Ontario Community Newspapers

Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 26 Feb 1885, p. 6

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 ^^r tkenwnd •* Wb^ do yoa mMo. Biaar ' I BMn to MkU tidD0 I wheneTwr I flod ouV^l^i il)i«y Ma. I haU » OtauuoMi'B qa«is»^0|lier day, while be fooi^t an Iriaoniaii, and lip was grateful that he ha* been lediog me aU **** SoBMboAT hiS» m IS? r' ^ff^ the eoonmlfiSwe: AeaaufioeiqrtheaiuMxailiaief fan worth pcaeefviogt Bible a li^t toi would make. Aa will Btimber ftre. ThOj eaudii|abgi and; araapeeified. ^aah eeone ia Inritrappio* priate wine aeeompaaied. Though in ahoot tea*. IJbat, 20-eent par pound ?-'-yf'nf there is now no game, yet at tiUa jMid wtne of Cilde^le preeeribed. ^Ctypbl » ieeBert ae tiiw, witt (he sweet winea of the pr^bet Amoa, a modem Amoa woold like to sit. Correa* ponding bills of fare from BnakspearahaTa oeen franawd. This one from the Sorip- toree is nniqae. It ieae follows: SBBLnmuBiEa. yeong hyaonr* jihieh yoa have baea aeRiiig |^u|N "vaui jm| par«cidga irepraridei. me ia nothi|« IhI a pD|Ndar haindor niip. fMiii ^tfcese 1^4^ berry leavea eolored green widi oopperas and pot into a tea-eheet toaeqnire the right odor. Bat that's the kind I want. 1 oan MAk* money oat of it. The but I got didnt make the beat tea in the worid, bni it wae paralysia for rats. Too see 1 bofl it oatil theeopperaa all floate to the top in a tkiek green Mom. Thia Iieami^, and have handy as poison. If yoa ever tcmeh a rat'i tail or a eookroaeh'a heel with it, yon bag your game. Before I began the skim- ming preeess the death rate in my family was pretty heavy, and that's the reason I'm a widower. While yoa are measoricg oat the leavee 111 give yoa irh%i I learned from the heathen." And then he diasaitated " Whenever yoa hear a eostomer aafc tor green tea beoaose that's its natural oolor, yoa may set him down as an ardent oaiive who has placed too mnoh eoofidenoe ia some grocer acqaaiatanoe. Do yoa know that green or black tea oan be made ont of the same leaf Dried on eepper plates, the leaves torn greenish, and a little copperas and a drop of sometbiag akin to Paris green deepen the tinge. Dried in baskets, the leaves become dark, and the aoealled hlack teas are, generally speaking, therefore, the porest and best. Bat a son- trary notion has posBeased the Hoosier tea drinker's mind, and time was when three- fourths of the tea sold here was green, hot now more than half is blaok tea. The best grades sell at SI a poand,bot we don't ^et the ehoice la this ooantry, and even in Japan and China yottr bones woold soon be bleaching in the gutter if yon sboold offbr to sell saob pizen ' as that berry leaf hyson. Old Ghinese gave me a package of that ' He-No ' tea, soch as you sell at 40 eents a half pound. You know it says on the package that it is the kind the Chinese use, but the fellow said it wasn't, and that 'twaa called 'He-No' becaose the China- man he no it. Still, it's pretty good tea for Americans." â€" Indtanapolu NtwM. A CeaipUcatC4l Qacatlsii. At tine Leicestershire assizes, yesterday, a singular oafc of larceny was tried before lArd Jaetice Denman. A pensioner named Thomas Ashwell was charged with steal- ing a sovereign at Alestone. The prisoner borrowed a shilling from Edward Keogb, who handed him a coin in the eteeet, near a lighted window. Keogb afterward dis- covered that he had given 'a sovereign in mistake for a shilling. The prisoner asserted that it was a shilling, and told a policeman that a sovereign which he had changed was one which he got for his pen- sion. The policeman afterward saw the prisoner go to the back of a house. The polioeman followed, and secreted himself behind a wall. He heard the prisoner call