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HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1893-05-19, Page 7TF :tftj :twattmjriaI4BaubIe aM lIow Albert : Btaittis Tryillgtofill4neet - The Pittianituay Fireiet—Huutial a Nome Secre1-n*7 for tae- Royal Birthationden Property oi the Dukes or iiedrora and .Griading-Down or the_ Fermate—Young itoperui of the wesentiasters—Luxury of -British sitootiag—Row tee Teila.elteat From's. spurious Petitee. liospoia: • The. ceremony ••of opening the Imperial ilitivate by 'Qkieen Victoria on or -about - the 14th of wilt be one gf ,the l bigost functions of he season. From Aevelop= meats that are-Aally. matnr- nig it -seems As if the pare- ony . in. - a great measitre; a Ilea of jnbilee regards the-grandenr of the Oortege. Indian po -entatei.and rep= resentsliivks the multitudinous British teolonieS:are to fake part in the procession, and the British Piiblic is just heinting to awake to the f:ct that its au tivt ruler - . " inean to Sprzad.heridf to . give eclat- to : th -lannehing,61 the great, uhWiehiv ail that her son has schemed: and pia aid to 'build' . and. establish in .the midi,,t.of unsYw.- patheti-J,and ungrateful ..people„ -who p1aiii - raY.•they don's want; -•and.: :will „have ?none of, it RtK oe " 1 22 With regard to the fat:sire ot.-the ins- about the Bedford estate &while the next five years.- The tenants are all &serious at the sprOspect, of some change in their cons dition.- The -last- two holders of the title showed such. an absolute indifference to the well-being of -those from whom they derived their princely incomes that the untidier of houses unlet on the property is surptising, . Three years ago in Gower street, which is one of the ongest streets in London and belongs entirely to the Duke of Bedford, a third of the street was tenantless: The Russells were too big to interfere in Matters . connected wi h their house property and entrusted it all to stewards, whose instructions have been to wring as- much as they possibly • could out of teetenant and make him improve the ptoperty, but, ooly grant ehort leases, and -then always see 'at the end of the term that it was ‘otrictly, under repairing conenants. HOPE IN THE -NEW DUKE. Bloo-msbikty hatesuffered from this worst tute invente will_ prove ss faie has -itt • store for it The- Rzitish viublio holds the • Purse strangs ad so far sboWtk eveinoli ry ea tion 4 Icf,e_piat-g- s rings drn very c. The. -Plince of Vales snd his'syco- phantit 'follow& s in the. einseel ere pretty well: at their witst end how to raise :the _money to eolthle thero to make a: fair -start . on the openiog dayt...- The latest bait held -out to elebt " fellows to -the institete, who, upon payment -pi efltaira: sum, are to have the.:11'0.2t.il of 'affixing the letteis F. *I -I-. to their- neeles. nile A lerge_nute of great ueknown .nobodice- have -alreecly jumped at 'this belt. end quite a -respectable fluanciai haul, has aireedy eenamatie. What ebeial value awl dihtletettee ree'tit these -let- ters mayposseits,e-it3ePt the:se of ltlaughinge steak and eidia;ule'' may be fairly jaelgtel. NEW FACTS bABOUTTiiD1A. feature of landlordism: for a 'fifty years past, for the Russells have . ground dein with their iron heel everithing likeindependence of -thought or action.. The resteiotions- and stipulitiens- were.. simply terrible, and woe: to the Man who began to werry thesteward e., if he had...the least wish to eerie*: his loam. The new . Duke is .a. vivacious, generous -minded eoldieet Much respected by his brother -officers in the Grenadiers.: 'He has before noW b --n heard to utter ideas on the.eubject of landlord- :and': tenant which; A Country Big Enough for Its Teeming, Million& YOUNG -,FiFEL,ET: • . • Apropes „of the accencliemento of the _Dochess. ef Fife, the Bake_ is much - 'ups:et at. - the child heing aitoth-ngiel. He teed set his neLeul. on a r_K.ty. and h. -ad brought himself *to look wIth almost e•ertainty that he would have the gratiacation- denglinglEnglabdte proepeceive King upon hi, thiaer the circumstances the Lady Alexandra Da _still retains her pre-eminence in the stece- censionel rt mesh comes to diminish their iniport4nc6; the I...adiee 1;e- obitets ot considerable - interett for- yesats- to cottp., as b6ing -daughters,-;wto toui;11 bot -,ter. c.4_1ance. of the-Beitish cl*o%n tan : eny prineesaiA -the rOyal: 1014_4, their oWn mother ey:_- ceptd. Victoria and Maud :Of Warfes :.are nowhere- in • , aed Queen Victor -luta denghetrs and younger sons are SiMply out oi C.S.T tE NAME15,1-Igitp..L,i. • . if he -meant what he said, argues favorably for the hopes which the 3,000 Lention ten- ants who occupy his houses entertaidbf the nett/hen/hie. . •- - MARRIAGE tIONIPLICATIONS OF THE 'WESTBIIN- STETA*; - The Duke. of Weetminatee :‘• and his sdabghter Lady Clieshain (nee Lady -Beatrice Ginsvenor), by an odd niatrinionIal ceincie dence, are married to a sister and e biother. The present Duchess,- the Duke's second wife; is the Sister of ,.. Lord Chisharre there -- fere; the Duke ie breither-iinlaw-to his' •own daughter; anti Lord bheshaintf sister isehis step- mother-in-law. Lord. ..Bel grave,- the, heir ef the Delte's vest. property, which_ is ,scattered through Cheshire, Flintshirea Midedesex and several other counties, and of which the London property i by far' the most ealhable-portioe, ie now only fourteen years old, end evill eqt_ _come of age until IIOW 'rliBY ABE .DIATBIBUTED. 1- • • Rome new statistics doncerningl Indiaand its Population were communicated the other day by the certeue eenintissioner Of Indies to the Royal Statiaticil Society of Loudon. _ BY *these it:a'ppears that the entire ip-spulation of that conntey is.a. little less than 288,000;- 000. .Itie an einermons population, but it ifihabite a visit -Country. The thean detesitY is 184 to lthee square Mile. -Forty,slx*mil ns of the people live. in theproportion of 660 and .tiver, to tht sqieare while;6,. 000,b00 -.are- distribated one anda half to the sicre:=. the letter -case -there are very metertal: points ailatO the' greet fertility of the -soil, and the wide *snit* of .ocett- pations to •be found .upon it, to be ton:. sideeed leniestititting capper:00a. As to the meat- cleneely..popUlated • tregicins, theta which,- riwue' g to gre%te_ resources, afford the: .etesliat' •means of liveliho4d, Europe has three neentriete Great Britain, Saxony, ated,Belgium,. where _there is 'al 'density Of -population net Much Ieeth Thirty-eight and a half milliene of people in Ettrope. live in - the proportion - from 600 to 600 to the quare mile; - The ettrskordinery-pressuee !of. OW) and 'a, -half heads: of ropedation to the acre .confin-d to some districts of Bengal and does notteffeetene-sixth Hof- the ;whole peePieo • In ..the matter Id preportion of town to country population, India .presente A.inarket.1 contrast to Europe and the West - *nail countries. generalVe . While in Europe ;the- -tetees are all the tithe draining the -country -Of its .people, z the direct cone trery . the . ease , India.- :11n England, . for example -6.3:percent..ef. the • population live in tome Of 20;000 teihebi•tents.or over India Only 4i -per -Cent. of lthepepillatitte are ea cengeegated cities. Eyeey. inched, ieg the smell* towns, which have been -ee Chi s,earl. for intordeipal. puiposest Only la per *cent.' or! people.are town dwellers.. - Another interesting . fact shown- 14 the cexisits returns that the iteditter people are not -migratory. Over 90 per :cant .0f the people numbered the last census Were enemerated in the Piece Wheel) they were born, . and 6 dent more in , the region -contiguous tat their birth -pace.. fit -alio of domicilo s.eires. to be -adopted-- only . where the etnigeints 641 eheep. *fain inimediate touch Of their former hornet :The people do notmigrate ,distant teente..,: The greet capabilities of .the country are well ehoese by the fact tleat in the moat 'densely'. popu- lated, tracts - thentineresie • -of -population sines- the last :centime :has been 8 per dent: The pleateettincrease was 131 'per. Cent. This shows that the- increalse of poptila:i tithe 1st - quite. inertial and the whole -reelilts of the Census Show'th4t . the growthi is no' way IA •eiteris •of the imeans : of suplo ' largely the otitis -Parts of port, As - • , . • - • • Europe, while there is •abundant room foil expanaion as :the pressure•becomes locali -heavier.