HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1908-05-21, Page 6OWN WEI4+++11i+♦+i++++4 +4++4++++++i+i44i++++++
A Broken Vow ;
—OR
BETTER THAN REVENGE.
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CHAVI II Xli. ' the way of it it happiness. The lady
! Je,i L, nh( that Y 10l
The mind of Victor Iceman w'as es.
tent`aily a InischeVIDls ono. There ire
lien like taut M the world, who never
really grow out of too impish nature
that lcllnged to tle•ir chilcdt 0 )d. scan-
dal,
lite a pleasure in spreading
dal, and ars 5,iiititl's amazed at the
results of it; leen who never lose the
Institut of making trouble, it they a
among their knows. - The perverted
Mod se•'nhs to tea;lr them a'.waye to do
what another, more onerous -minded,
tread(' stt:di. a -1y moat.
Under ordinary circumstances Victor
Kelman aright have been expected to
t( unHhsrd
A. and a little onleulptu-
to:.ef, the poor little love -story upon
lahieli he had lighted; might have leen
lxlecl d to see that there was no pro-
lard
and
►►.init, and nothing tolega
bo have loft it alone. Instead of that,
iteecter, he liegan to puzzle lits brains
tis to bow lie might step in; how he
!night, while apparently working in the
itterests of Olive, yet work a little on
to own account. And above all, he was
naturally puzzled ooncerning a [natter
et which he had only so tar touched the
Isere fringe.
One has to consider also the vanitvanity
of the man. That, in a curious q
fesh:on. he hail been. interestee in Olive
Varney was true enough; that he had
loved her. sem far as it was in him to
Mears had changed t all, was laOlivlly e Varney ue. t and
done much to sour her; above all else,
this man was probably the last who
toned have seen the real beauty of a
And !e it last owas
all, the not in v vanity of the im to rm n
hail taught him that a younger, fairer
fk,tvt'r had turned in his direction, antod
has sun i . t the carr +
merry, or even thank of love, while the
young titan has a certain AuntI'hepp.3
to prov.d3 tor."
"You brute!, she exclaim[ d i' kn•ly.
"Don't you know' enough
that
s% t That1—who �white.f the
would have
starve(, willingly—who have given up
everything l had in oho world to carry
. tit this purpose—that I shay bei 1eesup-
led
reed and pied for by b
might perhaps be. hud—or s.- ---
lnint-elf--for the plucking. He was not do with it,' she topped moodily. . re
the man to have any false notions (1 member the amount exactly—mostly in
del`' about the platter; the only dif-) notes with a line gold in an oid purse
my
like` provide tor
I ke that who can &,•nrc('lY 1
i
himself. You don't tuelerstand that;
you don't know what it means. 1 rntit
say nothing,because of the false poi -
lion 1 hold—andi
this Loy must work for
ene. I may be keeping the lovers apart;
but I'm punishing myself tar more than
I can ever hope to punish her."
"You're tar too sensitive, my denr
Olive; he replied. '"Thiele yourself
lucky in this world to get someone to
provide for you at all. If you will bo
so quixotic as to give up the actual
money you possess, in order to carr/
c.ut an insane purprese, you've got to
get sortethe wholene to ok after bus.ne.5 Ist. For
so tun-
ny, and such a P
n 1" twelc, and you. play
your part so extremely well that 1 sin-
cerely dopa you won't give up."
"Am 1 the sort of woman to give up
anything to which i have set my handl"
she asked. "But I am working in the
dark; i don't see the way.'
"It is difficult, I admit," the replied.
lying
goI tthellclutches ofmoney
ty which
Railway
Cine et on for a lit.
Company, we might get
tie while, until something turned up.
SG far as I'm concerned, 1 am on the
borderland of bankruptcy. By the way
—would the money have lasted tong["
"It depends upon what one wanted to
METALLIC
CEILINGS
Are Arrtisltic,
DURABLE, SANITARY,
sad FIREPROOF
Easily applied Calmat
S
Oraok nor Vail Off
*end us a skstal akowIng slap
and exact saaseramsata of year
esteems or wails, and ws wNl
subialt dodoes, estimates sad
k Illrlsttrateid booklet tree.
WRITE US NOW
Metallic Roofing Co.,
UIMITaO
Maaafacteirera
TORONTO & WINNIPEG
iThe Farm
with grief at the death of his dear friend
Ness
heard the full ive story` .l
h rising tears
he it the dreadful
necidenl, but resolutely declined to vis-
it the grave. Ile fell in his own mind
that it night ho uwkwaid if he net the
garrulous sexton he had seen before;
he gave the excuse that he feared rid
the
ordeal would unman him.
