HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1911-8-10, Page 2Ss:sees,
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PIDASIILIGHT AISVENTURNS.
—„,
0 u,,Tt440,0a;be:ilLeistboluric:co:itix0Hglir:tehiie.,:u.s, iledtu:
•
°Iitdoots ullthi),Ph'otograPSY:" FaYs
an 11nglish writer in the Strand,
"was an 1901, when I., flashlighted
on the stroke of,midneeht the au-
eual New Yeae'e Eve gathering o
Seetsmen oetwde St. Peul's Csthe-
dial an London.
‘c/ th. i 1 i i • that
• u" may lust Y ° aim l
ties is the largest flash that has
ever been used and it greeted an
altogether unlo'olced for set:maim-1.
The sebleet svas a difficult one and
had never to, roy knowledge been
attempted before, for even at this
date flashlight photographs in the
ipen air were eomethieg of a nov-
elty.
eTaking with me a' 'spooled. illus
minating powder ef my own invens
tion I perched myself up on a wind-
owsill overlooking the, churchyard,
vast areit•of which it would be
eiecessary to light up if my photo-
graph was to be of any value, I
used an extre amount of
powder, and on the stroke of the
hour pressed the button,
"There was a loud report and
what appeared to be a vivid sheet
of lightning shot up into the air,
the effect of which was remarkable
on the waiting crowds below, bus-
ily engaged in singing 'Auld Lang
Syne' and grasping one arhother's
hands with good wishes for the New
Year. Instantly there was a dead
silence which lasted for quite an
appreciable time, and then the
people began.asking each other
what had happened. , ,
"I ain afraid that iffaceenw
enough I alarmed some of them
rather badly, for I was qttite un-
noticed up aloft and there were
• •
many, among the crowd, which me
stoutly began to disperse in all die-
cakes, who went home with the
uncomfortable conviction that they•
had witnessed an erne, es evil
import for the -coming year. Others
were inclined to think that
it was a satellite that had myster-
ionsly dropped from the heavens.
"The intense brilliancy of my
illumination was such that, me 1
afterward learned, the flash was
seen et Elstree in Hertfordshire,
twelve miles away. It also attract-
ed considerable attention in , the
newspapers, several of which con-
tained references to it during the
and in fact ib was not until
my photograph was published in
else of the weekly illustrated pa-
pees that the mystery was solved.
"A picture of Sir George Martin
playing the organ in Vilestminster
Abbey is not exciting in itself, butfound
is a good example of the diffieult-shopinthwherecould
les often besetting the flashlight
tl se organ loft
was very small there was not room
to operate and I was at my wits'
end to know how to take the photo-
graph, forIunableted
, was o place
my camera far enough away from
roy sitter.
"At length, however, I saw a
way out of he difficulty. I fixed a
rope to the end of the organ loft
and tiedmy camera on the end of
±1 ±0 such a position as to allow the
lens to project through Sir
Geoege's peephole. I then let off
ms, flash with my camera in mid
air.
"A chapter of accidents occurred
when I went to Southampton. to
Photograph the home coming of
Gen. ter Redvers Buller from
South Africa. A fog made the time
' of the ship's landing uncertain, but
late at night a reporter running to-
ward the docks shouted to me that
the ship was just coming in. I rush-
ed back to my hotel, grabbed up a
box of flash powder -and a snap-
shot camera and dashing into the
kitchen commandeered a saucepan'
lid in which to firs the powder,
Then I set off post haste for the
docks, picking up en route a re-
porter to whom I gave the news.
"The ship was just coming along-
side when sve got there, and as it
was necessary for me to take a pos-
ition well above the level of the
ground we climbed. up into the loft
of a convenient shed overlooking
the scene. It was quite dark in the
place, but 'as we could just see a
door on the opposite side we made
a rush toward it. Teen without the
slightest warning we both almost
disappeared in a heaped up pile of
some soft fluffy choking substance.
