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Wingham Times, 1890-12-12, Page 21St to usettiutat it brad' teeu t;,timited. Whims, saved tire. Steamier. 1 de helloes1, tete /well, and a Ise k t wtwttsr to large nough an ,whilo the ritnt4 There testa batf a Ula,gwubaiete pakH be• tl.Hre p eua1 w !rut the ethet 'd ftt till 1 other ! ay wore r trovers sotehort. f;llet 1t 11 rosun y 1 tl l e»e And some •owe 11'td tiles time. own it t g' tide appear. the pillows ou the parlor fsen, �t rtr tare R r up M131d.1t 12s, 1f tl. >Ff`ur3raand M 4. x. dram serried, rue bilsband, and at nitaarried for lova : we were srery' when '?O' Pea, from the vgindovr, kr verty Baa staallsfng'iu e,t the door. 4, a �ieopie said, iu is fully. Take care; Toted. batter not marry rib soon—ben were't nae tli pie to to ,ur s i e.raptle l a plate of baked Means henna 1 Race they 111 make iu than. 1`1`a two [the sofa, It took me all of three !alike, and ,probalt'y uo one that would i weeks to get straightened around. (fit one: of the children. 1te too pro- And now that we've just wot sa•stlNd, lvoking far anything. If it wasn't for there's to be another, It's too had, !making the people mad, 1' sell the but idon't l snow that we can help ourselves, sines a; minister and Iiia !! family are coneidered objects of charity i nod therefore, obliged to take sup with v the eo le see tit to give e faegke4 at their wa,ruing, my pins- Whatever p p btatmd uud 1, them,without the chance to say a "We went to the minister: and wele.wed; word far themselves. ' happy w couple as near lived, A. donation party will be held at 'though we were so trout, They said; p e haver wilt matte tee kettle trail. Elder Spooner'& next `1'r►asday everltng,. tiertill it with meat, nor the tamp with oil. the Lord willi:n', an' its hoped every 'We loved each other my husband anal; body '11 turn and bring suthin' for the Wil were young and strung, stud our Il hearts were light; looked to the future without a fear, 4nd worked in the present with all our might; We instate utta home in the far slew West— r1 wee little house litre w brown bird's nest. We were so happy, my husband and 1, The furniture he parade ell at night, And T the carpets. carton's and spreads, Auel oar house was always neat and lierr;ht. ' We planted roses and vines by the door, 4,nd they, wreathed the cottage o'er and o'er. 'We lead bard fortnne,mv husbanrt and I. d. little nue Gurus end tip erops were poor ;` A,nt3, very often brat winter we paw Grim P,rverty stalkmg in at the door, But love hover, offered to lly away k'.rno the horde he made on our wedding ,d,aY4 'We never lost courage, my hu'thsand and 1. And fortune ohauged for us in the spring: S4elisave a good hoarse and ohilairen and friends l,noughani'tp spare of Averytinry. Au•A we'kuaw trod love will not leave our home No tnaatter what trouble or loss may come. —Abbe !film,. whole. lot for rags to the first rug ped- dler that coulee, along. Brothers 'n' Blisters, 'n' friends 'n' neighbors, announced Deacon I,lpears, after eupper,wheu the party was about to break up, the proceeds of this: are dawdles). amounts to twenty-seven bushels o'..beans: aril a large aueonut o' elotbtu' an' seine other things, In b'lralf o' the elder an' his folks, I thank ye for y'r Jib'ral't�. Y r kindness is appreciated by hiap 'u' ltion'o, T feel soar. and 1'en cure his heartan they failed to tweet the top of a parr of bright blue stockings, while Iiia jarow ket refused to keep company with tlte. top of his trousers. Eauh article had a peculiar colour of its own, and the gelterel effect was, as haft been :said, decidedly picturesque. The minister had no inkling of what Iris wife intended to do, and the sight of Ilia family in anoh fine array so rip.. aet him. for a tltornent that he read the vette he had just fiuishedover again-�- 'Verily I say unto: you, ever Holo• loon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these.. • A very atadible titter went through the younger portion of the oongrega- tion. Some even laughed aloud, Mrs. of pawl. fetZie power in bill peoullar flold of enskee