I LOOFICNED MY REVOLVERS with the intention el‘ 11Eng them at the pinch, but the way the atfuir turned out was laughable. As the bears dropped down on all fours to charge me I made a jump for- ward into the largest fit-sure, and down I Went for nine :1 tun feet, or until I stuck fast. It seemed as if same one took power: slon of me and flung me down: theze, {or I had no thought of my own about it. The ï¬rst I knew I vzma down there, and that bears were leaking over the edge (f the ï¬s- sure and dropping 1helr saliva on my up. turned face, My rlfla had come down with me, but had gone out of ï¬ght dawn the ï¬n enre. I was stem? ing atmlgbt up, stuck {est- en high as the know, and the ï¬rst move I made was to pull n revolver and open ï¬re an the beasts missing a row above me. An they were leaping back and forth across the ï¬ssure I had no tremble In putting lend lute them. The six bullet: In the ï¬rst revolver were about evenly divided. but by that time old Bruin had got a. flee. in his ear. He kept back out of sight ; but of all the growllng, rearing, and rletlng you ever heard the fuse the pair kicked up was the WGl‘Eï¬. The belle“; had stung them to fury, and the scratchkrg of thdr claws en the reeks sounded like lron rakes being drawn over Women by human hands. The xow con tinned to)“ about ten mlnulea, and then died away: I had made up my mlnri that some desperate chances must be taken. It did not seem that[ could pass the day down there and live. it was simply a oheice be- tween deaths, and as morning came I began to work upward. It was literally inch by inch, for I was thoroughly banumbed. "Klewever, the exertion seen set my blood in moiien, and as I drew near the top I got ready ta do some shooting. There were twe bears. on watch, and they began a row. I braced myself and ï¬red a stray shot 5nd yeUed and screamed at them, Mid directly 3 head owns into View and 1 ï¬xed a. bullet into It, The bear staggtre‘i mound fer a minute and than tumbled into the crevasse to the right of me, sticking fast at three or four feet from the surface. 1 then played for the ether, but as he would} not give me a shot I Wm hat! to the surface and found that ho hsd turned coward and gone oï¬‚ï¬ There was a deed grizzly lying on a rock, making two I had ï¬nished. This lellow had been Ihet in the stomach the afternoon be- enou gh 'K‘ I want you to understand that that night wars the longest one which ever blessed America. It would have been a. positive relief to me to have been hung head downward from the limb of a tree to vary the manaâ€" teny. I had to keep my arms up, and to- ward midnight thsy were so benumbed that they soarcaly had feeling. My legs and back were racked with pains, and long to brace with my shcuzdsra and feet: m maintain my pagitiun, had I men get timd and had 159 go further dawn, Getting my thing like an may place was impsnzihle, and in lean than an hour I made up my mind that the bears had the call on me, I: w†about ‘2 o’clock In tho afbomeou when I went down, and by 5 I was sore, thirsty, and desperate. I went up again, and ene oi the bears came so near getting my only) that his ciawn carried off my fur cap. I went down the crack feeling that I was In for an nibemonn's jab, I thuught the bears might possibly have a: dark, but; they tilt} not. Inueei’i, from who.