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The Sentinel, 1883-08-17, Page 3• • • • -• • • • -•-•-•-`"" • • • • • • ... . , ..........4.....**..............**,.... -..-1-.... . •••••••---,•'-''''.-7.--- •—•-, ... . . , • , THE:. VANEXTeir • CIRCLE., k3)';&..ta' °triable iJotttnezer fox. Our Fair Ifeatders, FASHION GOSSIP, NEW .RECIPES„ ETO. (Compiled by Auht Fenttiathal,FriYoUtitesik TO drudge away life for a place in eociety, to 'give preciouii afternoons to the • labor of "paying eel's," and to alltow indifferent acquaintances as Emerson said, to dente- . • tete the day, to give constant" thought to the revisionof one's . toilette• and the im- provement of one's visiting list, tl4s is to • be a gave to things - And if the .slave do not feel her fetters, Ho Much the worse for her: '8Oniany Women- have not time for ' the,unbUrried delight of their 'children's • . presence, for reading anything .beyond the • ••• 140 •novel, for any occupation higher than the harrowing round they :call. their ",dornestiO and social duties 17t .• ....klencent. work lor Cbildrcn..• Threading boads'ia alWaye 4:delight to children, particularly tolittle.gins, but it is .131,,uch better to give them Homething definite tefmake. and a plan to work upon. As 'won as they have acquired the •art of threading • • them at all they can 'makea very.simple , and pretty :necklace: fortheir. dolls by • having a long end of etreng cotton,- threaded through' a needle at each end, and a reapply of beadsof two colors, say blue AU4 white. Thread on..three blue beads over •each needle; then oreits the needles through on .white 'bead then again three blue on each . • needle, again pass the needles in opposite directionb. through one white one, BO form,. ing -',e731,1t.•••tru .E4 ate „..ee-teenete4neteseetee'oerMeleustieitigar e • can be joined together by layieg them side .!hy • side; and, starting again ' with 4wo needles, run one through. the , first three blue beada on the right .haed string, .the other through the flint three of that on• the ,left. Take a nevi white head to oroes the needIeti throegh, and on again through the next et of blues. •A number.Of *short strings - united in Ihiswit'y •makes :th.:peetty little mat, which may be dniehed 'off -round the .edge with a kind • of fringe .made of loops alternately of the white and. .blue 'beads; • With six beads to eaelle loop. • Orteitehite Preoure a bone,. cit'even, Meng with the hobe, a nine pieee.of a -hanker neck of mut- ton, say one pound, andOo' make a• .pot of 7 -broth to laiit two or three dant at this:, -,setteeo-Ofthe-year÷7agblid'Zigul of barley •• put on, with the Cold water; . 'Whet the water hails put in .yotir Vegetables -say, carrot, thrutp;. an onion and a' pabbage .or. •. •eavoy.• Minos your babbage vary fine, put .your turnip inwhole, and grate .down. the • oireot;,which makes the broth hate:a hies, rich look as Well .as taste; Veit altogether • two or two and a half. beers, as the good- ness of 'them depends a:great deal on being !Wen .boiled, :• *and • nothing IS` betier.;fOr. :children, and if they take plenty of theta. .they do not want • blea0 . they are also good ' for grown-up people,. who Pan...haVeihe, • • ,itii0W .te'lkask Btankrts::• • „ , ' It is not : every one who rightly under- stands blanket washing; ocnesquently. the , labors Of :Many. :are teWarded by a rough, .';'• hard finish; aempletely,spoilingthe-softnese- -TiOhleihja the oharm 9fea blanket. It would •be •seareely ;neceseary to write these in- risteuotions. for those who pride themselves • upon thinking • their method, the 'finest • • known': . ,It is neVer, well to..nteddle. With the: set idols Ofeonee hobby-fidere,althottnh even a "word t� the Wiser is:often of great :benefit. But fee.thotie'women or youpg. girlswho prefer to superintend •ihe • , oleansing. .of their blankets , themselves; • and :will -not east aside a valuable hint, we bete in few words 'a; •process, the • . result:at 'Which, ought to satisfy the Mind .ef.any : careful, person. ..A bucket of soft . ...*tater..4n.atIoich:418.4eiking,swlepufrz ve ro.POW047.0,40. ih uicker., le-'eet --aside over :tithe. The following Monate twO or. thiee..buOkets Of weter.,_areaddedAtilthisicand-pUt-en-thetitrn• to boil' thoroughly. . To ''the boiling suds: • add -bait a.pint c f.hartshorii and -a' gill .of• turpentine. • •• Stir weIL, andthen thite . elearieing Olin*is ready loithe blankets . .whieh, are thrown •. in, and with a strOk • puathed'Clowe and about. „. In, & mostsUr•-., prising ivey willthe formergelled color be suddenly • altered "ft* ...that of original whiteness. ...And When tauffielentiy eetiefied . that tuithieg reit:laths 9f :dirt or spot, ribite the bleekete, in; eliie:11 Stidaiehake, stretch • . :e14,4 dry' them in Mit). • . • • ,isks4s to 'istonseheepetri, ' . :If you wish to have the ,.best' respite, :in. ... cake -making; always hie pulverized sugar .„ • If a. straw hat has been Wet, and the stiffeese has departed, titbit little White of • e'gg roiled with culd: waiter Over .putit • • On.w.itlkaflannei clotheoe. •., • ; A bath towel' that willfih geed etaineels matheof carpet -ward, 'oroitheted in any loose ,stiten, eeehOrt. task' to makts.i.Puod, •it will outlast Most other to*els uSed-fer , rubbing Alone. • , • ••. • • If ''yCu lave oCeasioneto Lae 'OlOtilS wet , hot livater about ainievatlidedol not try to wring•themPut of the water. The -beet - way to prepare them is to, steam, them• ; they.ean be handle then with comparative eats • If it is possible OQ to arrange the order of dipnergetting, do not 0011 the peas until • a few lanai* 'bektee., they are t� .be eook&l.. They 'loose meth of their;Eme, • dibtinctive • ilaver if, shelled.' some time •.before • cooking; and do ndt What water is BO Olean tifitile lining of the Gooseberry 'rool.--Slininer a quart of • gooheberries untilteado\r, rub them through fiu.e sieve to a thiell pulp, Sweeten,: mid, • when perfeetly poi& to each gill Of it add, half a gill of csrearo. Serve in .glatisee with sponge ruSks. Tins can be made of healed • goeseberriete ar, little 'omen' juice being, „ gelded if neatest:lark.. , ' tele* $ottp.::-. 13611 a email iiuti of riop in • three pints of toilkuntilit will pasothrough •a sieve.. Grate • the white part :of three heads of cdory on a bread grater ; add this to the milk east it has Wen Otrained Pitt, to it.a quart Of strong veal kook ttlpt it,bod •, Mad the celery iteperfectly. tendet ; seat% o with Balt aud eirailnlie pepper aoa servo, If • cream is obtainable, ituostitute ono pint for \ the Same quantity of. milk.• • Delicious eaticelet Meataia Medd in thin way -: Slioe a large onion anti 'fry In hitter till it is brown, then cover the onion with rich brown gravy, which is left from rout beef, add mustard, salt and pepper, &hid if you °home a tablespoonful of Worcester - Blake eaueee. let tins held up, and if tO0 thiekthireit with a little stook or gravy er even litttle hot water with butter, our this when done through It fine sieve- •Of coupe a larger quantity can he prepared at than is mentioned here. ' /Feminine GQIIISIP• - Mrs, hamlet Beeaaher Stowe wears clothes twentyofive years out of fashion• • AVM Ella T. Greene gets 01,800 salary as commercial traveller 'for. a St, 14011113 1101300. , When a Georgia t irl found thather beau had taken another young lady to the oirous she cried_ herself sick and put crape on the front door. ' • ' They call it a romantic"marriage when a couple. of the neighboraget the bride's ,father ma beck room, andsit' on him to prevent his interrupting :and breaking hp the wedding. , • ". ••• lady Who frequently. ViEnte. " Hartford travois for a' furniture.- eittabliehment in New York and melee& good ine0Me. atilt husband was in the employ of the same eotiosrn and upon hie death she solicited the situation and got it. • , China silk of light, yet durable, texture is also used indark plain shades of.maroon, plum, blue and brown,, for short journeys made in drawing -room Oars _These dreeses. have the' short batque; apron Metals*, and round skirt withe pleated flounces. ' There are now in England and Wales befween,300,000• and 400.000 women who possess the fratehisee-that is to say, Oho 5-terebeheta.,,eteretti:eareene-- • • ateketreteleeeeet-: Tffe. number of .7ivemett landowners. in England rtnii Wales is 37,606.: . • . • . , A good design for pleated skirts is io make 16 WI pleats attached to a'.yoke form the entire skirt. These pleattiehould be three or fouripohes wide,. peeved under, neath-run together-froni Abe boltdoWn to „within twokightbs of the -foot, Where they are left -flowing,and ate edged •with embroidery, "-• • ; • . 1: • . ;White silk grenadines :for : afternoon toilets . have stripes.... of, blitoliwtelvet, are trimmed with black Fretch lace iu many frills; and are.. made up over • white silk Tlioee with velvet stripes hatf the width of the grenadine stripes make. very.effeetive iileated7iltuiLcai when arranged so that the. volvet etrIne"isettL...the-outeideef-tiach' .The newest 'littera 'collets are merely a straight beta of doubled fine %linen; with narrow soillops and embroidery along: the Upper ,edge.. These .are worn .outside :the dress pollar, and there are twolenetliwiee buttonholes in .frOnt. through whieh a nar- row ribbon is 'passed and tied :hi ,a bow,' and lieloW this may be added two fan - pleated ende-of mull and Wide laoe., . • Several French women of fashion mani• fest a very decided teeth for simply Made evening gowns of :thick white, (lorded 'stilt, merely decorated with some good lace or white pesseenenteris• ',Many of tthe•newest: Pompadour eilks• have white grounds. Arab, -Persian and Tunisian *Muelitui worked With colpred, gilts and gold are in high ,favor to drape over white silk gowns; -Whet eteler is preferred to white the ;ante chosen for theelaSt. entertainments Of: .the Parisian :meson were• -for ;the meet pert aurora, pink. "\Bleu -de -ROY,". gold color (ite damask more', especially) terracotta, Iceland- altiblile,;Peargeey, apricot need:with orimSonh 'primrose:and lilac :(ier whitens, as it is son:Mathes called.: now), ornamented With damask roses. . During the 'recent • storm at Mackinaw, old 'tank was •blown down and fell ioMthe railroad ties*. Dire; Frain,. Wife of; Wiliiam Frain, neer whose house the awl? 'dent lia•„,%Lenictet;.cas.k.,,:loiliviiithiurtilogur. th7eLizarettle;travizas about through • the htindleg,, , furious • atom . for. nearly ae.qoarter Of a Mile, and after cnn- iderable troubie - succeeded in ettrecting. the engineer's, attentionand a terrible Mei- aent was prat -elated. ' Mee, Sargent; •• ydfc; . of the Annerioan Minister at Berlin,: in a letter describing call upon .the• • Enipreirse\: said :• Majesty surprised me by esking.ehotit my daughter Lzzie. She had heard that Lizzie began the study Of medicate in Cali- fon:Oa and was now continiiitiglt'in Zeriph. We,are Much interested An medicine,' the Empress added; and then:spoke of Oltenia:al' war in Ameriita arud' t he • Franito,P; anal' war, saying that the : Gerreathe had gained' much valuable information from the Americans as to the treatment of "lick and, WOunded•Soldiers, whii�h .Was ,put to good ilea in their last war,” • • • - ,.• . • Eittertiiiidog Uh. ktiltes wait, ••I'Attle ToromY was -ebtertaintog one of his Sister's ,callers until she appeared. • "Don't you come•to see hiy srster ?" ho innuired. : 9.:•,:“okes, Tommy, that's what I nOlthe You,. like her a,good, deal, dou't ..You ?" "O course, I 'Werke her very much. DOD% you thiek elle is bioe 11". • , " Well, I reckon .1 have to, 'cause" she's' my eieterebut she thutelle me pretty tough sometimes. Bot, say, les ses you caret, yoer. meeth Mtge. . Now shut it real tight till',1,60unt tee. There, 1 Allowed yeti could do it." • • , ". :Why, Tonircy; Whet oaidI oouldn't?" ". Oh; bobody, hitiCh, but sieter,'"---.' Whet tlict she say ?" • • • ." ehe said- you hadn't sense,enetigh to keep: your metah thee, and I bet her two big oranges you had, and you have, ain't you, amt