- 1_, - t • The .raareitef the people arepoor,..bilt whe the Mode of living Imposed On them- beeth climateand by . their.- religion consider they ere snot peoree then the. epees ,of the .European - peagentry.il They . have little, tut. they_ 'Weet- little; and • ueuellil their wants are'imply satisfied. They .atie mainly : an agricultural pepple, each...cult:4 vating itepece Of land just aboot:eneugh ti pichluee suffieient for aetualipteient wan but ,not :enough . to afford any stirpl .egainst a bad Season. This fact is the eau of the, families. in India just as it is in Jr ,r lend. Finally:as review of the main reteiniie an.del:commercial statistietsi -for, . the ht decade ehOws.that the masses of -.03.e India people are by no Means oittstrippInCthe , soureeet of •• their wonderful countey, anti that it indeed, :hold . future that astonish :the western -nations.... - Merelri9tht 1900-, FITTVRE. DISTRIBtrrisni oF THE GEEAT yirEALTIL, •---Young Belgravetliyee, With. hie , Mother; tie-ColenteeaeGireevenee; and her. Oecond husband, Mr.--GeorgeWyedhani, at their house : in Perk ' His grandfather is very prated Of him es the ; ethe second. 'marriage; has c.ortipircated mitteree and it is 'highly probable that vilen Lord Belgeave emcees into his. inheri- tanee be will find that he has .got Ao. pay haedepoist. ennetties, not only , tin the Duchess, -bub. alio.' to the two let:lung:ladies (Ladies Maty andHelenGrosvenor) and the young -gentleman- (Lord Hugh GI oevenOr), whom the Present Deolasse has presented to her husband. - ' • WHAT BRITISH: soet-eNcs. COSTS.- The new arriyat Will have to .he nained %fter ils angus-J. great.--,rasi-imether ih ' • 9 ' eincase ergenelea fs.me to pai,s Eagland had three or four queens one- afT.er another. -11-le four Viativisis_ -rtal4 raighto. be, '-as- . a set off a--,e,icat, the four 0-e-orgt:S. •.The ellen of'. 1'de as Louisa 1,, and: her eldeit girl as Atex%xidra also •oilnut innovatio, Sovereigns of r%ther, at' fresh type, but Victoria is :]4‘.t.ppily arnong their' hatlea; and, as it is a good old :wearing -pattern, prob44y., be pre- ferred by future queer:s. _ OLD TIME. CUST03.1:'•- ,, EV CHICAGO: • -lesetah • Viell11111M111111110111101111111111611NIS ".1akooMPO":0.F.0.•'...,"•••••• orId's Irak Visitors Shonld Make a Nate of TM& • • The Chicago papers saylittle or nothing bittit crimes. • . The following comments on hia subject: by. -United. . States • Senator. who was a visitor to .Chicago a few days ago, will lie read with interest: • Chicago is a maelstrom -whose eircumfer- elicit is expandingwitle -enormous ra.pidity. into its insatiable vortex the debris of the world is drawn. - It is. aecriminal rendez vious. The recent 'municipal election, justly or noteis regarded by many as the triumph the -worst _elements of society. Carter Harrison is citizen of ample fortune,. wide eiperience.- - and - geed personal repute. gioreigne.travel, service in Congress and Other stationt3 have made . him -oosinopo n Or an promote rta • ' I It al*enas impeasible that he abould ally him - 40f voluntarily witla the criminal classes. ,elf-intereitt would eepel. the presureptioh, and judgment shouldbesuspended to wait theiesue. The Wit 'municipal • administra- tion was ostensibly one of .dicorum and law, but there is „no European capital. Where vice aid crime- are more ineolently ita..