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The Goderich Star, 1906-06-08, Page 7V e er , Oa 74AV* TIAN 111* Peer Ilealaat to Illpdt lie lawatiestars Wag *Sepia 141.04ki ellw141.4"". W. fiesialesa weft* ae *Was Ws sem tiatee rat Poem- ik wog allikrit4 ttAr WTI Welk ot 300, MUSA *row the Came. Wee anetatrough MOW, OPP** Of south et the Coale aleth I had come up trete the West COW hY roundabotit roe* ta der triet Et** lend. there I Masi the path Which hes for mina** beim mu of the chid nide roe* into O. laterior. ift PisrelY look la most Voss $0 Aar- tutv Mit Yett tO Walle We A talle tithi, tattling one Met sifeetly la front the. Other, hut it kw* in a/MOO A' 111111100k16 LaseitOIL tonal Pt go *Aim 0 Coin, the sighla of la 'rioting the OA CAW and UM Obi, with nee btil hid oliserred. They dove oh _ and were duly batroduced to„ nee Grantham, ot the Wears Routh NW*. His liordebitit Meth- the ileionare with hint bit0 court, mid Melt, ed tbent tO tette la* thi 0044 I* /rein the IBA Ao4r 4Inetice Grin OP and the bar that the cello-V*00M agist,„ eveh hope the Minty Mona** heit,,-to einne Suitleed, to *Ludy our cos* to ,toto,*e iolthttoom luta youv Pada, rang4s Ot Kataasa, and so to t ham *Meal to Out flea. Welter 411011,00rt *Ones Muds tilie 1.1itiorii WI** Pt tIthrier, thigh Mug Uorpti M. led*, hsac,dirtri, errist a otrtkieg *leo* hi Hrthett OW** after issue ardtioe4 *44 opera", hone et 1314 ott ) P4Ic - "Gentlennell; WO% "Ytill hive by 144004 tteeter* had two hard 4ime enimeetraing, YOU 'Oa the 01 tlX0000, the' MM. hive beim knooked ehentuutt have refilsed• 'give. the pe. flastel bArdsnip itt the hiad« 'tar UV. Ike Oat daps reet out ot seven,. 00010 001aPetted to blvoneo ell, night,* , Tb* 4. 141040, bilatinitUder of tbe Nile. PIA ihe 00010 dewy grOUP4. Eton, slipped while deiteendlug the clop poichky oazaa ot.you omit to it; pea. ,tster Sopa And eereined bier *nine. Ledetibi lit. Spoken the Tilitit .froM Amy erane oeyou- Ada like me tor or Lest Yoer *SAW* tens ot Coil vare tee. -$inaita le the language of -.But dering critfOlt• I knot** SY 44t Produoed Att dot tluttod Kingdom 0t People residing anient'ithe 'Mlle la Me MeV /:1114, Onortittndad tintinlittaato /*Welt 67,1e0,444 tons wall exported. tar ot AeSa111. Well, I musk admit that t 140 *anat.' Thirty *emend eelliehi "Vigttet Meek* oft ,ette ot the islaude the New MU orx May 28 tor e'plettle., Which, to 'ride*, ,1114,periple- paY ter the* *30 .4stottto coo •410,ew,, f •in arrOwreet Mitch is a dieleet epalten. bY *Wilt it 11, la proPOOta 1141 ()testa% wad. Sat, terS*I4, shioukt be Mauled tetteaaaway. The freedom et the ctty lapriii bee Sot y '414 8.14 We' f#IttiOrta lha *dials and. fOrnIgn En* Sne:SY IOW distributes the SeriPiliree hi hi- eQd been waters% bir ilernelt Kitsbn. 114 Wee OM Of Minn? InteraiNin Rabid BMW* liTiOrd. with Wit thite teetti preowned et socielea meeting ENG et Hall, tondo, l)tiring isat Yea* the Whit Wei it• toltiAtidointaittlinteolpiehWc4inictlagiulav rim_gwellialteseige: Metter"), Zigults, LIOURils **a -EltrYi0I4 CelinqUiel Piraltue. East Fnnito, Brtari. SPECIAL 'TYPE, 4 *110'0,WIty tn Hes Senn% Ones - Arid this 'totoE, and 01141C414t1I "t 4***:''''Witik 'MO. rst tiPvtatr4 Pt 90004 that ft field. ' htitt004 0 ' 0,WOr 04fier llr Pre- P. • ott ,ittee.,track, wIA4,,lormi. ,usi rwrIlisi ti. the object or ,stelpg.en,English la Urt Of agy, is 40-1(094.4s. ar,.waRto...otr tetwtted in rainhalti,s400 lot 'the_ ,UctiOn• in thillt. 0,0etter ot A; Inillielt PeOnitt .11711011 On . AVOW' every' tree.shunp and MA Of ;strieler-I'Aluti4ei • V" 4w..liut •/3•40xbiletii ''' 00 h Waste Ot energirtinleeS it les*, for fettilltirt heVe dectdeo AO iteProve the inn Pfeifle of North MOM*, • Xlitille Ass' tropt timo, imptitmotig-4044% ,cm 0.1 ',Ode attrwOrlts, 05.• toil:01044e as& .moro. maw iweinpfour , hours, ,.. • . ' , VW.- ., . ' .• .. ,• . . . ' la spoken; bY the Wa,Zigillatt,'Whe, 00iter• a Norwich funeral, While the sex, n't large are& 4 Hermit East 'Afrie ' -the %rest 'slave routes of the Vtirld., ,..,':`1,41,14.144.0.0catultrtt4;litimo 4'004.0°Yossmis;ton-er-i,.,-.',..H. 09E. Itl'Itiritt$, ,T,r., Aalq11.Z. ' ,. ton .*.aited., _,,- et the' frilitteidele his fent . 1,400W:is 's(petten byntheltes4. lee'a, 1 '-' . 'EllACISIXO',6LANgs. ' • .' • .1),,,40 Titai„. had found, the .Englishr 'or ',,,-gyou 'cannot proote, ' B), 0, Bowl EMI tore rtnt COMA elad\ hie Wife Oiled Who live In the.. interier 'of 'Antlittli,' i .14.0c. 'tut „4.1 ie,len"nie.iieriii rther ,Londetti eliMetnexceedingly .srye winch, lestsvordr, a oonpn,,of hem the ihe.bell, . . r ..‘ French ludo,phtokt; %no to 01.01, to. - • • '' • • - • :.• ,.. ' . • .' ...1 ' ' • . ' . . , Ceeritee taiied shwa etattifinii atid• Ave* lifesent„laid. UP.* ere /11g: 0010 the''euee.111 fit tea tetuf04 , gannet '!,prediice.,"11% :a . Of hours '06, 424101' Ov-01,0'04-all*".• ar°,1111**'' ''ineepliere 'With; its VerY, triege„ltriMitct such, conditi0O4lak ,httefier*- thirst* fliA weeden lettert( tt-b" Mdi3Ou t 0. 'turn 'of • RO3Oke :*:1141' Olaf d' Minigeinent ' eXtteust4ent rot seVere tiOnditione reriVirtirfaiP. You Several rOf the °dicers and men of the print this, speelat ti;pe has to be cast Elog'ar,tudhul bodykuard, who landed ot from the designs I ale We been auP• reueritiY, ere 'ever six feet plied by native sales. STRANGE LANGUAGES. . k.Ourtog:last year Ate° Essex and Ent, . feet :Of Inn ,illit"Ve'lt.t10 ;,/.1°41. ' at 1P114111'. ''.44*• '''..: ' ''',:'''''' ''''', ' ' ''-' ' ' ".' '''''' .:' toilet -,,,"•14•'&''''eattri:f.A4edia 44i:these and ' he 1 Wilb ',Whielt, slave* ' vre,., :114104' itoletAW • r - r VISTr "WMASP' YAM''' „ ' t • ' ' 14; ' - • - f' E - i lieltt en, the Mereb, - • ::... .• , ; • ••• • •,,,,, ,,,',•''',' ,rrerengh; 2,the'MternrOterelga„LP,t40„„„,11 00100 S/fitn-eatiffitit. teem Useful, -Mae, r Th* path .threngh 'tire ',ItilnillY1.-vetla' - then 'witngeetit ! COW,' eXntalqh • io.„.„0 . 41,„O' beat leesene trein, YAW inatineuVrOg. 'ft trY la AtrAWASVAlft nentliV'Ataellittines. *ow Axs...oporoot_. 0 _ co#4.-: _p r 00 ea pm .4‘,.._ pu , 1,....01.,e0ey.,...wo40. ,flumilouvi. 0. 44. paper I found; 'Mere • the,fresh bedifie•.01 :altiiies.