HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Advocate, 1888-1-19, Page 3f
tatMae '
Aoaicuramante
Tee government experimente this year in
maleing sugar from eorglitine are said to be
very successful- On fair soil the yield of
catte wasi au average of tWelve toes, The
average yield of euger per are watt about
100youn1e and of syrup lee galloes.
is claimed that at this rate, ewe at the pre-
sent low prig° of sugar, the hoiness of snak-
ing suear, from sorghum will be very proat•
Able,
good way of eViotering cabbage is to
poU it up by the roots ou a dry day, wrap
up the outeide leeves carefully end sexigly
mooed the heads and place diem ia a ever,
reete iv. Then cover witle sell lightly at
arst, addino more as the seas= advances.
In order to eecere free occess to the supply
in midwinter, the tndges may be proteoted
from f,reezing wild by some fitter being
tbrowo over it
A *writer in. the elferrer saya that steam,ed
or bnroed bones are easily pounded, and if
old bones, or those diet eetitain decayed
animal matter, are te be exited, put them ert
hot lye for a few honrs, which will clean
thez. The be mode ia to hero them If
there is not teo much fleeon them. They
win Pound or Vied easily velieu hot All
abide af boees are excellent fee poultry, mai
_ servi
Toe nape tof haricy Mee' a* a feed for
hog is zust aaprecloted. Tele/of ist the Wis-
cousin experiment statiou show tbet irse9
pounds of uncooked barle-y meal were re.
d to prdue 100 pouods a pork lase
weight, while of cone meal 40a pototele were
mowed, of cont meal mad Wawa% bad god
belt, 574 peunde, an of whistle ora ontl.
eliorte half awl half, 4$.1 pude woke re.
(Mired, Thie isnot A very etrildestshowing
in favor of 'barley ineel, but it deuteustrato
meet coneliteively that pod; can he mat.
Ably produced on barley to NOtheriare.fons
waere cern eatmot be grown at a pr4t,
Aceortilog to A Western eothority, the
freeduy poiet, seen np to 40 der. Pelee,
tee low for mil= COWS atantliog quietly in
their atolls, far the hot jnIkpraductien.
A mega from 40 dege, to 00 dego ohne
about the right average end is Wide entotigh.
lexperimeute prove that at a lower tempera-
ture they begin to eblver laud at 4 lagber
they begiu to pent in winter. They endure
4 nalteli higher temperatnre in surgeon(' when
they tura out meet milio Dauhtleo they
would eked muett more heot lit whiter if
wed to it, but with the °raillery veolliallott
of atablea it its doubtful if it would be heelth.
fah
While experiereced pealltry 'bivalent prac.
taco waxtuleg the toed sir= to fowls dories:
the 'Pouterfew hooter* or inoskee eeem
&pewee:fate its beoefit, Mow (=dere warn
all the food, whether mixest, co crathed, or
fed whole. In feesling the whole wen, worin
it thoroughly iet the oven, wady porobing
k, (sue one authority') awl that let it vote
off eittficiently to admit the towle estieg it
without ditto:44feet Tbe eooked food which
ie,d from time to time, should to giveo
wenn, aud, when necessary, warmed over
again cm feeding. It hi aurprising what 4
difference warm toed will make le the op.
ply a eggs during the eontinuance 4cold
weather, and eepeciolly iso if die !mete ere
sheltered and properly eared for otherwiee.
Women and the Truth.
"Let him that is without sin caet the
Bret stone."
We are all liars to a greater or lets de.
gree
'but that lamentable fact does not Jo.
con the enormity of the grime.
I once sew a charming lady, in the pre -
some of several guests whoni she had been
entertairting, take the cud from
her aervent's hand, eon it with a alight
frown, and retorts la eaying, "Tell the gen-
tleman I have gone to bed with a violent
beadathe." The servaut bowed and eouvey.
ed the a-Image—thus inereeeing the own
her of hars by two.
Fashionable lie of this kind are not eup.
posed. to count in the latelogno of eine, it
it none co me they aro like paratsitee which
destroy the delicate leovce of a plaut after
a time. They injure and blunt the finer
perceptions of right and wrong.
