HomeMy WebLinkAboutWingham Times, 1890-01-10, Page 2("►.tit,'}
tt mg oar ones
11390,..
FRIDAY. JANUARY 10,
GRAN
INNS M
AS EY
e:5. R
They wonder why iy love her so;.
They marvel where the magic lies
That I:uit$ me to her, they who know
That tliadys has her grandma's eyeelt
They Kay she's: but a thoughtless tot;
They say 'tin true she never tries
To pleasure me—but try oruct,
She can't btlt•pleasa with grandma's era.
They l=ay lier sistersare as sweet;.
it may be so, as they surmise, *
• nut who but Gladys comes to greet
tee gayly with her grandma's ayes?
• She'd have the moon? I'd give the sun(
what wonder that my heart denies
1\o draft that's made on it by ona
Who alwaysaskit with grandma's eyes?
She ilghis up all this world of woe.
She silences e'en sorrow's cries;
She follows me, where'er 1 go,
Forever with her grandma's eyes.
• Ah, who that knows what powers proceed
From simple things• in what strange grilse.
Can doubt a Tittle child may lead
Aa old man with her grandma's eyed '
witra Gladys I grow young again%
I, who am gray -so fast time flies—
Ara young, yet how my heart aches when
She looks at we with grandma's eyes
My child wife smiles once more on me,
Glad tears within mine own arts%,
As with my grandchild on nay knee
1077.A into her grandma's eyes.
—tla..v Norton Bradford to Montreal Star,
1
Re had been told' that tit. Nicholas'
lived awe,y off 'somewhere, and as he
had long wished to take a trio ori those
fascinating "train cars" which swept
through Rosedale,he deemed it .a most.
excellent opportunity.
Fre entered the station and warmed
his small hands at the big coal stove
with an air of great importance, The
agent etoticed the handsome little fel-
low with cheeks litce,apples and eyes
like stare, and long blonde curls frill••
in'*eever his shoulders, and smiled at
the little matey airs ho gave himself.
The eastern bound train thundered
down, Reggie went forth close behind
is lean and wife with their four off.•
five childeen.
REGGIE.'S SMAS GIFT.
And what does Reggie wish St.
Nicholas to fetch hint, a sled 1
No -o.
A sword ;1
No -o. •
.A. drulxi.2
What then,' darling, tell mamma,
and the slender, sweet faced yours; was not hidden about the house for
mother bent down and caressed the. s not
fluffy, blonde head lying oil her knee, lei so1ueGrandfather and grandmother *were
Reggie was silent a molnent,tlren look -in a state of mind which it were idle
The brakesman supposing him to he
of the party, swung lean On board, and
a little bit frightened and a good deal
delighted, Reggie fouled himself•reall:y
starting on et journey in search of a
papa.
aTconductor, passing through, re
peated the bralcesrnan's • mistake, and
the yqung traveller was not gtiestient
ed. On end on through the solemn
winter night rushed the train bearing
the little boy on his quest. fell
asleep finally and made so lovely
picture that the conductor, who had
two fine boys'at home, regarded him
with approval. It suddenly dswned
upon him that there was no striking
resemblance between this beautiful
chilli andthe snub-nosed, freckle -faced
family on:tbe other side of the eer,ail l
he began to make enquiries. He was
s:mewhat alal.med when no one was
found. to claim ' Reggie. However,
he could not put the child off the train
and decided to wait developments. .
* * :,:
There was horror, confusion and
chaos when Beggie's bed time came and
he was nowhere to be found. The
absence of his wraps showed that he
young,wife, Irons his otnintry, to wan-
der for heathy four years to and fro,
hating himself and orrery one else.
With a start this man, which his
bronze face rind sad, tired eyes, flung
his halfzmoked oigar awry and lighted
another. • He recalled that ,wording in
Venice when he received a letter which
Europe, Lul
o
had followed flim over allpe. A
letter from a woman who had hated
his young wife and whe had sent him
that terrible anonymous letter which
had poisoned his naturally jealous
Mind. She was dyiug and wished
to unda the wrong she had done.
The allegations she had made were all
false,.
