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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1900, 9 —— — = - = — — — = — . — _ Qossesssssssssss esssss@Pessscscssssssscccsocsesee® | .0 uu Mies Madee Robericon 1 have 0[F\-””\\ I'OR BR\ \\”l’\ ase and according to the laws of war, bee i and New Callfornias yaqs. why fs it wrong for Pr Bt McK wished 4 AD Al i blished. 1 be proper to it v ta A : GIBBY, THE EEL A e e g o S st e mons, Baiorn 3 ™ ! .4 ) tion rote P his - erecting fortifications and defraying h reads as W every A . . " . 2 ) the Eel, bu 1 ¢ Siz Handed the Fusionists by a | SXPentes essarily inclde o Res at we rejoice in the r \ - Bis co By S. R. CROCKETT. to rebuke him. eted, for the RatPR} of 8 o nds ol & mainten L auth oration ations with « ord ¢ ature 8 body uillippine Soidier, t t x and ear Iy ¢ s ald tesssssssssssssscsscss@@recsrsscccccscssscccssscss b his bod P % and Bt y p adduced the i A 1 & prosy ¥ 48, how ¢ . ) v (Copyright, 180, by R. Crockett.) | mon. It was our one point of resemblance orar Jeranged s " A . republ t P th by w . be ene Naturalists have often remarked how | to the pr ve ¢ was ob: | PRESIDENT POLK AND THE MEXICAN WAR | ; dent, f gratula little resemblance there is between the ne day the doct peering over his hat the long ns of 3 bas always § ve becple - ¥y ad 411 0t was b v ; young of certain animals and the adult| folio, discerned the meek face and beaming @ Hermene 1 “ sece that the policy of Presiden . estly R8¢ sustain the ad « casure specimen This tottering quadrangular | s t Gilbert the Eel in the center of bide tations from His Messages Ape |y 00000 0 took t 3 ody ] . f © Vigorous pros war in arrangement A string remotely ediately beneath him reaty plied to Present Conditions— from a conque - . o L 4 b ot be futy of & and inadequate ected at the upper b, Mr. Denholm, will you read for us e of 1 pro Marked Similarity of | expense of war; the te y the past and se oyal A anis A e corners is certainly the yo of the|this morning—beginning at the 29th verse— | cee crawl down t ¥ War Problems | stances might have soon passed beyond Questions for Bry t | horse. But {t does not even remotely | of the chapter under consideration the the authority of that foe by r y ot 1 belleve now that the attitude of t & 1t you I P American suggest the war horse sniffiing up the| And he su expectantly fnto h causes; neither thought it necessary to & e party in 1842 and 1852 was pec \ the N by battle from afar. This little yellow ball prius demen 18.~To the Edit ‘ nha ry if the also beileved in 1896, when I supported Mr. Which we took New M ud the Calito of feathers with the steel-blue mask s Up rose Gilbert, signaling wildly are being made were w o mig I > extent of my humble abil as € th . the pee » beneath its half-opened eyelids haud for the class “Bagster t first raised to a present administration in | piade, & he 1 ry i \ through the press and from the | ple who e v, why can unltke to the magnificent eagl P 1 to bim and meantime graspiog at t by the Eel estions growing out of Our | power at up pla that he also belleved that way. |y t sratulate people of toda books) stares unblinded into the very eye first text he could it him g a little anxlous | late temporary ‘ Mr. Bryan agreed with wme |upon the results of the which wa of the noonday s By th ¢ was again su wit lished, rty ot k iu the platform of 1896 was | have added | » R and the Philippiaes learned professions by no . He held in h 1 bluebottle. | cr is clearly r platform o the patriotic 1 | tt purpos the full-fledged expert of the my at the pro- | Kix of 1848, sections 15 and 16 of which rea wpathy iu their b | s belleve be war with Spain It 1n such cases the child is the fa ¢ iidst of a |y as foll jcal freedom and independence ‘ st wa t the soldiers who the m the parentage b € 15. Resolved, Tk It the t has come when the lives for flag in that causs apparent valry well, in began sole Y. | pe provoked on her part United States, the great repubdlic of the | " © Ame & as