Exeter Advocate, 1901-1-10, Page 230
SL
Rev. Dr Talrnao.e Speaks of the
Perils of Ufe.
patelt fromWashington says; arid hs COLUe to see whether
it 13
Dr. Talniaae ,preached from the true. I3ut before this $(11iViO0 is done
le lig text; "SO V1131 Shipmaster t1iai mao vill begin to think about
came to him, and. eaid. terito him,- hie soul. I.Ie has boon oil 111$ 1434it
4
'What meanest thou, 0 1uep iiee, 10C, He has made his last visit acx
call upon thy God, if SC) 3)0 that God that bad honee. His children will.to-
think upon 1.1.9, that we perish marrow maiming no, ice the change.
God told J'omili to go te Nineveh and. for all eternity he will bless God of that door, Once in, yon. will find
uf3t‘a go,
He tb.ought to get away ermicle, when yen last saw, them, and there it.
tt t. —Jonah I. 0. This mament h starts heavenward;
an an unpleaeant errand. Tle would or thia visit to the Brooklyn Tab- the old family factea eweeter than
from, his- ti-it..er putting to eea. aVitla Again: Learn thit a xnan may wake will be found that He who -1,v,9 your
pack under his atalif ,I)aal.:Alithira on hie ap too late. lf, instead of sleeping, fatiher's God, and your mother's God,
way to Joppa, a ,sea -part. 'Hee go( lx Jonahhad been 011 his knees confesS- ad your children's God, is your own
down among the shipping, and 'S`a.-ree:ug his sins from the time he went on most blessed Redeemer, to wthom be
to the men IYIng arouod °II the decks, l'aiard the craft, 1 think that God 1 - in the Chureh throughout all
Tiaay ‘e eoved asleep in the side ot
be p, thoiugli tile sea and the sky
a raid vare,stle, 0 nlY God. Wake
them up! Drop a thunderbolt upon
their eoffinalid and wake theta up!
/ know that tuanY of you
are sea -tossed, and drive,u by sin ix
wxrae storni than that which cam
down en the coast of China, and yet
I pray God that you limy, like the
sailor, live to get home. Int the house
of teeny manasione your friends are
waiting no inek7t you. They are WO -11
dexing why you do am, come. &seeped -
from the ,shiplvreelts of earth,
may yen at last go in! It -will be a
bright atiglvt!—A very bright_. night
as you put your thuna,13 on the latch
"Iilrhich of tlives.a vessels sails to-daye would have .saved, him' from being
The sailore answer, "Yonder is 3- voS- thrown oVer" board. But he woke up too
s)el going to T.arslaiish. 1 think if Yo'u late. The tempest is in full blesteind
hurry, you may get on board her." the sea, in-convalsion, is lashing itself
Jonah steps on board the rough craft; and:, nothing ,will stop it now but file'
asks how mach the fare is', and pays overthrow -of. Jonah'.
,
R. -allchar is weighed, ''''46'.'lls are 8°' men sometimes wake up too late Gold Is worth £140.000 a ten.
hoisted, -,:ilia the rigging begias to The last hour has come. The man has .‘‘,.
rattle in the strong breeze of the 1101 mere idea oudyind than 1 have of "e-l-ne'n lase 17 times as ni'llq gi"es
'a, mein
Mediterranean. .loppit is, an exp,osed dropping_ down this inoment., The --e-7" a e ,, 11 et, 3
h,arlocniaa and it does aot take long 'rigging is all white with the foam of '-'11144'' has un'' — ts"1°1' Of
cea. e `The sailors like what they etil.1 over 10000 tens, Germany 2.i.
