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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Star, 1906-11-16, Page 7FORTUNES NERDS BOW ART URIAN IDEALINING RIDES IN LUXURY NINO WAS 'PUGNACIOUS AUSTRALIA AiiD BRITAIN 11%) *wars INUOSt *WWI .1101141*, Ciri0141, f4o1*10( lar go Migirsom-1140- *Aft 040sitekil V*ArY rletr. • orm.. 00.4 0114101004110111( Avow its' A *NAV MS MAINktrANS IMMO 10 144.014$ AN uticagiNT WINO OK WASI POWS XlVtigN OF TN& *WWI OOP flOtVALION UN W1011111XX AV AN kW • • 1171114Y1e0 1,110111 Shit *Opal et To* Xiatessor WI** 0,01 11111111esta anit• Ow Hoeallitee CeSe* tessIsitei Trie4vi 0400e- lutottilown". or all 'tinnily insseeis. WU* perches* or:ancient 4lestonhatTi Ite the eryetel goblet in the poeseeetort ino leeetang .ot ixeutlful lessona *it blitsgraVai, known .1ar and, wit* P. the Hely Omit to the hays of Engiond lila Ix* rot 'gden -"Whence it. end Americo, and uplifting et the coma hi nucevtain,' thoUgh tearlitiott jitafffiginni tatindell and the hoodlums PM that ManY YON 010 rblit10 ,Ot (*"*Pfti to.; 4 better Me by tor" In• Op service a tffer 1441ring gotta Iltienee Of eldratrY, Poetry and ronaulaa. early me, meriting te the garden te 4re:three healthful tbings Which aixt „.„ erew weer frown Cutlitert's Weil, terbetuld. ill Ono In PrgieOt ROW„gati‘ saw wittitil, its neptea ebe fatries .boleing tentelAted Vent bn eorlea *to pracucei 'Ugh Melee, and- eisteeing Alowitt Mrs. !seta Inez de Ousmatt 6011Staii euetelted train their bendS.thS deinkings friend Of WA Mrattatalta. tita bIrc cull on, wheee..safe peeseestetnen, te thee% luta eStablisheti * America, 4 sald,,the fortunes of lhottinegraVe .hop -,.--imightliood of the Retina Table WM depend, s • At vie* to tatiching. ChiValry. *Merl AllettleC!'"fieStIre fixfin'tlitland iS Alte loyaItye megitatihnity unit oUler lking_htlY ugrool000rshig,rx :tory Reg, ,whighl VirtueS the b91(ti. $11#' 14,4%4404 the agesi Of the lerig; agai WeS"Preeetated their thellitn* theWlitieit friX paganik tie a ehletteirt 'tet 'else -elatt'filaderta, 0" 'et file QUeea Ttbnle. enstrietedi ototiTtx 004$ lost or which sheuld,he 0.01neltlent , 0;ty experience,: ceirehoreteet 'that miraeuletb elet tlaree loyeeetion.s, the s the diartinkcitregpe. At and OS' ur the:, gotierities nt. the juyendle,colirts gr WAX* . ***vie ItilleArk POI** iltiOnartif *Me* rftlieltegt ROM * IlfreW WO Oft of 10.4001.: _ „ WherteVer No objective Vis Within Well that. ht tofertaiing Britons.* genVentlatt diaiatteitil'Ag WaZil AtilY4brCetItahaett ill 1114 Stit;t1444113g "Nle't°91°" by meter Oar *4wadsys. and lat trenO,y ItilieA inUldielled MS telleit* intinettlee thet this 11* ter *COIL* Sin% eshiell *ha fenSidertfaie Iteld ntv tile ;flatlet)* Ot riteteeP Widiehll Ile VA Iiientarei4 Whe inlinteation et the mos * tweet aPfe04144' *POW IQ* 4:144* 4ns oven, tnn NIdeet Innelt linUeSe The train. be: mad in going to• end ULM end ilea drawn forth 4 fiery tele. ;Out die Highistuda la palitettAilli gram tot l'epthilland *It tin/ Ifihttg WiteelS, Whist* In 'ettlizievetists Mien ; Ivory end. equipped ivild reest .Pringe refer* to- prince *adorn. ettetogo pouyagelleretx 'teeters. , \Vattern dine preeellt EMperer/ Ill the 'bins* Oen- eiger tighter* ;Keying vortisz ,:utie Is a, rather beVsti, The afnelthliikrtant. Where( tla King InacinSiderattt yotihg at when% Ids happleati •Whilet leaVellinge IS et lltelloge' MOW oirrettl, lieralse heit roWS. wnn any Inlaid With ratInwilad and roseviOod.. his tatuee.1 _ IA TAKEN. ": OR $eRtentb0 2anci, ogf, Prince Iteheeltalle Wes recebled111 %Once Iv Nvheu 'Edwepit *Poen! everi Pru, the Erapit'ess Auguata. 1/101arla, Alta Wite contren,* ialtetrudor his *WOW et %Mein 1, °She. wita," sieYS,'"YerY tmi comfort. While the rOYal :mu lireken. down and sad. We hype, bY pooing there mast ,be fair discussing the EMporerie laat Attys.:and bearer TOO, 6.sa? the ,t41110' tailenjall Of CideagO, teaches rue that it dilliCult to proved 1 power,,t, en* * A eldrtnIsh.-Xelernt the adult,,* saki Mr, garrison, when tiw tacleadsite '0440 Polig.0! My Idea. is le held up beatititur end annitilletion Ity'‘Iiit 'ler lannitlere• nrin knightly Ideate to the boys end ..by• ea, 4 9m, line wakhitia ger listiog thew in ciur Arthurian orgrutiv,a- or dying out fOriAratit ot an heir-, :. a' Bee, te cottoteract the vicious and penal- ,ahin for the third, end laat,:. invecation cous, influences et the streets." has not yet arisen, and tdr. DadVefian 'Witli a heart ItIll Of sYroPuthx tor the Castle, tn the Islerf4reee, lads of her OVA great city Of Clitcage, THE PLAD YELIttltfAINS. mind saturated With Tern/Pen, and the( isure-romn. e raWingevoin Ls fur- l' Th d Phanthees of CawdOr Cagtle rettY still be England and her oict•time history, it was constructed like the sale deposit vaults, the hiss of eSeePing stain& frold_logoulas_0' then she Iteeenle alfitnated, and sindie ot lives oaths side tracks. All wen' on the Matiolettsne41 and the 4.1tsgracetul read itself end the atatielle SeSPeiWW behavior et certain people Whene she and freight trains ern atithehed Off end matotaned by utuaa. stand raoilonless and silent. Keiser Wilfialn travels in the mast ANGBRED PRINCE OF WALES. fiergooua foYid train. It custrILQ90+00° uPrince Herbert' BIsnaatzik, the Em- end took three years. to WM. In its pteaa atidedcnad the impudence to tell twelve saloons arer two nOrSetY Oaaahesi the Prince of Wales that an emperor MO 'UM intiele-rtitutt and a tree- (Kaiser Frederick) „Ito was unable to 1:00000orotostils VVret14 Leese tho fro• iec11011 Why. or lultain andh $eer Melte. MODERI-GkiK TRAGEDY WPAT IS cONSGRIPT"IONIOOT AT A RAGE MEETIX6 11110f041KAIRA StrOVUMON 0'4M Vath 'Al*** 1;illotirre AN'hese Suit Wall Relected 'Mee Italtesits on WO. TIM 41**,4 KAM VIA1N*0 FON Ing MOON% 101ONC.C. r11,0.1.44, It 11 bitrodticed Into Greet britain„ Whet itt liNeeld Neat 19 vow" mr. ILOM-.614m*HAciezpilkO4V1403410 Moy $PecIrsierst, Weeit rico.* * 10 rerie Ideris**00, SioAtINN FirStru Net granite A dreMa which diustrairee kW wilder le bathe defenee cePablo, 11,0egoharnp. Vt(144 Om* ctiors000t ' IFIvst,T4 Not utile itacc First." Ne, It Is aspects et Are in mederia GreCCe bile the *Nene. Or the Whole of tile greets Wrecit,d , a riw.eat 4.evetalay auto* upkwratia vixor-r.lilin is pie, rod, feet reached Oa bet disinter. Tilt SfOtte et' Pertlen Of the regUler forces, ot vio,tilu,,, , . ,e,iici end 1.1teentlietlinly ettrottfts litbrallniif 110te of the deiteltepi, cif it le the velego uf elennil, which Wei penteetine thes egprilry ageinst Invastall. inicch te.cii..,...6 1110.