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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1889-1-17, Page 2etassar. HEEE AND TanE. God's love For Man. THE Ton,B_T or DBATL _ God'a love for num leen through the n Themes Wilkireon of Verne's, N. Y., haa a. beatd five feet long, wbich he weEgfi 5.0 -are. It dine not diminish as he grows. neenartne Emote!" criminals. tor the rate tucked veder hio vest. I oldr. Neither don the loyal. child of God abete his effeetion whea he reasthea man's Toward 4 cr 5 o'clock, when everything 01 Oat Ontetointon lenge. The wealthy Ceineee of Port/and, Onn, ' t t Th 1 t"9shile mighe to grow ei. reedy miteide, the warden of the prime, helm erdatribed nioney to build P. large estate. „gdete, eree44trulecl by experienee and eccompecied by eeveral effieeils, pee to the hoseital kr seer eountruien. ConOrreed by the °enact:ea love. "Behold eondennied man's cell, aid shaking bine by ed McKee. men lambed lett hie wire wheb manner a love the Feeher hath be- the ehealder semernices Oust his demand nept me *tore elold, tin after the funeral stowed, upon ue, that we ehoeld be ealled for pardon has bees rejected. At" BOETA as and tber recited hie eleike ter leet tin:e. ti tile Boas of Civdro ILI tba,t word 'none we the prisoner has (tressed, himself he le, if he Oise of the featurea et the religioes 'belief mini read the euggestion of a dignined, so desire; left alone with the chaplian for a &Mlle W heeler Wilcox is -thief; "eFaee is ' matured, confirmed relatioaship with tlae few moments '- afterwerd be is led to the eopled die: Advanced epirits who toe Fether. It suggest, as "little cbildrthe toilet roma. First, his shirb collar ie cut aped ihicugh former incethatiore, aud i woald not auggest a manly serviee aud de- &Vey 30#ffeient1y. to allew the guillotine whe Benteetisbe with us and strengthen ne i votion and a manly appreciation of the erea Mille to fall upon hie bine neck; tben he is whets we ',Ey fer Isein f lest in eltirituel mast- 5 eines father's love, The eamis. thought may fastened With 4 cord steetlen fronts the ifestatithe or =Vet mileatione, but iu =ore 4! be arrived at by the men of tweuty five, or elsouldera And conneettng with another cord salstle arid nariterieses ways teyond the,-. thirty or more years, who bolds Ida own diet binds the two wrist_ ,sf a tbiXd cord goes mind of men to fathom, !i., father, yet a vigoroue and active man, in a from the wrist to the kneee, where le is A Lime tantaliser of sloe iefinentiel journal's ;' tended beert•embrace, end tinds in that joined to another cerd already paned le the -6-:ata of :Kew yaw have just dig. i %titer a wimp dbizer, a eeafidaiet sue b, OM. erourril the lege, covered tbat the i.e.w law providing for ehe ... psasioa. Herein is a developmeut of lore; Thus etrapped, the culprit is obliged to execetged by eltzicity oll perops edrad,med i 80MeThing added to the love vshielt the to death is an .i4.toirelaea with thc neerty i yonger meta felt for the elder twelaty years of the prees, end sbeuld therefore: be de- .' eeemething which the love of the yoning- lared utioral. doi I er for his own ehildren bait not yet attained. euumesetitThe provieiou ch. jeettd to fe, "o acseeet 0 the d„.ttet of Te bricg its felieity more clearly into view - any saele exthation beet ad the statement of ; !,htt es thrn to the words of one wise took de - the feet that leech thaviet wae oa zee day in / ndhe •in dePleded the 2aoredness of home tigeSttQn 4°Y XI4l/ted .46''''''rlig-e W tue: "le is the mast beautifel object the eye Aientlatebbelafier tr°44;ezbittobreracr n4ifeen:N74(10bur:loncrr Le • . . newspeper. law at the Ogee, shall he Parifehea ie anY 1 f behold to see a In, - ef werthe,ud ary to tleegeneralimpreesiee, is not conceal - e mau eau 4 , 444 Wieneipeg Mee furnished itspalaidel bigi 4011 WO in an entire leareserved corree ed from hie gaze. The dietance front the " to the; pegeeem The mutual kiadnees and affee- door at thegeldotiae is scercely twentnetepe, Tom Baekiti case in Damen", a fellows i teen 'between them give an inexpressible sat and as aeon ae the criminal reachee the swing- r-atced Leiti laY"1112g, fir4 reatie a brute ef )1, fefaetion to all who know them. It is a ing board the chaplain (mita him, the execta Yt hiaM'elt. wean liquor. thenhe to the tegellY quhricac, plcaawo *idea Inereatee hy tbe per, teener Wan Idea eed„ pealses him OA to the ileetdled AnIstaTtgo wti1103 he reeeivee! fret° i tielpetioe. It is ee eacretl 44 triendithip,. as /a5,etzie. .eal4 1 ratk I a elich AO. ii, tiled ; the the aa1oo. V S pleeenrAble as love Aud 43 jeyfel ee religieu, fell of the hada the heavy mead of the body to deeth. tVe hope thet in gal CA1-44 at umq Ili Thie mate of mita does uot only diseipate fielfieg tete the brae box. The movemeuto Me IN' 1414/34154 'elltieteetaiiitttt win e''t" ',sorrowwifielt would he extreme without in ere einueit eimititeenenn Tee knife felts. the gellates of Ito vietini. Then wile hiliete'. but eul'arges pleasures wbiele otherwise would The criminal dieePPeelee. geght,t0 heengt end if 4„"kl- be,.,111.44/5iltees ; be contemptible. The meet indifferent thing As sooa se the ceremony is over the body the eeteem 4"Per4 we° se" t''d el et4 Pm-5O4113in ile force end beauty wens it is /melte by is Plectla In a wagon414 C44VOY44 to Ivey1:4118bt ;o be eidrPeti la ja •411 the 4u1r. 4.