STRATED aimed to be ado tothe artist ¥ re striving To na en 5 fudmiration "fi Ne i for usefulness. Dew fa ¥ | 'E while issued "> ohe of the temp. With of ordi her any of pure, " a colleoth Teasure to its ¥ of THE ALDIN, atter it has been bo AT While other tor cheapness as v THE 4 : ception ely without oom The pos 3 ha WOr ten limes itscope TT 'the THE WLDINR eal that TEDrinting is on th the exception of a k {nding the. Anes of thelr would recognize n 10 elevate the od pabl; M ked sheets exist 3 at there is od the no ixen, J. Hows, being reprod «Cy the Ver tet engravenis 5 will bear the severest pis A) 5 he best foreigm wi i 2 ' yg bo Detiti indication the oi ion with any exist- \RY 'DEPARTMENT, st 3 vho has received assur. a host of the moat po »oets of the country, Pop E VOEUME POR 1873 Ne 350 pages and about p eacing with the rs ina 3 } Rpnumber will prey - ricture on "plate paper, inserted 2 nvmber for 1573, in itself, containing on int) and, although at out extra charge to sll gear be a [0 TO EVERY SUBSCRIBER at retail for less d tor THE ALDINE ana ill be delivered free, with the T. 10 every subseriber who vance. FOR 1872, with Oil Chromo, 00 a Cinmh. Ra ' names and $40, will re- tis, making 11 copies for gto work for a premium. circuler on application. nd desirable articles pars act permaaently, a With reference, enclosing "AMES SUTTON & CO., Liberty Street, New Vork. NTER'S cal Library ONSISTINGOF rs OLUMES FILLED WITH E PIANO MUSIC. L COLLECTIONS. lights. A choice collection Sacred Songs. 5 Fireside Echoes, d Boeme, 8, Three Volumes of- ebster, Persley, ete. Volumes I. and TI @ontain all of Will 8, ems. -- A collection of beanti uggpiiace. Thomas, Keller, (ENT AL COLLECTIONS. ol ree volumes of very, Fr young players. ¥ and Musical Recreations, Two collections of moder- Yiemories. A collection ces by Wyman, Mack, A collection of brilli- sic by Charles Kinkel, egantly bound plain cloth; J. L. PETERS, 599 Broadway, N Y. adention to The collection of over o nl opera songs. Price, $3g . Trade price, $4. 2 call - BETWEEN IN, / QUEBEC, AXD \ NTREAL. 2 RLEY'S LINE f the following First-Class Iron Steatners : * ; MEDWAY, ~ "THAMES, HECTOR. "SEVERN. ¢ intended to sat! very Tukspay dur- of 1872, and from newds alling at Plymouth T tickets from all luced rates, Certificates issued us of bringing out their friends. JTS apply the Company . OC. W. 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Advertisements must be in the office of publication by 10 o'clock on the Wednes- day. morning preceeding their first publication. To merchants and others advertising by the year very libpral discount will be made. ~~ B nginess divertory, 2 2 <3 -« wa. FREDERICK McRRIAN, M.D. M.R.C.5 1 UY'S HOSPITAL, LONDON, ENG- A LAND, Hindes' Hetel Oshawa, on IW, Cont Kn, MW. Wey 1s huey P LYS{CIAN, SURGEON, AND > A CCOUCHEUR, King Street, Oshawa. Residence and Office--Nearly opposite Ilobus Hoel tf. FRANCIS RAE; M, D,, Pi YSICIAN, SURGEON, ACCOUCH- +* enr, and Coroner. King St., Oshawa. 1-2 C. S. EASTWOOD, M. b,, Y{RADUATE OF THE UNIVERSITY ® (: of Toronto, at present at Black's Hy 1, Jshawn = 2 = J. FERGUSON, 'ENTIATEorDENTAI SURGERY over the Grocery of M. srs. Simps: t., Oshawa. ms preformed in a skilful manner lesidence in the same building. Veterinary Sargery and Brug Store, ENRY'S BLOCK, KING STREET, Oshawa. Horse and Cattle Medicines of a TEMPLE OF FASHION ! NEW SPRING GOODS STOCKS COMPLETE! Beautiful We are Now Prepared to Show a Very Large and | Assortment of Seasonable Goods. NOTWITHSTANDING the extraordinary advance in all classes of Fabrics, my Goods were bought Early, and on such Reasonable Terms as to secure, beyond a doubt, to the Patrons of the Temple of Fashion, all the goods they 'may require this season at an average of former prices. Our friends are solicited to call at once, and obtain for themselves some of the special lines now offering, in BLACK AND COLORED SILKS, BLACK LUSTRES, NCY DRESS GOODS, KID GLOVES, CORSETS, ETC. Oshawa, March 24, 1872. SPECIAL NOTICE--To all iho require to furnish their Dwellings anew, or replenish the old Carpets, Damasks, Curtains, Oil Cloths, Mats, Rugs, de., we offer such goods much below their present value. S. TREWIN; Corner King and Simeog#:Streets, Oshawa. superior quality. All drugs warranted pure. A careful Dispenser always on the Pagihines. Pro- rictor-W. G. FITZMAURICEZlate of Her Biary & Tth Dragoon Guards and Horse fra. ery. -ly FAREWELL & McGEE, LICITORS, Conveyancers and Notaries Public, Oshawa, South-East Corner of King and Siucoe Streets. 2& MONEY to Lend. "Mortgages bought and old. J. E: FAREWELL. @ *~ R. McGee. "S..H. COCHRANE, L. L. B., ARRISTER, ATTORNEY-at-LAW, tor in Chancery, Netary Public, &c.