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The Exeter Times, 1894-1-11, Page 6M70111 thi Stimptlontpeersaghts, Ceoosens Soeee Throat. oat by aiii)mzgists on a vieerantoe. „...ra.r is or Chest Stele:We Perotee aeiaetereviii give groat setisfectlen,-s$ cents. sosse, SHILOFI'S *lifiTALIZEZFlo •lerts. T. SelIawetins, gliattenoogaellonne sans s " Sheohei Veredizen g.41110 2trr LTV conekkeretteebestremectoforctonaraitateareetere V5' 04.' DY5PS1Ia tve tele Eign°7 tronbleit exceLe Pelee Teen/ H 1.1". CATAPi R E.P1r, .vey9 atah '1 Try this feemeaet et wile sitivety relieve and. Clews you. Pelee ee els. to Illeeetor for its etteceesful treatment io dessielletlfeee•.0eteelekber,Shnolvsetemeolles are er -vulIrantee t.-•• sensreeesore LEGA.L. LB..DIOR-SON, Barrister, Soli- _ * ortoy or supremo Court, Notere Pubuo, a e veys neer, C orain Iasi() tier, Atte Money te Loan. Offleein anson'slelook, Exeette. R IT. COLLINS, I Barrister, , Solicitor, Bouvey &nor , Etc. hsETEB., . ONT. OFFICE. s Over O'Neil's Bank. ELLIOT ELLIOT; Barristers, Solicitors, 'Rotaries r ablie, Conveyancers &e, Ihelefoney to Loan at Lowest Bates of interest. OFFICE, MAIN - STREET, EXETER. Nntivr. • FREDERICK, symyre'r. DENTAL. F. IIINSMAN, L. D. S, D, D. 2. Gra:duate of Iteeal 0oUege of Dental Sar - gens, and of the Darital Denertment of Toron, to University. (with honors.) Specialist in bridge -work, and gold ami porcelain er014711R,, Pure Nitrous Oxide Gee and l000te anathet• les for painless extractien.s. At Litman every :1:1\1$-ArT7L:SACT(TRY LOVER "TUE D.I.TOO.E.›,?' IS LIPPINOOTT'S ML,GA,ZIN1L CIIAPTIele XIV, I reelly think we shell get things prop- erly la order after all, if we persevere for the next two days,'' says Featly, in e %tete. factory tone, regterding her workiug perty With a blaming eye, And indeed so she welt Islay. Anything like the energy displeyed by all present has seldom beea seen before in a private drewing-room. " For heeeren'e memo, don't touch my eleow,"seys Larry to, GeoFfrey (More, whe leaniag ever his shoelder, wetching his every movement with an esteitemeet that borders on delirium, "11 you do, I'll rend you limb from limb." Leery is engaged on freinesunking io the earner, and there are two or three lilule watercolor sketchee in the usual young. lady like style that we all, mhosi know so well, lying beide hbn 'smiting for their mountings. Larry is Tette an expert at tielioato cerpentering, and has been pressed into the bawler service to day, though rather Anil/1St his will, haa now how- ever, entered into the spirit of his task, and is tremeudonsly busy. Miss Anson, nether from hirn, is betuliag er a talale,entainelling,with really exquie- ite taste, some !wallop shells in pale bines aud greens and crimsons, touched (Marra- ingly, here and there by a little gilding. " What are these for ?" atkecl Trefusis, stopping for a raoment by her teble to look down at them, "For s dressingstable, to hold pins. Pretty, aren't they ? "Geiertning. Bot a bit wobbly, don't you think ? The pins will be all eett-sick. Those ehellst will want to be propped up 011 every side to keep them seeady, "Will they? It doesn't =Ater. I shan't have to prop them," says Meta Anson, in- differently. The answer so exaetly describes her ineutal ettitude at all times, that Trefueis smiles a little, as he leaves her to take aver some shrecle of gold and silver tinsel for the beeeitifying of the dolls that Terry and Mrs. Adare are raising froni a shameless state of nature to one of a high-elass respeotebility. Soniebody calling for Fanny at this mo- ment she leeves Terry and harries across the room. "I hope you feel reste3," says Trefusis, stopping beside Terry. He trees to catch her eye, but feels. It is the first time he Wednesday. Ofdee:Fansons Blook. Exeter. has been able to speak to her since that IThe moat poignant aeguis1x is etirring the made of those who fear he will offer it to them as a prieoloss gilt, to he plaeed, uPon thou: stalls, Who Would raffle it? Atid.fer !how initial? Who would dare to walk ehoet with it and •offoe tickets for it et even 5 halfpenny a tiekeei The mast fla- grant impostor !lithe world of bezaers would not preeume to foist Mr. leittehl mentor - piece upon a wondering world. Theleoet, Mr, Eviugley, has kindly of - feral