Image provided by: Yamhill County Historical Society; McMinnville, OR
About The Oregon register. (Lafayette, Yamhill County, Or.) 18??-1889 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 3, 1888)
development of fancy work . tbr nab,-Car« "< «ha _4la>p>< Lib ChlMren >( —Cowardlo«. . audv u- tra.-a tbr derelopmant I"”01’'* ,wf.romer>» (auc> <*orh. l( " pH walt od tbe inartai It la “lu.,,. vanou. enaptar» on leather aJ‘^ur«.aiKlP«P“' Hower*. pK tur. «« *•’ o, o«.!» and rice. Iand«rape« j ..bld» nio* and pineeof bark. -.... . >'|‘ereu“w •* a>*^ „uttlnk tnttiii» and erocbel ' fir) beH ■" ha'* * llu,t“U rl „.„. ■« ot hagerte anil crocheted r ±°,d •* “w «mt m.^nder. and «moking future .pouoe. tldiaa and bed net mamma, and aigban» and \ hh l*by tnenda In tboeo day. '’’¿a Chamber had match hole, and 1 „,„ie from perforated card board , fly catcher or air cuntle hang ’‘¿’mectiamielier. wor«wd lamp meta 1X «■>»«■ tmlei -eta. all in m. many r m. raiubow The young lady. E’l.rf« held » .quart pt canvoe beiug r, „1 into . worrt«( lamtacape. por KTpjodle. or gorgeuu. hunch of flow r on U» wall'hung » newipuptr tumket Lfxiurtd 'rom old hoopskirt wires, a hiwll picture frame, ami a most excellent Lua» m er«y«u of ,o,ue u““*lber of the Wtgerum* Wien which every wuru rmornug to that remarkable baby was devoured. Tbe cokM of hair and ayes, weight at birth, a sug gmtion concerning the name, etc., all were luvwited with a strange charm for me; yet tn« facte were pitifully meager, and when cuy own sweet baby came, I revived to keep for hei fututa gratifleatioo a systematic record of her progress and achievemente. To be sure there isn’t time to do much at once, but I plan to write a few lines each month, •ven though baby Has to Et on my lap during tbe operation. It takes but a few minutes, and If tbe dar ling, wber grown, shall value her baby hi» Lory surely the reward will be sufficient. Much a record could conveniently be kept in a small blank book and tn any way desired. Mine begins with a newspaper notice of baby1» birth, and is followed I y a minute de •criptior of tbe doterattfug little maiden. Then in order of occurrence are chronicled the principal event» of ber babyhood, to getbei wHb many hopes, reflections and prayyf'bf ber mamma. EThen baby was a few Rouths old we printed ber tiny hand and footOD one page by carefully rubbing in* on them with a sponge and pressing them on tbe paper What would not you and 1 give if we today could see the imprint of our own baby hands or feet» a A lock of silken hair graces one page, and here and there throughout the history are short poems clipped from papers and maga nmr by way of variqfy, and which are of course appropriate for baby Other features, to make tbe account interesting, could be added from time to time os taste or ingenuity might suggest, and the bistory itself bould be a> lengthy and complete as time and in clination permitted. But if no more Ahan five minutes in each aeb mouth* could be devoted to this purpose I would oamestl earnestiy reoesnrnend every mother tc do ao much for the future happiness of her little ones.— Ladies’ Home Jourual. í 4uch sutaiMM and cowards that we dared uo< be about his businees down here— business he has left tn the hands of the faithful to do» If I were k girl and engaged to a million al re doubly endowed, who promised to keep me on honey dew and clover al) the days of my life when I married him, I would break the contract * nd starve on a crust if I found hitn out a coward, for of all things detest able In the sight of good women and angels, a flunk is the worst And what is any man better-khan that who stands abound wi^b hi* hands in bis pockets and watches, without protest, a brute pounding a horse* And what is any man or woman but a partaker in the crime who allows the inhuman beating of a motherless child in bb or^ ber hearing, and uever lifts a Anger to interfere» Up with you and find your birthright to a soul I Off with the habiliments of men if you have the natures of mice! Do not masquerade any longer as human beings when you put hu manity to shame! If God had intended you to carry yourself in the world as an oystei be would have put you in a shell sad planted you underneath the tides of the sea Pretension and Cheap Ornainenration. WHAT WE SHOULD EAT» WHAT PROFESSOR ON ATWATER SAYS THE 8UBJECT food of the Kuropoan Wageworker—A Queetion ot Natrltlou* Diet—Proper- tion* ot Natrlmeotr in Vortom Articles of Food -- I uj portant Facts. A Very Useful Subatanee. Th* main difference between tbe diet of people of moderate meant here and in En- ro|w is that tbe people here eat more meat and other animal foods and more sugar. Tbe European wage worker usually has but little meat, butter or sugar In England be often enjoys a richer diet. 1 suppose, bqt on the continent ordinary peopl. live mainly upox tbe cheaper vegetable foods. Meat* and fish supply a good deal of protein and