Daily News, Franklin, Johnson County, 16 March 1880 — Page 2

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'I

DAILY MWj

SEAMAN, LEWIS CO. PrausnJ Pablteatkm OMce, B0l% OWo Street. cJflwr WMMMMKflltfelflllMMMMMMMMMMi vote**!:... WW.'

111

te, Indian*.

TUESDAY, fyABCg 16. 1880.

,Thi$ DAiLyNEjys

is printed every

week dap Afternoon, mid delivered by carriers thrtTaghaut (he ciiy at 10 cents per week-rtcoltectums made weekly. By maUtpiytugepaid bythe Publisher) one month 45 tento three months $UZ& six months fSSO one year $5 00.— MaH mbecriptums in eutokmmj t«* h»Jf «l

v'?

GWUT lilTAWS fiinUnHQ SHA1CE. Looking at thereoent imtoryqf Ireland, (say* the Philadelphia Ledger*) and the deplorable'jfcdtodHion of the people, 1b4 alio it whit to .going on. as well that which i» making oo progress in th# Briti**h Parliament, the English speaking peoplesof the1 world may well he pardoned for a feeling of painful surprise. For a uecond time within thirty-three years large masfeefe of the 'Irish populace, mira beting hundred# of thousands at this time, are suffering .the paugsof famine, and.the sympathies of not only the Western world, but of f*roff Awlaare invoked to save them froth perishing by starvation. At the pame time, the combined statesmanship of the United Kingdom, as rep», resented by the Ministry and the majority in Parliament, can

devise no better and

no qwfp compreli^hsive measures of redress than emigration and petty doles of money tardily granted for temporary relief, andcveh these, because of iheir innufflcjeney, have to be supplemented by private contributions from the rest of the world. Tardy and scant as this Government relief Is, too, it is accompanied by party strife, in which the Government is bringing all its repressive power to bear against thosi? who, indignant at the condition of Ireland and the wrongs they believe have lead to it, are impatient at continued neglect, and are determined to demand justice, even though they delay otb'qj- proceedings. These last, believe that the cry for relief from Ireland is .the first demand to be answered^-not relief fro& existing famine alone, but relief from tbftt which Brakes starvation by the hundred thottfeand powibht in a country so richly Endowed by Nature. Pot insisting that so suproine a needkity alkali liave3 preference oy/er all, other legislation they are denounced and the power of Ptfrlla* ment flourished ih their faces to restrain their action and compel them to hold their tongue#* Whatever objection there may have been to the methods of the ObHtructioniMs*5,at the last session, they must be held io have' good cause, and good right in thfcfrqnt jje^^ p^fe^ting now. It is the. Ministry and all who second them that an» tho obstructions now.

If inch a sorrowffijl condition of affairs as those In Ireland existed anywhere in the United States,and if. at the jwyue moment, ottr Government and Congress should assnmfe the attitude now occupied by the 3f^sh Gbvernmept aqd Pilfer, meat, the American people would be overwhelmedwitbhumiliatlon and shame. They woutd bc profoundly cQhyinccd that something i'^^ft^ vital in tho condition at the suffering district was deeply »nd essentially wrong, and, by tho power of jrttbHc afihuicm^ ^hey wtfuid ^pmpejflhe Government to search, fQr, the cause juid applyk not only a taranaient remedy, but far-reaching measures of prevention for t.he fqtur^v

j|{

-j,amlhkv must be something.

And there

radically Wrong In the methods of British" rule ih Ireland tb account for the condl tion tit

Uie country, It Is cruel mde^dfyj

to ch«xg« upon U»e Irish people. ^Whec^i ever ebe they a»e, the world OY»f, under free or institutional govemtn^t,1 Irish' men t»«ye t^eBt^lyea to i^qmpetent in, all positions Uriif* in Industry^ in energy, in mental force, in peace or In war. Why is it that in their own country alone^ their facudttes show outcome they do elsewhere? Why are tile great maweet of the poprtlatkm stHckeflr by squalor and hopeless ^ovci^y? It Is not frpto ant' th herent defects

