The Exeter Advocate, 1889-2-14, Page 7THE THREAD OF LIFE.
OR,
SUNSHINE AND SEEADE.
ICRAPTER Tarrant RESOLVE
ITsXar.
"You nmet never, never take it. Elsie,
s bluthee to her Militia), Edits, Te tier great
ohaerin, however, her futere sietraain law
s,
received the new of this proximate family
Warren mad earnestly,. es Blew laid dewn
the paper once more mad wiped a tear trout
her eye,. nervously. It came to hira through
that broken-heerted Jittle woman you know.
ehould uever lative nterrieri 1r; he
ehould never he owed it. It wee never
truly or honeetly his, and therefore it isn't
youra by right. I cooldin% be myself, to
touch a aingle penny of it.
Elsie looked up at him with a twitohing
nage, "De you make that a. condition:
Warren ?" she asked, all tremulous.
Warren paused and hesitated, irresolute,
or a moment, "Do J metre it condition?"
he answered slowly. "My darling, hew
can 1 possibly talk of maleing coeditiona or
bargains with you? But I could never bear
te think that wife of mine would tough one
Penny of that 111 gotten money,"
4$Warren," Blois fiaid, in a very soft voice
—they were alorte 'th the reel:a and they
talked like lovera—"I (Aid to myself
more than once in the old, old
days—after all aka was past an (1973,4 for
over, you know, dear -1 said te royaelf "I
would never marry auy man now, not even
I loved bine—loved, bi truly.—unlege
had mouey 0 my OWA to bring him," And
when 1 began to know I wait getting to love
you—when 1 eouldn't any Imager ooneeal
from inyeelf the truth that your Underarm
and devotion had Made me love you Agana
my will—I eaid to myselt again, mere firmly
than ever "1 will never lee bitn take m
thus pennileatt, I will never herden him
With one more nuneth to feed, 940 arum
c omenla
to ma and clothe end aup
ply. one more life te toil mul naoil
and *lave Io,Ewle
ra a$ ib , be eAret Bur
Sue hie art aa he ought to curette it ; can'
2 give free play to hie genies as hie genius do
Af4ands, because he brie to to turn made frorn
hie own noble and exquieite ideale to out
the market and to earn raonete I won'
any further elmokle WS arms. wou'e Any
fustleer cramp tits hand—ida hand the
ettould be free as the air to pUridtle
ered hie ow u grand and beaetiful I
will never merryldmendete icenlering hire at
leant elIQUgh TO, aupport matt! 'Allolhs'
Aud just the other day, yen remember,
Warten—that day at Sae Reme when ad
milked at het what I had known ee long
without ever admitting it, that I loved you
bettor than life iteel;—I raid to you still
4‘lf ata yneett—et heTate But vent be
your e reelly for a long time yet. Noteet1er
why. he youre atilt myeelf. for
all that." "Wele, 1.1! ton yen uow why I
eald thew worde.—Even then, derling, I
telt I could never marry you ponnilese."
She peused, awl looked up at him with an
earnest look her true gray eyes, those
exquiato eyes of hem that no lover could
tee without an intetwe thrill through his in-
most Werren thrilled in reepoutio,
and wondered what could next be coming.
AO you're going to tell mo, Bide," he
tudd with a sigh, " that you ean't merry me
toilets you feel free to accept Whiteetrend
Elsie laid her head with womanly cond.
dance on his strong elloulder. "I'm going
to tell you, darn:age" oho aowered, with a
sudden eittbarst of unchecked emotion,
"that 11). marry you now, Whitestrand or
no Whiteetraud. 111 do as you *what in this
and in evelyiliing. I love yen so clearly to -
'day, Warren, that Can eved burden you
with myeelf, if you wieh it; CAW throw
soya& upon you without votaress; 1 ean
tette back all I ever thought or mid, and he
happy anywhere, if only you'll have me, and
make me your wife, and love mo always as /
myself love you. I want nothing that ever
wag his; lazily want to be yours, 'Warren."
event with an absolute netnanuai of surprise
or excitement. "You ,elect't :Amu to be in
the least esteniebed, dear," Elsie cried,
somewlant piqued at her 000l reception.
" Why, anybodyhl say, te see the way you
take it, you'd keosvn it all a clear twelve.
month KM 1"
"$u I did, my child—oll exeept the mere
trifling det.ail or the date," Edie anashered
at mum with Orotopt eornmonesense, aua
an erele look frora under her dark eyebrow%
" In feet arranged it all myself moat
eatiefactorily beforehand. Set what
was really thinking of jwit now AVAAS simply
'EWA,— SballIdn't ULM calm do dater for
both at once, Eleie ?'
"For both at once, Edie? For me and
Waren! Why, of course, one eake alweye
(leen 4o for bride and bridegroom t.ogether,
deeen't it? I never beard of auybody having
a couple, darling,"
" Whee a aweet Slily IOU Rep you
dear old goose, you, Are you two the only
marriegeable people in the univeree, then,
I didu't mean tor yen and Warren at aU, ef
oouree ; I mean for yen and myself, stapid 1'
"You and myse)f, did you say, Edier
"Why, yes, you, devoid 'blind bet, yen."
