â- ^"S'w' ^^^â- -^^^^r^wwiLl^Wy^W-r^^^'W^T' f-^- t'i| " .1 ai.: dsis£ •• You Stay. " " I renwml er, " aaid an old clergyn^J*te- ly, " |toi'eleu word spoken to me mW^oy- throittk life.' E**. miil. si^ly^i, â- fcntiva, childfiS, Lwas i««ry f.i^ve m»lioi»1brfore ^le. An the moon '•""lireMble vi«t«w 8*4eryNitiith»; ^bopfr "jj ff j ' i^ ^^-l ^Innged •« into despair. *t^\, J^f (3*llMi^-lSir goiSM^^n and I want snthin' nice and roomy to baj everjrproanie. ah »ifca»» «» «.^â€" t« ^wng^^fi Btoim,. familv^nged, j „ " « Fred, ' said my nncle to me one day, •the toothache, or the wet weather, or the boya who tease yon are bad things enough, bnt remember they jfo. and you stay. •« It was like anew gospel to me, Theaa great evils would pass by, and little insigni- ficant me â€" I ttayed! " It was a wholesome idea to put into _b boy's mind. The feeling of permanence is rare with children. They are to' their own feeling like anchorless boats on the sea,, driven here and there. Oat of this uncer- tainty come most of their vague miseries. It is good for them to feel that, no matter how poor, or dull, or obscure they are, in comparison with others, each of them 1»8 a life of his own, abiding and sure, which is of importance in God's eyes. Many morbid, self-distrusting boys and girls need just the poise and confidence which that knowledge would give to them. j u "As I grew older, the chance words took a wider meaning to me. The temptation, however fierce, would pass, 1 stood firm the grief, no matter how deep, would light- en; the agony of self-sacrifice would begone some day, and I would remain to finish my work, and answer my account. «• Life itself would at last vanish, as when the heavens and earth disappear, and yet my soul, this insignificant me, would stay, face to face with God." What are these things that we think and talk of sU day long Our neighbor's gown, or house, or bank account, or our own cough, or china, or lucky speculation These are the things that go. The kindliness in our hearts, the loving word we speak, the little gasp of prayer in our soul, where only God sees â€" these are the things that stay, and enter immortal re- re ords. Which weigh the h«savier with us WTTAHD WISDOM. Why does a buIov know th(««^# t'lMm has b«^ to sea. l^jj ji«r mate toJj» rirt*l^^d ,t«Ek on «e dioh^ thydf^ Ida bterowcijl *ny|iii9t(tÂ¥l9iiSi^ lot The Effects of ifovel Beading. The michief of voracious novel reading is really much more like the mischief of dram drinking than appears at first sight. It tends to make all other literary nourish- ment intolerable, just as dram drinking tends to make all true food intolerable, and to supersede food by drink. The voraoious novel reader of to-day, as we have said, re- jects Scott, because Scott's novels contain so mucii good food that it is .not mere story telling. The genuine novel reader detests what he csJls tame stories, stories in which the interest is not exaggerated and piled up ten times as high as the mterests of ordinary life. He wants always to be feeling a thrill of excitement running through his nerves, always to be living in imagination through the conoonlratod essence of the perils of a hundred adventurous lives, instead of toil- ing calmly through the ordinary hopes and fears of one. No state of mind can be more whole- some, because none is more calculated to divert the nergi ;s from the sort of quiet tasks to which they should be habitually applied, and to kepp them stretched on the tenter hooks of expectation, waiting for a sort of strain wl ich is never lively to occur, and if it did occur, would certainly net find a man's energies any the better prepared for it for having been worn out previously with a long series of imaginary excitements. The habit of drf m drinking, it is ssid, leads to fatty degeneration of the heart, i. e., ex