fat. Tbe fats, including butter, are neb in energy, and sugar supplies more energy than most vegetabl* foods Wbil< tbe energy in the working p**opie*s dietaries in England, France, Germany and Italy, as reported by Playfair, Moleecbott, Volt and others, ranges from 2.500 calories or less to a maximum of 5.70c, tboar that 1 have found ir this country range iron? a minimum ot 8,500 to b.000, and even higher The differences I d the protein in American and European dietaries are similar, though uot quite as large Without doubt Waste more of our food than the Euro peans do. bul the amount which we do eat is evidently very tnucl larger And tnougb hian.v of us ear far too much meats and •iweetmeat fo> tbe good of out health or our pockets, the evidena 'seems to me to Imply very clearly that we must keep on eating more than out transatlantic brethren if we ait tr keep on working as intensely and as productively as we now da The question of high wage: and abort hours is largely a ques tion ot uutntiouf dieu Meat, eggs. milk, buttei ano suga* can bt had, wbeL there is ley' are tooth money u pay to> them. ThejC some, and bene* people wbc car get them eat s groat deal They an easily digested ano rich it proteiL and energy, and hence sustain a high degree ot activity Tbe standardr for proportionr of nutrients help tc explain w Ly we need combinations of different food materials for nourishment. Almost any one kind^t food woulr make a one sided diet. Suppose, for instance, a workingman is restricted tc a single food ma terial, ar beet or potstoek A pound and thirteen ounces ot roast beef, of the compo- ntioz here assumed would furnish the re quired 125 gran if <0.2b lb.) of protein, and with it 0.2t lb. of fat, but it bar no carbohy drates. Y et nature bar provided for the use ot them in bi> food Thret pounds of corn iueul would yield the protein and with it a targe excess ot corpobydrates—over two pounds. A pound and three-quarters of cod- tist would supply the same protein, bqt it would have very little fat and no carbohy drates to furnish tbe body with beat and strength. Botutoe* or rice would have even a greater excess of tbe fuel which the beef and fish lack than has corn meal Assuming that tbe man needs 8,500 c^lonet of potential energy in his daily food, the one and‘three- quarter pounds of salt codfish which would furnish the needed proteiD would supply only MO. while tc get the needed prd&m from the tat pork would require 9.8 pound», which would supply 7H pounds of fat and over 82,000 calories of energy I Butting the matter In another way, we might estimate the quantities of each ma terial which would furnish the required energy A ration made up exclusively of either kind of food would be as one sided in this case as before. The fish would be mostly portein. tbe fat pork nearly all fat, and the potatoes or rice little else than starch. With almost any one of these food materials, in quantities to meet tbe demand of his body for beat arid muscular strength, the man would tiavb much more or much loss protein than be would need to make up for the con- -umption of muscle and other ris M i eq., If be were obliged to confine himself to any one food material, oatmeal would come about as near to our standard as any. Wheat flour with a Llttje fat—in other words, bread and butter—would approach very close to Voit’s standard for European working people, with chiefly vegetable diet, but it would need a little meat, fish, eggs, milk, beans, pease or other nitrogenous food to bring it «to the pro portions that the American standard calls for >, w Rice, which is the staple food of a large portion of the human race, is very poor in protein; beans have a large quantity. The different plants which are^ together called pulse are botanirally allied to beaus, ajid are similar in chemical composition. We have here a very simplo explanation of the use of pulse by tbe Hindus with tbeir rioa The Chinese and tbe Japanese, whose diet is al most exclusively vegetable, follow a similar usage. Tbe codfish and potatoes and tho pork and .beans which have long been so much used in and about New England form a moot eco nomical diet, indeed, scarcely any other food available in that region has supplied so much and so valuable nutriment at so little cost. Tbe combination Is nkewise in accord with the highest, physiological law. Half a pound each of salt codfish and ported two-thirds of a pound of beans and three pounds of potatoes would together supply almost exactly tbe 125 grams of protein and 8,500 calories of energy that our standard for tbe day’s food of a workingman calls for.