Northern Advance, 27 Aug 1903, p. 3

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

a;:;.;;e;r;g;a.T IE, Sunsequenuy a1uypui5 an uu V... in-ary seamen on a Kanaka, recruit- ing schooner for a. voyage among the -Pacic Islands, publishing the results in the Age. Next,he led the same! par per's exploring expedition into New Guinea, wherehe was speared by a. -..~Pa.pu.a.n cannibal. A portion of the spear remained embedded in his body, and was only removed when he /went to Edinburgh to qualify for his M._D. degree, Returning to Australia, he was appointed House Surgeon in `the Ballarst Hospital, where he re- . I--"L mained for two years, when his rev. ing disposition sg1a.in_ asserted itself. This time he chose China. and there he appears to have taken root at 3 Sir Frederick. I4ei;h:r:;,~ the Eng. 1 `Huh painter. Wu. aldovoted to child- I ran.` as. my .xnot.hor._ot; a funily. on. "day he called at `thehouse of a. young - xnuijcal vpice: ipglntor. ;_u\ . announced, in his high, "I "huv_o_. com; to see tho 1.5: baby." ' ' = _ - e ehlld was brought in, and Sir Fredetlo took it from the arms ~ of the ,proud~mother. He kissed it, end then ` "I must see those feet!" 7 '1`he.be.by e Jocks were instantly taken,o.f ` ' l` ` " cried "Oh, um lovely pink toes! the er-tlat. They are quite Greek! They` are perfect. -' - This in -`e. tone of rupture, and` , later he sold to the tether impres-_ neivelyz . , V f `.'Johnny.. you must point those "dear little legs..endefeet.. Work herd .e`ll,dey.. at drawing. mo'dellin'g ` and painting. and` let night dream of your , art. You n'1uet*concentre.to`yourael!` ` - ' tr-...a...me. live in it; I A tint \.---y-v- - ~-.`-p A prxmom forest containing 120,-` 000 camphor trees. men,_suring from 1 `7 to 18 {opt in circumference, has re. 1 f'cent1y- been discovered in Formosa. It sin-`,,.est.imutod that the yield of from these trees will ,`gmount'-;to_"18',Q00, pounds. Thcl ' `S-it xgqlt;-ggqgtirely, or -' " _' c;O n$Il"i m__other '.l`nu'.'s wny wow 5. u... V... .. old masters. werejo crest." M L Egon chapter Fergus. - .-'.~... . ____`___:'_.- *-* inn `nu: sou: have co.. Pnlulor nut lsby. -u4___ A ? stand unrivalled. A Itis not necessiy to wait for days for benecial results, you know at once that Gin Pills are helping you. Sold by all Druggists at 50 cts. per box, 6 boxes for $2.50 or direct from ~ * ` ccvisnkvlnl \l__ all the medicinai qualities of one and one-hialf ounces of the best.Ho1land Gin. As a. positive cure for all kinds of Kidney trouble. ' GIN "PILLS `Each Pill Contains _-v"C R1'e_[llE L'LlUI\.'c UL Lu: n u... ...v_, ..-_._ b He gave the word `That called us into line, set In our hand a sword; lt "and draw, ~ . ` And bide us forth to the sound of tho `trumpet of the Law. `East and west and north, wherever the T battle grew, . As men to a. feast; we faxed, the work of _ the wm to do. _.We are the choice of the Win: God: 11.. `Volvo fhn wnrcl Bent upon vast beginlngs, blddlhg an- ` archy cense-- (Had we hacked it _to the Pit, we had left it a place of peace!)- l_IIrchix;g,_ bulldiffg, sa11lng,Vplllu'r of cloud no firm ll_LIl.\iMIu5,_ uuuunua, ....._-__a, __ or fire, ' . Sons of the Win], we fought the ght of . the Will, our sire. Road was never so rough that we left itl - - purpose dark,- Stnrk was ever the sea,..but our ships were yet more sta-r_k. ` We trackedthe wands or the world to the ' steps of their. very thrones: The secret parts of the world were salted In-It-in I\!I.1I homag- Tm now tho n-nmn of names, England, the manna nnf nulqfhf, -11" nnw [uv ]n|nu- 0|. uauxca, nau._-,._....-, -- . .name'ovt might Flames from the nu; ha`! bolmd to W0 9115' .0 M... um-rhmvn, Mahtz Flames Il`0!1) UH`. Hus mm Irlluuua pg nu. u...- or the northern light; _ And thi: call at her morning drum gum in a gbdile of sound, Like the voice at the sun In song, the great pl.-us`- FAIIIII` and 1-mind: . - uxe tne voice at we auu LII sou`, um ......- globe round and round: ~And the shadow or rm? ag when It shout! to the mother-breeze Floats from shore to shore at the unlve:-nl And the lonellc-st dent): in fair with 1 menlr an: an. `In! `REEF. Alli] (Ila |lIlu.'lu'.u. |lI:"1.ll no unu nun c uauur cry of hcvr owers, And the end of the road to Hell wtth thl -A-nu` .0 `tan Hour... and l`\lItbX' .'