ft «•««■%»> l»' It Mmww mlk* i-^s«>o a' ■ .'] .If /5t
THE ALAMANCE GLEANER
'HO. >H
LEANED
*■* 1 * •"*' ■''
\, r " ! 1 i'
■;* ' PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY - *V
, E. B."* * F E R
.-K,-l * U rah am, W*. C, J-'v •
, . Ralei of /Subscription. Postaye Paid :
One. . Attrt**.'.. ...n.W)
. Six Months illlliMlll
Turde Months
' Every person sending us a cltib of tei) tub*
scrlbers with the cash, entitles himself to one
>opy free, for the lenrh of time for which the
club is made up. Papers sent to different offices
jtfb Departure from the Cash System
"Transient advertisements payable in advance:
yearly advertisement* quarterly In advance.
' ' - / tfev > Fni**}- f "ft
-1 quare a |s2 00 $3 00 $4 00 $ BOOitIOOO
2 ..ti»4« v -i4 oql' i
Transient advertisements $1" per square
for he first, and flfty cents for each subse,
AD\yEI^y^EMENTS
Prices reduced
»,'t ->»■«(« . , J» ■ *•>
Perfected Farmers Friend Plows madeln
Petersburg Va.
One Horse No. 5 Price $4.00
rwoHaMNo.T " 6.00
rw«»HtfpNo. TH " 6.50
rwoHdfte N0.,8 7.00
"VOTTAD-onJIP;
mmi fflftH
SCHOOL
GRAHAM, N. 13.
REV. D A. tONG, A.M. ;
REv.W W. STALKY, A. M.
\* REV. W.S. LOwO.'Ai M.
Opens August 20ih 18T8, and closes the last
ITrMwy In May, 187 ft
Board 98 to $lO and Tuition $8 to $4.50
mouth.
KMafia
vmmmw»«iqajo*p«« m uiw«|i^(ggw
Farmer Friend Plows at SCOTT Jt DON
THE GENUINE
DR. C. McLANE'S'
Celebrated, America -j .
WORM SPECIFIC
VERMIFUGE.
SYMPTOMS mm?
mHE countenance fe pale'aAi'leaden-*
A colored, with occasional flushes, or
a circumscribed spot idh one br botft
cheeks; the eyes become dull; the pu
pils dilate; an azure semicircle runs,
along the lower eye-lid ithe nose is ir
ritated, swptjnt
a swelling 4ttnCTipperTip7 ocfifsionai
headache, with humming or throbbing
of the ears; an Unusual ayretjpn of
saliva; slimy or breach' 1
very foul, particularly in the morning;
appetite variable, A j,
with a gnawing HB|B>Stil ti#sto®|
ach, at others, gone; fleeting
pains in the occasional
nausea' ind vomiting; vfoKnt jJains
throughout the abdomeiy bowels it.
regular, «rtu»s l;q|tftaatoofeslhpy{
not unfrequently tmged with blood;
belly swollen and hard; urine turbid^
' accompaqQ Ibf ficydfty fjjpbugh
sometinfcllrnmtl convUTSTvd"; uneasy
and disturbed sleep, with grinding of
the teeth; temper variable/but gener
ally irfitable, &c.
Whenever the above symptoms
* t0
DR. C. McLANE'S VERMIFUGE
-— * will certainly effect a cure.""
IT DOES NOT CONTAIN MERCURY
in anQ|ftjnYiiMntngff cn t prepara
tion, not: cdpsofeof wnng the slightest
injury to * n f ant '
npih Vj kmia I
x tt Tr**rv*~ "DiTi^Ml
arenoT rew»mena«T® s"reme^B
theilU
£«!ynruOTraoN«.
