,~ % .ouuao1uannIg;n"bv:_.: ; .v., _rnnnoum:un?III-_ T. . .. Au; J`-l`ALlL;1 (0 the [act uuu (u \ur- u............. .. Oxford. Cnnmbridge, anal Dublin. (1 stu; dont who is u nohleumn`s son. wemrs. or at one time wure. IL tuft ur tassel on the squiu`t.\ cugp worn by unde.rgru.- duulem M the university. A -~m..d..mm=r IS one who does the I dn.` la`-u vented some n-rw thunuer nor my pel- tormnnce. and by his piteous complaint against the actors for t1terwnrds"staul- in his thunder. an expression which t>wa.mo proverbial. The phrase. Mind your ps and qs is enera Iy, but erron-:o_uisly. supposed to liuve originated in tha score 0 ps and Q8. (pints and quarts), chalked up in lmr-moms in the (`use of customers who did not pay downfor their drinks. The phraae oomasxoxn the printing office and is due to the aiiniluity in form 0 the lower-case or small p and q in a font of Roman letter. India! A novioe to mix them when distributing type in- to the cases. Turning the tnbleaon an opponent is an expression derived from the game of hnrkzaxnluon. Buck- gummun" is the game (canon) of the trouuh loe), but in time: it was nnllnl tm name of us . To turn turn has been adverse. In Cornwall. E land. smoked pl]- chuda are oslled air Muilla-n ail- culur name, of which Prof. Bin Muller nivm tin followiml explanation: j`Th9 is the (cuqxon) on we lunfd called tun game tnr_n the tables." or bnclgaammpn-board. Is to 1-over-_so the PGIIIUVO posntion of (syn nnlnxqonnqts; and hence they are and to ho_ turned upon a plmyar when for- been adverse. 1.. l`nrn\vnlI. Run-lsnd. nil- of which rror. aux manor giqos tha following oxpla tion: unokad pilohu-da are large y exported to Genoa. and on ten duri about. They we called in Igalhn umtdi. `smoked sh.` The Cornuh ullora pick- ui up that word. natunliud it. gnu it an intollsibla meaning. and I.hu.n"ho- A-inn -nnlt illi In thif OWE C(`QQ` it intent ihla manning. and l.nlllnI- come. noon in: to their own aion. exporters 0! fair lnnixk. You see the Odyssey and the sdvtnturu at Ulyues on nothing comgnred wnh the `adventures 0! our words ` Going the winds hog," which is almost `unvar- Inlly od as It ohnrnotaristno An`- urban is aid to-ho of I! here nlan courage. [on the your 1 the glvg-_la_`h1llinI in Ireland was oquivnlant n can patio. or one penny more than tho English on. The tunorooin WII hmotimu onllotl n thlrhnn." and muslin: n When an Irina- IIIIIII. ll ehnfy b upuno. spent. nn nun ailltmin ontutdnl ntrhnd htwunid- cothowholo ." I j*B[UE#FEAME y 7 u-ug- -,-- _,- .%__ ___,,,, V` Yr _ _ . . ' " ~*." .4 ~ They are very pretty and wear white througlldm.` have them in ix sizes. The-v are just the thing for a` moderafi piid T13193- lsent, and are useful as well an ornamegitgll: _ ` ` ` Intonnsuon sway no .. l'BID.A.l'O Olt `nu IRW. e 0`2Ex.;`,oo|'Br:ok. so . " mom, 4 N on` .u'o".D| . lynoua. xx. ` SILVER % u WAITERS. K5591" $_"i'!T_. WHY ? I Gobd Qugllty. `coAL'Woon.` square Donllngt o5'rH of Co. 00:. (hho nd Wad unk Law? Mower-. The?` 1:0 :0! ea pens vs, an very pt rrder. makes the lnwnylook `like I There isgpeat eouifort in a good velvet. and is therefore an indi- nsible article ubund swell-kept gnu. DIerenunhnn'l cine |Lawn Mo4wer.| E. B. COOKING sTovg~:s%;% Sole Klngtton Agents. HAINE3 & ` ? A. Stracha,n's.%I MCKELVEY & B!_RC.H. , ._,______ .._a.__.ah..L`. 12, 14 and 16 inch I4, 16 and [8 inch `I- -ll`0Nl 133 Iron N e9a71naodxs'm FURNWE] `f or-` LIVING Canada P:c-I.'f'lcT Railway: THE. Nd'oda':` `I `% No d;anar.. Balls and quart wat_erVln fdur mtnumg. W A 863 thiiii; p1ag13h"'"f1ib11cc gnu. tnm mm. for ' CIR? -- ____V_., ` I1 I JUN]! I I! G M qu}'x_$ :1nI1lJUt_:i 3. 1095. '" Pull cubs :-MR. !.oulO.l.l Ilohoto omontnto nno . " '.'a&"'&: mu. m. ` `5'.'.`}Ii .`.. ;.tA ViknoTLmvuwoI comm. dunn ni-`nuuv I Inn on AHDDICA. m`_:_L:2.::-.'::m*::~x.*+.:.'e.+.-..s:..` am . `if Z:.::f.=: _-..___ AQIA Ila- til _ vjvqlu Inga. Jun um duly. (aunt Ion- Ai6_rToNTnaAL una. nun-munch nun A|nI.ll'nll|' >y- u----..__- . s"rn.--N3r'H KING" -5 n..u- QInnnInn$Ld"knhQ- lllo IV . V`, | `u--uu...., -.-- .. _--_-- ,, for tho oleoeon to oust Inch well-triad and mum: Itownnh. elpcdnlly to puvo nownytortho mum onho Torlato powu` In tho Domlnlon and the nim- nodtlon Iluon the farmers a :11 until has that are being taken off? I nd In an mlghhorhood that the human who w`u:Itoueotu'lIl ntonn curled tnlh |ohal'oono|ugloa and (int: 3 Mr trial. unddrnunn-In lugloa. an noutLyo- In; to the lamb ouxlkluu. `liq, Ink : Who In this Mt. Whitney? . .g__..__ _.L. ..|a..Lul IIIQA Qh` LIIZIIIVIJ 'Ii.II_v ------..~.. - ._.I 1113 some LINE or Analuci. ' 1lAy.i!li gxitum Hoh for 3 Nu run. one: nan. Ii".:'.:'.'.`..?.'x1`.`."`?..f.`: ::: ::3':t {`a'.`u%?"' " V V 7 V V U l.Y.0. AID III. II. LIIIII. _ -__...g 4`.-Q`: -10- N lagara Pal lo. mun... an-noun. Rochester, . V Tnn` ` 1" 'msuum`L='r'DcAPa mcnm vi dag! owlhi oxgowd) A. 22 .M.. com: in; 0 pa moon! with Hahn Go all point: In tho UTR'I`E8o " mm Mm Mayan. can human 05`?! VINCENT AND NIW 3082. . ` `luilbirdll ntoutlmo tab! and unable lntonnntlon apply to moan A Inlnln. any `none Ann. W. Bxnnf -31;!-I-1-t"l'm was 1 mm. :1'.`?:tu'." `333 I I IIIIVI I\nnru-_a - !LILTO' JAE. RWIIT Indnhl Lnwnrr co` p-uqm, la. :3-1'.`z':';r'"" r, lloohonor. md. Incin- III tho 3-":.=.%.""E nu)! D I! an . 1).!) aI.'IlMn.m tonmm LEW -biasing can-ma unuhnnnu Bulbs In Iunltobo--`tho. l|IorooIouInl- rm stay was - , *`quam a'1*nzata snou_.-v I310! (MI Omllilli Uliwl. 'I2 15.-Now that the union llu.,{QIIIIIOIIfWIeIlI_h9k `hut-knnd lop why! has papa Moompmhqd and how an |vg'o~'mIoU"lI_avo mod. mm of an, or hours iiihrlnhuuunnduad. nu mind when Adan linmt clpuuod Ikchhmhntv use um inhalan- .A..|n`_ lo`-nu] `Drunk: lnlrl fnhhlll F JD` Invyr u-g-u--- V.-w Burke aid to him: rev; '13:. again, your ` III! lentftorth tbeuriee upon` me- om el -eenmdeeb u it you were lectur- lle ugnn pm mathematics: but seem.- hp may by now degreee, im- peded II they are in their course by the lriotion of interest end the friction of weindiee." Itstook England forty yeerl lnehule otter Ihe nod begun tnri reform under I-Iuekiuon. How long the Corn how: might have with- Iod the bettering ~ 0! 'Cobden end 'Dl'8llIt.'bIItfoI' the ontutroplre oi the Irilh fnmine._ no one can tell. Years ago It Mdivern Ir. Bloke pointed out the dilioxiltiea in` the way of teri reduction in Canada. and they are more formidable now then then owing to the increase in debt and expenditure which cells for e inrger nnnuelrevenue. the bulk of which mutt be ruined by omtonm texee. Teh- ing everything into account the Liberals hevevmode as good etnrt. In the House he been no teri reforms at all, while on the other hand the interest: that have been feet and snout in the proton tionist trough for eighteen year: are squealing dreadfully. 5 Lula]- I-nun Mn: out in mu-fnln dng._ `Mr. Foeter makes it appear that there M Iqullllu `IWIIIIIIJA u Aside from thoaut in certain duties, the vdry gone:-nl aubntltution or ad vnl orem for Ipeuiu make; as big diilorenoe, whilvtho Induction in favor of British gxportl. that will come into full silent but year, will have more important con- poquonoen than moat people imagine. n_u.....- uunnlnnn china: g:-ghnnyyng-\_ UIIUBI II_Iu-u lllv-u rvvr-my .._..'.__-. Comm, woolenn. drugs. earthenware, tnnoy goods, ilnx and jute manufneurera, hot: and caps, iron and steel goods, on cloth and a great variety oi other wares will be oonlidernbly lowered in price-- not t one imported from. England merely, but t one coming from foreign eountriea in oompetiuon with horn. and. above all. those made in qnnadiun-fuotorioa. It in Iltimuted that the saving ` to the con- uumorin cottons nnd wdolenn alone will he 01,600,000 1: year. equal to a reduction of 040, 000,000 of debt at 4 per oent. The out ut oi the donmtlo cotton and woolen mil I, amounting to $10,500,000 annu- nliy, will of court: have to be oheupened to meet the clonal` British competition. `u British colnmhln Umionnkingu. The Government has shown, too, thnt it'll not afraid to npond money where expenditure in roquind in the public in- terent. The Crow`: Neat Pun road is a nooeulty'.to British Columbia. Govern- ment oonetrnotion would have con much more than the 011,000 a mile to n... n.....n..n Dnnln and would not I1|\l0I illlll HID Ill,\IUU n lulu: vu who Canadian Pnolo and would have beennooomponled by any concou- Ilonn In Cdndlnn Pnelo rates. The road will be llnluhed in two years. With the cheaper mel thu it will nendor moonst- bln the low-undo one can be worked at a prom. _l'or every car of are shipped to n smelter at In reckoned that men oa_r loads ol povlelom and morohondlae me needed by the miners. Brmlh Columbla In bound to furnish n good market for the newer hnmodlntely out of the mono- tains who nloea hay, outs. manta, butter ....I nnr And. thomrh It In as lonn way / ~/ Illnfllllo In. WHO Xll DAV, OIFI. nlunuu, uuwur And our, and, though I: long way off. Ontarlocnd Qncbcc will do In con- Ildorublo supply trade ln other commo- dltlu. It would have been I mlahke, llhnltlnto Inc American rall- wcyu and American cdvenmren-usInc the word In its host ccnIo-geo control -0 nun. nu-nil nan V or the pmvmoo. The Brltlnh Oolnmhln members and others no not tn-omblo to the con- unmtion ottho told from Roboon or '.l`n|.ll `to Prlnoeton by the Helms people. The work. they any. should have been given to the Canadian Pacino. --I`. In Ila-nllghn. -Ivvu -u vuuv v.-..-----.. _ ....,, Elk! In nniloba. Sir William Van Home and Mr. Shonghneuy have conducted their and 0! tho nocotintionn respecting the Crow`: Neat line in act:-oightforward and highly nthtaotory manner. Lhappon to know that Sir Richard Cartwright. who looks out for tho public intuutn an sharply as the next man. and cannot be aoounod of being 0.P.lt.," "G..'l`.R." or the parti- san of any other cor tioii. in well pivotal at the way the inn: has been done. and in oonvinoed that the bargain ilacood onetorthooountry uwollnu tho company. It" has been shown at Q was tho clamor raised against the 1 homo rates in Manitoba in for _-nut without naaonahlo Justi- odioa. - mien are iowpr not than 03 tanning tho road between Port Arthur the Othwa. thopniltioai action 870 miion long. Under the Crow`: Neat CF I-anpmont the rates on wheat and special article: will be greatly reduced. In othor wula. tho uttiar in llnnitoha will ho In-. inoauadlan Pnoino in . mom: m_' it. lhind Hnlitux. ll may II silo IMO in Order to gut the lonnt `poulblo haul for an the Grand Trunk will turn over freight duiinod for chop poiniu to the Canadian Pacino uh noxville, than giving the lnteroolonihl 4.1:. go-by. But when all cm. is uitljlil `puma clear that thus Interooloninli will lull bowl! as Mdnlrul iihnn it doe: ndw 00 Luis. The oicinln of the Rlilwqy Dapnfimont, who hnvo looked over the ground. are of opinion that access to Manual will enable it to pay the I210,- ooo in rental: and have u bulnuoo to tl_i'o Iriuut pvw--ywquqv - __-..._-. K 0 The uuslblnhmmcnl of (3 cold-utvornco iynom tlupughoub the country and of an Atlantic that line coating 0550.000 an ?d.n-t_ 0750.000 1 wt noted by the cries in another Nb work for which the Govdrnsnchr. can take some `ox-lit. So also In the more vigorous `policy In bohn othnmigrntion. I the country wants is popnlulon-not o lg:-ants who come here an to a hallway house but emigrants who come to may; and Mr. Sifton in certain to get; many of thgt. kind, more than have come of late ycnn. -1-5.- ....1..... onmm nf mm union. how- `#'i~ ".n.`!o:m.; Wu uu. us.- :.:E?:'*:.:::.~.-..-. :::3',I*-Z:e:. : ` ..' V. "19 and. ooopm dplox I3: ' - Ill . ` :::|?uln- *5 M n. nndh In: at I.11_u.m._ hgp Ohrougin slum: o 00.- II. I At ._ . V- ` or late years. The prime feature of the session. ever. a feature that will render it forever memorpbie, is, the tariff di iminetion in favor of Britain, therst pre enistep tows:-din gieecloser union of the: pit that has n taken since Adam it preached it over It century ago. To p on the lowest grounds. the value 0! t more as n husinenssdvcrtinement for Chu- adn in the United Kingdom can hardly be ovelqstimeted. it may besaid without exec oration that. next to the Queen h.erIe_ i`, Onnnde ilils the largest space on the sto in the Jubilee celebration. Besides` he gain. in this respect, there is the substantial gain to the Canadian, consumer, who will henceforth be relieved {mm the rnpeoity of the native combines through the lower rates on every kind of British manufactures. Aunehnu lnnmm in the disnnnenrnnoe Brigisu mnnumouums. Another feature is the disappearance of the Bed `Parlor as :5 power in politics. The infant-industry fellows who used to strut in the Russell House and walk up to the Finance Minister and tell him that; he innit do this, that and the other thing, as if they owned him body and breaches, now wont u subdued` and chop- tollen Mr. Mr. Fielding listens to them politely, but that is Mi. They no longer make the tariff to suit themselves and grind the people. . _ . , _ - , ._.. 9 -_.I-....I.l- saw -v. , -.-..\.-.V.._ The candid men in the Opposition nre prepared to admit not only that the Gov- ernment will live out this parliamentary term but that it stands as chance or reigning for tan or iiftoen yours. At the banquet the other night Sir Charles tried to cheer hil followers by telling them that ho was extremely hopeful or the future." Ho spoke with wonderful vigor but it sounded very much `like Jack Falata'a assurance to Shallow when the King had cant him "om "Do not you grieve at this," anid Falata. "I shall be sent for in private to him. fear not your advanomnent, I will be the man yet. that ahall make you great." To which Shallow, who had begun to doubt the old man's optimism, unawcred: ``I- can- not perceive how unleaa you hould give me vour double and stuff me out with .o_.uo " A nnnll mnnv o! hh0$ I "I0 CORDIB anu IWIIII llll! uuu wun It:-aw." A good many 0! at the. ed banquet nee Tapper`: robust imagina- tion to nee hope for the party in the fu- ture. Mr. Foster is booked to aucceedsir Charles. He has perhaps as little in common with the genius of Canadian ` Toryism as any man in the House. He is cold, narrow. essentially smell in his notions. There is no better speaker in Parliament, Sir Richard Cartwright ax- ceptod. but aomehow he leaves the Impression that he in not much good for anything but talking, that his judg- ment in poor. is knowledge of men meagre. and the it required he could tell: just as well on the other aide of the question, having no settled convictions of his own. `Even so. however, he will make a for better leader than Sir Maokenale Bowell was or than Sir I-libbert Tupper- would he. The Tupper inuence in dead. This was abundantly demonstrated at the recent Nova Scotia elections, where .. ..|........, .0 mm vnmn more would have Torlu. who ought; to Know. ugn-u m saying that the Tnppers are completely played out down there. 19. In A far on non Sir John Mncdon- tho recent Nova aconm uwcuuuu, wuvlv a change of 900 votes more would left the Tory potty without a single man In the Legislature. The Nova Bootln Torin. who ought to know. um-ac ln ....mm mm the '1`nnmrs completely played out down tnere. It is n far cry olcl to Mr. Foster. Some Tor-lee still think that Hugh John Maodonald in pre- ferable to the latter. Few believe in their henrtn that Mr. Foster in destined to lend them back to Fort Plentiful; He has no lieutenants worthy of the name from Ontario or Quebec. Montague has dropped out of sight, Hnggnrt seems to have lost interest in politics though. to give him his due. no is about the nbiest men of the lot. while Sir Adolphe and Mr. Bergeron no longer eount. Neverthe- less Mr. Footer in stronger in Ontario than he was aixmentha ago. Then he won in bad odor among the high and drv Tories tor orgnnixing the bolt against Bowell and the Remedial hill, but Int- terly the party has come to the conclu- Iion that the belt was to some extent jnetlilnble mu! Bowen : vanity and luck 0! gmp.'not_ to gy inennneity, being more than on nbli man like Mr. Foster Ihould have been asked to Iubmit to. The Provincial Campaign. For the next twelvemonth or no public interest will center in the Ontetio eleo~ tlom. Mr. Whitney seem: to be going to the country prinolpnlly on the uecldent polioiy lnnpeotor Chamberlain took out at the expense o( the province `lint it about the only policy the Opposition have. exoeptte nil vaguely engines the _Muoetlon lhportxnent. The or; that ... . .-, ._-__. n..._ o.. 1...... -........|.H would have some (one It the had looted the treasury or eeolen all her. it the Torlee whb inn Just been detected In Quebec did. But considering that ghew have managed Allure no well the Ir. Whitney he not a dhpln. would It not he ner Im- `n little magnum] a: well. ho E Ihezlzgn Otlu Itbtloulnh Inclrn. .. - _ __I.I. ifmimwmhrwzaa I?iil`Rhv' Ina 9.11 Mn. has out- tnm. snlvlu st 9.!` am. I Motown. Pnnnn accommodation and `s"'""'-3.-,:rix.`:.m....... T ` `lt_wou.l*oon.oc;o1.u- Tho Tory Londonhlp. - _.- . AI . n____ run ~ nnir % WHI(F.;'W,1iDi4TnSDAY. .fui4rm my 1397 ' 3: Jam .`,. ofit.`will uoehoof mail. The Annotation had a 3 lnnlncl of it. and. topnt it ml I}; `no plan in the . lumen hellt. It .11: In but on up-to thi hn,10o_suainnt ho`Lib- an! party. the Liberal party in now in a position to dccommotluh Ii: 1 do no& be-` have kl herrarlging umieoixonints or. a yhudy em, but it the infants whom r. Fialdiag has treuized with quite on much oomdamtion an th'd'y umm are min}: to c1l`mb mil of the audio and at- tompt by n roman expenditure to gia- vtroy Mr. nrdy. I don't no how Mr. Jan-'dy'u mortal at Ottawa can`:-strain. human nnttire balm win: it in, (mm retaliating on the prefacciy logical ground V than iudtlltrien which can afford to throw swap` is lot of money in pruvincinl poli islcl are. prim: halo,` eximrisiuu too much from the oonnumer and should have the amount of their pi-`oteotion reduced in the .... ma- mom-`nah, nA'1'[NEAU_ ...--..._--. ' Frank Fautm-lee. How do you manage to mid new; freak: |nd~eurloeities.' was the question , asked 0! the man.-sger of II travelling, show" that had pit/oiled its tent in u Loqdon suburb. Don't have to nd them-," win the igaoonlq response. They nd uh. The Iraqi: business in an rogniiriy esmhliahml M as any,0t.her, and has its` wholesale and retail llrms. traveling salesmen. brokers, _ price-lists, faotox-iee-" _ - li`aoco|-lain?" queried the reporter, aghast. Why oertainly-fnoto;lee--of course. The {rank business in divided into about three vzu-luties-iox-eign, domestic and takes. . uh. mm ant. ninnn the collector: trmiol Iluuu III: In Iuluu publlg lntorhn. In the first olnan the collector: all over the world` in search of ruritius,` but the vory boat freaks come from India` and the Malay Poninauln. In these coun- tries th-are me people who breed frouka. . They buy young child:-en and nnimnla, and deform them while theixn bones uro soft by all munner of menus. Then they- re constantly on the outlook for genuine naturhl freaks, and in those lands the hirth of u freak oeoura very frequently. The headquarters of this business is at Sincupore. H'I`ium thorn um unv number of men Sincnpore. Then there are any who devote tlmnnoivos to (me discovering and pinning oi` trunks of nil kinds and vm-iociea. and iaimre is mm-eiy a day does by that we do not mt-eive ll puuimge of photographs and illustrated oirouinn irom some fnmk nun-ohnnn or other. ; urn ........... nmm um `fnknd' frank men {mm some tnuuc mm-ununu ur Hunt-r. "Of emu-ea, there um `faked frank -u perfect host in thumsulves. It the pru- prlator of sxnnv llttln show needs nu ud- dmonnl llttI`uO!.I()n nnd does not have the money to him something good--{or, llko everythlmr else. fnsak.-1 have their price- hu can not something for little money that will serve his purpose. mm... Itnnl mmnhm lhn h-nnkn nlwnva that will ms purpuae. The real, genuine live freaks always command high prices, and travel all over the world in order to exhibit themselves. ' Most of thein have regular routes mapped out by their advance agents, Just like theatrical compauiua, and an they only appear at a piano at {ong intervals they never get shale, and somemuue make big~ ger hits on their second or third appear- ance than on their first." In spite of the many serious accidents that have happened from the ignition of gas in electric culverts.no really eective means of prevention has yet been hit upon. A remedy. which apparently has much merit. in proposed by Prof. Clowes. A standard hydrogen ame, ied from a small steel cylinder of compressed gas. is inelosed in a brass vessel, provided with a transparent front. This apparatus, which is portable, is mounted on a cam- era tripod and is observed by throwing a black cloth over the head. The air to be tested for inammable gas is pumped over the name by dropping the end of a exible tube into the culvert. and com- pressing a rubber ball supplied with suit- able valves. A constant stream of the air or tne cuvlert is thus caused to pass over the hydrogen (lame, and by the appear- ance and dimensions of ,,the flame-cap produced the presence of the gas is de- tected. and its percentage accurately measured. - The hydrogen name can be adjusted to two standard heights. and thus pe tage of gas from 2-iilths to 6 can he (i seovered and determined. How great a need exists for such a device as this is shown by the fact that in one day recently there were four explosions of manholes in the city of Brooklyn, and in each instance a manhole cover, weigh- ing from 400 to 700 pounds,` was blown out. In one ease. a cover weighing 600 pounds was thrown as high as the ele- vated road structure, against which it -..... hnnlnue :un,-u.--- --..-.-.. - ---. Tho wealthiest. of British nobles in the Duke of Westminster. As in the one of many other very rich man. his personal nppeamnoe does not suggest great wealth. A London correspondent given this do- aoriptlon of him: Tho Duke is a man at exceedingly quiet and homely appear ance. Them in nothing Shout him to suggest the blood oi` lineal nobiiit . He in mil and has is slight stoop, bug bears his 7! years very well. His hair in iron nu-nv uyhlin Mn niuu-out face is innocent Vlllll nnu I was broken. Amok : Pills for biliouanoonnd lick hud- noho. Dose unnll ; etfoct. nun. his 7! very wen. run um: All nun gray, while his clear-out of muatnohe or board. He umintnins the calm. immobile expression and inden- nble culture of voice belonging to his kind. but there in no trace oi hnuhti- nens or `suggestion of superiority. Hit clothes were of the simplest. A black cutaway tail coat. with no attempt at nrtiuinl shaping; a waistoont_ buttoned up very high. but allowing the display of as tow Iqunm inches of blue shirt; trousers completing the suit in color. a microscopic watch chain and ordinary bromi-to:-(1 boots. He wore no jeweled scnripin, studs or rings of any kind. Such was the personal appearance of the wealthiest noble oi the British peerago." __.._____.:.._._.__....__..-_.__. ....___... Igstitution th9 FRAUD ol u..%a.,. See you get Carter's. Insist and demand lemurs `rate no othx-. ET i;r'ITWJulIlngton nd M "':r:.::; " .::.-`.:::.:.:-~ EAST- Ln mini 3 . It-nuns fan Chi VI soziaua to do so. Bqwuuoutnhnjanl Tonlnn for (in: In Electric Culverts. - - .u , ._,, ,,_.r.-.__ ..-_I) __ lllchut III-lush Poor. Little uver P1113. on reuuncu Ill w UA".l'lN EA U. V` VVIIOII I no: Vvtvrv nuluvu. In spite of one`s teeth. is said to data back to the time of king John of ffnglamd. the violent and odious .~'uccossor of Richard "the Lion Henri, , who was lmtod by all classes of his sub- jects for his emotions and impositious. Early in his reign he trot n. \\`orlh_v.Few into his vlult-hos, and drew out one of his teeth daily. until, after :1 fortnight, of torture the Jew yieltletl to the l - rnnt's demands for money. Slll|ii:ll`fV the phrase. "lmuling over the l`()|i,\` refers to in period in the twelfth orthir- ten-nth century. when feudal |nronsex- tracted money fxom the Jews by sus- pendinnr them above slow fires till they puid ll rnnsom or died. '|`he political term, to rot." used for more in Eng- lund than in tliis countrv. originated til the time of George I. is enetnies re- vi`ed the ndheren`l'~1 of the 4-ourts as Hunover rots." Not. lontt otter acces- sion of the house of llunover to the English throne. some of the bro\vn~- that is. the German or t\'orwegia-nt- rate were brought over to England; and. being much stronger than the black or t-ouuuon rats, they in mu.n_v places quite extirpnted the latter. At. first the word-loth the noun andthe verb to mt"-wa.s levelled at the con- verts of the aovernmcntt of George 1; but gradually it. obtained a wider mean- ing. und came to denote nny sudden or meroenar change in politics. Tlhe ex- pression `to smell :1 mt" memntng to conceive ususpiciqn, is said to come from the uGermun phrase unmth wit- tern, to smell something objectionable. The German pretax "cu has passed into the English urticle n' and this and e perverted trunsltttion have given usthe phruse in questirn. In the phrase, "dowse the lim." (put out. the light), the word (o\\'.se ts from the dialect. verb doulr-~tluut. is, to do out, or put out: and glim is n mmlification of glimmer," on uncertain light. "To sleep like .\ top seetns ll very nbsurd )hruse. It is n corruption of the `*1-ench proverb. dormir comme uns tuupe," to sleep like a mole. Just the cheese is on oriental phruse. The word ehee.-5e. from cheex. Hindoast-.1ni-e. metms tliin';." In England. persons who fuwn upon the nristourncy are mil- ed tuft. hunters. in phrase which refers to the fact that M the universities of n..r.....| (`.n|-nhrithla. anal stu- _.%._..__.-____. nu; olucm 0FTnRAsEs.( WHERE WE GET MANY `SO-CALL ED SLANG TERMS. -..--?.- unv Have Qnner HIntnrIu-lxpr-euloul `lint Mount Oonlldenblo In the Du: fwhon They Were Coluod. I- ....`.A.. ..l' .-....`.. Inn.`I" :a unit] .() out; uuu "gtimmer," `rench pr( taupe, to: n 1 .nn..n.- I if ~:`~w~ ~ W .n:u':.~-. . Home Unu. Album . Haw York. Philadel- ph Jiulumon. auhlngton and tho