Millbrook Reporter (1856), 21 Dec 1893, p. 3

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a HAICA. ’w Increasing. lied. ‘a recent date has long fore. lie to the “list ies themselves lter such a line We never ceas- ,' irremediable teand to urge arious colonies r the necessity o extend the ks island and ifax and Ber- promised the itish colonies, Is regarded as t importance. lwever, have supine spirit lete control of .see it stated 'ed with their mat they are . West India Bermuda to filial), it is pd, not only commercial 9 as frustrat- tble touching e not aware or not but in the mere rial Govern- running in e assistance Lcircumstan- ild result in l important d Imperial - of great a1 interests ' ttle doubt” opment of as well as » look to the the Domin- statement. ssful rival ~ ; in spite l unication 'ew York and Lou- ched, the y gaining sowmg to and they ter extent elegraphic otic view e with the ons com- with the ty to look ‘ possible hostilities pply and en a con. 1 will wish the possi- altogether ire should ady exist possible. tates lies oled with unlike its ducts of rket for - with it growth. at end is at unwelâ€" e if the - delayed e the line , passed . KS . per-lor- d asked t and in . es upon - money over to : count- e draft -te of in waged would - hour ‘ have book been . uunt of should known of the I went it was r : tered '0 had Ht rate he at n the r. He incase his he .; m3 (:9. ‘ idea of such a secure would I : the ‘4 . a. (Minna-w .-.... _ .--....... ~ A-“ m. â€"â€"â€"uâ€"-~_-â€"'/ . w m......_....... OUNG FOLKS- Notice to Santa 01%”: BY ROBBIE. Don’t want much from San”: Only chooâ€"ciioo cars; And a. half a dozen Chocolate cigars; And a bag of marbles; And a lot of books: And a pole for fishin’. , Lines, and sev'ral liooksi‘ Halts. dozen sets of Stone and Wooden blocks; Dozen pounds 0’ candy Done up in a. box; Three or four small steamboat“ Ten or twenty cents: And a. small toy fawn-ya!“1 S’rounded by a fence; One small bowlin‘-alley; Suit 0’ soldier clo’cs ; lMUSlC‘bOXi an orgin: Punch an’ Judy shows ; Bow an’ arrer; also, Possibly. a. gun ; All-1 a. patty-blower Would be lots o'fun; Elephants and lions That could walk and r0315 After bein‘ winded, Up and down the floor. Them. and sev‘ral others. 'Hangin‘ on the tree. I ve a sort of notion 'd Be enough for me. His first Christmas- So this is Christmas 1 l don’tknowexflt‘ 1y what Christmas is, but it 889“,“ to be something very nice. They say “PM!” once a year, but, so far as I can 589: 1'59an comes once in a lifetimeâ€"at least this Elbe first time that it has come infill my hfe' Christmas seems to consist of ogre“ many things that seems to last quitea longtime This one has lasted an entire day. A” film I thought Christmas was just a kiss which my mamma gave me when I woke UP! be cause she said, “This is Christmflldwle'” Then I thought it was a stocking thatmy mamma had hung by the fireplace the mght before, and which she took down quite full of funny things this morning. There was a lovely silver rattle with little bells, and when l shook it, it went " ting-ading-a-lmg tingoa-ling-fi-llng-” I played with it a long time, and Iheard mamma say “ it was so kind of grandma to send it to me ; it kept me quiet for almost an hour.” I did not know I had been making a noise, but I suppose I don’t al- ways know. Then there was a stick with a funny little man that went up and down. It made me scream every time hejumped- When it was time for my nap and hat thinking of it all the time, and just how 1it looked, and I thought I should never go to sleep. When I woke up 1 had a nicedrink 9f milk and a little piece of sugar. “Because it was Christmas,” mamma said. lhad seen the sugar on the table a great many times before, so I didn’t see how thatco uld mamma put me in my little crib, be Christmas. A little while after that I hada pain that made me cry very hard, because it hurt, and mamma had to walk up and down, up and down with me fora long part was very nice, for 1er time. That to be walked. First I thought the pain might be Christmas, but I remembeed I had had that kind of a pain a great many times before. M y mamma said she thought it was the sugar, but I didn’t thinktny- thing so good as sugar could make me feel so bad. Then I was taken down stairs, and put on the floor in the parlor. I liked