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Lucknow Sentinel, 1888-12-28, Page 344.44, •.. vs, Axr ' A little coknek 14,1114.10 brigs A little mug, a 13p0011,bi A little tooth se pearly white, A little rnbbef rhig to bite. • Ittle plate all lettered. round, • ittle.rettle tor teeeend, • • A 11 ),sereep•ing- see she, stands1 A Attie etep• 1twiittoutstretched.lianda: . . • A. little doll: with flaxen hair, A little Vvtileiv, realise chair, A little dos e opricliest ode', ;4 lithe pair of goiters. hole. Alittie school day after day, A little seheolina'nm to Obey, • Andre study -soon 'tie poet • • Allttlegoidtutte at laet. A little muff foilwinter Weitthet,, A little jeokey.that, and feather, • A. little sack with:hinny pockets, • A little ehain,,it thig•,,andipeiMte, A little White to dance and howk • • Alittle .eecort hometv.ard new, Mitch!partY,:soinewhit late.'• A woe. 0i:reeking et the 'gate. • ". . , •• A little walk in, leafi June, • A little talk w.hile 'shines, the moon, A ifttie reference to•Papa... A little, planning: with mamma. little -ceremony grave, • . little etrusale tebe btave. . A little eottage.on.a laWn. A littlekies-,my giri wee gone.! ()ardent.' Why should we mourn o'er a sorrowful past, And crave for a,pettee that will come bt last Each life hath woes that are keen to bear- Ets pains and:its.heartaehea and its despair. It IS better to laugh than sighandgrieve; • TO eorrowin teem is not to live- . • '1' Frompain win gain and be Content l N" _ •Virlay should we fear in a halting place • To peer *beyond with an .eager face? Each life hath gloora and bewildering waste, • 1.4 Where !tufts grow fait and aro bitter to taste, '•It is better to • haste through a thorny way • • Than toindt in its Path to. wait svnew day-- . 'Mike fair each care and be content! Why 'Mould we, tailor tenet:. histrife . . ' 'T:wixtgood and the 111 that prevail in ide • , In reaching 'for.heights, noblest of bleat, 3 . Eacheoul of us has some•War with rest. . Crowned of uncrowned .at the end oldie 'Tis better to battle than floe in afrig140 • ,Better to lose thanto lament* ' li�bath enough who liath content! 74Vhen cherries grow on apple tree* And kittens wear lace ceps; • , • :When boys their pisters never tease . • • • • . And be r raithillatrwraps; enureeryldollaand tori. •' • ' Begin-todearce-and-play, • ' Then little -boys and littlegirla • May lls ia bed all day. • . , When donkeyilearn to sing and dance; When pigs talk politics; .When London ism toWnin Franco; When two and two n2alto six; Where drops' 01 ram real pearls; ' When coal is char and white; •,Thon litoo boys and little girls • May Pit uPlate at night, G. Ctiftan .730tgliatiee ,f‘ EInetirBalites., t • TOUCHJNG WORDS. • • , The linipresie Frederick on the Life and, ' Death Of Bier iiiuskand. • • The following • is;ts part ot the letter -Written by the '7 -Empress Frederick which is . published as an introduction to. -the• memorial volunse otter "disband, prepared by Rennell.Rodd , "As yen knew him in Sunni days when he was the picture Of life • and health, as well as in the last ead year when that life was overshadowed• by .isioltneas, I thought ' not* would be better able than you to, " • unaertakel-t-the:, task: 'efir -.Writing a short biography suitable for popular reading, Which may make • his ,neatie • better known to the English public, and give him o place • in their affeetions besiaitt that of my father, for whom he had so great a love, admire - tion and veneration, and with whose view& and ahns•he so truly sympathized. I feel • atirethat the life of a good and noble man must be interesting to all, and that On • exampleito_bright-ana-pore-can-onlYdo.