The Exeter Advocate, 1888-11-8, Page 2AN INDIO% B.TaBiTer, who lives on the shone of the great lakes
can 004 time trout oat of own, I viell
Storyoreetetteneneriereentent be a great man i and maY be 1 stM beemmtlt
rent VIA et Gnus ear. enief At any rate I vill eteong mode-
.
_ One,' So I gave the globe to lam and left
is time last September a .CaelP one happy saver* in the north voile. Bet
iehtly on the north shore of I never heard de chief lumen Glue Globe
or at a point a, few miles wee or Tinet °teener, so I geeee he Who the
of Elven Riven. Every 0r04. glebe or it got smashe4 on the reef w eti
y friends au.4. I get around the storm modeled the depreetioneltetween the
smoke aftereep er Ds. When waves pernettedthe glebe to strike thereehy
g1owwgte *Mee* et the 'reef:* Re looked at zue lewely end nem
.vm
wore oviegyer .4evelt ertni
bg and ilt.hing eterieewere olde
. bee . bad; returned t came
t dexte. elor nutter* of Le Sur.
bout the '0° whale*" then I Wittman
aaid ; It reCitgrea intelligeace to otele
take to aed bullhead luck don't omen,"
eed thee he went to bed.
I emblem:1 ebet a good etory and a true
story, and I retelved to imi*te the aeta of
ed 1 would catch, one of my 0001^ ray era coaxed% So, on the fellowmg
bose heir wee Inbite end when form satrtang 1 eiggttd. ttP 24 $489 29$94. b9wil
leas slightly be with eget looked through filled It with MMAOWS and authored it le
keen black eyea at me, and thee loolte4 be- theleke, Ana the eet de. y I fialtecl there
d me at the past and he united pleasent-
sy et seem watee he coninred ep.
"Ronk," he eaid, X*Ilt nen handle a
genue.barreled ehotguit fairly well Ler (me
of your age, ane tem van eetee Meek hoe
and teeth trout wheu they are ittiegry.
But you de not peewee knowledge ot lake
tout ner 49 eon kuow how to teeth them.
11401 yoUa finny. and thee I hope Oat
you will tealine thet
me CATCH FAES 7nOTT
retiree lerelltgenteite wed m We,"aul
tte *diet rather eavegely for Se aged a
exually good.natexed 4 Sportsman,. "and
say ben, bell -heed leek tlen't egunt s lake
trent tithing."
I knew then I* tertitteatien elteet titil-
lated lea , WhateVer that may be, refeTted
te 4 bream et Cued?, gem the be
which by me ievelved the leo et
044411 en Me pot* hut I declined te gem
out et Toy bet to enter e convereetione
eleedlell thee I knew hod bee* reported for
nty deStreetion Ilet the sliehting Tommie
pate unmetieed and evinced twee dodo to
neer the dory and to Imre how to ceteh
trout.
He odd; " Wine 1 wroi a yeeng nue the
le over 7d1 Itepent a own le profeeeting
ter 9°Pinir num en the meth there ef Lake
Saperior. With me wile reiddlenged Ie.
dim who heti spent hie life he bulging and
ebtag end loedeig le the fortota and ou the
watere of the lake regiezt. Ife hem the
wildernees thormighly. 1e keew where
the deer tted moo* Wed. Ile keineii whielt
lakes the wild waterfewl night be tented.
Ara be knew where trout, pickerel, awl
think beetelerited le dark, °Old water. Ile
gemmede desirable kuowledge relatiee
I° the region, age da whee we sat by the
mop fire the Ittdien to; he a telketive,
eaned meta mood. Ile 0110 In then lekee'
bdientog Lek*Suterior Witli a hethward
Um of his hod, are very Liege tout,
Aboot three milee fore here there 14 4 roof
in the lake where the 'WOW unot oreT
feet deep. The trout ether or, this reel in
large etimbeen They, are ahoy* there, bet
they will not tete the book exeeptieg in
ontein semonn if you eould catch one of
throe dee Toe weld Inver age* eat a plck.
"rel.' Then he told of meeting trout en this
reef that were from 3 to 4 feetIonatel that
must have weighed fora Ai to ao pounds.
Of DOOM 1 Wanted 4,0 °stub adeat 0130 of
them nth. The next. ay
11.1.DIMIrti MX TO Tlin MU:
I fished for hours but caught nothing,
The Indiee appereetly wee not dlopeoluted
but he resolutely minted that he knew that
the reef wee Uy reed with trout.
That night art we sat telkIng at thecemp fire
'thought uteplee by which 1 hoped to otch
some of the fish. The next mantles I sent
to the settlement for eupplket And in the
liet of *stick* needed was a fish globe, end
I wrote to my .e.gent to be sure te und a.
the glebe. In due time the globe arrived.