“ could make eu‘z, they were jalned by a third, and per- haps a fourth. warned me to step right there, I‘hey had retireï¬ cut of range of my bullets, but were on hanr'i to re: ceive mg if 1. game up: I hm “ It seemed t9 me that I had the better of the nitustien, though there was some draw- backs. My pom;th soon became palnhxl, and when I nmde an that to change “I was cempdied to have my boo’m behinï¬. In much. a narrow ï¬ssure M: was quite easy to work myself upward, and by and by I began tke mcvcment, hoping: that the beasts had been killed or drzven away. My head was within ï¬hma feat of the nurfnoa when †I was well armed, of éourvse, and you may not it; down that a. man Wha out: leone lromcivllfzatlen for six menths at a time, and takes his life In his hamd, has some little nerve. I had bagged four or ï¬ve gxlzzlies in the pravioun year, and was posted as to thelr cunning, Itrungth, and ferocity. I had a ceuple of mlnutea to think The bears sat up and peered sud unified and growled. I had. a reputatng rifle and two revelvers, and you mnv wonc’rer that I didn’t open ï¬re on them. Flmt, the ï¬rst shot Wuuld have brought them both ‘in en ma ; secondly, I was rattled. 1 could just as well tell yan that I stood there and popgmi both gr'zz‘lea over, and then went my way with coal in- dlfl'emnoe, but that wasn‘t the way of It. The shock came so wdiaenly that I wars up“ set, and my nervea were lu each a. state that I 0: uldn’t Lave hit an elephant a hundred feet away. I tell: just llkn running, and had there been any shew for it I would have taken ts; my heels. As 1 Bald, there was a couple of minute's grace, but they panned before I had any plan to txtrlcate myself. I dldn‘twilt entlrely. In a Narrow Olen will: Angry Grizzlies on Guard. " I was prespeoting in a. spur of the Rockies about a hundred miles West of Gal- aary," mid Gus Frikbee, an old miner and prospector, “ when I had the cloaeut shave of my life. One afternoon, when about half way up the ride of the range, I came to a spot where some canvulaieu pt nature hnd split an immense rock into many pieces. The eriglnal rock was a solid mass. about a. hundred ieet Iquare. The cracks starred at a. common centre and branched oflliko the legs efa spider. At the centre these cracks or ï¬ssures were three feet wide ; ï¬fty feet away they narrowed to six or eight inches. I steed there that afterneon, in- npectlng and wondering. when I suddenly smelt grizzly. Imeau just what I say, I get a strong nnlifef beer eder. and looked up to ï¬nd myself ooepered. There was a grizzly coming up the path which I had followed, and there was anetlzer en the path which I must take m get away. Above this aplit Nah I have been telling you of was a. cliï¬" up which a Equlrrel could hardly have made his way. 3 (isn't my the been had planned to get me between them. There was probably an the path. .I he one had been efl foraging and was returning, and theother had scant- ed me and come out. Neét'wir ens was ï¬fty feet away when I leaked up. A NIGHT 0F SUBPENSE. BEFORE DAYLIGHT CA ME A COUPLE OF GROWLS A DEN All YE ME He stood under the window and sang “ How Can I leave Thee." But he did leave 5nd so Iuddenly that the dog went back of the home and wept. †For heaven’s Hake, yew: honor,†or claimed the young lawyer who warn the pr£s« oner’a attamay, †don’t imnnm an ï¬ne an the man. Temper juatice with many. Just send him to jsii. Dzm’t mbhim at his money; I haven’t got my fee {mm him yet.†“But'you have lived with your wife much longer than ab: years,†said the friend, A juatlco found a magma guilty of an as- sault and addressed hlm as follows : “ I shall either ï¬nes you ten dollars or send you to jnil for ten days.†“Yes, but you see I ain’t at home much.†“ But she must héve been pretty 1mm perfect to have Hved six years with my wife," he added “She’s a teugh one to get along: with." Smithkius, in a. reatavrmt with a fxlenti, was bragging ts him about the hired girl they 1136' at his house, haw induatrioul, clean and economic she was. The pexmxmant elevation er depromion of large tracts ef land is one 9! the peculiar phenomena. attending thaws convulsions of nature. During the eartbqvmko at Lisbon the new quay subsided and the npot was cavered by water 600 feet; deep. Many other rem:.=rka.ble lmï¬ancre are an rcoorri. They have been terribly dest’mckive '39 lifn as well as property. A vluihation of the kind in Peru, 1746, klllad 3800 ; 1797. from a similar came. 1,600 Peruvians perished. At Canaan, 1812‘ 10,000 men wmedsstroy- ed ; 60,000 at Lube!) in 1755 : 40.000 in the two Calsbzlna and Sicily by. 1783, and 20,000 more by aloknnss resulting from It The movemiauta of the earth during an earthquake nmy be vertical‘ horizontal or whirlmg. Th3 mosh duntruotive shacks are generally the shonrtoet in riumt'azm. Thai; 02' Lï¬sbon, Navember 1, 1705, lasted abaut six minutes. The: thrsa anocku that rnduoed Caracas t!) mints, Marc 7, 26,, 1812, wore over in a minute and most: of the dmnwu ta the city of Cencsption, Fabruary 20, 1835, watts dent) in six amends. A‘s Lima, Pam, an average 95 newly ï¬fty checks in 1: year are expected}, and in some yarns of South America over sixty have been oounteé in a» war; not reckoning ï¬lms alight". (note, which were still more numerous. The same night that the city of Lima, Snubh America, was shaken down four new volcanic vents were founci in the Andean Seen utter the earthquake in Liuhen in 1750 there were some of the meat vieient amp» “one ever known. Aï¬ur the deatruotfon of Caracas the volcano of St. Vincent became active, and at the beginning Khe earth was shaken for a space of murky 20,000 :quam miles. ~ : There are supposeï¬ to be same: 300 and over of the“ chimneys upon the face of the earth, two thirds being nituuer! upon islands. America. has abeua 114 of these, and mere than any other geographical division of ï¬shes globei Eartkquakes appear to be from the name cause as valcanio erup- tisun, the energy of vapors and gases in the earth struggling t9 ï¬nd a vent. The name valcano is derived frmn Vul- oanus, the ged of ï¬re 9f the ancientRomana. They are generally divided I.th three magsea â€"a.otivo, intermittent: and Extinct. be'am- boil, in the Medieerranaan, is agoad example of the ï¬rst: claim, making a ï¬ery int-30911 light for tailors en the neighboring 5m. Etna and Vesuvius are gaed smmpiea 9f the Hen-and kind. To the populzu' mind they are ihc chlmneys 6f the vast roaring furnace) of heat In the bowels of the anxth, and un- doubtmfly serve 93 vents for the pewerful games that mighï¬, if conï¬ned, create a total destruction t9 the crust upon which we live, Ancient chronialors state that King Ed. gar attempted te extirpete the wolves in Eng- land by commuting the punishments for certain «flanges into the acceptance of a cer- tain number of welvae’ tongues from each criminal, and in Wales by converting the tax of gold and silver into an annual tri- bute of 300 wolves’ hands. In subsequent times their destruction was promoted by certain rewards, and some lands: were held en condition of destroying the waives which infested the part oi the kingdom in which they were situated. In 1281 these animals troubled several o.’ the English counties, but aiter that period our records mnke n9 mention of them. The last wolf known in Scotland was killed in 1680, and in Ireland one was killed in 1701, Very fearful ao- ceunt are on record of the revegee commit- ted by wolve when in hard weather they nsnnoirxte in immense theirs" So lately as 1760 such terror is said to have been excit- ed in France by ravegea of wolves that pub lic prayers were offered for their destruc- tlen. Since India. became so munhthe coun- try of Europeans the moo of tigers has been much thinned, and are long itis probable that they will be driven to the most romete and impenetrable districts. The wolf in these islands was hunted by an animal known under various appellatisnm as the Irish wolf deg, the Irish greyhound, the Ilighlend deerhonnd, and the Scotch grey- hound. There appeer ta be no doubt that all the dcge thus denominated were assen- tislly of the name breed. Ila original heme is supposed to have been Ireland, whence, during the proud daye of ancient Rome, it wss frequently uenveyed in iron angers to as- slst in the sports: oi the city on the Tiber. linflen obzarves: “The Irish greyhennda are of a very ancient race and still exist (though their number is smal‘) in their orig- inal climate ; they were called by tho rm- oient dogs of Epirue and Albanian liege,†,liolinshed, in his “ Dozcrlptlen of Ireland and, the Irish,†written in 1.586, eeye : “'Jl‘hey are net without welvea and grey- hounds to hunt them, bigger of bone and limb than a. colt.