Who loves but Labor, lives not long, Who loves but Pleasure, loveth wrong; For Labor weareth, And Pleasure tireth, But both together make man strong. Who loves for Beauty, loves not long, Who loves for Lucre, loveth wrong; For Beanty dieth, And Fortune flieth Bat both together make love strong. Who loveth Virtue, loveth long, Who loves the Right, sure loves not wrong; ¥or Virtue's golden, As truth is olden, ‘But both together make love strong. I SA. AT SAN PEDRO, Hesaw her the first time in a Mission street car, and his impressions were not prepossessing, There was something too 1mperious in the quick wave of her mand as she signalled the car, and her very step was jositive and aggressive, her oheek, 4 revealed itself in the easy carriage of a firmly molded figure, in his sight { i i { | | i { dacity. David Woodbury had been in San Francisco only a fortmight, but he had already made up his mind, with the awift decision which sometimes charao mot admire the women of California. of womaukind to which he had been accustomed, The women of his family taken, more or less, of a certain deli- cate, spiritual cast, not uncommon among old Eugland families, He re- who had even remotely approached the buoyant health and generous physique of this girl. For he was an invalid, His stalwart form and iron muscles had proved of of hereditary disease and the deceptive _ sage of decay. attained only the interesting stage of a sick man’s existence, when the tender sympathy and concern of friends create a subtle separation between him and the outside world, and the nerves are customed or unexpected. that a gray-hairea woman, meanly clad and carrying & heavy bundle, had en- tered the car, and stood leaning wearily against the door. packed from front to rear, seemed a singular lack of the enstomary gsllantry which appears to be a second nature to most Californians, Several newspapers were lfted higher, to shat of vision; a few men through the windows reads rs’ lines gazed stolidly seats, smiled in a superior way, There was aswilt movement opposite, the old woman geutly urged into the to be himself included in a scornful glance which swept the car from end to end. seals in a very la dable effort to main. tain consistency, bul this Massachusetts man, feeling an obligation to vindicate his own gentility, in defiance of his bol ily infirmities arose snd tendered his sat to the combative young woman. he courtesy was firm'y repulsed; “You must take my seat, I ean not allow you to stand,” he said, clumsily enough. ++] would not deprive myself of the pleasure for the world,” returned the girl. The voice was a surprire—musical and vibraticg, with intonations that he had been accustomed to associate with jdeas of refinement and culture. Bat he at once realiz>d that he had binn- dered. This dauntless creature, with his eourtesy to the influenes charms. He writhed beneath the con utter inability to defend himself, The very triviality of the episode rendered him pow: riess, The recollection of this vexations ip- cident still pursued him six months later. when he returned from the Sand. health restored, and ready for a seacon England. He was at an evening party one night in Mareh, conversing idly with a lady acquaintance, when his at- tention was attracted by a couple who had entered the room and stood ehatting with the hostess, He saw a dignified military officer, and on his arm a queen- ly girl who might have stepped from somo old-time picture, A shimmering form; not a scrap of iace or patch of welvet marred the beauty of the oos- fantine roses wes hidden iamond, in a setting of antique silver, teamed like a star amid the waves of er abundant brown hair, and io her hand she earried a curious inlaid fan, ¥ positive delight, With returning rength had come a new appreciation of the royalty of health, and be reveled in this pictare of perfect womanhood, He thought of his swster, who had a mild enthusiasm for art, and for ita sake foved the beautiful in natore, and wished whe stood by his side that mo- ment, and conld feast her eyes on the scone before him; the lofty room, with its rich sppointments, not more costly than tasteful, the wealth of tropical lauts and blossoms making the air vy with perfume, and in the fore ound a glittering constellation, with superb figure for its central san, “That is Cen. Langdon and his daughter Stella,” whispered his friend. “‘His wife died three years a4, leaving two daughters, one a mere baby, They Stella's devotion to hor little sister thing beautiful to behdld, Bat oome-—let me introduce you,” Yhe girl looked at him in calm sorut- ny as he bowed before her. “1 have met Mr, Woodbury before—in a street oar,” she said, gravely. An under current of satire cut like a two-adiged sword, To have attempted excuse or explanation would have ap- channel. The elegant simohocity of her dress he regarded as a bid