~I?lI..C*F.,V. ` ~"~--- dnnabk V` ' to .0 I :':..:-........,'*~-?Z...:.'-*-.'.I' .'."" -".`.':.'3.":'.*.':*. : ` --L who oaymthnt we aha put, at the hut of,u_tule,und die. While the living star! full that? and U 121 1171 I , e n` `K ..w. ll- nun. Q %nmLLfs .:.-.-:2!-.::.'-.:.z..*::.!. ',...'*`::. |\u)Uvu. uuuuuu-us. Jun... '6' .,-._,. Dr. B. I. Koidsll Co.. Genuemcn: I had to treat I you] ltotaofnino four yous ago which had a loan I Vin Im not Inland on the mac hand was vuyjndly __ _ _; Io_b_I_ horn of nine four years which had none I van In g`tkickodoIlhonmoicwdwasvcrybadly -sou: t I had to bathe It in rum valet then up (I Kendall`! Spain Cure. 1 lad Typhoid Fever in same w in and on gun the Kendall`: Spain Cure hnlfa chanco. tndit only ononnd a halt bottle: to can his leg with var slim human and it did so,oompielciy. that on would nut or that he 3 soul: 3 he sure: has some use since. ~ ' , ' Vuytnnlyyouts. G30. 8. HARRIS. ;" VT;.S .|`I'l"C;;'l"l-Iii: E365 Hm: ,_ Very uuly yours. such a I: tom 1 vii. !r1u5'i:3'x"'n"n'.'A'sVa`nu...'"3r'a":-73'5s'.?c no . -aunlgx Ask um. diuuls: f9I'.KlI`!u_`l jpsvln QI_u'O_-,. Irina I1 : Ii: lb: II. A: a Ilnimenz (or many man ms nu equal. Ask you? dru z for Randall : S in onus . an A '1':-ont.tu on a lone," no book no. 0: umnd ` -- n - unnnnt I A8 Inl III I I. A `.:"'-'5':-1-... u"Ti"."."`.`.'.`.":' M. 3.}. Know. 3.. uqonuno mu. V1.-o 3-I" LII!` 01111 OI uxe roan L0 ncu vuu. Ienaqot her dew; and showers! SONS OF `THE WILL. cm for Iona Spqvln. ,' _ . Russell. uanitoba. JII-0!903- - - n - - 4.,__.o__.. . I I.-A hurl-gni n -nsnnl WINNIPEG. Man. with Eddy s vnds W . ..I- nnivuv Hm-nn no ~ LOPAVI A..'..c .. -n..A4 F3! 52' 3!: E3 already in-? May we iug. ; the BE8'l'.j ; lot In '~` mom: Pi'ofox1-'t_`:5a,iri9",` H?nEa,t:"i'ne and Ii5hV3?Tir~ .. me House of 09m,mons::e as i`-:"ld,,mdum 011 `.h ?t..9?.,;3?h . ; A 9 n of shery rights .betVl_enet11o:;`?'i . eatlol and provincial Governments. if. V _."t_., out that th0_d3_Ci8i0!l fol-the ,. .- ;,ItP"_mcouncil, .dclivored on PM 1893, substantially secured to whbominion Parliament thy ,,._g91e.;,; H59 e to make regulations `cpqtrol, the manner of shing, and the cnaptment of all shenyqag, 7? ..1ati. S and restrictions -_1s"_vIi.tlili5~ V xcxusive competence of the_;i Dog [1196 L`8islature." Whi0h`*'TE1E":..., i;l11i"innd restrictions might, it was '. `: tion9d`;d nccessvarily to a certain ex-' `0 ea proprietary rights. ` For ` . lent .~ cos it decided that what-V -j- 'ctary rights ` were at tho" . a of onfcderation possessed ; by ,tlm mained` untouched by tho j -ihiqh North America act. and .Brlttxver wants might previously '1 been awfully made could law-. i ll be made after the `passing -pt ` tact, but admitted ithatythoI,o." nth` rietary rights would necessarily - aectod to some elltont by `tho '.mmio,,'s restrictive powers of reg- potion At the same tune the decis- - `, l' mgmgsly recognizes the right of . it`); Pa -1ig,ln(nt of Canada not only make regulations for the protec- . " and preservation of sheries, or 5150 to impose a tax as I. condi 3%,. of the right to sh. - i ' `Inns 0!. Llunus. 'Th,on1y part of the Canadian sh- act which the Judgment declare: to be beyond the powers 0! the I_ ar- ` nuucnt of Canada are thoso sections by which Parliament` empowered the mriuo and Fisheries Department to `mt consos or leases conferring-ox-; msive right of shing. Following Wm judgment, `conferences were held M the purpose of reaching -some was for administering` the dicrent .gunctions.devolving upon each Gov- ornment under the changed condition of aajps, 'l`o the Province of On- .mlo tho sheries were relinquished so far as the disposal thereof as a. DroP"im'ry ight." was concerned. which jfwolyed, of course, the issue i of 9,11 fishery licenses in-inland wat- ,_ _...a +1.. .-nllm-Hun nf all raven- % ,m-:nIES ..-..-... Ilnn. Rnvninnd `Pr: 0! all H3'llUl_y Alv\.\?|lJ\.D Au. O||VI'I|\-I "U-U egg, and the collcctxon of all. reven- ue3t,heref1`01n, reserving all rights of mgulation. The Dominion. however, may yet deem it expediaht to",ma.ko'~ some further claim with, regard .,toj ' the waters of the gI`ea,t lakes. (arm the. boundary line between two foreign countries. With the Province ` 9: Quebec an a.rro.