Stung with remorse he lived again
that shocking scene wherein he had
accused his wife `of her affection for
his friend, end Musing to listen to
any explanation had left her, as he
thought, forever, •
• Now be was on his way back to beg
her to forgive hien. Ah 1, would he
find`he► ? Perhaps she was dead.
A childish voioe, startled him.
0, what a funny 'ittle room, Tan
I come in 1
He looked up and saw a beautiful
fair Wered°boy, in kilts and sailor
blouse, standing in the door of the
smoking room." dust -behind him
stood the porter benignant, protecting,
Beefing. .
The man with the tired eyes held
out his hand to the child.
Yes, come and talk to 'me. Who
are von 1
Regie, said the boy, ' approaching
with confidence.
,Well, 1 -Reggie, and who's boy are
you i • .
Mamma's.
And papa's. •
No ; no papas, • Z• hav'n'tdot any
papa. 1 went to find St. N ichalas to
bring me a papa for Twissmass, bat I
'tonldn't fin' hint, so I,n.goin' back to
mamma now.
Bythis time he was on his new
friend's knee, and playfully petted. the
bearded cheeks with his chubby' hands.
The traveller sighed as several .re-
collections se ept over him, and the
conductor passing then, stopped and
e"
told the story of tieiros flight.
The child listued gravely and then
announced his errand again,
Mamma tries all the time so 1
finked if I got a , papa she wouldn t
try.
By the way, said the conductor,
the child is bound for your destine,-
' nation-•sR'5eee le.. -
Ts •that so `t •asked the man carelessly,
What is mammies name, Reggie) -
Mamma, Nora, said the boy, pulling -
at his friencl's Mustache:
lclora—Nora whet ?
— � a
Not Nora 'what—dust it in '•m,
x,
Nora.
• Do you live alone "with her 2 asked
the mail, trying to speak calmly.
Dare's dranpa and clrantne, au'—
else. !.' Speak, Yes, yes, who 1 , tell me,
clutching the &tiled, convulsively.
Uncle Rob—ate Aunt Mattie, an'
-but he .didsnot finish, for with a
great sob the man strained the boy to
his breast, crying out :
My boy -0, my boor
et. do • * * *
ing into his mother's tender eyes, . he
said, clapping his fat, pink hands.
Me wants a papa.
Eleanor's
ale
face S
re
w
hi
er
yet.
Shehid dreaded this hour;
the hour
when her child could ask for his father.'s
And now thee, the question had" tom
et this Obristi'as•' time, *lien every-
thing was reminding her of her cruel
loss, it seemed herd indeed. her
She did not at once answer'
ehilcl, but oanght him in her arms anti
held him pressed oonvuisively against
her stormy breast, The tempest pass-
ed after a little and . see • caliph,
acid:
Reggie, dearest, that is something
Se. tt1 •u:
' not
b
t o
St. Nicholas. :can a� I
Choose, instead, ,sonictoy, dar-
ling, vie
If I had e papa be would play
me, eagerly suggested Reggie.
There suddenly flashed before bee
mind a plat -ire of what - might have
been. Instead of sitting there ;before
the blazing fire ij,lone,, there might
have been a lutndsr me,fair-haired man
loun;iilg there on the tiger skin, with
Reggie climbing triumphantly over
him, pounding him with hie tiny fists,
pelting his mustache—kissing blur.
Ch heavens, it Was too much.! she .last section.
cat -Lid -not bear it. ' He was so haudsome,eo mischievous,
\Vith Shifter soh, she !dung herself so bright, that he was soon the centre
upon the low, broad couch and buried of n,ttraotloli. The porter brushed him
her face in the cushions. and even combed his 'carts. He was
Reggie looked into the. sorrowing petted and docldled and questioned,
eyes of .bis pretty anamma. He over and over. To every fresh cats-
cottld not understand it. Mamma chism he returned always the same
tried so much. The mammas of little answer.: that be had gone to fincl
boys with whom he played did not cry. Nicholas to ask bite to bring him a
They scolded sometimes, w' ieh was papa so'ramma wouldn't cry so much:
, sornething his mcther never' did, but Tits naive answer affected* many
they never cried. There were papas, tender hearted, ladies to tears, and
in all the houses where he Was .wont even caused'a suspicion of moisture to
to visit. gather in more than one pair of manly
His childish mind was trying to eyes,
re,ppie with this prohlent. There The'most di'sirntile. section in the
.SEETLATIXG DISEASE."..
