{ title: 'Sunday morning tidings. volume (Elmira, N.Y.) 1881-1885, February 15, 1885, Page 4, Image 4', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031252/1885-02-15/ed-1/seq-4/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031252/1885-02-15/ed-1/seq-4.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031252/1885-02-15/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031252/1885-02-15/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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1 it“ \_ Epough for ome hundred orf more,\ ~, 2 [* vmnwmmwwmm g,AMAlWIfl“Am : momma“ murmurs. mic; hotel men: seem to keep up their EQ bushels on the shrewd ' business principle | ~ of the man. who kept a tavern on the wild f Pue . frontier. On one occasion a ; guest flayed at his house and secured | © lodging and breakfast. When he asked |. .* for his bill in the morning the landlord re- ~~. plied in an oft-head easy-going manner | \Five hundred dollars.\ The | of speech : _. guest hesitated, but Anally brushed up: -... equrage enough to remark : . dharges rather steep?\ Aman has got to charge enough to keep uphis table at least. Now, you see, I ply get a customer once in two or three M, and I am obligéd to charge him 6901131: to make up for a good Tun of. 7 ~* The Utica bonifaces evidently have ~ copled the frontier landlord's policy. Last summer 'they charged the firemen ex.. orbitant rates, and recently the Grand \Army boys were charged $4.50 per day for &a single cot set up in a room with a | . dozen others. Judging from such un. pleasant experiences Utics is a good place for conventions to steer clear of-at least. _ the landlords. . @ Gf -me 'THE PRESENCE OF LADIES. K. writer in the 'Roller Skater,\-a new * journalistic candidate, that is worthy of success,-in discussing the popular ~- amusement of the day, says \there are numerous young men in the larger towns and cities, who after they reach a certain age seldom see anything of the opposite - sex. I honestly believe that many a * young man could, have been saved from . 'the downward path had he been given an opportunityot spending a portion of his time 'in the presence of ladies. Let us look for example at this city. Hundreds 'of yeung men who formerly habituated ~ 0 1”1mm! and sometimes even worse ~~ places,'mnd many hundreds more whose > < hearts often mourned the fact that mo lady friends, are now regular ants at. cur rinks and there is not & so foolish as to intimate that the \Hittle akates and little talks they have with | : ? 'Audies they meet there are other than ben \*' eficial. I have looked into this matter elooelylndknow’whmo! I speak, and I * aoe sure roller “was“ at present one of theme-t innocent udvholmme of pas- xenon rm: mm ALSO. .'Danville, in the. land of Penn., used to : possess a long-baired poct, named Wm. Marvin. Revers ladies of that place are - endeavoring to mark the poet's last rest- place with a monument. A local ggests that it would be well for .do like work and put one at f Marvin's wife who was one To Meat women to man's 'pobt would often say on . houge: \Obarlotte I shall gy e absent two hours. I shall, f ¥éturn, be drunk, and if I find you my return I shall flog you Charlotte was wise enough filmy from the house when her drunken lord returned. A lise MBR. RXMAN'S Porm. An editorial in last Sunday's Tromas, in reference to a postical eulogy of Bob In- _ gersoll, written by Mr. F. S. Ryman, , i baragitated that gentleman's admirers to -__!» considerable degree. The Troms, >- while it believes Christianity better than ~- Panthsim: or agnostic doctrine, is in no 7, ense bigoted, ani at the urgent request | of several readers\ publishes the poem on ~ the second page, 'to which is attached a criticlkim of the 'subject of the poetical a “moon. Mr. Ryman's letter, in his ~ own dorm, is also published. As such _ discussions are usually interminable, they ‘ wiflvindup wimthhiuue. . 