HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1907-05-09, Page 3WILL 1(ISSINt
BE PROHIBITED
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i+ SGlentist>fl as Extremely
1Dsngerous-tiow the Dia
ger Can be Removed.
at keen discussion is being moiled
efu
isy some of the best scientists este
the danger and "crimes" of hissing, 1eEi
by Dr. Somers, Health Officer of At-
lantic Qity, and Dr. Naipasse, ,of the
Medical Faculty of Paris. Thoy'dh'arpe
hrs Ides with spreading grippe, •sccriet
Wever. measles, mumps, whooping
cough, typhoid fever, diphtheria, ^rxry-
(eipelaa, tnemingitis, tubeatsit'lesis, and
'many infectious skin diseases. Tiitoy
:suggest legislation on the etibjeot,-a,nd
rho posting of notices in raiiwsy'eta-
:eous, street cars and outer Iptiblic
(laces, but they say it would 'lm ase -
less to post them on veranda e, in
cosy corners, porches, shady 'books,
nxr. moonlit lawns. They also ]propose
compulsory legislation for rndtittals of
disinfection of the mouth old purify-
ing the breath, especially *idea, view
+ho the protection of the inaocefitababies
who, are particularly subject to infec-
tion. Tho greatest and most reflective
purifier and germ destroyer ihnown to
medical science for the men'th,'throat
and breath, as well as for ••t ho blood,
stomach and lungs, is Psyching, that
triumph of the medical avers] that is
attracting almost universal :attention
/because of the wonderful results at-
tending its use. Ono of its neeent tri-
innphs is told as a matter ef experi-
-ence in the following brief statentent
or. •eeutn co.
lam sending yon photo and testimonial here-
with for your great remedy PSYCEIINE. Your
aemedies did wonders for inc. I was about 25 or
SOyeare of age when I took PSYCI{INE. The
doctors hadgiven nue up mart incurable coaiump-
taive. My taugaand every organ of the body were
terribly diseased and wasted. Frlendeand neigh -
Lore thought I'd never got better. ButPSYOf1INJI
saved me. My lungs have never mothered me
Mime. and Psychiue iso permanenteuro.
MELS. LIZZIB OARSIDat,
519 Bathurst St„ London, Ont.
l'sychine, pronounced Si -keen, • is ad•
mated to be the most wondet'ftil of ail
disease and germ -destroying agencies.
('For building up the run-down system
and curing all forms of .stomach
troubles and diseases of the chest,
throat and lungs or head, it is (simply
unapproachable. It is a reliable home
•treatment. For sale at all druggists,
Mc and $1.00, or Dr. T. A. Slocum,
limited, 179 Sing Street West, To -
"onto.
THE SEVEN AGES OF WHEELS.
[Peak.]
A wioker carriage we provide
In which the baby first may ride.
With kilts, a yellow cart arrives ---
A doubtful bittygoat he drives.
la kntokerbookers, down the pike
He oirouses upon his pike.
The age of love and gasoline
Demands a sixty-boree machine.
The years advance; he rides afar
In his palatial private oar.
Old, feeble, if the day be fair,
Nis valet wheels him in his chair.
Then one last trip be takes on wheels,
Nis bead no higher than hie heels,
The Chest Perna of Bronchitis.
If the cough is dry and hard, if there
is pain, soreness and tightness in the
chest, if you have difficulty in getting
your breath, yon have reason to suppose
that you have bronchitis. Lest it should
becomechronic or lead to serious lune
trouble, do not delay the use of Dr.
Chase's Syrup of Linseed and Turpen-
tine. the most certain cure for bron-
chitis.
WHY WAiT?
If I to morrow night should die,
You would endeavor to forgot
My fanite, my weaknesses, and try,
Perhaps. to even magnify
The virtues that were mine, and let
Your jndgmant of me rest, at last,
Upon my worthy deeds alone;
You would forget, when ell was past,
The weaker traits that I had saown.
Whv will you ere I del ars
O'erlook my faults sometimes and see
And jadge with kindness in your heart?
