Illinois News Index

Local News, 16 Apr 1910, p. 7

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John took the •eat tn'Ii%ntl hia friend, Mlii Wilion, in the trolley car. lie or a borr'd expri..1n, iind after i 1 camuil r,marka on th writber. the cluse of hti dligiiit ..m. revealed. r- WQ1U•H bV a tlilug to icy,' lie b.(an, •4w117 cant they icy It and get done? More ph,.hcI and moral foi'e Ii Wn('d In the reiteration of feminine roner.at Ion than oiiI1 be need up In i Ions time of ,t?ectiial •( tion. Woiirii. ('o1ver.attonyonhiat1 Largely of vircLilnr buiz iiwe with noth Ing to work on My wile lice a i%.tur itaying with hcr." Ill. trIiid •aw tlit'ic warn •Ofl)rtIZiLlI (OlIIIflR cud 11. t.'ned patiently. . Thu morritni ahe riilskld IOIUP let Icri ihe had Intend.'l to give inc to Ixrnt. You wouldn't think It would take long 10 tell about auch a circum itance, flOW WoUld OLI1 ..% by, no." said Mliii Wilson. "Well, It took all brenktait time. Bh began when she came to the table Bald ib.: .. •1 had two letter. and a postal card which I thought John would poet for mc on him way (town town. I stamped the lrtte, and la(d them between the leaves of a magasin. - there were Iwo letters and a poital card end I laid the book on the stairs, thinking I could give Ih letter. and the card to John, so he might mall thetii on hi. way down town. and I cant flnel them anywhere. lye hunted high and low. end I cant InluAlne what his. become o• Iheni. I. There Wqre two lc'tl.'rs all slanip ed and a IPOItS) card, and I rt'iiietnber laying theni right bctwren the leave. of the book, Ifld putting It on the itairs, so that it would be handy to give to John. f( I was very partu icr that they shmald go this morning, ant I knew he WOUld just a. .ooa post them on his way down town. .. 'T (sn•t think where th.y have die appeared to. for I remember dI.tlnctly p'acIng them in the book--two letters and a postal- and icying to mycelt---' end bo on. Hw.ll, that went on and on, and round and round, without getting any- wher, and the liii thing I heard a. I shut the front door was, 'Two Iet hr. all stamped, and a postal card. flo you wonder I'm tired with that for b eaktast ?" Jiat th"n a mascullne.voic. iasert.d tt,it troci the aest b.htad. On. man wu r*latlng enm.tblng to another so •niphUcsIlv that there warn nothing to do bet IIit.. 'e*1t? Wall. J gu I was .ra'L I i.v.r wu , scat In my lit.. I ain't usually seat of thunder--been lots of tlm.• right out In the opea wb.a It was thrnd,rla. end lightning hard, ead ain't minded It at ill, btat this time I was seat m*t to deeth. .eTM I*. Out bouse sta something liRe that on. omit th.r.. not very tar tl tb. aest on.. Well. we were ii) humS OWl on the *et porch I. the mdl waa sitting on tb. $.p qeI t. *e1b; tb Mb.r's weT. .Itttug beeR, bt I wa. o lb. Iow.r.t.p k __ eg WIN •I(Iag there, aid all . .' ,, q a lhe'e o* this Ihuadar . IIlls.. iwu leree! T. Itghtat*; Jee.t , : E ' q. . .4. . . --. -. 4 .,, ,-. .- -r ' - . : h('uiei thryre set near tog*'thcr, 70U know flfl(t I thought I was struck for sure. It s.'c:nP(1 to conic right down all around mc you see I was sitting right on the .t*p and I thought sure I a. struck. It seemed to hind of make me nUmb. 1 never was so it-t in my lIfe YOU the others were further back, but I wac right out Ofl Itie lower step. and the lightning scemeil to ('Vtl)C right down b.tw..,i th. two houi.e. 'Well, when I could think. I looked at my wife. Hhe was sitting back on the Porch 1w th. door, (luIt.4 a ways tioni izie, because I vii on the step, but .he was white as chalk. 1 never ae. any one so white in my life be frr.. "i4he was o sCat mn(1 I was so scat to see her so white why, she dWzit hnve I mite of color. .. v.li, I tell you, I never flhifl(IP4 thunder storms before, but that time I was scat You iv. I was sitting --" here the ear •topI).d cml the two trleiids got OUt John was gaiing out of the WindOw In an nh.orbed fashion For some little time nothing was said but Mi.. Wilson, being a woman. took advantage of her prerogative. Bp.sklng about buiziaw.-." "sciiae ma," said John. hurriedly, "I get out hera."-- Youth's ('ompanion CZAR 8 EARLY LOVZ. All., i1ori Siece Itait1on tnr H.eeIIfI Jew... IIrohe Off. A story of the ('sari early lire, wl,Ich baa long bern known to car- tam iiiemberi of the ltu..ian court, ha. recently been 1)UhlishPd. It ii the hi.tory of a love affair of his youth froni which it is said be never really re c(.'red cud for the breaking of which h( has nivrr altogether forgiven hi. mother, 'I,ho grl concerned In the story was of Jewish de.cent and the daughter of a governn'ient ionlractor, a New York iun correspondent says. 11cr name aa Rajeec Kagan. At the age of 17 •hc e.as celet)rated as a beauty and courted by some of the highest In lb. land. Inciudeig th. (rsnd l)uke Paul. uncle of the pr.a.nt Ciar Nhholai. 'l'he Orand Duke on one occasion took bib nephew to one of the lady'. rr"epl lons, end no sooner di(t the ad I.. her than he 1.11 violently in love with her. Rh. reciprocated the .entImerit end that urn. •vcning they mat b) appointment In th. conservatory of her fathers house and he declared hi. passion and •wore hi n•v.r would mairy anyone else. At ibont this tim. Marie Fodoroina, the Emp,i, was trying to pt a suitable bride for the future Oar, and •r choice fell upon Pilncee hIIc. of Rn.,. The youai man raNeed taheer of the match, saying his troth Ira.dy we' plight.d. * stormy Interview be tw.eu the Ciar and his eon followed, a. a result of which, alarmed at the turn affairs had taken, the lad e,sed to reaped his tither'. wIah.e, his last rliuIonstNneei bi1a sheared by the thrt that It the aaIr wys not Im. mediately dropped be co.qscor and him daughter would b. sent (o Ilberta In eilI.. When news of wbat had happened reached the young 3.,... she made a disparate attempt to commit suicide, but w' saved. Hearing .f thu the buM -M h.rvl.d to her house aM a heartrending scene the 1rl spin attpUs1 to hIlt hei.elt. After ether videat quarrel 'Sith the tnry should have qub(I accustomed I!I.nselN to the us of a picullarip I ",akWu1• viak wd afl.pirvedlag Iut$4 •t tocOo? I thiab not. To sic the statement that tobcco. tainted human flesh I. offeush. to the cannIbal. dose lot come home with crushing power Perhaps I do not love my fellow- man so well as the cannibal do... I know that I am ab in this way. end It my cannibal brother 41ree to poltak my wishbone he must take me a. he ftnd.. ma. I cannot abstain wholly horn the use of tobacco Is ar dir to gratify Lb. pampered tastes of one who has never gone out of his *17 to do me a favor. Do I ask the *nnlb.l to break off the pernicious use of toi*oco because I dislike the flavor of it In his brie. kit? I will defy any rp.ctable reel dent of thi Cannibal islands today to place hi. ftnpr on a solItary instance what. I have ever, by word or deed, Intimated that be should make the ilighteet change in his habits on my account, unl.u it be that I may have suggested that a diet consisting of more anarrhtst. and lees himan b Ings would mar. productive of gin- eral and lasting good. My own Idea would be to send a class of men to these Islands so thor- oughly Imbued with their greet oh Ject and the oil of tobacco that he great Caucasian chowder of those re glons would be followed by such weep- ing and wailing, and gnashing of teeth, and such remorse, and repent- ance, and gastric upheavals that it would be a.s unsafe to eat a mission cry in the Cannibal Islands as It Is to eat Ice creem In the United Iltatee to-day--Frim Pill Ny.s Budget. LVTRR HIS A3Z8TT. (eselami Delighi In PI.Tlmg 5.oed Fiddle to b. Tear. The second place ii not often covet• i'd. but in Russia royalty ranks so hlkh that to the loy1 subject It seems great honor to follow the Caar. The government is eminently patriarchal, In theory, at least, and the emperor must supervise a. well as patronize the S('hOOlI. At the Easter teetival the pupil. are treated with especial favor. Of this (Jeorge lirandee, In his 'impreaslons or Itussla," give. such a(('0Ufl a. he had from a pupil of 111(t) 4apd1l ----- Youni girli of the upper classes of the Itiiperiai '(Brls' school were driven in a long rocc.sion through the streets in themper1al carriages. The pleasure for tbeni was only that of belnff allowed to take a drive in a stylish court c'rriage, with coach- man and footman.In the imperial liv- cry. There was nothing special to be The theory of this ii that the Czar stafl(1. In a sort of higher parental re lation to all these children. When he once a year visits one of these schools ---to which only the children of the no- NlIty Ir admitted---It I. a custom that. s.m a sign of hi. favor, he drope his pocket handkerchief and the girls all scramble for it, and it is torn in ilirbees, so that each one can get a fragment. lie takes the molt brilliant girl to the table, and tastes of the food of the institution. It I. valiwd as the highest distinction when he gives one of the girl. hi. plate with what is left )POn it. It is the custom and usage for her to at it with delight shown in all her features. flrea.t was the astoniahmcnt of Alex. ander II when a young girl, a Pole, whom the Czar bad taken to the table, a.s being the most (listinguisbed scholar of the Institute, and to whom he had passed what was left of his meat and potatoee, nodded to a •ervant and calmly gave him the Czar's plate to take away. M.a1. ot raIlghl.a.af. The Mi(ldIe West Ii using luncheon. an(t dinners as a mean. to booming and boosting their towni. and davis- in fresh methods of accelerating progross, says ('oilier'.. fles Moines was ileeping the sleep of lethargy and hope- le.sne.s three and a half years ago, when a few of her busiest business ijien began to gPt togethe t noon iun('tleonI once, twice and' hree times a week, and talk Up a t1'riving town. They willed that l)ea oine. should aw*ki'. Oit . of theiyt inipirational I east. drew the Urea$,r Dee Moines opimittee. The Oqnmercial Club brt.b4hed in new life. Thq, Dee Moines plan, of comrniuiop and referendum gv4ument eflal)l1'd the citizens to clean up the mesa at the city ball. The life force of those baflquetings expriased Itself in various direcUons. To-day I).. Moines bee more vitality and higher niomentom than It had three yeara ago. the Wchee. and dinner habit ii still maintained as the source and fount of much of the good. You go to a luncheon of a hundred or so persons in Dee Moinee--bualnees men, lawyers, journallat.a and agricultural editors---and they talk while you eat Whit. the oouree are being munched thoughts on city charters, corn-growing and factory Inducement are caauslly spilled out by local talent. Tied t• he Te.h. "Than you think that motorinen are more cautious than chauffeurer' "They ha,. to be. They e.'t sw.ve It the p.d.strlan loses his heed."-- Louisville Courter-Journal. A'--.... Foreigner--But Ii the English Ian- gus.. capable of ezpi-eeelag anything? Nativ.CertaInIy. Look at th namee on our PU111a oarel--Puch. The harpy eagle of Bruil feeb - elusively on monkeys. ' Eigbty..neu a every hundred nadlan tRrmaN ow* their own r The igp of wild bird.. are eaa1i than those of the sama species ed when domsttcated. No fewer than •O,407 articias toned In public carriages were last yt taken to Rcotland Yard, Londosor all places of kuportance, SydT, New South Wales, Is farthest 1r. London u the crow 61.--1O,ISO milas. at. Louis has a concrete bu1141 fifty-seven feet high, which Is entLreiy without windows. The Illumination ii by means of skylights In the roof. An Irish woman, Miss Lillian L Bland, has designed and built for her- self a biplane glider twenty-eight t. wide. Beveral satisfactory glidee bay. been accomplished with Ihö mIe1Wn controlled from the ground by ropia. The engine and propellers will be It ted later. - Use of tobacco is universal in Lb. orient, and the word cheroot and tIe uIE come from Madras. Tb. flrst ci- gars seen by Columbus were wrapped with corn .hucks. Some Himalaya tribes take the leaf of the pelassa and, with a cunning twist of the wrist, make the bowl and long. narrow st of a pipe in the most perfect way. Miss Helen V. Carson of Bedford. Ia., haa entered upon her second year a.' superintendent of the high schools of Ezira, Ta. She was recommended by the Governor of Colorado for the place an(t waa Just twenty•two whea she waa eicte(I. Abe is said to do the work just a. well as her masculine piedeceaaor and to receive the same salary. It is estimated that there are 150,- 000 hives or colonies of bees in witserland, each of which produces forty poUnd. of honey during the season, a total of ten million pounds a year. The average price of Swiss honey for th year 1909 was 25 cents a pound. giving the years product a total value of $2.500,000, which ii mostly profit, nature providing the raw material In an abundance of flowers. Ilookha, the hubblebubble or Turk- ish water pipe, is always being smoked by Burmese women. partly becaUse they like it, but mainly to supply the men with nicotine water. This hub. t)l-bUbble nicotine water habit ii, In fact, a lazy form of tobacco chewing. A mouthful of the nasty beverage is held in the mouth as long as posalbie. They carry about gourd. full of It, and claim it preserves their teeth. and it may--New York Preca In our army machine guns hav been sup,lied froui tim. en 'Irna, it only experimentally itd not as au tn trinaic part of the rrny organization. Th question ha been tudIet, no doubt, by the general staff, but the (lefinhte organization and supply of this new arm ha. been ostponed to make way for other more pressing consider- atlons an(1 also to profit by the expert- enre of iuropean nation. before adopt. ing any 1eflnite organization or tao- tics for this new but highly important arm of the service. Some F.ngllsh seem to think all meats' coming in should be marked either "foreign" or "colonial" to show the buyer that he was not getting English meat. Every one of the chief joints would have to be stamped, and th exporter would have to do the stamping Further, the butcher deal- ing In "foreign" as well as English meat must announce the fact on his •ho,, front, so that his customers may know he deals In both foreign and English meats. Some of the farmers complain that much foreign rfIat Is tasied oft as Kngli.h to bring down their prices. Iob" is the only one of the abbr victed words proteste(1 against by I)ean Swift which has conquered even the purists of sPech Incog" ii still short of respectabilIty, and 'phia" ( physiognomy very far ao. However, other abbreviated forms have won. A eabriolet is e. "rib" to everybody now, though to I)ickens' Mr. Haddle it was still a 'cabrioly.""Miss" for "mi. tress,""piano' for "pianoforte" and "sweets' for iwe.tmeats" are untver. Sal. Nevertheless, many people still apologize for "bus" instead of "omut. bus" and wage a being fight against "phone" and against "photo." Consul Thom H. Norton, of Chemniti, tells of the importance of the potato In the life of Germany. "The potato oceuIe. a relatively more important position in (lermany than In other European countries. It is not only employed largely for food for both man and beast, but also for tenversion into starch and alcohol, The 1os crop was estimated at 41,500,0* metric Ions (51,261,liO short tone). 13000,000 tons being used for human food and 19.000.000 tons for feeding domestic siImals, Btarch tactorlee uttlised 1,1*0,000 tons, distIllerIes 1,100,000 tons, while 5400,000 tone were required for seed." The propoe.d home for tndIg,e% southern women in New York ha. m with such generous support on the pare o• northern women that th. plans hey. been changed and widened. Iaaed e( building the home in Virginia, as wee at Iret propened, it has now bess de t.rielo.d to erect It near New Yee and to open it to both nort,ern sad southern wom'n. It I. pl . conduct It along the line. of the Lee horn. in Washington, wiere pr,ei Tyler's daughter spent her lam Tb. only i'netrlctlnes will be tha% Ismatee shall be of patla Ntth respectable Mrs. 145 Ray Irot the bead of the committee whI • r-- the essuy . r'- . c:wi:. .. , _4w.,._ ' ---. p , j ( .t I %. . " ,-- I I .4 I-- . 4 , ) S Qpn. of c1 Pqrs,qn Impôi%nt Subj.cte, - -- . ,-- " , . . S P V • V S I As TO TI EIZD 07 A WITS. PRLACHR by the uane of Coburn, hold' forth In a Presbyterian church In Pittaberg, seems to be fatherfug a dangerous doctrtn when he esys that "any kind of a wife for a yout*g man Is better than none." Thoughtful people would think twice before subecribing to it. Any hind of a wife Is no kind of a wife it die Is not a proper help-weal, It I. the haste with which a great many young men go about getting "any kind uf a wife" that leeds so many of them Iut, tie diac'e court. Still' the worthy mau of cloth was not very tar wrong on some other thing. ha said of matrimony. 11cr. ii a partial report of hi. reply to the eacuse of a young nia.n that he could not afford to marry: ,*2Th !J TA2L011 O them if the enumerators •N strangers, and thw aN nien who will "decline to answer on the advice of at torney." What I. your occupation? The tptatIon to 1st tpsiey sweep skiwmd will be greet. Indeed, to Amencasi Are you employed or employw? That weakness tc.r boasting will get the better of thousands t this point. Do you own or rnt your me? Desire may g1'e the answer. Any mortgage? lt is unpl.ssant to talk about things of this sort. How easy to say no, lest the next question be, how much?--Toiedo Blade. I, London baa 2.111 mIles f Eb and I0 miii. of traways. - " CEmS Is C,.IZJ--.*OT DTJZAU. bk million of population, the number of felonious homicide. In. 1509 was as fol- Iowa: In Canada. 3; Germany, 5; Kng land, 11 : Fiance, 12; .Igtum, the mo.t criminal country in Europe, 15; In the United Stat.., 121. Owing to lax enforcement of law, and the mst.aken policy of giving the criminal t',o many chances for escaping the penalty of his crime, only ne out t( seventy-four mui-d.r.rs In tbeUnlted 8tats Is 'ion v icted. Political and personal influence and-the maudlin aentimint that regards crime is di.eeee and a murderer as a sick man to be cured, instead of a dangerous beat to be extermInated, permit the average man killer in America to escape with seven years In prison. Crime Is crime The murderer is a murderer. The sooner American prisons cease to be pleasant sanitariurn. for mental abnormal. and become lnstItut1oa for punishment of criminal. by hard work and rigid dlscl• pline, the Iiettr for our national reputation, --Chicago No, 'o'i cannot afford a wife, but you can go to the theater and club. You are too •.lflsh to make any woman happy, and no good woman can afford to hi betrothed to you. Tb. bachelors ar• not saving money, but a good wife pays her own way and th.y are the best banks and the best poilca force, for no handouf?. can hold a oiing men like apron string.. Any kind 'it a wit. I• t,ett.r than nonC, and a scarcity (It w.ddingu a on. of the moat dangerous aigne of th. times. Tuday 1,000,000 )Otiiig (flflfl al• filling clerical positions it low saleirie.. which w.r' filed by m.n thirty yesra sIo ICv.ry niing man ought to be compelled by law to get married or p.ty to the I4tate annually what it would cost to keep a wife. Annual forfeiture of the coit of keeping a wife may be all right, but how would the amount be flied? The parsons Idea might be amended, with advantage in many caae., by nicking the tax or forfeiture a •uiii equivalent to the itnnual cost of the bachelor'. drink. and cigars.-- - Hacranu'nto Il.e. ) TIlE CENRUS AND TH WITNZ88. hAT percentage of the t'eiiiuw stati;itici will be valuelcea bccau. of the great Airierican pronenes. to lxiaat? We wish sonic 0fl3 would figure this out and give us a torniii• la w tiich, w hen appl ted to the go. at report., w ill lrtuit the student to artive at exact facts. Consider atiii' of these questions: how .ild are you? II Is the cu.t'ln to joke about the ot)jecticr) to atatitig their age If the truth werc known i' would Prot)Rhl V he foiiid that most nien will subt rail a few eiri, particul'yty It tbCY, theiniiclve.. are 3h1U Iiij itito t.)4t period ktwn as middleiged. Are you siogli', or fl)rarrle(t' (lId maid. who have not ('eased to •t--IIA1', ii the Georgians ezpreea it, may let iinaginctlcn rule Journal. " n I',' I" I'w hi LIII 'ly o k FIGHT THZ HOUB YLY. ____'I IIKN the ('OflifliCfl housefly begins to thrive in the land It behoovee every good house- krep.r to make preparations to war on these little peat.. Typhoid and many other diaeaaea are distributed by flies, which pick up large assortments of dan- gerous germs in dirty place. and carry them into hou.ee and stores, depositing them frequent. ly upon food, by which they are taken into the human stomach. Bee that windows are properly screened. I'roviiie a receptacle where bread, meat, milk and other food. are protected from flics. Hee that filth dwa not Ic(-umuiate aticut your rem1.es interest yoiirult in k*'.'plng alley. and streets c1ean You can thu. per. form valuable service, not only for your own fahlIy, bUt for the c'oiiitiiunlty -- Chi('ajo Journal. Princc Nicholas finally agreed to travel foi a year on the condition that dur. in his absence no steps should be taken in thi' xnatt.'r of his love affat,, lI(-arcely had h left Russia, however, when a compact was entered into through the management of the Em. iren by which the contractor agreed to marry his daughter to a certain state o1clal of importance, and when tt. unhappy Prince returned the wed- ding had taken place. HI. marriage with Princess Alice was celebrated sonic little time afterwrt3 -- - _ . p.-, - -xI, .1 d.i...d.ö. I-- I butituI kiKy one moralag waS I- • • tripping With' a pitcher aS milk from the fair . . of ('oIera. whâs abe eaw4 in. she -stumbled, th pitcher down tumbled, *id all Ute •weet buttermilk water. _____ ed t he plain, 'Ob, what ebail I do now? 'Twas looking t you, now. Sun., s'tt-e, ktich a pitcher I'll ne'er melt egafr, 'Twaa the pr1d of my dairy! Oh, Bar- ____ ' n.y O'Leary, You',. sent as a plague to th. girls of ('olersinet" I eat down beside her, and gently did hlde her, That such a inhitortune should give her •uch pain. A hi.. then I gave her. Before I dli leave her, lb. vowed for •uch pleacure shad hrcak it igaint 'Twa. haymaking season--I can't tell the reason.-. MIJtortuiii will never come single-- that. plain--- vr, Y.r son att•r poor Kitty's di.. aster, ,"- The (lt'% II a pitcher was whole In (IlerM me! --Olti Addi-... t lb. Osid, Then gently scan your brother man, still gentler sister woman: Though thvy may gang a kennin s-rang, ____ To •t'p audi p human; One point imi.t •tljl be greatly dark, ______ _______ ______ The flyg why they do 1t And just as lamely can 34 mark How far terhiipi they he it. Who rna(34' the heart, 'tis lj. alone DecIdeily 'an try us: tie know. CICh chord, tta various tone, P:ach un,. It vir%oui bIas. 'rh.n at tIi IJalarI let's be mute, W. never ('511 adJust it1 Vhatp 1(II4' we partly may compute. Iiut kfloW not what's restated. ---Robert llirnp. TOJ.LCCO AND MJSSIOlILBIa. a Osee ini,eIar I(.naorl.('. Idea,. a. em l,*porf.nI 5bJ..rt, I sin (I! to notice a strong effort on the part of the friends of humanity t "fl 'u ig. those who wish to quit the use ol Luh.ccO. To quit the use of this wi.d is one of the rho.t agree able inethuiiM Of relazation, I have tried l a great many time., and I can safei> iiay that it baa afforded me seen. much solid felicity. To violentl)%r.frii'm Rnd cast away the weed, n4 at the end of week to find a god cigar unexp.ct1ly in the pocket of an oid ,flj Intense and de hr jitght. :' Kc1l.ta idl qa (hat single drop of the onoentratàd oil of tobacco on the toue of an adult dog tu.al. I The (Io. of Weleoe. have ii , doubt about t tr't(jh o1 coA picture III a reient publication hesive power of this itatetp 7and aliowe the window of a public build' for liii t reason I have aa'beeu ing, from which protrudes a pole bear- to the use of tobct'craiilong itig a stUffC(1 glove on its end. Tb. ds. should shun the conven Illustration portrays a custom of an trated oil of tbbacco, especially It old English town which dates from re iongev'y tic6any object to theni. tI)Ote tinles. F, J. Hn.ll tills about it Neithe would I advise a nun who In "Memories of Old l)evunsbtr ' cc ilne tendencies or ê,strain of llarnstaple l"air ii stIll an Import- that hi od in hi. veins toiai the con- silt occa.ion, sitbougit its old glory central , oil of tacco as a sozoiont. To the Se who may feel that way out Obecco I would say, shup it by all mci us, Shun it as you would the deadly u.,a tree or the still more deadly whippletree of the tropics. Betel tist* who have been unable to .ucbc 'tilly us. tobacco, and who theraf e hive given their whole llvei and tb usa of their nhi9toecopes to tb'. In estigatton of Its Iorrors, say that c initials will not eat the flesh of tobi co-using human beings And 'et w. say to our miOlonaries: "No man ('5 a be a Christian,,and use tO- hacro." I ac , and I sayy1t, too. with all that d pth of feclEg which has ci- eai C raractert.zed Ti)Y' carIie'st nit. ture, tt at in this *pr4 coniriiitting a 5rest (For. Wha' have the cennibala ever done for UI LI I people that we should aold the us. of tobacco in order to lit OLIF 'iseh for their table.? In what way hiv they sought to ameliorate our on4IUon in life that we should strive In death to tickle their pa- Isles? 1.AOh at the history of the cannibal for paSt ages. Read carefully his r.cord, aet you will see that It has been but th. hi.toty of a selfish race. Cast -- -- •--:--- _---- your e hick over your shoulder for Tb. ('rak, a Cent y, and what do you find to The complete crank ii a kind of col. be the condition of the cannibellats? lector of causes, and it is diMcult to A new missionary has landed a few discover the principle upon which he weehe revioualy perhapp A little collects them. A new religion and s gathered about .4i the beach under-clothing and some insipid hind beueej a tropical tree. Repreesuts. or diet are all the earns to him, and ti,. cnalbjs from adjoining island. be advocate. them all with equal er- re pesit. The odor of sanctity e.tneea lie wants men to change peivss t aIr. their livee in qvery particular and pro The 'hW sits beneath a new urn- tests alaat all the ordinary usage la.himq at the pictures In a of the world both In greet and is large joecerdanc.. A new plug hat small things. He does not believe that is ha4tag I a tree near by there Is any instinctive wisdom t Ano the Iedin.g citissne gather mankind or any value in pest tradi- about a the gyound and we hear the Uon and experience. Por him wisdom i.f 0k Ie etterney general whether has only Just appeared among men, and he elU tab. esme of the light or some ___________________ she ham revealed bemelt to ry tow. at the --Ldon Times. In zagland a paper co -- talus lit• bliowing personal: D.S..tt.S he Cnda •( young man to go as mis- Policeman--4top thilt? An%et htm py vacancy in one of Plop him? , . the Cii1I tsh$d. He muqt fully Athletic Cruh--tap him! I geese tanderi*d Ihe appetite. and cites oe A el •had.w. noti Why, he's r,ehta the hundred. the aØs, must be able to reach We are told th*t the 'small.t hsii yard r.oord int 111*1--Peek tbetrii* aturee at oao and mu.t thNws a shadee. And so it doe.. It - not eeo Applicants may corn - throw. a shadow o4r yost appetite When a aarñed m. is an advo la IIOfl 01' by letter. whe* you lad it In your toed. t. Cf --'nal •a' it Is btter that under these ci,' _______________ Zdl,à tIii;b. Ii heehed than that eumit$n te who frequented the Don't think that every fool ides yen ;4-;1I wik. . 'qe . cmt4 stt during the last oem- pt lto your aad is u ineplrsUie. 1 p I 'l S., II I ha. departed. It lasts for tbtee days, and in Former times as much ii twen' ty thousand pound. were expeqd.d in the purchase of cattle. A great stag hunt Is one of the features of the occas Ion. The fair opens with a quaint cere mony. Time mayor of liarustaple pro. vides a feast in the gildhall, and inulled ale, toast and cheese are served In the old civic plate Then a large stuffed glove a shown above the door of the gildhall, as a sign of welcome extended to all visitor.. While this glove is displayed no arrests can be niade in th. town. In the old town accounts may be found such records as this: "1615: Palde fur glove to LulL out at rait c-- 44" For centuries Barnstaple Fair has been famous throughout all Devon end beyond, and it. glories have pass- ed into songs and ballad.. Search the towns all round, there'. nothing can compare, miii, In measurement and merriment, with Barnstaple Fair, miss. Then sing of Harum, merrytown, and Barums merry mayor, too, I know no place in ill the world old Barum to compare tot A pin' make z.. It Ifid ' Sr * irlI '0 4 - •1 -' p : ' , b• r , - , ' ' , L% 0" 4 . , ,

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