†In Anglo-Saxon times a nobleman never went out unaccom- ptmied by some of there degs and his hawk, and so highly were they esteemed that by the lorest laws of Commute it was ordered that no persen under the rank of a gentle man nheuld keep ene. fore, thrse ball: hitting him, and he had bled to death during the 11131115. I got my rlfla and and boots after name hard work, and left the Ieoallty without; having seen anything further 01 my living enemies." Volcanos and Earthquakese Wasn’t at Home Much. Justice within! ercy. Wolves in England. “7manever Mexico, Chili, Peru, or the King of the Cannibal Islands turn up their noses at the English flag, her Brittaniu Majesty him; the oflander a whack on the uoceanut with e croquet; mallet, and that Insure- perpetuel respect and veneraflen. A carreapcndoeait mks how it; is that Engâ€" land gotta along so well with Mexico and other bzxrbaroun nations. Om: correspondent com‘zvenis on the foot that neither the Spin- iards nor any of tho little biack 311 “:1 83%)). American republics commit outragtsn on Brlflsh subjacta, anti asks how this is brought about. 3‘ How have you mamgad to break him in ‘2" she asked. “ I did it; chiefly with a croquet mallet,†was the reply, 7 The anuwarls very simple, It dos: not differ much from the answer a. man-Lad lady gave a frland. whe waspmialng tire aminbil- ity of the formal-'3 huahand. SPANISH BUN â€"Yelks of four eggs, ona< half cup of butter, one cup of sweet milk, one tesapeenful of soda, two teaspoanx'ula of eleven, cinnamon, and nutmeg. Bake in a moderate oven. Uae for frosting the whites of four eggs bentan to a ntlfl froth, add one-fourth cup of sugar, flaver to taste and spread evenly on the mks. If dashed it can be put in the oven until a. nice brown. PICKLED Plums ~â€"To elghï¬ pounds of fruit: add three and one-half pounds of sugar, one pint of vinegar and one pint of water. Dissolve the Bugarln the vinegar and water, let it ball, and skim till clear, then put In the pears and soak slswly tll dane, then take out and. ‘nci‘l the quuid tlll quite thin and pour owr them. The peara would be paved and a. few cloves stuck in them. SOUP MILK I’IE.â€"-To eight pgunds of fruit mid three and one-half cup of minim! after they are needed and chopped ï¬ne, one- half cup of sugar, 3. little salt. and differ- ent spices as one ohoosea. Use only the thick part cf the milk. Bake In two crusts. BEEF AU GBATIN.-â€"-Put two ounces of butter in a saucepan 11an the ï¬re ; when melted, sprinkles 1:130 it one teaspaouiul of minceé onions, um teasepaonful cf chapped parsley, three mushreoms ï¬nely mincad, a pinch of 68.11;, 3-eppm' and allaplce, and two tubieepoonfula cf ï¬ne bread crumha Stir for Zwo minuzï¬s and add enough broth to make the mixture “quid. Cut one pound of boiled beef in mega: lay these in a ailver or tin dish; pour the metm‘e over them and cover with a thin layer of sifted bread crumbs, Put small blba of butter here and there on the top, and. bake in a gouzi oven for ï¬fteen minutes, Serve hot. PLAIN A l‘I‘LE TAL'I‘.â€"-Rul) a. pie-dish over with butter, line it with shark pie-crust, rolled thin, pare some necking apples, cut them in amallpleoev. ï¬ll thu. ple-dleh wlth them, straw over them a cuplul of molat sugar, three or four cloves or a little grated leman peel, and add a few watpoor fula of water ; then cover with a pan paste oxust, trim off the eclges with a sharp knlle and (mi: a small all: at each and, pass a glglhsg iron amund the pie half an inch Inside the edge, and bake in a. quick even. Sac TCH BROTH â€"Take (mo-half teaoup barley, four quarts cold water ; bring this to the boil and skim ; now put in a neck of mutton and boil wvln fer half am hour; ukim well the tide :7 the pet also; have ready mo our!