Noble Sentiments.— The following extract, which we take from the London Daily News, will be read witli interest, as breathing in the reply of Lady Cavendish, the purest, the highest spirit of humanity ; A letter from Lady Frederick Cavendish was read on Monday night at a meeting of the Skipton Liberal Association. It was written in answer to a request of the Rev. S. Lloyd, who had asked permission to dedicate to her a sermon upon the assassination of the late Chief Secretary. Lady Frederick Cavendish says : “ The Dublin disclosures do indeed teach the lesson contained in the last verse of the third chapter ofJII. Samuel. You will, lam sure, forgive me if I beg you, before sending the M.S. to the printers, to look through it first with the special view of seeing if there is any word that cowld be turned into a desire for vengeance. You will readily understand how I must shrink from any such feeling. I would rather, as far as I reverently may, adopt the Lord’s prayer on the cross ‘ Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.’ The law, I know, must take its course, for the sake of the unhappy country itself. I pray that neither the unspeakable greatness of my sorrow, nor the terrible wickedness of those men may ever blind either myself or any of the English people to the duty of patience, justice, and sympathy in our thoughts, words,{and deeds with regard to Ireland and it* people at large.—Believe me, dear sii, yours truly, Luci Cakoline Cavendish. P.S.—I cannot say how deeply I feel all the kind sympathy shown me, most especially by Lord Frederick s constituents.”
The man who owns no land is one of those spoken of es the unterratied. A little boy went to a shop for lorae eggs. Before reaching horns ho dropped them. In answer to his mother, who asked him, ‘ Did you break any ?’ he replied—‘No, I didn’tbreak any,’ but the shells came off from some of them.’ Miserableness. The most wonderful and marvellous success, in cases where persons are sick or pining away from a condition of miserableness that no one knows what ails them (profitable patients for doctors), is obtained by the use of Hop Bitters. They begin to cure from the first dose, and keep it up until perfect health and strength is restored. —Notice. Holloway’s Pills. Liver Complaints.—The digestion cannot be long or seriously disordered without the derangement being perceptible on the countenance. These Pills prevent both unpleasant consequences ; they improve the appetite, and with the increase of desire for food, they augment the powers of digestion and assimilation in the stomach. Holloway’s Pills deal most satisfactorily with deranged or diseased conditions of the many organs engaged in extracting nourishment for our bodies from our various diets—as the liver, stomach, and bowlg, over all of which they exercise the most salutary control. By resorting at an early stage of this malady to these purifying and laxative Pills, the dyspeptic is speedily restored to health and strength, and his sajlawness gradually vanishes,
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Temuka Leader, Issue 1131, 7 August 1883, Page 3
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514Untitled Temuka Leader, Issue 1131, 7 August 1883, Page 3
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