-- ce--In_RBigelow's New Building, Dundas st, hithy -2 2 JOHN McGILL, ICENCED - AUCTIONEER, OSHA- wa. All opders left at this Office will promptly attended to. 1- = : Dress Goods, P. BR. HOOVER, of Marriage _ Licenses WHITEVALE. Issuer OSHAWA LIV ERY STABLE, i v . THOMAS, PROPRIETOR. -- ass Horses and Carriages always ally Line of Stages from Oshawa necting with >teamer at Lind, C. WwW. SMITH, CHITECT, PATENT, INSUR- n and General Agent, Si nt AT Si k and Liverpool. REFER- . Pros, F. W. Glen, Esq., rbanks, Esq Lay DOMINION BANK! WHITBY GENCY. ~ JH M CLELLAN, Aent B. SHERIN & Co., VW HOLESALE MANUFACTURERS of HOOP SKTRTs. Best New York Ma- used. The trade supplied on best terms. King Street, East, Bowmanville, 3 terial Faclory ¥ BD. HOLLIDAY, ROOKLIN, ONT. AGENT FOR 187 2, NEW SPRING GOODS Doetr). OVER THE SEA. BY FLORENCE HAYWARD. There lieth a land, & beautiful land, Over the sea, . Where roses bloom, by the soft breeze fanned, Waiting for me ; And the blue waves laugh as they kiss the | Over the sea. . strand Of that lovely land still ever I dream, Over the sea; And 1 see the bright waters dance and gleam "I'wixt it and me; There the golden sun throws his last bright Over the sea. [beam Soft music comes from tht unseen shore Over the sea ve Sweeter than Circe's rare ong of yore, Faint though it be; . In that bright land it is heard evermore, Over the sea. And oft when the sunset beams fall low, Over the sea, Some one is waiting and watching I know, Waiting for me ; And my heart beats high, and 1 long to go Over the sea. | | | | Sometime I know from that land of light, Over the sea, There will come a bark with sails of white I shall be free, To clasp that hand with a proud delight, Over the sea. ""Tis but an idle dream," do you say! What though it be; Still would I cherish that vision for aye Precious to me; Still would I dream of that land, far away Over the Sea, SUNNYSIDE, July 2ith, Selections. THE REV. DR. WILLOUGHBY, AND HIS WINE. BY MARY SPRING -- CHAPTER XXVI --CONTINUED, THE OUTCAST. Dr. Willoughby sat in his pleasant home that Saturday evening, -reading his | paper. He was alone, for Mrs: Willough- | by had gone with her daughter to the nursery to assist in putting the little ones to bed, and Grace was in her own room. With a comfortable sense of security from the storm that was beating against the windows, the Doctor had put his slipper- ed feet to the fire, and had fallen into a ml doze, from which he was awakened FJYHE SUBSCRIBER BEGS TO ANNOUNCE TO THE INHABITANTS OF | by the opening of the door. He started, rubbed his eyes, and uttered an exclama- tion of surprise. Louis Thayer stood- before him. His Oshawa and surrounding country that he has received, and is still receiving, a face was dreadfully paleand haggard, and Prints, well assorted stock of Spring Goods, at the usual Low PrICEs. Cottons, Coatings, Poplins, Tweeds, &c. « Clothing Made to Order on Short Notice / ---- 3 The Usual Supply of Groceries, Crockery. Horses, Wagons, and Anything else You can Think Of! CLOVER, TIMOTIiY. Cl.OV N, All Kinds of Produce taken in Exchange. ¢« J. W.FOWKE MARROWFAT AND COMMON PEAS AND BARLEY FOR SEED. 'Oshawa, March 23, 1872. ¢ Insurance Company Toronto, « purely Canadian (nstitu- ss, for Queen's and Lancashir Compan- tal £2,000,000 each. Also. A.outand 'anada Permanent Building , Toronto, for loans of money at low rates of interest. DR.CARSON'S MEDICINES. The - Greatest Pablic Benefit of the Age AD FOR WHICH, NOTICE THE £ Testimonials, (a few of them enclosed in wrapper around each bottle,) with a numerous list of respectable persons names, who testify to viz Lung Syrup, Constipation Bitters, Liver Compound, 3 ( Cough Drops, . Worm Specifie, Pain Reliever, H p t c. : Toe I os can be obtained at all Drug Stores. W.BELL & Co.,| GUELPE, ONT. ! Prize Medal CABINET ORGANS AND MELODEONS. le Proprietors and Manufacturers of HE ORGANETTE." | Containing Scribner's Patent Qualifying Tubes. | ii NEW SPRING GOODS WM. irateful to a WILLARD'S, TAUNTON. enerous public for past liberal patronage, I beg most most res folly to announce that on account of Increasing business he has been obliged to enlarge his store almost as large again, and it is filled, Every Sheli, Hole and Corner! With an Exceedingly Choice Assortment of Dry Goods of Every Description, COMPRISING Dress Goods, Fine English and Canadian Tweeds and Cloths of all kinds, Laces, Mourning Goods, Ties, Shirts, Prints (an 'excellent assortment) Hosiery, Collars, Boots and Shoes; Rubbers, Trupks. Also, a choice assortment of GROCERIES, '&@r SECOND TO NOME FOR QUALITY AND PRICE. #3 Call and examine my stock before purchasing clsewhere. TAUNTON, April 11, 1872. re CASH 'PAID FOR SHEEP-SKINS AND WOOL. 53-3m. Awarded the only Medal | Ever given to makers of Reed Instruments 2 at Provingial Exhibitions, for Proficiency in Musical instruments, | - Besides Diplomas and First Prizes at other Exhibitions too numerous to specify Our Instrnments are acknowlédiged by musici ans.and judges to be the finest yet produced. Our latest and niost valuable improvement is the "Organette," containing Scribner's Patent. Qualifying Tubes, the effect of which are to double the pogrer, at the same time # the tone smooth and pipe like. By derful invention we can make an in- 1 of nearly double the power of a pipe organ at half the expense, 1 - Try CAUTION. As we have purchased the sole right of manu- facturing Scribner's Patent Qualifying Tubes for