Tm allowade` f_o1f_` the 11.3 17. 8omeone-=or who or where V!` do not know. Kn<(>lw;st'thou not? Then seek; make no 2- y. ' - [And thou shalt nd, In 11nd of sun bor snow; 2 Who waits thee, little child or pllgx-I'm Rte! 2 to 1m cannot be.` .- Though when hearts break the world ` -`seems-emptiness. - . . ' But unto tlu-eel brlng, in my distress, A__ message, born of love and sympathy, And may It prove, 0 soualythe` golden key To all things beautiful and good, and bless The! life which looks to the so comtorb ess This `as! the word: Someone hath need of ' no. . _ The 'Brlllinnt`But~sad_Cai-ear of the '31-my ----- _ Comedy Writer. Richard Brinsley Butler. Sheridan. ayounger son, was born in Dublin Oct-.30`, 1751.` At the age of eight he was set down as a. most impen- etrable dunce. At Harrow he was. the most popular of idle boys; While ' his masters mourned over him, they liked him for his liveliness. At eigh- teen he left school, but had lessons at home in Latin and mathematics. His father taught him English grani- mar and oratory, andhxe learnt fenc- ing. and, riding. V'At Bath he fell in love with Eliza, daughter of Tho- mas Linley, an English musician or ' high mark. She was engaged at six- teen to an old `gentleman of fortune, who released her, at her. own wish, and settled 3,000 upon her. In his twenty-first year . Sheridan eluped with Miss Linley. Later-he went to London to study law in` the Middle Temple. `Miss Linley was then swig- ing in oratories at'Convent Garden, and her husband is said to have per- sonated the hackney coachman and driven her home. The opposition `of Mr. Linleywas at length overcome. and on April 13, 1773, the marriage was repeated. by; license, sent of friends. While living nlmntoa-I nv14\n`- Donia` u m n a n n . u A Q01` i-n Or- L....: with con- i I J vvo-:I_ev v'I\@I.D butt, uuuc \.'.'uuu (i pllblll For }i;1`$e God keeps thee In ms world` be-` `list being master at the hour. . recovered. -a\.rn-V \(A an nvsau IV nanav as v aaaa chard street, Portman-square, Sheri- dan finished the earliest of hisbcome- dies, The Rivals`. It `was produced- at Covent Gordon, `Jan . .17, 1775. The Duenna. with music arranged and composed by Thomas` Linley, followed on Nov. 21, and its imme- diate success caused` it to be. acted seventy-ve tnights,tthe new dramat- Gar- rick, thcn sixty years old, was pre- paring to retire, and Sheridan paid him 10,000 for two-fourtc-tenths - his share in Drury Lane. Linley paid a like sum. for another two-four- months.` The young.manag`er was in I. \Jl. School for Scandal not being pro- duced till May 8, 1777. was so great that the treasurer of the .- theatre` said two years after- wards it "damped the new pieces." Within` three years Sheridan turned from the stage. to Parliament, being returned. member for Stafford. One oration of his, delivered during the impeachment ot Warren Hastings, ex- cited ' unparalleled enthusiasm, Pitt declaring it to have surpassed all the. eloquence of ancient and modern times, "As an inuential politician. a successful theatrical manager, and a hoon companion of the Prince of Wales. Sheridan's star seemed in the ascendant, but its brightness lasted only for a ten years. Thedeath oi his iirst wife, the misfortunes atten- dant on a second. niarriade. the fall of his Ministerial friends. and nally , the burning` of Drnry Lane led to nancial? ruin. From this he_ never and with the bailiffs in possession of his iurniture and et- iects, poor Sheridan died in misery 6I'July 7, _1s1_e. A magnicent tu- neral in Westminster Abbey. with some of the highest in the land for mourners, heightened the tragic .con- etrasts. o IDD_ . no hurry with a new piece. The- i. ! `Its success -- i this vbrilliant Ix-is'hman s uni P}l$lL'U uvu seeps {nee 111 MS WOHQ D8- . .w. ` `Someone hath need of thee, somewhere 9-day. 1.`.....-.._ 1'1 I\-____1 unhapp y'is:o'.* ~a;bmn.;eroT .v; `man The i.ix;;i;; f}1;c}a;.;'l5;.;;m.a 1romlhnchoat,er,VEnglan,d, recalls the ' old story 0! the Ia'ndlordi.tha.t stated that hg;_wg_sWgq1p to mseghis ten- antfc rent '_.whorgup9n tho`. 't_on_ant' re- plie'd'_tliat he wu,de1ightea' to hear it ' 110 `us `not. able to do it A, nut-collector "had. great dimculty In gaming =tho...rent. from ; one Pat llnl.nnia,.. On,Hb1x,xs'app1i.cd to for-s o'.u`p'loj_,ot_ _wegka__'..r_ent ._ho_. ,saiq. he. i wu1d"p gy_ t _i!`_t_h_g Jnndlqrd would M; ii: n`.-now collar Ldogr; This ya; ' ab,` ind` ghiicollector` called s for m..n`mn3y. lihginxiia. was _ out, but hi : oldaIt.`.non:Apuid:..tho money that - sun, duo... . ~ ~ lf1I'.4I nuns Law; If Innnv 't\Il IIRBQ '5 . ` wqu .\ "Gii?.you have it roaqly (or once," I full. . . , . `1'Y.d_a_;`,,ti1r.f'."tho boy replied: but it ; - hi}: awful trouble. W9 had t6 I"d1l"iox'xge`ot' itllxg (urnit1i_27e." . g ' "0h?- iaid ho. pockqting the rent. V -"I diam know you'- had`-*.ny."% . aQ'.Q93@'-`.5-CO0!"-;t0 _t' it)" "Yoa;" continued the lad; "_{ather Sci `GI;-_i__n_; )Wqp'i ilnoo.` _ - < It`W{aa._aupp4 ) seg,1_h_`at .1;hof`gr'owing . di` like of ._b3r,yoi1fng'f.m'en wfas, the q use [o'_f_' `t,hfo' decling qt `wha.t.j,tl1`o = yoxnnireportet calls` thq ~terpsjchor- But. -*an"En;11sh' pgpojt hear: that the ladies ..aiia=c1aimii:g;_ lhd` credit.-' W0` aroftold thu-soc'ity' i`ludle.I wi.1.l.no_,t dunno.-Ilmmoro. Ball: 1 .exc9ptlt `.'.1.1!f. .cot_i1lon .iI=:siVen. - hue` an air _more like a. conyers_a.- '. '.z1gno.\1!.ith_. A b a.nd_ and bnet. than .1! A311-. Qh1y'.qu1te 's'.'9Vh`t girls. dance fth any show` of enthusiasm. A Wo- Wltn any lnow us cuuuuuunam. _ A.._._.._- man prefer. to `tu,l_k gag!` nixjt"raher; thin wu1tz. - Such `l`a r'ge? sums `are (ex: f pended "over ball dresses`-that; women . I16") trlgh'tened- `at the` eecit 0! the -Volt anti. tau` -nf.do.nclng.g So W09 men are, in yet another. oenao, slaves oI:th4`d,ressn!!I!!v- u; 'nutIgn~.1ufq_pnpgo _lt_o_tI|t_lu. I 114,11 than, .1_1.v9I .u'o% !mu'!fo_ by: th_o__j n$f_n_oty-,four life] amt- 011$ I61. Gfct Btiin ind Irin_u were " f'o1*_tunutgl_yr' td;_di`o' in a. nI'ch!:*"`tIi6 eoupuma-='wou1a stand` tw pug 2'dut::no:t:moI`l-1!!` `the of 1.. =-85fs9408;.595s;g.s. 7; 9 ' :5 r rv . ~ -' 9 , " t.otIl- or an! :!`,.P.""_`.." J- 'v'6i- _ ::`___ W. .. J`. ::``I . A 4'13 '.l' ' . Io}; aqua. J II,:.I,, ,_ j__)j_ A -_,_. R. B. B. SHERIDAN. jun . -Emmn C. Dowd. The time was when the chiefest dc- light of the young man just embark- ing in the world consisted in his budding and immature whiskers. Ho inspected their progress at least twice a day; to stimulate their growth-if the novelists of the time spoke truly-he besmcared the lmy `down with bear s grecse. Macassar oil, and other detestible and evil compounds.` Whiskers he looked on as the only thing necessary to his being a perfect man. We all remem- ber the way Dickens described Mr. Feeder. B. A., and Mr. Fee-der's whis- kers. And there was the young fel- low who besought Barber Sweedle- pipe to go gently over the jumps." David Copperllcld's step-iather. too, the saturnine` and sanguinary Murd- l stone was drawn clean-shaved. Thus was his innate villainy made appar- ent at one sweep of the brush. And ' Thackeray's young bcauxg all rejoiced` V in magnicent whiskers, which would } to-ds.y be described in new-English as skilligans." The whisker has `disappeared for: good and all; the beard yet remains with some of the ' more conservative of our citizens. * but the Anglo-Saxon world to-day V r is` full of clean-shaved young men. 5 ' Even -the Englishman has sacriced A i his beloved moustache. Canadians 5 and Americans are nearly all `desti- i_ hits of any hair. on the face.` They` ' all look like turates. actors or pro- fessional baseball players.. It is not K 4 A _|.':__. 1'4. .'- ..-. :r\t"nV;Il nf Ch` THJE.BAR"EEACED MEN PRESENT FASHION IN THE FACES or CANADIAN MEN; IOOK JUUUKUI DHCII . luau; Uonw' --g - F The 'I`orouto.News;'_o'f others to show themselves as possessing good lea: _ turel: of still others theremnant of f a sort of inveterate conservatism. . They began as elean-shavcn boys; now they are and will remain. clean- \ Ihaven men. ii But there `must be mother reason |lmitativenes_s,lnus_t have something fto do witxhit. Looip at the..pictures ' .01 "amazingly broad-should_ared and . amazingly well dx`es_set_l young Agent- ; lemon displayed in the zidvertise- `month in the daily newspapers. In `the whote months, parade of emails your-shall not.iind more than one to E `whom the ontist has -presented a a `, ; moustache. And not asingle speci- _ men _is.aliowed a heard. It seems to 3140 a case, of the rankest. most of- ! K ionsive `diserimination. Do not men If with moustache: buy` ready-to-wear _ `clothes? Are men with hoards too I I puinse-proud to- allow -anybody but the ' high-priced merchant tailors-sell them . in clothes? Why should nobody but ,. h iriess-iacod. young men impress `the _ public ii-_o_m_ the advertising Vcolumnq? `I. ~. It is time for, the whiskered,. the- _ 3 moustached ` itizens to -`resent this ` `xzinault. ' "For centuries men devoted A time, and thoughts," and energy, to S` the production all whiskers. ' And f.i now.` ~ unlsu: mthey are superior to iashion and custom, ' they . have to . ` spend time, or hirei_(ll:arbors to spend: *1` time. on the, ago ance. repress on, t `and ex_cis_i,on= oi whiskers._. Look at} 9 any _ old ' photograph "` of thirty years :1 ">3 new ll!-=. -What, ..i!`.;-the ..hi.ei- .ch9,3'Ic- E ,t_ex-i_.3;ic._ oi_-. the,;n19n;. there, 412913. -.1'Q.17 .. Certainly, yv_hiiker'a.' one of tho,-J.T9-: ` A PM9,;; -`.! (,"r-.",=:.i.. #50 39. I )3 [0N.>'.8"'*``.`'...'.' ` #34 W>`5`,9'!T 99.` V Consideration of the Boaunn Why `they ` Donndo 'l'heuu'e1veu of racial Bah-- : The buy of `Whisker!-Will I}; Ever Como Back Agaln?-llut Mon Look Younger Wltliout Board or loultuche. ICISIOHII .Ult8EUIL1 p:u;vAu.. Lu an nu.- a fashion. It is an indication of the overwhglming. desire; of some men. to look younger" than . they are, any: }'l'I'lI|IHU...,|uIa u--.. _ __.,. `_, _, `!=0.vt"i9n -I Q 69`!-`DC ta -U-on-t-vi-- - -- 53 durable and low-priced. Specially suitable for tron! aui1`div1aiontence!ntownIots.cemtcrice, orcherde. etc. Rell! 10!` 20 CENTS PER RUN NI NG FOOT. Just about the cheapest fence you can put up. Write for full pucnlltt Use Page Farm Fence and Poultry Nothing. The P189 Wire Fence Co., Limited, Walkervllle. ontula. Eontreal. R0,, and St. John, NB. 1 -'Page `Metal Ornamental Fencd I :>'n...a....... nrahln mm 1nw.m-ice'd_ Snecinllv suitable for front When the Kidneys fail to do their work of discharging the uric acid from the system, the rcault is rheum -tism. Until the Kidheys rgsume this work in :1. natural healthy way no cure :3 possxble. A 7 Gin M5115 tr __j._ 3 .cur rheumatism quickfy and for all time because the azu the most perfect Kidney Correcuve ever dxscovcrc . From all Druggists. 5octs. per box, :`m- 6 boxes for $2.50 or dxrcct, from _ -, __ __.-- -- nun-quunnuur-t\ nlnnn WINNIPEG, Mm. Your money back ff Gin Pills do not cure. Rheuma*iS!1_ o Ind illl MP -Rh)` and. as everybody Knows, the 11!- dinns are always clean-shaven. Cola the Honorable J. M. Gibson shine! forth in the picture with thrice ll many lineal feet of hirsute adorn- ment as his closelycroppcd Henri LQua.tre beard allows him neig- Again` 9. recently` published voluml. `of Dr. W. G. Gre.ce's cricketing re-` miniscence: `gives us 8 picture of the English cricket team that toured id Canada and the United States in 1871. All 0! those willow-wieldori boasted windsiiters that must have seriously, retarded their progreu when. they were sprinting after the hard-driven bull, or were running bl- tween wickets. -- L--|--- IO .vnII vnnfnrn fl tween wicxeu. Your barber, if you venture to mention to him the object, will gravely assure, with every air of jcartitude, that the days of beards," much` less whiskers. have gone for! over. It is impossible, however. In matter how good a w_orkman_ that -harbor may be. to regard him an alt impartial. witness or authority. The wish must be, father to the. proph- ecy. If beards .came in, barber! would go out. The problem` of tilt displacement and re-arrangement labor is always dicuit. `But till barber is probably `right. `The man- `_ with -the clean face seldo n grows a board; the man with thebeard often takes it o. . The shearing razor de- nudos thehvisage, and lo! the ownef steps _ forth from that _chair both feeling andlooldng. ten years yrmn3'!_ ' `TAO '. v.n1.. an. 11`:-art-n Mnttar nix` __ ,'r21`n, nu sc.. New York, 8pt.8,1902. me. n."._r. KENDALL co..' n-_An -__-_ _ I I._.._ ....l --__ B---I- n-A .`l D1`. B. J. KENDALL 130.,` Gentlemen :-I have used your Spnvln Cut! `on myhox-sea tor the put fourteen yearn and It has nlwayn given me reuulu In every pnrtloulnr. I also Inn one 0 your books that I have found very useful. It you have any Inter odluon or the 'l`|-ontlu on the Home and hublunul," will you kindly send me one. A|Q1QQIIClIII_ H F TQYm WI you KIIICIII IUIIII ll: uuv. _ Renpeettully yours, B. F. FRISBIB. It In an abmuteg reliable remedy for spa 3. splints, Curbs, lngbones. etc. Remove! 0 buncle sndlnvee noun-. Price 01311: (or 05. An nunlment for farm use it has no ml. Ash wnnr tlrnnrlnt for K ALIIS BPLV N CURE. feeling and loomngv ten year; yrulzigf er. Not 'only are Force, Matter uni" Science with the nian with the 4.-Ioall face. So also is the -stream of tends oncy. "The day _may come when thc whisker: will re-appear, but we sh.-111 all be 3 good deal o1der..doubtIcu._ --I. -_ _L .`I-um-gn ` IUCIVC mg. IT xaunuu co.. auosnuna mu. W. 3!! saw Us Buy`... when it dawns. ` HJOII Tho Bible contains 3.566.480 101! tors, 773,746 words, 31,173 verso!` 1.189 chapters and as books. Thl void and occur: 46.277 timed.` Lord 1.855 times, "reverend" ones. in the ninth verse 6! the 111th Psalm. The -twenty-rst Verne olthi Ievonth chapter of Ezra contains the" lcttqrt of tho plphabat oxcg Tho ,ninte9n_t.h ghaptuj of King: sad the tbiny~oovuuth}php_ -1 1.;:_'I.- I--6; nlikh .' Th I CVCU 3:: -w-V- King! and the thirty-Iuvvuvu VI.`-l`lIyqI'u g of 18511111` bro aliko. The `laugh! 3 % verse in" tho ninth vane. eighth chip i_ 1 tr ofathor. Tho jhortout in "tint yttirtyvmth` verso. olcvojnh ohoptd; I JOIIII. ` _ _ __, ' M2..- usvan roun_T_g-.31 guns wml soon. masuusl no Ana IOIVOI no um-. rnco u; an tor 1 unlmont {sung eiual. r dniplllt for K Anus BPAV N CUR A rescue on the none." the book free, Iaou Abopt the Ilblo. -..A-; for the gh and nt staff. - TETNGU` } Comps!!! t web (I. !|l'.\n-4... Ir lrunr IITH 599 I 'ter each meal three times a...d8Y`Vi%1-` .>'l`he average`.heu1tflly` "i .It' may` be` '-:,bu`t1 dav ` ay lack luxurY:,th?*I3?1s`Yillc;~'-i`3` _t , arily upox? the. -texture ` Iota } 3.35, for hair that is coarse.:lo9Ji:;;zl`% t Stimes as abundant as hair that. "fig" physiologists `say that_that:'ois'og:'V-. V tter Of stemP mt `W4 ~ and my to console"tl_1e,, V-wozggnfi _ 05e crown of glory is so` no";:1;ha,_tV_ih` ' 1kes no show at all withAth e_m.'-_M rJ_Ltion that she is the most 1'0 of mortals mentally land`-`morgue: _ ""9 But be its quantity what . _it_.~` ly" the hair ofa health) Woman is- `l:1] my_ only it must _be cared for ystelnatically to keep it at xtsbest} L 5 , An illness will spoi1.Vitq' lender te1npo1`a_I`i1y.._but a_ physio;-V : ns treatnient will restore-it to-its` lttminc excellence. Time after time lfhave noted fresh vitality and new OM11, the burnished glos that rum glrl unmistiikable Sign of bodily vig- :;y and a renewal _of the rich, natur. afmg of the hair, result from _ a, course of treatment for .impa,imd,; h,,'a11,h directed_b.Y family phy- sician, Fol-`instance. a_long_v and: persistence absorption of iron taken internally as 5` t.m `mqeri a" i d"' to,-`s directions will brighten and color the hair and often `prevent ear- hai, owes its pigment Ol`t1n_t to -the iron in the system. Such a prescrip- tion is composed `of two and_`_.a half pains of iron sulphate and one` and a ham grains of potassium carbooate, made into pills, one to be taken at-_L healthy-. nd. creasing the dose to three after the rincipal meals of each day. - A An` excellent shampoo for the hair is made in those proportions. mo yolk of one egg, a pint of warm rain-water, and one ounce of spirits: `Beat. un the mixtnrn` A ..nrvnI\\ PU, raln-wum, _._._ _,,,_.:,, .,,...~ ".` -1:---W-.= of rosemary. Beat yp the mlxture. thoroughly and use It while it His warm, rubbing it. "Well into the scalp, - Raimvatar 1s so soft -and mineliko that that is why it is ro-`. commended, for the hair abhors any- ;L-1. ..y.r\.\un\I:I:a`nnn {#1: tv`-.``Lu- ' wafu lldldklnnne -u Rainxvaterl 'i"s`msos.:o`l't ' thing that impoverishcs its vite.`lit_v,t so it should be sought for,` especially in those parts of the country where the water is naturally hard, but 1_1i it cannot be obtained, borax should, no` added to the ordinary water ` to" soften it, or `boiled water should be used. Another excellent. shampoo. is..- composed of two ounces of soap, the juice of one lemon, the yolk of one egg, and half a pint of rain or dis- tilled or boiled wetter. Place the soap and the water in a. c1ean,se.ucepan and stir the water over the fire. until the soap is melted. Beat. the` yolk of the egg and the lemon juice to*-( gether, pour the soap end water` on it, stirring it briskly, `and when it is cold bottle` it for use. ' ` n.-_.1_ ....:Ll. _ I .... ...l....4- Arnun AC Lal- sts nothing. until you see est. Deeds. orteht gating- armers aspect- jg uuau UUVLLG Lu l\IO uuvc Girls with a. luxuriant crop of `hair will ndthat they will require it they` use eggs only as a. shampoo seven or eight, and plenty of rain or soltenedb water. The way to use eggs alone is to dip the fingers into the yolks and. to massage the scalp with, the `nger-l tips, repeating this process, wlth, shampoo of warm water between crach, for three or four courses.` Egg, shampoos are particularly useful l I-.. ......:.nu I.nn `moi `running an 11-t) D-uu-rvvv --U r-- v-V-----.7 ---- -- ior greasy hair, and ensure a very! nice, iiuiiy and well-burnished crown'_ of glory as a result, without any of, that dry` appearance that. some-i times ensues "after washing the heeld. As every head, even the healthy one. is sometimes subject _to dand- l mu, I shall do well to add here prescription for its cure. It is ' mall! oi 48 grains of rosorcin, one-fourth, .0! en ounce of glycerine, and `half an ounce of rectified spirit, and -winter; to an a two-ounce-bottle. - Pour. '1 _ little of this mixture into e. sewer oaeh night, dip the finger tips in, it. and massage the scalp, rubbing it well into the head with the. lingers D8. or e. dropper` maybe fixed in-l med of e cork into the bottle undid * little sprinkled over the head -, "tel-. lowed . by a. massage of`-the -nger-, tips.` It is impossible to. exaggerate` the excellent eaocts o!.ece1p;mu8et with the linger tips for every hleejl. be it healthy or not. There. is virtue, in the finger tips, and the need; bone- tl by massage quite as niacin e'!1t_1'!;0`; face or body, which` is "e; fact few people realize. Moreover, -it is a quick process for -busy people. Five minutes -massage every night will work wonders. .Bruehing is eimply lillendid for the head it s9meone.e199 does it. Failing ._ maid, 13 `think, scalp mussaxo eI>etfor2i.16'd,'b:r'i 6`i.I0f'I." 1! just as eceeioul`. " " " -1- .__-;L I__A_ L|_..l. er.` A.` Jan ` Nidodtnd cu1tiye_td~. ...... .- ;uuu Isa Iuauuulvulh Girls with heir that -ll too Cf! thoulde massngolt every other "'ll185`7 with a. little oil. ueinrodoroue. cu-V tor oil it their hair is.i,no||n0:.` W thin or weak iheny Wsy, coco! ;3.D.9.`; tor {or the same epeclq oi hIl.,l';.. ...1'-. pure olive oil or a.liiibx,id_ bil} , .v0lf5_'_,-.` little should be tukeu` up` by, tho. lth!` tips, and the tag-""tI',0!". 03," hair need not be touche by ` `'t `.`n'" Girls who pouegg, ygpy-Quay." locks` 31`! generally i;ncllnoid..to L M; :Pl V' 0! them. but dry _helx: lajicll 'kn0W.l!='- to change color. more, q.U,1Cl_._1V~ hair with ; cc:-tall: amount '9f,!}:lt,W'.`: In moisture in 1:, end. .1: thiII,_n.-t,`,1.".`.; ll moisture ' is` lacklixg "it." sl_lD_l1_Mf.' Hess. lasted 1:-om Utah; bdgtdniric oi . ruin} rujyo , .e . : ; London fogs uldya, lnclfc-3,0. ellk. ; death rate. om, of thy 'worqt` oxlypyg I 3. both for dehity'a!id Pl`70U"l - November, 1379, ' to -'h"o"'f5l1OjVI,8_` ' "`Wary.e The -deaths` 10'!` WC 5513? weeke ended Eobmar3#'21':wero*1.73`"' 1.900. 2.200. 3,376.` 2.496 and*9-**> 9.. the deaths in?-.tho3 Itnth;:a1!60k~ Mug thun.nu,.1y dogple: ,tth.;09: in ..thg at. l'nLn Ogj S313; . n hm The death: tr. 3`t Io.ctued'_ `by. tl_1,o,. tom; oath-rate tor Vbro.n`c,!i1t1"n'. -tdu, `to. 8,3_ ,. D" Wit-. and to?` whobp1_n_!`i1 hiuu .....'.a. . _\~...4.`... ... -ihL`L'-`s-vi ML)` '."`'`l{ mu: nearly dou;bl.e& I-||..0.8.o.= :1: MI!- gs: Fain. in 1392, in Wary '13, -tho -ddqeharaw. oitiia `-.h d ~ .. ~ 27. I` ` ,..mu -4 `l'al' Aavsr ` ,6, * V"`'Y ` `W1 "`` % ,".to an the ulna it-F ' ` ., ` ` .92`: View of uwn. 1--.lSxcellonTt Advliad` :10:-j`I!t'g. " neat--A Good Shlinjbougi` 3.93; T153`; There -are 1 qther which, . know, says` `ti - respondent. . `I... -_.I-__ -.7.-uuuculu` := -_ 7 ~ ` 'In order to" discover what they must know but are not allowed to, civilized States `employ lmilitary spies. They may be Military or No.- val "Attaohes, duly accredited to an Embassy; i districtsdrom which information is } required by the Intelligence Depart- K. V ' or secret agents, , who are 1 sent to _reside or travel in `-.th088' ' I!v_i 1 OOIHOIUI < ; The work of the Trst class is "not unimportant, but it is not risky. The oiiicer may notvoverstep the bounds of common honesty, and. rarely, if V ever, attempts to `achieve, anything ` secretly. , ` - ` ` He is closely wa_.tched,v and knows it. If he becomes 9. strong centre of attraction he may .divert. the atten- tion of watchers from some secret agent who is possessing himself of the particulars the Attache is osten-` sibly so anxiousto acquire, but is successfully prevented from securing. [ The Attache is useful as a. clearing agent. ` i u..:.... k...-.'- --- --~~- ' ` ` 1 uvwauv v=uuya_y `AU! um cAUuu.uU vtuuc. For instance, some yearsago two N \ . \ Britishoicers created -considera.ble- "annoyance in Russia. by their -pker-_ aistence in hanging about the ,dis- trict -_in which the autumn m'ano,eu- vres were-Vto take place, "\r.v\ I!(\I\I`I\Il\In1\`:4\Inl\ and`... n... J- -1. ` rt gress. s needed satisfac- eady in-` May we rated 36 V g. It is g BEST... `abs/an v . Spies` bec6r"ue* possessed oi `facts which are of no real value to those V1 who employ them, but are assumed. to bg worth gggch by the, agentssofw other countries, and` an exchange of _`T-`piec,es. is effected.` Sometimes` ap- p.arcnt.lyi;= "useless in1orma`t;ionLfi is sought simply_for its exchange value. F`nr innfnnnn anwu-. unnu-as nun dw-us v c as: vv vow ruv Vuoliv 1156099` 7 - Vl`hc-n representatlons were made at ` ` `the; British Embassy, ' where the oi- I ; cers wcre.un_known,_ and subsequently ; they disappeared for a. time, only to ; beediscovered at the end of the,man- ; oeuvres in one -of the veiegreat fort- ` V rcsses which protect the west` fron- ; tier of Russia, and the one; thathad_. ' been the centre of the military `opera- tions. ` V ~ -rt, ,1 4I_____ ,,,-,. I._-__ 1\.-.__._9A__ . -1 1 in Asia.which India believes to be \ VI\Jl`u Had these men been Prussian om- cers their position "would have been .dangerous, and an unpleasant ` inter- national incident` mightUha'.ve occur- red. _T_he Russo-German frontier is ' nothing to Great Britain. neither is ` the Franco-German. Vwe e;;_che_nge' the first piece with Germany" for "the second, `and the second with -France ' fora. little bit of news about Russia. ` inxportant, And th,us.,w.\e,;get home. 'F`.nnh cnuntrv hnsvits' own neeuliar Iu1pu1'uu1r.._ nuu I.11_uu,,w\u,;5!:=u uqum. Each country l1a.sviij.s' own peculiar ' N0?-With: sphere of interest to "which. it dea;-_ 1888-Ults C votes _.its gree.test attention`. `Great ~-.D81`0hia1e Britain has so vmany that. properly: national , speaking, it` has none. But Indiais 3 P1`.mie"8' always a.la`rmed- e.sto= Russiai ` and S bourne cl e.gents-Br'itish and na.tive-ot the ' have ma.d< India`. Department are ever busy. seek-"' Ward thi 'ing-pe.rticule.rs- likely to be of? ser- T question. \?ice when we have to defend an Em- 9 They 11 plre which already. in the -military truce bet! sense extends from {Aden to _ Hong New _Sou " ' ' T , South Aw u'....a -4 eh. Tnrlinn grants in Rus- interested` `Inn: \Y_A.nAv_ _- .:s.ong. ' , .Most of the Indian agents in Rus- sia `arevofccrs of the Indian army, . bu't.:neodless to state,` they-do not j travel, as such. Some aoct to be. tourists 0!, gm 1nn,o.ce_n1. but .inquirix_xg . turn of mind; some go 03* commer- I `ciul travelers; some lean to religious 1 propaganda; while others collect curiosities. ` '1 n-11---- --'.-..'L- In-`IA-`snail IQ Anal`- curloanuc. 4 _ ' These regents have" been so ener- getic and prolic in their disguises . that in_ tho, , South oi. Russia" the bona-de commercial trsveler excites suspicion. The `Russians now insist `upon all commercisls" being -licen`s-'? ed- and taxed;-`moreover. the `Intelli- gence Departxiwntrhsas found the or.- ders. for goodsrohtslned -by its~.~.i_;raY- e1ers._.s_on_\ewh;at embarrsp_sing._. _ . As a buying agent the spy has also worked well. `.No_l_33-{ton can `now, go i across` thef Caspian to` purch s_,'so,skins any more then `to sell hardware` or even just. to amuse himself, without . his". letters being-opened` and the com- ` pony "ho keeps: careiully.n`oted..` o . In ordinary circumstances. .~ when the-opy is known. -he-.thereby,beco1nes '; innocuou8.;.snd_ '_h= kn0WI_J_t-`. 11 dh:-1 covered; the impolite _Rus_`I~i&n_Hway_"; is to .fo.rb.i.d z-himhto elit`. ., ,'.!|-l try. our te"decls`;;je he c6nies"irom~;`a ._ plague-infested ort, or-that he-is fa-_ ' Roman Catholic or a Jew. ` ' 'I`lIo.~`polit`e; wayds-`to oller him a . ` _crd~,--.-.or'-` helpmatcu or - comganion. hemp: ls;.- then-A:sho*n.. W13-,-hi. .must see. and as soon as l\e_,,has`;} `-~-- --4| 1'-nnnrf.Ad-.`thC ,. i _.___ w-- I tvbc` j .' Nutidho l_1|_oovor.WlIpt l,'h0!,.D.iI 'j~K_iqw ln'.l1iol_ 1_' NolTglx'l`>o,r'g"i'1`o_rA1-1t6i)'. V. '_ But Ajjofot Allowed To. A ` miI16i;diug;"~ ~ - - ~ - - The noun ~nr.1uun V53: us to cm `V Th t,ho:'.roc6kII1zod.,spy-'rouaIl 1 the .: `gal! _ - liukl. . or. 31V9.:2|Ii.Ins-P0113 at wht-Iser%.F;% "M and t_ol_l ..l_i1g_n 39$? gt9l!1.0.,|- .l.l /`.110, A ; "5313 W]. {mun on I upqglmoggjqylxg Q) {nut _ rog{::pn`t.`q.1.ct:!q5|_:gg:.;t.hen to igng, or; MM Mfhm.-;.I_~` hum . tunuvo- Heal nu umdcumgww u. = [mg may are the dodges resorted wha un H-`W >"~".`.;``Y.; "'~ITi ""'-z': 1.~s:-. . . the C `gunman, 1[.upc'tg,\;,._oi- `mongol, that tau}-`nuimg, ' swat`, iahcily ` mm; and` -the" ' `0lilnamun`-`ing? i will cgrtuinly ,ndfal`~`*den6uhco" % Hi can? `cimulnW'ignonnc`. almoit. whom ;'1`12g .t11vroA'=T-Tr-;;M&h.-.V; ;. ... ` Tho, `Japane.-9 `;pparen1x_-in-T pm `and 1gn`orgxig;uLqL u `_.':1_9`gihH.I_ gggu- ?e thin abbnt ach hat one would like to say: the London `Express cor- ldent. '- ' ` 1. Anni ;_.L_ L8. degr on theW_.Federa.tion and tho erly f obligations at tho~ recent ` B$&A;(\$lI (III? liar Notwlthstc;nding all . the --txactlesfs _ ;";" In the,;I;torth(::Q,V!z1ii1g'i7`a;71`e\ o!":th Au?- `t;o1npbl_leff,.Club some ~_i;npm?t.an_t, .8it a;tiQ g*lcsj". or-= fatglities .: tcfeueed; by` motor ears ., other: veh-. ..i,\':_le8A.,:_;_.'1h,ey'._-.a_.re drawn from the oi- c i_e_.l` gu;'e_s of `the annual reports of- the. ommissioner _ .o"Poliee of the .Metropolis, and `cover an a.rea.'\of;688~ -square miles`, from _Co1ney Heat-h, -in ` Hertfordshire, to '_1`adwort.h Heath. in ; _Surrey, and from` Larke Hall, in Es- 1 ',-sex, to Steiiies Moor. invllzliddlesex, l the most congested and densely pop; ulated.pa;rt. of the United Kingdom-. The gures cover" the years` from_` 1896,'when the motor car was legal-.. ly empowered to run on the public roads, to 1901, and on the strength of them the leading article in the Automobile Club Journal is headed "The Safest Vehicle on the Public . Rtlads. : T :1 1 1 ,,,,. 4:1 ; _3n 1,`. _.-__- 5 Stutlglcuvnshowing coldopu ROInIt>ll;-II; ` 3~ l')e3i?l: on Other Convey-ag_:eu. aovviatiti 0 pp The Journal says: "It will be seen from these gures that a very com- mon impression that motor cars are responsible for a. `large aumher of `fatal accidents is totally .unsupport- ed. Sincevthe act of 1896 .A legalized the use of light locomotives upon the highway, the average number of per i sons killed annually in the streets of ivthe metropolis :by light locomotives is less thanone. .* ," " The slow-v_ ! going vehicles -are responsible for 3 more fatal accidents than the quickv] I traveling ones. The following fig- ures `speak for"`themselves: i I ~T2':I1.-..i '...`.._unil`I-- In-`fuvnlruinlna {rs T.nI`\` Vupl I U o o I Q I u u u u ` - o u - u u - - u q uu - \ ca.rts`,. wa.gon,_ and`? dr By cabs .By Vomnibupes -. .`By'15ri'at'e"\ 3ziriiB; S By Cycles` ` ..... ...`.. i By light TIo_cVo z_nc_>'tives I . V5510 wusnu. . ' Taking the second and clearer step` first. it is sjuhject of intense satin-A (action to Audtrulians that conict over ripcrian 1'-ghts has" been avoid- ed. As ~th`e- Nileiis to=`E 3'ypt."so is theliurraw to great ureaslu-New South Hole! and ;V1.ctoria..- For prospety to reach those, a_.res.s in-1-4 7. cation t_he.-s.co_ns`ern_tionh of ood t I I L I P; I 9. ' Stites}. e 1 vh',t_erI_: are, a sine qua ,Tno_n. South. Austx-:1. has fought ths,'she1;1es_.o!_ her nelihhor` l$eei`a1'se sho feared that the tow of water, `whet the llurrey reached her __te.rr_'lt_o3-y, livoulcl be so low as to impede novlfst-ion. The , agreement ~gxm-.a._n_t.oes;.SosI3-h;Auatrul- 5 Isle .l.9!':.01.: 387;.00.0.cub1.. Mt Per minute, provides _n. Icomml ` administer the. Iche_me`s_ or ;th.`o.; other 1` witif. .d`\ n'-hi"; i | nlanteenf the put: 'et=.V~i<:,tox-is`; with [1 lesser quantities .l\'1,r,1ng;o._.tho~r-.ept_ .o_!_ ths..~.7e:_rZ.. snnsl,=!,u;;9!o-$19.9 Iomoeznt V as reamivqd 4.!1gI Z.-`.?A."7.` ns&i9no;,tbr99th9\stv `the: ~ amour w eh; `Nothing `short or us 'q;gfg.`_ ~ elysnte disggghggg _or_ mother; 2 di'oiTfhI{`;bgp_ `__ `_ _ tor a II a ot"ths`3` '1reeni`ent- ssipn. to ._ dad lt'm1ts_ the ,di_ve rsiohs" oi. `_ __ th I:even`mo`nhs;--Jg;ly' to` `1`I_nc1usive .' to "$995000 cu-- bl`e7 fect='per-` tninliti` on: the -'pIrt3* of 5 Newvouth` Wales}? and? .17.000 per: `ea :m_ugeg , _, _,, ` gore :1900 :+"-I2.on`H:lon ,curct1o.o.: _u1_'es speagc tor tnemsewes: X5` `Killed `annually byyehicles in Lonv. ; donz. . . ` 4 V Ma,ki.p8` Y9'Y allowance` f_or_` the falctj th"a.t the ;i1umber of motor cars. is still limited as compared with horse-dra.wn_ vehicles, it is still clear that autocars are among -the safest vehicles in use in London, and_ that the popular opinioxras to thenum-_* ber or persons killed by themvis to-.i "tally Imsupported by "the facts. `V V L * The real fact is that control, en_d,; :_,not speed, is the `measure -otpeafetyl, ; Motor cars gend gbicycle being the "most 7un de1" 'con`l:i`"6l ax`_"e` the " safest \| vehicles on the lstrets, while ' the , .b1fa.keless, slow-goi`_nHg,_ clpmsy vans, drays, and wagons are the most den-. ger_ous.---Lo'ndon .'.l`eleg1*e.ph. ' ` ' V | , . By Iulllo` I-0'0 Ilgnnotou Lon-onooodii '> ' By wagons,_ and drays .. 43 ' I ~ - 7 -" 1 9 Ir nukes . nauonsu UUIl`IIblUlU av uuv* nu.-auu Premiers congerqncg, writes out He}- correspdndqnt, he Premiers made a. tremendous stride to- V the f s_ettle1nent~ of the rivers . ml..." Inn. uumrui n. vn vearn question. v have secured a. five years between -the three States of _South, _ Wales, Victoria,` and Australia, which are vitally` in the waters of the Murv-. ray; by means of an . agreement which. it ratified by the three.Pa;-1ia.- manta, will enable the Asmeg to egg`- ry fchrouglx; ,imp9rt..o.n't, wo,t,er consery, vation works. ._ o-n_|_.-__.`1L.` ..---_.I .....i -I--un- alga` .-.'-v -_---... _.- Willis. Idiloy. `.7 Q * Thu Wlltuns.-&nut- Eon- leyuwm |lI'.`0DODKY`e;ll k;`>Q-In` Qlllx-.115... -um utaruv Inovmsyg; ewho-..;,n,qto; `I.-- I.A._ AI.` A. .`A hllg. ulilvuuuuay lllvv H _ ""-1!": ..-v-.v, has bean the oxnltatlon of the hu- mu win, u1r"'l`llr ~-'roron'to News. . km.` 'r1tan.-..I .r wu xx. Haley : hero-.- -fs d'omitublo was his .tayor1eo;;onco!Il1!mI . v`K`!`L'. was who %*Pu=dsA atexvnamtkile t.9.u-g A j until . ho,znnd9`jIt .9` .19 . , !qn{ntea.tpr 1} than hi.-1.1iitss,;x-a`Lt,nra,-.` H .. 4:.e1;,:.9.y` .. 1. l[orp1_t15_',' j :16 .1_>`q`a_t' ~51: lo roQ61_!It9, ` .j kept `;hIq'_xj_'c \_u_ (.50 dd `Itplc 1d;o_'o.' of ' human iu".el1enc'o.=` L-`H1 . `--nanny`: `us late playing {at cm! loom #35 thi `ililo ;ot7. lb.-vrdhldy fihord ~ 1!! sthmzaoul IC:1l_\t0 .. f It wa;;&M;:31.m;*pqut!1ll9:. in `mud! .9a~P , _...?"!~ 3.;-. .930 0-. it who}: : ths.v'\. qt 5. E was A wlthheldf_1rVi;j1n_; g1z_zx'_g_at;` 1_o.l`l_ that,` "J10 .19.Vd.-. ;.1t,,,pw.-`ed hiI!1'it.f*:h .30 3; of `the `-litero;'t'v.`zre" `or jtbi-op Acne: mark-_ [1 ed the coma; in` is! turn` cbaguny; ._B_u't ;; it; i`s`"n'6t.? u cbmplete` creed-;~' '1`-ho Ph- .; t`n|e'.=..*ph1losoph3'rI held: within itself ~ the, germs. not-=9I`1ly, of .8t'oi,cism`.V but.` 2 of-; :Eoic,v1rIJ_am.' Iron: -.WhiL,h: lattor. {by tho way,` in thD_.r.9lJm`j0_f:`. [)()_Ot1"o ' -u. -u...I- .. Am fmiiji idailiver Dy tno way, in }.`nu_ 'l;I:'||.I`u.|._ V. t,..........',., _l(r. Henley. ,di_d. . muph },t9. -, do'1`l,\_rer.. `us. And niihefr of .th,o =,=v- -; `ti-ke- gccqujtt '._)t_!_,|it:_t.oxf_s. high into the w'dr1d'y` philosophy i'n` Judvea` and 1: Gn1i.l.ee,_` and whigh canpot "nowjbo i dlirglggdqd-"`Q_ye:`WnA lite;-u.t'pre.' 1 '\ .. "0 OIHICCI OI III! In uvv ug-uuvg. ... -tmpahxmgmmaghem :!vok;;en9!!a- ;i'_!9r3 i ~ 1 `Brit"ih?`:`e:ig'itiocr hum calculutlld - 1;.` 1% ,:uoy..o, 1100`; pbundi cits g:'oY::c.i:Iu'ot ice in the minuteI,i;1B. _; _ _..._. -1. ..-..l-uunn\ lug-Q. rnk vrhllililo 7377.` ~ power. -ngigli Aluvor nishes Ii Aunt:-nllkn.