% V,04/9 bla IL Atil moot ot ads. oulgar,04 common. about tett allies north of Athen$ at the -Cant ne reteed 0114t nallitleined ()lay on the wild avinie. id the Nth Killitiftialet VOW% 0-11e4 le Y. 01$491, In LOndel; tea et the ParneS Weldable, and the tho prilliCiple that It b tbo 'MAY Pi et',"3,/ The eari-Itatintlel *MN+ Rail htlfile,,i1 , Daily Ifia(miele, ft may Irritate e'en es neenle al`e et the Altanten rtleer end Citlectil of MilltarY age mid Sound _PRY. to the 0'0'3)1,4 14 On it_litir.,,,,,,i4igit iiii442., AA OggreSal,Ve thing. eitittalled light Ms preserve a number of old traditiella end siege to bo trained forethe Inatiellat vie- and it Li PeneVed dint 4,0.101a, Uttitter, ahade;but you eennet get awe,y trona it customs which even to•daY heve tto el• fence, and tit taii0 part in 3 814043 the delPii$1" " Ws, Will 443°11° it yea Iniei In Alletralla, If yett are an meet roligiette tome. neeeteity Misc.,* Thera Wag a **4 Start fOr th9 014 AltiOnat and. a Liberal, with %Pe ideaS Ono et the avast remarlanne aimpersti* Tills is what tho Royal Commission. raCe. und the twOriteva hOrsc with. still remaining eeneernIng. the anattee lions is that of tho relation betWeett P. presided °vet' by the Duke of Norfolk, the oPPrOlarlete 114,Mie f/t Slettateerite terrine Of rlittions end Intereationaltsm, young gtrra Yen end her honor. The, said fs. eettple of yeara ago. malned With tour others Ott itto_ Plartilli$ this eriree,nrrogant note will ehocir you. peasant girrs all Wear a veil, nut the What would conscription mean to post, while on autildari fiL.,14triebeid. VIAt YOU,eantset ansWer die cry settle anY yaehrillik et the Turk, but a head *Vet* Englishmen? and five others gid away. pump widen will satisfy the rapidly. mg 6emething like thiet which Milan The first Step would be to divide tho M, Perkily* Won he rece it raco it growing ponsicleusness ot ha* yetIng peasant %Mien Wear, clad p:ular °pill* mystery,. legend end romance at Arthur nished with oh Patottoga and siainarY' hi the Centre el ehe ef the /ewer add hi* ittlifillts. and an intense love of The treasure-room...4 unlque feature—is _seen verierahle..tuniAlpra, ceeeal Wit4 only neturgl that_ Mrs.._Garrisen should with two large hurglar-proof safes. the castlea sd rtIrLs the legend, waS-bid- 'the IMO* piler Itself, Th den by a seer to WOW 441 ass lactba witti tbe gold that it Was hiS intention to expend on his new homey end to commence building nt the ape,. Where the animal should stop. Under the shade of a hawthorn the ass- hottest, . 41d -there, according to direction, wee .ereeted the vast castle—a guardian Sheltie to. the tree on. whose preserVatiers reited.the house's fortune. Muncester Castle guards 4 cup out a which HenFy - Vt.', 'a legitive-front--bi enemies and a guest el Sit Jahn Pell* nington in 14G1, Crossed himeelt, saying as he returned it la laS host, "Thy -family shall prosper's() long as tbey preserye thissRitp unbroken." Durieg the train blouts,.tmes that followed it was buried, end O being disinterred tile box in which it was packed, was 'accidentally dropnee, to the dismay of the fatally, who for forty years dared not open it to ascertain their fate. When rd length the goblet was -taken front ita resting -Place it was piend intact. THE "COALSTOWN PEAR," , *,,,, In the possession of the ancient family of Brottp. Of Colstoun, was in the thir- teenth'tentury brought as her dowl'Y 10 one of the Barons qf Coalstown by his wife, Jeanne Hay. Its possessien was supposed to insure luck, and for many years, until one of the ladies Of the doings of the chivalrous knights of old. family, with the true curiesity of Eve, "1 want Glastonbury to become the lying on a large traffic in corpses. He bit it, it Was kept intact. On its Inutile- joint possession of the motherland, and declared that closed coffins were deliv- Hon misfortune, followed; severol of the whot Tennyson called 'The giant dhugh-lered to relatives of the deceased con - best farms _, had to be sold, while the ter of the wesL' Glastonbury Is surely taining only 'ashes and rui..bish or a 'pear" itself was turned into the bard the most sacred heritage of both. Surely i wooden image. In several cases tha mass of stone it still remains. Little Englandism, and Little irishism 1 body had been placed in the coffin in the The Lookharts Alf Lee, In Lanarkshire, and Little Yankeeism could be merged in presence of relatives, and extracted after possess a precious heirloom in the Lee the greater Anglo-Saxon and Anglo- their departure. The leg of a man who penny, a small glorib set in a. silver coin, Celt. • had suffered from a peculiar disease was which has been in the family since the "The legends of both Saxon and Celt cut off and replaced hy that of a dead days of the Crusades, when It formed are represented in the 'Blessed Tir-na- woman-eln thlit Slate the body was ex-• part of the ransom paid to Sir Simon n-og,' the Irish Avalon, resting place hihIted ' to the -.relatives. Loci:beet by a Saracen chief.• Legend alike of Arthur and St. Patrick, a place In another case the body of a book - endows it with the property of curing where the very dust is sweet with the binder was represented by a piece of all diseases, a purpose for Which it was, ashes of sanits and roarty.rs. wood painted and dressed in the dead in 1e35, „ on the deposit by the civic GUARANTEE OF MONEY. man's clothes, and buried with much several thousand pounds, borroered by *Now I come to the practicel point. solemnity. On several occasions,' said Herr authorities of securities to the value ot plague-sfricken Newcastle. If the owner of the sacred ruin will con- Schonberg, the servants of the hospital Every bride of Use Verneys of Clay- sent to such joint ownership, I will had cut off the heads of corpses and don, Buckinghamshire, has, for the last guarantee the production from America sold them for ils apiece to other Ger- two and a half centuries, been married within a reasonable time of half of any man hospitals.). with sum demanded as the purchase price. Many witnessee have been heard in "Can we not unite on the- high plane of the inquiry no* proceeding: The di - see -A THICK GOLD RING, common ancestry, and make this 'island- rector of the hospital, Dr. Lenhartz ad - which has been in the family's keeping Valley of Avalon' a mighty memorial of milted that In every case the bodies of since the 'days of Charles I. when a international meaning? America has persons who died in the hospital had Verney wore 'It 0VDC hiS-infiltitrY gipv given her -Lowell, her.Abbey to sing and been dissected for scientific purees Ls at the Battle of Edgehill. After the fight paint with Tennyson, Burne-JOnes, Hot- ,f the relatOies had not protested within search was made for ids body, but only man Hunt, and other children of the twelv hours after death. Since 1900 a gloved hand could be found—a gloved muses, and it seems to me that the twenty-six corpses had been sold to uni- hand wearing a heavy ring, and still pulseless heart of 'Alfred' the great versitles abroad, and many parts of firmly gravping the Royal Standard. laureate, in the dark crypts of the Abbey bodies had been retained in the hospi- On the ct..Opletion of the wedding cere- would almost throb with life again to tal. The relatives were not informed mony thiaprecious heirloom is put aside know that England and America had h.: added, from fear of wounding their until it shall be again required, and the joined hands in such an undertaking. . feelingse Some 2,500 persons die every "What a new impetus this would fur. year in the hospital, and out of these t the study of high Ideals! We 2.000 are dissected. The superintendent, Dr. Rowel, stat- ed that heads of corpses were frequent,- te cut off nnd added to the hospital col- lection. For the purpose of Instruction. it was also necessary to keep other parts of bodies. i A former empinve of the hospital, whose trial for selling bodies was the occasion of these disclosures. declared gook will} fasciae ect-eye-On hie -beautiful ruins of ancient Glastonbury, now for sale, She stated(recenily that she cart Mad halt the nuiney tor the purchase of Glasteffibury. NATIONAL QUEETION. - BIG STA:EF IN PARTY. The qhestion that Mrs. Garrison now pots to the Brillah nation is:—Shall the beautiful ruirt.of Glastonbury be bought as the joint poissession of the two Eng- UsInspeaknig races, to serve as a lasting and central lessen -IR chivalry tor the atirmilating And. Wang of the boys of both conntriesT Mrs, Garrison has made a long 'and thorough exploration of "Arthur -land.," GA site loves to call it. She has been down at Glastonbury and Tintagel Caste reconstructing tho Arthurian history, tracing out the steps of Tennyson, and obtaining pictures of these British links with the past to reproduce on lantern slides in Chicago far the benefit of the boys who are especially under her in- fluence. "The same thing will be dcne in Eng- land," said Mrs. Garrison. "I have been in communication with beads of boys' brigades and other leading men in Eng- land, and they ere so favorable to the idea that I am quite sanguine that In the near future there will be established hero Arthurein chapters with a delinite train- ing in the 'Idylls of the King' and the When the Kaiser travels In this won- derful tnala he is accompituted by several secretaries, halt a dozen personal adia, tants, the household physician And many servants, including the iMperial barber, the imperial valet, and, of course, the carry on a discussion was really ten capable of ruling. The Prince of Writes said that, It he had not attached im,por- tame lo the good relations between Great Britain 8nd Germany, he would Julie thrown Prince Bismarck out of the room." The pages relating to that period so interesting to Britons—viz., the months of December, 1895, and January, 1896— contain no reference to the Kruger telegram, and tne South African War is b rel mentioned. Prince Hohenlohe, imperial chef. • hovyever, records at length a highly in - Most of the mansions owned by King teresUng conversation on Far Eastern Edward's close friends contain a royal policy which he had with the Emperor MOO fitAha iteutti this outpost at the ion ludo a tri us dishonor 14 a man white raeeS feta to lace with the Yellow' Weis Ogg eaddress away mai bet, Peril, Viellae or displease, there it is— The only efficient woy to reestabillait her "Austral* Firsti" reputatlen la to haVe the veil robber Loot; at the symploma et the influence marry her. the note possesses in national lite, Take Three years ago a young man of the IMPerlin an.d locel detence. One cam- village Mimed Mtchaa begun paying at. *Attlee et defence,sitting in London with (cations la a "meg girl pumed Stay - suite ef raeraa' If hat' a suite af mama Nicholas at Breslau. which effect is a 'private fiat must be ,,His 544)0i), thinks," says the Prince, gaivIen le attaehed to Iti Other suita .. Mutt Great. Britain. is responsible for set opart -for film and. ustially a private must be provided for the members of the whole -movement in Armenia and the royal houSehold in attendance. Crete, and he said: 'I am very fond of The King and Queen rigorously cen- Great Britain and the British, who are suro the list of guests who are invited to em,„„ i i, sympathetic with me, but I distrust their meet them- They Initially take their own i'''''"" -i' body servaniet, who wait on them at the TO GOBBLE ALL AFRICA. with his own particular wine from his The Czar also told Prince Hohenlohe table, and ottenest: the King is served own cf3llars. that he had heard that Great Britain had a plan -to fixing Africa, from the —.....4,,................. Cape to Egypt, into her possession. TRAFFIC IN DEA.D BODIES. That was, however, in his opinion, a _ long way off. The Prince, in reply, said Wooden Dummies Substituted in Coffins that the BriUsh attached so much 1m - e of Hamburg Dead. portence to their supremacy in Africa from the tear that they would one day A sensational case has been occupying lose India. the Hamburg (Germany) law courts. "But who is going to take India from Recently the head of a workingmen's them?" asked the CZar. "We are not so association, Herr Sehonberg, publicly stupid as to pursue such schemes." accused the Hamburg Hospital of car- Alluding On January '1, 1900, to the prespects ot the passing of the Navy bill, Prince ilohenlohe wrote: "We must not expose osuselves to the danger of meeting at the hands of Great Britain the fate of Spain at the Hands of the United States." Unquestionably the publication of the memolis was an act of indiscretion, and it is easy to understand the indignation which prompted Klitser Wilhelm to send a telegram to Prince Philip, which IS one of the most fiery documents which even the Kaiser hes ever launched. the entire genius of arMY and navy at rula. His ap roaches were not Elver - its service, has just reported that Auee ably received. Ho lay in wait, for her Walla need, aot worry about a Separate One evening when she went to draw water at the well, snatched her veil Ooft lituera oitinvnpe; rsite niaavsya,feinuntodewrhothsaa from her head and disappeared in the mighty hand she drops her unte ot 4200,000 a year. What happens? Is the NOW THE TABLES WERE advice mItetly accepted as reasonable TURNED. and conclusive? Mt a bit of its "How can we ever be a nation it we never be- gin a navy of our own?" cries the AUS- traltun, who, in lite and death, piaotes 'Aetstrtdia First." Listen to the inter- pretation put upon his halt -spoken, thoughts by the Melbourne Age, probe- blY the shrewdest conducted paper in the Commonwealth: NATIONAL IDEAL. "Shall we continue torever to hire our defence and cur maritime protee- tion? Or shall we now, as we are well able tu, accept the responsinility that properly belongs to us, and begin by easy stages to tli ourselves for tho per - /enflame of teat _greatest 01 an national duttes—self defence—by laylag WM- with the foundations of an Australian navy? We have no doubt as to the answers which the vast niajority of patriotic Australians will return to these questions. . . And we are so sure of the sturdy spirit of patriotism and in- dependence of the average Australian that we uehesItatIngly proclaim the ac- quisition of a navy as the paramount Australian national ideal." Let there be no mistake as to the meaning of this. The Age correctly voices the sentiment of Australians. ordinary gold circlet substitu e The lucky Prayer -book of the Hamil- ton family ts a veritable mascot, that live, I know, in a practical age, but it has been used at nearly every Royal ts not so prosaic as many thipk. After wedding from that of Gecrge III., in all, sentiment is king. 1761. down to that of the Duke of York, MAKING CASTLES. 