Grey Highlands Newspapers

Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 18 Sep 1884, p. 6

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 'ir! J fj .- I '4 â-  I? I It (. ^jl ii t r i i:: f In ,! • â- ! I It li mi A â- K AGMGULTUML TflE TElBTAIIliE OABDEH fOB SEP- I- a Bbavb n too kta to lipm â€" irtiiM of bowds at tiio tedc aai inmt, aad Iwaking anmnd with Im* BttMuro, and oofvr- ing witu MdMi, wffl Moan » «nq» M lit** M NoramlMr. Sav* ripe bMM for acod for next jmt, tad raoMinberaatxipeLiBMbeHiaan •soallMit eating in Winter. Bbrb.â€" Thin ont sowivge pnfe in laat mffiit'*, and tnnaplaat tiuauaingi if neoea- â- wj if not beet graena are gooa eating. Bbusskl SFBOcra.â€" if tliey aie late, ^noh oat the tope; it will make them apront. Cabbaob.â€" By etMnlineea and good enlti- â-¼atlon getTigorona, fiim headed Dnunheala and Savoyi ready for winter. Sow Jertey Wakefield oat-of-dooia, and, later, prick them into a oold-fiamo to winter over for apring planting. CATruFLOWBB.â€" Keep it growins. Should iroat oome on befnre yon nae it all, heel thoae remuniog thickly in a oold fiame they will keep and heart well en thia aide of Qiriat* sua. Sow and treat aa cabbage for apring nae, only they require moM protection in winter than do cabbagea. Cklbbt.â€" Bank np for early nae, and a little at a time, according to demand. Bat do not eari^ ap the winter atock before Octo- ber. Never earth up except when the celery b qnito dry, eke damp and mat are liable to occur. Chiyxs. â€" ^Plant aome in boxes, and by keejnng them warm, yon can have green chivea all throogh the winter. CoBN Salad.â€" Sow aome on light, ihel- tered ground. It ia perfectly hardy, and will afford you greena in early apring. CvcxniBKBS. â€" Sow tome leeda or set out some yonn({ planta in a frame; aa cold weather cornea on, line the fiame with hot manure. Ehsitb.â€" Tie np a few at a time of that which ia nearly fuU growur Plant out thick- ly that which yon Intend wintering over, and before hard froat lets in, put a frame, well banked, around it, and keep the endive dry overhead. Gebhan Gbxens.â€" Sow about the middle of the month in rows a foot apart. In win- ter cover with a tin mulching, which remove early in spring. Leeks.â€" Cultivate and keep clean. For winter use, mulch amopg them with dry leaves, or lift and heel them in thickly in a cold'fiame, pit, or cellar. Lettuce. â€" Before frost comes, get all your heartisg lettuces together, so that you can protect them with a frame if necessary. Sow Curled' Silesia and Tennis Ball in the third week of the month, and, later, prick them thicky into a cold- frame to winter over for planting in hot-beds in early spring. MusTABD makes a capit-.l salad. Cat it for use when it is only foar tr six days old. Onions. â€" Plant out sets in rows a foot apart, three to four inches asunder, and four inches deep. Examine the ripe onions oc- casionally, remove the epoiling ones, and break the sprouts from others. Otsteb Plants and Pabsnips need no care for a few weeks yet. Pabslst. â€" L f c and plant some in a cold- frame lor winter and eatly spring use. Thin those sown last month. Badishss.â€" Sow a few out-of-doors, and after thia in a gentle hot-bed. Spinach. â€" Pat in a goodly sowing of the prickly-seeded for next spring's use. In win- ter a thin mulching of clean sedge or thatch helps it but do not put it on thick, as it is apt to -harbcr field mice. Round spinach put in now will give a good crop before winter sets in. If you have New Zealand Spinach, put a box frame ovtr it to keep it from frost. It keeps in good condition as long as yon keep frost from it. Saving Seeds. â€" Save what seeda you can ccnveniently. Your own saved seeds are