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About The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899 | View Entire Issue (March 23, 1889)
rroprlrlor, EUG-ENE CITY. OREGON. A MOOEflN WDDINO. Oaavsnatlont Overheard Hrlore and IUr the Ceremony. nKKllKK TIIK. CKIIBMOWr. r The Bridegroom (to Best Man) Mow doe my rout tit In tho back. Half Mb Uttto lOOi My hair look all right? I) need If this glove isn't too big! See the wrinkles! What kind of a tie hnvo I (fit on my cravat? Inn t on end longer than tho oilier? Wonder If I can manage tho ring business with out letting it fallP Say, Hal, aren't tho trouaerrt a trifle too lonsr? No? How do I look? Ton minute after eight -time to go and meet Helen. I wUb tho whole business wn over." Tho Brldo (to Bridesmaids)--My train ;! all right, LllyP I'ull It out tralght. There! HaiigH all right, doo it? WUb I'd hint It a little longer. Am I very pale? I ought to look a little pale, you know. Smooth thoso Bide plait out a little, Frank. Ought not tho vnll to hang more over my far? RMM put those orange blossom a little moro to one ido. That look better, doesn't ItP Where' my bouquet? Kxqulrito thing. Un't it? I'm dreadfully nerv ous! What if I should faint? Just thin! of It! I do hope Harold will put the ring on gracefully. Whoro 1 my other glove? Whore it it? Oh, here It is. Help mo on with it, Sadie, I'm so awfully nervous. That hit of pow der on my face won't show through tho Tall, will It? lie sure and fix the dia-Tuond-pin ho It will show well. Wasn't It lovely In Harold to give diamonds? There! It's after eight. I must go down. I'm to nervous. Do I look all right? I'm so 'Ibo Ilrldegroom (In a whisper) You look like nil angel! Tho Undo Oh, Harold! I do hope tre won't mnko any mistaken! I should dit if we did. I'm to nervous! AKTKIt TIIK CKHKMON V Said to the limit, j "Congratulations." j 'Thanks." "Wish you joyf" I Thanka" "I hop, you'll 1)0 over and over and ntr so happy!" "h, thanks." I 'Yoi( look perfectly lovely, Mnmo." "ThankH, thanks. " "Kvery thing went off perfectly love t). The sweetest wedding I ever saw." "Oh. thanks." "Allow mo to congratulate you.1 "Thnnks." "Ah, best wishes, ah." "Thanks." "May you bo very, very linppy, dosr." "Oh, many thanks!" Coullili'iitlal Friend whisper) Poor inc.' (In giggling When do you uppose mil turn will come? lleo- bee--bee! "May you nlwuys bo as happy as sow. my child." Oh, Uuuksv" "May you live long and prosper." "Thanks!" "I wish you great happiness." "Oh, Ihankt!" 1 Another 'Intimate Friend" Oh, Mame (kiss)--I'm so glad - (kiss) for jrou (kiss) you wont through your part beautifully- (kiss) and the pres ent are lovely, perfectly tzqulsite (kiss) fo hope you'll bo very, very, very happy (kits). Timo. DEFECTIVE TRAINING. Til Wk r I. in. Hint Health Kntallril hy M . i. i .1 Kilueiithinal MetliioU. I would havo girls Instructed in hygiene, tho properties of food, tho diet proper to infants, ami, as far as possible in all tho practical branches which have the most direct bearing upon the life they are to lead It Is of mall consequence whether they know decimal fraction and tho boundaries or population of China, but it 1 ol the utmost Importance that they should not waste the hurd-carncd money of their future husbands by an unintelligent household regime, and It is also of much importance that they know how lo take care of their chil dren, hmv In escape avoidable disease by a rational diet and regard for sani tary laws. I doubt If any one rcalUc the enormous waste of life and health which tho ignorance of mothers en tails upon society. A young mother, uninstruct 'd in the subject mentioned, is bound l,i experiment ruinously with her own health and tlutt ot her chil dren, and ijiilii experience at the cost of untold tear, and suffering. Witnessing this common tragedy, I have not Iveen able to restrain the re flection that we arc lamentably failing in our duty to our girls, both rich mid poor. We give them ornamented ao eoniplishments, and teach them lo blush at the thought of the state for Which God has destined them, instead of arming them with useful knowledge which would enable them lo ce intel lifpnth with the conditions tlu y will and) encounter. Kven if the cost lie doubled, the benoftt accruing to tNe state from this kind of euuc.it nn would be many times multiplied. Instruc tion in the chemistry of cooking alone very simple and fascinating subject would save the community, in the aggregate, ton times tho amount of the increased taxation; skill in the making of simple garments would save another item scarcely less considerable. The poor are wasteful from Ignorance, and their ignorance In all practical subject bearing timn their own live is direct Hargeuble to our system of iuslrdv--Furuin. L U KUI Ut.l t. How i"'r Irish l:-l.bnrr llm s Mall.