The New Era, 1884-06-20, Page 9it
E14:
POE wt.
A. Itentt et obe Sweetest,
.A tong of the things that are 'Anatole,
The oraningest and the eotopletest,
',Reath the beautiful elty that is o'er us,
lathe beautiful world thatb before us„
Op the breast of the dear sea under us --
:None of which three can sender ns.
_Bey Moon with a little titer daughter,
That ,
hat looks. at herself in the water
Prete her blue bower so high up above no,
close to the angels that love us;
N.Jit these are lase deer to the night
'Amen unto my heart its delight.
liittle bough, with the little leaves on it,
/Faint green, like Titania'a bonnet,
As fresh as the hopes of the spripg-time,
.As light ae the songs of the wing -time-,
.Little bough, I but left you t)80�
A. little lace sweeter to me.
Little shell, with the pink overspreading,
Like the cheek of a bride at her wedding,
And as smooth as the brow of the sister
Whose coral lips lately have kissed her -
Little shell-ehip that saileth the ocean,
Thou'rt but type of my shrine of devotion.
Ch, a little bee recital on a mullein,
Neither lietless nor lazy nor Bullen,
.A wise little hunter of sweetness,
A 'quaint little teacher of neatness-.
Wirat'a more cunning than this little fellovv.
Clinging close to the mullein-llower yellow?
,Is't a budwith the red breaking through it,
And the morning sun etaying to woo it ?
.Ab, lovely and luring the rose is
Which the bud's fairy lattice discloses;
But my cradle, a bower that is fairer,
Heide a EtOlirer /bat is eweeter and taxer.
le't a nest with a baby bird twit,
A soft -throated gray little linnet,
'With father's wing hoverieg over it,
_And mother's breast ready to cover it ?
Ali, the sweetest of sounds, so my vote is,
Come not up out of little birds' throaties I
Mother's heart, with a little head on it,
Proud and happy because she has won it-.
Mother's heart says ber baby's the sweeteet,
The ounninge1raiiirell'irM51etest
Of all the sweet things under heaven,
Of all the sweet things ever giyen.
A
Grandnin's Angel.
" Mamma staid : 'Little one, go auttnee•—•—
If grandmotherli ready to come to tea:.
I knew I mustn't disturb her, so '
I stepped as gently along, tiptoe,
' •And stood a moment to take a peep -
'And there`Was grandmother fast asleep t
" WIEN It was,time for her to wake"; -
I thought I'd give her it little shake,
• Or tap at her door or softly call;
But I lutdn't the heart for that at all -
She 1001(0(1 80 sweet and quiet there,
Lying back in her high arm -chair,
vibilliher dear white hair and afittle smile,
That means she's lovjeg you all the while,.
didn't make a speck of a noise;
I knew the was dreandug of little boys '
And girls who lived with her long ago,
And then went to heav,en-she told me eo,
" I went up close, and Ldidn't speak
One word, but I gave bar on her amok
The softest bit of &little kiss, •
Just in a whisper, and then said this':
' Grandmother, dear, it's time for tea:
" She opened her eyes and looked at me,
And said: ' Why, Pat, I have just now
dreamed
Of a little angel who 00,1110 and seemed
To kissme lovingly on my face.' . • .
She pMated right at,the very Plage 1
. • •
"I never told hen was only me ; • •
took her band; and we went to tea."
—Nonsense verse: Cow Stipa.
Where, 0 whew earl the bossy.eowbia '
I think she's np in the sycamore tree I. •
I saw her tail fly out in the breeze •
And I just looked up when I heard her sneeze.
. •
iShe hung her bag on the front door latch,
And left her horns in the turnip patch ;
The dog came by, and " My friend," says she,
-" I'm going to roost in the sycamore tree."
She 'shook her elbow right in hie face .
And turned a summersault over theme;
•For the windwas high and her heart was gay,
What's what made her act in that very strange
way.
'She bonndilee dish rag Over her eye
And told her calf she was.going to ily ;
For she'd seen enough of the,world below
And there was no sense in living so slow.
• She put her arm.around his waist
And waltzed on tip-toein suchliaate,
I thought elle was crazy and said se, toci;,
But rd hardly said that when away she flew.
She rested her wings on the barn yard it312C0 .
And that's the way she began to go henoe ;
It was no use to hold herback • . •,
For I tried and tried till I heard her legs crack.
She jerked away and smiled so 'gird, •
I thought that her heart was a thunder-cloudi
And before I knew Elbe was laughing at me
She gave a spring fOr the sycamore tree. •
DON'T INANE TO • WAIT.
Your /Photograph Taken Wattle Vett are
Gcdngaals'aat a lon Con. •. ,
A portly man, with A luxuriant mous;
tache and a high round forehead, climbed
up on a rotary platform in the middle of
the big photo.hippodrome, at Broadway
and Fifty-fourth meet, one sunny day last
week, and ducked his head under the cloth
that covered a photographio camera. •A
well-known broker wheeled his fleet road.
der into the enclosure-, and as the horse
and milky whirled past the platform had
just time to exclaim, " How d'ye do, bir:
--Rockwoodl" when the luxuriant moustache
reappeared, and the photographer replied,
4' Pretty wall, thenk you," and whisked a
negativb plate from the camera, with the
trotter, and rig and owner reproduced in
miniature. •
A young bicyclist rolled paseed a few
minutes later, and in jut onefiftiote part
•of a second he and his swift -going rnaehine
had been captured by the artist. To -day
the hippodrome will be fornierlY opened to
the public. -
Diet night the artist stroked. hie big
beard and dimmed the new institution.
." Photographic art," he said, "has reached
ouch perfection that the camera has caught
the poetry of motion, and we ran make a
picture of the fleetest trotter, just as he
'looks when 'spinning on the road, and
photograph the owner before he cart say
-jack Robinson. And this isn't all. 11 13 a
matter of only a few inonthe at furthest
when horse races, boat races' and similar
•events can be instantaneously recorded,
and the negatives transferred by certain
• °herniae' agencies unot metal plates which
.0511 be used in printing for illestrated
papers. The whole work can be done in
• less than two hours, and at4)...coot-that will
be absurdly low."
The artist stepped to his bookcase as he
, spoke, and taking down a bundle, opened it
and showed half-sedozen metal pieces of
different subjecti, together with the proofs
taken from them. The proofs looked like
the proofs of first.olass woad ante.
Mr.Fawcettis reprinting certain chapters
frottIthe new edition of laie " Manual of
Political Economy." The new brochtire will
treat of " Labor and Wages.?
Five children went home from a acme in
iDakota deeply itopreseed by the feat. of
• deseendieg ati incline on a globe, Finding
•a smooth log iyiug at the top of e steep
bill, they took their phieeti ort it in a row
and set it rolling. They were ell thrown off
and run over, three being killed,
A Detroit despatch says John • M. and
Warner, who nearly killed Tres.
surer Crusty, of Lafayette, GratiotCounty
'have both been eentended. John gets ten
yeses and Bitola fen, They are Cana-
dians, hailing from Guelph, and attacked
^Onion with the intention of robbieg him.
Rburdity/ OrIipodveIstibJei
-
(11therhip.
BMX EMENTAIO TOMET.TES,
Worriliglat in. the Tiourie, a Ileaccottp-
to Rtooltb. and Haprdnoaskt.
(Aunt Kate'e 'Weekly Budget.)
' A neve In tite /tight Direction.
lit an intending and useful article on
" Simple Entertainments" in Etarpoee
Bazar, the writer wisely says: "Ae for
the supper, do away at ono° and forever
with ell these foolish gateaux W1i011 no one
eats; those heavy meats and game pies
whioh no one should eat; these fanciful
spun sugar ornaments which are but
the dreams of a dyspeptics confeotioner,
and all those dishes and ortlatuenta whose
after -fete is a mystery nneolved by any
but the waiter0, whO Mist carry them to
some limbo known only to themeelvd.
Barley sugar spun into every possible
device, and cloud -rapped towers of nougat,
make.a table look very pretty, but they are
not necessary to happiness. The hostess
who would entertain simply and well
should abjure all these ventionalities, and
should determine to make her table pretty
by her own devices., A tumbler set in a
soup plate, the whole hidden with moos,
and a few flowees put in, say the primroses,
or a growing basket of ferns, whieli moy
be bought for a few dollars, is a pretty erne.
ment for A centre -piece. • Several of theoe
can be placed on the, table if one wishes to
make it very pretty, and ivy vines trained
from one to the other make a lovely offset."
unlit Booing. .
fambletnible trimming for ininanier fireliese.'
Ili le used in flextime and for drapery! and
*Petering tint entire, 'ilk lining of the
Valtello
Plea_ tea Over** ads feabionably
macho With the trent_ rePresentisil an Mt-
aelnad fan, eil4 the back le laid in plea*
ham ids length and died ste a puff, with
PT1**beilidbaorittiwiftledbioolvf. new welkin_ g Odd*
are veryfull stud bunchy over the hips, e.124
are worn over a mahion bustle or with
49400814 041000 crinoline inside to sup.
Port them greoefelly.
Blue proudest" to come into favor again
in each ehadee a#dno-hlue, tmlegraph-blue,
peacock, Indiana° and neaten°, It is
• esspeciallY htYlieh when contrasted with
deep rapper browns and dull -red shades'.
• Gold net, thin tissues, and ebebroidered
- materials are employed for the soft asp
crowns of eap'etes. lace in fluted ruffles
or velizet shirringe cover the brim Flowers
in large and fanoiful deeigns, butterfilee,
!roils and mrahroome are the garniture.
A new ahape io hate is the "Dolly Dee,"
a modiacestlen between the oapote and a
small soogp. It conies in pearl; also in a
beautiful needle braid. These ohould be
trimmed with medium width ribbon loops,
caught' down with insects.
Epatilets of pleated race, bows Of ribbon,
or clusters of satin or velvet leaves are
fashionable,. sto they give the high -shoulder
efiect now m Vogue. A triple °looter "or
large ostrich -tip i ixtore fashionable 'than
a stotsage bouquet,. and in placed on the left,
side of low corsages'. . •
Short dolomite with short backs, pleated,
small square sleeves and deep Waite, are
made for spring in tan.colered clothe,
figured brown or gray woollens, black or
gray Ottoman silk, and various *ed stuffs,
snot as °loth, velvet,or brocade and
trinizned with chenille, jet fringe, Or 10,00.
