Listowel Standard, 29 Apr 1904, p. 3

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~~ i Russia's crest: life and movement. Pavements are God Requires Our Co-operation. and| rrp gg coats and caps, ladies the Exercise of Faith. fox, In . of sleighs Ue -- oh emacs in caps like : muffs w uge (Entered att an fing 20; at ot bid Arai next morning o vidionary | ped and round them and Nine Hundred and Four |breakfast to jump out of a vision | cured embro. pewe. Ballz, ot Serente, at t)@/ary fire and sizzle upon a Visio Down the tikidle'ct the street t of iat OttawS? | broiler,and the water faucet to fill) -reat shouting lear the 3 the pot with visionary coflee or tho |eomes at the Bd, pace, of of a fire A' Weapatch een Los Angeles says: |veost to tumble ty bread Jengine the private sleigh drawn by --Rov. Wrank De Witt Talmage|tray down the dummy filled with |two ma , horsea of some great from the following Lin : dnsoicage hot toast as we have t©|nobleman. The driver, with beard Genesiu xxx, 39, '* th : the sick to be well hair curled ol a Frought forth cattle, arenirabed, rehant our ewn effort upon which |threecornered hat of fur, ie leaning speckled and spotted." vine blessing has invoked. |forward with outst: like La sree a man of wealth |Faith to react upon works; works chario the and heat among the Hebrows of |alwnys in the invalid's room to 6° | bine silk-covered reins taut in both | like many rich men jhand in hand with faith ! hands. the horses' quarters points a JOB'S COMFORTERS. to screen Faith cure teachi tl ples the sleigh from the flying snow ingly revealed. tera "Leah was tender peg bu Rachel q@as very heautiful;"' in ener wortts, the elder sister wos homely | and unattractive. en lady marry; her eyes were watery, or "cast:" her senoattion | wre evidently as much askew as her eyes. Jacob was deeply in love with the younger sister, server 5 leng yeors her old Laban chented him o premised bride and palmed off g man the unattrac- | whom no one inflam win the younger to serve seven more long years, an as a result he had two wives instead of one. POWER OF THE MIND. At the end of his fourteen years of service Jacob prepared to leave his father-in-Jaw's cniploy. He want- ed to take his two wives and go off and build a home of bis own sore T 'his, however, Laban did o the crafty that if he would stay and continue fn charge of his herds of cattle and flocks of shee he, Lo would give to the young Man Os for his services all the coives lnmbs and. the kids that were ringstraked or speckled or Jacob egreed to the bar- But c young aan was the old man. As the father-in-law had heen unprincipled with Jaceb, so unprincpled now With t ot Je spotted, Be hecan » influence dhe colors of the calves, the kids and the lamhs about to be born. He took some rods of green poplar and chestnut and laid these rods of ewhite and black in the wWh- tering troughs of the herds ond the flocks. Then, When the cows and the sheep and the coats enme o drink out of the watering troughs the black and ene rods reflected in uch a stnrtling im- pression upen thes that the calves, kids and lambs born thereafter were influenced by that prenatal shock, most of them were oe pea t and spot od fae dered t If you place n etick in the water, by the laws of weflection that wood become o creature of life, when ao lad ones dropping my fishing pole, and as it | t the bottom of t brook the ripples made that red look like a long serpent wriggling upstream As these cattle stoop to drink T them start back os oug ous hiasin snake his fatal fongs to t peeronts one of the best instances to be und im litera-| ture of the far Seatkine: effect of the mind over the physical body. WORKS AND FAITIT But, though the whole trend of the! teaches that works ond faith, go band in ir these Biblical teackings. Thoy a hold om one little passage 5 ture and separate it from all) over sakic They maguify it. They distort, d then they rest their entire belief upon it. These people a be good at heart, but thoy treat Scripture sonic' 5 fam- ous reformer did in the noterl meet- ing had with John Calvin in Munich, 1 believe, in about the yeor 1540, After he valiantly help- ed to fight the battle of the refor- mation to a gloriots and a success ful issue be still clung tenaciously to the doctrine of transubstantiation. doctrine, in lunguage, ing of Christ's blood and eating of Christ's body. The other school o theological thought held that when we ussemble at the communion table we only eat of Christ's body und drink in aymbol. We eat and drink in symbol, as the lamb's blood shed upon the Jewish altar was the sym- bol of Christ's bleed about to be or us. ttle over tran- substantiation raged bitterly for years between the two schools of re- | ligious thought. TNE DIVINE PHYSICIAN. Did not Christ compel action up- of him thut was blind ? not Christ compel tion upon the part the ten lep- ers "Go show 'yourselves unto And it came to were cleansed." before his : ame like unto | that of a Httle child? I am not} here advocating any heretical idea that Christ cannot and will not in mau eases heal our physical dis- eases, but I assert t as a peop ec oh no more right to expect the Divine Physician to answer our | ayers for health without any co- to ly brend without our working for it. We have just as much right to i!may a blessing rest upon their carn- dotn at night and say t Lord's | est forts for per alleviation of "as ra "Give us this duy our aauy -- of the human on then in our cagerness | whic ch the Bible again and again hon- She was o maid- | ojgns' prescripti The onl ae (sage in the Bible 'which in any way © fameun prayer challenge, © | bandages cr Nea- | sc @ip seven times in the Jordan | Secrated eof the world? And bread not you, O ple, are not only ¢ to Serip-|nung up by the horses' h tural cornmon sense, But a ie Through the archway which leads jonistic to the commendations with from th rsbhaia into the Great Place beiore the Winter _---- comes jors human rr a and the physi- the sound of an approaching cheer. might be construed by the casual drugs is that one so often quoted by faith curists from the words found in the book of Job: 'Ye are forgers of Yo are all mysicians of no value." But Job is not here allud- ing"§o true physicians at all. This Men and sleigh conveying a distinguished- looking officer who about, jmaterislized police salute, dashes bs ee apie horsed, with the driv- lace livery of the court, Officers solute the people their hats, and the Empresa e pround with enough groans and /and smiles. Another sleigh follows, the little procession turns into the Nevsky Prospekt, and, taking os centre of the broad avenue, is gon \like a finsh on its way to the Knit- sick man still sicker. that Job's boila were the results of his sins, and Job, in disgust, plainly told them if they could bring no bet- ter comfort than they they had all better clear out. Instead of gronning of great Indies interexted = the Red! Cross organization i ey ought | Police dimapprar ar qu ier as they then a thousand, and finally Gfteen was na case of pages Po Stn of po potted ared; the unobtrusive dressed | hundred, but it did not bring the fort to him. as did Christ in hia re- | men who when the royal carriage bird ba "professor kept the marks about the blind man when he Was passin showed indications of , Tindow of n doy and turn si this man sinned | Oficial responsibilities mingle once, Bisee lest ra bird like the prodigal were empty--that was said, "Neither hath i "but"--he was born of God should ' -------- Pax woxoney rnornssios. REWARDS FOR LOST PETS: tnore with the crowd, AN TIONORED PROFESSION. If the Bible does not honor the medical profecsion why did Christ use 4s illustration this sentence for one of his sermous, "They that be whole reed mot a physician, but they that are .sick?" Does not that divine statement mean, "They that are sick necd a physician?" When Hezehiah was sick unto death he prayed to God to give him a longer lease of life. God answered that proyer. But tur of pret how? Through hurran medicament. {which Mr. ohn Clemes, uo weelthy é | Washingtonian, agresd to give for & 'little wire-haired terrier whose "i 'totype might have heen bought e Hezekiah preved. Ch, yea. But $1.25 aot any fogs' homie, But in answer to that prayer God puppy had "associations. It had him to se o sanctified poultice. | VO