"Inquiries are being received at Lloyds for insurance to pay total loss in case of peace being declared during the present war."
Montreal Gazette.
We ourselves should take our chance of this contingency.
"The total import value of matches is less than £1,000,000 per annum, and if £2,000,000 is to be collected, it will make matches 6d. or even more per dozen."—Daily Chronicle.
Mr. McKenna surely cannot have realized this.
MR. PUNCH'S POTTED FILMS. THE SENTIMENTAL DRAMA.
| Reginald Carstairs, reading during the vacation at a remote country village, falls in love with the landlady's fair daughter, Rosie. In the old orchard she would sing to him "Pansy Faces." | Reginald's haughty father will not hear of his union with the rustic girl, and marries him to a wealthy heiress. He continually annoys her by picking out on the piano the music of an old song. And so they reach a loveless middle-age. |
| In the meantime Rosie has had her voice cultivated, And, Under the Name of "La Belle Rossignolette," Has Taken the Continent by storm. In the midst of her greatest triumphs, however, she is often distraite. | Coming at length to London, she appears in Grand Opera. For her first night Carstairs, little knowing her true identity, has taken the stage-box. She recognises him, and, instead of singing her opening song, electrifies the house by giving "Pansy Faces." |
| In the sensation that ensues the theatre catches fire. Rosie rescues Reginald, but his wife perishes in the flames. | In the evening of life: "Pansy Faces." |