^SH ^OTgtheZalM. ik^»^ not need »ny dothay. lJ»'»lf,emetime. for the little I* »«i;^Sont a blanket. There Uf 'thli%^toter, bat It never '•"hSito tfaehouM. on the ,.F'*:"SJk.ixtymUea from the ^f^imle loe.Md beyond that [♦•^"^li there. U ieme mew. L ••'*L"S nevor aeen mow when L America. One morning M f?o-n their eleeptog-repaje «•*•!?. fi'it tima the pesmd aU ""ire very much excited ind nny I the anew to aee what roE" â- " "BftS threw It down qoiek- P- ^fit burnt thdr fingen they 'ifS.t mew weald barn. '»*^!Ser buyi a oette. blanket /*.«» good de^ of money (75 K-rlnnP the babe on theae ooel l»»^*P JL no bed or orlb to pnt In le ihe laye It on a mat en "•5dtErelt.l«.|».w^y. „ not mngh work te do in Kfhi hw no olothee to make er fei She doe. net eren wadi rflMtn. for ihe laya*!* wUl wear KIk Itand I think It *eald wear •'rfiheihMldwaihitoleMi. She »f 1 dlihof food to cook at a meaL •".t^t ettt In the middle of the floor, |(* " .?j .af ffit^ wooden â- peona J'Sn come and eat what they want, ffru.nythlngleftthedog.Iapit RtTdlih. So tne woman ha« enly li, Ind a few •P»®°" *« " "•* J"*^ ' ibher hut to eweep oat and no to dat' ^.:-!- ^â- ; ^B::«*»--«i.. Amprioi^j Pclnoe ing BaMeford PreebyfeMriuu have deoided to boild a new ob^wolb Freataltovahjar^dtte potato and other orbpe In Gape Katon. At Snnunanide, P. E. I, dnrins a reoent •twm,^-ainrtj^oat. fifteen ikaap, a kdito, and aa«e Tere killed. by I%;htnfnff.- Hm deg ^i^^nMng almig under a wageo when â- tnmt* --__' B.ampfitthi^irilibg fhrnt has brnd^ ram- larljr araq^ Bight far twtlva â- tnthe. Md th*i8wt««thedeg haa been to redaoe a pawfctel,kadtona valoa to a haane yelp. ThaaBJmal'aeartydeaeaae fa auioulyde- sy ISH. do« not «P" *» "^tSi'^lT^S* 7hBib«id ha. paid tm htmd of oat- u.kit Sbe takes great pride In hav- K.rden-a8 much ao a. your mott- tovlDg a nice house. When ^e \1L out in the g«den to work, ehe tU on her back with the blwaket Lkenof, and marches oat with a Ton her .honldor, a dish of eonr iahor head to feed the babe with and Ldi fall of ear* «^ °"°' """V irttin the corn broacjoaat and com- I bar digging, swinging back ^d forth Tone on her bask, 'thae reck- Tbibe to sleep. She then lays it on in the shade of a tree, and very large iWi^ow a large aa a Bat they ones. There is one ithore-large enongh to [have caught them ai iindilxteenfeet long, [iMwaliow the children. .^ IdHD the little one wakes up It cries joit J children do, and the mothc r throws .iber bee and runs to It ]ast as fast aa Lilyour mothers run for yon when they lyoaorjing. She loves her child just li H white mothers do theirs. It is and the mother feeds it with that I'fflilk ihe ha brought en her head. jieverdrink sweet milkâ€" neither the Jien nor the ^rown peopleâ€" for their lueklwajB tour. The mother has a lyef feeding her little one withoot iipooD. She puts her hand jastnn- tthibtbe'd month and makes attuuiel, ipntiog b the milk It rans right dawn bebild'i threat. When the little fellow liigenoogh te run all abent the hat, and (wi liii father has seme food ready to tmay be thick milk with belled oem ad), he comes md holds eat his two I pat together and says, "Ol pe baba I kwako oknm aandl ' [give me. ^ume food of yenis which ia nioe.] •fitiier fills his hands heaping fall and ^lipi it all out without spilling a drop on â- jnnnd, I childten are contented with plain ^ud have but one kind ef teed at a Ibey never complain of a hard bed, â- |h they sleep on a mat on