HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1911-8-10, Page 8_"111',,�, I
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The officers, told off for the dan,
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gerous part of the job were Chief
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Inspector Arrow, Detective -11a
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THE ANARCHIST �,,
spect-or Sweeny, and Sergeant -in
Badeock.
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speQtor ,
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These were experienced men, An
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MILLIONAIRE I
hely laid their platlis, well. . On
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7ent tip to the -door, disguise4 as
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�adesmanla assistant, and knock
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. *R-,�,�4t-N,40'*O.,Y.m,,*V,-*.k",#-"�,,.*,"r"*,�f �'O'X, .
ed. The other two were in hidin,
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� in the shrubbery near by.
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Scotland Yard differs on many
- At tho knock the door was open
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subjects amongst itself, but it is
ed ever so, little, and before it coal
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ckgreed upon one point, &ad that is
ain the three detect
�e closed ag .
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that the. most dangerous slippery,
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ives side, Instantly
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And remarkable "Qrook' it ever
shrill whistle was sounded fron
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bad to deal with was George Fer-
within, and when the house wa,
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dinand Springmulh von Weissen-
searched 'the anarchist millionair
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fold.
was apparently nowhere within it
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They nicknamed him the anar-
There -were plenty of servant
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Obist milliona ' re because he
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about, of both sexes., but they on
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-devoted a consi� erable proportion
and all professed to! know nothing
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of the money he acquired by a life
The detectives ,searched high an<
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of crime to furthering the anar.
low for nearly two hours, but thei
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_-ist cause, and also because many of
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search was in vain, Yet that ill
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his chosen associates, both men and
wanted man was somewh�re withi
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women, were revolutionary anar-
the building was certain, Ever
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c4dsta -of a, prono"ced type, says
exit was being watched Vy thei
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Pearson's Weekly.
colleagues outside, and these ha<
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He came of a good family, -and
made no sign.
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was exceedingly well educated,
At length, just when they weri
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having graduated with high honors
o air, a Beare
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in science, medicine, and litera-
panel -was discovered, and this oi
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ture at one of the prncipal German
being forced opened, revealed' t
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universities. But he, was & born
Passage just broad enough to ad
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criminal, and & dangerous one; a
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mit one man. It was pitch darl
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throw -back to the aboriginal Bay-
within, but o of the
ut darknes
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age. .
came the. sound of suppresse<
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A little matter of forgery and at-
breathing. - �.
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tempted murder made his native
Here, then, was their quarry
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land too hot to hold him, and he
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But which one of the three detect
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fled to England. This was in 1880,
ives, was going to risk almost cer
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and it did not take him long to
tain death by bearding him in hi,
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blossom forth into a, professional
den now he was at bay?
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blackmailer -and swindler of a pe-
The question in reality adinitte�
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euliarly odious type.
but of one answer. It is -an an
Once he found himself in. the
written law of Scotland Yard.that
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I clutches of the law, and received a
t
-he post of danger shall be given to
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well -merited sentence, at the Old
the junior, for that way lies pro-
�d
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Bailey of twelve months,' imprison-
motion, and promotion is, of
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ment with hard labor, His temper
course, the most ardently to, be de-
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was not � improved by this taste of
sired thing amongst all branches of
oakum -picking, and he vowed that
the police service. I
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he would . never do another
So to Sergeant -Inspector Bad -
"stretch (year's imprisonment),
cock was assigned the duty of ea-
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. no matter what came. After this
tering the secret passage so luckily
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he always, -went armed.
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discovered, and dragging thence
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pecial
His a i ty about this time was
into the light of clay the worse than
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bogus company promoting, and he
wild beast that lurked within.
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-did remarkably well out of it from
Quietly'. and without the, least
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his point of view. From one con-
trace of bravado, he accepted the
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cern alone he netted $300,000. An-
mission. Stepping from
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other yielded him $210,000 in six
into the cavern -like, passage—being
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weeks. He opened more than one
a tall man he was compelled to a,d-
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hundred different banking accounts
opt a stooping posture—he called
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in as many different names, and he
to the wanted man, telling him.that
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kept an album in which he entered
he was a, police officer, that the
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his different &�iases side by side
game was up, and that he had bet -
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with his. own proper aignature.
ter surrender himself quietly.
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This album is now preserved as a
No verbal answev'was returned
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curiosity at Scotland Yard.
but out of the darkness came thy
e
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As has been intimated, he swore
sharp click of a revolver being
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that he would never be taken alive,
cocked. Badeock felt that life or
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-and although as a result of his
death was a, mattex of moments on-
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colossal frauds half the -detectives
ly, and bounded swiftly forward;
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in Europe were, presently searching
still keeping bent nearly double,
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for him, it looked as if he would
both because. the height of the pas-
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beat them all. *
sage did not admit of a perfeetly
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His cunning was almost super-
erect posture being maintained,
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human, and he took no chances. He
and also because by doing so
tinployed a small army of private
.he
stood a better chance of not being
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detectives to shadow the Scotland
shot if his assailant aimed high, as
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Yard detectives who were trying to
men firing when greatly excited
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shadow him, He rented a fine
usually do.
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house—in an assumed name, of
The passage, ended in a door, and
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course—near Wembley Park, and
Bad.cock could hear his man fumb-
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spent thousands of pounds in con-
ling at the handle inside. But he
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structing -subterranean passages
could not get out that way, fog it,
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leading, to secret exits, through
had been locked from the outside
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which he could escape, if need be,
by Inspector Arrow's orders prior
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when hard pressed.
to the raid, .
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Scotland Yard heard of the ex-
Realizinz this, the bitnted. man
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istence of this -den, and raided it,
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faced about, pointed his revolver at
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but the bird had flown. Next he
his pursuer, &lid tried to pull the
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was heard of at another place in
trigger. But Badcock gripped his
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London, where he was engaged in
wrist with fingers of steel, and the
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printing and issuing vast numbers
weapon dropped with� a clang on
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of books of a kind about, which the
the stone floor, I
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less said the better.
It was a pitiful figure of a Mtm
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This house was also raided, but
that was dragged out into the light
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Dnee more the wanted man had dis-
of day a few seconds later. His face
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11ppeared. The detectives found,
was livid, his features were work-
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how -ever , evidence of his many sid-
ing convulsively, I
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ed enterprises in the -shape of six 1
"Water �" he gasped. "Give, me
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J)J the newest and most expensive
water 1"
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kind of hnotype machines, together
A servant ran and fetched some,
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vvith many thousands of objection-
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but the glass slipped from his nerve ,
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Lble books, all newly-printe<L
less Angers, Ilia jaw dropped, and
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These were destroyed on a magis-
a moment later he fell dying to the
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trate's order. .
ground,
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The search fox the master crimin-
A coroner's jury said it was ap-
t'
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&I waa continued, and at last he
Oplexy, But,was it! �
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was located in a large mansion in
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The anarchist millionaire, who
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was also, it must be remembered,
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'if ,This house,. which.stood in
a ,doctor, and ,,,% skilful chemist, bad
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ts own grounds, had been chosen
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long had in his po � ssession a gold
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or its seclusion, like the, one at'
signet ring in which was hidden a
Wembley Park, and, like it, too,
powerful poison.
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It had been fitted with an elaborate
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When; lie was arrested this ring
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,y6 em of ,sliding panels, secret
was on his hand, but the secret re-
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inberi, and subterranean pas-'
ceptaole behind the seal which bad
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lagog. �
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cpntained the poison was empty.
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All this was known to the Yard)
Anyway, lie was dead, and the
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&ad it wag known, too, that an
vorfA was well rid of him.
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oxwed and desperate man I ' urked
11ad he stood Ilia trial, there
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within, Consequently, it was de-
would have been revealed,the most
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Pormined to send three Of the very
remarkable, criminal romance of
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best men -available to ooeer the
modern timeq,
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house and effect tho iotual armgt,
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while Other plain -clothes officers
We ig6e� 6 lo�.wper to protwt us
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lfflrj�,r�.AetAiW *)'. watoli Ce .,Various
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from ,our l(oighbors ai,d-, * .A�tton
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bxi6- ip � tho::Jrroull4"Outsido, a -ftoffi -11
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I" r - I I - L 1 71 - , , I I 1� I I i , � � I I . Is -7 � . .. . ....... _.,_____ ------- NAPO[EON T I
1 I " I ,_ I I . . . . . - , RJE , # , L
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"I'll . . . . . OX' 200 ye"'% FUr Traders ]KeptL '01 '� I I - - , . 0 � �6,jt I
F . 'Jtdoor NJJ;JJt P I I , .
L � '. , ho-tographers Must - .
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Xost Settlerj%r QAt "of It' . Re Resoure(IIIII4401t. 5, R k; I'l I 111, 1, r — i I I
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It may sarpris*4 Many people The biggest flash I ever used Ili, ' __ - L'i'l .__ SU14 ftltlaux WRITInt iklw,�J&@
who as ]ate,,as ten years agg looked outdoor night photography," says - 11111SOI)XI, IN, 01S urm, .
11poll Manitoba, as oil the edgw of an English writer in tlAe, Strand, W*14 I ,
tho, world to kuow that Manitoba 45 was in 1901, when, I flashlighted I � L I . I I
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proba,lily is tile oldest settled see- on the stroke of midnight the an- 1. - I .111-1 I , I I
rr FR4 ... I / � �Took Poison When Zppj L
tioli of the North Ainerilzall, llual New Year's Eve gathering of T, K 11 All Seculed f
tiaent west of the M con' Scotsmen outside St, 11aul's Cathe. .
, ississippi , In 1814=1neldent Not oe11,Bpg
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River and north of Now me , dral in London. A014 4, H A* if. ) . . .
,. Xleo. �(J think, IL .. - I L . ,
. - ally unown.
It, was near the, prosent site, of ill may justly claim thit — �
WinAipLeg that Lord Selkirk set- is is tile largest flash that has. 11,��,__ o ------ 16 Is known t
ever been used, and it created an I , 11 Ilat at one rorfe,d at
f1lod Ilia Red River ,colonists in ;? _t � 10 his career Napoleon,. wh -
Isis, I . altogether unlocked for sensation. -111 I . t 0 In, ,,p I a 4191
Away up in the The subject, i�as a difficult -one and I ., I seemed lost In 1814, coa .
PeaCeL Rij,eK , at icide &lid actually took a drat�jr
country, 200 miles north Of Ed had never to my knowledge been , , I " ,!;__��'< dfr i Vit
poison, -wIlwil, bad fortu
I mon- attempte,a before, for even at,this Ir L
ton, the Hudson's Bay Compan lost its effica0y. He n
� .Y date flashlight photographs in the I everattam��
has a wheat mill that I ed big life again in spi , .
-has lie011 III open air wore ,something of a nov- .to of tile jjqk4�
. operation for fifty years. And Ed.. elty , �� .1 L I ex,y that lie ,endured at St, Hel
. I I L . . a Ld OM
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� monton is 1,000 miles west of 11'"111- "Taking witli me a special illu- - . I 11 according to The Debata, ,,,a . .
- nipeg and about 300 miles 'north of . __ .. —, � IfIr 11 �� suicide in great detestation. The �&
inin,A.ting powder -of my own inven- ..., — � little known Incident was recoat� ,
- the,United States. line, The mill tibla .I p�rehed myself tip on a, wind- ____ I
grin4a wheat -that is grown in the owsill overlooking the church,y&rd, ous system. The resulting photo- in public recollection, and only re- ly .recalled by a, Parisian writer,
I -eat fur region � astarea of whi I ve . and will be new information t *
6 gi: I . the V ell it wouid be graph, howe r, was, all things cantly his Royal Highness has been many who know someti-ting, of, 0
.
As & matter of fact, western Can- necessary to light up if my photo- considered, very satisfactory. l,la -p� midshipman in his Mai- tile _
l , . . . I rated As, Mat Emperor, When during his "
. I ada was thoroughly explored many graph was tO- be Of -any value. 1 --.7-14- �_ esty'a fleot, with seniority from the Eat Consulship one of his grenad. .
g years earlier than was the district therefore used an extra amount of A SELF-HAD.E MAN. day of the Coronation, whe.n, 'In -
between the Missouri Riv.-er and powder , L and on the stroke of the I I . . . L I I the ancient Abbey of Westminster, 'lera killed hims�lf� Napoloo -
. sued an order to the Guard .- - . -
hour pressed the button. . General Nogi. Tells of His he led the line of illustrious men .s� ,is, � "
- the, P,aoiA-o Coast in the. United ,,There was a 10114 L and I I . tarly and bearers of honored names and "'The Grelia4ler Gobain. has kill- 11
I States, But, for 20a years it wa report, , . . struggles. I , ed himself owing to a love affai�, LLLL
& what appeared to be a vivid sheet . . I ancient titles who did homage to a vai�,
. exploited by the fur traders, who . He was oth I
L of lightning shot tip into 'the air, Men are not "self-made" in newly -crowned Ver0ign, and when el7wlsle an, excellent Sol.
i. discoura.-ed every effort to turn it the ,effect 'so dier. The First Consul oOmru.%nd5
of which was remarkable Cailad& alone. Do not these re- .he swore to be his fatl�er's 1'liege� that thme Guards should be Informed,
into an agricultural region. The on� the waiti�g crowds below, bus- minisoenc' the man of life and limb, and of earth -
facto nies. ily, engaged in Bin . es of General Nogi that ,& soldier ought to conquer the
- 'A lid ' famous J&pan-ese soldier, r tne ly worship." These are the leading
9 r', Syne' and graspin g e ' n Lang events up to the present time 'in a grief and bitterness of his passions;
e sisted the inc6min of the farin,rae gin ecail
The AmerioallL'iS ubiquitous * n a th;x's pluck, determination and industry
g 0 8 for 0 . life which has so far ne that there is the same courage in
. 10 hands with good wishe , the ew which have raised more, than, one cessaril
a western Canada, now� He is -on the ye L Y enduring, with patience,
ar. Instantly there was a dead poor boy of our own land to em- been one of preparation for the
e farm, in the towns, in the cities, silence which lasted for quite an inence I I great career which lies before the of the soul as in f acing bravely
I . Prince of Wales As heir to the .
. in the iriigated districts, working appreciable time, and then the -My father could not give me . THE FIRE OF BATTERY,
hard and setting the pace for his people began asking each Other the, education ,other boys- in the throne, Of his home life it need .
r neighbors. They have. caught tee what, had L happened., clan were� rec�iving/' he writes in only be said that. under the care To ,give oneself up to grief without
e boom spirit from him, L and some "I air, afraid that innocently Nihon no Shoneni "I haA.to stay of a devoted mother, he has grow,, resistance, or to kill oneself to, 68V
I of them, like ill,- young Soot, even, enough I alarmed some of them at home. Bu. I I said to up a aplendid example of the beat - 0ape, is to. abandon the field of bat�
T ' go him one better at times. rath4er*badly, for I was quite un- t one day type of English boy—earnest and tle before being beaten."
r Yet they ha've 'reasons to boast, notic . ed tip �aloft and there were myself, 'Come What may, I must enthusiastic in the Performance of Again, in a conversation with
says the Columbian Magazine. Ten many among the crowd, which in- lea,rn while, I am young. Life all the duties devolving upon him. Goethe, Napoleon blamed the poot
without some sort of achievement L.
years ago Winnipeg had only 40,_ Lotantly began to disperse, in all dir- . not worth the living.,' . —4.-. for all -owing Werther to commit 4
DOO inhabita re potions, who went home with the IS. L AN ORIENITAI DETECTIVE. ,suicide, and in 1810, in a conversa,
t that it was a small town. It is now, uncomfortable convidtion that they "So I ,pleaded with my father, . _ L tion with O'Meara, he said:
I I L _ had witnessed an omen of evil and at last prevailed upon him to . "Suicide is the .act of a gambler
the largest single inland grain max import Teapot Was Used to Find Money
- ket in the, world. . for the coming year. Others send me to a dormitory known as' and Jewels. who has lost everything .or of a It
again were inclined to think that the, 6hadoba, from which I was ruined Prolli ate.
Saskatchewan, the middle of the it Was L 9 I have always .
. . . . a satellite that had myster- able,to attend the clan school. Tea may be considered as 'a drink thought that a man shows Moro
3 three prairie provinces, is an em- iously -dropped from the heavens. "My days at the dormitory were of the sages, but one would hardly courage in ,�nipportfiig the evils that
pire, in itself covering an area, of "The intense brilliancy' of my .4ays of hardship. It was under expect the teapot to play the part ,afflict him than in getting rid of his
approximately 250,000 square illumination was such that, as I the control -of the clan govern- of a judge. Yet Margaret Cotter life." He deplored the ,attempt
. miles. OnIv the southern -half has afterward learned, the flash was ment, aaid sheltered about sixty �Iorison says in "A Lonely Summer that he had .made on his own life,
- been touched, and less than a seen at Elstree in Hertfordshire, boyS, L all under eighteen years a C in Kashmir" that not infrequently and'in a conversation with
- quarter has been developed to twelve miles away. It also attract- age, fo� in those da,ys a boy was it is.called upon to perform that chand:
any extent. Still it does fairly ed � considerable . attention in the supposed to, reach manhood at function as well as its legitimate "When is life itself ,an evil 7" be,
well. In *1900 its wheat crop newspapers, several of which con- eighteen, and wliat 'man' would one, The author, in one of her asked. "When it offers only pain
amounted to 3,443,671 bushels. Now tained'L references to it during the te since the suf-
� live in a dormitoryl- . uting trips, lost a box containing and suffering. But
it raises from 775,000,000 to 100,- week, and in fact it v�as not until "Things, have much changed one hundred rupees and sonIe, jew- fering and the pain change at ev-
elry. Knowing that it must have ery moment there is no inz'stant of
OD0,000 bushels annually. Its oa,t illy photograph was published in since that time. In those days the been ,stolen in the nig4t, she call- life in which a man ought to com-
crop has grown from .1, 600,000 bush- one, of the weekly illustrated pa- Jipys brought tfieir own unhulled ed for her servants. . mit suicide. There is hardly a man
els in 1900 to more than 100,000,- peri that the mystery was solved. '
rice to the dormitory and pounded They allowed much surprise and who has not several tinies during .
0010 bushels annually. "A picture of Sir George Martin it, for themselves in the. m
Alberta, the province just west playing the organ in Westminster i Oxtar Pro- distress. They searched the woDds, his life conceived the desire. of kill -
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of Saskatchewan, is following right Abbey is not exciting in itself, but vided for their use.; there was not and found il�e empty box thrown ing himself. But the same person -101,
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along. It is in.the northern part it is a good example of the difficult- a. ,hop in the place where you could ,%,way by the thieves in'their haste. would have been sorr.y for his act
of Alberta, - near Calgary, in the ies often besetting the flashlight buy hulled rice. The boys, too, I, sent for the native police. They as a few days later. "
photographer. As the o.rg= loft had to cook their own rice for proved to be more curious and pic-
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Bow River Valley, where the larg- waa very small there was not room them -selves and to collect their own turesque than effective. They Nvould' HELD IT IN DETESTxxTIOX.
est single irrigation project in the to, operate and I was at my wita, ftiel from the, neighboring woods. arrive each morning in ,a bevy of �
world outside of Egypt has been end to know how to take the photo- "There. was also a stable attach- over a -dozen, tell the servants op- In the 'same way he remarked,
undertaken by the Canadian Paci- graph, for I was unabler to place ed to the dormitory, and it was the enly that �hey suspec . ted them, and that a man iXho succumbed beneath -..-
fic Railroad. Throe million acres the weight of present evils and coln-'
my camera, far enough away from duty of the boys to groom, the sit in a, ring -and cross-question mitted ,suicide did ,an injustice to
,are to be irrigated when the work my Bitter. horses. As the. poorest lad in the them for endless hours, trying
. to himself, obeying through ,weakness
is completed; about half a million "At length, however, I saw .% dormitory, a great deal of w-ork fell trick them into saying something
acres are now under the ditch. way out of he difficulty. I fixed a upon my shoulders. I Pounded which could be taken as an acknow- and ,despair'the fantasy of. the mo -
I ment while sacrificino--W-4 ,.all b'
n d fil
rope to the end -of the organ loft rice for the others,'I went iiito the ledgment of guilt. In vain I tried future existence, j nd, fill I be ,
*__ — and tied my camera on the end of woods to gather fuel. I cooked the to point out that this would . �1
I
Only bad no patience with Cato an 'loth- .
. I it in- such a position as to Allow the meals and I groomed the horses. put them on their guard; it was er great men for killing themselves. I
.
YEAST AS A P0015. ' lens to project through Sir "There were no ourrycombs or to no purpose. The, police were too Cato's death, said Napoleon, was
George's peephole. I then let.off clippers in- those days. I had to happy over the bustle and import- the one weakness of a great soul, .
Can be Made Into "a Tasty Pastel, ll�y flash with my camera in mid singe the horses' coats with impro- ance. the occasion offered to adopt the error -of a stoic, the one blot
11 air . Outside S-aggestions, .
to be Spread on Bread. t vised .torches made of"dry twigs, In one elaborate function I on his life. All ibis is suffi6i,ent to .
. I ;A chapter of accidents occurred and ch6p the straw for their bran was show that Napoleon, in .-common
The cleanest lager b er some- when I went to Southampton to ill . ash as well as I could, and asked to take part. I was placed with Socrates, 'held suicide in de-
ers . eof , yeast photograph the home coming of L al' in solemii state in an easy chair in testation. .
this for want of labor-saving co�- front of the hut, and I L I
cells, says Pure Products. still Gen. k_r Radvers Buller from . round stood
I e a wide circle of turbanned natives.
larger il��mbers are often found in South Africa. A fog made the tim trivances entailed much expeadi-
ture of time and troll,ble. __014—
ale, and in Weiss beer, which pro- of the ship's landing uncertain, but "In addition to all this manual In front of me, on the ground, ,11 I
bab,ly gives these beverages some late at night a reporter running to- sqiaatted the chief of police.; to in . I
of their desirable properties. But ward the docks shouted t me that labor I had the, usual school les -relief, lie could talk no E I. ,'� TWENTY GIVE WORA-N.SKIN.
1.0 I . ng is ..
x the largest amount of yeast the -ship was . - sons to attend. Never very strong, My young cook squatted opposite, I
by fa just coming in I rush . 1.
which finds its way into the human ed back to my hotel, grabbed up a I f ound. my double task a L severe a small native teapo ' Relati'ves and P!rlends SmOor to
I I . . t was placed
digestive system is introduced with box of flash powder and a, snap- straill -On MY Powers of endurance, between them, and close it hand Save Her Life. I
I
bakery goods which have been made shot ,camera anil dashing into the and I began at times to doubt wbe- five tightly rolled scrolls of paper, Skin grafting operations on are -
from flour. kitchen commandeered a, saucepan ther I should be -able to go through on which, I was told, were writ- markable scale have resulted in
Yeast is a fungus and belongs to lid in which to fare the powder. with the task I had set m-vself. But ten the names of m onlplete recovery -of Mrs. .
the same familyas the mushroom, Then I set -oft post haste for the I never allowed myself to lose oneoneach. 'V - a fariner's wife, living in
I
for which most people have a dis- docks, picking up ell route a re- hearb.." . . I The teapot had a broad rim round BM'awuth�inp Roding, ill Essex, Bag -
tinct liking. The agf, long use of porter to whom I gave th-B news. .. the top. The chief of the police on land, who was badly burned about
yeast for bread raising purposes "The ship was, just coming along- . __Kk I one -side, And the cook on the oth- the arms and back when soma i.
proves that this fungus is icap&ble side when We got there, and as it THE PRINCE OF WALES. er, each placed a finger under the clothes she was cleaning with petrol .
of thoroughly agreeing Nv th the was necessary foi- me to ta,ke a pos- � I . . rim, and held the vessel loosely became ignited. , No fewer ,than
hilman organism. In l view of this ition well above the. level of the E (liTard is an E xcellent Type of the at"POnded between them, twenty relatives and friends al- .
fact it is somewhat surprising. that ground we climbed up into the loft English Boy. - . Placing One of the scrolls in the lowed skin to be -grafted from theit
immense -amounts of beer yeast are of a convenient shed *Overlooking spout , the, policeman explained ilia*, bodies oil Mrs. ]Elawkley. , I
annually allowed to _go to waste the scene, It was quite'dark in the The Prince of Wales was born at if the paper held the naille tof the "For months afterLtbe accident,"
from every brewery in the country. place, but aS we ,Could just see a White Lodge, Richmond Park, in thief the vessel would give sign. said Mrs. Hawkley, in narr tin L
There are several circumstances door on theopposite side we made 1894, his Royal Highness was bap- Two paperg passed the Ordeal, her experience, L"I' lay in a uinerF
L
.1
which have seemed to stand in the M rush toward it. ` Then without the tizad there some three weeks later When the third , .1
was put in the Serioua condition, and at lase tho
way of employing beer yeast in food ghl warning we both almost -as Edward Albert Christian George teapot made, a semirevolution, and a '
*
B'i eat urgeo-ns who attended me agree4
production. The two principal disappea l le of Andrew Patrick. David, thus com- almost fell from the hands. L that I needed a fresh supply of
ones are its dark color and its bit- some soft fluffy choking substance. bining the names of his, father, his There was intense interest'L 'The akiii.
I
tern , ess, due to the simultaneous i "We had, it appeared, broken grandfather, and his great -grand- inspector Put aside the, paper, ,'re- "The question as to where if
use of hops ia the, brewilrg proces- nto a grain warehouse, the loft of father with those of the -patron marking that in I L t was iJJe nameof should come from was settled im-
sea, which waa being -used to store. some saints of England, Scotland, Ire- the thief. At the fourth scroll the mediately, Relatives and friends,
These properties of beer yeast, kind of fine mWdlin�gs.' The awful ,land and Wales. In April, 1907, he teapot swerved again, but remain- regardleas of the pain involved,
however, may easily be ren�oved. stuff was several feet deep all ov- passed the qualifying examination ed'immovable during the test of the vied with one another in being
beer yeast is not suitable for bak- er the floor, and through it we for the Royal Navy, and on May in fifth. The. scrolls were then thor- first to undergo the skin' -grafting I
. I
.ing purposes because it grows in-& floundered and struggled, gasping that year be enteted Osborne do]- oughly shuffled and a se,con-d trial operation." . 0 -
old Medium and does not possess.a for bre4th and *ell nigh suffoca64 lege. He completed his course of given them, The teapot madd its So many friends underwent thv
. I
great, enough raising power for .the ed. At length, however, we fought instruction theri in April, 1909, and signs at the two sameliames, I . I
.
L . ' �_' operation ,for her sake tlat Mr.S. L
� I
u There is no our way through and reached the in the followlna� month entered The, inspector then. said that, �1`a Hawk -ley forgets -exactly I ]low many
P rposes of the baker. I
question about the nutritive value, door justas Gen. Buller was step- Dartmouth Coll�p. On tbe'acces- I VAs so tender of my sevv.antgl there were, hub ther� must -hava.-_
of yeast, sinue weigbt for we t I - Ili ay, but fortun- -sion1,',,*f his father, King George, to welfare they would; be ..gi I - .
,
I , a ailg e , .nt Up to tile ,L th re,e 4 ) ,,ell . a been at I-ea.qb -twenty, includirlifl .
�
- comparable in nutritive, _61. we on May 6th, last year, anoe of restoration before they, father, .mother, husband, ,four -
is quite ch
t . -he .
Value to the best beer. . Pi' O' on g i 'al w ec'us6d. A 1wap of loose brothers, threp, sisters, four un.cleri,
J
iii -It I " �
ate r me all 0
SP ly io 0 him
e�k t and d ned him for the young Prince tucceeded to t exe 'a
a Ilit
For drect consumption in -the L .10 while . I I . - tile L
_ L Dukedom of .Cornwall .and to ilia I 'earth was alle at back .,Of.riny Ajster_jJJL_Ja'%', and ,several oousina
fresh condition yeast Must be put "I hastily poured the powder, in�' Scottish titles of Dukle, of Rothe- tent after dark. Each, servant, in and friends.
I
I
into a'suitabe form. According to to the saucepan lid, ,gave it to my say, Earl of. Carrick, Baron or 10�-- turn was to ,go alone and cast a "All displayed the utmost forbi-
the method of Kleinsebmidt, com- friend to bold and told him to ig- frew, Lokd of the Isles, and Great baskletful of earth ,on the heap. In tude in their sufferings," said Mrs'.,4,
I .
pressed yeast which has been de,- nite it with. a piece of lighted pa- ,Steward of Scotland, and oil Julle this way it was -hoped that the Aawkley, (l ile B � were , �
prived of its bitter substance May per as quickly Then 2 -3rd he was created Of holder of the stolen goods would astonished by -so w'onderf I al a de-
, as possible. Prince
L ,
6 Me
b 'Ited with edible fats, such as steadying tilygelf against the door- Wales and.Earl of Cheater, . make resbitution, in which ease .no monstration of family loyalty and
butter the result b * post, I held the snapshot camera 0 tile following day her and'bis questions would be a8k0J, L .
eing a, very n , I . , I
, a in my hands as f3r;nly as thor, Prince Albert a, ff e o f; 10' i. I L
ta,t ,. spre d possible bro were con- After dark I heard the shoveling. "Perhaps the, greatest! p1lick, .
d,r y Paste which can be . I I f .
e ,ly on bread,, Dry yeast An ,and waited, firmed in the I �6f After a, while the inspector alid I
'et 0 L privato chapel I oonsiderinj his age, was display- . Z�
be used in this, nianner, and exper- "At first my friond was, lanable to Windsor Castle, by the Archbishop .0
of 0a'L went J ut to tile 11"P''ah4 carefully ed by my Atle ten�ye,,tr-old, broth- .
fence has ,already shown that the ignite the po;v4el, and the anid-1 nberlitiryi aniong the agsistIpg sifted the dirt. We found nothing. or, who had a dee� i'iieision'nia,da Ili 11�
addition of yeast to'cdrtain sauces moments were flying all too rapid� clergy bei-tig, the, XWv, H, 1). '%Irigh� � Later, the two servants we i _41
.
and salad ,dressings is attendedwith I . te ftr- hi's arm. He rofu4�d-6 take ail: -',`
�
ly. when suddenly it fla,red up. MY clergy being the')Iev. ill D. Wriflit. tested and pub in j'ail, When tbey . an '
�er_.�y f&Vor&ble .�eglllta. L However, unfortunate comp taken com� S 01d were. relemed thayL jM;nodJ&t'0ly a &eathaticawf boro,,his sufferingo . .
It ; . anion, L by whom -Aho young prince
. . I 0�,' the C01'eniony, .0,4 me (or tbreeL Wee . u- b r'A 81 ol y. Altogether , some 200 :
ccessa�y that the . qa�stion R�etaly by surprige" was 80111t 11YIng been prepare -0 .
, - , ". kit' wag,",, that '
'alfbald ni6i*)(-,9,`thor- 'jh �"W� on higba"ok with sordo" badl',V buih-' Tbe'iiiMatitke *of tho,,FAii�%'os ' i� J'Uftj5'$b6 Lt'l" ' I f'th " * ' ", j� vioo,6 of skin.wero,.graff*d onto me
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