Ontario Community Newspapers

Listowel Standard, 1 Jul 1910, p. 3

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

LOR usk foolish questions in the inter- RNATIGNAL LESSON, JULY 3. . ie 18. $1-8, 44-52. BEL, r tree, but the black mustard, a gar- oden hoc séwn annually, is refer- As ess than all seeds--Not, of Shores literally so; rather by po- ©. putar estimation, since in ordinary guidening no sinaller seed was ever "Small as a mustard was a common Jewish say- ing, in which was exercised the ypoetic license often found in the proverb, ) When it is grown--The impres- "gicr ds not of rapid development, but of the contrast between the in- Town Greater than the herbs--It tow- mers above the pulse, parsley, and @inint ("ten feet high, drawn up amongst brushes, and not thicker, $than whip-cord"; "as tall as the horse and his rider"), so that, to all intents, it has the appearance of a tree The birds .. . come and lodge-- An Old Testament expression for the spread of a great kingdom, giv- jing shelter to many (Ezek. 31. 6; Dan. 4. 9-15). The application of the parable is self-evident. From @ period of precarious life amidst persecutions and toils, the kingdom of heaven has gradually enlarged ite sway till it has become a world- wide protector of the poor and op- ee, and a power that can no onger be neglected in any of the councils of men. During the nine- teenth century the number of the adherents of Christianity increased mcre than in all the preceding cen- turies of the Christian era. aah tt esenbhtA ' sonra @ homan porthn BE net--The seine, or drag F sie "whichis often worked, by fast- the sions: ag an bringing' it to Pins starting coe >} thus inclosing all Botkin else. ing. med ening one end to ind; asin the worldsare men of| of, Britain's Kings are, < Pr ete condition. gig | 2a -. Buried, ax oad Reyer a bart a Fee gc Bawardle body aa in Bt. 49. The end of the world---Ad"in the case of the tares, 'the angels are the agents of judgment... . 52. Every scribe--By his use of parabolic teaching Jesus' has shown how the disciples may become tea- chers and give apt che ae « the things of the kingdom; householder, who takes' oy a 'his. chest old things and new, so.they, where already sleep' many of'his Majesty's ~p sors. on the throne of England," spon whom -¢ Edward IV , Hea- we | Ge rge IV., William IV., and some thers. ate to present to men not. only.the old truth in the old way ee hee cld and new in their Master presentlaa® ie cts and experiences of life. nature THE G. T. R. a ae its Rail and Water Lines Together Will Total 15,889 Miles, . the commanding position the Grand Trunk Railway» Gyitem, with headquarters in Mont cupies among Systems Ccotinent. It isthe Pionéer rail- way of Canada, and one of the-ear- ifest built and operated on this side of the Atlantic. From a financial standpoint, the Grand Trunk Railway System is - largest organizatién ~-in- Can and one of the greatest in the Brit. ish Empire, the total] capitalization of the Grand Trunk and its subsi- «chary lines being $435,069. . In- cluding the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway, the total capital at ceember 3}st, 1909, was the enorm- cus sum of $534,180,795 for the en- tive Grand Trunk and Grand Trunk Pacific System of Railways: ~" The present total mileage of the Grand Trunk, including its subsi- 33. Leaven -- The fermented dcugh; lghtens it. Scientists have | Giscovered that this effect is pro- duced by tiny living organisms, spread through the leaven in large nu rs. Inasmuch as leaven gives, a disagreeable taste and odor to, tho bread, yeast is now much more ccmmonly used Three measures--No attaches to the number. The seahj© war the recognized unit of mea surement especially in the case of dry substances. It was equal tc about one peck and a half. Till it was all leavened--This poeeh at by the apa of ee om it Stas upon. bbe Barbi "tires these. upon al] the rest. Such i persuasive influence of: true ae ae oe upon the life of mankind. Beginning with Christ,! it has spread through the apostles, then through the early church, gra- dually working to transform the entire mass. The meal is the whole complex life of men, art, commerce, letters, religion. The Christian disciple must bring to bear upon all these the furce of his leaven- ing faith and love, and penetrate; them with his ideals. 44. A treasure hidden in the field | --In the East it was nut unusual for men to conceal their wealth in this way, because of the uncertain tenure of property. Often, because of the vicissitudes of life, the wealth would remain unclaimed in its hiding place. significance A man found---His coming by sheer accident upon the treasure, without seeking at all, is true to live. any a@ man finds himself suddenly confronted with a noble truth, in the Bible or out of it, and in obliged to take an attitude to- ward it, either of receptivity or of refusa}. Selleth all The man who is keen enough to recognize the unrivaled worth of salvation will experience only joy in paying the necessary price. The test of sincerity, in ev- eryone who comes face to face with the truth, is simply whether he is willing to give all he has and is in order to m his own. And surely, that which alone fully satis 4 fics the longings of the buman "heart, and fills up the whole mea gure of being, warrants the sur- » vender of all those things which do rt, and never can, satisfy. Buyeth that field--It is easy to ~ pietation of a ange Here, for example, one may as "Can one purchase membership in the bheay- pa kingdom! Was it right for the mart to hide the treasure before go- . " nut @ co! if the man's conduct seems . shrewd practice, it is-only on i essential "1 grount. in order ior beshene owner was of "in-! 1 Sig eoeapavatre y, es. SF caer as gid Louis "X. Frat 3 8; upset 'the der bridges; with Mts eoaere con- > Ww 45. A conhant secking--He ee at suspicious. wena Seeeere®, wad place ge Laks HL as 4a one cents eines ent anes va tft be he ba og the a ee fe ns 'however, -fo ve the Rocce ~ Goodly pearls--There is -a@ cer-] gam mg: est where. "only, at pateks tae and restor-| ian s fajr beauty and lustre to other re-! | feake but. roulette ge wooed raised Aigions, but they have.no absolute at were p gamblers mas- ¥2 noah to Bod =: = a Hy | que verading as. actors. . The us > ; rhnest to the best, lie will n raid a made, the ecards and mon- TRADE EOR HIM op with them. 9 eine. and the gamblers takes . NO : : Re eager ae pss te fd = the Police Court. owe _-- 'ons i. en int : rs) x ' Fs "'Wigwag--'I never kiew such 8 a ee Be aur s . | fellow.as Bjones! BM Soreas beatin mee ROT bi ines on the Great Lakes, between diary lines, is 5,400 miles, with a double track mileage of 1036, which makes it not only the longest dou- ble track railway in Canada, but 'one of the longest continuovs dou- 'ble track railways uadey agement in the worl Including the mf ace, of hs G:and Trunk Pacific Main Line now utider construction and contemplat- ed--3,640 myles, of which 3,044 miles are under co tract, also yrs miles ;of branch Tines---tho tote 0 the entire System of Balen will eve>tually amount to 14,650 miles. In addition to the rail mileage e Grand Trunk operates steamer ope re t Pande: | William, Milwaukee and Chicago: al so owns and operates large ear ferry steamers on Lake Ontario between Cobourg and Charlotte (60 miles) and on Lake Michigan be- tucen Milwaukee and Grand Ha- ven (distance §0 miles), the total muileage of lake lines being 1,239 miles. Adding the lake line mile- age to the rail mileage above, gives a grand total of 15,889 miles of rai) ana.water jines. With regard to the amount 4f business handled, the Grana Trunk also stands in the forefront. Dur- ng the year 1909, on the entire Grand Trunk System, the number of tons of freight handled amount- ed 19,233,485 tons, while the number of passengers handled was 13,916,147. According to the ofhcial reports for 1909, the Grand Trunk takes rank among the ten largest Systems on the North Am. erican Continent, based on the bu- sicess handled (freight, tonnage and passengers), while on its lines in Canada only, it handled 1,431,- "Bt to 8 of freight and 1,167,000 passengers more than the railway ranking next as & common carrier; also, according to the Government reports, it handled 25 per cent. of the total freight hauled, and 33 per cent. of all the passengers carned by all the railways in Canada. a es GAMBLER'S RUSE. How the Paris Police Were Outwit- ted for a Time. In spite of the continual war which the French authorities are waging' against illegal gambling houses, clever brains continue to invent ruses to avoid detection, Usuually the establishments are coccealed under the, guise of stamp- ccllecting societies, pigeon clubs, or charitable jostitutions, but even mcre ingenuity and cunning have been exercised in a case -that has lust come to light. At a little Montmartre theatre, recently closéd, it was. annow that a play called "Banco'" rehearsal. In one. aet-the cha ters are shown playing "banker." With some astonishment the Police Commissary of the ict. observ- ed that this was the only act in re- hearsal. i on; he was informed t f théplay could not be rehearsed. boediles the parts were not entirely committed to m the _scenery was dary thi asdeahere were other ith through the vehicle of "ict ' fa Many people fail to ap resio| tin Kall in He asked forcan'explana- Fenty cad in deliéate fan-like vibe, .