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Woodville Advocate (1878), 16 Dec 1880, p. 7

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........ 6v. Auw nu! nouso. Did you address her as " My sweetest partner for life?"-- I would not ny " dumt, " but I was obliged to say some- thing. (LtnahterJ D_AL “.4 I ‘ ‘fi.. 133: here Fil'ifiiu of 5].“ date, oom- mondng “ My donut loved o." What hue {DPIO of conversation throughout the cte .” ' Examination continued -â€"When they returned home she was in no way confined to the house. He heard from his niece that she had run away from aschool at Brighton, and afterwards lived with a man. When they wont to Brighton the respondent pointed out the school from which she said she had run away. It was not true that he had treated her with cruelty. She had beaten him. She was always bullying and fighting him, and used to say, " You dare not hit me. for the pub- lic are against striking a woman." (Laugh- ter.) On one occasion she threw some hot; tea over him, scratched his face and pulled his whiskers. He was sure he never struck her, because she wanted him to do so to establish the charge of cruelty. (Laughton) She used to throw his apers all over the room afte/ e had carefully arranged them. He was often locked in the room a prisoner, as she was stronger than he was. One of his fingers was permanently injured through her ,violence. She smashed a quantity of his china and used to abuse him, “ most gloriously.” (Laughton) He had been ob- iged to leave the house owing to her con- duct. He was afraid of her violence, and for three years his life had been a perfect misery to him. He was dreadfully afraid of her. She took the sheets away-from him on one occasion: He had called her “ a liar." but her lail age to him was be yond description. 8 e swore and used "Billingsgate language." (Laughton) Cross~examined by Mr. Willis, Q. C.â€" Soon after the marriage he found out what sclt'tgf a persojn‘he had got into his house. fiâ€"-â€"â€"â€"v~-I~l IflbuuV’ III lumen. whose local habitation is not inap- propriately fixed in the office of the Matri- monial News. He himself said. as if in extenuation. that he visited the office solely to gratify the- curiosity of some of his nieces. Be this as it may, the supposed widower there acéidentally met the peti- tioner. Shes he to him on the stairs, and told himt at she was a widow, with two children. He had some conversation with her, and was alterwards introduced to her relations. Subsequently he married her. She told him that her husband had died abroad. He thought that she was re- spectable, and that the children were legit- imam “ How did you get on in Paris? " “ Bad enough." “ How was that ? " “I found I had got into a mess. for she flirted with men. (Laughton) She was the topic of conversation throughout the hotel.” ' '. , ,7 K â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" uuv’ PIU' mine. Mr. Ambrose, it seems, shepperded sheep both spiritual and quadrupednl, being A farmer, speculutor, money lender, cattle and sheep breeder and person all in one. Feeling somewhat lonely amid his multi- farious occupations he bethought himself that a. wife would be a helpaneet for his wantsâ€"provided one could add to his store in a pecuniary point of View. As there were none in his neighborhood who came up to his ideas of what a. consort should be, he hied himself to the matrimonial agency in 1'an min“... I-_-I I.-L9. Mr. Justice Hannon has recently been trying a. case in the Divorce Court in which a. clergyman of the Church of England acts as a. solemn warning to speculative. not to say here-seeking, minds who think that matrimonial agencies perform all they pro: min M.- A...L..-..- - The flomwn of Pal-non Ambrose and tin Experience: of n “ Matrimonial ‘_ v ,, V7- “w--â€"- was was fee-luv ear. The causes of ccmme'i'oial improve- ment and of the present rise. not to say inflation. of all stocks and securities. are two good harvests and the revival of the lumber trade. in connection with the en- eral termination of the crisis in the Un ted States and over the World at large. The cause is not increased taxation. however skil- tully the new taxes may have been adjusted ; and the tour which the Finance Minister has been making to see the happy fruits of his new customs’ duties in creating wealth, though gracious and politic, is not without its comic side. It would be a sad mistake. therefore. to suppose that a further in- crease o! pros erity could be produced at will by a free increase of the taxes. or that it is desirable to maintain taxation at its present rate one moment beyond the actual existence of the fiscal need. As the harvests and the lumber are the causes of the commercial improvement. so they are its measure, which no legislation can en- large. It is necessary to lay this to heart. lest, in the fond belief that We have dis- covered a legislative talisman capable of conjuring wealth to any extent out of ag- gavsted imposts. we should be led to plunge to a course of boundless importation. multiplication of manufactures, and bonus; granting. which must soon end in disaster. any seem to think that Canada is pre. vented from doing an enormous trade only by want of commercial legislation. or of Bailing. cr,of some nostrum which the anadian Government or that of the mother country. if it had the good-will and energy. could apply. But the reason why Canada is not doing an enormous trade is that she has only four millions of people, one mil- lion of whom, at leastâ€"the French Cana- diansâ€"are extremely poor, while the amount of her good land is limited. almost all of it is taken up. and not a little of it- is exhausted. She is also deeply in debt. and has yearly to send a large sum in the way of interest to England. Her purchas- ing power. therefore, l8 not infinite, nor the market she affords unbounded. either {or imported goods or for those manufactured at home. The number of banks, loan societies and insurance companies which the wealth and commercial transactions of such a community will support is limited. though from the multiplication of such institutions it seems there are speculators ‘7th fancy that it is not. General and etc y prosperit awaits our 0 e if they will be guided by}, a sober vievgeofp facts; if they allow themselves to be misled by rhe- torical fictions, a period of exaggerated hope and boundless speculation will end in another crash. Mr. Goldwln sum: an the “am. (From the Bystander.) Amid the jubilant. voice: 0! " the bum." fl ll to be hoyod that a note of gentle van:- in“ will not cute «20 lyrihly Eula-no public -__ m5- ....... Agency; (VERY NIIJCII MARRIED. --_â€" vv-I" uvu 0-3 ” ”My sweetest Gaphin Curry, th residoa non Nona], Hdwn. was kicked into unconsciouanul by s hone the other duy ‘snd then, with elbows bored to thae shoulder. to sally forth to the lee- suree of the midni ht route. to distn ute the cards at 00, or. sosring to sublimer joys. to rsttle the dice-box st games of heard. Exquisite, revishing. as these delights must he confessed to be to those who hsve s well-formed taste, these stupid women, my lords. have not that tsste; and if you will not permit them to live in their own dull wsy, you should have strangled them when thev first lsnded." A! Hugues: Pics .‘n 'raeu- Behalf. . An immigration of nuns from France is , still feared in England, in consequence of 1 the enforcement of the present edictagainst _ the Jesuits. A similar trouble was brewing 1 eighty years ago. and Dr. Samuel Horsely . met it in Parliament in this fashion: “ I have stated to your lordships,” he said, “ that English nuns of ei hteen difl’erent orders, beside four sets of firench nuns,are settled in different parts of the country, each order in a house of its own. Now, my lords, if any ten or twent or a larger num- ber of these ladies shouldy choose to take a great house, where they may live together as they have been used to do all their lives, and lead their lives according to their old habits, getting up in the morning and retir- ing at night at stated hours, dining upon fish on some days of the week. upon eggs on others, I profess I can discover no crime,no harm, no danger in all this; and I cannot imagine why we should be anxious to pre- vent it. My lords. I say it would be great cruelty to attempt to prevent it ; for, my lords, these women could find no comfort in any societ but their own, nor in any other wayof ife. My lords,theycannot mix with the lower order of the people; they are ladies, well born (many of them, in. deed, of high extraction), and of culti. vated minds. And yet, my lords, they are not prepared to mix in the politer circles. Enamored, by long habit, of the quiet and solitude of their cellsâ€"absorbed ,in the pleasures of what they call the interior lieâ€"these women would have no relish {or the exterior life of fashionable ladies. My lords, it would be martyr- dom to these retired, sober women to be compelled to lay aside the cowl and simpe habit of their order to be- smear their cheeks with vermillion and plaster their throats with litherge; to clap upon their heads an ugly lump of manufac- tured hair, in shape‘ and color as different , as possible from the natural. covering, and Hum mu]. -IL-__ ,__ -v--- Inn-I... uvu IPINIHU as his substitute any public schoo teacher in the municipality in which the high school is situate. or any teacher employed in any public school from which there is any candidate at such examination, or any person who has taken part in the instruc- tion of any of the candidates; nor shall any-such person be appointed to preside as a substitute in any room at such examina- tion.â€"Amu Cncoxs, Ministerof Education. Education Department, Nov. 30th, 1880. s- _--_-â€".. vu 'uUDV yueuun o 1. In every collegiate institute or high school where the public school inspectorjs not able to attend in person he is empow- ered, under the 59th section of the High School Act, to appoint another duly quali- fled person to act as presiding examiner in his place at the examination of candidates for admission. and such person is bound by ‘ the same regulations as the inspector, and is entitled to the like remuneration. 2. When the inspector cannot himself attend, and does not deem it necessary to appoint a substitute, the head master will act in that capacity and receive the usual remuneration; it is also recommended that even when not acting in theplace of the inspector the head master, upon whom much of the labor of the examination must fall. shall receive the like remuneration as the inspector or his substitute would have received. The inspector shall not appoint an kin osshbibcut- ___- m”. .- ‘Furllner Instruction 3:“ the Entrance Examlnaflon. In the practical working of the present instructions difliculties have occurred in respect of the appointment and position of the public school inspectors’ substitute, under sections 59 and 60 of the High Schools Act, and also with respect to sub- stitutes when required to preside in addi- ‘ tional rooms. It is, therefore. proposed to give specific instructions on these points: ‘I ' “‘ 7 1n ‘--__â€"- AA|I ' ‘ . --___ V- "v.0 J ulna An'ibrose, niece to the respondent. gave evidence as to the violent conduct of Mrs. Ambrose towards her uncle. She had threatened to kill him. and he was afraid of-her. Had shaken her fists in his face. After the marriage her uncle became a changed man. His lordship, at the rising of the court, BuggesLted that some arrangement should be k ..... a AL _, . 1 . .. , - -vâ€"u w..wu5uuuuuu I brafight alibi} between the parties , un--....,... uu‘uws Captain Ambrose, neph‘ew of the respon- dent. said that in the latter part of 1878 he was on a visit to his uncle. The petitioner on one occasion gave the respondent n Violent blow on the chest. He appeared to be_ve_ry frightened of her. sessed oi. Sheiwstated “that“ sh: {1:21 “83,500, but he had never seen a farthing not it. .(IfaughterJ He had to pay £150 as commission. You will never do this again. I hope.â€" No, that I wont ; it is a lesson for me (Laughter) I am never again going to be such a fool. Sir James Hannenâ€"The commission.‘I su pose. was not for the lortune but for the l . (Renewed laughter.) Vfiith regard to his alleged violence. the witness declared that itlay altogether with his wife. who was much the stronger of the two ; that she frequently assaulted him telling him that he dare not retaliate, as no man should strike a woman, and “ nine- tenths of the law ” was in faVor of the wives llau hter), and that she would not stop unti she had £1,000 a year from him. The witness added that he had frequently to leave his home for safety's sake. and had to write some of his letters in the 0 en‘ air on [stilesan‘d g'ateways. _ (Laughton? do you -â€"_- . - uuvv “VI-IOU“ W “fi to it. it Jsmee Hwnenâ€"It shows the very inconsiderate snswer of yours before. Cross-examination continuedâ€"He had written toher, “ Yours for ever, omen." but did not know why ; he was always willing to let the petitioner have control of the house; a person at the matrimonial office claimed ocommission in respect to the fortnne thelsdy was said to be pos~ enumeaaoommisslon in respect to rtune thelady was said to be $08- , 01. She stated that she ad ),but he had never seen a. fetching .(Ifaughterq He had to pay £150 as 1881011. ,will never do this again. I hope.â€" athont; it is a. lesson for me bter.) Ism never again going to be NUN IMMIGRATION. Luy to that ?-â€"'I htvo nothing to lllGll scuqoLs. ' . """"" rorhdzinhormmfi tom {too . - 312.33%?33‘2 :w-mhsngi‘; 22‘: b. am. :0: m me u m 0..., Latest Canadian Jottings. “no. It i, printe 1° thet govern. any before.’ 'Very likely: I eel 'â€" . the world." "Do not at preeent be '5‘“ 7°“ do ”0‘ Km ”0‘10!- Jflt 0'0 John C.’El‘b, of Centrenlle, owned a discontented that you “.9 unknown It weter until it me 03 the bottom of the horse aged 86 but-he in now dead. 3 the a,“ condition of mu h”..- tub. end do thot et lent three orfourtimeu Rev. D. McKerracher, of Fort William, .. Chivdry ie the child of thecfio 1 -" "I I“ do “10 mm bull [011:th has accepted noelllrom the Presbyterian: u All " p]. ofimeginetion. they coy. no woe _to the quenti of oliege the, ot Wallmburg. . among?” live with.” u He found "in“. 51'. “frying. “I’d yohr p tn“ Will look I Brentford has had fourteen fires durin in suicide, and men Who do eo went im ° heeltb a mine. 811° Ind mum‘uflll the year ending December let and a tote nntion." “1 think the stronger '0 'ehnll how u ‘ mine better M “1’ 0th. 1033 of 32,165. There was insurances on in Irelend. the weaker we shall be in Eng- mm“ in ‘ ,9 “‘7' ' Th”. ‘1’. more PM. the property to the mount of 016,600. lend. end I doubt whether onr ohee breed «1 m1 kept Iicklgookins tor mm d In L en en epidemic hoe broken out will becheep enough." " Ilthere “ch plentyolweterthen mun on.“ among (the sheep The upper lip 0‘ the 5 thing so destiny. it will not submit tothe know 0" My P!“ i' ‘0 study m ‘enimal swelle considerably and then breaks mastery "1 mon." " Mornin if "0‘ 3nd "I.“ 01 plonte, end I 1“" “h." to out into 30.1“ but he yet the complaint romantic. Romence is the twilfght's. But ““17 “1°" “Wm 3m”. “Id does not 3 “"0 be enythin eerione mom is bri ht end joyous. prompt with more “1“ "Q," mehy Almost doing ‘0 From 3:53“ of ground onlgy thirt :nine action and i lot sanguine hope. Life seen "‘1“ them to. 1 ! . arde long end twenty-one yerde wi 0 Mr. no diflicultiee in the morning. at least none . ‘ ettereon of Percy recently pulled 160 which we cannot con uer." "Taxes An actress In! imtfinieheddreleinghw bushels of’urrom ’ . and tariffsâ€"that is the uture of England. eel! {or her port. end is going on the nice, A Bentinck schoolmaster dieconreged by and, no for as I caneee, it may go on lor- when her mother burete upon'her in the “a".fim eeleriee ofler’ed tothe mem- ever." " Charles Fox used to say, 'No withen open letter in her htnd. "It, here of his ”union has taken to plan". Greek; on much Latin as you like; and deer child. do you know whet hu' hop. in audio going well: never French under “i circumntencee.‘ finned? Your litter 1e dud!” "'0h, ‘3') Beturde "wing M Mr Wm. Pot- No English t. unless e completes the owoan you eey itâ€"how can you eea tereon of theytownehip'ol Pitdbnr‘h wee century. T eeewere like eome other good just when I hove made up n hoe, driving home from Kingston he wee thrown ; rulesâ€"the unwritten orders of the House oen't cry 7 Why couldn’t you yew from hie sleigh end his neck broken. of Commons." “ ' As for thnt,‘ eeid Wol- till after the third not?! 4 l E In L en en epidemic hse broken out smong t e sheep. The upper lip of the animal swells oonsidersbly and then breaks out into sosles. but as yet the oomplsin‘ does not spoon to be snythin serious. From a piece of ground on y thing-nine srde long sud twenty-one yards wl e Mr. sttereon, of Percy, recently pulled 160 bushels of csrrots. . A Bentlnok eohoolmseter, discouraged by {he etervstion ealsries‘oflered to the mem- Rev. D. MoKerreeher, of Fort Williom, has accepted a on]! from the Presbyterian ot Wallweburg. . Brentford has had fourteen fires durin the year ending December let and a tote lose of 82.165. There was ineuroncee on the property to the emonnt of 016,600. ,7-_ â€" ova-.ymwu wuu . .v the bishop presented himself to conduct the service, Mr. Dale refused to allow him to do so, and repeated his determination to disobey the law. The judge reviewed the early proceedings in this case and added: “ I am of opinion that this is a power the exercise of which in a propercase is not discretionary but imperative. I have no alternative. therefore, but to . grant the present appication. With the policy of these roceedings I have nothin to do; with t e question whether they arm the onlly or the best means of combating the‘ evi against which they are directed, that is beyond my provmce. But if an appeal is made tothe law it is the plain dot of this court to see that the law is fnl lled, and, when called upon, to enforce ‘its ow: declil-ee. 0n the other hand, the respon out as some purpose in view in defying the law and forcing the promoters toexercise coercion. When this purpose has been obtained, or before then, I he should change his mind he can obtain his liberty by announcing that he intends to obey the law. His imprisonment is of his own seeking. and his release will be within his own reach. He must pay the coste of this application." The curious better that a Lawyer Wrote ere Tau-g Landau... Mr. Ha don H. Shouse, a prominent lawyer of enderson, Ky.. and well known in many portions of the state. committed suicide at the Louisville Hotel under the most singular and startling circumstances, evincing a coolness and grim humor in the reeence of death that are hardly paral- leled. Mr. Shouse came to the city on the 22nd ult., and put up at the Louisville Hotel. He appeared to be drinking rather hard, but his mind did not up r to be burdened. and nothing was tfiuught of it. Last night, about supper time. he appeared in the office and sat down to a table to write. There were a number of gentlemen engaged in the same way. and, after writing a few pages, Mr. Shouse began a conversation With one of the gentlemen, of whom he finally made a confident. He showed him the letter he had written, which related to the writer’s death, and the manner in which he wished ‘ to be buried. The gentleman did not pay much attention to the afi‘air. and considered the man out of his head. After Mr. Bhouse had gone the gentleman walked up to Mr. Fleet. one of the clerks o the hotel, and jokingly asked him who was the crazy boarder. Dr. Berry, who had been treating Mr. Shouse for delirium tremens, came in shortly after- _ wards and Mr. Fleet told him of his patient's mysterious letter-writing, and told him that he had better 0 up and see him. Dr. Berry Went imm iately to the room occupied by Mr. Shouse. The door was found open and the doctor walked in unannounced. Mr. Shouse was in bed and to all appearance was in a peaceful slum- ber. An envelope addressed to Mr. Lem. MoHenry,_ one of the hotel clerks, was found on a bureau and the doctor took it to Mr. Fleet and had him open it. It was written in a bold hand, free of tremor, and read as follows: November 30.â€"Dear Lem: Immediately after the discovery of my death get comn and have me shipped by first train to Henderson, and tele- ph in death and shipment at once to S. H. ance, 1 Upper Third street, Evansville, Ind , and tell him to meet ‘ the corpse ’ at Henderson. vuwtv-GDW fiâ€"‘e Vance or my wife will pay hotel bill and all , char es. Your prompt attention will beafavor whic I will try to remember.â€"Your friend, ....,' H. H. Snonsx. On learning the fearful import of the re- quest, Dr. Berry rushed back to the room of his patient and found him still conscious. He said he had taken laudanum and wished to die. Dr. Berry at once set to work to get ahead of the fatal drug, but was de- layed by the patient, who refused to take the prescription. An emetic. was finally gotten dovm his threat, but the drug had taken hold. Shouse soon fell in a deep stupor. from which he never awoke.â€" Louisville Courier-Journal. ‘ Trying n Cletus-tan fer Bltlpllcn. v (London Globe.) ‘ Lord Penzance sat as Dean of Arches 1 this morning in his room at the House of ] Lords. Mr. Jeune applied in the case of I the Rev. T. Pelham Dale, incumbent of St. I Vedast. Foster lane. Cheapside, that he I might be signified in contempt for having 1 committed a breach of the inhibition issued 1 by this court, which ordered him to desist u from performing service in his church. The v proceedings were taken under the Public e Worship Regulation Act, andamonition a was issued on February 21st, 1879. which i ordered him to abstain from certain ille- 1 gal practices for performing which he :1 ad been condemned. On March 19th, t 1879, an inhibition was issued in conse- a was served Mr. Dale proceeded in defiance of it to perform service in his church, and since that time he had constantly performed 1 service in substantially the same pray in a which he formerly broke the provisions of p the law. A number of affidavits had been I repared to prove the statement of the n Pearned counsel, and the witnesses who <2 had made the affidavits were called I! and proved them upon oath. Mr. ll Jeune added that, moreover, Mr. Dale ” had declared his intention of violating the 1'1 nhibition, and when a‘gentleman sent by 84 than Rial-an n---_._a-: A VIEW (3001: IUICIDB. Beacon-lacuna Philes‘ophy. (Boston Herald.) In “ Endymion " it is interesting to note Lord Beaconsfield's fondness for antithesis and phrases. Some of these are worth re- peating for their literary value. “ Custom in England is a power." “ They have got a new name for this hybrid sentimentâ€"they call it public opinion." “ Zenobia never liked her male friends to marry ;” “ she liked flattery and always said she did." " Young Mrs. Ferrars was an heiress, or the world thought so, which is nearly the same." “ I love eve thing in England ex- cept its climate an perhaps its hotels.” The Government of the Duke of Wellington “ was a dictatorship of patriot- ism." “Brougham is a man who would say anything. and of one thing you may be quite certainâ€"that there is no sub'ect‘ which Lord Brougham knows thorough y." " The first dinner-bell often brings things to a point." " She will be annoyed and she W1“ hate me. I cannot help it ; every one is hated by somebod .” “ America will alwa s be oolonialy,” says Lord Beaconsfie d, “and what is colonial neceso sarily lacks originality. A country that borrows its language, its laws ‘and its religion cannot have its inventive powers much developed." “ The decrees of destiny are inexorable." “ and the being whose career destiny di~ recta is as a man travelling in a dark night who reaches his goal, even without the aid of stars or moon.” " I believe absence is often a great element of charm." “ There is no sport now,.and a man cannot always be reading French novels." " Men des- tined to the highest places should beware of badinage." “ Extreme youth gives ho to acountry." “ Hope soon assumes t 0 form of confidence." “ The most werful men are not public men. A pub '0 man waits. .flfl. v...-v-.uu5 uuu (DWI! by which they were suspended. shouted wildly. with new accessions of terror each time fresh and vigorous hands gave a live- lier impulse to their wicker chariots or sent them flying in new directions. The assembled multitude roared with laughter and encouraged the boys. When. at length. President Barrios deemed that their punish. ment was sufficient, he gave a signal, the swinging of the baskets was stopped. they were lowered. and the exhausted. humiliat. ed ladies were sent in carriages to their re- spective homes. The lesson had never to be re ated. for they sought no more to medd e with the concerns of Government, and were very careful to keep to themselves thereafter their private opinions of public Again; patience gave way. At first he simply shrugged his shoulders, then he knit his browa. Finally he said: " This thing must be stop ." He had twelve single-armed high gs lows erected in a line on the laza. From the end of each arm he he sus- pended a broad. shallow basket. with a short rope fastened to the bottom like a handle. Then he had those twelve women brought to the baskets, placed in them and hoisted into the air. As you may imagine. such a spectacle in the plaza attracted everybody. All the city came flocking to see the ladies thus elevated into such undesir- able prominence. And fancy, if you can. the wild. unbounded joy of the hundreds of street boys when free permission was given them to swing those baskets by the short ropes attached to them. The little raga- muflins yelled with delight, fought With each other to get at the ropes, and exerted themselves with frenzy to see who could toss a basket highest. The women, stand- ing in the baskets and clutching the ropes hv whinh ’hnu nun... ...-__A When he came into power one of his first sets was to drive the priests out of Guatemala. In his opinion they were drones in the community and made drones. so he would not have them about. But the women, who there, M everywhere else. have most use for religion. medeagrest outcry about the expulsion _of their priests. There were a dozen women. recognized leaders of society in Gunte- msls, wealthy and prominent. who were especially. loud in their lamen- tations and vituperations. They would have stirred up an insurrection sgslnst Barrios. if they could, on account of their priests. He stood their attacks until his patience gave way. At first ha nimnlv â€"vâ€"OV. I: In uvu i 8116 iioirâ€"she knows. REFRACTORY WOflBN. now a Practical ol' Gallo-uh Tull“ Women who Dunn“! with m... “'I But how shall she escape me, I! 1, bold, unue? And, should overtake her, ' Then what will she do? \ but under heeveu do ou Ill pose? The little angel Ilnneg- p The very mleclgiefje in her; cl... I.__â€"r Who In It I0 pretty “anthem can't}: nomad; w o no nous y. nous y. She should be ashamed 1' Who in it has e hundred been: 1' A little. wlcked I rite 0t torment end alight: She known-Ihe hnowe. Who in it that deal fly me Fleetly u n. townâ€" Flret luree me to pureulng. Then is instant gone? Who changes every wind that blow: ? A fickle, ell‘ln creature 0! omlng form and leeture; She hnoweâ€"ehe known. For whom is ell m eighln Through all the anal nfight? For whom is all my pin ng Through the hours of light ? 0 never lets my heert repose ? A certain wayward meld No mortal can undo ; She know e knows. Ike Known. glonty oi win then (23mm my elee M know of. My plan in to etudy um ‘ '1 nnd wente of plente, end I lave other. to - ' "study their jew- br«king nemee, and more £11 an teeny me by “no“ doing” { ‘ went them to.’ , fl- _-â€"..- -â€"-wv- avu-l "Illâ€" "wbok “1660010881110 In out In - tooordl'ngto the qugntitby f I p b, halt]: .- mino.’ She bud boonwondodn. ' how h t mine better than my othx ' ‘ Blunts in t 9 city. There we mot. phnb 'llod and kept uicklrlookinq ‘19: want a min-.1»- -lâ€"-A-_AI_ _ , Mr. George Taylor. of London, Ont.,wlio keeps about a hundred plants inhis house, heated h two coal stoves. and has all the winter overs he wants and some (or ‘friends, gives, in the s nded extract ‘Irom a communication to 9 Fruit‘ Bo- corder. an American journal; a~ hint o! the reason for his success: “ A lady asked me to look at her Oleander. She said she thought it was dying. When I looked at it I told her it was, and vs? fast,- foradrink ofwater. ‘ Ohl t could be that. for she gave it water only the day before.’ 'Very likely.’ .1 set ' but you do not give enough. Just give water until it runs of! the bottom of the tub. and do that at least threepr four times ---.‘-I. -4: .1- sl~ , in the. plwo: seventeen years end in the Church forty- five yous. He denounced the bellfra'm the pul it last Sunday. and woe promp'tl on ban in the ante-room to worn poop ‘awey. The ball vyu made I hilure end the societ lost money become of his action. T e Hibernian say he has op- them for em, and even forbidden in own peri 'onere belonging to the. society to recognize him on the Itreet, end that he broke up one of the tempemoo societies. He says their dances ere im- more], and he opposes them from 3 sense of dnt . Leodingl’roteetentcitinenlelnim that edenoee ere-proper. end thet the society in made up otithe beet Irilh people in tho tel-M A Print Denounce. a Inter-u- Metr- Ball In. tho Pulp“. senution in tint neighborhood, and “I. Hibernian; will ‘prolgablg bring unit -.._:_-L AI, _ ° ,,,-_ "â€"7 wrwu-rwulw 0110 01“". mm, and currymg it In such a mumer u to screen his face, and walking shoulder for shoulder with the man of God, he PM out o! the depot through a perfect o and of Police officers and detectives, thx. poor ueluded mortals, never suspecting st the party they were utter ‘youlg he the com- punibn ot'a. wellikgom': flew Yoaxvproaohor. The minister's heart melted. and in; few minutes the pair were conversing familiarly of religion and religious topics. When the train arrived at its destination Matches beheld the depot swarming with police officers and detectives. 3m]: as flash he formed a plan. He pick 11 little child who accompanied the orgy- 90;:ij to accomplish what ought to be cehieved by their own will." Those who he" studied the character of Lord Bewonsfleld will see in the cdvice given by the hero to his sister en sntiei tion of his own philo- sophy: " I have rought myself by long meditation to the conviction that n humus being with s settled purpose must secon- plish it. end that nothing can resist s will glhich will stake even existence for its ful- ment." dushsre. ‘eensible menueslloflhele-o religion.’ ‘ Prsy. whst’s mm' inquired the prince. ' Sensible men never tell.".’ "Gt-est men should think of o portunity and not of time. Time is e excuse of feeble and funded spirits. They make time a. slee ng psrtner of their lives )0 eeoomplish wfist ounht to be mhiavul now to Keep Plant- ovn m. DOWN ON DANCING. uni: nonnumv Bum. There 59:71:53 pm ‘i-lwkina.19r tune or an myth: I to .mdyng‘h

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