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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1911-07-20, Page 3JI) SOtik, 1911 JOHN REDMOND, IRISH LEAOE Sketch of the Min Wh F t the Head of the Irish Home Rele Party What ellenPer ef Men is Jahn Ited- mond? The aneWer is given in a eketcb, by • M. Louie Redincind-Holvard, who ie the Adopted gen of the Web leader. A. Mite of filial affection rune through et, But while the book le mere lauda- *tterY than critical, it preeepts a vet•y life.like portrait of the Man, and givee Ita excellent narratiVe of hie career. M. Retineolad-Heward, who was born New SoItth. Wake, Wag left an or, Phan at an *ear17 age- "When my . Mother 4104,». he says. fileaVlag Me an ' orphan, I Wee taken inee Mr. Jaim ItednieMESI house as one of his Oven • children, With a kinditelle and eutgna- elisnItY which did for me all that a father could, have done for the ecluea- tion Of his owtt eon," Reeereed, Sillegt in Corneae/Y, een, teMplative, and with a touch of melan- choly in eis outlook, eohn Itedenetni. s none of the Irish exuberange., and gaiety of Writ. Constant at- tendance at •the House of Cipatmons, he does not mingle In its rich, free • Inner life. He ie a widely -read man of cUltiVated tastes and with a tied - eons view of life and duty. It le no • eerprise to learn that he thought at one time be had a religioes vocation. An Ancient Family Mr. Redmond belongs to the old Irish gentry. Re is the/ head of an ancient Angio -Norman family, which . has been rooted in Ireland since 1170. Following the alebut invariable habit of the English settlers in the Emerald Isle, the Redmoncls became Irish of the Irish. Ras not leroude shown us • with matchless art how English, Nor- man, and Scotch settlers in Ireland euccurabed to the witchery of their new surroundings and became ipsis Hibernis Hiberniores? In 1170 Ray- mund le 'Gros, leader of Strongbow's • / advance guard, landed with a 'sn3all • force in Wexford, and that county • has ever since been the home of his descendants. Several members of the family eat in the Westminster Parliament, in- cluding Mr. Redmond's father, W11 - Ham Archer Redmond, who was re- turned for the borough of Wexford in 1872. A zealous Catholic and a tem- perance reformer, W. A. Redmond was described by the "Tablet" on his death in 1881, as "a man of large and cultivated intellectrefined, and sensi- tive nature." In his election address of 1872 Mr. W. A. Redmond strongly urged the necessity -of Home Rule for • Ireland, and declared ..that "ample means existed to achieve this result within the limits of the Constitution and without infringing upon our loyal- ty -To the throne." Clerk in the House of Commons Witb such an ancestry, John Red- nond took naturally to politics and to Nationalism. Born in 1856, he re- ceived his, early education at the Irish Jesuit College of Clongowes, in Kil- dare. Here he was a diligent scholar, • and early gave promise of excellente In speaking and writing English. .He was a shining light in the amateur theatricals of the college. Mr. Red- mond retains his youthful enthusiasm for the stage, and is an assidious thea- tre -goer in London. From Clongowes he went to Trinity College, Dublin, and was called in due course to the Irish Bar. He was for- tunate enough to obtain a clerkship In the House of Commons while still in the early twenties, and from that position of detachment observed the atartling rise of Parnell and the birth of a new Nationalism movement in Ireland. • Resigning his clerkship In the House of Commons, Mr. Redmcind soon returned to it as member. In 1881 he was elected M.P. for New Ross, and joined Mr. ParnelPs band, then in its brilliant dawn. Mr. Tim- othy Healy tells a story of how Mr. Willie Redmond, himself later to be- come a Nationalist M.P., but at that time a lively young Militia officer, telegraphed in horror from Wexford barracks to his brother on hearing of • the candidature for New Ross, "For od's sake don't disgrace the family . by joining the Land League and Par- • nell." How amusing is that telegram in the light of later events. The Schism and After There is no need to releaverse the • old familiar ground of the Irish agrar- ian agitation in the 80's, Parnell's amazing ascent into fame and power, and then after the divorce suit his swift descent into the abyss. Mr. Red- mond stood by the chief in the schism that destroyed the unity of the Irish party. As a Parnellite he stood at the • General Election of 1892 for Water- ford, where he defeated Michael De- • vitt. Before this, on the death of Par- s* nell in 1891, he succeeded to the leadership of the little forlorn rem- nant of what was once a powerful , party. After ten years of bitter fra- d• tricidal strife, a reginion of Anti -Par- • nellites and Parnellites was effected