Grey Highlands Newspapers

Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 17 Sep 1880, p. 3

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 ri Time. •• iprMd U jidtiroDg; And (wept mn ttrt aMll fortioB of hw fvtvM ttirt Cbloaal DmUmmt had tied MiaMy, mm**- 1 J agianrt h«r wuL To My that ihre did aet monm for her Bwmy atUag Whi« MMdtokaow-tevsttwt TWIh lit I to foathiA hnabaad' would act b« tme. Any good wo- 1 ni(ht yoa asked me if 1 lored yoa ' Mo art ' win moam ft niia who hia ttood I to ha yonr wifaâ€" tha night whaa mm aAY, 3rd NOV.tTuby day, jle none away kO NORTH. ftod with gwoe be- 1a.m. rJ.4.')p.m. Purlin.- l.'« I "H,^!^ Mother trib^ â- "_•«'"â-  ia^botrs owner bribe; "Jpoeelee*; no money, ikiU, nor breath, aid part the owner from bia horse till death. Then Daher, who waa subtle, mean and aly. Concluded, next, some Btr»ta;.'em to try So, clothed in raga, and masked in form and faoa. He aa a beggar walhad with limping paoe, And, meeting Nebar, with the bone one day. He fell, and prostrate on the desert lay. The ruae succeeded for, when Nebar found A helpleaa man in sorrow on the ground. He tO'ik him up, and on the noble steed Gave h;m a pUoe but what a thankleas deed I For Daher ahoated, Uaxbed, and giving reio, ijaid, "Yon will never see your horae again." "Take him,"8aid Nebir, "but, for Mercy's •ake, Tell no man in what way you choose to take. Lest others, seeing what has happened to me, Omit to do some neeied i:harity. " Pierc' d by theae words, the robber's keen re morse Thwarted hia plan, and he returned the horse, Shamu-fac«'d and sorrowful then slnnk away As if he feared the very light of day 1 â€"From Wide Avalu. Biddy's Song ol tbe Dress. Wurk 1 wurk I wurk 1 While the chickens are crowin' aloof it Ah wurk 1 wurk wurk While the cats are out on the roof I For och I f am makin' a dress. Cut bias, wid spangles galore Au' how it will shine at tbe picnic and ball Wid its buttons behint and before. Wurk wurk wurk Till me \,ix\xi begins to t^chwim Wurk I wurk wurk Till the niau av the hnujie cumes ii Seam au' hustle an' band, ISanil an' bustle an' seam â€" •• Kuirst four iialf right an' left" â€" Och, I seu it all in a ilream. Och, men, wid sisters lear 0ri), men, wid mothers and wives I'll show them suchau illegant dress Am they nt-ver saw in their lives. Stitch mitch I stitch That biaZ'-n-faced I'lilly .McKlirt, She niver can Hhme with Bridget .Vlc%i When arrayed iu,my,pollynaze skirt. me, Wurk wurk I wurk I Kroui tin till hnakfast time Wurk I wark wurk A' a |«i«t Hud wurk at a rhyme f '.ind uu' liu.itlt.- au' s* am, Seaui an' bustle an' band, Till iie he.art 8 in a llutter, me braiu's in ii whirl, AVid a dress that is [H-rfectly ghraud (X'b, liiit t« uiathc the breath Av the cowslip and prinirime nehwatc, Wid ;» Muii umbreHa abuve me head, \nl H-hli|i|H-rH upin my fate. An' kliiM, b.r wan shurt hour At the bull w)iiii thiH ilrea..^ is made, \\ id Its rililioiiHan' llimnecs au' furbelowsâ€" Och It's ,;,iy as a cireiiH [laradi- I JANE HEaRN'S trial. A •liii.t l.s IIIIIKK I IIAir^KA. I • ' Ml. b. CHAl'TKU I. may mistake a fancy for a passion T a |iaH.-it)n f. r a fan«'y, whrn once it •iMt'S." 'riiii.s HayH.tneiif on r best and (â- iir. '•t writers and truly the Ntory of ULtny ii »iiiian'M lib the tragic histtnry of many a biini.ir hiart, lieti folded in the truth he t ll- It la the mistakes of lite, iiifire than It" iTiiiMs, wlin.h have the most pitiful con- .** HUeite. N. .I.tii. 1 1. 'aril, wlieu .mIio was^a giti of .cigh- t't n, iiiuib' n iilixtake in life. She took a i.in.y loi a |a- 31011, lollimiii it» leadiug, and Imiiii.I It but II )ijm» 'itnuB which led her iitto~),la '.-• w)iere ttirre was no f^olid ground beneath licr liet, no ritt in the clouds ovur- bia.l by which Home r.iy of liylit might nhiue t'l ;ji'le her on her w.ay. S\if hail dreaiiieil dre:iiiH and seen viaionH of what lior married life Hhnuld l)( as the wil« of Walter Dixiiey ileain. She had thon^'ht til hertielf x" After my niarnage- d.iy I rthall iieVtT lie .il'iie -all the triiublc ol l.fe will Ih" e.viier to bear becauMe my hus- band la by inv side t" bear tlieni with mc '• the joys 'f hf' iweetrr, iM'cansie he its llieru to share them. " Tins w-as the rosy li;.'ht that faitcy shed u[nju the future that v,ix» coming. Miw cold â€" how barren â€" Was the re'.jty ' xl'iat followed these as.sion-l.adeii ureams I \»ifff*n m.ay h^ve a man through much wriuik:, thVough distract and shame, through is'verty .-nu sufTering but there is one ' thui;^ which sl.ays love as xurely as loss of \air .mil sunlight kills a plaut, and that is â€" indilference. .I.ane found hcr8'lf f.ace to face with abso- lute and chilling inu'lferencc before she hal bei-n a wife a year. Walter ilearn was a man who cravol for the unattainable with .ardent lunging his fancy dressed itself in the Karb of passiun, and the counterfeit was excellent â€" for a while. He was a man whose moods varied like the wind kind, if the humour was on him and he had an end " ),'ain cruel, if it ple:i8cd him to revenge a ubim denied charming to those he cared tt- ch.iriii, and only showing his real selfish self to tliixseof his own household. No one had ever called Jane hia wife, beau- tiful but she had a certain power of fasci- nation alwut her, and te had felt it â€" for a while. That was one reason why he mar- ried her, forgetting that one cau scarcely es- pouse a woman â€" ouly for a w^ile. 4ane wa« a slight slip of a girl, graceful in every movement she had soft, dark eyes, a wealth of dusky locks, aud a high-bred look that promised well for her powers of endurance. She left no stone unturned to try and keep the love she had once believed her own in very truth. But if a tree does not bear any fruit, you cannot gather what does not exiil wherewith to slake your thirst. Walter Heam oould not comprehend the natare of love in its bast aad hisheat Gos.'te sympathy of thought and feeling, the oompanionahip of miad with mind, the fealty of heart to heart, won things be no mure understood than he did the geological formatioD of the earth's oniit, VThaDJaae crared for bread, he gave her a stone. When she longed to b« near him and with him in bis amusements, whaa she tried to cultivate a ta«ta for society natoraBy distasteful to her, he said, " Do aa yoa plaaae." He made her feel that her presence was a thing indif- ferent to him at ail timea^irkaoma to him at many. She waa of too noble a natnn to ^harbor jealooay, bat it hart tba dignity of her womanhood to see him conrtov, admir- ing, foil of ev.-ry charm and grace tt nanner to other womenâ€" when for her, hia wife, he badip loving .ord, no teodar thought, all tliro^h tbe weary day^ Jane waa well-dowered, and glori^ia the fact for the sake of the man she loved. She woold not willin^y have bad aoy hairier '^biseatiiaappTobatiaBaf bsrfor- taoa bat nar guardian, Cokoal IHal a man who bad ba«k hw IMw^ eoMM in arma, l^iat«l. witlt »Csa«ia psniataaoe, « Vf\^ it brin| aawai oa Waalf and aay ohildrao sha m|^ bara. Mofabe ooald •ot gat her to dailNha««v of saU proteo- tH^-eren this aaah Jaoa looked npoa as a â- ~*^P • »»w o« â- â€¢*» ia whieb, in hia Mat Wrt. WtUmTmrnrnf Haan aiost fallyagnad. In faet, spaak^ia eaafldaao* tea friaod. ha oaOad the OobMt a "aad- dUag old tool" It waa a good tUag ia Um long ran for JaM that shabad had a •• tool " of any kind to lask aftar bar i aSsr i ia l at aU evslia to to her ia tba cloaeat and most sa- cred relatiosi in life, no matter how that life may have been sadde n ed and blight- ed by Ua innoenoe. Indeed, wbea the went to Uto with Colonel Daabenay and his gen- tle wife in their home on tbe weatem Scot- tish eoast, Jane would indeed hardly bare admit^d to heiaelf tbe new sweet sanse of raat and peace and sacnrity that stole over her life like sunshine creemng over a land- scape and making everything fair. Her new-bom content rather took tbe form of an exquisite delight in the beautiful nature by which she found herself surronnd- ed than In any more definite way. The lovely shadows of the clonds upon the sea the gray-green world of sky and water, cloven here and there by the gleam of a bird's-wing or the glint of a red-brown sail the song of a lark as be rose higher and higher in the blue vault of heaven, nplifted heavenward by the triumphant me'ody of his own »ong the tender golden-green of the trees in iipring the perfume of the rosea in Sommer the wash of the sea against the rocky shore-â€" all these beauties of sight and sound had for Jane a new significance. She did not know that it waa the sensation of daily • ffort, tbe relief from the strain of self- watchfulness that made her so open to every happy impulse of appreciation but the lov- ing eyes that watched her read the truth full clearly, and thanked Heaven in that, af- ter long strife and struggle, the gentle heart was at rest. Colonel and Mr^, Daubeney were a child- less pair, and Jane filled the vacant comer in their hearts. No daughter could have been dearer. They vied with each other who should show her the most thoughtful care, the tenderest sympathy. That was a happy home â€" the home where this trio lived bt side the ever-changing sea. In time the widow's cap rested no more on Jane's soft, rippling hair the very mem ory of the bitter past seemed to have faded from her mind as an image passes from the mirror that has once reflected it she had foui.d peace, and haviog known the pain of its lack, treasured it as a jewel of great price, â- d She grew to look so like the light-hearted girl of olden