- :00MMieefoneeet_espeefally • the.'fIret u*sti :or to. raartoeinfterbt lbeerYtbut what104 AnOternnirder4:440.0esiSiti.tn(StikrYP,"bIk' • ,-1, it. ta ' * - 0, - 0 .' :r , htiVO to leara is Mak %eery is geverneo 4Minissionert _leek: Ole ,deenest interest, it Praetice.by- the. Itioduttous of hUsisatt ..tn,in.,.-the :explenation and Whip' SW> natera',i Yu beim; therefore, to gad rt*ttictit ':.tigIPOPilinfa: *ex- ibtt, ,O*44 wont out exttetly, what your ,rsien are tap- Soras'Tile,,Ceineliaelellan then went into *we of ;d003-0,, how rat their 40019 :Pie-. Uord- 'Om i,ustice § ooltrt4'and fOr spiiir can he unaintained under "aniterse „,"•'ff. 'while. obSei!veu the eourt et work eireurnsiairmeS; . What Encs the 'limits ..ot u,r'," ilietta .:•°"; '••'',' "'•', s!: s ,,,, „ glair .pelWera uf:eittiorane% new 'far You 420', 2 ',,,,:hillie AiiterilOOn•ei..vlisit, waa.,pitid tit can trteit them to Drees a Strong eneMY 41.'4 Sentletigt,"Ybede Where the heed 'officials when they' ere Ittingre• And weak ,end cause throUgh fever otleitgoe4. been unable 0 ifeeP".np:WithAtie :party. on ilia'rearelli 'atid.,14:00hOK tbrMOPI'14, Hungry Ceantry, tiegile•Weitai'. ,; ''''',-- . ,. , - . .., • HTQl.EN' OB.;-,potiont,;- In most eases itlig';ainVet, ,,,araort obtained by .. ntitiVet,;.:cwAalicoytuo soiost. 0$,,itigt ,ov NymiacOkaif.tolot' -' or fee &MIL Bettie -40* theyi'.are nalved, '00' 0*PtitradihretW'':EMPts' times they are'litera,Vitinder ',Xit,'Pertw guese tradere. , They,urebreugiltile'lhe• so-dalled "einigtafieo:SillifeleOr:,W40.1:' aro' established at IferiOnertittints"Intlies:einna,, try under Perteglieae legillationa; And' are forwarded by •,1, bent tet the,'Vettat; where they are redelved btother agents; chiefly at Benguela,. hut ,also:at, Neito Redondo add Loande. The .,Averege' price givers for emigration •sitivea its:A101 though I have iploWtizI a men, gii07, es' muc as 425 there for as reelfr. Wee - 1114% lookin . She. however, WaS not re-,' quIred to inigratiens,' ' , • . " TO WORK ON PLANTATIONS, Large numbers of thd-sItives are kept The commissioners visited Fleet street , . • to work the plentetiOns qn• the mein, by night to See the great newspapers !De- land or othetsindustrieeAtongsthe shdre. ing produced and despatched. But I ,w4sh newlei speak Mily of ineX-• ' port trade 10 ihA Perhignese isi ds of San Thome and principe, insthe 01111 til FIVE, TCINS OF GOLD. °eines, The alavea 'ero Cenveyed,on the . - ordinary Oaseenger Steassieree whiebsrUll Aeined Giukrtts Protect One Hundred about once% torinita,„. 4,0y, or two Thotrennd Sovereigns. before the 'gamier Aerie 'they: are col- lected in a public. builettng. before a The, 'Cunard steamer Lucania, which They are asked Whether:they art ease.% bad on 170erd five tong of bullion and Gilresdole. lett Liverpool for New York recently, Portuguese, offiefid e.alled:. nje ing-ler-labor onssinaisliinete for five epecie valued at half a million sterling. shipment wassin the, years. Not the slighte:st atteritients fillet *-P°0101-'°I-Arkt° toiler answer. A tin.dlac With ivninta krm °I 100,000 .6overeigns, which were ber and a tin cylinder; contenting A paper .with . particulars ., , as ;to , their -names, _etc., ore himg'itund thew neeki, and having entered the officisats slaves, 'they go out as-"contracled,laborers.1 The planters pay from 42,* 10,430 tor a ..„LiTier Rank in ten wooden boxes, bound grown slate delivered in geed celitt- with great hoops DI iron. Guarded by Oett01101(r* ttlefr Power to 0x014,o, deOintated., ins ypu can . discover the; prineipal workings Of the aeat crily by extending the period of field The deteetive section; exocises Peace thrie from hours te greatly', Interested tho visitors as tile days, Thie Is why I litive bad- you out eyStera (was tinfeldecrier their instruc-, irt bivouac end' worked you waY ' thieveal; Gallery, the finger- that some 'of you may have thought se - Print tection-cepied directly from the vere. And this is why I say to you Chinese criminal elepartment, where it that if `you de net understand and sp. tuia been, in,Use thousands of years -the preciate Mese, extended field-dqs, end ineaSUrenient department, the would prefer Pist A -Morning' menbeinfre, eflices and 'elaborate syetem of photo- you wegid de netter to stay At heme grankY,',,beekkeeping, and reference, alI altogether. OXOUed Jim Wender of the visitors, some RECALLS BOER WAR. of -Whom have •bed eitended experience fri the imperial Chinese police service. "A iteld-day fitted in conveniently IN: - Yet another event was a visit to the tween two square miles not only teaches headquarters of the London Fire Bri- you nnthing useful, but gives you false gade. • impressions; and tends to make you thebretleal rather than practical tactici- ans. "Look at aatacre at 'Stromberg. From a brigade field -day point of view, Gat - acre on that oceesion did splendidly. Yes, on paper it was a beautiful opera- tion. If Gatacre lind started out on it after a good square dinner, and had fin- ished it befpre his men had time to lire, one would have had to say, "I pass that general." Gatacre took the I3oer posi- tion in reverse, he surprised the Boers absolutely, and yet it was a disaster. Why? Because the Whole of the previ- ous day Gatacre's army had been pre- paring for it, and he had imp'osed-heavy fatigue duties on his men. Because they started out 'without breakfast, be- cause for twelve hours"the men were starving, old were • aftertvards '•called upon te do, a big night march; because when they; reached the Boer position, the men were" done; because, in short, Gatacre finished this brilliant tactical movement with an exhausted fighting mind you,- his -men- were nut wanting in pluck. He had the Irish Hon of coepA that the,siereee are re. The car was locked and armed de- among them -the bravest of the brave. quired, and `the eocoa trade is no* tectives took their places in. a !snap cr. They were not afraid to die. They were greatsand-inereasing•Value:÷Ishelleve-SS e00-rt0Mt..14- -- Te -g -r °I DUI VII (Mite- -ready to die; tut they were- not amounts to iibmit X1,090,000„n you.; And coMPartrriCrit, into which they caul ready to fight. thi value of the slave§ is -ceneequEntly` so' gr that I" think their masters trY ace through Small hetes. The train did not stop between London and Liverpool, of which time the Precious boxes LEARN