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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1910-5-26, Page 6LIFF OF GEORGE FIFT who lhat'l been watching long at hie 14. Ile tame forth --Not, as 11Zark bedside,) seems to eonjreture (0, 34), from tate_ Maximilian --Poor Carlotta 1 boat, but, as John spocifionllt' Louis XVIII.. -A. King shonlcl die states, from the mountain where standing, Jesus had, by the quicker route,; Louis XV. -Why do yotr weep l preceded the erowel. 1:)o you think I should live forever Had compassion on thew - See ' I thought dying would have been Word Studies for April 10, His more difltcult, pity for the blind, scattered sheep Louis XVI,-•Freoohlnon, I die without a shepherd, drew him out guiltless of the crimes imputedto of the retreat are had sought, but, 'me Pray God my blood fall not in the words of Luke (9. 11), he on France. If so-eancl the knife gave them a warm-hearted wel- fell; come, •and then proceeded to heal Queen Elizabeth -All my posses- their sick. sii us for it moment of time, l5. The time is , past --The 5;r' Richard 111. --Treason treason!atwhichJess was in the'lra- DeCenrber 20, "lt}0.,- and Praise ltrcl rd hour Jesus Jelin Charles Francis, born Jo y Charles IX• of France -Nurse, bit of 'finishing his religious in - 12, 1905; and 1?rineess Victoria A- nurse; what murder, what blood! structions. exandestAlice Mary, born Apr`1 .Oh, I have dune wrong, God par- Send the multitudes away - The 25, 1897. due me! syroptios agree in assigning the 'ITL' HE 'HAS. Frederick the Great -We are all initiative to the disciples, but John THE P i~S over the hill, .We shall go better describes Jesus as taking the first The principal titles conferred up- now. (After a fit of coughing.) step,, All the shades of difference easily recalled by citizens of Can on him are those of hon LL,D, from Louise of Prussia: -I am a Queen n'1a• byreason of his tour through Cambridge in 1894, from the IA else , in detail cannot be noted here. This g g this countryshortly after the ae- University in 1902, from London b''" lrave net paver to move my is the only miracle recorded eo all y arms. four Gospels, and Mark's account version of Edward to the orty-e, University in 1903, and from lilac- hilus XIII. of France --There He is to -day in his forty-fifth govv in 1907, Hon. D, C. L. from er•me to the thoughts that torment is fullest. year, having been born atMaribor- Oxford in 1897; and Melbourne, g Into the villages -According to ough House on Juno 3, 1.805. Be tivdnev Adelaide, McGill, Laval, 1ne., Jcsephns, the shores of the lake is the second son of Victoria,and and Toronto Universities,and Marie LLouise, ]Empress of France wore quite . extensively populated nd-••t will not sleep; I wish to meet in Christ's day. became Prince of Wales on Novena Queen's College, Xingston,Ont., wale awake.Give ye them to eat=This bei 9, 1901 by reason of the death in 1901. He was made Hon. Mus. death y 10. 1 r brother,the late Prince University \Valeo i Marie Antoinette - Farewell, my preliminary conversation was, as of his ado r T by the of n ulr,Jdrou, forever. 1 go to your John tells us; between Jesus and Albert Victor Christian Edward, 1902, and by London University ]n' father. Philip, inasmuch as this disciple who passed away at Sendtinghn'n 1903. He became a Tionc'her.uf; Napoleon III. --Were you at Se - on January 14th 1892, in his twenty- Lincoln's Inn in 1s02. and Trees- eighth acted as a sort of commissary of don ? (To his physician.) sebsrstence for the apostolic band. eighfih year. user in .(903. In 1901 he was in-• Leopold ll. of Belgium -The long, 17. -Five loaves -Poor ,barley At' ilhe age of 12 years he entered stalled Chancellor of the Cape Unr- ler: 'uurne is at hand. I um sof- loaves at that John G; 9;barley the navy as a cadet, along ttilh his vi tsit.v, and of lie welsh Llvliver ; for.atin - Y eras "food for cattle and 'slaves"). elder brother, and spent two years si'v the next year. on the Britannia, the school -ship He was a ersonal Naval • Aide HOW GEORGE IV. DIED. Andrew noticed that a lad had at Dartmouth:- Two years later the ale -Camp to her Majesty Queen Vie- "Oh, God, I am dying. This is these in his possession, together