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The Seaforth News, 1927-08-04, Page 6More Blood on Erin's Shield Ia d'e. P th to freedom is gain` him will. take his life .in his ;hands ', As;; marrrr teethe:Ws by assassination, ,'Phis bine' Di Dellis A. McCarthy writes in the 11 is the, ''Free State Goyeri)rnent'o i Bo; toaHerald:- • "strong man," Gevin O'Higgins Vieth -I; "in an atmosphere of intense penia- Prepidertt and Minister of Statice midi cal bitte©ecenusuch eas si wa, tengender- Foreign Affairs, whose- life is/taken, ed yy tl t e cio elections, bethere found Shot several tinier •by' three' armed I; always and in every men equipped, with revolvers and a I irreeponsib'-e men who, seeking the, fast automobile on July 10, while on : nearest' way . to' a desired end, are. his way to church, be died within a' Moved.Without inuch hesitation and bloodshed. to. a few hours with words of forgiveness ' deed. It of violenceen tthis type, I have no for leis enemies on his lips• What s political effect upon will doubt, who planned and carried out 1on the country , be is yet to be .determined, ,but, de- the dreadful crime ot last Sunday in • clai1es President Cosgrave: "Tho as- Dublin. tyre m1eno11 ill these entative mur- sassin's bullet will not suceed in ter l rorizing the Free Slate, there are men of the real Ireland than the men who who will gladly step Into his plane. murdered Lincoln America. olln00p e they In the opinion of Tho Irish Times, of tive • of the real Dublin, the crime will rally the entire_ anything but tyros_ in human affairs, overnment's support, they would have known that no cause, nation to the C be it ever so righteous, is advance and inspire all parties with a nVe one particle by assassihatiou. sense ot responsibility. ho " \, baso "Good ood may come of this crime, ter - the motive for the shooting;' cables G the. Dublin correspondent of the New tables edias t as, 1parties heir. horror/ of it servess York herald Tribune, "it ie clear that hi ors fu America of sand it did not represent an attack oa the sympathizers es, itersnto realization11.meriof the such Tree State," but according to Presi- pa this crime "is the fruit and wickedness of attacks dent Cosgrave, teacl • Persistent attack against upon one another. It is by s that. im- Gte Government." 3. the will fail lit•" However, he adds: p and adesperatera men aro moved "IG will fail in its.object. We will Pulsive and meet teas .Corm of tet'rotism as ewe tolidldeeds from whichwilthose os who speao speak have nit other forms of seweriead: selves shrink in horror." And the the New utaYorlt Times "The Irish Free State is warned by "That Urutal killing of Mr. O'IIiggins , sprang from partizan hat- the assassination f Viseto destiny sident little doubt. The O'Higgins t zeds, sherd can be 1 themselves like the nest of frenzied. conspirators men thesins did not bear aegrudge. cherishing a private It whose bloody deeds are and are injure is taken for granted by, all Irishmen, new- State sovereignty repute," notes, the and is explicitly asserted by .the ing her national) p Government of the Irish Free State, Syracuse Herald, while in the New tmurder was intend- York World we read: ed as sthun act rho act of intimidation.- Ls- "Republicatl.leaders 1n Irolandin make tremean Republicans in Ireland hasten basso to disavow any 'sympathyHi •\ toema o to disavow.it,, ,arid to protest that the" brutal murder UeKelvin do bt of while they have been and remain at gins, ahcanAsbe 0 do t f deadly enmity with the Government, their sincerity. serve a "coils neon the a they have not countenanced or de- Y sired violence. But it is always easy fo rthe w•11i1 fringe of an. Irish party to translate the Whirling words of their leaders into bloody deeds. "It will be said that - political crimes are not unknown in other countries. Free An)erica has men three Plea- d °f the United States shot to of Women's Work to be field i Switzerland Every Phase of Women''s'Activities to Be Represented in ,Ve Great' National Fair' Which' Will Be Held at Berne During the Fall of Next Year E,o}'ne.—In the general shitiip fol- I the anrthoritiee asking theist, In view i I importance ...of lowing .the war the entei15 le e in: of the vnmenoe sou l which woman iii Switzeelatei'd were our undertaking in the dornaue of chiefly concerned were especially!. sohools,' . appranlrces, ' folk ` welfare, hand hit, Cheap ready-made clothes.ebe., to extend a •helping hand and from the outside,almost pit the Swiss thus assure its success. dmesonlakers out of business; no one "Further, the appeal is addressed Iv to buy painted or sculptured to those mangftactueers and mer- Objective, e - -bject- or enrbroi•dery, or bathe, no i chants whose products are made t one sceneed,t0 want any fine bind', 50111 for the most part by' women, or fr..ui or tooling clone, and so.it was which farm an "important element with other occupations. --_ It was finally decided to organize DUMBELL BELle-BOYSa &rifer of wonens expo '. sitions in ince of Wales, cantons ns. of the ic'hs 1Y he Prscions can o st the t ' uies Highness •'1T J h - Royal g r 3 11 a few setting-. like e -the iei nothingP .andwhat There's O •ci a first ehf1-bo the morninge his' brother Prince C, , for to remind the .public up exercises s according to the bell -boys aboard ..the mien Stanley .Baldwin, who sailed g Canadian. Pacific liner Empress of at Australia who aro seen in the plieto-•, The Empress of Australia made lien fleet re tikt'r run across the lc ? g 1i do - n - t1 ll 4 CO 't 0 P 111 t1 action - 3e a entirely graph nt Y ' ntic near version of the sword recently actor being. e 1 The pop „ cannot bo taken I dhtioned aud,ro g dnthis c:' -however o tl in this case, Cor it would be hard to been chosen as find a smarter set of bell -boys any- where. They cater to' many distin- guished passengers who frequently cross -the ocean . as for instance Ilie C tecta on this shit) recently, women of the lance can do, and as an appeal to then to protect-. home in duetries, • -There were four of these cantonal expositions, in ' Berne, Ge- neva, Vevey and Basel,'respectively. lon fined, e ptid virtue And Uho result was that' woman's A aanewfleet and has the Pride a the ;business' sphere took on Its normal yP Atlantic aces has ee the Round -the -World cruise vessel of the Canadirlu Pacific Lo sell from Neto York in December. hie Militate:us. Few actors are so Great, Britain Has No Muret ,Foreign 'Pacts :. Sir A Chemheriain Makes `Statement in l louse—No • .Anti -Russian 'Bloc London.—S1r Austen Chamberlain, the British. Foroign Secretary,; de- clared in the Hduse of Commend that thereis-nothingsecret.aboutthe Bri- tish foreign policy. There aro no en- gagements or ultderstandings not, known to Commons. Sir Austin was speaking during a 3bat� initiated by Arthur Ponsonby, in Laborite, clurinng which the latter the household or. in any business in criticized the Goverunten• t's foreign• which women are actio . To this Govern - category belong all they new i) yen- Policy: -The Foreign Secretary repeat,:,. housewife's -ed former pledge that the Govern- v n-,: Make net e o rnak undertake no Miens intoiided t rent would undota , in'w easier a designed to be of her gagement on behalf of the countn3 to women's sihess, states "ox other without submitting that engagement forms business., i► to Parliament and receiving Perna - "A committee' formed ue every utont's approval. Swiss canton will give ,any desired Sir Austin declared that no govarn- islforination about cantonal actipitie$, mens in Europe was under the misap—prehension,:. from 'which the Opposi- copies of the rules and rc:gulationus; 'tion appeared to, sitar, that Gi'Oat d to confer with all a aspect again. and stun bo t a y Britain' had endeavored to form an busy ..of these participants. National tri -Russian bloc.` The German, It is clue to tete success clusp.and. .so Ir anti -Russian itvons that the national �expdsi- clwlre .:and •associations will comma ni- French, Italian and every border state,. expos tion for woman's work, to be held m cute directly withet,he eScretariat of government knew that this Was not Berne 1928, as been p ann the rZos •non, 22 true the Foreign Minister ,said; and Berne. involving them in Great .Bri- jls May our appeal fend an echo in far from disagreements, h b 1 od The L It Amthausgasvo t o official name of this undertaking 1s Bez t Jol�n Drew "•rafts," a word formed of the, int - 't' ' title "Sclhwe- fortunate. Instead of aspiring to a nese that was beyond him, Drew in d alwa s within to radius iris gifts. He was .content to be a median and into o enc a mime for himself that he could not have won in another. knew that from the first "to the last, great rials of the exposition's s -the hearte of everyone whoa bears it, .rains quarrels ? ttint they weed tl of iserische Ausstellung tar Frauen Are enin , 'interest in our undertak-' they had ail been toldneed r�hia e y aw ak 6 and. Gentleman —The beat" ar "S4vi s Exposition for fent- d i to hei`p fear uo criticism or jealousy from Artist a ,� fug 1 ti 1 Government tf they death. .But there is a difference be- fortween individual acts of ureic who had I past, not sheepolicies esoofate hat hatreds tune. fat r nearly if not quite lost theft rea- "To liquid overwhelming an very I ifilcult- if tete C b less d Passing of W y d d E ll and.atvahena ie a . es're could do ldel - Admire "a- comedian; that field It made inane Acbivtti.es.'... by- interesting' fric?nds:;and co -wore- •ilii si . •. •1 " anything : to inhpro00 their relatone MODERN METHODS TO B 1 ere en every Fart orf Swheerlan. Y t SHOWN of Sulfa is as- with' Russia. too. The finanellal side a Referring tra the League of Nations, "73o carried on the tradition,ex a ition has time. launched • it the. ' The p mired tt single' snaclefoI of Sir: Attsteu.stiil.that_the Icagtjo :and; AN INTERNATIONALHis otvn daughter's cal eel, o. iof But his sister's child bY'tho 'representatives of the various earthy for the buiddengs bas ba d I the Council 'were stronger to -day than • LOSS stage rvas'brtiirnad Theca buildings, seven ren—rho world !knows them ,as Ethel, Swiss woman's clubs and associa- are to be ve•nd the uncil wet tyhai the tthOfl t what many the announce was now more peaceful than then and, "Tete last great figure o Lionel and John . 13arrymore—were age ot ou.that questions which could not lie regard as the golden ge: John Gaming ee He gave them 'the bone- n the death o tin them which Z ' 1 Th be placed neat and were not discussed then were theatre" Passed fit of hhe years, His intere. eel his last days in suf• n after they will include every woman in the rc- sive Bremgarten 10010 t that cares )on •_ Drew. Vie lav was, indeed, paternah Eve thisthe house- .•. � now discussed in a spirit, of friendly party weapon first in a. San Francisco sanatorium,:right up.. to the street's and houses i ens—one of the fi feting had been acclaimed by the world it public; On ' occasion ratanofStvitzsrlarnd.°°peration. Poe['n Minister users. OHua National a whole stretch of the country from was his custom to send each of them wife, as well rs the business we of Berne, the capital r British policy, the g brilliant graduates of the home but firm beloved Long Island night in ti new play a. hill bring .to view for the first: time Within these buildings will be. house.i so -opera was to reconcile else enennies, Lniei'ent 1 a Slim Fein patriot, a his b as on their. first g concrete 'exhibition of le was John Drew tv Per 's eakiug in, history 'a , con the exhibitions' of tlw' 12. gtwape as toas remove suspicion reconcile and the cause of dheren[ to the treaty—Was probaUly wherever 1 reel apple, the rewardP r in and' ear don:eetic economy,.: (°) a uimosite aroused known to the country at, large, azul their Pieces well.' [twhat she is -doing year y Sollotvs: (1). differences, and to helpnationssortie the victim of a paid as touching a rice "Now n and lout in the family, in education, in ardisnin sand ag'ricuiture. (d)', p• tome Minister, he was Mr. San Francisco p I his 'chapter has ended, g g wo their difference iu a spirit, good fel- when, as I though he were L o ati 1 are eft o carry D and is social welfare work. mens trades and sopa ( 1 ship end without C right arm in suppressing butthey 't' d t' sculpture, 1 the Policy of l+ Stage Figure 1 tions -.. According to - more in number, ilt ment of the commietee: "Safe stands, Luk Guyer, a gifted )voman •architect for a tremendous undertaking, of uric h. They will r: his )artium as oug I t on the taw business a sed a-ts 4) ow tit 'resort to force. osgravo s , i down f her own sons. It was that 11 show what her position an liberal. arts —Patti mg, • .cu 1'ltat was not 'merely edition. Those who shat Ism of o of-' t to: the 'resent trades and business Government, but the' kin of the hatreds of the of the country that Saw his last able that the dynasty will end with success have been up P architecture, ( ) the British vete titin . g d at Pat't • t:aclition. Nor is it altogether prob-'tSuhe will son and the planted assassination o t aconsiderable praise. The program ro- bs, O'Higgins <majority of Irishmen accepted the or the Wells:' The partnwas a new °more a man like Viee-Pre { . t Great Britain. The ma- creation Por him, for g waled her name as Ethel Bahr, ons h•atols treaty with t -three ate by a band or desperate c pColt. There are purple robes waiting • somehow Ytelieved that they anctliority ectats�i�ut it Is not Arran three letting years---ho to Ptn- who so for bee:" their friends utwould get a Party ad- rearnrtthe voters times declared by sent varied types of men of the John Drew was a person as'well .ae vantage out ofit" roe s Irish Vice- roughly 2 to 1 for the treaty and the world, not young nor yet old, His an sorer. "I have written wonderful "The murder of the 7ht books" said Mark Twain', "books in- i Constitution, To -Flay we have the last part was the irascible old gentle - spectacle of Mr. Cosgrave carrying on at the head of a party with 46 voles i theDial, wlrte De Valera heads the school Philadelphia gate s are f "all-star" company in "Trelawihyi industry, t't :com- to on the stage, for ho was over- Lhem. A few weeks ago a private time and what° he• hones an .arms in the home, {G). s while touring with I it class ' or 'the future Through Sofia inerce ofldci'al positions and PTofes- cen with f lines the too 111 f n , May, sA very young lady received Swigs women will learn the modern sions,' (8) science, literature, music? President may be an 9so etance, or it may be the first in a' series of reprisals, It may mark a crucial period in Ireland's progress," observes the Springfield Union. "But the Free State already has survived several assassinations,' we are re- minded by'the Jersey .City Journal, and the New York Telegraph agrees that, "If anything, this attack on Mr. O'Higgins will have a tendency .to strengthen the sentiment in favor of the Cosgrave Ooverlhment." Vice -President O'Higgins was only thirty-five, Ills grandfather was one of the prominent supporters and ono of the historians of the Home Rule m000men1, according to the Now York Evening World, fila uncle is now Governor-General of the Free State. His father was assassinated four years ago. Only last May, say Dublin dispatches, when a bomb was hurled at Vico-President O'Higgins, General Daly caught the missile In Itis hAnd and 1)111011011 out the fuse. Says the Brooklyn Eagle: "Not so broad a man as Michael Collins, who else was assassinated, Gevin O'Iltg• glus was a stronger character. His work as Minister of Justice was charged with'Ihat•ing sacrificed seven- . ty-seven political opponents on the altar of Order. That it broke the back of the Pe Valera armed resist• ante is conceded. And fairness is compelled to concede that those who were executed were, In the name of civil war, looting banks, breaking in- to private. houses, killing unarmed citizens. Was there any °thee way of stopping the business? O'Higgins thought not. He said 1n a campaign speech at Monaghan this year: 'we'll execute seventy-seven more if neces- Sary. " "Vice-Presideu,t O'Higgins," notes the. Phdladelphla Public Ledger, "was a H10011, hard_ man in dealing with dis- order, but 110 saved the Free State • in the Tour Courts rising in 1923." "He was the meet important figura in the Administration," declare the neighboring Record., The lnqukro)' Is convinced that "whoever succeeds REG'LAR FELLERS—By man whose nephew runs away anus, which have revolutionized politics. consorts with play actors to hie elia and religion in the world, and you t is won over by the i ruby m child - ? cin until 1 e might think that this s y m g 6 n t ?Mune. Fall with 44 outside, refusing charms of Rose Tr'elawny, on whom con hold my person to be sacred; but to participate in Parliament. In other the S'ooth'e affections were cast. Drew it isn't so; it is because T_lcnow Miss words, a party representing not far played a long line of comedy parts lichen and Mr. Drew personally." The from one-third the voters la in a post- under the aegis of Daly and Froh- Goa of complete hresponsibllity and man. One of the Bost summaries of World dwells upon that aspect of the man whore he is described as a gen- complete opposition, mu his career appears in the Now YorkUmtataand an artist on the stage as "Tits Dublin murder is another evi- wall s deuce that Ireland still has to achieve a real political and moral unity."— Literary Digest. Evening Post: "Perhaps of no actor of our gene- ration could it be more truthfully said than of John Drew that he was born: to the purple robes of the drama and 1 first am0ug the comedians of our that he leave blooded heirs Lo carry i theatre, is to give only a partial indi- on after hint. His is tete last of the I cation of his position. The, news of great dynasties of tete theatre.' With, his death recently must have brought him passes the name Drew, but not' literally_to miniuma 'sense of personal. the tradition or the house. ThciSloss. It plow a period. A genera - Boothe, the JeTfersons awl the Daren- `don ago Mark Twain wrote that his ports have closed their chapters, but j'oltildren revered him not because he not the Drews. I, had written' books and dined with "Two generations before itis ownstings but because he knew John the mummer's strain begain to show . Di.uw, A veteran of Augustin Daly's seIf . His maternal grandfather and great cergathizatiou, a star of Frolt- a in real life: "To say that John Drew attained a unique place in American stage his- toey, that for decades lie has stood methods which are now ' in use -to •(9) education;; (10)' social economy lighten women's labors and bring the we1Lare work, protectino of women best results. 1 and girls, (11) hygiene, : (12) histo - "An appeal has been addressed to rical. the women of the towns and cities, Three restaurants and dairy - ae well as thoselunch on the farms, will give the visitors chance housewives,' country vr00110)1, working to sample the famous Swiss cookery, women of all kinds, waren artisans,' and a vast assembly - hall will enable teachers, nurses, women in proses- . therm to hear Swiss music and wit sions; in business and in trade, in. ! no;s one of the ...Carefully l9iatinod viting them to raise part in the ex- and beautifully etaged jtagcants for position, either collectively with their wha ch Switzerland is celebrated clubs er singly as individuals. For -1i h•e exposition will open its doors tetes who have lved three years in I , `:la t week in Au -gust, -r9 28, and r Switzerland and Swire women all will close the. last days of `Septoni- suer the world are also invited to' Icer, this being the season when take part. Switzerland is at -its best and when APPEAL TO AUTHORITIES ' crowds of tourists are in the coun- I "This appeal is also addressed to try. his ease and sparkle, his conscienti- ous artistry,' transform his rolo.'Booth Tarkingtori, once said that he could have made Simon Legree into a mis- understood hero and gentlettian. In roles like the gay Lord Quex, or Major Pendennis, or Sir William blower of "Trelawiiy'—tire part in which New York last sdw him— he was superb. "John Drew was a gentleman and it gr•aridmother were English stars of man's when 11) the nineties' everybod3 an artist on the stage; he was the their day. His father, whose name be went to the Lmpiro to eee Dre wand sante gentleman and artist in every- received, was an Irish comedian of Maucle Adams, he survived to be the Clay 11fe, For more than a half-cen- r aY .Jimmie, i.1t was, however, during the, death of the stage, one. of :our Ameri-, turf' his high ideal of ,this progression, Dabs (lani,u0 to S ,. note. that tired feel- of his mother, Louisa Lane can institutions. He was the last hie earnest ,effort to achieve the eta' what do you do for regency lug?" Drew, that the consanguineous lll'Igreat figure at what many regard as most polish and effectieenees, his in- Jinlntle"Yawn!„ tluence made itself L if most felt upon,tha golden lieu age or our theatre. 1,,tinet for what was.)cleain and bright, — — - John Drew. I "It vas always hard to dissociate made item a happy influence upon our rewd. "Part of Mrs, Drew's dower was the ' John. Drew the man andsJohu Drew Sh� ilius he wren First Amateur Ciarclener—"I don't management of Arch Street Theatre the actor. In both capae Iand Rept the sante place in the Ameri- sea whv you should think, old l�hilcs in 1'li[lo bachla, "i was seldoo w1'Olo ; can Heart, in Part this teas bees Ise I Mrs. it,—•"I do believe this is a: bad is so unpopular—he lends you his l iedii to go back stage,' Y,Jwhich was ;tithe the stage was hes natural element, to quarter John," Providence .journal; Speed is rela- vier," in his autobiography,� IIIc. X.— _Chink so? Well, then,_I mo i ns -sketch -book ot a crowded ties.!which he•was born.' Ills mother andrive. Thirty -fled miles an hour on a Second Aotateur Gardener—"That's scurf°school in-! r taaro Pia3'ars he made his de- guess we'd better drop it into the dear road in miles 'Weather is not Ile was Peeped off to a good !Lather 1 It is more arranged it so that You mother's PhClatte p company' ssaril a speedy rate, so bttt he's a to row er in ;but in his church box; perhaps goodnecessarily i allotted g UF I theatre. Uplift Item. ' A Gloomy Prospect. policy of France and Germany, Sir Austin said, adding that he hoped that it wasalso the policy of all the other goverments concerned, - Mr. Ponsonby, in his speech, men- tioned the statementwhich was given out by Aristide Btia,nd, Fanaeign Min- ister of France, 'to the Associated - Press last April in wench the French - ForetSn Minister /said that France was willing publiclyto engage itse n with it. tear'- be- tweentothe 'United the two Countries outside, the, _ pale of the law. w lett r } He asked Sir Aus¢ten if the aid not think that Lhere Was a hope- ful line of advantage in that direction and 4vhether he was not prepared to • take a similar step with the United .States and France Cor the outlawry of war. , Sir Austen replying, made a note of 11I1.. Poi -worthy's statement amd- then, ,referring to the question of con-.' versations,between 'the United States and France to the matter, declared 'F that he believed such conversations were likely to take place. Studying Poetry Turtle—"It's awful. I don't know when I may be made into soup:" Frog -"Yes, and my hind legs may be lying on a `piece of toast at any time now." The Speed of Cars have to drop a shilling in a slot he- teaks of berg , n I •rew older; -he :theatre before he was of age. He had 'tt111 refer fore it works'."—Passing Show. 'When b allowed to go behind a Itis The boatman was tied or answer.; were across. Amont, the company soon !deiced to a lady who had attained the And they ing visitors' questions. "is this place i r lldwiu 73oeth, Lester Wallach, cants lay. Particularly as he became as they say?" asked enc of were 1age of one. hundred year=s. "What," , as bracing Davenport, Louis" Janos and mature, as he 'passed from Che roles i he asked, "would you say, as you look "It'ssin he replied. Stuart cavalier• into more serious in, ams.. g, P of the gay .our lite, hes given you the theStP.ob,,on• was � back over 5 1 take a Melee that "Yon eek the neighbors; they'll tel 1 made hes first debut parts,did he •o "When he I "[e )laxed she polished , greatest and •most enduring plea-. Yon that when 1 came here I was s 1 wee twenty. His asanrahce was all lits own. F I said. Drew tvwit the -man of the sure?" The dear' 'olds thingedid 10 weak I couldn't walk.' 'Really, sa that instead or Pampering barn gentleman, tbe 1 H could take I meditate very long. . "MY tittles; she .in it.'?—Boston Transcript, the wings e lit' and tete added,'i was a w I tractive persona Y, a . •k atop r. Daly's o tors.discipline ac us dntro- cenes and talk to the stenuoPremier Ferguson was once Chea his tel- , m� showed whets the visitor polItSl`3•. "Yes, really," 1 such, t hi moth i d 1 bl to die- waled to perfection. e 11 d i I tet I was er found t a u ea a l 1 vitality, rep c. >tece enc, said the old call. You see, born here." Lclpline him, He learned from Uer I a shoddy 1 Gene Byrnes. CANS PLA`( SAIL THIS AFTERNOON CAUSE MK MOTHERS y Asl-1N' Any 1 GOTTA HANG 'NE CLOTHES OUT FOR HER. DOES `(OUR MOTHER WASH? rso����9�9' ITS A .iO1D TOO. THE NAME OF THE ..tsIONA rJ"-Z r•.v,a",.t... seg VIE CBOT AN . ELECTRIK WAslAtw GALLEDq THE sT R' 4'e P' fry to probably a sold -rate, But fifteen riles an hour in the midst. or city'tra"ltic: on a stormy night may be ii dangerous speed. 11 is necessary always to read the speedometer in the light. of eou- ditions of the moment. The motorist must he taught that, He must, some- how, be convinced that when a maxi- mum .speed 18 fixed by ordinance o' erasure it does not warrant Thine in always driviirg at that' maximum. Thereare several,)Vays of studying poetry. The greater num1)01' of peo- ple who buy the books of poets and who find pleasure ih,them do not know anything about the rule of verse. Out of one hundred thousand. Englishmen who read Tennyson, I doubt very much 12 one.thousand.know• the worth ot hes art. English university students who have taken a literary course probably, do understand vary well; but a poet's' reputation and fortune are not made, U} scholars, but by etre great class of half-educated people. They read for sentiment, for_ emotion, imagination; and they are quite satisfied with the pleasure given them by tate poet' in id educating themselves when they )'eau him,' and for tris 11 is not necessary that they 'should. know its results. The educators of 'the' great mass Of any People In Europe. are, in this reuse, the poets. The ether way of studyin a Pool is a the critical method the scholarly way, ie )hilos0Ph•iritl I tI do not moan el 1 1 niothod,that is beside our subject.) eii !we read a poet closely, carefully, cb- rvin every • new and unfamidlar se g ord every beautlful phrase and un - This Bird Takes the Prize. MK AUNT'S 'T1deet`t ELECOT?IK ' iN MACHINCG' QS'i TEI .RE GREAT. -THE 101'4 R. YOU i .M.V UsE 5 578050 19R 1951;; rKOUR ARN)`GET51 gEsrnuRn,� laaata a,'•Sirq,t, '15)404.5 :y this way. They are impl'ov ng accustomed term, every ,device of 0hyni or rhyme, spend or coker that he has to give us. Our capa•city - - study any poet in this way depends, good deal upon 11155ary habit and upon -.,,• educational opl.artunity, Ily the first method I doubt whether yrou could find much. In Swinburne. lie'is :like 511011 ley, often without. subetance of any- kirid:- ,By the second method we cavi 'do a great deal' with a choice of text 'from his' bet work_ 1 shirk it better to state this clearly beforehand, that 'you may not be .disappointed, failing to find in him beautiful, haunting thoughts that you can find in Rossetti, er in Tennyson or 'in Browning.— . From, "Pre-Raphaelite, • and'' _Other , Poets," Lecture's by-Lafcadao Hearn, On Commission "Don't' you thine,. doctor, you've rather overcharged for attending Jimmy when he had the. measles?" "You must remember, Sirs. Browne. that inclugles twenty-two visits?" "Yee, but you forget he infected the • whole school!" •