'an. unann- LEITER. : Oolenel Caldwell's letter this' week will R rho: especialinterest to the survivors of ~ the gallant 107th regiment, who held a 10, mock 'legislaturb in the old capitol of | : ~~ Georgia. His description of Parson Davis, .~ Seif hard and halfsoft shell Baptist, is a brilliant.character . sketch, The:Colonel's | ._ letters have been thusfar of exceptional |. literary marl: aud worthy of: any that | 4 ~- have appumddtherinfiupmorme; TjtJentmyfiegnme oe ‘ ~' ___ A PRECBENT manual». | k E'mmotmmmmmnmm gum: 'that he merely announced mmtil making: shaped-mar, - thomhe did not consider that his action | Bue 6 pnehgtlmmmlheconnt. His ac- j-donwfildhponofthqmfionofubi \Ain't your | \Some people | might think so; but amongst, I allow that | mama RID® ; 00 [ (By: one of \ons. - fzf'fupmsummumum. i g‘ ow * \|. Bringing to the car a My display, : «magnum-autumn: - If, f But bigger st that biiiow of war - ~ 0000 4° “Maximum-autism. . Aud rosred like Bashan's beit uncontrolled; . ,.Mmmmma~4m ‘ T'uwwtflmlfimm 0 | mammnmmmuumr. | -_ But there's road from Eimi{rs town,. m= | - The R. C. N. Teading gown, | : _} | _ And: there: om the nunot mammoth: ght | .> Almmubuokuwma night Was seen to pars in Its terrible flight. - - mmenmmowmemmuw As ho pulled the-ghrottle and: gave ner spéed.. ‘ mmmmonnmnflswmw, Withmmym milés avg. ' Under their feet the road ° Like snakes ix their boots flowed, But Charlie Walkerdid not fall behind - When Alec Eustace got of, his wind, : ._ And Ald. Gorman fed with monogram fire, | And Shorifl ftanley with blood In him eye, - And Chief Little got his heart's desire As be the reception to be held that day. With Albany thirty miles away. The firat that StanchOeld saw were the groups - Of snow banks, blizzards, and then he whoops, What shall we do? A glance tod him both,; Hedashed to the enginemidaseormor hbuzzahs. And the reat took a drink there because They wore atalled by tho snow and compelled to pause. With frost and with snow the locomotive was gray, By the flasB of her headlight and the injector's pay She seemed to the governor to say : \I have brought you the gang all the way From Elmira town to Amsterdam, hey ?\ HwTab! burrah{ for ammonia, Hurrah for Baldy, Vet and Sam:1 And when their statoots are raised on high Upon the roof of a saloon hard by, Tag Amsterdam soldiers' temple of fame, There with Maxey's glorious name. | -- Beit said in letters both bold and bright, \Here is the gang tnat stayed all day By getting stalled at Amsterdam, From Albany thirty miles away i\ Cig...\ POOR SHOP GIRLS CET LEFT. Assemblyman McGolden tried to have the honorable body of which ho counts one voiceand vote passa bill to protect overworked shop girle from being fined for being late. \Slim\ Van Allen's Judi- clary Committeo reported that the bill was unconstitutional. If the constitution doesn't provide means of legislative pro- tection for poor overworked, mesgre. salaried shop girls, then the quicker the | state has a constitution thst does the bet- ter it will be. The present legislature is dodging some issues relating to labor that . & had, as a matter of justice, better tike 'heed of, Bhopgicls earn, on the average, .a princely sslary of four dollars a week, &nd when about one-third of this is taken | out by inhuman employers, because the girls are occasionally a few minutes late, they have a mighty small \pittance left to 'Keep them from starving. The unconsti- | ftutionaiity of such a law would become 'constitutional in the sight of heaven and bumanitarians, should our over-legal leg. iplators seo fit to pass it. A GLIMPSE OF DHRY BONES. ° The newspapers everywherehave 'be. gun a crusade against the indecently low corsages worn by society women