HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1925-2-12, Page 2SED THE WORLD
Humor from the, e of Mark Twain.
Gems of f�>��
His Wife's Advice. a
f the. meet difficult things. ., , each fife's'* -lie declares,. "
It is one o )atom .,
in' the world t melee the•inWorld )arum•, • rivand'
in fern . ands young mats now emerged, and the six-;
andfar between,
, stand. being ! teen lined up and i '
far botiv@en, shoula n, valued aerord•. r stood in front of the Governor with,
f
3ulY. Mark Twain, the American spoke far a',
,king• here their attitude. No one a
author, was one of the privileged tow an aspect of respectftilGo Governor said:
what this gift t on being a true story =meat Then the Goversaid:
1
Is an illustration, being `Yoe are dismissed, gentlemen.
talc) by n ce arrived
l ved lecture in a car-' serviced are not req ared. beli MT. Mark •
He once arrived to let Twain is sitting on when Cleve -
lecture
thin town, and as there was nobody • On another occasion,
there s hall an kithe went on to the land had become President, he. called
t tried. to gain admit ,there
lecture util..and by the ticket , at the White House. .While .
ctante,lltor: was stoppedturnd to Mrs. Cleveland and gave
collector:— ! her his card, on which he had writte eign it. i
"Ticket, Please.. "I did not," and: asked her to but at
" She could not understand,
lVlark Twain bent over and whisper- d and Mark Twatu
ed: "It's all right. I am.the lecturer. length she consented, his i
One Too Many then handed her' a note -written t et his
The man closed ono eye impressive -wife. It read; d
your
said, loud enough for all the goloshes in the White House." to has
ly and: , , you don't, Three ,
crowd to hear, `Ivo was Mark's device for proving
af, you have got in up to now, but the wife that he had remembered to obey
next lecturer that goes in here to-
orders
.ti
Fifteen T lyt,Wand! for Social Natural Resources Bulleti>t�.• AYR :S,.A.
h BUENOS
7-7
aygieale• •
;Che Natural Itesources Intelligence
•t rent of the
Service of the Dep:;ert
ll tal'y concerned in SocialU nada s dais prod
I.
I.onging the average eength I t btl the tries and are ,mecmg is o Buenos Ayres, which alio, Prince of
life has been shd�vn ra'cent y 5 tttion with iacieasing success. oDer- yizaies is to visit, may well claim to
futnouticetnent or a grant of Insurance' ing thq twelve months ending N st sporting city in the world'
suranee increased her ex -:'tie the i1 o
from :m American Life o bel last, Canada a1- people )lava' always
the (;arts exte Social Hy-�, ports of dairy products in nearly , Its two million p p ''circuses" d.
Company nc t tension, of its t?0 the case boen, well provided with
gime Council for the e�* 1 lines, ,This wags especially
and cream.) polities. The
with butter, rriillc p keep. their minds off p ie even to-
thecialized public heath work all overer for outsido
o
the Dominion. , ad_ To toe, supply of bAtt standard of sport, indeed,
t is to be used in sere , clay much higher than that of public
The gran health r all markets Canada contributed 21,676,-, f
ing .the en°gos. p of social' da03g pounds the past: twelve: menthe,
in
. a of .Reads and in year ( Racing is a esti d favors ho
uti in arts G as ages -11s b t The lin
the o y p ch no
Ibot the rural cis we•`l as urban ittea14t at Ott we,
dweller
CITY OF SPORT -
says.
' ' ucts are making,y Daisy Crabbe Curtis•
{
is vi coon
Hygiene as a means of definitely Pro, a name for themselves an t•rill comps
ofsessaie
titer new and amusing boot
president of tae Irish Free State, poses for his
William �T, Cosgrave, pi -
bust, which is being executed by George F. Waters, the American sculptor,.
t did: = - -- -
night pays." Ano 3n has Auteuil s u
The above is taken tram '"Mark I reminiscences is liar. Flank Rattigan s which was ."Diversions of a Diplomat" •
-
' ora 5 D
i pForeign
b g
ut
a e
A
th
i
n s of
va read
•Ti 1.
rs nt
@f n
b a { a @
or rm
d b the famous Ruth The pe i became
bushed was a
The Grass.
he di- e Y ago, and which t
fourteenyears _ Office, of which, Mr. Rat e� ao the old ,
How is the grass set free?.?
he djipnot be published official, martin
he stipulated should What liberates the green.
Here are some an /order. Is there some urging need,
more of the
his death, ,, in the book: o d
ems "The first occasion on which I had • Some inkling of that upper, far -spread
{of
of 1,he many g reit to Dr. John t
ria a v to wait - upon him with a sample for scene,
Once a ianauth- handwriting, he glared a be --the seed,
the Edinburgh phY,�tc my bandit This wedged
Brown, wife went a went and then snapped, That wills:* Go forth and be?
with
Mark Twainitrand his
and of visits to pa- handwriting is allowable in a pennate' •:`
with him on his round
doctor was ilius- but until we have had the opportunity
i How can the tiny grains,
the e
bents. When I Held under er you are @
one, t tit Y
first @
barking £ the carriage at his fi of judging whether
etopping•place to see a pati•ent, he re- must write more clearly.'I that moist smothering
} Ambition. Y
earth,
heavy
n from
a
brown
In ,
„ yourselves whileClerks Am , Foresee the' sunlight's worth, era. trades or professaolas iu
"Entertain You Theolds training and his peculiar)
marked: E of his own g
ere and reduce the papula „ remember a discussion amongst , Or dare, when that hard surface h There are grown men and
Igo to - I n one of them them down, aptitude. h
• f c
1
ahs whe
o
tion. b
bet- h hi h
't 12,935,279 pounds a
mahing•.possib:e a national scheme for. Rao• This butter, than w t e Argentine. and the best
ter is made, was supplied to twenty breeding of good horses,
the
affairs. national institutio
adequate education of all parents " es The United Kitlgdoni is of , bl od stock of the world Is imported.
and children 'in'the essential meLriing, countri
and vital importance ,of the funds course, the largest co
mentals of social hygiene, has. Germany, Belgium, and Newfoteallaind
It is understood that this oder h i are heavy; purchasers. it is ai in-
come through the very favorable re -
at to est to note that China and. Japan
ports made, by the , officials at . the' are in the market for Canadian
butter,
00
Canadian' headquarters ,of this conetaking -between them pang in Ottawa, r:egaxding'the acttvi--gaunds in November.
and pregram of the ' Social Hy- Milk powder is another of our ties P 6 exports having
gime Council. rapidly 'growing farm.
• In speaking of the uses to which its primary source the dairy aiodl
In the above twelve months' pe' t a o ,
this money is likely to be put Dr 'the
mills aha' P was ibera` of ten 'Years' standing are
don BRtes, General' Secretary of the 7,717,576 pound's of mi p nice
we have fifty as compared with 3,031,- now eligible. Even so, there is a con -
Council, said:- "Though exported, The amount
siderable waiting list•
1
O'
branches of our Council throughout 502 pounds a year ago,
to stn oft goedensed milk exported increased Longing lit' Rival.
Canada, and n national P ' Bx two 00 ands last year to b ` of which the Prince will
n u
been 6 cl
9 po
6 e
have 0 h
q ,p d •
a ,
h 3
social hygiene, theta i from , ear. During
finitely weak spots in our move- 43786,000. pounds this yeabecerae r. •d atiSo our cheese ex- visie is tmagnificently housed Ton one
' in tee -world: The
of`theflnest Plazas
edifice has a notable facade and a fine
entrance -hall and:staircase,. a fa
On the first landing thele islmere:
mous Diana sculptured :by g fere.
Corinthian columns, with dream
tion of onyx, ivory, and azni ejos are•
o lendid' r'acin'g re
neunxer, whiiol For a sireawith a sp
cord over £30,000,bas been. paid, The
Argentine feels that be has to keep up
to tradition in horseflesh.
The Jockey Club at.Buenos Ayres is
probably the richest and most excite
sive sporting ,organization in the
world, It scarcely , ktrow,s how` to
spend the vast revenue piled up by its
race -meetings• The entrance fee is
h fit &2 500; and only the ; sons of
Sery'ce.
i
orifi one life, to
Since ' a• • man ' has
lead, he wants .it' to `cvcount, and is
bound to invest it where it yie ds the
largest returns, not in ep
eral
pleasure, not : in the chaff. which ,the
wind driveth away, but in service
"simply given to his own kind in their
human need." )lin he
When he first chooses a ca g,
carefully balances the claims of sen-
the light
UeL a to rem-
ment, and these we now hop
edy, - One has been the need of organs
1
' rs in both Eastern arid Western
as been n The United States takes practically
of
the same peria , ,
ports' increased from 116,982,500
ounds in 1923 to, 120,116,200 pounds
tze ho a to' `appo'nt at i 924
Canada. These we p 1
one ex orfs of c '
a num ei ,I can't thiel:
The New dish. I remarked to another, stay
Meredith, the life of from earth's deed. heart,
childhood concerns Da saved an an a „was the reply, .
who saved Mark's if you feel like that, That edict: Unlash; go l;
life
times leads Mark , don't you go? • • I have a de -
Undoubtedly,
shall behold a sky.
times. Which why dOn being ted) blades know
e seVeralin on. Undoub y
lifstaying a
in
s y
t
wasobject e
heb
o
1finite ]
1
"Still, x-1
Twain to remark: S1 A�motion to leap high,
meant well. Let it go•" ,pressed to tell us his objecbeefuse • that makes them start
good man and often tire -Something
me was a sickly child,plained
that it - awe ore to which
some; and when his mother was in her to subscribe Office Or, from an ambient sun,
eighty-eighth year he once said to her: would be sent to the Foreign. Perhaps, through miles of air
uneasy about on tie demice of our formidable i l rd pro
I P h t•n e." Afraid lief+,
fair n
To suffer thrusting pains?
One of alark Twain's stories. of his why a rich man like yourself canis it
slavery like this. Well,
women on the concert .platform w o
are miscast because .they wanted the
e
e would
glamour and: applause:; they
' have done better to follow some
prosaic ,occupation outside the' spot-
light:
A rich merchant took a fancy to the
uffeur, bought him a
son ' of his chs ,
costly violin, and was bound to make
him a concert virtuoso. The boy
teak
a lot of ;expensive; lessons and
d the
cress to speak of.
e: The second weakness h team n
in aux failure to work a :par ..en 'ie exports
se en. �lsri he :.increased tariff.:
scheme for
the adequate ,• withstaei >
f'adolescents and children The twelve ^months ending Nov 87 452
of social hygiene, 24 showed2
in the meaning d 19the line compared with
out nationalti
i •
ttfic
education o
e•
ne so s deliveries- c of �, ' 1 part'of the decoration, A fine billiards
thaearliest years onward, slides across, hall, dining -Tom: s, luxurious que
per from the pro- a lions in 1923.
throb h . a and drawing rooms, rooms for cards,
me tothem ga''''''')•—•
g evcl e nal
•e ma co,th d� e it the q
bei Yallied with make tn
etc., t
ee ,
sbaths
Lo
toclosely
rais
u
ccfencing 1
but Dairying c
r{n g
uIfs
per channels a gradual,e
Da Y g
led a regarding certain bio -
objectives
ur i cement of the land. Raising
tdhe ae ped, i e any club. in the world. Beautiful
ow
g it to live stock,
lu
xu
r-
logical facts, and the maintenance of feeding . paintiugs and other expensive contri-:
la
nd
standards b a conduct In our i the resultant fertilizer upon theof establish-
definite
et luxur
cleanat -these enation measure that tivillI fes like tapestries and carving,
work so far, we have aimed fort is'a cons of bate to the elegance
educative work ensure the continuous productivibent. ricin
objectives by
parents. But we feel that Canada's 'greatest natural resourceAmericans assert that the g
adults and'pare i lands: os Ayres is the finest
and agricultural nil at Buenos ground: truerh g
to
io ,
Eu i
li•ld education the world
'' suppose you were ` There fails a faire g n word no - b
e?'+ "Yes, the w oa i " o Descriptive a how mea that chauffeurs' sons ought not
m youDuring
• i the
h in }q b mists" No• but in this
Y
visit of the King and
I wouldn't. live? Ivo, afraid Dur ng l To see the thunderous rain—t e s S to: try e a . '
would.' Queen to Gibraltar an their return tante it is probable that the lad
hot
at
author he
a
t
rb
ar
Dn o I
e
Delhi r time. h r
the sir
a
from t to i' htl spun was w
instance
relates
I •r'n the studio that
Of his daughter. atm.'s, childhood, The white snow lightly a number of amusing incl- a certain function
geCirag few o point-' might well have -been spent ell learn- ro fe�Ion a fr
b bench -to bee good me - their P theatre.
dents r When she was sixtoa woman seated .ata Now the brave g 1 stall at the
in Ger- ed • chanic.
and r � adage you: can't make tions require every
bird—
ing
a
aggressive .— er
more g
a ver
u e
should b hoi� ,•
e
ins
' i. n
d fl rte plan 'to ensure c �
,��,I �,� •a< hold that the course , at Longshampsr
t our plans ,'� < ,, � > Paris, is more course
thanats equal. Despite
gr
t MedicalM h Europe Can
stands are admittedly ` r - •:� . ^�.. � he ectators are;
dans
1 ��' :; - e: T p
to i oro
Paris physicians have been thing in D p row of gr
testes of s � � x k a^ ated in a
r u od
e e m
the q ��•
'r1• one o , p
• f
last
g
eta g
-
ger
e nI
along . all these `lines. This $15,009
ant will enable• us to pu . ,s#'� yY " a ,
'•te effect." • , �� � kt ' :a.�"`' F,..�y.,5, all efforts, the going is apt. to bei en -
to immed7a sand dusty during the long hot A g
in
tine summer.
n < z ? Finer Than Show.
Ancient Courtesy o'
'Theatres w a: Buenos Ayres buildings and
Profession m Paris Th � But
`° �',�s��" '�-�'�••' 'ttedly 'finer than any
•`h t i e
� ht
w
act
orchestra ,• '? • +that: for the special use of
...- ,.,.,,G • stands, .
members of the jockey and their faint
-
lies being mainly of white marble;
capped with a gracetel.roofing. Be-
hind; the weer roils of seats is• a
spaci'ous=' promenad'e,' with tables' for
afternoon. tea;: and, further: back; large
and well-appointed club :rooms.
Worthy of attention too, is the long
series of other white building's; elab-
orate i r:r.Tw. ss" n:q<. �.•nd. spacious, and the' space en-
orale
unneces-'lased by the.track This is not the
�,>^ .;•s�; cWith flower
ot'iitries, � ��,�,i�.�•.�.�•xt.•"•4.•'rt�`.•.��:��'<z•: � itsusl bare field, but'is gay wa
'bade,- shrubberies, and rivulets cross-
ed by little white bridges.
There are three courses, one out-
side the other. The outermost gives
a, gallop equal to the' 'longest of Bri-
tish "classic" races. •
Sport and 'Spectacle- Too.
she was the Governor o notherl c`
answer spreads- in . at the ,• - ea _police regula- �
theatre to have
ere. The old
n roughlyt he earth is . k urse out of a sow's ear was a medical,man on service �at each Per-
aired concerning „ author re naked suffering oft a thus p coin whom a seat is re
her table and andnd The The h Abraham Lm , fern -lance, for
o a darling." d Y o
v t
at 1 OC
of h ht d
it, and learned that it was made W thank' clad; lag y __
nd impressed, plied, "Does your Exceliencya flood , Oftela enough the
it She was awed a i 1 unched him on A velvet folds the sphere; who was in the leKcut of a+pig's�
k sends a friend to replace - hi�rn brit
and said, "Wald ones, eloquence ending an e. ca farmer•• at
., I always axran.
with her father she found arnew dish table, and said. "The guapal" which Even the.rock is glad;• -
many One clay rasaiated, means in English, , The green -the green is h
n « ar i arae r:
• s mammas so and a protest Th the )lend their heads. you ca Conn s so that the
May Lew tail,. till a Hartford
s he -says himself, Mark Twain of against anyone who could 'remain itn- can find him rapidly an case of need.
—avase ., •-" Once tae, event to see ag made one and sent it -to ham It just recei'tly started'1
yeas born las, • moved b
s that
• habit of observing served.
sea's. „ �„ Its a -theatre,,
n't=zea e a , •
Governor (afterwards President) „I disc
CleeeIand-he had known .Cleveland agree ee wi
to fame—and he sat on �' It w
before he rose
the corner= of a table while Cleveland
and another friend remained standing
and talking. There, appeared to Mark
to be about sixteen doors to the spa-
cious
pa
cious room.
y such beauty. y Theatre managers i
intention to dis- proved that we: mustn't la down the
any tt rs as unexcepti.on-
laimed h
with him," Mr- Rattigan de-
the r
in
t
ate
,< ch
1
much
as ,%
clares.
evening when the excited, Governor
clutched me by the hand and begged
me to forgive his outspoken remark
about my wife."
lased to delight his young favorites,
land which never fails of effect with
that fit audience tor� a Ch it is tiCsede-
signed
-
signed if it be told wt ririt
' in the manner that our waysof p
nt-
ing it may sufficiently indicate with-
out the aid. of -musical notation. Ex
with -
,
Crede. Prick up your ears then,
• my. good little women and men, and
I ye who are neither' so for little
here follows
good, favete lingui
Bears,
'a
tale
ea
re
e
B ,
Th
the d of learn-
ed
earn-
which may cone , „
"Once
e And so he e , " ars
agitation to obtain• freedom from, this i
gi
law in such matters at was unfair,
able.But if the probabilities are•that tax,arguing
a girl _
a singer, or than a like the United States and England.
boy will make . a good engineer an They seeRrted
point, with special medical service at!,
a poor sculptor, each. should have the police -station as a sub-)
1 trainan-g .that will eatable him or her. the nearest p,
i to qualify for the highest value, in-
stitute, when within one week two i
theatre patrons died while witnessing'
stead of that which will produce dis- rformances--one at the opera and
heartened muddlers in fields of effort pe impress
er in a playhouse=and the Cornelius T. Cramp, chef an othe
ue y are inept the other t' shat bar paety, says The successful - - sides
who finds h employee
will' make a better seamstress sary and not known in other e
than she Willd
to lva winning their i.
farwhich, e a
h essful employer is the man °malngers deckled to let the quer ion's Brits• of New York will a'l'ways be at
th loy�e can do d tidy prosperity," where- people
best and sets ham
� as a vast employ t
what
e �
at it. The world.:
at large, 'm'eet bureau,
each
un
%erect skyscrapers, but .neglect to,
vyill sooner or later discover
t d 1� — —
sweep their side streets.
man's ability; and if -he re uses o o
at he is best able to do, he is anis.' // o o.,• !'fat Some Plants.Can Do.
what
economic superfluity and cannot ex-\ % �.... b : (, Some kinds - of plants have•been
econo J lata
ect to'receive the ; wage that goes; �1 �� Edited which can . be made to P
I h start of the g
mins valuable laboier..,, Save he 1 )
t nt the to the t
e'
1
retie"- ,
rs a i .I
e m
:• h an Y r
hilae no s
�r<>;-<i%":•;.;.:<..'r�<•' d rave p• P � serve, it just as.�itQ P
• ;rt r ,, .ri :; d men an g n '- • • e f � 1 - )ants absorb , j
begins the story: O interrupted Flout. .• when he selves m- son
were Three esong-of than " a :drone •and a i v na�Eta
the p
on a time there anythingR. c<,,,,-� ns will absorb light, and then give it
w,,. •' .• up house of their 1st Comedian: Dad your morehotographic plate is
• together in. a Mill -Stream flow smoothly?' . ' .1.
social burden. But it crust be.rem Fate, out again. ' A P
who lived g e speeches 1d thandComehtheht,,I
All th"Welk, no; ; embered that constructive thong His the pl'a'its, and when the.
slime. Yoko Takahashi is the first
own in a wood."ld Eng- and Comedian — W creative
appear l big O -With dams." e criticism and the power of Clam -"There's Mr. Oyster, s
woman of to be made a college
the huge bear d constructed it w creafnv helpful' ,•'
t e
professor.
law and structure
e
italics' As a story -teller for chis
The grounds outside the track aro
embellished with flowers, lawns..: and
trees, including eucaly etre. pines,. and
'palms. An excellent band; discourses --
music, while a throng of gaily -dressed
people the men—at feast, the Argon-
tines—in faultless attire, the ladies in
elegant Parisian costume with a
liberal display of jewellery contribute
Ito the brilliant spectacle.
--a5
LClli • SC
con i •e year.
• e
rant ion
days and holidays. The races also are
s. e g
u
ti
lve the C se res .r
graph them
A beam of-, hgfit is turn . on hem I In
the cut a
There are regular. f t s on sun
ashion is he
Japan e
5,he was photographed, fel lishtylre; the middle-sized bear's
Au fence `�- sympathy are among the p ..,again,
for in big letters I s so that "no invalid who)
appointment recently, Imes are printedYu]{ fl
the little bear's words a
tewed l placed -over ht is yielded up by them they photo -
1• •g, r own form
;graph the outlines of Thi
in small Wireless t ori acute
re Coirlplete l tl They are very email Pan ed from elle Buenos
t S ave �e 1 their own photographs. so tally di
Wireless comma
Robert hon Territories, courages another have thought vott� thus IP iy only un- Ayres Hippodrome.
sten B meas the Northwest and Yii
from m t of the, Dominion was useless
of a high order.,
Nowadays. the riders •are generally
Argentine,; but the sport is• -ruled in
h British spirit. 'The onetime ten -
ing her
first
i
The Author of the Three t
I
re on the sensitive plate.
1 is which dency to. "win at all costs lies peace-
.
•
an stn is a supply Y tome.
need be. Without emp'-oY i What heart would , small as to be seen properly be The great Society races in a nor-..
or but they may
Past dui denies) der the .microscope;
very important for good or• .evil,' for mal. Year ureo'th�o Jockey SlePben her,
t Y tae yeasts and the and the Cup 1Sep mber,
the liacare a_l
• olds. are all microscopic plants:. and the National Prize
tremend•
Imo
It has os
always been difficult to ob• Pelligrow in
the ;Hippodrome ie apt
us crowd,
6 • l t +
niaation ljetween thinks still guides, whin soothes and
g P'iis
time.
the
Bears. Southey learned his
Robert Southey, once poet `•prat i children. It is safe to 5 when the first ,massa , {.. , $ Part
Rob h I V ig $U y
known anda Tlfree ran. The V
isth aw
atle
that of at
to -D
a I n
story Story so
Re wrote a ever heard the from Ottaw a ter- ant crop :area ,
ar and other par sv on meet.
t t Southey
for he was the delightful officially inaugurated at midnight,
ger
(0 filagree petal!)
Tit was of seven c December Fashieneg so purely.
of England; who wrote them father ownlittle
sons and dough b Hon. Charles Stewart, Min- ancouVeT -' 4 Fashioner sio ly,
purely.
i
laureate signed by
Been, the children's classic. say that his a first little boys and girls the Interior, was transmitted' of shipping in From what paradisal e of
Three tete were th ister recent
isassuredmetal,:
•
i
Vancouver ass.
c
oufeel
anma
least
I
g
es
tl
for
cost?
ot r•co
er who osToo. Y
loved the wide world over and nenwcompletiioe of the southernmost nmost for 18 000,000 bushels o£'graiii, and pros- e- • -
dreamed that he had created a master- Bears.i Who hammered you, wrought you,
tale en-: - — —" mina) at Edmonton openedb i -goat) far '
So comPleteI tale thisFrom argentine vapour?
the inauguration of the new service, =pacts are'�b� 1 � twerrri 2t),000,Q00 and -: •
folklore of the race t �Y1gy�eY. sat Fort Sampson 17 moot a learned at
theti h ' 't
it as a tale ofb one of those p been already
M � is Exchange Had
Piece. hat and a- n. a a
tared into ima n 1 proud lilies the stations put in opera•
1 un gl i u 1 ally 25000,000 bushels, •a was =Cod was my shaper,
we think of bear, When
T sen , , son Having
t bi , the Vancouver erC n - Fassing surinisah,
antiquity.
The grey g said Consider, 00 000 bushels
able law. i . t1e hes quick tion. is
n the hto a.,star, q �s. of. Signals, recently. About 13,0 ., , He hammered; Iie'wroug'ltt nye'.
the middle-sized bear and r I would have:shot up t 1 .The Canadian Corp
eaten. their rthe North: West Ter- . have been . shipped from Vancouver 'to aesshi curled sfl.ver vapour,
ADO;
baarti, seem. to 1la:Ye flats, In- I wttb sell. co-operation withof the
long ages ago Yukon Branch air the De- date since the beginning pressthe To -wish'et Ilts mind
—
t the geologists to t a and five 'thou
fossil
rocks.
foAs
breakfast porridge _ ...-. d B ic' s are on —
deed we half expec air had itad 1 seen • rel 'sa palely,
'discover t their three -Wad
small loaf, ` near a ri.tories an ant trip Y
fit sof, tee -Interior •Interior, installed' the ear oo an�aui
partme °`boards; for betivet:n
• ratus 1n -the four sta-
have thought mol
r, taatprint i s wireless, apps . A onion busheb to bi moved the 'thou
pit surely',
e. willened with lactgliter feted, 'nantels, Edmonton , mel.iom Finely, y,
I would have tions .comp Dawson.' x two months.
that the tale yla. o and next t Y , ,
The truth is, however, 1eav'en. •; •
Sd Fort Simpson,
atitlii 'that---�►-'—•"-"
'Was read. by de- rase wee the • north t st
is ssiodry It Till the g Work on
ren. in 1837: • you will find
hued child His tai•
l�'vol.And t z
the story d But if
couldst not
s ii . dazed multitu
or, t esmos '
bstponed ow-
chef lied to .hep i
• wn at Iders and sup � has nine
in that crown, jai recut a iVJ:rhnesoca
f p
Mightily, fi:ailly;
ed
nodes
In
~cu
led
el
I
P...
s
Preseri/ing the .Fish. - - tl His hammers of wand, .
• fish :refuges
tain trustworthy portraits of the in-
-sides
n- , o
things, but: now it 1. to become excited on sudh occ at ons.
f these. tiny i islf clo vd P
sides o,r all t 137 t
eater But, '�
. hem
many Y
a
t
into
•,,
r ph
leg-,
t
that90 0
t too p
ui.a
tonna a.
t .,
beenis no
i has
the substances which Color them )rave) matte Ascot
this power of giving out agate again, 1 res is a> Eery haiidsonie
i the eolor, pinto- I Buenos 3., arks
Wand so proclitctz g I city, with tree -lined st1.ee fine ii
1 graphs. I and t'nany splendid See c1711gs, iriclud
ing -a cathedral rte;zrl"y+•200-yes•7s olri.
Animal. Believed to be Extinct
California
fo
I ,Reappears
in
R P)�
•bear, sup -
I
grizzle P.
r
nia
1.
t
°fa 6
al
1
.e
v
tike
posed extinct; bas appeared after a;
the
Sequoia
ora
• `'t h 1
= LS a
art �
ea
lapse. se
.o
ff lofty • li-
•-,-D7Atio}til Forest, according to a• rale.
7 i. 1
er . f ft cqt " b' -report from San Francisco.
as Southey wrote It in vo i land been tit
utile four of a, curious work entitled ( would' have shru .a name. p to
the Doctor, wktich he wrote forTi11 a tree. died alone, without --Lena Hall. ley.
The
own amusement 'an,i afterwards pub-
fished anotttYre usiy . in London.--- _
- ":::n
flctitiotts character, Dr. Daniel Dove, s,,,,„,�
is credited with having repeated;the --^'�
story asp it wait told in liim by his ,
s- uncle William Dove. J .
equally Soutfota
Robert Southey, writing as the un•
;:tnown bioggraphet of Daniel Dave, -
the Doctor, says of the, most interest-
ing
nterest ing chapter of the entire work:
"So there should be oil•e (chapter)1
at lee,st. f{she nursery. With such j
chapter thc e%ore will I brighte
rountenanee of many a dear ca
t en the Ixeirt of many
gladden
father and teatter ttaotb
lions : uncle 01 coma
or sister. For thr
late one of Willi~
*bleb he Ilse
d with t
erns ing•to the loss o eri
nk.-vVith .'shame it.h the steamship Lady Kimber either closed t j
1' sw
I
lemal3
Land • nd
Candlemas Day, etich t, ilia SC'co
+ebruai. is tare tease of the"
day in 1 Y, on
Roman Catholic Cha1::17 celebrated!
tee second dee of evei".v 1sel ru01u, i•n
f ate lttiifiest4011 of the it iu
honor o 1 1
o om son,1 ietains. the California grizzly' and the 11re`zeineseon rti Utlt
o fishing at all tithes or l rancl�t .Chou p At one I lVlary
taai
ranges in such large bombers that he
was Made the official emblem of the
'state`:avid stili. grease the 'state flag;
He is coneiderebiy 1e ger than the
Rocky Mountain grizzly, is of a gray-
ish tinge and has e distinct hump iii
top of his shoulders. As a fighter he
was ;Feared by all ether al -deltas of the
early California days. Yet he was not
considered by men 'e dangerous ani-
mal, ajid ho usual'v tetots to fll:iht`011
man's approach.- -
A gentleman has ease witito tt fat -
le respectful without mean
ness,':'g:enteel ts'ithottt affecta.tloit, without seeming art Coes-
siniiatittg with
a terfield.
during specified seaSdns� _•
--__- :_- -
14
Wittersiialn, a tiny village in Kent, :England, of 600 inhabitants, was
hoses a field nearby, which looked like a raging sea.
• ....,...�.,...,,...,,.a,�.�«�.,�.,�,c>::. fob
`on by the l its. The photograph
redt�y in daltge;' of compete tsolatt
I Lord it the temple:.. 1, 11 1(1
from the great uiimber of lislli•
` uye;l
on that occasion The feast said ip
have origin%ted in 1.170 de lerat1an of
alnico -1s that Our Seeiau1 was "19 be
'a light to lighten Uo rieut,ilrq It Is
on Candlemas Day 6151 all,tAto
tapers and other lights iil11( 11 ,ue to
be used in the ober h during ih1' fol-
lowing year, are canoe Listed,
tIn ;Rome, the Popo performs the
ceremonyhim sel7, au.tl distributes
Wax ,candles to' the cardinals 'find
others, who carry them • in procession
through the great -hall of the face's
palrite. By an Order in Cduncil, the
ceremony lu liingitlny wits probibttei
in the seer .: , 548,
v
rs.