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Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 4 Sep 1884, p. 2

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 ' » I J • s 1 1 i: â-  1. :» w i â-  • ;^ 1:, u 1 1 1 li^ â- f ' Ir â-  ^r • III. i' • t. ^p^ â-  J 1 ji' in*- I ' *-â-  I' .*'â- ?; J AGBICULTURAL. fim Wfik f«r g^tOBker. The yield of wbflat depends Iwgdy npon he tillering, therefme mm carlr on riab, nellowioU. Wheeit needs to make ftatniig growth of roots befon winter. Usetnper- phosphate or other eo mmfr c i al fertilnw, when there is no snfBoent bemyard naaazsL lime may be wed to toQ rich in â-¼egstaUe aatter. Its ohitf valne is in UberatiDK othsr elements of 0bwt food. Asapseren tiT6 of mst, wet tiie seed gtain in strong br.ns, or a solution of four onncea ef blno' atone (Bolphato of oooper). to a gallon of water. m with a dnil when poauUe. If the wheat land is not well drained, make the water fuzows with the plow after all else is done. These will qniokly carry ofi â- urfaoe water after lurd rains. Grass seed may be sown a few wetka later. Clorer is best sown in spring, snd the seed may be scattered on the last snow. The best way to harvest com is to cot the stalks close to the ground, and place them in shocks. A ' 'shocking hcrae" is almost in diepeneable in setting op com so that it will stand. Willow, or other toneh withea are excellent for tying the shocks when the stalks are not suitable. The seed com should have been selected in mid-summer, but iif delayed, neg'ect this important work no Icngcr. Carwully decide what are the superior points in the com desired and choose that. This can be best done while the stalks are standing. Go through the corn field and cut the stlected stalks and place them in separate sbocka. Buckwheat should be harvested before frost can injure it. Cut it in the motning when the dew is on, to prevent shelling. Thresh as toon as the straw is sufBciently dry, and spread the grain thinly upon a floor as it may heat in a Iwge heap. Harvest potatoes when ripe, and before hard rains induce new growth, or cause them to rot. LrvK Stock Notes.â€" One of the leading requisite 8 for health and thrift in live stock, is regularity in feeding and watering. Both tbe quantity and quality of food should be uniform. Pastures are now beyond their prime, and need to be reinforced by roots, fodder com, or other green food. Any iall- ng off in condition i^ farm stock should be strictly guarded a gaiiast as cold weather ap- proaches. Young animals profit much from any extra feed during the first year. Horses after a day's work enjo^ Imng sponged with clean water containug a few diops of carbolic acid. After the regular feed, they may pass the night in the pasture. Look well to the feet and the shoulders of woik- ho.'ses. SuNDBT Mattxbs.â€" Cl( an up aU rubbish about the yards and buildings, andstcreall farm implements not in use in a dry place. Do not think lightly of the lain, but com- pete for seme ot the premiums. Mhke it a point to go to t least one exhibition and take the family. Prepart storage room for roots and other late crops, and be well ready ' for taking in the live stock when cold weather comes and autumn storms threat en. DriBkiif C t wwlw Gare of the Work Team. A dear work team makes farm operations more costly^ Gror micg is essential, as it gives rest to tired muicles: I^ is second only to proper food. It has been saidi "A good glooming is woith four quarts of oats." Feed liberally, but do not over feed. Feed regularly, and see that tl e team has its breakfast, dinner, and supper, before you have your own. It is poor policy to give horses no grain until they are about to do some hard job, or a season's hard work. Over-fteding with grain or grass, causes de- rangement of the digestion. Imperfect di- {;esticn means impaired usefulness in the ong run. A horse will do more wo k on oats than on ccrn. Com will prepare a horse for labor, but oats make a better ration during hard work. Oil and starch in com make it an undesirable summer tood; it is heating. Old hay, cut and mixed with bran or a little meal, makes a good work ration, if old hay is not plenty, feed newly cured clover or timothy. Give an occasional feed of roots, apples, and the like; they afford a variety and help digestion. If at all possible, let the tei m during hard summer work drink once in the foienoon and once in the afternoon, besides at their regu- lar meals. Judge them somewhat by your- self. See that the breast and shoulders do not cbafe. To prevent it, take care to have well-fitting collars, and bathe the shoulders with cool water on returning from the field. A Hint to Shiffebs op Affles â€" An English agricultural paper printe some ex- •ellent advice to American apple-growers. In the first place, it complains of a kind of two and three quarter bushel barrel, which is extensively used in New York, and ad- vises all who wish to ship fruit to England to use the old fashioned uree-bushel barrel, with an honest bulge. Then it alludes po- litely, but plainly, to the American habit of sorting the fruit, and stowing the second rate article in the middle of the bwrel, while the red cheeked, plumb apples are in- Tariably placed in the exposed ends. The apple packers of New England will do well to ponder on these remsrks, for they are good. Let them check their inclination to place the pleasant faces of their apples all on the outnde, aud rest assured tiiat if they can get a reputation for honest sorting, their reward shall be substantial. All the Eogs ik oke Basket.â€" We do not believe in iti The eggs may all be of excellent quality, and the Lasket strong and large enough to hold them, and yet we think it unwise to risk them all at once. There are manychances which a farmer must take, but he is rarely warranted to hazardfaig his present comforts in the hope of great gains. A man may invest all his capital in hops or cranberries, or some other spedal crop, snd â€" lose. He may clew aU the machinery of his farm operations, by going largely mto grape growins, when he might be£ter have kept to his wheat. Farmen have been sold out by the sheriff because the horses pnssnsn ed too mnoh speed, and the raoe tnek bad greater fasoinationa than tne com field. ScMue men run aU to oider, have a mill to make it, and that is all they make. Othoa raise only hay, and sell it off the farm. Their ^;gs are all in rate baaket. Mixed husbandry, and not speeialties, wins in the lang nm. How does Pat propose to get over single UessednessT Why, he pro p oae a to bridge- it, of The ooatom of toadui« glasses prior to AiBking bealthaiavwy coasBOii m -land and many othes oonntnes, and tally in Germany. It is ouriowa toteaoa this enstenn hM pw^O^ •S'\^»'I.**^^^_i oven smaugsaTaBe tribes. Todnnkontof the same cup and eat of tba'saaa plata, wm ooeol thawayain wMohJhew««it«j^ bnteda aainaga. mmI ti:a waddng te^ oontinnea to be not the leaat importart of the mairiag* osrenuaiaa to the pMm» aaj. The bdiain of Braal ntain • eoatom of drinking tofotfaer a little hrawly. as asijpi thsktldbe mMriacaiaooiMladel. InGhna similar easterns aiensst with. In the mad« isval banqnett of Germany it was the oiU' tom to pass a "loving onp* from band to hand, but this gradoally Bcoeasltated that the cup «hoald be of aawnnona siae, and thus smaller caps or glaaaea wen adopted, ud the old custom was ocnfonned to by â„¢o drinkers tonching their glasses before dzink- ing. The ceremony attending the passing and drinking out of the "lovug cap," as practiced at our great city festivals and at tome of our college halls, is said to have arisen from tbe assassination of King lid- ward. It was then the custom ammg the Anglo-Saxqns to pass lonnda large cup, from which each guest drank; he who thus diank stood up, and as he lifted the cap with both hands, his body was exposed without any defence to a blow, and the oc- casion was often seized by an enemy to mnr der him. To prevent this the following p'an was adopted: When one ot the com* pany stood up to drink, he reqnixed the companion who sat next to him to be his pledge â€" that is, to be responsible for pro- teoting him against anybody who should at- tempt to lake advantage of his defenceless position; this companion stood up also, and raised his drawn sword in his hand to de- fend the drinker while drinking. This practice in a somewhat^ altered torm, con- tinued long after the condition of society had ceased to require it, and was the wigin of the modem practice of pledging in drink- ing. In drinking from the ' loving cup" as now practiced, each person rises and takes the cup in his hand to drink, and at the same time the person seated next to him rises also, snd when the latter takes the cap in his tun, the individual next to him does the same. How Oplvm is Smoked. The smoker lies curled up, with his head resting on a bamboo or earttaeinwara pillow about five inches high. Near him stands an opium lamp, the flame of which is protected by a glass shade low enough for the point of the flune to project above the top of the shade. The smoker tekes a wire and dips it into a little box containing prepared opium. A small quantity adheres to the point of the wire, which is then held over the flame of the hmp until the heat has swollen it mto ten times its original size. This is rolled over on the flat side of the clap bowl, the opium all the time adhering to the wire. When it has been rolled to a soft, solid mass it is again applied to the lamp, and this al- ternate roasting and rolling is kept up for at least ten minutes, by which time it is in the shape of a pill and ready for use. The aper- ture in the pipe is so small that it can only receive the smallest quantity and the most careful manipulation is needed to transfer the tinyjiall of opium from the end of the wire to the bowl of the pipe. The point of the wire is inserted into the hole of the pipe and worked round and round till the soft opium forms into a conical shaped ring around the wire. By twirling the wire the drug is gradually detached from it, leaving a hole through the opium about as large as the hole of the pipe bowl, with which it com municates, The pipe is now ready and the bowl is held over the lamp so that the opium comes in contact with the flame. A splut- ter.ng noise ensues as. the smoker sucks at his pipe. After each successive draw he ejecta from nose and mouth a volume of smoke, the very smell of which is enough to turn a horse's stomach. By the end of the fourth or fifth whiff the pipe is empty. The smoker scoops up another dose of opium, rolls it into a pill and repaats the operation with tbe same patience as before and smokes away until the pipe falls from his hands and ha is lost in dreamland. If tobacco smok- ing were only half the trouble tobacconiste would soon have to shut up shop. |H?B MOUTHS WITHOUT lOOH, â-  t â-  » â-  How Eclipses of the Moon Impress Say- ages, The Greenlanders have a personal appre- hension in the matter and believe that the moon rummages their hoases for skins or victuals, and destroys those persons who have not observed due sobriety. The South American Chiqnitos try to help the darken- ed star against a dog that has wewried it till ite light has been oolaied red, and extin- guished by its streaming blood and they shoot arrows into the sky to drive away the dog. Charlevoix gives a sunilar account of the Gnarani, except that with them a tiger tak«s the place of a dog and In the lan- guage of the Tupis the literal translaticn of the ward eclipse is, " The jagnar has eaten the sun." So, m Asia, the Tnngnsea believe an evil spirit has swallowed the esxtii's satellite, and they try to frighten it away by shoto at the darkened disk. In Sumatra and Malacca the fear is aroused that a great snake will swallow the sun or the mo« and the Nagas of Assam set up a great drum- beating, as if in battie, to trighten away the devouring monster. Aoumg the American tribes sresome who believe that eclipses an a wamiug of the approaching disappearance of the sun and the fall of the moon at the end of the world. The Pottawattomies toll of a demon in the shape of an old woman sitting in the moon weaving a basket, on the completion of which the world will be des- troyed. A dog contends with the woman, tearing the basket to pieoes every once in a whiles and then an eoliiise of the moon takeaidace; others imagine that the moon is hongry, sick or dying at these times while tbe Alfnraf, of Ceram, thiwlr he is aaleep, and make a great uproar to awake â-² LttUequneL Two ladies had a littie tiff, and one of them remarked as she departed •'Well, as I told my husband this nunn. mg, I shouldn't care to be in your shoes." " I iniagine not," the other one respond- ed. " Yon woold find them painfully close fitting." Motto for oydista (adapted, b^ kind per mianon. bcMn die popolar cry (Mf tradesmm mchwtpnslghbwfioodB).â€" "Tri before yim Vma Plaik. N. Y.