In

uThe

the:i^iftra«ter ©f the peo­

ple. as the welbinfonaad workUk abundantly awM» the ft«l& of the land they inh&fcit, either. In one of tlie rael* accessible histories tf tho island—* British book, written by a British pen— we read in the fore front of the first page tlMM two amteacmr

1

advantageous po«itiont the fertili­

ty of the soUe and the salubrity of (he rlimate have conferred upon Ireland com mercifl facilities capable of being greatly increased. How far these natural advantages liav# l^eA made iiv&Uable to ward the internal improvement of the br-' land itself, and the ge^ntal ,bdtie#t of thtr empire of which ft foms an tmnortast part, may be ascertained from the following details of Its history and statistics."

This is quoted to shov what Ireland is by nature, and what its c^pahilitka are mt wrj^tdt by band that certainly was not biased in her favor, and for the purpose' of pointing put the intensity of the reproach which the gentle but pregnant words of the writer cast upon the results of British rule in that island by referring to subsequent statistics and history-—a hUtorv and statistics that are an ineflaee-

•v,.

..gaAi..

ih ajriers afc-Ire-needflrot go ftgpKicB we the «St and inl8ll th«T»op-

iilitiffn tf returned following for the years named: in lsSiitwaii .aiwrn

—rt AUUJb .OAl- -ifiSIWiA fearfully descending scale fw 30jears -ftjgw 2

76i?« puV^

nearly one-thard of the-entity pppt^U^n of -}&$' msictng no allowance wr lfl^ should have leen the natural increaseWho ruled Ireland in this*-» years? That is the appalling sequel to the famine, of 1846. And what-has the British Gov-: ernment done in the meantime to avert that which is- upon the.iun hapjpy island riow? It is said at the close of Uie history already" q^med.preferring to Irish troubles and the faini ae of 1846 as being the result of over-popula-tion, that "the will of providence solved the difficulty tben"--that is, thai depopulation by starvation arid emigration to the extent of nearly 3,000,000 of souls, had solved the Irish question! Has jt,? The cry of the famishing hundreds of thousands for food, and the wail of the poverty strioken millions In the midst of on«* of the most fertile spots ori the globe, show bow. And in sight of this, and in the face of the history that shows the Jobs of a third of the population of Ireland in 83 years, the single comprehensive remedy yet Suggested is emigration-emigration agfain after the depoirtation of! nearly 8,000,000. This and pittances of money scantily and grudgingly doled out for present distress—'this and wrAngling over miserable party disputes in Parliament. This is the height to which British statesmanship lms risen in the year of our Lord 1880. to meet the deplorable condition of Ireland and the nppalling calamities that have afflicted the Irish people twice in 33 years. Gould "Home Rule" by any possibility exhibit results so pitably wretched as these?

The study of the German language has been introduced in the publie schools of Chicago, as well as other cities, and now the Bohemians, who are in force in that city, demand that their language, the Czech, shall be put on an equal. footing. It is a violation of »the fundamental idea of the American common school system to teach languages} other than English, therein, and we nope the Czechs will continue their agitation until they drive the German out of them.

Th^ above paragraph appeared in1 the D^iLY News several days ago. It has caused some comment in tliis city, notably in the

Banner,

The Daily Nkws repeats, what it said a week ago, that It is a violation of the fundtiwml&l idm of the Common School tyttem to Uaeh other Imgvage than EngItih therein."

EVICTION.,

What the Word Meant*.

