the. clephatit is the 3 gent of all Loimaly He in} | meee than oy other map. tow Ie 14 8 ! BER le ba Sea Epil Kanon, New Jersey is Fives Bop e Cis yg Cweh gr a hr here Festition and romnd ate Tatty tor old English name of “love i 01 vablo chiefly 18 oatehun. The cocking is dome rd to a hats of the highest ran he in ago shat sb “ono ited of hort shold. din ly. the ori would mise a distinctive produst ie eatinary wt. The superintendent in these men. He ‘mak ne aannes a4 ¢ any | ited Statepnnd maybe | interesting story about the famons Fog lish sane before mentioned. The n kept their Yeoips 8 0 pey fike h and then he suddenly retired fn the business, closed his works ped making sance snd lived in lax after. Nobody bas any pesi- | tive evidence 8 to the reaper in which ; Wealth #0 suddenly, bat bo fa AEernt a hv ght mentation $f yusoss | i jn, cutlery, peck ipeening Hx : 4 ties did not praction. ¢ name | imperi flo i Thomgian ree- the country. But it was by ''; He felis an i o steal i, and | } woe of £0 tain ay . The pea kept thie | you hes obras aad 6 rae.” to win, and bad he lof Lit st wore elothmik ame] showy ng. In the 1 Holds and inthoow and Dapp © etna Ax carpenters, jo A ere, cit inet tani, masons, biackemithe, eartwrights fun pers, suddlery, potters—there was, fact, hardly a osefal trade the commu Brranee to ss nothing ix said of printing Frobalis they feared to attract the notice of the ul persscators, The Moravian Anabaptists, very different from thao who all over the German empire and Cetmewhore commanced the moyemen:, | followed the mudel held up in tie weds, “He shall sot ery, por Hit on, or cans: Biv yoo to be heard in 1 streets. They spoke of themelves o “the quiet in the land.’ In clothmaking and cutlery they o- tained such repute that at their finale. palsion the suthorition made special +7. forts to infuse some kind of energy § 7c “the Christiank'’ who hitherto L.d not been abla to ennipeto with the Low baptist cloth workers, It wad even ; ro posed to invite Duteh cloth workers ito} wk work’ and the overcoming of advise nities had attained their emisenc. Contemporary Review. Manages. ‘ Managua were fo have ben rude the canital of Nicaragua bicagmi th two | principal cities, [eon apd Gira oda, were always fBghting for thd bk oor Leon appromthes the most elosely 1 the roe motrepolitan character. Jt oon: Ts wide extent of ocomntry. Hs ponl buildings sre admittedly the fine in Central Anierion, and, eT showing A greater variety of race in ite Inhabit suits, it is the abode of the oll aristee. racy. Then it hak gore in for prs pen and édueation, anil though it strik o ax a trifle intongraons to seo evi 4 riil- way station in a place Hike this foray nothing of the other sifjuncts of civil zation, thers is 0 blioking the fact that thes seme adjnnots are there, and — ont fraction, covering Ky entite SATE, and fronting the whole whith of the grand plaza. From the rood I saw the wide Pacific shining like a thin rim of nlver on the western borivon, while stretching away to the northeast I followed with: cut shiftivg my eyes the How of Lew Marabive, which are nine voloanoes, 4 as parlectly tapered as an raid, Mausgas has & eer: » i being situated an the i Jak of the swpo name tn deat of HOvErament, — | Egeptian lepucti © Fe 7 DRS Loney of Ole Pall. # and violinists 71, being then 31 as wiodiniet wan. or Was ragion | Ho wa 30 hee have both,” sxid Bell a 20 to I's Fauight at 1 o "ehk, pass a ET Yor & mn rl Be Ball did ax directed, and when by francs had becorne 400 ten after an episcds with a wor ES ade tempted to take them. seared Li longer he would have won a tude opm — The stranger, who wus present at his el bow, was ¥ idoog, the Franch detective, already w Earopan celebrity. two great teen Warren Hawings and Richard Cobden, is one of Janse Han- way, whose chief claim to fame is that he was the first man in England who carried un umteelis, It is not probable, | though, that this is the resson why be| was buried in the abbey, since be wae also famous in bis day as a traveler and) a philanthropist. He journeyed much 1 in the cast, and wrote a most interest ing account of his life there, Afterward he came home, and, making a tour of | goes | England, wrols so dull a bock about it that it drew from the celebrated Dr 1 Johnwon too characteristic remark that “Jonas acquired some reputation by traveling abroad and lost it all by trav. | eling at home. ""-~Max Bennett Thrash. er in Sg Nicholas. Resented. “I will hunt him to the—fgnrative— ends of the earth,’ mid Yee Tawar man in most sarnest tones, “Pehaw I" anid the other. *'You are and robbed of $3 or $4." #1 care not for the paltry money, ow | said the Bostonian, “bot when he pointed the firearm at me the beast said, ‘Stand right where you am at!’ And ashudder ran throagh his frame. ~—Indisvapo lis Journal eA AOA Br Doss Away With Bluing. An ingenious Frenchman bas done y with the need of bluing in laan- He makes a soap in which be 8 8 solution sf illins gree iy pir maedk my the : conditions that the Anabaptist sor ane} that they represent an sdvanss. And the eattodiral of cut stoma fa a magni (8 Oto Ball fy tol in| not the first man who bas been held up| Hite hands and Herts Anscioy sik, ve in thint i r Sittne i cog Barked level Bans tele AE SE “welieTing chiar psy Nphteed frie” Jar nt your Dot trees cantlid 18 5 sent vir Pronay dy 80 Gp, ro Amini. Ab. Row Yoon Awd 1, pine i Fave at fa Povey Bo Hh pend la 2 : tin youl oF Tha ved saad Bios Ahn Peoetent fehl dk Ba voir Bea Te RAY, pte ve se Bath ¥ soRag wat Pema To your broses vie ov Bro dorily writen He Love's auwveeru ia Lava shy my. =F saya’ w cwkly. iio oon nl ALLIGATOR SENSE. They Dont Finve Much Re fors They Are One Bandred Years 4 AEST “Do yon know,’ sid Colonel Pon Cason, leaning back in his chr, Sehag | «| aiigaton al the roost Eiloinate cre. | fored on earth: It's a fach sense they pave! They've got more sense than a dog. How do I know? Haven't 1 eduonted ‘em? Ain't there an alligator | $10 venre old in Des Allemand bayen ! that wound work his tail to the bone for me if I asked Bim to? Bay, yoo make me tired! You get a gallon of molasses and a long | necked bottle and I'l show yoo bow to fame alligators. [t's the casient thing Lon carth, They're so afectionate. “Om Jane 23, 1885, I wens to Dex Allemand boven fishing A negro pared | i Baptiste Fortier bad just capght a ale Hgator 100 yours edd 1 dowd i tell by the pina sree Bip Yoo cant train & young ailigstor Thi td fay v, ain'y it? I asked Baptiste to wntl fd vin aronmd bis neck. Then Ta BE rng peeked bed tthe, fing 1 w hg Tassos and walled op to him, Fle ope Bis jaws fo rab me That was charm I shined the neck of the betils in his munih, just back of his pars, where on alligatrr has no teeth, 1 Hilted the bottle np. Jim tasted the molasses ne! and Bogan wiring bis tail. 4 Baptiste’ £ lei. but that was en sed dent. He wil se grails from the nainnte be ascend the I tanght him a Jot of pretty tri Bow to ented fliee, Bose 0 stand on his chew tobaoen, Finally 1 Ha Jooked ‘tl - fnil, hove harnessed Bim up to a boat aronnd xf me to see what I wanted reached over the wide of the Loaf and | bite a Hela Then he mule stood. Off be went, When | pulled an the raps | had sround his neck, he wi nonpdased for 8 minuie, bat ko seen | eanght on, and now when 1 go to De Alleroand's I rover Bave to Biren besdy to paddle my eanon. Jim attends | to carrying nie anywhers I want to go | “ay, do you kpow Jin is as glad te | pee me whenever I pars that way as i he was a relutive of mine, What's tha Of conven it's the froth, Ask Baptiste. | He taken cari of Jom for mee while I am | in New Orleans Now Orleans Times | Sk KER H F S GRA Ey : Mooew Jo New Bronewiel, The fatare of the moose, oldest apd poblest of the game animals on this Hav dip eogitinent, is amaltor thal has Suteranted | Mr a good many people Braithwaite, with] who has lived among thee animals all his life, says there 8 no danger of their 1gimiuution in New Bromswick. They abi | Abed their antlers before the mow be. of | tones deep in winter, and the sports man who endéavors fo carry Sway a horniess micome is always roughly dealt with by the magistrates down in the | settlements, The only relentless enimy | | of the moe is the lumibermian, whe in the depth of winter can make good pee of the tuext Put in the region which is the subject of this article theve ix Hite Jamber, and vo there wre few lamlor men, The Gogenersts Indians of the vil bags solinm trouble tvimsel ves fo hunt, 4, wad the few moss kilbok by hunters Are ~ aw pothing compared with the young | cues destroyed by the bears. Bruin gets trapped because his omat will aesragy $30 to his enptar. These are ro wolves in this wilderness, so the prooporte for the moose wre getting better 5 nated af worse. And if there are thousands of | moose, there are tens of thousands of | eribon, Frederick Irland in Serib- ad % oh The Robin and the Caterpillar, The robin hops aloag in the furrow and picks ap worms as the farmer Er nore nt 0 plows, which is ents itself or carries to | its nest as food for the young robing The robin prefirs muooth costed worms, | such aa the cooamen earthworm, bot if such food is scarce if does nat disdain the forsy entorpiline. It is an evil day for the caterpillar when a robin strikes it. The robin pucks it up and shakes 18 aad shakes it until it shakes the spines out of it-—the fur, an the children call the eaternilian's fumy coating—leaving the caterpiiiar bare in patches and gornitivass all over nnd shaken all out of shape. Then the robin i | it or ear- ries it off to fed its young —New York Bun. A Quistinaable Complinvent, Charley Champleigh —Ah, Miss Nightingale, that “Winter Song’ wos charming. It carried me back to the days of my childhood. Miss Nightingale—1 am so glad you Like it Charley Chumpleigh—Why, I could actually hear the cattle bellowing, the old windmill creaking and the discord. ant winds howling abont the doo — The cords of window blinds are good barometers. When they become tight, the reason is found in the fact that the | | air is moist, the cords have absorbed some of the moisture, and so are drawn taut. When they are slack, the air is dry and the tension of the cords is re fazed Th- 8 cent nickel piece, now discon: ting, weighed 20 grams. And the What are yon lsughing std shells of these ard se to get at Cw eof | Jwrge and very pasenber pipers of pircaors. That ie pot all, Eowewr, Not | | only have the two front legs heen diffor 1 entinted and specialised from the eight | others in thiv manner, bet alin, by al rare esoeption io the symmetry of the beely, tho right claw has been special | ized fromm the lefy each being hrtended | to perform a distinet fonction. Cue inal poisons, the other is & mill; ote in a ecatter, the ater is a cracker. ; Ad a rule, the right claw is the slen- derer and longer. It has toothlike pro ing and wevering than for crowing or | grinding. The left claw, on the other i hand, is useally thicker, heavier and rounder. Its nuscles are more powerful, | and in place of sharp teeth it hea blunt tabercies or hammers of differeit sizes. Tt mists, in fact, mors like a aut cracker | then dike teeth or wane. I8 ins meh | I paid hive $4.95, and Joo, that's he! N ilnater’s mame, wis noe, 1 pot a yoEso § my he brakn : rat ? fated (ARS "x ing organ. Nivertheloss you will find it interesting to obévres, by noting the | lobaters weyved to you at tibile, that this fifforontiation has bardly as yt become L quite ronstant, for somatimes i is the right claw that displays the bavimwrlike | put crdcker type and the left that acts | a2 niopey and biter, while somal lis ao a £ £ di fMereson coviara at all, JH chive alike (being sharp toothed of Ft hasunensd fH thee mime speeitnent Longmans | Magazine, : Fay Gonld's Nemwsin £1 am vented befors a Blazing fire in the a Pevil loving a wel as lend awning pad Toone nw, ? the center Bhle, Jay i wh $a hii Ju low chair. The haded 2 hip throws feel of fight on wiih, und alan ahowie In re te ground ef abode CY ro A i MH Seder 16 bo alle to ol ort the) er flesh within thy have asqoined sock | jeetions or srrated edges on its nipping facar, and it ix rather adapted for bie | srw oof a pee J oso st noglnnes el posks of mary cottinental Aiooowns, At Liegt the hundw wore boopd $0 gether with the ease of the stole, und the priotics wile very possibly the Ane else where, themgeh 1 cictnot at this moment give another instance of this