—Profe«or W. O. Atwater in J’be Century It is at comparatively small expense that The material known as woqdite. devised the average housewife must adoni her home by Mrs Wood, a «lever Englishwoman, A multitude of magazines and books are promises to become a very useful sutetence urging her on, giving directions how to Its chief ingredient is caoutchouc. During make coverings and ornaments for every the past few months it has given good results article in every room from garret to cellar. for a variety of purjMJHes, and is now de clared to be especially adapted to many other gilding the nails and the door knobs, making uses According to Hir Edward Heed. M P pine look like ebony, and common eartbei. it-Has ls*en produced in diveta taring, such as ware Like choicest Sevres. Hou false' bow tine shtVt® and ribbons tor waterprool arti vulgar' what a sham I Home made decora des. dens* blocks for resisting* the blow« oi tious are like home made gowns, they serve shot or shell, and very satisfactory rings loi a purpose, but show the lack of ar artistic engine packing One process con verts it inu band. In nine cases out of ten they are an elastic, sponge like subetuuce, and an , crude, inelegant, and tn the end extensive. other, in which it is mixed with whaleboix They do not make you> home attractive If cuttings, gives it a rough or frictional quality Lt’mera ’«re •ome thluc* the girl o( tbe you have not the qualities of mind and for mats. Some curious naval application, L pro.im-'l that will al way» remair , Heart that will keep your boys off the street have been worked out. It is made into armo< r fuL rue pressed sea mosses make JUM u night, they will not be stayed by a hand plates, which on being penetrated by a sho Care of the Finger Nalls. Ciarwtmgs little portfolio today us when painted milking stool tied with a yellow close so tightly that no water is admitted f tbe soinlrer old |>orlor of yester Our finger nails grow out about three times wun bow and a Turkish scarf acros> your and it is also formed into light and con F*..- .__A»»»i.mi<<Arv oik on. muslin and and a year They should be trimmed with sei» .center ’ria/.uity embroidery muslin . table, if yov have uot for your 'venient cylinders for carrying compressc. i cloth, the graceful riñe» and flower» •ors once a week, not so close as to leave no friends a gracious welcome and hospitable air to drive life boats, torpedo bouts ar.\ ted out on toft flannel, the fine beni- room for the dirt to gather, for then they do cbeei , they will not oome for the frippery in scout bout*, while it is suitable for makin, tbe drawn thread work, handed not protect tbe ends of the fingers; as was de your drawing room. floating or partly floating cables for pro d to* ub bw*n nimble fingers of bygone signed by nature, be*idea, if trimmed too Was there no virtue tr the substantialness lection against torpedo attacks, etc.—Fran. ( k ar« as beaqtiful needlework as any close at the corners, there is danger of their and simplicity of the old fashioned parlor» Leslie's. t growing into tbe flesh, causyig inconvenience is not the personality of a room ofttimer it» ig we can da Cause* of Nervoas Irritability. io ber>^rllima flowers and leaves and sou»etiroe* great [»am. Tbe collections ( greatest charm* Are not pretension and A prominent physician is quoted as saying Kd in some old book have developed into under the ends of the nails should not be re- < cheap ornamentation as much out of plao* k with a flower press, and such art ar- moved by anything harder than a brush br a in , your bom« tv they would be in your attire* ‘Were 1 to give the true reasons at the roe soft piece of wood, nor should the nails be Then away witL all these superficialities! of the growing inferiority, nervous irrita [Muents a* the statiouen» get out to con passed flowers as souvenirs of different ■Taped with a pen knife or other metallic Sweep ; oat the whole array of tinsel and bility and insanity, which are sapping the liti» lAStber work has iieen supplanted aubtOance, as it destroys tbe delicacy of their , fringet and tags, ornament^ that art no orna »vigor of, the time, they would be two things rood carving full of life and beauty Tbe structure and will at length give them an un , merits, that pervert the taste, that destroy the • ^-the want of proper food by all classes and rentional Worsted work has given place natural thickness. , aigincy dignity ana and cnaracter character ci cf a nome, home, making .it the sedentary training, or want of training, We are uot favorably impressed as i to the I loofc mort iiice a curiosity shop than the among young |»eople.” There is a good deal Dbroidery on beautiful texture that take« , I rank io art work, and is essentially cleanliness of a person who seep« his nails | dwelling of relined, cultured people.