Halton Hills Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 20 Sep 1894, p. 7

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SOME FAMOUS EXILES. iBteresllac ETCBM la l.i-rv WMck I Mar " rerceltsB. Grotin* wrote many of bit best work* in exile. Voltaire rmii/H a great part of hi* Ufa in what wai practically an exile. The Karl of Clarendon wrote hit famous historical work* while in exile. AU the Prince* of the Bourbon family have for a long time lived in exile from v rano*. Buchanan, the Seoituh poet, while in ex- ile and prison wrote the famotu "Paraphras- e* of tbe 1'talms." The exiled Maritu, aitting among the rain* of Carthage, i a epectacle ihat hat moved many a school boy to oratory. Magi<i, the great Italian tcholar, wrote several of his best treatiae* whil* in exile and captivity among the Turk*. It i* taid that at thil time there are twenty-two ex-sovereign* raiding in diff- erent pan of Korope, none of them in the countriet they once ruled. Pin* IX., the late pontiff, wai driven from Rome during the stormy dayt of 1848. lie fled in diaguiw to Gaeta, and remaini d there until restored by foreign M The Kmperor Charlee \". lived in volun- tary exile during the last yean of hit lite- Hi* chief occupation in hi* retirement wai deviling new viand* te tempi hi* glutton- OUB appetite. On* would think that if anjr claa* of men had th*ir mental powert to folly occupied by their oeceaaary affairt a* to be preclud- ed from other .nUllectual effort it wai the taUemen who hare not only to fulfil the old dntiet of monarch, and that ovtr by far the greatest and now complicated em- pire the world ever taw, bat who hart al*o to manage poli'.ica I partiet and carry tb* ma- jority of the nation with them in all they do. Vet the premier* of the Britnh empire have i done mor*gre*>t braia work for amuttment A great many of the Pope* hare been > foroeJinto exile, generally t>7 emeute.*-! *> ' greet .choUn do of the ttapie mong the tarbolent Roman populace, A | work of their live*. Locd Derby traatlated few were reatored, bat moet of them died of 1*48. He fled from Pant to Havre in duguias, under the name of Smith, and wa* taken from Havre by reanl aent by the Britiih Government to hit aid. He went immediately to London, where the Gov- ernment assigned him t'lairemont palace a* a residence, and he lived taere until hi* death, in KV>. Cornelia* Agrippa, th* famou* classicist and general scholar, wai forced to fUe from bit native land becaoet of having per- formed in public torn* umple philosophical experiment* now familiar in every tohool room. He wa* not entirely orthodox, and ventured to deny tb* common belief that Sc. Anne had three hatband*, upon which be found himvslf ao object of horror wherever he went. FAMOUS BRITISH PREMIERS. Werk for Amase- al Taast *>a*Ur* It* in exile. Jerome Bonaparte remained in exile from IS!,', to th* revolution of 1848 when h* wa* rentored to h:s military rank aad mad* Oovernot of the Invalids*. H* died ia Pan* | n 186a Marie de Medici, the mother of three ! Queens, wa* driven in to exile by th* influ- ence and addr*** of Cardinal Richelieu. Sho lived in great poverty, often wanting the neoasaariee of life. Whole familial have sometimes Men ex- ited at on* time. The Stuart family we* twice driven from England.and at different time* th* Bourbon* and tbe Bonaparte* have been expelled from France. Ex K.mpre** Eugenie lives in England as the gueit of Qu**n Victoria, who U her warm penonai friend. She often goe* to the Continent, and i* said on on* or two ocoa- ions to have viaiud Pari* incognito. After th* downfall of Napoleon, hi* mother, Mme. boo apart*, went to Bloia and thence to Rome. Sb* returned to K ranee during the Hundred Day*, and, at t*r Waterloo, went back to Rome, where ah* died ia 1836. D*Boart*s wa* obliged ti flee from France work of their lives. Homer while premier, Mr Gladstone did that and a hundred other thing*. Lord Beaconifield wa* a novel lit of high grade. Lord Salisbury, th* leader of the Coaserva- tive party, and England* aitomativs pre- mier, is a great scientist. He i* a worker n the fold of chemistry, hi* laboratory, one of th* beat private o*** ia th* world, being tb* scene of the recreation IB which h* take* moat delight. H* i* this year th* president of the British Soeao* Association, and delivered hi* inaugural addreet at the last meeting. It it said to be on* of th* moat interesting sad by far th* wittieit ever delivered before th*> aasoeiation. Lord Salubury wit en* of th* foremost writeri for the 'Saturday Review' when that paper was noted for th* kaen- neo* of its satire aad it* literary brilliance. H* was them a poor man, who gained hit living by hi* pin. Hi* wit hat sever grown mutt) aad hi* satire ia at biting as ever. Then ia ao mistaking hi* meaning, and therefore hi* address. though it deals with scientific ubiecti, i* easily comprehended by ordinary readers. It* purpose ie to now how th* greatest enigma* in nature are still unsolved by science and how little promiao there i* that science ever will solve them. It ***mt that most of these *aigsus,liks that of th* great CAM A MAN PLY ? A 4'eounlMee a*T Biiman sTzBeru srlilv- ely aer Taal II *s iBspasslalr. Can a man fly? Learned professors of tb* *cie*3* of aeronautic* agree that he can- ot, aad a formidable nommi**iun of expert* appointed by the German govern- ment to investigate into th* possibilities of aerial navigation have finally aad decisively aad officially aaid that it i* impossible. > 1 1 11 an ingenious and observant German of the name of Otto Lilienthal. after a long aeries of experiment* and in th* face of the decision! of the eminent scientists, ha* succeeded in proving that a clever man can fly, and fly for considerable distance*, too. Prof. Lilienthal, like moat men who have aolved difficult problems, ha* goo* clear away from the principle* to which other men hive found limitation*. When he decided to fly, in other words, he left the poeaibilitiet afforded by the balloon entirely out of his calculations. Balloons, (aid he, are end* affairs, daagorou*, not to b* dep*nd*d upon, aondirigible, and eln msy There u nothing ia nature built upon trie principle of the belloon,yet then are things in nature which can fly, and fly much better than th* bent balloons. Those thing* an bird*. To the bird*, then, I will go for th* model of my flying machine. And to the bird* h* went. from the**) same bird* it wai that Prof. Lilientbal .earned th* true principle* of aaral navigation, which principles he ha* aucceeded to a degree in adapting to the uses of man. H* first learned that it i* th* concave shape of a bird'* wing that enables it to soar, rising or falling at will without rr.uscultr exertion in th* teeth of a high wind. Then he learned that a bird'* wing bones are constructed similarly to Ihoae in a maa't arm. Knowing the** thing* h* bulk hi* flying machine, or, to be more correct, hi* soenng machine. H* mad* for himeelf that i* a pan of the ethic* of bu*inee*. a a proof of th* fundamental virtue it the tyttem to which they ar* related. The manufacturer who reduced the wag** of nit employece luring a panic, and then vol- untarily paid them the full amount when hi* trad* turned out to be better than he had expected, wa* under no legal obligation to do tuch a thieg, but it teemed to him right and fair, and he did it ia * tpirit ef regard for th* obviou* equities of th* ca*e. There i* no laek of bonne** men who are capable of that manifesting the right tort of feeling. It it not true, at i* frequently averted, that bn*inee* hat it* own cod* ol moral*, by which everything it permissible that can be done in avoidance of the law Our bu*ineat man are nonet: men. a* a rule, and would not succeed if they were other- wit e, tine* there u nothing more certain than that a court* of crookedne** defeat* itaeif *ooner or later. TKe law* of com- merce are entirely con*i*tent with justice and integrity, aad toaay of a thing that it it limply a matter of buiine** doc* not tignify that it may be dealt witr. in a -it houe"t or questionable manner. Y EH A t ELLOW TERROR. e li t Una's -i r I i eral aVti, Like itaaetrra la* *o* IB-SB*! .f i, em and !! Tletery ABea*X IB (ieneral Teh the Imperial rbioeee Army new operating in Corea eaem* to have a treature. Every one who know* any thing aaeat Ohio*** (oldien know* that all they require i* good offioer* to lead them. In that caee they will right to the death, for they don't mind dying, a* to die (imply te be removed from thi* world ol t oil and hardihip to a ha-en ol reel and pleasure that it i* well worth dying to reach- When you read about running away from th* battle-field it it, without doubt, th* fault of th* officer*, not th* soldiers. A* long a* their officer* *tay to Holland, aad then from Holland, where central myetery of life, the action of lit* he tint published hi* opinion*. He wa* ac cnaad of atheism, and would have been burned at the ttake had he not neaped from the country. Isabella II. of Spain wan exiled by her loog-anffering people in 1870. She hat tince upon ordinary matter, it, alter all, ooUid* of the inhere ef scienc*. Per hap* th* most interesting conclusion reach eni by the Mar quit of Salisbury in hi* addrew u that science ittelf i* almost convinced that natural selection u aa explanation of the of light bat impervious cotton cloth aad | , t h* field tbe troop* will remain. Some- rplit willow wand* two immensj wings twenty-three feet from tip to tip, aad a practicable if not highly ornamental rudder or tail He preserve.! in tneir construct IUQ a* nearly a* possible the form of a bird'* wing* aad tail, increasing the para bolic curve of th* bird'* wings to the exact proportionate degree for hi* larger one*. The** wing* aad th* tail, weighing ia all only twenty -fiv* pound*, are to constructed a* to fold up, lik* th* wingi of a bat. Having completed them, the profe*so ad justed then* to his arm*, took a ran alodg a hilltop, and calmly tad coofidently jumped over the side, spreading hi* wing* a* he did so. H* soared some distance and atignted in *af*ty aad comfort. H* reptatad hi* ex- periment many, many time*, learning how to control his apparatus, how to change direction, bow to n** or dsscsnd at will. H* improved hi* wing* and tail and kept on practicing until now he can soar for urn**, however, when a soldier i* promote*! aad ha* become rich by robbing th* men 01 th* morey lent him to pay them off, h< want* to enjoy himeelf her* before testinf th* pleasures in store for him in another world, so h* leave* his men ia the liae o battle wail* be take* a bird'a-eye view o the field from hilltop ia the rear. N< soldier will b* iteady under such circum lived in Pari*," and while in by no mean* j origin ol specie* hat broken down.aod that good repute with reepectable people before, th* only satisfactory, the _o>ly P * 11 ^*. he ha* been much lets careful of her con- duct since her enforced retirement from the throne. The Count d* Mirabean.the father of the famou* revolutionist, had to pleasant a time with hi* family that in tbe course of hi* married life he took out no leas than fifty-two leitre* d* cachet against hii wife aad her people, and bad most of them exiled or imprisoned. Louis Napoleon wa* taken prisoner by ' r 2, 1370. and inn- explanation i* dwigi, th* influence of will upon nature, the dependence of all living things upon an everlasting creator and rul- er." ^^^ IN DEATH VALLEY. A Valle4 Mates Ceverament taaVlal Tell* r n B*mr. Special Agent H. B. Martin, of the I'nited State*, land offic*. Washington, has tbe PTU-ian.Sept.mbar 2, ls.0. and im- [ ntnntAinm T)Mk Valley after four aad prisoned in a German castle until th* close ' ot the war. He wa* then allowed to depart. several hundred yards, rite to a much ! greater height than he itarted from, and fulfil most of the function* ef a big bird. *av* only that of propellinc himself in ttiil air and tiarting hi* flight from hvel ground Thete two t h ings a man is not strong enough to do, the bird pns**ing much greater strength for it* six* and weight than th* n.ott muacular man. Bat what Prof. Lil- lenthal lack* in itrength he ha* mad* up in ingenuity, for he ha* now oonitmoted a little motor, operated by carbonic aeid gai, which, while it add* scarcely anything to th* weight of hi* flying apparata*, is capa- of developing continuously two-borte Low Wing r'ook, th* famous commander of th* "Black Flag" army in Tonkin, al ways rwmtintd in the front liae with hi* troop*, and hi* officers aUo **t a becoming e i ample to th* men under them; the con sequence wa* that th* large French Army sent into Anam in 1383-4 wa* unable to conquer thi* little band of warrior?, aai th* command i* now in tb* service of the Governor of th* Two (juang*. gensrall; known a* th* Viceroy of Canton. I 'eneral Y*h *mi to b* mad* of nd ttai wart Huff a* th* veteran leader of tbe "Black Flag*'' aad naturally hi* little command of 4,000 give* goad count of it*elf wherever engaged. Yeh Ant attracted th* attention of th* outside world by th* wonderful celerity with which he crushed th* rebellion in Mongolia about a year or so ago, but b* TO UTILIZE THE FALJ. adresl Ttiesuaaal *rte Fewer M> ae *>*T*|*IM> d *l %tacara. Th* Niagara Fall* Power Company i* hree or four year* eld, but by many it h%* i regarded very largely a* aa eiperi- t. Now, hovever, the dream* of th* capitalists seem to be nsai ing reali/.ation. he member* of th* company say that soon he alectric power developed by them at Niagara Fall* will supenrd* *team power In th* cities round about, lighting '.hem and running th*ir street can, aad will prob- ably be ut*i t > a large extent in the manufactories ot New York city. The com- laay ha* transformed the appearance of the la th* latter part of 1990, Niagara fall* w** a quiet little village. Now it i* incorporated a* a city, having a population of 17,000, a mayor aad counciL Tb* oom y aiso bought up I ,'HlOacre*of land round about in anticipation ol th* raise in the price of real eatata. The working premiae* of the company axtenU for two aad a half mile* along th* river front and than rua eastward for a mil*. One of the moat e building* i* the great hmeeteae power hone*, whioh it over the waeelpit* containing the turbmee aad shafting for the electrical dynamo*. An inlet canal da* been dug from the Niagara river, about twomilea above the rail*, 1.500 feet leaf, 1) feat id* and 12 feet deep. After paam ing through th* turbtn** aad driving th* ims*B** machinery th* water will re- turn to the river below tbe Kail* by a tunnel 7, .100 feet long and twenty-one fee', high. One of the largwt paper mill* la the United State* h** been erected on the apot and i* already in operation, deriving it* power from the Power Company'* oaaaL aad, going to England, took up hi* residence in Chiselhurtt, whero be lived quietly until fun death, January 9. 1373. Louit XVIII, *p*nt meet of th* yean of hia exile u Kngland. He took a houat in Loadoa, where he lived quietly, and. it i* aaid. wa* much more concerned with the quality of hia dinner than th* nature of the new* from the war which wa* waged for hit reinstatement on th* throut cf Franc*. Caroline Boaaparte hated Maria Louisa. anil, being ordered to appear nu more at Napoleon'* court, ahe joined her husband, Marat, in intrigue* againtt th* Kmptror. half months' absence. He wsnt to do com* tarveyiag and for information regard- ing claim* of private citi/en* of a portion ef th* country. Mr. Martin aad hi* party ex - amined th* country for sixty .or seventy mile* to the south of Tale Canon. The sandstorms prevailed almost daily and the heat wa* intense. Part of the Urn.- they could net get water sad the> had to bring it a distance on pack horse* . "Oar main stock of meat wa* bacon," aaid Agent Mar tin . "\\ e could aot get s particle that waa freih, to we ate ths big liurda of th. desert. whioh th* Difjg* r ladiaas eat and ar* known Af Mr th* empire had fallen the waa cxptlled | M ohawaUaha, aad they tatusd a good deal from Naplee, but wat permitted by t he , | iK( | r0 g, ^11 our potato** rolt*d u soon ".. n-.r Vi.nn. ' al w* got in the ilsssrt aad w* had BO vegetable* of any kind. The only thing 1 ' Th* loet Kmperor of Austria to live near Vienna. When Voltaire wrote his "Candid*." in which occurs th* bit of satire abou; the eight tramp* meeting at an mi, most of them without money enough to pay for their dinner, there were at that time, no la>* than eight dethroned monarch* waB- <lering about Europe, tome of them in great poverty. Pauline Bonaparte wa* *xil*d by Napo- leon himself because of her rudeness to Marie Loniaa. Her baonhment wa* only from th* court, but ih went to Nice, where ah* established what wai practically a salon of th* iierm-moo.de. After Napoleon'* the wings. Indeed, in the tint trial the r'iceroy Li Hung Chang for a long little moter d.v.lop*i too much .trength I ."" H. h*. **ain earned dietinction by 1 hi* brilliant achievement! in Corea. th* 23th and broke the wing*, patting a ttop to further siperimenlt for the time. If Prof. Lihenthai incceed* in perfecting the great invention, the practicability of which h. ha* already demonstrated, and in ,n.s,n| aerial navLafon on th. .imple L A Jetpatch from Tun Tun on of Augutt to the London Time* says '(ieneral Yen'* fore* of four thousand men joinedth* main body of Chinees troop* Sever the wonderful forces of nature, i (ha world'* greatest scientists. f principle* favored by the bird* safe for mankind, he will have achieved a notable triumph e' aa will a* And he s**m* very likely to succeed unless h* should grow carelea* in handling hi* experimental wings, and, perchance, fall victim to the awlul fa>te wnich overtook th* laaMBtod aad legendary Icarus, th* rirtt maa who attempted to rty. NO SENTIMENT IN BUSINESS. that helped u* oat was canned trait, ordeal wa* so **vtc that Bach man some fifteen or twenty pounds of weight and all grew weak. Befora I would go into it again I think I would resign. It wai a trip V> try the nerve*. I will never forget it and I never want to travel** that tract again." tall, the t to him at Elba and made Smoking- Theatres. There are two "imoking theatre* England, aad all efforts to reform in them many effort* to obtain permission to join him in St. Helena. Ex-King Milan of Servia, who wa* chased out of hi* kingdom a few yean ago by hi* indignant subjects, spent mo*t of hi* exile in Paris, where be rarely lacked for com- panion*. Th* Servian Government in some way became responsible for ki* debt*. and after paying them iever*l time* found the burden too heavy, so recalled Milan and gavs him a job in th* army. Th* wtHowed Queen of Chart** I. of Eng- land, when aa exile in France, had a pension allowed her, but it wa* ao (mall and her credit became ao poor that *h* wat often reduced to th* greatest strait*. t% oa* occaasion, whan the Cardinal d* Ret/ waited on her, ih* told him that hcrdaugh t*r, the Princes* Henrietta, wai obliged to remain ia bad for want at a tire Diocletian lived in retirement rather than xiU after hi* abdication. H* wt* bora at Salons, ia Dalmatia. and after laving down th* rein* of empire h* removed to | fc ^ , ne that place, where he had a palace whoa* magnificence still astonishe* the antiquar tan. H* lived for eight year* aft*r hi* abdication, and waa highly esteeme.! by th* people of hi* native province. and banish th* cigar* aadcigjareUw of too people who patroaiz* them have b**a in vain. On* of them i* in Loadon aad tb* other is in Brighton, tad they have both been enormously successful from a fin- ancial standpoint linos their owners derided to permit tmoking during the performance. Smoking in mueic hall* i common enough m England, a* it i* b*re, but smoking in theatre* is new. It i* now claimed with insiiteaoo thatatmok- ing theatre i*) a certainty of the future. aad that men will insiit upon having a cigar or cigarette daring th* performance ot play* in the future. Then ar* two parti*! to th* discussion in Ureat Britain. One seek th* abolition of the practise on the ground that *moking it dieagietabl* to many amuaement teettrt and out of place, and th* other iasitts that th* tmok* kill* th* germt of di*M*t n the at*M*ph*re. prevents contagion, aid add* materially to th* comfort aad gayety of Hie. At t h* present moment th* Utter party tsemi to d*aoy. Louis Philippe bad |reat difficulty in e* taping from Frano* dunmg U* At Predimeit, ia Bohemia. wh*r* many mammoth *k*l*tont hat baoa unearthed a pr*histnrio family kai latoly b**n found. Th* skeleton* of the man. woman an.l children are oompUU, too avaa's being of euora-.out ux*. * lnele These naer rrellao *r ChaHly a*t*l BelMacrt*lr. It i* trite to *y that there i* ao wnti- roent in busineet, but the* fact need* to b* often reiterated for the correction of loos* thinking upon important subject*. Th* profesaional reformer find* it *a*y to promulgate theories ef iaapro/ement which promise to retlnc* the philosophy of trade to a bssis of emotional unseltishne**: but the application of such theories te actual condition* i* impossible. A man woo *x- ptcts to thrive in any financial or commer- cial enterprise can not afford to pat hisvatlf at th* mercy of ki* benevolence or hi* sympathy with human weakn*** and mil- fortune. 1 he pressure of competition it tuch that h* mast b* quick to t*ize every chance and to make th* most of it, regard less of considerations of penonai kindneas and liberality. "Biuinee* i* business, a* we say, in th* ten** that it doe* not include thoaa finer feeling* which find ex- pression in deed* of charity and sell-saonnce. It u a oonataat struggle for advantage* in which tome win aad othert lose, ana in which th* only way to be a winner instead of a lo*er ia to put sentiment aside and take account only of th* practical aapect of thing*. This it th* secret of all busmen race***, whatever may b* (aid against it by th* theorists and dreamer* whose persona*! failure i* a standing refutation of their teaching. Thsre ar* times, of coane, when a man oaa obey aa impulse of Keaerotity without damar* to hi* bnsmess ; in fact, there ar* times when hi* basin*** can thus he bene- fited. It i* to th* credit of hnaaa nature, as well a* human sagacity, that the** op- portunities are mostly improved, and that th* profit of tht m i* properly distributed. iMlaacea of thi* kind are familiar ia every coaununitv. They rspr*at a Um-leocy The retreat fiom Asaa was a brilliant feat. Th* heat was intone* and th* rente lay through a difficult country. la addition to the** obstacle* the column wa* haraased along th* whole distance by bodies of th* enemy. Bat notwithstanding all thi* the inarch of three hondrad and fifty mi lei wa* effected in good order, the Japanese line* at I 'hung- 1 'hew being broken. ' Tor thil achievement and hi* subsequent victory over th* Japan*** Army al Ping- An. after the junction with th* main body wa* affect*), Ueaeral Yeh and 10" of tb* officer* of th* Imperial Army ha.e been rewarded by an Imperial edict, Geaeral Yeh i* not th* co-nmander in chief of the army in Corea, that function devolving upon General Liu Ming Chuen. who waa Viceroy of Formoaa during th* time of the Franco-Chinee* war. Liu ia looked upon a* tbe probable successor of Li Hung Chang in case of that statesman's removal by death or Imperial edict. At lease h* i* th* moat prominent Candida t* for the ucct**ion now in th* field. A New NOM Hade Oat of a A few month* ago a young noeele** man asked the authorities at a London oospita) whether they could obtain a real nose for him. To oblige th* applicant an amputa- ted anger of another patient wa* grafted on to h:s face, but it wa* found that amputa- tion had caussd th* finger to die, and it failed to " take". To* urittlt** man, noth- ing daunted, then agreed to the surgeon's suggestion that one o? hi* own i the patient'*) finger* should b* cut off to turn t*n th* ssssl organ, but, in order that the linger should not be wasted ia the event of tbn operation being un*uc3*e*ful, th* patient i arm waa encased in planter, and for four wssks he had to hold hi* ttagwr to hi* fac* in th* bop* of taking root. Thi* U did and th* finger wa* then taken off th* hand and now remain* axed a* a BOW. It ha* been maoi pulatatl so that it i* na laager te be raoog nued aa a finger, and th* prooses of loan- ing it it being proceeded with. Asleep on the Bottom of the Rarer A ttrange incident in connection with th* work of clearing away the debris of the recently wrecked bridge at Louisville, Ky , is related of tbe rabmarine di.er whoa* duty it i* to descend to the bottom of the river and fasten chain* about th* heavy iron work, besides placing dynamite charge* in spots where the moet desirable results may be had. YetUrday h* remained be- aaatn th* surface for more than aa hoar. Then wa* no reapoa** when signals were made, aad there wt* uneasiaes* felt. At length the div*r who goo* on a* a relief re- ported for duty, and h* was at once seat down to ascertain what wa* wrong. In a few miautet both men cam* up. Th* diver wa* founi Mated on a pit* of iraa fast asleep. Hani on " Sweet Sixteen*." Th* tweet *ixt*ea*and boy* of th* cam* age belonging to this city, would never submit to live in Newberg, Or*. l"h* town papa* that make up the Coun- cil have built an ordinance forbiddmg"any person under the age of eighteen to wander about the town after 7 p. m., between April and November, aad after S p-m. during the remainder of the year, ualeet beariag, a writun permit from or being in company with parent* or guardian*." There are penalties at ta-n*.i to thi* ordinance for violation*. According to th* Echo d** Mm*s a new explosive has been accidentally discovered ia an unexpected quarter by M. Ra**el. a French chemist, who ha* found that a mix tor* of aluminium filing* and sodium diox- ide took are with *xplosiv* violence when in contact with a little moisture. Th* pre- paration of th* exploei ve is very d \ngerous, a* whsi. it take* are fiercely burning parti cles are projected in all directions, the beat being great enough to fu*e copperwir*. ~ Coxey's Original CanTas. The molt picturesque political campaign vet planned in the United State* wa* in- augurated in Maasillon Saturday, before a large crowd, by J aoob 8. Coxey. Mr. Coxey wa* nominate* i for congress by the people'* party of th* eighteenth district or Ohio, but th* candidate ia making hi* arrangementa in his own way. Th* circus tent in which be proposed to (peek daily will seat 10.000 people. It will require forty men, twenty horses and a brae* band te move Mr. Coxey from town to town. There ia more fiber to the I'oxey movement u a practical appeal for vote* than i* popularly *uppo**d. The en i er prise i* not wholly a picnic party. Tbe Human Vokrs- On*'* turpriae at the fact that no two person 't voice* are perfectly alike c****e when one is informed by an authority on tke subject that, though there are only nine perfect tone* in th* human voice, thare are the astounding number of 17,392,196,044,- 415 different sounds. Of the** fourteen direct muscles produce ltt.383 and thirty indirect muaclee producs 173,74l,$l,wnil* all in co-operation produce the total given hove. Admitted. TUliaghait "What a bashful girl M.S. Klderwr Uildrsl*eve "Y**, she s o* th* retired list." Hard to Bear. Mr*. D* Style (food of novel*) " Did you do as I directed, and tall everybody who called that I wa* eogagrd " Domett 10 - " No oa* sailed, mum. " " What ! Not ca*T" "Not a soul." " Mercy ! Such haartles* neglect i* out- rageous. ' That Tired Feeling T/he marked benefit which people over by That Ttred Peeling derive from Hood 1 * Har- taparilla, cooctiutvety prove* that thta m-Ji cine " make* lh weak strong." J.B.Bawrtue, a well known awrcnant of Auburn. Maine, says: "About >v* yean ago I began to suffer wto> very severe B*ta *> SBV wiiasaia. < . i naUy growinc wonn. took Hood's rlll.i. l>.-ing that t was- fMOtvd with *>T-*t*BW*B eompll- cated WKIV !.** BBS) alMaey treoMe*. I ImproviHl aK once au.l am rrtainly very muclt vetler and trfl more Hk working. Hood's Sarsaparilla always livwr me relief **( great romforv It 1* a CteaVsMBsl to any OB* MBariaf at I iltd.* car* HaMiaal CaesBsetkM *v s<fcaX a* itlansirt mil tr J. HOOO

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