"We had, it appeared, broken
into a grain warehouee, the soft of
which was being used to store some
kind of fine middlings. The awful
stuff was several feet deep all ov-
es' the floor, and through it we
floundered and streggled, gasping
for breath and well nigh suffocate
ed. At. length, however,' we fought
car way through and reached the
door just es Gen. Buller was seep-
ping san the gang way, but ft:retests
ately for roe an officer went up to
speak to him and detained him for
a little whilc. ,
"I, hastily Poured the powder ins
to the saucepan lid, 'gave it to ray
friend to hold and told him' bo ig-
elite it with a piece of lighted pis-
per as quickly as possible. Then
steadying myself against the door-
t I held tl es, Shot camera
pos ,ie s p.
rey hands as firmly as possible
(tad waited.
"At, first my friend was unable to
the powder and the anxinee
moments were flying all too rapid-' elorgy
,
when suddenly it flared up h My clergy
unfortunate conspanioe, taken then-,
pletely by surprise, was sent Opine
beck with sense bad's/shuns',
ed fingerer and * shock to leteherv.-
•
-
NApotEON TRIED
,._
PARISIAN WRITER
EVISOOL rs ITIS
•
5.'ook Pelson Whah AU S,
in 181.4—Incieent Not
ally Known.
It is known that at on
his career Napoleon,
seemed lost in 1814, co:
suicide and actually toot
a poisoe, whieh had J
lost its airwave He nevs
ed his life agans in spite
ory that be endured at k
and athording to The Di
suicide in great dethsta
little known incident wt
ti,11 d by a Parisia
alYnct.°•invillebe new infoe
manY .who know sometb
°TeatEmperor, When
?1ret Consulship one of 1
iers killed himself, Na)
suedana
an order to the Gs:
renaelier Gobai
ed himself owing. to a I
He was otherwise an ext
dim Tho First Consul
that the Guards should b
grief aansdoldhiitetrerohuegshstoVhciii
that there is the same c
enduring with patience
of the soul as in facing. k
THE FIRE OF BAT'
T '• ' If to'
0 give °nose up gri
• .
resis sumo, or one
t • tokill
cape is -W.-abandon the E
'. being"
t e before beaten.
Again, in a converse
_ _
Goethe, Napoleon blame,
for allowin Werthert
g
suicide, and in 1816, in a
'
tion withO'Meara, ho se
t, • • •
Suicide is the act of
• lost , ..
who nes verything
ruined profligate. 1 has
thought t man sb,
hat a
courage in supporting tilt
afflict him than in getting
life." He deplored the
that he had made on his
and in a conversation I
ehand:
"When is life itself an
asked. "When it offers
and suffering. But sine,
riand '
le ng the pain char
• "
els, moment there )5 no i
life' in which a man au I
mit' . . isg
smack. There has
who bas not several tin:
his life conewved the desi
• ' •
ing himself. But the sat
would have been sorry 1,
as a few days later.' ,
IT IN DETEST
In the same way lie
that; a man who succumb
the weight of resent evil:
mitted suicidepdid an
himself, obeying through
and despair the fantasy c
anent while saisrifieing to
futile existence. And, 1
had no patience with Cato
er great men for killing 0
Cato's death, said Napol
the one weakness of a g:
the error of a stoic, the
on his life. All this is su
show that Napoleon, in
with Socrates, held suite
•
testation,
e
•
••
.
., . ..
"Ot4W°°.• '
- .
,., -
ft,"2'MI'LLION PACKAtES•SOLD.,.
W;;;"''•'''''''','%?`•
. , r,1,,-A:4.'0',M1
. i''''.•
.,
, '
'
,
- • , ., , .,,
, g
, ..4 ,.*, melt,
DuanToBA,. Is gum OLD,.
—.s.
POIrt 214.000.sytreeisypirer1:37.!,:trayelltp.euooppl:
who as leth WI tee year8 49 looked
upon lifeeitobe as on the. edge of
the worN to knew that Manitoba
probe* is the eldest settled see.
tion of, the North, -Ameriven con-
tinent weet of the Missiseippi
ee •
River and north of New AxeX100',
it was neu the present site of
Winnipeg that Lord Selkirk set-
.