the ground, â- litboat even a little blanket ta cover P* If you iheuld go into their hat yon jnldfind " the little darkles in bed with lug over them." They are just ashaiqpy ^Ibgeats they sleep with at night, er as • Bukeya that come down from the tops |ft(tiee te steal the corn aa soen aa it is Ibey are as ohecifnl[aa tbe babaona i wme out from ameng the reoka to up the coin the mother, planta, if doei not icmsb in the garden all day Ikttpthem out. They are very fond rfaf' One of their amuaementa censiata ^ttkbg oxen and cows and other animala m They skip and jump abont as hap- Tud joyfnl as the animala about them. _t"'*ie ii a Und of happiness which yen lift and which they have not. And they I'Mtknow hew to get It until misslenaries Ittiudtellthcm. A Pata^ODian Paiadiie. Krtl.Bg ago PatsgonIa was belbvsd to la* " °""' deeolate and uninviting ISL .t*® world. It has been learned 1^ the past vhree years, however, that a Iwtt. V, "Jat»genian b not to he judged liri ^."" Terdureless Atlantic sea- IbTL. L^^entfaie MlUtary ezpeditteaa lh^.k1*L ^^" «"»e astonishing re- R,«»"rfCoLFont^. iMnw" Argentine governor ka£J°\P"T*»~' " J««* explored Su"'** '»'« from Itt monthen thiTAt. !??* i« '*«, bead streams in the K^^ 250 miles south of 4 20 soiia MttrAT...5^"' **»'«'» the president NtkitL?^ " (^ Fentana said **ntoL .T"" ""y '«"«• â-¼â€¢lleys, kpSJJ I?«M, immense traato ef 1(.7JJ1J;»»^/' he writes, '^Hse i dii»7ir iwlf-J^tt abimdaBoeof weed. L.*Jld^ii^'*8»«» IbeifcTa, !!!«3S|!Lâ„¢* we ef the meet I»y "'"" of lakes, and ex- i«««Ueentafailngtreca of unumal |!!nd," he writes, "new lands ji22»» q»Uty, weU adapted far liUg* wd oatUe raisfag, andThaaltk- Ttt»tn^9H mmkMn of koa titeagh tka dslf» at ^Sjganyida a f^ iiqri' age. Attimtfaiwef Btwtiag thetuloftte drive was in Golden Lake, and it was thought tiiat whan the taU wenid reaoh E^anville the head wenid be at ttie month of the Bonneohere, over tUrty-five mHea dlrtaDt. The Sabbath School statfatios of the iTova Soetia Mathodist Coafatranae ahew an ava** age attondance of 1.000 in ezoesa ef last year. The number of eenvatslMU reported waa 634, and the number of ohDdren pledg- ed'againat intoxicating liquors, tobaooo, and profanity, S.IS?^ an increase ef 1,699 ever the previoaa year. Mr. George Park, a leading farmer of E wt Garaf caxa, was found dead in a field a few days ago. Heart disaase Is supposed to have been the cause of death. He was a native of Sjotland, much respected In the oammunity in which ho was known. His widow and family are well provided for. Mr. .W English, of Petorberen^, pro- poses that 1ms children shall bathe wiOont drowning H* has oosistmoted a box thirty feet long by I « fe ft wile, and fear feet deep, and haa moored it to a large boom in the river, near the shore. It h so arranged th at the bathers may raise or lower the box to suit their requirementa. With a prudent engineer the contrivance should cfifeotually answer the purpose In view. Israel McLanghUn, who attompted an assault on Miss Stewart, of Hampton, N. B., haa been sentenced to imprisonment for life. Be is a notorious character, and haa been guilty of the same efFence in Trure, Chatham, Newcastle, and Woodstock. Pre- ' â„¢.n„ .Tiklr«a all ahnnft vlously he had Borvjd a term of six yean therearesomany snakes. U about ^^ Carelton. .have never heard f ^.t^^l^^JSTHJ hTTnativo of sl John, aid waaaseMier In the Union army during the Amenoan war. Mr. H. P. McCtaney, sen