To the American reader the simple Word "eviction" has so mild artd 'harmless k' meaning that he may not find it easy tb realize its terrors for the Irish tenant. To the latter It means the loss of the home in which he and his dhildreri and his apfcestors, for generations, w?re born. It means beggar^and starvation, or the wb^rk house. The following incident, reljated by the most RcvDr McJSraltyi occurred ti^t many yeto^ ago in the county'Meath—one of the most fertile in Ireland—and was published then in the Irish-American., The Bishop

'^evett hundred human beings we?e drfVen from their homes on this one dav. The sheriff's assistants employed on this occasion to extinguish the hearths and demol ish the homes of these honest, industrious men,, worked away wit|i a wltt at their awfiil calling until evening fell., At length an incident occurred that varied tlie monotony of the grim and ghastly ruin which. tbey were spreading around. They, stopped suddenly and recoiled, panicstricken with terror, from two dwelllngs whiph they were to destroy with, the .rest. They bad just learned that typhus fever he.Uf these houses in its grasp, and had already brought death, to some of .their inmates. They therefore. supnUcated th?,» agent to spare these houses.a Uttle longer,but, bje waSj inexorable, ^nd insisted tlxat be torfydowji. He ordered a Urge Wmno^ing slieet to be spread over the beds in which the fever victims Uy, arid then directed the house tb be unroofed cautiously and slowly. ,*

The walling of woraep^tho scteams, the terror, the ocas tarnation, of children, the speechless aeony of men, wnuff tears of grief from ail wbo saw them.- saw the) officers and men of, a large police force,! w^Uo were obliged to be present on the occasion. err like children. The heavy Tains, that usually attend the autumnal equinox descended la cold, copious toeronta during the awful night, and at once revealed to tlie houseless sufiforers the awful reali-» ties of their condition. I viaited them next morning, and rode from' place to place, administering to them ail the comfort ami consolation I could. The landed proprietors in a circle all around, and for many miles in every direction, warned their tenants against admitting them to even a single night's ehelteiteiMany ofi these people were too poor td eraigrate. After battling in vain with privation and pegttteace. th«y at la«t graduated from the workhouae to the tomb and in a liule more than three years neatly a fourth of them lay in their graves."

Tekgrttfth and telephone wirvn am ntaMoas in the stxue&s of Chicago that" the ftrs deoartnmtt teds ^eiy dMBcult to raise ladders to bctvttiag hnildinga. Some of the insnraneecoaipaaies threaten to hfO-ease their rates the evil is not reflMdtod btst the telegraphers state in reply that the firemen have their p^daission to cut the wires and petal when they we fit

the

the German paper.

5

cratic which furnished 432,227 troops. Those named ^ns ?lfcsf*!»itt**n ftre-Maine, New Hampshire. Vemont, Rhode Islaud, Connecticut. Minnesota, Kansas,

nia, Colorado. Nebraska, Oregon* and Iowa. Of these Ifinnbaptew and Oregon were new States, having been admitted In to theXTniori in 1B58, |^1

as States until after the close of, tb^ Among those named as pemocraiic are,' Missouri, Kentucky. Virginia, Pennaj^vg-

Texas and Mississippi, stme of the olttest and most popmmTrltrn:!i^"t

,ptmi.

Xybtptk df' (he1 61Bt American Odd FelloW&hip, which occurs op, the 2$th of next 4pril, thcuOddF^lows'Herald says- j..

On the 27th day of March, lSl^lffic Baltimore American, ft paper published !n the city of Bimflttm^rTJ^ftltre^the following: •...»• .• "NtJritas TO ODD BmLOws.1« "A

few memberfe of the Society of Odd Fellows will be- glad,to meet their,,bretty-, ren fpr the. purpose,.of fonning,}! lodg^,, on Friday evening, April 2d, at.tlid Scveti Stars, 2d St.' at tTO hour df 7 M." '{i

At that meeting v?ere present Thojnas Wildy, John Welch, Johti DuricAn, Jblfrf' Cbeatliam. and Richrird Rushwortlii From" thia beginningi owMonday eyenj#g, Apri.b

enAily organfeefl'h lodgd bif Odd*^ll«yw# which tney -calied Washirigton -Lodgfii' This we call the origin of American Qqdi Fellowship, though tbia was probably not the first lodge instituted, sinpethere^eems. abuDdaUt ^idence jthftt 'in l^TcW York Baltimore, PhilttdelpMti, and Bbston, trrtt Order had been ftnotra mid founded but this ww .then fin* ^ueggssfulutriftLift .tbe. new world—tins wiw tlie fiiat oontinupus effbrt, tlie first roage which ^ii!btHibef' its existence^tbe fmirit«!fi of but' pre#rit organization. .nvn. •. .mU

