HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1893-01-13, Page 6- t •
•
,
.ibe One forum:Man Who:Danced.
Thefeawas a dearth of revelry at ..Denclad-bY7-
-the-sea. - -
This tale comes from. a boarder there Who whis-
pered it tome. • -
.A.,.throng of lieantiful young .girls sWarrned
:over he one hotel, .
WaS Kate and -Garai- Maud and.. -May,-.
Corinna Blancheand Belle.
were fmoinating creatures, too; all sizes
--id all styles ° -
an eligide man for fully. Seven miles.
is one old crusty bachelor, two Yokels
a ; • -
of them were dancers, anil the girls
'It -nearly mad-. •• •- •
a*, change came o'er the scene, for
rtce Pendennis. Brown ,
. •
•.• ing- on a - bicycle .directly in -from
;Ie. he w_as uddbA.Ny,a.s
:rkfrib'- •
flirted witWtIi6 ladieoin a; most- de• -
;litini way, - ,
_ annis;boa,tin`p..„•cricet, oli he. -gladly
enotheroonde, . • a • .
they tell me, „six feet: high; and
eigned two hundred pounds.
owed him simply perfect, quite a drefl.
areavitliout fault,
one unitioky evening, they diseoVeredb.e
0111d -waltz' -
aa_w1z with cora, • and he bad to
e,kept it upwith Bella In
a Most fatigu-
:n utterly' 6-xhausdi; , by the
exercise and
_
• opiis reel. -
• vaitz.xvith May, • •
••
-
ing•way. •
NN`atit-zoized -upon by Isabel, who whirled him
And 010 kept- it up till dnight, did these
pitiless V oung seamp-1,
Till the latilli;id With a erotest came -ane dew
out all the lamps.
'Then the2.:, wat zed our 'hero throu.gh the halt
and Waltzed him up the stair, .
Then 'v alt . him to *his bedroom door and
sadly left him there.. • -
At breat:,--fast-all linibs were tore, his Intake
• tette full of pztin : - - •
Bit when `the morning meal was o'er they
btarted again, - , • •
. Far down. the' wide- verahda; till the Waltz
• becamea hop:, • . • - .•
-Arid h stnege •ed with the exereise,Aont didn't
dare to 14top. - -
Begging, praying and- protesting, they -were
always at his heels; ' • - •
Tillhe coulcia't rea4: his paper, id couldat
" eat his rneal-,„ -
He dancedaipon The WhidoWS and beneath the
e •SilaeS' bloom, -
Then he -danced with indignation. When alone
:v..ithia his room. . • ,' - •
Theylc,erit.it up a we k or more with wild and
thonghtles glee, , *
t.411 Mr: George leetedeanis: Brown became
sight to see • - • • -
His ruedy cheek's' had eisappetered - his -lace'
was gaunt an ;
And When he did .collap-se at, last, h?.. nttered hilt really it is not Bele to leave the door un
Story 'of'
1.410,7 litirit,Wat-re.V.551
WY -
ristmas
e.
E N . Little --Ethel
Renton- was %sited to
. .
: spend •Ohrietrats with
.her .geanci..perente and
-• her ttwo maiden, aunts
at the old homesteadein
- the CanediancitY where
GrandetteeseeField
had
Orient vilest of .- his life;
her -mother .. hesitated
before she accepted the
invitation for - little
GOldeif LOcksi".• :as
Ethel Was .nickaainede
. The hemestead was e
large, lonely -house.. Grandpa and GeendMii
'Field were. e cseti „in'. 5 ears; -Aunt
Kateherid Attett-E-tthee were quite utnitledtti.
children:- t Meer due eoneideration .
h�w-
ever, -Ethel-Was seeteasteequestetiPtc; ;Tend
.the helidayS, • alias af z.-er a ' long, • tiresome
-journey - arrived: ;safely, . to . be ...v.telceined
wertnly by the deerest • Old grendpapa and
granny .in. the world,: ite :Ethel wrote and
told her •thettiert- tater much labor -With. pen
and andrette-yeblets and- scratches.
• , . * - *
".Mother,I think we - had better bolttlte.
hall door-to-nighte There are tie Maii5eleirie-
Jars; Omit. It is not safe to leave it merely
latetted,7? 'said Aunt Katet They were all
sitting around bright . fire :the libraryi
Granny, Kate, Aunt . Eether... and
Golden Leekk.'' It wet. Christine's Eve.