Iediend it with water, meant a felT minnows
end uever got a We, 1 heeled h roy bawl
and witted to shore and mid nothing abont
ry fallexe, bet I eileetly deiteneo4 my
aged commdwas one Whe exeggereted the
SUeSeaSes ot Ins youtle
• 9110 $tee to eet Oe,
That Madame rettl oraetiato *hew
aelf diffieelt with eegerd to the money
tion iti. well Iowa,. Oe Quo wed:4 az Be
n Mr. hlayletenntheeperatie reeneger, nets
blit to eifer the fenteue rhea deem euly
eight bemired p mean bmt€114 of 914.9 *674'
and potted; which he hod entreged to Fey her
he.forelteed for each perfenrance, het she wee
newillieg to Teceve the inoeey. "The *,w4z,
Idtowed 0401420.4w. end fermeity ineeneateed
g c! tome," writes Mr. hlepleacen Whin dlerecirre
4
"that my eentmet with dlitchetee Bettl was
at u cud. 1 et:opted the luevitableseemet
tog mytelf with the refloat% Oat, beetdes
otner geed eniatiein my omptey, lima new
eight huedred patettlii to go on 'anti. Two
home efterwerde Sigtior Frencid neepeereel.
4 I g4npot undervtaed, ° he mid, 4 bow it le
you got tea so well wfth prime donee and
espeetAlly with Madame Bettl. 'reit aro e
mervelloue item, end a totem* mot too, I
Uay edit 1 hiademe Fetti does not with to
honk hereogegementwithyou, eeshecertalie
le wenld beve dime with any One elve in the
°Marna:wee& Glee me the eight hundred
nade, And showill make every preperatieu
gowg ott to tbe only. She empaweta me
tell .
good time for the beghteing of the erre,
and ttiet oho wM be ready domed in
the coitume of Violettie with the exop-
tien +arty of the shoes. Yee ewe let
her Imo the belence wbee the doors
ed the moitey orae* in from the mt.
Olio ; end (booty *here
and Pnt them in it. Then tied a plate of
cloth over ita neck, drat pulling oitt ono -
half of the decades° that water could flow
in and aut. I tied a *bort rope to the shank
OI the globe, and a heavy fish. line around
its neck. To the loose end orthe short rape IT
I tied *heavy stereo for an etcher. I put a ,-
Short d login the canoe and was ready
primer+)
to Miss
Lord
tL'ipoems
et Savage had had a low °pillion et me kept
before. Evidently he looked on me as an in. ternetf
sane men who prowled through the woods when
to dig in the //round, end this when game y, ,
mernels and Bab and birds Awaited him. " 13
Bat now I had lost all *tete. He relue. eartall
tautly peddled inc and my childish trap ,13°
to the reef. He vented, pig -like, when I mg, Vat
spoke to him."'" Words were not to be wasted ff-Putu
on such as I. Arrived over the reef I ore- a".12 YM
fallylowered the stone anchor and the min-
now-oharged jar, where the atone struck bet.
tom and pulled the line taut and tied it to
the little log which I had
THROWS OVERBOARD
to yen thetehe be at the thorn in
.0nr Desiree .1'i:reruns QM! ..oeeeeeloos. The Feleetiee. Oneetthein
We are all more or lent famWer. with adt Tereettene OL l'heeThetetie report that
monition), both ea.oeed. and profane, to lee Murray is goingShertly kublieh the:
up treueile.e.. where. ea brilliancy cannot be. Prince:
of w'elete • tie bee now
'titritiehed.ny emit nor its texture .4estreyed, spoken In Petite for e quarter et .century.
:by tone neetimulate aur Wealth and store Melte. people believe that hien. .epeethes ere
beyeed the Toole emend thief and ale written.' for him, the. Ertnee mitt euttleg on
Meant .eteitier, 'Copy -hooka math. °On- the emelimg touches. ObV491/44 that he
m.ent
tentweb,./etlet and all eorte et ethemes punt bene ea beteemey deal: of annetatteet
.foreiner.e.equable distrthetten of atte wothre for the eubjeets which be wane are eti
gone are tile antenget tienneneegrowlerst _edge tbat. it would he next to
for mute. memo the materiae for Wining
It wilt be interesting to See if there. is any
.t
'mental development in them* ..er it they
otherly ditaxtbutine by the .pletberk few 'thew the. WOrk....of differeet heed%
to the hungry and greedy many eand. cow
n` 44184 Mi.O4STIOS.
a Cardinal-ArabiShili hit latelY Stimetleen•'
gewe on
servative itetelety it& depths by* bela believe there b**, been no nutiation on
morttenef the idght.ef every Man te, ele1M, steely tbe Prince ef virags. 104 heel stronger
a Wing from the fvorldt. and to have view thee 'cementing dolma, Hi Ule ontie
Ithi ordlnery orthodox faablen hoe- lens on the desirability of havte n royal
ore. to. tortiblytte" borrow, " hall we say?