every yetrr of his life hip and More hopeful than the leek,•-, loepital. s'p,art. of the gospel, .assort Spears 1 Wade looked at Mrs Fssttigow to leo announced one Sabbath, after aegive , , bythis evictoucs what that estimable woman inolinecl The Lord loves a. cheerful giver, han's is strengthened taut she 1 nH to think of the proceeding, couldn't catch her eye, Stbe was too much engaged in following the Scrip- ture lesson to look at anyone. I'll bet she's mad though, thought 1Trs, Wade, One o` them jackets an' one 01 them trowis came from her. 1 dunno though's they look Finny worse than dress o' Ahmisy'e does. 1 didn't s'pose they'd think o' riggin' the chil- dren out in 'eat to wear to church. 1'll bet Mrs, Spooner done it on purpose. Mr. Spooner had done it on purpose, as she admitted to her husband on the way home. ' I don't think you ougtittohav° done it, Susie, be said gravely, but there was a laugh in his eye as he said it,as he looked at the molly group ahead. 'Perhaps not, was the wife's reply, but I wanted thein to see the striking effect: resulting from their generosity. Of course they can't get angry about it, since they' gave the clothes to be worn. I do think that it'll have one good effeot,atd that is, that old clothes won't be one of the impatient features of the next donation pltrty here. Mrs. Spooner was right. When the heart donation party oce.urred not one o'd earment was donated. Mr.Spoou- ar et hast succeeded in disposing of his beans, but he lead. to Io so at a sacri- fice, on account of its having been such a great year for beans in Soraagsby Corners, that they overstocked the market. he added, in a sort of postoript, after o' fellowship on your part. at y which he blew his nose vizorously on a great red and white bandanna in n manner that suggested applause over the ileat way in, which the announse. went had been made, and then sat down. Immediately there was a buzz among the female portion of the congregation and little groups of • women put theie heads together suds began discussing what to carry in th'e shape of eatables; while the men got ,n the vestibule of the church end oonsnited with each other on what they were to donate. I reckon 1'll take beans tilts year, said Mr. Wade. It's been a great )ear for beaus. I bain't raised so big a crop Finny year since '55, 's I can recollect, I can give luaus 'thout fa+olltl' it mush. ' can I,said Mr. Pettigrew, 1 hod So 'l'aahj 1)0:4At•tON PA Et'1' . an alUi'edbi; crop °fists the side hill 'We're great nu donations, elder. W. -jest go in heavy on these things. lleaeon ,Spears made the announce., l ]'sat to the new minister with an air .of stating the posso.isiott of a great moral v•rtne pecullir to the pedple of ,Berns„ stay Corners. I .have never found donation parties ~very sati,faotory, said the ,minister. I would greatly prefer Having a stated ',misty and having it paid in Well, yes, T ;; pose ye would,said the cl? t•,7n. I.'ltat's what'stll the ministers the psalmist says, It is more blessed. to give than• to receive. cordially endorse his sentiment from the receiver's standpoint, said Mrs, Spooner, as they looked over the proceeds of the donatiou party when they were alone, Just rook at the collection of old cloths, Henry. I suggest that we give up preaching and move tothe city, and start in business as a beau broker, arid; I'll run an old clothes store. We'd be well stocked up to begin with. What will you do with the stuff? asked the minister; turning over old jackets and aprons, aridother articles of olothing with a comi.oal look of-dis- may f dis-may on his face at the formidable col. lection. I thlrrk 1 shall make about 100.yards 'of rag carpet, answered Mrs. Spooner. That's about all a good deal of it is lot. I guess Pll take beans,too, fur it had been a gteat year fur heans in Scragsby Corners, as Mr.. Wade !tad said I've a gond notion to take some of my Ahniry'.t clo'es,said Mrs. Deacon Sppar t to Mrs. Pettigrew. She's out, - grew them, but they'd just about fit the eldest .girl, .l; slid jedge, au' they're' most as good as new, some on