'MANGE CASES MET WITH BY PHY-
SICI?.NS ANO OTHERS,.
trow'People Feign Injuries and. Other Ifisa„
bilitles—Several Itratlons Talton from
i;e
7,Ife-lxow the I1:eceptlons Are Disoav-
. w•ea,
A man, apparently in i great bodily pain,
was' found lying upon the sidewalk at
Front and Chestnut streets, by e police
man. °The man had fallen "all in ti heap;"
and his story was that he bad been way-
laid and beaten. A patrol wagon was
eummoned, but when an attempt was
made to place him in'the vehicle ho eoiu-
platiod of Much ekquisite pain it was
found necessary tet discard ?die, patrol
wagon and to carr, the loan ona stretch-.
er to a hospital, to arriving at the lat-
terinstitution be was carefully removed
from the stretcher to rapot in the receiv-
ing ward, and, although handled very
tenderly, the change of position seemed
to aggravate his sti tering, - Singularly
enough, when the surgeons made an ex-
amination, it was found that when a pin
was stuck in any portion of the,man's
body below the neck he apparently failed
to feel'•it, and the natural conclusion un-
der the circumstances wits that he had,
suffered a spinal injury, It was then
proposed to place the patient under an
aniesthetio, with the view of performing
an operation, but when the: man heard
this he jumped off the„ cot and darted
quickly out of the hospital gate and was
soon lost to view. He had been "playing
possum," but for what reason will, per-
haps;never be known.
TO AVOID Ti1E DitAFT.
Such cases are not infrequently met
with by pliysiciaos in their regularprac-
tice• and al hospitals, and other charitable
institutions. Either to excitesyinpatlty,
or from other motives, people sometimes
cultivate the power of simulating 'dis-
eases, These individuals are' known to
the medical profession as "malingerers,"
and they become particularly numerous
on certain occasions. During the, civil
war, at the time conscriptions were made,
it was surprising to see the number of
able bodied men limping along with•canes
and apparently suffering with rheuma-
tism or other crippling ailments. Whilo
it is not always' easy, even for an expert
doctor, to detect between real aucl sins -
Mated disease,»yet he can genes ait y y dis-
tinguish between the genuine and feigned
rheumatism by tin; manner in which a .
man plants his Gane .on the pavenient,
To understand the. 'difference it is only
necessary to watch a man who .carries a
cane to assist him in, walking and one
who flourishes a cane for pleasure.
to •attempt to describes The, poor
mother passed from one fit of uncon-
soiolisnes•s to another, and stalwart
i
trnk
Uncle Bob was the only
ono to b.
and act. It was nearly midnight
before the child was traced to the
station, but once traced to that point
the rest was comparatively easy, and
Uncle Bob soon had a preoiou"s' yellow
document in his hands which announ-
ced that the little runaway was safe
on board train No. 10 and would be
returnee,,,,,en No. 5 •next day. -
E1eanot'?s egoity was now relieved,
though"slit: could not sleep that,oight,
and the morning found her too. weak
to leave her bed.
Reggie would not return from itis
trip until 8 o'ilook that afternoon,
His mother counted the hours and mo-
ments till she'should hear that merry
childish voice again. •
*
Mrehet ox hoe war ,+'e ..,,
the uostrils, quickly detect
thine—Philadelphia ,
EGYPTIAN WAX POf1TRAiTS.
f'ur%ons works of Art unci In tire) ai#ut
of Burled Cities,
When themodernsreaci el:P'liny of the
extreme degree of excellence to which
Greek artists had atti inedinllis day acid
oi; the prices which some of their' works
fetohed, equivalent to £10,000 oe £t2t000
of our money, scholars and other even'
petent authorities dismissed these as
travelers' tales. They could not bring
theiiiselves'to believe that these stories -
were true, or that Rubous, Ilolbein, Sir
Thomas Lawrence and other later celeb•
ritisehad beenantioipated if;uotsurpass, ,
ed in the centuries before the Christian
era. And yet it was so, ail Pliny no more
than Ilerodotus deserved to be called the
father pillars, The graves have given
up their dead and revealed secrets wliic
it was thought had been forever hidden
In the tomb. It is from the land a
Egypt that these discoveries come.. r
The explorations on the site of Meme e
phis and Thebes had prepared the way
for the discoveries in the province of
Faijum. These consist of a number of
portraits found in the sand at IZubalt,iat,
whish are in the possession of Theodor
Graf, in Vienna, and aro now on view et
the Societe d'Encourageinent pour l'In-
dustrie Nationale, 44 Roo tae Pennes. Ac-
cording to an ancient Egyptian custom
the countenance of the deceased was
represented at the head of the mummy
or Catlin. This custom was adhered to
in the Grieco -Roman epoch of Egypt,
but instead of the plastic head, wbioh up
to that time had been. ?,alone in use, a
painting was substituted representing a.
real portrait of the, deceased. These
portraits, which were painted on a thin
panel of wood, wore laid over the face of
the mummies, the outer bandages of the'"
shrouds being then wrapped about them
so as to cover the margin of the picture,
the latter alone beim visible.
A mummy of this kind, therofore,i►!,
presented the ,appearance of a livinek
body, looking out of an opening in the,
bandages for the survivors to gaze upon
in the coffins, the hula., of which were.
made to be thrown back for that par-
pese. • The only .other graves where
these curious`pictorial works have been
found were opened, in the winter of
1897-8 by the '' English engineer, Mr.
Petrie, at Harvard, but the pictures, in
theni'ar a said to be not nearly 1 lot
rs discovered at Buba et
the specimens.. .
P
1 oc
The tombs themselves, built in the ,
were re isacked ages ago by thieves,
who,, their, search for gold, destroyed
both .coffins and mummies. Luckily,
thep ilferers •deemed the pictures to be
of no value, so were thrown away -but
not to, perish -in :the dry dust of the
desert. ;
Herr Graf's collection numbers ninety-
five specimens of varying interest in
point of execution, but all valuable ate
works of art. They ,aro portraits on cy-
press
ypress wood, the more ancient being!.
painted in wax colors, laid on with th
cestruiu or spat?xla, a lancet shaped}
strument—the:.later specimens beingt>io-
tluced by water `colors, to which claw
surrounded by a group` of sympathetic , added the yolk and white of eggs oxr
men and women, and one of the latter other resinous binding substances. The
had procured from a neighboring resi- painting with wax was donewithout the
b :und express roiled
bo , ex p
into the big station:at el—the nenextforenoon, atee the little, mussed, dis-
hevelled boy of four years wa3 put. in
charge of the sleeping car conductor,
His story was soon known by every-
body, from porter to pasitengei in the
wore papas, the 3X1413rmas. didn't cry 1 Caledonio was filled • with emits and
,The western-
His mamma cried a great deal, and luggage bearing any quantity of foreign'
there was no papa, low if papa labels. There were piles of books,
coilld 140 found perhaps mamma would papers and uncut .magazines. • Sow -
not
e
id little
of No, o, 11
d the occupant rT0
tcry,
P.Her,
Art idea shortly' grew in ?hitt busy reading. Hs occasionally fumbled
little brain. It was pea ly Christmas his books in the most nervous and cha-
tted Sr, Nicholas thrust surely be some. trait manner imaginable end primed
where about. Why should not Reggie the most of his time in the smoking
yo in search for. him aucl finding him, mere, lighting. cigar after er. ar. I3,rr
ln.1 for papal.. - stared steadily througli the 'frost cov..
t?t.. ilicltulaa, he had been told, was ered windows, but not at the scenery.
a
kind o cl eutleman to good little Over and over ire saw but one picture;
a
bor. end Reggie bad been very, very A brightly -lighted roost, daintily fur-
ood for such a long time. lies, that nestled.-..everythirtw new and fresh and
mics it 1 he wiuld set out directly in smart. He saw three people there--•-
sr,trcit of St. I\ ieholas and papa. ' two men and, a woman. • One Inas
lie &,ie gaiety out of the room starting forward with . pleading, out
-
'into thin hall. Here he pulled ort his stretclteci hand' --lie could- hear u
slant India -rubber boots, put on his voice= -.-Listen, Harry, youtriad, you
ova.rcout and cap, drew on his fur' droll'. (food. God, man, it's all a mis•
rant opened the door, s uared Itis take?
r,siottlf,
tact r t.,ia and trudged out
o p tq into the Be saw the women, xwent•faced,
slender, tirawiug herself tip with so- softens the Sums, reduces Iieliamn/atlon. ahs 1C,'' are feigned, but in the hands of a, ekill-
Iri tltt« g look of toneandcoot ytothaWhOle sywiem. "Mr:i. lvin• h •si iatnthe are Soon ex posed, A
v 'tlii;tlaill ad fiashtrto a ,low's 9onlhin Srup for eh.lclron teething !w fill p y 1C wrs � frosty str•lit +� oniryi{.,Iprb
f, ,>z °tin �roneer t
a ast a elle t fs the: revere tt ; method 'of simulating apoplexy
ex
1 ird tan,ant to to t t p p t.crir.0 on 1?: l p y
at r
, e t ft, 1
• rr,, to i
1;^q'„iN tilliw^r,reri a little, 'but he was a rtnt,11tr1rEtlt and t.o theoldMstantlboat'farrwta phy:?irians and purseii hi .
Iv. a p and was not actor iyho 1n'id with rage and jealously, the Galles states, +tied rs far sale by nn ibkin sts is by falling crown as if deprived of eon-
.. in 1#rttvt� litt'e4chap an , t?aromathoert tie world Price twenty-five Cents n
*" eon -
4 1Ie irurriet down was ltisllinu from the rrloln IaWiiy,, 1 . ,,. saiion and ccxaisciou9ness« 1'uwerful
fa# a lis . firs and • xsk iiir kites. 1w't,'raa.ow d a ,. ,1., .' .i , lr '- ?lit'. a rli•
Among the disorders generally simu-
lated are Debiting and:epilepsy. Both
have been so well counterfeited as to have
been mistaken for genuine cases. It is
only when heroic measures are proposed
'that theimposition is disclosed. Not long
since an up town physician, while pees-
ing an.. open airg g
Broach street, had his attention attracted
to a middle aged woman, apparently,suf-
fering with an epileptic'attack. She was
It was time for ''Uncle Rob to :be
back from the statiou. Elc,anor
raised herself on her elbow and listed
ed. •
Yes, there was his voice and—ob,
joy t yes-Reggie's. The dour was
flung open and the boy ran in leading
a tall, handsome man and crying glee-
fully :
Materna. 1"" wonted and finded a
papa—an' 'L bringded Milk home ,to
you.
• Eleanor gave ouestartled, upward
glance—then her husband bent down
and silently took her in his arms,
• Bram Sessions TurPnii.
rlence a -pinch of salt. The woman re-
covered consciousness, however, without
the use -of the latter remedy.
On the following Sunday the physician
noticed the same woman in church, and,
thinking she might be seized with another
spell, took a seat several pews from her.
Sure enough, an. attack came on, to the
discomfiture of a number of nervous peo-
ple. The poor woman was carried out
to the vestibule of the church, and the
physician followed. The seeming epilep-
tic, seizure passed off in about five min-
tttes.
FEIGNING DEAFNESS.
The next Sunday there was a repeti-
BillNye says never attempt to
cbeat'the editor out of a year's sub-
scription or any other sem. Cheat
,eller,
cheat
t but
` t he
. r shoo
the
minister, ,
,
the lawyer --anybody, but it you .have
any regard for your future consequence
don't fool the printer. Ile will get
even with you and more too..You
Will be up for ollice, one ot these clays
or want.sonfte public favor yourself, or
for,yotr friend and just when yours
,is a Heine, of beauty and joy forever
the printer will open upon you and
knock your air castle's into a cocker'
hat the first blow.
employment of heat audwvithout using,
the brush, tho ancients being ignorant of -
the process of dissolving wax. in turpen-
tine. On examining these rows of hearts°
gazing calmly out of large, lustrous eyes,
shut now for over 2,000 years, one seems
to be: brought face to face with. the last
of hupaanity in a more real way than has
hitherto, been in our power.
One is also struck with the 'modern
look of many of these ancient portraits,
There is a. face of an old Ulan of wonder-
ful force of cher.•acter and .intellectual
power. The painter" Menzel; of Rollin,
has declared that nothing' fh-ter than
has been done in portrait painting.! The
tion of the attack, The woman, who female faces are nearly all tinged with
was a stranger to the'congregation, was melancholy, but some are of great beau..
again takon to the vestibule, and the
physician who hail previously attended
her was again called upon. Thinking
ty, and 'they almost without .exception
reveal traces of the distinction of the
originals, There is a very modern. her' -
that the attack was simulated, he pro- i of an old lathy with short gray Ioels"
posed that's settee should be procured The fidelity of execution in these paialt•
and the. woman carried through the Ings is so great that • doctors have been
street to a police station.. In a- twink- able to" tleteot the existence of dropsy..
ling the woman sprang from the chair Architect.
in which she had been placed, hurried
from the building and has not since'ap-
peared at the church.
One of the methods 'adopted to mis
lead ii to feignedeafness. This is one'of'
tbys
men who desire
'e toe
resorted his trick„ es
n juries Gen -
orally,
' being placed upon to accts 1 Bing l i p J
orally, however, the judges aro able .to
fallow the deception, and, by the use of
a little stratagem,. it is easily exposed.
Men who simulate deafness will clasp an
ear in the palm of the hand .and' lean
forward as though the auditory nerves
were °strained to each what was said.
in an unguarded moment the supposed
deaf Male is asked a question it an ordi-
nary tone, to which he generally replies
and his deception is unmasked.
As a rule, however, illness and other
physical disabilities -tiro simulated by
people who wish to avoid work or who
desire to obtain eelrniesion to somo in-
stitution where they may live without
cost tis themselves, and sometimes by
eonviets with the hobo of bettering their
condition, In feat very many diseases
Awes To Motions.— Are you distnrbrd at night
flerin and
end broken of year rest b n sicYt child su g
trying with pain. of Carting Teeth? If SO send et
once And got a bottle of "Mrs. Winslow'ti Hoothing
Scrap" for Children Teething. Its valve its heel .111 -
Able. It will relieve the poor little • su fet.o
Immediately. Depend upon It, mothers ; there is no
tntstako about it. It cures Dysentery end t)iarrh,nt,
reeetntes the Stoeinch. and Bowels, cateswind Collr,
Nt as street titil',tr•alg the railway station, a.tv,,y frau hit boluor froul his g,ti'eett I9tso'ri�teira burr," . benu1 its all t. tier v >i toe, lir,
.S•.••tiy ter. a rnrti' '
Something Beyond Comprehension.
But how is it with the distance to the
sun? If so much time is needed to reach
the moon, it will.'i;ake yearsto reach the
sun. "Yes, it will -years and years, But
ion
isa •mere
question
how many? It
y
`'92,000.
h sun rs
mathematics. "If t o
miles from. tie, and our locomotive trove
ire miles an hour, it will be 1,220,065
24hours on the journey, or 51,111 days o
f
hours each, or 140 years. In ,other
words kid the lodomotive been known
in the middle of the last century, the
flight could have been begun 25 years
before, the battle of Bunker 11111, and the
iron horse could have been "thundering
down theages" ever since, day and night,
at this terrine speed, What a distance
is that' 'Yet that is but the entities of the
orbit whose circumference • the earth.
travels overy year. Where ere our id
of speed and distance? They aro
feeble for mention compared with this.
Then what possible aignifieenco ona it
have to us to say that light, naoeltrg
with a velocity of 800,000 nails, n; second,
r r s" i star in 50
will earl its from a &t,rta n
years, from :another idse), from another
M 1257 "c' o ex
utterly o cerwheintetl,
our own figures are infinitely beyond etc
comprehenstoil "-Christian tJxt&ou.
TEM ANCE COLUMN.
7P-
cownu ,1,6) hlr wtsomot T. W. O. T. u.