• the 31PR
McLank and Flkmikg Bbos. - •
iMi* upon having th* Dr. CMS*
Lank'S Livkb Pills, prepared by Fleming
K Bros., of PitUburgh, I'*-.,*
i"
TUB W.1V9188, —r
-'■Wfiih. MmTKog it
fice reading a very interesting book. It
was a part of his business, this reading,
for the book wu of a science within the
srtope ofr'hls profession. Hte was compar
atively a young. Man, and bad the ref.n
tatieu ot being an excellent physician.
While ho read some one.rang at his office
upon tbe stepping stoue he was iudig
nant.
It *vasa rag tfsd, dirty "boy, known in
Eriißworth as 'liamuier Jim'—ragged
and dirty, and with the vilencss of the
slums trpon liiin—a bov viciotts and pro
fane, against whom every other boy was
and a Ov
erseers had been ablo to reofatyn, and
who seemed to care for nothiug but to
anilW-peodfc-iflrtM *Sf %Hr. lils'trbd
na*B%7ttl rab*C)^eVßeerß'
Ammerton. Abtfuthis father nobody in
Ernsworth had ever known. His
mother bad died an inmate ot the poor
house.
On tbo present occasion, Jim's lace was
not only dirty, bnt bloody; and there was
blood upon bis grimed and tattered gats
ments.
♦JMesaq FVb
got a MnllwwS
• What kind ©! * butt?' asked tbo doc
tor.
• 'l'm afeared it's bad, air,' said the boy,
sobbingly, 'One o' Mr. Dunn's inen bit
ine with a rock. Oh I'
'What did he hit yon tor?'
'I tluno, sir.'
'Yes, you do knew. What did be throw
, tbe stone at yort for?
'Why, sir, I wus a-pick'n up an apple
under ono of bin trees,'
Dr. Wal*h would not touch tbe boy's
head with his fingers. There was no need
of it. lie could .see that there was only a
and that the blood had ceas
•Go nome,' he said, Met your folks
ease, Mr, iMn't got i»> home, and
I hain't got no folks.'
'You Stop somewhere, don't you?'
'J stop at the podr-'us when they don't
kVqk tne out.' ' '
'Well, boy, you are not going to die
liom l his. Go and get somebody to
west) your bead, or, go aqd wash it your
self, and tie your handkerchief on.'
JF'fWf fU. I n0 ~~'
•Hold tip, boy. I miven't got time to
jvastOj You sutler if, jroni go as
you are.' " F
'U W wifh thy* Dr. Silas Walsh closed
die door and returned to his book. He
had pot meant to be unkind; but really
be had not thought there was any need
Rnd
eerraTiiiy ne did IK>T want fnatpad boy in
"blvofßce. '' » . - 'iff o-m *■»■«
, Bujt not been alone
, cognizant of the feov's visit. There had
been a witnessat an nuwwindow. The
heard. She
Dman. Shewas not strong, and
resolute, and dignified like her husband.
Het heart was not only tender) but it
was uged to aching. She bad no chil
dren liing;Lut there were* two little
mounds in the churchyard which told her
down, avd cfj[led tbe boy in, by the back
woy>*to> tbe wash room. He came in,
rags f ' dirt and all, wondering What was
wanted. Tbe sweet-voice that had called
him %ad not frightened him. He cajne
in and stood looking at Mary Walsh,
and aa be looked Jua sobbiug ceased.
•Sit down my boy,'
He sakiown.
I good?J
youtrw* l '®MH
nmnrio pleasmn&lS
»I should ceiMyß
|^||h brought
MtAcMge, and w m tflrlhand
jpead.|Kid face.
one. She a a i|tfcifing
plaster, which she fi^B and
then
fiSlhuts
ting out the.jagsj*nd dirt, it was jealty a
* handsomofaee. 'Mis- *sa>
'What's your name, my boy
\W and sometimes
flagged ML' TTTW M l
:ffiAH£MLN ON WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 6 1879
'I mean, how were yon ohistened?'
•Wlenfiß?' • *«•' - '
'Don't ydti know what'name J-onrpfcr
etits gt*e yotl?» - 1 "
'O-ye-es. It's down on the 'seers'
as James Aminerton.'
~'Wel). James, the hurt on your
not a bad one, and it you are careftil not
Utiub eft the plaster, U will aoou heel up.
Are you hungry?' . it* *1
(Please, ma'am, !-haven't eat notbing
•"i »»*»•• « • • ' •
Mrs. Welsh brought ont' some bread
and butfer, and a obp of milk, and al
lowed ffie to sic there tn the wnsh
room and eat. And while he ate she
watched hfm narrowly, eeapning every
reaturo. Surely, if the science ot physic
ognonay, which her husband, studied so
teAclu-and witbench faith, was reliable,
this boy ought' to imve grand capacities.
Once mere, shutting out the rags and the
filth, mul only observing the hair now
glosty and Waving, from her dexterous
manipulations, over a shapely head, and
mai king t >e face, with lustroub gray eyes
and the perfect nose, and tbe mouth tike
a Cupid's bow, and the chin strong,
without being unscendy,—seeing tbis
without the dregs, tbo boy was hand*
some. Mrs. Walsh, thinking of tbe little
monnds in the ehurch«.yard, prayud' God
(bat she might be a happy mother; and it
a bey was to bless "her maternity, she
Could not ask that he shonld be hand
somer than she believed she could make
this boy.
finished eating, and stood up.
. 'James,' said tbe little woman—for shs
was a little woman, and a perlect picture
fcf a loving and lovable little woman.
'Jamee, when yon are hungry, aad have
nothingtoeat,-if>you will eome to this
door, I will feed you. i don't waet you
tO'g ; tfllung[]^/. ,
*1 shbbfd likfe to cfrme. ma'am.'
•And, if I'fetd yon when you are'hnn
{ry, will you not try to be gftod for my
afo' 4 '.
Tbe boy bang bis Read, and consider*
cd. Some might have wondered that he
did answer at once, as a grateful boy
onght; but Mrs. Walsh saw deeper than
that. The lad was considering how he
might answer safely ftnd truthfully.
flf they'd lot rae be good, ma'am; bnt
they won't," lie said, at length.
• WHt yon fry" all yoa canT
'Yes, 'm—l'll tfy all I can.'
Mrs. Walsh gave tbe lad a small parcel
of ioodin arpaper, and patted his curly
head. The boy bad not yet shed a tear
since the pain of thd wound had been as
suaged. Some inight have thought be
Was not grateful'; but the little woman
could the gratitude- in the deeper
light of the eyo. Tb6 old crust Was not
broken enough yet lor (ears.
AHctaswdeilrs. Walsh told her.- hus
band what She had done, and be laughed
_ Mara »■ ■ i"J "tit :a -
at her. ,
'Do you think, Mary, fliat your kind
nese can help that ragged waU?'
T do not think it will hurt biu), Silas.'
It vfas net Ib 4 first time that Mrs.
Walsh bad 4ql>vei;ed answers to the eru
dite doctor wbiflk-oflflatnnMy stopped dis
cussion. '
After that' Jim came often to the wash.
Yoopi door,.and was fed; aud be became
cleaner andjnore orderly with each suc
ceeding visit. At length 'Sirs, Walsh
washifdrmedtbata fHend was going
aw&fr Into the far Western country to
take qp land, and, make a frontier farm.
Tbo thought- occured to ber tbat this
might be h good opportanitp for James
Ammerton. She saw her friend, and
brought Jim to his notice, and, the re>
suit was, that the boy went away with
the emigrant .adventurer. And she heard
from ber triend a year late* tbat he liked
the boy very much. Two yean later
tbe «rmigram wrote tbat Jim was a treas
ure. And Mrs. Walsh shoWed the letter
td ffer lfthband,'*rtd he smiled and kissed
his ffttle'wife, and said bo was so glad.