of Mr. W. Mcr Oraney, M. P., was In Vancouver during the first conflagratien. He had a narrow ea« cape with his lUe, and, as It was, lest all bis clothes, excfupt these In whidi he stsod. Mr. MoOraney having fin- ished a heavy contract on the Vancouver Iiland Hallway, recently purchased an interest In a sawmill In Vancouver city. He was one of the few fortunate ones whoso premises were not burned out. Advices from St. Catherines report an epidemic of black eyes. The trouble began with two yenng men connected witii the retail coal and weed business. The first round resulted in nothing serieos, and was followed by an hoar's fdjeumment The second round was partldpated In by half-a- desen of the friends ef the principals, and all succeeded In having themselves finished in mere or less attractive oelers. The police were at lunch. An ex stadent of Ae Agricultural College, made loud new employed near Eden Mills, made load prefessioQS of hb abDMes as a fisherman. Some persons, however, had so little faith in his attainments in this line that they nude a wager that a veusg lady of the neighborhood could eulnahhim, he, hew- ever, to catch six to her one. The result wasAat the young woman caught nine fish, one of which was a trout weighing a pound and a half, whilethe ex-student oanght six shiners, jt^ Mr. Asa Fillmore, ef Albert oennty, N. B., abont three years ago changed what was appar«ntly a fiftydolhr bill fera stranger The bill proved, however, to be only worth. $6, a cy^er having been ingeniously pasted koiiide the figure 5. The first person sus- p«ui«d proved his innocence. A second par y mm arrested, tried, and acquitted, and nothing oaloulatadjto throw light fn tke mystery transpiredUnntll ,a few days ago, when Mr. Flllmere was approached by one ef his neighbors who acknowledged that ha had the bogus bill changed, asked to be forgiven, and restored the money with in- terest. A singular case was reported from Bristol, Que, recently. MissMmnie Baird, aged abont 22 years, dangfiter of Mr. John Balrdi Is just recovering from aniUoess of tibree months, and for fonr wOaka and four days of that time she leek no neturishment but a Uttle lemon water. She beoama greatly emaciated, being reduced to a mere skeleton, and grave fears were entertained that she would not recover. Phiysioians were called in, but the caie was beyond their pewer-- they dU not understand her ease, andoould doMtblBg to benefit her. A •hoyt tfane ago her appetite returned and developed to neh an extent that she haa a oontinual oravingfor food. Her oempleto recovery seema aaaared. â- â- Mr. N. 0. Blair, a badsoape pdnter o* MontnaL â- aiqwaaed to have been^rown- •d while sketeUng en tie UpperOtiMm, near t)ho onthlt ef tiia Chalk Blver. The Mie «ni slarftsd ny tt;^ OaDriM vsr eaaee, presnmaldj far Wspuipoae ef sninghls di^ wotk. Ha taa 90ft seensiaw- "• IWf' eaaee waa fonad b np in the rive^. ••4 *il!^ 'tTS!!. leaving oampirai dfaoov^rad m^^ tiie oaRSBt. The slvar,i aft ' hafas ap gsipdtohava .widaorwild. Tb ^jot of tha qM"»*",;_. no reaaen to unwiMBd Aleamwdir ana lir. F. nUThavostalM *-• hopaefiiadiog £^ with "rL^mUmiimg-Mmm, V.e a«areta iMim.**l^UA Ml av asa," aMWsnd i^r:e5L^ifiSti3Ei.'S 'asaidfoofto nyr Uf** *baB O^laia oaaM hai^ » and tell ms ttak tbare was an e$ jsr aanaing with xaKe an tiio water tina and gallinc for aas; andha added In a wkispar "I think, I7 the natnio of tha language he is nslng, Im masft, bo a vary Ug awelL" So I put the sardine dawn uhtasted. and went off to aee what the matter. Tme enough aomiboiy there, and I oould paroeive a large aelarti^ bobUag alieva the water depot Hko an agitotsd murhroMS. Ita owner waa a small man, and to ssonra a aaora oam- â- landing poaitioa, had monntsd on a pHe ef empty ttsis, from which point of advaatag4 he fired off hb remarka like shrapnel shelL " LiA here," ha sdd, as soon as I oaasa withfai range, ' did yon give erdars for the males to have water f' ' CertaUy not^ sir aidmab are only to ho watered when tte wdb have been o^tared." " Very well hare b your repreeeototivo, tha effioar l"with witharlag soemâ€" ** yen laavain oharge, breoUng the orders and" watsrin« amies." Hero the Inekbss A %UXIOQEft:AllIM iMl^^:AMti U^-'4jJ« to s^ tiiat he was net doiaganything of Oe aart^ bat ms only lookSig aft a papas on whibh soase one had written a reqneet for water for mules. " I don't oare, sir I I saw yon with my own qfos take Ob paper in yenr band, and If you were not going to water the mides, ' what wore 70a doing wMt ItT "Pardon me, air," remarked A meekly, •• bat U jam are net more oarafal those tins will come down " for he saw the pib b e g inning to trembb beneath hb saperlar's wra'-ih. Djwn Jumped .the ether aa If they were red het^ but aa aeon as ho feond himself an firm ground centtaaed tl-e attack. ' I'll toll yon what it b, air," he said, *• thb wator b as pracloua aa our life'a blood, and there b only one thing to do to prevent Ite behig (qoandered w« muat niako an example ef an officsr." Here he fiiM hb gUncs atemly on poor A whose enor- mous big eyes and somewhat cadaverous faoe gave him a ihoat melancholy exprea- aien, "He muat," centinaed he alowly, "be taken oatddethe areba and ahot." " Why, certainly, sir a very good thing, too," I replied cheerfully but jast for deoenoy'a aake, before coiulgning my friend to an early death, I added " If you will truet me, I wBl be respsnaihlo that the mules get no water, ana there b stiU a laTge reserve In store." I did not dare to look at A who, netwMistanduig his solenu face, was pereeptibly shaking with internal spasms m snppreesed mirth, which threatoaed at any moment to bo too much for hlbn, thcughhe pulled himself together and managed to look aa sober as a criminal at the bar, when the other replied, severe- ly: " I am glad to hear you say so, and I will trust yon j butâ€"" and here he again fixed A ^with hb eye before turning away, as though rcgrettiag hb bniencyâ€" ** mark my word. If that ofBcer attempte to give wator to the mulee he must be taken eutefde the sareba and shot. " " You evidently are not good enough to be shot inside the zareba." I said to A aa, bidding bim prosper at his rMt,I returned to my breakfast. I feel have deioribed thb scene very feebly, but there was a fine, old fashioned flavor about the idea of casually shooting ar c^oer be- fore breakfast that tickled me immensely. Killed in Time. A husband who had been out shooting, but had net been successful, rather than re- tnni home empty-handed, sten?ed into a shop and purchased a hare. ^-^--^^.'^k^H^ " There, my ducky," he said to hb wife on reaohing honte, " you see I am not so awkward witii tim gun after alL" ^., "L»tmesee!" „;i,.