-Hlllluiislr. Person who Imagine the member of the Standard Oil Company are the only men wh acquire roore than ordl nary riches in the; oil business hr not u-.pitiinV. k ill, 1 . lad-. I he oil 'country is full of men who have be- oomo wealthy In the oil Imsluess, ana never hail any ci inoctlou whatever with the big Slumlord. John Mo Keo.vii, of Washington, J'a., is reputed to bo tho wealthics' oil producer, and his figure i placed at $8,000,000. al though it is like! to bo much more than this. Mr. McKeown Is a native of Ireland, and began his earner in this country in tbu oil regions, coming directly from Custhi Garden to the Pennsylvania oil regions during the early excitement on Oil creek, about HOI. He was entirely without means, and begun a a day la borer, working for $2 a day, handling a pick and shovel for a man who had contract-, for grading oil-well derricks and lank seats. Ho soon be came a contractor himself, and from that got a small Interest in a well which proved to be a good Investment. Mr. McKeown was not one of those whoso riches wore nuddenly acquired. They cntno to him slowly, and only through hard work and careful invest ment. From Oil ereok ho went to Bradford, in tho ea;-ly duys of that de velopment, and there ho was wonder fully successful. His operations there wcru mostly on the rich Uingham lanils, where every well wa a success. Ho left Bnulford a very rich man, and went to Butler County, buying a small fnrm not far from Martlnsburg. Al though a small tract, this was ono of the most prolific in the great Butter flold, and Mr. McKeown realized an other fortune here. During this time he was making careful Investments, mostly In Ma estate In Pennsylvania and the West, and those invest ments, so far as Is known, have all realized handsomely. Indeed, nono of McKeown's friends can point to any considerable investment of his that has not bat good one. He is n man upon whom fortune ulwuys smiles. Ills wonderful success in tho Washing ton and Tnylorsto.vn oil-fields Is fa miliar to newspaper readers. In the Washington district ho probably de veloped tho richest spotever tapped in tho fVunsylvnnin region. It Is said that throe farms here of which he was the chief ben licinry produced -'l,(KK),. KNi worth of oil Mo i". Mr. McKeown owns a large amount of valuable city property in Baltimore and Philadel phia, ns well as cnttlu ranches in tho West. Ho has invested largely In the new Torkoyfoot district, lately opened up by the Brldgevva'or (ins Company, and if the region comes up to the ex- '.aliens of the trade ho will realize another fortune thore. Titusville (Pa.) Letter. MASCULINE JEWELRY. Tlii Hlgnrl It lie IIik Only llauble of Wrli-lircsi.ril Man. "The fnslilon of wearing jewelry mining men Is growing to higher points than it reached even in 1H8 1. It was then, you know, the practice reached high-water marl;. It attracted a good deal of attention at tho time, as prior to that the jewelry of men had been notable mainly by reason of its ub Bouce. Tho dudes, who suppressed wutch-chulns, scarf-pin and the like, allowed themselves full liberty in the matter of lliiger-rliigs, unci from this the general run of clubmen took their cues. Many a iiismonauio man wore flvo or six rings oa his fingers, The ',1-eat design then was the snake-ring, and alter that w hat wa known as the glove-ring. Tho latter consisted of a heavy band of gold, usually square in design, in which were set a diamond with a ruby or sapphire on either side of it. The ston 's were set well down in the gold mid were perfectly Hush w ith the top, so that a man could pull a glove on over the ring without dilU oulty. Perhaps the greatest success which was ranched then vas when the brace let appeared us a masculine adornment. Tin' natural result of nil this finery was that tho smaller clerks and cheap