found on the doorstep of Paul mean when he wrote |millionaire's house by the youngest i RETURNING A DOG. Reward of $5, 000 F Failed to > Bring | Back a Yorkshire Ter rier. What is said to have been the big- | rest revard over offer for the re What did Pi ed Timothy to "take a little wine |e = gir of nine, us she was for thy stoinach's seke."' Paul was BEATER OS 50. Sener | ee was dirty, lame, and three parts 7 , but ita forlorn appearance oly jena 1 frightened eyes went straight to th se the ey damsel 5 for | a sick thus to Timothy, Land with but few exceptions, is not- ed for its impure waters; refore be] istian, medicine when te | Noa delighted eays, 'Drink no water, but use ao lit- | generous | tle wine for thy stomach's sake." All through the Bible we find commenda- ito ry paemers like thease in reference | keep to doct In no ca. do we / should first be washed and given oa the medical profession oa xvthemati substantial meal. Then the puppy -and ridiculed in the Bible. Tynds... | made mor le appear- © presen (the noted synthetic. philosopher, | | ance, and little Adelaide Clemes Was 'hurled ot the Christian church bie permitted to keep m. Said be. Th the child's con- 'Slant companion, and for three ae was the happiest pup In alt | ) 'Let us yh but prases, the other to be filled by! sick patients under the care of com- petent physicians. Then let us com pare results apd aee which is the most | jeficacious--a physician's prescription or ga clergyman's prayer. My bro ibe r, that challenge of Tyndall's was about a8 foolish and unscriptural os any challenge that could possibly be issued. No man has a right to bar the Christian physicians out of hospital ward. God honors the phy- Fician's work oll through the Bible Faith should go hand in hamd with) |, palming off for the lost th forthcoming. tater offered a hundred dollars for its re-| covery and poorest a thousand but the reward remained unclaimed. THE CHILD GREW ILI, 'fretting for anxiety incr muking the land finally eens: Wen, wonen, and ar- 'rived from oll parts of the comity: | thousand | j}works. Works {n the hospital sbould |? RerTIer i she haan «y were brought by | co hand in band with faith. to the bedside of little Adelaide THE POOR MAN'S HELPER. Iehe fooled at them once and thea ' 'eursed ber face to the wall again. Penge eet ews tk the mus at More than two months bad passed our village childhood. heuer Beat Lc ccantamcs. catial Tle knew ovory family secret for miles aroun I had heord the family skeleton raot- tiling in many a dark closet. Hu was | at every birth, at every marriage al- mand became so insistent that the - tar end at every funeral, With him }footman fetched Clemes. The | the village church bell sounded a dirge | visitor would not give his business, almost af often ag it chimed for ao and as it was believed that bis mis- ;Wedding§ We knew not when we lov-'5 might have something to do | ed him the most--when +e wos gatb-| wit the lont dog he wus taken to ering the rosebuds in the garden of the little girl's room. She was sit- ire the meiilicunire's 'house and asked to see Miss Adelaide. He was fused and ordered off, but bis de Ube nativity or intwiniug the orange ting up in bed listlessly playing ssoms or placiny the white lily|with a puck of cards when niongsiae of the pale cheak in the|tramp entered and. opening his rag- casket. wre was a kind of religi- | ged coat, drew tr rom an inside rent o ous rattle in his old gig. 'That child | miserable looking little object and was the most envied of the village | threw it on or bed. The child gave who could sit by bis side and hold|S scream of delight and literally the reins over the back of the old| hurled herself on the animal's neck, mare, thot seemed to be just we old |for it was as the doctor and to know just many taimily secrets, yet It could not gossip any more than did its master. When the boy was in troubly this kind doctor would place his ener | thand upen the lad's jgive him advice young ssaidlen | | would smile under the twinkle of his | 'fatherly eye as he chatted to her of | |her first sweetheart. Even the | would buzz louder and the dogs bark | ¢ | more huppily, and their tails would ; Wag faster ns the doctor drove along |We remember the old black bag he | a+ 'always carried ond the long white he placed about the splints jwhen we fell off the kaymow and broke our arm. The strange looking bottles Olled with pills--bottles that | hind him, be locked yr lira the pills, too,}a Ildcal med to be the sa Watt you not believe { n such a velcian? will you At od 'lieve that by tho sick bed faith can {ge hand in hand with works and the surgeon's knife and S Sat the physict- an's prescriptions have o n the civilization and "the Christianization THE LONG-LOST PUPPY come buck at last. He scompered over the costly coverlet in trans- ports of delight, while the tramp stood by with a peculiar | bid? face. He was closely questioned as to wears und under what circumstances reward. the return of her he suid, refused to accept any other ward and disappeared os suddenly e had come, leaving no trace be- The rewnrd was sent to charity, d in this, 4 "In memory of a tor, Ch then, to our Christian physicians, whose calling . and o are thus ber ag consecrated, dead oo keenly | ner, pein and whan all the suddenly | when his peering tS evening the bricht searlet and gold |sor returned the little cage chkof Palace, where in n gathering, | his flight. ssarmns of | as offered TRAMP REFUSED $6,000 zor! corvlea iE him to her father. The mil- earted wilh dogs which they had bigh hope | simile on | master and A "pretty ay hes recently ap pear papers relating~ == Garnne of ¥ Hremen, o Wi "Savant, had lost | his canary, B-Professor wns a | alone, fhachelor and Tired his 6c eS quite aware a melancho- more than the ly mood. by; then, after on interval, a sleigh , ordinary amount of cheering, | But one when the profes | WAS cm- pty, and the open window showed raise | only too plainly the way hows rE HIS PET HAD VANISHED. entire' oe : one yellow fea- lther behind to yw the course of A reward of in Bremen papers, ore retivtn pole more to his own he Every morning os soon as light the Professor looked in was the cage to see if the late tenant pay once more "in residence,' only vo ditappein e rew was increas sed to 3,600 marks, ond half vinen, was the toot canary, On the seventh day, 'fessor went once mm | loo ok fur his bird, cage, cad = hepping boc out leoking for When the pro- e his | perchsas usual, was $6,000, | the sniuts of the. city but ptharwise las impudent. _ perky mn Where he caueed. the humdrum of ordinary life. ACTLAN on There are sixty inches of snow summit of Ben Nevis. damage the e was done by on Hadidingtonshire | John fell died from his injurie: Edinburgh Town Council] has adop- |* for thé new Usher Hall at | The latest rumor in political circles Pp is that Mr. Grubam Murray, Secre jtary for Scotland, will be raised to peerage. t A combine of Scottish steelmakers arrenged with the object 'of maintaining selling prices at a [pegnestie level. Duke of Atholl has raised an action of interdict against Dunkeld Parish Council in comnmection with right-of-way me BE ' | Rev. Thomas Cor Trinity Pres byterian church, rom!, Lon- jdoa, has cape the aail to cane: 'side LW U. F. Chureh, Glasgow | In consequence of the state of the lcotton market the Barnerhil] Works lat Aberdeen, were closed and 500 op- | eratives thrown out of work. | Mre. Marr, a Buekig woman, has received, through the Returned Let- 9 ter Office, a letter she despatched to 'her husband at Bildao, Spain, on De- ,cember 28th, 1888S, over 15 years '0. net ore Inverclyde, of Castle Wemyas, has been appointed successor ef the late Sir Micharl Shaw-Stewart as raranjar srk of the Royal Northern | Yacht C An caaeei happened on the rail mebeud to a Hawick man pamed Andrew Cleghorn, who = fell a telegraph pole he was dis- mantling and wus killed. A man named George Donaidson, 52, has died at Aberdour, Midas from awollowing carbolic mistake for medicine, which he at been tak- the yes 'tood £40,000 and £50, A special bees tag from Fort te Inver i. Xavey ncicngs to wits th the fopthall match bet Hig and Laneashire Fusiliers, in A Cup . . A distressing tragedy took 'place at Glasgow recently, a young named Walter Halley, a . fro x in the Forth and Clyde canal in f hundred marks | and soott settled down to. day the stream of basket-laden cooli- | their loads {nto | ally Sanka not hold another ounce. order of 'My Lords,' on a coabendurance t | ombang, which MacPherson, averred to bo the finest fuel ever put on board of a man-of- ar. "Ve'll observe," he hed remarked {to the a of the Snapping |; it comes aboard, of | Soave being a man of 'had sniffed contemptuously, and nor, the stuff was aboard he was remark- | ing to his senior engineer: "Shiny! I shoula jolly well os \it is whiny, and if it don't run 'pitch into the ash-pits | shall he 'agreeably surprised," na The captain came off from the ge atane ie t (Teady at six the next morning, punctually to the moment the cruiger weighed ond stood northwards through the Malacca Straits. Tt was the fince-weather senson in the Indian Ocesn cd os they were simply or- dered to experiment on the coal, it "there and back ngnin,"" and the captain could please himself where he went; he was to re to Singapore when his bunkers all. The ust- al routing of a man-of-war at Bea went on with its clockwork reguler- itv: but on the second day out, just | os 'the captain had Hyghted his after- luncheon cigar, and had composed himself in the depths of an arta-chair tu read the Pink Un, a knock came et the cabin Chae in his head, "Stafl-surgeron, sir, if you please, would like to speak to yo "Ask him to come In."* The staf-surgeon, o tall, middle- gered man, made his appearunce "Anything wrong. Holos" the captain vor me at this down and have a cheroot The stafl-surgeon sat down opposite : to his suewri officer, but declined the proffffercd chavce. "J regret to say, sir thet T have very bad news. Hi-Fong, the Chinese ward-ro second-stewurd, has on 'attack of emall-pox bh = ge took his cigar out of , Whistied, and put it back : "T have pits made to course of action, sir, and "Well, tell um what you propose." "lt is a bad case--a very bad case --and the isolation must be complete. I had thought, with your permission, of rigging oa shelter over the star-| board quarter-boat and putting the patient in there, In this fine wea- one is allowed to get into hos t save wyself and the nick-bay 'man who will attend upon him.' | "Copital plan. Anything else to' | rosea' "Only this. pox was hanging abyut in Singapore, 'done it will show the whole ship's company the necessity of it, and we shan't have amy trouble about the) matter." cutter at once, sir, and will ptart the vacceatys to-morrow morning." Very goo The news of the unpleasant visite- tion soon got noised about the ship, end after quarters that evening, when - the men were dismissed, the bugle | sounded the abil. fF Every -- bluo- jacket, stoker, ond marine became as gc. with that pipe, chiel- boatswain's mate,"" said the com- de mander. Long and ehri! came the call from the silver whistle, and then a mighty volce which proclal "D'vyou * | there? Smallpoc 'aving broken out aboard, all 'ands will be vaccinated 'beginning te-morrow morning. When the orficers 'as been done the star- lboard watch o" fo'c'sle-men will lay aft to the sick-bay, and then the jouer parts o' the ship Sees as red.' 7 The bugle eaieeG hs eas on," jand the mon ped to supper. The meo eoulined pir tea In a hurry. then lighting their pipes, proceeded to discuss the aituation. Alexander Hetherington was «n ac- | gineroom tifcer, a stoc red- fuced obstinate man from onc of the northern shipyards, who at the of twenty-seven was making his firat lacquaintance with His Majesty's Ser- 600 |vice on board the Snapping Turtle. He had merely been a year at it, and did not like it a bit; and it is only fairto add that the service liked him even loss, Steeped to the lips the modern doctrines of trade union- ism, he perpetually inveighing t the discipline to whtch he whs subjected, and wearied both his it ling. He, then, "To tell me,"" he was saying, "'as 'ow that I am to be put to the de- gradation of an absurd operation oa vaccination is to tell me that T am ng me to undergo it?'t "J don't know much about what the i x ter re (Pia ce, door, and the sentry ' tht ng, is.that there icon: faa no ' my mind a8 '¢hem there my hare come to you for your approv- | As T knew that emoll- | I provided myself with enough lymph | o ¥accinate the whole ship's com | pany. It should be done at once i | £ quite agree, doctor; and you shall make o start on me. I'm "Then I will get Hi-Fong into the | age |there blackboard,' 'c soys, 'is iors and his wessmaces with his | pipe in uth udly on the iniquity of the recent | per? tell you thet the first lootenant can't da it. '"E can't cven order it, I enys." 'don't yo thet I've ad it?' That's the os wher vou'll be, Snubby, ore you're much older. You'll an 'ad jit, and much good may it do y anying, the armourer' kno' _ the ashes out of his pipe en ceparte ~"T sm a conscientious objector this absurd practi Snubby, "and I shall refuse to submit." re unholy ald pervaded the lower The hi n to be an ecaediidts their captain, par gleefully awaited de velopments. The following master-at-arms reported to knew pe with ph dasecags j new his business, and the in-! private aa circumn- | to | sir. i own estimation shed. The captain stood ee quietly at the self-assertive, ate, excited man before him, cn ie decidedly my opinion, "Have you fo the ca: case of tor? =e) air."* "In that propose to submit for soe | peeenst bs agar a plan of my o if i ith your concu: mt doctor cy bowed again. The cap- then turned to the complacent thought that things wert going his way, at gel in a rmed any opinion on thie conscientious abjec- @|v¥ery fow minutes he w d be forward unvaccinated, cn pe of Ls) admirntion to all the iower "beenuse if I did I should bu paying I 'from. nratesdlng great zeal in the you a compliment; but sweeping of the deck in the immedi-| about to explain exactly what I am ate neighborhood. e report was going to cou with you.--I suppose," transmitted by "Nobby" Clark:, A. turning to the doctor, "that if this H., to a highly appreciative audience |man is segregated from the rest during the dinner-hour: \the ship's company for a period of ' w . and if he does "Me and Tiger (this was a meek | ordinary senman so christened) was | a-atroening o° the quarterdeck when | Snubby came afore the commander, | 'What do you Want tu see me about?' | saye the commander. 'About 'ere Vaccination turn-out, sir,' an- swered Snoubby as bold nas you like. (Well, what about it?" 'Only as I'm Q conscientious objercter ona o some- thing rrimitive something.'--Did you ateh them words, "Tiger? "No," replied Tiger. "Well, any'ow, 'e goes and 'e using ell oa 'e's so fond o': to be the inali un Englishman them tong wore _aeseverate it --privile; to be a Primitive o something and not sas submit to no degrading operations, 'ce sara 'Oh, you do, do you?" answers the com- stander very ule t. "Then, gir, is the gontimonts oa tho Trimitive some fars the commander, cven quleter than before, and then 'ce turns to Jorndy (this is the generic name for the Mmaster-at-arma, and is sup rived ge Dismiss this men. answer to-morrow "E's always passing and BAYS, V'll 'give 'im 'ie about some 'im and the quarterdeck and wants t captain about 'ia religion. 'maya the old What do these three men want, mas see ~Well,"" ter-at-armne?' There was o ordinary beonminn and a ship-steward"s assistant along o' 'im. 'They says," answers Jorndy, 'something about religion, but I don't rightly understand my- nell, al what they Wants to be at. i "There Church o' Engiand," says the old tinan, 'thero's Homan Cathe , ic,' "e 'Ss, 'and there's Wesleyan you please, sir ify, 'me| and these other two good men 'ere jwe belong to the Church o' the ard." "The Church o° what?" says the old man 'Now let me tell you jI. don't have no religions 'aboard 'ere. There's three laid down. In the Admiralty Instructions," pe 'ried up, scume an what 1 bee na leading stoker. ! 'ave to do afore 'c's very er. Snubb 4 Tut | "We un turn-out up to Stoneho barracks all along of |religion on one tine," se ee Sree of marines. 'Parso |wants to drill the like; choir fa peso but the choir couldn't get the * it nohow, and one day tho Parson was talking to the sergean [major and telle 'im all about ot. 'Ij the wants 'cm,' 'e saya, 'eastward position," he says, 'What's one there?' eska the major. Well ¢ person 'e turus to and 'e explains lit all tn the major; and the major 'a | Saye. | 'You leave 'em to i V'll ) give 'em preliminary drill, and you'll see 'em face round like as if they woe in the burrack square " ware did 'e do it?' put in the ar- smate "Well. "e falls oa the choir in the schoolroom, one ru em the star- board side, and the other rew on the port, and them 'ec says, 'Just you attend te me while I gives the detail for the eastward position. the parson is supposed to be x Singer img in church, ond what you 'as do is this: when you 'eure the parson "E believe," don't none o' you stir: them words is only a caution; d but as Boon us ever "ec goes on, rou on your 'ocls together." That there choir was a fair treat to see after that, the ww they'd" turn." . "7" "What!"' cihediaia the 'aiiial. des of conscientious objector? Nelson, Sharpe. are you quite sure that you're candi and that I'm so- commander grinned. The "It's that pudding-headed fool of cor 'aven t never submitted." | man, 'what's all this? hi jJector r to vaceination; Seeeeey , will same t velop the disease, be may be consid- = os fairly sofe?'* I should sree a moth, sir," an- swered the doctor gravely. "He shall coctaints have it. In 'that case he will have to finish his period of quarantine ashore, as our cruise only lasts another three weeks. --And now," continued "for you. buried: he was put quarter-bont; you shall live in the port quarter-boat until we = reach Singapore. -- Mastcr-nt-arms, urch this engine-room artificer aft. Sea , hint into the quarter-boat, and re port to me when he is there." | 'Right turn, quick march,"' came 'the order. | "But, sir"----said Snubby. | "Ah, yvea,"' sold the enptain, with the ghost of a smile hovering round but very little with me in going to say now, and that owing to the space in doubt you will agree Ww thot is, | which this engine-room artificer will be confined it would be decidedly un- advisable to give him full rations?" "It would decidedly be most detrl+ mental to his health,""' replied the ctor. « . "And the curation of hie grog alsa "Rum," said the doctor In a grave voice, 'would under the circumstenc. be most unadvisable." . "Right turn," came the in@xornble volee of master-at-arms; "quicl 'march."* "But sir"--began ey --_ "Silence!"" thundered the i luc fl boat, : Eagle yeoman of the. signals had bees listener d spectatoi lot ae whole performance from break of the poop. Once ows 'was safely disposed of in the cu the yeoman fied a lapwing the lower deck, and the whole sip'e t company gave thomselves over to « | wei you od | Hetherington fy a conscientious not be vaccina fe great quarantine for a month. |rations will be reduced to "six-upem las linble bid quarantine, and will be placed in one o' the other boats um | ber the coma, ioctl The chief-boatswain's e paused and studied the paper wink he held fn his hand, and from whic ad pain this long announcement. Then he gave onother chirp on bia silver "The captain call and proceeded: * will be v pleased to Interview any other men abo ' this "ere ship gong objectors."" c as dead silence, and then man fatietial: then, disciatiin notwithstanding. -~ ut of been and such a eg coptoln wos o discree retired to his cabin, . ain own request. --Chem- 'bers's Journal ry TROM MARKET TOLLS. The Duke of Bedford draws an in- come of £12,000 a year from the tolis of Covent Garden Market, Lon- don, and every orange, every potato, every bunch of fowers which passes through the market contributes to his income. The Duke acres of the M Li The Duke of Port- ®a engine-room art sir--the man they call Soubby on the lower deck--and he pitched a y loog the maintop-bowline into mo about conscientious objections d to the Primitive how he belonged something or other which never had and never would be vaccinated, »and sort."* land bas 300 ucres, covered with ge Pr ere and houses, and the Duke has of id, for building on - £6 10. per foot.«Lord 5 owns part o ' trand, Savo and the Duke of Norfolk is among the great land-owners of the capital. -------- ard o what considers themselves to- be con... Life is a constané drill for soldiers -. and bank burglars, said bias = Lee ety eee A

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