just as good as what you can buy. Peppers, cucumbers, melons, tomatoes, beans, and many- other things may ba saved with very little trouble. Bat if your time and spacs for gardeaing are limited, it may not pay yon to save onions, carrots, parsley, tur- nips and other biennials. Seeds are so cheap that it does not pay to go to much bother in saving our own if our demand is â- mall. Onions. â€" In the last week of last Septem- ber, I planted a lot of yellow Danvers Onion â- eta in rich ground, m rowa a foot apart, three to four inches between the sets, and four inches deep. They grew a litUe in the fall I did not cover them at all in winter, and I did not lose one bulb, and in spring they grew first- rate. Many of them tbrew np flower-heads, but these were removed •very week. By the end of Jane they had made splendid bulbs, and ahowed an incli- nation to ripen. On the 9th of July I had them all puUed up, and laid on their aides in rowa to ripen on the 15th I topped them all, uad brought them inaide. Potato onion â- eta I treated in the aame way and with equal reanlta, except that they do not throw np any flower-heada. Another thing about etato oniona ia, that the large aeta do not ar Itrgp oniona, bat, inateiad, a bunch of â- mall miea it ia the email aets tiiat bear the large oniona. Oniona from acta, if need be, can be harvested abont the firatof July, and sold at a profit yon cannot realise for â- eed oniona, and yon have the ground for early atrawbarry planting, late peaa, anap beana, beeta, turnipa, oanliflowera or early celery. Oniona from aeta aie poor keepers in winter they are apt to apront, hence •hoold be diapoaed ot or need up early. Let â- eed and potato oniona be the mainatay for irbxitx.â€"BmxU Ntw Turker. fie Had Tried It. Two Hamntoa dtisens wore toddling np street the other day, and the oloae andeam eat manner with wnkth they wen aeen to be in converaation dearly betened tiiat tlMiy were exohuging tiieir ezperienoe with dia* pepsia, "And didyoa ever try the hot water onref ' â- aked tiie tiun man, aa tiiey panaed at the melanohdy Biaii'a.pkte. "Did I r* repeated the melaaoholy man in a tone of aaroaam "Well, I ahoald aay I did 1 Why, I've been nunied fioorteea yeara." It ia impoaaible to be a hero in anything nnlcaa one ia first a hero in faith. Li the literary aa well aa militanr world, moat powecfnl ability will often be foond ooBoealed utder • nutie itub. yoong faaey, wtttoat » do* varr «»â-¼â€¢ »»titt» of the atOe thay aie «• ^ISfaiaeovw aiMWHd tkafe Uaor kw maiadocaBOtaoBeap to the ome^staoM whieh had been fontad. The li^t aad iMuUnsloTadrthe naniaga aad the eaily Mriodaof married life are awMiaeded by a Snaeof dimpoiotoMiit. Then oobmb do- neatio indinnBoa, periiy rec rimfiia li nB Both man and wife are dcoaired and on- deoetred. Unintentionally pe)rfai«a, Mt rtally. Both feel, aa it were, entangled. Tney have married in haate^ and repe^too often, not at lairare, bat with nrntoal bitter- neaa anl ill-oanoealed unconoem for one anotiier. Bach generally tiupk*. *»»«*•*» moat to blame. And I do not believe that I am overatoppiag the limita of apprramte Ungnage when I aay that the idea of bemg canght in a net repreaenta their aeoret ooo- vwtimia. HereiaadiHtatroaaatateof alEaiia. In thia oonatry auch a net cannot b eeaafly broken. The pair have married f w wone, in a more serioaa aenae than theae worda are intended to bear in the manbge vowa. What ia t be done? I ahonld very impw- feotiy expreaa my advice if I abnply aaid, •• Make the beat of it.^' For thongh thia la a mde lendering of tibe advice needed, much might be aaid to ahow how thia can be done after a Chriatian way. It is a great Coria- tianmle that, to be loved, we mnat ahew kindneaa and conaideration, and not expect to receive what we do inot grant onraelvea. " Give," says Chriat, " and it ahall be given nnto you. Judge not« and yon ahall not be judged. Condram not, and yon shall not be condemned." ' And if thia appliea any' where, it appliea moat in the caie of thoae who are in the cloae relatimiahip ofhnaband and wife. Clonda aometimea come over the married life becanae too much ccnsidera- ticn ia expected. Sbow it, I would aay rather than demand it, if it haa aeemed to come abort. Bo not think to mend matters by a half-gradgini{ endurance, but ask God to give His sacied help to the keep ing of the rule. "Bear and forbear." So may a haaty marriage, the beauty of which has been spoiled by some misunderstand- ings, ripen into the true affection which should mark this holy estate, and the cloud of disappointment give place to a love which rests upon no passing fancy, bat upon an honest Christian observance between num and wife of the vow between them made. So may the miserable afterthought of having been entangled in a relationship be blotted out and succeeded, as yeara go on, by a love cemented with the desire to do right before God, in whose presence and with prayer for whose blessioe the relationsiiip was begun. â€" Sunday cU Home, Satisfactory Eyidence Among the many indications of a marked advance in temperance sentiment, there ia none more satisfaclory and assuring tban the demand of the public for sound speech from the platform, and of logic and practical com- mon lense, rather than sentimtntalism and twaddle. The time was, when to be a suc- cearffnl tempaiance advi c ite it was only ne- cessary to have a fund of omic stories, and be able to mimic in word and act the drunk- ard's reelings and gibberings, and possibly picture the sufferings of his family, and shed a few teara over the " scene " just before the curtain fell. The audience then went heme feeling that the entertainment had been quite agreeable that intemperance waa indeed ah evil, bnt with not the re- motest idea that any effort could or should be made to contest the evil. But the advocate of this work to-day must come before the people having hu mouth filled with the soundest arguments, and his mind stored with statistics, facta and law, in short, possessed of the ability to educate uid lead the people. So effective has been the results of the agitation upon this question that the great mass of the people have themselves become fully awake to the demands of the hour, and the call is for something substantial and tangible â€" not the froth and foam of that agitation which only weakens and enervates public senti- ment. And all over the land such msn, and women too, are coming to the iront. No reform ever had more ardent or able advo- cates. The greatest minds of the coontry are giving thoughtful consideration to this problem, which te-day, despite the efforts of politicians to smother it, is the most import- ant, and only really prominent issue before the nation. With singularly few exceptions the old anti-slavery leaders are among the hosts of freemen in the present movement a^ainat the iniquity which cnraea the nation, the stats and the individual. Unlike the movement against slavery, however, the good people of every aeotion are united. There might be alight difference aa to methoda, but theae differences only lead to afiiiation and to thought which profit both the individual and the oanse itaelf. 1 here never waa a time in the hiatory of thia great national, moral reform when aentiment waa growing ao rapidly, and in the right direc- tion, aa at the preaedt. Again we aay, the moat aaaurinff evidence is in the chanoter of public address reqnired to aatiafy the people. A*int we 4Mni tie iMt^;i|tf»«t « very well, and W hdd bis breath for of the water Mtonet tolk ifeMk to their oara ••d rowjd "TKft^ «et the brttwof the water the r»«, «w. iSimi niained ita level, for on one crew aaw i^ i»i»« •!»«» i?â€" â€" " â- .-.â€"j'.isw- droDDod their oara. and acampered UKo SS5S »P *»• rigging a. the water daAed and bamp we want againat «"• aako the adirant ol every greaa â- Â«" â- ibie. poe- hyrdBami^^ ^:^u,^ whom- over as. JOHHHIE'S KITE. Manrew Xeeape or » Boy From n TemM* VWol A rvO^nt New York tolegramaaya Johnnie Maolntover, 7 yeara of age, went on the loof of his father's honae, m Hester atreet, to-day to fly Ua bif( kite. It flew so well that he did not realize that he iqu approach- ing the edge of the roo^ sointuitiy waa the little fellow watohing tiie hage toy. Sad- denVv a atrong goat of whid eaoght the site and 1 tarally fifiad him from feet, ana pMding him fully 65 feet above ttie pave- ment. The lad awnag anoufe a telephone wire aboat on a levd with tiie tcqp of the bnildiBa, sHmb, looaang liis hold upon his spool of atring, he gnepad the wnre and hong fireetly above the atieet. Than was great ezoitaBMnt in the atreet. wlian Frtuu New- man, a lad of foorteen, darted np the stair- way aad want upon the roof. He made hia way to the edge, and. kanug over, oaoght yoong Maolntover by hia ooat collar, and lifting him off the wire, awang him to a place of aaf ety. ^-'â€"-^ ^^ Clarit the town oiiar at Naatnoket, ia oredited with a recent aluirp anawer. A yoong lady who had made aome remarka about him which he did not like asked him iriMnlia got hia bell. "IgotmybeD, yoong lady, when yoa got your manneraâ€" at tiw Imaa foondry." ioek, then bump a^at •"'J^J^^P'S ing ahrieks re-echoed through the boat, and Si flew to the bo»a, the 8^^'"^J^ iMMWBffera and viaitora from another d»h«- Seahwho had ccm3 to aee *|»« 'ji" S^**^ ing to bale. We womankinl, thmkmg wL a temporary detiy. an ordinair bump- ing, took mir pain'a and began '^e^g JSwrcdt of thV -Sultena," it 1^ before na. I had juat acrawkd "7.30. Wo b»^« bumped," under mine^ when up came one ot the goitlemen. with gnncaae m band aay- ing, "Get anything yon really carefor, we o^ have to leave the boat." A few â- eoonda after np nuhed the gentleman, ory ing, "The water is gaining rapidly come inatantlyl" We ahaU never forget the â- eene. Oh I the yeUa, the screama, the con fnaionl The one thou^ht.of oar crew ptoper waa to aave themaelvea and their gwda. The dragoman turned ont th^ aailora from thefelaoea (amall boato) to make room for na, tmd in we amambled, and in a few mo- mente we were aU lauded, and the geotie- men returcei to the Bearie Camue for the crew, and then went to and fro as aalvage corpa. They worked splendidly, in and out of water, under a very hot sun, and with everything against them. No one was in command. Tne dragoman bad completely lost hia head, the dababeah was rapidly tilting over, natives swarmed the felnoosa and crowded the cabins, the water raahe^ in, and but for individual efforto. none of our thinga would have been saved. It waa really distracting to see the gilt cornices, pillows, soap-dishes, and cnrteina being handed out inatead of our preoiona lares and penates. However, two of our talvage corps climbeid in up the windows, and handed or threw out our treasures just as they had caught the swimoiing mattresses which were blocking up che way. The Arabs were worse than useless, and the dragoman beside himself, poor fellow, shk- all over and doing nothing. â€" Lady Sophia Palmer ia the Quiver. Yisst to a Jossmaker. "Me no wantee yon oome lonnd hea. Stay away," and a Celestial frown was be- stowed upon the unheeding reporter from a square aperture in the door of a dirty and rickety building on Jackson street. "It's all right, Jjhn I want to buy a joss." "Come in," said the Cbiaamen, in modifi- ed tones, The rough door was pushed open and the jossmaker â€" for such the man was â€" plied his peculiar vccation. Here were seen unsub- stantial idols of all desciiptioas, ranged around the room in a piomiscuous fashion and with wbat seemed a lack of reverence on the [art of the manufacturer. Then there was the raw material â€" gilded and colored paper, rough frame work and other accessoriesâ€" strewn about the place, odds and ends, dirt^^d disorder bemg every- where visible. "You paifiCee man 7" asked the joss-mak er, as he picked up a scrap of blue paper, probably intended for the robe of a god, and which the reporter bai sacrilegiously trodden upon. "Some pamtee nun buy joss makee pictna." "No, I'm not an artist but I wish to price the goods. What is this one worth " and a blue, yellow and red idol, with a staring dountenaace and with the conventional Chinese head dress, together with paper robes, stuffed with c3tton, waa pointed out. "Twent-fi doUa," waa the reply. Assuming that the price was satisfactory, and pending an imaginary transfer of the property, it was found by patting a few questions to the Mongolian that quite a trade in tHese idols is curried on the city, though of course the chief buyers are wor- shippers of josB. When finished, the joss, if it ia one which haa been made to order for a wealthy Celeatial, or which ia to take ite place in a temple, mnat first be oonseorat- ed by a high priest, who with hia aoolytes goea throng, a prolonged and apparently re- condite ceremmiial, winding it up by daub, ing a little red paint in each of the black eyea of the joaa, who ia then enabled to aee into the myateriea of thia world aad the hereafter. Itia the dying wish of every Ch in a m an ^ho oan afford it that a joas may be burned for him after hia death, and thia proceeding forma a part of all well-regulated funeral oeiemonieaâ€" another oanae for- the great demand on the efSgy manofaotorer and a oonstant aonroe of revenue to him. The head being of wood or pliable oard- board and the body of oheap though gaody material, there ia nothing aboat one of theae imagea which may be oooaidered of vafaie the ingenioua workmaoahip, in which anoh a diapiay of detail ia niade, maybenotedaa of far more conseqaenot than the nsefal or eztraneoaa staff which goes to make np the potent aad mystio joaa. Bvea the paper finger-naila, of extraordinary length are finely onrved. and the thiok-aoled ahoes and fan an not onitted. A half completed joaa ia one of the mxeerast lookbg aighta to be aeen in the Ohineee qnarter, work â- Â«â- Â«Â» ooaanunoed from the feet, and the iaside portion of the body being plainly visiUe. 8tMRtmei»eo Ohnmiek. faoetioasly defined • lawyer as "• liw^ r^^' -^T^ i/TySir est-to fro- yew «-«»- **^ilSSL«it leather from or«»king. JflSS^rtoSsTbeforo inoerting kathar soft aad plirfito. «« .^ {. Whatever be it. i»«pW*»« "Sfn^S- 5 in its ontwsrd featiwa • WJrt o* «banty, it U UnjSe to be tootfal. howev«r s^ah- ^."SSSiVmaking Kfl^Ma ««• pIâ€""*- ly for our neighbor. ., ^^ *,-**â-  » ^The Indi«» in Or«gm ^^^ *5* »*,^! violation of their reUgiott *o,^"" "j*^: SaJSTteeat Chkf »2U tii«« faom^too dust of the earth, aad. after W *»*« on its anrfaoe for a oerton tang* ofto, Ly retom to ite boao-^ -d j^pi b^g! put of the eUmeate of «»• ••'*\. V~^ Sriand tbey regard aa dealing m their own fleah aad blood* « i j. u.^^ The height aad velocity of -lopj" "^^ beeo detomined by means of P^o*58«»P^: ^o cameras, placid aboat six hundred feet I15«M aimaltaacoaaly »dâ€" ^^J^ J^jf^; dty. The obaerver meaaures the angle ot indination of the cameras and the V^*^ of the doud aa photographed on the vn platea. aad from theae data a tngonometno oalonlation gives great aconraoy. Keep up in spirit and eamestoeis. Hope, bdiev^ toyâ€" it need be, struggle. Never let^hings drift. It is minous when • young man b^ins to allow the world to move without Us having a ocmmon ahan m ite progress. Sometimes we wto have bad longer experience in life wonder how the new-oomers in the arena oan evince so much enthnsiam aa they do. We for|{et what we onraelvea once fdt, and, looking on vnth dimmed eyeaâ€" more far-dghted perhapa. but not half ao keen and bright aa thoae of younger menâ€" marvel to observe the energy of our juniors. Let nothing be aaid or done to diacourage them. It ia orndty to check their ardour. By ao doing we aball not only detract from their power, bnt increase the toil and diffionlty of the task which lies be- fore them. Let na urge them to "keep up " rather than aink into an apathetic mood and mode of action. It is well for the intereste of progreaa that the prominent plaoea in the working world are occupied by young men. A New Gas-Liglit For the past three weeka the York de- partare platform at Boston Station has been lighted upcn a novel principle â€" ^namely, with an incandescent gaa-liffht. The light waa invented by Mr. Lewis some two years sines, bat the present ia ite first pub- l:c application on a commercial scale. Be- fore, however, it waa applied at .Easton the system underwent careful trial at the com- pany's works at Crewe, and it it answers ex- pectation at Eujtonâ€" which so far it has â€" ^it will no doabt be widley adopted by the Loa- don and Northwestern Company. The principle oi the burner ia the mixing of air under pressure with common gaa, the light beia; produced by the incandescence of a platinum-wire gauze cap which forma the apex of the barner. The air and gaa an mingled at the burner in auch proportiona that perfect cooabastion takes plaea, ao that it is impoaaible for any nnoonsamod carbon to escape. The piwer used at Easton for compressing the air is simply tfcao of a Bish- op gaa-engine of two-man power, wh'oh is suffident to supply the air to a much greater number of burners than are at present in use there. Toe platform is 900 feet long, and it ia very effectively lighted by 20 Lewis burners, which have token the place of 50 ordinary burners previously in use. No lanterns or g'asies are used,, and the light is perfectly atewiy, there being no flame. It ia, moreover, quite niuffdcted by wind or rain. The burnera are oonatrncted to consume 18 ieet of gas per hour, but they are actually consuming only 12^ feet, ao that if necessary a very much more briUant light could be given than this. It ia atated that the quantity of gas consumed is 17 per cent, less Shan with the ordinary system, bnt that fully double the candle power ia obta'ned. Then, again the expenae of the glaaa laii- tema is obviated' as well aa the labor of keep ing them in order. An arrangement of thia qratem haa also been perfected for house- lighting which giyes the sama reaulte with- out the neoeaaity of nains power to com- preaatheair. On the whole, the invention aeema to be a practical anooeaa, vad in view of ita value aa avoiding the formation of noxious vapon by oombustion, and not leas of ite apparant economy, it woald aeem to have a good f uturo before it now that it haa been praotioally atarted.â€" London Times. AFmni*! carofnl stady Md parwdj^ many days beforehsnd a«**' hasbaenareheaiwl. I'C?* whoa the grooms have ^Lt* proper responsea. prompt «!?.*» I and with the greatest faSSi**^ mstake of thsbS?* "^^ Of her glova^VtSL".*' concm^n only one ovai, wh(i^""fc A.-forthe^ment^TiiS'.^ I brought into The fact mast be learned sooner or later that it is an ntter impossibility to obUge everyone. No matted how a person ohoosas to condnet himsdf he will find that hts con- duct will not meet the amcobaftion of all who an oogniant of his acttoas.- Thetem- peramenta of men an so varioosly oon- straoted that no nartiealar dispodtion will be acceptable to slL The praotne ot a oer- tain sot of virtaes will find admfton in a portion of mankind, while another and large portion will be antagonistic or indiff- erent. Mon than half of the worideannot be pleaeed with a partionlar Vm of oondoot for an experience baa indiq^trfdy dsmoa- strated aad confirmed tteNC "'•^' The Ofioe Boy'g Coneelte About Women. Woman ia aaid to be a men ddadon, but the Office Bay haa heard that it ia a pretty thing to h»iq delndtni. The loveliest lining for a boa«et, accord- ing to the OSoe Bjy, is a pretty faoe. When lovely woman makes yoa a pair of ahppera. the Office Bey aaya yon have "oat your foot in it." ' ' ' *~ Blnahea, aays the Offioe Boy, an odoon which maidens carry beoooiingly. ends m a "Union." Ia bve the heart is the papQ of the eye.' The heart that beato for no woman, tlto Offioe Boy oomparea to a niche without a atatoe. Don't reckon too maoh on the honeymoon: it may tarn oot aU moonahlne I Girls who "fly into a passfam." oiwht to have t hdr wmg, dip ped.l-AS7. '^^^ A. Straage Indlaa HaUtt a^^'pt ^^J^* 8««aUy known, says the *«»•â- Â«â€¢ «»Ter resonras ohow the I ^â-¼7 waf osn U ohewed and eaten wifiitT 5?!Si*n»» «»*«* with the TiJ^and â- !!; iteatinuBiooiof?ils hM^mi^J^S^ mtotte stomaoh, and th^t MZZrlJr*^ blandersand banglL^' *ll 1^ m« at tlmt verylervi^^^S,! moment, follow a olerffynul *•? W commnnionriile, nnd nsni " I plaM oppodte him. I twH!,*' ** when the miniater stretched «^i?*'» nnito those of the coupS:Sj.«'l»l m his own and give it s hesrt» a.^ times mora serious diffijultii: !!?*•' 8* ladies have had an almost naL^' ' laotanoe to u% the woti»^^ two, U their own BtateawntiiB7iH oepted. have ingeniously obbIIL* word "nobey." The wiiTS? stillto be formally admSdto.^ gnage. There was tna girl, ^^^ ' married by a very kindly oU J-L who absolutely refused to ntte» i?" "obey." Toe minister ,u^*lS ahe wen unwilling to utteri3ie iL J* ahe ahonld whisper it to him- battii lady rdaaed to accept evi thilJl oompromiae. Farther, howeTotl?? the clergy man refused to aooonifitJ bat when he was forced to diuZS without proceeding any further fiT oitrant young person consent«d'»o ' The difficulty, however ii ggt made on the side jf the Udy. Q?ri caMon the bridegroom wiihsd to Si little oration qualifying his vow yJI cribing in what sense aad to wbituJ was oting the words d the fflnjl waa, of cjupse, given to undeiiteril nothing of thia kind conld be Then was oae man who acooniiyl formula with aoUo voice nmAtjSSi have been exoeedingly disafpaetbk il offidating minister. He inteti marks aSter the faihion of " Fudge 1" " With this ring I that's superstition." "With rnvbodfl worship; that's idolatry," "Witkdl worldly goods I thee eudow thtt'ij It is a wonder that such a b^vimi, ducted ont of church by the beidii. L puti one in mind of an anecdote tiatii of a man who in his time wai i (3 Minister. There was a threat diwan the question whetlier a man cm ninl three hundred a year. "All I cat aaid the great man, "is that wheil With a'l thy worldly f(ooda I tima 80 far from having three hund-ed poi question whether, when all my debk j paid. I had three hundred psnce." 'I my love," said his wife: "battkl had your splendid intellect." " I difl dow you with that, ma'am," ibu^l torted the right hoaorable hosbul Clhostly Apparititg. In a recent Fortnightly Rmea tliB| article on Ghosts, in which a r«i story of the appearance of a reportitf judge at the time of his death lit" gentleman at Rawdon who read thid informs us that a similar oocanwl under his own observation come] He aaya â€" " In 1859, when I was s yoail I was employed in an office h I tr^sd. One n=ght I retired earl; tj bed, but in the course of the night In ly awoke, and lay quietly mnmi{i bed. While engaged in the delighf time of building castles in4heui, which I had aecnrely locked and fi auddenly opened, and one of oui Mr. who lived several mileii stepped in, dressed exactly as I baj him leave the offics en the prerionie' apparently in perfect health ""i* Ha advanced to a large mirror m\ over the washstand near mybedaM into it despond ingly.ltook up a bml ed down his long side whiskers wj tacbe, as was his custom, to do, ai]S^ coat coUar. wiped the dust off hu « gazed steadily for a moment intoijl and suddenly vanisbad from my iip|| out uttering a word. 1 was thorr" fri»ed, although I was notfrighh east. Of the reality of the appai waa not the slijjhtest doubt, asi' awake at the time. After thakB^J for some time I arose, losked at sjj and found that it «' The reat of the night pa«el win further distarbanoe. When I am'« office next morning the first ""I heard was that my fellow oleriwj Enquiry elicited the fact dropped dead Irom heart o'dock on the previous mgn* time that I had had my ' that diNml visitor. Why he appeared to ^y tell, unleM it was from thefectw-J I had some unpleasant words (â-  vioas evening in the wash raon" All Aborigiiial DweHWl^ A short time ago there «M J a manh at Schusaenned, » "J? wdl-praterved hut of the agj^^jj floorg and a part d the '^:^ and. aa appeared f rom » o»« meht. hi^ formed when o9--^. tangle, 10 metres long »*J,^ The hat waa divided mtji ^^^^i oommnnicating with e^h o»* jJ bridg^made of three ffrt«*^j doo^ tookingtowards tt'T'J metn wide, and opai«i« uj metres long and 4 ^^^J^tiid nor lay a hiap of atones wUJ^l ly formed the firepboe. i," j kitchen. 'Hhe Uving «»«;*( night refnge for oattle m o^^^s l!!£lad^3. wMoh^ad »o oJ-J meaaored 6:60 raetcetm'^i,\ wide, and was no doabt n*^^ bed^ber. The floor. «^rf, formed of round logs and »*: m This, be it Stone Age. •- â€" • .. mia^, j the lake dwdling" of t"^* larger in das «! i*"lS *i! luWnta. At both p^^ supporting tko houses w^^^ the shon by means « • j«i* removeible at ploMf"'"!, n* by ladders. Th«e 1*4JJJ «n a^ example found •* ^WJ^ tf ofa«ngirstan«*tb*tV; lonnea or rounu »vb- -t -^ » This, be it remembered, w- Stone Aoe. Itraa.jM^'^^i iriiioh pcotrud on either' I A sut to recovi J commenced ii _j ddendant is a lamtiffayoung lac gesthatsheato o; ddendant to t oiu{h the eating I time her life wi hedth ia pert nt allegea the to solder used in t A locd paper of ' â- "1 following A nted a dngle grt D it grew twenty M a full head of w wins of wheat 7* he next year.prodi] ' of sp'endid wh â- t spring, yielding Jl020pjunda ol itbee yeara. [The project of cu beiprovince of H forth Sea with th «n up by theGer ' Ileoanal is nth of the Elbe any'schidna\ 'â- tobeconstmct opennit the larges â- "1 navy steaming man Ooean, or i ataecesdty of ma â- *" voyage round t aued drawinga laabmitted to the [^ Cocket, in V "2^ down, dra •*»U waa taken i^jjaraa to hia aaaii Pitted in ao doing. [JjJwUer who had tte guard wb Y'»d he ahowed " was atill vidl "•» three weeka an K«17?^* oompenaa r^ him, he npl â- Wd on the fol!o Jtautradesmen 1 advertidng pn ,*rj«t«dc^f 2fJâ„¢*lpartof T*' albumen t 'â- â€¢flaahand ^atnrbidity l^l- Inalif. a handred pai ui™» consume "i** wear only 1

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