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The East Huron Gazette, 1892-06-30, Page 2---5Mt-d-dtee he. • 'YOUNG FOLKS. doitht1ese. these are the -weeds that yen - will have to watch and fight with all your . -• might, for they are stronger and more de- nt". Tone -of Voice. termined than 1 canfiri4 any words to tell you. While they are yet, young pull up tis not so much what you say, •every one. You know where your precious Aathe manner in which you Few it : 4t. )3not so much the language you use. ilowers are -they are safe in their orderly • As the tones in which you convey it. processions of straight lines and then pass ,..h your little handfork- like a comb to and fro "Come her!" I sharply. said, in the soil to remove roots and disturb new A mLthe babycowered and wept ; "Conic herei ', I cooed, and he looked and sprouts, but be very careful not to go too ' snatlad, near your phlox plants, except to pall with And steedght to my lap he crept- , careful finger and thumb the little weeds The words may be mild and fair, that have sprouted very near. This you And the tones may pierce like a dart; will have to repeat again and, again -new The words may be soft as the summer air, weed keep corning in succession. And the tones may break the heart. In the second or third week in May you 0yolopmdia. IIHRENATI F lin otinevittieg MAID ; . , and France' *ond kir htifteired thousand DOCifr rut& . A. felleruanifrOtit here to -day 'n' showed a bisok temei - dollars every days The Wet iti America did AIR Inge -aim" regerves a to His Castenters. -teen. One 'card ettrely naghter Isave-twelve parts. TWELV.3 HUNDRED Krum .BB- notcostlesstintinfiateen billion dollars, Prom 'nd one -was free, INGE jun BEEN. yuni,E11.- - the Crimean war down to that of 1870-71, A trial of more than usual interest was He said ez how 'twee sure to tell me ail rd wanter know - the civilized nations of Europe and America terminated at Lille, France, on Saturday. 'N' called the thing a Cyclopee-o2 stithin' It seemed a putty fine old book -a reggae' sort AsiGreat as the Population sif the Earth o' prize- The Human Sacrifice In Thirti Centuries- - $11,000,000,000 raised expressly for the who heti succeeditiC ttailding up a highly - kinder so spent in destroying one another$10,000,000,f Prior to October Lestikere lived st Roubaix 000 of the ordinary budget and more than a certain Gustave. Ittesson and his wife, Now. - Ontil I ast him questions, when I seen he'd told -lies. • purpose, making a total of 821,0M,000,000. prosperous butclusiness., The Reasons Jae', sir, that's the hest Can human folly, regarded from some The wars of the last hundred years have went m for spe,cialities. Their venison was Kind of a book I ever seed, but think Id like a 'Mars good - in special point Of view, be considered a sub - sorrow, the loss of men, and other results. which possessed apeculiarly savoury flavour, "Tells ev'rything r say Lcost $140,000,000,000, without counting the regaeded with affection, and their -saelieneete- • test ject for scientific observation? We do not For a part only oef this fabulous sum all were talked of for miles. It may be imagined voh me say thohesitateng.outop to presentinthteimethaoaffirmative,nevaelr- Before I buy her. Lemme see t What does thethe children might have been brought up therefore, that when, on the- 26th of last been classified„ and although it forms a and educated gratuitously ; all lines of rail- October, a warrant was issued for their ar - For words but come from the mind. may transplant your sweet peas from the- A.boutothheopyrorspects of the comin' year for oatsways might have been built ; prevision rest upotea charge of systematically dealing But the tones leap forth from the inner self,• .Ama reveal the state of the heart. .. e feller that. whole too vast and too complex to belong realize aerial navigation ; customs, town the indignation of their numerous custom - And grow by study and art; house boxes to the open-air garden. People I thought he'd flop for laughin' when I ast the might have been made for the attempts to in dogs' flesh, and selling it for human food, do not generally know that sweet peas are 'N' when I ast him "What's the joker he look- to any special genus or determined category. most easily and successfully transplanted. ad almighty flat. hu ad vi ees, :1 o uprop-bt - Whether you know it or not- I discovered it for myself accidentalli-in pveosrsitaivlietyst might have been suppressed; all destitution in escaping across the frontier into Belgium, leas magnitude ifttuodoetsaindde universality dues and all obstacles to freedom of trade ers was intense, Gustave Rassot succeeded Gentleness, kindness, love and hate. Whether you mean or care- fact, I was driven to it by my little friend, "It don't prognosticate," says he. "That ain't the pant rsays L erly so called. Even now we do not pre- bmyigiheuttehnaevses abenednirnefinirmovietyd.except that caused but his wife and one of the shopmen were The place is possessed by these dear, "What I'm a-astin' you is will the blame thing prophesy r extent, but simply wish to examine one of tend to treat the immense subject in its full Can the armies of the world be abolished ? trial. Mr. Leclercq, the health inspect or of Envy endanger are there. the song -sparrow, at the Isles of