Tempnranee toawleieg ie the State
schools of Vic:Weill, .e.ustrctlia, has
ben nettle coutvplaury. A sullicient
;rt of progress,
We sheltie help niet only to keep
oien all!, of the pit and to pull alert
restof the pit, but to close the pit.
tint wtte•Ic china'„ foreigners c irried
on by t 44 W t, ;I,' 11 is olio of its eta
/etr :ea enterprisers Aimee five
billbott8 of people in United Staters
ore beyond the rettel1 of benelisli leaf
h-ts lana • tracts. Ittemoss tIis'y do. not
Hilal': our language. To reach' theme
great and l ro.titef; elassea the workers
iu title dt'perfeueut are sending out
trmettsletions off Eiigliyli leaflets in art
t� , spy las fourteen different lengnaifes,
este 1ly.,a German.Suaudinavian,
ii,veditlr, llehenteen, Polish and Ital-
ia!), These. leafl1cs set fortis every
phrase of the temperance question,
and have already told fur the eause,
In' Lopatin.-- atin.-- Mrs Mary `C.t'enent
I t=scvitt, of tate World's, `r't'ometi'd
Obrr,tian TemperanceAssoclatioe,
Says the Gius';ow Reformer, ie havine
•t, ;splendid reception in I.c^,ndoe. ears
Leavlet'left America nearly five yours
4tiPti al 1 he xt•ound the world' missionary
of the Asset:lettere Site leas travel',
oil tbrou: ll. Japan, India, the c euntries
of the Keefe Dna Aitadagascar, and has
everywhere left a marked .impression
behind her, and stored her 'mine with
fits gathered at' first lewd . on the
drink gtu ifeee' •
-Miss Cassie Tel creno, a Japanese
woman, is studying the ootldition sof
women in the United States with a
vie v of devoting herself to tins eleva-
tion of women and children of the
•� 'rrtwer classes in Japan. She arrived
VI' San Francisco about four years ago,
became an inmate of an, American
hnine, learned the ltngutiessegraduated
from a young ladies' classical school,
united with the Japanese Methodist
Episcl pee Church; and engaged in the
W 0 T U work, She is now in Chieagc
attending the. Deaconesses' Trainiur
Sono I.
• s Vont. Miss Willard's' 9.d
dress. ,
When we find church papers this
we have loved aucl trusted all out
lives descanting on the nterits.of ' higf
license, the 'Christian pastors open!;
conrtnitted to this nefarious abnnlirta
tion, in wiloze wake lo;icelly an:
practio Illy follows the licensing •o
haunts df infamy, the mildest langu
age we cilia use is that of Isaiah'
letneutition,," They err. in • Wisdom
situtnble in judgment.
•tina method of raising a revenu u
Y vice,high license is a success tett:
it is equally so as"a life insurance polio,
on the saloon. It arrays the exper
and , nen expert tentperence force
against each other and make of
man's own household his worst foes
It has set back the temperance caua
ten years, if not a generation ; it ha
blinded hen's conscience's to more
distinctions, deadened the ohurche:
muzzled the clergy, cbloroformo,i th
religious editor, and rejoiced the. dev
"and his hosts. -
Friday.
Lee surrendered on Friday.
Moscow' was burned on Friday.
Washington was born on Fri.iay.
Shakespeare was born on Friday.
America was discovered on Friday.
Richmond.was evacuated on rc rider
The hostile' was destroyed on Fr
4ay.
The Mayflower was landed on Fr'.
—
Qpeolt" Victoria was married c
.Friday. ' .
King Charles L was beheaded c
Friday.
Fort Sumpter 'was bombarded c
Friday.
' Julius Ctesato. was assassinated c
'apole
ion$orfteparte was boraon Ft
The beetle of Marengo was fougl
on Friday.
The battle of Waterloo was fougl
on
Friday. .
The battle of Blanker Hill w,
fought on Friday.
Joan of Are was burned at
stake on .Friday. .
The. tattle of Now Orleans tv,
fought en Friday.
The Declaration of indrpenden
s'siglled on Friday. ,
'dlcronto Genghis and Colds
Asa all Diseases of the Throat and Lungs earl
'cored by the ase of Scott's Ennesion, as It scala
the healing virtues of cod Liver 011 and 1lypople
what W S Muer,
Sec [r tallest form. S c
Philos in the,
1> ?t R G P, est, Truro, N 8, says t Atter three yet
esperlenee 1 consider Scott's 1Cmuleton one of they
bm. neons market. Very a c'i:licnt in Throat st
hors 90141 by Alltimig.s;;ds, b>v. Aad 11.