Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 13 Feb 1913, p. 2

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i I Inca to hoe with this problem: If it is to he Indian. shall it be pier dominantly Moslem or predomin- ntttty Hindu? Por there are many my!" in India, and a character» lstic trehiteeture would fuse their ulient funnel, _ Great Britain, it seems, is OOD- fronted by a perplexing arehitee- tural problem in building the new capitol " Delhi. II the visible Iymbol of the ompire's majesty and might to be a monument of Indian art or u it to be mainly wean-m in type? Those who on- lwer that it should conform to the Indian type hucl themselves still The Paris journals are hm of speculations as to the reason for this nnwholesome stats of mind in fades. But, as a matter of fact, it does not seem confined 'to juries, tor we read that the murder trial now rivals the opera and the thea- ter in Paris as a place of popular amusement. Everybody goes, to murder trials and talks about them afterward They are the vogue; real actou and real thrills. The u-oounts of these recent trials will Icarccly surprise readers of Ro. main Rolland, who gives us in Jean- Christophe a picture of just such a society as they call up in the mind, a society sated with fletion and weary of plays. hungry for sensations, Kr the raw meat of the emotions, and seeking its pleasure in the first-hand impressions of murder trials. _ The London Thai-3' devotes a "L itlvr” to the whim. treating it viii; VH1 m)ternnitv. In the same " sul. . 5 The '1'? 'nrfr' Herbert Baker, a distinguished 34 Mil l fricnn archi, toot. points out that the 1liiheulty u to t'uul in the Indian type those "constructive and [Qumétricul audition [nonempty to embody the idea of luv and ordese "ieh, have Donn [induced out of chaos by the Britirh administration" The Hin- du genius expressed itselrin Inv- hh ornamentation, nehhseing a unique splertdor, but failing to give tho impression of dogsignl As for the M-lsr, the; left lor models tombs. tortresses, and mosques; they reared magnificent gateways and intricate man" at Pavilions and lowers. bet. behind massive walls lions Gn this architecture NOTES AND COMMENTS It was hpondblo newt-Mayo to convict a woman of murder in the counts of Paria,,.Pranco, where pate: Mme Lamberjnck had divorc- Ill he: hmmd.ll_ld when invent to their home to get his effects she dun him three times in the back. Inuit!“ testiAed ttsit she was perfectly reapunsible, but she de- nied that she had intended to kill her husband and a jury acquitted her. Sinai!" cues are of recent. and lowers. set behmd mam-we walls Bom ban this architecture express the upgnngssaggg Iolidity of the British rule? Better, he thinks. the classic style of Jones “d. Wren fused with t.ltr? nobler Mums of Indian "chicane. tyt,t.ur. That It Is lurtilu tho, an- tar in 13min. The inc-NM 505)“!va of the poo- ple u! Great Britain has bran fre- quent}: nod *hvombly commented on, and well‘kumur and“ workers Aaite that mid-"wt- was again furth- r-nmiug during the N‘PPM Ndidmza to Shuw that man or» ' inelirred ' lormerly Vr Mttutoeker yheir hard earned Huivuu in a i'vw days‘ unrmbraimd r\.'r.~!&a*~2 "tutnhen- no“. whigkf umJLto be the most mum-61m. has become so dis- themotimskrtheerimetupa- lion. Morbid oentimenta1Um in rife. A Int-Skin; insane. 1.51.11;- nee-t acquit“? “of m b.1350" jack. tu,s4teqeadi-toro.tthe Fr-o-Ar-kat, Ammo»!!- umvutlrainvd t \,'r~\‘~ iivunken- i new. which mad tl, he the most o.lut of viees, har Lvrome Bo dis cr-«lyuble u to rule a man out o': Society. swwup and hard; drinking used to be considered qni'r oompatible, Walpole made I. his sondrink mow port, tfutri Md.idj/ on the which} may, si.ifdiiiiti1 tn be ~01)” pm ugh love!” hia Tii1vi llidv v, tder th- mate?!