Shoals. arrested, and on Saturday came up for their me lots o' stuff its most interesting and serious phases, . the the town of Roubaix, testified that on the Then would you quarrels avoid, 'N' then he turned thepages quick, 'n' showed About Egyptians, and a squib about an Earl named Duff. planet. million human beings who military system_ of the fourteen hundred it is impossible. people this And in peace and love rejoice, friendly little birds whose song is sweeter Keep angel not only out of your words, -- A mechanic has calculated the coat of 25th of October last he had seized four than words can express, but they will hardly But keep it out of your voice. making wooden soldiers of natural size and pounds of chops which he found in a basket let me plant at all out of doors, scratching . , - -...- Birtwhen I ast him if it told a cure for tater good condition. As, after all, the victims in the possession of Madame Ramon. He He said it didn't, but it hada, history of rugs ! How many men are destroyed by war in up and eating the seeds as fast as I can put bugs, 'Ncl•I'llate domed if that there book he said a century? Official reports and documents them in. They are so tame, they sit on theof to -day are only an affair of number, arrested her, and found at the back of the askance if they see me at work putting would tell so much enable us to calculate the number of sol -all the armies could be reproduced for 6,- containing all the necessary instruments, One of the First Yrinciples., fence of my little inclosure end eye me money, and stratagem, he has decided that butcher's shop a regular slaughter -house It is exceedingly distressing to a humane seeds in the ground, and the moment I Had anything on any page I'd ever care to diers who have been killed or have died 000,000 francs, or $1,200,000,000 a year thirteen dogs' carcasee, about sixty dogs' person to see the indifference toward, the leave the spot, onthey think I have left it, touch ; during modern wars. We know that ing the unaccountable Franco-German war dur- (soldiers in fir, under officers in oak, officers skins pegged out and drying, and some Uv - comfort and life of dumb animals by little 'N' then -haw! ha w !-I chucked that pert in rosewood, captains in mahogany, colonels ing dogs awaiting their turn to be converted children. This is not the fault of the child down they swoop and go from one end to young swindler from the place of 1870-71, 250,000 men were slain on the in cedar, and generals in ivory), and they into provender. M. Roger, a veterinary the little one in early childhood to tease the and take every seed, leaving only the empty as it is the fault of the mother, who allows the other of my carefully planted furrows So quick he hadn't time to take his smile down off his face; 'Nd after him 1 threwtwo sides; that during the useless Crimean could bdrilled by steam power, the artil- surgeon, testified to having been called in his bag 'n' twelve -part war of 1854-55, 785, )00 were stain; that lery being included in the calculation. The to examine the chops seized by the health kitten, pester the patient house -dog and Cyclopee- men fell on the field of battle or died in hollow groove freshly dug out by their little during the short Italian war of 1859, 63,001) leaders of the two nations at war and their officers. He at once declared them to be feet. otherwise show their human supremacy My great-grandfather's almanac's still good hospitals; that the game of chess between staff officers would conduct the strategy at dogs' flesh. Questioned by the presiden t, ..._. Prussia and Austria in 1866 deprived uing of a training in cruelty of more im- over the dumb world. This is the begin - doors I am obliged to have a cover of woven It is trying, and when I do plant out of enough forme! portance to the character of a growing girl wire to fit over my flower beds to keep off 46,000 individuals of life; that in the -ffohn Kendrick Bangs, in Harper's Magazine. their risk and peril. The victory would be- the witness stated that dog's flesh was not Unit- long, as heretofore, to him who by his skill dangerous to health providing the animal ed States the strife between the North and should succeed in checkmating his adversary had no disease. Several of the regular cus- boy bay than the mother realizes. 'When the the dear little pests. They ere especially Old Times> Old Friends, Old Love. and in destroying the greatest number of tomers of the establishment testified that gets a little older and has often laid a trying in the case of sweet peas, for they There are no days like the good old days- South caused the death of 450,000 men in combatants. That improvement on ordinary they had patronised the Ramona because of foundation for the hardened character wait till the peas begin to sprout and then The days, when wo were youthful! 