HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1898-5-12, Page 3er.
th
. fele
n ot
lily
nee
oto
e no
loose
r usdre
u o▪ f
noel ts.
'tattoo
od
o. Re
s &hors
end**
in the
alley
aA 1tXn
of
;audidly
ived tue.
4i cove,
se were
en halt
len cow,
ar wen
,n, VI III
u11j Pre
oke par.
LPL
wtive et
st roag
ng into
c terve
of the
be esib
the fla-
tlet he
►aA was
bat he
w e l fare,
the Pea
r t'hem-
Gove ro-
hts sad
fel vena
Akio ive
nary to
at amid
1 crowd -
ll* alta
'the hep
ds -the
r aataa-
Cabinet
!BIBLE.
a quer
that it
to have
Ittaaila."
let vete
he Gov -
ere sot
PITS'U,
FROM
ass Cam-
e l Arms
lanes 1.
says :-
MaUory
Govern -
Abd for
d with
es. fur-
Govern -
1 laser -
Visited
D eet of
expidi-
landtng
, it ass -
dor gar
in the
expedi-
hie V.
oho has
, Guests
1 seven
*hest
Did msv-
la▪ ta and
racy ie
mist of
Iaoret's
M con -
leader
d that
I for .
Gas -
rad deck
It is
will be
les'Ir
b**
to the
let ibe
eg
flee
allay. I t
low the
am. am
touted.
behor-
ill have
ttgh for
base of
past, a
1 MIN" -
ted pro-
/4*droe
Pienlr
IId wtth
ed other
sent 1n
avers arp
• heavy
he Cara
it work
.bto
ile
Or bled -
ey were
is poo-
r
ella-r equip
M the
fel peen
al leoe
be ear
•t.
441
SDITORlAL 1VOTis.
tr thertrio•l to the last. The
sf f the 'quadri.* at Cadis have.
MIrl. •vowed before the these et
virgin uevsr to rotors- to their
poetry unless They rotor& trio -
g " pruvidiag this pledge 1. oar
mg, let ea see what the dpaaisb
leo' chaos. are to ever return if
Imo Spain. In 1571 the Span -
ander Dos Jobs of Austria, one
Liens" V•'s illegitlmata sone, de -
the Turkish fleet is tbe
Gulf
Louts. This was use `o1 the dens -
betties of history, aad Spins had
great men. one of the remarkably
great men that country ever pro -
wed. at the head of its adatlnlatr$tion
poIp I1 live Spaeth had not only
r &bleat ..arrior-Dun John - •t
toff bead• hat they had the aid of: •
and Venetian fleet and they
rgepy o°tnombered the Turks. How• -
f. the victory was notalvic, and
of the credit for it belongs to
di onions.
TOE WRITE LACE` fAN.
L
"What le the price of it r"
rol Med eagerly.
"ltirspty-tin [billings. ma'am," the
agalstant answered. referring to the
small ticket which bung to the elegant
fen [won the coaster.
"Twenty-five shilling I Ob. dear I wo
Then et coarse I can't afford it,"
Led Nina laid down the pretty trink-
et sad walked slowly out of the shop.
She was • sparkling, bigot-browed
brunette. with great, languid eyes, a
month like wave -wet coral, ss4 a shy,
bewitching way which gentlemen called
chamois' end ladles couldn't &Komi -
ate at all. MIA. Philpotta was }flat
about to he married, ands she hod ask-
ed Nina to ie her second brideemetd;
the other bridesmaids had given such
elegant wedding -gifts -and Niaa, girl -
like 1.•d as wish to be behlndband.
"That white lace fan, with the Ise -
ender silk lining oi�d the pearl sticks,
would bas. been the very' thing." said
Nina to herself. "Oe, dear, what
wretched thing it is to be poor! Ao
what will Mr. Forteerue think it
g ive Nellie soothing on earth but
two-ardrixpeeany handkerchief 1•'
Mr. Forteseos was the same of the
gentleman who was to be "beat man'
. t the wedding -a handsome you
graduate with an sabers mustache,
head of early Saxon hair and fang
i.s eye& sad whom the girls all l'
and Nina -well. she liked him. too
just • little. At all events, the w
seldom to stand well is his eyes, an
from this. quite as much as from be.
Olfaction for the bride-ir [ant,
sprang her desire for the white lace
WI with the lavender silk lining sad
the carved mother-0(1ear1 sticks. Vor
011ie Mortimer had given • gold watch
asd shah. aad Esther Ames • silver
emeUing bottle with s diamond-4ta4-
led stepper.
"1 -rause glee- i--4p,mt
Nina.
remblig
bort asd� west -
granduncle.
"Uncle Leopold." etas said, "o•$ you
spare mea sovereign r'
Uncle Leopold turned upon• her a
"Toe
withering glance.
"Yoe know. child. I cannot." mid be.
"Money isn't so plentltd with the
Cerrola that sovereigns flutter through
the day like sparrows. I gave you halt
a sovereign the day before yesterday.
It is all that you can have at present."
"Bat, uncle, here la a sovereign ly-
Nina Car -
bat ahs kept thin Merry ef her par-
ches* to hermit.
TEL
"Which hat the girls was it who took
this sovereign r' _
Mr. Tholas glass
liths behind gilt -
the
tared lila r/ aa.
moony glasses of his deableconver
spectacles. The doubtful cola quiver-
ed 1n his indignant fingers like as
aspen leaf upon Its stem.
The bookkeeper. a fat, mlddb+g•d
moa. looked Totted, and said:
••It was Mise Charnock. I know, be-
cause she remarked oa its brightness
when she paid it over."
"Call Miro Charnook at once," mut-
tered the proprietor. "The coin s bail"
And Amy Charnock Dame.
"Counterfeit! 0, Mr. Taxley, that
raonot possibly bet I loofa it from an
elegant young lad
"Can you describe Per r •
Amy 1[esitatod• with black
..She was very pretty,
eyes and hair. She bought esa•ot these
white lace tans."
H h," said Mr Tax ley grtDaly•
"No doubt all this is very s•ti�story•
bot our rules are invariable and
stringent --most stringent thin» the
receiving of bad coins is is question.
Your services will be required no long-
er. Miss Charnock. and lbs sovereign
will be deducted frond your month's
• salary. Sorry. of course" -es • look of
And blank dismay eau. over Amy's face -
"but It's our rule. Otherwise we
a .bouid he losing all the alms. Pees os
Mine Cbar000k, Miss Fettridgs
welting to speak to me."
So Amy was discharged.
She hurried home through the wan-
ing twilight, her heart teeliag heavy
young es lead In her bosom. her cheeks pale
• as ashes; because with Amy Charnock
h it was a question of sheer starva-
tion whether she retaised ler either
non at Newton & Taxle s or not.
- And then there ass the rheumatic old
se mother, and tbe little brother, who
d most be kept at school, wad- Ori what
was to become of Manx f _deeply
As ails hastened along, too
Ile Is victory has bees gained by
since that day. Three centuries
d a quarter have shamed since the
et Lepanto, but•epaia sever won
r important fight Oil the water
toward. diem Le(rato Spain has,
the ocean. at one time and soother.
It England, Fraser, Holland. the
rest ports of Italy. some of the
comb 115140Os ot the German
and altesost every other cow-
l. Europe. small aad great. and
of the little esti** of Central
donth AuerIOS4 bet she bas won
battle which bi W4 jntest
ffect toward betters. her Man for -
tetra or which fns aibi'sd to eves
the slighted dame the sows' eta -
net of history. 11101enteen years atter
onto, in Iia reign -d the earns
armada,
the 0sst�ry s11111tara ot
and alga. >rldeK bob ewer bees
ItilIROIR_>&{s - 111114 41111.,
this form'. Oftea after WK.
i!utast was won by Ragland 11..
did *paid try to wit It book,
t although .ometia.s. it was defend -
by oily s0 Is 1pltleast garrison.
always tailed. She tailed con-
icangsty asd ignomiou.y. is the
of 1779-88, wbea she was malsted
by a powerful naval force from France,
ry
Agricultural
13EST TIME FOR CLOVKR HAY.
There b no other hay that Las good
for all kinds of Mock. erpeclally•tor
growing &nimair and mach cows, as
where England was not only fig on fir desk•
ng the United States but had half of I lag and Uncle Leopold shrug -
her. Hanuph 1' to
garble arrayed ag• gad his shoulders. "You're welcome
that if you waist it. It's a counterfeit
death of the three. Pick the soil .bows
the mote es fast as it is tilled in,leee-
lag the .;.per three inches loose to sot
as a mulch to preserve manure.
It he beet to set the trees a little
deeper then they stood in the 'tummy
This place may be knower by the dif-
ference in color of the lurk. It is cue
Urinary to set k tree as near ver-
nal' as possible, but I have learned
that It should be net so • as to lean
slightly toward the direction of the
Iling winds, then se the tree
..ro
clover hay, provided the clever u row on grows, It gradually straightens and at
at the right time and properly osred.laa►Gulty Is able to maintain that po-
writes C. P. Goodrich. And yet • *tion. A tree should never be mulch-
Lrrtsas-I am nut eon but ed the first year, as, it will o•uss the
great many roots to grow soar that surface There
1 could truthfully say a majority - M nothing better than frequent and
fail so completely in one or the other, shallow cultivation to conserve mois-
or both of these particulars, that the
result Is, a great proportion of the
clover bay in the ooaatry is of inter-
ior quality. and we often hear men ear.
i
•'1 do sot think mob of clover hay;
is the poorest hay there is." Accord-
ing to my experience. the beet time
to cut clover Le when it is in full
bloom. Aa all of the blossoms do not
roma out at the IMPS time, I would,
if 1 were sure the weather would per-
mit, and if I mend cub It ail in one
day. watt till about one-fourth of the
heads had turned brown. But in prac-
tice. because I cannot cut it ell at
once, and to guard Against any of it
becoming too far advanced. I usual-
ly, and always if the weenier fa good.
absorbed In tides sorrowful retlec-
tions to take any note of the outer
world. she stumbled against some one.
It was •entleman, and the light of
the street lamp shone plainly on his
face as he lifted his hat and spoke the
customary pluses:
"•t
11-eg yoftr 'Outlast"
Bat Amy Charnock stopped him.
fer more then three o•etarles Stoles ee dIeddoss.nsow tvearlas» I ooaeoo•rPot
'Rut it looksee
good. Uncle Leopold "
"Of coarse it does, els I abouldn't
ee e
tr',M a mild es I was. Take it away
child, -take it &way! It's not pleasant
to be reminded d ane s bybthe
perpetual witness lying there
ore
one's eyes."
Aad se with • sigh Niue Vat the coin
in her parse and went away.
"I don't believe It's bad," said she
to hermit. a middies idea springing ta-
to her stied. "I dare say it is good.
may mese ol4 fey or other has re-
fused to take it from Miele Leopold.
At all everts. I mesa to try the ex-
periment. It certainly can't do as
harm. aad I do wast the fan so roach
.row
duct In Its el wars has bora be- ably
fan tabn it "
ler contempt. fa the battle of Teo- 8n
filer la iu ;
*portant wit - 4b l
hat participated Nelms Glade short
wart of the Spaneaa fleet. the only
wines rednta1oe oHerod to him
Is the tattle being by /beta's French
allies. In the wan saltiest the tittle
sinew of the soothers half of the
*writes eoatlaeat is this cautery
ipals'a fights os the mean were even
fabler than were those oe the lend.
Peruvians sed Ohilians easily beat
Sp.niah fleets in the wan of 19s4 -
M. The poltro.s Perej•. the Blemish
Admiral who committed salads in
1184 on accoaat WI [lis detests by these
bath Ameriese a had as a stleeeror
the reward aid blunderer Names, who
destroyed the defenseless Valparalao.
thus raising • storm of wrath against
(pats In Europe for hate destrnetios
of property se Salrapmess la that oily.
but Nunez qu$1y Dad with his fleet
Iron before (Aliso atter a few abate
were fired st atm grana the rem&
wltbh drama to be le thllit bomber.
'here 1e• poseibUlty. at somas. a felat
posslbilit7,
that tlpata may Iris en iso-
lated and unimp*atset fight or two
es the water in the present war. bat
In order to do eves this she will lase
to show a °pumas. aad .apedlty wlisi
she hu *ever dIsplayed anyw'bar'e is
the world in the past three oeDtaries.
Ter sorely ser sot misname," Ms
:falteriaglp- ..You ale the sen -
SPAIN 1LWAT3 DBFBI.TBD1
TSB UNITED STATES SHOULD BE
VIrTOR1OU$ 111 THIS WAR.
elver (Three •.deed Tears nae New
°pal■ wen a Naval 0.1415 -ere Leel
Taewaeada et Kea 1. veyone to awes•
a;terallairomei17 seeN& at Trafalgar.
,Atnerban naval officers are absolute -
tare and promote growth. It is Wetter 1
to grow some cultivated crop oblong
the trees than to allow the ground to
become occupied by weeds and grass,'
but all seeds should not be planted
closer theta four Leet to the tn tr
ee. N
tel attention should be g branches
growth. cutting beck any proportion
which are growing out theof toprop toe near-
lythe others. keeping
ly belsnred as poeelhle. 1 Rub off all
shoots on the trunk which are not
Deeded for mein branches
ly confident of mimeos in the war endb
Spain, not Ludy Molise they have the (111. of ina the aired of in 1876 on t
hich new
bast navy, but because Spain hs had • Por. Fi
stanAs the Or n of ldtd.lreg
long, unbroken record of naval defeats' teen thousand cattle and twenty-five
for three centtries and a quarter, and cowboys particle** in the •xcitiag
• victory this time would be an eicep- event. Mr. Croatia was not • par-
tlou. ticlp•nt. but he tells t be story she
e
Ib• last naval battle won by Swale t it from an sye-witaew.
/Attehe afternoon of July 4 there had been
was that of Lepanto, fought in 1571. a lively tbunderrtorm that made the
when the Turkish fleet was defeated mole nervous. At 10 o'clock
at sleeping sight.
This wee one of the greatest battles Is however, they seemed
the tonbe e pro-
profound
history,•but the Sp•niab had not only Deeds as follows:
i ablest for at their head. bat Ills .tars were all shining. and
Inns i QRBAT �TIYPBDB
FIFTEEN THPUS ND CATTLE WERE
DI THE KAD RUSH.
Two Thousand Deuce mesad 4 Iled
-A Thrilling &steel
In ono oftb nude Woolens Males.
One of the most desperate stam-
pedes of cattle ever witnessad b7 •
Texas cowboy. says the Rev. J. B. Com -
were
• es wart
were given effective sedate** by the there was no cause at all for the
of the herd.
The
Genoese and Venetian fleets. ! &roto ngt up all at opce with s ogle
Siam that battle Spain has not won 'i purpale, and the rmr [bat wan beard
a victory on the meas. At one time or seemed to come from a single thrmt.
another the Castilians have been es- I Ths W(Iron brolhero and their cow -
gaged with England, Holland, es en,'t bola echo were .leaping in the camp
CONTROLT.TNG ROT OF PLUM AND RUt0RED TO THEIR PONIES.
CHERRY. the petty Italian statoa. combinations I who were grazing with their saddle
There is great complaint each year of Herman states and various other , end bridles graving
i fast as the bits
*hold cherries and plums rotting on, countries. The revolutions in Central I could M placed in theeirto lh htltbey
the tree. Q'here is no doubt good' and South America caused her to makemounted and gallopedfag .thea head-
eaks
aa sometimes•l a s 1 of the now dieapoe
cause far the oom,plriat,
commence tutting before •n7 of the I nearly all the crop be spoiled by t frith t ser giver. .dons
Plant 1 writes Prof. Platt. Few yeoPle seem to battle abtch has had the slightest et- ••The usual course a etas! Doc
beans have turned. Rover is a
of rapid growth, and matures very ra-' know
how to °ave them. l have had (sot toward bettering her fortunes isof work nand start to rrun
rotting let It was only ears after the � piece
in & urcle. I b [tempt was
flus o[ her naval skill. But
w Ir ed in the direction of the firer*
t lie • rasntt. She has won ao
',idly, so that, atter it has passed the
fall -blossom stage. every duo is work-
ing great damage to it by cbasg-
idg the soft and digestible stems ta-
to hard, woody and indigestible fiber.
I find by consulting m1 record, that
the time of commenDisg to out Masar-
for bay on my fano to soothers Wia-
ooasln for the last twenty years or
more. has varied from the 7th to the
26th of June, Keay let it Mond long-
er before cutting because the? s.
Bat the in
groat! os with cherries seventeen 7 sing a
1 do not tear the rot nearly so nowt battle of the armands at Lepanto that I made it this sass. Some cattle oats
as I do the black aphis that I have Speiw sent her ■upyoa•dly tovia•iblsioutrun others. and In this 0015 there
(lest in appear- I was a bunch of about fifty fully twee -
found unmanageable and the cause of srmaoda-tb• g _
the death of more cherry trees than ands that the world had ever mes-
o n other causes put together. My against Great Britain. But they
otos
to s ra with defeated overwhelmingly by • British
trlt•tla.at. tel cherries Ls p Y _
Milpha
( 1 lb to 25 gals of forts that was insignificant compared
ty yards in advance. and too*
taster
leading group also some rue In
than other'.. and this group
a diamond shape. with two immerse*
steers leading all. When )jr. Wilson
and hie companion reached the two
leading steers they began shooting
water
o 009901 K with the greet dveoieo fleet 01 war -
water once just before the buds cher-
ries'
e e
and once with bordeaux wben th
ris are one-third or one-half grown,
then pick the cherries is day or two
before they are fully ripe. If the wer-
tber is Out persistently bad this will
creator weight of hay• be s000salal, at least it has been wtth
creased hatch flu at can &flitioa of ea• for arret01 gent's, • -
quality which no fanner can afford. Be- As to plums, I have never sprayed
aide tab. the queatlty will theWly De the Japanese* varieties except in a small
Rally made up by the Inc reaeeld am waw ss • test, but have depended 00
- oast or the• -m coal-aruv when ttI° re• - aft i4 dessailur
•
th. laps first one a cat earls- Then there -lei They -_might- be &11 ---
.old tmembehe
m•, stiff Lias lbs (t one wisltesetotget demur or sulphate of copper tel
sold aha tea -at Newton & Tsz1e s."' crop ot
thong.while bat
es
"[ do remember now," said Mr. or- cetntry where the dmidge is liable to of rot dthen aexiething noulhek ark, but' fescue, .as.remely puzzled. "But may I do drha the troy of need will statad'I I have found the foliage of the Ja-
i "a[ doth t wonder yen are puzzled at, a charms of getting, toe when ex -
the paneee varistiee uniformly too nen°l-
int„rritoto teat, ahead of the midge .ive to admit of .praying with boa
is cut early. Another reason' Beaux while in feat. The Europeen:
my strange address, Amy
ed, with •-little hysterical laugh. "But
the .oversiga .he paid was a counter-
feit, and It has twat ase my situation."
And she told the simple story of her
tribaiation.
Mr. Forteseue Wteaed with the deep`I the flak of having It wet with raln.� !II half groat]. Applied at thu
eat interest. He was one of nat4rse I and as a consequence. basted it into; it will not show when trait is ripe.
would h v, b p •alas old r. H. would have helped wosnas I the fere or .tads wale* much
mote'
tare (a it teat it was Meated
across the Btraad. or stopped to piaci t end nsrly worthless. 1 had
rad shawl of an orgat- bartaM
[tree crura to Ii
why many do of cat olover early varieties, however, .rem at
because they 'Ty it is so very difficult i bordeasx. They should be sprayed
to care. They have tried
...moo least Mies with it.tbe Drat time when
early, sad could not get it dry the new► growth is three to five inch-
ithoat leaving it out a long time, at' ies long and the sec and when the fruit
t' me
II.
up a- ---
grinder's *wife as readily as the em-
broidered
is only
just such an experience forty years trio
sad believed then that clover was "poor
start tor hay." But I learned better
SEATING TAR ap>ht1REGATiON.
.nave
broidered handkerchief of • ora �eewl maereas tor slimed In beetle s
be interested
ae t hat 't natural to usse.ed Audio*.
be interertsd is the tears that chemo than to do tint wa a .fibs Iaovelsrn l n of seating a
china -blue eyes aad the words that 1 better times -to lea on
tM ground "There are two ways flow from lip that are lite a cleft' cut it o or three s, sontchiag it light congregation•" said the usher.
cherry. I for two or these dal put people in pews so •s
"It seems scarcely possible," said he. 1 over with the tedder once or twice ev-� ,.Qne b W Im never the ynl-
ive on a I er day till the leaves and fine parts to mate • comport body
"that rtes Carrot would r/ 7 7 pearly all knocked off and theb to scatter
take." rfeit ods. It mist be a ads -1 were
were dry like sticks so they pit. and the other way
tate •• For many years I them. I prefer myself the scattering
It may bee Bald Amor simply. "Bat would not heat• in the forenoon Sometimes • minister will
I know, that I have been turned out have practiced cuttlaig • method.
altar tis dew was oft, or, wint bI invite a congregation that is sport-
ed
ships. their revolvers close to them, an
UNABLE TO KEEP GIBRALTAR. that way the Iieteen,w'•s nude to ob-
Uque. aad as tb0-teaifthg bunch of crit-
ter,
• was unable to retain Gibrel- n stampede oar
ter, the greateet of the world's fortres- ttieuoblanddtheotirs� ey ie p de oh -
q
sea, 1(ngland won It in 1704 alterr an load 1)0.41 taken. By [bis time the cst-
•ttAilit by alydssngeiln'°ke.• JP�t. spa
of H.e.s-Darm°tadt. Sir John a
WERE GETTING TIRED.
noel Jdmiral Bytes• Gln ' -fleetly awe miles had bees covered.
esw 10 it batt but has h. breath_ of the leaders 'SAM
and 0 7•t mbe la.aeLs : O &i kn a£R painfully 1 but- -
�ypeiesd.00. en i the f.ls - gat lgLO ...lie, Buie the front
t.W4th lose Tann mento the capture,ifth cattle
at this time knew se a matter
three months alter its capture, of fact their only safety was in keen -
Another
attack
los was about 400. Ing up the run. Those behind were
An0twer .tuck by the SVanloss 141
1720 was repulsed with groat loss. In Coming. and they were in theran.
rity
1727 their attaok coat them 5,000 men, and the leaders werecompe l� to
while but 800 of the small British gar- There was real danger for the forward
Own of British defenders perished. In members of the stampede.
ds • e • In the invoice article contained is
con rt French and Spaniards they
the regulation 'outfit' there is, al -
employed .howl. and srmam I ways soave kind of stimulant' and batt
employed the greatest armament that for the stimulants contained in Mr.
had up to that terve been brought Wilson's outfit. it isible that the
mast • fortress they were over- stampede wodtd have -been halted with-
eg of 40.000 men
tJ.111 • Another armyout disaster. He hada Mexican &long
with • naveFl farce tailed in a similar ams of the I,ed cow-Iwy■ ine the Soutb-
gfThe • to tide west. Thie Mexican end Ms horse ml -
The roostFrench
and Spanishefforttmade by
ways reminded those who saw blur
for Fsnch sad Spa
fortes was in 1782. when 11.11M of the ride
Met troops of France were engaged. j OF THE FARLED CENTAUR.
forward and bent
Miss Carroll" 1 is It yoaf"
"Oh. Mr. Forte**
Nies colored amorist. She Was a lit-
tle vexed tint Kr. Fort ellid threw
lesseld
have overtakes her jest oat tis
hold of Newton i Tetley* •mgerhma:
fold yet why should she be Driveled 1
Am Ila the way f la 1 oft-beadsomas-
pasty your" he mined
OA of tmanaer.
TYC•i1ZWL
self
t &tors lrse.,is.. s Wmei las s
or vewesre.
rel tlliam °mfg las, the Sestol divine
•.Ob. 05ytdo1y. J shall be delighted!
to bay • wedding
pro wan p'aitpott*." le
�t � shall is taterseted.
tj veavea7 tare to igtlutro what i t
tar
Nine's heart pules ed • degree s
tae fees ralr&ndidly rddread • shy
Lhe embater aa�da
pretty girl who stood there.
I was leokit g at a w'kite-laced fa
bare yesterday. Will you show it to me tl
• bright look of latellig.BCe osmo
s►srMei temonbered
yagists rlady s L te gt* .1 Sa
ea, ma'am I" se►Id she. "Whl
Ww1iti y 1 .fish del a lavender 1
ira
wr "Tae T m ,bias. I think 7
° Tun. a' the m'; ovisweat 11F -41n @billings
•'I wi11 take Ik P1aw pack 1t ver
car•feally 1* tits box." amr•
•Mall I amid it, ma• I w ll Ealu
"No. I Inn 1a a berry--
lt: lialf�w� that h W
trot aswilli ode
berg. f ire 1t that ao horst
permadbog barss
dens. Dina Carrot landed over t
counterfeit sovereign with five shi
�S In Firmest for the glitter)
trbket.
* girl �ttlew papered picket 5.1-
'1
sae reed now," said Nies, tam-
ing
to Mr. Vortexes,. who laid stood
lenalsg seater* tb°d ter. w whole
th ex-
e1Plar7 p.tt1DO°'
a the by t Ilett ale shay
Ade "Ds you WA elllie w111 lib it:"
Mks Carrot mksA. as Goes ea they were
"1 s e ea ibe �I mt.
Yr. Tortwone
&Mewed with � It is •
ei the gloss and
of ray place; and It she knew -
"Will you go wahine to her hamar
"If you think It will do any good."
So they went together.
Uncle Leopold was in his study. and
Nina was nopyin$ out some paper or
other for hiss whoa the two visitors
were *bow" In. Nina rose to her feet.
colons' bot carmine. Mae nohe
sweet (ace of the shopg
sad something told ber that her se-
cret was revealed• mel-utnele, tarn
"Nina," said her gra
isg sharp) around, with a heavy
frown darres's' �ht pbrow, as Am
0rsock told her sisyM !tory. "b It
possible that yes could he so devoid
of prieelple se to use that coin after
I had plainly told yon it was a coat-
rfeit l"
"i -I did set know. 1 thought per-
baps--" stammered poor NII*&.
"Thomas the jgrr. CiDehief roe have does."
'arrol. "let it be •
r
lemon
I mast see tate Taxley
to fellow to oese �jlrl. wast be
t51aat tO osoo. This plans almost delay,'
re"Andted la her mad
the fan r'
"And mast [ end ra.1t
m cried 171M, berating IS tesre of mor-
tified pride. Fortascns, it-
"Pardon me," mid Mr.
Wetplo.isg Mrs. "Let see Save the
of settling this little account
y or My Carrot."
tea No I" said Miele Looped& L..-.. leer.
"We aro poor; bat *0 ss * '. beggars..
11Cy Diene can silord
a11 t• send
Metalling tans sat to Mire* others to
send them for liar " e�ltppww
Aad so Nina bad to fall arehia[
the lines cambric y°°iletad
y after all on which abs seas embroidered
her friend's mosogrars-
"How I wish I bad let the sole
[L oiled le 'dilemma of
was
her
alone."
the week e4 t the wedding:
try whoa wigs beard test Mr. Fe rteec S WNewton !
resolutely data► p assfai'ad)�e1as
was Taxley s pretty sallgsfgu another. Aad
lt• 8o one wedding 41M da
11- Amy Charnook tb*Dk•d God for the
sg great goodies. that bed bestowed op-
en her each a gift as Ssmry Fortes'
end .,ads tors.
who for fourteen yaws Mier" With'
TIL u Confidential secretary and adds-
sr-la-chief.
dvls•
sr -l• chief. bas been implicated in the
Bye -home Plot, a eonsplsaoy to asses -
/Mash. Charles Il. and plias Wes -
oath ea the throes. 'its was pat to
the evcrnclating torture of the thumb -
on or thnmbeorawm, which he eadured
roically, without e.nteYlag or lm'
leafing others.
After Carstafsa became the privets
wiser of Willimd•, h. was promoted
nth tie ia.travl•nt by whish i. hod
a tortured. 791e ktea, w1.b1111 W
e> he rtht t of
h �thlt�ittsselei�
01 • contests* s[ ems sett placed
tbarebe is ale mmoYise sod lath
mala• to tan the MIMIC Mia UMW
owl and os 7
it ls t,," said ling Wil -
.';Let It ht be •mdar.d. Toe
ttai1d 'W a; tars the stow
layreally teal pais similar
Out roe felt.'
Cantay turned the shrew sl•rply.
' •
Cog cried sus. sad when' refereed
1ka1 under sash MIs he would
Ta lee.
e0116.0e4 to anything, true .r
fully as good. cutting it tate
in the l ht to coma forward ge
afternoon. •ad. It the ser .blase •Uy a andut e
bright, let It wilt daring the middle Nether in the frost seats:
t the day, tad not have it dry es I rather Des the pawn picked out baro
and there than to see • solid bunch of
them in the middle and all the rest of
the church empty.
"Of course there's so trouble of this
Bort in the morning; then the trouble
is to find seats for all that come But
most folks seem to think they've done
their duty if they go to church once
a day, and they go in the morning, and
at sight their seats are lett empty.
to have the leaves crumble oft.
rake sad pelt up in small piles, narrow
at the bottom. Clover pat uP in this
wilted stage, will pact good:
that
they *11 ar. [rata it rain should
they will Shod rain good.
Dome. it is lett is these piles two or
three de or looser, 'wording
to
the weather. Before the hay is haul-
ed t• !<r tank 1t is raaally necessary
to apo the piles end spread them out
some 50 that the ate shed air will take
set some of the moletere. bat do sot
think to gat It perfectly" dry. it may
seam gaffe damp and WIWI atter tht.
erten It fe drawn toy the bees,
sweat-
lag It
tea bad 1 urge of ►eating and
is the piles mad
willll net
heat out In the
mala
the bee finnest of hay. Some object
t1this way d 'malt* clover hay be-
came It takes more wort then it dors
to let it i e wreath out on the ground
mail It it thoroughly dry before relk-
t( may be • Mile Imre work.
but that is coepessated foe [nae/
times ever by this gtIM improvement
In quality.
VOA smiled sad fished tip. Prate
WO molt m muter M this was very
looked at the ten with delight
_ 1:11118.114.1.t.
b. are t�ebea�! t4 p• 6:111t5".1314."11116411"14
oltle�a
to„tel°asetd-TDs Rsj•olad ODs -I �e "Wbst s rldtosless IM•s 1 *10
•e a ri1111. 111111.1 Tate Girl -Hardly of Darle ' � t t lis dal
t t haul geweised to marry hint- good 1'•
TWICE A GMT NATION.
°r.+a
WOW TO MT FRUIT TREES.
Whoa say kind of r plant has its
roots espes°i. it is sure to suffer lose
of vitality by evaporation- These should
he kept covered with damp straw or
cloth. and if to be kept ravers.' days
before Mating, pl.oed in a cool place,
welt* one who knows. Taw some-
times arrive In a shriveled condition,
caused by delay is shipment or tran-
sportation. Them should he immed1aa-
tely placed leorlsontally is uatrench
arth ash
and covered with Peddled.
showed to remark for several days. If
the branches aro still shriveled. they
are worthless. They should be plump
vibes reviewed.
Itetmare all braised and lajared roots
with a sharp knife or priming shears.
Mee sat at all fibrous rootlets. as
sow growth starts from the large
soots Cwt beck the top quite sever*.
ly. the peach to a whip and the pees1
and apple to three ate Iosr eleort br*0-
(yon equally dietrIh*W .fond (the
treat ad vat morn Mao tram thee growl. The
t'Mwkn' •larou
set sassed the rents a leeuth *mel
over.
ra ere
One thousand pieces of artillery wen 0. rode tar ora .red to
brought against the fortress Leslie. so that he and his horse apps
forty -.1".o salt of the line. all three , 1ie one animal. No horse, however
deckers. tea great floating bett.eris,' rugged, •'wild and woolly. had ever
supposed to to invincible. carrying 212' been able to unseat him. This kit*
guns, and innumerable `smaller lash, had been to the little brandy runlet too
.tea, bomb catches. often and had tilled and emptied hie
such an amort, [rig For weeks 6.- surreptitious intoxicant",
Sup and mortar bostxl• tin cup with
000 shells were daily thrown, but the • ao that his usual excellent judgment
went awry. When he succeeded is
tandem of only 7,000 British held the' getting mounted, atter having fumbled
fort. on the high seas Spain I with Ilia bridle a good deal be ons far
At •meting In the rear, and the etsmpede had on.
hada elesson prow-
esa o[ themors A41glo-tiaxon
ver• tanin.the A Span- 1
pant him. so that whento . (vert on
ront
fah fleet of twenty-nine sail wee total- I the rear end he panes
ly defeated by Str George Byng in the d the other aide. and rode on the wrong or Messina. July 61. 1780. Nosy I
Cape Vincent Rodney whipped an- flank. When Ile reached the head of
the herd he was just in time to defeat
other fleet in 1780; •ltd France and the manoeuvre then under exfrom
uuttion
Spain together fought desperately but I of lendinpl the moving mass
vainly against Eng an 1n the ley of straight line to u eemiclrole. Kevol-
Gibraltar. dpstn always bad sines.
ver In hand. disregarding the other
England was fighti01 half the rest of men, he Mgan shooting Is the
the world. FA( FB OF
RATTLE Ola' TRAFALGAR.
The last of the mon important naval
battles engaged in by Spain was that
of Trafalgar. in which the French and
Spanish together attempted to give
battle to the English fleet after having
dodged it for month.. Tbsy relied on pouring over. •hof
• numerical superiority, but were mai- column was a novelly • to de
ly beaten by Nelson. I cascade of beet ptangl g
• Since then Spain hale not attempted struotimn while fleeing from an len-
to fight on the seas except with the eginery danger.
y republics of South and Central I 'When Mr. Wibon mid h1. lieuten-
Alas {{ ce The Potholes/1 and Chileans ants saw that it wimpossiblelvse rave
madly heat the Stealth in the wars of I their cattle heyturning saved right angles •t
by
1864 and 111116. Pereja, the Spanish ad- dexterouslyd riading out of the easy.
mire). committed emicide in 1864 be- full speed and
camas of his defeat by the Booth Amer -1 Thenext reissued to the flank aad
tonne His successor was the blander- I decideeed d a them..land all handsfew
comm aced
shooting Into the herd. the ohjnct now
being to bgild a breastwork of car-
mine. and save the roar end from the
Nunes attempted par destruction that bad overtaken the
thick et Callao, but some vowels that front. The gully well
happened to M In file harbor flreld • NEARLY FULL OF CATTLE.
few shots and he [led. by this time. They were snorting and
It t that raoord that makes the n1- bellowing, crashing and tearing, sad
I oftleera hollows they have an eel .till heaping up: and when the firing
Then is the time when the stranger
Med the menet church -goer gets the
best seats to the church and a welcome
besides; as he would. indeed, at any
Lime. but, it anything. be's doubly
welcome et night. BM for all that.
I'm board in the worse of my life more
then one good marmot] preambed at
night to a ooagregation of a dosen or
twenty. ll church even that
"But in a sera
number of people can be made
es
tive as a congregation by Judicious
resttering• In sunli a came, or with
thirty or forty or fifty people, you
would rola, i should My, the body of
the church only. not the seats on the
side aisles against the walls. by placing
bed only twenty �D the
them be paws on athero side f tour
middle .isle only. say
persons in a pew and not too much
scattered, but *till with an interval
of a pew or two between the pews oc-
cupied. oe can note • very r•epeet-
sble audience of them; and looked st
*cross their heads. say from the rear
of the pews, or from a low pulpit. un -
canopied pews are not noticeable or
mot strikingly so. and you are impress-
ed by the area of occupation, and to
a greater or lesser degree with the idea
of .umbers that that area would ordi-
narily
rdi-
narily convey. rather than by
legal number ot people present;.
Adds from the are 4*1.11eis of
the looks of thing'. I have always fav-
ored amok • dIspolitt0S of a small oar
favorable t likely to* the Fssch-
or; Inst.
(mprad bei
ar; bat, r i said a ase o�vw the
ws
i minister os Mese solea.
itat grsg&tbs sm►11. may be
ea a stormy to 0*11 them all
faekther, Med s. with the wind
outside sad the rain beating
tegensea lbs winders. to p i.ioah molk $w 1' -
(tion that the while os �
ld
pare termed out to bier f they had
ipemw• It was ooniS.
oleo
spats mese e1'ele a.v Mess Ise•erie ala
tails meg se tlrwesest.
Spain was ogee the greatest Dation
on the tape of the glebe- Ray. rather,
she was twine so. First, ea a sentry
of leaning and misses oder the
t*areestis rule. whoa the sit, et Cor-
dova lads slide K lie stales' mei
foumteA ss ofod*taies tower sed is the
pals* marl the estipb. d. wens
Ma was the�g.si1&ateklt eatiltary power
ill l!arepe. lit�• In e•Sid sot Mead
the mare* 01 .m0itrle told named
hes .taedity ahrmak end leis sell _
iIletrt Pwoe worth simehi*g of atCube.
p1lti5lmie ars Issigst4ast pea
THE WILD STEERS.
and the effect of this was to strengthen
the run and bring the advance straight
toward a precipice. This precipice was
• weak la the prairie, forming • deep
ravine fully thirty yards wide. and it
a shorter time than titt take. to
l01
th
thin contretemp aloe
Dig a hale Largst o
roots to a ryter& tins.
Audio eagle, of 1 be bola piece s small
�MS et earth. Oa ilk Met ties tree'
g50tty press it lata the earth. *alrThis
(*sone glemt soil •aseag this root
*blebopera oplaila to prevent wince, it t hae
ethos resew l°
ing and cowardly Nunes. who bombard-
ed Valparaiso and destroyed the pro-
perty of Eairopeanl, thus arousing the
indignation of all Europe.
to rem* thin same
task before them la the war w.
and they would be surprised if
tide war should prove for the (bet time
that Spain mold defeat Anglo-Saxons.
or any other nation for that matter.
A Sepeilive Plest.-Edwin--Yon
ereuld not lake [bat untie a mine to
hes esptel ive pleat a1 a11. would poll f
». fiel.1_ Igo sertalsly does not look
it. Merin -Well, 1. 1 . Attempt to
touch bite est be slosh op Imoseli-
Ste1T.
rte
•
TH•R ARABIAN BEAUTY.
Arabian laws of lovelies* say that
to b. beautiful • wesnan'a physique
meet tally exactlywith tbe following
mho/lute: Her har. eyetrreirs. bolos
sad .'*pilo must be black; skin. teeth,
sad globe of 1s eye. white; bead, neck,
ankles. arms and waist, round; tack,
fingers. erne" and limb, long; forehead.
ayes and lip.. tarp; eyebrows, noes
and feeto.roaanwir; sora, brat, aad
4, .*•
r . , .ries
eCo1u100'L,
That hropllal, said the `[tide, wee
built Md endowed by a deaf mote.
Indeed. Mid the loquaciona lunatic.
Thee ft is the first aµtbent10 os.e of
bstsg egpls4•tounded that 1 ever ea-
samtbriel.
WMAT 11' 18 FOR.
asthma manifest an
hrie11M0i1o�• outs dtdoers ea 'Larkey.
said hes.
f� Ottoman Empire, you ketow,
began the wounded ones tumbled over
on the others and in a short time the
gully. like the sunken road at Water-
loo, wee bridged by marrow's. The
herd surged up in billows. pike ea
ocean. and bent now, because itcould
not do otherwise. The semi -circle was
formed, and VVIR nwae dd brode around
en chomp -
the he *welts the opl,rfait• side and recrossed; and
in • ehort time they had the mottle
halted, forming an incomplete letter
0. and there they stood, blowier/. bob.
lowing &od shivering. All hands re-
mained on watch all night. and in the
morning, wises a count wee de. It
e hesd was ascertained that 210Q
mussing• There were afterward 24116
pairs of horns taken from that golly.
It was mailed /D roped. (Sully for .t0*Y
fears afterward. and perhaps w111 al-
ways,
ways, witk some pimple. be remembered
by that mom•. •
- •s• 1 ..,151. 41.4a ,s �al�'.�'
eltai�►tfr.:al..b ao �t
•
41.1. ON VIAND.
Tom Marmon, whatever became et
Oh, he's here yet. 0011414' ap quite
• repatatl.a os wind.
How re that'
s,anow
invented
three we
atriOsg elevens
pimps
1111.' mashies.