a man, and say to him " The policeman has been to mo about that sovereign I did have it, and have spent half of it, but I'll be hanged if he has it back." The polioe- man then put bis head over the wall and said " So yoa did have it, did you I'm the policeman." A legal argument then took place as to whether th|is constituted larceny, it being submitted that what the prisoner did was to •• keep " and not to " take." The Judge said the principle involved was unprece- dented, uid he left three questions to the jury, which they answered in a manner whidi was taken to be a verdict of guilty. The Judge said the case was so important in the principle involved that he would himself take it to the court of appeal, and meantime the prisoner woold be iiberated in reoognizaoces of £100 to eome up for judgment when called upon after the legal qneetion bad been decided in the Court for Crown cases reaerved.â€" 5(. James' Qatetu. cloth of blne^ and pnt tbereon the dialieaMidthevooiiB and the bowls, witb the braed ia tbe beaketâ€" Nam. iv. T, and Levit. tUL 3L Salt, without preaerUis« how mneh, and all in a cnisa.â€" Ezra viL 9B, aad I. Kings xrii. U. Bright sbiaing of a candle givetb light.â€" Luke xL3 Tcill them who an bidden I have prepared my dinner. â€" Mett. •rxii- 4. They are strong of appetite.â€" Isaiah vii. 11. Ijet aa eat aad be merry.â€" Lnke zr. 33. The f east was made for laughter, wine makes merry.â€" E!cles. z. 19 Ye hear all kinds of mnaie.â€" Dan. ilL Qr aeo Give us thia day onr daily bread.â€" Hatt. vi. 11. SOXTFS. Poor ont tbe broth.â€" Judges vi. 29. Feed me with pottage.â€" Gen. zsxt. 30. Eat thia rcM.â€" Ezek. iit 1. Use a little wine for thy stoma43h'B sake.- Tim. â-¼.23. FISH. We remember the fish we did eatâ€" Num. xv. 6. They gave him a piece of broiled fish.â€" Luke zziv. 49. Bring ofF the fish which ye have now caught-' John xxi. 10. Every man at the beginning doth set forth good wine.â€" John ii. 10. ENTBEMETB. Hare.â€" Levit. xL 6. Chickens.â€" Matt. zzi. 37. Besides harts and fatted fowl.â€" I Kings iv. 33. Kidneys.â€" Deut. xxii. 14. The wine is red.â€" Psalms Izzv. 8. Olives.- Micah vi. 15^ Give me a little water, for I am thirsty.â€" Judges iv. 19. ROAST. All manner ef baked meats.- Gen. zi. 17.' Ye may eat of the roebuck.â€" Deut ziL 15. Ye shall rat of the wild goat and wild oz.â€" Deut. xiv. 14. Cause strong drink to be poured outâ€" Ham. zviii.7. VBGBTABI.S8. Take unto thee wheat, lentils, and milletâ€" Ezek. iv. 9. They brought parched com and beans.â€" IL Sam. XT. 39. After that the fall com in tbe ear.â€" Mark iv. building, and eztraoKdinaicy praofMatiiHie tmite ti£n to-day. A airong polioa fntoe iraa stMiaMA in and about tbe aliHMl and the gate* of ibi aobool eneloaare were kept ebiaed, ao that no one bat those living at the sdMol ooold obtain aeeesa to tbe obapeL Tha aostomaiy aarvioea took^ls«e, bat tbe appearanbe of the ehapel was like that of a •aatlain »»«ate of aie0»; The Moat Bev. Br. MBOarCby.'BtalKV of (Soyne. whioiiiapoe,of the m oa t import ant dioeeaoB in the south of Ireland, has issued a pastoral letter, in whiidi he dnioanoea •bo dynaoiite outragee in Londoa and alca- where. He invaighB against all seoret and oath bound societies, and says that their works are a disgrace and a ohrse to Ire- land. The authorities have again been warnafl that St. PmuI's Cathedral and the Bank of England wiU be attacked. Dynanute Detective Boper has • letter advising him to and assuring him he will bittbre next Saturday. There is a growlDg movement ia the dooka and among builders and other trades- men to dispense with the serviaes of Irish laborers. Fifteen hundred Irish workmen were recently sommarily dismiaeed from buildings in course ot construction in East London, their fellow- workmen of other nationalities being unwilling to work beside those whom they regard aa poseible dynmitards. It is reported a similar movement is started tA Manchester, Liver- pool and other provincial centres. of Aeaa must hfal/n Paotoloa. MiA HuSst golden aaDda.bava jieUfld a riblLMtaEa to maoy aa adeeintat- ooa eompany. The Moond aooroa of w a ri lli ia also subterranean, and will probhwy prove to be far mora praeioaB than tta iUat. We refer to andargroahd rivan whiob have their origin in tbe graM oan- tral depreeaion of tbe Australian conti- nent, when some superficial atraama and the heavy tropical ndna diaai^aar, pareo- lating throng the penetrable aeif, and formisg bidden reservoirs, from whanoe at leaat two great bodiee ot water imia southward aad find aa ootlet in the sea. Ever and anon one of theee c h an ne l s is pierced by the well-sinker, and there riaea to ttie aorfaoe a pereniAl apring of ttie preeiouB element, in the midst of a region that is liable to be parched with I drought. Such a diaoevery baa just been reAved I m%de at Moree, in the eleotpral district of order his coffin, meet his fate ANl'l-eBKfflAn ViemONSTKAXION. Freecki Tete. I am in favor of the principle of one man one vote (hear and cheers) and I object altogether to the plural representation of property. I will take my own case I am a terrible example. (Laughter.) I have three votes for ai many borough oonstituea- mea, and I have three votes tor as many aoonty oonstitaencieB. " Shame," and laogbter.) Oh I but I use them on the right side. (Cheers.) I know many of my frianda who have ten or twelve, and I hewd of one reverend pluralist who has twenty- three. WeU, I eonaider this is an anomaly which is altogether inconsistent with the principle on which we stand. That prin- ciple is, that every honeeholder, at all events, has an equiJ stake in the good government ot the country his life, his biHPpinees, his property all depend mon legislation which he ia equally entitted with every one else to assist in framing. If we are to make a distinction, I am not quito certain whether it is not the poor man that ought to have more votes than the rich man. (Hear, bear.) It you have legislation, it may leeeen the income of tiie one, bat it may destroy the means of subsistence of the other.â€" Ifr. Chamber- Uim, at Birmingham. We remember the leeks and the onions and the cucumbers and the garlicâ€" Num. ix. 7. GAME. Partridges.â€" Jer. xvii. 11. Two young pteeons.- Levi. v. 7. And lie brou^t quail.â€" Psalms cv. 40. I would cause thee to drink spiced wines.â€" Cant. xvii. 3. Carry these ten cheeses to the captain.â€" I. Sam.xvii.l The TtartlUoii JBzpcrieuce •! a 4-ircar.4M £l«hty Feet la OHii-Air. San Francisco Chronicle In San Jose, Oal., not many days ago, one Mrs. William Kennedy was making anxious search for her little 4-year-old, oarly-headed son, who bad disappeared for the moment from the family-door-yard. Harrying throngh the streets, looking and inquiring for the little rnnaway, her attention was directed to a crowd of people who were gazing, white and silent with awe, at a bnge windmill tank, against whiob a long ladder'WaB leaning. The eyes of the woman followed the gaze of the crowd, and this is what she saw: Eighty feet from the ground, holding on by bis chubby legs and one arm could be seen the little fellow extending his free hand toward some pigeons that were perched almost within his reach. His awful peril had stunned and stilled the helpless group beneath, which now parted as the mother came swiftly toward the scene. Then her firm, quiet voice was heard, raised that the child might hear " Come down, Carl, and mamma will give you a peach." The child heard, and, look- irg over bis shoulder, perceived bis mother. Instantly he begui to descend, carefully clinging, round by round, and as he neared the la8t,he smiled at the upturned face of his mother and said '• I'm coming, mother," and in another moment was in her arms. And then that crowd separated into small parties of one each, 'and melted into the diBtanoe, leaving behind them only an mdistinot memory of moistened eyes and fluttering gboket handkerchiefs. ««!( siaod tke U|ikt mt the Gerasan Flas. A laat (Monday) night's Paris 03kble says During the foueral processioo of Jolee Valles, the Paris Soci»listio journalist, to- day, a large number of Frenchmen attacked the German Sooialifata in the prooession and destroyed their wreath. The attack was brought about by the fact that the Germans carried the German flag conspicu- ously hoisted 'immediately in the wake of the coffin. This provoked the Frenchmen in the streets, who shouted, "Down with the German flag." The opposition soon extended to the Frenchmen in the proces- sion. When the flag was not lowered in answer to the shonta, it was stoned and a free fight followed. Forty thonmnd persona attended the funeral. A great crowd of people have since Assembled at the Bastile, discussing the anti- German demonstration. During the procession to the grave the police force in the neighborhood was largely strengthened in anticipation of a ronewal of the disorder when the faneral prooeasion returned. At the cemetery M. Henri Boche- fort delivered a glowing eulogy on the life of Valles, and was entbusiastioally cheered am;d cries of " Vive la revolution soeiaU," and " Vive la eommune." I Owydir, hbout 890 miles north of Sydney. Water was struqk at a depth of 130 feet, and it rose 42 feet in three hours. " The value of the discovery," we are told, " can- not be overestimated, as the country in the vicinity has hitherto Buffered terribly in dry saaaoDS." The question ariaea whetiier, inasmuch as the country is beginning to be dotted with various points at which similar diBooveries have been made, it would not be possible by systomatio investigations to determine approximately the oonrse of one, at least, of the subterranean liversâ€" that which is believed u have its outfall near Portland â€" so that boring operations might be conducted for the time to came in those places only where tiiere is a reasoiiable prospect of BuoeeBS. A tieaM peraon aees, perohance, aome accident in which human life ia pc^sibly aaarificed, or the sensibilitiea are otherwise ahoeked. His feelings overeome him, aad hefainta. How ara we to expli^ it? Lat oa aee what takee place. The impnsaion upon the bram made by the (»gan of sight oreateB (throngh the agency of spedal eentree m the organ of the mind) an infla- raee upon the heart and the btood-vesselB of tbe bram. This resnlta in a decceaae the amount of blood sent to the brain, and eaoaea a loea of eoneoionsnees. lo the same way persons become dizzy when tooloi^ Ma waterfall, or from ahaiSE tbroBgh the effeebi of tbe organs of St upon tiie bmn^Dr. A. L. uSSSyX^r- ptr'a Mmganme for March, ' "The iBdtvMaaUty af f^hlMrca. The moral nature and individuality of children, says Prof. Adler, should be cue- fully stodied and reepeeted. They are, it ia true, bone ofour boneandfleabetour fiesh, but we are only the channels through ,which tiie river of lite is transmitted to 'them. Some paranto make a point of trying to mold their children into reproductions of themsdves. Bat every ehild has a right to its own individuality. For instance, if a boy shows a talent for art it ia a grave question as to whether it be wiBe fbr the boy's father to say •• Oh I don't want my boy to be a painter: I mean him to be a lawyer." Or again, a youth shows an intense passion for Btudv. but a fnend of tbe father haaan opening £ his counting house, and so the instineto of gemus are aaerifioed to the dollar. Thus the individuality of that life ia daatroyed and the partioalar meBsage witii whl(£ it wasutmsted to deliver to the world is lost. Tke Dcwl Cardinal' Paeteral. A Dublin cable says On Sunday in all the Catholic oburoheB was read, amid an impressive silence, the Lenten pastoral letter Cardinal McCabe prepared on the eve of his sudden death. The pastoral eipresses indignant ropudiation ot the hideous attompte made for the destruction of property and innocent lives by the foul dynamite conspirators. "The object of that wicked conspincy," said the pastoral, " ia to achieve the independenoe of Ireland and avenge the wrongs inflicted on. this unhappy country ia former times. God knows, the record of ito wrongs forms the blackest page in European history, but Buraly savage vengeance is not calculated to wu God or tbe world to the aide of this poor and afflicted country, which has no nmre deadly foes than the wretohed men who support and eoantenanoe schemea so detestable. Deeply aa I love Inland I would gladly oonaent to a eontinaation of Its greatoBt Mnrow rather than aee ita redemption worked oat by ageneieB that Uod and the Ohnroh anattiamatize." The paatoral created a profound sanaation. In all the charohea the other biahope denounced tbe dynamiters. OtbaaptaBtMcaBaoi baakby aelhng ttaait «iil»iCitoiiAeir get tiiw money had n an Baaate. ^^^J l^m CtanMyle lla« Nine Taca. Lord Garmtiyle, in spito of anything that has been said, oan appreoiato a good story â€"when he tells it bimseU. His adventure with a cobra when u India ebows him to be a man of nerve. " I was awakened one night," I heard him tolling a party of friends, " by a severe pain in one of my toes. Looking down in the dim light oaat by the moon I waa horrified todiiwover that I was being bitten by a cobra, the moat poisoneuB of reptiles. To stop to kill the sn^ would be to let the insidionB poison do ita dreadful work. I did not beaitato, however, but, swiftly snatohins my nvolver from beneath my pillow, w^ i^f '^J â- *"' " ^^Sidli toS Z^a'*^*^'^. "*?P*y obambar instantly Si^ "Zi!""'"' yo» taM»w.-2?ew Tork Corret^ptmienee WoMhiiftim Post. C}r«MBTe4 Peaple. "Ton would think that a eroes-eyed peraon would overcome hie sensitiveness," said an ooeulist, '• but he seldom does. He broods over it. It grows on him. He imagines that every one he meeta thinks as mnoh about it as he does, and life often loses all attraction for bim. Did yon ever notice a croa8eyed man walk? No? I can tell one as far as I can see him. It imparta to his gait a certain movement peculiar to the whole class of cross-eyed people. But it is not altogether baahful- ness which causes him to avoid looking a person sqnanly in the face. Ifhentained the power of sight in each of his crooked eyee, aa ia often the ease, it would do him no good to look the ordinary way. He would be very likely to miss the object altogether. The Imes of bis vision would probably cross a foot or so baton the object waa fuUy comprehended, and all he would aee would be the bunt and shadowy out- hnea of a pair of can or the rim of a hat. The place when the face ought to be would be adismal blank. Many br^t features are ruined by this fearful mist ortone. Some sensitive victims never pluck up courage enough to marry. They often become selfish misanthropes, grow stingy, and leave a fortune for a horde of straight-eyed relativeswhototallyignored them while they were aUve to fight over. Othen, with that natural yearning for the love andisympathy which are almost universaUy denied orosa- eyed men, take what they oan get in the matrimonial market. They spring at the very fint chance which offers. Thus otton a soulful, but cross-eyed teatheto finds himsjBH joined to a loving, but nnsympathetio, helpmeet, whose ambition never rises above the kitchen or the laundry. He loses his hopes, descends to the level ot bia mate, and what might have been a talented career is ended on a large box in front ot the comer grooery in ntailing neighborhood gossip. Occasionally yon find a man with sufficient strength of mind to live down the malign effeoto of atrabia- moB and come out a victor. When once a man has overcome bis diffidence he beoomes as bold aB a Bewing-maohine agent When he is coorageouB enough to look a woman oUiqualy in the face without stam- Tba bona of the shad toao. if it ooold ba «allod a hema. thaptotorr^nlMty. Hie wife wa» btpbftjartedCi JUid bia ^Idrea weta •«01d Bab'B in tomi," entering a i ' ofidlera. " Xheh look out for troaUb," tome one r^ed. " I'd rather know that the seven jaarallllh was ooming." Bab (Mime in, leading, or rather draggina after him, a httle bcqr. The child .was beg. ging him to go. home. " Hallo, fellera," aaid Bab. " Want a drink?" Tho party ofidlera promptly aroeeand An^roaehed the bar. "Pa, please comb on," implond the ohUd. " Oh. dry up, won't yon I Felleia, what'll yon have Sold a oow this morn- ing and am flash." Taldng from his poeket a shoe, nearly worn oat, he Btntk Uie bar with it. " Wife told me .to have this thing fixed,, as though a man's got mondy to t^row away.*' The boy pulled at bis sleeve. " Mow, I want you to stop that. I've stood aboat aa much of your foolishness as Vm going to." The men drank. " Fill 'em ap again," said Bab, striking the bar with the shoe. No one objected. The men whom he had joined would have drunk with him all day. They seemed to have no other business. " Had you in the 'boose the last time you were in 'town, didn't they, eh " asked Nat Boles. " Yes, but iihat'B none of your lookout. I generally pay for my whiskey, which is more than yon oan say and tell the truth." "I didn't mean any harm by it. Yoa are getting to be scch a crank that nobody can say a wordr4o yon." " That^B all right. Yon sit aroond here and guzzle every day, but if I happen to come to town once in a while and get a htile off, yon go around ainging it." " I don't do any nuA a thing. I merely spoke about it just now." " Oh, I heard of yon. Fine joke for you. Why don't yon drink your whiskey?" "Beckon. I want to drink with a man that talha to me asyoa do?" " Yes, you'd drink with the deviL" " I'll just show you." Taking up the glass, he made a motion as though be woold throw the whiskey on the floor, but bis appetite being atronger than hlB resentment, he drank it and said " I don't want to have any trouble with yon, Eli. We an too good friends for that." They sat down around the stove, for the weather was intensely cold. There is no plaoe en earth more dreary than a saloon in a small town, but men stay then. Yes, for JBtax will stay anywhere. When evening oame Eli waa beastly drank. He had thrown away the shoe, but the boy nam- end it, and to keep from offending his father by the sight of it, carried itimder hie coat. "We'll go home now," he said, taking hold of the boy's shoulder, " It's awful cold for yoa to attempt to walk I'd stay in town, Eli," said a man who looked with pity upon the child. " We don't have to walk," replied the boy. " Our horse is at the stable." " No, my little fellow, your hone is not there. Your father sold, the horse when he slipped away from yon before dinner time." The child bunt into toara. His father declared that having spent all hia money, and that as he could not get whiskey with- out it. he wouldn't stay in the infernal town. He vowed that everybody was trying to rob him, a belated but not alto- gether ontrue refleetion. " Come on," said be, " we don't oan for the snow, do we, Tom?" •?No,Bir." " Bat ii you want to stay, we'll stay." TheohMd, looking at him reproaohfallr, yet affeotionatoly, replied. "I wooldnt stay hen if I knew we'd freeze to death by coins ont in the snow." ' " AU right, Maeoovey. Gome on. Droaker than an OWL Foil as goose. Tom." SSfai,^ii'SH'ti*"'^°8. **•"»»"'»»• "WbafUoldladysay?" 2S^ fc^ ** ** Mperior to hia mis. " She won't say anything, bnt yoo know fortune. ^^J^JBomwom make a heroiel ****** «^" " Pntty good woman, Tom. Your mother amtahe?" "Yefl,Bir." " That's what I thought. Msu never baa bat one mother, Tom. Never heard of a naan with two mothera, did yoo 7" "No, Hit." ' ;• That'B what I thobgbt. When a man tolU yoo that he baa two mothera. eall him a liar. He may have two Bistera and a won't oando tbi^ The ordinary man melta under the affliction like a cake of ioe in July son. Tfc«T Feic When a weU-known member of this oom. '!^^J:Jr^. *^ V» B»»*» Senator bZ la New Â¥erii Uty. In a Bin^e advertisaneat in a New York P^»er seventy-three dwelling bousea ue (^ered for rent on Fifth avenue a^ adjacent streets. The price to each dweS ing IS named. A "smaU houae" fa ^ered fortl,aOOa year, and tUaia the cheapeatoCaUofthem, The pSoea iJto! •3.000, »4.000. 16;^. 17,000 to feo 000 a y««.. Now.am«BoaAt to have a J^ good inopma to euhlel^ to nav S7^» »W.OW •£•« fSSTS Th?d!JffiS marked .twenty-lli^fsei fiwt. aiT-St deaignated aa au^pinifiaant.^ ^.ss^sSfi.SLSs^y'"â€" â- Â»Â« He DM If at 0|e Taa We«hM»elorobitaarieB."Baidanedi. tor to whom had been iwbmittod a tone ^li^:^^ *»»• death dt a mi? priiititS"*** """ ' ""^^ be guid to oi'S*;il££'?° ""•»* »» *• ««i«*^ " Yoo woold think so if von «mm «» "Who waa be?" en'r^ySL^^ •^'•^ •'*^. • I" «Utt rST^3ft^**^y "" " anything." **Alblbaieiamgfaidtoreeeiva ik!^ an ^^iJ\^' ' "•â-  "S^wl m some very radical meaanrea which sorely out into many people whom he thought wereTta Sf«* atBtorm. They aboe^ him^S J?»^Wy. tat in h» honesty to mis tamed the fight strongly. A friend 5 £ S«.?tf "•^ visited him in S^S^meito whilatbe measores wen pending. ^^whatdotheysayof'LinBan whariti2;££j;f»*^v-«' T»-t.s ^fi^iis^i^^jir^ *^8. bboot yoo. "Speak it oot. "They call fAd«; TeU ma how th«y talk." fthi^ .-••-r~ y**" • "*» • "ooondnl, a £»!'^T'*I^*?^ •» Mtot-^verythiig they can thmk of tlukt'a hpML" '"â„¢"o bailee ^* «"» 8«M«o^ robbing hia hands u glee and ehinekilna in r^ru^ anjoyment. " they «eel=Sft^Siv boTSS this aaomitMi ^^a -x-i. ***' front yard foU of brothera, bat he never have hot one mother.^' v«5?y 7^ Btroggling along a Una. The obild'B teeth ohattered. "Can't go any tarther to night, Tom," said the father. Stopping in a f enoe oomer. " Just bo tired L?f5!*9*,??y'â„¢^"' »« 80 »»o«ne »nd tell the folkB not to be uneasy. I'm aU right. Going, Tom " " No. air." Early the next morning a traveller dis- moontod to examine something he saw in ri^t,"8^ he, in BpeaUng of it. "The boy had hiB arms aroond the father's pur- g«°«*.*ndjiad*rw«ed hia oheek close tothe^ioaghtMe ot the dmnkard. Both tnere lay a Uttle worn-oat ahoe."â€" iCrfanuaw 2yat?eler. -m said I 4»B «^ *,a?'"â„¢?*L •?^ «lghtnnd«r w «rowf,toldya I hadn't jmaehed tto viflitiiig'Mttia. *!»P««te ae«JMMa%Bc«m(. Wifeâ€"What a nomber of ladies there T^uohonhthis morning weanngseal- â- tan sacqaea. I ooooted no leaa than twenty-aeven. ^!^?Jf^*» "«»' "se Hie point)-Do OM'b m^ while at ohnroh? I didn't notiee a aingla one. ^^2S:i^°-?ili^" wwoely be expected w ^JMt^!^^^*^ woman nt^siao iM»MKfh to gJj%i«llo« wlimdiad. in the city babes io The mother

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