Loading...
The East Huron Gazette, 1892-06-30, Page 7• little loielmheett t weather precealle m, has delayed the Le planting of pota- Erie etennties there rottiag of potato 1 more Elmitered re - Vale fr other :RJ,I14444--; , , awth0.-.Piik ',Tannery -a, I88_6,-- kee was - A .e..enee, eenimanit �f Ceptaitie etreniaonslyapplied himaelf as his-prefession - _ . MENNTIO ilikelleb of the Pr*, te at Wales's ifeir--- Theinderet under the for lite, had been the chief thought that hadle, - . '11 4". Mis Wein "the Navy. StephensonontheMediteta,"nelteaaLdinehiirbaell filled his horizon. - Though he Ms 'since then A Me aa that.ship essureeleseveral naval friends that he has no - Loved for its _Freedom. . - - --" Met of Taking- a Vaeatioii That is George III was born at Norfolk- Rouse, was detained -Vance-in, onths 'in 3. James's Square, in 1738; Prince George- dock at Malta for repairs, he einea.temporar- intention whateverofsevering his connea- if Wales first saw the light within ahnoat a ilyetransferieton -the 2rid rune to 11. AL S. tion with the service, his love for which is To a civilized Man there is only one tone's throw oathe same place, at elarl- Dre,adnought, under Captain (nay...Rear-Ad- as:sincere and intense as ever, yet other du- pleasure which is greater than his first night horough Homo ' eeAs a boy -lee present- infra') Bedford, witlithe Hon. Mauricek tiela will oove inetutably .dernand a large in camp, and that is his first night outof it, , 1 a mark loontr t Bourke as her commoider. CaptainStepait; share of his time and attention. At present when he has a bath and a -gocid -he& withe- id in nearly ev son seeceedediOgeatakBedford ineeininand- all eyes are directed toward him, and cute- fresh sheets. This is enough to -estatliiiii sppears to be about anaie,J-who was hisesenior by Snit enteen to his "'der brothe the late De' of Clar- ' - e as . of the DreadilolightNn thel7thteAugnettt osity, is excited as to what he Noll do, and the fact that it is only by contrasts that i many places tire - ---inonths. In appearance the one w pale, 1886, and Prince George receieed his ale; Whom he will marry. It is probhtle, how- the salient points of things a.re developed. Nest leaf, but the pensive, retiring, but with a singular grace tenants, 25th August,•- 1886. _ e e . ' _ t the exigencies of his position come to be ever, that like his brother he will through and a furnace to keep the house at a proper If a man has a good home and a good bed, pointment anone of that sin& regular limn :red in gave promise of manner and deportment that never after- known by the people of these islands at large happy. re. While in some wards forsook him; the other was ruddy of The Duke of Edinburgh was now Admiral temperature at all -times, he ought to be ies apple blossoms countenance, full ot brightness and brusque Commander -in -Chief in the Mediterranean; only gradually and slowly. But judging Add to that a good cook and a ; to show, the more vivacity. The features of the elder were and Prince George was next appointed to from the impression which he has - made happy family, and he should desire to stay rted the bloom as fireln cut, in close resemblance to those oi his flagship, theAlexandra, 20th April, 1888. upon all who have had intercourse with him, in that place and enjoy it. Even if he wants but few exceptions his farther at the same early age. Prince the present Sul what that appreciation will ultimately be there can be no manner of doubt at all. equally comfortable and easy of access; but a, change and a rest, he could find places With the Duke he went on ,a.state visit to hhis staple of our George, on the other hand, bore a striking during the three years that heservedon the In every single duty that has been hither- there are men whO get up from the break - tan at-Cenetaetinople ; and avorable. It was likeness to the Princess of Wales's sister, Mediterranean station he visited for a to entrusted to him he has acquitted him- fast table and say to_ their wives: "Now, 1 mwithstanding the the Princess Dtgmar, the present Empress second or third time his uncle, the King of self with ability, and discharged it zealous- can't stand this sort of thing any longer," ie heavy rains pre- of Russia, not only in the general form and the Hellenes, at Athens, renewed his ac- ly and to the satisfaction of all concerned spell is on him. He goes off upstairs and and the good little woman. knows that the Dm may have wash- , and that imper- cast of countenance, but also in detail of quaintance with the late Khedive Tewfik at whether superiors or subordinates. .Beyond gets out a trunk, and thea from the depths feature and expression. Cairo, besides cruising at various times off the regulation attendance at public. func- ult. Pears where the coast of Asia Minor, Syria, and the tions, the opening of buildings, daying of of a far-off closet he hauls down some dis- 7or the first eighteen years of his life be reputable old clothes and lugs out a gen and >each es along the was the inseparable companion of his broth- islands of the Aegean. The Mediterranean foimdation stones, and making short ke Ontario coun- er ; and probably there have rarely, if squadron is usually considered the best speeches at charity dinners, his part for A, 10t of rods and fly cases and ammunition less in ju red by ad cherries are ever, been two brothers that were more at- school far