- a hied father, eted att insigeidcaut niee bee Vet/14017s Where it is buried in the toren) dereni and the poison itellera are the gore et 2 q in weight when tittered by a dutiful child," deld. Mee the nareata reciedut the loody get on without. Yee* a dent eetelletteltY eau N'orY emitY 1 From such a reletiouship one may gather 41Ala it 14 itaeTred ia moodier pert of the =Ie. 4 new commentary on vouthip and may en. tory TM Pealle io ever putupou the heecletone No little itailigeetion is expreeeed tie the. !ergo hieteas cenieerning tbe ineffeblepleas. its erder notto exeitepeblie curioeity. When oaEn les of else Eaelliti t AirtN. Coe -petty l tiree erul letiviteges of the tura of Go, Aivg Th.§ wily is zsz miatirtsd the Pretest of he Deaden regardieg the reptat diet came ; who, thrmegb Ceriat 44 their elder Mothers Pace authorize -a the reenitY et Medicine to receetly frees Zerzibar to the tenet that '5 boo ateneed no that Mete of eenebip, take it. Strictly speakhon, the eorpse night the emuipeey net culy witelre4 at elavery, -, eaeoe spirituel comfort:a of which tbe bigheetdeOt to be delivered to the foulty until otter but actuelly coutribatea int astietance to the, type of euthin lannhip furuielne but feint 6 twenty-four hours, this delay being Accorded Arab slave flealera to Carryon the infaineuelinuetratioe. Tliey are neared of the SytO• to the fondly to make tea dm:timid, hut the repere which, et bellevea to he true, would i eamidee made for their ealvatiele; they ropy latter 4 eituelated buried whets eheeuthoritlea let lone apse' it an overwhelealcg torreat of 7 etheirn hint 44 a eeridtlent, heeattee he Uivitee are certain thet It will not be reolaimed, bewtver, ere doubted by etimene end theee 1 mimeo to thenewatextehipe meth ;halvah the iviefiee- The tedet. and all the °Pendent' that agattog ante de 440+4 heteitate tet enereze the.. gaideree of the Hetet Spirit it is pendia:a to ,r: quire emend with his pentioe are perferm belief that meth created werh baeheeudoese "walk with Oat" Om Abet mem who bAVO ,,gd leY the AIL trefee. The cempeay )143relifi te deUy 4 ;; patily of the Fether, by the ruiparaltleled, Ctietoin le to give that: tiny auc4 coatreet de reported. este, perpleeittea in payer; they 0411. reverentlylmouy the diet ezecutioneruever tonata the Beitith publec opinioa. The vote cletsiale 7 their confidence:mid the utifeLlitog.efell their Dining ttle whole el Ode ludehriene ere In Afriee lee' thin orearizetion fertile sake el grown old ineonglf to realize the ylzhm of reederiun tee eheruels of traie len ceelimele • an e3r¢b3y father 4 love, and the sweetness Greenlapd's Stiameeus plateau. a.7ted tradwrishe hes riot beta allewed to their heavenly Fether aloe to "eerie for the dleedeeY w"'etee"fe• rter sate "*8 eereraefil i of tween, 7,ecompaue ceverthelne zeiterr and etioreeliatea of hone, world %tee their Atte in denlels. and =ern that seam die, heats to reetiva aid feast npen Me love of „ e'aw'F•etee, LdeTZ44,„78 d thae ,alrezu"Ltile isimere eleven ben fabricated the story to re- ii joya ef that Feteer'e ileum in Titieh 4.74 "VAng were" 'firvee7twhe 'as" tiumt/ler I'v*"' venoms ithiated. Mr. MeKinueraneretary of i meue venni:me. net reach in ler several montbs, AU the tbe ccm pang, is At pravat in teeollaud, and 5 . party arrived at the Wilt Gaut ten late to hie telsereiteatee in leendon refute to tall; of i cetch the lea vowel. The held letters, Green Sall Dres$es. the matter, contenting theratelvee by mere- I however, fain Nauven and Sverdrup, diet 1 deuying. the etatenients, Ara dem tunic In cOutEmpleting the meet uove1co3SUrn reaelacilIeistut jutot ces the lam vcesel of the totraaeUt3 He% =petted for Wfat* at full area, eceneione out, eeeeen wee 7(.8ffallS anchor, Sive Immo verY 4- .7- I itA It'd to it.li -4 h, „ nescwortty ieforamtlen which, in coenection "t/r01)155.11,51'rklf11:YI:eove7e1t4:181gebfwtilditig43:leveStertaral'etleAtere4truate'l, 1 ItrtlueT?actehilitl. aileite312rs'otpTdiTitillrknitirin','Ect (7, ..441. ,,,, ''',,: edtiAl?"ivisehrW:htteli3erntilat elinleerr Ilium log fade bo eoued lift 0 wee, after tyroapaerrtyis,tattio derhealentisi,eNivicithe800fretteowractrest,pler: °ler autlik one of the leftlest tvelomi that a pege heo efecee fe aot ohtafteogg I Neither of these gentlemen intiroathe that Therefore, tight ateys are entirely enemies- in their long jurney they new any enema hese, eovered with a tin& tebleclotts, bow 211 iteineexcept mar the coast. Their treacle - tile ,, n iludwe „ amoca frees, ietatere Ono of she neweat ()cages se he the mom, and promo:to asurneys juetify the conclusion ale :a awl La cep thee fled Greek otyle, enelio destined to be 12161C11 that imur Grienlend is a vein unduleting e animal'clitnaat a youna deueemen from ameez the addtteee weee wo-u at tbo optra and at dinner puttee as Vete= covered deep under enow and leo at no 'pi :Mau of equal tremendc es altitude cured of a stiffanklejeintwhieh had troubled WC11" da.e°'''' (inc dress 111240 in tide feint' i'l of d foe le oicate peach dink geadpore egh. ie toned he OhieWre in tbe twirl / °fatale% of ftr wake. Tee kteurer wound nei by with a nem of bent fawn :elk embroidered Thibet. For nearly three weeke, they tell ran:shit g teat "hem what yea Mem :teen in threads et Japancee _Gold caught on the ue, they travelledat an al titude of over 9.000 you mile feenudate a beautiful nerfee of ehouldiars by a baw ot pick ribbon, An- feet. Am their progren was at the rote of spe. ulastene, but eh that hme been exhilsiteil crepe do chino em over ten milea a day they must have ao f.:.o. v. at) emitting bat triekery an freed otht r le eel of ciel blue au r es nrenetiem is That balder. d in marguerites, : tad is exeeptiati !journeyed between 150 awl f.'00 miles et an i. concerned. W ally pretty, while a third is of white mode, 'altitude above the sea of nearly 3030 feet wheel is curet nay called by melt a name meterhda )higher than the summit of Mount 'Vega inc de tole, one of the favorite exitets elide' in imaginal:ha and no -Mitre dee. leteteeriem lin gothing to do with mageet, of the dity, eon has forget -me -note and mon ineton, No wonder thnt at that immenee l rose bads embroidered about the marl and liembt, in about latitude OV north, they lam, and sil the :neer phenotnena can he . - • found, oven in reidsemmer, extremely cold productd witheut the help of lather, as the • Y , g g la s are ueeor these reeressee, and they weather and trying nincle. s liftleg of tee tittle hi merely a trielt and the d fGk dNordenskiald'a two Lima, several hiuedred are then krolled twee' t kept up, rope ion, o lame young man nue trained for the coca- . .miles north of Niemen's' route, attained an ion. ' . . mime teem or pe, i The hair ebould be worn in a low roll at elevation of 7,000 feet at a dist:nice of 140 The real name of Ouida is Lyle° de la the uape of the uedit to mateh these gowna milee from, the west coast, Mr. Peary, at Rame. Her father was a Freh entnaher n, d , . with the front' in a htgh, fluffy bang or nom' 100 miles from the west coast, -reached a mother English, and she Pessestts the j padour, and adorned with one or two °ma height of about 8,000 feet. Dr. Hayes, 900 national ctiatterieties of both parents; her mente. Sandaled shoes are also worn. They ot Nnsen a route pushed inlaud tastes manners and literery methods are miles north a are made of satin the colour ef the dress sixty miles, where he wale 4,500 _ feet above decid."dly Freneh, while her features are have very thin soles and low heels, and are ' the sea, and saw the plateau stretching dem tedly Eeglisb. Her face is fair and Greek only in name, although far more cone- away before him 500 feet bigher than the oval, and her eyes arc dark bine and fuel of fortable than the usual French slippers, tallest of the Catskill Mountains. It is inteeigence. Her golden.brown bairgwhich Long gloves and 4 feather fait attached to a them enormous inland elevations, gradually was tainerly worn lose and fl :wing, se now ribbon are the correct ef oeterth to the Greek eloping to the enlists, that, by the force of carefully bride es as better suittcl to a toilet. gravitation, push the 100 cap toward the sea woman mit the shady side of 40: For A more modified dress of the same atene la and make Greenland the greatest of northern dozen years or more her favorite residence made so that the sboulder-scarf is draped iceberg manufactories. luta been a beautiful villa near Florence. softly over the bust and fastened in at tbee Such tacts as these are well worthy the °nub, began her a 1 terary career By writing waist hydiewas of a broad, soft, silken aa,,h. eaventure some and difficult journeys re - shop; stories for the English magazineo, for The end of the scarf falls emelt to the hem quired to obtain them. But the secrets of which she was glad to receive LI a page, ler Englieh publisher now pays her $7000 for of the skirt and simulates an overdress. All inner Greenland are not yet fathomed, and it of the beautiful maze in blue and silver remeinsfor future explorers to tell uswhether - every book she tonna. Ouida was won't to hi - - - ' Greenland 19 311 immense inlander really an bent that she was above the weakness of we:lite run with threads of gold and crimson, love, but meeting the Marquis di Stufa an br dered in big pink roses or am- archipelago, es a few authoritees are inclined acquaintance soon ripened into friendship, lYser rulrarflie°:i mauve edged with viol ts f to believe. It is to be hopen that Dr. Nate . and Oaida loved for the first thne. 'Ile a deep purple, Nile.geen with waterliliesseri will be able to tell ue inuch about the eit—all these and inany others as poeti- great Bea of Me that deeply covers the region he traversed. ovr march in streight as an I, with hie head threwn bank. Wb ot the preparatione are ended the procestioantarts for the guillotine, the primmer being supperted by two of the beaeornenee aide and athompaided by the executioner, the chaplain nal another effice, ale. The huge pale= doors Are thrown open elute teaQne%Liirig it by tubbing, wlien Mete, nieltug his head upeet and that in wow tee n ata could be lifted after Mallen was a member of one of the moat mild illustrious families of Florence, a man of fenciful are need for the Greek dresses oultured tastes, of aristocratic manners, and The gauze is used without lining for the scarf possested of a passicnate energy, which at- and sash and falls in straight folds over the underskirt of soft eilk—[N. Y. journal. traoted the no longer youthful °aide. She loved aot wieely, for the Marquis, while he admired the brilliant writer, only trifled with the woman. Ile turned frora the gifted AN ESUAPED PRISONER. novelist, and fell in love with a fair Italian, less brilliant, less gifted, but younger and Fired at Three Times by a Folieeman-elle- more beautiful than herself. Onida took a captured After atone Chase. characteristic revenge upon lier faithless ,—. — lover. She put him in a book: she made him A Toronto depatch says .