-Intareit j" J^*^ of Ksto Smnlaey, the rmaa V^I^SaJ" 163^ta9s haa been mvoluBtarily alinrrtg » dSSS apwoding ««««i^^*"»_^^ ofttMroon^Tirith extraordiMrynpfabtJK^ WitUn the paafe week or two aoorso «,P*' HwhATeooawto thia village from piMsa naa^ milso aw^ to see or inqooo aw«» thlsMadciiblegirL To-^ /»• «â-  â-¼Â«][ low. sad the members of her tmmOf b^ve tludTshe oaoBot live more than a f«w hotfs looser. Althongh She haa anffered area* ttSk of late she has not felt any incUxation to take any nonrishment. The mother «f Mns SmnlMj said to-night that her parcnto and avaty member rf tbe family bad ooazed and Implored the girl to swallow some food, but without a%a.L Even wh»n her agony caused her body to sway to and Iro inththo CONSTAKT BEOTJLABm 01 A PENDULUM, she turned her face away from the mcst temptmg morsels that could be prepared, and ii^ that she could eat nothing. She was conscious and able to talk this after- nocn. Kate Smulsey was a bright and in- dustrious girl a littie more tlun two years ago. She was then 18 years of age. and had acquired an excellent reputation among the good peop'e of this vicinity as a dress- maker. She was quick and willing and al- ways had plenty to do. In July, 1882, she was taken sick and was confined to her bed. She gradually impioved, and for a short time was able to bis about. In October, however, she grew worse and was compelled to retum to the sick bed, from which she has never since been able to rise. The first symptoms of her disease was tnmbling uid shaking of tbe hand, followed by an in- voluntary motion of her r ght leg and foot. After a while her head had a sidewise move- mjBnt to the right. Doctors diagnosed the case as St. Vitus' dance, snd the usual re- medies were applied, but with no bent fit to the patient. The girl grew worse and the motion at first confined (o the limbs of one side seized her whole body. The motion was at first perpendicular and like that of a person sawing wcod. only not so violent. To this partionlwr motion was soon added one partly rolling, and the two were com- bined. Lately the motion has been rolling only, the rolls oonstentijr moving her entire body from side to side with perfect regular- ity at the rate of 50 per minute. This mo- tion is perpetusl for 22 or 23 honrs out of 24, and is piBrfectiy involuntary. The poor girl would he quiet if she could. For an hour or more â€" nevir more than two â€" in the night she is motionless. She then SLEEPS FBOM SHEER EXHAUSTION, but is awakened by the slightest noise. The moment that she wsksns the ceaseless roll- ing begins, to stop only when, worn out, she again sinks to rest. Some persons doubted the necessity of this constant mov- ing of the girl's body, and thought it was voluntary. One physljian sat by her side 'or three honrs, during which time there was not the slightest diminution of the rolling. Another physician said he could stop it if he wished, snd seizing her by the shoulders, held her tightiy a few minutes, but the in- stant he rdaxed his hold her body resumed ite motion. She feels the result of this yet, and says that there is not a spot on her peison that is not sore. The weight of a pin is actually painful to her, and cannot be endured. Her arms, are larger and harder than one would expect for a young lady of her size in perfect health. To the touch they indicate strong muscle. In fact, all tbe muscles of her body are well devtloped. This u accounted for by the constant motion of her body, which keeps her in perpetual exercise. Another remarkable thing about Miss Smnlsey's case is that she haa no bed sores on her person. In most oases where pertona are confined to their bed for a long period sores show themselves and become very troublesome. In her case, although she has not left bet bed since a year last October, there are none. Since January 1st she has not been ab'e to raise her head from her pillow. About three months ago she began to have trouble with hw eyes. A strong light was painful to her. She lies now in a daikened room and wears blue glasses. The color of the glasses oontrsste strongly with the pale, white face and the snowy bedding. During the early part of her sickness Miss Smulsey relished deli- cacies, and the neighbors sent in such littie dishes as thc|y thought would plesse her. Her appetite was not ravenous, still she ate as much as an invalid ordinarily would eat At length solid food distressed her. and since March 11. 