that, for I could do just what I wanted. The only thing I couldn’t do was to fall off, andthat was all the better for me and my poor ittle head. . Pretty soon I heard a noise in the hall, and in a few minutes some big boys and girls came into the room. They looked so ig 2 I was afraid at first they would not see me, and that I might get hurt, soI crawled ’way over in the corner. Mamma came after me, and picked me up in her arms and said, “ You dear abused little thing, did we leave you all alone?” BntI did not think I had been abused ; I thought I had gotten on very well when there were so many big people around, and I was very glad they had left me alone. My! how many there were ! More than I had ever geelm before, and they all looked so beam. u . Mamma held me on her lap, and they all came up and said, “How do you do 2” and “ Merry Christmas 1” to me: I thought it was very good of them, and that all these little boys and girls must be “ Christmas,” One little girl leSPd me, and I didn’t cry. She had a great deal of hair - it was ye pretty. I think I heard her ask where my hair was; but perhaps she couldn’t see it I know my hair is very nice, for momma: says so every morning when she brushes it- with my little brush. There was one ye big boy. I thought he was splendid and Wished I was like him. He didn’t Wantto speak to me and cried a little. I thought he had a pain like mine, and I was glad he had a nice mamma like mine to take care of him. Then there were two big girls- first i thought there was one, and then I thought there were two. I couldn’t make out how many there were, because they,“ looked just alike. I never saw so Many look just alike before. They had on 307er blue ribbons like on my cap that I we“. when I go out, and they looked at mega though they liked me very much. One 0,. I didn’t move for fear of falling off; the place she held me on was so small. I think I liked her better than any one. They Were so big. I was just beginning to get used to 30 many big people when some one-pulled the curtain, and there was the most beautiful thing I had ever seen. I cried at first‘I could not help itâ€"but my mamma held Hie very tight and told me not to cry, that it was the “Christmas tree !” Then Chi-lag. the square when I went out in my carri were Christmas ! I couldn’t make it out and it made me cry some more. This tie; was not like the other trees ; it had little lights all over it, and balls, and oranges and apples, and dollies, and doggies, and; little baby smaller than me on the to That little baby didn’t cry, so I tried vep. hard to be good, too. The big boys age pretty song. My mamma pla ed on piano, and held me on her lap all the tidiée ry union of May and December. It was gen- tions, as to his conduct in his assumed “K,“â€" _ After that she said she thought it was tlme for me to go to bed, and she held me up in her arms and I shook a “day-day” to had h9oppend all day must be Christmas. That Seemed the best way to think about 1'5: and it made me feel better. Lake Superior, there 1' ' The last thing I thouuht just 3.31 dropped 3' tall, fearless Indian landed. The bridegroom followed her to where she sat weeping, and, resting ‘his head in her lap, he tried to cheer her _up by planning a number of delightful slaugh- 15ers, in. which she was to assist, one of them being that of her own family. His bride, in the meantime, was gently great inland sea, stroking his forehead and crooninga lullaby. “Ed "la-11y years ago Soon the “ terror of the lake” fell asleep, - d his if The 0d d h . k' °3 toglean, all tucked u in 111 nm -b had one son about 16an w e‘ y “d “8 °P "1 193““? blade “sword- was what a very nice thing Christmeagnis: listened to do many of years 91d, who had grass from his belt, cut OE the head Of the and. how glad I was I had lived to the tribe that the dem See It.â€"[Harper’s Young People. firm hOId 0f hlnl. “~â€" . One dark night his fa THE LOWELL MEMORIAL. _..