Why will yon not before I start
Upon the lona, last journey be
VMS- tit to jadge me by the beat
And fairest things I've done and sMd,
And kindly ovrrlook the rest -
Why will you wait till I am desd ?
--S. E. Kiser, in Chicago Record -Herald.
ABSOIUTE
SECURITY,
Genuine
Carter's
.Little Liar Pills.
Must Beer Signature of
"rtpLeezt-ze
Sea Pic-ShuntVNtapper 13etbw.
Very mann readas assay.-
Wake eittadifare
CARTERS
• FOR RIARACII#B
CAREERS FOR DIZZINESS&
FOR RiliOU$NEtL
FOR,Oitple mut.
FOR ReN$TtPATIOI
FOh SALLQW,$KIR:
FOR 'Lk COMhtXIOlf
the` rety' ltseetneeetieft.�r dr assH i'�+ps'`
MISS DICK HEADAOHiI
tANINDA AND THE NAM
Wsoli4 Expect Larger Share Of Prs.•
tecl`len If Contributing To tits Den.
The debate on the address •recently
Ivies enlivened by a statesmanlike anti.
It etful speech from Mee Balfour'tleal~
dile with Mr. Harold Gox,'s :propoeril
'drat the question of Lazier 'cotonadl
'contributions to the cost of the nate
should be raised at the approaahitxg
+Colonial Conference.
The proposal was itl•'adsxised, Meese
,study the question from •the colorant'
atendpoint, we shall. ease •that tttsere
are strong political reasons •ngdinst
any such a request being preesed by
the Mother Country. Canada, for ex-
ample, needs Arse anti iforemafii; the
assistance of a powerful army to de-
fend her southern frontier. Tiede Eng-
land is not attempting :to give her.
Tho Monroe doctrine incidentally
protects her against 'aggression on the
part of any power other than the
United States. She knows 'that the
British Navy is new •almost entirely
concentrated in home waters, and if
she contributed to its'eo4tseshe could
scarcely be expected Ito :trequiesce in
this condition of atisirs. ;ate for Aus-
tralia, that country is :much exposed
to foreign attack because 'its popula-
tion .is so exiguous, !hitt ;even here a
contribution in cash is undesirable.
Far better would, it be 'for the Aus-
tralians to form a navy eof their own
or to train and etluip an strong land
force, which would be of infinitely
greater 'service to the 'Empire than
any tribute of geld.
Mr. Balfour pointed rout that the
daughter -States of the 'Empire incur
some danger from the'Imperial tie, if
they also derive real •aiivantages from
it. lie doubted, end with reason, whe-
ther the British Pleet'corild be dimin-
ished even if this country lost its
colonies. Mr. Winston `Churchill indi-
cated the sound lines •on which the
Government will aet lin the Confer-
ence. It will endeavor tto secure the
organization of colonial forces on
principles similar to 'those accepted
in England, and it Will not put for-
ward foolish claims on account of
services conferred on lite Empire by
the British Navy.
CROP HAS DOUBLED,
Saskatchewan last year produced
did Showing In Crop 'Reports.
Saskatchewan las year produced
63,052,210 bushels of grniin, against
46,647,464 bushels in 1905, and 27,525,-
272 in 1904, or a gain of geey •consider-
ably over 100 per cent. in two years.
This is the information ethics the De-
partment of Agriculture will give offi-
cially to the world in a few days in
their final bulletin on tote 'crop of
1906, a forecast of which President
Hopkins announced to the Grain -
Growers' convention on Wednesday
in so far as wheat was concerned.
The grain crop of the Province last
year consisted of 37,041,098 bushels of
wheat, 23,965,528 bushels of oats, 1,-
316,415 bushels of barley, 710,989 bush-
els of flax, and 19,480 bushels of
speltz. In 1905 the figures were;
Wheat, 26,107,286 bushels; oats, 19,-
213,055 bushels; barley, 893,395 bush-
els; flax, 398,399 bushels; and speltz,
35,328 bushels.
Inasmuch as the average yield per
acro last year was not as high as in
1905, although higher than the yearly
average for the past nine years, dur-
ing which records have been kept, the
figures demonstrate all the more fore-
ibiy the tremendous rate at which the
fertile virgin prairie lands of the Pro-
vince are being brought under cultiva-
tion.
The area sown in wheat last year
was increased by 600,502 acres, oats by
189,975, barley by 20,619, and flax by
50,690, the latter being an increase of
200 per cent. Out of a total area of
73,048,960 acres in districts wholly or
partially under settlement, only 2,-
501,247 acres were under crop last
year, which was an increase of 860,-
684 acres over 1905. The number of
grain farms increased from 18,102 in
1905 to 30,289 in 1906. The average
area under crop per farm was 8,257
acres, as compared with 9,057 acres in
1905. The number of threshers employ-
ed increased from 1,194 to 1,947.
BONES OF FAMINE ViCTIMS.
Prospectors Discover Skeletons of In-
dians Who Perished Years Ago. •
A party of St. Lawrence Island pros-
pectors have just returned to Nome
and tell of the finding of -skeletons of
a native tribe that perished as a re-
sult of famine more than twenty years
ago. There were 150 skeletons in all,
bearing evidence of the suffering
which the victims must have endur-
ed at - the time. The weapons found
with the bones were of the most primi-
tive sort,
A nativeguide told them that the
victims knew
of other settlements of
natives farther south, but that there
had been a feud between them for
nearly 100 years before the winter in
which all had perished.
The guides said a whaling vessel
had come to the southern portion of
the island during the summer pre-
vious to the famine and that instead
of spending the season in hunting and
fishing the natives had idled away
their time. The catch of seal and wal-
rus that year was very poor and the
tribe found itself at the approach of
cold weather practically unprovided
for.
The winter was severe. One heavy
blizzard followed Another all through
the season, and the natives were un-
able to hunt or fish. Gradually they
.-lied, and before the warm weather
came again all had perished.
The prospectors say the tale of the
guide semis borne out by the discovot-
lee.
Jap Colony In Canada. 'k"'"F'
Apparently Canada has no fear of to
Iepaneso invasion, A schenee is on
foot for creating a Japanese agricul-
tural colony in the heart of Alberta.
Well to do Japanese farrne'rs are to
be taken out to turn their attention to
the raising of wheat and the Cultiva-
tion of auger beets and anything else
which will thrive in the climate. The
negotiations ere being carried out by t
11. R. Negativity, who proposes, accord-
ing to the Galina Telegraph, to buy
'io,000 acres rrerci the 'Canadian 1'nCi-
'lA t tNG HAM TIMES, MAY '9 001
Realfy Werth ltea,cjinglt. THE WAITING GENIUS
AERIAL. Ti;.EGRAPNY. + At certatn bases Itt the .rear. rand
learticulerly a month or two itiefore
the Christmas botidaya, near books
come lutes uewapapgr ofilves 'tor 'review
Plater than any one 014111 eaa (possibly
reed Anal review thein 'tvt4h sausttce el-
�lirst Attempted by Aarantens tit 'fhb
Fifteenth .Century,
One of the first systems nl 'acrid.
ttelegrapha was attempted fa The t.1ti'
teenth century, The origltnlltor 'Vial
Amontons, at that time eoaaidereil elite
of the cleverest scienthita of Ore Weld,
Yet yosz, never hear the name 'nowa-
daya in connection with that tor '4forse
or Belt. however, A.moatons develop-
ed a system of signal telegrullty so
that a message could be sett Trent
Paris to Rome in three boars. -(Those
who assisted in the ttaission'aot the
message along the line were 'unable to
tell the nature of the s essage.
Posts were placed from Mafia across
the AIps at consecutive !pdttlts, where
men were stationed with detest -epee.
Different signals, representing com-
binations of lettere, were TUU up at
each post. The man at the other end,
seeing the signal, pieced 'a•similar one
before his post, and so (the message
was carried to Its destination.
The key to the signal was known
only to those who sent (the messages
in Paris and to the recipients a thou-
sand miles away. Amosttona was not
encouraged in his work ley the puffy,
gouty fuuctionartes •0f the time and.
discontinued his efforts.
THE COTTAGE.
It Should. Re Without'Sham Elegance
and Elabora'lmn.
There are cottages and'cottages. Any
modest, unpretentious house designed
on strictly economical dines may be
fitly called a cottage, and at is more
satisfactory to regard ones own sim-
ple little abode as a well taint, commo-
dious cottage than as a smell house of
comparatively cheap construction and
cramped dimensions. It Is -When given
to the big swaggeoing seaside.bouses of
the rich that the term '`icottage" be-
comes a misnomer and an :affectation.
To the man of moderate means the
very idea of building a cottage rather
than a house carries with it: a sense of
making a home within his means free
from vain striving for a sham elegance
and elaboration. The cottage which,
apes the manelon is as absurd as the
affected and exaggerated digtitty of the
pompous and undersized individual
who seeks to create an impreedion out
of all proportion to his real importance.
Since simplicity is one of the stain at-
tributes of a well designed cottage, its
charm and effectiveness must :depend
upon the quiet excellence of Its propor-
tion and the harmonious and ueobtru-
sive quality of its coloring in relation
to its surroundings. -Robert C. Spencer
in House Beautiful.
MiSLED BY PARROTS.
How Columbus Missed the Honor ,ef
Discovering This Continent,
A flight of birds, coupled with a sail-
or's superstition, robbed Columbus. of
, the honor of discovering the continent.
When Columbus sailed westward over
the unknown Atlantic, he expected to
reach Zipangu (Japan). After several
days' sail from Gomera, one of the
Canary islands, he became uneasy at
not discovering Zipangu, which, ac-
cording to his reckonipgs, should have
been 216 nautical miles more to the
east.
After a long discussion he yielded to
the opinion of Martin Alonzo Pinzon.
the commander of the Pinta. and steer-
ed to the southwest. Pinzon was guid-
ed In his opinion solely by a flight of
parrots which took wing in that direc-
tion. It wits good tuck to follow in
the wake of a flock of birds when en-
gaged upon a voyage of discovery. ac-
cording to widespread superstition
among Spantsh seamen of that day.
If Columbus had kept to his coulee,
he would have entered the gulf stream,
have reached Florida and then proba-
bly have been carried to Cape IIat-
teras and Virginia.
' On tho Bias.
"What do people .-mean when they
talk about tacking?" asked It ibby, wit.)
had listened to a detailad account of
ttls sister's first a::periencc in a sail.
boat, but In smell Confusion of ruin 1.
"Olt, you'll know when you're a little
bit older," said his sister. but the
Small round face wore an esirressaion
of injury, and site had to explain far.
titer.
"Why, It's just tnrntn; halfway
mond she Said, 1.
rc '
(t Slight 1 i ..
t t, '�C
it.t-
tion, "anti then -and then you sail on
the bias."
LIVER COMPLAINT.
The Over is the largest grand in the body; its
office is to take from the blood the properties
which form bile. Whoa du. 'liver is torpid and
inflamed it cannot furnish bile to the bowole,
causing them to become bound and costive. The
symptons are a fooling of.fulness or weight in
the right side, and shooting paint in the Bate
region, pains between the shoulders, yellowness
of the skin and cites, bowels irregular, coated
tongue, bad taste meths morning, do.
ILBURN'S
LAXA-L IVE f:
PILLS
are pleasant and easy to take, de lot grip,,
weaken or sicken, hover fail in their effeete. and
aro by far the safest and eulokeet remedy.- for
all diseases or disorders of the livor.
Price 25 cents, or g bottled for $140,
all dealers or mailed direct on r5oetptt of
price by The T. Milburn (:o., Limited,
Toronto, Ont.
ther to himself or the ibeoka, Ile
glances through them beefily, unless
they are by noted authors, gets a
salient point here sea thepeaind "writes
Diens up" as best be ,cull. Then lie
forgets all about them
"A, friend came 4. me tone day and
expressed tris teutloattna at the way
I bad. written up a .new novel by a
comparatively =hussies' (author," said
the literary editor of .a (Chicago paper.
