No. 4709.--August 7, 1878.]

looked Ordinanco 6 of 1863, which pro- vides that five per cent of the value of eny property ele in a chair brali to paze to the coolie taking it to the Police Station, and ten per cent in the event of the property being gold by the authorities through the owner not coming forward to claim it. It is true it does not appear from the report what was done with the watch after it passed into the hands of the hotel pipprietor, who may have handed it directly over to the owner, in which case, as the watch would not be handled by the police at all, the clause providing for the paymont of the five per contain of its valus, to the coolie, would not, perhaps, apply. If the watch wore aled handed directly over to the owner it is possible that this individual also rewarded the coplie, and that Mr Creagh's $2 was merely a sort official acknowledgment of the man's honesty. Still Me Creagh, instead of drawing upon his private purse for the reward, might have promised a recon- mendation that the men should be pre sented with a free license for life. In stances of honesty of this nature are so rare among the Chinese that we hope the advisability of further rewarding this man, in the way indicated, will be yet considered. A free license for life would be a substantial reward. Some readers

may not be aware that an ordinary chair license, to enable a coolie to ply for hire from five o'clock in the morning until eight o'clock at night, costs annually fifty cents, while a special license, to enable a cheirosolie to ply for hire from the same hour in the morning until 12 o'clock at night, costs a dollar. Each bearer has also to pay a fee of ten cente, We append the clause of the Ordinance to which we have referred

LOCAL AND GENERAL.

somax state that

It

forty inches of rain fell in Bombay during the fourteen days preceding Brd Jaly. rained incessantly for a week, and the largest rainfall over registered was then

noted.

THE pleasurable performance of the Band in the Public Gardens last night was most summarily stopped by a downpour of rain,

sent, especially the ladies. Umbrellas and covered chairs wore at a premium, and the stampede was genorul.

CORRESPONDENCE.

CHINA MAIL.

R-GOVERNMENT CENTRAL

SCHOOL

To the Editor of the "CHINA MAIL."

August 6th, 1878. Bin-As I take not a little interest in

THE LIGHTNING.ROD. (Telegraphia Journal F

Dr. Mann gives the following summary of the conclusions he has arrived at with reference to the construction of lightning reda

21

a

matters Educational in the Colous, I was

1. The copper rope, or rod, employed as rather astonished to see a new set of regula- the main stem of a lightning conductor, tions for admission to the Central School.should in no case have a diameter of less The thought occurred to me, What has to that four-tenths of an inch.

2. A rope or red of four-tenths of an inch be done with the boys who were promised admission to the school as vacancies occurred, ia diameter is not large enough for the of buildings that are more than after they had passed the examination (Protect high. The resistance offered by to the no small inconvenience of those pre-school. On rerence to a file of the Chisia conductor of any given diameter increases liminary required for entrance to the

fail, 1st March 1878, I find the following with its length. Long conductors, there- "The raison d'etre of the Government Contraltors, require to be of Inzger size than short School seems to be generally acknowledged ones.

3. For every additional 80 ft. of boight, amongst some if, not all classes of the com- munity. The School was opened to-day, or of extent, a second rope, er rod, of the when no less than 218 boys applied for name transverse dimensions must be added, We are informed that, in consequence of admission. Only 35 of these could be ad- of the sectional area of the single rod must the transfer of one of the Baster Yerus- mitted, and the remaining 183 had to be seit be increased in a similar degree,

want of room. In fact the raison} 4. It is of no practical importance whe- qular Girls' Schools to the London Mission away for he new and enlarged school would ther the conductor possess the form of bere, the Bor. A. E. Hutchinson has re-to-day have been sufficiently justified, had rape of twisted wire, or of a rod, provided signed the office of Manager of those schools the new building been ready for occupation. it be of sufficient dimensions for the work which he has held for the past five years, Now, Sir, as very few of the 183 boys sent which it has to perform.

away on the 1st March can have during the If a cylinder, or pipe, is used instead and that the Baxter Memorial School, Tai- last five months gained admission to the of a rope, or rod, it must be considered as ping-alian, has simultaneously passed into sobool, have these boys, who

now furnishing the same conducting capacity the hands of the Church Missionary Society living under a promise of admission to the that it would have if slit up along one side, school, to be gain subjected to another and opened out into the form of a flat band of which the Rev. gentleman is the agent examination before the promine given by coudactor instead of copper, but it must 6. Galvanised iron may be used as a in this place.

have considerably larger size, because iron is of inferior conducting capacity to copper. increased giza can quite compensate for inferior transmitting capacity.