cejsive fattening round the heart, and weak action of the heart in c ^sequence. So, too, the habit of exciting novel reading leadis to fatty degeneration of the literary mind, i. e., to an unhealthy and spasmodic action of the imagination, and a general weakening of the power of entering thoroughly into the solid interests of real life. So far as we know, the only effective cure for this habit of liter- ary dram drinking â€" a cure not always forth- coming â€" is a moral shock of some kind which exposes the hollowness of all these unreal in- terests, and makes them appear as artificial and melodramatic as they actually are. That, however, is a cure which is an ex- tremely painful one, almost cruel in its diailiusionizing power. in. Fresh Clerkâ€" Yes, ma'am how xr the Atlantic ocean do ... He â€" " How be»Htif nV Mi«- Arr«w«mitii^ back hair is " Sheâ€" Yes. Much prettier than her front hair is. I wonder ahie didn't get it all at the same place. Our little boy, six years old, was sent to iBchod l^st^week for the firt .time, 'and on bis return home asked his papa "Who taught the first' man his leitirs ' City Balle â€" (pointing to a wild plant by the wayside)â€" "What's that ' Country Cousinâ€"" That's milkweed." City Belleâ€" " Oh, yes I What you feed cows on, I sup pose »" Honois For Women. In a pamphlet entitled " Les Femmea decorees de la Legisn d'Honneur," M, Ales- son gives a complete list of the women who have been given the red riband of the Leg- ion of Honour since that order was founded, and the total now stands at 34. Under the First E npire only two female nominations were made, and these were both for military achievements. The one was given to Vir- ginie Gheequiere, who had dressed herself as a man and taken the place of her brother, who was not trong enough to stand the fat- igue of a soldier's life. EaioUed in the 27th Regiment of the line, she displayed great bravery, and obtained the rank of sergeant, her sex not being discovered until she was wounded in the breast while rescuing her colonel from the enemy. The second was given to Marie Schelling, a Belgian woman, who enlisted out of likmg for a ndlitkry career, who fought at Jemmapes, where she raceived six sabre cats, at Ansterlit^ sad at Jena, where she was wounded twice. In 1806 she was promoted to the rank of sub- lieutenant, and Napoleon decorated her with his own hand in 1878, granting her at the same time a pension of 700 f. The third woman decorated was a sister of charity, Soeor Marthe, in 1815, while the only decor- ation given to a woman between 1815 and 1851 was that accorded to a cantiniere nam- ed Ferrot. From 1851 to 1865 eight ribands were given to women, among them being that \«hich the Empsror Napoleon affixed to the breast of Rosa Bonheur, and since the war the L3gion of Honour h^s been less sparingly distributed, one of t^e redpl ents being liidy Pigot, in reosgnition m the ambulance work she did in 1870-71. Alto- gether seven women have been decorated ior their services on the battle fidd, bat no few- er than 20 of the 34 have been sisters of charity, while the only artist has been Rosa Bonheur. One of the last recipients of the red riband lias been Madame Dieulafoy, the Intrepid wife of the explomr ia North Africa. for w9mm^bM^n^lS^!bLVMMwS^ vanity town of CMnhridga, Wn gl wA It Is iBtanOfld not so mndi to tSMh tite trade m todsvolop nannd dcsterily •mong woumd. Music is the sound which one's children make as they romp through the house. Noise is the soun.