you'll, make her duff up the. orateges, won't you ?" • ...The youttg man didn'twaittOBtle Whether she apgqd hp" or A .yeting bachelor, who ‘, had been ahpoitited deputy -sheriff, was 'called upon to serve an attachment against a beautiful young widow. lie abcordingly, celled upon her. and said, " Madani, I have ail -attache Wept for you," The widow flailed; azid amid slit' Was • hapPy to inform Irina lite attachmeht Wats reciprocated, " You .do not uhderetand tee ; -tell must propetiii to court." ," I know it is lettp,y ear, Mr, but 1.,prefer you would do the 'smarting." " ,this is no tium for •triflieg ; the jiletioele waiting." The juatica 1°Why, I ehitul&prefer it pinion? ' THE .fitTRIAN '•tesroZiket tel'Olegalre VANAPIAN 4.0/4041130,44,LEVG,- flint*, by. a Wowed. ,tiodicar man on ,How to Live. • r, (From, mo Lewis; lifonthiy. elanezipee , Thousands of pereoes Starve themselves 'itto thinness, paleness and hervomeress, by living on w:hite bread and sweet thugs, and sleeping teo• little. Oatmeal,. cracked wheat, "graham. bread and beef; with plenty of eletflo wotild Make them, plump aufkruddy. • ' " Whatis one Man's Meet is Another Man's Poison."- Good beef, good bread, exercise, sunshine, pure air, temperance, oleanlinese, abundant sleept axtheerful tern: per and a hundred otherthitigs are every inan'areeat, and no mitn'e poison,' It is true there are somethings. which One man can bear and another cannot, but they are of doubtful Utility, If you keep to the safe, and geed in -.toed' and: drink, there le no truthin the old saw; that "What is one: man's meat branother man's poison." This 1 diklidettatiwo sine. in. , mea84 de to !Over ..1.,1111*!4le Tea. -In the•LondonMedical Vine' ' Peens ,the following . paragraph: Dr, Heath, Pt Newcastle,has been, the 144 to -raise his voice against tel.' But it has long been a fact familiar to us that tea is MOSOimitful source of dyspepsia. Among the vast nutribers of poor women who fre- quent tht. patient poemsof our London hospitals, we should not be far. wrong in saying •theit- two-thirda are suffering from dyspereie. This dyspepsia almost in- variably arises from two came:tee-0e want of proper food, and the abuse of artitiles like tee, which 'tatty the &eying .for food, but which aggregate the consequent con- dition of the digestion." • Hot.Reetal Douche;--, In...rearayereeeoe• remit douche •.with signal :benefit. You should manage it in the following way: Lay your "patient on his sideruee a fountain syringe, ' whioh . you liang' lowthat the water may •flew into ' the bowels slowly. Let the -water be as hot as Your hand :can bear. Use fromoneto four quarts, exhort. nig the patient to retain it :as long.as„.he pan. This- May be heed as a domestic reined*. ...It will do • no harmand will always afford relief; espeoleily where the Oyeeutery is accompaniedby backache or severe pain through the 'lower Part of the abdomen. 1 have seenmenyoatagis of • dyseiCterYand straining dierrtitea relieved .at Once by this hot recteldouehe . • • 0,verWork.--Muola is said-Of,--.!•civerweik_ neat a -days; and ,much that is notaienstoal: Gem tie men. _Come- to. 00nOniti'"Mee-aiiiiiirie. ftill'alt the flattop that overWork. is Niteteen.tiines in twetity it Is bad food:: bad:. beets, *are and other abuses.' ..With geed Med properly eaten, 'eaten,' plenty.Pf sleep; a clean skin apadexeroisein the open air, not one in ten of these patients, would .beriak' down froth 4,, evetwork."' . '" • ,„ Atim .and Tobacco. -These. terrible eneinies.' often find : Ufl 'defenceless. ,.Our craving,stothaths call for Stimulus.: )314 lood,:badly. cooked, isthe clause Of of this untieemese• and longing of the sten:Math; A wife who .mm111- her ,husband's breath 'will help hien much more bygood food than by bitter words. Pees, Oakes, puddings, fries, heavy bread; strong coffee andtea play.the mischief with the. iitoniaoh then it ealls. for .sonie stimulus. Coed beef and inuttotielight sweet lire:ad, and good vege- ,table10. taken. in Moderate. quantities, with 'a discreetuoe of lemon juice, will .prevent Much of -the craving for driiik-and,tebacece Mysterious Peovidertoesze-This w:oriclia• "fullsot mysterious - Provident*. But it is not a myeterioareovidence that the organs pf the .abdominal csaVity are diapleteed and great iraffering exienes when a woman weer"' a • tight :Corset;lk:ts not, a; mysterious Provider* that' 'her. binge are kept: in a state ofoongetitioti till she falls into.con- sOmptiori, when she so dresses her feet and legs that'tliS blood cannot get down into them. It is not , a mysterMue:PrOvidetuie that She should le..eareetelteeed.Yettaeptieleand: .VS4st-raferm32714iins .44-,_:2r.eZt.tiag4traelaIt hu a. net a Mysterious :Provideeett that her feet should be distorted . aaenhee..becomer-ett- tripple-irehewettrthe modern Fret etiboot. .11 is not: semyeterione Providence that it 'maternity she is cverwhelmed With nuffer- Mg and helplessness if ehebectomee aniQther when weak;skrepectiti, nervons,And Made-. veloped. .Those Who talk about such things as:mysterious. Providetmee, are downright infidels. They teithet itelaiv nor God. . Thie, meriting -I- 'anted an Ottveltd.: woman; 60• .years old; the Mother .of ,-five ohildrein. Her lather diedat th,i'ageoeqel• her !nether' still lives, aged 82. IMy patient haegara; bent, neuralgio,diccutiraged'; wishes ,slie had. never . beeteL: thinks life an awful. inyetery. . Within ahe New England States one hundred' such Vernon breathe aud Buffet'. • Dotts, any one believe this a mysterious ProVideria ?, Does Amy ,90e 'doubt that ninetyqiine ,,•thousand . of theite •Woncietranight have beenhealthy and happy.? The, instruotion of girls in the. lawa of health is one of the grandest rite, Siete that ever fell to the lot of cartel. •ittalkiou ipros,,ipies straight. The operation to .be undergebeby the ne,tieueis eirople and: pritotteelly peirthiss. For the eotivergebt oto 64 there is no pain whatever, only -a little. annoyance white the Otterator is reaching'tbalittle rotisclewhieh has to be divided. I have perfonted the, operaticiti heedrede .of titneaon other people, Hotnetinatas giving at-aesthete:is, and often with no such aid. The patient is. stretohed.oh the table. „ 1 drat' apart -with ..my ;fingers the Lids of his eyes and insert between them' a';little steel inetrinnent shaped -like the letter O. , The sides Of this est end by a Bering and -force the lidareepee, diselesieg the eyeball and the network,of hmiaeles holding it in poei,tion • anddirect- ing its „Movements. INThen this expansion 19 accomplethed I lift eri then:lettere with a small pair of tweeeors, and divide it with my inetrunient. When it is cut it 'feels to the petiettt liar if a lathall hand of rubber: was being ebapped. There lane pain at all, Ver, Often, however, peitful operetionsare perietreed. ' The. Intieole hail semetinees been divided too beech; and the error: has to be,rectified. Thierequiree tette' stitohes to be taken, and anew Out to he Made: The patient' must he, r‘utide iiiiconseleus while this hi going on," ... ' "tan you euro any eaoti ef ettibisrnuti '- / can benefitcany ordinary Cabe, even when it can't he entirely. toured. 1 hale often wished that X coulcr'Operate on Ben Butler. I, think I could give hina as straight eyes as 1 have in half an hour's tinie."-.)1 Doctor, in New Irofk Tithes, • The Tragedies dm* One Woman's Lite l. Tbe"Ta.tet hiStor7dofutcheed4Won2an Who was• shot; by Bence Bo Shepherd: the other night ea New 'York, julit before he shot and kilied himself, it3 told hit a deepatolif frhro ,X4OUIS. The murder and suicide recalled at once, a • St. 140414 swum" non of old date, Airs. Voullaire's maiden Mune was Este Watts, and she was the step-daUghter of a man whose name is know ail over the west. He was member of the firn3 of Murray; Liller Co., original proprietere of the notorious Missouri state lottery, a ooneern with 'a franchise from the state that 'enabled it to. continue in business despite the efforts of earllathupstir 4-tinowahlynegaraandaglo.. sw7exeouting pow. ere Voulleire was,a scion of one of the old families'of On Louie. He became a prominent ,criminal lawyer. He was of very evraethY ootoplexion and excentitingly handsome; heonz one who was present is, learned the ehigular tater, of hie' marriage to Kiss:Watts At an evening party some one asked young Voullaire why he didn't get married. The snowier was, ," Nobody will have me 1" MOO Watts, who was standing near, said laughingly, I'll have you.' Later in the evening a few seribUrTfordi were spoken between them, and they were married about two: weeks afterward; . They lived happily together for nine years, and then scandals arose about the wife. The •Votillairee separated. Voullaire constantly haunted. the neighorhood of his -wife's separate resi- dence. One day he saw Charles Ruth, a clerk in ,thc _poet etteee - • - al"Peteree-etwitetemeleeittitlin Bead. A few : weeks later they :Met. again inFourth : street, and ex, ohingeideliots. Both Were hit: Ruth and the woman went off together to Lawrence, Re., Where they wereknown as Mr. and Mrs. 'Ruth.. The womantook with her One Or both of hersena by Vouillatre:. Scandals , arose it Lawrence. One.: morn- ing Ruth was found dead sitting pn 9 plenn stool in his 'Parlor, With writing materials and several fluished letters, anct- oneuncona, pleted letter before him on the piano. The' fatally phyla:nen, Dr..2tledlidOt, was acetified of., poisoning him, *iththe connivance of the ' woman. 'Then followed ' the long and •sensational Ruth 'murder trial. It wus shown -- thatelletthhad died f_ from .triorphite; but the •Weight. of evidence.,wate thathe -had-adniiiiifiteriiefilie drug bimetal. Alter that followed: the etruggle of Seymour 'D. Vat:Climate to get adivOrlie and the ous, tody of his boys or one of theirce.elle Won ;the suit. :He remarried; Five years ago he died, and his widove. and one 'child by. her are now in New York. The 'children .heve been partly ' supported out of „their father's estate,: :Mrs: Veil/lake had been . . lost bight of till'Illonday!s tragedy. , A. -KcftIirtic . . incoete., • Bob )3Urdette wiltee4hie: "A dlifin the woods.' • A.realistic ;Sketch in • black and White.: It hi *glad Picuio party, The Bewley school hate gene out into the leafy forest. The :dark object in the heavens 800, miles wide and '2,000 'miles long is cloud- It got to the woodii about as soon .as the picnic, 'wait. is there: yet. • ...Cheer thegreet Oak you Mtn see the dinner. The • largematerproef Mound in the middle of the table sullenly • laughing at the -storm, is 'fruit cake.. The teacher of the -Want .oliati made it- herself for the little • elms. But the sterol "saved thorn,' Sett, .the light, thng stilzeir,the cake. It will never strike anything, else. • There stands the' Cake, withonta. dent, •and underthe table, shet, tered and blighted; lies the thunderbolt. Under the ceder tree is a dying deg. He got in the ..Way, and the • Superintendent .felled him to the earth With one blew of • a biscuit. :The tell figures wrapped in..ahat Alostifr-Arsosp.Sre,-04.,,,aztratg. tettlajter nit 1.11- His ieftuence withthat class is gone for- ever; . The_yOungladies-will-.mater be able to., look it him again,: Withotiitthinking haw-he.lciokrad On this oocatipu. .Up in the liiekoxy ..tree • you -pee it griSf.strieken' face 'peering .down. It is the Soperin- tendent. , He climbed up there to • fix the Swing, and before they could throw hint: tile rope the storm came up and the ,pienie adjourned sine and line .mora. And he 'is waiting for the last, straggler to disappear before he genies. down.. ,Jie has offlciated. at -Sunday echool piOnios often enough to know better thati....slide4own a shell bark hitaltorY before an audience.' The, man with tbe aunbrellai Under his ' arm is the treasurer. He is.gettiog dienoheclebut he does nOtlealge:..hiOntabre114. He knows there is a name painted on the Weide of it, but for the lifeof him he catinot remember whosename it is. Ho ia yodelling his ch,amie th give the umbrella to a stranger • ,, Too•etennie aterineleurg. A New York report says: %Of& than 250,000. wat erinelons,' have come tit' this ruatitet- it the lase *etalt. ptrgelotreatre new refused by the lectiasianees, and have to• be sold for •account qf the Ititetat ortatiou companies... Tha mai t.itt tto glutted tbat the average nielen wil briog barely the cost ofthe freight. Georgia 'is -the groat centre for this, fruit. The peotitselaet season aieeouraged its thltheittitto there, so ittathoW nearly every -,farmer hail; a NOatei- meiou patch. : The 'Pennsylvania Railroad. brought to itersey City ou Friday fifty' eat loads. Or 60,000 molous, on which the freight was 46000, The tahlous Were sold by the reelected company, the "consignees refusing to handle them., At SaVnonall it is now itluited that the freight be prepaid to NeW York.. Selected melons bring hire $16,a, hundred, and average late Abd .$12 a hundred. , ' At a recent meeting in •faokillgo,n0g)tinai "the Atelibiehop of Canterbury, who pre- sided, teuelied 'upon the great heed that txlitted for "evabgelizitig, those, who NterP temporarily degraded and spiritually desti- tute .amottget the vast thaesos of. Loudon. .The ether day he walked through A poor; district where f teethes were su. ployed 111 bittltieg iriaaole•bertes, • load he found for rttabillecturing a gross they only teceived is and.found their own paete ; 4d /wail pad for inaliitig an Ulster, mid 'II forP0115 ol:iittle hoy'e clothes.), llonenar.-.Geruld Gwynbe,of West Matt - bete' reported at tbe polied offipai here, Fri- day that his house had been btoken into While be was out itt the field yeeterdaY'and a gold °pip faded watch worth IMO -Stolen. The Allendale et Kritle "eland eke Mawr The we°01$8*°e7duollif gianetatinlieLisivriskt:d• in', the 'Ottawa River, the scone of the late amide= oersmen'e regatta, itt the home of &veritable " Grace Darling." A Wog reporter who attended nee regatta' had the pleasure bt me*ttiog and cohverinng with this interest- ing youbg lady. Her name is Mies Emily O'Neldl, and her age " about le. She 30 :5, f101ighter of Detective p'Neill; _ex Shpenn- tot:Meat of the Doinithon Police Voroe. Her father owns the west end of the island, and ber family inhabit a sung little house fac- ing thasogth channel of the river and the ,Qutaricr sipore, , Mies Emily ha*. bqeu instiranentaf in saving from drowning no lees than seven' human lives at various titites; and yet this gentle heroine has not as yet been honored with the medals of the humane society, vvhioli she BO .rioblir • deserves. however, it may be 'added that it iaPaitly,her own' fault, for she is BO very modest, in speaking of her heroin' deeds that One *01.24d imagine that tihe was a very. timid creature instead of the brave girloho is. One reason why she holds aloof front prospective adornment of her bestial' with the society's emblems of heroism is that she drea is a public presentation or any splurge'on such an oeicasiOn. The Marquis of Lerne has visited the young lady's , family a tiouple of times, and it is under- • "Amid that he has, insisted that she will receive the medals. • • New about her courage.- Her first act a bravery was .to„ save -five smell boys wile were skating on the river from drowning.' The iate was in -very haeleconAititieteeneelLe 7etieete:e4Lie-e:-- '074rTSVi,PrZ, -disappeared. Klee O'Neill heard their °ems for help, and putting out in a boat she Medd her way through the rotten ioe and after a hard struggle managed to lend- all the youngsters safely oh shine. Her next' courageous feat was to rescue a half -tipsy habitant who was caressing the river on unt eafteioe. 