1884, SHE HAS BOT SWALLOWED A MOBSEL. For some time she was able to drink either milk or water and drank two or three glassea each day. Af tor a time she could not drink milk, and water only was taken, and thatin sniaU quantities. At length she could not even drink water. One day she drank a glaas of water and was soon aefzed with con- vulsions, and for two days was in terrible distress. She bloated till she measured nearly twioe her natural size abont tbe waist During the hwt eight weduihe has not smllowed a drop of water or any other nonruhment. Attempte have been made to jpve her a teaspoonfnl of -water, bat invari- ably It brought on convulsions and creat distress. Every exertion seems to bloat^ and bloat. She has no desire to eat. ^d thirst is satisfied by holdne water ii h« mouth ud ejecting it. This she does wveral tames a day. Her stomach tZ faUj^asif shehad rcoentiy eaten a hear^ Mim Smnlsey's sickness has been aooom- V^ by no dolnskm whatever, andher T^^J? ®^ rational She would be of her physician she haa made attemSs to AU effoite to feed hor m other W5ys tiian by denud of the positive fiwttiiat fbri63dav« up to noon to-day she haa not tarted fo^ «d that for weeks' dm ha. STSSoSS k ""' *«»*«». soientlste haye%iaited her and gone away mizzlad. ^â„¢ hiSjSS^'^T,?*'â„¢"' -d are "Jgwy^wapected. Dr. ZoUer, the attondimr â- offering from normal dropsy. Dr AwS thmk fctapeculiarform rfl^Vito'dSS! Thediifciwu» between the Quaker form of marriage and tiie Epi«»pal finS^ 2â„¢ hr^e doe. p,«ni„ to obof bat 2 THE KECffiHB OF STAB BUiilD. lth*tfe« lor be tnmbleaomo tttiea bsfore and snheeql Shoals, the J^ booters saomo jjiy revolMHb to the i«voIMHib tho Was of ooaat of NeK^mp?fc" 7«» that wmU tan maatr» tale Of NMO. ^to SSdi Md hlMr boo^.M»d matt a» Ike savi^pUti thof captorod Bom Win along j»^ it wy. tuKWod that bushels 6( doablooniwerebarMdiBa«g^iiag orevicea of tiie rooks, or the Uttli Ofcves that have been eaten out of the lodsea by tbe rastlesatide; hot tho piaeo waa thowm^y aearohed by aeveral genorationa of fiahw- men. and nothing more valuable than a maty ontlasa or a buated blunderbuas was ever found. â€".„.,. The gnmdamea tsU how Gapfe. Kydd oamo here oftea, " as he sailed, aa he saUed," anA there are legenda of other mratea qiuto as fierce and free as he. The Star Island used to be haunted by a beantifnl spectre with long white robea and golden tresaee reach- ing to her heels, who used to oomo oat ta some andboovered eavem at dawn, and shading her eyes with a hand that was as white and beautifal aa a lily's bosom, gaze off upon the sea in hopeleis expeotMcy of the return of a clipper that sailed away and never came back ag»in. Tfce atory goes that a bloody-hearted old pirate, being pursued by a cruiser, brought his beautiful mistress here and left her while he went out to battie, telling her that by dawn he would be back again, but he came not, not even till now. She died of starva- tion, but her fnthfui spirit still comes to the summit of the island aa the sun rises each morning, to meet the oorsair who never re- turned. There are eight of the islands, the smallest being as large, or rather as small, as a city building lot, and the largest containing only a couple of hundred acres â€" ^nothing but bare, Ufeless rocks, carved by tbe incessant waves into strange grotesqueness, and cover- ed by no vegetacion except low clinging vines and the New England blaeberry. Four of the islands are inhabited, the hurgest, the Appledore, hewrs a hotel and a few cottoges. Star Island has another hotel and a small settiemant of fishermen a third has a few fishermen's hate, and the fourth has a bold, white kghthouse springing out of ite orest. They were discovered by Cap. John Snuth, the friend of Pocahontas, who in 1614 ex- plored the New England coast in an open boat, and spent some time here making re- pairs and resting. On Star Island stands the only monument erected in America to Capt. Join Smith. It is a rude affair â€" a prismatic-shaped shaft of marble, upon a pedestal of eandstone, in- scribed at length with the record of his valorous deeds, and some cyclopedias say he is buried hero, but that is a mistake. The ^ar on