1860-64; we know also that the wars of armies would have the advantage of leaving the distinct and agreeable flavor of their bit in after life. which -men of good family sometimes -exhi- they devour every single one ! Now for the fun of transplanting ! It is When humankind were pure of mind, And -speech and deeds were .tru thful ? the husbandman to his field, the workman sausage meat. It was also shown that the Before a love of sordid gold THE FIRST EMPIRE in his factory, and the student to studies, Raisons had been in the habit of slaughter - earliest infancy to respect the rights of ani - Boys and girlsehould be taught from their the most enchanting work in the world. If the day is overcast very good, bat if it is And before each maid and dame became Became man's ruling passion, poured out the blood of five million Euro - happiness. and would promote public prosperity and ing about a dozen dogs each week. The mals. They should be taught to watch the the sunniest ever dawned no matter ; if .Slave to the tyrant Fashiont peens, and that France has taken up arms twenty times since 1815. On adding the . Court sentenced Gustave Ralson in default ihem. It is a very bad thing to -allow a you they will not droop a leaf in the hot- There are no girls like the good old girls - Against the world I'd stake 'em ! century a total of 19,840,900 is reached in number of victims of war during the , last ministers of war when men, having finally six months, and the shopman to three grace and beauty of the growing life around you put down- your plants as I shall teach That may answer as advice to future to six months' imprisonment, his wife to child to settraps, even for wild game. It test sun. Your little garden bed is all the civilized countries of Europe and in the fight. But for centuries Ministers and reached the age of reason, shall refuse to months,.with an additional fine in each ease. Is an equally bad training to allow boys to ready, your boxes of treashrea about you. As the Lord knew how to make 'em! They were rich in spirit and common sense; As buxom and smart and as clean of heart United States. Generals can rest upon their laurels. witness, as they often do, the tortures of Now take your hoe and make a straight And piety all supportin' ; Commencing with the Trojan war, the must be taken, it should be done our of theThey would bake and brew, and had taught Certain remarkable battles, fought hand to school, too, case has been the same in all ages of history. -- the slaughter -house. When animal life line about four inches from the edge of your bed, lengthwise; if you find difficulty in presence of the impressible nature of child- making it straight, take a string tied to hand with knife or club, have had the mem- And they made the likeliest courtin'! When we were boys together! arable honor of leaving as many as two hood. Love and respect for all creatures two sticks, push the sticks into the ground, There are no boys like the gocd old boys - drawing the strings tight between, and youhundred thousand men dead on the field; which God has put into the world are among When the grass was sweet to the brown bare theearliest lessons which should be inculcat- will have your straight line. Take the feet as examples we cite the defeat of the Cim ed at home. hoe and cut down evenly from this line, That dimpled the laughing heather- • brians and Tuetons by Marius, and the last exploits of Attila. Eighteen to twenty mil - Mothers who are very careful about the drawing the earth toward you and leaving When the pewee sally to the Summer dawn Of the bee in the billow clover, lion men are killed every century in Europe religious training of their children and in- the smooth cutting six inches deep against culeate precept upon precept for their guid- which to stand your plants for support. Echoed his night song over. by the enlightened institution of war. If Or down by the mill the whippoorwill once are often careless themselves about the Slip your hand into one corner of your these inen, averaging thirty years of age, plant box down to the very bottom and should join hands they would form a line There is no love like the good old love- example set. A little child is naturally hu- The love that mother gave us! mane, but if he sees the household animals take up carefully a few pea plants. Once a We are old, old men, yet we pine again 4,500 leagues long, crossing all Europe and around him treated with indifference or un- few are removed,the rest will come up easily. For thatprecious grace -God save us ! Asia. Don't break the long white roots or dire So we dream and dream of the good old times, The nations of the extreme Orient (the kindness he soon learns the lesson taughtAnd our hearts grow tenderer. fonder. Chinese and their neighbors) form a second him. It is far better to destroy tramp cats lodge the little pea still clinging there- if As those dear old dreams bring soothing human consolidation, and shed about the and dogs in some quiet, humane manner you can help it. Stand each plant against gleams Of heaven away off' yonder. same quantity of blood. Gengis Khan and the wall you have sliced down smooth with than to allow them to lead a precarious ex -Tamerlane marked their routes with pyre - your hoe. Put the plants in, not more than • EUGENE FIELD. raids of severed heads. Barbarous nations istence around the household, the butt of every one. For this very thoughtlessness three inches apart, with the roots straight . The Gift of the Sea. also are engaged in combats, seldom killing down, but if very long no matter if the in itself encourages cruelty. If there seems fewer than four to five million beings in "a to be a disposition in a little one it can be ends lie horizontally an inch in the bottom The dead