to read aloud to them seine sonnet whilst they work. And his offer has been acceptee, Nature as he pathetiettely re- marks, has inottpaeltieted ben for hard work of :soy kind,-eneaning, preenumbly, thee She has giveu hitn over -mule brain ; but if he oat be of nee to them in other, Iightee ways, he is entirely at their ser vies. He had at first bre ithed, rathex than spokenees a, hint to hiswillingitees to delight them with seine of his own deathless (but hs yet unpublished)sweetrneees in the poet - seal thee, but this graoiona insiauateon not heave reemved witli the rapture it de- server', he had sadly fallen hook upon 4 lower level. Philistines will be Philistines, to the end of the chapter. He has now one of Mr, Sivinberne's vol - Imo in his snowy hands, -the "Poems and Bellarls,"-and is prepering to rea(1 some of the matohleas verses therein contained. And, after a whispered entreaty from Mr. Iiittssto be sere and put in the asterisks with a free hendJ -an injunction whieh he es treatwith a fine orm.tempt,-he ants:hes himself with a leuguid gratin Inc leungiug. ehair and begins to read, - "Swallow, My Sister, 0 sister ewellow 1" At this moment Miss Anson says, her - aorcatauxammen eno=smtcossaalmacamasmatos 1-R. 0. EL INGRA.T, DENTIST, el -se Successor tea. L.Biltings. Member of the Royal College of neota.1 surgeons.) Teeth inserted with er without Bole, in Golder Rubber, A sate Ant:esthetic gave for the painless extraction of teeth. • Pine Gold Fillings as Required. Office over the Pest Office. 1.1169111. MEDIOAL T W. BitOWNING M. D., M. • P . 5, Graduate Victoria truireet tee °Mee aiss1 resIdence. oomniion Lebo a tiny.Exe ter T1R.RYNDMAN, coroner for tie County of Huron. Omce,opp Carling Bros. store,11xeter. •D rtS. ROLLINS ee. AMOS. separate Oillees. Residence same as former. ly. Andrew st. Offices: Spackman's building. tuu st, Dr R1ltn'same as formerly, nOrth door; Dr..sernoee same building, south door, J. A. ROLLINS, M.1). T. A. A 19,1„.14,-P-- last curious half hoar the night before, or, "Oh, I beg your 'pardon, Mr.' Evingley, but I think it better to speak before we have got too iaterested. " "1 told you, you know," saye Mr. Kitts, with a reproachful glance et the • Poet : " there's things in that book that—" "But I've got no more shells," Mise Anson is saying. " Do get rim some, some. body, before Mr. Evingley begins again. I do so hate interrupting anybody." "It looks like it," es/shivers Fanny to Terry. Mr. Evingley regards her with a look of gentle resigna,non. s "rm sorry," ,seers Miss Aileen. "Fanny, "Under the table; at your feet ; in a rather, early this morning: She had not I on the scene only when every one else was "Now, Mr. Evinglhy 1We are quite reedy, basket," explains Mrs. Adare, in soft j erke. I think." appeared at breakfastand mdeed had come weIl settled down to his or her work, and had glided to a seat next to Fenny and be- gan a diligent crueade against the dolle,who seem rether to resent being dressed. It seems itnpossible to make theirs stay this way or that way whilst their things are being "fitted." They wriggle, and wobble, and behave as frivolously as any living per. son of their own eiars,--whieh are ten- der. "Yes thank you," says Terry, in a low tone. She leaus a little away from him, and plunges her hen& suddenly among the soft masses of the silks and satins he has brought her, as if in frantic anxiety to find something to make the toque for the dell ab this reception, e "I've searched it ex - nave in hand, • haustivelyeeend Clam isn't a eign ex - " '�u look a little pale," as.ys he, lower- ing his tone in turn. There is something ",Well, if it isn't there it's ia the pantry, "Swallow, my sie,ter, 0 sister swallow!" Here the door burst violently open, and Mr. Adare darts in. "Fanny, Fanny, where's that small ham- mer of yours? Canty "((he village carpen- ter) "says he can't get on without it; he's putting up the art muslins round the stalls, and he says--" never mind What he says," crie Fanny, rising impatiently. "My goodness, Robbie, I think you might know by this time that I always keep my hammer in the cabinet." , "I know by this time that you don't," says her husband, very neturally aggrieved. - isang to yoit antes, before," thoys he, "1 thell eina to you neer &pea." He is at the piauo now, eta heti etre* a eberd or two. lIe luts tem= wale wards of Lord Lytton'e ; Chide not. Weasel, r ort wino thee I reel not reptere For aye the bseert theta Alegi netts love Witte e'er inelaneholy, , To stretuas thee Wide in on hnsu46.0 lerelu SUMM or :skiesi govea ; So it nty breast reflects the cloud, ).is bat the cloue o haereol Thane imams wlaseoe within my e So wen the mirror iteepoth Thee eidde it not if with the light) The shaelow else sleepetle • To Terry, listening, the words ate pleat& Bat so enainonred is the a the sweet mimic that the ammo of the words goes by her, lied, it been otherwiee she might have been affronted by this song that he Wets chosen ; bat his voice, -it °harms her, it holtle her ee with an oneotems-re When the last notes have sounded, he tune abreptly ori the muses -stool, and looks tower& her. She is teaming forward, her f she rapt, her eyes full of team Surely "nueele hath charms." Ho thiuks of that first night when he had sang to her, -that night in the old sehool-roora in the village, -and 4 Strange SenSe of power, that has rapture in it, -thrills him with a *lid new Passion. Perhaps threugh hie voice, through the power of made, he eau win her. He takes a etep tower& her. As though not- ing his desire to come to her, she gets quiekey up feotn her seat, whiepere a word to Fanny, aud, glidiag past her, leaves the room. With a smothered exchtmotion, Trefasis picks up the mug° he has let fall in a eomewhet awkward fashion to the floor. comeren.) , stay, Rebbie • dids tineconfidenttal shone him; emceA• the nurseryor--Oh e: te Thisattiend eesoeser, so unusual, e'seweeharass Terry. "Oh, no,' says she quickly. •And now, •eter, Ont, AUCTIONEERS. • T HARDY, J_II0ENSED AOC- tioneer for tho County of HUT011, Chareee moderate. Exeter P, 0. 1141 BOSSENBERRY, General fit - _t 4. consed Auctioneer sales cenducted in allparts. Satiefaetiotigearanteee. Charges moderate. Bonsai' P 0, Ont. T_TENRY EILBER Licensed &an- tieneer f or the Counties of litiron and Middlesex 1 Sales conducted at mod- erate rates. Oince, at Post-olfiee Cred. .ton Ont. armarcrrissmoarre ' MONEY TO LOAN. 1UF&NE TO LOAN AT 6 AND per,cent, 525,000 Private .Funds. Best Loaning CI ompani es represented. D. St DICKSON Barrieter, . llitstsr. te SURVEYING. RED W. FARNO011B, ?. MM. Cie Laud Surveyor and Civil En- •amis..1.-,1,4, se, rpatair..Sarn well's !Sleek, Exeter. 0 ut VETERINARY. ent & Tennen EXETAlt, OND. ario Veterinary at h o Town !Val. 1,101M9=INIC011361 MUTUAL ONT, leh orri indeed, she verifies her denial. She has flushed a painful crimson. She makes an • impatient movement, mod the poor doll she is holding, who has done nothing at all, slips from her lap to the ground andcomes to e violent and hideous death. When they lift her up they find her nose is broken. • "There," says Terry, with a rather "ter. vous laugh, "ase what yon have done. Artists should not be interfered with when at their work. Von must go away now, and. let me undo your guilty deed. Poor doll! and she was looking so nice, too ?e "Must you take off all those thins again ?" asks he aghast. " Yes, of course, and put thein on an- other." "Don't," said he. "Let her stay like tbat, and I'll promise to buy her, nose and all, for any sum you like. It is the least I can do. It is a sort of reparation." "Very well," says Terrylaughing. "Pll ticlset her 'sold.' Poor old thing," eying the doll ruefully, "1 'nuke try and patch her up a bit. The first thing I have sold to you, too ; and so little worth having." "Oh, not the first thing, is it says Miss Anson, who has just come up. Her tone is innocence itself,- her smile quite geileless, and yet something in her voice makes Terry's heart almost stop beating for a moment. Her pretty color dies away. Whet is it she means? "What was the fir& thing, then ?" asks Trefusis, with an interested air, looking at her, challenging her, as it were, bub appar- ently without a trace of suspicion. Miss Anson laughe. " Don't you know?" says she,-" Don't you knew?" This to Terry, who shakes her head faintly tend feels as if she could not speak. " No ? How dull you both are! I know, and, in tray opinion, it certainly is worth even less than this last purchase," pointing to the disegured doll. - "You fill me