The Goderich Star, 1907-01-18, Page 7r
rwl 'PM!
1.
JEALOUS -LOVERS' GRIMES
1114:411 SEEN TRACER 10 VIE• •ORSEN,
MONIOTIaL
Y Ant Mare Oecnallt TOP
Getnetriee Thin In Vendee
• glenes.
Ckte RI thC ernetleet eritnen dee to lea,
olliaethet leae Wet' egninlittect eectirreil
*1°11 V114 14 144 gusit 140
km woo a yeling girl DI tete then tWelt-
lYv Wbo Wee eXi4 AtlihhOd.
areth. by the Man Whilth aln$ bad Prga"
lied to Marry', but wheal She had jilted
lever Of anether Sutter: The tragetlY
1001c ttai itt New MeXtetl, !ulnae
pals lng pretty PA a
0o4.19.040,4 401totard.
'no two had boort engagod 'Or some
Pose months. when Vora JAPPeared no
Me scene * youngefellose feent -
'Who pm got acquainted with his pink
le• earupatriat end st$ regKlY lett ea leVe
•Witit het Itteantitne the Speselard, be-
ginning to see that hie COuree tit love
%vete beeetning emokeel. remonstrated
tee, th bLe sWeetheert, but the ,girl was
1011d Of gaillatratIon. and, instegd el re -
*trig her new lover, eta encouraged
until the Italian, belleveing, ROB hi$
101114.vas returned, pereuaded her to
run atelity and marry Win.
The eleeere had had a; twelve hours'
etart When the Spaniard eaugtit up their
trail, and followed the& step bY stela
gintll he traced them to small oountry
/own,where be fotuld they were
SPENDING THEIR HONEYMOON.
1611,11 ,at leat Unferttneatte Men jegi inlet g ggentifecripetteestee eese",e, mat Abe
belikkO hink and Alatit tiuu blotit eaten
apeettrilliCe- the'Weja*Siti orePt 111,1441.11 II 1111141%Vii 44 a Wit Otter 3,910 wero ahltiPhet4tit 4tr elm*
1.trottk to, etiustiolerittfa ttatned
eeridelVit Ineenethle. Theet,111GOS VeMtilt 4a.11. hi 4 1,0141181141i
te Beit *lee eilid /MO the ToOta -whero 11°W wow too IN '‘IteliTiatoilottatialt,
T'OtIttg bride lay. Or riii4k0r1h . DOD," Tbefte Viliditilte' anti et111°
aft theteitt the sekileld Wen
Seettrely Ito* to * Iteee, natt ;hair, and • lain* 44 the* thrtO, Ito therie arta la thte
tait thtt litighter dtty uroOr
not until .thext could his revenge begin-
evhen he 4.bOtlid VNtilWr I* Settees, ter iginituif *‘4/14614 Wftill 414 ifirr4trettileillas4VPIXIZeIrlitit4ui44 ittet
BuitELIVett MOON! 80 rd
When the unfortlittetta Matt 414 teat Vitra hitforo NOKIA alltf*Va t thins
open. hie *yea Utey, felt Open teit yeling Mede in *WI Of the pivot might of Inv
ilk LAN, •
/t,0411 d„14,1,4 111,e: 41 bad, imeat egotist tg fear my peg. eillocra owed to their Men, not than
tat*, * tuft cloorly tha thine* which
4.4%;,oh.inn MPPI:4711"q W"'“ 444in ple, Who Were Mell of itit mama, and the otiediencv Jaele WWI Le Itie
waragret, 01,00444 that it was it ntmirtielawy deLennaotteeptmfroiLthtoxfnaladnImineuil eFuleengt Exii4coutterwm. InNuterstc!.rouripulottseir itatueogtinlatotiodne.s
tntentall Brat IQ kill faithless I /wawa wog* leeeopeatla martinet, tail. For CoOk t4SOlemit'
Sweethetirt and Melt dfrilnatch the men CaPtaist BartheleineW Mee*, In Pity, adalotdshmt that he Is te (1/ "AnsWer
f;etwho lied Usurped his piece In her id* nee, algae tee yurnewee teeweete peet, for ye meat in ye Steep Tub; (I) Water
eigraelif-4rettatalyed, ltZt whketitahn; TAP Quint* 04190 Of lite ut Boll end lesue Meat; (3) Save yepuStectuipt
hert hretlighf the Carlotta crOwding retina' atteauNet)erettealleratt gYrtt:Attipirloaww,.u. mThbattelrn oaf *glettertailliti"ail Than tite:bitteliOnd of
ft 4erV.
tint en to ittl SitouldePt carrie(1
eldrItly the SOldite *WOW the Illantent
the door eletims Were dead. Then isoea emcee employee'. ne egte English grace Is made in the caSe Of me
the Ming. $eldler expleineel the situa-
eelf the benda 9f the genderniee, emeentaet
Channel and Nerth Atlantle. Seine Int in "Shaer Tenders, end such
MusIbte repents tor that gangennee k1114 by Pyrates or Friendshy Mistake."
bon, with greet celnelle" delivered hhn-
wet preeoluy appear, bet, a The men and the qUallit regulations
Iti
fore he was able to catch the young girl
by herself. Then one morning he saw
the husband leave Um heuse, end not
as soon as he was oUt of sight the Span.
lard knocked at the door and, being ad -
Hated, made his Way to the ee'om where
Instinct told WM his fOrmer Sweetheart
Wes, and there he found her reading.
