{ title: 'Sunday morning tidings. volume (Elmira, N.Y.) 1881-1885, February 15, 1885, Page 7, Image 7', 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-7/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031252/1885-02-15/ed-1/seq-7.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031252/1885-02-15/ed-1/seq-7/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031252/1885-02-15/ed-1/seq-7/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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- unded,. sore... & ypu more, .. © end; =~ sour bh oc C. dainty pet, -' not forget, she bent, glee: went ch for me.. low, - the nicesos their lipe: jg?) plot gr een DADY may ; - ad berween - \med that day. . fhowers on l! ager glue; mg * -d in the sty, for mamimsg to ge6,)\ be little thing; ¢ Fete =s mib ey that day. I stand form neonate. land -i to 826, in.uetal lair. - the marks to be.\ t there. : H on, agorggz'gone shall goy . to ling hand, e Mrs. J. W. ®. -mDSr, fast, & or poor. and moor, trams mbers, by, had I. the sod -- with God. d ber), plead, we need ; ust R can trust.\ hand, BOurt, start. # ® # « away, griy. frame 0000 _ we right. doer. live. vear to year, - a f by birth. er's sido, ' (llfiome' v home annoy, .- boy.\ bless. . ~ be west days We bave Immediaté > . R ©. I 20 LORICH, - hs mules E sorbed ; EC hot. “W'V'fmwu anv ane , | hfs eens AU}: ; esate + # ,f 1\ ‘. > “RefiWQv-w 4 qs e 29 ' non boa £020 au ¢ 1 “wt-WW , wrath Aulus P [n pac weflmfiwwu M w ,.,,,. - ap v9 .e. Vo lg poche ur q# agh m upp cames wn gey s can wih 4) \ a wht ns, ve 14 ijliuqr,‘ x)“: t* G tor)“ outlay fillings. ; \ mun\. ran-m our as. were. uf HOUSEHOLD HINTS [BY «UST mm“ 1 sesrgipUrions 'or ok1GNaAL won LJ quis DEPARTMENT ARB / Ap::| pesso ''AUNT Loom,\ om or sorrow our out. ' ®, LEMON mu. © Ose pint of sweet milk, one.: quarter of a wound of butter, one-half pound of su.\ and seven eggs. The juice-pulp and grated yellow of three lemons ; bake only with one crust. - e . éranax noun. One acsd one-half cups 6f corn meal one cup of rye meal, one cup of molasses. ope pint of milk, one egg, one-halt ter spoonful of soda. one teaspooiful of salt: (even full ) Steam five hours and bake balf an hour. A SICB omen mm. . Ong cup of sugar, one cup, of molasses, one cup of sour cream, one cup of butter,. | ene tablespoonful of gmger, five small x. cups of flour, one tablespoonful | of soda; one-balf tablespoonful of cloves: and the same of cinnamon. Drop from & spoon aod bake quickly. STEW. Take some chops from loin of mutton, place them in stewpsan in alternate layers | of sliced potatoes and chops ; add turnips and onions cut into pigéces, closely, let it stew gently till vegetables are ready to- mash and greater part of gravy is ab. then place in a dish ; serve it up VANILLA EXTBAOT. (One ounce each of vanilla and tonqua beans. Soak the latter in warm water until the skin can be peeled off. Cut all into small pieces and put into a quart bot. tle with one pint of gicohol and one pint of water. - Set in a warm place for two or three days and it is fit for use. - After this is used it can be filled a second time for the same beans. LEXON PUDDING. Beat the yolgs of two-eggs in a pudding dish : add two cupfuails of sugar ; dissolve four tablespounfuls of corn starch in & little cold water ; put in the juice of two. lemons with the grated peel ; mix all to- gether with a teaspoonful of butter ; bake about fifteen minutes., When done spread over the top the beaten whites of two eggs, previously sweetened with white sugar, let it browr a moment in the oven. Serve either cold or bot. WATER TEST. To test the purity of water there has yeen found ro better or simpler way than to All a clean pict bottle three-fourths full of the water to be tested, and dissolve in the water half a teaspoonful of the purest sugar-loaf or granulated will answer- cork the bottle and place it in a warm place for two days. If in twenty-four to forty. eight hours the water becomes cloudy or milky it is unfit for domestic use. ORANGE PUDDING. Take four oranges, pare, quarter and cut in slices, put in « glass dish. Take one pint of boiling milk into which stir. the yolks of three eggs thoroughly beaten, with one tablespoonful of corn starch and three tablespoonfuls of sugar ; stir quick- ly to prevent lumps and burning. When well cooked and cooled a little, pour over: the oranges. Beat the whites tc a stiff froth, add frosting sugar, flavor with van. | ills, sppread over the pudding. Place on ize to eool. FiG PUDDING. Take one pound of figs, six ounces.of suet, three quarters of a pound of flour, and milk. Chop the suet finely, mix with the flour, and make ia a smooth paste | with the milk. Roll out about half an lach thick, cut the figs in small pieces, | strew them over the paste ; roll it up, make the ends secure, tie in a cloth and. boil nearly,.two hours. Care shouldibeftaken to keep the water boiling and the pud. ding well covered with water. f Deir B. Hornelisvilie, N. Y. FONDA-A CAKADIAN RELIOH. | - Two ounces of butter, four ounces of: bread crumbs, eight ounces of cheese, one. [. sup of sweet, rich milk, threc eggs. Culj the butte? aud cheese into small pieces and put them into a large bow! withthe bread crumbs; on this pour. the milk [ scalding hot, after which add theyolks:0f |; the egge, well beaten, and & little um: Mix well together, cover and-set on the- back of your range, stirting. occasfonally | r, until all are dmaélved then add the- ver whites of the eggs, ammo 'to a stiff froth. | an h arid bakemequicff'wmm Witeto Put into & -pan or dish oven twenty mmuteo- oace. i \A Kandy Husband. g ~, belle. Thoughilnl momma—Well dear, which: gentleman: have you selected for your hum, band ? Daotifut «hummer—m think ul take” ; servint'c - Mr. Fathog.! © _ . Mamnlu~—-.n“ dear Mr. Daugi.tez=- ¥us. my chuige is very poor, | itis trie? bathe isso biz. and sldgut that-] che wiu se ju-t.pl ndid to: sol on the Bible: aad press winter! waves 000 09) Mlmll SL—()1 I ace . acamel. AW of *%, my. Mu “M 'joiced, as ever be smoke endlessly. He could have enough 1 time been tré Set-are, and. est at. Bome eat mustard with this dish . Sceane. in. the boudoir of a. Hartfordf l - Littleman la. uk very rich, whils your chofce is very poor. | a Xou will. not be ex mfiueuvrcl by a monetary considefition. Eo. Daughter—V % L. marry for: love alone \ poe ‘Hm’ord Sunder! * Mm... . BY mm 0mm unmr, ' - ; my! \yummnh. | con-mum) non no. 14” Chi Lung fell. that hln polo: ' were. over, and 'Tound ; his> sirength: returning fie. ' | began: naturally to thinkabout the future. ‘ - Que pound of sugar, ong-half pound of 13° had fallen , on/ hisfeet- in a 'most re: | [ ; owner, one pound of- flour, gix eggs, E: peaten separately and. very light; one-half | po -z pint of sour cream, une, teupoonful‘of © \0d“ » \ - '| of the. necessity: of\ provision ; Tor the |, ® future“ He did not know how omen .darin- lived ; he had never beets ou “mill-er : \terms with a mandarin ; but ho was per- > -L auaded that the noblest grandee of His | { own lend lived no better than -he bad. done sincehis knowledge of surroundlng events had returced to him. « He was not without discernment, and. he could see the beginning of the and. t. ~firat, Everybody. he? & fe and sympithy; Now that he was better; people pushed \him about a little,; faud he was 10 longer waited. upon as he had been. : In: a 'little - while they would. put. him to the door. - A. man: who could reason thou eduld of . | course go on & little further. - man probabili been. full. of\ service| getting ty he would 111de ht): e w never permitted to put his head \inside such &a : mapsion as this, and-it\ occurred to Cht Lung that the best thing he; could do would be to make hay whilst the aun con- tinued to shine.. So he began. to pilfer: with