child lay in the shroud, • corrected in early childhood by interesting of the trench ; draw the earth half way up And the widow watched beside, century. The total number destroyed every -And her mother slept and the channel swept century in political, religious or internation- it in the habits of the animal, its beautiful over them loosely so to hold them in place, The gale in the teeth of the tide. al"Wars is at least forty millions. fur, its soft tread and agile movement. A and then gently fill the trench with water, General statistics prove that, since the little story of thehistory of its race told in draw the rest of the earth about the roots, But the mother laughed at all, "I have lost my man in the -sea, Trojan war 3,000 years ago, not a single language suited to the comprehension of the press_ it firmly with your hands about.each And the child is dead. Be still," she said, year has elapsed in which some war has not little one will serve a lesson and teach him separate plant, making each stand perfect- " What more can ye do to me ?" • killed its proportionate number. During that this creature of God has been put here ly covered, indeed, the earth may come up the thirty centuries which have elapsed as a gift to man to be respected and- cared aneinch _about each. slender stem without The widow watched the dead, since the beginning of Asiatic and European for and not as a plaything to be petted for doing any harm. This is delightful work, "And the candle guttered low, And she tricd*) sing the Passing Song history, a loss of 40,000,000 a century makes a moment and then to be thrown aside. It and when your first row is done you will That bids the poor soul go. - the total number destroyed by war to be is wise to let a child have animals and hold- look at it with joy and pride, scegreen, so 1,200,000,0A,O. a number very nearly rep - him responsible for the care of them, and to fresh, so promising it will be. And "Mary take you now," she sang, resenting the total population of the globe take them away if he neglects them or is You can scarcely make the_ soil too rich "That lay against my heart," And "Mary smooth your crib to -night," at the present day. Cruel to thein.` This ivill teach the lesson -or keep it too moist for the well-being of But she could not say " Depart." Twelve hundred millions ! Thoughts of Brides, Terrible Disaster on the Caspian Sea. "For instance, what were you all think- Particulars have only just reached St. ing of when you were being married ?" Petersburg of a terrible disaster, involving Every one laughed and said in a breath, great loss of life, which occurred on the "Why, being married, of course !" Caspian Sea at the end of March. As early as " Nonsense," said the newspaper woman, the 4th ult. a repot was current at Baku, "that idea was in your mind, no doubt, but and was telegraphed abroad, that a steamer it was the undercurrent of thought. You had been wrecked while on a vo3. age to that were thinking really of something else. Con- port, but in the absence of further advices the rumour remained unconfirtned. No "Well," said one of the listeners, thought- doubt is now entertained, however, that fess, now." fully, " perhaps that is true. Now that I the vessel referred to was the steamer Alex - stop to consider it, I was thinking of some- ander Wolkow, which left one of the Per - thing else. You see, I was married at home sian ports on the southern side of the Cas. stop in the -evening. Just as the minister pian, with goods and passengers for Baku at commenced the service a lamp -shade on a heard of. It is now practically certain that the end of March, and has never since been " I turned involuntarily to my sister, who she foundered with all on board during a small table near me cracked. was standing near me, and was about to terrible storm which raged on march 29. whisper her to turn the lamp down, when it The precise number of lives lost has not suddenly occurred to me that I was the two hundred Persians had taken passage been ascertained, but it is known that some own wedding. Ot course I reframed from sides the crew. The Alexander Wolkow for Baku, and all these were drowned, be - cynosure of all eyes -that it was really my speech, but it was with difficulty that I re- was formerly used as a river steamer, and is frained from laughter at the blunder I came stated to have been quite unsuitable for so near making." " Well, I remember distinctly what I was provided with lifeboats. The vessel, more - traffic in stormy weather, being totally un- thinking about," said the intellectual wo- over, carried a heavy deck cargo, which it man on the sofa. "1 had b new pair of eye- is supposed must have shifted, thus causing glasses on, and the spring hurt my nose. I the vessel to capsize. How the disaster was wishing the minister would hurry up so really occuered, however, can never be I could go up stairs and change them." known, as every soul on board perished. " And I,' put in the third, "was con- gratulating myself all through the ceremony on my wonderful composure. I knew that A Robbers' Cave. he was frightened to death, and I was According to a German paper, a robbers® thinking what larks it would be to tease cave has just been discovered by a police him about it all the rest of his life, when officer in one of the most picturesque parts suddenly, as I held out my hand for the of Grunewald. The officer has frequently ring, I happened to glance at it and found observed twp suspicious -locking persons that it was trembling like a leaf. loitering about the hillside. From a seclud- " That sight ' phased ' me so that all else ed point he watched their movements, and is a blank, save my own desire to hide my saw the men suddenly disappear through the hands. I had a mad impulse to conceal tangled brushwood. He searched the spot, them in the folds of my veil, but I don't and found, cunningly concealed by a net- work of brambles, a wide opening. Listening think I did. " At least, no one ever told me so. I my- attentively at the entrance, he heard the self would hate to take my oath that I did sound of voices within. Armed with his re- volver, the gendarme ventured into the not." cave and confronted the two cave -dwellers. "It was a sermon of Sam Small's that was diverting my mind at my wedding," who were regaling themselves. The men, thus surprised, at once surrendered. The said the woman in the corner. " I don't care was superbly furnished -in fact, truly know that anything could have been more syharatic in style -though there were un - incongruous at such a time than one of Sam Small's sermons, but I had heard him mistakable signs of stolen property lying about awaiting removal. When the officer preach a month or so before, and just as I was conducting his prisoners to the lock-up was coming down stairs something, I shall one of them made his esca.r.e. This man's never know what, put me in mind of one of name is Wollenzein, of Spandau. In the his grotesque illustrations. " He compared the gospel to a spring and has since led a robber's life. The man summer of last year he escaped from jail, board. Just where he found the resem- in custody has long been sought for as a blance I can't remember. That was what notorious criminal. The cave is now an oh, troubled me then. I couldn't remember, ject of much interest. _anal was trvi is to fictur.a it nut all tarniiiab the service. I nearly missed one of the re- sponses, I was so intent upon the idea. The French Executioner- " Everibody accounted for," said the The executioner is still regarded in France newspaper woman, " save myself, who am with much of the abhorrence which hat not married, and Mrs. Blank. What were always been felt for him, but although he 16 you thinking of, Mrs. B. ? an outcast from the ordinary world, adirds- The little woman blushed furiously, hes- sion to the churches,promenades, and public hated, and finally said " If you promise places generally is not to -day, as it once -never to tell, I'll tell you. You see, I was was, denied to him. Whenever his place married in the days when people were enor- becomes vacant there is a rush of candi- dates for it more multitudinous, and more mous bustles. Well, in the confusion and hurly-burly of dressing, my bustle got lost, eager, than for any other State office what- soever. To be "Monsieur de Paris," as the and couldn't be found. It was growing executioner is styled, seems a pinnacle of late, and what was to be done ? No one ambition with only too large a section of the knew. I could not wear my dress without public. The executioner has generally been it, for it looked dreadfully. more loathed in France than even in Eng- " Finally one of my bridesmaids, a girl of land. And justly so ; for in the former expedients, grabbed up a handful of bath country his work, for many centuries, has towels, tied a ribbon around them, and been peculiarly infamous, not to say diaboli- fastened that around my waist. didn't cal. In the present day, it is true, "Monsieur think very much about it until I was stand - de Paris" simply touches a button, and his ing at the altar, and then the horrible victim, without a struggle or a pang, is no thought flashed across me, what if I should more. But he was not always so humane. lose some of those Manchester bath towels, Once it was his own hand that dealt slow best quality, in the aisle. death, and inflicted fiendish torture. It " I nearly fainted away, and I assure you was he who quartered thecondemned wretch every step of that solemn procession down -who attached horses, that is to say, to hie from the altar was solemn indeed, to me. I arms and legs, and then drove them in four proceeded' very gingerly. Please don't different directions. It was he who burned, tell, though, for people will tease me." , or broke on the wheel -the latter an in- womanAnd they all promised, but the newspaper describably ghastly operation, in which he told. used an iron bar to break every bone in the victim's body. It is not surprising, there - Thus &lows Moves On. fore, that even to -day "Monsieur de Paris" Patent Medicine Manufacturer. -" Doc- should be the object of a detestation 'which Ketch himself failed to excite. tor, don't you think you could discover a new disease ?" Old Memories. _Doctor-" Discover a new disease ! Old memories with hallowed glees, What on earth should I do that for ?" You echo in your melodies, P. M. M. -"Because I have a new patent Your song -s are of the other years, medicine which is the very thing for it." In other chorus and harmonies. Of other joys and other cheers, well taught in the familiar