the training of-youngofficers, in- the next few years will be chiefly. to "stand and lays them tenderly in the bottom of the trunk. He gets " a shocking bad hat" and tached to eaeh other than these two. Each asmuch as there are rdways a large-. -ember by," to observe, to study attentively from a pipe which madam will not allow in the in that SL every point of view, all questions relating settled part of the house and strange cases eir enemy, the seemed to find in theother the complement of of first-rate men of war o . his own individual characteristics. There on any other, replete With' the very latest than to the government and prosperity of these made of canvas which carry the chars titles report a pro but in some of the is no doubt that the quick liveliness of improvements in gunnery and torpedoes. realms, and the social well-being of their and fetiches of the sportsman. These he is the yield is not Prince George acted as a constant and wel- lace bedcover and then carefully lays Since, too, the ships are constantly exercis- eopies, in order that he may thereby fit places in the trunk. He then overhauls his of last year. In rest in orcharding come stimulus both in work and play hours ing in company under the admiral's eye, and Eimself to discharge hereafter the office if g. From various to the more lymphatic temperament of his liable to -meet in friendly rivalry from time head of the British Commonwealth. As he in the pillow -shams if Madam is not looking. " kit," He sticks "fly hooks" up in rows ding win ter injury brother. While that brother's quiet staid- to time some of the model squadrons of the will naturally be brought into direct per - en the remarks of ness often served as a counterpoise to the French and Italian navies, the natural con- sonal contact with all the leading . men of He puts tallow -covered cartridges on the ful. Strawberries younger's impulsive decisiveness. Were sequence is that all are kept in the very each party in the State he will have Fugue . eiency. opportunities for so qualifying himself. a heavy pair of very greasy and "heaving' on a. e general condi- it was Prince George whose pony had to they following the hounds together as boys, His acqiiaintance with all portions of the dirty cowhide shoes on his wife's most highest state of drill discipline and effi- e tory. Rasp ben, take the fence or hedge the first, and give At the end of three years of very success- is the only portion of the Queen's territories British Empire is already very wide.the midst of this in walks the lady of the Indha choice piece of upholstered furniture. In ined more injury Prince Eddy the lead ; were they bathing i ful service in the Mediterranean, which had e Cuthbert suffer- together in the sea, it was Prince George been full of much instructive -dieerpliiie for that he has not yet -seen. His experience house, the partner of his joys and sorrows. tether small who was the first to leap off the ship or him, Prince George returned to England, of mena,nd of human character, both ashore In this case the joys and sorrows do not hinter well. The i yatch's side into the water, and not till he and and volunteered for another course'Orgeir7 and hehas Used it well. afleatehas . been. -already very varied, awful those nasty old .• , . Madam says: "Now, jack -I think it is for you to put thing! whole encourag- was swimming around and encouraging his nery training on board H. M. S. ExCellent The undoubted brain power that he pos- on my bed -you have no consideration, etc. r brother to follow him did the elder twee the at Portsmouth.' ' Having undergone thai, he sesses is inherited perhaps from the •Prince etc.," and poor Jack transfers them all to einevitable plunge. In many ways the elder was appointed liit February, 1889, nothe Consereas..well as from the Queen of Den- the floor, while off flounces the lady to tell constantly leant upon the younger brother. Northumberland, Captain Darwin, the-flaeg4 of active habits of mind and body, punctual rvetion, chilled noluraging. In and the younger reciprocated the confidence ship of the Channel Squadron under. the mark- -He is known to be a great reader, - room thoroughly, as Mr. , B—hast been the maid that she must " go through that eports regarding not uncommon. with warm-hearted manliness and devotion. command of Vice -Admiral Baird. He. took , in the eliseharge - of the smallest appoint- pahking his nasty, old traps end has nearly The brothers entered the Navy together pt only a few lo- an active part in the naval manoeuvres that ments, warm and constant in his friend- ruined everything." - as cadets, on the 5th ofJune, 1877. Thereg. teens appear to summer, and was placed in charge of one of an usual. The the finest of the torpedo boats. ' 'ships, endowed with a large share of practi- Jack is ready and is driven off to the t. ; the average and thirteen and a half years on the other. must enter is twelve years on the one side, ulation limit of age within which boys however, fruit per cent. Just and was in danger of drifting on to a lee -like his late brother singularly free from any trace of self-esteem or conceit, most con - cal common-sense, simple in his tastes, and and is rolled away, happy in the knowledge station, where he bids Madam " good-bye " that in a few days he will be sleeping on a ter and spring Prince Eddy was within three days of the It happened that another of