`M. LI! nu. Sill Introduced in Legislature to '. Make Reporting of Tuberculosis u Affected Guest Obligatory.-- Not Much Chalice of its I Going Through.` [ A one commission, _by writing essays, more `or'less vague, on his own notions of A political `economy, which -are yaguer sti1L This tariff commission -is,; after al-La civil servioej'ob. Why? not get Prof. Stephen. down to brass! tacks and have Prof. Adam examine! him in the regular way? `Let onel professor quiz the othe. ' That! t ought to work out ne._ And since; it is not` necessary that the essay .,.sho_u'ld have -anything to do with the duties in hand, let us hear froml Prof. Leaoock on Goody Eats I , Had at. College, or some other `Led-ies Home Journal topic. ; It is only fair to -add that nobody! g agrees with Prof. Shortt s idea of a "0 I-Iansard examination, neither the Grits Who. `appointed him, nor the , - ,Tories who did.n tL All the glory the Professor gets out of it are 5: +] \|()(|t\ -pm... ..._.__ --,1, TY` 1-: f\ Professor` mi? of. it u2;1';j these few rremsarks.--H.F.G in The Tnmn to Q Ma - ON T think that concrete can be used D only for building bridges, silos, walls and walks; because if you do, you will probably overlook all the places where you can use it now. _ ' LIED: onbr thi s % T.`L; Irving, of "North Georgetown, Quebec, _used concrete for 81 different purposes on his farm in 1911. ` . There are probably at least a dozen prot- ableuses for concrete on your farm at the present moment. Perhaps you haven't thought of Concrete, except for a new barn, or a ` '10, or some other bt'g"improvement for which you aren t quite ready yet. `a_t sA why you should read `What The Farmer Can Do With Concrete will` open year eyes to the hundreds of uses that other farmers have T found for this material. In plain language. and with the aid of many photographs. it explains Just what these uses are. and howthey can be applied to your farm. fin.-n---o- ._.. _-4 __|__ n__ -_ ,, ' t` _,..-_.. V... vLl\/ uu n.-cu. a.u1Uu.u'l~ 1 He . ,sources of the expenditures u_pm1_ rural schools are: V 3 Legislative grants .. ....$ 527,736 3 Municipal grants . . . .. . 1.490.443 j Raised by trustees; ._ .. .. . 1,213,815 4 `.Other sources . . . . . . . .. 332,579 ! The total ex'pe.nditure on high `schools and collegiate institutes was - `$1,636,166, of which $1,043,585 went ;: ffor salaries. The highest salarv paid `T {a high` school teacher ,wa.s $3,500; X3 {The average salary for principals f: was $13582, an increase of $63. The ` total expenditure on primary` and : secondary schools was: nearly $11; ! 000,000, toward which the Legisla-; .ture `contributed $981,568. I I t I OVER TWENTY-FIVE PER CENT. S ' The Province expezmds-`over 25 per [1 cent. of its total expenditures for '3 all purposes on education. This is! compared with 19 -per cent. in s l jrhe belief is expressed? that, under" L ex1stin-g conditions an adequate stup- . ply of teachers: will be forthcoming` in a. short: ti-me. The attendance of inupils in certain sections of tho I rovinoe is unsatisfactory and mlea-I fisures to enforce. the Truancy law care recommended. " OVER NINE M1m.1o.\'s Sma.\"r. g The amount. spent. upon Public `and Separate Schools in 1910 was $9,343,202, an increase of" about $1,- 200,000 over the previous year. The Legislature contributed about 9 pert cent of" the total amount. The; nnn -nnnn A: 4-1. A .. __ _ L The teachers with Normal School training are steadily replacing. those; `With third class certicates. The Normal Schools are Well attended, the number of pupils admitted in 1911 being 1,034. More certihcat-- ed teachers graduated last year than; in any previous year. i I THIRTEEN MODEL SCHOOLS. I There were thirteen -model schools} in 1911, with an average attendance-I ` of 35, a proof, says the report, thatl the superior advantages of the Nor- I maI Schools, with thehigher profes-| siional grades they ensure, and the] prospects, of better salaries, attract| students as it was hoped they `- ,,W0uld,. The demalld for Ontariofi `teachers in the West continues and I 3 [employment in other occupat-ions is!` yreadiiy fou-nd, owing to the national 1] iprosperity. . 1 I. The average salary of male te_ach- 'ers, throughout the Province has ad~ ! vanoed from $660 to $711, an in- "crease of $51. The average salary? of female teachers increased from; $449 to $483, an increase of $34. In`, [ urban schools the average salary for} men is $1,089, for women $565. In] ru- 1'aI schools male teachers receive an average salary of $508, and fe-' male teachers $431, "as compared with $484 and $399 respectively the ,previous year. a I 1 . - II` f The . report of the Minister of? .Ed`wca.tion for. 1911, introduced in! !the' Legislature on Friday, deals es- pecially with this supply of teachers, L agricultural training, and the cost} [of education. 3 Department Expects Tllat Scarcity l , of Teachers Will be 0vercome- E Examination: in .lune--Report of Minister of Education ' ; Presented to Legislature. CANADA CEMENT co, Ltd; "-v- v- no onvvvo UV Ulllluu-Illwo ' H-`iris not oiiiy .3. building material: it : a. hand toriai, something tha.Lyoufli grow to depend upo and more. as you learn its possibilities. so wine for thin book. You'll find It mm a catalogue, nor an argument for you to .:buy. our- ccment._ Evory one of Its 160 page: is devoted to telling you what farmers have done and can do with concrete. ` __-, -___ --v-v -gov; vs-an luv IUFFIICIJ lull {VIII La-I Ills Concrete" can not only be used" for all the purposes to `which wood has been applied. but also many others for `which wood would never be suitable. 7|. 1-. _-`An. -__I_. -, L_-lI I ms mm For: 'rm5: ASKING. . Your name on a. ppstafjor in a. letter. wli bring the book to you by return `mall. Or use the coupon. Address Ngtibnjxl ` 4 MONTREAL F. J. C1ns.\'m` 3; 30., Toledo, 0. VVQ the ulxdersignod have known `F. J. Cheney for the I-ast. 15 years, }and believe him pe-rfectly honorable in all busine.=s t.raJ1sactions and n- gancially able to carry out any ob1i~ ;gations made by his firm. ! ' Walding, Kirmzm & Marvin, ' VVho1esa1e Druggists, Toledo, 0 I Ha11~ s Catarrh Cure is taken in- itenmlly. acting directly upon the `blood and mucous surfaces of the ,system. Testimonials sent. free. [Price 75 gents per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. F Take Ha.II s Family Pills for con- istipation. I We offer Reward for that cannot tarrh Cure. I Minisber (approachingi baptismal font) :' The candidate for baptism will now be presented. Mother of intended candidate (in perturbed whisper to husband), There! I knew we had forgotten something. Archi- bald. Run home quick, and fetch Hm kn-hum uuxuu the baby I ithe month bemg the very opposite ,cl:as.s of weather to the beginning, jthe. following record of the `Toronto `W'eather Ofce will be interesting: I M.