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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1903-5-7, Page 21 ► 1 •• r. i ► O O 0 0 0 0 o • O000.00.00 0 •oo, more. "Please do enlighten me, I'm C.} just dying to know,'" "I suppose you're laughing at me," he said. "I suppose you think; because you're so—so horribly pretty you can turn a man's head just for sport. But it isn't sport ; at least not to me, I'm handicapped every way., ` OThe music of the next dance be,. • - 00 • • 000 •O. a 000 • • O0'l a4 n. It appeared distant and much subdued. His balance and his nerve Cranfield holds that the beginning ? seep=ed lost, He rose slowly. of his courtship was unique ; but that dna • be Cranneld's one-sided T FALLACY OF A. FACS "At least,'" he. :said, grasping at a. thread, ""at least say that you re- member giving, auto tea--Bisherihorpe n eryou'd daysoon a and zee, one o ANTI -VACCINATION AGITATION, FUNDAMENTAL PEOVISION OF THE VACCINATION ACT` NOT QQIIIPLIED WITS,• D2ev. J. A. 0. N.ccuaig Seys Compulsory Vaceinati,ona Should: eerie, The uncompromising Mita:vaccine- tion resolution adopted recently at 'z d a laublio meeting bel.. to St, An- drew's Hall, Toronto, appears lz y to become the subject of consider- able ideated discussion.. The meeting,. which was calbythe eyor at the instance- of a petition of a mina the law is. supposed to exist. For example, Section 15 makes provision that in every municipality ' where smallpox exists, or in which there is. 'danger of its breaking out through communication with infected locali- ties, the Council of the municipality May order the re -vaccination of all persons resident in the munieipallty who have not been vaccinated with- in seven years, and the medical practitioner shall adopt the same measures to secure tbe re -vaccine- tion of all such persons. es he is S required to do with regard to chile view. I c' ie night of the l dren. uw. Sunt ball and he leaned against ft ""1#ere is a. provision to enforce At no �honeymoon. keel re -x acei'nation of adults on the room. A l:ur paler 'n the dancing, come baa from yo,_ a s a tbolds. good thatvaccination o. pvcc z � at 'l_ a grounda t) time a. dancing z:naai, Qn this arca Don't meet, me feel quite air one. he was e' ..t vele bored ; he I aider," g no longer than seven years. But was out of sorts ; the band was too She watched him curiously. Then l c'ct ill only in case at smallpox epidemic r • great. 1Ie an ex mesio joie the; dawning of a does the law become aggressive, It loa.t, ,the i,ra.. n WAS tea great. ; p n 1 _ L g tine ,ht weer tfa;]ly of has library smile—stole into her eyed; She' bar of citizens for dlseussion of the considers a person as unvaccinated ireri. r - of the tongNclasped her hands, and the smile' question of vaccination, was largely after saven years, but makes no pro - drat lire. ,,, d aim b13 appearance drste Iaornc. freest very slowly frena her eyes to Attended. The resolution adopted 'vision. except upon the aalapearan was as follows :— of sanza'll.oa, for the re -vaccination At the end of the room. he saw of sueb persons, It provides that aiinaary capacity sand force wash ;,tele the iron and steel nuanufactazrer+ : e" tis turfed toward the door. enol- N That this meeting as of opinion , i infants rause be would of have thought of the tendered for the work of baellak lowing a va human tmpu]se, he that the entire repeal of the Vac•• three-months-o_d = t tnonoy w u_duld ing the at9acitfnezy of tlhe new con laa ,,, ciliation Act, the disestablishnxen# taeelnated. but every ansa andwe entering it. any more than be world cern' "`Bonze idea, of the atne ' cud# leaned his cern all the same direction.: absurd ce ho business Banc+ lnnay be galnzd wasice• :anise, but the desire to Cranfield was fidgeting with laic and disendowment by the State of :nae and child over saran years of ,have thought of manufacturing. 12w ,u age an the eontnzunity may go un- and steel to contpeto with Carzze6`ie knee. is quite as Wee -doom as a die, i progranune, a t her words he Sad- ° the practice of gu1at1atiere timetree,! the fact #dant during the +eek dandy tore it in two, Abolition of all regulations regard- Protected toeless An eleldeneie et to Pittsburg. I3nt Air, Stsaht sats over $3i5t1 QGu .north of contracts eh n She glanced at hfni, and there was ing vaccination as a condttzon of smallpox appears, an opPve"#unity snack seized it watt+9„hat'e $.&010tsardel. The ;*dant is o� In a brief space the crowd cheat a low like firelight la her eyes. adarlission to educational institn= MF- TS OF VACCV ATIoz,r. out hesitation., Ite„innnnng with Os entrance parted. and his caries i ere s employment State de- "And all this is a ort froze the small slaughter house at the stock ; sucks a size that no single az;,. n^ -assn g ”"I don't think," she said, dclb then . or e►nplo,nnezt an a r J p h r ynzd', where only as few aninha415 elalall thework ong tirm could zf the ecdaigel taustann l By nnelted before another f�3>4in *-a4 acc.nat,on, The P m� feelingas rapid ►ick if infinitely more stile . "that 1 ever gave you any . parturients would be e the interest wants or 1tea. 'rn not Pais *, you know: I'p>4N of jnastice and the he;ltlth of the #ice of vaccination is .adhered to by !could be bandied dandy, he d�tielopk.A and that else directors insist ulzoh ¢r. nag. Ile dosed his ey=.s :then he Dai- v's sister. We are horribly a- community. and that a Copy of this the majority of medical .'ten in o ! hes in>tsane_,s with daily. wonderful rapidity y readjusted his plass. and Almost before his greet coin -1,0a? 0a? Item the Plant ready at the re like. and I always keep forgetting, resolution be sent to each of the #drip. •tinder the present law, they tithals knew what lata wars doing l►c clA0.iael time, Coneequentiv a name It was Creighton—Tommyf.a%vl• 'theseigh- Please fur�lt'e n,a* it's been malt nay,city Al la t''s and. also to .l W tare tied to it, whether car no, Somelie Iger At contracts have been let. each !sable, t, a 1 n, �ll,P,l? , es Y 1. ha o , t 'u >* A'a t 1 THE GrREAT NEAT PAGI ERS Valuable Lessons From the Life of Gttstevu. s 'F. Swift. In the oereer of the late Gustavus F. Swift we have another and a signal proof that there is no lack of opportunities, but only of -men who have the intelligence, the cour- age and the perseverfns energy to improve amen, says the Chicago Chronicle, During the first thirty-six years of his life Ur, Swift acquired, haat lit- t1 wealth, but during these years NOJ STEE► CLIENT RANI ANOTHER LAI,IZ,G,E INDUSTI; N FOR. THE PONINION. 350,e00 of Co. .tract _ave Bee; 4.weeded for Immense Works at F4uII, The Ottawa papers. gave an inter. eating account of the gathering o5 several days of last week. at Ottawa_ ofa dozen or two representatives at - iron and; steel manufacturing con - the had hem: laying the fozandation, i ceras from various Canadian. Uurted consciously or tzneonsciously, fes ''Bastes. and German cities, their -ob, success, - his subsoctueztt pheztannenal � lett being to subunit tenders to the. He had been observing, thinl,~,h2g directors and engineers of the Inter and aceumalatiug a stock ot` useful ,national Portland Cement Company knowledge as well as woriung. Ltd.. for structural metals and tote ahfnery for the big X1ul1 scones, According to the "Citizen," flu directors had long day -and -Agin sessions with the representatives of, a 'then he game to Chicago nun d there were great peeking establish- meats at the stock yards, rich. ;ow poweriui, and the held seemed to be c.c ntl+lately felled. 4.ny Man] of or, her mouth. ""How delicious 1" She said, "How perfectly delicicus 1 But how z, . W. was :abr0ast of than. y plant." •1 ,' dolma il' t or t faithin it and scala kayoDAVIS, M,P.P.„ North -York. asking nal melt of worldwide authority, for sale special part of the 1 lant. move slta�, ,'. up the room, and as TltO swish of tine chanters and the Itichartlson, At•l'.P.. East York, and , not. Prominent investigators, teethe Swift L What was W05 ot 1 not a l +i ,> business as I" • Flee }ia►ll yneaninlc hare. WO are told.their consideration and support have unhesitatiroglY Pronounced "e sal"?' "VS4gnerS* eenineers. andwhen the petitions are brought be- against it, Pr f Alf 4fore the Melee. wellace, who deals with the matter owra Ho /'.5te la IN AN IN-TERVIZere 11 •froon the stendpoint of a statistician - g oi animals for the market there mint great dem a ivnae. It was finsular mills at. Cement City. Mich.,winch appeared lest Seturday in the sits -a : 'The operation is. admitted. was a emit several others MOW ill succeesedTotemic& Star, -the Rey. j. en 0.„ ly, the cause or many eleatha, and P.at't of his plan to save what was . aIlIcCuaig, . who strongly supported . of a, large but unknownetmount ofthe action et Um public meeting. 'permanent injury ; the only really then wasted. So suesessful was he 't/l'eratl°11.trustworthy statistics on a large t':ee' utas. i he felt* rather than . throb of the waltz came to Crane heard, t . admiration that hutztatned'! 1 e1►i• they were the t ccompaniusent in their t Ile took a long toot;; to his tangling thoughts, then he 1-.in�'.t back ugeinst the pile ; tie passed his hands across bis lar, sceli12 g to reahfre exactly where' eties, brushing, away many things, he stood. Then, for the first time that night, "if you ever tall in love. Cron = he melee, neat". . someone - had time 54111, " flight I— ?" He halted. "y`oe'ls lie the worst carie on record, "Aright I— ?" - bar none,'" Their eyes =a, aloe words occurred to hint inane lir unddenly- bent near ; so ear says male prove it- to be wholly without If the facts in regard to the Qaa- rorcntiro of s1na11 tax port'-r,'ln• As a 9.san he was .cat that his breath touched her cheek. tario Act respecting vaccination .anal e tact. as a. la P , came -Venal ; bolt there were ;things "alight 1—?•' dust to level p gnan and it will undoubtedly rand: as the at ankh he draw the lime 'being )ler head drooped. and the color' the established sciin e 11uhistory of ore the gr,'atest and most pernicious failure law to a, married woman. curiously' . rus:acd into her face, tier answer. loan unit can be wave or It before the of the century.' The late Rev. Hugh c'oaazuaupity. to #cavo of public seal. : enus,gh, came first on the proec►il when :it,canoe. was a whisper --ore of; anent #sill bo produced Haat shall Trico Hughes, who carefully studied ed list.. The lo.lu gs that surged thuse u iinadil'1e mysteries that axe the claims and results of vaccina- thra .,h him es len let the pillar never really placed. To this da,, .lake imPerativo the repeal of the titian. asserts, 'Tho facts produced sure aura kinin :core tarpe4e n►agile up sof . C riant:rld insists that it was "yes." present law of tempt►l;zory vaccines, before+ the Royal Conitnls`:ion have ] thing ,r ' lion. The pct, toe it stands, is not convinced a that v ecina- ft;ar, The tlat.•� was 1aalaa.>t au, boa 1irs� trianalsla3 in quite 1a0rsist�renfoac0d. and cannot be enforces# t°altt'ly cpt► tan a grous;.toe. Ilei shied vig€ar0uely at teal determined that it has "nen without awakening a resentment and ulnas is a *'eat 19aistake, and that Uzi, shadow of it. But not neer an ctenl lu➢spr,+ vaccination is ono of the instant dial his eyes strati front Mrs. HERE AND THEk�Ek indignation that would bespeak its 1 neem. ru7st tearful autLegues et sacrt+d i,r.^t l.tt+oz's trace. " Ilainsurn ri;latn that selllslln0ss and N > "Under the !1~ct, Gia'ptcr 2UG. Sec Ile had re�en her axe'tarc-�:e^ce l's' :Wates of Interest About Almost tion 6, it iS I►rovided that the cowardice have ever devised. fore. That point alone wrought self- Council of each city or town within h "To sate the cast! most moderate- fore. Province shall appoint a con-' ly, there is a question as to tho v i If the claims merits at acclnat on a ward thereof. t Bait►rt place in each rd c . theta .i 1. Ile had called one day • s • load given 9 h r and she 1 ltlara o e with E , p them tea: Ilii verdict had been, "E treht;el,t pretty, sarcastic, and a She rolls 4:5.300 ,000 worth a year. trine cold." •t woman who has Plied at SLet- lie;' sssrvwed in his eyeglass and field lug",and, aged sixty-eix, had teemed still further hack. lie .naw Creighton introduce four 111011. `.t`iti>n $+ ant fear toc•si t years In bed. bis control gave way. Ile forcers .an Tit -ougb nut the woold about 8 per ethn e,* in the crowd ; but when he teat. of 1•eiiplc gain their lining de- n 9ntl • from the seal Everything, Bank of England notes cost a half ceu tuna © to 1.rodur0, acne: ell'5 biggest export Is timber. r'ea he'ts her side and npohe, his tioleo (l' tuatty, ticitA 1,003 parer mills, lr;. t 'a to►.e that, even to ;bier, was makes may lith as much paper es teeny. 1 Great Britain with but 8000. "May I have the pleasure ?" l -the luoieel up with just the faint- est soul+rise, Then her eyes fell on the facings of his red coat. and she smiled—tine friendliest and most per - feet smile he had ever seen. "J---•" She hesitated and glanced round for Creighton ; but Creit;lhton had disappeared. She smiled again, and held out her card. "I can give ;Yon number five," she said. "Win you put downy our name ?" Ile took the card and scrawled his initial-„ Then he looked at the ob'viou sly waiting men. "Number six is also free," be said, "May I--- ?" Ile would not have admitted the feelings with which be waited for her reedy. Ile saw the negative trembling on her lips, and quailed. 'then to his absurdly great relief, the saving smile came again, and she blushed. "You may.'" The words seemed the frankest and most delightful he had ever heard. There is nothing in the world so vivifying as hope. In a single mo- ment the sitifting crowd had become the universe, and he had found its core. Like a wonderfully deferred dream the fifth dance came' around, and waiting was at an end. "Mine, I think," he said. She folded her fan, smiled at the man beside her, then laid her hand on Cranfield's arm. ""Shall we dance ?" he asked. "Oh 1 please." Be hid his disappointment, though his ideas were curiously upset. She seemed so enthusiastic—so buoyantly young. The music had quickened to its end, when he swung. her out of the crush. His brain was still swaying to the beat of the tune as he drew her down a passage to a distant seat. In ten minutes of companion- ship she had grown straight into his life. The carpet of the passage was very soft ; the light of the hanging: lamp was very dim. It seemed to him that he had only existed until now. He arranged the cushions on the divan, and she sat down. "Do you believe in infatuation ?" he asked suddenly. He felt afraid of what he was. go- ing to `say. He felt that his prin- ciples, his honor—he used the word boldly—all staple things were .drifting from him like a mirage. "Rave you ever heard of a man • going off his - head in a single• night ?" he asked afresh. She looked up at him ; and behind the uneasiness in. her eyes he felt that, .sae. was measuring .him -Inch by inch:. "I'd like to ask you something," she said, "if you don't mind." She glanced down, and then- once more -glanced up, , ""I want you - to tell me your value." He met her . gaze in blank sur- prise. It was' hard to be' rebuked ; it was inhuman to be forgotten— wiped off her memory in six weeks. `"You've been puzzling me the whole night," she said. ""Of course, I. know that you're come friend of Tommy's ; but' what friend—and where I' met yotn—" .he broke off Suddenly and bathes : af,t • him , once h r were established O'er* vaccination C e oY he Council of every township andt c 0 y and incorporated village shall ap- point a convenient place therein. for the performance, at least once in each mnonth, tot vaccination, ;`and , Ytrt>nee with Individual ri;;hts, It .hall talo effect ►al nteans par g +~, N emnpels subjection of the body to a to all persons resident within each kuoavn evil, in entieipation of a ward, or within tbe township or elur9httul good. It refuses to the in - voltage. due notice of the clays and dititlnai the richt of judgment In a hours at which the medical !arae ! g Wiener contracted with for snot iteestionnble platter, and makes the at was 1804 done. from ,iu,Y1115 *� ' chemists who nnade SO Complete an marketing, but he dente ideas of dans, establislnznetrt of the National re- -- ,n fha rar,nrti � -- Durham, _ _ that four years ago he was able to say, "Not a heir of the beef Is wasted, and the hogs are all used is eapt the grunt," A lean who could keep at the the smokestack to the clinker it tt front in the matter of byproducts made from special designs and Ile' bad a great advantage as as cont- tailed da'atsings by a staff of eon• pouter in glowers. who Iaaaro learned the buei- THE 4A1N mom= lJG'r. ,kness by seamy ; ego's of practieat ew He could sell the latter on 4: very! Faience. narrow Margin, and stilt Male geed Yaeious representatives of fioo profits. large #newel:Caerl:4e firms stated to Mr. Swift had other Ideas. One, ai "Citizen" reporter that the ilia of then was that the uaeaOw% for' tailed drawings fa►rnielaea by Mese meats could be supplied far better engineers :are Mier to iraai'w 1➢r'0t txtoo➢ and snore economically it suitable tiga►ree upon than any that go into provisions were ;nada for preee1ving; their worn's, and the machines when the product in transit and storage. built and installed run with less Ido ttias pre-eminently the than of , trouble thorn weer others with seuirh • .r r car and war•elapuer.. they have to deal. They call ape e e t 190 neer; a oto 1. As a result of lois efforts in this akin that Ike fact that the Sunda nuaht he some defence for the law. field fresh treats can be carried al- engineers who (lessen the plant me lint there being a question touching Most any distance in any climate !u'9•sntend its 0lteretion after con' these clairns, the law that enforces and laic' down in perfect condition rtructlon is a very Strong arsure;rrce the practice is an unjustifiable inter - A STRONG POIN1" in favor of this oa'ganization lies in' the fact that all machinery. the buildings. and the entire plant frown flood iuttnded to be .lade into pi- impose will attend to vaccinate all 'c fi nate of has own holy ane the anus ►equiays 1.0 be kept forty years persons not successfully vaccinated, bodies of his cl►ildr�hh, afalevit that to 1•p in perfect condition. .who may then appear there, 1tl Izich be believes to be an evil, a r Itt- i ai, deme no . con ish be n � a Government ... tum a •1J9eClt a ret f 1. ht 1a n o to united "This fundamental prot•isloxh for States' gives deeds away to farmers the eaaforceuient of the Jaw is not Waits an assault upon the person and cash year to the value of $16t7,C1t1t9. sandy not complied with in most will of the individual, under pre - Nearly everybody enrolee s0 Jho- localities, but in the city of To- dente of protecting the body from. ••• ,. I disease. that divine law does not sanction even to soave the soul. "tJ HEIR OF AUSTRIA -HUNGARY. Personalty of rho Archduke Franz Ferdinand, pan. lee girls Legtthest they are ten years of age and the boys a year earlier. The beer Decree of The ;Stades at (treat Bentley, Essex, England. bast been held by the wane family for 5(!0 yawn 5. At Kauko.. in Central Africa, tbe average annual temperature is 83.5 degrees Fahrenheit. This is the world's re.:ord for heat. Census returns for Buckingham- shire, ]'England, show that the num- ber of unmarried women — 57,928— is precisely tie same as the number of beeteeors. The Pope at ninety-four reads without spectacles, wallas without a cane; dresses and undresses without assistance, and works about four- teen Lours daily. In lhroportioa to population, Spain, Norway, and Ireland have more blfnrl neolile than any other European countries. Spain has 216 trer 1.00,000; Norway, 208; and Ire- land, 111. Ladies are largely em to od in London in rent -collecting, earning commissions of 4 and u per cent. One lady is responsible for rentals amounting to about $135,000 per a11IL',rn. The world now consumes 6,300,- 000,000 ,300;000,000 pounds of tobacco yearly, or 2,812,500 tons. This is worth $260,000,000. In other words, the world's smoke bill is just $5,000,- 000 5,000;000 a week. Some of the residents in the -vil- lage of Wardle, near Eoshdale, Eng- land, have formed a Tree -planting Association, with the object of im- proving the - appearance of their streets and the approaching roads. The proportion of married people to the population is highest in Hun- gary, wLere 407 per 1,000 of the people are married. Portugal srtancls at the other end of the list, with only 310 married per 1,000. Chicago puts forth 'a claim to be considered the true Babel of the twentieth century. No fewer than any Public, Separate, or High forty languages are spoken •within school to -provide that no children its limits, and of fourteen each is shall be permitted to attend any spoken by more than 10,000, school without producing a certifi . ronto its fiery existence as a law has been entirely overlooked by the Mayor and the Medical health. Offi- cer. VACCINATION OF BABIES. "Under Sections 7 and. 8 of the Act, the father or mother of every '.hild born within the Province. shall, within three months after the birth of Such child, take, or clause to be taken, the child to the medical practitioner in attendance at the appointed plata, for the purpose of being vaccinated, unless the child has been previously vaccinated; and upon the eighth day following the vaccination the father or ,another shall again take, or cause to be taken, the child to the medical prac- titioner, in order that he may ascer- tain by inspection the result of the operation. The penalty for non- compliance with these requirements is set forth in Section 13. If a father or mother does not cause the child to be vaccinated within the periods prescribed by this Act, or does not, on the eighth day after the vaccination, take, or cause to be taken, the child for inspection, then the father or mother, so of- fending, shall he liable to a penalty not exceeding $5.00 recoverable on summary conviction before a Police Magistrate. SCHOOL LAWS AND VACCINA- TION. "In spite of the unmistakable terms of the Act, and the penalty for non-compliance, the law is so far ignored and treated as an un- meaning thing that not till applica- tion is made for admission of chil- dren to the Public schools, at ages varying from five to ten years, is it discovered that their parents are violators of the law. The Public school system becomes the net to catch these offenders under Section. 16 of the Act, which declares that it shall be lawful for the trustees of Tho famous prophecy of the ]ate JlI. de 1Dlowitr, that the death of the Emperor Francis Joseph of Aus- tria-Hungary would be the signal for the great European war, leaves out of count, an omno degree, the personality of.tlhe heir to the Aus- tro-Hungarian throne—the Arch- duke Franz Ferdinand. An appar- ently well-informed correspondent tells us something of the character of this man upon whom so much may hinge. "Franz Ferdinand is a man of bis times, but he evidently thinks it unbecoming for persons of certain rank to hunt for pr c ss suc- cess. He is discreet. Tho news- papers have often printed news or judgments concerning him that were incorrect ; he has never had them contradicted. 'Some day,' he says, 'it will bo seen that 1 was misjudged.' "The Princess, for the Arch- duke's wife being by birth. a mere Countess of a family that doesn't reign could not become an Arch- duchess, leads only a domestic life. Discreet, reserved, hating ostenta- tion and external show as much as does her husband, she devotes her- self with,. scrupulous delicacy' to avoiding every occasion where her rank, which doesn't correspond - to her true station, might arouse mis- understandings or bring up ques- tions of etiquette. "As the wife of the heir to the throne she cannot be confused with the general public ; but, ' on the other hand, her official rank pre- cludes her taking place with her husband in court life ; she. there- fore, keeps away. "Franz Ferdinand is a hard work- er. He hds all the education that is indispensable to a cultivated gen- tleman and is, besides, a specialist in military - science, - economics and the science of government., As re- gards' music and ' art his knowledge does .not: rise above the, level of a cultured man of the world who has a certain amount of taste." A good Indian elephant can be ob- taned for $700, while $1,500 would hardly purchase an African elelhant. The latter are now very scarce, only five having been brought to Europe since the year 1880. Police tati&taCs show that the ar- rests for -drunkenness. in London •bre^ at. 'the annual rate of one to every 175 inhabitants; in Birmingham one to 153; in Manchester one to 71; and in Liverpool one to 50. It he.s. just been discovered that there exists, at Rapperscvyl, Switzer- land, a fund consisting of nearly $50,000, which .has been subscribed by Poles in various parts of the world for the purpose of waging war on 'Russia when a propitious time shall arrive. cate 41, successful vaccination when demanded by 'the teacher. "Froin this, it would appear that all parents who delay "i'accination of children till' compelled to vaccina- tion by the provisions of the Public School Board, are guilty of an of- feiiee ' un:der Section '7 'of the Act, and are liable to a penalty not exceeding $5.00, recoverable on summary conviction before the Police Magistrate. It would further appear that there , is little desire on the part- of anyone interested to en- force the nforce-the law, as the facts of viola- tion are easily procured, 'arid the punishment of a score of parents would soon effectively call attention to the matter. But who desires to see the law enforced ? WIW1'0 they aro wanted. Another fact, and one "specially worthy of .remark. is that Mr. Swift was not a speculator in any objec- tionable eense of the word. Ile r•aw ntateriale are abundant, of er• was. indeed., a good Judge of market ceetional purity, that both lime. conditions. He could forecast as roue and clay lit' at the very door well as any of them. Ile acted with of the factory, that they have water - an eye an probable future condi-it power at the very low rate of 813 Vous, So far he was a speculator. , per horse -power, that they have as every In•ndent buyer and seller both water and rail transportation must be. but he was not a market from the Company's own dua's, rigger. He did notrun cornersorThen the Company are play any of Who speculative games of Ito build a railway or steam power the Board of Trade. He achieved Plaut, thus enabling then to build his remarkable success inthe come' a mucks larger factory with tbe same partitively short space of twenty- eight years by strictly business me- thods, Iia did it by enacting ie11- r •nut economics an 3' nt; the, consuming public better product and service. And he did it in a ileld which to the ordinary observer seemed fully occupied. He suppiled a valuable illustration of the truth of its succerefirl and economical working. ''The favorable paints of thi' Ottawa or !lull proposition are that the amount of capital, and thereby ma- terially - terially increasing the earning power of the plant. It is further to ho pot d iv i i , noted that with TBEIft OWN 1IOAT LIN:. they can market their cement at all ports in the Lower Provinces, and through the Rideau Canal can that as society is constituted leen„ reach all Ports surrounding Lake of brains, energy and perseverance Ontario. Tlreir beats instead of r4'- can always fled opportunities to isn- turning chntlty (roan eahstern ports prove their fortunes and benefit their fellow men in so doing. There would be no such oppor- can VACCINATION OF THE ADULT. No man canpitintoan advertise meat What is not in himself. If he "Nor does it appear that the is businesslikehis advertisements most strict enforcement of the law will, be businesslike, would effect the purpose: for which can bring back coal on their return„ trips. The location as to the mar - /iota to be supplied could not be tunities under the artificial social better, as there is no Portland Ce - organism for which some people long, and industrial progress would be as dead as it is in India or China. 4 BREAKING Mt! IN. The momentous question, "What. shall we make little Georgie ?" was agitating tat in his parents. •'I've thought of a plan 1" ex- claimed the father at last. "We must get him some useful toys— nothing like watching the toys a boy is most fond of to find out his natural bent. Get him a toy print- ing rinting press, a steam engine, a box of paints, a chest of tools, and any- thing else you can think of to find out what his tastes are." "Very well, my dear," said Mrs. Brown. "I'll get them to -morrow." But on the succeeding evening !ors. Brown greeted Brown with a very puzzled expression. "I got all those -things," she said. "Yes ; well ? And what does he like best ?" "I don't know. Tie's smashed them all up 1" For a moment Mrs. Brown's puz- zled expression was reflected in Mr. Brown's face. "I have it," he said triumphantly at last. "We'll make him a furni- ture remover !" A STINGINGPROTEST. Conducting a sale at Aldenham, Herts,under a distress for .rent,' an auctioneer recently had a novel ex- perience. Upset at having his goods sold, the owner rushed into the midst of the bidders and pitched a hive of bees 'upon the ground.1 Against such unexpected competition the 'auctioneer and bidder beat a hasty retreat, blit the owner, relent- ing, soon; afterwards hived his bees, and the sale was allowed to proceed. Mrs. M'Plaidget—"Who wrote the song, 'There's only one girl in the world for me ?' '" Sir. M'Phiclget— "Adam, I ,.suppose." • nient produced in the Lower Pro- vinces, and the bulk of all the ce- ment consumed in Ottawa, Montreal. and the Maritime Provinces is of necessity imported from Germany, Belgium, and the United States against a duty of 43c. per barrel. The "Citizen" article notes as a favorable point, that the C.P.R. and the Canada Atlantic railways a aye run right by the doors of the fac- tory, also the water way which gives a free outlet from the ware- house docics of the Company into the Ottawa river and thence direct to Montreal, Quebec, and the sea board cities, The Hull works will, it is claimed, surpass in efficiency and equipment any of the plants yet designed by these men, and will supply Cement to Eastern Ontario and the Lower Provinces from its advantageous location, just as the Durham works is well placed to supply the Western Peninsula. The business ability and scientific skill of the people who have this work in hand point to its success as an important industrial enterprise and promise well, we consider, for its financial success also. --+ The greatest meteorite ever found is that recently discovered by Pro- fessor Ward at Bacubirito, in Meld - co. It is 13 fent long, n feet wide, and 5 feet high,• and weighs 50 tons. It took 28 men a day to -uncover it. THE INVISIBLE JAMES: "Now, James," said the joiner to his apprentice, "I am going out. I `don't expect I shall be long, and you can be planing up that ten -by-. eight beam till I come. back.:' But, alas 1 . misfortune ' . overtook the joiner. He slipped at the bot - tons of the street,, sprained • • his ankle, and had to be taken home. The next day towards evening he hobbled into his workshop, andwas confronted by, an enormous pile of shavings. James was invisible. "Jim !" he called. "Hallo !" came a far-off echo. "Where are you ?" "Down here under the shavings!" "W-why—what are you up to ?" "Planing than beam up. You told me to keep at it till you came back; but if you'd kept away any longer. there'd have been none left," It was perhaps just as well for Jim that his master's accsd*n% had disabled his foot: Vienna 'almost always holds - a world's record for suicide. In the first nine months.of last. year. 1150 men and 98 women succeed ed killing themselves, and another 367 made unsuccessful attempts. Wolves can, and often do, run 5C to 60 miles in a night. -'Foxes travel great distances in search of food. Nansta saw an Arctic fox out on the ice, 480 miles from the Asiatic Coast. A Sy will lie motionless at a Item, peratnre of freezing point, begin, 'tet crawl at 53 degrees, to buzz and 63 at 68 degrees 113 degrees et dry heat will usually kill a 8y ir: t` short time.