admirable adroitness,' and olcked up anumber of unconsidered trifle But one great project fired his heart and soul, and occupied his Chinese intel- lect for clays. He feigned feebleness in his walks in order to secure. time to carry this scheme into effect. The ides was simple and lay in a nutshell}, and if he | figmd carry it into effect he was rich for. e. Like other projects conceived by proater men, this scheme of Chi Lung's had &a serious hole in it. His idea was simply to become possessed of Arthur Lawrence's pocketbook, the little leathern caso which held all that prodigious wealth he had seen in the hotel. af Montcourtois A piece of paper be remembered clearly was convertible into a handful of yellow pieces, each of which was worth four great white pieces, each of which in turn was equal to a bundréd small. white pigces. The thrice blessed possessor of those pieces of geper was rich for He, o could drink as much comforting colorless liquid, in which these outer barbarisus re-, pleased. He could to cat always. It did not occur to Chi Lung that the attempt to transmute -one of those To8 pieces of paper into gold would infallibly bring him within the clutches of the low. It did not occur to him that the esckpe with the pocketbook was a lmpoarlr bility. It did not even eccur to him th in the circumstances his project was Open to the charge of betug a trifle shabby. He experienced in the contemplation of of a great idea; and it absortled all his thoughts. When Lawrence talked to him Chi Lung always looked out for the gign ellow fingers would itch and tingle and inmp as he thought of the treasure the | simple oblong protrusion of the cloth of _ he was keen to discover Lawrence's cham- ber, and it was not long before the young man nodded at him through a window. After that he looked for him regularly thete, and Lawrence, in his western min got to fancy that the Oriental liked him, 'and would take the: trouble- to window to offer him a verbal salute granary chamber, and one of them was cured on the inside by two boits which ghot isto tings firmly driven into the deor post. Withdrawing . these bolts, which were rusty with long disuse, he stout permanent ladder, with a hand.rail runping dowu one side of it. 'The top man of his weight. . night, when the door which communicat- } down into the open, and had ways and means. On one occasion he had .. ventured out \From the people who were still moving about. < He had no means of ascertsining the hour, and in his lonely: walling likely to over-estimate: the rnpxd : of the., fiight of time. When Lawrence lef him At ras barely, dusk outside, but 's chamber it. was dark. In the hi h long time after the Englishman's depart. ure, andOhiLung ia jynpon his -bed and watched it as it, slow y it had grown so sombre tha scarcely see the window bars no. somebody brought him. . bis soup, quite cold by this time, & ; f bread and a lamp. He felt that I o . more .. com; napfiqn; con. negating“ {fidpndu &DOU P0110 ( a ho t alr atolls-o. rmeml ‘piecol. t the pocket-Book wi w bamcebe‘ 5467210! ; he: drew buck the ms i down the mildewed 'steps 'éutside._. when N on A arr or mm HAWRI. & his plan the glow natural to the inventor }* of the pocketbook's presence, and his- the coat indigated. When ho walked [ about the chatesu in the wintry sunsking to dpen'the. There were two doors to Ohi Lung's: discovered that the door opened upon & | step of the ladder had rotted away, but the rest were still sound enough.to bear a. He ascertained this i fact practically, and once or twieo at: {hands in- his he stooped over them and ktased: thema- T1311! twee ugdouoltedlyb i. ent way of wooing, but.. masterly and Ingo 11118231; a gagging- o draw her hands way. & J :ggfpzlfirdfim standin; nfifi with batik: -you from the ed with the corridor was locked, mnd the. house was plunged in silencé, ho had . got prowled~ about the building to consider burglurlons A too early, and had been. comfielled to hide | was I ipon bis breast.. ows the sky glimmiered 'white for & darkened Wheni p I this. resight, \ or _ refieollo 'than a- ' klgwgpifilpe would have' ad il. ; [how moo? ible it seemed that I He f and he slipped an arm: about he; wales r fl startle yell? : ht, a0d . \was: wpen night was. filled with moonlig m WV | markable manner, and he bad experienced.] | - enough of European ways to. know that it. [~f ° : was not every wayfarer who fell ill. by |- P-. 7 itbemeldewhovrucared for' as he had | |-- | - | been.\ Thinsentiment did not excite his | J - gratitude, but - it - strengthened his sense.}.6, - DONRYBBOOK was beneath this illuminated window. and then clawin ; the cold sill. 'with both 'yel- 'Tow hands, he lifted his head and' 'into the toorm. It was empty ~80. his couldsee. - He holdin himnlf in. retainer; to duck, if 'nocessity should arise... All on a sudden the very passion of greed dluminated his. Tace, aud he-aroge and atood upright , un» consciously. The -he know At again, he was certain :of ilk-lo; thf table. . He didnot lose all his caution, butthis nuezpeote‘d aigh :of the prize made him bold, and he' mock the window to see ifit wore fastened. (It. was fastened, but it was ricketty beyond: balief in a. house ensrally so wali ap. pointed and when he laid v. stronger hold a it,; and pulled at with 'both- ands, it | ylfm ded perceptibly with ® -sound . ss 0 Totten wood tearing apart. Hp tugged: spain, and again, until what with his efforts and omotlopmhe aweat stood upan: his forehead, snd his garments cluag 'damply to his limbs. . denly the win,- dow gave way,and. he fell backwards on { to the grass, busrecovering himself at 'once, glared right snd\ left, and with a 1 beating heart ofimbed into the room, and | with a fingle stride clutched the hook: At that second a voice fell upon his car and quick as-thought ho biew out the lamp, and faliing on his hands and knees, crawled to the window and peered into the moonlit night. He could see nothing but he could hear steps approaching on & minute later,; in the broad solemn light, two figures came into view, and he knew ther for those of Lawrence and Olivia. \She heard me. Bhe heard me,\ san Lawrence's heart within him. ''Sheheard. me, and sho is not displeased.\ / He had - just then. Ho was content when he could steal a glance: ather. Astor Olivia, that strange gaze which had so strange focted her, had ceased to be & puzzle. | needed no translation, for she herself had learned the language in which it apoke. Hier heart also had -an inward song of its own. \The sweetest maiden under the blue skies. The loveliest and the bost.\ His thoughts of her. When supper was over she escaped from the room, and a little while later Lawrence escaped \It is a lovely. night,“ he sald, \I shall walk for a little.\ \L hope you will return with a recov- ered appetite,\ said the old lady. '\When you come back you shall $116 a little sup- per laid out for you. You have éaten nothing.\ .. Lawrence protested gaily against a sec: 3nd supper, and took his way. own apen air, and to be alono with his new hopes and. fancies. ond. ' Thera :was fleecy wool about her head and shoulde standing in the doorway aud looking ou upon the moonlight. - Had she, known, or guessed, or hoped, that he would find her thero? timidest maiden will give chances to her } lover. Bho 'had hoped 'that he: would flnd hor there,-and had feared, as maidens shy hopes and\ tender fears. Lawrence was ather aide almost before he know it. \Olivial\ - Itwas not stan her or him, thatihe: should Christian -name. she. loo 5d at him brief dy and | \Olivia !\\ he sald again, on her by her sahyl g both .ghe did not resent it, \I loved you.! F hands in bis,, minute LArst saw around her, and an [dream of his, when he rode towards the t of Hancean, the olden head lay (a a Even gto Ahis. she out)!\ : 'mnitted in silence, and without so much as fire meéreat ottoman to repulse him. ~Oply, fell one large Q“YQD aggro: gum?” he asked <It is: 'the most sensible of, men cat times like No answer, but be'thought the golden er ; | head lay a little, closer tom: own ghoul-r . - \ d £ \ “You on’t think mie presumptuounin\ ¢ \toll ag you so soon. 'l have longed {eq to | . 'A tell you weeks and weeks ago. _ (4 limes 1 bave bardly domed to look at you i b . lost. you whonld gucss.\ olden \head still rested\ comp, inoculder, 'and. mother tear fell worm exp-Q 20 ou his hands / |-! - ~-SLI can't-tell you,“ he went on, “Phow' hard 'it seemed wffohovu without 3 word--how. impunity ou.\. f; Al the «mod of an: opening door Alli drow sway from: him,, and ]:] her. But he had a.great, dad tony yet. &. 'Land was in no mind to be dillutbedmnlln w th. iwfifggleomly night o he aid. s | wo walk in: mom ?\ Nothing. Jud come of the o “Shall g door, no intrud- ing presence had. allowed on A86 jound, 'and led her into the moonlight. again bonding over her; '\Telll ime. Did x too: suddeniy ?! Did you: goo-obi | fore to: day ®¥ > ~ > .- M'm mute he“? rl mm Geo him Yer an. inmate \I heard rhodoor f, W“; crouc ed, ' upon | y ears or | f | sho answered. the Arm carrlage drive of besten schist. He stretened out'a hand on either side ard drew the folding windows closes. Half need neither -of food nog wing | oly. Bin loveliest and the best.'\ + pect to. be observed. go ran e broad oaken stairs eager for the: When he came to the: :| roomy entrance hall, he pansed for's see, * Olivia with a ohm] of {- »eale consort. out | spirit a ditty. which had - The do. There: is- «nothing prettier, nothing -more delightful to be aware of, than these e cithor to | She did not. answer, but | | ad 5h? eels! nothfig and banana; 2g ~ earned for hot t he put them both . a £13. impadent. on the band which touched her hot chop); pre ould astonishing to notice how abhsurb sro the ff 'suppssitfons which can enter- the mind of { L ~- <You afe not vexed or [grieved ?* : Bome: | appronched the gates of Paradise, through 1 cast into the oreunry When Bt:Peter. A end go} . mm?\ asked St: > 'Peter. .._ - ~\Onétenth ; all that the law clematis »4 . g}; “YonlwloOlOOOODOOO dif you?. . Go ws back, you sebundrel Laad \give anyou ng in Ire huwwthapoormopwhomyonmmr, er;, yas O thes call again' ... ~ /F 'not been too presumptuous?\ he naked; Of Bfeislheblood, From it. the isotherm 'Did L alarm you? 'Did I- “noggin fimfiedfonoh tar-z\ M t bf- xwyfiifgvae {f' cw lided- away open.\ Asd with that she “g t exerd ct exerting {rom hin, th@defensive ins Atself a little too. latemtho \Andy u; had hung what I was say - pg t. OB, ' Olivia!\ the. dried,\ \I was] overwhelmed with shame. {1 ihought you. might think that Lknew' momma there.: I ferred- you might: fascy Imam enough to; choose That wey Of. trap}: ig | ou into: hearingmefi . t:] asked, you aid WBS: true? At true 2\. know that you' were there if I 'had known cowardly way ?\ - '*Y¥on epuld not new grit I was there,\ “How would you ?o not -Mr. Lawrence--\ \Arthur.\ The yourg- man could herd! fail to make his interjuollon, Or. to: like possession. of her walst: pg - to: give Torte to the appeal. _. \Arthur she ' begnnf mew mth so dainty and any in archnes@.that there and $58“? kernel; from him ag ou were going to gay something \ he ventured after this rebuff; c \Was if true ?\ she aaked. . +p know it wasn't true; but-did you imean it 2\: ._ \Did you mean, the words yon over. heard ? \1 don't know what the words ato now ; but I khow that I was speaking from the very bottom of my soul. they were not true, there is no truth in ell the world.\ \They were not tme,\fslle said. \Bat if you meant them---\ - \*What were thoy, dear?\ ho asked her.. \Tell me what they wore.\ ** 'The sweetest,\ \ she began, and pid her fats in both Honda. . \Tell me,\ he said, eelzmg the 'hands and drum: theme-rs *\Fell me.