-archl March 31 [In 1899 . .. . . Fair Fair In 1900 . . .. .Stormy Fair In 1901 . . . . . . Fair Fair In 1902 . . . . Stormy Stormy In 1903 . .. . . . -Stormy Fair Tn 1on4 cu----- " - i The Minister of Education an- Inoimcves that during 1912 the de~ paptmental and matricul-atiosn ex- aminations will all be held in June so as to avoid a repetition of the `discnmfort experienced by candi- dates from the heat last July. The free public libraries in On- .tario`number 131 with an income of '$310,188; ` The number of readers iwas 143,764 and the books issued 32,783,439. Up to April, 1911. Mr. {Andrew Carnegie contributed $1,- ,`536,500 toward library buil ings in 'O;nta1-50. The hst pro essiovnal school for trainim: librarians in this ;Provinoe was held during 1911 and fwas successful. | ___, rl-1-I ' Brunswick, 23 -per cent. in Nova ,Scotia:, and 14 per cent. in Manito-V ha. In 1911 the Legislative grants to education in New Ontario were $190,000, and the policy of advanc- lin-g money, upon inspectors recom- gmendations, for erecting school` I buildings in the North was con- tinued. For this purpose $7,000 was fspcnt; V . 1906 1907 1908 1909 1910 I911 1 902 1 903 1904 1 905 qnn/. CAME IN LIKE LAMB. "it's "handy" ma- upon more FREE l.llI. 7 7" , ________t...------i HOW S THIS? One Hu.11dre:I Dollars any case of Catarrh be cured by Ha.~U s` Oa- PUBLIC LIBRARIES. Fair _ Fair Stormy Fair Fair Stormy .n. Lhll Storrny "D..:.. A subscription -`to The S_'i=* A .`;"?V`-*4-'.-14:: costs $51-00 per year to any- ddle`? V1 -.9,?. `Canada. or Great Britain.` I - ' V T we shat?!` It uses the most e:lx`pot'c:ra}Ph `tom ings, prvocurlng W P , ' .all over the world. t 11y ae1ected'.$f`. d" Its articles are care u A '1m"` , tho!(3. its editorial Puy I - = V -independent. MoNT35"" 1 ' Nat`"". D 19 '6' . ion" was STANDAR 0, me D"`" Week ;.'ew8P3'P 1 in -of Canada. It 5 aims. 1)r1x.;;:|= ' what The Debates Oioe occupies. narrow strip of space between the Conm`10n.~' and the Senate. Its Sit- uation is in a Way typical. "It is the bond of Pwrliamyelrt. I I 8.11S'aI1`d is kocps P~arIi.amaent together lozigm` than would be needed if the inei u.bcr.s were not busy making` copy for their constituents. If Hamsard did not exist as a. link between the spoken and the printed [Word `the ses? sions .\vo-uH be Slmorter because" no zncmbor rt I a.r11a111e11t IS keen to `cpeilii \\'n1'(i.s` filat Win die in a d`ty. Han-:m1 g'iv0.s him a. certain limit- ul, if uAl.~`r'1I1'-0, iimnortulity. U:u1.~':H':I .~` busiiiess being Words, it is nnrumlly very paorticu-lar wbout tiicm. 11, files`, 1)OiiS`h(?S, arranges. re- a1'1'un;.w-.x' and keeps the debate up to p:11`.'1:I<* all `along the- Amil.~1 Ilw litte1' dc-1' ]~:n ; )1" 1'5, typow1'it.e1s, '\\`i1t:1`4r line the i 3 I line. 1 of blue books, or- _] Wand ssuch, ( ii-:111S'lI'd men dictate ] L`2&..n.x. Mmxkmazfs Glycedonia. I H145 a marvellous effect on rough .sl One or two applica- 'i1m.< will remove the roughness. and by its occasional use the =3!-;ir1 L1cquir`tS the smoothness and .-,-.m:uc.~:s. of a baby s. Glycedonia is not sticky, and gloves may` be worn a few moments after usin If`, ,`,`-1\() yr- .....l A... "r\.~I! 1 . Mmmcs YOUR SKIN KE VELVET- The [Sk of lling their positions. 1 .s<,-rious one, for the eight Hang. ard men--six English and two` Ire11<.-h--zn'o the custodians of ,1-,he. h`111g11zIg;'e of Piurlialnnent. It -is they who turn poor Speeches into, good ones, and who make excellent; if formal English of the capegless. ._ Or. u11tutm'e'(1` \erna.cular, Ah ihey . lend dignity to the interrufptions, give literary style to the jokes, knov; what asides not to overhear and, ` by their skill in. pamphvase, 21/table.-I one huum-abile gentlernsam to call an- ' other :L liar in steen different. Ways ` ;without breaking Bourinot s~ rules. 