On this page
- Departments (5)
-
Text (12)
-
5 6 THE TOMAHA WK. \Febmary 12 , 1870.
-
MOTTOES FOR THE, MILLION.
-
Saturday Times.—" Review B-Lowe — . it "...
-
CABBY'S RIGHTS AMD WRONGS.
-
get Alt into h proper ough, no working d...
-
EMPHATICALLY, RUBBISH!
-
Fancy balls are de rigeur at the Court o...
-
THE OLD, OLD STORY.
-
which temper 3#iss led som Alice t e o f...
-
THE RO UNDABO UT RAMBLES. BEING A, CONTINUATION OF THE SUEZ NOTES.
-
[from our special correspondent.]
-
Still on Board the Poojah, yan. 30, 1870...
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
What Crueller Sight Can There Be Than Th...
At present our policy has been a false one . In our charity the Irish have found only weakness ; in mercy they have detected nought but fear . What we have given them from a sense of justice prize of they outrage have and regarded assassination as a reward . They for treas must on be — undeceived the splendid . The old ship has gone to pieces ;—how shall we build the new ? We must have iron instead of wood—guns in lieu of where bunting — . for Justice rich and for poor Ireland —honest , by all and means criminal ; but . The justice landlord every ' s - life must be sacred—the assassin hunted down . Fenianismenemy of all rule , and deadly foe to Christianity , both Protestant and Popish—must be hurled back to the home of rowdies—the land of its birth . " Tumbling" must be regarded as an unpardonable crime among men—a deadly sin before Heaven . Threats must never be heard—laws must never be broken . Justice and Eng for Ireland d ? s aid , b ; y for all means the traitor , * for and the patriot the assassin a free country a high gibbet and a hempen rope ! This , and only this , would be true justice to Ireland I
5 6 The Tomaha Wk. \Febmary 12 , 1870.
5 6 THE TOMAHA WK . \ Febmary 12 , 1870 .
Mottoes For The, Million.
MOTTOES FOR THE , MILLION .
Saturday Times.—" Review B-Lowe — . It "...
Saturday Times . —" Review B-Lowe — . it " ! I " N cam ewspapers e , I swore . , I conquered \ * well Pall , a long Mali farewell . Gazette to all my ite greatness of its increased . " size ) . —" Fare-Morning Telegraph T . — * ) " ^— I i will . "As ro deaf ar that as it a p will ost do I " any man ' s heart good to Standa hear me rd ; I ( since will roar the you Herald as gentl s ' y death as a sucking ) . — " The dove Standard . " barer I " cause Globe , it is ( after the cause the Pall , —oh MalPs , I ' m sold morning . " suicide ) . — "It is the Adelphi , — " See how the Theatres busy little . B . ' ( Webster ) improves each shining hour . " P Lyceum rincesses — . . " — H " erve Bad " form Sauce , . oh " Sir !" " ' Her Dru St . yaweSs ry Majesty Lane — . . ' — s . " — " She Dreary " Though Wood , I ' m lost ! " very to si w g eary ht , to . " memory dear . " Hayma Olympic rket — . " . — Hence " Sothern , silly , we Babbler haven . " ' t missed you . "
Cabby's Rights Amd Wrongs.
CABBY'S RIGHTS AMD WRONGS .
Get Alt Into H Proper Ough, No Working D...
get Alt into h proper ough , no working doubt , order in time the first result cab s of regulation the new sys will - I have tem are first any of thing all been but arrived satisfactory , at are . apparentl The two great y the following points which : — ; ; r . That is not , exc bound ept unde to r exceptional a fare . circumstances , the cabman ¦ 2 . That not , bound except to under carry the exceptional cabman . circumstances , the fare is pay Owing to the proviso that a cabman never need drive more ' all than intents six miles and , or hire himself the for more who than a single him . is hour at , his to mercy . While , purposes on the other person handif the engages cab happens to be a ; are " crawler to be " tolerated ( and it , is or announced even encouraged semi , -ofnciall by the y police that ) c , rawlers or has 1 been taken off the rank at a railway station—which , it seems , fuse legall to y is pay not the a rank cabman at all anything —the hirer . This can , clumsiness at his discreti of the on , Act rehave of Parl , during iament the has past already few days proved , been inconvenient tried , in which , for police these cases nice points the cabman have cropp nor the ed public up . We are believe foolsand that , in on . time the whole will , come neither to mutually an understanding satisfactory on the ; but give it -and seems -take , absurd principle , that , which after will all the be should fuss and be chatter practicall of leg y islation left to th on e the contending cab question parties , the to question settle amongst themselves .
Emphatically, Rubbish!
EMPHATICALLY , RUBBISH !
Fancy Balls Are De Rigeur At The Court O...
Fancy balls are de rigeur at the Court of the Viceroy of sionall India . y At justifiable home here , and we , on consider an ave such rage , mummeries we have had only a occa State - for quite Fancy appearance often Dress enoug Ball scarcely h ; onl but y about a India year four , passes where times without the a century Government a Bal , — Costume which lives is . when What they must beheld the , native them Princes decked have out in thought the manner of thei the r Governors following quotation from a Calcutta paper describes : — with " The gold Viceroy as a nobleman was dressed of the in Court snuff- of coloured Louis XVI satin . ; trimmed his staff were dressed , in the uniform of British officers of the close of the the eighteenth time of Louis century XV . ; ; Lord Sir S Nap eymour ier as Fitzgeral a French d as marquis the first of Portuguese Lord Cliye . " Governor of Bombay , and Sir William Mansfield as cation True of , that the the Duke ball of was Edinburg got up h for ; but the the amusement appearance and of edifi the - sort Lords of of thing the country calculated in other to impress people ' the s clothes natives of scarcel India with the any and sense his lieutenants either of . the dignity or the intelligence of the Viceroy
The Old, Old Story.
THE OLD , OLD STORY .
Which Temper 3#Iss Led Som Alice T E O F...
which temper 3 # iss led som Alice t e o few the Grantham weeks apprehension back , the , gave young of her information lad lover y who on , when the to the charge in p olice bad of which robbing of silk , the ; has his silk emp been produced loyers very , properl Messrs and y . h convicted Leaf as been and sent of Co receiving ., of to a penal large the servitude quantity money for mistress five years led him . The into young the , crime man , whose has been devotion sentenced to his unworth to seven y the years romantic ' penal servitude in it . The . So young ends , a man story , in which pleading has something guilty to the of and charge how , set to forth how lthe his love had woman got the with better the of necessaries his honesty of , lifehe had , staked suppy and lost young his character . The picture of the it house silk and , salesman in we the cannot Brompton nursing help his p road ity mistress ing has the a thro misguided touch ugh , too a , long youth of nature illness . But about at the a having senten Grantham , ce lov was ed as proper the less Common wisely and just than Sergeant . well Davies ; remarked and has , paid as , for she the Miss seem penalty ed Alice to of have lost her , heart as well as her characterand in her caseat least mortal verdict , the ? of public " serve have her rig endorsed ht . " Who the sentence says woman , with the is the additional weaker ,
The Ro Undabo Ut Rambles. Being A, Continuation Of The Suez Notes.
THE RO UNDABO UT RAMBLES . BEING A , CONTINUATION OF THE SUEZ NOTES .
[From Our Special Correspondent.]
[ from our special correspondent . ]
Still On Board The Poojah, Yan. 30, 1870...
Still on Board the Poojah , yan . 30 , 1870 . a remain leak Yes , still ther In e on long board last , for the told I believe Poojah how this , but we wretched I commenced fear ves not sel very the has likel th sprung eatri y to - they cals . closed Had . I You added may a few remember more you lines the I captain could hav was e told in a you state of way advanced into Hamlet intoxication , though in , the owing stalls to , and the that tremendou we had s got roll a of little the tolerabl vessel , under y till the considerable famous lin disadvantages e " I'll follow . thee W , ell " , when things the went cap on - who tain of Then his sprung was I entranc 'll s come oon out e coming . with of The his you p curtai on lac . " , being e A n and had furious det shouted to ermined be scuffle lowered " Will not ensued you to when be , , my the done aft mate King er out an ? , interval and announced of some that twenty in cons minutes , the of prompter the determination stepped , , forward of the with captain that to evening act himself , but , , th Hamlet at it equence would would be not replac be e further d by Black proceeded -Eyed self Susa would n , in which appear the as captain the Admiral , who had in selected the last the act part . The for other him-,
-
-
Citation
-
Tomahawk (1867-1870), Feb. 12, 1870, page 56, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/t/issues/ttw_12021870/page/4/
-