HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1893-11-17, Page 63►Ap1tt'Erp, Not Tlhwn,
to some is full of ,sorrow,
ill real, half they borrow,
of rock* and, full, of ledges.
ers sharp, and cutting edgcst
ugh the toy bells: may be meg,
a song you'll !rear them stnguig;
lug never makes them wise,
king out front downoaat eyes,
ie vain the e u is shining,
tern sliarltling, blossoms twining;
ey but see'througb those same sorrows
to -day aad worse to-morrow;
tare eleads that must pass over;
the weeds oolong the clover—
crythiug and everything
s tee gold the sunbeams bring,
uiug from the bitter fountain,
yon molehill seems a mountain;
aped dew and drops of rain.
ell Into the mighty main.
in vain the blessings shower,
1 the mercies fall with power,
thering chaff, a ye tread the wheat,
oh and loyal, noatb your feet.
t it not be so, my neighbour,
k up, as yoµ love and labour.
t for ono alone woe's vials--
very one has cares and trials.
v and pain are linked together,
ke the fair and cloudy weather;
play we have -0! let us pray—
' and patience for to -day.
—The Advance.
A MEAN TRICK.
e had often tried to propose to
, nut she was such a very flippant
ng person that be found it impos-
e to reduce ger to it sufficiently
ous fame of the mind. Then, too,
was by nomeans certain as to her
ings towards himself.
ellowever he was denied the satisfac-
of even well ground suspection,
e had such a balling sort of man -
Never had he been able to sur -
tie her into au admission of anything
v -ever trifling, which might he tak-
!"i>lFas. an indication that he aroused
ethin her emotions of any Kind what.
r. it was certainly very difficult
know what to do.
.sMany timeslte had almost taken ad-
;entage of momentary silence on her
rt. Tunes with out number had he
arty clasped her iu his arms but she
hs tco quick for him. The boldest
art on his part had been made one
ening after he had brought a friend
cull upon her. Minna. Bob and
e friend,had all sat in the kitchen
d pulled taffy. Next evening Bob
id sheepishly:
Do you know, Minna, what they
s tellin' me last night?
How uould L know without you
(ling me? returned Minus, with
lirit. She was washing dishes and
le clattered them in the pan.
He was asking me if I were goiu;
marry you.
And what did you tell him!
Told leis 1 didn't know.
That was right, said Minna, whirl -
1
the dishcloth around
sud be—he said I was 0 darned
of if 1 didn't.
Didn't what?
lildll't
inarry you.
So you would be—if you get the
Nance, was the prompt reply.
That's what I told him—if I got
e chalice; but I Can't get the chance, and father 1 (seb.)
;Oh, no,. no 1. said Minna,tearfully.
What
They're old now to start over agin
a right had you to tell him you ('a protracted sigh) ; but I kin work
pultln'G get the chance? L for 'ecu. I'll do it. and Bob's shoulders
Cause you ain't ever give it to me.
No an' 1 never Will,'returned Minna -shook with nobly suppressed emotion.
ith
emphasis. It'll come hard to toe() the old place
, after all these years.soh
Jes' what 1 thought; said Bob, die- now (Rob),
ally. Gueas 1'd •better go.
Guess ye had, remarked his hostess,
oshitubly. As she spoke she wiped
Talky aleft rite? said Minna, S11
grily. IRK tiered they?
Qht word, ;.tamped Bob to billaself:
If t*tto gats. !load befurtt. 1 beget!.
',they wuz. dayln'— eayin' .
Well? *imply, what; weuz they say»
They wee sayiu' how a s you'dnever
merry any one, you wuz that uncet-
tent like find flighty like n
Who stud that? said ;!titins, turning
wrathful eyes upon him.
1 don't exactly tetnember, faltered
Bob. ukl
Most likely yourself, dlsdaief y,
rob weld not truthfully disown the
remark, as he lied made it frequently,
111 contidencs, to his near companions
in the village. So,. after the unexpect
ed home thrust he remained uncome
fortably silent,
Minna pursued for advantage.
