Ontario Community Newspapers

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 16 Jul 1881, p. 1

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11w ANN: drr Plan-an} given the fol- kwiug tumult (of making W (or mg» as up divas. 31: pan o‘cnlutic uh m slim-aka! in was until the by-lmta and: N Bum. Tu tlu solution aid {out of oxide dune. ml boil until it it Shana. Add satin-at inter to bring an nolntioa do“ to 10‘ than. mo: fingered intln sciatica and ‘ will L x -L I.. __‘|:‘|. 'l‘uI publication of weather pmlnbilitiu 1min whaling“. The man who rattan burrow-AI ”new: purer in the morning hnds out when}; is nhou d borrow an umbn-lla. A but it Mikhcll. lull. . in vaulting the ‘9 uwolntnnigudthc-cgemuwhu ou'hlu‘ giro the tum u: ything m {nul- .53 hi. heat. «115031,V llo km: hon w‘cllufiugfl-Mlyf mu an! Mary Andaman am both In ["3 Wk, and I part0! their dnily um cwufmng nth 'cluht. They my (My "poet. to t ml get! your. ml it is jun u 'tn ha up us the u'umplidh ML wane A "Anus "melting bin! is an ml ‘.‘i“8;:3i good) and Sunkey h 'mns. “aiming e . _ . . :‘Slmti . ago mum: n rum ukmg npa The l'arisixun hmhion dugnmnf the mmnent, in the words of Louis Xl\'.. is : “ ll n‘y a. plus de Pyrenees :" that is to any, fashion dues not stop at barriers. She him gone into Spain. and brought out ull that is heat in Spanish styles. Miss Jam: “mm. of the Yokes family. is «hunt. to follow her sister liminn‘s i'xmnplv, and cxplom the: Instrimoninl field. E. ll. Warren “'ri'ht being the individual who is to buy a] her dreams in the future. Although he'll get. Jessie fromthe start. they will luthcomo out all Wright: yet Yokes will hulk. So says the St. Louis ”(an- I )rnux‘rut. Tux Inndon 'ounmlx mm 10 gave [in-b 1y well thnt. MI 0. lknilunll‘n performance in " 1‘ Dana Aux Cmueliu" in one of her most brilliant “Tom. and in this opinion they echo the jud meat 0! American critio cism. Even the ‘al! Mail (-‘uzem. which treated her utifliy during her tint. visit to London. grow. cnthuxiutic over this Magnet-ice. nail the! Tim: [in-aka forth manually in in deteriptiou of tho death ["50 , Pcnuivc gnrdeII and lawn szIty dresses. l‘hef are trimmed with lace (imitation). and brightened “ith Iibbou bows and flowers. Sam Bernhardt has a genius for «lusiguiuk custmm‘s. Almut two yours naushu dcslguc . . . . . , 11 Louis XIII. tuilot with [minltml ixnlicevaml mnicm attached to the waist hy gaunt-rings. l‘hu coutmnouof to-dny are similar to this creation of hum. For sumu time she wore eccentric ulccnrs , gnthrrcd. hunillonnc, and h- '-of-lnuttun sleeves, intended to llitlc the thuuwuof hurarnm. Our very newest sleeves are nunlu in this way. Arcmuusu u. the Saturday [(vrirw, tho performances Ill London l?’ the Uynuumc Company have not. mm quc 1 success. I? is stated that the com any of the (Iritcriou'l‘lu-au'v, London. lmveg‘mcn invited to \‘ixit this country and to give a series of lmrfummlwcn. MIL \V. H. L\‘1‘El.l., the original Judge in The llmniteu, and an 0ch Toronto favorite, has been engaged {or next season by Mr. McKee Rankin. “'1”. A. SAan. who has many fricmh in 'l‘urun'u. is engaged for the juvenile business with Maggie Mitchell. and his wife (Laura. [,0 Claim) plays the first old woman in the WHO company. They have gone to Vinal Haven, Maine, to spend the summer. 'l‘uutl m IQWulwu‘nu in this country. .ml ya lumber! mll pull the W"! of their inhuu with I “ring uul to n duur latch. Nu dress nrtint aspires nowadays to the creation of u style that. 3:; to he “ the fashion," for there are so nanny thlcs, ull equally fashionable, that. individual taste alone is consulted. \Vhite and cream-colored dotted and upriggecl Swiss muslin in much usml fur inex- Mn. Sm. Sm'ru llrstu. will bogiu his travelling season with Eilgcwoml l-‘ulkn early in August. his likely that he will open the Grand for the season ”SI-'5“). l’nh: rose mull dresses should he xmulc cf- fu:ti\’e with flower acct-”mics of dark. rich, rml roses. daisies with dark centres and other striking flown-m. . A novelty in dress {autumn . is a acrics of Inothuroflpwrl rings uttachet to each side of the hmlice in fmnt. witha hwing L‘Ul'll passed through no as to close them. A circle: of plain told. fastened withsumc pretty device, encirc‘fcs the throat of Home of the most. fuhionuhlc London women at. the moment. In spite of the efforts of drcasnmkers and fashion (lesi men: and fashion plate manufac- turcru, the tug basque is moribund. 'l'u nmke the com re of a. colored _muslin (lrcma correspond in a nude with the skirt, the muslin mum. be doubled over the lining. The Longchnmpa hut tunm an innuense brim ahru My up in front, concealing in part :1. very hig 1. tapering crown. The Spanish lace nmutilla and Catalonia" comb have made a figure in Paris fashions for months past. l'olomines, in one form or another, reappear again and again In foreign importatmnu of coutumca. Large hook-mnl-cyc ommnenm are used to clone the carnage of many fashionable imporb ed Ala-mes. The I-‘oxlull is a new coaching and race~ course hat. brought out by the l’arismn Flower company. The “Suphwie,"n new coiflure of rare bauty and convenience, has been brought out. Shining pmlucin the Mother Hubbard Effort. appear: in 1 im' as Well In childrru's Parisian women wear their capote bonuets hr back. but their pokes project over the forehead. . Daisy chain dog collars take the plum of little pig, elephant. and spider ncckhwcx for the summer. Moire “brim, especially silk, cmubincd with lmn’l veiling. are the rage in Paris just now. The "obelink" hat lead- the world for coaching and race-comm lubionnbles. The minis tun-l the modern French style: divide the world of fuhion in Eng- bud. h‘uull ca pom and e poLc bonnet: dh Me the sum of fnhiolnb'fe In or, v..- -wwa -_.. bonnet of high “railway: [hark-coloured mullin- with bright printed burden will be much worn. The deflation of copying old Euglinb cos taint-41m reached Amelia. A Molnlverbn'g hum: black costume with exquisite edict. Think!“ we!) entirel out o! lubion. 8"" y MUSICAL AND DRAMATIC NOTES. Bruacba, not lace pim, u: agzin torn. Thisistbcm fordlkpmflhtia. lacednuauppeu to be in the anaemi- . , “m” A“ I“ “Ema silk is retired. Now in the m (at flower bonnet; Them is a ruin! a! old Chantilly hoe. Peom’esm Horn {or cottage banquets. Sketching W; an: n rrglz just now. uie upon is the [alias Pari- mi thc'm. Elsie Mil-dough). l'fnrbc's gnu-1mm“. tell km the rhymu her Mandarin-aid toluvumc-Lwnow. “Magnum-M mmlwcdlocm- than. Shomdtfingounlovwmd- «chit. Melboummu'ng ouhcr km. berm m hating on her hand; mehilo the old ‘w’rotnan' was still sitting by the large tab which her gnmldauglm-r lunl filled (or her. She had more than once glanced at rim-be, Iml lmlmn how entirvly absorbed the m with what was goiugou outside. and than she hem" had set hen-elf Win: All but total. might and nnngth to accomplish the purpose on which her miml m bent. "That man» that den-i1, Davie 'l‘mruhoc. than“ newt reach his houw !" Her grandmother tad beau a"vrise wo- mnn“-not . lilo: in the has had over data! to emu her will. .‘ e kncvr that rank to any nml that venous-2 in com- mon noun um! tempest. uni than who of- Iendal her IN! ”at. '9: may mi -ht lave pun Iith (Air wimlsbowing am a high: um shining overhaul. the v. Id. if shew. pay 113‘}: tfik which gulf! At three the thlc was high. a light breeze was blowing. (“Ill she knew the time had come for Davic's hunt to go. l’n‘sontly she saw its pretty scabitten sails catch the wind and slowly till. and then it sped on its way. Ah. how wide that. sum wan : how puthless and how terrible ! How much might happen heforo she touched hand of his again ! She l-ent her heal lower and lower and watched the nail dipping and the boat. growing small- er and smaller as it glided over a smooth tmy cm into a world huhlen by white mist, ' 'hun aha at watching all that long aml lune. ly afternoon. Not pncc did Ehe tam. ail-l at hutch. after weer-in quietly whom" fur an our ur so. her unison! dro pod down on the window-sill. when: awn-r her unce- lm‘ul uni unduly-cherish“! geranium» and may}. and the wear): girl slept. “ Roll: the door again, girl," said the gnuulluuthcr. “and keep all the neighbours nut ; I wun't none: of them in here now : and then when thou's «lune that thou must sit clown. and if thou wants any last looks. why I advise thou just to take them whilst thou can I But leave me alone, I beg of thee. for I want sure to he quit-t." 'l‘his uuitml l'llu.‘l\c's wishes [mien-fly: with all her poor tirul luxut she. too, was longing to huquiut. She clmppcd into the window-scat mnl forgot her grandmother and forgot uwrythiug. a-xcopt that Davie 'l'n‘vcthm- was now in his boat in the har- bor unnl on the wry point of sailing away immhcr. lut, while lilling the pail at the door. l'hIL-he saw the villagers erowdin ' to the harbor; and while filling hcr pui for the third time she saw Dmic, her 0“]! cruel lover. standing on the quay gixing his onlum, taking In loav es and othel pIov isions {01 the \oyage, and looking in too busy tu have any thoughts of her. She saw the rich brown nails rise heavily, flapping to and fro until they were fairly set. "‘ Dear knows, indeed !" muttered the Old wonuux us she bent down over the large oval washing-tub. which was standing on the 'round in front of her, filled nearly to the )rim with water. 'l‘hrn she looked up and mm’ thnt I'hu-hc was profiting by her silence and had a )proxwhcd the window. when: she was doing liar very utmost. to get “ one good look mom." 'l‘hiu quite overcame the poor girl, and she almost drop )ed as she ‘arricil in the water and cinptim it intu the washing-tub. At lust her great sum-ring gave her strength to any to her grandmother: “ Have some hn- lnun nntnr' in ye. Let me just tak' one last look nt him when he is going away so far and so long. Dear knows when he'll come back again “ It's nut that," replied the grandmother; “ it's not for any washing. Set the tub hcrc nfuru me on the flour, and fill it mlgcfnll with clean water flu the well. and dill not than stop to look about thcc while thuu’s getting it. Them heats can \‘cry wull sail uwuy without having thou for to watch them.” She ichd hcr cycs full of intense misery on her u‘amlmothcr, but her m'mulmnthcr was piti css and for all unsu'cr hmlc her “ go on with her work." er," she said ; hard work." “ciiidurcil-up" the hearth. but she knew that the title was rising higher and higher and that in an hour or two her Duvic's hunt must sail. She saw it gradually hccomc huuynut. She saw it begin to rock on the heaving water. “ She's surely not going for to set me on to wash E" thought l’hnrln., for now she was expectin ' to he ordered to gut to her spin- ning roe and she meant to sit somewhere near the window. “ I am tired, grandmoth- er,"‘she s-aitl ; “ don't set me on to any mom Thursday was the day on which Davie 'l'revethoe was to sail, and down below in the harhor there was the usual little stir in- separable from a departure of this kind. Unee or twice unhappy l'hmhe looked fur- tively out of the window. hoping to catch in glimpse of the man whom. spite of every- thing, she could not help loving so pxmsiou- atoly. The aged woman's eyes followed her with extraordinary sharpness and vigilance, and more than once she peremptorily ex- claimed : “ (lirl, I‘ll have none 0' that look- ing out. of t' winder.” So l'huehe could only cross the kitchen more frequently than was necessary, and hope for u glimpse of her Davie as she went to and fro. llut she never saw him. Noon came and she: and Elsie (llllctl.tllollgll little enough was eaten by either. 'l'llcu l’luubu “ washed up" and “sided all the things" and “ scrubbed down" the table and Presently the 0111 Woman said : “1 reach down the wash-tub from the shelf. “ RIGGBD WITH CURSBS DARK.” "be temps I‘cn Va le temps s'en vs. madame ! mile temp- non : mug. ngus ngus en allons !‘ Lies In the even-glow 1 Now, on the furwurd wu ', Let us [Old our hundsauu pray ; Alas. ’l‘huc staysâ€"we go 1‘ @Iw gm How far. how fur. 0 Sweat 'l‘lyg pay! bplxiud our_fccl_ 3m), in what traversed ways. Whig; hgwkwanl k‘nlqdelyys 'l'hc hopes we used to know ; “'hcrc are our old desires I Ah E where are those vanished fin-s! 'l‘iuw goes, you say (~uh. no! Once when my voice was strong. I fiflgd lhqwoods Mjlh ugng _ ,. 