with citriosity,'e says Tre- fuels, "Prey let us into the secret; I shall be in Miss O'alore's debt if yen do not. What else have I bought from her, then!" "Ah, I leave you to find that out," says she, smiling her large, bland sm.11e, and seek- ing a movement as if to go away, but Tres fusis steps, as if by accident before her. He hasnmer his beck to tee room. She alone can see his face. " No. You shall tell me now," says he. s voice is a comraand, Miss Anson heal - r n second, and then feels it will be to go any further. •forgotten lase Thursday e, with a shrug, of her we were looking ric a. brae for her ing monkey, o buy it for 1 sts full. shorted o you. w whist ho one fele.: very o the other r sorne peOple eays Trofttsis, eery, dowly, "yots haven' otietions,- p her hand quickly. with a heavy sigh ar$ that drenches would have been er been bora." he replies, bitteelye Inibeevissieto now I think of its it's under my bed. i wonder you couldn't think of that" "1 suppose thab's compliment," says Adare, who has a quiet humor of his own. "You evidently think I have a mind. above the average." He disappears with a slight grin. "Now, dear Mr. EvingIey," says Fanny, in her suavest Lone: "1 do hope this is our last interruption." "Swallow. my sister, 0 sister swallow" begins Mr. Evingley, in his most mellifluous tones. "Miss O'More, ma'am," says the 'butler, throwing wide the door to admit Aunt Bridget Mr. Evinaely sinks back in his lounge; the book drops from his liteless fingers. It is too much! It is much too much "Oh,hang it," says Larry -,whose acquain- tance with poetry is limited, "Ido think that poor creature might be allowed to swallow it now, whatever is is. It must be sticking in her throat by this time." General consternation 1 What has Larry been thinking about the swallow? The Poet casts a melancholy eye upon him. "It is abird," says he. "A whole bird?" says Larry. "Bien me! I thought it was only a pill at the worst 1" "Laurence!" says Terry, \vilely. The Poet regards him with a re:mattering horror, As for the others, they, I regret to say, have altogether forgotten them- selves, e,nd are shaking with laughter. Even Miss Anson, who cannot be accused of heving a lively sense of humor, is now bending beneath the table, under the pre- tence ot finding Sew shellesebiet in reenter to bide her face. And as for Mrs. Adare, she is hiding behind. Terry's back, which is rather mean of her, as Terry is certainly desirous of hiding behind hers. Mr. Rites has fallen into his 09.11V0,8, He has smudged it irredeemably; This, how- ever, as Mr. Toots would have said, "is of no consegeence." It is, indeed, a most fortunate thing. It seems in some strange way to bave altered the ehareetor of his work, to have enhanced its charm s. It is now " A Moonlight," taken at a good dista.ace, -esy is mile and a half, " Teal" cries Fanny, joyfully ; « here's tea!" :Hee voicte is a little choking still, as she emerges from behind Tecry's beck and pushes Terry towards the tray that the butler has just broughb in. She feels, indeed, as if the cotild have fallen upon the butler's neck, for hie kindly intervention at this critical moment. ' "Torryi you will pou.r it out," she says ; "bub no for a while yet. Tem oan wait, but we cermet until Me. Evingley has read to us the poem Of his seleetiou. near Mr. Evingtey, you will be geocl to no, aren't you, in spite of all these hateful interruptions ?" This graeilotis entreaty, this tender tribute to his eharm, rebores lefte tvingley to his genee of hien-sett% :he takes up his book itgettreessieteehie elms: brines his Male effort, as he ealle it, to a suceeseltd. Theo comes tea; they linger over it so long that Fenny at lett eels% to them, in the voice of the old eleyptian Neenah pars haps, after all, he was young the you.eg are the Cruellest Of all 1), " Ve are idle! ye ere Elle:" Witereoie they all fall open their works again. " As for yon, Gernord," says Vamny, prose. ing by Trefusis, you ought to be ashamed of you rs el f, " Ashamed ?" says Trefusiq bah: CS Ari Englishman some tirno to collect his wild. " Ves, thoroughly," says Fanny. " What have you done ell day?"' " Oh, that 1" says he. "Well, what ean do, after stil Pre hilt a poet fellow at a thing of this sort." 