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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Signal, 1886-7-30, Page 22 TIM HURON SIGNAL, FRIDAY. JULY s0, 188ie 1 • 3 (- EDUCATIONAL The following *mese tbi ohjesttos• able pegess M the meat emamta.ewe• Ion third dna mambas. IQQId13H (MAMMA IL i v EXas alter-.re.>It ti1>�es, at*. 1. Explain the Datum of the weeds is the fdiNieg, l S ars feet /Milled, oiaasllD 1u M tete ger another et the sores pars ci Vega deed hi Melee out theme aud thellegltab HJ4aridee There ten• Burke, levwrwo Irl or mush - gent of the art of adapting hie rem ' IAg. opt bur style to tis - - taste d bee feiss,,r,. but w aro comprehension and rkt nem td - tion uprise tum every orator. *$h eyes t7 Wt eB Kp»»d the See= gee- tloensa d the age, !,i, has develops* by every manly nerds., his teed ban - lag with U%L.1I hew Sad opsit. the +.'- e xcise, t►e dtivalr•.es, the hath rods/ Wiedhaa Nor, tbusab marinaded by by such tum, dud the youngest maneger Will aunties%• At y age mal on afoot thought*: of those umbo distiugeish themselves in Yes ...s,* loll. Why, surely then lila are ,till contending for peises and is too gess w will say that when fellowships at cu:lege, he had wee for the flag people are attempt- himself a couppouuw prase is Psshs- iag to seers their rigida, you most. Nuoliautage of fortune or can- tun cum my ren as I eft and write. mgadopt, end I must ivy myself out, Mb The bou,4z. hisitsman au whip M a going splendidly the, mad 1 pram would deprive them of the °ppm- mento° was westing that could set off to \ve Md not, ars Ihowever, it reached open p$ teed, d doiag so. the height his .p'endid talents and his round as et, ha deep andheopen steed, to my Iheory, to •'bimo� my Rol !u the other side in wee IINi 1osD1e 2. Make • list oft Itlections ul the unblemished h . At twenty-three he g / P who, nerd! aete " obi aur sea as they always du u few a mos, toward Su f`C 'AM p1a be a the "bother's,' or I•w, traier••o the aide ul oiled, as P w .oi ursrinaulisg M" -w eel, pall pro- bad thee thought wurtht to be ranked r hie been Camino . eellen`ly to ( se I afterwards found, Lad Jou overcome y peesomwl and the five t'r the overt, and u b woe slrlwdl tole at 5d. sad as ► neves to bis the difficulty. bet (f course ewt,tbtng little t.Ouw u be lee use s.fast flap MGM*, asd illustrate by one example or' wits the mimeo stalemate whoa aril well filled ...it at ��pea uorm.m4u, whoes have goue �, ieMmtiea, tis ores of thew iu8ec ed as the Je�aotea oaf tbs British ('nee thou w were lost Delos •/del to ke work we overtake end leave behead many genii on at • other side, when we rmethinr �iepich ban I saw ; out .. ._- -s the British ...,til. who had thee so lung and perlist•a 1/ were all wishing ourselves, wasa,mpal5 black Doth Dene soma •ppswr, and, those who had tlwught fit W eater tk. mar• te whop, covert,uoe of those will from "squeaks.," to time showing w their backs. It was here tha;, ly hidden frim vle biew. balkiest s when s minute Inter I reach ea side. I took place wbieb from time to time myfarattention Dona, a fine called ling ma of to• pair two rovgained tined tt...b •sure twenty-five or thin find Dim IyiuR .tilt and helpless and bis u at ea oecar it the hunting field, and which, as send twenty, and brutben 1 think from yards, I put him at it in teal earnest. hoses standing trembling near at hood, • role, do not fwd to improve the sem- and with that peculiar puckered- ep, wrinkled per oaf the swim eportem•n who ie far their Iikenaas. They were mounted on 11,n• rwlt aud ane .plenidid eQurt, thep ops hat appeared to be badly prawn three- the great gripe or ditch chocked with I `y k iii �Ais ardai seem of a� re•irw ofµ I FBOY Inn !0 NM h has ,:ret . b`i`b» the 4 s g.w Boli, therm �g►U ee J„y . rued {tta there is not the slightest deft, teemut b• unutterably provekieg, sod cal- newer, T. to name the temper ui • useable an elegaet maraca', your sod asRacioue animal, t., be rdd�by se briber aofigonutiw with isdtffnwst bon.maa, who d Raga, weiieo __ gist tar this-« , sed thee that , bean spas k� when geum •tams wase ewe • bleak MM. ilk �' Iso • leas ,sin, es perhaps holds w thereby throsibost the whole) , sod dealers' at the sed of it, with rs as oSwmi•i epithet. Nei tis broth ut sarin sd puller 1 wlide espther, tight Made sad awns idl.s d radius. weeld probably him as per- iod mouthed a horse Mite had ever the noel •Ytt� et was f►ai�e cry „( ail, ! 1 Iiedlnpseld by the .rl atomise NOD of the bre red as jria ass. 4 �• Ise olds. loped �,the Mender, bask forced tea h, besuppose by ee ibe Ilse the tail whist* 1 have ■ ad, l self bask, he lifted her top M espial use d, for the word "base" ie al- I style. le the DIM the weight and i.i • Weedier oweeiteaMa1 Ous.1s '134 at 1l~ of berm, ad rider .snood ones some remote period -4th knees ter, Blood peeps*, ate b eafr�+ to bring down a tsofW what parlous* 1 -they is nines modernooruw thew Mee made wee is seem mere • � )` sodil; andmast tow M Mud boundaries. Else risen 1l•e weal/ , M =toter, wttauu OMR alles ior: i e till apps aevor/wb•tre ears- ao�mtJPew � .net -d • =corer , them • •� n lei M W 7 �, ev.11wb'a'e the in M seen MY of the sop, 1 slow net she sesta of gigant phew whish le seeps a umesmi 1Mer. clones Tb. amused of Itetd wall./ 7 tbeeby east be oumethiag eseraee•' - And bora mad mare at h ft* the semi mad the et gain searttw°liuw is ' fief/ w� em of the whips, a sign 'shot thtlae days ad woo rete of the Bunt ire igen. • in the lope of diea,reeing a a sad rtlab:. tnoueted and are Mea wap that a toeless their dot/ in ler/art d loathing °�1...t, w• are mut gory log s.�a� mar Sumo ut th 1114 galley right t •e aeidpe0t Sure stoat to a sops, nee 1.. •( p e, 11*. like t f W I. Mouth i fortun to bestride peri, but I knew onlyi too would seer Iatng .,r trtet buwsde ooahiee lure oh 'Wit, the likh of o I haul But my thought. are wandertua boll gallop of a aril at Maim rade weer heats, and whish uvea sow 'sea plus. au wfutt.ed dela,. the JUIN) I lave made up m1 mod to hens++ dam to 4u more inviting had Whatever may have bran the muse, is the expre .Dos. of rest thuuyhts. Ciadty, os the ban (s) of tu n - leg, sued (i) of form, the•followine ad* hug end adverbs : y, well, what, late each, forty, P' always, fourthly, forward, po.- sideieays all tatty, loeenly. deo Ill who *toad at that bar, save him nen are gone, culprit, advocates, accusers. To the ganor•tion winch is now in the vigour of life he r the sole olive of • great age which has Famed away. But those mit who, within the last ten veers, have 4 11 in the force of each of the hemmed with delight, till the morning son shone on the tapestries of the House of Lords to the lofty and entrusted dM gamey of Charles, Fool Grey, are able to for.n some Munroe of the powers of a race of moo among whom he wu not the foremost. 1. What u the main subject of this paragraph 1 What are the chief subor- dinate subjects? 2. Show bow, in the above entreat, the author observes the principle• that italioiz al verbal forms in the folios tog extract : "Re. I !hall ge to town tomorrow. Of course you trill f She. No, thanks- I Shall sot go. I shall wait for better weather, if that hitt ewer seem. When shall we lare throe fair day Moldier ague 1 Ile. Dema`! stied Chet. Yoe should go. I should bks to have yea hear Roacomi. tA►e. No, lig ; I tri{[ Oot rt. B. (to himself). But you shall go, in spite of the weather and yourself. (To ker.) De come ; you frill en- joy theorem ; and you shall have the sagest p•eible mopp.r at Delmuniw'a JnrNo ; I aiwrld not espy the opera I aemLJw't walk to the end of the drive fee the bast supper D•Imonioo ever oaf Book. b. Distinguish the following (1, ea to meanies, mad (r) ea to grammatical eon - 'truths. (u; The eye which sees all things, sees n ot itself. The eye, which sees •ll thicgs, sees n ot itself, Ob Mame 1 where is thy bless t 0 Shame, where is thy blush 1 Oh dame : when u thy blush . Ob, ethanal, where u thy bleak 1 6. Still onward winds the were ws, ; I with it ; fur I lung to prove No lapse of moons can canker love, Whether fickle tongues may say. g•)getu the opggtfrgtiat ( • r"*tagre with • special reference to its (•) ue tet (6) continuity, and (c) variety. 3. Amount for the reference to the culprit and his accusers in the first sen- tence. 4. Aoeoaat for the order of the per- usal descriptions. 5. Why dose Macaulay consider it necessary to explain the abuses of Pitt and Ford North 1 6. Why are the nines of Windham sad Earl Grey introduced each after the description of the roan himself 1 What name u gteea to this ds%ioe 7. Show, In each ease, the effect d the repetition of "his", IL 1S and 14; "Eat- lish' , 1. 