twe princes joined the Bacchante, toria and was Lord Warden of the death," gasped George IV. as he with two little fishes. under the command of the Earl of Cinque Ports and Constable of half! sat,' half lay, in the chair to 18. Bring them hither to me- Clanwilliam and went on a cruise Dever Castle in 1901-07. He was eLich he had been lifted from his That was his challenge to their in- to the. West Indies, where they appointed Personal Naval Aide -de-' bed when the final spasm seized credulity, expressed in the surpris- practically underwent all the thrid- Camp to his Majesty Icing Edward; bins. ed question, "What are these among so mensal' ships w]icth the ordinary cadet was VIl. in 1901. In the meantime, says Huish in 19. To sit dawn That is, to re subject to. Christmas of that year By an Act of Parliament in 1901 i les memoirs, trite, Bishop of Chi - was apent in the Barbadoes, the he was granted an annuity of £90,-'ehestsr a.nd • al] • t'he principal mom cline. They did so in ranks, by hundreds and fifties (Mark) so as Sailor Prince Who Went AH Through the Na'l,,y The new King, George Frederick Eeriest Albert, to be known in leis tory as George V , does nut look unlike his illustrious father, and his medium s'tature,• with reddish brown hair, beard, and moustache, blue oyes, and kindly face, will be THE QLEEe"•CRY Possesses 'Exceptional Qualities of Mind and Heart. The new Queen Mary is the per- son woo has to be reckoned with in the next reign. CJhe has been preparing herself for the position in the same way that a student might road for law or medicine. She has made a study of royal statecraft and. knows down to the tit iest detail exactly her powers and possibilties and those of tier husband. DEVOTED TO DUTY. Most persons wonder at the ex trordinary change in'the new Queen since her marriage. From being a gay, frolicsome girl, the life and soul of every entertainment, she turned' into a•grave, almost gloomy. woman, silently going her way, solemnly devoted to her duty. She fails to excite sympathy, admira- tion or imagination, despite the possession of exceptional qualities of mind and - heart. But for her possession of a bevy of handsome children she would be almost un- popular. ' `THE PEACEMAKER." She always- was remarkable for sound sense. At theme in her girl- hood at White Lodge she was known as "iihe peacemaker." Much of her youth was passed in Flor- ence, where the Teck family retir young Princes going ashore for the 000 revenue received from the,' beat of the royal household, with ed when their fortunes were tvreek- day. A short while later they laid Drchv of Cornwell. pages in attendance, were culled to prevent confusion, and making ed, anti she is Highly artistic. She r g it possible for everyone to he serv- T'HEIR GLOBE. TOUR. lie and in then presence, without ed and counted, is splendidly educated, speaking In 1897 the Prince and Princess the slightest indication of suffering' Looking up to heaven, he blessed fear' languages -French, German own - made a journey to Ireland, where his Majesty expired. --He acknowledged, with gratitude, and Ia]]rn, as well as her own Tho Bacchante being later attach- they, were very cordially received.' VIEWED BY THE CROWD. the bounteous provisions of the with accuracy and fluency. She ed to the Channel fleet, Prince l Their memorable visit to the Brit- After the body had been laid in heavenly Father. The way to bless sings excellently, is a fine pianist the foundation for a sailors' home at Bermuda. BECOMES A MIDDY. George 'was hi January, 1880, pro- 1':h colonies in the four corners of state, the iron gates of the palace anything is to give thanks for it anoted to be midshipman. He the earth, as Duke and Duchess of were thrown open and everybody (compare John 0. 