1 fl`l_, T\,l,-L_, l'\lY| . it ! 1`icc 15c and 25CL"" I'J`Ve`l%'i`;l';-ti-V iful after shaving. my IT Fox . -""' "-'* '*"'cY\ ri in the Commons over -Han-` sard. Three of eight .w13- Atlases gwho take-C` L ._c,pccl:h(_.~.5 of P.ar1iaJ11~`3I1t 816. from the oor of the House," one of them to be editor of Hamsdrd, `two of them to be supemnnuatedv aftf t,hirt5'-.vc years service. - h MON KMAl:I_._ T. B EEC RCPT, Mnager_ F` DUI 0-13 ' Meecroft v C/rm./ues on outside ban/ca cashed lU"'f)8t I 9': O . Sn/v Notes Cached or Collected rm. moxtfavorable terms. . - /}u.-inr.-.s', zzr 1`r'(lo'O7lrLble rates. Collec-D firm (`if Notes and Accounts given .~'/uwittl alteration. . . . .. 1- -- /I/-uf/s Issued payable anywhere. Ill .- Each Copies` :1 Million Words` sion.--a Job to Thiive o.Oh,"foi'A'.i Speeches are Filiing.(?) I H__u;` V morons Sidetoweary Exist-.1. V ence of House of Com- ' mons Reporters, ` ' BANKERS. /'mn.~:a.ct a General Banlcing Olce Hours--10 to 4 ECENTLY theie was don!-=+ I you &. CO. Notes Disco zlttsel Barrie. aurry aAAau:\4w.|. u5I~\.7 ' J. VGIIJU order to Ii? wee}? h{1n.:i~I1 words iii} u Some ca" -- ?;"* ;**=;f 11;, =~;;~:,,a;;:.,*'aii*a::.:1gN`;*::s a or 1 ' - ` "` - - , 3 - - _ rs have to. blim "theomivellions of siilitviiis iphases the Hansard maI1- He knows hey nitives that have allowed` to leverythmg that is going `)3 inside` ms, accumwlmao They `Wm make. a `-the House or out. Lis-teni-11g is his 3317. ; grand re. Some of them were split I business . `but Observing is his ble, years ago and; are quite dry now "pleasure, which is only natural be.- No orator is so gm, no grmmmm ;cause he was probably a newspaper so watchful, but some day or other i man before he was Hanstard. Tom he splits an innitive. He may not 5 Owen k 5' everything 'bt every do it omelfly 01. wamonly, but. he lmemsbelr in _O_t*ta.w-a,_ even how each svggsh it same, mg Hm at 1:;:Sh*;: k:i8:1ed::";,um: sa - -as it u eit er rivet- . ` ' . ` ' ' mg. or so1,de,.ing._ I om_timeS_yii,f the H: ishasfat and rosy as he was gprchtig Se younghwd gggemhev 32;a::w:f,:,$`:;; ;eEf;`:g%"' n .r1n- e . _rtsrto et eran - et em a - e * ' knitgby wzt thog doctors` oan rotl , Sometimes` these Hanserd men ; intention. But if the split innitive get fat 50135 durillg 1`00%S'- -T0196 I is not attended to until -the revised which take them" to EWOPG Where `I 1`d_ Hanszard comes-' out :a week. later, they get 5106'-11SIf0med T0 P1`iVy 001111` i he. the soldering and riveting processes cuss P5`-We Tribllnalss C1`0W119d-A 38- are used` It is the experiem,e~ of Heads, and such. Travel nishes no the }IanSaPd Staff that -it is general. what Parliament began and travel '90 ly an adverb which causes a. split is *1 great ed11C'-3t91'- The Hnard iy. in,nitiVe_ Your trained Hmmardiman becomes a highly reliable ex- I9 [1 -` man soon learns how to detect a | Pen human 11`~9~hin9 I3e1 f`*0t' a11d|( s'pl`i?t `innitive ;a.nd how, taking the ['1mP91't'1`b&bIe- ' `F ls, foreign substance d-elieatelvy between! THOUGH Tm; HE_,-E5-S FALL_ it his thumb -and! foreiigei-, to squirt! .. , 1 9, it out like a grape 1-mm its Skin. - _ us-to how nnpc.rtui'bable let this 1'4 to The two S_mperannu_ated Hansardi incident show. It was a blazing hot 0 6' me Dusgan and `Abbott as also ? i`ii'o1?itE~il.n`i. `te1iTiasHt`ii`S:VS iii 51' 1" Horton, .pi-oinoted editor, have menl , ' - P i, e a Sm [D 3 . . . man on the oox. Suddenly there l( . domg that `Sort of ung ever Smcelivas a Oreat cl-itter iii the lass ceil-l -9 Hansard started and they do it 11owl`- , i 7 " -" - g- - _ __ - . _ ..mg who.