Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1908-05-28, Page 6 (2)eriiiletireee happens t on wil,. centain eeerte lento tei the dcaiettetil ceet Baer *,'.0ar ither v.lS aletaite Wapiti* ,in Baia whipaii •kitieree 01 hiSi life- to lett4 an UI14I * Ck flL'fl1 iny 1vi.p1 1'4 ,rgg001,4.t.b": '40113*.'001, "taittitte bin* ,thiir 40+410 MOatt 1:.4; :17:00!:#(4.4'('417:6.-*: .*!fle DrPithrie 'tap 044 inoroitta alti4 iteraing eira lury, Witbeut eralli5talbi41 4'etataltahlia hetet that politicians and ieffice-holdiare, lane and all, are itai1ic. the beet they CALI itar; .theripublia Weal- • allow, It may safely be admitted that h Orate 9-fflore- than by 'whok•sale abuse. Either of \ • .thetie habits will -leave ht m 'without. * iparticio of influence, one ',way or the either, and reduce im to a politi al a-Fififier. And. aTif c0 , n mvi w in theway commits civic suicide shofild -1-14e-reartairtered-o-gootieritizert. - But, next to voting. the Most. nd gienriable duty et •a' wioct t Ing. He should net telt; without MINI- husk.414, orto, Malt. avoiateritoate, a 10 Weald •WOuld.41. at here -lite," a, $44. reftiorit. 1.10W -evert. 'Might be little batter thanatatillintiaa'Oria veils goer keaarapi. When he Peirelet4., IniaVng hintscit ,David'cvidently thOUght ,.ho . hedeeuell reason, fit f ri. li ai n shame of his recent crime wit/ We iceie that ha was willing to pey any re 114 : able price far iexpiation. Judge then ties surprise to be offered the pro rty Without, cost. to himeeif. What*, chence corisearez • But Mind knew a thing that we a-aorget. The -soul! CIO 'Ryer be alfeapeped. ale ehtave the creet et one altar Ls to eitte'e Self. Lite hes no real Mere, cute •to triumph. God appoixtts no bargain days on, which the shrewd trader *nay enrich intself ton. He should not blamereyerybodia t the experts,* of 'alio Altnighty To oirgeil4113 4400xwAigmal/ARAgr-l* fettrte ter the sacrifices of a 'contrite heart timely raoly, rana el& reollestryi C011: hout_porsoft cerntogioterrinibbeilneesure-and-eve" -A-SPEtibtg- ftiAt)b-: itublio man. He is not a goad citizen unless; to the host of his ability, he What is the "spoiling' of a chiki? What hut the payment by parents of the does this. pritie which the chikt ought to pay? . • • "My child 4.10ei not know the meaning eonkucpppU1 4h* twitiaTeirthe byaro-t-tO a snowflake and Pily sucle a ielakTriaing tho meaning a popular election to the avalanche is ot self-denial, ho will miss all -the -mai life., equally applicableMprizes to a casual Mires- madof 1 knew a young man who e a "hita at his Mist publio ven- sign of °Anent by a private citizen and ture. But that !list hit was WS his Me resistless force of public sentiment. , It may sometimes happen that a single unpremeditated remark made by a good citizen and overheard by a politician !may produce a worldwide effecL But ecrtien it la that, when every gcod man In the conununity utters the same cam- suendration or condemnation a greater aise 1_ATr b94 lshould threk attempt the pit eneetnierolleat spiritual '*It**444411 L•Lev41 111&'11Ia , fir • !yr: lEs ')00 cr. braelt. kept Wei Oath eta hi. Ipin 14101, • Oh„, the practice agatnat Oureelvee by per econmetaast Tho 'last pittoe for a. „Man to salve MOMS 1.9 on bid Otte IA him wear Atittratatiarattrafraknolta1' tot 1W iri,404ratar of fare, but let hint nOl'i Shave the cot of those altare which Wilds. The &attest, economies WO Otter reettea are those which teuchiaer henefactitans. Our loss is greater thaii that of the eatatat e-o•efirse-toetielp. Charity eon better shard my withhokling of, help_ then can steed withholding it, TO, IA an- thereaceinY givirtg-iseto,..krtehineibeee Tor blowing. If Orn, hallde my altar Lor me. HE ALSa TAKES MY KW. . -That man who &aka how Mach he must give up in order lo bo la man hose entlen hold of oto Wren end fa, Oka tAtle*ri to wait" who -may -welapatareetteetek wh L$ following. - Life's real alters ma» sent the sheading of blood. • , To repeat then, David's great renunci- ation at Oman's threshing floor, to hold bravely to the aecrificial quality of hu - eye -Use a- - nobs`..e lighterillig of loads, to bleed that we may bless -in spite of ail complacr ant voicea to the, contrary -this is one of the rich truths of life. GEORGE. CLARKE PECK. - .raithreli • Lha'. (*;e1r.11011 . leac.lto 'thok'cri cisrn ev‘ith a :series , "of! ch ct011181 :Lord .crOrtior, culminating' in the attaga alien- that hei"rispersed. the cletrac tr 4,f it deed hero,:ta ' UNWISE TO STAY. , • ithiliEltrAdrENG GLIMPSE ° OF et/ 1 UM* efftib ‘14i4ifslterikentes,, .01 :ct Surv!ty"inf,t 0 in Wem „,f,tictron 4rt;:::t':.tt(4:)':'fr:::llj)iit;l".'t:'k;:11:111::::4'::''-':;'*s'"'' . /CI r,il: rio , pp' asurveyOr r, • Vie 'ir:reer;hvillee.1':It'i.'11:P:sel:;;114d).141:..iils;t4:1:t:!..11'41ti' il'%:;1.1:111:htlift's:iiii.ti•tle'-1 Lig s and axle's, and in It s isaiiijetenge in these, Mranete negre len idains he I\ Les winessieV many unfanira ;7 eighla ard „ere ' te nota few ad enturre. • i g 1'1 0y4,1't tr-31!MENT, KAM IMAM 1117480111T loo Hopi 11,0,, Park SP 114kk aere Lords *id Ides 1A* , Met/I& ii the 10X1011.4tuty of the GOVernMet111 10 el a atuaeener 14. in "the great oat! teal extric to till thie-garrasonse that he tried fereats of W et Al ica. Tie i.eurery..s toe force. the hand of the eioverrittient. %fey mutat and ih cl mrte, ab. in male, naelorioati - • red_bolhoesr.at forest which tam to tae Sotidan. a'. . Obyloasly. the extends far oame 300 meer trent et i teia thing General Gorrlon. eoukt have t* west, nil varies ih wi ith f. un 100 dianceaefter eommunication with Calm. antics on the east to DOO ne es' on the • was ctir eltr-aWrilltatirtaveheert--toartitralat wiitaih_the work wag careedInni train - In Berber with the Khartoum garrison„ It la ofeirigianiarettreardiagreas narth-a4 and such of the civil popeletkin tte the, Hite and et ieltippears toefeel the ef- wished to le,ave the place. 1 , frets ef ate . un nOre hem t an in court - 'Oa Wdaalernot appear to .have•marlie atilee (Van near '.I. to Vie equate r.rThere .any serious attenrpt, to eto so, because le iana tarereelifilinalresoretboittathei at ihe thought 'that.. it be, rolled, there masahere, wait the result 'eta Til SUNDAY SCHOOL tette- is exerted than by any other po- ItticaL ageiacy whatever. This is the Lesson IX. Jesus far the Dead. higher law," which has Ire* known. to • Golden Text, Rev, 1. 18. submerge and supersede senates end THE LESSON wOno STUDIES. conalltutions . without serices injury to Verse 1.Theifirst day 'of 'the week - Ithe state, In a country like this,aceiaaraiiiiiit The kiiiish subhath,_, endiciari teepecielly, public .seetiment, is every- responding ,to our, Sunday. thing, and public sentiment le only the Mary , Magda/eine-From whomaieelle had seven, deinona (Mark . . ggregate Of what "they .s*y." Let every emit out 169) She is mentioned anionat other women good cittzen, theeefote, resolve to 'have as One of- tease, eraeatiministeree to Ms "say." lesueief their- substance"i(tuke 8 2). Her devoVon and lovely to Ja&5U3 'trio ata In our alert and curiout age the news at the part ehe played the en at the ceass and subsequently. which goes Mimed concerning the ex- That Jesus first appeared unto her after veriments of the Wright . brothers with Ills resurrection (Mark 16.9) cannot hatli Mont the aeroplane is net likely to fail of re- Wa acThct. Eu at Ls, ein..1 in the orating. *pease from the imagin.ation. Rather,, theugrh. not early inY the Jetrevish day under the spur of the seniational jour -1 which had liegun at sunset on the even- nalLst, We are litiety to overestimate t10r ing precedirig. , Importance. The pendultmi bas swung 2. Cometh -into the city. • fa: ',from tho wondertees days which' 'lltey-An infinite reference to the elve- • r Jesus. Mary for one was clear- watehed so dully the earlier trim umphs ir 3o n t expecting the miraole of the ro- of i appLed science. Now -a -days we are surrection, &spored to see too much rather then , 4. The -other disciple outran ,areter - too little in the cloudland of the fitture.1 min was much younger than the sturda J leader of the apostolic group. Net the facts credibly reported are re- 5. Stooping -This was made tecessary anarkebly encouraging.The flight was by the fact that the opening in the ver- • only a mile and a halt1, but control was heal wall of the limestone cliff was low end much smaller than the dimeeeions reasonably satisfaeloryl. and after s6rite."' cf tee tomb itself. /twitter changes in steering gear a long- The linen clothe -In which the body ot er flight will be tried. The layman 's Jesus had leen carefully wrapped (COUP wholly unequipr.ed to undeestand 'the pare John 19. 49). Yet e tiered he not in-CIVETC01111O prole technical progress made,' but what tai Table by Q. fee.11-ng of ?everting% as et•en to hint iinprcesiee isJhe fact that some have -suggested. for fear of incur- ' invention is ncw actually siteei.s.fiti in ring cereitonial pollution. what may be coiled the bird's mystery. • 6. Fintered-W,th impulsive boldness so eltaracierist'c of Peter. talon are flying at hitt. Saw and telieved-Sotne haver suga No ineention springs from the brain feskti ibat whitt Jolla saw in the' tictalb of man cis Minerva from the headof cvnViflefted him that tha body (if3(5*13 , bad pot been ca\.ried off either by friend Jove,' and th" time whfril Ls. to 6-t134raie 'Or foe, and thetin this passage the mi- na from practical • aerial inavikation litter rertords Iii•e conviction first made :deubtless witl be :longer than our enerhaan his own mind that the'afaster hrid ihuslasin dispores us to day to eveet„ ,riseta from the dead. Perhaps, however, this le reading too mach into the •rtarra- iteclucting feint coesideration Itia taiet , live at Ulla aolitt. • We may takellet ex - engines ellero ef Alexandria, erel even ipression to mean that John was now r netball Isms et_filiovanniadellia _Porta, -revivifies(' that Mary , --Magdalene's attest Sokimen it Ca`us, dni Glavanni Etcatera sage wile not fdtertalle but that the body - of Je.sus had aetually len reintived from In the rattly part of the seventeenth cen- . , , . • , we find that Edevard Somerset, thch313111") ni5 enetniei, 'Tile next vcrse, moreover, lends strength, to this marquie of Wercester, made a reaily' interprelationo etaatteal eicam pump, reported in 1 '3. 9. As yet they timely not lite saliv- 1111 a- • ,eturei-lleal euateeeti-graiipeia theeeieni • -At"--7473-11:41t' ciatce of what Jesus Itimee. had teal , later. in 1T63. when Jenrie %Vett aivent- them aobeernina his death and resur- ail The heated' cylieder, the oondeneeie, teatime and Other relater' deviaris for which pat- 10. Their owe hottao-lhat 19, their 4 (1°44' 18'e're°bItiallej In 1761 tt?9-. thea.11741fIdaeante:kry'le-nJeruaiem i ntene. -To her is ‘Ireritct uttUtY (di the 6"1/1 f'•nglilte be eottehrafed the first appearance, of the _gen. Rut it *we's Mit /or eiiity, yeatee ireeerartatel Christ. , . namoly. n ISA that !be epplication el At the tomb --To %Oka she had rer turtied after bringing to the discipterl the message that it was en*1y. • U Two eerie/ -One eerie' only tieettioned,by tattliew 'i28: 11 and Mark If 0ga 9 ar ling unto the <Voitiall. This May puerility !twice been the remake!. matt of Itteetwei titerttiened by Lukeiland • . , ' tha steam 4.=ngtrze to railways tecreite a practical, strata -ere in the "later:ea" et ° 161\0i1;0' Stephenson; Mit a, rantora ariainice Yale rept:paial the Owen 'ive gent:. *ILO WM, ktiGwiedlx and fac heee ,ct rsOifati the' eeventeadth and il3gfit0111111 irOviturfe,3, linetv naildng. Tla, raar of titre eitovemant is row taater,\ aria "ri4 nny 'veyitta \,re33$111 tO1J4 tl it prailipter 41:01-C444). to, 6/ Ile invAni°,001.3 tri CLIP day th,en • ' 13. Woniati-ellerier 'appears fr tie tam, erhote etiratext, of lender pd.) dreas, ehiela Vannes at tech light tin its le,siteL0 adilreesittg his mother cti the ouns°.:on ut performirig his Pt:111)1° 10 11/° days 61 W36% I've' tir.st ntirecte 'John a 4i. • are standing tn ihe tbraerlio'cl et an- larecave th yeetce Ito antecedent tir (-VIM' Wale Mixt hag V174:',11 anoirLzr 111i' Utotz6lan 19 net expr ed, many greit'vietcrY ever the elezztents. ,ughtatary r, fermi %Hite kw" aa the „age -Tail OilibtriDN'S,Cf 3t1n8 and hit dr..w-,ptc.9. This may correct; Imre pralotfo. Itouover. the. pronnon is !30i1 rixmoNtIcAtEv , '‘A-ittrrt. reelee do eerti tariko away nty Lord.' .A too:tient therr, ons*syt° t..ter Mary ellor.s tinsaibly it mai V tweed -slit* 1(414 that tit tre,. iMellt the gaixtUnr iveriteiZ lithe 'CO prefer hcr (4'041 tictue likum seetoot iirote_vist *who, etrtt6wit)s- - thou?' 18 it* ofit4kireer mita have inquired. Note that Mary herself never refers to !be body of Jesus as such; with her it Ls only Itie Lord' ant, yet more ,personal, "my Lord." She has not yet brought herself- to 'think of him as dead, and to her the lifeless form is etill him:self.' This state of mind en her r4 vart 1st the po t of 'contact -front -which Jesus gently ds her back to a recog- nition of hi la her living Lord. The garden r -The tomb with others was in at garden, just as- a modern cemetery is a garden, spot, carefully tended .and cared for. Tho gardener was tho-one lemon a whom ehar, might expect to meet there MAMA early hour. 16, Mary -How. Meth of taindernes9. love, gentle reproach, authority, and comfort may not the Mester have put into thts one word! - She turned herself -Not having walled 1091P 'atL 444 10 ef 111 #4) 41,1Vt' 0011 t • „1.,of.»ng tJ&se.r , pfa , 'ar- wth ' LondOrierA" 610.: '00 140',,,,,* ', thepa the Vractical ',0,.• theeeiritteulailett springiiine hali., ciao* wit's a Latuton cos'rewmdent, N. 'e. hue: the tiering flower s 1 ow itt, a the pares Aileen beVei *earth WI1,piano,* -tee year,. Fieveara ie England need may -emit en- otiragentent to grow and tile dist mild wt, ether bringe but 'iriyra, tea. I ireiffedila, prhnpoets, evacuees erhien daffodils. in St. James's Par and along Constitution 1 .9 starred wit) white, pu rriafIlleti. Ile ark $1104stktY of. pr inrosesi end liensingtort • It irk hos united all these An 'a multi - e heel ceraet. Ilitde Para has Its usual display of , •rielailteemtangraeitond rata • 1, w tut; s predominate, but to the hore roi la levees of this largest, and most, faelileniiblr of London's, parkt °mid the itioveria: grereyelawnsetaireet4tyra ing 11., "refreshment, retreat:*4h- uNron.ruNAargC1Io1C1- Levelly -to -cue thetrevayehteugheit foot- aseitew:iittle--tea---plarre t to-beematie-------- 1_Vf rt to carry out the main *f limbs stretileng out horjaonhety for laharc ter many ienerattens fashioraahlir by foot. Tit? trees run up, te a height very site of the, "1 do not think that it can be held of some 180 feet, and from their upper ireMpliS "RING" OF BYGONE DA% that General Gordon made any serious portions trench off huge umbeellalitie aches end gent einen _came to wallte.e... ticitii.4n4,_E_gtilix9k • distance , _from twenlyeto filly Teat. daiV TreallitiegliCritore -of liTslitaiiirtiritainTrifee-Tie opinions • than of the interests of the crs as thick as large hawsers, Then daint-cs-or ItRtle 1T05. State. . . He was left a'evide discretion- comes the undergrowth, sa thick as to li was Hanry VIII., that royal peeper. . ary power, and he used.4 in a manner be impenetrable to tny one unlirmed ‘fa'abber, wao "acquired" the church opposed to the spirit, it not to the *C -with axe and machrte. The sun is lault,i of tee Mrnor of Hyde in 1536 and o w tual • text, of his instructions. • Hew- practically Wetted out. This I under- converted them inta deer park, here he and his successors could hunt to ever much tve may adriure his personal gaol.vth consists of all kinds ofk small ' . .- - heroism, *the fae4 parrafed above are, ties, bushe,s, shrubs, creepers, thorns their heartscontentCharles 1ad m my opinion, a cenclusive proof that and prickly plants, running up to ei tweet the pubLe te the park in 1636 s a mote unfortunate ahoice could ecarcely height in some eases of more than sixty and then gave it to his people aa - pia,* for racer. and atteetic sports. have been made than that of General feet. . Stern old Cromwell ecerns to have Garden to carry out the policy of Orli- The whole forest 'teems with insect mating the Soudan. . . He was ex- life. Snakes, scorpions, centipedes. and loved to walk About the park, end it was ho tvho emleeived the idea -of en* trentely pugnacious. lie 1,11143 hot -head- tamest every creeping thing one could - bons-. It is a truer saymg that-btaasho urotsndies or The itreesrmay beasaion -pale driveway 'about it inside iron rail- re td, impulsive, end Marti 113'his ono.. mune are found in iti white in, The clesing a great stretch at Vasa- with' --,,,- inqs, as a sort of recreation ground. wzmid govern others ritual. first, be - . green pigeons and a host of smal- Af ePthe Restoration the real popularity ter of hatted!. One of 'the lead,:ng fea- ter treetcal birds, many of the ,I tter of this grassy lawn Vvas eetabushed and tufts of Gordon's stt•ange character Wt1S- poesessing the most beautiful pltim ate. The noise is simply deafening. -1), di_ it became a regular retort far fashton- hie total absence of self-oontooL" able inert and women every afternoon. elarly in the early inorriing ,and late through the spring and summer. 'Even MR. STEADS INDICaNIENT. the King and Queen visited the "Ring,4 afternaonr Exceet for the netive sheep . Mr. Steed replies to these and•other and cows in the village clearthere as it 11 d t ,oritiaisats by charging Lnrii Greiner is practically no animal lifr in the for- ata wasC" ' !Ind s'emefiree8 linger - to wateh the games and sporrs , tots" and herses cannot live there ow- " .4 , - • with: . e_ Inthovery meddle of the enclasinie Mg to the presence of the tsetse my. were nine pools or splangs or sparkliog 1 Ignoring what braibienself laid &Anti At one perto I of the work, Alajor dug= wirier, wher,o people congregated to as the "first "Senthat and OPeritneininitrarr yl glSberg had eighty white melt ,and one drink iinii dratobts and -aii.iiii,i,-, condition ol success," on o al a - the man i thouraand natives under control, and gni at - b A where ''''''' mothers dipped their newty wearied the immense amount of work reqtilred for the gardenerts,•ats she streposed) an- ' o coalman& W*9 13 %es lf this size _ 2. Having failed to 411° that whlehi: "ellanarrgeaand'izly'ngbeulimexagPinedeldtklivnien it is re- amost of ail wits required," to ring the,; metnbered that practically ne stores of alarm -bell loud enough "to rouse tie. any kind could be obtained inland. The British Gayer:Inv-121 frhoimmsetten..kinthotrpoob-1,;• t: extledeiaticohn cua.rariyidnigviciacnd into twelve par. 3. Having of display ig the statesmansbip which Hes, "mops an in.stant the true same EIGHT MONTHS SUPPLY OF, FOOD bon of airs,' enct of not realizing . and various necessities of life on the "the favorable moment" until after it head's of carriers. Everything from a had Jong passed by. Mr. Stead claims that Lard Cromer bed to a frying pan, from tinned meat as ariesti agent in Egypt, meed to ren- tu the last 01.11140 of pepper, from a Hz° the megaitude of the disaster until reediaine chest. to a pipe of tobacco, had the rising in (he Soudan became gekt- ta he foreseen, purcheeed and packed era' in November,' 1883, and failed up in suitabte leads eight months ehead, to December 22 to lake effective steps and in addition to thaa arrangements to carry out the policy of abandonment made for the execution of eerie carry. Mg OUt 'Of postal services and supply Ix. had kilned on the Goverriment. al claire that it 13 proved Boit Lied of money for the whole period. Cromer stands convicted of having de-: A*1 this organization fell to eta lot 4if leyad throe weeks after rejecting Inc the director and one or two assietents Gordon proposal before he made up his , during tone to August, every year, mini that it wai necessary to send any which, being the rainy season on the one; Moisten) or Christian, to Khartoum coast, wore 'spent by the staff in Eng. I to. bring away the garrisons, and et not lend. and the fortnight voyage -out in having even tried to suggest the namelSeptamter was utilized tar drawing up et anyatifileeretuseareidtarriaahili leriGerria-thi programme ofeworkarinti leaning the don untl January 11. 1884, and then hei wee:as/try orders for its execution. CHOICE OF GORDON. I nominated a paiha who refused to go. Work in the bush, as the great, ferest -swer, she had turned agairietowerd the tomb; lost orteeinom in grief, without having caught the deeper significencei.rof the question, "Whom seekest thour But at the °speaking of her na,me she turns again in sudden recbgnitien to him who lead Addressed her. Rabboni-ln the Ifebreei literally, "My Master," a form ofeaddress used by pu- pils in speaking to their teacher. - Which is to say, Toacher-The fact. that air at thLe moment used just this expression and spoke in Hebrew throws a flood of light on the whole scene. For ljt.A one moment it is Jesus, her beloved teacher and friend, whom she has foinad again. 17. Touch me not--Iesus had not ,e. turned to life to renew the old famil r fellowship with his discipiea on earth. Itis.asciension woe to inaugurate a new fellowship, a• spiritual Union, between himself and s disciples, hence this warning oom and to Mary.. The verb diere used imp es iri the Gree..k a "eling- .ing to." ,-My 'brethren,e-Elvialutsiting the fOlquir.- ship and oneness of Christ with his efts- cipies which La to continue. My Father and your Felber -A like- ness with a difference. Jesus, nowhere identifies the eonship, of believers with life own. " A certain judge, while passing through the scene of an election viola tied •a large_stOne thrown at -hie head, 'but ha happ.ened to be in a steappaig posture at the thoo-it .passed .over him. "You see," saki he. eltdressing his feende 'afterwards, "that had I been on uprIght judge I might have Ikea k:lied." ...--.• Tommy -"Ila ion, Alma, where aro 3oii go ng 10 in such a hurry?' Jiminy 'I'M going home.' Tommy--"Soine- thing g eel geing on there?" Jimmy- , :emu's ginner teespankentera-ToM- my an surprise) ---"But why are you in buch a hum?' iniunye-"Because It 1 dint get home at once •pa will be lia and hell de. it." A little girl had bead allowed by her mother, to visit the mieister's faintly and stay :for dialler. After the preraherittal finiShcat asiting a blessing ,thro thtlat read: "That ISII t the wily my papa nicks o bleasinget "And how noes yolor psp's ir bleOsing?" imitated the ininleter, put, ;says:i 'Good fleat-,crist'i uhatP o ° Nirribie ert1S11" taS .1111&(11)hrtd 0110 s.und'et broken or kery ',/q1 wel.14* ily the lioilse ran; the' bel aleitnt OJIt1 asked thit new servant what had haprpened. "Itripped on II* carpet, 1110111* Oild rill the. ket-thingr, 101,1." "Oh* dear, dear! OW you. ultimo So save anything?' "Oh, pis, Muth; 1 kept bo'41 , of thir tray\ all ri &ifs • "A good listener usttaliy' ninth sought eftetai" allows k wire isv looking r hint *II the is (-ailed, ass no lightiemploymerit. At 4.45 in the mornieg the surveyor was "When Lord Granville proposed Gor-1 celledby his black boy, and while he don on Deceinter. 1, and again on Jan-'partOo% of his breakfast, if he wanted uar 10, Lord Cromer would have nem nny, kis tent was struck. The head IL et I int. Only when the prase had put mra an then looks after theack- carria In i work 414 MIS selasufficient 0111- ars., who are sent- on In advarthe with eal discover' that he would 'rather have t11l. provisions -an tinned stuff -and if Gordo* thee anyone else.' I!, Lerd there is any cuttieg to be done that Cromer had possessed the reason and day in advance 'of these go a party i 1 imaginatron ef a statesman, wh3.eby.he say, fifteen men, under a head man. Could grasp 'in an instant' the true s.1- =net with ekes and machetes, who untie!), he" would have telegraphed for literally chop ttieir way through the for - Gordon on -December 2, and.lhera witula eat in the -direct on it .s cashed to make h_aveabcert no need for igovernnient by the survey, The general principle ef, newspapoit to intervene. Lord Cromer cutting is to cut the undergrowth and ts soktY responsible for tha fatal leas 01 malier tr&s down 'until the_.mirtit the six long 'evoke between December stumbles across it !lege tree that would 1 and January 16, during which he take toa tong to felt and then to chonge maintained his veto on the oppoiniment ihe dirtetion ef the line, wh th nieans reoGeneraltroritine, wham laue afterw•ardsJ1u4 the path Lends' a little to the right told Os he regardea as tthe be to • or lett IS it-Proceed.s, givin'g it a tor tip, post." , it5.. GeXT.orw-ceues is:tnete oinuoe id°tIc,(L4'enriner-arYMOUE Oft LESS ZIOZA6 CliftitACTER: , de. Nnier.rssitteldotelo xtmadaccunses. ,Loro Comer ...The path thus made fax tho surveyor ',; merely , a narrow lano a few feet in po°11hicaytjtangwpardstrentlIPietA3111ThdvP,Invr6,1tittah:t Ivijellart! lsVu:dn'ell):vrASellile$1‘.°(11-ath4 PtIWIllitSb4irill3Uttablibl: fitg for tlie• perngesien at the Etwash eni thk-odolife. measures, the angles anti lieverentent. . • . r iii ' • , "PALSE;', SAYS STEAD. **Lord Croriteres offen0, er, is that of asperiMg the chara 'of * dead hero. lie seeu6ex Got - 4:4 riot even having triel to do hiS befause, Instead 'of Onicentrating efforts ,ovacuation, .he thought mainly of ,ttie sttbsidiary pOirtio‘it of struetiOtts andliegieeted the main s. qrt" plain English, this is false. The proof of this it to be -found 'in rtoe. don's telegram of March 10411, lett. *Gordon did see that all he oould de' we* io 'tem* the place. Ile OW &cm. crs .permistion, which be refused and osNleivd him to stay* The feet 11,' tliat Crotnet Steads .torOlded• Ott hie dwit Went, Ills guxlt is' taitablisikedi tinder his malt. leogths of line*, which aro. reduced Ire taltulatont to 'o form from which a map eati he made. At overy .three to ve mites 'it'uf)erinatient matk," with a St.'rtgnishing numberto act 'as a boa. ten, is erected. and also Id pmerve the aultriuth•obsrvecl them. At every ilye.or tett mites angular nicasurernents in lite travero lthes are eortveted Oy stir oh. '*'-rvations; which means thlt:the,'sur. vt yor ) vitio be VP till 1 or! O'clo;1c. in 1 1 the rii *Wig finding his httiludo, and 'Levin istronornicaliy, Naturally Majot„ Guggisbarg Met zany' native kings and chieft, lie often had to consult them to settle boundary idisOtts, .110 ileen allatteVeratt that they love ceremony and things had to ,be dons in it certain amount of etylia, The ,itsh**Oky, the,OIM ttitattlatt paltrotirt the, :wild*mao* tx-eanc.O weft .rell' and With be babies ler luck and heal h. A wooden house was *recited in the ifang called Prices Lodge. where tight refreshments were served- and which Pepys, and his ainialaeitcuse often frequented. He says "one* ring to see a. fine foot rare, three times around the fling we retired to the lodge to partake f chive-el-at:es and tankards of warm 'm ilk." IN QUEEN ANNE'S TIME the, gayeties in Hyde Park flourished welt. May day was high festival for the limit and ladies of the court. May poles. were set up and dancers stepped to the rasp and screech of the fiddle strings and bows. Upon the new grown grass collations were served from Price's Lodge. With William -and alory's reign came a diminution of roy- al prestige for the Cling. but the fun and (relic evidently continued. as one chronicler, Tom Browne, describes it thus in 1700: aSoores of gallant ladies in coaches. 'seine sing ng. some laughing and other* 'tickling one another, toy in the Ring and- devour .theesmaliese marcheratneerer- aed China oranges.' Then came a erne when the froope were encamped in Hyde Park and the, officers were masivA within thr Ring. ThiS does not- ream ti htveidseonr,tra, ed in the te&st the gallant ladies, as • they atilt continue to visit their favor - Ile mere atiint, gerund 10 •the afterreiona, peep into the tents, joirvithwit,,hhotliediiem rsicte- cupants and finish up ol tea and aweet drams of ratittaS." ° Tile first King GeOrge thought beet to regulate the gayety eif his court, and 5 me 301110 of the staider element wire .h 30k041 at the revetriers of the fling re. s!rIOtion!; ilUPWOet tvaida visited the park deity. lilted 'entieheii could not enter the park gak;at all. Only personsaff quality were admitted to the ring. Childrenrand tenants in liv- ery were relegated to .• OtaiSIDE THE IRON RULINGS. wliero ihey -had eteatirait wbile,itheireati-- gust parents ',and matters took Wit" walks around the 'Ring., Haiseveri the pdpulerity of the recreation ground soon waned and the gallant lades "turned their atlent:on O. wb. are.' • Early in the lad century prri!...es1.4 was pulled deweatil the irit enclosing the Ring t;.04.1a WWId. It. f !anent and merrymakinglavare ben, 1shclI and lhe Bing becatut any' 41park tvtb 1. ristti:reoitgesoaarde,o,nif groorttainietthe,iinti'iti,t,livelli ,perlod and the - early Victorian, era, Hyde Park heCtime tho saki)* rilsor't of fashion, and wealth that it is now* Hired cabs aro still tabo'ed'and digrOy smart ttodieosenor;tticdiiyprgr-1o Vieerlte kto:tnd:the mori:tehuvtoaa4evtte5ilt scYtn on bright Sundays in the railiatitt. That a refreshment place strauld rise on .the old site of Prices Lodge ig 'hot titling; and it is fitting too, perhaps, that tett end thin' breed and butter shouldreplaort the maecheptink Chine °coos and syllahobe of byg5ne deli* But it is donhiftil if the stately teditt 01 16414Iw ' ',.,:lidnilie'Sg'igailtall'airrat*It 111441 ef Oat lor Alin 1%11 and Ms *tie 1* thait 04,4060y noW, and the " itt the park hi not 1 o b* nsarr�d by taktag tia Wit** test a di* 111m1 if: if the . liko- atone