~ng'-n.1ent wgu nggdo 1.. by which the depa.1'tmcnt handed` ov- er the proprietary interests in /..L....:.... an Inn on *'In" u uw 1'-vr--~---u --~--~,,-~~- -- _, ,1? sheries, so far as their inland and waters were "conoo'!'ii1(I`; f claimed and exercised vjurisdictibni `ov-L ` " er the gulf sheries below 0. line. _` drawn from Cap Chatte--to Point doa- Monts. Tlfhe Province demurred to ,` `this, and it was {agreed that a. refer- _ence should be made to the Supreme Court, having for its object.a. mll-. ing of the ownership or jurisdiction over such maritimeifisheries as are` comprised in areas removed from the_ 1 mouths of rivers seaward on .,the bold` : coast or along the `three-mil limit,` and below the line of demarcation 8.}- r. ready mentioned. ' " `I V slve sheries there. _ _ .. made in 1901, by which a. test case 5 could be ma.-dc in order to settle the claim of Quaker to thee exclus'iv:_, 0 .. `course. decided the y Ilglntainod. . lief inahgro Ilshe'rieo' `on ' tho` `tliI`00" Jam uvv - --w-:_ \`$Il The Province of Quebec claimed 8-3 V proprietary practically all the `Wa.tel'_ area of the Gulf of St. Lawrence uipable of being claimed by Canada, ` while the Dominion admitted `its, right to the river sheries, but_ de- _nied that it had any ownership gain the seacoast sheries, and , conse-,_ quently could not grantany exclu-` A proposal was rights, which, if settled, would. grant as to the maritime Provincea _ claims, which embraced 9. proprietary interest in ` the three-mile limit. The other mar- itime Provinces, including `British Columbia, entered into .a, tentative "`ET0ement with the Dominion Gov- Omment, by which the Federal Fish- Wiei Dcvpartnient continue tdminister the sheries service. Practically as xormerly, pond- `!!! the lion to be referred as to `310; 10119` diction below low-water mark:. hilt in the interim collections made Bil? 1 tier such conditions are claimtbl `:3 x` I ` . Incidentally", {FOL -: .tho .A;*.vlw=.1. !'ll.`~'r 2' the Province: it their oonditill `RV! claim on to settlement of the `N09 T`. 4 I contend for .3 portion "g(_$h3l'.. ` Etliio.x' award---tour and a half mil- lion dollors--for A the twelve` yam my the United 8totuot~e\t.he"0'r?`7-, mile mm duriu-g *`tl'Il"'; ' `X I`n`An .0 LL- ......{.u 7` at . -5- uuuura--101' pug D'_VUVVV\JVT'- My tho sum or-t.he"On_n. autunnshm sheries` ad the thro`_O- 9 Inilelimit dur!u*g'=tl'uo", ` " .. 5;: $91100 articles of the treaty oi Wuhington. % Donlnlou 033:0! kotglcilto ' II f||AnA -I-.l..._ 4.- _---inn]-CQIVC `flu -U_ IIIII UIIICU CUIQUVVP ll these claims to progmotary ln- ` M can out mun oi the Pro- WOI uwrgng 2:0 Vnulno bolt: ` Mu eormomr jur1td1tiou_ ch I liol Govemmunt cannot 10111110900- ln: that any right. pom!!!` 0 `M than-mile limit wu`;.,in'5'tlI.lW' Er.` ' 3 Juriadictionj W X30851?-7 "V f`.u..-_ _____ -..Al...'." bk` `~.tn.tn_. u ` '| In JUILUUIUWIOII -UlCWIV9"" V'- " -`"3 Cr own '1-epnoiontinf the `.St9R0_o `N lot in any wayt.o"bo 3 I Proprietary right. to?&h,;~:-P!'0+ ; I. tib. II Ill. -uni! `hidai '"~~-eu- as . common I.ww'., % mmcally passed tea the -... T T M011. and was ubjetv-WWO? "9 " Q` ldmiralty courts, skid not C`? ti mmlon law courts Qt,.h9-.lQ_,n,l_,~ _, "A "5" iurisdiction of.-H10`? Ir". 7` _ lolution of the in. thg go the acquisition `by the _;-::_myV5!`nn\ent of Provinciblt P gm time in the columns (or: , I , ...llent to 5. 1' ' pg; 4 tum- hurl.-2'-` '.?'~df'"_nfnii'I'IoI:;7' Quebec : Clsllln. 7, mos%% Provincol . IISVO A Colonial `:`__, Jilin` -s--_-_I En. ;o no IOI_tlOd-'.l'OQ- "VT , hi `V , % Up- 5`"' f lg:f'_`.4"_m` E-.'*%Pi`.1..e.1.A1?%'%e,_'.`1;i,.*'-,-V ..s:23'M.`,.. .-4 ; of t1'er`1504i,_I_ted his %p9rt!I}t.:I,..9 9:21 wuuam mm: of,,1qV j; 1*.i1 `~` V..-'.`.?V:.`!'.-= ~ '1`hoso,nd2 gt-gut, g % 3 "re, `aw 3.5, 7;'. :'r.:`-'!n.awlI'o'2f~ ~ V 9aI>9r~ V ~ \. _, _. VI`t'i-plll7E;V()ju'uli'lo_ o lIiI_`f,._VS5"ilhjI_I'[Q ~ - laugh-5- 1`o_oIoi|A III: 0161: rorn-'-Fool ' . ad by.liu_0wn Plouufn. ' ! 1 _A . T" `A being "an gentle ` ' J apneafr7Klf7?`:;Ic1Ieii"i;inietlelj, te '- _Ame`rjican artist, who, died` \ . . ` p ` 'inALqndo] n" recently. 88-Vehinlelt Jthe 1. credit? I at or Q = "making eaeriiies .