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Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 8 Feb 1883, p. 6

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 wmmmfm â- ,i.i i*(j*s»*rw«w»' KSiÂ¥n' 'T." â-  i i m NEWS m A NUTSHELL- FITS KIXtnTES' SKI.XCT BXAOIKG. Fniaatary «f Forelgii. Domestic and War Itemiiâ€" C«MeiA«. Pitliy aad r*lBt«d. DOMESTIC. A new daily paper is to be publLhedat Ctta'wa. There ia a strike among the employees of the Perth car works. The total majority of Mr. Gagnon in Kamooraska is 59. At Bracebridge, the steamer Flora Barnes was burned to the level of the ice. Another instance of friends having to ran- som bodies stolen by Montreal medical stn- cents is reported. At Kingston a party of eight women were immersed recently by a fcleigh breaking through the ii;e. A man named Simpson was scalped by a falling brick at the new public building at Hamilton. I'he Canadian Pacific have just secured a large space at the Amsterdam exhibition, which opens next May. Timothy Milloy, murderer of Mr. Nesbitt, at Longue Point, was committed for trial at the March Assizes, Quite a scene occurred at the recent an- nual meeting of the Royal Canadian Insur- ance Company. H. F. Depsard's block at West Lynne, containing $20,000 worth of general mer- chandise, was destroyed by fire. It is expected that the services of the ex- tra staff employed on the census will be dis- pensed with alter next June. Carl Oslen, the interpreter at the immi- gration agency, Ottawa, missinsr for about two weeks, is said to be in Chicago. TTie late Bishop Pinsonneault was buried with much solemnity and little pomp, his will forbiddina' it. Otto S. W eks, Q C, a leading barrister of Nova Scoda, and M.P.P. for Uuysbore' uas been arrtsted for v/ife beating. At Moncton, N. B., thegymnasicm ImilJ- ing belonging to Sackvilk- Collegiate Insti- tute was burned down recently. The second officer in command of this j'ear's artillery team at Shoeburyness will bu Hflected from "A" or "B" battery. Miss Hermanie Letellier, the youugest daughter of the late Lieut. -Govenor Letel- lier, was reported dying on Thursday last. Miss Costigan, dangbtcr of Hon. John €x)stigan, has been married to Mr. Walter Armstrong of Frand Falls, X.B. Messrs. Gobier k Co.'s dry-good store, Montreal, has been damaged to the extent of several thousand ilollarsby fire. Charles Smith, acolorcd man, made a dash for liberty, out or St. Vincent di Paul i'eni- icntiary, but was re-captured. Hy. Bulmer has beeu asked t(j be a candi- date for the mayoralty of Moatieal. 'J'hree thousand names were signed to his requisi- tion. A painter named Ceorge Baker, living with his stop-daughter at io. G.S Dalhousie street, Ottawa, tumbled down stairs and killed himself. A King.?ton lady, for a seeoad time, has relapsed into a sort of trance, having little feeling, and dreamy appearance, and the con- dition of utter helpleseness. A m.an named John H. Hill, of Turtle Mountain, formerly of Milton, Out., where ke has a family, attempted to cut his throat Bear Waukapa. The Federal bank is suing -1. H. Blumen- thal, at Montreal, for .?1,567, paiC of the ]f»aper depositetl by the absconder, Louis Lewis, Blumenthal's soc-in-Iaw. Captain Abbie Thompson says they have •omo to Kingston to stay that at Kingston the Salvation Army will be found when the angel Gabriel blows his trumnet. The Lunenburg, U. S. bank, v.as robbed • f $5,000, by a young man named Ciuy, who when arrested disclosed the hiding plact% and the whole amount was recover- ed. As Alf. AdiTorth, clerk in Smart's Jiank, Kingsville, was locking the bank door he was pounced upor jy three masked men, gagtjed, and dragged into th • bank, auil wit- uesssed the cleaniug out of the safe. I'NITEI) STATE.S. Night watchman Lynch was badly burned at the New York dock fire. The Newhall House inquest is cIosclI. 'I'ho verdict is not yet made known. There is much ill-feeling exi.-tinL;- aiuono- tlie students of Hillside College. The decrees of the United States public debt for .lanuary was §lo.6;{6.SS:i. The ship Black Hawk, from New 'ork, lost seven of her craw on the passage. Sam Wakefield (colored), ex-state senator Euicided by shooting at New Orleans. An extensive salt producing field has been discovered at Warsaw, New York nictate. It is rumoured Secretaiy Frelirghuvsen proposes to resign on a.count of ill-heahh. (Jongress has voted by two to dec not to put'a duty ot^en per cent on quinine. The House Ways and Means Committee has decided to report a bill preventing the importation of adulterated tea. Henry A. Bewen was indicted for corrupt- ly endeavouring to influence the juror ick- »oo in the star route case. Foreman's gas building at Dayton, O., a $100,000 structure, was destroyed by ian ex- plosion of coal gas. One man was killed. A Port Colborne. Ont., boy, sued his late master, a Buffalo druggist, for discharging him and throwing him through a window. He got $1,000. Mrs. Green, widow of a member of the chamber of commerce. New York, has don- ated $57,000 to the chamber for the benefit • of nnsuccessfnl merchants. Young Carlile, the murderer, was lynched at Kansas. He confessed he was influenced to tke committal of the murder by reading of the exploits of Jesse James. At Erie, Pa., Geo. Riddle was discovered witk a terrible gash in hia »kull .above the eye, and upon refainiBg craiacioaanees mada oath that be waa set up«a by three sons of Jos. Bettolini, an old Gorsican, whom Riddle slew in tliat city thirty years ago GKNEKAL. The murders of Lord Mountmorris bare baen arrested. At Alexandria great distress prevails among the poorer Europeans. Biamark is indisposed, and will probably be confined to bed for several days. The St. Petersburg banking house of Jacobson is reported to have suspended. Information relating to crimes committed in Ireland, continues to come up freely. The British gunboat Foster has gone' to the' Isle of Sky to over-awe the crofters. The Czar and Czarina will proceed about the middle of April to Moscow for corona- tion in May. A number of warrants are still out in Ire- laid against the members of the secret or- ganizations. The German Progressist party's attacks on the army have greatly irritated the Gover- ment. A steamer and two other vessels were wrecked off Lundy Island. The crews of all three were drowned. No agreement has been arrived at between Austria and Roumania in regard to the Danubian question. German otlicers in the employ of the Porte have draM-n up a plan for the reorganization of the Turki-h army. Members of the criminal societies in Ire- land are becaming terrified, and aie offering to turn informers. At Bombay twenty-throe persons have been killed and twenty-eight injured during a panic in a v\ ool factory. Mr. Chamberlin, speaking at Swansea, said the next session of I'arliair.ent would be interesting, but not exciting. The bill proposing a loan or 76, loo, 000 marks for railway purpose has been intro- duced into the Prussian Diet. The barque p]liza, from Burges,NflJ. has arrived at the Island of Jersey. Her com- mander, Capt. Cox, is dead. The cantonal Government of Neuschatel has issued a proclamation condemning the recent attack upon the Salvation Army. John Kynaston Cross, member of Parlia- ment, says the Indian cotton trade is prov- ing that England may well stand by her own strengt.T. An injunction was applied for in London at the suit of the Cunard Steamship Com- pany, restraining David Maclver from trad- ing under the name of Burns Maclver. Absurdities of TXLzn's Dress. '"Kneebreechss are coming into use iu Boston," said a fashionable Blank street tai or. " b'or every-day wear "' "No, not yet but that will come soon enough. I mean for evening parties. I am making a pair of knee-breeches for a young inan to wear evenings when he goes m full dress. Several of our 'toniest' young men are v earing them at dinners and at parties. In New Ycrka number of young men mov- ing m the best circles have re=olved to wear knee-breeches with full dress." "One result of Oscar Wilde's example and preaching, I suppose" ventured the inquir- ing newspaper man. "'Oh, no Wilde didn't start it. Haven't you heard of Gotch Don't you know that (.4otch says that men are comfortably and conveniently dressed, but that beauty is conspicuously absent in their attire?" It appears, observes the Boston Herald, that this rival of Oscar had put his ideas regarding men's dress into print. Trousers are not economical, inasmuch they orat baggy at the knee long before they are worn out, and they are always getting dirty at the ankles. They are not specially adapted either for cold or wet. On a wet day it is the part from the knee downward that catches the rain and necessitates the chang- ing of the whole garment. Indeed, it is the way in which they ignore the knee-joint which renders trousers so practically objec- tionable. It is at this joint they drag,, and not only spoil their own sliape, but inflict a sense ottisihtness over tlie whole body by means of the braces. Why are buttons placed on the back of a coaf' Mr. Gotch remarks that the tailors i^ay that they are thereto "mark the waist." But whj- should the waist be marked As a matter of fact, the only reason for the ex- istence 01 these two buttons is that they are a survival from the time when they were of ubc, when men but'oned back the long flaps of their coats to w all^ more freely, or found them useful in sustaining the uword-belt. Another rudimentary organ may be found at the end of the sleeve. There is always a cuff marked generally by a double' row of stitches, which performs no useful service unless it is to remind us tfiat our forefathers had facing to their sleeves, and that the little buttons which still appear at the end were of real use when the sleeves were tight at the wrist. Another inevitable feature of the coat is the collar. In old times this col- lar was of some service it was large and turned up well in inclement weather in order to allow of its buttoning properly around the neck, a nick was necessarj' But, though we hardly ever think of turn- ing up an ordinary coat-coUai-, and find it of little use if we do, we still preserve both it and the nicks as survival*. The stove- pipe hat, too, is only the carcass on which our ancestors were wont to display ribbons and knots and other gauds. In itself it is both ugly and uncoaifortable. Then we wear absurd neckties that do not tie and pins that do not pin. SanUsbt m stables. All bams, stables, sheds and other build- ings intended for the shelter of domestic animals should be so arranged as to com- mand all the sunlight possible. For this purpose invariably place the stalls on the eastern and southern sides of the building. The windows should be large and sufficient- ly numerous. There is no fear of too much sun light, either in the house or in the bam We have no right to deprive our animals! any more than our children, of that whi^ has been diffused so liberally. A CHrl'» RemarkaU* »««T of How Sh* Was Savod From Pronmtnre BnrUl. '• Here is a young woman who has had as curious an experience, I think, as any yo a ever heard of," said a Greenpomt lady to the reporter. "Clara, show him the plate." Miss Clara Munce, who was sewmg upon a dress for the lady who spoke, laid aside her work, and, going to a drawer m the sideboard, took out a aUver coflia plate, which she offered for inspection. It bore the inscription CLARA MUKCE, Died June 3, 1864, Aged 16 Years. to whom does this refer " asked Munce least I "Wf-y, the reporter. " It refers to me," replied Miss quietly. " It was on my coffinâ€" at suppose I may call it my coffin, though I was not buried in it. I occupied it, how- ever, for some hours, and had it not been for the intelligence of a lady who came to attend my luneral I should have been in it now. My uncle took it to his home in Chicago, where he is fond of showing it to his fnends and telling my story. 1 kept the plate, which I seldom allow any one to see, for the recollections it awakens are not pleasant. " When I was a young girl I was in verj delicate health. I used to fall into trances, in which I knew all that was going on around me and heard every word said m the room where I lay, but I could not speak or make the slightest sign of life. My body grew gradually colaer, but ordinarily 1 aroused myself with a start within ten or fifteen minutes. The doctor said it was a form of epilepsy, and warned me that some day or other an attack might be prolonged and mistaken for death, it always affected me under the same conditions. After sleep- ing, as consciousness slowly returned, I found myself wide awake, but unable to speak or move. "After the doctor's caution I began to grow afraid of myself. It was a horrible sensation. I di\inled to go to sleep at night, and, though drow-iness overpowered me at last, I awoke unrelreshed. During the day i was languid and tired, but I dared not lie down, for I knew by experience that if I slept by daylight I was almost certain to fa 1 into a trance on awaking. Asa consequence of all this mental disturbance I became seriously ill, and I was ordered to the country but before arrangements could be made for me to go I was stricken down with brain fever, and my life was despaired of. "Now, before the fever attacked me, and while I was confined to my bed by the sickness brought on by anxiety about my condition, the trances seemed to disappear. When I slept I was refreshed, and awoke at once to full vigor, and not, as formerly, by slow degrees, to wretched helplessness and immobility. I think I should have es- caped the brain fever had it not been for the doctor. He told me that the epilepsy was only mustering its forces for u attack more vigorous than any I had yet experienc- edâ€"as a storm sometimes lulls before it sweeps evtiything before it. He fright- ened me terribly, and my braiu gave way. '• The brain fever was conquered, but I was very weak â€" so weak that 1 did not rally. The doctor, always cheerful, said I never would. I lay for days neither asleep nor awake, but not in a trance, for I could move and speak feebly. ' She may go out like the snuff of a candle any minute,' said the doctor in my hearing, and I never verified his preaiction by going out at once. " Occ day- it was June 2, 18G4â€" I felt that I was really improving. Lite seemed to be coming back to me. The doctor had not noticed it, but I knew by the unwonted distinctness with which the rumble of tha Greenpoint waggons struck upon my ear that I was gathering new strength. At last I grew tired, and, for the first time in seve- ral weeks, I slept soundly and healtl'.iiy. " I awoke slowly, with the rigor of limb that I knew so well. An unutterable hor- lior took possession of me as I felt that I was in a trance and remembered the good doctor's capacity for blundering. iMy fears were well founded, for half an hour later, when the nurse came to look at me, I heard her utter a quick exclamation of alarm, and hurrying away, she called my mother and sisters. The doctor was summoned, and arrived when all my relatives in the house were ai-ound my bed. He felt my pulse, put his hand upon my forehead, forced open one of my eyes, and examined the pupil httle thinkin- that I saw him as plainly as he saw me, and sorrowfully remarked ' 'I feared it. She is going fast!' "Oh, the misery of that day" and the night following On the morning of June 3 my body was cold and stiff, and, while my mind was as active as ever I knew that I looked like a corpse. Mv friends thought me dead, and when the doctor came they stood aside, silent and weeping, and made way for him to approach the bed. He looked at me steadily for a few seconds, and then said reverentially '• 'Yes, poor creature, she is gone ' and he covered my face with the sheet. 'â-  And this was the man who had first told me that an epileptic fit might be so pro- longed as to be mistaken for death Mv indignation at that moment absolutely over powered my fear. Otherwise, I believe I should have died on the spot. "For more than two days I lay motion- lesson the oed. Tuberoses were strewn over me. Friends came to see me, and re- mmded each other of good qua'ities in me that neither by myseU or ethers had ever before been suspected. I heaid it all No body spoKe of me except as a corpse none" noticed, what I am sure must have b^n api«Tent, that my face had not lost the^l or of life, and on the night of Jane 4 I bv beside my open coffin! On the morning of bt^ied'tLTdar^""'^^ '""""' "I had heard the inscription I alâ€" " Munce. I formed, bat I felt that ther. was little ch«ee of that, becausa I was fuU of ^- The undertaker's men were in the room. waitLg to fasten down the coffin Ud. Kisses S^amfrable had been pr??«?^ JP°? .??/ face, and I bad given np a" J^ope of life Shen an old lady, worth all the rest of the Storsput together, elbowed the others o^ of her way, and stood beside the coffin. She was my Aunt Jane, and she had come from Albany to see her favorite niece for the last time. Her presence seemed to calm me for we loved each other eo well that 1 could not think it possible that she would allow me to be buried alive. She was stooping to kiss me when she suddenly stared back with the very simple and home- ly remark .. " 'Why, her nose is bleeamg " It was perfectly true, though up to fhat tia.e nobody had noticed it. My .iiental agony had made my nose bleed. "Now, the doctor knew quite enough about his business to be very much start- led at seeing fresh blood flowing from a body that had been dead two days. He examined my face and said hastily, as he for the first time noticed the color, "Take her back to bed." " The suddenness and immensity of the relief restored all my faculties, and as the men took me up I said, with haialy an effort, and in perfect natural tones " 'Thank you, doctor. How are you, Auntie?' "I think I have told you nearly the whole story. I recovered very quickly, and have never had a trance since. The doctor still practijes medicine in Greenpoint, ani is considered one of its best authorities on diseases of children, and whenever he sees me he tells me confidentially that from the first he had a ' latent suspicion that the vital spark lingered somewhere,' but I do him the justice to discredit the statement." â€" New York Sun. «*- « â-  ^m m â€" â- â€" â-  ATonc^ilns Incident. Three persons stood together under a gas light. A few doors adjacent was a saloon, and through its half open door came snatches of coarse laughter and licentious song, in- terjected with occasional oaths. Of the three figures standing near at hand one was a man apparently of middle age, well-formed, and bearing upon hia bleared and rum-suf- fused countenance memories of better days. The other two were females, apparently his wife and daughter. The face of the elder woman was pale and anxious, while that of the younger was pitiful and sad. Only fragments of their conversation could be heard, but it was clearly evident the wife w as eagerly imploring the partially imbrut- ed husband to go home with them, but he refused, and tried, iu a maudlin way, to in- duce them to leave him alone. .Just then there came merrily trooping around a corner close at hand a group ^ot young people of both sexes, who were evi- dently returning from sonn; festival or en- tertainment. As the party .a:ne into High street, they commenced singing, crossing the street. Their voices, well bleiided, poured forth a flood of harmony upon the still night air, and as the group of singers gradually disappeared in the distance, snatches of mel- ody came floating back upon the ears of the listeners, including the group of three before referred to. They ceased talking and list- ened. The stolid rum-blotched leatures of the man worked convulsively as the sweet cadences wafted back to his ear from the increasing distance, growing fainter, then me.-ging inechoe?, and finally ceasing alto- gether. What was he thinking of What hidden chord of memory had been thus evoked within him â€" even through the blinding daze of drink, which held him mind and body fast within its clutch Were the memories of the old times, purer, better days, when he sat with mother, wife and child at his own and their fireside a sober, trusted, self- reliant man God knowethâ€" He and the man himself; but as the fragments of melody rolled back upon his awakening senses they awoke other echoes within his soul, echoes of the pastâ€" as he beheld himself now m contrast with what he had been and without a word of further par- leying he allowed the two waiting ones to slip their arms within his own, and quiet as a lamb he went with hia own flesh to their home and the three disappeared into the shadowy night, he walking uncertain but uttering no word. What had moved hinl thus? What was ic that had thus touched his heart as with a magician's wand, caus- ing the unseen tears to surge up within his soul a3 they had not before, perhaps, for years It was not much, but it was enough- for the merry group was singing " Home' Sweet Home." ... ..«« licaru lue inscription on the rlatp read aloud, over and over again ' Sara Munce. Aged IG years. pSr girl. So young to be oarried away. But she wa^ speak I could not even try to speak or more. All voUtion seemed to have^ in me, and I could only pray silently that might die too before th^ lit "IKeJe per A ab-MarIne Treaenre. Iu 17S0 the British m»u-of-war Hussar was w. ecked m Hell Gate, having on board about $5,000,000 in guineas. In 1794 an expedition was sent out from England, and for two seasons attempted to raise the rf TT* ^^ ^f forbidden to work longer by theUaited States Government. In 1819 another attempt, was made by an Enslish company with a diving bell, but with no success. Since then a number of companies wIth?nfTl!"*^°?«^ *°'""' ^^^^ failure! Withmg the past five years a new company haa beenat work, using the latest sub-mKe aimorand appliances. A sloop firml^an^ chored about 100 yards f lom the^New Yoi k side of the East River, three-ouartVrs nf o mi^ above Ward's IsUnd. U^^^'e^Zl^/, headquarters, and marks the spot wheWthe Hussar sank, with her bows pointing to Ihl north. The stock is dividS^^f Js So shares of $100each. Cannon, cannon bkUs manacles, gun flints, silver plkte id S have been found. One dav a kT^ u brought to the surfac^U ^a^ fuTof'jewr with anecklace of brilliants. It was llTttr a moment on the deck and /i*. never to be seea on bS aJafn *^"*PP«'"^i silver, made of vaxiou "c^fraggtome^t^' by the action of the water l,o« i? together with BcatteSg Void ^fns "fiut the main treasui-eremai^ fetfe be found! Table tippingâ€" Feeing the restaurRnt TtSfU^^" best chest protector-A doTlS to the bag(c.ge man. The smaU boy is W to "'sg^^^L**.*^^ thea'S^burobS ^rude^te'p ie^^^^n -n' 'T;. ^^« prudent hn7«f!w P- P*°' '^^ the im- either ' "'*â-  °«* '»ak« much. TOPICS FOa It would be money in tv ness to the heart, and sedatlH of the great American peor, "*S women kind-if they S" and how to enjoy walkina race physically if they L"*! J their bones and blood in th â-  "' did not labor under thedel'""' a breach of good manners?' professing to belong to .^"â- rm more than a hundred and twe I They have good heads and°fi' when the prevalent spasm for i' over and allows you to see th tedency of both brains and ui lencth without breadth or \hi ' mount high, but go neit-er l ' enough. They are fulfof "" gropings and graspings tiuy ings til inventions and iunovatic'ns • i thought necessary to umalgaVJ' brilliancies and vagaries jn and make practical wisdom co- what we most need. Acd wsiv by a natural doctrine cievolmiof' mg doth beget healthy appetite j for food, and food niakes blcoj left to itself develops brawn ' When the shoulders widenâ€"ev being equalâ€" the mental proc""' also. This is a fact in mea'a"' WOMAN .- Work, .ii;,;. All exchange asks why .^„j. rather clerk in sto:es on stana,, than do household work for would be well paid. There abDut it. The house-work IS t young laJv or aoinestic servi^^ ' ternaed, is to a certain extent tracised. Tlie one that deiks it- writes in an otiice receives some slid recognition. A young societ/i may escort her to " the opera hot' soc!algathcringV;thoutv;o!atb»;m good society, but let him cscortH hired cook to a fashionaLle parn-" his sisters would not know her" it will be said that society hasvaj grades and that while a ycun^lic; m place and take a Iiigh positicti grade, she might be vtrymuthoiiu-l another. This is all very true. spirited young lady wants t}ge;J highest grade, and she well Liij through the kitchens of others as la servant, is not the road that !aj Let society recongnizo the dignisr' Let the honest working girl leelx she hires out she has not lorfcileiii; to social recognition, htt tlieit i virtue and culture, and notsiiiii are tlie passport to L'ood societv. iiiKAi. Women, " 1 try to do my be^t but J li so far from reaching my ideal." girl said this the other Jay at t'ui'J Congress after listening several i many able paper.s aiul t i speeches. " From reaching yo u' idcLl asked an older woman. " My ideal of true womanhooL. " But no one woman can expec.i her ideal of all womanhood " " No I suppose not," admitteu ;; thoughtfully. "I suppose 1 oagi:;;: something, though, bet:er thaa ' reached.' The crowd drifted pi;' ing with it the wistful, earuest the dropped conversation was DStn But suggestions awaken tlioug' man-hood, as a whole, can be uo:t::| than ideal. This grand abstractaa present much to a lofty mind thin, poor, weak and lo\r in thought of another. Tiiis fragile b:;:: woman was holding in the clear her mental vision all tiie stroogp the score or more of t.xoeptionil ' who have beeu discusini' some o: ;i:J est questions of the day. .Mrs. Houl sight, Mrs, Livermore's eloqufflMj Stone's concentrated purpose, AtoyI incisive power of statementâ€" in avii special excellence of each speaker t:J taken part in these loiiL' sessionsK work, successively Lutc 1 for emu No wonder she found her tired I'.op into a minor key. A crocus may bloom in a light snow drift I'li: i stow-bank hurled upon it in ao a^jJ is simply crushing. It blooms 5i;' warmth of spring but is hopdtJ^'y' by the heat of a July sun. My young friend is oaJTviug "'tt-;' plaint some of the sadly lieayy t-J which nowadays fall unpityin?.^ girlish shoulders. I hear of Ji" asp ing, uncompromising, laitiiful totEt^ trusts J yet moving on a-soiiel*" patiently for firmer foothold am! sji pathway on a toilsome road, as" self Is not she nearer to her o"" ' ideal self than many of these «:' world better knows and more tree. tjireattfi A SHIFTING BOG The shifting bog which is overwhelm a part of the town of in Ireland, is a very interesting pJ-^ on, and one of the most singular re; the heavy rain which have ot 'f'-P 1 in various parts of Europe. '^^" Jl acres of land have already Ix^^""^^^] ed by the bog, and several fai-m li*" been destroyed. To those whotbi"" only as a low, swampy piece "'s' may seem strange that it place and move across tiie •^""""â- uj, however,are not necessarilylo^*" j,| some of these of Ireland present s ' pearance. They grow by the acct of vegetable matter, and w;tien «« in this case, by long continued ^^ encroach upon the neighoonng It is to be hoped that some rneaj^,, found to stop the advance of tne ' Castlerea. IiUys Prayer. Not long since Lily, a little gi""jj^ after saying her evening pra)'e"*j j^ indulge in an original petition o varying it according to her moo" ^jj, aware that she had not been r ^^ good on a certain day, and „j prayers were thus suppleniente â-  the Lord to make Lily a good' ^^j and if at first you don't suc:eeoi again."

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