THE following items are from the Straits Times :-

Londor, July 27-An Official denial is given to the statement, that Farliament will be dissolved in the Autumni...

The Hon. Mr Douglas, Q.M.G., will leave here (Singapore) for Ceylon on 31st August. No information as to who his successor will bo bas yet been received.

The Colonial ateamer Pluto, which was despatched to the assistance of the British ship John O'Gaunt, which got ashore on the Horsburg Reef on Friday morning last, returned on Saturday and reported that the John O'Gaunt succeeded in getting afloat without assistance and before the arrival of the Pluto, and proceeded on her voyage to Manila.

Mr Stewart is fulfilled?

are

Again, how many of the Chinese will be able to see the notice published in the Government Gazette last Saturday, stating that applications for admission must be sent to the Aoting Inspector of Schools, “on or before the 12th August, after which date no application can be entertained for the present year"

I do not consider the new regulations published in the Government Gazette of Saturday quite fair to the 183 boys sent away who may not be within reach of such papers as I have. referred to, but who will present themselves when the school mests after the vacation, only to be told that Mr Stewart had gone to England, and that the old state of things bad passed away, and that the regulations in existence were all new.

Your Co.,

a

7. An iron rope, or rod, to be equally efficient, must be rather more than double the width of a copper rope or run exact figures the proportional diaretera soaded is as 67 to 3.5. The conducting capacity of iron is five and a-half times less than that of copper, or, in more exact figures, as 14 to 77.

8 A galvanised iron rope conductor should, in no circumstance, be less than eight-tenths of an inch in diameter.

never be omitted when the conductor ter- minates in a dry soil.

Miscellaneous.

I sot me down in thought profound,

This maxim wise I draw:

26. The danger of a lateral discharge

Its capacity. A large well pointed and

Than musik a gal love you. —Josh Billings. well-grounded conductor will convey a very powerful discharge to the earth without the A KITTEN-A boy at school, on being lightest tendency to strike through any asked to describe a kitten, made the follow- object external to the road. A small and ing graphit statement: "A kitten is chiefly imperfectly appointed conductor, on the remarkable for rushing like mad at nothing hand, is always prone, during the trans- whatever, and generally stopping before it mission of lightning, to flash off some por gets there! That boy got a prize that tion to surrounding objects.

half.-Judy.

27. The capacity of a conductor may practically be increased in three ways to ensure thin cfbviency and thiety. By the employment of larger ropes or reds; 2 By a more abundant service of points; and 8. By amplification and improvement of the

earth contact.

I

"BERKELEY, Sept. 1869.-Gentlemen, I feel it a duty I owe to you to express my gratitude for the great benefit I have de rived by taking Norton's Camomile Pills. for the above-named Pills, for wind in the applied to your-agent Mr Bell, Barkeley, 28. The proof that a conductor has been stomach, from which I suffered exorucia made capacious enough by the judicions ting pain for a length of time, having tried employment of these means, ir furnished nearly overy remedy prescribed, but with. by the magnetic needle of a galvanometer out deriving any benefit at all. after not being materially deflected when a taking two bottles of your valuable Pulls, I galvanic current is passed through the was quite restored to my usual state of conductor to the earth.

hoalth. Please give this publicity for the

29. All large masses of metal contained benefit of those who may thus be afflicted. in a bailing should be metallically con-1 am, Sir, yours truly, HENRY ALLPASS, nected with the lightning-rod, unless when To the Proprietors of "NORTON'S. CAMO, such are liable to be occupied by living MILE PILLS."-1f88ep78. people during a thunderstorms, as in the case of an iron balcony fixed outside a wall in front of a casement; it is then better

that such masses should not be connected. circumstances, persons standing upon them with the conductor, because, under such would be in less danger of being struck. When they are connected with the con ductor there is always some risk of persons standing upon them furnishing a path for the lightning to the conductor.

30. The best method of connecting masses of metal with a conductor is by closed circuit. That in a connecting metallic band should proceed to them from two different parts of the conductor.

31. Soft metal gas-pipes must never bo allowed to run anywhere near to a lightning

conductor, because there is always dangor when they are so placed of some part of the discharge deviating from its proper route to 9. When a strip, or tape, of copper, is avail itself of the good carth-contact furnish used in place of a rope, or rod, it shoulded by the expanded msins of the gas be in no casa lens than three quarters of an supply, and in doing so of melting the inch broad, and one-eighth of an inch thick. small fusible gas-pipe and setting fire to Suoh a strip contains a sectional area of ʼn | the gas. tenth of a square inch,

All Property, left in any Vehicle or Chair shall be taken forthwith to the Central Folice Station and banded over to the Police Authorities who shall cause the Goods to be publicly advertised in the usund Manner, and, if claimed the same shall be handed over to the Owner claiming it subject to a deduction of Five per Centum on the Value to be given to the Driver or Bearer bringing the same to the Police to be ascertained in case of difference on Dewakan Island, Straits of Macassar, March 1st have since been admitted into the strip would contain a trifle more than hal i

Captain G. F. Graham of the S. S. Eastern Isles reports that the British barque Rhoda of 245 tons, laden with horses and bound from Macassar to Singapore, was wrecked

The Crew and cargo were all saved, and the wreck has been sold by. publio auction. Captain Vincent of the Rhoda shipped the horses on board for Singapors in the Siamuan brig Wanderer.

:

AN OLD BOY. [We are informed on good authority that nearly the whole of the 183 boys rejected on

10. Galvanised iron, when used in the form of a strip, should be four inches wide, and an eighth off an iuab thick. Such a a square inch of sectional area.

11. A lightning-rod must be absolutely School, and that the building is now so crowded in school hours that satisfactoryanbroken, or of continuous length from

end to end. tuition and perfect discipline are almost 12. When metallio water-pipes, or other similar stretches of metal forming part of impossible.-En C. M.]

the structure, of an adilice, are made to do service as lightning conductors, all joints must be carefully made good by salder, and tosted afterwards to ascertain the sufficiency of their conducting capacity. Without this precaution, the. arrangement is able be a source of danger, lustend of a meant of 18. It is quite unimportant how a light

China.

BHANGHAL (News.)

by the Captain Superintendent of Police, and if the same shall be unclaimed at the Expiration of Three Months from the Date of the Loss the Captain Superintendent shall Bs soon thereafter as conveniently may be, cause the said Goods respectively to be sold in such Manner as he shall think best, and THE Friend of India gives the following the Captain Superintendent shall deduct out paragraph --We learn from Ceylon that of the Proceeds of each Sale a Sum equival- the catechist of the C. M. S. who accused ent to Ten per Gentum on the Proceeds of the ritualistic Mr Duthy of idolatry, has the Sale of such troods, and shall pay the bean ordered by the Bishop to make an Amount to the Driver or Bearer who shall apology, but refuses complianco, as he is have brought the said Gouds, and subject not convinced that Mr-Duthy is not guilty thereto the said Proceeds shall be paid mitu of idolatry in prostrating himself before a the Publio Treasury; and in Caso any mutorial cross, and in bowing to the sacre- Driver or Bearer shall omit from any Canse mental elements. "Is it come to this," Messageries Maritimes at this port, and Ding-rod is attached to a building. It does whatever to comply with the Regulation asks a local paper, "that the missionaries contained in this Section he shall be subject of the Gospel Propagation Society are to a Fine of not exceeding Fifty are and themselves charged with idolatry by Cey the Value of the Article retained, and to alon natives? Christian England, horo is a Revocation of his License for a Period not picture. You send missionaries to convert exceeding Two Years over and besides any natives from idolatry, but your mission Punishment for Larceny or other Crime of aries themselves are told to the face of which he may be convicted.

their bishops that they themselves are idolatrous.”

Police Intelligence. (Before C. V. Creagh, Esq.) August 7, 1878.

CAPERS,

Wong Aloi, a coolie, was sent to 4 noutbs hard labour fee stealing a bottle of capers, the property of Messrs Davis & Co., from their godowns. Several bottles have been missed lately in a mysterious manner,

ASSAULTING & COOLIE,

Mr E. C. Barradas, writer A. M,'s Naval

92 Zinc. or iron pipes on the tops of chimneys are always to be regarded as masses of metal that are to be brought into connection with the conductor.

33. Lofty chimney shafts may always be satisfactorily protected by a single con- duster. Care must, however, he tallen that the size of the conductor is adequate for the height, and the top of the shaft must be entirely encompassed by a bar or parapot edge of metal, and points must radiate from it on all sides into the air;

34. In the case of manufactories whers corrosive vapours are omitted from the chimneys, copper or iron terminals should be soldered into leaden tubes, and a sub ordinate service of points should be added at some lower level, where they would not be liable to be affected by the corrosive

vapoure.

CAPTAIN WEBD ON SWIMMING.,

Quotations. Horezone, August 7, 1878, OPIUM.-New Patua, cash....$5924 a 595

aredity -

Old Patna, cash,... None

credit,

New Benares, cash, 585 a 567)

Old Benares, cash, Nene

credit,

11

credit

13

New Malwa, caah, 790

credit, 798

Allowance Teels, 6 a Old Malwa, caah,

Allowance

Taela,

Bank, on demand, ...... 30 days' sight,

23

11

aredit,-

6 months' sight,............... Credits, Documentary, Smonths' aight,.. 8/10 Bombay, domand Rupees, Caleutta, Shanghai, demand,

Exchange.

*.8/0

9/09 5/10 3/101

... 224 ...234 724

... 100A

www

444

P.6. pm.

KEN

* 26.60

#

Ca *** ***

144

30 days t Bar Silvor, 17, dwts, B., Sycee, ... ̈**** Mexicans, ... Gold Leaf, English Sovereigns, Australlan Sovereigns, Discount,

***

SST

5.28

... 8 to 9%

Shares. Rongkong Bank, 84 % prem, Union Ins. Boolety of Canton, $1,860 China Traders' lus. Oo., $1,425 sure, regret to hear of the demise of M.safety.

The community generally will, we feel

Yangtare Tas. Assor,, Tls, 675 Obfueas Insurance Co., $210 A. Hennequin, agont of the Compagnie des

North China Ins. Co., Tis, 1,050 S.K. Fire Ins. Co., $900 China Fire Ins. Co., 1250 Vice-President of the French Municipal not need insulating fastenings; ordinaty

H.K. &W, Dook Co., $17 % prem. Council. The lamented gentleman had, wetal clamps of any kind may be quite

The following latter has been published .K, 0, M, 3.-boat Co., $6% prem. and his end was not altogether unexpected.good conducting capacity, and otherwise in the London page of Lords on tests for Shanghai Steam Navigation, Tin, 21 we understand, been ailing for some days, safety employed, provided the rod be of

debate in the Hons Hongkong Gas Ca, 90 The flags at the French Consulate-General ficient.

14. The rod raust be terminated above in athletics for candidates for comunistions in Hongkong Hotel. Co., $58 and on board the M.. and P. and O, maik steamships in harbour, wore lowered to metal points, well projected up into the air. the army, see that swimming is mention- Chian Sugar Refining Co., $43 % prent.

15. The terminal points may be made as one branch of athletica doomed adrio Ohinese Imperial Loan. £103.10. half-mast, and we understand the French either of copper, or iron, but they must be able for caulets to learn. I have been fu- public offices will be closed to-day, Aug. tapered out very gradually, and be perfectly formed through Colonel Hammersley that Brd) out of respect to his memory.

sharp. An alloy composed of 835 parts of the test would be to swim a certain distanco Further subseriptions (gives in Dastoritver, and 105 parts of copper, forms an in a given time, I would, however, onll column) have been received in aid the excellent material for tipping the points, public attention to the fact that swimming (Taken at Messrs Falconer Co's Premier China Famine Relief Fund. They include because it combled these to preserve, for a should be regarded from one main point,

Queen's Road.) the 23rd and 24th telegraphic remittances long time, their sharpness under the cir- viz., as a means of eaving human life; from froin London of Tls. 6,000 each; a remit- camatance of exposure to moist air. The this all-important point of view would

Horexone, August 7, 1878. tance from Melbourne of Tls. 4,482.49 ; | silver tips should be made about two inches suggest that the beat swimmer is not neces Tis. 515.05 from New York, and severn! long, and be firmly screwed into the terarily the one who can swim the fastest for BARBONETRE smaller sums, amounting altogether to Tis.mination of the conductor. 17,176.92, and bringing up the total to date to Ths. 169,218.60, of which a balance of Tle. 20,813.45 remains in the hands of the

treasurer.

