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The Brussels Post, 1889-4-26, Page 21ow,ta�amasn: TOWN DiRl+X i1OHY. 1tflczvILLE Cetr,t•u.- Sabbath Sell -lees at 11 a,m and t1:30 p.m. Sonde). School at 2:30 p. m. 1`rv. John Loss, I3. A.. pastor Rttor Crtrncu.--Sabbath Services at 11 lane and 0830 p.m. Sunday School tit 2:80 p.m, Re-, r-'. I3, t3,nc•tc. AT. A„ imams. Sr. Joules Curacn.—Sabbath te.•rvieee at 11 a.m. and 7 p.m, Sunday School at 0:80 S.M. Rev. W. T, Claff, incumbent. MarnonrsT Cuuncn.—•Sabbath Services at 10:30 a.m. end it:30 p. m, Sunday Sohonl at at 2:30 p.m. Rev, M. Swann, pastor, Ro31AX Cernor.zc Cucrncn.-•-Sabbath ger- vine third Sunday in every month, at 11 a.m. Rev. 1', J. Shea, priest. S,WvaTrov Anitr.—Services at 7 and 11 a.m., 3 and 8 o'clock p.m, on Sunday and every evening in the week at 8 o'clock. et the barraoke. Capt. Dean in command. On» FELrowe' Loma every Thursday evening. in Graham's block, Mnso:nc Lonna Tuesday at or before full moon, in Garfield block. wanted to say, 'Don't drive my 0,r hungry," Robbed Matey, "we have lied nothiug to eat All day " And again they began to erg ; for Lizzie W,1s jean as buttery. The poor children hail gene to bed with THE $K.USSELS POST lied really left, anal dem lin a v.. "Yoe tpsr+ el mat t,1 tielbu' i to this singular Hunt! 1' ,e d,; v,te I Pat, lek Snilivitu yI11 era tit-auly cot,ti for his flee . 1 nud feared -here I ate your 111010 ' nal n,3' eli'ee by IQ an 1 y atter ; he war li,t I know ran a n 0141klra , •,f Inv "ilk nhliged to be von'ttnily &lamed, li^,trher 11 lain, l melte yon w;'1 Net one derail to mime item Minn earns.,, 'Stu food the eight bofove; it wawa except hie Intoner. Even the The ehildren'e teetris gniokly i^(10 limo since they had had n 'fall eettei,at pot the fnod berme, him in ' ollanged lute am!ls' and the meal meal ; the ueighbors, where they tie c;,,...;, t.;nti,.,ue rltli43.t , winch 13icldy piet pee "ti the table had Rea}°ed einee the death of their Ie} the firat t130nu+ut the man for them :sande them forgot their mother, had not given them Any breaitraet, as the poet people theta t,olvss really nothing to oat. It was now dinner time, but there was no dinner for them "Oome Mary," at last said Liz zit, "we must try to get to 001110 arouse. We may porlinpe get n little bread or a few potatoes. If we stay hese we shall starve ; no one will bring no anything to eat here." thought of nothing but the fearful dn' ,r•+r in which the t:4i1.3rtm were, and walking quickly toward them, he exclaimed : "Don't yon see the dog ? He will tear yon to pieces 1" But suddenly he stopped, as if rooted to the ground ; the dog had got tip again and gone neat the children, when he looped up at his master and wagged his tail, It eenmod ay if he A. U. U. W. Donee on first and thud "011 1 1f our dear mother were guests away P Monday evenings of each month. hot ahvo 1" exoIaimed the little one,Par e'v °tem. At that sight n gran! ahaugo FOIIE TERS' LODGE 2nd and last 'Monday getting up with difficulty. came over the man ; the spectacle CACKLES. L O. L. 1st Monday in every even,n a of ascii month in ery month, .hall.The children were very weak, (1ud before him acted upon hem like an May hntohed chick+ are the boat in Orange Hall, could only dreg tbenaeelvee slowly otectrlc shock, and feeliugo such es for brsedere next year. Poor OSFICE.-0f}oe hours from : a.m. along. Hand in bend they totter he had never boil before Realised to : F •r mealy legs in fuwle, an oint to 7:80 p.m. ed on. Several t Mr."' i, . I, Trrrrr = t1' 11.,.".'" times Vary :lacier stir within hien, Ment Suede with eull,hur and horo- and Library. itt E. ,,nca it.. r. ,ubl ' nt n :,nv forth„r. The Children li•.d ,i 1,rn, terrifis,i s,oi it ',MS a•• •tl open from a to'e n cl ,: . ";Cede 1nys and sat down on the high road ; et he cell of the man, fearful of :lever 1,130 enlpaur :u your Roily and Sa nr 1 74:::, : } e Slmw. Li- and 1'. was With Ili•' greateet dill( mmt Ilnteet f•l•11'tvt'ite eaten tt?ain'13 n1c rain' diva. Aiwa y take n dry brarian 3y to B} r s-.... W. t T. I * a:. .vt j,;s• a'll'y that Lint,. persuade.( her to hie Command. They stood with waren day for it. ret alt ng.in, and to Purdue their 1,-tucnst uses. At :tie after Wrap up 1.1ch egg 0marately in a meettnis on the :Ard, 1 ardav in melt month at ' e , S p.m 'sir:. Swann, wap. At last Lizzia f'ineietl Alp- wane al tniuttoed silence, the f•trmer piece of paper if yon want to scop Pr Mt -.1 a , saw n 11,.t1•:e, Anil p.,l'eted t.lward adrt'd : T s, ,..,:',;*•_•4.::...••••1i.-,1,.;. l r , . 1a, t is til • n GaY 11:1,C111,1:: . i1. r ,s ., 7 ti, t, 1Str1 tit v. th leen "Ara you raelle et, fearfully Burn oy ,t -r :;1}x:11', a colt Mein tip el w M • 1 Mary, c Shall eta s^ r n art and 1Ct: :kinky. 1 butt r t�1 � 'a 1 c t for d e.'l e you ' . t F.6' tt t.11no: •n t n Y even despite shout he -ize t r.. • t f is , p Ii e I ,tu 1 feed; it S. ,t Clot Thog. E&1 13r s ur 1 : „121 thiti tn. eat; , t 6311 find the (1).., 0 fool ?„ '111 phis lneterial for Om egg, D. Steward, Aaseisor, and Jas T. nose, hied people there ” But without ,v unug for all Air Halted limo apriulrled uu the inCollector. l each mn Dead meet, the lot M on It took} thein mere than a quarter an+nver he continued : ft let and droppiug boards absorbs ScuninDoetee—T.le:etcher chairman), "f an hour before they teat:lied the "Oome en then, you shall have all bad smell, and warde off damp• H. Dennis, A. utmtee, J. erarereaves, J. farm hoe -e, for such it proved to be. eomethmg to eat, and as much as nosy. Z. Denman and Jas. Buyers; Sec.-Treas., With hesitating stops theyntaproech you like." W. H. Moss. Meetings 1st Friday even- ed the house, for they had never ng in each month. Pattie Smoot. TEAcnKlte.—D-11o. Shaw, Principal, ]fisc Richardson, Miss 13ambly, Miss Abraham and Miss Taylor. Baine or Ewan. -Reeve Graham, • Clerk Scott, Jno. Wynn, A. Stewart and J. G. Skene. Dr. )Iohnes, Medical health Meer. grief Patna Sellivau lead taken this farm near Kilburn ,(bout ct pear be fore. A. kind Prnvidouoo bad di reotod the abildreu'e Mope to Mina ; but if the dog had not taught him a leseon in kindnoea, who knows what might, after all, hive become of the peer orphans ? But Be who is the :Rather of the fatherless would a su redly not have forsaken them, (�iy,bUb;ren;'s tamer. A. TALE (els THE IRIS1-I „e, iatp hearts, stood mtill at the FAMINE. . door uu:il the voice ceased. Then The potato famine in Ireland nets Lizzie opened the door and both the nowhere felt more severely than in children en erect. Tho farmer eat the par of the country where the ' ,n can arm choir by the fire, following story is told as a tea„ "Well, what do you want ?" he tale : ! harshly asked the children, who In a emelt village in elle nt the j were too frightened to utter a ward most barren districts of the 'Wept et ,tad to tell their errand. "Can't Ireland, there lived a very peeryou. speak ?" he asked, still more widow, whose vole inheritance from roughly. her husband was two healthy child- Lizzie at last took courage, and ren, girls, of the reipec iva mite of said, gently : three and five. Painfully, and be "011, if you would be so good and the utmost efforts, 'leu ceinievsd to give tis the Meet little bit to eat—lb pass two yeare of her eerrewful 003(111 piece of bread or a few pota• widowhood. Bad and smtn: v Pond tone." "I thought so," shouted the farm- er ; arm•er; "I was sure yon were nothing bttt begears, although yott do not seem to belong to this neighbor- hood. We have plenty of those here, and do not want them to come from other parte. We have not bread for oureetvos in these hard limes. Yeti will get nothing here. Be off this moment." The children, dreadfully frighten- ed, began both to ary bitterly. "That will not do you any good," Continued the man, "that kind of whining is uothing new to me and eon'} move me, Let your parents feed you ; belt they, no doubt, pre- fer idling rather than get their liv- ing by honest labor." "Our parents are dead," eaid Lizzie, "I thought so," replied the farm- er : "whenever the children are scut out to beg their father and mother are alwaye dead, or at least their father. This is a mere exam for begging. Be off this menat0." "We have not eaten a morsel the whole day," pleaded Lizzie ; "we are so tired that we cannot move a step. If you would but give ne the hetet little bit to eat, we are so hungry," "I have told you I should not, Beggars get nothing here," The farmer got up with a threat ening look. Lizzie quickly opened the door, and drew her eietor along with her. The children again stood in the farmyard, but knew not what to do. Suddenly little Mary drew her hand from her sister's clasp, and went to the other eide of the yard ; there was a big, fierce dog chained ; his dinner stood before him in a wooden basin. Mary put her hand in the basin and began to eat with the dog. Lizzie went nearer, and sate that in the basin there was 00nd0 liquid, in which a few pieces of bread and some boil ed potatoes were floating ! she like wise could not resist ; she had but: ono feeling—that of the most gnaw begged before, is spite of their former misery. But at tbie moment they could thick of nothing else but their terrible longer. When a fe.v eteps from the house, they hoard the farmer violently eoolding rine of hie men. 'Then ho went into the house fiercely closed the door after him, wo ac, to make the windows rattle, continuing his abuse all the while. The children, terrified and with obtained only by labor trio grant for her delicate frame, lord at tart put her upon her sick bed, and ttratl,, in pity, removed her in a few days, and without great suffering, from a]1 her earthly troubles. The poverty of the pariah was so great that nothing could be done for the poor orphans. All the neighbors, with the utmost desire to help, were ton famine stricken, and beard their own children too often cry in vain for bread, to assist others, "If the children could only be got to Kilburn," a village some miles distant, said one of the neigh - bore, after the poor moaner had beau butted, "a brother of their father lives there, and he could not poseibly refuse to take care of them." "Bu matters are as bad there its hero," replied another, "and I fear they will bo no better off there." "It cannot possibly bo worse than here, for nothing butetnrvetion stares them in the face. If we seed them to their relations we have done our duty. We aaunot possibly keep them here." Al) were at last agreed upon this, and there was a carrier, Who, on the next day, was going near to Kilburn, he was requested as an act of charity, to take the ahildron with bim. The 322001 readily eon - stinted, and the neighbors felt slabs fled that they had done all that could be required of them. The carrier, as agreed, name the next day and took the two girle— Lizzie was seven now and Mary five—in his cart with flim. The timid children kept very quiet and close to•getller, the carrier hardly looked at them, 'Toward noon they reached tbo spot where the Dart would turn off. Tho lean lifted 1110111 out, showed them a road to the left and bade them go straight forward, and if they did not turn from the highroad they would, in about tae hours, come to the place, hie then drove off. The children 1 sobbed out "Good bye," and looked tug hunger ; she took a0nie of the out after him as long es they tumid bread and notatooe and Ito them see the least speck of the cart, and greedily, then they both began to cry. The dog, not necuelomed to such Lizzie ceased her crying first, guoste, looked at she children fall She too holcl of her little sister's of astonishment ; ho drew back a hand 330 had :mated herself on little, then set down and left them the ground, and eaid : "Got sup, bus dinner, of which .lie had oaten Mary ; wo must not stay bore., if very little, At this moment the we wadi to get to Kilburn. We cm. .farmer stepped into the yard ; he not *bp hero on the road." wished to dee whotlter the children And taking them. by the hand 11e led them into the house, calling out to the servant : "Biddy, got som0 bread and ilio, and bo quick, fur these child• re " Tho clog had shamed his muter -- the brute had taught the man. Touched by what he had seen, the farmer was auxioua to matte amends for what his conscience showed him to he a great sin. .Ele seated the children at the table, sat down by them, and kindle asked them their ns moo. APRIL 20, 18h1I ,.z rzcax.:�st�.c�r:.^.rn - "�.�• ,.�......mA.,ma• F3tUssEr S ... •r. TILE 'Undersigned desire to intimate to the Publio generally that they have Removal to the Brick Block Opp, , Nigh in to & ill's Rom, —and arc prepared to Pay the Highest Market Price, 5,1 c h3b,, for any �Q llu13utittyy offFres& E� i es. n r �..a" 1_ V ..Ca t..J s. A i .cs., TJ,�i J. `firs, Ball.au.tavne & Son. Br'1(s'gel.' E4.3. Emporium. ur.>;:era'rnr_r.,xw.;e..•.e r_nrarnaavr_.ss�•rM _araxxz.i�csrc,. Par:Ilnlbs Never set a hon more than once in ittoeeesien. It outer treakens her See the New Noxi Bi-ide r and makes her unfit for future use. i �9 Handle sitting hens gentle. Let the chicks, have a daily feed c cc cc cc of the young red milder grata. w�'° 11 If the roof and three sides of a coot: aro water and Std proof the J ' O X C N R AKES MOWERS. 3 /j front may be quite open, Arra 1 �'.(O �% ,, RS,. , Sitting hone should not have (vet ulea•e00, meat and but little wheat. Corn es host. Until the weather beeomes'sittled' f ji'\T'[I 1T'[t( WI 1 I 1O1K P,• Ln•rirt�t let the broods bo small, 'LIMY da i l.B It 15 y` + 1,�r better this :gay. 0!d bi•s of table or floor oilcloth "My name ie. Lizzre," said the are useful ou tee roofs of leaky coops. eldest, "and my sister le called When. you have hatehe3 as ninny y 1^ (tea �y ��e Mary•" chicks a,e you can feed and Caro for Davis .d.ta7 }t1 {J „n,�-+- Machines Stoves, Tinware, Sze., at "Have your parents been dead long ?" "Our father bas been dead two years, but our /nether only diad last week." At the thought of their recent loss both children began again to weep "Don't cry, ohildreu," said the farmer, kindly, "God will in one way or another take care of you, But tell me now, where do you come from 2" "From Loughrea," replid the abild. "From Loughrea 2" asked the man. "From Loughrey ? That is strange 1" He began to suspect the truth, and naked, hesitatingly : "What was your fatber'e name ?" "Martin Sullivan," replied Liz 010. "What--1iI0rbin—Marlin Sulli- van ?" ho exclaimed, jumping up at the same time and casting a piercing look at 13110 children, thoroughly frightening them. His face grew red—then tears came to his eyes—at last ho sobbed aloud. He took the youngest child in his arms, pressed her to his heart end kissed her. The child struggled and called for help to her sister ; she could not think what the man meant. Then he pub down the little one and did the name to Lizzie, who took it more quietly, as she had seen th tt the man did not hurt her sister. At last ho beoamo more composed ; he dried hie tears and said : "Do you know my name, child. son 2" "No," replied Lizzie. "How happened it then, that you have acme to me ?" be asked. Has ally ono sent you ?" "Nobody has sent us," replied Lizzie. ""We were to go to Kit burn, where a brother of our father livea, and they said he would glad- ly r00elve us. But I do not believe it, for our mother always said that he was a hard-hearted man, who does not care fur his relations." "Your mother was quite right when she said so," eaid the farmer. "But what will you do if the hard. hearted man dons not receive you ?" "Then we shall have to starve," answered Lizzie. "No, 110," exclaimed the mean quietly ; "it will never 00140 to that —never. Dry your tore. The merciful Clod has had pity on your telpleesness, and has made use of a fierce brute to soften the heart of your uncle, and therefore, tic will Hover forsake you—never I" The children looked at the man in utter bewilderment ; they did not understand what he said ---leis words awl his behavior were alike strange to them, Tide he soon pereolvod,foe he added ; properly you have enou:;h. Cover bbo bottome of coops with dry sifted cold ,shes, not too many ashes at a time, just enough to dry the floor. 110118E TALK, Water the horse before feeding. There is a great deal of saving in a walk. A horse will go with Iess feed on a walking gait. Bring out the Morgans for the Mating roadster A Morgan mare and a Pereberon sire will mix well. The Average farmer can rear a good colt and not feel the neat. The Prmnoh coach horse is a good one so put faith and money in. Style i1 not so important as size and feet in the draught horse. Some horaee have dyspepsia. Feed such ones bran with their oats. Europe wants iota of cavalry horses and as many more for arnl lery eervioe, It to all right to feed the horse hay only twice a day and the most at night. Feed a horse a little hay at a time. Five pounds is enough when any grain is fed. Make a bargain to use the same stallion for two years, You might get a mete1ed pair. A colt a year 0111 to bo sold will make a payment on a mortgage or buy some improvements. The horse needs e0m0 coarse food for bowel distension. Straw is good when free from duet, The horse will 13e1r salt every day if it has a chance, atad the tends to promote digestion. Mr. Dahlamau, who owns the great hero market in New York, says a man can go home the next day w1th the money in his pocket wean ho brings draught horses, A splint may be rubbed oil and the work ailed by putting on a lini- ment, but few would persevere in the rubbing long enough to make a cure. A Hater will do it. Alt. Forest has now a paid fire brigade of sixteen ,nen at $6 a year each. A regent return shows that thele are 557 Public schools iu Manitoba, attended by 18,850. Hiram Walker and sons, of \Valli:• cranio, raised last year in theit'11op. yard 67,188 pounds of hops, A new e130ame1 is to be put on the Grand river tet Galt for rho sum- mer. This 15 the first eteamor that has been on the river .311100 the as aident teem years ago. Hiram Walker dr, Sons bought the fins lake shore farm and house, near Kingsville, of Ezra 14Ialatt, for $10,000. Also on the East they bought AIf, Scratch's }arm for 110,- 000, They intend starting a largo brisk iztdustry. J. JA TR R -0 88 IJS_ -BRUSSELS, ;= LE We, the undersigned, call the Attention of the Public to the fact that we have put m some NEW MACHINERY and are now able to do better Work than has been done in the past and as good, if not better, than most 1HIILLS IN TILE PROVINCE. We will endeavor, to the best of our ability, to Please all Customers and fill all Orders at Shortest Notice. Those Parties having WOOL would do well to give us a call before going elsewhere. We have a fine Asosrtment of BEBE IBM, 13rhvAo alf ZETS, TWEEDS, to. KNIT.. Goo - MAN 1 .. T- ., 01,.�vr�i, �`7 a t Hoping you will favor us with a. Call, We are, Yours Truly, Willa HE S CO,,