Weston Historical Society Digital Newspaper Collections

Weston Times (1966), 21 Jul 1892, p. 4

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a " " . . amt} _ iiC5yfelt, “with, tl" - “In! My! you bun' h cu huh: Ila. you would but“ -yahatt, is. it yowmnuly rm to but.“ a. but dug-mu have mint by mu: ttrep, which I. gttlT has. _ on m 'a'ttdllsQ l to to , il,'.': In“ I. ot an loop at duh duty, to: all. will - " l "my will 1Wn-< Mr all m --to no other ',',e,tn't."iti'd' d “a that award from your “an. iiiii) them be but. ta will tsq bravo for you ' Nd - oovu {mil how noble new” ‘50] b. they will quail tor you. Bid them ti. vb. and thy will bo viu tor {on , mock “was: odu-t, thir will be too . tor on ; Bath and no “loin“ in your rule our Jun]. You buoy. pub-pa. u you have been told Io choc. that . HUI”. rule should only be ”qu kph-nah houn. not over hi: mind. . t - “r . .r.i.rcs.r._- " ind a Face. Buying " homo u nun], pm! at Work. while tho girls um " oh -ewurBiotss, and boat ridea, uni bonuizing expeditions, and moving M. suds!) pump, and (annals of :11 mm l __ . . W LuA In- BU ”I“ . Whu folly, not only for you, V but for them , but mull they hue some mere-Lion? Ibrtaini, and " mun; yuan. Now just stop And consider tut it is not a kindness to Mini them up in thin wny. ' A Li a in} very ell-nest and practical airair, and ttht to nuke tt up out of picnics .114 feldv sind jollitiel would be very much like trying to nuke a. meal out of whipped crash}. Mt would be neither "mole nor hedthde No girl should go out-Whan - ' _ ' , __a .A5 than " wholmme use an“: w an”, .. ...._ chm _ " F In thin day and "a women muit lenrn' more than houuhold nervice. but Uyst we should be tnught ll Illa lama her alphabet. - She in never too young to learn. but renlly, " in u praetimsrPatrm an) concerned, Ill. immune. too old to Imsrn. 1utrita of name-I, thritt, order sud economy shouldbo among the firgt lawn: of life. Girll should - know tttat there in such I thing uhbitunl disorder. Comforti‘ble 'system and well-considered prudence are among the ifta and gmbes that 'go to make up the “wad. 3nd beautiful women. A ,clreleu womnn out never be wholly knuc- 'tive. The eye rests at once upon some evi. 'dence of untldineu and tho chum is tie. nroyedx Okla-wand boys, too, for that matter, should have . the importnnée of ‘pénonlj hair-en and neltmau only im. -prelled upon them. h _ - . ' - s, cue, :........o:“. no. -'eu-cu ”a... ".._.... And not only in this imperative, but. order and system in bulbous affsirt left)! the utmost. importtuttre. How long would smerchent do bin-inane. think You, if he put his momma down on some ooad lump l of pIpor or on the wall, or undertook to: mry them in his heed? The idea. seem: Ti,,",',',',,",: but is no more» then many at t e prxrvailittg notiona on the subject of housekeeping. There is rally no ray-.1 roe d either to do. mlio or bull nieces; Only hard work 3nd Immlodding industry can nukes perfect 2,2'e"ll21il'l'e or ucnpable bmineu map. 'Anrl hon-alum! mini" do not take long to [cum After all, if one only begun eerly and grows into it naturally. Mia lcuope should be learned by all tht whether rich 1" poor, and, with t CUT, o'er, precticll lesson end steomplitshrneny that time, ur‘ength and ciretunaunees will ‘ permil. .. Extnvwmoe in Simplioty. " Even though (weer. simplieV as repu- Ienad by muslin: Ind nrgandies prevails," «y: . correspondam. in the Phxlndclphin Times. "our "anus-m. gull no not de. barred from Ihnwma how much m may cm be expended even on . gown of this can, mud in mummce they line A twen 'y-tire- cent his: with Jt dollar a. yard with and hem it with real lace " sny price th V cm reach. _ " Their pmnnls. though of the pl-n'MIB description. will luvs: h-ndle- that repr‘ment lung hale was. being, u thty no. nude of colorgd purl net With iror3U, overland I with genuine gold or silver. and n 'very i econtrmlcsl woman think! A Dresden ('hinl- hot. or bun“. not nun um: too expenllve. I _ ... ___, va u. '_...- -v. V..- ..._._ - - - . “on their h.“ they Wm wear real 3i: 'i'i'iii'aiiir/e/ it Will Bf link. The1 2',',',rdd','gltl, and la/l,; l/lt.! .0" whey nhnulil then he removed mind the ord _ ' in in” Ttot, t It Ferr m I',',',',,"',,',','?,,"; atirred until hy takingn prece and {trauma l 1: than" Ves - Ur rm.“ ”In? an a hot lam. when drum awny it 'Ill show c 009..th t . place of the pnuino. "m fine xhrendn nne~hnlf inch lung, The" tmit Tlt, m ”non; urPje Ind CP" “mt. mire at the rate of ihree and 3 half ounces to the, tl, tre P" C" ".Ith No “I?” y,ti, If!) pounds of milk: cool tiriwn to about sr, ',,1tili l",'tfr, or ,t,1ee'tl,rl'rm?,,r 3:; 'd'. degree! and put to press. when-WM he "no " not!!! to l CC,',',",', ' C, " kept 12 hours. When talom tr ll! pron 'l'l'g"A, "nail. sup!) y " en ”be " " the ends or nuuide should be oiled to re . . m Pl“ nftthoem and tbo that ree vent their tracking. The cheese ','ld,',u"C 'STI, Willa h!” In??? 'lg t,Wt,evr,; tttrned nver every dly and the purine rub, 2'; . Srl I" O , CJ we: t I',',,'.' bed. The ten/ipl-riuurr of the mom where 'he,',':,','),"'.";,?,,",,',',;")?;," if; it’lriwutill the RIIECRP are Plerfl nhouid be kept In near '5“an M her by“! hnir "a ght up ,0 degrees " possible. . with fltret.ot the fix "gitrtte mail: Iiidihd ' . a F with a... _ The Hythical Number Thru- -- _ . . _., ..,, ----" -..A "ML L-- L.-- ..;ii “A ,rrittrn o! thr win: rar- Jew-nu. “Sh. my look vqndorfnlly 'rel, and nth-semi” in her summer attire ut the (our; non of ImAll moun- mun: nnt he de- Idod by the dm‘mbitv M tht an" into hunk: m can of the name Humour, _ _ - _L_ “mu... ... W" __. -..- H _ "lover hi. there been A - when 1;“!in rdgnod with we nmnipnmm Ctatd cl, May. Silk-v. slum \nd "tIts-ot bu awarded in on» “in: thed-tho Made mil i- [own won by ttq-ttttg-t ght Thu“ h thet bluish. dre- " uni-y ,t-tth-rhe*arorttmt, but with our V'- d nun-”9 M. _w__mu plum! 'w-T. ... -v-..,_ P Ik,ttt .0 "h [Mid ”My Jamal. mm!) "rim ..the ‘m hr um um, and uh. In." y, thot very intimation It Bet III ”an who Mm” teeNerstgTs'i who M. at: imi- tate. aa "iitiCTifrtiat m. "tUO-et-qt-tth, ”than iFii.au-iemetitqiiet1ttte “V. ninth-hum Jun ttrr-"'-'.',""". ninth in! whim Propor Tnimng for tlirU. '3‘“! mm lie-Mn PHI-inn PM hum-"u we the pludnufa 'ubi.bdoqddllh‘rlnn Ann-d Fdiaiueirh-hq4tr 1" PIN." um: , na 'Ittt New .tri,t.It, w,___....___._- I" I... d I'd-OIL "is aaia by i,eii2,.etr.'ttfi,L't,."