“th bald It...ng cf funky, on? sprig of celery tap 3 chop all theme ï¬ne ; add your chopped vegetables; pepper and salt to tube. This soup takes two hours to cook. PEACH FRITTERIZ â€"-Twulvn peaches, two ounces of butter, sugar. three eggs, faur eunoeu of flour, a giil of milk. Peel the peachea, split in two and take cut the aromas; dua’n a little powdered sugar ever ‘u‘hem : (Hp CBCh piece in ï¬lm battrvr that Ea made with the eggs, milk, and flaur, [My in mm fat. Serve with fairy sauce mafia of the two ounces butter, sugar, and nutmeg beakn to a cream. Khan ruaty bkqu lace Eu 3. teacupful sf soft water, in which one tablespoonfnl exsoh of bomx ami alcohoi hswa been added. When the lace is partly dry, dip ln water in which an old black kid glove hem been bailed, pull on: the edges, pin en u. sheet “blotting paper, and dry undcr a heavy Weight. Grouse spots can be taken {ram goeds 9f any ooier by covering the spot wtth pipe clay. Powder the clap and moisten wiï¬h water to the consistencv of thick cream; {spread on the spot uni let dry; leave on several heirs am] than :emave with the blunt edge sf a knife, and dust wish :3 volt bruuh, 1‘9 remove paint, apply turpentine till the paint is waft, shen ap‘mge repeatedly with alcohol. 01;, wax and renlmus su‘av stanceE may bra removed En this «my. Spets umda my ruai: (In woolena may samu- timea ha remuvad by citric acid, but b tiara applying, test on a bit of Kim material, as the 90k! sometimes changes the odor of the goods. The following mixture in highly recom- mended ne an excellent preparation for eponging woolen clothes to clean thom: Two ounces cf white castile soap, cut in smallbita and diaselved in one quart of warm water. After the soap is alaeolvod add four ounce: of ammonia, four ounces alcohol, two ounces 9! ether, one ounce of giycerine, and three quarts ef soft water. Mix and bottle, using rubber or glass stoppers for the bottles. To use, pear a quantity of the fluid int-e an earthen dish, lay the goods on the ironing table outs piece of rubber cleth, and spenge with the mixture, watï¬sing thoroughly and always drawing the sponge in the same direction. When the goods is nearly dry prens with a. hot iron under a piece ef white cloth if the geede are light colored, or under black if the goedl are dark. Remove the rubber cloth beiote pressing, and be sure there are no creases in the ironing blanket, as every one will leave a streak in the geods. Rusty black goads can be best restwred bv sponglng with stranq ammonia. water, or, wind; is bester, & mixture ef (qual part: of ammonia and 8.1061181. How to Secure Esteem. RBNOYATING OLD CLOTHES. HOUSEHOLD. CHOICE RECIPES. plane 01 Au aooidenh acaurzad the other evanlng on the Milwaukee and SE. Paul mllway, 01056 to Waupnn, by which a. widow nrsmcd Daoey and \two lltï¬lo glrls lost their lives. Ava the train came fauna a curve the enginâ€" eer saw walking on the bridgea woman and MN) children. He whistled and put on the brakes, but the distance was toe shark, and the engine ram ever the nnfar’aunata trio, mangllng them terribly. The train wax; pulled up and the bodies taken in) the depot. The parents of the glrlu had gone out; of town, and had lefï¬ the children in change of Mrs, Dacey, who did washing for families. The girls, who are between eight and nine years old, had gene on the track to play, and Mrs. Dmey had gens after them to bring them back, when they all met their deaths. Prof. L, Weber relate»; In a German per!