Ontario Community Newspapers

Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 27 Oct 1887, p. 2

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 ' {â- â-  â-  v^s?' :i^i^-;jS^=^^^ i 5:f-'5 \.-\\ ^â- .^S=^"!1 i^iU ;^2ii.^i wmi 7A' r'*-* IRi *â€" 8odK Tut b« li^»^^ •;•-.#=' That UMfrakintlilHMr to The town of Mkklethmvta wm ming and thriTing. There were Hdnbrioaasprings which an enterpriiiiag dootorhad lately bronsht into notice. Xlie firm of 6(S$3(1^ and Datton maw^aetwHl ambrdUaein lam qnantitiea, from the atont weather-proof fiunily roof down to the daintiest fri^ed toy of a parasoL There were a Guild Hall and a handsome Com Market. There was a Modem Scbool for the boys, and aH^h School for the girls, and a School of Art, and a School of Cookery, and National Schools, and a British School, and a Board School, also chonlias of every height, chapels of every denomination, and iron mission rooms budding out in hopes co be replaced 1^ churches. Like one of the animals which Soologjsts sail radiated, the town was censtaatly stretcUbg out fresh arms along country roads, j|^ livin? and working, and g^ually absorbins the open spaces between. One of these arms was known as St. Ambrose's Road, in right of the church, an inconaplete structure in yellow brick, consisting of handsome chancel, the stump of a tower, and one aisle jnstweatiier-tight and usable, but, by its very aspect, beggging for the com- pletion of the beautiful design that was sus- pended above the alms-box. It was the evening of a summer day which had been very hot. The choir practice was just over, and the boys came out trooping and chattering; very small ones they were for as soon as tiiey began to sing tolerably they were sure to try to get into the choir of tiie old church, which had a foundation that fed, clothed, taught, and finally appren- ticed them. So, though the little fellows were clad in surplices and cassocks, and sat in the chancel for correctness sake, there was a space round the harmonium reserved for the more trustworthy band of girls and young women who came forth next, follow- ed by four or five mechanis.c Behind came the nucleus of the choir â€" a slim, fair-haired youth of twenty a neat, precise, well-trimmed man, closely shaven, with stooping shoulders, at least fifteen years older, with a black poodle at his heels, as well shorn as his master, newly risen from lying outside of the church door; a gentle, somewhat droopini; lady in black, not yet middle-aged and very pretty a small, eager, unformed, black -eyed girl, who could hardly keep back her words for the outside of the church door a tall self-pos- sessed handsome woman, with a fine class!- cal {cast of features and lastly, a brown- faced, wiry hard-working clergyman, with- out an atom of superfluous flesh, but with an air of great energy. " Oh I vicar, where are we to go " was the question so eager te break fourth. " Not te the Crystal Palace, Nuttie. The funds won't bear it. Mr. Dutton says we must spend » little as possible on locomo- tions. " I'm sure I don't care for the Crystal Palace, A trumpery tinsel place, all shams." "Hush, hush, my dear, not so loud," said the quiet lady but Nuttie only wrig- gled her shoulders, though her voice was a trifle lowered. " If it were the British Museum now, or Westminster Abbey." " Or the Alps," chimed in a quieter voice, "ortheUflSzi." "Now, Mr. Dutton, that's not what I want. Our people aren't ready for that, but what they nave let it be reaL Miss Mary, don't you see what I mean " "Rather better than Miss Egremont her- self," said Mr. Dutton. " Well," said the Vicar, interposing in the wordy war, " Mrs. Greenleaf's children hare scarlatina, so we can't go to Horton Bishop^ The choice seems to be between South Beach and Monks Horton." "That's no harm," cried Nuttie; "Mrs. Greenleaf is so patronising 1" " And both