Ontario Community Newspapers

Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 18 Nov 1886, p. 6

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 up â- 1^ TTFIATiTH. Hdp to Bigoitun. that M » pw^l* weWve ererytkiqg wliich toadlt«a^Mfii „ and plaaiure »t tk» U ptbifc wiM it Among the aonroM of food fadiag, I crockery, plate, eaOimf and " China costs Imt littl* wot* men ware, and is Ubd^v J» care and to last longer. Plated knires, forks aiid tiMiBS are now so cheap that ercry tttUs Muf have aa abundanie. Ob some a «wn » Mated ware is ptef eraUe to solid sHrer. Whm the Mil- leuninm comes in, I shall pnSer the striid ware, bnt up to the dawn of that happy day, I shall nsten with siaoere reqpact to thepraysrof light-fingered-people, "Lead us cot into temptation. Nice linen gires such pleasure to every- body that I shall not attempt • pka for clean taUe-doti^ and napikins. I should be satisfied with plainer and cheaper food, if nea^y jR'epared and served upon snowy linen, with ehma and plate. I have no donbt there are people wbo, Hke blind men, only regard we taste of food, and, like ipifpt, have no choice about the trough in which it is served bnt most of us are filled with a sense of satisfaction \v'hen surrounded by these clean, bright things. I cannot mention a table economy more wise than the use of beautiful crockery and linen. It induces good manners, quiet, deli- berate eating, and other Christian decencies. And it makes food Iodc so palataMe that the purchases and labor of cooking may be sensibly reduced. An intelligent lady assured me that the sight of cracked wheat always turned her stomach, until she was visiting at Mrs. R.'s, when the wheat looked so white, the china dish in which it was put on the table was so beautiful, the fringed napkin and cream pitcher were so pretty, that she ate cracked wheat for the first time, and has ever since been fond of it. Very plain things can be made appetising by a pleasant dress. How true all this is of many things be- sides our food I know more than one' man, and more than one woman, without intelligence, Christian sentiments or man- ners, who are tolei-ated and even welcomed on account of their fine taste in dress. And is it not true that the mass of men regard the dress and manners more than the quality of soul within It is the dish and the linen which decide the fate of more than thing. one Headaches. The approach of the winter season will, with a large number of people, be inaugural of a recurrent headache, for which they are unable to account at all satisfactorily, but which experience has taught them to ex- pect as surely as fires and ' snugness " are rendered necessary to personal comfort. It would be well if all such sufferers were to understand the rationale of the complaint that periodically attacks them, and be wise in time to ward off the return of their old malady. In every case where the headache is not dependent on some organic disturb- ance, and when it is felt only during the colder months of the year, especially in large towns, it is undoubtedly due to the vitiated atmosphere of rooms lighted by gas, and rendered "snug" by close-drawn curtains and draught-excluding doors, while a brilliant fire is maintained for. heating I)urposes. This latter is, indeed, the only preventive under the circumstances of an absolutely poisonous condition of the air, which is very seriously contaminated wherever a gas-light is employed for il- lumination. The remedy for the evil is in efficient and constant ventilation, a neces- sity that every householder should see is .scLureil in all the rooms of his dwelling be- fore tliey are transformed into winter habi- tations. Mind and Body- Healthy body, healthy mind or, healthy niiud, healthy. body. Keep the hod;y 'healthy, the iiiiiui will be healthy keep the mind healthy, the body will be healthy. A wor- ried luiud wearies a young body into an old one. Old age often comes of rust, treadmill, living in ruts, learning nothing new, insist- ing oiie is too old to learn. A young ihan niai-ries at twenty-three the woman ditto they give up recreation, get into a social treadmill, turn their lives into Irasincss, housekeeping, calling and receiving calls. At forty they.are mere machines. Now they l)cgin to lay up for old age they begin to feel old, and they are old. Ericsson is act- ive with work and in\'ention at eiglity-four; (.ikidstone, in his seventies, is ruling Eng- land DeLcsscps, canalliiig at eighty. To reraiiii! young we must