at public or private entertainments. There is noth- | ing so calculated to disgust men of sense as a woman attired in &a dress in which the waist or upper portion has been ap- | parently laid aside as an article of apparel, \It seems strange that a fashion which is at once so ugly and so unbecoming should rage so madly. A gentleman but lately from New York, in speaking of & full. dress occasion in that city, recalled with & shudder the vision of dry bones which he there encountered. Women who have covered thoir shoulders decently all their lives now undress as unblushingly as the others. 'It is neck or nothing,\ a bright woman remarks. Women should remeto. ber, says Alphonse Karr, that modesty is | the surest of coquetries.\ ==—--—________—-—____—_.—= A 110mm ConTRIBUTORs. The Trmas requests contributors to write more brieffy. The pigeon-holes in 'the editor's desk is filled with esmays, lot- | ters and contributions that are in some economize. space, and. hereafter communi- tain live news, will either find repose in Contributors should tho «besar in mind: that criticlams of affairs two monthlold 5,000 milos in 100 'days. : He is already filmm‘ of the Senate Basques-clots}! long-dimMnd !~ - sounds, established a precedent. in the hin feat, when accomplished . will place ‘hhuthehudolthepeduvinprdw Whoa“: tenth-atoni- .mummb “Wyom- ' invehthodty “cone-Mm. : .., | snd Slagree silver .work are menufactur. , | atteimpted to discuss ® way: elongofing | having. moored I| exhibit a few ire And, striking Youmana mm; sawed-off oath, | | A writer, speaking of the Craze, #AyE: | instances over two columns in length. In | justice to our readers we are obliged to | onions of great length, unless, they con- the wastebasket or be returned to the [ writer-if accompanied by pauper stamps.. are- of no earthly use toaliveneWIplper E «Strike while the iron 1s hot, or not:at: all. ' HOIMAO’I HIG WALK. ° a ~ Noam the Matti!!! has ”mlflwmnowdraw 'amido 'the mtonhe and 4,437; muslin eighty-men days. He bas | 638 miles to go, and. thirteen days in | | which to accomplish the feat .of walking [ , “Mtedhhomih junction | \lation is froon mono to 55,000, of which | two-Mundane. About: 1,500 Eure pom mmm and 'Jows | Nothing alace the «notion of Momma. hetweeo everybody but the politicians . of the North and South has, so stirred. the public as: Gimme-cum! Ot.course roller $o 1mm bave in looal instances been : : |-noticed byt'he prase as merely exuting, |but they held no 1 rarmplace in 'the heart: of the people. 'he buman mind is al-; demandingnttewcnfi. advance tgent mi'hbi- cycle and a cornet - player, propose to: ot nature and some creations of art bined with huran mechanism that | are truly wonderful Having with the janitowthe'l‘y abort walloper's uniform, | during the commet Jjugglery. \The formance will com- mence this evening by ® presentation of a. wonderful plece of human meehoniem, entitled the . tapout 81mm” Ordinarfiyhe a thing of fiesh and 'blood, but this on is constructed of shoet. iron, brass moun , with steel knuckles and macadamized feet. When heis in: repose he looks s door mat, and he can be used 'for th scraper, and perhsps with proper manipu-: lation you could But mark you, (Keep the cornet subdued) he isn't any comer loafer when you wake him up. Buppos you are an injured bus band and you bid 'your wife farewell and take the train to 'be gone several days. You suspect that another man is not true to his wife and desires to visit your loving household dutring'the interim. Lay this machine down at the back door ; tell your wite if any tramps call to “and upon this mat of ateel, brass and crushed rock: The calamity that will follow can be easily ex. the tramp. The who loves to visit and care for your wife in her semi-widow.- hood is just as 'ligble to receivea shock he is mora liable to call. The sequel is at the re; adv g rates for reports of sudden and suramary demises.. 'It is simple in construgtion ; watch this \ab- sent husband\ when I step upon him i Bee how he springs Into action and living form ! A man of steel! How he strikes rout right and left and Hour Why, Sulli« van couldn't stand up z second Marathi: rewarder of 'He can be used equally well upo the young masher who. interferes with the hired girl seven even. lugs in the week., This slugging automa- | tion was invented by a man who hadbeen |'the Victim of seven divorce suits, but since he completed this domestic harmony pro- ducer, he hasn't had any further business in thé courts, except assault and battery Cases. that an enterprlfig Journalist will supply | R Ofa mandy,\ but the hudienee needp't chime in. Lifting the c tton ecurity aside, the ty at theone | price of admisfloxi win r view of . “n.i p®DHI,\ . |_ A man who never tasted liquor, never smoked, never thewed tobaceo, never visited a saleon or roller rink, never had wagisl of sixteen plump herself down in \ his lap, and never was known to lie, and never read a newspaper or Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn. You will notice that he is & pronounced branette, and is dressed in a gunny sack wound with ropes. Helooks ikem Buffalo pac | house dried beef, and he £1063 He is an Egyptian mummy and 'You can't buy his. vote, but he just as much as a man when? vote in the progam will be the PO8TOFFICZE FAXNTOCINHI. . These figures have been in the chamber of horrors for twenty-four years and their aby and- anypery movements are the won- derotthepreeent century with two or three back centuries to hear from. 'These men are worked by a atring manipulated by themselves. 'They: all go into. this. large building- marked postoffice, ant after remaining some time: they 'all leare 'but one, who upped-em be cock of the roost. The audience 'that they (wear a. diuppointed look as they emerge from the building. Having shown you. three remarkable curipeities, exhibit the,} ° _. ! e can?“ ornonou Themgnonthexight. thing’flhflw laocoon with flery serpents twisting and | encircling bis body, is a-man wholloked 'his wife with & stick Ot. wood. Ho was Imported from Hades, . furnace. No.. \B7 mmumh his place.\ The Mentored-lubed“: knife, / families with her lying She & mun-um - Bhe tum “are and in art, and | te quict as passable; Pq 3010 that precedes the nose and face 115118193 to the lamp I will purpose or & boot. him to peel onions.: plained by any of the andience playing | from this battery as the tramp;.in fact, | readily explained 'by the column obituary | The Jone orchestra will now while | | away afow hours writh the \Chimes of N el vell of ob. [ te you died cin buy. We will now disburse & :chromo | U to each lady patron and remain seated for } a couple of days for the bachelor orches. | tra to earn his salary. The next change | at small cost,\ ummdmufi tediotuuummuxiomtoph” Woman on the right \with\ her tongue | Elmira ‘TMioofmofimiammfl m s M - 8, second division, is: the frozen figure of:] . a fireman who was called up in- the. mid- to. - be ' inspect. , would| much prefer,. finfiging by bis looks, inattendanrennthe: thmsmyox'qin- spection, That. group 'of naked \nkele | die . of. the. night sd. by . the: msyor. | He. tonized\ - then are ex-managerk of rinks,. who were rédiiced to starvation while an. | flavoring to boom their business, ' The group of ons \hundred panama 'young ladies dressed in: tights, in the eighth | | seciion, . are the oaly: chempion p | akaters in the United Bixtes, eechbqiug greater than the other, see Managers' Bellows of June 9th, 1884. Theist, J Hy, fiiwlmnng man, with bis feetc f upon the marble Jop, is the editor pl a country newspaper. He weighs: «01mm unds. 'The man: with an-awful red with his hat smashed, Toted for Bt. iThe perfommca Lor - now close by. tiona will constanly appear. WE- THOUGII THE LAST GLIMPSE or 'ERIN WITH SORROW I NEE, {By Tame“ Moory, the MINSTEEL ] man the last glimpae of Rflnmfih sorrow I | Yet wherever thou art shall seem Erin to mo. In exile thy bosom shall still be my home, And thine eyes make myolunate wherever wo TOAM. 'To the gloom of some deeertmeoldrocxyshore. Where the oye of no stranger can hound us nog Ore, Iwmnywmzmymnuwmd think menouzh wind Less rude than the Wavelet-women- hing. wrenches, And hang o'er thy soft namaawndmsbmee mammothcom-nmsmmnw One chord from that harp, or one look mm that. hair, afime twenty eighnn yoar of the AN. ACL wan made respecting the 11 tuna dream genera! o: the Imh whe wore restrainei Ibo my! bove the cars. Of Sn inde otflle ”It“! med wine mac +04 SHADOW; T“!!! Filth The rich are. a ylf ed | I noticed a gentleman whom I yi: | last fall, has beenmnnz ever since.. the evening 'the . , ma (march on the cornet. The. nudienee | please refrain from kigking the bond; oi! the side-of the-museum. Be cmfglaq you pasa down the hall as the atairs have been.torn down. | Themuseum will open regularly every week, when new atirac- reign ot All on their hm “Noggin“ > no freer fromm the abadows | 'that desth: bunga, than the: poor. - One | year' ago Miss Reggie Shellac! Bruck- lyn, a beantifol young lady worth in her: | own right $300,000, was married to Sen. aot, mi The wedding was a grand 'and Cher wedding transom was ie shy Worth, of Patio, costing a smaly , . A. few. do}: ago Mrs. Murtha as |Judgments.\\ You say Mr. Ingersoll de. in | “royal prophets, into., but dean‘s yukeny. ”A. cline my: pom 10° a.\ acts I honor more than Ido those: publicly in my own defense;, think itiuo sinfal oomppozt. Se - On the 81a of January last I went down to Kingston to Hear Mr. Ingersoll lecture, |- anéquugoing to my seat in the car | Uhoughf, as being Mr. Ingertoll i jugh 'I had never before seen & ng 'but pic- mm othim. 1A: noon went «4p and spoke 'to his, and had a very pleasant chat with: him. He introduced me to: his Wee—one of the very finest ladies I hove ever met.! anywhere. Itaiked with him all the way down to ngmn, and also at the hotel. i where he stopped I had the honor of listening to: bis (39anan for an hour 'or more, and I must say: without, reserva- flan, that I hever yet met anyone, Chris-. tian or Atheist, who seemed more truly. in sympathy with all that goes to better <I the brains or bodies of men, and I know if you could have heard him you could not say with a clear epnscience that you. 1 thought him a bad man.. Now I do not wish to be cross orcunkyin tnis letter { for I am not really offended at the public rebuff you gave me. My poem to Mr. Ingergoll will be published in the Boston | Investigator soon, for I ahall copy it out today aud send it to them with your 'criticism upon it; so honors will be even. on that score and we. will now cut for & new deal. In regard to Mr. Ingernoll’a theologlcxl tenets, as I have said, I accept them and tised because I wrote : Tmoamnoum , 'The bigots curse, the tyrant's, Rona-ad muwucnmlowauewpzpueaooa Thy hope is here! j Well now may I say, and I say xi in all kindness, tod,-the very fact that 'the T {church and her defenders refuse to hear «all sides and consider the honest convic- : ton of those who differ with her and who 'does really more to undermine the very the days of Promethous® and Epieunu 'down to our omBMDnvin and (I‘M!!! < either increased intelligence 'or lack: of { evidence, or both, and if there is a God | and Christianity is his chosen creed, does 'he lack evidence to convince afinite being 'Of those truths that religidnists claim are | \| so important? As the French philoso. pher says: \Site parié pourguot {uni- vore nest pas comvainou?\ [If He (God) has spoken, why is not the umvm-se con- *inced 2] - «' - The old questions of Epicurus concern. | ing Qod have erver remataed unanswered: - Is he willing to prevent evilbut unable ? Then is he impotent. . Is he able, but not willing ? 'Then is he malevolent. ° - is heboth able and willing ? Whence, then, is evils _ ' Perhaps I maekeptie, atheist or infidel or whatever you please to call \it but I. he said: fensive as that which doubts the facts of: honest and > cerefni o‘bhernfion ~no inf! | delity 10 gross 'as that which d(sbelieven | the deductions of oompetmt anfl unbuaed better in‘fiifit - / Well, now . 'Old po my?» I'm: “biffiimtwi Nor CY flowing Dr. Putd y; with omeer, asd Dm‘w \andmwudm Momm- Proad avenue which it Located helm | Churoh, . and Second mm. 3m . in «: mien most. deplorable; abominable new; condition. . Dr. Purdy: says one zimngimf'wfitt terrible Alth efllfi * ‘K favorotm musing.“ wfil pleuenouee . iga m forenoon. They found the blodk with when, or clse compel the: forst He 'thinks that guch>& pool will???“ 'been discovered. “momma of health | foam? inhumane. 2 ' dents: to abandon tha ptemiia. H 2% rfitmmi-nmy Thethmmotmmimm whom mmeWmudtyto -attend Gov. | \--* Hill's reception, returned: on - Thursday}o* \mgmhthmforwmwwaf ane ta high-w maxim Alesand -+ tm. eat £3 frames: a well tattler who broke up severs! , Mammfihum we whgguflundhhmkkumlzt |= dec a ”3“ with the [ \J“.mi flfi ‘ Ti :\ | He is evidenty Jick ap gm l~ catnip; are fine-mafia} usted to gelamt instiny ays wome whers, Jp - perhaps I am mic a “mtjhflge yondoml like Mr. Ingets XAL; it is your MyflfllmmMflLMm, gon °WWWWWM_'M.1 a; - Uefeent nee-don topubliely de Ese M Robert: G. Ingersoll, |. © whose theological doctrines I believe aad | | ..- of any other publMe/ man now living in || .. is country. |I presume you will give me | | - é same 'show\ That Agrippe gave ] Paul | _ viz the right of making afew remarks |\ . 39d Min $05 honor of the man whom. you seamen 5s I suppose my poem was publicly chas-| disbelieve her Bible, I say this very fact | *** loorner stone of all religion than all the | min a chi. Frigss ares. - skeptics inalded 'have dokhe trom | A Kew York paper reports. that Gov: Hill, at his reception Wednesday evening;, kissed the intended bride of Mr. Mike}: Murphy. It deciarsa that the \Governor 'smilod as he placed his- hands on the | orange:wreathed brow of the young girl's | head, and blushingly confessed that if was 'the first time be had ever Melody Mr. Murpby was flattered.\ i . There jis a tide in the siffsirs of woman | which taken at the flood ledds the Lord: | knows where, says Byron, but in man's case it is different; the tide leads onto | fortune. The handsome Governor may | And in that first sip of nectar a.desire.to | | possess a bride of his own. an affair in- | which his many friends would take pleas. ure in extending their oongutnhtionn. ‘thelluonio ~'What does &a doubt neon? It magma! thet allude to him; but, as you have imade | - ime a 'sort of s public. target, I feel. that | - WWW “not the «mont 'é Milan Sie 'skath Tiik in the city. ©. It Fashioned “Whhmwwdmm | will be held in: ”Ermine \Thi v m“ fug m ma,mwmvmm. ' (Pyaz as you sya» !) - yeep her down! ° | wmummmmmea. mmmmmwm ~ - hey her down! .- ken c. | wwmmeeim” Last smmmmmmmm nmmmzmwmoe— tol Keepherdowni. . ~. (~~ ; Youhm sinned like whoa. , (fill WAIGLUM mtounnmn Kurosawa: ~. She, like you, to sin was pront, - smw,qona1es,she’ume, ‘ (Lumrvxlmcmmomu) ~ *Keep her down! To# nomenwwe. K.¥.. ' --size 0!!!me aonnows autumn}. . There is only space to quote Gordon’s 3 , | own words, in illustration of his chemo-f ter, which is: the secret and cause of his | and is the noblest development Of | po 2 mummmmf- rhf: e this century. Hereaesomeot the maXr- | v ery ims of thik \man of destiny,\ as follows: \It is a delightful thing to be a fatalist, not as that word is gammy employed, but to sccept that, when things happen and not before, God h Teakon so ordained; them things, not only the great tings, but all? ‘ the circumstances of life : that is whatis meant to meby the words 'you are dead'. in St. Paul to Colossians.