the Ckmdor. The announcement that the Chilian Gov- ernment has dwlared a war of extermina- tion against the monarch of vultures â€" the coador â€" and offivs abont five dollars for every condor kiiled, justifies someiemark as to the possibility of the Chilian Government real zing ite purpose. The Condor has in- deed been decUrel "an enemy to tbe repub- lie," and condor hunting bus become a high- ly lucrative business but when (me takes into consideration the astoimding powers of the bird, and ito wonderfal habits, one finds it hard to believe that the government can ever succeed in destroying the species at any price. Shooting it on the wing Is almost out of the question for it sails at altitudee far beyond the reach of the human eye, and roosts on peaks immeasurably above the clouds. It has been seen at altitades of 20,000 fest. It can withstand variation of temperatun beyond human endurance, and hatches ite young far above the saow line nevertheless, it rests quite coaaforably on the buring sands of the Southern seaooast. It faaunte the whole western slopes of the Andesâ€" not only Chili, but Pern, Bulivia and Patagonia. With the vast spread of ite wings â€" often exceeding twelve feet â€" ^it can perlorm prodigious journeys in a few hoars, Ite eye is miracuously keen for when no bird is visible in the sky, even with tbe aid of a powerful glass, if a male or other animal in a convoy fall or die, the oondors instantiy drop upon it like lightning from heaven. Latterly the birda have so increased a,% to form a veritable scourgeâ€" notwithstancUng the fact that the female lays but two eggs at a time, and that condor hunting haa been a rogular and luorative calling for more tiian a century. Traps are the only reliable means of c«tohing them but the day will certainly come when traps shall be of no avail whatever. Condon have already leaned to fear a gun and with their won- derfal si{;ht it is absolutely impossible to get within rifle range of them. Birds soon leam to ikvoid diab^, as has hoea proved smoe the erection of tho telei^a]^ luits in United States few aro sow killed by flying against the wires. It WiU be strange if the condor does not lean to avoid snarM in- stinctively. When the birds find life in Chili or in Pern nnnsnally diffionlt they have only to migrate further south or north, and propa- gate their speoiea in other altitadaa, until they beoome so numoroaa as to mi^to again to those regions which oatiawed them. ih«i the work of destraotion would have to be done over. All things considered it seems impossible to exterminate such a raoe of valtuies onless meana of destroying their eg^ can^be devised but nobodyâ€"St even Mr. Grahamâ€" woold nndertake to aoale lev peaks 19.000 or 20 000 feet highfocslwha parpooe. The oondor is oartunlv ^kd with rare powers of salf-pr.serv«ti5n^Ed It is not anhkoly his ha»^h%dow may AmS above the oorpae of tiie ^t South AnMrimn m that land twilight meeeding the Wld! GEMSOP^Otfi^ Good, the more coBi»«„i ' nndant grows. «*'»uicu^ Tokeepopa'acpnio,. and a awest one. ** What i» defeat? •tepto'i '•r^H #Othijig bat tile firtt^l^^ I IIâ€" Beftued. The moon beat silently npon the wavea. and tto waves beat nday ^ttoJS' heaitatingly. 'Hm onecoSition/'^Jo^l^ condition. •«• owMUHon," he pliailed hr^d^. h^. "Itis."sho«pU^SuSSy-^ yoa do not agab ask wT *i «St ft" 2j^y« OM the wave. «d iff lis oSJ «Md to hsit as they wtmUmmmSm "L^^^o-^tiSiii^hT^lS^ fc^ '\^ ^Li- li Soep oarefally out of a «^ Bl'a way, and stiU more Js!?' A person ondtr the firs. «. ho oan command leoorL*^ them. " "'M If yo« hit the mark, you »^^^ above it every arrow that fliJ,*!»«i traction of the earth. °*"«»li| It in the pleasore of the ^od,^ voysi b in coofotmity with lustiMS^I ooofoimity to the Uwii. "°"*lliloJ Whatever pe-ple may thbk that which you balieve ri^t ^l diff r!nt to censure or pn^ iq| The moment we feel angry in ^A^^ "^»^y °^ "WviiJS and begun strivug for onraelvwf Philanthropy, like charity, mat 1 home. Frrm this centre oatnl may extend in aa ovcrextendiag^ He who is dear to the heart iiaMTT far as fas can ha he whom the Iwi* is remote, though i e ir as onr v»|jSi Any coward caa fight a battls Jj J sure of winnning but give the'JJ has pluck to fight wh«n no it buT"S ing. ^«l As the soil however rich it uuvi-J not be prodo ctive without culture, Jftji without cultivation can never good fruit. Every man is not so much a woih the wo Id as he is a snggestion of tu. should be. Men walk as propheoMS next age. r â€""wi Where are there two things so and yet so nearly related, so unlikeSl often so hard to be distinguished ftoT ' other, a.% humility and pride? Conversation should be pkasut i scurrility, witty without aflf«ct»ti(, without indecency, learnsd without o edness, novel without fslsehood. True glory consiste in doing whatd a place in history, writing what i be read, and in so living as to nihl world happier and better for liTisji Eneot not praise without envy imiJ aie dead. Honors bestowed on tiie] trions dead have in them no envy for the living pity the deidl C'ty and envy, Uke oil and vinegar, i to not. Educate all the faculties and of chilJnn but, above all, see tint j oonacienoe, the balance-wheel of tb u system, is trained unto perfect accord i the principles of positive truth andi justice. If Satan ever laughs it must beith crites. They are the greatest dapeilifl They serve him better than any otin^| receive no wages. Nay, what ii itiUi extraordinary, they submit to mortifications than the sincereit tians. We are ruined not by what wti want but by what we think we do;t lore never go abroad in search of yonri if they are real wante, they will com k in search of you for she who buys ' does not want will seen want whatih^ not buy. Never be ashamed to confess yonr anoe, for the wisest man on earth ii ant of many things, insomuch that i^| knows is mere nothing in comparim i what he does not know, ihere camtl a greater folly in the world than to i we know everything. The most glorious exploits do not ili^ furnish us with the clearest discoTvis| virtue or vice in meu. S jmetimei a i of leut moment, an expression or a j4l lorms us better of their chaiactera mi J olinations than the most famous siefje^) greatest annamentk, or the bloolieitli whatsoever. Wl at is death To go out like 1 1 and u a sweet trance to forget oin and all the passing phenomena of thed we forget the phantom of a fleeting r" to fcMT-D as in a dream new connectioBi* God's world to enter into a more f phere, and to make a new step np i graduated asoent of creation. Where and How We Bomemberl If, now, we take models of our 1 .aad on the first mark out the looatiooaj various areas connected with the vanouf sory organs as determined by the vw oal connection of the white nerve tlirs on the second mark out the location otj various areas which physio'.ogish shown to govern various sensory orgvsj the third muk out the various ""cl disease poduoes distarbance of s^l tho various tensory organs, and ""i m-°mory of perceptions by those orgsmt onthefowth mark out the variooi' whieh withor after disease of the senaory organs â€" ^we shall find that np" foar brains the areas belonging to «V. organ coincide. We may tberefore«fJ that each class of sencations and aacB of memories has ite own definite ar* ' graymatier on the surfacs of the Memories of objecto tean aie l'**p^ posterior part in the ocoipitsl ^J Memories of soonds heard are lx**f'LJ lower lateral pert in the tempM« Jjl Memories of motit us in the limM 'J tonoh inthoae limbs, are located Jids^ in the oentral. lateral region. ,***"rBl speech an located in the frcn^ "^/ therefore a mistake to speak of «^A single faoolty of the nund. It u^' j MttmUaffeof distinct memories 7"^^^ pooMMS, each Und of ^^T^.^St^l OK nt from the others both in its nwsu J n ite location aa are the diflermtwrj sense throagh which the orij _)OBehad taken [laiigUacklog wl I of a sand-bank -â-  I. But at tbe _jastbeyplung [kj( male a eiidde as it did so the vi r teeth, and small â- trous crocodile „j hideous creatu [river so clumsily I watching it wou _hs arrow-like swi Imomeut it touch I knew only too i and made fr Easten I In the East they f^ysartoavow( (â- MB pen â- ^ How l1 Eavly Marriages. Early marriages are r^V"^.^^ oommon among boys and gir}'";-*! end of London. They begin "'k^P" paoy" when twelve years of district there are four marnea eldest la 19, and receives 13) • other is 18; has three years of bM ship yet to aerve, snd has two cflw I oti^ is botweea^ 16 snd 17. andj; Qhildrai^tha fourth is 16 and KW had oUld on 111 a woeh. 1

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