'The farmer and his team. Went through, and Mies Emily -managed, to save the :mane but the team was droWned. This was hist winter. Her third and list stroke of heroism °marred the present summer. On,the Dated° shore, :Opposite, her father's house, is a. saw4nill. One of, the mill hands' fell off a; wharf in trent of • ; the mill anti was.oarried off by the current_ mid.streani. ,. Miss Etnily saw the mishap, and her trusty boat being itt hand be was. -7 004-byith,e-wddif Of the drowning .millirian,• Who :was speedily hauled into the boat in a famished oOnctition. Mies Emily is in expert oarswoman., She his a modest, sweet face, and to the casual observer she does not betray any. Of the heroicnature thatis the delzght of the: neighborhood and , the Pride of her father, mother and 'Osten.. She itt rather ethell in stature and her limbs appear to be strongly':ponstructed.•-- Potent° World. DiP106100N,IN:VIEILE 1110.11MS*1181E.... AIL Senedble Nerthweiliern VIew 01 eke— ' Ceases et le.' • Whit mean the ••dark shadows lowering overthe brows of speculators and ahem ' Who oanie to this far land to mike haste to .' be rich?_ The answer :is, we believe, to .be •• .folind in a• sentence, • Spoken -by some ono, •• 46 forget 'at the moment -Where or .by whom, the other day, '" The towns have Outgrown the country." They must be content for the country tovatah tipe There it s - are; s true, other .cagaree at work in various, localities •lierci, in Molise 4aw;:,. f�r instance, .the • delay • .of the Government to put he lands on the market and to recognize the olainati f th sq eaters 'have done much and are doing much to retaid. progress. .. But it is chiefly by -hindering the' growth,. of . the "inanity, 'fi's .distinat I rom the oity, that...this ere tivaraviti-449-447,1rti plotiehediti er.Week. There _itt much talk about "reaction," but but :there is no retatotionlh: this land save that whiedr;• has in aertaiii-sentione f016-WCti wild .and *• reckless speOulation.: " * But . what is to be done tn the' meantime wbile we are waitingfor .the country to Aro*? The answer:5:1o, every One must, we, suppose, find for himself. , Meny, even of the; business nein of the towns, are answer, ingett .very .praothially,,. by going. to the . country themselves and • engaging actively in .fartaing,:purtanite.--Moose Jaw New. , . Salt ter the Threat; ' In thestedaye when diseases 9f the throat ate so universally prove ent, and in .so many ott6enfata1,.remailis au eXehange, we, feel it our duty to say it word in behalf bf timnost effestual; if, not positive cure • for sore throat. For Many years pans indeed we they say during the Whole of it life of .; more than forty •,years, we have been • subjeilt to a dry, hacking tiou.h, whieh is . nop only•distiessing to euriaelveti but to our, Weeds, •and 'those with whom we •are. breught 'foto business contact. Lest fall we were induced to .try What .2:Viet:Mee: theta' Wee' ib cominon pelt, We come nuanced by using it three, tiMea a day-: morning, noon and 'night. We dispolveda' • l'are teaspoonful of pure table -salt 'Di about • ahalf a email tumbler full of water. • With , this We gargled the throat racist' thoroughly," jest beforemeal,time. The resulthae;been that 'during. the entire *tutor, we were hot Only free froba coughs • and colds, but the dry; hacking •cough heti' entirelydisap- peared. 'We -attribute these satisfactory resulteeolely to the use of salt -gargle, and that cordially recommend a trial of it -to , filmic) who are subject to diseases Of the throat. Many personS who have never . tried the Salt gargle -have the Impression thetit is unpleasant, but after a few days" uric+, no persort„ who loves a nice, clean. , mouth abd a first-rate sharpfter of the . appetite, will alum don it.—Ex.change. WintAT YTtLn ---;WO are afraid that. the Yield Of wheat in Oita bonen veill be badly effected by ruse Many yields' examined )0nos outtillg show badly shrunken grain. Galt liePortee. • • , a 4 - A friend who was ,,abdut to volt thcr United 'fits,tea asked Cobden Whether it would be worth while to ge ftfr out ofhia, 'way tfor the sake of seeing the,$, Palle of Niagara. - ”Yea, mast assuredly," was,, • Cobdetes repfy, 4% There are ttve tiUbliLtjjtjoS •fittitueee-oue of restethe other of motion. . The i•uhlitetity of relit id a dietirat view of t• the Aips ; the subliniftY of motion la Niagara." 4 f