that and South Beach are so stale," said the youth. "As if the dear sea could ever be stale," cried the young girL " I thought Monks Horton was forbidden ground," said Miss Mary. " So it was with the last re^nte," said the Vicar "' but now the new people are come I expect great things from tiiem. I hear they ari very friendly." " 1 expect nothing from them," said Nut- tie so sententiously that all her hearers laughed and asked " her exquisite reason," as Mr. Dutton put it. " Lady Kirkaldy and a whole lot of them came into the Sohool of Art." "And didn't appreciate "Head of Anti- nous by Miss Ursula £gremont,"' was the cry that interrupted heri but die wetat on with'dunity unrnflBed â€" " Any thing so fool- ish and inane as their whole talk and all their observations I never heard. " I don't like this style," one of them sud. "Such ugly useless tMnsv 1 I never see anything pretty and neatiy finished such as we used to do. " ' The girl gave it in a tone of mimicry of the nonchidant voice, adding with fresh imita- tion, '"And another £d not approve of drawing from the life â€" models mignt be such strange people."' " My ears were not equally -open to their profanities," said Miss Mary. "I was struck by the good breeding and courtesy of the leader of the party, who, Ithirk, was Lady Kirkaldy herself.' " I saw I I thought she was patronising yon, and my blood boiled 1" cned Nuttie. " Will boiling blood endnie a picnic in the park of so much ignorance, folly, and patronage?" asked Mr. Dutton. " Oh, indeed Mr. Dutton, Nuttie never said that," exclaimed gentie Mrs. ^remont. " Whether it is fuuy worth the doing is the question," said tiie vicar "Grass and shade do not despise," said Miss Maty. "There surely must be some ecdesiasti- ca] remains," said the young man. "And there is a river," added tiie vicar. '*I shall get a stickleback foar my aoqna- rium," cried Nuttie. "We shdl make some discoveries for the Scientific Society. I shall note down every indi^nal creature I see! J say 1 you are sure ft is not a sham waterfall or Temple of Tivoli I" "It would please the cIh^ boys aadQ. F. S girls quite as moi^if-Bot mote, in tiiat case," said Mte Ma^; *.*bat yon need aot expect tha^ Nvttie. LeMbiapeguden- ing is gone by." -: " liiven witii the oonntiy peofleT" said Nuttie; " By at least half a eentnry," said Mr. Dntton, "with aU def onoce to this yoong ady's " It was oat «( tiMir tiie ^1 d^antiy. "%»fs aU about CMUrtry Mp ml siJI ja I ho^ ^C6««io, inr day^ yoOfin faML" iiite 1111*0 THiirjLiiiii" beet in tke chdr. The honaeein St Ambrose's Bead were semi-detached. The pur which the pai^ had reached had Uimr entrances at the aiijl^ wM ft narrow' gt»vielpa^ UaZing by a tiny grass polt to eaeh. One, whiob was covered with a rich pall of purple clematis, was the home rf Mrs. Egremon^ her aunt, and Nuttie the other, adorned with a Gleire de Dijon rose in seoond bloom, was the abode of Mary Naget, with...ber mother, tiie widow of a naval captain. Further on, with adjoining gardens, was anothw couple of houses, in one of which lived Mr. Dutton in the other lodged tb» youth, Gerard Godfrqr, together with the partner of the principu laedioal man. The opposite neighbours were a master of the Modem School and a scholar. Indeed, the aayingof the vicar, the Bev. FranouSpyers, was, and St. Ambrose's Road was proud of it, that it was a professional place. Every one had something to do either with school or umbrellas, scarcely excepting the doctor and the solicitor, for the former attended the pupils and the latter supplied them. Mr. Dutton was a partner in the umbrella factory, and lived, as the younger folks said, as the old bachelor of the road. Had he not a housekeeper, a poodle, and a cat, and was not his house, witii lovely sill boxes full of flowers in the windows, we neatest of the neat nd did not the the tiny con- servatory