/t'2T. Hod-II sienna-aim m- tiilr,tuetti"o who! why-house no: a... Only itart','gtttrt tgttthtelt ,md‘hoummll .m_thnyonuvbowh. . Anybody! can mk- " own ioo ores-run in 'ninnuu. And toe u: upondiwn of We of 1rg,M',treg . oorn-pondem. " m i-tire irod " be frozen in plac- ed in I tin buckupr other unpack it cm: ho readily cgngulod by putting " in . pail conniving t weak notation ot ml hurls: ttl and um Into this throw . imam ‘ot common Glauber ulu sad the resulting col-Lil no [ml that . lunch of wine .iur linked in the leIuhv Wlll be frown solid in n few "mince-I. And loo cram or ices "my [be qulckly And gully prepnfed. Aromn without t couch of some “It is! only art furniwhud. Lite in full of up: and damn. up! sul that - thy unity of the memtu jaded uni phylimlly ext-Anita} ioruu"r-tightor in the panodicul good cry METRE momentary loss of cannula was on the npituri lounge, ur the" old 50*: in the tsitting-room. There are time: 351nm so many of the things I'm. distract nu could be straightened out, and the wu iii; clear ii one only" hm! a lung, 2/'2,/C'ul'i', couch on Whole suit bosom 'he could throw lnnuelf. boott, and brains, “match his weary Ikame.‘unnnndful of litjlel and tnpestry, .010“ hi: tirird eyeg, relax the tchuiun of his mum-leg, and give his Irarrssssed' mind i chunce. Tan minim»: of this soothing nar- cotic, when the headthrubs, the soul ycarnn for endless, drmstuless, eternal rest, would make tho v.ision clear. the nerve: steady, I the heart light, and the star of hops shine Again .5..." ' _ There in not 3 doubt that the longing to die is mistaken ttrc the need of a. nu . In, tstead of (he iumtortslity of the mm‘l busi, ness men and-working women want regular and systemnpic Jonas of dnzjtrir-atif after umosiy bank in (t"ii'e%u'iz4l a.“ old oak WWW“ into iriGraGai0rroTrs7rFirsreremJ"qr {hat can approach a big sofa, or a. low. long couch placed in the corner. where lined na- ture cmwn her face tothe wall and sleep and doze Bway the gloom. The character of a heu's egg is sqmething tbnt sill-cu consumers of Lhiskind of food veryrtrioasly. Few persons suspect danger existing in In egg. There is 'an old adage to‘thu effect that an egg and a nut can be eaten without suspicion, but it is very fur from being tray." For a. nut has almost al- “my: a Worm hiding inth kernel and an egg has been founrl’tn have the germ! of verious low-amp. kinds of organisms Grist- ing within its substance. This fact has been heretofore mentioned 'n'derived from personal ex rience of the writer, sad now we have bagel-e us a report of investigations by Dr. Gsyom who hut discovered in eggs I bacteria. aspergilli. end other org-niams which are derived from the fowl itself and are to he found thin in ovaries and oviduct and blood of diseased fowls, Inoculation of i the hen. with hacilln resulted in the pres- ‘ enmrof these organisms in the eggs, and the fecundnted eggs, were found to be urgnore profusely supplied than the sterile ones. Consequently even eggs are to be eaten With feet and tremblih and the long-boiled hard egg will ale “their than the light-boiled no t gnu, “(lathe well-cooked omelette safer than either: . The owners of fowls shouldi themif _ P espe‘cially careful V of ' the health oi h - CLsk. iiriiiii9PiGiai Lnimnls is yery properly objected to sis food. But the egg - .. , .A r, H “ML .1:-.,...,I.. the pupa“, our“..- w _._ ___-_'. V W of idisetused lien is as much disused a the flesh. Poultry cholera, roup and other virulent discuss are more Krevnlenc in low]; than any dileaaeu in ot er animals. Almost evhry farm Mek has in receptacle for departed nick fo'whc.bselt of the barn or in I fence corner, and in little graves in the garden under the mutant bushes or grape vines. No notice is taken of the fact that the egg trf then hem have been fathered And no d or used for weeks precm ing the um a! g u. mu... .._.... ...V._ V," And soil or used for weeks preceding the final event, OT a thought given that they were virulently unwhnleaome. Yet We have been told that hens bad received the genm of diphtheria (which is roup in their case? Mid of tuberculqsis from human subjects. But. who has seriously consMcred the danger of infection by diphtheria or consumption, . " . I' ' :,4L. {and ux luleuuu u, 'ru""""'"" ___ - . or of intestinal fever (which is the _fow| 'cholera) from thrreggs we eat? And yet there in imminent dun-gar of it that has been heretofore ue%autuea, so [at as wd know, except for some years past by the writer in HIue'colmnus and by Dr. Gayuu. A dniryman writer to the Farmers' Home Journal thu the ranking of a small amount of milk into cheese is not easy. on account of the mffieulry of keeping the temperature of the curd even It All times; Itill it can he done with prop)? care. For a dairy of '20 cows it would much the best economy to purchase from some of the dealers in dairy supplies I Imnll tin “it surrounded by a wooden one with A space between fur water and a tirrr-box, underneath to heal the water. Where thin: in not milk enough tn justify thilexpenle. the dairy kettle can be Iltjhzerf by putting ynteil in the kettle and having a. tin vessel tn set m it. The Hulk can he plnced in this and brought up m the desire ed temperature, which won d be about Mi (le reeu, for the introduct'tort ot the rennet. fl is quite dWwult fcrtvpr'rson tlmt " not accustomed to preparing the rennet to got it into I shnpe that they can it!” whet the strength is, and for that reason it in better' Ito order rennet table!- from the dealers, which are put up with full dircctiorofrsr use. When the curd becomes hard enough to splithelere the finger, it shout) be cut up shout as tine M vein and gently ntirrvd and ir,a txstine M rain and gently alirrcul and l the mmporntnrr Kradnnlly brought up to 93 1 degren, at which pom! it should he kept‘ until the curd hevamén hem, and when tnknn up in.tlse Fund and pressed together it will full'npnrc. or n Mm]! Piet"' when heaven the teeth and bitten it wilt Iqumtk. The': whey nhnuhl then he removed Ind the ord stirred until hy ”lungs piece and preumg . ' -.-,‘._L_._ stirred until hy ”lungs piece and preumg on a hot lam, when :lrgwn awny it will show fine thread: truths]! inch lung, Ther, unit In the rate of Hume and I half ounces to the Ino pounds of milk; cool driwn to about sr, degree! and put to press. where 2Pf.l.Li le _ .... ' ' r-- -- ...---_ Mnch but bern “it! and written at thr "ucrpd numhvrsevem ., How nboutthe num- ber ulna" Sturdy it "my be Ion nd m in may odd comlnnntirro u the “mud number." First up hue the Trinity ', Ju. pilor'shghtnlhg hind three fork] m,thelrldrnt, of Rectum three [man's :(‘J-rlorul. mum's dag, Id dine heals, and the Pylhiun into" In on A tried. There were threr 4UU' Mid three Yuri". The my. in Sol, Apolh und Liber The mmn. too, in Lam. Dian: and Hoe-to. The Snbinn prisyed 'thre time. I (by. and my nation. in per Morning um not. of Moe-um. how thtre "e.. In olden than dugout" were cured by three eiremrttorArtiott-e disrup- with VIM animal yum than into thre nep- '13th "mined three “in" into thre up "In val-m nd .P‘IM three “no. Matt omn- odd three com innit," maid ht an], hum the Bbove me. that thm - i: not. that II . nyi number. "di-, M'n the hot of over A pneu- in point ,ettmiwtro it In an In: a 'art.