-' which other people's children make under the same circum- stances. What an American girl wants to be a duchess or a lady of high degree for, when she can be an Ainericui hired girl, with ten times aa much power, is more than I can make out. The Proper Study of Mankindâ€"" What is man!" righed Haroun Aliascbid. "Today he is here and tomorrow he is in Canada, and the next day nobody knows where in thunder he is." " And what do yon expect to make of your son when he comes of age, Mr. Smith?" " Oh, I don't know," replied Mr. Smith, despond- ently. " I think he'd make a good husband for a rich girl." Wise in His Generation â€" " I say. Brown, you know Shorty pretty well, don't you " " Oh, yes." " What kind of a fellow ia he?" " Well â€" Shorty is a man who generally car- ries his money in his inside pocket." Reassuring â€" Nervous ola lady, on the fifth floor of hotel â€" "Do you know what precau- tions the proprietor of this hotel has taken against fire " Porter â€" "Yis, mum he has the house inshoored for twice wot it's worth." " No, my man, I haven't anything for you," said a gentleman to a tramp with out stretched hand. " Who asked for any- thing " replied the tatterdemalion. Don't you see I'm a politician 1 All I wanted was ta shake." " Clara " shouted the old man from the head of the stairs, "I called down ten minutes ago that it was time for that young man to go, and I haven't heard the front door close yet." "No, papa; he left by the window." Magistrate (to woman) â€" You admit that you hit your husband with a stove lid, and yet you claim there are extenuating circum fctances governing the case. Woman â€" Yes, sab, dey was a extenuatin' sarcumstance. De stove lid waren't hot. A new fakir Bchsme is an advertijment stating that the advertiser will send to any one enclosing the sum of $1 the secret of perpetual life. The " sucker " who sends the dollar receives by return mail a neat card, on which are printed the words " Don't die." [New York Tribune. " AThat is your husband's business " ask- ed the icquieitive woman on the train after she had exhausted all the other questions in the Yankee catechism. " Oh," said the other woman weariedly, " he's a lawyer by profession. He spends his time in minding other people's business, too." A young widow, in erecting a monumen to the dear departed, cleverly avaiis herself of the opportunity to intcribe upon the tomb, " Sacred to the memory of Mathnzin Bezuchet, who departed this life, aged sixty- eight years, regretting the necessity of part- ing from the most charming of women." The daughter of a rich banker stopping at Bar Harbor ventured beyond her depth the other day while bathing, and was only saved by the efforts of a young man, who risked his life to save hers. The day afterward the happy father sent the young man a note of thanks accompanied by a $1 bill, which was immediately and indignantly^re- turned. 00L0B3 TEAT EABMOHISE. Red and violet do not accord well. Orange and yellow accord incomparably better wan red and orange. Blacf never prodaces a bad effect when it is associated with two luminooa colors. Greon and blue produce an indifferent effect, bat better when the colors are deep. Blue, when placed by the side of orange, increases the latter's intensity, and viae versa. Green and voilet, aspeciaUy when light, form a combination prd^erable to green and blue. Red and blue accord passably, especially if the red incline rather to a scarlet than a crimson. When two colors accord badly together it is always advantageous to separate them by white. While grey never exactly produces a bad effect in its association with two luminous colors, yet in most cases its assortments are dalL Red and yellow accord pretty well, es- pecially if the red be a purple red, rather than scarlet, and the yellow rather greenish thF.n orange. Yellow and green form an agreeable com- bination. The arrangement of yellow and blue is more agreeable than that of the yellow and green, but is less lively. Ma Didnt Knov Evetrtbins;. " Bobby, your mamma tells me yoa are a very bright bey and she ezppota yoa to be a great man,' sud Mr. Blossom, as he sat in die parlor waiting if or 'Bobby's sister. " Ma never does' speot nothin' right. She don't know what she's taUdng* lxnt. SIm told pa she 'neot!D4 yoa an' sis would be married fore Fall, an* that WMmqre'na year ago." f â- , iS â- â- : I'^tT- operty this is iving ed the Hew Seimea of Faoifio Islands. W ithin thaiast ffca ilipi .