Fent. row don't s'pose Mies Spooner'd fool pntout about it, do yore know, Alis. Pettigrew. I can't see why she should, respond- ed Mrs. Pettigrew. Clc'es is clo'es an But ye see. e 'twon't hardly A, ut'nister's folits lav to clepend on us here tat ,`,cu•agsby Corners. fur a linin, r'aint as if, they could 0, i w 3 `vis+ got in the habit o' llavi.n' afford to be independent ye know. 1 ,t1 )outvote,.;in' theyexpect'etn, ye see, s`pose I might to Well take some retitled the demean, an' they'd feel sore j tekets and trc wa.is that air gettin' ter'otfenrird of a preacher sot his foot pretty snug for the bays, 1 . will, if alnwli ,.u' sKid }ie asouldn't have 'eel. you conclude to take some c1 Alneiry's Some folk give siathin' in that way dresses, Miss Spears. t t;tt tvnniriiit.' give nothita' in cash, an'Wall, then, s'pose we do, responded wo. re bound ;;rt it out o' the coot-. Mrs. Spears. ,inanity that we can,ye see, The eveeing of the donation party Aly experience has been that a great carate. •r?eal of what people bring to a lona. , T'itas hist arrival at the parsonage tion party is tyorthl,:ss or useless, said was lir. wade. 1Te Bret the minister, the minister, who came to the door in answer tri Well, yes, I s'pose so, assented the ,his knock, with a two•bnshel bang fu11 dearon. Dot. '4<vouldn't do to :,!:ick of something oil his shoulder. hg'tn' donations on that account h=ire. flow'd do, elder,, Beautiful night You d have the folks down on ye in no f nr the dotaatiotl, ain't it ? was his l9tix kende alaesware, (hips, Grnekery, etc, worth. One afternoon in the following week the minister sat down to prepare ser• neon for the doming Sabbath, As was often the mase he talked it over with his wife. When he named tie chapter be proposed to read at the opening of tlee sorvice, a sudden gleam of mischief came into Mrs. Spoorler's farce, But Pile said itothuiig. 0pt0Y 4041;1114. The only way to get up in religion is to first get duan. The love of money kills more mea than drunkenness, No mat; who believes in Crud is melt, afraid of the devil, Love tau see heauty where the world 'Picea only deformity. Sympathy is something that can not he learned at. college. When God tells you to laugh it is e girt to keep front doing it. The devil never feels lonesome in the company of a stingy man, If yourlife is not a blessing to others it is not a blessing to you, If a man: hes God within him is. it any wonder he is enthusiastic Ifyott want to be a thinker ask your. self a good many quet,tions. Give the past to God and make good wee of the future. If you want happiness don't try to find it in somebody else's garden. Before you can find rest in the sera vice of God you must be a worker. You con always be happy if you are willing to rejoice with others. If you want to be able to speak kind words, oybtivete kind feelings, If the preacher is convicted by hie own sermon. he is on the right track. It you are poor, it is probably be- cause God can not trust' you with money. It don't cost but a few dollars to man to heaven—on a tomb- send a prone. During.the week Mr. Spooner wrote to a friend ru the city, asking him if there was any sale for beans there, He had twenty-five bushels to dispose of, at a low price,he wrote, adding that it had been a good year forteaus in Saragsby Corners, When. Sunday morning carne; Mrs. Spooner sent her huaabandon to ch nreh ahead of her, tinder the plea that she had not got the Children quite ready. Don't wait for me, Henry, she said, of you may be late. We'll get there in time for tho sermon. Be wan reading a chapter from the Psalms when his family arrived. He had reached a verse in .avlsic;h the lily of the valley is spoken of, and these words rolled oft' sonorously from his toughs jest as the d•yor opeus'd and Mrs Spooner, followed by her.cbildren f11ed slowly and impressively in— ' Verily, I say unto eau, even Solo- mon in all his glury was not Arrayed like one of these. As he finished the verse he looked• np at the advancing ai.rr'ivalaa, and the spentaele that met his eyes tested his ti rue. greeting;, as he shoot; hands