“ 'he-bit/vi) it. uf the ym' ' haw . for»! . that it he ':'t'eeAiiii,i,'i'itt'rSta8)i' his cam! would qui , . F:.idatfsn; (ruining to find tll IflEtNnii!e, of vierr.roee:toArhettroetriitii, in not. tonoeiaVobihutue.w'irat lst my ' Arrtemgclitigtaior “than cheap- ltr, ~513de Malcolm? is any 0 iewt of 9Cqb, . . , "I iosoti "Mlltat ahtiltati The site of the new capitol is un- WPFW. It is smupynded tri, will of the mantrtrpiitm " Mos- Urn architecture. The irpikrrtunity is pquaI to the problem, and nume- thitelike gfniust‘wi" be required to devise a new type Lime]: “all be a ht symbol of empire. "an. art. "petrdiqtHhriieiNd'whsek ll! impusiv-mrt that in this im- pun“: Mdhn‘vntion is raw am "an ‘Iupirndg. LESS DIN Mib'.?iNEs'ti. N 1’) - wi-vllll", I: II.“ T L 1he hutur.wlsrk, 2.: my ')t,'ttttei--it 'cti"2tiu"d later 2 stttierior tsrtimsn trla.si, a m .8rart- 3 Wins, lit-Mt revue}; oLsiiWF, ofaaleohot is T,',' P'o'ytt!tlfl' ttlf. Mum): Gerizim wa“~ tWal): mun , west of 11itc?Aa'.'ii,s, m the territorr) t ' _ . in a! " '.'iiiiit'i.ire-li,tirir-t8 teiitairn. some distance". iiGiuaiii'irTAG'iiJ,Ti,iE?ii,ire! ’erusa'nem. One meaning' 3‘1me that in an m- i, 'ofihisfirrhie is "saddle" ur "sho'ul- "mire” Cmmaanhe name "Ctrrtann". ik if; iderhtd from} lot meaning to how Mich! idnwn. ty) 'sires.' "lcarhuurs." It Tithe} 'ttttscat 1rst 1atrplied.-ordv, to thir " _"i,',ic rf' ?.'ff/UP" of Palestine: Inthrn' 'd [ouch 1eirjy,uyytilp lo the Jordan HM»: _ 1iii? ‘91.}11 " Cinh- 'y U.‘ ,tpGl . “a , to ie, wKoTe" country, ineluding the ’L - 1',tsriiiiig.upun" districts u well as the -if 11ri.c:Tinird _ I. . " In thee shall all the families of the earth be blessede promise re- peated to Abram in Gen. 18. 18, and again to Jacob, Gen. 28. M. The simplest interpretation is that all nations shell be blessed through the rovelstion given to Israel, a pmmise ftallod in the later ex- ltension of the religious ideals of lAbrum and his descendants to the *Gentilee. The Hebrew, however, permits of smother rendering and [interpretation, according to which the sense of the verb translated “'be blessed” becomes reflexive, l"hless themselves.” The rendering lwould then become "All families of ‘tluf varth shall bless, themselves by 'IhI-e.” that is. in blessing them- lselx'es they will use thy name as a ;type of supreme blessedness and iwish for themselves the blessings rv(-ugnized to be the special pos- session of thy deraeendants. Ac, (muting to the first interpretation, l-r:u-l is to hummer the organ or lchannel through which grout bless- ’ings are to he communicated ulti- mately to the- world; acmrding to the second. the great blessings which Jehmah will bestow upon lsmel will attract the nttentiun of other nations, and awaken in them a Ionizing to participate in those gblc-ssings In either case the pro- mise remains is the wider sense of Gi term a Messianic. promise. der. ' aritrr'titeoiieeie urthe city may thrretVir" 1gmtl' bl" Iteetruerived. jdryqr irirl.osa.tAioss on the chlikG wait- hetween the two mountains. ’Anuthrnj u: cation ir, that aha e " V“ s"w " heck. on. the non of Tumor, the living, Hauanhe name both of a city and of a district in the northwest- ern part of Mesopotamia on a tri- butary of the Euphrates. A lung range of mounds still marks the site of the ancient city. On the slope of one of these mounds there. is a modern village of smnll huts, and near by the ruins of a very nm'ient castle or fortress. The city of Hamil is mentioned in some of th" Assyrian inscriptions recent- ly brought to light. On one. of those Ssargon," king of Assyrin. boasts that "he spread out his sha- dow over the city of Haran, and an a soldier of Ann and Dawn wrote its laws." Sennacherih also men- tions Haran as having been dew strayed by his predecessors. The city of Haran 'ntill flourished under the Romans and its inhabitants were nmung the last to give up the Chaldaean language and the wor- ship of (‘lmldaean deities. b. Ali their subs.tance-ionsOt- ing principally of cattle, sheep, and horses; clothing, silver. and gold; an~l h: usehuld possessions. The s mls that they had tttttterr-- Including children, servants and slamu. A litrlc later Abram is said to have had 3U: trained servants (Gen? ft." rt). ‘Ii has. therefore,; quite a mmpariy oi-tribe which mi, gratnd westward under the ieafer: MAM. w --w.e A.-." . 