^eJbay hoMrd some tatOT«iia nywiooDQemJIng thi doui{p in P4ific*wiiAen «f -^tb^ crert 'pow^ that may |e worth aoiang. A week age it was annotooed.tbntMa!aiB^u)^^a4!«fi^n»ted the aabei^,«rM» iMPi «t, wlo^o m^^ islanu, strangely enough, figare i in th«: greai " of tl besai bni rich guano deposits. â€" iFhHn uaiuB the news, that GrBtit' ^st,has formally prpcjaimed ,tba soy( kf Queen Viotoria ov^ 86,900 eqaalrettUea ofsontheast New Guinea, thus confessing the Btrategetical blunder she committed nearly foolr yipars a?o, Xvhen 'sfaq fefueA'the petition of Queensland to annex not only iEhis pibi-t of Ihr ^eat Island, bfit also the I far more promising re^on on the northeast coast, with its splendid harbors and large I riversj which Ciermany snapped up with avidity while Great Britain was hesitating. The information this week that the Eng- lish Consul at Ruratonga has been instroct- ed to proclaim a British protectorate over the Cook or Hervev group is indeed sarpris- ing news. Rumors have been frequent that France intended to -take these islands nnder her protection. Their relations wich the outside world have been almost wholly with the French Society Islands, and although the entire group has only 400 tquare mUes, it lies dir.otly on the route to Australia by w«y of the expected Panama Canal. Besides being valuable as a naval station, the group would nicely round off the possessions of France in these waters, which now half sur- round it. England has no possessions in this part of the Pacific nearer than Fanning and Penrhyn Islands, about 900 miles away, which she annexed last spring. On Tuesday of this week the proposed an- nexation of Savage Island, just west of the Hervey group, was announced by Great Britain. This indicates the purpose of that Government to enter into competition with France for the islands of the southeastern Pacific, where England has never before shown any ambition to acquire lands, and where she has been wholly unrepresented save by the famous little rock of Pitcairn. The commercial value of these islands and others still unappropriated cannot be very great, for, though they nii.y be fertile, their area is insignificant. As riival and coaling stations, however, and »s connecting linke along the new routes of travel which the projected interoceanic canals will develop, some are of considerable importance. iMHFS rCMFJL!lD ACTS AT THE 8AMK TIME ON THE NERVES* T H RJJVEH, -~ â€" and the KIDNEYS This ccebined acdoo gfves it won- I derfi4{)0wertlfine all diseases. Because we allow th« nerves to 'aii(un weakened ascl iintefted, and %these great OKiaas to become dc^ed or torpid, aoapoisonous humors are therefore fincea into ^e blood that shotdd be expelled naturally. WILL CURE BXUmreHBSS, FILES, OOKBTXPATIOV, EIIS17E7 COX- PLAUfTB, UmKAST DISEASES, FEUALE'WEAXKESS.XHETIXA. TISK, NETTBAIGIA, ABS AU inSRVOUS SISOBDEBS* By quieting and strengthenins the nerves, and causing fiiee action of the liver, bowels, and kidneys, and restor- ing flieir power to throw off disease. Why sufEiw Bilious Fains and Aehet t Why tormented with Piles, Constipationt Wh; frightened oTerSisorderedKidneyst Why endnre nervous or sick headaches I Why have sleepless nights t Use Paine's Celery Compouiid and. rejoice in health. It is an entirely vegeta* bk remedy, harmless in all cases. Sold iy all Druggists. Pric* $I.oa .,,*» Six for $S.oa WELLS. RICHARDSON CO.,Proprietoi8i MONTBBAIi, P. Q. 72. r" ROUGHING £vai Twelve DoUars a Fapei From an article entitled " Hard Times in the Confederacy " in the September Cen- tury, we quote the following " In August, 1864, a private citizen's coat and vest, made of five yards of coarse homespun cloth, cost $230, exclusive of tiie price paid for making. The trimmings consisted of old cravats and for the cutting and putting together, a country tailor charged $50. It is we to say that the private citizen looked a veritable guy in his new suit, in spite of its heavy drain upon his pocketbook. 