Johns of the town foi'owed the suit of their leaders, and the market wus Hooded wltlf tawdry jewelry. After a timo a good healthy reaction sot in and men went bad; to the ring which they always return to." What Is that?" "It Is the old slguot ring. I am more or less fninlluir with tho history ' jewels, and it has struck me olten that this ring, which monarch- of two hundred years ago wore on the first linger of their right hands usually, 1 the only one which lias a staple place In the affections of mankind. Not only do men return to it after they have lieen led astray by gaudy diamonds, and the like, but it is very often the case that the best dressed of those who are the most e.qu: - to about their jew elry give up !l sorts of precious stones i hen they bccom- forty-five or fifty veins of ago and settle down to the plain signet ring on the third linger of their left hand. Jewelers' Gazette. A writer in the Manchester Mirror says that the wealthiest town of its site in America is Brookllne, Mass., of which tho assessment valuation Is 107,-toi.Uia. The distinction claimed for Brookllne has Isvn generally sup posed to belong to I'unajoharie, in this Stat,'. I h it :,,. e is very small in coiuMirisu w ith the Massachusetts town, mid the number of residents there who sremany lime millionaires I considerably greater than can be vuuuU'd ou the finger of both har.dk. ANIMALS IN CHINA. John Warships All Hosts ml Burden a aacred I rMlint The Chinamen regard the beast of burden as sacred animals because they occupy the position of men In the labor market. To eat the meal Oi an ox is deemed sinful, even though these ani mals should happun to die of old age or overwork. Tho carcasse are either tola or given away to tho poor, so that their 0WMT1 might not oe tholr doe cration by personally devouring them. Tho mules and the jackas. a well as ui intfeiiur.ilile cumiianioas or tbefarraer. They usually live in the same building with their masters, but in a separate apartment which is ape dally devoted to them. By long association with these ani mals their owner can rosily under stand their animal language. Thu the simple pawing of the hoof moans "hny i wanted." Tho common brny means either "water" or "oats." The loud stumping in tho stall means "gen eral starvation," and tho following, in Chinese language, is believed to I un dorsKxid by tho boasts: "Woh" means a southern path, Yoe" a northern path; "Ileh" means hurry, and "Woo'' meuns lowly. Strange to any tho above words are all understood by animals of long service and the whip is seldom used except upon old, worn-out brutos in the hands of cruel master. Thore being no so cieties among tho Chinese for the pre vention of cruelty to animals, it Is not unusual to find an occasional bonovo lonl and riot) Individual buying up here and thero old beusts of burden, to turn them loose In sonio garden of his own where they can eat and drink until they die. The hind 1 o vnlmible In most of the settled districts of China that hay ha to be made out of the sialics of tho grain that was raised for man. Corn stulks are cut down the moment the oar of golden corn are plucked, to make food for the animals. Tho principal hay-making stalks are tho millet, which tho animals prefer to any other. The next that comes in for a largo share of animal patronage are tho stalks and v ines of sweet poUVoes and green peas. Tho termor lire dried into a reddish brawn old cut up in two Inch sections, and the latter even liner. The sweot-iiotato vinos ure bettor en joyed by oxen and cows thun by mu'es or horses. Wheat straw is the princi pal food for cows uvd the provender of the other animals is only given them as holiday inoalB or luxuries, us tho mules, jacks Btid horses will not touch cow food. Three times a day tlw horses, mules and jacks uro given roasted lieons or browned poos, with suit These are nover given raw. l.litnese neiievetnoso grains in their ruw stutu would make the animals sick. Tho cheapest grain with which lo diet unlmuls are cakes iiiado from yellow beans the refuso of the oil manufactories. These cakes when fresh from tho mills weigh nlsnit 160 to 1 pounds each, and owing to the extremely poor pressing machines in the oil factories they retain about 40 per cent, of tho oil. Wholo families have been known to exist comfortably upon such cakes for mouths. Green grass, even during the summer months, is Boldom given to working animals. It I deemed unhcnlthy for them, except for cows, which ure usuully lund loose to l)d by the wuyslde or wher ever they oun find food. Altogether the llfo of a Chinese jackass is not a happy one nt best, us it is without doubt tho hardest worked and the poor est fed iinlmai in the world. Wong, in ft Y. World. HEROIC MAGGIE O'FLYNN. A Path! Blary ol Irish l.lte suit Wo msiily Uturltr. In a cabin on a sunny hillsldo over looking tho Bay of Dublin dwolt a middle-aged brother and sister. Tho man was a helpless cripple, entirely dependent iihiii his sister s exertions; and on her death a car was sent from the poor-houso to bring him thither for shelter. The poor vvYetch clung to tho only homo he had ever known, and he utterly refused to leave it. crying that ho would dlo if deprived of his "suy nir and shut up within prison walls." His loud lamentations had brought the priest and some of the neighbors to his side, and one of the latter, Maggie O'Flynn, foil a doep impulse of pityto vv ards the unfortunate man. She was a single woman of about tlfty-iive, of weather-beaten mill certainly not at tractive nppearanco. She acted us hord on the estale of a gentleman close by, to whom her services were invaluable, "llould hard," sho said to the poor houso officials; "It" not Maggie O'Flynn that 'ull see apoorcraytur takon to the poor-houso when she can give him a shelter. It's a corner and a wolcomo In me own cabin Mick Costilloo shall have." But here his reverenco Inter posed and vowed ho would allow no such seamlal in the parish as an un marrie.l man and woman sharing the same dwelling, cripples or no crip ples. 'Shure, Maggie, you won't go buck on your word?' implored poor Mick. Maggie hesitated a moment, then turning to the priosL said: "If there's uo other way to save him from 'the house,' your rlverince, I'll marry him. an' sorra a huporlh w ill any one bo able to say agin it thin." It was in vain that his reverenco pointed out the terrible burden Moggie was taking upon herself. "It's (or tho love of (iod I'm marry In' him an' not to plaso mesolf," was the answer she returned; "an' sure tho Blessed Virgin will niver let me want tor the bite an' the sup when she sesvs mo sliarin' it with tho craythur that has naythur." The marriage took place, and uutil his death, several years Inter, the kind-hearted Maggie O Rynn carefully tended a:uWuppnrtcd tho poor heiplcvs cripple in her own of. P;t ! Mail iia.vlto. RATS AND POLICEMEN. iDf ul.r Story of Whll. Ko4.nl lh. Vol CHy Hsll station. Several years ago the door-man of the City Hall pol' ttloB WIW PT' sonted with a young whit rat. For some time after tho officer attached to the station objeotod to the presence of the animal, and the poor rodent was driven to it wit' ends amid a constant shower of boot, stray ploc of so up, loose cartridge and innumerable other domestic articles. But the rat was; game, and a remnrkabto dodger, and iusUsal of falling away borore tne no. -liirnal onslaught, it thrived, grew stout and more daring. Its nightly depredations made rest for the lodgers of tho station impo-"'1"' un(: teaeei organization wa formed for the pur pose of annihilating the rodent. In ono corner of the dormitory is a small hole in the floor. Here Mr. Kat dwells when not roaming about. For four night tho entire force of the sta tion clustered about the hole awaiting the advent of his ratship. But tho rat has more than it share of fox blood In it rich veins, and the whole of those memorable (our nights were spent "at borne." The other evening the organi zation disbund Hi. At midnight Officer Richard C.anley walked In. fianley l one of the best members of the force, having saved from drowning no fewer than twenty-live lives. Ganloy's over coat pocket wore stuffed with u king's repast, which his wife of many years hud fnithfully gotten up for his break fast He hung his oont on a peg over a chair and retired the for night In the morning he arose and went to hi overcoat tor hi faro. It wa picked to pieces, and there wa plenty of clear evidence to how thut his ratship had climbed up the hack of the chair and into the well-tilled pocket This was another blnck peg put into the rat's board of life, and Oanloy renewed his oath of revenge. Last night tiunley came around again with his well-nileu pocket He got a largo nail and hum mer und put u cout-hunger high up on tho vvull whore thero were no chuirs. This morning on gotting up ho wont to tho coat, shoved his hand into tho noeket. und his bund ran over tho soft fur of Mr. Bat The rodent had climbed up the wall into the border of und dropped down onto the cent scrambling into tho pocket. It wus n wonderful feat, the officers think, and now the men hnvc foreswore their word) of vongeunce. In future tho rat will bo potted and fretted. Rats appear to havs a great fondness for tho guardians of tho peace. At the corner of Maiden lane, and South street is a coffeo and enke slinnty kept by an ex-policcman. Kvery night and morn ing, when the traffic Is at n iNMtiltU', the proprietor of tho coffee-house deposits a huge pun of men and sirup at tho curbstone and tho rodents from ull the docks of the neighborhood svvurm to the spot They nssemble in hundreds. The mujority of them seem to bo tumc. They do not frighten even when surrounded by u curious crowd of 'longshoremen and sailors who ron gregute thereabouts. N. Y. Mai1 and Express. DON'T FRET AND WORMY? A l'lsHssnt nlsinltinn s Knurrs ol Con tentment In It. Itfst Nt'iMfe If you want a good uppoti'e, don't worry. If you want a healthy body, don't worry. If you want things to go right in your business, don't worry. Women find a sou ot trouble in their housekeeping. Some one says they often put as much worry and anxiety into a lout of bread, a pie or cuko, into the weekly washing and ironing, o should sullice for much weightier mat tors. This accounts largely for the angularity of American women. Nerv ousness, which may be called the reservoir of worrying it fountain and source -i the bane of tho Amer ican race. It is not confined to the women, by any meuns. but extends to the men as well. Kven business men are sometimes afflicted, so we have heard, and so our advice n to yield to this habit will be mosl kindly received by all classes of read ers. What good docs fretting do? It only inerenses with indulgence, like anger, or appetite, or any other human im pulse. It deranges one's temper, ex cites unpleasant feelings toward every body, und confuses the mind. It ulToets the wholo person, unfits one for the proper completion of tho work whose trilling interruption or disturbance sturted tho fretful lit Suppose these things go wrong to-day, the to-morrow are coming, in w hich to try again, and the thing is not worth clouding your ow n spirit nnd those around you, injuring yourself und them physically for the mind affect the body and for such a trifle. Strive to cultivate a spirit of patience, both for your own good und the good ol thoso about you. You will never regret the step, for it will not only add to your owu happiness, but the exam ple of your conduct will affect those with whom you associate, and in whom you are interested. Suppose somebody makes a mistake, suppose ) 4 arc crossed, or a trifling accident occur; to fly into a fretful mood will not mend, but help to hinder the attain, ment of what you wish. Then, whec a thing is beyond repuir, waste no use lot regret over it and do no idU fretting. Strive tor that serenity ol spirit that will enable you to make thf beat of all things. That means con tentment in its best sense; and content ment is the only true happiness of life. A pleasant disposition and good work will make the whole gnrouiidlngi ring with choeifulue. America! Ai Usaii THE VAGS ADJOURNED. ' A 8ucc.ru. Appllr.""-- El.etr.cltj U Four Ulrly TrP. ,"When I learned telegraphy, in I lfJ7.V"ald aknlgbtof the key. "my first : bUltlon wasthatof ull-nigbtoporatoron i thu i'.rle railroad at Corning. It being a great railroad point, my chief com , punions -after about eleven o clock ev r7. iu. Imlf a dozen dirty i cry iiiui ww.s. ' tnftnu. who would crawl out of their ! berths in double-aecKe i cairn. -the purpose of thawing out by the side of my warm coal fire in the passongor Li v..ii it cot sort, of I ..,,r, vou know, to keep awuko all night und hear the m,.ll the siwoet odor that arose 'rem the burly tramps a their 1 clothing began to stoam at the lire-side. I JVrhaps vou have p:ved a train of hog nl Kn-t Buffalo some time in your life I and csn recall to your memory how pleasant the . situation was. .At any ' event I resolved to clean them out, I and, arranging with the day oerutor (George (Julnn) to oomo around ono night at twelve o'clock we began to lay j plan toward the extermination of the i post. Quinn was an original chnp, I about six foot six inches tail, with a I club foot, and wor a broad brim hat ir true Texas style. Ho was an eleo ; tricao of no mean merit It was while ! working at Corning that ho invontod a ! funnol-shuped instrument thut when nt ' tachod U the relay of a telegraph clr I en it he wa ablo to sing a tune or play on hi cornet into the mouth of the funnol, nnd then requesting all the boy on tho wire between Corning and Ro chester to adjust tholr instruments line, thoy were able to hear every note of his. This wo bofore F.dison's telephone had come into general uso, nnd was thought to be a groat thing by the country operators, who used to pas many a quiet night listening to tho weet notes from Quinn's 'Musk-phone.' Well, to return to the tramps; Quinn came around at twelve o'clock a per agreement, and finding four dirty fol low Btretchod out upon the waiting room lienciie we proseoded to 'do t em,' but in a novel way. Going to the battery-room 'Texas Jack,' a tho boys used to call him, fixod up a strong battery and attached it to a key whence a wiro wns strung into tho wuiting room and ticross tho hands, and in one instance across tho knee where a hole appeared, touching the flosh of all four of the tramps. Then taking pioees of cork and splitting them at one end so as to admit of their being spread ovor the bridge of the noso, with two matches stuck In tho other end. my friend Quinn Btepped lightly around the room, placing tho corks on the nosos of our victims. Wako up? You couldn't wake up ono of those tramps with a dynamite bomb. They probably hud not hud a good sleep before in u week. Finally George gave mo the wink to touch the key and lot tho battery onto the tho wiro j t af tor ho had touched tho matches off. It's surprising how fast lightning will travel. I deelnre it don't seem us though I had turned it on when gtich a bounding, jumping, swearing and cry ing of fire you never heard. If there hud been a hut-pin six inches long run tnto thoso four tramps thoy could not have moved any faster than thoy did out of that depot When Quinn came out from his hiding, he remarked: 1 was only afraid of ono thing, and that wns that owing to tho length of time since any of our lodgers hnd soen a bath, I feared tho electricity would fail to roach to the skin.' But it did. and that was the last time I saw a trattp in the Corning depot." Rochester (N. Y.) Do ion. WONDERFUL SEOUL. A Strange City Full of strange I'eople and Htranger Customs. What n wonderful city Is Seoul! Its 300,000 people are made up of strange characters, and my eyes havo been bob bing about like the rays of a kaleido scope in my efforts to appreciate it all. Kvery thing is new nnd every new thing is strange. The big wall which surrounds the city is a wonder, and its three great gates are moro wonderful still. They are closed every night nt sun-et with iron-plated wooden doors, and after this time nono outside the city can get in nor can any inside the city get out As tho sun sinks behind tho mountains which surround the cii itnl a band ot soldiers playing music which sounds for all the world like a Scotchman's bagpipes goes from gate to gate and bars them shut At the sumo time watch-tires spring up upon the hill in every direction, and from these the King knows that all is well. These watch fires are signals, and they form a partof a continuous line of liivs. which are built upon the hills in all parts of Coreit They tell by their different flames nnd the intensity whether all is well nlong the coasts of the enst and west and in the mountains to tho north and south. They ure, it seemed to me, royalty's farewell word from the day and they really meant that the country wa quiet ad the capital might Bleep in peace. The city doe sleep, too. It people go to bed wfth the shadows of evening and by the law the man or boy w ho is out after dark is bound to be whipped. Women have the right to go about at night and foreigners are never halted. a aro the Coreans Such lanterns us arc used are of the rudest shape, and they consist of a frame-work holding a candle, with a thin gauzo cloth thrown over it There is a great bell in the center of Seoul and thia is rung early in the morning for tho opening of the gates. Tlii boll is in the middle of the long, wide 6troet which divides Seoul in halves, and it form the heart of tho capita1. Frank Q Carpenter, in Nation al Tjihuuo MA I HIMUNIAL Mly A TretU ou tho uieMnN Mi..l..,u"-J In your studv to mu.. Iiand's temper, do m.i i. . - "raH . m firm hold of your ow n u- I Urns fwlfUh urxi Iaim it. j 1 u m" ""-'-nOflU Ml fWfTV rtsDuaibivo H,IUJ find im iff Hill fin .! m7 M "--mil (jfrJ i-rwiiinr into n Hnm . a-orld beware most of thi. tJol indulging It you lose the J tage-groiind of your sex husbund peak harshly It even the liest of hnwl.....j. - '-iim an evil moment, or. If you are pressed hard, J '"I" m ii ton presses neither oxaspurutlm tempt Oliey your husband in all 1 matters und In some unrei 'isogjB icrs. nui noi in an niatterr you will make him a tvrsni' . 1 1ST. ' sen a siava wnon he bJ luuo .I ' m viwilt'H. tJlkfl way and smile bewitchingi,. not get tho bettor of you th becoming a urutc, nnd beJ luusi, uuiijrinij jruu, un lsn your husband hns any tincti tlenianline about him. b Kobor-mindod Christian u havo no great rouson to f,..ln Alwnys attend consclentio of your special province, to and the pantry, also to the and, If you huvo children, tt ery. nut oeware of gother a mere housekcopei up of bairn, xou huv form to yourself, as well husband and your family negloct thl duty, you may kJ unworthy to Do either his wif,. mother. Cultivate your 1 not prove by neglecting plishments that your only ob quiring them wa to catch i To insure this continuant husband s love, behave so ig ns to command his respect out revoronco is a childbA can satisfy only a low tvpe looks on his wife as a play-tl Dress well. Married wa err here from want of a 1 In the fair sex outward when genuine for puintiag in my opinion, a positive di not to a husband merely, low-mortal, but to God. of the Unlvorso, as all It tify, delight in the utnioi magnificence and luxuriance decoration: and it is plainly being endowed with reasoi his hint, and, whoro He hati fair object, to set it forth wi graceful trapping thut is ii with the character of the wo dress is, in fact, a sort of dressed to tho eye, which it power of every well-conditioi to compose; and a woman tusto for decoration is a di turn, us much out of nature without wing.-. I. Stuart Cassell's Family Mags tint WHEN RAMS FIGHTJ Knrdtinters That Are Fmiffhl Ii nnee With the Coils ol HM It may perhaps throw I the obscure causes of the I sheep to sej thorn tight rams engage ill a duel, whirl in a most gentlemanly were ns much a mutter of an engagement with swords I virons of Paris, Is better farces nowadays. Perhaps some ten or twenty rams ml corral, and presently two bends together. l'robabl? I having a conversation, und i debutnblo matter crops up, shakes his head impntientlyi ing the word of his inlorloca insulted rum looks up, udv or two, und they rattle 1 Instantly all the other gentla er round as tho two intend ants march backward step byi an admirable slowneM MM tion. They are the two icni ends of the lists. Therein I pause, and then they bun" 1 violently forward to head to forehead with ought to break their skill solemn backward march i the pause i9 made, and ligerents leap at each more, and tho terrible tl again. Sometime they ruol before one turns diisy m the batt'.e, but oftoner tiveorl mnko the thlnuer-kul ed lurl be contemptuously hustled by the conqueror. Ocetl sight of one Bet of duelists Unoccupied lookers-on wC ardor, and couple after coal to march backward side rush forward in line to meet' inc forces. It seems to n! is more interest in this farce of the displuy. Howen habit arose it can hardly tuneeoos to the species, aid" to lower them in the scale for while tho thickest-skuii lords, those with the brains often get their craao. with fatal result. This expluin the very uneomu domesticated sheep. jut among tho Australian black throw light on the dull. ' neB of some of the native I that country. For their m od of dueling at (east which I heard most-- clubs, and. having drawn manner for the first blow, loser on tho head as he with the utmost fore blow is not decisive -nui ways so it is the turn man to do his best und i slrnl! U cracked. Cora!'"' ' ESS