HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1909-09-23, Page 6 (2)• ,
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anelent city
itt t41 es
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imiI'4 bis1hIay, to
t et *hobs 11,An
a zuan
21714\11-ality an
ntsother t(Ugti
1 willint '
iinnis- eiery , n
tin it elehration
tieing,- whose iueur-
rs. he • nouuee
1-.t•rt,sJ1 wflt on
14
notice of ,the t
who stamped hi in.
influence upon the
• Lute k gre t many authors
read hat hen, but not hie sror 5-
.
The Johitsort is uot 'any.
thing he- setene,- however, -lint in
'Boswell's "Life," In that biogre-
I24,- the greateatseters written --w
tlnd theMau we leant; to knowIt,
e there we learn, who he was, what
aid ancl hestluiught, sin
how he inilueneed his eontere ora
, 4
lb i there we A • ne. t
. .
—
"iotati mob
1.
out his ponderous judgments upon
s, men elld-Afraiterrb-tovAieating Gar
' rick and Goldsmith, Reynolds and
Viozzi, insulting Boswell and gnz
aing with friqhtful noise and faiiial
contortions =numerable etips of
Hi knowledge has ' been_IyOs
tottneed yet
evert the proverbial wheel boy of
to -day eau catch him tripping every
ow and *gain; his judgment was
lased by petty prejudices; he was
3 Tory, dearly loving a lord, 'yet
who can forget hie rebuke to Chet.
tertield in remembrance of the tots
front about the dietionaryl *Whit
can forget the helping hand he lent
to Goldsmith in his distreis, his
kindness to younger brothers in lets
ters, his hatred of shawl; and pre -
tenet If he wits ungrateful to
Mint. -Thralasheeatise oho married
without hisoonaont, 44s. not forget
his household o! queer dependents
winini he never -deserted, or Ids
• loyalty to Savage, • his companion
in days of poverty.
It is to sIdimson'S eredit.thst h
inade English eonversatierea flue
art; for it was in his dub that Eng-
lish epeech first dealt-. with things
above fox herding and the gaming
table. But of . all this how much
would we know were it not for the
despised Dowell. He has.heen held
up to ridicule- for More than a Cen-
tury for the undignified methods
he -used to get his Material, yet his
Work stand s to -day the most' living
without, -:i
-'10111.15011 WO 4 be to us nigh=
mare than. a name.
•
Wonder if* often eoressed at, the
great distances covered the 1-
grations of birds. ,A niong the little
• warblers that cross tine esentinent is
one halted the blackpoll, whose
range is from Brazil to Alaska. it
js said thatthe shoat* ourney per.
formed by reeniVera., of the epeeies
Is 3,600- mites, while, those that ree
Lo the limit Make 7,00 milee. Of
seeurse, the flight is- not continuous,
oer Is the rate of progress very
greats -siesse the birdsfeeit'hYlite
may. But for 1)14 of the trip- they
voter nOe miles in a day, •
• - •
/
t
.1.4 •
4
, .
!, en th S- lit;
eve irt *larger. oil
ettglitt'nr ,ourte,,the :'saddit Will
:-frote,.our review, ,•• no ,of th
Uu We have orneS, tiot'oE the joy
, 4 mi,Wd. '.. :We -shall: et 110*
i of: fife bit, bec,nt itti,04.-
i„ st --
. . .
A Tfriend
is
nd tots*tig.'heecl..
ret fIuwerob,aitel,
ut
1.! --s°Atd1h-last2-1
,'scee ;finds ell
here tit in. iile. Op. the )cont
through ;the centuries e
have seemed to exhaettst themselves
io endeavors, to keel). 104n and his
eireetest joy' and blessing far, apart,
or thy havepietured his s (led
eurely his bight good -I -so remote
from him, * being sitting in awftte
untipproaehattle, dread -inspiring
splendor.