1 3. I will bless them that bless thee-Thus indirectly will Abram become a. source ol bleaaedneu to others, who will be blessed with prosperity or visited with misfor- tune according aa they are friendly or unfriendly w him. 4. Lot- Son of Haran and nephew of Abram. The story of his life win be found in this and the two succeeding chapters of Geneqis. In Be thou a btessing--Accordingto the Hebrew idiom, the impersona- tion of blessing. mom. blessed (com- pare Psa. 21. B; Isa. 19. 24; Zach. 8. 13). clu-rncter, a strong contrast to Abram in that he was selfish, weak, and worldly though relatively-, in comparison with his heathen neigh- bors. he was still acoounted “righte- ous," his personal oharair being 'sufficiently free from n-proach to render him in the sight of God worthy of special deliverance. He stands in the Bible narrative as a type of men who think too exclu, sively uf worldly advantage and slhly of W4 present cafe Verse 2. Now Jehovah said unto Abram-Then uqula give the se- quel of the lad. "ttmis of the pre- ‘oeding chapter, the country which Abram in commanded to leave be- ing not Ur, but Baran. Just how Gud Ipoke to Abram we are not told. Hia voice in to be thought of, however, not as something exter- nal, but rather as heard within Abram’a inmost aoul. Get thee out of-Depart from. Thy country . . . thy kindred - Abram was to leave both hia home and his relatives. Thu command to - his family ties and wander forth into an unknown land was no small demand or test of faith. 2. The promise, however, in us great as the requirement In this unknown land to which he is com- manded to 3:1 Aber is to beetome a great nation Ind an example and a blessing to many nations. Lesso- TIT.-), all of Abram, - in. 12.714. Golden text, Gen. 12. 2. "here in nu Midi-nee that he “its vverworked mentally or physi- cally.” adds Dr. Taylor. He cites the case of a. prisoner who, wh. tl (lung-rd with sleeping in the r. axluay, wrsnt to sleep in tho doth: bells of a. housemaid who went to eleep in the m-t of aJrnounc- mg " vitiirrr. and while carrying a tray with t'ti',tA full of coffee; and mentions a woman "who was a nurse. till, in one of her sleeping pamxyrvms, she dropped the baby on the fl 'ur and nearly killed it." Next year the Duchess hopes to join the ranks of the when women who hare been for a number of years an active and conspicuous element in the Ladies' Kennel Club. Dr. Taylor is sympathetic txr- wards those with whom sleep is an offrwtiou. and he thinks that the fat buy may possibly have suffered from .wme mysterious disease. Toward the Bottth---Literssllr,the Nasal), the name given to the southern tract of Judah, a restrict- od district lying between the hill country about Hebron and the wil. derneas of the Sinaitic peninsula. able, for a few days ago a. valuable animal which was being consigned to her from Ireland got suffocated on the journey, and as the con- signment was at owner's risk the loss will mean something in the neighborhood of $5,000. Excessive Sonutolenee Is So Ex- plained By tt Doctor. ' An attempt to explain the exam» 'ilve. somnulvnce of l’irkwick's fat In.) is llid/(lt' by Dr. From-rick Tay- Iur. F.it.C'.P., in an interesting "rtielts un sleepinoss in -Practi- limmr." “Thm‘r an-.;L‘Hu un recur-d ul‘wr (115m .wf a worm-“hut different kind," ”ya Dr. Taylur, “in whioh tho individual sleeps continuously for hours, days and months; some 1rf these we described a tux-roo- !eptsy, and thvy mm to precentul- Nance“ with f’ _ "', Pa'chnnz hrs'- P,', ti. -;l We” munth tvitlr ' u warruptiun; on anothelj occa- sion Miran months. Mother man. in right years. spun: more than fuur and a half of them in sleep. The' Tfnul nttack hated fUteen "isou" F '9rotrir-rs'-Wtr reference ep- tht fbefjo e' .encred tree, the a}: fPytt'1: coming from "Bora,' the word used regularly of the authoritative direction given by the priests; The word transleb ed "oik" is rendered in "the mar- sin of the Revised Version Tere- binth. Tho tree, which in one re- eembling the oak, in still common in Palestine, es in also the oak pro- per. Following the example of her brother, Wm. K. Vanderbilt, the Duchess of Marlborough is building up a. reputation' as an enthusiastic dog fancier. 'Nas,-coffee, and even minnow are mentkmod as remediaq which will keep poople awakn when tutu-lied hr s.'tere.ierus. D". Ta,yl1w dates that he hasmmplnvad with FuecPM In' s' ber.'.' 1095 that he haul? Ln as beaten oottanite--ieltsnder. ' 8. Beth-el-The unoient Luz, iris, timately connected with the his- tory of the patriarch. To be iden- tified with the modern Beitin, about twelve miles north of Jerusalem. Ai-The name? mum “but.” The location of Moreh wu a little more than two miles ooutheut of Beth-el, on the road between the lattorohsee and the Jordan vnlley. Apparently a city of importance at the time of the Conquest of Pele-- tine by the Hebrewn (compete Joshua t). 9. Journeyed-By any stages, In is customary in Palestine. The word in the original means liters]- ly to pluck up, that is, to move the tent or ctottp. At one time the Duchess ignored the dog craze and it was a. matter of common talk that she was prac- tically the only Woman in the “smart set" circle who did not pos- sess a dog of some class among her household pets: Nor. she appears to be fallix-ng into line wiih her friends and is paying fancy prices fur bulldog breeds and water span- ids. rm mth Her experiences have not been up to tho present entirely favor- D l'ClIPISS AS DOG-FANCIE]! "'Areu a nun ‘1 {an Words.” "That ought, to make him popu- SLEEPING A DISEASE. Duchess of 1farlirorotigh. ha CtiiAdi.kg', Kaus It (Might. ii, com»? . M. 18, 19). n, howovot, WM rule W out travellers why might give an unfavorable opinion of the Russian regime. A Buss!“ Muckraker. ' A law weeks ago there was heard in certain Russian newspapers the fsret cry from. Bokharu, and it wu an exceeding bitter cry. A Russian traveller had been through the oountry, and on his return he sought to rouse his fellow-country- men to the cruelties practised there. Since a very small perce'n- tage of the Ruaaian people read 'P.wN."H""3: and since the Celttkrr- 'hip " still strict, we my safely oonclude that people in Canada. and In other parts of the world will be talking about the situation in Bok- hara before the people of Russia are trous'ed. In either event talk- ing is not likely to do much good. However, in view of the fact that the atrocious cmelties which the Russian traveller, Alexander Petr koff, discovered were not. in the majority of cares, practised by Rus- sian officials, but by native nut-hori- ties, thew is some pturHwct that lhlmia, having little to gain by their 'perprtmtion, will forbid them, and will thus seek to show herself the friend to her charges, the Bokbnriuna. _ Toriure and Exeeution. Mr. Pctkoff happened to be in a. hotel one night wtuVhe was awtvk- ened by hurt-mus from the adjoining room. He 'uuml out that the You"! was being llW‘il 'tts a’ local court of juctice. lily 1.51.11”; the sentry he SELlll‘l‘il iidtifitiitnce while the trial w'ns gointoti. The triareorv,isted of torturing in poor wretc' uncured of pettv theft. One by one his fin- tterr wereivisted until they brokc. As the eighthbono was broken he confessed. “Next morning as My. Pctkoff was driving away he passed the market place. and saw there the victim of the previous night. He writs being executed. He was bound. bid refusing the aaurationws of the executioner to look up, thc ttttrn kept his face down, and the swnrthmau could not for (some time strike the fatal blow. Before he did so the man's face was slnshed out of recognition. Finally the ex- ondiuner made a faint. .The man ducked his head, and when he look rd up the descending sword caught him full in the throat and severed his head. Tortured for Every Otrenee. Horrified at the sin-tattle. Mr. Petkoff decided to investigate the administration of justice in Huh“ hora. and what he diswvured sub- sequently formed the substance of his (liMloiures in the Russian piers. unmet! mzerainty 'ovor 30le it was tuidermtood MWrevouldBe some compounding advantages 4.0 the population, which is compound for the most part of Numb-no. Thoy were to be civilised, if not in.. deed won over to the sort of Ohrir. tianity that panel no religion in Rush. It mud. be add that in the forty years of the Ruuiw camper tion there have been few complaints from Bokhares. Whatever has Inp- poned there appears to have suited the people, or rtsther that portion of the population that otherwise would have attracted attention by protest. On tho part of outsiders there has been no mm, for_the up, like"! den tttnd-tlogged. and hutWutrftor tho third time. Wumen guiltrod 'rnfidelity wre'k‘illml. A fun-mite method iw R, tie than in a sack and throw them off on 'tn-foot parapet. Sometimes a .uithlem, husband u killed. but only if his wife happen: to be tho. daughter of wmg intrtstyr.tul citizen. Jt hosti- wa-bcd that every s/Gr-nitro" persons are tV,rturrrin lawns; mama 700 Hié udder fort-int. tn View of the fact that the total population dues trot "siNid 1.500.000. it would appear thd T the horrors of the Pummayn Mchhe Congo are sewn!- " if they are not surpassed, in a mummy thud: supposed to be un- der C'.hriatun.travyirtupenb. BM Person Lie Tsrtetriilt _ bfaGidurHi,rUk in 0-0 Ho'fuund that under the Itiiasian regime the old 'savage methods of punishment remained in Vogue. and that even though the Russian offi- cials did nut personally witness the twrrttirehs they were well. aware, that they were.gojng on. They were simply bribed by the local authori- ties to close their eyes. for every offeorcetheiv, “as sume penalty of tyrture., granted not according G, the heiucosness of thercrmic, but Maurding to the prursperity of the primner. On the pasuoent,oChnc's torture rsentenoes were remitted. A man sentenced to have hisears twiswd; " (wild esywefon pay» ment of Mm. He wuld save his Pye/s for $1520. In every came the jndgr simply pot the finii in' liié'own pcckot. though it is 'sup,rkmed'that kft'e'rsGrxu he wotitd hive to "'iirifit'" "with-the' tuyoontpthw who laid the charge. ' _. .'. _.' ‘Dohfll' Mr “nanny, _ tty lynx; My» eore.s a Af- guaiitan,' but been tf Ram pro- Tinetr. .-" It is govern! -tryitgttits, pom Rm sud-om, 5 Buar sian railroad, and no one is allowed within its borders without a Bu- 'jds)sitsrt, hiihioh." Thai' is to any; they trre strum; up for a few mom- can; takeh dawn". 'f1otged. strung: Prisoners who have .no. money at a.” no beheaded, or" are hanged This more i man known the onion- it h to In. his has shut. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO I It has always been the custom luml-ng the Chincuo to drnpv the {Hare ml upming day in red hang» ling-s: of silk anon-d with pictures of lfairics and gonii and iuwripliuns of ‘mud “mun. With thr coming of yawning lanterns Would be suspend- ied mnung the hangiuga and illumi- Qnutwl h) candles. This has all jvlmngml no“. First the .lupzlm-N‘ ln'nuxhl in o.lectrir, trdsertiseomr, lfur their [mum rnedieines, and mm wh‘ Chinese nun-hum sprinkles a galaxy of electric litrhtr all through lbhe hangings that cover the. front of his newly opened store. I .5: one large More on Nanking Pealh. the Shanghai Settlement'. lprincinI Chinese business street, l, where the municipal authorities had Unwed the property owners when irebnilding to muva their premium [hack so as $0 allow 'or sidewalk' ':isptik'ta, fearing that ther ,houlerhe {out in the shade by their "tr-meets'- itnro next din-r “ho had ns-l Wham land were th-tore FV . 'tt and luv}; ‘fmm tho curb. 1.19;. 19:: 2,: v." tru IL lsidewulk out as in u bhoirpld lit-outage from the unwind can: oil and "which” ' 'keel, at“; ineooittpleudy covering the from , their More. Upon this dancing the lhgve finalised a maitrm'fbrsitt elect; ltriohl dkxildy, whioh they eltaag. l prriod'uyWy. They had no gonad I trpttttrthtyir show well stated thast [tiii,"',"'?:",'"),',"':"',! farther 'up-(he ataeet amazed 'or itself a. Hindu staging, and it is now a comm to no which will outdo-the other in the' matrttifiomteo of in dupur. Mr Lsuronoo Gomme, of the Lon- don County Council, mentioned, at . muting of the Folklore Society. that ho knew a one when the kit, Chen fire was not only a. perpetual one, in so far as it had been kept alight for hundreds of yarn, but constitute " mud record of their kind in Enghnd! Yet there are othtt similar" Ion; tan-Mia and Mum ot" vario- Shin” Amonpt ul which may well make the world MO " a time that