(Courier.)

The sailing vessel Harlowe from Sydney, Now South Wales, with about 1200 tons of coal, has just been lost near Woosung. A foreign pilot boarded her on Wednesday morning (July 1st) near the light-ship, and all went well for some time, when a strong

In looking over this Ordinance we observe several clauses, which, it seems to us, have been altogether lost sight of by the police authoritics here, although both the comfort and the safety of residents would be much increased by their enforce- ment. We refer specially to paragraph 14 of section 12 of the Ordinance, enacting a penalty not exceeding ten dollara against every evolle "found silay or bying in a public vehicle or chair." This practice as very common in the Colony, and seems lately to be increasing. Not content with merely sitting in the chairs, the coolies absolutely sleep in them Yard, was summoned at the instance of one in broad daylight in the open streets, their Lai Ali, a chair coolla employed by Mr savoury heads resting sangly against the Randell, for an assault. back where a "fare's" cranium will be Lie Ali, a chair coolie employed as above shortly seeking repose, and their, in some stated, deposed that between 7 and 8 cases, filthy bodies, lege, and arms literally o'clock he was sent by his master to get "spread" over the chairs. If a chair bowo bottles of liquor from the Police breeze suddenly sprang up and before the Cantsen, He was carrying the liquor vessel could be anchored she was drivon on closed it commonly owns its objectionable home in chair, another coolio was into the Tung'-aba bank. The galo continu- sickly smell mainly to these disgusting front of the chair, and as they were ing, and the ship being in a very dangerous habits. These things take place right passing through the Holywood Road the condition, the captain determined to leave under the noses of the police.

defendant and three other Portuguese came hor, and he and the pilot and eleven of the Then again, it does not seem to be up behind and poked witness in the back crew got into one of the boats. The re generally known, in the police force at with his walking stick. Witness asked him meindor of the orew, about eleven in all events, that any coolie, who, when why he did it, and he then struck witness number, got into three other beats bolong unemployed, allows his chair to remain five or six times on the arm with his sticking to the ship. One of the crew had been Witness dropped the chair and ran to the drowned. The Captain's boat was ultimately in any other place thair at one of the Central Station and made a report. picked up by a pilot boat and the occupants appointed stands, is also able to a fine The other coelie gave corroborative were brought to Shanghai to-day. Nothing of ten dollars. Very seldom indeed have evidence.

has been heard of the other bosts, and H. we seen this provision enforced, although- inspector Matheson proted taking the M. S. Hornet has gone in search of them. it is daily and systematically set at charge and having seen the marks on com- The Harlowe is a total wreck, even her

masts having disappeared. defiance in nearly every part of the plainant's arm.

Defendant stated that he was on his way Colony. In conclusion, we may be to the Chinese Theatre, and the defendants aiding somewhat in the preservation of who wore carrying a chair obstructed the peace and good order in this Colony by road; defendant caught hold of the pole and indicating a few other offences which are pushed it on one side when complainant punishable under this Ordinance by a nade use of very filthy language. Defend fize of $10-

ant then beat him.-Fined $1.50.

Concealing from, or preventing any person taking, the number of himself or

of his chair.

Using any chair without having a copy of the list of fares properly affixed in hus ohair, or not carrying a lamp socording to the regulation,

Carelemly carrying any chair to the danger of any person or property what

SODYUTŲ

-

Using any insulting language, or being guilty of any rude behaviour whilst employed.

*

Refusing when unemployed to accept hire, without reasonable cause for so doing

Demanding more than his anthorised

faror

Not travelling with reasonable expedi

J

STEALING BEEF,

Wan Azan, a dopis, was charged with Asealing about Blbs of beef, part of the ration intended for the men of the 74th Regiment. He denied the charge, but was sunt to 10 weeks' hard labour.

LARCENY,

THE PRAÇAN ON BOARD THE "ARABIA.”-

should be branched out into several points. 16. The air-terminal of the conductor

Multiple points or aigrottes, as they are termed of this kind, are now made in copper, of very good form, by all the beat electrical engineers.

17. The larger the building that has to be protected, the more points, or clusters of points, should be used. In the case of buildings of any considerable extent the conductor itself must be branched out to all parts, and each branch mest end in its owe projecting tuft of points.