-e function IS to give light o- - as -cheerfully and iionchalantl__v as aim the Owen chamber and -coolness : " doctor removes'_ the appendix from a_ in .Sm,a_.:wr' A Image aniteware I 5` tV\i'o-I113di-erlaglgllgr e:1)atin~t..'b` All the lpa, f0]l.o\;;ed by two grtompound same 19:0 0 Em` '51 Vel1_ " are a=chunks of ice, and a quantity of! great nuisan-cc. icy ta \-0 up too S1,mttm,(_d 2.1335 came thmugh a sky_i m``-fl` S1 a`~`~ iliglit. The ice man stuck half way 1" ll `V11-`T G11 TS ARE NEEDEW like V an incomplete angel. Come 1%] Outside his special gifts of j1ldg' i1-1u1 Said big. Duncail Fmse" Of ) ment,_ knowledge, literary skill, the ' ( {_3 3`b0}`- *510.'1.`7 the 109 man d'1'9W !B physical endurance. He must have 5h`,'W,e"ed `,l'Wn> `5"m'n`g M g+`=9 __f| . a constitution like` a 'ho1s,._, or a Mississqiioihllioiit the head`. Parl`1a-kg: gmm1'_ Opel?` tenor. I H16 hours are meait was iul of hood and wounds ca long and u.regu1a`,._ He comes, on an ' excitement, bI..t Campbell kept [duty three Orclock of an afternoon right -on shorthand`i`ng.. He took and goes` off anywhere botwcon down the exclamations. But. after- lal eleven and two in the mm. n1,ng.o He, i wards in llansard be boiled it down lth Works on an average vedays in the g to three lines noiipareil Whi-ch sai.d*: week, seven hours a day, for ve'I' At Jhls S.l g' the ipwker V3.3 1` , months in the year. He, has a ten terriipted by a graiiitesvare pail minutes; takein each hour tWenty;tii'_ei1ty_ pounds `of ice falling`. through yo minutes to transc1,i.be,s and half angthe _ceil1ng. Half a man made a [to `mm. wrest. Just . think for aIl I10t10T1 to come through also, butusu moment What, it means! Eight the motion was withdrawn. scribes to take down, all that two ' ` A DWINDLING SPECIES. hundred and twenty` Ph:ar-`begA par-_ _ (don, members of Parliament--can1I-]angard is. a Wonderful body of, - say inhalf a year! In the course of men and now that the time comes I dsay S Wmk` 3" Hmward` man notes`, to replace three of them Parliament transc.ribes', _c0I'reC1B; 11191911335, and `is muolr exercised.; Good shorthand accurately renders over two thou. V men, with a knowledge of affairs and sand words. `A millwn Words In a ' the Canadian c`ons'ti_tution `and ve monthsi session; the raw mater- liamentm-y procedq ial of ve hundred novels! No and` English history and geography" author, not e'ven"the Audlt01"Ge11' and ' back-of-the-dictionary foreign ` eral is so voluminous. And `these phrasesr--all of which qualicati nsl o are other men s Words, mind` V011. the Gazette advertisements demands not having in them the charm and: --are scarce as hen s teeth. The delight of creative work. When you `modern newspaper system doesn t read in the Boookinmi some article breed them. Shorthand interferes about a writer_ of -`best sellers ty1I_18` with promotion. It puts a man on himself -to the leg` of his table in work_.. ;If a `reporter knows- .._.1-_ L- .1- cm--- `I.--...1-J --`--~`~ -'- ' I Wail! l'ol'lo llllll] ` `through nolonlot I 0. 20 PM. and Tourist snupm Colonist Cars % % % No charge or berths gfnrough -Tl_'a i Toltojnto to i Winnipeg yd Westjk `A;mfy`c;P.r; Amra. gs ff-segdgsst C , **f 'MANl'[0 Alum sasxn cuewnn Mspecliraxns W_l|l [cave Torog__ Iisimf-Lifl ~wuu VJ. uutuu. were spuni !;'earS" and are quite now.1 opator isso great, nogranmwmian} watchful, other] an noti cruelly but splits -it A just. the, same, and vHan-I I s-avd- has to x. it up, either by Qo\.1r\n.n4~:v\n'.m.