Ss wp CBRE ee ni a Permitting children to sit at table with their elders is the cause of a good deal of mischief and injury to their youthful digestions, A variety of dishes should never be permitted, and checked at once. Economy and self- denial can be taught at the children’s 1able far more easily than at school, The diet of children can hardly be too plain, = If they require to be encouraged to eat by the administration of dainties, there must be something radically wrong somewhere. It is unlikely that that something is constitutional ; more probably insufficiént exercise is taken, or taken at wrong times, or the nursery is stuffy, or the bedroom badly ventil- sunshine and fresh air are as necessary some food is, The want of cleanliness, or frequent use of the bath, is many times the cause of indifferent appetite in children. Without cleanliness of clothes and cleanliness of person you cannot have healthy children, Without this the young blood seems poisoned, the child has neither buoyancy nor heart, appetite is depraved or absent, and he grows up as pale and poor as a sickly plant. Injudicious clothing is another cause of dyspepsia. It is bad enough to en- vase the body which full development in a tight dress, but it is ruinous for a child to be clothed in tightly-fitting garments, of a child’s body requires room to grow and expand ; if it be in any way com- pressed, the circulation through it be- comes lessened, and it is therefore sick- lied and rendered weak. has attained its of a child's clothing ruins not only the tion, but indirectly those at a distance from it, for no damming up of the eir- culation can be tolerated by nature, Tightness round the waist in children and young people is the cause of many so is tightness of the neckerchief, by retaining the blood in the brain. Have your children’s clothing loose, then, if you would see them healthy and happy. See, too, that at night they sleep not on feather beds, and that though warmly they are not heavily clothed. fed Children should be with regularity day by day. times are strictly adhered to. of getting up in the morning and retir- eial to the present health of but it greatly against his in after-life. I need hardly speak here about the quality of the food that is placed before a child ; against indigestible or too rich food, against sauces and spices of all kinds, including curries : against heavy foods of the pancake, dough and dump- ling kind, against unripe fruits, against too hot soup, against strong tea and coffee, or beer, or against over-much butchers’ meat, Pray, mothers do not forget that an interval o' rest should ensue between the meals you give vour children, and do not ruin their young digestions by cramming them with cake, or buns, oc sweets of any kind. To do 50 is worse than cruel, it is a «in, and « sin you are but little likely to commii if you truly love them, and really wish to see them germinate into strong and healthy men and women. Tarts and sweets and confectionery would be bad enough in all conscience for children, even if they were always pure and unadulter- ated. But they are too often positively poisonous. Feed on plain and whole- some food regularly from day to day, permitting no stuffing between meals, and not forgetting the benefits which acerne from frequent changes of diet more especially as regards dinner. Do this, and your children will live to biess you ; do otherwise, and expect to see them sickly, with veins and arteries possessing no resiliency, with mucous membranes pale, flabby pipes of lungs that the accident of a slight cold is sufficient to close, muscles of limbs so weak that exercise is a penance instead of a pleasure, and flesh so unwholesome that a pin’s prick may cause a fester, and all this because the blood is impov- erished through errors in diet, teaches him habits which are chances of success Large quantities of hay have berm shipped on the Union Pacific Railroad to feed the herds of cattle upon the Platte Valley ranges anl in Western Wyom- ing, where the grass is snowed under, The trains on the Denver short line are compelled to run slowly by the numbers of eattle who take to the track on their way to find water, Official returns for January in Michigan indicate that all kinds of cattle are in fine condition throughout that State. It is feared, however, that the wheat has been damaged by alternate freezing and thawing, or been “smothered” by late snow, The Church Temporal. a 1. Never neglect daily private prayer and when you pray remember that God is present, and that he hears your prayers, (Heb, 11:6.) 2. Never neglect daily private Bible- reading ; and when you read remember that God is speaking to you, and that you are to believe and act upon what he says, I believe all backsliding begins with the neglect of these two rules, v (John 5 : 89.) © 8. Never profess to ask God for any- thing you do not want. Tell him the | truth about yourself, however bad it " makes you; and then ask him, for Christ's sake, to forgive yon what you ave, and to make you what yon ought to be, (John 4:24.) ing to do something for Jesus, Every night reflect on what Jesus has done for you, and then ask yourself, What have I done to-day forhim? (Matt, 5:13-16, 5. If ever vou are in doubt as to a thing being right or wrong, go to your room, and kneel down and ask God's (Col. 2:17.) If you cannot do this, it is wrong. (Rom. 23.) blessing upon it. Christians. or argue that, because such {2 Cor. 10: 12.3 You are to “How YOu may. ask vourself, in my place ?" (John 10 : 27. 7. Never believe what contradicts God's Word. i Can what I feel be true if God's Word is true ? and if both cannot be true, | believe God, and make your own heart the liar, Rom. 3:4: 1 John 5: 10, 11. Brownlow North, Modern Skepticism. Dr. Schafl, in volume his first direct consideration of modern i the | skepticism. The following extract will | show the author's views as to the man- ties ought to be treated. There {one He says : are two kinds of skepticism : represented by Thomas—honest, Radducees and Pontius Pilate indifferent to With the latter ‘even the gods reason in vain.” But truth-l skepticism always deserves regard and cial, worldly, frivolous, truth, and ending in despair, honest, wing sympathy, and demands of the real which are in a patient in- | vestigation or imaginary § asus | difficulties volved iu the It may be more useful to the Cl than unthinking and i orthodoxy. of an One the ablest (De Wette) made the sad but honorable confession I lived in times of doubt and strife, faith was forced to yield I struggled ta the end of life, Alas! 1did not gain the Seid.’ for a few months before his death he wrote and published this significant sen- tence : ‘I know that in no other name can salvation be found than im the mame of Jesus Christ, the crucified ; and there is nothing loftier for mankind them the divine humanity realized in him, and the kingdom of God planted by him.” Blessed are those who seek the truth, for they shinll find it. Shake Hands. Shake hands with «omebody #¢ yon go out of church. The more of it the better, if it is expressive of real interest and feeling. There may be a great deal of the spirit of the gospel put into a hearty shake of the hand. Think of St. Paul's four times repeated request, “Greet one another’ —after the custom then in eommon nse, and one which is exnressive of even warmer feeling than our common one of handshaking. Why not give vour neighbors the benefit of the warm Christian feeling that fills you to your finger tips, and receive the like from them in return ? You will both be benefited by it; and the stranger will go away feeling that the church is not, after all, so cold as he had thought it to be, Seven DeadMen. A Strange Legend of Venice, There is a story current among the gondoliers and fishermen of Venice, There were six men fishing once in this “Valle of the Seven Dead, They had with them a little boy, the son of one of their band. The boy did not go fishing with Lis father, but stayed behind to take care of the hut, and to cook the meals for the men when they returned. He spent the nights alone in the cabin, for most of the fishing was done between sunset and sunrise. One day as the dawn was beginning across the water, the men stopped their fishing and began to row home with their load as usual, As they rowed along they met the body of a drowned man going out to sen with the tide. They picked the body up and laid it on the prow, the head resting upon the arm, and rowed on slowly to the hut. The little boy was watching » for them, and went down to the edge of the canal to meet them. He saw the | body of the seventh man lying on the prow, but thought he was asleep. $0 when the boat came near, he cried to h's father, “Breakfast is ready ; come along !7’ and with that he turned and The men fol- lowed the boy, and left the dead man lying on the prow. When they had sat down the boy looked round and said ; “Where is the other man? Why i “Oh! isn’t he here #** cried one ; and then added with a laugh, “You had better go and call him, must be ' asleep.” he shouted : “Why don't you come to breakfast ? it is all ready for you.” But the man on the prow never moved nor answered a word. turned to the hut, and said : “What is the matter with the man ? he won't answer," “Oh! said they ‘he’s a deaf old fool. You at him.’ The boy went back again, and cried : i So the boy re- must shout loud, and swear “Come along, vou fool ; the others , are waiting for you." But the man on the prow never mo ed nor answered a word, Then the boy ran back to the hut and said : “Come one of you, for I can’t wake him up.” But they “(ro out laughed, and answered : + again a d shake him by Lilt 3 1 . . #i11 eg | tel ul ’ 1 hin! we can’t wait till dooms- day for him." The boy waler once He got into the boat and shook man by went down to the more, the | turned and sat up on the the leg. Then the man prow, and sald ‘to the boy: “What do von “Why on earth don’t you come Y Are they all to wait till doomsday for you #* back and tell that 1 coming.” want 7, ae) them am So the boy went back to the hut and | found the men laughing and joking. “Well! \ “It is all what did he sav ¥'’ they cried, right.” answered the boy, “‘he says he is coming." The men turned pale and looked at sat very still and i i Then heard footsteps coming slowly | one another, and | laughed no more, mitside HY up the path, The door was pushed open, and the dead man came in and sat down is | the bov's place, the seventh at the table But i the each sal with his eves fixed upon seventh, their They could guest, | not move or speak Their gaze was fastened on the dead man's face t blood flows chiller veins, till, as the along the lagoon, there were seven dea { men sitting round the tabh the | room. i o——— ——— . Young Wives for Old Husbands. By-the-by, a few years a friend £0 a loaned me a book containing the remi- niscences of Henry A, Wise, In it he was out riding one evening with Presi. dent Tyler, who informed him that Le was going to get married to Miss Gand- ner. “Why,” said Wise, “she is too young for you."" ‘*Not at all,” re plied the President, ‘I'm still in my prime.” “That reminds me,” contin- ued Wie, “of an old darky down in Virginia, who was generally consulted by his old master on any affair of im- portance to both, The old master was a widower, and when he got the con- sent of a young lady to marry him he communicated the fact to the old darky. ‘My Lord,’ said Sambo, ‘she is too young for you.” ‘Not abit of ijt’ answered the master : ‘I'm still in my prime.’ ‘Yes’ responded Sambo, ‘vou are in your prime now, but wait till she gets in ber prime, then where will your prime be 9’ ow -— How Texas Cattle are Utilized. There are beef-packing establish. ments at Rockport and Fulton, Texas, both of which places are in the centre of cattle ranges, in which at least 100,- 000 beeves are slaughtered every year, Every part of the beef is utilized, even to the tufts of the tails, which are pre- served and sold for the making of ladies’ frizzettes, The Blood flows into tanks and is pressed, and is sold at two cents a pound for the muking of fertilizers, The tongue and lean beef are boiled and canned, The hides are salted and sold again. The fattv matter, is ex- tracted and goes to tallow, The bones are boiled to a pulp to extract this fatty matter, and the dry bones, mainly phos- phate of lime, are sold at one cent a pound for fertilizing, The feet are cut off, and from the hoofs neats-foot oil is extracted. The horny part of the foot, the shin-bone and the knuckle-bones, are sold for the manufacture of domes. tie ivory. The horns are piled up until the pith becomes loose, and this is added to the fertilizers, and the horns are sold for munufacture. Every alom of the anbnal i« probably used, a Kisses on Interests, A father talking to daughter said : *'I want to speak to you of your mother. It may be that! you have noticed a careworn look upon her face lately, Of course it has not ' been brought there by any set of yours, ' still it is your duty to chase it away, | rant you to get up to-morrow morning and get breakfast, and when your mother begins to express her surprise, | go right up and kiss her on the mouth. You can't imagine how it brighten her dedr face, Besides, yon owe her a kiss or two. Away back when you were a little girl she kissed | you when no one else was tempted by ' your fever-tainted breath and swollen face, You were not as attractive then always ready to cure, by the magic of a mother’s kiss, the little chubby hands whenever they were first skirmishes with world, And the kiss with which routed ba i dredms as she leaned over your restless the rough old midnight 80 then she many pillow have all been on interest these long, long vears., Of course she is not vou had done your share of the work during the last ten years the contrast would not be so marked. Her face has more wrinkles than yours, far more, and vet if vou were sick that face would appear more beautiful than an angel's as it hovered over you, watching every opportunity to minister to your comiort, and every one of those wrinkles would seem to be bright wavelets of sunshine chasing each other over the dear face. She will leave you some of these days, These burdens, if not in her Those done so lifted fic shoulders, will break her down. rough, hard hands that have many unhecessary things for you will i be crossed h lifeless breast Those upon or that gave you kiss will be tired neglected lips vour first baby forever closed, and those sad, eves will have opened in eternity, and then you y will appreciate your mother, but it will be too late.” er Scraps. “How is business ¥'' asked a man of a glazier. “Putty good,” was the re- ply. There is a limit.-- First young lady, “1 sould sit here forever.” Second ditto: “And I till lunch time.’ A Michigan man dreamed recently that proved true. on his work. The dream He tied the same dream didn his sunt was dead. mother-in-law, but it A celebrated poet advertised that he would supply *‘lines for any gecasion,”’ | A fisherman sought him soon after and ‘a line strong enough to cateb | wanted | a porpoise,’ what we such for indance, as we publish in the Sunday A correspondent inquires will pay for “original stories Republican.” Three cents a pound, One of the saddest when a man is looking through an old vest, and thinks he has found a ten which when brought to sight.turms out to be a cough lozenge, J.ubock still insists that bees are not of u sympathetic nature. And yet this gentle insect, with the buff mainsail and red-hot rudder, has frequently brought tears of sentiment to our eves, A carpenter in Newport, R. 1., who had put on a pair of house doors with the glass portion at the bottom, said to the indignant and protesting wife of the owner, ‘that is the very latest Queen Anne style, ma'am." A gentleman who is no longer young, and who never was handsome, asked his son's child what he thought of him. The boy's parents were present, The youngster made no reply. ‘Well, you won't tell me what you think of me? Why won't you?’ “Cause 1 don’t want to get licked,” replied the sprig of a rising generation, sven idiotie brains have been some- times very clevef at repartee. It was a celebrated Edinburgh professor who ac- cused one of these unfortunate ones, rather unfeelingly, saying, ‘Weel, Jock tell me how long & person can live with- out brains #7 “Ah!” said the idiot, “I dinna weel ken, sir, but how lang have ye lived yersel #V Pawnbrokers have never been scribed as the pioneers of progress, ale though it must be admitted they are always ready to make an advance, moments in life is cent piece, 80 iki So Atos in A Clatter ng Conscience. . ————— One of the neatest stories is that of an early Judge, an Archbishop, who, in denying an accusation, said, striking his breast, ‘‘By my conscience, my Lord, I know nothing of it!” The biow made his shirt of mail rattle, which brought the caustic rebuke, “My Lord! your conscience is not good ; I hear it clattering,” He had to flee with his clatiering conscience, and seek safety disguised as a shepherd in tending sheep on the mountain side, “Landlady,” said he, ‘the coffee isn’t settled,” No," she replied ; “but it comes as near it as your lust month's bill for board is.” Recent Legal Decisions. EVIDENCE — PRESUMPTION OF DeLivery oF TELEGRAMS, 2, AGEN- CY—LOANX — RATIFICATION, — The superintendent of a mine owner borrow- ed money at 2 bank to pay the miners, and executed notes in the name of his principal for the loan, and sent letters sud telegrams to his principal at bis residence in Cincinnati, advising him | of what he had done, No replies were ' him. Upon refusal to pay the bank brought suit on the notes, and recovered judgment. The defend- gnt appealed to the Supreme Court of Colorado, who also decided the case. Breed vs. First National Bank of Cen- | | tral City—in favor of the bank. The | Chief Justice (Elbert) in the opinion ‘1. Greenleaf, in his work on | { evidence, gaid : ‘If a letter is sent by | post it { is presumed from the known { course in that department of the pub- lic service that it reached its destina- | | tion at the regular time and was re- i ceived by the to whom living at the receiving letters there.’ $ 1 it was Person | addressed, if place and | This presumption has also been held to apply | i u sually | Wo telegrams, 2, The silence of Breed upon the grams will, by presumption, ratify the And it to show, for the purpose of charging Breed, ff & $ v sii 4 4 IOIL Od didi that receipt of letters and tele- acts of his agent. was proper as bearing upon the ques- the money rroy INSURANCE—~OTHER IN PorLicy. condition in it that the ANCE VOIDING policy had a d shiv Pure t be entitled 10 recovel other insurance on ihe upon it property witli out the consent of the | ance was taken oul e owner with 3 * uy i ¢ ne th seri © but the polics getting the consent | LUL UK IC 3 reason of misrepreseniation HISUrance, was he company was beaten on its iolation of actual violation the id an appeal was taken to the Supreme ‘ourt of y ompany a jJuwigment. {G:ifillan 4 which The n the opin Minnesota, Lie J us- said : “In Have Chief 10n, the American Courts generally it has held that in question here were not violated if the contract for i or conditions similar to Dseeny that other INSUrance was either void voidable ; but we cannot vield our assent to such a construction of the gard of the plain objects contemplated by the contract. It involves a disre- the parties to contract when it was made, and to accomplish which ti was ad pte. we condition against other insurance In this view we are Federal, New X and Riis tained by the ork. Jouisiana Canadian Georgia, Courts.’ PERMANENT MACHIN- An action was brought FixTrunes ERY—CUsTOM. by certain creditors against the owner of land engine on which there was a steam and accompanying machinery, which were annexed to a building bn the owner for permanent and habituaw use in smelting lead ore and manufact- uring it into pigdead. In this case Thomas ve. Davis—the Supreme Court of decided in favor of the grantee of the land. Judge Henry, in the opi«ion, said : * Between grantor and grantee of land, if the fixture is one to become a part of the realty, it must be so firmly annexed that its re- moval would involve the destruction. impairment or substantial injury to the freehold : and the manner of annexa- tion would seem to be a material qnes- tion, The offer, on the trial, to show that it was the custom to regard ma- chinery for making pig-lead as chattels was properly raled out. The intention in making the annexation to the free- hold is to be determined by the con- sideration of the character of the an- nexation. and its appropriation and adaptation to the use or purpose of that part of the realty with which it is co: - nected.” M.ssouri Manniaoe AND Divorcg—Di1 CREE Forming MARRIAGE--MARRIAGE IN Avorn STATE. — A husband was forbidden to marry in the decree of divorce granted to his wife in New York. This part of the decree was made under the express provisions of a statute of that State. The husband, however, contracted a marriage in Philadelphia, having left the city of New York for the express purpose of | avoiding tle prohibition of the decree. He returned to New York at once, and lived there with his second wife, The validity of this marriage having been assailed in a New York Court, the Judge decided that it was void ; but on an appeal to the New York Conrt of Appeals the decree in this case— Thorp vs, Thorp was reversed, Judge Tracy, in upholding the marriage, said : *‘ The marriage being a valid contract by the laws of Pennsylvania, it must be held to be valid here, unless it is contrary to natural law or the express prohibition of astatute. The provisions of our statute are penal in character and, therefore, have no effect oufside of the State in the absence of express words showing the legislative intent to give them that i effect, and no such words are to be found in it. Thix disqualification to marry again, like the disqualification by statute upon a person convicted of felony to testify, is imposed as an addi- tional punishment for the offence of which he has leen convicted, and neither has any force or effect beyond the territorial limits of the State in which it is imposed, ’— Phila, Record. ia ——————— ———————— Something to Live For. It has been asserted by scientific sur- geons that the will-power of a sick man has a great deal to do with his dying, and the ease of Charles O'Conner is cited as evidence, A still stronger case oocurred in Michigan the past summer, An old man, living in the northern part of the State, got out a lot of t'm- ber many years ago for a toll-road com- pany, but the company failed and left him in the lurch, For years and vear he tried to sell the timber to this one of t at. but no one wanted it, and at time and decay rendered the beams ai- fast most worthless, Last summer the & pervisors of that county advertised for proposals to build a bridge, and the old Wh bi i. ile waiting to would be done he nan see what put in a wis taken very sick, and he grew worse so rapidly that of doctors was called, a council After due deliberation he was informed that he was approaching his end “When bridge #"’ will 1 know Aix he if ally asked, opened to-day John over to “T'he bids will be “Well, I'l] gets the job, send i fr i ng will depend At five o'clock in he and the On I afternoon the family physiciar arrived in company. The old mar neither better nor worse, he asked “Well 17° ed as . the son “Onur bid was accepted, “And we’ “Yes, but live.” . . a s . “Tean't. eh? I'm not onl 3 114 $deent } it "mn oni live to build that bridge, but I'm goin . wr ¥ ’ SITY » tas re to work that square into to the last fool, or my name isnt Rodgers ! fan [tis a fact. vouched for by good men, that he was off bed in a week, and In night he was at we hotel A Kansas displayed in has the following the “Gentlemen wishing to commit suicide . notice bedrooms : will please take the centre of the room, to avoid staining the bed-linen, walls and furniture with blood.” School Te Sunday poh » story of a scholar who, when asked in the lesson of ** David sparing Saul,” why David compared himself to a flea, replied that he guessed it was because Saul couldnt catch him.’ lady OIE women It is the opinion of a Kingston that dog carts were invented by rascally husband to keep the from talking. It is next to impossible for a woman to talk while riding in them without biting her tongue York Graphic, Now A grumbling old bachelor, after iis tening to the following, ‘‘She was her muver's own ‘ittle darlin’ wopsy, popsy, deary ducky, so she was, n’ he mus’ keep still,” asks, ** Why don’t women talk some decent kind of English to their children.” A bad weather,” of his pupils, weather * sit down," spell. “Thomas, spel said a school-master to one “Wieath “* Well, Thomas, you may said the teacher. This is the worst speil of weather we have had since Christmas,’ “You advertise that there is 5 fine streamn of water on the place, but | don’t see it.” remarked a stranger who wanted to rent the place. The landlord sid: “Just work that pump handle a little and yon will see a fine stream of water. You don expect to have the Niagara Falls on the place for fifteen dollars a month, do you?" —- Sm — 9 I, No Such Word as Fail. We begin to think that Richelieu's ¢ eel was right ; there is no such word as fail in the vocabulary of the man who is bound to succeed in his undertakings. In this world of ours there are men of men, We see on the one hand young men well educated, with perfect heain and form, unable to cope with the world, On the other hand we find men without education, with imperfect physi- eal development, overcoming natural disadvantages, achieving honorable suc- cess. There is residing somewhere in New Jersey a man who was born with- out arms, and yet can write remarkably well, chiefly by using his lips. His am- bition backed by a persevering industry has enabled him to overcome difficul- ties that seemed insurmountable, and he therefore qualified himself for an active business man. He is pow nearly thirty years of age, and is an object af absorbing interest to all who come in contact with him,