- odioal that during a thunder storm at Rlbnitz, m Mecklenburq, the lower pane of a window on the ï¬rst floor of a. house was broken by lightning and n jet 61' water was threwn upward through the hole to the coil- ing with such force than; part of the ‘celllng was broken down and other damage war: done. The hele In the window was like a bullet hole, with radical cracks. Some cigars on a table ï¬hat was broken by the fall of the ceiling and the water were out- benizsd, The origin of the jet of water is net satisfactorily explained. W. L Timmena 9f Illiuels was engaged to marry szttie Parker of O'xle. Ha had a. friend, Lnuéa Downs, and aka a stator Mud, and he tried to make a nmioh heï¬wsan the twe, They exchangei letter»: and pilots- grapha. engaged. to marry, and them was to ha a. dauble weï¬ding at the Porter radiance. ht; when the ynung men appeared Maud pesitively refuted to marry L'auls becmae ha hat! daoeived her. Instaw 91‘ his own phato- graph, he had sent that 0? a. flashy ani hmdaoma negra mlnntral, and Dawns: was neither flmhy mar handsome. Tummom stoed by his friend and refused to marry Latele unless Maud married Lauis. and so the double Wedt‘ï¬ing was declared oflâ€, Prof. Weber’s Big Storm Story. not uwim, ahe at onuejumped after the llwle one, caught; it by its: clothes, and acraamed for help. By ï¬lm time help crime the mo «r was xmuuneclws, the baby nearly (irnwnad, and the children in the boat half crazy with fr’ght. M rs, C L. Cook attempted to arm the river at Miners}, Conn, the other evening in a mull mwhoat, txking her four children with her. When they were in 1h.» mia‘dlc 9f the stream the baby, nine montln 91d, jlmped fmmthe arms of the eldest chm} into the liver, Although Mm. 009): could A prominent Waharbmy manufmturer recently lllnstmtad the force of habit. His habit is to get shaved at half-pint 6 each evening. The oiher day, expecting to be busy in film awning, he Vina ahavav'? at noon, but 1.26:30 he again entered who barber Blimp, patiently Wanted half an hour for Ma turn, and when the smiling bnbor xuhtei his hand over his ball head and said “ 1-bit cut ?†zemembered that he had been ahavod and bolted {rem the shop. They raisa enargetio hem! in Kaunas, A Kingmnn csunty man had. one that tried to batch out a sittmg of eggs and failed ; then tried a second 10!: and breught forth tan ï¬uo chicks ; took care of them for six weekn, during the last three of which she laid an em; raver; 3&1;ch 5&3" ; than wzmtsd $9 3i: azgau‘nA and not being permitted, stole anethet hen‘a chicks and Drought them up with more than utepmethexly devotion. The marshes on each alde of the Little Emu Pieine River, in Wtsoanain, were burn- ed ovaz‘ this summer, and ream?» rain‘a made a strung lye, which was carried. into the riv~ er. An 1633?. thin is the theory advanced to account fur the fact that Ehe other (1sz than made 9f ï¬nk name dawn the river, Booming 1y In a gram; huny, and went over the dam and out 12139 the Wisconsin Rh'er. A Narth A’iama linemm, repairing tele- phone 225mm near a. blacksmith shap, was In (Sanger 02 faking, and czmght bold 9f an electric light w're. The cum-sat was power- fcr}. enough to keep him from latting g8, and woulni px'cbahly have kiued him had us mat yelled to the bizckamith, who ran out with his: pinesâ€, dipped the wire, and rescued ï¬he aevorely sneaked man, River, and, urged over in: precipibcurs banks until they piled up, ene on another, twenty- ï¬ve feet dorm. In this way 172 sheep were killed, and uflerward skinned, cut up, and cam-ieé (if bv the redekinr. A quick»teinpareï¬ but mlf-pasaaased bull go: on the railroad track 3.8 Madison, Comm, the other dxy, and wouldn’t get; 51f when tha Newport express came along. This is not the usual cheatnll". abeut the bail and the locomotive, {or the train stepped rather than try conclusion: with the animal, and a brakaman was sent to get the bull off the track. He