'In January, 1863, the material for a lady's dress which before the war would have cost $10 could not be bought for less than $5C0. The masculine mind is ucequskl to the task of guessing how great a sum might have been had for bonnets 'brought through the lines ' for in spite of patient self-sacrifice and unfaltering devotion at the bedsides of the wounded in the hospital, or in minis- teiing to the needs of relatives and depen dents at home, the Southern women of those days are credited with as keen an in- terest in the fashions as women everywhere in civilized lands are apt to be in times of peace. It was natural that they should be so interested, even though that interets could in the nudn not reach beyond theory. Without it they often would have had a charm the less and a pang the more. Any feminine garment in the shape of cloak or bonnet or dress which chanced to come from the North was readily awarded its meed of praise, and reproduced by sharp- eyed observers, so far as the scarcity of ma- terials would admit. " Bat fashion's rales were nesessarily much relaxed in the Southern Confederacy so far as practice went, when even such articles as pins brought through the block- ade sold for $12 a paper, and needles for $10, n ith not enouch of either." LeatherBelting BEST VALUE IN THE DOMINION. F.E.DIXdN C0. MAKERS. 70 KliiC ST. E. TORONTO Send for Pric 3 Li;tgai.d Cisccucta. IiA.Dl£ii* Dresa and Mintle Cutting by thi new and improved TAILORS' SQUARE. S .tisfacti3n ^naraateed to teach ladies the full art of cutting all earments worn b}' I ladies' and chi^ren. PROF. SMITH, 31Di' een St W., Toronto. Agents Wanted. offltiiaifinBRnfliiijj^j Head0iD8i loriiitoa Hnbserlbed Qpltal. BUdJCpCapui.....,:: IMal Assets XII.â€" (CoKTiytrEij 'SWctmorAteg by flayliaht /ii. iourncy, not forgetting •tilcrthe wees tr. the right JC^t along. The ground ' " and wet that at every step hej [•^u knees in water, but he sed **^rS^'»d of the swam? than •*^e day before. He saw severi *^-^ »d » ground hog, ^durj bat t ****'^fc"*wa8 iuimolest«id bv ,eu»ble the Diiecors to meet i*!'P' lor loans upoi) aUafactorv real «£»! '^loireinaSl loea Appraisir^ or to ""-eroi theOoi J.a*;R6E«mAS0Il.U.nar^. Direct,,. i«^, J* ""Having passed throigc I •5K* and WUed a great many sn^ «*»â- • J^ towards the end of the ** !fc2fche determined to go home 1 *J^. But just as he began to t| Stained oSsd FOR C RCHES, DWELLIKGS •ND PUBLIC BUILDINGS M'GAUSUND soul Ing St. W„ Toronto. ' TC Nirvous Debility. DR. GRIP'S Speciao has been ased lor'u,, y,| fifteen yeiriwith great snecess. In the treitaeiitTr nervoua de^ty, and aU diseases «isin?iran ° cesses, overjfftrked bralc, loss oJ vltaUty. tatm, « the ear», pa piatlon, etc. Pot eale by aU dnai* Price, 91 pe boi, or 6 boxes for ?5, or will be sem, mail on reci Ips ot price. Pamphlet on »ppUcrt!a, THE GlRlY MEDICINE CO., Tcionte. MERCHANTS. BUTCHERS I andTraders generally, We want a tOOD lIANin your localitj topickap on sitisfaetorj guaraatyl U9. Casl faraiahed Address, Hyde Park, Vermont, U. S. We areehildrtn who cheerfully Join in tkedorus When Breadnaker's Yeast is the subject befortusm Mamma tried all the rest, So sit tnov/s it's the best, [lighi'it, I 'Cause her bread is the -tohitest, her bung are tit I â- And toe eat ell the pancakes she dare tetheforeus, I BUY THE BREAOMAKER'S YEAST. PRICE 5 CENTa â- i/. ** loed niHiy "|inhlr Um mo^A itates oiM to^Sfl^itS^ palnlesaoom con b attended with duwer. i«t alwaya and nee no oOer than Piitnanus PainUas Cora Extcaetor, Kt drns^iti. 