detsil Pub it wonld scem that the nimge wits wot followed in England. I am pot aware of any trace of it fn any an clint English services book. Radoed the eeremoty with which i is connected In absent from: most English book ably because in the English forves of the meirvios the joining of hands took place at the tithe when the mi and woman give their troth to ate wo iiber. The inter joining of thelr bine br the privet after the delivery of the ving we introduced into England in 1 a ‘a ceremaotiy analogs fa Len Telinet fram that with whith 1h : the stolé Bosceant ines cog oo) it wonld syposy that th avo tion fn the Inarriage IW innovation rather than of rou irathon, asd that the inoovation te foandod daa mistake, = Notes and Ghtied dh Romesh sad iw Tospeiaibs iin It bs waid that Roseettl never» aoned to draw, The same is maid | oeay printers, nd the Freueh my >. of all Englislinssi. Tr fe certain that Foun of close study ax a young man | ooaperod him all his life, and that Be va pever seve of poespective, distanors, con We | me net peiug fo quarrel with iioseest's birds and batterfliod wind flovomg be can mons moh wang or few os bead siywhers but in paradise. IV Ge hed roid tenbnieal difficulties with pre Ruphaelits “sipeerity,” they woald bivvw Boaen pe boantiful and has noveal Bot in paintiog flesh and hair seed dee ply, In con hinting brillaney of color like that of Meabiog with dogeh and fin olor eat foatares. Io in fh Toe of £ and pa ba tarps bo Ieee or pe 8 1 Bave geld : Beek { fis ik the ho Alek 3 sper on thst fase, The dui Brito over with Sat thay jock whioh shows a Prev mind amd haps moment Then suddn of pain distorts the Tope, the ein © the book fall fx a perveles bun | Por» moment be pom to sffer 1 torino of th dune. Then be pulls | himself together, begs to ba peewee, SARE and then goes slowly np the heond soair- | way, to pass a night of anguish. Fis Nenesis bas strock hogie—nen- | ralgia, which has traveled with him 40 yours—-an cosmy which all Bis waaith could not Seibe had chimed its pound 21 of flash, When I heard of howbs died — turned his face to the whit wadl, whis | pered CT am so tived, fied” and then | slipped into the unbuown-——tbis sence j cama back to pw with new poaniog | Gould grabbed for gold--got it. And | that wan sll he did got out of life . Cornliill Magazine. Modern Five Worship To Scvtinnd. Burghesd, in Morayshire, i anigue in oon respect, tha elavie.’' This ceremony 8 gone wii ovary New Year's ave, old style. 1% in supposed fo be a relic of | fire at There is now only one other community, it is said, in Britain | efuvio consists of half an Archangel tar barrel fixed om the topof 8 firprop about four feet long. The second half of the tar barrel is brokun up, put inside | and mixed with tar. A stops must be meets the polo and the barrel. The bro- | ken bits in the barrel are thea lighted | by mens of barniog peas, no such thing wn y . i fuoes of fnrmatare. The mininiam esti- as a lucifer mateh being aliowad For over 50 years the clavie has been made by tho sane mua, and one partic. | | ular townaman has provided the "live" peat for 40 In the dark winter | night the blazing thing is bore ap one the middie of the village. Hers the pole | {a fixed on a short, strong oobumn, and the clavie bums out The women rub in, and, picking bits of the pow dying clavie to “keep the witches away,” dis appear into the darkness — Glasgow Herald, A Waning Canton. “Do you notice how much. the prac tice of carrying the hands in the poeket within the last few yoars?” mked the literary man. ‘It was never good forum, bat atiil you would often soe i I think change. Put your band in yonr poekel as you stand for an instant on tho street some day amd see Mf you dea’s agree with me. If you are anywhere io the joreer op central portion of the city there wil be from one to a doen or ine nowsbays io sight Every ose of then will notice the motion of Jour hand in yonr pocket, aod if one is Jocking in another dirsetion he is attracted by the rounded by o straggling mass of boys and as many papers as there am urchins are thrust Uxie your face. It is a dan gerous thine tw put your hand to your pocket unless you ars willing to have your progress delayed for a nioate or twa No wy X: ak Times A Wienan's Crittodum, wa who writes noame sar. saking of another woman who nes ond wits #, butt who publishes dee Fi Bus I think #hvs misap- ‘ cake nts! Ee: % Borie, CORT plies * her em SEAL agar SIAR sc Off threw types The fault Siem mys y : ol. What the objectors nom in It has “the Buorning of | where the practice is carried to. The nsed to knock in the pail which con. street nud down another at high speed | then earried to the Doorly hill in has been given ap by all closers of men the mewshoys ame responsible for the | rash of his follows, and you are sure. ry vhrsatile,” aa sdmirer gimdation Hike the of Leonardo, ho Eng ( Ligh painter ever exewllod him. ig Exeoption Be talento the miuinotesy i off Roasstli's women, drawn from pee Tbe shared with almost all paafrs. There is phe Ruphselasyue type of fue, the Correggriosgue, the Tithunoane, sud : Era Doadily shat they do ned Bile the 00. I i #0 entirely vou in that eriticia: wonld bo impertinent, and we con only may, without exprossing a Juda tisnt Yo our eye the lips, the throats, the Huge, off Rossetti’ beant bos have susothing in them which ia pof quite hus, bot is like the flesh of sbrops, boovie or Ie mim, these mugtieal beings when vapfare the passions of men, but not thelr boarts Quarterly Review. | The Loud of a Dost Storm, Blosen dost is 4 general and familiar waisnnor (6 howskospers over the satire west. A mining estimate, yorified by direct alaervation, for the quantity of dust settling on floors daring soch storms is about & forrteenth of an ounce of dust on a surface of a square yard in tall a day. A maximom estinnate made | cin the basis of the sbove IEWETAPEY a oimuts wenbd be at least five pounds to a square yard of surface for § storm listing 34 ogre. If we then suppose that uw house that ix 34 feet wide and 32 feet jong has open crevices, which aver ape a sixteenth of an inch in width and hive a runing length in windows and disors of 150 feet, the wind nay be map ped to enter half of these crevices with a velocity of five miles per hoor for the time the storms lasts, or for 24 hour The dust may be supposed to sittle on not lean than 85 square yards of surface, itieluding Soor space and horizontal sar WP PR i ELE mate, based. these fignres, givosus 395 tons of dust to shecubic mile of afr. The maximon eethmate would be 194,000 tng——Peguine Science Monthly. ann rem A Khinpeody on» Matton Cheep. When u primitive man wants hreak- fine, he takes a sheep, koeeds upon i holds it between his lege, and cuts ite throat. 1de skine it, dod, taking a slice ant of it, fries it on the poais for break- fmt. We also demand not less imperatively catiets for eur breakfast, bot we manage itt another way. Wa procure an inds- vidual same way off to kill the beast, and anotiver out of our sight 10 cook it We have a paper frill put round the bone to disguise 5 snd set a pot of flowers straight before ns to look as while we eat ib~but tr the sheep-—to thi sheop—it can make little difference which wiy is is eaten! We still do om I unclean work, but we do it by proxy. Aad it may be questioned whether what ere gain in refiosment wa have not lost th minority. ~Formightly Review. SRA HALON 4 Arlen, A Man's Diary. “Ther are but two biographers who enn tell the story of a man’s or a wam- an's life,” writes Oliver Wendell Holmes. “One is the person hivowelf or berself: the other is the recuniing ap- gel I should like to soe any man's be cgraphy ‘with corrections and emendn tious by his ghost. We don’t kucw each gther's suorets guite so well ax we flab ter ourstilves we do.”’ The biographer who is practically possible would not toll his story. A very wise and good moan, whi filled a great earthly place anid to me more than once or twice, ** pat ne secrets into my diary." ~-Gentle- gaan’s Magasine, The first fire brickamnde in this coun try were manufactured in Baltimore in 1827. They were manufactured for the backs of the old fashioned fireplaces, i the limestone proving too friable SI totic read like | The fiveness of our gold coins is about #0 per cunt.