- 44 Thefte in humbler Walks of life, who are • denied many of thebleeeingsenjoed by the , • rich, to -Whose lot fall, the ab.called good . things of the 'world, are • often aptto, imagine that their burden is the hardest to hear, hett.etteggleeand pain and teem are only for them. Therm, perhapo, Will think differently when they read of . sufferings , borne With such .patience,' and of duty so : isheerhilly :performed whilo siokneetwas undermining, the :strength of the 'strong man; they will be able to enter in some degree intothe depthe ,of regret and diratp. .pointinent felt by a rider who ',Area •his • people at 'being: nnoble to tairy.out the ' long -cherished plans for their Welfare that had Ze much at heart; they • Will gaze ith admiration at the coinage With which, when the shade!) of death' Were hangingover -his path, ho etrode atersdfstatly glong to the end. • 'Grief ,and pain ..conie alike' to -ell • forciken heirte are US be found in palaces as well as in cottages', and the bond of bre- therhood seems 'Strongest' When love and .pity unite all hearts, and • reverence' for • whit is good lifts up our settle. May this' •• ,little history of the geed anamiefal life of the Emperor Frederick appeal to the hearts those who read it, and , be As it were a ;greeting from him to his fellorrotifferere in the himpital,• to, wheel I so earnestly • •desire to do a email soviets, and to Which 'you have so kinclly premised. to &Vote your • ,pezi. Yours sincerely, Vittorize: • . • , • The Bonsai; Small Boy. • ' When,Chaplein IlleCabe was in Militias' taur erideaVoring to raise81,000,000 formiseione, a little. boy heard his appeal, and thinking' of the large WM) he had to raise, determined' to help him.. The first chance he -had early in' the week he gathered a basketful of chestnuts, whit% he tell& for 5 tents. He sent this to ,Mr.McCabe with . • the note: "11 you Want' any more let no Theltirer. ' ' • • Answer, Noah. Bright Boy -Mr. Withers, Was • °Very living' thing exoept Whet went into the ark drowned itithe flood? , • :, • • ' Mr. Withers -Yea ; everything. . Bright ,Boy -Fishes? *3et Juice and Beauty. sCertain young Women in Old HurleY, rise beet Pike to heighten the charms of their complexions: -Kingston (Aro Pree- Man. , A kingfisher 'attacked a black Wass neer. • Orlendei;Fla. The 'bird eank ita imbibe into thebese, Intending, to ,barry, the fiett off, but the -task was too great, and, as 'the bird could not free itself; the', bass found tichible hadrowning it, . . . • , Q1710031INIT-- TOPYOS: ' _ • ' onnoonoott.„ that there are ,,20,000 protemional oritainale in NeW York city. .lanOW dritts ale three feet deep in Metiree Cletutty„ Po., while we, in the .Niagara ,Peninetila, are enjoying Indian summer. - 'But our Yankee neighbors continue to label the Dominion "snow bound Canada." Tit Weat front • ht., Alban!!! .Cathedral tie specimed of eoelesiaital art -the England,. PreSente: 'what io said to be a unto head Of an angel with Whishere. Theangel bs the. counterfeitresentment ot the late Lord Grimthorpe • • • ." A Lenr has been appoioted, profeepor• of woodcarving. in. a WaStern, Collage., "Her ilret labors," Bar' some drolL:pereon. in the Baltimore Americo*, •• should ;.be to,teach the young, ladled how to sharpen a lead - pencil." • . Rocour S.tVIL, " inienter of the railroad ticket," heie just died iii•Eragland. In the early ' dap Of ,lltitiali railroading receipte, were given for travelling fame. then o, railroad en:4)103,0e at • Birminghosn, hit open the, ideaof the, tioket. . Turin) ilabrOnze group of a lion(*) and her cube in Fairmount Pork Philadelphia; that is an objeat of terror t� every horse driven near it, f30 realistic is the mailpter'0, ,work. Lost week ireatised six runaways, and the Park.'CeMolierrionems hove, there- fore, ordereclitememovak. , . • • Et.Eiteriess Euerixte's phyeiciens are endeavoring to induce, her to depart -from her present' mournftit existence and to mingle to erinie-extentin the world. Qtieen Victoria,and Princess •Beatrice eeekto- pro- vide sdestraction for her by giving musrisal soirees; the invitations to Which ehebonnot easily &Ohne Lotincia correspondent tells a ourione thhigabohttwo persona Who ploy. leading parte in the Parnelteommuieloothel. The 'chief. jedig;'' Sir Zanies Honnen, and thef chief defendant, Mi. Fermin', are bOthyir the* vegetarians.. i Mr. Parnell has to ovoid ineirt largely,: and his refreshment at hinOheOn 'UM° is a glaSe • Of hdrlemonade. Ir is too'apt to be the **me that . When. wellttodo folk' have Made .a. Christmas offering to Saint Charity their consciences are quieted for th'e rest of the, year:: Not -somith-goed-Reberma .1tobertrion,--Of-,•New' Jitthrwhile=agor•-•-lett*a- half7milliondollerra trs •ll -e7 used in giving peer Women and children. an :outing' when midsummer 'etinbeame heat -the. lionaetopa. ." Curer," the famous elephant now at Cincinnati, is as had as he is ' big:. Hebei) killed Keepers :Meg and Sullivan, and riew;'thrnigh he Weighs 10,000 Pounds and is Worth 81 a pound, be:hie:melt is to :be killed. • The Rebiniscins are said to have de - tided*, shook , him to death by an electric, 'current as qinek and istrongos a lightning 'stroke.' • • "How on I beeeme. a .kawd mechanic 'Weed and .001 says: "The watchword :Of advanee in, think. Think in all thins and• Phices_._ 11,enienaberthitone hour's earnest thought upon a subjed on,which you have beenreading is ' worth :ten- extra' lours Of reading nponit.. The Mechanic': Who will pereistently study .and think of his 1:spinals wilknot down: Ile. Will Certainty' cense to. the:front eVenthoughhe were confined in thezWalle of AprisOn:: •"•-• • 'Dn. LIVINGSrONE has :takenhold on the hersit_ot_the. world. more than ,-any 'other man in Modern tithed. . •Ile gave himself to Africa,' and by so doing he commanded the homage of the world. But be Was a Soots'. man of the: Sear), Ana the Stottieh people are natiirally, prond of him. Monuments have been raped:hi him hi different porta cif theisouptry; and a bust of the great miss,' :denary. is boon to he placed in the Viellisee Monument, ' Abbe* Crag,: near ,Stirling. : ' Ptorme talk,glibly_sibbritamilliOnbushels of wheat, 13nt very fiesta them realize what a'Vast: 'Moonlit that is. • •A wheat.' dealer °eye." that if a Million brothels were loaded on 'freight cats, 500 boaliele • to , es!, it would filLatrain over fifteen miles long: If transported by waggon, it would make o line of *mime 142 miles long. •If Made into bread'Ereokoiring a bushel to, 060' CO the. 'of flour, it woula „give each Man, woman and child in the United latoted and Canada' 2.1b. loaf Of broad." • • "VilEia! are in this city," -Aye 'the:New York Sun, " 'eight or ten colored physiitians Who 'enjoy a good •practice,,in their profes- sion, and it is. not confined to the colored race, for several of them have a profitable 'list ot white patientaiand at teed • one Of 'them is tt favorite with Wealthy . White families. ' Most of :them' are graduates : Of reguler mediae' 'sichoola, .and they find that their willing.White professional brethren 'are per. foctlyto hold ,consultertiOna with them in difficult cesee." ..• . ., • • . MRS. Amin SNELi.-MtCati, formerly of •Chicago, and daughter of ' the murdered millionaire, Snell, has taken 'herself to New York for this winter with her Maids and her children. / She eaya, that people have .no idea of the annoyance° to Which' she and her Mother haVe. been enbjected abide the tragedy. They have been beset by deters. tivers anxious to hunt dent' the isioraerer, and, have received no fewer than 300;000 begging letterafronralt pars of. the world. .VERSSTSSHAOiN, the 'Rnsian painter, when presented to the giristudonts of the Normal College in Nevi -York --the--other day; 'Said: "Young ladies, yon are indeed very'eharming, and, itt obedience to one of our Russian enetoine I , Would like to Bahia you all individually. But since I cannot I will kiss Profersior • rianden instead, and be will give you the kiwi in my place' ;" and stating' the action to the word, be turned to the blushing and digni- fied professor and, with a • haefLon. each 812ouldior, iMprinted o rericeinaing smack on hid cheek. • , • AND Mas. CiLinsTONS Sid timid • pe- tered by the London 'Deify News me they oppeared on the platform on the Occasion Of their reeent Visit to Birmingham. ' ::Both were in •etening dress, she 'charmingly attired in crimson bilk, hlicat , lace and dia. monde, and carrying a- swansdown fan; Mr. Gladstone, with the etieternary pen:Lelia' in his coat, "his areas 'shirt open at the neck for ' strong oratorical effort," and the way of his white tiethus made eriey for its ouetomary journey to the side of the Heck 'bithe COUtcle Of his coming oration. • ' Scram " Robert Elsinore" has becOnte 136 famous a novel, it may be interesting t� know the Harpers' • copy readers unani, inOnS;Y condemned: the beek When it wad Offered that house for publicatioth They •tsbjeetea twit both 'becittlie tit lie length 4 and because, being ill HMO 0 „Xkligiono 00Yel. it- 'demonstrated no new 'principle, and whether it was intended," is a.rcom- mentary and inStidoation, • tit Matthew, Arnold- or not, it merely illustrated a. fent In intelleottiai. ond moral life that had been sufficiently illustrated already, and was well reaognized. ' 45 anticipation of the proposed utilize. tion of a large ,part of the • sewage of Paris by irrigation on the fields of Aoheres, a commission appointed by the Frenoh Senaterecently visited the irriga- tion fielda at Berlin, These are now in working order and furnishthe; moat extensive, example • „of sewage purification • by irrigation in the world. Berlin new contains more than thirteen hueared thousand inhabitants, having trebled- in populatirin during the last twenty yeers., In the oat)) ing, dis: Ito tads the oesepook a still used, but the whole of the blood :. built' portion of the pity, •containing 1,15 , 00 inhabitants, is thoroughly elwered, aid all waste ' matters from this part of the opuletion are carried by Witter to the pa ping stations, from whioh they aredietributed on the irrigation fields. , , ; • • On a street oar there was a lady Who bowed to the popular craze and opened a yellow -covered copy of •• Robert Elsinore" -that religlophilosophical-ecclesiastital- Ingersoll, novel, which has been boomed rather than doomed by, the pulpit utter- ances regarding it. . For a few minutes ehe reed -onward from the sub.head " Chli•OterI,"Thenahe 'closed the volume and contemplated its bulk -over seven hundred pages. -What was the. natural curiosity of womato do. in the face of auohodde ? She had read the , introdno. tien,,, peopled by , Catherine, Agnea and Rem, and she desired to see which one married.Robert Elmer°. What was the use of struggling through 700 pages for this, information when she could scan the lost chapter and find out definitely? Well, - !She did a;ntibipote, and when she found it was Oetherine she turned back and 'started in on the !story again with a 'satisfied , air. just like's women. ,• • • • . ..-..li . . vs+ nile everybody has heard of, or seen • or used celluloid, onlye few know what it is composed of or how it is made. The follotiing•ist-a,-deacription-ot•-the Prawns, carried ent_Wafacitory near-Eariefor.the 15O-actotion of celluloid: , • • ' - - . , 'A roll of paper is 'elowly unwound; and at the same time is *meted With a mix: tura of five parte of sulphuric acid and two parts of nitric add, whirl falls upon the paper in o fine spray. This changes the • cellulose ofthe paper into pyroxylin (gun cotton). The excess of the'. acid having been expelled- by .presstire, the piper ie woehei with plenty of wetter until all tracers Of acid have been removed,It is then re- duced to a pulp, and perigee on the bleach-. ing trough: Most of the water having been got rid Of by meafts. of lt, "strainer, the pulp is mixed with item 20 to 40 per cent. of its weight in camphor, and the mixture thorotighlyTtiithrtitrid •, under millstones., The necessary coloring having been ailed' in the form of . powder; a second mixing, and grinding follows. ' The finely divided pulp is then sprout out in thin layers( on slabs; and from twenty to twenty-five of these layers are placed in a ydratilie press, separated from One another y. some sheets of thick blotting impel", and are subjected to a-presatire of -150 atmospheres, " untilall traces Of nioieture havebeen got rid of. The matter is then passed : between rollers heated, to between 1400 and 1500 F, whence it blame in the form; 'of , elastic 'sheets. 41, PiAlfPX wrim n) ow.• ren triad Wee; to the, the Om On alf he the of sod ly no lid, re he le, de id ID nt es ird h- nd d er on oh A Mb by 044 Sekrether 11;01Pb 40 • A mother -sat alone at an open wind Throlsgh it oaths the voices of. gie. shild lie they played under the aecola• treed the breath of the hot afternoon air.. In. OM Of the mom flow the bees, the Wild with their lege yellow with pollen, going and from the acacia trees, 'droning all , while. She ,eat on low chair before table and darned. She took her workfr the great basket that deed before her the table; Borne lay on her knee and h covered the book that rested there. S watched the needle go in and out; and dreary hum of thebees and the noises the children's voices became a coign , murmur in her cam, as she worked slow and more slowly. Then the bees, the 10 legged; witePlike fellows who made • honey, flew °loner ina closer to her he droning. Then she grew more .and ,Mo drowsy; and she laid her hand, with t 'iterating Over it, on the edge Of thetab and leaned her head upon it.. • An the 'VOWS of the children .outoi grew more ,end ' more dreamy, oftme now far, BOW near; then she • d not hear them, but she felt her heart kir her sleeping babe. Be forward and -.sleeping there; with the be flying about' her head, she had we brainpieture; she thought the bees leugt ened •and lengthen'ed, themselves out a become' human creatures sild. moved roun and round • her, Then one oame to' h softly, saying " bet MeleY myhattdnp thy child as it sleeps. If 1 shall tou him he shall be as I," She &eked " Who are you ?" And he said : "1 am Health.. Whom tench will ••have always the red blo dancing in his • veins; he will not kno weariness( nor pain; life will be a Ion laugh to him." . "No,'• said another, "let me touch; I am 'WOO*. If I touch him ,materi care shall not feed on him.Ho shalt li on the blood and sinews of hie,f0119W-me if he will; andwhat his eyelids for h hand. will have: 'He, shall not know mint.'" • ,. . • - And another said: "Let me touch ;• am Fahus. The man I touch.' lead to high hill whom all men ;may . see hi When he dies heis net forgotten; hi -nainerbigs-:-,-doWn-the=ren-turiers,-eai tohoee it onto his fellows. -Think-not t be forgotten through the ages 1" ' ' • , And the mother lay breathing ateadil but in the brain-pia:are they pressed °los to her. - • ' "Let me touch thechild," said One "for 11 od w. or al ve n, 10 iia m. 0 First Financial I.082031. , • Baby Goild-Granpa, I .want- to buy ;• el. some candy; but I have no money: Grandpa Gould -Go to the candy' store, mychild, and Offer the Mona liberal aum for his candy, give him bonds for the amount based on the value of the