words of "The pansies. For the enriching of your- bed- tncient Mariner": four feet, by two wide -I should put a bush- Then came a cry from the sea, He prayeth best who loveth best But the seatrime blinded the glass, It is day, and the sun sheds its light and All tIhngs, both great and small, el at least of well -rotted cow manure and And " Heard ye nothing, mother?" she said, heat upon the whole world. The country mix it most thoroughly with the soil. -And "'Tis the child that waits to pass. For the dear God who los eth us is green, the cities full of life, and the vil- if you can find a spot which the •sun reaChes He made and loveth all. And the nodding mother sighed. lages surrounded with laborers. Millions ._. .,••••••••••., for only half the day they will flourish much "Tis a lambling ewe in the whin, of men are living, actin and and producing. Useful Mita for Youthful Gardeners. better than if they have his light continual- For why should the christened soul cry out Life unfolds its joyous and diradiance lv and their flowers will be twice at large. That never knew of sin?" on the surface of the glvine obe. BY CELIA THAXTER Pansies love the shade. If you, make your "0, feet 1 have held in my hand, = But behold the sun, gone to rest ! Be - bed under some tree, they will like it much. 0, handset my heart to catch ; • • Nothing is so delightful for our young hold, black night and melancholy •silence ! If you are transplanting, you must set the How should they know the road to go, people, especially our girls, than home gar- little plants aboutfour inches apart. When And how should they lift the latch? "Funereal Death decends from sombre dening. It is a healthful recreation and a all -are in and the bed is -full', water them They laid a sheet to theoor, steel. He passes like a bird of night whose hires wonders.d heights, holding in bis hand a scythe of perpetual aid to the understanding of na- copiously; if the sun shines, cover them With the little quilt atop. 'flht with newspapers pegged down till evening That it mightig not hurt from the cold or the . Let me suggest the, Drummend phlox and then take oft the coverings -don't for- dirt, _• MAKES ONE SHUDDER, hardens will be interesting all summer. get. If next day is bright and hot, cover 'But the crying wo•uld not stop. extends his -hand to the four cardinal points, They repay any care with a wonderful once more, keep wet, and in a few days the The widow lifted the latch traverses shadowy space and disappears in readiness and wealth of loveliness. Now on bed will be safe. ' And strained her eyes to see, the depths ; this gesture has arrested May 24th, say, you have your seeds and I think the poppy gardens must have And To letopopened the door on the bitter shore the soul go free." humanity in its course ; this passage of the your tools, your beds all forked, manured, three beds four feet long and two wide. necrophore has sent all human beings to hoed, raked and ready for planting. One Then we can plant each kind by itself, Cali- There was neither glinimer nor ghost, • their last sleep ; to -morrow morning none 'fling more you need -a piece of board fornia poppies in one, in the second the There was neither spirit nor spark, of us will waken ; the sun will shine upon ebout two feet long and seven inches wide. mixed carnation poppies, and in the last the "Tis crying for me in the dark." a land of the dead. Not a. single humaai And. " Heard ye nothing. mother?" she said, You stand by your little plot of brown wonderful Shirleys. earth ...es ee • I should add a peck being remains to look upon the scene. --h, of all hoofsandwith the half bushel ot manure to And the nodding mother sighed, beauty and delignt, thait t lds for you of Paris, London, New York, St. Petersburg, gician who will call forth all that sweet ' "Tie Serrow makes ye dull ; Vienna, Berlin, and Rome are suddenly ex- rttlied- C 8 ig ayerr:tovaaerrtemtb,LrdwLtho+nulyi.ira Have ve yet to learn the cry of the tern, pageant from the silent, passive -soil. It ness t hardly a layer at ail in - the case of ne the_ wail of the wind-blown gull" tinguished. Streets are deserted, dwellirgs teems a very simple thing, the planting of a the Shirley seeds, for they are so delicate " The terns are bloviii inland, ' - - filled with the deed ; _cities, and villages_ ..... _ , Seed, but I never do it without a, feeling of as, to be almost invisible; the carnations The gray gull follows the plough, are eerneteries. - - - - - - - . . 'Twas never a bird, the voice I heard. Silence, seated on the ruins of the globe awe, as if it were a sacred thing among are much larger, ithe Californias larger still. Oh, mother, I hear tt now! " sleeps in the midst of the vast field of the the mysteries of God. You kneel by the Cover them with newspapers and waterdead, in the midst of,this prostrated army little plot -if the • around is damp bring a. every night (unless the weather is .wet for " Lie still, dear lainb, lie stiff ; The of 1,200,000,000 corpses. mat or a piece of folded carpet to kneel two or three days.) They should be up in a 'Tis thchild ispassed from harm. e ache in your breatt that broke your The imtnense cemetery of all mankind, en, for you don't wish to take a cold as the week if the weather is favorable. rest, seen at one view, is the real measure of the first step in your gardening. Those who choose nasturtiums for a gar- Andtshte feel of an empty arm."- victims destroyed by war from the histori- You lay your bit of board straight across den will have but little care, for they flour- , cal beginning of nations down to the year the bed about four inchces. from the enish in all sorts of soils and don'td.She put her mother aside, want -In Mary's na,me let be!• of grace in which we live. Yon lean one arm on it to hold it firm, and watering unless there -should be desperate For the peace of my soul I must go,"she said, The sword is ceaselessly drawing blood with a little stick draw a furrow an inch drought, and once freed from weeds they And she went to the calling sea. from human veins. Eighteen million cubic deep in the earth along its edge, straighttake care of themselves almosentirely. In the heel of the wind -bit ier meters have been shed. . and equal as you can in depth all the way. The seeds themselves are most interesting. t Where the twisted weed pwas,plied, a- In summer at Paris the Seine delivers to , Into this begin to drop your seeds as evenly They are carefully ornamented. Deep She came to the life she had missed by an Minn two parts of the bridge Pont -Neuf about a as may be -they are so large you can ace grooves run parallel to each other from end For she came to a little child. - • • : hundred cubid meters of water every sec - them distinctly. When yon have sown that to end of the seed, which is like a clumsyShe laid it into her breast, ond, moving with a force of 3,500 horse furrow make another on the opposite edgeDutch boat in shape, but what a freight of And back to her mother she came, power. Every hour 360,030 cubic meters of the board and fill that. . Then lift the the deck ! of water pass under the archesof the baidge, board and . lay it down carefully 011 loveliness each carries below' its shelving But it would not feed and it would not heed, Though she gave it her own child's name. or 8,640,000 cubic meters in a day. Imagine other side of the last furrow and again the river to be human blood instead of A nasturtium garden need not be manur- And the dead child dripped on her breast, make a groove along the edge and plant, And her own in the shoud lay stark;. . water, for if the blood shed in all wars was and so on to the end of the bed. The width ed. I have found the poorer the soil the A nd " God forgive us, mother," she said, put into the basin between the quays it would of the board givea you just the right distance richer the flowers will be. If the soil We let it die in theslark !" between the rows and saves a deal of trouble -should be' rich the plants will run to leaves and the flowers will be comparatively remain standing on the parapet fifty hours RUDYARD KIPLING. form such a river; and we would have to in measuring. • yd; at few. Plant.them,after your bed is thor- - . to see it flow away. Now with our hand draw over the sees That quantity of -blood weighs 18,900,- the earth that was displaced in making the oughly laid out as for phlox,. lines as much as six inches apart, in straight Fatal Duel in- Hungary. . 000,000 kilograms. It is an unfailing stream, furrow; it will give them just the right it least, for they must have room on A duel with pistols, which has had a tragic which every hour, since history began has depth of coveting -about twice their di- - all sides to grow. Cover them a half an inch ;deep, ending, was fought here on Wednesday unceasingly poured '680 litres of blood to ameter. That is the rule for planting al- press down the earth and:nave them.- They morning between two notable members of dye the repel purple ,wort: by the occupants most all seed& Now take your board endwill germinate more rapidly if you water Hungarian- society. The quarrel arose un- of imperial thrones lay it over each row, lean on it gently to the bed at night if the weather is dry. But der the following circumstances: • On the If . tae 1,200,000,000 skeletons should rise make the earth perfectly • firm -not packed after they are up 1 never water them any -hth of iltuie .the Emperor is to visit Buda- and climb one upon another the.ladder thue ,.-bard, but firm. Do this all along the lengthmore; they don't„pest for the pupose ti of celebrang the jithi- formed would” reach the moot!, coil about of the bed till it is literally smooth as a like it ; don't need it Put your row of climbers against the house, or lee of his coronation as King of Hungary. that body and, continuing onward, tread ,..... Now take your watering. pot and, in fence or -large rocks. In his State entry into the city His Majesty mount infinite space four times as far again, • lightly -sprinkle . the bed- all over.