18. Terminal points should project into the air, at least eight feet beyond the building itself.

mind that lightning conductors approxi- 19. The gonoral idea may be kept in mately protect a conical space around them, whood base is four times as wide as the conductor is high. This principle, however, is not an infallible one, and it must not, therefore, be too implicitly relied upon Whenever any parts of a building approach towards the limiting surface of such a conical space, additional points should be fixed there, and be brought into connection 20. The bottom of the conductor must be with the general system of the conductor, sarried down into the earth, and be connect. ad with it by a surface-contact of large extent. "MOES THAN Two."-Frankis (to annis,

21. About the best earth-terminal that who in eating a sponge cake) Annie, letan be contrised, consists in connecting the me be your baby, and you feed me." end of the conductor with the fron main of Aunle: "Oh, no, Frankie, you cannot be a gas-nervios, or water-service. The end of my baby) my baby must be in long clothes the conductor should be attached to a broad une wol can't cat no sponge cake," piece of copper or iron, and this should be Fruth.

laid close along the metal surface of the main underground, or, where practicable, be eren attached to it by some kind of

older.

22. Where there is not the opportunity

Do.

of 1877, £107. Temperature.

9 A.M....

80,074

Do.

1 P.M....

30.060

Do.

4 P.M.....

80,034

181

Do,

1 P.M....

84

Do.

4 P.M....

84

Do. (Wet bulb) 9 AM. Do.

77

Do.

Do. 1 P.M. Do. 4F.M.

78

78

Do, Maximum

84

Do. Minimum over night

a short distance, but the one who can keep Eurydice was one of the many cases that THERMOMETER--94.M,-** afloat the longost. The late wreck of the

confirm this view. In case of shipwreck the man who finds himself struggling with the waves has to thlak. not so much of reaching aliore (too often an absolute impossibility), but of keeping afloat with the chance of being picked up by some passing vessol. The swimming season is Dow commencing, and with a view of show- ing how long a healthy man can keep afloat have determined to attempt a thirty-six hours' swim in the sea, on the same condi tions under which I wear the Channel, viz., not to wear any artificial dress, and uot to touch any boat, &re Should I may arise, inasmuch as the fact that a man succeed in my attempt, I believe some good who had swaw for such a longth of time might encourage others who may one day When he dependent for their lives on their ability to keep up in the water. I am, yours faith- Nov. fully, MATTHEW WEDD.-2 Church Terrace, 3, Elizabeth Shields, Hamburg Queen's Road, Wandsworth Road.

JINGLES.

Who can tell what a baby thinks ?4 When it wakes from its forty winks, And rubs its face into numerous kinks, And stares at the light that comes in at the

chinks

Of its rockaby nost, and gapes and blinks, Who can tell what a baby thinks? who has courage to ventura a gnozs As to what the baby may think of its dress, Trimmed and ruffled to such excess? Or what the baby may think of the mess Fer headache, and toothache, aut stomach dis

tress, And for all its ailings, more or less

?

What does it think when it waktes at night, With all the pretty links out of sight?

"Eziza," said 'n olargyman to one of his parishioner, whom he saw with her hair in curling papers, if uod had designed your hair to curl Be would have surled it for. you." He did, Sir, when I was a child," for adopting this expedient, the lower end with mebody stirring and making a light was the reply" but He thinks now I am of the conductor should be placed in a Does it think its condition is far from right,

shallow tranch, opened out 20 feet in the And that big folks are not at all polite, old enough to do it myself."

earth.

sent to 10 weeks hard labour for stealing Wong Awing, & cook aged 15 years,- WAN

AUTOMATIC HOUR-GLASS SIGNAL-Theist ground, and be buried along in it And treat their visitors far from right, $17, 2 rapeen, 2 gold rings, and 50 sents ingenious little signal egg-boiler, recently to the end, and he also well packed Found And that darkness is meant for a pozeonal slight?

with gar coke, broken into small pieces, that the reason it takes delight from the box of a seaman on board the S.S.invented by J. A. de Masedo, of Headingly, before the french in covered up with earth. In sweeming with all its personal might, Danube.

