New Years Address. 



The year 1893, with its bustling 

 - . with its hopes and fears, with 

 vil, has | way ! 



ul are numbered — its incid 



m the d< T rnanki 



[t is nov 



the philanth 



is in his 

 favor. A beneficent Providence has 

 filled our honey recepticles to over- 

 flowing, in many localities, and 

 throughout all our broad and diversi- 

 fied country, extending over some 

 twenty-five degrees of latitude, but 

 few failures or short crops are report- 

 ed. But this does not answer all the 

 questions. Those products which af- 



ford food to man, though th 

 mate object and r< 

 not all that th 

 1 upon to 



her and no ■ which 



i! Id devi 



contribute 



and social el 

 The Roman, 

 his country, k 



to th 



station among his fellow m< 



Politics supports its class of non- 

 producers, aud its avenues to prefer- 

 ment are choked with crowds of eager 

 votaries, four-fifth of whom must 

 necessarily be disappointed ; and even 

 the fortunate few, at the first giration 

 of the political wheel, are cast upon 

 the world — out of business — and with 



