HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1890-10-24, Page 7W.'ACHE$ON & 90N.
•
FIRST SEASON.
Wu sesshud today the following gook
Special Prices,
LADIES' CASHMERE GLOVES, we... es pee a rate.
HANDSOME NEW MANTLE CLOTHS,
WOOL SHAWLS, $1.10, worth $1.50.
♦ W MM DT Z•3TD1103131 NNW SWAM DRESS GOODS.
We invite you to inspect those advertised specials.
W. ACHESON & SON.
FURNITURE!
D. GORDON has now on hand a complete assortmeat
of Furniture, such as Parlor Suites, Bedroom Suites,
Tables, Chairs, &c., Window Shades, Curtain Poles, &c.
Picture framing a specialty.?
UNDERTAKNC!
Ive special attention to this branch of my business and keep
everything required for funerals. CHARGES MODERATE. ;73-3m
First door East of Bank of Montreal, West-st., Goderich.
Black Velvet Ribbons
ALL WIDTHS.
EIFFEL POINT LACE,
COL'D VELVET RIBBONS
AND VELVETEENS,
Now in transit from Britain.
W 11.11.1 BE HERE SOON.
4064'
r
ONE PRICE ONLY.
ALEX MUNRO,
Draper and Haberdasher.
S3RINV 1r�
MONTSERRAT LIME JUICE !
the mora Cooling and.Heatthful
SUMMER DRINK.
ASK FOR MONTSERRAT !
F. JORDAN, - MEDICAL HALL.
A T.r.MNs rise nesg.
A Yankee from Vermont had cum• to
New Yurk on business, and bad made
the acquaintance of a local Scotch mer-
chant. Both were ooevival soul, and
after an afternoon spent in the consume -
tic n of (cocktails the man from Aberdeen
invited hien.. triesd to spend the even-
ing at his huts. The invitation was se•
copied: several of the boat's .
were present to tweet the stranger ; and
• right down jolly evening was spent.
Many songs were song, among others.
"Soots Wha Hae," to labi.h the Ver-
monter listened with intent curiosity.
At its clew he removed hs oig.r from
bis mouth, and drawled- - "See here,
boss; that's • Carnation fine song, but
who's With Hay I"
Frank Wilkinson, grain buyer at Ham•
that, mil: "I seed stent ',admin.'
sad friend no relief netil I tried :ViI.oa's
Compound Syrep, Wild Cherry." Inco
than one bottle cured hies of • long
sanding and painful ooegb, with tight-
ness of tritest and short breath. Sold by
all druggist.. let
The effect produced by • man whn is
to unmet .ill always be greeter :bas
that pmdeeed by one who is only play-
ing her. pert ; and the character of the
worker will. in some way cr ether, be
mirrored in the work that he produces,
31.1.. (ewe.
Mining ezpr.a trete that cholera never
sttaeks the bowels bf the earth, bot
humanity in general and it necessary to
nee Dv Fowiet'. Ketreet .4 Wild Strew.
berry for bowel eoapl•int., iyseat.ry,
diarrhoea, eta it is a awn eers. 2
The pre,nrties .f lassos to sane per-
sona as the felted Rt.tes u one is every
; M Sertland it is eine in every 674 ''
is the egviewlteral Marietta of England
ft is owe in 620 ; is Londae the preper
tics is ewe la 400.
$..4a? WIl tb. y.derbllta.
The Vanderbilt& are all religiously in-
clined, and early on Sunday morning
the children are washed and dressed an
sent to Send•y-echooL At church time
they go to tbeir father's pew and sit
there with Ain. and their 'nether during
the service. In the afternoon they go to
Sunday -school again. They ars Dever
allowed to um horses or carriages, nor
to go mit, except for • abort walk as •
matter of exercise. The day is spent
very quietly, They have an early tee,
and in the twilight the children gather
in the movie -room while one of the ladies
plays the piano or organ; Cornelius Van-
derbilt, %%illiam K , Elliott F., Shepard
and the ladies of the families join for an
bur or two in wing. The boys some-
times bring out their violin, the young
girls play their harps, and there is an
boar or two of th. .oat delicious music
that :r,• could imagine. They gime hymn
after hymn, and when the twilight (.dee
away the little ewes are pet to bed, to Ret
up the next Iatrning with the glow of
beehb upon their cheek., and begin
their week of study and play, that will fit
them to honeine strong men and wo.tsa,
to administer wisely span the vast foe-
tuses that will sor.n be thein.—Ladies'
Emile Joor.eL
Timely Whilleas.