act, feel and hope like the voung. iron, menifm his neok, ties a ng aioaiid it, take* cold, hM wan ftnwt, brondiitiB, oon- mnqption, and diea. If^ aIcd wuuei. fMVthatr RomU Sage irMUy gpaa t»chi iiilkaenB«^4M-| Piowers at the Table. Their beauty and fragrance add not a lit- tle to tlie.plea-ure of the table hour. A large, fragra.it bouquet tvkes the place of an extra disrh. And nothing is so cheap as flowurs. During a considerable part of the year they cost absolittely nothing. It is the sweetest pleasure to grow them. And it is surprising how cheaply a small conservatory may be managed. It is such a pleasure to observe how the love for flowers is increasing Their sweet beauty brightens the most unexpected places while their presence inspires almost every pulpit. The service of flowers at the table, In. re- calling the lost appetite of Hie invsdid, has long been recognized. Their service in re- fining the appetites of aU is not generally appreciated. It would take a brute to eat le one, at a table made sweet by the pre- sence oi flowers. The TluPoat. The throat is a wondedW instrument o^ music. Place the fingers upon it, and every time you speak you can feel the vibration of the vocal organs, producing sound.. Any- thing that, even touehea the ihroat impairs the purity dt those sounds. Flin^ a clotli over the strings of a violin or a piano, and get music out of it if you oan. Soevacy cloth which suriounds the throat impairs the sweetness of tbe voice. Women go with net^s bare men have theirs swathed and bandaged, audten women have sweet voices where one man has. A man's TCHoe should be as pure as a woman's. Why is it not? He is shaved and dlioked. Uod has provided a covering for.' man's throat, light and soft it cIothe(i,.$i»e peck and fre-: serves the health. Bota cian gets a sharp -MUBiEL'B TEAiiBarvnni. Sr lUBT BKADLBT. Mrs. Henry Ward Beecher is wrftins aoMny lettera from England to the Broot- qra Mfmgaeint. Girls yrmk in the coal mines of Bdgimn loculing carr at 40 cents for a day of aaven- teen or eighteen honra. • Cella Thazter frizzes he bann, and so do Lomae Chandler Moalton and Ella Wheeler Wilcox, if rqmrts are true. Joatin McCaHhy has cleared over $30,000 on his " History of Our Own Times." The King of the Belgians has an eye on Queen Victoria's castle of Hobenlohe at Ba- den, and is looming up aa a possible pur- chaser. The fortune of IVIrs. Mark Hopkins is es- timated at $40,000,000. It was all made by her late husband in the Central Pacific Railroad, A woman works in a Kalmazoo (Mich.) cooper shop, and can make as many barrels in a day as any of the men who work with her. There are numerous Masonic lodges in France composed exclusively of women. They have all the fancy features and cer- emonials. "No man,"says Ruskin, "has ever liv- ed a right life who has not been chastened by a women's love, strengthened by her cour- age, and guided by her discretion." Sir Arthur Sullivan, the composer, imbid- ed his musical tastes from his father, who was Royal Bandmaster at Sandhurst. He spent most of his boyhood in his father's band room. The ex -King Thebaw, of Burmah, does, not like his place of exile in Rutuagberry. He complains of dreariness and dullness, and says that his house is infested with snakes and scorpions. It is stated that Joseph Arch has sailed for Canada with the intention of settling here. Mr. Arch was a member of Parlia- ment for a few months. He sank under the weight of the Home Ride BilL Lord Randolph Churchill is a great coffee drinker, and is said to have a little gas stove of his own upon which he prepares his own cup of coffee each morning. He thinks no one knows how to make coffee but himself. The ex-Empress Eugenie at last sees the hopelessness of the Napoleonic outlook in France, and has withdrawn the pensions which she has paid regularly to the support- ers of the Bonaparte dynasty ever since the fall of the Empire. The Empress of China has reigned twenty years, and will resign next February in fa- vor of her son. She is said to be exceeding- ly progressive, arid but for the men who formed her council would have had railroads throughout the Empire. There is talk of a marriage between victor Emanuel, Crown Prince of Italy, and Vic- toria, second daughter of the crown Prince of Germany. Queen Victoria, Kaiser Wil- helm and Prince Bismarck axe said to ap- prove of it. If it takes place it will be the fii-st marriage of a Protestant Princess into the House of Savoy. When Joseph Cook, the famous preacher and lecturer, who is now in Canada, ap- pears on the streets of Boston, he is dressed in a solemn black, carries a well known grip sack, and a long gap between the bot- toms of his trousers and the tops of his Con- gress gaiters displays a glarilig and gaudy .expanse of red stockings. Gen. Boulanger, French Minister of War, who has recently become a disturbing quant- ity in European politics, combines English grit with French dash. His mother was an English woman, named Miss Griffiths, and the General himself was born in Brighton, and he says his ear-liest recollections are of the time he played with the English boys •!?