near Leeds, appears to be capable of many 23. Plates of copper, or irop, may be And reasing the neighbours at dead of night? other applications where certain work has to used as corta-terminals, if this be preferred. And what do you think that the baby thinks? be performed at the end of a given time. The plate should not then, however, in any Looking about like a mild-eyed lynx, The sand-glass is charged with sand in the Henry Antoine, steward British ship usual way, and is tized to a frame, and case, furnish less than two square yards of Watching the epcon that studies and olinke, Arabia, surrendered to his hail this after. noon on a charge of shooting and wounding hung in such a way that when the full bulbarth donart, reckoning both sides, and it Whale paps is warming its estyip drinke is turned upward is rests against a stop; must be carefully rivetted and coldered to Over a candle that glimmers and blinks, one of the crow whilst the ship was at bes.

and is thus held at such an eagle that tho the conductor, and be surrounded with Hamming and dramming out Capt'n Jinks," Mr. Andreas Maller was sworn in es

What do you think that the baby thinks interpreter in French and Italian. Johan centre of gravity of the glass is above its broken boke, before it is, buried up in the That the children akats ta, aot et the rinks

centre of oscillation; but when suficient Dentach, Antonio Balerino, and Sporent and has run through, the frame carrying 24. When the earth is unavoidably dry, | Did you cay that babies are thinkiess things, gare evidence. The evidence of the latter the sand-glass overbalances, and becomes the earth-contacts of the conductor must be with no other light than what instinct brings, two tended rether to shew that they were. On the other band "any person who, the aggrieved parties, They said that acted. By this movements hammer made proportionally farge. Abundant size With brains as downy as batterilios winge,

Over and under, and rings and sings, having engaged a chair, shell refuse or knife was never drawn until they were set attached to the frame is made to strike's may be so managed as to compensate for And heads as empty as a bell that swings

When muscular motion is moving the stringe? neglect to pay the fare for the same by a number of the crew. Spoventa bell, and the glass remaining in the altered the disadvantage of dryness.

25. With dry earth-contacts, lightning said that he himself never drew a knife, position the sand rung beak into the first forthwith upon the termination of the bus admitted that the Frenchman did bulb ready for use again. There would rods may be a source of danger instead of Did you say that babies are thinidioes things? hiring, or in case any person shall wille (Sporenta) had the winch handle in his appear to be many prodesses, especially in safety, if this precaution be not observed. Then when doce the thing begin to grow ? fully jure or damage any public chair, hand, All of the crew had something in connection with obenical manipulation, in The only means by which it can be ascer. And when does the mind begin to stuw?

which so ready a means automatically soting tained whether a dry earth.contact has And when does the baby begin to know of best, illtreat, or ase abusive language their hands.

upon suitable apparatus at a dsed time been made large enough in the employment That this is true, or that is so towards the bearer, shall be liable to a The case was still proceeding whan we would be of great falu diining Journal of the salvapomelon. This long should say, when you find out, plerad los gas firework prosity not Excceding Afty dollars.

tion

Leaving his fare before the engagement shall have been completed.

went to preet:

{

Shipping Intelligenes.

The following is corrected from the latest, London and Colonial Papers, do;---

· VESSELS TO ARRIVE

left.

Nams,

·AT HONGKONG.

From

Deo,

1, Glengaber,

Flushing

25. G. B. S.,

Jari.

Liverpool

27, Earl of Devon,

Antwerp

Mar. 25, Oracle,

Liverpool

80, Bristollan (5.), Apr.

Antwerp

Cardiff

Hamburg

Antwerp

Penarth

Cardif

Liverpool

London

Liverpool Penarth

Cardiff Cardiff

6, Maritime Union, 11, Hamburg, 15, Lizzie Parry, 16, Invincible,

22, India, 28, Roaie Welt, May

1, Ada Melmore,

3, Melrose,

2, Cosmo,

5. Imperatrice Elisabetta, Liverpool

5, Strathearn,

6, Challenge,

6, Southern Crosi, Penarth V, Napier,

12, Doa Quixota,

14, Verona,

17, Lord Miscaulsy,

18, Niagara, 26, Banian, Juna

1, Marina,

14 Emily Chaplis, 20, Commissary, 20, Ajax (6.), 26, Galates (a),

Oardif

Penarth

New York Hamburg

London

Ouzbaven

Landoa

Cardin

Fanarth

Liverpool

Hamburg

LOADING FOR KHÌNA AND ́JAPAN PORIS,

- At London, -Steamore via Bucs Onnak, Strethmore.

Commonwealth.

Melbrek Corsa-

Balling Vessels.

Sydenham

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