'l‘u praise your “rose" n'fid “snow ;' My hird. that hang. hi dead ; W here are your r0305 fled l Once in the days of old, You; kicks, we_re _cn_rlim; gold Your locks were curlimifinld, And. mine had nhaln the crow ; Now. In the selbsamc stage. We' 1.3.? rqpchcd the nllvqr age. Leads lhmuxfh 57mm landscape low - We manila: nk we see The earth' :5 fixed surface flee. Alan. ' Ttmc Std) sâ€"we go ' Time 30$. )0!) a) 1- Ah no. ' Dun In the ex (5' deceit of men whim: flyingh-eg Time ' 10033} 1" 3127171617 Alan}: _ cun.)pggo; Or an. REE mifnoi so. What need toehnin the hours. Porjouth werealwnyspuypâ€" VOL. IX. Mai, Time; SM)':;:M'B go ! Thin: 7' 7m H W V “ow, you say lâ€"u film 2 m PARADOX OF Tm. [A Variation on W] «Auhlin Dolmen. Hirl " Gut Her-out! W hat'- comul to be! 3 I: 31'“? drowned 3 My l'bnrbe ! My own bonnie lnirn !" " You tell herâ€"4e“ her kind." aid one 0! the m to the out“. " No : tell me any way. but tell one quick! I nin‘er till 1 let minute- bnck knew my “She hing“ Atkimnnl, b) the above when they got ens rith he: {or Indium her oql." “ She might - pm talkie” hound, but. they're 11! sadly and the won't." n-plied the out". - She tried to call Pha-beâ€"her voice refused to form an articulate sound. She opened the honscwloor and looked out. All was fair and calm and bright. The sun was glitteriu over the hank of n cloud from which it. hail risen ; the am. who-«- face was as clear and open as that of achild, seemed to be smiling nu munn-r tn the sun‘s arms. hut the hue of the clill’ wzm veiled with a tender mist of driven 3 my. and on the shore lnya broad Ltd! of ashing mavwls, heaped up and driven inward int above high-water marl: by the force of the gale of the night. While Elsie was looking at th'u. two fishermen came toward herâ€"they were on their way to her houn: Their faces were lull of rough pity. their rye: grave and kind. and their ruin: low. " You maybe do not know ahnut it, mir tress 2" said one oi thcnmlouhtlully. " "are ye canted here for to tell me tint l have lost my hoim 3" said the old tom, to whom knowledge of the truth seemed to he thus suddenly and nmngely given. _ She felt for the steel and flint. She felt for the old shoe in which she kept, her tin‘ dur. She :lid her best to strike a light. but her hands failed her. the sparks glanced Millc. and she was forced to gin.- up the attempt and to sit where she was 1; while longer: it last day broke; but. though she.saw her crutches near her. she felt too numb to trust herself to them. There was no gale now. It was a bright autumn morning. mul when shv saw how hri ht it “ma. her eyes turned to the bed to 100 for l’hwhe. The bed was empty. She rubbed her eyes. but l’hmbe was not there. and when she saw this a terrible thought came info her mind. and straightway she rose to her feet and walked m'rmm the room without her crutch- osâ€"a thing she had not done for live yoam. So she sat where she was for some time longer. until the cold made her teeth chatter and bones ache. “ If only I could find my crutches," thought she, I’d make for bed mysel'. I‘m fit to perish with cold sitting hen: !" The girl did sleep, and the old woman left her and went and sat down by the embers of her tire, listening to the howling of the wind, and wondering what news she would hear when morning came. At last, worn out by fatigue and cxuitcnwut, she herself fell into n sonml sleep. No answer was returned. " She has crept her \mys into bed aml is lying there last in a hcnvysleep. poor thing,” thought Elsie. remembering all that the un- happy girl hml gone through. “ She‘s asleep, and once asleep she'll stay asleep. and so slut may for me, poor lass : 1'“ none wakcn her to trouble." About livAc in the morning she awoke, chilled to the very bone. She was sitting by her bummLout fire, cold and desolate. It was still dark, flllll she (lid not know how to fill-15.1 alight. _ she. She looked up. All was dark ; but when she tattered to the window she saw a faint fragment of a moon over which the clouds Were driving fast. Again she heard the wind as it swept round her frail cottage in menacing and wrathful gusts. The wind was rising outside, and in the window-seat sat the poor girl whom she loved hotter than any one livingâ€"the daughter of her own dearly-loved lost (laughter. She vas sleeping, with her head lying against the window-sill. Elsie could not; see her, but she put out her hand and felt her warm soft throat and hair. “ Sleep away, my honey," said she kindly. “ sleep while then are able. 1l'nl feared the wind will not let thee sleep on ” ' fixed her now baleful blue-gm ' eye; resolute- ly on the water which Phce had just car- ried in for her. And thus she sat, quiet, silent and still, but the wish of her heart was busy and strongâ€"her enemy should not live. She might have sat thus for half an hour when her lips began to move. No words. not even a whisper.. passed those lips, but neVertheless they framed words. Quickly those words came, quickly and con- tinuously, and then there was another change, and again she ceased to speak, but whether she spoke or was silent, her eyes never once strayed away from the surface of the water. Sometimes she made passes over it with her lean and bony hands, on which the great purple veins stood up swollen and knotted, or she bent forward and seemed to clasp the mass of water in her embrace, while speaking strange words in hushed whispers or low excited murmurs, and all the1 time she watched and peered and darted in- , quiring glances at the glassy smooth water. 1 After a long time â€"was it a ray from the} dying sun outside, had she shaken the tub and made the water quiver, or were her mut- tered rhymes and her heartily-pm 'ed pra '- ers lmingthard Tâ€"a faint white light caught her eye «was it really the water heaving slightly under her upraised hands? She saw it. Old as her eyes were, they caught the wished-for sightâ€"her breath came qmek and fast ; she fixed her eyes more firmly than ever on the waterâ€"her thoughts on what she was doing. She bent nearer and nearer; she played as she had not prayed for years, and faster and faster came the words of the old rhyme which had been stored up unused in her memory since the earliest days of ehildhood~a rhyme handed down for cen- turies from witch mother to witch daughter, in the cold far North. where her fore~elders' ships went to and fro. Again she fancied that the sluggish waterâ€"the water, so hard ‘ of hearingâ€"stirred, and this time it seemed to her that it moved more thoroughly, that it was not so much a sparkle as