DEPENDENCE. m oases' to keel) them alive. Yet, as all carried by sPecial train frorg London to Liverpool. The moSt elaborate precautions were taken Euston te safeguard the trea- sure.' It was bee:Sight from the British non. • s . It is 'almost entirely tor the cultiva- speeially selected detectives and con- stables, it was placed in a special but- ton -care Whieh can hold le200,000 gold tellt,VOX -Milt ,paid 'damages tor The Smits spoken an the wand or wwam,. Use of MOO poultry;' ii lambs, 47 tur one of the '13ritish Soletnon. Islands. which hatre became Christianized, DO* .keyitsAltd 87 dukes s_ The_ thaneellor ef the Exchequer_stacesa" ba le egekell by; the tribes living insCens -IWO, the total amount paid in licenses trai Africa to the/north qf Lake Dang- ler Ali . motor vehicles during 005 was weolo Colloquial Ar le is being prepared ' - The welt-knotvn Black Dike Mills Band for the unlearne in Egypt; who do not 4047k , et Messrs: John Foster and Sons' works understand elas. cal Arable. East Sein- en Bradford, are to visit Canada and to Is anotheto the many languages spoken in the ew Hebrides. Americn In July, Among those discharged from CM. Bri-Bri Is th language of Indians near cailVassed by the Milkmen's Sunday grants pouring Into Canada. - Amid the duet. • s ' lbam DOOkYard, who ard emigrating to Pananat. Canada; is an old man of seirentye-five At Winnipeg the society's depot aup- who, ts geing .out with his family.. roilk for the whole day's supply on Sun- in forty -We languages had been sold, Rest Soelety to agree to one delivery of rebel of tongues in Johannesburg Biblee Householders tn Hernsey are being guages to the polyglot stream ot eiril- ' but the resources of the depot there plied the Scriptures in torty-three Ian - A lady who last week visited the were beaten when a newcomer to the noose otCommons and attracted a good "Golden Citr' asked for the Bible in deal of attentien hes been identined as kelarelle. 'the daughter of Field-marshal Oyama. There was n record output of the .,, Erected if,0 years ago at Worsley, Scriptures last year. thfc volumes Issued netteMisfichester, by ahe Duke of Bridge- beingA only nefew short of mix minnows Water, a chimney has just been cut The Rev. -Y. H. Ellison, who reaa the down and converted into a monument annual report containing the above lig- urea said the price of Bibles in Eng - to the Duke. „ • Another West Australian stamp, 4d. land had been slightly increased, and blue of the first Issue, with the swan Iv hoped no one wonld grumble. The the auctioneers who recently •obtained learn a lession from the South Sea Ts. Russia with about A 400,000,000 People. inverted, is to be sold in London by Sunday sclionls of the country might China with about 1,400 for a " specimen. lenders, who never °eked for the 13Ible 18304,002:000000 The death has just occurred of Mr. below cost price, and never bargained United States O. M. Randolph, C.M.G. one of the ear- for a discount. Q. What are the numbers of the in - best settlers on the Rand, and principal habitants of the principal cities in dif- guide to General Sir Redeem Buller dur- .+---. ferent parts of the Empire? ing the war. , THE NEW PSYCHOLOGY. -- • A. Measuring 5 feet 10 inches high by 4 CLaolneduotnta . . . . . . . . .. . ...... .. ........ ............. 4,964u8),,915107 feet 8 inches wide, and clasped with geld, Animals Have Reason Thnt Diners Dutch geographers in 1650 has just been 'Thetiscoveries now being made in the sMaainfocrhdester .... .... .. ...... 195514,9331 an -atlas of the world as known to Only From /net in Man In Degree. Glasgow birthplace and Anne Hathaway's cot- psychologists now assert that the only Vii61:901(1433 discovered at- the knish Muaeum, after great psyntiolo ical laboratories of the It was announced at the annual meet- est, writes Prof. Edgar L. ,Larkin, in , world are of t ie highest possible inter- Bombay Liverpool lying hidden for many years. ing of the trustees of Shakespeare's the New York Journul. The leading BirmMgham . 723.430 loge that the number of paying visitors difterence between the minds of the low- Sydney ........... . , .... 511,030 :137,905 to Shakespeare's house 1ost year exceed- er animals and •man is merely one de- Madras ....... s .... .... 509,346 ed 35.000. About 10,000 were from gree only: That is, the minds of men Melbourne , s.:. - ....... 496,0'79 ded with jewels, Satsuma -vases, and er. • eossest°rfonagl-i Cape Town 387,994 Dmuobnitirneal ,,t - Many boxes, containing swords stud- aortheerofenthime eassamoenlykinmdanyasmmth Johannesburg ...... .... .. 755,642 21P,730 lhe United States. se ether Icipanese works of art, the pre -1 Careful and long -continued experi- Q. The inhabltanta of the earth vary 77,068 sents of the Mikado to Prince, Arthur of in race, and in the color of thefr skins. Connaught, .have arrived at Liverpool ments have demonstrated that even low The principal colors are white, copper. with the members of the Garter Mission only from that in man in degree. types of animals have reason that differs yellow and black. Among how many of n board. the Victorians_ All' organic beings are mere colonies these races and colors are the subjects A of cells -Le., cities of -individual living of King Edward to be found ? FLIES WILL BE SCARCE. entities. At present it is unknown what A. Among all. Of these about fifty- - life is, but each cell Is a centre or four millions (54,000,000) are white, and 344 millions (344.000,000) colored, Mildness of British Winter to Have Et. source of life., Ganglia( are nodes or Sect. collections of cells into smaller corn- 0. What are the numbers of the sub- inunities; and in the human brain dif- jects of King Edward belonging to the Common house flies, which are a ferent corithinations of the sane. kinds close principal religions? "Another moral I want tO bring home source of dangerous epidemic summer of cells may produce different faculties , A. le you is ttie importance of iooking after illness among infante; will this year, it of mind. For differing associutions , There are (thou% 208 million seople to loolc after you whs,n. you are Britain. I -there is but one kind -give riee to au There ere about, 94 million ef the Berne kind of ultimate corpuscles' Hindus .... .... .... .. „2ospoo,000 yourselves, end 'not expecting other is believed, be unusuelly scarce in Great in the field. It is easy to cdinplain thatl The scarcity not only of the flies, but the phases revealed by ordinary chem.: Mohammedans .... .... .. 94.000.000 the staff is inconsiderate or is not treat- of an insects, will be the .natural con istry,•and by the spectroscope. The un- There r''P a n11 n t. 58 million our Consul, Mr. Nightingale, said in his were under observation. Cipher flies. last publIthed toed, the dedth rate, sages had been sent to the more import. ant stations on the route, and every pre - where we cart eheck it, is enornunie. caution was taken to prevent any pos. Among the slaves ofsthe Prilielpe, one Pi sible holding up of the car. The °ni- fty° dies every year, and Where I have E DAY MOVEMENT MINOS OVE VERY T 140 WAITS 001114111.4 TOPIR WTATINTIK* CIF NEW 11024100 reg. SAO IX% wk. (sows Pitkilfeie Vail*te PO* ig *WS itteskiesi, prOMOterti .thit 4roplite, Hey *overheat * • 'Englited ant toad Meath' hes litteir the ide SSW thint Of it from the firarerhaVit *veil eiresert_te tatistiled With their- litt0ds); 104.1900111.' 14 to their Present lotormation, Empire ilay via ratebtated 3.000.1104 titett ' •1[4riousis_40* ,ar: the Itritirkit re0.1414, LOA Mei% hat ligated ett Perna cateeliterit Ser ehildrervot, Hie Elarire,. bit kept .,49.1i Olebrettons, Vieteritt Pr •Witire tiaY, It Itt .0 WIWI* Tita USE, CITIMN$ '0V THU . ettery. What. 4. toor''velatott, to, the, Pilah',Empiret • ,Anetver,.. attOsalthittet *MC ria'. .Werd• erid. •citi*Pit or the, tiritialk 40.411iter ••'` ',What le the . extent la KUM* .'Of lne, Britian: EMPIre't A, iiktiOtil, tWeive MI0104 square Miles Hil.(180.900 sqUate 01 these only - 421.000 Square miles are in the Hotted Kingdom Qs Whet proportion ot the earth'e iSurtatie does the British Emplre cover? A, About oneditth, er 21 per cent. Q. HOW does the extent‘of thosOritish Eiripire COMpare with that of other countries? A. The extent ot the British Empire is greater than that of iiny other State. The nations outside the British Empire possessing the largest extent of territory are : itussies, 8.000,000 square miles; United States, 3,023.000 square miles; Brazil, 3,220,000 square) miles. ,, O. What is the number of the sub - pate of King Edward VII.? ik. About 400 millions (400,000,000). Of these, only about forty-three millions (43,0eopet live In the United Kingdom. O. •What propertion of the inhabitants of the earth are the subjeets of King Edward the VIlth? A. About one-fifth, or about 22 per cent. - Q. How does the population of the Britesh Empire compare with that of the most populated conntries outside the Empire? A. The population of the British Em- pire about egital to that of China, and 1 More Numerous than that of any other count % The ,,eost populated countries outside the Empire are : 1400/414Y at 000004000 01.111100101, tie the Leittest WAS* NOW ifothere ere getterlillY ileetieed Cit bring ei tOo rePlit Their anti thelr weepers *refold tO Sutter from IMO Of elWeye .10,11 it hi hardly Or Wender that ter 014244II itUP• Puirr ttebitt tor thillge• haPpett raiddly in NOW YOrit. ' Unir$: ,taltuuteit* illetettge$ Cluld, bern, and every wen- there is in the eOtirSe. el lest yeart 'tteeuldIng, tO the, atatealies of the York 'ettY MAIM DePertillent, 004A habiat WOO eYes IfIthboiTt reatle* lottn. Ind tbe titans,- length_ ot tirae. 18,060 •hUnlefl heingd, Weer$ ite 410, Mina the rest Of OA Shmild NeW YOrk, the„refere. bel'effartitid AR One, greet famtly it Could. n0, ha tiO, ciried Of race , suicide. Every 'Min- • Mee the births. tatted the deaths by tele, so Mkt if it should close its deers en all the rest of the world there Would still be 88 More inhabitants every morning. HEAVY.' DEATH BATH. The teartial raveges ot censtunption omen the people of the city ate little realized unlit it is understood that On an average throughout the year one New Yorker suceumbs to this disease every 28 minutes. Indeed, every fourth per. son that Is burled in this eity Is a vic- tim et teberculosis of the lungs. in some months, however, pneumonia kids still more. March, as a rule, deaths from pneumonia are nearly Mice as many as from tuberculosis, and in the early spring are wont to die here from this disease at the rate of one every 15 minutes., Those who say that "it is safe to slay at home" do not know much about New York. As a matter of fact, it is 2,500 times safer to trovel on a railroad train than 10 move about in the streets of this city or on the waters within its boundaries. And it is also dangerous simply to box one's self up in a house. From some accidental mese OP Other a New Yorker is eilled every hour glid three-quarters. ACCIDENTS ARE MANY. Some one is killed by a street car or an elevated or subway train, either by being run over or in a collision, every six hours. Some ono drowns in New York every eight hours, and some life is lost in a burning building every It hours. To show that ine in this city is far more dangerous than riding in a steam railroad train one need siniply compare the number of passengers killed in all parts of the United States a year and the nutnber of accidental deaths in New York. Otil ot 700,000,000 people who travelled on steam trains in the year 1903, according to the Inter - State Commerce Commission, only 355 met death, or one in 2,000,000. The ac- cidental deaths in New York last year amounted to 5,191, or one for every 800 inhabit a nts. The sheer dread of living kills a New Yorker every ten hours. in the last year there were 853 suicides. Poison was the means used most, and en an average some one In this city seeks death in this way ()nee in every 24 hours. The less painful method of suffocation by gas comes next In popularity, one dy- ing in thls way every 40 hours. while some one commits suicide by shooting every tWo' and a half- days, In April people kill themselves faster than in any other month. Murder In New York strikes down a victim once every two days. and every eight hours an attempt is made to RM. Once every two weeke there is a mur- der which baffles solution, and which would seem to belie the old adage that murder will out. MAI1RIAGE AND DIVORCE, Cupid travels fest and furious in New York, for he causes a marriage every 13 minutes, and, perchance, because of hie speed, Ilke the reckless automobil- ist, the lender boy god suffers many an been able to test the ratnon Ban Thome, -- Ing You Well. Gentlemen, It is not for sequence of the mild winter. Insects do iverse ls rnade up of varying combines Chile. sne . upset. One wedding In every 40 that he It is almost equally nigh." when ttig'-'2,-ss of aold reached the brings about lends to it divorce. Every At me end of th,a,live yeare the sur - - tor your own commanding offiCers to sleep through 11; and after a hard win- end variations in thought, from late an. Buddhists sole and one•hulf hours some mun and A ot the -London and North-Western were relleyed of a heavy responsibility the staff to nurse and tend to you; 11 is not mind cold weather -they simply of life corpuscles into infinite divereity; There are eb.eiut million I lavers are called up in bidelte$ of about. Y dn thaL Regiments have no business ter Insect life is nearly tilways abun- alvsis of mind and brain, seem to be There are about 23 million 12.13°0", wife are pellet, permanently. Inasmuch that their tontraet has been.remuved tor 1 anY4 al. occasions, and te be grumbling be- teen prevented from getting at their one kind of brain cells into gauglial. gans ns many New Yorkers when seeking a divorce go out of the State to proeure stauner in safety for the raliwa ftfty before the Curadot Mid rare•infortned - company would have been responsib'e b thee term of five years They neVer imirneY* 23,0000"ou than he is, perchance, aware of. In- a nit (",isupiedstitsfluiritteedrs thfaort monoereoruetveorise2s0 oss a occurred durin the o e looking helplessly to the staff on dant, as the insectivorous birds have cansed by varying clusters together of of other religions and pa - cause they think the staff neglects them victims In a mild winter like the last, Mind is now known to be the pro -1 Q. What was the value of the bi-:al 1 I h d toss pouv*VI:attisititil mdi.'westessitastterst is wrise..nei Hoe awe easel see abtoritostimew tew sit di sites,sway. flews ortise. alat 10044 " "Igee.eia raw PrKtAw ma Wont,. Mks' tee odder het cue Put a oleo sr amtuonr SOAP ete ellaylibartkposure keee • of. rosbermative Rao t WOK. tetise, evit anklet ia gitese Mom Sian on :iirirtieseMrose t elloyie Itikeestivi sea !anion out iwatie twietitte *ad Yang °entails ,„="zrr. dorx *imbed le the al " WOW. ano go back. mama ANTEAVEREWM Much, of. the seme precautions were taken in the shipment of bullion valued et A-850,000 which arrived at Southamp- :ion on the Wishner Castle recently. This As a nation we hatee the right to liner- valhable cargo was consigned to Lon - fere. In 1830 we paid"Poringal 4200,000 to stop her Slate& trade. ' By the Retlin -- And Brussels Acts of only twenty-one /and sixteen yeare ago,"Portugal bound herself, in coalmen With "tia, to pet doWn the slove trade-froni the Congo Basin and Centred Afriect generally. •We have also the right of common humanity. which we haVe alWays ge about the vnirld a wield deal; 'and I Imo*, onlY kto well liew much of her repute- Infift,,,I0r Proidetlen Of birds and till tion for•hutaianity and 'Justice England •Orte, enbrials;'hut ribt a society br has lost in the last ten 'years, thtqAtteAtiell'er giants. ',Tile, lot:of the giant is hi manys ways hard Otle. It a -Man le of such abnor- Mal size ihat people Will pity tor the priVilegn of shaking him by the hand, A alritost certainty means that he win die before he is ItirtY, Vgat,,teW giants have lived after that ' And Machnow, the Russian giant, Who atter a long tour has reappeared at the London Hipimdrome, is of eli tnen In the kingdom one of those win should be Most pitied. What can a poor giant expect when r him to be seen walking out of doors de. cretoses his niarket value by about half. only exercise Machnow can take hue to be taken under a roof, and so tired of this restriCted exercise has he be - eon*, that ids appetite has fallen off aletiogt entirely, and he has lost all interest in life. During hiv stay in London he IfVes In 4 room on the top of a high build- ing, frem Which he can only see Hie sky, and during- zimott the whole ef The day he lies upon a bed searcely caring what bootnes of bim. Not know- ing' the hifiguege, he e411110V talk or ticiabuttlieurlpaopde,rs, end so has nothing' to Ot course hts salary is a fabulous one, hut ettilley le, after,. MI, not much when 006/ interest in life has almost entirely vanished, wad when. like Ittachnow, tme oily finds a TleaStireht errielcing cigar. tithe. HIS WM ANSWgri. Ooe day AS Pat halted at the top of the river bank, ti Men fettn01115 for hie Mind etepped Mid asked -lbw log litiVe you limited water tor the village, say good Mari t" *Titt yenta, sot." °AM HOW many loads do you take In a day V. *Trott lin to WWI. 40r." *Ah,, yost NoW ittiVo preblem tor Vitt 110W Much water at this rate have 'Yon waft 10 MI, ater The driver of the Waleriiiikart jerked ihtimb bitekatard tOWArde the riVer, ifid retitled tr, “All Mt Water ytx don't R.'S there how, soti,;fr • ..'GlANT'S DREARY LOT. Atarlinow'S Health Suffering From His ,t s Close Confinement. Iitey beim 4A 'England septettes for the,',ROVEnt1011',OT cruelti to children, • 0 4 FINE GUNNER. frielsher Esiablishee a ,nleitt Record in the Navy. Bombardier 'Edwin 1. Mend; of the Royal Maelne-AelilletY. son of Mr. Ed- win Nichol, teWit Pbailllert et 'Worthing, England, heel:feet:IMO the,ellaitipion shot in the Beittsilt navY. iha; gun -laying esti mr If.81. Hindus en, off the Parteguesa etiatite, bti Miele the most rerharktible Store or len hits with ton roundg OW. tntrinteis with a 9-.2 ale The,PreVitills ,beat perterm, *Pee waS '•eit' Of neren ill WO and' a half ni nies rouuthi. Admiral Petty StOtt,-WhoiWas oo, board the Ilindlistlin Orbit( Orne.".11CAttlillt eon' 'gratelated Niehist cortIlie, fine perform- ance, by redifeli lie not only became champlenSehOt In- the navji, bUt luis tabliahed a "reeerel," the whole world. • . -4- „, RATH IDIULMO MERE, A11111010 .1(Tikeiff telitiftt fn .Cotirt. A house. Odell `waksold ft? infeatett with rateontld tturrefusal of the, 'tenant to pay „rent 'txt conacquetice, led In- art amusing. netforr at wently, the tenant seeking to rettiVer •driturot tot frauiluleht teprestilistlow Mr. IfigoldebY, the lerisn4 Sold that • the 'ttboSe--V4a.,traarlY,,slintinYntiffibeil by the MM. Vie Is'efir entail to tiltelt Mein,. theY *eV ,deter„ and eitidlAY stolarthebeit,„ Thelata need, to drill 14 the hall et night sod Up And down thestairS and MOO 'bedroMit Ind dining -roan Mora, • ,„ • A servant deelared thatt-the tam came In theitsafidi -teelt:„IfIght, eful the thib, area. ea* ite,ttiatty tlitht rtogetheti. terrier,. Whew the a og *at in 'the ,R.V.,t.,bert the Ittit 0'004 In en Who' 'dtawing.toom.. iLfteuglitett, The OS fito milled out of tribet.,, , At$ 'vita XO.A.10. *Yea. sitter hi .iexclaldiad,,oMoot Sure sick Man. He's got excliniatoty" theurnetionL“ "Yell AIMS halletanittory ehetnet. Omni!' explained the beher-infornied Colored law Nile word *excittaatory' means to *To. sit; knolls It Mee:" etsickly rienehded tea ether* /a a tene et 4e. Oda Niad list's Net Whit da trouble ap-dt aelea Olt* * As ' Noe , , • WITCH Docroita, Witcheraft, a playing eeotiSpleirotie plot fit dretd,firlteinca lilted war tdrittne, that tit Nitsto $outh Africa. !timbal& iha AM** of Om 'Iteding rebel. end ,Ilte Wahl* tre disciasing the itiervel. Iota tiffecte Prildne4 oft Ida the* by the witch. &AOC Serena ctf. the latter heves had 'marvellous escar,0 and the TAMPA *SW *Bert thet dee, 44 **fie tots, White ritent," The staff has its own work to do- b. very important, difficult, and anxious work, too -and regiments must learn to depend on their commanding offlcers lo make things easy and comfortable, while commanding officers must learn to depend on themselves." LAZY, PEACEABLE LION. Young Enolishman's. Unexpected Meet- ing With the Khtse of Beasts. That the lion Is not always the roar- ing, tearing beast of legendary de. scription may be seen in the following extract from the diary of a young Eng- . lishman who is at present serving his country in northern Nigeria: "I had just topped a long incline and was walking my pony, when, on com- ing around a corner of the road, hidden by some trees, I saw, seventy yards in 1 fiont of me, basking in the sun on ,sn open patch of burned grass, a magni- ficent full grown lion. The sun was not strong. and he was very lazily flick- ing his tall from side to side. He had a short mane, and his eyes were a Icvely amber red • in the weak sunlight. "My first, sensation was one of es- 'torilshment, profound amazernent and delight at seeing such a flne beast. Ile was a beauty. and it seemed Impossible fo realize that he was really wild ns he lay on his side, looking at me with his head ralsed es a dog does when he hear his master's footstep. He was fat es butter, sleek coated and glossy. "My potiy. as the breeze WW1 coming from the other direction, 01(1 not wind hint. and Went steadily on without •to MUCh as pricking llp hls ears. My dog was walking on in front. about ten yards, and, luckily. did not entire him. It was not until 1 was actually priming MM. tvhich I dld within twenty yards. that f realized thnt if the lion took It into his head to (Amy a bit rif whiffs man 1 should he unnhle to dispute his ila"Ahliter I had proreeded some 150 vents the lien got iip leisurely and followed eking the Mid behind me, but. offer go - Me about 100 Yards.- he ferried into the Push at the side of the road." BICH MAN'S SIMPLE LIFE.. Merid, an interesting 'Peterborough (Englahd) personnlity, has died sOniewhat suddenly at the age of 79.' Wes the sow of a Coventry rib - bort weaver, and after being n cheMist • rile, he heeame a farmer. POSseating great speculative inslinets, heiinVetted Anil reinVested wilh the AIM] Of at keert thientier, and his land passes - Were nt ebnalderablo dimensions. His refuge estate ts estimated to be worth 450,000; and he left rib will. Re led a SIMI& lite, Ida Jrifet ehiefly being bread. potatoes, land hot water, hnd he was in the habit Of rilieritng 4 mile every morn- ing. *, HAVINGg IN !MILANO. tin Deritter di list the estimated balances itt the Postofilce Paieno Rank Ireland attionniett to, it110,22o.deti. 'compered with 4847.000 fin 1004 -an inerefite Of 100,000, In the truatra SOMA Ilefilcs an Inefease ek.01,000 te SWAM RI the tate ted the Post=ofitee SetIfige fillthber ok, deposi- tor -a trieV,;.tileil trebled fa the muse Of WOW Y00' .Z7) however, insects perish by millions, from cluct of bran' activity -that ie. mind is trnde of the British Empire In the yitar marriagea eontracted In that city s birds. 'legally broken here or elsewhere. For telldew, as well as troin the beaks of n result. Mice, birde, insects have been 1904? ELECTRICITY IN FRANCE. Official reports from Paris and Mar- seilles indicate the immense strides made 12) the movement to obtain electric pow- er from waterfalls in that country. Many factories and trolley -lines are now oper- ated by electric power brought over u distance of 100 miles. The effects of the neW system are practically felt In the , hilly and mountainous district stretch - Mg from the Mediterranean Sea to the Alps, and along the western borders of the latter. It is believed thnt 2,000,000 horse -power may be economically ob- tained, and of this total about one-fifth has already been utilized, or is In pro. cess 0 U Z • progress on new plants in the French Ams will, it is believed, revolutionin manufacturing conditions In the whole Mediterranean region of France, and greatly stimulate and increase the In. duslries of that hountry. 4 - FLATS FOR NIILLIONAIRES. Luxurious Monert;-11-41ate at 810,000 a Year Rentals. When the flats which are now being erected in Pork Lane, London, are fin- ished. millionaires will have the satis- faction of knowing that at least they have something very (nue,' ,out of the coirnA frne o inn. the ordinary £500 a year net seemed "cribb'd, enbined, and confin• ed" to them, while even the £1.000 fiats in Berkeley square., hitherto the most expensive In London; had terrible shorts c°Inin nPga8r.k Lane, however, the rent will be .C2,000 a year, while living will cost nnolher £10.000, The aecommodation In ench flat is: Hall 40 feet long, draw- ing room, (lining room. smoking room, billiard room. boudoir, 11 bedrooms, kitchen. servants' hnll. The block of six flats when complet- ed wie be .valued at £250,000. ont of whieh werktnanshlp alone will have cost A100,000. DOG TRIED FOR mUnDER. Then Ordered by ft4Ise Court to be Shot. Two men named Seherrer have been sentenced to imprisonment for life, rind their dog to be shot by the court ' at Delemont, in the Canton of Soieure, SwItserland. They were chnrged with the murder of a wealthy farmer named Merger. The dog had torn the throat of the tar - mer, who was also wounded noVerely by a tenths The two men pleaded that the Mur- der was committed9se, the dog, and much of the fime of the trial Wee enta- iled in hearing evIdence for end agefinst the animal. When the mirtimum penalty allowed by the Swteia law web rigged 00 1110 eieherepre, they buret Info team The ono. whfeh was mureled, follght nate- ogely ae It was removed from the eourt V? be shot. ft frequently happens thet thatyo tirvanfie;s Poit noticed until efiCr bet tuddeoly ecrjuirce a little morieV. shown to be possessed of reason. AM. , mats learn bp experience and store thls experience in memory for long periods of time. Love, affection, veneration, love of the beautiful, gratitude, coma.' once, consideration, contrition, sorow, trouble. care. mercy, pity and many tther attributes for long deemed to be I re now known to be os- sessed by nrilmals, In many cases to a hirevedreagrl ebeo.oks giving thousands of In- siances are published. The most rigid scrutiny made by careful and conserva- tive psychologists during the last twen- ty years has been totally linable to de- tect any trace in body or brain or find any analogy In nature concerning the existence of what is popularly called the SOUL Blood cells builds flesh, stomach cells digest and brain cells evelve mind. Peychologists nre incapetile of finding any difference between the three procese- es. In the preeen1 stale of psychic sci- ence It is not known what mind is, hitt whntever it nine be it Is known that is reused by the artion of braln and nerve rills. When this activity ends ell trnee,i ef mind crime In nn end. Cells flint originete mind ore far mnre rem - pies item those nod perform the offiee ot gems -lion In elands. TI,P Reerelinn of mind Is of greater eemnlexily lhan the eeerotion nf hiln-or engine finale. nut ell are developed hv the wnrk of relle. Perham; the world 18 now ready In twelve this generelisnlion, thus• The human Mind rnntnins en faculty the! (sinned be found In the minds of ant. mak. in less degree. GREAT ATHLETIC FE tT, -- Dan, Walked. Rode rind , Cycled Mile In Nineteen Minuten. it IR many yeara ngn since Mr. Bel- pell, Ihe (among old flimbeitin mode a maleh to wall( 0 mile, run is mile. and ride a mlle. all in 15 minulen. Ifr won with some seconde in hand, rind the Met wag rightly eonsidered 0 not - 01)10 one, AS Mr. ilulpett Ihe lune was no longer a boy, but a probsisional man who had been some yenrs in bust - fleas. It Is interesting In see thal cn elien mere *owning ell -mend lest tins Met been accompflehed by a youne officer. Mr. 1C. Berge, cif the 17th Cnvalry, The serene ni this expinit wan a level mile on the rond between Ilan• nu and Behrn lamer? Khan. and the; mile Mr. Haw had to rover froir times -at a nm. at n walk. nn horar. And or. a bicycle -in 20 minutes. ni 1.1 0:2.1 the first mile In 7 minutes 52 s eee. mule. ran the rusennd in 5 minini Ceeonds. galloped the third Mee 4 seconde. and bieyeled the foorth in 2 minutes SO 2.5 aeronde. lime nefilev- Ina hie task in 19 minittra A seconds, Incluelve of the time token In rhanolog Mounla. and winning with 52 ((monde tr. ahem Ail who know nnythine of offitetlea will onprerfate the merite of this Very remorkohle performance. COULDN'T BA iN TWO PLACE5t. "Po." POI little Tommy, "my Sunday Ptemal feather sayn If I'm gond I'll eo inkavert.° "Welifir netted hie pa. %'01.1. IMO cold if I wail I'8 fri tho &con. Now. want ta resew %Ws tyou Or herr • A. Thirteen hundred and nye minim pounds (g1,305,283,000). of which 73.3 per cent. NVOS with foreign countries: and 26.7 per cent. between different parts of the Empire. Q. What Is the amount of tonnage of steam and stalling vessels owned by the ElAnP.11.1'ge Empire owns 9,426,493 tons of steamships. end 2.729,608 tons of sailing vessels. Total, 12,156,101 tons. Q. How is the British Empire gov• d ?Different portions are governed In erAnc different ways. Some portions, like the United Kingdom, the Canadian Doinin• ion, the Australian Commonwealth, New Zealand, Cape Colony, Natal, as d New- foundland, are self-governing; .1, others are partly self -governed end portly gov- erned by officials eppolnIed by the Bet- tish Government; end others, again, like India, are governed by officials ap- pointed by the Home Government: but n11 neknowledge allegiance to the King. Ern peror Q. Why should n citizen of the Bri• list, Empire owe ditties to tire State? A. Because cilezens of the British of personal liberty and flax -don/ onstir- paSSed by those enjoyed by the citizen uf any other Stole in the woad, end therefore owe a. thebt of gratitude to the Empire, which proterns Mein in the en. joyment of thes e unrivalled privileoes, liberty and freetioni, Q. What 19 'the "Empire Inky" MOV.. - went ? A. An orgt,nized effort throughout the King-hiripe rur'S (1011111110M to 1M - press on all teeltish subjects the tumor. lance of cult' venlig the virtues which tend lowerds good citizenship, such es loyalty, petrel usin, courage, endurance, respeet for no d obedience 10 authority, to encourage self-snerlfice in the public interest, end to instill Into nit, but es- pecially into the rising generation, an uncompromisli ig belief ilk 111.1 sacrednese of the trust 10 (posed on British subjecte by the respons ibIlities of the Empire, and a determinati4 if posalble, never to feti We ful fillment of duly. Q. By wb (en steed(' the "Empire Day" moveme nt he promoted ? A. By eves 7 British mulaect. Q. What 'Is the moaning "Empire Bay"? A. May 241h if4 nntifilly observed throughout the dominions of the King- Feriperor no the outwnrd sign ol the "Empire 13s,y" movement, Mai 24 iv the atmeo•renry of the blensiny of ihe QUPP0 V letnrin. l'iluring velum,. tong reiffn aiNty yen rg HIP 11.:II gries 1,, tie present vain dimensions, Las V1411' yenr her people ineerias ea In health, stls•nutli, number,. W011 If h, and happiness. Q, '1\ hat ls the natty of the Brittaii nellonal Ong A. 1 he 'Union Jan " Q. ‘,‘ hy it milled the "Union leek"? A. Iteorinee it le co rnposrel At a entail not, lpflemilo",ingloeih..l4,0e4.01410:,n. anTillielrirsrhostioruer St. George. St. Andrew and SI. Patilek. Q, khould the "1 :nion Jai he flown e'es,"EinpliV Day." May 241 7st Yes, ty, from all public buildings, and el etch and ehnpel low. afrr9oGtont:pdstriiateeiceti:t ngn .1170 "red Quaker'. -se,"aler .111a- ddi h wever three children are born. Yet faster than Cupid and faster even than the storks are the barges of Fills Island. Every 40 seconds on immigrant enters New York. The Miens come 29 timee faster than the ehIldren. Of all thogr who enme from Europe. one In every four settles In New York, or one every two and twn-thirds minntes, Thls shows thet New York rttv is grewIng nearly three times feeler from Immigra- tion than from births. SWEETHE.A_RIS "GHOST." goas on :-"Thus, ln the course of I the place and Its suburb, Oaklands, A Dead Girl LoRevseirsite Her Praxying generation only, thls City and Its su The story of the return of the spirit burbs have arisen. Men are alive by fin n (lend sweetheart is told on the au- score who have hunted all Oyer UK thority of the Bev. A. (tiambeis, bf foundations in a dreary waste. But I Brockenhurst, Danis, England, in the wonder what enchantment of the Are. Lunn Nights can have equalled title (jeTchuelt viitcPa‘riewrela los IIONV it Young men evocation of a roaring city, in a fem in grief at the dente of his sweetheart years of a man's life, from the marshes prayed earnestly and conetantly for a I and the blowing sand. Such suiftness eign that she lived beyond the grove.' of increase, ea with an overgrown The sequel wag thin. white at work in youth. suggests a Corresponding swift. his office one day he loeked up and sew floss of deetruction. We are In early geological epochs, changeful end lose. the dead girl on the other side of the ri um. She moved a little towards him feel, as with a sculptor's cure, and we / model that the nuthor may yet grow tried to speak. When he rushed tuweNis her she vont:died. After thei IlertlfrenCP he woke one night and found the glrl Atanding y ?OR Three . nines she laid her right hand across her mouth In a pe- culiar manner Later he remembered ihnt before the body of his .sweetheart ,V11.4 put in the coffin he hnd trled to One her, and a stater pulled hie head I n ck rind laid her hand across lifs trj)Ith.lf,L-EDIT.ATED OFFICERS. 24) Per Cent. of BrItIali Lieutenants Not Ready for Promotion. The I trifieh WaerxriOmillinenetiorneprif,rta. o intinti,hre are you one of the Kaiser's gentlemen. (11.1fficleePremrliTil°31hiteni Regular Army ehowe that or. perhepa, one of the Counts gam siinht toprovernent has undoubtedly keepers,' "%in. I ant with the Knis niken Of the 651 enalnine and was the reply. "What do they Hy $5,000 Berm will be vitt PrOTOit ttiat Beep eon - talus any injurious thomicrint or ray torso of aduisetstlou. YOH Mame Refunded by the aeeler from imam inn buy thadlibt Beep It you Asti any eau@ tor aneteetet. LEVER BROTHERS LOAM. TORONTO AN ATHLETIC BABOON. Defies Recapture in a ,Steanaship's llold. On d the Come° Castle, of the Union astie Line, which .arrlved al Plymout , England, recently' from South Africa, a large collection of wild animals, brought home by. Mr, .H,,, Wind. horn, u German collector. Mr. Windliorn stated in an interview that on the present trip he had lost a iurge male sphinx' baboon. About a week after leaving Cape Town it broke out of Its cage, Lind for two days it wat at liberty hot& and defied all at. tempts at recapture, showine '••lit when. ever anyone venturts. • Efforts were made to recapt8re tin baboon, but whenever netting was thrown it would 'leap clear, jumpins fifteen feet at a time. It was allowed te quiet down, and while the keeper wise offering it food, Mr. Windham got 14 close quarters with it. He,. howevee blipped, and the baboon fastened itii ee n s e animal's jaws, and then it fastened its fangs in his hand, badly maiming it. It also bit the keeper and the boritswein of Ttihwey slalitptempted to drug the animal, but it. swallowed half a bottle of whiskey without effect. They gave it opium eno g o leinonade, but this had no effect upon,et. Finally the baboon was coaxed through the companion -way, bound se. cureiy and conveyed to its cage. It died four days later, howevew-from a brokeo heart, In M_+_r. Windhor_n's opinion. VOICE FROM GRAVE. Robert LouAlsbouStte;erinsceson's Prophecy It almOst alartlitig, after reading the accounts of the San Francisco ths. aster, to turn to the late Robert Louis Slevenson's essay on thut city. Aftet an extremely beautiful description et weary of and shatter the rough sketch. Never, surely, have the musings of a startlingly verified. poetic genius so auddenly and AND PEASANT. Asenevv•zeihai 14,,,K.r..1A;ggittElyirithe "Franklecher Esneral- hie chateau. Schlitz, tho Wilhelm Hearin jusCaAnremilny. Things About An weesing anecdote 9bout the Kai - Kaiser one day lost his way, and asted en oid peaAnnt to give him a lift In ',art. Seeing the Kaiser's shooting uni- form the old seen Raid to him, "Well, rIliemukte.nante exremlned, 110 have failed In show thems elven qualified for higher A eompnrisert of the resettle at home, where there A..e fewer dletraclionn (.1 tstiel ;pvl I t loan, t inonnlevd t \ay borte,r, 11,,:iedepelfanet rent. of the en faded. %%title ai home there were only t I but few noldiere." apli:vfLinc:11.11treniniotsCrer'hil: lion. "T., I, of drum. him attend here?" "Oh, he la all answeml the peasant. "we he 48 sod to he a quite en) relnling (Over wnr MCA. when he 1, M 14 re. forty•two en ndicIntee only one lieu- tenant failed. . re . . ,n) per rent of fro 'time in the infiintrc end f n%ntry rests-, lively. and oser 44 'Pr Pent of the lieu tenehts of the army SS -mire Corns failed there atilt germ tle he some ofileera who wen1,1 tet men work In Ilerembee nn hour oi o leteh In WnInr thst %stied In (IPpin frnie four feet to (eve- fr . ---- flOc'Y FArSTF.NCT "Wrmion (1,-0 noi onporim mitrh about tiosines",,- "Xn" Anewered the re worried innk "Mos'ywerrn st nine ()bee at gin sn armchair gmeko Is funny atones.* Llialammmov.s. A e 4