Little Ethel -loeteed. jtip quickly front- the
hassock -Where • the :Was sittag et Granny.'s
"Burglars, Anntfeleate-What are burg -
ars - . -
" _Why -bad then,fdeariest who weak bleak
maske o.ndluive revelVers theie. pockets,
burglar 1_ it was strange that he 'had no
quite as •well as grandpa. Could he
mask lin; He was :veey • ilressede
possibly be :A burglar ? Ethei. stood
spell -bound at the door; gazing at the in-
truder, . her mind filled with. Wild-cenjee-
.turete Then, horror harroes,, he. turned
and looked at her! . Ne* for the -reVolvet 1-,
Bathe:only Said : •• -
• "Well, little Miss Golden -Leaks,'
who
are yott?" eetetitt tre ,ot
-- What a -vetes impertineht burglar. Ohly
•Mr. Smith, who came twice a.week to see
Aunt Esther; dyer". Called her Miss." Ogden.
Locks2te•• •
; -.• 6- Mysiiame is Ethel. Ethel.: Esther Rent
son-that'ts my -real name." . 7
- What: you? Yoit: ease' "... .
teegie burglar etivenatel tweet:rite. her with
outstretched arm. Wild with fright, Ethel
• fitoweeds. the •stairease. Then - She re -
Membered what Aunt Esther said she would
do-- if the. burglar came. Poor .*";Gol.deti
Locks" *meg leer lends. in despair .iis she
looked At , the. :great high. teviiidoets. :She
could never reach - to Open. them. At
least she could sound - the gong. 'She _beat.
franticallyr on it With. all her Strength.'
• Step: - be -granny - Corning
dowse- the staircase? Granny, with= her
gray bait flyiegin disorder -h' whole face -
lighted Up.. with joy.? "Golden Locks"
ceased the wild alerne. . Was granny' Mad
with fright She had rushed zigh.tinto the
. . . -
burglar's erms. e • - . -
"You silly little. -4 Golden Locks,'- stop
crying. . It -is not A burglar at . It is
your dear Uncle Arthur Conte beetle safe and
sound from Over the tete"; ,So spoke Aunt
Kite Who found poor Ethel: Crouched under
. .
the halt table Sobbing as it her heart would
break,. • - . ••
-* • • ..
"Then Granny isn't Jellied, and he. really
isn't a bueglaie_enthdo you think the things
• Santa Claus brought are all safe r' • ,
itt Vas -With :0, trembling Voice that
Grandpa Field proposed a new -toast at: dint
• ner on Christmas day:6 To Granny's 1.jn,.
bolted- door.". -•Ethel did not Understand
-What it meant, but.ehe tried hard to rook
very wise, and Whiepered • to AMA . Esther
thatgraiiny looked :so .queer, emtlivg with
here es full of. :tears; and the bargler-e-
• .. .
•-41
NONSA.GOLILIA.k Plit,E011111g., •
-
Interesting References:. -to au.
• - Mhinster_in Scotland: • -
The Rev. --Dr: } Nixon • senior peetor of I)
,- -
Free St. John's (Presbyterian), hiontrate,.
Scetland,- who for a number of, -years past
has-been resident' in Ediaburgh,preached on
-Sunday forenoon recently in his old pulpit
to it large congregation. Dr. Nixon chitee
for.i.his text the first Words of the , 42nd
Verse. of the chapter Of Luke-" One
thing is needful." •That one thing, Dr. •
Nixon pointed out, was personal salvation.
It was the only thing needful for .peeseat.
and eternal happiness, for all other. thing's -
health, wealth, prosperityttpleasure, worldly
honor, .etc. -were subordinate to it, and
.wrare tint nene.rsrtry oca Lela -Ater.
Dr. - Nixon concluded with in elamient
appeal te his- hearers to accept. -and further
the: Gospel, Ile was listened to threughont _
•
.
His 'lobby coats and wais:.coats hung upon -hint
like a mit,' - - • - • ,. j • . .-
-
H
•
_
-
_
ON TRIAL.
That's a • • . way
to buy' a, edieinete
but it's a pretty
-
hard eoliditices.
under which to
you've'
t the ant
or Mist
't ate -
it. Perlia
noticed tb
dinary, hi
'medicine d
ti" tempt it.
I The onl
of its
meltable, in its effects that it can
this plan is Dr. Piet -eels Golden X
covery. • As a blood.- cleanser, sir
storer, and flesh -builder, there's not
known to meclical science. In ev
where the fault it in the liver orth
Dysitepsia, Indigestion, Biliousne
most stubborn Skin, Scalpeand
affections, it is guaranteed in eo
benefit or cure or you lave your
, •
Sr;
b Ariirr• bad. tiv3 ..e,ase dr of how tong stande
rented?
d so rot -
• sold osi
'cal Matt
ngth-ree
unglikefl
• I
ry &seam;
blood,''
and tits;
ctofulotit
• y cese
oneybaeltet
with dose attention, and raanY of -the older_To every sufferer from datarrle,,ntocr7re ova,
ing, the proprieters o, •
Remedy say this If WS Cala,
Pt5eroo.fe.cintlyc.aslianodn .Psoerinicla. n.oesr_ntanly!druweggistagele .Ttai
neernbers, together with a large
er
piteous from Other congregations who' bad-
_known.- him while in Montrose, were -de-
lighted to findthat _the old . power and elo-
quence; of the preacher, had not gone,
although necessarily they. were sotneyeltae
abeted, The -Reit. I. A. George,..junioe, •
P-asOsitcondiicted the preliminary- parts of
the service. Dr: Nixon is in the 90th year.
of his eget . - •• ' -•• .
e A local 'tepee said " Phytically, intel-
lectially -and spiritually the • sermon de-
livered by the .nonagenakuien .preacher, Rtio
Dr. Nixon,- in Free eSt. John's, Montrose
on Supday forenoon was remarkable. As
witlaslow steps attcli drooping head the rev?
doctor ascended the pulpit stairs, the friends
who had last teen him 'there nearly fourteen
years ago, could -not fail to remark that the
hand Of time had fall surely though kindly
on the hoary heencl: Yet the voice. Was
elear as ever, and, when raised in..deamicia-
tion or warning, Showed much of the fire of for
mer days. Whenthiteloquenhewas suitained
for -nearly an hour-sertuons were never
any shorter When the rev. "(looter was at the
height Of his .power -e -without the . aid of
numerous coid __Water 'nips the .playsical
feat ...Was ceitaini5r one Which might
well shame many of. our modern
twenty-rninuto eerrnonizers. Intellectually
the isermon was a model of coostruel",ion
according. to the -.old- eehool, the - triad of
"heeds- eieb-heads; sentences and words
folio eriher:eaCh other in gamest geometrical
progression. i Spiritually „or the_olegteally
the' eermon w- as .also - of wbat; the Die-
ruptien Worthies might call the ," guid auld
Gospel kind.' Every argnment was
66 V.M.I1 Wi7 Soriptue'." A glance - at the.
Ord Cameronian s •Manaiscript woald proba-
bly have revealed:tile fact that what many
mtnieters, end- as all publications
nowadays *rite and print' as "h—l" and
were in his ease .written fu q Out
with ctpital letters. Theee, Was nieguarted
dubiety in speaking of ttieni, .and -certainly
ao attempt to. Leave -them out of accountrio ;
pandering to. niodern. epeculgetions,, aid
no -tickling' of the ears ef•-the "many -headed
beast." • - °-
-ttt" Ohl Kate 'exclaimed Aunt Esther ;.' that Arthur-ethas tears an is ey
end -steal neersho3fe money an si ve .
15 UflUL
" Yoe will frigh'ten the child. -why you% too ; why do they. cry on Christmas. day,
kelier nerveus, even." • auntie ?"
• - Deer little " Golden Locks," some day
ishe would know that there are shell things
as happy tears.
. f-iNe bard matter- to••alarm_yout Esther,
-belted." - - . _ •
• rune .Chair by the. fireside. Grumpy was thin and
- . awful _sorearas,
And -the doctors . ea tile, and-- 'told • tbena -la
- ' dancing in his de6ams. .... • '
He came there on a bicyele, but, ah --_-so
. • '
G.ranny atose 'slowly fkom the great arm
e WAS
- the•tale- •
Ile left fhtire n. ambulance -the,t. went- to
Bloomingdale ! - -
•
•
rife Childhood:of the- Wart.
• Oh. the rosy-dayb-of chjllhoOd,
-
ly- they zyted..-
-When not a 0-iarlo. 142 a -vain's:lied;
And not 3.Wtinde tied!
-The-yeara.va.... tall of Veofaise then,
.The tongue was tali otpraise---7-
Bilt I t4ditk tkle cup is sweeter lime,
t Than in the childish &eye. ••-•
Ob, the Iaughinz world of (hildho)d,
Of ignoran e and ease !, -
. The lighteg touch G -31.1.1a
And the idest Pleasure pleaSe
Yet the upward_ paths are dearer, -.
With all the thorns they bear, .
- Than n garden of a hundred flowers .
Ihrlien Ignorance is there !
.
Oh.thb beating hear:-. of .6hildhood-r.
That little hear-. of
-That doirtit has never entered, -
Noe:eon- ,w 114 s brolightlOW !
-Truzit nie, wit an the raptuee.
• - eager- life eat\ spau -
Canl.ihadoW..forth the perfect love:
'Phat warra4_the.lateaSt: of man: •
--Dora Read GOPattie -Harper! ,nreatil
•
_ Jay Gould;
TO‘Wha.t nlaT: 'Cie. not return,
-- eatio,,,esandet. ... , - . ... . -
. •
-lay Gored i.i4• deacl--Ws little odds,
Ile -,N4F5 bUtlitti.4 worth, - - _.
His ehekeis wenehitehousetteld gods, . •••
They did. no good on earth
Ile may have need with good hitent, - •
. . Bot an his life h -as been miespent. .
' 'No Widow's thanks or .orphan's prayers
. Will hell) him up the " golden stairs.-- --
-- Hie tomottene eannetetruly say,
A worthy man has pa,s-ed away. _ .
_.„.. ',Aillions hP own ecl-te help .inankind,
. ....- -:-. But all!. his goid was not refined. , •
•Ye -who a.re wealthy try,to be -
- A bles-ing to posterity, -•
• ;Then-whee your earthly course is run .•
The Lord.above will say s Well.done " -
„. e, .
...,,..: ..
' • • . .
e •
spare- elter face -a -such a dear .
wore e loole of: Sadriess that Ethel -had net •
seen ,
-bead: on Attnt. Kate's Slieuldere and saade
her soft,.gentle voieet• .
Kate; do aot emit me- to . bolt the, door
to•hight. Whet if boy :- should .;come
hoixieett .Whet if he should- find the door
closed cta • hint? . We might not hear him
knock, Kate.' • . •
"But it is ten years to -night, mother;
since Arthur *eat away.." , -
‘‘. Aye; sand _ -Can. - I- forget" it?. ,have
cot/it-ed. the deee the months, the -years.
Po not eek 03e tO. 'kat the door,..deer ; he
hatek to -night."
went- to iest- 'end -left the greet.
r Sage's Catarrilit
' TOE -11041.T11 GLA.
- . •
They Come to --alt End M
Thitik.They nay',
-.1' Glaciers plunge into the sea in many cold.
counties and perish by drowning, their dis-
membered remains fioattng way as bergs.
But their end is. by . dissolution where the
annual mean temperature rises considerably
above the freezing point. At some certain
level 'melt faster than they can fitter, .
and so terminate. The ev
fluctuating eget: Icelandic
steadily- advancing; Swiss
ing to M. Forel, have undergone during
'the tweseite ceuairy five errtating periodie
•
Fasters
Warning to Patent medicine Advertisers:
Patent -medicine conip.enies.which" athier-
tise to chre the ordinary ailments Of man-
-
'nit before so ••she _laid trerabling kind, idefeit -a-certain sum -w.
• never expect to. pay, Should take warning
from a recent dectston of e g Court
of Appeal confirming a .ladgmeat of Mr.
Juttice-Lindley.egeinst. the CerbOlie Stiaoke
Ball .06repeity. The -defendants inserted
an advertisementin the neilepapets offering
£100- t� any: person:. "who tient-eats the
. -
increasing epidemic _influeeza,:cillds, or any
disease batted by taking cold, after, having
used the ball, three times- daily Pit. WO-
.weeket-aecording . that printed direatio.ns
suppliedwith each - • The plaiatiff
bought a ball, ,and carried out .the inttruc-
tions.. t Three times a cley for two *eeks did
ise it' biit tithe caught: the infloerza;
"4.ILW.
._ Tao Midden:
- tele _winter daYrat eventide,
Tom -sat, with Julia at his side,
And begged her,:o'er, and o'er,to Say
11-qw soon should be the wedding day.. .
The raaidenieofly hung her head
And so her suitorsoftly said.
As to his own she raised her eye?, - •
" "Why, Tein? yen take me by surprise r
'Tis February novir,.myd:-ear.
The stormy March is very near.: -
Don't keep. a fellow waiting, eeray.1
Say, Julia, shan't it. be in --May ?r'
1, indeed, is -et
laden are now
laciere, accord-
d unbolted- the latch, to which -
• • - nevertheless and thereupon _sued the corn-
- • - fon lit the
o gruuy
a
her lopg-abtent boy had the key,protecting
the inmates from' a raid by the bueglats who
were said to be busy -ie- the neighborhood.
" Aunt Esther," said Ethel, as she slowly
-undressed fo-r hed; takinga long time in the.
procetts " why does granny alwayeleaVe.
the doer unbolted ?" - • . . • -
• "-Little -eirls odiould not ask tett Many
„ • .
questions,-' Goldentlockis.
e- - • -
"Please' 'Aunt, Either %tell me.. Did
'granny- . have a little boy who went away'"
• a- to
Well yes; long ago. e W
he a eailor a great ship, and we think- e
all but your granny ---that lee was 'drowned tisers in this country .should take warning•
pany for $500. - e compauy
case on various pleas, such as the absence of
a regular -contract, and so forth, but the
judge held that a.published promise of the
. 9
kind in the advertisement was a. pledge
and • decided that it must -pay. An appeal
• was taken, but. the higher coUrt. has 110*
COMO to the same, conclusion as the lower
one, and - the.Carbolic Smoke Company will
have to tsurrender the money. t-- As this
`decieion would undanbtedly .be • followed by
of .,dindoution and groethe
chenges
_
by these • .
Theie cheese:eta
Unmistakable, and suela
beett . antieiptieted. Th
deereate a‘ecompt
dry cycle ; 1--iere
damp and cold. Meta
degree of cold, it is corte Avat•le that a per -
the
Ea:sten tlytau gmen ted, d
. Gernsterh lever ee. I(
_althea o w .s Be;
The meteorc- •
and emphasized
are Very
howeveri, is ,
es might ,have •
t ie to .. saer,
08 warin. and
•te, , one thet is
ohe edditionals••-
Sad- Over.prodUclioli of Scholars in Ger-
11111111Y• . • •
• Germany suffers-from:an intellectual Over-
produCtion. • All . professions are over-
crowded. It was, fondly belieoed'uti . to our
dap that the State had .no More iiqt 'dant
task than to render the acquiring of knowl-
edge at easy as possible, anti .for that pnr-
rise to establish many higher echeels. But
it was not asked, whether there was room
enough for employing men when their ediii
cation. was finished. Taking, for instance,
the career Of law in ?rusks.; We .find that
there s are ..1;85I men who have not -only
•passed through' the gymnasium and the uni-
Vertity, but have already served the State
gratis for about five yearsi'While the annual
average demand brone hundred. There are
More-thait 7,000t examined architects with -
mit -a z fixed einployment ; it is the same
with 'engineers; teachers in ciliates, Mettle,
matics, etc.t These unemployed forces are
partieularly attracted -to the great
capitals,: ..beCatnie. • -everyone hopes.
that with the' many chances they
offer he will find a- gap.. into which he
May jump. - - Men ;of university training
are, almost without exception,' capable only
of intellectual work-. If they do -not suc-
ceed in their branch they cannot 'become
tailors - or carpenters ; they must take to
'pettifogging, ! giving lessons, . copying,
writing for inferior papers, _etc.. ._ There -are
lawYers, physicians, (looters of philosophy,
among those who are regularly relieved .by
the, Pock Board. All these men are,
of course, disc:entente& With the present
state.ot:things; and ready' to join with thole
forces which hold out hope Of overthrowing
it. -Nor are female candidates wanttne
in
this prOletarlat ; all these- who give cheap
leaeoneS write Mediocre novels for low -class
journelte. or Work for shops at starvation .
wages, are ewelleng .. the army ei social
•revoluttona-De. . Geffeken, in the January
ifoittra,
1 The Voids Not .11:11.0ead Vet:
Even a blind Mtn Can see that more .
cleerly, than daylight, or else *by ;should.
so rnahy -conttaue: to uee oily
and often nseless preparations • for the.
relief Of pain, when a'preptiration just AS
cheap, i elegant, More powerful, and pene-
trating as Nerviline is can .be purchased -
frein any dealer inemedicine? • ItTereiline
Cures !instantly aches and pains. Nerviline
is 'the Most efficacious remedy for internal
Pains;: NerViline applied externally subdues
the most inteniee pain almost at once.
Canadian courts patent medicine advert,
,at sea.; but ,grahlay thinks he will cmxte back *Halifax Herald.
seine date.", -
"1)o\ you think he e willcome
auntie ? ' , • .
No dear; but do not talk about - YourUncle :
Artleur-----that was,. hietname-talk Of.
illorriethingteheetfal-thet - makes- me - -feel
'sad." -
‘‘• Well let's.:Ssee-cto-yeu thinkif the biirgt
lar. comes he will 'steel , the things e that
Santa Claust-pute in My stocking? You
khowl hung it up inliberrye--the liberty is
very - neatthe. doer, auntie -had I
hetteit gs and get theestoekingeend hang it
" Dear tee child Whetideae conic into
hack
Miss Julia deeply blushed,--Of-dourse,
-And down the loVely-eyelids * '
."Why, Tom I",she that's nine Weeks off?
And-,•-wo-eIdn't April do as well I"• • • -
- _
The St. lificholas (Revised).
Dear old St . -Nicholas,
. _Lean your ear this way,.
Please do tell to (very soul
• What I'm going to say.
Christmas eve is coming soon,
NoW,.you dear old man,
tell you what to'bring to me,
Tell you it I eat.
• .1
-
fa the times Of yesterday
So Many years age,
You mu -t well remember it,
All had:more friend than foe -
- Each one owned his cozy nest .
'Id tilled the sail around, • ,
• SaintatedAime ; the precious gem, •
And niat.ean•ne'er be friund.
There 'Was tess
The air with joy vis.e.hed in the land
Choose for me, dear SaAta 11Ath,
Hoping
one Toil think, are right,
Hoping. yeti a oyohs time - •
I'll wish you a. gled good night.
• ' .
:
titrikes.
• Strikes arewlite proper, only strike right;
Strike -to some purpose, but not for a fight;
Strike for your manhood, for honor and. fame;
Strike right and left till you win a good name;
Strike for your freedom from that is Tile;
Strike off eon3panions who -often beguile;
Strike with :the hammer, the sledge and the
axe; - • p °
Strike off bad habits with troublesome tax;
• Ste -meant unaided, depend on no other; •
Strike without gloyes, and your foolishness
• smother; • ° I
rate off the fetters of fashion and pride;
smite where lit beet, but let wisdom decide;
eittritt kneed blow while the iron is hot;
a". keep striking tin you hit theright
aPOt. ' -
in a sate place?" .
your silly little: head,". replied Aunt
Esther kissing Ethel • good -night, as she
tu.eked her into bed. • •
"Please auntie, tell me what you would
do if the burglar got into the house -if you
same him?' •
" Well ". saidAuntEsther, who w° as very
.timid and F4sity alarmed, "1 think I
would tush down stairs, open the hall win-
dow wide, and seund the -greet gong ---that
would bring the neighbors.' •, - _ „
4 4 Would yoa rally do that ?"
" Most,certeinly;'treplied Esther, With a
brave' voice; kt It would be the -very hist
• •
The Public Schools of New York City.
'1,1tieo•fS esh1:1:Weeetuettinits
reely perceptiblet
might enable tht glacler to. over-
_ - e
whelitt , 13rie. But this would he an.
exceed ist gly fall ttep towards the restora-
tion of a iortiiei. ettee f things, when an ice -
stream close upou 4250 miles in • length,
etertiog frem theaame eourcee ceoesed the
frozen or noti- exiettn t. -lake ef Geeeva and •
eleboalted 'by Calez upon Leone. W:thont
•ievere cold aetfewell as heavy precipitation
ice could net pessibly lave gained tt.0 great
seicendancy. Awl- this was no local
Phereemeteon ; it n'aetsimultaneously peeve,- ,
lent over widely sep tatted tracte of the -
earth's kat face.-Edin urgh,-Pevitiv.-
•
It is .authoritatively
will tell," aod yet her
You dont hear eome
what time it it-
geveleand is to have
Langtry ia xhibite
inueeum. •
The late -Miele Rse was on the tstage
New York Manage ---,Welt, 'I've got to go
The typical New York City 'primary
school is a hard, unsympathetie, mechanical
•drudgery - school, a !school into. which the
light of. science has not. yet. entered._ Its
chaeacteristic feature lies in the . severity
of its. discipline, .a discipline_ of enforced
silence,' nietionlessness and mental passivity.
T.he difference •fpundin.going fromroomto
mem And irom school to Ischool-4 have
teen Many Of them -is 'a- - difference in
degree only and not inkirid. One. teecher
willallowher pupils' to move their heads
a:. little _more freely than the standard,
another- will. allow- a little more freedom
s but • leis free-
,
heede and the third re-
te to keep -their hands in
d of behind their. backs.
thing to: do." • - -
" Itwould be e. very brave thing to --dee
auntie, 15:tit. Sorrie.waysi I -think -it would be a
very ffighVenii g thing to 'specially.if
it was very dark." • . • - "
"Golden Locke:v. fell fast asleep to
dream Of . Santa Claus and : his
gifts -
dreamed as we old folks used to dream long.
ago when our stocking . hung awaiting the
.generosity of some tieart Santa :Claus, who
has Icing -ago gone to the land. Where _ kind
'deeds to the little ones are not forgotten,
.WhereloVe and 'kindness Shown: on * earth,
add jewels to the brightest crown. -. Then.
" Qolden Locks" awoke. Bright moon-
light illuminated the room. -first: the
child thought it WA' morning. - She sprang.
hastily out of bed. Morning indeed 1 why.
the Moen laughed at her with his „great
Blazed "Golden Lockta."-Iihe- veituld. take- a
4..ittieone•peep, at her stocking. .. But
Wozattea,e E,„.1 . at11-`• 1140 bed•agein. . She
thete'Oent'l... -dame ! Ethel, hesitated.)
Tuhthe4ou. gna sudden- :thought
t very hard. • She
round face -
state., -
111 P"1"- d
r would go-. own
t ? -Aunt Esther
amp moist begging_
she, Ethel,- must
tugs. " Who!is
Slipped CIA"
f the door,
down the
to the shoulder-
eicinein Moving t
quires the °bade
their laps, mete
.The character of the instruction is identical
With that foUnd:wherevet this Wee system
of diecipline preyailo, -being ;of that form
Which appeals t� the. nieinory :alone. •The
aim of the teacher is Simply -to - iecuie.
re-
Sultsby drilling the .pupils in the -facts pre-
scribed for the wide. The public school
system Of New -York city _affords, therefore,
another. example .of heeet e under: unWiee.
management, et trained teacher May be res
dewed to -the level of Whohas hed no
training.—Dr. J. M. Rice, in the January
Forum.
asserted that 'Lame
ly a day passes that
one ask you to tell
a $400,000 theatre.
in wax at London •
when she Was three eeks 'old. ' •
11 , .
to London agii.in, .tt gent-- at for!
Manager --Got to-hutit up itowe American.
actors forournew piede.
-
We sen l the rnarireinns French
Iteineily CALTH 0 s lirree,- aild -a
legal guarantee thatfiAlanos 'will
STOP Discharges &EktliErtgoillity "
1
efilal?. gnertnittorrItes.Varleece10
gold RESTOIIIE Loot Vigor.
Use it atzd pay if satisfia
Address, von moist. CQC,
Sole AMeriCall Agents, Clielnunti, Old*.
who see. e eard a Are
at the a afraid -ifittr
have e pe th -But real
Afraid ?” slittf•
• , 0 t.
of bed again, 401)
into the hall. e `'*14 sg a
stairs. She pin N.' out
was a light
joie !". whie
guess We es„
run away a
Didn't Mention Sir Name
That Oregon.- girl • whit the other night
saved- a whole train from destruction, and
then went ,on her way.hoine,.not even tell-
ing her name, is a _genuine. heroine: The
report says "She was on her - way home•
from &Party when she discovered thsat 'a rail
had been -removed on a -high • trestle,. and
thereiipon she peoeuredts; lantern. and 'sig -
nailed the approaching train just .in time.
Having done.a heroic .dised and savecrtaany-
trivelere from a horrible (teeth, She Modestly
went on -her wayk without waiting for
thanks or reward, airem•Watettantentio
ut
her name."-Chicagn •
. 7
.„Ey life is,. Miserable.
Mr. '.Henpeck matter.?. Mr. Henpeck
Friend ---What's thtivays flaring Up at Some, -
et -Ah, my wife is alPs- jealous of my, type-
-thing and now she :tie of yteme.Aypewriter.?
Writer. F.-4ealeithe chance Of your life.
'Good 1- This -is f, -Discharge your type
Mr. H. -Hew 1wifo takeher place and
writer and letyours ableto do . .
then you • will
you've never done
Heet:Whatis tha
wife. --
Crneve°r'lliaSilEe.DArit CLUA RRKESYSOCAATTAARRRRHH NCTHEEN
THROAT AND NOSE, COLD IN THE HEAD, b
FEVER; INFLAMED PALATE AND TONSILS,
stores,. the sense of mell, and drives sway •
DULL IL-11. Ern eA OlocHttEmeXwpieriiievrioepekawboYnadleirwsh. 0. ..prihavteiz, a
50c. at Drurists. git by mail on recetatet
of
. • • ° •
nen
ow * strange? There
"what a
eno9tbeteiklaild-to hereelf. " I
;lore in yen" life.- .Mr.
F.-e.Dictate to your
1_ . •
-
aimind the fire, Emere
' • .
. WaiieSt as Represented..
Al
Li 'stubby little man With whiskers -
chin
bought a ticket at the -Academy of Music
last night and went in to see "The For-
esters.- At the end Of the first act he
rushed out to the box-office and said to the .
CC Whithr Iiirttsre,Z..11rneY back."
° PACO fladreSrang
CLARK flM CO..186 ADELAIDE ST .WEST, lona.
LDOLLA
MAKE-
KYOIIRSEWNG MACIIINEA
FOR IT OR SOIDA3 C
STAMP FOR .PARTICUIAR
PRICE-LIST,SAMPLES;
COTTON YARN Sec. 'OF 01.111
.7177lia:MACH
VREELMAAVBROS:M*
.GEORGETOWN,,
• satisfactory ?" t the show
"Not by a dinged sight it ain't. I seen
pictir's of Tennyson • up all around the
town an' leem over to see him act. Feller
aie:,aptfedaai
hi
r
. lin fact
eratoi adteeratiz
fmthisee rws.P:Irbhnii4snogeeoldt
the greet
np the
'-‘44 until
take
r •
12,000 Acres of gOodkarirt"Q
ICHIGAN IngLands, title ;perfect, ea
Michigan Centre.14 Detroit St
. Alpena & Loon Lake -Manmade
LANDS . g);173ircetjactr.eraapifing tfrom 112 lei
These lands .are, '.
cl se to enterprising new towns .
FOR . , chlirehes, fieb.00ls, ebo., and wit
be ear onmost Womble ter -Ma -
-. Apply to It. M. •PIEB,41E, Worn 1
SALE ,- Bay °
iti;ot to J. W. Emmet
_ • Wh.itatere Mich. 'Please :meatiest
' this paper when writing
ENTR
EIUSINESS •
COLLEGE
"4,kviiire . oat., and STRATFORD, ant •
Largest ana, best 1:business colleges in Oaneds...
- •
tiateeleigues free
SHAW de IsLIOTT, PRINOrPA1,131
inside tells me he ain't with the show at
Fla., and learn to have your stock coma
• all." - •-WRITE W. G. TILGHMAN. PALATKA.
Diceollom's Rheuinatic Repellant. the sex desired. .
'II you have suffered with rheumatic
pains in body or limbs for years do not !
expect a cure by applying liminents or oils.
These have been tried for centuries past ; Valuable -treatise a
up,
d to bottles ofmedicine seat Emote
SLOCUM 6* ,NCOO 11311xPrWeeV AanddeloldPcralgoeffictoetdrotteritt 047..Ar „
' any Sufferer. -";Give E
and found useless. .Rhenmatio Repellant is
"Come and sitilipitablir western relative. -the only remedy known that thoroughly ;
soniai,"-iaid the bkal- limita' tions .tbat 11 remcives'the disease and benefits the system. : FitEi, "DETECTIVE STORM*
$ and
wiu ‘r -There are! mgsc _ Pacit .of goods worth 2,
h d 'n • Si elunt Rachel " • -
There het -a man whd wasilniP and prevent me ro SI woman ;from Boston, This is the season when little boys mani." large 100-P. Pic ure Book, that will sIr PI
,
Claus! p ers heart sank
I will sit in ' feat a startling ingenuity is finding airholes rIL Cth the read ° a halldseme fortune. Sena
; he must b tit* railed the ye e permission
e `-` ''""th you
o. -silver • to p y postage. A. w...K.D1Win
'm the ponds and skating into them. D.LL,Vsnito N.S.
7 .*
•
. • "
7.;
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•
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•
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