The Brussels Post, 1891-7-10, Page 2TEE BRUSSELS POST
.Jv1x 10, 1801
LYNDON OF HIGH CLIFFE,
AX OLD SOLDIER'S LOVE STOEY.
IBT0.Degree.% Aethor Of " When toe Tide iVa 1Lgli, "Tho Artist and the Man,
"Into a Larger Room," Ete., Etc.
London :' that is to eay, ono of the 11108
W0116 0,1111 places in 010 Wlil (I. 1Vinter
doll in t he North, and 1 see, from the papers
that yonr weather is none of the best
1Vhat do you say to a trip south 9 I could
put you up, nod it W0111 11 Onlirell Illo LO hare
,y00 her fOr u little. Ity•the-by, there la
on attraation. With the mitered perversity
of het' sso, Miss Browne elings to this
gloomy old einem She is may staying with
her unele, Mr. Smith, whom I meet con-
stantly. Neither Of no think her 1001(ingns
ou She ilia in Scotland. If you could
manage to teeth; up some of the mountain
eie tied bring it ovee with you, it might do
her good, She still speaks with eathusiaem
of Castle FAtrielc, I 110 ditto, I ought to
fiettere 1 by the way in whieh she seeks
me out when We Meet in society. But I ant
aware that r shine with et borrowed lustre,
and do uct tilioW MTV my less tenured
rivals."
This was the substenee of the colonere
letter.
He sent it off on an evening in December;
the next mormeg something happened
which nettle him sorry he had timed eo 00011.
He was Silting at a lute breakfast by gas
lights for there W0S It thick fog outside
When his letters "ere hronoht in. One was
in Lady Flora's hatelwrit fug. " How
strange ;" he said, " when 1 hay& jesthe
thiukine of them !"
He read n Mgt, and the rest of Ins let.
ten, I ft ar, ran a poor elmece til being reed
that morning. When we ileum seen the eon.
nets oi Laely Flora's letter, n"0 0100,11 jtelge
ef the 0 fleet it waultl have upeu Colonel
n s mind,
i•Id V DEA:: FRIES D, -4 am higreat
tremble d perplexity, and I come to you
any extraordinary exertion. :sternly la ‘,„ yea emifee.,.,,a ie me, seine
took himself to task. Was he, after all
(1, 0, 01111 p.m took a very St.rung
be had seen and dove, teething better eiem a le my poor little go vetness, Letty
chicken. emitted weakling 1 ha 100 deFara...,..
Monni,..n. Pardon mo for referring to :his.
Tem ol." '1" 'hung,' 1.011 s"? ''e "a1 For Mier no of your own -wise reasons,
live alone? One Path to nee en`l eau wel belleye.-you made up your mind
being closed to him, were there not otiNerer iiet to ere la: to her. I feel sure, however.
CHAPTER XIV.
1110 coLoNEL am .1 PLAN.
BOW Colonel Lyndon passed the weeks
'that intervened. between his departure
front Scotland and n. certain morning tote
in December when we meet him again, it
'would be diflieult los any one -difficult even
Sew himself -to have told.
Before 11:s Veit to Lady Flora he had. as
we shall remember, been the prey of a feels
big which to 11/111 WM both novel and
disgreeable. He was liko one in a 11eW
world -a woo Id which has nu panatell'.
elaim on hiln, end no pest in it 111111 he can
till better than any one else.
With his visit to Scotland much of this
painful feeling passed away. He found
that domestic life has pleasures of its 01111,
and that one rimy live wisely and well with.
out 1110 ceaseless activity of body and mind
tbat had marked his femme lite.
Then arose the dream, whose course we
have eteleaveured trace --the armee of a
new hapainees and a new serviee--which
inade him for a few weeks as happy as a boy,
That dream, as we know, vaoished swiftly,
When the colonel returned to his timelier re
in Piccadilly, and took up, or tried to take
up, his lite again, he found himself where he
had been before -a stranger in a, strange
ecuntry-a man with no ahn in life, with
nothing to arouse his hepes or employ his
energies:and for a time feeling uf extreme
*listlessness came over him.
This was duo partly, no doubt, te the
'change from the bracing .110 of the ineere ht
Augnstto the clesenees of 1,e Li .11.t. a, st revue
-It startled the colonel to rind unable
to awake at his usual 1100 in the ntetedeg,
. .
tired after a short walk, and sla inking hem
15
Some one envelY-sonie "ne in Iliv knowieg y. etas I do, that you continue trefeel
somewhere -had need et him. In eriviug : a wane ea.. a. deep rev," iol' liee
way to this unworthy deprassion, Le was ;
; " What will you say 1111011I tell you that
dishonouring his God, mid depriving
ins
fel; she has left me ? At the moment that
lows ot the good he might do them.