And lie Bad another soprco of gladness,
Upon ber
bust, JtieaUhx 9*u M>iY—wpQ,
promise ot life wnd happiness in the
time to come.
The years James Ammer
ton dropped out from the life tbat Mary
Walsh knew. The last she heard *ar
five years aftftf be Went away from Erns
worth, and Jftn had started *ttnt for ffl
golden moun|s]ns of his. own pcoouut,
to commence in earnest his own life baU
tie. , t * *-i iu * j' 1 iuijHM
Bnt there was a joy and a pride in the
little, woman's life wh|cb hela its place
and grew and strengthened. Her boy
whom t)my celled tfbilip, grew to be %-
youth of great promise— a bsight. kind
hearted, good bey, wbom everybody'
loved; and none loved him more then
did bis parents. In fact', they worshiped
' him : or, at least, his mother did; At
tbe age OMevooteen Phillip Walsh enter
ed college, and at v thfK agps of t*entj-»
one be graduated with honor; but .the
; I.: »■ -T , i 1 ■ 'f
|bis atM tatfy taxcdh's Sy»-
lem, .and. bp entered upon the stoge pr
manhood nOt quite so slrong in body as
to should have been. His mottor saw it
mid Wti anxious, His father saw it and
lljAt be should have recreation
and recuperation before be started into
active bnsnasss. D* k Walsbwae not pqj
cunuin'ly ib!o to rood his son off on ex
pensive travel, but he luund opjwrljbffil _
ty for his engagement upou (he Mult *9? 1
an exptoiing expedition, wiiiob.would
combine hcaMhfnl recreation with an
equally healthful occupation.
The expedition was,bouud for the Wes
teru wilderness, and ma need not tell oi
the paitiug between the mother and tor
beloved son. She ktased him and bless
edhim; and then hung up&.» his neck
with mote kisses anil then went away
to tor chamber and cHfed.
Philip wrote hou,e otten while on his
way.out; aud be wt;## after he reached
the wilderness. Vim accounts were
fclowiifg,' and his health improving,
three mouths of lp.ftyt 1 life, and forest
labor, of which Phillip wrote iu a letter
that bad to be borne more than a hun
-1)10(1 miles to the nearest post, and then
followed months of silence. Where was;
Philip? Why did be not wrilef
iOue day Dr. Walsh came borne pale and
taint, with a newspaper eruinpled and
crushed in his hand. Not immediately
but by and by, he was iorced to let bis
Wtfo read what lie had seen iu tbe pa
per. She read, and fainted like one
mortally stricken. H'was a paper from a
far western city. told the sad fate
ot th» exploring party udder the charge
of Colonel John Beanehampe, how they
had been attacked by an overpowering
party of indians, and how those not mas*
sacred bad been carried away cap.
ll #
Poor 4UJe woman ! Poor Dr. Walsh;
But tbe mother suttered most. Her bead
already tdkiag on its crown of silver,
was nowed in blinding agony, and her
heart Was well uigh broken. The Joy
was gone out of her life, and fhick dark
ness was round about tor. "
And so passed half a year. One day
the postman left a letter at the door.
The band of the superscription was fa
mil lier. Mrs. Walsh tore it open, and
glanced her eyes Ovfer the contents.
O, ioy 10, rapture I tor boy lived 1 was
well! aud was on btf Way home to
her.
When Dr. Welsh entered the room he
found his wife fainting, with tbe letter
clutched in ber nerveless grasp.
By and by, when tbe first great surge
bad passed, husband and wife fat down
and read the letter uhde^sUndingly.