Groat esti timely wisdom is shown by
keeping Dr Fowler's Extract of Wild
Strawberry nn hand. it has no equal
Inc cholera, cholera morbus. dtarrheea,
dyeeetery, «alien cramp, and all .wa-
rner enmplaiots or loosen... of the bow
els !
it is estimeted that Um number of
serried by tail the railheads is
the world averages 4,600,000 • day.
h is esti..t.d that Na cement of
gold is the world is shims 413 ulna
nide. and it would $t is a root. 14 feet
esti any, if is a said sale.
Tail 8WKAL. Fit1ULY, OCT. Z4. 1890.
TSE POET'S CORNER.
essao-PIFss se ale. s.s.bliS.
Mla.di.es have swim the diary of the eeettea
.f the Lmrd :
Bo is tranelitmg est the viats.s where the
sr..ws el wrath .r5 massed ;
He bath Isssed the tat.ral lightning of his
terrible .win sword.
Iiia truth le starching o..
1 hove seam him 1. the wsab•eres of a ben
,ural olol ag esmps
T1im have bultded him an altar is the even -
inn demented damp. .
1 ems read has rlgbteoue sentence by the dim
and A.rtaR lamp.
His day is marching ort.
I have reed • fiery rowel. writ In bur.Lbd
rows of steel :
A. ye deal with my co.am•ers. so with you
my lance .hall deal ;
Let tbe Hero. bora of weenie, crush the ser-
pent with Ms noel.
aim* Clod la assrchiag oma"
He W sounded forth_,h1. intim et that stall
serer o.11 retreat ;
isle is sifting out the hearts of men before h..
jedgme.t seat :
G. be swift, my seal. to answer how ' be out 1
lent. my fest
Our Ood u Marching au.
in the beauty of the lilisa Christ was bore
across the sea;
With a glory in his beeum that transfigures
you and me ;
As he died to make seen holy. let 'us dm to
maze
1 tree.
While God
is marching oo.
WAS HE RIGHT ?I
3e Send ■ starving nanny by Babble'
• {.revery.
Hon S. P. [tartlet, of Quincy, III., re-
lates the followings story, which is told,
M. .J. . D. Davidson in the Quincy
Whig:
Some years ago when I was ,quite a
lad, I worked .t the punting trade at
Quincy, and held cues on time 11'h:.(, in
the same "alley" with • stoutly boat
printer metal Tum Cowan. He was a
veritable trump ; not from nece.etty, but
from the rs•eon that eat many of the
guild are --a restless love of ruvt-ag. He
was a type of character not iofreque.tly
met with, embodying wauy points of
intellectuality and venality of talent.,
arta in his case thew developed to a re-
markable degree. He was a philosopher,
a poet and an orator all in nue, and the
beauty of his language when the poetic
mood was on, and the lofty character of
the sentiments he expressed were a per -
poise' marvel to ms.
MCowen took a fatberly interest in tae,
and used to give me age and sensible
advice, occasionally enfurcitei Pt -,by
stories or incidents from his own ex-
perience. Ooe day. in the course of one
of thew talks, he said :
"Bartlet, cio you .bink it is ever
richt to do wrong T'
Of course 1 said it wasn't, and be re-
plied that he thought there were oc-
casions in life when not only was it al-
lowable, bat • man's duty, to do .bat
was in itself wrong, or cementite onto
sidered so. "To illustrate," said he,
"let me tell you an incident from my
own . • . , and you can judge if I
am correct in my assertion :
"One cold winter I strayed into a lit-
tle country town to Ohio, and got • lob
of type seting in the only printing of-
fice in the place. One evening soon
after arriving there, I started out for •
K roll. It was a cold night -1 remember
that because i had no overcoat. In the
course of my wall I passed a tumble-
down and apparently deserted shanty in
the outskirts of the town, and was sur-
prised to Leer a sand, a of • groan,
. - , front the interior. I stopped
sad knocked at the door, but received
no re . see. My ccriosity was aroused,
and west around the house and pushed
open the rear door and sapped tato the
bowie. I found myself to • room amidst
• seen" of destitution rind woe that will
never fade from ray memory. In the
.nrner of the room lay u man in the last
..ages of . At the fire-
place with her hands claiming her knees,
. hioh were op to her chin, wee a mama.
.urr.:oeded by two or tore. little *8n-
drs. They were hovering over a few
smoldering Kicks in a bottomless into
kettle, trying to extract from thea a lit-
tle warmth.
'They told me they were moven, who
had coma there the summer before zed
had found and taken tossession of this
shanty. The man was taken ill here,
and for a time they had gotten along by
selling. one after another, their horses,
their .giion and most of their furni-
ture. Finally .inter came nn, and they
had nothing left to live on except the
ehauity of the people of the tows. Con-
siderable Lad been done for them, but
the people had at last got wary cat the
drain and bad began to neglect them,
•
ao that they were now destitute of cloth-
ing, fad or proper food and they knew
not where to apply for them
"I Dade up my mind something mast
be doe* for thus people, and I pro-
.ied thea that I would see that they
bad relief at latest by the following
evening, which wee Saturday. 1 west
o p -own and spoke to s number of peo-
ple abut the eco, but they all mid the
family was shiftless and
that the woman would not work when
she bed the ity. I wondered
how the woman wield wort with those
children and that gook inn to take can
af. Finally I ger* up the attempt to
get ethers to do anything and deter -
raised lel Wire ay owe wawa to them the
following evening -
"On Saterday night the prnpeistor of
the paper more lain the enapneing-
room sea said : 'Boys, f hsys.•'t see -
'seeded is raising easy Money to pity you
of tonight. I input sumo early next
weak. Meatrtiae yoe'll have to mod
peer hoard bil.s of a few days.'
"1 toed him .het i bed promised to de
for tide family, and stared if he .aslde't
nem me • little cash, or tat host make
so that 1 meld get thea
some needed things from the Mersa. He
replied that he was already is debt et
the Morns and hatted fe ask for amen
credit ; Nat in feet be didn't believe be
maid giwo it. (Every ell veinier .i11
reempris this ho .Mk* *tare of the
• try p.ia itl.fe.. i. old 4
—Ea-) As didsl tws hew M w.M
de ythilg fee Me GOSS fee east
week
"An eyed .ed disheseeseed, I k new
not what to d... 1 could nut Artini my-
self to go to that faintly cod 1..s their
diaappotntmest when I told than 1 had
buthtug for then. After wandering
around awhile I went tum boardtooag{
house and west to bed. But 1 ovoid
sot sleep. Tho reproachful, buogry
laces of thzee ehildrru rues up belie
me; 1 grew more reuse and ousted as
I tbosgbt ut their disappoiut.seet and
their destitute's, toll 1 could bear 11 au
lunger. 1 said : 'At lent 1'11 play the
etas ; I'll keep my appointment with
them, cod teat to.. why I amid not get
anything fur them
"So 1 kot up and dreasad and went
duwo to the wretched hurel. I found
the people very .qch aii they worn .be.
I had first seen them. They were ex•
peeling me, The wumeut 1 entered
(boor ayes sparkled and eager welcome
and expectation was uu every facie. My
heart failed me. I could nit tell thew I
had nothing for them I stammered out
that 1 had c. me to find what they need-
ed .dust as if 1 didn't know before -hand,
that terry niggled everything). I thou
le:t, promising to return couu.
"1 didn't know what to du. I went to
the humus of some of the citizens and
woke them up, and p:esded with them t..
d , something Wooer, but each in turn
refused, aytog that more had already
been dune than the family deserved. 1
walked on until I found myself on the
buatoes square, which was deserts', and
stood in front of a grocery More Liu
which burned • light. I tried the dour
and found it lucked. I pushed on it—
put my shoulder to it --and it came open.