He ea. dew. 13 High chge and ateyea , wist111,,,Itteiontesoli
there for timlt
had known him from hisboyh .ted, had fallehi°1
e. ele nr,od nal teeter,
hero wn 'free will, 1(1 1 with my approval
fool 001(00.101. I must -1 must -tell you the
into ill -health and was tronel al by not It ing
'1
whole storyd
hi , ental: i; goes to my heart
The COI on el" ie1111' t i'n'ite.delfi00,u3t0 s 41'1 it'sen ols'iLt1 ot, even to seem to speak against my son. You
know what lie is -how f n11 of emotion, how
and tried to carry ont 1 is ideas, hut he did not
understand the ways of the clergy. There
were things dcne-done, he believed with
the best in tentim,s -with which he could not
impulsive uvhen he tidies an idea into his
head, and how ineapable of counting con-
sequencee. 1 00.11 speak to you, therefore,
agree, After several weelte spew. in an hon' inti„ehliiienti•sreineak;silley coo ooruLl ftaona,201reyochltiernr.,
-est effort to understand the working of the
self in love-anel with--Letty ! Imagine
parish, he eola the rentor thot it woida he
professional aid. would say a "0 ortl against. her. She is the '
better for tbem both that they ehould mill in „
what this means for me ! Do not think
most. charming little creature in the world.
'1 evil' gladly pee fur a cur Ise," he said ;
Theugh innocently imprudent now and then, 1 ,
" he will help you lietter than I ean. I sup -
he has acted from the best of metives, and `
Jokedhe added, with a enule, ler tie 00101' her behaviour at Cue lest W118 admirable.
looked distressed, "I am still too much of a
Whether she [0 101 love with him or not, I
eoldier for this kiwi of work."
have no mains of knowing. I hope not ;
" There is not discipline 0000040 811110100403
but Percy, as you know, is peeuliany fasein-
ns for you," said the reetor.
ating, and he has been more delghtful than
" Perhaps it is thet. Anyway, this is
usnul 01 )1(10. Letty found out his feelings.
not my vocation. I must try Loudon
gain,and uvould not even let hint speak. Site
"
moue to Inc. poor child ! and begged with
In London, Colosiel Lynon spent the tears to be 000(0 0(1103' at once. It leis almost
anoliths of November and Decemiar.
[('01400 my heart to part with hor, and as
Helmet recovered from Ids first depression,
fan 11(113', I scarcely know what to da
• and he found various ways of employing his
superfluous leisere, money, anti energy, Bra,
in spite of everything, the days went by
somewhat wearily. Ile was not iniscrable,
but he was 1101. 1)010404)'. To a man acenetom.
ed 10 111)' out his days 110110 milli try preei*
confidence ycu than in any one else.
don, to know exactly what his tattles are, When I said she might perlutps meet you in
and to take up each one as it mimes urith London, she said she hoped she would and
enthusiasm, it is perplexing to have.,. leek her face brighter. ed in the most extraordin-
ant for suitable tusks, and the colonel felt,
001 010. ei,y
" If you arm suggest anything, will
There were some bright points in that bor me know? Anychino that
'winter in London. One was 00 most nnexs yon
money and friendship can do Zell be
:pected meeting with Veronica Browne. She
done. 1,0013 no much distracted to Nvrite
-was staying with her uncle, Alexan ler Smith , „adv. Do not, I beg of you, judge
and one evening when the colonel was dining "'"'
me harshly, If Letty had even 0 small in.
0.1. 1410 house, he found her in the drawing* dependent fortm e, I might be willing that
„room, This was the first of several meetings.
Percy should think of ner. As it is -you
:Bout et teem en,lu)ed toasting over their
Scotch experiencee. Vert vies, who wits in 013081. 050 it is impossible."loursever,
full correepontlence with Janet Mackenzie,
'
could give the colonel the latest news about ' FLORA W1 XST.1 100.1.X."
his friends. She knew that it was on their Three timee over the colonel read this
account, not her OWII, that ho liked te, meet letter. Then he drew his writing -desk in
her ; but this dfd not vex her, as it might
have done formerly. He, on his side, tele
very friendly towards her. She puzzled him
a httle, and he ;could not help watching her
sometimes, and wondering if the change he
saw, or fancied he saw, In her manner and
bearing was due to his imagination or had
any basis in reality. So much softer and
gentler ehe seemed, with a new thoughtful.
ness in her expression -not flashing out the
first clever speech that came into her brain,
but sitting, often silent, waiting for others
to speak.
One day the colonel asked Veronica's
:uncle if he thought she was quite well, and
the answer he received confirmed him hi his
belief that smite change had really 00015 0001
her.
" She has never been the same since her
visit to Scotland," hir, Smith said ; my
Wife says his her illness there -the sprained
ankle, you know -but I think there is some.
thing 010010 10 it,"
So the colonel thought, and a very curious
theory began to shape itself iu his inind,
If her trouble Was Mental, that meant that
ahe was in love. The colonel weld imagine
no other trouble to a girl in Veronica's
position. It might bo intellectual, 01 0011105;
Ile had heard of people fretting themselves
into their graves over Positivism and the
Darwinian theory, lint he did 1101 think she
Wee 11, wonum of that type.
Bat if Veronica's trouble dated from her
visit, to Reotlancl, and if it was alovetrouble,
whom could it he about bet Percy Win-
stanley ? She had refusal him, indeed ; but
that the eolenel believed meant nothing,
More frequently then not, if report spoke
truly, girls said " No" when they wished
to say " Yee Rut if this were so, and if
Percy =Ibis mother were still of the seine
mind-bhe 00101101 VMS certain of the faith-
fulness of Lady Flora, but he was rattler
inclined to doubt her son-mightnot mattere
be set right Ile became quite animated as
he thouglit it all out.