\ -~ \ 'The sweeten: maiden under the blue Skies,'\ she whispered. guilty,. \'The. \If that fs not true,\ cried Lawrence ; (amoral? no such a thing as troll; in all C wi Youoipeople who mitke ”love in plain moonlight in the ooén alr may fairly ex- Asa matter Of fact two Elma of oyes regarded Lawrence and Olivia during a part of the infiemew. . The first pair belonged to Uncle Raoul,. who, two minutes after Lawrence's de- parture, had taken it into his head that he could enjoy an after-supper stroll on so fige an evenln§ -and hag started with: the intention of following him.: He got [t no further than the ball door, , and there. he saw something which csusedl. him to t [stop with a low whistle of setonishiment. By and by ho retreated on tiptoe, and re- turning to the parlor sat down to the gum and lifted up his voloe and sang. e was an indifferent performer, anf his voice was like that of the fémale duck, which is fullerbodied than that of he: But he- \ .with great ; popular many years before-''Vive DAmour,.* W3 do you.. make, that noise?\ growl the elder Baroa: © Demand,\. said the rgonnger Baron, idjng with aflonrigh. emand of my proserver.\ | The Baron Amedeo. de Bozo concluded in his own mind that brother Raoul bad: taken a little more ivme than fad , been good for hime... The second pait of: eyes that looked upon an interview which, perks. have been priva belon in nag, | before whose 'hiding-p the \lovers stood. -- He looked .- anger than Untle Raoul had done, for he had no scruples : Of delicacy, and 'no 50am to run away ; to. He saw the interview to the 'end, and he \heard the murmuring voices; and at the last ho saw Lawrence take the unreslstln Oliviain his arms and huher 335m 'BHRC again and again ; . Then ho daw Lawton around Olivia's neck, with his Free { emotggued 13311311133 i? om: bakk, 3°33: ose of. hers, an w atly zoun: | waist, and in that, a $ng 135m 'move away together. . : Then Obt Lnngepolre if s\ murmurin \his own tongue, and laid the pocket.book ~on the table.... And his: words, being inter- rated, were { » am‘l pea-chance this Js “She loves him, al they Have.\ '. When perfect. silence settled down Chi uilg opened: the wiridow, and-never dor- Ang to: look behind him .at the EL] be was runhing away . from, he chm out, and. leaving tho window wide. opens wilted into the region 'of the unknown. a hell > ’xm'. wools “7“: x, Elf . LL a L Lets hows onquoanokfl (eep A. hundred millronmre that» dpluoe one arm which he haid just seen... pase . My 'the |. 4300: widow, who had but {no mite; to | .demaxded. hrs credonfids, ha replied he | 1m! loft by his will ten mllllom tor the l What proportion of 30:1:va is lhat Rx Th Emulate i receives all its material of growth and 1o- ammo-ma the body. whtpl- - **Would. it \have been 'very base, 4d?“ V . \Base ?\ he said. \'To \prefend | 'Rot, to rm; l #?. To wap you into hearing me intlm | then for the first-time he kissed her. glhe 4% [ reason to know 'will be the attitude of the'| :| progress in the southern counti | wine: which Mr. Parnell: has yet: minnow sud. Itithroheidethwllon't Row ml“. 'has the ~bipod p r regardodeoa cert anew \'party on thi “é‘lubjeo 'an gharanteethatIsot. them: forth! cor- 'reotly' as .: follows.: 'They» ~'put ' thanks-go, flatworm in thi- my z: “We - no part of.; gland I thero 'be Ithhmemgym lvod tofight Englmfiby 433W“ 1h Leonora; we think they sro utterly wrong, but we leave England to - doulwlth 'thein.| - We are not her- police. and we will give her no sort of aid or comfort. 