in so prone to new nad changing his and environment. le is on record how, when Crom- well'a savage troops pytted Win- chester Cathedral, and did untold damage there, afterwards making their way to the College with in- tent to do likewiu, a Colonel F ien- ttea, who was Cromwell's friend and omoer, stood with drawn sword at the College gates, and defied any soldier to attempt to desperate the old school whilst he stood there a.live to defend it! Generation after generation of them has surceeded to the house for more than 400 years; and Mr. Fred- erith Churchyard, the present hon- ored tenant. erected a stained-glass window in the church not long an” as " thank-offering on the 420th an- niversary of (hr hunily's tenancy there. Whilst speaking of these splendid tenancies. it may be worth men- tioning that Florian'., the cele- brated hotel at Venice, has long boasted that its doors have never born cloud at all, night or day, for three centuries; whilst the Mai- son Dore, in Paris. known to be a favorite house of call in the Empire period, can proudly claim that its doors have never been shut since they were first opened, during those great days when the glorious Court saith" iGyiGois" that the kit- t'g,tfiut,ftitf cottage had never boo-ll-od to no out tor. wall tint whenever food we: cooked at it, a. small part of the food was thrown back into the fire "tor husk," the family aid. But he be- lieved that, in reality, this custom was but a relic of the fire-worship- ping propensities of the older gen- erations ld this funily._ The celebrated old Cheituerts Inn, at BUpeatonets, in Yorkshire, boasts that its fire has never been lacking to warm 3. traveller for over 180 years, neither day nor night, and that it has been ever ready to re- ceive the coming guest during that time. Lit Loui) XIV. mad; France the wonder ot the civilized world. What shall we "b' about . new English family whom boys have at tended the tame school for nearly 300 years, thus making themselves the record one in England for this splendid fidelity to the old schooll The Fiennes family, whose head is Lord Boys and Bole, have cer- tainly attended Winchester School since the only part of 1600. There was Fiennes at Winchester about 1620, and there was one at least a year or two back! The Churchyard family, at Stoke Gabriel, Devonshire, can bun.“ a wonderful tenancy, which must- como almost next to that of the Cumberlnnd one already mentioned. The Church- yards entered upon porritussio" of their house at Stake Gabriel in the fifteenth century. and have never let, it, since! he of the Power tor Advertising Growing. During the pun! you Chinese merchants in Shanghai have taken up elvctric adwrlising to " sur- prising extent. and now the Urge Mum's an Nanking Road vie with cme anothor in the splendor of their sin, "1' fronts. pay a ther go they wotfld never get started. ' If some men were oorntetled to l-ILH‘TIIII'I'I‘Y IN CHINA. than thilggo_ 1999‘ M iiUGaiiir 11W Hid-GM . - .'. 'hcnhundcntt lteir It, 12. bleeding and l are b, u_,‘ ' ‘7 u Find and ftiilt t 'ltii Fit'2lf3B! ERE EiiME% wum-ibe ings it was the hard-gat, of his hurts 9nd dip like e. But he never mum to " the dunk}; tn An- Ten years ago journals were war ing aentimeottsl about the passing of the hope; the motor cur would drive him from our - and tire years would see him . curiosity. " [M of ttf. Black Noamuin how inc iormerly boem only a prim. Alas, poor camel! Through the centuries he has held a. primal plate in the hearts of men. Of all ani nulls none but he could weather the terrors ol the dent; without him man was rttrwerless to penetrate Hm hearts of, ,thrrgieat "tootis'xents. And now, like the rest " us, he is to be superseded tita mere machine. He will become a drug inWte market and when we go to view his almost extinct trpeeies in the, .ooiogicuU parks of the world we shsll no longer be able to explain to little Willie that he is "the ship of the was touching and made good humno-intereet journaJinm in its time. ~But thepamimrottho home is surely not nearly no tragic u the passing of the camel _ _ - Fredoh offioerrs luv. ouooeoded in Ruin" -__.- m 2iGLi ' inventing a. and sledtie.fo.r me in tttu" boeat bu to I“. the te/trt. Dtttrt t'diitioha",.,,'Ti, 2lt; dtyh /"ao,'g'r'i'Jf of his: 11'.','ltlltr'ti'fitl 'im'lhs.‘ iifi..iirit.r.li'lCiC' 'tttttd CIC eg. " mishap. This new vehicle is p: “6W1 bum; ot the Gad-Bio pang“ by. means . of a 'iyltpell?e'ih'tti'it'eil.i,l 10 how an Induatrlinl i't"""2'ld,l" the tiri,,t:iioter'1tr,iriii,?e,ijij,,' in Clorunel next. Jum, mum 'ltu,,'rihed desert trtruti. 1,,f"a'.it,p(.'e, tres, 'ISI.,,,',"': IC? ry/ttation will now be greatly sinr fliriler's iL/ii in iiaiJnuirlch reef,, tutd “.1”: the came: 'tll] 1""i Hr. Hyrne. Medical C)ifteuar of of "in."'"'""", 'Ty,"',?.',,""""" Elh'mrhodn. and Coroner for the "P. , :t '..., T ' ' (Mari-'4. has died .4 the age of " _ _ 'f f. '. - Inn'nlved in the dispute. . Farpprroy a"td_h'ittr?. . 1 An alarming and widespread any If King Victor linummzzd, on )4,.'-!§mk:of parasitic mange has maui, b tuyneiid,' My”) Inn'lhe hdaui:irm. hated itself in Dublin rits and vu- of tithing the title (31-me come-r- ,burba. .ntbin the, past to“ weeks. in: he will only hh't"2utjl2tt't ot 200 bursa haw- bran a,slrion rermtly set in the Bal am. knitted. _ ttl, czar. or emperor. of Buinarin Captain Thomas Crottv ha. died r-". until a shun time aw» m!) m Waterford M an advuuoml up. be king of thy etrttntrr,, : :22 his farm-Nasal was (mmmuudwrdtho Emil-n bt hi .- . m' {hi In) nt . SUMa-ne which was " 'lf ar brhis 1tpa'r,titet.',)ti,lt ies/ttated,': Huber may “a . your: on P _tl(ittiq,y!t?itt (IC/leash., Canada; My. 7 Maugham-gt the ruler of the i unanimous}; and to appmo tho To hum ta m nu‘le tho d Be Done Without. Children Sit Down Too Much. Ore- gon Teacher Hui-s. The familiar oehool desk. as we knyw ip, is, soon to become a, curi» usity. Prayers in "idetateiotr" bu damned ir. The- ktiuiit anti must ik because it is an enemy to health and directly responsible for "many of She ills of echool children. In twenty you: it will be Mmlete in the schools, Prof. ENC. Bisson and at the annual Tmu-hers' Institute in Oregon, recently. wrwcrd. It wu a neceunry ex- Ire-w -u-_:v.r- . -- T"--. - fiance . F. " . , thaw»; " to In we do n ti Ib fl. (‘jm’thmnm for diiheu . b', _.."‘;f _ ttf .2. .-ir' {file lbw-Mo” ,rhauctv.9av.aatstme , y,h m, but he had been them with improved Wm": dimh‘!’ and he my. but Jatots did. when." Ser' tot aw the vuion; the In." that oughytoju but}; by: wig,“ him you up, and for diiiicuAtitriibaP ' , V u,!f‘"f1'*;,n~.u'" "m. . ,but he Udbomtdreami tren with gmpnoved cyst-curl; di M. and he who while: hat Jami, did. _ Man-nil: Om“. Mion: the real mun than tHt-tttg" mghibmn-Jy. €3,311?” vole up end saw the ‘- automated with won t . [I that La, M59! and nut! that '" h"! 's.iilkstrd. . a pea up}, “no people we call the The Law II "est-tter JJ drama?! - the only “id""wuh _ .'yx,> "_.,'. ”415,1 ' _ 'i,' phenom. Not the philosophers but no stone pillow, no vision; new the timbre for us the n‘glwm hooks, nailing; no struggle. no} of ',l1'T2t To dream well in to visstorr “We“ 1,}th whim are 1in well. Vim a a arc-mam of for the pleasant )puhi. £113 musme be.neiieent life. Through it we, needs be lifted overAhe “owl! we the pwvidenoc and fricndslw comes at Just an unsteady. “man at God end the divineneas and pm: ts1itrfui4 unable noneutity-.acver a Abilitie- of nun; we see things in mar.“ 'Mity it oeitigKriiss moi! Wt proportions and know a Tensor: taught hy blow: and tl thtt thin In God's good world and feting winds. But the boy who setsl that it in oeutinvllc-d by His trngels, out in life crying. "Fetch was! Hun! who are ever at our oeru'mu Rm. _ Prolemr Simon told the teacheml A nun named Patrick O'Uumw that“): wr "i. prime“) e, in the JH" killed in 'Mnllow while mangled trst' r','id"Jrtt'cl','dr'i'i' walk" ‘ch , . , telling a decayed poplar. our (hen to 'git cramped and still when P Spa, Home. which Calm they mm be free to mow about! “it T. PoaetT;ne of 'the two in the edudmwmn in a. natural way. Had} members of the Waterford m oumpered th? desk to a. relic of 1(‘orpnratjun. has munouuwd her in- barbarian. . " _ ltentLn err [wing u candida!» for tho “The east-iron. rigid. mqtitumtauma,vornlt.r this war. seat“ today will J"s_tltroep, out." The magistrates M m:- turvrick, he lulu; {In itVas', we “in hair ‘toanilin poll) sessivts limo dvcidsd 1seneliei'ii'vd tubhir, 'fh chairs. ana‘lto 'tMict terms. of impriwnnmn: iv, the "children will Mi“ pinned in" cam-s of drmxkemuws and die downto u out. but VAN my: about LAQKl‘W‘l) conduct. gs the)" Mandy and {Nine mid "vrk. ,', The Portndown ravens luvs oh- ' "fkhafchildren' nit'uTrv,r.-h1r4, :mhled In inrvease in ‘1th ttethtr too much. Adults ao, tou, iattuow"intt to from o to 7%, per t t',',,'ru2'ts" csrineedthnGtors all .ro:'ttt,,, ungrdlug to the er/le d in: to . “rammed m.” the Stork :0) were e lay on do. "fs't- 333930 hide 'li','-":".",-,'?,,)," I, The "towtt “manta 'e; Wampum, Is‘d lo walk. The old Romans mm,d 5 have brim negotiating with the ti, make the children s,tand up and ‘ middlenmm with a view to npemng dimly. W? do just the opposite. la we; t _ {xv early pttrehatre .l the “an im tral Prtt Um! thesit-'tuuuvutr, vi' their lwldings. ting posture. toao"uelt maul. Saran: l - The homstimhen employed in tho 8; roughly inorganic duetcso.'wsmic-ldban of Mm". Chidlolm and Do. "a't'J,ifut'iii,- ' A, Near wed (mung)- "Mall: 4w»- ithrips1lifeal,jelr'1 - , T Emperor aiterfiine. . If King Vicmr ICnnmmzu“, M R ls ru.meiid,' mm; Ms .the Initiminn of taking the title ulnar-w emper- br. he Will only blinMg‘M “Sohimlr children" niti.0iic Mro ttether too much. Adlle: do. a». I 'utrtirmly “minced “mums 11H grungy) kesryhiklre med - n k. ll, IS'. gt was the mm of hit e. But he never much to " terwcrd. It wu a many ex variance gyms-mm {ding ur;,; “inc a @5111th to No "drod. _' ~35" "T outimer- “And how do you hie PASSING " THE PANEL. MINT tiCMtMH, DESK GOt Good Reno-0n. gtie---WUt mu kc r J $55011 of the Story " that Self. Is the Road to Peace , "vr"rbout ”Man"; you J v,..,',,. iii “NPR. ca,” noun day you should tsattt =eteisgrkir, m MW ! A mun "mod O'Brien, a who ':ot Roeleigh, has died of blood- [mi-arming. the malt of a match by Moat-------- .A -_ OF h DREAM pm I ' Mee' we 05111.". telated 6b on: wido-nwako potions; Nottbe philosophers but “A Wk" for It the rnglwu 5'U'e'T2i? To dream well is to tiivee well. Wu . remain of e bepelistent life. “numb it we It the pmvidrnoc and triendsho tt God And the divineness and pour . . its ot nun; we see things in WW proponione and know "that thin in God‘s good world and that it u nominalled by His Angels, tvlto Arr, fur at our union. W Rev. flllllll Hull's GREEN ISLE lappenlngp In the Finn-dd Isle of Interest " Irish- At a meeting of tho ClonmeJ Cor. poration it was decided to adopt tho report. recommending the formation ar6 . lag-hr fue brigade. Twenty-five tons of hat). the pro party of wag-n thive. of Mils eight, Kerry, bu been destroymi by _ Kr... Wry Fehily has just pun-4d ottryhi-her 10% your ak. her daughter’s residence. Midlelnn. The old lady Wu . regular trtnvkesr. NEWS BY MAIL FROM IRE- LAND'S SHORES. Czrrrigaat, Main Street. Newtuwn stew“. uve been destroyed b., NAN-little girl and Sheridan. aged four yet". was killed at Craar. uhun. Barl.l.vcoruserll. b.s the (tiling of the gable wall of the house. Hun of mums 17%ka Carnation my. unanimously agreed bu opp-M tho Limerick Huber (Madonna in the nppicatkm Gr a bin to roux-r0 the present swivel bridge leading to "AYetlurles Bridge. who are e' a t m: The death ha: oocurrr-d of Mr. Witliam,, Lord», County Tipper an", " the dvnnced age of me years. t An old man named June-3 Fag-n of Jenkinstown district. auddr‘nly le’OdJn, Hun rch Btreet, Dundalk. He iii Tkr.reinrts of Age. My. T1tr1faot. haverm on n (11le The NW 30W, near Now all». In. boon burned to an Tue “Mood premises Pf Jamm {N'iggt u the may”); M eco- ( ,dmst on 991199 gnu-k thy will uh ”when: Eamon: . About soo srirld an the Carrick. have dujdd was .0 "" In: of “it"; death By "that I death of Int their birth., ite in eught/ in” to I 4 indium th (‘1 mortal um um. u advisor to CIVIC depar (liq lull 1 'tOrvis:, tone "HOW" chief fr Dr. Curie pm it " m BO. on “I [Azure tttM

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