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The Guardian from London, Greater London, England • 11

Publication:
The Guardiani
Location:
London, Greater London, England
Issue Date:
Page:
11
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

TBDE MANCHESTER GTTABBIAJiT, MONDAY. FEBETJABY 12; mis HALLE PROMENADE CONCERTS ROWING AT OXFORD. MR, WILFRED S. BLUNTS WILL. RUINING IRELAND FOR NOTHING.

NAMES AND WEIGHTS OF Mnic I- TBBliiiner "1 Wud. Max Brueb. mwance gl tt Gflds tato Valhalla BhlMgalg THE BUSY MAN'S MIND. WHAT IS A "LIBERAL PJK M. SADLER EXAMINES fJOMB DEFINITIONS.

Wiener. BOX OF MANUSCRIPTS NOT TO All tK e' worM is saiig Vlmanfr Maein CrJ.n Vine, llaideiu BIO OPENED FOR 30 YEARS. SoLf mfal Warner. Ill n.t. T5.F59v,I,8t? Marriage ot Figaro ")Moirt.

ffl" "rrfJhengrin" Wagner. SI A "I i fSi KC Apprentices 1 The Mastersineers I "A- BOAT CREW. (From a Correspondent.) OXEOTtD, SUNDAY: Although rain fell more or less heavily at Oxford yesterday aftetnoon, Dr. G. C.

Botrmc (New' College) had the A crew out f'Dc a hard row below the kxsks, coaching from the launch TJtona, which he was by the ex-President (D. T. Kaikes, Meijton), D. Horsfali (Magdalen), and Tt. E.

Birgess (Magdalen). On leaving the boathous.s the crew, in the same order as on Friday, peddled down to Iffley, and then bv easv stagesi past Kennmgton to Sandford. About a hundred yards Iwlow the locki'tliev started at a stroke of 27 per mjnutc, and continued at that rate as fin- as t.lm CARDINAL LOGUE AND THE IRREGULARS. ORGY OF VIOLENCE FOR A PHRASE. (From our Correspondent.) Dublin, Sunday.

Lenten pastorals were read ia alt churches in Ireland to-day, and in almost fvery case the bishops referred to the state of the country. Cardinal Logue, Archbishop of Armagh, At the Manchester University on Saturday Sit Sadler, the Vice Chancellor of Leedi University, addreMing coma seven hundred KuJenis of the North-western District of the workers' Educational Association, outlined his The Haile Promenade Conceits have not yet established a sufficiency of subscribers, and while the fine programme of Saturday attracted a crowded audience to the cheaper seats, the centre seats were not creditably filled, and again one has to lament the uncertain support which the Society's members give to the Society's occasional undertakings. The concert was open to one general criticism that the SATISFIED oneepiion of a liberal education for busy men. of us. Sir Michael Sadler said, were busy lu-onle who hah" daily to face duties which made a pjciit drain upon our strength, our attention, ami our sympathies; who bad to submit, cheer as aunenani, a distance of just over; two tnilcs.

utenea nis nastorat letter Dy saying Havins resft -Rsfiw r.Mi- wrings were not provided in the strong fully and alertly, to oonttaat interferences and prooaoty the last time he would auaiesa mey aia uie return journey at a prWdlo ttntil ATlSFACTION is no parrot BEQUESTS TO CAMBRIDGE. Mr. Wilfred Scawen Blunt, of Newbuildings Place, and of Worth Manor House, Worth (Sussex), traveller, poet, diplomatist, revolutionary, and horse breeder, who took part in the Egyptian National Movement of Arabi Pasha in 1831-2, and was imprisoned for activities in Ireland in 1887, unsuccessful Home Rule candidate for Camberweli in 1885, for Kidderminster ia 16S5, and for Beptford ia 1887, and the founder of one of the moat famous Arab studs, who died on September 10 last, aged 82 years, left unsettled property of the gross value of 78,364, with net personally 37,016. Probate of his will, dated 27, 1321, with two codicils has been granted to his private secretary and adopted niece Miss Margaret Theodora Carleton, Mr. Sydney Carlyle Cockereil, of the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, Mr.

Edward Alfred Chandler, of Witley (Surrey), and Mr. Charles Hobert Whor-wood Adeane, of Babraham, Cambridge. The testator stated that he made the disposition detailed in his will bearing in mind the reaching Kennington Beach, where they did who bad to give first place in our lives to duties which we must not shirk. In what we had to do. although there was much of absorbing and cry with us.