@ wonderful appearance of Tace. Thee sept. 'Among these are the her- aldic-bearings of Edward the Con- ferdor, Edward III., the Black Prince,. Henty-VI., Henry VII. and Heary ViIE., and those cf-the H gs, rt and Bourchier and other Jeqnotis Gumiligs. Low pointed 'arches gonnect. the columns, and sbovet open thé clerestory win- dcwsy 20 feet in- height... The west is ceaee. 'tar del and wi the nework'and the fish at in| espn ot Flee Where Masy it George's Chapel, Windsor Castle, 3 Its interior is as magnificent as re ahr of the colored ass. 'Tt con- |; no gnized - Neate of igi lana roofs of fluors of tile, cove sheeting of wood will prove ible, can be. ors desired; ing, nor pape ecund- proof, teins no fewer th partments, arrang: ard displays the every service held the Knights of the Garte STATUE OF LEOPILD. A conspicuous objegt:!pear the | west door is the whitejmarble sta- | tue erected by Queen Victoria in iutmory of her Majesty's -- uncle, Leopold I., King of the Belgians. In the Urswick Chapel--so called; * after its founder, Dean Urswick, who died in 1521--is the cenotaph of the Princess Charlotte, daughter of King George 1V., and wife of King Leopold, and not far away" is 'the cenotaph of King, Ge _ Close byis @ memory of Prince. 4 west door. 10ir, 'which is of singular reg and Fichness, is di- vided from the nave by the orgea and choir screen. ~ KNIGHTS' BANNERS. The stalls of the Knights of the Gerter are elaborately carved, and overhead hang the knight's ban- ners, recalling memories of the in- staliaticn ceremonies be since C dation o 8 order Bt Gevige's Day, 1349. 'The sOv- ereigns' stall is under the organ. In the centre of the choir is the rcyal vault, in which le the re- mains of Hen mry VIII. and one of his queens, Jane Seymour, and Charles I. Near the altar steps is another vault, in which repose the oy by af iron screen. TOMB OF HENRY VI. In the south aisle lies his taser to the throne, Henry . WwW body was transferred" from its first resting plice at Chertsey by order of Richard III. The spot is mark- ed by a black marble slab, bearing the simple words "Henry VI."' In | the same aisle lie the remains of the Earl of Lincoln, @ statesman who died im 1584, after holding high office in the réigns of Henry VIII., Edward VI. and Queen Elizabeth. In the Braye Chapel there is a me- merial er command o Queen Victoria to the memory of the late Priuce Imperial, son of the Empress Eugenie, who was killed in the Zulu War of 1879. On the wall near by are the sword and fabretash of Capt. Wyatt Egdell, a c:rect descendant of the founder of the Braye Chapel] in the reign of Henry VII. Captain Egdel} recoy- ered the body of the Prince Im- perial and was afterwards killed at the battle of Ulundi. QUEEN VICTORIA'S MOTHER. The body of the Duchess of Kent, mother of Queen Victoria, was ori- ginally buried in the vault near the altar ateps, but was subsequently removed to-the mauspleum built te her memong nt Frogmore, in Wind sor Great Park. The Prince Con- ecrt was also buried in this vault during the building of the mauso- leum at Frogmore, where he now liés hy the side of liis illustrious] consort, Queen ee In' the chapter room is rved the sword of state of Edward IV. This s¢vereign's coat of mail and sur- coat of crimson velvet, embroider- ed with pearls, gold, and precious Stones, formerly hung near the-éast window, but it was teken away and ccstroyed by Cromwell's troopers. \I- the south aisle a matblé. slab marks the resting place of the Duke ai Brandon. whose, roniantic' marri- age in Paris to Mary; start Tor Hen- ry VIIl., and widow'of the pte is not material fa 'the st ey m ae and people em for the -w: eed | rot be transparent, but es Bei sla te. It will, however, hard an ! durable. The roofs can te made of the same character of giaens *It withstands héat and cold alike, a whatever patents. may interfere mat the age} of the ao orig cw are so nearly expi pl will be but a short tine be will be eliminated. 38.8 cost -- BURMA WOMAN'S LAND; She te erhere efor Her Energy ™, yv. somof King Theodore ctl |, sinia, who diéd.while on a to |. Iinglatd and" e interred. newr thé} women.