He had, indeed, had another idea. Percy
Winstanley's rapturous exclamation on the
night when tray read him her little lecture
-"Have you found ont that she is lovely,
exquisitely lovely 1" -rang often in hie care,
and he had inteepreted fe after his own
fashion but what more likely than that he
had been wrong?
That evening the colonel wrote ti /otter ttl
Percy, which, he flattered /11111801f, WAS
hiahly (10pm:1lw ye, th,011---I10t1, which it would not be well to
7'1 ant eetablisheel in tendon for the enter here, but the knov whet Was good
whiter," 110 " There ere riot ninny ween she mat% and the colonel's sileiteitut
afreetione now, lert, :IA you remotketl'when 1.1,4', PIA gentles ti011rteette manner, touelfed
oayou Were here in the summer, ' Lo»don lo x!' to tee heart,
" 1 wadi yen joy, site" she said, in a lo
vein, when, with a kind smile owl bow, 10
turned away from the co ti ter.
" Thank you," he anewered vourteously
and then -for there was something in th
girl's Mee otuol ataitavr that, alta.va Itiat-11
stopped to shake her by the bawl, and ex
press his appreciation of the tremble ehe hoo
taken over his leisket of flowers,
" lie is going to be married ; he is ver.
(allay going to be married," said the girl t
herself, as, with a eleep sigh, she looke.
after him, " 1 n ender if she loves him a
he loves her "
A tear -the first she had sheet for many 10
long day -fell over the flowers she was ar
rangi»g.
" Most likely not," she thought 1 "015
the way ot the world. Sot there ore some
wometi who would da for ti 11104 lilte
(011110(111.101100014 )
Seetia'S Bens Oare for Their Datti,
O An unusually interesting ceremony took
place in lotttit Pleasant Cemetery, Toienito,
on Saturday nf (oilmen hist before ;theta two
thoustiad people. 11110118 the docile Item of
a 000(1 (01 monument on 10.1111(1 Set npact for
the burial of 8011000mo) 111111 100111011 0 lie die
in poverty, All the city S 'Wet. ,,ocieties
were repreeented, the offieern of the St,
AndrewSociety, by whom the monument
O wait initiated, taking the leteliug part.
1 After mayor and praise Do Dan 14 00 ea Oa
president of S1., Andrew's society, delivered
the following earneet and pramtiettladdrees,
the spirit of which is commended to all 011r
O eaders ;
Fellow countrymen, Nee etre aseembled
here 0 eel ay to dedicate this burinl plot t
reeelve the !males of the friendless Mel 0(1-
dogont dead. '11 0 tire also gitther.
ed together to formally unveil this 111(1011.
mem summed hy the tit. .Andrew's Society
of loionto ehmes of remembrance,
where the ashes of 001 eountryinen 11,1111
coentrywomen will rest in peace. For this
beautiful and unique cairn on this uoin.
mending and 00(01003, kind], the St. Andrew's
Society is indebted to the Caledonian
Society, the Sons of Scotland, and the Gaelic
Society, cd this eity, for liberal donations
towards ite erection and for hearty co-
operation with us in the work, These
societies claim porDeular credit In eon- A European Zollverein.
tributing to the fund for payment el the The formation of the European eollverei
ground and inoenment, as they feel it 0148 a has therms° 1 ((Otto
i.the nativity mid the hop
privilege to have the opportunity to give ex. .ut the Imperial Federationists, On tho 1 7t1
pression to their charity for so worthy mse. a imputation etmeisting of ettenbere
an 'object. hey Were conscious of the, the ImPe'.1a1. F0.01000010010L"oogye, l'ade'l 1'
truth of the old Lain a Inge that " he Lord litraesey, welted upon Lord eelisltury
eiveth twiee wlio giveth quielely." So there 1" 01,101' t° arg° itha to
is en debt upon this property, indeed there enee of he sellegoverning bbrittoh erlonie
is a surplus. 'Ile 01l,2OO have met all 'labia to consider the questioli of partaking in th
ides, mid the residue will not, oely lceep privileges end responsibilities of a unite(
,I,„ r);,„ ;„ good order l„ perpetuity, loot empire, le al Salisbury, in replyleg, sale
will still further ontiment the ground. In. that he '0,10. in eetice 00(0 '00' with th
dead, so seneitive were wean) this point, objeet, the deputation Isel el alma '111
thee one of 1), emelitioes (01 1102101(1100, Was (.1 1t(34(1010: too a'111"(1' 'As nmhing 100" 1014
that We 1114 alive no debt on the day of riess that
n he future of the Bettie!, Limn
a.
er gathering, yee „en 1„,„,;,,., ain aord Salsbury agreed with the (lemmata.
Andrew', seelety t0thet 00.0 tO the OXIMiliOnee of an early inaterine
•
MORE INDIAN WARFARE.
The. aorenief tee Whistles Moly Effective
Than 0 Verve Or Scattier:.
(1. 0 3 I opehouse, general freight agent
for Chicago and North% esteem lines west of
Omaha, is known throughout the West 40
the " clionipion Indian killer." Mr. Mon.
houee in proud of the dietinguished title,
but is rather reticent about relating the cir•
ionnstance that tnade him somewhat famous
When the firm steam engine to enter north-
western Nebraska mode ite appearance in
that part of the coensry, :Morehouse wog
in charge of the cenet net ion gang whieli wee
then working on the rood. The engine steam-
ed oat into the wild eountey as far as the
line WEIS bublt. 11011 sectom of the State
001.8 111110 With 11121011B ;ma thousands of the
01111104010 0401(103101 to see the iron horse. -At
first they would not venture nearer than a
half.unile to the lo.tontotive, bet tinaliy they
became. bolder. They eame 01 110011, ill het,
that the tritium, became alarmea. Several
sliots were tired et the red men iu frighten
them, but they did net bave the(111.110,1
effect, fur the Indians came nearer Red
nettrer. The eegineer mid firemen Locame
frightened and dew te,I Die engine.
" Thoee red davits will kill every one 001 us
if something is not dorm 0" said One of the
men. Just then alorellotiee, Who was watch.
ing tho advancing :ravages, called out to the
engineer 1
" Give them the whistle,"
Tait the engineer had disappeared, and
there was no response. Morehouse didn't
wait long before acting. He leaped into the
cab. grasped the whistle haudle and pulled it
wide open. Such on unearthly shriek as 110
one ever heard before or sinee came from
that engine The whistle evelen.ly had the
asthma, heaves, and eeveral other lung and
throat diseases, for it made ti 110100 that
frightened the white mem
Did it frighten the Indians 3 Well, I
should say it did. When that whistle
opened its throat a pante was the result
itnong the savages, They fled as if the evil
pirit 1,vas pursumg thorn. Therewas plenty of
team in the boiler, ti good lire was burning,
udalorehoesellungon to that whistle handle
ike griin death. At nest he sent forth long
hrieks, telt after the saveges had been sent
Hying across the plain some distance began
hem a few shrill, short screams to increase
their pace.
" The air is so light in Nebraska, 00 rather
was at that time, that the sounds of the
whistle unveiled for miles, Not only did
consternation break out among the savages
who were near the engine, but others muffle
away became alarmed. When they saw
thele brother& running they, too, 140,1181(10frightened and joined .1 11 the uvild run Ito and
down hills, across plains, and throe eli rivers,
aloreliousewas the occasion of all that excite -
1110001, and that is why he ia called the
" champion Indian Itilieri"
.. But where does the Indien 1101(05
1(1 Mr Liclitigham was asked.
" 'he next morning 10)) 1101(21011111118were found 0)0teen milesfrom the place where
the engine stood. They had run themselves
to death, and aforelemse, of course, Ives the
cause of theie untimely taking off. He can
bo blamed for fr,ighterting the savages 10 110(0(13
with !that blood -curdling whistle.'
with her. But I acted for the best, and
I hope to have her back some day.
"SVibl you do me the great kindness of
0000(104 0,01, mei to yhig to find out whae can
be done for her ? I believe she has more
front of litm, 1(1011 1110030 o,briefo418Wer, His
pulses were throbbing euriouely, and all his
heart seemed on fire ; but he had tiled to
write calmly.
"'Cheek yeti, my kind, good friend
these were his words-" you were right to
trust me. I have 0 plan, and, if you love
her as you say, eN erything may come right.
I wrote to ask Peroy to manse here, but keep
him at Ettrick if you eau. 111111 see Miss
Morrison, make somebusiness errangetnents,
and thenmnost probably, run ep to Scot.
land for two or three days. Meuse ender.
deretand, hi the meantime, that I take nit
much interest in the rens people es it they
belonged to myself. They do, in a eertain
sense. I will write again to.morrow.
" Yours gratefully*
" ANDREW Lvemos."
Another letter he dashed off before he got
upfront the table. It was addressed to the
solicitor and land -agent who tnanagea the
High Oliffe estates. This letter was still
briefer.
" I wish to sell High Qin. Please make
all needful arrangements, Advertise it at
once, and largely. This is final. 1. am
thinking of leaving England for an indefin-
ite One, Poesibly I shall never return."
It was very strange. The hope which had
begun to redtdossom 100 his beart, and prove()
as illtisory as his former hopee heel been. It
had gone absolutely ; gone never to retain ;
not only so, but it was meditating the Very
greatest of poseible changes, the giving itp
of his childhood's home, of his conntry, of
the new life that Ile had once thought might
be dear to him. And yet the colonel was
happy. Shure the day WhOTI he was called
upon by his mother to give up hie military
career and return home, he had never been
so completely, to serenely joyous as Ito wog
on that dingy lemming in Deoember, when,
with the joyous feelings of a lover who is
certain of a kind reception, he prepared for
a visit to Lady Flora Winston/opal 00110171,
When be found himself outside, under the
glimmer of the lamps that feebly illutninat.
ed lie look -ed 0100011131 (00 0 floristig
shop, There was one not far from his
chambers. He wont in, and bought a
buttoteaole bouquet for Mineola and 0,
basket of flouvere about whose arrangement
ho Wile vary fedi:lions, for some one else.
A pale.fared girl served him. She WaS
110,1partienlarly good girl, and rette had
tremble& of her own -dark troubles some of
Smuggling.
The dullness of the overage conscience in
respect to smuggling is a matter that, has
long attracted the attention of those sem.
tomed to distinguish between the mora
quality of actions. Many persons who are
strictly honest in their dealings with their
neighbors and who would feel greatly ens.
tressed if they had wronged eine put of a
dolhir, will without any apparent convenes
tion, if the opportunity presents itself, de.
fraud the Government, which means the
people collectively, of the duty that may be
Imposed upon any article they may wish to
unport. lt is not easy to account for this
peculiar featere, unless it be that in the one
cage the person wrosiged can be held up be-
fore the mind as nn individual, while in the
other ease the wroug is done to so great a
number, and eaell perton suffers go slightly
by it 1.11001. 11. seems ta the wrong.doer to be
no offence at all. The reasoning though
specious is very fallacious, for if there he
low difference in the gravity of the Milano
the greatest wrong is that watch affects the
greatest limber, Juet now 001r neighbors
are complaining that many Canadian traders
along the northwest boundary are smugga
11104 040015 across the border into the United
States. It is dimmed that owing to the
smallness of the customs service thousande
of bushels of potatoes are rushed into the
Ladled States without paying duty. The
indueement to smeggle potatoes is great as
they bring good price in the States. 11 10 a
coesiderable lees to the governmenu, how.
over, einem the tariff on potatoes is 26 cents
00 bushel, This condoet on the part of our
fellow citizens is greatly to be regretted
though it ie difficult to discover any method
to effectually prevent it. Those who have
respeet for JAW and for the righte of °times
onght to frown upon the practice so as to
disturb at least the consciences of tholes who
practice the dishonesty. Good neighbor-
hood reqnires that we shall do no less.
A recent despatch from Paris, France, an.
mamma that the Frenoh wine -growers are
geeatly elated over tlie eeperiinents with the
American vine in combating the deadly
phyfioxerii. Many remedies have been
to against this pest during the lest, fifteen
years-iminei Rion of the infeetml vineyards,
sprinkling with biNselphate of carbon, etc,,
--bet nothing steam -led until the foreign
vine was introduced. For the exotic the
destroyer appears to have no liking. Be.
sides enjoyieg Me immunity the American
plant is said to thrive well on French soil
and to produce a grape thati is eminently
eatisfactoey. l'hat this discovery will prove
of yeey great velue to Franee goes without
saying. To the people of this continent,
however, the question of Prencli wines le
not bee of 80 great)iconcern aS ri was 0.
quarter 1)1 11 century ago or before California,
took to growing the vino so extensively. It
11031 (01113' thirty 301100ego that the dr, t at-
tempt WLIA Inadn at Wil.c.groWing 0111,11(1
1,rtst 0'O (1' the Califolffis, pre.
bit was evvr .'14,11(10,6100 g1(110119 W111114 0(113'
ithtstt 1,,(11)11,111/0 gallon:5 were imported.
0111(01; 111 1'ereilit.11, ouocl t0
PrilYYFI Ins turn0 his longing eyes. Neet
these worthy fled enthral espiratioue be L
hope that 111 0011)' avoid n patmor's grave
OIoo fereeken cornered 5011I0 10(1.14 0.300, 08'
lama 'mine and kindred, If one mortel
011111010(nes) lie faraway from our nal ivelan
then let 1 hero be It mil red ashes Leith 118110
kindred dust to dust, in mina' emu
Riau US 0118 upon whieli wo are now asse
bled. 'fhb; epot is for the homeless timid
0011 prOtile, hilt W110111 Ore 001 IliWity8 frIell
(00
lie
D
10-
01,
04,
iy
m•
of
yspepsia
Totemic Suffer Una J'or 19 years- Re-
stored to Perfect, Health.
Veer people bave suffered inert+ severely
from dyspepsia than elr, IC. A, 111eittahon, 10
well known greyer of blannton, 3'n. Ile says;
tl•
less. I have noticed floweret 1004000 ([(10 fe
graves new seen near where We 01101(101, 8011
loving hands lied put them thm
over e ount
in which repoeed the forme of those who.
/if e, were olueets of affection, Dell, illny
love. 'Were it nue for yot
generosity, as far as I know, eo
very ne
elieee ten kitties, as Os',)) 04 tile 1110011.04 14svhieli there is re010, Red Will lie Mr 001100(111
001010, Would 1114vn been bnrie.1 four ;WI
five togth
eer in a common gran a w
ve iee.
000011.0 corner of this eity of the dead. N
boast is meth, of this, but reverentially 0
tloi4 beautiful Jane day we formally set 010410tide olect repot, and this select 0010)1, as
burial ground nod monument for the need
Scottish dead. We devoutly pay, ''I'eat
to their ashes."
"Before 1878 I was In excellent health, weigh -
11 10104 OVer 000 pounds. In Mat year ah ailment
10 developed into nento dyspepsia, and soon 1
in was reduced to 162 pewees suffering burning
001(0)1100119 in the 0(11l5110001,palpitation of he heart,
0,
t
r,„ 111t1111811 nausen, Intel indigestion,
emilet not sleep, kat an
1r
lisurt In iny work, had 1(10 of ineittneitoffa, and
'Y
d for days 000 11 time I would have weleemect
1. (tenth. 1 beemno morose, sullen and Irritable,
.„ anti for eight ye1110 lire 01010 1014(100)010. I tried
Inany physicians and ninny renledICS. One tIlly
11 IL workman employed by me suggested that
01 I take liootps
At it bad S Ufferin ettred lils
• Smetana rata, an
wife of dyspop-
sta. I did SO, 111111 befell) takIeg 1101 1011,1,' et
a bottle 1 begnii o tete like a 1/810 nom. The
terrible [011110 00 winch ([tool beett staleeted,
n 00118011, I 110 (Ion 00 1.000 heart subsided,
, my stonmeh beeatile ettsler, miusea disap-
, peered, end iny entire system began to
f tone lip. With rVariling
ystrength 001(010 StelVity of
, mind end body. Before ears
., the lifthieittle WaS taken
8 1 luta regainee my fernier weight Bile natural
• emention, 1 itin todity well sod 1 ascribe it
1 . to taking Hood's Sarsaparilla."
1 10. 11. lf yell deckle to lake Rood's Sorsa.
O patina do not lei ineueed to !say any other,
'
11.1
0 oaozos
f '
1010101 Ing the hem of the MUNI, 011 the shaft
ice els° seen on fear sides the St. Andrews's
cross. This possession is simply because
St. Andrew's Soolety took the initiative in
the ptirchase of the ground and in the 000(10
114011 of tho cairn, and that this society has its
existence solely for ;heritable purposes. It
was meet then that wo should hold the pro.
petty in trust for the benefit of all all 01 r
poor of whatever kind or conditiou. Yon
are to be congratulated on the completion
of the work. 1105 not a lavishexpenditare,
but i0, is a needed mid spontaneons mein i-
festation of good will and Christian chat ty to, ests ef the important comninnities with
not simply to the living but to the dead 1,i111`, ed. 111`1"11"14 1-1;e,
then who Wel first the light of ththentties 1130010Luc, goVerna.mit wortiti
day athe draw ioo ths spas th the kind we have to 0011101101 With in order to make it
all love so well, and to which we turn with milted empire similar to the United Statue,
fond recollection. It is Cliristitin entlenvour which Lord Salisbury described no n zol-
exemplified in a ploctietil form. Dogma Iverein or ItreleSTOreill, Ile 0011(111111ed 11,101,11
hes its place ill speculative th011ght ereOile the stetement that he could not ennetton
are necessary to formulate religious beliefs ; conference of e denial statesmen until a de-
theo'ogical dissertatiens are important in finite scheme of imperial federation luta been
showing the modes of human thought in re- In'efwell• 8Peaking further a few daye later
lotion to Cod and man, bet none of these the premier of theempire said thetmeinbers of
aro religion, The lientral idea of Christianity the league must work hard to convert their
countrymen 10 the league's way of thinking,
is Goeblike work. 11 That charity, tliA
suffereth long and is kind." .. Pure foul for 't w,o, impnssible for England to give
toidefiled religion is to visit the fatherieSS preferential treatment to the colonies at the
expense of the meet of the world. They
and the widow " well as "1.0 keep our.
selves unspott'ed from the world." Tho must, ascertain how far the country would
positive imam:Hos of comfort to the needy support the policy of which he imagined a
prominent feature was a preferential tax en
is put first '' Thou shalt love thy
neighbor 0.0 thyself." 101410010 the feidgia„amain, wool find meat. Englishmen, in his
of the low." "Inamnuch ns ye have done a Opill 1011, W011111 000e1 0011800t to legislation of
unto one of the least of these nty brethren, a vague or indefinite kind, especielly, alen
ye linve done it unto me.' it is 111 the them dearest flatly intgrests were concerned.
doing that eharaeter is cletermined, and not The !segue was satisned with Lord Sal's.
merely in the belief. All eheritablesocietiee bury imply to the deleceates, and will organ.
feel the force of tide Divine text applied to ize.a fair trede campaign throughont Client
the inebriated, and nowhere but in Cheis. Buten.
tendom is (1110 0001) in its highest manifesta-
tion. This city is crowded with endowed
charities, which exclede nearly all classes
of the afflicted, from the infant
to the aged, anol front the helplessly in-
capable te the childish dement. This grand
exhibition of charitable intent is daplicated
wherever the pitying religion of the Christ
holds sway over the 110110 0.0011 consciences of
mankind, Sinner as well as saint is often
permeated with this spirit of beneficence.
Simply by juxtaposition to its prevailing
influence, this ground and this erection are
in a humble way am outeonie of this spirit of
Godlike benevolence, anti dare it be said
with national pride, that, in this eespect the
Scottish people are promminent, according
to their means. They are industtions ; they
are frugal, iund thole envious enemies eay
they are parsimonious, yet when their per
capita wealth is taken into consideration, no
nation excels them in contributions to roll.
glens and charitable purposes. The one
hand gathers with prudence, but the other
strove with disereet prodigality.
pennies may he well looked after in the
earning, but the pounds are usually dispeps-
ed-nur in foolish extravagance, but in canny
mei needful eharity. Church and charnel
muse, homeless, houseless, and hapless sure
always objects of their care and solitude,
irhose of 0010 00(103000)11150) arid countrywomen
vhose bodies may be interred lien, will have
o oostly pageantry nor mote neat following
o this last resting.plime, 'I lie rule will be
he solitary conveyance unil friendless 0001.
0)11.005110,ienellt tO the grave, W110,1(041. 1: inily be the
kindly presence of some mildew 01 one of
or tieottish societies. A 1 hest, the buries
lore must of necessity be lonely and attend.
CI by few. While this true, it is 0, 00111.
Olt 1.0 110, and will be to distant relatives
ntl friends, to retilize and to know that
hough such may have no useless trapping
i000'costly eavaleffedes alt last, yet the most
mitutifel and 001153' spot has been seleeted
n the cemetery for the last resting -place of
hese Scotish dead. The desire of the dying 0.1001000,0.1001000,while ell the ladies at the tenet
o have their bodies Mid in tho homes ef have 0000t thew fingere' ends the power to do
anythine,
The Austrian lady of station is acquainted
with every detail of tho cuisine. A story is
told by Viennese Ineliee of another, who,
having neglected this branult of her educa-
tion, ttllowed, at it great, dinner party which
she gave, two dishes of the some color to
ha served in IneneSSitin-a ±11(000 for whieh
no excuse coeld be Imola,
the deliberations. The operatioe extol int:
010.11005 And impulees, he said, lottl erented 01
feeling of 1100000111000001 011 ennade. and Anetralia
wh ich !night not improperly 1 e culled an un-
willinguese to acquiesee in the pt eeent state
of things.. Continuing, Loal el
marked (),ata large proportion of the fo-ll
seie
negotiatione 0.01(1 difficulties arose entirely
from the colonial conies:tams of file Empire ,
The government, the Premier added, lied to
exercise great vigilance in order to see that
it did not incur elangois whieh had not lira.
en from its own attends, bet from the in -
—40
Austrian Women,
Sarsaparilla
1 850(11,7110 angels is, $1; SIX ('11 010 Prepared ordY
by C.I. (000000 101 CO.,Atotheuttrivs.Lowen, MIS&
iitDO Doses One Dollar
• Great E: ploring 1:poditicn to Aust. alio,.
The important, ei: 'teethe, aetipped. by
; he 1 i ',matey of ei r Thome,: lealere .131(1 I
fertile thorough expleratici, of the it intoning
Wattles on the te tug,.
gameed 00.1 Ili N 10.-1 Hee, tie end ready
00 10,000 from A .e'aide. •r;„.• et the
O peditiou ia 100 Well -kit :0011 All.ti ruliall ON -
plover, Mr, Itivi1 Th, eti,ec
0 members are 1011e ki,,,Wa it their
' VariellS Ilepal mellis. crtineis,
with their Afgliroaliieers, foto 110
01101 lIelire Ellitio IS f011111 pill el the ex-
pelition. 1: I.:dated in 1 lie "Pamectlingee
Royal. 1 len 31. 111110 01...1 the
arsas to he 000boOoei ie n100 y 0 1 to the
I Wost oi lie eV,: 1011 t The
Perhaps you do not believe these
statements concerning Green's Au-
gust Flower. Well, we can't make
, you. We can't force conviction in-
to your head or med-
Ladies of high birth are wonderfelly ea. Doubting icine into your
throat. We don't
Thomas. want to. The money
is yours, and the
misery is yours; and until you are
willing to believe, and spend the one
for the relief of the other, they will
stay so. John H. Foster, 1122
Brown Street, Philadelphia, says:
" My wife is a little Scotch woman,
thirty years of age and of a naturally
delicate disposition. For five or six
years past she has been suffering
from Dyspepsia. She
Vomit became so had at last
that she could not sit
Every Meal. down to a meal but
she had to vomit it
as soon as she had eaten it. Two
bottles of your August Flower have
cured her, after many doctors failed.
She can now eat anything, and enjoy
it; and as for Dyspepsia, she does not
know that she ever had it."
pa.ble, owing to their excellent system of
education, says a Vietent letter to the New
'York Beetling Post, Whatever they may be
called upon to do -from cutting it dress to
making ft salad -they 1110 1(131005 ready.
Yoeng ladies with titles and fortunes are
sent to famous milliners and deessmakers,
where they serve a regular apprenticeship,
and remain until perfectly able to cut and
nuthe any gement.
An Austrtan lady who can not swim or
does not know how to ride well 18 0(01 excep-
tion:
Needle work of every kind, even to the
making of Mee, is part of every younglatly's
education. There is ito STIlltttering OE Ally -
thing ; whether Bhp learns the piano, or to
draw, she learns it thoroughly. If she has
no talent at all for ;Lessen, which is sehloin,
she lets that art entirely alone. Her pedes-
trian accomplishments put us qui eta to sheane;
ellbrts of memory aro another soerce of
wonder to tts,
The wonderful memory which emibles
Aestrinn ?hes to repeat sometimes tl e
whole of 'Paradise Lost," or an enth e
theme, times from pritetiee begun in baby.
hood.
