Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 30 Jul 1896, p. 6

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WM- ,. , THE VERY LATEST FROM ALL THE WORLD OVER. ‘n'erestlng Items About Our Own Country. Great Brltain. the United States. and All Parts of the Globe. Condensed and Assorted for Easy Readlng. CANADA. Repairs are being made to the Bid- eau rifle range. Immense tracts of prairie land in Al- berta are burning over. Mr. A. Dawson has been appointed Police Magistrate of \Vinnipeg. The Cataract Power Company offer to supply Hamilton with water for $13,- 000 a year. ~ Michael Wakeham, a. stovemounter. of Hamilton, committed suicide by cut- ting his throat. Lord Aberdeen has consented to open the Central Exhibition at Peterboro on the 22nd of September. A number of female employees of the Canadian Colored Cotton Company at Hamilton are on strike. The Canadian Express Company has secured connection with all pouits on the Erie and Huron Railway. Mrs. Jones, of Brockville, has her famous herd of Jerseys to Hertz of Prince Edward Island. The grain, root and hay crops in Port Hope and_Peterboro’ districts are reported as givmg an excellent yield. The peach crop in the district about St. Catharines will be a failure. 0th- er fruits are generally abundant. The byâ€"law appointing Mr. E. G. Bar- row City Engineer, at a salary of $2,- 000, was passed by the Hamilton City Council. Engineer George H. White, of the ’I‘. H, & B:, was killed near \Velland/ 'dbytolllus engine being thrown into the. Winnipeg City Council has abandonâ€" ed its intention to asphalt certain streets after advertising for tenders. and now the city is threatened witlh snits by contractors. Mr. Ballantyne, of Stratford, after a flat to Manitoba thinks that the, out- look for dairying in that Province is very good. At. St.'Catharincs the family of Mr. S. H. Mighton had a very narrow cs- wpe 'from the fire which destroyed the dWellmg. M’innipeg alderman are dissatisfied With the_ census figures and will ask the Dominion Government to do the work over. Manitoba’s wheat crop, according to The Nor'lVester, will not equal last year's, a good deal of the grain being damaged by rust. The 50th anniversary of the marriage of Sir Charles and Lady Tupper will be celebrated b a olden ' ddin .October 8. y g “e g on For the first time on record the work of the Dominion Supreme Court iscomâ€" plleted up to date, and all the judges are readiness for the October lists. The reports offorest firesin British Columbia state_th'at many ofthe min- ing towns are in danger. and already immense loss has been caused to the farmers. * A pair of highâ€"bred horses have been presented by a friend in Dublin to Lady Aberdeen, _who so narrowly escaped drowning in the Gatineau, to replace the team lost in the accident. Mr._John S. Middleman, of Birming- ham, is'ln Ottawa for the purpose of in- terweaving the Government on the sub- ect of the. immigration of juveniles to his country. The Montreal rolling mills, were closed down for some time, have been restarted, and some four hunâ€" dred men, who were beginning to feel the pinch of poverty. have found em- ployment. It is reported that Chief Archibald Skirving, of Ingersoll, will be appoint- ed to the provincial detective service, to fill the vacanty caused by the resig- nation of Provincial Detective McKee. Mr. T. H. Lawry of Hamilton has entered an action for $10,000 damages against Mayor Tuckett and the Passâ€" mores, who recently assaulted him,al~ leging conspiracy on the part of the defendants. I F. A. Knapp, a Prescott barrister, is‘ in Ottawa to interest the Minister of Marine on an ocean steamer which he has invented, which, he says, can make the voyage between the Labra- dor coast and England in twenty-sev- m hours. GREAT BRITAIN. N Sir Peary Anderson, assistant Under- secretary, in the Foreign Office, is dead. The Cunard Steamship Company have ordered three 5,000-ton steamships to be built at Belfast. Mr. Charles Dickens. deceased novelist, from paralysis. A doctor reports a. case of cholera in South London. The officials are exam- ining into the facts of flue case. The diseases of animals bill and the land rating bill, passed by the Imperial Parliament have received the Royal assent. It is stated that the Imperial Gov- ernment intends calling upon the Char- tered South African Company to ay an indemnity for the Jameson raid. The new Burniah railway loan of two millions and six hundred thoumnd guilds was placed on the market in _ ndon and subscribed for twenty times over, Complaints are being made that the Martini-Henry ammunition of 1890,En.gâ€" lish issue fails to come up to the stan- dard ; but it passed the inspection of the Imperial Government. The Queen, through United States Ambassador Bayard, has sent an ex- pression of her gratitude to llie citizens of Oceala, Fla.,who recently planted and dedicated a magnolia tree to her Ma- law. Mr. Balfour announced in the House of Commons on Wednesday that he fear- ed there would not be time this session to pass the Deceased Wife’s Sister bill, but that efforts would be made for the passmg of thedrish Land bill. In spite of strong pressure brought to bear by Sir Donald Smith, the Imper- ial Government has finally refused to permit the Ulster Steamship Company sold Mr. which . son of the died ‘at Kensington to erect on the live stock wharf at Belfast a building in which to slaugh- ter Canadian cattle. Kansas City banks refuse to pay OUt any more gold. Forest fires are sweeping 'the valleys in \Vasiiington Territory With terrible rapidity. Millionaire John R. Rockefeller has made Cleveland, Ohio, 3. centennial gift of $1,000,000. _ Ten lives were lost in a flood which followed a cloudburst in Frankfort, :Ky, on Tuesday. German Swain killed histhree youngâ€" est children and then suicided, near Attica, Mich, on Tuesday. , Herbert 0. Spencer, of Lawrence, Kris, has the. disease known as mental blindness. He has lost all memory. "Billy" Ward, the. noted minstrel, has become an evangelist. He attri- butes his conversion to the St. Louis cyclone. George J. Gould, the New York mil- lionaire, is preparing for an extended northern cruise on his yacht Atalanta. John McMannus, sentenced 23 years ago to life im isonment for murder. was liberated mm Auburn prison on Monday. Nicola Tesla, the electrical engineer, claims to have solved the problem of tho longâ€"dista nce transmissions of elec- tricity. s « Notices are posted that the Amos- keag Mills, Manchester, N. H... will close. in August indefinitely. This Will throw cut 6,000 operatives. l John 0. Howard, Deputy Town Mar- shal of Tulare, was hanged at Sill/IE ran- cisco for the murder of an Italian in a political quarrel. Etta Robbins, aged 24, has been jailâ€" ed at Huntington, W. V.a., for the uiurâ€" der of a father and his two daughters. She had attempted to kill a. whole family. Car barns, 250 cars and 50 horses. belonging" to the Chicago City Railway 00., Were destroyed by fire in Chicago on Saturday night, at a loss of $330,- 000. r The death is announced of Right Rev, Arthur Cleveland Coxe, Episco- pal Bishop of \Veslern New York, and a most conspicuous figure in the Am- erican church. A strike of the various organizations constituting the Brotherhood of Tallâ€" ors in New York has been offimally de- clared. This will bring to a standâ€" point about twelve thousand strikers. The, system of importin women and girls for immoral and ot er unlawful purposes is to be investigated by Com- missioner McDoaiough, of the _Ur\1ted States Bureau of Labour Statistics. Thc paralytic stroke which prostrated Mr. Vanderbilt, sr., is said to have been the result of aviolent altercation with his son, who persisted in his determina- lion to marry Miss Grace \Vilson, who is many years his senior. The re. rts of the business agencies in New 'ork continue. week after week to be monotonoust dull, and the cur- rent ones show no variety. The week commenced badly in the speculative markets, owing largely to the outflow of gold and decline in the Treasury re- serve. Businessâ€"which is always quiet at this time of yearâ€"has been considerâ€" ably further depressed by the general financial unrest. The produce mar- kets have been much depressed; lard especially marked the lowest figures on record. The industrial outlook is gloomy, as owing to stoppage of works Indifferent parts of the country the pur- chasing power of the people has al- ready sensibly decreased, and no pro- spect of an early improvement appears to be in sight. The sales of wool this week are the smallest known for years. GENERAL. Over 1,300 Spanish soldiers in Cuba. are dying with yellow fever. It is reported at Singapore that na- tive uprisings continue in the Island of FormOSa. ' Massacres are reported 'to have. oc- curred at Orde, in which 25 Armenians were killed. Reports of the crops in France are most favorable compared With the re- ports of last year. M. Eugene Spuller, the French poli- tician, journalist. and author is dead. He was sixty-one years .of age. It is estimated that it will take 50,â€" 000 Chinese troops 1'0 subdue the Mohammedan rebels at Tani-lime. The British ship Sierra Parima, bound for Rangoon, has been wrecked on the Maldine Islands and all hands lost.r Mrs. Catharine Booth ClibbornKhead of the Salvatioui Au‘iiiy organization in France, was knocked down on VVednesâ€" day in Paris, and seriously hurt. The wife of Carmen Morales, of Mon- terey, Mexico, was assaulted and tied to a horse. The horse was then made to run away, and the. woman was, drag- ged to dealh. ’ A Turkish irade has been issued not- ifying lhc Council of Armenia and Patriarchate that they will be held re- sponsible hereafter for .any treason on the part of the Armenians. Sir Frederick Carrington reportslhat his forch carried the Matalxale position in the Maloppo Hills after severe fight- ing, in which 80 of the enemy were- killed. The. British loss was three kill- ed and eleven wounded. A fire that broke. out in Cause, Island of Crete, on Sunday, was mistaken asa signal for the Turks to massacre the Christians, and a panic ensued. Marines from the British and Austrian men-ofâ€" war lying off the port were landed be- fore the error was discovered. _â€"â€"..â€"â€"._ POKED HIS NOSE IN. 1 An experienced telegraph operator can, from listcning to the sounds, unâ€" derstand a message on one kind of tele- graph instrument without seeing it at all. One. day an inspector walked into an office and began to question the clerk in charge. Suddenly a message began to arrive, and the clerk sat down to write it. The. message was as fol- ‘ lows :â€" “Look out for squalls, The inspector is smiicwhcre on the line. and will be poking his libs“ in everywhere." The inspector smiled as he listened to the message. while Elie poor clerk looked quite helpless. His: superior, however, went tothe instruman and sent back the answer:â€" “Too late! He. has already poked his nose in herei" , the forests. 'vcry bright pupils, but the black flies llH UN_Mll ITEMS OF INTEREST ABOUT THEI BUSY YANKEE. Neighborly interest In His Doings-Masters of Moment and “Inn Gathered from 3119 Daily Record. Gold has been discovered in ‘VOOld-l bury, Vt. J - .A Connecticut: school boy ate 16 mince pies on a. wmgcr. After many years of absence salmon are found in the Delaware River. Paper boats will soon be put on lhe market by 3. Dover, N. H., form. Cape Colony has ordered young or- ange trees from California for experi- mental purposes. More. than thirty-seven thousand girls are engaged in the telephone service in the United States. The new Connecticut forest map shows that. over one-third of the State is given up to woods. Twelve people sat down at an Etna, N. [1,, dinner table recently whose un- ited ages were 950 years. A Burlington, Vt., man gives his baby on airing by towmg the child's carriage behind his bicycle. A New York genius is constructing a_ bicycle. for which the weight ofth rider will furnish the motive power. A poor man of St. Joseph. 110., has fallen heir to a fortune of $150,000 left by an uncle killed in the St. Louis tornado. The fact that ‘Vhite Sulphur Springs, Mont... is a. splendid antidote for the tobacco habit, is attracting the atten- tion of slaves of the weed. l A flawless stone weighing eight tons, two and a half feet at base and twenty- hvo foet long. was takcn from a quarry in Eureka, Vt., the other day. Bath now boasts of three canary birds hatched out of one egg. The lit- tle fellows were about the size. of bum- blebccs, but are alive. and growing. Otisfil-lll, Mo, claims one of the larg- est oaks to be found in the state. "Ibis majestic. tree measured 14 feat 7 1-2 inches in diameter, measured one foot from the ground. Jeremiah Head. a. wise, English auâ€" thority, admits the ability of Alabama to produce iron cheaper than England, but thinks freight charges will pre- vent serious competition, It has been found impossible to build a lighthouse on Diamond Shoal, off Hatteras, but the Government will put in a lightship at once, and she will be the strongest ever made. A bear being raisedon North Island, Cal., disappcarcd. The whole islandwas brat over for him, when the tired party found him asleep in a imdchamber of a residence, where he had gone to sleep on a pillow beneath the bed. In a lot of old paper stock received lately at a mill in Andover, Conn., was a Bible, the inscription of which reads: “This Bible was used in the pulpit by Rev. Steven \Vcst, pastor in Stock- bi'idge, Mass, from 1759-1818." An Oklahoma editor expresses his thanks for a basket of oranges thus: "We have received a basket of oranges from our friend, Gus Bradley, for which he will please acceptour compliments, some of which are nearly six inches in diameter." Since trees have been extensively planted in Southern California the rain- fall of the region has become much more uniform and favourable to agriculture. But there are other parts of the state in which the sawmills are wiping out Mrs. Ebenezer Humphrey has proâ€"- Sented to the town of Oxford, N.H., the original warrant issued by King James of England for the collection of the town tax. It: was issued to H. C. Gray, King’s collector, and is dated Decem- ber 31, 1671. E Joseph 13. Porter, of Canton, Vt., hasi i l lately come into possession of a hand- made wooden plough which is mine than 176 years old and is still in agood / state of preservation. It was built in 1720 by Jonathan Uelcber, one of the, curly settlers of Randolph, for his own: private use. _ Richard (Joker, who became famous about thirty years 9.10 as a boy soprano iii the choir of Trinity church, in New York, adopted the name of Della Rosa when he grew up and became well known as a baritone. Some time ago he inherited a forlund, and is now liv- ing in London.‘ A Boise, Idaho, man having advertised he would not be responsible for debts contracted by his wife, she retorfs that “He never paid any of my bills for my clothes or anything else in the nine- teen years I have been iiiaii'ied. to him. He is now walking around town with a ’ suit of clothes on that l paid $15 for." An enterprising bicycle dealer in Brooklyn is offering a novel inducement to would-be purchasers. He gives a. building lot in a small town ont he: Jersey must to each phi-chaser of a wheel. The Int, of course, is neither large nor valuable; but as an adver- tisement llic scheme is said to be work- ing admirably. , The Rev. Henry H. Bogart, rector of the Episcl'ipol Church of the Advent, Bensoiiliui's‘t, Long Island, declares that, in his opinion, all broad churchmen are disboncst; and in order to give a per-, sonal point to his remark he declares further that Bishop Potter and Dr. Huntington, of Grace Church, in New York, are broad churchmen. At the public library at Macon, Ga., there is a barometer made simply of a thin strip of cedar and a thin sl rip Ufr white pixie, placed together and stuck perpendicularly in a. base rest of wood. \Vllé‘n it is going to rain, the strips bend down and when it is to be dry they stand rigidly stiff and straight. It is said to indicate coming storms unfailingly. , In a barn at New Berlford, Mass.,r are two animals which are very rare,. in one feature, at least.‘ One of them is a ram, which his four large and well defined horns on his head, and wool and hair growing together on hisbody. The other is a "hilly goat," and he» has four horns, two growing together. from the top of his head, and arching backward, and the olher twa growing from the sides of his head and branch- ing sideways. Miss Maud Davis. who is tcaching in Ellintsvillc, Ne, says she has a very nice scluml house to reach in and some are. so thick that she is obliged to build a smudge in the stove and fill the room full of smoke. \Vben it gets too thick they all adjourn to the open air and start a new smudge. She says she has been in the smoke so much that she has taken on a fine colour, like that of smokcd ham. Mr. and Airs. Jud Tlusc, living with relatives in Kansas City, are crazy on the subject of religion, and almost physical wrecks because of their refusal to take. any food. Ever since they be- came insane they have refused to work or accept aid, saying that the Lord would provide until the end of the world came. Luse refused to accept the wages due him from the St. Joseph Street Car Company, for which he worked, and the demented couple have starved themselves until they are scarcer able to stand. .â€"_.______ NOT T00 CRAZY TO THINK. SOME HIGH Gun MINES. C. P. R. ENGINEER ON THE WEALTH OF BRITISH COLUMBIA More Railways Wunlmlâ€"Thc Need of (‘oke Fell by [he Minorsâ€"Crow's Nest I'uss Railwayâ€"lie Recommended the Line for Government Aid. Mr. P. A. Peterson, chief engineer of the. C.P.R., who has just returned to Montreal from a trip to British Col- umbia, in speaking of mining there. saidzâ€""From what I have seen and heard I consider that British Columbia. is probably the finest gold mining coun- try in the world. \Vhat the miners need is cake for melting purposes. and this they have not got, The country Valuable Inventions Thought Out by Patl- is mountainous' the diatances t0 be ciils In Lnnatlc Asylnms. “A lunatic asylum is about the last place any one would search‘ in for in- genious and valuable inventions, isn't it ’6‘" said the resident physician ofone of the. largest of these institutions, ac- cording to a writer in London Ans- wers. "\Ve have a patient inthis asy- lum now who believes he is shut up in the old Fleet prison for the national debt. In the hope of raising the money to pay this trifle off and obtain his rclcase he has for the last two years deâ€" voted his poor brains to inventing thing‘s. Strange to say, among a host of utterly absurd ideas he actually has produced two which are really practic- able. His friends and I have supplied him wilh such harmless materiaLs as he requires. and he has just finished a simple automatic contrivance for the head of a. lawn tennis racquet. to pick up the balls and abolish sl‘ooping. It acts pretty well, and I'm so convinced there's money in it that I've advised his fricnrls lo secure a patent for him in case b: becomes cured. His other inâ€" vention is of a different kind, being a really efficacious preventive of seasick- ncss. “It's very simple; two of its compon- ents are in every kitchen and the rest in every chemist's shrp. I have suc- cessfully tested it myself on two oc- casions rcx-enily when crossing the channel in very stormy weather. MADE HIM A RICH MAN. "As an instance of the cleverness of lunatics, it may interest you to know that a very valuable improvement con- nocted with machinery, and now in daily use everywhere, was invented by the inmate of an asylum Well known to every one by name; As he is now quite cured, and is a somewhat promâ€" lnPnl‘, man, I won't mention any de- tnils; but his invention, designed and modelled as a diversion while absolute- ly insane, has since brought him in thousands of pounds. HIS FLYING MACHINE. “Alunatic atan asylum whereIwas once assistant ph‘ysuian invented a. flying machine, and had a unique method of suspending it in midair. ‘Atâ€" mespheric pressure being fifteen ounds to the square inch,’ he said, ' have simply to exhaust all the air from above my airship by an enormous air- pump fixed over the whole deck, and the. air pressure underneath Will hold the ship up.‘ I told him he'd need an- other air pump on top of the first one to exhaust the air that would be press- ing that pump down,and another above that, and so on, ad lib.; but he declared he once made a. model which worked splendidly. He. said: 'It flew about in the room like a bird. Unfortunately. the window happened to be open at the top. and so it flew out, and so I lost if,’ he lamcnted. ‘ "'l‘he chaplain of an asylum in the north once told me ofammlmunthere who had a plan for laying a _ cable round the. world in two days. His idea was to send up a powerful balloon to the highest possible altitude, With a cable. attached. By the revolution of the earth 011 its axis the cable. be deâ€" clured, would be laid completely round the earth in twenty-four hours." ____.â€"-â€"â€" A TIGER'S SPRING. Tull-teen Shots Iii Ills Carcass and Killed a Man. The strength of a tiger in its dying struggle is said to be almost fabulous, writes Miss Marryatt. in a letter from India, and she goes on to describe a very distressing occurrence which took plaice in the Bandypoor jungle, by which Captain Hâ€"â€", aideâ€"deâ€"camp to the governor of Madras. lost his life. Captain Hâ€"â€", whilst staying at the I bungulmv, on a journey to or from the hills, heard that; a large tiger which had done great mischief in the neigh- borhood was still lurking in the sur- rounding jungle. This was grand news for asporlsman, and he lost no time in sallyiiig forth in search of the beast. According to the statements of the natives who au-ompanied him, the captain soon found himself face to face with this monarch of the Indian forests. _ The tiger was on one. sule of a small stream, and Captain Hâ€"â€"â€" on the other, and it was afterward ascertain- ed that ho had actually fired at the brute thirteen times before it sprung with amazing strength .acrcss .the streamâ€"amazing, when it is taken into consillei'ulion that Capt-am Hâ€"â€" was in general it most successful shot. Selling lhc unfortunate [nun before he had lime- to elude the attack, the brute crushed him so friglitfully that he was only carried back to llie llllllgfl‘ low to die. A doctor was procured as sobn as possible, but nothing could save his life. 'l'lic tiger 1111151 lizive fallen buck :ilinoM instantly and died, as he was found on the split \\ ill] the thirteen ‘ shols in his carcass. JI'S'I‘ THE THING. 1 I 111g :1. lemon. travelled are long and the rates of tran- sportation are high. I know of one case in which coke, was imported from Eng- land. I mcntion this to show what. faith there is in the outcome of gold mining in British Columbia. One saw iron pipes and all sorts of material piled up at the railway stations; saw heav- ily laden waggons at every turn; saw every indication of serious work with’ the one end in view of developing these great industries. The notable thing about the gold mines of British Colum- bia is that they are not confined to am: section, but are scattered over the country for hundreds of miles. CROW'S NEST PASS RAILWAY. "\Vhat is needed Is a railway through the Crow's Nest Pass, which would tap the finest coal-producing re- gion in the. world and by means of which the. miners would get their coke, which is indispcnsable and the lack of which causes them at resent to labour under~ serious difficul ies. The lack of Such a. road retards a development which would be remarkable if all the necessary facilities “ere provided. But that so much is bcing done without these facilities is a proof that there is a. wellâ€"grounded hub in the. future of the Province which is destined to be- come the wealthiest Province in Con- federation. The C. P. R. has always been favorable to the idea of building this road, but of course it is also a matter for the Local and the Dominion Govenunents to interest themselves in. Proper communication and the provid- ing of facilities and necessary material for the prosecution of the several en- terprises which are now under way are matters in which the country as a whole is interested, for. assuredly, if the mining industry be benefited by the providing of these things the Domin- ion as a whole would reap, DIRECTLY AND INDIRECTLY. the benefit of the outlay attendant up»- on such provision. There are many per- sons holding back until better fatalit- ies be provided. I know several gentle- mun myself who have properties, for example, in Bwland, who are simply waiting for the railway in order that they may develop them, The long haul- ages, the high rate of transportation. and the difficulty of obtaining coke are bound to have their retarding effects, although, as Isay, with such facili- ties as exist remarkable energy and enthusiasm are being shown." " Is there any chance of the C. ,P. R. taking the initiative in the building of the railvmy'f” "\V'cll, the. C. P. B. would. need as- sistaiil'c. in such an undertaking. The Dominion Government has given subsi- dies to railways which are of {general benefit, and it is not too much to say that such a. railway as I have men- tioned would be in the nature of a. na- tional benefit, leading, as it would. to the. rapid opening and development of the finest Province in the Dominion." AN O'l' H ER. RAIIAVAY NEEDED. Mr. Peterson also mentioned that there was a desire for a railway north from a pvint contiguous to Ashcroft to the Cariboo country. This under- taking would also, he. said. be justified by results, for he was informed that fully one thousand horses were kept on the road drawing freight. . People were settling all the time, the country was being opened up and the heavy rates for the transportation of freight told heavily upon the people, who needed simply the encouragement of communication generally all over the line. Mr. Peterson had hopeful things to report :â€"-'I'he crops looked well and promised an abundant harvest. On the. way, down. Mr. Peterson met two French engineers who had been sent over by French capitalists to report on the gold region around Rat Portage and Rainy Luke. \\ bile they did not anticipate their report and while they had not arrived zit final conclusions, these gentlemen said sufficient to give Mr. Pcterson the. idea that they were favorably impressed with what they had soon. and that their report was likely to be exceedingly favorable. BROKE UP THE BAND. The success of a. boy in silencing a street band is recorded by the Phila- delphia Record: ‘ A German band of four pieces started to play “Annie Rooney." A crowd of urchins, attracted by the music, soon gilhu‘cd around. Then a. mischievous- looking boy appeared on the scene suck- He Waited uniil the band was in the. midst of the tune and then squeezed through the crowd“ _and, standing in the midst of theVmusmans, began sucking the lemon With all hll‘d might. ' The effect was instantaneous, the sounds issuing from the brass instruâ€" inciils, became feeblc, and at last they ceased altogether, and the full)" Ger- mans, whose mouths were dripping moisture and all puckered up, made a break for the little fellow. tlii‘eaicnâ€" ing him with terrible. punishment. lhe boy mnde his way through the crowd, however, and soon showed a clean pair of hot-ls. STATUE OF VICTORIA. Queen Victoria is to see. herself in bronze. A heroic statue of H. R. H. Patronâ€"Sc" here, landlord, look at is to be placed at the. junction of Queen this sirloin steak brought me. in the wars way. Landlordâ€"Then I ,(hiuk, sir, that steak exactly fills the bill. your waiter h'is Victoria street and the Victoria ' Isl when I wanted a. steak I bankmcnt, Blzu'kfriarsâ€"(me of tile lus- that' statue is the work of the late C. em- The liest spots of the City of London. B Birch, the English sculptor.

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