days that it waa hard for those who looked upon her to realize the fact of her six-and-twenty years. Before another year waa ailded to their anm, the peace, so lately found, so dearly prizel, was troubled but, like Bethcsda a pool, troubled hy an angel â€" the angel of love, full, complete, intense. lane had once " mistaken a fancy for a passion " no fear she should now "mistake a passion for a fancy." In tbe unripeness and inexperience ol her youth she hM suc- cumbed to the charm of a man's voice and manner now in the full bloom of her wo- man hool, she yielded to the influence of a man's heart ind mind she reveled in the sweet subjection claimed by one higher in thought, deeper in mil d than herself. lu past days she had found a pleasure in Walter Heam's adulation and fondness now she only sought how best she might show her devotion to one she knew to be worthy of all she could give. â- lane's new love-atory came about thu^i- A certain expedition was about to set forth on a ijuest of scientific inquiry there was some talk, even in that quiet corner of Scotland, beyond the Kyles of Bute, of a young naval officer whose talents bid firir to make him a shining light in the annals of science. He was to go with tbe expedition, and his name was Ouy Challoner. Some delay occurring in the fitting up of the ship select) d to ail to almost unknown seas, Ouy Challoner came to spend a week or two with some old friends of his who lived near Captain Dafibeney. Ciiy came North in utter unconsciousness that at each step of the journey he was nelfr- ing hia fate, and that that fate was to come in the form of Jane Heam. When he first faw her she stood beneath shadow nf a lilac tree whose faint purple blossom:! swayed to the wind. She wore a simple dress of pale gray, and at her throat was a crimson knot. P'rom that moment life was a new thing to Guy Challoner. If he had been ambitious before, he was doubly so now.lor, day by day, he grew to read better and more clearly the noble nature of this woman who might inspire a man to strive for a greater name, but would never hold him back from fame because she cared to grasp as much of his life as she could. Her cultured minil, chastened by past sorrows,, appreciative of all that was grand in science and beautiful in nature, eagerly followed the lead of hia. The man lived a charmed life, feeling himself beloveil even before he put his own love into words and, when he did 8{ieak, when one evening as the thrushes sang good-bye to the day that was dyine, as the shadows lay sleeping on the sea, (iny Challo'ier told Jane how she had crept into his heart and nestled there. " Do yon love me enough " he said, looking into her eyes, at once so dark and bright. " Don't you know?" she answered, hiding their happy light upon his breast. The thrushes were silent, the shadows on the water Heil at the soft touch of the moon- riseâ€" aud still those two lingered in the gloaming, hand in hanJ, like two happy children. And for all answer she laid her arms about his nock, and said in the words of our sweet- est singer: ' I will love ttfte to the death. Ami iiut ficvoiid. Into thffworld to oome." It seemed to Jane after th«^ ^igbt nf be- trothal, aa if for her a new heaven and a new earth were created. Not only was she loved with a passion and tenderness such as she had never realized in the past, but she was led on from day to d. y to some new knowledge, some more perfect undi r^tand- ini{ of the beauties ot nature. She was al- lowed to feel herself not only loved as a woman, but prized as a companion she was unspeakably, intensely happy, for once in her life. So the golden d.ays passed on, aud at last it was settled that Jane's wedding-day should be fiefore that ixprdition sailed to unknown seas, and (iuy should leave her not hia promised bride, but his wife. "Then I can come after you," she said, with her eyes suspici' usiy briglit and a quiver about her lips. " Yuu can write for me from any port where \o\3 are like'y to stay any time. ' "Can I?" lie said, kissing tbe tremble from her month. Before the wedding-day came round Guy had te go down south to pay a visit to the Admiralty, and make certain arrange- ments about that intended voyage of which we wot. We will peep over hia shoulder, if you please, and read the foolish letter that Jane sent him on the second day of that short separation â€" a letter than which, in Guy's eyes, earth could not hold a dearer thing, save and except the little hand that wrote it: " I am not being idle because I mi.'S yon so much. I love reading the books that yon have read before me, and where, on the margins, you have left pencilled notes. It is like following in footstexw that you have trodden in â€" it is as if you had passed that way before me, and dropped a flower here and there for me te pick up. 1 have f6en SO happy. Guv, these last few weeks I I have been so nappy that my happioess has frightened me sometimes â€" it is only .a short time, and yet it sterns more than all the yean of my life before. It is foolish, I Buppoae, to write you sach loi^ lettan, and vou away for so short a time, and coming back so soon T It is unworthy of the wis- dom that should have gatheiad round my •even-and-tweoty years â€" is it not When you oat this thsre will only be two days more oaf ore you set out north again, so that vecy aooD I shall be beginning the day that baa only to wsar to seven o'clock before it brinaa yon to ia%. The lilies of the valley are all out in tba fftrden, aod I shall fill the vaae upon your writicgtable with the pretty bells early that morning. Then I shall ko for a long walk along toe shore. You will think me a baby for writing like this. Do yoc know I really thought I was erowiog qaite a sensible, almost strong-minded wo- man â€" a mattar-of-taot, oommon-eense sort of personâ€" owM. B«ftim^«aet you, I mean â€"before the day wkMSBsr the lilac I aat witb the leaf-«WisiVlliokeriag on my beak, aod Mra. J^M torched me on the •hovlder to ndb aMlookaiL You know whs* I saw wh* I did kwk^ Guy 7 Oh, my darliB^ bow fair the jpHr baa seemed to me Aw r heaatifnl a Ife^bfe bMgi»wn â- nee IW moaieat wbea I met your dear ayea loakiac into miae witb a stnaga, qaasttoning. as tboogb ' sometbiag thef had " your thrubea were singiag, aad^tba area rasa like a silver wortdorar tba eaa? Iwilllo** thee to tbe death, and oat beyond into tte worid to oome.' " By what be thoaght ia tratk a bappy chance Ony CbaUoaar waa aUe to set oa ra his joorney nortii a day aadier thaa ba had expected. What a food light of sarptise and jny would dawn in Jane s dark syaa as he stole npon her unawares in sooie 'et spot such as she loved to hide in, alooa with her trearare ot sweet thougbti I P«h« she would be nnder the old lilac tree She loved that tree he knew, though now sU its bloaanms had fallea. It waa a fair Summer's day, tbe day on wbioh Ony reached that fair home beside the sea where dwelt his love. Green below, blue overhead, and between the wafting of innumerable winga, the song of a thousand birds. That was what tbe world looked like to Guy's happy ey«a sa be neared the haven of his desires. How quiet the place seemed I No one was astir. He looked in vain for the substantial forms of tbe Colonel and his wife, nsnally to be seen wandering in the garden at that hour on a fine evening, or for a slight figure, book in hand â€" a woman with earnest quiet eyes and a crown of dusky hair. He quickly paased through the hall-door, which m Summer stood wide open from early mom, opened the door of the room on the leftâ€" the favourite indoor hannt of Mrs. Daubeney and Jane, and then he stood quite stillâ€" strack dumb as it were by what he saw within. By the mantel-shelf stood the old Colonel, a letter in his hand, a look of pain and terror on his face â€" the face that was drawn and white, like that of one who has just under- gone a painful ordeal and is still dazed by the shock. Near him was his wife Siuan, looking as helpless aa women of her loving nature and small endurance always do when things are going very badly indeed. Her eyes were streaming with tears as she sat in a limp heap in one comer of the sofa, and, as she saw Guy, she gave a little piteous cry. As for the Colonel, he threw out his hands toward the figure at the open door as though he would fain have kept off any nearer ap proach. " Great Heavjn I" he said, hoarsely, let- ting the letter in his hand flutter to the ground " is that you, Guy Has any one told you T" " Told me what " said Guy. white to the lips, but master of himself as usual "Where is Jane?" " She is gone up the shore â€" she knows nothing â€" come in, shut the door. You are a brave mm, Guy. Call your courage to your aid. You will need it all. Read this." Guy" drew a deep breath aa he took the closely-writ 'en ^heet of foreign paper from the Colonel'cj hand and carried it over to the window. And as bedid so Mrs. Daubeney covered her face with her hands, and began rocking her- self te and fro in a perfect frenzy of grief. Guy had been full of a terrible fear lest some harm hid come to Jane, but, thank God for that, his dear love was safe and well I Any calamity, he thought, that did not touch the dear head eo soon to be pillow- ed on his breast could be met and borne. And with such thoughts beating right hotly in bis heart, Guy began to read the letter on the foreign paper. ad tbangh tha ia tba qalat faat Biids the hash « tfca bat mHOs, as aUrtwas ant thM. Md the laay waftiH of a aea- galTb wi^gi aaw aad afitB sbflna whitt EetvMB sea sad Atâ€" *3L TheSaa tent bad bees garaertd in, aod Antoma was fair with a cam aod mature beauty all ito A paseefal hNoduag spirit â- mnser was past. nirit sasaMd abroad, bat a, harvest of o^n- CHAPTER II. When Guy Calloner had finished reading through the letter in a silence broken on|jL by Mrs. Daubeny's stifled sobs, he laid it ' down upon the table, and, turning to the window, stood there silent and motionless. He was in truth, as the Colonel had said but a few moments back, a brave man. He bad encountered storms, in which, each mo- ment, death seemed to stare himself and his companions in tbe face, without for one mo- ment losing that calm, repressed manner that was his most marked characteristic, but the mental storm of feeling that now shook him was harder to face than those perils npon the great waters. The poor old Colonel â€" who stood holding to the edge of the mantel-shelf with oue hand, as if elad of the support of something solid amid the bewildering and uncertain state nf things in general^beard the sound of one deep-drawn breath after nnother â€" the sound as of a swimmer, sorely presseil, battling against a mighty current. " God bless my soul " be cried at last, appalled at Guy's long silence. " Jane will be here, before we know where we are if we don't look out. Guy, my dear fellow, my dear boy, what the devil are we te do " What were they to do This man â€" Jane's husband â€" bad conceiv- ed tbe happy idea of leading every one be- longing to him to suppose he was dead, while be was in fact living under a false name in various cities in America and then, after long years, writing to announce the fact of his existence, and of his intended return to England. He was good enough to be jocular over the whole affair; hoped "little Janey" had " not got married again " said he could Bot of ito sweet ri^esa of perfection the man barryiaa oa with easer. stratnad eyes aad pale sat^s wotted nc tbiag. Tha rot ks dappled all goU aad raddy-brown with the ^ing feraa tha tovaly purple shadows aiaepiag on the sea the waft of white wiafi tbe famt star-ahine above, the gentto-aob- bing wator below what were tnay all to him T Eager, mad, craving for tbe sight of a woman's fee, (ay, tboaf^ it might be the last time he should ever eaas npon it, be still longed for the sight of itT;) agiOBising, qniA-ooming qoeetions aa to how best he might spare bis love all possiUe pain in tell- ing of tbe torrible story, snoh were the tbongfato that surged like the waves of a tronbled sea in Guy Challoner'a mind. For him all the beauty of earth and sea and sky around him might as well have been but (desolation, storm, and tempest. Jane did not expect himâ€" be had thon^t to come npon her as a sweet surprise. All the way on his journey down from London his mind had been fuU of anticipations of what her joy would be in his an-Iooked for coming. That last letter of bora, So full of all womanly tenderaees, of passionate de- votion, of perfect comprehensK^n of his aims and ends in life, his love xnd his ambitions, was still in the breast-pocket of his coat. It seemed like carrying some murdered thing about with him. What would Jane say when she saw him T How should he meet her how should be greet herâ€" his lost lover-his darlingâ€" torn from his side by a cmel fate t In time to oome, no doubt hot indignation aninst Walter Heam would t»ke possession of Guy s soul. At present there seemed no room in his heart save for thoughto of Janeâ€" room for nothing beyond unutterable pity and tendemess toward Jane. At 'ast, just at a tnm of the shore, he came la sight of her. She was coming slowly homeward, a few yellow fem fronds and a scarlet bunch of orchid-fruit in her haad^ Catehing sigh: of Guy, Jane let feme and berries ft\X to the ground as she ran to meet her lover. How often, how often in the weary days to come did Guy Challoner think of his lost love as he saw her then 1â€" her dust-coloured dress blown Iwck the slight, graceful form ranning on to meet him the outstretched hands the eyes at onoe soft and eager' the- red lips parted, and tbe gentle breast panting a "little, for she had run quickly along the sands, wondering, as she ran, at Guy having come before his time. The shore was a quiet, lonely place in- deed, there was absolutely no one to see what went on except the lazy sea-galls floating in the offing, and a robin singing sadly, as it is his wont to do at eventide, in a bufh hard by. So Guy caught bis love in his arms, and their lips met in a long, long kiss. But Jane felt a stmnge thrill of fear even in that happy moment of greeting. "The lips that pressed hers so madly were cold and trembling Guy was deadly pale, too, and his eyes had a look in them that she had never seen there before. " What is it " she said, the soft rosy colour dying from her cheek as she clung to his srm and she looked up into his face with eyes full of fear. Then, aa he did not speak, only catehing her hand in his and holding it tight against his breast, she added Have they ordered you away at once ph, Guy, tell me, are you going to leave me /before we are married are you going at once â€" te-morrow, perhaps to-night 7 " Are you going to leave me " His heart echoed the pitiful question s qnes^ion to which he might well have answered " Ay, my love, for ever aud for aye. " That is what be thought. What he said was this " There are no new orders, dear. I found I could get off a day sooner than I expected and so I came that is all. " " All!" she said wistfully. (to bs costinued.) ' «tsist J for whaa. five yeacs after «m date of hsr MBikai. Walter Heam (a slab traasastioa hear the broad light „ teAsMsisa witb a fnt^dTaod to brsak the faet of hia tothoaahebad Ui«id«w,waetwdto ^pimiiit II liif gtohsr found Yoa I taso, Md tsU yoar tiuitwt to the statiasi TbaColsMl aoddad. tbattaMiaa ef his a for ever so long 1 aaâ€" and Uwy w aia not good^oaking, Oay' can yoa that, iSr I You are a oierar, aa om eaa see at a gfaaoa; -a Httleâ€" jaat a littla-hssd aai Yoa are aot very yovag eitbar, yoa what is it! TUrty-thiae aad a Ut 70a win aigr tiMTs ia a spiea of iojpertaaaea sirar a Biaa oauo. ' t eossiag I «â-  tha ssa hssa JaaaWUaiBtty not help laughing when he thonght of vliat an " astonisher" his letter wouin be to them all and that he would like to see Jane's face when Col. Daubeney " broke the news to her." " It's likely enongh I shall break some- thing more than the news in telling Janey this, groaned the Colonel " what about the poor child's heart " Guy bad still kept silence â€" still kept bis face tumed away from the two who watehed him so intently, but now he crossed the room tbe Colonel's side. Mrs. Daubeney uttered a low cry at the Bi;;ht of the change that a stmggle, short and sharp, had wrought in Guy Challoner. The man «ho had come into that pretty, cheery room less than half an hour ago with joyous gladness in his voice aod look seemed to have grown old all at once. His cheek was pale his month, set in a resolute line of pain and endurance, looked as if never again could it soften with a smile his eyes â€" well, after meeting them for one moment, Mrs. Daubeney covered her own. " You are right," said Guy, speaking al- most sternly in his determination not to yield an inch to the agony of heart that be knew, if once given way to, even for a mo- ment, would sweep all before it like an ir- resistible torrent. " You are right, Colonel Daubeney we must think of Jane, of her only, an 1 of nothing else as yet. She is somewhere up the shore, you said, I think 1 wUl go and meet her." In a moment Mrs. Daubeney was clinging to his arm, sobbing, trying to speak, ap- pealing to her husband, saying she knew not what. Guy put his arm firmly about her shoul- ders. " Try and trust me," he said with quiet earnestness "no one â€" no one must tell Jane of this but me." " It will kill her " cried Mrs. Daubeney, wringing bur bands. Here the Colonel, nerved by Guy's ex- ample, rallied hia forces and came to the rescue. "My dear," he said, "Guy knows best. Ellen, dear wife, let him go." Mrs. Daubenoy'a arms dropped to her sides, and her biuband led her to the sofa For a lifetime she had been guided by his wise and loving counsel she could not oon- tond against his will now. Guy had reached the door, when, sudden- ly, and as if strack with a new idea, tbe Colonel called him back. The delay triei him almost twyond endu- rance, yet he stopped. " What is it T'^he said, panting a little, in spito of all his powers of self-control. " I say, look here, you know don't let us make things blacker than what they are. This fellow Heam â€" he â€" there's no reason to suppoee he's been leading tbe life of a taint in those parts mayn't Janet be able to get rid of him eh I don't you see T "Yes, I see," said Guv steadily " but that woold be no good. In Jane's eyes no- thing but death can diapolve marriage, and I think the same. This man who baa made her life in the past so wretehed most stand between her aod me forever â€" ss long as be lives. My God T be broke oat wikUy, los- ing hit calmneas for cae mad moment "do you not think I see and feel the horror of it all 7 My darlingâ€" oh, my darling I wbioh of us can ooaitet yon T" T isl iiniif to this burst of angaiab, tha Cotoaai fs sadly that he had spoksa aa- sdTwdly Oat iM had fsr hotlar basa kft woU atone. "Iflfiaditn ryâ€" I totsihte here, "said Ch^. ^^rinyaa ssnd my traps down to ths sis Neilson's Burial and WilL Man- Haw «sy •at BBl»Oqr,aoaw to r B» darsd aot givs m SB ^H • ««riMa af/OdBag ssesa SMatsait, aatth^^ oat ia tta iMfctuiuatida. Aagliissiiat sss orar a tiiad dnld. The bka aiasa paipb (From the New York DrwuUc New*.) The London correspondent of the Chester Ouardum states that Miss Neilson's will leaves £40, (XK) te the Rear Admiral Glyn and £1,000 to Mr. Cpmpton. We do not believe this news to be authentic Her at- tachment to Admiral Glyn was well known to those who were intimately associated with her here. The mere fact that he had of fered her marriage a'ter the scandals that had touched her name filled her with grati- tude, and though she reftised to saarry him, she seemed to consider him always as a bro- ther. AU matters which touched her nearly were referred to him, ami ou his advice she determined "vprything that was important. It w:~ a standing offer that he would marry her at any time she pleased and yet, sing- ular woman, she preferred the intimate com- panionship of other men of whom she did not think one tithe of what she thought of him. If she had left the bulk of her fortune to him, it is out of gratitude for his loyal and con- sistent friendship for her. But we doubt the story of this legacy. First because Ad- miral Glyn would hardly be likely to accept the earnings of this actress as his own â€" that s, if be cares to keep any sort of position in English society, and second, because Miss Neilson must have had a much larger sum than this to leave behind her. She did not hve expensively, aud has made for several seasons an average of ^,000 a year. H- r fortune must have reached an aggregato of at least $350,000. It has been said that she had married Mr. Compton, the actor, before she came here the last time. This is not true. They should have been married, per- haps, but were not as a matter of ceremony. It is not very flattering to Mr. Compton that she left him a paltry £1,000 out of her large fortune, for whatever he ought, or ought not to have, in the {.ecuhar rektion of her sec- retary, there is not doubt that she interfered greatly with his professional prospecte. He has lost caste immensely since the relation he consented to occupy toward her, and he wdl have difficulty in getting hack where he was now that this little dramatic episode in his life is over. It is probable that if Admiral Glyn accepto this gift of his dead friend he will devote it te some charitable purpose, and not to his own use. If the legacy has been really made, there are, perhaps, some reservations in it as to the ultimate objeote, and possibly it is only placed in his hands in tmst. If the legacy is troethis is most likely to be the explanation of this singular will. All that was mortel of Miss Neilson was buried in Brompton Cemetery on Friday last. This Cemetery is just outoide of what may be considered London proper, and is a pretty spot A number of professional peo- ple accompanied the remains of this brilliant woman to their last resting place. Tbe body was taken from the railway stotioa to an nnderUker's, and from thereto tfie grave. Miss Neilson had no home. AU the aar- ronndings of her death and burial wera iaex- preaaibly sad. She died on an old greeo louMe m a pnbUc restaurant, fraqneated solely by people of a fast class. Her last sigh floated away in the presence of two strangers. Thence she was taken to the Morgue and cut and quartered, no portion of the once beautiful frame escaping from the scalpel of the curipas men of science. Muti- Uted and almost falling apart, the body, but two days before that of a bright particular star among women, was placed in a tempo- rary coffin and taken to London. There it was placed in an oak casket, but no one was permitted to inspect the dead, as the sight was found to be too horrible and repulsive. A hiberal-minded Lttle feUow visiting on Cape Cod, who foond the inscription in the viU^ grave vard, "Not dead, but sleep- ^^ "" '*â„¢ ' mother aad said " We must go home right off I wont stoy here aUmght anyhow. They bury people when they go to sleep. I uw one of then ?.V!!-^v«"^*'*^ and do you snppoas 1 d stosp hsre to-night and have tham bnir mer "This makii^ a vaaatian feasant by wal ki a g a h oat the ooaatry ia the diwaiM "*.? ^T9 •"â- * '•' it is laid out toTto," said Jobfl»ttte. " I'ts got foar dog b£a «^7jr nrf^cal^ been efaibbed orsr the hsaa bjalkirsdmaatwiee, aad eves I sitoa it i t ii l to flirt with a giri sWd aadjaU for the aasa folka. TO m by «Ms B«^«ar. like aoiriliasd hsattsa. Iks l^tsat haa-stosss evar kaswa as- epatlyiMBaad at Steveim Foiat ^nsoaa- sm. HMjtsass frcai six to taa iashas htm isil, and oavered theoaaad turn lear to p sain s s h ai tsaa. Thias sf ths to hid aU tha Tha • whaafL aofa sad bay IssTtsffl BS*MI she^ da- of How the Qmm MTcd tbe BubT- John EraiM stm raking hajin a field on the touth aids of his ootta(;e, while hia wife waa in tbe dainr printing bai- ter for market. Little EIsj, their two jearold babj, was playing with blocks on the sitting-rooin floor, and old Robin Hood, the dog, was asleep on tbe graas cloae bjr ikm door that epened to tbe UwB. « The skj wan almoat dondleas, and the snn bkaBd warm in the fieldi. " Joat the weather to make tbe oom grow," aaid Jolm Etmu, resting a qnar- ter of a minute^ and looking oontent- edlj oyer the wall at hia lonriahing oom blades, already two good inohes at least abore thoae of his rich neighbor, Mr. Haverly. "Elsj is safe," said Barbara, the trim little house-maid. "I might as well knead ap the bread. " And she whisked throng the ritting-hwm so st, and with so little noise, that Elsy only looked np to see if a bird had flown in over the low half-door. Tired of her blocks at last, Elsy went and togged at the door, and made the latch rattle. Robin opened one eye â€" the one toward the honae â€" and half- cooked an ear. Bat Elsy kept np the rattle long enough for him to get oaed to it, and drawing hia tail doeer under hia noee, he ceased paying any atten- tion to the child. He knew she was behind the door. He had done his full duty by standing on his hind-lega against it, and looking to see what she was about before he settled himself for a nap. She rattled the latch every day, but she had never been able to lift it â€" he needn't have thcU on his mind. So by-and-by, when the crown of her little white head showed itself above the door, Robin was dozing away, more sleepy than ever. She ^gA pushed her block-box close to the sill, and stepped on it to take another view of the latch. For Elsy was enterprising, and had no more idea than have other two-year-old babies of of re m a i nin g in ignorance of any new and untried danger. Of course she succeeded at last, and so easily that she pushed the door open and let herself backward down the steps without wak- ing the dog. The oldest mother goose in the barn- yard was as energetic as Elsy,^ She quacked about among her neighbors imtil she collected the whole flock, and then matronized then^^down to the big shallow pond in front of the house. They pottered a good deal on the way among mud-puddles, for there had been a shower the night before. Dame Evans pottered too in the dairy, bat that was because pretty Miss Ruth Haverly called to bespeak some of the butter before it should be sent to market, and was trying her hands at the printing. Very soft white hands they were, and Mrs. Evans enjoyed watching them. "^There," she said, " that one is a beauty " as Ruth tumed one of the yellow balls into a dish. But she never would have allowed anybody else to meddle so with her butter. A spot on the dairy shelf would have have been as great a crime as a speck on the snow- white kerchief crossed on her bosom. But no thought would she have taken of the butter, nor even of dainty Miss Ruth, had she known what Elsy was doing. Nor would Barbara have cared so much about the bread. She was singing, and did not hear Elsy fumbling tritb the door-latch. few faiehM above the tap tfOw jk, after the MTaring of Miik hai bam put in plaaa, A layar of ateaw may ba tut over tba top of tha Tentilator to eep rain from running ia. Unrmro Qmmms Oom.^liaeL jmat we are asked to give directions fbr pf- serving green oom in cans, and eaeh year we are obliged to aay that we know of no so uDinrfn l method oHier than that psaotiaed at the canning ha toriaa. This reqnine tin oaas and the nae of ttte soldering iron; and only those who oan solder can pni ap the oom. Hie points to be observed are these The beat and sweetest oom, in jast the right state for the taUe, is picked nd oaed at onoa The oanaers aae a bent knife to oat it r^iidly from the oob, and soase have a wiaehine tat the purpoee. The oom is cut from the oobs, and packed doaely in the cant. Tbe ooha are pat into a boiler, covered with water, and boiled for about an hoar. This liquid is used to fill up the spaoe among the kernels in ths cans, enongh being used to cover them, and, tinlees the com is very sweet, a teaspoonful of white sugar is added* The caps of the cans are then soldered on, each cap having a small vent-hole pricked in its centre. The cans being soldered, the next step is what the eanners call " processing," which is to boil the cans in water. A wash boiler, or any convenient ket- tle can be used it should have at the bottom a rack made of stripe of wood, on which to set the cans. The cans of com are put in the " processing " ket- tle, with the vent-hole open, and sre boiled briskly for two hours. They are then lifted out, one by one, using tongs made for the purpose, setting each down with a sharp rap, to knock down any oom that may be upon the inside of the cap. The cover is then pressed in as much as possible, and the veut-bole stopped by a drop of solde^. The cans are then returned to the ket- tle, and boiled four hours longer. Operators diflidr ss to the time of " processing," some of them making it a secret, but from 6 to 8 hours in all seems to be necessary for com. n* Mtnpoll* akonds with ey^**-!* " SsatoT iMaa^Mnsas of s^es sad MtUaase ii arehitceiars are ooabeotod hy ddaprto- tioa aad naekaaUaaas, sad sven on ustrmf bill, that piaaaeU of all earthly sabitioa, taUsiMe tavewe sad diwepab aiistJa {VO BB OOMVIMUBD.) The Art of Sleeping. Most of the men who have made their mark as successful leaders have been Kood sleepers as well as hearty workers. Napoleon Bonaparto lost no opporounity either for a good sleep or a good meal. Even before going into battle he would take a few hours for sleep if possible. The Duke of Welling- ton was such a sound simper that he seldom moved from the time he closed his eyes until be awoke. He used a very narrow bed, and said that when it was time for man to turn in bia bed it was time to get up. Henry Ward Beeoher is known to be a good sleeper. He falls asleep in a moment after his head has touched the pillow. These men and other great workers have had a faculty whi h ia an important addition to the mere toking of sleep. It is tbe power of withdrawing one's self frem all surround- ing persons and objecto and finding immedi- ate rest in slumber. The man who oan thus take rest is refreshed and strengthened under many circumstances which wonid keep other people weary and wakeful. He is maator of every situation as regards his own rest. Some men, I'y long habit, find themselves able to toke sleep with the same ease that others would lake a glass of wator. They can sleep either while perched on a high stool or rattling along in a railroad car at forty miles an hoar. The economy of wear and tear on the lives of such people is wonderful. Tbe man who cannot sleep unless be has first removed his clothes, put out the light and climbed into his bed is at's great disadvant- age. Greater yet is his disadvantage if he can sleep in no bed but bis ' own. There are some who are possesed with tbe notion that their own bed is the only one in which they can slumber. These people are uttorly wretched when they go to the country where 'â- '-- beds are stuffed with straw or shavings, â€" ' the springs are made of noisy ftthe Eat fii'^L '^^'c" resounds whenever toueheiL f When they go to Europe and are fonwd I either to stoy awake or to sleep in quarters I not much larger than the shelf of a mantle- or drillâ€"which l'"?*^*.,-â„¢""' *°" K^t for ntts- n„o „1- t ^r A xt. J*-"**- """ "f "" """"'ort and di«omfort One plant every foot ought to do bet- AGRICXTLTUAL NOTKS. Corn in the hill tor than three or four plants struggling together in a hill. In the former method it is at least twice as much trouble to keep weeds from each plant as in the other. Is the difference in yield enough to pay for the difierence in labour 1 Long Ladders are the most easily moved to any considerable distance upon the farm by strapping them upon a wheelbarrow, the rear end being used as the handles, by means of which the whole is trundled along. The entire ladder is before the person, and there is no danger of doing any injury to surrounding objecto, as is the case when carried upon the shoulder. Oats with Whbat. â€" The sowing of a bushel of oato per acre, with the win- tor wheat, has often proved of material benefit to the wheat crop. The oato grow more vigorously than the wheat and aid in catehing and holding the snow. The oato act as a protection or mulch to the wheat. The little food the young oat plante draw from the soil is returned during the spring when, being killed by ths winter, they rapidly decay. Coal-oil Barrxls. â€" Some months ago we asked those who had succeeded in rendering barrels which had held kerosene or petroleum fit for use for cider or vinegar to give us their method. It is rarely that we have had such a number of replies to a like question, they have come by dozens and scores. We thank all who have thus respond- ed, and would say that while a lew have advised burning out the barrels, by far the greater number have found that soaking in water will answer. Some advise immersing the barrel in a stream, but the minority of those who have written us find that filling with water, and allowing the barrel to soak for several dajrs, occasionally changing the water, accomplishes the object. Uathbr the Lkavks. â€" The leaves that fall from the trees in autumn may be tumed to good account if they are gathered and used for litter in the stables. They furnish an excellent ab- sorbent for liquid manure and are of themselves a valiuible fertilizer, as they contain large per cento of potash, phos- phoric acid and other essential ele- mento of plant food. To gather the leaves rapidly a long-headed rake pro- vided with stout teeth should be used, and the leavea loaded into a cart or wagon, and taken to a pUce where they may be kept dry and handy for use. Besides the direct value of the leaves, the raking of them from the door-yard, for example, gives it a neat appearance, when it woidd othwwiae leok ill-k^ ITmmLATOB FOR Root Pit.-â€" In pitting roots, openings should be left for the eecape of the moisture that will rise from the heap of roots. K saeh »P«™g» are not provided the vapoota wUl aoeamolate and deoompoaitiaa wiU â- oon b«n^and in a diort time the foote wiD he roOan. A simple open- •*,*• *?P o' the pit, orat iTtw^ •!«««» ndge, if the hs» is one of ««»ie«^J«,i«,o»;afcie«t The WMUator should ran down into the heapv v^^to the bottom. Soeh aa aMii«. experienced in sleeping and in trying to sleep is the reeult of habit. There are seme people who toss on their beds for half the night, )u if they were uneasy ghosto. They have never learned to sleep. It is tbe power to shut one's self within one's self that constitutes one of the ap- proaches to healthful sleep. There are ob- jections to sleeping in church which need not in this connection be recounted. But the man who has, by i atient habit, accus- tomed himself to slumbering under a ser- mon can ledk to sleep anywhere and un- der any circumstonces. He is sometimes seen in a snug comer of a street car, when several ladies appeared on the platform seeking seato. He often finds it convenient when a bore addresses him to be able to subside into slumber. When his mother- in-law wearies him with protracted discus- sion of unintorestiug subjecta, it is ever so delightful to sleep, or to seem to sleep. Oood sleep is a blessing from heaven, and he who can sleep, whether flies crawl on him, mosquiteos bito him cross people scold him, or noisy children dance and play in his presence, is blessed, indeed. â-  â-  ^t â€" .-♦ â€" African Explorers Killed. (London Standaitl.) The sad news wbioh has reached Zuizibar of the murder of Capt. Carter and Mr. Cad- enhead adds two more victims to the long list of those who have sacrificed their lives in tbe interest of African exploration. Hitherto, disease, and not violence, has been the cause of the fatality which has over- taken BO many of the explorers of the dark continent. From the facts which have reached us it would, however, appear that the gallant pioneers whose loss we nave now to deplore met their death at the hands of a chief named "Wrambo." But as the ex- pedition which they commanded was at the latest date in the country of a robber king called Mercambo, not far from Lake Tan- ganyika, the name basin all probability been altered in teWraphing. Messrs. Carter and Caidenhead, though Euglisbraen, were em- ployed under the auspices of the Belgian branch of the international Society for the Exploration of Africa. The leading object of the expedition sent oat under ito anspices is not so much geographical discovery as the establishment of centres of civiliriog influ- ence and commerce at various pointe of the interior. Tbe first of these stations waa founded in August, 1878, by M. Gambler, at Karona, on the eastern shore of Lake 'Tan- ganyika, one bandred and forty miles south of UjijL In Deoember M. Cambier, was joined by Measra. Popelin and Carter with the lodian elephanto, of which only one re- mained. Another reinforcement, constitut- ing the fourth expedition, under Messrs. Burdo, Sogers and Cadenhead, waa far on its way when laat beard of, and waa sanguine of soon communicating with Mr. Studej. The latter, by the aid of steam launches, is endeavonnng to aaoend the Congo, which, amid so Many perils, he descended three years ago. The introduction of el^banto mto Afnosa explsratioa was a great stop in advance, and it was fondly believed that me (rf the ehief difficulties in the p^ of travel had at bHt been overcome. IW^ether all toe Baropeans have met tbe toto of Messrs. Ovtsr and Cadenhead we have no meaas ss yet of Isamiag. Thb Dna Major, as d*odb«d by a Cbicaao JVi*^ reporter: "His feet rose and fell with the regularity of quarto OTuabere bia bearskin wae as towering aad flafly aa a ost's tail to amiag tuBsT Hk gaaotlated kft band was ^uA to hia hip. aad his gasatistad ri|dtt hand to hk sta£ sawing ti^t aad left far dsar Ufa. Tha^ha I tha asacad lias oi rsviaw aad â- â€¢â-  to salata. Fiist ha raised tha staff shoaldsr hi^ aadwabhiod tt ioar tiaMS Uka tha walUag kaaa flf aa sMiaa. Tbea ha rsvscaad H smd gava osm giktottake to tha iHlhlaadtwo flsSdaha to tha Mt, twiriad tha hash sav«a tiaMs^haM tha stsfftwaaiy feet ia air, ami aMda a â- stisa ss H ha ware fobc to taa a titoleaoaMnathsisteiiaMe down tmlm. laatoad of saa^t ftdafliv. taakad it wadsr ha UaaUMW aad laid tha bask of hk baow. tavens sad temassoto eight of the faahioaabis maasioas wiA their aarvad baloatradea aad amuto pwttooaa. Bat thsas ooatiaato, whi* hsa Ud one writer to dasanU Kew T«ak m Paris witha toaah tl ths hBokweeda, a»*J, Another to say that the Mj is mire like â- waaa, tha raMlcadsBse of his tna! vv^aiBt, and ^ioaatto biaakat only w^^iiiti his abaadaat dir t th aas sMnaiMs aia Bowhafe so apparaat aa abovs tha soath- •rnbatdanof otoalpark. Saaebiag as fbr aa MaObattaaviUe on the wsat, aad to tha Harlses on the east, the land hM nsariy sU bsaa graded, and many â- tneta hava baaa laid oot, and in some in- ataaeaa, paved, oarhe'^, and illuminated. ^B yMia ago, or more, when the imperial Tweed waa asated urith lyparent firmness on tha Biaaieipal throne, this region, with the splendid park as a centre, w«s seized upon by real eetato speoulators, and predictions were made that in a very few years it would be covered with handsome dwellings. Bat the tide of success turned another way, with what effect, as concerns Twsed and his am- bitiona, is well known; and though on tbeeast side some of the vacant spaces have become populous, and some notable churches, hospit- als, armouries and houses have been put u^ the west side has altered so flttje that it has seemed to be lifeless The new musenm of natural history, witb its imposing facadelook- ing liver the hill ai.d calc of the park, glanc- es from its rear upon a neighbourhood which, in my experience, is quite unique. It is not to be precisely described as city, nor ss su- burb, nor as the nosettled but broken torri- tory that outlines mot cities while waiting to be absorbed in their advance. The anti- cipations that led to the grading and paving of the strecto have had a very hmiled fruit- ion in isolsted rows of pretootious and rec- tangular "brown-stone fronts,' which seem oddly out of place. Here and there a ves- tige of old times remains in a premetropoli- tan homestead, with an impoverished or- chard around it, or in a grand mansion with a classic front of Doric columns, and a gene- sis far antedating Fifth avenue. But it is not the new buildings, premonitory of the city's advance, ikt tbe old cues reflecting the past, nor thetre two in contrast that gives the city its charactoriotics and peculiar in- terest. All down in the hollows between the graled streeto, and in spaces wbere,-uo streeto have been opened, tbe gray Lauren tian rock stands with bot a superficial layer of soil upon it, thousands of acres are un- der cultivation by squatters, and \«;itboot other encKsnre to the land than tha em- bankmento formed around tbe hollows -1y tbe trap rock foundations of the streets Agricultore is carried on with a primitive simplicity of life and under a picturesque- neas of oooditian that tet an ai;ti8t on the edge of desire. Many sqnare miles are green with vegetables. Yon see the garden- ers with their wives aod mothers bending to their work you hear the querulous call of gies« and thec-mtentioiis of pigs and if you coald shut out from the |View the immntnre streeto and tbe precursory dwellings, you would never realiie that you are within tbe limito of the city, or that immense steamers are loading with grain by the river-side a quartor..pf a mile away, and that the buzz- ing thaT vibrates the air cbqes from an ele- vated railroad. The lodgings are of various proportiooF, sometimes teing limited to an irregular fctrip, and sometimes enibracing three or tour- blo^s in possession of one man. It is not an occas.onal load, tbe product of onebatoh, that goes to Washington market, but a large proportion of all the green stuff' consumed in the city is grown in theoe hollowsâ€" the lettuce, the parsley, the celery, the cabbages and tbe potatoes. But though one man trebles the quantity bis neighbour produces, he is no better off nor more ambitions in the matter ef architecture than tbe poorest; and ill tbe comers, or in the centre of the hollows, or perched high up on the wintry gnei -B, is found a grotesque villey of make- shift dwellings, mere conce-tAions 1 exigen- cies in many cases, which by no means indi- cate the pecuniary recouij^es of the occu- panta Some of them are simply tqualid, but npon others the sunshine and the rain have brought out a soft colour, and the scraps of which they are built have borrow- ed a quaint grace from the weathering. If is scarcely safe to let an artist loose among, them. They abound with pictmexque "bits, ' which he declares it next to impossible to exhaust and not long aijo, when I soared into the sky ward region were C has his studio, I found him black to the wrists with ink, witb which be was printing etohings of some things that he bad discovere 1 among theee^ibanties. BaUcioaud Vsrih[8asJisaaiongthsp„^ the Boat nalikaly persons in C* U '-- ' • adopfing the roU o(TS^ to fit men, or •.T^ih. be publio ii .it/. Even _^, sensibly aoongheoW pobbos, and were fairly S' tare, soienoeand art, did not coZ_ •^T* *p l» nsrtisarily qnaliti^dWi.- inth what i|ere suppostS to be SS of aU themes. T^e times han iN however. Every man. aye. and ,!», man, too. np«r u supposed to be Ji' else, 'almqt* a moral philosopher ind^ logiao. ,fSo much has oume of o,"^- handliag of jMwrcd themes. If o^^*^ ened in one direction â€"if we migh ** without offenoeâ€" we are possibly nvf ' of running too far toward the opiJjP treme. If they relegated the disSZl*" these subjaote too exclusively topri^k to professional religioni«to and monW* is just possible that the wori 1 may w' gamer by handing it over to ev. rj i_2 mns who may have what honest Geot^gZ phenson was wont to call, "the gift^ u gob," or who may happen to be i" with an iteh for icribbliug. Some educated men, m«n,too, makii mens pretentions to profuodity of tl learninK, make sorry euough work u t manipulation of these ancn d subjecta. TL fact IS, they now snd again get thiia mixed that we find it next to impossible • make anythine of them. In the ead^ babblement abont religion and monli- which "ding our lugs, ' we are in danger losing all right notion of either the one the other of them. Even a reverend not in the BntUk Quarterly, from whom • would have expected better things, wrife npon this august theme, for the enliglite ment, ss we may suppoee, of a select sc superior class ' f readers, confuses matlr in such a way that we find it no easy ta«l make cither head or tail of them. Belir is defined ss " IS F^RLI^Hl:l BVBEY FRIDAY MORNING In time to uicl^ tli enrly inals. It oont.iius the I ites' F.Tei n aixl Provi"""' Ira, Local Inteltgiem-c, County Ba""'*- jmmercial Matters an I an Instructive Tsellany. ♦L26ins(ivancf, jl 50 i« three month*, t2 if not pai.l till 011.1 of the y«ar. ^o va- por disconubued until all arrearaKo. arc paid, except a: the option of the pub.uhcr, and parties rtfusioK papers without payin,; np »i/l be held r^pooeiUe for the subscrip- tious until tbey comply with tbe rul.s. All letters a**"""'^*^ to the Kilitr must be post-piA otherwise tliey may m.t !« Uktu fdj^« P""' "thcc. Ltks ok AUVERTI.SINK 1.- year' jsUl 00 d'.i :«« 00 do ....••• c .. IS «l do y,,' 10 ««0 'ar.ls do 4 HO Ix l.'Dcs and under, tin-t insertion.. 50 Ka^h suls iiucnt inst-rtion Xh Vioxn SIN to ten linen, first iiiterti"n 7.' Kach subMqucnt ins rtion :.'â- 'â-  Over tcu liner, first insertion per line h Kach 8ubreiuent insertion '.! The uumber of lines to bi- rcckoacd Ity tlie space occupied measure*! by a scale *i soliil brevier. Advertisement*, without â- |eeilio directions will be publiKhid till i.-r- bi'l an) cbargel aoconlinjjly. AM trai.si;..i-_i advertisements must be in the ulli « ol pub- liotidn by 11 o'clock c-ii the Thunfclay O'UDiiig preceding their publcatioii. C. W. 1;LTLKIm;K, l*rt.prul..i. INTEEESTING ITEMS. tevciiuc for 18S0 • \^v •â- â€¢-t'rm'r"' an aspect of life "â€"the g,, ward aspect of it, if we may be allowed translate â€" as "a natural instinct in mtn phenomenon characterizing his existetg, more rightly, " the faculty in us mol recognises the ultimate aod Snpi^ Being," â€" ss " something consis'.loj the recognition of such an sbaoin, and perfect being." Now this lait ^^ all very clear to the clerical understand j,. .*' " learned clerk« " may have no ditficultj I "•" comprehending it,; but. evidently, theorl. nary lay miud cannot readily tak4 it J How the capacity for a thing and thb •».* itself, the cai'acity for religicn and fe!: can be identical is not qaite obyiou; v mind of the ui'iuitiated. Religion nu:; deed be "au aspect of human life," ji,. could only be quite sore of the ideat t- these woi^s were intended to represec. may be a " phrnomenon "â€" thoiig; ;. p'hrase is a little ambiguous as it^ u;:-; used â€" but a pheuomeoou which is ".lu:: al instinct," "a faculty," and at tbe lui time " something which consists in'tlie'n-' cognition of an absolute and perfect S.-;ii^ Pf rplexes ns. Nor i' our perj)lexjtj '*««. ed when we read, further on, -f the aausj of the- "religious sense " for ".ia auttiori* tive religion." What does this mftn* .^ authoritative "instinct," "faculty," '» peot of life," "phenomenon," s-imetku^ which consists in the reengoition of tbe u.:- mate and absoiu'e B ing 1 We cunfettil- The Frei.il i.'i(NlO00ri sl» Tiii;kk have Ix-in 1-kl duels -in Kriiice within eight months, without thje l"fs if a •inKle life. .\ T.\LWAKT wom.in (4ot ciiifihitHii-nt in mule attire Oi. a faiiii hand at llut.liiiiMiii, III but the farmi.r liischar^nl her on Itar.i- iujjhirmx. She has brought a soil i.. i.. eover «a,:eB for the whole c -i.tKie' Mi.* Kluka SiiAK'ix, dau.-lit, r of S-nat- r i^haniii. 18 betrolhi-d to .Sir Tliini.iJ! Ili ketli, a wealthy Ku:li!hiiian, who, in .ii» coui.-M. of a tour roui:d the worl'l lu lii (â-  .-iin i.t, has been makiiit; a xtop ul jiH I'aau-' CISCO. " » TiiK W'artha has foil iw. ,1 th i;r«ii x-ui,^ |il. .-iit her by ilie »,I. r, h Klli. an I ojfaTr • •trii'an rivers, which »\-iil.it»iiij^ tluir hiuikH, have wroUL^iit d.slruition ov i .m 1110 uu'Us extent nf i-mnti,\. 1'i • rl;iri.»- tlli-cled by iIo.kIs iu l'|n.vr .^ilciia i-. t- 1 riMe. MviilAN woodcutters in.tlj.-\l' lirommini; diiltovpn-d a Ininn'M k ;i liali-decayed oak tn-e. .\ watch. «:i-" iiigraveil "' H. on Kr.n.l» « it. 'a h) his b:ile. 'It is .-.up .qmiI t l nn u )i n»aii climln-il tl..- tree aud acci-ieiitiv ill .|.| .1 in- to the hiilloH trunk, fioni which there »-.. nu eacaiH:. i ' I hv, Maj.Kt\ l\r-.t tiiiil in e.'lltu-- iinaUy \t hllll lj I Hell ill. ttl ' .i iiiiH-r. l-'lolll wliert- tli ' III lllMoli miie, t-^l I tr..o|.». I po«i!ioii a| Ii t iipi*-. !*f»lf hour I ioiie-1 cA- e.ieb all leoaih'i have l '-.hl.»lia:' tiii-ir «.i 111 til- .ii ;Ti. eifuil bar J» a er.; Milan ;;i"un'i ii.^'l-. I turn tli- iu- tb •• iijht Ufl«:it ,V-.M.t .-3 .)a-l.iiij£ rtctiii Count .. ni.-.( ..! .»'â-  M-r, A «Vi;(.~iiM\\ was im exhilotii-u iliMi r..r M II,. .iavsasa fa^U-r. lie foileit SJO iloJLiis fortvey tl:i\ he la.- (or t«o »itk-.. A w;it h W;«» or 1. «â- ; I very !etinite notioawsir nwishid Ue|i. Mellkoff and the Nihilists, (Loudon Telegraph.) According to a Vienna coutomporary, usually well informed with respect to Rus- sian home affairs. Count Loris Alelikoff has sncceeiled in sqne'ching nihilism, if not iu killing it, by a process which does equal credit to his ingenuity and hi$ perspicacity. Discarding the intimidation method so dis- astrously practiced by his predecessors in irresiKinsilile power, he addressed himself, shortly after accepting office, to the delicate enterprise of making terms with some of the leading members of the secret association, then m custody and awaiting their trial. Toward these persona be employed such con- vincing arguments that they imparted to him the names of their principal accomplices, upon the condition that tbey thould not be moleste I by the authorities â€" a condition which Count Melikoff has honorably fnltiiled to the letter. The revelations, however, thus made to the dictator enabled him to approach the peisons in question with such directness that they coula not but perceive themselves to be absolutely at his mercy, and feel Uiat it would be to their interesto rather to come to some advantageous ar- rangement with him than to persevere in macbir.aticns which he was obviously in a p -sition to f I ustrate at uny moment. With admirable sagacity and discretion, Count Melikoff kept each amenable conspirator^s secret to himself, and conducted all his con- ciliatory negotiations in person, trusting to no official and letraying no seceder from the revolutionary orgamz-ition. He privily sent a larj:e number of bis "converts" cut of Russia in the character of secret political agente to Roumslia, Bulgaria, and so forth, keeping others at home on " retaining sal- ariei" until an opportunity for employing them actively should arise. By such astute proceedings as these he has cut the very tap- roots of nihilism from whjcb once for .Ida- hie phenomenon no further danger to the Russian state need at present be spprelienJ- ed. t â€" » Drinkiiig Toasts. In private life, toaating has almost entire- ly disappeared. A hundred years ago aud less, it was rife in the extreme. H^lf a doz n men coul 1 not sit down to dinner with- out drinking toasto. In tbe event of aoy great vio»ry, there vt as no end of toasting. The nation was for a time half insane in drinking tbe health of Nelson, WeUiagtoUf or other sncceasfnl oommaudera by sea and land. It was part of a young's man's eda- catirin to get familiar with a U\v t asto, which he could bring out when " called up- on " in turn at evenine eatoitoinmenta At the ripe age of 50, be had become so hack- neyed in toasting as never to be st a loss for a hero, or for a sentiment snitible to the charaotor of the company. At the very least- he oould give " The rising geneiation," " All ships at sea," or " Mty the wings of friendship never loee a feather." Curious aud not a little melancholy to think that vast numbers of worthy people now gone to thair rest baUtaally killed time in soaking and trying to amoee themselves over this kind of driveUng nonserse. As yet, the popular mind has not been roused to inquiry on a variety of important qaeationa. A great part of life was consumed in dawdling and driakiog, as is still the case among eer- tain claates in small country towns. Dis- oooatenanoed to gemetml sooioty, tarjf toasting holds ito groaad la tivities. These, the libatioos are obsecvedly aa oopiona, as pcovooative of ontorial dis- play, and aa maob attemied with sfnsnlsss aproar, ss ever. Oorpoiatiaa dianaia, char- il^ dinners, raoeptioa aad farewell ilinnw^ are all alike ia theae r e s pect s Bvcry teaat OMHt be pasfaos4 l)T a dnak all nmad. The qaaatity of diaiapagaa does not convey mind. Surely .it wus searocly w^rth »hi« i, quote Greek, aVid otherwise make a gn.' display oi wisdom i^od learning in orde; put OS in pos3es8ion of such barren resn.^. And when this learned theologian proce^ to distinguish between religion andmonlm and makes the first of these tc consist oi t:^ duties of tbe first table of the law, and tl latter of the duties of the second table, ih- uniuitiateil l^ mind^-for which al'Di t prcsame to speakâ€" finds itself in almost » great difficulty. What is all religion en- braced in the first four cummandmeati o! the Decalogue or is all the mirality is eluded in the remaining six Has monlitj; nothing to do with a man's relation to bit Maker, or are tbe relative duties of mau ai to a member of eociety be beyond the spliers of religion We are not tobedra^vn iutcoD- troversy on a an! ject beyoud our depth, aiiJ we do not want to incur the charge of in- consistency by acting contrary to the TOond tikcn in the opening paragraph of thi ^^s\ cle, but we m»5» h' " â- â€" â-  i i^ "J tB'*»' the average lay mind all this will not Ix quite clear. \^"e suspect that to not a fu» of this sort, the distinction between religio: and morality will appear to be something moie subtle and spiritual than the writer o thiK article in questiou has dreamcl ot. Ad if tbece acr d themes are to be kept out c the Lands of the ignorant and profane, sue: writers as the Rev. Stanley Scathes will hav to treat them witb greater care, I I too I .l,.-..l. »n c.Uil t' iiian 4iN.li .1 umlerta'^Hif;, iiii the sofa in and onlyi^-.ncl vOii u I. tL "I" ;iiy till jiiiiilic u.-rv a.lniitte'I I'l I'urcha-jin;; oriiiks. The Miong attempt to carry out hi but alter -ix ilSys he U 11 state of COI11.T .\mon.. the many Hi id.-ll,crtr ti-a.rilion, of duelling i^ the toll -win;: Two' „-.u-;enl^ fought, and eauh slice-d oil the other n-.'s.' The ii.-ses fell to the ground, ;iiid, I., ii.a picked up by the seconds, were pl.\M re-i again on the faces of Ih. liu. lii t.-. Tii.- "|Mratioii •uccoedel, i.iii in tli. l.iiry Ih.- luisen had li-i-n chan'nf. The ai 'niliu.- man heuietorwaril had a snub, aii.l Ak- miuIi man had an a'^uiline. Tilt, lal, sL ^utiMtj.s ot till i-i « ..tli.-i,. Church in '•erniaiiy ^bow tliatit haK â- in' ISiihop aiifl 47 |.rii-!i!.s at work. »riiei-4: ai. Ijcbido -1 I'lo'essorn, iw.. lu^alid priesu, an 1 -t wh-' witliilrev* on .-i.couiit of ib. 'ifcus tlcci.si^l,. Iluriugtiiv ':i;^\eal tline piK-hIa died, tw.. were removed, ;in i tuo «-r. n- ccived. .\bi.ut a do/on ot the |iri-la have taken H ive-. Th" iiumbi r â- â- ! • id arli-dics is estimated .tt 4.j,(l(J0. TiiK appeal from the (linrc-h a.filior^i ie-i. at lo.im- 'or 111" ral c ntrilc,ti.D.,~ ii-.m tl,.- 'â- â€¢'â- â- â€¢â€¢ "" --i-j-'M Ol n„. •.,„.,, ,^a,j.. with urgency aii-l |H-|naMo|i. Tin- "â- â- -.ntn- butor» .lie tohl tiMt 111 gixiiii- l.i til. •. tbey ^ne lo tin- ino.sl an^u.it nivii'li aul eaitli .-iiid !• r tin- creatot work^.il U-uiir- cencc 111 the world. They (;ive loi tl. l«h. lit III I/ie lUrv'h, (if hispil,\lK, '•tpli.iiij;;.-. auil ol their own »ouU. â-  A-KMi:. placed before a powder iitli^-i- riue si-i hi- cohinel rp|.ro .^i, '.niol jnc a'l im|-"te I II .V i.a .i.ai. 11* ,,r ~i-iii .moi and ».')-,! ri:.l\, biitres|i.-c Udiy. .•" I'lrdon- n c,. i- el, Imt sm. kill;: ir. ixa .-dloHi^l leiv. Tl e eo|o:.el, with a 9iijH-rli ;;• sUir- lliii. a»ay t. e • 'g.ir aud gives the. Iiitlilul ti-utinel a louie .i'orl «V, s.,.,], a» In ...i aiciiiud the coiner the faithful entiiii 1 »ijj, |T..uil teaia on his rugged conntciiAli. â- -. " picks uptli • ci^'ar and linisshii, it with n.rv -nianifestatiou of delight. .lAcon 111 M.AI-, an eccentric old b.c!. .!.. died a few .lays ayo iu Ashlind,' Uiiio,- ,aM.l, -ill reaiin I. is will it w.is /..un.l Oiat he b:i.l I cjaeatbeil all liis i.roi«.-rl\ • c-.»ll!*l^TIl(o ,,| M'.i.ilOO in boll. if, boi.ies conM.lerablt- real .state â€" to I*. II. « lawKoii of llaMnxii!., Ohio, for vn .let ol charity .il. me liini »|.i|e tiavell.n;,' soliie.:irs ago. It i. stiiiuUted in the will, li.iwever, that (liwtioii iim-t i.iarry Minic girl I1..1 kn .wn t him i. w. .-ir orbcloicthe 4th ..f Marcl», lvl. l-'a!ti:j.; to do till..,, t'le III. 111. y :;,H-s to cliarit .tdi; ol.- jcets, aud only tin- real fta'e t.' « lawj.iii. A MAiilsTHAli at "Ntock|«.it. Ku^laioi, stated unlcr oath tli:.t he iv. rh.ai.i a ».•- loan tramp say to hci sisU-r t '• llnw muii. Ii.ii! Ihce got to da\ â-  " l-'rtt'-i-n shiliii.i:!!. (marly .•*) after. a .!.al ..f r.iiii'.linK al-.iil. I1..W much lias tlu-e got'" " Kiv. shi!iiio-. 4iut 1 have nut Ih-i n about nm.h." || ,au .1 111 III «ho ha-l Ife.'n lianj'.ii;; on ..tie oi ll,.- Iiri.li;.-s at Stock |..iit, nter a piiidic' loii- H lure, after refr.â- ^llHlJ,• hiui.seU « ith li.pi..!. he j;ot hu cop|»ir.-. chaugel f.r mK. i to tin extent of seven shiilinxs au.l sixpence, b...i'.- 111- that ho bad coUecte.i tli it m twa hour-. TiiK Irii-b corre.^p.iiiilent .•! the l.-inloii Asms writes tl4« tl I**:. Itiei i I ' • J.1..V- -.iinj i" .,ir*v...|^ \^lian Iilly ..fi a ti'..- • 1 â-  K â- ' I-;.-.-. lun.. I -PV. • .*.ia^ r«.. (i ii «.,-' i.i.iik. laii • I •tie •_ yxr. -ti^.l- .tT.^..M. •a'.l. ..tl. aitiii. ',^ Will^lll. .1. ix-. • â- â€¢a- Ii â-  'r)a.-«. If^tJ ..I ^al'" )i •..liiliiai -i-ni â-ºâ€¢ ».l....... Ill an «-% 1. «.(.». •â-  lie -I- i ' â-  IllMk. «ll' \aiiily The Hwnonn of an Election. It is impossible to carry on the G^ivcn- meiit of a country without party oppisic. party. This is urovoU beyond doubt wi)?;- ever the form of Government is, even ioisu slight degree, representotiveand constiti^ot al. Russia, China, Persia, or MaudaUv ..' course, are not included for in those c 'H^- tries there is no Government iu the ^:^..' sense of the torm, but an unmodified aot cracy or tyranny, and their rulers arc Jw too seldom of the type of Miltiades wlioi.' though he was "The tyrant of the Cbersonnese, Was Greece's best and bravest frieu.i. Now, it being acknoHledged i'aat party i« ings will exist, aud that they are fouodeiic certoin definito principles, the questiou hi, geste itself, â€" how is it that pnncipUt ' uttorly opposed to each other aris- .-nd om- tinne to exist among meu wh .s.i bi th, u- tionality, and education, have so mai) pointo of i.lentity 7 The true answer, bo» ever seems to ba that the opposition of art) is really more apparent tUauaclual, moretn ditional than rationaL In a state, tv, where the prevailing tone is not one of iug^- morality, the thirst for place and power ia' a great inffueucc m keeping up the op|oi' tion, and inducing men to 8upp.:rt thoM I' whose help tbey expeet to climb to the pu sitioii or obtain the office they aspire to. ' in tbe individual politician his creed is i^- pendent on hereditary or educational .Ifa*- t.,_,, „,-, ,_ .,,„ ,.,,,,' /iiiM* writes :- " II.eiKitato ero| i.« iiiiinlv lugs, and the shallow ness of bis convictioi .. i '"•" 'â- '•I â- mii"v xL 1 ^^ f .n. iiiagmlicent. What lew in -u cii re.-i'lli«' isoftenahownwhcnmconsequcuceofpnitt^' f .n u A. I t • y t -..„ 1 ., -iccing IS now seen on all aauut, â€" tield.^ Im at »?me real or fancied neglect received » .^ ^^, ^^^,^^.^ naturally, without a .,„-,. ±L\"t'^.t^!'.^j'h}%'::itl '!?^!lf.. •â- ' '"--«• This LS clue-,ly owiii, to tf.e cli.wg. of sie' the 'Chaiiipi.iiis. ' I., m.- i.laiited on all han.ls east to weit, aii.i tully kariii^' out the t;oo.l tli'ii^'S s|ki'ii ii ..i tli- iii. The price of oats an.i cittle his d.ml.li.i Hinci last year, that of pigs more than .|.«ili- â- d. Oats arc a ;ik-.1 crop, and tunii|i.s and • -111.;- l!- never looked better. " ^a II. :i- t. ;. Ill- pti-.' I" 1 1 .1.- -te. ll, â- Â«! i.i.l Ii .-areii..-. .ild.n... |...t ,-l )tl.-i t.il llt |j'i lb. re V th- c.l ... :«Hirii _• I ..t -lie chddi. n., b...kiii.- |M t:raci in, a. u-ly .-l.l tij to tltI-» .11 Uiiii i.ai. ..- «.i th. â- I... ii..» t" r, ». mill _*• â- fi- ll, 1 niof I lnl_lil I tj bis former opponent-. 1 litole of sham in th- ,...., ,^, lesuscitated by the I'jiris iicj-"» tor the p'n- the pruicipl so their opponents, sre P»- pg^ of showing that Kouget de I lie «a, tivcly debghtful to one with tb^ least scW- ^, rei-ubhcaii. of the hampioas in bis oompositioo. Finally comes the polling-day- 'â- 'iS i Cmh Aio w.mien l)cU the worM. On. .-i the fato of the rivals. Hacks -Wirry to u^ theui at least contrn ed to l»e. t ili. « eutral fro to bring the voters to time. Money u r«ciHc Radrcud Company. Lke Se'.nei 1. r, expeudedeely. Somewhat dubious dodgei b1.. wanted to buy a d i^-, anl .-^he lou-ht ii lare not seldom resorud to r â-  ie shape oj u. '"' ^.^-x^'*â„¢ »n'l "«! 't »eut by xKre^. pe"oaation» eta, and. wb .e anpoi»^ U '°»^°- « hen the ...g arr.v.-.! the l.a.r honr has nassed. the exci. jient b^J" *a.s »U " l. and ,he sued the company for tiXmpndaii^-Sands at fever heat indeed- #7» for allowing locomotive to .oald all the l7dTu^i "uiion» inwlring copiou. ^^^ "«, " ".^J^ She obta.ne.1 judgment. bli^-totUngbanot resortod to while ti« '^^ZJ^\l\r!^:i'"^-^^=.. the money ' ui»aenaa, theteBMifiilef awac- oaJoad of empty bottlea k aol at all nnnan- aL What may be tha difllsreat degrees of mtonoatioa tra dMll not attsaipt to nscify. Oaa would aot iika to ba too aevers oa a stattar adaiitti^ «I aa^ axtenoatioas. At thaaBasatiaM,wea^bspssBittad to 99 that the oaiulssatiilttitoasisstii ha did an tfato wittaaah st ie t iua a ia aai aahe ia aeeaedanoi aULiwUita. aad ftUa that thaeMMI hav i**^ onaaa^ asdfaariW »ttarad ea the ^:/OMMte Uak Tmmf t Mf ay. eHhaf latwiiiinii lisa ia high m4- daa^te leak lite riulriilwarBa. ttewWanibaUaatt^aaMaaat^Md^ ^taan de aat eaas l» fatJaiieilMllhv «M round and backs up There is verily not average politician. It is very amusing to watoh a collision between two bodies of electors when they have to decide who shall occupy tb " in the House of Commons. Tbo ea,. a** plausible affability, and lavish p^yn. «« " the candidates and their friends, ihc â-  *^ ed, noisy, som tones witty, aud al 3^7y' more or less uproarious meetiiigs, thi I'r^i fights that often result, aod thb othei limiuaries of the poliiog-dsy, giiV good opportanlty of studying buni^- au one ui its most humorous asp^l stump speeches of tbe more or ieiGt canulOates, the burning words of hi pudiition of aoy unworthy motives candidature, and the positive Tiifc writer ul the wor.ls and mtisic of «1 S.%v. itic King." u now unini»takaiily ,,. L.. I». K'.Ufiel.le file, the author '-t 'Nlarwilla-se.' It is true tht; sovereign lu 111 tile f'leiji liiiian tnvouketl ilivme ^Ation was not one of the four Georges, JtEouib -Will.* al »llo^â- e lii^L 'esUir^lioii lu 1814, itouf^a ur.'lea iiyinii Hilli I he title and refrain of " liicu (.re-nervc le Uoi. The :::uk t;. â-  il «.!,: L all -ill t !J| »-».:. tilt- l-i f.-».-dei U,.; ^Uli- o'-A-l {i:.r W. ll-Kl. .kiiij. \usti 1 k-.. 1- ilPiC l._ hav. \^ IS -,,. A YouD.i; ' s.-.irceU re.-elil t.-a- xonn^' l.oi •wailllike. French "Goil-Savc tu. Kin.t'" "the w..i.ls of ^said t.. Ia\|l which Were a Ixild laiaiiliiaae* .1 the llai. .. ., 1. .-- "" "" A ov*rian anthem, was r.iiiil.lisliel, and ll, 1 With which they hurl innneodd and sueerU ;... \i^ ' elactorS await ths deosioa. Tue succes* company founil out that the 233:^ »:. u--!:;;:^ 3;="-.: fcrx'rr.tsiri -â- ' • !««.â- ' oprd^g to his tomparament and his po of a^ -control is ths expression of bu i"' hair. 1 lie coo.panv tno.! to catoh the w.i- ,^ man who p'aye.1 this bald trick oo them, but a .. -., u.„ she escapedâ€" probably had a hairbrea.Ith OS. ,lBg*. Sametiases he smiles serenely, w** „.„ ' "»o«.n rs. -j^raUy bia aekaowledgmenU of the boB "• owi" •**»« it he is ezoUaUe, become* «â- â€¢ Ik the lca.lin- jou-u .1 -f (.eoeva « wejj. oohacaataad poasiUy bystorical. Over tt' kuoWn Alpin- tourist, ,.ul.!i.sluii an .«,.„„t â€" â€"nitffn t of Us^toatad riviU it iJ best t.* of tbe procewliugs of a raven inbuiial lo the draws veiL A certain amount ef respect" Swiss mountains. I»c,cendi (^ trom th,: re. l das to dignified miafortone and disapp«»' «'« of gi«iers, he c... "I"" » "J"' "•â-  Mat. oTto, on tha mins of Carthage, »^"p***^ 8'"' surroun.led '•• t'"f '7' ' Cmmr â- â-  he fell in tha forum hid d»«" from sixty to seventy raveoK ha.1 lorjiie-,1 a STintoeir ««t^ ^^ ^p^b^J i" -«^ ^-"d one-^i their fellows, ..W.ou»ly thrv."tim of nimliJd oTnhdeno. m ttia«Jpnt. whose ca«e thay were dirfcUMing v^ of the naonlT "' '""" croaking and wing rtacpini;. tSL m^ S^-iâ€" »j -.-n. to bebri*' Now sad then they interrupted their debaUs ly^i^S^ri^^to'Srt^uTStUe W^ to lijjj^ the enii^tic Representations of .ik-4 .wTj t ' i5j^ • »i,r dav l»«f 'nspnsoner. who condjicted bis own defence !^^:^Sf2S"**"S:'?*.vli*^i^*'*^*°"«"'K fervour. ^the judge, breaking r^?*ji!SS^'"u^f'""^^him«»l""'t toto a deafening chorus of comment, ^II?*^kI'**^.*'J^**' f'kS^" «df»futotions after his every statement. nMhglbly. and "ukdiSecent honest. t'fmimtij, having arrived at the unanimous ^- â€" â€" â-  1,^ tJooao^on â-  Wmc you see ynaa take on â„¢ Tis»ed to exonlMtu it«olf, they Hew upon him her-pecUyoa. f,^^,^ off his yoa It is a whsMhafa yeaagjMM^yywJM**** I Mas Be '•l^.r-'.ViiBi^JwwaUsid that the arraigned hiril had fail- ' w upon sides, and tore him to pieces witb Md-oud We. ..I a f.-w 1.,, \al- .â- ! fro I I -.tilU' .iccu |.-,iMi.-.ii-i 1 ,.ai!- lliat ...iMiiK-i ai. _.l :- â- â- !. al' i.t. I,. 1 ten s a lijih; .^u' i«lime;- a.lllillilnle \i I'll' -lit aw .J lio l^ .1 c.inif lexu.; .iurii.;.: ll. .lays, and «| iJ.sp- »r h ' sueii iiiall ij I eiiabl. ll- 1 I to-il.) lliali. I neiit iMc.li Siin.e lenie. I condition, I euoe aud membc-rs o "rto made bave rcKuJt case of the fueh interesll MTvatiuo on a^ that of thel ters daugliteJ A MOM. tl the l.mldiii:: »as one ol a J niiii.i, .1 man ' his traiie Tl he helpe.l to| burst, the me on the Empln liim out fur Pi

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