11). crossed the equator, visited the Ca- Cornwall and York, was begun in was admitted,indiscriminately, ac- The disciples to the multitudes - the steamship Ophir in March, 1901. cording to the, historian, "the Aim- We are reminded here of the insti- The itinerary was through the Me- ney sweep and the . bricklayer in, ration of the Supper. Symholreal- diterranean and the Suez Canal to working dresses were seen pushing 1y we see Christ's ministers intrust - India, Australia. New Zealand, through the crowd or overleaping ed -with the sacraments. in the form South Africa, St. Vincent, 1V- I., the barriers;swhile the screams of of the broken, consecrated bread. thence to Nova Scotia, and through the females and the rude and in- So the miracle was a prophecy. The Canada to the Pacific Ocean anddecent jokes of the blackguards passover was near, and the new back, arriving in England :un the gave the whole scene more the ap- Passover only a ,year distant. t of November.1901. hearance of some crewel hastening 20. All ate..and were filled -Phil - THE .NEW KING'S COUSINS. f•, a rare show than to the sham- ip hd estimated that with two hun- „wet o re worth f bred, h narks, the Falklands, Simons Bay, Montevideo, and Australia, where he remained several months. Then he went to China, and returni ig to the Mediterranean by Singe - 1 � ..,pore and the Suez Canal, complet- r • • ed his tour by a trip ththroughPal- estine. He spent six months with .Ars brother in Lausanne, Switzer- land. In 1884 Prince George was made bei of death, died shillings ore a sub -lieutenant, and joined H. King George V. is nearly related WILLIAM'S END. I one could have only a little. George when the breath left a the Fifth became Kingof M S. Canada on the North Ameri- to several of the continental sov- i Twelve baskets full -Jews fieris anal. reads vorao:ouely not only nov els but serious books, She is proud of her striking like - nese to her great-grandmother, Queen Charlotte, and buys every pit,ture of her that comes into the market. A woman collector out- bid her for one of thein at the Duke of Cambridge's sale and ',refused to sell it even .at a, premium, The resemblance, though strong, does nee flatter. tate c ew Queen, GENEROUS TO BROTHERS. She is very generous to her brothers, the. Princes Teck, who are chronically hard -up. She is keenly interested in polities and never loses an opportunity of dis- cussing it with leaders of either party when she 'happens to meet them.. She is not .a success as a royal-repiesentative abroad owing to 'her formal, undemonstrative manner. Once she was surprised by an unusually enthusiastic recep- tion in an Australian town and ask- ed the mayor what might be the reasons; he, no courtier, replied: "Simply because you aro the mo- ther of six children." TASTES ARE D0MIESTIO. Her greatest friends are Lady Eva; Dugdale, the, Duchess of Port- land, the Duchess of Sutherland, Countess Shaftesbury and Vis- countess Chelsea, now married to Si Hedworth Lambton. Brought up in comparative poverty, she shows small appreciation of her present luxury. All her tastes are domestic, all her pleasures mental. She will be Britain's ruler. CROWNING OF GEORGE V. WILL BE MOST GORGEOUS SIGHT IN THE WORLD. Rings of England Solemnly Pre- sented to Subjeefs in West - reenter Abbey. 7En lai can station. The followingyear, in ereigns. Be. is a nephew of King Different indeed were the condi- quently carried a basket of paovis- October. he bonnie a hill lieut.- George of Greece and of King tions attending the death of his isous with them, so as to avoid de- father's body. He has yet to ho ena.nt. He was attached successive- Frederick VIII. of Demnark; first successor, King William IV. in!Moment from eating Gentile meat. crowned, and the coronation of a 1 to various ships, and served cousin of Emperor William, of the 1837. For hours his devoted Queen They were large baskets and pro- king is 'lure most stupendous spec- Y p fade the old world affords. with the Dreadnought and the Al- Czar' and the Czarina, of Queen had stayed by his bedside doing her; yoked much derision among their exandra fla slii a of the Mediter- Victoria of Spain, of the Ci'own utmost to soothe his •sufferings. ; foes. Each of the twelve apostles The coronation of George V. will 1 be r oaths in ire oration When i ranean s uadron, of wlhich his Princess of Greece, of the reigning Then, when the end approached' wculd have one of these receptae]es uncle, theDukeof Edinburgh, vvas Duke of Saxe -Coburg and Gotha, the Archbielaop of Canterbury, i and the gathering of the broken a commander-in-chief. of the Crown Princess of ]i.ouman- whose name the dying monarch