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Lucknow Sentinel, 1891-01-23, Page 71 or I IOW a this Don'tcher Know LrDudle. (AirI was read in my spiritlOaken Tallmaget I And for many another good soul inhhis line, IOW the growth of true grace is so scarce in the creature Called man, till I aced on this exquisite fine. s i leather rom the tip of hip shirting sho- To that part on his head where in others ie brain, .find he cheered up my faith as he lisped of the weather While he gnawed at the nib of his eglantine cane_ 'The don'tcher kuaw dudie, this dear little dudie, This wincopipe dude with his eglantine cane. This sweet little dudie" I hail as a treasure. The purest and sweetest that nature can yiela, 'For he shows $ fat the barber and tailor at plea,ure r�A_ � 4 ,, �; moi; �olsro��e"slySk] d ...y t . tine art in cloth's stroll a high inspiration. As more than makes up for the absence of braiu, And wisdum and worth are a small calculation Compared to the watch -charm or eglantine C800 Otthis dear little dudie, this exquisite dudie, This don'tcher knew dude with hia,.eglantine cane. Slow sweetly he posed on the doorway with nte; The pale mop fell soft on ht ra ongue lisped a nolle like the seed, if they 's any, Such as babesused to shake .from a green calabash. /And he strutgled, so manly, to ask her to tell him (His hair -part and uecktie had wearied his braiu) 11 elle thought, "Don'tcher knaw, Fweddie Chawls d excel him ' In the number of knots en his eglantine cane. Phis dear little dudie, the don'tcher knew dudie, This wincopipe dude with hla peculiar cane. —A, 1tAtrISAY, author of " Muriel." Canadian coin in ilte States. anadian ooin of ettrop metropolitan life.lBI trino nsicamllylwomore than rry meworth ly it is •ommero ally our tabooed uant drasti a11w always a source of irritation and sometimes personalealin it -as a nom exempt dity. Nearly every time yon get change a 19oentor 25•oent Canadian ooin will slip in --usually the former -which can scarcely be de. tooted from oar dime. Then when you are ins hurrying line at an elevated sta- tion the tioket agent will posh that ooin back to you and you must fumble around for more money., If you ehonld board a street oar and happen tohaveno other change ahennef, a 15 note•yere will be coni: • polled to get off and get change, for the conductor will _ neither aooeptoar' Gene - Alien piece nor change anything bigger than s $2 bill. You may not havo.noticed up to that time. doubtful coin. 'You take an tinhad-the that you will -never accept another, and during the neat hour will crobe be caught -agorae- Some- rsa the coin at par, others ata discount. The result is it is shifted on iliomebody else and gets paeaed around in acme Way-perbape to you : once more. There are business men who let this'ooin accumulate gad finally- sell -it -to a-brker, who in turn makes -a good margin on it by shipping it at a premium back to its own country. -New Yrrrk World. - - Children. - I am fond or children.. I think them the poetry of the World, the fresh flowers of -our--• .hearths -and horses; little conjurers with their natural magic, evoking by their spells what delights and enriches all ranks, and equalizes the different olayoea of society. Often as they bring with them anxieties and cares, and live to A grief, we should geton very badly without diem. Only think, if there was never any- thing anywhere to be seen but grown-up men and women I how we would long for the sight of a little obild ! Every infant oomee into the world like a delegated prophet, the •harbinger and' -.herald of good tidings, whose office it is to turn the fathers' hearts to the children, and to draw the disobedient to the wieaom of the just. A child softens and purifies the heart, m warning it and melting it by its gentle presence ; it enriches the soul by new feel- ' tinge, and awakens within it what is favor- able to virtue. It is a beam of light, a fountain- of love, a teacher whose lessons few can mist. Infante recall ns .from much that engenders and encourages sel- fishness, that freezee the affections. roughens the manners$, indurates the hFar;, They brighten the home. deepen love, invigorate exertion, infuse courage, and vivify -and euetsin the charities) of •life. It would be a terrible world, 1 can think, if tt were not embellished by lite -le children. - Thomas, Binney. . The Way it Happened. Boston Courier : Edgely-Hello, old man ; I hear that your are married. Wasn't it rather Budden ? " Wooden -Well, yr -e, a bit sudden, perhaps." " How dirt it happen ?" " Well, you tire, it WAS thio Way. I Was calling -on Mise Smoot), from Chicsgo, and oho eatd, ` Do }eu t•hiuk, Mr. Wooden, that MArraage is always a fail" a ?' "' Why, tie; said I,' not elwevs I can imagine a (nee where it would nudoubtedly be a perfect success.' At this eh', leaped up, thr,3 v her arms around my neok; and meld : ' Told ii very sodden, but you have made me the happiest of women. Lot next fueeday be the iley.' " A Wise Foticv.' Montreal Star : If prev,otron ie better than cure the Grand Trunk cffioiale are certainly acting wisely iu prosecuting per. sone who steal ridge b, boarding their mov: ing trains. 'Then, too, tbr, dates are justi- tifi:.d ori the ereunr1e rf public economy the audit Hoed recHve the fines; and are perhaps ssv d the expense of coroner's fnqueate. Yet it seethe strange that men 'have to be fined for continuing a praotioo in which they rrin greater denger than a soldier dor a in ata ordinary campaign. Truly, familiarity begets contempt. The 16argosr, Kitchen in the World. The Bon Maroher in Paris poseesee prob- ably the Iron ;eerkitohen in the world. It provides fool for all the employeee of the honee, 4,000 in number. Tho emallest kettle horrid 75 quarts, the largest 875 quarts. -The re aro 50 freint; pane, each of which is capable of evoking 300 outlets at a time, or of frying 220 pounds of potcbtoes. When there are omelettes for breakfast 7,900 eggs are need. There are 60 cooks' and 100 kitchen boys.-LondQnGlobe. 1. • It you want to be convinced' that 'better people than yonrsolf are in the penitentiary nein .tcer`c 1iio .- - . GO EASY, BENJAMIN It May be a Good Election Card But Yon JLay Get Nipped. FOROF WILL MEET FORCE. A Washington despatch says : A shadow falls upon the message that the President is understood to be penning for Congress on the Behring Sea question. He has in his pooaeusion, as a part of the State Depart- ment brief or "preois t' of the case, a minute by Mr. Blaine to the effect that Lord Salisbury has caused it tq he coasft- nn uutlylloode kn n to him that .in they - �V'c-.—t- a..n-2:Ci.'i`'-'V4'/iri"JLtit,'•Y' X11.1,1' jyeitL `�'e Government could-, not permit a single British sealing vessel to be searched or seized in Behring Sea beyond the admitted territorial jurisdiction of the United States without an i'tnmediate and forcible reels - tepee to such a proceeding. If the President withholds this positive intimation from the knowledge of Congress, be will find himself in an iinenviable position should it beoomq known next Bummer that tie bade/erne enereeep ive present nnicate ' not to ntentit- ciliated e with- % full r so in - of war ion by h pro - vise a of the rbitra- be a o par aimed, t only rk for going ion is eking of his Blaine ration ritish e has for a y _•.all. ter of augh- at at rid of to Sir mom- ,hem - or misleading statement of the situation. Should he now comen his- knowledge to Congress, it is be expected that Congress would co Belt with voting measures oat simply to provoke a confliot of arm out at the same time arranging for and vigorous prosecution of the wet vited. Bat to enter upon a course legislation without appropriate got Congress upon the eeveral Britis peseta for a mixed oommiseion to de eyetem of international protection seal fishery and for an Impartial a tion of the entire controversy would coarse most unlikely for Congress t one. President Harrison, it 18 of does not with for a British war, bu for an anti•British agitation to we his own re-election. And his delay in on with his plans for such an agitat due to the difficulty he finds in m Congress the unwilling instrument personal motives. He expected Mr. to bring oat a strong Russian demons% againet 3ehring Sea sealing .by B vessels, Instead of wbiah Mr. Blain only adooeeded in paving the way diplomatic controversy with neerl Europe over the intentatiened oharao Behring Sea. At this moment Mr. Blaine is the 1 ing etook of every foreign diplons -Washington with enough comma English to read his published notes Julian Panncefote andthe ridiculing ments of the American press npom -Ids tiro tra the arb Pan -bell own Govt tha e-nndersteod-in-ofGetal and dlplo les that the report from Otto e ; that the note of Mr. Blaine reje Salisbury proposal for Behring itration was delivered to -. Sir J noefote several days ago. Ho ooae President Harrison may he i person .he can assail the Br rnment with nothing more for n paper pellets from the State De t melees Congress shall approp ey for more warlike missiles horize their employment in the ma emplated_et -the-White-Hodge. • Washington despatch 'eaye`:_ Pres to -day transmitted to the H epreaentatives further correspond he subject of the Behring Sea con y between the United States 1 Britain. The President's mss together formal, and merely at , en response to a- resolution of Be, he transmits the oorresponde d for. letter from Secretary Blaine is d in the ,correspondence: The Se maintains the correctness of the p assumed by the United States. yes that the controversy turns- u point -whether the phraee " Pao n " used in the treaties of 1824 a inolnded Behring Sea, as oonten rent Britain. If the. United Stn prove the contrary her case tete and undeniable. Thereto Blaine enters into an.exhaust tent,. based on Benoroft's histo ape, to show that Mr. Adams and mporaries had a dietinot understate at the phrase " Pacifio Ocean " e d the waters of Behring Sea, th n as the. Sea of Bamachatka. T ary points to the lenge-wealth of t an American Company, - which ould have been carelessly.thro. by the Russian nobility in a phra merged Behring Sea in the Peed He cites the long, years of abs from the seal waters by the adve. people of the United States an Britain as a presumption of the f right to enter. As etrpnger eviden_ correctness Mr. Blaine cites th 1e of the treaty of.1824 to show th 'a relinquishment of jurisdiction al my to the territory below the 50t, th degrees, also an explanatory not teeth to Mr. Adams in 3824 pos xotpting the Aleutian Islands an untry north of 59 degrees, tore s from the concession to the Unite of the right to fish and trade. He &Is e action of Great Britain, exoludin trona the waters within eight league Helena when Napoleon was con ere, and again refers to the protea eroised over the Ceylon pearl fish Great Britain, saying he is willint; t those provisions for the proteotion Beal flattering. He epeake of the us injury inflicted by vessels under ish flag by United States fisheries, nests that she send an intelligent sinner to the seal islande, fie o the form of the proposed steel - and says it will amount to Dome- egible if Great Britain consents to o the real questions discussed for four veers.- What were the rights matio wa is sting Sea ulian Wever. n•his itieb. of bl e men mon ant cont A Pro of R on t vers Grea is al that Hon oalle A elude tary lion belie one Oaea 1825 by G can pomp Mr. argao and m conte ing ib elude know Secret Rasel says w away whish Ocean nenoe turons Great lack o or his protoo Russia plied o and 60 troll] R tively e the co minute States cites th vessele 'of St. fined th tion ex eriee by to aaoep of 'the enormo the Brit and sug commie objects t tration, thing to arbitrat the last part- riete. and nner The mute encs tro- and sage ates the nee in - are. osi. He pen ifio ria ded tee is re, ive ry hie d. en he fio ir at • exercised by Russia in Behring see 7 How far were they conceded by Grea,t Britain 7 Was Behring Sea included in the Pacific Ocean Did not the United States acquire all of Ruseiand rights ? What are the present rights of the United States ? If the coneurrenoy of Great Britein ie found necesary then what shell be the protected denim Ant the United States ever claimed Behting Sea to be a closed sea and quotes) Minister Phelpa in 1888, where he Brays that the queation is not applioable to the The Czarowitz has arrived at Jeypoor, India, where he was received with great «' Pesse ns at the /Plow." Well have to change our tune, 0 Muse We're