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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1899-05-11, Page 3JACK • 418~4611116 16461/61606111646014101031 lie qUIRN VICTORIA:3 WILL. Grace Darling's Gran, itrtbrho.ritt VoYdetil 4111:ibt en.. ner eternme* leer nemeeen ler liens -e , in the lighthome log ths adventure nee forever eonneoted with eis demo. 11" 4Pee et the Wed" "" iitataL The news* that tint tomb Of Grace Darling, the faMous Northimlbeien liere•rn nam: "Nine Pereone held on by p - 411. ;het to Nice of Vbscolint Cram _heroine, ii in neva ot fulsia for its rs., tottarivairzt and were resemed sby the and the private solicitor of Qtrein V uttoria ni taken to mean . that the ,Ilitioation, brings back the memory at i aged eovereign a Great Britain ha: golden eeed" Welch time abould not tunne__ hieW BALLS AND POMANDERS* , "X don't ase Weil it isn't all right," Captelet Eviston Mentally noted, with be allowed to WACO. It le emus fifty u entre eillte Grace Darling was laid to The modern woman 'westrit among the rest under the ebadowt of "ging Nen various Jingling bite of 'silver or silver 'matte, huge and weave," ena withie gilt upon the chatelaine, an ornate lit - eight Of her lietethousen and at the tle box containing roinute foreign cruel Hawker Bonen where the good &Ade which Preeerve their refreshing step Forfarehire found a watery watt. and delightfue 'odor for A long time, itembornwirh Onureb is a foie one, with but there can not he ciaimed that then, much emlesiological intereet. But the ecerlt hoeee are exentle novel, except loadat'one win* sitteaote the ordinary in point or size, aa women hive alwaye visitor to its vicinity bi that canopien numbered Wenn thole trifi" Of ben" tombin the northwest corner of the UrY' aurae receptacle of exhilarattng churchyard, whereon is careen recline, perfume. ' Among the Minor ebjeeta Of beet in slumber, On oar clasped. to her 4 Peret0Acki use mentioned in the Wen - side, the figure of the maiden, whose tory of Margaret de Balm, daughter "single act endears to high o awl low 04 littroPhree de leoltune Earl ot Hero - throughout the world," ateWordsworth f0111 and Feeeex0 is a " Kum° de mune sang of her. • bre," Or isoolet ball, in the composition Atter the lapse of halt leettenture it of , which ambergris probable itoruked may not be unneceasare to recall'. the a PrinoiPal leneedieet• We 'Ore learn details. of •Grivea' Darling' S exploit. The that a nutmeg Waa occasionally Used Faroe Islands, a„ dangerous group off for the like Purilaaa. It was Set in ail - the . Northumbrian coast,' lie in the ver, deoorative with atones and Pearls direct route between' Scotland and the and wan, nvidently, an Object rare and South. Thelargest, and the interest highly Prized' 41-mmen the vablable.efe the mainland, is Heuse"Island, famous teeth of IlenrY V.-,. according to an m- ap the retreat of Ott Cuthbert. The VentOrY taken in 1428, are, enumerated remains of his hermitage still exist, a Musk bal. of gold Weighing 11 Oelices and here be died. 1 The Staples island and another of, "elver gilt. At a later group, across the passage renderea , peeled the pemandee, was 'ere corn - dangerous by the half -hidden Crum- - inblielir worn aa the pendant of a lady's stone^ Rook, are celebritted as the edgily eive AreurneedtPi4°4ri3n tor in oi.t haunt .of eseafowl oil many and rare Ouroluotiius Conceits," 1580^ ' . varieties, whese 'eggs are collected 1 Rho orange appears to leave been lima with muoh difficulty for the market. as a pomander aeon after its introduc- tion into England. Cavendish' des - Most easterly of all is the nongstone eriees Cardinal Wolsey entering a raark, and surtnounted by the tall red ' high-water crowded hamber "holding in les•hand c a very fair orange," weereof the meat, Rock, not, 4 feet above . , . , which has re. or aubstaxtoe Within, was taken mit, lighthouse, 68 feet high, and. filled again with the part of a sponge wherein was vinegar and oth- er confections ' against the pestilent aiea ; the whioh he most Commonly smelt unto, passing among the press, or else he was pestered with many suitors." ( , Sir Themes Gresham, in his celebrat- ed portrait by Sir Alltouico More, holds in his left hand a small object resemin ling an orange, but which ia a po- ni' aTnedir.so' Meth:nes consisted of %dried eleville orange, stuffed with oloves and other apices, and was esteemed a fash- ionable preventive against infection. It frequently occurs in old portraits, eith- er suspended to the' girdle or held in the hand. , rn the eighteenth tottery theentg- nilication of :this object became so far forgotten that instead of the penmen dem, rear oranges were introduced in- to portraits, a practice satirized by Goldsmith in his" Vicar of Wakefield." When the pomander was made of sil- ver .it wanelerforated with holes to let out the scent, hence nlie origin of the vinTahiegretrtlensoft mt"lenatl. ion of aerates that welch occurs in the inventory of Ali - note de Bohun, namely, .the paternos- ter of coral. With gilded gattdier, the larger beads. and the three branches of coral 'which he also poseessed. The above use of coral explains its 'being worn in later times, as an amulet or defence against infection. •-• e she protested, "You eleven% received a abrug of disguot, that when the tuty orders to Mop tbee damn, so you lodge wee tilled they would be in tiro are :lane vote* droit. And you don't very centre ot the mass ox Indians and „really believe in stuping it anyhow. as fax as Possible tram the only exit. so your conscience won't 'hurt you the For the time being teem were nay lead little bit," She went on cheerfully. thirty or forty Indiana sittings about, Eviston shrugged his eboutelera. • They took very little notice of the ' "Too late now Eviston," put in white visitors. and either moyed noise - laughing. "Yo tt °eget to leasly about, looking up front time to have said all this to eina. Eviston before time at the flood of aunlight atreaM- the invited us." in through the opening in the top of eavIington moved over etearer to the the lodge, or else eat quite Mill, mem- officer, and taPPeneeine lightly on the ingiy plunged in a stupor. The air was latouldee, oppressively Ult. and but or the tepid "You mean tbere may be trouble? "e pungent odor distilled from the pine he asked he an Undertone. ' boughs evoeld have been unbearable. Daptain Eviston frowned. "TOW', Onside and from a deneince came in - he said shortly •"That is, of course etermittentle ethe monotonous sound of It's very Unlikely. but one never knowe a ton -tom. Through the thinks in what the Peigana are up to in these the latticework of boughs could be internal, howling deems of theirs, and men bedistinotly the restless. moving I ani :Otte sere we will be tee only groups of Indians and ponies. whites there; this sudden °image of The Hon. Beatrice gave a nervous dates has thrown the authorities oft little laugh. their guard. We are probably the "I caul stand Much of this," she only Peelne insides the, Indians thene- whispered to Mrs. Carlingtou, "If neves who know- that the dance is to something,doesn't happen soon X shall remodelled her Will. , • - In herevery praline family ot grand- children and great grandchildren 0014 and daughter* are constantly beton born, whom the queen aura "remem- ber" in the dispostition of her property, but the death of the, mapegrace Duke Alfred cif Coburg was the mums of the itmue_diate thenge. • Measured be the standards of multi- in'l.lonairedom Queen Vittoria is not very wealthy. Her fortune is:Omura° unknawn. 'tin:449m estimated at less tban 025,t00,000. It has beenpIao- ed as high as ne5n00,000, but the form- er figure is undoubtedly /the more neatly warred. „ For, while •the Queen la undoubtedly feel ty, she is ale° generous. Afamily like hers makes a. constant demand elm her for money. This princelingn pension le bum/Mont for his dignity; be held today. Oh, bother! ine all run away through alteer nervous t. that one's' debts meat e•na ; tins ight, I euppose? he added...erne get- Captain Eviston leaned forward 0 - wag as cranky and nervous as a ward the ladiese. " • , aielie dolv.rY. Must 1:6 neonae(); -- Aroman? Re looked at the others -wait- "I think it will be. better-toretts.not and it is the "Widow of Windsor"who Ing exneetaattlef gfiA"' be said. to laugh or look- atomised, or alarmed, pays' the• bill in every ease. 1 grimly,. ."You seem datellented to see at anytlung that May happen," he said, It is lucky for ber numeroute ',brood this sun clanee, AO X take it thee° is "Too know ins rather 'cheeky, our be- _ nothing more to be paid? ing here: we haven't been Urged, to that the Queosit is etteute. ele jumped lightly into the trap be- come, and X don't think we would oare THE, POBLIO INCOME • • side Doyle..who gathered -up the reins &Specially about having them come to af, the queen is a fairly definite aunt with an oda expression on his sun- our weddings or funerals, or whatever from year toe year as follows; • burnt face. • correeponde in seriousness among • . As they drove mit of the incloeure. us to this dance of theirs, and ao we had Pelee Parse^ • •`• • * 46000 . Um. Eviston stood up in the trap and better be as 'quiet as possible." SaiarY, nouseholid. • . • 181.260 looked on every aide for Jack. . Anse Page shot an amused glance at Household expenaes; . • * 172,500 "I wonder where he can be, Pembroke oyez, Eviston's bent head. It Rove. bounty, . • . 18,200 Arthur?" she inquired anxiously. "X struck her that this English officer Ransil:else-8m • • • • * ' " 22,589 haven't seen her for sem so long. 1 waa most particularly fussy and nor- „nnapPrepriated. , . 8,010 meant to tell Iter that she must not vous .beneath his calm exterior. Miss • • go 'out riding On Nellie this afternoon., Kellwood looked. alarmed. ' getal. . • . . . . . , . 4407 589 but -stay with Rafferty (the other or- "I don't -believe I like this at all? Here are over two million dollars a aerie),. I'm afraid I didn't tell her she• signed. "Faber mer • - eyesight •le. ve r ne ' 11 t thdi nuna y. a 4, e Queen's s epos - good -bye, either, pow e ,_little chap." , deceivingeme or there axe at least five - a' , She aighed . a little. "'Well, she ale 'thousan4 blood -thirsty -looking Indians el, lam Only $800,000 n60eine of it is ao-, newties knows bow' to amuse nerself, and out ore the prairie; and it's awfullytualleesco. All the money gees for de - that's a merely, but wewill have to be warm; and stuffy in here. and I wish 'finite objects ee. to pay the Black Rod 'eery careful and not talk'of the sun- I wereback at the distachmetat." ^ ‘ , his 010,000 sa year and the Poet Lnee , dance before her. She will be ter- • Stirling ,obetekled noiselessly. • • s retie disappointed .to have Missed any,- 'Not- more than five hundare, I . . Mite his $5C,10, and the 'Secretary ot thing like theeBeane, though', 1 -should say, Miss Kenwood. However the Board of Orson Cloth his 0,500 and _suppose it's „no, sight for a ohild, eh, •five hundred Indians are equal to five SO on. , • • . • • ,Artharg" • '. -, • ' ' i• . thousand 'ordinary Men when it coMCS The te d. About li It . se sums are teea Captain Eviston's. ehoelders gave an to tomahawking . and. scalping 'you-. , , - . expressive sheen, but lie -ventured no know," he concluded cheerfully. s . as much, varying from year to•. year, r emark ' • grs.'Stirling put her hand over ben; talt usually more than a rolllion del- • , • . I "The reason that nine Eviston coiled ehueleted's mouth.' - ' ' - ilans, are expended upon royal palaces, vet obtain a view - of Yuck was a . very - **Don't.cieei; about such horrid tbingso some of which are not •occupied by the simple .eite. s .That young lady was at , /aortae, :she said. . • e .. . . Queen . at all; upon the - oval parks, tete ferniest. Mid of the pasture,bee r• Where. was - another long. wait 'and upon ih4 royal yaohts-from 4200,000 : hind a bin . cottonwood, with a pall of thenstm heat down more fiercely than . upwards -ter the royal octet for such . mei in one hand and a halter grasped. ever, and thtv general e murmur Iron'. other Heals as the salaries of theeneas- :firmly in tee, other, enticing Neltienehe groups of Indiens scattered over ter of the Tennis Court, Her Majesty's , • who was somewhat shy Of the sump.. the open ,space of ground grew. louder Limper, Biatoriographer and Warden . teens Linnet lOggeree to -etene nearer. ared more 'excited,. and the, Sennaof 'oi Regalia,. and Elm Majesty's Cheri - :rind let :herself • be caught. • . • , °anuses Pluninee and galloping • about ties•and,Bounties to Indigent and Nen- good tea, of government homes come nearer e A. and. fiercer,. They had essitous Persons in Scotland. ,. . eo'" with a fairly ROA trap to draw over been waiting fully three quarters of In a. were tee. Melee spends more 'prairie . land will. trot • ten miles an .an. hour when suddenly the Indians.- than 1380000 a year upon the Queen; hour without once . changing' gait •of ! nearest the lodge fell back and seemed i but nine -tenths ofr it is spent in more speed, and as regularly as clockwork. s to shift themselves Into kaleidoscopic or lass (anions ways proscribed by nen So Cantain Eviston, knew without . figures of brillionet hues; and there rose tom; over but. one-tenth of •it eas the sulting hi,waftch that -it was just ono, . yin-- a eat patter .of moccasitted feet that Queen any control. o'clock when Doyle turned the borne I - • s- beet time restlessly. to' ehe gene 'throbs Atter all, she's not, so -rich. It is: no . up the citelt pant Lecouvreuree end Of a tom -tont borne. by an Indian; who Wonder than her Meal • wedding pre - he - : saw before him, a level stretch •- of ' came slowly down e bill a little to the sent to a young favorite is. an India - :land with cottonwoods surrounding it •right. - Be wee dressed most gorgeous- shawl. • . • , •ly in painted buckskin elaups and crim- •On three ' sides, and the open approach froson-flannel shirt*. °leer .which Nedra ' • HER PRIVATE. FORTUNE, • ra, the creek sementing with nediaits • • . and ponies. As thetraps threaded hung lenemerable rolionoelong Plaits of The private Perinea ot the, Queen le , ' ee r beaded at the top and fitted into no doubt .be nail 'Made up • of _savings „teem way slowly through the moving - made, theIedians fell. back oneach httle leather sockets,. the- olavir of .an out of this 10 per cent. unspeolfied. • ' e. • s. aide, scowling and muttering at sight eagle, and 'a necklace of , vivid. blue- So long aa the lerince Consort was „ of the officer's black and the private's ' glass beads. ' On his head was afbeau- alient he received 1150,000 a year, which ed tuniotine • coeonet. of Many -colored - poem- Peement lasted twenty-one years, Inas- tr. - • ' . . . - In the middle of the .oeeae ground pine quills that rippled in the hot ler, jug, with his death in 1861, • Prince - was a circular ledge at least ninety and. from the s centre- of winch rens in Albert was not above speculating with . feet in 'dem:meter, the Aides formedof eeagelets' feather tipped.. with narrow his money, and, as men in the city poles twenty feet tall,set near to- '' omelet ribbon. Aerate his forehead ex- were always glad to give him. "tips,' geteer and Interlaced with boughs of . . tended a broad yellow band of paint. :he was ge'nerally suceessful. -Ile tato ' cottonwood and pine., held in place here A knee-rattio dangled against his side 'considerable. fortune. to his widow. and there by.leather thongs " The and jingled as he stepped lightly, rais- *the Queen has received many other" s' : roof, which slanted upward, easforixted , ing each foot yeey high and needing bequests. In. 1856 a Mr. Neeld died In niece the some way, the cross -poles the • knee as a hems does in parking. and left her ;2,500,000. Other money all converging at the oehtre•and Behind him 'streamed a throng of paint- intts have come, her war, but probably • • ' fastened to the tall central lodge -pole. sole fantastically dressed Indians. ,Sud- far more ham taken the form of jew- Tee:boughs whichveer° strewn Utica denly., the. Indians .neateet the leader. els* plate, trinleete and costly trifles, . --over the root ' stopped . at about four beret- into a wild, high song that Ming 'Whose aggregate value -of Cava°, not feet from the top of the lodgeleaving quivering and ehrill on tee hot air to be a eircular -Open Apace through s - which and - then• eleoppect suddenly to • a:low is esticonfounded with crown jewels - mated tie more than 05,000,000. tint sunsbeatniereelyt ' . I ' key. only to break .forth terrifically ' Taking Queen Victorian fortune at . .. • " • - Doyle halted. the borne On the edge again on the high note. With the be-, the more moderate. estimate and' re, Of . the dear.. space id front , of this ginning -of tee.song a seen of agitation rnembering 'that in England 8 per cent. • • .-.10-ctige anclewaiten for orderoi. Captain passed through the .znass of Indians, is a pretty goodeeettirn upon invested Eviston swung heel -sole down from the and every mocassined foot was rafs- money, Queen Victotian private in- -trap had looked narrowly at the group ed and brought down with indouble come may be some $700,000 a year; or, of Indians about him- as•he waited for stamp upon -the hot, dry grass, which with the, unappropriated $800 000 of the the Others to come up. Pembroke was crackled and twisted under the blown civil lien a little, over $1,000,000 a roue ' the. first. . -•._ As the heaving, flashing . procession There are, indeed, several of the "1 say we are in greet luck. Plenty; neared the lodge, a dozen =edible& 'Queenn.subeects who are much richer if Onto. It 'doesn't seemed to have • men .emerged from the group nearest than she, •And beside the wealth of soramenced yet," he alionted. • • - the entrance, and joined the chiefs, who the Itothathilda her fortune is small. The impeder nodded. . walked behind the musicians. Although ' But by strict ecemomy she gets along "All right -so far," beaddedundoes the day was intensely hot with the and will leave something to seaoh of les. breath, • -• f short, fierce heat of the Canadian sum- her deseendantS. • ' • • Vie Page jumped lightly • down mer, the medioine-men Wore Iteag robes from ter seat .in, the trap and °Mae of fur that almost -completely maven , Over toe Ione s'. • . eped tliern and from out of which their GERMAN SOLDIER% , "lent this peefectle she ,exclaimed, pallid. faces eppeated glistening with ' . IIION., . '' breathing quitiklye in her excitement. great drops of perspiration. Aeound- •neeetee atottatoker.s vroups .t, eeefe Thou 'Iltio neck or earried in, the hand was "Think of =teeing thiel How awfully feathers! I wish X Iota brought „my' lodge, eaolr Indian threw up lus head The''41(110--rAe Der= Ftitisee ,10 net pictoreaque they are in then -paint stud the Medioine-beo. At the door. ef the . samem." • .. for an instant as if to take a last look Pass their nine merely in going , ',„ "Perhaps it's just as well you didn't," at the sun before entering. The 'leader through the Manual or .marohing and Mentirked Captain, Eviston, coolly. took his stand neer the central lodge- aotioter-'marching. Gymnasium peed- -tonere ores it man torn to piece's down poles in the full blaze of the sunlight, the requiremento of the near Medicine teat lent year for which streeraed though the opening flee ,is an'a at . thetographing. Some 'Indians Whe did and continued beating furiously upon service* as -well as snectial military hie -tom-tord, while the Indians meth- periodos in waling walls, &a. To twit oat happen to want to be photograrohed. • Xtes eel very well if,then oda* and ask ed past him in their endeavors to get the soldier's agility and ;strength a you to dos it, bee I neeteldn't phetogreph Pitteett fosse _ when to nee the den: board wall sixteen and te half feet theen en tease arid 'wenn they are wen. Ae then' 0168ed 01°131 °aPta • • wrought Oup at, a dance, unless X was espechos, reonden to 410 mr, rigidly Irmo contact` With the eupPle, of it; flow can a man six neat' tall Evistonet parte the. women shrank back high is built, with n pla.tforne me top risk, Mateeded in ,ensouinte. the nine they are. Proviaion is als° Pude in "Where eball we leave Abe erape, dark hued bodies. After a little, it climb it wall without pnnon .pro e'eo- Perall ee fromthe wreck," ' -their code for women habil* who de- ntvistonn' dereanded Oaelingon to catch bold off Alone it would ted fon, porn- narrow *pace was left freenabout. the ., . . . J, i. in from all over the civilized oeorjd, i sire to early on the Wiliness of their But honora and homage soon flow* ; Ing up.. .group, era thy breathed marc easily, . ' Vaptain Zeiliton 100104' ithoet'liim steld-lealten forwara with pine, etpe.ote . be impossible, bat viitli hie contradele to Hewitt tette' eta. Henske sent biter. hesbennal In Mae of the latter's death viewers;.. the Duke -.Of Northuinber- - or illness. In oreer to do this the wife. *tnekin. _ • ent fame. • „..,a, a., moist it 'betionitte possible'-• though . by^ land presented her, at 1.1ewiek* with ,a ' newt have been enrollee in WOES OF MILLIONAIRES. trees near the entrance to the lodge. • he said, nolioating a mall alley of elDoyle will pat th'ene in that grove? °f the -five hundred u4a1448 AvtaY ntertleltila damn. le;e0 Oi the 'minters gold watch; a subsorintion oil 4700 wee the reet reastikag„ theneeelve$ at the ine°P e°wa eine three hundred ,crowded into the WO' 4. .A A place their clasped rained; prop:Mille of inareistge, were not ' t i Vienne in tut an apprentioe for three years. Aio the union An Englialt millionaire has just been 'nee* jerly, "you will hot May- with them, ieniee0 * night 'merely to sit In a boat adjudged .inceixible, of looking after "But," he added, turning to the or- entrance and around the aided, where,. hands under the feet of Ave Of their lacking, one ,from the itetist who came Innetielee emen appear u ever they could Mee. In the center of inturades, who etande erect. Thee, al to take her portrait. ( She was titter- the protein* of etteges of the union . hot_ ono,- witnedno see beckoned to the lodge, abent the pole, Was left 'an he phoes his hande on the wall to during a shipwreck kitty at the Adel- and „show their ekill, before they are hpferitipereyototrte.dellse. imagines birnself the oPell ottani:on epee, around which the an Indian. leaning againtst a, little back. ouch end modeenennou ennsee theme 'steady hisievelf the stooping soldiers phi. In December her *pee deed was skin pony Mid regarding hint Mate *dually dmintatized, in 'a hodgepodge allowed to open shops of their Oen, A. Sono yeare ago a rich merchant property certified barber mutt have es took the idea 'hoes iii the lodge it possible? iliac& Vogue was a notoriously bad der eticke fell fr. e the hands of the the. top of the Wall and pull himself , trite: of the day; and "Grace Darling - ilerostwyjeleariliAtTait:Zhar:ecuubrii:oinw 4 e 4 him thStidt°41ti;hah:aiddlierweLwrruaii:Petn:grii::::,-* Provinglee etioyee," he saids "tell the youtg Indians and squaws. , selves. Rack of these were reamed straighten up, raieing him as far al ethet Indian, tittek Tongtte, to get tie Suddenly there was a lull. The sten- The eoldier is( not yet able; to reath °a 88 Was a d knowledge of end pans an examination iiiese;se, they catt. telefrattgint47Irv:18ttere Captain Eviston for borne eteleing; but ent of almost perfect silent*, Then at full lengtio- and extends his hands ed the e Austrian barber be well versed in the in nest aud was to cOntirule it, They of+ _ tridiati with the to lo -tom, the beating 'up. A. oomra'de veins is on top stretch- uk. litegattitt agretraretletpoegneeirtoy; for experiment. Not only mist the- f reinannend had been nAP twiee bef"'4° feet 'were Mill, and there WaS a raorit- es himself out on the roof, lying down " Steamboil leaide a the curkme invade theret we! net another Indian in sight , 4.1k Pra0tIoal skle of the subjeot, but quer. that the imspeetoe' knew by name, and, from the group of medicinemen One to the soldier below. Then by main lighthouse sevirrtersete;rtenadgigirdtilfg lbseddes, he thought that Black Tongue, of the tones, raked hie eyes to the the man is pulled. up until he etineatch one toted Attie Yet Hewitt writes ne goet, are irtilelfrelatitt tsototlebkzi:11 71 mote Op, and advanoing to the centre 'strength and tionsiderable scrambling be i Ids it i found her b alio the elementary rule* of aritisep. biam of light one addressed an hero- hold of the top and help himself up. enamel -room, would be inclined to be the fame which interned to lier so lit - II W tics are thoroughly gone into. ed lipalto , °Oita to the stitt. At: he spoke, the Offieers stand be with bayous:: li ea* Pacir VOlagne nen* 1.61."' ixtuseleat of his face twitched, his lips guarded by little bags 0 chamois, 1 Sowr' he lia . Y" nee their gaze. The words seernad to fall end hurry the praotiaing preratel. but natural and neesesery, "a perfect realization of ft 'nettle Deane in ail tle merited, for she thought her action ed de English forMem little siMple, Melded A STRANGE rurrittbunott. w a U reltestantly. id in a sttrl ton became liety,-and his eyei wavered In that nO Otie can be pierced( by aprod, . Doyle WO 2161 any ell& Penton- involuntarily froot his lips. Suddenly Speed is; a nettemary, part of the men A native paper printed in Arable In tnee Wes, "Naplake, aatiopoteists, puskaii," he nky, end reeling, fell backward among stand idIy by while the GOMM* Olittab X thoroughly good creature." he flung. ttp his bands toevard the Lion,- for eni enemy is- noe going to able, gentle look, the it eetetit entile -Young won:tart-the t quiet, anti- Cairo toys that a villager of More ne imid largele end dieeconneetedly, with the. otber raedloine-rnen, who, wrap• their ramparts, and the limn who 0 etweep of his arm toward the womere at fine; to Seeing Hewitt, Averse mieh sold some hued. After discussing ped in a. wet of trance, took very IR- eorambles up fasteet is proclaimed, VIO, to. whom with hie wife the boat hiding plat*, he . e The Indian threw out hie hinds With fie nOtioe of hlite The silence that tor in this test of agility. It le tummy strangers, she eventually- allowed hita her father irpoke of her dislike et decided to pat the Mena, under the enen toe alraost Gallia gesture a Impote followed lasted for only a moment, knitter, with heavy knapsack on yaw to enter, and he found leer at her *ewe but Moved softly Intl quiekly te (Th Be Oentinttlide back and clothed in marching, gar- ing, neatly deemed, her hair braidede mattrees of the beley's oot. Of motile -r- dently his chief steed talking 0- ti the gram to Where an old Indian, vi, —,----„, —,— - this. • manes, to give up a straight wall like (he Humana Sooletre vote of thinlaz and tbot night three robbers Game to se the entire 'village knew a the mese . to group of Young brume. Theolder man , TWO IOW. teemed on the wit I above her head, get the money. The baby began ory- il t nod intently to the few quick TUE BRAIN% WEIGHT. P a Mats Mime teapot; in the ing, and one at the robbers oarr d it ,worde lellek Tanen. poured Hato hist Paterfienllias, furiously -You scouts- ' plaoe of honor la %be room. Hewitt outoot and ell. The father ant th- aar, and turning to where nasain (Iran why did you elope with my The average weight of the brain of wee charmed with her good genie end. er, 'awakening, rashed out to tie &isnot and hie peril sterol, bowed eaterhtent aravele, and motioned rodeo Meek Totem; proteded them tenable fees and flonienall of a society . th rus row-. an adult male lis tb,ree pounds: four modesty, her mia deoeitistail iootrtc; ra:rtai fax'- taken tilietlx0rttrettetrae614t thitiordaebnier; rill oututese The nerves are all onanected tune-buntere after her little submit,. his ooturadee In tee tu ci them tweed tho New Soo-Inetowe-To avoid the lout. itAlireetly4r liTviget ---"rn ee. . far auto of Ms tr, and directly fee- Oat IWO end led them to phloem on the weedimin Man IteamIngly - Thank 17;it'l' ter enan OT:. telel°fwaN fleetiara 01111 latinc, it; 741/1 °f tit. het' re log tier th a T placed Grace ,Darlingn home, and which every deem envelopes in foam and spray. • , From an account by' the .only cabin passenger who survived, and which is taken from the Spectator of the ensu- ing tveek, we, learn; that the Forfar,. fibire, a steamer bound from Hull to Dunden,encountered a terrifio gale of St. Abb's Heads on Septembee^ 5. and Dundee, encountered a terrific gale off leaky boilers, drifted into the Farne Islands, where she struck in the small hours. The passengers, in bed when warned of breakers close under the lee of the vessel, rushed cm deck, and an awful scene ot terror ensued, "the shrieks of the 'houttlea mingled with the roaring' of the - ocean, and, the aoreams of the wild! fowl disturbed from ;their resting place." Within three minutes after atriking the steamer parted. by the paddle -boxes, the stern half being instantly, washed away down the tereible current of the Piper's Gut, carrying with it twenty - /Iva passengers, the forepart remani- ing wedged in the rooks. Eight of • the crew with the one cabin passenger es- caped in a boat alinest nuraculously, for they unviittingly took the one outlet through the breakers; but the captain, stioking to thet ship, was washed overboard and drowned, with his wife in his arras. At daybreak.; William Darling, the lighthourse-keep- 'er on the barren Longatone, descried Anis of 06 unfortunates clinging to the ,rocks, stirrounded by the raging sea. During that awful night their cries had been heard, above. the atom by his daughter Grace, then 'alone at the lighthouse with her parents, and when Darling deenend a rescue- impos- sible, she urged lent to attempt it, and seizing •an oar herself jumped into the boat. The father: followed and Me mother helped to launch the boat to what seemed -certain death. This boat, one of the high-prowed cobbles in use on the -Northumbrian emit, has survived its mew of that memorable Mottling', and was exhibitoil recently in London at the &hornet exhibition. Grace Darling was na Amazon. - Hewitt describes her as "not tall: her figure being no means striking." Feet years later she fell an early vic- tim to consumption. glut all the twenty-two years of her life had. been passed on her lighthouse home, io con- stant scombat with wind and water, and she was no mean oarswoman. While her father, with a desperate effort, landed on the rook, Grace ef- forts and in rowing kept the cob- ble from being &mho& to plecen The heroic pair were thus enabled. to re- scue the nine surviimrs, it:thanked and completely exhausted,. bearing them to The lighthouse, where they had to re- main three days - till; the weather Dil- ated and a landing could be effeoted BAY'S PICTURE. She had just the day before received the proofs .of ten -months -WA 1Villie in six different poses, and the photogra- pher /shuddered as •he 'saw 'her once more enter .his parlors. • . "ra2 wine," BIM eaid,. leithout any obvious grief, "but none of these nega- tives will don "Not tee of. the mix"? he inquired, hopelessly. "No,' she aale, "I'm afeald.not.. You .tuve, I like Ibis one very welle though, of course, it doesn't do baby justice; but his Aunt Ellen says it's an a.bso-, lute ^caricature of the dear little fel- low. The one she likes I don't cane for at all, and his papa says besnould never know for whom it wes intended; it leaks so cross; and baby is such' a sunshiny child.. "The one he likes, this smiling one, r shouldn't consider. for a moment, for it makes baby's mouth- look so enuoh larger than it really is. . "His grandmother those that one, but as Cousin Fanny said, there's a very queer look in the child's eyes in int, --very queen! Hovrever, see likes that one where he's alrnost crying,' that sob- er one.. You ought to have heard baby's grandfather when she said she liked it. • "He .realter deoided the thing, for on the Northumbrum 'coast. In an account of the invest on the few what he isaid seemed so seesible. He 4: asked Ints why I didn't have some more bodies ever found out of the forty-five who perished, the lepeotator of Sep- taken and tree if there wouldn't be at tember 22 thus calmly alludes to . ..„letunt one that would really look like woo. Now, when Can he sit again f exploit, 'without the big head einem the photographs and the epechn It's hard for me to ispare the time, but views Within it few days with winch late you.eee it is the only' thing to be dorier ter day journalism wined have trumpt- en it: "Nine of ^the persons saved owe their lives to the huraanity and ine trepidity of Grace Darling,- a' fine AUSTRIAN WOMEN BARRS. young women of 2e. daughter of the Women berbera aren quite the rule keeper of the Nortbl Sunderland light in Mists's, and Austrians take no house. -ller father would not venter. out till she urged hini .t0 Make the be 0,,,fa, and the Berbers, and new. chances with their barbers. They must 'effort, offering to Otitis An nit hereelf. neer They then put off, and: at extreme Maireler VW= °f "um" sees to it MS LIKE A ROMANI pliy 1 110.1“0: STORY OF A POTTER WHO 14ABOR, ED NAVY WRARY'YEARS. Ile Was Ospresied rcver$7 and Cow Onept-Iliereara oalisme Freeelosisis, •1POSOWd the stereos. or tee ellaeleet oetherns true y Slut at Lest. Athlone te • More thert 800 yea ta ago there1. ed in Franco a man nettled Bernard Nelsen* 33•041 60 ed. Paliesy, the atory of whose life reads CE1111 INTEResTir4 guts ABOUT OWN COONTRY, Cranbrook, 334 like a rout:ince, for hie when Iine was we worn. ehangett and ineidentelly saved by meet nbetheen sroNr hp* etteganie Mg a beautiful cup. • ameciation. - After Bernard Palisay Ind looked en* Ymir, )3. 0., est Ionise on, an enameled cup of blame weece weeks eeetelet. • he saw by thanes hie Whole...noire wee ne. Ragtime* -.Minete there are 00 to dimover 'the secret of producing Orange WOW" • white enamel &Woo, 0., Minern Union will He lead devoted himself te oltemioae Meet -0" bueleitai• re:lean/hes for improventent in pottery, and traveled ethrough France and Germeoe for that purpose, at the Name time carreing pie blueness of a land .sittiveeer imilionsh his puree, The reeolve to dial:lever hove' eveite ee- awl woe made occupied all a his thoughts, and weary tiine anal* fan:kiln had *waiting for eis eapern meets to succeed, His liadetio one to go to for advice 'and help wien, he fallen over end. over aoain. , ,ENDX,EnS AMT./RES. After mixing different kinds of „play arid 'shaping -It lett) a tup, :ember or dish, he put it into the omit, hoping to see it oome out White and beafiti.: fuL but day after day and year aften year he was disappointed as nothing but brown wait*, greeted his weary eyes. AII ties time bis 'neighbors were laughing at him. His wife scolded and reproached him, for his family was starving and the poor children oiled for food, and altogether that was. e eery: unhappy thee. in the Pelisse household, Poor Palisey, who loved ih .and was working fpr their en- tered, as well as llis own, after eeproaceets would leave off working for the secret welch se tantalizingly evad- ed him and go to painting on giant until the family was comfortable again and theno,he would return to les anxious search. • B17101tD UP THE FURNITURE. And so time went on, and several yeans more pared in hopeful expeeta- non by the determined man and doubt tine diatrese biles twiny. Filially he became so sure that the Mott was al- most that he -wee more in earnest than ever; and for six days and nigetee he mit by the oven, ;memoir leaking time to eat, and only taking te., few minutes to sleep, and feeding the fire with* everything that e lie could find, bet even then he needed more heat, and he had no monee to buy feel. In his excitement he rushed into the house and began to break up Chairs and ta-, lees, even tlie. bedstead and flooz were sacrificed to 'the fire. Then his wife ran* soteaming to her neighbors, bog- ging them to mane and tie up her bus - band for &madman. But, fortunate - by, it was too late, for the fire was bereing it.a brightest and hottest, as if it knew that uPon it hung not °WY the future' happiness •of the Pelisse but_the Swot of white, enamel. THE NEXT MORNING when the oven Wu opened, his long years of anxiety and labor were re- warded, for there Mood It little dish, not brown, as usual, but "white and glistening like a dove." Thee his wife and neighbors changed their opinion of the "madman," as people are apt to do in the prestsnee of success. He went to work With a good heart now, and adorned soma vessels with flowers .and figures of animals and colored them to repreeent nature. These he :sold for a high price, and pelmet. and plenty reigned again in the Palissy eente. 'Atter e, while bis fame reached the ear of a rich nobleman, who gave lent an order for making tilea" for the floor of his palace. Other members Of the nobility, and even the Xing him- self bought his wares. So it came about that he 'won fame and riches through triale, anxiety and /stunned- ing, such as few people are mina up- on to endure. . IT SAVED HIS LIVE. And the eight of the enameled oup and the determination to master its Secret 'saved his life. He was a Hugue- not, protected to^ the Xing, and when the „terrible massacre ot St. Baxtholoe men' vent ordered, Queen Catherine es - 'tonally exempted him, that she might profit by les knowledge and wonderful getting in making pottery. for the erne banishment of the homes of the no- bility. Panay was not only a potter, but he Wien scientist as well. He gave the first. correct theory regarding the origin of apringe ,and formation of !stone sand foesil lie was a sin- cere, honest and courageous enam and although at them it seemed as if ev- eryeody and everything was against him, his strong determination to over- come °babe:ties which sertounded him year the fight after 16 years, and Oar. rice him to fame and fortune. This is the etory of a •man of determination and single mindedness who lived over SOO yearn ago in Prance. nI0,00e opera house will be emote ed at Roseland, B. 0, elosidand's postinaltter rostielves a ,mele arY PAO a Year. • A gas OOMpany wants to natal * Plant at Nelson, 13.0. k. A. new railroad statien will likel erected at Wall:4000mM. • Greenwood, ax, PresbYtartaaa P Pose erecting a church.. Battleford, WILT., is corporation see a village. Telexurnnuth tenneeta en ae fac ans o Carman; Mau., OhUreh, " • le to have Tee Pr wilt buil The best, -e Greenwood, B.O., are held at fromee3,000 to 05,000. Lindsay Council has net gelde .0513...fie • for fighting the caterpillars. • A Caledonian Societe has been fo I ed at New We.stinineter, B.C. 'A Belgian sendioate may • este a glass factory at Mathieu. Two-thirds of the bUsieus :Vernon, B.C., handle bicycles, • Orillia Citizens' band ha granted 0100 by the Town COU Tho. new . Melville •Pees church in.Fergus will cost 018, The business men of gernie nave orgauized a p A branch of th is to be opened a Eassland, B.C., i have a High soh The Indian teuri.in • will •• The -Merchan eleven branche bia. Woosiatittle--niay Ceonemissioners to look after the het .4:1T.t.luie'-'' nonseor of Rev. Dr. Coclira at Zi Churoli§,Brantford, will be pa ,12,4- . . ford are to have their inhales lb. las established a hospital in Dutch • The'kinderg. erten teachers in Brant- 001:nsedoeat.v....Tho.mi Donnelley will lik. oily . be a candidate for mayor of Kingston Dr. Barclay, formerly of Strathroy, . . • The lega.1 lawn of' the Bound& Creek district, RD-, have manned ..., arti7eleantiwwooe' , le Oen • asseeneent„ no' Itel show!' $500,000 wortb. of property in th• Tath rceiet ye.ilver grey fexakins were re-. oently aold by Indians at Atihoroft, B. C., for ;100e* -.. • Chatham doctors Want to be allowed to ride their bicycleit on the sidewalks of the town., ..e. o •e Tee Peterbortee,Hortipeetural. •&nee day has been guttered 3300 by the thWla.e°11-11311411;troh • bas been elected • presideut a the Rainy Inver Distriot Board of Trade. The Vancouver City Connell will give 050 to entertain the Wester Canada Press Aesociation. W. H. Fletcher has been appointed commercial =Star of tbe ' Ste:titer& CowlieoodgiasttemInalestiintuotaer.d of Education is epposed. to the teaching of typewriting ' in the town schools. ponductor Lethbridge, of the Mid- * lentedivision of the G. T. R. has been nu trostijil..yeep. , A new town hail beininshounee onnthireoe,„ ee. Xettle River 3.1% British Co 'fin. It. Nakusp, B.C., will lee in orporated ra is known as Beaverton. as a city in July and Thomas Abriel Is likely to be tbe first mayor. Godfrey Booth, the manager of the . Bank of British North America at Neve Westminster, B. C., hag resign.- • Viotoile, -B.,Ces, chief of police cone. • plains that yoniggegtrla of respectable families in that city envoi, the etreets late at night. •ne , *--- Xohn Carnegie, ex-M.P.P., has- be:et en , re-elected president of the Peterboro* Board of Trade, T. Q. Qum-term/ins is the new set:ranee. • ' An effort is being made to have the hotels of Nelson, B.C., clotted between twelve onlock Saturday night and eix o'clock Monday morning. • D • The body ot John Evans, the d•sek kart& who fill overboard teamenhe steamer Slooart, has be 'gonna floe - r ing in the lakes near Itombery, B.C. *lastest Andemon bag retired fro* the management of the Greenwood, B. 0., branch of • the Bank oneetritteli- '''''''' North America, F. T. Shortt, of the Ashcroft "branch, is his stint:Vidor. • DRESSING FOR, A GOOD VIVRE. Wear as few bands esposaible it or near the want, and in all Cabe* wear them as far below the *else -line Ms poesible with comfort. Make draweeis with ats little fulness at the top as pos- fired hien a cleekship at entail ealare Bible, • and alevines make them on a bis own Office. He took it and kept t work nearly twenty years. When eareetilly fitted yoke. If you wear a eietthe left nearly eneopenee, .chemise or bond -cover beve It fit Two English millionairee were not- ionoothly, and nee no sort of frilly WM. for their parsimony. One picked wings that will allow .their iinprint p and emoked, envie end!. The other, through Wolter fitted Wane. Make Iter fine Inceptions h hottee, °mut egnodisartooullbed umardefaulalLnoolilleatthinga atIlletrimmas slienboxikas be Ian ayto, utiipiineastiotobruattbleert thee. men Wars ineane. Both were than mobroidery. If you weer a sheet raved in benzene •under -petticoat of flannel or other ma - Another millionaire' imagined for a terial, melee with a fitted. yoke that onsiderable time teat be was a drope well over the hips and abdonten, utrrel, and would eat nothing but keepieg ell fulness -both top end bete ora- 6 6 . e op peaks:en Another wets too parskruonioua even. ?should befitted with mule preolsioe buy hemmer a 'Werra overcoat. the skirt. to your eery beet goWn, awl loose a Ifs friends made him a pre. shoule amens be wore well beioW the nt of CCM an4 he promptly told it at waist In front and on the hip'. esooact-band and pooketed the raoney. • e* A STA.NDING INVITATION. Glady Whater beeorne of Mabel? Do you flod potpie greerally pretty ` *Rolle -Sheet joittOri the great men f anon a life theorems agent ority. btlI solleatcrr. Gladys-tou don't melte to say she's 01, yes, Weed, answered tbe latter. dead t nee useale always Ink me to ma Relle-Oh, no 1 ittarrisd Anali Oak • • ea SMItin see the Women root Whittle they emu- leitents, daugbter got a estelble to and minute nuninettiona, probebey hither, who all his life 0 nee Peneentei emoted 10,000,0000 itt number, Longstoes Rook till withia e visor of the whole interlor. haebaud, atishoth Mad& •ne., • ALAR. , e