Lucknow Sentinel, 1911-11-09, Page 6OVER 2 MILLIOtt PACKAGES SOLO WEEKLY
:=1
AL SERVAN
IN CUPID PLtYS HIS PART
BELOW PALACE S'EA.I.R§.1
,111-4.1-ACCO•31Plii110-„P
AO°PtS'flatifielil-CireaIrtgt
Adppte Ilimself to Any ,Cireums
stakes Is the Skret of" Ilia
SeAotcleIrddinisg ht(e)intglideCpeell:itulsatfi•Ogur'reer:
at all •eventS,it is de•asingAO grew
at the rate it shouldesaye the Lon -
den AnSwerS.'
But this dePePulatioli is no new
thing; And there is another Sido to
the 'question, asside which,,is fir
from unpleasant; for what is
`Sritain"s loss is 'the Empire's gain.
In the making of every British
colony the Scot has Played a.part.,"
and a book which has been recent-
ly pub1ish4i, ,Shows hew Mitch our
great Dominion beyond the, seas
owes to the pinek„ energy, and colon
ising' instinct .of the' num froni the
North. •
uguese. Indeed, none of the ser-
vants atthe English Court could do
,so,- excep,t , the =late King's valet,
Mr.
Mr'. Chandler, who was remark-,
ably good
'So the love-siek pageshad to call'
upon brother- &se,' who could
speak EngliSh to 4 et as inter,preter,
s, -and-foe-sever - the enamored
are Oteurrenee mita a Royal ler.., Page'e°ntln to 'make. ic've t676-6
' ' ' , ' Court. 'housemaid through the
yak Marries Otit'o/ BoYal . • inecliuin of a third 'Party, But at
' Enipin.i.: . , 1.theeenclusien of the Royal visit'the
interpreter ,proposed to. the 'maid
tsi;freqnent.",reinit of tee Visit of i himself,' and was duly accepted, and
Yal'IlterSo*age to !uglan&ifi"-4,-; so 'mortified' Was the:other.page •that
treiri4e',..betWeen e'eervant 'in.the i he left the Royal sarviee.,'' ''. .
Pirt.'.ter..,;'' '4)f' 'thes‘Royal visitor ,,and , 'al .0f etsiarse the, majority' .6f Royal
tttrIrs4,tt is 'n4r 'stivie,ign'S service. ',1 servants .find mates in 'the !louse-
"PUring:the last' 'reign three of• diet heleleof the Sovereign in which they
:ROyal :Males sei.vants eaCh found. al are erapleyea, and it is, by the way;
.wjf..14l'Otiid'ene of .4tieen Alexandra'S-sa. Matter ef very rare •occurrence
MaltIS' a'hnstiatier in-the'retinhe-ef Is that-st-IloyaleserYsint -tharnitannY-
toreign Royalties; says the the London - one not in some Royal -' eMploy.
1
.4•11•SweriIs.'ii .-,.-,,,''','.'.-,..,. ' , When two ,eervants at the English
" ri..n,:tlio, present reign,.n°ne,011-(, ing 'Court. Marry, they are Put on What
"(forge's servants has married but is -called the
he;Vieit:raftlie;German Emperor at •. OUTSIDE' ESTABLISHMENT. '
time of or, ICU% Edward's death ''' ' , ,, •
' ' *.inajtria.go between a That is; to gay, they are .allosied tes,
).service 0! H.R.11.- the live''Ontsid° ' BPekingltam' ' Palace,
nnanght and ,a eervant 'aid '''a YerY, large, nutither of ''. the
1
"0110,11ilS33
MUST/AO/I ,SIIARP,
ese-
•
,
Many Disguises- Donned by: eDeteees
tiVos to Capture Clever
retinue of his Imperial ReYal -servants do so.
Some of, the upper servants,. who
anee,sa,__ _oc u - reg onsible positions • and
ousehold during the visit Of a for- are 111receiptexceptionally god
' Royalty to Buckingham wages, have, very good houses on
ilaee"aye eour.se thrown &good the 'outskirts of London. Their at -
al into v,,Ontaet.. with the servants tendanee eriTY requirtd--ar the•
in' the- _retinue of the Royal visitor. Palace from neon, and'except on the
The male and female attendants °"asion of a State entertainment
• ive their meals apart, but they they are allowed off duty after eight
.zneet in their spare tun' e in the large o'clock in the evening. And when
halI,-wheresfrequently
ini-
Criminals,
Street betting is, as we 'all know,
Prohibited by law.' But- the( dif-
ficulty is to Obtain' convictions, for
street bookies are .very •wary, and
-he•-sight. of a:blue ',uniform sends
them scuttling to cover as quickly
as a blackbird when a sparrow -
hawk's shadow swoOPs aerose"the
grass, says -London 'Answers,
At Rochdale, the'police had long
been aware that a lot ef•this kind of
gambling had "been gping on ,at .a
epot on the banks 'of a canal. 'rho
bookies ,in this ease had Protected
themselves by posting seonts on all
sides to.giVe warning ofthe ap-
proach of police.
Iltit-atslasfsstlie-poliee_sentwitted
them. Two 'constables got them -
EARLY HARDSHIPS. selves, up as golfers hi tweed Suits
There were Scots in Canada so and stockings, and armed them
long ago as -1621, when Sir 1,Villiam selves with pewerful field,glasges.
Alexander secured, a charter grat- In this guise they got near enough'
ing him the -territory, roughly, euv- to identify a number of the offend-
ered .now -1;37 •"-Noira ' -Scotia. erse and later--these-svere-arrested
and New Brunswick. But and fined. '
it was, the exodus following the Recently a party o°. dectives ar-
rebellion of 1745.that WaS.tbe start- rested two noted jewel thieves by
ing point in Canada's history. disguising themselves as inilkinen,
wearing smocks and carrying can.
_Pagan, obtained a grant of land at, Some few years aga a merchant
•Pictou, and lie ,effered, ' as an Werinwoods-St,reet-went
ducement to come to Canada, a police, and told them how he .was
free pa,ssage, .a farm \ and a being worried by an old' school -fel -
n
year's provisios. • • low, who s. as trying to blackmail
. .
"He owned an old Dutch brig, him..
which, he ealled•the Hector, and in , The pollee suggested that he
the Hector he shipped out in July shouldpretend to fall" in with the
1773, his first colmusts from the BLACKMAILER'S SCHElq,E
Highlands, 189 souls in all . . , . , ' /./
,The ground was still uncleared, but land negotiations were carried out,
-they etruggled through the firt hard through .the - ``..kgony'' column of a•
Then a Greenock Merchant, John
pinipt dances are got up an,the
Verietiges'e „
PetYING TIIEIR COURT.
chaperon to e mat ft OA such oe-
,a,sietne, and it, is then •that the
and,.,pige.S'of Royni
eriOnagei• ,'haYe an .,Opportunity :of
„payIngjtseIt r to t emai s
the:King'S•Honseheld; ' .•
-As a general rule, Where a •aisai&-
aervant einplpy Of a:Royal
•
parsonage Marries Man " the
Servite of ent-
ersanother..Royalty,'she:
.seryiee in the Royar'HOUSeheld
in which her husband 'is. enipleYed.,
For,' examplee.if a Mariseryant 'in
King . Ge•arge s. -service married a -
maid in • the service of, -.say, ' the ba•nd are sure of handsome gift from
their Majesties.. . •
FOR MAKING SOAR
SOFTENING WATER,
REMOVING PAINT,
DISINFEGTING
CLOS-ETS;DRA10-67;ETC:
SOLD EvLavvv-HERe:-
tTheSUBSTITUTES
•
ELECTRICITY—ON THE FAR
1101.04MIts TflU OU :,.
"7 -
Hired Will Dwell in Earth')
'ParailiSe-J-40,4t 'Own an--
: The' Current. •
, • ,,
-In these daYS Wbell the itrQpUJL
tan•reity May 40 described AS ggroat"
electrical laborateiy and consuine
ing stati01). itelieutti not be cher.
.leolted that:lire-farm itSeiria reins -
i',11 for its share of this iiiiiversal
souree of ,ey,
power.
-
Th are ite;0' ,OXanY • ways ,,-thrOu&h
Whiehsthe farm that; on, afford the
.0Se of the eleetric, eurrentemay have
it for the. trouble et'
„ ,
KMG. . §ome near -by inter -Urban electrue.
SAFE INVESTMENTS' - — ,
,,thelr customers. s • • for Ole,. sonte,str6am close ataillantdo .
Indeed, bond Selling, in tuarty cases, nisy „lave a gravity' ,waterf
hooks, of thts sort which they 'OuPPlY to line may aye' its Bur his current
. .
"YIEL.D" ON BONDS DEPENDS ON TIME
Dolma HA-S-.-TO-OUN OEFortg
•
MATURITY:
.the,Courttis,, not in residence at,
Buckingham' Palace their presence
is often not required.,
A, few of the Married servants
live in'', the 'Palace in the 'inairied
servants! quarters. These 'are eld-
erly ‘aeriantessyho ha,ve been a° cons
Siderable tinrin, the employ of
Royalty, whesefainilies, if they
have any, .are either, in the employ'
of Royalty or doing otherwise for
themselves : 'but, no , servants with
,411,
young Children are 'ail° . to re --
side in the Palace. When ,maid-
servant at, the Palace becom'aen-
'eaged to be married, .she at eke
informs the house -keeper of thes
fact, who reports the matter to the
Queen `,--ancl-the -Maid. and her hus-
Explanatlqn of ThIS Important Point of
, Croat Importance -Not • Like 'Stocks
Whith are Never Reriald and Ther.efare
. .
Time Not Considered In 'ReskonIng 'Re-
,
turn -Some Interesting Illustrations. .
. • . (By "Investor") .
'Id the first of this series it was shown
that-of-risle.' is an -import-
ant Principle of investment. If is kvery
simple one, however, involving no very
contused/ideas. There ds.aueilier princi-
ple, to be borne. in mind•when making in -
•vestments which is of no less importance.
but Wis, however, considerably less ob-
Vious to -those whose investnient experj-
ence is small -and even to many Who
should uriderstand its actions. thoroughly.
This is die principle of investment "in
Accordance with antful _requirements."
' long, ago kiluancial paper stated,
quite correctly, that , a ',high. return on
• • ad prospered.. Three years ' London daily, l'.), which,th4 i an investment sliould always be' looked
,
lai-er tit e joined loy other att-agr-ettis--2-300ssitielevas • ii..-d-aa-tHeicin: 41. ,,--how IA
ey W re - , • (
scots trout Prince Edward Island, to be burled at the foot of a certain not be - taken to.mean .that such
0 as poi/limos , ank. which pays 1 .„per
a stock
who had eniigrated from Dumfries, i tree in a. hrickfiel near.Hono
-Park-Railw,"aY" Staticin.- • . tents Der ‘ annual, is decidedly 'past the
The .Pehee-PrePared a cigarebes'eSs_ danger -mark and should be -I -avoided ._,Cd
weighted With lead, which -was duly
buried under the tree. Then sev- eberse, the persen.who figures this out in.
. this ._
eral detectives hid near by d way,- redite misses the point. • ”.The
income or rettira' oa an in'
relatives -in, . Scotland to .come put 'after waiting all night, spotted' the r e of
•
and join them. The so-called High- 1italltrriaaled'pokrng- in the ground eatutent•_depends on the rate of divi-
. .ferent thing altogether. den& to be `sire. but if 11 ciiiiiee •a '-dir=
land 'Clearances,brought others --no with his ufnbrella. , ease of a tshteorck pFao:ingesanta.pler
fewer than:1,309 arriving in a single • He quickly dug up the the •hex; and •
.• • ' • P e'
he signal. and -• the fellow °
when• one of take the
was Therefore the. return on the SZOO inv t•
season in i803. Fresh' s_ettlements was carrying it away. cent. The -investor will have to pay At
sprang up; some, cast in their lot detectis.es, .disguised Et$ ar- labour -
least $200 a 'share for r this' sto k But
. , , , y in oxica e , ; , e •
with thalitr, traders. others struck er and apparentl - ' t - t d
out and fought their way to uri- lurched up, •asking hirn what he had the dividend is figured on the Par -or.
cleared Init fertile Parts. • 'got there This ,' aye the oth r 1 face --value of the shares vihich i 6100
. ' t ' ' . g " . s '.
bondsare sold ,r1.14ebasis of their develop electricity su cien
tor IUUL
l'irulteilaet;eatiirStiestaheetionnellii::eninotpientegticir.cTha eorieit. a dozen farmers; or the gas°liu°
engine in eonnection with'a dynamo
ore,. it is necessary-Foturiffentffild-liOWITis,,Withi-D-COIripp.'k.raiyely 'casv roach
js figured PUG .beickre or one ' of 1:1K PrbSPCrouS farmer, who dis-
may „be. For instanee; a covers that to keen his boys' on the
incos:mhi,ainnyigi:onhdisis'atEl.3.71ecoinrictabli. 0DDeeyrielompari;kenett. arm-oreveneven to make certan1 that
under„, the iiitpresSion that • as they his hired liplp will stay with' Iiiin ,
"Yleld" 6 ner :cent. hicOnie will be Ithei,r19ilgightltenthethsoesses9oelt-i:dittiudugPertie%11.1,5.';'.."...
6x$87, 52.20 a ysear. whereas' as thfry
-,..are 5 Per cent. bonds he gets but Q50 011
each thousand, as te will have to ,iwait
till the bonds mature. se years hence,
for the $1:0 -Which represents the addi-
tional 82.20 he expected and didn't get. The
314-o f -course „--1 t he -profit, _derived.irent.
buying the bonds for $870 and having them
redeemed at 81,000.
•Don't forget, therefore, when reckon-
ing this- rate of income' on o.' sectikitY, ta
find Out -if it is a bond -how long it has
-to' run.
Xing olItaly, she would enter the
service of the latter monarch, and
vice, versa. In this way; .in nearly
all Royal Households, maidservants
Who have been formerly employed
in other Royar Households may lie
found -
a°i•cee:si lig a esis f
servant
irl in the
• howheyeethr,septiro.‘i.yeieoein on
on -
other Royalty. For eXarriple, a
footrnalf.jii" the employ of the
Germae".Emperor married a maid-
servant- in'the-lite-hola of late
Xing and the man subsequently en-
tered the service of Xing Edwartl,
FA V ORITE SPOTS.
Often 'a maidservant in the ern -
ploy of their Majesties marries' an
employee on one of the Royal es-
tates, and in such a case she • at
ways leaves service at, Buckingham
Palace and goes to live on the Royal
estate with her hu -band. '
When a couple of the Royal ser-
vants flurry, they ire divan a fort.
night's holiday for their hOney-.
moon and during that period they
ltrejniot Jiable, under-- - any-eireum•
stances to be summoned to be in at-
tendance at Buckingham. Palaces
and is Still in the Royal employ. or an.V of :the, Royal r•seidenees, as
;Sometimes, when a maid in Royal are all the Royal servants when' on
..ethpfny, beeothess.engegeeeseo_a_ Jima_ _theip_strdi n a holiday, though
uf
in eerviee in a foreign RoYal'Ifense- course a Royal servaici,;WThin. on hiis
hold, eshe is vets/ loth to enter the (or her) ordinary holiday is on y
summOned to be in attendance
Ilatte,r,AIN,.ARDee , d t d
under urgent an ures.spee e
but had been eaten out-bYlocusts.''
After this the Scots -stream was
e,onstpit, whole families arriving.
When the first hardships were Over,
these early pioneers wroth to' their
-',-, .: ,"' '• .'"--- • ' . cuinstarrees., , , '. .,, . •
One of the Queen of Spain S'4res- ' Few marriages between the,jleyal
tiers, NS -he, was formerly, in ser . servants have, by the ways been
ties, in the Eriglish Royal lienS13- 'eelebrated-iii London," • The,„(Majore
. hold, could with great 'difficulty be
, , ity of Marriages 'between theni have
tresrSuaded to leave her employment taken place at Winctsoi.„-Saxidringe
at.Buckingharn Palace when ?he be .ham, or •Bnithorni, ,1 :
:•catne 'engaged to , the -:,ICing: Of , : . ...2 .N . A . . . ..
' Spain'avalet, The pair‘.0 ,
King Alfonso Carrie to thil•e Country Il()W..TO JUDGE DISTL. .
, ,
In 1.90e end the valet soon after,- At thirty yards, nsguthing that
'Wards proposed, , but t e ,Th:1 at your sight sight •is of average streneth',
first absolutely dedlined ,1o4 leave,.
.., the white of & trian's eye is plainly
teivice at Buckingham 'Palace. it' , see, ,.
n and the eyes themselves up to
was out of the cittestion'for.the valet !.eighiy yards, At 109 yards all parts
teleave, the '''Feevie of his llossalj
of the body are seen distinctly;
'Master,. who probably would have i,oight.. •theeetherits are •verniitibie,
' ihjected to his doing so„ and in sareh i and the details of the•dioss on he
a case .the Valet -could not fiaie obr-
If L 1 oistinguished, At 200 yaras the
tained •employment. at the ,Erigii.in i outlines. or .1h-effatie " are corifused;
Court. IItit• the 'valet' wag a pet- land row4 (,,,
t bettonS, look' like
!1•3ten w°°eit. and, after •I'ite'').ilil'") I tripes At At 409 yards :the 'face is a
of years' time he persuaded the m.ere dot.,,
but all the neovernents of
anaidetossimity hirressvhert4.4':wnl 1 tile arms and legs are still distinct...
ES
'
. •
t'neflt3 3 eat s ago.
JOY FOR, FARMER'S WIFE. -
In the home of the farmer, the
first adaptation of the electric cur-
rent would be in displacing the+
kerosene lamp. A MOtbr in the
r basement and -a --punip-afid„talik on
the outside would effect- a, syStem.
of water -works for the house. In
the dairy the cream ° separator,
'churn washing machinery foidairy
necessities can be operated. Laun-
dry work -that bugbear, ' of, the
farnier's :Wife:•,-1:i.S simplified: and
AIM- 'long -Sought "milking mitehe:
lightened 'to the last degree.' Even
�IJR 'LITTLE WAYS:-
• --- • ine" is to receive an ityPetus at the
Mans "taints °111* A-neest°" hand -of Yankee ingenuity, and, if ,
---EnyeeithirMet--7 shirt -W --1m *chest,- t eetric
_It is from out remotest ancestors
Mankind's dislike of darkness is as .,.
old as•he is him•self. childrerT'stables the
-Chat we et many of our habits WILL BE GENERAL BOON.
" current must drive it.
fear\ the dark, .and few grown-ups wires in gaspipe housings not only
•
In __the cow barns and horse
eleetriC bulb attacher to
are quite at .their ease in it. *al give the safety light for winter,
' Even in his' own house, every inch mornings and eveningsTbut alreadj,
tee ea:coon-1 eleaaer_husesnade, Atessese
.the. lights on. Most people know
has .appearance adapted 10 the easiest
..
mildlY uncomfOrtable 'till he
what' it is, 'when walking at; night'
along & lonely road,..to glance Un-
easily:, Over .the; shoulder: - •'
'We do not .expect to be 'stabbed'
inethe back' by a murderer creep-
, • THE INEVITABLE. SANDY.'„' • • -' e. ' • • ' • '
Hearing, the • 'stery • et thesei. . tance. ' . ' • ,'
• ,
veterans; ,,a, CO s,•0 p ,. . .
his admiration, saYing:, , 'pellets ,diseoveresi to .be run .by,• res
ceivers of stolen, property, Early,
' 'The. only.' instance I know that,
one evening they • arrested 'the .two
Is can compare it is•that Of-Meses
,principals, and then a detective
leading the Children of Israel into
., , . get himself up ' to look excctly like
the-Pkonaised-Land.''
one' of the arr.ested pair, and.,,stood
. Up j naped the old- man '
„mose ,, said he. ,,,com' p. arile•m- e. behind the counter., , '
Presently a man•came in, and of.,
to Moses! Moses he hanged l• 1-.1 '
Iost.,hfilflhii\arniy in the Red Sea, tered for sale goods'. Which • Were
Ovidently stOleni 'He.. was at once
and I brought\.my party through
the end, of • the
without lesing onessman V,- arrested,. and. by
It was men of this .spirit ' „who evehieg no fewer than eleven are
feunded the great No?th-West. Com- rests had been Made.
•STRAls.T.GER IN THE ,sTALLS. '
pany, whichebV the endeo,,f the,i8th' ,
•eentury, had an annual:turnover of e, f probably., iF i that one bond maY• be PaY-
, .,
2120,000i , enrployea ,50 cler4t.",'71 .•''
Portngal came to London and on, . • . , , ' ' . . •• . . - . ., fs ,, to 'Ale means a,t t•hepeesent time that .
., , ty. ,It 1E1 tins last fe
' ' ' ' ' ' . the wide, open. space. e o c . s, . ,
ature . that affects Pe referred, for sa ety s sake, ,.
wo years ago King .Manoel o . able in Jen years and the other in twere
then, and 35 guideg. practicallx>a 1 the - night herfOre he• left' visitehd . EVC1'y a.vaila)31.e vrorker turns °tit-
m▪ terpreters arid clerks, 1,120 C noe-
and most • thorough currying and
cleaning of the coats of cows and
Instead of the long and laborious
process- of ice etitthig from- pends,
the electric current will operate the
resiS- ment 18 $12 per year. ok $6 on every ing silently., No ; the r.e4 son is refrigerating room's ' anlfflontii
• . , caught w-ithout a chance of
hundred invested -that' is. 6 Per cent.- that the- dark once left men de- fluids, with automatic stoppage ol
referred to in a pro. fenceless frOm the attack of anif the motor- when the required degree
strenuous times from one of the A shop was found in Goswell This is what. was
• ed • Road, Clerkenwell, which the eiens article. when "rate of.. income" was maiS that could see, in the dark, of cold is reached. The power may
better that he could, and the mem-' be directed to the farm workshops,
or y of those days is in our bones where lathes- and grindstones 'arid
and blood. emery wheels may be rue for the
given as one of the points-thei, second
in importance -to be considered in chosing
ad investment.
Now: in the case of stocks, aa we 'see.
above, this is' a very simple ,matter to
understand. When we nonaider bonds.
however, there hi considerably more to
be taken into account'
Anyone who has ever bnight bonds may
sometimes Wonder" why 'two different ' is-
sues or the bonds of some particular city
sell a‘, quite different prices. The se-
curity is exactly the same, the rate of
interest identical', the only difference,
- Scientists trace stage -fright 'back farm's “jack-of-all-trades " saying
to the days when to' be eonspienous not only the cha,rges of the Village
,
meant to invite -attack 'from more blachsmitii in hundreds of troubles, .
. .
powerful,animals, Ancl theshyness but save 'the time .ofdriving to and
many people have abouterossing a from the town. • •
large room -when other people' are ' •• - • ' ' '
SAVE FRLIT-FROM I:ROST.
present is another inherita,nce frorn .• • • •
our 'primitive. ancestors. . In the in ' sthne of the tnirthern•'. fruit
forests it was only the biggest end growing section's the -electric warn....
strongest animals, snch as the bear„ ing signal s set for rousing th
who'clared to -walk,' stra,i ht acrOss the„night when the "danger!'" tern -
whole' farm population any tune us
the .elephant, and the ' maStotion,
• , peratuee is reached' out . of doors. .
Lane hea.tre. , Near 1 e: make?
the price. What 'difference .could that ,sidle or slink' r,ound. theeedges.
'the proprietors were Stots.• • Pardu'ro-f the performance a gentle-. - , you ask. , . ' • ' Havetyou. ever ,thOughf- over thti- itaitiealtit kindles fir:eS in the .srnadge pots' ,
in tile stalls-. ivas- quietly- asked • ' , • , instinct that we :all have, are set in ' tiye, orchards, pre-...
• ten kyears to rina, Belie ,at 103IA. itt ' - - ' --`, ' lo kin ' At s in one asselectticity' is- light,- power-- -and-s---
d f ' I 'cl f'f t But
----And'-the--Itudson...Bay Company cuppose ta' 5 per, cent. 81,300' bond with c 41'4;313,
The wil en we .are-_-- .,0 g_ _, 0 e. . , Pgre or t le angers o . ros .
and the someone' tinos• round, to.'heat allsin " ' - t- th ' '
looks away, and pretend we zeta , ene, may ,no e press ,
become electrical
0,n_e_ '‘,y, knovv enly slightly„ to prh- 'Asia risme...engineer w•h(r _does. 11 )t
,,,.....„. •
ni'it watchitig? Similui. iS tie irnPuise 'ehnetate.im's,lidaguetoPnivattSically ,turried .on 7 • s ,
when .we nseet'in' the street 'eoine- ,
To -day there is not a practical ,
tend we dd. not' see 'hhn• Iftleser look uton .the'. pr,:ient State el ' - •
imPulses• are usnallY c'vere°the irn- l oleetrieal service,as in, its infancy.
mediately, but there are few people li ere, eine! the electrical city. flo7v.
who have' l'Icii felt them at timOh long before.the electrical 'farm?, '
gradually became Scotch. From
the time when the inevitable Scot to gl *e .11P his Place to scimeone who
had a important duty to perform. owner will 'receive SW year on an in-
aPP day, , the chief oepporoon of the The pe gon in question was a tall tnient of $1,082.50. In such circum -
appears upon the scene to the pres-
ent Bay officials have been
draWn froni-tre-.0eliliey-s-inti•-ethe 1- evening -dross, and ef mos_t disting-
, ' ents before the cu ain fell, the' per -
f d_snon, ored man, in perfect stances a etock-whieh is never repaid -
would net the investor about 41-2 per
A few mmil_ t: -The -bond -is -different. however..
IlighlAnds. • •• uished anpeara e.
The investor pays $1,082.50 for the boa&
.: THE SECRET OF.SUCCESS." Son next, hini-alit -beadyseyed ''Yllic4.: i° ten. years is paid off at 11'''69•
\
appointed a 'dresser't).the-9tieen'o. 'At, GM, slittl details earl: rio longer
: , distinguish. At' 800 Ya:rds men
A. Sillititttp ' itt a etowd eannot Counted,..nor
Most servants in the eTrinloy ofTtlieir mo\-entent-4 dis•
' foreigner-jemped up, evidently in S°-'1'° Inii5C save en°ugh out °' hia in'
Atii:st the country, still-e-Makesseit n -fintrss-,1-0_,iBrut . ,ii nvight. _es,e.,....saFeessar.,•taseposse,
theLt82.50 of ca-
S:try ' of .the fernier who said that hi stopping. to get if, knOcke Pitai thin! lost,. That is to say. he must
call to the Scot is shown in the bor just then dropped his s tick. and.
"it made '-a; ehap'S eyes•r,glad -to • hi-, vat,. and then" his dleves. ais, "
Ndown lay away in each Yea's,. oi the ten which
his -bend.,has to rint, ..the scm 0! s6,,i,te,
look at, wheat 70in. high with Such deliberation in recovering• , ilie whiCh, at compound interest,Wili ailotint
. causeda e ay w ne • eons]. era N ° . ' ' Y
t 016132 50 b the time the, bond ina-
a head on it. And ye dinna grow d i ' Ir'' h ' 'd bl
niek. . they saw me' owning annoyed the foreigner. ,.• . ' `tures. Therefore. the Investor can only
tattier; like yeti in , Banchery:Deve-
11 soil like .vott in 'Aberdeen the . ,31eanwhile 'King lvtar'Pel' kft.-11',:e c°2681\der:-$4?..P of 11.1' abntlal inter•e!t'.'-'e't
a, tak, their lints aff to me ., • • ',theatre; and then the gentleman In Sail-a3,legitimate incortie, and, dividing
4 , 4..," ,c 4 , evening -dress, who t..'n't re,i1IV :a 843.s0 by $1,082.50 we find that this
at i‘s, the secrei, ok,tiie, 000LS -. we
W1-1* ' ' '''- nown detective,announee amounts to. 4, per ent, on the Mil of
SlieCeSg ill (2ariadal The author is' L , ' . • • •
trial ne propose(' ..,0 SO6 nim out tif 1,082.50 Invested. Therefore, a 6 per cent.
England at'onee. .
FACT ANI? EANCf.
It is both paradoilcal and un -
explains: ,t, thus: . d, with ten years to run, selling at
• They were able to adapt them- 1031-4 "yields" 4 per tent. /l'emernber,
Selves' to any eiteemstaricee; they the ainetint returned iS, of OtirPe areas,
together,' In Canada to -day there :
had faith. in' theinselvee, and stuck , •
are close upon a Millien eitizens el
Scots' .descent or birth: They are
only One:eighth' of the 'total popula-
tion, but they hold among them
•
"
,-,The explanation lies :in . the, old', .,.......___,v_......-- .
TRITE SAYINGS, .
'inirrial" hatred' •of meeting another . .
,aniarl% eye. \Vlach a dog, or the . •
anenahs,in a immagoriss Eeon tee ., it, is a pO6r•riite,tliat won't ifiiiii
castechiesn•telusfse,ds-%iaarried..ilshjosikt` tfidu:ti.)y;_yrtai j. : 'si:eVph, it t_ li...,c*aistt ,t.;:i at, .:ii,-. rks While '
• ' , , ,,, ,
Te%a'sjs.i.;t1iisitt aa t'sruiedkci evt,iel/rilegahrtn ti is 111 0111'
rr,..1ifif,:sc,lxieitiii-gesa'rne:t.,a4agiciii ..eticti..att ,:o.i. lt,e.1:6. f. oth..yo.. rilokci istiiift., ,
wilder days, and exactly .er ". ' . . ,
' obsoet,is ,th'ne.:::: ,1 .011 . will never reach the rigliti '
sPa.nds to.the. del.i"lia4nriling °at liti,sisw, igtehttInsgtal'iti:ett. hard tf.!;'itii..'
sOtrie animal's are 'so adept in. The
weaker- animals !caret .er.',ns ago 'I'. 11,a fl.°"' '"Oth";'' '.. ,
'that a rnoYind
lion will blink when it ehtiiites 'alwaYs- . Wu
•
" in the "wrong 'road.
cent. in esee'ss of lltac rate Tr?"' etietaY" Loan- tnaL ,hcartitii Say the leas!1 iolat 1.11111.11'P.
Per"' s'"Pe ..'I'llehareni skirt. is .
er •tlaari 4' per, cent., but the half of 1 .
pleas'ant 7ade ,thrbugh a Airy
It is. easier o live within an,
payment of a. part 'of ttie in.vested 'ca -
pitid, in insteninentii,
COme, than without"; °tie.' , On the 011ei t liana; where.. a ,rtiretiar
,More than" one half of the, positions The crocodile likes its meat high,' b9-na., 5013'halpv,.. par, ,the prOcess iit,, re,
foe any inimigiant into Caziatla: is 'rpt:,1d' 4a3,f,teerarekoillilisi"thito' rkeeoedria8),t bid4e" ver'sed. *161 iti't'lliPle' 4 l'''' 6nt''' V.“)rid
worth having. . The best. pasepott
sel.ing , at 0, with ten, years to '1.1a,
tO speak With a 'Scots aceent. One
:Thioughout, the world ,ther;:!-ares: 'Yieldg.;;tbe iove4tor: 6.5 r,r.!,r cent., >Otero,
oedaSionally Sees the notice -in eon- „,,,2 ,10,6,,,t, ,volearwes; 270 01 which ,ag, a, .4. per rent, 'ott6'ek {;(4ijni at 'yo,
iteetion with 'soine eituation--:"No turns -but' 4.4 on the itlY.08ttnent. The
English neea ;apply." If .an -„e active'. '
fedtion, i00460 years
yr ate on tne doss ri I line ,.
' Do like shaking hands/ M, ny 1, t •
maae iiaste to ge 'a. trans,er.
Pe;,,Ple do noti avr-)idl'O!!' 11Iay not a marriage, ceremony bit
'anon.? a4 much as peseible.' it is 4: t
30$1,1Y a transaction in bonds I, •••
the 'old, animal di.sl ike or being '
tette:bed, The or,tlinary 'house -dog! .
,1•• • -1. ,TAN. ON BAC,II1s1„,011.0s.),e,-‘
ie •CIVIIIi.(30 3t tratS oelti
petted; 'Lahti any wilq ring' (lie period under(7tVErniin
st;ild 03.41101i. city.h 1as an • Eskimo' 111. svheri UtelierUtdoir} was taxed
il 14 tJiI dog, A. totteh' Will ,Malre it quints, peers had to 'jay more dearty,,thita .'
11 r , , , Y.5 rct,,,'" . ay,' ay, 'or Ittiry' It.S Sitn'gs int0 ,44.fmnionert4 for the , privilege:1'er
Royalties, of Whatever nationality, ItirettriSh. .AC1,000 yards ti, line 9i Canatlian had tie temei • .. , ,
hand, " , i,in'gle bliSs; sas's thel,Oriden ,elti'On-
' gpeak 'English and Pre,nefieso that 1. solsilsre r(q(,,mble5,a brodd 4611, ,,N't , " .. t• I i -1 ii'e would' ted.,that -marriage is a first-class
‘,‘,).0s, opots Peet, apply's, intsrest rimst be siri4(.0 the vIrt ,A ,tbral . ,..'11\ -qt tiS 9V-qreOth4. thIS indlihe' 101e. The, yearly tax le'yietl ere '
cost but $900, there!arer tri ever, $••) .' '.'tle.• Intruding
there is no difficulty regardirig,ton- 1400 "..ards . essealies e,..gri ., bo.: ili.poi onit: ii„dvertist,,, iiith5eif a feel, ocitlist.
. , , Jf love is blind it must be admit-
th.e" berld is repaid par' or $1,000 , and
eersalson between' them. ems tsneuish frern infantry, and
at
taiion ally th,6 services or an inter, 0' a, meunted emiti usuallY ap-
preter are rectuired. Once thie led , peats, Mere peek. "••• '
ks unexPected ralina to a ro-
- • '
h.o4
•
ruartee, t1Aitt • 'is talkeil Of in' .inel,stzED /1-/:cf
castle. l'ACtiat'4 that ,li'aveIn , poet:
the serYatits! hall 'at Nt,litaKet
' lia.pp,ened when tlie I< ! hand ?".. 4.$40`d•'Nfrs• 0.f •ber
of P'orfugal "Was vting W'in<lser leisharia ie ire bresiight borne a flit' wotk, bet else of meeting so4many
„" Castle 'in 1904; One of the•sisitine mantiscript, , I chts thats te liorne'tItere
' ,an 'argunient in fav°"'f' inat-' siso proEv wbieti wi'll be reeelat. at tire "iti Ow CA4C ('51' 'ewe iritirnate r'rientis, bachelo- ier langed frem, '212 11.S.' in
rinionrit is Stated that gmen:g fver„„:v time tee e,e;rei is ro,,enia.stra o,f whIttit, it): but there are many peoPle who, if the' Cjase. of dukes and firefibishops
eLii3Oini0Oin-aihsa,ciwiehleiires, 'tialinieorep,g'armearri:3 th8er.,:,yi,iteIbd4,rianeger„;:ohji;d:.0„rt,,hrait.810t;1,..fo,,,„,tii8, 0..f, tvioitiist ati,eLfrird,zdac,e,y t,ia).13.iticl,:ii0;iig<",,,,,,c, ,,,,idt:jc, ittail: 40.1vti to.,1 shilling in the ease ,et
tbse ichedilled, as "other per-
nien.the:r'Ati(i is
only
eighteen Pel:. 'abt,, on a filed dSte, the e.sunnt o.• limp Tee.. 'ereeto Jere; ,...,,sereho,,(4), h43•4: cominillea,ta pay. R5'0'when.rie war- .
1,000- • " • ;"i, ,' . •• r ,^ . i t . ' '''' i ' ' '', i ' '' i ' -
. , m6rtgat,oe or cli,beirt'urs ' whi(h ore ewe. i`e's s 'ts, them s--- e "" " •••-e--,--- ,,orei " Fiirthermore a dUke. was '
Paris; T ) fa id I is e' areint; .sbool tip gfhotr biVyl 'gaa rdjonzeoin; tin() /0 -; ,,. 0, t i ii," ,, r 0, ,4" 004", ya.,on,}) iip..0 . 1,34 ,t;iro, •,...A. refAins, :,,,,r .1;t:ti („4, 7 1 (i. e: d, 4
-:,30 When his eldest son Wait '
be'ifkl*d,„,,,mai 'wil naSnete"ae smt raf5nYft,:5 'e a il did tel:It;a;:ra;:e.i.6's:fisitir.0747;,,tip8i.,not.1:'citti:f 1Ilti' .1)It';'(,, tugahlts:thi,sr',;,''''})1.1'.hiCt;f4j,i''11:,Irjel rii:nactnr '1,,:is•cji.rsil'hejr!'2n5, 'Ny'llh:10eni:vehrnrYlii?ecklild4ecslt, '.itt.'(aillri
OPitil.°11, °f you, make make 11-16"; eflitrtfi-I0 jau,'i't.t:q'ii44"4: t.04?:1"11.;'it.;;;I:IC:toirkirr'41''''';:t4uf'''''It.'11i.e'''' $(.1',1e4.'ziLteo:;:'d4e'e.'ls,liertiflitt-i...1, .1:61:vt..;:1:' )1;1(1')111 y)gitelL1 l'w;tair8ielnda arrnid4141i Itt,'V.,,° b‘‘.e'hn-nliihg.i01*deif set-%sv 0303
yon'll get its ,,
ti`ita'u'' ' ti'''' th'f* ar° f'''''''1"f'4t' t''S'bl" VetY OtdOit MOInOrY Of the litynan Was batted. And the' other mem, .
%itnels la an 'unspeakable nuisanneed Or
tnrian'S' i,i,e't.,.kties whether he ik War- vol4+ rat" mid t'f"."11 tri tt,13"%ni' n/14
bet he squid ' also probably
lynched," '
Within, another' twenty yeare; it
is' firepliesied, there. will be 'dotthie
niimber'• of Scots in Canada,
And going to Canada the -Scot is
sure,,...pot'' only of finding honest
teonareh'aeris fell ttioloyitly is in ili1•4y Matter'. '1,1"e Cart Still tie
lovle with rine ef the es4;:etant Irehss-iJn'.et. pm/4)01%0.y. "Are v0tt. • 8eat taaada.
not epesit wetri ropti.64.. '
'YtenObf .1 k-,,fsw tfornin• ,Tliete are ItineSe- When 'a. iticent
tip filq on the, Castle Stuff, 'the p- t s•-ei "at the fere I"' •
o tnata hot, he,r4;"
oti:can generally tell 'front -a "cotoi;)"1 t1'6 434rUle" raee going Indeed, to the belt peerage had tt,
Lott bond, bare a otivpii
,
• kk
ape-tlko Ahnilar takeiesgradaated' tiblO
and silent in trettle Ito 'their tank.