A gentleman laid a wager with a lady the
other evening that the could not live through
tin following day without lying, unless the
hurt the feelings of !tome of her friends by
aeoming rudeness.
She lost the wager, declaring tbat she
found polite lies absolutely necessary, aa he
had said. I do not believe them neceesary,
however, and I am confident we would win
and retain more friends in the long run if
we built our daily lives on a foundation of
absolute truthfulness.
The moment I detect man or woman in a
he, however trivial, my intereee a,nd respect
Is lessened, and I am sure othee people are
influence& in the same way.
The moment my own lips have uttered a
polite lie I feel a decided lessening of regard
for myself, and am conscious that silence or
tact could have saved me from the foolish
error.
The liar who possesses a good memory
may make a success of his profession for
years without detection. It is seldom, how-
ever, that the art of lyingiand the art of re-
membering are combined n one person.
In some cases lying is a disease and should
be treated as such.
I remember a woman in my own profes-
sion, who told me in onrfirst interview that
she had received Ote for a short •article
whir& had recently appeared. On our
second meeting she spoke of the matter
again, and said she received $50 for it. A
fe w days later I heard her mention it to a
third party as having brought her $25. I
learned afterward that she was paid $15 for
the article. Had she recollected her first
statement I might never have doubted her
word.
Lying is like the opium habit I have
known people who began to tell "white
lies " for convenience, and ended byeeecom-
ing the most absolute and shameless of liars
on every occasion,
cel know two ladies who are otherwiee ex-
llent in character and, both are valuable
members of society. One is a devout church
member in high standing and foremost in all
good works of charity.
Both these ladies seem physically and
morally unable to tall the truth. When the.
truth would better serve their purposes they
choose a lie. They harm no one but them-
selves, as their lies are never malicious and
refer usually to their own affairs.
One of these ladies is fond of telling the
most marvellous stories of herself and her
friends their remarkable adventures, their
extensive wealth, their wide travels, their
intimate a.cquaintaneewith renownedpeople.
If you repeat these fairy stories after her
you cover yourself with humiliation, as they
are almost entirely eabrieetions of her/vain.
If yen disprove her statemente to her face
she looke you in the eyee, and smiles and
emphatically eleclares you misnoderstoed
her words. Her conversation Is sparkling
aud bright, ond yea are =mica and enter.
tained bIy, mita you discover bee gift
for improvising.
The other lady's talent rune more in
mercantile channel, She makes' &purchase
in your preseuce for which she peye $10.
Let a third person enter the room, alai elle
declares smilingly that she has just paid
020 for the article. If you correct her tilie
ineiste that yoa are mistekens Ilex. doctor's
and tient t'a bilks, her eervatet's wage% the
Flee of her bonnets and boots are All sub.
leots of exaggeoted etetenteatk She hos2
tare the maiority of liars, a memory like a
Awe itud conesooeotly controdiets lierself
dozen timers In as raaoy honor,- Her Moneta
all Acknowledge her oufertnnatepeculiariter
but she is al kieddieartred an. aceeseeses ae
many admirable traits that she is tolerated
la epite of her llee.
It eweas to me both of these Wive need
dee serious attention of some epecialiet on
diseases of the bolo.
I ;Ave beard an °plot= eepressed thet
women are less freUlg and tothial than mem
If this its true it is due to their edneateem
Women ere teuglit to conceal and men to
reveal their toe natures from the eradleop.
Wogs= are tatight that the world expecte,
titem to be statue's 0 dem:auntsaul that
ie mercileesto tbe Mee who by word, ;game -
here, or ant hateatee that oula step
own from her petiottel.
Man ktooght that he ta intents being
of Needej readout liable to fell WM error*
which the world endelay furat amlfers
givee, Ile tette the nods abent hie etetarst
mad hie temptation% =a the world lietene,
4)11)1nd:siege and inhumes.
Woe Unto the Woman who, otionetter hew
free from elm coufeene to her hot frietala
thot the bee ever in tbeeglet, even, been
'stirred from her rule ef abeelate decorum.
She ie forever More hooded "deuhtfol,"
Constagently the Melo from tho werlelt
awl, it neCeogary, Ike to ceiteeel bar real
boron exit fano deteeticro I have hoed
the ohjactieu offexea that if we all eptak
abtoluto truth we mot *peak ill of many
people. I do oot believe it. 'I'hero le no
human beiug en depraved that semi owlet
apaken of id= It would be an latezeet.
tug experleuce if we sibmild aRexperimmet
for
an entire mouth in fouling the excelleut
quality to Mendel) in mit oemon we meet,
and kceiling alleuee concerinno, ba Or her
faulte.
Samoa, however* la often made to aero
aa the helpleee tousle:mid of limo Ion
broglue moo eleepizehle Uetion the out
conveyed by eitence wben emelt le otetled
to tlefena Um reputed= of route eietina of
malice or envy, afany o neme hso be=
shadowea by the sigalatiost silent lie of one
who ehould hove spelt= the word of deka eta
I am afraid this 144 pimos of fahmbotal more
feminine Ulan lalatialtilliC
Liao, hike poetv, Ore More frequently born
tbaa made, but certain methods of edUelitiert
eau =create or cure the maledy. It le odd
that eeveral of our greet minas% were ter.
rible liars in cbildhood. Thar vivid home.
Miami portrayed eventa and eecees which
they related a, actutalaccurrencee. Utilized
in fiction, their bittern propeeeity to exag.
gerete common events became valuable to
the lover of exciting fiction.
A child tsbould be taught to eonefeler a
sUght preverkation a a deearture from
morality, and triot truthfulneze of tweed).
even in trivial smatters. as one et tho high -
et -.shame.
However lightly we may epeak of telling
" white line" we all feel an sustInctive re
&poet for the moat or woman who bas won a
reputation for sincere tntatbalness, and We
have but to build our eau lives on the same
feuded= to be regarded in tbe tome light.
Improper Shoeing.
1 Many of the ailments and demeans of a
horecs's foot aro catteed by improper sauteing.
One of the wont of the serious evils is the
practice by a number of blacksmiths of hot
fitting and clipping. Burning the stole of
the foot will in time partially destroy tho
sensitive lamines. It Impairs the membrane-
ous lining under the coffin bone ana closes
the pores of the born, cs.usieg the hoof to
btcome hard,:dry and britsle. It alto ign.
pedes the healthy growth of the hoof.
It Is alleged that shoos cannot be fitted. AO
rapidly nor us closely as by hot fitting, and
this is generally true, for by this means the
hoof is burned to correspond with the in.
equalities on the turfece of the shoo, untd
the Utter is thoroughly imbedded in the
horn. Owners of horses should see that
their bled:wilds do not practise this in.
jurious mile of fitthlif shoos
Costly sympathy.
It has been noted by dietinguishea people
that the senders of telegraph messages of
sympathy or congratulation on occasions
calling forth =oh messages to them, over-
look oftentimes the prepeyment of the toll.
The widow of a promises nt mantwas °bridged
not long ago to pay a telegraph bill of $30
for "collect" condolence messages.
The Spectator stigmatizes with just sever-
ity M. Pasteur's proposal in the Paris Temps
to compete for the prize of £25,000 offered
by. the Government of New South Wake,
for some mode of destroying the rabbits
which have become a pest in that colony, as
an "almostdiabolic expedient." IL Pasteur's
proposal as to transport to New South
Wales the microbe of chicken cholera, and
to spread the disease amen the rabbits by
watering their food with contaminated soup,
in which this micinbe would be conveyed to
them. This, the Spectator thinks, bears out
the contention always put forward in that
journal "that science is becoming more and
more unscrupulous in its manipulation of
the mighty but only half -understood agen-
cies which it has itself discovered." The
physiologists "turn vivisection into a
scourge," and now to prepare " to spread
plague with truly sublime rashness amongst
our poor fellow creatures, and this without
any possibility of knowing what this tre-
mendous instrument may effect." Less
dangerous perhaps, since its effects are better
known, but scarcely less repulsive to the
finer feelings of humanity is the suggestion
of a resident of Winnipeg, to ship to the
afflicted country some North West rabbits
affected with a plague which is said to
appear periodically among the rabbits there
and carry them off in great numbers. We
can scarcely auppose that the sanitary
science whiled is striving so hard to prevent
the spread of coata.gious diseases in men and
animals would look complacently upon a de.
liberate attempt to transport and propagate
beyond the seas even a rabbit -destroying
MR. enANABERLAIN Gun
SPE EVIL
41 the Toronto Board or Trade .tnnual
Dinner,
Mr. Chamberlain, on rising, was received
with prolonged cheering aud weiriug of
handkerchiefs, the company etandlog. efe
old t—hirs President arta gentleinen,—I
thank you most eincmely for the kindnese
with which, yen have reeeived me wed for
the itoureoce whieh this kindeeee givee ef
your sympathy and aupoort. tlfear, bear.)
I am Very glad to he here among you, end
to hove the hewer of meeting en Many of
Ike ponds:mut repreeentativea of thet ao•
talrity ated enterprise which have none sa
Viten for theprosperity ot the/tomb/Ion, and
which hove made the (amen City et Canada
A great Centre of conimaretal lfe and en er.
prim (Ileer, heat) Mr. President, yott
e4a vary tway that the finhject
you liave Called Ine to reepond is a fee-
reatheig one. 11 IS the COMBeereml inter,
Sete of the Empire ---ant a 0, part alone.
(War, hear.) am glad that the Beard of
Toole of Toronto think Me worthy of re -
vending t9 SO large a 'object (Cheerio.)
prOltee to me, at 40, events, *list you have
not been prejudiced by mortising you may
have beard to my ditseavantage. Wagons-)
I reed thie moroing in tem of your meet in-
asteonel teenage an appeal whkh wast ad.
dreseed to me pereooelly, mid In wEllett
woo aola that I tad dettlarod diet the intereets ef Chnsela meet be stthteraiO4ted to
those of Manebester. In other artalee la
the eome eper I have Remo it alleaesi that
came over to treprement tsb exporters.
Tbot is a meat tmfortoesate takapprateusian
of the foots. (Owens and Istuoittar ) I on;
here tie the repretentetive of Getat Britolo
(hear, heartooteting est behalf of her okay
of C'enerle-o(cheere)—Wheee lettreete the
is hound lo lismour to deferel. (Renew.
ea ghosts) If 1 WI wed aoy leugiusge
thee which like been imputed To me
I ahould heve bean =worthy of the pod-
tiou which I held. (Hear, hear.) 1 eats
mere yeu that, except SI for US tine inteecite
a Binetteghisee aed gattebeeter areiriesoth
col with yeuru, yen Limy trutt rile to lay
them aakle oaths) prenut °wedge. (Cheent
I regret timee naletakea en the port of the
inEueutiel organs of pulsate epistle% not so
• much ouauypertseami grouude ae Nemo
they tend to doeredit and to gruloarcssa the
negotiatore who are engaged to yoer linti-
neSS-s-(beara)---heeatise to that exteut they
damage your gate. (Clacorta) Bet 1 have
referred to thie otetter for *setter NAM—.
beCalogg 1 Want to paint erne to yoo *bet we
bora little too mu= about alitagenilln of
lutereetet (Hort hear.S Oar intereete,
Toluiand thew of the Neater Ceuntry,
and I well go further and ttey these et the
United Stowe, ell lie in the some direstiou.
'Icor, bora Wbat tte pleuipotmatiatio
eve to do is. to thew that there it not
divergeeee, but ideutity ef ilatereek, and if
it dove not exiet we have to create it
Wheerea We have to deal witb tbete polnta
lucid a eplrit as than thew that we 1aLro
to no= frieudly agreement which will be
mutually beneficial and satiefaetery. gshp-
plausol I *peek tonight under couelder.
able ditaeulty. 1eonfeea that at tint I
hedtated to eecept your itopitable invites
dote beeauee I woo afraid it would not he
passible for me to mate an adequate response
to your hindnete. Sinee the commlesion I
hove undertaken imputes reattictions upon
me whiett I am bound faithfully to (MOTO,
I am not free to Mecum tome of thew 41110.
dons which have probahly tho greateae in-
tereete for all of ue. I am Sure you will
make every ueceetery allowanee, and will
not expect from: mo any prontsture
diteleaure Of c mlidential nenotatienn or a
fell discussion of matters, of eentrovexsita
policy. (Applause.) Although I am afrold
I cannot prorafee you tho covet:alleles/don el'
any State went, yet there are Some general
consideratiorm whieh effect importent Mat.
ters, and %Melt I propete, with yonr paresis.
sion, to lay before you. (Applause.) In
the first place, as to dm epirit In width a
combed= of tide kind should be under.
taken. Ae1 paused through Itugind and
the United States, and again when I crossed
the boundary of the Denduion, there waif
one idea impreeeing iteelf -upon my mind at
every atop, indelibly written upon the face
of tea vast countries, and that was the
ereetness and importance of the distimstion
for the Anglo Saxon rate— (Cheers) — that
proud, persistent, selausserting and resolute
stock will& no chants of climate or condi-
tion can alter, anti which is infallibly boned
to be the predominant force in the future
history and civilization of the world.
(Cheers.) It is said that patriotiem begine
at home., 1 amatt Englishman. (Applause.)
I am proud of the Old Country from which
I came. I am not unmindful of the glorious
tradons attached to it, of thee° institutions
moulded by slow centuries of noble endea-
vour ;but I shottld think our -patriotism
was warped and stunted indeed if it did not
embrace the Greater Britain beyond the
seas—(eheert)—the young and vigorous na-
tion carrying everywhere throughout the
globe &knowledge of the English tongue and
English love of liberty and law. eCheers.)
With these feelings I refusesi to speak or to
think of the tinned States as a foreign na-
tion. (Applause.) They are our flesh and
blood. Still lese am I lei:lined to make any
distinction between these interests of Eug-
lishmen at home and Englishmen in Canada
and Australia. (Cheers.) What is the blot
in regard to thetre peoples the older andthe
younger nations 7 Our FLA is their& Their
future is ours. You cannot if you would
BERKE THE INVISIBLE BONA.
which binds us together. (Cheers.) Their
forefathers are our forefathers. They wor-
shipped at our shrines. They sleep in our
churchyards. They helped to make our in-
stitutions, our literature and our laws.
These things are their heritage as much as
our If you stood up to deny ie your
speech and countenance, your manner of life
and institutions would all combine to be-
tray you. (Cheers.) I urge upon you our
common origin, our relation ship, because,
while the things °Defer privileges, they
also entail obligations. We are all breeeoh-
es of one family. It behooves us to do all
in our power to promote the good feeling
and affection that ought to characterize
the interoouree between those peoples.
rafferenees there, must arise, petty con
-
bete of interests and of rights; but if we
approach them in the proper spirit, mutual
respect and consideration, I don't believe
that any controversy can or will arise
amongst any members of the English-speak-
ing races that will not be capable of satis-
factory and hc noureble adjustment. (Cheer)
I am glad to tell you that this spirit has
animated one and all of the plenipotentiezies
ettee at Waslaington, and it is 'upon, the
mdstence ef that spirit that t base my hope
and me. beltef thet ehall find, an arrange-
ment of thie centroverg waleh will be sat-
isfaetory 10 every Man nha doiree eincerely
to promote the unity of the Englielospeak-
ing peoples. (Cheer4) I don't thing it
oeceseary that shoula urge upou you
yew epeciel interot in good neiglitenithood
with. that Great Republio which fey thou-
sands Qt utiles is separated from you, esoly
by an iovielble line. (Hear, bean)—The
great interests with which we are entrusted,
important as tbey ore, are really insignafis
gent beeicie the unporteuee of inaintaimeg
thew geed relationo--(hear, bola—end to
SWUM theae good regime, to matintobe and
to Priam. then; all that le neceossety -.is that
wo &should approatat the ditficuley to the
Spirit that I hare indicated, tat we should
deal with it AS amen? friende who aro alto -
'item to come
TO eiswisCanneRY 41144NOMMIT,
• abort time in the history of nations since
Confederation. Lees than 4 genera -doe heel
paSSed away, teed yet 4 new 4,:ainids, has
been revealed to us. (Appleteee.) Not the
ice -bound desolation which imperfect infer -
Illation formerly pictured, but e. vast streMh
of fertile territory which enures home -8 for
a towing populatieo of God-fearieg and its
anstrious inext and women at oo diatant
date. (Cheers,)With this determioadou
10 malutain, as I hope they Will—nay, ro
drew loser the bootie which unite them to
Great Britain—I am Cenrinced their loyalty
and affectien will never look a warm re.
