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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1908-01-23, Page 361,2N\ n "-to. • , ,,,,overr-seureswerssswsiestosslorsiersirouerryglipliglipipplipprIPIPIPPIPIPF. r • • THE OLD LAND, , . Ota, It le -about twelve miles. in eirceinn formica,. widelt leevee tut uncomfortebly wide field, for the treileUre-seelter Whose . elue fails LIM. • illtber calm) Captain Benito. flyieg the . ?tiny Int eresting liappenums ,Reportea From daumeae---eiglit carroaated end en thirty- , , Jolly Roger at the truek of the brig He. two pou»der on a swivel, Hie betimes was to bury .church plate and valtiables •• taken froin a Ship ett•Otli/Yittitlit. Ahollt 182a Don Fedro' paid his lea • Britain. The service at the Manchester Oahe- drel wits interrupted in. a dramatic name ner on Christme meriting, when a. large congregation witnessed the unseemly spectacle of a violent struggle be the pub pit between the church officer* and an intruder who after wending the ateps, commenced 4 speak "In the name of God." The opening Itymn, '<Christiana, Awake," had just been sung and the first portion of the service) wee being recited, when a man occupying oue a the front *eats rose and with consummate eoolness entered the pulpit. He was Mr. Stewart Gray, the leader of the "Beck to the Land" movement in I/lane:Lester; and en - til recently the superintendent of the Muleicipel farm colony at Chet Moss. A. tall, gaunt man, with raven Welts which fell in profusion over his fore- head, and \veering a coaese brown suit, Mr. Gray made a remarkable figure in the pulpit. With amazement the 'congre- gation beheld his Actions. Holding his sombrero in ais left,hand,ohe raised his right tam high above his heati as if to command silence while he epoke, and then turning to the clergy and the choir, he b'e,gan to utter whet he aeseribed proteet, eir.'Gray was understead to eay that he protested against the holding of a service to commemotate the birth tif a Redeemer when there were so mazy poor people and so much. poverty in the coun- try. Tim yokes of the clergy a.nd: choig ceased. The dean (Bishop Welldone was observed to motion to Mr.Higginbotham, the senior warden, and in a few seconds lir. Gray was • strugglieg with half a dozen &arch officers in the pulpit. He repeatedly relettsed himself front their grasp, calling out, "I address you in the name of God," "1 am. speaking God's word," and. "It is blasphemy.' - Seizing him firmly, but without using unnecessary force, the churchwerdena removed Mra Gray from the pulpit, the intruder repeatedly remarking, "It is blasphemy.' Once down the pulpil steps the church officere quicIdy marched him across' the side of the cathedral to the Derby Chapel entranee, ' where he was ejected. The police were called; but it was de- cided not to give Mr. Gray into custody. • He was greatly agitated, and wished to enter the cathedral again, but, acting on the inetructions received from Ma, Hig- ginbotham, the police refused to allow . him, and finally escorted him to the street, as well as a colleague who had. joined him after his ejection, After the incident Mr, Higginbotham informed lehe Gray that had he told. him he 'wished to make a proteet he oould probably have arranged with the dean for him to have done so at the proper time in the body of the cathedral. , Mr. Gray.replied that he had made his pro- test in the only way open to aim, and in t,he least irreverent form. The dean made ho reference to the incident in his sermon. - PINK PILLS WILL CLIRE RiltUMATISM. •••••,•,••••••!, • Every Form of the Disease Yields visit to (...Q08 isitAndi buying the bothea . to This Blood Building , of the two men who had carried them. The recordiug instrummit is a glass For it le well known that a nstaellon left • • Remedy, siphon -About one -thirty-third of an with o, bullet in his skull will mount it as y ent that Another kneckea m t ff I ink eutometically. Twenty-two words a cue to Make the atateM sure -chests burietl with him. inch in diameter-4ml fills itself with guardeeti ghostly sentry -over the tree- - lima% startled hy my intrusion, brought himeelf together and wobbled out. .Tones turned to me with, a look a vase reproAelt. "Mail to see you, again, ottl•mang liut --why in the devil eoulde't you, stay away a, longer? I'd here bad it IA half an hour ;neve,' "Heil what?" "Why, his club. Lord, what a eouvenir that would have mase,s Our ways parted again for a 'While. _ was riding- a wheel•over the crest of AO Sleek Forest, *tear Titisee, puinplog slowly to the tep of the 1014,, white road. A pine cone struck iny holidlebar. minute can be aunt, a Ine_dichie will cure rheumatism, but y a o 2 all looked up. An aerial yoke mnittea. a Ty - The Pottlsen system. of mireleee tele- Ornate that ho f 1 Five millions eterling is the lowest es - pe u pop e wi , 1 •11 give you the rheunuitie naufferer must lose more saw a awayipg.speck silhouetted against rolean bailee with much unction and I phoily is:being fittecbto a Biltish bettle- , for the value 0 tOl. 0 o a oat . f p ft ee , h II than mere atatements-lie must lutve VICTIMS CF FIRE. goldthilted .swords, of chalices, studded Here le the reasout ltheimiatism ie it lank Pills cure all forms of rheumatism, ,Tones. ing through hie hand, "take my picture booing on a derrick into a. deep pit, of "Hey, old maul" he yelled t t- lairee children were sufoetetea. on Box- with, jewels, anti of a crown, whotie mid- . disease of the blood, Every dose of Dr. 1 -quick-you've joa In thue--ean't loild , rumne twee out in a huge mareitory .tolilderef egg• Willienia' Pink rills Actually make new kielyred blood -This new blood drives en - Mg night as tee zesult of a tiro weicli most diamond is as large as a pigeonesin , on much longer -camera's at foot ef the tint the poieonous acid, loosene the e tree -lest it half way win mg joints, and rlieunuttisal is ballietled. in Wordour streei, tioettsinute eyeaue, But Mr. Robinson's centre& for lirt g His camera was smashed, so I used The . gee mut ilkoor ox tan tJuutung . ie. in,g these pretty thine 'to light is eot noyeagds bwve tostigee to tee trete ship. There is telk of 176 tons of eilver hethereasons. awl. proof. De. Willieme a cloud.. airy nettled told me Waa my own, "Were you expecting met" 1 which. wee lore •bralte out is ocoupiee ty unchallenged. •Mr. Guissler, who in past asked, when he ehinnee down, With hark. tonear enowrooni, aim tale three tipper Costa Rican Goverment, lately asserted. of these statements and here is further "No, not exactly. Look here-biggeet itoors axe let out iii tenentente. At, his own exclusive right to exploit the fresh proof. Mr. 'Rao,e,1101trirnonittilig3:1 )er,e, aro! Pine cone in Germany, frone the tallest Memo .A. mid et, G. Quentrill es a tile- years lies had ti like peirilege from tale ed hands and treyed troueers. abOut Imlf-past eight a little gill cait- southern half ol the island, Ile aeclared St. Jerome, Que., says: ree on top of the highest hill in the ed tee ettention te. a peeing petit:emelt that no oue eliould meddle with the field I was a victim of rhetunatiem ana was almost a, cripple. My "Schwarzwald. There's something worth to a strong glare on 1.11e /list neer, cee of his concession,- wherein, to his mina, bit of the do., get my awe, became Ba eveueee work Made it ne- I admitted it, and we stood surveying mimed by a family named. Roil -berg, Don Pedro's treasure is halden. wao were out visiting time friends, If he be cessery for vie to be on my feet en good the panorama, of mouuded hills, and deep ,, 411, elerm was promptly given, and With. still alive, Mr. Guissler must be reckoned- . eey alter remeay, but *Ailing gave Me out gorges full of the sound of falling swollen end the pain eo agonizing that the aumetee of the house matte their • It is well knoWn time Lord Fitewilliam I was forcea to stop worlc. I tried rem - "Lovely!" I murmured. . ineo the seeeet---ai out elm, plotzaa. peel is understood that the earl found Mr. relief, nod. I began to think I would water, • 1 e'pose it is. But ewEIP0 inreuge. We ' smoke and flnallea is interested in tbiS treasure aunt, and It Barney, seven- emit alayman four. Guissler the vessel to carry hint baek to. suaded te try Dr. Willituns' -Pink Pals. "What yeeete, yes, aever get better. At laet I woe per - n s crowd when the fanatic figure of - it But this vessel was wrecked at sea, I le s than a month I noted a slight Pills for three months and. at the end move on." -,-From aJones, the Traveller," her three chielven, Dewy, aged eigat; say -I wender if I couldn't fine a big - A shout ol iteerer raSe 'fr0111 the funds. the island 'which he hed left for want of change in lag cendition. I continued the ger cone somewhere in these parts. Let's of this time the awelling htiel disappeer- by Wilfred II. Aiburn, in The Outing ad left me and Magazine for Ceteber, by the neigabors as Mrs, Inetzka, was and When Mr. Guissler at last arrived in screaming woman, who• was moogn.zed dow on tee top floor, ,obtain a renewal of the Ample concession ed, every pain end ache h sen beating a,gainst the panes of a, when Costa Rica in last October he could not e : i "It seemed hours," eaid en 'onloaker, ple e y cure I felt better in every way. I was com- Williarati' Nevertheless vowing that no one else It bout my t 1 ti and once more able to go work with ease. Dr. CUSTOMS GE ESKIMOS, BUSINESS HONOR. Messrs. John Harper & Co., Willenhall, Staffordshire (the partners being John Harper and Matthew Tildesley), made tin arrangement with their creditors as far back as 1871, and paid a composition of five shillings in the pound. la a cir- cular which they have sent out this week the executors of the late Mr. Herper say: altf.r. Harper determined that, if pos- sible, the balance of not only his own share, but the whole of the partnership debts should be paid in full. "The executors now find themselves in a, position to tulfill those wishes, which were that the creditors (under the 1871 deed of arrangement) still living, and, failing them, widows or children of such creditors, should be paid the balance due. "Uefortunately, the Inland Revenue a,uthorities have ruled that the moneys allocated for this purpose were not in sat- isfaction of any legal debts, and were subject to a 10 per cent. duty. Having had to pay on the whole amount to be - distributed, the executors regret that they have no alternative but to make a proportionate deduction." THE QUALITY OF MERCY. Belief Respeeting Future Life, ter of momenta. 'The woman cried out ' 1 d • e Thousands write giving just as strong this moment flames begat' to burst from states Mr, Geissler nod his wife arelltei the window, and he herriea wnith tae leo- • to be fohnd. His yaeht has net been • 0. findin their root in bad blood, such tine connected with the PeebOdy Museuin of thon, but as'at cure for all the ailments g Harvard Universitt, and who lived with "The firemen then hurried up tee Island aud its ghost -guarded treasure anaemia, heart p , alpitation indigestion, A the Eskimos last winter at the mouta of man to the geounda , . seen again, and it is feared that Cocos . . , stairease, and in a few eeconde one ap- has taken more victims. kidney trouble, headache and backache, peared carrying a little boto oe about disordered nerves, ete. Dr. Williams Pink Pills are sold by medicine dealers the Mackenzie River, related recentl .orice graetedeto him, • . the wiadow, though it was only a ma.- - should find 04 treasure of Don Piedro I B VI* Pal are certainly Vthy of all "before tee fire escape •was run as to Few Evidences That They Have Any 1. Mr Guissler left in a sailing vessel for the please I can give them. sistence to reseue teem first, but at A. message received at Costa roof of the value of Dr. Williams' Pink ills -not only as a cure for rlieume- that leer three children were within, end Coco's Is en , and since that tune t ere V Stefansson, ethnologist (if the An - begged the fireman wit° came to her as- has been no news of him. , erkan Polar expedition, who is *stole lum by artificial respite Dr, G. g. -se • GALLOP Tp DEATH. - or by mail at 60 cents a box or six to a reporter of the Seattle Post-lutellf- boxes for $2.50 !rola the Dr. Williame' geneer curious practicesumong that peo- ple in manifeeting their respett for the sever*. Efforts were made for smile min- ation, but though there seemed a spark ae Y. of Oak Hill -House, lVfediclue Co., Brockville, Ont. dead. o utes to 1 • ' By the retirement of Mr. Oh•arle's throu ' ' ' ' ' t 1 1 1 1 d 1 b a gh Walton to ahepperton, They senting a ru y me aim to y an ugu ii- civilized, their continued respect for their u i (G; ,I... - - -... le 4. :4 • - - . -0 poaarurreebdrdlei endf a rsi gs ta:ti i.feceinet neEmodfseounnart, 0, dead would do credit in chanieter and of life,. they were umeuccessful. Weybridge, was drowned near Sheppes- "The degree of the civilization of a "'rho dead bodies of a girl of eight ton on Tuesday afee.rnoon through fall- nation," said Mr, Stefansson, "is largely and of a boy a four were brought down I T ng into the dimes tie us orse w 1 e 'th h' h ha shortly aftertverds." riding along then river bank. measured by the respect shown for die The doctor, acompaniea by his groom, is a 'smal In the p great city Eskimos menet be regarded. as being - r unded by dead, and, curiously enough, while' these FAMILIAR ABBEY FIGURE. named 0ousina rode. from Weybridge equalid n s and pr.e• Groves, engineer, whicli teacea pleee at made their Way to the towpath lea,diag ous picture. Instead of brilliant flower sincerity to any of the nations of the the end of the year Westminster Abbey to Chertsey. Owing to the floods the beds and, well cared for gravelled welks, earth. They rear no monuments to mark the resting place of thoir dead and will lose a welekn-own figure anci. Sir rth wee ' slippery, and when opposite a few begrimed and sooty evergreens, Frederick Bridge his right -bead mane untsey, about ehree-quatters of morello here and there a. dilapidated va'ae one on. which to record the virtues and Mr. Groves ,who is eta! remembered from Ohertsey Bridge, Cousins, noticing taining a dead plant, and a few :teats, by many as Queen Victorie's "village the 'bank 'was very 'narrow shoutea a rickety and unelean, oreate au. impression aehievements of their heroes, but if years it. the royal fovge at Whipping- zilintiffonantnno inhiz.s mattaidtetet it. l'tt ' I vs 1 refound gloomaand depression. Bat 'memory is the oniy thing that grief can evidenced in affectionate and enduring blacksmith," was engagee for • eleven call her owns"- surely this' one thing is ham, Isle of Wight, but after loeing bhe bank' apieao7ed. to agive wo.17,11ronr the et a ert $ tkethee enotPon all, for at the further end of the sight of one eye through an Accident lie horse slipped and plunged, with the re- and fro' hand in hand, awl judging by cuenstpolemsabet,htehefsner svanniletliel. andogieefs4nercoluiss. garden a young couple are walking to wee placed in. eharg,e of the heating ap- stuhlt thatl tbotthh ride: and animal were the relit enttraored expression on both p toms offer some of the very few eva .was in charge of the'•engine of the or- their countenances and the fire of fond. gan at the late Queen's Jubilee and the ' ' 1Cooluvsnial: 'tett 'onecerivdirs'enounted, bat Dr. devotion whiel gliiitens in their eyes, 'deuces that these people have any belief pamtus at Osboene.-11r, 'nElvaves, who- , solemn wtn. o the Sealy! tithe was booted and Spurred, they have plighted their eroth each to respecting a future life. Abbey in 1874,1ea year before ir Freder- t t never appeared again. The hove scram- the'othee, and are indulging in glad 9,n- "When a death. occurs, the body ie age. ge. e is eeventy-four years of tbahlneede.ou.t end was secured by the woo= tioipatio; ofd.happiness 'and of joy. Truly taken to some suitable spet and eovdred The driver of a brewer's van witnessed this place is tothese a garden of Eden, iwnirt Ihnildlgeharisiaorfg:Tapin•ilotusofkiintas,Fdornidfreoodon. 0 accident, and ran across the Gherasey a very ara Ise. King's coronet' n • • ' ' ick Brid H ' . • . * Meads, but was too late to render assist, And. there are other of these earthly slating mainly of fish (for this is their catienfgartwiciltehof sdirnieit,)fe, isprpelsaecnedtsonofthtehipniges 168,000 SOLDIERS WANTED' • . oases these gat:dens - of Eden; some so Dr. Sealy was a regular follower of the alluring" from' their inherent beauties; To raise de fourteen divisiona of tha Berks and Bueke Hounds, and had serv- some from their assocititions and memo- they think will be useful to the departed new Tereiterial. Army 168,000 men will. ed ,on various: public bodies In the Wey- ries. There are, for instance, the gar- spirit. This is renewed. so long as they be reeuired. The numbers of the Volume bridge .disteict. ' dens of the seas, such as mita os well be have opportunity to do so. As they sel- teer infantry force, from whom, proviel- Only it few days ago Dr.' Sealy oele- seen on a quiet day through the trans- dom etay longer than one year in a•place, ed they accept the eonditions of service, brated his seventieth birthday, when he parent waters of the lovely tortuous this period marks the limit of this ex - the new beefy will be formed, are so declared that "he • felt ite strong and channels flowing amidst the Scilly Is- pression of their sorrow and. interest in that whele in some divisional districts lands. 2 Here, perhaps, a fine specimen the future welfare of the dead. distributed throughout Great Britain hearty as a voung man." dire are not nearly eufficiente _, .. . of the peatock's tail, its fringed filaments "But they do net stop with the giving Tte following. table shows the num- . reflecting all the colors of the rainbow; of food and presents. And this throws • The agricultural wealth of the ' ea States, brought to publion notice re- cently through statistics ohowing figures running into inany hundred million dol. lars, aud covering the verious. soprees that the farmer aas at bis command, reteale a progress during the pea de- cade that is little short of marveloua That for a conablemble munber of years the world. has aeknowledged the suprem- acy of this country as a wheat producer is att established fact, in the matter of many other food produets America is in the very front rank from the standpolut of exportation. Through saill end hard work the husbendinan lias made the nat- ive soil yield him treaseres that foreign consumers readily accept in exchange for golden robe But with all the ingenuity making for superior quality whether it applies to the grains of the field, the raising of live stock or the manufacturing of the Mutt - alterable produets for the sustaining of human life, there ia one branch where (Me of the smellest nations in the world easily leads the rest. Danish butter has attainea to prominence that to -day extends throughout the entire world. Not only in England and Germany, with their own advanced dairy systems, but in Africa, in South America, in Aus- trelia, in fact, everywhere, the quality of the butter that DOnmark sends abroad is considered the chief reason why such. a demand exists 'for this pro- duct of the Danish dairy. The Khedive is expected to Mania an bits usual edict extending clemency to various prisoners, which will be issued on the anniversary of his accession early in January, substantial reductions in the sentences passed in June, 1900, on the natives tried for the fatal attack upon a party of British officers who were shooting near the villttge of Denshawai. The Denshawai incident took place on June 13 last. Five British officers were Invited by the notables of Denshawai, village near Tantah, to some pigeon - shooting. The fanaticism of the villagers was aroused by the presence of the,offi- eers, whom they attacked with cudgels. Captain Bull, of the Inniskilling Dra- goona, was so badly injured that he died in a few hours. Captain Pine Coffin, af the Loyal North laneashires, had • his arm breken, and Lieut. Smithwiek,, of the Dublin Fusiliers, was seriously in- jured. Of the prisoners, four were hanged, two were sentenced to penal rerviaude for life, ote to fifteen years, six to seven unoccopied land. No owner eau bring a years, three to one yeara iinprisonment atreet into line with existing streets of and fifty lashes, and five to fifty lashes. an adjoining owner without permission- - BRITISH SYNDICATE BAN E owner, who has fregeuntly demanded " Under the auspices of the Association and obtained sums equal to Z1,000,000 for the Conservation of Mines and Rail- per acre for the right to carry a new *nye in Anhui (Ngaohwei) Province, street through to itn. old one, where a British syndieate is intetested, In northeen suburb not long ago a an antaforeign poster is being widely wealthy land company demanded E20, - circulated, appealing to the people to 000 from an adjoining owner for the imitate the people of Che-Itlang, itrai sub- right of aarrying three bey, streets bite scribe for the opening of mines end the ine wi g building of railways. estate. It is recorded that an owner in If the people admit concessions, seys a mean snburb aetually pain n2,000 foe the potter, it will not be lohg before the right, to earty his street over it piece Anhui is garrisoned hy foreign soldiers, of ground forty feet WI& and tour feet ' d b deep -the barrier of unused land whieh inhabitants. 'ay between a road oll one estate and a At a largely -attended meeting at Pekin projected road on the adjoining piece mere of land. to hear the views of the gentry moned from the Province of Che -Kiang The result of the present haphazard by the Government, it was resolved to system is that the street routes in our Oppose the prOpoSed loan for the eon. suburbs are inconvenient and in a large struction of a railtvay by ft British eon- meat:Aire Ilecicaa for traffic Purnasee. cern. Tte aim of the Government is to coulee *COLLECTORS' BAFFLED. • here an undulating copse of the graceful light au another of their curious cus- the Territorial Amen. y • and the approxi- booksellers and collectors that floeked eateAdtimes gently waving to and. fro given to the child next born, and if no pied( or purplish feather plant, its deli- toms. The hame of the dead person is ber of men required in. each district for Diseppointment awaited the crowa of mate number of infiurtay Volunteem to Messrs. Sotheby's rooms on Saturday as the oars disturb the clear waters; or birth occurs until after a number of the Numbers Numbers to witness the dispersal of Earl Howe's here, its enormous bulb firmly fixed to a tribe have died, then the names of all available: District. Required. Available. remarkable collection of Shakespearean rock, a great plant of the "Settfurbelows," the dead are given to the newly -born London (twoeilivisions 24,000 16,000 works. The cream of the collection was its outspread fronds perhaps as much 'as child. I know of one instasee of nine Sootland (two divisions 24,000 40,000 awesentunoficiut:enty-eight copies of Shake- twelve feet •in diemeter. And now the names being thus given to a child. Then speaxe's plays in quarto, several of which boat passes otter a veritable flower gar- the giving of presents is continued, only den. Beautiful setattnemones of many they are given to the child. But it must Home Counties .. e. 12,000- 16,500 dons .... e. .... 24,000 27,000 Instead of witnessing their sale, how-, hues spreading. their tentacles in search be understood that in giving them to the presents are really intended Lanca:sbire (tea) dive.. . 'It ii:cia ... .... . 12,000 20,000 . ... . 12,000 12,600 ever the crowd of visitors were informed of prey; dumps and tufta of the grace- child, the that' the whole of the copies had been ful coralline; numerous varieties of smell for the spirits of the dead. Of course, SountIli MIcleetli en .... 12,000 12,000 sold privately, though the purchaser feathery sea -plants of many colors -pink they do not exactly speak of them as only wished to retain half of them, the teed scarlet and white and light olive spirits, but they have a vague, indefin- f3o .1-1 M'idle id ds .. .. 12,000 -12,600 gee., .. e, 12,000 14,000 remainder being entruited eo Messrs. green, withe perhaps, here and there a able conviction that somehow and some - East Ani Wessex ... ... ..... 12,000 15,500 Setheby for sale. specimen of the striking sea -fan, or its where their departed friends and. com- . Weat Riding , . ... '' .. 12,000 10,000 12,000, 10,000 Rather easily- Mr. Sotheraeasecured no still stranger congener, the sea -pen; rades still exist nd mily need their help. fewer than thirteen of the fourteen whilst amidst ail tins labyrinth of beauty "Tide .seenis to be the natural expres- a - Northumbria. .. To the 14ndon: eli'visions of the. new' quartos which hen been returned. Tho from time to time bright silvery fish of sion of their cotnnuinistic practices. So foam the Royal Fusilier Brigades (really Most notable priee was g,400, paid for a various kinds flash by, or hover • in far as food, clothing, shelter and pro. Surrey ' brigades will probably. be added copy (If the fourth quarto edition of search of an unwary shrimp or .prawa. tection are concerned, everything is held for this reason that unselfishne.ss is gen- but even this will -hardly bring the di- "Heather -a little beak of fifty leaves, Aye, to tae lover of the beautiful la in common for the common good. It is a Middlesex body) and one of the two visione up to full streegth. The large f published at 6d., and obtainable less than nature this is truly a paradise. excess of available men in Scotland can- edition of the same play failed to realize inn years ago far under £20. A later ' _ But there is one garden a surely in- uinely characteristic of these Eskimos. finitely greater interest than any other Kincluess that is limited only by the sim- net be used to make uped.eficiencies in more than £60, notwithstanding that a spot on earth. "For in the place where ple and unfavored &erecter of their en - the English districts. - .. , . copy of the same edition has already tle. was crucified there was a garden, vironment seems to be an instinct; for erfenretnhteittelhitidoretnheairreolducierst: ortalbeadilenntaa:leir TOWNS ON NEW PLAN. been sold thie year for £107. A copy of atid i tithe- garden a new tomb." And the 1032 editioo of "Henry IV." (Peet I.) thir"Clarden Tombaf• situate at the foot pciley they do not appeal- to have the . made 400. A clenn end perfect copeobi of the 'teputod' Hill of Calvary outside lively sense of person.al rights so usual Mr. John Burns' Town Planning Bill "Henry. V."' realized. £104, and £120 the' walls of Jerusalem, is no wbelieved Thus they grow to. will be one of the chief Government bills was given for a copy of the first ndibion by- very Many to be the actual sepal-. in young people. unpolitical. The aim is to put an end "Love's Labox's Lost," 1631, was sald'Nf the Saviour of the world, tater, oil laid the sacred body manhood, and womanhood, and it seems .itext session, Its main features will he of Parts II. and Ma of "Remy vr." ehte- wherein was natural that their memory and affection to ragged subutbs, built without regard for 1201," and "Ring Um,» ma; for the edjoining Golgotha, making exPia' for the dead should find expreesioni it s tiple acts of thoughtful considera len particular, and with each estate owner changed hands in 1905- for £900. appropriate to themselves the benefit of tion for the sins of all who will but e to either symmetry Or public conveoi- n000: A. copy of the lastanamed 'play for their imagined needs, . It ii all very ence, with roads leading to 'towhee iri refusing to accommodate the- adjoining Mut copies of the.first four felio ealtione Out of seven of the ."Doubtful Piave' that, great sacrifice. And happlly this intend doing next spring, I shall have pretty and Worthy of careful study. two reached tha•ee figtires. The. felioe eVer.liailliWed site is now vesteden 13rit- equally &nous custom of theta genet-- ' When I go back among this people, as 1 Hitherto many of the land competnieri together reeched 42,730, thei bulk of this ish hands; the trust deed providing that owner in the matter of street coxistruc- of- Shakespearea complete Works. onl opportunity. to gather many more era in London suburbs have laid out estates it "be kept as a quiet spot, and prea.-' ous Eskimos!' don, y so as to retain round them a belt of sum being obtaitied for the copy of the ott the' other band from superstitious first folio, which realized 42,025. This, served on ono hand front desecration, an uses." --A 13anker. , _ . (cP - eteTed, 110111r4N Thai is the kina of weather that f•hort. ens up the winter, Sintletlei ts in the, Cele tl et at M ai•oy n75,000,C00 worth of propirty ainnially, and aente of the yhyoe aneentteleiggaat olintoa wohntinti:i aietiolt:itsptilierotinertyhoourtoafeonrtoa. w jitlii•Itoiwteeelaertee .1.):1:iet:ssiabse4eendiantioiltunligliongae pool Itetalaht alditeefli,vtetti, vortliast,0111 ailex et il lei:oieyneeirsa0o1,8 oatnuhlaeti denotes careful attention to detaila in placed in tihnstteerll.ermIelteierenntnhse tbutiattteornnilst gum; of trichinosis and the bubonic although he Is said to carry arouud the are to leave for England or for places • thousands of miles distant. The British plague, he no doubt saves us front mauy Wanda have long held a monopoly on .t devastating epidemic: the Danish procluet bemuse of the high, 1 grade, which, however, Inmate a high The United States National Aesecia- pritipiartoic:v.s a no less thorough ergo -taxation , lq)esuelattli00:8 infrskofoilloswels? of negative po. than that which makes the product the . . gtbl laynetehee twthrled'I)stlemlonseet speegetefdathirlys, itttapooificyllawninthfaerteufreerzeliasto co:I:et/7640;04r acme of perfection. Directors of many 19.:°00 feti Ic'liket:datttsliii eotPi al s t ri k 0 ; agricultural colleges in this country, to- gether with leading officials of the De - NO limitation of output; pertinent of Agriculture at Washingtome who have paid "Trifolituat" a visit, speak notocomtiipmulstorniyont:se of the ninon label; perts at "Trifollura." meN in the highest praise of this part of the No restriotion Ara tO tb0 use of tools, No sacrifice of the independent work - another to this model diary men with the business, But from every part of the world there loam come at one time or machinery or materials except such as Russia, Japan have had their d.airy ex- , set purpose to learn the secret of Dan- ish success in this domain. Frame, areisi:o7re4sfteli;etion es to the number of op. pientices end helpers when of proper The fact thee Siberia is now recog- oteha ea vhe- aginefit nized a factor in buLteranaking is large- glynndeuetntoththnet Bcoaunlitstirlydatioryeesintenthweh men -that only five per cemt. ia union- • 11,1wy claim that.these propositious are tvor of 05 per cent, of the working - about the mainier in which Danish but- fore long Siberian butter will become en There is nothing at all mysterious in this part of the Czar's empire . Be - Japan agriculture has made rapid strides i ere. Since the war between Rutaia and metrically opposed. to the above, and e • it e ized But the fi ,e - ' t to correct proportion, have views die- ter is evolved from the fluid stage of active competitor for the world's trade. seein in many eases to have the power cream into the solid product. Not far Without the eo-operative success of to °Wore° theh• &Mends. erative dairy, this dairying industry in Denmark it is "Trifolium," is the example, which has not probable that such exceptional re - from Copenhagen the co-op ifpoorruopaneedrstsars ntnohiinhtbeiguritiontfinoplaleeknsismngsntrik•ri highest point of perfectiop. .kilugiereeeltiane farmers of the United Statee, especially ()aches its throughout the West and Northwest, sults could heve been obtained. The paer•enspbeegriitnynidnegpetioldsunnndesrusetanh n3.ethtehir. llthria:tth.etilielalr'etesatre illtfolrxelelii:cofielillici:tiiivolliehlit:eonlotisif. service) to f or m the :Ipfrirfla02:nicitdooroyd e art ohoiye eo ra so Ilot0008pivt. oafbnoeuittansot,a0t0i0stoiefsikoorfa atnh: &lime, held at Rome, the honors of At the International Congress of Agri - Successful Co -Operation. oda as prevail in Denmark. - 000 in all of the. new Territorial Army, distinguished eepresentation went by MODERN MEDICINES. The 190,000 men, however, axe so vale- - treated tinder the conditions of medicine likely to find himself with large sur. og aurgery of half a, century ago. Why No sane -mother would wish herself sheir ous y ed that Mr. Haldane is pluses in some districts and eerious distribut acclaim to Denmark because of this country's contributions to the science of o as loned rgedicines of half a cen- ,, 'In stieuld she give her little one the 1 some dienicts to transfer the men ceded that the eo-operative plan in effect butter -making. It was generally con - among the Dent& farmets lent itself contain poisonous opiates that cannot cure the child, but merely diugs it into for instenee, for the two divisions (24, tury ago, which more likely than not " 500000sinetiollet.t4u0a,00lizoe Scotian, tages in others. Nor is it possible admirably to the most successful re - Witty. Baby's Own able No .i.' sults. Wherever you travel in Den - Tablets is a modern medicine prepared n temporary insens pot 'ion of this great exee.ss are avail - mark, these co-operative dairies form rallying points for the farming interests medical science. And the mother who with all the care and skill of modern ' go to divisions outside Scotland, so VIttentresersIn duction, Throughout Jutland, the soy - that concern themselves with butter pro - gives this medicine to her child has the that there will have to be a weeding 16,600 men. There ought to be money eral smaller islands and in Zealand. where Copenhagen is located, this phase of agriculture is the most conspicuous to rt does not contain one particle of opi- so ate or poieouous soothing stuff. This t , , g • - can am s volunteers have shown themselves!. fruaxantee of a Goterrunent analyst that out of me way of utilizin these men 13r1 - the eye as it is the country's greatest p medicine cures all the minor ailments in the United States bas had. the benefit of O. Vieit to l`TrifOlium," where the of- . More than one auccessf ul dairyman triuger. - from the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., . . eine dealers or by mail at, 25 cents. a box oaring the Boer war. laughing, happy child. Sold by all medi- them she never could have sent out to of little ones, and makes baba a healthy, to be a real bulwark of defence. But for to explain the methods in use. "Tri - folium" is located in the very heart of , ficials in. charge are at A times glad Brockville, Ont. Africa the ntunber of troops she did •the "butter country. Al aroun cattle show the results of such feeding as can only come where the grazing fa- talities are the best. The clover fields extend for miles without a break. Farm after farm give evidence of a prosper- ity that has made the Danish tiller of the soil the wealthiest class of their kind. in the world. In tbis matter of co-operation the ownet of the great estate, as well as the farmer, with his limited titres, stand shoulder to s'houlder. Into the ea -oper- ative dairy, the management of which is in the hands of men chosen from among the big and little suppliers of place as pane, the secret of hater - making will soon be an open one to you. Up to the moment when the milk ar- rives at the datey the respective farm- ers ma.y be said to work independently of each other. The profit-sharing busi- ness begins with the man in charge tak- ing account of the various receptacles Containing milk and arriving by the htm- dreds. enot of the public body -but, of the latter ••••••••••-...orarrorill legislative powers upon imbIle bodies rot the first time in the illetery building estates, large fuel come wireless te/epraphy a message. sent before them :with echeines for laying out. u"" streets to direct that all streets shall Miles across the wean -from Copenhagee tette direct routes to somewhere. WRITING BY WIRELESS. which will enable them w len oweers of however, is not a record, two copies hair- Two '1111ericarta Men. ing made £2,400 arid £3,000 already this season. HE WAS AFTEE 'SOUVENIRS, twee Trish con dat walk Ines beat By dees peanutee den', Pinot two,. t'ree week wan we coo meet • had met Jones before. In fact, meet - to Newcaatle•on.Tyne--has been eute- inaticelly printed at the receiving sta- • . - tioe. SCARCH FOR PIRATE't BURIED This feat has beet] aceompliehed by TAEASURE, the Poulson system, whielt has been Orgititized by the- ownirs of ths Patente, One snore adventurer is to dig in Cocos the AmAlgarnated Andio-Telegraph. C,om. Island for the treasure of Don Pedro Be. pa0. nito, the pirate. It is tO a countryman The first sewage was sent in Daniell of ours, Mrr. Claud Itobeet Grieves Robin- liy ii Danish operator, ami reitehed its eon, thet the Costa Rican Governerient ItAitietion -without a single ihterrup.' heet just (vented the sole right to explore OA. Thil AritVel Untie were readily trans. the island. for two yettre to eon% by the operator intil their COM- COOS Iittliid, as 'Cite* treastirectenklit ISpetlding lettere. know*, lies some 440 miles weet of PftlIA,- Many guesses were made by experts as to the amount paid by the mysterious purchaser of the collection -whose name is knowd to only three people in this country -the general opinion placing at at between Z10,000„.and £15)000. , THE DUKE'S NEW post', The Duke and Duchess of Connaught Wt Londoe on Friday for.Parie en route to Islets, where the•Ditke fell' take up the post of Comitiancler-ia.Caief ef the Mediterrahenit Fortes atta High Commis. stoner in the Mediterettneen. The Duke of Connattglit has served Lie Inepector•Geteral of the Forces and Pre. eident of the Selection Board sittee 1904. The` Oonitrataid-in•Chief of the Mediterraneau is a now post. The iincet under the c,oiernand of Ms Royal High - nese comprise the gartisone at Malta. and Gibraltar, the detachments in, Crete and Cypatte and the British troope Egypt and th'is Soudan. The headquarters of the command are et "Tt.ialta. The duties of the new post inelede the atilierVision of such »letters as inepectioe anti ttnieing, Its well as the study of questions of strategy and defe,nce withio the limits of the Mediterranean cons, intend. ° +pi *here the Money Comes nave (Loecion Advertiser.) Fifty dollars are to be epent this year in Canada by the. three great reilway eetripanies. Most of the money eConatO from the old country, too, • It *ill flow into &eery channel of lettitiess, and ' to; lartilutighast et lard times, which politiehms b.ave conjured * h d become a sort of habit. The ing biol. a first time I saw him he was hanging by his feet, an apoplectic, equirming mass, on the facade of Blarney Casale, kissing the stone of eloquence. My eemera might him in the act. "Gad!" he sput- tered, when told ban that his feat *as immortalize& "Di my face in it. Send me one, Will you? provo to the folks back'in Zanesville that I did it." I hod tiin Neese aim again in• Lone don, evbere all ways meet. was saunter - Beg eel me "Daeoman. *Ale veal he goo how mad I gat, Whooch (lose planes hewn, too. Wan day he lety: "Wave matter dat, Ain't 'nage). name for. your Idiericana name,. yob know, For man trom Italy; Bet eels harni tor call you so, • Den why be mad wooth me?" Firct time he talka dose way I am too mad for speak, But nexta time 1 justa say: "All righta, Meester Meeckl" 0l my, novva heat hestore S000h lenswedge Mc he say; ing eround the Whitechapel. ihotto, and A.n, he dcfn't look et ine no More through the window of an a ley taVern lOot niarhe two, *ad day. Dees bees pollee:titan bat eora' an' smile an' say to nun "Tien°, Italian' Now. =ebbe so you gon' deny Dat &Wee. name for you." AmIla hack an' mak' reply: "No, bleb, dat'isti, true." "Hal Joe," he cry, "you tlieenk dat Should call you 'eferican?" "Data ;mode 'nough," say. "for me, - Ref (let's vent you ere, Dan." SC nor all times we spealut ea Like geode lelericent; He tityo to me, "Peed intent., Joe," I say, "Clood motile, Dan." A. Daly, In Catholic Standard and 'fluff*. notieed two melt drinking stout. One was a "bobby" in uniform. His (veil Were blearta mid his face purple, The profile of tho other looked familiar, I walked in and beheld -jones. The po, . .%te/ Pit ;46s °41,41 4Cs K1D.Nt R E u ATo cc-BAutte 1.)/441.04.'' APt 111U clUge rsioss 14:445139a 00410 " tut pretty. aeon agoil SO° In the Separator Hall. In the separator hall the milk is once more weighed and then begins the skimming process, the six mammoth sep- erators capable of tulting care of 30,- 000 pounds of milk an hour. Front here the skint milk is conveyed partly to the paeteurizers and to the cheese vats. The Cans in which the milk reached the dairy are now pinned on automatic car- riers thee take them to the rinsing room where they are immediately wash- ed anid scalded. As the eons pass slow. iy to their desti-nation, with tops point- ing downward, every drop of creanl. remaining drops into a trench that runs beneath the carrying chain. Many thoie sand pounds of the richest cream are thus saved annually to the dairy: ', From the pasteurizing apparatuses the dream is carried over cooling Machines and then passed into the curdling tanks, Close by are locate& the great refrigera- tors for the manufacturing of ice. Hero is Peen the wonderful attention paid to hygienie•inatters. The tiled floor and walls, the high ceiling, the many win- dows admitting pure am, everywhere It is sanitation which Is given chief eon- siaeration, The Churning l'oom. -'. I Wise inen of the nations are beginning An Abyas'nian Hotel. to ask what is going to happen when the A hotel has been built at Addis Ababa great Celestial Empire has its awaken - by the Empress of Abyssinia and to in- -.ing. It has become a habit to refer. to augurate ib the Emperor 1Vienelik him- self presided at a banquet givenno the Cinhcianpaoalise ceoifitubrelielsi behind the times, and diplomatic body, sitting for the first sense of its possibilities. That same idea g aroused to a true meal. This is perhaps one of the roost time as • a European at a European prevailed ie regard to Japan not so very astonishing things in an astonishing world, and shows how things have pinira:ywayseastuappaogsoe.d tTohbeela:itstleeloIssellayndlocEkiend- changed. even since Lord Napier of up against European civilization as its 1Vlagdala, ' Niegt up to the town from which he took his title just forty years Emperor was shift up from his people, ago. Not so very long ago we used to hear of the banquets which the Abys- sinians made of raw flesh, and there was a woodcut in an old book which represents the chiefs sitting around a cow and carving steeks off the placid animal, which apparently walked about from table to table for the purpose. - London Globe. FORTUNES FROM BLACKING. Estate of the gross value of £350,737, with net personality Z168,139, has been left by Mr. Thoinas Berry, of Parklands, Dunham Massey, Cheshire, and of Black- pool, who died on August 31st. Mr. Berry was head of the firm of Meters. W. Berry, Limited, blaeldng and boot -polish manufacturers, of 525 Beebe dale road, Harpurhey, Manchester, and of HOMOttOn, tendon. He left £4,000 for charitable purposes, including tele 000 to the Salford Royal Hospital. Other fortunes which have ben left by persons interested in the manufacture of blacking or boot polka are as follows: £259,557 was the personal estate left by Mr, William Berry, of the same firm and brother of Mr. Thomas Berry. Mr. Wit liam'Berry left over Z50,000 for chari- ties, principally around Manthester. £152,937 Was the estate of Mr, Pierre Paul Fitte, of Knightsbridge, and of Ger- ing-on-Thanies polish manufacturer, con- nected with die "Nugget" polisbes. £100,373 was the value of the proper- ty left by Mr. William Robert Lane, of Richmond, Surrey, and ot Birminghaan and Newmarket, who was ease interest- e'a in the manufacture of the "Nugget" polishes. KNEW HER. Fortune Teller -And now, sir, you must beware of a tall, fair-haired The churning room is eterily one of the most interestitig features of the estab- lady, with blue eyes- hreersepetchtelybeutttaenrimoillacniicii Visitor --And a blue dress an4 white pliushminpedent toYmthme then transferred to the oheeseanakifig hat? 'Yes, yea, I know; she s my depertment. In the butter packing room Wife. . Over -Crowded. Nearly half Wilke. hi Neer York live in tenenient houees and cellars. There is a storY tif an ittSpeetet who feund four feeniliee living iti tete reoila chalk lines being &wit norms In such ' manner to to meek Mit quairtne for . eitelx faintly. "How do yon get along hetet" inquired the ittspeetor. "Very *ell," Was the reply, "only the Mitt in the lurthest corner ket+ps hoarders." 0000000000000000000000000 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Girlhood and Scotea Ertatsiott are linked together. The girl who takes Scott's Enna. slot: hat plenty of rich, red blood; she is plump, active and energetic. The reason is that at a period when a girl's dige.stion is weak, Scott's Emulsion provides h*er with powerful nourishment in easily digested form. h a food that builds and keeps up a girl's strength. • ALL ottuatosTo 800,. AND iI31 .00. 41604400404401044.4000**40* de40,44, but when the awakening came the little Jap made strides which made the world sit up. Within the past few years japan has taken a place among the nations, and has even been said, by some writers, to hold a, position on the Pacific side of the two continents similar to that held by Britain on the Atlantic side. And. while all this was going on China was looked upon as a country to be parcelled out in zones of influenee among the great natiens, and as a people to be legislated against when they desired to enter an- other land, and exploited for trade pur- poses when the chose to remain at home. John Chinaman must maintain the open door at home) and find. the dosed door abroad. But he of the pigtail has seen what his little neighbor can do, and signs are not lacking that he has begun to think for himself. A leader has sprung up in his midst, too, who also has ob- served what is going on in the world. That the yellow man in his native land is capable of doing more than his opera- tions in the white mines ternary would indicate is admitted by those who have studied hint neost closely. When he awakes to the full realization of what he cah. do something is going to happen. When European and American religion, and European and American civilization have done for the Chinese people what they aim. to do, what will the millions upon millions of Chinese do in return? Will they expect to be treated in other lands as the people of other lands expect to be treated in theirs? . Will they de- mand bounty for bounty; tax for tax; privilege for privilege? Perhaps time wilt work out the solutioe of the pro - Wein; undoubtedly it will, but the awakening of China is bound to tax the brains of the best statesnien. the world can produce. The Snail. There's a funny little snail Witb a bend aim a tail, And he lives in house that is round, round,. round; • And he tarries on his back Quite a queer little pack, And .11.! creeps right along the ground, ground, ground. lVhen he goes into his house Just i ir fear of a mouse, Then lie twists end he turns all the way, way. way; oh he ineks into Ids shell - :if :4 -on kale, at him well - Yee ell just see his horns, so they say, say, say. nut the snail is very shy; When he thinks no one is nigh lie will trawl from his very slow, sloW, slow, And he winde him all about Till he Armes himself mit- Yon will fled if you Inok, this SO, -Thienbentit Meese Stoller, in The Housekeeper. ; . A _