In 1901, and John Redmond became •the leader of what was again a more or less united band. Mr. Redmond first distinguished himself in the House of Commons dur- ing the debates on the Home Rule still • of 1893. The force, the cogency std clearness of his speeches showed at he was a valuable addition to the debating strength of the Irish mem- bers. He has always been averse to • the idea that Ireland should cut her- self away from an Empire to whose greatness Irish valor and Irish states- manship have contributed so large;y, and which includes within its borders so many millions of the Irish race. Corean IViarrlages In Corea mareiage is even more ine portant and essential for a man than It is fo a weirian, ale, until a men be wed, he is a being of no account. If 1, • father has not selected wives for hie • sons ere they reit& the age of twenty he is considered worthless , end ne• ' glectful. After Fifty Yeats • After fifty-three years, an Indilitt • %CAW veteran, Private Andre* thlte • ler, tete just been preeented With the • Medea earned by hint for hie serVide In the '2nd Highlanders Iti 1858. • 'telephone Despatehing The Cantidtati Prieltic heti 3,066 istilee of telephones,br seventrl, one Miles more than its neared Cot& eetiter, the Atehisen, Topeka an route Ve Railroad. • The Bank' of Montteal has (leaded , to iliereaSe its capital to $10,000,000. 611,1doe Nows.itteord On 31 esens On, : , * ROYAL SALUMS I . . . . • CAREFUL HORSES .. . ...„ . . - -- w - .--i ii "NOTHIN6" NE . .. . • • A CHAMPION MURDEMS, . ... „ .1 Canada's Annals Contain a Record. I , Brusiekting Case, 'I. ettellarreYeePcsuultiPonsensotuesuedly ru tbilei•sesolluend- try. but in England. in London there • • • • were printing shops which pexliteed Uothing but ' horrible .booklets treat ing of in.u. niers and hangings. The; enjoyed tremendoue eale and were a bought by all elasses of people. I the o One m st expensive of these pallep lets- exteut ts a book of 33 pages. describing the iniquitous =ear and tragic end of Sophia Hamilton, who was sentenced to death. at Fredericton N.B., in 2845. for an alraost inereclibi . series of CrirrieS. And if Use story con- Mined in the pamphlet is true she wee entitled to the eharapionsh' .ip as a . caurderess. ' The achievements of Kate Bender and Belle (eunnese were trivial by ' comparison One May seeak fli t ' epee . ly now of her oareer, since all con- • cerned are in their graves, but the people of New Brunswick, sixty years• ego; Mentioned her mane with shud- sug teetseu. men ,seeseesee "see .1,... liepb.ia ague leaxned that thee /tad I large sum of money in gold. Ms* wee 'I hoping they would stay for the night. : blit they had an unreasonable desire ItoietiP.Ustiso.epribisand. cpesetitringtedthetywacmy inideteaoht be detained, scut a couple of her else putiee up the road to waYhtY thillea The d p c t -bed Pe • ist; the roeat Inds' l'ewt‘hen'' talie"-trageveir:ri home ran into it the murderers did their work, and Sophia mune up jeet in time to see the vietime die and ree Lew the of $10,00(1 in gold, tenon another occesion stile waited epon—a pest at th la Wet ' ciesn fair hane dr,ea dst table wrih her stab higt in. ths eenbackteewklreile ehseiestwasta vommenting upon the x eil ' et the coffee. e .e enee '. Finally So h' p la. was arrested for Isha- murder of a Quakerwhose WO w ••found. i he •cellar' Sb . ''** le r 0 wee. Sued at Fredericton and sente ced to death. but t h fe• n ' some o er ieride managed to cenyey poison to her a few daye bel • the date set for the b ,angm• g and spa died in her cell. - - . The Mueleitsteeneed Greetings of Roystity-e-interteiting tilde Light' too Court litiquette . ss•HE BY 1 jApANEsE 1.0.01. . Soros RonisHrksbis. Cases of Ifonine . ..00,0ity aye Seen Recorded- Homo that 'Cavell Children ......- There have been many instanceo re+ verded le which home, when going et a rapid pace have stepped aside to *WOK stepping on n Child who b".' Peeled to be in the WAY, but tome ere Mit have seen in this merely the uer- vousness, that shiee at a Piece of pa+ per or ether moving object ort the - read+ AnY such exPlaustlaa Ps tor* vousnees, however, must les eliminate 4 tram -itach an inetnnne an th'n 44- rowing r corded in "Our Dumb l "' et 1 II t th dit seal. ae o d persona y 0 by the Person. who was the small bov- of the s•tery - ' eeteOns- ne-y.:earliest'recellections• reY t th i d t h e , a or was on o ,oreeta, ains ne many kept from one to five ite his etables. They were well cared for,etime and in re -turn he exriected rood 'aryl e . . _ .. . _ear -- .