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Where The Chinese Will Go

Where The Chinese Will Go image
Parent Issue
Day
27
Month
April
Year
1882
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

Despatches from British Columbia indicato that the Chinese will have no trouble in finding American homes after hoodlunis and demagogues have forbidden them to land on our Pacific coast. TL'wo shiploads of them are expected immediately at Victory, four thousand more are to follow at once, and the sooner they arrive the better will the natives be plejsed,for the sa;d natives are sensible enough to know thatonlyby an immense increase of their laboring forcé can the province be developed. It might be supposed that California, which needs labor rather more than any otber State in the Union, might view the Chinese in the same light that its northern neighbor does. Coiumbia, howeyer, has no hoodlums to distort her visión. Mr. TnnyoON, through his son Hallam, has replied to the temperance society which recently forw.rded him a resolution expressing regret at the "drink" passages in his new song. "Iy fathör begs to thanH the committee," the son writes, "for their resolution, No one honors more highly the good work done by them than my father. I must, however, ask you to remember that the 'common cup' has in all ages been employed as a sacred symbol of unity, and that my father has only used the word 'drink' in reference to this symbol. I much regret that it should have been otherwise understood." IV the will of the late Joseph E. Sheffield, the Scientific School of Yale College will reoeive from half q, miUion to a inillion and a half dollars. By the sale of the Williston milis at Easthamptoii, Mass., Williston Seminary will get $200,000, and Amhetpt College $100,000.

Article

Subjects
Old News
Ann Arbor Democrat