February, 1879. THE WEST SHORE. 5' CHAFF. An agricultural paper asserts that milk onmM through inheritance. Mebbe it doee, but aomo of it looka as if it had come through a thunder ahower with the lida of the oana open. A bare-footed darkey while hoeing cotton one day, aaw hia big toe under a olod, and thinking it a mole'a head hit it and hurt him aelf. After working with it for a while he got tired, aet hit foot on a stump and aaid : "Well, jea pain away now ; I doean t care, you hurta yeaelf wuain ye do me." It was a rioh old widow who wondered that the handsome young man had fallen in lovo with her. "Yea it ia wonderful," aaid Mr. Sprnceup, "but I do love you to diatraotiou. Why, I even love the ground you walk on." "I thought ao," observed the widow, "but I am not in want of a landlord at present." A GENTLEMAN who had the misfortune to loae his noae waa followed by a beggar, who kept exclaiming, "Heaven preserve your honor'a eyeaight! The gentleman waa at laat irritated by hia importunity, and aaid: "Why do you wish my eyeaight to lie proaerved Nothing ails my eyeaight, nor ia likely to." "No, your honor," aaid the beggar, "but it will be a aad thing if it doea, for you will have nothing to rest, your spectacles upon." A late commander-in-chief at l'ortainouth alwaya expressed a higher opinion of the intel ligence of the Japaneae. Tho ground on which he rested hia opinion ia supposed to be aa fol low! : Some yoare ago, arrayed in all the pomp of full uniform, ho waa ahowing tho firat Japan eae Embassy round the dockyard, and finally came to the chapel, whioh ia not an impoaing ediHoe. When its nae waa explained to the intelligent foreigner!, they held up their handa in wonder, "la tt possible, oh, bravo Admiral," aaid they, "that auch a great man aa you can aay your prayers in a little plaoe like thia ?" The Admiral always spoke of them afterwards as '1.1- t r...j aa. a reniarKaoiv eenaiDio aet 01 men. .owo r.j nminer. A flom, I iff eTI. . . ., , , good deeds, the good memories of these who nave MM the salt and tho huht of the earth tie not periah with their depart ut o thev live on still; and those who have wrought them live in thorn. Tho weary traveler in tho south of Spain, who, after passing manv an arid nlaiu and many a bare hill, Hilda himaulf at nightfall unuer uie mgiiia 01 (iranada, will hoar, splash ing and rippling under tho ahado of epreading trees, ami alongaiile of the dusty road, the f grateful murmur of running watera, uf stream ota whoso sweet music mingles with his dreams IW nil Bleeps, .mil meets Ills oar as the lust . ca- , i , .... 1..11 ... 1 . 1 .i . . ... 111,11111 i" 11111 Aim nMnoiing wiwam vie' miiwr; What ia it? It ia the aound of tho irrigating rivulota called into existence by tho Moorish occupants el tiruiiaila live centuries ago, which, amidst all the changes of race and religion, have never ceased to How, Their empire haa fallen, their creed has barn suppressed by tiro and sword, their nation haa lieen driven from the ehorea of .Spain, and their wlaces rumble into ruin; hut this traeo ol their Ihiio. limit civilization still continues, and in this continuity that which was good ami wise ami generous in that gifted but unhappy race, still Uvea on to cheer aim to re I rush their enemies and their conqueror. Kven so it ia with the The Ice Briikie at Niagara. Niagara river below the falls ia spanned by a bridge of ice one mile long and 60 feet wide. The river haa been spanned in thia way before, but aeldom, if ever, so aarlv aa now. The other day the ice "iaminnd" lieneath the miner euiueiisiiiii budge Haya the Buffalo Vourirr: A vaat quantity ol water bwl accumulated behind the ice and made a desperate effort to get free. The enonnoua body of anow and ioe waa raised up by the water and tossed about in all directions. Urge blocka. weighing hundreds of tona were lifted into the air. Bouldera were torn from the ahore .! ;..!., ,1... itMim ml a solitarv lir tree, which ordinarily atanda three feet above high water, waa earned away. The ponderoua atrangth of the enraged watera waa ao apparent that it teemed aa if they would rend the great gorge in twain, and in that way eacape from their imprisonment. Aa they could not break the in ile. wide dam in two. thev lifted it Isslily into the air and rnabad away beneath it, leaving a a pan of ioa above and behind them, in formation of the ioa in thia bridge ia not th am. . ... Wk M f the river. On the A men ran i.le it ia chiefly comDoaed of anow formed into rounded boulder shapes, and looka like white ooral. Aa one approaches me center 01 the river the ice frsKincnt become larger, am near the Canadian ahore huge cakea of water ice , a -,.li. I mm. In some olacea there are crevicee 25 or 30 feet in depth, but water ia not aeon through them. A FAtt.IttAimxu Ktfio. It ia aaid there ia certain point oo a ridge high up on Kearsargr mountain where can be heard the ramble of ,,.,. ,, ik. Senihern Pacific railroad aa they croas the ran ire to the weat of Mohave, 140 railee distant There ia a regular daily train .t in.wi nVluck. and UDoo reaching the plaoe at thia boor the noiaa ol tba train is heard Uur illust ration ia that of a brilliant, popular and hardy annual, with large aalvar-ahaied tliiwera; purple, crimson, yellow, while, striped, everything in the way o( colors except black. Perfectly hanly, and delights in a warm situs tiun and sandy soil. There are few low-growing planta that can lie coniared to thia for bril liancy of color and abundance id hluasoius. It ia excellent for a hod on the lawn, whioh sow the aeed at once in open ground, lieing per feetly hanly. Tho Hieinua, which makua a part ejl our dim trationa, ia simplv another and the botanical name for that well known plant producing the castor oil beau; an. I I bough often times grow II by tho acre fur the pi eduction o' oil, it la, never theless, a plant uf very ornamental foliage and showy fruit; it is stately ill growth amfquiln tropical in apHaraiie, which make it an at tractive feature of the lawn, iartioularly when grown singly, .lames Viek, the celebrated iioohoatsr lloriet, roiTDUOaV good deeds of those who have gone before Ms. Whatever there haa lieen ol grateful eoiisuier lion, of kimllv lioaiiiUlitv. of lei r-a. lung gen eroaity, of gracioua charity, ol high numb d ju tioe, of unaeltiah devotion, of saintly devotion theae atill feed the atream of moral fertilisation whioh will run on when their place knows M no more, when even their names have perished." Mia StttnUy. A MaiiIC Calt-Mr. Blackluirn, of 14 Vic toria I lead, Kensington, haa invented a remark able vehicle, which require no horse to draw It The body ia in the form of a dog oart, and the arrangement of wheela like a tnoycl. Mie motive power, concealed in the body of the vehicle, ia obtained by the comliustion of lien inline, a email jet of whioh ia admitted into a burner about the aiae of an ordinary chimney pot hat The steam paaeee into the cylinders f a small torpedo eagine, which rotate a liori aontal abaft There la no steam given off, for it i. i and mmm mi a Im Hi Mnm boiler. The weight of the tteem power la about 180 Dsl On lighting the lwnaofin tba ateam require no attention frm the driver during a ride of many boors. Tba driver, by applying hia foot to a pedal, can regulate the awswl and .-..r ,.f .Irak It travels at the ret of alxnil eight mile an boor, and is eaaxly directed m iu IlKINDH. k.n.loaas nil 1 possession of these illuatratioiia, swaks of th lliclnus aa an orna mental leaved plant, which (or out door dooor stioii for ordinal) use Is iiloplslled diva Vn;a i.iii a Ciiaki a If one has uever taught her little daughter to dree her n dolls, as well as to make qiiilto, heeta. pillows ami shams, she can have but little idea of the benelit ol such instruollim. little girl. I mie to have their dolls dreaaasl neatly aa wall as faahmnably, and if they are shown how to make tie- garments, and tarnished with suitable material, they will do it themselves at an early age. I knew a little girl Whooiien astonished her mother with a new, stylish Hal lor her Uoii, which she hail made from scrape hr mother had given lo r. In tins way aha iaaraed to lit and make the wardrobe for her ddl, awl wlwu her doll waa I an I by aba began making her own . lotlirs, ao that at the age of four year eh mM make heraelf a suit throughout. When I aa mothers eit Bp half the night to dreea doll, for their little girls, I eaaaot bat thins, what a pity mothers will not U wise and teach lliMi to do It thaineelree! Tbeehlldrea wuold really enjoy it better, aa It makes their lulls fingers skillful, and they feat seek aa later set la hav ing each doll look aa neat a thuaw owned by their playmate. I know thia te be the eaae. Will not aome oo try it ami report for th hniH of otlwr mother and daughter? Hurut Snt Xorktt. MM