What subsequently happened can only
be guessed, bui when Ihe huabiind re -
0 watched them for several days be -
turned he found Ms young wife
Alead on the bed, her pretty face
,g1411gurod and a stiletto in her
he murderer was never arres
',though the Italian, who really. love
Wife, mule every effort to trace
Another interesUng case, in wh
lealous lover was very nearly atm
gul in slaying the object of his (Wee
occurred about a year ago in the S
In this In.ste,nce the lover was a c
and highly -educated yohng Hobe
en artist of „some distinction, and
parently steady and relleble. The
he lov,ed, scarcely eighteen years of
.evas cashier in a restaurant kept b
father. The young man Atippene
keep into this restaurant onerelay,
addle paying his bill his glinAe le
ttett pretty cashier, to whom he at
, ost Ms heart.
I Soon he began taking his meals
i' arty at the restaurant and spent n
lute in eonversation with the- ye
ady. This, however, did not an
him, and he put in operation a sch
.1which he believed would win for
the girl he loved. He gradually b
4eaving off his smart clothes, ate
Cheapest "coursee," and filially appro
rd the girra father will& a well -for
lale of being out of w.ork and
ASKED POR A JOB.
!And Waii led 4Way,
clue to the CauSe te et WW1 In the eon- Made in their behalf heVe euteer *way.
as to
ene-r-e-eteeeeeee.
THE LIFE OF FISHES. text of Capt. Jenteil'a letter. His attip They Were tor the Vita er part, the
was in Funehal, Medal*, on July 18, uScilllYwattin of a ilionaY lime- au
1m. "And there," he ironically in- 41 01 tie i..1011\1101ilifilriit .eise 1)
No OM Age Amon; Fishes as Among forms the Adrittralty, "I Was .reinthreed our security to the reyetering seamen,
with WU' inutinetra,thet had been land- who lived hard, worked herd, and died
Men, Says the Old Fisherman. ed from the trimmest frigate, with two hard that we might live in peace and
_
"De fishes grow old end wander others front the 'Lively' that had broken qu'etness.
arelind in the ocean, decrepit in their old in a very elan:0in; way: James, "In the olden time,' Says Admiral
Old age, us men do on the land? Well, howeeer, was not the Man to fall in Lord Cheuees Beresford, "we had the
man.
hardly so, I fancy," 'said the old fisher. finding a niethrei 01 perstieding Ms new 'cat' with the dtschillitet now we have
hands Into the paths Of nett% "I gave MeV:Mine with the `cet.'" and UM
"You see men when they grow old are them no lime tor reflection," he cheer. liritish navy of to -day ie a model to the
*cared for by their kind, nourished and fully adds, "geed, whdleeorne valuate, world, a menace to none—the upholger
protected Mom dunger and life Is made constant employ, and 4 verY dlevere flog- of a great inheritance.
easy Mr them, but it isn't so among the ging tor every offence was thole allow-
.11sItee, where each one must look out for ance. An example I made et one mu- ...-„,...-4,---,........
Itself. tInous fellow for an linproper speech LteNDON BOBBIES.
. "Fishes are cennlbals, end every fish io the boatssval b I 1
at •I v nit him twelve
from the time it Orst waves a. fin ha the dozen lashes, very effeetuelly put a stop Ilidtiroore Detective an Adndrer of the
wider is in danger of being eaten by ta the conetiquences which rnight have
some larger fish. True, fishes of a kind been fatal." Unless the,tetes of Nelson,s
go in schools and so find some prole°. time were toUgher in the epidermis than
'non. but the able bluefish, for Instance, the men I hue° aeon tied up for a round
dashes into a school of menhaden and four dozen " the career of the mutineer
bites and tears' and kills and eats, and who endur'ed 145 lashes was, fatally
.so it Is of all lerger Oshes towards stopped, as well as the consequences
einaller ones, they eat them when they
eat FEARED BY Tim CAPTAIN
J1 in o the, fish Le. in constant danger of Flagging was in.. hishlen In the daYe
og ,being eaten by some fish larger than it. when the pleat wee either chasing the
•
heart. self. a danger that it aveide by refining foe across an oceen. boxing him UP itn
ted, away or by hiding trout its enemies hie home ports, or hi -toeing him o
d las when 11 can. But as It mows older and close action wherever found. Even
Jelnn comes to what you might call age, it Collingwood—friend of Nelson, and a
ich fs grows less vigorous and alert and is less humane commander, us humenity was
COSS. able to look out for Itself, and then with then understood—took Into buttle et
lions no help from the outside it is in great gloriotts Trafalgar scores of men who
danger. And then It is more likely to had been flogged by his orders for tie-
tates.
lever fell a prey to purwsites or to disease and vial infra6tions of a dracortic naval code.
mian, so live a less time than it might. have Nelson was wont to say when some tor.
lived if li Watt possible to have ail the butent tars were brought to his notice—
al3- conditions favorable.
ade t
glrl o -We no .often get fishes that are very knows how tit deal With such fellows."
"Turn them over Le Collingwood, he
„ 1, ' large ,ei their kind, fishes that we take
Jd•t. note of, but their greet size doesn't in hot haste on thq mernotoble morning
And the man who led the seoond column
and necessarily indicate great age. When we ol Oct. 21, 1806, certainly had a way of
ii on see a giant among men we don't con- his own with Intractable sailormen. "1
chide hions that he's an old man, do we?
once
hanging in the riggInte to drY—evela If
No. It's just so with fishes. will make them salute a raiddy'a jacket
MT"There are giant fishes just as there
aro giant men, and there are stunted the middy be dead," seld.the 'Admiral.
me" fishes and deformed fishes and all Met, An apologLst for Collingwood pleads
,un.le but that "he did- net out a inalfs flesh to
it doesn't follow becatise a fish is
ws'Y vert: lafge of Ils kind that les very old. rthands," as maey other °Meets did.
eme ., o guess you wouldn't find many "A dozen or so" was the great commun.
him fine but feeble Id
o patriarchs wenderin der's limit.
etir around ln the sea. I guess theres no oll Equity demands at least a cursory ap-
tae age_ among ashes IIS there is among eine* of the material out of which
ends ,
tiled
itch- men..
flag-Celkers-and 'Captain -a heal -to manu-
facture seamen whe could "band reef,
and steer," and flght the guns when
The restattranekeeper, who was a good-
natured man, sympathized with his cus- Div
tomer, and found him a place in the din-
interoom as wailer. Soon enemy/Lids
It
the young assistant suggested that he
abould "board" with the family, and no "LI
objection was found to this arrange- ,
rnent. Then, just as the young Romeo p'f,
was beginning to believe that his woo- ;YIL,
Mg was going to land at the altar rails, '-'c"
h:s hupes were dasheA by the appear. seP
fort'
ance tbe scene of a more favored
the
suitor.
The Bohemithes jealousy immediately
, got the better of him, and he told tne
sweetheart that if she even looked it
his rival he would kill her and her fa -
her und mother, and finally himself,
But the girl only laughed and continued
Jo to Jeri with her lover's rival, until the
green-eyed monster finally hed him in
his power,
At last, getting tired of his outburses
of passion, the girl informed the young
Bohemian that she did not want to have
anything more to do with him, that she
was engaged to his rival and hoped
shortly to be married, and she never
wanted to see him again. The young
man took the news with apparent calm.
nese, but his brain was busy with
tenge. He threw up his situation. went
to board with another faintly, and just
as the girl and her parents were con-
gratulating themselves that they were
rid of him be turned up at the restate
rant and asked to be allowed to see his
former sweetheart once more.
The girl's mother opened the door a
declined to let tern in, but the yo
man pushed past her and rushed .1
the sitting -room,. where he found
girl eating her breakfast.
WHIPPING OUT A REVOLVER,
he asked her If she intended to marry
him, and when she answered "No" he
shot her twice in the chest and then sent
a bullet Into the arm of the mother,
who haerfollowed him In. Ho was about Afric
to turn the pistol on himself when lite the
father entered and overpowered him. acqui
The girl's Ilte Was despaired of
many days, but she ultimately" recover-
ed. The young man is now serving a
term in Sing Sing, where. it is believed,
hls jealotie nature will huve lime to be -
Coale norti,c1.
Probably no country in the world has
produced more jealoue lovers and hus-
bands than Frafice, and that It Is a
dangerous thing io inlet:ere in II,e love
antra uf a Frenchman is shown by the
following which created nn
idtense sensation at Ike lime. About fif-
teen years ago a young French soldier
fell in love with the sister of a brother
officer, and after a few weeks proposed
and was aerepled. The wedding -tiny
was fixeJ and every thIng eceined
foretell a haopy union, when the young
lady orte-etunately met a man who had
been a former lover of hers, but whom
She Mid belitved dead. -
Instead of severing the aequaintance,
howeter, the newly-engmed girl saw so
much of her old friend that she soon be.