---. Tho Couch in 3 Coiry Boom- mun-up in very" man-lulu Ice Groun- Unwholelome Eggs. Making Putin Cheese. F in "ervriere to banned u the root of everrihirttr to the Farmers' Home when n per thtre and I with W In“ - “to WI . ' q HIDM- F _ Th - ttfe'? “in “out Sill-buryin- pop-anal om. though My bl Autumn 'orot polliiul‘iiwut. Ball (Joint PIS-o Midland [ugh-d It.“ his non-wot. Robert' (boil, ttet at Bye. lélgh, Lord Kapor of an uaatyl Ill- du‘Quun Elizabeth, whohMGon a board. Tho [which qt ‘vuring baud- mnl out i; England It the bog'mu'um of thouvonmmh century, tad ha - tiling com. in “sin among that clan of men from whom Prim Mull-Len “I drawn. Even the mumb- wu Almost. unknown ln Euglnnd, except. Imoug We military, until after thin Crimea: w", when civilian took to waxing it, ’ partly in imluuon of thc uldiun ud‘ pull, fronuha iufhseurs of tho Fienoh Il~l lluuuc. But a for the bend, it in still ro- gnrded u an eccentricity or u ch. gnsrk of mule uutllndiulx bringm? up. The otiicial clnu' " I rule wear on y side vhllkerl. Mr. (Mud-tone, Lord ta-field, Lord Russell, Lord l'nllllerdon, Lord Derby, Lord Aberdeen, Sir Robert Peel, t " Duke of \Vellipgbon. Lord Melbourne! And Ill th utlvtr prime animators of the nine- teemll century were only side _ wllluk- eru, while before their time, tor two centur- ies, the custom 'r" w shun: glow. At. My: I thr num- um. um um”... u..- _ h... - - pron-m. day beardl Ire more common in tttg House of Lords than in llie House oi Com- mom, because u good many eldérly may wear them, and the Lords are much thcr man tlu, Commons. But m either hon??? beard makes a. muu' ileci-lcnl noticenble. Lord Spencer. formerly Loni {lieutenant oil Imlunmars a trig rough beard, and Lord" Lathe 1e present Lord U'hiunberlain, wears a. huge red beard, coming almost down lo his waist, But Lord Sulisbury is the only Prime Ji iniater Who hus won”; beng for just, 300 yew-i. And much u beard as it is! If ip were not for his great. bulbous forehead and long, aggressive nose bis beard would seem to cover the whole face of the man sud consrituto bis whole in, dividuality. With it: sturdy bushiueo and total disregard of conventional Maui. it is, Mdecd, very ehisraeteristiv'of huru, The Duke of Devonshirn. who always wears a l bend, is said to tuvveinorj, bF you be dtyyaty1- ness" about tum war in England. But Lo: close. He in the ve; minded, buii.headed, huh answers} I and: appearance " much acts. an». The origin of Lord Snisbnry’s board, however, is to be fohnd in an incident T of his career which is not generally known, or, rather, which i: generhlly forgotten, but which has had a good deal to do with the formation of his character. M He was a. younger aim of the second M Lvstrtrf Salisbury, and rlrough his father was-the lord of many tunes, and married to a gram. heiress, the present hqml of the house started in life with little? batisltiitoriemune and a selendid education. Lord Robert f Arthur Talbor Gueoigge Cecil was not the man to live on his father or to idle away the s best of his years among dogs and horses. r He determined to be independent and, hav- ing an Oxford fellowship to support him, 1 he set out for Australia and New Zealand t with the serious intention of becoming a l colonist and building up his own fortune by t enterprlso and hard work. That was when , he grew his beard, for III those days a, razor was almost an unknown srtigle in the col- ', ouies, and having get into the habit of it, I _ he has worn it ever since. V Lord Robert's plains of lite were entirely I changed b the death of his elder brother, I Lord Crsnhournc, to whose courtesy, title," 1 and magnificent prospects he succeeded. l 'He had slreudymnde a great mime Tor him, , self in the House of Commons, and been a me mber of Lord Derby’s (inhinet, when, five years later, the death 0 his father made rr him Marquis of Salisbury and one of the great landed magnates of England. He was then just thirtreighr and in the prime of his puwerl, and his accession to the House ,of Lords proved s. most fortunate thing for the Canaan-Line psrty. Lord Derby-the . greet Lord Derby, as he is commonly call. ed-- wash. tory of the old school Mid unrest. unfortunate politician in every way. He was a man of splendid presence and most chivalrous character, and his princely Inu- nitieence and ardent lore of sport made him personally popular. But he was never in .touch with the English peopleor in har- u‘inuy with the spirit at the age. He seemed to he a feudal nobleman of the middle ages dropped accidentally into the nirysrceyh century. Under his leadership the Crui- lservatives really had no prospects at all. ‘ They never got into power except through some temporary His? and they never held it for more than a PW months. All idea F of a Conscrvnthe admigUtratirm as s per" maut-ut thing seemed to have ps~sed away. Just a you after Lori, s'alirdutrr's mweesii u to the familv honors, Lord Derhydicd. M r. Ihsracli as he then was, succeeded in the , leadership of the party. and LnrlSsllshury b took charge of their interests in the House b at Lords. He was immediately elected , Chancellor of the triivtr4ity of Oxford i",,') e suewssinn to Lord Irtrhy--ts very high hone) y', or. for so younua 'man-tum was marked n out for the future Prime Minister. V Two more :l,iei',"r1ed'frn, than Disraeli W and Lord Salisbury can]: not well he im. r agined. Disraeli was all his life an actor, . a mystery, a dreamer, an adventurer. He r l pussnssed nothing and he did rum want to t possess anything. He never really bwned R l, an sure of land in his life, and if he hind t? l just enough money for current. expenses he - i, was thankful not to be troubled with more. " I He had no children, and his wife was more . (iiC,'i"'/riJii than anything else. He was .m-r .. W. ....7.. ___ " cp nil-English in all his idem its he C Wu in appearance. Lord Halishury is exactly the opposite. He is, perhwa, the most. Eng- lull Ev‘glxshnmn in England. He in A wrnlthy landowner, Invl the inneritor of titles and cannot: 3Mt years old '. easentinlly a fruntly mun. and who vr-rv pink of social grandeur and high style. Yet the "In men _ got an PYcellenLly tugtatlmr. because they both hm] lining. Lord Salisbury wan wine enough to discern that lliirneli, with Ill hm llimsincs.‘ ind all his olmrlmaniam, hul really hig- i‘kW-c but. unnugh Mart to carry thvm oat, He was hum enough. too, to trust lher‘li: Mill no“ who ever I trlntnl Inm found him fnlnn, iaeri hsd ltimt unnum- inristht in!" men's A-Imrnclors ’which ennhlml Kim to find nut movwr then T anybody vise, not cxcophng themselves. l what they were heat ht for. _ Lord Rnhahnry hud devoted himself mninl to home "air, and p-perinlly to 'J,I','l7 I‘m-uti'ms : but Uinmrli discerned in him I great foreign minister. By wuy.of testing his Mpncuy in thin respect. he nent him to the conference of the pnwors at Con. auntinnple, withont any previous lruinin ' " minim/er plenipmenlmry It an 'e,"t'r'l',',','lfy' "mm! mriod. He acquitted himself an :riliml ner‘iod. . He in well that he am Hired pt mind rsuik vita Dumb] well that he an! Hired pt one nvroke almost wlunl rnrik vita ”and: u i mule! M Mr. man politic! -n with»: whmh he h u never fnrfened nit-me. Fir m that tirre until Dis- rapl'n den'h In r'lf, the two Ilurnmrn worn In Dan/id and Jonnt0n; and when the "UMW" M the policy of “wave with honor" was lnid to his real unicr the yrlmid of primrose! at Hnghenden, LU' Snlinlmry was nnnmmnmly m-t'lnlmed his Humor In the lentil-"hip of the 1'onrervntive party. How well he but unneeded in that position is attested by the {net that out of the eleeett ynrl elapsed ninm Disraeli) death, the (‘nmervntihs hue been in 055. seven: they have now" been defeated on n tavern- ment qllnlinn in the Rotwe, of l'mnmmw, not Ml my quantum in the Hanna of Lords: and they have Tont, lever an“ mum either puny ever "set before in an maul length of tire. The mm m"... their madman on. lk",',,,',',') day mm! the" "minim Imdrr hard Derby ' , " one of thr no“ mnnrknble thing! in the i I modern h'"ory of En um. mum U..- MI',',", dmhlodly, Hunt-II © I - (Mil to do "I) with that. h VII he who pluM’i‘é‘vY "a win of an Conn-nun pony into a 1mm -mhurtrso of renewed mum. Thou B.titin [arqu numb“. “in now»: runs), 1711‘ mari-ii-ei-mbsf- But Lord Silisbm‘y ,I'une him the very ty cof the “mug- headed. gum? tempered Eng- it I and; he shows it In his I much as in his words and in} ‘i‘lm ii"gi"i1 'tji-tue-, “a." P""'""" ___ "e" tte 090'; mm. m. in fun. but. In. m‘ an“: unds 1rdt tho Brit. hl, H. m to ho oou' , " pow “Mu “yum-l, . Iiwuro. But iiiiiTiuTi'%rLayiuued bouts-- Innly in dad-m m nun] um can». :1:th ot til the dunno and vidoly pm at the empig‘y. (Mun. when "'NW'rau. mums and. m to teater ' All!!! (manna Tho we - 'i.aiiePee.'"e, I??. agatted.d at tho 9min". Vim. um It. I. sour-:3“ some Minn: negotiatin- with . continuum Pop" upon an uppit- ontl teivist qwtlou, the object which ho ad; in in - in canmugd with the lutm “logy or wolf-re of sonic dirtant de. wdalay. Pmticdly. his controll .ll the untold. "airs ot the mini". and thu Minis. .ur a Wwe, the Secretary of Stat. (or the Coloniu; mind even the Firat,Lord at tho Admimlts, In bat mdjuton of hig.r That ‘in why Lord Sniiubury ha Altar coulomb ed that the allies of.MmiIIAr or Foreign AWIP ought to be bpld by the head of the govBrtuneat. Before his time it was cul- wmu'y tor the Premier to be Fiat Lord of In: Trouury, on the theory thin. he ought to hold the purge Itrmgl. But Lord Salin- bury hu ulwg'yl ' the ground thnt th‘n moat important otliee m the Cnbi‘not. in the modern position In the Britilh Empire in that " Foreign Mirtiater; and tint he in quite u utll able to control the purl. string, throu h av. "gated culling“ In ho would bet if ll bun-elf administered the lreuury. --A - _ l W , ”i mm-..“ A: a”, Kindly affords abundant evidence of the columns“ of this 'view." All the recent trouble between .lreat Britain and France about the North American fisheries-sud I. very Iorious trouble it ilwnrose from groa- ignornnce of oolmiinl "Urs on the part. of I Foreign Minister more than loo yuan ago. l In one of his best known essays, Macaulay makes grout fun of the Duke of Newcagble, not knowing that Cape Bremen was In ialnnd. l But an a Peh,ruer period Jan; the gem of the Indian 0032111). was" lost to Great Britain by a limilar blunder on the part ofa Foreign Minister, who, in concluding a treaty o? pence, nid he supposed '.'uue island wns pretty much the Battle It t1trty. I" ... . _ . ,, .__ Ln. f .. ”mo in} wavy, ...BMv.. A"" .W - We need not in so far had: as that, in? deed. to see the resiults of the syabem’of divided couiseis in imperial “Hairs. against winch. Iatrtrsalisbury has stgadfaslly set his TaG7TmCtTFoTijl1 Mr. Ghe"e2rfaeT! administration, the empire was involved in ‘coutly and disastrous little wars. and in anirry tuterivstious with the colonies, simply because the prmnier gave all his attention to the treasury, while the Foreign Minister.‘ the First Cord' of ms Admiralty, sud the Secretary for the Colonies, each pulled his own way. There bus been nntliiug of that kind duringtlie last seven years, untlit is _1't,t, to' snv there _ will be as long as Lord Salisbury 'rs':',','", where be is. The rule of his foreign policy is, to use his own words, “to trest all other pnwers as a gentler man would trgat his neighbors, that is to say, like gentlemen.” and in every case, if Baseline, In comet? u. friendly settlement, eneticial to all concerned ; nnd the under- lying principle of it all is to keepgood faith, promising nothing which he does not fulfill, and thrrsatenNg nothing which he does not mean to iMiet. c." C mean Fo "P"S"" ' n C Bismarck, who is an unequaled judge of such matters, used to my it was impossible to cultivate the friendship of Great Brxmin under Gladstone. because it was impossible to depend on British policy from week to week ; whereas, under Lord 8alisburyls re' gime, Germany ho, become warmly mulch ed toqrttt.B.ritsitl without ofTendiug French susceptibilities. C . I . I I r 74.1 (V.I:..L.‘_..'n nun-.0 “an. M.__._._8ii. ,, 'ii?"ia,ri? while Lord Saliybury's great) reasons of favorable landing. merits " ii foreign minister are very genera l Far the route surveyed by the Thetis the ally neknowleged be has never gained popu- emplctu the Sandwich Islands would be L',- Iurcty in the ordinary “Me- The gristn- i ooo miles in length. The route-surveyed lty crney EWBM'olly him: and the grest tutMW of i the Allmtross is about titty miles longer. of the working ltMHt have ii genuine admira. i The Albatross hind hoary weather during a tion of him. But the lower middle .cluus, l great part of her trip, but the Thetis ex- wmwll trisdersmen, und tiurmore mols,do not i perienced favorable weather during most oi lilohim “.hii- Ais t'or him, he [Gpsesl the time. The Thetis survey is considered them too heartily to have bny resentutiant i to be the mtist nesuriite and heist ilctermin- l against them, and he is far too proud toi ed of any yet made for a. I'acitic cable. make ““y effort to conciliate them. He The interests are partly commercial and never shrink: trat, axpreuirig hi, couusmpt partly political. Direct and quick cmir for' them “id their view. Of Pi‘hiic life, and i munication with British ports and colbnies he is " “W time ready to retire rtcther than i and thtHar cast generally is wanted far the to he indebted Ur them for a tingle. vote. I sake of Canada’s commercial interests in He is not 'ssas0 Wit eloquent Speaker. but he i that direction ', but, and perhaps nia‘nly. it! My bold and clear, and in dealing with his i an altcrruttive telegraphic route try the East. titrponertur he hiss “Rh “- curtlng Wit that I is wanted for Government purpose"-" route his tspeechtstr are alwziyn eagerly listened tr, that shall be entirely through British pos- and read. He is not uncommonly charged ' sessions null not Silliicct to interference or with bad taete in his epigtams, ii” for Irv l stoppage By any foreign power. It is can stance when he stud, 1spt'opotr ot' William 1 sidered to be tin essential move of prudrm O'Brien smd.tyilhafs flight iropt bail “hi i tial strategy, In line with recent 0) perinicuts IUrnelf's oxttwtroplw: " It, is h raurimts [of shipping British trrrpps from England to thing about Irish watiomU lcnders that they , India. and the biasbovpr the Canadian Pacific are always escaping. Wt‘lmus they escape l, Railway, - .. . . i. ,,,y _. t . 's. .. __---- he is on any. time really to retire rather than l to he indebted In them for a tingle, vote. i He is notatasll an eloquent speaker, but he I, is no bold and clear, and in dealing with his l titrponertur he has such a. cutting wit that i his speeches are always eagerly listened tl, and read. He is not uncommonly charged ' with bad taste in his epigrama, as for Uri stance when he stud, aprnpos of William l, O'Brien amLDillvn‘s flight from bail and t I’Mnoll’x‘mtnslrnpln-: " It, is th Furious l thing about Irish national leaders that they f, are always escaping. 8trtttttmuis they escape l by water And isotuetirhes by the tire escope.’ l Bur he 453%”ng for gust) Monuments. He an." w tever he plenacs and if his fuca' dun’b like it so much the worse for them. _ _ In private life Lord Salisbury is a princu- l ly noble in tll respects, a rmwiiffceni host, and excellent. Innillurd, and!) firm and cor- dial friend. He has ouertnined Queen Viirtoria at Hsttiehl House. his splendid sent in. Hetthrrdshire, rssyris ancestors eu. termined Queen Elizabeth under the name roof ', and last year ht, entertained the Uerlmul Emperor there. Bat to see him at his but". " necessary m he at one of hin " hnnn- tr parties when he surrounds himself with his neighbors and friends from all parts of the country, and comes out ntrnnc in his true clmmclnr of " " tine old English igcntleln'm. one of throlrlen tuno." Re Hove: good eating and drinking, puts Away a i,iidi of oli1 pCrt after dinner in detisnee i of his hereditary goirt, and in not at .tl.ll Minimal! of How grnrrnns old Knrl16h vines. But nobleis’a oblige in his rulenf Me and he l never departs from ft.' For years past hm} health' has compelled him no live in (hr nmuh of 1v'rsnee in winter, and the Villa, Cecil in becoming ulmpnt as well known in cunncctlon with liis name as Hatfield. " Me ILVRpenks rvnlumeu for his bonhnmmie that he is, next Lo the Prince of Wrsle<, the most popular Englishman in Frame. Ernr um w \KM‘IELD 'T'u tho sllngleam on the mountains. '0',Tyli,,'lt brightly are it mm. "ha the In: blu-cn m lmmtain. mun: “may err it din: Dr. if horn, and lhrru- a hero no rvvnrmlmrod thrrtnOthe you». Trt to him the min in mm: but”: hath Milled his Mann and (can. Yet what r1nnsp'r men will clan: lf hut onlrin the nlr May be heard some must want ion of their _ name: Though (hr-v heur it not Gemsciv the same V Tim I rainbow. “in rcredinu Ad the pnntimz fool walnut-I. Or " mthnL yyytlr unhted.insr, " . n" '"'iGraiiii trl'lllle: mmv man will dare “at to Rah! their shrub-r nhnn‘ in some tr.' t, Lucien 11th I” of Nbmtt hem" . 'Tia the Eel,', Murat Mal For a ii I) lth'i but hogun . Whrtt (ha Man or 2;iiiiGiid Slug ha quirkly lo-I or van: Th t ohm" Flam In"; my bourgool To an "rrrirtstitttr tlower; . Or Trhett mm their “Minn urge on To Defy Immnrml power. V , at how Huh"; men ignore AH the [mute old- in “are. Fwdim hr!" hut [omen momma“ nll In n c: Or in wuietdat "win". mm the ham. Pmetitnmtrh. mynnioml portal _ , Humane" nmy Ta, mm: t l "et the op. Ill” ' an Tumor A That h up the rancid" home. o. Mo hun- our No! Nolan n- When the frit with ha known. And the (run churn: mm t nun More the throne? _ W Inmaml:n.m1m9 Pan prtttre Imam. “on: An but In" t ttreq " "for. mu! tbenenth Wm my 7 mttt mum - mm .5: tti-i-rut-fu/tfree, 'ttttV own-I nu- .. w in. the who mm In”? duo metwure, 'ilht'r out of Man! nor Inn-c: Int holdv- in mm his trenmra I my: uplfurn or thr, rare. . fame. Vanni, Life, Death m abundant evidence of the ii"sirGifiit%%rV ', ".srrr.rl _ ’l’l mom for I - M largo, no. he ~14“ _ What in wealth What is fame? What is dcestht What " “ch (w. w Sign. tiLuiueh p. - to “In” tho W it II. IONI- rhoprojm a. khan “mm.- Fl thp M30 One- to 2Sttl'iat conduit with“. ad Alums. uni prov“. n axon» 'uetatu.h Ind chap mull to tho lulu; _ tttt'tttmThSt.rdr'.Ta'2t w nub. whirh omb- kaud throu- ( (“all at tho wny mound up Irlobo, mm to " boon Minna-d very mnuridly to. vtrd ortqqtpliaiyetrt hy the "lulu Mum ed by tho Unibd suu- cruiur Them in It: noon“! nanny ofthe propoud roam. Thu Theda-Jan Sun Frucinou on April, 18 lsat' be uh windingl and mike . eueul lur- vray of the went bed over d'.' refund routs iron Culifornin to the gum wick “lunch, lb. it'rut notion of a proposed route to leml. Slap returned to Sun Fruwiuo lul- wuk, Sir months Ago the Alhntrou mode tee, survey, but the result: unlin- ed in m Iurvey were not oonziderod of- ‘nlture vory favorable to the project. The Albumen lurveyed I route running from a rt,'e on Monterey Hay, near the town of ontorey‘. direct. to Honolulu. Her Bound. in" Blurs ed that the bottom of the lee. wzn very irregular over the grater part of . . THE new: sum‘icuu. The depthl of the water were very great, end a great man lofty mad perpendicular ODFII we“ were discovered along the truck, indicating great danger oi’freqm-nt and serious trouble: to the cable tllroh h abru- ion, and also of total loan. from I',.',, great deÂ¥thn and the swing between the reefs he Them met with far greater mucous in her our av. The theoretical ruute was the name from sun Francisco to Honolulu, 1 but, a» in the one nf the cables from New York to Europe, the,acrud route of the ideep sen cable was located to begin at a :0th some considerable dismige from San ‘ranciscu. 