It is not the f&stiion of Englishmen to flatter our friends. Especially is it not o\ir habit to use < smooth words when honest plainness of speech and warning seem the truest kindness. To. our thinking oducatcd India lias been too flattered by well-meaning sympathisers in Europe.— I "Englishman," Calcutta. Oh New Year's Day every human being for once thinks well or his neighbours, and says. so. It is tho only occasion on which all men experience a common and universal sense of brotherhood.—"Nachrichten," Hamburg. ' Whatever bo his (lag, ovory sincere Catholic cannot but pray for unhappy, boroic Ire-, land, which has struggled for so many centuries against her almighty enemy,, with no suppjirt but her own ardent faith and indefatigable patriotism. God's timo will come; there is no statuto of limitations for crimes, committed . against nations.—"Lo .Correspondent," Paria,
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Dominion, Volume 1, Issue 139, 6 March 1908, Page 4
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138Untitled Dominion, Volume 1, Issue 139, 6 March 1908, Page 4
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