getting out o1 date • We'll have to hustle up in lfbe-- The world has changed of late. We'll sing no memo! balmy spring And brooks, -and birds, and bees ; We'll draw the line on summer, tQo,. With hammocks, elrls, and ease. Although these things make pretty verse, TheTo bnsine a re mon of every day On mousy -making bout. Then let us sing of something that Will help them every day ; Let's sing of grimy printers'ink, That's a1wa•}ifl•mare to (.ay. n�r'!v rr iuu . d where to send it to Let's tell them of the mighty work That printers' ink can do. Let's let them know that nowadays The heftiness men are wise Who constanly, judiciously And boldly advertise. Thus will we gain thegre,titude And then, b sides, who heed e'll show r ymthem that We keep up with the times. Slnart Enough That Thur. The other day a man presented a cheek for $50 at a down town bank and it was passed bank to him with the remark that it was " no good." " Hasn't the man got any . funds here 7 " inquired the indignant check - holder. ell balance. He has drawing other oheoke of this kind of late," said the teller. with the check,ge I'll lsee if ween can't mem that. What's hie exeot balance ? " It is against the rules of the bank, bat the teller gave it. Then. the oheok.holder stepped over to the receiving teller's win- dow and pulling out a roll of money said he desired to deposit 147 50 to the credit of Mr. Blank. "Now," said he to the paying tiller, "pay this check." - The latter did so and then closed Mr. Blank's account. "Now if any more cheeks of thio kind come here Mr. Blank can be jailed," saying hide rho oheok-holder 'walked out. -New o rIc World. Shut the Girl and Suicided. • A-Metropolie; TII:; despatch says :. Chas. Rose, of Bay City, is•a young farmer who had been peying attention to the daughter of- a neighboring farmer, Miss Mollie Welsh, aged 18. Rose was forbidden to visit Miss Welsh by her parents, but while the parents Overeat church on Sunday Rose visited the house and induced the young nvoncian-to"-take-a-walla When they had stone a abort distence'he asked her if sbe was willing to die for him. a She replied yes, and he drew a pistol and fired, the bell taking effect in the girl's face, inflict ing a probably fatal wound. Yong Rose. then returned, leaked himself in a room, and blew out his brains. Between Two Fires. Brooklyn Life Editor -That perform- ance at the opera home Monday night was the worst frand_l ever witneessette -yet I see your article puffs up to the Dramatic Critic -I bad -to. The com- pany will be here all the week, and the manager .said if I printed a word. against them he'd come around with a gun. Editor -I 'see. Well it's always wise to keep on the safe 'side. Office Boy (rushing in) -Big mob at the door goin' to shoot the etre.metio oritio. that. They must be the audience. And Have as Much Fun. New York 'Sun: " Why do you live in the country, anyhow ?" asked a New Yorker of a suburban friend. " Is the oast of living less 7" " No, slightly higher. ' " No opera, $50 a eeason. No concerts, 525 a season. No' theatres, $50 a season. No big dinners to friends, $100 a year. No „" Sat 1" said the city man, seized with en inspiration, " wouldn't yon save money Booth a Banker It is not generally known, says a London cablegram to the Brooklyn Eagle, that General Booth is a banker, as well as a preacher and commander of the Salvation Army. He ineues Salvation Army 'bonds, secured by first mortgage on the property of the Salvation Army, and offers the high interest for Great Britain of In per cent. The objeot of issuing these bonds is said to be "fair interest, sonnd security and the extension of the kingdom of Josue Christ." Some curiosity is expressed as to the nature of tire havestment that justifies such a rate of interest. Clesh St. Thanes Tithes : Yon cen get your postage etemp moistened when you buy it new in tbenSt. Thomas P. 0. Miss Martin the obliging stamp vendor there having procured otie of Hager'a patent stamp moisteners. It is a very ingenious little contrivance, consisting of a wet sponge placed in a box. In the lid over the eponge is a series of small roller° over which the atamp is paesed and which prevent it from getting tbo much wet. Another Big "Do." A gang of men are now traveling about making contracts to paint building rode. The proprietor of the gang afore to peint the roof for $5. Yon think it reaeonable, and allow him to do the work. Whee yen ask him for the bill this is the w h e springs it on you. For painting mon $5 pee ag e agreed, bnt here is where he ()Mabee you: forty gallons of paint at 11,50 per gallon, $60. A Self -Lighting Cigar. A druggist in St. Petereburg has in. vented a method Of tipping cigars wieh preparcition so that they are lighted like a match by rnbbing sgainet any bard gun face. A manufacturing company is said to have paid him 60,000 rubles for the putent. The principle ban, Of course, be applied to cigarettes, pipes, tapers, et:Indies, eta. Much is expected of this curious cone- bustion tip from Russia. A man can never be grateful, flays en of the premium of hia hands and feet. EVICTIONS IN NEW YORK Homes for the Oare .of Destitute Children. A STARTLING SUGGESTION. A Protestant Episcopal clergyman, named Father Huntington, could not be invited to preach in certain churches of his own -denomination in Toronto, beoauee the ministers re in char soft h ase Thr )tpr`$'be�o%iie social tieoies, Huntington preaches the dootrine of the Fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of men. He read in the firat book of ,the New Testament For one is your Master, even Christ ; and all ye are brethren. And call no man your father upon the earth ; for one is your Fathrr, which is in heaven. Neither be ye called masters ; for one is your long as we can ; why, some of them get to be quite old maids, , beoanse, you know, Fathe;, when they go out they are so likely fano to the bad r •' Think of that 1 Thcusandq of yyan;g, girls from Ireland, Germany, Scandinavia and elsewhere land in this country every month, alone and out off from all the pro- teotion of home. Do they go to the bad as soon as they set foot in the streets of. New York ? On the contrary your minis- ters from their pulpits will laud the probity of this very olaee and pall them their very beet penieh!Lner3 z;;i&Gaising, as , Father a ger a raised b the hundred un''er the care and guidance of the inters and other good persona that have to be kept in until they are old maids for fear it they got out on the streets they'd walk off with the first man that winked at them." Coming back to evictions, Dr. MoGlyna declared that the solation of the poverty question was in the salvation of the home. , fries o eta do the beet p fc� ak z� ]x ;ru tr�:cxf,a-+-.►r"'�;�_z��-iti n urtf� th .cl."`.'' Pre Ee application of this doctrine appear to be acceptable to som Toronto clergymen. A Catholic p New York, named Father McGly impressed with- this idea of the Fat of God and the brotherhood of m few years ago, for alleged reaaone need not be recounted, he was depoa his priesthood. Last Sunday w addreesod a meeting in Cooper on the subject of " Evictions New York World having - state there were 20,000 eviotion that oity 'each year. " " Poverty," his audience, "increases in proper •civilization. Where you find .the civilization there you find the moat p misery, vice and crime. London ha of it, even in proportion to popu *ban New York, New York' mor Philadelphia or Chicago, and those more than Cincinnati and such e ones. " Here in.. New.- York -this ver chronicler of the time tells us and for ne that there" are 20,000 evi annually. Ireland bas three" time population of New York City and 4,000 or 5,000 evictions.a year. " They tell us that these 20,000 fa -100,000 people -evicted annually in York-almost-enfi.irely-beoauwo-t-hey got have not the money with which t rent, are in 'a etate of ' voluntary pov That is to say, that they make theme poor, and that if we want to cure po we mast first mire intemperance and lar- vices: They tell ns `the poor wo should learn how to make • a four -c '=-nor for 17 cents, and that the ra mp on the park bench is a round ing to fit into a egnre 'bole ; that oe is waiting for him somewhere oa nesota or Sontle Amer-ioai -2'her -plyand `demand as expounded. by A Sm is substituted for the Mw of Go ounded by Christ. They