had ; pieces would be a lesson in pru- vt once. o Another a indication that this miracle was meats. FROM DON IIE SCOTLAND NOTES OP INTEREST fRON HElt BANNS AND !BRAES. What is ()oiug On In too Itighla9Jt! and Lowlands of Auld - Scotia. The puhlie of Glasgow is ' again to llavo a permanent Zoo, . Success continues to attend the of eret'ions of the Glasgow Labor Exchange, The death tate in Goviun last year was 17.49 per 1,000, end tho Mirth rate 30.18. Portobello is to Have a martin - gent of Somalis this stunnrer. Last year 38,044 attended the Sabbath Tyree Breakfast Mission fu _Edinburgh. On account of an outbreak of measles at Port -Glasgow the infant departments of two schools have been closed, Paisley Town Connell intend to construct a new reservoir at Row - bank, near Howwood,' at a vest of ,about $00,000.. Wild cats are iucreasing.in'Ross. and Cromarty counties, A number of Dalbeatt]e Workmen recently left for America. Matthew McIntyre (5 years), Port -Glasgow, got 19 stripes of the birch rod for placing sleepers on the raileoa'd. Ten thousand rats have been. killed since November in B:adding- tenshire, by members of the Pests Elimination Committee. The Fishery Board have deposited several rnillioris of plaice fry in St. Comb's Bay, near Fraserburgh. Pittenwet;m. Town Council have opened a fund on behalf Gof tho two widows and ten children be rdt of their breadwinners by the sw•ainping of a fishing -yawl off Ce lardyke, Plans for the extension of 1)uu- ferniline Infections Diseases Hospi- tal. at -a cost of 381,830, are being considered. At,Marisohal College, Aberdeen, most ancient prayers handed down a monkey nurses a white rat, car - from the first ages of Christianity, vying it in his arms, and cuddling and a prayer, while reciting wheal' it affectionately. At night the rat the Primate lays his hand on the goes outside the ergo ane] sleeps on ampulla, or vessel filled with oil, a piece of matting on the top. standing on the altar. The Blantyre Estate, Erskine, is The King here removes his robe advertised for sale, along with the and cap of state, seats himself in beautiful old mansion house. • the chair near the . altar, while In Wishaw last quarter there four Knights. of the carter (hold were 247 births, 107 deaths and 40 over him a pall of silk or cloth of marriages registered in the parish. grad, The Dean of Westminster The .Caledonian Railway Com - takes the ampulla and spoon from pany awarded a poor woman the the altar, and pouring oil into the princely sum of 534.30 for stopping spoon, hands it to the Archbishop an express train when a tree had of Canterbury. The Archbishop fallen across the line.: She probab anoints the Sovereign in the form ly' saved many lives and thousands of the cross on the head and on of pounds of rolling plant. both hands, saying "Be thou an- The Slcot'c:li whisky trade shows no ointed with holy oil as kings, improvement. Tho consumption is priests and prophets were anoint-• decreasing, and. merchants clear as little as they possibly can in view of the uncertainty as to the inten- tions of the Chancellor of the Ex - n 1 p e<! At this time Handel's Coro - rilli s arranged the final pr•ograamne nation Anthem is rendered. r be subnrittad to the King CROWN COMES LAST. icier that he may set his formal cal of approval upon the 'arrange- Ia. of the Crown Princess of Swe- been heard to utter several times, t d chequer. HIS FIRST COMMAND. den. He is also related to King, tame .to administer the sacrament. 27 About fie a thousand For five months the ruiners oar In 7888 he received his first corn- l Manuel of Portugal, King Albert of "Thy will he done," came freely Leadhills have been locked out for the Belgians, and Czar Ferdinand film the King's lis. And then distinct from the later one. The Kings of England are crown t, daring to enter into a combination mond, that of torpedo boat No. 79, of Bulgaria larking t the Archbisbop, in faint Chapter 15 verse 29 Jesus de• ed in Westminster Abbey. Guests minster invests him with tl�e sn fur the protection of thou trade in - of g thenaval teens; Behave me 1 am a sehg parted thence prom the t tted t pertnurca Ltich cf the royal or - pe terests and those who manage the Thus anointed, the