Nice doings, theta, fur man! she
went on contemptuously. Talking
about girls when they can't talk back
for themselves.
If the reported conversation had not
been whooly imaginary. Bob would
have been stricken with remorse. As
however,although inwardly
THE WIN iHAM TIMES NOVEMBER 17,1893.
Signs of the SonpyaxioOri.
Iia always conies flee USX gripe
MA two srobrell*s.
He always offers her his arra,.
11We always clean Slntven and wears
besides immaculate }ltteli; t► eareWOru
worried expresainn. •
He always pant out his watch,
presumably to sea llbw nuicit Qf the
honeymoon is left,
\Matte he regi,ters tit the hotel the
"Rand wife" le w1'ittete twine es large as.
his ewe noble.
Slee never fails to. RA how many
lumps of sugar lie te%kee in his rloff'ee
1Tonnow,tx's Prises —The _Female's
Friend,—Se soon as, t he human fun-
ctions are disordered they should be
rectified. It is a hopeless .delusion to
leave the malady to its own course.
A few appropriate doses, of Holloway's
Pills at the proper period will prevent
many a serir>ue illness. They arrest
all morbid influence, and prevent dire
eases front extending and all','ctiug
more distant organa. Their primas,
action is upon the blood, stomach
it was, I "ver, kidneys and bowels. `Their
trembling, he caw an opening and 'i y
took it.
Bet I spoke back for you, Minna, I
did.
Oh, you did, did you? was the dis-
couraging comment. Since it wuz
you said the worst, seems to me it wuz
all you could do.
They said a lot more'n I did, Bob
continued with Iiotitious courage,
they said as how I needn't ,lam hangin'
around here, far yo'd allue scorn me
till the judgement and not marry me
at all. very varied charaeteristi'cs when twee
Therewas some truth in their remarks, in different positions. For .ex:Ytngle
remarked Minna, subbingly.
But there was wuzzer nor that, he
said, with well forced gloominess. I
said as how 1 kuowed you would
marry ete—
Who made you sa wise? interrupted
Manna, sarcastically.
Au' a man net me you wouldtkean'
—an' -1 bet him yon would.
Beasts! ejaculated the nluch.inceus-
ell Minna.
An' I het a fearful lot. Minna,
Gosh 1 -.-I'm scared to think of it. If
I have to give him all that money the
farm'!l have ter go—sure !
Minna looked up, frightened.
How much 2 she asked, aiutly.
Wonder hue, much she'll stand ? , staves are in the same position in
Bob asked hitnet•1es perplexedly. Then 1 which the tree Frew, while the eatnrat•
led ones are reversed. •
he klaneed at her tentatively, t
1'tu most afeared to tell you.
It' .—it's—gosh, Minna—it's a hunch.
secondary action strengthens the
nervous centres. No drug Can be at
once so harmless yet so autagonistic
to disorder affecting the other sex.
The most perfect reliance may bo plan
ed upon their purifying, regulat-
ions and renovating virtues. Thou:,'
may be safely taken by females at,
any age.
The problem. has puzzled ninny why
two pieces of wood sawn froth, the
same section of tree should possess
et►YlUid Mantis*, '
A prominent rnerobant reeeutly said to
the writer that no qualities were more de•
Hirable on the part of.huueelf or employees,
especially during'busineee houzs,thatitlteeo.
qualities. And iiia is a pleasant place to go
though you Novo no shopping to do. As an
illustration of the practical velue ,of a
cheerful spirit, a largo retail merchant
when settling with his clerks for the last
Week's service in the year gave ono of them
.an extra $20, saying hi explanation "I pay
you the'regular amount for your week's
work, but the $$0 is for your cheerful
spirit rind smiling countenance maintained
through the year.
This one quality of soul alone would
wonderfully transform this world if it
could but prevail generally; life would he by
far more enjoyable, and even its crush -bur-
dens would seem to grow lighter. Surely
the man who goes to his daily work with a
light heart and a obeerful spirit, singing on
his way, has music all day long by which
to march, and he can work more hours and
reach better results than are possible other-
wise.
But there are inany who are not built on
this plan. Cheerfulness seems to have
been entirely left out of the compound of
their being. It is exceedinglydifficult for
these people to be pleasant, exercising the
winning spirit, but easy enough to be
gloomy, morose and sour, However, the
most unfortunate in this regard may do
inuoh toward the cultivation of this very
desirable grace.
gate post. will be found to decay much
faster if the butt end of tlee tree is
uppermost than would be the case if
the tap were placed in this position.
The reason is that the moisture of the
atmosphere will pre.meat.e the pores of
the wood much more rapidly the way
the tree gerw than it would be in the
opposite direction. llicropical exam-
inatiou proves that the pores invite
the ascent of moisture, while they
repel its descent. 'fake the familiar
case of a wooden bucket. Many may
have noticed that some of the staves
appear to be entirely saturated, ,while
others ere .apparently quite dry. This
arises from the same cause; the dry
The Norian Rock of Canada.
Ithumatism; yes, and lel smitten -
GIA too, are greatly relieved and often
entirely cured by the use of PAIN-
KILLnR—Try it. lac for a New 2 -oz.
Bottle;
ren dollars. , An interesting description of the Norian
01,, illy 1 ejaculated Minna ; you I Book of Canada ("Uber das Norian oder
ue' Ober -Laurentian von Canada," extracted
A hundred dollars 1 repeated Bob, from N. Jahrb., Beilagebd. viii„ 1893, pp.
chokingly. and, overcome by the feel- 410-493,) has just been lamed by Professor
ings tie bad aroused, he buried his F. D. Adams. This forms a thesis for the
head 1st his hands. From this safe doctor's degree at the University of
retreat he continued disjointed remarks Heidelbery. The Norian rocks coneist
broken by emotion, s mainly of "anorthosite," in which plagio-
Don't eare for myself (sigh)—I don't olase is the chief constituent, ferroanagnes-
want to live, any way; but the fartu'll tau, silicates being scarce or absent. These
have to go, sure—and poor mother rocks are intrusive in the Grenville series
—the upper division of the Lower Lauren-
tian of Logan, who regarded the Norian
series as Upper Laurentian, Professor
Adams shows that the auorthosites occur
near the castes n edge of the great Arcbaeaa
platform of Canada. He compares this;
with the distribution of modern volcanoes
along the edges of the Continents. Some
of the auorthosite masses are of great
extent: that of the Saguenay district
covers an area of nearly 16,000 square
miles, that of Morin, 1,000 square miles.
These results may be compared withthe
conclusions already published by Professor
A. C. Lawson, that the Lanroritian gneisses
of the Rainy Lake region are intrusive in
the so-called "limonites" of that area,
rocks which are previously considered to
be later than the Laurentian. Professor
Adams' paper contains a map of the
.A Now Ohiocition.
An elderly gentleman called et a lodging
Reuse and asked of a servant who opened
the dater:
Piave you a room to let ?
'Yes, she replied; but --
But
IBut what? asked the gentleman.
You are over sixty, aren't you? flaked the
girl,
Yes,be answered;; I am sixty-five,
I thought so, said the girl; youcan't hove
the room, as my misses don't want any
faueeuls from her house.
Not Greater Than a Bank.
An angry discussion was taking place
between two colored men on Bates street
recently, and one of them was about to lay
bands on the other, when Daddy White
came down Cadillac square and stopped to
ask what the row was about.
Dat man owes me half a dollar 1 replied
one of the disputants.
I don't deny it ! said the other.
Den why don't you pay me?
Kase it's too soon.
If yo' doan pay dat half a dollar I'ze
gwine ter smash yo' fine 1
Hole on, Mister Simpkins—bole on !
said Daddy, as he stepped between the pair.
Bet's see how dis yer case stands. How
long has die gem'lan owed you half a dol-
lar ?
'Bout fo' weeks.
Has yo' dun axed him fur it befo' ?
No, sah.
Den yo' hain't got no case an' better
yb'r noise.
Doan lie owe me sat Money ?
Of co'se he does, but am yo' a bigger
man don a savin's-bank? If yo' wants dat
money yo' gin him 60 -days' notis alt' do
bizuess in a bizness way. Humph 1 De
ideab of a white-washin' cull'd man sottin'
hisself up to be bigger'n a bank wid a
millyon dollars in it 1—Detroit Free Press.
01, don't, don't, dont, Bobt I can't
bear it, grasped Minna choking down
the tears, I'll—I'il— •
ut her dishpan and hung it up on the Bol, wait a moment. Then be'went
ail. behind. If I'Were you I'd learn on :
few things. before I came courting. Poor sister can't go to school, or
But your a big sight olever'n me, nothing, reeking himself to and fro in
answered Bob, meekly, apparent deep grief;an there ilo wood
That's so. maid Minna, laconically got for the winter, an—there he wept
s Bob passed dejectedly out of the aloud and seeing this Minna, too,
itchen door. wept aloud.
On thinking over the interview on 01 Bob, she Dried, how could you
se way home Bob thought that on be se—so— and she burst again into
the whole he had not made much pro- tears.
areas Bob restrained himself from embrao
A few days latter hope returned, ing her, acid he shook his head thee
bright eyed and smiling, and Bob Molly.
determined to make another attempt Dunne, Minna, he said ine choking
to secure the elusive Minna. In the voice; hut there ain't no help for it
Oft dusk of the early summer evening now. Its all got to go farm and all.
e went thoughtfully across the field Never! Minna said, hysterically, I
towards her father's cottage, now will marry you -I will!
ooftened of its daytime angularittes, Taint right to ask you Bob said sad -
d, to Bob's imagination, nestling ly and hypocritically. You don't care
onfidently in the trees, nothin' about we,
She sat down near lira ou the door- I didn't afore, said Minna, tearfully
tep, and leaned her head against the end shumefacedly,buttb>i<twas an awful
Etasemeut. She looked very pretty, her lot of money to bet on me. I like you
ack eyes darkened the lids and her fur it, Bob, I do.
le face in the dusky twilight, her An will you marry me?
lr curling in moist little ends
and her small fate. Bob looked
her, and his heart failed him, 13u
Membered a certain Thomas An-
son, whom re prt said had loitered
til the honeyenekla'for the last
,oettheli end brought bask his
*mune,
wuz talking about you lout
wet et the pump, he remertt1red
AiYsing oheelr%tlttltote.
Medicinal 'Uses` of Eggs.
For burns and scalds there is nothing
more soothing than the white of an egg,
which may be poured over the wound. It
is softer for a varnish for a burn than col-
lodion, and being always at band, can bo
applied immediately. It is also more cbal-
ing than the sweet oil and cotton, which
was formerly supposed to be the surest
application to allay the smarting pain. It
is the contact with the air which gives the
extreme discomfoSt experieneedfromordin-
ary accidents of this bind, and anything
which excludes air and prevents inflamma-
tion.'is the best thing to be at once applied.
The egg is also considered one of the
very best'remedies for dysentery. Beaten
up' " lightly, with or without sugar, and
swallowed at a gulp, it tends, by its emol-
lient qualities, to lessen the inflammation
of the stomach and intestines, and, by
forming a transient coating on these organs,
td enable nature to assume her healthful
sway over the diseased body. ,
Archaean area of Canada and a fall biblio-
...
SYtlltanis' Royal. Crown Remedy, osetifei' pure es
earth, guaranteed to curs general 314recut bebti!ty,
Rheumatism, Nturalgia Analysts, etc. r ,
graphy,—Colonies and India.
Scrofula eradicated and all kindred dis-
eases cured by Hood's Sarsaparilla, which
by its vitalizing and alterative effects,
make pure blood.
the North Shore, Theeutluok its decidedly
ln'omisinq. At the Qpltir goldhno the
result of a week's milling on et is re-
garded as the poorer satnplcs of ore brought
forth about 015,000 north of gold, The
operations 101 the Creighton mine, owned
chiefly by Ottawe ]nen,: aro not to far ad-
vanced, but itroug hopes are entertained
tlntt it will turn out well. That the capita-
lists itt bath caeca have strong faltI is ex-
emplified by the ercetiou of commodious
buildings ana very expensive machinery
with which to develop the respective pro-
perties. At the Opltir ]Hina the main
lkiuilding is 58xS4 feet, live stories• high,
with a wing for engine room and boilers
87X40 feet.
IfVe are hopeful that the great northwest-
ern portion of Ontario, embraced within
the bounds of Algoma, will yet prove to be
ono of the richest mineral producing locali-
ties on the continent- It is also aatis£ao•
tory to know that them is yet plenty of good
farm land itt that portion of tile Province
ready for the cultivation of the hardy and
determined settler. There is a great future
before the northwestern half of the Pro-
vince.
Tid-Bits for the Boys. -
Liquor and lick her too often travel to-
gether.
To frown in the mirror casts a serious
reflection on any belle.
Gallen: Is Mrs. Meek at home? Kitchen
Goddess: No, mum. It's her afternoon
off.
Barkeep's 13roathrat Iialeatu Will Hard any J1ag'i
Cold, U1•orlciaitle er aethwa.
Mrs, Dumpsoy—Our _Bessie is the bright-
est little child your ever saw. She picks
up everything she hears. i\lrs. Popinjay—
Something like our Johnuia. Ile picks up
everything he segs.
I cannot say yes, Walter. I shall always
be a sis—Sister to ine ? No, you won't,
Yes, Walter ; your brother Charles propos-
ed to me last night and I accepted him.
You see, said a lawyer, in summing up a
case where one party had sue.l the other
on a transaction in coal—you see the coal
should have at once gone to the buyer.
Not so, interrupted th; judge; it should
have gone to the; cellar.
Actress: I wonder what I shall do this
season to keep myself before the public?
,gister Actress: Why don't you try acting?
Judge: You are charged with being
drunk—but haven't I seen you somewhere
before? Prisoner: You have. Wo took
the good cure together. Judge:Discharged.
Biffins appears to have taken a rather
obscure slate in the community. Obscure?
Well, I should say so. Why, nobody ever
brings him a petition to sign.
It is a common thing for women to say
that men are all alike. But when two men
fall in love with the same woman a differ-
ence very soon exists between them.
Vexed Wife; There is no calamity can
befall a woman that I have not suffered.
Amiable Husband: Wrong, my dear; now,
you have never been a widow. Vexed
Wife: I said calamity, sir! Janette, I'm afraid you are a vain little
wife. You gaze into your mirror so much.
You oughtn't to blame me for that. I
haven't your advantage. What's that ?
You can see my face without looking into
a mirior.
There is said to be a tribe in Africa
which requires public speakers to stand on
one leg during their addresses, and when
they become exhausted their time has ex-
pired.
Aged Husband: I begin to think, Mary,
that I've wrecked your young happiness by
permitting you to marry an old man like
me. Young Wife: Oh, no, indeed; I expeet
to make my second husband very jealous
telling him how fond I was of you.
Why, Bridget, did mamma have another
husband before she married mypapa? Yis,
darlint, but iio doied, ye see. Oh, Bridget,
Faith, and ye'd better be glad, Bessie. If
he'd lived he *night a made yo a cruel step-
feyther.
How She W ai.td for Him.
He—Are you ready, dear'
She (briskly)—Yes, all ready.
He—Good enough! Then I may turn the
gas out?
Sbe -One moment. Is my comb in
straigbt? I don't believe my hair is fit to
be seen.
He—Olt, yes; very nice. Have yon got
everything? •
She (decidedly) _Everything. Wait;don't
put the light out, Let me see—what did I
do with--- Oh, here it is. That's all I
'He—Well, thou--
She—Harry! These are the wrong'gloves;
they're tho old ones me sent me. Just
think, if I had not discovered the mistake?
The right pair were in my pocket. Now,if
you pin my veil and take this wrap over
your atm—don't lose itl
Ne --We can go, I suppose ?
She—Now we can. By the way,I would
better take my smelling snits; no telling
What may happen l
He—Shall I turn tho—
She—Turn it off. Oh•h.li, do wait an
instant! My sandals! I almost forgot,and
it is so damp! Will you get them out of
the closet—left corner, on the shelf—and
you'll have to put them on for me. i hate
to ask you to kneel in yournice— Thanks,
dear, you're so good!
He—Well, we're off!
She—At last! 13n1 stop. I haven't locked'
limy desk, and that strange nurse• Thanks
dear, you're so good!
Ho (desperately) -011, come on; the cer-
tain will be up ?
She (reproachfully)—I've boon ready
these twenty minutes.
Virtue of a Cheerful Spirit
What the world needs among other
things is more of those people whopossess
the invaluable charm of a happy disposi-
tion. Who doesn't enjoy Coming in con-
tact with such persons? They carry a
radiance of soul with them that seems to
affect the very •atmosphere. Their tastes,
habits, views and opinions .may differ
Froin our own in every way, send yet we are
ttnawoidebly dratvn towards thein and fas-
cinated by them.
She nodded They possess such pleasantness of dis•
Thank you, Minna, I3ob said, morn» l position, such sweetness of temper, such a
folly, It's awful good in you. gentlotsese of spirit, that they become en -
A. moment relapsed before he start- while differ with
ed into real business of courtship—
he had to pressed crraifully an
d rn
that motneslt Bob looked up at the
Tory jester of the twinkling' star and
sufficiently exheltnged with it a know-
ing and prodigious wink.— dhioago
ger.
Among Qntario's Gold Mines.
M r. Blue, chief of the Bureau of Mines
in this Province, has been on a tour
through the Ontario gold fields, and has
been interviewed by a Globe representative
on the results. There aro, he says, very
rick pastures and big potato yields in the
valleys of the Vermillion and Thesselon
Rivers, and the yield of red clover wee
something phenomenal. So well aloes this
clover re -seed itself all offer cultivable
Algoma that farmers say in six or moven
years it completely mobs out the timothy.
This being so, and pure water .plentiful
everywhere, Mr. Blue holds that it ought
to become a banner district for beof,rnutton,
cheese and butter. It will be easy, too, to
make the best pork, as peas, without bugs,
yield 80 to 85 bushels to the acre, and oats
produce abundantly.
Of land thus capable of supplying a liv-
ing to the industries there are yet. in the
hands of the Ontario Administration tens
thousands of acres, for sale to actual
of
settlors at from 20 to 50 coats an acre.
The important question is a near marker,,
seared to you, w li a ou may a This, to some extant, the lumbermen supe
y y 11 but Mr..13Ine holds that if the mining
them. Some'are at great advantage in the ply; l
very_ ontstert by having a natural gift thil He—You're not ready now 1 industry grows, as there is some promise
y Vh I'm waiting for youl • that it may expand and prosper, it may
of cul. And tinsel this is a She '4 y, g
sweetness ea Y
most desirable gift, a greet gift to any man Ho(in
emszeme
n
t —poroe
? dOV
a
stlj
more
thann rn
orf
ng
for r the
no matter what may be the sphere in which I. She (patiently)—I'm waiting for you to distriot. Mr. Blue writers with the roserve
holrtoyds. .All appreeiwte the presence p
of a l put tbi gas out. 'We ean't go and leavo it ' of a Governmont official, yet hopefully, of
tunny temper, a liappy apirjt anal a fraxakr blazing to the oeiling,—The Club, tits future mltling for precious foetal; on
Mr. Geo. W. Cook
Of et. Johnsbury, Vt.
Like, a Waterfall
Great Suffering
After the Crip
Trernendous Roaring in the Head
—Pain in the Stomachs:.
"To C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.:
" Two years ago I had a severe attack of the
Grip, which left me in a terribly weak and de-
bilitated condition. last winter I had another
attack and was again very badly off, my health
nearly wrecked. My appetite was all gone, I
had no strength, felt tired nil the time. had
disagreeable roaring noises in my hes;?, like a
waterfall. I also had severe headaches and
Severe Sinking Pains
in my stomach. I took medicines without ben-
efit, until, having heard so much about Hood's
Sarsaparilla, I concluded to try it, and the re-
sult 1s very gratifying. All the disagreable
effects of the Grip are gone, I am free from
pains and aches, and believe
Hood's Sarsapar6la
13 surely curing my catarrh. I recommend it
to all." Guo. W. Coax, St. Johnsbury, Vt.
HOOD'S PXLLS cure Nausea, Sick Headache,
Ia, tceet;on Bliloneneee. Sold Ur all druggists.
•
COR ®So,
UNDERTAKERS
WIN GRAM, ONT.
A LIBERAL OFFER!
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The two publicattnui+ will he given for
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fore atonally let, 11304, as Nell as 10 new
subscribers.
u w t»e.e t tine rico of 6
The re ul r u the
g 1 p
%*slot*:' Journal is Oi.a Defier per year.
Tho Zottruel sod the "fume will ouly eed't
you *1.25 it yota scud uow.
dtlirelaa, 1'rrutts Oryrgti,
Winabatn, Out.
My Ne
.x,
14 net h wee a
y rti,ndown farm;
An' her cows an' pigi
mighty lot o' hal
To my ileitis ajinin',
awhile,
Till 1 wouldn't be in
kind 0' style.
So I looked my very
up to her door,
Till alta looked up e
waddle' up the it
An' her cheeks was r
hair tat black as 1
k forgot to scold and
ed so sweet and
But my hand was to
wouldn't never d
To 'forget those deprtt
ing at her shoe;
So I gethereet up my
Mrs. Brown!
An' my tone put out
lashes they fell
But I ain't no num ft
right on to say
How her pigs et al
cows et tons of h
How her chickens ser
an' I wouldn't ha
Gettin' harder all the
will, you know,
Then the wilder she
drop on her cheel
Ar'ia something in ht
let her speak;
But she sobbed and o
7� teary tone,
That she had no one
poor and all alon
An' my hand was oft
a -reaching out fo
I had learn't a sudden
thought I'd learn.
Well, my scoldin' was
I thought to do,
For her pigs and cows
widder with 'em,
-Will F. McSparren
A
Errors About
Mr. W, a Orr,
i•eeent letter to th
Whenever the nn`
of the liquor truffle
person whet hes r1 it
snore thtut, perhaps
ings, where its meri
cated, he almost it
the error ••f repreee
lets as desirous of
ing with whet pool,
drink, etc. 1 hate•'
elated with the
prohibition w:.rk to
long period anti het
any .advoejtte of
appeared to be desi
such law enacted. 1?
vince or the Domini
prohibition menus i
be enacted arid miff
importation, menu
alcol.iolto liquors for
Such a law always
vision for a supply
use in me'dictne, li
well as of wine for
poses. Never has
where a prohibitory
tion, that the sacred
home is invaded t0
family eats or dr
there moat he prowi
houses where laque
habitually sold in v
just as in the case o
goods, and of lionisei
prohibition question
ed on its inerits, ant
or demerits of en it.
of prohil.ition ever
that bas never been
statute book.
Again—and now
Commission has con
important to note -
possessed of comm.
peots to see the tra
completely. Named
hiltitory law being t.
of prohibition affect
capital (int of the
and Kansns and lot
North west 'ferritori
not wholly probit;
'voted ngnii'1st the Sc
because it was no
inetteure as they wn
They wintred total
stead. le env opin
given the subject ni
thing Re total prtttti
traffic in this couut
crushinn it autism
whole Province, cat
Total pmelte Um, ,
sense, has never be
over limited (irons,
mand for lignor ns
practically c,nteed t
legal entente) n.>,i bi'
liquor sold opelily,
such sale, in 200 pi
ronto, and lipunr s
law in a few semi -1
underground pinoes
LICA
a1
1
trioWt cow. isle*
here and w al entree
other cities) thorn i
towards the innth
eradication of tee
completely deatroy