404 iris Iled River •°°liiiii8t"u
1813.
Away up in, the Peace ' ,
River
country, e00 miles north of Upson-
ton, the Ibelson's Bee OomPanY
has a wheat mill thet has been in
operation for fifty years. And Ed-
mouton is 1,000 miles west of Win-
nipeg and about DOP miles north of
the ITuited Stake line. The mill
gids wheat that is grown in the
great fur region.the
•
As a. matter a fact western Can-
ada was thoroughlye • lored many
years earlier thanwaePthe districyt
between the Missouri River and
the Pacifie Coast in the United
States. But for 200 years it was
,ex kited bythe fur traders, who
d.isPcouragedevery effort.to turn ii,
into an agricultural region. The
factors of the fur companies re-
sisted the incoming of the farmer.
The American is ubiquitous in
western Canada now. He is on the
farm, in the .sewns, in the cities,
in the irrigated districts, working
hard and' setting the pace Inc his
neighbors. They have caught the
boom spirit from him, and some
of them, like the young Scot, even
go him one better at times,
they have reasons to boast,
th C I b'
says e o um ian Magazine. Ten
years ago Winnipeg had only 40,-
000 inhabitants. Ten years before
that it was a small town. It is 110Wd
the largest single Wand grain mar -T
ket in the world.
Saskatchewan, the middle of the
three Prairie Provinces, is an em-
pire in itself covering an area of
approximately 250,000 square
miles. Only the southern half has
been touched, and less than a
quarter has been developed to
any extent, Still it does fairly
well. In 1900 its wheat crop
amounted to 3,443,071 bushels. Now
it raises from 76,000 000 to100,-week,
,
000,000 bushels annually. Its oat
crop has grown from 1,600,000 busb-
els in 1900 to more than 100,000,-
000 bushels annually.
Alberta, the province just west
avian, rig
of Saskatch - is following' ht
'along. It is in the northern part
f A , erta, near t e
lb Calgary,inh
°photographer,As
Bow River Valles- where the larg-HELD
' ' •
est single irrigation projectinthe
world outside of Egypt has been
undertaken by the Canadian Pani-
a Railroad. Thre.e million acres
fi - •
are to be irrigated when the work
is completed; about half a million
acres are now under the ditch.
*-- '
esseer s..0.- ere—
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K
'
THE ANARCHIST Sis
se
,"
MILLIONAIRE s
cherefore
'
fesesiesess.sesseseesseteselieeleselEss***"
Scotland Yard differs on many
subjects amongst itself, but it is
agreed upon one point, and that is
that the most dangerous, slippery,
and remarkable "crook" it ever
had to deal with was George Fer-
diaancl Springmulh von Weissen-
fold.
They nicknamed him the anar-
()hest millionaireepartlY because he
devoted a considerable proportion
of the- money he acquired by a life
of crime to furthering the anar-
ist cause, and also because many of
his chosen associates, both men and
women, were revolutionary anar-
ehists of a pronounced type, says
Pearson's Weekly.
He came of a good family, and
was exoeedingly well educated,
having graduated with high honors
in science, medicine, and Meta-
ture at one of the prneipal German
universities. But he was a born
eriminal, and a dangerous one; a
threw -back te the aboriginal sav-
age.
it liitle matter of forgery and at-
te
tempted murder made his native
land too hot to hold him, and he
fled to England. This was in 1880,
end it did not take him long to
blossom forth into a professional
blackmailer and swindler of a pe-
3uliarly odious type.
Once he found himself in the
ilutahes of the law, and received a
well -merited sentence, at the Old
Bailey of twelve months' imprison-
meet with hard labor. His temper
was not improved by this taste of
iakum-picking, and he vowed that
se would never do another
'stretch (year's imprisonment),
so matter what came. After this
se always went armed.
His specialty about this time was
iogus company promoting, and he
lid remarkably well out of it from
ds point of view. From one con-
ern alone he netted $300,000. An-
Ither yielded him $270,000 in six
veeks. He opened more than one
iundred different banking accounts
a as many different names, and he
:ept an album in which he entered
is different alum side by side
rith his own proper signature,
his album is now preserved as a
uriosity at Scotland Yard.
