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Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 3 Jul 1884, p. 6

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 K • \i m m ..â- â- â- { If --f li'ir If â- â€¢'.â- {• f i l^ 't m, 1 â-  ii ' f ' pnr '-:n â-  â-  I' vy. [i-l !•? GKADTS OF GOLD. It is sot death that makea the martyr, bat tfaeoanw. Thae is ro iS!^ BMdMT Street 8C»Mhi Bombay is exceediDgly interestiDg to me. I love to soak my handkerchief in camobor, then start off in the edge of the evenvg TOf AeiHG ON THB VXD SKA. is»«^«sg,®5 WatOKHKn bSii^r^ rjl^^B to stagnate. â- ^ " '" *i BOilo judge of men's merits by [jpaikeMf them. like those of light. _._ fhing but do- baa Boai^iw i;li|iK majas^ii^. afapf It! qnsin ti ix^lii^i aelf-tattpllBB-fM»iFt ahrayaalMraliro ' th» circle t^i S^ of is often lions. Who is rich 1|^( ere are a great many' y?i in the and nnlettiifaiigi bin it nnleam than ta learn, fiar to biisg tiie sabiimett motive le tmiJIest duty and the moat infinite to the smallest trouble. o is wise t he that lesros l^m every Whojs powerful I he that gpveros his content. afroaanot Unless they are «9ne the moment present themsrtvei^jt is not worth e to do them aAJg^^ haps your milnei^v^ofrs what a capital n yon are l^Sl^ ntyer means to let become a reaf^becaDse you do the well. t ig iaj^e art of ahowint; men, ^sign»,-*the internal regard we I for them, J{ ^uriaes froa^g^pd sense, roved" bs ininreaunaisi- coast'line: andASiffi"' shiptfltR'n of TOO, ana aanoc ^Sr'feaaSfiif-, ,,. their ««â- * mm^tMmmfVWB^ -a e^»y stitch. MOA^tibbg^ i^ favoJlBlrXilP^il^rf iromffieBritisH tureyou, and ultimately starve you. Sa«», ships in bonduot. that I do not rebuke thed ^^i^i^ 'W" '»**?""^*"^!StnrthS aslBasshy. Here are some bwtblacksl bqara th^ stesfi^ Araj «»d Kwgh* Of. the the ftit I hive seep sinoelMTOigSlio Fran.; Bath, which wwxtH,ash^eBOOif ways out p eis^. ' Toar shoes are always blaAedby, Aden.' .u„ aar. 'the faot^l porter, or the steamer porter, or i feel warranted m saymg that tne oays the bbanung house porter in these parts,? ^n hot^ The^e is,!?n|y m»9 «op»"*» ""' so that the busing of the street urchin i| laometer^bjjKkl, and I "Pfn^* !1^U •adly iBiored. 1 do not hear the ItgUia with libit 'rvttx,l fittd.the«j6olest place m Ame^osn ^, "afhine yer bbotsf Thes^ the sfaipr a ias«a^w»y leadmg out of the Hmdeo bbotblkcks should visit New York- main saloon, where a ?egW»E brings, BP» and see how it isddne. ' (relatively) cool draught frouf the lower H*e a ^t cirawd df natives are lpokui|| regiok^of Mie sAin; Thai^idday register lor off at the sky over the bay. I lock, also^ the pawMCft ^«»* fe?« ,^ 4«grees «â- **«• but see nothM^ ' I move on further until i; hpij to Mfidegnaes.: In,tl*» oaWns the, ^mr c6me in right of the seashore, when I dis^ peraliWu very mnqhhifl^er. pie gannenta cover thousand and thooaands of people sit^ of those who awtiat^rofnaedly are wringing tiBgdoi»Ban*garingat the black oloudlee| wet with jwrepira^lQn. wl^ilsf th«lnp^juid sky; 1 I ferrft out a Paraee (the Fanees al^ higtm of tEosei.whp do not fire K clJMomy.jiltat atost always ipeak English) and he explain^ ybu"wiWld 'think they had TJeeh ' imWrtd it^alltome. This is this first day of th^ with fMlMeC^ Unifbreindtily, tM tbetfmo^ Hindoo N«w Year, and it is a great nataoaai motgeter uv^aestion only re^aters as highas oostom to look for the new moon. Afte^ 1504w(ees. ,1 pntiUi ooton the hfitoiLWfjr much looking I discover the qneen of inihe sun cn« day. The me^oarT tro^ iii^tâ€" the lAn^est cirescent I have evef right up to 150 doKrees in mo timer and 1 seen^- haaten tp,^riii^ the iaetarament ,ia, -jlMt it l%e itoeets are thronged with men, wo| aiij^a^d explode. ' 4 v» meh' and children, ail attuned in costume^ Aad'Vetichey tell ine this is literally pool that are more showy than any I have eve^ keen el^ewh^re in the "woild. ' A seHes (^ tenrifio shriek'snowrise abov« the babil Of street cries. elbowi Vi rtu e consi ats in^making desire subordiiP ate to di^, passion to principle. ,i T|iapil- Isrs of fhaifwster ^r* ^odcrdtiqfi,, temper- ance, chastity, simplicity, seU'Coatrcl; its method is selfdenisl. Let ho private aifeotion Uind thee in,aa*'r{ othpr'aoab's cause for the eirors t|on sbAlt thereby commit are often without remedy, and at the expense both of thy reputation and fortune. It is when we come to re joice in dnty, to take pleasure in sacrifice, to follow jaatlce, mercy, and truth, not only with the firm and steady step, but with a loving and tender clasp, that we realize the true vitality of righteousness. The mind of the scholar, if yon would have it large and liberal, should come in contact with other minds. It is better that his ar mour should be somewhat braiaed by rude encounters even, then hanging forever mat- ing oa the widl. That every day has its pains and sorrows is nniveraally experienced and moat univer- sally confessed but let us not attend oaly to mournful truths if we look impartia ly about us, we ahall find that every day baa likewise its pleasures aud ita joys. The fishermen of Brittany, so the story goes, are wont to utter this simple prayer when they launch their beats upoa the deep; " Keep me, my God my boat is so small and Thy ocean is te wide." How touchin^- ly beautiful the words and the thought I Nothinil in the rapga of oar conceptions can e^tffthe dread silence of coosciencs, thecajm desperation of remoise, the corrod- ing of insatiable desire, the entire want of truth, tne gz awing worm of envy, the bitter cup of disappointment, the bL'ghting curse of batped,^ These pushed to theif extlremity may fe^ enough to destxey the souL ,„' â- â-  -, Wben^ amiability' descends to weakness, it loses all claims to respect or admiration. To be wcrthy of regard it must be strong, and to be strong it must stand on a solid foundation. He who is able and willing to lay "No" firmly whenever the cSuiie of right requires it. will say "Yes"' with a fuller and a richer meanicg at all other times. A rule for living happily with other is to avoid having stock subjects of disputation. It mostly happens when people live much together, and they coaae to have certain set topics around which, from frequent dispute, there is such a growth of angry words, mor- tified vanity, and the like, that the original subject of difference beocmes a standing subject for quarrel; and there is a ten- dency in all nucor disputes to drift down to it. that a Hindoo is-pieiwDg the u«»se of one uf' his daughters, aged prja^ ten y^ars. Thf m'-tiie taking. The m ' apjpriclat^'m "the' taking. The means adopted. 4«l(WfWNag ti*i *oie^sitfon are rather primitive. The child's head is held by one person^ frfaila another jaips .^e wire of the j^irel thrbugh' the shrfuaing cartilage of thepaBtara.4^f 7A' "-^f;..! {,:â-  ;;|'i. :."'â-  i The'xebt ofa scieitee is toaiabihty to pre- dict. We beliefs iheratatrobemer, becacsa he is able to foretell within the fraction of a second when aa eclipse will begin and when it wlil end. Wa put faith in the chemist, also, for we find by experience that, when he puts diverse atoms of iqatter togetl)j^, a certain result %k ^^Xi ' to -fbliojit. Wite^, for' ibatance, is composed of two gases, exygen and hydrogen. Spiritualism is dis credited liecause it prophets and mediums cannot foretell. Some of the sciences are so far imperfect that its profesiora cannot pre djct with confidence. We know a gr^at deal about the weather for instance, but the Wasbingtcn Weather Bureau, is often mis- taken in its foreeasts. ' Much has been- said as to the possibility of founding a science of (ociety but it is odnceded that, as yet, the sociolp^ats have not dared to claim tOey could read the future. All