den Ltw Wallace t« PflblMt Anotlier fc^nl «i timu

Gen Lew W, Meiico, arflvi route for rtte day frnddeamuided alittleSessioa, "Whatdoyou waqtf he ask«d^ "I want to know where you are going, what Vbti art go^hg thbre for, A8r an about j^ew^lifekl^i^^ "I am mfttg to last CongfeST"^

apport ion ment^fAf

fx'-. YS» I

..ie %r-

ind:attw§

tiiiinniiniimiiiUMi^r'iiiifrii .. SUtes are taken and called Republican

Wd

1859, respectiacal^y one of Uutm-lwo years before tlie war broke .ouu. 'on^ oij|y year and one that same year. Nevada, Nebraska aadJCilifiradAJ^bUM^^

1

The

bureau also calls the^e 13 ^slaVe Btatftii'S The absurdity of liis onlv etpuda the ineonsistency—of- "tht?-~whnifr nrtirle. IN Pennsylvaniil "was ever a slave Stat5. U-4»^ not within j&e memprj of

J(

the BWf?ut

generation^—And~eia»8e»-tW Keystooe" aoi^»g ,lhe Demoqrtttifs' cpuld nqtbe more^ridiculpiw. unlesf..^,.^the number of soldiers with 'which, ine bureau credits that loyal commonw^afthv~'f Peunsylva*nia gave a malority" of oU.iKK)' for Abraham Lincoln in IwO Hnd Hftst fieF electoral vote for ever- Republican didate for President since then.. Under all circurastanee»-4h»tf--l!»lrfiteHB*ajr be set down nts reliablyItepnhlicau. And iAistewi of furnishing only pl.092 8ol(ii'r^ .^S the* bureau states, "Pennsylvania had'.in tnc field 366.326 men. Mfesrittrt is' credited with 199,111 troops, .wliefi ,tues #?M records show that she had but 108 2 ,- 000 of whicli were colored!*"

lvr^

The bureau names eightBtWetTand Territories as "|ui^rig funil^nin^M number of troops than the State of Missoiiftr These eight'Stated and Territories had a population :pf 1,8^9,109, ,-tttud f*irniwhel nearly 200,000 men. while Missouri, with a populfttiun^oLlJl82*Q15L-Xuj:ji,isl)ftl ohiy 108,000, notwitlxstanding the fact that the war was on her own soil and a larg^ptr cent, df these were ^militia who were protecting their own homos,, The bureau also makes a comparison between Kentucky ancLiowa.„.and„.Gl -JJUux^nd arid1 Vermpntor ^ew Hampshiij)., Vqry^U., Kentucky,' with a population of fl,if)5,-. 684, furnished'?8,540,'whlle^^'lowJi, with' population of #74,948, or a littlo over half of that of Kentuckjr, fumiahed 7^860, men. In proportien--*o-4he-population, Iowa fumiahed two men to wliereiKon^

soldiers, white Vermont, with a pdptilH tion of 815,099, furnished-85^49,and New Hampshire*S"*826,"078~pwpTilHtiTm "Bent 36, 605.

In- 'othe^:wordsji Vermont and Now Hampshire sent evetsy ninthntnan jwhile Maryland only sent every 14th m^n.,^'The. population of a State at the inception of the war is the proper criterion from which to make cpraparisonspTlie^ vole a State 10 years After tne war closc'a cuts no figure. The bureau lioweie r, carries the comparjaoii i-nouifattiieri While. it .iTvaa about the business, it should^ave. mentioned tlie political complexion of ,the States from'which the rebel soldiers'were drawn, .lrilsls an Important omission. It fftils trt declare that the Democratic States alone furnished ail the rebel soli, diers, and tbM aU the sympathy Uiey rer ceived from ffe? ublican States came from Democrats. Yes.' say Ve: Stand by the record!" uliv-

tw Am. Hie juTring a re-

rlefiMh

1

rt «fptirposes,

and ^kerepmieatatioft Mxtecte&HKL HoAe of the members were wtWing to htrtett out, consequently no biU wasjoassed, and we top withetft a L(^gid*t\tre. •^appy Te^tom Ymi Win remain thai wty. won't ysu?" ll "Hotlf wi cm helpIt

andwith ^*etf.ordfet%f thing* wenced new legislation. 1 w«bt to isee what can

mining matter^ and then to Boston to have a book published."

AraltfAte Tlws was re a the otlier great hi: pied now only by the wild Bedouin. 'Without the gioiip 'of'blark: l«itK,"Ure aisd vtliqf pist moving ire of tlie desert is not

m-

Mot em*,

importaacc to meX^to^rio h^ye al«g islatttfem#.

4

*feitn^«ts rfAched til.

The mm" cr wms IEHT

not bloody, and, ^e^Vl?i^es resemble those of Homer rather ufSn those of Von Moltke or General Grant They despise manual labor, and employ Christian fellRheea.or*n»4uiai claas of Moslems to till tlie soil for them. Their food is scanty—rice, grease, cracked wheat and sour camel's milk, &c., and their dishes are very uninviting. Arab woertieh who tlo thoA-ookingl-arer filthy in their habits. Yet the Arate make excellent cofffee, whiph is drank with their guests as a ceremony. The meu ^waysTliMitdt ±li^coffe^ fwl

I ft ra Rti :Hi (Tri 11 nmls nave aboV equ rights. The tribes with which the speakpr had most to do immbered from 100 to ,0()p and 4.000 tents each. 'Great tact'VuVii prtulence are required to'live audir4yelaxuoug them in safetv. Kindness, firmttessy and some small presents generally open the way to their confidence and favor. Hospitality is but, one of tjieir noble traits: yet, on the other hand, tbey^ii steal and murder if their interest' demands it. In fact, they have reduced throat cutting, to a tine art, rhe. women are regarded as inferior to the web, and are verv ignorant and degraded. The.ir coiuiition is Wretched, yet iHssibly they could be reached ano elevnt«d by the efforts of Relf-sacrilicing Christian \yonien, were they to go an\ong them "and live. The women, however, are not kept so secluded as are the Moslem women in the towns. The men are.

and rhymes, which are repeated for the ^ptertuinri)&nt! of the camp night after night. Soihe Bedouin children have occasionally found their way into tbfc schools Of Bethlehem, Jerusalem, Beirut, and .Damascus. Under favorable oircthow poopk^might poesibiybe reached by i-jcivaliziltg innuences. Tlie lecture abounded in amusing and enterUinin$i nddent^tvhi$8 5mne und th6 SpeAker's wvn' dljeerVn prosecuting his wcTrk in the de

(li ti

.Vji Obscure Hero.

Here, is a story which con from New York: An engihee __ Edward Osmond was recently running & passenger express train through Philadelphia, to Jersey City. It was one

!i

•r"

Osmond fell senseless 6n the engine. He was both burned and scalded, aiid the pain quickly restored consciousness. The engine, ivith its open throttle, was rushing forward with frightful velocity to certain destruction.

Inside the long train of Cars men were tal ki ng, smoking, laughing women playing with their ba)^v J^ tomnai let }iilf)f?61 "OC)\\ni

4

tlie} teiider and

escaped. Osmond'wi^ht nave done, the stink Instead, 1^(Uong.the Bide b^th1^"engine, carefully let himselfi itito his place, andii^with hia burned hands reyewed the Siigine And applied tt^e( $it bi:ii^e,s.The tr^in stopped., people, ujside the.cars wenton with weir reading and tbeif go^lp, Mi,d the children played with 'ihwl fftOtiieW, .tjrho #(6adered^' j&i-

over the very anonth of «fehe grave, and were snatched back by the ^tiietj hfgH coui^e of one'ppir workfioan.

To our mind there is something finer in the qalm intwrity to duty ha the face pf. ^d death which Ui often seen. in., the lives of obscure.American meohaqicft who fill posts of'respongibilityr than in. the ,dafch anfl .stui'dei). courage of many a daring eoldier on the battte^eld. ...

children surronijtlliiin ail n&e they .show to him.

"JS

i\ev

uilieis.

of the swiftest and heavl^ trayis/^'ing words to those whom you meet in whicjh are. only entrusted to the lhost distress'. Your kindn" experienced engineers. The train was out of their despair, jnirtkhig-isixtjrTrnl les itrr honr,~wherr a1 heavy*rfwnuectingjs*od o£#the driving* wheel ou the right of tho engine beoke, and one end of It, swinging upward with terrible ptcc", struek the cab beneath him^ud shattered it into a thousand pieces »v

tmtk

lil'H Jrt •••.: ''tii[smftrek In His Family. It. Is really difficult not to be stanuck with the contrast existing between Prince Bismarck^ te^ble1 !*epiiC»ti«ft atid th* patriarchal 'plctutfe,1 h.'pi'cdented by Uia fa»t\y of iv^ich he is head when he, returna homa to rest .from tl«3-ard®nt Btrtig^e! in which he hrt» so long been eog%4T. ,'P4touching than the respectful and silent entliusiasm with^^rhich his wife and and the dcVoted«t

In Ids faznily

circle he letAhitaself gdvonied by theit' anxirful ,tendem^vf, Fh^n he leaye& the table liis wife orfan hriags him hiw long'clftv pipe and light» itfor him. This first 'pipe femoked, a se»30rtdi all ready, ist-handcwi to him, and. iliflilf afterward gently taken from him without third being brought ,Tbe Winc» yield® .to this silent tyranny,, which relieves him of a portion of hia personal cares. His s«n Herbert told me, "I have put my father to bod, for, he, top, you see, ends*by being. tirel. lie is treated, indeed, bv his fiutiily as a dettiigod, and pared for as an rnfhht On hearing hha chat with his family oft** is strnri Ijy the clearness with which he #*prew)8ihimr seii tb© *grace with which he^«toop« to iumiliari(y, and also by the feeling of Irresistible fdrce Whim ho insinreJi, iw that When' ohce he has ftAkl anj^thiiig it liecomes law. Even whea ho unii«nda the mo«t naturally vou are conseioas that he has only to ^tne^^iSj Unge^^v a a a a

Ripe peaches may be" prevented

Hever, rate. to another. a confidence, home with unkind words augh at the misfortunes o:

',,Miww8fipaft'wiigi'iif''ywir o^ti

tWM*»'ie4h time

ippoint^jn* tttc« JSevea- nvike jmurself tlie hero, of youv

S

^er

jiyil qu«^pn.^ Never question a wsryapt or ibou^fciK^iVin%tt«^Kl.t ,L,. ^eyer refer to a gift you have njygd^,,, ar^iavor you liave iwaeredLijtlftVi ^Never- associate with brtd- e(&mpiKi*y.w'* Have gootl c^iri|»Biy, «r none. si

Never look over the shoulder- of an« «T ther who is readtegKir writing ti -W Never appear to notice a scai ity or defik-t of atly one pre»enu* "Never arreitt^the at^ntiOWMrfi£Bn' '««'^i )iumtaiiee by a touch. Speaks MiftrW

Nevftrpm»ish vonr diiki fco* si ftmlt? tof' vs hicli you «ildict®d yourself. £nv«ried I a new wequaintahce by '4 ho hrisitian name, unleHS reque&teKtto do sea*

Never lend an article vou have rowwt

1

io so.

tmles8"you lmvt?' i^rnilsgiTm"ttr~

in* a few things yon may he rnler 'ov^p" many Never exhibit too great fkmUiarify, with the new acquaintance |you may iiye offense. .i.vi ,.

Kevef foil to otfer the tiest and esBiesif seat the room to an invalid, an eld« ly person or a lady. *Xst?

11

Never send your guest, who is accuap tomed to a warm room, off to a eoldr, damp spare bed, to sleep.

J^eyer enter ja room filled with people without a slight bow to the generis' pa in

Never fail to answer iuy iivvitatioi^/ either jiersonally or lv letter, within a week after the invitation is rertfved,

Never accept of favors or hos'pituilitiei, without rendoiing an. excliange of civ ilities when opportunity" offers.

Never cross the leg or put 6n£ foot in to the street oar or iil places where will trouble othei-s when passing bvi J*

Never borrow money atifl neglect ro pay. If you do, you will soon bo known as a person of no business integrity. 'Never wriffe' to andther1 asking for^ iti,-, formation, or a favor of any kind, without inclosing a postage stamp for thii reply.

Never fail to say kind ana enconwiflh.i words to those whom you meet in distress. Your kindn$s,.may liftntliei^/g'"u ir despair,,tf

Never refuse to receive an apology. You may not deceive friertdshfp, bu/t cQurtea^ will require, when an apology is offered, that you accept it* 'N^ver eramiug the^cardiriirthfrcitnl'1-' basket. While they joaay bo exposed in the drawing-room, you are not expected to ttim theto over unless invited tb d^i SO. .,v. ..

Help Oiw Jpytlmr,

This little sentence should be written 6ver every heartr-statnfied bh etory^ memory. It should be the golden rtilo

Eut

ractice, not only in1 every household, throughout the world. By helping one another, we not only remove tho thorns from the pathway and the anxie-, ty from the mind, tytt we feel a sense ot pleasure f»V our hearts, knowing we ArO'l doing a duty to a fellow creature. A helping hand or art ehcowraglng word irffl no loss to v&tijfliifl.a beiiefit.to othe^(... Wbo has- iMt-4^th»-power-of.a UtU«-» sentence Who hflffaot needed the encouragement and aid oi a kind friend How soothing- when-p«rplexod with* some fitsk that is both dlfflctrlt fthd btirv densome,. to feel a gentlo hand oa tliox. shoulder, and to-hear a kind voice whis* pering, "Do nbt be discotiritged I see your troubles let me help you.". Wha^ji strength is inspired, hope created, what sweet gratiftldcr is felff nnd the great difficulty is dissolved as the dew before the Sunshine. Ytefy let u» help one ano^i ther, by endeavoring f^ strenglhen and encourage the weak and lifting the* burden of care from1 the weary and oprj pressed, that life m«y glide shibothly oti, JncrtHe^TOTt'ofTimfj^^ Waters and l^tJf«^Mllfi ig hand is ever ready to aid us, will rcw^rfl otn

Kaatw

after mnqfedftwflJHf not. W 'east A At ±-3. x.. to thciffnBMll

intle

riaothefTB6irfMirlor, among^the marvels, wasan apple in a pteaU It quite HI let! I

it have got there I By stealth I climhetl a ahair to nen if tho bottla screw, or if ther^W.b^na joint in the

flora

from

decaying for many boars by covering them well in trmki

o»ld water, I

mvm

tvocntes in this way ooe night Iart autumn, which were fnlly ripe. Th^ water will not extract the flavor from the frtiit' Ex chiding the air from them is, of coarse what mvm them.

throughout the length of the phial, was satisfied by careful obseryation

me an enigma and a Mystery.

and within which was growing withiulhe C-ry#aJ. The apple was put into tlie bottle while it wa» little^

this experimen^#W*A^-^wnlH r. W«

be? in the result.. grewi till it fi!U?d ill* hot-1 tie, when we rotut off from the and then All«d the with alcohol and'ebfk^i it %ht. We have now, all aaiiwah. with tlia littlo prickar*™. pn as it waawneojyeftgBt ctrked it up,

#ome man with an wigernetw for fanwi hfii ioventcd a spring wni rock a nmx

to »J«ep or

zoiim

animak What tin*

wft^wkind Of it saddfe thi man down on tlie row-of be ^d«nly» aad^wrthout wanting, points at tfie sky with hisHAil.