the D on of Canada, we hereby caution all parties from purchasing them elsewhere, as they will be liable to prosecution. We have |. copyrighted the name of i "ORGANETTE," For eur instruments containing this wonderful fact Pr fs ons our An . s a are moderate, the risk nothing, the result unvariable, and the opini- Iétters from prominent business men, | ete., ete. | those Ontario Commercial College, THOROUGH of the 4 Frene, are CHARRCTERISTIC of the age, where you of the times, Belleville, Ont. INSTITUTION FOR BUSINESS ng men and boys can procure an education AND PRACTICAL and the united admission of hundreds of offered by this College. ose who can devote a few months to study: Th hanging t! desirous of cl ; SUBJECTS TAUGHT. Book-keeping--by single 'aud double entry, Arithmetic, Corres ing, Railroading, A Staf of Seven Practical and Experienced Teachers. Spencerian Penmanship, ndence, Commercial Law, Phonography, Telegraph- teamboating, Mechanical and Architectural Drawing, $ nts who have SONS TO EPUCATF A more lucrative, or to q pation t! ir preatiyl occu call ge find that the advantageswe offer mprovement, A "-n ny | n this copyright will 5 prosecuted. ives to not be obtained elsewhere. and Journal containing all particulars sent free of charge. hi Hiustra'ed Catalogiies furnished by add: W. BELL & CO., Guelph ng I' 2% Speci of P Address, . 8. G. BEATTY & Co., Belleville his dark eyes, unnaturally large and bright, | searched the room with a wild and anxious | look. He tried to speak, and stretched out his hand with an imploring gesture, then, staggering back to the wall, leaned against it for support, Shocked and displeased--for, judging by his appearance, Dr. Willoughby at once | concluded that his son in-law was under | the influence of liquor--he spoke sternly. |' Louis," said he, ' why do you come here to-night?" | "You have taken away my wife," he | cried. 'Give me back my wife." "Your wife came to me of her own free | | will," said Dr. Willoughby. *' She sought | the protection of her father's roof, because | he who promised to cherish and protect | her, proved false to his trust. She says she has no longer a husband or a home." He paid no attention to the words. He did not seem even to hear them. His eyes went wandering all over the room, and he repeated in pitiful tones:-- *' You have taken away my wife. Give me back my wife." ~2 "1 have not taken away your wife," said the Doctor, impatiently. "She can return to you when she pleases, and that will be as soon as you prove yourself worthy to receive her. For shame, Louis Thayer! How dare you present yourself before me in such a disgraceful condition! | Don't deny it, sir! Don't add falsehood { and perjury to your sins. Oh! | you have fallen low indeed!" To these re- | proaches the wretched man made no other answer than to repeat the words he had twice spoken, " Give me back my wife." " You have forfeited all right to call her wife," said Dr. Willoughby. 'It would serve you justly if she never returned tb you; fut she loves you, Louis, notwith- standing all the grief and anxiety you have caused her in the past, and the mortifica- tion and disgrace you will bring upon her | in the future, if this continues. She loves you, Even now she was talking hopefully about you. She will return to you at the first proof you give her that you have en- tered gon a new life. You have every- | thing to gain if you do this. You have everything to lose if you continue the mad course upon which you have entered. -- | But there," said Dr. Willoughby, *' why do I waste my words upon him? He does not even hear what I say." It was quite true. Perhaps Louis Thay: | er had borne all that day his nature could endure. His arms dropped. He nolong- | er looked eagerly about the room, but, | with glazed eyes and with an air of wealy | indifference, stood leaning/against the wall. | When Dr. Willoughby ceased speaking, he moved slowly toward the door, --slow- ly aimlessly, as if no further object in life remained to him, and he saw no reason for taking another step, but would gladly lie down and die. He turned as he reached the door, to say in his sweetest tone: -- "Good-night, father. Bay good-night to Fanny and the children, and God bless vu all? y A moment after, Mrs. Willoughby bustied in, , " Doctor," she said, *' would you mind stepping over to the drug-store! We are out of 'soothing syrup," and Louie's gums worry him so, Fanny cannot get him gniet. Danis down to Brigas's, of course; and I { don't like to send Katie out in such a deep snow. By the way, whom have you had here! 1 heard'you talking very loud." Then Dr. Willoughby related the inter- view. "Tt looks dark for Fanny, my dear, and for all of us," he said. * He was so intexicated that he was obliged to lean against the wall for support; did not know what he was saying, but rereated the same thing over and over; and when I talked to him, appeared to be half asleep. Poor Fanny! I am glad she was upstairs. I would not have had her see him for any- thing." Mra. Willoughby looked disturbed and anxious. +" How could he drive out here in such a storm!" shie said; "and think of his oing back in - the condition you describe. setor, I am afraid you did wrong to let | him go." "He can return as well as he came," | said Dr. Willoughby. "The horse he | always drives knows every step of the way, | and will take him back in half an hour.