46 any deserves . no atd <or sympathy 1mm us. She is herself committing wicked out: 'make} complaint: in the 'Honse of Conr- mons and demaud: redreaa, she scoffs at our mphlntsand rejects our demands. Wa have called the attention of the But- ~Englgnd rules. Ireland mdeflanoe of the | peoole’l will, and in A 8 epint 'of utter eon- remquor national sentimené. .Sho iner- sist in sowing the storm, let her xeap the | whirlwind. No words of foul abuse than be ap, lied to us, by any of cur 0mm men;ho matter what - methods . they; € ploy punishEngth for her cameo. We shall continue to do our utmost to 1 1n- duce Irlnhmento support our, policy3 which we think is \the wigest, but we shall moat distinctly, refuse . to anathema- tise at . ' THE omnnre Or momma e thereof our people who may choose to | adopt ®different polisy.\ T1118 I have Nat: al League lenders They wfll'paso no r solutions as emanatmg from: the | general organization in- condemnation of the dynamiters, and if Mr: Parnell refers 'Thatter at all th any of his sbeeches;, | he will not go half 'so faras the London. paper; dictaté.\\ Neither the League 'its leader is in' s mood just’nowtodo 'mnilch to grml‘y British A bet- ter feeling 'could hardly be expected it a; \tKme 'when' government 'polisicians. and[ their nowspaper.. organs | are threatening us 'with toother five‘years of Extl Spencer! and the Crimed 'At: >< f” ; Mri Parnell has beon ha g“ \E ien. _ King ly is scarcely the word tor° no kmgor viceroy: could , got ¥. (ma of , peopletocheer'lflm ot come bu}. doors to- look at: him, exagcept through curioaity. .At every town; and . village: through which Parnell gassed ' thero was: M an men, women. and children fo present it, |- In Cork City Mr. Parnell .was .co) orclpnt prices , of the comp-y 'in politics and Propulsion (the Tory Tory . l'l‘imu A; the Cork; meetiogilr done. mee Irish party, herald, «| ask: Lor less than. resolution of, Gallows. ish constitution ask for more, but no roan. hasfimrighttofix ibebounfitnytofi a THE: ”M431“ A RANK, \Thu# farfshalt thou. go snd no. miner. Who Trish party Has: dever attemp 'the progress 'of . Ireland's~ . pationhood,: Thule the' niost advanced national goes ted hovri “rule, 3nd imam: zeference fo'the' “pie-long Te. : 1 groeafii [0 mplices fi‘hfiiflhohofionwkw. \u*> trouble that - may\ come upon her, | She | t of Dublin.Castle, - tndmothmg bas | ~ g a ; ishg¥emmet to the abominguons anti, o been done to put arstop to those crimes. 4°, 101111, would not, ir | J| let grammes for a newspaper conducted in| 7 'an address of: welcome and . multitude of|- who i r \his rgom for &. day by indixposm , 'and | hundred; of. leading people culled. to nuke . Inquifies and express: . symplthy, among | 1 MC! “1°“ mber.belag Bir John Amott, one of | '>) .\ ‘ 'but the field: or tawdry 'and new near whwthay cannot: under thefirit- , 16 man \Has i’rlglxt‘to say 40 tik: eormtry, 7 yand | it. never mu. to fix the ne: phils ultmoi p [ - , ' © P mun tje noes. The omen paper: ynbhnhod in lightencd..F religious liberty, of Ire} the myof. busin 'the Anterést_ of Ireland. {The Tribune 4s not a dynamite or New; organ, : It is a | co moderate advocate of pewefiul and |. sfitutional. methods for solving the Irish problem, yet certain men in London would | crugh it, if hey, could. . 'If the proprietors of Moonshme bad the power r they would apparently suppress every Irish newe- 25% paper. ©\ l «The case: of Inspector Murphy, who eas dismissed from the police because of | 'pis'action in helping 1 expose hm grim” hs otex-Detective Krench,;i% er 'poses. a 'national 'testimonfal to Mr. Mur. to ParHament : so .that hemyblahge 46 |= InfIy | face with his enemies when .the ql tion , 'Ot: mmuummwe‘ .[: Ancertain to be. 'Truth, Mr. We ~ pupemn Conimenting - On 'thin' we, 'the Parnellites & ift if they. hippen 3205438 m need of warning gflomco. vot sn ipréad sympfihy. \One:. gentlemen pro- te phy.! 'Another: inggerwrlw; “Melee“ > ' marks 'That Earl Spencer is the best of, Ee, ; (i IrishNnfionxllats,sshehem1nih togiveL «*W \ . posNYBROOK em At your requeot I op ¢ ‘hicl: the new piglet o fueflocfixg mehuonmhfifieoai ”békiu \46: mutter 'Hanntr.> about -sedition.: *It. inay. be;; -that | :y, 'does hot proteat-suficl fily i119 have | po adorefifir‘for mother-Moll of deterring. -