used vder ron heed, my: good lad; note well the end, from the beginning and be wise" | At 'that moment Kits mother was, span, Young § BOME MISTAKES IN TRAINING CHILDREN. dead Very few adults realize how sonsi-| tive children ave, and what little and then instantly a wondrous change passed over his countenance. = His cheeks seemed to fall in, his jaw drop- ped, he put his hands unsteadily to his head, and pulled the brim of his hat low over his eyes. His wrist had bled in his fall, and the action left a broad stain of blood across his Jac, ly poison contained in the buibs He cloead rie eye ms if jt had sudden- : ly become blind. of the common daffodil, 4 i az; The article contained a warning, , "Come: away, Kit," cried Lillas, 1 SEI a D J across an article which told of the dy ment at her, standing as if petrified, oF Sn doy In the Of Sadie rocked « tence. . It was a quiet summer afternoon in the fuiness of July. The day was hot. Flies htmmed high up under the roof, where among the unceiled rafters it was dusky and cool, ~The house-place| « seemed very large and vague to his childish eyes, because the windows and doors were so bright that the sight could not dwell on them long. Kit lay quietly in the cradle, which had be come so small for him that when his "granny" was not looking he put his { from that man!" things ai1ne magi note which I want to pass on. It said; °0™M® away often & thes, Wnimagined ! fest over the oval bar at the end to suffering. As a result they are con-| that ina number of cases, where peo- . For Hough he x ould pot lave pen stantly making serious mistakes in, Plo had eaten daffodil blubs, mistak-' Tm of the trAMp---0 helpless dealing with them. I know a mother In€ them for onions, they had been! asad. forforn--frightenened Her. who says the only way she can make poisoned. Not only was the action of She did not ¥epeat the 'one "hurried her chiid really feel his punishment the poison amazingly speady, but it tance she' lind given him is by humiliating him just as much as W&8 necessary to consume but a very, © Kit' re his 'shoulder gently possible' before company by recount] Small portion of the bulb.in order tor, Xie man's reluctant clitch." A y : Ft ed ln oi | 0 len gn 1] APSR i Now; this is the worst possible small quantities to cats, the bulbs pro- Ia at said Kit high ran: off method: of dealing with any child. - It Sued Youle Salivdion snd Parga) The tramp squared his shoulders. © wil Bet cif him of bia fault; bak, Blooded animals, they acted: se on and straightened his' face. He' liniped al-faseinating tale ho, crawling up a hillside, had suddenly {come upon a fierce chase--fleeing] wanderers of the hills, God's. folk hunted like the partridge upon the | mountains, the dragoons full tilt after 'them. He was crying because he, ©. Castle Burned In 1626. _} The'ancient castle, which came fo Lascelles on the death of his uncle, was erected in 1688 by the Earl of "| Clanricarde at a tremendous cost. In on housekeeping matters. 'Each' we this paper she will have something in. of happy, or more rebellious. | It is a great mistake to try to dis-| nd death.by paralysis of the central cipline a boy or girl by calling atten-! tion to his bad manners at the table or elsewhere; or to punish him when strangers or guests are present. Such treatment is intensely humiliating to a child, and makes a lasting impres-| sion on the youthful mind. Many par- ents and teachers have eo mortified and discouraged children by such in- judicious punishment that tragic re- _ sults have frequently followed, espe- cially in the case of nervous or over- sensitive boys and girls To do the thing that is best for the child we must know his nature, and realize that he is not an adult in brain, experience, or heart. He has not an adult's judgment. We are all apt. to forget that children, even in their teens, have not developed their moral or reasoning faculties to any great extent. Their judgment and " levelheadedness are weak. They have not had sufficient experience to fall back to Help them in néasoning, and it is surprising what little things often discourage them, and make their whole world look black and forbid: ding. With them the present is every- thing, and when their sun is darkened for .a moment they can see nothing but blackness in the future: Many parents have a mistaken idea that they must be stern with their children, that they must suppress them, or they will become unnfiinage- able. They do not realize that stern- ness and suppression simply mean strangling growth, stifling aspirations, « dwarfing ideals. There can be no real growth, no normal development of faculties where there is no freedom of expression. Happiness is a child's birthright, _but no child can be happy who is con- stantly suppressed. There is some thing unnatural about a child who is not happy. He will never make a full- fledged man or woman. There will al- ways be something lacking in his de= velopment! He will be abnormal in some way. A happy childhood is the best protection against ill-health, un- happiness, and failure in the future; the best protection against the de- " velopment of handicapping peculiar- itles, idiosyncracies, and even insanity. DAFFODIL BULBS AB A POISON. © A writer once remarked in disgust, that if you want to publish.something where it will never be read--print it in an official document! In glancing % yard less material is required. The' through an official drug' jodrnal, re- ntly, these ironic words recurred to! that been emetic--eventually causing collapse nervous system. Generally, the thrifty housewife, after the plant has ceased to bloom, stores away the bulbs for the next season. Not infrequently, the placs where she puts them is close by the store-room for her potatoes and on- fons, usually a dark spot. It can be readily understood how an unobserv- ant person could unwittingly substi- tute the bulb of a daffodil for an onion, there being such a striking out- ward resemblance between the two. If you store bulbs near the onions, be very careful. A SMART VERSION OF THE TUNIC. 5014. In this model the tunic effect is shown in the "apron" portion of the front. This slim-line style is youthful and becoming to slender and to mature figures. The sleeve may be '| finished in wrist length, or short, as in the small view, The Pattern is cut in 7 Sizes: 34, 86, 88, 40, 42, 44 and 46 inches bust measure, "A 88-inch size requires 4% yards 'of "40-inch material if made with long sleeves. With short slesves width at the foot. is 13 yard. Pattern mailed to any address on BRIGHT CANDLESTICKS. 1 made a discovery the other day dispensed with what was quite a task. A m have determinedly down the long leafy way towards the gaunt "Combination", poorhouse, till he came to a burn that | trickled underneath a little bridge. He | went slowly down to a reef of pebbles, {and taking off his coat he proceeded to make a thorough toilet. When he had finished and put on his coat again he~ gazed at his finger-tips critically, | sighed, washed them again, and let | them dry in the sun. Then he put {them gently into an inner pocket and drew out a faded pocket-book, piti-; fully grey and frayed at the edges, | where the cartridge-paper lining showed through. It bore the inserip-| tion: CHRIST: R KENN"--DY, M.A. Several of the letters were blurred and missing. He opened it with his slim, clean fingers, and the "tears flooded over in his eyes and rained down on the leather. Tremblingly he took out a packet, and, unfolding the paper, he found some stray frag-, ments of stalk and greyish powder,' with a' few petais of hether balls still adhering to the largest piece. On the papér was written "Given me by Lilias," and an undecipherable date. "Bless God she did not know me to-| day; as sho did by the. quarry," mut-| tered the tramp as he sat and gased. He lifted the paper half-way to his; face, as if to kiss the heatWer; but be fore he had touched it he snatched the packet away. "No," he said, "I will not--I will not. A man of unciean lips--a man of unclean lips!" Then he restored the whole with reverend care to his pocket, and, re- gaining the perpendicular with stiff dignity, he set his eyes again to the road, and his feet down through the dust to the poorhouse. And as she and her son walked homeward, talking almost gaily, the hand of Lilias Mac Walter was finger- ing at the bosom of her dress, that it might touch the trampled spray of white heather, which she had placed. there after grinding it into the soil with her heel. CHAPTER XII. A ROYAL ROAD TO LEARNING. Kit's schooling, so far as the mere j acquisition of the orthodox amount of (learning was concerned, was easily gotten. He had the natural faculty {for letters which makes nothing diffi- cult. He was possessed of a good gén- (eral idea of the next day's lesson be- | fore the other scholars had done mark- ing the place. He listened with won- der to the slower rustics atthe age. of seven and eight sti) wrestiing with | the alphabet. He nbver remembered | , the time when he could not read any, book which came in his way. ] . To this earliest lof th ¥ prone thinking of them. Very cautiously he drew the volume out, and there, in the too brief space of the cradle, he labor-| jously spelled out the remainder of value to tell modem housewives. Look the tale, and was just assuring him- seif of the ultimate safety of the original" witness (boggling much over the unknown word 'seq a favorite one with the fine old-fashion- ed Seceder minister of Sanquhar) when he saw a hand he knew well hoyering in the air above him. For at this moment it chanced that his grandmother, slippering about in loose "hoshens" on the. floor of cool blue whinstone flags, must needs come to his cradle-side to make sure that the boy was sleeping. Kit tried to run the book secretly back under his pil low. But it was foo late. The eagl eye fastened upon it. The firm hand descended, secured the volume, remov- ed it to a place of safety, and r\turn- ed to-investigate the reality of Kit's slumbers.,. The sleep of the just in six-foot resting grave was nothing to the invincible depth 'of his uncon- sciousness. But that was the last Kit saw of the "Gleanings" for many a day, in spite of a hundrad spirited] hunts, until one never-to-be-forgetten day when (the grown-up faction busy preparing for the Sabbath journey to|. the Kirk-on-the-Hill) . Kit. ran. the green octavo to earth in the far corner of a drawer, which his grandmother had opened to take out the week's linen. To slip the book under his pinafore and convey it and himself to the safe sheiter behind the cow mow was the simplest of Kit's achisves ments. To such a student, therefore, the routine of scholarship in the vil lige school of Whinnyliggate presen ed no difficulties. (To bo continued.) © mr: THE PROFITS IN TEA. GROWING The price cf good guality tea has risen in the last two. Years between 20c and 25¢ per pound. The demand which hag beensphenomenal, has sus- | tained this increzse, and the fortunate! owners of tea plantations have earned | dividends in some cates of from 60% to 100%. All those engaged in selling the commodity--who" have not been making any more profit--have been hoping for overproduction. This is |- inevitable when such profits are being made and prices will then fall. But', tea is still getting dearer, and no one A Wish. Just a path that is sure, Thorny or not, And a heart honest and pure, Keeping the path that is sure, That be. my lot, Just plain duty to know, Irksome or not, And truer and better to grow In doing the duty I know, That I have 'sought. 'Just to keep batfling on, Weary or not, ~~ Sure of the Right alone, As I keep battling on, True to my thought. --Walter C ---- soaratats ; Minard's for Sprains and Brulses. » , Smith. Glass Dress A glass dress that belonged to the Infanta Eulalie of Spain, and that at- tracted much attention at the Colum- bian Exposition in Chicago in 1893, {has b presented "to the National Museum at Munich. | The gown. is of soft spun glass that 140ks like silk. So fine is the glass thread of 'which it is pound. ---------- "Clever seen that on the Acro-| {polis have revealed wires? he mysteries of telegraphy." Replied the Jew to the Greek-- That proves that my people knew the mysteries of wireless telegraphy|" can foretell just when the drop will come--whether in one year or longer, It may come when least expected. "I. know I'm cranky," said the handle of the ice cream freezer, "but I won't turn that thing unless I am | put to it." {BEAUTIFY IT WITH } Pian Candle all lit up!" have spelled the word 'rabbit' with Two ts." out." 8] in "| made that. the dress weighs only one |' Said a Greek to a Jew--"Haye you} ! That| ! proves positively that my people knew 'Have you seen that in excavating in| Jerusalem no wires have been found?| 1826 it was destroyed by fire and, since, nothing has been done toward rebuilding the structuve. The outer walls were not much affected by the fire, for they still stand straight and | tall, @ majestic pile of stone fronting on the silvery waters of Lough Derg. The castle, set in the green acres ot park by which it {s surrounded, will, when: it is'rebuilt; be a fitting. home for a princess. . Acres and acres of emerald meadows stretch .away from 'ita enclosure 'and: in_the distance can. be seen the winding river tranquilly making its way through the peaceful | country. The little' town of Portum- ma, where the castle is situated, is a very ancient and historic one. It lies {on the Galway side of the Shannon land was once the chief pass and cer ire AN AE he Match Box--"Well, if there isn't Mr, W afi nieve Which One? i "Freddy," said the teacher, "you You Thus Teave fie 61 then! "Yes, ma'am," 'which one? - et st mae or ities mile is sort of rusty. : 2 little: milk o' human kindness, replied Freddy: _ | means of communication' between the provinces of Connaught and Munster, * Many times the: famous 'bridge res sounded to the tramping of "feet on" their way to mortal conflict and many | vatiunt. knights: rode over it in days hat are long past. "oy Most 'the Clanricarde estate, which was formerly the largest in area and extent in Ireland, has now passed to-the ownership of the tenantry. For: many years & bitter fight was waged "over | this estate, Lascelles's nruch- hated uncle having been one of the last of "the 66: holders of vast tracts of land to consent to restore the - estate to its rightful owners. Historie Associations. Like all the large estates in Ireland, ¢ has many historic associations. Poets. e sung its beauties and the strength and courage that its great line of chieftains pos- For, until it came: into the 8, its owners: land: as possessing all the attributes hat make real. n gly. + | thats real men. And'L = Sele Inheriting some' of th 'people of Tre-