' fbauk God 11 found a true fViend, or,'
I should say, a true friend found me.'
wrote Phillip, after %fe bad told of his
safety, and of his whereabouts. 'But
for the comeing of this friend I should
have died ere this. Ue beard of me by>
my name, and when he learned that I
was from Erusworth, and was the nonet
Silas and Alary Walsh, be bept all Us
energies tee my release, Hempen! tbonsv
ands of dollars i* enlisting And equips
ping men tor the work, and with his
own band struck down my savage cap
tor, and took me tbeucefortb under Me
care and protection. God bless him!
be you both ready, to bless him, for be
is comin^ftF * **»***" >
Upou their bended knees that night,
the rejoiceing parents.thanked God for
all bis goodness, and Called down his
blessings upon the head of tbe unknown
preserver of tbeir.eee. f jiii tr
And, iu time, radiant and strong, their
Pbiliipeame hoine ta tbem—came homo
a bold and educated afrit, fit lot tbe bat
tie of life—came borne knowing euOtigb
of life's vicissitudes, and prepared to ap
preciate its blessing, '*''
And with Phillip came a man ot rpids
die age-a strong, fnvnk-faced,handsome,
man, with grey eyes and curliug hair.
'This,' said the son, wtou,bo bad been
released from bis mother** rapturous em
brace, 'is my preserver. DO you not*
know him?'
The doctor looked end shook bis bfeaff.
lie did not Mow.
But the little woman observed more
'keenly. Upon her the light broke over
poweriugly.
'ls it,'she whispered, putting iiwrth
her b^'d»— it—James Ammerton.'
'Yea' said tbe man—a stranger WW no
more* '1 am James AJimertoa 1 -dfcadL
thank Hkd Who has given roe opportu*
nity thus twsbow tow gratefully lies
member all yonr kindness to'me, my
•moee than mother.'
And be hald tor bands, and pressed
That evening Mrs. Walsh, sitting by
her husband's side and holding oue of
liis hands said to him. . 1 *5 -f
•Once upon a time a pebble was kick
ed abont in the Waste ot sand. A lapi-
HMt>i "id. . r» 7^
dary saw it, and pliked it np, and when
no bad brushed away the dirt lrom its
suMeee, he applied hie chisel, and broke
through the crust, and behold—a dia
mond, puce end bright 1' I , - .: I |
VHABtTVteB TU9JIUM nr ,
tun a .'}>> i)» art
Never aay anythiirg damaging Ao .the
good name of a woman, k metiers not
how poor she may be or what her place
in society. They have a bafd enough
time at best, tutd God help the teen that
would«give*hem a kick down, the hill.
We are el) too tree with their namea—
talk too much about them and wedoveiy
wrong, The least Uule bint that there i*
Sethi ng wrong, that 'sho ain't ell
I,' whether spoken in jes( or in ear
nest, is takeu up aud unlike tbe rolling
stone gathers moss as it goes from pleeo
to place aud at last comes home to the per
secuted with ornsbiug weight. She has
done nothing bnt keep quiet while her
idle persecutors have pursued her, and
now she is kicked from door todoor, «nd
is fallen so low that none will do her
reverence. Give a dog a. bad uame. aud
you had •* well kill him—talk about - a
Soon women o*4be streets and across
arroom aeu uters, and. you bad as welt
set her4swr»at ouueas a social wreck.
No one wants to help . her. We don't
went so much theoretical religion; we
want * kind of blue jeans and nomeapun
pity that will do for tbe washtnb and the
kitchen as well as tbe drawing room and
parlor—a sort ot universal hoeesty that;
will not think a woman, a thief because
she happen to .wear a sun bonnet , and
walk across the street with a siring of
mackerel in her hand. There ia nutbing
wrong in saanual labor, aud honest pov
ei ty is a sure passport to heaven.
• leonn asNANe OLD,
A man is ordinarily said to be young,
even in this country, where we live pre
tevnataely fast, up to 86 or 40; to be raids
die aged from 40 to 60,. and not bo posi
tively old; if he be of sound health and
well preserved,'until he si oil have reacts
edGO or thereabout, t Thia estimate oi
years would indicate the normal. ago et
man to be 100,. fae Button declares it
should be) though kieavsrage is searcely
60, aad 60 M much beyoud It. What
reason is there, then, tor speaking ot S6
to 40 asyouog, 40 to 60 as ralddtowige?