I walked in sad helped myself. I piled
eny arms as full se 1 could carry of pro
-
mamma and took thew down to that des-
titute faintly; I went back midget anoth-
e r k,$d, sod took It duwo; and then I
went to • neighboring wood pile and
gut several arm loads ot wood ; I built
up • nutter goud fire mid evoked Chu e
w retched people • supper myself, and
case away lesvioe then, eating it, their
hearts filled with gratitude and their
iips spuking thanks and blerings. I
want to my boarding house and went to
bed, and slept wouedly all night.
"Next morning I went down town
and found a crowd of people around the
store, talking excitedly about them rob-
bery of the bight utter', and threaten-
ing to 'string op' the culprit if he could
be focrd.
" 'Gentlemen,' said I,addrering them,
"you used not look any further, I'm the
man that did it. And 1 can tail you
why I did it if you'd like to know.'
Aud then I told them all the facts of the
ase and concluded ' 'No., gentleman,
I am willing to abide the consequences.
I will submit to any penalty you uaae.
If two or three years of my liberty will
pay the bill, I'll gladly forefeit it; or, if
you] ehooee to' let me pay it as I can
from my weekly wages, I'.I remain in
this town until every ant Is' paid. Do
as you please; 1 leave it to your sena. of
justice. But I would have fed those
starving children last night hied I known
it w.,old oust ins leo years to the„peui-
tentlery '
"Even then some were for arestine
and committing me ; but by the next
morning the tide bad ehangeo. Seven)
citizens made up the amount duej;the
storekeeper, and Fmrisiw ..s made for
the family thereafter. But nothing
abort of that act of moue could have
r ,used that.00mmunity op to its duty.
And now, my led," concluded Cowan,
"did I 4o right in doing wrong or wrong
in doing right r'
I eta too little of • casuist in those
days to answer the question positively,
Omagh I have winos made up my mind
gotta clearly about it
Cowan afterward went into the army
at the opening of the war and fou ht to
its close. I was interested in following ;
op his history, and, on inquiry, found ,
that he had left behind eine, wh
he went, a record of kind and charitable
deeds, and that happiness sad blessing
seemed to foil ass him. He .a a man cal
great heart and talents, and
had be not so underestimated hie own
&berries, and shown more', settled pur-
ees* of life, he could have arisen to al-
most any position of eminence and honor
Amon, matt. After the war he returned
te the north and lived for. time in St.
Limit He eventually took op his old
✓ oving life, and ended his days as he bad
lived t.`.e meet of them --a tramp printer.
shishI theetesleea (Oeste)
being peelliarly seated for such epee -
mauves, unpremeditated wtb.nt. of
song.
The kat el the enol Irish bards wee
Terluc► O'Carolan Omni 1J10, died
1737), St.oe his tuns the bards to Ire-
1•ed have hems usually nw.adic sod va-
grant a their habits ---nut rarely Wind,
es the asoma bards often were—and
though dependent upon the hospitality
el the people for their livelihood, regard-
ed themselves, and were regarded by
other., as tar es !namable removed loom
the category of mendicant.. F, -r ages
they had beet. regarded as privtl.g.d,
and a0 a country and saung • people
.here boeset.hty was au eummoo and so
meiterssl a to be beret reguded a an
exceptional virtue, the strolling bard was
always sure of • warm we:come, and bed
and Hoard. If blind, such a deprivation
ouly eodeard Aim the more to heat et.
tertatnerr,—N. Macdonald, in Harper's
B.Z.T.
reee.trlvgle. in Wet ame.a.s Nfereal
remote 1■ •rtes. tart..
The pr. -Terence of the Chinese for food
that seems to our appetites ab.alutely
dugu.ung is well kuuwn. lu Cs..tun
rests se11 for fifty cents a dozen, sod dogs'
hind .(uertera command • h.gher join
than lamb or mutton. Furey eating
birds nests worth thirty dollars s pound'
Thu is what • niaudariu revels to. The
Pruett have beguiled us tato eating
frogs' legs, which were once tabooed in ibis
cuuutry,.na we have even euute toesteem
disessed )souse liver in the farm of putt.
qro.. The writer has met Bra-
zilians .h., rare carer bow constrictor
.treks, mad count monkeys and parrot*
a very eu..d meal. In the West ludte..
baked snakes is a common duh, as the
reptiles abuund,snditiu gcod wayo( get-
ting rid co them- But when it tomes to
frying palm -worsts in fat, one would
think the stos.seh would rubel. it is
nut sat, huwertr, thuo1,h, 1.y a strange
irconsiete.ey, stewed rabbit is looked
spoil with diel(ust.
On the Pacific Coat this Dgtger in
duns eat dried Jocasta, and in the .ti -
Renting Republic skunk flesh is a chatty.
Our own favorite lovely.. the oyster, i.
very disgusting to a Turk, while the de
vii -flab, eaten in Corsica. is equally w t..
us. We cannot understand, Tither, bow
the inhabitants of the West Indies sod
the Poodle Coat can est Lairds' eggs with
• relish; .iii jet bow ti.e e44s .1 the tar•
ale and alligator cau biter .e • tacr one
article ..f diet.
The Brazdiac• rat ants, probably to
,let rid of them, for they literally infest
the country, and are of enormous size.
It is easy to pick up a handful of ants al-
most anywhere, though the wary do not -
go •twat it in this way,a the peatifrrous
insects bite In a in. st t 1Ciue. manner.
A curry of ants eggs is • great delicacy
ir, Stun, sad the Cing•Iese eat the bees
where hooey they have stolen The Chi-
nese, who soon t-, have stomachs Idle
the ostrich, eat the chrysalis of the 'silk-
worm, after unw.ndu.g the cocoon. /spi-
ders are used in New Caledonia .ss kutd
of demert, while caterpillars are also rel-
ished by the African besbtner'.—Hall's
Journal of Health.
The rienewlea aelg\bur.
brother has often told me of a funny
time she had when she mu quite a young
house -keeper, st'.Leten with a port .wing
neighbor. This lady seld,m had any-
.
thing of her awn at hand .hen it was
wanted, so she de, ended noon the oblig-
ing disposition of her fr.etid•.
One day my mother pot on her large
bou.eieepio;( apron, and stepped acres
the yard to her out -door kitchen. Tee
kitchens i.. Kentucky were never • part
of the Pewee. but •twava et a little d.e-
ance from at in a separate building.
'Aunt Phyllis," said my mother to the
zook,wbo was browninr coffee crams in a
skillet over the fire, "I thought ;I told
you that I was coming here to make
pound-cnke .nth cre.m''otes this morning .
Why i• nothing reader
"Lay me, Mir Emmeline "' replied
Aunt Phyllis. "Mies 'Tilde Jenkins
don* carried off every pre pan and rol-
ling Mn and pastry beard and borrowed
all de eggs and cream fo' herself. Her
0.kin' isn't teo'n begun."
This was a highhanded proceeding,
but nothing could he done in the came.
It was Mrs Jeakin's habit, and mother
had always been so amiable about it
that the servants, who were
never troubled themselves to ask the
mistress, but lent the t bor-
rower what .he desired.
Sometimes jost a we were ening to
church, I was too little at the thee to
remember, mother mid that • small
black boy meth very white teeth and •
very woolly bated would pop up at her
chamber door, exclaiming :
"Howdy, Miss Emmeline Miss
Tilde done sent me to borrow yo' Prayer -
book. She loin' to 'church today b.r-
sel1. "
Or, of a summer evening, b.r maid
would appear with a modest request for
Iimmeline's lace shawl and rd bin fan
Miss 'Tilde wanted to teaks • call and
had nothit.g to wear. All this made
mother perfectly set against oar borrow-
ing so much a • elate pencil or a pin.
We were always to use our own things,
or go without. 1 never had • sister,
bot onetime often spent months at the
hoose and wen in and out of my room in
the freest way. forever( bringing me their
gloves to ttsend or their tis to °lean, s
equine .i11.
Never borrow," said my mother.
"Buy or give away, or do without, net
he beholden tonobodyfor •lean "—FIM
"Mother's Way.' by M.rgst.t E. lattles
.t.,, in Harper's Toone People.
The herds of Ireland.
Though the bard as $ member of a dis-
tinct guild possessed of many hereditary
righa and privilege. bee long ceased to
exist in Ireland, na.mbsn of the herdic
order may be .till oosrsionally met
with in Eery, and elsewhere
throughout the of Munster
and Connaught. It is needless to say that
their onedition is widely different now
from the time .hes they were attached
to the courts of kings, had se honorable
place in the bosseholda of the nobles
and chiefs, ameorapenied the armies to
battle,and ane the praises of the rioters,
or lamented the deaths of their heroes.
Diodorw Siculus relates that among
the Celts in hie time were anmpnsers of
melodies, called bards, whn played no
ineirbmente like lyres, and sena panes
gyrated or Meech.* strain.. Pusidonio.
a. . 30j States that the Celts lake with
thew to battle people whom they Mein -
lain called bards, who celebrate their
pra:aes, and publish the tef
their ewineet men is thong. That mama
was cultivated by otheee in Inland as
well aa by the bards is evident frost
the writing. of Oneidas Cambeenei.
1166),who wrote that hishops,.bbote and
holy ren in Inland had harp upon
which they piously aniseed themselves by
OV1ina.
Important as the teaotios of the bards
wee among the ancient Irish, they had
so heed in the prvdeetion of the epic
literature of the enuntry. TAe authors
of that wen • pseeliar e1w of (ample
known a.tI. who formed a branch of a
.ell-ortg'gaea�i.sd sad egt.n.1,e oamtsenity
of sehnl•ra The bards, at i.am in les
anent tales, worts Isere iteral poets,
songsters, and author. of the eomprei-
Mess known w fsw:efw. Tboerh *Me,
Memel isveriaMy, to write, theirwogs
were rarely written, bat being snnpneed
ants.g essisitted to memory, sad retain-
ed by fre'eont remedies. Is malty
eases tbe1 songs wets p/rONse .stem.
1y, and as i they
were extremely span the I.egu.ge is
As AMMO of &Asir anrvteees.
Have you ever sen her work ' Have
You never, at lanae, 1.1t her influence,
in every (Thristian tensity God hse plowed
the angel of little .aertbee, trying to re-
move all thorn., to lighten ■11 the bur-
dens, to *hare all the fatigues. We feel
that she is with us, homes we so'mew
that lingnf he"
-
Wore, those deliberate .,olseses whish
spoil family life. became we no looter
hear those sharp, rode words whisk wowed
eo deeply, sod life re sweeter.
The angel el Ii1tle seriIoes hoe ,,mowed
from heaven the missies of those asgele
of whore the prophet apssb, who reesevs
the stases frees the reed, lest they amid
braise the feat of the 4aaall...
Thom is a plass leve si mmediss. Mae
.natio,--his Aussie 1* colli tp4N a
tart i, MINN
CLEARING SALE
OF
PHOTOGRAPE
ALB IS
Two Weeks Only.
ONE-THIRD OFF RETAIL PRICESI
Full Cloth Bound Albums for 25 cents.
Full Leather Bound Albums for 50 cents.
Plush Albums from 50 cents up.
Remember this sale will continue
for two weeks only.
FRASER & PORTER,
Central Telephone El.change, Cor. North --t and Square.
Court House .ivare
THE PHARMACY
HARNESS SO
This soap ub4rhly taluable for ti w
of old harness, the ofliug ot boot �,
rarriai,r and buggy tops, and is pert.•
r't to the cleansing and healing off c.
-. ratehe.. galls, wound.. cat.. rte.:
25 CENTS PER ND,.
For sale by
C3'E0RC+E RHYNA. S,
Next (..o, Acheaonbdr) ,foods Mere.
Cattle Chains ---New Patterns.
Crosscut Saw:. --All Makes,
Cutlery ---Table and Pocket ---In Endless Variety.
Chopping Axes ---At Your Own Price.
