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Show THE HOME SENTINEL. BTTIIE CKXTINFL IIHLISI1ISU Ji. 11. FELT, Manager. O . TTAII. MANTL The people of rank in England who lave fallen into poverty are to be pen. Eioned made strong again, as it were. A Kalamazoo merchant gives away a copy of Stanley's Travels' wilhj each pound of cheese purchased at his tore. Puns are in order. 8he"does nut tease me. Gertrud j; JULIE M. LIITMANN. and she may as wdl grow up to u,y said tiilif.es, ders'and her Con a, rrmraifiv s:n e the wav i l ng As 1 told poor Let a liven it bv tune and ujz, Un do Archie simply. And (rreet.ug give to ad we pas.; a son to aler, I wish 1." had le't To white (d head, to ii.'ht of load. I supit as is, but, ns succeed ti:h; To matrcii grave and laughing ills. be will the Irene some iitle day pose Hurrah or lane and by wv.y. Ki r d.sUmt lady of the Hall. a'h and high way. For fr.enda we greet, f r foes we meet. My mu. her wiped away the tears Along the world s broad highway that had r.sen in her eyes at the menTi morning break: 1. the limbs are strong; tion of her dead husband's name, and Who dreainaof crime an i guilt and wrong! a polite and plaintive protest Yon onngdng ar i bis vimft ey es this so speech. bhud love mind of and again:', Nay, iigit You m a v marry one day yourself, Are wisdom proof and fod.v wise. 'ir Archibald, nr.d leave sons of Hurrah for lane an i L or distiuii path and liigh w. v. own to slice el you, she said. your T or friends vve greet, for foes we meet, But Uncle Archie waved the protest Aiong the wor.d a broad highway. and, for the first and sternly Tis noontide: let us Bs.iiJan hour last time in my rcmenibrauce, anIrvaui druming ere we line the ;owcr, swered my prettv, gentle, and conour indture disappear. Aud ciliatory mother v, ilh harsh abruptSince slight of heart aud b.rhi of heirt d-- , There are two GoraMiiie poms: one, a romance in ver.se, by Will M. Carlcton; the other, a souvenir of the St. Lawerencc, by Alonzo Hopkins, Tlie latter was puhlished .ino iy uiously. In Germany the law provide that a critic may not enter a theater to unjustly criticise a play, even if he has There is a delpurchased a ticket icate flavor of humor in the idea of A critic ever buying a ticket Canal schemers stop ut nothing. The latest plan for an artificial water the tunnelling oi Way comprehends the mountains from Cumberland, MJ., to Morgantown, W. Va., making u Kublorrauo.m canal sixty utiles long. Now dawns the day which tnarkf the beginning of the end of the exile of American patriots in Canada and promises the restoration of wanderers In the bleak fields of the dominion to the arms of tho-- c who tenderly yearn to embrace them. Ik the young Englishman who is reported to be preparing a key to the works of Robert Hr own mg could sea the piles of unsold liaoonhui keys to Shakespeare's works, which wore prepared by Ignatius Dotielly, lie would hesitate at the threshold of his literary venture. Not many things In tho earth, the water and the air are out of tho reach A flash of lightning of photography, has frequently been photographed. Not long ago a scientist with a camera Hid un electric battery got a good pic-luof tho bottom of the Moditerrun re The Brazilian minister of finaneo rejays the greatest wish of the now public is to model after tho United States and consolidate friendship and commercial relations with this There isaquos-tionubl- o nation. compliment in the thought fiat we couie so near the ideal of a people born and schooled la tnon-treh- y. Miss Ro.se Elizanktu Cleveland is Tine Crest Iuu, Paolo. Fla. It is a lovely and romantic place on a lake iboutsix miles from Sanford. Miss Cleveland is building a cottage near iho Inn. Miss Hastings, tho nieoo of it President Cleveland, also Miss Elva Bryant, of Madison, Wis., a daughter ( Gen. Bryant, Secretary Vilas law is there. partner, The Sturgis, (Dak.) Record reports novel lawsuit. A nmn from Bare Butte Valley lost his poekotbook containing $200, which was fouud by a man of Elk Creek. A month later, apon learning who was the owner, he returned the same, and the owner was very thankful but deinauded interest for tho use of the money for that time, lodgment was given fur $1. li und costs. An old lady of Lebanon, Ind., has seen shot by somo one unknown, and has been arrested lot ier ;he crime on no stronger evidence than This