over his dining-room window always produce the flowers most needed for favoured ladies. Why, the very daisies never durst lift their heads on his littie lawn, which even bore a French looking- «;la8s globe in the centre. Miss Nugent, or Miss Mary as every one still called her, as her eldest sister's marriage was recent was assistant teacher at the School of Arts, and gave private drawing lessons, so as to aopplement the pension on which her moth- er lived. They idso received girls as board- ers attending the High School. So did Miss Headworth, who had all her life been one of those people who seem con- demned to toil to make up for the errors or disasters of others. First she helped to educate a brother, and soon he had died to leave an orphan daughter to be bred up at her cost. The girl bad married from her first situation but had almost immediately lost her husband at sea, and on this her aunt bad settled at Micklethwayte to make a home for her and her child, at first taking pupils, but when the High School was e t up, changing these into boarders while Mrs. Egremont went out afi daily governess to the children of a family of somewhat higher pretensions. Little Ursula, or Nut- tie, as she was called, according to the local contraction, was like the child of all the " 1%ey never tdl me. annt Urwilft pate oo l« ••^T"" look." D^ tUaklAi ue wftiti^ to tdl nMl|U% If there were, I em â- Â«â€¢ )||il jOpt try to findit oat betd riw i 5^«« Yon don't thinklwowfrj of that sort T Bat I thoovht yoo might know. K you remember their fiiet eejtUng here f "Soarcdy. I waaaveiy small ohud then. Misi Nugent had afewn gne no^leotiras meation. A-^im jMmembraao*. fom befpre he*' of inyrtfeolBs^ wMiqjoru^'^abdut the beaatifnl yoniw widow, aad that it had been said that the rector of the Old Church £d'doUKred'litnweii tib know tiiei tadiee weU, v^ had heartily reoommeiide$l them. ShetiioBghtitwiiswjmfyto spieak of hav- ins been one «rf thrir firpt scholars, telling ofthe awe Mim Headworth inquired; but the pleasure it was to bring a lesson to iiretty Mrs. Bgrement, wllo always reward- ed a good one witii* kiss,. "^sfBd she iwas so nice to kiss-yes, and ie." "Annt Ursel and mother were both governesses," continued the giri, "and yet they don't want me te go oat. They had rather I was a teacher at the High SchooL" "They don't want to trust their Littie Bear out In the world." " I think it is moie than tiiat," said the TirL " I can't help tiunUng tiiat hs^-my father â€" must have been some one rather grand, with such a beautiful name as Alwyn Piercefield Egremont. Tes I know it was that, for I saw my bantismal certificate when I stood for the sdioiwship it was Dieppeâ€" Ursula Alice, danghtitf of Alwyn Piercefield and Alice Elizabeth Egremont, May 16, I860. James Everettâ€" I think he was chaplain at Dieppe.' TO BX CXNTIHUI:) party, and after climbing up through the High School to the last form, hc^ed, after passing the Cambridge examination, to be- come a teacher there m another year. CHAPTER IL HON^S HOBTOK. " And we will all the pleasures prove. By ahallow rivers, by whose falls Mtlodioos birds Biog madrigala."â€" OM BaUad. It was holiday-time, and liberties were taken such as were not permissible, when they might have afibrded a bad pre- cedent to the boarders. Therefore, wnen two afternoons later Mary Nugent, return- ing from district visiting, came out into her garden behind the house, she was not soandft- lised to see ft pair of littie black feet under a holland skirt resting on a laural branch, and going a few steps more she beheld a big shady hat, and a pair of littie hands busy witii a pencil and a blank book as Ursula sat on the low wall between the gar- dens, shaded by the laburnum which facil- itated the ascent on her own side. "Oh Mis 4 Mary! Delicious! Come up here 1 You don't know how charming ti^ is. She moved