• ee e sue speed. We had one horse, Fan,' h w th. pet t th . whole :emit . a -• - • - ri itind°; wall: cons. idere°41 so safe that .I. It little fellow I kilte, WW1 allowed .to 1 'around her head and heels With- g etY I t. ' u.,„reill .1 Et vne day I was playing ill the Yard as emit' whilee• eid 1, • , het hit il 'a ' - t'''• eau Ink° 231; fathere UP. W en Ali rea%: djuini)ed iinto the wagon, ga, , ere up the relas and gtwe the word 1° gl' - et the horee 'moved not a - Mtge e- He then ligbtly toucleed_her with the whip; old- 'Fan' Mend,' pflik- ed u her eat" but would not budge • • •,- • I Pth I, en my father, a little OUt of • ' pa ence, gave the horse a 511114'1)er a . ke,. What, was his .amasement to see 'Fan' lower her head earefullv • - - * - - seize with her teeth a small bindle • in fronto he directly f r, Will AkeAustria tent y ton it to one side, then start off on a brisk trot. As the .small bun- dle proved to be me,. it le needless to pay that after that an was more petted than. ever before." ' A further Instance was observed in Bedford, Pa., and recorded in the 1/ Pennsylvania '`flawkeye... • A little girl with her doll ire her RPM% fell under the • feet of a passing horse. But the horse moved back away from the child being careful not to t • ' • - — - -- 6-0P upon her as he did so, and then, put- ting his head down, grasped her skirts ' firmly with his teeth, lifted her clear off the pavement, and set her gently upon the curb, stepping, back there- ueP" and looking at her with .evident satisfaction. . • ti. Kleine Happening" That ,are men . Repetitions That history repeats itielf MAY be 4i, trite remark, but, all the. NM** 1$ alr eery true one. Take the b. =lag g then Cif woreen'a itiffreee. In * InuieuM at Cracow may be seen teeflay a. document Wert. ng 4 seYenteentlecentlleY date, which is heeded the "Young WoMerthie rite time" It wet pregented tO the Polish Parliatnent iiimmoued by King Teed* taus. end beers the. official mark, Whiter tae trainer* of this petition. de not actually staler the Tote, they, make eta fewer than twenty-five impap rate requests, each bearing' upon vele taus •appecte of womeete rights. Th. petition begins by renting out that - • • Polhill Ming men Spend far too muds in'eourting. The women request unit a fine of a thousand crowns may be inflicted upon any Young man who fails to marry the maid he is courting by the June following the commence- meat of the courtship. Another chum demands that all men shall, by law be forced to merry at op before the Age of thirty. Most folk Imagine that arbitration and disarmament . are purele the out- come of twentieth:century civilization, but the feet Is that the desire for nit venal peace is no new thing. Eigte len hundred and seventy years ewe a mple to Peace was dedicatee in Rome•; and, to come to more modern times, tbe Congress ot Vienna, in the year 1814 seriously discussed a gen- eral limitation of armaments and . . a -preliminary agreement was drawn up,, - by which France and Prussia and ' pledged- themselves not to in- crease their armies beyond a certain point Two years later, in 1816, a Peac a Society was formed, whin held an' nual meetings. and many people really believed that an era of universal peace was dawning neon the Id wor . . Even the harem 'skirt is no novelt In 1849, Mrs Y' . Amelia Jenks Bloomer, an American woman, introduced the. trouser costume which bore her name. It consisted of "an open -fronted' jacket and loose . trousers. the latter wide like those of the Turks, but gathered in at the ankles." Th BI d The oomer dress was seen a good deal in . the West East of London In 1851, but 'caused trouble, just the h ki t h as e arem. s r as - • - , Ot the various salutation; that paint between Sovereign and people. the lehtion molt Meier a undoubtedly theand- sheke. It is pletteant to have fent the grip of a king -an experience, to re- member and make much, of. A Worth -country Miner, who* the King had decorated and shaken hamlet with for Borne. deed of irt3rOlaM, Wan weicoinge on returning home by a. ereWd Of hie Mende. They were sur- Prised, hoWever, when he pereistentle %tiered their hands, -proffered irr 0011. , gratulation. and kept bis own et the leettom of his trouser -pocket. • "'How's Allis, inter seed a frieud. 'Ifiuit turned proud? ' The miner cautiously drew 1110 right hand from his pocket, regarded it st moment in adnitration, and then re- turned it decistvely to the depths it came from. •that lets, na, leder he exclaimed. with A slY tWinide in his eye. "'Ye Canna expect it; ,i've Oaken ha•nde with the 'Xing:" . The value a the. "blii islates hand- •ishake" is thoroughly understood ilt America, A political "captaln" will stand for hours ebahleg hands with the endless file of his supporters. The President lerneelf is not exempt, On the (*melon of the Inauguration, Bali at Washington, Mr. Taft went through the Ceremony, it was calm' isted, just 4,600 times. TO those unversed in Court Etis quette, another form of salutation, that of kissing the Royal hand, some- tinier; proves . a veritable tear*. The, poet Longfellow, describing hiii pre- sentation to Queen Victoria tells how he unwittingly. grasped 'the hand which the Queen held out to him. Re noticed a look of- Ourpritei on her face, but did not 'realize till • afterwards that her Majeety. Intended her hand to he .ltissed. This rather formal mode of salute- tion, though it enters into many Court cememonies,. is not in this country carried to such an. extreme ea at Ma- drid, one of the Most conservative courts in'Europe, • When the second of the 'young Spanish princes was born the little Prince ef. the Asturias was 'just twelve months, 'old. - But al- ready he 'seems to have been instruct- ed in Court etiquette, for on his baby brother being' shown to him, •he he- mediately held .out .his hand for the When•infant be kiss! ' king -meets king, the . usual greeting •is a kiss on both ' cheeks. The two monarchs embrace by lightly holding each other's shoulders, and minting firs& On one cheek and then iminedtately afterwards, the other. : The raising of the bat and bowing, whtch are the only forms of salute- tin that the ordinary mortal can ex- Royalty Peet to reaeive froare most from, Royalty fatiguing operations; if long continued. .- Queen Victoria never spared her self in this respect in the Dia- An increase Especially in the Core sumpo$ of Prk-Seetf i • Too High Priced --""" Th, old prejudice as to the eating of animal fleoh. among the Jimanette has been broken down to a coneiderable extent. Indeed, there, has been an increaeing demand for beef among them, but its comparatively high price seriously miiitatea against Its being made a univereal gape) foe -diet. For this reef= the copelemPtion of beet in Tokyo -or threugh the 001111tre for that matter-Inte remained mama stationary during the last few' Ye are, but an increasing demendes noticeable for pork and hersefleehe te few years ago the consumption of pork in the capital did not exceed 20,000 head, but at preifent something like double number are slatightered, and One sem& The highest mark for the eme, nineteen of beet In Tokyo was reach- ed in 1904, when 3,600 cattle were slaughtered, not 'secluding those' ite tended ter military use. At this time the people were in an excited condi- tion owing to the war, and they were apparently reckless in their holm- hold expenditure. With the mention Of hostilities a reaction set in and the demand for beef Mut considerably de- - creased, Within the last few years there has been a great increage la the consumption of pork, owbeg no •doubt to its comparative cheapness, - ' and tof the fact that the people have become used to it. Cattle .are. imported to Tokyo for slaughter from all parts of the C01111- try, Most of *the aulmals, however, come from Central Japan, Shikoku and Kyushu, and the flesh of these cattle is sole under the general name of 'Kobe beef.' Most of the pigs slaughtered . in Tokyo are imported from Chiba, !Wake Kanagawa and Shizuolla prefectures. Last but not least there is horse- flesh, which • le in favor among the lower classes. Itis va little more than a decade ago that Japanese took to the eating of horse -nosh, and since then there has been a slow but steady increase in its consumption. At pre- sent• no fewer than .• 10,000 head of horses are butcheredeand eaten in Tokyo annually. In Telly°. horse-fiesh ' Is • offered for sale under. the highly practical name of `cherry -flesh' which has evidently been suggested from an old popular song in which the horse - and .the cherry blossom. are associate ted. /Japanese are adept in -this sort of coining • new terms, of .which there • are !tatty - similar instances, It is, however, to be regretted that unscru-• • pulous dealers are known to .mix up. pieces of horse -flesh with beef and Sell the •mixture as beet • Sometimes these . e men are brought tobook The ' . ' ' •con- • gumption of mutton and veal in Tokyo is stet very limited . - ' • .. • . •• clergies. Her father was a .murderer before her,. and was killed by a dog belongitig to one Of his victims. So- aPnliteexi cewihieenntly7ouitgearsMana,swgeh.o.Wreaxfuell'Qedd . . to believe stories lib heard refiectese. upon her character, After .being mar- rWc1 awhile ke was convinced that the stories Are true, and took his young wife to task, which proved. so etubarrassine to her that she placed poison in his soup, and he died the death*. Then she established a wayside inn near Woodstock, N. B., gathered about her a corps of skillful hone- dila experts. and took up murder and robbery as her life work. She had the house remodeled to facilitate her work and there were rooms with • trapdoors in the floor,. and sliding panels in the walls, and similar con- ttivances. Her cellar became a morgue. At first she buried her vie- time carefully, but as time went on and business • increased' she became rather careless and just left them • lying around. • There was much 'traffic along' the quiet road where her inn stood. The banking facilities of that time were not as they now are, and some of the travelers on their way' to buy furs or lumber or other nierc.handise carried , large slims of money, Sophia easily • picked • pie. out• such travelers when they stopped at her cozy caravansary, and made herself agreeable to them and • treated them to wine which she . had , "Degenerate" Mete. That artiete OA a claim are seMeWhait inerneci tobe degenerateisa vildell". held notion, but it would to . seem ., bet disproved by, a tenni little leeseeee, that took palace a dew days zigo. Arthur Heming„ the well-kno Canadian attest, recently went to New York to invite American artists to ex - hibit at this year's Canadian Nationale Exhibition in Toronto. Gardner Symons, who hike e 32411 standing among American artist-' asked out to dinner Heming and til.;c: Frederick Waugh; another noted ex- List. "Let's go down and have a et;eirtaa ' before e lunch," said Symons,. when the• three had got together at the club. . -e never take a.nythinge' said Hem - lug, when the waiter had been celled. ' 'Neither do I," said Waugh. • •• Symons laughed. 'Tha 's ' t funny," he said. "Neither do I, but anyway we'll have •sonew cigars." • A box of strong clean and • one cie mild ones were brought.• "I don't smoke," said Waugh when asked to have a cigar. ,,And I ,don't smoke," said Reining., 'Well, this' is a great joke," said, Symons. "I don't smoke either, but I thought you fellows would at least 'eke a 6 'cigar. Say, you eat, don't youe' -.because I've ordered lunch." - • • • . . MARMAGE TANGLES . , . .. • TAKE TU E TIME • drugged with. much- Skill, and then • the travelers vanished from the face of the earth. She did not always kill thein in the inn, however. She was a svoman of resources. Two gentlemen from.Quelsee .who • were on a fur buy- . • . • '' . - " * • The Dominion • vernment is send- ' • lug inhale tents and beankets . Mite Porcupine, wit& a •detacImient to distribute tiara. Parliamente will be .. Lor a vote to id the sufferers a. . - • ' • . Some Queer • Relati • i ' onsh pa are Not - . . • only Possiblebut Actual . • -- Considerable amusement was caused in the British House.•of Com- , w•member asked theSec- mons hen a retary ' to the' Treasury "whether a•• woman who was legally married and eubsequently left a idoon the WW. death of her husband, was entitled to be treated as the widow of her late husband for the purposes of the death duties, in spite of the fact of her hay- Ln g. been the daughter of her late husband's deceased wife's sister?" "SPeaking. generali3e'''. replied the Seetetary, . amid loud laughter, "if the marriage was valid inthis country the answer is in the affirmative." • When the laughter had ;.subsided, them . 'meber asked: Can the right hon.- gentleman say What the relation.. of the husband and wife was. before, • marriage?" - After another burst of laughter, the Secretary replied: "1. must have no- tice of that question." . - ' This may have been an imaginary case, but there are in Teal fife many raarriage tangles which put the one 'quotedcompletely in the shade.' In fact; it requires .a more than ordinar- ily• nimble mind to sort out the con- fusion of 'relationships which may follow such an •everyday .event as a marriage. It isnotso long , ago shies a problem of this kindsivas considered at the Centre]. Criminal Court of Lon- don, ' Eeg., with exceedingly :curious results. . • ' ' " • • • • • A woman Married a 'maul we . Will call •Brown, and some years' later he Learn How to Live Well; the Real . Purpose of. Our Being' Here ' • ' ", ---asked Take elute to enjoy the flowers- that are all about you at this season of the year. The Great Lover of us tel must love flowers Hi .mselfand mu . • st want us to love them, too , for He has scattered' thee]; everywhere with a . ; free handLook at them oftentake in eheir sweet perfume; let them help you to think beautiful theughts. Then they will not have been made .ili vain , Take . time to .eare • for the trees. There is something grand about trees'. To . be with them' ' to tend them and to- study. their life and nature, Pallet m.ake men eetter. In the great edneational life of the farm, be sure to include h course in tree culture. ' ': . Take'time. to • lcarn al you 'cat) , about the living . creatures that dc• ,pend • upon . you for their very lite. . Not simply because these friends of the field are able to do. something you, • but •for the better reason bthat they; too, are creatures of His th'ought and therefore worthy of every. k;nde ' /mu you may bestqw einem. them. Take time to know men. Pope wee right when he tend; "The proper study of mankind is .man." Get close to al; the* good men and women you can: •Serve Omit With a good pure. heart and your own life Will .be the. broader and the • beeteie for it .* • • - . Take time .to live. This is the real purpose et our .Coming here -to kern hoer. to nye well. Calmly, earnestiy, patiently, • go on •from day to day,. end so build a life which Will last through . the ages. -Farm• Animal. .' . . . • . , .441 e , •• 1 0 • ' / ei , •• , • • . . ''''•'''OVER 2 MILLION J.'s. .„ .. e , -. .• , . • .., 1d1 4 i ' • . •e ' . . . ,. , • . •, ''• • 0 .•• . •• ..• ..e , • . - , lee • .• . • .. . . PACKAGES. SOLD, • . • • • . . . . .. ' . • • - . • " ' • . .Even mond Jubilee,. procession, when .seventy-eight )oars of age, she hoe:red almost continuously for by far the • • . greater part of the route. ' . • - • • • . 'ehat the .youngest members of the Royal Family are brought up in the same tradition is. shown by an inci- clerk which oecurred later on. that very day'. At the moment • When the crowd round Buckingham, ' Palace was thickest, the two eldest children of the present King appeared at the open nursery' window. Prince Eddy,. the elder, who was three years Old within a day, in response to the cheers 0? the spectators, gravely. raised his hand to his foreheadand saluted. • This action wrought the enthuslasnt of the crowd to a high pitch, and the • . acclamations were so long continued , that the *little Prince concluded that something, more was expected oe hies, Straightening* hinielf, therefore, he again saluted; but this time.wIth both hands at once' .. • . •• • •••• . . .. . . . . , • ' . . , ••• . 'OF . THE HABIT . TEASING - , . . • ----e-- . • , ' , ., EistertalnIng at First,. But 'Soon Be-• . ., . 'comes Intolerable ' , — . . - There . are few habits which should be more carefully looked after aniohg yOungsters than that of teasing. and ' worrying their playmates -or the elder' members of. the family,. At the • out- . • set; and In its mildest form, it may be to. a certain extent .entertaining. and amusing in the • little one, but after a time. it grows 'tamest intolerable, and 1? allowed to . strengthen with the growth of the child, it develops into • a habit than which nothing15 more annoying and exasperating. • There are persons in good society who. are simply tolerated .because there seems no legitimate way in whichlo get rid of them.. An aecident, a misfortune,. a 'trifling indiscretion: or soineeneomfere table . . . • 3.11111111111/ . AommarmillOMMININWAMilml • • . • . -, • e • • . , • •• • , ereeeper . . . . . , . . . ,!ere, • :..a . Rich At.. ; P.. M • . . '"*:•';' * . d as p • :'• • cream wanholesome, ' " . .. ;Al.•• ' ...,• . • ,e,e1 . " ' ' • .• • ' ; ••••e'• ,,,.•-e .. ., \.• • The Most digestible of nourishing beverages • \fee.. •,,, . , . . .. . e • • ., . • ..,. - . . . • .1 - . ,.. , - '•••,' ,,., • , ,• , "l'' • • . , ...... .- . ..,,,,,... „ , • • . . •. . ...., ' ., ',. ,,.. , . '''' ' ". „ r... ,,,... ,•' , • - ALE and STOUT . ... , '',.' • Creates appetite; makesmeals taste • . .• .• better; brings healthy sleep. Keep it • •' always , in ' the hOuse. Your dealer • Anolion... sells it. or you can order direct. ee emezetee - 21 es` e B.RAHMS•AND. THE. SARDINES . . .. eveitt or. another fuedshes them a pretext ,and, there is no living with• the'once they• To , . - ' •Mme. Liza Lehmann is one' of. the world's • leading composers, . • although ' she first achieved fame and popularity. . as a. singer. :Randegger • was her teacher, but she •received Many use., ful hints from . Jenny Lind in her earlier days. After her marriage in 1894 she devoted herself eutirely to composition. . Mme. • Lehmann .tells a quaint story of Brahms. 'She -was staying with Mme. 'Schuman n at •the get started.' show That one. cares about such things' is . often to . furnish occasion for .. further teasing; .therefore the: victims ' keep silence. Their only protection* is the 'avoidance 'of' the society of such Peo- pies and more than one man, and Niro-. Man have found themselves omitted from entertainments and left out of social gatherings without being able to account for the fad. • • . 7' • • • . . •• .•- . divorced her.. She married again, but . the King's Proctor interfered in .the • • SONG -BIRDS' -FOR—GOURMETS • matter of the divorce, with the result . . • .. that the decree was set • aside. The .' H Nf LarksFind . nd a Mar- woman, finding' her ..seconcl. marriage uge umbers p• . . was illegal, refused to.. live with her . • lest in London, • second husband and went abroad. • . ' — • Bearingthat her first husband - had • A recent prosecution in Norfelk has now died, she :married again; but her thrown some light on the trade, in ;original husband came on the scene, leeks for London. A farmer -was . and the woman *found herself in the fined for laying. down grain poloned ' dock charged • with nbigamy. - with- strychnine for the purpose of , ' , . .. The 'tangled webs of kinship. were. catchine eerks, ewhich would after. ' further involved by the woman's o.. wards appear on the tables of eve m thee, thinking her son-in-lew was dead, aims. • , , marrying his father. 'Thus, When the • This men sent seventy-seven dozen original . husband turned- up; he found larks to London in three . weeks, the that:. . . • price being 30 cents 'the- •dozen. It. - HIS wife was the wife of .two other has been said that between January -., men- . end March 40000 larks arrive In Lead- . . enhall Market every , . His father was. hie .father-in-law .• .day! - Those -wile). Consider ,p ' HIS 'mothdr-in-law, was • Ma etep-• igeoneple a moth.er. • . • •• . .• . . 'delicacy May be leterested to learn His wife was his stepsister. . that the birds are often cruelly treat. •• • ed before they appear in the, time at Frankfort, and while she was there Brahms came for a short visit, , Naturally her excitement at the pros. •. . , . • : AN ANCIENT: CLOCK • • • - . • , pect of meeting one of the world's I most famous masters' was great. On the morning of the first dee Of his visit the breakfast menu included sale thee's, which were served in the tin containing' them. Brahms devoured a number. with gusto, and then,- to his youthful Worshipper's amazement and . horror, coolly took up the. tin and • drank the 'oil!: ' • • • . • •• • • ' ' ' .• • .. - ' •• . in Winnipeg There is One Made in . the Year 1779 ." ' . • • --;-* • • •.When a Winnipeg jeweller was 'called uponto repair a clock at Mrs. M. M. Lockwood's residence; he was 'surprised on removing the face .to find- perhaps one . of the ..first clocks - snide In Anierica. At a• glance it was .seee ' ,- . • - • diA. ---e- • • . f. . ' • , '714 • • . : . • . • "w"'"""'"' . , . . . . . • ' •-. ,• \T • 0 ' 0 . . . . • • . . ' • ....I)EBENTURES • \ • . . . • -' . • THE GENTLE cypnc..' •' • •• '''''-•"— • • ' that the works throughout were made ,ipt wood, the only portions ef • other', • - - Hope springs es eternally as a • wa 'man from a mouee. • - . A man..ia apt to feel that hie hands are tied•if be bereft a free footWhen • • Man an but , little here below , but he frequently -wants a 'fresh sure ply of it. • . •• • . Laurels that 'are-. rested upon soot edit. . . Silence is the saiice• that softens ,tbe spice of life. • • " One good turn is api. to. make us . expect another, s • Material about it being two heavy iron weights. On further ,examination • it Was •found that the clock was made in et -brought H ' -about 1779 A e 11 ew avee , p cu ar feature about this relic of the 'stormy a f " •lay aye o ear y. raer can I •A - '1 . independence is that although the most intricate ., parts tire made entirely of hard wood. • ' it has been In constant use since -1779, and has kept correct time On one ' place is fornd the name of Emil Kech,_ followed with the information' that he • • • • had repaired . the timepieee in 1869, - and only once• in the xecollection of • . • • smelter- A •GOOD JUDGE OF MEN ers shops. Soaie 10,000 are .annually to London from Italy. • ____ e . uarnegie had just begun .to They are taken when. quite young, the foundations of prosperity -, an and packed in crates..containing eighty . . t hi with ' • ' • e a' hundred,arriving•en Paris two overseer cetne o m w a very long le face. • . . , -days later. Twelve hours later they "Thsmartest • I • depart -continue theft journey, and r h • e man n my • • , eac ment Says he's going to quit," he staid. London after travelling two days. and "I • i h 'd hi- ' draise thre id hes a very lax xi b f w e you see m, sir, an . . e g , ge • numbei o his salary, We simply can't de 'with- them dying on the way. out hint!" . • Quails are also packed in• crates in 'If he died to morrow then," snort. theesame..cruel way, attention having gie the wor s 1 been fre uentl called to the scandal ed Carne , k would be helc e . .Y . . . uP, would they? You 'couldn't fill the. Then there is a Certain amount of gal). yourself?" • . .• . • eruelty in catching plovers, and thoee "No, 'sir; he's a very skilled work - wh.ose business it is to carry on the man," trade have been prosecuted more than . S . - "Wei1 . . end bim to me! " oncealt , hough the numbof sa er tiric. Al' a judge of met, Andrew cast . look • tions •have been few. . thp indispens fit ;,.. , e • . • .... • , see ..;:e•••'' ';'.' e.:.; e, e e• es .. . ,.: ..; -,•:.•••f •e• , ' Ile! jr \\\\\\\\\\ . „• • • , • A ' , ran. 3 Millions \II ' \ A . . . \ • * I 0 • . , • SECURITY . , ' Put your savings in the Safest form of investment you canend-- * the ..1% debentures issued by this selid• and prosperous company -- established 1864. . Issued f$too and upwards.. , orable Interest payable 'half -yearly at the rate of 4.°,,,.. . Depositors a.nd Debenture -hold- ., ers have the first charge on the entire assets of the company. . Since incorporation over 'MC . minion dollars in interest alone been pOid to Depositors and Debentureholders. Reserve fund equal to paid-up capital of $ t000,000.00 and assets over thirteen millions. . 4. • 2B ., 7 . . * 4 SC COOT/ avings 0.0 .1 , xg 41 onboSA .7honints „ . , ., THE SUPREMACY " MACY OF BRIDGE ------. the present geeeration of. the Lock- Wood family has the clock stopped. • 'Reviewers Of the teelal eseason„ just dosed agree tbat• Its outstandhig feature is the conquest ot German societY .by the seductive game of 11 bridge. Pern o.monopoly In the hands of a few privileged folk, who knew it front English visits, bridge '*130011 has. now become the properte of Gee man society gettertilly. It has Invaded all bra/1.61es of the smart set, hided lug royelty, the arme, and the aris. tocraey, The theatres reveal unmis. takable evidence of the bridge plague. Several of the season's plays. Intro, duce games, and the dialogues of a do, zen others tell of it conspicuously enceforth the national mune of ' ."Skat.." seers likely to have to- fight for itia existenee with all-coliqueritig bridge. --. ' • Record Crowd at Cricket • The recotel attendae for any cricket !match is 95,00e, the number . present ' at the England V. Austra.la Tee. Match of March, 1805. in an interview .With mri3. Lockwood it was learned that the clock had been in their family •since her marriage With the late M. M. Lockwood, and •that preus. vioto this thee wee ee it the DroPertr ot . his grandfather, havieg in hie home in New York State tor Mete years, As neat 115 she could 'remember it was given to him by hie father, who was borte in New Yore State about the time of the - declare- ' tiOn of independenee. The framework ' Is made of maple and ,stands 26 inches high. • 'The front le 'decorated with carved pillare, The figures Oh the dial aree almost obliterated btim y e, and thsame key which for &macre. tions has been used every 24 hourshave to wind ft, Is 'worn smooth he age, having been brought int6 service no. less than 50,000 times, . ... —........-- — -..- Reeinient to a Menagerie ' Paneshment from tbe regiment to a menagerie has been the fete ot the ' Himalayan bear, the pet -of the 2e6 Battalion Ielreee Royal Rile -Corps, e •quick at one, . and said: . 'His Big Saiary. "SaY, supposing my overseer here Mr. John Hays Hammond. Amer!. died euddelllY to -die, would YOU. be • ea's 0p0oial representative for the able tefill his shoes?" ._ Coronation; Was at one time the high. _Without hegitatiOn the man replied: esesalaried man tn -the world. He UrOtl "eineel" paid $600,000 a year for acting as chief 'Well, then," said Carnegie, "you eoneulting engineer to a: big Amer!. 'needn't wait until he dies. Take his ean ratilwaY. . Job now. Ws fired!" . . .'11 Fat Pension This Mr. Chambers, of Creston, 13.0 hail,Sit Edward Clarke, K C., who still three deer visiting his ranch ! on oee. practises at the age of seventy, re• d'Ly y d 43 d d t . f - ---7 fused a jedgeship in 1897 an app int "•''. an is rsua is Wo 0 them to , 0 * remain. with him.. meet which evotikl new entitle him to a petetion of $20,000 a year., The ' export—Catae- trade of the . 'United States in 1910 was the lightest KITCHENER AND THE O. O. in over twenty years. Exports from 'Chicago were approximately 68,700 . A certain commanding officer was for the year, against 130,468 in 1909, putting hie troops through a iSerieg of 187.305 in 1908, 266,131 in 1907, and manoeuvres before • Lord Kitchener, 301,121 in 1900but eomehowor other he 'teenaged to his mete thoroughly in , . . • Aided by Films Cinematograph films which were ae the result of Wine his keeper, and then escaping. ' ', get mixed up. BOUGHT AN ONTARIO FARM , the end, • however, the C.O. bobbed up, smiling, and, trotting proudly ueto taken during the reedit chattnutgres. riots in France have enabled the po- lice to ideates,' and arrest many of those who took part. • • Enormous Traffic People to the number of 33,286, on , foot or in vehicles, crossed Black. friars, . /Amin, and Tower pledgee Dr. John Standish, of the staff .of the "X. ot X.," he remarked: "There, sir, Nova Seethe Agricultural College, after I flatter myself that was extreMele, looking over Many farms for a home in Well dente" : ' . • the Provihee of Ontario, paralysed a "Oh, excellent!" VMS the suave re. fine 200-aere fated in the township of ply; "but, witty i ask What on, earth glinuesing,• county of Milton, 214 Were. You trying to do?" reliefs trim flooreetneets. ..- e , .. 491.1.,11.4114 • The tlaionist party, in Britain i , „ t° the cite' between 8..30 et,M, and Ineuwhn a "rehearsal" .30 a. e. tensui 'Wag taken reeenilY. On 31 esens On,