'nu esti slog," says Emmy, "That poor islibb over ithore"--ppintitig by a thrug to Mr- vingtey, and beiligi ndeed, Most ungetetomi ie her ale theeitiels dorle hie little beet ; the emellese'esesigh- ing with doleful reirenetbraece of Mr, at Lig{ te or forenmca--"of all email AN INFLUX OF SZTTIJERS, Canada's weogrik Laud% Deing TaReu Zip by Now Comers Who Are Well Amonetsb English people the thrm "America" ie generally applied. to the United Stetes ; most people forget that Unlade constitutes the melee portion of the North American continent. Daring the past two yeers there has been a great migration from the Western United States to Manitoba and the North-west Territories of Canada. Partial failure of crops, depreciation of prices of farming products, etc., have been potent factors in inducing this migration. .A.fair sample of the can- dition of the fermiers in some of the Western States during the past year is afforded by the following extracts from letters from farmers in Washington and Idaho regarding the prices of produce in those States,. These letters have been received by Capt. Holmes, General Immigration Agent for the Donsine ion Governmeet, who has visited these States and is persoeally acquainted with the writers. For instance, one •farmer says : Pforsesemay be had for from $1.0 up to $25, „weighing from 10 ewe. to 13 cwt. Cows may be bought for from $10 to $15, end registered bulls from. $15 to $25. Wheat sells for from 30 to 40 cents a bushel. People come here to see this great fruit country, as these irrigation companies call it,. but are disappointed to find the water privileges completely in the hands of these companies. The farmers live here simply to pay taxes to the States and 'United States Government, and to the water 5mpauies,d. have nothing left for themselves." Another writer stye : " If you know of any fanners in the Caned:ea North-west who want registered cattle, send tote their addresses and I will procure ethe • cattle for them cheaper than they can re:tee them. Some of us have ()Jeered our Linde at less than half while we paid some years ago, and if we succeed in selling we shall make up a colony of forty or fifty families and go to the Canadian North-west in the spring." • _Copt. Holmes is sanguine that the moves mein of population from the States to ()made, which has just commenced, will largely increase in volume during the next two or three years. He says that there are millions of acres of fertile lands in the Canadian North-west open for settlement, where wheat can be raised at an average of 30 cents, or 1 shilling and 3d. a buthel. For cattle raisers there are thousen6 of acres of the finest graziug land in the world, the average hay crop from which is from three to five tons per acre in the nat- ural steth. In regard to the question of fuel, which isa. very important one to the farmers of North- west Canada, tine has been solved by the discovery and opening up of vast coal beds in that country, and also by the fact that there is a plentiful 'supply of amber in anyof the mixecl farm- ing regions suffioient to last for the next torte- years. • Capt. Holmes has tavelled the whole ter- ritory from Winnipee to the Rookies, and, except at a few points' along the C.P.R., he says the water supply is ebundent and the quality first-claes. As a country for the settlement of English farmers with small capital no better location could be chosen. EXT. RAORDIE AE.Y TELEEATB.Y. A Woman. Painfally Conscious or tier Reenter's Murder 'lliousands of Miles Away. A curious eireumstance that may be look- ed upon se a conffrination of the doctrine of menbal telepathy took place -in New Orleans recently in a family of importance in the history of the State. This family numbers among its members a lady and her twin brother, a yoong man who for thepast few years has been in business in esTew Zea- land, but who has been expected home on a visit to his sister. Otte evening lately, the lady was sitting surrounded by friends, ewhen all At once film gave a piercing cry, and placing her hand to her side fell fainting to the floor On reviving, she declared that she had been suddenly stabbed just above the heart and under the left arm, indicating the spots. She was enured that she was laboring under the purest imaainetion, but wee herd to convince that this was the case, rio plainly had ebe felt the knife enter her body. That night a lietle daughter wee born to her, and the child was foundto be Marked on the places indented by the mother as the Woands she lied imagined. The marks on the child looked as if they :eight be the cioatrix of old knife we:ends. Thenext day a. eehlegram was received them friendof the twie brother iso New Zealand, inform- ing his sister thee he hood beea stabbed to death by A native inc. querrel, awl the date given. ef the young noon's death 445 that of the night when hie eister had reit the pang of a knife entering her own body. Soo prevailed on her husband to inquire by &able where her brother's murderer had struek hi: a, end to complete the coincidence, learned thee he had boon stabbed tivide, once above tha heart mut again under tho left arm. She is oorivineed that through be' affi nity with her b felt hie death even toe he re' Peed MT Sheep, That Was a narrow shoe Whore trod Thy blows). feet ; And that 4 nOISY 011,0113 VhatfolleWed Thee alOn MAI IMMYS, (MO was SUOU We scare°. wattle (Wieo to toneh: -Sae Thou watt pressed upon by the uuroldee theop, ' Aud very otos° to them Thy place didst keel), Arid et le thus Thou say -est to es; "o, ir Ite leveler% eeea leey theepl" That was a toileome way, And that 4 eeltre day, Whoa 'lame didet, by the well Or Indeed water ten, An.(I beastly speoat bo ene, .A.s if that ene alone, The straying one, or all the world bad need. most deep, . And Thou no tliougee but to rceureim Thy sh coo, Arid it is thus Thou sayest to us: "0, if you leve ?de, teed My 1511001)1" Phut was a loveless eset'd Whieh, by steanee spirit stirred, Orhade trne children grace TO see Thy shining. face; 13ut Thoti, ditlst oall them near, And smile away their fear • And one snot little one the eymboeseemed to Thee Of Thy great heavenly kingdom yet to be! .And it is thus Thou saYest to us; "0, food My lambs, if ye love Me I" That was a green hillside, • BY Galilee's sort tido; Ana stveet tile garden's shade By ancient oliv es made. We often follow there Thy worns of Moto share: But 0, tho multitude ot Thine untended sheep! Speaks there a voice within our tipirit's deep. Thy voice to us, And speaks it thus; "0, if you lovo Me, feed Illy sheep!" -Dire. Merrill E,. GateS, The Churches en the Green. BY RUV. WILMAX UYBON vouBLISM. Surrounded brneat homes of modest pride Hero lies the village green; Two churches have bean placed here side by side. The dead aro laid between. From the same pleasant nlot of mother earth Their pure white outlines rise. Pointing by gateway of the same new birth. To the same heavenly sIsies. How calm the scene thee dreads before the view I Humble, but pure, these homes, These vales the stroke or 'settle never knew. Here woe nor discord comes. But nol They tell me these are rival spires, And those who 'neath them moot. Though seeking the same God in their desires Their brother do not greet. At separate tables of their common Lord They sit and beg forgrace. But they restrain their brothers from the board, • And grant no right of place. These temples stand'lik.e foes tibout to smite Upon that peaceful green. And. sad. memorials of the tearful fight, Their dead Ile here between. Was this the grace for which our Saviour prayed When on that dolorous nigtit, Humbly, with basin, in rough cloth arrayed, Ile made his followers white Was this the harden of that priestly prayer Made by the holy Sou "Father, I would that these I love be where We are, and, like Us, one." Can we not bury with our hallowed dead. What should with them have died, And be true members of our common Head Together, side by side? Lot the oldnath from church door to church door Be worn by friendly feet, And at the eitered Supper it once more Brother with brother meet. • Then, midst the flaming of the sevenfold. lamps - •That burn on either hand, In his true temples, not in hostile camps, ' The 1.,ord Himself shall stand. The Pentecostal glory shall be there, Resplendent as the sun, And. hand in hand into Christ's vineyard. faiv, His church shall press as ono. --(N. Y. Overseer. The Lesser Ministries. A flower upon nly thesehold laid, A. little kindness wrought unseen; 'know not who love's tribute paid, I only know that it has maao Life's pathWaysnmeth, Mos borders green. God bless the gracious hands that e'er • Such. tender ministries, essay; Dear hands, that help the pilgrim bear His load of weariness and care Moro bravely up the toilsome way. 0, what a little thing ban turn , A heavy heart from sighs to song./ A. smile can make the world loss stern; A word can cause the soul to burn With glow of heaven all night long --fahurchman. Skatina Sour,. Vithisuer a eonaaR -we glide along, ye pines on the Southern shore. From your branches long, where the cradle song of the South Wind plays no more: Whisper of memories that you hold in the heart of your great green borighs. Of a Summer's wino that was yours and mine, w hen the days were long and the nights weren't cold: Of the whiseers toned, and the warm love ° told, and. the old, old vows. 'sting with the tune, oh thon broad lagune, of niy steel -clad shining feet. As I skate away to the end of clay where the Tvvilight and. Moonlight meet. Ring with the plashes of °ACC that plied on your bosom in nights gone by, To a tale oft told that win no'or grow old, thothe nights grow long and the days ▪ x cold, And the ice has formed hi an iron niould o'er yo ie rold, holtalitoitid:. Echo atrecom of Tullio, er the song a thy great unrcet To tine heart or mine from that heart of thine, While 1speed to the red.rimmed Weet Eche of faces that, used to row On your face ere the jos and, rinis_ Had come to reowo all your rhiplearlown When yourface had Hie blush of a sunset's glow, And the winds !at: ubtlien: tworesroann'ttratxh:o.wsimn.ds that blow in the Winter time. You woe, may your htaiiniSin. rvost 01 wheat; and tares, You may gather your cockle and barley, yen may hushrond els:week, or Joys and cares , Laboring lateh egri artarcinadf Tf And the poppy bold • And the cornflower blue for adorning: But the fullest ears of the seven fat years Will bo gleaned by the gleaner next morning. You may draw year nets, yon may draw your lino, roiasv;neo lnintt d iotrTfirshn honor,inn'cntrt yihook ti 00,3 And of places anapests 011 twenty; The fish of weight, Swallow un your bail. Tom. Int es 1111(1 your wilee not seething; Bat1 he lustiest trout, there's no manlier ot doubt, Win be eatight, by the fisher.' next morning. You may think out thoughts that PM) wittY and You ratty think swim dein, SetrO MIS] IOW You /nee' store' your brein With troth or with Von Hee, , ltiaY l'ethjetTlifittlsagniool fa'°w* Bo it nnderStood: But this feet on yam mind must be borne in, Thee the lateet thought that menkind eon lea Will lit;iig,11341o141st by Some thinker next ntor.n. You nuty piing to this World of time rind sense Nrou may think of 5, nether rroly ; 'ty,nti may sigh, eh, 'whither 1 and ask, till, AV,h0rice ? A.sibefiedlite nuzzling, fairly-. ' Yob iireds sweat, ",t3r0 still repeal', On this dear bid 1031t1111' WO Were born in., Good battered tel.bviet, blest cbatip;e blest . .,tta,yralto to aoe's &Bildt*, VIOTOULIVB feltair 4Yfl Stils1ch.-1;rtesues leave ite e SPeut'*A.31 Ii1131Ma1lag 'lees el' Full tUre it for is Queen. Queen Victoriaei euhjeets are tamest mil vereally unaware thet the royal lady le entitled te take her seat in a trinity of thrones, As Queen of Greet _Britain she ocoupies the (emir epees whiehforlemee have been spent,end wisieleitidden beneath eloth of gold and elevatecl upon a diae of four steps, lives in the histoey hamen glory es mime, 011A111 00 Tillt CaCTBEX or Gamer narreele, the throne of England. As Queen of Ire - lend there is reserved for hex• in the Dublin Palace of the Lord Lieutena,nt a semblance of the shamrock wreathed seat that Emmet apostrophized on the scaffold as the couch of Erin's kings. It is 'now nothing more than a semblance, for Irelend's real threue his never been occupied but by Ireland's real hinge. Tradition hes it that the royal chair was spirited away as long ago as the time of that English Pieury,who, according to the rhymes that any Bridget of your ite- qua/Mance can s epeat, "laid Irelamd low." Ile this as it may, there exists a throne, carved of oak and gilded liberally, whith bears. the ensign of the herp and is tapes- tried in greee. Over it is a wealth of can- opy and a cloth of gold, Whatever it ss rumoured that England'esovereign proposes visiting the sister kingdom, this reserved seat of royalty is put in readiness for her Majesty. ' As Ernprees of India, Victoria may also take her place on an imperial throne. Great was the perfunctory resetting in Calcutta. when Disraeli first procured for the Queen her Indian diguity. There was a movement looking to the purchase by popular sub- scription of a chair all gold and gems. But the native princes proved 'unfriendly to the project and the result of it all was the setting aside of a throue room in the Gov- ernment house in which may be seen sour - tabled affair, ger:nom:Wed by the star of India. There is theoretically an imperial throne reserved for her Majesty et the various Indian courts, but practically node- tng of the sort, exists. • Tea wooers we "SHB muse oe neaps. Returning to the throiue of England, that Costly article maybe sod to have a mul- tiple existence; for there aro humerons canopied chairs scettered through the royal palaces in which the Qtmen sits on state occasions and which are all indiscriminete- ly alluded. to as thrones, But the rea1 throne is the imposing thing to whieh the chamber of the House of Lords owes most of the majesty auggested by ITAPOTMOX'S TIMONE, its present appearance. It stands amid mountains of tapestry, and oan easily be seen, when in position, by any visitor. The chair itself is of wood, gold, ivory ane silver. So roomy is it that two Queen Victories could find place there, despite the oriticism which attributes to William Dean Howells an intention of calling his forthcoming book "The British Throne" beeemse the royalty upon it is so la.rge and fat. Whenever Her Majesty goes in stets to open. Parlitomene the chair is theatrically draped. anew. The coateof-arrns, with its familiar unicorn and bon, is carved an gilded on the back, While the arms are s,er- pen tine creations terminating fiercely front- wards in a pair of lien's paws, The legs, if legs ,can be elegantly mentioned as per- taining to a throne, are short, heavy, carved projections that Seem to have taken root in the floor. There are no meters or anything in the nature of a substitate. Royalty upon ite throne is apparently not, wheeled about. The carvings are highly elaborate and vagut3ly suggest the designs on a side- board of the renaissance period in art. The guides are very glib with stories about the symbolic nature of the carvings, and a shilling will nrootire the visitor England's whole history read from the hieroglyphics of England's throne. EMOTIO,N AND TEIE SENSES. Xis fitsigniar V.ireet1 Described by a Noted English Surggeolu Sir William Dalby, coneulting aural surgeon to St. Georgeei hospital, has been noting down some " ttratig, incidents in practice," that is to say, certain cases within his 0W0 experience As a roodicel practis tioner-which he confesses himself tumble to accoant for by any course of (muse and effectwith which the profession Can be said to be at all ecourately familiar. ,The meet °meow have reference to effects of emotion on the varions eenses. One is that of a lady who wee standing before her toilet; table looking through an open door- into her husbandei dressing - root', where she sew in a mirror the reilec. tion of her beteband itt the aot of cotting hs throat, From; that moment she was abscautely deaf. A similar sadden and oomplete loes of hearing heppemecl some years later to young married women who was eeciettnly confronted with her husband's dead body at the time whets site believed hi tn to be qhite well ad ween she Wee going to meet bun after along absence.. On vations 0000481011S bee Williein Dolby has noted the remarkable orfoots prodecett upon the beaming by ernotioPabiseielleenees, not only by grea,t mentel shoot s,bu t by men tal strains. Ire has known not only sudden rief, but also overwhelming joy instantly Ala 0 Dbredxs ite deaf. SirWililitut sense of SITU 11 to 130 ne tie:cable influences, o ei to,sti. too of loss of txpt 1-obacco is one of fly few, 'articles of manufact- ure who.se real men can L1-5 only g. be found out by actual u5e. For thirty yeao we have been ma- Kinq' the be* Qrade6 of to- bacco. and we recommend MASTIFF.PLUo.CUT a5 a reliable and 3up,rior article_ Tun T. B. PACE', TonAcco Co„ R iond, and Montreal, Camadq. 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