Denny in his mind was Ulat he orae
poor. Moro than that, the only person
in the world who could have helped
him was poor also—and that person
was Olive. -
"
"The Thing is tame—confoundedly
timet' he muttered to himself as he
paced slowly and thoughtfully ntong
Greenways' Gardens. As the Gardens
formed a sort of elongated square, with
a long strip of ground fenced in itt the
centre. It was possible for anyone to
walk at the end furthest from the main
road and be comparatively alone, be -
eau -e there was no real traffic in Green-
ways' Gardens save that of its inhabi-
tants; and Victor Kelman was pacing
slowly to and fro at the further end. "I
love variety—change--above all thing4 I
love amusement- I saw in this a chance
te go one better than my stye et inscrut-
able one—Olive; Instead ot which 1 am
at a standstill. Of course, it you come
to 111111. she is at a standstill also; be-
cause she also hos no stoney. There
arc two Things to be done; to discover
who and where the real Aunt Phipps
is --and to get something out of aome-
body. \\'hich latter has been my prim-
eip'.e all my life."
Conking towards him, from the di-
rection of N. 3, lie saw Olive Verney;
evidently elle was on the look -out tor
h 111. AL h:; end of the strip of garden
was a rue'y broken gate, which [night
at some gene or other have been lock-
ed, it simply swung upon its hinges
%• 1lrhkin I cerinin That she .saw him,
that W'as may mother's. Goodness o
knows how my tether managed to
scrape it together, tor Ivo were often
hard pressed enough, in the last days
of his life; but there was a suns of near-
ly two hundred and fitly pounds—atter
I had taken what was necessary for my
journey. Poor father had been careful
to keep it in English notes and English
gold; two kindred anti ands to gold intnes
the
in notes—and len Po
old purse. elle rest, fortunately, I had
in my pocket. Why do you ask?.
"Oh—for no particular reason," he re -
1 sponded lightly. "1 was only regret-
ting that there wasn't a little of it
handy just now. You soe, my dear
Olive, your responsibilities are some-
what heavy; yott have brought. axe into
Il business and I have expensive ha-
SIIEEP SCAB.
Tho Iwo stock branch of the Ontario
Agricultural College, Guelph, have pre-
pa+oJ the following IN)tes in regard to
sheep scab:
Cause. --The disease Ls caused by a
Write which pricks tee skin of the sheep,
caos.ng a scab to Corer, under which
the nkat~: lives.
Synhpti n.S.—Tho arlir1171 is resile; --S.
'I'l.ey scratch and bite then,selvee and
rub oga:nst fences, eta. The fleece looks
tuftal or [Hatted and portions of it are
pulled out by the sheep with its mouth.
If the hand is heal to the sheep's ins'
whee it is being scratched, the animal
will commence nibbling. This ns ane
sure symptom of the disease.
Mete.- The fleece falls out, uhsually
bheginntug at the shoulders, and work-
ing backward and downward. Ewes
may abort or if 'anew are curried to
full time they aro likely to be weak and
unthr:tty.
'i'realment.--D.p all animals and spray
a" but:dings whale affected sheep puta e
been housed. Shear sheep
dipping val. for at least two minutes.
See that animal are completely sub-
me
rged nlcrged al least once. A second P
ting must follow at an Interval of sev-
en to ten days. Isolate animals from
fields or lots where disease is suspect-
ed for at least two 11101111Ls, at the end
of which time the mites should bo dead.
Dips.—Any good stock dip should be
effective, but the lime and sulphur dip
,s the surest and best. take
To make lime and sulphur dip, l e
eight pounds of unslaked lime, )
a mortar box or tub and slkewith
water so as to form n lime paste,
add
twenty-four hounds of flowers of sul-
phur and stir well. Put Ibis mixture
in 11bout twenty -Ave gallons of water
and boil for two hours, stirring con-
stantly. \Vhen boiled, strain the mix-
ture through sack.; and add enough
water to bring the total amount of dip
at1 no one temperature ta1'001degreesthe
to 1111
degrees F.
"\ly good man, think what my grief
must be,- he said, with a catch in his
voice, "when I tell you that we were to
have leen married on hor return to
England. Think, my good man, of your
own wife and offspring --tall station-
masters, 1 believe, are married mete—
and imagines what your feelings would
be if tion -
Master that was tou knew o ahaveebeen hadleen
cut to pieces, 111 a manner of speaking,
within a short distance of this place.
It is horrible!"
"Pretty bad for you, sir;" said the
man, with deep sympathy. "There was
a platter of settle ptaiperty, I believe,
d
at the bag
eet of herat was ehdeath. deceived
you
should care to cluing it, sir--"
>w(.v .
b sed in through the Kale; gfanc-
cr h• �
inn • As it by tnutu,l "skeet, and the brutality' of it all. 1 wasn't
the
bet and tastes.\\'het will become (1
is
nue---of us, 1 should say'. ellen the las
shilling is gone, I can't think. 1
havenlavoice,or to alight do a little
arlstocrat.iC singing in the streets. Two
hundred and fifty poundal it's a lot of
money to be lost:'
She sal &tient for a ring lime, with
her elbows on her knees and her chin
dropped in her hands, staring at the
ground. Victor Kelman sat with one
lel. lightly cress('d over Iho other, and
hir hat at an agle. watching her.
"I suppose you'll tient; ane a tool, Vic-
ter—but 1 nl no gore! at this business,'
she said at last. "Perhaps there is in
in something of n1y' mother some ten-
('ernes% that n 1 alt my hard 1i!e could
- gte eel 1 lav awake lost night. thhtk-
"Man—how can you talk le ale of
property—and bass—and such -like, at
a lithe like this," said Victor, turning
away his head. "Still, for. all that," tut
added resignedly, "I suppose she would
have wished me to take charge of what
was hers, and what would have been
I know
what ours Jthe bag contains,, becauointly. As 11 matter of setshe was
coming to 1nglatul to never me, and
lead fold me in the guileless innocence
of her heart, what she was bringing. A
sum of money—in notes and gold—dont
lel us speak of it; tt overwhelms ahead
"It you should wish to claire it, sir."
said the statu►n-nnas!er, "p'r'at).; you'd
heat go to the Head office; 1'11 give you
a note, sir. There's terrible, sad things
in Chi.; life. especially when you get
mixed up with railways. And you 111st
about to Harry the poor young
dy—
dear—dealt'
e pas
.sed
ot. p .m shoulder, r he saw she was 'nit of 110 lneannese and Ito bittern. ss
Collett b.
they` slopped at the Due seat the place
le.asted—a seat hidden to some extent
ley the tall old trees. The man waved
n hand politely towards the seat; the
woman sat clown.
"My street Aunt Phipps--w'hfI is your
vert mvve'' asked \ actor sou•call; .
"That is for ttxt to any." she retorted.
"Al allevenly, it [won't concern you,
\iet .1' Ke'nsnn, You Seem to think. he -
Cans yeti have so unluckily found ine
ul, and penetrated part of my secret,
err. Victor Kelman carr:ed that face
or woe back to London with hien, and,
armed with the sttt:on-twisters note,
intervew•ed tiro.,' fn aunt )city. ile was
AC overwhelmed with grief, and burst
into tears aro frequently, that. they were
rather glad to bring his examination In
an end; They felt positively ashamed of
their simpletons when he produced, with
ev:denl reluctance, the tore lettere (Ital
had once ben sent by Olive Varney.
They were qu:to innocent petters, 111:
one conveying an invitation • from her
lather to Vicar, the other written when
ihey hail gr.,wn intimate, and making
an innocent Enough apy►ointment. 'Ube
lettere
letters were read, or merely glanced at;
it was widen that as this gentleman
knew the aelust contents of Ione bag --
the amount in notes, and the smaller
sure in goll in the old pine -11i3 apph-
cnton mint bo a genuine 4,lie. More
than That, the mans grlet was appar-
ently so sincere, and he begged so pite-
ously that they woukl let hitt hnvc
again the letters he had already pos-
s sse•I, that he gained This point. Few-
lunalley for )vim, too, iher.e hupp'nel
to lie, a rough men tr•an(kIm book in
the bag. ill which him name was 111rn-
hicned. After a somewhat trying ordeal
he come away out met the streets o1'
London again. with the preciow4 Vag
in his posieesion.
"11y dear Olive Varney,' he said to
himself, ns ho hululi4d to the luxury
of a hansom and drove 1) a comfortable
restaurant, "I think I may manage to
g.'t along v.'ry well on this for a time.
It's a curious thing that 1 always man -
ago to fall on my feel evome1►ow or
other; and this is but an instance of
it. Why 1 ever worry about things snr-
priaes me; they aiway.e come right
somehow'."
Ile dined cell, and smoked an excel•
lent cigar niterw•ard3. 11 was quite late
when he loft Ute pt;te4', carrying the
Lag; he call d another hutment, and
(terve Maltreat -I • Io Chelsea. At the
entranceI laud (11.e hhmans'a liberalGard s,fare,
alighted.ghtedtihl�l. 1:
and ,lrv,Le:I up the Gardens towards
has lodging. And so strolling, almost;
ran into the arms of .Mr. Christopher
Da yl:e.
"Hullo!" exclaimed ChrLsloaher. "I've
just been up to your place, on the
chance of Itnhng you at home. Bern
cin a journey?.
"Yee—on bus:Luss,.' saiid Victor Kel-
man, glancing dews- at he; bag, "and
A ver' nice basin, -s, too. Int tired;
g oil-n;ght."
(:hr st,phrr l.nocktd softly at the door
of Aunt ['l,pps' room that night; she
cnme to it, and stooll facing turn. Ile
lhoeght then. as lie Poked at ler, what
ho had tro n landght ur unapproachable ow lCM
shle
And strong 1 P
seeaned.
"Only to say g0o41•niglit, Aunt
Phipps," he said. "I've just Been your
friend Kolrnan; drove up In a cab, and
said he'd been on a journey. Gat teLs
hng with She seemed "Mr. Kelman in a cab?"
surpri,ed. "And a bag? What sort cf
boar
:Scemet rather like a iady's bag,
Aunt Phipps. Good -night."
Cie be
Co
n
Unued. 1
The Utility of the Bicycle
FARM NOTES.
The memorandum b)olc is a nighty
good thing for the fanner to use in the
busy season. Get one that may be car-
ried conveniently In the pocket, with a
',IVO for a pencil in it.
Labor-saving device t are
the doing
h away
with the greater p
side
di u.tgor•y of the farm, but the fas•mer
will always r:o.•d his energy.
')'here Ls one crop produced in a weedy
flew thnt most 'armee fail to take into
consideration and that is tabblts. Har-
vest it while the season Iasis.
Give the young colt some oats. There
if nothing letter for growing animals,
especially equines. than oats.,
a s. ,
1f the bores eat their grain
that it does them no food try
some smooth stones about the
a hoe's egg in the feed box.
It's efts er to breed defects than good
points. The latter aro the result • t
thought and care, Cho former come from
carelessness.
'!'each the roll to Mop promptly when
tole. This should be one of his first
k4 sone. It may save many nn accident.
Tho horses may not need as m+icii
grain when not hard nt work. but they
should have it just as regularly.
A wad harnc*S cupboard can lar
made cheaply, and it will keep the har-
ness neat and freo fern dust.
Wo always like a horse that drives
freely, het who likes ane that will not
stand w:thou[ constantly fidgeting?
It's both slouchy and wasteful to fee([
grain in a feed box that is not clean.
Farmer,;, who in early spring 1
for large yields rather than for large
acreage are the wie.e ones. Lees acre-
age ail more tillage help to solve the
labor problem u.a well es to increase
the profile of the fame.
Fanners mel W think td acme things
they scene to have forgotten. Cine of
I1hesP, is to shut their eyes to the shine
of the dollar they have not carnet.
Schemes of all kinds are afloat In theme
days. Some, of them promise to make
lis rich without lifting a finger.
The great sceret of sWo.Ssfnl Canada
thistle era(lieat.tnn lies in not allowing
the: plant to get far above the surface
of the soil at any one time from the
period of the fist opening blossoms 1u1-
1.1 the ceasation of growth in the Mt -
Winn. Cutting either above or below
the surfnco of the sill, after that season,
t : 11111(11 more eOlcacious than during
the pretesting period, eincn the lendeney
1) vigorous growth ceases atter the sea-
son 1)1' Wee:[ lining, and if the 11111111 is
then eut ort several limes the su,ue sea-
son. below the surface of the ground,
the roots stcke'n and die.
AO tot. this kind of thing; Fate has
for,•el it upon me. it i had been born
under some luckier Mar, t Could have
grown up to find the lova and the ten-
d• mesa that are in the world. I'tn
ttwl ,ugh now to sympathize with 111 s
penniless boy; trot enough to be sorry
for the girl. She's n nice girl."
"She's adorable!" exclaimed Victor,
k sing his linter -lire. "She's pretty ---
virtuous— and umiab'c; she las but one
(null—that she loves another mall. 1
that p
yell Igko the tvht)•hand in ties had forgotten; she has timelier foul --
. •,..II
1leilieoe a wilt find you ore mtslnken. that she is poor. All the
ilniceltwomen
ea h e• r game 1 play'. I play alone; h'n the w •oi l l Pa ugly
1 leo made up tele mind to Urnt.
"I ,ie Aunt Phipps!" he anal, with
a :anile, "i thought that we had arrang-
ed to piny wbetever game was to he
playe-i blether; I thought It was sele
114(1 that I was to help you? 1 don't
think your' \vise to try l en knowave rne
loo
out of it, my dear girl;
etude"
"You think you know a great deal.'
the said, "but you'll find you really
know very little. 1f you Corte 141 That,
I•e are loth helpless in the natter; we
Can ta'k--and talk -ante talk shoat w•hn(
were going to do; nod then sit ttah
Our birds in Dur laps. and do nothing.
Thee: et tl.c Neilson. This girl, whom
l w01i'. 1'03 anything 10 injure, sn►iles
111 my trice, r.: a worl(s out ter herself
her own l,tc..tory. Inevitably ehc and
this suppnec(t nephew ot aline will drift
together; i know enough of Ih' world
t� know that money 1s 01 no cenaiderre
lion whatever in ' uch a multi r as !ha%.
Thcy'p Slarve, re, pair of them; but
they'll sten'.' tegeL'er and be happy.
(,nes) get the mercy, Its a st . ( .
o •mpettention, So you am thinking of
giving up This busirtess of vengeance,
eh!'
'Never!' she replied. "(lease me. day
and night, (s the remembranoe of the
vow 1 made; it Itns been my life for
luny years, and I cannot forget. 1
shall go on Io the end, no rattler what
111y own feelings abettt the thing may
1e."
'They parted then—Olive to go hack
to 1114' house and elder to his own lodg-
ing. When lie arrived there, tM shut
himself in his room and sat tendering
long and deeply, with pursed lips and
a nervous hand at his chin. Finally lie
got up. and began to search in un old
po,keI-book — turning over varioeis
mere with rubbed (Ages until he found
%'hal he wattle I. And %vital he wanted
were two letters n(ldressod to himself --
the first as "Dear (tri Kelman" --and
the tC Deer --"My dear \'fetor." linth
were signed with the name -"Olive Var-
ney.'" Ile mold •d with saesfachon ov4 r
them a great many times, and then re-
p!ile: d them in 111e rocket -book, nd
%cent out. leer it scheme had cone into
h;' hind at Inst.
The s •he tie termed so good that he
was %%tiling W venture upon it the re•
teaming money he had tit his pockets.
Ile tont off to Liverpool elreet Station,
and !Fuelled again down to that place
from which the had come with Olive
Varney. Ile knew• perfectly well, in his
own mind, that the lag ut which he %vas
ul acarch would in all probability have
e
r Com-
pany;
e
head nm
c
of 1h
leen sent Ih
but it was a part ot his plan to
play the innocent, and to (M the bus!•
noes npparently without nny previous
knowledge. Accord ugly be %tent, quite
openly, to the stalionene ter; represeent-
I n4 o
so fast
putting
size of
\V•t.; never mere nasured then tit the present time. The bust -
TI man, the doctor, the curate, the leacher, the farmer,
the larks of all trades rid,) the wheel. The bicycle sate,)
tutor and money and puts you on the b.4hwuy to (',•on any.
cForall the n' rtant emessage
a girthi,e slere or tl o %%heel(1.Avii, for a hurry
s.olves the problem.
call or iulpo d b'
Consider these pxorless ntc,(lrls built In rigid and cushion
triunes:—
and
d► rend Rambler-fhe wheels for serthce.
names: —
Massey Silver Ribbon, Cleveland, Peeled, Brantford, limped -
Canada
-
nada G ole and Motor Co., Limited
ca y
WEST TORONTO, - CANADA.
WHIT■ FOR sOOKItT 4 R"
�TIIE `RIGHTS' O"BRITONS
ANUFACTURERS 1
INTENDING TO LOCATE IN TORONTO WIL.L FIND
Ideal Manufacturing Premises
IN TRUTH BUILDING
2 000 to 10,000 Square Feet Each
Flats /
LOWEST RENTALS. INCLUDING
Steam Power, Heat, Electric Light
�t
Fire Sprinkler System, Lowest Insurance.
Most Central Location. Four Large
Freight Elevators.
S. Frank Wilson & Sons, 73-81 Adelaide St., West
tater VOU ctN e►b :D t=r: MITI11M
'1'111:
Mauna Charly stater )lett 1liuht and
Justice Must No lie Denied
to Anemic.
liri'ous, of cvuse) lever have leen.
• nd ),ever will be—sieves. They,h are
tree men, end as sit S
assesi mid privileges, ulthough exactly what
right.; they have is n9t, perhaps, very
well known to theca, says t'earsoua
\\'Daily•
The 1 holy of the subject is ono of
,t•., fututaulentnl principks of English
law. In ria Cherie itself slices one of ' that right and
justi•o must not be dcla)ed or dented
tc anyone.
1t is, naturally. ,v,netimes necessary
to keep alleged wr<,ng-do�•rs in safe
tnstidy until they can le toted, but to
!event any serious abeses arising out
ie this . 1111e of alfaira the "habeas Gor-
7:1.
!.0::\f t" rtes pas.=(tel in 1G, tion � do-
end, r this act, when a parson
Carole 1 on a criminal charge, and is not
brought to trial, or where he is intprop-
crty detained by private individuuls,
anyone has the right on his behalf to
al.ply to a judge for a Writ of hatless
G,,rpus, which oornnlands the governor
[ the gaol or the tenon who detains
'hint, 10 bring the individual before the
emir!, so thnt the judge can investt-
1 tc
us-
kept n
' k
e'n'e the reason why hos {
L dy, and, if no geed reason is put for-
ward, he has the right to ie set at lib-
•rly at. once.
In modern criminal practice there is
little need of the Habeas Corpus pr'o-
c'dure. A lean, when arrested, is usu-
elly brought before a magistrate very
:I eedi!y. Frequently on the safe day,
r 11144 clay following his arrest. The
e:egise' ate inquire into the case, and
( l e is unble to conclude his invesli-
•;,li<u1 at one siting, the can order re -
rands for not longer than eight days
e-. Ls
a; n stretch, atter tvt..41t the aCctLse41
11 once Committed W take his trial, or
acquft'cd.
Neeverthetess, if occaSien ars^s, either
h er n1•net or civil matt rs. the "Ilateas
e• opus" can still be set in motion.
"HANDS UPI OR 1 FIRE.'
Every Briton has the right of defend-
ing his property and person. and to
,•s„ such a degree of fore ns is ncces-
•irl• and r-gn6011ah1e b attain that ob-
1111
SCHOOL HYGIENE
BRITISH
REGULATIONS 1'OR INSPECTION OF
CHILDREN.
Rules Which lutein Medical Officers
for Schools in f:dithunj -
Chicago's S)stetn,
Discussing "School hygiene In Great
Britain," the Canadian Journal of Me-
d:cino and Surgery says:
"l'ho lkdlcal Officer of Schools, like
many other great reforms, Inas come
so suddenly at the last that great ac-
tivity is being displayed by the cont-
inually in getting the educational
house in order for the change. '1'lle
hollowing reguLtlinnS, adopted by' the
Edinburgh .School [ioord, in 1901i. bove'
worked admirably and have been a
help to other Boards:
"Regulations for the Medical Officer
of Scloots:— -
"1. Ile shell ndvise the Board as to
neve sites• required,
egiiire d,of lasr to school ap-
paratus;
w•hrn req
paratl s; ho shall exercise a general
supervision over Iho ventilation, heat-
ing, lighting, and cleanliness of the
schools; 1►e shall I:eriodically inspect
all school lavatories, and other sani-
tary Installations, and he shall report
immediately to the Ilene-\lusler, and,
t' necessary, to the Superintendent of
\Vor'ks, any insanitary conditions dis-
cm'ered.
"2. On receiving intimation of an
(•uthreak of infectious diseasn among
the pupils attendingnny
ol. he
Math at once inquire into the outbreak;
lie shall take such nclon as may le inr-
mediet-ely necessary, end ie the illr, s
sen ns practicable, report
lt
of this inquiry to the Board. and to the
Mo.Iienl Officer of Health for the city,
and shall co-operate with him in any
mcnsures lie may propose tor the pro-
venntion of infection.
DISINFECTING .AND CLEANING.
Board any practices that he consider -
injurious to individual l,upils.
"11. If any child is especially nnpnrt-
4d to hem by the Head Teacher ns eat
tering front any ailment or detect o.
injury, he shalt as soon as possible ex-
amine the child and give such direr
tiorl.s as they be necessary.
''12. When rcquir d, he shall medical
lye examine candidates opponled to to
siti4,ns under the Boned. Junior She
andelea and Inintending
caes '1 ennpk,yesuabsent
D
owing to illness.
'fhe lyse -story• gr',wne under our eyes
day by day: the %cry fact that he has
t'c looney bringer them together, out of
Iter pity for Iron. Arid i've done tt.'
"You?"
"Yes. But for lite fact (1 my ^otning,
the nt'gat atilt hnvc' hor'ed Ihal 11" was
tine day to be10 rOf ll ea w hat 111 lhad
t,v. "Ry some perversion
pleaded. 1 am designed actually to
er ng happiness to her."
"Ilnv (lo you know that no coney is
Senning to the toy?"" he' a,ked,
• has
Heppe 1
1
ht
int P
"Because the urs .\ P
a p rtofltthe are r.'(,lou [haven't fathom-
ed
ecu 'i 4. my friend.' eine," he
"lite me incl- e
`. Pt1YSiC:\L TRAINING. Knrninn-
l3. .1 lc shall, after
Ion ns he may (Ind na'esdsnry, certify
the fitness of teachers er pupils ils 10 un-
dergo special courses of physical train
ing.
"(t. Ile shall. by lecture. demi-maim-
lion or otherwise. instruct the teacher-
in the nletho!s of rccogntz'ng the com-
mon ailments and detects of school chi-
cken; in the practice of first all for
school accidents; In the general hy'gi•
ene of the school and class -room. and
in the physiological princeples that un-
derlie physical training.
"15. Ile titian keep such records and
Looks as the Board may I,rescrite er
n ,love; he shall submit an Animal Re-
port
pnrl on the work dc►»e, and l,( Nail
eke such s{ ecial metes as the hoard
may require. Ater me
"16 Ile shall perform any
(heal duties that may le. from time to
time, required by the Boned; but nlcd`cnl
or surgical treatment shall be no hart
.'f the Med:cal Officer's duty.'
TIII1EE DOLLARS AN HOUR,
Vet. He n,u-t not. however, inflict on
his pro-
pel on tooth c hamnt an he hiury mself ishsufferr-
ng.
For instance, if a men of herculean
stature strikes a little man, the latter
rail entitle) to .hoot tis aggressor.
II lis life is in imminent danger, ho
%[valid le entitled to kill his assailant,
but it he could protect Himself by mov-
ie maiming his attaokcr or by threal-
en:ng 10 fire, he must titer se the milder
cour. a The right of self-defence should
be used sparingly. The h roper method
for the punishment of Iho aggressor is,
e,f course, by legal le.bumal,
11 must not he foryotter., in this co k
n4.tr•Uon, that anyone, who, by
h assailant, tithes n remise which It r'
c .ns d. red "unreasonable'' or "unncoes-
.11ry." is liable to be indict'd for man -
.laughter. Cases have arisen where
II on have been shipwrecked. and In
•udcr to save theinsclv.s from Marva-
tien, they have drnlvn lots let kill and
.'at one of their number. Persons who
d-, this are guilty, not of manslaughter.
but murder, and it Ls no defence to show
that the victim consented to the course
taken.
FORTY BURGLARIES.
Over forty burglaries, tri which the
t,onty is valued at several hundreds of
thousands of dollars, aro now laid at
Spc'n.cr'; door, and he has just admit•
text that the jhmny found in has pos.
SeR9iOn is 11141 snmc with whet) entrance
was gainel t) Capt. Bcaty's reselence.
Not a single article of all ttho henvaluable;
ne stole, however, his y'
ed
or recovered,
t
t pre me
R tp "Bet ,•ong th t': eeent but rA cnty Have the gentle spring breezes blown
1
,i'1 pk nsnn y.
with the thought I)'41 mat the ; rock in
' henget gentleman
fltunle'rt you are a ,t'tr11W Itg Rock inner ved in England, anJ overwhelmed year hat into tiro niu4J (1113 s0tSon
4g.
"3. ile shnll advise the Board ns to
the neceesily for )•cl'e):ltcnl dLsintec-
1ion and clean-ing of the setrola, wen
a view 10 the prevenient nt disease.
"4. Ire shall mike such exemfnnlinn
as Ileo Ronrd may require ns to the
mental and physical condition of chil-
dren se'ected for speeial scltrxtla or
class(',. anti shall grant any necessary
certif enter. superintend
"5. Ile shall medically' supe
a't special schools and (lessee; lie stint'
keep ohs Board Informed of II.e mental
and physical progress of the children,
and ire shall indicnt' any teeosure9 hint
may be' ndwisnble for the preservaltoii
er promot'on of Deer health. the
"6. On r('cetv.ng tnllirnnlion from
Chief A*trendanae Officer that n rhi'd 13
absent from eche el nn 00•roant of an nl-
Iege•l places. he shall, where n mech.
eat ccltfi4ule La not producol. Inquire
into the case and report to the Board.
"7. Ile shall mites," the iloord as 10
the ''hildren remitted L, nny Day in-
(luslrtal School and shall make such
tnnlicnl examiinntions and reports
r p tsa
may be req
I1, Mac11., discussing the same sutb-
jcct, says:
"A memorandum published in lite
British Medical Journal by the Medico -
Political Committee (,1 the British Me -
teen! Annclntion, advised that the re-
muneration for medical insp "tion of
wheel children stilted be nt lee rate of
,Ei(, ler annum for attendance on one-
half a school day n w(elc, holt a rschtol
day being defined as lit•., hours: Mel
's. the rate of remuneration woukl he
about 12i. nn hour. Ties is an import -
et, mattern'enlcnt of U nMe-
sid-
dthe co -Political Committee is both op-
portune and valuable.
IIOLD ANY OPINIONS YOU CiHOOSE:.
Arother "right' of the Briton Is that
ef holding any opinions ho chooses up-
on any subject or topic on the carob,
or ort it. and of airing those opinions
anywhere and to anyone who cares 10
listen to him. Ile can do this to any
(stent so long as be does not become
lin 8441101 "nuLill nre." or cause large
!large crowds to gather, so that the pub.
I:c h'ghways arc obstructed; and so long
as he keeps tis personal telltales with-
in tnir !tines, and make, no slaternenU
regarding other p;eoplc, which ars
oevionly slanderous.
Cklsely nkin to the right of tree
speech is the "liberty of the ihess,"
which, into rpreted, !mans that any
man is the
d \Oita he
themes. nnd%ta
rite what lie choose's
provickd he does not break the law anti
infringe the rights of other people.
'tell re is nlso what Ls termed the
"right of public mooting,'' which 111011111
simply the right of 1 ovate individuals
to assemble and meet t• gt provide any
pplace they think fit. (rl they a
tut Ir...5 nssing nr o`>streetieg the pub-
lic highway. \\'toile 11esctnblcd there,
they can say what they p'( ase within
renron; that is, nnylh nu except Mat
wh ch vtould tend 1„ .ter up riots or
;t,c I! le ;WC k, COrnln 1 cr Imet.
As the law now startle !teems aro
entitled to [hold whatever tc'igious opin•
tens they choose and lo nit,erre what-
ever form of religious worship tt►ey like
rest, A man may 1)c n Memnon if 11e
wishes; but, it be does, be lnti-t remem-
ber tint. &)mold he marry more than
(ole wife, tie will tee punesh4d for leg.
Lute.
'f11e tights of the Beton slop short al
(ane wife.
DOWNED.
The port;}, [tell-dres'4d gentleman,
who.e spe laity wee mortgagee, rose to
address the meeting.
`l114 41!e 4a11, v
p1;COiiD EXAMINATIONS.
chet So f pncrrty and dos " 9• To the extent and in Ihel on pre-
treat !eat in this town le the lack of thr.tt. reeled ll mc`dtcn4ly examine ,
from titne to time the to nt1.
he seed. "Idem talk of the wolf at the hes
le never coma;
to toy door." , spending the schools approved shall rreser
leste
"1 s'pose Do's atreerd of
door. 1 getting,and maintain P
o
skinned," shouted thyme lrrevereet pe reoord of the
examination
hechc 3,
non in the a onc41, and the party gen- lyshall nni1
nd
tlemen sal down, suchs-ematimeasurements and ob-
..
� nervations 03 the (Board sthal It,sli'u'e
or approve,—tor exnmp'4', m snau- 111 me
1
'r
ern•n nr
SCiEN(S TO 11iF. R1: Vie et helgt►t and weight. P
tie. imrb tied tee nee.
CIIIC.\GO'S EXPERIENCE.
"Meantime, It is interesting to know
that Chicago, n city which discontinued
Medical Salim ina'c'tion ter n short
tine, MA re-estnbl :She tl iti w th the g t-
will ei everybody,
thereto by a series rf epidenl'c+ of scar-
let fever Inst. year. 'I'i,e Mel cal School
Inspectors are apo o ntrd otter fnasing
n (:iwil Service examination held und.'r
the nuspices of the Chicago Health De-
partment. p:no!t ineee ter iS Resigned
In n colada al.tilct, e. nlaiing usually
(rem three to five achr,o's, %•.111 n 501101
p•f,pulntion (•f Three (,r four Ihheusnd,
The (lector goes each meriting 10 Ilse
once of lee schnol prinelpre and there
examinees a't children who hove been
absent tome clays or more fromnny
nit
roues. and nny who are
1 n% ng c(.nln;;;ouS d :secse. in addition,
111'' MetUcal School lmexctr,rs mu -t 3441
that all the children nee properly vac-
s moat. doing the vnecinntion thenh-
sr'Ws '.1 reefs new. They. further. sheave
charge n( n11 ''a-e's ' 1 g
die
case to the rn4etoral teat 14a !eperlyd tothe
coCng each writ that the
Health hep'nr'n1^and. nn 1 g
proper girnrael n' rcgulntiens are ob.
s'rvat. Ann(1r4g 'he ,eiently appointed
m•diral 1rl1"nl ,n,p'rt,rs in Chicngoy'a
a Carrel nn. Dr. Margaret itegcrs Ri
tVRON(: MOVE.
that
(t
\\nr,e -"What diet you think o
Ifs --"I hear the professor is going to d4 terxlration of 4)11)3 q !
lecture 011 auUt-spols next week." I "10. Ile shoe from tine to hew d- ,. r 1 ler rem'neeett Fort).
She -"0h, 1 malty must go; I suffer` sp et the t•hysiral exercia rt e"' 1!c t •I d ye• `11 1a lelloe l• ge n f ctly elf frank,
th:
r'�ibly
from tr'scklas. 1 the Crane)ls. and aha11. r. p
,. t-N-rOtlCIII I)• shock•
\trek— i say', old ohne. t"m in .
Ing 1141(1 tock. 1 %tent 111'mey badly nd
1 haven't the kart idea where I can gety
it."
perlhapi
p5v4A I nd nn ideapled to hear thyos
thnughl,
could borrow from Inc."
COULD COUNT (IN \ttrlil'..
Iler Father "Anil sen you went 14
n,ntey my (laughter. (h?'.
young Nein --"That's %hat 1 said.'
•
Iler Father- "leu/ Trow do yon eapeet
to support her on an Mecum of $Ml)
a year?' our
Young 11an 'Yoh, e'1114,yiem, )
in-olne angel be len tines that amount.'
A w•enatt ,
rionSidersone Aman nice,
Io•.kt1t whd ;dee 'ur s W .