a regular upheaval of the entire body. She had no doubt this time ! Assuredly she had seen it moving, and she laughed a silent laugh and prayed a stronger prayer! She baled her wrinkled arms and again stretched them over it, nor did she once pause to take rest. Darkness was failing fast ; Elsie still sat there. She could not see anything in the room ; to her aged eyesâ€"to any eyesâ€"the window itself was now a mere opaque blurr. She did not require light for the work which she had in hand. She never more relaxed her purpose. She was convinced that she had seen the water move in obedience to her will, and not till it overleapt tht barrier which eonlined it and dashed over its edge before her eyes would she be satisfied, for then she would know that a fierce storm would be raging on the wide waste of waves over which that “false deevil Davie" was now making his way. She was weary and faintwithfatigue;butitwasonlythedullthing called body which felt fatigue; herspirit was brighter and stronger and more resolute than cver;andsoshesat,untilsuddenlyanangrygust of wind dashed against door and window, rattled their fastenings noisily, and shrilly passed away. Then she lether hands fall on her knees, and then she cried aloud, “ The Lord’s name be blessed and praised forever and forevcrmorc !" §he yttled hgrgelf firmly in her place,_nnd Plum-be, my bairu,whcrc art than 1'" cried FENELON FALLS, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, JULY 16, 188]. A Philadelphia woman took her silver comb to her dentist to have A bucket: tooth put in. Baton Tunuripl. The goat is a native of the vacant lots about the city, and there are lots of them. The goat is omnivorous. He will goat any- thing that he sees, and will seize anything that he may goat. His principal food, how- ever, is play bill. He is very fond of letters. Let us honour him for his love of bill letters. The gentleman goat is called Billy, but he is a Billy that no policeman can handle. The lady roats are called Nanny. This is their ewe-\ann '-mous name. The young goat is ‘called a ’id. Kids are on hand the year round. The goat is generous toa fault. He presents a couple of horns to everylmdy he sees. The goat's horns are always above his browse. In the matter of more cash. the Cashmere goat is the most famous. There are many udder kinds of goats. The female goat gives milk. She Will brin r a strong man to his milk, if she feels just li '9. it. The milk is good for making cheese, but it is not just the cheese when you are brought to your milk. (Goats are fond of the outskirts of large cities ; also hoop skirts. HmLskins are made into morocco; you may rock a goat‘s skin. if you wish to try the experi- ment. The goat wean; a heard. It is called a goatee. though not confined to the he goat. The goat is worse than the Old Nick. He shows the eleven hoof. The goat is a rare joker, though he has been ratlu-rm'c.~nlnne by the paragraphic profession. lie is not a beast of nurden. although he has been the burden of countless Immgmplm. The goat is noted for his bunting, but he now-r llllg‘. The goat is one of the signs of the Zodiac. signifying that he has a propensity to knock things sky-high. He never goes high hiln- sclfvâ€"that is to say, he new-r gets over the ha-a'a. Shaka-aware understood the spon- taneity of the goat when he said. “ Stand not upon the order of your gain r. but goat once." The goat is a wide-awa‘e animal. He is never mught lapping. notwithstand- ing the many 0mm of til-napping you may have read about. For many years the goat was the only “butter" known. Ulcouurgar- ‘ inc now met! some palatm better. Goats love to get on a high nxk and nun them-‘ selves. Give them a chance. and they will} always seek: sonny climb. The god l'anf was a sort of half-goat. All goats do not; pan out so well as he did. The won‘t of all 1 goat: is the rediagote. L'nlm it he goat to l thunder. A young child is (filled skid: but he in nay Ind. though horn naked. Being hunten. goat: are good on the tram. They are a headstrong race. As they spring from the ground on the halt provocation. they nu ‘ he mid to be my. Hot pttl’lafb we have ni enough about the goat. lh-n-a ! They lifted her into the chair again 111111 carried her home as they hml brought her, and as she went she said to herself. while her heart achcd with a pain which. as long as she lived, would never leave her. “My bonnie hairn l’l1u:he, hml 11s it is to have thee lying (lead and cold there it's better nor having thee living 011 to he pointed at with scorn. ' Now nune Hill 0101' know the shame that has comed on us, for I hid in) ' thoughts and gave them a. wrong turn, and I sni1l,,‘l‘oor young man " Ay, :1.y,poor young mun,’ W'asnhut my lips said, but my ll(‘ 11' “as calling him :1 (160117!" Then she stooped and gore the girl whom she loved so much :1. long farewell kiss, and then after a. struggle unseen by all, she looked at David ’l’revethoc. There he lay. cold, still and, with all his busy schemes for bettering his own fortune, brought to this abrupt and terrible conclusion. “ l’oor young man," said she, “it was 'arly for him to die 1" No one made further opposition. 01111. large table in the centre of the room lay two (1 ‘llll bodies. David 'l‘revethoe mnl Phrebe were lying side by side. 1901.11 1011" time the old \1' 01111111 stood snppm tin" herselt by the ellue of the table, 111111 looking: at the girl whom she hull brourvht up from child- hood. At lust she turned to the sailors who had earrietl here there and Sillll: “ Them two were sweethearts; I (lid not like the notion of her going right away from Inc who had been like a mother to her, to “'01le stranger down South. I nirver favored the Inarringe 11nd nivrer let this young 1111111 come within my doors. I kept her in the house for three «luvs 11fo1e she left. She fret sor - _11bo11_t his wing 1m .1y pour b11i1_ 11." “ My bairn 18 1101211 cl'iud Elsie ; “ let me see her at once." ‘5 Ah, but they were long about it ; God only knows how it will be with her. Ye’ll go to her ‘2’; “Ah, at once cried Elsie; “ but: how 2” They placed her in the arm-chair and car- ried her quietly to a cottage just above the beach. A crowd was already collected by the door. \Vay was made for Elsie, and she was at once eai‘ried to the room were poor Plnehc was lying. At the entrance a woman met them who shook her head and said, “ Better not here.” 'n “But they got 1161 out again. you 511111. ‘ ' c1ie1l Elsie. “ Pour lass ! she stood by the pier holding on ngin the wind, and wet to the skin she mun hu’ been, for whole water was conning down all the time, and when Douglass’ bout cam’ back she ran along to meet it, and when she heard that Davie and all aboard with him had been drowned, she ran past i\'\'eryhody, and threw hersol' into the water." “‘I knowcd it was. I felt it was from the very beginning.’ cried she, quite des- pairing. and with that she run the faster. and then I knuwedns howl had dune wrong, for of :1 suddenly I remembered that she and him had kept company together the year afore, and that my misses had once or twice tellt me that she believed they were lovers still.” “A5, ay‘. ’CIicIl F. isic iIIIsztiL-ntly , “ but go on , lli\\(:l mind that; just tell Inc \I':iI 11: she dill. ” “ Ye slept last mom I" cried both the men, astonished. “ \ e could sleep? There was that wind at our end of the town that l ‘ was afeared it would ding our chimney down, 1 was, indeed, and there was dirty weather out at sea. I S“? your l'lnrbe when she first cam‘ out. though somehow or other I lost her after. We were all hurrying down to the harbor for to render what assistance we could, when all in the wild of the night down ran a figure by us, and at first go otl‘l reely thowt it was a spectre, but it was your bonnie l’hwbe, poor lass! ‘ And what's the guns all tiring for so terrible, Mr. Dun- can 3‘ she said, said she to me. ‘aml what can all them lights be about?‘ 1 think mysel’ she mun just ha‘ said that because she was so terrible anxious-like. for she was tied to know why all that was being done, her a girl born and bred by the sea ; so I said, said J. ‘ Honey, it’s a boatâ€"41 fishing-boat has been drove ashore. and is lying there a \vreek,’ and with that she set up a great shout, and afore iver I could tell her not to be so fright- ened-like, {or the sea had gone down a bit, and Douglass’ big boat had put out to try if might could bedone, she ran off to the harbor hardly able to steady hersel’ in the wind. ; So I ran after her as quick as I could, 1 and cried. ‘Houey, it's none 0’ St. Aidan‘s? lads as is in thutbont. It's one 0‘ them Peu- 1 zancerboats, David ’l‘revethoe owns it.’ i difi‘erent than that she was lying safe in bed them, inside the house. I nivver went to bed myself. I dropped asleep by the fire." _.â€"â€"so-.« â€"~ History of tho Goat. r115 @ A slur halloHaox has just been hub to the French govemment. Itlmu tw each opening with a different. key. a pantua which in“ n utuhnr come Juie ticket dept-ital by the elector. am itinto one of the box. the lich: into the ot «division. Simulation machine register: on a tablet he! voter the number of tickets cli pal hallo“ mm . in number wit: the uni both wit the " tell-hie." u voter sea for hinncl! that the in" bum mt ml taken account. 0!. She owed; be wooed; the old In they could i! they would. No arch. I hear on all sides of n very strong against encumllering “'estmiiuiter with any, or at least with many, mort merits. I niatinguish, of course. I. bust» or ningle utatues mu] the (rut strut-hires with which the Ahhcy ha from time to time disfigured. The c: small element in the question. and 3 must. in cnornmns. it in the mommy umnnud not the ride (If the nation it is desired tn ilustmte. The two ments to the Pitts cont about £6“) a and in St. l'nul'n there in quite a fur! pended in Carmm nmrhle and ind: unlptnre. It is mposed that in there uhmxld onl ' [he hush in the . such as have lately been put up m'l'hw and Mneaulay. When we have a me like Flnxman we may venture tn «- monument M Luge M lnrd Mansfield the space in the Abbey in mo mlunl mlium: ermventinnality. There is I)! mom {or that in the parka and mu.‘ But that same faculty of sleepihg and nvaking at short notice may be utilized for the purpose of taking little naps whenever opportunity oll'ersâ€"in the last half-hour of the noonâ€"tide recess, or during the Buincombe interacts of a protracted session. ll‘he in- habitants of all intertropicnl countries make the time of repose n, moveable festival, and during the dug-days of our torrid sunimers it would clearly be the best plan t0;imitatc their example. “Children must not sleep in the daytime," says a. by-luw of our tinie- dishonored Koran of domestic superstitions ; and, not satisfied with keeping our little ones at school during the drowsy nfti'rnoons of the summer solstice, we increase their misery by stulling them at the very noon of the hottest hours with a. mass of grenlay (i. c. heat-producing and soporific) food. An hour after the end of a long, sultry day comes the ‘ cool night-wind, heaven’s own blessing for all who hungcrand thirst. after fresh air; but no, “Night-air is injurious"; beside, Mrs. (:rnndy objects to promenades nfterdurk, so 1 the children are driven to their sufl'deuting, 1 unventilntcd bedrooms, not to sleeplbut tel swelter, till toward midnight, when ulrowsi- ness subsides into a sort of lethargy which1 yields only to broad day-light, three or four hours after sunrise ; “So much the better,” says the fashionable mother, who has passed the night at an ice-cream rub/0110‘ “and morning air isn‘t healthy, either ; most dangerous to leave the house before the dew is oil' the gmss." l Only the curse of [)CSSillliSHl, on II ofnl distrust of our natnIal instincts, eunisxplnin such IIlIsuInlities. 'l‘ he parched pIIlIIt I S peti- tion for II cooling liquid is not plniner than the lIrIIin’ 3 er.“ ing for rest and IIlunIlI Lr IIheII II high temperature adds its somiiiferons tendency to the drousy influence of II. full meal. Un IIarnI summer days all Nature indulges in n. noontitle Imp, - I huII- ‘IIIIlkL-Il through tIopieIIl forests that new nesilent under the rays of II \ ertienl 1-“!le Nor‘w eginn pine- won: in the IICI Id of II polar nigh‘t. ' nor IIouh it he may to name a singlelnninml that «10m not appear sleepy IIfter IneIIiII. At noon leaf-trees throw their densest lmde; eIeII butterflies seek the penetrIIliI (If the foliage. and limnls cling lazily to tile dark side «If the lower lIrnneheII- . eI (-ry ‘scheol- teacher knows that LlIilIlren feel the ‘IlroII 243' s Iell of the afternoon sun ; IIh3 should. they II one he hurt by 3iel4ling to its prmn Itings ’ Either pustpone the plincipal meat) to the anl of the day, or iIILreIL‘Ie the uncut 4lL- re- cess to at least three hours 80 n3 )lc.’l\0 time for II digestive xil'n‘lu. T In conclusion, Xlr. \Varncrkc stated that the sensitive pnpei could he used' in glue cani- cm in lengths, “mind on 1011015, and exhibit- ed a slide “liich he had made for ilie plu- INJSL. In the course (if his remnurks. Mr uerke demonstmted the rcmo 'al 01": inc picture produced by his metluy paper to glass, and showed that tlu immersion and washing in hot mm” the picture by the dissolving of the ‘g unucted npnn by light, which thus h an my the unchanged bromide of silver back in the ordinary gelatine proc being that, unless the exposure is very curately timed, there is considerable danvcr of over- exposure, and intensification fixil 1g very ‘ «liificult, pictures by the gelatine pr ess are loften inferior to those by collodion. By the juew process he was, however. able iot- only to intensify, but also to overcome t ie draw- bucks arising from over-exposure. The latter he elleeted by using the emulsion oh paper. He had found that no matter how much the paper was o\‘cr-exposed,the picture, provided the de\‘cloper was restrained sutlliciently, was not injured, while iii the case of the emulsion on glass,‘ there was not only hulation of the image, but a reversal also. The transfer of the imhge from paper on to the glass is very easy. The paper is ilmnersed in water. and placed in} contact with a glass plate. The superfluow mois- ture being removed by a squeegee, t to paper may then be stripped oil', leaving thejgelatine on the glass. Hot water is then applied, which dissolves all the gelatine not acted on by light. and the image is left upon the glass in relief. Intensilimtion Mr. \Vl‘arnerke ell'ected by mixing with the emulsio l a new actinic coloring matter, and which is not all‘ectcd by silver. Aniline colors [he had found answered the purpose, and in ‘his way special emulsion for special purposes could be prepared. This method of preparation he thought would be especially suitable for magic lantern slides. Mr. \VarncrHe claim- ed that by his discovery relief cbuld be obtained farmore easily than by the ordinary biehronmtized gelatinc, and therefore it was especially suitable for the \Voodbjurytype process. By mixing emery powder with the emulsion it was rendered lit for eilgmring purposes, and by a combination with vitrili- ed colors the image could be burnt} in, and being so adapted for enamels. Byl using a. suitable emulsion, however, so little ‘gelatiue could be employed as to obviate all t illiculty in carbonizing. The process could also be adapted for collotype printing.- Tho Monuments in Westminster A At the meeting of the Photographi of Great Britain, London. Mn ' L0. . nerke proceeded to give the \ etails discovery he had nude respecting t of pyrogallie acid on gelatinckbmmi‘ discovery consisted in the fact thn iue plate submitted to pyrogallic acii insoluble in those parts acted light, exactly in the same gelatinc acted upon by chrom the insoluhility bein ' in propo the amount of light am the thickue gelatine. This property Mr. \Varn poses‘to ntilize _in \‘nriongi \yays. T Important Photographic Disco! «n <-.> or When to Sleep. Mam your, nccx. {Torcnt futuri- I’M-y, :kcmy -ulpwr ll!!!‘ :1 a: but plc for plenty 0 Society Ir. “'ar- of a new I0 action 0. This a gelat- l Inmame upon by my as f‘ salts, 11011 to as of the rke pm 1e draw- 35 being curatL-ly of over- lg very )cess are l \Val‘~ ‘a. gelat- pl from ya more er fixed ‘gclatine 1 carried feeling Alphey monu~ :twc-cn nlnmun been .1. is n [:1 the If ”If: The “uh. 1‘ “lie 11 ball milwd locks, run! an " {rum ldmpw ‘ going nly the "c the bbcy. which nmml- .11 Mid l’mlnmor Clmrlmi H. Monme, of Annapolis. Itatm that the ordinary fruit m-ids. nucll nu Hume cuntninul in nppla. tunmtom. rhubarb, lemons, etc., is" acted upon tin. Somocinlet which he examined. and which had lat-cu floral in a tin fountain. contained unc huuv died ml wventy milligraulmca ol metallic tin tn the liter In mlutimx. Out: we was given where pawns eating lruit. [Huerta] in tin mm wm mule violently nick. nml tin only was found in the fruity L'umuinn of tin pipe by \ntcr wu referral to. and it wan mgguted that the amnion mu duc tn the vegetable will: in the water. As "tempt in to be male by the Living-3 none inland Minion tocumrnte yum: of the ‘ different 31min 0! chinchoas in the moun- uin alley- ol the Congo. Parliamentary lan vunge is improving, un- der the henignant ru er of the pronent leader of the House of Commons, almost an lzwt ml the rest of our inatitntioim. On Monday lust Mr. Mitchell lienry moved that “ the letter Higued Patrick Egan and published in in the ["I‘t’t'lllllll'N Journal of the 26th of May is a breach of the rivileges of this House." ’l‘hereupon Mr. G mlatone, while declaring that the proposition was one which Inuut he atlirmed, unggested that Mr. Mitchell Henry should not persist in his motion. Sulmo- quently, however. Sir \\'. \'. Harcourt gnu: it as his august opinion that a vote should ihe taken on the motion. Upon this Lord ‘Itnudolph Churchill made some severe hut lnnt by any means dificourtcnus renmrku on the elk-ct of Sir Willinm‘x advice. ’l'hen en- sued the following interchange of amen- ities. Sir William \‘emon Harcourt. looking at Lord Randolph Churchill. said to him across the lloor of the House: " You little mm I“ To which Lord Randolph not unnaturally replied: “ You :1 -~-â€"-d fool I" Instantly Sir \Villinln jumped up to order with fell intentions. Mr. Lalmuelu-re, who had meantime risen. at one:- gnw: way, and memhers chuckled in the expectation of a breeze. But Sir William thennp’mri-ntly re- flected that if Lord Randal 1h might he an am he himself might he :1 ion]. and he mat down again. Ohm more did Mr. lnlmurlu-rr rise; hut then Sir \\'illiam. having pronun- ahlv reflected on the dill'ervm-v lnctu‘ven a fool and an an. again rum to order, Again Mr. lahouehore - anxious, no douht, not to upoil Hport~ sat down. tut again. up Ian-nt- lv. Sir William retloctrcl than it Lon linu- dol uh might i-onrreivahly In: little, hr. fiir \Vi limn. might (-onveivnhly he dnmnml' and so, after rmnnining at the table paying im- thing fora ”war, he linnlly rt-xuml-d hiu‘ suit with the proud l‘llllfllflollllll‘fi!‘ of having added some new and highly useful lrnm to the \‘ocahulnry of [mrlimm-nmry language. 1 ‘ Oil 'the 'sonthwest; extremity of Fisher‘s Island is a reef that was for years a perpetual menace of navigators. ’l‘he Horernnnent has built thereon at a. cost. of over $300,0(Ma li 'ht-honse, topped with a revolving beacon, wmse alternating lights of crimson and white can be seen at a. distance of many miles. Few 'rcatcr safeguards to com- lncree have licen established in many years. Capt. Scott is one of the contractors who built it, and it remains a nmnnment to his skill and to the benefit-once of the Gov- ernment. Capt. Scott employs :IlIaIIt fortynwn and :I small lluctnf vessels in tllUlHlSlnt'SHOf wreckâ€" ing. He does not often go do“ II Im II. lll\Cl HOW. It IS \I 01 k that IIIIIkcs' grc at lll' angllts ("I the plIy sisal strength, and the "It'll “ho cII~ gage in it gm“ pIcmutuIcly ()lll. "llII-y mo. paid $5 Inlay \\ lIcII (liv III<r :IIIIl SIO u month when idle. Their legitimate expenses :Irculsu paid lwpInployers. When the steamers Nanagansett and Stou- iugton collided on the sound on the Blst of June, 1880, Capt. Scott was engaged by the umlerwriters to wreck the Narragansett as she lay on the reef oll‘Cornticld lightship. He began ope ‘ations Saturday morning A- the collision occurred on the preceding Friday evening~and clad in the heavy, emuhersomc armor of the diver, he explored the wreck, finding here and there in all Hhapes of ghastli- ness the men and womenwho hadso suddenly gone to their awful deaths. At nightfall work was suspended, and while he and his crew were gathered in the cabin of his wrecking schooner, moored alittle way from the sunken steamer, his son. a young men of 21 yeam, who had remained on deck, \‘as , knocked or fell overheard in some mysterious way and drowned. His body has never been recovered. Doulnth-xs the strong tides swept it out to sea. This catastrophe dis-i heartened the captain, and he abandoned work upon the steamer. and the wrecking was intrusted to other hands. ()ne ofhirs latest operations was the floating of the steamer (ialatea, which went ashore on Gull Island a few weeks mm. A little while before he removed the cargo of the steamer Chesapeake, which had gone ashore on Fisher’s Island, in the Sound. The steamer itself could not he saved, but \‘as slowly beaten to pieces by the angry sea. l‘mt Capt. Scott has undertaken other “jolts" that called for a prodigious amount of work and the exercise of eolmiderahle in- genuity. llis largest contract was in mix- ing the British iron steamer, .lohn l‘u'umhall. which, while bound from New Han-n to Constantinople, went ashore, on (lull Island. in Long Island Sound, in March. ISTT. during a dense fog. She was laden with arms and ammunition consigned hy the \\'incliester.~\r|uu Company to the Turkish Government. The eurgo was valued at $1,250,000. The lh‘amhall lay in a position that made her the pluything of the sea. and she was slowly lmttered to pieces. It was an extremely dillieult task to remove her ‘nrgo, and at the best only a part of it eould be taken out. She finally \renttopieees. and the marine underwriters promptly paid the eonsignors an insurance of $500,000. Capt. Scott was paid $26,800 for his services on the wreck. Capt. Scott is widely known in marine cir- cles as a wrecker and submarine diver. He has followed that businmm many years, and it is dillicult to say how manysunkon vessels he has floated from the roofs on which thry had struck or has raised from tho bottom of the sea. The floating of the Newton mm a comparatively easy task. 'l‘homain thin" to be done was to send a diverâ€"in this case SI r. Brownâ€"to the bottom to make fast a chain to the sloop nmidships. The chain was passed through tackle on the “rocking schooner lying alongside, and force being applied to it luv a steam cngim- on the schooner's deck, the sloop was slowly pulled out of the water, rightcd and pumped out. A Few Pacts Concerning Ono who Ens Trod the Bottom of the Sea. r...- m- nuum: PM The old sleep, George Newton. which has lain at the bottom of the riwr a little way below the stemnlxvat landing at the foot of State stn‘et since last. March, has been raised by Capt. '1‘. A. Scott, of New London. and a force of men. and is now atlmt. The. sloop is an old ml), and hardly worth the $300 it. cost to raise her. It was nwessary, however, to float. her, that vessels mi Vht ap- pmii‘ch the wharf alongside of which 5 u.- was sun ’. Parliamentary Politeness. Fruit Acids. " CAPN TOM.‘ O c.- .â€"»_. \‘Iuily Fun H The work which Capt. Eul- hu (intruded with the Muiam (iav eminent u; do there u to build a jetty In" to connect the upper and y! the ml with the land, {arming u Champs”. h in not generally known thntchumpu m: n» We knuw and :lnuk it, huu Im haunt 0 Im- tiqnity. AlthuuuhChnrhm \'.. Henry Vlll., Fraud” 1.. and l'upc [Am .\'., pmw rim:- -:mlu m Ay. mul Henri Quntro wan pmunl of hi): title of Sire rl'Ay. they drank «mly utill wim-n; {or it wan toward tho: rm] 1;! the nev- vntu-mh century that the “Manna" or ”lurkiinfi' wim: WM invenunl. a! mnruu: hy n jm‘iul «.13 monk. “out l'vrignnu, uzllurm' of flu- AMA-y of Huutvillivrn. The grunt pne- dilm-tinn of Um {t-gamt D‘Urlvann and hi» jnymu hum] of nude mu! fornmlt ram-5m fur warming chum mgm: hmu vht it iuw vuguv, um] it hm: jun! y rmuainm tlw umwn of our {rants m cr xinur. ”vm~oww- --â€"‘-.-- Yum Car: is but a natural lurhor, tin-re being simply A "5415th Icpurutecl {mm the Gulf by a low coal ml. which 151ml: little Howalqn {going the tiara: Imhcrly norms: M rn. Bartlett mm M. theqmwu'n In! almvr- ing-rmm. 'l‘lm lmly will In: rcmemlxmal as having mun-d money enough to ln-rry an Aim-rim: young "um. A NTATL'M bu recently been {mind in a "mum! on the I": y Mun Um’cmmem “nib way linu. It in x Saved min: 4.568 can "‘4, and il thin be confinmul it will pmaably beam: 01 um oldest known “Mum in the world, This name is about. being rammed w Cairn. bmknu-r. MAIIIII'INII 7qu A “HIT.- -.\lntivcu for marrying nrc \‘nrioun. “ l'mlmhly ‘ Innrry- ing to getn II:.st "' Hays the New York Imlgv r, “ in mum common than M generally IIIIppImI-Il." lintnotmnrc up than we nup posed The hundreds of llH'll whn musk rc pmu: at lflutr IsalooInI, hillixml romnn, corner grcmcricu. flllll alwwhcrc, while their When are Innking uhirtn fur fifty cent.” a Ila/L-II, or going out In: ruhhing hy the «lay, ahunhl con- \ into the moat nkcptical that. " marrying to vet. I: rent" in mm of the mm! Immnun Ino- tin-II fur marrying. .. Hmv much alum the gang-way of In light, ship? , A NEW hook any»: “(fun nlm “Luna?" A mnrc important question tn the marrying young man in: "(Jun she bake?" or “(fan ulna new on shirt buttons?" It was Professor llullcland's opinion that the limit of possible human life might be set at 200 years : and this on the general principle that the life of a. creature is ei 'ht times the years of its pcriodof growth. '1‘ int which is quickly formed quickly parishes. and the earlier eom ilete development is reached the sooner liodily de ~ay ensues. More women reach old age than men. but more men attain remarkable lon verity than women. Some animals grow to the very old. llorned animals live shorter lives than those without horns, tieree longer than timid. and amphibious longer than those which inhabit the air. The voracious pike. exists, it is said, to an age of lot) years ; the turtle is good for a hundred years or more ; and among birds the golden eagle. is known to have lived nearly 200 years, while the sly and sombre, crow reaches the venelable age of a century. ’assing up in the scale. of life to man, we tind many recorded instances of longevity among the classic Greeks and lionnms. l'liny notes th: in the reign of the ‘lmperor Vespasian. in the year 76, there Were it” men living in the limited area between the Appennines and the Po of 100 years and ap- ward, three of whom were HO, and fourover lih'i. Cicero’s wife lived to the age of 10:1, and the Roman actress Imeeja played in pulp lie as late as her ll‘lth year. Coming down to more recent times, the most notable authentic instance of great age is that of Henry Jenkins, of Yorkshire. England, who died in “$70. 169 yuirs old. He. was a tishcrmag, and at the age of ltlfl easily swam across rapid rivers. Another historic case is that of Thomas l‘arr, of ‘Sln‘opshire, a day labourer, who lived to the age of 151! years. When more than l'.’() he married his second wife, and till 130 he could swin ' the soythe and wield the llail with the ’erst of his fellmr-lalmurers. In his I 52nd year Pan“ went up to London to exhibit himself to the king. It proved a“ fatal visit, for, violating the abstemious habit of a century and a-half, the old man feasted so freely on the, royal \‘ictuals that be soon died, merely of a plethora. ()n examination his internal organs proved to be in excellent condition, and there was no reason why he should not have lived much longer save forthis taste of royal liospiuility. HEPOIKHIL man uric-n (mar spilt milk he should he sure that the milk in pure. Rmvcll intend» to walk 600 miles in nix days. “I: can mukc tlmt IliHL'Illm: much quicker in the cum. 'l‘m; Knoxvilh: ’l'ri/ulm: min-1 thin in «m rm of (10:11] isuuuu, dead heat.» xun «It-Jul locks. It might have mhlml dead give nwnyn. “A MAN hm: been crazed hy rum mnl milk." ()m: of thu very \vorut thing» In mun can do in to mix hin drinks. llu should hnn: stuck tn plain rum. A Goon looking hum Inn-n u good looking glnxs. Tm: young man who gun: u , drinking tn prupitiutc his girl wisely cum: nulwl that .1 lllififl in ms gum] us a mnilo. E in has been lately attacked 'h} a body of [ab e and loan-nix! u-Visers. who, after eleven years of labor. have just ginning a comet- :(‘l ulitiun of the New TustameuL TM: is a gnmt stop in the dimfimu of rationalism It concedes that the Scriptum must be sub- jected to the lat: of msun. and this concea- 'siou is due cutirvly to the modern scientific l movement. which demands higher shudu‘ls of prouf. aml more inexorable questioning as to what is true. Tlxe intact uni most impulsive pmfof did of the scintitic spirit is teen in the meant txmtnient of the Christian Scriptum Biblical criticism has lung been nth-cud by the scientific method, and is mar in be. conâ€" tmllul by it. How far the critical spirit is alnmly advanced and ditl'usul. so that the Bible is u-ganlul as. book with I hum 3&1:in imperfect side. and containing em 3 that can he removed with better knowledge. I is slim“: by the {act that the English ha» i lation of two hundred and fifty years? thud- ‘ The nwisers oi the New 'l‘estmnent have fairly and iornutlly enth the critical wed '9. but the driving it. home is to be no holii ay atl‘nir. Professor Robertson Smith. one of the, most learned. able, and candid Biblical critics. having undertaken to treat the history of some parts of the Old 'l‘cstav went in a great cncycloiuedia. was met by his church and silenced in his pmfessorshi I in the Abenleen University. But the “'Ol'lt gains by this act of intolerance. l‘roi‘wor Smith left the. college halls and went out to give a course of palm- lectures upon the critical history 0 the Bible. which were. at- tended by crowds of eager listeners. The let-tune: were collected in a volume that at once becomes a textbook of modern Biblical criticism. The true scientific ground is here 0 en] ' and broadly taken. and it is gcneml y admitted that l‘mfessor Robertson Smith‘s book represents authoritatively the scope and objects and methods of the critical school which has been growing durin v the last half-century. It has thus nt lengt l be~ come the. benigh ollico of Science to bring its methods to the responsible task of throu- ing a better light on the origin. history. and true character of the Christian oracles than has been derived from uncritical tradition. Nor does the critical attitude taken by Pro- fessor Smith at all compromise his Christian position. lle is no ske itic. trying toulidcr- mine the Scriptures. l e. holds to their car :icntinl truth, but chogllizcs that on earth and in time, and among ignorant. aolliah. aml prejudiced men. truth is liable to be ub~ scum-d. wl'nor. E. L. Yornuss. in Popular .N'i'irm‘r .llonllily_lln' Jul!“ A MARRIAGE at Hm in an mwnn lieu] The Solonoo of Biblical Criticism. How long Mun may vaa. ALL SORTS.

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