- You go to sand and it'is @ wo) and conducts it and-selis , nana ora mango. AtT. tions a Burmese woman the tickets, and @ fair daughter of |; the land is ready to take your dic- tation and do-your typewriting, if you are looking for an @manuensis. The Burmese woman is not only an efficient business. woman, but a ard merchant do not interfere with rer other in .the «li st degree. dded to her superior BEnitigence ne Burmese woman has She has eyes 'of a deepd quid Deck or brown bordering on black. The forehead is usually high and well filed out, and-there is # purity of expression about the . Her bead is oval and-shapely, this effect being heightened by the manner in which she dresses her hair, in a bi ape on top of her head. Her dre s white, with a tight-fitting jacket with large sleeves; the lower part of the body is covered by a single bright silk petticoat, which, also, is tight fitting, and displays the figure like a modern sheath skirt. --s A RESCUE VESSEL. Germany Provides for Accidents to Submarines, The French navy's lack of ade-|, quate means to rescue the sub- merged Pluyiose, which was run down the other day in the English Channel by the Galais-Dover mail steamer, calls attention to the fact that Germany alone of all nations possesses & vessel capable of deal- ing with such aceidents. Although Germany has only. eight completed underwater eompared = wit Crest Britain's 63, France's 66, Russia's 30 and 18 of the United States, Teutonic thoroughness has already provided a tescue ship. She is named the Vulkan and was launched at Kiel in 1907, The ves- sel, which has a length of 230 feet, consists -of two separate hulls. harap are fitted. engines, which give of twelve knots. At « either end: the separate hulls are connected. by a deck, so that viewed from tara or aft the ship presents the' structure at a tunnel. TA latge 8 nt to allow the _ largest Gétman. submarine yet] s a ec ict left t 'two steel Po net of cole} 'wayman ide, will be aidlished;: where, "Ww od | dations were being' dug, sere .}are some old brass- «nee used by the guards of his Ma- gomejjesty's mail. it. |that after being-regulated at "| per side. | went over a precipice 121 feet. The paroals which mee nee 8 good mother. Her dutiés as mother | }en* | abot by 2ays » : Globe") Pebdcreshen, 'hi past, and in ma ne thateines hay- ing @ sufficiently startling sto 'bag which was stolen-by'the high- in, ia an old inn, = a was bein hen 'fresh sc 'skeletons were. discove! bound watetne 5 - These. watches bg picvided with.a Jock" and ke quarters they ore not = taknper- ed with. MATL COACH: PILLAR. "There ate two. "ot the staves used by all ranks in the postal service during the Chartist riots; and the ensigns horse-pistols without which ty. at | tached to it.. There issthe old. anail- | foufid.in- a : songs, such, the Girls" pri "Alway s Merry and; icn, they had_a new idea, and the men on the right side of the hall would stand BD, whereupon those on the left-ha e would consid- er it was sw Ty to'stand up and "itell the others to sit down. ig accompanied by violent pertige 'of the hand, occurred seve times.. There was a ® great upposs" for sév- eral minutes when a lady stewart requested an offender to leave the hall. In rejoinder the undergra- duates demanded in sing Anybody Here Seen Kelly ?" Sats erhaps 'thc most interesting! leaving documents out of the question, is one which must avi faree eer where it is--on the recon Road. This is the mail coach | pillar "erected by John Bull, In- bape felt secure in olden times. ? nd/'spector of Mail Coaches, with the akl of $65, forty-one subscribers, 1841." It was put tip. received by him from in the year "as a cau- pig that on December 19, | Edward= Jenkins was driving fhe Gloucester and Carnar- von mail coach. Unfortunately, he was very drink, and when he me a cart coming the other way he was too fuddled to pull over to his pr i The leaders swerved an coach was dashed to pieces. DEAD LETTER OFFICE. The undelivered articles at the Returned Letter Office, perhaps better known as the Dead Letter Office, form a remarkable collec- ticn. The number of letters and dressed 24, atppl snakes, tarantulas, . 'tortoise are kept as aig as possible in case they should be claimed. But most interesting of all are the "documents, and the anecdotes which are care- fully treasured in the. miseum. . A bag of letters ery had been sto- wat recovered | alinost intact, and the "following fotice was sent with each letter ---'This letter was enclosed in the'Newport letter-bag, for London, of Noyember 6, 1822, which had been. stolen, and was eraled over a hayloft at the New Passage Inn, with the contents mu- tilated." ns HAIR OF VESEEABLE FIBRE. = Odd Substitute "tor Haman Hair Found | Ape Germany. Sad news from Germany. The cemand for hnymat hair has become so great that a substitute of vege- table fibre haB"been istroduced. And how it happens that the German demand -fer hair is so in- sistent and ----_ There are two obvious reason Our friends, 'the Cidtmans, are & scientific nation. And your man of science is frequently the proprietor a large open space whi to thatched. And the really entific explanation of this is' that everything is concentra' én the werk of the interior convolutions, end the hair--piqued by neglect --- takes itself off. Then, again thes Germans are a musical people. And 'your- profes- sional musician requires three times as much hair as anordinary| man--four times, if the musician' is a pianist. And this is why the beld head, like the turnip, must be crowned with vegetable fibre. a FIRED IN THE ATR. Young Albanian is Squad Ordered to Shoot His Father. According: toa méssage from Con- stantinople . published in The Mor- Albanian of pore Se was eaptured and ordered Among the firing party, from Us- 'kub- was Saison of the condemned man: He demanded to be released from the "duty, but the Turkish + forced him to remain But when the or- and | der to fire. was given, the son aimed in the sir, and his father fell, the remainder of the firing party. The co! ed the 3 arrest of the son, was marched off to the mili son, where he hanged eee tn nn amen wt Sas 9 oh voice of. ec to be- tion to mail drivers to keep from) , | intoxication. + ¥t'appears from the found on the 17 inst.- (1824), con-|° pe mmander theréupon. order- and he} t: S r in command was: subsequent- ly transferred to another earns Pankhurst was leaving the plate, lnear' some undergraduates sitting near the front jumped on to the i platf 'orm and seized a flag. -Some .of its supporters tried to hold it, when another detachment of stu- 'dents came up and captured the {flag, which they broke, and then jdemolished the low railings round ithe front of the platform. The police now appeared in nim- bers, and they had a rough time 0 lit. some cf them being knocked off' the platform into the body of the hall. In the centre of-the hail, }meanwhile, about 100 undergradi- ates were having a severe fight with «ther policemen, some of whom es i their helmets. The chairs were overturned, and the greatest contusion prevailed but | the hall was eventually cleared without apparently any serious personal injuries being sustained. NEW ROYAL PALACE. Suggestion For a © Méaaetit to King Edward. The question of a national me- morial to King Edward will be posaiben: before the British pub- "Among @ number ' lizards, Tooie = pagpedblous "which are already|r Bl emed considered is the important i that Buckingham Palace should \Froutah the palace as it now stands is abokt as ugly as an old weather- stained barracks. Several promin- «nt members of the Royal Institu tidn of British Architects are stron yn favar of the new facade pi opo! , there is some reason for + bélie leving that plans now; in« éxistence' for the provisiog' nct Only of a finer ffontage for the pulace but also of an entirely new story The gorgeous Victoria Memori- al, even in its present unfinished condition, makes the King's resi- cnee appear by comparison very mwan, very shabby, dwarfed~ and squat. When the leesuurt is com- pleted, the public will -be shocked is the contrast, and edged be sur- prising if there not an outcry for a new Buckingham Palace which will really be worthy' of the Em- peror-King. ---- TERROR OF TORPEDO. Dreadnoughts "Cannot Live in Nar- row Seas in Time of War. Submarine and other rpedo craft are to be the 'controlling fea- ture in modern marine war, accord- s|ing to one schoo] of military writ- ers. ie ese, Col. Repington, in Blatkwood's Magazine, asserts that neither merchant ships" por battleships can live in the North Sea and the English Channel in time of war. 'As a 21 inch to +l enighting nearly 'a ton, and travel- ling at the rate of forty knots an honr is effeetive a ce) it is clear 'that the smal-. Ww. hundred dollar ship, carrying thir- ty men, against one, costing ten million and carrying -a thotsasd] men. But there are two sides to the question. QUEEN'S PERQUISITE. The Welsh captain who caught a sturgeon'in Pwilheli harbor and of-|* rge was doing n> more thas his- reves ily News. His: Majest is entitled 'to every. siprenan: land | ed in the: United . or, -- ans ene of them, cungbtia e Pgneres, graced" festive bos at Queen} * rquisite, the object of ri- ous division being. that her y Shali always be well supp W j, although singular- »|ly enough the whalebone is King's half. "other things which- the is entitled to re- ; | oates are a of white doves, a nd of in seeds a pair of adhes fuse aged 'a silver needle [from m his tailor, Bright," taken up in "viperoil cane | Soon after 10 o'clock, when Mts:},. do; | The f | Sc ptember. 1 nine months. jhad never heard of the ae et wee 1 any shape oF form » has bee eee n appo} pk < 'Nation. Of 'years or, ily, oS. Done- 7 sented any man of his': age im Irelgnd to run him for $25.' e te Connacht Tribune states that "@ Yumor current to the ef- = be about to purcht ve the: "the Congested Sistricts allinpacle rural counci are Be Ning 'Bcheme -for the, heus- ing-of 'qpotking class embracing at a total cost of oy The - trégsury department has sanctioned: the érection enty-six artisan Sant "by ° Dungarvan 'Urban Céuncil.. a nh royal sturgeon, méasuring "12° feet in length and Yeishing 32. Btorfe, was caught by fishermen while fishing for Pr eg "Government Board The -have sanctioned a loan of $15,300 to the Cloneygowan Rural Council, to enable them. to carry out an im- provement scheme under the La- borers' Acts The Carlow Urban Council have applied to the Local Government Board for sanction of a loan of $15,000 for. the building of working- men's houses in the Graigue por- tion of the Drban district. As some laborefs were engaged in 'removing the debris of an old house in Creggs, lately occupied by Mra. Manion, they-came on a consider- able, amount of. money under an old window 8 Some, workmen who are en; te the Wongested Districta_ u-opening a river at Lisbally about a _mile.from Gurteen found a num- ber of oyster. shells some days ,38° | containing live fish. The "' " oc-) casioned much surprise locally. Ten head of cattle and two hors- es, the property of William Trim- ble, were driven off his grazipg ranch at Kilmacurkin. The police: remcneeed seven of the cattle and the two horses on the same date,! a few miles from the farm A familiar figure passed 'away at his residence, Mount Royal, Port--. ush; recently, in the person of Devid Lindsay, who was well known in local literary circles. He was a poet of considerable merit, a mu- sician, and displayed skill in sketch- and painting Patrick Blake died recently in the Corfin workhouse at the age of 119. His grandfather fought at the siege of Limerick in 1691, and is said to have lived 120 years. The Knock farm, near Milltown, has 'been handed over to the ten- ants on the estate. The farm com- rises 64 acres, and was in the oc- cupation of Michael Connor, Mill- "The Irish Society has intimated to the corporation of Derry their wil- lingness to give 865,000 towards re- building Derry Guildhall, destroy- ed-by fire on Easter Sunday, 1908. After being deaf and dumb for 8 years, following an attack of yel- low fever at Bermuda, John Dris- coll, an ex-A.B. of the navy, sud- denly regained full possession of his senses. aes. aaa A NEW DREADNOUGHT. Battleship Hercules Will Ghertly be Launched at Jarrow. The launch of the battleship Her cvles will take place very quietly at peg il -on- i So ngland, in a day or tw The Hercules is one of the P i battleships provided for in the "regular" programme of 1969-10. Of these the Colossus was laun at Greenock on April 9, while the Orion is expected to be Inunched at Portsmouth in Dace. armored cruiser Lion, com. pleting the original programme, wili be set afloat at Devenport in: The Hercules was laid dowh on July 20, 1909, and has thus been on the stocks 'Tittle over At sum of £1,- 24,708 is to be span 'on the ship ree! by the end of the precent financial year, and as she is to be completed four months after that, It is prob- able t her total coyt will not ex ry 650,000 A detailed description of the Co- lorsus was. given in these column: when the ship was launched. ees gl be similar in all re- say, she will dis- oe 22,500 re and will earry ten 19- reas guns, all mounted on the cet-tre line, allowing a full broad- ee. piise the! the 'American mvdel. oo BURNT MONEY FOR RUBBISH. A purse in a Vienna hospital ad. mistered by. nuns was obse ng up a bunch of paper mon pagan : had found in the bed ead a small for- rig Subsequently it turned out that the sister, who ,had lived in the nunnery ee her third Lever; ue and thing to we ro administration | or with worldly things ee scons 'the loan of $19,000 for of tw ; v' De + 35 wig - "tele

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy