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The Brussels Post, 1914-1-1, Page 3ti ;a_n�:.4t,T-'•T"'rm�'rJ'ahZt'�T1Q1NLlllW", ESI INTERESTING PEOPLE ' antlereaeraMinnalifienuarwasrinnIP Daneiug at the German Court le al ways a matter to be takenseriously, The Kaiser 1s blmseif an expert dancer and will have only experts at the State balls. At all these functions the Court dancing master ocou lies a place of 'vantage fromwhich he can watch toe. dancers, and any m1etakee or clumsy. nese will be certain to bring the de-, lintluent a polite intimation that ho must mend 'his steps or expect no fur- ther invitations to dance at Court, Prof, William Howard Taft, of Yale, until recently one of the fattest mon in the 'United States, of which he was President, Is as happy to -day A. BOT'S BEAR STOUT - Tulin of a Formidable Battle With It Big Bruin. A reader of The Youth's Cent-. panion sends this narrative of an actual adventure that he had as a boy in the woods of .'Vermont. It sitmwa the value of determination and oqur+age, even without any other means of defence against a beast as dangerous as a bear with young. one September afternoon I started after the cow, I knew that she would probably -,b9 with the young cattle in the woods, so I took a short cut through the sugar "bush." I supposed, o£ course, as a ltid on Christmas eve. Why' that the dog. would follow me. Because when he weighed Himself 110 ,n As I made my way through the was down to 271% pounds, back to big maples, I saw near the fence at the weight of 27 years ago, when ee the farther Bide a dark object that went on the federal bonoli. "When I certainly did not belong Lhere. As left the residency I was` about on the I approached, too object verge of nervous prostration. 1 pp ' , 1. moved, weighed 841' pounds, I wasn't bapl'Y and then stood on its hind feet. It black bear. sant s agood-sized 1 a wA and n have sena e I couldn't e b p companion for anybody. Then ` T The bear half -snorted, half - took up my course of .treatment andwhistled loudly, a here is the result. I'm hard as nails. I can walk all day or lay golf all day, and I love everybody." Stevenson's old home at Bourne- mouth, which it is now proposed should be acquired as a memorial, was given to "It. L. S." by his father, and was named "Skeriyvoro," after the famous lighthouse. Several pathetic references to "poor old Bournemouth" are made in the author's "Letters," whore he says he "lived in Slcorryvore loco a weevil in a biscuit " Dut the best, perhaps, is -that contained in a In the morning I renewed the letter from Samoa in 1887 when writ- search. This timo I took along the Ince 'o Sydney Colvin. He Wei "Toa dog, a medium-sized mongrel. I and that gaunt old monument at was wa]kiug along an old logging Bloomsbury (oho British Museum) are road, looking for the tracks of the t11 I have in view when I use the word Pomo. Some passing thoughts there, missing cattle, when I .saw the dog may be of the room at Skerryvore,'running towards me as fast as he and the blackbirds in the Chine on could go, Close behind him oame a May morning, but the essence is,the bear that I had seen the night S.C. and the museum." before. At the same time I heard Many stories aro related of the i the cubs scramble up a tree to . my characteristics of Sir William 0. left. ;Macdonald, the noted millionaire manufacturer and generous benefactor I was in a bad hole, for the mo - of McGill 'University, Montreal. 'Un- her bear evidently thought that til a few years ago Sir William never her Dubs were in danger, and the had a telephone in his o$iee, and' dog was leading her straight 'be- lieve)" }rade use of an elevator. Some; ward me. He dashed past me with - time ago a young salesman for a fin- out so much as a yelp of recogni- ancial house secured an audience tion, and I had about fifteen seo- en Sir William. and was anxiousPrsto I ends to make, upmymind what to sell him sumo bonds. Ho Presented his proposition so cleverly and so of• do. I had no weapons—not even festively that the millionaire said he I a po'aket-knifes. I knew that I was would take a couple. Going to a vault, no match for the bear at running, he drew out a steel drawer that was iso I decided to make the best fight crowded to its utmost capacity with I could. Near me was a mud -hole bonds. Sir William examined it care- fully and tried to get la the two or three papers which the young man had with spruce boughs to keep the handed him. But he could not make sleds out of the mud. I seized the room tor them, and, patting the docu- largest limb I could find, and has menta back to the salesman, remarked tily broke off the busby end. It did quietly that he hal changed his mind, not make a very formidable weep as he had not space for any more on but it was the best that I could bonds. The caller was so completely 1 surprised at the unexpected turn that get• events had taken that he had not a single argument to present, and thus he lost the sale through Sir William not possessing a steel drawer cepa- oious enough to accommodate the se- curities. cubs, each as large as a good-sized dog, climb ahoar-by maple. I cell- ed to the dog, but he was so far away that he dial not hear me. .The oubs soon came down from the tree, and all three scrambled over the fence. T saw no more of them at that time, nor did I ,find the cow that night, although I stayed in the woods until after dark. She had strayed to an unusual distance. SHOCK CAUSE DUMB TO SPEAK. Remarkable Cases df People Dumb for Years, 8peakfng. The recent caselof a young woman In hingland. who, Eater being deaf and dumb for 21 years,pinslowly recovering both hearing and speech—the shook of the tragic end of her brother, who drowned -himself pin the Stour, being regarded as respopaible for the miraou.- loos example of shock succeeding where doctors )1eae Yailed--recalls sim- ilar in'etances. Some time ago the narrow escape of a boy from dro leg of North Shields fsh quay had remarkable sequel. While efforts w re being made to re- store the appal ntlg drowned, boy to consciousnessy means of artiflctal resplyation, a au who had been de- prived of epee it two years earlier as the' result of Jan aeoident, pushed through the orewd merely out of ene- oaity. As soon lila he saw the prostrate boy, although not in any way related to him, the ight gave him such a shock that hi speech suddenly return- ed, and he fo to file g iound in a state o l n overin Ile on - finned collapse. lT o re S i C o finned to speak freely, and has�suffered no further iulpediment since. .It le not many years Ellice a remark able case of dumbness erteited great interest in medical 01x0108 in Germany. Twelve menthe earlier .- a Bavarian cattle' dealer.'had been kicked• by a horse, with ,€he result that he Com- ietely lost;tho use of his voloo, A year later he w e riding a doomed horse to the 'knacker's yard, when the animal, who olesi-1y had plente o6 life in him, Kogan to kick and plunge in: a danger - sus Manner, The man we are told, lost his head completely in wild excite• ruent, and after a few minutes t began to talk, oompietely regaining hie speech to the boundless.astonishment et his Mends. PERIL OF ST. PAUL'S. Weight of Cathedral Dente Is 82,000 • Tone. Xi) an artlele an "The Peril of St, Paul's" in the Arohttoois and Build- ers' Tournal, Mr. 9'. M. W, Halley atatea that the weight of the cathedral donee down to the toil of the piers is 12,000 tons) that the piers roueist merely of a eeverlug .o1 ?ertlaud over a tore of rubble„ :tad that. the dome 16008 over A tea' trreheg to .the south-west, a deviation front thetruth which hat) iu0reased in rocont years, "Wren t:heeugh lark of knowledge of design inadvertently left too stuall a »men of safety in his aul»ierte, The ' building is not et refit, as the continual breekIng of cement ApM•gqvos, and ttr0 slightest alteration alight have dime. trot* restate." Montvatlone should he prohibited, Ms', Halley egggcste, irk a definite area routed (be eethedrnl. Yew: tunhteils. W111 last touter if yea don't roll it or land ft, When the bear saw that I did not oases upon whom he has umpreased run, she stopped with her forefeet his ideas and his ideals with such on a small log at the roadside, and his ideas e •success, began to snap her teeth and growl At the same time the dog, seeing nee face the bear took courage, and came "back to help'. Dn. rTOIIN: tAIJBIGAIi'11', Canada's Debt to flint Cannot Ile Busily Appraised.. Fifty Years ago Johnny Galbraith trudged up from. Port Hope to Col- lege Street to get learning. Ile unwound a long red wool. unuifier from round his neck, put the ends neatly together, folded the muffler carefully, doliberatly, compactly, and ineertod it with great delibera- tion in his overcoat pocket. He settled down to study, not avidly nor sulkily, nor yet in fits and starts like many a student, but with a quiet steady appetite for learn- ing He absorbed knowledge as a plant takes up water. Every fact he met ho weighed, measured, test- ed, olas'sifi d, and packed up on the walls of memory, each fact in its proper place and convenient for use. He had no doubts a,s to what he wanted to do with this educe - ion l even at seventeen, pattering around in his own father's back- yard at the Mechanical devices with which he had amused himself, he haat dis•i;overed the limitations of mere native observation and inge- nuity; ter ho had pursued engineer- ing knowledge from Port Hope to Toronto, and there, finally, over- took mart of it, so that he east now hold up the intricacies of the engi nearing science for the observation of youths—no longer wearing red mufflers—who ate sent to his de- partment of the big mill of eduoa- tion close to Queen'a Park. For The World in Rowley New eine to shorten Atlantle Passage, The proleat for shortening tbo Atlautia Boo passage be the ntanguret'.on 0t, a s6064614 service, between the wast of Ireland and Bellew:, Nava 5,0(0,. mei Boston le et lest Approaching the.regkoe of realization. A contrnot wee signed In London on ovember 06 giving power for oho draw• Ing of plans for the conatruotion of a harbor at B}uaksod Buy sed the making of a railway conneeting that point' with the three principal railways of Ireland, This is the plume known as the All lied Route whieb, wee advocated in : the British Parliament and out of it by lir, Robert Ambrose, formerly member rot West Mayo, and the necessary oapltal has now betarovided. The designs will be (tarried out by henry O. long; of Easton, a well known architect In harbor oonstrection, and the necessary steamships, rolling oto h and permanent way material have already been bas okon rrom English firms, elle railway communication with Blnslc- sod will bo made from Oollooney, in oligo Share. the Midland Great JYeetern of Ire• a11d the Ureas Northern, and Grant Southern and w,eotorn feet converge. A weekly service ofast•steamers is oontempiated,whlolt will tarry walla and passengers to Halifax In three days and o hall; and the voyage will be carried on Ito. Boston as the port el debarkation on outward cargo. It Is =posted that ch now roast 7111 divert to England mach traffic that now pee- from Americathe oatmeal by to U Y reason oY superior speed and shortness, Wondersof the Wireless. The development of wireless telegraphy 1s :teem pllshiltg. thoegs whioli a few genre ago were regarded as beyond the realm t possibility When Diareoni gave itis. groat dlsoovery to the world thew^n• dors al Ste future development were un• dreamed of. We are beginning to rroaliza 'them 00000 119181 has boon meds 0om•, poo'at slyy tore for vo,sele, ma3eages e,'o i Raebed tli0a0ands of miles between sta.! 1 bklts, instant commuairstian 1a made from )701111 to tint through vset afros(t7•oe oY. primeval rarest in wltdernesaee and by tole wonderful 050101 Ibe world will, soon get information of the pyf1ieuom cee of storms and ateer natnrnl dieturbanoo. of dieted value to mankind. It is pro. diotel that with the cheapening of the wireless system the newepa ora of the world will have oomrabelr own wiirelesethfl plants and he in oommule boon with all parte of the world, while buelnese houses will have tho same eonvanlenoe. The wireless will also transmit the human voice for lmenenao dletanoes, and 1t la not lnc», eaotantee Dean Galbraith. thirty-five years this thoughtful professor of engineering has been sending his influence to the vory ends of the earth through - the 'grad - Was 'Then a Trade. When Dean Galbraith first be-' I shouted as -loud as I could, and 00400 associated with the teaching struck the bear on the nose with of young Canadians, there was no such -thing as the engineering "pro- fession," it was to a large extent "a trade," based upon a system of apprenticeship, There was no lit- erature of engineering science. worthy of the name. There was no real educational standard. Engi- neers were •trained by big firma as apprentices. There *as little tabu- lation ,of prineiplek in the profes- sion and o'amparatively little stan- dardization of praotioe. Galbraith was one of a few stu- dente of engineering in the world who souglub to ohan`ge these condi- tions, Hie opportunity came when the Governnlea't .asked. him to take charge of the old, School of Tech- nology, in the old Public Library at the corner of Adelaide and Ohnrch Streets. The politician.% of the day were willing to accept the conditions of the day,Y 9.he -con- oeived of nothing better than a technical school for maohinists, a projeot which at that tinlo and in view of the limited amount of mon- ey available was not suitable to the country. Galbraith proposed in pplase of the School of Techuology a School of Practical Science to teach engineering prineiplee, anei. ho wsis'.ablo, by reason of his per- sonality and reputation to convince the a�yrthoritios and have the school eatalal'�ished, my club, while the dog went- round behind and began to bite her heels, She turned on him in great fury. I followed them, shouting, and pelt- ing the hear with stones that I pinked up among too roots of an upturned tree. I had it in Oiled to tree the bear, but I soon discovered that this boar had no notion of being treed, Back she oame with renewed fury, fol- lowed by the dog, 1; gave her an- other blow, and the dog renewed his attack on her rear, until she turned on him, again. Over and over again we went through this. performance, until her interviews with the dogbecame of so lively a nature that they told on his cour- age, Accordingly he made up his mind to desert, and left me to fight the battle alone. , Mother Bruin returned o attack T!'I t me with tlio sane vigor, and 1 be- gan to find the matter serious, But T did not dare run, for 1 had heard people say that ib was dangerous to turn your back to a bear that was showing fight. So I hit her again on the nose, and shouted, at the top of my voice.. Much to my surpriee, she ran off a £ewrods, eat down,. and looked at me. •Por sone reason she seemed to loose her fierceness; perhaps she had seen her oubs make then escape. Than seems the moot reasonable explanation. At all events, 1 took advantage of the armistice, and walking backward, made good my escape. After I` had fennel the cattle and driven them 'some, I gob a gun and reburned'to the Kane of the fight, but I could find no further trate of the boles. Tipping rho lisle lusher, Public eseoutiotters in Ttiglund used to add very' ,00neidoral ,y to their official salarlee by the axtbr Mon of tsps from them vietlem korand a elan of any rank note exp to hand his exeoubioner 0076hing frqm five to fifty guineas, 'If the tip were liberal enough it was possible to defeat the ends of justice, The f0111008 rttek ICetclr once c'onleseod to having aoterted 20 guineas from a metorio18 erin11na1, fa coneidera- t{on 4i, whish he game him an op- portunity to stip a thetsid old anal Angle Ilith the arosvd, Whereupon ICatolt made) a l6iett of ptivenit, aivad a 071111,6 14.004 3{ttla tailor from among opttai n And rati'tthhg him up instead.. 1, _ t Since that time Dean Galbraith leas devoted himself to the task of teaching and directing the young engineers who come to him as pu- pils. : Teaching, and upholding the principles of the profession he loved, have been the one occupa- tion of Dean G'albraith'e life. He does nob golf„ Ash, nor motor, Ile deolin05 every offer --•and there have. been many --to obtain twlde his pre - Sent ' 1000m.e by steee trti.Itg appoint - incase 111 anduatrlal world, lie the til declines a•11 requests --•and there ,are many -for hire, services ao nonsuit- ing engineer,- 11111ooe he 0011 be eer» tarn that 5100h work, however lucre live, will not, interfere with his col lege work; it .it gives any augges- Mon of oottfltotin;�'• with his duty 1)e 'refugees it, Sometime% he ,per- Mits hem/self the lnxliry of a Bance trip in the nowih Country, a reg(osi he learned to love during llis year0 at e surveyor for the t1,1?.11. Along, file is content to put in hdt11 a teat and seine grub and paddle through the wilcicrnesces, silent save for the Tapping of lake water and the atgh. tt.,s• e^ ing of the forests les g is,:arts Harness SIhxlgah sr »44ea Olas lb®tie®eS*isee4......teee 11sea rl� G 0 r y' '•'?': a k]', y1 r; :I 'TORONTO ONT ''araaa 00000' £W,1LLETT CO.LTD WINNIPEG -MONTREAL We `mm unheettatinglgr recommend Magic l3akilteg Powder as being the best, purest and !most healthful baking pow. der that it is possible to produce, CONTAINS NO ALUM All ingredients area plainly printed on the label. diblo that a speech or' concert 1n London may be listened totn any Canadian city. Moder Unrest. n This is 'an age of social unmet, and none of too leading induetrinl countries has been Immune from disoentent amo••g its workers. Canada, perhaps, 11ae so far been less disturbed them' bar sister states of Australia, N�yyw Zealand and Routh Af• ilial, but the Aminion meet Sooner ail later ln, confronted with the sails pro- bieme in the same urgent way. Indeed, those aonutrles.hev been wise that have been prelthe tong folitwal eendlt2081 so moot the demand for wide and coni acetal reforms. That wee necessary 1f far nothing -else than to avoid a o1vll revo'u• Lion, and oven that phren of the'otd and wgrld-wide eonalct is not over.. But he fe blind. L14.04. who fall, to x00085155 only a movement to under way which 4)511 only ne dor and of the moral standards of life. end in a raeoA Ooodtitutlov SuggestiobPn,the nodal or. ' . ie Bald that a patient entering an 'FJ'nglieh or German hoanita! for an opo would know that if he made a blunder It 'would be shownup by, a trained patholo• 51st, and there wouldn't be so many blue• dere. It. fa an old Baying that the eels. takes of the doctor are not 9800, 00 te'y go underground. The European idea 18 that too hospital- au makes boxcar doctors, novernment by Commission. Thon rairie towns and aisles have pose. ad throegb the throes of an e]cwtlon and Have settled fora yens at lerat, wbo 18 .10 ru'o them, Probably the mast 10182-•eb- Ing election wag 1n Lethbridge, Thio 5o•. uhaed arty J]•eaa adopted the ptaa of lav ng three oommlesionore wbo are 10 control the civic administration during ,.,_+L 'ea.6 system abolishes the Aldermanio Council and le a unique departure, Lethbridge be- ing the first city in the west and the sec. and in Canada to adopt the new system. St. eoltn'e has the same eyetem In forro, and tt !t le tacked the devices of initia- tive, referendum and recap, Otheroltios Lion :with n• good outcome of flfiterest. thieve• tion meet consent to an aetopay in ease .I of his death, It is auYgrlted by lordorn � - American 05 Burger to 1,01 a the l a tulle or s`tli:.other is. worse," said too man, Ampted surgery that a similar rule ebe r adopted in Amertaa.n hospitals. A doctor "Come bank at once." of the FORTY-FOURTH ANNUAL STATEMENT of c Royal ank of LIABILITIES TO THE PUBLIC/ Noteo of the Bank In afreulatton>., u..a: peposlts bearing Interest, Inotddln9� interest accrued to date 1101,900,790 87 Deposita net boertng Interest 88,278,871 00 papooits by other Bethke in Canada 9 405,869.. 90 Deposits by Banks and Banking Correspondents elee whore than In Canada ,.,,... 1,849,466 79 131110 Payable ....• ..........tea.,, ,....,..,til-, jacceptxsnoos under Letters of Credit,,,,a..a,.,,..,.•.a.,,,.arra eels, nah. 918,176,634 60 188,177,662 47 2,065198 990,899 69 861,106 6s TO THE SHAREHOLDERS! 9154,761,440 04 Capital Stook Paid-up. .. r .,w •. ....s.,, r 11,560,000 00 Reserve Fund ,.• +' ,�* 912 560,000 00 Balance of Pronto parried forward 1,015,119 88 Dividend No, t05 (at 12% per annum), payable Dee, 1st, 1913 6 848,900 00 Dividends Unolalmed . .s»aaw.,twr. era.y,,.s. 8,426 11 a• - - +•>.,.•'- ^- 850,228 11 13,875,119 80 - ASSETS Current Gold and Silver Coln Dom In len Government Notes ..,.,,., ...,... ...., pepostt in the Central Gold Reserves Deposit With Dominion Government for the purposes of the Circulation Fund Notes of other Benito r .,., ♦., 11 •,, , ..,. Che ues on t other Banks . „ . .,r Duebyother Banks In Canada .,.... . ...., ..a Due by Banks and Banking Correspondents elsewhere than in Canada •, bon -Onion and Provincial Government Seouritles, not exceeding •market value Cenadlen Munielpel Securities and British, 502619n and Colonial' Public Seourtties other than Canadlstt, not exeeeding market value Railway and other Bonds, Debentures and Stocks, not exceeding market value Cali and Short Loans its Canada, on Bonds, Debonturoe and Stocks .., .. :.,. ...a Oen and Short Loans elsewhere than in Canada arse 00. 9180,248,786 7$ .a 6 7,802,007 72 11,664,142 00 619,486,209 72 2,000,000 00 578,000 00 2,676,878 7 678 8 7 8 0. 0,686,249 S 1160 12 8,603,452 06 1,127,312 01 2,081,888 e8 14,505,506 92 9,002,199 01 10,817,498 66 Leans to Provincial Governments 4$ 247,485 89 f.oana to Cities, Towns, Munlcipalitiee and School Dice treats 0,686,624 08 Other Perrent Loomis and pia0ou Its }sea baba to of interest) . • .. ,., ,.„ .,a.' 98,606,928 1 ' Qverdue Debts (eatPntated lass provided for). „. 1'76,673 is w. --.-----M+••,..•••• 9102,716,658 66 ,Hank Premises, at not more than goat, less amounts written off ee,,.. 4,788,1 28 68 t.labtltties of Oustomera under Lettere of Credit, as' per.eontra ,.a,,a 381,106 60 72,385,791 71 $180,246,785 73 PROFIT ANI) LOS$ ACCOUNT Bail ail of Profit and Loss Account, 30th November, s 610,216 38 f!fgflte for the reify after dieduoting charges of manage. • ment and 011 other expenses, accrued Interest on • deposits, hili prevlefon for all, bad and doubtful debts and rebate of interest en unmetueed bele 3,942,100 t22 .... r ..9;,7 APPROPRIATED AS FOi-L0WSs ” d.. Dividends, Nott, 902, 108, 104`t{nd 109, at 12 per tont. per annum ,.,,,.,.,.,.,va.,lrrs, „ e..v• 91,587,200 00 Transferred to Off1'eare' Pension Pond asaa14.re *09 to, 100,000 00 Writtetl' Off Denk Frostiest Aaoou0t zr,.s,,rti 360,000 00 Potence- of Profit and Loss eprrled leeward s,r,,,•••.1 1,015,119 50 02,780,319 58 li eteextreaMeatieft ,EDSON L. PEASE, General Manaos6 Ici1"W I A i0leJ Conditions Tin 51111119 f In all account of the perienee'5' on a pilgrim Olen Grisham, in. a, Timid ILarper's Magazine, gives pen picture of the' collclit',o which Itnasian pilgrims to m travel •nthe st era . 1e ra e g� hundred, he declares, i-er.,7 ntodated in the hold oeoui ca"To wont down tho dark'„ into the bowels of the eilij writer continues, "and ext they lived there. 1 bad n4fa found a place for 'myself ne nights were in prospect. 'Pi was something never to leo;' ten for the crush there, tilt Hess, the foulness. and the teal "There wars first) wilderls linen sacks, hand„ cross0s, with the clutcltf with bears _ grey wolves follo^,rp,,,, tails round and rect(, �a,� 0, ` sacks men and each n wens combing out their hair ,or ing their underclothing: "As far as the eye coo looking into the dark depth hold, were bundles and p bundles and pilgrims, to tl' rat -gnawed timbers, whent. ikons and holy pictures, which gleamed little Cared) in the most noisome re the ill, the very feeble; and the maimed, tl1.h those who had .ei'thhoi"- no wish to get up an and sunshine ablive fleeted that it would impossible for me to s there even if I found "All night long prayed aloud and s their watches ox pr had its nautical )vi in the witching hoar the hold were not tivo pilgrims pro selves and singin the stern' enol' t and sang with night, and aft and each went' still to be beat'' bass prayers ole God." Will IS ALT*,,, A Professor Says' Sion of :� ervd t Professor G. JZ1. been trying to discxi have a craving for a Ile says it is not un value as afood th Nor is it of lasting ulant, Alcohol • a sant on all forms,, simplest micro -or most complex neivo however much it to thinking the co though an individu it as a stimulant, whole could not, '1 be of no permanep the struggle fore's ulant serviceablb,e cases does not exp{la desirable thing to' ail periods of thea' hi mental evidence f that it incr0a es0n9 or mental :"&ild There remail' I ations the den' demand•for a to feasor Patrick mend for joy grounds that t' are too double a demand wh 50 illatinitIve,eel fore,p t• tlic bei;: its ii otic in relax the tenet fires, and e011t1 aloes quickly a tificially what: tion" in the acct, to do in the lire SIGIiALT,111.0 "Wireless" ll' Crude The •report tha Ishtib a Bnlgar hailed news to Men rglative ' ,•.: •1 b 11 i at Berrien iS n'• hill recalls 11111,04.- ,. nailing feats 111 1.061 , Thu Basutoo, 11 t uu ti'oatly anticipate.: ?'aptly" in a era tiakt le, by etrikllig lir , drum of• goat- sitir; cin a spears') spot,, at ltl, drstancl!• tec.n port of the Mei ear oloae to k4, vilare,tiunea-heala passes the mooetag can this be eta, elate' tt itSgttr;tt Oast ,dllying ill te Beauties we about big hat reel& in Vele Of t p011s6, 1- oonditibe earl fro 'nolle it t notd.' 121 to 0(111 she behig nearest to the 1rltsrlts, only 32 short, This pr