were the To how many medical students 1 expoun to see—I hop and injury, was commenced by her a wor hould recognize that s and ur’w ers who fe the war with Mexico? you willingly entrust the will remember where he is | th ug the Rio G a ing ¢ o be a free and independent | If so, are w entitled 1 y from sticking plaster to a ¥ n an troops and lnvading our or [ Spain as we from Mex 1 are not care of a half-guinea u h of this a e of Texas, and upon a r I ¢ 11t t| soldiers ist much surgeon y g d A v 1 &1 laws of pati . n were ca |e 1 to t Al s of all loyal trust with ail the middle 1 and 1 our part & 1 the struggle A ADS 48 We he soldie the Mex as a whole the o For five minutes—ten—ffteen, the gentle o B8 medita " Biikseit o8 the Sitas pirys: paign with the lowa regiment youtrselven P ly siding with the enemy above cav ¢ nud on, th rd “Hermaneutics r scourse At a wor 4 neither mor ally, by word the | ppines, and came home when | of ountry, deserting the soldier who is There is, perhaps ntinuity abou* at intervals llke the pleas- 4 no m 1, have giv tort b 1w stered ou h the reg aud | fighting for the flag of your co y and en the legal profession, but even there it is a ermitten epring. Then | His head was almost or 1 of the glv honorable discharge ter | Aging those who are opposed to him? notable fact that the older and more su 1 suddenly to his €k | floor and his 1imbs extended far up the gal- of cons !, That we would be r the v with Spa honorable war, and W. B. EMERSON cessful & lawyer is the more inodest you lery stairs. To say that his face was flery temulity for foieed assurance of peace with when it was ove ught, and still think —_—_— :\m‘. him, and the more diMdent of his it b vou comstrued vairy well | red gives but a faint ldea c while Mextico, fo 1 ¢ just principles of we had a right to demand indemnity Just| My P Richards ently, the carica allibilit ndeed, several of the most | last time. Be good enough just to continue |a black streak upon his nese \ tha wn that the only indemnity | jyaemnity tor the 1 secur ’ as we did at the close of the war with Mex- | (urist on ge, (be New York oem j eminent judges are in this r quite place you 1 off. Mr. Denholm, |the charwomen of th ge were not a be power of Mexico to make pioureyue hatwhite th in Bof t In accordance with that belief 1 submit | weekly, will appear at the Press club bene as other men s Mister—Mis- Denbolm? whit re diligent tha students there. f the just and long-defer liberal treaty offered tq Mex remains the fol g questions to Mr. Bryan and his | fy Friday afternoon Mr. Richards is a But of all others, the divinity student e moonlike countenance rose from | of citizens agalust her and the | g, 500 44 jg the duty of the country t followe » each of which { must have an | prominent member of the German Press i* perhaps the most misundersto He | its eclipse behind six volumes of Owen (follo | Wygat 1 1 after that is a kind of which she can reimburse ght to | edition), whil Nay, he misrepresents | permanent tran tain the administration and t stain the honest answer befol country in every measure necessary t fal 18 misrepresented by those who o know him be 1 can support him this ib of New York City the two smaller moone 10 maye the expense of the war is directed themsclves upon United States of a portion I suppose that Gibby regalied a seat United » and that the lecture proceeded ' a ce somewhe L vide for the vigorous prosecut of th Do i believe in the democracy of himself, and when he dofis tweeds a the vacant place in bench 1 from which|gafier 4 fashion. But I do not kmow for |of her Mexico has no money 10 | (o' ihiig that treaty be rejected I ¢ Polk f takes to collars which fasten behind and ' Gibby the E ad translated so glibly With | certain. Bursts of unholy mirth forced | pay @ means of making the re Aba (HEt the decioerktio DAF p was tight for Prestdsnt Polk to |8ut A clerical coat, he apt to disow best | the efficient aid of “Bagster their wa t linen handk < ! y. 1t we retuse this we d the treaty