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The Goderich Star, 1906-06-22, Page 3'.: ' en!, 7' -- ',V --... 7.1r. V' 112 ClittenSVAS NUT T BARD No PLOT TO MET TIE WAS MOST 11114444S OM* Malt Tait AWOL 111111.1100111 1111111MOTANT geelliMMIOSILIg PRAT PT 0141410011 *TWO* Otrit OP 114804 11400111101101111AV. ' 110011" Vow* 10,1140ak4010 ha Tleigadi The allgeldWeallitie BAH $1 • 00011100011 1101rateger The* gime Baliallifee /10010011000 Ott ** a* dt Ito et gome lifsimolees reett Mit IONS Is ‘404.00, W410004, Is 11411t, Kale Iteref ot the tea* Fresoleilis Wonder * Use &outer kes bees Pretti thereughly, lamp, * liaslaaataett cettage. plentlede Utreeplted tatt by Wm 14ove, but aide ota- eanetireeted; 1104 004110440 At OR*. ttues tunt ine140.41. Of the OP ter - Wised Meta - roe whieh throw a, lieW and lideretitillg Mr, W. Os. Coelheil. the eirrettettr bead' .1.141* 00 Viewing In Se leper.* Mi- er, Inta IWO thirty-nine Years fiery Poeta. will croP eut uew Sod IOW Pre - it the poet -oast 10.* travels ltahly tor years SteOte. One Wry— *healer et live in the mottling to ainott- the story ot the pesmogers tna the land, abont eight Mlles *WV,. delivers liteithiehip Pere, 00101 id- itte Mal* Balt.Paillt AIM WOW*, end. to the bey Arm/40100 atter the esx%, ihili rest of tIW 40 free unlit $`,50 qUelos enek fte LOY eleated the city Item Wbete ha tettirne Streed. Ms _Ow ralle Val Ita Owl *Ad here la Wain* momosts ho hes- built the What tee Meijer A. 14. fillteldneelt Thit*Wharte ..et the tinelertildni ie re- elites shOut that teteildent, toltevil in matiotNe, boa Vita a ISOY OrldrarlitldtS) Meath had hal right head enot liviay by fr, gtin “A, Mau I hake& wi% Ine Other ,day but he 'entered the Poat,ottlee, and. has heen regerelad eit Vilushle lierVarde 'The itMerearrie Whim he wanted 4 hoose built Mr ItiMselt at StrOod. wee demo, but 'not to his g4t, to `work to Maks 0, better :int goti the 111410. And Hien drew big own ditOgne tt• hOnea at Slittlinitl. Theite were pasted, by the perish oatin, cil, :First Of ell lekl'fietvn eolid Mendell= ot Cement, Which. he got' end Itatalared fen the hoilding# In 4, pony4spi 010 Of Ide AW11- atruetion, he drove over to the cement workit ewe Week end purchaitederdnifill centeot to Mike utteaut for his purpone. lie Mek he bee been. ten Years 11011041g "The Coars” he ettlie IL „ , Ile, with hie one hind, .091114ea thonsands or 'bricks, whielr, he -carried uP two ut tiMe, until he carriPleted a strong building, which would take a San Franciede Orthquake to OverthroW, FARMS AN ACRE, *iter golotte. PIS two beeSdavid 1000 *4 As ths RONA et filearieliattlate Wild* la greeter or tem haeti heen, oesittuoted for litairly * Year proud event lark- 1W Dr. Alex* curet end _Dr C. Ce eitee Preeelos 14*a Old** tie the .PhY140101.041 mislemskast blow Militant It hew toms. Lsissettery *t ths Voiveretty gtt. Oloolos billitoOlk bits Eirs17 10 well Ow °age, diuoverimil We been Mode Wet omen et Lewd ,A.NW and Lerd -Lyn& promise le revoltittenno WPM. *get ItIttele. sad Midges 104 White ell tee exPetioseitle hue be* 1.tene. PegerMed Ott doge, the oh** Wass to But renter Isits It been so numeriee.Uy asoartain Metleade et aergery Vitt Weld Arend se It hist noln since IWO, end be, otted on fittnian beings to transfOrin but ict the tiesi width lute Osgelfed Itil; algae Into Uterles, tritosplut omen* Unlonlitt PartY. woutd be stronger WI and WM' to eubitinde the eller* and . been For of the ooloritaLeenclidatto In Win* Of IA ante* Mr this 44010 the fleld at the leta Metal aleetton the ertertee and Vele* Of Is AIM. • AltialtlettY Were IOW reterielet At the, 'Patient Urea Ors, Ceti* ah4 OUthrle ere 'watching NM ttoaert delta . tlgt1 are aPPereettlY Hutting wtth. their • otrr or PROPORTION. The nufaber Of ritenthere Fitelitimatit valits and arterteet trenaPiieeet in Varteue *Cm Over*" Ma, twelve:\ never beee Wail. A1110)34 the Meta discOhore0 proevartton to the atrwagtla or the the eurgeone are Uwe rfekinies. That to stiy, boa not Jo. erased with their growth. In 1857 there Were lex eolontel mem** Of nut ;louse Consmoris, and there Were, Si* in Utl7- OW Ind there Wire m4Ttioro. 'oPEnAvoil. Ths trenspiaritatien et vela* on *tent" prettneree. froM' tteacttoteal pond ot the traneitinnatten TOMO, ertertet ' • the *eat eVoute Ot the feet tee XrAnsPlanfe4* voIro 444 theal4Pfolf ,Tettra tled grciWing Illterilet1011.$1 pres- the new functiOna Inut recetVeel entarratitttelmpente, , flee/ trier* tramp:tit the htOod That le why colohial,•reproventetion in nanonottely.' After ten months ttlo thits Henst 0a.C.OMMinut Was loge in Miletiert throttgh tile erten* la, epParo 4he Parliament. and WIRY there were entbe eit active '0 on the day of 'a* 410 Many new candeintee t.he field. Operati00.- The aSeertatillad We are insignificant IN LAST PAnuontrr.. compered withlhat the eXperfinentere Cottelder the !metier to *Willa% Itoko .to':/tecoroP It by feMlYinfi thelr were !lateen Menials. et Weemeinger MedMie fo Allman. beings, In a scientine When Mr. Valfoue MOO*. 'Three' ree treatIse thee have Indulged Mt speemla, ;Bred. Sir Williera Doan.. Oen, Labrie, tiert te Only le Moderate extent, but their ' end Mr, 0, M, Drown, a son of qua of hYPottieses are decidedly. startling to the the fathers of the Canadian Confedera. mind. tiett, zhd et the, thhorh.whe„steed agate Thefhope by the tranBOantation a ten ,weeo returne4, , ,„ vein 011 another,.vein to produce a delta 011.114, be 004104. 'Iherthree' who atlert of the 'blood from one part ot the went under tn the gineral„wreck,wefie VanOUS .SYateM ta another, The eigold- Ot11001:ets. One 'Wee , Mr. Berate' EaW, aanea.Ot atta)a deVlation ts that heolthY late tinder -secretary foe, the tioar4 (f red blood 0011d be introduced into (mos Palaf•alatal tt,a4111 044.41doorilo eve en; wIrre the hio..0e1 beeenle stagnant or Trade. and. the. ableetadebatetr on tithed ufmealIhY. dbea hope to be -able- by this devIation to cure diseases or the Pettey efter M. Chamberlain, The others. were mr. Leufs sinettur -kicheyv, and even of the brain, arid mr, mut streyeit. bt the 2g new Softening of the brain is now incurable, cendidatea for Paelletnent 13 were tariff but Dre. Carrel .and Guthrie expect to wormers, of trtlem platy one was re, see UM time When by sending reet turgIng through the brain they will be turned. The other fear elected. were on able to reverily the brain cells and re - the ether Side. One. therefOre, ot ?le store the paUent to a normal mental , feat that the Ust of Colonial candida ea condition at the reeent election was a record one, colonial representetion in the Rouae is RESULTS EXPECTED. lees, not‘geeater, thari it. was before the If the discoveries are tarried to their late Government went de the eolintry. logical conclusions` various affections of Instead of the sixteen colonials in the the heart now considered incurable will lest Parliameet, there are fifteen hi the present one, CANADA MOST IMPORTANT. It is often assumed that colonials can belong only to,one side. Ae matter of fact, they are usually fairly divided be- tween the mulles. Before the general, electien Mr. Balfour had six coloniaa supporters, Sir Henry Camebell-Ban- nerinan seveh, and Mr. Redmond two. Among the new candidates there was a majority of Unionests, but, as it meltea away in the general rout, there are now I only four colonial niembers -who are Unioniste—Str Gilbert Parker. Mr. Hen- niker Heaton, Dr.1 Rutherford Harris, and Mr. Arthur Fell; two who are National- ists—the Hort...E. Blake and Mr. C. 11. Devlin.; nine Liberals—Mr. C. Wason, Mr: A Rapt, Mr. W. A. C. McArthur, Mr. Hametr Greenwood, Mr. P. Molteno, Mr. H. Foster -Boulton, Mr. A. C. Beck, Mr. H.IT. Eve, and Mr. C. D. Rose, the PoPulaa member for NewmarkeL NO LITTLE ENGLANDERS. But whatever their:political opinions may -be, -they aee never Little England- - ers. Hence, wherever they sit in the House, they are a source of strength to the Empire. As might be expetted, Canada carries most weight in the preeent Parliament, as -she did in the last. Of the fifteen colonial members in it, seven are her sons. The West Indies have one, and Anstralesia four. South Africa, the last of the `cotonies to make herself felt in the mother country, has three, and it Is worthy of note that until 1891 she was represented in only one Parliament, from 1866 to 1868, when a member t f one of the oldest Dutch families im the Cape Colony, Mr. P. Van der Byl, sat for Bridgewater. be quickly remedied. If your heaat Ls not in the right place it will be trans- planted. If your kidney or liver Ls not hitohed to ,the proper kind of machinery your veins and arteries will be dissected and grafted together in odd waya that will give new, healthy life to the tbs. leased organ. *More wonderful still, Drs. Carrel and Guthrie, it Is deelared, have actually succeeded in reversing the circulation of the blood. The results which they ex- pect to obtain from the reversal of the blood currents have long been sought by the medical world. Reversal' of the Circulation in a man, it Is said, will cure gangrene, which has been the chief obstacle confronting sur- geons in the healing of internal wounds. Where ulceration of the lining of the heart has set in reversal of the chain& tion will soon restore the tissues to a healthy conditIon by an increase in the flow of blood. .The_ same result, it is thought, can be obtained in the case of any diseased gland. experitnerts-ofetheetWoaatt%aoda' have been confined to the- trausCianta- tion of velns taken from the ,operated animal itself. In time. however, they hope to transplant veins taken from another animal of the same series and even from an .anlmal of a different species. It was the wonder of StMdlend, thla one -twined man building a etnemlete hoeso. The villagere watched the Walls ge up, and then the roof go on. Finally he grit the eatniney-pots. on - rind pointed and contented the trent, and bad ritther * gnitaGY a*ParlallOa. No Was 0041M1 the City let Pere, Which errived the MeglIng of the earth/VOW. All the Pislertgers were Counting uP, tattlettertill Oat cettbd g9 94torit, inct g Wee lemetterie before theY iletieed thet We' offleare of the shig were dieturbed over something. No pliel earee to Matt thorn, and When. they got Inte the bee them wit* 401:40144 111011littr about Ps 10PPearenca, Toe OWE knoW that et that t11114 tlie Wind Wei driving away from them. ao that THEIVSAW NO SMOKE, end the usual lartdmarks—the Clitt Hottee, Call building Mime of the city halt end Ferry 1M1144,-itWere alt ing. arid frearl * dletillee would appear tuldisturbed, eau the tneemshlp slowly cern* up the haY the appettrance Of the water gellt was net teateitud, het the Oar Vats strangelY deererted. Not a ferrilaoat Or a tug wee int Sight; the quarantine or oustoras-hotne boats did not come out, and it was not till they approached the Mission street wharf that they saw the smoke, the wreckage ot the wharves and a fireboat at work. Then a launch apreaehed and gave -Minn news of the disaster. It was a eitUatIon that a :017:41:41,41.0,14441,40:1401:::4t11114;1,001):::14aC.W!..„.."14441:444:1,14:41,44iqath.d.:414011,44414iti*IPly4S"rro°"4"141:44:41::°)744upttopandig4 4741cillurciorlitri:lotioeltri:14:104":161k1:14114tr"4:4WIVIP:IF:1:114414440:14413141414.°444:!1. '' . wan yes; we've posed au th011e etlhq ww44.1“tetNoietat p4ptciwt:spataa.:tteetiolieetate: 03444to ittitterwogetit suititi, witie,ti proved et- mine ot intereSt to nie.' with geopesphy, tory, end *Mar This is ths 041.0.0e that took place: teringt".. - , aublectsP ,,.. .,, ' "What 100410 en Au Mt" "You s,re. et 1,4 100y;. lett setio01 yetr "qto0Silin Axil vrai' - t dO 'YOU *Mr . "Typleferithtlit etterklialid outt.cpsig, tion.wygg. "Fiowoa, thorn, sM OoOdi but t her you haven't lorgotten Want" • Oh, :deer On." „ "OK yott do all yotir ovoid goosm wood Num voteh etopriold ei ItYy. tn074 , _.: DON'T KNOW. SlIrt V=S Ttt9rs' . mily. an. ovus to, . corral ,. Yeer's 'Travel hi the Old Ling. . UMa erld, the' methentaties1 gOegrlotiY," . "Ne„ Or. Don't linOW ftriathlaill litta -The colossal proportious wheat ratl- way tranle la the United. Kingdom bee tiL'It'W"Clt, what do you tome' roPor, 4r your now assumed era enikingly iadiCatea geography? Wbere's Tinitalettlor in a return recently tainted by th'itioard Sore he leered op al me With 4 grin of Trade, giving a preliminary summary that ,plainly sight, 'You're Itylni me.' of the rallwey returne tor 1005. ellon't.know? Wetl—er—avhereee Cane Them are now. the return showe, no Ileirnett:..,„ tower num 22,413 miles Ot rellway ltne "Don't know, sir," end *Milner grin- open to traffic. The number of mtles "Dena . know wlaere Cepa Horn is; travelled by trains reached the follow - well, now, min you tell me where Cope big astounding dimenelonsi— C 1 t" "Oh, yes. sir." "Where?" . i "In India, sir." "Well, er--where's Ceylonr the house Wks ready for occupation. "Don't know, sir; never 'eard of it," The while he farmed an acre of land, story writer could make goed use rf, did Ids postai duties of twenty Odd rat* and the gentleman who told me about .trouroWth,,at' not know where the tea canaes It paled as he enlarged upon the •awful Another ignorant leer was I.' ,sponse, so I thought I would coal er horns, and guessing he Migh , "Well, where's Luton?" , football enthuelast, inquired i ruts "Don't know, sir." r "Don't you know where Londasi Vs?" i. E. KELLY, Agent, Hoderich. "No sir," Hopeless, I changed the sublq_. • o day, and lived in Rochester! The hottee te now let to good tenants. A look through the piece was enough to satisfy one as to the care taken in ita construction. No builder could haVe done it more cheaply or better. "Those erches caused me tie:Sublet," he said quite simple', as he pointed to e ticklish piece of work. "Oh yes," he continued. er ever two new stores. One read, "There did most of the carpentering. put the will be an 0 so different opening here fioors down, and then I did all the paint- in a few days." The other read, ''There frig." will be something doing here shortly." Collins, a robust little man, Is just fifty-eight years old, and is proud of his six stripes of service. He built the cart which takes him round with the mails. unceetainty they felt Over the desert- ed anearance of the usually lively bay With its myrlad boats." Major Hutchinson tiotes two striking instances of the grit of the San Francis- cans. He went downtown immediately after the quake and noticed the signs WOMEN WOREERS IN JAPAN. Employed as Clerks, Bookkeepers and School Teachers. The remarkable increase &wing the last fear years in the number of women empleyed hi various branches of coni. ulercial life in Japan must be regarded as a very significant sign of the times, says the Japan Chronicle. Not content With the occupatiOns which have almost exclusively belonged to females, they have now invaded those fields which have 1111.1e:tie been considered as be- longing to the male sex. ' The eXperiment made In the employ- ment of women as clerks and book- keepers has been found satesfactory, and we now find gtrle eMploYed by many of the ihans and etores in Tokio and other ERR IN PERILIZING IetVES. French Prdlessor Describes Ills VVhich Cause Unneeded Operations. A sensational statement was made the other day before the Academy of Medi- cine by Professor Dieulatoy, who said that many persons merely suffering from muco-mernbranous or sabulous typhlo- colitis are wrongly operated on for ap- pendicitis. Muco -membranous typhio- colitis is 'characterized by periods of cohstipation and ditierhoea, the ejec- tions having certain characteristic fea- tures. There is pain in the right lilac fosse which resembles that caused by appendicitis. Dr. Dieulaloy pointed out that It was very rare for a person to suffer from appendicitis and typhlocolitis at the same time, and in any case appendicitis is neither a cure for nor a result of typhlocolltis. He expressed the opinion that the number of errors of diagnosis and un- necessary operations performed wore ever on the increase. It had been dem- onstrated, he said, that muco -membran- ous typhlocolitis has nothing to do with the appendbc, the ablation of which consequently had no curative effect what er. It was necessary, therefore. large Cities. The employment of women thet reat cars talcen in making the in Wee various directions wilt do much dia oafs. aS it Wae time to put an end toward emancipating the Japanese wo- to useless surgical operations. men, Vvho have uma new been entirely Dr. Dieulafoy said he was as much as dependent Mi Men for the shaping of ever in favor of The ablation of the ap- thelr desthnea, It is only natural, under pendix In cases of real appendicitis. Dr. Doyen fully supports the views of Dr. Dieulafoy, and says :— "I could cite many cases where an operation was decided upon merely be- cause the diagnosis was insufficient. There hets been a tendency blindly to THE PALACE OF EL PARDO. Where Alfonso Took Ris Bride After • ' the Royal Wedding. On the left bank of the Manzanares, some twelve miles from Madrid, at the end, of a dusty road, made more dusty te-day by rushing motor hars and rumb- ling furniture vans, liesethe Palace of the Pardo, in which the King of Spain's bride is now staying, say& the London Tribune. It is little more than a hand- some, well sithided chateau, of slight historicel or artistic interest. , On its site Henry 111. of Castile built himself a hunting box, which Charles L razed In 1543 to mahie way for a more important building; thie, however, was not com- pleted unUl the reign of Philip II., and indeed beers the later name of the Em- peror _Clefeelee: "Caseates Rom• etelhe Hispano Rea," waft eekiecheons, imperial crowns, and eagles. It Is a quadrangular molding with towers at the four corners, surrounded by a deep moat over which there Ls a bridge and a drawbridge. The walls of many of the rooms are covered with tapestries, of which the most notable are some fine Gobelins after Teniers and some copies of Goya's pictures made in Madrid. But perhaps the most interesting work In the whole building is the best painting that has come down to us of the Admiral Gas- per Becerra, the stories of Medusa,' An- dromeda, and Perseus on the vault and walls of one of the smaller rooms; but It has been shamefully treated and tink- ered. On the right of the staircase Is an equestrian portrait of John of Aus- tria, the bastard of Philip IL; It is at- tributed to Ribero and bears an imi- tation of his signature, but it is obvi- ously a forgery or, at the best, a bad copy. Elsewhere there are some fairly good allegorical frescoes by Bayeu and Mariano Maella, a few paintings py Morales, two nice little Vanloos, a copy of a Velasquez ,that ought to be burned, and a Rubens 'in the chromo lithogra- phic manner. In the chapel, which was built in the reign of PhMp V., there is a good' Se Iserdthand, by Lucas Jordan, over the high altar. The ,furniture is fairly good—in the drawing room beautiful classic frames In gold and white, covered evIth purple damask; the curtains and screens ef Talavera silk are unusually flne, and there are some bronzes and candelabra of merit. There is a profusion of china, which, however, amounts to, nothing more than a nice little collection of bis- cuit figures and the inevitable gilded and painted vases of royal parlors. Resides the palace.Itself and an attend- ant building, in which are the stables and staff rooms, a little way to the north is a pretty tele building called the Prince's house, built by Charles IV. be- fore he' came to the throne. Owing to the energy of Colonel nip- olles, the chief engineer of the royal household, to the incessant personal at- tention of Don Alfonso himself, and to the labor of 200 workmen, a great transformation to modernity bas been made In the old house. Prince,ss Ena's apartments are In the west wing. No one may see her bed- room, but the old tapestries have been taken down end replaced in frames over newly painted walls, On the walls ef the dressing room la a tapestry of a hunttne scene. and the ceiling has paint - Inas illestrative of commerce, industry end agriculture. In the dining room of the euite are three tapestries after Goya's "The Good -ter -Nothing," "The' Smu eters" and 'erhe Pilgrims," and the dome Is decorated with illegorical fres- Mee of the Snanish provinces. The little theatre hire been refitted, It has flat benches for the 200 people who ran equeeze into it, end a royal box n1 the hack facing the stage. Hs drop erene le grey and bears the Initiate ef Isabel the ip whose time it was made. such etrcumstarices, that female educa- tion should engage serious public often- ' lion. The number of girls receiving a school ethic:dem, it is stated Isi now more thaa eight times the number of those at sehool ten years ago. More re- markable) ate the figures given by the Tokio Educational Society. Fifteen years decide upon surgical intervention. and ago tbe percentage of females admitted operations have even been carried nut to the training .scheol for teachers Was neete fever. on patients in the early stages of ty- less than W. Oa compared with the Men, ' bat to-deY the rate hes been comnletely "Quite recently a child was brought revereed, the number of male applicants to me. I was asked lo proceed to an being now about 15 per cent. of the ' otteration for appendicitis. Instead of fottil 1 It is Sala that women, as teach- operatina I examined the child and eft, ire proving themselves superior to found symptoms described to be simply men, and: that thera La coneetruenity due to the nreeence of worms in the in - more detneilcl for the former then th—e .testinee. Nevertheless. the narents were so ronvinced trot it wni; a cafie of rumen - MAW% There ft no doubt that the ern- recital lent an eeeeetten was nertormed ployMent ot %smitten In the various by another surgeon the next day." branchee of biteinese activity will steed- ily Itterease with the advance of educe - lion "Mang them. ' • gIONAlL8 MOM TI1E DEAD. ptopood phipkotent "Death An amazing discovery has been made nets."' to Prevent Premature Modal. a" in one of the communal Paris. A class master neteed that ae schools in Mertelfirleg for tbe reception of Inane ter ten °'(1°C1c every En°111ing one of mate becliest. where they should be kept Puells4 a tittle boy Of seven, seemed .0 under vigilant supervieton comet.. hecetae a prey la fits of delirium. rio tent sdentt, verittereri tor note ityo or thumped his neighbors, and when re. ;nava are peoeoece hy miss tatna,4a„ proved by the master, rolled on the floor, shrieking, and groaning like ono ttagehY. Setedish lady, as a preven- posseesed. IiVe or premature burial. tdeution, she propose, tho /Ise of The child was &intently In the habit the rifellettettliet ineented by of asking lava) 61 absence for a Inm- ate or twit, ende the master had him lettlatifete, by whielt any movement on „, „„„,„,,„ , „,,„. tvatched. it wee tonna that he carried ,,a,e,:iiva:,ta.",,,,,,k,="Xe';'„„:;,t,,,, a email bottle of absinthe In hie pocket . end Molt d nip te often tte he could ets-- "'" cape from the eleee room. It has been time furnished. tm* litny$ ilia in In is wrimento ers_. proved that the child's mother filled the "to bottle for him every morning. eel* Amfaieti eery calm Wes; fitted mama* Ilea+ THE mrr f F011 ABSINTHE IN CLASSROOM. Youthful Pupil In Parisian School Vic- tim of Bad Habit. IYOLLIONSbFPASSENOE6 mixtuous mota, ON mow Paseenger trains 24,930,000 Good trains 154,413,000 Mixed trains .... 1,711,000 Total 40,71J0,1500 Litt t 1(W, arried d mia ows:— re. ,000 ,000 44,000 2,030 ers. ,000 remarked: ._ . "Well, your geography Is .ce,i Concerning his experience . in getting teatelful. Now how about your ll out rt newspapert under difficulties, the till right there?" majoa writes: "Oh, yes, sir, passed all that; ity 0—Ael -,.' "My small press had been shifted the sixth standard," about eighteen inches to the west, but "So ydei said before," I replied. !) STRATFORD. ONT. was not injured. I went to work and WU tne who was the father of e town, which appeared in the extra, de- I might as well have asked hi Our classes are much larger set up a little account of my trip down- Victoria?" signing it for my regular Ilse. was Nebuchadnezzar's father, or ban they were a year ago. The scribe the "circle of Willie." ublie have learned that this "Never mind; now, when did nee to obtalu a Commercial the best place In ehe Prov - THE FOLLOWING MORNING brown paper which was part of a stock to use the little stock of paper I had for a regular lesue, 1 printed it on the when he died?" "Great Scott, boy, can you te DON'T KNOW, SIRe' tiducation or Shorthand traili- ng. Students are entering ach week. All geminates get I planned the extra and, not wanting ne accede to the throne, that had been in the office four years. "No, sir." ootpositions. Write, now for employment for everybody who will eiteror?" , ANIllilLN x ••• .• - - at , "Of course, the papers say there Is "Weil, who was William the Con - can a man who has been used to office deprecatingly. 'Well, who wan he?" telinerals 349,551,610 357,989,009 ' Tons. Tone. work, but it is an absurdity, for how "Oh, I know that, sir," he anmwered. work do much handling bricks? Ile e "Why, he was William the Second." General merchan- hour. Bestelee_that, the relief work has got into a snafelef red tape that makes ""NFroonmsenSsePainviy sirbeo' y,; , _'llfz_sanan gym. Total Mee 100 285 091 103,173,000 would need a new pair of hands every "Oh I Where did he come from?" wages. The worst feature of this red- Frarice. 'Was hila not William CII Nor- a man work a week to collect a week's see, - le& • 449 837,615 461,162,000 1905. . ' of needed goods lying Idle for no ap- "Oh, yes,. air," eagerly. RECEIPTS. parent/reason. Tons of bread have "Well, where's Normandy, now?" Merchandise ..X 28,314,906 X28,748,01* tepeism. though, Is to see great stores rnandy?" ispelled -and gone-meldy at a lime when "in Frenee..eiree, , .. — Live stock . . 1,419,206 1,389,0t* station we did not get any bread at what Is the eapttal of Franeer Minerals . , . 25,671,581,851 26,271,010 it Wee badly heeded. At due- nearest "Good, positively goid.' -fly the bye, all for over a week, and then only in With eager response, and Mildness on Total from • or two before It is distributed, and men The medicine was ready. end with a gods traffic . .L.55,400,052 450,408,000 the' ineereeelon of one loaf to a lomilY his uncared for face, he replied: "Why, s are going about with their feet tied u in rags while immense sleeks of ebees leerned that there was something amiqs, The authorized capital of all the com- et six. Meat is cut up and Iles a day Normaruly. sir." tions to be passed upon. In the way at wfth the method of leaching. sum of X1,3913,721,000, and the paid-dp the i antic are lying tied up wafting for re:ruled-, not with the hov, perfume, so much es panics amounted last year to g g P sigh of relief I sent him home. But I clothing and tents there is more of a And that le what we aro paying for. capital to £1,282,768,000. The gross receipts In 1905 amounted supply on hand than has been distribut- to X113,549,000. and the working ex- ec; and much of the Mood supply that ........m.........-. penditure to 170,087,000, leaving net ie- END-OF-THE-WORLDERS. ceipts ter the year of Z43362,000. This raM and exposure. Lots of times can- is an inereese of Just over £800,000 in year. ned goods were given out instead of net receipts oonapared with the previous was absolutely needed was enofled by , -- fresh when tees!' goods. were spoiling They Predict a Battle With 200,000,000 In the depots. I do not think any of Demons From Mars. . the main officers are responsible for this. tee it is „regrettable that some un- derstrapper can so tangle things up in a time of need." CENTRAL iminmalpaIMINO ngere , the were 190A, pared r. t In- d and lag as lin ROW JILTS AREinsliED GAREER OF A BEAUTY' woos* Amoral) 9,0 phicidwED wars liANDOOMUT WOMAN PRO ItAnuas. igEN Altailtagg. Vide *reach of Promise Action* Am —Osnerally beetled Wore They Undergoing Ilex Tried tor Tliett Trouble le 000 SO g101,04140* Gat to Court, lat Iluebend- At preseot one-indi ot' liSty is gerheads with the other halt, hotly di* „7 missing the iunoterlee or gain 01* youog Woratiet la Undergoing Iter trial et Como Mr theft. ,"Niny" ,Bucel, as the young women le familiarly oiled, is coneldered td he The =written Jew, that while a WO* Hien may seek legal redresa for clisap- Pelritnient 01 tnetrimonial hopes a man Muitt grin and bear it, iv slowly but surely teeing force, remarked a solici- tor in conversation with tho writer. 'Whether this le due to the increasing claims Mr Equelity on the part ot the the Wattle, °meet woman ill Itelle. Plie. fah, sex I cannot say, but within the tab, wm3 a ram 01 golden ootr. two - . past year or two there have been sever. large blue eye* set In a Bice of faultlees lines, end a cultured mind, are the chiet al breach of promise cases in which a tram ot ,,Niny..„ orsvoinity. Hitr man has figured as the plaintin. fattier mid mother, Signor and Signora Such actions are ueually brought, not mteel, bout nomend. at one wile ow4ed tc°0neetrcauctre, bcpumt, Petoillarecktrjonverroroutroapblo'lkeent, Deputies, in Rome. the tinion Hotel, facing the Molitor et exPeues, the damages claimed row- A few yetul ago her beauty ettrected senting the estimated cost of the unfor- tunate courtship. This not infrequently offered her his hand and heart, but he the attennen of it young painter. who amounts to e considerable sum. For was repultied and is now att 111111ate of example, in a ease recently heard at nor lacobini, the nephew of a drawl the Rome Lunatic Asylum. Lator Sig. Leeds, England, a Mr. Gibbs obtained Cardinal Secrelery of State ti Wel restitution of $780 in this way. He might very reasonably heel clairned In love with her, with the, 'mull, that . mune, met her at a ball and fell Madly , something also for dleappointed hopes, they were in due course Married. tor the !tidy he lost was reputed to pos.. Signor Jecobinf did nola belle Ina sees a fortune of $50,000. The gentle- time.heuereu dictum that beauty and man was clerk to a firm of solicitors, capriciousnes are inseptireible, and at. and, u his busineee brought about tile ter it sued period er quiet married lila acquaintance with the lady, the law— she elopM with a Signor Agostird, who ourieusly enough — both began arid deserted his wile and children ended hls romance. A MOST REMARKABLE CAS17' t.Ith art apparatus, which sitfpclicit the rdiFhtest movement; and aoc out of tgft) signalled. CITY '0" PAMILTES, 8ml Premise* _contains the laritest tangiest he the Wed& 11 hostels nt bar. thy thiiikliittit fitetieft etch havtrist loot* than tourtraet A10**,11,410, Aids,. ltve feentere with more 1160* OA *U. great lit *eche • aAbl" he sighed sfeelfuily, as `he lean- ed abeve heie "would I wore a glove t.rort that harin," "Ittdietalehar replied the girl, wetuty. "You could never be maything but a Men? Mat Mtn eerie Mere than ti *et, but the ttialority gat more they STATESMAN AND MARRIAGE. _ Married.,Men Who have Been Successful in English Polities. i There has been no more interesting news for weeks than the announcement of the engagement of J. Austen Chafe- garding the end of the world, but the ent. The point at which e r way berlain, M. P., to the daughter of Col. audience applauded each alike. 11 was fettled or the centre from which they were English paper. The idea that "Mr. Au- generally declared that exclusive signs distriuted can only be looked for in the and wonders will cortimence In 12 extreme northern latitude. Dundas, a retired staff °Meer, says an sten" has at tut capitulated tO Cupid years' thne, but nothing serious will hap- Prof. Wilser's opinion coincides with tit 1929 0 b prophet said: lal k ed that of Dr Schlosser that mighty mi- gratione of the brute kingdem preced- "Socialists wIll by this time be gov- eil that of man. The conUnuous cool- erning the world and will have adopt- tin; of the North sharpened the etruggle ed as their trade mark the number 666. for existence and altered completely the This will be branded or tatooed on the conditions of life, bringing new forms forehead tif all who do not wish to oe into existence. beheaded and are members of the So- , It Is not true, Prof. WIlser says, thnt cialist Labor party. "At or about this date the earth' the tropical sun has power to develop the human gerrn. All progress has a great man cannot have a greet nem. will be Invaded by 200,000,000 infernal ceme from the North and the new, high - for "Mr. Austen" is exceedingly ' great demons, probably from Mers• These de. ly developed races ' had their origin mons will begin to kill the population. there. Chancellor of the Fechequer that tals e.e2test of battles, in which ail the Prof. Wilser points out that nothMg Fin Ily will come Armageddon, the In many respects. He has been the beat , Vona. He was an ideal Postmaster- people of the world will fight the de- m.ons. lq known of the origtnal home of all those great groups of mammalia which General, and while he falls short of las 'The result will be a draw, but not spread themselves with man all over country has known for many genera - tether's exeeptional shillty as a fighting mtnated. Then the world. He comes to the conclualim man in debate. he is still so far In front Until both sides have absolutely eider- that the home of all mamalla, men in - down will come the cur- eluded. le te be found lir those inarces- twaoinr.ldfi,r that will be the end of the sible reeking to -day buried In eternal tee or covered by the waves of Arctic seas, ROME OF THE HUMAN RACE. was settled at Ottawa last October, after twelve months' lit "lion. The plaintiff, t Mr. 'Jerome Inter ale, an Italian law- yer, sought to r ^cover damages from Mr. Bonelli, whose daughter had broken her engagement to marry him at her father's instigation. The total amount Maimed was 112,1123.64, thla being the forsaken sultoree (13hr-elate of what the courtship had west him. Judging from the various items in the "bill of dama- ges" the lover regarded the tender pas- sion from a strictly business point ef view and kept a record of hie disburse - POI.= ARE PUZZLED. The runaway oouple went to iComo, where they took lodging* In a large ho- tel. A law days after their arrival some valuable jewelary disappeared, from the room ocempled by a bady guest at the hotel. "telny" took a very active part to the search for the missing Jewellery, and Insisted on the matter being reporb, ea to the poUce. Shortly afterwards serne.of Signor hicobines feweitery 41. so disappeared and there wu a reps*. ' tion of the same scant The police WV?. greatly puzzled, and had Signor Agostirdi companion watch - CA, With the result that at Cernobbl her meats even down to ouch details as stamps and car tares. Most !oven ars content to look upon MIS found in one of her boxes. and .'he trunks were searched. To the great sur. prlee of everyone, the missing Jeweler, every hour spent watt the object el their affections us a gain, but Mr. Internosta --doubtless recognizing that "time is money"—Includee, in his hill an item for 465 hour* spent artUrthe faithless lady at the professional charge of $1.76 per ohrdouera.i. 'arihnoce eneroeclati:InYthaan "8"501(11: chi:lull:lead" Great efforts art 'being made to gee aloPrPeathrsattoallela:ma. beOetnheur°ernma:shinag 0ittemsan the.beautifulswomansout of her scrape - and to assist her tn clearing herself el canoe sail, $2.12 ; attending at residence were ; "Dinner hs my garden, 815 ; at Como will soon give its verdict. a the dishonorable accusatton. The court and holding Miss B --es hand (four hours), 82," and so on. Even the loss.— tor depreciation, preeurnably—upon a returned present Wiva not forgotten. After losing his case III the lower court Me plaintiff appealed to THE COURT OF REVIEW, The annual gathennes of religious so - ail over the world, are 00 In full Migrations of the Brute Kingdom Pre- ceded Thal of Man. cieties and crank aseueuitions, Minims strength. Exeter hall, In the Strand, Prof. Wilser, of Heidelberg, Germany, London, England, has u meeting of some one of the highest authorities of ea. One of the strangest of the meetings esting article on the original home et A draper's assistant beeame engaged to delivered on anItli(use line following case, tor instance. Good Friday, which WIIS sort morning noun and night. tura) history, bus Just written an inter- • an unlicensed dog. The summons wu his employer's daughter, The business illegal, so a second one wee made ouL there has been that of the End -of -the- the human race. lie concludes that not Worlders. The members of this curl- only the larger apes, but also the most , ; was not in a flourishing condition owing Murphy was fined half a crown. Con- ous league are aged people. Practical. ancient hordes of human beines mado to lack of capital, and the young man, stable Huggins sauntered in front of ly all of them bad different ideas re- their way across the European einem- having a email legacy left him. lent the Murphy's residence la keep observation money to the father, it being understood on the private life Of the dog. that when the marriage took place he Mr. Sheehan, the member for Mid - should become a partner. For a time Cork, heard of the vIcissitudes of matters progressed smoothly, and the Murphy's dog. He put a printed notice business recovered itself and became en the Parliamentary paper enquiring protitable. Then, to the assistant o it the Chid Secretary had also heard of amazement, the Mel broke off her en. Murphy's dog. He asked him to state gagetnent, and her father repaid the the precise position of the clerk of the loan, without interest, and discharged Petty Sessiorui who refused a license for 's dog. Mr. Bryce communicated him. In such circumstances one cannot minim be surprised that the injured man promptly appealed to the law, with the result that the draper, rather than have his ingratitude expoeed, handed over a proportion of the profit the victim's money had enabled him to make. Money spent upon en Intended bride may, without doubt, be sometimee re- garded as money Invested. HERE IS A CASE IN POINT. A young gentleman of moderate means fell In love with a girl much below him in social position. Her education being Y Sets Many Buildings Ablaze far now very defective, he undertook to remed sure of Seeing Thera Burn. A man named Kobeit, 32 years of age, hae been (wrested at Marbach. a village near St. Gall, Switzerland, while in the act of setting fire to a largo houie. He hao confetesed to being the author was at once wrested. "Niny" daoleree that she is innocent, and maintains that some unknown hand—a revengeful hasband through some agent, partiops—had plaeed 'the lost jewellery in her trunk. A valet travelled with them, and he may turn out to be the villain of the Meat which revereed the decision and aecided Heat les claim was within his right. The comparative rarity of male breach of prorolse actions is due, not to any popular sentinaent in the matter, bUt to the fact that such cases are generally Nettled by the legal representatives ut the parties before they got to the length of a trial. Speaking from nty own ex- perience of such compromises, the jilted man's claim is generally both moderate PAT MURPHY'S DOG. Ras Become a National lune In 1111466 • A common Irish dog of unspealad pedigree has almost/ distracted a Cab- inet Minister, Oovenunent department, au M.P., a Petty Sesalons clerk and a policeman. So important has 'the 01). noxiou.s beast become that he was Mint ttoned in Parliament the other dee. The doge belongs W an Irishman el the name of Patrick Murphy, of Dub- lin. Murphy applied for a license for It in Irish. The clerk said ha could not, read it. Murphy left In anger. The police summoned Murphy tor keeping sfter reaching his thirty-fourth year is fascinating to men and overwhelming to women. He is the most popUlar and most reticent of all the younger men In public life. In the ftrst place he is ex- actly Itke hLs eminent father. He has the same clear cut, finely chiselled face, the keen eye, the firm, small mouth, the Inevitable monocle and the ever present orchid In his coat lapel. He is the exception to the rule that stsit-un LIFE APOSTLE. Parades Streets of Paris in White Robe and Crown. Jost), Salomoncon, who calls him- aelf "Msi.n," is exciting much amunement In Parte, where he paradee the streein dreseed Only in a flowing while robe reaching to the knees, and wearina owlet on hie head. " heir Med heard,' of ir rich golden color, Iteve never been cut He carries a long white Met, and wearo oandate. "Metre," who eve he fa an apostle of llio "eimPle hen walked all over France in hie singular coettime. M- arcie% steeps on the eround, whatever the weatUr may he, livre (lamely on vegetable5. 110 `,vev that Oen shatild tat tio tetanal mineral fro - duct, end tvIll not eve Use flan with •his cepetablog, ttlic is fifty te yetteit ht age, deeleret thot he , weinderfully healthy, efid ettributes it firely to Ilia Wile Of life, of his contemnorarles that he may he called (fret clue. Aside from thiss. la modeqt. eedate, etudious. Industrious end considerate; and his father simply adores him. It Is almoat pathetic to weleh the elder etetesman when the ycunger N on hie feet In the House of Commons. The old warrior. scarred by many fighte with the great men of the Vic - never allowIng hie eves to leave the torten Parliaments, site up straight. adored object. "I conerafulete my rieht ward by some speakers. in connection send hlm bock to lierbert Gladatone, with the nearness of the end of ,he Secretary of State for the Home De- honnrable friend the member for FAT. hanlon." sewn Mr. Chamberlain, In re- woeld were the San Francisco earth- partment. The hangman's name ia Al - qua e, the marriage of the King of exander Aimsbury Clarence Engiiiih. and he Is believed to have gone to the United States In February last. Engligh la an old sailor end e mem- ber of the naval reserve. Lost winter when the Job of public executioner be- came) vacant he applied for it, and after n severe test secured the job from a number of other applicants. ft la a good paying job 11 there are pferee exeeutIong. but the Home Secrete re has been very merciful of late and the rnurderere have been reprieve* so often (het F,nsilinti and hie family were on the verge of starvation. Engliali told his wife he would like emigrete lo the United Stake. Ile (Mt nf literatilre and sellina lints about Amerlen, and ono day in Febru- ary Raid farewell to hie wife and Iwo ehildren and wag gone. He promisted suereesee. wrm morrled; no were Palm. tasneanthealleated ithora atone The to write oq enon oa he had ranythIne to eelflISTIANITY lel POMPF.II. cretin and Salleieury. revenant Is Lady Dorothy, who lived in wee „ e home ee„ teem Hie eetio For the firet time. It la helieved, in On the other Finn@ the doohterc point the 18th century. For "an° reason 0110, want haek tn her parent% Wore ricer evidence hen tieen Mend to the panel -Weis of Lard lefelheurne. wan Ant ntI in an nem obambee, 101n Recently Engligh wee eent for by the lo ratecles bailee Fox. te Me, Parnell, her senftea and died a hopeleee lunette. Goverminent. for a hartaing comfria ppl 1 big le a dineevery of high inter - of the Influence of Chrietianity In Pmn. to Mr. Paltrier, as erne? et their redden- Ever lance those dayo her illeemboilhel Another speaker was heroic enough to take some exception W these state- ments. He mad the world would drive out the devil thee year but he would come into power again in three yeara. As regards the blg battle with 200,000,- 00e devile he was sure it wouldn't mat. ter if there were 500,000.000 for the Arch- angel Michael's bound to win. Among the ehme serinualy put fore A HANGMAN LOST. Apparently Has Emigrated from Britain to the United States. Somewhere in the United Statea fenglandei public exeeutioner, commonly known es the hangman. If anyone finite him they ere respectfully requeoted to ferrIng to hie non (names are never men- tioned In the House except by the Speaker when he vvishee a member to know that he le In disgroce). and "Mr. Austen" refer; to hls parent aq "My right honorable friend the member for Weet Birmingham." There are people here who believe that man's usefulness as a politician le impaired by marrlege, end that the member for Feighagton will not be AO ereat a man after the reremony at Lhe rhurch, but am inclined In Geoff et the idea. Ilsere ere and have been PO many areal men in Witless whore mar- rled life bellea it. Mr. Gladstone's A IITHEN11CA TED G I IOST. wee reeponetble few meet of hN power, foe efle looked after him. arrenged hie Rayham Hall, the family piece in Nor. enerigemente and generelly glimmered folk. England, of the Marquis nf Towne - him. te fleeermetteld. the peewee /If and, is the /seem sew) a writer, of a Spain, the clze of European armaments, the uneneployed problems, roaring ••1 meanie whirlwinda and tornadoes. Another speaker asked If women would have to be branded with "606" end when the reply was In the affirms, - !Ivo he retried the point that they would refuee the branlIng. would goon their beauty. The whlie-whirikered pro- phet who fathered the "rifig" brand mid wome.n when the time reline would. he felt asspred, rather lose their Woke than their heads. with ublin Castle. The aulborities there enquired In Cork as to the ante- cedenta of Murphy's dog. Mr. Bryce... Chief Secretary for Ire- land, explained the history of the ani - mat In the House the other day. Thum the time of a Cabinet Mtnister and many Covernme.nt officiate. with SOULS of the nation'a money, was wasted because Mr. Murphy applied tor a license for his dog In the native tongue. A MODERN NERO. It, and for two years, she studied both useful and polite arcompLIshments at Ws expense. Apparently the acquieltion of learning increased her value in her own (wee as well aa in thou of her lover for at the end of Met time glee heartleaely jilted the man who had done 1/ 18 fires that have taken piece in the so much for her, and married another renton since 1890, but it Is estlmated who woe wealthier. The former, thus ' robbeA of lhe fruite of his outlay, corn- 1.14h:twhrtem gdoesteranedingatthattelishet 60wastmnUttese'es; mencea an action to recover the amount supected. Of late fires became so fres was paid by the hueband, who doubtless spent on the lady's education. The bill eL mpenies doubled their tariffs for the quent tn the canton that Insureetca did not wiah hin bride's former defb district. Kobelt explained that after starting cienolea advertised in court, a flre be wouldeelimb a tree. or a hill la . The above are but a few inetartees out the tetetnity and watch the building burn. of many that have come within my ode me." naid the incendiary, forrea me prove that very frequently a dicearded knowledge, but they are °efficient to wtth itio grent,ee ley. ..sometaing in- te commit the netts, and the sight et the nuitor has serloue exenoe for impelling enettoment. 1 was not master of my - to the law. On the other hand, deems are sometimes made for rldleulotie reit- self and could not control trie deeire to flernaq thrilled me with plumes) and cone, an witness the ease of a man w, ho wieheri to bring an action eneey 'to eel., e naming masa... vindicate his penal/in " Ile argued that the blame of a broken, eneeeerrient in d that him alwaya laid upon the man, on reputation would be geflauele (thinned. Needlesa to say, hie folly Vol no (OMNI` than hts eoltzlimee office. — London Tit -Bits. 4 lien. Pertiornentery life, Me, Memel- eferlt ts Paid to atinenr before the birth on nori' ThPil 11 bceam° Oublb that est for etudenta of archeotoey. While) ism. rertainly tobea a man teem bin of a Towneliend or hefore the death 1 ismne cirele ranee then le tittual with a Mother of the family, and thio lift- men who liva a 1000 culling end oscricf. quiet wraith wag reported to have been ing life. ?teen who never reeeh lessee eeen on the doy preceding the (terrace 'Then you have nd sympathy for tbe mail the midnipat helm hen tang since et the kite trairaine. deeming poor?' asked the poser' emelt- garel. and thr• arnv dnwri al fureine red see Ina Mr Chanty. , Our Idee Cif a poor houeeiceeper la "Ma?" replied the ttett and areet mon. .!tliatetreaPret,4 sitirr.eiter4. cillfrIcenntliitrlext".17tlet;e1111;;I: 0 Ivo:nail who mins Ito houee on bust. "WO, Mr. I have nothing but sell -teethe they intend to neglect their dales. nest orindoles, tor num.° ' / L' -...,1 he had digappearee. !minima BUT flYMPATIIV. eSeei 4.0 ao nome egravatione wore being mode cn fin; northevext alde Of the dead city there twin t1Pisuralt to light fl tereaeotta yea - eel beeline the go -called reor.ograin Chrlat, aureourieteti by the eronsti et thoseese The vessel tie atheleeted to the Met century of the Ciitatian era. It wee found et a depth of about twelve feet bitiow the surfaceL ,e CURIOUS .KITCIIEN.. Tho imperial kitchen of the Sultan of Torkey te more like a tortme than a Wee to cook his meal*, OW it hae an armor -plated door and ts fitted with torten which can only be evened by one man. As each course le propared it placed on a diver dish, which is eesied ,rf;"' with red wax by the kelardthl. the dn. dal responsible for Wit sovereigres food, and then a black velvet toyer is glued over the dish to keep Wenn. A pro - ("eaglet) of peaple foffeee the meal into the Imperial chambee, the sells being broken in the Sultan's presetwe, and often Ito keienlint ie requested to tees come nettle:4.1100*AL. The trot ef tha elution's feed does not otteed, $1000 yeti*, for 3 it frunitly entrees, ted befied tht to feed the ritiltentitie. tent. biers el Me hotallteld end pity 01 tie astentes Usifttil his *brutal hm1004 of 111\000,4100 by MOO I Week. c„:1 • sir