'â- â- â- -:.-â- â- - "-..V- V_^tv_;^;-, .;- â- .%' ' The only reliable cure for catarrh is Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. Mistonri has 7,81S miles of railroad. " He most Uvea who thinks the most, Acts the noblest, feels the best. And he whose heart I eats qolokest Uvea the longest, Hves in one hour More than io years do some whose FM hlood iUeps as it slips atof^ their veins." These lines describe that concQtion of per feot health which all men aud women tvith to enjoy. To be able to think clearly, to, incline to do noble acts, to live long, and joyously we mnst be free from the domina- tion of disease. By ttdcing Dr. Pierce's. Golden Meifical Discovery tre may, by puri. fying tile blood, Moape consumption, gener- al deUHty, andrweaniess; and (urblo and skin diseases and verify the truth of ppjstry as well as fact. The beat sculptor's day is found near 61!- timo^e. :.'â- 'â- ; My love was like a lily lair. Low drooping in the sultry air, My heart was rent with loief and care. IlovcdberwclL Butlol My lore's now like a bTooming roes How bright her tece with btiaiy glows, I due not teU. Ihe wonder grows and grows blooa â- wins bee would stop to sip. r of £ei perfect lip PiSrotre VtftTeHts'Preserip- Ihe wMidedni The nectar of L Twas Dr. Pierot^e' VtftTeHts Preserip- Hon wrought the spdL Three inchin is the average width of mil- linery ribbon. .... j:t^isfa€iTifjaL Stiqtomsâ€" if o^jtm ' Intense itohbig and stfaigbw mfsS at nli^iiwone «« senltefaingi' If ^aUMMpie oontbine tmnois fonn, mliiob often.bleed and niaefv ate,bAeB[iin|;v«(V iora.' Swannrs Onmon stops' oaiQr buss itaoi^M£?fn]£Sus. °ft?UMmJ$«r What Is It In Meat That Strengthens? The ALBUMEN it contains this substance bayond all qiettion is the most important .constituent ol Reih. I OUR NERVk tissues are entirely dependent upon Albumen fortheir repair and ir blood in order to be healthy musi opnt ia it in bo less than seven per cent SdENIIFlC ANALYSIS hss clearly demonstrated that JOHNSTON'S Contains all the elementpâ€" without a einzle exceptionâ€" necessary fir the formation of FLESH, MUSCU AND BONE. 55 per cent, of o garic matt-jr of flesh forming material. 13 per cent of m-neral lalte Of Pbofphates. It must i.e evident therefor* to the int«llijrent public that Johnston's Fluid Beef bas;the fl.si claim asA NOTRiriOUS and STRENGTH-GIVING FOODforo'.d and young, sick and robust SOLD WITH OR WITHOUT THEBACGER. There are many miiatioks of Caplt9l^ild Funds now #rcftr$3.00dj0p0...„||AB HEAI^ ©FFICBiT ^T^ ^15 TORONTO STBEET, TOROATWi A Hbaie Cofl lpanT^ RtlabllMied O ctober* 187). â- • i To this date/odbobb* Slsti, 1*37, ibmte has been returned Tb U^bbu ofPolky-hoUsiSideslhalidBist..^...^....... ...- To the holders of matniad EooownMOt PoUoiss ... To PoIicy-hokieTS on surreadslr brPeHoM. ToPoIicy-hokieTSon«urreDd«lrBrPQllaM....;..^-..:...iT. -••••:;: "«S2.5«* " XcP^oyâ- holdelstocCw4.^TOflt9(laolu(^nztholea^MliM'andbefalgpadd}..â- 16,1X7 ft ^hMwMSst imJ»y9S3as.-.J:\.'iu^.f.:.^K.7Zl^.i •••••â- ^iU « -» wâ€" fruiclcss, he observed â- ^Ji r^ tamaracks which hsd o' jj^th became less numerous, del • VrT-d by bass and soft mapl| •""*^ Jso. became less moist, an f °«Undiig»™i»^«l»P« oovei 'TJTS^. ^Wch shade !*rSest^uaUty. The old rS^^nvinoed that he h ^t swamp wd t^***, instead rteSer world, it had conducted *«,tr?d.at would yield the very I fn. fir cultivation. His f^vorabl !5 to the foundation of the road i«abJuttocrcss,andtotheseU] ' wnnch which IS one of ZjSiS Sw settlements in this| SniTsurrounded by a splendid ba *^xee were descending a very s* .«d encountered an ox sleigh, wl !S?wltog slowly up it in a contrary r SKtwople were seated at the V rt^ehTcle upon straw, which madi Stadtute for buffalo-robes Peil !?