and socialists. MU -poverty !moieties are
apringine up in our large cities. t pulpit and
atform ring with elogueet apeeale for a
reetdoet there ere perfect:1Y W hflown•
--what heeetuelly needs. " cto•operalion," nfie foetines on theise matter; are not shoed
44 prat sharing," " indontrifil nartnerehip," in higher neuters, and to the Princo'sgreat
organiratiett of IOW*" "the enetrol of credit he haa eeVer 41104'4 his °Pintoes,
Men0p9lisS," are plunsea familiar to the ear. if they were le oppoeitioa to the Queen's
f the veaget 911i/a 911'001 uai ela moll to &Novae Intewli, He is the first nele-ap!
more than aa yet reecho the 4.fkr or the eye. /latent In Englaed who never allowed whet -
probably at no former period in the world% ever 4ifferemea my have atise_e between
lifstoV or to the blow 4evelepmeet of Christ- hiniand the Crown to bene penile gossip.
f 65 peverty,' beee Kt heeler he the meth of. The Whet* hen been epeedieg three days
1
lien civilizetion have the weede " meeey,"
e vteeitlei flats, and them Antlibeele, nts eemsetteen re RASO&
ithe people, or the prinenolea which eheold[ie Porte in ecteecie e, Ot course everybody
reeetete the neiteetelen and nee ef the geeti *ewe what be bee been delug, Ana wbgre
iaul Mud te enrMil and eltminate the otter,' he has been breakfmting and dieing,. RI) 1
ibgeet ge t40tIghtfUllly* €4=eetly 004nidereCroa biebneas itt tneonteettlee tettentebet by
(mid diecrencl. by throe cletsee and Individ- :the idereette de Lem tile bee beee to ao
was to whiten it ie given to interpret thn;Altie. GMnier in BaThe Bleee, at the
ereen to the people, and to 'Marlowe the" Vert 44144, 7411% 149114 at the Nouveati Cirque
deetirdo el the tettiene, iand Le Unlit. at the Edge; he bee Lost.
But there tee Spedes et wealth, 4 NOUN* L4111.9 Ra C91190, t1994, 9f B MAI ri9heoei the
of troeure, too meth uegleeted in our (ley .„-rou„0„,4 thwart am_ tIthettl lentA hiederee de
et movellou materiel prosperity, a Med el steaututS and the wind Duke Alexia, and on
*nen vim is in enegee et being pewee by ' nendey Went On a oboe with Berm Alphense
thoegh it adteite el tedetitaite femme, end dltetbsebild at reffieleis
proznieewo mete return. Unlike the weelth Sheotieg en the Sabbath day 1
of whieh geld tied Silver have boa Wetted' Whet will Illarenta see'?
as thenuttend nionne, thin whoe °Iglusee wee, on the day of hie *4715'4 ea
we lege, le reelttok4 in tho epeedinte e Elmo, hilt Freeldent Commit beieg
grove) by the therm& mid like the breed Oficial. eine in the iteWapaperSt
ealt ern the wenn; rennet' to tie egitizt yel bight-4041th hie ord.
with getientes gretitutlet with that rewaxd '
wbith always comee from ,
"Thedevetent to eineethlog efer
Vrenl the V9S110 Of our terrew."
wealth ineaSUred by eteclGOOrtfln, end
ag0044tes 0VC4 in theyear of grave
le Abseletly limited In genlitity, the
;744/49 Of Mnell et the prevent SOCial
H441 agitatiM4 bon unfelt, the
9W it II tO be divided i there
ly se meth te tee around* mid
netto then *IN to try ihmethroesh
%sate nee Of my special sit* or
en some one &dee is to jut thee
eprive4 If hl s or :her rightful pro.
But the rtehee of the heart sad
hid, the weelth of teltereeter, in a;
es lam glorlea of the unlearn* a;
tlt
and 49TO And Weety end win
pretteent with ell peeve and joy
tom m the htviiible world atoned
leg with mlereseopie dements o
yried forms. For whet lin*
the reproductive power se4 meg.
memo of rioble doires, generous
es, mire awl healthn teenle l
"wee tb" Rua. Mee Hri.xnegolana"
chergeeble tame, end to common
ilmilitie4 Of tided or Mart are Me.
doenoegst these thine whIch a non
my" we "credit." our bleeds with
orth" so mazy dollen, and fo a
Ter7 execution of value beton
e world of spiritual and mental
life's melds and enemies, to over.
relettoes, and that the he
tworthion" mot Tellable
loot generally. tIta 040 whou wil
the Urged arnourit expreued in clot
=tie Actual forgetfulness of the
of noble desires, cheating tastes,
leieures, "ot plan living and high
eta of diadem:erg of our genet
d especially of our greet ouetty.
esteutly tempted tom fain room.
the things whose value can be mei.
eel iri figures, and to point onrehil.
those whoee Georgie* neve boon ex -
directed to the ancamel anion of thill
Walled "goods," not of thie world'a
ights and pleasures.