aside so as to leave the ascent â€" by an inverted flower-pot and a laurel branch â€" open to her friend, thus knocking down one of the pile of books which she had taken to the top of the walL Miss Nugent picked it up, "Afarie Sttmrt I Is this your way of studying her?" "Now, you know 'tis holiday time, and volunteer work; besides, she was waiting for you, and I could not help doing this." She held out a hand, which was scarcely needed, and Mary sprang lightly to share her perch upon the wall. " Look here I" " Am I to guess the subject as in the game of historic outlines," said Miss Nus- ent, as the book was laid on- her li^t. " It looks like a modem â€" ^no, a mediievalâ€" edi- tion of Marcus Curtius about to leap into the capital opening for a young man, only with his dogs instead of his horse. That hound.seems very rationally to object." "Now don't 1" Guess in earnest." " A compliment to your name. The Boy of Egremont, poor fellow, just about to bound across the strid." " Exactiy 1 I always feel sure my father must have done sometiiing Uke thii." "Was it so heroic?" said Miss Mary. " You know it was for the hundredth time, and he had no reason to expect any special danger." "Ch, but his mother was waiting, and he had to go. Now, I'll toll yon how it must have Men with my father. You know he sailed away in a yacht before I was' bora, and poor mother never saw him again but I know what happened. There was a ship on fire like the Birkenhead, and the little yacht wait near to pick up the people, and my father called out, like Sir Humnhrey GUbertâ€" " Do not tear. Heaven is as near By water as by land." And the littie yacht was so close when the 'great ship drew up that it got sucked down in the whirlpool, and rescuers and all died a noble death together 1" " Has your motiier been telling you 7' asked Miss Mary. " Oh no 1 she never mentiims him. She does not know. No one does but I am quite sure he died noUy, with iiome to tdl the tale, only the angels to lock on, andtiiit makes it all the finer. Or jnst sappoae he was (ma desert isliod all the time, aad oameba^ to find as! Isomttimes think he is." ^^ "What! Wh« the otiier theory T" " I mean I am q;nfte snrewlifla I son tltibk- ing about it, or reading BMmaimOhumt,m theOous FttmOg.-' "Oh!" ^^ i "jC ssMary, has no one mm told yoa a^y^ngabeatmy falharr fOSSmiDAT GOHTfiHFLATIOir. There is some virtue ini almost every vice except hypocriq^. Simplicity of^ chalracter is the natural result of profound thoughto. Politeness has won more viktorys than logick ever has. â€" Josh Billings. Every day should be distinguished by at least one particular act of love. â€" JAivater. There never was any heart tnily great and generous that was not also tender and compassionate. It is the moment when our resolution seems about to become irrevocable that tests our strength. Advice is like snow the softer it falls the longer it dwells upon and the deeper it sinks into the mind. Reason sometimes misleads us, feeling sometimes misleads us; the wise nuui corrects the one by the other. No man ever got rid of a lie by telling it it is sure to come home sooner or later to hobnob with ite author. Reason and kindness are the yreat promoters of that harmony and hilarity which generate friendship and affection. There are netties everywhere, but smooth green grasses mte more common still. The blue of heaven is larger than the cloud. No one ever had a glimmer of a will to come, but that shining " whosoever" flashed ita world-wide splendor for his opening eyes. â€"F. R. Havergal. Great efforts from great motives is the best definition of a happy life. Ihe easiest labor is burden to him who has no motive for performing it. More is felt than is perceived, and more is perceived than can be interpreted, and love climbs higher with ite lambent flame than art can pile the faggots. Life has no wretehedness equal to an ill- assorted marriase â€" it is the sepulchre of the heart, haunted by ghosts of past affections and hopes gone forever. Every good deed will have its blessing, We need have no fear of losing the rewara if only we make sure to merit it by the virlke of our motive the judiciousness of our effort. Let grace and goodness be tiie princi^l loadstone of thy affections. For love which hath ends will have an end, whereas that which is founded on true virtue will always continue. Thrare is no power of love so hard to ge and keep as a kind voice. A kind hand is deaf and dumb. It may be rough in flesh and blood, ^et do the work of a soft heart, and do it with a soft touch. But there is no:one thing that love so much needs as a sweet voice to toll what it means uid feels and it is hard to get and keep it in tiie right tone. One must start in youth and be on the watoh night end day, at iiork and play, to set and keep a vmce tnat shall speak at aU times the thougnts of a kind heart. Tempest-tost on life's langh sea. Thy dtodplss-stiU to Ttaee- In thdr sore bssetment atj :â€" â-  tew M Ma-ter." Ftam on high ..ndb«r_„ ^^^ fasit%Kai*er,;«i(ll *^Peace,be8tlUI Foi^y word offcraoe they plead:â€" Peaoe.bestiU1 ydSamcytk ifi l«Mr for Theeâ€" »dMien-to«.eadiOaIUce BIse, dOMr Iroird. and bripfTeleaae QnSuiBeWtoiUng ones ny Peace. Jesns, Ibper. speak the word :â€" S^eak^tt W the earth bath beard :â€" Tbroogb 11m tonnoU and the din O'er the turbulence and lin,â€" BiiiifflfilhBmlBl bleadngs near. Spedk the word that all may bear ^. Banish wrong, tot rigUt inoresf e,â€" Bering the nations into Peace. :^ Jftns,. Master, liie and speak :â€" Peace, be atUl 1 Ihoa nkst here the help we seek :â€" Peace, be BtiU I Let Tliine own sweet restful ciUm With its blessedness aad balm Breathe its spirit o'er the strife Of our weary haman life, â€" IIIL from fear shall oome release. And to all. Thy Perfect Peace. Jesna, Master, speak for me :â€" PeaosLbestiUl Speak, and let my soul be Jree :â€" PeMM.be^! Bid my troubled nature rest Btennynuaions sweep my breast. ' Speak Thy Word of conscious jtower To my heart, and this glad hour. All ita tumnlt-tbrobs shall oease I shall have Thy Perfect Peace. beneath thm" to5^»«« 2!^!!^'« »«».«« of] been ^tting up a iubfleR^**«d Queen m the aV if a^^tiSS^ rooms be closed on Sunday Tf***"' several hiMidred pounds liiA *»•* rartar. of a milHon si^t!^^ Glad Idves. Few thin|;s are so conducive to a cheerful spirit as that habit of mind which takes deluht in the commtm and ordinary tilings of Ufa. The songs of Urds and the fragrance of flowers, the biuht sky and the fresh grass, the mirth of ohimren, the inter- esto of home, the sooie^ of friends, the day's vacation when a longer one is denied, the littie gih where a oostiy ooeisimpoesible, the thousand little acts of kjn^ nyas and courteqr, of charity and benevolence, that cost so Uttie and mean so much â€" such tilings â€" and their name is lisgimi â€" ^may, if they are permitted, fill up the life with gladness and the heurt with cheeriCnlness. But, when they are pusbed aude agnot worth at- tention, and every nerve is strained' to the utmost after costiy and fsr^off illusions, it is no mder that the starved capacity for happiness should dwindle away, and that a doomy discontent, bom of lume long defer- red, uionld drive the smile bom the lips^ and the cheer from the heart. yoa are guiu mm of nU: The RomanCfttitolic aadioritiesofiBoston are plaiming to eitablish one great common cemetery for all the dties in adiaoent part« of the date, to iriUch the rdbMMis ftce ex- pected to mn snedal ttntni tnoaa daOfi the can g direotfy into Oe groonds aad aU expoM ef caniages iantaimy ^tb,tiie oiidertdbgr esrtyfa y gjsto dljf to tiie i«fttlM^ mn^-a^AMtqRuWliB^SS B0ikmM is said tobe raa^ to mn fonsral trains «t radncad mtaiV sooh ft oemetny is