outrage is wore suspicion. due to the ancient friend of the malicious paragrapher.the mother-in-lajoke, nnd it reveals the fertile tlomonta fur evil that exist iu the aged ind hoary chestnut. Th it joke should ae arrested wherever met. son-in-la- w The experiment of constructing a urge building of paper has be in made nt Hamburg, where an immonso hotel with its facade and atlier important jiarts composed of ;hat material has been erected. It is claimed that the building is absolutely Jreproof nr.d also impervious to the iction of the elemeuts which rvnder e Brick, stuno or wood uusightly or under prolonged exposure. ly uu-laf- Congo native who has been taught to read and writ,has just sent a letter, bis first, to the archbishop of CanterGreat and bury. It is as follows: 3ood Chief of the Tribe of Christ greeting: The humblest of your servants kisses the hem of your garment, and begs you to send to his fellow servants more gospel and less rum. In the bonds of Christ, Ugalla. It seems to us that the letter hits tiie null pretty effectually on the head. A astonish Ciiaki.es Ike Russian tanks at the court of St. Petersburg by abstaining from tbo use Mr. Smith is Df intoxicating drinks. Emokv Smith will a prohibitionist, but he has out At tasted wine for many years. public banquets he turns his glasses Thi down when tho wine Is passed. will astonish the Russian who are tl hardest drinkers in the IVe have always been repro world. fended at Ft. Petersburg by a in m who liked at least a little wine at dinner. 3uchanan, Curtin. Cameron, Jewell, Baker, Ingersoll, Lothrop and others took wine with the Russians in a ueu-rou- s und frieudly way. oot blue-bloo- smat a of tear. Have sworu the Hurrah for law an by way. For distant path und high way, tor fiund we greet, for foe we 1 met, Along the world Tis uiht anti a hv; broad hih way. foul th.evcs have mobbed The weak one hero and left them robbed Of hope, and faith, and love and rest; But sure ol soul und pure of huI Still fold their treasures to their breusU Hurrah for lane and bv way, F or distant path and high way. For every one whose journey s done, Vho s gained the distant sky way Uncle Archies Wife. CHAPTER I. You will com: to Mrs. Marshall's thib afternoon, mother? Oh, yes, it will do you good to ninko tho little effort! You have grown quito palo through shutting yourself in the house so long. My mother shook her head at this appeal, as she had shaken it at so many similar appeals of mine within tho past few days; but this timo I thought I saw signs of yielding. Certainly she looked longingly over our pretty front garden and on to the sunny high-road- . 1 suppose you are right, nnd I ought to make the effort, Irene, my dear she said, with a disconsolate but 1 would rather hide mysigh; self away till I have somewhat recovered from this cruel shock. However, though your undo Archie has not used us well, I have no wisli to be unkind to him or Mrs. Gerrard; and, if we shut ourselves up, people, I suppose, would talk. They will do that in any case, mother. I do not suppose tho Lud-ieig- h folks have discussed anything for tho past ten days but tho Squire's extraordinary marriage; but of course it rests with us to give the gossip a good or ill nutured turn. Then we will direct it into tho right channel at once," answered mother, with a quick flush, and I ain sure the consciousness of acting magnanimously more than half consoled her for the effort she was making and tho disappointment sho had endured. Poor mother, sho needed some consolation badly; for, though she had us a matter of fact, no real reason to complain of actual injustice, sho had been startled out of a pleasant sense of security lately, and, as she observed, mado to look downright ridiculous In the eyes of all her friends. Uncle Archie or Archibald Gerrad, Esq. of Ludleigh Hall to give him his more dignified title was my fathers eldest brother, and had been looked upon as a confirmed old batchelor so my mother putheticully informed me When 1 had bofore I was bora. reached the mature age of nineteen he wras a bachelor with still, as idea of little apparently estate of holy entering the matrimony as I had of entering a convent which I was not very likoly to u do, for I bora me engaged to Dick just then. Uncle Archie brought us to Ludleigh after my father's death, and established us, not, as mother rather exported he would, at the Hall, but at k the pretty, old Queen Ann houso in the High street, that had been tenanted by unmarried and widowed Gerrards for many generations. You will be more comfortable than at the Hall, Gertrude, he said, in the grave, kind, courteous way that was natural to the stately old gentleman; and wo can seo as much of one another as we please. I should like to have Walters little girl brought up under my own eyes; and yet I am too much of an o'd bachelor and absentee to have tho Hull arranged for ladies' occupation now." I was eight years old then, but I remember that seeno of our home coming so well how 1 perched on my nudes knee and asked, with all the pert boldness of a spoilt child Why don't you like ladies at tho Hall, Uncle Archie? Aren't there any pretty things for them to seo there? Very pretty things, Irene. And must not 1 see them some day soon? I Hsked nnxiously, and Uncle Arctii: smiled and patted my head. Assuredly you shall, little girl, as soon as your mother likes to bring you. No one has so much right to soo them no one shall take so much interest in the pretty things at Ludleigh Hall as you. The last word were spoken more gravely, and, I fancy now, more to himself than to me; but naturally I only understood the superficial moaning of words then, nnd my juvenile curiosity was aroused. beI asked earnestly Why? cause I um a good little girl. Unde Archie? Boeuuxe you are my niece und the last of the Gerrards, he answered, with such a heavy sigh that mother, who had been sitting in the comforia-ll- e chimney-corne- r wanning her slim .vhite hands and listening to our cone versation with an expression of content on her face, suddenly interfered, and, culling mo to her, told Mar-tinea- reil-bric- imi-cit- ness. I shall never marry, Gertrude! Do not maze suc.i a suggestion aguiu! lie exclaimed angrily; whereupon mother apoiogi. ed with tears in her eyes, und promised never to repeat the offence. From that timo forward it came to not bo understood, only between mother and me, but among all our Ludleigh friends, that 1 was my uncles recognized heiress a much more important individual than the Reverend Walter Gerrards orphan daughter would otherwise have been. Our establishment was conducted on a mudc't scale; hut no expense was spared on my education, or indeed on any of my needs; and, as the years rolled on and I reached tho threshold of young womanhood, I began to be aware of my own consequence in the place. About the samo timo too I began to wonder about uncle Archie, thinking that, with all the advantages fato hud started him with, his had been rather a wasted and melancholy life. We did not see much of him at Ludleigh. The Hall was shut up for at least of the year, while he wandered over tho continent in a restless, aimless way that could have brought him but little enjoyment. Ierhaps tho very fact of my only catching stray of tho man to whom I owed glimp-e- s everything gave him more interest in my eyes, made me speculate and theorize about him ns I should hardly have been inclined to do about a commonplace uncle seen every day. I nover passed through the great Hall or wandered through the deserted park without thinking wistfully of tho absent owner, who tcolc so little pride in his present possession and would leave no son to succeed him when he died. I imparted my thoughts on the subject to mother one day; but she did not sympathise with me at all answered indeed quito crossly and impatiently. You are talking sentimental nonsense, Irene! If your dear uncle is satisfied with things as they are and we may assume he is, seeing how soon he could alter them if he chose if he Is satisfied I am sure we may be." I answered Yes; we may be, rather angrily, Poor mother's worldliness was of the most innocent and childlike description; but somehow it Surely he jarred upon mo just then. would have been a happier man if he had married somo years ago? I cannot say, my dear I was too happy a wife while your dear father lived to have one word to say against married life; but old maids and old bachelors have their own consolations, and I dont fancy they feel their loneliness so much as we think. Besides, everyone knows why your uncle did not marry." Indeed I do not for one! I cried, Please flushing with excitement. I knew there was tell me, mother. some romantic reason. It is not very romantic, child, and I am sure you must have heard the story or 1 thought you had, at any rate, but you were such a child when your father died But I am not a child now. Do tell mo, mother, please." Well, when he was quite a young man, Archibald Gerrard was engaged to a very beautiful and fascinating girl the orphan daughter of a Colonel Maxwell, an old friend of his fathers. Your father was quite a lad at the time; but he has often told mo that he never saw a man so frantically in love as Archie was. None of his people approved of the match; for the Maxwells were as poor as church mice, and Violet had littlo besides her beauty to recommend her; but that seems to have been something superlative, and of course Archie had only himself to please, Did papa liko Miss Maxwell?" I nsked, as mother paused with a reflective air, as though sho were gathering the loose threads of her narrative together. 8he shook her head. Not much, though he admired her beauty as everyono did; but, if he had no great love for her, he absolutely hated her mother, a cunning old whom he suspected Irenehwomnn, from the first of making up and forcing her daughter into the marriage. Lookers-o- n seo moat of the gam , we are told, Irene; and your father's eyes were very shrewd und then. He said Violet's indifference to her adoring lover was so patent, despite all her efforts to conceal it, that he often longed, at all risks of offending him, to take his brother aside and beg him to see things as they really wore before plunging into what bade fair to bo a fatal marriage. But he never did? Mother shook her head. No, he never did of course. What man ia his place would have found courage to speak out such unpalatable tru'.lis? What man in Archie's would have listened to them? Your hither just watched and waited for the coming of the day fixed for the wodd'ng waited with a sick and sore foreboding at his heart, for the two brothers loied each other dearly. Jt came at two-thir- clear-sighte- d I cried eagerly, as mother paused, enjoying my wild curios. tv and her own dramatic points W fiat happened then? a bit of melodrama A catastrophe that act the county, and even people t of the county, talking for months. On the wedding morning. Archibald received afrantie note from Mrs. Maxwell entreating him to come over to the cottage in which she was then livYour father went with him, ing. n he had ke.ing sure that the trial was at hand. It was well lie did go: for when they reached the cottage they found the old woman in hysterics. Violet had fled! You mean sho bad run away with scii.e one, mother? With sc .ne one yes. She had effected a most romantic escape through window; for it seems her that the wicked old woman, who had ail the time been aware of her daugh-te- r s feelings, and kept her under lock and key upon her bridal eve, fearing, I suppose, what really happened, that the girl s courage would break down fore-fc.-e- bed-roo- at the last." But she left some letter she let them know where and with whom she had gone? I asked, more interested in the runaway bride than in her mothers baffled scheming. Yes. Your father said he pitied her almo.-- t as much as he did his wronged brother when he read that scrawled and blotted little note. He had thought her incapable of any strong feeling; but both pathos and passion were in the wild pleading words that seemed rung from a proud nature driven frantic by excess of misery. In brief it told your uncle that she had fled with a man to whom she had been engaged bofore she ever came to Ludleigh an officer in her fathers regiment, and the only man You are rich she could ever love. and generous and gool, and Frank has nothing; but I love him withmy whole heart and soul! she wrote. And your father said the old woman stamped her foot in impotent rage, and, with a wild, screaming laugh, cried She loves him, and that is worth all! Tho fool, the imbecile, the ingrate to think that sho should be a daughter of mine! It will make her so happy it will last so long, this love for which she has cast away ail the love of a t aurien, of a beggar, of a gambler yes, a gambler! Oh, I am almost consuled for the trick she has played on me when I think that her future is in Frank Egertons hands! The life he will lead her the way he will break her heart and humble her proud spirit! There was something inhuman, continued mother something diabolical in the way tho wicked old woman gloated over the suffering in store for hor own child. Archibald turned away and walked into the garden. Your father stayed behind for a few moments, feeling, as he afterwards told me, that he could not go without speaking his mind. Be silent, for decencys sake, if for no other reason, he said sternly. If he can bear in silence his pain and the cruel wrong that has been done him, surely shame should set a seal upon your lips! She s'.ared at him as only an French woman can stare, with an insolent defiance as insulting as a blow; then quite suddenly she walked to the door, looked out at Archie, standing motionless as a statue by the gate, and broke into a harsh scoffing laugh. His loss? What is his loss to mine? I mock myself of it! she cried, rapidly dropping more and more into her native idiom as her rage inHe is young and rich; I am creased. old and poor. lie has lost a girl whom he thinks pretty and adorable. Bah he may console himself the world is full of pretty and adorable girls! But for me -- where is the fine house I hoped to live in where the fine fortune I hoped to share? Gono out of the window with the imbecile who Your father walked out of the room, ashamed and afraid to listen any longer to such unnatural words; it was a relief even to join his brother though Archie in his agony could have been no pleasant companion just then. Boor uncle Archie, I cried indignantly, as mother paused with a sigh; I wonder the blow did not kill him! Men do not die so easily as that, In 1872 a German artisan, a shoe, mnker. died in Charleston, 8. C. jj D to had a Brother there, to his deathbed he bequeathed an Jfre box about the size of the Vessel which ladies plant geranium-- in li,.s h Ex of the clay pots of Dutch n,.umfa;. rs1 ture. The brother, who became keif Gkax to the pot, knew not wlmt to with the curious legacy, but lie kept 1 vesvt: it in a trunk until a few yean ago ash v" when he married. Itwnssu! " ''Blent. ourccs Iv taken from bis trunk nnd g:vento ok tllff his little girl ns a plnythin The little girl sea tt ere thecon-acv" tents of tlie box, pegs, awls, etc., to the four winds, About a y. ;;r ao m pui her lather died. nnd a lo Wl!e iking utilized the box ns one in wl.i- h sb planted some geraniums nnd placed .uutaii.: it on the grave of her dead husband nls of When the plants grew tlie ox was clbj taken back to the city and did gerv- term' ice again us a plaything. One dav tl on tB the bottom tell out of the box and it llJillSi1 was then found that the heirloom had ?o two bottoms. A roll ot Irnnk bills nd Jui fell out of the lalse bottom, and with BVer the roll three pieces of silver, three VGram half dollars. The fact was reported uward, to the little girls mother, and tlie amount she found that lorad ' tet it was $133. It has since been ascertained that id now f1, the man who left the small hut teresting legacy died before he couij juac't explain the real reason for the gilt nmente tlie box. Thecircumstnneesnsabove9? were related by Mrs. Kggers, to whom nher" the facts were given by the lady whoeacy m is in possession of the money, phavio very interesting part of the story is0'jr that tlie lady used a part of 'the witlu" once to erect a memorial sata? money-n- t to the testator at St. Bethany Woman's Paradise. a A woman with an aim can do anything tnry. It lias always been contended Aten se be in is there that pots. suffimoney geranium aim if tlie in she pleases Boston, Tlie theory will receive a great boon xs' ciently dominates her life. She may enter any occuation she chooses, work in by tlie facts as given. Charleston (mne any lines she likes, and be certain, not News und Courier. Brighter brass with a cut lemon. Powdered ammonia is considered excellent for cleaning silver. There is no economy in cheap soap. Get the best, when lizlf the quantity will be needed. Blitter is tainted ly any strong smelllie kept ing odor. Therefore it should by itself. Have coffee pulverized. A third less sill be required and the quality much ,mproveJ. To cleanse knit and crochet articles rub in a pan of flour until clean and shake thoroughly. sauCity people can make country lean of six )or.v pounds sage by taking tenderloins are liest four jxiunds of chine fat, four ounces of salt, two of sweet pepper, and the same of mixed and marjoherbs, savory, sage, thyme, ram. For the Hands. Mutton suet, well rubbed in at night, drawing on a pair of white cotton gloves to sleep in and washed off the next morning with a few drops of ammonia in the water, is better than glycerine and rose water, both of which are, in result, too drying for some hands. Yei.ks in Caramels. Make a thick sirup from one pound of cut sugar and oue pint of water, beat slightly tlie yelks of ten eggs, add to the eggs four tablespoonfuls of the sirup. Cook until a thick paste, stirring constantly, flavor with wine and a little cinnamon, turn on to a plate dusted with flour. Hour the hands lightly and roll into small balls about the size of an egg yelk. Cook the remaining sirup to the crack, add one tablespoonful of honey, dip the balls in this sirup and drop on waxed paper; when cool wrap in fringed tissue papers. quietly under such an intolerable wrong, I persisted, with an inconsequent vehemence that made my mother smile. He did nothing, my dear in the circumstances the wisest course to per-suthough I am afraid we cannot give poor Archie much credit for dignified lie was very ill for some weeks; and then he went abroad, and even your father did not see him for many years not till you were born indeed then he appeared suddenly at the Parsonage one day, such an old, gray headed, g nian, I could hardly believe that he and Walter were brothers. He was very nice though, and my heart quite warmed to him when he took you in his arms nnd kissed you; 1 could not help thinking that, had things been different, he might have had children of his own here then; and I suppose a similar thought was in his own mind, for he turned your father and said Four little ones must keep up the Gerrard name, Walter you understand that, I hope. Four father began to make a hurried broken protest, which Archie quietly silenced; and it was after that, in answer to my puzzled that I heard the story I havequestions, told you e, -- 10 sober-look-in- BE CONTINUED. 1 , I I - j onlroa-countin- ( o! t'eme-elter- , 1 only of the approbation of individuals, but of that of tlie community in which she lives. Tlie atmosphere of Boston within tlie gates, in all the Newtons and other suburbs, is an atmosphere of freedom for women who work. In tlie ranks there is a feeling of reof spect and consideration for women who are in business, either because they must must be or because they choose to be. In every city there are numberless ocwomen engaged in cupations, as here, and there are also plenty of women elsewhere in business large enough to employ other women. But there are several here doing business in lines whicli are somewhat distinctively local in Bpirit, although their influence extends, with their trade, as far as California and Florida and tlie Boston TranCanadian provinces. script. Womens Estimate of Bachelors. All women are in league against the bachelor tlie married women from sympathy with their unmarried sisters, and the unmarried from a desire to lessen the number of spinsters. With the league against him, offensive and defensive, the unmarried man may And peace in heaven, but lie can scarce hope to find happiness on earth this side of marriage. However, once married, all tlie' bachelors troubles are over. He is no longer tlie subject of interested or designing attentions except the attentions whicli proceed from love. True, the bachelor becomes on his marriage, if not an object of commiseration to the knowing ones, an object of comparative indifference to all women but one; but tlie sujierior love of that one atones for all, and his added dignity and completeness as a man and citizen make him wonder how he previously-existeas one-haof a pair of scissors without tlie other half. Womans Cynon-worke- j j d lf cle. t have Courting on Street Cars. , From the Brooklyn Engle. Love making? said tlie si the sa:n w bear i nianv conduct-BuUf- : or, Oh, yes; I see a lot of that, too, D1? you and it does my old heart good. Whj,t tr,ght. theres many a young couple whos-jffij- , parents do not look favorably upoul, early marriage, or marriage at ail I HG unless they make the selection, who; Coe do all their courting on tlie cars.; The young lady will get on uptown, j froi let us say, and a few blocks further wit: down she will be joined by the youn nmn. Their efforts to make it appea froi that the meeting is purely accident, il; rale are amusing to a high degree, k' they dont blind old veternnssu h n:8yCl I. I can spot 'em every time. Man n time Ive seen one of these couple; ride down nearly to tlie ferry, get o:; Str and board another hound They can keep it up all day if they; Tak feel so disposed and are not detected.; nov 1 have known an angry father and, an angry mother, too, on another otj Pre ension, to appear on tlie scene javrij, when they were least wanted, Noth ing ot an open nature occurred inthq car, but I noticed that the lovers lei as soon as they could do so wither" degree of dignity, and from tlip lijrH in the old folks eyes I judged tlis there would he rough weather oi, j coast for somebody before long. j Kindness Amply Repaid. Last week, says Chatter, we to something about the fortune cf. Frederick Cook, ofStr ofNew York, which had its beginnir.f in a little kindness lie was able tod j for George Pullman, when Pullman was as poor as a church mouse at. starting his famous car company. Now we hear of another instar A Wall Convenience All sorts of handy things can be made out of anything at all nowadays. Here is something useful made of an odd piece that goes towards providing tt of cretonne and a few playing cards. It merit ot that little Sunday-sch- e is a catcn-nl- l for rags, paper, combings, song, Scatter Seeds of Kindness gid a thousand and one waste articles It appears that when Westit: at ought to go out of sight. house, the millionaire inventor, and poor he got a placei-thirassistant engineer in the Navjj It was during the war. llis felloij workmen plagued him a great dea as experts often do a green used to keep him running errands for tools that had no o. IT ence. In that coterie was a man name-tSnyder, who treated Mr. Westing?? house in a kindly and helpful mannt f.. r Irene. "Then I wonder he did not kill Mr. Frank Egerton, or horsewhip or or do anything rather than sit down to-da- y, The Story of a Geranium pot UOJtH MATT lilt-- . and then me, with unusual sharpness, not to last: then? And mure. uncle mv tease any A SONG OF THE ROAD. Mr. FVestinghouse has recently maif; him manager of the Union Interloc i ing Switch Company, at a big salaC'.-an-! d with'a fine house to live in. A daily trial to every woman is to keep h track of her Scissors, her button hook, shoe horn, keys, and all sorts of small The Festive Frog. things. A pretty place for all these A frog in the first stages of its C tilings can be made of a Japanese fan as reer gives no bint ns to what it shown in tlie picture above. eventually become. Asfaraslooksc g Dont. one would suppose it was coin j Dont read in street-car- s or other jolt- be a cat-fisltspendstlie liretdafr ing vehicles. of existence its swimming about Don't pick the teetli with pins or any some pool, industriously wagg1 other hard substance. the small tail that is appended Dont neglect any opportunity to in- one end of his little round, sure a variety of food. a Dont eat or drink hot or cold things shaped body. By and byfrom Pair.J unu' , , out stick to legs begin iu succession. immediately time a for vest. its uses These it Dont pamper tlie appetite with such kick and then moves them lc variety of food that may lead to excess. close with, collar to its to make way Dont read, write, or do any delicate hind legs- its and esculant long work unless receiving the light from tho brighter-is little then the It that left side. relations' Don't direct special mental or physical fellow disclaims further even goes so far energies to more than eight hours work with his tail, and to cut its in each day. acquaintance entirely except e Dont keep the parlor dark unless you quits the water forever Taking UP Talue your carpet more than your and bathing purposes. on abode it the land, soon gro"8 your children's health. Don't delude yourself into the beliei to an article of commerce that you are an exception as far as sleep sought after und prized bye?100 is concerned ; the nominal Philadelphia Times. average of sleep is eight hours. Dont endeavor to rest the mind by He: Im thinking of emhraci absolute inactivity; let it seek its rest in it , work in other channels, and thus rest literary life. She: No doubt i would. happy if you do; I the tired part of the brain. -- Life-Savin- h, , ' ; Kt. 1 -M : K. I and 0F reiin 4T dll d by tloivi r Uu 'V'a is I rki ID iAl If BaJi HRos., 1 .00 prtj diUtoh tfc. oid i 3C! lEGf 4 PFF m I 3LE lor ot W. N. |