HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe New Era, 1884-03-14, Page 9A
11
March X;e1 1884: „ , _ - TRE.,Q
EN'S lir'
• IrOBTXdre
• Med fidideeirte, Adeddell. for the ifonfle
If or*. 0444'
TI' e OPtgait.iiif Frip'tideblpo
;Weer WirafleliMolmette the 4ttatttiefor Morels)
be gathered at her olendor wae
Thebeauteous robe she wore;
.#410.4.10,agoldou bolt enibraeage • , •
' Onel'oficilxUed Seteithere.
., • „ •
The girdle'ehrank ; ihrleimeningtoned.
Still kept the alibiing gem,
But noir ber flowing loess it bound,
A lustrous diadera. ,
4124 narrower still the eirelet VOW
Behold a glittering .band, •
its reseate.diamond set anew.
Her neck's white column spanned.
Suns ilea and set; the straining Ow
The phortened links rapist,
Yet flashes in ,a bracele tie grasp
The diamond; op her wtiet.
At length, the round of changes. peek
The thieving years could bring,
The dewel, ghttarieg to the laeti,
Still apexklea in a ring.
Zile, link by lick our friendshipa pa,
Ralootien,,break and fall,
na.TXPW xngizoil •.. the loving heart
'Lives changeless through •thein all.
• eddy Tee do not piled led, •
, . •
ISOnie youthful. housekeePers One dal,
Were getting supper in a way
That wee delightful, really. •
be grass a velvet carpet made
Reneath the glowing maples' shade;
No room 'so charming nearly.
• •
'Then Flossy brought a napkin red;
4‘ 'Twill make a lovely cloth," she said,
But when she came to try it,
Alas I 'twee not quite large enough
'To bide the table, slightly rough,
'Twits useleas to deny it.
The rueful looks of blank dismay
• Began to chase the smiles away,
So meagre did they find it.
ouripoke Bunny little Nell:
We'll leave it so, 'tis just as well,
• And play we do not mind it."
The joyous miles returned 'Once morq
' Too soon the dainty feast waa o'er,
And shadows gathered thickly; '
A star shone silvery in the west
Warning each merry little truest,
To,seek the homefold quickly.
•
- The lesson'is no plain as day' ;
• A eloud.may rise above your way,
__The OUnsuise is behind it ;
When things go wrong and others frown,
Just cut all vain repining down
And play you do nob mind it. •
A Copple Wen.
• .
:VOr brava Scottish lads • wi' their kilts an their
ihoSe • •
Wee doot but bite lived ance on parritch °alms%
Sat the times they attic:hanged, an' a'maun agree
That the maid o' folks noo talc a cuppie o' tea.
.just lboknt our arny, when facingtheir foes,
•The feek o' wha ne'er tasted parr:yell or brose.
Mut at them they go, an' sone make them See;
There's naething that cheers like a (nipple o' tea'
'On Egypt's wide plains,whaur the sun fiercely
glows,
'Oor brave lads ne!er theught abeid parriteh or
brose,
Tel-el•Kebir ance won, an' oor heroes set free,
The hale o' them ha,d their guid clippie a tea.---
iert,t. • r • • ••+ ••,40.gsr *Nal
And our brave Volunteers, as ilka ane knows,• ,
lie'er stick tae a e ?Sie o' patritch �r brose,
But would far sooner hae that plant o'er the sea.
The product o' China,a °apple o' tea. -
'There's folk noo-i-days that would turn up their
12000 •
it afore them ye laid either parritoh or brose.
But try them wi' something guid, then ye will see
Hoe dainty they'll sip their bit cuppie o' tea. •
•
Tan a cuppie of tea ye can treilt a bit Men',
But parritch qr brose 'Would look once mean,
And as long as I live, and ger it topree, •
AM stick tae any ane hien', a clippie o' tea.
"BANS ismtor.." •
A ligb,t girl's form and a baby face, ,
Bine eyes with stool, MU state; '
Yet they tell me, Diek,,she can go the pap • ,;
In a way, that would ourl your hair. • •
They say thatehe's not ;et twenty-one,
And sne Warily looks eighteen;
• But Abe doesnoteare for what girls call ,
She Can hardlyknow,what theyinean. •
She played the deuce with good old Fred...
Till he went to the East, you know;
She had paid to his face tbat she wished him
dead,
For she'd somebody else in tow.
Whey said Harry blew cut his brains fa debts
On Me night uf MO last Two Thou; •
But I eaw his book, and, for all his bots,. •
' He might have been plunging now. • •
And two men fought on the beach at Cowes;
One fell and the other fled; _ '
And a Romish priest wouldhavebroken hisvows,'
But -be broke his heart instead. •,
No, Dickey, you need not look so glum; ,
She'll wait for a better match :
• She's not the girl for you, old chum;
And youlenot what they cell. a catch. •
— •
•
Echoerrttt the Great Morn*. • •
In Heard ithunty, Ala , logs were whirled
into the* apd broken befere they reached
the group& •; •
•
At Ileeded,,Alat, the torn -tido' deposited
near the railroad a woOdadording machine.
•. which no dine about there had ever Men
before.
Three horses' belonging to Dr. Thema;
Wright, near Birntinghans, Ala., were lifted'
• into the air, and have not been iseen_ox
•••• -1E-said from since. • •• ' ' •
A house near Birmingham, which'
two negroes were lying sick, was picked up
by the wind and landed tidy 'yards' away.
Neither of the men wasdnjured, •
,A bale orootton pas blown hall a mile`
sway from Goshen, •Ala. • A °Mirth -was
• destroyed, and a large portion of it was
'-found on the top of the monutain. three-
quarters of a mile away.•
Near Midway, S. 0„ Martin Mingo, a
coloredpreatilier, was lifted from bib bed by
the: wind end depoeited in. n. valley' 500'
• yards vadat,. With tett slight btuisee. His
•house was hiowa to' piece's •, •
Clifford Id Lockedof jasper, Gad threw
• himself into a clump of undergrowth to
OBecipe the tornado, spa was so severely
thrashed a.bouti sod pelted *ith hailstones
(hat his clothes were tort into ribbons.
• ,
then a hill in the centre of the village
.0f -Goshen, Ala.., stood a netentid weldbuilt
• eohoolhoupe. Although not a stick of the
• building could be 'found after the storni.
'• encoepting the flooring not one of the
• twentyasin itonatee was fatally. injored.
At Rockport, Ind., a party of twelve, who
%had been across the river to attend a wed.
ding, Were caught in the tornado. The
ferry bciat in which they were was blown
Behove and clashed to pieces, and its patmen.
gen were left clinging to the limbs ot the
trees; against. which the boat was hurled.
None of them were killed. *
111114MAIIITA.111.
la143013.E.• ABBEY,
• '
Joint Brown's Despair Over a Carriage
• Accident to Her Majesty.
•(looter or the.,Qmenti new book have
titid reaeheil Una tad A perusal of it
shows that the eitniets already sent by
citable thew very fairly its oharaoter. It ip
. almost entirely devoted to denriptions of
little incidents in the Queen's daily routine
of life and to John Brown. In one place
little, breakfast eIone. I remained, at
home readIng, writind and resting on the
IsOfit or in an arddebair•
• The Qmen was greatly intpressed by the
communton service softie oelebratedki tho
Scotch Itirk, and JO On entry hi the journal
for Nov.18. OM says:
It was all so truly earnest, and no de.
thription can db justice to the perfect
devotion of the whole assemblage. te was
• most touching, • and I longed muola to iold
in it (Since 1873, nye the Queen In a
foot note, I have regularly partaken of the
communion at Orathie every autumn, it
being alwaye given at that time.) To see
. all these simple, good people in their nide
plain dresses (including an old woman in
her mutiob), so many of whom I knew and
Borne cd.whom hadswalked ferdold as they
were, in the deep snow, woo -very striking.
Almoat all our OWA people were there. We
mine home at twenty minutes before 2
o'clock.
Doting her visit to Iverloohy the woe re-
ship describes how a careless driver upon
bar carriage in a oive froth attnegiugta. owed bY °AMMO of Loohiel;
Rath
d It was quite dark when we left, but all
the lamps were lit as usual; front the first;
Ib was, as Geri. Ponsonby observed after-
wards, a striking scene. "There- was
Leohiel," as he said, 14 whose groat -grand -
.,.uncle. had been the teed moving came of
hoWevertigt. WhO Was dtivins, seemed
to be quite contused, suddenly, ;snout two" the rising of 1745 -dor without him Priam
nudes from Altnagmthasaoh, and about
tWelitY Minutest after bo had :darted, the.
toarriaget began to tern up on one aide.' We
called out, 'What's the matter?' d'here
was a page°, during which Alin said. ' We,
• are upeettingt •
"In another moment -during whioh I had
time to reflect whether we should be killed,
or not, and though there were still things I
had not settled and wanted to dod-the car-
• riage turned over mate gide And We were
all precipitated to the ground! -1 oame bleed ie in my veins, and 1 am ate their
down very hard, with my face upon the tadratentative, and the
people are as de-
groundenearthe voted and loyal to me as they were to that
oertiage. the horses both unhappy race.
on the ground, and Brown calling out in
despair, ' The Lord Almighty have mercy The Queen% attachment for Dr. Maoleod
on us!Who did ever see the like of this le vary clearly shown in every reference to
him, but nowhere more clearly than by her
before? I thought you -were all killed.'" deeoription of the way the news of his
The Queenie face was a good deal bruised
dud „olden, odd bet tight thumb was death WSS conveyed to her.
oixededvely pablui aut much ettosett, Eattnords, Sunday, June 16, 1872. -We
smith was sent back for assistance, Brown had come home at 5 minutes past 8; I had
in the meanwhile benig d indefatigable in Wiebed Brown good night, and was just
his attention and care. Almost directly k°i°$ to tdd ddetsIng4tom, whet' he aeked
sd:er the incident happened "1 'said to to mnte in again and nay a few words to
Alioa it was terrible not to beanie to ted id me. He :same in, and said, very kindly,
to my dearest Albert," to `which the Prin. that he had seen Col. reneonby, and thed
one anattered "Butte knoweit all, and there was rather hecl news of 13r. McLeod,
em sure he watohed over aro "Ib was who was very ill -in faot, that they were
!
not gold," tthe first what my beloved he queen says, "and I remem. afraid he was deadOh! what a blowl
bered from
How dreadhil to lose that dear, kind, loving,
One large -limited friendl. My tears flowed
had always staid to me, namely, to make the
beet of what could nob be altered." . Hew; fast, but 1 checked them SS much as I could
end.thanked good 'Brown for the very kind
ever, except for Smith, the itioident had no
way he broke this painful 'Andean:, lutex.
serious consegeeoces. "People were fool.