these craft, disabled her screw off the coast of Ireland, r ore 1Beasonable probably the youngest cadet that ever join- was a stiff gale blowing. Prince George was yet careful and frugal on his own account, siderate for the feelings of others, willing to learn from all, generous and openhanded by mosquitoes and smoke, with tough, soapy bread and black coffee for food. bush -heap -with rude men and surrounded cellent supplies passed the minimum by two days. Hewes maximum, and Prince George had only shore. The sea was running high, and there g to pick U. ed theBritannia. The late Professer Drew, sent to her assistance. The taskwas a nest for hi's private allovvance has up to now been Madam explains to a lady friend that of King's College, London (whose experience difficult one, owing to the delicate nature of moderate and never large. His fellow coun- "Mr. B. is such a curious man -he goes off of boys and young men was perhaps as large the construction of such boats. He showed, trymen may patiently await and watch, the up there and lives like a wild beast -I do e is little that clition of farm many teacher's), had previously seperin- however, such skill, judgment and nerve in .further development of such a character not understand it." ity and supply tended the mathematical instruction of the approaching, securing with wire hawser 'with strong faith and with large hope. To develop your real sportsman the en- . • hile lee greater brothers, and often expressed himself as after several hours' effort, and ultimately : ...1 III vironment must be favorable at very early onsider that the reu.ch struck by Prince George's ability and towing the disabled craft into safety, as won ' ' ' ANN OYANOES OF TRAVEL. age. If he is favorably situated he 'labia, a strong v intelligence, and regretted that he would him high encomiums of praise to the Admir- becomes possessed of an unbounded enthus- m laboreee aeng - - not be able to prosecute his mathematical alty from Captain Fitzgerald and othermenihr Having a squalling baby in the same car. iasm and more tools of the sporting craft caused by the studies at either of the Universities, and officers who witnessed his conduct- on that Having the ferry -boat pushing out just as than has a dentist in his. A great many nd the North- carry them beyond the standard exacted occasion. Theachievement was perhaps all you get insight. people are now growing up whose tendencies ers' sons to the by naval requirements. The two year's life the more noteworthy as Prince George (like are an illegitimate cross between an English Having a beastly drunken individual hi battue and an American suminer hotel - en by "larm spent on board the training ship under the Nelson and many another distinguished the seat in front of you. e old country, command of Captain (now Vice -Admiral) naval officer) suffers terribly from sea -sick- they are a sort of "arrested development" quality so far Fairfax at Dartmouth,admirably suited the ness ; and the behavior of a torpedo boat in Having to swallow dinner in five minutes between true hunters and fishermen and are concerned. or have your, train go without you. people who are not financially able to buy a two Princes, and conduced in every way rough weather is not the most conducive to boys from the Having to pay ten cents for the morning country place. All such are spurious and ing tried in to their healthy development in mind and quietness of nerve or for comfortably collect - body. While there Prince George won ing the thoughts, -. , ... - paper that at home costs you two. not to be considered seriously. The genuine iety paid them lover of the woods did not gather his of wages here- As ne, had new unmistakablytgiven;evit Having some one get hit° the sleeping•car th • merles- of how to be happy from " shoot - more than one prize for boat -sailing, and o -ant paid per pulled in more than one victorious crew of elence of exceptional capability as lieutenant, berth above you just after you have retired. • ing on his estate," or proceeding .against cadets. n, of say seven the Admiralty ordered him, oee 6th May, - Having the brakeman bawl out the tigers with the entire organized population O with board, On the 15th July, 1879, the Bacchante 1890, to commission the Thrush,. a large stations and not be able to distinguish a of an eastern principality, or from dilettau- increase of 28 was commissioned by Captain (now Rear- gunboat of 805 tons burthen and 1,200 horse- word he says. te literature on how to do the thing so that Admiral) Lord Charles Scott. In her the power, at Chatham for service on the North us year. The two Princes made their well-known three American and West Indian stations. Such Having your washerwoman fail to send "it will stand wash." nges from $20 you your clothes in time to leave as ex- He first passed his boyhood in a country 60, or 59 cents years' voyage about the globe. They were independent commands are usually given to pected. . where the squirrels were 'pretty thick and both rated as midshipmen on the elder senior lieutenants only -bet It was a dist/lin- es per day of nts with board . Prince's sixteenth birthday, the 8th Janu- tion which Prince George had well earned.Having the conductor inform you just the trout would bite and the old gentlemen after you have started that you are on the were never ceasing in telling how they h these rates ary, 1880. For the greater portion of the He had- further- the ticklish - task assigned wrong train. killed "the biggest buck I ever sot my eyes ective figures bime the Bacchante was attached to the to him of towing a torpedo boat astern onto." = He then tried the southern arms of Having the hotel waiters hinting at every trainingsquadron under the command of Ad- across the Atlantic to Bermuda. This, too, the big lakes until they became infested meal that they expect you to give them miral, the Earl of Clanwilliain, which con- he successfully accomplished. His profes- with women and summer hotels. Then he something. . 3isted besides of the Inconstant, the Tour- sienal duties -took himetoevariens pleoesain tried Muskoka but Muskoka got filled up maline, the Cleopatra and Carysfort. The the Canadian 'Donde/on and eirdeeneor two Having somebody in front keeping the car with ' persons who wore two peaks on their two Princes under these auspices saw for on the United- Statei seabitaltdt 't ' window up when the dust and cinders are the first time the West Indies, South Amer- flyingin. '. - hats and ate their dinner on a table, and g to the trade In the following antumn he was deputed the guides became servants instead of ica, the Cape, Australia, Fiji, Japan, China, . by the Queen as:her represe*tive to open - Having your baggage go astray just when woodsmen. Then he discovered Quebec, . . Singapore and Ceylon. The Bacchante the Industrial Exhibition afffainaica. This you wanted your best clothes to make a good the Northwest and the Rocky Mountains, ves with but- was then ordered through the Suez Canal waS his third visit to the West Indies and impression. • • and away ha the heart of their wilderness into the Mediterranean, and a -considerable o spent over period of time was shis presence awakened among the Having a street car poking along at a You will find his "bark -lean-to" where the pent by the Princes in s, while New tants of every degree eveneneyerOan the usual fervent demonstrations -of lOyalty to utes to catch the train. _unerar gait when you have only ten min. timber grows the highest over the little Egypt, the Holy Land and Greece during 00 for 2,827. spring, and where the "dude has ceased the spring of 1882. . the Crown, and attachment tett the United Having to wait in the corridor until the from troubling and the cigarette's at reit." in Stockton, in the effi- After returning to England about the be- Kingdom. Except oe stateeliCasions, auch elevator goes two floors above you and comes This sportsman has got a moral mortgage a cure for ginning of August, Prince George went in the as this visit to Jamaica, Prinee 'George al- down again.' on a little pond somewhere away off up autumn along w th his elder brother, under ways deprecated the necessity of being re- somewhere and he won't tell you where it the care of his naval instructor Mr. Lawless, Having the Pulhnan conductor wake you is hecause ie dont want you to find out. , - t writes that and the present French master at Eton, M. ceived with royal honors. up and ask for a ticket just ifter you have y It was with nu desire taavoid performing fallen into a sound snooze. eu may not -recognize this man of the good opprm- Hum- -to Switzerland. They resided at any real portion of his duty thathe request- . .wooda in Toronto or Montreal because he or the in. Lausanne for six months until on the 1st of Having the car porter, as you are about has -trained himself tu he as much like the ed the- admiral in command of the station, May, 1883, Princ3 George was_ appointed to leave. after he has brushed the dust off reatof humanity as possible in order that Sir George Watson, that he might receive tree, grown midshipman to the Canada,. which was then ask" if you have notforgotten something." he may make& little money, so that he can hie sanction to he treated simply as an or- ' commissioned by captain (now Reareltd- eter of four dinerynaval officer. As soon as this wish Having forty Jehus poke then.. whip under go htniting once or twice a year and be .his easoued will mire') Durrant taw service on the North be - ' 11 k h • — . your nose when weetareaveateyoute destioe veveamatoneleeelt.ioe a space.. When the American and West Indian. station, where •cana, eteenera y nown e _wee emeniesieto , e me, , - Itaehbak.heeerld- tbe pieces to which h teL -aticineeseira wanting- to take -you- to your buds open and the grass shoots, and the ote recently re. she joined the s ua , , andenath-erno -WA* evas dispatched more naturally, sualight thaws out his mind, he will mani- ,eeeeetworrarlffte- _ &mid, Commerell. Be- - - ' fest uneasiness and become unsettled. You. three cente and thus to obtain by direct personal inter- Having packages -of lozengers and copies sides visiting man- other /dines -in. the - t his know. of"-ThebR d D f theWild W st p e can begin to detect him then. He .won't course a probably truer and more adequate Dominion and Nord; America, he ascended e eine!' e 1 • ' ' care about the frost and the peach crop, or $3. knotvledee of their real condition than if thrown into your lap every five minutes on the St. Lawrence in her, by Quebec, as far the train. the candidates,- or the anarchists, but will they h d -b to him in constant use oxen of as Montreal. Lord Lorne was at that time ey a een exhibited . be morbid and go on ieeoherently about of another Governor-General of Canada, and Princess gala attire. . Haviag a room at a mountain hotel along brown-hackels, No. 8 shot, and improved not kaow Louise was with him at Ottawa. The Thrush was now required on the side the bowling alley and being kept Greener models, and other profitless sub - must be the During the ensuing winter the Canada West Coast of Africa, and her place was to awake by the thunderlike rumbling of the forefathers be take —..mmeamoosseen-, jects Late in the season he gets down his cruised among the West Indian Islands and n on the North American station by balls. - . visited Demerara and British Guiana. a ship of greater power .arid tonnage.. She Shortly after this Prince George became was therefore ordered home td 'Englafid. Disciples of Oahe '-'h' . double-barrel and his rifle and begins to oil the various them up. He takes out his pea -jacket and 11,000,000, the senior midshipman in the service, and On arriving there Prince George was pro- A gentleman who was seated in the lobby his oil -fanned moccasins and his jaeoers. rennet wages was waiting till his age allowed him to pre- moted to the rank of cornmandeoon the 24th of a hotel at Philadelphia the - other day He is constantly writing letters to "Sam fiscal year sent himself for his examination as sub- August, 1891. He was then in his twenty- chatting with -an official from the coroner's Bushcraft, Mountain Pine, •Assinaboia, N. f the prod- lieutenant. This he did on the earliest day seventh yeareandttieflftesietheetthis naval office said: "1 saw an article in a leading W. T., or to "Pierre Antoine, Temiscamh- was $150,- possible, namely his --nineteenth birthday, service. . English weekly the other day which should ingue," and receiving replies in brown or yel- 3d June, 1884, when he obtained a first class There are, among living naval officers, be of interest to you and so I jotted down low envelopes si gne d with his (x ) mark. Why led in the in seamanship. On coming home he at once many who when promoted to be command- some of its figures, which are as grewsome he becomes so interested in these half savage joined, as all sub -lieutenants have to do, the ers were younger in years and had less length as any statistics I ever came across. The ar- men in the waste places only he can under - e has just ad. It con- Naval' College at Greenwich, for further in- of service than Prince George. Sir Thomas tiele was headed. 'A murderer's paradise,' stand. This curious person does not want to was about structiomand subsequently H. M. S. Excel. Symonds • was a commander before- he. was and had been written by a man who for two go with Madam to Cacouna or down by the he longest lent at Portsmouth. Naturally he went twenty-five, Sir Alexander Milne -when he years had made a study of the murder sta- sea, begs off. and goes up to conspire with the North- through the course exactly like- anybody was twenty-four. Sir Geoffryllottibth-Wheu tistics of the United States. his friend, Dr. Swellkill, who is a hunter else. Every sub -lieutenant has to pass five he was twenty-five, Admiral Hoam When "According to him there were 4,290 mur-. . and old comrade. They go into the doctor's eighth in th examinations, one each in seamanship, in he was twenty-three. The Duke ofeEditi- ders commifted in the United States during private room and lock the door. Madam, navigation, in torpedo, in gunnery, and in burgh became an admiral when- he was 1899 and 6,906 thing 1891, a, substantial the doctor, becomes concerned and goes pilotage. - In four of. these Prince George thirty-four. Re was neVora,sulAientenant increase of 1,616. He had divided the over to see her friend, the wife of the first t Baysachieved the unusual distinction of obtain- at all, but was promote:4 at once from mid- murders committed during the two years man, and says: "Your husband has been 1 the gilds ing a first class, and thus won his promotion shipmares. rank to. that of lihutement. elle under various heads. Quarrels, he said, with the doctor a great deal of late, and I hay aa so, to lieutenant' ' s rank, 8th October, 1885, also skipped -over the rank CfeeeMnniander were responsible for 2,184 murders in 1890 a.m afraid that he will entice him away this From hiseerlieat days at seahehas ever altogether, and went roa1ieijten. and 2,820 in 1891, and by quarrels he did summer or fall, and I did so want him t� go ay ur tuf. been a thoroughly efficient and also a mesa ant twpost-captain-befote he ivitelattieetY- not mean drunken brawls. Murders which with me to Old Orchard Beach. , popular officer, not only with his comrades- two. It is believed that elire-Ditkenosgea70- . took place while the -murderer was under “ Well, you know rhave no influence the best. the gine-room or the ward -room, buthalso gretsethe-rapiditY of'hie-ea. rlyeatiliiiinceene' • the influence of liquor numbered 486 in. 1890 with Mr. B. He insists on going off to these , - with allthe men over whom he has had cepa. the service; though-- theeetwha knore. t and 877_ in 1891, and it was pointed out strange places -he always has and I sigh to rried, but mand. As a midshipman he was attgayt, an eieellent officer he -liasa-ilhd.W*hi., that the so-called prohibition cities furnish- think that he probably always will," con - keen to do all in his power to render the and how capable an organizer a--tctisi ed more murders in proportion to their doles the little woman. and -steel 'boat's crew or the gun entrusted to his must acknowledge that he has ,OttiVed hiM- populations than did the non -prohibition "I am sure, then, that I can do nothing t. dicks charge the smartest and best-handred in the ielf worthy of the holsorameenferee4 lip" on places. Murders committed by unknown with the debtor -he, too, will go -it is so ship,. as a lieutenant- he was always alive hini.'.- • - - - - ,__ ' -- ...., -- , persons for unknown reasons footed up unfortunate to have_ such tastes.' • fur boy. toall the -individual charactersof the men Afterlife returnthhP_PgituttteKtitiee.Geiterge -464 and 859. The infanticide eases . From that time on the doctor's health ers want of his division. Those who Flawed thein- went in the auttunner1891 to itayeetith the- of the two years - numbered- 167 and begins to fail. A brother physician recome selves neat,stead,- smut and eager to feee Jaule-e of Clare* -0 PiikniA-Auifit3-41fe two 208 and the persons killed while resistinL mends the "wended* -dm' n 18 86-1111. r trooth if f- - fil their dutiesand get on, hewatevet. ready hrothereivereetienhridretrappyinhtlie mu- arrest 149 and mituhate -to De compelled to leave his pa - 1 boys git y• word a IrteLogr.a.r.....+14.----.2- ........1_-1:14,2.2•mixsinfra- 1aftuelafiertgilreet. • 1 . 182., T - -e*-1-auna *111e . to encommee , -e. - -ffel-ping baud. Because he knows his work theiaolden days. - t ;8 , 8,1F8. _ a re ,,was years. - In 1890 there were 102 executions ereatatneerarespectively during the two gents, yet his health demands it, and -one e_ finemorningthe man and his friend, the thoroughlywell,andishimselfpreeticallyable there that he ccin0aotedthe:tYPISe'd fever and the number last year went up to 123." doctor, are missed from the haunts of men. to do each thing he requireeof thennhis men from the effects ofwhish he ; hes'ronly * sEllr In a few days the trim, well groomed -city have thorough coafidence in.him, well aware cently recovered. The -Mieht beet*. Was then are no longer recognizable. They sit -that 'viten need belie nneves'spares himself ; hardly convalesdent when thentliertviainitz Benefit of a Doubt. in the forward end of the canoes with a end thwi when he calls tipon them to put- tacked by the- fatal pixeumehliete avinakehe Magistrate -"Has prisoner been convict- stump beard and a bull -deg pipe, dressed, - . forth all:their powers -they alwaYs eheerfedh iiiketiniVefl. Ihtflinteadi -be_imaginedhow edbeforer Constable -"No, your honour." in dirty, greaay clothes, while behind the - . lY respond in a way that Britisht bluetacke the inWen lossoithis only-legother fell -upon Mgistrate4"Prisonett, 1 -shalt give you the . • .. . ... „. _. _• .• pans, blankets, packs, and guns sits is :alone cage do. More than one of hie captains' linatinier these. eXrcumetauhee- with over- -benefit of the doubt.-- Prisoner (notorious strange, dark-skinned, heetle4areneed h a.ilI hovaa remarkedthattheyneyerfeltteo secure, wheliiing force. ' Besides-Mhe blow to his thief)-"Thanleee, air." Magistrate -“Ob, breed, with scraggy hair and a briatli defraltivh -Prim* chvgd,:ix ,eoTehth. Ve-rietinWithkeieeonneetratnighte affectioniehis Whole future prospects were- r/4 not going to let Yoneff: If you haven't beard. The canoes cleave the miner y1.40 officer of the completely -changed in a, moment. -Up to leen Oilevicted before, you- ought to have waters while the yellow reflections - - - - • - ' 41rittfini:elliavateareeroAndedide healed eenh ,Threeinouthee hard 'shone." ' with the Vandyek shadows of the r- . . •-• -. S. water in hised, the o minute eneeed isa strangeaa Enitesnnal 15 as 00 ise of - . :.•,, hanging forest in the lake. They are If they are not hers then they are on littk liti4.013i happy. -scraggy ponies herding other scraggy ponies 0 nhsatonytbedeot a dry -stream.-- As tholigh ChOthe maps of the world von will nualk The bravesthattle that ever wee fouhL Shall Inell you where and `*vheri: _ bearing packs and all following an uncouth urging his- own horse ever logs andoup and piratical man who is just ahead 'Twastfought bythe niothersotinener te notesatisfied With travelingby night and by . , , e day for a week away from their cosy homes Nay, not vrith cannon. or battle skik ' in town they are now making desperate With sword, or nobler pen; -- . haste to go up a bleak mountain range as Nay, not with eloquent word or thopieht, Frommouths of wonderful men. though in search of the jumping off place of But deep in a welled -up woman'o, heart, the -world. A woman that would not yield, . It would be interesting to understand But brat ely,. silently bore her part, this man so prone to these lapses of savagery. Lo! there is that battlefield! bWe ceo mr readily i lyawfullycotrip r eh drunke n d oefeorwhd No marshalling troop, no bilionac" song ; No banner to gleam and wave; time and calls it a nervous dis- oay as t tt!tm eas But, oh I these battles they last to long - From bitbyhood to the grave. Yet, faithful still as a bridge of stars, ease and gives it a scientific' name which man leaves his native city in the heights of hen silent, unseen, goes down. . She fights in her walled -up town, clears - it of mystery. We know.,why the Fights on and on, in the endless wars. the 'business and social sea.scn and deports T 0 ye with banners and battle shot, himself to the West Indies or Florida, -his And soldiers to shout and praise, bronchial tubes are on strike. We of course spie but he goes to cultivate his mind and to be I tell you the kingliest victories fought, lazy and dissolute, but here is this man Oh, Are fought in these silent w' see that another takes himself off to Europe whose business and social life called for his Gspotless „comae ee a world of shame ! With attendance, whose health is offensively th ne;.2 and silent scorn, you cement rugged, and he does this strange thing. tie o back ee, Gongliest warrior bod as white as rri.0 kirn. JOAQITIN MILL ER. eats the worst imaginable food, all cooked in 'a :disgusting fashion, he sleeps in a sort of kennel like a farmer's dog -lying on through and around him. He freezes nearly Mow Same of America's Many Wealthy brush and with the smoke blowing all Owners Live. ' Jim Whitlatch, the discoverer of the to perishing every morning -he goes to bed wet to the hide,and paddles up stiff currents or _toils under a sixty -pound pack all day, Whitlatch-Union mine, near Helms, led a and his only reason seems to be a desire to question is now owned in England, and has typical western miner's life. The mineih slay. produced 820,000,000 in gold. After Jim Whitlatch had sold the property for $1,500,- You doubtless all know one of this sort of 000, he went to New York to "make as men -ask him why? In all probability he much money as Vanderbilt." He was a will fold himself in his robe of superiority rare treat to Wall street, which fattened on and simply pity your varnished ignorance him, and in one year let him go with only and will not deign to reply. He will consider the clothes on his back. He returned to you hopeless, weak -lacking character and does it go with him when the spell is on him and find out. If you do not like it you will Montana, began "prospecting " again, and sentiment-bnt if you would know why he discovered a mine for which he got $250,- 000. - He went to Chicago to rival -Mr. Potter at least know why. -F. Dying Sayings of Notable People. • Palmer in wealth, and returned just as he did from New York Addison -See how a Christian can die. --5" flat strapped," as e Arria-L-My Portus, it is not peinfuL another fortune and went to San Francisco, he would have expressed it. He made still where he died a poor man. Another Lewis Dr. Hunter -If had strength to hold a and Clarke County mine -the Drum Lum- pen, I would write down how easy and pleas- mond-provides another such story. It was ant a thing it is to die. discovered by an 'Irish iinmikilairmesmatalr- Louis XIV. -Why weep ye? Didyouthink Thomas Cruse. Although he owned it, he , I should live forever? (Then,after a pause.) could not get a sack of flour on credit. He I thought dying had been harder. sold it to an English syndicate for $1,500,e - Byron --I must sleep now. 000. But he remains one of the wealthy Charles II. (of England)- Don't let poor men of Helena. . Nellie starve. (Nell Gwynne.) There is an ex -State Senator, in Beaver _ Charles IX. (of France) -Nurse, nurse 1 Head County, who owns a very rich mine, - what murder! what blood! Oh, I have done the ore yielding 8700 to the ton net. He is wrong! God pardon me ! Chesterfield -Give Day Rolles a chair. a California "forty-niner," who came as a prospector to Montana, and since discover - Columbus -Lord, into Thy hands I com- ing his mine has lived upon it in a peculiar mend my spirit. way. He has no faith in banks. He says! Lady Jane Grey and Tasso also used the bis rnoney is safest in the ground. When he same words. has spent what money he has he takes out a Cromwell -My desire is to make what wagon load of ore, ships it to Omaha, sells it haste I may to be gone. and lives on the return until he needs an. Dernouax (the philosopher) -You may go other wagon load. home; the show is over. There is a queer story concerning the Lord Elden -It matters not where I am Spotted Horse Mine, in Fergus County. It going, whether the weather be cold or hot. was found by r. A. McAdow, who sold it to -- Fontenelle-I suffer nothing, but feel a Governor Hauser and A. M. Holder for sort of difficulty in living longer. $500,000 three yew ago. They paid a large Franklin -A dying man can do nothing sum down in cash, and the other payments easy. were to come out of the ground. The ore George IV.-Wathy, what is this? It is was in pockets, each of which was easily death, my boy. They have deceived me. exhausted. Whatever was taken out went (said to his page, Sir Wathen Waller.) to alcAdow, who got about 8100,000. Then Goethe -More light. the purchasers abandoned it, on the advice Talma-The worst is, I cannot see. of experts, and Mr. McAdow took hold of Hadyn-God preserve the emperor! it. Ile found the vein, over which rails had Jefferson -I reign my spirit to God, my been laid for a mining car. He has taken daughter to my country. out 8500,000, and it is still a good mine. Knox -Now it is come. - Louis XVIII. -A king should die sten i ( then a poor seamstress, hired a hotcleand chil- One of these children of luck came to Helena with money, picked out a wife, who was ing. -----.- ___-__eneeeeQ0 Marie Antoinette -Farewell, my invited the town to the wedding. The amount dren forever. I go to your father. of champa gne that ilowedat that wedding was Charles Matthews -I am ready. fabulous, and it is said that the whole town Napoleon ILL. (to Dr. Conneau)-Were reeled to bed that night. -Harmer's Mag - you at Sedan? zinc. William Pitt -Oh, my country, how I love thee! A Woman's Smale. Pizarro-Jesu 1 For good or evil the power of a- woman's Rabelais -Let down the curtain; the farce is over. smile is very great. It is the outward and visible sign of a talent of pleasing which she • _ Schiller -Many things are owing has received to enable her to be an influence plain and clear to my understany' for good in the ordering and government of Sir Walter Scott (to his fa i 'hod bless you all! the world. Men are verymuch what women Socrates-Crito, we owe a cock/ ma- make them, and it is by rightly using their i talent of pleasing that women can make lapius! \ Lord Thurlow.-I'll be shot if I' -don t men what they ought to be. The man at the head of the house can mar the pleasing believe I'm dying! Wof the household, but he cannot make it; William III. (of England) -Can this last that must rest with the women, and it is long? (to his physician). Gen. Wolfe ---What! do they run al- her greatest privilege. It is one of the duties of women to beautify the world, and zeady ? Then I die happy. ---, Dust at Sea. especially their own homes and their own persons; to arrange the furniture and erne- eemea of their robins tastefully, and getter - The British ship Berean which recently' give a touch of seemliness to that made the voyage from Berean, aroundl the world with which they have to Cape Horn to England, encountered a re- shed joy, to radiate happiness, markable but not unusual phenomenon at . ight upon dark days, to be the sea, viz., a storm of dust. After crossing the equator she fell into bread of our destiny, the spirit e and harmony ---is not this the northeast trade winds'and when about 600 miles west of the Cape meet on de Verde islands, _ a. service? Here and there we the nearest land, "the Berean's sails and e who possesses the power of en- chanting all about her. Ifer presence lights rigging were thinly coated with a_ very fine up the house ; her approach is like a cheer - powdery dust of a dark yellow or saffron Jug warmth. She passes by, and we are color, scarcely discernible 071 or near the content ; she stays awhile, and we are happy. deck, but profuse on the highest parts of She is the aurora with a human face. the rigging," so that the sails appeared In a New Zealand cemetery on a grave. "banned. stone is to be found, with the name and age Fine dust falling on vessels in the Atlan- of the dead, the words, "She was so pleas - tic near the Cape de Verde archipelago has ant!" What a delightful character she often been reported, but it has so often been must have been to have an epitaph like of a reddish hue that it is known among that! It makes one think that a choir of sailors as "red fog," and has been generally nightingales is perched upon her grave, and supposed to come from South America. singing melodious chants to her memory. The observation on board the Bereanap- " She was so pleasant" that friends used pears to overthrow this conclusion, and to to come first to her in seasons of sorrow and determine the African origin both of the sickness for help and comfort. One sooth- Atlantic dust and the so-called "blood hog touch of her kindly hand worked won - rains" of Southern Europe. ders in the feverish child; a few words let ( Admiral Smyth many years ago reported, fall during his stay in Sicily, March 14, 1814, a from her lips in the ear of a sorrowing sister did much to raise the load of grief "blood rain," which fell "in large, muddy that was bowing its victim down in drops, and deposited a very minute sand of anguisle a yellow -red color" -quite similar to that Her husband would come home worn out now reported by the Berean. with the pressure of business, and feeling He then regarded it as "sirocco dust' from the African desert, "crowning the irritable with the world in general; hat' beautiful theory. of atmospheric &cola- when he entered the cosey sitting -room, and saw tion." Both on the Atlantic ocean and ; the blaze of the bright fire, aid, Europe these rains of dust have almost , met the smiling facenet sweet -minded variably fallen between January and A oman, he would sua; 1,g_-.4 in a moment 1;4 P :the soothing influences which were -a period of the year in which the Saha is most arid. la The Wrong Answer. pram 1 read about --balm of Gilead to his sinking spirits. T lough schoolboy fled in a rage from the lais methaem alnaCZY j the little oifil aunts of his companions to find solace in . of VtlIE cosa grief with his own largettt a, in the papers ?" asked little Johnny. haven of rest on her breast* rid' " Pm suie I dble't know," was the reply, many onhl Teo f see .rotiou MOW' ‘,--, '--r: ming." Tthh5 hat " eetteette hert "unless it is where the minerego in swim- women; aliening apantgollissdneet efilitiM3- ete "H. (11".:',:' ; a. :2.,-4-1-01- •,i, 17`,-/ - ,,,,::•. , _, . , , -.,1F:17.---,?,J1 ,,-,t,_ ,, , , , • ,,,,,,,. ABOUT MINES. An Overworked Intact. Deetor-Have you triedthe seashore llr;st Initalid-hYe, Itried it -onion ,but hard work. Dretaing alidOnntreeleing.isTerf Ileht.ef:°Wnite.- ll, you see tfie Alecto!. I had there "ledohttequite undeestand?" said I must take a toddy after each bath." 1;Yes, but. -suppose he did." -- "It keeps me in heti:in:4,41 the time" - male - effect 1 tive and the pow4f the fidelity with *hi& iiuty'flhned, and the spirit intiv hi& difieilltiel -areeixiate. and -trials are home, eadgieaVitige sad bys. are of o.