As has been intimated, he swore
bat he would never be taken alive,
rid although as a result of his
olossal frauds half the detectives
s Europe were, PresentlY searching
or him, it leaked as if he would
eat them all. ,
His cunning was almost super-
uman, and he took no chances. He
mployed a small army of private
etectives to shadow the Scotland
ard detectives who were trying to
sadow him. He rented a fine
ouse—in an assumed name, of
mrse—near Wembley Park, and
sent thousands of pounds in con-
;meting subterranean passages
:tiding to secret exits, through
hich he could escape, if need be,
hen hard pressed.
Scotland Yard beard of the ex-
tenth of this dee, and raided it,
fit the bird had flown. Next he
as heard of at another place in
widen, where he was engaged in
rioting and issuing vast numbers
! books of a kind about which the
ss said the better.
This house was also raided, but
lee more the wanted man had dis-
speared. The detectives found,
swever, evidence of his many sid-
I enterprises in the shape of six
the newest and most expensive
nd of linotype machines, together
ith many thousands of objection-
:le books, all newly -printed:
thee were destroyed on a magis-
&tete •order. .,
. .-
The search for the master crimes- .
was continued, and at last he
ss located in a large mansion in
smbridgeshire, known as "Eden-
dd." This house, which stood in
, eiwn 'grounds; had 'hems chosen 'keg
r its seclusion, like the one at
embley Park, and, like it, too,
had been fitted with an elaborate
Stem of eliding panels, secret
ambers and subterranean pas-
,
gen.
All this was known to the Yard,
A it was known, too, that an
mad and desperak men lurked
thin, Coneequently, it was de-
relined to, send three of the very
at Sffiensavailable to enter the
tree and. slat the witted arrest,
tile other plain -clothes officers
te detailed.te watejl the verieue, from
Its in tligrounde euteidese .„ topreteetsualreitiii
The officers told off for the Jen:
gerous part of the job -were UMOI-
Inspector Arrow, DeteetiTe-In-
specter Sweeny, and Sergeant -In-
specter 13adcock. '
These were experienced men, and
they laid their plans well. _ ..One
went up to the door, dasgweed as a
tradeemank assistant, and keock-
ed.The o•ther two were in hiding
in the shrubbery near by.
_At the knock theedoor was open-
ed eves th little, and before it could
be closed again the three detect-
lees were inside. Instantly a
shrill whistle was sounded from
within, and when the house was
searched the anarchist millionaire
was apparently nowhere within it.
There were plenty of servants
about, of both sexes, but they one
and all professed to know nothing.
The detectives searched high and
low for nearly two hours, but their
search was in vain. Yet that the
wanted man was somewhere within
the building was certain. Every
exit was being -watched by theirYet
colleagues outside, and these had
made no sign.
At length, just when -they were
on the verge of despair, a secret
Panel was discovered, and this, on
being forced opened, revealed a
Passage just broad enough to ad -again
mit one man. It was pitch dark
within, but out of sthe darkness
came the sound of suppressed
breathing.
Here, then, was their quarry.
But which ane of the three detect-
ives was going to risk almost cers
tain death by bearding him in his
den now he was at bay?
The question in reality admitted
but of one _answer. It is an un-
written law of Scotland Yard that
the past of danger shell be given to
the junior, for that way lies Pr°s
motion, and promotion is, of
course, the most ardently to be de-
sired thing amongst all branches of
the police service.it
So to Sergeant -Inspector Bad-
cock was assigned the duty of en-
tering the secret passage so luckily
discovered, and draggsng thence
into the light of day the worse than
wild beast that lurked within.
Quietly, and without the least
trace of bravado, he accepted the
missien. Stepping from the room
into the cavern -like passage—being
a tall man he was compelled to ad-
opt a stooping posture—he called
to the wanted man, telling him that
he was a police officer, that the
game was up, and that he had bet-
ter surrender himself geietly.