When we tell you to fit Dunlop Cord lyres and just, over a minute s. liard rowing fit and then worked by short stages back to the crew did not go ut. Barnes and latest weights are ae follows: numoers necessary to endow Wagner's music with itg fullest pulsation and life. Apart from this shortcoming, the playing, like the music itself, was first-rate, and the great feast of music kept enjoyment high throughout the long course of the concert. Mr.

Harty is not altogether content to let the processional nature of 1i I a hupiy interest, there were also grave and con satisfied we mean it. priests and people of that archdiocese. He was addressing them under anxious and depressing circumstances, because for over years the country had been in the throes of a harassing and hateful conflict, which grew as time went on till it reached a stage which made the heart sick under a sense of gloom, almost of despair. At first the struggle was with an I tyre in the world Kas Ih. P.

C. Mallam (Lancing Queen's), 11 6 P. C. Wace (Canterbury 21 134 A. O.

Irvine (Shrewsbury and Merton) 12 8 K. K. Kane (Harvard. U.S.A.. Ballioll .13 7i ine annhauser Overture assert itself at the P.

authority which ruled Ireland for seven j. Mower White (Kugby Brasenose 13 8J opening, nor has his style the natural greatneBg to carry the Venusberg section immediately beyond its Mendelssohnian affinities. I'o be fastidious in SUOh musil in in toipp t.hn wisai. stantly changing anxieties. If we lived in a time of inspiring opportunities, to lived also in a lime of grim menace.

And we were therefore all looking for something -which would give Hherty. to our hearts and minds, which would keep us free from the bondage of mental routine, which would keep alive in us admira-u'jh, hope, and love, find give us relief from that sense ot harsh and impersonal forces whioh we could not withstand hut against which in us was unconquerable the kind ot consolation that noble landscape gave. hundred vears often with an iron roc. almost (biirewsDury Worcester). 13 alwavs wit-h of mrdial svimjathy and O- NiSKk Magdalen) 13 5 UHKWiwex, U.S.A., and the people enlightened understanding of Brasenose).

stroke 10 10k', hility of the highest success, and Mr. Harty'a D. Clapperton (Magdalen College Sch, Magdalen), cox '7 1L bade our experience. No other tyre is comparable with it for 'Once you Have fitted Dunlop Cords yxjiiswill'iiever, litany ptb.er make of tyres. The Dbnlop Cord is thV climax of Dunlop achievement.

We; are proud of this product and we ask. you to buy it. without any qualificticm whatever. apparent wisn to xeflne expression is here a weakness rather than a strength. We were de- wants and wishes.

During the most recent struggle under the rule of the Black-and-Tans deeds were done and crimes committed on both provision that had been made for bis family iigniert to bear for once the violas and second violins take their ascending figure in the Venns-berg section with -rjiauaopv mil n. by the Earl of Lovelace and by family settlements. The testator declared I wish to be hiiripH wit.U tb. least noimihle Hir Michael called the attention of his audience first to the close connection existing sides whicfc neither the law of God nor the law of man could excuse or justify. Eor a time then there was comparative peace, but now the plague of bloodshed, destruction, pillage, old ultra-carefulness overcame the first violins delay, and in the simplest manner, being laid in the ground wrarvneri in mw old Eastern wnen, after the entrance of the Venus theme, they take over the flsurf.

Prlmna mmt rapine, robbery, even sordid theft, had invaded travelling carpet, and without coffin or casket at least a part of hu archdiocese with a beautiful thing of the whole evening waa the of any kind at a snot in Newbuildiniis Wood introduction to Uie Third Act of virulence which left in the shade even the most outrageous excesses of the betw een the habits of our bodies and the habits of our minds. It was our first duty, he said, although it was difficult ia these days to find way whiuli did not take up too much time, in keep ourselves fit. A very shrewd English viir uii cducaiion, John lioeke, began his rc.it is by saying that be aimed at a healthy itiiml in a healthy body: mats sana in rni pr.fi sand- Another characteristically Uug- u'i uere again, violin players never seem to learn well enough the keenness of intonation After speaking of the high hopes which fol required to give the yearning of the ascending lower the signing of the Treaty the Archbishop notes Hs fud effect. But the fine thing about RUGBY INTERNATIONAL! THE IRISH TEAM TO MEtEr SCOTLAND. Tho following have beau selected to represent Ireland tjcotLaud in thtr inter-natiojud Rugby match to played at-'Dublio on Februarv 21: W.

E. Crawford (LansdowfJic) U. J. Cufisen J. V.

tteif-henson (Qucctish J. B- Gardiner; (Norths Tt. Ii, McClenaghan. (Intioniatisi; W. Cunningham (Landduwne), JW.

Hall (Instonians) 5r. J. Bradley iDolphin JR. Gollopj-, W. r.

Collopy (Bective), D. Cunningham (North), P. Dunne (Bective). C. HaWceran (Services and Wanderers), T.

MirTielland fQueen's)i; and J. K. S. Thompson (Tkinity). Then? are three changes and two transportations from tho team winch was defeated vnis excerpt was that we had not to wait for the Ik-It writer, Herbert fe'penuer, expressed what.

said 'he received the flood of congratulations with gratitude, bul with a sinking heart because be could, already hear the muttering to Uie same thing when ho said that Ihe Wbrlds FINEST COR TYRES oi me music to develop. It came with the opening notes. Mr. Whittaker has never had a more enthusiastic acknowledgment of hia Jovely playing in the cor anglais solo, and we think he owed not a little to the fine atmosphere which had been set before his first of a distant storm. The storm has long since, burst, and never before in the world's history did such a wild and destructive hurricane spring from such a thin, intangible, unsub USB DUNLOt stantial vapour, the difference between some note was played.

equivocal words in an oath, the difference betu-fen externa and internal connection with 'MAKFLP 76e es Gaff Baffin tfa VfoyfJ. "aguer, we understand, had hia first introduction to the film world in London during the pat week. Long before the film was invented there were keen Yfasnerians wlio held the British commonwealth. This is the only foundation I have ever seen alleged. Men imglaud at Leicester on Saturday.

.1. B. versed in the subtleties of the cchcols may "jardincr (JSorth of Ireland) goes from scrum- that Wagner was so unbearably slow in his known to my executors, without religious or other ceremony, or intervention of strangers but the. men employed on my Kewbuildings estate." He left 10 to each of such men to be chosen by his executors for the purpose, aud requested that his nurse, Elizabeth Lawrence, should accompany him to and arrange him in his grave, and he charged his executors to carry out 'this urgent request and to see that these conditions as to his burial were duly performed. He left the black tin box labelled Bequest to the Eitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge," with the MSS.

therein contained io Mr. Sydney Carlyle Coukerell, of the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, upon trust to deposit the same in that museum, to remain there as the property of the museum unopened for thirty veare counting from the date of his death. To the University of Cambridge, for the Ijtzwilliam Museum, the illuminated Persian MS. of the Shah Namfeh, formerly belonging to William Morris, and 50 to bo added to tho museum fund for the purchase of Oriental MSS. All his Byron relics to hie grandson, the Hon.

Noel Anthony Lytlon, to he delivered over to him by the executors as soon as he shall be established in a home of his own. 200 to tho Franciscan Monastery, Crawley, upon trust for investment, and to apply the income in the upkeep and repair of the chapel there, in which his brother and sister are buried, and the monument to them in that chapel. 200 to Joseph Cheal, of Crawley Kurscrics, upon trust for investment, and to apply the income in the maintenance of the Friends Burial Ground at Thakeham, known as the Blue Idol, in token of his sympathy with the ancient Quaker body in West Sussex "in their faithful opposition to military service durinu the late war as durinff former wars." understand them. Men of good, sound prac- uie un-cie-quarter im0 place, tical common sense hardly succeed. There l' BM may other foundation-pride, jealousy, ,21 ambition, self-interest, even meie senti- iomie) C(, ccBnnIefi tho Wnl U.

the business of education was to prepare our. Cj far lit living. Manchester's Advantages. I his cdm-ation, Sir Michael proceeded, which J.ueke and Spencer tet among the greatest uf life, Kdvvard Gibbon had described as In fold. For every man and woman there was liu: education received from other people and the education they gave themselves.

Here in Slanuheatur, he remarked parenthetically, we haj every reason for deep gratitude for all that lu'i been dune by those who had taught us and made it possible for us to learn. No one in Manchester, he said, could ever forget what was due in her. great citizens, farseeing, generous, and tircwd, who bad endowed so much here both by example, which meant most, and by their AVlto, he asked, could forget what we "v.i! bj thu University of Manchester, I'm- nearly a quarter of a century, had iwniy aluft in the North-country the torch truth and training; or what we owed to mil- music of Manchester, to its great libraries, iu its pictures, to the hooks that had been ritu-ii here or to its great newspaper, which all of us, whether we agreed with it or dis-Hfinwd, knew to be one of the great' European vi I artels of lilcral education IWati i Ir i nvn 1- r-. lit 1 i um, iuuy caiou uk, jj. ura.y (Uja yVosiev) and Mahonev (tJot-V the background.

The result has been that in Constitution! disappear from the soruknrhatr' a great part of the country a state of atwI are redacod bv W. P. Coiloiw ind'p' Coilopy and. caisis sucn as uas Deen uuueaiu oi iu tuts Tlln -riI; past history of Ireland, excent in days of the tenal laws. But the sufferings I 'J'lio Scottish team, as alfleady aiajiotiMoed, will bo the same as tliafc which, of our fathers under the penal laws were very different from t'ho horrors to which we are .1 rr r.

stage aouon that a few significant pictures would do more towards dramatising his mueio than all the acting in the world. A picture of Tristan lying on his couch by the sea is essential to the opening scene of the last act of Trietan," hut hardly anything more i essential, and it is arguable that anything more than a picture is renutsive. Much the same may be said of the love scene in the second act and of the scene of the Love and Death Potions in the first act. The pla3-ers, excepting the brass, tvere in a mood for delicate effects, and the "Good Friday" musio from "Parsifal" had an exquisite flower-like tenderness as the melodies rose in their fragile, woodwind tones. This is musio which is conceived, as it were, beyond the realms of normal expression, and from which, all strenuousuess is eliminated.

Th 1 5 J- It .1 enemies of their country and creed, but we i vales at Cardiff on iehlrmtry 3, the suffer from our own people with little to con- exception of two forwaiti cnl TIC in nOK tvlnla 1. 1 (TA-nnlacii 'jinn The selected fifteen are viction that our country is not likely to emerge for centuries from the depth of devastation and ruin to which she haa been reduced. D. Drysdalc (Heriotonians); E. H.

Liddell (Edinburgh Univere itv), A L. lrnit. iTTMrlA.ntittu nuitlqin H1 no op- frni-vr tnaw u- lnose who put firearms into the bands of When Matthew Arnold tried to express in a nhrafcc tie vital principles of a liberal thu'uli'jn, he said something which added a twit deal to the public judgment of his time. a inan fought, Arnold, insisted, through 200 to Professor Edward Browne, Professor of Arabic at Oam-bridee University, becsine: mere schoolboys beguiling their jtuth and (Royal High School F.P.), A 'Biownimr inexperience by false principles of patriotism, (Glaseow High School); 6 playing upon the generous spirit of Irisn. S.

B. McQueen (Waterloo) and Brvce devotion and Insh bravery and --mrang them (Selkirk)- wye him to apply it as a subscription to any mosque mat may rje ouut ry tno voluntary subscriptions of Mohammedans in Iondon of which he to commit crime have a terrible responsibility J. M. Bamierman (Glasgow High! School WJ? to hear before God and man. A hat is per- j.

0. Buchanan (Siewartoniains), 1M 4art (Glasgow High School), D. vies girls have become involved in this wild orgy j. may approve. He left to him also the Arabic books and MSS.

formerly belonging to his late wife, Lady Wentavorth. it. (Melrose), T. M. Bnrtriun uutrui euucauun was to get to know mid world; and for thia knowledge he caid, it was before all thing necessary that he should acquaint lumself with the best that had iwi-ii thought and said in the world.

Matthew AiiM.fd wun a battle in modem English -r the true study of English literature. He iiilitalcd the nlaco of iioutrv in Ihn uluir, man'i ot violence and destruction, if not a active tvai irremue to iionengrin, lor mstanoe, is wholly different, for, although it has a greater steadiness, its intensity keeps the expression strenuous throughout. The Prelude to "Tristan and Isolde" had not quite its accustomed burden of grandeur and one felt here again that fastidiousness had too great a part iu the interpretation. There might be something of bluntnes9, say, -I Vvew5" tews and his bungalow "Woodlands," Horsham, with about 13 acres, to his nurse Elizaljeth Lawrence in token of his gratitude fur the care she had bestowed upon him during the future motherhood of Treland. AH this a i i- A Mecial description oF tlio KntrlanJ He did what, in a rather sharper, mote iMrauunalic form.

Rlak liml ,1 But the great body of the j.eople are sound, match, which was vox by the- former me nasi twentv vears. lie reminded us that the power of iniaeination auiiu. ucuujuuicu iiul uo yieia a jot or tittle mvaw. oy jiuiuus uo ry is 'pUonsneu on ill education Was Vital: that iinairinntinn ttiiibK me auvaJiLcuus wuico iiiey diave secured, pago o. Half a yeare rent to each of his cottage tenants in Sussex whose weekly rent does not exceed 5s.

200 to Arthur Curfe Oafiin, in token of his appreciation of his many years faithful service and to support the legitimate Government, which is all that now stands between us and absolute anarchy." FRANCE v. GLAM ORGAN. filiTDEDAT. The match which is io bcjjJayed at Toulouse on Tuesday befjween Franco and Glamorgan is arousing very considerable Interest applications for tickets have beent ipourinc- in in i.W at estate ageni. 50 each to his groom, William Homewood, his gardener, Francis Cherriman, and his former groom, Alfred Kensett, in consideration of tlteir long service, and to Edith Mun-nery for ber especial care of him.

PASTURE RAIDERS. MILITARY INVADING SEIZING CATTLE. in the interpretation of a Richtcr, but one never doubted that the full man was in the agony of the music. It probably becomes increasingly hard to put the full man into the performance of Wagnerian excerpts-. We had a splendidly powerful bit of drumming from Mr.

Gezinck at the close of the Procession of the God3 into Valhalla." No doubt there were as fine things in the Meistersinger selections as in the rest of the music, but our musical apjietile was satisfied, and we did not stay to hear. It was a refreshment to hear the Mozartian airs Voi che sapete and Deh Vieni sung by Mme. Bella Baillie in the tempo at which a musician would imagine the music. If we owe this exceptional delight partly to Mr. Harty he is to be congratulated on departing from a bad custom.

We wondered also whether we omccrs ot tuo Oomite des Pyrenees, and it seems likely that, iu spite af its dimensions, tho Paro des Sports w3 11 -be naot If ted; and that it could only be fed on what great seers and thinkers of the world had iti. -light and written and seen. Mr. C. Brereton, Inj, Sir Michael Sadler claimed, knew as much a- any Englishman of the epirit and working of 1 much education, had recently asserted that luit, the French priae most highly and ar-liid as Uie most iudispcnsable effect of a lilt, mi education was not intelligence, as every iIkt English had suggested, but emotion: that passion of the mind inch comes from a vital, as well as a understanding of great literature and ideas, Huxley and Ruskin.

At tiiiir beat Englishmen and frenchmen 'zrwil in -ceing that thia passion of the mind liHTit-I were necessary if you were to have uuo outcome of a liberal education. Our IMi-ticii ami our fire, he thought, however, had 'cm touched during the last 100 years more i by a sense of Christian virtue than those the French had been. He noticed a differ- Mr. O'Higgins, Free State Minister for Home Affairs, in a statement to press representatives that the gate money will esta.blish a record tor iJiuvmciax matcnes. it is.

in fact, th flrat in T)llllm rpfprrflrl t.hr. loinrr talrnn deal with people who have taken advantage I wteraalio1111 io Pl3d ia the pro. i.x. vinces, and Ruebv cntlmsiciK nu cnttmsuisi are 30 to his coachman Arthur Godfrey, if still iu his service. 5 to each other man in his service at his death (including farm labourers aud woodcutters in receipt of regular weekly wages) anil every woman or girl in his domestic service for the six months preceding his death.

500 io Mr. Sydney Carlyle of the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge. 500. to each trustee. He left his household effects generally to follow the properties of which they are part, but he made heirlooms of numerous articles brought back by him from his travels, as well as numerous gifts of mementoes to friends, including To Hilaire Belloc his Froissarfa Chronicles of the disturbed state of the country to pasture I preparing to COMMERCIAL MOTORS their cattle on other people's lands.

louiouse irom Tarbes, ALBION MOTOR CAR XJie military are now tafcing action, and have vwzsuiaie, montauiban, and entered upon a policy of seissinjr these invadins ulut-r towns. Ji UfcANSQATE, mAfiCH ESTER, ead Office and Works Scotsiotju. Glasgow. Branches at Lokdoh, Sheffield and BnouHCUAM. cattle, selling mem in the public market, and reuepwou at tne iown Hi-Jl is to be given to were indebted to him for the harp accompaniment to a Scotch folk-song given as an encore; thp two learns on Tuesdai- mormW holding the money to form a compensation fund out of which the rightful owners of the much of it was so ape and judiciously sparing banquet has been, arranged for the einening.

The lanas may oe paid, xnis remeay lias so tar le" team is virtuatfiv comolflp French team is virtualBv comDletc. in the notes. Mme. Baillie's pure and clear been applied principally hi the ccrantie of hen has given notice that li nrHl k. four volumes (1574 edition).

To Lady Gregory the Donan Bible used by hitn whilst imprisoned at Gal way. He left 200 to his kinsman Huch Elnhin- Galway, Tipperaiy, and West Meath. Several go to Toulouse, and he will oonecaueniTv iT-T haveenpduriMtte past week, iv ZV titone Chandler; 100 to his kinswoman Rose voice was found greatly pleusing to the ear. 3. Ii.

POWER STATION EXPLOSION AT OLDHAM. ana uie poncj is oe exieuaea. j.tuaixa. A meeting of the feelection Cbramittee is to be held in Toujouso on Tuesday rnorninn- tfluut; fcK to ins triend, Wilfred Maynell; and a life annuity of 100 to his kinswoman Margaret Blunt. He left his Worth Forest estate upon trust for his cousin Lady Mary BELFAST ARRESTS.

select the French team which will meet Wales The police searched three houses in. various I Swansea, and the team representing tbe iciiKiini auu ijr wu Algernon uuy. and Ins heirs entail, who failiue. withiu certain limita parts of early on Saturday morning, and 12 rencn army is also to be chosen. Renter, TWO MEN INJURED.

Just before noon on Saturday a 6,000 kilowatt afterwards arrested four young men, two of It Works in a Whisper tions as his I'rivate seeretai-y Miss Curleton may appoint amongst the descendants' of his father or of his aunt Lady Leconfleld. or the National Trust for Places of Hislorio Interest. turbo-generator set exploded in the Grceuhill or Natural Beauty. whom are brothers. It is alleged that plans were found on two of them for the destruction of public buildings in Belfast.

The police are still making inquiries into the matter, and so far no charge haa been made against the men. To Miss Margaret Theodora (Dorothy) Carle-ton, Ins private secretary and adopted niece, he left all his letters, naners. and conv- LAWN TENNIS. RESULTS OF COVERED COURTS CHAMPIONSHIPS. Barcelona, Stjkuat.

rights, and his residence Ferrycroft, and about 'iue, for instance, between the highly-educated1 i.nglishman and Frenchman in their judgments I 'lion passing affaire. It waa the Englishman who hail the stronger element of compassion, iii.l hoped that, whatever we might lose, we liuld always preserve that great moral and -I'iruual tradition which kept men's hearts alive to the claims of compassion upon iiiiflligeiice. Huxley's definition of education, Sir Michael wfin. on, was also an interesting one. "That man has hail a libera! education," he said, 'who has heel i so trained in youth that his body i- (In' tfiuly servant of his will and does with and pleasure all the work that, as a I'o liHtiini, iu is capable of; whose intelligence is a i-U-ar.

cold, logical engine, with all its parts i tjual strength and in smooth working order inin.j i.s supported with a knowledge of tiie niinlairu'iiiiil truths of nature -and the Una of her operations; one who is full ami tii-e hut wliusc passions are trained foini- to heel wlio has learned to vi- a bfuuiy. whether of nature or of art; to viltiiiess, and to respect others as That, was a great and inspiring I'-tiiiition. Yet that greater contemporary of I I ux ley. Kuskin, wayward and quixotic he put soiiietlnng" into his idea of a lilfviil ciiieiiiioii which Huxley did liut convey. An ciiiiciitcd uinti, itiistin said, was ono who i understanding of his own uses and timii'a in the world, and therefore of the general urc of the things done and existing in the woi ld: and who had so trained himself, or been Kiiitied.

as to turn to best and most courteous whatever faculties or knowledge he There, they had something less individua-ijiic. more unselfish, and really more crafts-nian Jikf. The Intellectual Conscience. tinny acres in ine new sorest, nis farm Electricity Works, Oldham, and destroyed a part of the building. Wreckage was hurled all over the engine-house and through the roof, hut only two men, Arthur llutchins and Alfred Weston, bolh engine drivers, were injured.

The lire brigade quickly extinguished the resultant fire, and it was found that the explusion was due to the ignition of lubricating oil and insulating material. The tram, light, and power services of the town were suspended for an hour and half. MORE IRISH MANSIONS BURNED. and the use for life of Springfield Park, jus THewDUUdings estate, and the residue of his The following are the- results of the final rounds in the world's covered courtit lawn u.iiio iu. aua ngiu Eaple House, an extensive residence, the property -with remainder as sh matr annnirt i i i.

it. Malo amongst the descendants of his late', father or of niB Aunt Mary, lady lieconlield. county xipperary, nas Been burnt to the a He directed that the Public Trustee should nut be appointed as a trustee. mimhet of men entered the bnildinn- nnJ celled the men guests to assist in hrinwinD- 62. LABOUR EXMEMBER THE FREE straw, which was Placed in several rooms and i Doubles.

H. Cochet and Jean Couiteas The Ne THRILL FOR PASSENGERS. seu ou me- uuuuiug was ourned to the ground. STATE'S FUTURE. Mr.

Walter Halls, the Labour for the ine spieuoia resiaenoe or Mr. Ludlow M. (France) beat B. Tcgner and L. Ro'ng (TXen-mark), 61, 61, 7-rf.

Mixed Doubles. Wise McKane and W. C. Beamish and Jones, of Knocknacree, county Tipperary, was also burned to the Tt REMINGTON mmm Heywood and Eadcliffe division, addressed a FOOTBALL SPECIAL BREAKS IN TWO. mansion beautifully situated.

The oraer ttlATu- well-known land agent. 18 a J. B. Gilbert (Great lntaui), 3rr3, Crawley (Great Britain) beat Mr large meeting at Heywood last mgnt on uie Irish situation. He said he had come to the A football special tram- carrying over seven -i- a-i'i'Ot' Quiet hundred passengers parted in two when Hear if '-i( conclusion that the Free State Government was not going to function, and that the Republicans were going to win.

That was his considered oninnn. and it was shared by a (rood many ing Kinghorn. (Fife) station on Saturday after Alter tbe close of TMay -the distribution of prizes aud the proclamation of tbe champions took place under the presidency of the Infante Ferdinand of Bavaria, represented the King of Spain, while a band played the Spanish, French, and British National An noon. QUIETrw'ttaj -s TypewrUer can be of, 6pwi'ip0ti. hat fcirteen iSiSjttijKiVw at afl times wrtKri abeyance.

n. 'Tien, ctwjt rfattvfwhi' -RemnurtonkT the "Self- The engine tore along with the first few other people. People in Ireland were hoping thems. hat somebody would turn up strong enough to bring together the two forces, but there was fatalistic feeling that there was. not man there was etiil something, however, Sir Michael Sadler insisted, which our minda needed, left out' of the definitions ho had leierred to, and he knew no one who had gone iieurer to expressing it than Bishop Gore.

An carriages 01 uie urn, wnus trie remainder followed at diminished speed. The occurrence was discovered in time, however, for the brakes to i applied and avert a disaster. good tnataiau. EMI NG tloW'Ri'Bi' Ri bilT enOUgU Oil alum auvuu net The train was taking supporters of Baith Rovers to Ihinfermline to witness the Scottish educated man. tsaid Bishop Gore, must cherish it this did not happen, then as a result of the Mi.m.

auwiniiuai iu his suul a sense of the eternal: a sense of cup uui me ueirainea at Aingnom. VALUE. ihat which was, and is, and ever will be Ivinc I I i CT mi ciiauges iii msiury ana progress. Without this sense a man was without some-iliiiiH; ihat was essential to human worth, and CREATION OP COUNTY BOROUGHS. RE90HCT0N TVrtWiUirf CO, LTD, 100, tt 3 ii tas because ot" this that he was afraid of uie unit moaern eaucauon aurt sett-educa- nolicv of destruction now going on, which be deplored as everybody must, the Government would be unable to function and must sooner or later come to an end.

Then the Republicans would; get the oprxrtunity, ither of governing bv force or of gettmg the people to vote for the' Bepublieah1 That of course meant the of. the present treaty, and then the question would arise as to what England would He desired to impress on the people of this country that whatever happened we should be enough t0 look back and consider the- origin of the present uuu. Education was not fomethiug that waa ROYAL COMMISSION'S TERMS OF iiivi-cly connnea to uie scuools. it was an Htjiuuphere which involved the whole of -eciciy. It operated with its touch upon heart, i it 1 i REFERENCE.

iiiu liuiiu, ami soui. it stirred ancient SEVEN HOURS' DANCE. Mr. Tietor Hindmar8h and llaa Bello Dnnjij who succeeded in breaking world's Mrd for non-stop dancing, haying- danced continuously for seven hours ad one minute, received jattory mraMsifrom'iU parts of 'the county' on- Mr Hindmarah waa feeling a stiff aeae of one arm through havir to keep it extended over such a long period, Tut'otherwise felt' Quite fitl: Miss Dunn, who finished the test: apparently withbutany- ill subsequently swooned in the ballroom, and had to be. latxn to her home.