auaceeded remarkably well, but the hull was mighty close to hls basis as be skipped over the nearest fence. George Miller, serving out a. ten-yea; sentence in an Indiana prisen, heard of the prison trick sf eating soap In order to ap pear 39 be wanting away, and thus gain a pardon. The schume worked too well. MAL even liquid nourishinent', 5:111 in more than likely bu die. A large flock of sheep which were b13ng driven from Mautana mm Canada were sur- rmxndad by a band of Indians pg the _Bel_ly 'DH‘A- hm,“ _. r A few days ago tha feurteen yearreld daughter of Dwtd Fry cf Stumptown, Md», was ill and slept; sixty-six hears. Sm awake. ate heartily, saomed quite well, and than went- te nlaap again. A1: last accounts - "m. uyuuuuun she had been algebiï¬glï¬lnzty elght hours without lntarmlaaien. .._.., ...u-.w uvv "cu. Ausr fer’s (ï¬lms? inhulygrated, he cannot take Hired girls get very low wages In Cann- da, judging {mm a recent sermon 9f 3 King- ncen preacher, In which he pleaded (or mere pay for domestics, saying that many girls work hard, early and late. for $3 a month, when they should receive $10 EJght-vaarold Bart Cbaflee of Pium Creek, Not», perched on the fence of a “laughï¬or pen to watch J‘Lm \Vxlson sheaf: a T‘am cow. Wilaen ï¬xed, the bullet ntruok the cow en the Iarehead. and, glancing, hit the boy in the 1351: aids and killed him. Bu Harbor Indiana oamplaln thnt the trade In baskets, bead work. gull feathers, and the like. has been Very dull this Mason. Increaue of Indian camps and uvorpx-eduo- flan have been the mules of this deplorable state of affairs. A Triple Tragedy. VARIOUS 'I OPICS. “ 812mm? grown wt of struggSem to over came difï¬unltlen. If there were no dim aulv tiers them would be no auuoeaa, If mare was nebhing to struggle far there would be nothing achieved. There is a hill bafora us that all active [spirits endeavor to mount; they run, they toll, they struggle, they he." It i not sufï¬clank to constitute ourselves just men and women that we strictlv pay our debt», keep our premises, and fulï¬l our centracts, if at: the same time we we sham where we should be kind, hard Wl’mra we should be tender, 091;! where we should be sympathetic. " Experience keeps a dear school ; foals wll] learn in no other, and mm that, {or it bath-us) wa may give advice‘ we oannet: give conduct, However, that; will notbn counaeiled cannot be ad, and if vnu wil! not hear mason, lht surely rap your knuckles.†" There is a species cf pleasure In suflerx Eng frem the lngmtltudn of othnra, that Is reserved for great minds 319nm†“Man is a. oma-‘um nf'aaaooiaflon anti educnï¬inn. The early influences of childâ€" hood direct the tamer of h!!! life.†“ The diaoaverv of what is true and the practice of what in 9:076, are the two may: important ebjacta of 1H3." “The bread sf life is love : the salt at life is work ; the swentneau of Illa, poetry - the water of me, faith.†’ “A mnfua! undamtanding is ever the ï¬tment 01min." “Not En nature but in man Is all the beauty and. worth he seen.†“ If. [9 a. fatal onwardioa which asks not. What i9. right, but. whah any the maj arity.†" Unleva a tree has hnmn h‘manema in the Spying, It In vain tr.) 109k for fruit in the Autumn.†If’ M †file at ‘ , in $ SALTING STOt'K â€"â€"Thnm in a. szrnwï¬ variety of nninlon and prmcflcn M to muntity in suiting Etnnk, and ham h 7mm!- light on the nnlnt. The French mania, Wrenzh their Department of A'zriculture, instituted an inventigaï¬ivn in wgw'? to mating animals, After careful expt-ri-mmt and frquirv on Hm mbjeot the following: WM rc‘mmmsudod 2 VVavking rx or milc'n can". *wa nnnom ver day ; oxen fmttanlmz in Fig.3}: {I’VE} and 0. half ta fnur mmcnn: mam. {xv-twain“ mm ta 9:270 ounces ; sheep («fmflfle for frotï¬wrvlzw) (me- half to 1WD thirdly nuncos: harem: and mulca eue ouncel afmv! is human mvi’ hdg‘né minted, shaw- Ing it 1:0 be full nf blood, and shaking with nvevv antivlty of the MM. she is. in a healthy. haying ocnriTeicn. With this am;- dltion of comb you WEI? diamâ€? the utmnsf; acthdty in your fewâ€, ï¬â€™mr‘ilng M; every nnund er motion The movï¬â€˜mntfl are not likn asmrkuu jump. bu‘t with an elastic spring, shnwing a condition of vlrznmua health. 0:: the maizmrva if the edgoa 8f Hm comb and waMJaa mm a mxrpllnh rnd9 anzi flm mnvements m’ugg'sh, thenâ€; In disensa amt! danger. 0mm AND HEALTH (W170st â€"A penitry autbwiï¬y infermq m “>th wan the comb of are ready for the market and than ever; pflund 9f fead brings some frs-ngihh return. The were mnidly the z'qimml gaim in weighty the smaller the propmtinu mg feet} spent in snatalning We. and therefnw the gmater the proï¬t. 2:0 the feeder. A special Invsfls'tigmr5'1m wTiih y'efnranqa 120' the probable pra'hlcthn a? wheat; in the United States main"! ï¬â€˜w wqregnte oi the WIutâ€"nr crop. “295,000 COO bushels against 212 000,000 19M: rem “(The outl- mahm nut Chiï¬fnmia. ni‘. 60,000 000, Tiliemls at 28 000,000; Indima at. 32 000 000 Ohio at 34 000.000. Michigan at 2.3 000 000, and Missom'l m 22,000 000 “41-13st Tm npring what in estimated at 140,003,000 Against 4 5 000,000 imt 5703'. The quath of win- ter grain is repertea‘l to he‘sver than it was.“ in 1585 PROFITABLE FEEDIM m- Ciao funding that; para bank in thM which keep?! Hm animal, comtanivly gaining. \ vma one has truly" said that evaky {mu'fl M be". canaumeé 'nv' an animal that is: Us.†ranking in weight,, in am much amatoï¬, I\ e, the u mung things mowing fmvn the timr‘ 1 ,v we nativev')‘ till. they m,“ _.,»‘1__ t . L‘,A 1 1 SAVING VEGETABLE SEEDS â€"D3 not Ma'- kmpb te save your own seeds, says a gar- dener, unless you have mmd evezy precau- tion necessary ta prevsz; croar»*artliizati0n. Plants often mix without the knavfledga 9f the grower. A mefmzx may ‘nv: ï¬nalized by a pumpkin, and though 5; (1-121; vi than season may be genuine, yet the: grads of such, If and next mansion, may camera a {WET-are of the crop or else destrey the quaflty. A HOME MADE CREA'UER â€"Sm~m one thug tells how to make s. sin» rplny home-made creamer. Out; a. barn .‘ in tav-u, 911% in a. faucet to lot of? the water, and pmvida a tight cave): to keep our. vmï¬min, Gat ‘she tinner to make three c-ms maven Enahw in diamater and ï¬fmen inches; rippgwith three; flanges on the but'mm in ï¬g wade slits in. blanks bolted 4:0 the b uttom of the tab, so as to hold the cans dawn Lvun when empty or only part-1y ï¬iied. Pu nu i'ne Mb full 9f water, or let the arming watm- run thmugh It: to the watering 1:: (High and you have a handy cream raiaox’. THE RURAL FAIRS â€"â€"The agricultural fairs. now being held taraughout the country: should not be neglected by farmers, herti- oulturlsts and stockmen. V‘Vhen properly" conducted and enaeumged, such exhibition, are highly beneï¬cial I» indlvlduala and com- munlties, and t9 make them What they should be, right thkaklng, progmaulva rural- ista ought ha attend and centzibube to sue car more. T111: BEE! TURKEYS,-â€"â€"A5 Thanksgiving In“ drawing nigh talk on turkeys ls timely. :ha two largeau breech are the Brenna and Ni!- ragamett. The former In of dark bronze color wish in Imam: approaching gold. with dark at flmh-oelorea legs, The Narra- gansett is of a motAilic black plumage, with anlmoa calmed ltg-q. Nu adult gobblar of either variuty, should weigh lass than twenty ï¬ve pounds. These wdghha, how- ever, are only minimum, for specimens of gobblern often reach forty pounds. Septemr bar or October In the best; time for uelectlng the gebhler, as the prices will soon bra higher. (he gobbler will be sufï¬cient for at least. flour hens, and sometimes more. SQBE‘R MiFMEN'E‘S. TIMILY AND PRACTICAL. 9f reproach 3:21 the truth oi 46-44% ~¢A FARM. other, and mama In 3013001 ; but lviae, but war, they 1 be help- , she will