The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, September 23, 1880, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    .?
-
.t..M aawan.i4r - ----
MT
1-
f.
3z
$
".V
ftao
led to last.
lib cdrenitlcs
sted ue:
trlncles In Time's nhifttair sand.
i till Bow Id tae tar Shadow-land.
Tintlcif Magazine.
BOW TO
MAKE CHILDREN BE
LIABLE. - Those parents who most keenly feel
their responsibilities are in danger of
watching their children too closely.
It is surprising how early in a child's
life this surveillance becomes a source
of annoyance and irritation, through
the first instinctive emotion of self
respect, and how soon tho little ones
learn to to sly and deceive, hoping in
that way to escape this watchfulness
if possible. They conceal their child
ish saving! and doings if they are led
to feel that they are suspected of some
thing wrong. If they are unable to
understand what it is, they at least
realize that their parents do not trust
their honor. They may not be quito
able to put their annoyances from this
cause into words; but let this idea creep
into a young child's mind, and his per
ceptions grow old fast. Nothing so
soon develops tho evil most feared as
this ovcrwatchfulness.
Teach a child while yet little that
father and mother are inclined to com
mit some small matter to its care, and
without tho least show of doubt or fear
that the little one will fail; and those
parents who perhaps have forgotten in
some degree the spirit of their own
baby days will scarcely bo able to real
ize tho happiness this trust has be
stowed. The importance of the trust
will, of course, be gauged by tho ago
of the child. Begin this teaching early.
Take care that tho small pupil is not
taxed beyond its capacity, but let it
distinctly understand that the parent
is in earnest, and fully believes that the
commission will not be neglected.
None can estimate- how this event in a
child's life will be fixed in tho young
mind the first time it feels that its
parents have- turned to it with loving
confidence for the performance of some
little duties, and that they have trusted
to its honor. Nothing so clearly awak
ens self-respect as the feeling of re
sponsibility which comes with the
knowledge that they are trusted; and
tho caro and faithfulness which even
the youngest understands will be nec
essary to cxecuto the work to the
parents' satisfaction aro good seed
sown, which in later years will bear good
fruit, and amply rop'ay all tho trouble it
may have cottoprcjiaje-tho'soil for its
splnra.
That such teaching is not tho easiest
of all maternal duties every mother
knows full well, and all would much
rather do the work than bo subject to
the tcdiousness and anoyance of drilling
a child. But this is tho mother's mis
sion, not wisely delegated to another.
First show a child precisely how to do
certain things. Perhaps the lesson must
bo often repeated before it is done
well; but after some trials begin by
leaving those littlo chores for it to
do alone when tho mother is not
near. Tho .more trivial tho better
at first. For instance, say to the
littlo two-year-old: "Mamma must
go out a few minutes, but she don't
like to leave the nursery in such dis
order. Will not my littlo man pickup
all the blocks and playthings ho is not
using, and put them away just as
mamma likes to see them? And
Jennie also will, I know, fold her doll's
clothes iust as I have shown her, and
lav them neatly in tho drawer when her
,J .i.t ...:n
Fc
ay is over, x am siuu mis iuuui nui
ook von-nice when mamma returns."
If tho training is begun earty it soon
becomes easy for littlo folks to do many
things well. How proud and happy
these miniature men and women feel
when they have this token of their mo
ther's confidence in their ability to caro
for such things as she intrusts to them!
and of course it will be often necessary
to be a littlo short-sighted, and to pass
over a few items that will bear im
provement; but don't point them out
at once. Let the mistakes or defects
wait. Appear pleased with the first
effort. It will be time enough when the
next trial is made to say, "I would fold
this little dress so" or, "I would put
these books here just so." But give as
much sweet approval and praise as is
judicious to gladden and encourago
them in every effort. Gentle hints may
be interspersed with all tho approval
consistent with truth, and it will not be
long before the mother will find her
little prattlers quite competent to take
a large share in keeping their play
room and bedrooms in creditable order.
But if these lessons are not begun early
and made pleasant, children will have
acquired the habit of being wailed upon,
ana will learn to prefer it to helping
themselves.
Each year, as a child can bear it, the
importance of the trust and responsibili
ty may be increased. If the labor is
accepted as a love-offering, to save
mother's" time and strength, there
will soon be found willing hands and
happy' hearts, ready at all hours to
lighten tho labor and save many weary
steps, while at the same time the young
are learning a lesson that will do them
good all through life. To prevent these
little duties from becoming wearisome
as the child matures, vary the lessons
by changing often the nature of the
trust- Try some small thing that will
tax the taste or judgment a little. Send
the child out to buy something of no
great importance, so, that if any mis
take is made no' -harm will follow, yet
still important enough, .for. the.ohild to
feel the necessity of care and thought in
selecting. This will soon learn them
to exercise discrimination and judg
ment in small thmgs,and prepare tho
way to exercise these gifts in larger
matters.
An expedition of this kind rises be
fore me as one. of -the brightest of child
hood memories. It was a time of much
sickness both at homo and in the neigh-,
borhood. Mother was ill, the elder
children either on the sick-list or ab
sent. It was necessary to have sup
plies" from the shire town," twelve
miles distant, where most of the impor
tant shopping in former days was done,
and foreign groceries purchased. The
chaise was at the door, and father,
ready to start on the journey, was mak
ing oat the list of items by mother's
bedside, when he was summoned in
great haste to see a patient.
Here was a dilemma! The purchases
mutt be made; the patient must be
cared for. What was to be done? In
,ihe south hall door I was playine with
the baby, so near the sick-room JTcould
act fail to hear the consultation between
father and mother. He most go to his
patient, but who could be sent for the
articles so much needed?
The "tailoress" would be on hand in
the Boraing, and the , cloth must be
randy for her work. Atailoress was
la
nd by
xtgave! I
1. not twelve
r thouqht I could be
JeS'oJi a big thing. I felt
t?th7tJ2l&r. only to think that
bless her! thought I
iruxicu. tvncuicr it was ue
..-j-1 tt-.t f. .. -i
that I should go or not was just
then a secondary consideration. Yet I
was wide awake to catch father's reply.
"Send that child. What does sho
know of buying anything? And, Lucy,
this is a very important errand."
Ah, then my heart collapsed. I
didn't quite want to go the work
seemed so great but I did want father
to think me as trustworthy and capablo
as mother did.
" Yes, if you think it safe for her to
drive so far alone I think you may trust
her to do the errand well. The mer
chants and grocers aro old friends, and
will not take advantago of the child."
"Well, it's the only way left for us,"
said father, with an anxious, dissatisfied
tone, and tho great responsibility was
committed to my care.
It is vain to try to give the thoughts
that surged through my young brain in
that long ride to town, or how anxious
I was on the return ride lest I had for
gotten something, or made some III
advicd purchase But under all the
anxiety and excitement was a dull pain,
remembering as I did that father was
not quite ready to trust me. This pain
didn't leave me until, safe at home, all
the purchases laid out and examined,
he drew me to his kneo, close by moth
er's sick-bed, and kissing me, said,
"Well done, my brave girl! Hasn't sho
done well, mother?"
How much good that day's work,
with tho confidence given, did mo in
after years, giving me all needed cour
age when duties seemed too hard for
me, I can never estimate; but the most
precious of all was the thought of my
mother's trust aud father's approba
tion. It is onlv by such trust and teaching
that children can bo taught to find
pleasure in labor, or in important
cares. Emcl labor of children as a
duty, sternly command, watch with
constant fault-finding and suspicion,
and labor becomes drudgery, and care
of any kind a terror to the young. The
child cither becomes stubborn, or, if
timid and loving, is so nervously afraid
of being blamed that this very fear
leads to prevarication and deceit
Ah! if young mothers knew how
many hours of self-reproach their
mothers pa;s as they look back to the
time when they had their little ones
about them, recalling how many mis
takes they made by overstrictness and
lack of confidence, it might .save tho
young mothers much after-regret, and
their children from yielding to many
temptations.
But each one must have her own in
dividual experiences, and "old wives'
fables" aro not heeded until, after
many mistakes in middle ago, she
learns to know their value. Mrs. II.
W. liccchcr, in Harper's Bazar.
m
A Tragic Story Retold.
Moke than twenty years ago Niagara
witnessed a tragedy which, while of a
heart-rending character, was marked
by an act of true heroism seldom
equaled in grandeur. Mr. Charles
Aldington, a young man about twenty
three or twenty-four j'ears of age, was
allianced to Mfss Do Forrest, both being
residents of Buffalo. One day a happy
party, comprising Mrs. Do Forrest,
a younger daughter, Eva, a beautiful
child five or six years old, and "Char
ley" Addingtou, as his friends were ac
customed to call him visited the Falls.
They crossed tho bridge to Goat Island,
and, while resting under tho trees, lit
tle Eva strayed away from tho group,
and approaching the bank of the nar
row but deep and swift stream that
rushes between Goat Island and the
small island lying between it and tho
main American rapids, was amusing
herself by casting sticks into tho water
and watching them as they were
whirled swiftly away. Mrs. De For
rest, alarmed for her child's safety, re
quested Charley Addington to go after
her and bring her back. Charley at
once proceeded to the bank, and, think
ing to give the little one a fright, ap
proached her stealthily, from behind,
and, catching Her under the arms, held
her over the stream. The startled
child threw up her littlo arms over her
head, and instnntly she slipped through
young Addington's hands and fell into
the rapids.
The realization of tho horrible
calamity must have como to Adding
ton's brain with the rapidity of the
lightning's flash. He saw that his rash
act had cost the child's life that only
one desperate chance of saving har re
mained that tho world was at an end
for him forever. Tearing off his coat,
he rushed along tho bank until he had
1)assed littlo Eva, who was kept afloat
y her clothing; then, plunging in
ahead of her, he seized tho chad and
desperately attempted to throw her up
on the bank. As he mado tho effort he
fell back in the rapids and was whirled
over tho small fall that intervenes be
tween the American Horse Shoe Falls.
Little Eva struck the top of the bank,
but all power had apparently gone
from her, and she rolled back into the
stream and was hurried to her dread
ful fate. The mother and sister stood
powerless and paralyzed with horror
while the tragedy, almost instanta
neous in its action, passed beforo their
eves, leaving its dark cloud hanging
tover all their futuro lives. Charley
Addington had mado a hero's atone
ment for his thoughtless and reckless
act. His father he was an only son-.-was
in tho habit of visiting th'e Falls
once a week for years after the
tragedy, and ho would sit for hours
gazing at tho spot where his son and
little Eva had met thoir Ueaths. Ho
became well known at tho Falls, and
there were many who believed that he
would one day voluntarily seek the
same fate that his son, in his heroism,
had courted. But his sad pilgrimage
had no such ending. N. Y. Hoiir.
Two Tery Tall Skeletons.
The following was copied verbatim
from a note made in his pocket almanac
by the late Judge Atlee: "On the 24th
of May, 1798, being at Hanover (York
County, Pa.,) in company "with Chief
Justice McKcan, Judge Bryan, Mr.
Burd and others, on our way to Frank
lin, and, taking a viow of the town, in
company with Mr. McAlister, and sev
eral other respectable inhabitants, we
went to Mr. Neese's tan-yard, where we
were shown a place near the currying
house from whence (in digging to sink
a tan-vat) some years ago were taken
two skeletons of" human bodies. They
lay close beside each other, and meas
ured about eleven feet three inches in
length; the bones were entire, but on
being taken up and exposed to the air
they presently crumbled and fell to
pieces. Hklr. McAlister and some others
mentioned that they and many" others
had seen them, and Mr. McAlister, who
is a tall man, about six feet four inches
high, mentioned that the principal bone
of the leg of one of theml being placed
by the side of -his log, reached from his
ankle a considerable way up his thigh,
pointimr a small distance below the hip
I bone." Harrisburg (ftr.) Tclegreph.
laiilv
away the
mer. and the scene
auiet and peaceful that oar
lyes Would have grown sleepy had we
not known that ten minutes more was
to change it into a raging hell. In the
woods oehind us we could hear the
tramp of regiment and brigades in
th forest across the peaceful meadow
regiments and brigades of the enemy
were coming into position. One could
have crossed tho ineadow and scarcely
notice tiny of the preparations for the
bloody struggle ready to bogin.
Now came that dreadful silence which
always falls upon an army iust befare
the ffamo of destruction is lighted. It
is this silence that makes men turn pale
and tremble. If it lasts only five min
utes it seems a whole day. There is no
loud talk no wonls of jest The moat
ruckleiis man feels tho weight of that
ominous silence. H the lino is to be
dressed the order is given in a low
voice, and tho mon step softly. Tho
horses feel the oppression as "well as
the men- Some move uneasily about,
others staud perfectly quiet ears point
ed forward and eyes searching the
woods bevond.
"Crash! Bang! Roar!"
The opening of the battle comes as
suddenly as a thunder-clap, and there
is a movement of relief up and down
the lines. Tho spell is broken in an in
stant, and men and horsos aro anxious
to movo. Tho songs of birds aro re-
(ilaced by the roar of guns, tho sleepy
laze in the air gives way to a cloud of
smoke, and peace stands aghast as tho
murderous shells strike in solid lines
and scatter men or fragments of men
over tho grass and even among tho
limbs of the trees.
We aro roady to movo, but we stind
as if on parade. The brigade to tho
left swings out and the one to tho right
is slowly hidden by the smoke. Bullets
are singing over our heads and throw
ing up the dirt in front but wo are held
there until the curses of tho men be
como loud and denp.
All of a sudden tho roar is increased.
Tho enemy has planted a battery on a
hill to our left, aud is plunging shot and
shell into tho (lank of all the troops on
our right Down our front sweeps, an
avalancho of destruction, clearing our
own lines, and shattering others be
yond. Now wo move and chango front to
face tho battery. The line in front of
U3 stalks grimly into the smoke, and
the line behind us makes its presenco
known by a steady tramp! tramp!
tramp! One cannot tell whether it is
a singlo regiment or a whole brigade
moving oQ to charge the battery, for the
smoko has now dnftod down upon us
until tho tenth man to the right or left
can barely bo counted. Wo can hear
no order, but tho line goes straight
ahead until clearofadipin tho meadow,
and then it suddenly springs forward.
Men cheer, but in that awful roar the
voico of a man could not be heard ten
feet away.
Men fall to the right and left The
lino sturablos over corpses as it hurries
on. There are Hashes in the smoke
cloud, terriblo explosions in tho air.
and men are stepped on or leaped over
as they throw up their arn)3 and fall up
on the grass and scream out in agony
of mortal wound. It is a nightmare of
death. The rank and file hear no orders,
see no officers, and yet they push on,
the line now dressed a3 if on parade
again bent like a crawling . serpent
Bayonets are fixed, but we are right
upon the guns before wo sec our enemy.
No one has an order to give, and no order
could be heard. Tho line moves ahead
or falls back as if it were controlled by
a lever, and yet no one can see how.
Each man acts for himself, and yet all
act together.
There is a struggle over the guns.
Men are shot and bayoneted as they
ram home the charges. The guns are
discharged upon struggling masses not
ten feet from the muzzles. Now our
linos retreat Why so we cannot tell.
A dozen of us aro "fighting over a field
pieco shooting, stabbing and clubbing
but we fall back and reform. Half of
the guus are silent, but the others are
pouring grape into us across a space
not three hundred feet wide. No one
seems to give any orders, but all at
onco our fines movo forward again
with a cheer. No one sees his right or
left-hand man. For the time each one
is alone. The lino bends back doubles
up straightens out surges ahead
falls back springs forward, and again
we aro among tho field pieces. Bayo
nets and sabers clash. Muskets are
clubbed to deal blows after bayonets
are broken. There is a terrible roar
a thick smoke a constant cheering,
and the horrible nightmare forces a
singlo man to attack a dozen.
Ah! what i3 this? All at once there
is a lull. Men look around in astonish
ment. Wounds unfclt livo minutes ago
begin to bring groans now. What has
happened? The smoko drifts away and
the explanation is at hand. We have
captured the guns and killed, captured
or routed tho regiment of infantry in
support It was a bayonet charge, re
sisted by bayonets, and we have won.
Thero are ten acres of meadow covered
with dead and wonnded with knap
sacks, haversacks, canteens, muskets
and swords, and yet it was only one
simple move on the chess-board of tho
battle-field. Tho guns are turned on
the enemy, our lines re-formed in rear,
and men ask if it is really so that we
stalked in the shadow of death for half
an hour. It seems like a dream; it
might bo a dream but for the awful
sights all around us but for the awful
cries coming up from the wounded as
thirst and pain do their work. Detroit
Free Press.
-
LiriBg Beyond Oar Means.
I have often wondered why it was
that people will be so utterly "blind to
their own interest and future welfare as
to live in a style beyond their income,
so that they can appear as others, who
are more highly favored financially, but
which can only bring to them galling
mortification and misery in the end. 1
know it is of quite frequent occurrence
in large cities that a family may to-day
be apparently wealthy and move in the
best society, while to-morrow's sun
may find them penniless and friendless.
Yet whilo in the country comparatively
few keep up this hollow show, we are
not without such people. I once knew
a farmer s family, who, by industry and
economy had become what was thought
very comfortably situated. The mother,
however, had some very high notions
of her own. about education and refine
ment (who, by the way was very illiterate).-
and said her daughters must
not work as She had to, but be educated.
And as they could not afford to do all
this and keep up a stylish appearance
too, they did not hire servants, and so
the whole burden of household cares
rested on her alone. During vacation
their time was wholly occupied playing
croquet going a-nutting, or picnicking
and entertaining their newly-made
friends, therefore the mother's work
was greatly increased, instead of being
diminished by their assistance. There
was no time for the poor tired woman
ever to take a peep into a book or
paper, and thereby Keep pace with her
daughters in the attainment of general
knowledge. At last their education
was considered finished." Then
arose a most perplexing question as
what was to bo done with.mother, as
she must now be introduced, though
not prepared for so elevated a position.
Then they resorted to silks and cash
meres, hair-dye and gold spectacles;
n eerer take the place
mind and reused manners.
minlt of all this was that the
m hirlf nerfectlv obnoxious to all
ier old friends and acquaintances, aad.
worse than all. she utterly aesptseu
people that worked, "they were all
coarse and Ignorant" and the whole
extent of her conversation was about
her rcSaed daughters. When last I
saw her I hardly recognized her in her
Uisguise, savo ay ncrannu "" i
and common-piaco taiK. mis w uk
the only instance I could relate; there
j- f.ir'too manr others, toms of which
made such despera'c efforts to keep up j
a certain style that thoir farms were J
mortgaged, and finally sold, and they .
awoke to the awful reality that they had I
voluntarily gone down into tho macl- S
Btrotn of financial ruin, and were penni-
less. Their fa-hionable friends care
nothing for them now as they hive lost j
their "fine feathers." and their old
neighbors whom they forsook in pros-
perity. in return cure nothing for their j
friendshin. and so they sink into no-1
served insignificance. Should refined,
int.lliir..nt nAonlo. who never appear
aught save what they really aro, recog- j
nizo or humor "Mrs. Shoddy's" pre-,
ioninn' Mfiw i noeietv to rid itself
of herpresence? Cor. Cleveland Herald.
... m
Piaacer Experience oa the Ohio aid
Mississippi.
Tue bravo old warrior. General Will
iam O. Butler, who died Last Friday at
the advanced age of eighty-seven, was
something more than a soldier. Ho
was a noot and had at times givc7n un
doubted evidence of possessing the ili-
vino aiuaius. tun pocin euiiuiieuujujj
"O toatman. wind that bom airiltj,
Vor never dM tho IWieiitwr tlr
Upon it Umbcm bowm be.r
So wIM. no tott, m swot a Btrnln,
will long hold its placo among the gems
of American poetry. But tho days
when the only means of transportation
on our great Western rivers was the
flat-boat havo passed away. It may al
most bo said to bo a thing of the past,
and hence the lino flavor of General
Butler's poom is lost to a great degree
to a generation who only know of it by
tradition.
A voyage from Pittsburgh to New
Orleans" by flatboat was an enterprise
once of greater peril than a tour around
the world is now. It wa certain to bo
full of adventure. It required montlis
for its accomplishment A shot from
the shore by some Indian or reckless
desperado might termiuate abruptly tho
voyago and tho lives of tho navigators
in blood. A moment's neglect of the
steersman might wreck tho unshapely
craft and all tho hopes of its owners
hundreds of miles from home and in an
inhospitable wilderness. There was
danger everywhere in the currents,
eddies, whirlpools, bayous and snags of
tho tortuous Father of Waters; but
thero was no less danger from the half
eivilizod dwellers on the bauks. The
outlawed criminals and the desperate
adventurers from civilization skulked
about tho shores or prowled with light
canoes among the bayou3 and creeks,
watching for chances to plunder, even
it murder was necessary to aid them.
A flatboat voyage down the great rivers
was perilous enough from natural
causes, even if man's inhumanity to
man had not incro.ised the peril. In
thoso days the Government had not
thought of suagboals, and the Missis
sippi whs full of half-hidden dangers.
The current was constantly changing.
It was easy to be deceived into an old
channel from which there was no re
turn. B.iyous were often traps watery
culs-dc-sac leading nowhere but to
ruin. Tho organized river pirates and
wreckers wcro always on the lookout
for unwary vo3'agers, so that a blight
mishap generally ended in complete
disaster. If, under such circumstances,
tho flatboat man reached his distant
home, footsore and weary but penni
less months after leaving it, lie was
lucky.
lu tho earl days of flatboating a safe
return, evon when the veuture had not
proved financially profitable, was a
grand event and the occasion of tumul
tuous joy. The business bred a certain
class who sought it for its adventure
and dangers as much as for its profits.
The river pirates met in the flat-boatmen
of that early day a class ready,
eager and willing for tho fray--a class
which, like tho ranchcros of the plains,
accounted a trip tame and spiritless if
unattended with danger. They were
rough and ready, careless and care
free. Dreamily floating down the
Ohio, they whiled away with song and
danco tho lazy hours. JTho boatman's
horn waked tho echoes from distant
hills more musical than steamboat
whistle or that ear-distracting horror,
the calliope. It was a romantic life,
befitting the graud scenory and rude
time. Pfincty days on a slow-moving
flat-boat, the scenery constantly chang
ing but ever wild aud beautiful, was a
thing never to be forgotten. The spice
of danger in it gave it zest. An occa
sional adventure with river sharks only
relieved monotony and added interest
It is difficult for one looking on tho
Ohio River to realize that once flat
boats, broad-horns, the queerest craft
that ever floated, did all the transporta
tion business from its head-waters to
New Orleans. A flat-boat scarce
moving, with rude arrangements for
cooking on deck, almost under water,
with long oars awkwardly attached to
the Bides, is a type of its time almost as
grotesque and odd as the Viking ship
recently dug up in Norway. Perhaps
one day it will excite as much archaeo
logical wonder, for it already recalls a
time wo fail to understand a condition
of society and of our country we can
scarcely appreciate. The leisure-loving,
deliberate, slow-moving flat-boat was
fast enough for its day and people.
There was luck in its leisure. But the
flat-boat has passed away, and the boat
man never will wind his horn again.
He sleeps as soundly as the warrior
poet and his ear is as dead to the sad,
sweet music of the boatman's horn.
Indianapolis Journal.
Double and Twisted.
A laughable circumstance once
took place upon a trial in Lancashire,
where the Rev. Mr. Woad was exam
ined as a witness. Upon giving his
name, Ottiwell Wood, the Judge ad
dressing the reverend person, said:
"Pray, Mr. Wood, how do you spell
your name?" The old gentleman re
plied: "O double T,
I double U,
E double L,
Double U,
Doub'o O, D."
Upon which the astonished lawyer
laid down his pen, saying it was the
most extraordinary name he had ever
met in his life, and after two or three
attempts, declared ho was unable to
record it The court was convulsed
with laughter.
A Lever's Bereave.
.
The latest and worst case of lover's
revenge comes from - Australia. A
young man whose affianced went back
on him and broke off their engagement
received a note from her asking him to
return the look of her hair which he
had. He looked over his trunk, he
collected a heap of tresses, culled from
various sources during his love-making
career, and forwardedthem in a bundle
to his lady love, inclosing a note to the
effect that he had really forgotten
which was hers, but she might select it
from those forwarded and return the
rest at her earliest convenience- The
storv got out and the neighborhood
felt so wnn for her that she went oh a
prolonged visit to her country cousins.
m
A Scxbcrt fPa.) cat has adopted a
j family of young squirrels.
mOXAL A5D UTEEIKT.
Mr. Sothkrx. speaking of hw pret
est illse. aya he has as xaaay lives as
a cat. but this may be his alnth.
B ex Peklxy Poo he has a ncrh um
pipe, presented to hlns by Joaquin Mill
er, which Tcanrson smoked aad col
ored. Mil Cojtwat sy that Carltle
neither read nor write, but Hs oa a
ofa and longs for death. Carlyle will
be eighty-two la December.
The three Lonjtfcllow brothers
Prof. Henry W.. and the Revs. Samuel
and Alexander hare been visiting to
iithcr at their oil home ia Portland.
Me.
Edwin Boom, after visitlnsr Ger
manv. Italy and France, will return to
London in "September. !i hut not as
yet made any definite English engagc
mentr Salvini. the gnat Italian tragedian,
has been engaged to appear in thi
country the cothtug season, and a com
pany is already in process of organisa
tion to support him.
Puor. H. M. Paul, formerly cf the
Naval Observatory at Washington, ha
sailed for Japan, where he will ttko tha
position of Professor of Astronomy at
the Univerbity of Tokio.
Alice: in Wonderland i to be mar
ried. She is Mis Alice Liddell. daugh
ter of the Dean of Christ Church, au
thor of the marvelous tale, who wroto it
for her: and she is engaged to Mr. Reg
inald llargreaves. of Cuffnellt
Jcimje Black writes from abroad
tliat " Mr. Uradla'igh has great intel
lectual powers, and he looks it in face
and figure." Tho Judge adds that he
is not o handsome 'as Mr. IngcroH.
" or nearly so brilliant a talker, but as
a bold blasphemer ho can beat his Amer
ican rival all hollow."
Geouge Eliot's retirement from
literature is meutioned as a settled
thing by the Literary Sews. It quotes
her as often saying that her late hus
band, Mr. Lowes, was a great mental
.stimulus to her. constantly encouraging
her in her work. Isn't that rather
slighting her present husband?
James Rusiell Lowell's speech at
tho Savage Club supper has been much
applauded by Ixmdouers. "It was ad
mirable in itself," says tho London
World, " perfectly delivered in a soft,
low-toneu, and yet penetrating voice."
Mr. Lowell is described as a wonder
fully young-loukini- American, whom it
Is diihcult to believe is sixty-one years
old.
It is feared thai the death of John G.
Saxe's wife will have a fatal cflect on
tho poet Ho has been bedridden for
some time, and was devotedly attached
to her, having in several of his works
drawn his be.st woman, both as to love
liness of person and beauty of moral
character, so plainly after his wife th.it
friends always recognized the port i nit
Miss Saxo, the only living daughter, is
also an invalid, and could not attend
her mother's funeral.
More Wife than Couutry.
Thi? other night, soon after a ward
meeting had opened, ono of the elect
ors present began edging for tho tloor
as if he meant to leae the place. He
was soon stopped by a friend, who said:
"Don't leave us now, I want you to
hear what that speaker is sajing. Hear
that! He says we must triumph or the
country is doomed."
" Yes. I know, but I've got to edge
along towards home," was the reply.
"Home? Great heavens! liow'can
3ou talk of going home until he has
finished that speech? There he goes
ng.iin! He asks if you want to see
grass growing in the streets nl our
cities our fertile farms returned to the
wilderness our families crowding the
poor-houses until thero is no longer
room to receive another?"
"No, I don't know as I would, but I
guess I'll sort o' work my way out"
"Wait fifteen minutes ten lire
wait until he finishes. There it is
again! He asks whether you are a free
mau or a slave? He wants to know if
you have forgotten tho patriotic prin
ciples defended b the blood of your
grundsircs if you have forgotten the
sound of liberty bell?"
" I don't know as I have, but I must
go really I must."
" Hear that hear that! Ho says
your country will bless you."
" I can't say as to that," replied tho
man. as he crowded along; " but I'm
deatl sure that the old woman will if I
don't git home in time to put this cod
fish to soak for breakfast!"
"Great guns! but do you prefer coil
fish to liberty?" exclaimed the other.
"I don't know as I do, but I gitmoro
of it."
" And you will see this country min
edsee her go to destruction?"
"I'd be kinder sorry to see her go
down hill," slowly observed the delin
quent, as he reached tho door. " but if
you had a wife who couil begin jawing
at ten o'closk and not lose a minute
until daylight, and then end up with a
grand smash of crockery and a fit ot
hysterics, j'ou'd kinder stand off as I do
and let this glorious old Republic
squeeze through some mighty fine knot
holes." Detroit Free Pres3.
Palestine.
The progress which has been made
in Palestine during the lat twenty-five
ears U especially evident in the erec
tion of man new buildings. In Jeru
salem, inside the town, ruined hous?
have been restored or rebuilt Outride
the old town are entirely new suburbs,
tho extension being made especially
toward the west. The Jews have
formed among themselves building so
cieties, which have erected long'bar-rack-like
buildings adapted for several
families. The number of dwellings
during the Last twenty-five years has
been trebled. Bethlehem conveys the
impression of a newly-built town. In
Jaffathetown wall has "been demolished,
the ditch filled up and a number of new
houses and magazines, even palatial
buildings, have been erected. So also
in the gardens of Jaffa many new houses
have been erected, and to the south and
north of the town complete Arabic sub
urbs, mostly by sottlers from Egypt
In Ramlch, also, new houses arc seen,
still more in Haifa. Nazareth has in
creased in size, and looks as if it bad
been rebuilt Tiberias also has its new
houses; in Jenin a new military arsenal
has been erected, as also in Nablus,
along with a fine new barrack. In the
latter place tho once lonely valley
toward the east has assnmed quite a
homely aspect, and in the town arc
manv new private buildings and also a
new khan; there arealso the new school,
the Roman monastery and the buildings
of the Protestant Mission. In Bethle
hem a new barrack and arsenal have
been erected. Through the schools and
the increasing trade the working people
have acquired greater style and taste,
and the newer houses are thns mostly
a great improvement on the old not
the oldest which, as a rule, are well
built Nearly all the houses have now
jla3s windows, a rare thing twenty
o
years ago.
Heard in mid-channel: Robinson
You've seen more of the world than
most people. Mrs. Smart Now where
have you met the handsomest, pleas
antest and best-bred people ? Fair
American "Well, among your British
aristocracy." Robinson"" Indeed!
That is most gratifying to my pride as
an Englishman. And where have you
encountered a the ugliest, vnlgarest
and most offensive specimens of hu
manity ? Fair American " Well,
among your British aristocracyP'
ft.';.
The man who places riches above
everything else is apt to think the end
justifies his meanness. &. 0. ricayuiu.
' .
ALL sorts.
No Slouch A ull hat
Gktst.xaL B. K. BCTt.au ow tox
latrrtU la the gold miatt of ta Paci&e
coast,
A ruux tsn rbf lah marks th
grave of (kjwrl Sa HotMtoa at
HustrrUlf, Texas.
Llotx 1L Wiclck. priadpal chief of
tbeCacrote Indian la North Caro
Itaa. died of eo&HRpUo8 recently.
A r as r peach trahs. direct frsa th
orchards of Wetawaro aad MarjUad.
runs Into Botoa early every momta.
The Republican candidt for Dl
gatc in Congre' from Nc Mxfao I
tinned Tranquclino Luaa the tranquil
moon.
Calvlv Stxes. an eccntric charac
ter of Snffleld. Coca, refuw Xa hai
hand with xny one. and kx aot doa
o for years.
The creat majority of the Inhabitants
of Portugal hire chcitnut hair and
brown eve, although there L also a de
cidedly blonde type.
I) i.v Mace caa tell to a fraction of a
fecund how fat he drives a bore. with
out consulting a wateh. and wtafl other
driver have the Same faculty.
A mule in the Newark Cement Com
panv works refuses to do service alter
the oe',1 iWHtnds tbo hour of noon. If
he is hoWting a load ho deliberately al
lows It to settle back. After feeding
bo allow himself to bo hitched up. but
no amount of coaaing or boating will
Induce him to work until after tho one
o'clock whistle.
A ccihoCj jiht in St Lours Is that
of a bearded, intelligent-looking man
of forty playing with preat xiMt at
marble, rolling a boon, dying a kite,
or w.dkin; on stilts with tho ehlldren
of his neighborhood. In spite of his
imjKJMu;: head, he is scarcely the eoual
in menial development of the children
with whom ho plays.
At Delaware Station. N. J., when
the sky was perfectly clear, there wai
secn receutly, ou tho Delaware Rite,
a complete circle embracing all the
colors of tho rainbow It lav fiat
ujKin the water while the un wa re
flected from tho center in a thouand
beams of dazzling light Tho ring was
probably one hundred feet In diameter.
The Railway Henevolent Institution
of Great Hritain is a jrrand chanty
.-.I
which has no counterpart in this coun
try. During the past year it distributed
to widows, orphans ami disabled mem
bers over fSO.OOO. Iu operations aro
to bo &till further extended. Among
other plans is one for the erection of an
orphanage, toward which one ladv has
pledged iXOOO. anil a legacy of 910.000
has recently been left to the institution.
Josiil'a J A co li, a wealthy and Influ
ential member of the Society of Friends
of Limerick, Ireland, has arrived In
Philadelphia with his family and serv
ants, ami will settle on a farm in
Chester County. Pa. Ono of his
reasons for leaving Ireland U his objec
tion to the law which makes vaccination
compulsory. The Government has en
forced the'penalty of .! aaint him
several times. A singular coincidence
has occurred in conne 'lion with Mr.
Jacob's purchase of a farm. Tho orig
inal owner of the property was Isaac
Jackson, a great-grandfather of Mr.
Jacobs' mother. Mr. Jacob knew
nothing about his relationship to tho
first owner of tho farm when ho went
to buy it; knew nothing about the
American branch of his family, and ko
lected a part of Chester County thickly
populated by a branch of hi mother's
family without ktiowing it
Work Kcueucd Upon tho Washington
Monument.
TwENTV-Fivr. years ago work was sus
pended on tho Washington Monument,
after having attained the height of liO
feet. In the years that intervened be
tween the stoppage of work up to two
years ao nothing was done towanl
completing the structure, and it Mood
as an emblem of unpatriotic devotion
of a great people to the illiutrlous man
who led the American armie.s to victory
over an oppressive foe. One hundred
years after the birth of the Amerii an
llcpublic. Congress took step to com
plete the monument Two years and
more were devoted to strengthening
the foundations, so that the monument
would stand tho pre5.suro of the addi
tional 20,000 tons of stone necessary to
take it up to the height originally in
tended 500 feet. For some weeks now
the top of the monument has thown
signs of activity and life. 'J he old
board covering and the rotten derrick,
which stood the Hummer heat and tho
wintry blasts for twenty-five oars. dis
appeared, and in their places nppeared
evidences of modern machinery and
hoisting apparatus, and a score of work
men engaged in removing the upper
layers of Mone, injured by the water
and the frosts. Under the direction of
Colonel Casey, tho Commissioner ot
Public Buildings and Grounds, the work
upon the monument has progressed
very rapidly. Tho diameter of the
mouument at tho base is fifty-six feet,
of which thirtj--one feet is of mason
ry, the well-hole in the center be
ing twentv-live feet At tho height
jf 150 feet the thickness of the ma-on-rv
is eleven feet eight inches, and this
Colonel Casey thiuks is wholly unnec
essary, anil so he proposes from thij
point" up to reduce tho thickness about
three feet, making the distance from
the outside edge of the marble to tho
inside line of the granite eight feet eight
inches. By doing this the base of tho
monument will be relieved of much
pressure and the structuro will b
stronger. The filling in back of the
marble to the line of the well hole from
the base up to the present height has
been done with irregular-sized blue
stone and cement In removing tho
upper laver of stone for the distance ol
about two and a half feet all sizes ot
stone were found from the size of a
man's hand to a block eighteen inches
thick and two or three feet in length.
An even surface has now been made,
and from this point up nothing but
cut granite blocks, every ono made to
lit in its placo. will ic nut in. The old
plan of putting in blucstone helter
skelter will not be followed, but instead
a regular course of granite. An ele
vator has been erected inide the mon
ument which carries all the stone and
material to the top, and as the work
progresses this will be extended up
wards also. The elevator Ls a perma
nent one, and when the monument is
finished will be used to take pa?engcrs
to the top. Colonel Caey told your
correspondent while standing on the
top of the monument that he expected
to add twenty-five feet to the height
before cold weather sets in- Before
the end of this fiscal year, the 50th of
next June, he feels confident that sev
enty feet will be added to the monu
ment, making the height then 22) feet
A large number of memorial jstoncs,
contributed to the monument twenty
five or thirty years ago. are in a small
frame building on the monument
gronnds. These he docs not intend to
bni'd into the monument proper, but
will have them made thin and fastened
on the inside as it goes up bv copper
bolts. As these stone are of irregular
sizes. Colonel Ca?ey says it will not be
advisable to put them into the wall of
the monument proper, because it will
interfere with the regularity of the
structure. All will be used, however,
and made to show to advantage. Verr
many of the memorial stoaes in the
monument on the inside facing the
well-hole, are badly injured by the wa
ter running down upon them aad tk
effects of the weather. A number of
these were elaborately lettered in gilt,
and the lettering is almost illegible.
Washington Cor. Ffdladelfttia DulkHn.
Oar Too Bccr!.
tms pirrsMXSCS.
w Ta -? ESS IS3
tuw fcwtKw i trT
k!Ul
I . . .. -. . I
, . ?"' ..-rr: ., -j
Ittlto
os t Kin iitr "1
t! r hniJL
w rem t a fv J r .
, juj4 i JJUJo tee ALJ
am u ?:-irv?isr
iHMlkbll)B
ft. . frci(rri4 l H l" J
Kf" IX. ltrt .V. 1 Mf"-
50!
"Nor CLCAtt. hrp uJ rt"xi?; l
Wild i CiMJ.- ...-.-
to arret attention
.. , .. . .. runh a aeraUr
as that - remarked one rentlcaa to
' aether. aXy were I5ng f
another, as they
I - It 1; not often any one hears Jt The
bov w ho uttered
tuphatleAHy. He I a
, in orphan, who lives with,
about two relics o H
IV Vl "- - -
mi to a em
.aotuer hero.
r Ucrw.
ht uncle.
miles oS. H
--.. . I-- i.nn.)n.. Wi
svalK la every vitj,. ---- ,
'unch. and walks back at nJ-ht He
of j,im
UuV.e a character. I should Hlo
to sea htm. Boys of sufch aturdr make-
up are getting to be caree. hile the
world never had more need of them
than now." , L
All that U true; and If you wish to
ee Ned conie this way."
They moved on a low tepa. pausing
,. .r. ii...n ..Hirt near hlch a groupof
, lad were dtscavsing omo exciting
; iHielioli.
.tt Utt't rlrbt. and I won't have any
thlug to do with it. W hen I say no t
- - " -... . -
, nits'" iu"
Well, anyway, you neodn t apeak
o loud aud lull evcrvoouy aoouv .
, was responded Impatiently to thU deo-
o loud aud lell everybody about it.
Ui.lK- t.t tlil iIjMI.
go
1 1 never go In for
wrong.
told you no." for to begin with. And
xou're the ones to blame if Uwitf been
"...t- fn "
IMIJ "" . .... ... .
r. v ...i n..Hi.n
I should like to ce
f, :.M" ' "
vou n Ullllinn. .
Yc. ir." And the boy removed
hl ha. as he pawed through the gate
And waited to hear what Mr. Vaimer
mh'lit tiav to him
I las your undo any apples to enr
" No. ffir. He had some, but lie. has
r.
old them. I've got two buaheU that
were my idiaro tor picking. Should
you llko to buy them iir?"
Ye, if wu can agree ujKin tho price.
Do you know just how much they aro
worth?"
Vfn. elr."
11 AH right, then, 1 will call for them.
I and you may call at my houso for tho
pay."
Tho idtort interview afforded tho
stntnircr nn opportunity tooberve Neil
Dunl.ni closely. Tim next day a call
was made nt Ills uncle's, and although
work enough, too. to pay . arrive!. ail coociumcm .-, t" " '"
nod due mow towards running hU WUlkl haVf, got wrong; and sum cu
uncle'-farm than the old man doo him. thry ha.1. for hnxton
i elf. I lel tae eoanw-irvw ".. t Mil WA. HOi ,.,..,.... .- - - - -,
in tho ehool nd the greatett favorite. hU hu f punctuality helped to iul
. i. .,..!.. v....... i.t whit to ii)rct i li... ii,A ..tt mi Ufit ho na.
r.von wu nuw" jm ...- -- - - tll
Vou never m, m for fun." &k. J'0"- .. U ,rot,U ml M0 ,fl
i I mvvir i'o In for doln;
years eluped beforo ho knew what a . for the usual fonu of llnvengitn In uo
friend ho had gained that day his for- In country places It might bo fieceM.ary
tune was axitired. After he had grown to put down two or three of lUit
to manhood and accepted a lucrative , driven wclbi near each other, and eon
oosltlon. which wa not of Ids seeking, ncct them, no that the auction-pipe of
ic asked whv It had been ofiered him.
"Because I knew you could say no'
if occasion required," answered h?a
cmp!o)ur. No,' was tho first word
I heard ou speak, and jouspoku It
with a will. More people, old and
voting, aro mined for want of using
t that word than from any other cause.
- They don't wish to do w'rong. but thoy
t nesitatoa
nit rinrli,. tinttl fl ft, f jimtitut lArt
them fast
t fhe boy or girl who is not
afraid
to sav no
is reasonably cer-
tain
of making an
honorablu man or
woman."
Yes" is often a sweet and loving
word.
No" is a strong, brave wonl, which
I has signaled the defeat of many a
echemc for tho ruin of some fair young
life. Temperance Itanncr.
X Word to Yen, Yeaig Xaa.
Fiiwt: Be honest By which we do
not mean, simply, not to steal. That
goes without saying. The young man
who, before Jus bcanl Ls grown, thinks
it clever to cheat his tailor, or to sneak
out of hia little debts at college, has al-
readv laid a sure foundation of ill-
fortune. Nothing is known trn miicklv
t or sticks to a man so long as the repu
tation oi aisnoncaty. it is tne neck of
mildew which eats and grows blacker
and spreads from year to year. Boys
are latuousiy ounu to too lengthening
g
- J
shadow which these faults of abarp-
ueaung ami lying in tneir earnest yean
throw down their whole future. In a
year or two they will bo askiag for
patronage from the public or a chance
in the business world, aad they will
find that in damaging their character
they have already squandered their
only capital. No merchant woaM take J
a boy, even as porter. Isto his employ
who was not known to be honest. We
ao lor gramco our ooyi aw fcOBest,
his fellows, lie is bo weak nornham.
neither to his companions, his God, nor
' even to himself. He does not sham a
virtue which he has not; he does not
imitate any other man's character; but
he tries to go to the bottom of his own
to clear it and lift it up.
As the boy begins so the man will
end. The bid who speaks wkh affect.
tion. and minces foreign tongues that
he does not understand at school, will
be a weak chrorao In character all his
life; tbft bof who cheats his teacher
into thinking him derost at chapel will
be the man who will make Telipioa .
trade aad bring Christianity into eo
, tempt; and the ooy who wias the high-
. ..w..v vj JV.4.IOJ nnuMHiuuog
papers wiu ngure some aay as a tricky
w.1'.tni. TW U, !, --t..t -ZX
--? - "" ""cr ncs
or Door, null or clever. WW ,
it.. ; -t. . . : : . J"-
trgjii. us larjeaau Keeps mm answer
lasiuo oi iae iruia aireaj
c? .;te!-...
irteaos who will last ail hk life ui)
holds a capital which will briag hint ia
a surer interest than money.
Then get to the bottom of things.
You see how it is already as to thai. It
was the student who Va grounded ia
the grammar that 6ok the La&a rixe;
it was that slow, steady 4ra3gfj Ttrho
practiced firinif every day last whtfer
that bg$ed-.tb most gi
moaatatas;'iJs the elerkV who stasiSes
the specialty of the home ia of-haars
whoutoheprosaoted. Ycmr britifaat,
"! 'PPr-go-l. hit-er-aus feg ,.
ally terns oat the -deadweight e the
family byfbrty-gve. Don't tafceaav
thingfOTgraat; get to the bettesftof
things. Neither be a ahaat yors!L
aor be fooled by shams. Ready for
yemin yoar earfy manhood there are
pkaryof plaaevea waking fee joss to
taxe u lor granico our ooyi aw aOBest, seems irrobable that it hi the colle
in the coarser meaning of the term, of some curiosity collector, and a
But there is a finer honesty that enters I stole it. and finding it of bo value t
into a mans nature and lifts bimabove.it away.
Aa MtfaWw witcj """r
tmt tell y m01 ot
U .amber of frieada to dinner Th-
UrTdlaner was ve. aad all .hja.
' lltd kn it, ei coar. We. tho
"". i- ... .itMnr
i.-..
KrawTlwO. aad lK on of the ,
thU oa ffuet to table. The Mara.
w ptactnaT It Pf Uhw.