a78,000. oif the' Britieh populatiOM
for the vefssels to get out on the broad death. Ho, cilia the night is 11! '41
'11111834 die," he says, "yet not ready. 1
a "spanking breeze," and the plunge mast; Push out upon this awful sea, but work cdwaYs tlimierg"und in min"
xl the vessel front the. crest of a tall have nothing vi.111 which to Pay MY Attar of l'OSE0,5 aelle at £20 au la
wave is exhilarating to those at fare, ,The )vhite caps I the darkness! .tvii" hs exa°t137 fi" titue the at
home on the deep. Bat the strong the hurricane I .E.Ioev long have .1 been ' ' ' ...t -
breeze, becomes a gale, is.-.b.e gale a sleeping? Whole days, and months, arid • Anstralla's dea'°1-'rate Is
hua-riean,e; The affrighted ..passen- Years. I am qutte awake now. I see, the Inwest in ihp IV
gers ask the captain if he ever. saw averythnig,abat it is too late." Invesi: gaTY's is 333, tbe ligilest
lanythin like this _6efore. aoh yes,- ble hands take him hp. Re str d 1 s Perry mode the fir
,e)' g e
T E SUNDAY SCHOOL ON OTIIIR DE'S BEI
NTERNATIONAL LESSON,, JAN. 13.
,T ortoplotli Eiatry;" '
Clolaten ',if. 9,
PRACTICAL NOTES. „
' Verse 6, .The disciples.. The two
erred to in veree L Went. With:Out
qUestioning. Did. ae l'esue,,eornmerid-
ed itheni; ,Terke. that the
cYwner firat eliallenged the dis-
ciples, but -freely permitted the use of
thet ass and colt when 'told that the
Lid' hadneed of them. "11' must have v,l-'4sted
Q.
'wonderfully impressed the two di- 'fur
'plea with oar Lord's power to 1391111ll
out how exaetly things turned ar., they time.
had, been minutely clescribed,,a" met
'7. Their cluthea.,‘L'iose, large mantle's,
put on the colt as 14.11 earea, sadd e. The ,
sob thereOn. Xernially,helphr
him to raount„) as "'''ho' were a gr
SONE HEROIC FEATS WHICH HAY
BUILT UP FORTUNES.
litnxice of Norfolk's vouitoetion,
den rick' -S 15(31:50C14 fif
Wa!miao—candittons
Peo,rlon.
The hero is tholOorY
try; he may be' also t
posterity. YEbere ale
making yotir childre
„ ,
ful for/your exee
provA that if
monarch. l
A ver,y/great xnultituc
ages, world without end, Amen. most 'of itaat'peapie.e spree
naelats ' the way. n
of laeifier, as -With us‘ca
or the outer steps
ear, 'Travelers
where 'O'ustoans h
by contact
us many ac
eustoixl. '
,
m:1,s of
pieces
the
'
ODDS AND ENDS.
'trier Notes' Fronn the !Poor fElla
of Me Globe.
1 a
13
n.
,s.serling, or every
id
Noleon title lasts.
'Assurn.ing that' the cell
'three erenera,tions of
,
coun- Put down the fortu
old -Mine to put coown the fol
many Ways of Nelson at ,£1
embrace
elsons we may
e of each Nelson
une ofeach
00, all b Otise, long,
&'the for
humble orci1311.43n‘eenblcompound ilY;(1gtb5Yle's‘ has1eits latbboullulltae'll.::::13jtieaaii11.::Ltf `11131:°' floc°1aesfa°11tt:Igto'1,1,-)iliCtflell'1,'9-1tdIi:!:'*e0Q's0;,,' 0 0331 down
n, not„
ake
terity is that it only begins Lo capttue-`r.9lie SPanisli
f ,suet ntigax altv.htabeai(1,agiki000nciat\ cope idia intfee1 sevan pan4sh sb,ps and
sinkings •
ffective after the lapse of, ()en-LT:tries 000,” might ve been the form' of an
and meanwhile the benefactor may be ' account sent int.o'tive Government by
quite forgotten, says London Tit -Bits. Lord Rodney after hi,s relief of Gibral-
, A much simpler way is Lo be a hero -tar 2782. It is the sum which im
and to perform, smite heroic feat which been paid in pensions for his galleentery.
will induce the Government to grant The present I,ord Rodney valUes his
to you and your heirs for e -vet sill).- ancestor's heroic feat at £2,000 a year
stantial penSion. There is nothing nov-. in hard cash., and as he succeeded in
el in the lidea--it has been carried 1851, -he has himself received the
out again and again, and there are
' Birmingham, Engl
-ling them alt
There are 15
streets In Loud
averages 120
100 houses
The
times
on I,
c,
''this is nothing:, mariners are seew to get loose. In vain. They bring
to admit -danger to la.ndsmen. Bat, his souft to thi, vergy 'Chey let
after a while, crash goes the mast, it down over the 6ities
and ±he vessel pitches so far "e-beames, THE; wiNDs
end" there is a fear she wilt not be The see epees Its frothing jaws to
rightel. The captain axaswers few &wallow. The,, ightnings hold' their
,queations, and orders the, throwing' torches at -tAe soups buria.l. The
' t of boxes and bundles, and s° thunders 4,111 their bells as he drops.