§hametsably audacious than h.ere, not where there is secure immunity: 11kigh- 1 14 robbers ply their vocation • as daringly Dick T t Blackh heat S'uhg re sTurpin aea . . e 4and .sandbaggers rob- their Actims in the . heart of the city. Berglaries ere SO COMMolli •• It is an imperatiFe.. that:- on the ocCasion of •th Orth. of a -Rtiyal...ehild the Secretaiy of Sate khOld be la • notin alten.d-ance in the orOitiary acoelita tion Of the terrp.„1.42t; actualzy in tEe room itself and a wit -nets' to the birth. the present inst.taxice IiAlestrauger made •its app,,iarance.,..rkil.t4er•bd-ore . Arai "eXpeOted,' and there was, couieouentiy, _a g,reae eush to get Rothe Seceetary A Ell4i Ma the spot. He had loft his,.offi,iiai teeidence and gene for a welk -When the Royal meeeeogers ar- arid eis. some time before ceuld tracked bandied tneo carritge and driven 'East Sheen Lotigt, -the re- . Mote zubueb.e of endow where the Fifes -jet The Duke . of ..Sutherland expecte to1& Doetehint and its ehootirg at '11. rent .0f 5,000- for the 5c.8A on ! el3.Ood-hunger-like earthehlingee is insatieble.- Here are a few of the Stinis: ii -4d by " diSeineuiebed " sports- men_ for their aurtual isport : Sir A. Birth.; Invercatild, $22,t 00 ; • leird: Wimt boree,. Aeleuencbellele. $22,500 ; Lord Bur - ten, Glee quoieh, $:15;000 ; i_Bra4ley Martin, ,Balinaceal, $13,500; 0, Moe-- ciennt, Glenfeshie, :$12,500. Abd for only - five-weeke' tensecyof Merton Hell, with its- sheetieg, Albert Edtv.ard'S friend, Bron Hirsch,. paid Lord -W-alsingtain -no lest than $20,000.- t - TRADE IN FOREIO.N- TITLES. :The Villa: •Demidoe in Florence, . which -was recently visited by -Queen Victoria and beyoud'the terraCe of - which a. lovely view of --th.e Vel d'Arne elietthes, presents; eptlet• from its own beauty, an. itaterest in- the feet that- its •pesseisicine or father: that of - the _eetate of San Donato lu which it is situated; - carries with it the right. or the pewee of the: Owner to: term hinikelf When reside:- • ' -NOT IN AT THE • . _ _ . When he did areiee all was over, and the _ baby, weete-d and drested, -Wae-:prenented lto him by ilia doctors aid mutest in ettend- - anee. . Haw the deffieulty will be overoome- as reerdeehie depoeitiorui thattheeeretes rio changing at Meth and that the: Ohild rree tied to -him was actually thehiffi brought _ into the world by the. Duchess ot Itfe'is all _ Matter of official detail -which has tobenet right by the means of red- tape and afftsclar vita. To those living beyond thetaphere of ealonarbby, alltthis Beep eeerti quite -unneces- sary, but it la by no, means unimportant where, aa in the prezent instance, the direct- eucceation.tolhe Crown Is concerned. * A PNEVIIATIC SHOE. Tennis Players • and Pedestrians May , . • .. - Enjoy. an Easy Bounce. . l' Perhaps. one of the queereit •things ever introduced Is a shoe for tennis pleyets with a geed deal. of bounce ' promised in the bottom of it. The sole is fu nished With par cushions of inflated rubb r, designed to give spribginees to the feet when en - wised in the genie.- The -sole itself is of rubber, to which these pneumatic tubes are attached. One would. euppos • thew ettoes well adapted for high jumping, and, Of Course, there is no poseibility . of slippieg ltithem. For lo-ng-dietanch walking they are Betel babe unexcelled.. TheY are buoyant t; and preVent the least shock . the system over hard reeds or wallies-. 1 course,lif the air 'euthions get punctured en route, the same difficulty attends he accident, and titer same remedy must heresortedte, twin the cane of. the ruptured tiro of the bicycle. • Prejudice in the Matter of lieges will probably deprive- many. pedestrians,11 not tennis players, of their benefits.—,91w6 , and Leather Reporter. i - 'that thoy have ceased to attract notice. 'eltpockete, thieves, fakers, crooks, bunco-, article. The Cadifornia, Fig Syrup Corn- iteerers and green -goods men are ho ding pany, of San Frencisco, Geist has suffered hi h carnival Massage parlors, 11 Houses' much in this • reepect, articularly itt 'Canada, where a number of imitationa are INFRINGEMENT OF =Gan. - The:California .Fig Syrup Company Will Proceed Against Canadian Initiators. . . When a really good proprietary article is put upontlie market it is invariably the rule that pirates follow .with pcor imitations - hoping hto grow rich out of the adver- tising their - shams get from the genuine pi all liatione," and other resorts eiEfer opportunitiett for sensual indulgence- un- . . 5 natural vice, and crimes egainst nature not surpassed in Cleveland etreet and the MOnlin Rouge. Wabash :avenie, after Wghtfall, is likenthe Strand in London. Drinking saloonsl'are innumerable- and ambling houses abound not only. in the 1 being sold. : The company as determined to put -a atop to . the conspiracy and has come to the conclusion t bring action against those infringing upo its rights in this country. Already action has been - -brought,. • in some • parts of the ',United States, and the company has no shims, but in the great. business thorough- fear l of the outcome. - its succEse twee. If the atithorities do not know these will mean the running -out o the wortlitess condition t3 they are alone in theirighorance.. intitatiense thus' i eecuring to the public a ilThe : only • alternative is .between collusion 1 enuine artiele the merits of which havel peed imbecility. . But, while crime- is alarm- been fully tested and never found wanting. tingly -frequent and puniehment exceedingly •irare, it need not be assumed that life, lib erty andproperty are generaily insecute. - lAll'a rote; the man who attends to his Own ' The ..F1. oral. . GariginturLoci4Nor Moat Air.e°1fia business is in no danger. The stranger who 4- . i I perils. The Church and 15 i 1)(4:tina;4-i3rarnnteteerkeelede: flOre"w:artue . e)fanthde ePuaca will not incur their perillni avoids the gambling4 table. end the brothel 'theatre - and teal. chantallt- eehool ,:are . °Foil air -Well, as • the variety 1 leaves- curiotisly-shaded wall-fiowers, pull - and energetio, - where charity is ' There :is no 1 wird& •blosSolit and small clunips of by- te toisades .of v community where the mere - orces are i • vigilantd, . - • • - • twisted in • theenifortonate and the disabled is More inpenti I of all kinds, .especialty iv : bonchee of mignonette are koore-active, where the. care of the eolicitous and humane.' The -trouble and -to OA the fashitelable h instenees is aleo- orna danger are that so manyofthe. guests at the 1 many fair will be rustic uns h' t' t d 1 a of lace or several mercury _ , . op is lea e „cur ous . . • - - - LULL Unwary that they will become easY vi- Plet4rlais -L°274". . FAVORITE MAT FLIWERS. the Reseien, Anatole Denhideff, pnrchaaed . . . . the. properi ty, he ntinedeetely ;welled. bun, self of this feudal Privilege, which has long bc.a.sed.to.exist-in England. -. :At the _present oment, however,-, :the ownership Of Arundel Caitle, which -e i ihp_propeety of the -Duke --of Norfolk, berries with .it - a .Shatilar- -right. -In the dark .ages when pORSCEi*I2 was in sterii reality nine points o t-Watv, tineltolding of any property im- mediately conferred e title,but it is new only Telly*apd Gr -many that this . happy state of affairs AM -exists, and in each case of !AIR yeitereit hs -been mneh eeeteueee TO TEANSATLANTIO GIRLS Et gland Ja lost all -sense Of the tradis for -.lestance, ,the Dap of Devens -hire does not ‘lown an , acre . in. the eouettyt from:which he derives his title, &mil numerous other instances adduce as bearing on the pont.- But to this „day _there exists in Italy- estates, the oWnership. of which -confers ducal, often pritieely,-atle, and of late years such *estates have been frequently . advertised :in -. the • continental .`papers; anenQrmOUe Sum being demanded for the rights attached, To alt intents and and Etch eh" nobleneen " -haat,: perfect . drangea, together with aquatic •grasees rdure ; foliage , and compact now .employed eigear, that In ented by, bows wings. --Lades. p:ED:Fo4 AND HISA,ROFERTY. • The new Doke, of B;dford e will mot . bel nearly as wealthy- as his father was—zot that the. 'family -estates_ have any Way •-diminished, Ittftealeart from the fact that the property ,has not yet recovered /rpm the numerous imotlestion dutiela paid- only _dur- ing the1ast• two yeate by the late Duke; lire are new two dowager -Dttehesses • to • provide fot;laesides heavy jointures to his two sisteie; _Teeely- .Ermentrade tialets wile - the Britieh Arabassador to Berlin, and 'Lady Ella Thusaell, who ris .stillettemartiede The new thesehesa is under 30'years of age, and a sidettdid horsewoman; It was during his stay in.Tedie that the Duke -then 'Lord Herbrand-Rriall, A. a 0. to the -Viceroy, Lord Dufforin—hnet her, and much to the surprise of .in -a*, and the , -open cliemay -of some who heelfh_tiher plans for the heir-. peestimptive clukedem,_ atnoanced •.his engagement to Miss Tribe, : daughter of the -Archdeacon of Lahore, but the Old .Duke • :who was then alive-, • very readily gave .,hi; Consent, iltd the weildi.ng took place shortly' afterwardo. -GRINDING DOWN OF TENANTS • • Basiness: The Elmira Gazette, saye- "A disti, guiShed editor of a women's _periedical ha cometothe conolusion that husiness:womtn are not happy. The_ widely -applauded m.- deperaderce of Man; he thinke, does net satisfy them.r The Worry of .besiness the weer:and - tear Of continued watchful - nes that expenses' do not overbalance the reeeiptai. the -various loeseS. -by phrinkageiof Values, . delay inliansportatiene theft of et ployeee, etc., are all calculated to take happioese out of businese. There is n� - dependenelein. this couiatiog4obin ore ti ms of the be-asts and birds of prev. - • pharaoh. 'Clone, lout files Jelw There.. .:SmakEatt6' ouAat off°EriPlaptoP111370°Bh, w0-.11,,oliearw°vase nth:ate:: 'that a Jew would be Premier of Egypt now a lhoreiglier Propeseit to Do Away ' with 1893.8na ee . .m. Riaz, a i The hewoz raee s now Cigars, • , the PrimeMinister et Egft es ruler, even _ i • - It is evident that -Mr. Boult, who. :puts as Joseph, • the on of Jacob,was the Prime forWard a ".theery*Of aniokhig " in the I Minister of another of Egypt's rulers. "Gentlemen's 'Magazitie,"-is 'not -himself a From the seat of his power, Riaz beholds smoker. A tobacco -went -bottle, _he. *Eng- the Pyramids which his ancestors helped I '' gestR,- would be an effizient substitute for to -build for the rauminks ct the Pharaohs. pipes,. cigars and cigarettes. He pictures ! The fellaheen of Egypt aro tinder the the time when it . will be preferred to Jewish .Pasha as the ,Jewish bricklayers, . them, .. and When thefragrance 'iof I were ence•under Pharaele.'•.; We -pleas that the • narcotic hetb will supersede Riaz is yet more powerful than ever "white • rose," " jockey club,' and Joseph was, for - Pharaoh said to Joseph, lavender water in-' churches and - other "Only itt the throne sill I be greater places.- where._ • thefair • foregather. than • thou," while that : poor creatures Tobacco -smoke, he _adds; might be manufac- Abbas IT., would not dare to say that be tured like gas, and turned on as a •dietzte is as greet anyhow as his premier, backed feetant -deodorizer in hospitals, theatres, . , • law courts and' public inestin•ge; It it e plausible prophecy, but' there is one cm - portant factor which it. leaves entirely Out of adcount. One of the chief pleasuresof stnoking consists in watching the blue curling wreaths escending.eltywards ; blind men hardly -ever smoke, and .men :who have their .eyeeight find little pleasurein-smokpig hi the dark. But of this particulat innocent enjoyment Mr. Boult's: revolutionary pro- posids would deprive us .altegether, and, therefore,' they cannot be. entertained.-- • Londen pail* Graphic. . nese office,enillmoiethrt tir•-- ineeet.iltet a uouseh—oldl attende: ing to wayward or enduring tho antics of -a hooey husband -,oehett- he retneols honis from the -cliedri7gf company of he club. • • • Aillma Song _of ie. .------ "Sing a Song Of Sixpence" - is a favorite I' - _ - nursery rhyme, and -every 'Child who knilsivs it probably thinks it a rhyme and roling ,more. It has v..beautiful meaning, and- lamt sure yoti would like to hear it. - •The 24 blackbirds represent -the. 24 hours of :the da . The bottom of the pie . represents ithe 'earth, the top of the pie represents the s When the pie is openday breaks and birds begin to -sing; then such a sigh males a "dainty dish " teliet before a le tied .the Sick R00111. Dr. NV; Richardson 'says that the first words of most physicians when they enter sick rooms in -priVate home *should, be -Goithe's • dyiteg exclamation: "More light. 1 morhetlightale twer,de-daii took"Eit the patient he has to Ask that. the curtains be mind,: in order. that the rays e of a moph greater.heideh than the ablest phy- sician may ever hope to be may be admitted. If the. patient's eyes are so affected - that they cannot bear the light, a Wee ingenuity will suffice to screen them, and at the same time allow the cheerful light to enter: A dark sick ;Pam must be an unclteerftil 'one,. and now that it is known that light is: !one of the most* potent of microbe killers, -.* let • up have ..it in abruie dance. - Why.' sitioid *people behave' as - if they were quite , Bare • the .Patient were about to.die? In the matter of abundant light, hospital wards are more salubrione than most private sick rooms, for • . . • light not only slays bacteria, it cheers the right to his titlet but .eociety- knows how to Mind. To account for the "-darkened pu po ..velue such easily -acquired tdistenetions, and Tee king is: the the coin thelun7 room?' that is such- an Ordinary accompani. net infrequently- marks Ina vert unpleasant beams, eThe queen is - the -Moon, the hOry mont of illnesi that it May be • said to be manner het/sense Of the estiination in. -which the mooalight. The maid in- the garden is firmlY built Into English literature, we the peep of day, the clothes she he han mg must. go beck -htindreds of year'', when a are theeciouds, and ' the. little. birds that patient Who was sidle say on a . "four - napped off her nose is t sunset; and u.s poster" bedstead, was tightly enclosed with we:havethe whole day. Hari?e Hood red curtains—that Color, through some un- - I inicounhable superstition, being thought to he- be - •up by the arrogaut Lord* Cromer and the Militant Sirdir and General Walker and the British redcoats and the native troops e - and the Mediterranean fleet and the Earl of Boeebery, . with the consent of Gladstone, aged 84. The Jewish Riaz • is al shrewd premier of the Khedive and a - serviceable agent of England; he knows how to set things up to suit all parties in interests Thus goes the- World. We lay bridles fekhe Egyptians one day and make the Egyptians lay bricks for us another day. Look out, ye tyrants !—Sun. Long Distance !Trolley. 'According to the Chicago :Evening Jour, nal, which booms the project, there is dia..' culty experienced eetliatinge the support of capital for the electriecradireagehohanee: that AV_ Arise& aii uncertainty. It is - likely enough that trains will go 100 miles an hour as Scheduled, on the projected road, in good weather, but snow and eleeb blookades, interrupted currents and burned - out fuses may reduce the commercial value of theenterprise. However, _ ultimate IMO - con in. getting the road built is said to he assured; andperhaps the mechanical an- culties may be conquered Also.- 10 holds well. a 7".soi disant. 61 poen% mar - co*" or duke th Thus Prince Deinideff was more than -Once subjeeted to humilia- Alone On this, ecereo as his . origin Wee. 'far •from patrician and his • title gained by 110 • meritorioriii deeds. An*riean girlsr 'might do worse' than take - this inforination to heart,- especially: when going their Maiden teffectieits tete title - unless due inVcs- tigation lanade,-. may.: turn Out te, hita. bogies on. .'t• -.., • • . . To Cook. Canned--peshe :tolti brit from the.cess o Weeping a iiteitOf tit the 'Nervous Sardine, have en occult - potency over disease. Old , - . - Ift • superstitions 'die bard, and -it will re- _ quire years of education, and the united Persons who weep sithat tears- afford relief. Nothing' is more perfectly rue* efforts- of: doctor and nurse, to let in God's 4 nothing more clear when the facts a un- first -created giftto.man to the rooms that .dersteed._ - The relief cemees net - from the', it will warm and brighten and Purify as mere escape of tears, wlitiell is: only P. PPR- nothing else ear,,__Aidependev... . ..- - to the nervous chain. • If the storm be calmed ,,- A houseleeepee of eiperiende says that ' h e -soi3Ole a cook Canned peas sothat - they are at. once by soothing ineasures, as w en w , _wholisoine and tootbscene, firste of all they i child that weeping from fear, annoyance .-should-.be drained q,:uite dry. ' When this is or injury, we quiet .the 'moque; ..centres, . done heatasMuch milk as would naturally i .upon whieh the effect ceases. In chil!dren. . be Used iii.Cookhig. them and when it has . the soothing 'Method - lontaceeds, mkt, icano,, been -14°12.0010 the holli'zig point put in the. antes it succeeds e in f adultes, although in Peas, and, haviog blended Slittle butter and adultii;the cessation of -teats is mere :!eeln... -fiteir eidd ie. •As -..soon is- they again Come =only -dieto- actual O station- folloWin period of nervoias a tivity.—.br. III a to ti:e boil.ing point they are ready to serve. Richardson. Weigh Your Words. Words.may be forgiv4, but they are not Ethateaissillo'r forgotten. ilyou Tbenceatuusenkyionua are not t y\;feeling Atli welI,-or the pettith, annoying little action that you indulge in, simply be- cause you are nervous for worried . doesn't do you one bit of good audmakes eve.rybody around yeu _uncomfortable, and. long after the words . have been uttered or the deed done the memory will•rinkle and burn and you will ' wif3h you had' held on to your tongue and your temper before you got into such 'a scrape. Remember this the next . time that you feel put mit by the world.in general, and when you have conquered the first time it will come easier :and easier every day afterwards. , . The paper: which the Duchess' of Suther- land destroyed a few dap.; ago is said by the London cerrespondent of the New York Sun to have been a_ statement which the Duke caused the Duchess to draw up when she was Mrs. Blair, the wife of Lieutenant Blair, whose body was found on the Duke's , grounds under strange cIrcumstanees. The -I lieutenant had been shot dead, and the verdict of the juty was that he died by his . own hand.. - - • . • Jess—Jack proposed to me seven times , Arrangements are about complete oi a Stgned 92 wills' isefore I finally aneepild hhn. Bess-ffWhat corner in charcoal. In the .gtest _ hereafter` No-Btitiali sovereign has vetoed a Parlia- length of time intervenecl? Jese---0 five Ithere may be a particularly warm corner km Te lato DLit= Sutherland Made. and: • - letedoneis are likely to hear a good deal mentsry bill during the past 185 years. . rebutter or so. - • . the projeetote. sAn. In suit Basentedi . Whe Clerk—What your • husband's. name, madam? The Customer—John "Smith. The Clerk—Plain John Smith, eh The Customer-a-No,indeed John's the handsomest man in Bingtown. : , A patent has been granted for a device for tapering fingers and and reducing joints. There are men and • Women so intense itt their hatred of persons they don't like that their. glee seems perfectly fiendish when told that -this one or that one is a prey to the monster dyspepsia. "The 'worst enemy I have get," said Mr. Brown yesterday,. is dyspeptic, and I ant fielighted itt thepros- .peot he has for enjoyment," and Mr. Brown rubbed his hands gleefully. . "How is it that Jenkin' t baby cured him of drinking VI " Because every time be went home tipsy he thought he saw twins," • •