this is ap.'opos of a person who has appeared in Ohio, who makes a claim that he has discovered the law which shows the variations in the prices of commodities. â- , His name is Samuel Ben- ner. He published a book in 1875, in which he made a forcastof theppces of iron, grain, hogs and cotton, up to the year 1891. It must be coufessed ttiat he baa so far proved remarkably accurate. He said the price of iron would be lowest in 1877â€" that it would advance and be at its maximum in 1S81 â€" aod that it would then shrink in value until 1887 or '88. This forecast has not been proved false up to date. Hope. Hope I ^^^t would life be without hope? HopO^and ffitJi is th«'i*«ll spring of isteW:^1lM^^KlV aiiilflNSP. wd ha that 'M'WiII obtain ^nM^gobd xss ' labor. It is saidjiitfbioafchapp somiln^ ^cling to. The manaer eceah^ iritV his ship '^king beneitth,'^tbe wavM^cjKtta WmssH in^he *Ma hqiBf he may drut to land somewhere,, fxt bp pi«k^^ up by 4onie ^aexpeo^d vesetl (Ctotiiaigihis.d n path eo m e Cm cs tPr "days he will battle I with the waves, till rcsoue ocme^ 01^ .^ath closes the â- oein." BnC AO gTande^ hope of all is the hope of a happy immortality in the world to come. -Free irom sin and sor row, care and pain ^a rest from a)l anxie,- ties wlMM all is peace, Where ^l is loyja^ where Goi Is. He fills heaven and He is love. Then let us pray that we may have such a bone, and for faith, natientlv. to Why He Brought Them Back. A small boy with an intelligent face went into a fruit dealer's store, and dep-uiting a box of grapes on the counter, stood looking down. 'I don't want the {(rapes, my Lttle fellow," said the dealer "'ve got ss many now as ' caA t^. Takb tfiem away." "They a£«jrPTirs,".taie.bos,uid. lopkiwcinB' came along here and took this box of grapes from the stand at the door. I knew it was Bteslin' an' my mother always told me not to tal^e anything that did not bektag to m'e, but I couldn't help it. Just before I left home my little sister that was sick awd "Oh,if I had some j^pes Kke them I saw down' sown, I coaliT eat 'em^ " We didn't have no money, an' nobody knowed hs, 'cause we had just moved into the boose. Mother washed dotiies, but when sister got sick she had to quit. When I took the elotbes home the laay told me ta oome next day for the money, but when I went there the house was shut up and the people was Doae, so we didn't have any money to get graped witii. Mother said, "Never mind, we will g^t soineineney after awhile." I saw her go into the other room, "an' when I watched herahp hid h« fiipeboried m a pillow, an' was praym' I came away down town an' stood aronn* a' long time waitm' to get a chanPe,' ah' after Awhile, when you wasn't loobib' I took a box an' ran away with it " 'But why did yon bring it baok!" the dialer aaketit. "Be- cause," raplied the bojr, chiking down a sob. "when I sot homn tha liCtJa '*f!S _. ia ootnparisoh with «he eouditiob of tiiintl* that .Witt prenrail » mcnkh.or two .henea Bspryoiiecn.t^p.slfB sayyi fp. I wo^^ hdw high thp'tpm|Kraturp,w;ould. raise -» thermometeiviathfe'Jnbt ' It ia indefedi hot bntsone becomes in a measure ini|i»d to it after a day or two, and freqeht salt wat(r batbs sprves to make life mor6 tolerable. Iii ttie hot months there are always a numberbf pasaeng^ And laboraM, especially strikers, who perish from txoessive heat. Evea^or bens and dupks are unable to endnre t^e warmth, and several of the panting creatures expiire, despite the fre- quent drenchings with fresh water which the steward gives them by means of a sprink- ling pot. The sunsets are glorious and the moon rises even more eo. Indeed, the evenings are pleasant aod we are tempted to sleep out on tae deck instead of in our stuffy cabins. This, however, the captain forbids, on ac- coant of the peculiar inuuences of the moon in this climtA». The rays of a tropical moon