19; "There U. 18, 19, sod 21; sad "British", IL 37 and 38; and of the use of "tbe ingenious, the chtwaltose, the 61}h -scut.", iL 27 and 28; "uobbm- imbed' , L 35; and "culprit, advocates, sccue.n", L 39. 8. Espleir the exact significance of the description, the English Demos - theme and the English Hyperides '. 9. O.'itioio• the form of 11. 19-24. 10. ()entreat the effect of the last sen• tepee in the above extract with that of the following one, amounting fur Macausj s nen of the additional p.rti• collars : But those trdin, icitlun the last ten years, ham listened till morning in the Howe of Lords, to the eloquence of Earl grog. we form an estimate of the powers of woo sows of whom teen better than he. 11. By reference to "illustrious", L 7; "arbanity", 1. 14; " sly", L 37; and "animated", 1. 4-4; show how light may be thrown upon the exact meaning of • word (a) by means of its , and (h; by die it tragi its synonyms 12. Give the terms that describe the And if that eye which watches guilt And gaodne., sad hath power to see Witbie the grace the mouldered tree, And towers fallen as soon as built, Oh, if indeed that eye foresee Or see (in Him is no before) In more of life true life no mare And love the indifference to fee, There might I find ere yet the morn Breaks hither over Indian seas That Shadow waiting with the key, To *breed emboss my proper scorn. (1) Cheerily, and explain the relation of, the clauses in 11. 2-4 and 9-16. (2) Classify. and explain the exact con- struction of, the italicized word*. (3) Explain the use of the mood -forms is ll 4, 9, sad 14, and of the tense form* style of the abore extract, and explain in 1. b. their application. 14) Whys the inflection of "watches", e extract ov ab Illustrate from the ov 1. b, different from that of "bath", 1. 6 / the 13o[ Macaulay • style, (5) Analyse each of the following, v .o which writers should imitate, and (b) lag the form of the several parts ' onward', 'whotever', ,lood- which they should avoid. Give in each 'wiad.', newi , 'ssould•red', 'Inde.', 'forty case the reason. for your opition. away at the back, aid who tiods hien/[ worn olds- ooe a boy, the other iron furze and tanglod lean a skated ashen/ to, wait bbl taro r with c routs y which were more remarkable for the Summit hasno means been Mich- _ by Patience u is possible under the circum- slue. of spirit and general "ekitti*b- ed, and hen we are at a Standstill, just stanem than good breeding. At the game balanced, I may say, utoua the Steep 1... W. were oe is d.1* I had a Rronnd, time they could jump, if flying every ob- cf the 'impart. It was • ticklish tat - and during this delay I had an oppor steel. that came in their way can be so meet, and it seemed at ttime that a tont 01 watching "Iteynuidi ' (age I onus is d .dl• ; and indeed this gelidity through- pound oe two either way would make all bear�a,gang , a eery young out the horse breeding districts of the the different., 104 some little giu.ut one, in all speak of the fox), now but • mere &peck eying acmes a large field, white, as I looked, the hounds, baelsess, and whips, in their respective order, shot into view from behind a clamp of evet'rremn., the whole forming as pretty_and inspiring a eight as it is wed possible a good of pushing said wedd- ing in the narrow gateway that terminat- ed the lane, the field -an unusually large one on this ooimpine-began to spread it- self out, some taking the Itoe that fancy oro knowledge of te. ground directed, others foltuwi.g in the wake of these, while, as is always the eau, a few gal- loped off along the greasy border of the road into whiob the lame opened. in the direction of a by -rad which trended qO.y towards the hue the bunt appeared to be t king. As • rt e, when a fax broke from the lower aide of this covert of Sy.avogue, as was the case on the present occasion, either of two totally distinct lines was adopted, that w the lett bringing him, at between four or fire miles dreams, to a winding glen overgrown with stunted timber and tangled brushwood, with patches of broken rock cropping up here lied then throughout it. Generally spooking, when this glen was reached the besting of that particular fox was *m- oldered • thing of the past, aud the dimwit* of • flesh covert, if time per- mitted, was the order of the day. In c -es where the upper/site direction was chosen • very fair run was often the re- sult ; but • good fox, starting under Om arable . , was generally the first to reach • large tract of young wood, donee fares, and broken ground -a lead- ing feature to the landscape, where fur- ther pursuit was pretty certain to end in see', and 'waiting'. 