__ and meant “Strong \V‘ saying he was afraid an . bassador. nor persuasion could, m The followmg Speech by Mr. Bayard, the resolution. United States Ambassador to London.made At last the father ' - - at the unveiling of the memorial to James “Ah I my son, I hiaddl’iowpetdl it: deiiid be Russell Lowell in the Chapter House of your mission to kill - H - . \Vestminster Abbey is well worth repro- thus rid our tribe of “ab Undo Tab. and ducing in full ;_ The wise men have said tIllmwerful enemy. “I hold myself happy in that Ihave been by one of our family b t is would be done permitted to be in the Chapter House of failed in their propheu elther they have ° cies o ' ' Vestminster Abbey when, for the second" come to pass for anot, ’ r It W1“ not . her eneration ” time, the name of an American is inscribed g . . rd ' in this double sanctuary of religion and re- wrought by Hah~Undo.Tr:tho:fth:ha {till nownâ€"the bust of Longfellow, and now the Sorcerer,” a owerful ch‘ ' ‘ memorial of his brother poet, both from island out in pthe “ big wftelr-lg’mgndnwhrd our own kindred beyond the sea. The sallied forth at times on mu’rderous ex- forms of these two gifted sons of America. peditions, to the terror of the ate Clasped in the bosom of the land of their tribes. The boy knew that whoever should birth ; their ashes rest in peace at home, rid the earth of this monster would be made but the echoes of their fame have been the greatest living chief. He had never wafted across the Atlantic, and they fall heard before of the prediction just repeated in the clear and musical notes upon the by his father, and this filled him with new lovmg ears of two countries whose people ambition. But how could he, a. boy afraid speak the same tongue. Longfellow and to go to the river in the dark, hope to do Lowell, here in Westminster Abbey in this great deed? blended fellowship, are worthy companions All night he sat thinking about it, the of that band Who sung with Wordsworth, taunts of his parents rankling in his breast. and who gave us nobler love and nobler At daybreak he started westward, taking cares. only his bow and arrows, with which be u I am unable in the few words permitted supplied himself with food. On the third me to attempt a. portraiture of Lowell. night, just as he had lain down t9 rest, he Happily, this is needless, owing tothe elo- 3:;nsinibk‘2nihihliiilng 11%?! anggllfOklngabofilb, gzgatiladdreis Ffllgr' Stepiifen, ghich ls es- Going hastily toward i? he savgwaii1 eIddiaiii y graeu o myse an my com- . .’ . patriots, and which will be received thus by IOdge’ m the d°°r 0t Whmh “fwd.“ °ld the country whose son is its subject. It is “13mm, whom OdShedOPh "30°31‘15”“ as the a strong saying that ‘ blood is thicker than 0 Fizigjiilmzllib 13:23:}:2 ant k h t if wate 3 8 rue er s a “ Every day proves how the ties of com- upon the ground, and this had caused the men origin and ancestry are stronger than :33: geehfigggé Oghgiingf was ornamepted written treaties. Theinborn sympathies of she struck the earth Wham) every “I“: race finally silence international discord and d th . d'fi m. ”the birdssoun ‘ jealousy. It is pleasant to recall in this e Whig tliebrlfilngvligtlis. chamber that the man in whose honor this 0d h d h t c entered the lodge. unveiling takes place to-day stood twelve 010:; fgipiiggdegvitlfieatilfg. 80211198 t°f°k off her years ago speaking words Of honor and 3f. and when she shook it the 8:33an wit-finial fectlon 0f Dean Stanley ’ that pure, noble shouts of laughter Odshedo hpswtds 20W being whose “Fem" “ll .13 beforeus, seeming- eerin in at the dbor wh tli) 1d ly the guardian spirit of this venerable fiurn dg dd 1 ’ h.” e o woman place. But eight years since the vaice of mucfi fr? htziiel’l Igogunlm'v He EV” t§° Lowell was again heard in these precincts hgd h' d I :de en w en 8 .9 when.the bust of Colerid e, the gift of :Egdfdgre im, an a“ a hand on b” thefiiiissdfn‘éfi‘éi‘li‘i'a..;1"’;.§lf$yfi‘:§Imikngatliim she him was erected so soon after his death. The 2:: IV; pitched lift: eVEr slinpie he left his fath- reproach of long delay. often just, cannot ge. r 8 e ‘3' given hlm sup- . per and he had told herh ow he came to Life filial??? nor can be applied the words lea. \ie home, she said : “ Were you really afraid to go to the See the Nations slowly wise and meanly just, - - a: To buried merit slowly raise the tardy bust. river m the dark 2 ‘6 n “For here brotherhood in letters and kind- Agisfii: 3,2831 da wiivffiesigisgedogg'fi. and red spirits hasten to give buried merit a 1 k . er just memorial. I cannot forbear to wish, £03.};1thfp the birds and the scalps madea orrl e in however futile in; may be that he should .. ' 3- ,, . have been permitted to io’rsee this honor. “€32: yiopnpfga; 112:3 zhgifiedfllfbxtggé It was his purpose to bring the people of as mucli as I was of; the dark 3’ ’ Great Britain and the United States to a .. Why 3: asked the 01 d .woman ve better knowledge of each other, to replace sharply. ’ ’ ry some.saltegstussit3“” “1313...... 153m,“ 1:: . . ur. me a e op answere '1’ “1H8 13837:: (31181 11:11:55?!“ 3831? Heist-Iii; Again the old woman shook her. stud and tolhugiie (dad he made his skill and 1‘“)ng cloak,but the birds notes were all in accord, edge t’h e agency to interpret the better and the laughternwas like music. a feeling of both branches of the race having You “”11 d2; “add the “be": for you common glories. In all American homes a art‘e‘very brave. _ , sense of grateful pride will be felt when they Brave ° echoed the boy a "1 astonish- learn what the name and fame of their mgpt. ,, , , , , countryman, the poet, scholar, statesman _ YGS, said the witch, Sl‘l‘llllng and nod- and patriot, have received at the hands of ding her head many times, the bravest 0f Britons in this venerable temple of national the brave, for you have the courage to tell religion, honor and renown. ‘Give my love the truth. It is written that, you are to to England in general.’ was the last message slay that monster, Hah-Undo-Tah, and ,I of Lowell to Thomas Hughes. In these am to help you, so keep up your courage. memorials may we not read England’s .But the stripling s heart began to fail reply to Lowell and the nation be faithfully 2ng as the 01d WOW“! began her Preparai re resented?” . ' . . . Illr. Chamberlain moved the adoption of . Flat“ she applied. a. magic comb 1’? hm a vote of thanks to Mr. Bryard. He said “9‘"? thh caused 1‘7 to grow long, hk.e a that Englishmen claim common interest, girl s. Then she dressed him in beautiful common pride, and almost common owner- clothes, such as a princess of his tribe might ship in great Americans, and this was wetaiii. and painted his face in a most be- articularl so in the case of Mr. Lowell. w‘ c ing manner. . . rThe vote of, thanks was adopted unanimous- When the young man looked at his image - in the lake, near by, he was so charmed that I)"; and Mr. Bayard made a brief reply 0f be nearly fell in love with himself, like t an 9' Narcmsus of old. His friend. now gave him a bowl of shin- ing metal, and a sharp blade of scencpled A few ears a 0 a. young girl married a sword-grass, that was thrust in his gir _e, famous general Emid much comment upon '33 3' modern belle might wear a favorite the way in Which Love leveled age, in this lflower. Then came some general instruc- Ill-Assorted Marriages- e 11 considered that the bride’s beauty and character. _ fgshSiiess were offset by her husband‘s He was to go down to acertam part of prominent position in the sight of the whole the lake shore, Wthh was In View of the country. Not very long ago the sister of ISIde where the Bed Sorcerer llVed, and this some young wife became engaged to drink out of the shining bowl. another well-known army oflicer of years, Many of the Indians would then come discretion and celebrity. The married lady across and ask him to marry them, but the addressed the most impassioned appeals to supposed princess was to say she had travel- the other to reflect upon what she was ed a long way to be the_w1fe of their chief, about to do before it was too late. Among who must come for her himself, or she would her arguments was this seriously worded return to her native place. complain“ “ I k110i" W13“ it is ‘0 carry When Hah-Undo-Tah heard this, he meals u135ml?S for two years to an Old man would come in his’ own canoe. After the and I WM“ you not 3° take the care on your marriage, Odshedoph must make the oppor- shoulders. I know what 13' and you do tunity to cutoff the bridegroom’s head with 1103-” the blade of sword-grass. Hâ€" " ' It was now morning, and the old hwoman - - told the oun man to start out on is mm- A Submarme Bridge sion. A13:I firstg he kept up a good heart, but One of the most famous and most 3“°99?3‘ when a. lull sense of his undertaking came fill of modern engineers is at present v1s1t- over him, his courage failed him. Turning ing Canada, closely inspecting the C P- R- to retrace his steps, the fog closed about Mr. Lillyequist. the gentleman to whom we him like a wall, and .he could only find his refer, has a large-sized scheme on at present, way by going in the way he had started. and in order to carry it through, he feels It all came about as foretold. When the that it is necessary to SWdY the methods Indians saw the shining bowl they came by which the engineers of the C. _P. R. have flocking to the beautiful princess, who surmounted what might be considered 111- refused to wed anyone but Hah-Undo-Tah Superable obstacles. The plan which _he himself. . has in view is the building of a submarine And so the Red Sorcerer came after jug bridge and tunnel between Denmark and bride in the state canoe, the ribs of which Sweden under the Oresund. . meg t0 the were formed of living rattlesnakee, with large shipping traffic it is 1mP°SSIble P0 heads pointed outward to protect the chief build an overhead bridge, and the uncertain from his enemies. services of the ferry cause great inconven- The marriage took place at once, ience on both sides of the water. The fact although the bridegroom's mother opposed that Mr. Lillyequist has undertaken 3° long the hasty union, saying no good would ajourney for the purpose 0f studying the come of it. Even after the ceremony the engineering feats of the C. P. R; 81399-118 mother voiced her doubts pf the new VOIumes in praise Of our vanadlan inmate of the household, at which the bride road. ail‘iected much indignation, and walked out n l . .’ to go to the Remarkable sDeceit by the American Am- river for some water. The boy refused, he Wild legends 0f sleeping sorcerer. Taking one of the canoes, on fear had taken he soon crossed to the main shore, carrying the head With him. Here he waited until liter returned from the cries of the Indians told him the head- less body had been discovered, when he started oil to find his friend, the old woman who makes war. She was delighted to see him again so soon, and, cutting off a lock (1 neither threats of the Red Sorcerer’s hair, she bade the ove him from his young man change into his own clothes, and set out at once for home, bearing the head with him, which would establish his reputation for bravery beyond any ques- tion. Upon his arrival home, he found his par- ents mourning for him as one dead. They scarcely knew him an first, for he- had changed from a timid youth into a man who . had seen many wonders and achieved migh- ty deeds. When the head of Heb-Undo- Tah was shown to the assembled tribe 3. great about of triump and thanksgiving went up that one of their own people had done this deed. Odshedoph was made a. powerful chief. His name was placed among the great war- riors of the earth, for in all the land that lies between the great waters beyond which no eye can see,the Red Sorcerer had been feared, and Odahedoph had delivered them out of his hands. Anger a. Permcious Vice- Anger is a vice that frustrates the de- sign of nature. Men are born to help each other ; a’nger makes them destroy one another ; Love ventures all to save an- other ; anger ruins itself to undo another. Nature is bountiful, but anger is a per- nicious vice that carries along with it neither pleasure nor profit, but, on the contrary, destroys all the purposes of a cor- rect life. Anger judges a. cause without hearing it, and admits of no meditation. How much better is it to forgive injuries than to revenge themâ€"for revenue of one injury exposes to more. If anger were valuable because men are made afraid of it, why not cherish adders and scorpions ‘2 Anger itself is much more hurtful to us than the injury that provokes it, for the injury is limited, but where anger may stop no man living knows. Why should we not make the best of our short life, rather than contrive to gall and torment others ? Our wrath cannot go beyond death, and the very hour we may have set for another’s destruction, peradventure may be our own. kindness puts an end to the controversy. . It is the part of a great mind to despise angry man as a physician does his patient ; looking upon him as sick and delirious, disregarding his words and actions, and at- tending only to such efi'orts as may con- duce to his recovery. Will any but a madman quarrel with a mad dog when he can pacify him with a crust or a. kindness. Let us have a. care of temptations that we cannot resist, and provocations to anger that we may not be able to bear. When an angry fit overcomes a man, let him look in a glass, and the very spectacle of his own deformity may cure him. Anger will abate after careful consider- ation; time turns anger into just jud g- ment. , It is not enough to control our own pas- sions, unless we endeavor to amend others, and. herein we must accommodate the remedy to the patient ; some are won by entreaties, others are gained by mere shame and conviction, and some by delay. A tempest may arise out of a calm, but a. skillful pilot is always provided for it ; it is good for every man to fortify himself on his weak side. Never condemn a friend unheard ; for it is an unjust thing to believe in private and to be angry openly. ‘ A jealous person is apt to take that to himself which was never meant for him ; let him, threforc, suspend his anger, and chide himself for over-credulity ; for his revenge once executed can never be re- called. “â€"â€" OHINESE PIRATES. Reinforced by Siamese Soldiersâ€"A Reign of’l‘error on the Tonquin Coast. A Victoria, B.C., special says :â€"Accord- ing to advices received by the steamer - Victoria the Chinese pirates are now organ- ized on shore under an ex-army officer of Siam and are being reinforced by Siamese soldiers, who have vowed vengeance upon all Europeans, the French in particular. The Tonquin coast therefore is in a state of l terrorism. The pirates recently raided the I town of Bacle, tortured M. Roty so as to injuries ; and a. wise man should treat an I MREIGN CABLES. Prof- Tyndall's Lamentable Deathâ€"His Wife’s Fatal Blunder. Trans-Atlantic Mall Question. A London special says :â€"The coroner’s jury in the case of Prof. Tyndall, who died suddenly on Monday last. has returned a verdict that the deceased came to his death from the eflects of an overdose of chloral, taken by mistake. The drug was given to Prof. Tyndall by Mrs. Tyndall, who, mistook it for sulphate of magnesia. Mrs. Tyndall wasa witness at the in- quest. She testified that her husband was accustomed to take two teaspoonfuls of syrup of chloral at night, and two teaspoon- fuls of magnesia in the morning. On the day of his death, she mistook the bottles containing the medicine and gave him two teaspoonfuls of chloral. The chloral was in a new bottle. l’rof. Tyndall complained that it tasted sweet. She then looked at . the bottle, and discovered her mistake. 1 \Vhen told what had been done, Prof. ‘ Tyndall said, “ You have killed your 1 John.” Mrs. Tyndall further testified . that after I’rof. Tyndall had taken the chloral he jumped out of bed and said, “ Let’s do all we can to tickle my throat. Get a stomach pump.” Mrs. Tyndall caused Dr. Winstanley to be immediately summoned, and gave her husband a mustard emetic. He vomited, and was then placed back in his bed, and surrounded with hot water bottles. He was also given cofl'ce. He became uncon- scious. Dr. Winstanley did all be possibly could for him, and later in the day he regained his senses, and recognized and spoketo the doctors. The latter worked over him all day. Mrs. Tyndall gave her husband the chloral at 8.30 o’clock in the morning, and at 6.30 in the evening all was over. Dr. VVinstanley testified that he had used an electric battery on Prof. Tyndall. The professor had received about 80 grains of chloral. Had his lungs not been disabled he might have survived. Dr. Buzzard, who had been Prof. Tyn- dall’s physician for four years, supported Dr. Winstanley’s testimony. He said that Prof. Tyndall used chloral, taking about a teaspoonful nightly. Prof. and Mrs. Tyndall were an affectionate and devoted couple, and he was satisfied that the death of the professor was purely accidental. h“â€" WBLL KNOWN BEOPLE. Something Interesting About Them. The Queen of Greece is president of a sis- terhood devoted to the reformation of crim- inals, and she personally visits prisoners. Simon Cameron is reported to have once There is an end of contest, when one side said that he would 50°38? ride 3 thousand deserts it ; and the payment of wrath w1th , miles on a. railroad than write one personal letter. W. D. Howells is said to have enough literary work mapped out and contracted for for the next year to assure him, with the royalties on his published books, an income of $30,000. Edward Payson Weston, the famous ped- estrian, is now past 50 years of age, and has tramped not less than 60,000 miles in pub- lic. He is desirous of an opportunity of re- peating some of his former triumphs. Mr. Howells, writing of James Russell Lowell, says: “He was one of the most tolerant men that ever lived, so much so that I think he would have in vented toler- ation if Roger Williams had not been before him.” Lady Eva. Quinn, wife of Capt. VVynd- ham (heir presumptive of the Earl of Dunraven,) has killed six grown tigers from the frail shelter of a howdah. But she’d probably get up on a chair in a hurry if somebody should suddenly cry “ mouse 2” Bernhardt says that the longer she lives, the more she likes dumb animals. “ They are so friendly when you do them no harm l â€"they are so unlike men,” she says. Sarah’s newest pets are two young jaguars which she brought from South America, and a monkey. Sir Thomas Esmond, M P., is conducting a. crusade against the English language in County Cork, Ireland. The efi‘ort is to make . the English language unpopular, and With this end in View Sir Thomas and a score of other patriots who own their own carts are having their names andaddresses written in Irisn only on the vehicles. Gen. 0. O. Howards, commander of the eastern division of she United States army, is a. frequent attendant at the Young Men’s Christian Association meetings in New York. Last Sunday he delivered an address on the subject “ Loving Kindness Between Father and Son.” He is one of the most noted Christian workers in the United States Army. Henceforth the signature on the notes of the Bank of England will be “ Horace C. Bowen,” who has been appointed cashier of the world-famed institution, in succession to F. May, who has held that office for a. secure a ransom, put M. Boujer in prison, generation, and whose signaiture £35 3131:33" and are starving M. Fritz. Boujer is report- fld 011 all the IglgdmLt-ed t lftTli aihnefciii. ed to have tried to escape,but was captured issued by the ‘ 3' Y 0 re and banged. D anish Margarine- The butter-iiiakers of Denmark have long held an enviable position in controlling ; the British butter market, but of late there ‘ has been an unexpected demand for Ca na- l dian butter in its stead. As yet the supply g has not equalled the demand but there is} the prospect of a steady trade being opened ' in that line. The Danish producers have . Street” for the last twenty years. The temperance people of this country; .1 the United States and England, are already ' making arrangements for the observance of l Neal Dow’s ninetieth birthday, on M arch ‘20, 1894. Temperance societies in all parts of the world are asked to co-operate, ‘ each one conducting the celebration according to his own judgment and opportunity,but all to send congratulations to Gen. Dow. Lord Bennet, the only living son of the learned to make margarine and during the l Lord of Tankerville, England,is an evange- last year they exported some 16,000;ooolbs, ' of that unpalatable article to Great Britain. l indignant at the swindle. If Denmark is l to hold the butter trade she must close must agree to swallow the whole output of I rancid grease. Should she not- consent to either of these restrictions the trade will naturally fall to our Canadian producers. l She was a graduate of Vassar, but when l she saw the roses at the flower show she ex- I claimed : “ Oh, what a lovely lot of Jack Munroe, roses l” list who is at present conducting a. revival l in Sing Sing, New York. He'is peeisteld bg Much of it entered the United Kingdom ‘ Dr. English, the British reVlva lot. or under the name of butter and the house- Bennet has had a. varied carreer. He nae ' served in both the army and navy, was a keepers who have purchased It as web are noted hunter and a. swell society man. The l death of several members of his family. is m ' ' said to have been the reason for his giving argarine factories, or else her people the remaining years of his life to religious work. man in the parlor is trying to k iss Clara. thought I heard her cry out, ” Blumer â€"“ Heavens 1 Let me go in at once." Mrs. Blumcrâ€"“ You can’t get in, my dear. She has locked the door.” aâ€"-â€"â€"â€"-â€".â€"-â€"â€"â€"~ Mrs. Blumerâ€"“ I am afraid that young , . ---... .-.~.¢-.,,A__

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