poisons me4t, and our suppbes are tested with a piece of silver in the boiling waters Any discoloration of the silver in- dicates that the meat has been exposed to the moonshine. Ode indiscreet sailor sleeps on deck, and in the morning his face is wrenched out or shape. After this we are careful, and sit under the awniog while we spin our sea yams. The dews at night are very heavy and leave a thick salioe deposit on the ship's rigging. Occasionally a mirage furnishes ns with diversion. The phonphorescent displays of the Arabian and Bed Seas are not what I had expected after reading and|hearing so much of them bntper- hapa this is owing to thp aqpematur*! brilli- ance of the moon. The phosphorescence is however, sui generis so far aa I have seen. It floats abodt in appareiA "chunks," which attach themselves to the; sides of the vessel and are impelled forward for a time, only to become dptached at length, and quickly dis- appear astern. Here on the Bed Sea. for the first time in my seventy-five days and nights of sea voy- aging, I have a taste of what a fire on ship- board impliea.. Oa» hot, i btaathless day the chief officer ia havinita large kettle of a re- sinuous Uqnid boiled, up forward on a deck stove, for application to certain parts of the ship. It is left alone for a moment, boils over in'e the fire, and in a inomeht more the whole mass is ablsie. Toe liquid flows over deck, and almost bMore we can take the fact in great sheets of flame are leaping half way up to the square sails. Tee alarm is sound- ed, the sailors n^sh to the saind-barrela, and by the tiUe eaoh'man has tiiro*wn a pailful of sand up^h thejd^k there i^ nothmg left bur^ng but the^ kettlle. Over thin a cour- aa;eous fellow throwis a piece of s»il -cloth, and two other ttiPn 10 it tothe deck. In trie meahtiflitf the captain has ordered the donkey •ngiaias to work, aud there is an im- mpnsp^ream .;rpa4y to iflay qpoa the deck, were such a meainre necessary. I confess that my heart is thumping away wildly, ^iit,none of theoffioers or men seem any mo^ concerned than if such a scene were of oi^'Jy occurrence on shipboard. A fpw.xnan hayo been woonded or bamed in the qpration, while somo others have lost part.of their clothing. 1 suppose no more dangerous foim of fire pould bread ont. ud yeUt is handled with petfeot ease and hW onatela ripple of Pkoitemeht. In three nanolis. it hafe oehaed to be a anbjeot of oomnMBt^ ., ,,, Dry earth mafcea good bedding for ca'tle in midsummer. are valnabif tor (i^ifMlohes *!oy ,ndmore^^iia#5.d^ht .M*«ppptfiieplirta.gp«*»tMa ha»*«tti in invemcBf two drill* At V-9AMi««#ilMl»Mtf5Mi^ aMr^' II rs. -rrU^ // iti i- â- '(, Ite l»l8tcilmtiM. «f Jiali. Oaaiof Mia'moattDa^veloiiji^ii aacpeaafnl aabisnaiiJentBcl^modem AtenHae ia tiie In- pH4«ofr«n ctmw fish iMdui^ the sfer«uaa •°* iMespfithe various cQiitiiini» aa, A f »rm« ianjweii iffordfo riwe oaW)age foAhW^ oeh#»l«iiK"-^A*l "fliii- crdi has lto««»sJt adfpala«**-4f It oaariietbe aeld it iqa^jhe fe4«fhf%i|l«llW»^ "O*!^' ^*^ cr pigs-,.-,,,,- ux-i (^i ' '-â-  " "â-  •. ' Every garden ahould hayo a «n»ll bpd of sam^ttgFmfl^aayerf, |4rrief land marjotam. In l»ot no.gardon ia completewtthout them. They eaji beKCOi^ from ae^ nfid,pw».ob- tamed^nmia^ for a long t^met. .. j- Xi lTo«k*'ra'Dikota, iaidy, ttf^f^ engine drew tight plongha, tnmttg n sOd ft»r inohai thipk as evenly and w«U aa oonld hedpneby horaopowpr, a||4 «* ».»^ ^t Oyertwenty-fiyeapreaf dfUTX)! ,.; *i/f 'An cSKpjrt in s^rawberiy ciptMVWW'**' that in tiintsnlaniSni^ the â- *'»'5°S"7..*r* runners should be left on to th* length of six inches. The end of thp ronneia are^tben Ib^Mbeht-dbManAlinried'withllhe r6o,ts, smA aot va^Nlold^tC^, M draw noBtMuiient ip tbe,plan)b«afta'newroin8Me {annedi ;!i' ' r X Some fbulfeeren affimittKl; foMt winsat be fed too much, that liborKVio^iV JO'J*"' sential to large egg prisdhction. It depends slDmewh«t.on tiib war i#wla *r* fed^wnfl the, i^reed., ^iMliA*hktie ^ra^ieliea; nied» ^rM excited to e;(erpise, and ii^ilesa th«gf 4P^^% fn Secnrjnff thehr fobd thPJ^ will beoonutioo iaay and fafr io iaiy eggSi The aOn-nttrng! varieties can hardly De: -fed too" Mooh fcr profit, especially if wheat may go in the market, it ia always worth a doHsr' or inore p^r bnabel to feed to layhig hena. Benefits of, draining.â€" Among fhP other beiu^ta whioh draining secures to l^nd, the prevention of exoeasive evapoi^ioni by means of whlth wet land is continually kept at a low temperature, is not the smatlest. And this evspc ration is most active ia hot weather so that the land is deprived of the wrmth which is faadespensible to vegetiition at the very time when that warmth would be of the greatest aeryiee aud when it is most available. The only way by which stagnant water can escape fr^m land is by evaporation, or, in other words, by exhala- tion into vapour, and, though ptrhaps not equally well known, it is equally trae that heat is dispersed cr becomes latent by the cjnversion of water into vapoor. It is in obedieuc) to this law that human beinfis catch cod when their clothes are wet through and they expose themselves to the air; evapcration immediately commences, the system is obilled^ and a cold is the result; and precis"ly the same evihi play on a wet soil which is exposed toaun«nd wind. "Hie ' cooling effect is well illustrated by swathing a bottle of water in wet flannial and placing it ont it the son; if the flannel is kept moist, the more will be the evaporation, and the colJer will be the water inside the totsle. To reduse the efiect of evaporation to tan^* ble figures, it may be stated that in the pro- cess of carrying off a gallon of wtttet'by evaporation the ami is deprived of aa much heat â€" heat, remember, that is iadi^peasible to vege^tion â€" as would riise 5^ gallons of water from frecsina-iortjoiling point;'it is not surprising, ^i;3fore. ttiat evsrywhere wet land is Imown to be cold land. ]^eat, again, will pasi only a very short distance down war Js in water, because water is a bad heac-conduotcr, and if a soil is 1 a'tnrjd with water the warmth if^he atmosphere cannot peuetrate it. â-  I « » I â-  X ' Canals. Ssme out-of-the-way data respecting the sreat eanals of the wcrld ate piiblBshbd. The Imperial Canal of Qhina is o«^r I.OOO miles lang. In the year 1681 uas completed the greatest undertaking of the kind on the European Cntinent, the Canal of lAngue- dpo, or the Canid dn Middi, to cooneot the Atlantic with theftlediterraneaa; its Ipngth is 148,mUps, it has more than IQO locks and a^ut fifty aqu'sdiicts, audits highest partis navigable for vessels of Upward of 10(ytinfe The larsrest ship canal in Europe is the oreat North Holland Cshtil, completed in 1825â€" 125 feet wide at the water surface «birty- one.feet wide at the bottom, and whichhaa **d a depth of twenty feeti it extends fr«m Ainrterdam to the J^lder, fifty.one Ailea.i The Caledonia CanaCTn Solrtland. iai'V, S.' tal length of rixty mUet. mclt^iteg* tftrte lakes. The Snei Canal Is eighty-eight miUst Icnff, of wliuA si^ty-six mUes are adlhlM; can^. The.Erie Canal w 35Q4 mUea.,IaaK: the Ohio Canal, Qevelana tb Poitsmonth. 332; the l^mi h Erie, Cincinnati to Toledo, ah^' r' ^1,^' '«• EvanavUle. tot thi, utuo line, 374., ..-,! TO-DAT WITHOUT A^ ThOli â- â„¢^%e^mi^.:si music with '*i'c^^ aexp," ir .1* I Ot â- orkinj^j IMattiil'Iiiforinatioii. ' "Man does net oMmive the maanilade of ' a billicn," remarke¥«5 ieoturS ;*?f?A T bilbon aheets j»r pai»er pl«»d one 6h W^iM SSShi^*" '*•*• ««rir Ml«l» At tbu iunotaurea v» â- J-.ii-? il-il.! ' means stmplj snoking ci»^«-' and the m« trivi4^'?J'««'«Nl lie offer, in itaiouiSino^l"" ed nature This i:^e 'iSTSl^i ed her meridian. No one wort. lore the paisage of time. wh^Z* turbs them with the cry of bnkA" ro^y »5li««*ptt w«te if thetl!? E B»m life. It miy bs the T^" its sunny sk? and the quickeni^ desert* or^toasiMy th,, .tagnstj " enee which deludes them. It »,/ ' ♦ffbUfcbf tbiakiog or ot WtX^^^t Eleaaiue imprcsAon*.. for there i, ete ttrta' does not clssh with ev». iment^; jhab^t and custom of inJJ -nffliOfle^. "the isolation of», though the captives ardsurroand«ikT hO^ of' people. Toe piloaophersTe,- ' the E^st aM forced to meditate httw tb^%aate R homantty around hki one aiU3ii0r|te whose r*ligiou8 dnt»i inoOtihting lieads could be chMjail such monotony and silence, Thg J toergseatidiibfoaght would thiakftJ ple^hose Ignorance and indolence jJ iBsmds with egotism, obstinacy uid portanoe. It is a common thing lot i ians who have been educated by the govemmen); in tbe best collenL «pgifef|]a(^ to Eastern liieijl nv Awl^ iMDsMway their boob, iJ Jn^Sitmptpe with intelligent foreigngl ' Imemselves in a harem 'among ignoiMl ina»|«sd'll^ejra end their existence. M pAbiilityffhat thdymean wbeattRl that 'in iheir education of mind thej J neglect the heart.' An Eastern nnf sit for hours inhaling the ptrfaiaeodJ flower and enjoying tht music of a foi (murmuring at the time a chi^tti i| Koran, without etoppirg to nndenW meaning) aud the beautiful ohjecti o!4 tha't Allah has spread before him, joys to-day, but nevpr thinks of pn ubJEC!» which please him in Khpl painting, however dear to him, for^J of tiie pleasure they might give in theh This their writers tuXi life rich in 1 tions." Women's Song. Women who have sons to ieii,| dread the demoralizing inflaenceacfb Eooiates, odght to understand the of ypung maihood. It is excean.eijij leas. It is disturbs 1 by vain ambiti thirst for action, by longings forexcita by irrepressible desires to touch life iii fold waya. If you, mothers, rear ytvl ' so that their homes are associated vitt| repreei^'on of natural iostincti, yon sure to throw them in the society f any measure oaa supply the needii^l hearts. They will not go to the houses, at fint, for lore of liqQor;t for the animated anl hilarions conn ship they find there, which they £oi| so much to repress the disturbiog ness in their breasts. See to it, tbeii,f their homes compete with public pl« their attractiveness. Open yoarbliij day, and li^bt bright fires at night, " nate your rooms. Hang pictnree npaj walls. Put b;oks anl newspaperi r your tables. Have music and enterti games. Banish demons of dsUnes aptthy that tiBVs so I u% ruled in household, and bring in mirth ull^ cheer. Invent cccnpatioas fcr yonr li Stimulate tiieir ambitions in wcr:hy i tions. While yon make home their I light, fill them with h'gher purpose! I mere pleasure. ' Whether they shiHj happy boyhco I, and enter upon 1 with refihed t^st^ and noble ambitiori,! p'ends on yAta; Do not blame misersblef k^epsiia if your so as miscarry. B" ,pcB,ihIe that with exertion andrigat" ^a mo'iher'may' have mors control ovaj destiny of her boys ttum any other inw wbatpver.j.t,; •^,., :^ ^Parent and ChUd. 1 indispeiiEsible conditioa of e"" Itii; .^ M the ^faotaif^edncation t'l***"*^- ahoahi become the first and truest iFK1 iUe child. This possibility aad daty J 'irhteprti^llege, tbooftjn unknown, wjl .itietabr'aaM thei whole futura of th° Vi ia through the love and confideoa' «ixiit8Tet#iBeii' them that durable infl" ««e exerted.' ' If-ihe child naturally o" j)^l jittl^ joya^ ted sorrows to the everJ" sympathy of 'the mother if it grow "J the habit of turning to this w»ri«T iJlOiej^^ltQl ioftMnH, the youth wiU dja^J^ftr.iYi* Wsexpjeriencas and I .ffie parmt as^d tlie little child, iwi (if KfoT^htch'tt^t be gradually knofnj then he encountered with the aid of r" .^oe. Tlt«L form of the relation W«ri^'1^'t| oW ihanges not it« ^Tl»e eHMtiMdf 4he rehtt ibnship is tra

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