7. Correct any erre. in the following, giving in each case your pawn : ia) It s our belief that as many or even more University men will be found in the ranks of this profession than in e►iher medicine, law or divinity. (b) We are at the outset met with the epeeist peculiarity that in the cams of emit of the other three each of them has the exclusive right to my what aro to be the tortee d admittance. Has this prounion any my as to admission l Not a word more than any member of the c.m- nasijly- (e) It is not necewry that we should point out the results which are sure to follow the adoption of the practice te which we have referred without some safe guard. (,t', The objection ie frequently made to reading the Koran, that the les- son. are read in an indifferent, much• suite', onlam style, and therefore they lead better not be read ; but let Isaacs of the pre lector a character be fres to du its work. (r) Not Daly ia the attempt made by it to .m.etaia who are prepared to be- gin the worse but also to stow how the subjects should be taught. ENGLISH LITERATUkt-MAGA['• LAY. Ere,ainer -Jona 8(ATH, B.A. But neither the culprit nor his advo- cates attracted mo much notice as the ac- cusers. Is the midst of the blow of red drapery, • spins had bees. fitted up with 'teem batches and tables for the Com moms. The mangers, with Burke at their head, appeared in full draea. The ooll.dore of gossipdid not fail to re- mark that even Tot, generally so re- pedls.• of his , had paid to the illestrios• tribunal the comp iment d wearily • bog and sword. 1'itt had rdu.sd to be nee of the andwctors „f the lmpeaeboast ; and his commanding, espiorm sed •somas do+luence wu teatime to that great rooster of various ta- i . Around blindness had unfitted Lord North for the duties of • public proee- emiw ; sad his friends were left without the help d his emollient sense, his tact, sod his urbanity. But, spite of the shoos, of these two dieti.gutehd mem- , the box in bers d tis Limsee st0000d enotained ase isk tbearmy of w �w e as perhaps teed sit d rises the great ep Alheaiwe eloqu.,iea There were Nor ad Sherries, the llioglidr Demos - &sous, having noticed on occasions when that equine rumbas baa member has been is severe eeUsbs with the mored. A fat sheep, the geese of all this trouble, lay ou it. back panting c'u"e by. Di.mountin't, and tonna* the dight red coated fifers oesw,-i see elm has happened in a woman,: Me South of Ireland appears meats, and was required. A touch t • spar (ha. fallen u x,in hie ,Deet, and every little difficulty is u a rale experienced In would hare duubllcee clawed a swirl , tide ut lir Dor i sen nit, at exp•l� redaciog it to an exact edema -in trans- start of effort *efficient to have tore tis Pal"' the lunge, ger cm more teebmiesl forming the great wild boanda sad un- !sod from the point oe which the bind (runt the „the wind has bee betook* necessarily high leap into the steady M- fest rested, • strugtttios dip would CM- tautat of Aim"- a inial •: , w 1 haviour, confidence, sod good manners tainly have followed, end I should have pa pes4ssse of the trainei bunter. been precipitated into the unknown I know to my cost. whets, fur what msec Well, them boll were evidently riding depths of the owes of thorny brushwood la 1p*iheOed psxi'M+ re•piratioo is We- epiest each other, u jealously was k- benestb with the tall wined of me good p.e•ubte, and hey satslapt at speech ends •R• , J 7 ' to word in • peculiar guttural grits. Planing lured in their every gesture. And ow nog o. a Iu• But sea peotwl•g ham in a adds; position against the beak, well theydid ride too ' and how their or two, a hoose rein, s gentle stroke ,.- legs cloth/ to tough tweed trousers, the hand dawn the straining muscular !I was aiwwhen my mhie d to the ht ' sheep. 