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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1900-03-01, Page 3another haa the enthuedasm ; that evening of the same day gathered ell \ home. The • will ha fingor tips, and she was most fair to yielded from sheer fright. wbito monster's inteelor, dragging the which is lacking IA ono is made' up his family together, ancl said; -Now, spiendict ci thYoy thin-ju vtuettat rite. ofBesoideits VI 'this, re was a lit.tle .Bui he wag silentleedetermined to germ with it. Sometimes a phagocete I hav ne e make d • ea", an t op - yield up los stewardship the firs all, he thought, with a sickening sense bump against a poor germ as though ec tecta make the plan,and 'Matthew atYched an tbis with a morning r rebuked you very nfair- ' Woes in berde; grouse in broods ; • 110ME UFE OF TEE PEOPLE Rev. Dr. Talmage Speaks on Our Domestic Affairs. Different Temperaments and Tastes in the Family -*Advice to Those Who. Are About to Establish New liornes..The Dr. Advocates the lAw 'bUSiO41141." AA tar att 1 lenderestend "a 0 I the moral , and omit* home at two which a Man goes at ten ohiliock In 11 il 0 genteel bueloteni," it Is aomething to e I or three otfook ill the Worthen], and , flute $.11orge Mount of money for do- ........ ling seething. Teat ie, e beiteee, a Matthaei' ilailiday eights& She Wee "genteel bueincsa i" and there has So wayward, So prOVOlting, 00 loYablei been ittainy s wife WItO has Made the so pretty 1 inieteke to not being satiatied until the hUshand hae given up the tanning of Rut he was meth too old. the hide.% or the turoing of the haute,. Matthew came of QUtiket gook to tem, or the building ot the walla and the City ot lexotherly Love, he wee PUt hintself 111 eirOlen Where he has ho. . dtherinut wtoinoti.eandbuot .st long. 047eka licieturtiii:ani tent7Menteille.vedate, and at 88 felt it* thet Upset him t down th aides ehe had eta to (Weak, grown UP hiiiMelf to be quite a Metbutolah. lie- maeletrom, taking bits wife and chile at Matthewhi knee, he havidfe etood (4: W/et: hlulhe' yi 7:00 :re: a gee: to hex and, her brother in loeo panne. 1 hils3 1111111 • :14'11 traine Ai1st tit! teoille' tis for something like twelve yearse- A despatch teem Washington says: -yott that the destroying angel Fumes Forbearance and a Religious Life. ' .• • . 'of the, day, and alit the Ileum oe the. ever aince Matthew's best beloved la s invalid ,e-Reve Dr. Utmost) preathed from the by without toughing oril entering the t , bee go very slowly, and very heave- le followiug text :-"Test them lea;rn v. 4. . t door -post sPrinkled wit the blood ot ' eY n e g linAi thy at 'Why is it e a al hal eaeOnaniodation w. -"e awaY t" a see veYage, leaving AY t. and there r t the everlaisting Covenant. along, and in otherfe they always get mann e 5!utopvirbpvernyhoortwena,niatiadA.1013tuitt ran itt: Ituteitb, acidndde hoist bmu:tintheossv Ruff:211i! go test iinenese is aa express tr io • within a World is willed by four let - A thee.* Within. a church, a world along we'll . I bave watched suela eetan la thee stoker, and Death, itiath Laisetsh:lhilrolitavilletomo rot3se,tonco..ticiloongeluseseit , dee, banker -ever sinee the good shiP go pleasantly, and atter a while engineer; and though one may cam: Aurora w&nt down in a tearful gale -tore-11041e 1 If things go 'right there, ee to 4 night. Tleeee are .the freight traina friend, Ilaward Zoe. took I Mit to show piety at hooneer-eleTira. feet some tem 'Iles th ev lus two children in the geod Oare of a et trains going on towards clestructio they go right everywhere; Le things there 00-010 devastation, domestic die. ittff.odnt of it, and awing thee red in the Weat Indies. r crltrangBnlit' Wig 1. Gol's Worednetr.1 or the lentern of Aunt Patty tried he de her duty by • go prong there, they go wrena ev- 1,1giert erywhere. The dooe_ote fee the await, ma; aittuueruegue Wt4roorntworno htahreggitzier, bintokperditton, cent ng warn she eine ara ;rat °ne 0hut the obildren .thus berett but she was and state, A num never gets higher lee be expleined, still things went on 0114aLlih eke-tet'aeh, crashi Teere are two 's,Pinsters borp to be the prey of youth. meat !with a Aleut, nod a, wail, and me °t th"e deer' Yielding ing-hOuse is the foundation Of chitt011 and trials, and some thing's that hod first, littnorefeweililoe have nothing to do re or destructutee Eel vandals, The young people loved ,ple:aantly until the very last V' WhY l than his own garret, or lower than his QW.11 aellas. In other words, domes- 'air •. Th started right. 1 • .....Yy seecend novice, to you, In' . your Frei. 001104, those Who ha lazy ar tnop ve somethi g; her dearly, ruled her ruthlessly, and laughed at her little code of laws for tic, life overarches and underguides all home is, to exercise to •the very last oP eo, hut who are too ingeshair in the eursery is bigher than scene of the people in the worin ere it, When your behaviour in the do- of2,1;it advice to It *was ae her bystericehieheeite that. and took the reins of government, It Matthew stepped in at this juncture gross is tile domestic circle; the rook- forbearance., Prayers in tbe house- aVe one more w . -ve to tho,se who w gold will not makeup for everything. 8.- naraa: Rod that is: 1,:itl 14vp&t:sli2i(tiPinr. cf, threw. eihrysostemeeroother made the hardest to get along with. There stand up in PraYere nrette rerele beoomee a mere matter was he who planned the education of his Ixm for him, If e, man should are People Who theeehildren, and who, deaf" to their staxt out and run seventy years in• a 11)1.1teetings and pray aike an cettgel, who gelreeallaeumlaetzni h e are uncompromising and twhileernesTlet 0 eladreeri b Yee twaresiknongsit k:apot htehera.whostmeaaddielytutoior thhociiiir. atn°Y of the Position you occnev-:41.1;:te straight line he eould not get out orankyd Yau may not have every - You want it. Some- Pthess lies etark dead on, theliteartta)."- daya glorious and geve them splendid from' fender the shadow, of hie own 'thing just as times it will be the duty of the has- atone. When the hushand's poaltion rewards of merit. . MaLitleplece. I therefore talk to You band and semetimes ot the wife to as head oe the househ aes of voice, by. strength But now the term, of Matthew's seu- . . • Waterloo with no Blucher *coming up etc 9f don:testes blies has become a -des- start hi the world, and was quite ready aged Joy Jr had d s f I f" it d in e an eternal moment when I your rights ,and you will have a of arm, by fire of tena ts 1%ip hight.tell to. decide the coefliet. potisni that neither God nor matt will p r, ehe repue_ , .. ma, e a succo s u speak of your home. God Makes the rem in parts, and then As individuals, we arc fragments. ever be ashamed to apologise when aibicks Oh, ye wh - %premised to love needed' about life in general. to jeive dear old Mat any pointers he A.s fox Alias Evelyn Russell' SoY, fue you have done wroog in domestic af- each Other at the prAd to do it„ I the order of their, being. other life, The highest honse of, con- Preibilite oe your . nature the law old la maintain- imposed guardianship was trier, How - this morning about a matter of in- Yield; but both (stand punotilioutily on edi by lotidn He gradually puts us together. Whet fairs, Let that he a law of your catunitt perjury, ALEginh:Wilicladte Y1 she invariably and unabbreviatiindgiley, on, its eal "' " make up; out detioite And surpluses of ehaeacter being the wheels • in the unrighteously rebuked or* of hifi was this: that once a n laneelirtllitt iivil3tsagit. The West. from Wil c'es'isli141 start in life n'tter the manner e -well, she, too lead ma e a aue- ,c,ve, Or oftener. "Mfleis nheeairord sootw,MY .grandfather, wilionvitii I cosier to kie that flower, thar4 iti fo to yogi th tit: blacl°cnues th4ft dlight leitY'" at girls. She 'was 10, jest half =rage, glest 000114 inechaniam, One person thildren, lie himself having lost •his a o arknese for Afatthew often dismally refle,nted 1 she and, perhaps, having 'noon erv. hes the patience, another has the Patience, g . Here, is uman, awl, wifs;, they agree had, charm with ail its power of win- misinforined of the child's dein s - ' courage another has the placidity, found oot his mistake, and in the • othin else bat the re th ning love, ohs was coquette to the euspinon come on your aifect 0Nvi 0 subscribed berself-ewhom Matthew lath you make uP ; what youlack I household. The best thing I otter het with ludignent feeling, to linger, her twee flaehing and elieelor night. Yett have Oil elli indoors OW You' mu* put oit i wrap. And, pro. Of course you tin do se you, °home bably Mies Patty mod Howard are en. about it," she said, witiohl was a rather' easy about yoU. Cam% be reastMlible." auperfluoue rental( under the circUtno "I Wiii g0 booze," +mid We* Idiewild Maness. in a trembling voice, "eltic.e yen, ere go 'I mean it only ter tbe beat, Eve," auxioue Le be rid ot me, But I de 40 'aid sadly. "This unwire project" not need either you or the shawl." 77but here he stopped, ratber bond.. "You will, neverthelese, -have both bed At himaelf for itaviug nearly be. on this Occasion," said Matthew stern - "That le My attar." the 4eterrupt.. wiri.th"Ayendu ed with terrible diguity. Is swytilionsootedri:r.Fuma the Metter Yee know nothing et the 'prolect.' 411100),4001 So gaging he went up to her And the money you refuse ma" she woule or not. In trying to evade Pitt the thaw! around her, whether whether it te uuwise er not. it is Matthew 'lettered and looked et the bine she etumbled, and he caught her, carpet very. herd indeed. abawl and all, (1;1 hie arms, wil& with a graud edr, "I well rilartatti Matthew always WEI he comPletely lost his head at thla moment. Ile fore • "Hereafter," eontiniled Miss Idle. 'I" "la mx" matt°"' Th" 1 w that th i 1 h 1 ttnow,ittlit how Much I have and eper.id - ' go't himself -forgot everything but I. II e g r e oved wee in los arme eueb treatment any longer." . it as I please, without begone for It, --at last! ner ciose, AO all his penteup, raan'e , I ant ot age, and I will not endure . _. . Eve! be meld desperately, holdrag soul breaking Ike bombs, "'you knoW that I lave you!" eta this ahe said in anger, never dreaming that lenimuffering Mat- thew would take her at her word. Thee he released. her quickly with an "ray well," he said, and he was Ettr elan'estsion on leis Jace ati of one ex- • little Paler sa be spoke. "I will tato Peeling tbe heavens to tall, But M- stepo to this end At enc.e. You will stead of felling the heaverfs seemed to rind r have not abused nee trust," oven their golden gates to Matthew, Idlewild, ail swathed as she 'lionised as she was, Mies Idleteild'e for leg head •drooped with something like was ii an EgYptian munamy, looked 131341136 at these words. ; Never in her UP at him with wet, laughing eyes, life had Matthew spoken to her like "rt took erou a long) time to melte this, never before had she felt abashed Op your mind, Matthew," ehe said and frightened in his presence. A ptaintively. fewitt sense of his fidelity and her own , . --e--e.,-0-- ingratitude rusheci over tier. away. toes a step forint& but he terned , Here i's a malaria germ% description MALARIA GERM STOR,Y, e . "Ma tthew I" the faltered,. and she -flyou.seili vaedon me it 'lawn you? of u fight with the phagocytes; "Just he said forrnally,-"ram very busy this then a lot of our new-born brothers nun ning.e . . • hemen'orowding upon us from behind. He tield the door open tor her, and and when we turned to remOnstrate,' with burning cheeks the kurried out, they parted. • b_ other 48 we sow, away to the rear, a greatoom- motien. A fight and a retreat were and no work was spoken y • Matthew could not have been so going on. It was slaughter of the very busy, as he said, for after his most, horrible hitt& 'There at the head visitor waa gone he sat there at hie "' desk a long time, motionless, with his of a tide .of blood were columns of pet., head bowed -•still staring at the car- Phagooytes cUttling into the reiikIlterti- Of course, she afterward made an l ' hem , fee malaria germs, killing the* meal-. abject apology for her behavior, call- owing t whole. and growing hie- ing Matthew the beet, the kindest tier as the process wenb on. It was friend a girl ever had and herselt a en awful spectacle. I hutte back, fag- everekoed inerate. Aced she. put on an dilated. A phagoeyte would race Was :OrPriforeetea:iicilduni=ilY Volet down the current with a swift over - word more did she speak. about the hand stroke, reach out, and grasp a theater piety. She implored him to microbe from behind. Then the arm keep her finances in his hands, and of the phagocyte would shorten, nd, when he Steadily refused she broke a down and cried so grievously that he aa it seemed to me, retreat into the trAyed Howard. havega eg ey e ress-Etn many a al .12 W s portunity I m t , us ge a va r ra t A 7to it would grovv fanetiotis, and would by another or made up by all. Bod- one thrn 1.10, til (they have &house they will al say. °ma% s itiire A bi are a came. ridingw b shouldering him otit of tbe. road. Away _tmosochatinies execute it; the house to patient sort of despair. Fool I he call- of what this would mean to him. I eeliiits la flocks ; the haraan race in ly. e tun very sorry tor it. I rebuked' Intecelecien dreanting a foolish dream. would go the'. poor germ swimming in's do:e. UltreedeathOneand idolLars.'It ed himself with very hearty self -eon - a zoi,N. God has mosi beautieully ar- you in the presence of the whole fain- ears lights are hoisted; ropuertainnen:ipanal tzati A itrlbwho theittronizttocoreidi , 41:etteifs_e_ ' e ea (I -She 'Mkt not have fast in order te avoid the encounter. rengel this. It is in this way that IlnY.titlidr noweseinriel.t, Yollte trulteer: strikieg him Mir in the Middle, and He balances society-thie conservative take:some courage toile that, It ways' hcaorrdssesoibi:mviitation sent out. Tilt were aireldieily relative liThe trill wh: Poox lilatthew was out to the heart. go d -plated harness prance would subdue this "Dear Lady Dia- Ha was very kind to her, but he did with a 'slow motion going inside out and that radical keeping things eVen. right, was it note' Never be ashamed ot call her Eve anymore; ahd there like, a 'glove, and aetuelly taking the t a the out- o alsologize for domeatio inaccurace. t , °Me u :and take da n was some dashing 'hero who n• up g of, gueste c i i " Every ship must ha.vet its 'mast, =ter, taffrail, Dallast. I have no was a sort of coldness and apathy in F' d t th • t Wit t are the alr p.aees; the flute sounds' the would take her heart by storm,. germ in vrith him. 'Ugh I I' should have remained there in a sheer spell if my 'eoropanion had not pulled me al?'nelawIctitfhorhian2;ed bltiod mil,' he called 4 We went onward. • • weak points, if I may call th,em so- dancers go up and d ; anti 'different from me than a driving wheel jirrealt: eelnPitnihn, and then stand • grolnd wine, the e°1th "ithl (lee f om them, Do not carry the um and the ' wheel. a Of the great town adorin al b e was her patient, w ruthless She walked over him 1th more right to blame aenan for being a I and the, fash- little feet, and h has a right to blame the iron shaft fire of your temPer toe nea the 0Fly frarci this tbe pictured walls o:o the serve the status quo wher h° Pre - lee ana aesiring aboye all things .a„ye. reading her ridicule Ppineess, uiEdloat tbrit holds it to the centre. Sohn Wesley Plwee :111% 41,2etVije, b6 balances Calvin's institute, Dr. hl'•• h- b rtta otsitgold •173t Jae sheohln! elands .c• n it in the music; Joyed a certain misexable e 'Pane en- Ooth gives to Scotland the strong lir saliepped brae, e,aefretutlate hueband eomes - a. noW, of sculpturaea;ncsoeiinr itlt utalp ohf4PPloivneemecililai had never ePekesn a weserodf w ere he t rews whirl tra the.; bones of theology, Dr. Guthrie.' clothes hones from the store :with his t' [Praha/ t. • all exhausted, do 'not let the ifeltfeleure tit IrwaYi fiash it in the clean- She franklyer‘told him all he love deh-nee.ou ictrolneensisreindted I Let us . affaies, often. innocently, stabbing him theta vvitli'• a throbbing heart ana anteaa:trat21:ilif (4:),roea iiins temper; but bo .1; buird hts and 1 *ill then a throe(' to hap i(x)i ' "e e,sa let. AR th Parlour with he.r confidences, and; beguiled bine or bullied him into disposing of her *arm flesh. The difficulty is that we are not satisfied with just the PromisePthericleerlarstrillg sound of the worir that God has given eiseee. do, The war -leap. t Yee! lite witill be !spent in ma in p u and.- m , g ge will be water -wheel wants to come inside the to you al unraiti ated curse. Cowper noill and grind the grist, and the said: 1 ''The kindest and the happiest faith • the 'water. Our .useluilleSs and, the will End occasion to forbear; welfare of society depend uport our staying in just the place that God has d _something every dey they live a pity and perhaps forgive." , put us, or intended we should occupy. For more corimpactness, and that we I advise, also, that you make your may be nitre useful, we are gathered thief- pleasure circle around about in still stnaller circles in the home that home. It is unfortunate when it grew. And there you have, the same ia otherwise If the husband spends varieties again, brotheks, sisters, hus- the most of lus nights away from band and whe-all different in tem- home, of choice and not of necessity, perainents and tastes. It is fortunate he is not the head of the household; that it eheuld be so. Xf the husband he is only the cashier. If the wife be all impulse, the wife must be al1 throw the cares of the household in- to the servant's lap, and then emend prudence: If one sister be sanguine • happer wants ta go oat and dabble ea • • • must five nights of the week at the opera in 'her temperament, the other be eymphatic. Mary and Martha are or theatre, she may clothe her chil- dren with satins, and laces, and rib- necessitiee. Tbere will be n0 dinner bo. s that would confound •a French b t they are orphans. Oh, for Christ if there be no Martha ; there ner, u will be Ise audience for Jeeps if Ahern z- it is said when a child has no one to be no Mare. The home organ. a say its prayers to because mother 0! plush have become wriggling rep - is most beautifully constructed. Eden has gone off to the evening entertain- tiles. Terrore catch tangled in the has gone; the 'bowers are all broken ment. In India they bring ehildren canopee that overhangs the couch. A, down; the animals that Adam stroked and throw them to the ormohlets, and strong gust of wind comes ttitough the with leie hand that morning vvhen it seems very cruel; but the Jews of hall, and the drawingeroom, and. thg they came up to get their names New York and Brooklyn dessipatien bed -chamber, vehich ail the lights frave since shot forth elude, and sting, are swallowing down more httlethil- go out. iend from the lips of the vtine- and growled panther at panther; and dren te-day than. all the monsters heakers come the words: Happiness midair iton boake plunge, with that ever crawled. %eon the hanks of is not in mer And the arches rese his manner to ber which, try as she would, she could not overcome. Certainly she tried to 'make amends to him In a thousand ways. Indeed, her manner to him was so much gen- tler that he began to think that she had guessed his seoret-that she pitied him. . Matthew lived only about half a block from the Joys, and Evelyn Waa Lii the habit of running in and out of his. house as if it were her own, She TEX SCIENCIC SICD *AMON MEN Of MARK. Xxseei Xs* X A reediser /tee es* fellekt efivertmg Are gr. Coen iteodee los.* * detailed Mall Iteseietimefer ceeiniesione 'tone -some oiki.: The ealence Mad praeties of bed mak- ti. 4 PINI*4400":7eutilitiv:aiyears a ing hem undergone a radical change in the t f hsolijanteitor Ario. Alien tif Palmyra, Wia„jirett ylaes ow years. Ila newly done- 4,4 op mot 4 p briar , WI, of tb: pems;0.!: thait cite; over" and decorated bowies„ nothing prospeci"";: ici:ulesA44tOrttoititigehl..7th Afrleavrtilealtlitri CUtaga°rUi0Ittadtrbaa7mildmtorr:orheitIntrEdr"itecosailvabaosilit more lux. extend over a period of 16 moth& of hygiene then the new ds bepittae.dleiPaawr; situili16,101"untow*atrdijiitcloi"44bailetingWie"eflu: nilw sehool of science for Ripoo er.hatre, Ripe% Wis. The buntline will be mese The model juit now in the howteg in honor of Ur. Ingham. ‘‘011Yetrheingallheticifou:e irnealishQtre GYeo*rwriaPt:beevd.„ arWthilenWirt eHter.nlYV"lelenga.1 tteblie;r69141"146/11.4"4" _Three pouid 8108p with an abundance the otpleol, wet Nick Mid missed the 44- ' 008. Len: haIrsting toitsf stbhesnheilvd cehsentremshass. Itt „woes oe etretching room, in the area in ed by the foer maseive carvedpoate of "ilist die" since 1857, one of theselele couches and three mat- Theodore 0. Hurd, chiefeelerls of *II tressee are required te bring the the courts of Ididdleatix county. blau,, and in winter on top of these reposee sibbnaeda th"Pe7,P4'"ileeWetiliegthbraelvtelenrSeelhfals.ctuhglreteese4rybleuv:ileparlairedoret edeePhig platform up to "the required a Mighty- tick stUffed 'full of th4 best and able to do as hard a day's work as white goose featbers, When Ulnae re- whee he 'Wag a led ef id* ed Georgian bed is dressed with great 1 Theelateet echo of the Dreyfus cave is quirements are fulfilled the full-fledg- to;leli 4411141"1 ClaZglige 11:: t?1:13fiegit:4:11.1% attention to detail and elegance. Old next election, The ex-mluister of war eeepodgedthaWflitohorb,Ullion fringe is tastier)), commanded the hametre aye at') h arr n 3° c‘tas ad OWe 1 the, owner is aeandtvtedhe t3o°an ttil0ef aidtincrotlevfeter:earrewrobrietehheenht9Eireignrta°%14.tWIthnandefe' (reign,' th01: . Edon garrisoned In' the ISonime depart - toed for the hangings and. counterpene EINAD BOARD OE' THE COUCH. - °opted a cell to Munich university that It la* Wt eve";13°dY wil° clan ley Y-v-Ireel;weenrdeedeeittealuilimconedelintieonnisellitititieldoetegeu* bands on a genuine carved Georgian 'L'a hed or. dress it in antique broeade, bY the ecieutiet that have only reeene but even the modern brans and iron bepeuhnitigpteDed,At;mboyotrIreevlsiorgtheratuanievoerr:olteL bed or dress it ha antique brocade, Sheldon, et Lake Shore station agent, died the other day, once did bira the featherestitffed inettresses for winter rho great service et his life. "I Was tor four mei are na longer a mere fashion but days a brakeman under him when he was era a general custom. For heel a cen. a conductor," gage Mr. ,Arraour "Mid h tory the feather bed has been looked told me I was too much of a 'tool eveer .uPon very coldly by exports In hygiene, topmroarkeessitogomodaxramitroolaiedz.'w' ho has just hilt, ,tieently botla with regard to the. hangingseeucl the feather mattress, a ;:t.geeadefte: hcrermmeavennUeathd,r Wee b°r° fleeted with Oxford'. e ulversigy 13701! wco:i; .nehaervnogeuoofnehneraarlrgei aele, ,.. relzozinaantdind owlet ometeen, nigh 50 years. Tile venerable Professor EtTodreanimendect to take the feather bete -Cambridge end Dublin. eep:stinittieuteladrwlyithelidnearalyn:npeiaehranosi)aeLd adds M his numerous foreign honors that , re fili eeniAnbliin eif Erg EI,7111! ,Ingiii'ttu:V, , r a g - care' in the winter. Queen Victoria, is ...`eReeeee.oresentative he W. Cushman of actettytileefr tthrea vf ee lei tnhge r i a ob ei dm, t f go or one of tbe shining proofs of the effic- WashingeGeoestate ' made his maiden goes a big tickful of feathers in lts afterward edpresseu -u..,,,,,,,, ..el.e.4 st- rerY much disappointed with it. ,'-'ftf-eiSa--04.,„, '1/41....).1 - i• 6 eawhtoeor: sane; rsopueenedhitinquthite: in..diZntlittli onatihdern day. , ere • alWaes the curtains are drawn about he the house from making ognenofteethehe 'tthheit hheaeadd oeif :hitt hbeedd ttoo eshhnutt obffff atnhye shunt" serious impression be wished to. .,,,, and fears be did not make the. draughts. Queen Victoria and her doe- oiCa.onwairiesisimdanth.lullus Kahn of Cedieose tors believe that the proper wey to ing of eseatas tore tgr pirtesketil: stesidenrawo; sleep ha winter is in a cold room luxere convene to get the one occupied by ex - lousily lapped in a nest of feathers that Speaker Reed in the Forty-seventh sei- nen, was fermerly an atter and haa trod preserves all the heat of the body and the hoards with Edwin Booth, Joseph necessitates in the coldeet- Weather; .0 Jefferson, Tommaso Balvini, Mr.and Mrs covering. of only one pair of blankets W. J. Florence, Clara Morris mid others: mid a downeequilt, The modern be& . . ORCHARD AND GAROEN. aii:arifeillilgienic7aquires more heavY • coveiing than a palr of tired aboulders leinleached Eish.'"--01 are the isest fertilizer .- 'What,' said I, 'a red cell ? We have can atand, and the hair mattress con. for all stone•frults. just+ come from one!' ' (gently disskpates the human heat in- Peach treei suffer- the most from stand - "'Never mind,' he replied, lizid a stead of conserving it, besides drawing lug in the thick grass and chem. and red, cell a.nd eat yeur way inside. It away that priceless force huraan else= pear the least of any of the fruit treat is our Only chence. See the others bricity; at least thet is what advocates The objection to tryitg to grow graPes are doing it * o a ea r say. n e ar among e u reea , "Sure eneugh, many of my brethren Ali this drain the feathers prevent, that the grapes need all the sunshine pee. &mete, when. come in, e'ring their .adorers when they betimes troublesome? was very sPeeial Pet of• Miss leehY, had selected good red blood cells and tgeea,sily yielding oedema they present stele. , • tlowers, and pearls, and diamonds, This she required, him to do by virtue Mattbeves maiden sister, who 'kept were pensitratine the skin .and climb- permits Perfect relaxation et the mus- The compaerform of growth of the cur. erect throw, thene on this pyramid, and of his whilom guasdiamship, the pres- house far hkm, and who knew noth- ing inside to eseape the iphagoeytes. It cies, that an never be gained on a bed rant adapts it to close garden quarters, leteit be a throw; and there let Hap- tige of which she carefulle Preserved 'mg about , the girl's latest impertin- seemed. to me Ho unfortunate, jUst as of ease the- best hair. With the come pniess, the queen, mount the throne, for such occasions. mace to ber brother. Perhaps -women ,we had gained ouir freedom, but it was ing of the eighteenth 'century tyeee of while its ability to thrive in a partial Ms Sbe as the more de ndisnt on t- arzch We will stead around, and all Pa Etre sharp such matters -she mae better than death. So we looked for English bed the feather metres., best for the grape, but it will succeed in straight-laced, somewhat of a Prig. so she never made any sign. ever. was being occupied, and it seem- numbers of wonien who have not only shade is greatly In itafavor. chalice,s lifted; .we will ear "Drink, oh thew iu such Matters, es froward was have guessed Matthew'a sestet, but if cells. „Every cell we °wale to, how- yes intreduced and now theee are Generally a. warni. dry, light siting ueen; live for ever!" But itbe guests .te u s are. rea h asset the lawn clash of the impatient hoofs( are heard in. the distance,. and the twain of the houeehold come back to see the Omen ot ;Happiness on. the throne amid the parlour floor. But, alas, ae y e wee, the flowers have fad- ed, the sweet odours thave .beisometahe smell of a charnel -house, and instead of the queen of Happiness there sits there the gaunt form af Anguish, with' bitter' lip and /sunken eye, and, ashee in her. heir. The romp of thee dencere who have lett eeems crumbling yet, like jarring thunders that quake, the floor and ragle the glasses of the feitet runt to eine The spite wine on the floor turns into bloodI The wreaths rife art the fl te t clothed wing and eyeless sockets' the the Ganges. it have seen the sorrow pond: "It is not in reel" Anil the child she neglected, was not so Med. 'on by invisible fingers, answer: der the sun in blood land fire. Dann a grief that she felt from the ego. in • • 0 A d th has gone, but there be just one little much fragment left. It.' floated down on the river Riddekel, out of tParadiee. It is the marriage institution. It does not, as at the boginning, take away from him a rib, Now it, is. an addi- tion of ribs. , This institution of marriage has When slier wrung her hands it seem- --a- ed as if she, would, twist her lingers been defamed in our day. Seel m and. polygamy, and mormonisni, and from their sockete; whe,n she seized the niost cursed. of all things, free- her hair, it 'seemed. as if she had,' in loveifine have been trying to turn terroot grasped a coiling serpent this earth intoCa Turkish harem br with: her right hand. No tears! great Salt Lake City. While the pul- Comrades of the little one came in and twain ovine whirring dovvn from un- or a.Godless mother on the death ot silenced instruonents of music, thrum- , fact that the child was dead as tha feet frozen fipa of anguish braille Open. and that she had neglected it. She said: seated on the throne of wilted floweret "If I had( only watched ovet and car- shei 'Jarboe her bony hands together, ed for the child, I know, God would and, groans: "It is not in neer uot have, taken it." The tears came That, very tight, a cler with eal- not ; it was a dry, blistering tempest ary of/ a. thousand dollars a yeao-only -a acorching simoon of the desert. one thoweand-goes to his home, set up three =oaths ago, juat after the marreage-day. Love, meta him at the door; lore, fete Wit:11111M at (the tahle; love, talks, over the work oft the dayi love takes down the Bible, and reads oe Him who earns our emits. to save; and they kneel, and while* they are kneeling-riglit in that plain room, om that plate carpet -the angels' of God build e throne, not out flowers that perish and fade away,/ but out of garlands, of heaven, wreath on .top of wreath, amaranth on amoranth, until. the thrthe htecione. Then the harps, of God emended, and suddenie there appeared one who mounted the throne; with eye so bright, and brow so, fair, that the twaio knew it was Cheistian love, . And they kneilt. at the foot of, the throne, and outting one haed on each head, she bleseed thole and field: " Happiness is wlth me I" And that - throne of celestial bloom withered not with the pegging years •, and the queen left not the throne till oue day the married pair felt stricken in years - felt themselves celled away, and knew net which way to go, and the queen bounded front the throne, and scud: "Follow int ; and I will show you the way Up to the realm of everlasting love," And so they went up to sing songs of love and walk on peetements af lova and, to live together man- eeiolus of love, end to rejoice. for ever' in the truth that God. is love. pits have been comparatively silent, novels --their cheapness only equalled by their nastiness -are trying to ede- cate; they have taken upon themselvea tol educate this nation in regard to holy -marriage which makes or breaks , for time and eternity. Oh, thia is not ' a •mere qUestion of residence or ward- robe. It iet a queetion charged with gigantic joy or ecorrciw - with heaven or hut ut b she will never forgive then of George Send, Alas, fo.r thin .fierself. The memory will sink the or hell. AlasA for this new dispense- le eyee deeper Ante the sockets, and mingling of the night -shade with the pinoh the face, and whiten the hair, marriage garlands. Alas, for the and eat up ihe heart with vultures venom of address spit tete the tank- that will not be satisfied, for ever karate Alae for the white frosts of plunging deeper their iron beaks, Oh, eternal death that kill the °range 'you wonderers from your home, go bloesome. The Gospel of je . " back to your duty I The brightest Christ is to aesert what, la right and flowers in all the earth are those to assert what its wrong. . Aetenept which grow tn the garden of a Chris - has been made to take this institution tian household, clambering over the Which' was intended for the thappineas porch of a Christian home, • and elevation of the raee, and. make Wept over the Galin; neighbor& name in, and the memeat they ' saw the Will face of the child the shower broke, No tears foe her, God gives tears an the sunemer rain to tbe parch- ed soul; but in all the universe the &lest, the hottest, the most Scorch- eing, and onsuming thing is a mo- ther's heart if she has neglected her child when onoe dead, God may for - I advise you also io cultivate syroptie it a mere corameroial enterpruse-an th A y of occupetion. Sir *lames MU - exchange of 11011se0J and lendel . all" tea, one of the most eminent and dee equipege-a businees partneeshiP of gala men that ever wield, thief two, Steffed up with the stories of atanding at the very height of his romance and knight-errantry, and un- eminence said to a great conmany of faithfulness, and feminine angelhosd, scholars: f.ikry wife mean me, The the two after a while have roused up wife ought to be the advising part - to find that, instead of the .Paradiae nee te "ere firm. She ought to be they dreamed of they have -got nothitig interested in all the 'wises and gains hut a Von Amburgh's menagerie, Jul- of 'shop and store. • She ought to have ed with tiger's etrid wild eats. Eight9 a. righb-shei has a right to knowi eve thousand divorces in Paris in ene year eryibing. if ,s, men goes into a Amel. preceeded the 'worst revolution that nese transaction that bes dare not tell France ever sew. It was only the his wife of, ybu mar depend titer he first edurse in that banquet of hell; told / tell you what you know as well as I do, that wrong *manna en the allbject of Chrietian marriage are the eanse at this daY of more moral Outrage before God and man than any ether cause. There ere Some: thinge that 44 want' to bring biller° you. I know. there, are those of you who %Ave had homed set up for great many yeaes, and, notwtthstanding, the hardships and trials that corde to thane you would not surrender them; and thee, there are those here who ha.ve, just estab. Relied their home. TheY have only TRADE IN SOME{ AFRICA. The natives af South Attlee have a curious method of selling -their farm products, It is a common eight to see is on the way either to bankruptcy or some of them negroes entering the moral ruin. There may ihe mune Ximberley stores.; one will have a tbings Which he does not wish to trou- single egg in his bend, another will bite his wife with, leitt it he dare not bare a quarter of 4 peck of mealee h6rA he he on the road to discern- .,„ fiture, On the other band, the hus- cern. The negro Wan the egg is an band ought ta 66 sympathetic with serious, and as much concerned con - the wife's occupation. It is no emir corning the sale of hit single egg Mt thing to keep bowie, Many a woman if the trarisaction amoUnted to thou- eheit coUld have endured martyrdom a* sands of dollar'. well as Margaret, the Scotch girl, have The peeuliar trade is carried on bee,,,n,„‘",?„rn,„4111.t ioniewhett after this fashion: "Bow """'" ."^" """'""'""""''"`"' Math, Bahl give for thief" asks the MIA tyrs of thokitchen. it is yen, annoy. ing rater the vexations of 'the titiy. tire, as he holds out the egg in hie been in it a feW months or a few the nuraevy or parlor, to have the hus- heed teble' er In this proprietor offers him two cents for it ; but if eggs are soaree the negro and to the storekeeper. Sometimes 'tuella the/ stole, or the years. Thee there are t W 0 trouble; you °tight tti tete store for eue ogg, may et ail the way from 5 to 10 omits will, alter a while, Mt up for het -en -hour." Sympathy of odettpit. von, often 08 omit amount that Pelves a borne, and it 'hi right that a tient ei the hueband's work COM hoot to ail; "You know, nothing about ehould +speak out upon these theimeit, him, with the soot of the furnace. or of vito8 snetece,,, which le tett worst the native receives goes for a drink • Sly first manse' to yew heire odots et letither, or scam fectories, let pout tu your *lit home, if ;tie e rieW not The wifabe esally deeveted at tem kind of brandy, a Delon tan drink. To h,onie; tied let Him who was a gueet begrigeed halide or uneavore aroma. the storekeeper of Kimberley, how., ever, this tufts of a single egg and a at Bethetne be in your household; let Your odes are to* your intereete are outer ot et rook of motikie6 mounts Hot. T me young people who bend* to fight the betties. Four eye* dreds of Viet,. Sell their produets in begin, with God end with to wash for the, &pest pow shoo, the same fashion. heaven. Have on your right dere OU Whieli tO wavy the trials. It hied the engagement ring of the fa iii rerY sad 'IMudil WbeA the eidgitor rtdite affeetions. If ogle at rat be a issa **ifs who doer am thee pro Ohrlatlan lilt that ea* take the able It is Ni very sad tine* for end read's few versed la the amebae when she a bualund who time, and then kneel down and sm. labs la * se mead yourself to Elm why) "Meth the Mime is Mt Oolltary fa families. X *oat to tan what R. 414,154 the DiVine drop upon your one, your Tosses are ogle; lay hold Of to great des. during **day, as hue. seery h , end plot, end expects.- the work of life with bath heads Four area niet want little *peon, glee. /If ettremi,-Very sorry, dr, the man. agsmanat won't allow smstratug on the STRICT 'Ad and ve,ry severe on her frivolities. ie nottb w want into his t d n h ix i b t lik th almost any kind of 'fertile soil well adapt - It was to quash a darling plan of his pretty sister that he stalked into Mattherw's office one morning, his brow wrinkled in a protentous frown. " Mat," he aaid abruptly. "It seems to me Evelyn bas been spending money like the deuce.ls.tely. Haven't you been letting her draw her interest ahead of time V' . Matthew reddeeed guiltily. He still had charge of Eveiyn's Enamels, though the Joy property had been divided and Efoward had drawn outhis share. " Sometimes she has anticipated -a little," he said, slowly, but it is no great matter." "But it is very bad for her," said Howard with a parental air. You know yourself, Mat, she has no more idea: of business than 'a butterfly. She ought to learn to live within her in- come. And she is beeoming quite reckless about money matters and - other thhigs." Matthew pricked up his ears. "What other things?" Well, to tell you the truth, I think she halt • got into a rether fast get." do you Mean I" he asked, staring at Reward in alarm" " Why, it is chiefly, that play -writ- ing fellow, Duval. He has a comedy to be lerought out in New York next week and about twenty young people here propose to make up a party for the ' first night.l• gvelyn is gmong them. They have a rather good chaperon, as it happens, but--" °She must not go," said Matthew. " I thought you'd see It that way," tiovvard. replied, with a satisfied air, "So all you have to do when she de - mends enemy for this expedition, is to say ' No.' You aen do this, beneuse she has overdrawn her account." "Is that the only veay I" he asked, while he thought, with a pang, 'I must refuse her -I must cause deep- pointment.' " "The only Way. I tried to reason with her ; Aunt Patty coaxed her -all to no abet. She is bent on going." TWo or three dayarifter the visit of Howard's Miss IdlewIld Went down teven teems Matthew in his office at the bank-e'on businees," at she maid, demurely,. Matthew felt like , an ogre in the task before him, and what made it harder to bear, he knew that she never dreamed he wauld refuse her, so ac- eustomed was she to his indulging her welly whim. 'Give the poor cripple a dime.° she began in her absurd way. "Certainly," said Matthew with grave politeness. an4 he took a bright new dirae out of a little roll of coins tresh front the Mint and: handed it to ber. So she looked a little disconcert- ed and abandoned this method of at- tack, "Matthew, / am bankrupt, 'insol- vent, forced to make an astsignment," the said Itt a plaintive, spoiled -child tette. Ht want Stunti money -a lot of money, in fset-for a very specitili pur- pose. May I have it t" "A lot t" regeated Matthew. "Yee; tiled Is, at least a hundred.", Matthew looked grave. "What is the special purpose!" he inquired, fervent- ly hoping she would tell him all about the proposed theatre party. "Thetel a wore," said Mies Idle - wild, vrith an air of mystery. "r can twIt let you have any money pet now, Eve," he said gently, after a patute, and as he Oapoks etarefully avoldied her eye end etared With rapt absoeption at the cravat, "Mt, Matthew, I haven't any mon. ey," she said piteously, half laughing, half embarrassed, "and "Toward is go mean ha wili not lend me any, 1 shall have to sit on the curbstone and Nell needles if nobody will take pity on me." "You have overdrawn year tlecotint eeverel Monthe deep? Said Matthew, stilt Studying the carpet. "It i$ wtorig for rat to allow you to do this." "But now, when I want it iso bad. ly. It is cruet to refuse me now. I will eeonomitie atter this, Matthew. I wilt, indeed." Peor Matthew found it terribly hard not to yitdd to her, but littivard'e Wortle, "feet Set," tecUrred to him, and he steeled himself against her pretty beeeechiug. f a w, *age, sa after a pease, with jut a little tremble in her vole* and Pin expreeelen on her Which thoukl have melted en ioeberg. Ant' Matthew WO Molting it the e , Perk ape that WAS why hi had stun 13 te say "Nos again, end In Seek way that KW Idtewild knew that bet pretty pleading Wall Wald. Ot bostio, elm 141411.11, IL Matthew's Quaker hair rose. "ill7hat suyoe evening about 8 o'clock andi closed. the doer, giving ' strict orders that he was not to be disturbedee It was about fifteen minutes later, just as he had settled down for hie evening's reading, when he heard the door bell eing, then quick footsteps running down the hall, followed by a gentle lap at his door. He did not say "Oonie ire" but got up, with some irritation; and opened the door. - It was Miss Idlewild, io evening dress, with a frothy -looking pink thing over her head and shouhlers- laughing and out of hreath. Now Matthew had been fathoms deep in a foirmidable looking tome - trying to aid forgetfulness in study, and,. moreover, he Wee very, stria a.baut matters of decorum. • So be frowne.d at the apparition. lovely thorugh it way, and hardened his. heart. "May I come In V" she said demure- ly. Matthew looked at her unsmilingly still balding on to the ewer, "Abby is ant," he sale. "She has gone with some ladies to a leeture." e'lfew lively far her !” said Miss Idlewild rather quickly. Apparently she was her -old self this evening. "Perhaps you had better go into the sitting room," said Matthew, in a tone which he, meant to be at once polite and crushing. The girl laughed, not the least abaehed, and made a little bow. "'Your hospitality overwhelms me," she said mockingly. "Why not invite me to sit in the hall*" "Come in," said Mattherw, shortly, diropping his, hand from the door. Was she laughing at hit mitten? Might he not haVe even penal' was itts angry reflection, "It was ;that dreadful Beecher," she sald tonfidentially. "I had bribed Perkins not to admit him, • but of eourse, Reward happened to lie .at the door when; he reng, and so I was tn for it, Howard in Se -s10 liberal. so r fled in desperation. That dread- ful boy! He is waiting for MO nOW, t gimes he thinks I'm priuking." "Did you tome °Vert here with no *rap but that flimsy thling to asked Mattlieer, looking his vet** oreasests "Yes, grandmother." This was what she called Mettheev when he lect rod her, He bed hitherto borne each Nice in. pet -lent silanee. but to -night it anger- ed him. She thinks id truth I am a "grandmother'," he thoWellt. bittern. "T object to you addreming rae that manner," he &Id, with an ef- fort, "" "I beg youv pardon, Matthew," ehe mid, looking a little frightened. "lt was only in fun." Then. he mid: "You will take cold going back, I will send for a shaWl- anti he rang the bell as he spoke. "I won't haVe any shovel," mid Mille idietviId, pettishly, "rirst You re - wive me as if I Were a chimney SWeOP tben you aoold Me foe a mere herrn- leas jett tend titat you, want me to Wear a shawl! won't do it." "You will." rou will see, Beside*, I am not going home yet -not until that atumed Beecher has gone. Wit tiM6 he came lie wept -actually wept -all over the cerpet. / had to pet on iiiy rubbers." But Matthew was proof against non. sense. Not a smile escaped hine, A huge gray shawl arrived per maid and 'he begets to untold, it, with, a deter- mined eye. "I tell you./ won't wear it," she. mid Petulantly, but ebb weft growing rather pink with apprehetietoti ea Mat- thew steedily advarteed, the shawl out- spread in hla "r inlet thiiik what makes your to ,unkind to me," Said MIAS Idlevtild, weakening arid growing pathetie. "It wes dreadful a me to epee); to you as did that day, 'but I've tried. to show you that I WaS 'sorry for it, It omit fair to go on "kitting that upon me, You trent Mei a* if-•" Bare Idiewild plotted, unable to Pro- , Matthew construed thei es a begs ciepitulation to ',mope the shawl, eo be wan not moved by it. "I'm going to take you home now," he id " d / t t this tet ni4 put ft around yen." "I *IRA have it 1" she exclaimed. exeitsdly. tare gathering in Iter "Now, Nvelyrt,'. sold Matthew grave- n, "that is childish. It is wiater ed to me that the phagocyte& were gaining on us :when my companieh suddenly pulled me to one side and cried!' " Look out I 'look gut Keep away from that current near the -centre there. • It is worse than death!' 9 What is it t cried. for I could see nothing. "'Don't you see V he said, huggin.g the wall of the tunnel, 'there it es that discolored streak running near the ceetre of the stream. It ia caus- ed by what men call quinine. and it is deadly if yoll SWIM in it.' ' "How. does it sleet you?' 1" asked. "'Row does it affect you le asked. makes you ineapable of motion -- stupefies and prevents you climbing litto a red blood eell-it is living death, and the friend of the. phagocytes!' "1 shtiddered and swam on. At the end of a sewenlike opening,: my friend darted to one side and stand a red blood cell' which was unoccupied. He began. work on it at once. "'Good-bye,. brother!' he said. 'Here is where / stop. I've work to do Hope you'll get oat of the wet before our white friends catch you. Look out for the qUinine streaks.' Ains- lie's for February. made •with broad bands of drawn work learned t e v rtues u e e queen of England travel about with - „their beds done up in leather eases. Some of the rheumatic.s and sufferers from cold feet have pronounced them- selves free from their afflietions when luxuriating 1 . AMON ed to garden crops if not too damp. Moist fruit trees thrive best on roiling land. Prides are less liable to injury by frosts on rolling land than on level land, even though the latter be high and dry. Black spot on roses Is a fungus grow- Clrgop prematurery. goo7 preventeive tis Feather bGedsTRa.Ere FeoniAlTinngill'iRnSte use to keep the plants In a werm, clry atmos - as well in nurseries, and though foe 012,0r0•H children the Georgian fourpostee is not OUSEHOLD yet the faabion, the gayest beds are made ,to chime in with the schemes of Flatirons .once ,made redhot never ree nursery decoration. Chaemingly carved tain the heat as well afterward and wilt and painted wooden beds are newly in- always be roukber. teoduced, elsethey have brass or seme- After sweeping a room allow a full tioimoosppvsoilvvreiratelestoeionetos atihde incloaorrkipri0000ds: hour for dust to settle. Duet with a On the headboard of a light mitple bed eepply damp cloth, followed by a dry tubbing. a little lard to dirty hands be - for example, wig be painted a night fore washing them with soap and water. scene of clouds across the moon, alicLa It loosens the dirt and keeps the skin . flight of owls; on the footboards aline .„.„. of caroling cock greeting the sun ty- Vinegar makes spots on the table linen. - b d in hand - °Sir prinoemrnininengt. are the e s Teach children to catch the drop left on the lip of the cruet after using on the some sleeping rooms nowfadays, that stopper and thus prevent stains, or set et, is no wonder their clothing shows all the art and lavieh• beauty and the cruet in a tomer._ of a fashionable women's wearing are 'TM E U RS E R Y. parel; Sheets of especial fineness are n on the leav s, w ich us s th m o _ . running' about the four sides, andlin- A child will be naturally polite and THE GIRL OP TO -DAY. thoughtful if the mother is also careful. en, lace whippeAl on the edges. The costly blankets are sent to a nee- A thin flannel bandage around a babeo die women before they are ready for abdomen will often prevent cholera tie eur,atoodhabvuetttohneihroltsgteistolhigehdtlwy itab irk farentenankly children may be greatle and a monogram worked in the °or- strengthened by a daily salt bath, and, It nem, Duvets" covered with chitta silk possible, sea salt should be obtained for show a fluff of valennennes frills and this purpose. pinked flounces about their edges, and Never use pure mustard poultices for the huge sham pillowa used by day are children. ' Their skins are 'too delichte. upholatered exactly to accord with the One spoonful of mustard to two of lin- duvet. Added tp this luxuriousness seed meal is a good mixture. there are beds with big satchet pillows A Crepher. that He ael day between the theets Commodore V nderblit wee not so Arlie tocrati i hi ta f hi I - and When taken out at night Mir- a n a notes as some o 8 re a round the 'deep& With a eleep invit- twee. On ono occasion he was sitting on • trig fragrance of violets or rose leaves. the crowded piazza of a fashionable hotel One ot the most remarkable social developments of these latter days is the evelutionpf the mature heroine of romance. Formerly t ..loiepost was al- lotted to the young girror the young married woman. In those times, moreover, the adjective Of youth would not have been applied to the maiden who had passed her twenty-fifth year. and only In the spirit of the grommet flattery to the matron who had seen her three decades, It is typical of the age that this explanatory note shOuld be necessitry. Now the expression "young" Is purely relative. The perio4 of middle age has been entirely abol- ished. When almost everybody younger than somebody else, it Ise only this f ho treme antiquity Who can be regarded with any degree of certainty as old. At AD the girl of to -day Mt longer re- ttres on th.e shelf as a 'failure, to pass the rest of her are in the humiliating pe Mon of the roeideu aunt who de- ets herself to the children or re- venges herself on the poor. She le merely prepaaemg to start on a new phase of life with a more definite plan and a clearer visitne Very often she marries mid begins efreilll at 40. Some= times she has been known to be so greatly daring as to enter on matri- taony for the first time when she has Passed, her fiftieth year. For the matron the range is even More extend.. ed. At 8) she is qnit6 a young thing ..gay, frivolous, ekittieh, tet Whom. go. oiety and flirtation are the chief ob- jects in life. Ten yease more bring her to her priane, It hi the period of feseination, of adventure, of 10101110e. The WOMOM of 40 is upside of any- thing. She is the object of the wildest piens, the centre of the moet daring romance. At 50 she is prob- ably marrying for the second time. Threte.scOre Will fillet her approaching. this altar for her third Wedding, and if she lite' long enough, she may even reap;eari at a late; (late to beteg her record Up tO fOur. tio,OS MADE PROM: HAIR. The moat 4311XIOUR lace is called point tram*. /t le Very rare, and was made of humeri hair. Prellish celleetors say that it eXiste the present day only in their otibinete. It was confined to the early part of the /sixteenth ten - tiny. Margaret, Ooinotiree Unmet, the mother of the wretched Dotage', tent from the Tower, where she with imprisoned, when her son,,LordChar- les Lennox, minded Ihe daughter of Bess of Hardwick*. a bit of this kind of lam, to Mary, Queert of Soots. This in the oaf initiOestsee of the guilt is a veritiisiairtrong proof of her belief that ha been itapitted to her. The little re of polled tream we* work- ed by • old Osten ogle owe hands graY . t was, .411040.. bilIPANLY A WWII. it al ro *ma *tato. , Unto it it otiodetwervaor ter ntf:04 bit Ain is us namse..• , *prbiglifts vstmetitli • sesi." le taw a man 113* &Vet ONTARIO'S PROGRESS. whop lady approached. The comma • Elora rose and talked affably with her while his Wife and daughter raged. . "Father," said th • dau eter "do 't enettsetes Shoon; teoewtie:miteipir al,. 113cpeam, .One who used to gen ieoultlyg.t-o us'?" n you remembee that vulgar woman as the The fifthl part of the annual report "Cei•tainly. my dear," responded the lineern whheeenrt• Liles rio(7t:rwerbrioenlir statistics fee the year 1898 has province,' dealing of the Bureau of Indwuistthriesintonriatphaet just The.ladieii made no further coniMentS, peddled oysters up in Jereey." been Waited, and embodies Many Wig' MOODY'S SAYINGS. gestive deter& tO the growth, po- pulation, arid financial standing of the Some Christians are like ati old well-. Meni0ipalItiee„, doelpiled from the as- drAledoehippleingitihMemwera,tfeitozieenauflp sessment returns The ooingarative the water In a 'hip Id all wrong. A tables suminarizing the ilgttres'oover a egefeeg Include% Christian in the world is all right. but the - period of 18 years, with tha exception of those relating world in a Christi:in is a different thing'. tO inuniCipal debts, which are only I have no sympathy tor the old eitiken made up to 1897. While the impute- who dies and the newspaper reporters tion during this period has inereased have to hunt among musty church ree- from 1,828,495 to 2,001,830, the total aa- eras to find out If the man wee a Chet/ - segment has been augmented from 11**. 0094,880,650 to $800,184,838.. incitation for ell urposes has Increased from REFLECTXONS Oh' A 13AOrtnton. $9,0b9,88 to .12,222,960, or from $4.08 " per head of this population to .11,10. The There are a whole lot of men who whole period 188647, has been rapid, Mit its remthding them of an old, poor inereate of debenture debt, taking the neVer hear e new, witty stoxy with- munielpal obligations having risen one. from 420,924,888 tO $511,577,4715, but a favorable eign is that this increase even with their wites for eomething was ranch more. marked diluting tlithe tho will even cpiit Saint; like they eatlier part of the period, t 6 grOW Some mot are so mean that to get would die fot them when there IS tome bettoingt. ico4o.yrisidearcrably lege during the patty, The isopulatioo, tables Shoes, that moTsbte viaelVileableei loav e 'lint let heehiwl dori el d, tlibet the 'urban municipalities continue to cause the little child ie the only nee grow et the experise of the rural nee - who doesn't capon to get anything Out Hone, The townehip population wats of It. 1,148,856 at the beginning of the pert. When a man tells his little bay Lod under consideration, and largely that it butts him *Orilla whet, he has owing to the emigration to the North.- to whip han than it does himeelf, lie Wmt, Ited fallen to 1,098,984 in 1 has forgotten what he mied to think 8146614 roboirculio4imein Tolle thhaceijboepttaa. when his hither told him the same . Mee to SMALLPDX TIME NOW. .• tLon of the townships number 1 110 t hint(' I I* Rat nwhile the cities have in. ........... ores,eed -their numbers from 111:0,6114 440. , Itnel the Population of towns The etatisties ot smallpox show and villages 'together has grown from that this ailment is Mote prevalent S00005 to 449,607. from January to June Olin in the lat. ' iownship valtiatione heve ehanged er half or the year. Measles elbow a but little. Tbe figures stood et I145d,. descending curve In January, a tit* in Of17,645 int 1880, mid 0448,810,000 in May and Attie, a fall from August to, City valuations heed ineretored from Wolter, and then rim in November -or $164401,911 to gt$0,017,878, and the aa- and Deoetaber, earrying us on to the memento ot town* and yillsom from 3armar fall. Scarlet fever IS IOW ,0f8 to Stle,167,147. from Opnry t July; It rhos in blames In the debenture" debt Auguat, and inpihigh till the end ct entirety le the The December. Ty ged fever is tyipieally sromifir of ell dallPti rleafn trona an eilment at the autumn, • , sad that of bra etwo more Miss Howlett, the high hod: obese- ibbsatttre pion goiter, and * most flatethed play. y doerdased sr, is net yet seveuteme, aid lee*. "bows 41141t Man boy hit vadat ,OW to tise towers 996•9991199•99 sts ,• L a