`f"5" "Was, ii. i ways in` hot water with somebody, I and was as_ fond as` an` old-fashionede lawsuit, enjoying litigat Scotchman of getting intoa lively, ion almost ' equally well whether he won'or,tlqst.'. i -[Whistler W83. not particularly proud _ . of being a native `Amer .ing in, that respect Wil .>`Astor. A Frenchman o ican, ;;!5e'se'znbl- 1 liam i Waldorf -5 me sized him a up as being'_j"`_a;1,' American F -tin " his i `nets and a Frenchman origin, an `Englishman `in his -man- _ in his esprit." \ The-critic added that about the man 7 there constantly oats an indenable fragrance of"'_sulphur_. Others have de- scribed the artist : laugh as satanic in its cvnicinmo and -6 L. 1-H Al!` -v- I IJUIJ IIIIV at uni: xuugn >88 SE58-BIC in -8 '0Yni0i8.11; and yet `he felt dis- 1 appointed and hurt it his companot ions failed to join in his mirth." `He ` bad the habit of buttonholing those to whom he talked. not guratively merely. but actually, that they might not escape him until he had `his say. It wngrwnll "nun-4|. ....|.n.. u.-....I. 4- nu... vuvuyv `nuts uuuu no; nan "1118 l It was well worth while though, to listenrto him; {or his-wit was irre-lit eistible. The mere repetition of his mots did themfinjustice. or-' it was 3 not the remarks themselves but the way in which they were made that made them funny. His` personality. was enriched `by all sorts` ot~manner- isms and stereotyped. words and phrases. A_'L..L I2I-- L- ___.A - --~ A ' ' ` ynu Iluuao _ l ' | Artist-like. he spent; great deal 0! pains with his hair, ` which curled } beautifully. But the remarkable fee.- ture of this part 431- his toilet was that, while the" dyed nearly all at his hair a. rich, glossy L black," he lelt one tell tale lock`? with the ..wliiteness of ego, 5 l "l" O1o,tllIlvIhlh`I `A ' . Couecb: l - - . ~ when the, ofcer `nrst _ a.ppea.red- he wore his hat in! the drawing-room and smoked and `spat. all over the house. Mr.` Whistler -soon settled that. He went; out-into` the .ha.ll,. armada himself with a cane and ja.unt- _ ily wha,cked.his visitor -s hato. The ,` man was` so surprised. that he forgot. to. be..angry..- One morning, when.) Whistler was shaving, 0. message was brought to him that the bailiff wished to. speak with him.` tnTY_.... C'vAo cant` III` -.- jd collect: ' + ' A. 0' " y"ef`;7-.` ' ` ' " ' " , - i - - rauuauauuvug-_vuuaua V. vv UV `'`'!'`.`'`l v--: Y011- Y'`1"d better 19*: "me 59 What I . dea.vored' to sqtlare themselves by * can do With it'_'_ . ' _ -, jamming W one han,d-,,-or sometimes .13 his ' 3t`'38'1` 3'7d'Y3i`r``?:` h`5d `` in`? iljoth handsintd. '~t11'efr trousers poc- the'- top oi an o-ld~pa1e.ce in Venice, 'ketS_ Rcently one of our most V ,-`A. starving on- a. diet `of maccaroni and S ect 1 news ` ,g,1nt,d ,, 0;. .p.01f!3t&.% u;1h1i,!q:.*to sen `of; ~h16.:-t`ai : t we-5 ipoxamin. pictures -'except`*'at: tstarvation-' pr`ices."'**who is a good 'cig`i'g,',, a fond father ..It -was only; by -dint of industriously ind a thorough ch`m.chmu,_ Behold"; Crying P h .9`'"` Wm? trh-'t,h n` This estimable gentleman had stood 8113' induced 5011.10 $9 b" ` him` in the eye of the camera Wltlrboth ` . . Doslllll Wm: -cudi*l`|- ~ "hands stuck into those pe;;pendic;1laI'- _ Even .-in his da_y,.__o1 prosperity, slits! `His attitude. was `t at o 3 Whistler `was, perpetually in debt. He boy who feared that - hlistpewlies, had no head for money matters. Here W01.d J08_gle out of his P00 9 3: h 3?" is` the way he once `tamed a London Was lacking In the P1& _:-19%??? ert. who had a shim t %::m::;c3:2:;':":h:; h; ,When>the.. o1'cerWnrst_a.ppea.red- t0 ` tell` his iiubiect t0 BhW hi drawing-room hi?-_1}_d_S?~ A e ' ,_:-.4 , sin. 4_..1_'__n-. ,---~|..n_u.- .u..-1o Whistler had no false : -modesty about praising his own` work. when struggling for recognition early ,in hiscareer, he made. it a point to laud his pictures so` `loudly and per-3 sistently that other folk nally be- I gain to take him at his own valua-' tion, because no critic thought it worth while to say anything against, the obscure Young `artist. .This self- esteem served him- all his life. l(l'1 . _ _ . _-._. LI_!.. 3.. _II ___-__-___.-- 7 had USUUVILL 99$ VCR IIIII" II III? IIICO Come now, this is 9.11.. nonsense, `you trying to `do this," he said once to a fellow-painter who thought he: landscapq to phint. -'.Jt'is- much too lit upon a p1"dznising"~ bit df_ 1 ` good okgubject to be wasted . upon" `;Vln`-\uu'?"A I-`A41-Ar IA!-Lynn clan u!1n+. T `Tf\II p0l6l1l}&,j l{1_ulM.6_ 51.0 V6611` any -."jq1.. '-qga ~. $1,. L Vp`ic`t1u'e's except ".ti sta.!"va.ti`0n-' pfics.` only up his own waljes that he induced some believe in ` baili ;bil1~a.ga.inst to collect:' h v t 1111... . AL. _A--..' dun` nnnnavn. "in t:oi-1')`:_:'V.-"; ' o M d V` I tell you- what I advise you to ` do," returned Whistler, as he pushed % his caller out of the room; you _ should do -u .I do, and have _o `man .` in youraelt."' _ ` ilflluhtlocouno.-V-.N * ` ' some ot'gWhiatlorA'a Aloyvluita becamo famous. `ions in` puficuldr the en- ot. joyed as -as sweet `mortal. although he \ ' lost it and wu .t17x:ed.=hea'1,5i.ly for tho hgxury, _ Ilgz; `I. ;;cf>mmission 0.: ` It-om Sir , . paint. 5 _ _..A_-u...- ~a'.'.'a.'\.|rI. .'-I1nn "CID: x: in ctura g`. WlSn8(1.t0< B11655 wsuu uuu. "Very well; send him ._up',"--- said. Whistler, but he kept on shaving. Now, then, what do. you want?" he continued, as the man appeared. A I want my money. air," was the reply. T A * What money?"V A V My P98.8.e8.8i.n money. sir." .Wha.t,_11aven't,they `given It to you?"_ _ , .1 . . No; air, `it's you that has to give n"t(())t.;im1;I;e deuce I have!" this __with_ one `of his endish la.l1Rh9- ..ur_n 1- 41.4.1. 14- : vm-v hard- oneot I113 Ilenuusu xuupgua. Well, I .think it's very hard, air," anivelled the man. I have. mv own mmily to keep and `my own ren ;- _-..- n , " g`v$v.- 7-7 4..`... "1' ___ J _ V _v oeredvq ` - `*5 tho -mo .*t0'I'i .InI191w`-t`lI0"IJ!`|0- Whistler4oulIt~.im1Q31!1V. but` tho intuit.-`vi - warm?" ouch`-`-p syment. pluint! wolf. xetihriudcmont not x The` `list iotorndi-.to~.im1ud`u bio-` only `10f.'NO.`10`l*3li'v` Wt` '59"! cr onhv.=- hi.Itory.- i I;cuphy. truer. `damgges bosidem. Iwthqiogy and .3 __`v`qry Inga, ii at `Bix`1:`- Wli i'at;ldn-.54oc v'!n(`9"ti'Iii;0,8" `WM '. 151G*!i*. works on elex_xxent';;,ry,_scievnce. particu- e aft ?-c`_ c. an oi E vi 1"` i i . . *`"" *5'"""` ``'`' `7` 3` " `Sir. A qua:-reiod with gar `car-it.*. u, Cd!-1 Pmmc. Rmhnd. `t caturinz.:hin.= as 1i'` .1 t'T`` ` ` _:f1nterviewudi'n Nw` York` not lent` " "" 'i` A ` " A . .- `listed on treating mm like .a.*1oreign- ttbyerby M :4`. ` ;`..l-1 '7. ,' -. n vian!W%,;:aii~ or. V The u_ontreo.1,cgpita1iat -took it _ . I 1*` I .. \.- . . ,, ,, 41 ."`v tli_;x ;o vliht; (who aIIb....a.qa,.!',t*iIt_.)i,___ u ` mw. of Q6-1. hm _ an __m__ W" 31?19_"`'$919 ~ .i-""`.%".:>.".`lV hrviowor inu69nt;ly:- _ LIZ` 7 ' ` N I I-vmea .`.....`.m- 1mro':'mytmxx'g to do p;;..g1.% -._.;.-_.` Moat WHlSTvLE`R|SMS. ` '--Q 9 IIIIVJ 6593-1? 0519 0&4:-IJ\yu 1. VI 515 `III them justice. ,6 Ii. fortune has no favored them with pleasing countc-V znances, they reect that the camera -: ` isable to make a Hyperion out of a" ! Satyr. And so the young men go on:_ _ i beingisnapped. at. In this connection it may be well here to give a brief 1 - account 0! an important improve- , 3 meat in photography. It is com-. _i`monded especiall to "Sir Lipton. ?. _ as La Prcsse wi 1' persist in calling _ him. The inventor of this improve- , ment has no intention `of. applying. ; _ for a patent. He prefers to dedicate , 3 his great invention to the Canadian .\ , public. He says that in the pat ; - three years he has examined a very ,, large` number_of photographs and _ ;- process .engra-vings made from photo: I graphs, portraits 'o_t. men. He nds 1 that a high percentage 01 them-1 I 85.7, _to_._ ),,;e.ccu1fatc--are marred by 1 a single rious_ blemish. The object , f.ot his -invention is to get rid oi . this blemish. ' __._._,,L,___ l_ _--.._- ...:..._`I. `'4. _` wk'_awiuns=- mm: toicisiiiatsi -"`oiv?ui1c`xii:.'riog I - j .\ig.LGf|vou: Keep Inn-_ uids '_ 'g b 0i:I .,o1' Your l'ookot_|," ` T `A young womo.n~stood up beside -Sir '1`homusv-L,ipto`nand- snapped her g =Cam0l'a. an` cite-witness? avers, untiltt {.911 the films. inghcr mghine were ll- ed with pictures of the Irish knight, All over Ontario similar young wo-A men are behaving similarly to all` kinds of persons, says lJay`by Day, g in Toronto News; Muskoka. is full of ` `amateur iphotog!"?aphers,. who keep _- their shutters going without somuch 3 as a. ".by_your leave." It is regret-i ! 't9.ble `to state that there are Iew `t persons `who are, verecund enough to (protest. They pose with" unconceal-o ied; delight ~ If they -are good-look- ing, they hope the camera, will do J-Innmn :..nL2..- TI l-..A..._- 1....` .....L LIIIB UICLIIIBII o The apparatus is very simple. .. It 1 consists eta sign. to be placed on ' the camera facing the sitter, bearing `' L the le_gend:_ Keep your hands out 01, iiyour pocl;ets_!, - It is to `be hoped i that eiiery photographer in Canada; amateur and professional, will -ac-- qui-re one -of `these Tinventions. Why Sir Thomas Lipton and pretty near- ly every other man preparing {or his counterfeit presentment for his friends . or for the public should suddenly possessed by an. impulse to make that" picture awkward and undigni-'. tied the inventor is unable to con- jecture. Yet they all--or nearly all-- ? do that same thing. If the obserir-~ ant citizen, in the midst of his7 strenuous life, will take time to peer..,intp the show windows of" our photographic artists,-`- he will nd |.-6 \...-.1}.4- ..m.anu` '_inn- an! Inn Bovinu. , {K };'i1"'+me`K"$31"'oif"zeqI"'iaa6 ":sumnion ogL_courago'.- to be "taken." ` A;-.nuu\uuuI' O-A -nunrn thnmhnlvnn ` ` ~ -Iursl leho'ol'LlbI-Oriel` . 'Accor_ling to. the reports of inspec- . tore `just received at the Education . Department = in Toront o rural -school 7 libraries. are being established in to great number of districts throughout the province. 1111...... Inuuguulnn --rn nnnnnl-QAII .1117 nanusor. _. , V This curioiiQ'ii1ani'a exhibits itsoll elsewhere -~ `~`t*ll 'm.`in. the ' picture gal- lery.- Ours o`r?%.tory~suers from it. You `don't get our greatest orator ' rendering himself guilty of any such ga;uchcrie. Sir Wilfrid knows better. "But.-"both here and in Ottawa; few men can rise to make a speech with- out immediately` thrusting one hand into sepocket; ~When they get up to reply to en .e.fter-dinner toast-, they shove .both hands. in. The wives" of such speech-ma.kers should sew up_ the ..pockets in the dress suits. '.Per- 'haps this would be disastrous at `rst. es it might disconcert the speaker, and cause him to V forget .. what he had to say, like the school- boy whose jacket`-button was . sur- 5 reptitiously cut oil by Welter Scott. But in the end it would produce one 9, of `two needed` reforms; It` would compel "men to `stand gracefully, or it-' would keep sf lot of platitudlnous bores where they belong~-in~ their `chair. - '- ' = I-I16 prvvsuuvu These. libraries are supported `by the Government under on order in council. July,4.1902,` ot which tho lol- lowlng sro extracts: - Section .2.-,- "Any? rursl school board which provide; s librsry tor- thou scholsrs, shall ho ontitlud to s s~ln.ro_ or whotovor mouoy moy ho op-` ip;opr'io.tJod' `! r` the` purposo` by `tho 1;4sgls,l.s'.'tgro. It '11:` purchssoo such coutslnod in tho op-` fvjr6V6il.liIt'._"t; . . . n..sI.- II ._ ..O.0`lhnru.-. I-In-Al . oehnnl g IIW Plmr ,r-v-9.19 "3 _;__Io_ldr 5qka_ on Alton and or- ugo. _on Illmolacentro. .7`. = paid tho '0! ;.;2&h1 = Denna:-n4% Paine ` C " V U|".>.l';lf;=uQ ":e'c'io:ai ? her: .1 n 1 . , .<:ru.r. .1: oo- - ho.-rd Vch-iuhfhm hm? H- det thole...cpmli1; om" `ohu1l boiaimu'a pa a&,;gpo,p.` Oquivileji `to .n`cIt tn; mom: -v!!d*1.;biIi. W` `*0 819 .1_1'| _|_-11?: on`9.(:*0II.`:' put !'ov11lid' nu -mo` l1**6!'i L5Itd973tlI0`!b`lt- 1`tu'n.-* in - _w_u.r`a-`un tf' new -`~pnymeuz.*.' 'nn<% list ntornodt;-.ta=-lnclud'u -vim hl,ntory. trsvon. . _.l.1_\d ..a 1IJ'Q_:.vlilt at , on __sc1nco. puma- | jgrly on. nqtum: gtpdy. 44+--.. 4-:-------4---- A ; ' w1mpm van.Hojrnd. chuirm-I.- of tho cam:-n Pacino Bhilrwh _`gm,`.r"v1gwo'd*t'n' York -not long -.._.,s_-_-. ~.: ...-.'a..;'na. .a.u`;Ia.I.vn'n`n clan in- ~tcrv1owe_r union Inn0s=!!1'r&, , . pm you over hhgyg . anmnl t-084 wit, .om;_ Arzn.er.i<=.m,I ra.gi1r_I_d{*- if 31! l`1.i= in eruffihdfkled 0 A n. fob. _ I op .~.h`o`tlI Altohi'tnd.:Ill1noiu_Centrs1- V i"`,-.4. nu. .-'.|.'sw. ..4n..-;..on A-had; tha scribe. >`~.2}!hn;hCtQ`!;;:, .:n?b`:-';::;;k;`;u 3133" 5'9- .V!Uith3~I5n5f L -n.`a.. ..1a.1A'|(`....Ii.' am . 'A1t'an sad `or- A A oAM%~_u=x_g:_LEssoN.% 1w}1:`%:1ston1:iInnN, AnVA1'vo1!3. i 1.3;-ed. E Vffehry Won-kc!-n~_l`1`|_a_'l`V~ ` rr._u-H '1'":- no`I_iI.t._ " ,. Blessed` summer` holidays, blessezl '-`I$or the health of body they bestow, "and thrice blessed because they bring `win life whichlareg enduring. says The -,'I`oro`nt`o',rStar._ ._ The slowest lesson e that we le"a;rnis the right*proportio'n ;,of things, the` true relation of living ,;ji,1;o.succeeding. In the city . here ewe ._Vea.sily get them confused, and once 7 in confusion it is e. diicult ' matter Eto `get them straight `again. Nature 4 herself is our best teacher. V In her. fschool is neither disproportion nor confusion. She keeps us in mind, ` when we will give her the chance, that whereas the thing we call suc- cess promises us the sum of all hap- `Ameifs minds` nearer to those things-~ piness, it can do very little in that 1 direction. That, on the other hand, the ceaseless pursuit of it separates -._- tn...-n 12.-He -nu-nab nnurinrr n`nn_ buU Ullnuaccp yuauuay us 5;. yyyuvugyyu 5-F2113` ` from life's most" enduring plea-' H3 fj;\sures,< and ultimately -destroys , the epower itself of enjoyment; The streets of Tgbronto are thronged 1 D37" `hen who _ are all :making the supreme mistake,` the world-old mistake of toiling along ; 7 the road to wealth, . thinking it the _ path to happiness. ~ To` these; men :`Nature, if she had them in one of her _ . fgreat summer schools, -would nd no; __ better, question to put than- that of .; old, What shall it prot a man if . .1-`she gain the whole world and lose his ssoul. A ,man s soul; is .it`not that part of him which is made up or his fl deeper _consciousne's1_s', his higher as- pirations, and tenderest affections`? That part of him which gives suste- nance to his faith, his better, hopes, his charity, `all three of which, un- -happily, are in the gravest danger of ?.I'ta1'vation~ in the process of getting A even a verysmall part of the whole _'-world." His soul, moreover, is that _` best part of him which is reawuken- , ed when, beside some northern lake- . side,_he sits under the stars while he .i _ hears Nature's quiet broken only by voices the dearest to him in -all the `world. A man came back to the city ' yesterday after a week spent with his family in the holiday ' country up north. His friends,` when they met him on the street congratulated him ` on the coat of tan he wore on his "~ cheeks. What they might also have " seen, and perhaps did, was a. certain contented expression in his eyes ' which he had alsobrought with him from the country. Away? from. the treadmill, or, the game, or whatever i, you care'to gall it, for only seven days, and yet it was long enoughto . refresh the very soul of him. The ef- fect will wear away. of course. but ` it must be there still, and we war- t rant you that to-day, as he sits at his desk, his mind looks in a little dierent. way at the problems and bargaining of business, and that for somo days, at least, those better things which `cannot be ,' bought and sold, and are not listed on the ex- changes, will have a stronger hold upon him. In one of Nature's sum- mer schools he had renewed his knowledge of certain simple plea- sures, and refreshed those . domestic 4 aections which are the source of the ` most satisfying happiness Mother ' Earth oers to her business-ridden, success-pursuing sons. nujj-_.-----1-um CIEICH. 'wu.u uuw vnwvyvnvu - Va...-.-' ham and St. Cetharines. The dis-. trict of New Ontario alone shows an increase. The average daily attend- ance was 57.01 per cent. -0! the. total, as compared with 56.69 in 1901. a. slight increase for last year. ' _'I`he attendance at the Roman Ca.-_ _ tholic Separate schools shows 3 to- tal of 45,964.. ofwhom 23,314 were i boys and 22.650 girls. The increase = for 1902 over the total of 1901 is 1p977o > ' I O` I r-n..-..\... ...- ....!...-hm hnn n nnnsidnr. Decrease in Noble Army of Pupils from Figures of 1901. Some interesting: statistics were announced the other day at the De- partment of Education, Toronto." showing the salaries of schoolteach- ers to have been a. little higher in 1902 thanthey .were_ in 1901. . The total number of pupils enrolled in the Public schools of the province in 1902`wa.s 408.124 of whom`209,566 were boys and 198,558 girls. These` gures show a decrease of 6.495 com- pared with the preceding year, when the total was 414,619. The decrease is noticed in the townships, in many of the towns, as well as in all -the cities, with the exceptions of Chat- `. _..