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Exeter Times, 1911-6-15, Page 5--- _­_._, �. � ii 04 . 'WROP11010101PR" _­_­,",­­, -� 1pll�I,Qfp��i .1�1 � I I !Moo 'P.0 I wm� . � . , I I ; , - ,. , , , , , ".-!o I 11, I 1. I � ,� I 2 11 11 I `111111111 , ,, . ", . ­- � --7 . I . . 21 .. I � , ­` - I - I I " . , I , ii#�4 ��, I opp, - __00 , - ­. , . I ,� , , , , � � 1 ­ - ­ --: . I -11 -;;,v,, I'll I . I I I . . ,� . . .. � , . I . ,.. , , , i � I I , I . I , I I .1 I I � , 11-7 , , I i . � I I . � . I I � I I I i I � . I I I , � I � I I I I i I � . �. � i . I . I I 1, I . I I I I I I I 1. . I I I I I I .1 I I . I I I - " I , � , �' - I—M117W �. I - I I 1. 1. � I � . I I . I 11 I . I . . . . . . 11 . . . I I � I I I . I . , 1. I I I I I � "I � I . . I , .11-11 I I I . I � , � � - e " ��,� - �, I . . � I ;V1 q_!.1-'1___-"_"- . . . . . . . ". I I : =_='��,=%== ,--.— T r ko 4. h I ­.­____ —.111"_ _­__ I � --11i, � ­­­­ . � I I I I I � I I . I I I � � � -A I . I . ­_ � ­ ----1-1— ==1 �, 1. I . — � � . � I � � I I ,: ,, .1� . . I . ­___'=�� I 11 0�" - . . . . n .. . � ��_ - �00,$' — �'. ==f"111" .... .. - ­ ­ I ,I I I ­­ ;_4"��;m� - , ,,,, , -, '! ... ''''' i — ... � - - . . I . 1. . ,. .1 I . �� happily typical of avery large all i I I _�,,�;, " , __ . 111 I I ===__1___====1;�_ .. ­ 11. . . . I I . � ­ I I . . ... I . I. .1 ''I . I . OR -1113H SCHOOL PR ORR ber,of those who in. , I . �, � I 11 1:1 .� I . . I . � I I .. � . . 90 to make UP the . - � Two, STR !, I . � : I , I � ; . . ­ I I I AVON IeA-4341 � i 11 I � . I . . I I I . . . I I I �. I Uneducated ,74 pOr cent. of our ell �n .i 1. _­ .1 . , � � 11 . , � .1 I � . 4 � youtll,,, . . I I Javalle'so Institutlons That 'Clatig, , � ,,� , .. . a I " . wfua WT, SINOW ASK, F i , ' I , I I !!! . . 1,11FOr TO, You* Can I Beat L * t -s."' 1 JIOW IT C I �c-COXTAXNRD, I Pre-014inence for I � 1. -11 I . 1P an NOT 100 I � i I I � ., 0111"Anns WIT11 GER. SELt . I I , Oddity. I � I , I � V . � . I . I . 1. . I I. I � . MANY's . SYSTg�% d be bad on' I I MA 10 N Q 00WOEft, japa � Vo of the od 11 1". I I — . - . . " It , woul ough if ,We I u Possesses ty � ' ' � 1. I I it gas That Delicious Flavor and Aroma that . I 1, were tile 014Y nation � i I I OUT .00r,CIFy I � I 11 I . I . . . � I ,a tile world. , , . cle4t farms in the, world. From, �- �, i I . . ­ . I I'll I 040' , I I , I :.�: . . . I It would be sixffioiently serious if I A&L � thorogoes� out each year a krop of 1 111,4 1 1 1 . k5ath,fies Milliolis U�,-ou hotit the World. , I I I I � . �0 ,,,.,, i �_ . Big PO'Wntage Taken Away. as we were a self�contained nation, to I I � I tens of thousaucilg .6f Snap nas tur. �`,�, � . I I M, ift, a I C ties, This farm ha . , �11 I whom foreign progresA or forei � � I �, the , I Soon As TheY,Reach Legal Age competition meant, , nothing. I I problem of p 4, so v0d . , . I � llilgulti AND GET THr. GOOD KIP40 11 reserving tile sup-pl'y I I � 11 I ... , � Age'LI we are not the only nation in the I I ... 5 of what is t � 1 It mit, : , . I � e apanese as great , , �'. " ,., LIPTORPS TE A - I world, and we. are not aself.con, I a I 11, a.clelic4cy as diamond back torra- , . , . . �, , � I I L. G. Yl the ,E:JW-`(;[LLETTC ,, . ;1 Ohi-ozza, Mone well tained nation. We are in 4 stern ' , QjLT.,al � Pin is to Some Americans, � I � 'I . . .. I I ''I . known Publicist, writes in the. Lbn- OOmPetitiOR with countries which I r TOR ONTO -ON-r. This queer farm consists ,Of a . 1 Over 2 Million PaCkaps Sold -Weekly re I a Oartaiu of them )4: , don (B 9.) News under -the caption alizo that., While it is true that umber Q , . a t 11 . f ponds, I , , I . I � . I I "Leb us Build Against Germany", education cannot alter the, quality 6 I 'WINNIPEG motqmk" 4ro sob apart, as breecilug ponds, � � I �;� I I � ly I , I On -several occasions, when visit- of a child's natural gifts, it eanso once a day a man goes over the I 11�1 , I I ing our'elementary schools, I have what gifts it I � " I ,. 11 . 11 . ____­­­ . � I . I ... 0 shores And with little wire ba,�kets . . ., , � 1'r ""'.1 __ ­_ . . . . . . . - - - I possesses a's I �) "".11 ,� ­ I � .Obtained permission to. ask the 11011,11aise-it. immeasurably above a I I covers Up all new egg 4epoSits, �, I 14 "i scholars in the classes who Phildof srinilar c.apacity whose fac- '_ , � . 7, , . sometimes thousands of these wir6 . ,�f I I "I , member of Italian descent; .and Dy, hive attained ligher, ave"been left dormant. E ! , �', t; wl��, , .1121 ,,el , "'t 11 I ' 1i CANADIANS IN THE HOUSE Or, who aits for the' Hitebin: I ti�e age i iii I ��, I N 2 I time � � Lwl � I Hilli of fourteen ulties h '0 baskets are in sight at a r I .� I division of Herts., lie is years -of age to rise in their places, 1 —114— .1 11 11 0 �� V11 marking the P14CGS Where the eggi ,� ,. ., ,� I an .ar' " � ,� � 11 ,� — � .Cho test always gives tile same re- � * �� , I J - - I ,,r . . dent tariff reformer, 11 '0/�� lie .and 'eveliting the, turtles from . . I I . and a close TRICKY NATIVE GUIDES. - I 0%W, , � � -1 I .. . 1, - , e P, .411 , or more . ___­� .1 -_ -_ scratching the earth from them. .- I I I I I.. i stud eradism in politics. childr -a Hatching requires fxoui, 40 to 60 ' j � TEN OF THEN IN THE B!RITIS11 out of f6d, suit. Of a 'class of sixty .. �� _'. I , I ell, wily some five or ix � I �; � �� . . . His book, ,"The Commonwealth; fo are Some Dangers.of Travel Through. Bull, B.C., is not required, and days, according .to the, - weather. . I I I und to have passed their four- I " I PARLIAMENT. � I or, & Study of the Federal System te-enth year; the great majority of ORLD "'he young, as s4cou as they a . . ; � I I . . Tierra del. Fuego. he is able to cast his -eye upon the . I � .. . . . of 'olitical Econoniy," -should be 11 work of Other nations in quelling - , ppear, I I ) . I I � � � read by ev.eryo children are withdrawn from school Travelling throu'gh Tierra -del are put in separate amail ponds 1. � I � I i . no interested in th"' by their parents at 'the very ear- Fuego is not without . disorder, .and oompare their success and are fed finely I �, � �­_l , I I Has the L I its danger ith his own.. . � I aFgest Representation of Subject, I . S, THE MT I I chopped fish. , ,� . I There is no. change whatever - liest moment allowed by the law, as witness the -following story, of ORR OF JOHN BULL AS w � They eat this during September I �, 1 A . . �. I ,,he N in At the period in life when a child Charles W.. Furlong, in the Outing, A POLICEMAN. I JOHN, BULL IN EGYPT. and ,October And late in October � I I I . . AAY of tile Over-Scas . , the porsonnel of t ev Zealand- begins to have any real capacity to as a mere incident,of One day, burrow ig the Mud f9r th� wiptex, � I � .� . Dominions, ers in the House. Mr. Fell, Dr. . � . . - . In Morocco, for instance, which � dh�pple, Mr. J. 0. Wason, M receive - instruction systematic "When in the field, 46 is remark- � is almost as fertile 0, source of gen. coming On in April or lay. Most �' I I r, is oral trouble as the Nea of them are sold in the markOt . I � : '. The number of colonials in I St. training.ends, That to -say ad, able how keen and' subconsciously His Life - i the Mr. Mey- , I - - . have to share . British House of Parliament stead- aey-Thompson, have been. duly te lication, in the real sense, never be- sensitive the mind becomes, to ev, is IN'Ot a 114PPY Ones As r E lly increases, gins in school for the mass of our ery ,sound , and . ait' when they,aro. from three to five � . France, and Spain trhe I In 1887. there were turned by their constituents two � sight about one , He Gets PleAtY Of Ricks and joys and the labor. . . years oitt, at which time, th�y are I . 0 . ) , I only Six. By 190o' 'theve woke six- of them without a'cbntest. . . population, doubly so to anything Visual or No Ra'pence. I John's record beat, of course, is � I I I teen. In the pi-eselib parliamelib , Even thirteen years 6f age Spells otherwise not in attune with what . that in Egypt. The island empire also ,contains 'I there are twelity-four. Only those TWO OF THE FOREMOST. . tile limit of systematic training for seems to be the natural order of Good old John Bull is the finest ne, . When it became a pearl oyster farm, In the, Bay of , . re, e er of children things. cessary to take steps to put down While my attention was Policeman in the world, 11, fact the lawlessness in that country, plantation from which a rich har- . are included who were born ,and Of the members who we in tli' Ago there has been established a bred in Greater,Britain or lived in, P, This will be clear from th * fi�xed on the further opening -of the he . %rliament of 1906, and will sit in . e f ollow- unites he Position of policema) Fr do adso intended sharing the �1' N, ,some Part long enough to 4cq,L I tire the Parliament of 19ii, the most.in- Ing SL&tistics compiled by the narrows, 1. was not unmindful of and justice of the n an vest is obtained. In May or, June I . , I .1 peace, though for beat. However, wheu the, actual I 'I. a local interest.- Otherwise the list teresting are Sir Char Board of .Education. I OverY movement of the Fuegians neither offloe does he receive any stones weighing from six to. eight I I . , k would be three times as long, says Mr les Rose and on the four thwarts in front of me. reward or mak fighting took plaoo, and there were pounds are sunk in shallow water, � � I", . Hamar Greenwood, both Can- ATTEND&CE, AT SCHOOLS 0 any profit in: the heads to be broken, John Bull 1 4. a writer in the Loud -on Express, I The nearer ones blocked my view majority f, and in August tile tiny shells be- Adians. They are suke of a hearty , I (igoo-7). I -of those forward. . of cases. On the contrary, ound he had to do the work him- � I the Continental Press from time to self. . . I I � olonials have figured larger tin uished statesman, Sir Charles Age, . No. of �, stones remain for two months,, but, . I � But it is not only in numbers welcome. .The second son of a dig gin to appear on them. Here the . . that c . 9 3cholars. The first man scanned me closely, time have much to, say regarding Therefore, since then, he has had since the younger oysters cannot � . I �� at the late general election than at Rose is .a public man *ho, toucher. 11 � ....... I *­" ­ "' * 69,3,loo leaned carelessly to one -side over what they term his officiousness in, Egypt tinder his personal super- � any othe in their power to English life at many points. ' lie 12 ........ ...... ... ... 596,759 the Starboard gunwale, while the interfering in other peoplel stand cold, in November'all r-ocks , "� J; I VU r, but second s af- vision, and -to-day has restored the in less than five feet of water are - ' I � I � arrest blic attention. At the be- was one, of the personal friends of 13 ........ ...... ...... 408,341 lolled over to port. Before fairs, says Pearson's Weekly. country to such a law-abiding and I , I ginning interest centred in North- the late King.; he is a k. 14 ........ ............. 67,811 he had fully completed this action Other of the Great oved farther out, where the tem- I I � eqn. sports- I I Powers from pea condition that he has earn- in � , ,-1 � I West Manchester', whp-re, Mr. Bonar ma 15 .. .... * , , * " " "­ . 6,923 my riflO was in my . hand, cocked time to time take a hand in - ea ce'u' perature is more even. At the end , I . 1, n, and A familiar figure in the I I the plaudits of even rival pol- ra � . I a - full at iag. various unsettled and unruly : icemen. He hasearned his stripes polic �, Law made such a gallant fi,ht for social a -act ffi),an,cial world, 16 ........, .,..... � ...... Lnd from my hip, pointing . of three years, when the shells a -tariff reform, and there is not the It was ,cortainly his personal pop- The attendance at twelve years the breast of the third in'an, who territories, but the greater about two inches across, they are � I v,cto por- for it, though they carry no pay, least doubt illat the ry of Mr, ularity which enabled him to win of age is 26,000 less than at elevene sat amidships in the, gap they had tion of the work falls upon the and he has had to put up with a taken from the water, nuclei for . I I ax Aitk The attendance at thirteen years opened up, clown which. I looked at broad shoulders ,of poor old j pearla are inserted in them, and M, on -at Ash -bon -under -Lyne, New Market after the death of , Ohn. considerable number I . "�� again . at of age is as many as 88,000 less the barbed point of a heavy seal John has recently been released knocks. e� I heartened the Unionists all along Colonel MoCalmont, and . of hard they are put back again, thirty -of I ,,L * a . � . I eL feet of . . :1 . the line. � the laist election. One of his $is- than at twilvo. spear. His left hand lightly stead- from one of his bea:is which he shar- __44 them to every six squar � I , I �;, bottom. . . � � I I Then Sir Charles Rose won back ters is the wife of Sir Stanley And then comes the great st ied the whale'boiae head, in their ad with other Powers, this being A YEAA D.NOUGHTS. I .11 Newinarket for the Radicals, pede. At fourteen years of ap - -F throwing. But the inan his Cretan beai. The international � - % Mr.. Clarke. � _, They are left there four years. . "! k Hamar Greenwood, Sunderland, Mr. Hamar Greenwood is a scholars drop to 67,811, a & '4 ,L second too garrisons have been Then, being seven and one-half , ; � ,.A" and Mr. A.. C. Beck, Saffron Wal- breezy speaker I of 340,0001 - . withdrawn Brazil. Will Launck the Most Pow. years old, they are .removed, and I . I I I and personality, i ' In from the turbulent island of Cr,Ae, erfal Battleship. searched for pearls. The harvest - -, . . ­ ­ 'Rritain, France, I Russia - ­_ I . den, Even. more remarkable wa,s who began his political career as CHILD POPULATION. ,bhaL,- - -of artificial or "culture" pearls is I . I the return of Mr, Jos, Martin, for Private -secretary to Mr. Winston I '---I a respite Thirty-six Dreadnoughts are due . I St. Pancras East. Because he saw Churchill. NOW leb us carry the matter fur- way of subterA.,,., . t_ to be launched by the world's very large, but, -unfortunately, � ' (( � He is, however, an Im- ther. In iq ' . I � .�A no reason for an election" he, wa,s perialist.. INO one, is likely to for- 09 a committee appoint- the loose end of a pic,.o ,,. -, 4uring this year. That is, these are only little, more than half . . ' I 4enied all help from.official Liber- get theisplendid defence ad by the, Board of Education to about the mear'llead and shaft, as ,a.. . 1, I 11 of the -wery ten days- pearls, for although large, lus- . . . alism. But he soon showed h report -on thesubject -of Continua- th0high to'& it. Then, slightly CHASING j,,,,--. liattleships I �, . e was Governor of Jamaica on his return tion Schools , trous, andof fine quality, they are .� ite prepared some. valu- disconcerted, he put down the 41 flat on one side. This farm has an .1 , . qu able to dispense with it. He to Englhncl after witnessing the . It wa,s.too accessible for tal a. . . is not nicknamed "Fighting Joe" em . rthquake. and the "regrettable. able, statistics as to the attendance spear. This one little district is to be iu dditional source of income in the . . for nothing. incident" which followed it. or non-attendance of the entire my peace of mind, and he was r- lOw,Rd to run on witlivat foreign and VaiUl- -1 Dearls that its oysters pro- 1 A � I , . I . 11 INTER. IEIR POLITICS. ages Of -eleven and twenty-one years , . REGRE 'TED ABBE . 0 _�a " . ,T . youthful population. between the dered to stow it away under the intervention * * E ver since e - td�me now being built; by .- ,:� is not lacking in J . TI thwarts.". 1. of the Greco -Turkish War, when tho,.world, -nortion 'Of, Per— � 41. , All colonial members Of the old Twelve of the colonial members of age. Not only the above facts, ' _+ General Vaasos was sent from Atli- A co`iisi-lt-�rable. number Of thes�, _nug oys- . A, � House of Comm re- are on the Opposition sicle and el- but attendanoes, at secondary I ens and made a burlesque, attempt belong to Ails8ia, which has been Sl`- 'IPA I .. . l turned for the new one except Mr. evon on taie, Government. Six of schools, technical institutions, re- CARELESSAS TO HATS. upon the island, the blue -bagged busily engaged-f�ii­hom.a time in Weekly- _'111_� � I � I Henniker Heaton, who has retired them were once colonial members formatoriesi and e'vening schools, . . . __ ., . gentry, who regard it as -their building herself a brand new navy I . . __�_ . , . . . -after representing Canterbury for of -Parliament, and one was Prime were examined in order to arrive. Comparisons as to *England's Em. home, havo found European diplo- to take, the place of that destroyedi, DEATH OF "PELux.- , '"'. - �L at a definite ,conception of the pro I . macy constant employment. I . I - :1 , 7�ey­five years, surely a record. Minister of. his. province*. � - I inent Dien's 116adgear. by Japan in the- last great war. She � ' . I � He. will be greatly missed, though . portion of -children and young peo- I I Not very far away, in the same will launch four Dreadnoughts, as Famous New Zealand Pilot Polplixw__ P r 1�j . � I : "_� with mingled feelings, by Ministers . -119 ple, w'lo are tinaer'instruction at Speaking of hats an English part of the world, lies another of compared with Germany's seven, . Victim of Sharli�._­ `.­ _� � � � � . . . � and ex-Ministbrs. His Place as the ges. All classes of child- _-1), I . I 1. I . y. various -a writer says., It is astonishing how John Bull's patrols, which be and two each by France, Chili, Ar- I 11 . . I ,oldest ool,onial membe;p is taken by INCOGTkTITOS OF ROYALT re considered, and the stud- 'careless many eminent men have shares ,with Italy and France. In gentina, and Japan. One each will Every -body who has sailed up the � . I — . ran we . � . I . . I , Mr. W. X.-eswick, who has sat for Queens and Princesses Sometimes ents in seconclaxy schools, If all been about their headgear. The this case, however the troops are be launched by Spain, Brazil, Italy Sound into the harbor of Welling, . . -K, " I - Duke of Wellington is credit- found by Turkey, nd the Powers and Austria. Britain will be ea !. Epsom since 1899. Travel as Plain birs. or )1j sorts and classes estimated liberal- great a, sily ton, New Zealand, will hear wibb -re- ( He isa, paxtner in the great east-ok Ss. ly in order not to. exaggerate the . ed with wea,ring d�e ,hat until it of the entente merely supply cer- first with at least eleven to her grab If the death of "Pelorus � . . - ;1 It has always been the custom of cas was So bad that a tactful friend tain officers. Jack-" This famous dolphin has for , , , . -ern house Of Jar -dine, Matheson & . a as tp non-atteudance. As it is the case that. credit. Cariously enough, the ''I'll, J., Co., which he repre"�ted in Hong I royaltie� to travel under assumed ' Persuaded him to give it away to the Greek, Servian, and Bulga, i years acted as the -pilot of ships, I �. .: ��,.; � D rian most powerful battleship which the I I . � Kong for years. Like Sir Thomas *P t though their incognito AY AND NIGHT SCHOOLS. a servant. Some days afterward�, Governments connive at the form- year will see launched will and, his loss will be*deplored, not, , � . 'in,'samre-so�ectuedt belong, I I I I 41, Sutherland, he took an active share most people know who In 1906-7 there were about 691,000 we are told, the Duke sa,w this ation of "bands," who scour the not to any of the great Powers, only by New Zealanders, but by I I � 1.� 1 in the affairs of the colony as �a they are. The King and Queen of children of 14 years of age.. of ,�ame hat, newly ironed, on a chair country and terrorise the -villages, but to Brazil, whose -one venture travellers. "Pelorus Jack" had the .1 ,�, �. . the Belgians, who lately went to these, 156,m attended day ,Schools, in the hall, where the servant had it is not surprising that the Tom- in this line, the huge Rio de Jane- distinction of being the only fish pro- I .1, : member of the Legislature. The . Unionist candidate for Walworth Egypt, travelled under the names and 92,368 attended evening at that moment placed it, "A nice mies of the.Sultan under this Eli- iro, will carry the record arma- tected by special act of Parliament. I ' I- I at the late election,, as he was -in of Count .and Countess de Kesh, schools, ,making a total attendance hat that," observed the Duke, ropean leadership have their work ment of twelve 14.3 inch guns, as I But the sharks have no respect for . January, 1910, and in 1906, was Mr. and,,as this was a name not well of 248,050, of 35.9 per cent. Thus, "Yes," replied the Servant; "it's out out in protecting disiricts and compared with the ten 14 inch guns legislation, for the dolphin was their Belilios, r�so a colonial from Hong kao'*n they were not recognized by as many as 442,950 attended neither the one your Grace gave to Me. chasing local De Wets who are as of the iiewest. American battleship victim. �, . most people. . I -_ - �,e . Kong. I I day school nor evening school. Ov- I've had it done up." "What did slippery as the ,will-o'-the-wisp. and Britain's ten 13.5 inch. A correspondent writes: "When I 1. . . The late Queen Victoria, called er 64 per ceiit. of our boys and it, cost you?" inquired ther, Duke. The crowning act of insolence oc- . -.4--_ i - -aged 14 have done with edu- "One shl-Iling," was the answer. curred when one of the British of- CAR6 TO RUN DAY AND NIGHT York, was making his last visit to I P , CANADA HAS TEM. - I herself. the Countess of BaImoral, girls e it