«)• le chain pier. â-  Gen. Boulanger speak English with vernacular fluency. A good many persons, after considerable mental difficulty, have been taught to be- lieve that when Robert Bui-ns " \vTOte â- " Comiu' Thro' the Rye" he referred to a little stream in the northwest of Ayrshire, called Rye, Avherc tiie lads were given to ly- ing in wait and kissing the lassies as they waded through the stream, their hands be- ing employed in holding up their petticoats to keep them put of the water. Now comes Editor A. B. Todd, of the Cumnock Express, who is said to be an authority in Scottish literature, who was born a few miles from the Burns farm, and was intimate with some of Burns's cronies, and he says that tlie idea expressed above is pure nonsense that Biirr.s never saw and probably never heard of the Rye that the description of how Jenny " draigelt a' her peticoatie" doesn't mean that she wet it in the water of a stream but betlraggled it walking through dew or rain-laden grain. AJl of which commends itself as being a sensible explanation. Teacher's Rights. " I say, pop," shouted Jimmy Tuffboy, as he raced into the house, " has the teacher any right to keep things what belong to a boy!" " No, my son, she has not. What has she got that belongs to you " " What has she got? Well, she's got my besttjackknife, seven' marbles, a glass agate, a dandy jnece of string, a pocketful of horse chestnuts, my chestnut bell, and "â€" " That 11 do James. I will send dver an express wagon and have them brought home." " And I am gdfing to ride in the wagon 1" grabbing a ' hot dough- nut from the table he skipfwd out of the house like a young cyclone. '^Brother Foster," said a southwest Ar- kansas |nreacher, pansing iii hfa aermon and addressing a member of the oongregalicm whoocoapied-abench near the door, "the boys over in that mrove are "m:l^t«ig a good deal of noise tmd msturbing thejneeting. I wish you would go out and stop them." Brother Foster went out and returned pre- aaatly wit^ the information thattiie distnrb- erawere not boya, bnt a lot of men icwa. the county seat, who were hanging a horse- thief. " Congreeation'a diamiaae^," judd the preacher, grabbing his bat "we will take np the puadonary coUeotiien nott Svn BhshM^VMUir fMciM slclood-tombs awlttidr Nor o/SSyiiw Gooae-WsBMa plaeUng down fram No, Mnrid oafy sees l» fcwm •rf**«»' *^ *» r Bat UtUe msidM MniW has a mothar wUfe, WhoM tender ktaes itj the tews in the diOdlah eyes â-  PntHnrbyhersewtey-irorii, ah* makes her anna a neat Wherein a Uttie blnffing with droopinr wings can rest. And gmswing how to wfai her ear in qoite tko aaaiett begins at once to way, ' Mother knows a story, dear ' " Mother read a atoiy onoe about a certain king Who made liia servant Lokman do a funny sort ot tiling. " He waited at Iiis table, and when the master dined. As faitliful as liis ahadow, the servant stood behind So oftentimes it liappened when they two were alone Xliat Lolanan got a tidbit, as a dog might get a bone. " There were many dain^ dishes set before tilis king. Potted meats andj sweetmeatsâ€" the best ot every- tliiog Grapes and figs and pine-apples in golden dUiee fine. Silver pitchers full of cream and flasks of ruddy' wme. " And Lokman every now and then would get a share ot theae^ A glass of wine, a dish of fruit, a sUoe of mellow It pleased the king to see him take with simple gratitude Whatever gift he offered, and always find it good. " But once, for curiosityâ€" or in an idle jest â€" He chose to tiy' his servant by another sort-of teat. He cut in two a melon that seemed to suit his mind, And scooping out the fruity part, gave Iiokman the green rind. "Then watched to see him eat itâ€" at first with laug^iing eyes But as he aaw it disappear, with much mors ot sur- prise For Lokman ate the melon-rind in such a placid way, Tljat whether it were sour or sweet 'twoidd puzzle one to say. " ' Upon my word,' the king cried out, astonished and amused, ' If I were you, I should have said I beg to be ex- cused But you take down the bitter dose, and keep a smil- ing face â€" I never saw a foolish thing done with a better grace.' " ' Why foolish ' Lokman answered. ' You gave it me to eat With the same hand that has bestowed many a mor- sel sweet Should I refuse to take itâ€" or take it murmuring â€" Because you choose to give me, for once, a bitter thing r " The king heard this with pleasure. ' Upon my word,' said he, ' There' wisdom in your argument that's quite as wise for me. I'm far too apt to grumble at God my master's will, And think when He sends trouble, that I am treated m. " ' You've set me an example that, though I am a king. And you a slave, good Lokman, is worth the copying. Take this for thanks.' And gave him a jewel of his own, A golden ring that sparkled with a precious ruby stone. " Then who so glad as Lokman The proudest in the land Might well have enried such a gilt from such a roj-al hand. But modestly he wore it, and not with foolish pride, And served his master lovingly until the hour he died." " Is that all ' little Muriel asks, when mother's tale is done. " How short the story is It seems as if you'd just begun. I wish you'd tell another." But mother shakes her head " Not now, dear you shall tell me what this one means, instead." " It means," says little Muriel, " it means â€" oh I I don't know See there how white the ground is, all covered up with snow It's just too bad, I do declare, when I exijected May- There will not be a bit of fun for my Thanksgiving Day!" " But that's the lesson, darling, I .wanted' you to learn," The gentle mother answers. " God sends us in its turn The sweet thing and the bitter, the pleasure and the pain, Sor.'.etimes the merry sunshine,' sometimes the snow and rain " We ought to learn from Lokman to take what may befall With willinsf spirits, knowing our Father sends it all. I wish, my little iluriei"â€" but Muriel suddenly Cries, " Listen, listen, mother " and jumps up from her knee. She rushes to the window and sees through flurrjing snow. And all the gathering darkness, a moving thing !â-  below, • That nearer comes and nearer, until a welcome sound â€"The trampling of the horses' feetâ€" rings from the frozen ground. " O mother " screams the happy child. " O mother, it is May She's come at last I Now, wjn't we have a good Thanks^ ving Day " And down with flying feet she goes the welcome guest to greet. While mother followsâ€" thinking of the bitter and the sweet. â-  She's not quite sure that Muriel has understood the thing She tried to teaeh her with her tale ot Lokman and the king But glad in aU her gladness now, she hopes to see the day When Muriel will bear trouble in Lokman's gracious way^ A Qneer Love SpelL B. C. DODCn. In search of knowledg^e He went to kcowledg^ And there was ao busy He often grew dusy His time was qent whoUy On deep studies waolly p. He wouldnt iovusb liquor tod nerer.ieonld miquor He did his own aewing ' And wouldnt go rewing He apent little money And never was toney His heart was like^neisB V^ODeiiayaKiiMiK, Attnetive aad'paiMte, Just made him go luisne His lore was as gntA rAsabikd'sftMcHsBMat; One moining he said. •»8we«t Si Mi watt" And she tost him "Tour t^ssioiaiessrBciKir^i' Tw- hewtmusta^fobe i Any more for my sacbe :a^ f^.4: 11 LhTE DOKOIOV lEWB. I baa toriMd two lads The wife of Pater LacWy. of Montn^ Eve both to triplete. two beyfi «^gM, It wMk, and all are pro^endng fa*or-^ •My- V Soott,a Marquette atorAeeper, at ttie Winnipeg Awie Court now m seaeian, niaaded goUty to twenty-three charges of forgeiy. A true tall has been found against an In- dian named Thomas Thomas for the murder of Harriet Gilmoor at Selkirk, Man., in A^Iaat. The North-west Council have adopted a motion granting pensiona to the widows and or^ians ol thePnnce Albert Volunteers whQ were killed daring the rebellion. A cat, not liking the new home at Green- field, N. S., to which ahe Imd")^ removed, todk her six kit^ns tid walked%ith them bade to her fertier hoi^e s^ Mitton, a dis- tanoeofl6m4^ 1 Asa Lewis, an aged fanner at Dudswell, Que., retired in g(Md health one night last week, awoke during the night, assed his wife to get him a slaaa of mUk, and was dead when she returned to the room. Agnes Saunders, the young girl who mys- teriously disappeared from the Coflfee House at Ottawa a few days ago after intimating to a friend that she Would drown herself, changed her mind, returned to her boarding house, and is alive and welL A few days ago a student named Huntly assaulted the Principal of Moncton, N. B., Public School, distributed his clothes to the four winds of Heaven, and planted bruises on various parts of his face and body. The police magistrate will detennine the extent of the damages. While the family of Mr. Joseph Watson, lot 2, con. 13, East Garafraxa, were at church, fifty dollars in money, and promis- sory notes amounting to $1,475, were stolen from the residence. The servant girl's trunk was also opened and a purse contain- ing $3 in silver taken. ^The Evangelical Alliance of Halifax, N.S., are protesting against the running of horse cars in that citv on the Sabbath. The agita- tion is wise and timely, and should be reso- lutely prosecuted. If the American Sabbath is ever introduced into Canada, depend upon it it will be by the street car or Sunday newspaper route. Mr. W. C. Van Home has replied unfa- vorably to the request of a deputation of Strathroy citizens, that the Western Ontario extension of the Canadian Pacific Railway be diverted two and a half miles from the proposed course in order to touch Strathroy, and now it is proposed to begin an agitation for a short line to connect Strathroy with the projected extension. At St. Thomas a family named Gloisan artook of mushrooms for supper, andshort- y afterward the father aad two daughters were seized with severe pains and vomiting. An examination revealed the fact that sev- eral of the mushrooms were of a poisonous species. An emetic was administered and the patients restored. The consequences would probably have been much more seri- ous had it not been that all ate sparingly of the plant. A few nights ago the room used for a night school at Brantford was entered by unknown persons, the stove overturned, large daubs of paint smeared over the walls, the seats of the chairs, the gas globes, the ceilings, and floors, and other acts of mali- cious mischief and indecency perpetrated. The room had just been fitted up by the young ladies interested for the winter series of lessons, and the authors of the outrage are likely to receive very vigorous treat- ment if they are. identified. There is consternation in Hinchiubrook township in Huntingdon County, Que. over the seizure of smuggled goods in the posses- sion of farmers. In one instance a farmer had to pay for shingles that had been 'on the roof of one of his buildings for over a year. Numerous ^hiowers, ploughs, lamps, and other articles were attached, and the information in almost every case is reported to have been so precise that there was no possible means of escaping the duties and fines demanded by the Customs officers. A Springfield, X. S., despatch says â€" A great many accidents are happening in the coal mine her owing to the recklessness of the men. Broken arms and legs are of al- most daily occurrence, while fatal accidents are very frequent. The output is at the rate of half a million tons per annum, and is lim- ited by the inability of the Intercolonial Railway to handle freight. The sanitary condition of the to^v-n is deplorable. There are not half enough houses for the popula- tion. The water is abominable, and epidemic diseases are alarminglj' prevalent. It was noticed that an old man at St. George, N. B., spent a great tleal of time in a piece of adjacent woods, and curiosity was excited to such a point that he was follow- ed one day lately until he stopped before all open grave. It was found that in this grave a box had been placed and springs arranged so that a man could lie down in the box, and pull down a board .^^hen the grave would fill with earth, the brush ar- ranged for the purpose would cover the mound. The discovery was made barely in time to save the old man's life, as every de- tail of his scheme of suicide had been com- pleted. A Tyandinage correspondent tells the following story :â€" " Rose Archer held a life lease of two acres of land from Wm. Tracy, Lot No. 4, 8th concession of l^endinaga^ upon which was a log house. She went wi-.h her sontoMichimn by the Tu^ay morning tzain, last week leaving the house and what little furniture ahe had in poaseasion of P. A Shannon, to be done wiui as she should wiA, thteking that (die would come back in the spring but some person on Tuesday ni^ht broke op^n the window and door, phed the Icwb out'of ttie hooae, ao that the roof feU in, leaTing tlw poor wi(9ir's house a wreck. â-  â-  â-  i .. A Gravenh,9Tat pap^r (Swerves :â€" " It seems to us that hunting deer with dogs ^umldbe prahlb^ altogether there would be more sport in still hunting, and there would not be anything Kke wholesale uaughter of deer. In a conntry like Mua- koka, where there are many poor settlers who depend to a large extent upon the deer for their supply of meat in fall and early winter, it is an injustice to them that t)ut- nderswith a pack of doga ahouldcome in and exterminate the aupply. We wonder konnda tot huntiiiff dMn. ... Mm^oka. P*ny aS«iraSt£«'^t-of i£?r ?.^" *Ka£ S'o^^*' i iMiere ahe waa found in a w«!.l "ktaw» •treet. The girl's fSher" '^• for, and chancing to esuvhim *®^*I^Pl»ed attempted to esjpe. bTwi^unT"**' *« finally went home^er ^T ^^f^^ «rf neniated in ^^^^r^ J^S^^^,^ ^^ father ahe would be sent to gaoL I The chief point made airamat M,, is lap, of Mink Lake, duriug^ff^i.^?: V the charge of murderingler LS^ ""« ferted against her, was^in the tiS^ P"" Mr. Jamea Dunlap, of Adamstnif ?lu"y "' the decea^i wtu ttelu^ ':^l' for to go to his son's place he wm W ta v?' ' lieve that the deceas^ wa, merely iu^'t t^e corpi then lie i lfj»f?*S*i deceased was WM not until he that he learned the stood beside the J. • *â„¢*^' and ".cuuPh up-stairs to where his daughter-in-law J^ and exclaimed "Mary, how didau£ take place, and you hear nothme of it » t this the old man thought she replied -t! was all done by one blow." Mr Dunlan a little deaf, however, and could not Cl^ solutely positive that the accused us^tT language stated, and nothing could be»T duced to corroborate or confirm his sn«? cion. ^P' â-  On Thursday last a serious explosioa rf dynamite occurred in Thurlow ou the o^ posite side of the river from Corbyville i number of men havebeen engaged for wa* time enlarging the great Government which was constructed to drain the swml land lying between the fourth aud M concessions of that township. One ofth number was James Bogg, a young J about 24 years of age, from Lindsay. Bon? was preparing dynamite for blasting, 4 found that it had been touched by fmsi He had it in a fire to thaw it out, when he noticed that it was ablaze. He wentfo. ward to pick it up to extinguish it, when it exploded. He was thrown twenty feet from where he stood, but had hardly struck the ground before he was on his fw again and fleeing for his life. A second and more powerful explosion immediately fo]. lowed. It was found that the left side of Bogg's body, from head to foot, wag filled with small fragments of rock, and thattto large meces had made deep wounds in hjj hip. His condition, however, is not re garded as serious. The rock on which the fire was built was blown to fragments. He Was a Cynic. " She went straight up into the air, Sfi feet, and I'll tell you, sir â€" " "What," I exclaimed, "she went up-" "Yes, sir," replied the quondam dude "she did." " What was the matter with her?" • ' Boiler exploded. " " Greatâ€"!" " Do not be surprised, sir," the quondam dude interrupted. "The ladyâ€" .= he was a lady â€" to whom I refer did not have a boiler attached to her person. At the time of the explosion she wason a steamboat of whichi was the captain. She was^ â€" I mean the lady â€" as pretty as a picture aud elegantly di-ess- ed. The force of the explosion sent he straight up into the air, 500 feet. Whe: she came down on the return trip, she feS into my arms. I thought she'd .say, if sht was alive ' Thank goodness, I wasn't kiD ed ' but she didn't. iShe said. 'Oh my goodness, just look at that big hole in my dress ' So it goes, sir, so it goes, the worH over. The gentler sex is controlled l)y oiii- central idea, and that is dress." The Eussian "Wolf. Although the wolf has long been an extinct animal in the United Kingdom, it is far from being so in European Russia, where the val- ue of domestic animals annually dostroyw by wolves has been set down as not less thai! two million five hundred thousand pounds. In the statistical Report lately addressed tu the Minister of the Interior, tiie frontier government of Samara .â- iuffered most, the- damage being estimated ar six Inuuhed mw fifty thousand roubles; Volodga came nest. being five hundred and sixty thoiisaun roubles. The Polish and ]5;iliij piovmcs and Archangel suffered lea.st. In au esti- mates like the above, no account can oi course be taken of the number of wiM a" imals destroyed by them, or of tlieloso' human life. The police reported ouclma^ dred and sixty -one' persons killed by woh* in 1875. It is fortunate for the traveller that the wolf is one of the most £Uspi'-WW; animals is existence, in counection v.it.i an) object with which its cye«, i;ose, "i\^"" "l unaccustomed. A stick pS iit«'d m tJie .e*-^- with some fluttering piece of Imen ticiu it, is often, sufficient to preserve the caveat of a slain Buffalo or deer for the Imuter- Better WMstle tlian Wiiiae. As I was taking awaU, Iiwtice.lnj-o Uttle boys ou their way to scnool in small one tL.nbled and fell, and, though b was not much hurt, he began to whuie m babyish way, not a regular roarmg boy «)- as though he was hi cross whine. The older boy took his hand fatherly way, and said " Oh, never mind, Jimmy, don _t wUme it is a great deal better to whistle. iu a little kind, that was â€" â€" i-i--*' "6 wonfler i,n»fx Mie Mm" --" j. » that the aetOeia do not petition the Legis, can hope to at the start. ^^^^ latnre,to paaa a law prohibiting tUe nae of •• Our plan, dear, w "» i^u \S fkitiidiiie Wii j^gtaiia feed can iJIowlng the st flelda during t Boaly be done 1^ good strong gw ^n wte, a» is of*®° '° •S* tiie fields are in STl^ will be do J^^unt of feed seen ••ft; a rule, with all J.SU plante will mak J^L^table crop th J^ to grow in the f al |«tiU and in additioi Jimmy tried to join the whistle. „ " I can't whistle as nice as you, Charii said he, " my lips won't P«°ker upfSall " Oh, that's because vou have not go the whineout yet," said Chfl«5 ^^^ the try a minute, and the whistle wdl drive whine away." x t .oro nr heard of SO he did and the last I «^w or w end of life. Trouble with Neckties- Mr.Winks-"rdjustl*etok^owd^; women are ever g^^ **'v!n taken to wear- yourfoUies. You have even taten^ ^^^^^ ^atandupcoUars and gentlemen ties." „ „u„ should we not, Mrs. Winks-" And why sno I'd like to know " ,^ it'saa incon- '« Well, inthefirst place. «J^, n venient fashion, auyhow. J^jj^ ^tie these yean a man cant Smc»wlingupfrom«fl«J^ haJf the time, and I don t see Jed down during the ^^y be expected to feeble growth in the sp Hen, often, consider w trampling when th« 2d is soft aad mud {p„en hard of course j„rm, but a thaw c| jn the wheat fields, ,»e will be done in S»d in order to av jble care must be taker when the ground is soft Then, in places, the wheat down so close keep it so, that the vit£ out, or so nearly so tha or, at best, make but a in the spring. Sheep ai to the ground, and v number have the run ol able damage is often do So, that if the whej considerable care mus harm to the crop will amount of feed secure addition, there is alwa age, as it is almost imp stock all the time, a si weather, or the stock v one place, and the whe injured almost before y I Taking the risks int pecially with late sow much doubt, whether, ing wheat can be regan Green feed is, of coui able during the winter, of obtaining it is to so pressly for this purpose early so that a good j early in the fall. If tl a large amount of wint readily secured. But my experience is, tha turn much stock in very often it can be dc parent injury, yet then to run, so that, at best be considered safe, ta another. And the safest plan tions ahead for wmter wheat grow as much considerable less risk c a growth than there food a start during 1 he more vitality the better they will withsl care should be taken to as possible. A Pew Agricu] Don't own more land \wdl. Don't imagine thai I through learning. Don't starve your I land. Don't treat your h I sideration than you do Don't use poor impl Don't let your plow Don't let your mind Don't throw away good manure to go to I Don't expect your c I by you than you do b Don't keep a worth Don't chew tobacco I to divide with your v I Don't expect that t unless you make a ' I yourself. Don't contract a de that you can pay it a Don't stint your I (orts. Don't put a dolla: I needed to make the 1 I and the home more hi Don't growl. Don't whine. Don't lie. Don't cheat. Don't die without towards making the Timely S If you have any place put some cai ' cither crude or cryti all genu life in the p^ and will be iKpB curink the wate ^injure them, i polic aeid is aufficiei Qg the waUowa up c A good place for we year is in the we the Bhade, gra *hioh contribute gr ^owth. Some coi weotehardmoreth I 'Vthepiga. We ^eatbeasfitto tbe tba aKdes j--» wbieb in ti â- â€¢St. Aaataellent pra »y^or*woagotl "*«r aeeding wor **^ Thia ia more kot^anditc iy the ontls "eed Here ^^m ttr montii i ***,«*» crope. ,nr; about how women JQ«^

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