a+ith the Well, then, said the poor minister minister. with a High of rwsination to the meet" 're bra:gist ssnnin !teats for ye. tehle, I slippage tt will have to be. Fust r'ttte beans, too, roll fled.. P,ettns �3e thotigilt of his last donation party, with his dozen loads of wood ; wood saieli was Nnrthiessto the donors, be cause it had been cat so Ion' that it was arneeteable, ttn.d which:they never ,v ,old beets thou�wtit of using at home,, �Al-ore then cniee his wife's temper had annrtly tried with: the miserable a oil', and she had threatened to take bota•;fire of the whole lot, and proba- d41: would heves rtttenit,tr'ri carrying t n threat into rxecittion ik she had .r d any idea that it could hate ben €;oex'ttl to burst itself tip, #inti hie 1 exclaimed 9Ira p`pooner, int eiternay,wften her }meleesa Marl told' 1:rrr thnt a donation party w':§ bei•tii ro tires ue 4ted np. I dui hope WO might esw I've. counted fourteen bushels a , r i era in'lfl ams when we Caine here. ready, whispered the minister to his being topped off by a hat trimmed with+x ,� ribbon a v=1• bright functions and its environment, con. • t after the Net t follow, arnsltrpiirtr era! N The es b y is healthy'fivtit', elder: 1 seas raised of aeif•eontrol more than any 00 'sin. 1 uthtin' better for growirl' power child ren. You can put them in the woodshed', raid it 1r. Spooner. Jost then Ur. and his rtr�s, hut liar eosins; -d to keep bitcic Mrs. Pettigrew drove up. Iloilo, elder, „Rad evrnin' oall.ed the grin brat would have appeared at out Me.. r'ettigrew. I've .got some .the faintest 'encouragement, beans here for ye. lti hewn ye have Such a sight 1 The eldest girl was arrayed in .A•laniry's cast -oft' dress, of { he sees the wonders of minute structure 'min pautT In the woodshed, Rand t11e ndttister, iutvy blurs, with some ether girl's polo, with new potvera of comparison; Ire raise of red, rt�A:r sister was resplend- marks the relations that subsist be• with a smile its hid wife. Tt's going totween different organs with fresh cai>a- be beans this year, toy .dear,in a wills, ant hi a dress of Scotch plaid pattern g of most gorgeous colors, originally,but prehension and delight; ltH sees pose ♦ atbilities of development, and of res. tiling elect be had ever experienced, be afterwards told his ;wife, tris inonth twitcher!, and as smile flickered about 'more Canada stan4B Among the Natlgns, xe onto'xelegrun>. Canada stands first iu oanal develop•'+ me.nt. - P Second in the proouctioa of copper. Thud in area. Fifth its mercantile marine. Eighth in :railway mileage. . Ninth among coal produeingnations. And to nth. inmthe production cif iron, '.!'his is all in wealth produeed. Ie. undeveloped wealth the ])ominioas takes a still higher position as coxae pared with other countries.. • The largest deposits of coal in the world are in the Northwest, ' The richest petroleum beds are along the Mackenzie and Athilttesca. The greatest copper mine is at Sud. bury. The best iron ore is'bn Nova Scotia, and Canada, as a whole, possesses' it supply auflluient fol the whole world. Qala itq of Wood vs. Etichnoas at' Milk. The attempt to make retitle abnor- nlaily rich is a failure. Milk is Made of blood by, a process of filtration through th'e'ttruillilary glands, there is no di rest cliannel,between the stomach and the udder, ant Sabo milli can only be influenced„ thron lr ,, the brood. Plats fed in food do not riiuir'fats in milk; To clomoustrate this, en 'nglish set�,- vant has .been analysing the milk of a, , tigress fed wholly on lean set he found it rich,l,oth in fatts.aud which he says shows that the_ substances had been derive sources of animal origin,tuid healthy blood can be dope to furnish the fats in milk, which feed the cow all sli rapidly of a variety of good digested, tend give abund water, and good atteiidane The cow's inherited pow vert this: rood blood into and it is along these lure men must work rather theory that rich milk Can froth the cow that nater out for a sky blue milker List your given word b cord,a chrain of wronght will go far to make a In 3'041 man le tho noliltsit Life attar Forty. The beat half of lifeis in front of the Man of forty, if he be -anything of a Xilan. The work be Will do will be done with the hand of a roaster, and, not of a raw apprentice. The trained intellect does not' see inen as trees walling, bot sons everything clearly sad in just nieaelure. The trained tem• per does not rush at work like a blind bull at at hay Steck; hot advOntioeWith the calor and ordered. 'Fie of conscious power and deliberate c?etertaination. To no pian is the world se nein,'Strd, the future iso fresh, as toliim who has spent the early years of Itis manhood in striving to understand the deeper problems of science and life, and who has made some headway' toward caw.' prebetatling them, To him, the coin. tnonest things are rare .arid `wonderful. both in themselves and as -parts of a beautiful ann intelligent wliose. Such a thing as staleness in life end its duties he cannot understand. I(now.. ledge is always opening out • before him • in wider expauses,and more command, ing heights. If he be a doctor he finds,for exctnple, that the fresh study of one of the organs of the human body ;fields a pleasure and eh atnlighte eiinzent which it never yielded before; Then other arrivals followed in rapid now somewhat subdued by time and surae l/eine, earl et, lenge three nut Fie 1 wear, still very vivid, and over it she toration, which never struck hitn.in .., brought beans, I wore a jacket about three times too his tat'lier studies ; the various parts every f lir ba g 1.,1 attiall for filer, ttlo p" t cp costume ' of the body, and the whole of the e., organism in rtlattioti to its powers, its ink 1: was raver more vexed wife shout l3 ria;i.irlt, and still tlrere'ar old freshly dyed a y K Jnr t tit I eras the itaarr3ritg lustre o n Fi old t n had ft stitnt� ralitiracla', the wonderfulness of There wasn't a room its the house 101014 clptlrorr i>;l m i+1rt of ft. l pair of trousers wlrjg1l fairl7 dragged St Which. knows 110 end, The pleasure e. Sly Cif TEMPERAN( comirexao nr 'r -.tor Dr. 13. W. Weise alcohol caber's tiler mous than even 00 Tolstoi's latest o against tob.tcu.t. ei stated that he has for the press in v inveighs as;arinst e'ltness,: awl shows the elreot or warn of drinks on the hush; The ringing of t! of henceforth the liquor traffic, IsZc tine better than tit suable and the dis who a mlpess sea a nate proselyte in the the soteotilio tern bill. But Illinois hill in spite of theta The Lincoln, Ns Qetober Sid sseys c offspriug of the sa to date its a letter t out to the teachers is p7•esucuably sent Board, attd at its e the 13oard's letter i by Ohas, (Jolloyer, the Board. The : la appeal to the teaol WV? their influence it eialaon, lest the los rived from it brie t4aohers' salaries. From the very taiutsery, Mrs. Get deceased, was an u of teetotaiistn, ant 4is due the accept absolutely taxeludst in the •Sal vatiou A partakes of Mantic tutu mad Woittau, 1 entire force is ' at alcohol in every t has been the mean new recruits from. loved the strong d thein" loyal tis th adoption, The Chicago "Un haat s to be dopa '.:Distress ? is a cc recurring at tlssese Government to st and the breweries, threatened peo'plo have enough and t of'life. 'Whew he stopped in 1509.10: of famine— the tai Was 8o great that i toriies had stopped ovate on, the state hour would have nom plaiut. . • At the City ''nglrand, the fa Joseph Parker, re Jiilr timeintoxictt halted front the sr It liar done ilioalea ant also opposed "tc vile ;concoctions 11 instanot's, illtoxioa displaced, I±'or`m; touch them ; I sire toy lips. Plain w ting to take in , U easy t-uud one 4 that is that at the should not be tome tion or the reneivrtl Ries tru etive'habi ts. hear the heaviest acre COM - milk, dairy. frutn s>4 bteinerl bloekrsc Wild Cherry Bark, !attend and Senega. dies with which Date c;anadn for the oast (';roup. Whooping Cc Loess of 'Voice, All t Wilson'aa Wild Cheer rm, au'd with other most taliatnle•er Threat, Chest a d Cherry is sold. I lb The °Wen Satin' trpi; decided to Mt air Jae i,ll ta^ •«^1nnttl R"tt'f