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The Brussels Post, 1890-4-25, Page 6T.1,4E; 'EMUS'S-MS POS1 own Ihrootory. • Mitztvnthit eirenon.—Salibath Services irt a. m. and 6:80 p. Sunday WIWI at 2:30 p. n. Rev. John Rosa, IL 4,, pastor. INC% 'COITBOU.—Subbuth Servicee 11 a, rit, and 6:30 p. in, Sunday School at 2:30 p. in. Rev. G. B. Howie, pastor. Sr. Jon's Cinnaca.--Sabbatli Services at 11 a. m. and 7 p, m. Sunday School tkt 9:130 a. In. Rev. W. T. Olaf, locum. METHODIST CNIIItelL—SLbball Services a010:80 a, m. and 6;30 p. In. Sunday Sidinol at 3:130 p. m. Rev. S. Sellery, 13. 41., B. D., pastor. llonam CATHOLIC CIIURC11.—Sabbafil Service third Sunday in every month, at 11 a. m. Rev. P. J. Shen, priest. SALVATION ABM—Services at 7 and 11 r. m.,• and 8 p. m. on Sunday and ovary evening in the week at 8 o'olock. at the barracks, 011/D I'VLLOMs' LODGB every Thursday mining, in Graham's block. 'MASONIC LOMB Tuesday at or before Poll moon, in Gm field block. A.O.G.W. LOMB on host and third 'Monday evenings of each month. Fongsritnie LOOMS second and last Mon. 4isky evenings of each month, in Smale's L.O.L. lot Monday in every month, in Orange Hall. Tom Omucm—Office hours from 8 a, m,toi p. ran, MrCIIANiC'S INATITVTIL—Reading Boom 21119i1 Library, in Holmes' block, will he oipon from 6 to 8 o'clocic p. m., Wednes- days and Saturdays. Miss Minnie Shaw, " 'Librarian. Bnessms W.C.T.C. hold monthly • meetings ea the Brd Saturday in each month, at 8 o'olook p. TOWN Cousem.-1.3obt. Graham, Reeve ; 88, Strachan, J. M. McIntosh, William 'Stewart and Wat, A.inley, Couneillors ; -F. IS. Scott. Clerk; lhos. Eelly, Treas- user ; D. Stewart, Assessor, and Jas. T. Goes, Collector. Board meets the 1st - Monday in each month. Salton oAnn.—T. Pletober, (chair- - man) R. Dennis, A. Hunter, W. B. Dick. • man. J. 3. Denman and 11. E. Wade •, Sec.-Treas., W. H. Moss, Meetings 1st - Friday evening in each month. Punic Saloon TgAmmas.—Jno. Shaw, ' tegincipel, Miss Richardson, Miss Hernia- ' Miss Abraham and Miss Taylor. Swaim og Hasson.—Beevo Graham, • Cierk Scott, Jno. Wynn, A. Stewart and X, G. Skews. Dr, Holmes, Medioal gealtb Officer. gbilbunis darner.. .THE YOUNG ENGINEER. 'The sun was sinking behind the Treated) horizou. The evening etiain stood on the switch at the rotted house, waiting until time to glad. A few passengers were in edea waiting -room. The workmen sat the roundlouge had finished Lair day's work. Several sat -tediting to the telegraph operator. A number of miles don the re-oad. at a station, an old engineer'e -two littte boys were playing in the gala of the tugine, while he was in •the station conversing with the agent. One of the boys unfortu• -irately succeeded in throwing on all else steam. The engine shot up the itiaek before the engineer could teaeli.it. The poor man alneoat went mad. He knew that in less elan- thirty minutes the engine streeld dash into the round -house, or 8othe evening train, if it had left the station ; or his little boys, 1errified, might attempt to jump from the engine. The operator at the roundhouse 'was telling a joke, wilen he sudden. • ti,' turned to his instrument. His Thee paled, and he rose to his feet. ,-As he rushed out of the office he eliouttel : "Capt. Fuller's engine with bis two little boys in it, Is coining at lightning speed, and in a fey; minutes will dash into the ronnd-house I" The young engineer or the evening train rushed from ;tie depot, jumped into the cab of itis engine, celled to a brakeman to open the switch, and to uncouple tine engine from the train. Ile • threw the throttle valve open ; the engine started with a jnmp, and .fiew down the track almost like the Wbat a time there was at the depot I Women screamed, aud ; men pale with fear declared that the young engineer was mad. 1u --their inseiginatious they saw the enginee ()teeth together. They saw the eyeful wreck, the mangled and caltled corpses of the boys and the engineer. But the youug engineer, with eyes fixed on the traele and itend on the lever, thought of noth• Mg but Satin the little bop. . Preeszitly the wild engine dashed in, to iiibt. Tile young engineer re. versed his engine, Auld soon was nutting with equal speed in the MUM direction ,ts Me; wild. olio. _Ile gradually let, it eel:delta him. It e:truly jarred hie engine, A .usotoent later lie eteuel in the cab of 'the ruiraway. In one corner sat the little boys, crying as though their limier( would break, leagening the :.t*ced, the young engineer an the ,,engiue alongside the platform, and ;Asuisted the frightened little boys siatto the depot, amid the shouts of Afb1114,py' crowd:" 'The operator .-erieh a tetdient face, went to hie in. ettlireteht, rtted sent this. meseage to itho gill0f;eirioloia father ; "Your Itttle one and engine are mare( regesentidebY the yOUng engineer," CALF KA R RIAD FN. Nthe tellaii of bus 11;theOPY marriages are the reeuli of green human calves 'being allowed to run at lerge hi society pastures without any yoke ou them. They marry and have oluldreu before they do mnsbaahee. They are Where of teethe before they are proprietors ol two pairs of pairs, and the little girls they marry are old women be fore they are 20 years old. Occasion, ally oue of these gosling marriages turns out all right, but it is a cleat Oaeo of luck, if there was a lew against young galoots sparking and flurrying before they have out all their teeth, we suppose the little roosters would evade it in some way, But there ought to be a see timent against it, It is time euougb for these bantams to think of Ba- in a pullet whoa they have raised mune), «moult to buy a Lill)(113 of lath to build a lieuhuueo. But they see a girl oho looks cunning, and they are afraid there are not going to be enough to go around aud they begin to spark real spry, and before they are aware of the natality of the marriage relation they are hitched for life, and before they own a cook stove or a bedstead they have got to get up iu Lite night, aud go after the doctor, so frightened that they rim themselves out of breath and abtiee the doctor be cause he does not run too. And when the dootor gets there, there is not enough linen in the house to wrap up the baby. Why Some People Foil. They are ]azy. They neglect details. They overlook the small things. They have no eye to business. They hope for fortune to drop in their laps. They let their help waste and destroy. They let their fires burn at will, They are elovenly in their shop. They let their shops get filthy and dirty. They try how cheap they can do everythiug. They fail to advertise. They have too much outside basis netts They talk politics too much. They fail to invent or have now Woes. They are penny wise and proud foolish. They imitate their neighbors, They are not polite or BCCOALIMO. dating. They think most things take too much trouble. They fail to push huetness. They know not the beet is the cheeped. They know not the power of method. They rise illiberal to home ent-r prises. They attend to everything but their own businees, They become rusty and lose ambition. Chinese Wisdom. Forbearance is attended with pro- fit. Thetatraighest trees are the find felled. Life is a journe,y, and death a re- turn home. Causeless anger resembles waves without wind, it is better to suffer an injury than to commit one. The loftiest building arises from small accretions. A discontented man is like a snake who would swallo,y an ele. phant. To persecute the unfortunate is like throwing stones on one fallen into a web. lf men will have no care for the future they will soon have sorrow for the past. Kind feeling, may be paid with kind feeling, but debts must be paid with hard cub. Hear both tides and all will bo akar, ; hear but oue and you will still be in the dark. While silent consider your own faults, and while speaking spare thoee of others, Tho house wherein learning aboundwill rine ; that in which pleasure prevails will fall, Those above should not opprese those below, nor those below no, ci ouch those above. The people are the roots of the state ; If the roots are flourishing the date alit endure. The Wisest meet iu a thousand times bo ouce mistaken ; the most foolish in a thousand times mud bo onoe right, To be fully fed and warmly -cloth. ed, and to dwell at Ow, without learuiug, is.little better that a beg. tiarevate.. When paths are coteta:Al/ trod den they are kept clean, but when abandoned the weeds choke thorn tip ;111 wattle eholie the mind111 the illesente of employteent. sieSes.; - gemptrance Nato. There are more thau 0,000 licensed enleees in miens, New York state bas 292 hrOWEIThle 71 of which aro in New York city, It is stetted that 98 per cent. of all children taking the telt:Terence pledge remain faithful to their early VOWS, Hutobiuson, Karma, is a city of some 19,000 popnlation. A mar late deputy and two policemen do the police duty for the city. General Neil Dow, the temper- ance agitator has juat celebrated his 80th birthday and is still hale, heat ty aud happy, la a merit letter, 81r. Gledstone states that he introduced the lio• eneed grocers' system in the iuter este of temperance, ; but if it be found hurtful, lie dine not advooete its retentiou. Mien Willard said too other day at. (1 big temperance meeting in Chicago that sines her recent visit to Philadelphia she had become more of Quaker than ever. Site is determined not to fight, and not to attribute bad motives to thee who Generul Smith, ono of the joint comuniesion b Swaziland„ South Africa, declares that it amulet re main iudependent, as the milieu is fast going to ruin through drink, 10 15 a Fad sight, be says, to see men, warner' aud children reduced to the lowest level by alcohol. Government officials in New York State have had a beverage known ite hop soda aualyzed, and thus as codeine& what its drinkers had found out unscientifically, that it is lager beer. 3t bad a big run in no. license counties until a temperance society representative got upset on it. The temperance people in Mel bourne are anxious to have a hoepi tal to be conducted ou the same lines as the London Temperance Hospital. They are pressing the Government to ;rant them land for the erection of a house of healing in e Welt no alcohol shall be used. Exploded Notions orTo.lkty, There are a good many notions long exploded. Nobody believes, for example, that all women wear tight boots. That alt club men get drunk and don't go home till morning, That the children of fashionable people are badly taken care of. That- all boarding-Imuse tables are bad. That all women wear tight stays. That all women lay the seeds for rapid consumption by gettiug their petticoats wet ou rainy days. That all women ere jealous of each other. That all mune pies are indigest • ible. That a little candy is unhealthy. That a fruit diet will save your body and soul. That your way is the light way, and mine is the wrong. Nobody believes any of these things, except the people who live such narrow lives that they think uothiug good can come out of Naz areal. Ad VertIsing. The business man me thinks is wise Who knowath bow to advertise. For he who tellanot of his wares Will, sitting, wear ottE pants and elkairs. So much has been said on the subject of newspaper advertising, and the shrewd business man of to•, day finds it so necessary to judic- iously advertise, in order to keep up in the race, that I think I had better not go into details as to how it should be done. 11 you want real live information on this subject get John Wannaniaker's pamphlet aud study it carefully. Talking about advertising, did you ever ponder the fact that wo all adveitise in souni way or an• other 2 The -man who -at irregular intervals walks up street, taking the whele sidewalk in a zig zag fashion is publicly advertising hitn- self as a tippler who takes a glass too much. Ditto, the dapper little fellows who walk down street real fad to deceive yon, but who have to put au the breaks every ten steps so tie to keep from switching off Olio sidewalk ; yes, we have such fellows io llrnesels who advorti.vo tbab me fail, brit would far rather be considcre,t sober, ‘Ve have the man who borrows xti X and says lttt hill return it to,morrow, and lin does 001, and tho eliances am that you will have to take it out itt trride. Such a man advertises himself as a fraud who cannot be depended on. Thee there is the woman who buys ten °ante worth of thread or buttons and hag them gent down. Slob a Woman edyedistes herself as delicate ad not strong enough to carry parcels. Then therd ig your wife to 'whom you confide a great secret, tibe.teitt it to your neighbpee wife tette adverOsoc it, for the won. eserese's en all get it. Also the mu who -tete yen to do a favor or severe,1 more forhim, but who neglects to allow common courtesy to you in return, advertises himself in your estimation as a selfish ingrate, Itt deed there are innumerable ways of advertising good, bad and indIffereet dispositions and Iain glad to say I know 10110 few examplee of these extreme cases I have mentioned, Living ae we do in to thickly settled community where everybody knows everybody else, let us endeavor to advertise ourselves substantially as a ready, righteous people. Bow To Minuet. An unidentified exchange gives the following rules for colleeting, most of which are based on experi- ence and good sense. Cut 11 out and give it to your collector : 1. Never give Oho ides that you celled because you happened to be in the neighborhood. 2. Myer plead that you aro in absolute need of the money. 3. Never explain why you want the motley further than by some general pram as to meet out- steutling bills. The debtor is usual ly aLli expert in showing a man how he cau get along without motley ; he will worst you in an argument, and if you lose your temper it is an excuse for him why he should not pay. 4. Always be civil, however busi• noes like and inmortnnate you may deem it necessary to be. 5. Never think you have done wrong because a debtor gets an gry His anger under civil treatment shows that he does not leased to pay. This you might as well know early as late. 0. Show quite as firm a resole tion to get the money on your tenth call as on any previous one, or else it would have been better if you had not made it. 7. Never leave a debtor without his settling a time when he thinks he can pay, and never fail to be on hand at the tune set. 8. 'As between yourself aud the emploseee let the most busiuess-like of the two make the due. 9. Suggest iustalmente. Shame the debtor into au arrangement to pay something every week or month. If not $10, then $0, or $3 or $1. It will convince him that you have eet to work in earnest to get the money. 10. If a debeer gets angry or hate worn 011D your patience, a threat to attach kis salary may be eftective, not so much that he it; likely to fear that you will get the money ie that way, as that the affair will come to the knowledge of his employer. 11. Similar effects may be pro. (laced by saying that you iutend to place the bill in the bands of a lawyer, particularly if you mentiou a lawyer who has a reputation for harassing debtors. Professional debtors, however, become careless about legal processes. 12. Drop into a debtor's favorite haunts. It will make him uneasy especially if you do not hesitate to ask him politely but promptly for your money on occasion. Good Words. Receive wealth and prosperity without arrogance, and be ready to let it go. The best people need afflictions for trial of their virtue. How can we enrolee the grace of content. meet if all things succeed well, or that of forgiveness if we have no enemies ? The most precious of all nooses. 81008 is power over ourselves—power to withstand trial, to bear suffering, to front danger ; power over pleas• tire and pain ; power to follow our convictions, however mists(' by menace and acorn ; the power of calm reliance in scenes of darkness and etorm. If unity has been lost, truth has been preserved to us. And this is our consolation. If the church be not the great opean, vast, bright, fresh, a counterpart of the blue heaven above it, still she is like the hundred lakes that nestle among the sheltering Wile ; they know not each other, but every outs of them reflects, and truly, the fleinainent above. Calcine.: of Thought. Sin has many tools, but a lie is a handle that fits them all.-10liver Wendell :Holmes, Tile greatest and sublimespower is often simple pationce.--qiieritoe Bushnell. Faith in immortality ic the high. est tribute that'the world has paid to the worth of lifo.— [Emerson, Whatever Is done by those around you, be yourself fully determined to welkin the most excellent way.— [Wesley. Toad aro the softening showers which cause the seed of heaven to opting up in ,the hewn) boast.— [Sir Walter Scott, 11.01,x1 , '1890. JERSEY BULL POR SERVICE. For terms and otcTer varticulars ask for circular at nw Mug and Book Store. Should you wish to sell hit heifer calves I alu Pen - pared to pay as 1000 as 010, aeoortling to rnllklit,jualittuR of their dams, 20.11mhs U. 0, ONADMAN,S russets. ULL FOR SEIt'VICE.—THE LI 104 3, eV SlantigiroTai podium bull, u:orins, 91.01/ to be 11,110 at time of service with privilege o returning if necessary. CaAh. Rozsme, 119.8 Proprietor, BULL FOR SERVICE'. — THE undersigned will hoop a Well -Brod Durham Bull, rising three years old, for service on North Ralf Lot 29, Oen. 7, Morris te. Tors, 81,00, to be paid ati t me of service, with privilege of returning if Ileaessery. !15.2in N. WALKER, Promoter. relI1OR0.-BRED BULL. — THE lindeesigima witl keep the Thero'.hrod Shorthorn "Barna Grasp 0111 ' bred b F. W. btouo, Guelph, for Set -vise on Lot 11 , Oon.(1,Morris. Terms 81.00, to bo paid at time of service, with privilege of returning if necessary. Pedigree may be seen ou ap- plication. W.8 JAS, Brent, Proprietor. 1800. !3F1E.ct.C. 1800. J.& J.LIVINGSTON Bove it limited number of bushels of the BEST DUTCH SEED for Farmers in the vioinity of Brussels, who intend raising flax duriug CLIO 00111111g season which they are prepared to deliver lo quan- tities to mut flax growers. Gan be gut ut the Brussels Flax Mill. Seed given out at 81,50 per bushel, union the usual terms. Order Early to Insure a Supply. —For ilex grown from this Seed— $10 PER TON WILL, BE PAID, if of good growth ; harvested in proper seas- on and deliveret at the Visa 0,1111 as aeon as at for threshing. We will also rent a num. bar of good sod fields 0)r the purpose of growing fax. 31- & J. LIVINGSTON, ProprietorsBrussels 51,01 11)111, Jotent of eatttt Cures AtteuniatisT DR. PHILLIPS Ow• =az-nom-w, XXIAs Rix Oftiloo Cady's Block, Seafarth. Where ho ann bo Oonsulted no nil OlirOnle Diseases of both Soros, Consumption. Mahout owl Witlarrh troaloden000nfully by Inhalation of Medi- cated Vapors, the only rational • troninielit for those 010011400. NERVOUS DEBILITY 050 (111 diseases of the Urinary Organs posi- tively eared in a short time. Cali or Address al-tf 1315. rumwes. SLANORTH MONEY TO LOAN. Money to Loan on FARM PROPERTY -at- LOWEST RATES. Private and Company Funds, A.Prx:srTO J.C.Ueffernan, J.A.Yonng. Valuator. Agent.. Ethel P.O., Ont, 2Stf THOS. FLETCHER, Practical Watc7b7)zaker arts Jeweler. Thanking the publie for past .favors and support and wishing Mill to senate your patronage, we are opening out Pall Lines iu • GOLD AND SILVER WATCHES. Silver Plated Ware from Establiehed and Reliable Makers, fully warranted by us. Clock's of the _Latest Designs. JEWELRY, ! WEDDINO RINGS, LAMS Gnu Brims, 1.3noomots, ttp, ra'Also a Pull Line of Viokrus and Violin Strings, &a., in stock. N. IL—Insurer of Marriage Licenses. T. Fletcher, - Brussels. Flour and Feed! The attention of the Citizens of Brussels and Farmers of the Sur- rounding Community is called to the NOW Flour and Food Store, Brussels, Opened in the Shop lately occupied by Mr. E. Grundy, (Opposite Mr. Bmker's Grocery) Whore there will Always be on Hand a Full Supply of Flour, • Feed and Meal of All Kinds. As this is our first location in Brussels WO trust y01.1 will give us your Patronage, and in return we will endeavor to Supply you with Best Brands at Lowest Figures. TNT.E US A CALL. Yours Bespectfall,y, KING & HARTLgY. ETHEL ST AD FLOUR MILLS. The undersigned having completed the change from the stone to the celebratod Hungarian System of Grinding, has now tho Mill in First-Olass Running Order and will bo glad to see all his olsi customers and as many new ones as possible. Plow mina Food ailktrays 011 Rand. Highest Price paid for any qumlitity of Good 't'oin. MILNIL