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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1929-06-06, Page 3Sco# • • — ' 4 4 ent iarmingOperationi 'General Assemblies of Two Grain Growing„ Districts of Branches to Meet Last • Time • , , s• Edinburgh, ,Seetland-Tha.,General • AssenilklieS• Of the •two 'great Presby- :'..terian'cluireliea" will meet for this last Vine "as separate bedies, nearlhe close of this mcnith,fa. Edinburgh, When the 4104.'0 $Cothmea and.Scotswonien, the • World Ofer Will be turned towArde the, •ity During their sittings, tlakaSSein- bus§ FRI eolne• to: &alai* • mentous linport to the Scettish people; .• After 20 years of negotietien, union, is •4atJast to be An: cideernplished,faet, The •final Steps which gonotitiitioncil, pro- • cedure reqUires will be taken in the • autuMn. .• Many, questions 'concerning chitrelo *ark at home .and. • abroad Will bedioeii0ed but the Bub- •. •;•lect of union' Will: overshadow all .• others.. " • , • • ' i • , The Char.* of Seetland membership 13 praetically_unaninioas-foeuriiim. At • the lait- diserribly • an amendment fpr -the rejection of the scheme, received •only devenVotei.. In the United Free , Church, however; although an Over- whelming majorityare keen to go for-. ward'into the larger union, there is a ' minority led by Rev. jaines Barr; With •,a vote at the last assembly of, 48,rain- ., titers and side's, which is determined to prosecute with all energy the ar- •, ' ,tangemeats for a Continuing church. _ , FRE F101%1 STATE. The .majority Maintain that„ by the' Acts of f921 and 1925 the Church of Scotland freed herself .of state 'Control and interference and that the financial bond between church and: state was • broken. The -minority believe the ac- tion proposed hi against the principle' of religiotia equality whigh they punt • as sacred e principle as spiritual free- dom itself, and " to. the 'principle of -Voluntary • support of • religioun or, .dinajfeesi . ' In ' the debates whkh have taken piece in the United Free Church As•- 'isembly in reeent.years there has been • an absence of rancor in. the speeches; • the. majority having always admitted . that these who have consistently iden- • tified themselves with the minority • ,Statre taken .the_gtand respnase.,t0 • 4•;`,..- •- • Note the •...•!, -:',141t4 Ferocious Beasts riilit-Bahers • ;. • Shallower Beaches in Stonth-, s?Pritario Are Most ‘5eripuitly, Affected • ern Pacific DangeroUs For " Summer ". .The wet weather that haa prevailed •w;.; Itity 10,44,1'4 this spring In•' York .aad. a4jkeent,• •-•.•Pereeietts. snakes, ,giant: octopi. and emintjakheato4:A sanlarAaf .adverse •Salt "watOr..-creeediles •bave given effect On farm' conclitiorke; .:1.$Sed-Ing. Is. dangerouS i'speet„recentlite'Sballower . . , • • ,reP.Ortid *wii,•.weeher to a •inelith:,•14a1 'sections. of Much Of the .-Seuthern Pa . „ lnsom� localities.'Grata growing ;sec, •whieh-hitOi rto have, been free :tiena-ate.'effeeted"mest;:amt•-gardellit,*..• •frointhose inenaleig. • • . • • • • conditions • are reported •as,:leds sert• ono.. A late. Seaeoa4Or tlie ga.iciener„. however, may .,Mean,7,:the • lese 'of the ea0;c34arket.• . , Parniers .of-S'earbore are .anxlous to se.e fa. few (Mg Of dry •Iyeather,'sId .tr. "D. 'Annie; Clerk of the t.ciwasitilp. -He 'stated . that Many scit ;the -prominent farmers. had 'reported that their ferna 'lag operations- were retarded' a •fus Market • 'gardeners. :and vegetable. Prociaegra_in_EaSt4-6, s p re- port fairly good' conditions 'prevalent., James '1Viairhead, of, ••••Agtneoart4 States that 'crepe,. such. as oats and barley .' are, coining along tikeiy in most cadge. PaU wheat, on the other nen& psi:pikes ':dry gamed, and the general„effect, of the recent etorms .has been to rot •it. gond deal of it. In nny inflate:thin this is going to be an eff. year ,though an Ininsediate' drying up of 'the weather •mai yet allOve fair crop," Mr.,..Miiirhead Considers , that the hay .Crop is the most ',premising wt.•-presentr-- , • - The. Donaida'• Farm in. York Town- ship, •the property of Mrs. ,D..A...DUtk: lap,. is very well advanced in Seeding, -according-to the 'euperintentientHDr.- R. M. Jenkins. •"Wo are fortunate...ia being on fairly, high ground. Some others have their fields Se wet. that they .• have done Very little. 'seeding." .• "In Markham :Teiviiship the tali. fall,wheat came. Slang verrivell in :MO early spring,'! 'said. Norman porter: "The cold 'Wei weather. that followed .held it back coasiderably, enda.,Week age it seemed: pretty bad;", he went jAPAN tii)ENO Atli 'IA IL • . 40,11. "The last few days, Of Warmth, : • " ' • . however,,have iniproved. it fifty per gent" , , . • , ' , . • Tatakaiva, airport ler Osaka, will" 6'1 cargo• ' Jess Baker, of Vaughan, Who•tarnis . zo, acres, said that . be had. let the. ' he T. ' Vangioni While •:avviimuing •• in Altarge ' Herber, New Zealand; ,en- !clitred.:terrific "tgeny in the, Ex10 of tentacles .of emit octopus. A friend dived. .into the Water and bat Off the sea bri4e With', a deb, Vangioni being on 'Ate •p" cant' et 'collapse wheri_hes,,. Ilo said: 'he had 'dived deep wate,v,,wheri What he described: as two devirr'eyes ;glowing and e^. - seethed to dart down Upon, him, and even' before the' tenacles grasped him be felt utterly powerless. An. uncanny fascination or paralyziag horroranade him almost incapable Of.effort against the muscular and tenacious grip. AI - most 'More terrifying than the amaz- ing strength the.tenatles was an electric wires, •which they seeMeci to impart, lint whether this wig' real or due to terrified imagination he Could net say: . '• • ' People of North Queensland "wile have abandoned the practice almOst .estuaries -ef---t-lie-distirrct-Toil hot days have abandoned thi0 practice -alinost altogeter consegagrice ,Of inkaision of salt ;Water crocodiles. • • At Carrie three youths were bathing 4n---an=ineesuria'-nearAhe shore -when - One of ;them, Itevi Conlin; age 14, whO-was:in Water only 18 inches deep suddenly leaped into the air with a cry of agony. ,Elis..6ompaniong. were horrified, to see • pointing from the water the long jagged jaws of a croco- dile wide 'open ready tosnapagain at One happened to have . with him a long -pole, with Which they had ,been ' Inaugiiration • of .airanaii serVica • in Japan, showing pilot about to Iciaie • , • , engaged in mane water spiis, and •with great presence of mind le raised , this sad. brought it Crashing down On •doille Mit to gi ass on Fralay--;whieh a. -s 'gips : the dictates of conicienoe. There • is .1 , • it conies will he bitter. . . the snout. Seizing "their dazed and iiartieularly by our shot) win.' bleeding 'companion, they ma de far the -Oli.Wflie crocodile. follFwed and Made another v.iciotis snap -at Conlin., this time just missing his left leg; which, on tenant, of a terrible gash in the 'hip, Was trailing-. helpiesoli in the water. Atter three human tragedies Continued mind in Ontario County. • Barred by. 'Edict • planting operations, according to W. of Regent Street Free qhurch,lhaving in November h h • • • . , saggestion t at „t e parting. when • . • • have greatly retarded the. sepiltrig and • • • • .• ' The Gentrala • Assembly 'of the Ur.- dows.and in the presi:, relying on •• newspaper advertising we should in- trust the . work, to then ,and • wonien 'with a fine sense.. .oe lAtigt,iage clad for ,thir pictorial are we should smPloy 'the , finest. talent •avallable." , district representative last Yoted by an 'overwhelming ana. M. Crosherr, aix an sessimis, cotigrna3 Coanty_ • jority in raver of the union, the,Pres-' for the department of.agriculture The • ,Loridon s Rue di- la P ---FiftkLA— Com • de venue-- bin . half iti•ctiftlittg szr . • tions were asked ..to express, their G. R. Pattersom of the .Department et • :case was in support of , the scheme. Agriculture! He said that the. north-. LOndon.-The, merchants" whose ern section cif the county in ,th . The figures now., made public are e•vicin- • • Presbyteries, 03 fin and none egainet;: , opinion. The great majority in elk Sets High Standard • Ity ' of Caledon was 'in meat. better: _shape and' stores here turned the: re; shap.o than the' central and pOnthern built Regent Street into an, English . Kirk session:; 1,302. for, 91. against.; . . sectieno., he.. season .ppened eatlier Rue de la pais and -Fifth Avenue cOm- •. •ceadregation 4,320 for, 104 against. . in the north op the sloping land Siin. favor Of ,neWs- . DUKE'S APPOINTMENT:. ' ' the few days af ilry•weether hadbided are troitly. given . . • • • . .,aP nthn ie sec n e r y • pr ng ipaper.p. vert ng nd just as strongly Ph.Oi t t of the Duke of ti tie an a 1 kart, 8 : • Is s India Guarded • Serious DeVelopments Aniong Natives, According to :•Reports - • , York 4a• bord :High Comiiiissioner of .11 ' the Church of ' Scotlaml his given great joy to the Scottish people. It is • regarded as a• signal act of Royal ••favor. At the ;close Of the assembly - last year it-waSYtentatively agraid -that in the event of union taking plTge Their Majesties the King and Queen • would attend the service ill St: Giles' • Cathedral •at which the uniting coven- • ant would be signed: • The King's ill- • ness, ;however, made that impossible and it is considered a graceful acton Hia Majesty's part to send his son: The Duke will be the first member of the Royal family to attend the assent: - • Ny sine° Jairies VI. did more than 800 • years ago. •, • . Reyaillighnos and the Duchess •will take un residence at ,the palace • of Holyrood for 10 days -And. carrp through a busy prOgrain of VISI:1,3 to • the Generel Assembly and the iiumer- mis charitable: an,a philanthippie hist!, tutions in Lilo city. • , • • Member d Of the Church, of, Scotland 'have chosen lie their moderator the AtV. Dr. Joseph Mitchellrallanchline, • -'Who has been -a -Warm supporterOf the ,unionoovernent and a valuable serv- ant on ,comniittees .of the church,: The United Prep Church in.oderator is Rev. • ' Dr.' Alexander Martin, principal of New. College, Edinburgh, who was moderator also in 1920. Ile has give* year d of later tartherauseint-uniom. • The Moderator of the Free Churth is Pref. J. It. ghekay, a distinguished ' • theologian 'and schelar.,1 •J W. M.'Birks finds Britain. Itnproied. .Head of Chamber' of. :Cam,- tnerce Returns After ' . • • , Long Visit • , . M. Birks,president Of. the Cana: .„ "(Ilan Chamber. Of Coffiblerde,• nactim- • panted by kra.._BtrIts and tiole "knirlor- irreved 1v.tontreal,In tto special train, from- the •Einpresti• of • "Aestratra docked ' at .:4ttebee.. • Titiii_Oeiit lope% time . la likirePO,in okvdmittiti7lit Mr.4141:0.1t0-'-Metet., throitgli live CounfileS beptdes Het- • • , "The, Progress; of Canadian indite - td ffyeonntieroe le *featly .appreetat* di;Evitir: ' • ,.proot'of the is the fagt .titat tile Chain- •• .0er* Omtnette, in teadoa,tilim •Plgtnin•I a 11 d •Mancliostde Were stindTng deleotei te the- ,..Albert-laconveation ' neit September., yritoo, ti itritiroving In rogtaatt, 1 nib -delft ttto improvs. went: nirgfien"tiffrelkqietitintrirlind- that. the leaders Of .inditstrY: rntght • Jt be whistling le keett Otiir , • 1r,0 , • , . lIoit lia crops good opposed to garish electric signs and '' and alfalfa,. except In the low -l -i'" nc 60" attract objectionable means of ' ,"• ' I parts, exceptionally good. • Mg attention. - . This attitude reCeived pronounced "The .season is milch delayed," said • APMoVennelof Milton,aniere expression at the first annual diener . . , . of: the Regent Street Asiociation, 'id' ir has been a bee y rain each week mid which the'Lord Mayor a London and` that has held back -Operations, &meet- , ally onthemany other distinguished guests were . . heavier' land . The seeding present around Georgetown and Acton is well ' on, but OthA great deal of Regent Street Is timate. er places are not so for - the property . of the Crown;, and, one oraihe SPeakere' at the dinner was A. • Quebec Chroniclegelegraph (Ind.): The'opposition. a 69 farming.class to a general proiineial law Is part pre-- jUdice, part obstinancy and part las. ness; but if the driver of •a horse drawn vehicle were risking only his own life the Governirient, might Well take the stand, ,under the circumstan. Oes, that his blood is an his own read. In point of fact', 'howeyer, he is as MU& a potential Menace to all other traffic upon the road as speeding moterists can possibly be to him. •S. Gaye; cnn.lnlinn !MKT for Crown Lands.. • , "Regent ' Street le not going to shrink from advertisement," he. de- clared, "for advertisemeht is the sort ,of "stimulant without which no trade la ;these days can enjoy:health atid vitality. But there are many: ways Of advertising., Within los yards Of Gila room vre can bee a form et; advertls, hig by electric 'signs: • "Weshail light against anything et that sort being Mb -Mimed on any large scale in 11..egent Street. , There are plenty of other ways of adver- London-The :Bally Mail's corres- , iiclia. report that Stringent Precautions,. bad' been ,uted to sharks at Bondi Beach, Titer e heart of Sitty,„, shark fishing company spread huge nets between two 'shlOs and 'secured 20 sharks, one of them a tiger 'dierk! the most ferocious a the speeies, 20 feea in length and :weighing between 800 and 900 pounds. • ' Several a the catch Were "whaler" sharks, a kind whiehjireys on whales. Seine of theie Wede .fearid to haaa „re; ceived amazing wounds, Presumably in -battles with the mammals, two because of- "serious developatent " away. .. among the natives. being so maimed as o e a eaten taken to• -•guard high British officials • • ' • s • •'The ,dispatch geld reports filtering' In from the hills ,showed that the In- dian Governm;ent was facing :clinical - ties, the •nature of wliteh have not, been explained. , .There were rumors' carrent, of sec- ret movements of troops and military 'personnel and 'material throtthout northern India, the correspondent' said. • ei•• • • , • The Daily Mall dispatch said heavy guards had been placed around pnbuc buildings, and. tliat Lord Irwin; the Viceroy, nya,and various prvoipcial gov- ernors d .high civil -and :militari of- ficers were protected by guards., Nearly thirty blind menare now practising with more. or lege sucdess in the legal profession, three being re= cently called to the. Bar, ' 1 ' :Raiding Chancellor" • „ . Eeonomibus 'la the Beriew of Re- views (London): • Mr. Churchill May go clown,te.historY as a....bold but not as a successful. Chancellor .of the Ex- chequer:. • His first Budget ' • was re-' spSpisible. for 'saddling the•mation with a pensien seheme Which will not be- come celf-capporting, Oen cin his own calculations, until._ the Year of grace 2005. In every other pudg6t he • has •raideil lone fund or resource after an- other, and has thus. cleared out every ngstegg. He has the.:highly dubioud• reco dcif having, by a species of finan- cial legerdemain. almbdt 'without .par innMsed lipbzi the • suPer-teaPay; er 'an 'extra 'year's tax. BY the device of changing its name and.calling It a' sortax,, he collects both sOpertax 'and - surtax on tha. samo year's income. " • • Canada's Divers I • Natural Beauty Attracts Many."Tourists er f cination, Bill ersia isDyingCOpposed --4"" • Moiled ICadjar7Dethroried Measure In . the, MapitObart • and Forgotten, 'Nears •• Legislature. • is 'Criticized. Death in 'Exile ••• kok Labor Leader,. , klz.kg WALT,. :‘.:70v44n1.00FR Aslan ---4.. 'OW introduc� throned, forgotten, 01400/led #441,toba• Kos. ,tnast all of hia';folia.w.eri; '014*Iy• ,for compulsory .vitopinatierI 0'4 rtgaring.hia,deathin decteralneealation, Ia. ,the: Minittar,, "Agreeing that there,,,is 41;4)0 a -f. and „ecinstratticiii pt 4or,tker#, • his redo,xery.and`giVing him but a teir". iylanitoba vicae ,strougle•.•,crttici*„. by ;01.1.ger `to ,•' .7,Williftsio,litene. Meinhor Of the. poor , , rio ferteer ef4th -'initei_..ltarty.,' -Although,' the bill was, el*eP • went, an operation at the AnisTIOSIl hospital it. N,euilly, to, the suburbs r of Paris. The 'surgeons- fotind, that his condition'. Was gar more critieal than, the diagnosis had indicated. Ile Is suffering" from severe kidney •frouble . „ ; which has reached' a.atAge where' there -la little that-fiiedical• science a second readings, it la .generally elt? p.ected that'ita.PrOVidlionO coal. siderah,iy. Mactided CoMinittee;. as resnit. of thcr•effeetfie.nrgunagistenfo. winced: by Mr. .',:• , .. That it .wag a••ietOP oUtetrgareatil9* rather • than. ot. progress and • • • was not In accord With. the '.'ephrit " • • • • • . • -• - , • •• . • •• •• • Since the 'king Of 'kings has learnotu .,the tunes wtreT-same of tho charaeterl, • • •• • • • ' • 04, ..0•4!i....seii91144ese, situation • he ZatioMiTelnaoYed, : .314r -lvene tg• ..• -had gurvvn-.-morbid; -which 'la a •hentlf- .cep ‘. to .-his:regovinjy, Since .„ his de, throriement, • Ahined Kadjar has 'been. abandoned by almost his whole 'suite .0f• follower's. He. receives • very. few visits at .the hOspitat •Santad .Khan, speeclingainst the .bill:' • He Said that, Englated, .after trying vaccination for , a .century; and compulsery vaccination for half a century, had changed the law, to optional vaCcination. •• This was done on the:recoMmendip. foriner Persian Minister to • France, tion : Of :a: nora • coin/1111414n, Which and Hassan Mohamed Mirza are about the only visitors the king•receives, ex, •cept - a few meinberd of • his. former household. . . . ' „Before. he became ' Ill the tomer Shah was, a popular figure in French 'fled' spent eight yearf in Rs •inquir,y and which:had taken the teitiniany Of I exPerts of •Europe and America. • Hof,. tan& also. had 'abandoned Compulsory vaccination last year, following • • cussion. of the question. 'by -represent& . society ; in the . theatres • and In the. Avis, of.:111,e__League of Nations, • - . -restrarcialte-iFA faihion, wAere he was • Always accompanied by strikiiklY. beautiful Women. His finances appear- ed 'doand; following his 1,000,000 franc • Three :of the five medical members ' of he Hearne agreed to SuPPat ' bill, Which 'was sponsored by. IN: Onto • Onion". Minister of Health, in the coup on the Paris Bourse although. he. Provincial Government' The 'other 4111:1.--1410, berivii3r ea -Industrial and •oil . ' • Ho has engaged in pelitias but little. Ekren before he was dethroned he spent redical member said pe.._would not Uppert coMtialsiett riaaination 0! ,Inoculatlon, 'except, irr Cases of time - who might be exposed ta' e• disease „ •. • imitstlet c;iut histimeHe pofstseins raentarvkeedryr.whea there was an outbreak. that 'power was thrust upon him when his father abdicated the throne', before Ahmad Hadjar had a.chance to play!. He was only 11 at the time. Ife„is but 31 nil*. • Ven- his death Would cause, almodt Mi. Political Coacern in Persia, for he has •np, pelitical followers. :His* bro- ther, Hassan Mohamed,. 3,has pol- itical ambitions, According I to, preniin. kinghain Palace, the first' palace Sent- , ont,43ersiartsr-If death--evereemes-the so-to-olisapPtier Shah his brother is expected to replace 1iirna pretender -tothe throne:Hassan is• ambitious' to. became .the eighth Shan in -Shah •of the Xadjar dynasty: . He, Signaler George Sivewright. fat He • insists that he alone is able to Pe - :battalion, Scots Geards, dressed la store. the dynasty. dusty •eivillan clothes,..'etiirabled .•into" Mystery Cleared The Lost Sentry of Bucking ham Palace Found • • The mystery of gie*,guardaman 441.0 - vanished in his scarlet uniforna three •weeks ago from a sentry post at tine- -was solyed last week. The solution came. not through Scotland Yard Kit •: from the missing sentry hiniselff---. ' hie mother's home, In Aberdeen, Scot - pain s Opens ,Fir Release of Thousands of •White Pigeons Adds Bril- • lance to Scene as Alfonso• - XIII Declares lbero- • AinericanExpbsition • . Open -Dictator • •- • Attends Cere- ,mony • - ' SEVILLE EXHIBITION • Seville, Spain. -Despite all misgiv- ings as tothe success -of the There - American exhibition, Seville has sud- denly twee -lea city of crowded streets. The big fair was solemnly opened by King Alfonso in:seven short words. The cereinOny took place in the Plaza de Espana M the centre of the. ex- hibition grounds i the -imposing spec- tacle being -witnessed bfa eroiaid esti, mated at 70,0q,0 pthered under a Serene blue and cloudlesi Sky. The arrivalof the, King,'Queen and Infanta. was announced. by salve, of gins, the signal for a tremendous ova- tion, while thousands of White pigeens, were liberated over. the tribune amid the Way i lig flags of:Spain-end Porta - gal and thepurple standard of Castile. On each 'side of the ,senticircle Were -seen' the diplothatic representatives _of the American reptiblics, resplendent in gold -braided uniforms. Opposite wore the Cabinet 'ininisters and Spanish Irandees, and on the left the 11-614-aFef Spain's aristotracy. Ceir.! Plinio de Rivera in the course of' his speech said.: "Our words vibrate across the Nopld--to-:tell it'ot- the close embtiice which unitesbrothers and setts and -members. of the Same' race." Alpert from its' political significance the fair is regamied as an evett f and he still possesses theearof nue untistial importance, Only after the electoratekis intuitions • are Inman, greatost difficulty did 410110003 Slid. fl.P' He knows, • as:riciii7e"Orins elsea4 coed in- completing their preparatiens. Pears to. kb*. • what t twit-now s�me of the buildings are not ready for tie inauguration; as, for instanee,•the Argentine pavilion.' f • The Goilernment meanwhile is chi- termi,ned to end the harmful Prra- ganda about conditions in Spain, and .it is atnionneed, that -a -Mk:filet-tows- • pitpieltaeiveett hed 60,000'pesettoi for - publishing EnT, -tristrtreltaw rogardttt _named brawl in Seville. • Tills.,ftt Ns; One thing, it tertainr. nerivirtik feet wee ,the only oseordant note 1j1 oansfl11gaiist the Unieullabli t le' news Of -the MO gift% gereineniik..[ a ace a 6 • --r- (Abeedeen is 500,; phut from Londunr' he had walked), he contested thaA hi bad Wilfully' deserted. His . reanonfl Although o,aly 19. - he had, been; made • 4 lance Corporal. jealous fellow. • geardsciien had made his young milt-, , ta•ry. life unbearable. When he wait publicly reprimanded ,fiir " buttons at guardmount, the sensitive sentry could .stand no Mere. Ho threw las rifle and. fur busby into the Buck- ingham -bushes and stole away -Sentry. ' • Sive•wright now faces a two-year prisonmeat Were England* at 'war, •.'.. env. technically,:. he would.. face a fir- ing Alberta Tests Radio Education •• Edmonton, Alta. -Hattie editeatioa . in Alberts, schools was tested ofit. for the first time on may°23, when a special , patriotic, program for HMO* Day Was radlocast Cram. the 'Calgari, and Edmonton -radio stations to every Sett001. In the province.. . •- "The •tiepartinent et EdUcation Will check carefully the piens of tilts trial racitoeitettag program in order to Wei -Mn i -to whit extent practical tank of the radio . can 'be made In. ecinnea• , don ?Atli: Alberta's public schools# as, -ffiettits ot .atkirditkiug. and @apple. • menting' the- tetiehar's work, -TU.. redid, program tonsisted et ..the Ent, pIro'tjaY decire. and Queen Mary, and addreasea by. • the 'Lieutenant -Governor; the Premier . and :the Minister, of Education. • • Mr. it aldwires Campaign Watchinan t4 the' Spectator (Ltin. don); Mt. Baldwin: is plwriag a lone habit very deftly.. In may reopecte lie• is the best electioneer of the lot, man" is- thinking -and M the "or ary, woman:" And he playa upon their bb; •stincts, as against their passion' Or • °Motions, •With a hand that* never t4.. tors. .tdr. titaldnriteti,speoches-betIe- ' • colt and all-haVe been tiff:it rate. Anift he bbidq to• the course he has'in, dt ottr tifiwag 'ha may well, Ott a-triotnry-45rerhntli ollfertfitt40.: , . , •: :ft •,4S iirit*Ei ileter te"ktiit lt •toto' :. rtiN tto.itibielittit---- "Idliiitf'htiiita . ttrito can not control his own Mita- ot the last •two Yeatt Iteeitit..te had, • .tiewer fifty .or seventy.fiVe liOttiet*Ottitie been taking 4h0 Sound ottt or We*, . ..,:t. „to- oar el ...,"ffestim-Horaid.". ',. . „.1,,, ;........ritfortigtedrrelhith:._.•mer),,e..:iitticsitittinNt.'•witie "an-,tlt •",(1-ott" Can i' ta rg my danghter bait • 'krio-W•• IS the. kenie. of sr feej,-titatenels: teettntent sfOli. itast, sia-ve bthimea. dio,•••. .• "--,,o'itairaFeaturea." • "011tigow, r.A.FItnrn Standard;" • .. •••• c1.11. ie'Cy.etztlaa7g tilGiolieti.,:07..i.,ew..,deOdtm.eitaS,i,leescia.thc$r,,olti,tly,„..,4..07,Int.,titiMIT "CI: .lit:.,76tifill.....:otiell:ehae.:0.0::::.V.•-nd-L--eci-L--...;6• -. - the Ott of • paha itt ?" "asks, , a roe, d, er. jotat•weAtiio:iiii,omitt.liiii,4st:ititpd. atitedd4,;• :1101v:sing Ili Yon eat•ususilY ses it itt Ivo tatiet-;-. .tO Show for it at the end•ot the da?-. • be_addel that .ttio ,:ip* has. eosleittinst . ---1-.--- • • . , . ,- ',...- t4'!. .......°-":".14414....171.4301:41,it',,_ , '- 14-4- :.4 7, , - . 1'4 • , ..• ,L ONE TvOie OF BeApty we IN Ti.-te,E4st CANNOT etitsov . Waterton lialtes,;t4itiPitst• raitt,..ott.,014 ifitelnattotiat boUnciftrY, in At tette, is tits swat ficiuthotirof danada'd steale reserves.