-*5 '•; " Isn't ho a fine fellow 1 ' â- j'""' ' "My dear," said the wife, aa aha oarrbd the hare to her noatrll*, and put it down witii a grimace, " yon ware qnlto right in killing him today; tomorrow it would have been toe lato." **Hew b tUs, son-in law yen went to the ball last night, and here it is soaroely two months since you lost your wtfe?" I acknowledge It, mother- in-bw, but then you know I danoe so sadly r P«epls to get kerne that they era glad they went •' What Watoxt did yailr hmlbind have for baatiar year **ltwaNtpntoztyoBr Haner I it waa a dnk*' AiaUaw named Otmtj fell tiiroagh a Montreal aidewalk last Spsing and has l»a- eeme one of die sners of the dty^ ' Oontributorâ€" "Hsre b a msansor^t I wiihtoaabaattâ€" ' Editor (waving hb hand) â€" "PmasCTy. Waasa^fuU jast new." Contriboter (hbnd^) " Vary weU I wUl oallagain when some ef yea are aebeir." "lamooBvinaed that tha world b dafly growing Iwtfts r " remaricsd a r ove r end gsn- tbaumtoa hcothsr-elsBgymaa *«nv eon- gregatientaoeaataatlyiaeteadng." "Yes," repUad tha otiiari who hapnaned be a penitsntiary ohaplain, " and se b mbaa." In Oesa Hqias of "money lying idU" wo hoard ef a aaan in New York who, when he attaada Aardi, aooapiee a pew the f arthart from thOalpit to save tiio interert en hb meaqr Wb the oelleoters are passing ttie pbto f^fooatrlbatieaa. Fatbarâ€" " What ought I to do to a bey who b bay and diaabadloBt, who has no re- epoot for hie parenta! What shoald be done to ttat kfaid of a boy " Sonâ€"" Don't, for goodness wko, talk him to death. G.ve ma thoUokln'that'soomln'tome»an' be dene with is." Mieaionhry (to nawly-oonverted^hief of a oannlbaltribt) -VWtfU, Lake* haw abeat oinibaUsmI Fonr weeks ago 'yen sbngh- tsredyoar father; havayaa net improvad sinoef Cunlbalâ€" " Yea, indeed, my teaeh or sinoo then I have only eaten a oeaple ai very dbtant reUtivea." Mr. Isaaoateinâ€" " Ah sb, yon rsatered mine pey a goat service, rir, in palling him out ot vator, und I shall nef er forget H* sb, nefer." Ufa Savwâ€" " Oh. wdl, Oafs nothl^." Mr. Isaaosteinâ€" "Nottiing, mbM frenti Did yon know mfaie pey had on vun ef mine twan^-fivo delbr suite t" A poetess, bewailing the Inconstanoy ti man, says: "If I should live a thensend yearsâ€" ef course none of us oanâ€" I'd never forget those broken vows nor love another man." Oensldering she character ef her poetry, her decUraden that she oan't live a thousand years b cause far widespread re- jtrfdng. The baby was doubled up by the orampe and yelUng at the rate of a mlb a minute as the father and mother stood ever the orlb with the bndanum bottle between them. "No, Julia," he said gently but firmly, " yen pour It out that child b growing so much like your mother that I oan't trust myself." An Irishman, owing to dreadful mbfer- tanes, resolved te commit suldde. But as he did nc s Wish it to be knoim, lest it should leave a stain on his family, he left a noto oa the table to the foUowbg eflect " I hope yen wHl not think that I committed snbide. The pistol went off as I waa cleaning 11" " My dear," said an anxbns wife to her hnsbaud, who b^ running for (ffiie, "we mast eoonemise in every possible way." " I do f C3nemiz3," he repUod. " Yes," she replied bitterly " yon spend $10 or |15 a day treating a lot of bar-room loafers to beer and whisky jaat to get them to veto for yea. Do yon call that eoenomy t" " Certainly that* s pelltiotl economy." • j ;^/t^ ""~WeiCpop,"~sald Jiiamy Tnffboy, "bo a grin' tor the cirons in tiie aftemoen or evening." "James." said hb mother, "I hardly think your father intends to toke yen at M." " Net take mo Then the obeni might as well net show." ' Yon oan go this evening, my sob." inter j vited hb father. " Evening I I was in hepee you'd take sae this ikftemeen, 'coz Uncle Ben's promised to take me b the evening.'" Aft »Me Traveler (to neighbor In a railway oat)â€" Your name te very famniar to me, Mr â€" er â€" ah Quiet Stranger â€" My name is Mjuctzinotskieei KoroozMtootber. I am a P.»le. Affable Travelerâ€" Yee erâ€" It isn't yonr name e much as voar faoe I waa abeu' to say your faoe was very familiar to me Quiet StrangSFâ€" Yes I have been In prison fourteen years. I was dbohaiged thb morning. Affable traveler keeps on traveling, but qoite affablmg. JVoas Oaar At Jimes .I i*fWroaf*tvv *n got ail sa raws ok Moainif' Bbbh i*«isftr .** Yamm, Mam much asu Dbt a kativ' owas tons sowir t Nova 8eiEX^ Ybv xvow, mm YAaxaai wan tp nsQ ar tik WdA, ?av'« j^iirr Aouaa oaoMK. Da aauus^BaaRa aja aisiA* â- *» amd wni aa fw» MVAannb VA.'rm OMMBB aa oiTiLDaD wt^xs-waii nuf comtugmtrntMian a vm ^n'aut Bdonovl" J Evenr hamaa nuds evea a ungeriag ttfat of tsmpsrj ahaald keep sH «o4a!l. • toohd^pOt; Â¥mm»f« handy; that ho may iitU hat' luM srirk aff hb wratii whan b waxoa fiaroa. Xhaia b nothing ia thb vain aid whrid ttsil rtK ssad a aian bsuik to hb appainted work, with a more wilted ooUtr, and a traar oomprehen- slott of li^uel^ than thirty minutes wrest- ling wMi anill flavend aii. "He can ash bsoflaroeiyonthe wood. AUtiiofnryaf hb nature^ all tha hato ha faeb for lib ea- emy, he oan Infuse into that sxj hsadlo* andhewtheoiiipswlllfl/. Nat vary Mrtb- tioally, probably, bat tbsy willfl/. And preseatty It begins to dhwn apon the man that he Is iseliag more oslm. Eridentlyho ta experbnoli^ m change of heart. He does not hate hb eoamy Bohlt.erly, after idL Tiio axa weighs abmit eighty -one pounds en ttie up stroke. Hs doas'net hate hb enemy at all. Ha ohanges hb stroe and liogiaa to aehop en the systun vt Italian psnmaasMp, Um ap-strokes heavy and tte down ekea Ught. HarattMr bvaslus enemy now. At last he puta all hb failing strangth intoena torrlfioUow. Ha mfsssshh tip with tha axe and ssaitoi tdio ohopping block witii the handle. A tluj^ as tMugh ha had swal- lowed ani alarm obbk goes from elbow to hip, and bade again, aadthe axedrops from lib powerless hands, and a weak. Hasp, nervoleas, parspiriag, trembl|ngt gsspiag thing, ho staggers into the house, liee down on the first thug that looks likoalonngo* and b ready to die. There isn't a lear or a fault In hbhcart. Death has no terrors and life has no temptations for hiob He haa chopped out all hb baser nature and b jaat aa ethereal and spiritnal a« ha oan bo ba on thb aide ef the Jordan. It b great Mm^m^^mmmk. nBarr â- ittto Btvea Peepb with whom I have been quarralliag all Sprbg wonld be amaaed to see om now. I foolishly contracted, two weeks ago, to keep a camp fire going. I didn't know ^en that tt too^ all the foreateintho Adirondack spars to keep up one little camp fire- I am not a large, bread, tal^ sinewy maa, and the axe they gave ma might have beaten down tha wazen gates of what yon may call it that what^s-hls-name beeelged, if ever ho did besiege it. I have fallen trees with that axe that would have maie Mr. Gladstone shudder. They tell me I most say felled, net fallen, but I know bettor, beoanse I only out down fallen trees. My wrista are larger than my knees, which goes to show that I don't pray as Imrd as I chop, but I haven't strength enough to hate anybMiy I am too limp to censmit the Ifghteot sin, so I haven't much need of prayer. I didn't vrrito last week beoause I couldn't c'oae my fiagere over anytliing smaller than an axe helvo. We tried tying the penholder to my dhows, but they wouldn't bend idiii that kind of an Impbment. My bands are a lit- tle bettor thb week, but I am as badly axe- rlddan as ever. I hear voiaea calling evon now for " Mere wood," though I assure yon I have cut a cord between every paragraph. At least, I think I have. FarowelL I will go out and chop until the axe flies off tiie andlo, which b every five minntes, and then I am going to heap high the faggots, and crawl into the camp fire and show the old martyrs how sweetly and joyously a man can roast himeelf rather than cut one solitary stick of wood more. â- I I H I a I I s ai I B « â- ICanied Women'i Hunefr It is heooming the fashion amang mar- ried ladies to keep theb maiden name in addition to their hnibaad's -yni'ts, Thb praottee baa leqg bean in vt^no among ao- toesses and etiier ladlsa who have made a repatatbnfortheoiselves before marriage, tha benefit of wbloh tiuiy are unwilling to loae. The namee of Meadames Gddschmdt- Llhd, Trebelli-Bettini, L^mmensSherrlng- ^ton, and haste of others, will reaHHy ooonr to everyone as oaiea in paint. Bat until btdy the (ashbn was oonfiaod to actresses, alngos, authoresses, and other bdles whose less at marriage through the change ef name would have been so substantial a pecuniary one that It might be estimated in thousands of pounds. It is only now that bdlee in privato life have began to realise the fact that thdr own let In iin«i««.i.gf |ig their name, and tlins, to a great exteat los- lag their ideatity, b qoite a| real, iad qalto as imperUnt to thamadvoaaa the actress' would be to her, althoagh poanbly ao one weuldgoaofaras to sayitbada monAary vafaie. When a girl marries^ it b usually only the favored few who ara preeentat tiia wed- ding breakfast wha rssJi^ manage to ra- msmber her new name and address. How often we hear tho, qaestion " What b Mary Sa-aad-se's name now, and where deae she live f ' How often tiie ana war brings the rejobd» " Dsar me i we must have been qnlto dose to her tho otliw day what a pity we did not knew, wo should have liked so muoh to go and sea her." Honoe.the present movement oa tha pert of married women. It certainly will have many ad vantaaas if it becomes general, net enlvto the ladles themselves, bat to all thsir frienda and acquaintancsa, especially If the donbb sumano comes, in course of time, to be tha dbtiagalshiag mark of a married woman, fer as It woaOd form part of a lady's ordinary dgaatare, wUoh tho titb of Mrs. or Miss does aol» many a oer- rospeadent wrald bo roUevod from the har- assing doubt wliidi qow bsoeta him as to whether ha b to mSSnm Us reply to Mrs. Miss^erE'q. ^»â€" ^»â€" â€" »-ifc He Wasaft Ili«t lbdf a Hiiidoe. "Anddo yea,"" said tho vWtor to the olraaa totta awaiMiy Hindoo to tta Mother HaMard pants, **4oyea actaally watahip yoadarwOta aiophavtt Do yo^haallM goaatoaoh BBonoagtooiisr iilsaus altHi dastasodsMaaidttiiMtr Da yon aotaaUy wanUpiaaiiaagB|Bty srtiiab in Ihi lllf â- (Md teaks of tha ilBgihk Nib r ^•Pkairr»aftr iaqlsM tlio oxhibUha Do] asi Biftenr '"kJt*a""?#i? P»towtk to â- sa, FhaftUadao'^aff ho yaagMn'ma! Olaa hsnfartlOawMkaa' iMad aa* wUal, jgpltwatsfelgla' tta YlMb Maiv aanlMsafia' aNi««|sli toarwtS ^jiiMiiNiiMUiiiiiiiiMai iMriiiiUfei^kii^ "-^-"'"if'ir'Tl^iSiVf