are no doubt right about .su demand, but they are wrong on Intemperance is not the cans erty, but its effect. Both the very the very poor take to drink for. o reason that, according to some p stare twinkle -they have nothing o. We don't want to abolish anybo ion't want to kill off anybody if we it, bat we do believe that by abol; the cause of both of these extremes 1 do away with the evil of intemp and many others besides." esoribing the plight -of those nnfort, nough to be unable to pay their re McGlynn said : What becomes ofetre evioted ?' Wh 11 the pins go to ? They are broken nd down, lost in the general ma poor take in many of. them, me and inatitations Dare for others. Not many, years ago it was a "ha matt to find a plane in the city in what or child could be oared for. But sone slipped into a bill up at Albany provision empowering police mag s to send children who seemed to trate to such institutions, to be mag d,at.public expense, end now there a ren's institutions everywhere, nstoad of making any difficulty abo,a� gin poor children they actually con - with eaoh other for the possession of nfortunatee and Dater to police jaetioes there to secure the greatest number le. oohing after destitute children has eoome a matter of baeinese. f course the good people who manage institutions would be shocked if you I soy that they did it for salary or Itiia for the love of God and the. f humanity that they eke laboring, notice that they always menage to holneelvea well clothed a1}d fed and -tabby housed. ase institutions are a positive de-ri., n this respect to the real good of the They make it too easy to break up a They put too many fapilities in the people who ere tempted to get rid of hildren until they get old enough to 'pport the family. the oilier head, the institutions are y oases harsh -and cruel to the last in refusing to give up. a child when ey have secured it, and in keeping owledge of its •whereaboute away to relatives, even,when they are able Dare of it and anxious to recover it. other oases, as apparently in one ^ant 0ae6, instiffioient evidence, Butch elisions complaint of a neighbor, n made the excuse for the invasion mo at midnight, the seizing -and g off of children and the arree't of a who, because she resisted Ibis , was got out of the way by a con • accusation cf drankenneee and a to a.mointh on the Island, There's oh competition nowdays in this Of oaring for destitute children. nenee of the institutions is bad. It od's plan of raising children. Two together, four or five a dozen, if but 200, oh, that's too many 1 dretl do not thrive under ench a physically or morally. Tho 111100, tell yon so themselves. I visited --an inetif<r�''t o.n--..fotegirlet od woman in oharg, as d : does not e of the riest iu nu, Wa8 herhood en. A which ed from eek he Union, ," the d that s in he told tion to most overly, a more iation, e than cities mailer acione proves otions e the only miiies New artily o pay ertye elves verty stmt man curse gged Peg hi. t in lave et dam d as pply pon- e of rich we ere up, the rd is - be re tra try pla exp and erty pov and 8803 the to d if we help ing shot anoe ate e Dr. do a gron The itsyln a po body little trate Wide child takin tend the u and o possib now.b these good o bat I keep t talent i poor. way of their o help in man degree, once th all kri trent to take e. very as the m has bee of a ho oarryin mother, violence venient sentence 100 mu bneiness The' infl is not G or three you will, " Chit gera will enOnce and the g eel NZPL%� 1 e ` evtc tons, In Ireland and more of evictions in New York. An evioe, tion in Ireland is far less dengeraue, either to health or morale, than one in New York. " I would be the last to seek to withhold aid from Ireland, but, in God's name, let oar obarity begin at home. " There's many a man will salve hie con- science with a eubi,cription of $100 or • n1,000 to a fund to clip ;be wings of Irish landlords, when that beim is but a beggarly part of the rents the same man is extorting - in this city. " We•mast abelisb, not the: landlords - they are entitled to a fair return on their investments -but landlordism must go. I1 ian't civilization that is wrong. " I have no. sympathy with the cry that, God made the country, but man made the town.' God made the town, and he put into it the very noblest work of art. genius and all human progress. The centre of all civilization is in the cities. It is not with that or with them that we fight. to do is to ve it leprous blotch frl we are trying m he face of civilization. tion. Land -lord is a hateful name; ,there is no' lord of the land but the Lord our God!" Dr. McGlynn paused here and bowed his bead as if he were- in. a pulpitagainand- • • - ebiitit to end a discourse With prayer, bat he remembered himself .quickly, wiped his - face wearily with his handkerchief and brought the service tie a close, with the announcement that the meeting the net Sundaynight would be devoted to the subject of "Children's Play -Grounds." As the ligbte were ,turned down and the andienoe_-_ [curried away, such exclamations as " Isn't he beautiful!" " Oh, my, I do love bine so 1" and " What a dear man he is!" could ' be heard from the women on every side. An Indian Romance.7- iiritin-in.the•Face is another assert and exceedingly dangerous Sioux warrior. Hie daughter hod romance that makes * rather interesting story. She fell in love with a young lieutenant in the army onoe, when the lieutenant-visited-thee—Sioux `reservation. Later he was transferred to Fort Laramie. Not long after that a band of Sioux obtained a hunting pass and roamed over hato Wyoming. The Indian maiden persisted in nocompanying them. She saw the lieutenant, and upon learning that he was married she fell upon the ground Damming and tearing her bleok tresses. The young squaw refused to return with the Indiane, and they con- tinued to camp in the vicinity for several weeks: One day the Indian girl ended her unhappy 'life by cutting her throat with a honting•knife. She was buried with the 'usual ceremonies of Indian obsegteee.- Denver Republican. • Some Indian Nameso The,censue of the faritilies of the Chey- enne scouts at Fort Supply includes Mrs. Short Nose, formerly Mina Piping Woman; Mrs. Big Head, formerly lilies Short Face; Mrs. Nibbs, formerly Miss Young Bear ; Hrs. W/aite Crow, formerly Miss Crook Pipe ; Mrs. Howling Water, fermerly Miss Crow Woman • also Mrs. White Skunk, Mrs. Sweet Water, Mins Walk High, daughter of Mr. White Calf, and Miss Odage, deughter.in-law of Mr. Hard Case. The ecoute at Fort Supply are terond of their uniforma and their military work. The women are proud of their husbands and fathers who aro thus employed, and, no doubt, &leo of the namee they bear. - New York Sun. When to Make Manure. MOO manure in the cold season. Keep it under cover. Add everything to tha beep tbat will conduce to its value, bee always aim to insure that all material wiil be in a , fine cOndition when the time arrives for applyipg it to the soil. To properly and thoraughly prepare) manure for ase requiree some care and attention. .f Every portion ot manure sbould be rotted, as tbe better the condition of the manure the more immediate its effects when it ia given to the plants me food. There is always plenty of work in winter that can be profitably applied to the manure heap. The Robin Society. Lord Rothschild -and Lord ,Rencialph Churchill are among the patrons of the Robin Society, an Etiglish organizeition, which has two objects -to give Christmas treats to pber children and to send the lit• tle onee into the country in the eummer, 5 000 Londori ohildren, and in 1890 it largely incremed that number. A Christ. Ines card is platted "nnsier each child's plate The breakfast consists of' larg(1 betterec roll, a good. sized currant 'roll e»d Lot cof fee. The bettered roll is eonretricol'On tin premises, but th,e current one i nket1 The Girl of the Period. Neve. York Menne : Fee -Shall I Coln pilti011et* to you while you have your toed She -No, I don't -think it trill be DOM sary to tske gas. tUr8, Elizabeth R. Sherwood. of Gran Replies, lies secured a vt rdiet -for $15,0( against thaChicaao3 At West if et ion Rai way for thoosiefath Of her inebend te yeere ago. A mediae./ jeurnal declares that a 'trent men will abtually softer more frOsil tl p,,ins of eiseolution In ease he died