"'%esu expressed ,my'1$ea of it exact-
ly,' he said. 'It Is enterer the remarka-
ble books of the year. 'The plot is ab-
solutely unique, the ttres ttnent of it Is
Isola and original Stain the dialogue
crisp and deli'gbaral. ilt will make a
great bit.'
"'Well; t said, '11 lit la as good as
all that tit vend et"
How etc (Gems Flank,
In the gear kingdom the ruby, the
diamond, ` the emerald and the sap-
phire constitute 'time big four" and
take precedence-atnd.in the order nam-
ed -of all other ipeecious stones. The
pearl is of course mot a stone. It has a
standard of Its .arrrst. The expert teat
or the gem is its ,color, its degree of
clearness and its perfection of cutting.
Upon the last depends its brilliancy.
In the diamond the •"brilliant" cutting
holds first place. "Iihe other stones are
cut altogether differently -they are
crystallized la different systems --fn
fact, they differ is another respect, the
diamonds being it nsineral carbon, the
finer ruby (the orleutai) a variety of
corundum, the emerald a variety at
beryl and the sapphire a colored va-
riety of corundum. What is technical-
ly known as the "step cut" is an es-
sential to bring out t1te fire of the last
three.
How the Pulse 'Varies.
The hutnun pulse bas rather a wide
range, but the general average may be
put about as follows; At birth, 140; at
two years, 100; at (rem sixteen to
nineteen years. 80; at manhood, 75;
old age, GO. There are, however, great
variations consistent whit health. Na-
poleon's pulse is said to have been only
forty-four in the minute. A. case is
also related of n healthy man of eighty-
seven wbose pulse was eeidom over
thirty during the last two years of his
life and sometimes not more than
twenty-elght. Another man of eighty-
seven years of age enjoyed good health
and spirits with a pulse of twenty-
nine. and there is also on record the
curious instance of a man whose pulse
in health was never more than forty-
flve, and, to be consistent in his incon-
sistency, when he had fever Ifs pulse
fell to forty Instead of rising, as is
usual.
Wrestling For Exercise.
Wrestling, the "microcosmos of gym-
nastics." is a tine form of bodily exer-
cise for those who enjoy hard muscular
work after the tedious business hours
of the day and may be practiced -
adapting it to circumstances -by the
man of a ripe age as web as by the
boy of ten or twelve, especially the
form known in this country as catch -
as -catch -can (which is about identical
to one form of Swiss wrestling), I ex-
changed the Greco-Itoman (or Ger-
man gymnastic) style for this one
about twelve years ago, and I was
then over forty years old, and still en-
joy it much if my opponent is of my
own weight or a little lighter and if it
is deprived of its potential roughness
by a gentlemanly spirit of the part -
nets.
Precautions of Old Time Doctors.
It was formerly the practice among
physicians to carry a cane having a
bellow head, the top of which was
gold, pierced with holes like a pepper
box. The top contained a small
amount of aromatic powder or of
snuff, and on enuring the house oe
room where a disease supposed to be
Infectious prevailed the doctor would
strike his cane on the floor to agitate
the powder and then apply it to his
nose; hence all the old prints of plysi-
einns represent them with canes to
their noses.
A Marriage Warning.
In Germany all marriages es herc
to be
contracted before a register previous
to the ceremony in church, which is
optional. The law requires public
notice to be given of the match, and
this notice is generally exhibited ht
a box hung up at the town hall or oth.
er municipal building. The following
official announcement appeared lately
in a small town: "from today there is
fixed at the town hall the new box, is
which all those who intend to ester
the married state will be hung."
Not Labor Lost.
Theafe bore e a paper stating that
there was nothing of value witbtn.
Nevertheless the burglar biesv the re-
ceptacle (pen, finding the statement
correct, "Well," he remarked, gather-
ing np his tools, "it's worth something
to ascertain that there etre still people
Who tell the troth."
The Opportunity.
Opportunity has ail her hair on her
forehead, but when she has passed you
cannot call her back. She has no tuft
whereby you can hay hold on her, for
she is bald on the bads part or her
head and never returns.-Francols Re-
bel/11e,
The Weakest thing creature by tole
centreting his powers on A single ob•
ject can accomplish something; the
strongest by dispersing his over many
may fail to accomplish anything, -Car.
.
la, R, Hirer)
It nnatters )itr+e .••het your plana mast be,
Th world .eerie. oedema for were good
iftveutli ns,
Thn nnane"mptrsh'•tt alrihig ie hard to ice,
We mealier.- stilt ey'risible dimensions.
Yon used nor tome Tor honor while yea
. dream
Of heighte tear vt02 intend some day
to nlittte to;
The beefy wor tt4 (clines t r waFteOpt +est
Ca thee. wtvt W114 oto worthy win -n
they've ' int„ to
It matters not whet raterite you p"es•'se,
Nor what vex atigbt tin itt our ntr
It yeti Ara bnptn:r on in rdi,nesx,
Or wait tor sunny $n)e and Luck:
shapes»s
Wernrm 'Doctor With Title,
A daughter•of the late Lord Abinger
'liras just left London, Eng., for the
;Far West ,of Canada, whore she pur-
ipeses •tonattibliah herself as a doctor
;and suroson. The Hon. Ella Scarlett
'remarried, awhile attending the wounded
"in ,the South African war, a Mr.
:Synge.
Mrs. Synge has the moat extraor•
'Binary pluck. She has gone to Can-
ada With very little money, leaving
her husband. to whom she le de-
voted, to live with his mother. She
lis armed 'adith letters of introduction,
And is determined to 'obtain a large
practice, no 'that her husband can
'follow her out there later,
Mre. Synge is a fully qualified M.D.,
'besides being a first-class surgeon.
'She was at one time physician to the
Emperor of Corea, The London hos-
• hat authorities think very highly of
her, but the woman doctor in London
hu a very small chance nowadays.
Dividing a Journey.
I An Englishman was sent out on tt
journey to take a parcel to a place
about twelve miles from Malden,
Essex, a little town near the coast.
As he started rather late in the day
his master was surprised to see hien
back soon after dark. "You surety
haven't been there and back," his
employer said to him. "No, no, mas-
ter." the man -replied; "I got halfway
timer, and it began to git dark, so I
com'd back ag'in. I'll goo ('other half
tormorrer.
A complete .Atltuttie cable -Octets
fbont_gGOO,oao,,, ,; r.-- ' _ ..
CATARRH CAN BE CURED.
11111 the Germs by Breathing Hy -co-
met. Gives Quick Relief,
Many people who have suffered with
catarrh for years naturally think they
cannot be oared, and become diycoursg-
'.d.
The reason they have failed of cure is
beminae they have not treated the die
ease with the local remedy. Byes mei,
which is breathed thronhth a neat pooket
inhaler so that its healing medicated air
reaches the most remote air cells, kilis
all catarrh germs and restores the muc-
nus membrane of the nose, throat and
lungs to a healthy condition.
Catarrh is really a looel disease and to
ones it, it most be treated by a remedy
which reaches every spot in the nose
sad throat where the disease grrme
lodge. Hy -o mei does this and gives
relief from the first day's use.
A complete Hyo -mei outfit costs bat
$1 00 and Walton McKibben gives a
guarantee with every package to refund
the money antees it cored
The Short Woman.
She never can look tali.
The moat she can hope for is to look a
little taller,
But Lincoln said anybody was tall
enough whose feet reached the ground.
And Orlando thought Rosamond ideal
because she was ' just as high as my
heart."
There are ways, too, whereby the oan
seem to add a couple of inches to her
height,
She must dress her hair high and add
to the effect by wearing a high topped
ootub.
The longer her shirts and the higher
her heels, of coarse she taller she will
leek.
Princess frooke make her look tail,
and so do stripes running up and down.
Frills and huge sleeves that increase
tier breadth take away from her beigbt.
She should therefore 1 t res avoid too broad
h o
shoulders or overtrinimad appearance.
Mach will be gained it she holds her
heed high and oarriea herself well.
It she doesn't it's so easy for her to
WEAK
Holy many women
there are that get no re-
ma)fmro-
reshmen( from sleep.
They wake in the morn-
WOtit,,N ing and feel uredos than
when they went to bed.
They have it dizzy sensation in the head,
the heart palpitates; they are irritable
and nervous, weak and worn out, and
the lightest household duties during the
day seem to be a drag and a burden.,
ILBURN'S HEART
AND NERVE PILLS
are the very remedy that weak, nervous.
tired out, sickly women need to restore
them the blessings of good health.
They give sound, restful Bleep, tone 'up
the nerves, strengthen the bent, and
make rich blood. Mrs. 0. McDonald,
Portage le Prairie, Man., writes: " I ('rat
troubled with shortness of breath, palpi-
tation of the heart and weak spellb. 1
got four bores of Milburn's Heart and
Nerve Pills, and after taking them I was
completely cured.
Price 50 cents per box or three boxes
for $1.25, all dealers or the The T. M
bairn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont.
-..,,.,..w. «.....h,44.. 'iv
LEHIGH VALLEY COAL
Come with the crowd and leave your order
for Lehigh Valley Coal, that is free from
dirt and clinkers It has no. equal.
111111111111111111•101 111111111111111110111111MINIMINOMMISOISIMMINIIM
.. D.13 u •rte. t+ S
f.areer the nimble kitten clas'1, which
may "cute,"bat ant a bit impressive
The Art of Walking
ft's dignift'd art of walking. the
hippy practice ot vagabondage which
3teveatson and Waltman prettied so well.
the most Innocent ot pastimes, the elm.
piret at exercises, is in dsneer of failing
turn abeyance, sage glias Carman.
Oar fashionable people affect one rich -
culotte manner of walking and then an•
other, year atter year, lint almost no
one thinks it worth while to learn to
walk normally. There can be no uni-
form fashion of good walking The
normal walk is not a matter of caprice'
but of art; it lends itself to the infinite
varieties of character, and becomes in
each instance expressive of the indi-
i
ridual; so aha# we recognise a man byni{
his gait as easily as by bis voice.
The Out requisite of good wuilting lO
a good poise. If the body i4 well poised+(
at each point ot its motion, the motion'
itself must be good, The prones l of
walking, which has been described es ilt
series of falls. is, to be somewhat more
accurate, a series of falls and reoovertsla',,
so insensibly merged that there is no
saying where the fall ends and the res
oovery begins In walking we are in se
continnone state of unstable equtlibrt-
urn. We pass gradually from one post. '
tion to another, yet are never oat of
poise. We are playing with gravity. 4
good waleer spins the earth deftly be'
neath his feet, as an acrobat in a circus,
lying on his back, spins a barrel Or a
painted ball
4001011411000141111119110111111111110000 116010110011011400101141111011104114111001111
ICLUBBING
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RATES•
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1 FOR 1906 - 07.
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satammmmmmmmrmws
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01 GO
4.50 4'
4.50
3.10 +
'1.30 +
2 30
2.35
260
135
170
1.75 .t.
+
1.90
•
185 q.
1 35
1.80
1.60
1.80
2.20
1 35
2 35
1.35
2.25
2.25
3.25
1.90
2.75
2.90
1,45
1 85
1.65
1.75
1,15
1.90
2.10
1.95
1.75
1,35
1.80
1,45
1,45
1.7
0
1.90
1.65
1,f0
1.65
1.75
1.65
2.15
2.45
1.80
1 a0
1 CO
1.40
1 90
1 90
2 CO
2 CO
1.40
225
1.85
2 45
1 90
2 25
1 85
When premfnwe ere Rfeen with sny of elem. were. enl•aerfbere 'will
revere ouch prenhinnsewhen ordering ibrctigh tie, same the if ort'rrrd direct;
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