- :13 J-L` ,:-~, --v uvuuu, w, 1l 0dteJ A sentences 'th.at;'.ended -lamely in ad ; preposition, perhaps doruble . the num-. her for plural verbs mismatedi with s -singular -nouns. ' or 1 the other way 7 about, and; double that number ' again for subjects: * and predicates t that got hopeless'ly.~lost in the shuf- , e. Then. there are -all the g s _ that George Foster has dropped since` 1 the present .Pa:rli1aanent omened and 1 one packing case hasbeen set aside} > for Jam Aikens `mixed `metaphors! . If the member for Brand-ta`u speaks! often enough one Parliament ought` to ll it. ~ ` THE STOCK of SPLIT IN`!-`INITIVES. i Brut worst of all are the split in-! -nitives! The Debaters Oice is fairly crammed.` with them; No cor- ner or` eranny but spills them. out in hundreds if you poke `your nger -in. 1 Some day other Hansard will .' have to burn the millions split in- l1 nitives that have been allowed ` accumulate. will make t grand of were split fl 5,931.3 "a-E0 a.nrl- urn 1111:!-43. :1- ------ " 1 4 1 Low, cog} mums @119 taulw swasbb i fhat. .SETTl.ERS 3 TRAlNS[ '9?.?}*!:.P9'.P!| I Begin}? ilns leaving 1'oronf_I " T1113` P301-w.ssoa s BRIGHT IDEA. ;no_iav waiting` for promotion -from fcomtmittee work to the regular Han- ` nnuul.` cling `st`L;f1uTr', ;~.vjf_i<`:_;fc1i_i;8"._" ~+:;i1:e' ". fir Mn9rA;%%IA.A;%eve%;Z? hem: ;; .::s5`sa:y"-<,)nf:)'1;?e ".I3`t1IIE`1'1wi'1`g`"'fau`-Fa`: ..ject`s-: The Follies. of Fashion,. ` .__Soouta A ,;_c_c ` Sn0w`. L.-1._.._.'*_`- 99 : u`D:I.`.'..`_`1.'~._... rm..- 1:1:__'L1 __-~----. \/I-sJ.Al.1JlJ\.'-LL nab one 11ans:ara' en I man the oor. Suddenly there! 09' was great the glass ceil-' ".,li11g' "function is ,to give 3 I t.o green and coolness la.` vsu-mmer. A .Iar`.ge granitneware 19 ` pail, followed by ten-pound! of! )0 `shattered glass. sky-i `light. The way; :,ai_n, big` Duncan of; ie l G uysboro. Slowly ice drew! in l himsel.f back. More broken glass ,9 showered down, ctlttfng Mleggvs _of a Mississquoi about the Parlia- 4 r u I .e ment was full blood ,1 and excitement, but 11' shorf;lIanrling,. ,1 the exclamations. .But. .l: '0, wards in Ha.n.sa1'd be -boiled it '1 0 5 to three lines nonp-areil s-aidtl ..lA+ +.k.'g o+.;...,. 4.1.... -.--Jw ` ~ Vdxzite %}@k.*}u1nTf*$-*?% Professor . { Short-t. s xgmination idea, is his` plan. to have. theucandidute an A-`-nan. nun Ann A: `L9; ..--.`. uuuu vuutv vuvuuu. ul: nu _a'tion. Your buttoned-up college pro- fessor always ' runs to exa.minations.' Now, a newspaper man, if he is any good, is a postgraduate. of the uni- ve1_'8ity_ of the world-, and much good it would do to have a. college pro- fessor -examine him. It would: be like the less examining the greater. Which-, as our OM friend Euclid A;iustly_ Tobgerves, . is absurd ; I iI rof;sbr Adam. Shortfsr idea is that there slhp3l_{i_ be an examin _:;.-.. `7-__-_ - ` __...-.vvvo \.-. CA) G W \.II-I-\l`."JlI-.1. Uni 1 comes` Po them `I18 Good . knowledge and `the `and par- procedure and `Canadian and geography and qualications .advertisements modern newspaper them. jhack work. `If Ishorthand he keeps it~to himself. All he wants to use it for is to catch ashes, to fix` idioms that cannot be ,remembered, to get happy sentences "down put with not a word` changed or out of place, to _I;e_I.pture dia1ec-.-- ` :11 wanna . --1:--- vs \.(u.u U1. yxwuc, LU UHnpTrul'e in short the, way Kipling uses his .`s'hort.hand- and Dickensvused his. [ luv vL1L'LT3 JIHJUB uUlI.`pul'C11 `VIUCII S'al(l`: _At stage speaker was in- ltG.I'I'l1.I)t1Bd :3. graxiiteware _tw_enty pounds ice through] `the c=e.ilin.g. motion to through also, but! motion Withdrawn, T * DWINDLING All of which goes to shovg that, Hnnunw?` {ca .-.. .........1-._.E_-1 1 _l4u.5_ .uU_l; D1100 .1lKe a: J11-aX_ln1 gun, or {Tom _Wa.1la.ce be owing slowly like gthe lazy Scheldt or wandering P0, or IVVebster,` of ` Brockville, be stuingl la srrxnnnh ac.` -Full N5.` ..11...:._.. -71 1 --v um-v_ '\J.L J. al. u.dl.l..lC"LlU *'D}1SS% De ; 3 [fore him and" interests him. The` lgwriting is Asu Dc0n_scious.- Low speed M` or high, one" hundred words or two ;}hwndred, the hand follows almost by instinct-. - Billy Maclea-n may be r- 'Iing'_ hot shot /like :1 Maxim ITnm 7a'I]nm-. kn a.,....:.-.. -1-__1__ 1-1 v - y wvvvs ,_ 1.1.1.. JJL \JU'I\V 11169 -U6 lasrpeech as-@_fu11 of allusions as heaven: is full of pat-ines of bright gold, or as an accident. insurance policy is full of qualifying clauses ---1'+ -rnnlzou van ,1:n:....--.,_. 1\*rAn.:--_A E f01:e `of.them`g'row'fat on It. The words- of statesmen are very lling---as ll - ing as7the east wind. Besides the words `go `in at one `ear, and go out at `the other. `merely leaving their shadows on the reporter s note book. I 'Shorthand -becomes second nature to `him. He can Write and 1100]: around. I The life, of Parliament 1-nassa M136- lfnm In .-n .....'.Jv :...L .... LA d ,0? Ifllght Imagine that the drip,` V r1-P. flgnpg of V dr declamation, 93 W115t0n Churchlll calls it, would-' [wear a Hansard man to the lggne. frnhn-n1w .~n........L :1. 1-, 7._..,,,, _..-.v sou-L oxuvtsv U1 methgglncu, -ever}1`~aady, never tiring faj to the`.`last. Is it any w.9nder` that to shake, or-their ear or` their eye `grows -dull? V " , I over hismsgu5o:il;g:anm?11mda w3I$ i:_s Your Hansrd man is the real tnartyr. "the real slave of the pencil, ever readv_ `nnvnr Hy-:7... ..:4.'l...._-1 L- and ITEM: vof IT. am aunapuo J.4I.UVV, VILLI. lb DLLFIL Uub'." Businwss Man (.Wea.1-ily) :' Great success. He -s teaching me now. } _THE USUAL RESULT. i l Fnend: f`You book. your son into [your $tabl.1sbment so1_ne months ago `to teach hlm the busmess, I under- `stand. How. rd1d if turg gutg : f1)__-_'..-, , 1 I The penalty for neglect or refus- under this Act shall be not less l'thanv $5 and not more than $20. ; E The Secretary of the Provincial` {Board shall mail to the patient in-i 'structions as to the care and preven- tion of the disease and the Local; `Board of Health shall supervise the`; HQCD - ! The Medical Health Ofoer shal-1 ;'ente.r each case with particulars and make a report of all cases to the !Boa.rd of Health. Dr` 9 ! Any bateriologist of the Board of I-Ie.a.1th shall make an examin- ation of sputum when so requested by physician or medical health of- icer. ' The superintendent in charge of hospita.l, dispensary, prison.-, asy1um, reformatory, home, house of refuge! _or hotel shall do_ the same when he} .loarns that a person residing on the! `premises is suffering from tubercu-` p losis. ' T. The meaisvure seeks to enforce the [following clauses: i ` A. medical practitioner shall give, notice to the Medical Health lOice.r when he is aware of any {patient having tuberculosis. [(7111 _ ..__ V----.auusu;v(; Ila-l:l.U11'I.B Ullluer roof on -`pain of a fine, Dr. McQueen, | Liberal member for ` North Went i ',worth, introduced a bill in the Leg.-` islature last week. [ I With the object of making the` keeper of a hotel `or any other insti- tution responsible for the of all eonsumtive patients under his ran`? an .-m:n'n ml.` .. Li..- T\-- 1' I` I