-- | There is no occasion for anxiety, dear.-- | He could not stay here, of course, for to- morrow is Sunday, and it would undo all Fanny is trying to accomplish if I had | made him welcome and allowed him to see | her. No, wife, I have acted for the best; let him return to his lonely home; let him learn by painful Sxpetisnce that ' the way of transgressors 1s x "| . * : sharp { sleet pricked his face like needles, and the WALKER. my son, | The Doctor put on his heaviest overcoat, | lit his lantern, and went through the | snow drifts to ihe drug-store. The | wind chilled him to the bone. He looked for sleigh-tracks by the hitching-post near his gate. The surface of the snow was | unbroken. "It is impossible that it has filled in," thought the or, "' so soon. | He must have put this horse under shelter at the hotel." | The snow stop falling about ten | o'clock. The clou away, and the stars came out, but the wind changed and | blew a gale all night. The oldest inhabi- | tants had never known, in the winter | season, so high a wind. Trees'were blown | down, old buildings capsized, and great | damage done in the region. The great trees near Dr. Willoughby's house tossed their bare branches, and creaked and groaned dismally all night, and the pines { trembled, and bent toward each other, | murmuring hoarsely, as though whisper- | ing some horrid secret. | In the city the tumult was frightful. -- i Chimneys fell, roofs were lifted, or . their | tin sheeting torn partly off, and left to swing clattering in the breeze. The bell- | tower of the Wilmot Street Church ter- minated in a long slender spire, and the whole structure had more than once been | pronounced unsafe by those competent 10 | judge. To-night it rocked fearfully; and | everyjnow and then, heard plainly above the | roar of the tempest, and the clatter, and | din, and tumult all around, fhe great bell | tolled a mournful peal, ; | ""I shouldn't wonder if the crazy con- | cern came down with a crash," said a member of the rival church, as he turned {himself in his bed. "I told them when | that steeple was building, they were car- rying it nearer heaven than any of them | would ever get. Well, they need a down- fall over there of some sort." *' Mother," said a child wakened by the | tamult,--*' mother I hear the church-bell | toll. Is there a funeral! Take me into | your bed, mother, for I am afraid." | At daybreak the wind lulled, and the | Sabbath morning dawned clear and still. { The sexton of the Wilmot Street Church | came early with his boy, to clear away the | Snow, " Father," ' the lad called out from the | porch, 'see how it's drifted in here be- | fore the middle door. Tt looks just like a | grave." "" Set to work, boy, set to work," he | answered, gruffly. " There's no time for fooling, and all this snow to clear away. -- | I haven't seen such a bed these ten years." | A moment after, the boy uttered a shrill ery. *' Father! father! it is a grave." The sexton threw down his shovel, and | hurried up the steps. Wrapped in a soft, white mantle, spotless in its purity, but oh, how deathly cold! they found the body of a man. He was lying upon his face, and 'his hands were upon the | threshold of the door of the house." The | sexton got down upon his knees, and care- fully scraped away the snow from the prostrate form. Then he gently lifted the | head, and looked into the dead man's | face. . | "Great God!" said the sexton, | the minister!" | CHAPTER XXVIIL | How pleasant Dr. Willoughby's break- {fast-room looked that Sabbath morning! | The sun shone in at the east windows | upon the beautifully-spread table, and upon the family group gathered around. | Dr. Willoughby gave devout thanks that | his dear ones had been sheltered and pro- | tected from the dangers of the past night and brought to see the light of this beau- | tiful Sabbath morning. - Then, with the | dignity and grace that characterized his simplest act, he dispensed the good things before him, dod to the bahy across the | table, or answercd the grave gnestions of | bis little names:.ke | *"It was a fowrful night," said Grace | Willoughby. "1 could not sleep, the | wind blew 80 and I thought of the sailors, | and of the many poor people in the city who were not comfortably sheltered. suppose 1 was very nervous. I kept victuring to -miyself some poor wretch, 'a os or an outcast, struggling through the storm, that bitter wind chilling hin | through and through, until, faint and ex- hausted, he sank down to die. I don't know how many times [- pictured that all out. Oh, father, what a terrible death it must be!" "1 slept quietly," said Frances Thayer. ** Louie Kept me awake till eleven o'clock, then I dropped asleep; and though I knew the wind was high, --for I partially woke several times,--it was pleasant to find myself snug and warm in my bed.-- The consci of thedi fort without made the security within the sweeter." "A man to spake wid his riverence," said Katie at the door; and the visitor fol- lowing her through the hall, entered the ii heey He was a rough-looking person, a stranger to all, d in a sh overcoat, with a whip in his hand, and his hair and whiskers were white with the morning frost. You are wanted right off, Dr. Wlliough- by," he said. '"They've found your son- in-law dead, froze to death on his own church-steps." Shriek after shriek echoed through the room, and her mother and sister, hasten- ing to her side, found Frances Thayer with clenched hands, a face as a death, and wide, staring eyes, from which no tears were falling. | Every word th spoke to her was followed by a f burst of agony. Before starting on his dreadful errand, her father came, and, bending over her very tenderly, spoke her name. At the sound of his voice she gave an awful scream, pushed him from her with all her strength, then, shuddering, hid her face. Over the road Louis Thayer had twice trodden, oh, so wearily! the night before the wretched man had walked the distance back and forth--they brought him to his father's door. The wife, sternly denied to him then, bent over him now with bit- ter wailing, and piteous appeals that came too late. His heart was breaking then for the words of affection she lavished upon him now. Those vain words and vainer tears fell all unheeded upon the senseless ear, upon the marble face. How instant- ly last night would he have® accorded the forgiveness for which she pleaded so fruit- lessly to-day! Until see looked upon that dead face, no tears fell from her eyes; then they burst forth in a flood. *'Let her go to him," Dr. Willoughby had said, "It's | the terrible sight. "' Let her look u| him; it must needs do her good; for, what- ever he was in life, in death his face is] ' as the face of an angel." Yes, to that sinning and sore-stricken | man, deserted by his dearest earthly friend, lost and despairing, struggling through the cruel storm, and fighting back his earthly faintness, that at last he may sink down and die an outcast's death " between the porch and the altar,"--to him was given a dying experience that left a smile of rapture upon his face. Did One come | to him that night *" whose footsteps leave | no print across the snow?" When the devil left him, did angels come and minister to him? when the mother feared she conld not bear | 3, present success, and t promise of fu- ture usefulifess, should have been followed 'his grave by a mourning multitude,and srne to rest with words of Christian hope anid consolation, was laid away in sileno and in gloom. 'A group of sorrowing friends " beheld the sepulchre,and how the body was laid." His aged father was there,--thank God, his mother wasdead !--and the poorold man, bent with years and infirmity, standin over the ve, remembered how he h toiled and struggled for many years to en- able this only son to prepare for the work of the ministry, and marvelled at the strange providence that had permitted a life so bright with promise and to become thus over clouded and go out sud- denly in darkness and his honour. And Allan Richmond, mourning over his friend with a great and bitter mourn- ing, took up David's lamentation: -- " The beauty of Israel is slain upon thy high places; how are the mighty fallen! " Tell it not in Gath, publish it not in the streets of Askelon, lest the Philistines rejoice, lest the uncircumcised triumph. 'I am' distressed for thee, my brother Jonathan; very pleasant hast thou been unto me; thy love to me was wonderful, passing the love of women!" " How are the mighty fallen!" There was found lying beside his un- finished sermon a folded paper. = Tt was his resignation to the to of the Wilmot Street Church. yn NY the Saturday night he died; and before the story of sin, and anguish, and deep repent- ance it contained | was to have beén - claimed to his astonished people, their pastor had gone to plead guilty before a higher tribunal. ¥ Those who best knew this man, whose downward path it has been a sad task for the writer to trace, bear unqualified testi- mony to the loveliness of his private char- acter,--to his intelligence gifts and graces, to his keen moral perceptions, and to a something about him, which can only be described as magnetism, by which he-se- cured and held the sympathy and atten- tion of those whom he addressed. That he would have achieved a brilliant popu- larity in his sacred office, and have become a bright and shining light in the church of God, living a long and useful life, or wear- ing himself out early in his Master's work, --in either case leaving behind him precious memori¢s, and the lasting fruit of his-labours, --that he would have done all this we cannot doubt, but for the dead- ly enemy before whose power'he fell. Then he died a miserable "death, and, if he found mercy at all, was saved as if by fire; that good men spake his dishonour- ed name below their breath, and bad men use it as an occasion to scoff and blas- pheme, let us thank a social custom that some Christian men uphold, some minis- ters defend from their Bible, and quote the example of the Saviour in its coun- tenance and defence. O earth ! earth ! earth ! hide not this blood! "CONCLUDED NEXT WEEK. dl + ® + -- RUN HIM OUT. The moral to the following told by the sufferer is too apparent to mention, -- Young ladies will hereafter run their brothers out when gentlgimen call. I'm certain that I Wished somebody would spank the young pancal. We talk- ed of hills, mountains, vhlley and cataract ~1I believe I said waterfall, when the boy spoke and said: i ' Why sister's got a trunk full of them up stairs; pa says they are made of hoss hair." This revelation struck terror and blushes into the cheeks of companion. It began to be fvely apparent to me that I must be very gharded in what I said, lest the boy might slip in remarks at un- called for places, in fact, I turned my conversation to (him, and told him he ought to go home with me, and see what nice chickens we had in the country. Un- luckily 1 mentioned a yoke of calves my brother owned. |The word calves ruined all. The little one looked up and said: *" Sister has a dozen pair of them, but she don'tavear 'em only when she goes up town on windy days." ' Leave the room, you unmannerly lit- tle wretch!" exclaimed Emily, 'leave immediately." "1 know what you want me te leave the room for," | he replied; 'you can' fool me; you went to set on that man's lap and kiss him like you did Bill Sim} mons the other day; you can't fool me, I jess tell you. Gim me some candy like what you did, and I'llgo. You think be- cause you've the Grecian bend that you are smart. Guess I know a thing or two. I'm mad at you anyhow; because papa would have bought me a top yesterday if it hadn't been for you gettin' them curls, dogon yer! You needn't turn so red in the face, 'cause I can see the paint. There ain't no use in winkin' with that glass eye of yourn, for I ain't going out of here, that's what's the) matter with the purps. I don't care | if you are twenty-eigfit years old, you ain't no bos o' mine." into me my fair Tue New York Times says whiskey is responsible for a woman being kicked to death, a boy fately stabbed, two Joties men assulted, four people feloniously at- acted, and one man robbed on the public highway in the city of New York, be- tween Saturday and Sunday night last, The demon alcohol is. scoring up a fearful record of tability, and body must in the end atone for it. Dox't Lixz Murron.--A very good and true story is told of the recent excell ent ormance of Handel's Messiah as Brodaway Baptist Church. A farmer took his wife to hear the grand music, so splendidly rendered on that occasion, and after listening with apparent enjoyment, the party became suddenly interested in one of the grand chouses:-- 'We all like sheep have gone astray." First a sharp voice exclaimed: We all like sheep--" Then all the singers at once asserted. We all like sheep--" Hang me if I do!" exclaimed old rust- icis, to his partner. "I like beef and bacon, but I can't bear sheep meat. There was an audible titter in that vi- cinity, but the splendid music attracted the attention from the pair and they quiet- ly slipped out. Ix the Wyoming legislature the other y, when a man insisted he was not out of order, his opponent jerked off his coat, shouting, " Mr. Speaker, if some reliable man will hold these duds, I'll teach him he is out of order;" and the point was carried. Sr1NKs is not going to do any more in conundrums. He asked his wife why he was like a donkey, and she said because he was born so, and he ssys that the an- swer is very different from that. "KEPATOMEATATERIN." This was the note sent by a Jurmer to the school teach- er in the potato digging season, to explain his boy's absence from school. 3 Tt was a quiet funeral. He who, in right of the talents God had given him, his / replied the peer. '" WHEN are you mostly at home?" nask- ed a bore of Lord Chesterfield--*' Never," a ---- SHALL WE KILL THE TOADS! My garden is full of toads, with a rather large poetic licenses. The more man- Wa and the better the cultivation, the re the onda rive This is probably : al eye to business, for insects thrive best in rich land. Bugsare scarce on a gravel bank. But where the ground has been seuehad, and the manure wd ed in unsparingly, ion is rank, there insect-life abounds. And the toad makes hjs domicile under the cabbage or the squash-vine,, and watches patiently for snails, worms, bugs, and millers. That smoth tongue that he darts out with such rapidity looks innocent enough, but it sticks like pitch to every living thing.. His wer of digestion is excellent. Harris 'ed one hundred black larvse, uar- ters of an inch long, to a single toad with- out destroying its uppitite. We cannot af- ford to loose such an agency as this' for the destruction of insects. He does for the grovnd what the birds do for the trees. ive the toads the freedom of the garden. -- Exchange. apres sii ---------- Bues AND VinNes.--A correspondent of the Fruit Recorder says: *' Having used the following compound for bugs on vines, I find it very efficient in keeping them away. It is composed of two tablespoon- fuls of spirits of tu tine, well mixed with one quart of vlaster. The turpen- tine and plaster must be well rub to- gether when mixed. Dust the plants or vines with this two or three times a week, and the yellow striped ybug will do the vines no harm, and by putting a small amoun: around the plants and vines on the ground, so as not to touch the plants, it will keep the cut-worm away from the vine or plant." * Horse Tra1NiNG.-- The bram of a horse seems to entertain but one thought at a time; for this reason continued whipping is out of the question, and only confirms his stubborn resolve. But if you can by any means change the direction of his mind, give' him a new subject to think of, nine times out of ten you will have no further trouble in starting him. As simple a thing as a little pepper, aloes, or the like, thrown back on Ris tongue, will often succeed in turning attention to the taste in his mouth. o Irisabad practice tie a halter to your arms or iy or to put the. reins when out driving around your wast or neck. A man named Williams, in John- son County, Mo., recently lost his life by a thoughtless act of the kind. Wishin to water his horse, he put the lines aroun his neck and approached the pump. The horse took fright and ran away. Mr. Williams was jerked off his feet, dragged on the ground, and his head fas literally torn from his body. A cHariTABLE Detroit man sent a bundle of cast off clothing to the burnt out victims from the Wisconsin prairie fires; he received from one of the sufferers the following: " The committee man giv me, amongst other things, wat he called a pare of:pants, and 'twould make me pant some to wear 'em. I"found your name and where you lived in one of the pokits. My wile laffed so when I showed 'em to her, that 1 thot she would have a conipshin fit. She wants to no i there lives and breathes a man who has legs no bigger than that. She sed if there was, he orter be taken u for having no visible means of support. couldn't get 'em on wy eldest 1 , 801 have used 'em for gun cases. If you have another pare to spare, my wife would like to get 'em to hang up by the side of the fire-plase to keep the tongs in." Two mdiden ladies in Louisville were very much shocked the other day when they observed a young lady in a neighbor- ing yard dig a deep hole and bury an ob- ject carefully shrouded in white cloth.-- They at once notified the police of their suspicions of foul play, and the body was exhumed. It turned out to be that of a lamented cat, and the suspicious spinsters were hooted by the crowd. AN odd circumstance has just occurred in Milwaukee. While a funeral proces sion was following the remains' of a child to the grave the other day, the agonized parents suddenly conceived a strong de- sire to secure a photographic likeness of the corpse. Their wish was communicated to the other mourners, and the procession was thereupon stopped in front of th studio of a professor of the art, and while the dead was subjected to the action of the camera, the sorrowing friends sought. relaxation in a cooling glass of or. AN eccentric farmer who lives near Doylestown, Pa., for the last twenty years stacked all the hay he had raised on his farm, selling none of it, and using very little. The result is that he has fifty large stacks of hay on his premises, making an of t 400 tons. Of course they are in various states of preservation, some being quite rotten. The man vouch- sulot no oy ion whatever of his sin- gular freak, but keeps on, year after year, raising hay and stacking it up, refusi the most Hberal offers hing. he wpe Tur Canada Gazette announces the re- ceipt of twenty Martini-Henry rifles, with 10,000 rounds of ammunition, valued at £100 sterling, being the result of a collec- of Cambridge, the Lord Mayer of Lond am or and a committee of p hn of pn men, during the majorality of Ald. Bestry, as a testimonial to mark the feeling enter- tained towards the Canadian active militia for the loyalty and valor displayed in re- pelling Fenian attacks on the A youn merchant who is trying to strugglealong in a false-like economisalway took a class in Bunday school recently, Daring the progress of a lesson he asked, "What is solitude!" and was visibly dis- turbed when a miserable boy answered, "The store that don't advertise," A CLERGYMAN created quite a merriment the other day on one of our steamboats, going over to lay outa new camp-meeting, resori, by the inquiry, ** What itive proof is there that King David and. Solomon were tailors!" No ome' in the crowd could answer, and the humorous divine quoted the familiar : "And ing puted the alas page, * dnd his father had made." a Tue city A situation-seeking young' lady noticed an advertisement for ome to do light house-keeping. She wrate to the advertis- = asking the lighthouse was, ad if there was any way of -getting to Sundays. shore on in." bees did no such thi "at two or three o'clock ng, but went off to the woods a half mile distant." Now what made this swarm go off? It was because the gegen) and the Bout abuat hee in the ocen- tre of the swarm nothing of the hive. For all that was done, the hive might as well have been ten miles off as where it was, and the limb back on the tree 'with the swarm, not cut off. It is true that a few bees might have found the hive and Sitacied the Setionol theswars. But © letter says: * swarm came. at I o'clock," and '" after dinner, (y say 123 o'clock, "I cut the limb off." By this excessive long time, there was such a quiet in the swarm, that there was little chance of any bee discovering the hive even if within five inches of awarm, which was perfectly at rest on the limb, Again, the two hours gave ample time for the * bee-tree bees" to go and hunt up'a tree'in the woods. One could hard- ly have dune a worse thing than these ow change this a little, and see the ts. The limb is not cut off. The Sue fale, table-cloth and hive re-used. The swarm is up fiye feet above the table, hive and cloth. That is a rather high distance for a swarm to fall, though I have repeatedly ventured it without a cloth on the table. Bit we will do the hiving just right this time, and not be in the léast danger of losing the swarm. So we raise the table-cloth and 'put under it two thicknesses of a woolen spread or blanket--a bunch of cloth for the bees to fall on. Now take hold of the limb, and shake it gently but firmly, and the swarm falls the five or six or eight feet to the soft woolen pad; the shock startles every bee, queen and all, so that not a bee is in the swarm but knows that they have left their lighting place. What is the result? Part of the bees think they have fallen only, and these all rise in the air and light again on the limb, and must be i Shaken off. The greater stay with the queen on the table cloth; and of these, in running sbout to sce what has happen- ed, a few discover the hive and begin to buzz their wings with joy. This buss is heard by others, and the sound goes out, "We have left our lighting-place and 'are at our hive." And in less than a half minute, sucha set of buzzing scamperers | are in haste to get into the hive as you | see no where else. And as a rule your trouble is over. A But suppose they crawl up the outside of the hive--What then! Why, havea stick four feet long and a quarter of an | inch thick in the blade, liko a wooden | knife, the blade two or three inches wide | and lower edge sharpened to. a little less than an eighth of an inch-thick. With this, gently cut fem off of the outside of | the hive, throw them back on the pad, | and let the bees run buzzing up to the hive again. : Again, suppose the Lees clog the en- trance under the hive, what then! Just take the stick and genily'but firmly them back--a foot away from the hive-- thus virtually saying,"You are to goin the hive, and to go in at once, my bees-- not a bit of delay and doubt about it." A swarm often comes out and has lighted in ten minutes, and I have them on the hiving cloth in five minutes more, and in ten minutes after that most are in, when'I gather up the ends of thecloth over the ends of the hive, disregarding a pint or q or two of bees ovtside of the hive; and in three minutes more they are on their per. manent stand and hiving cloth taken out --all done in twenty-five minutes. And depend on it, reader, if your hive' is clean and neat, the bees never leave it. Shade it fur four days the sun. Bat if yaa let thew stay on the limb, or ou$- ide of the hive, or do not get them off their lighting-place, they may not find hive, even at a few inches distance. Yon may put a hive over them, and cover them on their lighting-place with a clean hive, and the queen not know that a hive is near her, and so the swarm will go. off, 30, too, the practice of shaking a swarm ff into the hive, and turning it up with cham in it, has this eror in it. queen and bees may not know it is . hp ink it an acocident to their lighti and then may leave the ng just as Pein Sion the tree gnd not in the hive. Dozens cf my this error, and "cose man this way. So if you into something, and pour them out, so that they a foot or two to get now zin, and let all the bees tinetly. Lo My word for it, he who loses one sw: in five hundred is a bungler by ald ind tions in some such ways as these. I have never lost a swarm that I ever até to hive, many hundreds in number:: came near losing one, hg in to save a graft on a fruit hive over a swarm so that it they fell, most of on a stone sidéwalk, wi off. I put the hivé on and there never was a Trarrive Cur Wonus.--An says: It is very annoying after havi out a nice lot of sweet potatoes or p lants, to see them cut-down one one cut worms, We have tried ashes, me, soot and, in fact, we have ever heard of, but never ; accident, we ii Pi worms Br . satis; any person of the merits of this plan, y however, the cow ion to lash a fly that was biting her. . at his bookstreps bu hia samy pull at hi ; but soon cut short, for * bossie," "ia §E 33 ; - o he