- Don% a ou For Foie:Campion gardens plant the fine is lobe accompanied by a brilliant escort of that is,. tiQ,700 leagues in height . Th Sprinkle too long in mplace or ywill e Hungarian nobles on horseback, in the niag- corpses, if thrown into. the channel at Calais, ethe bed, --7' holding the watering -pot highas. - you can to mate the shower ea gentle as - wash outyourseeds ; go round and round same way as the phlox seeds. seeds that are very like poppy seeds, in the -nates. There has been great rivalry nificent native costumes of Magyar Meg- asepwa.ezte31/0e oceanfromhe•gtho je would form ,a bridge between France and surface damp. possible. !minted Only just to make the, ' No Career for Him. landowner, -put ' forward a claim to --13e in. P the young -nobles to take part in this cayel cade, and among others M. Karsaf; a 06.1 anlimg13*-. NEnegrtiahnSdeaanblY tgyhatie<fee,data wmairvrwoered tbaokfeoni matt Water the bed li hta Nice Little - Boy—"I wish you -would reaching -six times around the world. ttleomde men nsiddae - , g y every night at teach me to black boots." ' eluded in the list. - M. Karsaf, who is a Jew, War is not only an unnecessary scourge, . Of children on thegrassied lea, never ,comes alone ; Sicknesse ruin, A' Considerate Husband. - ' 1113i-shiciveke 'detbeiktr every -.'" - ' "Inot satisfied with my aimless exis- barge“ at this, for which he held Aitel, sitneetunlesa it-siMuldzsin.. If _else .eoat' - Ileotblack—"Wat fur ?” ,,......„,_ , - „ .- drop is- --Dre, -, am was, however, excluded. _ Taking great Um - but is 'Mere itikirioutt than all others; for it Of daisy blooms and humming beets Of shadowed mounds bedewed with tears Old memories. at-eatherdhed— and Wateringyouen gentleman, and - a . Meeting took , place this responsible, he ,sent his seconds., to this . .A." great aniount of money is necessary in faminealways follow in its -path. . and in two cOses. Husband -I never rebuke my wife except And through the gathered myeteries, That hang like veilingmists of seas. You bring us where the bound'ry nears . _-_-_eseimattrh. were* needing eo iced as -,.- ki...r. In *Ai le nee At- ' irte and I wish to b - d 'a prominent member of the Diet; Priiiiiily - 4(t144*--„,--..07,-,;4hould ,-- -.- ;_i.___ 18: fel* :-. `1-,Seet.;': -Kin You lick one boy twice as order to kill in proper manner, toe& h Friend—What are they ? _ , • ,.... , 'ant moe iiglst )411, i: I .,f 1- . seeI,hoots e f k i , Or 14* •-users*. wid one hand, hold y'r kit in other abong th th'hau-.4,ep. off two other boys wid n--:- . ed, his adversaryhalittlet **mg_ him in - morning. IL -Kama -was Seriously wound- . — - _ • - - - __,— - and multiplyingtaxes ofaji-nationearinever slain costs Octet ," In the first place, I am rude to her But only touch the minor keys -- Old memokies. _....h..h-.-„--.--- MARY /0.4.-1itatisinet e a nd nowI wijI8 you_zAd. 4*. iii,,4e.-''.-, . , , _ . .,. _ '-- the doctors- present on the ground, and tts- the benefit. tHgavarits.ttence attended to by sufficient to pay for :boteliery Of "Inman when she reproaches me." ;t7,000- The ino'r- 5mg are you rade to her ?" The world in which our dead appears, e• -e- eoearefully,, -,,i,.4;,,,4-- - 7.:.: ..tP....4.- treopi. Every year Eurepetspehttetenoeh ,_-.:_ " And under what other circumstances - --,-- -,,,--.---coming.. - :--,--- C.. - -,,,,a. r-, ve ter go home en grew ut shedding- ' - .- - - --- -' - - "Well, when she doesn't reproach me." "Srfi -,- na won't do far a bootblack, seen as possible removed -W,,-.7iitighboOriog ' - than a bil 'on two drtd-'•iiiilh' - - ' - able in humen nature if weDA/m:1 our at We should miss a great deal that is vain Presidents without policy would be po- tention exclusively to importwpersonsgea — honse, but eolietele4ittetteined akin re.. . _ ,, , h ,s _ ,. . . .,. mi._ sloilers -----_... , ----- - - . ooyory. - - - — - ; - - . - ----: _ . - tatoes without salts --tilamerton. - •:._fl. - ' - -,„ • 44 ell) IMwhm Te farmers tention whysPthe in Canad fe sows is c generalj ly fbseorl observed l ti afconurdl Int geld al tire that have in to the ve tices car to under- poorlydeed pi we simple or intelliger necessitym, time.oreT ext Th byandato why the actio variably the oper case to gi than for rule in land, an Ireland ; so freque bacon cur take open They ma' sows will as those s who have say that much be less dis or worm their ex quiresgr- ed sows larger am during th flesh see ing the e quires do- wupellfokrnoth says that tective aid salt in cur an unspa mends the packers. with plent in bone. '0—, L./ good prop from such impressed farmers, especially as much 1 °of hpoogilistthWa seems emps torese Whites, a nicunreers. mont 240 pound- shouldnot should be earliest mo September, wanted is I meet the re and export. the packers dressing, a quick, u that it wi sell his sw them dres to feed awir alive. Th against fat er must pr quires, se t housing, th to be sold should beco winter dairy he finds gret that are alw time of year tity that he ing distric order he v and can on ing long dist tice of killin way to the killing yol ing pigs c the essentia female, and male. They) bodies snial in the ab' be likened unripe number of sacs of vas These are t stages of de the diagram ing her perio illustration In the spa conditions t. tl and point dii of the operab tion, is that paratively en ing food for operation. I to six weeks for the mar 1310,i HtlathveS tohfeaatg men, one holt the hind ones in the flank hip bone; for space may present shoul a hand space ed spaying or cision from beh backasf the pig its right side before backvra and only th fat. With the you feel the bi ward and ups! of the pelvis will be found bladder and sta up to the openi ovary, and it color, being s being pearly w dull lead colo scribed above - bunch of unri .elaetic to the tA -the opening sire easily cut o -the knife. So_ -1-,eefer cutting, je hover 1 • di