No' article of furniture should be put in a
room that will not stand sunlight, for every
rocaniir-A-dwel IWirLoho,uTdlie.c-The win.
slows so arranged that some time during
the day a flood of sunlight will force itself
into the apartments. • The impedance of '
admitting the light of the sun freely to all
parte tot mar .dwiallinge camiot be too -highly
edimetted. lodged perfect health is nearly.
as Much dependent on pure sunlight as it
15 011 pure air. Sunlight should never be
excluded except When so bright auto be
uncomfortable to the •eyes. And Walks
should be in bright ounlights, so that the
eyes are • protectedbya • veil
or parasol when inconveniently in-
tense. • A sun -bath-. is ofmore im.
prance in preserving a healthfolrandition
of the body than is generally understood.
A sun -bath crate' nothing, and: that is a
misfortune, for people are deluded with the
idea that those things oan only be good .or
useful which cost money. But remember
that pure waiter, fresh air and sunlit homes,
kept free freln dampnese, will oeoure you
from many heavy bilis of the doctor& and
give you heath and vigor whichuomoney
can „preeure.. itis now a well established
feat bat the people vitnylice -radoli in the
aun are uauaily stronger And mord healthy
than those whose occupation deprives them
Of sunlight. And certainly there is nothing
Strange in the result, MEMO the law applies
with equal'foroe to everynnirnate thing in
nature. It is quite easy to Arrange an
isolated dwelling so that every room may
be flooded with sunlight some, time in the
day, and ib 15 possible that many town
houtieo could be so built as to admit more
light than they, now ;elective. •
Green and Wenoir with 'White Toilets.
A New. York letter, says , By far the
niost fashionable colors to be employed by
the modistes: this summer In .00njunotiori
with thnwhite toilets which are to &hound• -
are • pale green:. Persian limo°, and the,
many amides of yellow, from deliateo,
primrose to deep -ecru. White over pale.
oolored slip will be very elegantly worn,
Transparent black dreoses will be quiteAs
•popular, and the newest mode with these
is to line the bodies only with color, the
skirts being all of black -the bright color
• of the bodiotelining aPpearing in the rib.
-bons which leep and hold the soft, full
drapings of tunes andunder-firese., •
Contlesual Feast:
. Soak:one cup of -dried bread.brombs in
one pint of boiling Add one table -
Roomful Of melted brater, half a oup of
sew and five beaten eggs. Mash dm oups
of mow canned pettohes and stir in. Put
into a tin- puddiog boiler and boil two hours.
• Eat with sugar and cream. , ,
• Scoop out the inside of a sound potato,
leaving the skin attached at one aide of -the
hole as a lid: Mince line the lean of a juiey
mutton chop, with a little salt and pepper..
• Put in the potato, fasten down the lid; and
bake or roast. Before serving (in the skin)
add a little hotgravy it the minee seems
too dry. .This is celleda" potato surprise."
_ .
...Crusts left front brown 'bread can. be
made very palatable by breaking theni in
smalbpieees and covering theni with' boil-
ing water. Boil until theylave boom° a
soft mush, stirring frequently and adding
more water itneoessery. Add a cupful of
milk and a piece of butter, and let it boil,
gain until thiok. This dish is delioious
When eaten with maple syrup.
To make a tatty dish for tea,, pink some
codfish, let it soak inbikewarm water while
you mix two cups of cold mashed pcdatoee
with one pint of oweet milk, dub eggs,
good-sized lumpof butter, and pepper and
salt if it is necessary, then add the cod-
fish, mix well, and bakein a buttered
pudding dish; for from twenty.five minutes
to half an hour. Serve hot., •
.Prune Pudding. -r -A nice prune pudding
is made by stowing a pound of ,prunes till
they are eat, remove the stone& add Sugar
to your taste and the whites of three eggs
beaten to aetiff froth. Make a puff pane
for the bottom of a pudding dish. After
beating the eggs and prunes . together till
,they are thoroughly mixed, (meted them
on the crust. Bake for half an hour or
until you are euro the pudding ie well
cooked. .
• Amend the Mioase.
A. hall window inay be made very pretty
by pasting on it stained glass paper, whioh
can be purchased for a steal 81110 01 money
and daily applied. .
Never wash in warin water before going
out in the cold air. Snob a prttotioe will
roughen the. akin. Warrn water should
.be.used only bedew retiring. ' „.
• To brighten the eyes for a ball or party,
a very barmier% devioe ill to eat a half hour
before leaving home a lump of smog on
Which ie ten drops of cologne. This gener-
ally proVes.effeetitte.
'Very pretty .and inexpensive Curtains can
be made of cheese -cloth, and bordered with
riokraok or cheviot°, ruffled. The cheeee-
cloth waehes ninety and elaonld be stiffened
with a little thin sitarch.
Et:toping one or two option ex quarry
shale in A teakettle almost entirely pra,
vents its becoming incrusted. if Li kettle is
badly coated, it Will " nearly allocate off by
•arying and slowly heating it tin the Wok ef
the stove. It must be turned from side to
add
58 11 Cleaves off. •
• • Latest Faiddini Notes.
Embroidery on tulle and hoe le the meat
The Paris waistcoat is the name of a
novel drapery of white broke de chine or. of
red surah, striped with velvet ribbon and
attached to the front of dark velvet or oilk
bodices. It is gethered to a point just
below-the-neols; faile-lif loose drapery to
the waist, and is bordered with Spanish
lace. It is °ought back on the left side of
the hips by a large rosette or loops ot.
velvet ribbon.•
00111IP FROM BRITAIN.
Oalaleserszna EtopeAvert Since --
lauto-$04r Evesiallos.
The plagus bee appeared, on the Persian
frentier.
AId. lift/Alley, of London, who vain in
0041Sda 14 040 Unlit 440 on cable beemeSso
hall failed.
Theist* devioes Of a Paris paper for
attreoling veaders U the entergellielit of tWo
eMomoit PhYskelane to attend itrattlitailelY
Woo its 70141Y inibeoribere,
A.Bwilie doater whO hal been ruined by
POW& °Mudded suicide at Nonage
yesterday. •Thisi the thirtYeierand ad-
• tilde at Iforamo thie swoon.
A. St. Petersburg despatch ears twelve
artillegy °Made have been ;wrested at
Odeesp charged Iwith Nihilism, Fifty mole
and female 'pupils in three Hieh Schools at
Eiselunteff have also been a.rrelited on the
°hare ef.,,
`There are two additions to the list of
royal author& The Austrian f:irown Prince
has ntibliehed a book on his travels three
years ago in the Holy Land,and Prinee
Vfederielf Oharies of Prussia is preparing
a history of hie reoent experiences in the
East.
The weather las now definitely broken in
England, and there has been a suooension
•of thimder dome and fierce rain. The
farmerit isre delighted, for the crops badly
wanted Water, while oporting men are oon-
°led for the diminution of attendance at
ace meetings M' the improvement of the
round for heroes.
• A Parie despotoh says. M, Pasteur has
been worried to death sinoe he ennouneed
kis discovery of an antidote for hydropho-
bia by offers of subjects for experiments, a,
young lady being elf the number, and by
hundreds of thousands of pre.Yers for relief
by peroons bitten by dogs in all parts of the
world. His life is further embittered by a
orrisade against him of the anti-viviseetion.
hits.
ib-ia-significant-of-the•progreesaflemale-
employment in England that the Providen-
tial Company, one of the greatest insurance
office& is now entirely served by tamale
clerks, and that 4,353 are employed in
-Government offices, buff• the excese of
women is still so great that Lord Shaftes-
bury liao declared that the greatest benefit
that could be conferred on England would
bathe emigration of from 200,000 to 300,000
'women,
4. London cablegram says; Much uneasi-
ness has been caused among Government
offieials here, by the latest imperial utter -
adobe trona St.Petersburg. This is attri-
buted to a growing belief in Russia that
•Hngland Is gradually retiring from • its
former policy of extension of ' empire.
Russia, has forraalljr announced that she
he,s decided to abandon her reoent intention
of evaodating,Central Asia, pnd has pro-
claimed' a'deternaination ' te sl*telizd .,her
Asiatio frontiers. This announcement
oontains a threat for England„ being coupled
with a declaration that Russia believes it
will be better for England to confine her
merges in the Hetit m future within the
natural boundaries of India. • I
For and About Women.
The Queen and Princess Beatrice will
stay in Scotland till June 271h. ,
It takes a long time for a woman to get
into the thirties, bat When ohe does get
there she stays.
Among the moat recent articles of orna-
mentation for the bonuete of the fashion.
able ladies of London are artificial Hurtle,
toads and other reptiles. •.
Mrs. Gooding, the wife of a physician in
Cheltenham, committed suicide recently in
her bath -room by stabbing herself to the
heart with a surgioal instrument belonging
to her husband. The deceased ie stated to
have been mentally depressed of late.
• "Mary, Isyant a messenger to send down
town," said a lady to her maid;," the sales-
lady has sent me the wrong bundle, and I'
want to inform the forelady of her careless.
netts. Is there any one disengoged ? " I
-think .not, ma'ain ; the chamber" lady is
buoy with her rooms, and she kitchen lady
has visitors -her mother, the washer lady,
and her cousin, the ash gentleman, having
celled. But perhaps the foot gentleman or
the coach gentleman is disengaged. r will
50e.
• I knew that women wore various sorts of
deceptions and falsehoods, but I never had
heard of a false back to the bead,writes an
English correspondent. Whea_Mand was
buyAng her bonnet there.was a ray trying
,on ever ao many. At lost the wire of one of
them caught in her hair and pulled off all
the back part of her coiffure, whiehwe had
• been -admiring, became it waved BO prettily
and fell in such dear little curls on her
,neolcand round the backs of her ear& It
was not As though she wore a false plate or
ehignon. • Thie was, as we afterward
hoard, called a nuque, and else tly resembled
the natural growth drown, up to the top of
the head. ,
The most oommon headdress of the
Norwegian woinen consists of a eingle
• kerchief of cotton, sometimes of silk, em-
broidered at the centers. It AB doubled,
folded over the head and tied under the
chin. In sunny weather it is allowed to
project over the forehead eo as to shield
•the fade from the Sim. The corner, whip:Ai
hangs down behind, thews the embroidered
pattern, and protects the neck and the beak
of the • head. In the •neighborhood •of
Bergen, however, more elaborate; head.
drawes. are seen; the patterns are various,
but they are all more or lees piotureeque.