—Dora to l»e said in favor of the military training of Prussia, for our own boys nowhere get n trimmed jto tbe quick, as it is often done tc V. Btoddard in Good Housekeeping. Iniua filile it 'vies with tbe grand better physique than at West Point; but the her acconiplifiLnients with the needle in prevent dirt gathering there, whereas, if e old style, which is yet the very common Cicac} and finish, it has gained strength margin were allowed, it would-be an index A Child's Hunger for Love. style, of education involves our young jieople Ladtband boldness of design, of airrange to the clean line» of the hands, from which Delays are always dangerous,^but never so I of color, and warm tonesand variety tbe collections under the finger nails are irredeemably as in the case of loving words n sedentary habits. We are a nation of sit bòrica Tbe deathly wax flowdr art has made. Leaves margin, then, and the mo or deeds, it always proves impossible to ters, and not of walkers, and are taking the L intc war and clay modeling, and rnent you observe that these collections need speak to-morrow exactly the cordial or affec •onseqUencee in the way gf stagnation and •ongestion. Heart disease and brain disease Las the caller used tc be entertained by removal, you may know that tbe bands need tionate word which today demanded of u& ind lung- disease and kidney disease and L booti ot. old castles and ruined washing, when they and the nails are both 1 A mother whose child had died suddenly >ther congestive diseases follow too luxurious cleaned together ke* copied from unuatural landscapes, — — ««-* — --------- - nanition. (^pbe-Dem ocrat. Most persons are familiar with those trou was so entirely prostrated with grief that mating and i inanj" L be looks on a painted screen radiant blesome bits of skin which loosen at the root» »me of the too officiom friends asked her to [poupeot natural flowers, a silken ban consider it ber sufleringb were greater than A Good "Recommepd, ” Lite a belike bird singing on a swinging of the finger nails, it is caused by the skin tbotM. of others wbe had lost frienda A stranger from the interior entered a Dv La caiivax on the easel filled with nod- adhering to the nail, which, growing out “Gb. it is not tbe same, it is noi the sameF sroit wholesale clothing bouse the other day ! pansies, bits of life gleaming out here ward, drags the skin along with it. stretch she criea “ My little girl war different from ind stated that he was looking around for a ing it until one end gives way To prevent kbere and everywhere. other children, she wae so loving I dhe used I tee shop windows can be seen most ar this, tbe skin should be loosened from tbe to oom* to me and bep me to kiss ber. ot take •etail stock. After being welcomed be wa> I embroideries and paintings effectively nail onoe a week, not with a knife or scissors, ber ir my lap for a minute, and sometimes 1 tsked concerning bis financial standing and ie promptly replied: led up into ail kinds of articles for home but with something blunt, such as tbe end of was busy and told ber tc run away and play “Maybe I doau* haf some rating in det Lmeut. from toilet articles to parlor an ivory paper cutter; this is best done aftei “ I hurt ber little heart. 1 made it shut up bnee and hangings, all the product of soaking the fingers in warm water, then its little leeves wber it ought tc have been looks, but 1 can recommend myself. I vha# isured for <2,000, uud 1 burns out und got Line Angers and fancies. There are so pushing the skin back gently and slowly; tbe ooaxed o}»er. by the sunshine. 1 shall never er money in my pocket” la-of decorative art where one will find white specks on the nails are made by scrap forgive myself. ” “Then you didn’t loose?” queried the whole ■ wood carving^, designs in bronze and ing tbe uail with a knife at a point where ii She never did forgive herself, and tbougL aler. * Be sketches, tbe results of women’s fancy emerges from the skin. she was almost pathetically loving tc the “It vhas a cold day, ehF absently replied Biting off the finger nails is an unclean)} Irt work. Tbe societies of associated children who wen left, no lapse of time ¡ie man as he looked out upon tbe wintei L design and manufacture rare textile practice, fn^thus the unsightly collections hi •oulri ever eras from ber mind tbe memory — o h t e l p a destri an a —Detroit Free Press. • kt for embroideries and paintingB. the ends are.|cept eaten clean! Children may ot that tittle girl wbo was hungry tor love. B industrial association and charity be broken of such a filthy habit by causing - Y outb’6 Companion Martha Washington’s Complaint. ■ for girls has its depaitment where art ' tfiem to dip the ends of their Ungers several Bemion.J. Loating, LU D„ tbe dlatln — »Now y ork ___ ■ __ - ■ • ■ - • timet a day in wormwood bitters, wttboui- Illustrated Cook Books. nished historian, writes in a Washington letting them know the object Lf this is noi eivspaper of a conversation be had in I Me 8ome young ladies w bo have attended sufficient, cause them to wear caps on each itb Alexander Hamilton’s widow One in cooking scboolr during the winter have col finger until tbe practice is discontinued.- cresting remark made by Mrs. Hamilton lections of their favorite receipts. The little pine* is the natural condition of every Hall’s Journal of Health. vas one in reference to Martha Washington 's nooks, made by their own bands and ill us I child, and il the small boy or girl A Woman Working for Humanity. trated in water colors, are quite unique. The i is I ike for society. “Mrs. Washington, who ecuiiar facility for any one thing it b> ike myself, had a passionate love of borne cover of one has a picture of «ill life, apples, You are distributing tracts dr making f entertainment, with certain granted Ions, of course. One of these is phys» clothe« for the poor, or visiting tbe sick, oi nut», raisins and a glass of wine, while .'nd domestic life, often complained of tbe vaste of time’ she was compelled to endura »dorr and a few rude and simple play throwing yourself into this cause or that another has the portrait of a dainty cook, Agreeable occupation is as great t> movement with all your body and soul, with sleeves rolled above the dimpled elbows They call me the First Lady of the Land tiid think 1 must be extremely happy,' she and tumbled curls peeping out frofh beneath might and main. ty for children as for adults, and ix Madam, you are not doing nearly as much a lace frilled cap Ln one book which 1 was vould say, almost bitterly, at times, and hie almost nothing can be contribute, dd: ‘They might more properly call me the good as you think you are. You are only permitted to took at the picture that Ulus real happine®. of a child. Inef State Prisoner.'"—New York World. feeding and clothing a few bodies who will in tratee saiadfi is a lobster and lettuce leaver 7 hard to make my childrer tiappx all probability be just as hungry and ragged utaide a pot of mustard and bottle of pepper, mother, with a sigh, oue day. in -I- Readers of Bad Books. with a teaspoon lying near filled with salt. 1 her efforts. * w „pext year at the same date, and come to you, My own conviction is that the objection ptryiug," exclaimed a practical frivn • as usual, with tbeir mduths and rent gar Slices of lemon and curled lettuce leaves hie books published in France are far more ments bot^wide open. Or, you are working form a border, in and out of which receipts Bibow, “and do as a neighbor of min atronized by foreigners than by the French to push a movement when possibly you need art written in rhyma The picture of a hemselves, for 1 can never come across, far more to push yourself in every direction. salmon in another book is a genuine work of i bow is thatf’ she asked, dolefully mong my French friends, a man Who has irt Curiouk little designs accompany each y, she simply lets her childrer grov You are expending a vast amount of force ivelop naturally, only directing then and enthusiasm in attending exciting meet receipt, and the pretty affair shows so much tad them. M Zola’s books are read, 1 ad i properly She has always throwi ings, listening to speakers, good, bad, indif skill one naturally wonders if the same hands nit, not. however, because they are objection ible, but because they are written by a trans w far as practicable, upon their owi. ferent and all other kinds, being possibly one •an product a real appetizing dish of escal the lot yourself, and you get up in the loped oysters or an old fashioned apple pie.— indent artist. We read his too often »s. taught them to wait upon therfi epulsive details for the sake of the masterly New York Sun. [-no matter how many servant^ ' she mbrning too tired out and fagged out to get enius displayed in the handling.—Mux nd to construct their own playthings up any interest in anything. Against the “Crazy** Quilt. I’Rell in Cosmopolitan. You wonder where your strength has gone .6he returns borne from an absence If I was a woman and had nothing better pail but one thing—their mother’* to. Why, madam, it went into Thursday The Rights of Inventors. f hatever has been brought for them night’s public reform meeting. It was a co do than to sit down and cut scraps of silk and satin velvet into pieces and then spend It is an easy matter to prove that there i? bwed when the needed time comes part of the enthusiasm which pretailed there. k exciting is allowed to them at night, You can’t get up such a good time as you bad uours in sewing then? together again into a inthing new in the world, and it has come to h go to bed and to sleep in a whole there on empty benchea There must be •‘log cabin” or “crazy” quilt, I’d—Pd—well. »e the fashion to belittle about every in ven ion made, by showring that something in somt pental state thatdnsures restful slum people to fill them, people to talk, people to I’d make clothes for a few of the ragged, dis fcey art taught to love nature, and t< applaud, people to clatter canes and boot cressed and forlorn little creatures of earth espects like the thing invented has been k there is nothing arrayed so finely heels «when they are pleased, people to fee) who swarm in all cities and are often found mown o’fdreamed of before» As a general |ly of the field, the bees and the but excited or indignant, and talk excitedly of in small villager A woman could read the bing these rusty resemblances are matters I there is nothing sc mean as a lie, indignantly, as the “tyrants,” or wrong entire works of Dickens, Macaulay and of very little consequence. They go to show The Rev. Clinton Locke is a humorist. Not ■thing so miserable as disobedience; doers, whoever they may be, are held up to Hume, and keep up with al) tbe leading mag chat somepno has tried to accomplish a cer F a disgrace to be sick, and that good the audience’s execration. People must ex azines of the day in lees time than it takes tp tain purpqwe and has (ailed, bis failure result long ago a worthy couple came to him, bear ing between them a babe of exceeding tender I good teeth and good temper come pend strength to do this. Nor can they fill make one “crazy” quilt; and they are nigbv ing in no benefit t^ ttii public. igo. < lain food, plenty of sleep, and being up again in an hour, nor in five hours. You marisb sort of things when dona A wbitq “We want you to baptize her,” said tbe To Keep Away Drummer». are one of those people You had a good, <pread, costing 12, will give any bed an infin itely more elegant and restful appearance. father. A business man of South Florida adopt* w to thrive, children require acer- warm, exciting time at last night’s meeting, “What name have you decided uponT ¡Mint of “letting alone.” Supreme and now you must pay for it You were on L'nis is a man’s view and may not count for this novel plan to keep drummers out of hi* much. — Zenas Dane in Good Housekeeping. place, and be says it works admirably asked the reverend gentleman. a mental spree, possibly, at tbe temperance the mother, few toys, no finery, “Alas, sir,” answered the father, dismally, Every morning he places a plug hat and od, no drugs, and early to bed. are meeting, along with the rest, and now you Hive syrup is good for croup or inflamma sachel on his counter. As soon as a drummer “we have not decided. Had the child been a things for making them happy.— feel the reaction, just the same as if you’d tion of the lunga It must be kept in a coo) bey we should have named him Benjamin. A comes to the door and looks in be see* the taken your stimulant out of a bottle.—Pren place, for if it sours it is very poisonous. pMig hat and sachel, and be goes off. believ favorite name of mine, *ir, is Benjamin.” tice Mulford in New York 8tar. A Biography of the Baby. “Yes, and of mine, too,” echoed the ing that another one of the craft has that Mant custom, that 1 am sure more Damp salt will remove tbe discoloration of ground already covered.—Brooklyn Eagle. mother. A Case of Cowardice. “But it is a girl,” said the father, wofully. [would like to observe if they knCw A woman came to me one evening and told cuj« and saucers caused by tea and careless Work for Women. I that of keeping a brief record of “And we don’t know what to call her,” washing. _________ me that a certain neighborhood was al) ex he Our children’s earliest years A lx>ndon jeweler recommend* diamond •id.led tho mother. citement because of the constant and cruel A teaspoonful of salt in each kerosene k.remain »blank in tbeir memory, “Cheer up, jny good sir,” cried the saga cutting and polishing as an excellent em jean tell wjjh what delight they may beating of a child by its adopted parents. lamp makes the oil give a much clearer, ployment for women, saying that be helieves cious pastor, “and you, too, my good woman; _________ rears peruse the pagfes that may gi ve “They whip him constantly,” said she, “and better Light. be not cast down in spirit. We may yet find that any woman or girl with quick mtelli rue to the happenings of that won one can hear the little fellow pleading and A tablespoonful of turpentine boiled with pence could learn to polish a diamond “very some way of applying to this child the name begging for mercy between the blows.” “Sol you so much prefer. your white clothes will aid tbe whitening /airly in six months.”—-New York Bun. Fheh looking over some rubbish in And you sit around and listen, do youF said process. “Sakes alive.’ ’cried the father, “we can’t _________ L “Well, to my thinking, you are just ex Fr s garret, I found a package of old A young Madras Brahmin, married. In a nafiie her Benjamin 1” Remove spots from furniture with kerosene. communication to The Indian Magazine rrne of ferhicb had been written by actly as bad as the doer of the cruel deed." “Nay, nay—very true,” answered the holy ►her to my mother when I was a. Think you the Lord is going to hold you and speaks of hie mar wage as "the eternal knot man, softly, “but we can name ber Bea me guiltless, if the day ever dawns when be Keep cheese in a tight tin box. Hurl”—Chiraaro Naw*. pt. and never shall 1 forget the of sorrow tied. ” <, makes up his accounts, that we have been