eThy -teho- „should have glorille
he 'mod- high,' Setting him a,sthe
sun in the heaven of inau'i inirzd
znd ideals, havemode him a ob-
ject
f glooti: and fear ;thfnuii” of
a feeti
ramT.Ttire
ave "shut our,seyes to tholight-ande
.10ve, inti-nite, bending heferit, an awe
fit' ereation of the darkened imag-
ination,
Not eo the ane,ient Hebrew seers
and 'eingero; they tailed men to he
.744i t
bu
14
dsr
the
9
at
rt
worldewer ha
wautil
1
46,4, 4444"..-* •
1' *11 heti
. •
teit ,the
•
lesif '
• ,4
hyee aie no
the-
ueit'ae to ie
'•tfend tbeir
at tek pleastire 4 for
,
I
bappi ess- ii ways
the darkeess is relieved only
by the fitful flame of ht.
The people who With cynicism en,
diet the nay rse are those who
heve spent t powers fighting it
henetieent laws. who now eomplain
;meat is the. life they, have elected
o in the daritp 'cellars bears
o lug -towers. The -right life,
the AM 'W.. is the sane. heal-
thy sone thst -lives itterlf out in-sthe
open, and seeks tho47odness that
everywhere abounds. •
No- teener whet profeeelone of
piet.y one may make, if you sco
-hi5-1-4does-1-Tfe-
and iiit'pretn it in tcrins of misery
otrinaY besureshOlias faith onl
in the absolute weerigness Of the
ma -verse and believes in a goil, who
has inado a tniserable husineas of
handling the affairs of the human
race.
herworld
wondrous fair; the days dawn
Itsnew brightness and_gloryl the
flowers answer back to the sun in
poems- of beauty; the great book
of nature lies open and overy page
is written large with light and
love. Blessed are they of the open
heart and undimmed eye who read
the message and see the hand that
writes -it all.
The meaning of life to every one
depends on whether we will put
oureelves•into tune with the good-
ness and Iove thaVsprings from the
great source ofall being; whether
we will take this net onlv as a good
stiork but as a world where good-
ness and truth and love are the only
g6tid for us all; whether -we will
take alt, tife's lessons as part of the
learniug"Nte laws of the geed
whether, with our faces- set to 'the
'light, we shelf mere en -d )310Te leae
the darkness behind and enter in-
to the full day.
HENRY F. COPE:
A bird ol la different kind, the
wit,„ fres a •ntecte, longer dis-
t is than ''ithese ) warblers in ter-
\ tain 'parts of. the i
world. It s rep.
resertted in this vountry, hitt the
, migrations to 'width *0, refer are
tont north -astern Siberia to New
eland. Tile flight southwaril
aele after e nesting seaton in the
tit that leste-pretty,w#ll through_
sumnier inonthe: The -hidi
*lithe eitefetn Attiatie eoest,
LL Wands of Oeeirtiertstet
d. It is eitieuliited that-.
hef diSteneesist•the migrietion
• is 10,040 miles, hied during the lett
,etretith of 1.000 initee,,tittite -is no
lands -for a restimespittee.• 'In this,
4confieetion it slioeld he noted that,
though. the, Itirde seek:their. food in
,stud bents* byithe 'gen... they do not,
isettle on the Water lik6 $04 birds,
that. the flight for that 144 thou!,
mites inuSt be couthittoue;
A writtor• * London paper
ints res that the gedwite are not
t make tbo great wipes
leseetise of the iteed of food,
hiessays that the hest,explart*-
,tiert of their ((met* is that it is duo
' to au instinct eleritedi from tt4 tu
'0,411k a
c
' • Their,
inet Mirn
1 eats' ter
ti New Zee- of.
St times the'Ibis
numbere
0 A ielt tsine, war L
beta .thok. (OS. h Izw
wo bar Phot. ,rnflari
esees
4rtve
t 6
-.to rejoice in him, to think of hi
.assone- who inesteethe-hillesto stle'
like lambs and tho trees of the,
woods to shout with itne, and the
morning stars to sing together.
True, they worshiped ono who spoke
alsoin the' thunder and the whirl-
wind, but oven this was but love
expressing itself in swift opposition
to evil and, wrong. .
The greatest mistakeethat any
life can make is to attempt to, flee
from the infinite life And lore. Joy
lies not that way. 8eokig the
ehadows is not the wals of finding
light 'and -warmth, now much bet.
tersis it to think of a. love- from
.which ' W. cannot. flee, of * life in
,which • we live and move and have
our being; '
Why should we lorry over defi.
nit -one of the divine if Why not take
the goodnees and the . joy; the
blessedness, that Comes through
human love, and the peace' that
eoines through Pain, and see in ill
--
T A. R
, iNTERNATIONAL LESSON,'
••SEPT. 20.
-rifiee—Saterifices wehe offered
the -Gentiles upon many oecasionl,
their 'entire worship 'being, eneri-
Atlas' . Only a Part of the animal
ims offered to be burned on the al-
ter. Qt. what remained part wont
, o the priest and the rest was re-
turned to the worWpser, commonly
-te- forns-sthestentro of 4-7), feast for
lwiinsc-If and -friends. Se it would
ea -tappets thatestriotiatts
the house, of a, heathen friend, would
have such meat see before him. The,
Corinthian Christians had been
much perplexed by this problem,
and had sought the advice of Paul.
In chapters 8, 0, and 10, we have
his- answer. • '
Eat not, for his sake that showed
V.-Abstirtenee, in this ease, would
lee promptedentirely by the Chris -
len 1111M'S regard for the Sertiples
of his. informant. • ,
29; Conscience, 1 say. not thine
sse--e, but „the ,OtherhiseeThe Ohris-
iaii may eat with perfect freedom
401,00nscitmee *est sitehifieed . to
but when • his neighbor rais-
e a' questionit is tittle, for himto
lelieate: his rightsin. order tee
is neighbor's coriseerice mayoust
scandalized. \ •
Why is My liberty judged by au
titer eonteienee T.'s-Abstractly con
idered, a, inan's liberty is to lie de.
indeed hy his own eeneetinee,
sit it I eat, -when my weak and
rupuloue neighbor asks onestione,
hen 1 paas the judgmentofs
iierty o1cr• to iire• neighbor.
30. I•partake with thankfulness
eference to pot._ .411,"44.4,4,
;HI ehovr the igeneeal feeling of tit
orint.hitin cChristiene on the qucs.
on under elieetiSsiett, arid the reit.
n !why any 'question wee teased
t alt. They knew that, is, there
aa one true Gods, AM klol repre.
ts: no' reel/ deity, end :food mule*
otsstherefott. be polluted In, heir*.
offered to itistitit there were Chroe
thine, not, a, well itustriteteil, -whi)
still thought of an itiol'erst
g• for an itetuel and who
*seise- shieked at .the idea; of tet -
g meaf erecrifieed to it. Renee
whik the Mature Clirietienmight
cit h grateful helot what he.e.e.
s•'• fleets might-
ifl the
ver at of tarning
Tereleirlite
0. . .0e atilt
• -Text, Iteta.-141:
Verse 23. All.things are lawful—.
This is broads general prin-
ciple of Christian liberty, with re-
gard to things „eortsidered indiffer-
ent, espetial. y the use. of 'pertain
'kinds of food, suelt as Meateoffered
to idols,. A Christian men, 'how.
l'
ever eennot shiekt himself behind
this principle. as if it stood itnres. t
leted to either.. luta. When the
-
question is asked its,' to what are
the- limite- within -*faith- Christian:
liberty may *be eierelted, siecount' t
must his taken ns to whether goo
which Are permissible are also ex-
pedient, and, whether they
If they work ilium to -others they a
iresunnifeei. If theydo8 not build 1
tips Chrittiose ,cliaraeter, it, erounte
for • nothinw,thar they are perinist •
iteeording to a. hare legality,.
The general. prineiple, therefore, is
not absolute; but relative. ,
24. riStiansethies elentitnele•tlia
szn*n ihould lath himself, not Mete-
ly,, 1-4bit-seettra.6,0f,coaduet,
Were matt'. but alto, "•'WiII it lee. •1
• oiltable_to,nty' nrioitttorr::"._ - •
etes- Sold.in the ,slounblee ,
ferenee hire 14 itt sieee
with tiie original itst * C
the meat market. "Shartibles•
Means "Olitughterlientes't •
Asking :no queetion4 fos •voneeis.
to& eater Not stopping to eoneart,
terneettnee at I •Paul h atilitaut
ncourae ntealeSs stlit
tin-
woh'soine crtplew. At the/ sham.
hie, " noldouht, t would be of-
fer4,1, for sale which had been of -
Pled ii "isterifteet but it srould he
ovetanieky, toa'lc nstech, "ease. It,
le true thnnnfl of Jerusalem had
directed Gentila 'converts to alt-
staiifitont things seetifired to idols,
and Pani Itim'self had ,publieleed the
dere( n firth% but, Ile does, netrnentjoit
.
,
"-
Al II
•-!40•'*••‘,*".A`,4.
• 440,0
At
h •
Ints,s
only to
-the entire
Tr e Christie
,entehaste he ,iehich 'atifttraets
in et different '
bat et erything
t ILIK14:41t
QV/ ft
it iVf
kr
'!*11 by Cs lit ' it
ier. ,
Oman 1.y as follewits
snau whi tilittke he: terittots, AS
hristian eat 'Meat Used in Pitt
e, aees YIU 4eing tioe he Misr- sh
wb,klewd to dothe .ame
VMMLh hia apitilitiis Wilielkis
'en,lightened. 'ita'.;.$40ilts,. *tuna
* t , ' he 'is° doing • iteteng 1 41:04 Ite;
iteneeth „to .otitlis ., his eonen
rztl is liettught . to • 'xnoist
1 ntrtxj\.0hor;tiva, dvee wilieitiest."..'t Itu':lilt 3
j'hrstikk . -4 'or
s 'tt ‘Olivit,b4411-14P,1
.111: ' •411.31311,,.. , '
'7, 0
it please alt it
•,it 10 -,1:41-',.versle 21 '
are Roms'ft. t,-P:.7Ps
an ft
ion that, rather than 414 ih
of :hie brotheens 'P. aptr 1
o_,11At he would eats no 'meats
erne .4_1Wv•etTe-T-e74th '
a life that -was maele. all thing
At.11 Mee, thet they may he :saved.
tt•
s ,
1,4011‘riliestlef i pi
Witt5 tt4
th,‘tierage..
hlt0
r ett,0.• Qe Apt,s 4ter v.w070.4,41)1111,)„,,:irrItittisittilt!ti:
ine is:tier/taps in a
die tof, the sleatiteorneesteS
eeees.
in its. litter 'et -ages,
e roost 04,%13.4144:1Y ..14417.
, t 11`'t3t t!; vtfosure
a( re*lIy idft.d WI op ,e is
f it proper 0 theirtotai, iti
b'r'wlienseons, *i ' tv o
, .
4144.1.1*1-
ts.
**4-Isfstleasirieletristeleiehiletriet;
RATS COVE
sesesee
rancesof the ItEiedirii
portant houses savor, of Delphic
vagiuntess with regard to
autoera-
tzc fashions for the winter, there
i ClOeided note which is being
sounded iethe millinery world of
Paris, says a Paria letter. Its
noticeable -ar,
.
ore-Tli47eeTvernirs van
e 'confined to the crowns in ertelh.
44; silks or. velvet.- -.Entirelarge
hats with high trowns are beauti-
fully covered with Moire and topped
with an immense bow of wide moire
ribbon. s just at the juncture of
the 'cretin and brim a narrow -fold
el the silk is placed. This style is
most convenient, beeause any shade
(I a, costume can Ito well matched
for the hat. •
Unusual, this, for the Parisienne
hives her contrast. On the turbani
there is a.• backward tendency of
the bulh,of the trimming. Most of
the folds of materiat are drawn
from the front and project at the
back beyond the line of the hair.