eetftb- Hshad. InMexieetiugrhftveaMdaltenar- tB. ears over the hnrso nar tootos to Oa "Fear Not, I Am With Thee." •T Bsn. Lord, the days are so lonely, so weary, The ni^ts are so long and drear. " Dear one, I am ever beside thee, Thou liast no more need to lear." But, Savior. I feel, oh, so helpless, T So blind, I see not the way. " My precious child, daarly I love thee, :. My feet shall not let thine stray." But, Jesus, the tempter waylays me. He tempts me on every side. ' Loved one, mine hand holds thine closely. In its hollow thou mayest hide." Oh Jesus, my faith seems to quiver, ' The trials come quickly and fast. " My child, seest thou these nail-prints For you the hammer waa cast." Yea, Lord, but Thou art so bo'y, £ And I am so black with sin. " Tes, dear one, but I too was tempted, i I am holdmg thee closely within." But I've drop't Thee so often, my Savior, I have spoken and acted nntarne. " Precious soul, tiion need'st no repining. My love is all poured out on you." And do'st Thou forgive me my Jesus And wilt thou give grace to me still " Dear one, my Orace is thine, always ' I am moulding thee by my great win." .-, Oh, Jesus, my heart is so hungry, I am yearning, yet toeing so mndi. "Thoueh it seemeth so dark, trust me fully, • For Satan thy soul dAe not touch." And, Lord, when the sands all seem slipping. Wilt Thou hold me still close, nor let go 7 ' On the firm Rock of Ages 1 11 pbMe thee. The floods then shall not thee aerthrow." Dear Lord, why thete trials sa many? .. Why this sorrow, this burden I wear? " "Tis because I love thee so dearly, I want thee my oroes to help bear." Then Jesus I'll yield. Tes 1 1 love Thee, I see Thy great hand in it all. Thou wilt never leave nor forsake me Nor my head from Thy bosom let fall. " No I no preoioos soul. In thy bosom Dwells the Spirit whom I to thee send. Let him hold all thy sorrowful burdens. He will guide thee all safe to the end." A Frossian Gavaliy Officer- In the course vf conversation with the Adjutant of a dragoon regiment stationed at Metz I learned that he, in company with some nine or ten brother officers, had been out on a ten days' reconnaissance nnder the GeaotaX commanding the cavali^ division. The expenses of tiie trip oftme partially if not wholly out of the officers' pockets. My friend spoke of the tour with the greatest enthusiasm, and I went to tihe General to obtain from him the details of the system followed. Now, the GmenJ in queetion. Yon Wright, an Englishman, whose memory is dear to all of us officers who made hl»ac- quaintance, was one of the meet disting- uished, cavalry officersin theCkrmany Anny. From Major m a cuirassier regiment he was selected by Von Moltke, althouffh personally nnknoiWn to .him, and on nessional re- oommendfttions only, as Us milituyseoretaiy in 1886 as commander of a cavalry regi- ment he led the Third Army into Chalons subsequentiy during the campaign he held important staff appointmente, including that of Quartermaster-General to Prince Charles daring the trying Le Mans oam- paima. At the time. of this particular visit to Metz he was the Lieutenant-Genend commanding the Fifteenth or Frontier Ca- vaby Division. The General was al^^ays pleased to talk about his professiob uid to g've any information to those who asked f(V The following was nis account of tiie reconiuussance The evening before we started I thought oat a sobeme. AV 7 A. M; the foUowii^ morning I met the officers, and to each Igav^ his dsgr's work, which he returned to me completed at 2 P. M. Daring the sitempon- and^ the eyeoiog I examined the work, and! delivered' my cHlIcismsoii it Ai^hen thd ratoeii assembled n^etftrnmin^. ' The fitot that I have been farooghtapm the JBnglish Army moat be !^ioepte4 U an excuse for the blundering question I next addressed to him: "But, Genenl^~liow mi^' stdF ofB^ien^ ito« d^- ramps, AssiataMT' Adjotalit and Assistaat QoMrtermMt^ ChMePM Jttd yoa. to do Ae details r 'Saa»A' wat.the ndLv "I udmotetianâ€" ft.man wbo bar won bis poaWoa by tiie hardest of Work in Boropean wanare, aad ftt onetime ai-psaaa auncrav^ 4b«bOto 5.ie0 sabres ia „**y • •pWtnalisttc sita.. bam, England, came toandT" somn ene in the audienoeffi»?il Mim I5ay was found to wSS. roof, while tiie "spirit" that w!l5I the darkness over tiie heading"" was an inflated linen bagT " Mr W. K. Vanderbat hu s Lovat's castie at Beaufort. ^t?^A autamnshootmg. TheS^^SiH red sandstone, and is beautiful -T*! gablee, and mullioned wbdow, u^ hnndired feet long and eighhrLaS u one of the finest castl« iZfiSl The Crown Princess of Amhk J her Mjonm at Abbazia, onthe Bil manded a crew of six youM ^^ Conntes^s of the bluMt blood rffci who womwied a barge, which SL steered as they rowed. TheywewJi attheomandcaUedthepSf' modora." ^^ Gounod was asked to lead tiiet the 500th performance of hi» «m which took place on hU festal day wl phed tiiat he would prefer to io»-itf Giovanni were given instead (J holds Mozart to be first amonir mji^ posers, and that he bimseUiBhardhiy to hang wreaths on the pedestal of bk! ue. ' Dona Isadora Cousino, of Ghill, n^^ the richest woman in the world, Jl fortune is estimated to be at least t*! dred millions of dollars. Dona Coi on "the sunny aide of forty, above i height, of graceful figure, and of i type of beauty. She proposes makiin York a visit and if she does cinl make her presence felt, for she tpoil money freely, and is interested in i| variety of subjects, from art to caftU-nL General Neal Dow says that the n] became a Probi'oitionist was thiB: Aw in Portland, Maine, came to him and ii him to get her husband home one niclit,! he was drinking at a local saloon, uli knew if he went to his office intonaMi jnext day he would be dischargei Gai Dow went after him, and uphnidedj saloon-keeper for selling liquor ton who had a family to support The sL keeper replied that he too had a fim support, and that he had a liceme tt r liquors. That such » traffic as thii ikii liciensed struck General Dow as bejugi g- ing sin and he at once made up his mill do all in his power for the cause of tion. VEET EIOH POLKS. Clans Spreckels the sugar king, iiBil| be worth over 130,000,000. The Duke of Buccleuch â€" she richet'i in Scotland â€" has an income of $I,5( per annum. The late Meredith Featheringili ^K soldier, leaves an estate of $1,(100,11(11 heirs in Kentucky. Mrs. Hicks-Lord, Mrs. Panm and Mrs. Marshall 0. Roberta are i widows par excellence of New York. Mrs. Mark Hopkins is the richeit i in America. She has a fortune of it I $40,000,000, and does not spend MM come. I George Westinghouse, inventor of tKj brake, u wortii $9,OC0,O00. This i»belW to be the largest fortune ever made oti wind. Isaac Jeans, a Philadelphia Quaker, has made a fortune of $3,000,000 aii I importer, began his business »reer by ' ing oranges and apples at retail The estate of the late ex Senator I of Nottingham, N. H., is valued afll»^ of which one forth is to be devoted »• itable purposes. The deceased beiiiW" a power in New England poUticsir of a century ago. The fortune of Prince Ferdinana oil ria, about which there has been" talk, is just 150,000 a year. The J will inherit a further fortune of »« on the death of his mother, the r Clementine d'Orleans, and abo the ful estate of Eberthal, together «»» palace at Vienna. «, The Nizam of Hyderabad, whoW H ed the Indian Government *iW^ strengthen the defense of the n*" frontier of India, is tiie greatest cUV. hammedan princes. He ™»"'^fc impression on the English dBnng»»jj| inliOndon. HU manners are j»»i fascinating, and he is th«»^^JiJ the native Indian gentleman, w "rj recent offer has added vastly to M P^ ity in London. LoTaWe Prieiids. There are friends who are nmP^ j, to lov and admire-people wnw heart with tenderness, for w""^* the most entire admiration, ' fftulta are BO harmonious v ^^i characters that you are .J"" " -e(k too. and would be nnwiUmg » otiifr tiuM what t»ey "«:,.^ for* f have tiie divine use of callu^J' love. .In their presen*^ P" h»« angry feeling, never a bitter tw^ j, «T Morally like some =oAj^^^ «oented arbour where yon «*Vt totiit* Wmmer day and get refreshmw* 'ward cUmb in tiie fiery opM- analvse your sensationsâ€" yo». jj^i tiiat ydtafeeL When yongo Wj^jj ge hs«6^ peace. You hear noWy,, ments, no hardi words, no nnch^ mise;^^ Ridicule is an art «»»!^ a^di^er foUows tiie f»te of.?ry, 1' ana anger louows ww iâ€" -- tun tiinkiiSiat "otoare betterJM^jfceft eKaS^S^her cKak toodijj^^ for the covering, tiwy V^J^,^ To others belongs tiie *»»^^i^ to them only that of "«** tlwf t of oharitftble sHenoe ^SStad f**^ Soph sweet jand gentirhesrw" |irloelws. i the mina """"j, -JL-.^nderfulso-caHfd' •'•^Tfc^w me, end knew ***fh STwh** i wanted, alt *j^^^Ssslon for ocienoe to i "^^oM mothers used to ha, .•JfSrthe same pby?i«it°ice 'i!S«d me over ana said, Ke ^•*^ in bed. so warm as to "P^S^te audyouwiUbeal! *,°S""' Not inch medicin ^m«lT hat it proved to '"t^^o places. I pre „-ave given some bread pills If^ti "a teaspoonful eve i*J^Wn« this man i" tborous H ^to the times; and wha ,nd »!? '"f^ig .. bUious V Ts L'f^i! S very best land. CfhU hoVse and buggy and dnv« P*S^ Then he puta on an c feil\nd, witii dog and gun tab â- SSthe •»«»* r«»" *T """' K ° When tired out he comes i J dry efothes, and after a fe; ta "nSlicine," goes home all n| .„ been his practice for many yes 'HoTfoolish, then, for us to i^taTwich injurious things, whicl gJSgent physician, who ^o« ^^ has yet taught, on tt Sdn't think of touching I And "foolish, and even wick^, t J^wn tiie throate of the li SL every time they cry or w nL^^t a single drop of med* Trfany kind. We have alwi hue take «a» of »I1 ^**^® "^™® What we could to assist her by â-  for larger ones called an f^w it is hard to sit idly b 1 ones suffer, hence we try t An •'Eme^ency" Cabin 1 In every house, especially whei Jly is large, tbera should be somi PoTioddents, and sudden attacks A contemporary descril I" emergency " cabinet, as a bo: used to hold a variety of art wide and narrow bandages /rolled and ready for use, r cats or hurte on the body or latter for wounded hands J tiionld also be ftpacket ol r, a roll Of diachylon or adhes iQts.ef old linen, lint, cotton, i i«f joaUodion for cute, old musl ' lltsters, ^ns, scissors, an( \m that will suggest them itiidi^to good housekeepers. Ammg useful things to be ac NTeare such following simpli ae of peppermint, spirit |or, some first-rate olive oil, aroD I immonia, water of ammonia, ohol, common salt in fine powde to of soda, and a box of mustan The aranatic spirito of an lomphor should also be kep IhoasB where there are aged pers \m sebjeot to sudden attacks o Iboth these agente afford rel Mtote impeded cireulation c lluttardis a valuable nauses ' luvected or acddoital poi P^bmrbe added that copious â- 'â- tii water taken until vomit |*Bd tlieceafter repeatedly until â- "ffowd to be thrown off, is a j â- to nae entil the help of a pbys Ig^MUed. Ifpahis are felt in Ipvt omiont injections of tepid ,_. .jitiie system in both waj Y^ aripwdily as poesible. Qymnastic Tiaiiiiiie itJti'Blfafltoodc, of Amherst i ?**. wying on for the last '*~1y into the physi I s tt d e n ts under hit IWnT" teiRilte that diff i?T %P JOpelar imweesion re â- â- *â-  ***-'ment. He has of 1,258 studen athletic men belc 1 1.;;^^^:"^^ hall teams, i iBildb^ prises at athletic I fc-T*" separate group of |;*jMidfiiri»41iat Oeir Vver tiiftt of the ftverag utiis of an inch ;M^Ir. Hlttdicock " 1886, four we f tiie ftvernge heigl ditbnninefintpris •nibitimi three we (e bright." hei^t is """â- ^^^' â- tiBflManaii iil

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