None, unless we consider that we' begin
practiole and ÜBetpl existence, as we re-
ally do, with the attsluaeot of our legal
majority/and, as a sole people hare very
life -90 to 86years— atcer that. It is
common to speak ot men, especially in
pnblio positions, of 60. as in tneir prime.
•A very few appear to be so, notably iu
Europe; but they are not actually, since,
at 76, the public distruets them merely
from their ago. R'he great majority
of men are burled and lofgotten - before*
tliey gain three score, and be who .la 111
ilia prime then, in a seeming sense, is ex
ceptional as he who lives 00 or 96. We
all like to delude ourselves in respect to
life, i When our neighbor is 60, be apt
pears to be very old. When we are ot
that age, we are not young, to be sore
but weifeel as young, we say as over, fcr
faot, weareiu our prime. While we
can creep around and are in possession of
our faculties, qre lnsist tbat we are not
very old; but'our Iriends, Smith and
Brown, with not a year more than we-,:
if the truth were known, make them
selves ridiculous by trying to appear
young.
ISeS SDB S*BOPI,B.
i: . « ' ,
'' Odd folks here and there are describei
in the newspapers. Koxbury, Massachu
setts, has an eccentric tramp who liyea
in a cave during the winter, and apenils
the summer iu .making begging excur*
sions to neighboring towns. He never i
say#o word', and his dress eoosiats en
tirely of old bootlegs fastened together
witH' leather strings. A small wagon
drawn by two goats, and containing a'
helpless, shrivelled man, attracted attent
ion in Hagerrtown, Maryland. He said,
that he had traveled in that manner for
many years, and called himself the
"Ameriean Tourist." He is entirely
Jielpless. His wife and four children
accompany him, and attend to. hia wants,
getting their Ifving sale of tem«
peranee song rfnd otlier small articles.
Jefferson Stevens, who live* near Sul
phur Springs. Kentucky, conclude that
he is gifted With peculiar powers, «f
Which he lately gave a street exbiUtioh.
He held a forked dogwood switch, like
hose used by wizzards, i a Lis m ft uth»
and tol4 the to ask pny questions
.tlnyr pleaaeA A pair of tramps turned
upat Dee Moines, lowa—Peter Carlisle
t en£«ri£s£wbD were»on their way to Lead
viHe from the FmtrsylvniM coal regions.
They had pushetl 4 handcart all the way,
containing their baby girl and a lew,
household utensils. Cjuson Carr of
Cal., will on no account walk a.
but always runs, no. matter if tbe
distance is only a few feet; whHn> Mrs.
Main uf Chicago, wiH neither run nor
waftnmugM i*yi«Eiiiw%W«#lF,
because ahe thinks KSfleJk will drop off
if stirs them. The jtory comet from
Uve f.. ne , ar
that 4jfcy. He says %fiwt t-arly in Jife he
ran iway from home and went to sea.
He Was early shipwrecked on one of the
Soot* Be* Inlands, where cannibalism
was and idolatry was the wor
ship of the natives. How long ho re*-
poained there be does not know, but he
learned to enter into their savage ribee
with a good deal of zest, and oonfessse to
have acquired a taste for Cannibal
iao, ■ .u.WwaiWt
11 • 11
NiJiiflSr
mmrnrnammmmmmmmm
G leaning's.
In 1877 Jacksonville. Fin., l«ui 1,700
I'M 14,000.
The son o» ilie lale Gen. Gideon J.
Pillow is writing his father's biogia
~* A cotorM WethNlbt dHm'rh !n Abbc-
Til«e, 8. C.. ga*e> •$ I,SOO last year lor
Ch TbwjfSu"th ' 1 *
f(tee and mind au the presence of good
There are fpW doois thrOngh which
liberality, joined with good humor, caa
not find- its w«y. •*» *, |
a It is easy to pick.hujLee in ether people?*
work, hut Jar more profitable to do bet
ter work yourself.