wh t was f K t indemnity from Mexico N self, and often e n persuading him Mister—Mist —er Denbolm chiefs rolled har ed as gags au obtain nothing else To reject in & elf that [ ' 11ige edate The professor knew that he was absent But there w eling among mAa: jemnity by refu to accept a cession of W vas he ever minded, but (if the expression be allowed), | ypat though dou s there was humor in | territory would be to abandon all our ¢ he has got his |he could bave sworn | the case, the Eel had gone a little too far | clais i to wage the war, besring & DR‘IN r"E hie_mind, and two or 1 am here, s |and it Prof. Galbraith were genuinely an. | expenses without a purpose or a s ot 1 1 together the Eel, a little nefaced, WS|oered he might bring the matter re | Object. The doctrine of no terr d t jest and prank not wholly | roon the place where he had been en- [ it t¢TEIUY WAL the rosult that Giber a public acknowledgm (4 leavoring to persuade Nick McFeat to lend tows a8 10188 father's so | our e y was wrong and that the war to be room bim his dress clothes “to g0 10 & CORVEr- | ia o oo ) | clared congress with extraordi one or two st portrayed sazolne ' —which request Nick sisted in refusing, allegir elly per- first that he five or ten years — mayvbe longer — doesn't heal because you are not using the proper treat | unanimity was unjust and should AL founded in S0 when the class was at last 3 a dozen of us gathered round Gibby ani |abandoned—an admission ily tha b 1€ with salves } le th othing and relieve wanted them himself and secondly that the [y tO5E0 0 B8 ERCRAEA round by und degrading to the national hou ment, but are trying to cure it with salves and washes While these are soothing And of these the first is Mr. Gilbert Den- | Eel desired tu go to no “conversazione,” | ((PISICUUEL 1o him that he must €0 at once Justifying the Censlc pain to some extent, no real, per { good can come from their use, because the disease . holn, master of arts. scholar in theology, | but contrawise to take a certain Madge Rob- | = o~ "HFH A | Then again, in submitting the treaty is in the blood and far beyond the reach of external applications. to his class-fellow collouially and | ertson to the theater. L el A Bt | which was fnally agreed upon with Mexico, A sore Lieals promptly when the blood is in good condition, but M@V i it is diseased. The ? generally known a the Eel. At this moment the fateful voice of the| ol TT AL 00 In& Ahe Eel was re- | b0t Polk, 1 his special message to the tendency of these old soies and ulcers is to grow worse, spreading and eating deeper into the flesh, At college He was | professor broke in upon them as they were d i “ They are a constant drain A pérson’s capacity {0 ate ou July 6, 1848, said fve and valuable territorl ipon the system, gradually but surely ruin the health and sap the very life & merry-he he to say We fnetructed him. W easure is soon lost in the great desire and scarch for some cre pres- | Just rising to the height of their great argu- - hing to cure, g el at | areument, appeal, persuasion. We S o ol e ared prv | S, §. S, makes a rapid and permanent cure of old sores and ulcers, and is the only medicine that nance of hi s . i » where | €0 torture. Finally yielding t il et > past the does, because 1o other can reach deep-seated blood des. Ordinary Sarsaparilla and potash mixtures min i e D W TR O = ey tiiny (o6 Uis BTN GF Whith) o ETeVamenti bl aigni) socss o8 are too weak and watery to overcome a deadly poison that has taken possession of the blood. Do not ol b, you left off? Providence Is saild to fight) Gibby was led | brilliant achieveme and eignal « 8 waste valuable tine experimenti it i to bring uy Gibby Toss; Hignaiiby WLy for “BuSE: | 65 14k doari With A SaBEEE. AL sa h elb n\! our arms will be a guaranty of security fof | e S ALY hat 1 o sk breeth 1) 0 keep | ter” and endeavoring to look as it he bad | We knocked. He entered. The door was |the future by couvineing all nations -nKJ A Bidiahbe e ye e Jeft g, receiving what 1 considered onty & Tight wou himself at college by means of scholarships | peen a plant of grace rooted and grounded | shut behind him, but not wholly. Hajt|our rights must be respected. The Wouu“nd t e 4l me any good 1 hatt heard & & & hix d EHSTEB U BT TN Prof. Denholm gazed at Gibby | a dozen ears lined the crack at Intervals bbb o ddhern B s Sut of tay blood | 800m afterwards the sore uealed up. Sid was cured sound & Gbie, in situ, then at the place formerly occupled | like limpets clinging to a sm ates onal chara abroa ot i O votiok 4ot ety SR o s long me,. 3.3 Mokaavaw: Tadres \ But his only fault obvious to the world | by him, tried to orient the matter in his [on a tidal rock. We could not country never before enjoyed. s iy % 1o vaet was a certain light-headed but winsome | head, gave it up and bade the translation | Eel's words. Only a vague | our resources have become S. 8. §. is the only purely vege u Kayety and tendency to Joksi . 1f you will write them about your case, they will gladly ¢ e ne 8? eli Scholias: terrupted, W Qur resources unex blood diseases a life study. If you will write them about your case, 'y Part of Gilbe e e D o b B AR o R beeay el AANb 10 el oy | bitited au¥ihe ipublisredt paired” | furnish all information or advice wanted, without any charge whatever. Address SWIFT SPECIFIC C0., ATLANTA, GA & lithe slimness of figure which gained him | you fellow, where's that Bagster? I call |say, this has been a lerson to you, it bas| e see that at the close r our \.].:; the name of “Gibby the Eel.” and which it dasbed mean) yes, sir, it is connected |been 00 less a Jesson to me. Let us both With Mexico we found pureelves dealing y enabled him to tice many amusing | with the former clause by the particle | endeavor to profit b; in money its {n- Be | / ble blood purifier known ; ' " re respected throughout the 1s made of roots and herbs of wonderful purifying properties, bikee o BERELS | Rbbed reached us 1 T doubt it much morn | kDO v 2 A ) 4 ctual cal kind. I used to often to restrain his| But Bagster" eame; not and Glivert 418 | rexched Prot. Ga ¢h, The Bel stop SO ROA e | probably be saved from _which no poison can resist. . 8. 8. quickly’and effectually prdor by telling him if he did not behave | not distinguish himself this time. Indeed, | and there was a pause. We feared its ill- | the necessity of engaging in acother {orcién | elears the blood of all morbid, unhealthy humors, and the old, troublesome sore heals. himeelf and walk more seemly he would | far from it en. 77| war for a long series of ye It is & sub- At the same time the general health isinvigorated and bu m‘ I\\ hen n]:ll(‘ .«lru ch et bis bursary taken from him by the | “WIill you parse the first verb, Mr. Den-| “Poor Eel, the old man's golng to report | Jéct of congratulation N h . ‘h it fl:; to ‘:l"ffl"-‘;i"“ you may be sure your blood is ba WIES00R Senatus, Y ! pt 13 ‘ through a war of mere than tw ye put 1t in order and keep £0, olm=no, not that word! That has usually'| him"* we whispered to each other P ; R This would recall Glibert to himselt | been considered & substantive, Mr. Dent | And then ‘we: besrs (e trolDeF: o 1o | duratiun with the dusiness of the countr Our Medical Department is in charge of experienced physicians, who have made when almost anything else had failed | [ Us person confound ¥ it, unto greater dilj- | A Dation unable to pay | 3 pranks in the classroom. He would have | (have you not found that book yet, you|gence and seemliness in our walk and demuity obligations, Just as we found our-| & made an exceptionally fine burglar, for few | beast?) conversation. We will say no more about |S¢lves at tho close of he late war with| Kll" Sololllon Had holes were too small and no window too| The parentheses, it is hardly necessary to | it, if you please, Mr. Denholm ' Spaln. We see also that the president then, g #ecure for Gilbert to make his exits and | say, were spoken sub rosa and were not| e . . . . . . « |@s now, rather than receive no indemnity entrances by. Without going so far as to |an integral part of Gibby's text as it We cheered him as he went out i1l he |5t all tec portion of the territory, of #ay that he could wriggle himself through | reached the ear of Professor Galbraith | waved a kindly and tolerant hand at us| 't® conauered foe for such ‘1“"“"'"“"" ::‘1 A Great Repu tation for WiSdom An ordinary keyhole, T will say that if an “Ah, that will do, Mr. Denholm—not so | consulting in any cepted it without and there was more than & gleam of humor ccupyin 2 v ; ( e will of the peopl cupying A 2 . A : e F aattibese Deahlts, | walhenct faulio 68 el SIECISL (RIS 10 the kindly specthcieniss 1ithe gamile | ;0 st SHC TP e One of his wise remarks was “Of making many books there is no end.” He had never g " most ordinary of his habits | Bot s0 vairy ill, either. ermeneut was neither so blind nor yet | ‘B8t W 7 5 | i Vast e 1i 1 f was that of wandering here and there| And Gilbert sat down to resume the dis- (8o dull in the uptake as we had b |POFIF Of Mr. Bry ihis war with Spain| Y geen the making of a great dictionary. Tt is like the making of many books and scems to ;hrnuuhum the class room during the |cussion of the dress clothes. By this time, | aecustomed to think him. was not & war of conquest and the ad- | our of lecture prestming upon the pro- | of course, he considered himself quite safe As for the Eel he becam ministration has no right to accept ter-| have no end. In making the fessor's purblindness or A man from i ] lack of atten- |from further molestation. The professor | that day, and to a limited extent at last | TitOFial indemnity l',“ i et tion. You would be sitting calmly writ. |had never been known to call upon @ man | put away childish things-‘though his heapt Sl lassiaas 16 S0+ Ing a lotter, drawing caricatures in your | thrice in one day. So finding Nick McFeat| will remain ever young and fresh. Hiis xliipy notebook or otherwise improving your obdurate in the matter of the dress sult, | story i D et mind with a laudable is another story and, so far as this|® il Ik as th en waged with a imitation of atten ed bis intention of vISItIN | little study goes, it is enough to say that n wa tion when suddenly out of the black aud | Kenneth Kennedy, who, he said pointediy, | when at last the aged professor of Her. | V16 BRuen, Wb aries \'l:‘nluv“-’\ dusty depths about your feet would arise | was not a selfish and unclean animal of the | meneutics passed to the region where all nced it has bee ltuu-* i the parition of Gibby the KEel. He|kind abhorred by Jews, but a gentleman, ner itry and will be vigorously things are finally explicated, it was Gilbert ew ta would nod, casually inquire how you found | one who would lend dress clothes for the | Denholm wh by i e yourselt this morning and | e expeascn o ¢ that ho only dropped i up the memorial to his was subscribed t form yoa |asking. And they were better clothe: any- | memory, whi o by every .|} anarmy of the brainiest and smaxtest men of the world was employed and 2 million dollars 3 he expenses of t I on bis way up |way avd had silk linings. Furthermore, | student without exception he had . son for P : Sl gl YV ity e o ' ) P to bench 17 to see Balhaldie, who owed | Nick need mot think it, he (Mr. Gilbert | had. And it was he who wrot W' | spent. Take the BEST I.l.nl.»l Ll_nl I'HE BERST B_R.\l.\h and the result must be satis f bim a shillin Denholm) would not demean himselt to | bralth's epitaph, of which the last line Simliagity of Gonfitions | § factory. But with all this expenditure of man and mind and money ‘“"-' i long'" He would nod again|put on his (Mr. McFeat's) dirty blacks, | runs | In answer to this we are told that we | ¢ pleasantly and sink into the unknown | which had been felonlously filched from & | ‘“Gentle, a peacemaker, a | 2 compare this Mexican territory to A abyes boneath the benches as nolselessiy |last year's scarecrow that had been out al | and et Godr e Philippines, because Spaln was about | The Standard Dictionary is Offered for and s unobstrusively as a smile fades |the winter. And he (Gilbert) would take | i to lose its power over them and that but | rom a face Madge Robertson to the theater and what R Sometimes, however, when in wanton | was more, cut Nick McFeat out as clean as mood his progress Balhaldiewards could |a leek be guessed at by the chain of “ouches | At this the latter laughed scornfully, | yini" Caroce” Bos N g i and “ohs” which indicated his subterra- |afirming that the grapes had a faint subs | ceremonies 1 nean carecr. The suddenness with which | acid flavor and bade Gibby go his way At the beginning of the present century | 1 Glibert could awaken a lively interest in| Gibby went, tortuously and subterrane- | there wer & somnolent o slonary s 10Us, | for us they would have before now, per- haps, been free from its control. This n min- | question was wlso raised regarding the a o Mexican territory, but was met by Presi- 7 marrluge | ) 0t Polk in his third anoual message, | ¢ decomber 11841y An SR el There are so wany points of superiority in The Standard Dictionary, aside from its mar- Rev. George Schambach, a Lu tster of Newark, N. J ties in the world A g Indifferent student by | ously worming his way to the highest seats (are more than 2, with more. (hes 1o actual conditions of the Mexican gov- ‘k velously low price, that one can scarcely enumerate them. Some one has said there are in the flag had 1o e reiy Do in e eait ot |lp the SR YRATs Japnoth Baaner)| eslentin : [ erament for e s outa ve ve. | | THE STANDARD 41 dictionaries in one. Each topic is the work of a specialist. b to be felt to be appreciated. [M. A, reposed at full length upon & va-| | )r. Edward Everett Hale, In spite of | present that if these provinces s ¢ B~ sy ind o ‘Q "'“Y"hrl-r-l'nrv"'x ersued the sound of vigorous :‘unl seat, having bent a Highland cloak ‘}j;" Fpate conunieg ta be dotive --mn WOTK | tained by her she co not long continue to Ratisfactory to students and scholars because so complete, containing 300,000 words, \ fabares - ,’,‘L 4 ["h""' time the | over a stick to RApTSAR ’x‘\““’“"’ m;"”""’ neclt doea much of ‘the ne essary per. | Bold and govern them. Mexico s to fi"'L:“ nearly three times as many as the old stand-by, Webster's Dictionary. The hook stands in n 0t the range of his uns foe | tion if perchance the kindly spectacles of | sonal investigation and visiting am the | & power to govern these provinces ig as i v Pt " v 5 'Ivhmrm could be observed scated two or :,.“,"i'“,‘.t(‘,\ Al tlixa 1o, ble Aleaetion or of the clty & am el f 1,000 miles from her high favor among the wise men on both sides of the Atlantic, and that fact alone establishes e broe sk intently studying a | Gibby gazed rapturously on his sleep, co lepresentatives c r it pted 1o be retained by k testament wrong si, 1ng the picture of meek tod | her they v | the 107 Congreg. m as once in the Latmian | met at Pilgrim h ite the H its success. Here are some opinions from the press of Europe: * up and look- | templating constitute t for a short | g the Dicure of wmre Pl cave Diana gazed upon Endymion. He| {0 invite the Hor ¢13 10 | timo even normally a part u{‘lk v dow nlout | The Freeman's Journal , Dublin, The Irish Times, Dublin, Ireland The Liverpool Daily Post, Liverpool freedan (a'as coUld Gilbert use so much | was proceeding to ink his face preparatory | hl i diamond 3 \ This would AR Ao el i Ireland: “For scholarly accuracy and ... 1t will be recognized, we bave “It 18 an implement that will be of Galbraith every ..u‘v»m:1 at of old Prof. | 1o upsetting him on the floor, when he re: Rev. Dr. Me ng | Upper California 204 "I““V .o l“"“"‘*fl\ exceptional fulness . it stands un- every reason to say, not alone vast service to those who cultivate T O Lo gt iy 03 e foor” when o re f | European_ nations bas long since directed | | [ oy Of other existing dic- throughout the American continent the literary arts on either side of the 18, Now Testament sxaaisia oo | Mudles | desist. : | their attention o A aportie| | tionaries with which we are acquaint- but in all English-speaking parts ot Atlantic. 1t 1s a monument to Amer- Mlly, aforded bis atudents as oc oot Ecl, you are & most infamous pest 1ot that prov £ the United States ed, we know of none tha be con the 014 World, also as an authe tean Industry, no less than the great iy, Aorded bis student .M[' hour of un-| Can't you let a fellow alone? What do doubt that s United Sty ’ pared with the Standard from its fuloess, discrimination White City by Lake Michigan (the late B ] AP e ey of o 7oe s [ 4 elinqu present occupation o The Belfast Age, Belfast, Irel riety and ample erudition It is a Chicago World's Falr e SR |~ Whereupon, with countenance a trifle Faduate an heir cla 0 1t as indemnity an | . it were difficult o praise this monumest of American learning and Galbralis mio SYer studied under 8 brass, Gibby entered into the question of o broyacoliege, Vet his grand would be made by some foreign power | B oo laiq ajctionary too bighly. It is o, RUBAALAG St salbraith will forget that gentle dre | the dress suit h tlety and tact . : ing voice overbead, that full-orbed ‘ moon- | There never was s0 good a chap as Ken ich two smaller | nedy, never one so generous. He (G. D) spectacle seemed to be | would do as much for him again and he light countenance, over wh moons of beamy r were vice presidents of Unier coil possess it, either by conquest or by ||| P NS 0 hion” all who speak the the Standard Dictio. .y America may purchase. 1f no foreign government should | English language may be justly grate- date a new period of the counmtry's his- new Methodist > be vl ¢ it in either of these modes, an in- | ful. tank it ome fs to b ts main bulldir 0d | do v it ; ¥ R g na tependent revolutionary government would | FRFPOLUAL tran in especial that [ would bring it back the next day pressed f Eva 2 W 88 sopbetiecl bably be established by the iubabitants e 3 . : : blessed word, eutics f which, | by ’.. tallor secretary of the northwestern hranch of 1} f.‘l ch foreigners as may remain in or re- THE STANDARD DICTIONARY has a great many attractive features. It is not feas- it Is said, there e one student who | Kennedy was not so enthusiastic. There are | ~ci0dist Women's Foreign Missic move to the country as Soon as it shall be could remember tes bave |] ible to enumerate all at this time. 'or instance, so many words are in constant dispute, ates have | | clety did much toward raising his | for the colleg o ing. He died | several points of view in matters of United young, regretted by ull wh » knew him. kind. Kenneth Kenoedy did not, of course, | _( opher, the veteran [ bandone ument would be 1ch words have heen referred to 50 leading philologists and their opinions atken as final, ) y the word q . evangelical leader, eteran sh | aba 1 FAS. 59 b P . 1 : ml reamily the word came to you, sooth- | care “ & dump” about Madge Robertson, | frangelical leader. Has rece too feeble I independent I'he matter of spelling is also diflicult to adjust. In the Standard that has been settled B _DRG Eratefu) At mother's by, re-| but he had the interests of his silk-1ined | Ly nm v ar 1| ox s ecome annexed | 1 ] current as the wash & quiet sea upon | dress coat at heart. ment of sch \ ore Il couservatively, vet accurately, a beach of softest sand . : | . D ne n | “That's al' very well, Eel,” be sald,|ford. and . orced T ations are gems, i strating a nicety p O R 1 Will 00w prosesd 10| ralalen Blemtble Solaolentiy Ta (e gerpenr | EEEEmETE ‘. |-.-‘1 roeed ’I.hl :|uol‘|nubn ire gems, 111|1~l{.|(|1|_ toa ety the use. of the mml»vi call your attention—to the study of Her- | dicular, “but you know as well as I do | th ho forteanatann I'he illustrations are numerous, in fact it is a work that will be attractive to children on maneutics—Hermaneut—Gezent aue has | that the last t 1 lent it to you you| F T, ¥ of the army; | s account and consequently all the more valuable as an educator. affirmed—but In my opeenion, gentlemer let some wax drop on the walsteoat, | Yener ¥ fo ropilyrmusigpyicsill ]| this a 1 h r eutics!” ere you passed from | right It ot. an ne een | INE o moral or lega P brof. R rodd. (¢ bl adinet | AR te :1;' maneutice! .:n‘ e you_ i from | right on the pocket, and I have uever been | {nf, Ni® ¢ he . legal No home library where Prof. R. A. Todd, Columbla: “I am exceedingly pleased with its fulness, conden- conscious state into ) aH1a to Rat (¢ ent' kikos " o X . 