Ring kneels down,"while the Archbishop recites a prayer, and the Dean of West - arm manoeuvres. parts ofa , the ceremony.are rmi o• uricnaments, rubes, spurs. sword. ring, While in charge of this vessel he - -- "g building; of urs of the company refuse to al - rendered valuable assistance to an- fat's man. Tyre and Sidon,where he had heat- lite the seat nave of the buildin nrir and sceptres, is then in dire. or - These were his last coherent ed the daughter of the Canaanite tate peers acid peeresses will find din' delivered to his Ma est low them to resume work union outer vessel which was in distress. wrrds. "In less than an hour," woman. the transepts; the choir and in ort wti aming last This the Arch- . they will sign a solemn Undertaking, On May G 1890, he was placed in Fitzgerald, 1 M t, x V1ent up into the mountain -Fol- strumenialists will occupy a galrover to have anything to do with charge of the first -Class gunboat •-- `. I • h d with- lowing out his purpose, which lery at the east end of the novo: MONARCHS' LAST WORDS kava ris Majesty e bishop falces up and, lays down puce without a struggle an wa B again on the altar, offering a pray- trades unions. Thrush, bthei, and A it he spent a year orr, a roan the ween kneeling at going At Lochwinnooh naturalists re- • en the North American station, vis- ht bedside, Q g or for the Sonoreign about to be iting ('anada and the West Indies. holding his hand, f the sake o£ continuing their insiruc- 'the theatre," the actual dais on invested Ring George will sent In 1890 Ise was designated by Queen word one the hlacicbircl and maxis Victoria to open the Industrial Ex- hibi'tion of Jamaica, W. L In 1891, ou his return to England, he was promoted to the post of Com- mander. His latest command was E. M. S. Crescent, in which dur- ing 1898 he visited many of the sea- "No, I shall ge on; I shall work port towns of England and Ireland. to the end." Words that will be ale was made captain in 1893, Rear- ci:ronicled in the archives of Eng- . Admiral in 1901, Vice -Admiral in laud as the last utterance of a 1903, and Admiral in 1907. He was great and good sovereign, a man. gazetted a General in the army in wh:, had played the game, Edward _ (ho Seventh of his name, the des - Pendant of a long line of mighty Lessen 11. The Multitudes Fed, rncnarehs has passed' Matt, 14. 13-21; 15. 2(1.31►. Death is a solemn thing, especi- al y when the head of a great em- Gold Tett, John 6. 3i. ertc had been frustrated, of oin g Bishops in their robes will be rang- hieand still affectionate- into seclusion with his disciples for ed at each side of what is 'termed port the season to have been a for- ty ro mg xis the com urhilnself in the historic chair, placed table warmth of which rendered tion. which the Sovereign and his Con- in front of tate altar, and Areh- having youug and the robin, house 3U: There came .great multi sort are to bo throned. Members bishop Temple will place the crown .sparrow and missel thrush having tildes -Compare, verse 38. Hie fame. of the royal family will occupy the on his head, the trumpeters will nested and laid. had' gone before him into this dis- box just above the south side of --a- -- will out a fanfare and theguns the altar. LONG SERVICE RECORD. old custom, the shouts of the at the Tower and in the park - 13y wi1.1 — erre a salute. HOW MONARCHS OF THE WORLD PASS AWAY. Deathbeds of Preceding Kings of England. -Crowds Saw George IV. her unwilling to believe the sad reality." TE cLESSON S. INTERNATIONAL LESSON, ;MAN 29. He was created Duke of York, Earl of Inverness and Baron Iii] larncy in 1892. The death of 'the Duke of C itu•ence from pneumonia iu that year left him heir -apparent pi:'e• et the rine on whom its cold! Verso 13. When Jesus ])card ]t basket (Acts 9. 25), larger in sire. 1:o the Throne.. Ho had himself !hand falls. But primer and peeper Verse this, however, there seems to be • PROCLATM THE KING. only recovered from an attack of await alike the inevitable hour This may refer either to the news l' triet, largely heathen. and they brcke in upon his privacy with all ma ner of unfortunates, and, in compassion, he healed them. 31. tGlcn•ified the God of .Israel --Implying that they were liens: the hymn. "1 Was Glad When They York. The Queen is anointed -on 32. They faint on the way -Many said Unto Me." Ube head only -and invested with of them had undoubtedly come long The coronal'•ion procession, the the ring, endowed with the seep - distances. most gorgeous 'sight of the old ire the ivory rod and the dove, 37. Seven baskets full -These world, will sweep through the and, after this it done the peer - tiles, the baskets used by the Gen- whole length of the Abbey from tiles, and were, if we follow Luke's the west door to the dais,where e:•ses may assume their coronets. 1\'estmrnster scholars will herald This is tea climax of the scone. Eleven Employes Average Fifty the entrance of the Ring and • +--followed -- y'-- ------r-- f Years w•if.it Stine Firth. Qneen, and the choir will render the Queen by the Arclrhis'hop of In the firm of Messrs. Heal & Son, upholsterers, of. Tottenham ('our( road, Landon, England, there are elven employes whose periods 01 service average nearly fifty years, These eleven employes are still te< rking in different departments. version of Paul's escape from the their Majesties will kneel in private • Thu lung and Qner n•. then offer erne are upholsterers and uphol- p their oblations, enc] the communion st.eres_es, •some are. in the bedding wall of Damascus in that style of &wane. !tvnhoid, which nearly cost him his. lire In July, 1895, he presided at the sixth In'trirnational Glcographi- ' • 'Val Congress, bold at the Imperial Institute. In 1899 he succeeded the Duke of. Argyll as president of the Royal Humane Society. , MARRIAGE OF THE NEW RING. 'JIte marriage between the Ring and the Queen Consort, the Prin- 'sass May of Teck, took place on ea., come to his family by the July t3, 1891, tho Ring being then dsnghter of Ring Robert Bruce.) 25 years old. The ceremony was Charles V.....1y, Jesus. performed in 'the Royal Chapel, and Charles[ I' b (" s team attended by all the Royal 1am- ily, and by the t"zarowitz of Rus- sia and the Ring and Queen of Den- mark. As'ai, result of that union five sons and etre'daughtetr have been, biro ; Prince Edward Alltc; t Christian (Irrn•gt Andrew Patrick David, horn ,Tune 2:3, INN, th'' 11re- i�c,Tit heir-pret+umptivr. (<t t'h,'thrunr• known as :Prince David; Prince Al- bert ' Fredorittk Arthur' George, ,Richard 1.-- youth, I forgive von. he rn .1)ecemhi'r 14, 1895 Prineo ('i••, Bertranal de (Marden, whose tittrdns •vlw hila leave .1'apet'nauin, never to leave them US brig as they st • . Albert, o him.) anti. in their eagte.rnc's, made 11,,v Pre.- 11 11' -. "Well. i'n't uteri Then follow the (nlcinr; of the pie -looking " r e �re s • i' 1ilanty William Frederick rl i. , ori a killed Ir )white f )t ]c, but fairly ()n an average over 50 ielsnl.rd moo: ' Russia; Voltu;t ktna de our' round the, hitt 1 of the we', t winch lee: can furnish oaths. the sin io of the ancient with ' .r„ ,c' • , 7 Tinct+ (.ano)gn \l:rxiwt,lr,r 7, r f 71t t some . n „ r • , E5 !r• Al.laio r.rth clt,rm ends nasi Wiwi, t nt i.u.t•uta ,.1:,, r.ac.t year in Lng- [,rtr ilfareh 71 1J00, Edward ,\lexsndeir• Edmund, burst 1,.. tired. Elizabeth. (To his wife, lake. a mom f,r'mc-1 Vent (-sre_atcit Sideire "'' n( the 311 lisrl and Waite. whielt levels all distincti+nis. His- of the tragic entl of the forerunner, ttt e cert stn y* His - they tells how preceding sovereigns brought to flim by John's diseiples, 80• Magadan --In the boat (the have met the last dread aims. or to the interest which Herod be- method of procuring which at this gars to take in las mighty works. u usual place is not explained), WHEN DEATH (`AMIE. Withdrew -- Excited Capernaitm Jesus and the. dit;crples sarlc•cl alt - Rin James V. of Scotland. -11 °tiered little leisure after the parcntly to the south, seeking a i," , c(1'let took. The region of Maga- Creel Chamberlain and.: Garter- prtncegs of Sweden, end as ,young tug, This should be an eloquent ohne with a Ings and it w ill got with strenuous Campaign. through (.'tall , . l l n •ha,.. Rin -at-Arms will formally resent girls to be fond of collecting pre01- tset+mony to the healthy nature of olio, that Ido to word brought to lee whreh had been broughtotate to a can and the parts n n. but t : ' g y p p, g Mark) are both unknown. but'they King Geary the Fifth, the nn- of• stones from all parts of the the upholstering trails, daughter, tha, `his wilt. had borne a cause with the death of the Bap- (v • e probablyin close proximity, doubted King of this realm." This world, and many of their friends "Our firm is now in :its one, Ann- aneto fat t:, the to nae- bre Besides, Jesus mist have v cr 1 l is done b • turningto each of the ccu,tributed to their collection, not- dredth year of existence; it was otic to tilts fact of tate crown hay- the densly moved the ion.h e and their very remoteness; that would y •make them desirable for rest Fuur carters b.f the theatre, the solo the Princess of Wales, on her 1 foundeal in n small house fn Rath - pees Baptist. of And, in addgn, the pegs wbith anembarrassingodd'is mzet_ which Jesus sought. John 0. 19, Scvoreig,• also turning his face t,o-' roiur•» from her Tang colonial tour. hear, place, and probably number. ing with Herod made nig retirement 15, must be rememhei•ccit nconnee- vt•ai'd those successively addressed -Thus the two royal sisters gat to- ed less than rt dozed all told." to another tetrarchy advisable, at service will be proceeded with. 1'11INCESS "PAT'S" JEWELS. impartment, and two are carmen. "This must be it record• in the ar. nals of any firm, I should think," When theyrise, the solmnity - said Mr, Heal. "Five of these em - will Apiutaeei1 al• Dinner Ablaze With plc can shuw. an averse ser- vvi.}1 begin with the recognition - yesg IJinmonds. vice of forty-six that is to say, the Archbishop of 3' •'. Years; six of over Canterbury, the Lard C'hancellor, Princess Patricia of Connaught fifty. They are. all hale and hearty, the Lord Chancellor, the Lord and her elder. sister, the crown and the two carmen are still driv- emenr er. ,?1111900' lion with these miracles, ed to refer to a command to' his son least, for n time. — --4,---- to r••---_— tri forgive his enemies' and murder- A desert place -John says, (GOOD FOB THAT, r1d) ,.There was much graysin the. "But I've got plenty r,f lush'," Charles If-- Don't let poor Nelly place." The meaning of Matthew says the customer, "Why should I starve. (Deferring to Nell (Iwynn.) hole, as eve find it in many oilier bey your hair tonic?" the abbreviated Litany and coin- Lor hostess whether she would like, _w - William IIi. --t Ian this last long( places in the Gospels, is not that -Sprinkle it on that 11iln0111 hat • , er •' r. • r ti, wee s411 nor 'jewels and as no: ,, r bull 1 151011 n s. •vie .,tad the sea t.aei J laic: chap who failed is taws e1'. C'rurnvtell• -7t is not my design tit the lihscr. wtis burr" wast n u( ours :rnd'Chan! e it alto tr fuzzy mini from the Hisbop of London. emcees Imre expected to loin the! ..•._.,,. ;- ,) tht.r'1! was bereft or human ahro!ct,ng,encovereere _.__.. ..r-.. _ t-.. the .___ and given over to grazing;. Su the The regalia will then be handed gcther many gems both rich and tri the Archbishop, whose thtty it 0 rare, and sherd no doubt are a p'ca PL lENTY OF TIMM. to lass the different articles to the sure to thein both now -.c -days, They ]?lanigan.- "Ph 01 would ez do if 1)r,an of St. George's to pare on ate evidently so to Princess I etri- y Petri - the altar. The swords are excepted cia for one clay- when she was stay - from this ceremony. Then follow Ina ata country house she asked yes lived to be tiro hundred years aid 4" Lanigan -"Ci don't know yit," drink or slick, but my tle:sign is to make, 'Cirri( baste 1 esu to be,geonc." Napoleon 514,1 Dien-LaNeth', hrssneaint - Tet° diarmeel assumes his cap of erims:n, relict, wear them that evening. word: princ :is .11hc, succeeded is too busy: word: "wilderness., is used in Lal,e '' r:l-_"1. lore =uu 1 Harr, and1.r1ndactr m s.rdeners work b = I'be 11111 } turned tis with ermine, Val hrcisr thought, it would be "cairn 1 g S 18, a, and PIK-where, 1 tunica consent 1111 be }urtt•e, only Followed bus on foot•-. The ata have ptoi e d mammanrt and papa TAK'1'„y SO 'OA TIT fon." nod hof' hostess bring pleas t,ri'd'antl. chiropodists by ter, foot. o,! atthe idea, she by and by came lr,; rums( be remembered in eennee- dr wn to dinner' dressed in a 'Sint. 11111 V' .1.11 diose ntirae:les,