.peated BEMS
to Me. I tent' for and told
ishly &tanned when we got upatain, and
Leopold, Who was quite stunned by it, and
made a great fuss. I teok only a little soup
and fiali in toy room and had my head ban. all ntY maids"' Bye* one waR amot deeply
dated.!' • grieved, I cried very bitthrly, for this ta a
'
• In Mond, 1867, the Queen visited terrible lOse to me. •
Floors and the 'Scotch border country. There M. evercelione of the 400 pages,
Mina that of the- dedicetion to the , final
Kelso is described. as being. very pia.
tribute, in which the name of BrOwn does
tureeque. Here she -was the Riles5 of the
Duke of J3uooleuoh, whose house is ad; not.appear., On 07213 onoggion the writes:
-mired greatly :
Charles would not have made the attenddi
• -showing our Majesty (whose great-
greadgrandfather he had etriven to da.
throne) the :wenn made •historical
Vpincgi Charlie's wanderinge: It was a
scene OBS could Rot look on unntoved."
Yee; and I feel' a sort of reverence in
going °ter these menet in this most beau-
tiful country, which I am proud to call my
, own, where there was suoh devoted loyalty
to the family of my &motors -for Stuart
I gave my Wthfill Brown an oxiclidad
'" The view from the window:: is beauti- silver biscuidbox and wale onyx studs.
fol. The distant Clietdot range, with a Was Ma* pleased with the fotmer, and
the tetra came to hie eyes, and be Judd, It
great dead of wood.. Kelso embothmed in •
is too men." -God knotte ib is not, for one
ricitt woods, with the nridge and the Tweed
po. . • . , • .
fretting beneath natitral grass terraces devoted and feithful
whioh go -down .to it:: Very fine; It re. • Ondlia 2tst Of Oetoher, 1875, the Queen -
minded die a little of the view from the
attended the funeral of Brown's father at
pdemt park,•near . • Micros, opposite Abergenlie. She ea:'
. On the 12111 of September, 1877, the When the coffin was being taken away
she (Sirs. Brown) gobbed bitterly. %look.
Queen left Balmoral for an expedition to
Loth Maree, which -proved 'meet delightful.
Here are one or "two pastimes:, whith show -
how the time Was, spent: '
"Reading ; writing. Beatrice's Mona is
a verypreitti Otto, but very hot, being over
the' kitohen; ,Bibwids just' opposite, also
very dice and not hot, but 'emptier. After
dinner the Ducheseof Reibuighe teed 'a
little mit of the nevispapared.: • . 7. •
The midges are dreadful, and 'you (linnet
etand a moment withont 'being stung. Di-
, at twenty minutes to L I remained sketohe
tee:the:lovely vitt:ire-deem-the windows in
the dining.room, and then sketched -the
beautiful, mountainalso. Even hem.
allootigh the children were close at hand,
.the feeling of lonelinese, when I saw no
room for my darling and felt Ions indeed
alone and a widow °Tasmania Me very sadly!
16 woe thediret tune I had gone in this way
on e vieit (like in former times); ond I
thought so much otall dearest Albert would
Have done and said, ond how he would have '
wandered about , everywhere, admired
everythipgdooked at everything-andnow I
Oh I must it ever, ever be so? • • '
Daring this visiattinetQueen Made an
expedition to Melrose; "moat picituiesque
-and surrounded by woods and hills:"
, We drove straight up to tbe abbey *
and Walked, about the rificie, whioh are,
d t de of hit
Oldr 700 applications- for donne 'hove
been Made in Montreal, only 300 of whioh
will be granted.
The betrothal of the Prinoetis Elizabeth
of Hesse tvith the Grand Duke Sergitis of
Ennis, officially announced .
A mati, whose name is given as Pathe,
was r MI -6W on the Graod Trunk Railway
yesterday afternoon near Ibe Gregory
House, Montteal. Eis leg5 were out off by
tho oar wheel, and he died shortly-afterd
'MU • '
-There is a kind of bird in South
America Called the pave. These birds eit
in ledge flocks in trees and wait Wail they
Are all shot one by one. XiSoilthAnterican
sportsmen, are like same of oure the pato
must lite to a greet age. .
ndee y, fine, an ome the arc so.
diite and nation in beootiful preservation.'
;Meat truly 'does Waller Sciett say: '
athou wouldlit vieWfair Ifialrose aright
Co viiiitit by the pale Met:Might. •
It-looketvery ghostlike, and, roininds- me
a little of Holyrood Chapel. . • . ' •"
-Another twenty minutes or half hour
brought ue to Abbotsford, the Well-known
residence -tit r.13ir Walter Scott. 'It deo. low'
and lcioke tether - • . • ;
They showed us the pakt - of the house lit
Windt Sir Walter lived and all: his rooms
-his drawing -room, with the same -furni-
ture and carpet; the library, where we saw
his MS. of-"Ivnhoe '' and.seyeral others'
of hie noveland poemdin a beautiful hand -
Writing," with hardly any erasures, and
other tallow Which Sir Walter Mid himself'
collected. Then his study, a Small dark
mein With a little turret; in, which is a bust
in bkome. done from & oast -taken_ after
death ot SirWalter. In bis study we sad
his jeurnalrin which Mr Hopp Soott asked.
meto write kcit, name (whiohd felt it; to be
a presumption in me to. do ); as ;Oleo the
otherd We went through '001110 padieges
intolvto or three rooms, where were cod
leoted fine specimens of Old edition ate., and
when in a glans:age are Sir Walterts tan
clothes. We endedby going into the dining -
mom, in which Bit Walter Scott .
where welook tea. .
In September, 1869; the Queen !Aided
divertroesachs, and theentrym the jourhal
for the lat is as follows " •
- • We got up at 7.30;lireakfaited at 8; and
at 8 30 left Brilinoral with •Lonise, Beatrice
and Jane Churchill (Brown. is always,
unless I mention to :the contrary, on the
boa) for Ballater. • . •
We ham only space to quote the follow.
ing panage, one of the many. in whioh the
Queen describes the beautiful scienery of
the dietriot
• Hatdly it °mature did we • meet, and: we
patssed merely a Very few pretty gentjemendi
• pliesee, of vety poor oottageo With amide'
women end barefooted, londlaired.lathiels
and children, quiet and unassuming um
men and laborers. This Solitude, the
.rnmainu) ana wild loYelinese of everything
here, the absence of hotels and began, the
independent simple people, who all speak
Melia here, alt make beloved Sootlend the
Proudest, finest country in the world. Then
there hi that bealitifal heothen which you
I:, tot see elseWhere. I prefer it greatly to
Switherlaind magnifigent And glornitis aft
the ecienerrof that country is.
On Wedneadityddept. 8, she Writesi :
A Very bad night from a violent attack of
tunirtilgia in my leg. I only got up 'after 9
and Meld hardly Welk or Otandf but Was
Otherwise Mt ill. I took a little, but very
•
some whiskey and water and oheese,ecoord-
ing to the universal Highland tendon& and
• then Ii3ft, begging the dear old lady to bear
.up. I told her the ' parting was but for a
time. Saw 'my geed Brown at a 'little
beton 2. He said all bsidgone nil well, but
he seemed very siith • • • ,
Thicoeolusion is•dated Bahnoral,Novem-
••ber, 1883, and rens as fellows: •
A few words I muid add in conclupion to
•thiedsvolitmet-ThsthfudatteridalittWhter
id so often mentioned throughout these
leaves isms longer with her whom he served
so trult,devotediy, hotiritgly. Li the•fult
tend healthand strength he wa.s snatched
away frorn • his career of neat:Anne. after
an illness of only three days, on the 27th of
March -of this year, respected and beloved
by all who recognized hie rare worth and
kindness- oft -heart, and truly regretted by
all who km* him.. His lossto me Wand
helpless as 1 was at the time froia an
accident) is irreparable; lot be deservedly
peseessed my entirecotifidinice', and to say
that he, is dad*, nay, hourit'idstied by Me,
•whese • idelong . gratitude he: won by hie
(instant care, atteotion .; and devotion, is
,but a feeble expression of the truth. „
' a trien nobled thistiertiebit '
More loyapand more loving, never mat , _
With in a ;lumen breaat. . ;
'' Late IMatint•nt• Note*. ' •
• -
The Illinois Central now declines to buy
the three blocks of the Chicago lake front
in., conneotion with the Michigan Central,
for widen it treated. ,
D. Caldwell who 'retires from the
general managementof the Red Line,
March 1st, has been appointed general
manager of a line of ,lake Steanyars.
• J. C. Anderson ismiseede Henry Monett
as general passooger agent: of the Ontario
• ak Weaterti Itoad, operated by the New
York,.Buffalo & Wean Shore Company.
J. J. "-Bogen' resignation • as 'general
-freight agent of the Missouri Pacific has
not yet been accepted. '
Frank E. Snow, Commercial Agent of the
Wabash Rotel. at -Detroit, has tendered lite
resignation, to take effect Bleach 1st. This
will beunweloome. news to Me. Soovde
_mattydtiends. — • • • • —
4
A ottastrataw PAM/Po
now w Illeptier et lier 4.1mjetter service
Ramped inteetrecithe-isis Gravid
Amman:
(E4MIlteu, Quh, Speotator.),
130140 We, OOMMOtiell was «weakened
• metal months ago regarding thaexperience
of a gentlenten well known inthis city, and
at the time the matter was it subject et
• general oonvereation. In order to ascer.
WIZ ill the facts bearing upon the motter,
a representativeot this never was
despadohed yeeterday to interview the gen-
--demon; in question- with the following
result:
Captain W.11. Thohollo, formerly In 11Ier
Majesty's eervioe, is a man well advanced
in years, and has evidently Been mocha
the world, Zadowed by nature with a
strong conetittition,, he was enabled tit
enduto hardship • under which. Many
men would have succumbed. Through all
privation(' and exposure he Feserved
hie cenatittition unimpaired. 4 number of
years. ago, however, he began to feel a
strange undermining of . hie Ufe. lie
noticed that he bad less energy than form.
erly, that hisappetite with uncertain and
thangine, that he win unacoonntablt weary
ati cart= 'times and eorrespondingly saner!
getie at otberei that hie head palmed birth
first in front and then at the bee° 01 th�
brain, and that hie heart was andsuelly
irregular in Ha adieu. tAll those troubles
Intattribtited to ocnne pinning disorder, and
gave them little &dentin, but they noted
to inerease in vielence coutintially. To the
writer he said.:
.
"1 never for a moment thought these
things amounted to anything eerions, and
I gave them little, if any, thought t but I
bit raYeelf growing weaker all the while,
and could io no way account foritt
"Did 'von 'take 149 Steps to the& these
symptoms 2"
"Very little, if any. I thought they were
only temporary in their nature and would'
0002 pass away. Bat they etid not pats
away, and hent inoreasiog. Finalty, one
day, after more -than a yeer hodpassed, I
noticed that my feet. and . ankles were
beginning to awoli and that my face under
the eyes appeared puffy. ". This indiestd
inareased until my body began to fill wtth
voter; and finally swelled' to enormous pro.
portions. . I was afflicted, .with mote
theumatio pains and with fearful et times
that it would sank my heart. I consulted •
one of our most prominent phyensiane, and
be gave me .,no hope of ever, recovering.
He said that.' I might live several menthe,
but my coddition was suoh• that- neither
:myself per any of my family had the,
elightest hope of my-recovety. In this
condition a number of mouths passed
by, during wbieb time I . had to sit
conetantly in au easy chair, nob being -able
to lie down. lest I'should • choke to'deith.
The slight paihs I had at first experienced
increased to , most terrible • agonies. My
thirst •Was intenee anda doed. portion of
the time I was wholly unconscious: When
I did rennet my senses I Buffered 'so
'severely that my oriektociiildtbe'heerd der ,
neatly a Mile. No one eau "have. any idea,
of the agony I endured. r was unable to
eat or even window flitids. • My strength
entirely desetted me and I wite so exhausted
that .1. .prayeddilay and night ger death,
'Ene doctors could not relieve me and.I.Wat
left in a ondition to 'die, and that, too, of
Bright's dames of : the kidneya . in
its . moat terrible -born. 1 think
I . should hevei died . .. had . I get
:learned of a: gentleman who had Buffered
very Much et I liadtatid I• resolved to pur-
sue the same none of treatment whioh,
entirety thrlid him. I anordingit began
and•at once felt it ',Mange for the better
going on io my system..., In the courso. of o
week -the awaiting had gene from my 'Mao.
Mein and -diminished all over any body and
I felt like another main I .contieued the
treatment_ andatedbapdadositytthet.Lteds.
• cured through . the . Wonderful;
almost Miraculous power of Warners Safe
'Care; which. I &insider the meet •teloabled
, dinovery Or Modern lines."' • '' •
• "And you feel apparently wed now?"
- "Yes, indeed.. 1 am in good health; eat
heartily, and both the doctors • and • thy
. friends are greotly surprised and gratified;
at my remarkable reettiration 'after I was
virtually in thettrave. My do:lighter; Who
has been terribly troubled with • a pain in
'berbtiok eatised by kidney tronble, has 'alio
been cured by . means of 'the game great
remedy, and inytaniilyandnitselt have eon.
istittited. 'ourselves it kmnd of ixtissiOnaty
enjoy for supplying the .'dloor. Of our
'neighborhood with the:Mined* whith ltas
been to valtiable os." , , '
• As. the .writer. woe returning home be red
tinted upotathe statementa ot the noble
!man *ith, Whoin be had Onversed, and ws
dropreasednot only With the :truth 'of' it
aSseetions but alec With the singetity of all
'hie &cite; Aisle could not bet wish UM the
thousands who are stiffeting • with minor
troubles which -become so serious.unless.
taken in 'time .might kriedd of • Captain
Nioholds' expetinee and: the Manner,. in
which he Was eated..' And .that is the -cause
'of this Ortiole..'
.. • • . . . •
• ,; rtionnit Frorg•tteu. •
, 4
The following .:ciecurrenees- in 1784 have
• been copiedfrout an old chronologytd
• The first apPeatancie ot a North Anierd
can Indian in England. .
. The frostlasted 59 dive. •
• Mindins first manufaiotured in England.
• • Sunday Scheolsfirst established,. ' "
' Thieve,' eartisd off the great seal of Eng-
land. •• ' '
Polls at elections openedfor forty day*
Asttradeeman. ittdDublindtarreattand
• fee:that:3d for importing Englith .goods.
LoarlerMudien. .t00mb-treated in the note
m
..•
• No duty on tea., , .
Wheat, Os 24 per bitehel. •-
. Rye, ea 64 per bushel. • .• •
Batley, 33 poi ,bushel. .
• • Oats, 23 per Inishel:' ••
• A. large toed 16e.. • '•
• • ' Janie Thiene •
...• • . . .
Seem to constitute the very edam:A of life.
The little drops of water unithig form the.
mighty 'mean, and a hriodreddexaniplos
might be _cited to prove how impOitant -
after all are the little things. Now, corns
affairs. • Little syrnpathy Is. ex -
tinted, though- they should be a Boddie of
agony te the unhappy possessor. Putganeti
Painless:Corn EXtractor is it email affair, yet
by its period speedy and painless action -
:it has gained the good will and kind vtorde
of thOtteandetwhe hate used it. Dendlake.
the dangerthe substitutes offered by Home,
but. 'see that it. is made by Pcileon & Co.
Binged:a.. date, :sure, painless:. '
They hove aboliehed on matt Of the:
London tramways the bell plinth, whioh
'they adopted after usItt Was considered
a nuisance, and it failed to [intent dia. ,
noneety. • -
L.A. bad egg can be detected by the way
it lies in the water. It will float. ' So with
bad characters. Theydie iso much that it
is not rietiess94 to go below the surface to
detect' them. .
A Wady old son of the plough
. Had a genuine creamery hough, , '
,l3ut sbe took a bad cough
winch carried her otign, _ \
And he don't run a creamery mug%
•••-4..NaW. 'York journalist is repotted to
have lost a gallon of rum fifty yore old by
theft of it plumber kepairing the pipee of
his residetice. It is only in New York
that a journalist 04 Save a gallon of runt
and yet be wealthy enough to hire a
plumber. •
A suspected counterfeiter with a large
ariamint of bogus :silver on his person was
arrested at Montreal yesterday.
• Mr. John Creighton warden of the King-
don Penitentiary, who --was Was- Arian With
paralysis, is recovering.
By a vote of 1 to 4 the London City
Council last night decided to let London
East have the city water at one rate and a
third for ten yeara. •
Mr. White. rk, is Moving
' in the
direction of having Oanadarepresented at
the Forestry exhibition to be held in the
city of Edinburgh, Soothind, in August mit,
• The members of the Obtain City Council
last night passed a vete of immure on the
Mayer for ottendinisa ball given by himself
wearing his chain Of
•
silence Is Golden*
Mr. Duolley was Making an aliening cell,
and 'Why, who Was allowed to sit up a
little later than usual; put to him the fol-
lowing question:
"Mi'. Darnley, do you want to make 115
in ten niinotes?" '
"Do 1 want to make lid in len minutes
laughed the young man. " Certainly x an:
Bub how can X make $5 in ten • Minutes,
Bobby'?"
'
. " Minima will give itto you. ' Sha told
papa 'that Rho would give 05 to see yoii
•hold your tongue for ten filihilteil,"--Phi/4.
delphia Call.
ralt.410 WOXIM V/14.1314 41.40•
°Weser raWkediettall 110117.4
(From thm Nineteenth Century.)
It It now, E dui sorry to My, •ootnething
over fumy t ware mince 1 began my medical
studies, and at that time the Otte of :Wain
was extremely elogular- 1 ehould think it
hardly Possible tiled it could hove obtained
anywhere but bar such a country oo Eng.
land, which cherishes: i Sue Old crusted
abuse as HMO aaft does Ito port wine, At
that time there were twenty-onedeeming
bodies -that le th pay, bodies whose oertilit
°ate was received by the Wade as evidence
that the venous :who possessed that cortint
gate were Medico' experts. How then
bodies came to possese these powers is a
vett anxious ithenter in bletorY, en which it
world be °tit of place to enlarge. They
were partly univernitiest partly tnedind
guilds and corporations, partly thi3 Atohd
bishop of Canterbury. There was 120.3ential,
authority; there was nothing to prevent
any of these lionsiog authoritin from
granting a Hoene to any one upon any oo11.
ditione it thought fit. Tbe ,examitiation
might be a, fillaillat the otirriculum might be
it sham, the oertificote might be bought and
Bold like anything in a Pluta t • er, op the
othet hand, the examinationniight be faialY
good and the diploma correspondingly
valuable; but there waii noli the smelled,
guarantee, eX03pt the perional chancier
of the people ytha ootnposedth offininie,
tration of each of these •Iieenising. beads
as to what reight happen, It Was possible
fora young man to come to London and 0'
epend IMO years and six months of the tilde
of his otimpulsord three :years °' walking
the homitale " m idleness or worse I
he muld then, 'by putting- himself tin
the hands of a juditiouti "grinder: -
for dhe remaining • six menthe, p asa
triumphantly through' thq ordeal of one
hollee Cilia twe elfamituttj013, Wrikoh Waif all
that was absolutely UtleeSeary to enable
'WM to be turned tooae upon theipublicatitT
death on the oaltt hone, colignering and
to conquer," with the full emotion of the
law; as a a qualified' practitioner." It is
difficult to Imagine at present such a state,
.01 things, still More diffloult to dePlet
consequences of it, Neaps° they would ap-
pear like a gross and maligtutnt carinture;
,bub it may be osid that there was never a
system, or want of system, which was bet'
'ter oidoulated to ruin the students who
came under it, or to degrade the. prefers -
mon . as a whole. My „memory gen
bath to . a time when -motto's
from ••whoin the. Bob ' Sawyer Of the
• Pickwiek Paters Might' have been drawn
Wereanything but rare. * I re,
member e. story was:current in my young
&IA of a greatcourt physicianwho was
travelling with friend, like bimeelf, bound.
on a visit to a country house. The friend
fell down inon epeplectio tit, and the story.
tanthat the physician refund to bbsed-him
because it Was contrary to professional eti-
quette for a physician to perform that .oper-
etiond Whether the friend died Or whether
the get betterbecause be was- Mt bled 1 do
not remember, but the moral of% the story
•is the slime: On 'the other handdwhen a
famous; surgeon, irritated- by the proton.
sions of the phySitnaufr, was. aeked. whether
be meant to bring up his son to his own
calling; "No," be said, " he is stnsh a fool
I mean to melte a physician of him.71'.
• , •
"'Ana AND OARDXNe ,
"PIPer
bee
soil*niCQui lieporethalpni .01 'et ritrgal lohbios.:re 14.1 beet I rile;boOpo jeunnontcirsoels Plgbtiy.flveilrirnbod:Thieeshet11.8011,11
14 is good role to go to the ,bettom at
immature that It Will not keep. and 1. Or•
littifiVeltie for feed.
enough of it -all the better it be a enh*
things, and, therefore, deep ploughing an&
ground' will not grow glovers
and a forn2er is throwiug away' money to
sow hie seed upon it, until be has precede
the sowing with an application of Mentiree-
iniRugai. Mantuorenntrfarhu tfrtorme e ati!e atabwietetti
asheo as a kindlier where they can boob-
tained in sufficient cluantitiee, Apply
bountifully as for as they go.
Cultivate only se much land m you Oita
manure well if your land is thin and poor.
Remember that experience of all good
farmers is eoholueiVe on this point Thell
one
edo wiv:errleelamo°atungurroeudaviditlhl c'prrPoutlguhts7MPourive"igeathale
ly balf-way prepared.
Potiltry houses' ishoind open towards this
Muth -should be whitewashed • inside an
outside-tho ,fleata should be cleaned out
once o week, when possible, and an 0008-
01032a1 application 01 kerosene given tbs.;
lidos and bottom of those testi' the hens
heve been ming. Give your chickens a.
chance to help you in accumulating a IOW
shekels. They Wilt respond p
Now
rOmptly ts
rrerotwatitanenationegitverenthtetinim.e .to g'.reafoo
alt
gear and lititness on the farm. There are
two geed reason why this work should be
aatended to at onge, The farm hands are
comparatively idle and there is no dust t�
settle upon alid, injure the leather after it
is greased. Waeh every strap and rub
„every buckle until it shines like a silver
dollar. Castile nap and warm water are:
good for cleansing barness.preparatory to ,
an application of neatefook oil and lamp-
'? • laltk•• all Ulnae sheep oiNht' to , have'
daily mess -.to • salt. It is one of ths
greatest preservatives of health. It keeps'
them •olisaii, sound and strong;.it*braoes
up their appetites to the consumption od
00areer herbage than they would otherwies
eat. For lambs, the firat year of their
Irma, add -etietenth of finely pulverised
copperas as a pretentive Against the insidit
rips eibalkoiond.ti
sucktng parasite, which C•ause!
The points in favor of dairying are:
• 'First, a dairy ferm coats • lo per centlesti
to operate than grain.growing or mixed
ageniulture ; aecond, the average returns •
average a' little more than other branohn:
third, mina are snore Uniform and mote
reliable; fourth, dairying exhausts the Mil
las; fifth, it is .niore etsecure again.!
Changes in the season, mince the dairying
doetenot suffer eo nauchlrom wet and frost
and varying seasons, and onevandif Prtd
dent, provide against &oath. „
• tualuctiv et OF MAN.,
Nervous Weakness, • byspePsia, Impotent:8r,
Sexual Debility, otired, by -" Wells' Health Re-
newer. SI., . . . • . • ,
Nathan J. Straus, of New York, has sold
Nathan --
Valentine *. Eitith, of • Minneapolis,
Blinn., the cheetnut gelding Palma, record
2.2*, for. 05,000. .••
*01 S A fair outitie hi but a nor sukstituti_fo
--inward-wortte"-Good kilialth inwardly, -of-the
bowels, liver and kidneys, le sure to secure a fair
outside, the glow. of health •on., the cheek and
.-Ar.g.v in the frame. For this, use Kidney -Wort
and nothing else.' '
Never too late-, to .mend-Sonlefolks
wouldn't need to be lite, thoyneed• such a
deal of Mending. ,
t -.-Don't wear dingy or faded things when the
Itlit=eent Diamond Dye will make them good as
new.. They are perfect.
•
To tell men that they cannot help them -
salmis is to fling them into recklessness and
despair: , . • • . .• •
• ,
•
*Foryears Mrs. Lydia E, •Pinkham has been
contending with. the terrible hydra known as
Disease, with what surprising success many who
were iii the serpent's coifs will testify. Often has
the powerless victim been snatched 'from the
open jaws of the destroyer. In smiting the heads
ofthis m,onster.Mrs. Rinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound's far more efficacious than the.prooesses
potietial and actual eituterir.
. ThaIlhiversity. of Pennsylvania hail' ret
tooted the proposed rules tio regulate college
athletics.... , .
antra et titVAIWS WV0133.1 !firktifi
Infallible, taskeless, Jiarinteas, &Marti° ; Mr
feverishness, restlessnesti, worms, donstipa,
tion. tee. , • .r
, • Weston, the -pedestrian, is now on 'bis
last 1,000 miles, having.cOvered 4,000, and
the English papers report that he is in line
condition. • •
• 4611012011 ova COVGIESO' '
Ask for " Roughen Coughs," far Cotiehe; Colds,
Sore Throst,Heareenees, Troohes,15e. Liquid, 50
. • .
Geo. tlreith, Of Pittsburgh. Pa., is °tit
with's thellengedifferingtte.run any-inan in
"-America frora 75 to 100 yards for from
.01,000 to $5,000O eide.• , .
. •• .
4 good Baptist clergyman of Bergen, N. Y., a
strong temperance roan, suffered' witia kidney.
trouble, neuralgia and dizziness almost to blind-,
nese. ever two years alter he was told that Hop
-Bittera would. Cure him, becauett,he was afraid
'of and prejudiced against 'Bistora." Since •his
cure tie gays none. heed fear .but trust in Hop
Bitters. . • .
—.,-- •
• The Itteii rah.' Atteg.
Poison's Nosy:raft cures flatulenoe, chills,
spume, and cramps. ' • . •
Nerviline Mires promptly the werst cases
a
of neuralgia, toothache; lu %ago, and
oak:dice. . •
Nerviline is death to all pa At whether,
external, internal, or local. •
Net ening inay be 'tested at the finial' cost
of 10 cents. Buy at Once a 10 cent bottle
of Nerviline, the great pain remedy. Sold
at any.drug store. ., • • - * .
Isaac Todhunter, e. well-known mothed
matician is dead aged 64dd
The corporation of Cork has decided to
give the remain of 'detente Colton:, of the
Jeannette expedition, a pitblio funeral. .
Massachusetts Mint recently put a
bullet into the kitehen oloOk, stipposing
that he was shooting a burglar... go is the
same man who stusaikedo otring of onions
hanging on the wall one dark night, sup.
peeing that he was kissing the hired girl. -
-0 Oh, for a lodge in some Vast wilder.
hese I" quoted, Mr. Splatterly, . the other
day, when he Was feeling in a poetio mood,
4,° Shouldthink you hkd dodges enotight."'
said Mrs.* Splatterly. " You aro out ilOw
four nights in the Week to lodged, and if
you had another, in a Wilderness, 1den't
supped) you would be borne at all, exoept
to' eat."
. Hew to Get•itid et the " Blasiters.",
SO nkoh bas recently been written in •
oondem,nation of the o masher " that a few'
words on the other side of the question will •
not be amise. While net designing to pre-
sent the Masher as it saint, we would i3u,g-
gen-that the burden -of often flirtation be
placed oaths shoulders of those who -justly
' should bear it. Brazen as the -male street -td•
flirt appears,'he will not often Bonk to a
woman who offers him no emouragemente '
It would be poor eort of fun for him to ind
vite attention all day long if his invitation
met with no responses It is manifest that:-
the girls are to -blame for his promos, upint .
'the streets. 'Let them lay oeidett,eir dash?
gii.oldnesint_manner, • ithielidthey-often •
foolithly' imagine denotes independence •
but 'which is 'as dan-gc3rous as it is un-
seemly... Snell it demeanor provokes
remarks from men and wotaen which '
would make the este of the average. maiden
tingle with indignation could she but hear
them. There te no doubt, that many girls.
are lacking in that modesty whioh would
entitle them -to consideration. With these ,
the streetilirtatioo, frequently reeulting in
acquaintatice, is it great frolic, but these '
very girls would non assume a manner not
in accord with their character cotdd they ad• ,
see tbemeelves as others see. the* Very r 4
few gale With to be considered last, yet •
they can, by e. certain. reeklessness °Coon-,
duct while in Public, places, easily earn ths
appellation. They may not be guilty of
any crime, but 'they will as certainly loett
therespeotof everyone whose reopen. ' I
worth having as though they were. 'TWO - • I
particularly applies to women who have, ,
reached or paned beyond the 'age oft ded
What may be readily over -looked in ho
school 'girl cf15, willnot be foigiven in her
sister ef mothrer yeared-Courierdtournad
• • The Qiiebee Legidature will meet oat
March 26th. . .• ; •• • •
The memberi3 of the London W, C. T:11'.. ' • '
intend startieg an Industrial !School: ' •
The London City (dinned voted $200• to •
continue the Hoop kitchen in operation.
' The" thip Garden IsIsna, owned by Calvin
.Son, and width has been
trading between the Old Country and the
-West Indies', has been Bold for 020,000. She •
was Wilt at Garden Island. •
•
. I
BEEN PROVED'
. • .T.tinintiatt.T, CURE for •
KIDNEY
. Does slam Cars or disordered tirine Bai.
eitto that you,are.a.vietuns THEN po0 NOT
HEE/TATA sae Kidney:Wart at WOO,
giath reeorameud Wand it win. speedily 'eve
coma tho ,cBiea,saand restore healthy action.
Ladies„ For coinplainta poet:liar
•yout sal, am* as
midi/solo:leased, Bidnsy•Wort is =surpassed,
atilt liet PromptiyandttafelY.'
1.
0 .
31.
•
Lather Set. incontizion00.rotentiOn Ottirise •
brick dust or ropy deposits , andcall draggin E
paled, all apeedily yield to its mast:Ivo powOr.
0- SOLD BY a= 3:imam/sm. Prise in. agi
.4%1144'
MANDRAKE
ts4rgripi
2,4-1q. •
THE.ONLY
VEGETABLE
CURE
FOR
TYWIEfArqMPIEW-4,4,
LOSS of Appetite,
indigestion, Sour Stomach,
Habitual Costiveness,
Sick Headache) and Bilieusness.
Piloe,2.gx.i. bottle. Sold by all Druggists.
tre. n•-",” ar•-•
ESTABLISHED ism?.
GLIM3 (4.A.1.8t40w •
111 Wads ef Heir laredeinifisindieddahlo
Butters cheeee. wags. • edediry. Tau.
tlastaread'al, Itarigisettiai mckr"-. mat.
a
•