\ Again: “We, for some wise th to. happen-ail nems: of 1M? name Wells Station don‘ nigh terviewed,\ he rep replied, * evidence for our case.\ and taken pin life the ba 4 -. # W more f than by playing police court, _ Itis eerleéfiy right to? . path: tormezenfier nder; bit a: ahi nid caprices often cande ma have nothing further to do when the scroll | t of events is unrolled than to secept them |- as being for the best. Before itis unrolled | it is another matter, and you could not | say Isat still and let things happen with this belief. All Ican say is, that amidst moms troubles and worries no one can have | peace till he thusstays upon his God ; it | gives &a man a superhuman strength.” 3 \It we could take all Fm things: as ordwined aud for the best, we | th And elsewhere: should indeed be conquerors of the world. Nothing has ever happened to man so bad\ as he has, snticipated it to be. I we would be quiet under our troubles they { would not be so painfal to bear. I can |- not separate the existence of a God from His preordinstion and 'direction of all | myth! ”back” and mow the be in &a chri 11W mums»). The fire eémmxaiionm have. “ed +n order mu inrbifis the: things good and evil; the latter He per-| DWS mits, but still controls.\ And Tor ai glimpse of his outlook on jute as it .is?) comi *There would be no one so unwélec come and, reside in the world as Christ while the world is in the state it now is. He would be dead against, say, nearly all of our pursuits, and be- altogether: cum \4 This is 'Chinese\ Gordon. BEST or ALI... The Mamie Reception 'of may; , maintain-mi Success, Last Friday evening the frill, roomof | to ‘ : templeTUloomed withs bright | practice the -on their. subordinates wo idea. IVA array of a-crowd of happy faces; the oc-] 7°7\ 'casion being the concluding reception of | the Knight- temphr series. - Preceding 'the dancing there was a . drill of the | OF Templarcorpsby P. E. C., C. 8. Davison. | * Bt. Omer's display marked improvement | w; in the drill and make a fine appearance. | th Elegant—unfit: by ' Driscoll's orchestra: Aent inspiration to the merry 'dances, and # bountéous. lunch - sustained andl jng soothed the fnngr self, at whatsoever. tune; : during the évening the gnests desired. 'There were several visitors from neighor» | /_, _ med; ing places, and the whole affsir-largely “hogtied aud competenfiy Flintledum + 1, AC . (innocent; a>. cm smmnws runny, MM A Semen; Luke Navigator Nat-pow}: Myanmar.“ Clown Smolzer, of the Seem Sienna: Navigafi ; think David Page, told &A great truth when Badd “Therein motephcilm #o . \Of. |] [track to take a train ' other one tpproue’hmg, M He was shoved quite a distance along the by ig flanking between the: roads, but was homily pulled out of. danger 'by the Btn Thegemalfiupbainwas eop. | ®! . W ountamxggges PIG tion agent. I gratulated on the\ fact that he escaped with only alight bruises. \_ __| Uheck Fall or Mirin, & \The Misses' Ronni), 'of Ehnira, waited“ g m than uncle : and aunt Fitzapatrick last | \ut | week, which was very pleasant for thé | \old folks,\ for between them they\ filled ' t them Fiz rhansion chook. Hall of . mirth © andpteputxytromthefi e {of: thew“; fivonnmmmm [ and upon. the | E a a: hitdeythe yo ~ 119011 he avitation finexgenm to»o time tom-wflfifig loaned ent that fixe over mmot that pfipflu am he bund has meow rs» M1410:- the patrons. >. The ' is undoubte “Mi-Mum “gamma them any, not 31m t reform, mum's the w myméflufmm {b'imi‘od' Ing surface “wésLfiMQfieI‘ ”banana-mutt». prix