No verbal answer was returned,
but out of the darkness came the
sharp click of a revolver being
cocked. Badcock felt that life or
death was a matter of moments on-
1Y, and bounded swiftly forward,
still keeping bent nearly double,
both because the height of the pas-
sage did not, admit of a perfectly
erect posture being maintained,
and also because by doing so hearil
stood a better chance of not being
shot if his assailant aimed high, as
men firing when greatly exited
usually do.
The passageended in a door, anti
Badcock could hear his man fumb-
ling at the handle inside. But he
could not get, out that way, for it
had been looked from the outside
by Inspector Arrow's orders prior
to the raid.
Realizinz this, the hunted man
faced about, pointed his revolver at
his pursuer, and tried to pull the
trigger. But Badcock gripped his
wrist with fingers of steel, a,nd the
weapon dropped with a clang on
the stone floor.
It was a, pitiful figure of a men
that was dragged out into the light
of day a few seconds later. His face
was livid, his features were work -"The
ing convulsively.
"Water!" he gasped. "Give me
water!"
A servant ran and fetched some,
but the glass slipped from his nerve-
less fingers, his saw dropped, and
a moment later he fell dying to the
ground. .
. A coroner's sury said it was ap-
oplexy. But was Al e..-
The anarchist millionaire, w ° is
was also, it must be remembered,
a doctor, and a skilful chemist, had
had in his' possession a gold
signet ring in which was hidden a into
powerful poison.
Wbein he was arrested this ring
was on hie hand, but the secret re-
ceptacle behied the seed svhich lied
contained the poison was empty.
Anyway, he was deed, an cl theeffeetiors.
tasty
world was well rid of him, directly
Had be stood his trial, there
would have been revealed the onost
remarkable criminal remelted of .aeldition
modern times. and
ous
gl'aith,
"irisiderod,
General
Canada
minisoences
famous
pluck,
which
poor
-beam?
the
elan
Nihon
at
myself,
1 earn
without
is
an
send
the.
able
days
th.e
ment,
boys,
age,
supposed
eighteen,
live
since
- boys
rice
.
rt
vided
a
buy
had
th
fuel
.
duty.
horses.
dormitory,
upon
rice
woods
meals
elle
•horses'
singe
vised
and
mash.in
this
.
trivances
burs
labor
sons
I
strain
arc]
thee
with
I
heart.",
Mtwara
The
White
1894,
tized
as
Andrew
billing
grandfather,
father
saints
land
passed
for
that
lege.
instruction
in
Dartmouth
Won
the
the
DukedenCef
Scottish
say,
frew,
Steward
23rd
Wales
On
brother
firmed
Windsor
of Canterbury,
by
been
The
Knight'
system, The resulting photo-
however, was, all things
very satisfactory." •
• ----4*------ '
A, 811LS•MAIDP MAN.
— .
Nogi . Tells of His Farly
' Strugg ess -
Man are not "self-made" in
alone. Do not these re-
of General Nogi, the
Japanese soldier, tne
determination and industry
have raised more than one-
boy of our ,oW11 land to ems
•
"My • father could not give me
education ether boys in the
were receiving," he writes in
•
no Shonen. "I had to stay
-borne. But oned I 'd to1
ay sel
'Come what may, I must
• lel 1
w i e, am young. Life
some sort of a,chievereent
not worth 'the living '
„ s. . , . • es.
b 1 pieecied with my father,
at 1 tprevailed '
as upon him to
me to a dormitory known as
Shudoba, from which '' I was
to attend the elan school.
'My days at the dormitory were
of hardship. It was under
control of the clan goverti-
s
and sheltered ahout sixty
all under eighteen years of
for in those days a boy was
to reach manhood at
and what 'man' would
in a dormitory? .
e Inge have
Th' 1muchchanged
that time. In those days the
broughb their own unhulleel
to th.e dormitory and omitted
P
for t emse ves t e mortar pro-
h 1 inh•
for their use ; there was not
e place you
hulled rice The boys, too,
• . .,
to cook their own nee for
s lee and to collect their own
em e s
from the neighboring woods.
"There was also a stable attach-
to the dormitory, and it was the
of the boys to groom the
As the poorest lad in the
a great deal of work fell.
my shoulders. I pounded
for the others, I went into the
to gather fuel. I cooked the
and I groomed the horses.
"There were no currycombs or
• thosto
pees in e days. I had .
the coats with impro-
torches made of dry twigs,
chopthe straw for their bean
as well as I coidel, and all
for want of labor-saving coo-
en ae e much exi 1
t '1 d)c w.li-
of time anti trouble.
to allthi nt I
"In addition s ma ia
I had the usual school ks
to attend. Never very steong,
found my double task a severe
on ray powers of encluance,
I began .at times to doubt whe-
1 should be able to go through
the task / had set myself. But
never allowed myself to lose
e, '
in public rthollectien, and only
his
cently iRoyal highness has
rated as a midshipmen.tin his
esty's fleet, with sensers y from
day of the Coronation, when,
thheiadneitAbbei .611 Wreisotinsuinshateerdh,
ebearers the linetb° ' °
andearers o onore names
ancient titles who did homage
I -crowned sovereign,and
pew s,
he swore to beli''
his fat °I s
man of life and limb, and of
IY'wership." These aratise
events up te the present time
lifil
e which has so Inceoessary
been one ofpreparation for
great career which lies before
Prince of Wales as heir
throne Of his home life it
oily be a'cl that, rider the
s-1- 11
of a devoted mother, he has
'
up a splendid example of the
type of English boy—earnest
enthusiastic .'
in the performance.
all the duties devolving upon
' - •
se
re-
been
Mt
th
iii
an
to a
When
"liege
•
earth-
leading
in
the
the
to the
need
• eare
grown
best
and
of
km.
'
vie
.
ill oney
a drink
hardly
part
Cotter
that
her
.
sew
1 save
call-
and
woods
'
thrown
haste.
They
pic-
would
of
bp-
and
e to
tried
only
it was
too
adopt
I was
placed
in
stood
to my
;
placed
hand
paper,
writ-
round
on
th
-0 -
the.
in the
that
the
the
and
The
re -
of
the
,
of the
theirs
trial
its
-
Ws
a
they
loose
of my
es
0,
In
the-
would
no
Wei 1
ar- se!
they
int-
that
age
i -e -e--
A.N ORIENTAL ' DElis tees
—.-
eapo as set o en
tW U lt I'd
and Jewels.
Tea may be considered as
of the sages, but one would
expect the teepee to play the
of a judge. Yet Margaret
Morison says
,il Lonely Summer
'n Kashmir,in " ' that not infrequently
it is called upon to,perform
function as well its legitimate
e
as. g
one The author an one ot
' ,
tenting trips, lost a box containing
one hundredrupees-
and some
elr • Knowing that '•
y.it must
been stolen in the ni ht she
ed for herg '
r servants.
They showed much surprises
distress. They searched the
and '
the empty box
away by the thieves in their
t
I sen for the native police.
proved to bamere curious and
t thanff t' - They
uresque e ec Ise. ley
arrive with morning. in a bevy
over a dozen; tell the servants
'-
only that they suspected them,
sit. in a ring and cross-question
them for endless hours, tryine
trick them into saying something
which could be taken 515 an acknow-
ledgment of guilt. In vain I
to point out that 'this would
put them on their guard;
to no purpose. The police were
happy over the bustle and import-
ance the ()coulee offered to
0„,,_
"'"'"-'°' suggestions,
In one elaborate function
asked to take part. 1 was
solemn .state in an easy chair
s t f the hut, and round
a wide circle of turbanned natives.
In front of mete, on the ground,
squatted the chief of police;
TOW, be could talk no English.
My young cook squatted opposite
a small native teapot was
bebsveen them, and close at
five tightly rolled scrolls of
on which, I was told, were
ten the names of my five servants,
one oriea.cli.
The teapot bad a -broad rim
the top. The chief of the police
one side, .and the cook on the
er, each• 'p1 aced a finger under
rim, and held the vessel loosely
suspended between th-ene
Placing one of the scrolls
spout, the policeman explained
if the paper held the name of
thief the vessel would give sign.
Two papers passed the ordeal.
When the third was put in,
teapot made a semirevolusien,Burgeons
almost fell from the hands.
These was intense interest.
inspector put aside the paper,
marking that in it was the name
the thief. At the fourth scroll
teapot swerved again, but theme-
ed immovable during the test
fifth. The scrolls were then
oughly shuffled and a second
given them. The teapot made
signs at the twocsame names.
• • , , -saide
The estpeottn then that,
I Was eo tender of me servants'
welfare, they would begiventhere
(thence of restoration before
. ,motile',
acoused A he al? of
earth was dug at the back
tent aftet dark.' Reels serieut,
turn, was to go alehe and cast
basketful of earth on the beep.
this Way -it was hithed that
holder of the stolen 'goo&
make restitution in whiels case
, s
questiotse would ue asked,
After,daek I heard the shoveling,
After 'a while the inspector
went out3e the heap and carefully
sifted" this dirt, We found nothiee.
Later, the two eervants were
rested and put in jell,- When
were released they immediately
ed nse for three Weekie, wages,
tilt' third TIV.tifeill, iltIptilfonz
meet,
.
YEAST AS A POOL.
----
Can be Made Into "a Tasty Paste
• •
to be Spread Olk Bread.
The cleanest lager beer some-
times contains numbers of yeast
cells, says Pure Products. Still
larger numbers are often found in
ale and. in Weiss beer, which pro-
hably gives these beverages some
of their desirable pro t' But
per res.
by far the largest amount of yeast
which finds its way into the human
digestive system is introduce4 with
bakery goods which have been made
from flour. •
Yeast is a fungus and belongs to
the same family as the mushroom,
for which most people have a die_
end liking. The age long use of
yeast for bread raising purposes
proves that this fungus is capable
of thoroughly agreeing with the,
human organism. In. view of this
fact it is somewhat surprising that;
immen.se amounts of beer s•casts are
annually allowed to go to waste
from every brewery in the country,
There are several circumstances
which have seemed to stand in the
svay of employing beer yeast in food
production. The two principal
ones are its dark color and its bit-
terness, due to the simultaneous
nth of hops in. the brewing Process
ses
These properties of beet yeast,
however, may easily be removed,
Beer yeast is not suitable for hak-
ing purposes because it grows in a
oldmedium and does not possess a
great enough raising power for the
purposes of the baker. There is no
question about the nutritive/able
of yeast, siace weight for weigh% it
quite comparable in nutritive
value to the best beer.
For drect consumption in the
fresh condition Yeast Illust be Put
a suitabe form. According to
the method of Xleinsclunidt, Qom-
pre,ssecl yeast which has been de-
prived of its bitter substance may
be melted with edible fats, such as
butter, the teeett being a very
paste which can be spread in
on bread, Dry yeast can
be used in this manner, and exPer-
ktice has eiresk Shown that the ignite
of yeast to certairl sauces
salad dressings is attended with ly
favoreble results. However,
iii neossAry that tho question
,eeeeseeseeetherosegle -etude' seri:4de
experts on cooking,0
• ill OM t
TWENTY GIVI. ' ''
" 's • - -
e„,,,,,,,e F e 1 '
""'""' '8 a neal s
Save Her Life-
-Skin grafting operation:
markable scale have res
the complete recovery
Ilawkley, a farmer's wife,
Beanchanm Rotting, in Es
land, who wasbadlyb
burr
he arms .anw
t, d buck b
clothes she was cleaning w
became'. '
irputed. No fee
twenty i,elatives and fri,
skin to be grafted f
bodies on Mrs, Ha.wkle y.