> jfr> ♦iJtir. » jai *">▼■
As long aa hearts b ? at as long as life
exintß, in whatever age, iron or goldeni
you will findlorV. >XS *
,fAr# 4 ' taetififtff ai* »-;«* ■*»
. Madame Gnrster. the soprano,
cejvw only S2OO a nfcht MM *W:
h»i nM'i *4) »iwr lii* Jl9l n 1
Jp the Atimippi penitentiary there
are over 200 convicts who are imprison
ed for lifer ***** **>-
St. Louis manufactures six hundred
thousand barrels of beer a year and the
consumption there is two hundred thooe
•odi »r»r it an ■wi vKtiJf !»+
Loud talking is a attra sign of vulgaris
ty; but whispering ia tba lawesb sort of
Ulking any one can do.— Richmond
i'i HiVfittf - s »j'U .jdfit
antlKthT' , **&>«*-
X>bKeeT ffi?g U witf'"hair So
belles orm# 'Orleans', ttftnb out to be 'V
cook. nAi tfsa fcrtrt;
Laura D. FMfy the CkKfoVntT W
deress, who nerer bad a baby herself,
has in vented a baby carriage and sold
.. .
, Mr. Henry Smart, who wrote the
hjrnm. "From Greenlaw's. ley foun
tains," has received a pension of SSOO
from the British government.
The hay crop of the United States, at
a valuation of fivo (dollars per ton, is
three times that of cotton, ten times
that el wool and twice that of wbeet.
A French uewspaper the other day
hafl Uie *n its police
intelligence: "Suicide of two persona;
statement of the one that survived."
Chief Justice Che*e> grave at Oak
Hill, near 1 WashWfcon, U* marked sim
ply by a Mock of gray granite, bearing
only the record of hia birth and death
following his name. There could hardly
Wte a rulS? er ' mOnU?DeU - n ° r 006 10
"George,'* said she to the''perspiring
yonng man, 'I 10re you just the same
but as our city relatives are co.ning next
1 week, mother,,(.biaka yen had better stay
away, becapse your long hair and freely
lea face might make them think our ac~
qualntance' weren't very high toned/
The young staying. '
The Emperor WilWam sleeps on a bed
hard enough to have suited the Duke of
Wellington, does not amoka or ape
snutf, Of flowerf and especially
gaily. He fs tighi jltH years oTST arid
Can ride horseback like a trooper.
a fine report thiß ia from ioe "
Icetatid the region of intense natural
cold, is full of raligions warmth. The
Word of God is the text book of Un peo
ple. Every heme*ae itß Bible, not just
a* an ornament, not» m the wt*ll 'kept
cberiahed marriage giftynor beoautn ot*
some undefined auperstibunis feeling of
reverence, but. for use. Ip loeland
the Bible is constantly read. As a con
sequence, Iceland is without a theatre or
fff liuJ ,W> B,lch offic f 4lß , Bliers
*m "" y
*4 it* »#» K ' » *mo a«n>H u> »«
six minutes, and a birth every /our.
Thejutupih oCjlha ifc,»t
rate^l^MTyguv each day.
The total length oTiha streets in London
is akuut mil*.; there are built
T r l y .t ar , abou u t9 ? Q^ 0 ****&»* b '
which the length ot the streets is
ed by miles. In the jaila
there is an arerege of 75,000 prisoners.
, The foreign born repeats of London
number about thirty.seven
per cent of the whMe population were
»born out of the eityH^r«wi
MtrruAt? Toibbatiow.— That house
wiU be kept in tormoM where there is no
toleration of each OtKSfrs* errors. It you
lay*"s£pgle stick of woo* dn the grate
and apply fire tait, it wilt go w»t; put
on another Hick, and , they will -
*™** mL yo 2i sL