7 whom I had once agate diM 'sed. e4 it etre by, and glanung at the bat e er"PPed-up figure, a n•nattly In e.tfrtr- u, shouted to me as he whirled along, "Arras why duel ye put hire ep renin sea ase (It y tL for the any t • hut before M grown eowld (sold, 1' Prom possible place in the text bank -a had been brukee, and there was lots seedy, my friend eine of returning ep.e� and below to explain hew the peiet where • dense grouts of furze difficulty is creeping down the upper beep which clothes its entire length has, for portion of the oppuate side and leaping , • woos hod bow lyig et ittm furl& some reason or other been removed ; and , the corresponding gripe. Doubtlem I ger aide of the ,tune pp, had spies; map one, with • not very fraternal sounding there will be grief hen, for alt cannot 1 at hie approach, and in making •n soft` "whoop" of triumph, gains, a few yards have the lack to be well mounted. and I ward attempt to serape, lad got betweelF ups hie c Impaction. who ie hie turn, stadia, • look when half half acids. the I the deir.disg foretop of M. ores, eaglet preening hie mount to its fullest sped, succeeding field, sen enough • pair of i tug the d'owtsfaU el d1 parties emesseeds cremes the tine his bristlier to taking, spurred boots stood upright upright and H• now expensed Iweeelf se being IOW and ties over a "atone gap" a eomepun upside down above the tangled brush -' fit sole. and ss tis.ie.g showed Wipes substitute for a gate' in his turn half • wood. which on this side grew even move i of returningBnd as m adore, wetplaced oit evil dozen yards to the front. Now both luxuriantly than ou the further. But i its legs, dt simultaneously clear • low stone wall, where u the burse i 'Ih ' he, of course. way once mon. and settle down to a fast gallop over a must have gained the summit, and there, This d.ib•d •Mowed several ha+teaee. stretch of broken aced atony ground I not tiling the look of affairs, must have whom I saw little ut mase what I which crops up strangely enough in this ! got Yid of hie rider and returned the may come allthe w th turop&rtt&acuitr hand tract of soared pasture and clean. pleas he came, and is now probably gratis'up ant sheep land. These youths are wed �onmfort•Wy, or proudly cantering rimed the rest, short, tough it was, bad fresh - grown and heavy ; their mounts, though the field with his tail in the air. A man stied our horses. 50 that we "rib asst active and wiry, are immature and out of I can't alea)s be recognized by the soles amen ap equal term with them. condition. In such ar. , ugly spavin, if of his boob, and whoever this individual And now. fur some 11tH• time, so nothing more, will no doubt before long aught have been, be was in no enviable shorn had • •ref 11 view o of the hounds, and nds time •now need, and Patrick Healy, their poution, tat se I Domed 1 heard a stream : caraat father, will scratch his head as he sees el water gurgle a nag the bottom of the parallel to a Gen them both returning, unsold, lame and gripe, in the very place where his head to the Mid or sit fat another, aloes in most hare been et that momentary dan- 'their wake, while 55517 naw •od -pram We of I. 1 epee, as more them i their music rings out full and clear. TM one bead and pair of shoulders nos be. 1 scent is not what it was in the morning, one visible, es the „woofs clambered land all tome are down, bet there is age - anyhow up the further aide of the bank. 5r a lien d a shock now, and ea Dosld- I was about gning to his "swum*, {ate (the hentewan), always in his piers, wheel in one boot R•v• an enertetio j Claim the brew of wise .bgbtly eluabd kick or two, thee the cher, then bolo+ Jest .heed otos, we pbmd7 hoar from view, end ro di•ubt is cheery view tallow, std oa arriving had 1 delayed to look, the head belong- at the mime point cue again diadmeelp iau to thou boots 'for the leas said about WO the honied on pllanty facing the the hat the better', would presently have corresponding slope. appeared in their place. H • ewers, hie Mentes 1 might *Meet But now all say time was occupied in me. were numbered ; fur, threes Roving gamely, he had a certain "Wassailed" look which b.tokees fatigue mid dis- tress, and I well knew that then was no shelter or safety to be friend in the course he had eho•en to adopt And I felt for the poor fellow umbo, perhaps, tired out at the very i of his race toe fife, had so brae held on his way, I R}rsm-hs• the beet poems. under the sum, and thorough J , t to suck • large num- ber of the "Lard. of Creation." But the end a fast approaching , the reified ohr- ped d Kil- is in front ; the ..ewty rad has been crossed. and so have the two succeeding fields : she lad here bus been cleared, and as weary awl fnilei, a' het gallant fox stakes fur the ivy -ewer - ruin, as if then to fed • d safety, he s overtakes and .urrrtoamdii, and almost smug the grey tombstones of the old esu akyarl he yields up his brave life, but rot before he the left a life -mark r o mon than one of his reheat - less anomie+ enemies, and after ha led as a chum of some Metes. miles, which will long be remembered by thou who took part is it as the beet run in the ,seoedz of the f•aefis--- Hont, Aeted, bdota w. s.paratd mb ewe 1 joar.eys, i ►awed more ttian one genome sportsman among those present express himself to the ef- fect-thouvh many will look upon this u a settimeotal and wh•he•rt.d view of the t - se -that so onset a bid for seta!! demanded, in the ver' I.s e, the right to • eo.tin.*ece of thee life we hod so thowehtle•dy taken ; that Bode a idlest effort called fur some mon kindly skim than to be torn to ribbaied. twenty maple of keen, hungry and ex- pectant hounds. R. E. H. As £Neatsbed Ades.* tooteesean. Two well-dressed ladies were rounding the cap of the Ashland block, when a banana peel that lay in ambush there brought one of them prose. The officer who came to her aid was startled nearly out of his Meta when she maid : "Pull my leg, will you, please 1 Pull m7 log," Affecing to 1, he took the lady by the arm, with the remark, "Will you let me help you, madame r' "No, don's ! Pall my leg, 1 say ! Pull my leg, can't you r' The officer let the arm drop instantly. He was thunderstruck. He backed off Ind wiped great beads of from hu reeking brow. At this moment the second lady came to her assistance. She seized nee of her prostrated compan- ion and gave it a vigorous pull. It was cork leg. The fall had disarranged the knee adjustment, and • pull was traded to set it •right. -[Chicago IllatL • nee Breakdown It i. • common thingnow-a-days to hear one complain of fedimg all broken doth with a faint, weary, restless. lan- guor, witb strength and appetite nearly gone, and no well defined cases. This is general debility, which Burdock Blood Bitters promptly relieves, and most in - 2 variably tures. Curved round the wiry, fidgety .ides of neck, and the throwing of m7 wetg their mounts with • sort of iron grasp, so well forward decided the matter ; and that never an inch of "light was visible, the sensible aniasal,lowerisg himself upon although every provocation in that direc- his legs, crawled oat•liks to the 5emfint. tion was gives, and u to parting eon Here the bank was some twelve or fif- pany with the .addle, the idea seemed teen feet broad, sufficient for an ordin- m . Now ey raced, h thebeck of the ohstacle • t' weary from the great uutl'ern horse fair, lwtwlan thee* }urban of refuge lay a and will swear, as he hu done regularly • t stretch of siwud mtam Lad- for the last fifteen years, that hell have undulating, but not by any means what .•an ind of bocce bre din', it doaem't pay; might be termed a "hilly country, 'with and yet why shouldn't it 1 mound banks and occasional stone wall Shall I tell you, Patrick, one or two enclosing large fields, and this stretchier reas(n. why hone breeding hs. proved away for miles t the direction of Ball failure with you ? The sin of your -may She mrrtn hewS r,I a 4•sr fox t is probably of diming So tar, ear fox blood sod ret faulty . , and very Seemed ll d•termimd to tyke the control possibly deficient in those two moat On- line, elnost an 1 iced of portant points -shoulder and action. artium, and only to he accounted for, I The dam -your own farm mare -b think, by the fact of his being a stranger to the neighterhood. In all probability, during • lengthened ramble, he had sought shelter for the day in the auger from which we had w unoermonionely evicted him Thanks to the kindness of a friend, I wu well mounted, and although the stroog-limbed brown horse and I had been strangers hitherto, before three fence. had been crossed we became fast friends, and Deemed thoroughly to ander- stand each other ; in addition to this, I