tspoese. They will be eltizeos of we mean
State. They will bo citizena of 4 deride:MA
the like 0 wliich
Tin WeRXX.0 OAS ICRVZR ARM
• with regent exteote population*, reemiree*
and variety of lied:gem who owed allegiance
10it. (toe of our poets Mr. Mottlieve Art
ooldt bas weet4n of the overwhelming bur-
dens of thie van Empire. The blirdeus. are
vast it in true bue we wait zest los= them
hy owerdly Seirrender—(cheers)—ora mean
betrayal of the intereete entrusted to our
ore. Relief mot foosolio widening the
foutulatioos of the great Cooreaeratien, end
oot mining away the outpeeta, (Chorea
The inteeeet of tree demagog. is cot teem*
anaeehy or tile dtaintearatioa el die Empire,
but rather towaris the uniaisig together
kindred raaeos WW1 sbollor obteeto You
have a peetton ha the great intai that Ike
before um It rosy yee titot the fedeeetiou
of Cooado May be the lamp lightioa mir
path to the federatiort of the Britialt Empire.
I (Cheers.) If it isa. dream -4z may be only
ithe nnagination oaf so vedeodase—it is
grand Nest tileor iseeza It le gee to sitimo
latei dee pen -leant -a and etetetuminhip of
every man who lovee hie weary ; and
whether it ha deetieel or nut to perfeet
treolizetko at leen os all cherith the
, seutnemit itmeetrea. Tat de SR our
'sewer to promote it, mad eularoe the rele,
tame and good will which ought altvoye 10
oohs; betweeu sons of Eeolani tbroughoot
tbe werld ood the oat folio et hone, tPro-
• longed elteerteg4
ood not ers• between edveramiess struogliie
for petty pointe mid other extremietrighteS
weet1
and ting every 0:Meted's:at aa tileagit it
were a. loaa and eaeritme to the .etheres
(Obeer.) . Another general Obeentatioo '
will ventore to umhseitoel !it is Mit
e which 1
annaipateoeneral atifent, :Anything witteh
ean increow ond develop emorsteraitsi
times betreeen the two countries los not wally
4 good. thing let teie It Ueda to bring
aletue• tide goo4 feelleg whicit I stokes
(Hems here.) It appear* to mo thet tho
propeots Of improved reletetets with the
United Stetea lover /mama moot tespefel---
fepplaitee)-044 this* these will- corn. e,
zadepeeilene of bergolo Pegg's-mimeo.
Wbet: ie Fusing be the I.:hated Statee at Ode
eastateut leede Ine to believe dot drone.
atencee .41; orostisteue date .will levee *lie
Government of that emnitry to oemodel he
teeiff s more liberal :Whatever
penes . Fewer, lo epininiait ifo eer-
taio • that lit A few feats tee •Orkt wifi be
diudiatilied Or altered so that it Will catotes
to be 4 of cenuneecial excluden • be.
tweea the United States end the teet.of the
tietieue of the world. flipplentsal If tisk
ehaego otemeet about, as 1 predietosalthough
huew hew elougerours it to attempt to
proplewytowbet ludnenee Will it beve upset
your' tartff due side ot the Nee le le
cleft's: true that oseti Wit burdened—Mid
not likely to be An early doto-ob,y eur.
pies of 120 millione—ileughtert—bet I tenet
it Is ottly the United Statee witieh in
to =ger team this pletherie Ceaditlen,
amighter). There are °tiler weeidexeliten
widett may net tend in A *linnet' (Breeden.
Mom ie tate meet urgeot steed of Canada A:
thie moment t so the develoaments Ib -
eerie/ emil practice! develoemetat of the
limitable mamma of Tow cestutly, Nellie a
ee joist beers %maintop by your neagniarmot
roilway. You wisest to get opou the bud at
the earliot ienteibleatlioe see ladantrione etiol
aetive poptaletiere, vim will
WARR TOM 341:11k5 AAP num&
toriff aninaaelliarily hisslleoundersteod,
I do not premme to offer any espial= open
your toristorthatightert—I merely melte the
general ebeervotiou ; I do pee say wbether
your tuff la or k not unneeetteerily hies,
that alepentle up= how you feel it --(laughter
awl applause).—but! say that a tariff which
is unneseoserily high punt have a tendency
to sahckle pram tely the agricultural I aduatry
you wish to toter, audshvertfrom it Isamu.
which wall go into other inairstriee etimulat.
ell by its operation. I am ready 10
thirst with the inheritore of anew emutry in
their reprodoetion at any idea that thei
conetry than be one in which their imlustries
shall bo monotonouely eouthied to e aingle
oecaptt(on. I see tit° ocea for various
pursuita and occupations, but in the Case of
Called% newest:de:you thie seam trarely
premature. Tito drat objeet is to get the
papulation to own the land. When you
ban) tho Industrious producers,
you will find you have eeeereel a vast popu
socials of oneuraere, aud that a variety a
industries will spring up itua prosper
whether disrobe auy tantior eat, (Applanue.)
Gentlemen, you will ace from witat I hove
ventured to say thet I am in favour of the
widest possible Commercial Union—theme
hear)—aud iutercourse, not only with the
United States but 'with all the world,
(Chem%) Tittat is the true, unrestricted
redprooky. (Hear, hear.) ft is a very
restricted reeiprocity, indeed, which would
make you dependent for your financial free.
dem upon the government of another state,
and, perhaps, pave the way for the surrender
of something which is atilt more important
—Imo= your political freedom. (Cheers)
Sonie people, it appears, who have adopted
a well-known sayine of Mark Twain, appear
to think that as upon this continent the lion
must lie down with the Iamb, it would be
better if the lamb consented at once to lie
down inside the lion. (Leinshter.) confees
that I don't entertain that opinioe—(bear,
hear)—and I don't think it wortb. while,
even If it were proper, to delouse to -night
the various prapoeals marc or leo disguised,
more or less msidious, for your painless
extinction and possible ablarption. (Cheers.)
I have not discovered in the course of my
stay lathe United States any general desire
on the part
or AsitatiC.thr Vrkortaf,,
who have a good stock of territory of their
own, to increase it and increase their respon.
sibility at the same time—(hear, hear)—and
any such arrangement as that which I have
been considering, if it comes about at all,
must come about after full discussion and
with good -will on both aides. (Hear, hear.)
Gentlemen, when you become tired of the
mild sovereignty of the Queen, when you
cease to be proud of the institutions you
yourselves have trained with due regard to
your local needs and requirements, and when
the slender tie wnich still binds you to the
Mother Country, and which, like the electric
cable, exerts no force or pressure, yet still
maintains unity of sympathy and of interest
—when that becomes an intolerable strain to
you, then it will be time for us to consider
necessary measures of relief. (Cheers.) In
the meantime I cannot but think that, in
the working out of the great problem of fede-
ral governme it which seems to have been
left in charge of the English people, we shell
the quicker teach the perfeotion of onr free
institutions by diversity of methods, and
that these will be more fertile and sturdy
than if modelled upon. a general view of a
single and stereotyped form. Rest assured,
if you desire to remain an integral part of
the vast Empire of the Qaeen, your interests
will be maintainei, your rights will be re-
spected with all the influence which that
Empire can vsield. (Cheers.) Your fellow -
subjects throughout the world will rejoice in
your prosperity and take pride in your
ceaseless activity and look forward with
confidence to the steady development of
and mumps•producuig epidemic. who has recently been engaged 10 confer- your illimitable resources. It is only a
•
14),IM tbe Ttire5ilaad.
Ogre, awe we etaret wata _..,,ellr,tAnt tett
tepee the threshe:d 0 meteor leer ;
Thst line where ;nit end preerat seem ta meet
stronger cargos:. than theida 4sesohere.
1141414::ag:141AgatroWIMeri*.
Vim mcliretiam er; Wet CA*
Vi4h
ahalttpen wises one te fzrget
84-,sreanst flagn szaa &hen resr.:;=ty'S ilogerits
4:7.14 MeXe Watts the dylug a -tar feehts 1
IvoliaNt tha;" ne Ote agadatr;;;te citnngloW dem
••Or ktitith.ma Me toner 2uIt1
sclumaCgestlr..,7--aral the falternir heat
8cam etre! my eet ts4.3 M4 ego* If
!"4?
Fos, gay a:Amine:in WM be F:eyet tessarrare
malanz, Mu teoct "
literemeM,Iry errs Ca" g glen ;;teani
Acmes the pith 0 life red eblete Geht:e
And ceir the serene ttsare 14-E!I drirani,
And Errix dime Ike eye itasl kills Om Resta,
'11"Nt-?7,-*Vir,VH4'4,tlfglgi*7*
_It; man e ee, anodic:0 ;
MT.* W4Vel eU c MIonzserr4m%tioz, shore,
And ;delis the W2t4 eat }Aram tennetri the Slim.
litre ends the cliecherrd pep el 'nava ar.1
fat than wart' ani Ignes u sit all awry.
Item they matt stand est some Qtr NI. %sane;
shut limbo*, oa1 1012io year cent -Me
Bing oat: wad, Belle.
Ming an. Cid ters„ta the wiril sky,
The tlyiracleat, the frosty Nett;
The s, ar se it. hurl,' the" tOit;
Rhizoid, =take:Di eel id hitg
rat the c.1& ring intherm
Raw, happy belis omits the IISSW
The year Is wing:lea Mango;
Ring oat the take, rlag in the tree.
nine out the ct rf tint sain the Tahiti.
Far these mat Ittre we nee no mere
Ithoz cut the fa it rice arid pane
len; in matte to an wastinud.
Mac eat a othnly d"ina mete,
send mint tones et play etrae;
Meg in the nehie • um* s si
With etter mataitrs, purer
Ring outthe want, the etre, the ma,
Theta; hirits oddness et the tittles ;
Ring out, rang out my 'roundel rhymes,
nut ring the fuller minstrel la.
Mug oat WO pride In pines red blood,
e vie 'dander and the PpIte;
Meg in tlie lova ot truth ABA right,
Ring in the common load get&
Mr oat old shapes of foal disease,
Ring out the narret+inglIst of cold;
iting oat the thousand wars of old,
Ring in the thousand years tf peace.
Rire in the valiant Mae, wet free,
Tee largerheart, the kl-dlier hand;
Ring oat the darknus of the land,
Run; iu the Christ that is 10 10.
In Cromwell's time the gates of Hyde
Park were dosed against the "mases and
"tbe clasees " exeept on payment of an en-
trance -fee. The gates -were guarded b y por-
ters carrying long staves,who prey ented
any one from passing in without payin g his
reckoning—a shilling per head and sixp erica
for a horse—end who enforced strictly de-
corous behaviour.
ear. Caamberlin hit the right nail on the
head when he suggested that the crofters
should be induced to emigrate to the North.
West. These hardy sons of the soil are
just the men to develop a new country.
Thoroughly inured ta the hardships of a
coldand rugged climate, the inconvenienoes
of our winters as long as their lands were
fertile, would. count for nothing, and while
they prospered our country would increase
in stature. There is room and plenty and
a hearty welcome in Canada for all the crof-
ters that will come.
A party of gentlemen from Kingston,
Jamaica, have gone on a search in the ship
Maria to look for the treasure of Buccaneer
Morgan, whose pirate ship Phantom was
wrecked years ago in quicksands some
twenty-five rniles off the coast of Belize.
This same party of adventurers on a previ-
ous trip to that coast claim to have fixed the
exact locality where hes the treasure cradled
by the ribs of the old pirate ship. Being
without appliances for the recovery of the
treasure, the party returned.
• As an illustration of tbe facility with
which the charitable are imposed upon, a
clergyman in Central London told the fol-
lowing anecdote the other night :—Last
winter he traced nearly a hundred coal
tickets to one woman in his parish, She
had hired will coals instead of money all
the cellar accommodation hi the house, end
had even stored some of the coals under her
bed. Even when the clergyman bad expos-,
ed the imposture he had imme difficulty in
preventing a lady from giving this women
still further relief.