"For months after the a
said Mrs. Hawlolev, in
her experience, "I lay e
serious condition, anti at
` who attended 111
that I needed a fresh sr
skin,
question as to
shonld come from NVD.,S SO
mese ately, Relatives and
regardless of the pain
vied with one another i
first to undergo the skin
' '
operation,,
So many friends undere
ope • le f 1 k 1
se ion or ler sa e is
Haseepe forgets eettee h
Were, but thereY in
been al least twent '
father, __ ,s. ., . , Ys
nusoai
brothers, three sisters fou
• s‘e • '
sis ree-law, and eeverals
and friends.
"All ells I •oti .1
p as t le utnu
t e , te , • a —.. „
u e in • 'mu. su orings s
Hwes°, eseet the ,
uteestee'd surge
•t . by ee vsendel
mons ration of fatties,. Item
rm„,..t,.. .. ,,.
",",f."?P' ,. '"'°. greatest
coneseeftel tas age, was
ed b m eti
er :IS ' iv c tan'j'Year-o1
° k ...a 4"1") ineision
me arm, ne teftised to 1
ensesth ode and bore hi s
bi,av 1 ., •13
• e Y•f '...eitogether le
tii,(1,1..9,F. !9n 1.T.6,143 grafted
the esseieseleh Weed 0
,T1I1E.,PRINCE OF WALES.
— -
is an Excellent Type of the
English Boy.. ,lowed
Prince of Wales was born at
Lodge, Richmond Park, in
his Royal Highness was bap-
there some three weeks later
Edward Albert Christian George
Patrick David, thus COM-
the names of his father, his
and his great -grand-
with those of the patron
of England, Scotland, Ire-
and Wales. In April, 1907, he
the qualifying examination
the Royal Navy, and on May in
year he entered Osborne Col-
He completed his course of
there in April, 1909, and
• th e leered
the following Mori as
College. On. theaccess
'81 hislather, King George, to-
throne en llfaY ali, last Year,
1 'Pince steceeded to the 'were
yes nget
Cornwall and, eo the
bibles of Duke of -Rothe-
Earl of Carrick, Baran or Ren-
Lord of the Isles, and Great
of Scotland, and en Juno
he was OTOatOti PriODO of
and Earl of Chester,
the follosving day be and his
Prince Albdrt, were cen-
in the private chapel of
,
Caitle by the Athlibiehop
among the assistlpg
being the Rev, 'f D. woo)+,
being the Ike, M. ),), Wriele ,,C
whom the young prinnos. 1104
prepared ',,' the eererneeY,
siseetStere blethesleteneesees, 'Reediest
clithe Glartee will he feeds
, es very
We seek a lawyer to protect us it
or neighlenes and a, eleeter. should
oireelviles, , frosts
•
OAZIO
o peeled 8
when el
temP111,1
A drams
ortunath
Is' attersie
of the To-
e, xi:e1141.,
sbats, hem
ion. The
0 recent.
0 ' wetter;
ation to
eg. of the
during his
is grossed -
oleos br-
aids :
n has kill -
Ove affaike
client eel-
oomniandrs
informed
nquer the
passions;
curage in
the' pangs
ravely
ERY.
ef without
eself ±0ess
eld of bat -
tion with
the poet
o commit
converse,
id
:
a
gambler
or of "a
e always
WS More
evils that
rid of his
'attempt
own life,
with Mar -
evil V' he
only pain
the suf-
ge at ev-
nstant of
it to oom-
dly a man
es during
re of kill -
se person
✓ his act
remarked
d beneath
and oom-
ustice to
weakness
the mo -
it all his
nally, ho
and oth-
emsolve.s.
eons was
eat soul,
one blot
fficient to
common ,
de in de -
utter is
011 a ro-
ulted iu
f Mrs.
living in
sex, Eng.
ed aboui
en them
th petrol
'sr than
ends al -
ram theio
ecident,"
aerating
1 a vers
last the
to agreed
pply 01
shore if
ttled ins.
f needs,
'nvolved,
n being
-grafting
vent the
at Mrs,
ow limey
est have
n'clutling
d, bus
r stales,
etnisina
aid Msg.
ns were
a de-
ity and
silents,
display
bet:th-
in/ale in
ake an
ifferings
me 200
onto nes
vet siee's
1
4