She sdoniecoyered, however. Mr. Hindmarsh and Miss Dunn are to meet French," (dancing experts; hi London for world's non-stop dancing championship." M.C.C. TOUR lNNEWZEALANb NaijxBB, Satdbdaz. Tho match between the minor aBsoeiations of tbe East Coast and tbe M.C.C.

toaring side was to-day left drawn. Beuter. "FIRST OF FIFTY." A bullet-riddled body was found on a road in Tipperary with the inscription attached. The first out of fifty." HELPED TO MAKE A MILUON. COMPANY PROMOTER'S FINANCES It was stated at an inquest held at St Pancras, on Saturday, on Minno William Boerima (47), lately residing at Lincoln Hall.

Hotel, Upper Bedford Place, Bloornsbiiry, that Boerima bad told a friend he expected-to make a million by a company be forming. Evidence showei that lately he had been unable to meet hia billa at the hotel, and had borrowed- money both' from the management and a 'servant, and this had not been repald. He told bcni he bad a credit balarioe, at Edinburgh of 50, but aeheque for 15 which he gave-, was returned by. the bank 'marked referred to drawer." He was absent hotel on Saturday on Sunday apparently. suffering from the effects of alcohol.

He remained in bed on Monday, and partook of a late dinner. On Tuesday morning a etrong smell of gas was found issuing from his room, and he was discovered lying unconscious in bed. i Death was due. toJ asphyxia poisoning by! carbon monoxide. widow etated that her husband -was a toropany: promoter.

She had not eeen him for some tinie. i police-stated that a number of pawntickets were Boerima's effects. i The inquest was adjourned for further evidence. I The Ministry of Health request us to state memories. ana revcaicu new nopes.

it touched that the terms of reference to the Royal Com- private lire and prtvaxe auty, niorals as well intcllhieiicc, industry as well as eictpnpn cosition. Ve should not iorget that the men 1, wi of t-he oresent Government' could- mission on Local Government Areas, the an- pointment of which was announced on Satur IBGHOOLM A8TEE JJ CHABGED not set rid of their responsibility for the present the affairs because of their i a o-pcnn ifvifm ninn rtarinrr day, should read as follows An old lecturer at the Manchester Univereity, 1'rufesor Hartog, had said recently that the object uf a liberal education was to awaken the liuellcetuul conscience, to make us ashamed of hciicj slipshod; to make us concerned about ITijbiiy and honesty; to make sensitive to muh, which we iriust arrest by our own judgment and lest by our own consciousness. euppoxb Ol mo 1 pressed-epecimens of flowers To inquire as to the existing law a-nA -nr. JURY FAIL TO AGREE. AT SECOND warr-ei ETBTOaTorrurisoaata: ooeni Onga ce-'xn-raniAne SDeTW cedure relating to the extensions of county boroughs and the creation of new county boroughs in England and Wales, and the effect of such extensions ox creations on the administration of the councils of counties and of anJtwrrrsci At Essex Assises the trialkwas ioRloffencesfa resumedof Frarib nt u.

at once said( gate, asaulW ing two ieeicUvely; sevemanij non-county oorougns, moan districts, and rural districts; to investigate the relations between, these several local authorities, and generally to SUICIDE IN THE STREET AT ST. ANNES. llobert Frederick Freeberne, aged 45, residing at St. Amies, a foreman engineer at the Harwich Xooomotive Works, who had been awtav from work for three months as the re-sult of a' nervous breakdown, cut his throat in the street at St. Annes on Saturday night.

Preeberne, accompanied by his wife, son, and the -latter's companion, a Boy Scout, was on irav to. consult a doctor and, it is said. last. "jf; TKfl areas, and At a meeting of the Bury and district branch of the National Federation of Building Trade Opeiatives last night it was' mianiinorriiw HUMAN SKELETONS UNEARTHED. Three stone coffins composed of rough slabs and containing skeletons in a surprisingly good state of preservation, believed to be of the early-Christian period, have been unearthed on tbe coast road near Cockenzie, East Lothian, bjy workmen engaged in dicging lend.

i The livdian Chamber, tof cided to support the national representative in- the Maharajah of Bikanir as Ohanoellor for the Grammar School; trr 5 -J flvpvBUlB lUT the reduction of wages. dreaded the consultation. tourtn iiroe in succession-. 5 VJM.

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Pages Available:
1,157,101
Years Available:
1821-2024