«were. upon the crown of the hi Kd completely down into the sJ Kk the whole cou«eof my W^ STthr^ nglier mortals collected f law '" °- rpiie man was bl *?Sf?har^eX through which ::j?dreadfu yellow t'eeth that I r£?^ofaioar,Jhe^womati^ CHATHAM FANNING MILHl OVER 2O0O ALR EADY SOL D THIS iEi Surpasses all other Fanning MiUs in the market. Do not buy until you get my Circulars and infoimi- tion. i^Our Pateit Bapginsr Appiiatus eaves time and labor. WUl bag CO to SO bushels per lonr.anneanbe attached to ftnyoftbe macbines made by ua duiing the last four jean, H4NS0N CAMPBELL, Mannfcr. CHAT tf AM, Ont. i) "Peerless MACHINE Oil, but none equal it in Inbrioatin? propertje^ " IBS, MiUiMM, eta., find none equal to tue ew Peerless made by ««««uTn SAMUEL ROGERS CO, TORONTO. fialA by dealers everywhere. ]^e4 to^ldlisy-h(MeiSfn t^e SwrarltrftthMiiPolicles. •I ii;soy7«*L f^p^o^2 CDONALD, MaiWKliMf »»'**^ ^^^^ Mmiielno, not » â- lood, Uwr, Kldfioya, Urinary Oigana, Norvousnesa, StoeplManeaa, Pemato Complaints, »*J?!^»*^YoMrLite. aynooo Bewnrd paid ter m eaae tHay will not cure. onia6*»i -^-es, '.1 ,. â- - •â- , ,;',*'â- â- "-â- -*» â€" 'S â- â- '•'•vip----^^' â- iuiiiilikii .-J-. ... ^i..:. -A^i â- %'1^^^.,-r--. t ;:^s^^^i.^, lyiM^ ^^^^-^^'^^^ ^^aM high cheek- boned. ^^fi'lenUoTe'rlikeatoad. Til ^^Sd hi. hideous mother withl VI TiSroravillsDOUB obliquity I JSeredbim the most d.gust.ng| this sintular trio. As we passed them, our knowing nod to my butband, d " time, the mott quia strangers, as he I thinl fgg mei Rud Mi the same towards tlie •«We are in Inch, sir ieiKhmaybecaV.edB3aut/segg We made ourselves very me, noor people's expense, Rpd M Kb bis o^dd stones and \ankect| rions. amused the medium of ^ouab the great swamp, wbi.h Snts for several miles one un of rough and unequal logs, all wrosB^buge sleepers, «" ^^at the and down, when pressed by ^he the kevs of a piano. The rougn •5u£^occasi?nedbythisconi.H ttessiiE, that it never fails to S^fteaveller sore bones ana aa. for the rest of the day. The p^ row over these logs tbat two v^i not pass without great difficult rendered more dangerous by the al ditches on 'i'^er sioe "f formed by bioad creeks that no\ sw^p, and often ter«n.nate m i "1^ o^minous dimen^on- The ever, hid from us all th e ugty the road, and Mr. i^---TT, trough in perfect safety, and li SlTdSr of a little log house wk Se steep hill on the other s^d^c and which he dignified wuh tne tavern. «'„ It was now two o clock. e the road since seven and men, chUdren were all ready for the that Mr. D ^^' '^^Z iSendid house of entertamme« 5«e de»fci"«i to stay for two t rSh ourselves and rest the ho, "Well. Mrs. J -TT"'^**. for our dinner? 'said our dri bad Been to the accommod. " patters* and pork, Eir. to be had in tbe we^ls. Th, have enough of that i D^ â€" shrugged up ^^l^^eC plenty of that Bub hunger's good sauce widow, and sec about it, 'TKuired for a private roe andffi children but there w rooms m the bou- Jh- Td^ontrdK^s obliged t *:?"Y?n«rmuchtolea» are Koing to the woods, saia "To unlearn, you meat p. •« To tell you t Soodie, 'ladies and gentleme; ae„ in the woods. Eid^^S fLX^oShttryou ^^fcf?bavenowis husband. Ib-d'^rtue tohavemyownway-toue and set up master. « You dont like to be pu way"re'umed he, wuh 'sS'coloured very red the heat of the fire ever Inff the pork for our dinner nfwas very hungry, but fortbe dish she was prep proved salt, hard, and ua.. P -pronounced It ^rtdskey still worse, wita It down. I i-p laaked foracup of te teead. But tfiey. were oul his si 88 Co •J wl hop^rising had failed. ^^J bthehowe. I^orthL^d naid at the rate of a quart Iwaaelad when the t SSdpork.tndwere fNdi tit. ,.;, -c "WeU, mister; did no â- Mmeyiorthat bad jos« irWwe were once mow SSSdnotVvecat ll^ipt.aup^ e. » ?--• :-'Vi