HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Star, 1906-04-20, Page 7sour, e
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beessat
beim It Wm itite
111 elleidne*Y1 ettew
eitelbeetlettIR
' cleovIti
0
E AWFUL SLAVE TPA
A, 00 LONG AGO
stiOnt the
/ile AokiIVA CMIfettP40401
with
Ogee thet iaglinetee end 'the
Wlitet Ora YOU
LAME FMCS ;AMON-
the Telmer
letetese ot 14 retell+ ti
We have 11t
tekr eh* tWo MOW I W0'41,4441 them Y 1014 fon*
in
kiveeling *Wag the Celeedtarl IrOlitert A Area eX.., the
With* POO; fe. ler leone deentree w* I Can
le the Charreie0 HOBO. MY* to put, down
beeet the ba/eY 10101 lef thee itOrts ot wee at th* Acne Wile
. Wild weet, Mid PM" genie' linerthaft we gr. mettinif ewe astetssates,na,,
thenegb, Ore* Ihr Wet feetthal. Pie* DaW*011 UV* tha
tet the Catintry. The conditions boa Trrilt eaten), fee tip mentineetpert
eirit ler dlifereat, frent thelete Which ,ee _tee' Whiett .prOallit.tai to twins
entgeg in cote popteru state* wben may universal 'over %a world. lt elOW
*ere Aest opened up fp lannigrantit used lit •Angiand and the United State*,
Thorp *re nts e0WbOy ug thronlin mid there will Some day class*
the 'mete eitoettog. it IOWAN,. thefa eation taireati ofiltiS kind ineCettedi
Aro no bold -ups oar ratiroalls. eild' that Oenteit Ot the anger. print* Of ell
ihe NO Men eflene Piller CM*" eote" 0171:1131114 WM be PA recfgel foe the vierii,
Apteeege ebeenele..Theritere. Plea- otte peetee del:040001a 01 the eeehtirefe
ty et herroetnit Cenneeted With tbe Uttle Thiel g ,y
*tele, Intethe Old settler/3 40 ret *Mike lend Yerd iti 1896, OA that oepartmat
the underfoot clariee byetilecoting 14$ BOW has Intaelepeleeelflelga-;eielotorrojejone;
tem, witheleerewnleereeanet -#4114,, er4 ;no •illiggrutir -wmhpircl44 'Vow' tittif.- ttiaY.
Unctilibita gre'• levier 144°444 can fittellibly'id nIttleanY erttnthal there
411400: ef Oar west and Saelt!`e ' e,e` . re hot'
irho; *egret, et :thee good (settee gorge* Metteeett ee One.
1101 Cellade'e *0**fed Mike *14 ' •4 ^
(44C1414 111"1" whq to,xote it Eng GP ilia GMAT
1? 9 D • *
The Mennted Pn* cet the '""it .
-retwoole military tOrces-10 exiSterige, Mauer Pelee*** e0SU 0 , /IOU
compiese,e lem Ihen. teet Wane Wit et. ethle, Digiveete ,
keeps 'Or4ef... throUgheet teuntry Mere
Slattrelne Centaille 9f the Wiled there
tkl• vnu /s1t4 4ag„ 04 tt 4iet .11,q'trIlrilriol''Iryti:tra 40474ioonhilef: aithxoinsaxehiftnitsang4eixtrieusarr7.6 ,0)0140
OM% it nuts. tom here tas Atte 'M'Otia epaltiA Pkt, 01,110p. says ...144, esan4an
009,11: "Jt 04100 tftlit .111* Fieneeee-en cienligele for nealee el
aone Bele the, Reece Phier iletteln sonni lorm Qi 4:44140 nolo.
ethe Mining amp*. et4be Yeken. cratespe,144,einaototemmt venv.
Inetelbeee PetteleelterY Pate rbf the neelt lepoy, manifest en grebott oe.
Wileet Pelt, *lore Alleellead enel .otaeer gree, revelres Amon their deettencee.
tremteratnee are :taking lip' 110Illestetiusli cheetemagne the great and NviSe
And they galleee tin Arid dawB ttio-Poun„; or the. -Frank who stande fer feudal
Glary between the united, StatOr ovtwatien, who "srattehed" from%derk-
9 Canada ellerdlnit eleatelst enteggene nese thet lands he oneeterede and
and eaftleeettleelng aettling„ any
- winr Veered- an empire 140.00 hand, hilt
miner.tronblefe.Whieh arise betWeen the ttts osieo able to 000trot, aimost the
two Pe011,100;•, . • • sold exception. What Saes- !be beati
LONG BEATS FOR It:WONTED, „bigN, vollf °
' , At $g Alexendee the Great who bad
rItory is here et netpiee, The Metaled'
'one oeibelargest StatiOne of thla thee ecetenea toneeelt A god, died r
lb& after, one of pis frenetic orgim,
Pence ,,haVe narritelia about two. trilialt Wear, the 'foremost man et, the Ancient
frOm theeetty, and Meet ot the neve-Men seerid, had strange convOISIOns in hie
are broken in at th.ta POI* before theY later yeare, and it may lie,thatihe dee-
are shirted out 1410 tilt service, There get' of Ftrutus &eyed him frrim deciln-
are other. large ete4,loileeat krinee. Al* lo„ into madness, ..maribotengh, who
bort, tahlarYi and Edinontorf. They b
WaS married to a violent woman and
may be folind near evety Indian reser-
Whose only BOA died in boyhpod, was
vatton, and 'Oft every spot where .treuble epileptic eurieg Ws ten' last years r.I
Is likely te,Obille4 ofe.
r."77—
t•
s
-1(dventuretar--and-sdarings-Clive,
InterYfeW NMI). colonel Frederick Wlitilte, world famous and flonquerer ef India,
the heed of tins oreanizatten, and le ai 40 wag, decidedly a' neuropath, In
man, weal,' more than .any other, has his memorable duel" with 4 brother M11,
had to-do With brIngleg It to its present oer he missed his On, thing away the
ethaioa State' C'ellonot Willbraas Peen' weapon and cried: °Shoot and be
connected with the pollee fur' mere than, namned/ seld you cheated and I eay
thiety-nve years. Ile,rias seen It grow so Clive wee passionate, mote
from 200 members to almost 11100, and mit, gouty and an opium eater. At 49,
he has been asseelated with it in vare itch and of unetinted reputation, he
oua capacities through all parts of this committed suicide.
great British Northwest. . Wellington s was . distinctly epileptic.
I asked -Colonel' White teo. tell me some- His fainting fits' eller Watertoo were
thing, as 'to the extent, of the territory frequent and it was,en &Keck of epilep-
;instep his .turiediction., He said: sy that carried him off. The Ronianoffs
"Our police • prectnete run fioro the have been neuropathic for nearly three
botradary of the tinned States to the centuries and end of the epileptic tits
Mello Ocean. We have altogether about of Peter the Great is "said to have last-
-.1,300,000 atnare miles under.. our iurisdic- thvoe days:, Charles V.. whose nte-
lioh. Take Edmontee. That i town lies thee was insane, had` lite in his youth'
Over 900 nines north of She boundary
and WaS gOlO, bald and scrofulous --
of the Vnited States. We have policemen Frederick the Greet ffrom the face of
en guard -there and all along the line whose lather, when. he took a walk,
Paatha 0661th and sey.s Macaultty, "every human being
to Hudson's Bay. We have men htm- fled"), reared in a perfect hell of a "pa-
dreds of miles to the northward, and lace had a certain general unsound -
we keep a large force In the mining loess of mind, to which mercy was al -
.regions of °the Klondike. Indeed, we tegether foreign. The stock of Oliver
have practically the whole of the sparse- Cromwell was not Averhealthy, and of
ly settled and .11nsettled portions ‘st
-- Abe neuropathic tendencies of the Pro -
British North Ameriea." teetor hhnself there le sufficient evidence
"Give the some idea of hew order is hichammed-but let Mohammed rest.
kept in ' each a country," ,seid,f. Joan of Are, the divine girl -woman.
"Our arrangeMents are such that we seer and soldier, who came from the
rirne In contact with all the sealers, As sheepfolds of Lorraine to Make victori-
a is now, our polieemen ride on horse- ous the orifiamme of France, Joan heard
back thrdugh every part of the lands voices and saw visions. and was kiised,
which are being opened up. Every man
has his route and he /gallops ftom farm
io farm and shwa to town, asking ev- she &aid, by the celestials.
ery colonist whether anything wrong
has taken place since his last v.isit. If A NOTED MINE OWNER.
the farmer has no eoniplaints heis ask-
ed to sign a report to that effect, and Risked a Fortune to Back Opinion atbd.
if the contract his troubles are at once Struck Gold.
Investigated. We have a record of ell
the settlers, and we go Over the route The death Is announced of George
and make the policemen produce these Lama, the Bendigo, Australia, mine
signed statements allowing that each owner. The death of Mr. Unwell re -
man has been visited. moves one of the most picturesque fig-
ures in the history of Australian min-
•
EVERY FARMER AIDS -POLICE., lug.
Mr. Lansell was the chief owner of
"It may be that the farmer will claim the most Important mines at Bendigo,
his cattle has been stolen. if SO, the
--- the chief centre of quartz mining in
policeman goes with him to trace the Victoria. By his courage and faith in
thieves' and If they Ore found he sees the future of the 43endigo field Mr. Lan -
that they are brought to justice and sell at one period in its history prevent-
remished. In- many cases -such- coin- el the field' from being practically
plaints are false alarms, and the police- abandoned.
man and farmer find that the stock has The gold in the shallower workings
merely. strayed into some valley nearby. had been exhausted, and all the experi-
Nevertheless, we Make many arrests. merits In sinking deeper were failures.
There were more than three thousand «You must go deeper still," said Mr.
convictions for crime and other offences Lansell, and risked the whole of his for-
m the Northwest territories last year. tune to justify his opinion.
Many of the offences were petty ones, The workings reached a depth beyond
and this number, all told, covers a Roe. which gold had never been found In
pulation df more than 400,000, scattered Australia. Mr. Lose!' held on confi-
over the enormous region I have de- dootiy. 'Jests and half -pitying sympa-
Berthed. It seems to be small." thy passed by him unheeded. Down.
"Do you have many murders?" down, went his miners till nearly a mile
"We have had thirteen In four years," t.elow fhe surfabe of the earth they found
said Colonel White, "and 'of these thin- the MO goldtbearing quartz.
teen only (woof the criminals were Can- Then It was found that Mr. Lansell
, adians." had been provident as well as plucky.
"How about lynching?" He had bought controlling interests in
"We- oave never had one man lynch- most of the mines that were then be -
ed *anode, and, more than that, ate ing werked in a hali-hearted• fashion,
have never had hold-up oh our rail- but Which Proved veritable bonanzas
roads. will not say that plans have w lower depths.
aot been made to rob OUP trains, but 40 Me, Lanseirs plork made him a mil-
ler we have circumvented them. In- liontitre, and the hero of the 40,000 peoe
deed the records show that traveling is ple who get their neing in the prosper.
far safer in northern Canada than in mig City or Renato.
the western part of your cotintry. I le- One of his peculiarities was the fact
member two Or three instances which that he never counterianeed She introduc-
occereed recently where men had evt• lion of outside cannel, as was so terge-
dently sehenletr to hold up the trains
on the Canalian Padilla Railroad. In
one of these the WoUld-ibe thieves had
a team of fine horses and a carriage
shipped to the Point Where they expect-
ed te rob the train, Our police knew
something was wrong, and We had a
force on the lookout. The men found
that. we Were watching and as a
result they gave up the attempt and
drove off toward the south. We have
not heard of them sines."
"The nieunted police are doing a
great dot in the way of explorations."
continued Colonel White, "They go
ahead and Mae the trails, and pros-
pectors and
ty done In the West Australian mines.
n consequence, the wealth of the
Eendigo mines Was locally distributod.
and their shares have never even been
quoted on the London market:
. • •
CONCERNING ORANGES.
Ane eminent Japanese bacteriologist
tuts ahown that the acids of lemons
tipples and other fruits-dtric acid.
melte actd-are capable of destroying
nil kinds of disease germs. Cholera
germs aro killed in fifteen minutes by
lemon juice or apple. juice, andttyphold
fever germa ere killed In half an howl
SETTLERS' FOLLOW THEM. I bY these acids, even when considerably
diluted. If you 'squeeze a lemon Into a ,
- They have opened up the Reeky Moun- glass of Water containing cholera germs
taina and have eut . passage -ways end let It stand fifteen or tWenty min -
through the wade to Alaska ard the tiles, you may dtink the water with
Pacific tenet. Oft ageh trips lhe pollee. Impunity, ag the germs will be dead;
men er I hougea along the trail, end these juices will kill other disease
ef
leave se plies. of bacon and °thee pro• gems. Instead Of telling a man te
t 'stone or travelera who come eller, Wive hls etornech washed out, we can
WM might cow . theYriselvet witineet nete tell him to drink orange juice,
food meree oft In the wilds, The troubie which will cleanse the stornadh as thole :
of many of eitir Mining teogpecterli le mighty ' as a stornaeh ttthe, provided It 1
that theth 'Mad SAPPHO PIM bld et be not a ease of gastric Catarrh, in whieh
&quoit the Unite they reeth the place. there Le a large amend of tenadous
where' they opeet to work. They muet mune edhering to the walls of the sto-
then 0 U(014. or Mark'. gueli Dien tan mach, a Menu:telt tube le dlelodge it is
got fresh Stilleilfee at thesis red houses, requited, but ha ordinary Cases of bit- ,
It ie 40014/ging that the Moo Info baele jousoess, foul tongue, bait breath, sick '
toed will tiel tenet Abe supplleei unlese hetteciehe, and nerveue headache, a t
II, fa aligtfilltelY IleectitfirY ?Or ihOlf ode" kelt diet is * Wender:in purifier.
tenatteei Id ififeh ,eitifierittiona tete then
.........,.....4......m.
go along and blue a irate about tight jedoe : mi ibt your pantshmen!, at
feet Wide.' It is wootrtat haw son ,,„,,,,.„,,„„,„„ni for 416. prisoner : Awl
others follow mid fitilitt Malay little hie- i'"wei"'i;seresol ha, ie uv,,,,hat are 'An
le19 grt" ttll 414ng lite II"' l'W' 11'45 laughteig at 2" "I Was thinking thtd you
mating Mtn OkPlOrtillerie ell the finite eon nntnison Ine tor fhb gme rvo Um)
end aro gradually Opening tip the Ord ,eateitttz, nava etto. against you,
NOtfitUTSfir
"Aro ell your pollee thonitii4; Colonel Judge ...
ate...as
westomOo or wawa erlAthet ron.
Iwo* *room
J10.110tit trrilettaida
"Ifehaffiri
*One 1.:NOvnlifitt Writit0 fOte
keete reelerealgelet leef OPite lrentt tilt"
stkeett, Atrtedt
itlet IV pier itgo WM 4404 ter ene
WU* 0,We Adel Mrieree the COMA
Ittifer 144: IhrOukli. thit
,Of Angela* tilie Vortligtbiarif 4100440 IR
Otttriet Afekee MOW Ot the 4e0,0140
litele: he4 letrettely e0ht* WM, ttete
. Weld leoeret 4.401Melebollt Ogle 40
0140 elt Sibas tea4 theee,
Path Wilkie bee ^for nenteriee been
eenaeof Oa Chief Vole NM% WO WO**
4ereere It 'is. nifireeY Ireek. * Meet
VW/ . fee eteeroW *et yoll hievet to
Willie like UMW% petting one that la:t-
eeny in front Ot the-ethete het it lead*
einheet . Pore 'the 4elt
let elategeeia *Nes lite' feirety 'AQUA-
'betti theeliKte the pteitrtant--vality
• BattuOug- oar the, weetepletente
1100.0t 41.1anea,threalgh.
lett einnerY Conntiy. 4041114 Idgh Wide
embed where the .trileitartes ot the Celle
ge And the 'UMW 110W .40evn on et,
that able, ',Oros
Athe.-nese tevingateness •Lalte
thonten blaneltautnindtit -the -Ogle :0
the great chleene ilite Congo -terrain,
t t th,e COPPeeeTatiKeie,.nt Kottingit, end
ee to the Vans ,tindr away AG thp eastern
Ma. And thee tittle; Ire*, which earns
end Sedate. hi oveld every tree stump and
inft of greee. Ilea bum 'time iminentorlal
been' (Me Ihe nreet &lave routhe
the world:
- It 1.$ 3Q As '14 enterecl the Hurt,
grfaittntr$ nounik-slavti:antittleit
Mg en. einthet every bush., They are
the Weeden feelers with whieh the handa
er the feet ...e/ the • alevewere, linked to,
geteer OW the nuirch., pn reaching the
caafiza the wow Are knocked oft, he -
geese the. elattes begin te. deeinde
esealm With that long stretch of . Hun-
grY 000037 habit* theme bet,' hove
teunct theekles. on. the path from end
to' tode eVen right. down to ehe coast,
and the ether day I had a letter tram
an Englithman I knew Wit of .the
anza, saying: "Since you left thelraMe
has Increased,: ond 18 more open. The
reeves ent new going to the coast tied
ue, or rather lied tagetber, In a con-
tinuous Tho Path through the
Henget Country Ls etrewn with bonee
and skuile, and I thund there the ftesh
bodies .0 slaves, 'sem° murdered, eome
tett 14 starve, because through fever et,
igne they had been unable he Iseep
up with -The pai—iren-the--maretri--and
in going through the Hongry Country
on one waits..
HOW SLAVES ARE OBTAINED.
•
In most cases the Sieves are original-
ly obtained by natives, who buy- thetri
on some charge of 'witchcraft, or for
debt, or for drink. sometimes they are
kidnapped, or captured in taida. Some-
times they are mere. plunder of Portu-
guese traders, They are brought W
the so-ealled "emigration agents,' who
are established at various pointsk
the country under Portuguese regula-
tions, and are forwarded by them to the
coast, where they are received by other
agents, chiefly at Benguela, but also at
Novo Belden& and( Loanda. The
pews naturally vary accbeding to the
slave's health and canal, ey. have
known a woman who was taken from
her husband rid three children far insthe
interior, bought her twenty. cartridges,
arid sold in Benguela for about .£18.
In the district of Billie which is some
306 miles from the coast, an ox, a load
et rubber (say 66 pounds) and a young
slave are regarded as about equal va-
lue -say But in Benguela, as near-
ly as I can estimate, the average price
given !Or emigration slaves is £16,
though I have known a man give as
much as £25 there for a really nice -
looking girl.
Large numbers cif the slaves are kept
lu work the plantations on the main-
land or other industries along the shore.
But I wish now to speak only of the ex-
port trade to the Portuguese islands of
San Thome and PrinCipe in the Gulf ef
Guinea. The slaves are conveyed c•n
the ordinary passenger steamers, which
run about once a fortnight. A day or
two before the steamer starts they are
eolleCted In a public building before I
Portuguese official called the curador.
They ere asked whether they are willing
to labor on the Island for five years.
Not the slightest attention is paid to
their answer. A tin disc with a number
and a tin cylinder containing a payer
with particulars as to their names, etc..
nre hung around their necks. and hav-
ing entered the office as slaves, they go
rekt as "contracted laborers." This is
thf process which the Portuguese cal)
'"redemption." it is a most lucrative
nrocess for all eoncerned. except, of
course. for the slaves, who are only the
merchandise.
HERDED ON STEAMERS.
They are next taken on board in
lighters and herded forward. There
were 271 on the ship by which I Cagle
last June, not counting babies, which.
perhaps, numbered fifty. The average
during the last few years has been a
little under 4,000 a year. but it is now
rising, owing to the perpeteal demand
nt the planters for more and more la-
bor. After about a week's Journey the
slaves are landed on San Thome - Oka -
hinge. or the Island of Hell. they
call it -end they are distrhuted among
the planters who hnve requisitinned the
"Emigration Committee" for theme The
planters pny from £26 to £30 for a
Frown slave delivered In good condi-
tion.
ft Is almost entirely for the enitiva-
tion of Cocoa that the slaves are re-
wired: for the two Islands. being doge
under the equator and nearly Meyer;
veiled In mist and dripping with mois-
ture, are as good for cocoa as they are
deadly for human life, and the cocoa
trade Ls now of greet and increasing
value. I believe it amounts to about
&I.000.000 a year. And the value of the/
slaves is consequently so great that I
think their masters try in most crises
in keep them alive. Yet. as mir Con.
gut. Mr. Nightingale. said in his last
published tenort, the death rate, where
we can check ft, is enormous. Among
the slaves of Prinethe one in Rya dieg
every year, and where f have been able
to fest the rahs on San Thome, ft is al-
most equelly high.
At the end Of the Ilve years the sur-
vivors are coiled Ho in hatches of about
Pfty before the wrathy and are inform-
ed that their tailrace hat- been reeew-
ed for another term of flve years. They
never go beck. I have sought in vain
for a single case In whieh a slave from
Angola has been rettirned to his home.
A very few eigtape over sea In canoes.
A few hundreds. especially on Principe,
have meateed to the forests, and are
Hying there like wild bensta. From'
urie to finie the plaritere Institute drives
hetthee and ehnot them off. ft was
described to /no as fine sport.
flUMANerleS NAME.
Since I publialied the aecount of my
r.urrtey In liarperei Magazine. pile ef
the great American &icon manufactute
ra MIS written to nui to say nun in
ernistquence ot my ertieles he has atop -
pad the frithertatlen of Aan Thome co-
edit. f think it lieely that other great
Matintadtdrere wiii thle example
end If they ad together dud give their
rettgettel this may have aome effeet 'm -
on Dm Portuguese heart.
bit fis a flallon we heves the right to
Interfere, 1830 We Old PortugUeve
000,000 le iltete Iter tekevet Werke By
the Beelhe end Britegels Acta al only Si
teld le eeetti itget, Pettettgal tend her -
Otte eittehlen with us, to mit down
?he slave trail item the Oango
fold rentrafiA generally, We. balm
Old rigitt cotonion humanity,.
White," .1' askett)
'U. There two meinY ,reglens whiat Ltittd prnther nbfr. PeteYbele Weret
• 110t emebMige linteeheell. Tina YOU Mid *tend. hereto the Winettelelte
Se ea ebelit Intl:Mee Itity. on the Mae. Frateybwe aCttriitifily, my 111110 men zi
kehete tEver..tind In tether pert* of Ilse tot why?" Little teretheet *Oh! tile
fae Notth. We hum 4 elettoft en 11114'4 says the eaft eelet Ihreileh Ott, I want
*IV* lar la hltfli *hipped in No it title '
litallausd
IA* Air I
feilet *WNW avaoteg
*toot hew u thouittr
wok otit- IOWA Itlat
slut. efeetelg OW -own 404
*gals *t lost, wa,o4to anforosanett
astsatidiessii• upon Portugal, as stve
dare not reagit. Or ish* retnalf.
woes* wa Aro *bit strong ePlaQUittt
me 14 Mod a CRAW 10 *Mot on* of
Owe sloe Shipe On ete genre*
00404 01/010thieleele tne. feed,
MitiOur§OZION IN 04.*
recuttor .pMittteatt Slott Veleta* t4yt±
, Vaeltifettrite
retn 040 Ottlefe ore told hy
the new re leo* atet tho
Durplete* recently tomtit 'f's1itarttial
'Iforbartirs, fmglitritt, "
1114, tha *Olivet*. moat
Nth* Alava" nolt other Nmeonforto
church* in lb* dtstrict, hobt ehal, ree
'1 . Will net he en
deeeeti With /4 40)4 the Meer
tiont which is *nett Mt 1010, '
Mee*. vhrAt vat stliPeet• eerth an
Orfitlde stt tonbead of BIS Clitirebi,Whit
wilt_ consist eattlot %gaff
been 1010014 -and under 'the ne
Thus Will begin the .eff
lentelei velnch W.111 eontlnue for
POP Yeeree Puieluef this perket ChM
Mid .th 'th 1
Afit -aiNha-havroorpreirhuAr,
Iva new ChttrOk Will he given an oppars
turt1W 01 itttalitinii. the. perfect Alto,
Oui0es Will be' provided to difeet such'
Persona along the paths of halves. snit
the'devil will. he .ettained UP in 'order'
Nor/ Owe it Ow
Wore ot litey
enteke were. and If*, Vary tiaoeist
men* Internal acononly
p of syar. hilt Ow WON- 000
*MOO atoothg all elasete '11
matt- There Wee* Mk Ve0Ket Wee Neel hY•
the *tit of itiettenett eta kneeerY
ret717,1tierattvii poailiona. Lord heeding -
bane, Wnett Lord Nigh Admiral, rows a
Voteot ble 0wh. tooic ta'appOlut
the *WU in the navy,
'4t1014miliit _ofVOyfirfit welts old VA*
*t* *re *SW together' ,islo writer
am ehief benellelariest under 414) Wee
et ben Of, peettletititt end perquisite* which
t :*r Otte 414e Made th* OM en happy *
ttunting grinin4 for MO ,i'sscsis sof thee
genntee. *hey were 110% Kraut,-
Aatioat NOw
it
w.46zethe-Driutal0444104's 40.0.410411 . "if
$44000,000,1A0*
‘' The Alpha wire .tatablialval lig.
VW the dieutrotte fallwro.ot many Ole
tette :banks. Three hafkdrol
wore opened id the baghtnipir 041 OM the
IleatedaY 44,3 world,* thOte Alapoilkoct.ltt.
• keekee P*PleY 1$40101 felierfeedi 0.041
*Met ..leankil eintla •te matter .
mg*, .4041011' tha ehtttltv0 taw to
e I Vila& a rue. otttrontr 4twe'ethele4 wiltntvn *Meek .
Winn* .41skro flute telhad . sow*.
• 9.403Al •Ospoiltors.. 'Vatting tho
pOptilatitin. of :OM% gritign tritanik
DE N
A IMO, 1:40A
'
Who Eu010
0010 iiactillf
to MM.
tho Var Ugh bav cool* 1,aute de
keroott gatharoth logatber ag the
rtle4 "heed Of lite It eal SoeietY
,S10218111 and elettinished, 1001. end en
'hI''4r11414:41*ItIol`tolti
,,yeer4 Sono. among Ma aborigines o
et 40,000.000‘. 14 Preeee that 000 Otreott*
1,0 overY tour iota a hatt to* dooms, 4441/314t: Ilia 4t011 %vit$' a° Welk C°4''
eelentilleellY. plausible • (bat lit* Warned
.iti 11111:10. „2.6"very elits* isi roproont4, ni,„4 .1,,.„,,,,,„, i„,.1110,w,..1 it ,,, go, tit
.
, Ameng tbe elepoiliteee. *Oita nebertitinturAyt 13;iiiie 4;4,1, lzwevez, wymd,
'44/t4 4°44" Alle- 4letk la:lb° -11W°111°' ' the. Wholit iteetattee 40, ba the Once* .
, The advantage* to th Ohne ortil non 4, on annorraany imaortativa
Piot, the sioteduto stamirltY Vrolli lesltlitittd, ittid. Linda' de Pougifil,opt Wint
!iktoe4gr ehe genvenfehee ef littekint eee' f tiublicl.y Athetinet4 att * V*04 "°r0 "It
Inet.e. . 4 ea 0 • IV
whieh is not etteetrd by ehteakte ii -,4 oije,-,i,4totatt details of, the terrible pepolt$ that.
' Wael letteelled 10 tbot terminological itit
eeneee 'fourth. talety ofroloat ,P01041*• *x4114404
i
now MIA tenet littbolhe W1041100 of
wetly _ hy the developtineet, of deed; SNUBS, INSULTS, clitigt.T1E.S.
bildth the Teta? Meet* where no efike - prow* a Ile IA* over 144 4 more
fthil that,tho Meted Pee POW* agte'ct 4e411A W441 141d' 4" 09'
f42- led to ply their trade with Imputthl.
soya AP' Lentlon, Olqbe. and One Seit
eNt,got stiveft jeers litird tabor from
sAr ;oh gteisthet ter a '10fig Serie* • ol
e freelde. Alut- in eeleteneing the Man the
;/,' Nage e!cpresseci 'tga retrata that ha
r could nel orcter ,WM to boi banged
,
t. • AT TelE illeiSPITAL GATES,
Pe11 wee lenerellY Rte. heat Catkin
IM:men nee And w-Weerntinlir-thninost
liked, . polatoati Were alwaya served in
the 4mns, .aeteethees jwo„ to eath mare
end a good naltired cook was frequent.
1,17 Prevailed MUM tet cook indica and
doff* that the had made for them,
demanding for Ws seryleee
that ,theY ruby be saved freire tenieta
Ye either' a pot ot grog or a portion of tha
dish he cotneed,
ihm It 'at .00 ot 1,090 YON tbe
%Weed, in tochIng their otegkial atet
...that of the *endless Adam -they wi
ed o -Church, this privi-
lege hailog,heen forfeited by .not Mo-
tile the correct Church beforelhe dawn
et the millennium.
The Membeo of this Church are to
ix the Bride of Christ In the new era,
arid they will ,be first to Ilse at the, re,
surreetion, arid be known as the' find
fruits. The next will be those WhO Ul-
timately win salvation and are admit-
ted to life , eternal. whilst WI the rest
wilt go to a second eleatb-which is et,
erlasting death. The adherents ere very
enthusiastic.
Among the adherents of the new see
are three local Primitive Methodist
preachers. In tendering their resigna-
tions, they wrote that, while they be-
lieved that "the wegee of sin is death."
they could not find in the Bible that
this life was the only opportunity they
would heve for salvation. They bellev-
ed that Christ 'would come again, And
that -everyone-would. have anotherchance
The movement Ls already causing a
good deal of dissension in families.
SENTENCE SERMONS,
By looking for the best love lifts to
the best.
A tree Is known by Its fruits, not by
Its shoots.
Some saints try to prove their faith
by their ferocity,
He who scorns the poor turns his
Isord from his door.
People who are 'always picking bones
get little meat.
There may be more love in a warn-
ing than in a reward. e
You cannot climb the heavenly ladder
on stilts 'of dignity.
Hre cannot pray for himself -at all who
prays for himself. alone.
A bonko game is not made a blessing
tv coming into a church.
The downward road often looks like
an ascent to the eye of pride.
The fruits of heaven are not in the life
unless its climate is In the heart.
The man who has blisters to show
coos not need to talk about his bur-
dens.
The man with time to waste Is a big-
ger fool than the one With money to
burn. • •
We might have lighter loads on our
lacks if we had less starch in our necks.
There's many a man who never prays
tor rain until his neighbor has his hay
out.
The man wIto goes out to buy religion
never gets anything but the gold briek
variety.
When a man really has the robe ef
righteousness he is not afraid to let it
touch his neighbor.
The man who sits In the back at
nrayer meeting often wants to walk in
the front in the parade.
The devil IS never BO near being your
sovereign as when he seems to be wor-
chipping your superiotity.
He is sure to make crooked tracks
who tries to ,tread the heavenly road
elide his eyes feast on the sights of
sin.
Sonaelltnete however, he could Maly be
bribed -1Y money, Mut In Wet way lie
creeeed nis pay of 135 shilltngs A Meath,
adtittIQW tO which he was neatly al.
way* in receipt of a perish*. of US. 8(1.
pee month.. Betides these saurces
revenge he also made good deal ot
money from the eale of uslUsh," the tat
scraped from the ship's ooppeo after
each *eel boil been aerved, and half et
which etvos his perquisite. The other
„ halt belonged to the ship for greasing
Ithe bottom one running tackle.
The ship'a ene moreovet, hea-
t ored With a guard ot two marines, who
-
AFFECTS THE HAY TRADE:
English Leather Manufacturers Oppose
Embargo on Cattle.
At a meeting Of the Stockport, Eng-
land. Town Cornell recently a long dis-
cussion look place upon the question
of Lhe restrIceens placed on the impor-
tation of Canadian cattle. Mr. Alder-
man I.ees. a hat manufacturer, said II
was a great chsadvantage to the coun-
try tri have these restrictions upon the
importation of foreign cattle, One e -
suit was a great scarcity of hides,
which seriously affected' the price of
leather, and that in turn affected the
totting industry„ and made It a very
important matter to Stockleeet.
Mr. Alderman .1. Turner. also a hal
manefacturer, sold that serious Incon-
venience lo the halting trade wnn glit-
tered through the great advance In the
I rice of loather, hides having gone
up 33% per cent.
Mr. Walmsley sold the motor -car In-
dustry was responsible for the increase
in the price. of leather, five hides being
used for each car.
GREAT BLUNDERS OF LIFE.
Here are some "blunders" written
down by five hundred men, and to he
h.und in the Crernr Library, Chicago:
"The greatest blunder In my life was
gambling."
"When I left my church and mother."
"My greatest blunder was when I
learned tO smoke.'
"Was fo fool away my time when I
was at school."
"Not keeping my position, but grew
black in my work. '
"Thinking that my boss could not eto
without me."
"Refused a steady position with a
good firm."
"Would not hearken to ii;6 advice of
other people."
"Not saving Money when. I was
young."
"Beating some one out of money,"
"Did not stick to anything."
"Careleas nhout my religious duties."
"Did not take care of my money."
"STONE GONGS."
A recent English traveller in China
describea some remarkable camisoles of
sounding stones, or "stone gongs."
which he saw at Chufu, the birthplare
and burial -place of Coiduchm. One of
the atones. which are composed of a
greyish oolitic: limnstone, hae been
shaped info a cover for on ineenee dish
plaeed in front of the tomb of the grand-
son of Confucius, When Afro& with a
atick, or with the knuckles, it rings like
'bronze, and the Sound Is so distinct
that ft is difficult to teeleve. without In-
apedion. that the object la not really
competeed of metal. Bounding atones
Ore IfflOWn in other etutritriee. A cor-
respondent of Nature describes a bridge
at °wick, in County Mayo, Ireland
Whet is Wally known as the "Musleet
beep," because the Motto forming the
seeping five ant a musical note when
tar
Stood sentry over the door of the galley
during the preparation of meals to pre-
vent unwarranted. Mtds upon the pro-
visions by ship's thieves; he did. not
wear a uniforni, nor Was he ex -
'seated to keep watch, being allowed te
sleep in comfort end comparative pile
vacy throughout the. night.
pN THE `LOWER apN DECK. —
But ori the other hand he had some
duties not connected with food, among
them the preparation, when the ship
was in ,port, of a hot poker for firing,
salutes,
And it was an established custom of
the navy that the ship was not properly
Paid off until the pennant was struck
by the coolc. This operation he was ex-
pected to perform as the last officer of
the ship, and until he had dono it no
officer could consider himself discharged
or et liberty to leave the port, This rule
held good though every seamen had telt
the ship, and sometimes the cook him-
self, in a flt of absentmindedness, went
off without carrying out the task, and
had to be routed out again before the
incensed officers could leave for their
homes': 'There. will be- seamen alive to-
day who have heard the phrase : "Every
man to his station, and the cohk to .the
foresheet," and the landsman who has
read Marryat will always connect the
man of the galley with the famous
phrago
" SON OF A SEA COOK."
In addition to the ship's cook, of
Course, there welt; as now, the mess
cooks, men who were appointed by the
seamen themselves to be presidents of
the messes for the week, and who had
to receive the provisions for the mess
from the purser at the daily Issuing of
victuals, and who had to hand these on
to the „ship's cook in good tirne.
compensation for his trouble the mess
codk drew a cook's, or double, portion
of grog, and he deserved It, for his
duties were arduous and his critics
severe.
If ha spoiled the duff he was tried by
a jury of the mess, and this jury was
gathered by hoisting a metes swab or
beating a tin dish between decks for-
ward. He was condemned to most
painful punishments if found guilty.
He was also the carver of the mess, and
In order to prevent favoritism a blind-
folded member Of the mess was required
to call out the name of the person who
was to receive the portion as It Was
ilaced on the table. Small or large,
that portion was given Id the man
named. and probably no more' sane -
rectory mei hod of deo lin g with the
question could have been found.
HAD THE HOSPITAL BMW'.
Many People Who Become Chronic
Visitors.
The record of the patient who visited
the Teo: rage Wells Hospital contin-
uously for fifteen years can be parallel-
ed. and, indeed, beaten, by several
London hospitals, says the London
Daily Mall.
There are many obstinate diseases
which can rarely be ahsolulely eradi-
cated. and paltentg suffering from these
diseases will attend hospital for years
with regularity, Ulcerated legs aro very
frequently the cause of such uovarylne
patronage of the out-patient department
of the London hospitale.
There was one old man who used to
he a regular visitor thirty years ngo to
se Bartholomew's Hospital. lie dis-
appeared after about five years' regular
treatment, but six years ago he ap-
peared again for treatment and medi-
cine. He exolained that fn the interval
he had been to King's C,ollege, the Lon-
don Hospitel, se George's, fhe metro-
pelitan iloepilal, and four or fire
others. At some he had only attended
half a dozen times, othera he had heen
to for years; but he had reiurned to his
first love. as he himself said.
Ile only attended for a few months
and then disappenred onee more. Ile
may he dead. or he may he going
rounds once more, lo reappear, like the
wandering Jew, a. decade hence, a
nonagenarian still hopeful of a cure.
Ogler eh ron le out-pallentx are lees
fickle. and Guy'a ifneplUtt can hone( of
nt tenet two pellet& who have team
regular attendants for eighteen years
end more. Doctors come and doctors
go. hut they still attend with their cards
and medicine bottler:.
One old dame, welt fifteen year,' at-
lendanee her credit. came too tale re
molly, and found the mit-patient de.
partment shut. On her nevi visit she
complained bitterly to the doctor shout
being "locked out." "I villein hat
dropped dead In the atreet," she
tpiavered.
e
THE BIRHOP'S
Dr. Gibson, fielop filoureeter.
England, preelding at a neraing neeo.
coition Meeting/ in Ms dioeese, acid he
vealled the Hine when he was attacked
with measles cot a hey al gehool, tie
hod a nurse In Melt after htm at night,
and remembered that he wee niwnes
awakened three time during the night.
Virg, when he woe in his eertiest eh, p
ond ne comfortable as could he she
tctoomnotel hwiantiffronil ;11 ithatri Xii,;(71/410.,1
1 orley woter ever dive. Later he would
atynkieitted coin by the tom entwine
et the nereee-and auborpiently by the
notee the Made in rekindling Lilo fire.
bookie Witte ce isttie dePesit .seventh, hitter price. Theugh torrett in meet t
edeeattele thd yeeing 414 lhe 0001;4 de Itougeinetat te0k Well ell
mtre4Innnedintaletahte oittoomwloegegya;ot ellhoehtilus! sing eitttarattrailtrit thh011Itct weal, wiren pottpuwt.
iebileini dtSeottletge recide** and digoov;enred, the 4"eptten ha was never
feaStoureawelklmrn ,iLtioautis 0040-lipteoutituemrn oanat'as
sax. °There goes t o lier t" when he
welks itte street, Kvery door has
atm are used aa a lathila 111'1°41°' been ;netted to hiM, end he haa had le
suffer snubs, insults end cruelties in-
hnottnnhena'amblatt:. The last eight yams have
been for him one long struggle to eon.
Alice Peeple that he Is In ;veiny an
hp lite own words he Wet below the
extraordinary story of Ws paiotul ex-
perieuces
"The persecution which began when
/ was first attacked in 1898 has been
kept up ever Once. The name of de
llougemont salt excite& laughter and
insults, and wherever I appear in pub -
lie and am recognized there am I
leered at or called a liar.
"At first things were so bad that I
was &dually compelled to leave Lon-
don and go on a long sea voyage. For
instance, when the controversy round
me was raging, I,was recognized while
riding on an omnibus by a Crowd stand-
ing outside a newspaper Mace in Fleet
street, in the windows of which was a
shouted to the driver to throw me off the
otacur.icast:ire of me. And the crowd
4'S1.) I WON not sorry -to get away, hav-
ing first shaved off my beard and as-
sumed another name.
COLONIAL'S PliOTEST.
Spee .
Tne edyantagee to the countTeee-
greetp lhemeelveli under seven head -
First, the people raceivo the pro-
fits ea interest CM tilde savings when
noted, the CattntrY's wealth ts
groWing within Reed; third, by the Wi
dletribution of these savings meney can
nmmptly leach points needing it agtb
lroM loot cause% fourth._ in O-
rnate places stringency train toe limited
banking facilities Is prevented or We-
aned: fifth, the laboring people ,fed
MOO personal Interest in the stability
of the country; sixth, seetionalisra
among the less intelligent closes is
lessened by continual and close tont%
with a common financial institution;
seventh, by special investment, the
people's savings may be made the faun -
dation of securttles tor financial inste
tutione, of loans for municipal improve-
ments or special national undertakings.
- 4
BIG LINERS BEING BUILT.
British Sister Slaps to Outclass Any-
thing Afloat.
Two new ocean Ilnera . which are be.
..the 110,0011.000 _lent.. by
the British Government, are fast near-
ing completton, and will be launched
in June or July of this year. They will
be muted the Mauritania and Lualtan-
la, and will be the largest 'Alps the
world has ever seen.
Each vessel will have a gross ton-
nage of 33,200, .while they will be sixty
feet longer than any other liners afloat.
They are eighty-eight feet in beam, and
hi this respect are Ufa first to surpass the
Great Eastern, which was eighty-three
feet in breadth.
Each will have accommodation for
9,000 passengers and will carry a crew
of 800. They wilt be propelled by tur-
bine engines capable of developing 80,-
000 horsepower, and are expected to
travel at a minimum speed of twenty-
four kndte an hour. Marino engineers
predict the vessels wit' be the steactiett
ships 'on the ocean. They are' to lie
lilted In a manner equal to the most
gorgetsus of modern- hotels. The decora-
tions will consist cif reproductions of
the greatest works of art, tyhtle the
system of title between thle various
decks will provide for the rapid transit
of passengers from one part of the ship
to another. •
The first-class dining saloon will he
unprecedented in marine architecture.
It win be a massive, gorgeous apart-
ment 125 feet long by 80 feet wide, and
will comfortably accommodate 500 per-
sons at one meal. It will be lighted by
a great dome extending up through the
two decics above and crowned with a
roof ot cathedral glass,
More than one engineering reeord has
been broken in the construction of the
ships, The stern frames and brackets
are the largest ever known. the former
alone weighing forty-seven tons and re-
quiring no fewer than sixty-nine tons
of molten inelai In the making.
The rudder weighs seventy-nine tons,
end Ouch link in the 2,000 cables Is
twenty-two end one-fourth inches long
and weighs 100 nounds. Each fink wns
tested and withstood a strain of 370
tons.
MPS AT NELSONS TOMB.
Vbetitto Senors Honor the Greatest ol
Sea-Eighters.
The London papers to hand give
stories of the visit to London of /he
Japanese sailors Rent over to man flic
great new warships recently built and
now going into commission. The Ex•
press thus describes the visit uf Ihe crew
of the Itashima to St. Paul's Cathedral :
At a lithe before 8.30 in the morning
the cry of "Here they comet" was raised
among the mass of spectators who had
gathered outside Liverpool Sire& Stn. ion.
As the dapper little bluejackets emerged
into the street a hearty cheer sweot
through the watching ranks, followed
by a confused chorus of "Darnels." The
sailors broke info confuned roer of
"Ilelloar With that promptitude which
is bred of a naval training. they climbed
int0 the string of primrose -colored
brakes awaiting there. When they ar-
rived at St. Pald's Cal hedral Me visitors
showed the utmost solicitude to be con-
ducted for'hwilh to Nelson's tomb, whirl
hnd already been described to Mem hy
their comrades of the Katorre crew.
Their mein as they stood around the
tomb was a most impftsive study, The
sentiment of veneration. almost of awe.
was plainly expressed In ev et y eolin-
tenanee. The tradition of enceeter-
worship IS still strong tn the Japahese
naAtur'ne;ost pleasing, half pathetic inci•
dent of thie visit was the (aiming of
Dean (iregory to welcome the hand of
hare -headed guests. t'enerable
tinder the hurden of his 57 years, he
stood before !heap heroes of a relehtV
strife. end eddressed them In silvery,
though slightly quevering loner+.
"we In England," said he, pausing
that the inlernreter might translate lila
sneeeti, "look on the Japanese as our
frflutdc. am sure the Japaneee reel
this game sentiment towards Us. TI141
lerinnese ere a briive race, and It Is the
earnest hope of all Englishmen Dint
their destiny amonfrthe nations of the
earth rainy prove as great no their vnlor.
their chivalry and their humanity
rneAl'rfett:ilenerm Sinclair followed with n
few kindly words. Captain litchi re,
turned thanks nn behalf' of his men for
the wermiti of their reception.
.—a
ENGLICH LADY otertgen MPS.
The only English lady privileged to
act as a nurse in the rtusso-Japoneee
war, and the first to enter Port Arthur
after the hiatoric new. hes recently re-
turned In London after fifteen months'
experienee of the honors of' wertnre.
Thie lady In Mrs. Teresa flichardnon of
Glaniwydan Park. rarmarthenefilre. who
wits speeially selected by Viscount
itaynahi, the Japanese ambaaendor at
leindon. nealet In neretn hie
wounded reuntrymen. Tall and of
ornmending appearance, with a hind.
Iv. sympathetic. fare and even from
, "When In Australia I was Invited to
address the New South Wales Lancers
on what I had witnestted as a non-
combatant at Elandataagle. When I
arrived one of the men got up and re-
marked toudii and with an oath that
though they might care to stop and
listen to the liar he would not. And
this, though I could not possibly have
told lies on this occasion, seeing Mae
the New South Wales Lancers were at
Elandelaagte, and could have checked
all AM.
"While nt the Cape, I had Iwo most
unpleasant experiences. The first Was
one day when 1.went out to bathe, and
eidenly found smyse41- In -quicksand.
Being an expert swimmer, I threw my-
self flat under the water, and rolled
oieTte on the •Auleicsand beneath the
water until I reached a rock. This is
Ihof only way In which one can escape
from sands of this nature, as, though
they are of sufficient substance to hold
the body of a man they will not sup.
part his legs.
"Before this I had heard it gun fired,
but thinking merely that target practice
was being carried mil I look no notice of
it. But as I sat on the rock a men came
running down to the water's edge and
shouted to me that they Mid fired the
shot to warn me of the quicksand. I
laughed and replied : 'No fatal accident
hannens to Louis de Rougement.'
"'What r he answered. 'Are you
Louis flougemont ? If we had- known
that we would not have bothered to fire
the shot and save. a liar,'"
._,.....
REMARKABLE COINCIDENCE.
Row a Colonial Fugitive Was Found In
a City ot Great Britain.
A couple of men, strangers, sat down
together to lunch In a restaurant In a
Midland city of England. One noticed
Mut the other was rending a colonial
paper. The two got into conversation,
and the ling, pointing to the newspaper,
ascertained that the other was a resi-
dent in the coluny whence the sheet had
conic. "I have fl friend OUt there ; he
went out from here ten years ago. I
wonder If you know him," and the ques.
Honer mentioned his friend's name. "It
is very remarkable," answered the
colonial, "that you should ask that
question at this moment. I was read-
ing, when you spoke, a three -column
artIcle In this paper describing the
mysterious disappearance from the col-
ony of ihat very man. I knew hun in-
timately."
The colonial went on to describe the
strange disappearance of the 'outwit
friend. He had gone from the eelony
mysteriously SS If the earth had still -
dent/ °pelted and swallowed him. In
vectIdritIon had proved thill eccounili
were in perfect order; he had hand,
some balance at hie hnnk, his business
was ft:Awl:stung. Nothing that (amid be
discovered bore the least relation to the
disappearance. tie had no known
enemies, and %tulle suicide seemed im-
possible, none could believe that he ha I
been the victim Of foul play. The con-
vergence) was soddenly Interrupted by
an apparition. They mode a rush to-
gether for a corner of the room. To
oblige the psyrthists one ought M be
able lo deelore that it wns thr wraith Of
their friend that the tam men saw. It
was not. It was the man himself.
lie had been seired by an intolernhie
weariness and eraln fag, and, acting cm
an impulse, hind fled froni the rolony
Ills birthplace to rectipernle. That was
nII. ills chance meeting with fle-ie two
friends gave han the first Inlitoution
the alarm which rag disappearance tad
(Mused.
—4.
A FlEMARKABLE TII1IN EPISODE.
Art extraordinary Ntory of a child
es/ ape from death Ives given Leeds
,,Entllortd) Asslyea, where the parente
unsuccensfully claimed dernagea from
the Leneashire and Yorkshire Hallway
Company. The mother and the little
boy, who ie three years elii, were travel
ling to Southport , when the train
lurched, and the ehild Was thrown
against the doer, which flew open.
train wan passing III the opposite direc-
tion at the time, and the boy wag
knocked by the engine into the four foot
way, where the trnIn passed over him.
Strange to say, he wee unhurt.
NEW WM'S N.‘ NST1-'
The gross IndelitNIness of New York
is greater than that of the Chinese Em-
pire, The crist of operating the elty's
government for no year almocit etpints
the annual eeppiehturee of both on -
non and Pe r is e. neblited. l'sPW ork
01 fa yser4e:coott %glee atsheinvIrilreht ailans11
London spends for fts entire odrainietra-
non. At the persent lime there are
te,Otin men sml emen on this city's;
ropri))), ,ry 8100 that a "Iew
which pity shines, Mrs nfrtlarilRfIll SV/10 orker hoY5 "'opt it I" eelltnaled that
known by the Japoneee heroes the, 812.25 gees into the pockete of munt-
nursed as "Our English Mothete Neal "corvants."
1
\ 1
II 1
Soap
is better than other soaps,
lot, is ben whon used in
;Sunlight Soap contains
\e Sunlight way.
injurious chemicals.
Sunlight Soap is pure
soap. scientifically made.
Every step in its man*.
facture is watched by an
expert chemist.
Sunlight Soap saves
labor, and the wear of
rubbing which common
soaps require in washing
fabrics.
Your money refunded by
the Mailer from whom yen buy
Soli& Imp if you find any came
for emoilaine
Lever tronera Utast Tomato
ose
I .
VALUABLE DESOLATE ISLANDS.
The most valuable desolate islands in
the world are the Liakovit, in the Arctic
Ocean, off the mouth:. of the Lena, 111
Slberia. They are frost -bound and ute
tarty barren, save- tor Arctic mos, but...
they contain such enormous quantifies
t. I fossil ivory that they are exceedingly
valuable -in faet, although uninhabited,
save for the ivory-dtggers, and of them-
selves incapable of superthin life, they .
produce a revenue of $5,000,000. a year.
.1111.1111.1M101011•011.
CASH
In Your Leisure Time
If you could start at once in a busi-
newt which would add a good round
SUM to your preadult earnings -wane
OUT navassunt A nou.an--wouldn't
you do it ?
Well, we are willing to start you in
a profitable business and we don't ask
you to put up eny kind of a dollar.
Our propositionels_thhu_ wIll
ship you the Chatham Incubator and
Brooder, freight propeld, and
You Pay No Cash Until
After 190(3 Harvest.
Poultry raising pays.
People who tell you that there Is oo
money la raising chicks may have tried
to make money In the business by using
setting hen. as hatcher., and they
might as well have tried to locate a
gold mine in the cabbage patch. The
business of a hen le -to lay eggs. As
• hatcher and brooder she is out -
claimed. That's the business of the
Chatham Incubator and Brooder, and
they do it perfectly and successfully.
The poultry business, property con-
ducted, pays far better than any other
business for the amount ef time and
money Invested.
Thousands of poultry -raiment -men
and women all over Canada and the
United States -have proved to their
satisfaction that it is profitable to raise
chicks with the
1- OS Eggs
Its. 1-1,0 ras
OIL 1-241 Egg.
ClIATHAM INCUBATOR
AND BROODER.
.;4317111:11.rt.':24taglrlAS'
chicks out of 69 tam law was lay
first loti truly a tee per eclat hatch.
'IllIa0:1111;nywriti°471:1;tellkhlIfer03:* at :If 1°1 g .f Ent cl :31 rt.
can b;rt ratifor
IpTe44: wlith I:4Z,, can tfl
not horn from me. NIT tamer
trutett.n-altrowill. ZiLio.mfleACIr.t amunnvinte.-
00ouual not set anotherjuouer could
"The incubator rta turniabed mo
Irmo sitcecdpistr lt to easily
operate end only needs about le
minutes attention every stay, it
mcOorens, attiessi JAW, Assa."
The Chatham Incubator and Brooder
is honestly constructed. There Ls no
humbug about It. Every Inchof material
Is thoroughly tested, the machine is
built on right principles, the Insulatiers
is perfect, thermometer reliable. and
the workmanship the beat. s
The Chatham Incubator and Brooder
is simple as well as scientific in con-
struction -a woman or girl can operate
the machine in their lebsure moments.
You pay us tio cash until after mod
hasrveonedt,
us your taante and address Cm
a post eard,to-day.
distremting antes et ry, Bran-
don, Resins, Iv vaprir,_100.o, tenahtsiter,
Ito.,Montreas unisChathens Address
We elm suit yea gutt4tafram, ear
all cauemeedencito Chatham. ate
Th*Manson Campbell Cie.,1,1•Aigg
beet, 33. ClidiThAll. CANADA
Fattortee at esettitesti Ogre and Ditaort.
Let eut gusto you mites
on * itood loanisttni Mal
• or dood loam* Scsid4t4