Velvet in black and 'colors figures.'
tonspiduoualy in auttutitt,ntillinery.
Coque feathers are extensively
used. Metallic figures in gunmetal
tone" are contipicuouo.- There is
renewed vogue of .jetis which ,14P'.
OS,in combination with Crystal,
silver and gold. It is also intro.
duced itt beautiful embroidery de.
signs.
verses of
• NO MEAN CALIBRE-
There.is Prof. E. Ds Campbell,
't,h0 holdthe elixir of chemistry itt•
Ann Arbor, and another blind -man
•
In itome, new,'Models the waist
line is again normal. . The French
woman /dings to the' high lino for
evening, and her ',demand for this
answered by theupper line of a
high girdle. Although the polon-
aise draperies are featured, the
long, clinging -line t and the varies
irons Of the tunic, Will not bo touts
pletely surrendered. The fulness
of the•tleeves• *Rivas ast the atow-
be ea'e4p! en Killerae41‘0,4
a sfaosaier to eiy
:Wert hes•predue
eatable blind resit
• "el s' theLetti
t "-ass 1w -has,Ji,tu
oalleAt a14t4wser, practistng at, the
lar. According' to Van Northeys
ingasitte power* of 41dukttvo
asorting are almost turantiy. ,
Ile tan tell on entering a roont
4).:w titans' person s are- there AS•t
embled. Se can give you the -di-
mensions of the room without walk.
hg around it. • Almosts'it appears,
Wives solved the •mystery of tit
foorth dimension, end hae appar-
ently dee-41410_4v sixth eetisee
In chialTenging flat lain
attorney dieplays & itidgment of
eharaeter that is iniraculerts-tei the
e
4
tp.
a 0,ra -11-i-r.stOtt ng
ACCURATE Dgaiszoxs.,
'Vatter A. 4elly. lost -1'4iSight
-
whee 11 years, old. Re is only 29
now. Re waS educated at 4 saheb)
for the' blind, _and then took a
itrse at the -St- Louis L9nt-Selsee14-
and-was graduatedwithin
10t-
- explaime his .pristessional sue -
tosses by pointing out that the ba-
rna], alen4617 eube o cultivated
that.anything read aloud -can be en-
graved upon the mind to bc tailed
upon fiti
The list of the blind Who have'
hieved 45riim00444 _at 'least equal
to that of seeing men of their own
tending itt education and intellis
gence, might be continued in, elefi4
ritelk. There are Oen. Brasrton,
The blind boss of Rhode Wand;
Chris Ilekeltleys the blind boss • of
-San Fre/110'1m; Dr, 'William .14003;
who invented anew system of read.
ins for old and insensitive -finger,
and whose son, i Robert Moon, is
seeretarsf of the Pertintilvaela Rome
"4.;
1
1:Uktr.41' U
the leprog
r the leper n - in
• Willie of old is itel suStify
e dread with which he. le JAM re -
"fora
do not, however, flf modern lep.
rosy; co that, wit iler the fear of
the *leper" of oden times was or
was not jugtified, it hould not be
eJlowed to eolor the view with
which the leper of to,day is ;crier
ed.
Leprosy is, indeed, an tnfertious'
eliseases that is to .ssy, it is do'
to the- presences4n the tissues of a
bacillus- known generally as Ifan--
nIs lacill,w_c -after theNorwegian _
physician who diScOve-red it. B�b
vehether it is contagious, *tinder the •
etesditione of =earn life,
;
•
in to he Very cloubtfnuela:a'4-76F-:'''
f tho .few lepers _known, to the
'aim in. all the larger cities,
iMie are cared - for in 'hospitals,
oth live at hot& and visit the
"climes of the doctor's office from
tittle to tinte_i_yet .an instance itt
terseu,s4tas-avqttifed-------
t e disease from any of these lep-
ers unknoynt.
There artemarty disease$ more to
he dreaded than leprosy,. because
more rapidly fatal, more' painful,
,ar, tame vontagious; yet mine of
them, except yerhaps srea1lp4At, is
more feared.
Theillogical terror of leprosy
may be- the raise of_great cruelty 4
te those affliet.ed. •There are thou-
sands of people who show culpable
indifieretate to the enforcement of
the laws, against spitting in plastic
pieces, although they know tuber-
tulosis hinges largely upon care
this regard. Yet .these same per-
sona would ili.in..h4rror from any
that had hailicifed a lepers—
Youth's'. Companion.Ls
sirrolmorarmio.
IN Tilt SIM. ROOM.
Flaxseed Lemonade. --Over four
tablespoonfuls tlexetted pour one
quart-boilirig-water, let Steep four s
hours, strum -through pieee el lin-
en, and add suAtir and "lemon juice
ta-te. This is soothing for colds..
Slippery Elm Tea -se -Pour *one tile -
tut of boiling water over one teas
spoonful of elm hark. When cold
strain end ...acid lemon Juice and
sugar to taste. Geed in ease, of in-
flammation of the mucous mem-
brane of the- throat.
•
Teaching 8oeiety. ;end Cireuhrti";
Library for the Blind.:
Viet:0 is the Rev. 'William Beres-
ferd of England, ikitholost his sight
whi,lis playing, with his little bro-
ther. lir. Morrittoh, Ifeatly of :Nor-
mandy, who lost his sight and -hear-
t* When a bey, -hue who wrote'
1.10101iry rather than et the tort
of the arm. Huge unstiffenetrre-
vere and large pockets are cormes.
sions to theliking for Louis XITI.
styles.
•
Skirts of street gowns .are getter.
idly devoid of trimming, ale
Designers are relying uP-
elever introductions of pleating
to giVe decorative effects. On the
bodiees Much 'braiding is used in
rattail and- fancy' designs;
The empliesia. itisstreet. eostumes
ld on the line rather than the
trimming. Ties deserves careful
study, but when mastered it van he
ineorporafed m teeny new gowns.
A raised line hi thelintt innevation
appeere-in the \upward 'tendency
iunitS$ in thee line of trimming
eit,-the, Leaflet anetv•ire- the under-
arm' >team that .etOves- upward from
thTeiebeillnI4leoltiththbou!'w"is' h. es to depart
from the conventional ttittk' or yel.
wedding ten now here 000,1.
iyhtinisittoioutrn e,f*tuloac.:Oorelarlits4tetbikt4heci4ine.vely
lor. *theme.
One detiehtfel idea is:Worked on
ft„shiniiiiCoillsi with the over.
its of chiffon. The pale sitelispink
1 of One, dre$S het the soft ever-
ry of grayish sea green. The
ideseenee of the sea sunset tit
twilight in the shimmering effect pro-
duced, Ish the two material". ,.
Thi!,stither own has the fever
Colors. ,Over the • gteen
the Pink ehiffokirt tit"teirip di lig
36. that et the Ara.' .
iloth. of the dresses are held in
the same eolor picture by the eve
rrneient touch of ,b1/4444, At the
haek of the piffle, holding the ends
s„( this orossest,reeiso are large, flat
hows, of:black tulle with keg ilow
ing end'. rt. is * vide relief from
thr Lameness t hrideontaidie
butfirtteit'y rep
t 4 4, itriportitio04,
11 fhowitts rates
0,4, in theltitee;
ir wares., .
4.
14 4
• .44;:,
4
4
,44411144.4,,,i4
•
of the same name ie Dr. P. J. Cceps
LL, D., wile boids-the posi-
tion. of head tit the Normal Col.
lege le England. Blind as he i
Die Tearinhelf
Latin at' Afroherst for -fifty years
Prof., Edward • Crowell teugh
during twenty sif which he was
quite sightless. Preseott, the his-
torien, was nearly blind.
Nicholas Saundereort, who was
blind from childhood, Wit% Profes-
sor of matheinaties at the Univers
eity of Camttridget in the fiist part
of the eighteenth century, Curious-
ly enough he leetured on Optie$
nil the theorrmsreonfsvayttoint:Qnen _4t
mania tits se blind secretary''. Who
ie else the inventor of writing
ineehine for the blind. Roumania
has 0,000,000 inhabitant,,' of whom
to1000 are ,b)iritl. 0A4 these, )84000
are initriied: In oinie 14,000
beoarito blind front ttateonut.
John 13. Ctirtiss‘, who tune
tondo" the teething of ethe blind' in
the publitt. schools of Chicego, is
himself
A BLIND MAN.
There ar 1,200. sightlss persons' in
New York eity. Blind telephone
pt'rators are, now growing, in nunis
The first VIM,* blind girl who
* New York hospitel, •A
-itehbuard was inetelleel at the
*etiolation for . the iUind itt Nem
•
•
••
„
One of the New York.ne
ibwik telephone opera
tor; and in Spite a proluct. ,
blind are heiug • 'ehisnied
eoneethit. ,A lighd rnan
BrijoklY* • hat * prefitable Co&
hueittese. Ile blends the cOittit,./01
delivers it. There are blind steno.
giaphers ak1 typewriters.
- ' hist, the 'blind *starter, went,
i& lion'sden- with st. trainer'
• 'with hie. seneitive Angers net.
he ,-,teeferirtatiorei of. the tercet
ars hod-: rte., remit is *
tignilleent lion in *ttpz
,t1
ha,
-
;
,
•
PA-SSIN(41 qr TILE pARIAll.
• Will -Not- Run Loose hi -iiint-
stantinople. •
'One. of tin; oklest institutions itt
Constantinople is to Ile swept.a.way :
by the re,forreittg„ zeal of the Young
Turks. After •the end of the pre-
eent month no mote pariah dogs
are to be allowed' to rttrt iooseabout
it- streeth.
For'seenturies these animals haves
eted-es the Eceivengere of the city,
and what will happen -if • they are
eereel off without proper protis-
Orr being:made for doing the work
that they have itiiherto aecont,
plislted ,rentaips to be teen. ,
C'ertain it tg that Other tsperi-
, menti in this,direetion have/ *elate:
ed Mortor less ,elitaitt.rotisisesThua
\Abasil refornileg Suites' \ •
of the nineteenth eentury,sneierly, '
ipt****0 .46 revolution by banith-
ing -the elogsesthey "here' found to .
nut -niter -over 'eighty thousand' at '
that timessto the island in the Sete
',tItarmorsts Ploeues followed teed
upon. their -removal, and the ("isms 1.
.mander ef the, Faithfulwee. finis
ttiO.SlitilsloShott -0P1149.0e
end 'have them bac*. *gain.'
'Oe 'ankh(/' oecitsittit i'ertain
:Chief
of Polite started •emigreting • •
them in'hatehes aerostif to Asia
Mi-
w.r; or at least he Said that that
seat -their tleNtitiatiOn.; Ak tea. -
tr Offace., he. Red the peor'bruteli
i*eeretly and quietly drowned Ili the •
be ,of ' the 0 Black Sea, f 41,1t4i' thol -
late. 'find iess not what was :
tore him limbfront limb,
fire te..and hurnt to Oa.
-afer edge, the dog trateeport ship
that w* tying- at the nitity waiting
for fts int living load.
44e Mangy moneOls are
hived by 'the levier .or
der riStatitinople, who
glad-
ly with theta their Eissnte
'b 5 "motorising for theni
1,4
eh' talko him for )if o
Yttlie,"•,seedt when I ice,t
int tJn
e lesest ii144
'7
re
ir ad*
Zh":irOrttutg of
t at
.1there4ove‘trie wive
nth*oe-rii
,
7
,
•4, PI
4:141N4 • t.