for notoriety. Observing how neatly she parried aii attempts at famil- iarity on the part of her admirers, he refieoted that the women in whose soci- ety he had been bred had no need of parrying any such approaches, The air themselves was impregnable, During ensuing weeks he met her frequently, but his original conception of her character remained essentially He told himself that she was a gay, brilliant girl, always cheer- ful and animated; but dwelling aito- of ber class, Pacific street, after an early stroll on Russian hill, he encountered Stella Langdon going down town on a forenoon stylish women affect, he inwardly de of plans for the coming season, they progressed down the hill, they demzons, Sauntering carelessly dirty than the average of the Her face grew tender and piti- of the arms, she disappeared down a Jley-way, Her companion halted a moment irresolnte; then, realizing that he was for the time completely torgot- tinued his progress down town, The little land and sea-locked port of Where the cliffs and then re- ceded, years ago a little founded. ‘wo milesnorth, on the crest of the cl fs, the last battie between the Mexicans and the United States soldiers habitation, repose bones of the slain of one army, while ont in the bay, on a rocky eminence the dead of the defeated warriors foand their sepul chre. Oae by one these graves have been rifled of their contents by the en- croachment of the restless waves, until only a conple now remain, with a snowy cross above to mark their barial place. to the south 1s another long, low stretch of land, with shores of glittering white sand, studded with t» which a littl: steamer daily plies, as well as to the distant monutainous slands, rising like pale bine clonds fer out upon the ocean, where earth and sky appear to meet, The little modern town of Ban Pedro nestles in the orescen-shaped hollow facing the sea, with precipitous ells rising like steep walls 10 its rear, and embraciag it porth and south almost ¢ water's eige The village low that & tidal wave of modest {imenstons conld with one mighty surg: obliterate it from the face of the earth. Bat its quiet mhabita dwell on in peaceful security, an {i mwaay restiess city people find in the quaint spot, so shut off from the everyday world, the r-pose and isolation which they annu- the entire {104 80 ia Aud so it has come to pass that every summer finds the lonely little cottages overflowing with city guests, and the low ground at the north avgle of the crescent and frout ing the ses is dotted with gray teats all the season. Here it chanced that one day in Angnst, when tue waves were lapping L «ngdon and David Woolbury encoun each other, Bhe was sunning A for the book of nature spread out ing. He reverted at once to the oecasion when last they met, for, struggling an obetinate man he had converted even Of what philanthropic society are you a d rector?” “Of none, sir,” There was unmis-. takable surprise and inquiry in WAY: “Then you ars one of the hard-work- ing members who do not accept offices, nrate fairs and carpivals—all for the purpose of enticing from the pockets of an unwilling pnbliec money for the mere hot-beds for criminals and pan- pers,” “I do not understand you, sir,” Her lips tightened and her eyes sparkled with a daogerous fire, ‘Be honest. in the interest of what raformatory 1nstitutioo did you purane that wretched little beggar we encoun- tered on Pacific street a month or two ago?” “Mr. Woodbury, did yon notice the condition of that child? When I took hold of her emaciated arm it seemed as if 1t would melt away in my grasp. Did you see the cruel blows the older ohild was rainiog upon her? And do you think a womaa conld pass by such a sight? I wish you had seen that home as 1 did, Two miserable rooms for a father and mother and seven child. ren. The womaa was at the wash tub and when I told her way I had picked up the little mite, she burst out eryine, tolling her troubles in susch a discour. aged way that it made one’s heart noche, ‘The oldest boy and girl were at school, and there are five little ones—the youngest an infant at the breast, the next that sickly baby, ani the oldest the 7-year-old Yor in whose care sho had placed it that morning.” “Where was the father?” . “He is only a poor laborer—sober and hard-working, she assured me; but his work is not steady, and his small wages are insufficient for their support. Bo the poor little things had to be neglect od aud sent out on the street to get the sunshine, while the mother toiled away at home, or sometimes went out with her baby to do a day's cleaning, The tiny girl we saw had been suffering with a severe cough for six months, and they could do nothing for her but watch her fade away before their eyes.” “What did vou advise?” | “I persuaded them to take the little | one to the Children’s Hospital, where 1 | have a friend-—and a noble, good woman she is—who is a director, There the little thing was put straight to bed, | as she need to be, and nursed day and night, as she could never have been at home" “With what result?” matron, who tells me my patient has | grown plump as a partridge, and will be discharged in three weeks more,com | pletely cured. The father has pro | takes his family there this week. Let us change the subject, bathing?” “No; I am afraid—" “0! stingarces?”’ planation somebody had come up and whose delicate fronds were borne in by the tide. He stood for an mstant, irresolute. him in that moment. He had learned thetic woman; and he knew, by a swift, He asked himself what else he childhood, and, above all, a coward! bitter langh, as he flung himself down on the beach, After this passage al arms they mu tually avoided each other, Save when mot face to face they never ex changed a glances of recognition. son at Ban Pedro. Ouse day Miss Langdon rode down to Wilmington to take the train for Los Angeles. She le't her little sister in the care of friends beach, with many charges aud cautions, which the child promised to heed, Early that alternoon David Woodbury wandered along st the foot of the cliffs, chipping away at the rocks with a smal pick he carried. Ho was something o an amateur geologst, and there were some irregular, amber-like © ystals im- beddsd in the rocks, which had determined to subject to microscopic aaalysis, Absorbed in his task, he was aroused by the sound of a lady's voic: close by. he “What is it flattering on the top ol that rock, Henry, Is it a bird? me that glass, and let mo see.” (live “No, ILy dear, my eyes than yours, I will look. 1t is a ctuld.’ Aare }y heaveos A little ecluild out on a narrow pont i rocks, with a surging sea all around, and the tide coming in! Every one un- derstood how it i bappesed, recatling the shain of mess-grown rocks that hited their hends above the sea at the ebbing of the tide, and whi the re venturous had sometimes clambered, nt every vestige of which effaced by the sea. The lew mea about stood dazed at the sight. No could make a passage of those sharp ani treac herons roks, and s'ropg swine mara dared not breast the pitt less swe of the tide, maddened to fury by ila rocky barriers, over in was nD VON boat at the sight. Years ago, 1a his college Aavs, he had been a daring swimmer. Ouoa hetore he had breasted jast suon a sea to reach a boat which bad over tnroed with three men, As Woodbury threw off his coat, he re. his Hawaiian physician: guard Vv gilaut'y against any sudden shock or violent exercise of any Kind.” | to meet and bear without recuvil the | plunge into the boiling element. back, and he battled with a vigor he | had never known before. Finug now {imbs or tore his hands; now sucked lown by some eddying current, which | all his strength only sufficed to conquer; i now faint with | mighty incoming breaker, he reached, | at last, tho rock where a little girl arms aod soothed her till her wild sobs ceased. He bethought himself then of | what he had not reealied before—that | between this rock and the breakwater, | which afforded a safe retreat to shore, | lay a comparatively open stretoh of wea, | carefully supporting the little one, but | swimming with long, masterly strokes, | he bore his precious burden safely, at | last, to the shore, | As he stepped upon the beach, Stella | Langdon met him with outstretched | arms. Sileatly he placed the child within thom, and she received it with- ont aword; but he was strangely stirred by the one fall look that fell from her brown eyes like a benison upon him, A hero in dripping garments, he stood among the idiers upon the beach, all deeply moved, as even shallow natures will be, by the sight of a truly gallant deed, He tried to meet their effusive praise with easy indifference, to make light of the perils through which he had passed, Bat a choking sensation in his throat overpowered him; a weakness, which was more than the faintness of exbaus. tion, seizad upon him; and it was not son water that gushed in a erimson flood from mouth aud nostrils. Stella Langdon, sitting within her tent, and softly crying over her little sister as she removed her wet garmouta, lifted her face with a sudden pallor as she heard the measured tramp of men carrying a heavy burden, and a vcioe saying, regretfully: “Poor fellow! He's done for this | time," It he had been taken to an ordinary habitation, and there submittad to the confined atmosphere, unrcatural re- straint, and artificial remedies which invalids are nsually obliged to undergo, it is doubtful if he would have survived the ordeal, But after he had been placed upon the comfortable bed in his tent, the physician who was summoned wisely concluded that it would be dan- gerous to run the risk of removal And ego he lay in the open sir, the cool sen breezes finding their way through many a rift in the canvas, Close contact with Mother Natare rccormplished more than doctors or physic, and after several woeks of rest and quiet, the inward tissues that had been ruptured did their | work of healing, and he rose from his | chances for a long life about as good as the average man's, The sesson at Ban Pedro was unnusn- ally prolonged that year, More than one party of campers lingered on, loth to leave while the life of this brave | young fellow hung in the balance, The Langdons lingered among the rest, and | when, one day late in Beptember, David Woodbury finally emerged from his | tent, walking somewhat feebly at first, | girl whose arm he had taken. Blowly they strolled along the beach, and various gay groups nodded smiling approval as they passed, He drew her | at length to a little nook in the oliffs | from the wind, Below them | beat themselves upon | the rocks with a sullen roar, The sharp | the distance were veiled in a bluish | mist, Far on the horizon the white winged sails of an incoming ship could be desoried, Some rare bird, with cliffs, and dared. swift and sure, to its nest in a hiliputian bush, clinging to = cleft 1n the rocks, But the young man wore a troubled | look, and seemed oblivions of the charming scene before him, He turned his companion at length with a weakly, embarrassed smile, “] do not like to think there was a | time when I seemed contemptible io | your eyes. I was pot quite so hard. hearted as appeared-—-about that litte child, you know--" { “80 I was fully persuaded when lI | learned that au unknown friend in Ban Pedro had forwarded a hundred dollars to “I duwin't mean that you should know “stall, I do not kKoow toat 1 care now, possessing himself of her hand with an | nearer to him, ‘Bat I wonder if you will believe me pow,” he persisted, following up his chain reminiscences, ‘‘about that miserable affair ia the street-car, the first time I ever saw you. You remem- ber? You thought me zealous to offer | my to iy when [| wouldn't yield it to an old woman. | make such a distinction for the Queen of Bhebs, The fact 1s, [ was brown study when she came in, aad positively did not see her until you hal risen . I'he girl nent. of coat a yonug Ia in a ooked at him in gentle AAT “Pav mir jadnng yon so, ¥ understood it all perfcotly at the time.” sh Woodbury, I never dreamed of said, Biases Knuckles lanished, Are god thev are d At a recent reception in it was noticed that pot a gene tleman wore these at ne time all.the rage woaments. This change 10 style has been seen on the way fora long time past, bul ashoxly twenty years ago wou d have be- feved thal end «¢ soon. When they first into style they were made in useful patterns, but alterwards resolved themselve:r into oma. nents. At one time no party or ball was eonsdered complete without their aid. and itile differences in opinion which «re bound 10 arise even in the most polishea | sywiely were settled on the spot without delay aad smouat talk which now characterize and belittle such gather. iat going out of OCI Y the have cme so cime the of By some unseontintable means the hand raze knuckles went under the ban, snd nothing has been found sufficiently | worthy take their place. Bat, seeing some io factor has evolved a direct successor to the knuck es, which combines innocence with | The | ornament onosists of four seal rings con necied with each other by invisible links | The seals are | wearer, the hardest variely being an alloy | of copper, lead and iron, polished up in the highest style, making a variegated seal | as beautiful as it is hardened. Ino rest the rings are ornamental in the highest degree —ip action they are four nogs with but a mngle thought, and that 1s to make a de cided 1mpression on the gentleman op- posite, whose doom even is sealed if he continues the argument auy length of rime. “Oh, sren’t they swoet, prettyl” simp- ered a young lady st a reception at Del. momen’s recently, «Why, certaloly they are,’ said the wearer: “‘and they're not only preity, but they're good.” “But what is that red mark on the edge, Algernon” she continued. “On, that is a piece of blood-stone,” was the reply. “1 should hke to take that one home as a pattern for Father Nidoey,” saying which the belle gently pulled at the third ning. To her surprise and his disgust fonr rings began 0 move from the gentieman's hand. He had forgstten to wear his safoty-ring, and the real chsrsoter of the cordon of rings was thus given to the world, The innovation threatens to be wide- spreading 1n a'l circles, RR Soonxrun young ladies who in the funny colums of the newspapers dar ing the one hundred years have prom their aweethoarts that they would marry them when the Washing: ton Monument should be finished are beginning to look arouna now for sOmo oon t loophole of escape, Romanos of a Dinner. Pall. Broadwsy paet a large maoufacturing passengers was called to a queer little who hurried down the street with a tin- rail in her hand and went to the factory gate and knocked for admission. An o'd gentleman who sat in the forward and said: “Hello! there goers Dolly again” “ily who?” asked a girl at his mde. she 18 called by all who know her.” “What makes them call her crazy?’ mouth uot 1t looked and Charlie hadn't been married but a here eyery noom and bring him hws dinner, that the story commences. [hey lived 1n a house on Washinglon avenue could be, for Charlie was making & good “Well, one day sat noon as was her as she got to the gate it flew open aud out came four inen bearing the dead body by & falling timber. Dolly fainted away at the sight and fell into a fever that did not abate until lope atter poor Charlie had been burie! an ther tok his pisce in the factory. “As soon as she got able to go out she went to work sod scoured the up old working as usual At fifteen before 12 she put on her bright new shawl snd gay bonpet, and, taking the pail in her hand, tnpped off knocked at the gate The men came out wail for Charlie thing lo eal. ner snd let him have some They tned to reason wilh . and told her that he had gous away on a long job, and would wot require any {inner for many & day-—never, perhaps, 3at she would not listen to them, and waited there until the bell rang for the nen 10 go WwW Work sgaio Ever mince nearly 10 years ago- sarge thin has Oo ane y has done the & thst the factory jays, hol lays been running. a! home, but all the rest of the she pits on the same old shaw] and bon they sre faded and threadbare starts down the street with s Uin-paliin r hand.” ““1)oes she Carry t fresh every day?’ asked the wirl “Jt is fresh and hot every day.’ “*}at what does she do with s ghe finds that Charlie don't to eat j1#" ‘Well, she wn on the b the same old dinner, or ’ the old Ww OCT come takes a tabla, chamber to ake off she stays there Before children stesl er all up and empty pall. They ther mother 1s poor, { bad que #11 ns it home and sets it and, going into her aw! and bwmne!, cries, and and comes oul her two the room and eat the ive nothing but are hearty ch and 8 gond bot for anybody; #0 they eal Il her and she fest inlo Cries Cries. the lidren dinner and ' asad the girl, relapsing nto silence, 10g ail interest ia the siOry. ———— Concerning Tapestry, fabric revival of A rela new sum i* 8 { damask which is made silk and es satin damask snd c untry hades are capole pd and capucine, mer # OselY Teen wn maternal simijar 1 cre nz ea'led worsted tapestry, betier manufacture In her designs, tahie if the be mne, 1s wil, De DYIDE ariv Eiglsh groups sad {1s use is largely in portieres aad for noe aller but which may nzer strictly & novelty—is that ng a ceotral ineda'lion in cretnne with hordering of plush cloth showing an additional stnp of cretonne with fringe st the edge. A sivie dstinguished as Fenters tapes'ry shows a running desigo of leafy luxunance, with Dutch fizures seen al intervals in color being strongly Flemish quality. The cretonne printed Gobelin tapestry, designs as that of epie! rich ve'our the we articles - arming combina or the tinctured with the lron A line of asestry cretonne, d s'mguished as I'Art, « 880 hanssome 1a its desigos, repre- sculpiure, painting while peries illustrates the s=Ciences ywrasment scene. suitable for a wall hanging, 10 this material, while reprecentations of Faust, motsie crene «1c. , screeas and cushions. Another showy design 18 from a French opera, ‘“Tribut de Ramora." Home of the most beauti- ful priots are from the Wettesus, a lake Both for turpiture covers and draperies extensive use 18 made of Oriental and tulips, roses and lthes, A pleasant new wh ch Is much better than jule tapestry, is known as Dentelle de Clery, the desman of which 18 in imitation of Colbert lace. {an delicate on'ors, as of gold or blue in combination with white, 1t forme a desus ble summer cartan, Lustre Painting, This is the term applied ip Kogland to a #0 easy of soquisition that it 1s readily Joarned by ladies who possess no skill in drawing or pmoting, 11 is made to yield resulta rich 10 colar and close'y resem)ling in effect the more laborious productions of the needle in crewel work embroidery. Uatlines of the pattern to be produced wre srepared on furniture velvet, coal vel veteen, satin, or whatever maternal 18 chosen, and the pigments—metaliio sud stances reduced to a state of fine powder are mixed with a medium aod applied with a stiff brush. The colors seem 10 be durable, and to be soarcely at all ff cted by the use of geslights in rooms in which the hangings are placed. Among many beautiful pieces of work recently exhibi ed is a pair of velvet curtains ornamented with reeds, flowers, and birds, reslistioally treated —a replica of a pair by Mee, Husung 10 Prine: Louis of Batten “erg on his marriage. Table covers, por feores and w'tar frontals are sHme of the many other decorative articles exhibited. Junction the conductor came to a pas- He didn’t claim to have lost it, but leaned back, looked the official square in the gye and said: I'm dead broke and have a hundred " “You must pay or get off,’ was the I know the rules of I am now about to “Oh, certainly. the road by heart. He appealed. He said he was an un- fortunate man who had failed to strike a job in Louisville and wanted to get with his family. It was a vain appeal. The man said he was in the same box him- self, but was going to kill his family in- work. “Come-—you conductor. “Oh, of course, but I will now ap- peal to the passengers en masse,” He rose up and made a little speech full of pathos, misfortune, hunger, cold other unpleasant ingred- it nobody seemed interested, “1 can't fool with you any longer,” the conductor. ‘I'll stop the train and off you go.” “Hold on just 2a minute, I am now must pay,” said the ents, bh For five minutes he flung his soul in- to a grandad effort to melt the conductor, He quoted the Bible, enlogized charily and appealed to humanity, but when he had finished the conductor reached up for the cord and said: “1 must obey the rules or lose my place.” “Ray, lemme appeal once more.” “No-—can'tdo it.” The train stopped and the man bowed good bye to everybody and got off, ne miles up the road, where we stop- at st wm, there was a rulupus something, and directly hauled coach, where the trucks. Hs id mud from head conductor looked at v ¥ ped a stat i appeals out thio Lhe the of nan in under WKB jast he on Ie had 1 fn $41 fad Deen nN was dirt an owded, Deegan and he his ane il ap ngers rel A r Not Dangerous, It was a Crs avenue Cur a lovely young man g parting the tails of his Prince sal d aud forth pocket a rose-tinted mouchon de This be sensitive pose 8 moment Then he wed a fare 10 There was ® in, snd, Albert coat, s breast poche. delicate, and returped it LO drew off kd the box, displayed SUCKIDE &n va! sourishment anther pocket, | 3 ! handkerchief and such wn drew from yurished unler his is p Rel. one : ry "er 10 IMOLEla Next, he } a Ow with 1%. “Robbed a © passenger 10 ye thes-line?” ther Pa ” Varce ne, an Naw! heen 10 naa was the answer sgusted ‘ow moments a third si'k I 8 hbandger- & ef, ths Lime 8 ue war QD t at that moment ered that be bad reaches he was 0 disemtmik, with his the car, and took his and oul. saved, the sweet thing discov. where ledd the umbrel'n handle, stopped patent jeatbhers up The passengers drew a breath of i the » reel 80 be DU glrap £1 ngerons, gentleman,” said think I never saw gpreimen, i “i a more beautifu “‘[Jude you pever see one before?” asked e innocent-lnoking passenger. “Ah” said Teut “pumshment. he tk the MIC PRSsenger, A A Running s Hole Ont of Town, A friend who bas been trave'ing in Mex- ico brio gs back a good story 1liustrative of the peculiar lack of inventiveness of the people of sister republic. A church ' was ‘ately built a! Lagos, on the man line of the Mexican C niral railrond, sand when Anished the fathers were annoved to flad that a bg bd trom whch the clay for the adobes used in constructing the edifice had been exosvated, remwuned direclly in front of the n ain en'rance. (Orders were | given to have the unsightly hole filled up. | This was done by shoveling into it earth | and clay from the n-arest bank. Hut this, of course, left sncther bole, and #0 ihe palpstaking Mexicans went 10 work and filled that up a hike manner, leaving an other gud in the ground, which was then filled, snd the operation was repeated uotil the hole was ran out of town, 80 to speak, | and the good fathers congratulated them- selves on being nd of sn UsEighliy nw- | sance. People who wooder that the Mex- joans are pot more enterprising than they are. will fled in this little tale ons expla- | nation of the diffi ulty which stasds in the | way of a rapid development of the coun- uy. 1 Mir yes - i - Irtshmen In the British Avmy. n 1880, for the first time, Irishmen tionality. was then styled *‘this boon.” | ments held them in great number. Be- | tween 1807 and 1811, more than 400 | Irish of the 1,000 which constituted a | regiment were iu the ranks of the Sev. enty-first Highlanders, In 1510, 443 of the Seventh Highlanders were Irish. in 1809, 666 of the Nwnety-fourth High- landers were Irish, and in the record of the Royal Scots 404 are registered as Irish. Speaking in the House of Lords fourteon yearsafter Waterloo, the Duke of Wellington said : “It is mainly ow- ing to Irish Catholics that we owe all our proud prominence as an empire and I owe the laurels with which you have been pleased to deck my brow.” Ox of the best muiohing muterinls is salt hay, as it contains no seeds or weeds and oan be stored away for use another year,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers