HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1892-12-1, Page 7elliterseeonssopeetemseammemossiesisensonwesille
LATE FOREIGN NEWS
'The persoitel estates of the late Duke of
elenchester was 1;053.
the Queen's preterences are now said to
lie toward De Vero, the Irish poet, for the
vacant laureateship. Mr. Egan will regard
this as painful.
Cancer has been discovered in American
brook trout in a pond in New Zealand. It
wse supposed that the disease was unknown
to fishes.
The Mikado of Japan has no mere flori-
cultural little couutry to rule over. He is
the sovereign of 40,000,00) people who- live
t'n 13,000 towns and villages.
King F, antis of Asia, grandfather of King
Alfonso of Spain, is nearly 70 years of ago
,- nd of dwar fi§h proportions that do not ex-
ceed these of his little royal grandson.
Tho German Emperor bas added the dee-
pration of the Black Iiiagle to that of the
• Bed, whieh he had previously given to
Count Tattle. Over here it is the eagle that
-gets the taffy.
Four men, ot» of them an underlooker
clamed Cart -wail, were suffocated in a seven
;;a:et seam of the Whitecross Colliery at Skel-
nersdale, near Ormskirk, on Saturday, by
n inrush of gas into the workings.
The profite of the Paris Post Office, whieh
last year amounted to ton millions of dol.
'ars, have inoved the Post Office clerks to
.sonsfdor what steps they should take for
getting their salaries raised.
British officers in India are to occupy a
lowly position after death, according to
some of their native troops, who hold the
doctrine of souls, No
of the
alndoo sou try in 13ombay ever fails to salute
.a passing black cat, for he firmly believes
that the soul of a British officer inhabits
that sable body.
Tho Duo de Moray, distinguished as an
amateur photographer, has given to the
French War Office a process^ by whieh
paper of any kind or thickness eau receive a
photographic print, rlg_hty impressions can
be made in a minute at a trifling expense.
Soldiers' certificates of service and theme -
ter wilt bear the owner's portrait.
Mr, D. S. '!.'ravers, writing to a London
evening paper on Friday, says :—.During
the last few days there has been carted
from some place (not known to me) and dis-
charged into barges at a wharf on the
Thames at Blackfriars, a great quantity of
human remains, one barge alone having
skulls and various human bones visible,
Surely this is punishable by law. Such a
ghastlyand revolting sight is a disgrace to
tiny civilised country.
The lar at cannon manufactured by the
,~great Gel .tan gunmaker, Krupp, itis record -
ad, will ,hs 270,000lb. The calibre of this
enonst1 r hostile engine is 10}in, and the
barrel is 44ft long. The greatest diameter
tf this gun is 0hft, and its range of fire is
About 12 miles. The projectile is 4ft long,
weighs 27001b, and is fired by a charge of
powder weighing 701b, This gun, it is
stated, will carry for nine miles, and pone -
trate 20 inches of solid steel armour.
.A. woman, about 20 years of age, who
states that ate belongs to the theatrical pro-
fession, swallowed a quantity of oxalic acid
in Tottoultahn Court Reed, London, early
on Sunday morning. tilio was taken to the
police station by a constable, where the in-
spector gave her an emetic and sent for the
divisional surgeon. Ultimetelyshe was re-
moved to the hospital. The acid caused
excruciating pain, but she is quite out of
danger. She has explained that the reason
she took the acid was disappointment at a
gentlemen not meeting her according to
promise.
Late on Sundayy evening Mrs. Wright,
wife of a hat manCifaoturerresiding iu High
Town, Luton, met with a terrible experi-
ence at the hands of a tramp. It appears
that a rough -looking man went to her resi.
dence, and, on learning that Air. Wright
was out, attacked her with considerable
violence. A sharp struggle ensued, and
"centualfy the unfortunate lady was stun.
Led. Tho mala then escaped with a small
amount of money in silver, Mts. Wright
was shortly afterwards found lying uncon-
scious in a pool of blood. She was still in a
critical state un Monday, and her recovery
e extremely doubtful,
A story Mr. William Hancock is telling
on the lecture platform in England reflects
great credit upon the sagacity of the buffa-
loes in Sumatra, where he has been travel-
ling. He says that these intelligent anitnals,
being in great fear of their mortal enemy,
the tiger, take refuge at night in the rivers,
.vhere they rest in peace and comfort with
only their horns and noses sticking above
the water. Possibly the traveler derived
his information from veracious natives like
those ot Central Africa who regaled Dr.
Juuker with tales of monkeys who built
fires and cooked their food after the manner
of the lords of creatio-1.
Commander Dundas, R.N., of the British
Imperial East Africa Company, is on his
return to England, after h ing devoted
.early two years to a successlu exploration
n the steamer Kenia, of. the ivers Tana
and Juba. After niakigg Ills w y for more
than 309 miles up the Tana la year, Com-
mander Dundee reached Mount Renia by
caravan, and ascended it to a height of 10,-
000ft. This year he ascended the Juba
more than 400 hnjies, established pacific re-
lations with tfie'Somalis of the country, and
reached the spot still marked by the wreck
of the Guelph, the steamer in which Baron
von der Deckens navigated the stream in
the ill-fated expedition, 27 years ago, which
ended in his being murdered with live of his
European companions.
The city of Panama has founded a public
library to commemorate the four bunlredth
anniversary of the discovery of the New
World. The Star and Herald speaks, of the
institution as a "long -felt want," and those
who knew Panama in the palmy days of the
canal builders and apeoulators will be inter-
ested in the indications of a remarkable
change down there. The Municipal Conn-
'cil made an appropriation of funds to install
and maintain the library, which is to be
,:now" as the Biblioteca. Colon. Three
nundred volumes were provided to start the
library,, and the Society Progresso del Istmo
has denoted smite 300 more, which formed
its -library. The general public is invited to
take a patriotic interest in the institution
and make it a worthy memorial 'of Cristobal
Colon, as they call him.
A000rdir-- to a Paris telegram, there has
juat conclee113 before the Mayenne Assizes a
.xensationa._ seee which novelists Will not ne-
';leetto no..3 ..M. Trebel, a -veterinary sur -
eon, was tscused of having poisobed a
woman hvamL..., Tabur,with whose parents he
lodged at C4erron. He had promised mar-
riage to the girl, and her mother; who Was
reported to i s in love with accused, was for
a time implicated in the charge. M. Trebel
maintairec`♦ teat Illadetnofsolle Tabur took
'arsenic rather than. survive disgrace and re-
s •iinded the or,srt that ho fully intended to
marry her, met that her father was opposed
to the match. The veterinary surgeon and
Madame Tebut were acquitted:
Cin Tuesday align•s an alarming collision
occurred in the Mersey between the Walla-
sey ferryboat Crocus and the sailing vessel
Eurydice during a tog which prevailed.
The ferryboat had about 300 passengers on
board, and in going towards Seacoznbe she
reit into the Eurydice, which arrived on
Tuesday Froin Vancouver, and was at an-
chor in mid -stream. The collision was fol-
lowed by a panic on the part ot the ferry
passengers, who rustled to the lifebelts,
prepared for a struggle for life. The inn -
nets of the ferryboat came tumbling down
on the affrighted passengers, followed by ei
resit of steam, whieh tatenaified the situa-
tion. The yards of the Eurydice struck
some of the ferry passengers, oue having
his leg fractured and others sustaining
minor injuries. The captain of the ferry-
boat at length succeeded in calming the af-
frighted passengers, who were ail safely
landed at the lauding stage.
Some idea of how it rains in the tropics
may be gleaned by Northern readers from a
few items in late West Indian newspapers
relative to the " autumn showers." One
day it is noted that on the prov f ns even-
ing "a block occurred on the cat lino at
North street, one of the cars being unable
to cross the gully, down which the water
was rushing like a river." Another day
several gangs of igen were reported out re-
pairing the damage done to the car tracks
by the "showers of the previous day."
Nett day the city had men out "cleaning
up the debris washed down by the show.
er." At a celebration the people were de-
tained in the building over three hours by
the showers. The children wore kept
frons school one day. And there have been
times when the `t showers" have developed
into " heavy raius," and business has
n
had to be sus cKingston, even t
pend d in u„ e i o
thox e pub-
lication,
nt of newspapers suspending pu
lication, Ilut the marvellous way the
country freshens up after the showers
makes them not only welcome, but sitnply
delightful.
THE O.P. R. SHORT LINE TO BUFFALO
Significant Evidence Concerning the New
gong Atong the Canadian Bluth or the
Niagara River.
A despatch from Niagara says :—If any
further evidence were needed that the so-
called electric road on the Canadian side of
the Niagara River is simply a bcaneh of the
Canadian Pacific, the fact that the tracks
are of the standard gauge and the grading
has been done without putting in the under-
ground. wires eee5aarY,
Ifel et ici
tY
ware
to be used, would furnish it.
There is every indication that it will be a
steam road and that connections will prob-
ably bo made with the Grand Trunk for
Chicago. A connection has already been
arranged north of Clifton for freight, and
Grand Trunk cars are in use in the construe.
tion of the road. The bridge over the
whirlpool canyon is a powerfully built
structure suitable for a steam railroad, and
the same is true of those at the Cedar Isl-
ands, It is simply a Canadian Pacific
short lino from Buffalo to Toronto, and the
elegant new palace steamer which the
Niagara Navigation Co. have order-
ed for next season's business will con-
nect with the new road at Quecnston for
Toronto. This company was obliged to put
this steamer on or the Canadian Pacific
would have had a boat of its own to cont•
pato cn One of the best paying passenger
water routes in the country. President
Van Horne of the Canadian Pacific is a
shrewd Yankee, and the manner in which
he has cuchred the Michigan Central in this
instance and the cinch he has on other cont-
petitors stamp hint as a railroad man of mil
usual capacity.
ONE THOUSAND TONS DAILY
The Cnrnegte Company Willa or Canadian
Nickel—Effect or itol'ortsutontit Test.
A despatch from Toronto says :—About
three weeks ago, under the direction of the
British Admirality, a test was macre at
Portsmouth of the nickel steel armour
plates, aud the result gave the highest satis-
faction to everyone concerned. The plates
produced by the Harvey process, were the
handiwork of the Carnegie Steel Company,
of Pittsburg. While there was no doubt of
an ultimate influence that the success of the
test would have, an immediate effect as re-
gards the Canadian nickel -steel industry
was hardly hoped for, yet such has been the
case. Last week the agents, at Carnegie,
Phipps & Co., in New York, made the an-
nouncement that they would require 1,000
tons of nickel steel per day from Canada.
The offer was made to the Commercial Min-
ing Company, which possesses nickeliferons
tracts in the Sudbury district through one
of the company's directors, Mr. Hemmieg-
way, in Boston. The directors of the Com-
mercial Mining Company in,.Toronto say
that all that is needed is a custom smelter
in the Sudbury district, and claim that the
Ontario Government should take instant
steps towards the erection of one. At pres-
ent only four mining companies have smelt-
ers of their own, and their united capacity
is only in the neighborhood of 300 toes per
day. The Carnegie company would prefer
merely that the oro should be roasted in
Canada, but should be taken to Cleveland
to be smelted and refined. This procedure
would have the effect of losing a very large
Industry to the country.
BEASTS ADJUDGED AS CRIMINALS
A Curious Study or elan's Dealings with
the Brute Creation.
A book which will delight all lovers of
the curious and grotesque as well as provide
food for serious theugltt, has just appeared
at Naples under the title of the " eriulinal
beasts." Its author, Sig. d'Addosio, de-
scribes it as a mere attempt to deal with
the subject. He prepared it without as-
sistance, and admits that it only imperfect-
ly covers the ground he has outlined- Yet,
it presents a perfectly astounding array of
facts and veracious lncidentsrelatine to the
supposed amenability of brutes to the civil
law,
The reader is first reminded that the an- furnish to the club members, at the lowest
oient lows of the Egyptians, Indians, Per- , possible rates, such accommodation and in-
sians, Hebrews, and Groekaattributed rights formation as a stranger arriving in Chicago
and duties to animals, and decided that during the Fair would not be able to secure
equally with leen animals were subject to except after days of toil and disappointment,
praise or blame, reward or punishnhent. The club will be distinctly Canadian and
]i'or this reason severe penalties were in- for the express purpose of looking after the
atituted against men who took the life of interests of Canadian visitors. Club porters
animals, maltreated or hurt them without will be in attendance on the arrival .of alt
reason and equalty severe penalties were trains and boats, and will look after mem-
awarded to animals for acts hurtful to the
lives or property of "len. Little by little
these laws, which flourished when mankind
was still child -like and ingenuous, fell into _ sons, will be provided. There will also be
disuse as the human race became aware of dressing rooms, bath rooms, cloak rooms,
its immense superiority, and finally the and all the conveniences of a well -regulated
cold and reasoning Romans denied to , club. In the office will be kept a list of all
CANADIANS AT CHICAGO.
TLoliglaerul Provision for Their 1;ontrort
During Their 'Visit to theWorlal's Fair.
One result of the World's Fair is the es.
tablishment at Chicago of a club for Cana-
dians to be called the Canadian Headquar-
ters' Clnb. The location of the club is on a
valuable site which has been secured on Ply-
mouth place, within 200 feet of the Cana-
dian Pacific and Grand Trunk depots, and
within a block of the elevated and cable
roads, which are the cheapest and most di -
root means of reaching the fair grounds.
The managers of the clab are an incorporat-
ed company of ilhtlueutial business men of
Chicano soil Toronto, and their aim is to
leers and their baggage, and conduct them
to the club house. Reception rooms for
ladles, ander the control of Canadian mat-
animalsany rights and duties, andpronouno-
ed them to be void of conscience or per-
sonality, without, however, deciding that
they were mere machines. Then carne a
reaction. The middle ages, distinguished
for the predominance of imagination over
reason, leapt back ata bound to superstition
and barbarism, andallrights a d duties
b r sin, n
were restored toanimals,to ether with
such responsibility that wen they
commit-
ted any act hurtful to man or his works they
were summoned as criminals and subjected
to the rigor of the law. In the sixteenth
century this humanizing of animals began
again to decrease, until in the seventeenth
century it entirely disappeared.
After this historical sketch Sig. d'Addosio
considers the advance of scieuce in relation
to the animal kingdom. The theory of evo-
lution, which ascribes to brutes the rudi.
ments of human attributes, is carefully re-
viewed. The modern school of science, says
the author, declares that, in common with
mankind, animals possess reason, will, con-
scienee, language, sentiment, and sociabil-
ity, and that the whole difference lies in the
more or less, in quantity and not in quality..
The modern penal eehool now begins to ask :
"'What is crime?" and itself replies that
crime is a natural phenomenon, common to
plants and animals equally with men.
Now, slyly observes Sig. d'Addosio, if this
theory be carried out to its logical cense-
quencea, it would result that an animal
which has sinned n ainat human society
ought to be punished for its crime, as it was
in the middle ages.
The curious lawsuits which. were, in the
middle ages, so often instituted against
members of the animal kingdom were some-
times penal, sometimes civil. The farmer
were directed against animals that had do.
stroyed human life, or resorted to magic
and diabolical works, when the accused
were pat in prison, tried, sentenced, con -
domed, and executed according to all the
formalities of lawsuits against human crim-
inals. The civil suits were directed against
such animals or Maoists as attacked and
damaged cornfields, vineyards, orchards,
meadows, and so on or in any other way
wers hurtful to the possessions of teen.
Wheu prayers and processions bad been re-
sorted to In vain, an appeal was made to
tic loot ecclesiastical judge, who cited
the destroyers to appear before him, nomin-
ated advocotes for and against The in-
habitants of the damaged district did the
saute, and the trial took place with solemnity
and with all tho tedious detail und long-
winded argument of mediaeval justice and
jurists. Tho sentence generally condemned
the accused insects or animals to leave the
invaded territory within a given date on
pain of ouraes and excommunication, and
almost always assigned some uncultivated
place where they could retire and Iive as
they pleased. Often, when the creatures
had been deaf to the sentence, a new trial
and verdict was undertaken to carry out
the excommunication.
A Mystery of African Travel.
Some further details are published con-
cerning the death of Lieut. Quiquerez of
the First Regiment of Chasseurs, while re-
turning from au inland expedition on the
ivory coast. According to Tile Libr Pa-
role, the deceased had been a suitor for the
hand of a general's daughter but havinig no
fortune his proposal bad been rejected by
the father. He then sat out' for Africa in
the hope Of distinguishing himself in active
service, On returning to the coast some
time •afterward he was informed that his
intended bride was married. He thereupon
committed suicide in despair.
Lieut. de Segonzac, the deceased's com-
rade, who brought news of his death, hi an
interview with a representative of The Gil
Blastis reported to have declared that he.
had no reason to defend himself from the•
accusation that 11ad been brought against;
him, inasmuch as that the' enquiry would
fully prove his innocence. He protested,
however, against the insinuation that be
had"ever wished to avoid paying Mme. Qui-
querez a visit, adding the.t` he had seen her
several times since his return to France.
He also declared that itwas- impossible
that any papers belonging either to Qui-
querez or himself could have been saved and
brought back to France.
The 'Matin, ,on the other hand, publishes
the textofa long communication 'addressed
to the Minister of War by Col, Fix, de -
mending an enquiry into the lieutenant's
death. The.. document reviews the facts
already known, which tend to show that
Lieut.: le Segonzac was responsible for lits
comratte's death. Col. Fix endeavors to
show that the tragedy oannot possibly be a
ease of suicide, and points out the improba-
bility of Lieut. de•Segonzae's story.
t the hotels and boarding houaes, with low,
tion, prices and terms. Hitch one eau guts
choose where he will go and what price tie
will pay, end the officers of the elm!, will
have arrangements completed so that no
one will be imposed upon. A register will
be kept of the addresses in Chicago of the
members who have been located1
ythe club
so that their ft•ionds arriving in the city
i will at any time be able to find them, There
will be a post•oflieo, telegraph office, tele-
phone and money order office in the build-
ing. Canadian papers will be kept on filo
in the reading rooms. Tho members eau
have their mail addressed to the club, and
make any appointments to meet theirfriends
there. In short, it will be the Canadian
headquarters during the Exhibition.
There are given in the book, on the au-
thority of official records, accounts of a vast
number of trials of horses, cattle, fowls, does
goats, snakes, leeches, etc. The majority
of eases are taken from the records of French
courts, though Italy furnishes a goodly
number. In Naples itself, for example, an
ass was solemnly tried and condemned to
be burned to deeth—a proceeding which
called forth a scoffing poem from a wit of
the period. Civil suits were generally
directed against vermin, such as caterpillars,
grubs, leeches, locusts, rats, mice, and so on.
In 1451 a snit was instituted against the
leeches which infested the ponds in the
neighborhood of Berne, in Switzerland, and
the bishop of Lausanne, in his instructions
to his parish priests of Berne, which instruc-
tions were solemnly approved of by tike pro-
fessor of the University of Heidelburg,
mentioned that it would be advisable to pro-
cure " some of the aquatic worms and place
them before the magistrates." This was
done, and the leeches, both those present
and those absent, ware ordered to leave the
places they had so boldly infested within
three days; on pain of incurring the maledic-
tion of God.
In conclusion the author dwells upon the
fact that scientific knowledge has swept
away nearly all the legends and fancies con-
cerning the animal kingdom. A history of
such legends is, ho holds, highly prolific of
valuable thought and forms a most curious
chapter of the history of the human mind
itself. He dwells upon the modern move-
ments for the protection of animals from
cruelty and prophesies for the future a time
when a still more intelligent and syun.
pathetic interest will be bestowed upon
them.
a
TOOK POISON ON THE PLY.
A Dose of Parts Green. Blown Down ua Tina's
Throat.
A Montreal despatch says —While ,the
Wind was blowing very hard, shortly, after
5 o'clock the other afternoon a carter named
Julien Lefebvre was driving along the Bea.
ver Line wharf when a barrel fell, from a
wagon that was proceeding in front of him.
This barrel burst and the contents, paris
green, were blown by the wind into the
face of Lefebvre who was almost suffocated
by the powder. He swallowed quite a quan-
tity and soon felt the symptoms of poison.
ing. He was taken to his heti e, where a
priest and a doctor were summoned, and it
was oniy'sometime after that the powerful
emetics administered acted and saved his
life.
Mrs. Francis lflshar Woad has been study-
ing figures, with the result of finding thee
nine tenths of thechildren of college -bred
women
women survive infancy—r,recerd. Bever be-
fore etpnalod in my age, class or country.
Mea. Wood is herself a Vassar girl and a
trasteu of Barnard, and the wife of a well-
known physician.
Children Cry for. Pitcher's Castoria.
From; Peasant to Sultana.
Here is a little romance in real life which
I am inclined to think would be hard to
beat, There was a few years ago, a very
beautiful girl working in the coal ntlnes of
Franco, Some oharitable person, struck
no doubt by the girl's wonderful beauty,
found her a situation in a tamous dressmak-
ing establishment in Paris, where her sup-
erior intelligence soon made her a favorite
with the "madame "
She was at last sent to Constantinople
with some dresses whieh had been ordered
by the Sultan's mother, and from that time
nothing was heard of her for many years.
She might, perhaps, have faded out of their
memory, had not a relative died and left
her a stnall inheritance. Notices wore then
published after her where abouts.
Inanswertothese asplendidequippagedrow
up in front of the Emb tsay, and the Sultan's
favorite wife stepped out, to declare herself
the onetime Fiore Collin. Sho renounced
the legacy in favor of her kindred, who
were still poor, incl, in reply to the many
inquiries, she explained that it was the
old story of love at firat eight between the
sultan and rho beautiful modiste.
Flymino—"What do you do to euro the
blues?" Flamtne—"Paint everything red."
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lvithiu easyreaoh."
CAiau os MAIMS,NeD. (`itF.
Late Pastor Bloomingdale Deformed Church.
Castorla cures Colic, Constipation,
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x11I$ Worms, gives sleep, and promotes di"
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Without injurious medication.
" For several years 1 have recommended
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a ersSBY
OR•HONEY REFUNDED. Purely Vegetable, Perfectly Harmless
and. Pleasant to Take. ForSale by all Druggists. PRICE 25 Cts
McCOLL BROS. & COIVIPANY
TORONTO.
Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealers in the follor/iag
specialties
Lardine
Cyl=nder
Red Engine
OILSool
molt "TC311j1sg
Eurelza
TRY OUR LARDINE MACHINE OIL
AND YOU WILL USE NO t()THER.
For Sale By B1SSETT BROS. Exeter, Ont.
AND BELT ODMSINED AND MlObUC8S anrr,eieNY CLCOTRICITY TO P000005 A anOCR-
_ar8 aOX �arveR0aS. LLC4TAl5ITY MRL CURB YGU Ano Aran TOL. tN SCAM:rN.
MCC KcoiaAL TACATMCNT. P0108 01, .wra aa. S.. Ste, 010. 0108 WART MSASIJRC. PRIC8.'
FULL !ARTICULAR*. JIUDD 8LCOTRIG GG., a WCLLIN8TON aTRCCT BAST. TORONTO. CANADA..
EXETER LUMBER YARD
The undersigned wishes to inform the Public in general that h.
keeps constantly in stock all kinds of
BUILDING MATERIAL
Dreszed. or TTndreezed.
PINE AND HEMLOCK LUMBER,
SHINGLES A SPECIA.LTY
900,000 XX and XXX Pine and Cedar Shingles now in
stock. A call solicited and satisfaction guaranted.
JAMES�P ILLIi ,
Dr. URN'S COTTON ROOT PILLS.
Safe and absolutely pure. Most powerful Female Regulator
known. The only safe, sure and reliable pill for sale. Ladies
ask druggists for LaRoe's Star and Crescent Brand. Take no
otherkind. Beware of cheap imitations, as they are danger—
ous. Sold by all reliable druggists. Postpaid on receipt of price.
AMERICAN PILL CO., Detroit, Mich.
et� t4a iy roti off' .'•0% 'b.
4;•fido �titi Oi4`� Ca get 4t 1e'
s4V
offs o cot Did 4t4 A`��o,�.1
eye.firrfib c; Se
i7
at, eco st. 0�
ab e,>> taG- J,t t.'f.v eat
c,:%
t1�� at o �e �y 04+07
,,sot $ y�y, •yctiti ��titi'� yoE � , ,- ,c��,�,
OPOOMMOM
Manufactured only by Thamss Holloway, 78, New Oxford SEe,st,
late 538, Oxford Street, London.
VT Purchasers should look to the Label on the Boxes and Pots
the address is not b33, Oxford Street, London, they are epurions,
A —
Dashaway--" I left my good silk hand-
kerchief here last night, Miss Summit,
and I thought I would call and get it."
Miss Summit—" Yes, Mr. Dashaway, I was
afraid you might call, so I just sent it to
you by messenger boy."
Miss Chaplin, the well-known sculptor,
has been commissioned to model the two
Spanish bnllocks Queen Victoria keeps in
the park at Osborne. They. have enormous
horns, and are considered remarkably ,beau-
tiful creatures.
He (clasping her to his manly bosons)
"Do you love me darling P" She—"Well,
I have a leaning toward you, Gerald."
BREAD -MAKER'S 0
HEVES F41L5 i0 OWE BAMMSUUOMMPS
MN 3AIJI EY ,OLI, t311M Cttti'S
E' Wit E L • A ,
neatcough Berme test i343w, rise.
in time. Sold by erne ars.
gill