10 eery day the girl is expeeted to learn
a poem or IL page. She often does it while
malting lter toilet ; and at last a poem re-
quires but a single reading and it is stowed
away in the memory safely. As lingnists
they are famous, 'This, too, comes from
lownieg when very yonsg, As the meert
language is French, learning it is oompul-
stew, Even servants ore expected to speak
both Trench and German.
The burgher's daughters will 000l, cende-
mend to the learning of dressmaking and
cooking, which the tttled lady can do with-
out ite reflecting on ben social pOS1 0011. Alld
go the young woman to whom such kuowl.
edge would be of praceicttl benefit are 110-
mit' fathers 15 015 old as our ran. Patriarchs
nob prophets,wisemen and warriors,saint and
avago, Ethiopian and European, Chinaman
nd Congo -man, have 00011 a fatherland for
hiell they yearn when the inevitable hour
omes in which they mnst pass down "into
ie valley of the shadow of death." Thu
arm -hearted mid impetuous son of Erin
nee for the Shannrock.covered green mid of
reland. The Englishman knows of no
lace to itly his bones equal to rose -covered
lbion. The Frenchman Nyoold love to close
is oyes in death where luxuriates the firm.
e Us. When the hoer of his departure
Ines, the Soot on hie sick bed dreams of
isty lolIbo, polrp[e moors, wimplin burnies,
sky dells, gowany lees, and the mild kirk
ith its toilet kirk -yard in which rest the
hes of generation after geberation of his
refathers. It is an instinct of our nature
thus linger in fond contemplation on the
nd of our nativity, and wish to die and be
tried there. The person whn 1303 11115 fool.
g crushed out in the toil end drudgery of
orydny life has destroyed in him one of the
blest 1)1050,18 110 the warp and woof of his
ing. How the Jewish exile wailed in
ree•siek»ess for 01 Jerusalem in ruins,
lila he WAS in bondage by Bitel's historic
ream 1 Hew the nstraeised son end
ugh tors of Zion tmelay long for a bellt-up
y rio Pkbhmilto to he again glorions mid the
y oof tho whore. earth 1 Pilot:0 financially
logo thole to die. rho Moslem's herwt
old leap with joy wore he permittegl to die
Mt oca, wifell to hint is the nearest earthly
Members of It besting o tib shoeld always
be true to its sailers.
Shute 18418, the year in Nviiich freedom of
worship was guareeteed to Protestants,
12,000 citizens or Spoin have left the Roman
Catholic, eintroh. The Spanish Protestants
have 120 lumees of worship, 100 sehoole
with 100 teachers and 11,000 pipits, 80 pas-
tors and 40 evangelists, six chetah papers,
three orphanages, and two hospitals, A
large number of Protestant VerindinalS,
printed ill Spain, are sent regular ly 101010101.
co, Chili and Argentine.
-
Nine Lotg Years
IVIra, John ,IVIcLean writes from Barrie
bland, Ont., March 4, /880, AS f011OWS : "I
have been a great sufferer from nourotgin
for the lest nine years, but, behig tele/sod
to try St, jiteobs Oil, eitn now litateily
'endorse it as being a most excellent rentodst
for this complaint, as I have been greatly
benefited by 10 nee,"
first reached will be that lying between the
tracks of Goose, Forest, Alla Giles, and os
said to be a tract some 100(0 miles in leneth
by about 350 miles in width ; the next is a
strip lying between the northern track of
Giles and Colonel Warberton's ronte, rough-
ly estimated to be 000 miles in length and
200 in width ; ;;, third blank lies in the north-
ern territory, to the oast of the country ex•
plored by Warburton in 1878, Gregory in
1850, end Forest in 1870, it district of some
400 milee by 300 miles, lying between the
overlautl telegraph line and the Victoria
River. The rntnrli journey will be to the
east of the overland telegruph.
c ;JAC 0
TRADE
REmaiinvimiN
SPRAINS, STRAINS, INJURIES.
It is nn erroneous 10100, 00 0111M5110 that great
f0100 is required 10 04050100.0 a strain or simile
Thom um 00 utaitY deneato muscles and teu-
does which hold together the 01101110 (10001 foot,
and direct the vehicle of locomotion that a
very slight thing often tames nnl, °Min vary
painful, bet (0. very serious sprain, w fah St.
Aeolis Oil will ems
SORELY AND PERFECTLY.
Weak Spots. -A huge number or etiees
is reported or accidents to the aukle or
foot, more than to all the rest of the body.
Tito ktwo is also 11 very denote centre of
notion, and inairies thereto very frequently
result in acute pains, enlargements, stiffbess,
and sometimes permanent stifrness, unlese
At Jaeolo 011 prevents, 1102 005
Einar Conte Ane Cnnorne Caeca,
enD,sesflaniolltolPohr ;rt' fig tn• IIIIMS1111rtal 01111 itt rl erxeraelst:
eive exertion ; to mroteh mimeos er
Witilciutdisloc.atioa, and A1. Jaeobg 0010010,0
EASON 050 WiTHOUT FltoUnnerint.
Trepreht.-R11?wi t hSi. 311)f11
rmoyi croug111t:,opart,m12.Pro.,
0100 1.000 body from nal Red dial('
10404 0101 111.08 11.713 -6E -1 -ER 00o Baltimore( It&
Cana( fun Donot 0114101011010, 01101..
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00)
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et
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