happened to know every inch of the ground, and as I felt my burse settle down, after the first . t of the start, to a steady, equal gallop, which convinced me is a moment that he knew what he was about. I 1 that e zhilarating sensation so dear to • hunt- ing man, and produced br • that he had a geed animal beneath him, • good one to follow, and • pound open bit of country to ride over. By this time we were well away from the covert, end presently the 6rat real obstacle presented itself in the shape of a broad stagnant dyke or drain, which, to look at, might here been toe ted oe twisty feet deep. Across this i had, luckily, .onse mouths before, discovered a ford, mo that in my ase no tame was lost ; but there wm time to notice that this was to be • Mut bliog-block to many, for much "grid" and struggling out of tenacioesblack end might be seen ale nes the course of the drain, and upon looki•( ahead it was at ono" evident that the field had bow thinned to a very greet extent. But my s"e"ttler ear • Renown- start had not been a good one, and many • pink -clad Nimrod, and the frieze cow - JOY 90 -People in the ,red becks of perhaps a dozen farmers vicinity of Grafton are very much exci- I w,a1e giving the "young ones" a day with tad fall of • meteor near that the hounds, were very far ahead of me. Ph". W (merit a pert/ ret harvsdefs wen Now that i knew my horse, and felt what at wort one afternoon is • barley fid/ he wee „spew. of into it seemed on the i.r,r of Henry Disderick the/ that 1 was not doing him jetties, and I were startled by • bud and strange wondered whether an animal of his clam noise, not unlike the roar of • long mifht not to subjected to s certain see. train of care The meteor .truck the Batton bordering en (what I may mil, ice earth within • (•w rods of where the want of a hotter term) disgrace, .t being men were standing, burying itself does is behind in the ver/ oonteat in which in the ground. The hole in the ground ni all others be mast meat pride Mo- ts three or four feet in - self. The depth i. unknown. Th. mon 1 therefore , I to press for - are now permeatitg mound the spot. neral as far as might be, and here my - knoweldge of the mound served me to • Bai5ee1 Mew scone good purpose. In the hunting The best eraeir•tot of foul humors of field it seams to me that there i. --and if the Blood is Burdock Blood Bitter.. A not, there ought to be a cortin under- sell, radical h• f t d bet the horse and his doubtless mcre or lam of a "weed," and is very tek1V wanting in • certain dear- taking care of myself, for • succession of able " " of bulla This year narrow rotten banks lied to he dealt your second hope ,'for T believe it to your custom to add to your stock every se•a- om) you have taken from • neiwhboe in discharge of a tong standing debt of £7, or in other years have brought a oclt or filly, just weaned, at a moderate pries oertainly, but with all his or her dargen and difficulties yet to come. For the first year, Patrick, )on have partially neglected and perhaps half-starved the otjeets of your future hopes ; for the **coed year the earns may he said. Early in the third you have gills them some rough breaking in, and the juveniles have sorted in carrying on the 'prying work of the farm, while during the sum- mer your two fine mans have broken them to the saddle according to your own ideas. In November these same boys obtain your . 10 rids out your young hone just to see the meet and acyutom them to the sight of the hounds, he., Sc. Evidently they are desirous that they should are as much of the hounds ea possible, fest me far during the run they have been well to the front, and have come in foe • share of Donaldson'• (the 1 .i) laoguag.for riding in among them when • short check took place be- fore the covert had been left far behind. Well, your two boys. Patrick, hare had an exciting ram, and have eajoyed them- selves to their hearts' outset. True enough, u ater55 prim, •oeording to their class at the great fair, had born forfeited, bat after all, this 1s nothing new, and by this time you must be quite Ito se•ieg your " plodding op the dirty "Rothe." which leech to your house, on their return jour- ney frees one or other of the neighboring fairs ; or, should • sale have been affect• d, gee meat by new have got over you early bebit of blaming your e'ded ens for taking • price which will only go • short way towards covering the ex - with, Tn my mind these narrow point- ed obstacles, which crumble away bee moth the treed of a horse, are very much to be avoided ; but there was nu help for it, and as mine didn't appear to object, of course I was eatisfd. indeed, he •ppesred to understand that danger lurked abnot them, for, as • rule, he seldom pawed to "change, • bot row, and without torching the summit with his forefeet, )oat rapped it with the bind, well to the further aide, thus helping himself clear over withont any loss of time, and withoot causing the ✓ ie.er to tbat "up and down" sensation produced by • lying leap over • tall and perpendicular bank. But who comes thundering along be- hind me 1 It is none other than Tim O'Regan, my friend of the covert side, and whom I have not since sere, al- though the stentorian yell he there treat- ed me to had riven me cause to think of him more than ones As far u I meld n ee u be swept along. he appeared to haw• been in trouble, for one of his strong jack boots, and the corresp.ediaw lel[ of hie tough corduroy breeches, were thickly covered with black mud, the g eneral of which strongly re- minded me of the stagnant drain 1 have before spoken of. The combired imps - toe of !Omen and hu here mare must have been something enormous, and i wondered, had he come into collision with an ordinary oiled hoose, whish of thh two would Imre been the greatest sufferer. "Hurroo-o ! Hetr•)o-o-o 1" he shouted as he recognised me, and the ring in the last syllable of his gusting told of complete satisfaction, and of the intense enjoyment he was deriving from this meat excellent nn. i have never before .or since seen • man so utterly carried away by his feel• legs, kis animal .pins, and his innate penes incurred by the many former and deep rooted love of .part. Perhaps and fruitless attempts at getting rid of 1 meet ewfne that 1 was aim somewhat them. excited, ter this rum was (ewe as far w I Bet what's up, now 1 for as we drop b badnone) an eend would ' oept onol red n . dayin the comfortably from the summit d a rather s•a.nrc . • it not in the sends e/ hied' seek, almost the mason+e of that part the --- Hol 1 remembered.snuff eg of the field which had been well to the lisek •haply -what, 1 do sent be" - the, seems to have polled rep at the fur- which wiled forth from nal • load 1 the, bnwwdary „t the field 1 bed jest ea p•• toned. The mace wa peon ex ie.d, of laughter as he and hie lame went at sew battles nes • change e- sae in Seco for one of those h' h minuets of Yaks d•"gar""s .ped •t an wnfietmll sins the 0.11.1 is health and beauty. It re- rider ; that the mind of the aporia r mei. sg . din a wdl !its street k heed wits her alkogetli*' known to E It moves the bleed taint of Serrefine, that m•1 ---she rider (I) -eyed+ to gsvoww maw .h hu160%1 fon ted, whish t the V terrible disease so ermmoa in this both, though 1 Mee my dnuoe bt+ t .at rhe cnewtiss, ken fsa •t right uiRlss to oar h/a i'r°ugb peennei emsfes . ser meatry. 2 ,opposite enarse esight oboe prove the course. and forvt7i moment • meek immmn/drip�egi• •afar and hslt.1 one -that i., for the 1'nlem one of them hes bees seen sod tome.lee i ease h.1 held dip, sed feared A tilt. tel soda, mew or •..mania, Snpertor •wind ; is tam, that both burse climbed "ewe, no imam:p•te idea sea he that the 17et ar 184. shoot mist ,,ss bottles. the ssme miee, Aosta be rwleewed ty I ksow td no more sellable tete to de- ems*" the dgewsfall Bel Tim sem with wets water, wi11 eweden sorer and oder Amite be voided by one sad formed se regards its den1se•iosa, sad l • goal te the remiss. W Iheewieg ►int A (l.orgis hunter, awed 65 7eah, liar that he sae killed 991 deer and 187 alli- gators. A man meat not expect to bee in doom simply became be marries • erase widow. Iso not laugh at the gentleness with • ban poll, my eon. it le not nearly en bad to have • head that is bald on the astride as to her. • bed that is bald oa the inside. In the history of metlleimes mo prepa- ration hem rmesived sub enhsrsil *ow marilatlee. for the edsrlali.n it affords soul the psrmdimmt ono k dards io kid - bay diseases ea De. Val keine'. Masan Chore, is Who 1D Sten eeagre;il s simply wawd.d.1. ti W lent, 2m A