1l attention to fon, accuracy aud completeness. Its mechanical execution s a delight to the artis- And %o on and 5o on until the colle Suddenly the lair became conscious that| than of el Polk. who, inl|] there are school children e \ :' 1 | wax l“,m quadran x.l as gentle hum of exegetical divinity from 8 Intelligent neeting bi nd || should be without the Ntan esident Bashford of Ohio Weslyan: “After a comparison of many words I am quite ime to file ou r & wash and brush-up | the rostrum had ceased. The word ‘‘her- maneutics” no longer soothed their con- | to lend the pa f.|verse at intervals of five minutes, like the chaptern 4B of the new Roman ( e | the look Westmi before dinner in ha!! Upon one afternoon every week a Galbralth read with his students in s ‘all's well' on & ship at sea Greek Oreeginal He prescribed half a Ab, Misster Dep-holm, neruaps you dozen chapters of “Romans” or “‘Hebrews" | have ed yourself by this time. Be and expected us to prepare them care- | good to continue where you left fully. 1 verlly believe that he thought ! off Den-holm—where in the world we did. This shows what a sanguine nd | is Mr. Denholm smiable old gentleman he w His beamy | The spectacies were Dbardly beaming spectacles belled him not Dow. A certain shrewd suspicion mixed The fact was that we stumbled tbrough | with the wonder in their expre our portions by the light of nature, aided | Dr. Galbraith gazed from the E considerably by a class copy of an fo-| tic genious work known by the pame of one |to posi “Bagster,” In which ever ed that the Stan | surpasses the Century Dictlonary in careful and accurate tion of words and in its {llustrations, as well as the number of words defied.” ater. "1 say more emphatically than ever before that it s the best dictionary in the 2uglish language, and I want it for constant reference.” ; Prof. Duffield of Princeton' “It will be conspicuous among the enduring monu- it. Thel| JHore 47 same e3press . ments of intellectual life at the close of the 1%th century For lun.wrN-‘n:Iv«nou necessarily orning the work b ®% of vocabulary, accuracy in defoition, judicious arrangement of material, instructive fl- | duty of the professors lustration and admirable typography, it is superior to any other work of it class, and ere long will supersede them and be recognized as The Standard Dictfonary." ns & conquered |} dard Dictionary seror duriug his ¥ possession and || C generally agree \ as %0 the excellence of the work s either a treaty of peace or he rily withdraw fro ¢ ivil gove 0 led the right a for the maintenar t civil order nd ghts of the inhabitants. This TRt haa Gasy sRerauins ARt Khia ditx A% | For $7.00. Examine the Book. sion as s posi- to position two and back again 5 ! hment of temporary gov- | | fon onme. This culminated when he | Canadians of the town & year sxo rr of the conquered provinces | Greek word had | was finally discovered in position three, | minister the functions of . Sheencio i sy Megeath Stationery Co. the English equivalent marked in plain | high on the skyline of bench 24. e A figures underneath, and all the verbs fully | How Gilbert acquitted himself on th parsed ut the foot of the page. The use | accasion it 1s perhaps better not to say. | trustees of the church | of this was mnot considered wicked, be- |1 will draw a kindly veil over the lamenta- | 2£3in8t Berger. cause, like the early Christians, in Prof. | ble trugedy. It is sufficient to say that | the tewa s obrais Galbraith's class we had com- be lost bis head completely—as completely | tonality | which bave thus, from the necessity of the | h