Edte went en With an Atettneted
air ; "We might get them both over themene
dey, think aerietzely kill two weddinge
so to 'peek, with clue permit., They're tnachl
t a temple nubs:wee in a litnifte alarayn,"
"Two weddiuge, my deer Edie 1" Billie
e cried 'in surprise. "Why, whet CM earth
you ever talking aheet 1 I dont under.
e etaud you."
. "Weil, Mr lietherly'e a very good
Edie anewered with a Winkle ; 4,he'a goner,
• oily eihnitted to have excellent MOOT and
he ventured the other day On a ;critical opin•
• iou in my piesence eta% did 'tenor at OnCe
to the aentelleSe otbit perceptione and the
t aoundnesu and depth et bit methetio judg-
b ment. Ire Oki nie to ow face, With the ut-
rueee gravity, 1 wee the very weete.ab aod
b prettiest girl in all En lame
And what did you say to that, Elie ?"
Elide asked, mined, with MAIM donning t
nerceptien ef the real meanieg of 'tide queer e
badinage,
"I told him, my dear, I'd alweye eoulide f
exed hita the Algid; aed heat et living am i
theritiee artigiQ Plattifra, mid thee to h
weuld ill become Fey nii9F.a nitidenly tt
diger trona hie opinihnou aneh an important i
•
Neverthelese, Mr. Alfred Eleherdon did
within one week of that date duly proceed
in proper form to prove the olaim of Elsie
Challonor. of 128 Bletchiugley Road, in the
pariah of Remington, spinster, of no occupa-
tion, to the batestate estate of Hugh Mamma.
fler, &quire, deceased, of Whitestrandnall,
In the county of Suffolk.
The Mob is, an ettate, however acquired,
mush needs belong to somebody somewhere';
and since either Elsie must take it hercielf,
or let some other person with a worse claim
endeavour to obtain it, Warren and atm de -
tided, upon further consideration, that it
would be better for ber to dispenee the re.
venues of Whiteetrand for the public: good,
to let them all by default into the greedy
Clutches of the enterprising pawnbroker in
the 13orough Road, dr be swallowed up for
his own advantage by any similar absorbent
medium elsewhere, From the very first,
indeed, they were both firmly determined
never to spend ono Binning of the eatate
upon their own pleasures or their own
necessities. But if wealth is to be dispensed
in doing gnod all, it is best that intelli-
gent and single -hearted people should so
dispense it, rather than leave it to the
tender mercies of that amiable but somewhat
indefinite institution, the Court of Chancery.
Warren and Elsie decided, therefore, at last
to prosecute their legal claim, regarding
themselves as trusteea for the needy or
helpless of Great Britain generally, and to
sell the estate, when once obtained, for the
first cash price offered, investing the sum in
consols in their own names, as a virtual
trust -fund, to be employed by themselves
for such special purposes as seemed best to
both in the free exercise of their own full
and unfettered discretion. So Mr. Alfred
Heberden's advertisenaent bore good fruit in
due seacion ; and Elsie did at last, in name
at kast, inherit the manor and estate of
Whitestrand.
But neither of them touched one penny of
the blood -money. They kept it all apart as
a sacred fund, to be used only in the best
di way they knew for the objects that Wini.
V fred in her highest moods might most have
-approved of.
And this, as Elsie justly remarked, was
really the very best possible arrangement.
To be sure,. she no longer felt that shy old
dealing rigeinse coming to Warren unprovid-
ed and penaileste 'She was content now, as
-a wife should be, to trust herself implicitly,
and entirely to her huaband's &wade.
Warren's art of late had every day been
,more sought after by those who hold in
their laps the alosolute disposal of the
world's wealth, mad there n as far lese fear
than formerly that the cares of a house,
hold would entail on him the miserable and
•degrading neoessiny for lowerieg his own
artistic standard to ingot the inferior wishes`
and tastes of poseible purchasers, with,
their vulgar ideals. Butit was aim sourie-
thing for each of them to feel that the
other had time betm seriously tried by the
,final test of thia world's gold—tried in
actual practice and not found wanting. Few
pass through thee sordid crucible unscathed:
those that do are of the purest metal.
On the very day •wben Warren and Elsie
,finally fixed the date foe their approaching
wedding, the.oeam and. happy little 'Wide -
elect came in Nei* Confirm Wimp of the
.a.coomplished arrangenient, all tremors and p
In the hot of ohonges be the conditiOns of
-British agriculture, referred to in a termer
letter, are found new problems to vex tne
British, farmer, One of these probleine,
though a Minor One, is a tronblesofne oPe,
is the dithemites of fiuding good dairy.
maids
One speaker ab the Conference argued t
thie 'problem, simple ent it may appear: A
ally prevented farmers makieg butter at
Another speaker eaid he "acivertieed fo
nureery govereese ana had twenty appli
tione, and for a dairynalti, had only. on
Wbet a pity, say we ell, that the unee
unsetelessful applicente for the niireery
will go -on just about the same in the future
Whet, them. mud doe?I am 110 on
off those who believe that the hest of Mitts
and chews cannot be made, and le not mad
11 the farm houses. I merely say this, tha
the great bulk of batter and oheese made in
farm housee ie not he, any Menne an geed as
ie alight he, and I affirm my belief dust i
Neill be neither better no worse, ase. rule
in tlee future than lb bee been in the past
• glTreUSTING ITgt4i,
e
✓ At Birmingham, England, where the Cor-
e poretien honght eut rive' gas aompeekee,
t s went into buideess inielf and cleared 4telen
I the first year, the price of gm is 62 mete
per 1,000 fer mall eonettmers eini 58 venni
h fee them neing over KIX* feet. It is coal
, gas, too, not water gap, which do eit not COO
one.hali As ititieli to Make.
hat111 happen to be Emend in this notion, it
catil 1Q1145"oettvb ne A mean' en on townie
A^ a.
01; A8417d1 wwhear enartbal: ttolde4; bautre 13ordelastreer hrile81*
beep Many there are, and their nemb-r grOwes
do "who think and believe that cheeee awl bat-
.
the ea provide tlee only eyetour under
for whiele we cen attahe the beet reatilte ; and
at, yet we are not dead be the fact that even
IT— they are not idwaye a eineeste. They fail,
no like other systems, if net well lookecl after,
rag. if the heod man is nob skilful and mindbil
ok, well. Sometimee they fail, hut not 01 ton;
elie and when they de, the eause is not hard to
seek, ae a rule. I fawn them because they
save expense, and produee even ooesla, aud
t mire labor from the women at the farm; and
pay tabby well, tie teiege go."
I endorse Prof. Shelocu'is remerka 80 far
AO they beer upon the advantages of the
factory system. So far as they bear open
the liona syeteul and its future, there are
two weak points, First, the home dalry.is
a Met and bee leeee exiatence that ig in-
definite SO far se we are able to set now.
It le, and is likely to be, a large factor in
the problem before as. The faceory has not
eplaced the home dairy to the emcee that
men have eXpeeted. either in Etenlami nmin
e, Itesieg *hut Ca he tree, aro An
advocate for the trapeovement ef the home
er tleiry. Prof, Sheldoa'aretteom for believiug
en it will net improve are not 00nPluniVe. Be-
Yi memo thitage go en badly when 219 Adequate
eX- attemptmade to improve them, ci net
AN proof thee they ivill not weed when the ere
ok et improvement seta le, There wee a
0* le the bistory of Deeenark, when there WU
ere wore need than proopeot of improvement.
Tb ere came 4 time when *hue Wee leee wed
than realieitien of impressment. ne_ed
the poly to Itneee that the hone dairy bi a
Pd mapent teeter in our pet:thieve here, to realze
°0 the neeeetity ef urglog imprevement
Eld far as improveineut is possible.
1"4- Mine believing in the largest " possible
at linprM'eosent of the Mime chary, 1 weald
not learn to ktuedle the churn as well ma
milk bottle, and so inereaffe their fitness
a home„ tie well aa °lemma for eroploynae
Pencil has bombed upon this geeation
Scene, a farmer's dangleter playeng a pie
accompaeineent for her brother aingt
Banging, she sopa "Do you know, Ja
mamma, says I mina help in tile dairy;
helped when she was a girl. I told her I
would rather ge out as a governese."
" Aa to dairymaids, they teemed to he
alineet extince ast the cloche Those to be
obtained did not euffielently know whet
ought to be their work," ge remarked one
disgusted farmer at the conference. Another
imisted that the owner they teeined up good
(Moyne:gds. the sooner they ehouid produeo
in Begland ebo butter and elmeze for which
they "paid the foreigner 4/6,000,000 a
year,"
gave we net
4 PAM:MUD rbOnTn'l ler CANAPAl
Aee the forme/ea' deviate* lessening Online
butter as their mothere did! Or "under t
Omega(' conditions," dem not the moth
fiud etteler to do the whole !park here
then to initlete the daughtere tete the m
eerie!! of the (olchfaellioned) deiry it
taleiy ie true, in roma perm Canada,
weile the ciao have enportunitiee wbi
their enotheta never had for aceniring gee
fat and prettyaccemplithmente, the moth
largely meneattliee both the knowledge AP
practwe of dairy art, and even in eeinii Ine
sur$, of the lioueehold art, Glebe take
edema of olio who will not Willingly ate
aecond to one of hie itex in bit appreelati
of awl admiratiee for lovely gitlhood,
wile Neill mit Mr our daughtere every aeco
phsbenent thee thew beetle desire, or tie
;win nAlie them more than. ever elie,rmieg
he home. Tbat advice is net to allow yo
elvee, hem ieleo ideae of life, to lose t
golden opportenity 0 girlhood to pro
rola ell the rieh experieneee oi the motile
it the *bort time thee eine ;nay hAVe t
tivilEge et A telether 'enact the seine re
heti sheltere you, Let not a delight in In
lent elefootOtehments 4reete tlindain
he conmon•plece aequiremente. Io a wee
ry to enticipete, an a girl, your eetiomte,
a women, el the relative velue of what m
be teethed or aegutred in the dar at hem.
with mother.
There are varlOne 'nays in whieh
4D14417 1,11; werianD.
Pint, youim heeple may he teught b
Cana of achools, how to do dairy woe
hit question of dairy schools, and the tr
tag ef dairy maids may well be log for fu'.
iseUffniOla In a later letter.
Second,. parents should ace to it that t
ja urge the lergeet peseible
If- XX'Zglif5ION OF VIP ZACZO4Y8V57,01.
0
fit While th be diffrep 1 opieiou
eee mey t_ ere4P, 0
14, whikt Matt% the factory aerate= will
he 4u ent tee older eeettm, all an enreed
of th fog Tie the QUO Lee ecepplented. the
h. oth likely to de use 40 far hoe the
or dvantaged. While Nee iiininf
(1, Mot 1 error 0 teed:leg tgo the Me.
as tory eyetera ae a eerteell, ,see neey lady re -
ay nerd it ieveheliIel on cue ot tho toot fillrOW
A
quotient in Perhaps, that native
Meleaty itself mieht unduly bias nee to an
incorrect judgment in the opposite direction.
So thou linhatoreed hie eritieel view in a
praotical Way by premptly kiesing me,"
"And yon didn'e object) r
"Oath() mantrary, my ohild, I rather liked
t then otherwiee."
"After which,?"
"After whieh he proceeded to review m
own eharaeter and propeete in a depreche T
tory way, that led ine gravely to doubt the i
aceuracy of hie judgment an that Teapot; d
and he nelehed up at lest lay laying those
very objeota he had just been &lamming, in
hie hand and heurt, az the foot of the throne,
metaphorically speekfug, for the aweeteet e
girl in all Bughturi to do as she liked—aacept w
or rejeob them."
"Anti the sweated girl in all England ?"
—Elsie asked, fuelling. so
"UneouditIonally accepted With the most d
pleasing nroinptitude. You Hee, My dear, t
it'll be with a splendid thing for Warren, a
when ho seta up house, to have an influentiel
art -critic bound me, at: it were, not to &peak t
evil against him, by being converted before. a
hand into hi a own brother•inelaw, Besidee li
which, you know, I happen, Blake to be over y
so muds in love iVith him."
"That'e a good thing, Effie,"
"My child, I consider itsuoh an extremely o
good thing that 1 ran upetaire at once and o
had a regular jolly old•fathioned ory over it li
—Elsie, Arthaea a dear good fellow. Ana to
you and I can be rnerried together. We've w
always been dieters, ever since we've known ac
eaoh other. And now we'll be aistere even b
morethen ever." th
[ent tern] 18
be
A Legaon to Ohildren. al
The man of common sense, who refleote or. In
hie own endeavors to leave an inheritance
for his children, will soon reach the con.
elusion that there is something more to be
desired for them and by them, than houaee
and lands and funds m bank. That some.
thing in righteous, honorable record and on
remembrances. Who, among right-thinking se
men, does not hope to be spoken of, after th
hie death, San man of blessed memory? fic
Such a memory is cherished in the heart of se
a lovirg child and la prized above earthly ab
poseession. It also serves at a valued in.
heritance for an entire community, and the be
sharing of it with the public magnifies the gr
happiness of the direct helm. The mie sure gr
way to leave with the world a blessed mem- Lo
ory of oneself, is to live e. God-fearing, God, ti
serving life. It is the righteous man th
who shall be in everlasting reinem- ed.
brume according to the .13salreist. Now ter
as this reinembrance is not to be Ot
oonfined to the minds of one's own kindred, on
no 7;aan. is to postpone his striving after it g
until he shall sse a f mily growing up around a n
him and acknoede ging bim as its earthly da
head. He moot ein at the very dawn of tor
manhood to prepare and win such remem- tin
branee for himself, in the minds of all who lax
may live after him. "Reneernber now thy we
Creator in the days ot thy youth," To fear
God and keep his commandments must be at
the very foundation of oharacter-building.
Upon that foundation, and on that alone,
there surely can be built a life of loving ser-
vice, of helpful counsel, of unselfish toil.
The highest ambition that can stir the heart
of youth is the ambition to be useful, under
God, in the lifting up of the thoughts and
hopes and aims of a sinful race. Such is the
ambition of the man of whom his fellows
say, after he has gone to his eternal home,
"His memory isllessed."
cs . . UV nil A
I,4 LIMO. Ferenee (P.E.I.) einetee 1
, •Ohnilleetien With the pudilleatia4 of ,,,e! lettere
' the fellowieg .extreet kern the "Rata New
Yorker," bearing upon this queetien :—"Ca.
Iit. operation lea erep tweeds *
Minieter Beedpe leaves London because
England hoe not yee appointed a summer
te the oufortunete Lord Seckville. The
temptetien eentraet the meow of Mr,
helps' departure witle that of Deed Seek,
ville atroxig, but the vont-ram is ten sug.
gestive to revive to be empleesieed. itt to
be rememhered, however, that Mr. Peolpe
Ilea written re lettere, and it le farther
to be borne mead that no Boglialunan
Imo sougbe le entrap The distinguished
Amerieen.
erase April,M,the shrinkage in Amerfoan
railway zeceritim ism been at the netts of
One per Cent a Mentio„ Tbere has teen a
drop of at lees* 000 00000 ite the Mee
rehte of railway **mks eta bouds„ The
chief gefterere aro the Aohivon, Topeka
Santa re and the Chicago, Burlington &
b(4014121decYrs'of Intliveieeestcst701:011. 313Tretodneolinallrin° plarriene
hae broaght deem several there
whem weelth was counted by the bandred
thou-med. The 'Western reilwity bacloose
bac been badly overdone.
