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The Brussels Post, 1892-8-26, Page 3AuGusT 19, 1892 TIE -WEEK'S NEWS. 1,010(1 110, Villein) thousand iimiligrants have settled In Man itoba th is year. Tito population of limnliton in 1864 wee .22,000, in 1892 ID wee 40,794. The petition ageinet tho election of Hon. 11 1'. lanter WEIA diamissed on Tuesday. Police Moor Steadman of aloucton, 13. 13,, was Mot...load while attempting, to arreet a burglar the other Mrs. Mary Warren, of Hamilton, is 100 years of ago, and le Will hi fairly good health. The New York Central and Hudson Paver reitroad has completed arrangements for a threw lino to Moetreal. Petrick Lyons, 120 Pearl street, Toronto, died at the General hoispital last week from sunstroke. A Grand Lodge of the Ancient Order of United Workmen will be instituted at Win- nipeg on August 241111. The interments in the Toronto cemeteries during July, 1892, were 96 less then during the same month in 1891. Up to date the 0.P.R. Company have ssold $952,000 worth 01 10.4111 in the Nal th-west duce January 1. Arnold Reid was, stem* by lightning and instantly killed while going frotn his barn to his house to the Otto concession of Dawn township. Mr. J. A Moroier, a brother of the ex - Premier of Quebec, has made an abandon- ment of his estate. The total liabilities amount to 820,000, and there are no assets beyond the household goods. While riding on a separator at the Win- nipeg Industrial Fair on Saturday after noon, a sewn -year-old boy fell off and was crushed to death by the wheels, which pass- ed over him. While digging a trench in the neigbbour hood of the new olectria light station a Kingston, ou Saturday, the labourers un earthed a number of human bones and sword bearing the date 1040. A. Port Hernn despatch says Cherie Norman, of Toroeto, who pleaded guilty o 17 burglaries, was sentenced by Judge Vane to seven years at Ionia. Charles Hoffman another burglar, goes to the same place fo three years. The shipments of grain froin the port o Montreal up to doe° this year are abou double the quantity exported for tho cor responding period last year. A despatch from Ottawa says tke displaa of textile fabrlee in tim Canadian section o the World's Fair at Chicago will be th largest ehowing of Canadian cottons anc woollens over made. While playing on a crib at the river aid at Severn 13ridge, Ont., the fonr-year-ol son of Mr. Win. Beaman fell into the water His sister, 10 years of age, jumpea in t attempt a rescue, stud both were drown ed. Mr. Gerard Goyotte, wife ond Mild were poisoned on Tnesclay night at Emil ton by arsenic contained in a eau of goose berries of which they partook at their sup per. The doctor summoned relieved th sufferers with soine difficulty. Mr. Chnpleau, Minister of Customs, ha an total:mew the other day with a numbe of Montreal inerchants in connection wit Oustoms reforms. Mr. Chaplean propose establishing a board of experts to deaid locations of valuations, elassifications, at Rev. G. P. Story, St. John s, Newfoun land,is in Toronto collecting Node to rester the Methodist College recently destroye by are in the former city ; and he states the the people of St. John, N. R, are willin that, he shall collect for his purpose the sn subscribed by afontreal for New -Brunswick capital after the fire of 1877, for it has n yet been forwarded to them. GREAT The Duke of Manchester, heat known a Viscome Mandeville, ia reported to b dying. The Queen has knighted the Lord may of Landoll, conferring upon him the orde of St. Michael and St. George. Merrell & Sons, worsted epinners, Bingley, Eng., have suspended. Liabiliti £130,000. Mr. Gladstone arrived in London o Monday, and was given a very hear ovation at Ruston Squaw station. It is stated that the engagement Prince George to Prineese May, daughter the Duke of Tack, will soon be official announced. Victor C. Cavendish'nephew of tl Duke of Devonehire and heir to the duk dont, was married on Saturday to Lad Evelyn Montrose, daughter of the Marqu of Lansdowne. Mr. Timothy Harrington, the premium Ponnellite end secretary of the Irish la tional Leagne, has been married in Dobl to Miss O'Neill, daughter of Dr. O'Neill. The Itesh-AineriemPonneCommissiona decided to visit> London and hold a oonfe once with both Irish parties on the Mord. Parliment, for the purpose of bringi about a reconoiliation if possible. Ina speech delivered in Mallow on Stt day Mr. William O'Brien said the Iri party had the beets of all gaarautees ogain Liberal treachery. They could and WO'S turn Liberal traitors out of office withio hours. Tile cattle market in Englatid continu depressed owing to warm weather. Ho offerings are large, and iFices generally lot or. Cheese prices are higher. Choice,Con dian is quoted at 47 shillings. It. is expeoted that Mr. Gladstone up taking office will make several aeppointmei which will muse a eensation, et 18 0001(3011 ecl that ho haa decided to apportion a f officee among the Irish leaders, Mr. Sext being spoken of es Irish Sooretany and 01 Arthur O'Connor as a Civil Lord of the A sniraity, The Althorp library, tim property Lord Spencer, the finest private oolteeti of books ie the world, hag been pureeas by an English gentlemen, who will pl the collection 14 a seitable bending, which the general public will be given f 0000130, xi:Man Mae% Over 20,01000:00 are now on ateike New York city. Great numbers of cattle are dying fr Tows fever in Oklahoma. Portland, Oregon, had a 060,000 fire Tuesday, There Wat n, killing frost in Montana Wednesday night. Robbeta secured $10,600 from the banIt El Reno, Oklahoma the other morniog, Ono Imitated, and fifteen Neve York on seam•r boys isitenck on Truisdear ageless proaemed rocitretion of wages. Statietios show that about 1,200 miles now fathead Wore built in the United Sta during the flat mix Monello of Olio yet% 11, TT $ S 0 8 T. A committee appointed by the Cheenher of Osmium* of Wend Forks, Deka line iesued 5 oull for a 0°01w:01100 le coneider re. elproolty with Camelia Operations have been suispeeded ab the FhainPion lean mine, near Maialaotte, '1"1 Iola, and the 000 employee heves been dieohnoged. Inebility to market the ore la the Qattara Tho 20 girls in the Central Telephone Ea- cliange at Indianapolis, hove gone on strike, Moue° of rules whieli they say they aro expected to obeerve but cannot. Dr. Atignsitus Turner, of Boinen, supreme president of tho Fludowinsient Order of the Rea Cross, Ms been arrested oharged with obtaining money ninlee false preemie:sea Charles Page a PhiluelelpIde banker, ins shot and killedby a customer (maned Robert 1Connedy at Iiie banking house lasts week, Kennedy afterwards killed himself. In the United States Senate a reel:dation hats been referred to the Interstate Com. mares Committee to doolare what Inhalation is regulate° to protect the international and fereien commerce of the 'United States against the Canadian Pacific railway and Canadian commercial aggression. Victoria, 13.0., sealers are said to be en- tering heartily into the plans of the George Tbreadwell Company, the furriers' uombine recently started at Albany, N.Y., with the object of souring and dyeing the skins in America, thus taking from London dyers and finishers a trade which has been mole. sively theirs in the pasta Iii' ansignAL. Ass an act of retaliation against the Mc- Kinley AM, the Government of Victoria. has increased the duty on Oregon pine and eau. nod fruit. French Anarchiets, convicted of stealing dynamite bombs which were used on May Day, have been senteneed to terms in gaol ranging from five to twenty years. The four conspirators who were impliont- ed in a plot against the hates of Prince Fey dinanct of Bulgaria and 10, atm -Minot?, the Prime Minister, were executed in Sofia on July 30. . A deepatoh from Fez says the attitede of tho Sultan of Moron° towards the British , mission continues defiant, but that great . preparations are being made for the recap. Yon of the Fronah Minister. Eminent Germen medical authorities, Prof. Koch, Dr. Virehow and Dr, Hirsch, say that cholera will sooner or later attack all Europe. They think America's chief danger lies in the importation of ens, but believe this continent will escape if proper precautions are taken. A *ay or. L. earth too fele, le youth too bright To mod Il((( eintle or heaveni Have i no simony foo to tight No sMs to be oroon Ain I too young to woe the Lora. Who len Ale hestven foe met Too young 10 1101(1 those slue enhorred, Ile bore uPon the true I MY, Fallacyl man not, t his glad heart o eel 1 hoo lte suverel n good And ewes, me seethe, lie ,10,te 'pet In Thine atoning blood I joieed lialdt not Thy word a pron10,0 sweet For spirits young as minet May not my Hoot have lestve to greob Some vision all divine 1 0 1•=112,0101 or holincsal all thine own 1 0 C4od of joy! 0 God or graeol 1 bow before 'Thy Throne. 1 pray Theo riot to keep from mo All Harrow and all smart; Bur now I bring my joy to Theo; Accept this ginwhig heart 1 - A VEBY TRYING Lin. _ea, ireeenisai Mewls 08 a emelt Voint-tillie Time rer Wrath' and 1110 Iteereattni. de was juet the kind of a raanlaine old rod farinhouee, with painted gables of mossy gray, overrun with ranee 01008 and hidden in a tlangle a Illaw and rows, that a palates' would Iwo Mown for bis canvas, a poet rhymed in hie somet, a writer re- to describe in the opening chapters of ilia snirener novel, and a woman Nvith common ammo would have seen was out of repair, dainp and, unhealthy, ineonvenient and uncomfortable, The green paper Blades of the seldom used parlor were rolled up and tied with white tapes, the oreanowhite curtains inside with their crocheted trimmings looped book, letting the tioloaniliar eurishine into (Ile low room, with its odor of damp, clean sanotley (mimeo to °country parlors, There Ins a rag earpet on the floor, istriped in gorgeous colors, a lining° in the corner with rod calk° 800008 83111 huslafilled maiden, 0 few 'freshly varnished estne-seat chairs set stiffly back against the wall, aud some tin. tb'rYaPrcle eidaninsimdairleks 0wf or:dill:ILI ael:awareaPt.lbol worsted Hewers on the Wall. Beside the orderly table where the family Bible and photograph album had been lif talon corn. • . g plutons, a woman sat sewing on some of thoae fearfully and wonderfully oonstruot. ed trousers which the " barefoot boy" offew the mai regions fastens over his shouider with asingle suspender merle like his trom Itilli8re"Ntrdait'sn'°ing°.suhtastIldoewws ohyeel her lels1,0 oieuatroefe fresh toilet of luxurious simplicity another woman sat. Tan PITY WISTFUL Her hails fell in becoming waves upon her forehead, her hands were delicate and spark- ling with jewels, a bunch of fresh clover was flooding tmon her breast, and her face was bright with ettg,er intereat. The woman in. side wore a faded calico dress, its illy awing waist sitretnIcen out of sliapelineas with much washing, her hair "embed tightly away from the sallow face and twisted into IL tight little knot at the back, her large brown hands ammo red with heavy work draw- • ' ' ' ina the thread them b and. through the g- work hurried, awkward euergy, The woman with the clover in her belt, fresh from the rush and al rain of active city lite, had wondered why the faces of these farnters' wives were ecs dull and spiritless ; why in. their peaceful environment, in which the pulee beat of the mighty ruah of modern life warmly stirred the monotonous earn, whore hurry and restlessneas were meicatul. ly unknown, the country woman aged so innoll more rapidly than her city meter ; • • . wny her akin 1 ost its delicacy, her hgure its suppleness, her hair its luster, and why ainong the Nvonlen Patients a 100000 as,Ylunts the farmers' wives constituted the mayority. She seas finding out now. Shelled. heard this 140:11411'4 00000 in the &warted When the birds were Waging their first, dreamy dawn songs, calling ont to Gt.:mows ole milked. She heel seen her liftingtherais of foaming milk thetlook sopictilreerluelliPaintinge She heel tried lifting ono'herself end knew why the straight back was bent, the weists large and bony. She had heard her heavy steps walking the weary treadmill of the day's duties through the long mornings There were washing and ironing, making and mooding. The well, witli its "old oaken bucket," wee far from the kitchen siuk. The cistern had been forgotten in Ole construction of the holm. The vegetables were in the groans], the eggs in the loft, everything in most in- convenient places. There were the chit- siren to get off to school with their well. filled dinner -pails, the men in the lots to be provided with hearty luncheons. Did you over see one of these men mow away bread and huge succulent donghnuts fried in lard, beaus and pie, thick countrypie with sodden crust and maple sugar 80000015g ? This one woman must keep all Ilia domestic =Ohio, ery gotng. When the cool shadows of the twilight fell she went again into the stable, where the " kine " of the poet's dream welted to be milked. There's no plaoo this side that prepared for the winked so hot as oneof these stables full of these same "kine e which have little picturesqueness outside the poet's faney, And. when the milkini was done and the "0100 folks " n ., si elm outaul 0 and chatted together, the atom= cleared away th sumer thine he had left ' 8 - - -8 ' to do the milking put the children to bed a' ' ' made arrangements for the early morning meal, and then went to sleep herself, too tired to crimp her boar, say laer prayers, or think how wretched she was. " Mit do you always work no hard as this ? " queried the woman hi the shadowof the vines.. "Pretty much of the time " answered the other, in her loud hi h Relied • , , g p voice. aoe the spell there's the spring a work, you know, and hose to milk more cows, >mese the men folk is blow night and morn- , . th . , a . was, me 4 the butter to make mai the mnk goes to the fectory, the house to Moen, the sugar to seam off, the soap to in k d / t f n i -tin' a id net • , ,. a °' and loto ° .. a 11 ' - 1- r- P8rui 'm be done You know we farmer folks do I . everything ourselves. Money is too scarce t a it ut to h York 0 I t • I 1 ' to y o risme 1 4 W 11 e WaS 1 11 and pitintini and paperin' indoors, And then the Moshe cm les o and w h v - ' II 8 I e in" folks, and 1 have more milkirs' to do, and sometimes take the milk to the factory, and the berriee begin to gib ripe off in the Iota I don't have any to put up for the winter unless I pick 'ent myself. It's all we can do to buy the sugar. And then there's har- vestin' and the thrashers, and after that the house to oloau and things to get fixed for winter. And the children do get sa all ord Of clothes. You See WO (1011't 1181,01" buy 11411) end things made out of old wear out welter. I cen't get moll time to sew in swimmer, I have so much to do," "And in winter 1:interrupted the softly modulated voite, "ell, in winter there's the quilts to W piece up and minfortables to tie, the carpet, legs to sett eaul Itien% It, is an awful job Le maim a carpet Nvben folks wear their clothes as close as we do." And then there's the coloring of 'rim to do, and the warp to get ready and all, and the knitting. I ten you 10 10 6, power o' work to keep three boys and two men in socks and mitteas. I batn't got a girl, I lost my only. girl, She'd a Reaped me, you know, Aud it's only a lit- Ole while anyway before the mows come in again, and I have the butter to see to, "(01(010 DO YOU 10,1b," 011 I don't read intieh of any 'oopt Sun. day a'fterstoons sometimes when I get my work clone early. The men fate thy reed the paper, you know, and kind oi tat c it aver together when the neighbore wino so I kind c, keep tho run o' things, that 0 nyi. I do mita the reading most of all. You !mow I WO a teacher when he tnarried ine, pretty good at books, too. 1 thought, juat as 10(4411)000 yet do, that they wasn't any need iu a farmer's Nene workitig round ell tho time and plain' so old. and foolish before e'ne's 30, but I tell You 1011011 a man Intin't snot his 100(41 0)0,4 for, there len't any- thing 'Mt work for Ine wife. You sus tho children come aloug, and, you ean't atiard - . to hire a num% The mighbera come in aeci do whet they eau, and the moo folks telt hieng beet °al, 0'4 "1,1°1 Y" 0,4"'t "e"d it ft. 7 .000130 [ma ,you gi 1 up ono go te work Do ere you 04'0 fitt3ing ond that and taking oare of the babies dthe ha d nos k i ' k you dowu yu'ung. "Yon gitr so. you llsteolliA, l"li°'lli 'llt' irer ;$0/11'1' 1 It ISQ:;001gotrttit: ?" a ene onea 10 0 white, or 00,1000, There e church, but, you see, we have to eit up only to git the ohoree out of the wa 1.,,tii° have to drew all the children and take tri' etno .00080 time aloe, cc I , . , Yone to mere inn wad to home, end the 1 . 0 • 0. n miry mine to gm s inner and git the chores done te go again ie the oveniu o, until I tell ion t' es I belie auntie; is the hardest day in all the week . • tWhiletgsnrrialalrlYdge°0 to ttlie":fulaeir'omne. day, buy: take our dInner Y" °°' "ea" we alwaY° with us ynts; know, and we have to start earl so te.'hu w ho ' ' II todo the milkinaYAnd 0118 01 0.10 ull ulll 01 we goner° Yr winewheres the Fourth on amount of t a?. °Wickert ; that is 1 d" , le an the chilaren go. I don't always. ., And there's the ohuroh socials. We go sometime. te the e m, tit I hem to take some - thing, beans or biscuit or cake. 1 decuare sometimes 1 tell 'em I, suppose if I ever git started for heaven I'll ha t cook the , ire' teals to eat going, 01.0ov:re:, fa the Win. ... stoanizebwnotrnoena folks visib back and forth v know the d ' 't 1 d - - "" we 1 war good, an the men have the wood to gie out, ao they use the horsee, and we have so inneh to do we don't get started. The men visit more. The o and I ap seed notatoes or t ey °Ilene work ; they ohther on Y go 8" "oh :ovad and. at +the factory ; hot see dote, get cut as cute1/4 ' as we'd orto. Of course, we see each other to the village where we do our tradine But se e don't have much money to spend, so we don't go to the village often," "&.t what do you do," fettered the clues- ioner, " to -to-e 'o ' oi r , , ni y life at all . i Oh, we are too Way to think muchh about life and all those highfalutin things that worry you. There's the children al, ways, and the living things around tie keep growing, and the few flown 300 can raise. Of course, when aye have trouble we elliek them I c11.1 waut to get awey ise after niy ite o gm a . I wanted him to take l' I • 1 dled, Incmo back where I used to live. 3 -11' folks 1s all bead or moved away, but 1 wanted to go with the horse and baggy. It wouldn't have cost inuoh. You know I was married in Juno. Them clovers you've t go la was all 1 0/100. in bloom along the road, and the wild • I never see so many wild roses, I wanted to ride through it all again, juat 0.0 I did then, you know, when he brought me here sitar the weddin." Bat if he thought we went anywhere we ought togo to his folkses, and he didn't see how we could both get away any way, so I stayed and he went and brought ids mother back 301113him to stay here. She was lame and a little out, You know, and I bad enough to do, i tell you, the rest of the summer, "and then she berried out to start a fire for supper, only stopping long enough to really laugh in answer to the last question, and co say: "Morey to 'spend for little things I like? Why, bless your heart, no. TATTLE arnisitY To SPEgo. "We git the things we mast have and are glad if the cheese and butter will Pay the Wore bill. OE course the men has to have their tobacco, but that's about all the tummies we have money for." And when she was gone the woman in the vine shadows sat still thinking of a lot of things, but principally of what odd things women do for sweet charity's sake. How they will go front tenetnent faotory to tone- meat factory, begging permission to lay a Manch of flowers -beside wall poor seam. streas sweltering at starvation wages, and never seem to think that by combining to petronize any store or net of stores whose owners would agree to pay decent rates for ready-made clothing they could make it poseible for the sewing women to pick their own flowers in the fragrant °emery meadows. How they gather up the waifs and strays of the city slums and pack them off out into the imuntry for women to take care of who never have a day's rest or recreation, and never think of inviting the women in return to their ciby homes for a breath of fresh life in winter. Of the women who go off with nervous prostration over getting their spring ward. robes ready for the summer, who have to be token o le seam e or a rest altar ge mg t tl 'd for a et' err calling hst finished, who are worn out th • and hysterical over their housekeeping which misdate in ordering Jane topolish have chops instead the silver and Mary to h of steak for brealanst, and csorne out in the 9001(10y to shake out their perfumed frill§ m the faces of those other women to whom the contrast must be maddening. And just then, vaith a clash of dinner pails and 011(10- me swinging rah, the brown-leggedurchins oa ' ' up t ie ItTle WIT1 SC CO , boUndrog t rough i I f it I ' h the clover to where the woman in the faded gown came with the pail of water for sup- ripe per. And ono had brought a string of• red strawberries threaded on a grass stalk , another had a bird's egg of speckled lolne, and the third in hia grimy hand carried a dewy °luster of the will June roses that • 1 hel •dill grew in t ie e gelenve, and as the u ace 6 rightened and softened, the woman with the clover blossoms thought of some more things not dreamed of hitherto in her pint- resophy winch ahe isn't going to tell. - - nORPECNIRS DIN or Tat --- Recovery or Me Bodies orrery, a Periened le tee voloreao Pe84 Pi 1°1Areilir°001spi'll)eicleetgtoi °ea tVvCeharoi3;r' of to oihilybraQ:delied the Colorado Desert, near the Inexi, reaohed here last evening from Cal the resume party is expected here bc morrow. 7 he bodies of the older B ana Fermin Fish of Mesta v il le, P found more than a week ago, but t of theyounger 13reedlove was diewn this perty only elation distmee fron Flab. The emitter, of the bodies 1 tale of a terrible death, They bee out ou mulebuok for water, whieh mats scouted. They reached witl miles of it when Fish fell, unable to head op. His companions made him oom with a blegket, and pushed on, ti follow the trail of the mules, whi broken their fasteeings in their era reach water. The youoger man e fell goon but his father who was a t t dessert prospector, staggered alon mile. Then ho threw 0(011 )10 ean of • WaS carrying. A quarter Fof a mile he threNv away a portion of his olot hundred yards farther his hat we He struggled up a heap of sand, fr again, fell, staggered to hie knees, c feet, fell again, and died within threcoguartere of a mile of an abuse orwar Is water, As hepitched f d h' was thrown into a small bush, and position be must have been rectohi , _ 'n another deeperate effort when d lieved him. The men bad evidently been deo days. All the bodies are dried c we, " d gonbrandy a withas rifles an proviaions will probably mat 0110 • il 1 b d. 'Men now ts, surroun es g san the expense of bringtng it in. TI party a a very time, a t o d hard • 1 h never mu out of water csr promise member, Jewel, came near perishi greed to overtake the others in a Is a- but they made suet' nick time the watet an loft two dayswithoutcl-• d strength of his horse saved. him ft ing Ms body on the desert. Jewels, evidences of the recent big earthqr 0030 000 fissure' fully a foot wide, tended as far methe eye could see. • t J b 1 d epringe e. ucum a, once a an ma disappeared a Young GlImour, the A.nglo-Ind 3000 tl mught to have pensh d ontl Desert, has reached Salton all right letters from him say lie had a tot When hatch the Nvorst his Indian oc cheered him by asaniug ; " Ma 01 soon ao dead." We 13111.1d the Ladder. Heaven iss not reaohod at a single bound, PrOnnibeulialy"eal4r4Wdi °to' bthoewGft'alcullt‘idesrkte, 6.nd we mount 00 0110 eummit round by round. - c a ount thls thing to be grandly true Tbat a noble dced le a step toward'Ood, Lifting the win front the oominon sod To a purer ate and a broader view. We rise by tho thinge that aro lender feet, By what we have nmeterad of greed and gain By the pride deposed and the passion slain, And the vanquished hills that we hourly meet, We hope, WO moire, we resolve. we trust, When the merman; calls us to life and light; Bub our hearts grow weary and ere the night Our lives aro trailing the sordid dust. We hope, we aspire, we resolve, we praft. And we think that we mount the air on winge, Beyond the recall of, sensual things, Willie our foot stilt Moe to the heavy clay ,,,, i'vps. for Velar 11, but feet tootilir irn We illY hc?ir,r,T,,,e4:1V: 41a. .014 wtrici pritY, But our feet must rise or we will fall ogatn, Only in dreams le a Indeor thrown Prom the weary &tali to the sapphire wall • But the dreams depart and tho vision fans, And the sleeper maw on his pelew 0(0(0100.thickwith' Heaven is not reached ab a single bound, 13u0 we build the ladder by which (00 0(08 a bb°1°,1V03„; Iireth 00 the ya"Iterl. °hi" , Iron' - We mon r summit rou itd. by round R. (I. Holland, THE WHEEL AND NATURE. —. It wing, the Vernier, it is Easy to Vind the Beauties or the tatter, The wheelmen are everywhere. Their as- sedation constitutes a most important foal- d eVen in our political tor in our sooiel an,, ocionoin.y. They swarm over our country roads, introducing new faces and new ideas into remote rural corners, briuging the eity to the out•of-the•wely farmer, and they na crease and emphasize the growing demand for good roads, The wheel has been of enormous value to the eity you th of theland. When men who are juat beginning to look out for the great hairs were ambitious youths, they hod three ways of seeing out•olathe-way oontury plates. They ;night walk, or ride, or tin -ye. They were lowed to vely either on the horse, • • which was ()nominee, OP on their legs, witioll were slow. While walking parties, there- fore, were not wholly 011110030:1, the yam Nvas ao slow, the fatigue to the °mamma pedestrian (001 00 great, and the places visit- ed in the course of a single ramble were so few, that the country dogs never learned to differentiate between a gentleman in flannels and a tramp in rags. The wheel nes changed all this. Now one who wishes to fiud nature and rural life in their hiding places goes fleshing to them on a swift wheel. Faster than horses, the wheel eats nothing and requires no stabling, It does not fan ill and run up doctors' bills. Although a serious break tnaypu 000 end to the rider's exestraion, an unimportant mis. hap will not be likely to muse much delay, for he who rides may mend, 0011 (1 1m has no mechanical ingenuity, there are few neigh- borhoods that are wanting in blacksmiths. . 1 The whee man lands his holiday, perch. . • ' . ed high on his o d•fashioned machine or a. . . kl 00 thground on 'his "mining Vie Y et e ... "safety. The too sh irt days ot sus vaca- evote to t troug 1 li e corm- tion 4000. d d riding 1 1 h try, and he who is a wise wheelman seeks in his outings the roads which run through strange and unaccustomed memo. He will doubtless encounter bad roads, but he will see unsophisticated men and women, and will discover in the byways natural beauties are missed by those who frequent only the highways and the beaten pat las of tray- el, He will keep his eyes and eare open for the sights and sounds of nature, mid be will gain a store of keowledge and of memories in his sl Is et,rtwo weeks' trip in the country that will be a • d '' • tl •• pmze possession in ie nisi. ter. The wheel Dan do a great cleal for human nature that for the meet of the twelve months iii cooped up in the eity, and if the young men who aro the happy possessors of i this admirable instrument. of locomotibn vall 1.1$0 their opportunities, they will bless the 1 to e on whie day that gave to 1,1 ern ti who 1 ' h they may ride into (110 0010000 cornere of the lend. "Tired of Mother." A visitor inspecting the cherities of a manufacturing town in Now England came , at last to the Home for Oid ladies. Being i young and kindly. ho thought thet it he were , to build 01.1011 al/ inn for tired souls while , they waited the coming of tho Shadow, it • should be set to the (01(100 00 quiet woods or gay and friendly flowers, Thle Home book' , ed out an dusty streets and brick -yards. . Within the Mallagors had. fulfilled their . duty, Each inmate had halt of a clean, bare °hamper, a bed, a ohest of drawers end a , , 3 chair. She was given so many ounces:of meat and bread for breakfast, of meat and , potatoes for dinner, of bread and apple. 1 sauce for tea. TIM food never meted r throughout the year. 1 The house was kept apotlessly clean yet 8 there was in it a flavor of decay and hope- 0 less saduess. The withered old women Bat • silent, or talked feebly of yesterday's wind • or to -day's rain. No other changes mine to O them. They had no borne nor place nor I work in the world. Nothing but this bare O sparse in which to sit and Wait for death. g "Do yon know anything of 01(8(0 0" the O Estranger asked the matron. " That tall old s women, now? She has a sbrung, noble faoe, t Who is she ?" "That is Ann Miller," elm said. " flap- pen to know her story. Her husband died, leaving her penniless with three children. 8 She opened a little school for small children O she did tailoring at night. The baby, a girl, wits sickly. For years this wotnan sat r stitching by the cradle until midnight or O early morning. "She had great ambition for her children ,1 She worked and atarved herself to keep a them at aohool, to make their lives happy and full. One is now a merchant ; the other o edits a newspaper io tIm West. -The girl a marriect a wealthy farmer." " "And their mother is-bere ?" said the , stranger, amazed, " Yes " said the matron. a Hee thud. took her to live with them in turn. But Y she was not pleasant to look at, and her manners were oat of date. The grand - o children, striving to e as iona c,that b f h' bl found i• her in the way. Grandmother's seat at the Y table and her chamber were needed for s moro stylish guests. " Her sons aeld daughter tired of lier old ,t stories, of her love and of her. They paid 1- the sum necessary to plane her here, and a they newer 001110 near her. The visitor went to her and talked cheer- a fully for a few moments. He happened to ,. mention his home, gHer withered face flushed and trembled. g "Aro you from A---?" she cried. "My son John lives there 1 I con expeoting a visit frotn him. He has not been here for 1- more than a year. But john0800 buoy, 'h yoa know 1 8t, " Dia you ever soe his little boys ? I waa A so fond of them ? I drown about them 1.4 every nighb almosb. They loved ire so. They would climb an my knees end beg for ns stoties, and hug and kiss me. ie "Their mother disapproved of it. She v. said an Old person's breath MIA unhealthy, a- lb may be so. But it I could only seo 01.341, °nee I" ahe staid, rising in her excite. o, men& tS "Hall her I Nvill only look ab num, T will not touch nor kiss them. My children w have outgrown me. But the little boys m loved me. Toll John it is near the end, r, Oh, I'm comfortable enough 1 But I want d. Iny oWn 1 Anal MI SO lonely I Beg hint Go come -to beteg them once before I go 1' When bhey had lel b hoe the stranger said, or "Surely you havn no other stuns case ? The eel children who', 001 00 abitildOn a mother ea aro monsters 00 l0\),' ate misteken, Many ambitiotte to men ord women, pushing into society, find ee ';rattier a weight, They put her out of sigeti n a Homo, and forgot hen" 'the samoger, leaking bank, saw Ann's in hangry eyes folloWiog him, "Bat God," be said to 1111)1881f, "God does not forget m the cruelty of the one or the loneliness of the 001100,1' en Open the Windows. Now when Daniel knew that t11. was signed he went into his house, windows being open in his chanthe Jeruestlem, he kneeled upon his kn times a day, and prayed and gay before his God as he did aforetime, Vi., 10. Whoever hos drawn this. portrae Jewish exile in Babylon it Is Om p a man of prayer and of a man; Much ae prayer hasbeen mismday much as prayer has been derided t is true if there be any .truth in, that men of prayer are invariable power. It was so with Moses, apostles of Jesus Christ'with Lutl Wesley. All the testimony of shows this by repeated and infallib Observe in the case of Daniel that recorded of his courage of &egos Babylonian court owes its wort fact thet he wee not entering on order. He weasimply carraingout t of his early youth and growii Daniel did not form the habit of in Babylon. He brought it with 1 his native land. We all know 1 sacred devotional songs of the Hen charmed many of the Assyrians. some of your native songs," they s the poor Jewish exiles, sad at ever3 of the dear land from which 1 been ruthleisely borne away found such a taek hard to perform shall we sing the Lord's son strange land?" they said. It s these dwellers by the banks of Cho lege to think of such a thing, An hung their harps on the willows when they remembered Zion, But wise s Would 10 nob have wen they had sung these songs? Tb heard inight not only have been but they might have learned to Him whose praise yeas 01400110 the these exiles knew. Be this as it Was well that Daniel kept up unb habit of prayer, He kept the old • , o ell alba •se a etre, e 10,nd ng n e r 1 ng . often, but no oftener, with no este Nvith no difference at all, save this of opening the windows toward -three tiniest a day, as aforetime, Ms athees. ed to the Lord Goa ot . f was simple and full of auggestio limits the atoms of oar comforts d the ful on of your stre gh is "5 n 11 that we are not wise enough to 1 windows open, The atmosphere long closed grows impure, the therein grow drowsy and listless, joy 10 01, when teeing with the dm we throw wide open the windows mit the fresh, time, 1)000 a10 of the How reviving, how vivifying, ha hive are those blessed goepels of 1 weot sounds • of sougs of birds c rose and eglan'tine, and of the'n , , , , , , nay. awry rumple means a de draught from. God's own finnitai and li ht and beaut Our souls , g „ a': , news 00 Well aS OUL 11011800, and it 1 t d open thorn, if we w 1 I a en an wait, God will Mae° 8Wee6 gn8P 1 t ti d t d , t anc rti Ian en mimes o ewesp In the silence and peace of Mile morning, let as open tbe window soul and hear what God the lord Open the WIndowe of I earls and n a 1 - ns wait patiently for the Lord a, send ns some sweet measago. ;2;11:It 11,:g 11:11Vtig meeenatiii " ...—.......-- English Meedows• How and when men first learned' to make hay will probably never be aknnown. a For haymaking is a "pro 0 " cl se pro' .111 ; 000 d • s a duet not si , p y sun- nee g but gram which hae been partly formmoonntamill,anceitclas lisninuanr incladoehr, twork ?tf8 ' Probably discovery was due to Accident, but pos. sibl man learned it from. tho pikes the Y . „ , , " calling•heres of the stoppeo, which ent hay for the winter. That idea would fit . . in nice y m e thoor y tl ittt Co 11tr b1 A 314 1 a dth th ' was the " horne of the Aryan race," if we - to above it an ay- were Still allowed b • • d h - ' . . , is certain' an nob mainly medical makingma,Y • ' " countries for winter forage. in u oi) P1400110 1113' there aro no meadows in the world so good its those,io England, or so old. Het from the early Angto-Sexon times old meadow has be distinguished from pasres,"and haslet waysbeen seethe. TWO. th ods of whet is 110W established 11100410W i land still shows the marks of ridge and far. and from the great thne re uirod to row ; ei make a MeattOW-t011 year§ ea least on the 1 d a hundred on the worat-men boot bootd, have alwaya been relnotaut to break n n , ol ,pasturm na ancient meadows, wit 1 a 121 I their great twee and olose rich turf, are the sole portion of the earth's sorfaco winds modern agrioulthro respects and loaves in_ peace. Hoe the excellence of the moo m rtOWS of England and the etivy of the Amer- law"' The Bond Surgeon Of the Lobon Medical Company is now at Tomato, Chmada, and may be consulted either in person 00 1)3' letter on all ehronie dieeases peculiar to men, 11113, young, old, or middle-aged, who find themselves nerv. otts, weak and exhausted, who are broken down from exoese or overworlt, resulting in sonny of the following syinptoms i Mental depression premature old age, loss of vital. by, loss ofmemory, bad &emus, dimness of 'sight, pelpitation of the heart, emissions, Naaek of energy, pain in the kindeys, head. eiche, pimples on the face or body, Rolling or peculiar soneation about the scrotum, wasting of the organs, dizziness, speaks before tho eyes, twitching of the mann, eye lids and elsewhere,bashfulness, deposits in 'Westville, loss of willpower, tenderness of the scalp add spine,weak andflabby muscles, desire to aleep, failure to be rested by sleep, constiPation, dullneamehearing, lossof voice, desire for solitude, excitability of temper, sunken eyessurroundedwitlx mtAbart mum, oily looking slcin, etc., are all symptome of Dervous dcibility that lead to insanity andAnd death unless cured, The Spring or vital force having loot its tension every !emotion wanes in =Beguile°. Thow who through phuse committed tri ignorance may in per- kne,nently cured. Send youts address for • wk. on all disettses peculiar to mon. °eke tient free Waled. Heardisease, the symptoms of whielt aro faintspolle, purple bps,Minbnese, palpitation, skip boatel hotflushos, rush of loloocl to the head, dot pein in the heart with borne atrong, mind land irregular, the seend heart bot ' Wainer than the fleets pain alma the braa.st , bone, ete., 0411 pogitively bre:lured. No oust, 1,1 d for book, Adt , t • V. no paya Seelrew i..101301.12a1 Madmen Ave. Toy:alto, Ont, ' Sleep, Behold I lay hi prism like So Paul, Chained to two guards thee both and Stela, i _ All day they sat II tie and hold ( The ono Nvas name Regret, t to oeit il gill; of the through the tw i °lose There 010080 011 angel shining and& That took me by the hand, and Etat The obelus geow son and slipped She, . The doom gave back and swung aK c peteIS Of S0111b 111I10.0 neWOr 1.11 sound, M I followed, treading o'er enchanted Into anothee ma a Itimineravorld. The meter of time black and bolta Thou knowest 18 Lien; the angc Steep. --lArehtbalcl I Ire who its false to preamt dot thread in the lona and will fin when lie may bave forgotten 1 1 aBoorsher. " Whon I grow tip, I ain going to live on C'n a faann and eon lo(s of apples," mid 0. little mies to her „younger aides. the other daya Ins "af you do," soda the youngster, " you'll got the apploplexy." se Sue-"lIow did yon and Tom Hinow i a beppon to 9010 013(0011011 Blanobe 0" Blanche -" Wo were both single yen k11011% " Well Wo married to gob oven," ate ICIonstrositioe lied honk quarters in the dm ie1110,814(010.1 *es Wolgtlit.- wad*, The trial of Jaeger, the defaulting cashier, for the Rothaehilds, was bosun ea Frankfort yeeterday. Fourteen other persons wore arraigned tvith Jaeger, oharged with eons- 13110103'. 1 ringer pleaded guilty to most of the charges brought, wine, him, ST. 001. Witueo lrto says 14 to ho' the" Rhea ort en Ihse, po, and tore to. 'eecliove, 4, Welds ho body ered bar o bloat of old the struck the ma- ne two 110113 1100 fortable yin to, oh toga ta idently veteraet for moat he further hing ; found. 11, rose rawled ese than mice oe oanteett from hiss g for ie Leath, ra- d thirty p. The d dried where le t worth le 0000116 gh they s. Onee ing. Ha w bourse t he was only the om Jew - NY many take. Ila that ex - The hot els, have ian, who' o Salt= Private gh time. minuet= ink yom writing and his r toward en three O thanks -Daniel of thin rtrait ol f power, Modena his thing historye mess oE with the, er, with history e proofs. what is at the 10 to the any new he habits - g years- devotiott im from 1030 1113050 rows had. "Sing uir aid. And, 1118111017 hey had. captives,. g's in a ee.ned 00. bar mere- ci so they and wept was thue better if ose who, charmed. worship only joy may, fib roken 0)18 re burit- Just an, ntation- little ace erusalene he pray - This me 1. Whafi and hin- o the fact,- hrow the, n ot a went dwellers What at ning day and ade morning I ream.. resh and odds of ow mown , ep dement s of life have W111 - if we wilt look end. Is of love gently in. hallowed s of the will saye ind. Let nd he wilt Ity 04031. wore griroa thrall; r Bonen b hopoloscta,. nly (0014 away from. without o. iferled. gem:nide temp I's name ia atimmen, ar beealca a the flaw 3 eatilieo--