1893. So great iS its reputed. virtue "I went this summer to the E.Iglish that, in 1874. Dean Stanley toek it to SI. seaside . I saw little children digging in Petersburg that it might be used at the the solid. I said to one lime Anglo - marriage of the Duke of Edinburgh With Saxon child: 'What are you making ?' the Grand Duchess Mtule. The unfor- tunate marriage of George IV. is, by the superstitious, attributed to this prayer - book nee., having been used at the ceres- moity. DON'T LOSE THE ROMANCE. TEXT OF KAISER'S TELEGRAM. The North German Gazette publishes the text of the telegram as follows: "Have just read with amazement and indignation the published aecount of the most, private conversations between your father and myself concerning Prince Bismarek's retirement. How was It possible, that material of this kind could be published without having first obtained my permission? 1 must de- scribe this proceeding as tactless and indiscreet in the highest degree, and as entirely. inopportune, since It ts unheard 'of that incidents which concern the reigning Sovereign should be published t " 'I'm making a castle,' she said. I even to another. 'What are you making? that he hod seen the nrms of a dead 'A manor house,' she replied. I went to man amputated and replaced by a girl's another. 'I'm making a cathedral, said sheuld suspect nothing. it was also arms in order that the‘essiesie,retatives proved that wardens had cut off and seld heads end other parts of corpses for their own profit, and without the knowledge of the doctors. In two cases at least coffins were buried containing only parts of the body. The employe wise acre:Med en the ground of the Vallle of his evidence to the pithlic in- terest. Herr Schonberg has also now been nequitted on the ground that he Mid merely enrreed out Ills duties. end that the graver charges were not proved. Life without sentiment is as insipid ns a savory without salt. Yet when people merry tliey usually "settle down," which means they endeavor to look at every- thing from the conimon-sense point. of view, and forswear all the delightful nonsense which they indulged. In when they were sweethearts. Is It that rent, taxes, butcher, baiter, and candlestick - maker usurp the place given to romance? Or is it that people always grow stalder as they grow older? Is It, possible that the wife Cares less tor love than the sweetheart used to do? Not Us her heart of hearts. But, once surrounded by ti, she vows unconeciotts of it, and ima- gines it no longer of supreme impor- tance, even making the bideous mistake of fantiing it can be done without. Familiarity breeds contempt, and so she lightly prizes love to her own undoing-, Stick fast to the high ideals of courting days; don't let yourself be persuaded they are foolish or old-fashtoned. Don't, when love becomes a daily certeinly. fancy that sentiment chn be dispetv with, or you will wake up with a start one of these nrie days and find to your cost that the fdture promised to be so fair is stretching blank end deso- late before .you, and that your husband, or your wife,. aa the case may be. bears no resemblance to the swortheart. of /ears gone by. the child. "Now, had they digging In the been making p tones Grazt doe en Chicago children nd they would have king houses and lac - You have here in England thes eautiful lines with the romance and poetry. the legend and his- tory, the chivalry and "solidity of the past. So, you see, such a ntuvement as that of forming 010 lads into chivalrous Arthurian chapters is even more neces- sary in America than it is here. But it Is a good thing on both sides of the Atla ic." WORLD WALKERS. India Seems to he a Stamping, Ground Just Now. The Allahnbed (India) Pioneer reports the start, from Karache for a walk reund Ilse world, of a man seemed Thomas Lorimer. The wager was one of leeee) rupees, made with two bookmaker.; the con - (Leer: being Mai Lorinter its 10 start (torn Karachi without money; that Ise was nether to beg, hortem, nor steal ort the journey, hut would earn his liv- ing by honest means. and return to Kerachl within four years, Lorimer sel out In fit condition, earry- Ine only a waterproof sheet. n °Miele of emelt cooking seenslis of aluminum, and a few other neeessaries. He fs not new to such adventure: and he hopes to get through Isis present ex- pedition by giving performances en route. Ile is a society enterteiner as well as a good athlete. His route will be through India, Up- per normals. to Chine; through Ripen le 'he Philinpines; to and across Mie. tralia: Ihen by sea to New Zealand, and thence to and across America. lie will cross to the British Wee. and continue oiewate1 Frame, Germany, the Italkares, Turkey, Palestine. on to Egypt, through Abytteenia and Samotiland; and return to Karachi by sea. CUPID IN OTHER LANDS, Among the Afghans marriage 19 a ease of purchaaIng the bride. A rich Afghan marries early* simply because he can atferd to pay for a Wife, while a poor one often resigns single until middle life 011 accOunt of hie irolbility to per-. chase. It the husband' dies, and the wi- dow eilehee tie merry -egaife-sho tar her friend." have to refund the purchase money to the hien& or the deed hus- band. A eommen nueioni 19 for the brother 41 the deceased to many the widow. NO other person wOuld think rit wedding her without Erni asking the brelleelea consent. ln China curly mar- riagee aro the Mies Tito reatell is ar- ranged hy 010 Mid is in the nature of 4 80111111erelal tranteetion. The e•tpe.oted to maize: rOSE1119 et money and ciothp to the rIde, who, howcert, trings tiO dowry oe anything ronoved they are spread lattt npeelally le return The eeletiddra fire trellered rails In a drying -room heated solerallife tot. Ittety tbys, Ora tht Llen• steoni.pipcs. where (bey nre allowed nniain until theroughty dry. The All the relations of Stavrula began paying lb& addresses to Welles. But in addition to tie regular forces o now it was his turn to be cey. He 050 in indiu and the colonies. Of course, would not merry Stavrula; he would the size of the yearly contingent needed not even return Use stolen veil and so to keep up his army would depeni on make minor reparation for the injury he Whollair we had e period of one, two, had done her. or three years' training. Germany bus He began, however, to force tee anon. fixed three years for cavalry and horse lions on her at sUch tunes as be could artillery, and two years for the great find her unproteeted, and at lust Ise bulk of the other men. French stu- made a forcible attempt to carry her off dents in luw, medicine, divinity, etc., to the mountain. A vitlage genderine and young men needed tor the aUpport arrived lu time to save the girl, but was ef families, serve unly ono year. About himself shot down by Michas. Michas 74,000 are thus enrolled. The remain - was arrested and condemned to a short dee—about 100,000—are enrolled ter term of imprisonment. two or three years, ' Returning to Menkil about two months Now, with fleoat Britain the wbole awe Michas fOund Stavrula betrothed 250,00t1 flt young. Men would 001 be to another man. He lay in watt for her, needed. Probably - less than 200,000 When she appeared she was accom. would nave lo leave home every year panted by three women and two nien. and go through one or two years' life lie opened are from hls piece of con- in barracks. There would be no cs- cealment and dld not stop until he hod eePtfill. mortally wounded every one of the SIX. "GOOD-BYE, LII3ERTY." Then, dashing out into the roud, he ini- melded a kiss on the lips of Stavrula, As to the 60,000 or 80,000 who recap - •who was already in the throes of death, ed service ill the active arnle. they and at the same instant drove his dug. vvuuld not go scot free, but would pass ger through her heart. Then he disap. probably into a special reserve. peered. The Government prompt'y offered a reward of r.,00e drachmas (about $1,000) tor the arrest of the murdever. All the police and gendarmerie In the kingdom wile* esatultry into a number o ettlIcd, tiait loud siteute trout ertitting districts, In each district would tho public in the paddock and 414 Renal ho termed a recruiting board, Composed the course, end ahrtelis or "Au veleitri et officers, medical men, and others. I This is robbery," In a twiuktion the and every year the boards weulet draw crated htid ruebed eetilee, the eottr5e4 11 ming mcn in their witiCh itnntadiattlY hepanate a theatre a twentieth year. INCREASE EACH YEAR. lighting inanities. The police and forty Republican Guards tried to stem the tids making All those young men physically tit tos the peal -MOW) Wenn, Where he would bo summoned to train. for the official bettIng is taken, but werq detencont their country. Some 200,000 thrown, beatee, Melted and had their or more young anon reach the age of clothes torn Wm their backs. Women twenty in the British islands every year,' and children were trampled under foot, • and after the relection ot the to& about numbers of reVolver shotS wore Devi, Rbeeke woule remain. But the army knive3 were draWn aud used, and the would not need such a large number of puri-niutuel booths, barricades and Imo. recruits every year. Authorities have es were set ablaze. fixed the stundln army at NO,000 men, CROWD GOES CRAZY. EXIT BRITISH OFFICER. It is the same, too, In military ideals. With the departure of Major-General Finn, the retiring Inspector -General of Military Forces, ends the reign of the British °Meer in Australia. "Australia for the Australians," and "Australia First" apply to the men In khaki, as to the bluejackets. General Finn will be succeeded by Celonel Head, an Aus- trallan-born soldier, who hos risen from the ranks to be the chief administrator of military affairs in the Common- wealth. Except for an occusional visit of inspection for special purposes no British officer will again exercise tn. nuance yr authority in this land. Every .regiment will have an Australian at its head, every fortress an Austruhreoborn commander_ lisousands will be spent in sending A,ustrallan officers for train- ing in India, Egypt, Canada, South Africa and Great Britain, but obligation is upon them to, return to ttos land Of the watee and the stringy bark': and pees on to their brother Australians the speelal knowledge they have acquired. MOTHERLAND SECOND. withou The Kaiser's indignation Ls upposed to be out of chivalrous regard for Ms. I have an Australian Governor of marck's memory, for the memoirs dis-1 New Guinea (Papua). Social and Melo- close nothing which does not redound mane pressure is brought te bear on the splendidly to the Kalser'S honor. The Prime Minister to delaY the fulfilment Kaiser very early in his reign realized of this desire, and a sort ssf "marking that it s.,05 a question of ehowing that thh,e' Royal Coinnussion has been ap• he and not lit,marck was the ruler of pointed. But the Australian Governor the Denim w system of Colonial develop - TO PRINT Bl..,.ARCK'S SIDE. It is interesting to learn at this junc- ture that the third volume of Prince Bismarck's memoirs is at present de- pesited in a sole in the Bank of Eng- land. They were lett to Prince Herbert Bismarck with the proviso that. while the chief persons figuring in the vol- umes were alive they were not to be published. On the other hand, if an account of this important episode ie modern German history WittS pub- lished, Prince Btsmarck left instruc- tions that the volume should immedi- ately be sent to the printers. It will be interesting to sea whether the recent publication of Prince liohenlohe's memoirs will be considered Ly the troA Chancellor's family as sufficient cause tor the latter step. were busy seareleitg fur him tor month, but not a trace ut him was found. The crime was drifting into oblivion when suddenly a cousin of Neches went to the authorities and OFFERED TO BETnAY HIM. In order to reach the guilty man a su•atagein had to be used. Tee, soldier% dressed timinseives us tramps, and, steered by the cousin, scraped up an acquaintance with hen as if by acci- dent. After a while they proposed to him that all three should. go tu Anitirica to- gether. 10 this way they gut hins to a place near Athens, and there, uoder pretence uf celebruting their departure, they, made tum half drunk. The two then fell upon tilm. Michas fought like a wild beast and inflicted serious injury en both Isis assailants. They succeeded, however, in holding him and in doing hint up In iv neat packuge with rope so that he could be carried off to prison 'without „further trouble. Ile is there now awaiting his trial snd sentence. It Is expected that the Guyernment will exact foil ,....eeeleer its Beuctunas and that the career ot Michas will sours be brought to a close. If OSLO turns to Auetratia's foreign polies', and the questiene connected with the control of Pacific islands "Australia First" is seen to be the motto still. The Governorship of Papua and the control of the New Hebrides are cases in oint. Australians are determined to ment in line with Auetralian ideas must come. As I write a series of meeUngs 1 Frida's aunt, ielts. tuld the rector of the are being held in lite great secondary sellout that elie had not seen her niece Those whe wene enrolle te teg (fuoirletwitel syoeianres coari,i.hori,,,,n. ockell,L II \‘‘::, ,orentig . at herefivleall:. training would bid gsesiebye tu liberty ! them into tregments wit t le r , pthit:ligedoldb, acitrills tthoeokbapoluacneoftesor the conscript wuuld po .s into the te. thsy eontained. pillage and of arson last, serve, where he would re.i.ein ter fuer 'I he :worse of e , for 0 full hour before it showed any Willie ht the reserve he v.00111 he 11- 8icii, .1 ill element, and it NVOS several yeurs. • able tu traintag for two periods, oos- 11 to • let,re it ceased altogether. Well- sibly of eight weeks each. In the event dress'. I men and women rushed about of war the reservist would, of ceturee, i witit their hands full of gold and bank be liable to u summons to fight. titles which slid not belong to them, The con.script would now have been and for which they fought desperately six years u soldier and have reached with others who tried to rob them of hie twenty-seventh birthday, Ile would their spiel. From the top of the grand - have spent one. two or three yeers in stand the course lotted lihe a battle - the ective army; the remainder in the , field of mad people, a pandemonium In rdeasyerst.we.waTiiidllii)sa,,t4weinnitny•swehetts.intatvher bilurrtehe. I stv,,tutigeillIt amnedn f,eairtidaini\dvotnhseenyesitiinrwieis.beldazaanat _ _ would correspond with the German flre and the mounting coluinn of choking tt Tho crowd went absolutely crazy. Al soon us 11 was eeen that, in apiie of the false start, the race wa.11 to count, there wile a mad rust/ tor the alerting gate. wtilch was pulled doven mid broken op in lin instant. Then the crowd werd en the pollee, who were helpless against, 11, and tnady people were very seriously hurt. A few moments later little puffs of smoke rose from all over tho course, and wherever there was a pureinutue1 booth, stand, or benches, !lames were seen to be rising. Suddenly a shriek was heard from all sides of "Let us take our money haekrrhe efori-mutuel_ clerks. Colnd be seen lighting the flames 111%1, and then ruehing away trom the blazing heaths with their boxes uf money und ofe tickets in their arms. 10 a muusent they were surrounded and !mocked doe n, and their boxes were snatched away from theta These wooden boxes, containing the rnuney and the tickets of the pari-mutuel, were smeshed to pieces on tho ground, 10011 tearing them open and /temple GIRL DRUGGED, TEETH EXTRACTED. Pollee of Berlin Mystlfied by a Remark- able Athenture. A child of 12, named Mita Wagner, has hud a singuiur adventure, about e inch ell Lenin, Germany, Is speculat- ing. She ells visited at school by a yuung women. vele said she was U11 opera singer named von .eassen, and GIVING THE REASON. The counsel proeecuting in a breech ef promise case was youthful and fresh. and delighted in showing himself off. The defendant had entered the witness - box. "e'res soy," said the courssrl. after sev- ere) impertinent queetion.s. "that you neser nsked the plaintiff to be your svi;e'ver." responded the witness, eith emphasis. "But you made love to her?" "Not to my knowledge." "And never called her pet names, either, I suppose?" "No. sir." "Now, as a matter of evict, didn't yoa call her 'Lizzie' after you had been to see her only three or four times, and 01W ays after that, when you knew you should have called her 'Mies Mint,' If you had not been seeking to win her young and trusting heart?" ;Nei:. spirit; Intl(' pulled at Um counsel's sleeve, but Ise paid no aUention to her. "Ale Indeee r very sarcastically, "I presume you never ettlied her 'Lizzie' in your lite, eh?" "Never " The counsel brought his ilst down and simply Meer! at the defendant. "I'd like to know why you never did, sir?" he asked, with the air of a man who knew he had the facts. The witness was as cool at; a palm -leaf fan could make him PS he replied, with an exasperating simile, "Because that ISO her name." Then ft svae the coutisel heeded the plaintifre wild clutehings, and wanted to hit himself In tho netts with a law - book; but It was too late. SHRINKING FLANNEL WITH STF.AM. All good flannel ie shrunk before be- ing otrertd to the ptiblic. The flannels are" placed between two heavy wet sheets, tint, and left in tint position tor need -four to natty -six houra. When ings or the tutelary, g4 tons propillary incasurOs,. 11 tht :elms WI to' tutu out nit5pleicuslYi The 'weadOlg postrk,ned again end astaiu; Tho, em,,Narty -• rstritop tatititi.4 • fn driniting, (t•me,crt eartishaU 10010 In the -nuptial • r,e,stt prccess is to place tho lengths o lie Itellitel In folds betwon layera of ''Jtty phPft, and elibleet It to a pees:s- he tlydraulie litechinea. The Moro seen onr nee SitInefted to, tho More 14E4 Mtn the Iltranehl Wrenn, tel FORTY YEARs A CONVICT. Pardon at Last tor Man %Viso Shot et Czar—Now a Lunatic. se stirring in the fiends of the youth of the nation a purely Australian enthesi- asm and devotion. "Australia First—the Motherland Second"! It totems one shiver a hit. But nfter ult. Australia is the Motherland now of the niajurity of her inhabitants. It. is, therefore, but human feature that she should take first place in the hearts of her suns and daughters. Lundwehr. In this body le "First Ilau," In which the conecrtpt re• raains for Ili% years. Anil there in the "Second Bute" in which he stays for slx or seven years, but has tio tre (Ong tu through. VERY COSTLY. Now, the conscript wuuld have reached hie thirtsenintli year, and, although as the prime of lee, have no more truuble .so long ae peace' lasts. Ile would then pass Into that militia cutlet! the "Lund - I this ply with the ubject of f see e. ee ‘‘ Lowe to 13(0;0 u Antoine Berezowski, a Pole, who was sentenced to penal servitude for fur attempting to aesaesinate the Ozer Al- exander I I. on June 6. 1907, on ihe coslon of les Majesty's visit to Pans, has been pardoned. Bereveystil. who was eighteen, and ap- prenticed to an engineer. fired into a carriage in which the Czar, tlie Ernper. or Napoleon. and les two sons eere driving in the Bois de Boulogne on their way to the exhibition. The occupants of the carriage eere than that ono case so treated se hts 11 uninjured by the fleet shot, hut one • f should have been treated by surgical 1110 equerries and R horse were svound• means should go wrong. Bereeowelii fired again. and thr „Diseases which generally run be barrel of his pistol exploded and seri- e gemmed by hypnotism aro of a emir °slaty injured his hand and a woman Ilene! order, and not limos assoclided who was close by. ss ills organic changes. It run I niink, flerezowski was arrested. and with I es., i proved Iltat it Is pfeiSible by riesehnet- difficulty saved teem being mobbed hy cal means texi suggestiun. without no, the crowd. personal influenre such as ritagrutlit.ni, It IR Sind that the Emperor Napoleon to meek the conecious mind of the sub turned toward the Czar and sold welt ject and bring out seine undern in g tin a smile. "Sir. we have been under fire together." Alexander replied gravely. "Our deetinles are In the hands of Pro- vidence."' The Pole WAR tried. condemned. and shipped I.. New Caledonia. After swum years. le reason of his good behavior, DANGER LN A London ^helical Expert Talks of Experisnents. SinAul:t.rung (wee of pollee arrived, but • BEYOND CONTROL. although they mude a number oi ar- rests, und isithough the order was given le mounted guards to ride the crowd down if neeeSaary, very little cutest be done to maintain order. Nu lives were lost, but the casualties were innumeruble. At about half -past three the firemen arrived frorn Puteaux. By that tette there were fifty booths bluzIng, und the crowd, in a white heut tt • 81 Min" in Germany mid t true,'" in France. Item lie ould atin,i1,..„pefunry,,a4d pr them (rum extinguiehin the flantes. evented Half u dozen men se the horses dragging one of the lire en- gines, belabored the afilMaIS With their slicks and umbrellas, and thus Inght. well her. Hide wilti permitted te leave the 00001 fur tiller Ileum. Tugelltte, Fettle end le•aulein yun Sas- sen droie fur a while through the tdruets, then Went 10 0. deillt-St'S, where she was drugged, and two tif her (runt teeth extracted. Von Suesen and the dentist to extract three more, but the child, who had C01110 10 her eensee, grew alarmed. and resieted. \ on Sassen and Frida then walked about. Enda ens sliesen beusallui articles of female seeseei tee sive, vendee s, and WW1 told Mal after a while she would wear steel clothes and rule in a carriage. Ven Sesser) pruttlised to train her es an s pent flinger, fel pressed the chtlii s sere Freda at tees put ist (we, 11 I get and rushed to paseing neeicar, beard. est 11, und made the best o.1 her wily hones. The police are investigating the stery, but the child's statement, tire so con- fused and her nerves so shaken mut it is Mmes.:11)10 to get a reale, coherent nar- rate:ye from Iter. Tiee believe it IS Some rimy deVelopnielit porserstly. regarding Which it might he well to have mesiieul opinion. \ on tiro:sell esrldentiy fal e owns n• 1111 opera singer elle thes iteme ex• eds. Tise seieletunt Seesen is a girl of about 19. quietly di eSSed, With a win, ning manner. The advantages and enngers of hyp- notism os means of treating disease formed the subject of a notable lecture accomennied by sumo reinareable ex- periments gisen befere the Psycho - Therapeutic Society' by Dr. Edwin Asti, for some time slernonstrator phesio• logy and house physiCilin at St. Mary's Hemline Lundon. England. "in using hypnotism to curt, disease." eaid Dr. Age, "WP at present 1111. v. it ht a great ferre selisch e is do not. fully understund. and ellich vt'e cnntest en- tirely control. We certainly cannel. cen- tral a sufficiently to govern the grosser forms of disease, and it Ls Important to remember that nothing can do more 1 ehoeherapeutic The Manter—"Alphrmse, I can't pay you your wages (or loot month." The Itiatv--"Pardon mo. air, but bow shall t diOugr The Masier—'"You think Man ter- ' feed le money. don t you? he eerthillty do. sir." The Mrse- going to give you a Inen' frollday Weed: • Main 1111111 (urty-11Ve years old. This us the cureer thruugh which the majority of healthy Englishmen will have to pees if the Continental system uf universal military service is tidupted. : • blion for the army is spoken of ill Great, Britain. In Germany there Is ened them into a stampede r g i conscription for lite Navy al well. an I rniddie of the erowd. The horses gal- es geeee„ toe Navy is munned partly 1,1 e 1 welly hither and thither, lasleng by conscripts end pu rtly Isy volunteers. soo with their hosts and Injuring many Both countnes tsy this Homes iseie .0. , 1, 'JP1.'• cured a line rime' rt.serie. Belnin s , 11 l.al -.1-1 i-ur NI. LePlee, ihe Pre - weak point is Ole insteliciency ef u re- 1, t .3 1' .:,, •. ;unveil with reinforce - reeve muerte turce, ss . testes .1 iesec. and a squadron of en. and the flre was got under to f a ‘r.1"ni..yr, litkIleelyn ritriscautlil,sctinlel'tsl!:,`:, L'!:::',', . l'w g'"'"' curimen laborer will he 1 sry niusli bet.. ter wuremen fur their trill:1111e. Ont. of the evils Is that a levee nteetser 9 nten, perhaps 1 50.04,0, wueld is. threes , „.,, ,,,,n 4e 30,ro ,,tored, ,,,.,as upon the la bur inerket every s ear. And ! !e,.., - the other sereng argument coosinst cell- ! III: wingg"it,ftiltd'yelo'un1,1:11:1gg. but the frumewore sersplion is glut it %soul (sus , 020 000,000 in addition le what we t t- reaty Spend, i/ consciousness." he eeperimented 00 o young Member ef "metre !Pillion going tereuee es tee s the auxiliary ferres, foetidly peeing the '" e seep., it tee,111 sou, ...elegem; To illustrate the points of his es lure subjeet sloe a slate of wifeless, le,. polo, iltsei. I thee, pessisi 1.1 isiietetion, and lie secured' a remisalon of the h '1 I WW1 to1f1 by' Ash that he else In Ilia sire! n '''' 1 "m"'Inl' 1" WP))"71"' \‘'''... )''11 celony." He procured a farm t B rootn of Ms regiment. At the word of """ 41""` ul,Y Iliqro 1 you plense from cointrland he stood at a est , I • . bole but wee obliged. to reel& in the erne .a• sot chapter in 1110 litstory of 10104110 rail. a ou- rifle and finite. went ferreneh the. artant.4 ot loading les ell'ee "T sten rroy venture t -I, 51tV Mi. that u e GENERAL RUIN. In Ile of the 01101:51 the build• ing width the stakes and piLkets f i ARISTOCRAT'S FOR CHEFS. King Edward Suggests an Opening for Herd -up Younger Sons. ti Ile or bunted, unite u King Edward has niade else and • tie is sprinkling uf pureinti. 'it " etoese' of lemgchaine race. entir,e- r,a.. or the moo. picturesqu. rare -courses in Europe. the buildings of all renus•ated and improved lest •••. 's a pitiable ieight. It .1 • seldiers, and nu une ender any pretext , se terf is pelted up and hiss esle leo, ell the fencing is Pructkal 814411°41"n- Ile bU)8 1 w°u1'1 beet li. este wheel the cruet! scattered be geott thing for some sif the yuungs 1 , is 1, suns of the aristocrucy if they eought ! .1-11„ teeeie , eset y _roes. .n.o the houths, puSitkalfi U.4 CtletS, 'r111,3 idea Was thoi '84) padderk r place while the King sius recellIfY veei- • or "peluuse." the buildings 01 which tee outcenie of 1111 irwident which took has suffered little in ',ore - mg Luril anti I.ady Lolehruuk. enereie wmeeig periesn with the iliseltaltO '811 piulddrk, 4 w OMEN'S THREE ST %Orli. Englend's Chancellor of the Exchequer Are.s Last le "Neeireme." Mr, Asquith ,41,01.0 l'N'en1 1y In a meta peel natured Monitor about women. 1-114. to-OtAlun viii3 Ult. opening of a golf 1,07.11Ur ot Dander, •-•eullttficl, and there vois prepondertince ul %seinen present. " \\ all delighled at all times unit 111 sei pewees Stahl Mr. Ailipilth, "10 Nee 1:1,10's 111/011 gulf iesks "I hay.• filched ett• entrees of (ornate majesty and lits hostess returned (ten len I ady (sere! ssisers wus 1034 111 ihs GIRL VERGEtts. v Method of Ailrecting Men to ni- 1 Sers lee. 110 "loi,d1,11g" bast, ,.1 lel nee r 11. 11 I '0 1'1.14;1• 1111111 b .11 \1,111to.ottl. 1.• 41Ia a motor dross otie ..sening about 7.30, pre.sence of the leing, by an Indiscrete 1 young 10,111111in, that there was no dire • Nes net- in emigres.; Us 1144, chef ,N113 drunk I and in bed. An silliest -identiral ines- .1 tient heCifrred II yeer ag 1 ellen the King ,, wns viseing the Sas.goong 1 1.1, Ktng I'.1 011 soes !sensing sisesgatery I '1' I n uny lcin,1 et vierk 111141 10 sAtil.,,,Itri,i 3,,ii II TuAv presesien fel the 11110.,r-05 ,`,,, yetinger Sun!, ',1 ifiTeruniQUR fi,ddenicti 11,.. knuvrs 01 whG1 Itrt 14 t1111,111g. 0,, ,1 "C. '‘• (1014 per annum. find 11,,,r behavior f ned we 11,.4141,1 girt.; 1 hoecongregate 11 110 lo, furoosl 111,. ‘ - .1111,1 1111r,1011,, . chefs earn nnstiong flees StIrso to See.• "casette/ reesie'k." I he mute rhst e 11.k. dUl "' 1.1 le""e"'esell. Isette le ' eisleel e''teleelssus els! .eiss tee. e'retsts..•-• (elopers automobile, the audience be1ng II is 1,, T110 a meet gratifyine weer 01 prorraq of what 1 mns react. - On being 11110 that he% inliat drive his f woman ran alweye extend WHY ALL FOAM IS WHITF.. assured tie never hod diesin on . The gyretion RA 10 11,11Y all foam la youth eat In the chair. puttee imaginer.. Marling Severe. sseretel tin<well pednle and occareinnally made g movement as sesunding a warning horn. I•lyenotient. Agit said. was a greet power which need be useil with adventage if due enro 14 Wien. but it emphatically Wag Mit the thing for an amateur to trifle with. white le not an easy one to tinder,. an . but the fact IS that foam ie alwas4 White. whatever be lbe color of the liquid. The froth produced on a bottle of the blochest Ink is white. and wow- be perteelly so were it not tinged, to a certain extent. by particio of the Ilgold which the hub- bies; hold in methanical steepeneion. AA to the Ouse of Mos whitenese. Irt aufticient to soy thin. it *due to the lerge Minnber of refleeting eurfrtres trellised by the. foam, for it, Is !twee sure faces wliteli, by refleeting Ilse Hail. en -1- '100 Alpert MT eye3 the linproseiosa of "Sir. reme to ask sou ler thie hand el your slaughter," "Ail rifest eb- eirneledly replied the old man Mtn tens Irelong over the said s nee emery NIL "would you as soon take her head also?' t1,1 ,ol.11 It gihrTifiti• ,101111141 114•111,0U 1111/3.. jetrtiseitelti wee gelf, elr spot., e sth some amount of riz'rf'bters. 4,8 ',,u01. filinntla lead heneeller, 4311,1 to (Ate of MO Feigleh jutigee, that if he had a little 1111,1o. •••, peg 1011ce 1to 1A,o111.1 1..• 1110 woi luster that ... r ise set n 1,..nitti 1 Mott: tine ItitrIptill Minh WK. PUMP of gel; es "es peer -Nets stemless by nesi• pra, lire 'from bed 111 wOlSe. "1 'A co. Opting the 0th/Pr 113 1, 11101. Myaelf might 11080 lenrried a slew lim gunge .11.. Ilene I hese ileVided to tie - corning a very Indifferent performer at tho geom." 1, 1 '.•1 111,1rAullIg the •‘‘ 11,.4 hit 11 11.4kti 113 111 iseng turned steels at Is '0 set - tole is. as elsrk leain /11, PI'. " "1".' "''"" "11( 1 I"' 't 0 iti_ i . L., es,-.. —see— 'situ)" I""1 1411' ""11"1"" "'"1 us is see 'eine the 11. Were harddip uf the areisse.try 1.-P. I h.. g tale. 1,1.1111.., 1,14#1.+0 le law up the coterie they eeelf "e'fl ' thee., else. siting 1'111 11 1.1,14.k. 1 \ weer limos mere looney than they c,,,11.1 tsetse ' find erry eve to 1.:et hv point( in fer ietenee5 f, .1111 of v. with a becemote 1i11.• welch their trninmg eis tits item. Allrl nod 141F 18 .14)11104t roe 1111' they would start eels II a lethal nilynni . ces. e door te weiceine aiming 9r, nee se kimv tug wh,:t d; -hes le Mellows -Is ruittine.1 paint's' 40.1 11,0 111.1 11 01 1110 111n1/%11 11. 11 1q appetites; Itirthermos. /1. thssr sitille4 rrowd4 "1 vonad bc rsesineted te lee letchen• Mit. H., (+1, , t,ti1,, heretofore beet, 'eels deanusighliprvtell:t,i,p1(:,..te. tiv1,1-,:i t eisregeeetete, coming ft sin far r •.,.. eaelor. the IL, h s' ,71,114:111111"tv.13 :::: I .1', i.ii'. . 1,, ‘11. 880 no rise, ..1 has inenrili,h,oelsr riv::: ,r,,.,,,,,,,.1.1:1,1. ,,•:,,,,,v.:74,1111 1..,,, .,1111.:,,:mh,,I,:ti:„1,11311:14,,:it ‘p,re:,:tiesti: noes te osiesie VW their 1 Ill tiers dere,- 3,0,1 „., ,,, 84 „dire wouki pi,, , 3), lung. ii::::::,%1D,A,it,baVy: rpl gra gin il % eine 11071r ,r .' 1 ,1,1 0,t, (',I,M,,,,l(n tied If 1,-i ,,,gi:.'" ,,f lam 1.1 twilit: lifittt to many youne • so, ese. of the experiment %%het). he tIon wr" 1"1"." 'IP 0" s. '''.1 "'"" 1°13 1 1,1011 (shorn the dedractionst of hist:lees tren""na It rt" 1 12"1 "I' "r't r'hltl' 0 ''' herl I le inure have hitherte tnenopetiee 5. 1.111'11.11'1,* WellIr",1 ary c, Gliirls 1.11, 11,00, 5.1 111 1 11F, e RI-Art.1 v,),„ .;,,,i,,s had du, 4'11 1,11' fl' fl t/ .torlle1 1,1111114,1. 10111 1111rt put end. r 11 "\\ 7110 e he. 1, 1 ,,f 1, • • -Pi lig ae.ne. and rem ow that eteh OA 1,v no means tesel eseteett le take nse rut of him and said -see dee t spelt it that wits. lire " Inseeelor ot s end enceseuree has st tire len't I met know it. onlv. volt " %Eng fifteen enerei the peuncl. (fid Ilio I 1-11/11.'N'Pr.'11 11111, 1111'1 "Vv ell. ! been 10"c"Ila. Ile eaught you ee.. 1 apett it right nobody would , hes" "Worse Than that. He Bead I'd notices it." been giving seventeen!' 'rho eliltreh's prineleat RUpporlors are prominont Men, rind they are Kitten% delighted. They say ihat tho eel Illtutehos in Illa neighborhood moat kdlow A1114 or (10 out of bueiliesse The said litelet.was euMel- ere nee the eitertery showed a 15o per cent. inereose over the correeponding Su.n,seloany goofemlastuoy;.r. aaid I easterner lo tee eroeer. "I OT11. Th0 esse ‘; 9 ff14tt ' e " ' ^ ;", ; .(1 ss, „S'Il ,r ' see .7;