WTty-aadby aaolhef gue,l dropixslte
aad was ry lUca Mortlfird to aad
, ,t;.UfWW eta,
ABU WM: v. w
M lh0 cam, and were lU.w,
: morUfiM. t the Mil?t S!
lUWt4
to My at the neU Uw . I W .
them ah p 'r'- T JILT.
wrr U
e evHm
THVt v -'- .' t t
oaly. but were on hnd for soup,
(fcaerai Washington w m
peneiual that, oa on occaahm.
M TCT
Hrnl thai, oa on occasion. .
i.i, ,v linN oawetlns: hint at
inw t.. --r . . -, , .
, ruin hour, on inUinc thai he h4
aot
1 knew a elcrgvntsn oce in
. f nia thtf iiuaUalppl River d
,wim elghtan wile down stream u
ke!p appointment for afterm
tertc I traveled threugh the I pp-r
. 31Uulp4 regkm shortly afur. and U
1 1,,1 of roUes from tho rfacewlwr.
h lived, out toward the bonier, I heard
of hu -at (cat. Tho bonier men r-
..t.ui .,,(u a man. anl called Ww
...the minister who tnadethobigswltn "
Nor l aay one too young to begin
the cultivation of habit of punctuality
, , . . i H tR,e Rt .0jHH,i. w
Um0 jB cjftMt OR iJnjp when aent on an
.,.. M on. t lt t be tao
u
J
ilt,M,i i,lnes or trefelonl mn.
t 1 -". . " ,. m l. ..
ho habit ot prontpincaa is uaeij o
r I tnuihlrt L-eneraUV.
. k ww f
Wa,Mugl on way wi u
J iul of Abw I a h e right
That MWihuipp! clergyman, did noiilj.
t...l .!.-.. l).... .n muyl Ttlttltilr' for
Washington! way ww tno oeu i no
. r . . i . . . -
Aud thrwj three- are kmm! example for
, ,rbov, and irlrb to follow.
"Sever l
1 . . . I . if . .. .. I.. -Kill.
I Demon ume, au. u ju. w ..
ahead of It, , and you wl I mcr jypcnl
' the habit of punctuality. Qdn
Day.
The DrlfeU Well
far Flrr Piirw.
' The Firemen' Jvurnal, l an appnv
j cifitivu arllelo on thU nubleet, reoom-
!! mends tho general adoption of the
driven well for tin purposes ami fur
umall country place, whero there i no
I largo and contant water upply, u
should think llio suggestion an eiui-
! nently practical one. In New York
j City much water I being obtained by
this system, where It U now largely
lined to aavo tho expensu attendant
upon a largo uo of water from theoltr
I reservoir. To obtain anupplynutHclent
an engine being attached, water might
bo drawn from alt the well at tho
samo time. Of courmj, thewj well,
working in the principle that the water
1 drawn from theground round them by
making n vacuum in the tube, will iijv-
j ply much more water than mi ordinary
I open well, and they are Hot ordinarily
j so cxpenlvo to put down. An abundant
.nviitlv t vf ., ..mm If.tlntlt. i Att Mtfin.l
I at distances varying from twenty to
fifty feet front the surface, but, in such
cane where a well I put dowss, it should
be at once thoroughly tested to deter
mine the probable permasent yield of
the water-giving strata whtm it Is
driven.
A ChtIbms Collection.
AwoMAXmadea curious discovery
at her house in Bangor, JVIc.. the other
day. While sweeping off her door
steps she turned over somo dry
leaves, under which wore til.
i dosed
two rolls of bills. Ono
roll contained f 50 in bills, tnotlv fm
Old state bank of MMachu:tt. and
with them two 95 bills on the old JvwV-
ern Bangor; ono 10 note of tho on-
icucrate Bank of Richmond. Ya.; one
25-ccnt scrip of the corporation f
Winchester, Va ; on $5 on the Kx
changc Bank of Philadelphia; Un peo
el Banco National. Rio d la I'lAta. In
the other roll there is scrip as follows:
Fire cent. Vcazie; 'Jft cents. Salt Lake
City; 50 cenbi. Monro. La., and in
United States scrip two 3-ccnt. two
6-ceBt, and one 10-ccnt notes. Besides
this there are a half-dollar and a SI and
$4 bill of the old continental money, a
good modern silver quarter ami a silver
Deacil and trolil nn Tti fin1 Uim
bo clew whatever as to the ownr of
this queer collection, nor as to how it
hznrnp! in t. i-f - i,- .I- t.
seems irobable that it hi the collection
thief
threw
-
X HerefM Three a as!
ft Mali Iran
Qhi.
Two uttle girls, named Rebecca and
Florence Jones, were playing on b'on
fy Bight in their fathers ganlen.
close to the Kircr Mosmow, at Mn
nurath. Ksgiand. The younger child
was rusning after the older, when tho
latter fell headlong dowa some steps
into the river, where the watr was
deeper than oaL owing to the recnt
storms. Seeing her sister carried
down the stream, the votinger girl,
three ami a half years, pmngSi ia to
the rescue, and adzed her by the hat
and hair. She h-W e. bat toe stream
Sl - .LL.T -T'T" IMug. ci
ouwis THaaUtV Hi fcair k; !!
tl tit.V.. . U "
chad tw j , " tl A. r?:r
uiv mwc iMH m MSBJi. "I a -wr
ko-Jnssr s'E"
mnmroi perns harried, to the spot
fKt in ti u reseat th girl m abal
watsrWowHt hridg? before th
? had carried her awar.-fcw
.tibsfa nt can b
SfLi-Si TW7 We tL
JifOTaadiaaaydaaafee. The
J-work paoara k JHfcmphed.
fJfc the week ia UUh4 aby
23!?"? ? hard Hadd
2ir2!r Tk?raU.k6e!aiad.
Iw?i jBfr' ! P the addi
tional adratag of a sjaoUi aarfaca.
jrrrj ,"& k4 of phoophy or
Sk. T wll. w tmt lfi
uZm w H Wi wwrta- Ten will br
'TyjtWaSaHa nJrnt t lat
lS3ak lTy. Churchman: fr
.wtV aX wrof,oiM. xpn-.
So? Wt5ty Gl aad Ord-r -Uh
Vrlf tht ery mhcm .!
te 1
raartaalUy.
Sa do -.to K,
..n hl WfK IwWm M
any rat, k U ao o Htlnt after th
vl
'
r
4
A-
y
5V --" '-" -9u j-
"Uw- - V.
vt?. ' 1 '
t jo..
1- ? -
-- -..V-T
--- 5-
2-jzr2-3'
as' Z ?- '-'