—avunam Ross, the hero of her nob novel, which she calledyoung the men who was committed far tria- Future Millions in Australia. The imagination of the Australian people delights to dwell on the probability—on tee certainty—of the immense expansion of their numbers during the next hundred years. They are now celebrating the centenary of the founding of the earliest of the colonies; they confidently predict that the Australian continent alone, which now contains about 3,000,000 of inhabitants, will contain, when the second century comes round, "Frendship" and a very weak, wavering by the Police Magistrate on tbe charge of 100,000,000: As the patriotism of young hero she inede him. She had her revenge, stealing 'D. O'Connor's furs on Xmas eve, the Englishmen feeds its fires on the past glories but the Marquis won the woman he loved. other day raade a daring bolt for liberty. of our race, the patriotism of young Austria , Re had been up to the Police Court in the liens derives Equal fervor from the vision morning concerning bail and was handcuffed of the future development of their country. leey tti.loicl ran*, to another prisioner, named Stephen Nagle, With a pope/laden of 1001000,000, having in . 5 entering the van to be sent back to their veins the best and most vigorous blood "Ob wisat denomm' ation are tie chile t' ided By some means Ross managed of these islands, blending in themselves all asked an old colored preapher uf a young to slip his hand out of the brace the best qualities of the English, Scotch couple who had brought an infant to biro for let, and when she van door we and Irish people, inheriting the material, baptism. " Sah ?" said the young father, opened at the jsil poor, he darted out and intellectual, andmoral triumphs of European evidently perplexed by the word t' denomi- made a break for the gate. P. C. Veitoh civilization, living in a tenantry the resources nation." "1 axed you ob what denomina. had charge of the prieoners, and after hastily of which are boundless, andunder skies such tion de chile wen," repeated the minister, a looking the door to keep the other occupants as poets in their dreams have seen. bending little severely. The parents Molted at each of the van from getting out, he started in over the isles of the blamed. Auetralia, a other in evident confusion for a moment; pursuit of the fleeing thief. Drawing Ms hundred years hence, will be one of the then the father stammered out ;" - 1 I -- revolver he sped three bullete after the re- greatest, most powerful, and most splendid donne know what yo mean by ' denoraina- 1 treating figure. Be pulled the trigger the of nations, These are the prophecies and tion' sah." " Hoth, yo' don't?" replied the fourth time, but the cartridge missed fire• hopes on which the most ardent and geher- preacher, scornfully. "Well, den, I'd shn- Veiteh and Jail Turnkey Reid pursued ous of the young Australians delight to plffy it niordin ' to yo' ign'ance so yo' kin Ross hotly, following him aoross the Don dwell. Their buoyant faith in -tbe future understand it I Are de child a boy or a gal fiats into Cornwall and Oak streets. He was of their dimple is an animating contrast to chile 2"— [Youth's Companion. recaptured on Oak street after a desperate re- the wearmeso, the despondency, the hope- sistance, and taken back to jail. lessness, the perplexity with which many A Word of Friendly Advice. of the roost thoughtful and most oultivated of our young men at home discuss the con- A. festive Scot has been, entertaining a • - " brither Soot" m his London home, and The new laoe veils gathered around the dition and prospects of our own country. And the exulting hopefulness is a great; towards the small hours he told 'his butler neck have the effect of the wire masks worn element of strength. A hundred millions ot to order a thb for his ftiend, whom he by bee -keepers when hiving their swarms people on the Australian continent within goldressed as followe :—"Good-byee—sitting and are not particularly becoming, ' the next hundred years—this is what the bolt upright in his chair, and searing added' at his guest; "peel exeuse me corning oob— A young Iowa lady named Emma Mershon Australians erpeet„ And there seems to i34 Fen afraid of the draughts; Man," he con- is aaid to be creating qui � a furore among more than room fot them an. England, e timed earneelly, "When ye geb ootside the Americans resident at Nice by her re- Sootland, nd Wales have an area of 88,000 yell see two. cabs,. Tek markable voice. She makes her debut at a sqtare miles', with a population estimated at fi e the firat- -the others no' there." concert this month, rather more then 32,500,000. The area of the Australian wentinent 2,944 00Q equare miles, or jot about $3 -than as large.—The Contemporary Review, MISCELLANEOUS. The largest organ in the world is now hang built in London for Sydney. It will (met about $75.000. Miss Helen ”Hastreiter sang reeently 11. Rome in an, opera by 4 Greek eorapeser, stare Sernale, It was a very gorgeous epee - mole, bUt 4 poor opera, aud 4 failure. Sets. of black fox or Meek lynx fur are within the reaoh of the average puree, ancl will be found an excellent choice by those who intend to purohase new ere eleia ter. It is almoat impossible that the Panama. Canal business' will end peaceably. There am 15,000 woreanea oa the Isthmus who muse be taken to tbeir homes if work can not be found. for theme, Otherwise there wilt be riots, and perhaps revolution, But is who to find the money if private Myatt - ors will nut, and the Freneh Government must not on pain of war with the Uninci States?, The situetion is one of extreme danger. A writer in The New York Tribune notes a4 an letereatiug feet that no really great by= is atatarian, The mietterplecee et Qbarlea Weeley coull be used in tee, ser- vices of the Roman Catholic Church, jost As 80211001 Faher's beautiful berans are need in Froteetant Churches. Churches+ may au. AtheeAttee each other in their prayera, but la their hymns they an ell unite and forget ter a tune the pertwalla cif opitilea and prejudiee thet eeperete them. Forty per cent, of the priutere in Ds. ole are foreigners, mostly Canaelleue—im are ell per cent. of the employeea of the Detroit :street cer eomp.deles: awl 24 per cent, ef the carpenters sa the eity. Evb deece to prove thin was given the other day before 4 COPgreS447331 Costensittee. Tbe object sougbt to be procured is the exclu. alma from employment in the St* te_s of such el these workingmen es have their rya. deuces 13 Canada, Victoria, B. O. seente but upon plaiting herself abrent et the times, She is to have sbortq an electric street railway end complete sewo.rage system„ so that in these respects She will be edited of Toronto, her is one gnat edveutage com- paratively new COMMunitlea peettes 1. they cell always corer:oath thew than with the latest improventeute of civilleetieu, aud they hoe no old-feebtoued cenaervetive ebueee to get ritl of. Aware:Iliac to the cable despetelme donna hog the recent eithanteh nt Suebitn, it op peen that the British troops hoe means been supplied with idea -kir eworde and beyouote. It is elated that the coetreetore exeuee themeelv: s by representing diet those weepiest' cau no leteger be made to advautege Ito England. Tole 18 2* greet sew feteleu on the part of ;he menufeeturere, but Le will hardly eerve to vereen tbe Government from, blaitio in neglecting to put the weepene furnished them to a praotio, al test before aceepting the% The Catiadieu realer a eo may be peziece to account for the great interest taken in the progreas of Boulenglem in France, ehould bear in mind that any Dictator in that country wee) withta hia power to last mint try to obniu for it the conseeration of victory over is foreigu en: my. The Lon, den Spectator thfulto if Boulanger should >succeed he would five the order to march within a month, and as tbe mere order would mobilise Otrmany, the Fes neb people nmuld be no powerless to prevent tho col listen at if they -were nuirionOtte. Dern Seliebury l'ae, it same, his mind ite made up on two thinga:--(1) The ritieh are not by any means to abandon nettle:, and (ii) there is uot to be weedier Saudeneec cuumeign. Tide ie all very ; but in it not aomewhet eelf.contradictore If Suekin is to be retuned and made side its anailants must be dtiven only, and driven away -co far that they will not bo able or willing to return to harms the neighborhood of the flatfish lines. But how far may that be 2 In tattling that, all tbe essentials of the Soudauthe oempaign may be involved A. novel sobeme of Church omoperation in proposed by Mr. Edward E. Halo, of )3eaton. He would have the eeveral Churches carry on their individual work as at present, but proposes that all shall unite and maintain a great central church or cathedral, in which services shall be held every afternoon, the several clergymen of the denomination con- ducting them in turn. The services would be made especially attractive to strangers, and arranged with refereace to interesting the fide thousand pupils who attend the edu- cational institutions of Boston every winter. The British trade returns for the eleven months endinet November 30 possess con- siderable interest for Canadians. During the period in question the gross foreign trade of the Mother Country amounted to £623„ 000,000, or enven per cent. more than in the correepondieg period of 1887. Bat her trade with the Dominion exhibits a remarkable falling off. Her exports to Canada show a shrinkage of £491.000, while her importe from here have declined 2858,000. In all, her trade with the 'Dominion eluting the last eleven months was less by over six million dollars than her trade with us be the cor- responding period last year. A Congressional committee is pretending that mos* of the pauper immigration into the United States is from Canada. This, in fact, means only the well-known fact that much of the migration between Europe and the United States is condnoted by means of Canadiaa steamship lines and railways. Of course poor immigrants are very likely to choose the route that is at once cheap and convenient, and reach the United States by way of Canadian ports. They are, however, no more immigrants from Canada than those who enter by way of the port of New 'York are immigrants from that city. The Wash- ineton inethod of Mating the case is a mere trick to throw a slur upon Canada. It will be interesting to note whether the editors ot the leading newspapers in tee State of New York will carry out their ex- pressed determination to defy the law by publishing a detailed account of the first ex- eention by electricity ander the new statute, If they carry out their intention, the law will either )'ave to be declared uneonstibu- tional on the ground that it interferes with the liberty of the press, or the editors will have to go to prison. To people living out- side of New York State the publication of accounts of executions under penalty of be- ing punished for misdemeanor appears to be a somewhat despotic dictation to the news- paper press, which would be more in keep- ing in Russia. Edward Camden a young brakeman on the Norfolk and Niestern Railroad, while coupling oars at Norfolk slipped and two wheelo paned over both thighs. To extricate him both wheels had to be run over his legs again, and then, before he was gotten out, four cars broke loose from tbe tram and ran over his mangled limbs. He was fully con- odout; all the time,and did not make a- cry of pain or a complaint. When he was gotten sub he quietly removed a chew of tobac- I owe TA.Tee AnX TOM/ reerosee oit co fronthis mouth aed threw it away, with without referenoe to ourselves, I confe tabge:irne,inawricbetnhattbehesn-wroguelodnannevyneprnintatkeed othnee tuhattboenire pcienreshenarbdpluyalsoeokstupieinauoshe aultte shreds of his mangled legs he took no au- jog the attention of serious politicians, and iesthetio. Up to the time of his death, some feel tether reminded of An anceeoto whig hours afterward, he never uttered a was told some hundred years ago about th 1 two Sheridaes, the father and the on. 47 Th The abolition of sleaery he Brazil has . time," said the parent to his son oue day been attended, unfortanatelY, with some "has come for you to be tahidg a wife,' bad result. leinsy of the slaves wereandtxict Doearttifsietnyvy, wtronseowaifereseheaoltel dIedta.ke thlrfetisatuegi4ed. prepared for iturnediate manuntinion, the °Image in their condition lits had A tor.) It see= tO be that there is little re- wCithstro9nu tahee% in ntitohnse Pinerio7teairepaorts°30ef what we may term veoted interestal in. the a d showa either forthe mAt lioarr cuPar orp:o. rf too: hre.:sr 13:di example,tint seesed 0 onxf st ar, jiteoa tt Ah f tgc haal 01 ga tmle ad oyt Bruerfeertrhett Mr• one case than be the other under the oilman:1- ba'b the of the slays Mai resulted he sonething like lt le not asatisfaction th find that Canadian haw, e* The freed men de not take to eominerce has grown th the extent tin'b even work; they go to work when they like, 20 our great neighbour does not censider it a that the information from all pens of the negeigable daalestiq. (Applause.) I die - province is most disheartening." Some of seteaete entirely those persoris of whom the planters have given up in despair, and have spoken from responsible polittelano, or wbililbedIa4tulliebred Ina! ItSoasymenIthilg of t%hies7o°rPit g taus, ae to wbose action it is net my duty to still more from the Government of the/Se 40eht1Ior 444 to be expected, and it will emp:ineet:dbauctlowssethauted tett, atttreraespatittoem.theititzt. butake otYetesta:ree: otrtlieztegallileelivaetehil,fylabveeerny valued name epee, those who would try (Hear, heer.) Does loot the seam biQoa run to become industrious and self•helPfttl mem' ey.5 to rouge Melinga of jealouoy between We in our veins ? (Hear, heer.) notour Toroute Hosea of Trade Eaugttet. toy to a great extent the same as theirs: (Hear, bear.) Aro net the traditiona of In reply to the toast, "Lord Stanley, the which they are fproun due in great measure to a common engin with those of our maul (Applauee.) May we not, on the contrary, feel that we eau. admire, 'without jealousy, their menu, their ability in dealing witti vast gummed? May we net ethaire the premptnete and dolma with which they moot great emergeuelek and, last, not lease, we may admire tbeir teetwity in trade. (4p - pians.) It eeenle tO me, gentlemen, that al, though prowl of tbo1n tire States, 40 adiVel in moat comes leo generous of bort, W0401314 never allow those feelings to mbside into -the form of jealetwy. (Cheers.) I preach upon wee text only, and witbont offence to aziv. The text n_pou which I have spoken $4 tie pm% and trod to epeak upon it on many moans in the future in variety of form, and which I hope shall bo the guiding prin, ciple througbort this great country, is afttr, tins, beloved, there