candy, then atingle the issue Of stock, sett one-half to theother parties, pay the man his money, • and you, will have one-half the store, 13130:7. •Pltiladelphip Record. , . ROTALTElli LIBERAL TIPS. • Why4neen yietoriiii's. New HOnsekeeper ' Looks Forward to Neat Summer. he-QweenliiirctiPpliffitird Mee -Ronde r- oan, the ' housekeeper to Lord .Derby at Knowsley, to be the stiocesser, of ".her aunt, the • late 'MM. Henderson, esiya the London World.' The salary is only 2112 year, but the housekeeper, of ,coarse, has excellent apartments in the castle, with numerous perquisites and'. privileges. The office ot hotieekeeper :at • Wilideor is a, very important and responsible one; and 'the duties next year are expected to be un - *daily Onerous, as there will be a large party and numerous him:Akins at the castle dining the Royal Agritultitrol Show, when the Queenis to be in residence, and. the Crown Prince of Austria and other distin- guished•personegep are likely to be anung Her Majestre guests. There will else be the visit of the Emperor'Williarn 'either at the end Of Juno or early in July. The troubleeand tracasseries 'which ,the arrival of royol guests) from abroad always in; Velma; are, however; 'cOmpefisated by the, presents' they dietribute; and the kale Upon' which these, are dispensed by )(V wealthy Sovereign maybe jtiaged from the fad that when the late EmperorNicholaa visited the Queen at Windsor in 1844 he left 22,000 for the .servants at the troths and also gave 2500 and ,a pirate; .of dia- monds worth 21,000 to: the then house. keeper, and #fretVegold anuff boxes„; -with his portrait dot in'airtinonde, to theilordri, "gibonia find equerries in waiting. • Not Too Tame, ,COneiddrable. excitement Was.nreate4 in Richmond. Eng., lately. ' At first it was rumored that a lion had escaped from a menagerie, which was stationed in the mar- ket place; then it was rcimored that a child had been worried by a lion, and there was quite a 'aspic, it being the Market day. The real facts weresoon revealed When Mr. Robert Chandler was seen carrying in hie ante the apparently lifeless) body of. his little daughter Alice. The child's face was covered with blood, ite eyed appeared to he coming out of their sockets. !teems the child had beentaken into the ehOw,by an elder, eider; who waa carrying her in her orals. As they -were peering the lion's cage a man stumbled' againat them; and the fern. ciotis beast took advantage , by suddenly seizing the child's face in its claws, then made an effort to reach it With its menth. Sonia men rushed to the' redone, but not be- fore the child's face and heed were fright, fully torn.She liyea; but is in a very pre. Clitriale state. , A fOrte•of 100 Men is employed upon the Canadian' Ship Canal at the Soo, surveying the. site of the canal Oral clearing it for the actual:digging, which odours not spring. , . „ • The Pepe says that he thinks' the good health he haa tin)ayectfor the pest 20 yours is doeft, the regularity With which he has ,tv . • . T*44.4BPE 4AvA1r4ESOYDIPLITHERIA.. Lekin00.31110tarbe From MS TAY WW1 • liatartting Renort- Dr. Lehmann, who visaed the' North Bay, Ont, dfsierict for the. Previncial, Board of Health fee ascertain the extent and cause of the ratio& of diphtheria Whictilas heali Prevalent there, has 're: turned to Toronto. Pi the 'North' Bay district be found (sixteen cases of diphtheria and . fear death e reported. From North , Bay he.retumed aonth to Powasaan, and from there travelled Westward to French River. Through all that district he found diphtheria prevalent. In Po Raman SS • cliSee.were reported and eleven' deaths have . *marred go far as could be ascertained. Na dinisetdriigolia."attTenhde46re" ie ada01101130e,f • 1tIt PiOnWathessnime. and one at French River, 50 miles distant, but there- are none between. The chief caueee of the disease were found to he iin- pure drinking water and- bad sanitary 11r. rangements,-The settlers would make their , wells only a feW feat in depth in the Marsh,' ground -and were not very perils:War se to • how they dimmed of refuge, very often the • well drained the soakage from this gar- bage. So sparsely settled are the districts that no local Board of Health has been ' organized. Lately,. however, the: kavsgea eighteenofthe do i setleees h avvee .8f abated.srb eAe nr At Cr ahaer bea0411; • with ten deaths. In the toWns 'along the , C. P. R. that company has 'controlover the !sanitary 'arrangements of the houses of their employees and supply medical- at. tendance, but those not working for thet • company are'eften found very careless,' "Timely Wise !." For Sharp Eyes! "Nor Is:+e, nor honor, wealth, nor power', Can give the heart a, oheerfni hour-. When health is lost.. Be timely wise: • With ill -health all taste Of pleasure flies" So speaketh Gray, and who denies . • NO surer fact beneath the elliee. Ales 1 for hita who early dies, liecanke he ifi not timely Wise. • Alas for him who vzill endure • Tho ills he might so quickly tura; Night -sweats, and cough, and hard -caught s• breath, • • coosuniption's heralds, signs of death. ,• • , To be "sated, take Dr. Pierce's Golden-, •• Medieisl Discovery, ' Thoneande have been • ' '" cured by. it who, otherwise -Would -now. be- fihling untimely graves. •y, For all liver, blood andlung diseases; it is speoi#0, • I am Love. if .•1 tonal him -he shall no walk through life alone. In `the great& dark, When he puts out his hind he oho find another hand by it. When the velar' is against lain], !mother shall say "Yon gait.' 'a' 'tether '''presal ohiller and said "Let the touch; for I am Talent. I ea do sir things , that have been done before 1....tonch--the--eoldieri-2the-otatesnian-,--th thinker and the politician whootesseeds toia the writer Who is never before his UM and never ,behind it. If 'I :too& the chil he shsll not weep for failure."' •?Alstut the mother's head the bees* were • • flying; touching her, with their long taper: ing limbs; and, in her brain picttire, outsff The shadow :Of the room came .00e with sallow 'see, • deep-Iined, the Cheeks are*, id•„hollows ancL.a month ' smiling quiver. .He 'stretched out his hen& And the mother drew bookend cried; "'Who are youP" He aosiv_erest„nothipg,aud__Iihe. looked up between his eyelids).Arid • ehe said : " What min yon give the child - health ?" And he said: "The man tdoch, there wakee up in his blood a hurn-: log fever that shah lick his blood as fire. The filter that I will give him shah he: -chred-when-his-life-ie-curedr" "'You give Wealth..?" ' He shook his head.. The nion Whom I touch; when he bende to Pick tip gold, he sees 'Suddenly alight over his head • in the sky; ;while helot* up to 'see it, the -gold'. slips from between hia fingers; • Or some. timed another paseingtiked•it from them." "Fame ?" He answered: LikPlY not. ',POT ,the man 1 touch there is ft path traced out, in the send by a finger which no man 8008. That he rand follow. Sometimes it leade almost to the top," and than turns down euddenlY into the. valley. • He: . most follov,r it, though • none else sees the 'booing." • Love?" _ • . He said: "Ile 'shell litinger•- for ithut he ahall not find it. • When he stretches out his arms to it, ahd would lay his heart !against a thing he levee, then, far Off along the horizon he shell see a. light play. He must go towards it. The thing , lie loves will not .journey with him he meet, travel alone. When' he presses, somewhat to his burning heart, crying', 'Mine,: mine, My own he ehall hear a Voice4-•••• Renounce, renounce 1 this is not thine!'" ' •• He shell .suoceed ?" , ' He said:: "He shall' fait,' When be tops ,with others they Dina • reach' the goat before hint Far -strange voices shall call. to hire and •strange : lights shall beckon him, 'end he -must, wait and: listen. And this shall be the -strongest ; far Off &Omni the burning Minas Where; to other men, 'there is only-. the desert') waste, he shall eat a bine sem! On that sea the sun Shinee th'e water is blue as burning amethyst, and the foam is whiteon the shore: 4 great hind ritlea frets) it, azia he 'Shall sea upon the Mountain, tope !miming gold." • • . • •, • The mother said : "le shall reach it " • And he smiled curiously, • She said : It is real I" • And he said: "What is real ?9,* And she looked rip • between his half, closed eyelids, and said: " Tondo."' , ' And heleaned forward and laid his Vend upon . the deeper, and whispered to it, emilinglrond this only ehe heard : "Thi shall be thy reward --that the ideal Musa bp real to thee." • ' .:„The mother elept on keaviiy arid , bistinpicture vanishea,--Itremon'eVerid. , 1. • Time -tried, True1Y, Tested. • Trier' for yeera ; severely tested, and atiil. growing in popular fat& Apa tie°, is tho. record enjoyed. by Dr. Fieree'is Pleasant Purgative refiets-the little !Sugar-coated laxative gtsinilee, Sold by druggiatat anti - bilious and cathartic. •r Rebecca E. Robertson, recently dead in Now York, left halfe, millionto provide o free brief summer 'outing for 'poor people Of that n • Favorite. • ' .„,•.-.-F-extielestwOrdiitabition loves . • • 0- 0 • A nd 'art has ne'et,ito Portrait painted, • V irthe the heart of avarice moves,, .0 blivious to the, " shekeld " sedated ; R e,rer than even these., by far, , I s health, defying poet's diction. .1 T hen with it trine not, nor mar - g thethat:female pleasures bar by taking tor„ Pierim's Favbrite, Prescrip- ti• • tion-romedy so eatiefactory for alL those ' , weaknesses ond disease') peculiar to women ,that thsly,neeano-lohger aufferfrom-theM • • if, they Will: but nee this world -finned remedy: • • • • Energy superammi. Customer (to .grooses boy) -Yon don't • ' seem to be a teryenergetio little boy.' Don't : nu feel well? Boy -LI -Yee, 1 feel, all right, •• but the bees ia out :to lam*. _ Little Leaves of soap. • , -7-soitria-nqw-prepFed-on-tixiiipoutint-ni, •in the form of leaves, ;or ,Very thin tablets, which are either tarried- in small leather •.• oases or stitched together in little boohe, and easily aeParateci like the leaves •Of cigarette paper. Each of these leaves servea for a single wash, and, their utilityrio travellers and tourists is Obvious. -4 Freie" Press. , • MARVELOUS DISCOVERY. . • Wholly Unlike rutificial systems.. Care of mind wandering. • ..AnY book learned in ono reading. • Olassesof 1,087 at Ridthnore. 1,005 at Detre: 1,500 at Philadelphia,, 1,113 at Washington 1,210 at Booton,Iarge clawed of CloinzubiaCia w. student's, at Yale, Wellesley, Oberlin, Oniveivity of Penn„ Michigan University, Chautauqua, eto. tog.: Vinod:at:ewe! hivv.RAlosigana,, aPtrpaemzoTopa.„Btlizetutilenin aildge Gmtios, Dr. Brows, E. Coos,Prin. N.Y , State • Normal 'College, eta; Taught by &area P°naehreell. 01311°. 1,70°IttilluTa FT°E8,1‘2.37FRFElltifthiroAnlve.... N.Y. • :' ,.. : - . . Mtge,' :Pr, 1"01,t:/' . . . If goo y saw 1e S to the t04910601e and ,,,r . tail trade: Lamest Man !Joann:era in 'iiiir line. Enclose • 2 -cent state Wages d'iter day. Permanent position. • poetale &neat:tied. Money advanced for -W. . advertising, eta. Centennial Idanafactu g Vo, Cincinnati, ()hie. ' FOR SAL A Northey 12 -. Norse 'Peer Boiler and ,Killey Atitontio Out -off 15 - Horse,.. fuer. v 'Engine, mum Buati-PlIE GoVpl°11. All In best of order, ,Cais be et" the office of the 'TIMES' PRINTIN Cu. HAMILTON °SWAB) " 4"irWeif., • • TH15 CoOtRiS 5,1iS1' FRIE4'It I