1'hsCgulantio deepeeit unblcs begin.or end,mt Nova South. Ncwipuitd. ltml that immediate vicinity. The The-Lin titrated from Point Conception, 220 miles south of Sum Francisco. and as miles west of the town of Santa. llarlmru, at the head of the Suntn Barbara channel. The place “a: considered by the electrical engineers to be favorable for nW‘ cable landing. The ground at that point Is high, and the water shoalsoil' on a mud bot. tom. __ "yr-say-ere-w-tet-deb: M southwest, and by way of the Great Circle. in the beginning of the survey soundings were made every two miles until a. depth of 900 futhoms was registered. Five miles out from l’ointConception sun bottum was funnd at eighty-seven futhoms, and at thirteen miles, 251 fathpms were registered; From' that point on toward the Hawaiian Islands the depth of water increased gradually to 3,000 hthoms. or more than three and a half miles. That great depth was the aver- age for many miles. When the bottom wns level soundings were taken every ten miles, and where it was irregular, yndulsring, or where reefs were discovered. soundings were taken at short intcrvuls down to two i in smile T _ sounded on the route was 3,228 feihoms, all a: paint about tlvyye hundred mi cs from Hllo. on the island of ilawaii,'where it is proposed to land the cable. The water shoaled to one thousand fathonw thi ty-five miles from Hilo, and shoaled giadunny from that Otl to the laiulin place, near which the 'depth is twenty Mellon“. . A short cahle will have to be laid to connect the island of Hawaii with Honolulu, bur'it is probable that the direct cahlé to Japan would he laid from Hilo to avoid tt-autsmisaioas and for reasnus of favorable landing. _ .._....._,. l These considerations have led to Hm [nap 1 pingnnn of threecompetitiv," routes. A, prim- om all teleszrams from New york for Chum. ‘Japan. or Australia “lust go nmlcr the At, _ thic to London. Tlumcu are three mute: to I Indus, two through to China und Japan, ‘Bml one noninmuuon from cthcr one of the Mhrm on to Australia and New Zeuland, The _ northern route in from Lontlun u, I)elnnurk. 'i, “trough “nun; and ACRUS< THF. N‘lliEl‘lAV WHIP 11.4, A by the great Ndrkhorn Telegraph Company In Vladivostnck. tlwerwtcrp seaboard, wlu-rc eonueetiorrtr with t'hinn and Japan aru'mmle. The Indrrrhtrc pea" mule is I Und line norms Hrrmhny, Russia, and I’vruin to Hg Persian Gulf,' and the-nu: to Bombay. The' eastern route. direct to China and Australia,, is by way of fume, the ktohtcrrtsttcau, Vl’ngypt. the Red. at, Arabia, India. ihmang, and Singapore; --nn.l Nunez by my oi Jan: and vhs'urriatra to Port Unu’in, on the north- ern coast The roman urn long: (if Je three projected Y'm-mv routes two start from British Colurulsirv, (mu {mulupnn and Australia, thenchm for Australnuhrect, Ivy the way of the Fiji lallmuls. The "only ern ruutc is projected from a pmnt not" E Victoria B. (3... ti, [:pllxlnk. 1n .tho Aleutian Islanth, mom-n to Acta Vishnu], and 'rom there to Japan. A srupphuur'rT' Iary cable would be run from Japan via Manila and Nita! (inimm to the northern Australian crush It is known " the (‘mmdhn route. The central. or Unite" States route, which has been surveyed to the S.m:l~ wiuh Iqlmnlslyy Um 'l'hMii. would run tyh'er' thnumte surveynd to Hawaii, (lumen ttt Japan nml Auslr tion m-w. F,ither would ramplmé th Japan: from Brubane, Alan-1m. 1 mu. nnw-vur, would nut, atfhrd guott'rateilities.ior rcachlny‘ Chum and Japan. . . The approximale (“Hanoi-I of each route an : Noun-m, Mull-h Columbia in Japan. 3.Cgiorrtile_ : central, Hun Frauds", to Japan 3,900 miles: snuthvrn. isritlsh (blur-“MI m Aunt-aha! 6.750 miles. The ex'ensmn of the first ahTe mule from Jspan In Annual in, prn’jectrgl nusudy for Government pur- po'", thnhly, 11y the ronte indicated, sy'nlul w Mt added dinnm‘p oi 3.000 milu, ff,"eTe'd'if,,t't'o',' of the probable cast “my: on”: by ench of the three. rnnws‘v-ry an; ‘mim'nte plncing it tit abont four, six. and Haven million dMlnrrl, "N :cl'ivrly for eneh main "hue. mid I; matted lions for Mt militant-I Japm to Anna)“; Nut. that pro‘imau. r " Andaman. Ind the British Cmrernmpnt are hum-Hy ehietiy iantad in the narthern up! mthlrn matey. and "mimic! art- quot to ah»: that either of than romu in he! In th erntral. Elertriciann concedes an vantage for the northern mm. in the than" dmmm between Intermediate ,pninu. ‘hloh would. ot' count, henna the upped a! trattsmiottVrit. “his! mum " in m f SANG Affect on the taritt for telegnmn. m0 M mache- OI m Ionhem TH F. URIATHST " E PTH Till r th' trrt'avr, Atmtrulnvdirect, uls. The north- m a point no” imsk, 1n .tho " Acta ylslmyl, thte from is only up- 4)" for there able - a... - - .-..._, -Te"e_ee-' talcum-manh- out! be bud»! i?vViyu)eerrur..itrt.tePAet from Sul‘rulolwo. _ " tq mid, dug; W ieiiti'd'fdltut " the who!“ on Oh when tout. [I Td much non hunk“; at“ a... I“! be ' rink ot ieoreuNisms A Britiah gun- bo-t computed "out? n urb- ot annoy: than; Nu 21’wa horn mum. u slam the poo-lurch.” roan. It.“ prowbh that M trusty two ttstar, l, by ("hum mum. to' C in and Annulk. would nary, sad that rivalry would can. [on at» lt bu bun Hunt.“ tltst the United she... should join with an British Gonmm'cmt in {not of m. north-m run“, mnkiuv in terminal at I plus. in chi Sum of Wuhin‘um in.taad of in British Colum. bia. Human ounce-Inn Ttid tho qentrd route by the The“. ma. “up ttrt.",,' rennin, to In “an. Titty K, hunt with: cubic in nestled it conceded, 3nd that Mel, be ooustrucred very H00 by wine _ ute its accepted by 'lldf2dC"h luulcd ' In every roll Ian" all hours are the mother's awn. from the time of Istr child'u hnbyhood to the twilight of his later life. No numnn his in no clone u the mystic band which “may. a mother to her children. Their lives, ones Mention with he'- Jn every hurt-belt 3nd every thought, are neverr,tutogather dissevered while life lube, and the mph in indeed an illgrnle who, under any provucnmn, speaks iiighyrsrly, of tire mother who emailed him in her "Young arml, 3nd who remains, through all-chancu and change. :11 lossrand gum, his friend, his chulrlpion, hi: deieadeit . ' .._... .. PBs ...,,.__. " 'lrhi; world never felt so cold before," said . man, middle-aged. prolperuul Ind self-reliant. " Mother died last week; I reams that I must henceforth Mona}. the storms alone. Fr Tet Wore are hours and hours. Thcdise mother, appreciating her opportunity and thp preciousnesa " the gift of (ipd which cnnhlch her to take part in carrying for- ward the race, is clmry M certain tunes and seasons, which are peculiarly hers for im- pression and for delight. One of these sea.- sops comes toward tire shunt, when it is time for the nursery supper, und the frolic before the children go to bed. Then, if using can. the mobher mourns u lylesse'i half hour iiaic-arasu'nssacsaikisuspvsuctlvtd as' ““13 it problems, pitting, cuiuiuiurTreGriFiiu,r l couhdeprys, and sending the .clsjldtiut tn their nightly rest happy and tranquil. The mother is more than mistaken-she is :ruul -.-it at this time she witlmlda a. carcass or speaks in reproofs or criticisms, except . that which is "lost gentle and loving. No shadow should be nutter-Ni to. full on a lit tle heart at bed time, h, wever important the occarion mny uppcnr for discipline. l Alrove Ml,-if the mother prize liar privilege: Might she will herself hear her children suyll their nightly prayers and hymns. 'l'onua- l l'ered a dittyitn he left even to the must trustworthy of unrscw, at this rite the mother otlieiates, aisoeiqting her own Iver enue and inllueuul. with the devrotiouat" habit, which, if formed at all, Intuit he termed enrly in " child's life. And after the little unit's have grown to girlhood” and boyhood, to u. certain independence of care and the development or their own individualities, who hut the mother has still the freedmu of their teams, and who else, excusing herself fur a. little while from the drawing-room and the society at friends, can glide softly in for a few moment's cirat mid a good-night kiss upon the utsfvurowed forehead: and the rounded checks BO softly resting on the thornless pillows of youth and health? l'he mother} hour is worth wntching for, Rent it crude her in the. ale horption of, ln-r intensely' occupiud duty, ur under the prezsure of her serial obliga- tions. ca 'r. How to qs', 1256 Goueberrg- The ssysomrisorry is not t,') highly cslocmud in thin country afrit is I Fmgland. It, is difficult to"get th variety “high Avill grow in our dry climate and attain Mme pericction, wlricVibmbraius' in the moist climate of England. Our 'eoyrruou variery of goosebcrry is so susceplihlc to mould that iv. has prej- “diced 'fruit-rtCrsers against the entire Mimics. sNevvrthelesss n gooselrerry pudding is a very good dessert. and " sauce of grcen gnnsnlwrrius an vxnellenr aeenrupvtimeut of hmiled Vlaml: or ahurmt any June, dinner. The srooselrer.ry is n fruit, that, is generally used inst hefurc it hummea rlpc. mid while it an ill poRerqrrn the mid of the imm :Lnre hm ry'. A'ripe gonwlwrry is rm insipid truit, of no special valm- fur making. I'Vl'l‘pl in the tiinwhorrrwel, unripe far "gomvhm'ry fool," whieh will»; for l ipn gnaw/her ‘lv! slaw- ml to a pulp and beaten with whipped urn-mu. An r'miliGhattcrwturlitw, with grain Mumm- herriewia inndi- as fMiowp,: l’uur il pint of milk over a alice of ruvrul, vrumlmd. Mir in ten cron [nlllClemllfuiS of llmu'. Arl.rl the ynllu of four "gun. half ,1 tt i'nlumulvil " salt, and finslly,the wl,:tt-; or Muir 03;; which have been heutcu m "tt' sstitt"frnit:'m' V Heat this hm- tec carefully aiul stir into it a quart of green grrusslrerrietr. Pill th, pudding in n. qvv'rrssml mould or lie it up in a. thitk ulqlli which lnw ..............,.y,.“ -r___ lar-' been beaten to "ty' sstitt"ttr,it:'m' V Heat this ban- lcr carefully ahd stir into it a quart of green guuscllerricn. Ppt th, pudding in a. qrmnml 'tiould or tie it up in a. thitk cloth wlrich hm; been leroughly gun-axed Bud floured. In it boil two hours. Nora! it with an English braudy-suuec' or an uhl~fu<hinn hard mum». To mukc a gooseixcrry saucv, trrp and mil a aulhuiunt numhvrnf gilt!" qowsoberrles. Add about. half a. pint (if water to n qunrluf Ivor- braudy-suuec' or an txlnl~leshinn hard 35mm. I To make a gooseixcrry saucv, trrp and mil a l aulhuiunt numhvrni gush qowsoberrles. Add I uhrmt half a. pint (if water to n qunrlof ber- } ries and let them new in an earthen ipkin i till they are thoroughly tender: 1"V,'l/)j,',', vnough to nmko them pulumhlo. hut. Mill l have them}. pleasant new. S'erv'utlrrs sauce I with meals as cranberry or apple R'atice are I served. Green gnnsnborriesulsu makes very ', _-.... .‘..:hl cw”... w--.“ nize pie, either Inked like " rhubarb pie in a crust, or tirst str'wed, lmkml withrm an 'lpper'crnsl. (“Ill then cnvered with a meringue, like u lmnml or apple mmingne pin. The 1“an of this fruit. ii .1 rurmus example: " the Iransmutation of langxmxa It is not the lurrry of the fumdiaoWowl which luvml Home, ml the .nnuu- would which lawn] Home. ml the spam to inrl/ctstrs,.rrtttit iwlite ly herrv or gorwclwrry, so cis' to Ms thorny Mam. ' A Shari time. r he via-ed Fttt eliu verse. which grow gxniom On be"): " nart " ml: l were written by We‘tminutor or reformers. In Frlnne it has been durum-brunt! that vaeninuinn newsman! to harm: suffering from glandrn. ' Among the wealthy chug" " annn it is eoetridertH uwrwtitied to ride . horse. going may th'stt . walk. dirty fa: Little IAIN" The mm who live. right My] in right has mar. power In his silence than another has by hit worth. Churn-hr it like be"! which rm. out "not Inn-it. Ind ,rtiieTi, iztirii "and uczduuhy "sound with swat as; " The Mother]! Hour. Say Well and Do Well, I). Dot ~"‘ Marin, 's “mid I H d " :16 orv,elserry is rm insqml fruit. w "1-, far making. t-‘(N‘pl in " b, :tlnxccilm for "gonwlmx-ry l o' a for ripn ghnutbvr On sLmv- I w heutvn with whippml urn-am. l “ rpmhlmg with gum" grnme- d la foliowg'. Pour 'A punt of _ in l oi hruml, crmnhml. Mir l spunufulsnf than Arl.d the i. 1!. half EL tt ‘x'ulumuful " suh,‘ Inland {nun-3g“ whirhlrave v'sstitt"frnit:'m' V “can this hM- l I ii,ri7irit'ariultoigreenl, 'm th,, vuddinu in a m-muml 'l, mush Bart mbtful wl tmp, of the by one of {are no)” Ltly 3:33;? ' m. I M y new " Why d he: Tynan prnusu n", you wash it? won't let me. mm in he: cyan. orally tbe prick- "lied In alluaion iaiia Liwu-Tx- Tm.’ 1uFria, i. iii puritg _ in t FIE: P,irtfHyy,t 'eiN1 tl,e,i,t'ggtt.t "It. Dirt did u- -. "'M"" - n" .m“, -- '_."'" mania that-bl. Huh than not Tunas 'ii'il,liili5,'ii; an. 'iffllh' thrs “in! mania, mot pain“, in My! up. iiiiratmos by teo maul of (to to” juice ., it se'.urod 'on tho Attr, ye, I J""'v--- -~-~â€" --e "___ '-"'". 7 __ V mud ,ci?,e.' on tr ad w hath: Mother t inn, wttets w, bum he tomy 'arte/dips',;)?, “I. It ot, I hymn, tho first “I aver -uestl no long no in Atush u have“ rhea. The boy was willy singing to Minn f , . _ ' 'iiii'aT,rirrikiri GTiisr" """--'. Oh. how they owned! “If. C Warmly In our saviour K In. loud at, His Irrqu" ring. Home. pub: tor A)". - My miBdtuw buck both. night whan I heard the“ lune words Iun. by . little band of Jumsiuunl in the ”lump: of Alpimull, and further lack Itill to the time when in Edit burgh I heard them in their umber“- clim mom. _ _ The manic coming from tho 9“de of the men, the word: telling oi tho fur-Away goal, thin hymn neeml peculiarly fitted for tho world-wide fume it Inn won. Art the mil. lioas who have sung it there Irv path-pl few who kitow how it came to be written. I have the story from the author, whom, Bible 01min 1 attended. _ _ " In 1V3)? in '43, the due I Im not nut-3.0L Andrew Yours ' was I young man--. tench er, in. St. '/lflfrlrlt',, s'eotlad-iuul much interested in Sunday school work. It Imp- pened tlsat, spemlin an evening with I family recently fromglndin, he hand mils of the ladies “lay Inmeching which struck him very much. "What is that?" Jae laid. '""3 .P.N.e". ., -_- _'""" T "Why," she Answered. "That i: a Hin. duslnui air called 'The H: y' land.' The water carriers sing it." m inked he: to play it again, which she did, Mid Again, iive, or six timpic The idea had occurred to him that the air ould be suitable for a Sunday aBliool ”yum. The ner day he wrote -__e-_e "'"d""r"" __ . "The 1rwprLau4" Hts scholar: took to it at once, visitors heard it, and it apiead and was ttasmsTtrtisd into msny languages ind sung in every olune,ornd @ulgiqgrciof the eaLer 51:11:01)“? 1an l 11195.5 any (36?on strung sweemesa, and thc, water clrrier'n sanglns brought [my]! to the ever-living streams. blorrl cu nnun-ua‘i shaln lry dosing": The, i ukuuu, Joe/IN/tmart pontdins t blow] cut-.Iluxg uvmunnb of the doings of a mun-um in; 1901mm! lately Aot in the Rsh 5huln lnurim. ll) Bengal. _The manner hid dcsirnyul 1m ,pvrsons befauLhe was cut dov.un Ilia lippctlla for flesh, his ferocity", his gunnmg. null his nuducnw werur'vaex. unwed in the leopard bribe, and they wquld haw? (hum crerht In a tigev. Ho dopopulnt- ed who‘n vjllages, fur Lhe were terror of his name Jon: the inhabitants flying J" Boon as be had mixed a solitary victim In their midst, i The villagers began to think the scourge [ w.“ " demon incarnate, and it was thnpos/ , Bible. to nrgmiinu them for the pursuit. A: i length some twenty elephants were brought 'itorrfether for the expedition, and I flying cylurutr of British planters set forth in ”me of the (lestmver. They searched for some limo in vain, until an old man, whose gwiie hml been pawn, can”: to report that mum tlum‘ry had lukgn refuge in a tama- (rind tree. . 1 " Wu as be had stated, only tlu, mun- ‘Mler haul by (his tinny hidden 'I'mnself it i the juvgln at the loot of tho tre", and {an ; the moment crutr.d not he found. The place l wns Surlqutlml, and the, vlcpimnu “Ranc- _ {d in chm: order to trample the Sigitive out 'idi his hiding plm'r. This maneuver suc- ( cisrulml “her fropwnt repetition: the' beam. iwtodrivonout of mwr. and a: once rid. tllul with l: -l§.u. ll. ' TF ‘u-vmne a legend ‘in the llis'v: . '*‘ l' , l; A deiry. T For miles around thé people never Ventur- ml to icave their imuaosafter nightmll until they heard he war! dead. lint this was no grout lnmlmnce lo him. He would seize Jet" from the Marauders when they were smoking the evening Pip-ed sometimes he iienetrated we very houses in the dead oithe night and carriedfnway children-- often William giving the slightest ulnrm to the Mlle! inlnnlqi. , n Ase. rule. he killed only one person pt. a tune ; but mnnemnns ’llc killed two, and, run one c,eeassiorr, three in one day. Clsildren and Gill women were his favorite. food." Arriving his victims there were SIX men. He ;w.mxmnuliwl by a sheer hankering for human i ilegh, Ion-be never touchefthe cattle. (:mtitmln is the soil on wl -tAnerraacit. F Sonpsuds are good for i plants. The Spirit of 1rmse'.fiisitnest. _ One of the earlirit lessons in training chil- dren to he unsellinh irto tnncthL-m to rd- juit'e in the happiness of othrers. It is It nutuvnl llllplllBL whon some rare plenum in o:'eted to one child in the family for those who Enuiml share the eujoynwnt to he n trnle envious. If the liltel' is singled out to take a delightful journey thd hrother prurybles hen-anus Innis nrrtincluded in tho invnfunun, if " favorite uncle makes Jack aprmnnt of a hicyclv. Mary pout: because nu gift in Ireqtowed upon her. All such must-,1 "(for an opportunity tor parents to develop in the (-hihlri-n that highest form of unincltiuhnew which finds its joy in tlw har- pinrxs of others, Few adults, howevcn you”; thin gram» in its fuluess. They nre fur rsadier to weep with those who uni-p than to rtrjoiee with those who rojniun. But nothing wins friends more easily than the hahit of entering heartily into the plus of others and expressing plus-ire nt Llwir succrgs or good fortune, "Your: letter this morning." writes one who ,h.“ always cultivated tins gift of loving Ek-uvlucss, " hr'mghl a groin happiness into my day Menus? oi the pleuure in More for you which it orovicled." Were thisspirit - prevalent how much sunshine, would he added to our lives. . In“... ,. The greMou of faults in to beconscioun of none.-- [(lnrlylo. Tho man who works for God “ways geta his pay m advance. Thr. donkey is tht, longest lived among“ our domestic Animals- Fortune has rarely condescended to be the companion of gvnius. _ [DisraelL _ Example f: the nrhonl of mankind, and they will ham " no other.-HBrtrbm Young men think old men fooU, And old men know yn‘unu men to he 'ro/c-tMetcalf. anpm‘em do“ {way 'with"uglittemts,' ind PVPtt mats: the beauty of beautr--fAmie. _ mm?» Willmm of Germany hu recog- l nixed Gen. Reina! Bsrrion u prelidunt of Huntede An nhaentminded huh" hy , shop in I; {oval (030M, ' Dr. ijntt Beck. at Newark, N. J., who in touring in Germany, has been "Potted for .peakimg dim uncanny of an Emmi and is in prison.- Protrtinetter is dangerous: snd Prince Ril- mnrck. who Tt'grd"d with Hover: b ad- miring young In in At Risingen an! had this eye injured. WM timer“ " unfortuna- u Mr. Hlmlsmm. at whom I “Md Old ‘womm hurled a " chunk " ot SHIN-w. In a ftght in Paddy Morart't _ an Cnnal "mt, Buff-lo, mi Maud-y night, Frederick Logren " yxmleukmd "an; nysn,.loI1ttrig M hmnm. Out.. win no. 7 AA; -----_ -. -_._.‘_ Silornfrm (iii/twi. The; qml at..." over I di-ttah" wan... T T ‘rharo h t bumpy land. bur, (Ir away. . “than tawp p? trio,tsstand, Jro1r'lpyitt tr Man-Eatiug geopud- 55W?!" Vlutely tuqlrtd n 11-le- ‘lcr nymmn'u chin, and an: Mm £53 the soil on which joy thrives - [Wm. C. Thackwell. molt gnrden

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