lest! be uo Egp' Kaig.e0T11;4//101:1Q0/11 tahleaux"eraga."of (aasehdaellanI PriPeeTee4'hal'aseArboloWd" thIet4 ;14;:r1 Cot rBniallay teme4'ofezePnae: tbe same PvtuThdPitt in the hidileA ef ita terrors, but the cerdial atoil kindly, ,forni utddteieeh it he aPPliede I may even say jovial, receptirnonutow.uh4blityoons ,sttmebeagat;24,40°0°TattaeatyearYtwtdhat:tairea uitteuypueallttitLietard awtargeQeQeutitwlatr•einh tiolegiaiveeotuontry of her Me,. Atig„h4vtag2*mo11gkit its oedema thoneugag- ed n; venom pursuit% you will ever produce identity of feeling ; but those who wish the D0101121912 best, whcwiab thetin entergeneice there Amid be entire unity, those who &tire to preserve the proudest traditions of and me= raw cedeside, eteetyear wee the their rase, who cling to their curstorne, who diet annual dinner of the B=4 of Trale of tiarysreth legtkbeeahwiaew tideeleofa5erteieeleutothatlItelr ground leest that city. It wee attended, I helieco, to the willing and cepthic and lew abiding eitizeue, giddied binned f alike in commerciel pureulte prtemsgen4lt xAth9eilucletYgseltittlhelauroovento Thaeiluediew"tiu- letP5dPridttiotedtaaltaltdadmhdienbasvaeidadtbdarteslIeltaovne end unity. May I vey then I hedouly epoken in in the realm of EnAlolt, and, may aly, a political I the moo spirit se I do at the preent time, letcrearieeal P°11iiel''' °leer' bear) He and thet it what I have done is wait liatened to neturelly upon that oecnion with thers13et whlat ..en a bitrtiQn. 1. sin, then there in for that sin no peron inert) t4ty CI°impenitent thee tbe individual who at tide :' attenden. I may, the:aforee ti uet you to I wineflpil;cteV14trocItaitfel ycitouue.iiie( AraPtroincniolnuiWterbel leek rather et the elrelunt.testeee under elellicehh envenom' a new comer eapetially le alines() ‘wV(le 01;51% 1.01411%ej:ionf ittriantiihreattioeneliautt re" daunted by the grandeur of the halt. Tt weld together countries, States, and pro. for the be ly who have been able to bring men is indeed WO effort worthy of the together 40 notahle a gatheriog no this. (°higheat chez of eta Voroanship. But men Now, tztEt vm 1 nT o°orte' eu4t/ 11;te tge., rNy; If here have been found among you in times pad is one principle which, it appears to me, luta who have been mai to the OeMient And while, wo trout, their lives come to the trent more th in another, at (Cheered inst —end I epeak of all—mey be happily pro. I, mole, life, it is that underlying the habit of astocietiou. MMenthat lettered to the benefit, ef the country, let tui tbe en It ivo d even trust eaten their footsteps a race may follow best and isreateet ecu C4et moth widely ci)iequally Moe to the great Melt before theme tnijittc' ieol:oeflYtrtngl abeiaeonrthzuoY'hterwhether CIltCtb rPil8C8,enanid. ccjually prepared to zreet and to surmount all Gevernor-General of tbe Dotniniore" et the Toro Ito Beard of Trade Bauquet, is Ex- cellency made the fel/eyeing elecemexib reply Lord Steulty—Mr. Pzesident, ladies and geutieneeneela the prise,en of rec-ut and undtilarietze ennly it was my duty entengee other Gunge to exismine certeirt deem:none beering indeed the :damp of age, but per, haps It teey be aubject to emete doubt AS to their olive. Amongst oaten v a*uuewbih purported to 5Ota414 coutemporeneoue 44. count of emits eleewhere given or deeeribed In the Book ef the Prophet Denbo), 414 It was them recorded, in etielLime to eertein, other cirouniotanceo attending 4 betting ita. eldeut of hie career, that es he was lowered 44W13 into the mouth et the lion'a don, the Int words with which he consoled. bituaelf were atill audible to tbe theeet- aut multitade, and they coatietal of theee jesty nuelketi me feel that I am amoment Owes who will, L tante define the few Ito:mirk:A whiele 1 hoe to melee, preasave that friendly demeeuor with aid& they drat greeted me. New, I am called upon to apeek 011 2* ddliculties, I am not speakiug only of that indeed, men swallow forced to combine in the etateamanship whose strength it is to alt interests of tr ado and commeree. All the still. Tbat may be more applioable to the e a . enterprioes of the: age. whether con- 0111 World. Certaiuly it is not applioable e ....on with our great ocean ateamshipt or ; to the condition of a country such to this. ted by association, other wondere of our augue,dhtabvee been pm deniooyooi But to attraet and retain population, to de - I velop tho great facilitiea which already the day is for men to emaciate to a greater thew, Dud which I trust may be inimeasur- extant then formerly. 01 the associations of ably Morena, to encourage the utmost - modern time not the least met'ceable are freedom in commerce compatible with the tbese formed voluntarily, such as that I have due progren of our trade and manufactures, the honour of aldressing at this momeut . and to consolidate all those various intereste This boon is, I believe, almost enexampled andetadad Indeed, a task worthy of in the number of its active members, and 012 the principle tbnt imitation is the sincerest. the highest deathly an earth. (Hear, her. CASAD Cs FUTIME. lowedf 0 XMof:ithteeryor,enittaiocnxIomfpaleimiliiaadr bboedeniesfoiln- I Gentlemen, in an elequentspeech which was other pens of the country. We know what addreesed by Lord Dafferin to an audience serytthe can be renderent and have been I at Winnipeg, be spoke of the great North - rendered, by such associatIous. They have West, then opening out, and described in assisted the Government of theMotheteCoun- language whit& I could only feebly sp- lay Inoue way or another for sometime, and proaoh, tbe feeling almost of othezement I speak from personal knowledgewhen IAS- with whic)2 the penonified Dominion sure you that, as late president of the official I viewed the approack from what had been Board of Trade of England, I can testify to considered her utmost boundaries into the the advantage whit& has accrued to those ; new world which lay before her, and into public service from the free intercourse al which the old portion Beamed tCi. be only ready information afforded by snob. bodies-- I the ante -chamber. Since that tints happily (applause);—in the collection of statistics much progress has been made. But we have and the giving of information, whether to only now, as in many realms of science, their own body or any Government depart- 1 where each succeeding conquest from nature men6. Perbaps not the least important duty opens up fresh prospects, begun our work, of snoh bodies, and I say this sub rosa, is As one mountain range succeeds another so the putting of pressure upon Ministers of it appears that behind each lies fairer and the Government, and in England the fairer prospects. (Applause.) To make the Chamber of Cernmerce have found ample , most of such a heritage as this is no light mope for their capacity. I think that as- task. Bodies such as yours working in the sociations such as that I am addressing community, supplying information pushin muat command admiration, because it is trade, and using the resources which exist, wonderful to find raen actively engaged in ' are performing a. great and noble task, and business or in the public service 'cheerfully ' corresponding with the ability you possess surrender for the common good no Moon- so is the responsibility great upon you if ' Blamable portion of their time, and make you neglect or abuse your opportunity. sacrifices for the promotion of associations Gentlemen, I trust that in years to come, on which they believed so much of tire wen long after we have passed from this scene, fare of their country depends. (Cheers.) there may arise in the Dominion a people After the eloquent tribute of respect paid to even greater and nobler than that which the Board et Trade by the letters of Sir exists, who may populate this vast Dentin - Hector Lengevia and Mr. Blake, it would for from shore to shore, and who, whether be idle on my part to enter into any details it be On the Atlantio or on the Pacifio side, on the benefibs whichthe community hats will be know to ite those who are foremost in rethived from its labours. In addition to the cause of freedom and of commerce, who the duties I have enumerated, it has the are indeed themselves the forerunners and useful function under seal of legislation, of at once the representatives of a great, happy, arbitrating between its members in these and prosperous people. (Cheers.) cases of misunderstanding which will arise even among them engaged in commerce, and thus litigation has been and will be often avoided. (Applause.) The officers of the board, by the manner in which they fulfil their duties, have set an admirable example vvhioh might well be followed in private life. They have no light duties, and yet they have undertaken them cheerfully and discharged them faithfully. (Ap- plause.) Now, gentlemen, to pass to another point. You are well aware that it is the duty of one who holds my position, so far as may be consistent with his duty, to keep his eyes open and his mouth shut, (laughter.) He has to epeak frequently, he has to speak on many oc- easions and he has, so caref ul s the rule, to avoid everythin upon wino h i tany question can be raised, so tiat, I am afraid, at the end of five years he may feel that he has al- most surrendered the right of private 'judgment (Laughter.) But in the capa- city of observing what is going on none of us can be ignorant that there are, I will say nob otherwise than irresponsible, attempts made from thus to time to elven the Dominion from the great career which is, as I believe, before her, (Applause.) When eee how calmly Just the Distinction. Youngphysician (at a consultation )—I have no hesitationin pronouncing the disease angina pectoris complicated with musoular atrophy. Old plysician—You haven't, hey? Young man, when you have been practicing forty years youwill have learned how tohesitate, sir. It is important in a case of this kind, sirto hesitate, and it is also more professional, sir. Young phyrsican—May I ask you, sir, what your opinion is of the disease Old physician (impressively)—The disease, sir, is muscular atrophy, complicated with angina pectoris. Young physician (humbly)—Yes, sir. dee Poetry and Truth. '2oung Man (to editor)—I would like to leave this poem, sir, for you to read, and in case it is not accepted can you return it to me? Editor—Ob, yes. Young noan—I have aped it "Anon." Editor—Very well, sir, I will return ib Anon. •