• In 10081 0868 they consist of a crown of
white"diinity held out • by a light but stiff
board; both the kerchief and the red tapes
by Which it ie tied. hang down the baok
almost to the waist. In keeping -with this
'is the blue bodice, worn over a white blood,
and held in its place by red .and yellow
shoulder drape. Still more characteristic
and imposing are the bridal crowns viorn 111
some parts of the.aountry, particularly in
the Bergen' Province. and in Theldmarken,
where the primitive customs of the country
are still preserved, though in other parte
they are rapidly disappearing before the
ieevitable advance of civilization.
• A Novel Itide.
• " Bet I once had the queerest railroad
ride ever known in the world," remarked
the brakeman, as he and the train boy set-
tled down on the corner for a chat, says a
Chicago • Hertad gossiper. "11 Woe about
ten yearn ago, when I was a yardman. One
night I iumped onto the pilot of en out-
going freight to ride out to my cabin. It
was snowy andelippy, and when I went to
get off I loot my foothold and dame near
falling rignt in front of her, but 1 straddled
out my legs and my toes caught the bars
that run up from( the pilot,to support the
headlight frame, There Xining by n2y feet,
with my head clear down on the nose of
the pilot. I had to use my hands ne hold
my head up clear of the ties. I yelled, but
I couldn't make myself heard. frhe
neer Couldn't eee me for the boiler, and
though he hadn't seen me jump off,
suppesed I had done HO on .the other side.
There I hung,..gettiog stiff and cold, with
my bones and joints oohing as if I had the
gout, the oner thrown up by the cow
°atelier covering and freezing me4roy toe°
okinuning along within an inch or two of
• the ties, and the most awful paints in the
oordii of my neck X haVe ever known.
Every Minute it leenaed to nie 1 intim drop
to my death, but I hung on to her for eight
mile, when we stopped at Woodstook for
orders. / couldn't walk for a week, and I
believe ray neck is a little Miff 'yet. rd
rather walk 600 miles than ride smother
eight le that fashion. ,
),
Why is a vine like a volunteer?-Beeettrie
it is trained, dreesed, has ten drilla and
,shoots.
A Reeky Mountain Government deepatoh.
dated May 211h, Yesterday an import.
ant event in the history of the DOtnillion elf
Canada took place. When the raile et the
Canada, Peolfio Railway were laid across
the soon:nit of the Rookies lute British
tielueibla, thee uniting that Previrice by
aniiren band to ito eastern aided.
' - „. •
• ' Carlon, Facts.
L foxhound whish had been brought to
Halifax in a close oar from o town 105
miles ilistant recently dieappeared, and
two day% afterwards his arrival at his old
• home was reported. ,
The first Londoner, aceording to the
Bulkier, who introduced conduit water into
hie premises was a tradesman of Fleet
street. Thin lie hew a rectord of 1478 Bete
forth the oeourrence: "4. Wex ehtualer
in Fleet etreet had by orafte pereed a pipe
• of the oondib withynne the ground' and so
canceled the wider into his solar ; where.
fore he wag •judged ,to ride through the
alio with a coedit uppon his hedde," the
city crier meanwhile preoeding the orimi.
nal and proclaiming his offence.
• Card telegrams are much in use in Paris.
There are two kinds of them -one like the
ordinary postal card in form and color, and
the other blue and capable of Wing so
dosed as to conceal the writing. -They are
each large enough to contain a message of
fully 60 words. When a oard be dropped
into the card telegram box of tile nearest
• telegraph office the official in charge picks
it up and has it transmittaa through one of
the pneiimatio tubes Whit* extend ali oveX
the city, thus insuring' its delivery at the
place to which' it is addreseed in lee/ than
half an bout from the timiit was "posted.'
: .
•
A Veteran Clergyman.
One of the oldest inhabiters in this
country is Rev, Thomas Rutup, who is now
on the superannuated bat of ministers of
the Canadian Nethodist • Churoh. Mr.
Rump was born in the old tewn of North.
erases, in the county of Norfolk, England,
durii2g the first year pf the prerant den -
tray, and is now Verging on towards hie
85111 year. • Working at his usual avocation
until 1.834, he emigrated to Canada and
landed at Quebec. He Afterwards became
a preacher of the •Methodist New Con -
flexion Churoh, and RS 8110b, ill 1837, was
located in • the. Animater , District. 'Boon
afterwards he 'sided • two terms • in
Helton .eounty, then almost e wilderness
• back from Lake Ontario. From there lie
went to St. Thomas, in the' RIgin distriot ;
afterwarde Haldinand-and then east.
ward'to Frontons° and, Leeds. In 1850 he
went to the St. Catharines district, and
many men xiow growing up h2 years ppeak
kindly 01 01(1 Daddy Iturap. In 1874 when
the New • Connexion. and Wesleyan
Churches united at the, Milton Conference,
. he became a regular minieter, and bas since
been associated with • the Methodiat
Church. or 18 years Mr. Rump has been
an esteemed member of the Orange Order
and a Deputy Grand Chaplain of the game.
Re was once married and bad a family of
ten children, three of whom are yet alive.
•
* On Watering Elowerst.
Wateritig in- gardens requires differeot
rules from watering pot-plante, though
both need theught, and must vary with the
thee of year and weather, If in a very
emeky town I should recommend -More fre-
quent Watering than in the country, in
dry weather. Jil the Country the waterie
only wanted for the roots of the plants, but
in the city it iswanted by the...leave& too,
'Or the foliage gets choked and phoned by
the smoke. , •.•
Planis breathe through their isve�, as
We do through our mouth#, fia 11 is necoll-
,eary to the lives' of some, and to the health
of all, that theirleaves should be kept clean.'
Otherwise, in watering your garden, you
should try to imitate nature. Do not water
your garden 02 a hot sun; it makes the
foliage ehrivel and turn color. Nature take*
care about this, for when tale falls the Stun
is hidden by donde. Be in hob weather do
your wateiing very early, or Woe in •the
evening, ubleee your garden is shady, and
then any time wilrdo, You should water
as eeldom as possible, except when the
tillage needs waohieg, and then you shonld
be careful to Beak the toots thoroughly (dere
any water tenches' the leaVee.
Right Ron. 3.oht) ThOMds
unseemlier of Indeed, iedangerouely ill.
10416
Dr. notwara'S 411141.re• se nefiere the Wk.
testa lotalksopileat lawitatoo
iloht.o?Attlog who boa by the Victoria
Philaoartgamthetilitith or Load911 JE the
EMMA weak in May, at whieh its Plealhara
gave a worthy Weloome to Vice-Chagoellor
Demon, 0.11,0., of &cGllt University,
Montreal, at whose indulge' the British
Aesraiallon thie year. The
Elociety ef Arts kindly lent ita primates for
the otiostsion, and the great thedre was
crowded in every port before the hour of
Meetbld. Flie sboireial taken bY file /1.
Barkly, wee -after the members' had been
announced by-Oapt. F.Petrie,the ileoretary
-welcomed Dr. Dawson amid loud ap-
plause, and asked -him to deliver hie ad-
dreso.• Ib was eft "Prehistoric' Ken le
EfriPa sudHYXiet" and waii Illustrated by
large diagrams, also flint implements" and
• bonew collected by Dr. Dawson him-
self On the opot during his winter tour bit
, the east; Prof. Boyd-Dowkins kindly
.assisted in the •olasailloation of the bonee.
In dealing with his subject Dr: Dawson
remarked that great interest attaithes to
any remano which, ie ettlinttie0 bilitoriesaY
so old, rotty.indioate the reeidenee of man
before the` dawn of history. lit Egypt
nodules of flint arc very Abundant in the
Eocene limestones, and, where these have
bees wasted Way, Egnaill on the surface.
In many places there is good evidenee that
the Hint thus to be tornia everywhere has
been, and Atilt is, used for the manufacture
of <•flaltes, knives and other implements,
l'hi3se, as is well known, were used for
many purpeeee by the ancient Egyptians,
and in modern times gun -flints and strike-
ighto still •continue to be made. The
debrie of worked flints toned on the surface
s thus of little value as an indication
of • any flint -folk preoediug the
old Egyptians. 11 would be otherwise if
flint implements could he found in the°
older grovels of the country: • Some of
these are of Fleistooene age, and belong to
a period of partial submergence, of the Nile
valley. Flint implements hadbeen alleged
to --be found -in -these -gravels, -but•'-therti-
seemed to be no good evidence to prove
that they are other than tbe °hips broken
by nieohanical violence in the removal of
• the gravel by torrential action. In the
Lebanon nunierotto °norm' exist. 'These
were divided into' two classes, •with
reference to their origin; some being.water
awes or tunnels of subterranean riCero,
others see eaves, excavated by the waves
when the country was at a lower levelthan
at present. Both Weds have been occupied
by Mali; ' and some of them undoubtedly
at a time anterior to the Pheenioian coon.
potion of the eountry, and even at a time
Won, the animal inhabitants andgeographi.
cal features of the region were different
than, those of the present.day. They were
thus of various ages, ranging froM the post -
glacial or antediluvian period to the time
of the PhoeuicienAccupation. Dr. Dawson
then remarked that many geologists in
these days had. an aversion to using the
Word "antediluvian," on account of the
nature of the work ,whioh, in Tears pow
gone by, unlearned peopie had attributed
to•the flood desoribed io the Scripture- but
as the aversion to the tweet that wordwet,
he thought, not called for in these days, he.
hoped it would pass away. Speaking as a
geologist, from a purely geological -point of
clew, and from a. thorough examination of
the country around, there was 110 doubt
there was. conclusive - evidence that
between the time of the first °Beeps.
tion of these emcee by men -and they
were' men oaf • splendid physique -and the
Appearance of the early Phe2ancian inhabi
tants of "the land, there had been a vast
submergence of land; and a great Cato.
aye & stupendous one, in' which
even the Mediterranean bad been altered
from a smell, sea • to its present size.' In
illustration of this, the caverns it the peas
of Nalireil:Itelband at Ant Elias were
deeoribed in some detail, and oleo, in son-.
relation with these, the ocburrenota of flint
implements on the surface of modern sand-
stones at the cape or rat. near Beyrout ;
theseloat Were probably ofinudh less anti-
quity than thee° of themore ancient cav-
e:no. A disowision, ensued, •ivbioh was.
taken part in by a numher of distinguiehed
felletwi of the Royal Elooldy:
• ' , 'WhatJI Will Do.
• Polsone Neavnatia, the great pain cure,
never fails to give prompt relief in the
following. complaints :-Sprains, bruises,
outs, tio douloureux, rheumatism, spinal
pains, neuralgia, toothache, lumbago,
sciatica. Buy to -day at any drug store a
10 sent sample bottle and test it in any of
the above complaint& It never fails, for
Nerviline bloom .osed of the most powerful
pain subduing Ye :dles in the world. Get
a bottle at any , rug store. • Yon will be,
made happy. Te and 25 cents a bottle.
4. fashiqns,ble ew York bridegroom of a
month is ot ed with haying pawned hie
wife's wedding,preriente.
dthaiversal Testimony
Cannot be disputed, and the oase is yet to
be heard from in whioh Putinini'S Painless
Corn Extractor has failed to perform a
perfecit euro. , Thie with painless aud rapid
action andlreedorn from annoyance during
use, The great corn and bunion mire
otands unrivalled. Sure, sate, painless,
Beware of frauds offered as ottbstitutes for
'• the great corn cure. • Putnam's Painless
Corn Extrader. N.0. Poison it, Co., Hinge -
ton; proprietors. 1;:ise no other.
• A counterfeit dollar of Pure silver and
over...weight ie said to be circulating in
InahN.. o ;man cam live withoulintunesbare
,-•
of physical suffering; but many accept as
inevitable a great amount 'of pain whioh
can be , avoided. Lydia E. Pinkhana's
Vegetable Compound was invented by One
who understood its need, and had the rare
ekill to provide a simple, yet admirably
effective remedy.
Dredging at the nibuth of the Red Iti;zer
to be commenced at once. This will im.
proVe the navigation of Lake Winnipeg.
• Certain additional tra,ots of land in
Manitoba have been set apart for school
purposes. They are withdrawn from Settle.
Mont.
• Moltlaeue, the Calgary murderer; has
been committed for trial for the Murder of
Buckekin Shorty.
The revised editien of the Old Teetament
is nearly cappleted, and will be /Published
early in the sulannt4
Give to a WoUnded head seoltision.
Neithercensolatibu nor 1050011 CVO effected
inlything in Muth a cutee.
Sixty Clore for eery Man, woman or
ehild*Orb odninimed hi the United fitatee
laot year.
A Madrid despatch tier' the Ministers
haVe decided.tbarnavatiof the 'fifteen mein,
bets efthe Meek Iland Anarchist BooletY
randomized to death shall- be ex/netted at
jecertirettide!he °there Will suffer life -lend
•Eve Long, of Gainesville, Oa., while out
riding with her father, turned and rode
away With ThOMitri MaCOndel, whom she
married,
lofroor•go. ft1DEMenv.
Matraalvlbsarr Mama by a Bather who
Ihnowlsi Dtplotheirta afoot iola 0$0.1141.
Medial men, jay. the New Teak Tisa,
will be relleYeT by the melt whioli him
iota reached 212 a idagallar Oasis before the
English oeurta. The Plaintiff wee the
father opholgld vrho differed from " doup."
It being neoeosary 10 insert a tube in the
child's throat to relieve it from threatened
ouiloctation, the operation wag eldifullY
performed. After the !warden of the
tube the physiolans regraded the father
to free it from the accumulated matter
With his lips, win& he inetantly
did, the dootors negleoting to ten
him that he Incurred any risk. The and
died, and its disease proved to have been
diphtheria, by which the father, In torn,
Wen BOSH attacked. Be aued the dodo=
101 datuagee, The ease was tried twice,
and was much discussed in the English
prem. Upon the first trial the jury dis-
agreed. But Lord Coleridge told the second
jury that the doctors were right in telling
the father te free the tube, and e, verdict
for the defendants was found. The prin-
cdple, we diplomat is that it is no part of, a
doctor's duty to mour astoger in the die.
charge of his profession, whet; the sot to he
performed requires no partioplaT skill and
can be devolved upon another standing in
relatione of blood and affection to the pa.
tient
•
In Runia the heir to the throne eMliall or
age at 16, and is then usually pleaed bit
charge of some dietinguished person weal
-
ally in the confidence of the Czar. 11 18
thought that Count Adlerberg, who held a
high position in the late Czar's household,
will be selected now.
Next season foreign ;Aare will have the
field on ti2is side the water. Irving,
Ristori, Modjeskii, Jana,usohek, Rhea, Wil -
Solt Barrett perhape, and riaidaill, Terries
and others, will come in with new piece%
but of all the native stars Lawrenee
Barrett slope is preparing a new PlaY• 16
is ()ailed "Galileo." •• -
.e0 -
— 44111111.111.011100.1.11101A
•
• is
* . •
*
*
* '
*0
fit I
LYDIA E.1 PINICHAIIIIPS •
* VEGETABLE CONIIOUND,',1
* * * * * ISA POSJTIVE CURE *.
• .
Far au of ibose Painful' Complaints and'
* Weaknesses' so conimon to our best *
* * * *PEDIALF POPULATION.*A1 *I* 1.11
• IT Willi CURD ENTIRELY THE 'WORST VONA 0E.
MALE CoMPLAINTS, ALL OVARIAN TUO SIN.
ELAMMATIONAND IYLOERAT/ON. PALLING 42odDzsj
PLACEMENTS, AND THE 0oNSINZTIENT SPINAL 11850,• .111» AND IS 'PARTICULARLY ADAPTED "Po WTI=
"CHANGE or Lars. • * •*• * • * * *
'*•Ir was. ressozyn AND EXPEL ti7MORS PROM 1116
UTERIns mr AN SADLY STAGE op DEVELOPIIENW.THE
TENDENCYTOCANCEROTTS HUMORS TnEfOurscmcians
NEM' SPEEDILY BY ITS 11511 * * t*
,* IT .11.1801E5 FAINTNESs, Furranner, raurrnors
ALL °BAYING 1011 STIMULANTS, AND ileums WEAN,
NESS 01 11111 STOMACH. IT 01.111ITS BLOATING, HEAD-
ACIIE, BERVOT/S l'ROSTRATION, GENERAL DEBILITY,
DEPRESSION .11111111111011011o11, * ** *
. * T.LIAT 08111(1110 01 Br,Annin Down, CAHSING PAW,
WEIGHT AND BACRACHE, TS ALWAYS PERMANENTLY
CHARD 131 ITS ESE. * • * * * * * *
*IT WILL AT .ALL TIMES AND TINDER ALL CIRCIBIL.'
STANCES ACT IN HARMONY Wall THE .LAIrs• THAT
ooyerat THE PEMALE SYSTEM. * • * r * r;* *
Oirlps enneose 18 SOLELY roaTnizzonoteaer
HEALING Or DISEASE AND 11111 88(101,' OP PAIN, LED
THAT IT DOES ALL TT CLAIMS TO DO 11(0(1541105 0,
LADIES GAN GLADLY TESTIVI. * * * *
* * Pon TIEN omen or TEIDNEY COMPLAINTS 330
nrruna SEX THIS REMEDY IS HNSMIPASSED.
LYDIA E. PINSIXAMPS VtGiETABLE COMPOUND is
repared at Lynn, ;lase. Price $1 nix bottles for $8.
• Sold b5alidrugglats. seetbymaii, postage paid,ittforna •
of Pills or Lozenges 60 receipt of .price asabove, Mrs. •
Pinlibam's "Guide to Health. will be mailed' Yree 10 fuEr
Lady sending stamp.• Letters confidentially anowarfult.
• lie family should. bo 'without LYET,A 11. l'INE1111105
./aven 11144 They cure COnstipation,Eiliousneesami
Torpidity of.11us Liver. Rh cents per box. * • • 4,
• ID. 25. Old.
ymg ONLY
VEGETABLE
CURE
FOR
3DWISitnETPOI..9.,
Loss of Appetite,
Indigestion, Sout Stomach,
Habitual Costiveness,
Sick Headache and Biliousness.
Peke, 05. per bottle. S11dbyaU Druggists.
EIT;_EAR AND THROAT.
•
G. S. RYERSON, L. R. 0.P.
AL-, S. it., Lecturer 011 1118 Eye, Bar and Throat
Trinity Medical College, Torepto. Oculist sal
Aurist to the Toronto.- elieterel Hospital, tete
Assietant Royal London Ophthalnkle
Hospital, Moorefield's end Central London
Throat and Bar Hospital, 317 Ohttrob Street
Toronto. Artificial Human Ryes. ,
I f, '_F IT I
al..ett i. harcule .1. do no& mean wormy it) stop t otri _r .
a time and then have them Mum again, I Menu a radb ,
cal chit. 1 have mode the disease of FITS, EPXLEPSII .
or FaLL1N (I SICENESA n llto long otudp. I warrentlny •
remedy tO core. the 00001 c 1,1, nowise others have , s
fantails no reason for n ',IV, l'OCCONtlIg' ammo. Bendel . •
once for a treatise afi a I,' lo Bottle of my infallible
-Moody. Give Express find )Rt Med, X4 Costs yea
nothing for a trial, and 1 will mire yeti,
Addrese Dr. U. ,I, Thi:dar - .d3 Pearl St„ NoW York.
• ESTA,BLIS1-111D 1869.
43'.1133E3 & G -ALLOW
All kinds of IlIott Products bundled. also
Hotter.; anemic. Estes, Poultry. Tallow
etc. Pat. Fig& oexriere supplied. tookudgu.,
menu Selleited. 83 Colborne street 'Toronto
LIVE FOXES WANTED, '
OR FEU, GROWN.
For particulars Mtly 10 EAII,OLD LAMB f
Mtn Street, Corner Rughson street,Earnilkni.
,
YOUNG MEN legtarVialwererninttil
Send yotir nettle and 100. in stampt 5o7. Earn .'
Engineer, Erldeeport, 01
PLACE to eeefire a Ibisinen
Education or Speneerlan Fen
' fit Cie SPENOOR
raN BUSMEN COLLEOn
-cairn lerinb hike
GENTS WANTED TO SELL
VISTEUDIABI lanilionsits, Addressi
with dame, DR. W. D. MASON & 00., Marthall
Inch., 13