ficers, 0, the King, who wa,s then the Duke of As usual since 1887, Canada co'� the Czar Paul I. and his Empress cation. '' I "Here's half-a-crown; I'll hav olonel Elliott, was taken — . New Zealand I was One of the com- I m I .. I . mands most strength in. the House, ones went on a long journey to all I -I- 115 71ais of age the pro -portion ,back," and Wellington is reported prisoner by some Bulgarian band- Traffle Will be Continuous in Lon- pany I . the great courts of Europe aa , I - As we approached Welling- _ 1�e'A . . ten -of -the oolonial members being the of c�l ad Len not at school rises to to have taken it, and worn it again its; had it not been for the devot- � I I Count and Countess du Word.- The nearly 77 per cent; -at 16 it rises to, till his friends prote, a ton we were told by the sailors that , , . �1_ . � . �, ,her sons.. . The best known are Mr. last Kin -9 of Sweden,. of the ancient nearly.89, per cent.; at 17 it rises its shabbiness. sted against, ad bravery of his Turkish orderly, our warship would be met in the . . Bonar Law and Sir Gilbortt-Park-er, . . . it might have fared ill with him. For two days this summer -that � �, I 1. . already familiar figures in English line of Wasa, Gustave Adolph IV., again to nearly 87 per cent. Perhaps the remaining most - re- As it was, he was able to effect a of the Coronation aud the day after sound by an -extraordinary pilot in , i � .. ..4 public life. 'The coming man is Mr. called himself Colonel Gustayson, . The figures, bad as they are markable historical comparison in wonderful escape the same night, .-London w ill be a wid6-awake mod- the shape of a. dolphin. We treatei , I the story as a sailor's yarn, but, . Mai Aitken, whose return was one Queen Alexan4ra of England on would be much worse if the even-' hats is between the plain, steeple- shooting five brigands in six shots ern city, for instead -of all traffic k one occasion, w, . , � � of the surprises of the election.. Ile I hen she stayed in ing school Scholars were Omitted., crowned, broad -brimmed hats of with his revolver. and life disappearing from the sure -enough, when we entered the . I had only ton days in which to make Paris, wa,s under the name of Mrs, Those who believe with me that the Puritans and the. flat, broad, Britain and France again 'share streets after midnight, 'tubes, bus- sound there was the famous fish I , . I � the acqUaintance of his constita- , Stephens, says the Gentlewoman, the, day is the best time to learn feather -bedecked hats fashionable another. "beat" along the frontier gas and Street cars will run . day and (which must have been about tell . ­ I . ency and to organize the defeat of and Queen-Idaud of Norway when should note that at 14 years of age with the Cavaliers of Charles IL of, Liberia, the queer little negro night. feet long) speeding before us and . . I the sitting member. she makes an excursion often calls only 22.5 per cent. of tbechild Vop- . Nowadays the most striking fact republic in West Africa, where, the Showing us the way. It is due to That he sim At the close of the -evening traf- 'Pelorus Jack' to say that he was . �, - hers -elf Miss Mills, while bar sister, ulation of these islands is at school about fashion in hats is that while liberated slaxes were settled after fic on June 21st The Underground . . ply romped in was dule, to his bab I .� . its of business concentration �and the Princess Victoria, travels Often 'Inthe'daytime. . � our women vie with one an -other in the American war. They have prov- lines will shut down for an hotir. not tempted from .his �dnties 0 as Miss' J81inson. . carrying the largest. artificial gar- ad to be quite unable to cope pilot by food thrown overboard. He , passionate Imperialism. 1�e is. on- MANY NOMINAL SCHOLARS. , with .Lit 3 a.m. on June ,92n.d the ii � � tra I S took his businiass seriously, and . P ly thirty-two, and has made a large The King -of Bulgaria travels as . den beds and beehives on their the savage tribes along their bor- will stari again, and the service . . , . lv� ,. .. al concerns in r for the I not until we were- at anchor did he . �� fortune in" industri Count Murany, while the present It should be borne in mind that heads our men are eage ders with regard to gun -running will continue with ut intermission . . . . King of Italy bears the name of, the above figures in one important light,' . Canada, the West Indies and South ,st and most easy fitting felts. and smuggling. give any heed to the hospitality of � Count P�llcnza,. The German respect make the number Of &01101- 'The.demand f I . until 3 o'clock the next morning, )P � . '.1 I I America., His -wife, is the niece, of I Crown PriucO and . . -or a comfortable fit- _. lis being lengthened and ac- the crew. I I Admiral Drury, command . I , Pringess call are appear bbtber than they really ing felt has led. to 6.6 invention of WHE N THE, BOXERS ROSE. the trai —*I -- or in themselves Count and Countess are.. I refer to the fact that- partial machinery that has numbered. . celerated. On June 23rd the ser- NEW CURE FOR CONSUMPTION , chief at the Wore, himself a Can- the Bribery and corruption are the vice will be continued until 2 o'clo C . actian. , . Ravensworth, and his younger exemption from school attendance days of the orthodox sizes-tho rule there, and not the exception. in the morning, and a -gain on thcle Ell'. ,lish p. . . . a, brothers Prince August-Wilbelm affects a great many of the nomin- 71-8 worn by the. late King Edw For instance, the Postmaster -Gen- following Thurgday, when the State ap I 1: a . .1 FROM THE ANTIPODES. and Prince .Oscar travelled as the al "scholars." It is unfortunately t I ird era Advocate Use of . I I ' . within the power of the Lower Edu- he 7 1-8 of Dickens and John' eral has been known to remove all Procession takes plaoe.� Ammoniated Gases. . L wili� Counts von Lingen. , , . Stolle The Australian contingent, ich I . . Bright,'the 7 3-8 of Mr. Glad the stamps from tile latters before e . used to be the 4rongest in the The ex -Empress Eugenie when cation Authorities to grant half and the enormous 8.1-2 of Daniel mailing. them. 1_� In connection with the , laborate Some of the English papers re- � . House, is now the, smallest, Its she is incognito is known. as- the . . arrangements made for the protec- cently announced the accidental time attendanc� for children . be- O'Conno.,, etc. At times, Of course, the weari- tion of Westminster Abbey from I . tween 12 and 14 years -of ,age. In � I . . . representative in the, Conservative i Countess Pierrefon,ds in remem- I . --4.4— . �someyoiitine of patro ,discovery of what appeared to be, a , - party is. Mr. Alan Ell . rgoyna, who braace of a castle of that. name. areas containing over 58 per cent. . . I joing is varia lling and pol - fire during the Coronation Period, cure of consumptio� by means of f I is that was once given to h6r by Na- -of the population of England and BE' CRIET OF THE ORANGE. ' d by real sharp fight a party of firemen have just made the ammoniated gases generated in Oda of tile editors of the'Naval � The late King Edward Wales, partial exemption f rom ing. No better example . of this a tour of inspection, . The 31 by- the �r,Odtictioll of maggots for fish * . *`as known a,s the Du d "I Annual, and, as a partner in the Poleon IIL Here is a way to tell from the could be found than in the Alli drants in tho'buildiDg---all 10011nect- bait in an establishment near BraA- � ,great Australian wine firm,,is fam- ice, of Lancas- school attendance is granted by ad- outside appearance of an orange march upon Pekin. when, after o . . ation autboritie,q. W . the ed with a huge tank ill one of the fol.d. iliar with trade conditions in the ter and King George takes for lifs 110 , w many pieces there are % ithia -. .Boxer risings, Brit n The United Stat�s Consul at I . ,�&,,Comlnonwealth. Mr, Thomas,. who travelling name the title' of Lord even the satisfaction of knowing Look at- the stem end of an orange France, Rusisia, Japan, and the tested and found in Bradford, in Washing- , . -he New South Wales Legis- Ily twhich that all children enumer - perfect OrKler. Special telephones, t"�4at in t , Renfrew, Thp naine, under ated in the and you will find that there is a United States of America, fe ' Y aged in tilis , 1� V MGM 'ring connected ith the neniost1ire ska- ton, sa s : "'AfleToeln�tgto lative Assembly as a Labo I Queen Alexandra gonera, ravols early lines of the - table - attend .little w work, . - , egg of Chester, . I I wheel where the sear is pupod for the safety of their represent&- tions,,have been installed. it -is said certain persons I its as .,b Labor m6mbor . away from. the stem, with. kpo tives, organized a joint expedition. known to be sufferinj from tuber- ber, now si is the Count sch�ol full time. . ko$ I � for Derby in the Parliament at The late E,mpress of Austria al- MOST .SERIOUS NEED. that lead away from the cep-tre. I r and destroyed While the Coronation ceremony culosis have regained their health. I k_"� 11 wr,ys, had her name entered as tht I : .. I , 1�ost,ninster, and Mr. Lynch, as a ritess of Rohenoinbs� I . spaces betweea thes,o the. Taku' forts and, is proceeding special firemon While some, local medical men ra- I . .1 X tonalist,'whose pro-Boei sym� Con rhe King Lob us clearly 'realize what the, Count tl'G after heavy will be placed at fixedpoints in all . I I . . of Sweden, ig'known as Co'Unt, Tul� Position is, Of our boys and girls sPokes and you will know how many fighting, succeeded in relieving tile ther ridicule the idea, others do not. I I . pathioi made him so notorious dur� 'ged parts of the building, tach being One Physician is reported to have I . gard. Ex -King Manuel of portu- at 14, 15 andaiG years of age, who pieces the orange has. Your r. woof foreigners, who had. been besio ,,, . 4�1 ing the �Sonth African war, Sal also wasIond df being inco nito ,number 2,02%000, three-fourtbs are Is easy; YOU have only to op.en the ili'llia. British Legation. within reach of ail electrical fire said thit the oure is by no means I . 11 S. A. released from disoipline or saiious orange. I . In spite of the scares of a Teu� alarm signal attached to the regu- inipossible and should be . invcsli- . I I I I ME MBERS, and was then known as GounNar- , � '; . . . to . lar firo ilarm pedestal ott the gated. Ho. adds, I . . p � I Thera ,are four South 'African cellos. I . . training, - The apprenticeship sys- - -44 - . . nic invasion, Garmany and Brit- 'ground floor, I � 'Ammonia, has a ... � ' bern has largely disappeared, and, I . . &in organized a, punitive expediton . I . I ---.fA— - I very boneflaial eff"t upon s,oai-a Of � I I mainbers-Mr. A. 0. .Beck, who - THE ITALIAN OF IT. . togeth6r through the wfid and little ID . . Ib is just, . . for an ovooedingly largo proportion the processor of life I I � , . was d,ef6dted in January, 1,910, and ey Octivc WdY of of those who are withdrawn, from ' (rTha p r known country where Nigeria and . � . I'll, .1 � has ,distinguished himself by re:Wv� leading up to a new gown." llko�v rofesso says tbab music possible that it may destroy tho I . . work .1 t.?,�) , 'Irl school, omployment is a mattor of olves a g ,P said the Cameroons border -each other, A HINT. taber�cle bacilli. it is by no Itcang '- � . �� - p i I � L ering for the Government the $Oat do you be,gin by tzilk- mechanic groat d0al 'to Rossini,) Shar I fighting wa's experienced b Ho -"Do you think that your &-, utterly ridioulous, although I will , I I . � ii I � , ,f,j a �iip to, al routine, or worst,.. Tb a J th (1, Vol , I I � 1), � I I lost by Mr. Veage; Mr. 0. 8, Gold- ing to my husband � ab� I I 1'�) '" Woman' "What's 468- the two columns, and a, German thor would -offer mc, personal Vio- not commit inyself t it �at preserit .. .1 boy fooding bits of. metal i"llio a! "_Ii I 0 I I ! maun, the million�aire; Mr. P, Mol- _ "' I � 4 . I r"Ilrope. Ts'vont�ia�lly"ho,is 'glid 0 rmichit)", olzz 010 boy "louellin.p, along 1 -R at," i onlied Mr. Climr=, lieutenant war badly wounddd. lonoo it I were to ask him for you ill I think we are far too Apt to put ' � 11 , tono, probably the � only colo'nialloomproliaiso." I 'Xith a 1)ask,�A ovor his arm, is un� Probably .Italian for.lrosin.11i "is Fortunately, there, are dne or.two - Sh�_'"Xo, but I think he will if aside romedies discovered by tho i ' � . ' '��,, I . . I . I . : . . places where th-04tsistAtee, of 401111. you'don't pretty soon.1P as of 110 valuo'.1 11 I I . . . M . I . I . �, . 1. �. I . . I i . .1. .1. . . I I . ,. . I . . . I I laity . I . � I I I I : . , � . � . I I I , . I ( I I . . �� , : � I I I I . . . . . . I p , _. I I : � I � � I � I I I . I ;1 . I I . '. � ; . I I I I N � .1 ''.. � . I . 1: . I 1� 111; � i I I . 11 I . . � - I 1. . . . I I � 1i; � I . I . I I I I . � I I . I '... I I , 'i .. . I I . I . � I I 'k . 1. . �� � "I .� � . 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