Yee, by the way, eani this titivation of
the heating of railroad carriage; makee
one thinle of Another important Matter en
'whish company peivilegee are :Mewed to
over ride publie right; How Meng theta
eXpeweel telegreph wtreal How melt keg-
er are they to he enepeeded kern three ugly
cede* in every Urge -coy, a nightmare to
every ineehr aisthetie Inflonee. Bat that, of
comw, iglA uniMportimt OnsideratiOn.
They are mere than ugly, they are very as.
rime! ebetruetione 940 Of fire, awl. mow
of them, wove breken or elignmetied for
more remote They prove euro awl sudden
death to Man en Wont who touches them.
Such, aroideeto Mine hepeeued elreetly, nnd
ay /Appian undo, et any thile.
Mr. Edward Stetthope. Secretary of Shift
✓ Wer, epstekles et garneeetlee Linceln-
attire, on Monday e'vsnin& said a thunder
eloud wag hengleg over Eurepe, eatel that
limner or litter, probably sooner, it woad
buret, bringlag the tereest and most terrible
War ever known, It won Margate to view
the prefeeetielle for war owe beiug teede
througleents Barope withent feeling teeh war
Wee eppeoielhiug, tie hovel, liewever, 0'44
thea median 0 Listen -de *tette:nen weuld
Peeveut *het netime from heeeteingir.velved,
l'he" Poll Men cetettn," eemeematieg upon
the speeehe deem:weed. tho kdly et such nee
aures, Tied sehe they ere velculated tee tie
eh enteehlef. 11; cleclerce teat Mr. Sten-
he,edlete thetterio he quite uoinetitici,
wnhitione projeete for bridging the
r ver at Detroit Arif ender ceuelderation.
thee ie for a high level triage et:feting $,-
WO 000, the other is for a drawbridge mist.
100500,000. The latter would temain open
during all the utivigetion :semen and he
clewed only ou the Order ef the ceited
Stevie Seeretary ot War, when cenale
are oksod, Oat or the other of theta
eahemes la twotty slue to be cerried ear, en
the City et Detroit cannot permit iteelf to
be eultatracked, as It Will he when tho Grand
Trunk ettnuel at Point Eldweed is complet.
4817,
Certain moths end butterflies have rezeut•
ly been found to give off odors from their
bodice, -which ere either meeretedfrom organs
epeoially adapted for the purpose and eau-
azed near the end of the body, °rear in inane
butterfifee, from eertato hair•ilke melee e
the wingo. Mr. 3feldole, according to "Na-
ture " has lately deteeted the scent emitted
by t'ho male of a snouteraoth, a species of
i/erminia. MITT inteot poseessea s. farolike
arrangement of hales on the foreleg', which
he late 'proved are acent•orgaum. Tbe odor
they produce is like that of ettificial temente
of jazgouclie pear, viz, aro: areeate, The
It it a healthy sign at the etate of public)
opinion across the border that there is
simulteneoue movement in aeveral of the
States to. meoure ineremedpurityof elections.
As a rale both Republican!: anti Deueoerats
soon to be -agreed that reforat is netettaary,
pertioutarly in the direction of protootieg
the secrecy of the ballot and in preventing
bribery. lt is a faoacomplhnents.ry to Cana.
diens that the system in vogue in the Dom-
inion is eked by the 17nited States tarots as
being superior to their own inthese matters.
An hoaeet eleationlaw honeatly admientered
will do much towards reducing the expenses
of electiona, evhieh, under the present system
of our neighbours, are enermeue.
Were our lakes and riveter this year whothr
" unvintage.ble, lond would be the ontory
and great the &Areas, Only jag) in Vase
hoe too gold eenee te keep (Iowa the price of
foe; ard even now fears are expressed tor
the futere. 41: R.reghlteepole tolrgraul 46
few 4eye age ova: 'Tire Le crop of the
Hudson ia over 3 500 000 tone and net
pouted 0113 has yet, teieu gather'ed and there
are only WO 00i) tone aft over Of which
John Clerk, the ice kieg, bats 0,00Qtors. 1*
ie now only n day$ foto the dret 0 Much:
and
as it takee 000 teen and bele, 'kWl
horses, eed over 100 fskaul Engines tialere'
daye to turege the crop ef 600 t as,, itt
will he Seen that teere Mut got to neeeme
terrifie needing when the ice becoinee thick
eeteeeh to cut, if it riche tale winter." Per-
haps the ice•meking enteleine wilt yet be
brought Mto rcquiedzion.
The United Suttee Bereate gegraeing
end Printing its the concern OM paid*, ell
the greenhwbs and heeds. A short theta
age Litman printiag preeem were pee in the
jeueeee, dieeescolg *bout 100 hand preets
printers. The digeherged men Jewel etireed
up a great Morm and proenred tee enheoie,
mon to Coegreee rif measure redaeinn the
eoya ter 9 the Inventor of the machines
• from $1 per 1.Cteli impreetionet to one eent
per ,000. Tile debate 9, a The matter will
be memorable inu se=n4t Of 4 clelanee iteng
te the gnighte of laaar by Mr. thitter.
worth, of Ohio. ao said that becaillie the
labour organisetieue had ileeideel themprinte
ing maettime, remego Was co rean9Afr
ptittiog them oat. We had pretty much
melted the condition when no employer
had the right to dieeherge hie men 110
Would reef:Mir/and the geroiate of I.eber 30
egtablinil Wifiloping-p4t A;5 ;be Nital and
whip abent 25 reembere of Cenereee ihe leet
Seturdey tech month, Ile honed in
Ood'a providenee thee the time would elame
when ate reetthoeci of the Woe weld
aseert itself and they weuld net meek
like poltroon", an be had *CCP the Mane
do over awl ever agate, at the behest/ 0
Borne eteelemen ie ehe galleries heti
COMprafilieed bin illatihfai enwo er twiee,
coefeaaed. been,' veld be, "the
t time I do k label! be eseralyaed where
het la kuewn the Morrieeette CASO
reeently censed COMMOTi011 in the
ureh ehmiee A144Preal, whieh was quite
blely felt, Miee Alexeothene Morriesette
yentig Freneh C411;4144 girl, the child
Cethoile perente, who lefe her hewn
hag te her prefeeeed free that ber tether
going to *end her To a cenvent, and
retuge Prnteiltant Oiinften
'Ape where ehegeve op her Be.
thelleateith, wed anuerneed hermit
tut, Iler haw wee !enable to
1, her to rove hitleastehe
nee of the Veatie ler etooy,
r er ca. -5 mir.r,or. labia
i.1eieneiga,4 aertlli !lave ix=
j :tweeted In els thelete ete A father
by the hetheeltiei -ierel Vine. thy
Owe et ethi hileteele w4v pacur bke.
recovering the petteei elettehter. To
tide the Ideee telehteareee replled
hogirl was eye heht ageinee her will,
but that stews deterieteed Lee to go home
tor fear elle weeld forced to renounce
her Mitts' Mith mad teter ri convene,
The upshot, al the cam Lee beep *13* *be
ledge hefere wheal it wes Inheaghtbii
erdered the girl to he given into the eherge
of her tether, en the grenlid. tut 00 alleged
-morel or *engine coaelderatione fetch as
dune alleged by the Qlethoritics at Grande
Ligne ear he allowed te override the nature
awl legal rights of pereetege.
WO see that there io movenient on foot
to total:dish egret+ !more in blentreah ar•
tents in their fever beloa aavaueed to
effect that they have been Miami ta work
welt in other eauutrive, and have been bents -
&del to workingmen. There is noreezon why
they "Wald not bo both prefiteble itavut-
ment" et mency, and benefielal in more weya
than one to the working men, But it all de
pends on the way in 'a blob they are man-
aged. They mum imitete the good feetaree
of the model tevern while oteeriog (gear of
Re deleterious one. To be worth anything
they ought to be clemaly, oheerful pleme,
oomfortably but not luxuriouely 'furnished,
wall aired and well lighted, and Where the
culinary departmeut its not suffered to out-
weigh all other consideratimus. It is nob
very difficult matter to establith
a _sorb of second -clam eatbig.hortme or ram.
taurant, *oto speak, but tbat kind of estab-
lishment would be fer removed from the
ideal Coffee House, and could have no bene-
ficial effects whatever, oa anybody. The
restaurant part of the husinese, it seems to
us, should be kept in at enhordinate 'mai-
tion as poseible, and the coffee rooms s boa&
be places where iood can be got indeed, and
that clean, nourishing, mid at moderate
prices, but where the whole space is not
given over to the businees of eating and
drinking. Tbey should foeter the social in-
stincts of those to Ahem they cater as well
as their animal appetites, otherwise they
will surely preve failures as competitors
with the saloons.
k• comma= AND rosette:1m CiA;ZWArg.
It efiCeUragee a wholesome end geod-
• e -need rivalry: It encouregea etrict and
he methodical busmen hehies It brealie down
one ititricate rale.o( iburnb prom* el do
gene by gives place to the ahnideet afa
aeieet proceels known to the progrtesie
orkers reeday, end ou 3 beat a Ingot
he changed condi tions under which we a
ving. Mak the age which gives you
wing meradue and an organ give you
airy auited to the new cenditions %Olio
beep othe,r things hew( helped to brie
bout. Tide can be done. I have in rain
mother who hat nrovitled herself wit
he beat implements atie can get, and h
dopted the best preemie she can learn o
eying no daughters, she bas made be
oungest aon a most cffwient help. Ife
ow able to churn, witsh and selt the butte
n the (shorn), leaving to the mother herae
nly the ehapine or packing and tbe genera
WA. Even the husband, whoa° whol
yarn
fo het. been on the farm, has now hese
take a considerable interest in the their
ork and begins to pride himself On havin
qUired some knowledge of tbe " art o
utter -making." It la safe to say thatunde
o old sylftem and the neeeasity of eltillfu
and manipulation the mother Nvould hav
en to -day doing the whole work hergelf
moot wholly unrelieved of even the mor
boricas part of it.
The next thing noticeable in the diens
014 13 England was the feet of a etrOng 13
nation towards
the matte ieelowdem dietrnsee emu.
l'181 men'in larrideg conamanitien, and Tie harm:
e lul to the heat intereete of tbe farmer. It
mirages public epirie and eliterprIre. The
re mer who lumen interent in the creamery
Win eXPnitiO the booke from time to
min cattily nee how hie returne for
compAre with them:. ot his neighbors,
eighhor beating him, he Neill be
d carry bis inveetigation further,
en what breeds of cow,, what foods,
what care aro needed to even the returns,
es
h An intelligent creamery petron would car.
thinly see the neeeseity of providing good
r roads, and conducting other needed improve-
s
ments. Be, driving emue of the selfish, mil-
e
intercat feeling auto! a farmer and develop-
/ ing publio spirit, the oceoperetive ereamery
would work good results.'" nem followed A
preference for the oream-gathering system,
which because it wilt be discussed in other
connection, do not quozo here.
W. H. Lrercrn
c0 oPicriAmS
This aubjeot appropriately follows that
0 just discussed. Hading done the best
O San with the home dairy, let us make
e most of that grea t corroder° of 'tit de-
ienoles—the co-operative dairy. Let us
O what our English friends have to say
out( this queetion,
One speaker favored "small dairying"
cause it had been more profitable than
ain growing. His " corn" return (grain
owing) "814 notpay his labor bill." Prof,
ng expressed himself as doubtful about
e establishment of creameries, owing to
e low prices of dairy goods. He favor -
the Normandy system of buying up but -
and " blending " it in a packing house.
hers, however, favored co-operation. Said
O speaker :—
is next tb irapossible to manufacture
Wrenn sample of good butter in the farm
iries to compete with that mede in fac-
ies; the building and fittings are quite
suitable. If factories were establiehed on
go estates for the use of tenants, or else
re on co•operative principles, either milk
cream or butter could be collected or deliver-
ed there in bulk and treated and distributed
in accordance with the tastes of modern
Consumers. Butter could be graded at the
factory, and consumers would know what
they bought ; indeed, a local industry might
be re-established were the factory system
extended."
Another speaker, (Mr. Howman), else fa-
vored creameries, where the farmer would
send his milk to be separated, leaving the
cream to be dealt with, and taking back the
ekim to be used on the farm. He said,
"The great difficulty in competing in the
butter market is caused by the butter that is
made in farm houses being not only small
in quantity, but variable in quality and oolor,
and I am convinced that if we combined to-
gether and formed butter factories we should
be in a mut% better position to compete with
the foreigners who now out us out in our
markets." •
Professor Sheldon, who is so well known
in this country, was not at the oonfetence
last May, but in 1886 he read a paper on this
subjeot which took a dark View
The execution of crininam by a painless
death seems to'be attracting a good deal of
interest just nbw. , The State of New York
is about to use eleotrieity instead of the
hangman's cord for ittc condemned criminals.
Illinois will probably do the same, for Mr.
Jones, of Sangamon has introduced a hill
to the like effect. Zmember on -the Frenoh
Senate, so it is said, proposes the adminis-
tration of prussic: acid as a good Method for
inflicting �apital punishment, If we are to
go tilt* far with the doctrine of euthanasia
for murderers, why not go a few steps fur-
ther and suggest the lulling effecte of a hypo-
dermic injection of morphia, or the calming
influence of „ chloral, or the intoxicating
effects of Indian hemp --even, we might
search for the renowned hashee(sh, and let
our felons pees away to the, sound of (slow
inuaio. To use electrioitir seems only semi -
logical.. Who knows but that death by the
eleotrio current, if inetantaneous, is not
nevertheless egoniemg ? If we are to kill
ainleaely, why not do it plemently ?
01' nix War BOusn Venus; •
in England. He confessed to having lost
hope that reform wee poseible in home
"In tlaeory," said he, " reform, hi within
reach ; in practice it is not. We -cannot
%tell exPeot that the intim will induce
people to icmprove, their dairy goods any
mere than the past has done; and if it be
true that they have not, as a; rule, improved
them in the past, then it is pretty sure they
Overthrowing a Giant.
In the winter of 1824 a boy was playleg
in thegardert of an old colintry house in
northeastern Germany. On the pedestal of
a stetue broken by the French eoldierewlaen
they swept over Prussia and Poland eight-
een years before he had piled the snow into
the rade likeness of an enormous man.
which he was pelting lustily With stones
and snowballs. Though not yet ten years
old, be was unusually tail for his age, and
very strong and active. His feetures were
plain, and even heavy, but there was a
namelew something in the expression of
hie firm lips and large brighe eyes in which
a close observer would have seen the prom.,
ise of great things to come.
Shot after shot hit the great velaite figure,
but though the gimlet tottered, he did not
fall. Then a sudden and startling change
came over the boy's face. His teeth
clinched, lais eyes flashed fire, and het whole
face seemed to harden as the unconquerable
spirit that was one day to shake all Europe
boiled up within him. Seizing a . heavy
stone, he hurled it with all his might at the
monster, which trembled, lurched forward,
and broke into a thousand pieces.
"Hello, Otto, what ant thou doing now ?"
cried an old servant of the household, com.
ing round the corner at that instant, with
abroad grin of amusement on his weather.
beaten visage, scarred by the French sabres
whioh he hai faced by Blucher's side at
Ligny and Waterloo.
" I am Germany overthrowing Frame,"
replied the lad, with a glow of stern tri.
umph on his boyish face which quite trans-
figured it for the ir oinent.
"Good 1" cried the veteran, as a flush of
excitement overspread his ruddy face,
" Mayhap I shall yet live to see thee do it
ID earnest soma day."
There leave beat an unusual number of
burglaries in England during thepast month
or two, and dismission 15 procceding as to
the beat means of potting a atop to the pre.
valence of the crime. Flogging as a punish-
ment for the offence is in desperation pre.
posed. Anxious householders are aekitg to
what extent they ere at liberty to use fire -
Arms in driving off the intruders. Legal ex-
perts advice them to aim low, so thee they
may escape being tried for homicide. The
householder will probably continue, as here-
tofore, to elm wherever his quaking hand
and the dim light enable him to, and take
the risk, and the number of hits will also
continue to be far outnumbered by the
miasma
The rather bumptione reiteration of the
Monroe doctrine by the United States Sen-
ate, with special reference to the Panama
canal, does not appear to be relished by the
Republic of Colombia, for whose benefit the
doctrine was resurreated. A Brooklyn jour-
nal admits that, according to the last ac-
counts from Panama., the sentiments of the
people is that the United States be invited
to mind their own business and let the Col-
rabians mind theira. They feel perfectly
apable of managing the canal job for them -
°lye& They do not ask for our protection
r assistance, and would resent the proffer
f either as an impertinence. In the case of
emote when the attempt was made to en-
hrone Maximilian, Mr. Seward took the
ground that if the Mexicans wanted him for
their ruler we would not think of doing any.
hing to defeat their wishes. If the Repub.
of Colombia, whose territory is traversed
A man who was condemned to death for
murder a short tune ago, and is at present
oonfined in the prison of Ratiber, in Austria,
having resolved to ooramit suicide by stem.
0
0
And so he did; for, not many years later, Nt
ittle Otto had become Prince Bismarck. t
He Scatted.
le
A respectable man went to the cars one
day to see his favorite daughter off. Secur-
ing her a seat be passed out of the oars and
went round to her window to say a parting
word. While he was passing one the (laugh.
ter left the offal] to speak to a friend, and at a
the same time a grim old maid took the seat e
and moved up to the window. Unaware of 1 h
the important change he hurriedly put his se
face up to the window and Bald:" One roore in
kiss, sweet pet 1" In another instant the I so
point of a °often umbrella was thrust frora tee
the window, followed by the pious injunction: o
"Scat, you gray headed wretch 1" He Mat. ru
A charge from Zalinski's formidable dy-
namite gun could hardly make a greater
commotion among the ribs of the unfortunate
vessel which received in than a recent dr.
oular from Archbishop Corrigan of New
York, has made among the Rornan Catholics
of that city and elaewhere. It 15 history of
course by this time, how Dr. MeGlynn pro.
ved recreant to Rome and founded the Anti -
Poverty Society, which has been tinder the
ban of the church on his account and perhaps
other accounts, ever since. The attitude of
the hierarchy towards the society was very
clearly seen in the McGuire case'a John Mc
Gain who died suddenly while at one of the
Anti -Poverty meetings, baying been refused
burial in his own plot of ground in a Roman
Catholic cemetery, because he had beep
transgressing the will of the hierarohy in
being there. The view of the matter taken
by the Church was upheld by the Cioil Court
before when it was taken for deaden, and
now to leave no doubt; on the subject, to
give no Catholic the excuse of ignorance
about how his spiritual superior feels on the
question of Anti -Poverty, Archbishop Cor-
rigan has issued a circular, 13 which after
referring to the moderation of !Aleut* with
which for two years he had treated the
Society in the hope that its mitguided mem-
bers would gee the error of their ways and
return to tlse fold, he proceeds to say, "In
order, therefore to safeguard the intoreets
of souls for whom I must render an ac-
count on the day of judgment I
ereby make and declare attendance
1; meetings of the Anti -Poverty Society a
reserved case. ' Only those who knovr what
"reserved case" know how serious the
Asohbishop'e 'threat is, or what a formidable
bomb his circular may pray° in the camp of
Anti -Poverty. A reserved MS " IS one in
which abaolution is nob absolutely withheld,
ut which must be paned specially no el
y the Archbishop himself, who may grant
r refuse the absolution of the sins of the
pplicant according to his judgment. The
why personin such eases is not vrima lack
titled to abaolailon. He may repent of
is sin and inaplore pardon, but it remain,
with the Archbishop to say whether, on con-
ideratibn of the whole these, the sinner is to
eoeive abeolution 00 not,
tion, is being fed by force two* a day, 18.
very twenty-four hours. Four days ago "
e began to refuse all nourishment. The
eans employed to feed bine are the follow -
In preeenoe of the prison doctor a
rew lie with great difficulty &leek be-
een his teete, ,and his mouth is kept
pen by small eemden wedges An Indian-
bber imbe ia tten pat down his throat 13
nd he is made to take sufficient quantity "
nil& gruel to keep him alive. He sturdi- °
resists the operation, during which he a
The ti• tle phrelob7annad. hne:acintaitynd of; otte oe arep or g°h
413. f
O year leas been and is still a very senoun
USSt1011. In the tropics ice is a luxury ; in
anada it is looked upon aft a necessary, r
ted.—tYarmouth a
tof
1
Wilberforce nalversity has reoeived a gift ia7
from Dr. E. N. Yelland, of Philadelphia, of j
thousend acres of land in Eastern lien- 1
tacky, ttnderleid by valuable ooal measures tk
identicil with the Pittsburg beds, and q
abounding in iron ores and timber. C