- -...I IJL (`AI-In.nr;w\nI -I-VUL Av-Inn * - - Mo.l_e.F_'m 1o.Mule.F'm'le , `Countiel ..o.$859-8269 8379 8371 . o `Tow-as .. 649 315` 667 1:17 | 11sh M<|" ; Cities ...~ ... .. .915 470 935 479__ren1'u. lnY.mothor.o!, 421 -3oo~ 430` 313` dc V . . . Pmm. .p;1ynt,or,'u\d announced, m In: huh. I > uhgoftfjctouedmywr goubgcogghogx ' * "i: 2 3.: I ' > ` . g ` ` O`! ' 0 19011.09. 8.497. m,19o2. or thmx I '..'9. .m'= A ` PSIIIOI uldl Duly- : S!rFredox-ick. Leighton.` 110 VEIIP ted to one baby. ' ' '4 I399;-,3..=P0% .P!!$?"*9 W9 ~`*`:`oo7`-11 mm mm was .` f`.L:`;t.' A'Y9'.'w." ~ 1"` 1901" L `M 1I`rod:t:o.took1ltfrom- arnurof %`*:`1. 1 " 1? `Ph 99 9`-" ""`- prouomomr. and ,. ..'*.`!`?`.".4-.3. .'A 19? .-1'0" u.aa= o ':I ; . " d-`C;9'``9' A`9v`.`` .`'. ;`V. 9" Y mm o . '13! *".}5..l' .01 ,tR!.|D1|9l. -WW` N"` socks _ majtjqzhqol _'ufo.inin,__ inoreuod.,. from kn Om` ' . A ." "4..4.!.l'Z.,in ;_19.01'.to 4.601: :ln_.190,2. er. hon`, `wine toes!" ' A '8` CV93 DC}? C_O;nt.- ,0` thC t0 `h. `rtht. (They "9 u;i`or t;h'e?~_[_tqtal_ may 3; teachers Th-,,: .,,., ,-,,,g,ct_-- n ' wore unlvbtsity [gtI_Idua.to1s,T -or about in`: ._ ' 1 cen't`......_` . 3 Thu: oo9m9unt W` wt: in .~.m1y=o .!.'591"7 ' a`.9.'i.5;,11.% .190 _ was 82,- '.'Johnuy.. must those '. 93.3933. In :inl'.8 .61. 8113-'4.00W -am legend rm, I; 4.`;-` 19o;1j,,] _,tg;g1_.expgp _t_or ,1; dgy, drawing; 'mo'dellin'g and" If all Apurposeu In .1902.` !i,qLIo.8.4.359.975 painting`; at night E ngglpqyg`g;828.682`,in..`1901, an you must` concentrate yourself` i|li'0'35"..i.i|.V`.".1?L9.ll 5.`!.`T .9` `.31.-393.- V! lnyour work.- Y:oum\13t V0 in "- `... "` ` ', W. . V` L That : why those-grand old boys. the . > :14: -D; In I ' / A````- 1`... an l`* In 1.171 7. - - Teachers salaries show a. consider. 1 able increase for both- male "and fe- 1 male, and, although still low. are higher . than at any former `period in the history of the province. The tul- lowing table speaks "for itself, as skewing the average salary. The counties. of . course, are exclusive ole ` {.1 _ ;.__n 4.-'-....- , NATtJRE S SUMMERTSGHOOLS. Inquunv. '. --_.__ , cities 31 towns:-I . `gnu. -No; V.x1rah.,iL1;1o9ku {his belt Whnnhn. In naugning heartily. A womam. on the I other hand, may not inlay rjoko '0': I a. oituq,tion,_o._.whit. leap. not really % laugh .!`e u; -but sho ma.no.`o`s to `- do so. an I rule, wivthout` diurrognglng I1eu.turca>.or- `hgtv toilet f`. and pirating. di_aqreeI1b_Iy- on the M ---._.-m.-u..`.... in-nn`n ` 'l`hn tinkln.nl 'mQtm8 ulsugreeuuxy U11 lull! Vqdlallj` km of other people. The tinklo or feminine laughter is generally plou- uht `to liat_e_n to; sound: wolllcrou, m.ter,4- lt"`ottt.lpleasa`t;tly _|N oNTAnIo'swEVi-Tioi6Ls. '!.nV c0n-.- ._L > .;_I.-_` I... wioor 4 1902. - tn! 3 :1`. it. If_- I!!!- Askynur msiston . F933 ' ' j V9.19 :9 To s'c_J'.r3:xa:_:a:_;'I,<:>`B.--1'0 ALLOTEEBS 0 9 9 or /.76 !/V:4770/V. VEIIMBNI 'l5Al!Ml__PIAC!N'f ~ co., Bellows falls, Vi. A Famous Correspondent. A man very much talked of lately, .on account of his valuable press let- ters, is Dr. G. E. lIorrison,' the Po` kin correspondent of The London Times,_ and for a man of only. forty or so he has certainly -had a crowded and adventurous career, He started it, it seems, while a school-boy, by lnavigating the River Murray from source to mouth in a little canoe by himself. _ Then he walked from Mel- -bourne to Adelaide, a sort of trial trip preliminary to his great and perilous solitary tramp of two `thousand miles across Australia from .farthest- north to remotest south. This was the beginning of his con- nection with journalism, as he wrote a; vivid _narrative of his experiences in t_he,Melbourn,e Age. Then he work- ,`_ed for a. season among the pearl- shell divers of Northwestern Austral- ia, subsequently shipping as an ord- "---" -'------ An as '|'(nnnL's|_ rpnrnitg tonsue BY ALL. FIRST cuss DEALERS" "WE-Y cohtinud muse` the old style wooden `Pub: 311-! Pails when you can buy this wage to much mpre durable, as well as being light, strong and handsome wager` for Eddy s

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy