The Huron Expositor, 1930-08-01, Page 3'.W21, " � . , I. '.0', �, ti�� , �(". �, Ii I I _.._...__ V.
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, �Mt'Xey A F-PIRGOTTON ANNIVERSARY? 77 [""i
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, "'llie w hA � - , 1300 � Atch, - ao*m ,,%p 111. �11��
� I 'T. CAMM yie� 1 do � w � - "! I, , , ,,� C,% 'i � � , " ,,, �,r , � � �,� , �
J, � - . '. - T01 d" 9 goat for a I . .� , 1 14, - 1
�_ �;ii�iytt, � ,,do -,. JQC&� 0 ilets are. , , , I., � .1 aptw horse,,ng I., . I � . I, , ot - ,.�� ., 'A
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", illop, The goat ,11vold hi, T' I . , , . .-, , .1-1 IrIT ;
. ,r.AT 0 Wers . ipi ��, . . �, , , ,,, . , , ,
60i . 4 �11 .0 4 - or'by mail, ' ,1, ' I , , . I � ,�ru I
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, silthis,aA anniversary YoUhave fol , I . � ill.l.., 4" � , ��'t?�. -1 I" -_ . 1? "
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-' - . I they ,were inseparable., , . I . " . I, , ...'0 4 11 _X1 , i
, 4 *11 time to an, * , I - - 4 - ;�e, " I I
a b Wil .1 � . 5 @
M ,�. ents 0 ox, froin The Dr. .
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, I 11 '' . ..F , :_., ". .�,, 19,
"� riame,'UMI, a filly,iiar : I - I I V4.Z�` , .t I
,, Brockville, -, rede txueto F . I . I 11%, I 111
a V ne Col, . lem. youl Your telephone willt iA..13, 0 ri,oth,Whom he live� __ 1 7" , : ' 14 ......
I � . I . . I . ." % ( 1 'T 0.4t ,#144P "it fard , law
I ,, , ". I .. � talm you to ai , I ce, yol in a I., I .It - 1 I$ * 01 ..�..b , sUV
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� =, nute,g. ,and 'a greeting by j,o AIX openly,'' is; the Efiglisli De�by � : , ,
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I ,, - . n6r, 1104 , , a 4,ack cal , ` a ;dl - � --a"h
MONTREAL HAD A CABARET WN dlgt!t��e is a ,form of remembrance, . . , " . . . �. I I , - P, ,� W I
I . -predates. Out -i Horses,'ou tuilman told usi for1r. I - ... , . . I — , . c I i - � , �'': I
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I 1 1678 L, I veryo,Ae asp dislikes as quickly as. they form at- I I'll " � ,eds �nd -S166, , -0. :t Tbo", , ". "i t4iq ; �'.
. . town calls ,nowadays are as easy'to . � 1. ,��i I . . EaglfsfiVoi,.�i_ tch TZ�64 I
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I achments. Many a stable band ha� I _1�y ,, t',. r;
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make as. local ones and they are V � . " �q ,,11"
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. Thi: Rts are fedi W,p .
V I ., -People of many of the cities of this, cheaper than. ,ever before. Reduced quit becaus6 he fau'Acl himsOlf un- �� . A ,. I really-'�eaUt�f ul. � . � _ ��J � 11 , . " I .
clontinent 'are disturbed about night L.S. begin at 7.00 p.m,—on pol with. a, certain bqrse.i nel . I
evening rat ' � , k -only ,,, , 11 ,:," � -4
. erknew, either, tblat hoi�s�s Ide , suit, and strongly urge you to bakiantago 6f t-1 - S ,
clubs, ,Nsw York seems to have an il,anyanep .calls. . . Ill � . . . . . � , I . .., I � . I' I . 1- ," � . ,11 i.,,,, r ....... .
I I I acute attack of thbin. . Chicago is not ' I .1 � when they think you axe pushing them. - I � , � . I I . I . �' , . . . .1 �.4�1 . `_ ,
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- . . . � I I 'I , I 0 .,.,., - . "... . ,e
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. wholly ignorant of their existel . � - ---a purely defensive measure. whei - . , -IF04 $ ' I ' I'D .. ''. 11 I I J, ;1� %.l
th . . . . ,REGULAR $25 SUIT&
and even Toronto the Good has hear ey , _want t. stirf something, they I � I.. . . .1. - I . . .. . I . I I_, �;.''e�,`
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. 4 " 'THE TOWN' iliol -kick, they �ibite. We always had I . - o .. I . 11 I I I �01 , � �. "'. �',
I - THE TALK OF . -
,of .them. ,Perhapli wA,% thige . I .1 . . . . . .�, ' ,�;
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lof legislation .like ihe Volstead Act i thought thatihoroughbredf; were very I . , '. I . , REG-ULAR130 SUITS FOR $2. jo,-Q - :� . . . . . . 1'.�:,_
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;and the Ontari6,T�ni�erance Act that The Kingsley Club irket one night . � . I . I . � I - ,�
intelligent, bptour friend said, some� . I'� -,.�r
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last week in. a -small room in thel Ro- � I � .. . "I" , REGULAR $35 SUITS F .�
, l ought these in4titulions into notor- - what regretl that they are really . . . OR $28mi ; I
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. . the authorities,. - . � . � '6 , 1.
.�. . :br r, at, least, inti ifisrepute with tel Governor Clbptom. MostlY they' not bright—just erleaturesi of habit. . .- .
. ietly * I ll� � were -men. That is because more men They spend little or no -time think . I � � �. REGULAR- $40. 'SUITS FOR $3 I -0 . `� 1. I
. I ., 14rherl no new,thing undqr the than women stain -Wer. *The Kingsiry ing 'but they remember things. They .1 I ' I � i3 �
wliub is made, up entirely of those who . i . .�
. ;� ". `1,i
;giin'" and the night ,club illustrates are like elephants that way. They nei- . . . I ICITS ' 01k ' ' � . _ - ,
. sitanoner. AET.'J. iStanley 'Smith, - I REGULAR $45 S F $3 11 I�N,
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maxim to the full. f8iget. , . I . 6.00 . . kllql.,��- __.�
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-this . , ; , 1!�',
. lawyer from Philadelphia, made a . . . .. �!�,..
Away -back in i678 and 1680, when long, fluent speech. He is the foundipr lH11. h I / . I .,., . :I.e,. .A "
- g _powered though they be,, the 0. . '. I
Wei York had but just, graduated of the two Kingsley Clubsonle, in big department stareshave no natural I �"_ ______ - ��,Ilt I
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.from Dutch -rule and became Eng., hia and one here. -For thirty . " . ., .i. �1�1 I.. ..
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'Scol ftiend, I do not Philadel� merchandising genius�—gendus, for' - I I I ; .,� -11.. ,,o. I 11
-lish---no, my . j� I -I I.. �11 ....
I years he stammered, and then con- ample, such ,as one finds in the r I'll,
I .1
-me,-itain was ex I .. t I ....
an British, .for Great Bi quered it. He doesn't make any slips I � I 1� r ... I _�
N. � . I mot yet—when IChicago, was: quite un- I bazaars of the East -Side. We are y I 1> . rl:,. ". . r, ,,�., .. �_,
ven . , , " 0
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I I I . *n,o,��; ,and Torontcl it existed, at now, e Ion .such a word as 11staltis- thinking at the moment ,of Samuel 3 Big Dress Bargains, I _: 10� I
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i ties." After he sat down 15 ,other per- Shipman, merch int of ,Orchard St., Women s I ".ii, ';",!.�.."�.�
, . I "'41."i.i,
,All, -was only a place.of fur -trading . . . :, .1.141,
.1.
" ' so dealer in -corsets, -brassieres, and � I 1. IJN f, , 1,
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I I the authorities of Montreal had thelf ris spoke. NeW members of the club . ,, 11 � _ 1�
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-troubles with thespeal See the were permitted, to speak only- a sen- things- like that, Mr. Shipman's push I F ... 115:11;";��;�AN'
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tence or two. Members of three or cart is enlivened by a parrot that A wonder value in all new styl 11" � ,� 11 � �'f - , ,,l �-
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rnodernity of what took place! Silk Hose Specials .. ",.."....""";
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We are told that in May, 1678, the four years, standing talked smoot"' sits there, looking sharp. We paused 4 , " l��L,� .III,
ly f6r five'minuteg or go, boldly tack- -I Dresses. New ideas in cape collars, . . A,` ."4%v,
I. authorities were informed that in a for a few minutes in passing, strange- , I - I'll" : - ". �,
I . ;44 l
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ling such ,words as "sympathetically" k $i.,Jlf*b s, frills, flares, belts. Made of . ,�.��, `.,�,��,�n� �
-certain e -et young people were ac- ly drai the pinkish rumpled bird. Ow 1, ,, �.,
abaT . ,. 1, ��... , .11 1�
� and "portentously" withogt lapsing 39c & 59C . �.I` -Itt,� .
- After we had, hung about, tentatively, . .. fine Batistes, Dimities, Sport Cloths. .,_ , _.�,
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custamed to meet aiid' Play cards— It was all dn the nature of evidence for two -minutes, the parrot cleared .. I - ,_
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-but, worse, they were accustomed to in his conten- his throat and in that withering tone,_ Don't miss this oppor- . Prints, etc. Sizes, 16 to 44. ... ,, . I.
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that 19y. Smith is right .." : ,;;,. .
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cr, .1 ,drink to all hours — the original tion that stammering is the result of that only a tropical bird can co ' �, .., � � � .: .�� i;,,.�', 1 " ,
French reads "jusqul a des heures - tunity—Silk and A ` - . I t�,�,,��
to a mental inhibition, whose chief com- mand, he addressed us is follol A 1. . '.
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I indemses"—and so, they decided rs "You've looked at everything, you've Silk Hose, fashioned, You'will marvel how these dresses I .. I ,,;,
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7nlake a tour of inspection. ' , I ponent is dread of ridicule. Ten yea .. . ,"I ,
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� ago Smith decided that if he could felt everything, :why don't _you buy I c , 0
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�Rememlber there wias in full force full length, spliced % .., %.!�'
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. get a group of stammerers, together Rp can be sold at this price. Dimities, '. .,� I
something? ., ii - .'... �
-the . and .persuade them to make heels and toes. Block I At $2.69 Lawns, Piques and "Batistes of 'finest I . .. -
'Norml tyranny which the Saxon little - There was nothing for it but to lill' - I '.11. "; .
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. complained of -so bitterly, but which talks they would be cured. The plan pick out a good braay�iere and be on c)r French heels. All I quality. Bought at a big reduction I .1 %;,; I ", I I
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4t. I has worked. Starting with five mem- our way. ' I I ... I --"y
11 -the Frenchman adopted a his own bers in 19�21, the Philadelphia !Ungs- . wanted'shades. Sizes and passed on to you. i I,---.
:free will; and that rang at 9 o'clock, ley Club now has- more -than a hun- . Ill , I 9 to 101/.,. Regular � I . . 1. . . li..11
and all cabarets we I - . � ;1 � ,-"
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. . good-bye to their patrons on the sound dried. The process of conquering the ALL WASHED UP 75c to $1.25. I � ses are $6.50 values. Col- i.: . . *...�, ._.....�i I
of the -bell. . defect is slow—sometimes takes years These Dres ' ' ... I :1 I : 1.1, 1, �
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The irre-gulari . ty 'spoken of having —but has been proved successful. in Bathing has. not always been look- ors aranteed;- styles the 1''. . . ��....
scores of cases. The Philadelphia club gu _ . I I . , I
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to be investigated, the authorities ed upon with favor. The early Chris- 39c & 59c I At $339 Beautiful quality. Piques, , . , 1,
rinten- holds a big banquet in a hotel every t;ars, eager to disavow all the cus- .. . est. . . . . .�`,11
charged with the duty of supe air and invites judges, college..presi- , Batistes; delig _. . � .
,dence, then -being the SeigneuTial ye . toms ,of thf-.ir Roman oppressors . htful colorings. - . ...'�,
. jGourt, set out on the tour of inspec- dents, etc.: to attend. The club mem- I . Prints, -_ .. .,�
I frcwned upon, personal ablutions foi, .. � :, , .
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�. -14 bers address these fearsome outsiders I . ,-
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tion. With a -regard for human frail- almost 600 years. And in our ,own tI.,
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ty and procrastination not to be found without flinching, and rarely falter. country there have been. times when __ ___ - - . . :.11,2
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Last year ten members of -the N 11 , �
! 'in all officers of the law, although the ew bathing was regarded as mere. swank, I . "I'll, A�� -
York club, which is seven years old, ;1;
a -bour for closing was 9, -they waited mething worse. Under* Puritan I 1 -�ii
� . attended the. Philadelphia banquet, and c) " so __ _ I �..L 11
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till 9.30, so as to give everybody a spoke. The club here also holds an Tule public bathing, however volumi- I I 11 A:
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. chance to put his house in order, annual -banquet too, but on a smaller nously the, person might be clad, was ' ALL MEN'S .. .. J1,
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,watching, the passage of the time b'f pioscribed as a mamifestation of a ALL WOMEN'S I . ��;., �
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scale. fleshy pride and a temptation to glor- .. :,,
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an hour glass. * � HATS STRAW HATS ',�,
The French author from who I Mr. Smith estimates there, are ,�
in ify the body. Still, there have always l�
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9. , -0 to more than a million stutterters in the been a consideral number 'of people � �,ll :, � I
country. Quite a number are war vet- , STEWART BROS., Seaforth 11
take nry information, seems rather I IL A .! ��
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'be amused by the '. ",
spectacle of these --shock often causes stammer- w1 --o simply would take a bath come HALF PRICE . HALF PRICE . 1"1,10
-Uave officers of jusltice, sitting around erans, what may and say ivbat you might. , I 1. I �.
.. ing That's the main reason more boys I (I
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. an hour glass watching the time go stutter than girls. The excitement and -In the history of bathing, we find I . 1§
-by by the, light of a candle. that there was a tendency either to E___ I
tension of their games is greater. An- . . I ,�;,
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. To me the picture is illuminating, other reason is that girls learn to ignore or to overindulge in the bath. *hr � . � 0 . - I 3
indicating the humanity of those talk at an earlier age, Mr. Smith says We shall specify: I * � 2
seventeenth centuTy Montrealers, a In some of the ancient Oriental . ,
and are gene -rally better and more na- rchies—Persia, the It got so bad that censors were in- special rooms for bathing afid for in- She is taught to sit ,down for curves 1 he told the Landlord that the, lack of . 'I
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'humanity which has been inherited to tural talkers during the formative mona to select 1 �4
the full by their descendants of the brightest example—the bath was a stalled. I stalling tin tubs and stoves for beat- and ste-ps; to stand still for traffic. I clean towels had driven him away. �.
period than, boys. . derable item in the establish- Presently you decided to bathe and ing water. Andrew Jackson huTled For telephone porles or other obstrue- I Chagrined that he had not com-plain- I
-nineteenth and twemitieth centuries. There have been, and are, some consli , . I ed before, the landlord exclaimed,,- '.1
, Well, the half hour elapsed, and ment of the fashionable. It wasn't have done Nvith it, whereat you re- these relies of the lovely Dolly out, tions which hay be gone around, the, ...
0 famous stammerers. The ,club takes . s to the opposite from the I "Well, but you have a tongue in your I
,,I, I , �everybody should have his house in � at all unusual for Darius to take two paired to the tepidarium, where you saying that they were obnoxious to dog lean I . .:
I . ; .,order- the guardians of -public in -orals its name from one, of thern—the late baths during the process of one feast. reclined on a marble couch and per -the common, people. obstruction and pulls her man over. head!" . ,�
mission. AL the Charles Kingsley, who wrote "West- The first was quite likely to occur di- mittled. your temperature to rise under To -day one can Wend upwards of She stops for a curb, and waits until I "Yes," instantly retorted 'Shaw, "but �.:.!l
set olit -on . their ward Ho!" An impassioned s.. I eT, an has h -is foot well placed be- I a . -?I'
Auberge, Bouat, their first place to be rectly after the ragout and consume the influence of a large furnace be- $75,000 on one .bathroom. Such a her in, .4
ed- by iffi- I
I
inspected, all was quiet; but going on ' he was always handicapp two hours of the 16 gi,v,en over to neath the tiled floor. bathroom becomes a small heaith re- fore she goes on. She is taught the I
wo� culty in speech, but went right bare neces- difference between controlled. and un -1 Col, Sam Hughes, Canada's Minis- � I
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they 'heard, all of a sudden, two �ach making ipeeches anyway, thus serv- feasting. TrumDets would blari the If you were a normal person you sort. In -addition to such assing con -trolled traffic. 'She is taught to I ter of Mi . litia during the war, was w- 12
inen crying that they were killing le ing as a fine example to fellow-stam- guests a -rise (if they could). Slaves were by this time ready for the stri- sities as lavatories, tubs, dr, q I
-lother in. the place of Martinet de Yon- would appear and gentl� lift the great gillus. This was a curved instrument tables, showers, sitz -baths, foot baths, look out f or awnings and scaffoldings I terrupted' in a political meeting by ..",
meTers. d something and what not, we may haive pretty which she goes under easily but which an insistent and prolonged hissing. ,,��,
Iblanche, -a surgeon. monarch, golden chair and all, and something like a spoon, an �'. ",
,W -W There are all'kinds of stammerel - ch while might strike the man on the head. He stopped, looked in the direction of If
To that place they went, separated carry him to a large hall where he like a small hoe.. With it the -body was book ' .1 ii
I
combatants and calmed theiii of course.' You can bear the marvel- would be deposited on, a black marble- scraped. The Romans had not yet lolling in our tub, a radio, a violet ray When ,the dog understands all W t1is the hisser, and said, "There are three � I
i
the - ung a,pparatus, a weighing and measur- perfectly she is introduced - 1 Jaer things thi hiss, a snake, a goose and I
ildown. Then they went to the house pus progress they make at the meet slab and disrobed. Applause, to reached the soap stage. The batl , to -you come forward l.'�,
,
of Charles Tes-tard de Folleville ings of the Kingsley Club, which are which Darias was partial, was always was most vaciferous—it was not the ing machine, cbezt� weights, a rowing blind man.' . . a fbol. ,iWill that :,�.�
held three times a week, in, the- Christ The second stage of the work bil we may identify you?" ."
. renchman may lack, -d by crescendo music, merry singing we moderns indulge machine, and even a typewriter. , ,�ij
-whatever else a F Church building. One of the most being stimulate . i
be generally has a fine name. Well, stubborn forms is inability to say and presentl� the king was borne in in our morning shower. Through Yes, bathing has become respi gins when the blind man is provided '�,�
a "good. name is better than great forth, high above the beads ofthe ad- those Roman arches; rolled- the hyster- able, and a lot easier. with his particular dog. His fir,%t task A book agent once called on Presi- -1,
. at qll. You ably have is to put the harness on big dog. who dent Lincoln. and sought to sell him .,�
. xiches." It was his wife who manag- anything prob miring guests, and lowered gently in- ical protest from the ticklish and the do I t
friends who are that way,4,,but you is trained to come and -put her head a bool, for which he bad no use. Fail- �
,ed the cabaret anit it was of her pi to the 'perfumed waters. Several hoarse -pleas from the hirsute. The �
. . that the complaint had been made, don't know it. Such people, silent and . times the king would be slashed gent strigillus was no bath sponge. DOGS THAT LEAD THE 13LIND in his hand when he speaks her -name. ing, he asked Lincoln if he would A
twhich occasioned the visit. embarrassed at a gathering, are put ly to and fro before being released to The last of 'Rome's emperors was Then the dog takes the man out in not write an endorsement of the work il.
,
I At her cabareto they found in the down as tongue-tiedor dull. Mr. Smith demonstrate that he could swim if be that feeble youth Romulus Augustu- The work of IMArs. Dorothy Harri- the town. Over the game- route which which would enable him to sell it to i 111I
-sel roorr4 seated at the table and believes that any case will yield to had to. lus, who was weakly sloshing about son Eustis, an American woman liv- has become so familiar to her she others. Whereupon the President, al- I
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playing cards, a group of gentlemen the "Smith Pitlking to a gath- Under Lycurgus, in Sparta, we be- in a hat tub when Attila's Vandals ing in Switzerland, is known and val- goes, always remembering the halting ways anxious to oblige, with a hum- A
.-of high degree, ,among them 'Sieur eying of stammererg. He doesn't be- held the first recorded regime of or- and Hung entered Rome bent on pil- ued in at least four Europe -an couri- helplessness of the feet which come so or entirely his own wrote: "Anyone 1,
I lieve certain psychoanalysts who say of tries, and is just ,becoming establish- uncertainly at first ,behind her ,Own; I Who likes this kind of book will find �
Dtilhut whose, name has, been tortur- ganized physical culture, which pro- lagd�, All the fight -washed out �
, � , analysis is sometimes the only cure. ed in her own. This work, which be- waiting patiently for Ar charge to it just the kind of book he likes." .I
-uth. - him, as it were. 111
, nd, his And thus -we pass into the Middle -mprehend signals. %
'ed into Dul This group showed ur of bathing ev
I Smith says he has never met a casel ery seven, clays. Ijyeurgus a' gan with the training of German,'con
-no disposition, to 'break up. On the dut%r, and "The day comes when the man re- The, late William R. Travers amd _ '1�
. he couldn't improve and eventually 9000 captains, holding in subjugation Ages, which, for the most (part, forpi- Shepherd dogs for police .1 'ii I
I
1. ,-eantrarY, there were. manifestations cure, if the person didn't give up. - has developed into a school for edu- spon4s smoothly to the, dog's signals," thli�� late William H. Vanderbilt were .
the visitors -to withdraw an army of 90,000 athletes, were so ed the most unsanitary years of hu .
I --which induced ` The dial -ph-one is a great bGOn to said Mrs. Eustis.. "Then they mi�y be- very irltimate friends. When Mr. Van- .f
� "'So as jaot to expose, Justice to the in- stammerers, because talkini to an democratic in the body-building nianity's journey up. In, the Middle eating them as, guides for peo ' ple who I
sults which were ,plainly about to be scheme that they scorned the warm Ages a man bathed only when sick have lost their eyesight. is perhaps gin to negotiate new routes. He starts (lei -hilt died, some vulgar man without I
.,offered. . operator is the -worst ordeal a person baths of other nobles and took them and not, even then, with a view to the most outstanding service to the out alone,with 'big clog, gives 'her the ft,eling, asked Mr. Travers how Much A
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. I who stutters has to go through. Such cold in the i along with tb,3 com- recovery. Being ill it was expected blind since the invention of the Brail- command, 'Ll or 'Right,' counts; mon-ey Mr. Vanderbilt had left. Mr. . !1
I They could not depart, however, the . I
a Person almost always gives In the absence of soap of him that be should die, ia�d the le system of letters. the curbs as his; dog pi for them, Travers, in disgust at the question, I
.-without inaking the signifienitt remark man berd. PI I 0 1 "
`
to Mhdame de Folleville- ithat .t was number ftrst, and then the e,,hange" handfuls of %and were used, and one bathing was merely by -way of at- ,Mrs. Eustis's school is on the out- and continiiing thus, gets to the block, repli .( : "I e I ft it a 1. 'i.
peri Numbers -are comparatively easy, -but details. Isabella of skirts of the quaint university town where he 'Arishes to go, counts t he
that most Now York exchange names are jet ahead when one reads, that 99,000 Spain was rather '!
, To this she im regrets that news -reels wlere centur- tending to burial I
'past 9 o'clock. proud of the fact of Lausanne. It is called Fretich, steps, from the corner if the h -)use is Charles Lamb, than whom no gelint- ��;,
niently -and superciliously replied hing sturabling blae1s. Obickering" is the giants 1�p familiar to him, or in case it -s -not, ler or kinder -hearted wit ever brelath- �
she had not heard the bell. Not -gathered at the river and, mas- that she bid, had but two baths in her "I'Oeil qui Voit." " , .11
. ept worst. saged each other's b�cks -with wet life: one when she was'barn, and the In 1923 her interest in the'Gerni inquires the number from a Tlasiser- vd, at times found it impossible to re- 11�
. . el of that domiciliary visit exe sand. second when she married Ferdinand. Shepherd dog took her ab�oad. She bv. strain himself from the Personal; as, �,
-an official report from -Which ,, the All r "In Grermany these dog guides are fol- instance, when he cov�ered a friend � .�
t . author has taken his facts. acing stables have ,watchdogs - The Greeks were the first to soften They gave her a third when she. died. soon became int,ensely absorbed in the .1 1
�, , . One of that group of insouciant on the premises, and most stables al- themselves with too much hot water. It was in the 18th century that the work the German Government was do- accepted as a matter of course. They with shame at a wbist party bV 'blurt- .11,
. -players was the famous Duluth, who, so have other arimals—a -goat, a Tab- They ,perverted the bath, making it a forerunner of our moderii batnroom ing, supplying these dogs to the sill are taken free on traim or other pub- ing out: "Gad, James, if—if dirt wete . I I
I . ran-ce. ill,lic is edu- t -t -trumps, what a hand you would .
. .. on the following ,first of September bit, or something—because it soothes depot of sensuality. They soft-boiled came into our lives. I find nothing to diers who had been blinded in the war. lie conve,,, % and the pu v way the � - !" .,�
I the fioyseo to have playinates. We themselves. It wary nothing for a prove who it was who crel the Each disabled soldier who was cap- cated not to disitract in an. haxe , ;�'
.. . left for the west -and -became the learned this from a turf gentleman, gentleman of the upper classes to first true bathroom, but Madame eble of handling a dog was given one attention of the (log on duty." 4,�
..'A
I prototype of the "Coureurs, de bois?'; I e. it is most difficult to get the men Talleyran<1 was riding one afternoon. . 1�'
. big discoveries in the weitern—now who told us some amusing eager,. If spel eight hours u day dawdling a- Maris�' Kuertko had four nice bath- and an allowance for its maintenanc The man, will al- in an open carriage with a garrulous, .,. ;.
q , —part of. a horse strikes up a friendship with bo t the baths, -going stale. for the rooms—probably half the bathrooms Th6 German Shepherd dog has ,been to correct the dogs.- 1.1 I o
-become -almost the eastern a rabbit and the rabbit waiiders 'a- u 3 my nominee. La found to be the best dog for the work. :way, insist that the fault is his, that and borei diplomat, wben he saw
',
.,North America, are well known. way, it can spoil the -horse's career. 'Want of vitalized air and fresh ideas. in Rusgia�and i� in high degree. He has been bre& for centuries to herd he distracted the clog in some way or another carriage coming toward them .1. �
- Kuertko had courage ��
11 Another domiciliary visit, about two Almost every Tace-horse hag a dear However, it remained for the Ro shment sbeep, and has the instiivicts of Pri failed -to respond to her gignal. Such whose occupant was indulging in a �. M
. I . . rs. afterwards, did not, pass off go mans to make something important She set up a charmifLk ell has is their affection for the creatures mighty yawn. Instantly Talleyrand '� �
I .Yea friend somewhere in the stable (a dog, out of baths. The baths of Caracalla of 14 roorns. in St. Petersburg, four of tection and responsibility. He .
�
� , - t�.
efully. July 27th, 1,6810i, two Po his who have o-penci a world of indepiend- grasped his companion's arm and hiss- 41. �
�, e another horse, a man), and trainera � re enclosed in a walled square a which she converted into baths. There the proper weight to pull back in .
� fie�al� OffiCeTS, charged with the dirty I.uitk to recognize the iMPOTti we about them. Even harness -and have his master sense the enct- to them. ed in his ear: "Hush! You are, over- I
4 . . : �
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� ' rder- are i ,y .know, that qugrteT of a mile on each, side. With- war. no end of talk - Frank has charge of The heard.', . . . . . . I -
., .....
I- ,,, of geeing that everything was a Mr, Morri , 11
1. ly, heard a.'r6clott. .going -ah, in the of stieb. friendships. The iTr were 1600' seats for 'bather,, and the great Catherine in, her acres of immediate reaction. ing Eye, the sister school to l'Oeil — . �, I
, Fol- horses won,'t perform well an the their guests and at the base of the palace had but one 'bathroom. "The three months' preliminary ed- See .
I cabaret of the same'Nadame de ii Voit, at Nashville, Tennessee. Mr. Calvin Coolidge was at the time a, ��I', ..
, I
1, -leville, and detern-Aned to enter to ill- track unless things are running vall$ were shops --- elfthing, jewelry, The bathtub, generally considered, ucation with a geeing teacher is most (11 . bee-il blind for some time new rnember of the Massachusetts 4`�,,�,i I
.
smo.c 11 d. The lothing shops did, a large was 9. rough affair alid- usually port- in - Mrs. Eustis, "be -cause Frank had . ..� � , . I
vestigat&. . I . �thly at home. foo c ,hportant," said ben he inet Mrs. Eustis, and was Legislature. In an attempt to beekle . .
. -e bel two- Ty. we, are not 'training' the dog as you w ; I
They found people sitting round the Vander ,Pool, one of th business because curiously enough a able until well into the 19th centu rnembe,� asked, "Slay, I , I
. � y ar-olds this -season, is crazy about eat k various shapes� A favorite in would train an ani'mal to go through persuaded by her to come to Lausan- him, another ,., I
I , .---n rael scribed tricks, We are ed- ne. .� 1.1:
. table, ,drinking and- quarrei -was � 'groom. He has won sev, g,r deal of thievery went on and It too Cal, is it grammatical to say -a hen ..
� h it was indulged in principally by tho France in the 1700's was the, slipper certain pye . .
I :after Ill oliefo-ek-4,6 apile, of is in this sits' or ,a hen, setsol?" . ...
I . i ,�
and after each race the groom has 'bath ,attendants who, being slaves, re- bath, made of iron or copper. The urating hin-t in the fullest se.nse of There are many ,persons �'f.�
") , the officers Of the law did not pat on, made a bed for himself in the stall - no wagids, but were, ex�eeted to occupant sat on a narrow shelf with the word. It is most interesting to country who are desirious, of having "Weell," drawled Goolidg% "Itts, a 1 1 1 t:p,l
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I
11/1 end to the digtui,bati:66, but, dn ibe and slept there all night. Vander Pool ceived 0 , graduates of the school to good deal more impottant (#iii�tion � �`�,,,,
col it excited the ire of the dis. Steal what they could. his feet forward ift the toe. The wgter see how much more. careful the dog ne ,of the independent of human back in the country Where I eamq� from �.J'I.Z
, 3
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11 all,ows- no, -one to enter the stall while You entered, the spoliati where had ;to be poured in. and. dipped out. is of the. blind man. from the, moment make them I � ��'g
) . they drew ffil ' ideb. It is too clostI7 and, hazardous to, know when a bitA eackleg, whethet : �-�i',��',,'
orderly lot, and the groom is aideep—doesn't like to 'your cloth- Occasionally it was. equipped with tol- she—vv,e find the fehiales mote re- gu ,,, 1! ,
el at th�i ofliel - you mdressed, entrusting ;he long distance from she's laid or. lied." 1, I I ,I,�
. swo,rds, made a br det, hwm him disturbed. I I . ing to i person pretty Sure to be un- lers and a chain. Bel Franklin sponsive to this particular kind of to %hip, them t . � I �!;l
. ll�'
. � and chased. them out, into, the'str in. you proc egin wo, n Switzerland to the United Sl so "�. ",
e; eeded 'to the fetched one, from France lv�ith him and work --- 4b , a to rk with him tba ' � ;,
I 1� I
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wargaut, :4 .1 Mau ol War wi devoted to --a big ,reliable. Th ,Mrs. Eustis has made arrangi � . ",
I � one of the officers, 4)el . -6 fou would be rub- was the talk of America for it. she has been witb the instructor. This stor7 is told Of i16 Auti I ,� , 1.,
; � - in, the hand's and Iiiiiiier -nai General Trot, and- when unctuatium, *her :., �.',.
, -- ,
I ' "The groundwork consists of t9 q vi h* h � ; ,,�, ,,� :- :1,
.glaoler was woutdied a. Thus ve'neered ,Napoleon, was one of our outgtal uking for the breeding and .training of the When her, lioli wa, lea; lnt, t I, -1*6,
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ttims, but suecel -with hisf *late, thib gmat racer was retired to the bied down with oit I - . dogs at the Ebarling Kennels at Mor- teas, who W, put the o' ' , 1_ t� , - , �
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.1 , - into the frilgidariuitmn i ' I thtakers. ThAte on big way to the dog over the samercMte each day red& 149, . ,&.: �,
h ill .0. ..,� � �4,i
... , Aud, ��General ristown, New Jersdy�. aintances ,6u , 6,�"a—wdlil,` ,
I I ,,one Alftdpe. OadMin, iA9 . .6 :1 I Trot was allbiwed fia go you si'hu tered 66 from pa,t1g.be halted to until the dog knows it by ,heart and , . acqu PAVA I., :# *, .�A.,� V,
-4 roam� *here. loiled 9 Z I !,
J.'r # sud - finding rduge in 6 esta A ''.him as a, .�Vweclal dispensavion. or &01 again ;78i, I I I .2 -,,.I
4 ment .of M. Bloul-at, whi sil .. , 1%7; are htill ihii a'rid �very. taking,, cold, io-4 disliotitsed on the paiiihoil,hinisplf fti. -kot baths which can take care of any situation which __ ,A expected erusive, adynitti P'l% I . Apill- "51.4 'I
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� and had ;;; " ' the, dak. He'r,sin, the neWt would h4vilb ,cookle'd, stry ordinary h -u- may arise. - I ,great man said wi �,
,
. . lix 11, ., Then there was Mrs. Virginia topil of . q 1?p,ovided with a har� i arF9 9gol�%Qeorg&e Bernard Doctor Ri vw�bhht, ,ct-w� ..." ,
ve been 0. pri hotel, _ wor.'�'��V*.�'f
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� d.w. 4L_ lrr,6j, A, fitd, lok Rome, pill � social., 1111[naiiielial, ma . nhik-sea',he said he "The dog i. Saint ye .� I pl,", ,
. IdIA9 tvVo yelai be- i ?, V410, Ivs. gray hdrge nai '�&tl��'��,`,�,,� -
) 4 --I.
. I tocosMaj, Mebol.a4, 'Altli payin,g $180,000 J�ft Wd% e:&11 I I , ily . - ft Ags, af torh").1 . '1#011 ,�
I ,,:. , Ibbil found 16W, t1i ff U-sh"ed han- -9bW, idlasi ` Vd, h big lodgi - tea 9 qy� im a, �j .�
I ' ` , , 'ch 'fift ovel,Y %oft '"Wid , '', , I ��.X , "t,
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it'hied an$. efflArged. Rp,potaiir U .01 %eepo'� ijyj& further. new with 8, setffi4ti &;::�' pli
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