General Fall (foods ---Stock Complete.
ALL AT SPECIAL PRICES !
R. P. WILKINSON & Co.,
Hardware.
ANOinuzIL BOOM Ili BUSINESS!
M_Z'roi. f� t,
Hating removed to l'rabb'a Block. S'uare. is prepared to sell all kinds o
Groceries, Provisions Crockery,
Glassware, Flour and Feed, &c.
At rock -beton prices for cash. Plow give me a:call.before;narch acing elsewhere
GOODS DEL.. r .....ED FREE. Yours,
an
J. M. PROUDFOOT,
The signs,
GE O_ BARRY"
The Furniture tha1er, is selling all kinds of rareitnre St Ike k s tit t crit). prisms. 1t
well-known tact that he
for cash. He leaks) the leading Undertaker of the town- .tmb.aming Fluid always kept en
hand. lie also n •ks. s opeeity of Picture fr.m!ne. Give him • call beton.
Furniture elerwhere, and yon w 11 find out that he don as bed says eel's cheap
I'OR CA�tri_
in tbaakieefeneand slljter their past patrons. he hopes to receives coati maeeof the
ante.
CFE Ci. BARRY. Eiamilton-st.
sweet smile, "How comfortable i am
here!"
There ie eons work to be acne, :and
she presents herself for it, simply, with
the joyous manner of one who Bods her
happiness in so doing.
Bow many oversight,' repaid by this
one unknown hand' How many little
joys produced for another, without
her ever having mentioned to anyone
the happiness which they would give
her'
Does a dispute arieef She knows bow
N ..tattle it by a pleasant word that
•.anis no one, and fall. upon the slight
fV ' like a ray of sunlight apes a
dea
ould she hoar of two t 1,
.b has always new mune of reanitieg
them, without their being able to show
her any grwtitede, so sweet, simple and
matured is what she dos. Bat who .ill
tell the thorns that have torn leer heed,
the pain her heart has endured. And
yet she is always smiling.
Have you ever seen her at work, the
angel of little eseribe.al
C )s eartb.he is milled another,• friend,
• siists, • wife. in heaven she is dialled
a snot. French Writer.
The as N Ly/we.
The fi.pa.r of Russia, when epee a
ther�ttet>. 11.. s m the heervilsss., paned
oll
the (a the simple Aust of t� tory
hiker. Gaon retiring h* was pleased,
asthemMid of the Marsh te see tM old
e tas fab op his Bible sad treed a .bap
tee "De you read slim, t4 mar is
askei.:"Tes,.yoer:Majesty, emery d.q. "
"Hum saheb of the Bible have you read.
my r.ni" "During the past year abs Old
Testament and pan of Matthew, your
Majesty."
Thinking to reward him, the Cur
placed 500 rubles between the leans of
the Book of Mark en the f allowing morn -
into unknown to the loU-keeper, whom
he lode farewell. Several months pawed
away and the Emperor retomp�pdd,� .pus a
eseood tour to the 1;.11-takert=111t. Tub-
ing the Bible in hie hands be .s MN,
prised to find the 500 rubies intact.
Again isterrngating the toll keepers to
hie diligent, in reading he received u
affirmative answer sad the Mateo/tent
that h. hod $.ighed the chapters of
Lekr.
Ais'Ma�• my sae, i a groat hie," replied
Majesty; "gtee me the Bible tt11 I
sm.Om book he pointed to the
mosey, ' whish the wan had not mesa
"Thou heat net eiw,tht the Ki .ndos of
God, my sou. As p.oi.bat 1, thou
shalt loss thy earthly reward." bed be
placed the rubles in his pullet, to distrl-
bate ermined among the neiehborinR
poor. Icondos Standard.
Of the saute i.as. rare 600,666`601
aro wed sletb4, that ie. they weer gar -
meats of sem. livid ; !4,000.006 bob*.
sully go caked, nod 700,000,000 city
Bower parts of the h tdy ; de0,060,011111
Mee in Immo, `$0,000,006 is hob nod
eaves, sad aj, p 0,660 tyktreet y hays we
abetter,