of the cargo aS they can get ..e,•'-'1,erna /death ca.tches.hun. He has
he captain at last confesses gone for ever. And while the canvas
at little hope, and tells the or eked, and the yarde` rattled. , and the
hat they bad better go , ropes thumped, the sea took on i
t_ la:The rest of the st° 1 funeral dirge, playing, with open
for you ltn?'-i 1 pason.• of midnight Si.01:111, "Be
a the sea, the - threw have called, and ye -refused ;/-2 per
.0 ' )9
i stretched out my hand, ar'id• 1111'n'-
., a; evil 1 „ices' a man's regarded; but ye have w-,
un down lir e I all nay counsel, ander steel pen° at
The Bible eays Inay reproof ; I also vai, in 1824, se,11-
Tarshish. But calamity ; will me, apieoe,,
the sailors bring t ea,meth,e. setaare miles of
1
ne ship, lift him Now, lest axen. Each square mile
streets, and eacti street
In
east awayl
emerald shade
drops , s each fretting leaf
nsistenee of -5 rief;
hopeles f life deilis;
But, hark, and now thrZ ,e, unafraid,
a,robta.ripalos to axe° shies.
' —Heler Maga.zine.
4;0--
N
A Story of a 4
opening Match.
14 BY A'
a forlorn looking fig,
ure as she Shuffled along the frozen
, river road in rthe late November alit -
shine.
"1 believe I never saw' stela an aim-
less, ,shiftltiss, family In my life," de-
clared Judge Hilton emphatically aa he
and hia daughter Mildred detected the
thinly clad figure before them. "If
anything, she's as bad as the rest;
though when her mother died I itnag
fried the responsibility of caring for
the family would have a beneflcial in-
fluence 011 Nan., Instead I actually be-
lieve It's had the opliosite effect. Just
look at that torn dress aud. ragged
, shawl! If a girl bad any spunk, she'd
never he seen 00 a , thoroughfare as
pUblic as this is in Such a slatternly:
condition." .
"But think, father," and.i‘lilcired look.,
ed up considerately, "how hard she
must be obliged to work even to 'exist'
the family, as Vuele Joe tided to say,
'I believe she has a load of evergreen
now to. Sell for winter deeorations, It
a..0asy lot by any means flux pew!
art as." And afildiaid tucked the
hick:. retie more statgly About per.
Nan Ha.scall lived in the old, aban-
doned mill domrn .hY. the falls,. "flvvas
the shelter -Job Haseall coitld .get
tif,ter, his wife's death, for rents Nvere
not easily obilrilre-761--tiiritt vvas .Own
that 1110 fartTv's tole sourcts
Was cut off. ,
Ants. Ffitscall had somehow succeeded
S b7. ahnOst' a Miracle, frail es site
was, in providing food itiid shelter for
the growing fathily of ten, ,
Jett' was, forever lounging about 1115
pea -Mince steps , in strumer,. ii,nd't his
Winter Watch tower was the settee In
, the west 'Window of the smal
tore near the tavern.
01"rhaps next week I'll be 6,141,0 g
Job sorneWheres," he would say 1
10 early spring flays,' ad In 0 531031101
need inamMit he went by 'MS mrlfe at
1110 witslat,Vb, bent on, hia ttectistoined
'offering grotind, and when the first
oSt cante in the fail Ile Would brae°
rioei .131 dedlare: tnit '•
:nee loggin 'fore ,Wirtter'S 310103.
111(11 tv11kli flto ilrysex
clia-
use I
have
0. no mao.
t nought
itould none' of
11 laugh at your
ek when ereqr fear
ec e you should make.
of , fo,reig.. -
e Which she herself ignated a
having .been ,thrown together in tin'
.
dark.
"I can' spell 'all the cominon
without looking at thein. J -u -&g
m -e -n -t," she spelled. "Leave out tie
`e' before 'merit.' Separate looks eas3
but some'll spell it with an '0' ever
time." ' •
In early November Dr. Randall,
genial, retired practitioner, a man wh,
had won the distinction of being th,,
,philanthropist of the village, bad or
-
fend tuition and all legitimate ex-
penses for one year at Douglass sem:.
nary'to any- young man or woman who.
should spell all others down ,in old.
fashioned contest. This was -to be belt,
at the high school building about the
raiddle-of December. It made no dif,
ference whether the contestants at
tended school or not, the only requirc
ment being that they couldn't be ovcy
21 and must reside in town.
That Ethel Maynard or Ralph Hol-
man or perhaps George Lewis would
get it was the foregone conclusion in
the minds of nearly all the inhabitants
,of the village.
"Just you wait. Perhaps you'll be
mistaken," was ll,Tan's soliloquy aftei
hearing the matter thus prematnrely
settled. "I don't care for the old tui -
1100; wouldn't have it anyway, but
'show you I can do soniething," and she
nodded her head dellantly_to an imagl
nary, unsympathetic audience,
"All ready?" asked Dr. Randall the
evening of the contest, glancing at tbe
,ager faces about him. ‘d think, so,h
he added. "Ethel Alaynard and Ralph
Holman may be captains' and choose."
Amid intense excitement long lines
of spellers were soon in their places.
"Any one else like to spell who hasn't
been (Ira:Wit?" And ljr, Randall 101)1(06
over his gold bowed. spectacles incptir-
ingly. "I'll just wait_ a incenent."
There wes n slight stir in the
corner, and Nau Haeenli slowly arose.
"She liere--Nan Ijascail!" and 11 tit-
ter ran round the room.
Nan's face flushed with indig,nation.
- caught her eye and smiled
'approval.
"Your tu o mose, Mr.
aid Dr, tu ail.
"Did Miss Maynard Choose,
Very well. 1\'an
rage woman spends.. twelve
ore money on, her hats, than
er boots; and the, reverse' in the
of a man.
59,521,500 croins were struck in, the
British during 1898, being over
two'. and quarte,r million above the
previous record.
A sum ef £3,000,000 has Ibsen spent
by Queensland. in importing. many
thousands of eligible settlers since
the colony was founded.,
edF,KorFolgodcaoani rates a:4d7,,t0a0x0,e0solothe,..,uynilieatr-:
again.st £41,000,000 France, and
only £12,000,000 in Russia,.
moon-a'1311.0.11116111111111.1t, 0..od,mg- the land
With mystery and unreeaeurecl dream deli htgreen
But they who ‘‘,--ith me gazed on those
Distanced in moonlight, while the night wind
Rare incense from deep forest altars fanned,
Ali, whither gone, with giddy seasons' flights?
"The
neir gar-
tental• sign
eta. are SPread
crowd br'idal
the remoter East,
e, not been affected
Europe, have given
, ,
tints of this pictureSaue
11 one' oceasion fleveral
cad. were-f.eivel•'eu with eiett
.
gorgeous silk, over which
, .
n and ,his friends rode.,,Others
,
down branches fr-5M: the trees, and
trewed them in the way. Branches
ofl palms, held in nearly all countries
to be the emblem of victory. '
9. The multitudes that went 'before.
and that followed. TItOse who met
him eonaing out from Jerusalem, and
thogi who were going the same way
as he. Hoeaona to the Son of David.
The word "lios,anna,” means " Save
now." See Pais. 118,26, 26. Tthey sang
o paaisa,ge from a well-known hynan
surreaa by the priests when they -offer-
ed saerifieee. In the highest. In
heaven," as in the angels' hymn,
"Glory 'to God in the higheAt.” It
seems; tO have been after this singing
began that mar Lord wept over Jeru-
salem,
10. When he was come into Jerusa-
lem .all the city was moved. Profound-
ly agitated with joy and vexation,with
enthusiastic support and bitter resent-
ment. 'Who is this ?"' A condensed
phrasing of the manifold questioning
that now agitated the city.
11. The multitude. The pilgrims,
pressing steadily forward to the city.
Thils is Jesus, the, prophet of Nazar-
eth of Galilee. As if sue.1.1 a state-
ment explained all.
11
' laandaome sum of £70,000 a,s the,result
maty families in Engbind to_day wilt° i of Admiral Rodney's bravery 118 years
. ,
have to' thank some brave forgotten ,, a '
ancestor for their good fortune. 'Thel After this, 3-28,000 for the relief o1
only thing' that''is necessary -is that ' aleknaw seems mean enough; lt
year iheroism shall fake some' Striking all Sir Colin Campbell received,
„form, stah as the defeat of a Napo -1 LORD NAPIER OF blAGDAI,A,
leen, the capture, of a city, Or the since his succession to the peerage
pa.eifying of a rebellion. ' 1890, has drown 420,000 from the
The'Duk,e of Norfolk, must be vdry, ' Treasury on account of the first Lord,
grateful to the 'ancestor who perforna- ', Napiers storming of Mazdala Fort,)
ed a feat of valour on.Flodden Field,l, bringing ,the total, sum paid up to
for, though the soldier and, his deed • 60,000.
of daring have been forgetterf for cen- 1 ,Herolam, When it is recognised by
turries, ,the Duke drew .a. cheque for !(he Government in this way 18, 311-
3-304) the other day on we -count of it. ieileed, a royal road to fortune, One
'The aneastss waa the Eiii'l of BUT-, Ilunda,•od:--.'and. .sixty-five thousand
rey, and for, hie feat a grateful Gov- Ilkaundis lin*, been paid to the heirs el
ernm,ent gave him and his deacende l Vioconnt Hardingte, who displayed .
ants fox- ever a grant of £40 a year. glacat braveT,ye in many 'battles in In.,
Year in and yesar out, from 1513 toidla; and tpegixresent Viscount, who
1899., the ,Earl's euecaeeors hove ye -1 served iitl't[6 d WokaeleYIthe Nilo
ce.ived the 3-40. The soldier himself Expedition, Expedition, 5ti11 draws the pension of
ceived only - , 3-3,000 a year which was won by 3118
A FEW PALTRY EIT.I.NDRIEDS, grandfather
but his desc,endants 'have had in all The firA' Lord Keane conducted a
over 3-15,000, and the Duke of Norfolk brilliant eiPedition to the we,stward
has lately consented to stop tlie-pa,y- of the Indus, which has yielded him
, -
in,ent in consid'era'tion - of a cheqne for and ,his descendants 3-118,000;. and
£800 down.. - ' ,Viscourete,Gongh, of the British Ern -
The Duke of IVIarlboreag-lit has much , b'It' sy 19-13eilin, owes an income of 3-4.01
to thank his grea.teincestor for. Bien- i Wweek to the -fact that his grandfath-
beim, where he and his Duch,ess dise, er conquered, the Sikhs—'a vittory
pense hospitality worthy of a King, is which has already* COSt the country
his, rent free, as long as he "lives, ,3-100,000 in, pensions.
1
because the Duke of Marthorough two 'Fiord. Seaton and Lord Conabermere
hundred years ago beat the French st'OP, each receive £2,000 a year fo
army at Blenheim., The Duke's for- feat, of valour performed by an an
Lune, indee,d, has been built up by cestereLone-in'earracla and the other
, .
the hero' of ' ' 1` ' 1.1.1e7_,Wellingtori. The pensio
ele ee
£1
tel
th
he
s y was
n
h above t
batenser than,of old thy burning; orb, warm soft wind that rings o
. Thou planet lone in star forgetting skies! I bindweed bells, she said, and ma
Each ray from taxka viiih tender purport.. Sweet music in the grass will turn
Say,-didst thou not those love lit souls absorb,
wherefore thy splendor aches against m no oyes? 1 the leaves about, and then the
0 nights 01 silver memory, 0 sights! ' I will wither one'by one and fall ,
7—Edith N. Thomas in Harper's 13azar.
and the grasses will turn quite dui
di y, and nb against each. °tine wit
ge.''''''."''''''''''''''''""'''''''''s"•''.‘'... ' shrill and fearsome sound as the wi
1 THE_II{DG[ Boum .. ,,,,Ast itilliaatiintgh
I
'. : sweeps tm along the hedge bottonn,",,e,
little mouse whose ear
g the little
felt frightened, and
' • be quivered While his Tofher talked
0 -
Their Home. She knew just hoawThe felt,' and now
she gave'him coefort and advice about
.
BY MARY ELLIOT. the future, „anifshe tbld them all wliat
they ' must' do, "Vor," said she, "the
,
ld and bitter blasiS-•that will b
.4,'• How the Harvest Mice Bo It and wondered what won' d come of it.
2
; wintee'is too great and stron,s,' for tiny
Little Mrs. Harvest -Mouse loved al -creatures like onrselves, and so while
hedge bottom. She always.said itwke 1 the,big world and the hedge bottom are
more private than the open field, and bearing the cold 'weather We may sleep
also she thought about the farther and quite peacefully, each in a tiny hole,
how he comes to cut the corn, but, until, the wintertime is over and the
leaves the long, stiff grass in the hedge i stuanner crimes again. 'Yeti must seek
bottom safe and , standing when the your holes when the right time comes
cern is' all carried away.bithe barn. and then be sure to curl your tails well
So when Mr. Harvest -Mouse began, toi in to keep them fro -re the frost."
talk to Alra. Haryeet-Mouse 'about ; They all squeaked a little proraise to
where to build. their home she begged 1 remeMber what she said and not tblell
Iiirn to ehoose the long, stiff grass In they ,knew better, and then they,Waile.,
In the field. That is how it happened t world and the sky and the vinter time
the grass stems, mid they bnilt yery ' grown 1,11) mice. AndAhlle they talked
the hedge bottom rattier than the cern; Pered softly to each other of,elfie great
that their 13"t was built between and how quite soon 14 should be
cimningly of narrow blades and bits of and 'chattered mei- atekting flies
that they could thxd,, 'anfi they fixed I could be mo- . •
iiy feather 01' any soft and bending sttiff I from time 'to ar) e and ti.yiag who
eve:. ant sayIng I,
ow the town to
last 1 o t'
a tvee rOU1111 1)0S1nn
1:444,
opveret la.1311.411:inlidgsthofe glornogn,ndligahntdoften
etheYe`andals to the foot rests. There
9fity games they play upon stilts,
ran
tie
are
Ricking Tree,
The "kicking tree" 18 a landmark half
way between Wells college and the near-
est village, which bears evidence of pe-
culiar treatment from the students of
that well known edueational establish-
ment. It Is described as a large elm
whose branchee shade the walk traversed
by the college make purchases, and it ite
e girls whenever they an to
o
teem all in sucima clever way that at -h thef ou
had grown since yesterday abt a half `mile from the college. For
.s1 as xe„ ‘trvest..i.vlouge carne horneand two or' three feetni
, frO, the giound its month, the PaYnlellts aP1)1Y en tho
the stiff groan at til s if it
031011.0 11 g Ibigger ita° -zt Aile noses with
. s fwitha t unit IS sadly maired. There ale eats final p 'chase money. It Is seldom,
ap;rew theee' ,,,ave and anxious, for he brought on it and indicatione that it wao once however, that a railroad rents,loceinct-
Very thin, ,tlie airminer aft blew
lv '011'611,1x end 'tool it nicely a.ir
The (idler ,,irtisses stand'
about 1110 it from the bawl
tie Itindweed ilten ,gre
111ein. It twined
twisted its tendr"
or, then flung
. made 0 Inc
fr. 11
ng t
iring her a
oally, engaged to ,t'e plc-
. Among them were a number of
cellent copies of the world's gil:atest
works of art, and the man, an artist,
found his task a labor of love.
With great eftre he hung the more
valuable copies in the roomy reception
ball and Juia just finished his task
when the lady returned.
Her eyes snapped as she surveyed his
Work.'
hung`Wthose old chestuuta
there?" sho'cried.
"Old masters, niadam," said the star.
'tied artist.
"Old chestnuts, I say; it's the same
thing. If you hung thein, take them
down. I won't have them there. With
new furniture and new decorations and
new carpets and rt1gs ,P11' have new
pictures too. Who Over heard of such
olor
dusteruippery stuff In a strictly modern
h
"And what shall I do with the --tin.
ildcdhestnuts, madam?" the artist 19'uire
"Oh, dump them Into the attic until
can get rid of thola," replied the
And there the "chestnuts" lie, Ma-
donnas and cherubs' and all, gathering
dust and calmly awaitIzuw the ,getting
rid of process,
Relating Leeeinotives,,
Hundreds of loed.
omotives are rented
every year. Several porporatims make
their chief revenue this way, The
Baldwins have many machines "out on
the rental form of payment—that is,
the engines are rented In the seine way
that you would buy a stove on inatall-
ments—so much down, so much a
by Itself. 50 IN"11S1 Soft'and fight aria ' . ' ProPerlY eovered With a tree's 'lanai tives. They are uSually let out to con -
bad nevvs from the corn close bv. Ehe
, Spell yOur best, whispered Mil- whet
dretl. 011(1. She pressed Nett's Itand
the airl htirried bv her look of l'i"Or
cimrtged tiltneat to a smile by Mildred
sympathy,
"I'll give, 500 0087 wo
And "dagnerreetype" was
"If times Caayi don't
03-115 ti bard one." n
con .(20y.
"Idiosyncroole
Missed on "
It,
11010
1(11101,
growth, but all of it is gono DOW; The ttgletops wly) construct tetriporary rail-
ent- hawk had come and. relight their kind-
, , ,
ly,neighber, Field -Moue. But this
r,olinde be said quite gently, sitting 'close to
s, and ,a lit- Mrs. Efarvest-10.ouSe, lest the little.,ones
UP and helped should'Ilear. "Alt," she sahl and heav-
Ind the stems and ed sigh,'"hOw gladi am We chose the
s :from orie to anoth-. long, stiff ,grasa in the liedge bottom
t tiny -bells about And ra,ther than ` the corn in the field!"
y garden neer the nest. "Yes," said he: "we did well 'to choose
ixTest-Nletise Nana vary pleaSed the hedge bottom." , Ant.1 with that he
P was done and Telt happier ran aboUt the ' nest ..and . Counted 1118
Viten eight little batty' ndice Nvere eight 'Children :anxiously and Scolded
situg and safe its:1de. They fitted „into then: a little and tir‘on went a -hunting
s eoft,' 391111(1 bell quite perfectly, for 1118 .supper ,by and by thd (inlet
Which sltows Itow wee they were, ' night canie down and settled on tile lit-
st.' And n OW through the hot stimtner tie falnily and all wits i)eace and
Vett ()tit, days, while .14f1,1)/eSt'AlDitge Was ifleS$ 01`' RWIltie.---nifItir. a
inovir what be busy Mdt11 tile 'children, ITartrest-
ilpl,spelled Mouse was bere anchf,we'
, .
leeting ne`i,Ys for his
ol Three Other food for.
Nan
college girls have done it. Years age wayt fel' hauling, dirt ,from exeava-
.i401130 erratic girl started the fashion of. et s
, , • ,
wallring as fat' as the tree an matking "'•
t to `a who hire the locomotives
on Lae , , ,
, , .
progress by adininisteriiig a vigorous Itick
upon its side.The fashion came to stay,
Now not a college girl think o of walking
by if without touching her foot against
the trunk in a casual, matter of fact way,
Millions.ot. times, probably, has the old
':elmii.ptb.oen thus 'astaniecl.e--Boeton Tran -
he, intiater Who gives his Pupils
pie rules"' :for determining questions
which confront 'non, and partictilarlY
gk31trnt Atidal aneetions le apt to find that
frequently tO
USually have their own Baines glided
on thena so that thootbblie may slit -Tose
that they belong to them. The engines,
as a usual thing, are east offs. They
may have pulled expreSs trains once,
but now they are only Ilt to pull gravel
cars. The engineers who work them
are oftentimes also the east offs of the
profession, They in a3' have operated
expreSs englnes, but tlarougb careless-
ness or otlicr incapacity have been
dl-
eharged from ono road after imetliet
until they 3-30 only tit to haul pravel
wood trains,
efeze aDEirter.
One Of the Chief. teitchittgs In the i'eli-
31' style 18 that to attabt to 011110-
15 necessary or 111 least desires.
tractiee daily lit front; of a look -
0 as to inake Sure that all the
• the easy 0009,