St. Peul admonished his spiritual
, 1000 yeas ago, what things to MO
What thin to buy themeelves
hat thing* to =he the rail sim of
, outside the necessary drudgery for
Jitely be gave them Advice in words so
noble, so broad, that when a great
teecherof ear OWrI. t12710 wished to
re for the "remuant," who are to
"numbers" of our modern civilize -
elle of conduct which should be ex -
d yet wide enough to include all
uls, he need the very words of
t Apoetle to the Gentiles, end &d-
ome who would be rich in mental
na physical and moral health to
mselves excluaively with "whatao-
ga are true, whatsoever things are
e, whitteoever things are just, what-
ings are pure, whatsoever thingii
y, whatsoever thine are of good
there be any virtue, if there be any
on these things."
would humbly and earnestly say to
.f before her, seemingly (and rightly
all the world in a sling, " Choom
r desires shell be, for that is what
be and what life shall be to you"
Freewill
hle eneel
1134 a
By tide
and del
lbt*ui
to cone
'
uncifer
be indu
the arr
Nor Wai
entIcipo
Freuchi
me the
PAM hs
pomade,
other.' I
on, bet
been
redieut
and tb
ed bri
set my it. The Indien watched ray pre.
peratione with eilent scorn. Gatobleke trout
with a glees or I The ieberne was too absurd
to be worthy of a warrior's conelderellon.
and which was sufficiently bouyant: sup-
port the globe thet was suspended itt the
water a,bout four feet from the bottom. I
believed that the lake trout would see the
minnows,. that they would try to catch them,
that their reeeated failures would make
them ravenousethat they would actuallyrub
their 1100/38 against. the glass :until they be -
name sore, and that, when I was ready to
fish, they would be keen to bite. I laughed
when I hadilise bait fixed to my satisfaction,
and the Ind4n, looked at me through keen
eyes, as thouliblee thought]. had finally gone
crazy.
".1 did nottvisib the reef for two days-.
Then I said Come, Henry, we will go
catch sontennont." I took my lines and a
pail of rainnowe for bait, anti bade thelndian
getthe canoe ready. lie reluctantly obeyed
me, lie wished he had not told me aboub
the reef. He hinted that he would have to
go home shortly. He was sullen and un-
gracious. Arrived at the buoy, I baited a
hook and dropped the line. licit the shiker
strike the bottom and then I felt a mighty
tug on the line as the large fish grabbed the
minnow. The fish dashed for the deep
water. The Indian knew that 1136 hooked
a fish just as quiekly as I did, and he thrust
his paddle bi the water and we followed .the
&le so as to get away from the buoy line.
Then I palled the fish in, 1Wo artistic pley.
ing with aneeight-oance rod, but just hea.vy
hand -over -hand pulling. That fish weighed
20 pound. The Itellanta eyes blazed with
otoitenient. He Struck his open month
with open palm to express his estonishment
and milady paddled me to the buoy.
AgNin I dropped ehe lien Again '
THE 'EXIT WAS IliStANTL Ca -CABBED
and the eager fiSh darted off. We followed
tilI beyond • danger of entanglement with
the buoy lino. when the fish war pulled into
the canoe. The Me were as twins. Two
were Sufficient to supply my party wit h
food and 'I refueed to catch " more, much "to
he disappointment of the Indian, who want-
edno load the canoe. Every other day after
that the Indian, how most respectful in his
manner and epeeoh, and I caught from two
to three trout. 'They were the best Bch I
have ever eaten.
left the region;not having found
a copper mine, the Indian begged for the
globe, saying ;'Giveit to me. I will catch
12 13 the foreen When I want trout I will
,set it and catch them; NO other Indian
The
who db
most in
in 1840
hanged,
and na
he wo
amugt
in/teen
the idea
Georgi
collisie
Tyrol.
vasse of
althoug
been se
mains a
King
is in
$71,000
wanted 'I
akaua's kingdom, and tiamttive e monop
oly to somebody else. The disappointed
speculator died, but his executors, bringing
mit to recover the $71,000, have compelled
his Royal Highttets to disgorge.
M. Van der Elst, secretary to the Belgian
Minister of Agriculture, while spending a
vacation at Eastbourne, England, attempted
with a friend to climb the face of the cliff
known as Beady Head, where the rooks are
600 feet high. He succeeded in reaching the
summit, but was much cut and bruised. His
comrade got only half way up, and then had
to be rescued by the coast guatdsmen, with
much danger to himself and them.
The handwriting of English literary men
being under consideration, it ia said thab
Andrew Lang writes a peculiar, bat not il-
legible, hand; Swinburne's was curiously
schoolboyish, but perfectly legible. Mat-
thew Arnold's was lucidity itself; Mr, Rus -
kin's is pretty plain; Sir Edward Arnold's
is also very plain; John Morley's ia difficult
at first, but easily got acquainted with;
Le.bouchere's is pretty bad ; T. P. O'Con-
nor's is rather rough, bub easy to read ;
Frederick Greenwood's *le called agreeable,
and the editor of the Times, it is said, writes
a particularly good and legible hand.
aaaaseene-e.
• "Pa, who was it turned the garden hose
on Reginald when he was serenading me t"
lit was I, daughter." ' "And why, pray?"
"'Because Shakespeare advises it. He says;
If music be the food of love, play on,' and
assuming Reginald's brand of xnusic to be
She food of hive, I played on—played on him
with the hose and a dilution of holed
powder."
Loam Jdn. Wentworth.
an aiteary notice of "Tang john'
' Wen gob, the Chmege oelekrIty wile died
eu Teeedey leen the New Trek Herald
Km- Itt let57 Mr. Wentworth WWI eleeted a
Mayor et Chi .e. Ile intredueed the fine
*tom fee c tie them It Was called
; "Leeg Johr..°' leg 114 met teem lie
; itexodireed two Ore engines, mad um
r were named respectively "Liberty" and
'Bement ' A hi W
, was
alweys doing ecenething sateetional. Ono
night he set Om whole police format work
witintiog signs which were hues erne the
tiltiftwelke centantry to lew. Them *tug
wore piled u le metre, ntL
°nun WAS * stack of them 44
meeting No. This incident at -
'aviation all oven the outlay. Ali-
bi* proem wax the dletherge of
he wh polio force, from chief down to
lethal& per, at one fell a TWA '
4, weep. wee
demi et 9 C10014 in the inotnieg, And by
neon next day he bed a new faro aworn Ohooaing Their Owa Timor,
in and et werk.
TA11111G. 800
sueoesaroi Weist et Telephoning Trent Hof
Wel* Baste* and Nevr "TOM.
The Buffett) „evening Newt reports tha
the new long distance telephone, which in
E004 be put into operation there, was
teeted by the officere and dixectera of the
Bali Telephone Company recently. The
connectione had been put in at 5 pen, and
commie:0E4ton was at °Ace opened between
Beate% SPfienAeld, New York, Troy. and
Buffett). The wires worked well, and con
verotioes between the most dotent pent
could be as easily carried On as it both
pattle4 wee within a block of °oh othe
in the city. The bslonge to the Ameri
enn Telephone and Telegraph Compauy
New York* and la $00 mile% in length, go
iegethroegh Troy down to New York, themie
to Boston tin Springfield, Kase. Thia tea
illeiliMINIMMI111111111111111111MINIMMOMMIIIMINIMMINIMMIMmINIIIR
l'OltEIGN NOTES.
It te teatime -44 that in Begleed 040 M44 in
500 gets 4 College education. In this gleri,
ono country one man ie every 200 takes a
college course. .
A London Woman, liridget McMillan, aged
45 yew, has been brought thepolice deck
202 times awl been cemeetted 147 them,
eliarged with being drunk arol rioScas.
A new religious order hae been, ;netted by
e men omen ilay, called the eettotbentooe
s.
et
ort
to
and the men bed to dig down several fewa
rennet in
The failure of Several. crops of red clover
in New Zealand was expleined by the alteence
of the fruetifyieg inseete which are regninite
ati necessary to the perfeetiot ef ortale
'dune heedred wild boa were imported
from Begleed and set free, and in OM dis-
• of the Slim It reins upon, "the fumieme
ted truth that eederitee all religioue ey
✓ terns."
t A poen was recently lint eleven dye
f meld, esetatul. It wee found in a ettiV
- Which oenveyed water from a colliery, up
ita belly he mud and weter. The vulva
t too narrow to Allow the cteature to turn
et the problem of king distance
OWe
telephoninghtteb004 401,e4, and all interest-
ed wee coegretulated its nIICCeig,
In thui comeettee we lore that the /01
POMpany 91 1.;.4144.4 eOW
1
bail tine a line of the same chamfer he
tweee Torento, Handlten, Brantford, In
preen, Wooriatock, and Loudon, and pro
9 tact the clover has begext to 40044,
nova to gtve those of es subscribers wIt
have 4 loge brielitees between my twit
these pieta perfect MeanS of Coonneniel
tiee, free from all diererbing Suenda On
Ohne linen The inetrumente used th.ie
system are more peweeful than awe ;
erdinary leo, and eaele convereetien requires
f A cerious ferryhoet le builclien for th
" River Clyde at Gleegow. bunged of retie
Leg meltable lentlie
meet the rim aud in ee oliv btidgee t
rt ef the boat itself wi ruterahe tbildee:cathrriedde:
All= hydratille elevatere, by which it ean
the one of two ooreplete opper wires fo
She ishele leergile of the linen Th***.lotitre
the Teethed et teguriee th..
'Nee. wonderful 'remit* are .Of Senr4
patented by the. Bell 'Cenweety. It 'would
enty Pte.:emery. tnituild 4 line of :the SAM
Wort trent Haritiltint tO Baffelo enehl
Torento eud London to be put . ditee
with New York and Belittles and , the °OM
pany would el woo widerteke. thie
t rated or lowei-Sel. The beet will be e doub
ender. lee feet long, of 55 foot beam. fOt
12 feet 6 Melee draught.
2e
Swath politiee ben beee thrown tato
etato of omidereble excitement by the
publiotion of the etetieties relaties to the
t, ruete.1%tattetteetionord_learethme uSpendyi,200Thbe4rveipargebtl
bedt men 1h76, with A totel of 4,e2orpooko
•
There orce alee 1,109 eSevente With 25 QV)
One& The einita Of the alarni liea be the
it diet the indent are alteolit entirely
Cerlist.
tastietrreTttrligioQeliteltbettre4U4SWI:efiliWthirIL'eMeni"Wl
ug la Lendoe had an added Toilette
the ether day in the overturning of
seeding eliertot mei the tbrewieg out of
the driver. the eecond chariot running over
the men. The opectatoo applauded in and
old that it alone was hilt worth the price of
admistion. The driver died at the hopitel
withie hear.
An eittlleee railway tree, emeheing of 409
pletfeme cere4 to be 04491 the attreetiene
at the Nem Exhibittou, The Bee willite seek
so that the plenteous will be en a, level with
the surfece mid the train will ron slowly
eueugb to plermit moot people to step oa
while It le lei motien ; but for the semen
modetleas of elderly people step of fifteen
aeoonde every teintito will he rude. The
motive power will be electricity.
Theron a youvg women In Athena., Gee
who, nelige rout weildevored and right -
Waded yoreatt women, chinch to being
looked at. nha bed a negro ameba the
other dity for looking Into the window es
he wee winkles by the hem, mad *he fol.
lowed that up by writing to * praminent
young man of the town, threatening hint
alto with erreat if be didn't gait looking
at her when be met her on the street.
Comatiou illegal In Feauee, and bodies
itTe to be taken to Italy to be burned. hi.
Morin, dying recently in Faris, left lastrue-
tient gat hie hodrohould be sent to Milan
to be Vaned. This wan done, and the out
of the tecineratIon was but fifteen shilling,.
The Itellan Ctiotora Iforite, hoivevert levied
$70 import duty on the body when it came
into the country, and the setae amount ex-
port duty when the ashen were *ken beck
to France.
A Man was digging s hole In a field ad-
joining Trinity Chiecin Margate, &gland,
when his piclonee suddenly penetrated *
ovity end fell from his hand. Ile just
managed to reeve before the °sixth gem
way and exhibited a liege eubterraneous
chamber ebtut 12 feet le height. It wee
found to contain 4 =Mbar of hnmen and
other remelt% and tbere wan aloe a long
underground passage, prnbably co:mooting
the climber with the sea ahore. Within
o hnnared yards of the spot there are
some very remerkeble antugglen' envoi,
and them is Borne little doubt that the
pregent discovery is of an obscure portion
of this retreat.
dicient breinese ler nth a line coeld bo
lied
.e.ramwomene,..,01,1019,1gmemets,
The Speoial ref4t1I-roi
e if The YoutWe CoMpeulma" for the co
lug per, as imeeeneed in tau (Mood tfouv.
einr We hme recelvetl, leolude fix Sala
Stotio, and Om bemired end Fifty Sleet
Stories, fully ilieltreted. Ale° Taloa of Ad-
venture* Illuetreted Sketebee of Trent.
linmeroue Artielee, 8914140Q and
Articles, Iroueoleild Article*, One TheltaAnd
Anecdoten timely Editorials on the leading
minion of the deyt And a whole page melt
week for the little mon " The Cempentee "
bee won *Vete lo the home life obteined by
eta other per; ma Le newl every week in
nearly elf a Milliort funnies. With its
Double ilelidey Numbere Thankegieleg,
Chrlstaus. :Now Tore end fluter, ito
ohle Illuitreted Suptiesnmete, itit fin
pipet end beraatitaleittmemno otherweekly
Wormy paper Can mach it in value. It 14
roily 4t450 vow or only $1.75 4 year. 11
ermined $1.7tittiew you on hem it to JOIATO
ary fro and for e full you from that
dete, nolediegthe Supplement* and Diehl*
litimbern anil the Anneal Went-
itIM List with 500 illustrations. Adams
"Th*, Youth's Cumpouton," Boston, Mese.
ii tery et Napoleon L may fully ex
Lots et good starlet& OTO told Of "Long213 traction %hick Bonlengerism
John" and Ids deluge in Chlogo. In the
to of 1873 there Walla run en Set Smiehti
k, At the height of the excitement e
form was men moving (Iowa the street,
Lug ar4 bureau roll of beek notes. It
Wentworth. To everyone be root ha
the remark then won't ahead
juet going down to mthe
t with Sol, The non 4 read like
wi re. Arriving et the beak ong John
towered above the bode of the clamorous
deist:titter*, prahed men out of his wey with
bit ,gigarttio Arms, lend oiled out:—"on
fe lows rant money. Stand back and give
moa ehence. I went to male depostetof
$20,000." In five minutes the "ran" Wee
over and embank awed,
•Stout 'Women,
Vinmen who are too atout ahould avoid
bright colors, exoept for trbninings only.
Black oz. very dull shades are host:even white
preterable to anytbmg brilliant. They
mut not increase the breadth of their
simulacra by botiffant effeota, =leas their
width at that point is dispropottionately
narrow as compared with their waist. They
mustaxy to profit:toes shapely meet lay means
of V-shaped trimmings both back and front.
This is a hotter devioe than exceuive tight
vthich usuelly aggravatee rather than
raocleratee the suggestion of fatneaa. The
variety in designs of bodices is now no great
that anybody, no matter how badly ahaped
by nature, ratty at leant be very considerably
improved by art. And fat woman must
not be afraid to add artificial expanse to
herself. It is on that point that I have to
argue with my customers. Bat I generally
eninvince them that a good deal of tournure
is essential for them, no matter what the
prevailing fashion as to bustles may be. A
distensiozt ot the draperies at the rear of the
skirt reduces, by means of proportion—and
it hi proportionately that the eye judges of
with titi everything—the seeming size elf a woman.
girl on life'li threshold,
omen who, having tasted the pleas
"i excitements of society, finds them
either pples of Sodom or no longer
available "Turn, and choose again nobler
pleasures, simpler aims, more tuiselfish
tri-
umpba." To her to whom have been given
worldly riches and "solid wealth," great
blessings if greatly used, "Set not your heart
on them, but on the desire to use them for
the elevation and help of your fellows, for
the cultivation and enjoyment of the spirit-
ual powers of yourself and your friends."
These are the only kinds of pleasures and
riches that endure, and that build a king-
dom in the heart and in the life which
worldly calamity cannot overthrow nor per-
sonal disappointment destroy.
For, after all, it is only our "desire,,"
our " wishes " (from an old German word
that means "pleasures)," our "admire -
tions," that makeand mould us, that fashion
tha immortal part of us., that measure our
valet: as human atoms in our relations and
influences on other atoms, that surround us than being one,
with an atmospbere of either pure or foul
essociations within whiala our little day
must be lived oat, that ultimately make
our happiness and the happiness of those
nearest to us ; for "20 be truly happy is a
question of how we begin, not of how we
end ; of what we want, not of what we
have. An aspiration is a joy forever, a
possession as solid as a landed estate, a for-
tune which we oan never exhaust, and which
gives us year by year a revenue of pleasur-
able activity. To have many of these ia to
be spiritually rich." .
MARIA _OILTRUTH.
The happiness of every one depends more
on his own mind than upon any or all eater -
nal circumstances.
When alone, guard your thoughts; in the
family, guard your temper; in company,
guard your words.
We are haunted by an ideallife'and it is
because we have within us the beginning
and possibility of it.
Kindnesses are stowed away in the heart
like bags of lavender in a drawer, to sweeten
every object around them
If we did but know how little some enjoy
the great things that they possess, there
would not be much envy in the world.
Character is like bells which ring out
sweet music, and which when touched acci-
dentally even resound with sweet music.
Be careful to be juatewhat you would like
to appear to be. We often think too much
ef appearing to be a worthy charaotet rather
First fiurglar—" What's that, Second
Burglar—"A sample ease ; I spend the day-
time going around (idling oil to keep doors
from senealtbig. Qoocl. wham°• :dint 12 2"
Care of The Body.
Most of those who die between twenty-
five and sixty, unless they die by accident,
die by some indiscretion--anch as the over-
indulgence of appetite, or the neglect of
food when needed or the overstrain of
business, or exposure to changes of terotieree
ture without corresponding changes of cloth-
ing. 15 ie intelligent caution that sweet
sickness; and caution ought to be
in possession and in exercise before middle -
life. It is so much easier to prevent seriOUS
sickness than it ie to aecure recovery from'
it. Hence it is that many who are deficient
in vigour in early life outlive the vigorous
and careless.
tu :seem to have for the French tut
on returning irom Italy, *wax
old woman lune and bobbing,
a asIrad her where showas going, to !thigh
replied 401 wont to see the Ern ror
lend they tell ma he zs on the road. yni"
ri tt
lead Napolean. "Ho is a tyrant as well as
the adieu. What hew, yougslnodby hire V'
44 That may be," old the ol team " but,
Meer all, 13 1* the Ring of tbe people, exid
Bourbons were the Kings of the noble'. We
home amen biro, and if we are to have
o tyrant let him be one chosen by our-
seive4."
p the MU atVevere when ha mush
The Tomb 0 Alexander the Groat
Acoording to a Berlin correspondent,
ws has been received from Egypt to the
t %et the tomb of Alexanderthe Greet,
wbich De Schliemann sought in vain last
wioter, 131 000 been discovered in Alex -
The coffin io of inarble, and is
covered with beautiful deeorationa. Its
breadth is about three feet and a half, and
its height throe feet. The skull of a man
wee found in it. The °elfin ie -aa found in
a brick vault, about twenty feet high, cover-
ed by about eight feet of earth: The keep.
er
*1 213 museum at Boulak is going ahortln
to make a through examination of the torch.
Typhoid from Milk..
An epidendo of typhoid fever occurred
some time since in CaMbridge, Masstichus•
etts, as the result of the infection 01 213 milk
supply obtained from a New Hampshire
dair' tr. The roilk cans "were washed with
water from a well whioh had been contamin-
ated from a neigbboring privy -vault. A
case of typhoid fever had occurred on the
preinises a short tinteprevious.
An English oniropodist advertises in a
country paper that he lima "removed
corm: from several of the oroaned heads of
Europe."
Damage to crops by early frost has not
been confined to Manitoba. Reports from
Dakote and Montana say that the injury
has been very great and that in one county
in the former territory, namely Ramaay,
seventy families are entirely homeless and
destitute.
Magistrate -- Madame,your husband
charges you with assault. Madame—Yes,
your honor I asked him if he would ever
cease to love me, and he WU so slow in an-
swering that I bit him ewith a mop. I'm
only a woznan, your honor (tears), and a wo-
Manta life without love is a, mere blight.
"Miss Maud,' he said, " I have °erne in
this evening to ask you a question, and I
have brought a ring with me. Now, before
you try it on, I want to tell you that if you
feel molined to be a sister to mei will have
to take it back, as my father objects to my
sisters wearing such large diamonds." And
Maud said she would keep the ring.
The Liverpool "Post." tells the story,
which is rather late in getting intO print, of
how the Prince of Wales, last year at Hom-
burg, put an end to the imitating of his garb
by dudes, particularly American dudes. As
SoOn as he arrived there he found that the
out ot his coat, the pattern of his widgeon
the shade of his necktie, were accurately
copied. It annoyed bis royal highness,and
i
a few day e afterward he appeared n a
hidems suit of dirty, blanket -hued tweed.
With it he wore a red shirt, a blue collar'a
soft felt, low -crowned, cream -colored hat,
with a band of orange ribbon, and had a blue
silk handkerchief sticking out of his coat
pocket. This, with tan ShOeS, completed a
costume, the like of which was never seen
off of the variety stage. The strangest thing
about the story is that it says that this per-
formance of the Prince effected its purpose,
and this year he and his cloches have been
left alone.
The moat powerful war ship afloat, the
Benhow, has just been completed and joined
the British hiediteraneart fleet, She carries
two 111 -ton guns besides other *mailer game
A shot from one of them vreighs 1,800
pounds, and when propelled by' the full
charge of 850 pounds of powder it can tear
ita way through a whole yard of iron ar-
mor. The gm 18 43 feet 8 niches long, and
the projectile is over 41 inones long and
nearly 1 foot 5 inches in diameter. Eng-
land's eight best ironolada cost nearly $25,
000,000, the Benbow costing $2,800,000.
Two more ships nearly finished, the Nile and
Trafalgar, of 12,000 tons each, will eon
nearly $5,000,000 apiece. At this price each
will be worth its weight in copper. The
simultaneous diaohaxge of the guns of the
entire fleet would develop force enough to
lift the ships, gun:: and all, two feet ont of
the water.
The Comtesse de Paris has formed a
League of the Rose, a Reyalist union, and
this is the programme: "The Roae of
France is a league which has for its objects
She re-establishment of monarchy and the
defence of Conservative interests. The
league proposes to inolnde in its ranks men
and women belonging to all classes of society,
without distinction of worship or creed, and
to unite them in a friendly association for
defending in common Conservative interests
against Radicalism religious liberty against
persecution, the riglit of fathers of families
to educate their children freely, the interests
of labor and those of property. The mon-
archy„ traditional in its principle, modern
in its institutions, will guarantee these
interests and those rights at -the *tame time
that it will secure the material and moral
ptogress of the people. Women of -France,
you can do much for this League. It in-
volves your Most cherished convictions, and
the future Of your children. Labor for them,
for the monarchy, for France. The league
has as its emblem the rose of France."
The Years.
It is sometimes said that to the young the
future always looks glowing and glorious,
while as age creeps on the expectation of
anything more than a repeated monotony
dies gradually away. It certainly would
not be thus were life's experiences read
aright. Each year brings to each life Some
new joy- or sorrow, some fresh idea or ex-
perience. If these are incorporated into
our lives so that we" discover their meaning
and learn their leesons, each Year will find
our characters firmer and stronger, our
thoughte clearer and deeper, our heants fuller
and richer, end our expectations purer
indeed, but also larger and more trusworthy.
Only those with thallow minds or deadened
energies or selfish hearts talk a the inono.
to f