Came cOnvinced that her approaching
marriage was a mistake, and, being
honest In her Intentions. she expinined
matters to her flanc-ee and malted 111111
AC retells? her. lie refused. and. half-
med a.p..h inelense , ondeeteappoiniment,
hi, demanded the name ot his rival,
which the girl derlined lo give. As he
was wee( incapable of lielening to rea-
son the lady gave him his dismissal.
and a month later married her former
lover.
Then the young soldier threw tip hiS
COnlrnission in the army nitd was rte.
Counted a rh see er. DI smeseng Reif,
tie ireeed the newly -married couple from
place lo plare. and nt last "tine up with
them in the Forest of Fontainebleau,
"them.,
IN A SMALL ANT1 LONELY HOUSE,
round shot hurtled and spllnters flew.
CUSTOMS 07 NEGRO TRIBES. The "men of all nations" who vexed the
official soul of Captain 'Bartholomew
°rec. Rare—IAA Regard for Withers James had been roped in by the press
—Property Rights. gang and-Irle-tfirrecord 'mat .very few
of the aliens were capable of being lick -
is said that divorces are rare ee into sea -going shape by the rough-
ong (hose tribes who lead a simple and -ready methods of the time which
undisturbed. As the civilized peo- ineluded the boatswain's rattan and the
, marriages cannot be dissolved rope's -ends welded .by his mates. The
hout formality. Princesses of the great bulk of the work "aloe+ and aloft"
41 Coast only have the privilege t- f and at the guns was done, by regularly
prating from thelr hu.shands without enlisted seamen, "bounty inen," maybe,
mlity. Some white clay handed to but
husband is a sign of dismissal.
BRITISH -BORN WITIIOUT DOUBT.
(amnion people, on the other 'hand,
Lave to appear before the chiefs, who
decide the "case. If they present the
wife with a piece of white clay, she
must mark the trees of the principal
streets of the village as a sign that she
is no longer a weddint wife. 11 the ell -
?name is granted te Tte man. the wife's
family must return the equivalent of
the purchase money.
Old age among the true negroes, as
among many Other peoples, is held in
Ligh esteern, says the Southern Work-
man. Contrary to the popultir notion
the family life of many African tribes
before they came In contact with Eu-
ropean civilization was beautiful. The
large family prevails.
There ls probably no race In which
offspring is so highly prized as among
negroes. infanticide is rare here in
cetnparison with Polynesia and Melan-
esia. They rejoice .at the birth of a
child. In this respect they are much
like Europeans. Mother love is very
strong. If a man's mother and his wife,
they say. are on the point of drowning
and he can save only one he must save
the mother, for if the wife is lost he
may marry another, but he will never
flnd a second tnother.
The original right to private owner-
ehip 9f land is acquired, as with Its. 01*
ther by fee or allodium. It is said that
tenure of land among the Dahomey's and
Rechuanas Is in fee simple. In East
a it is everywhere nliodial. On
Gold Coast property In the soil is
red hy bringing It under cultiva-
tion. All the land In the neighborhond
o? a lown Is considered as belonging to
the Inhabilan's generally and the man
who nest cuts down the bush and grows
n crop Is regarded as the proprietor
of that port'on.
Among some West African tribes
there Is, under native law, no commu-
nity in goods between a man and his
a lie. Eitel) keeps • separate estate. Wn•
Uteri owning and holding properly un-
der identical conditions with men. The
laws of inherlianre vary. In some
cnsea the brother Inherits: In some the
eldest or most influential son: In some.
the rifle! slave, The underlying Iden
Inheritnnee of property seems to be
e, 1,e, p the wenn of the house. 1. 0_
the °stele. Ingether. This is somewhat
similar to the Iden underlying the EAU -
110 law of inheettanee. 'The strong lied
the running. as with us. defrnud the
weak out of pranertv. mieficularly tyre
men and rhildren who have no power-
ful min t Is es.
In vile of nbisqe4 there in n definite
and nelsnowlelged law. le which an
+Innen! can he mode by nerenns of n11
renssee. presided they have the means
n' setting the merhInery of the Inw In
minion. There ore wills, bet they are
pnt the rule. Gifts take the piece of
Willa. A rich mnn gives thinge during
his lifetime to his friend or fevorile wife
nr Meld or elave. sn that he can see
Met they get what he wishes them to
have.
.theY were et-midi/1g the honeymoon. For
ellays the young seldler shadowed
4 -patiently awaiting the lime when the
,,young wito ahem be alone. Welt eon-
, edderable eunning he succeeded In lur-
:e, lettere end then Making lihr way lo the
. hen the hueeand away with a forged
hottera filigree -tied In forcing ati entranee.
tOtInd the yoting wife quite alone.
' And belting the deer lie bade hen pre -
re Air deathe Th0 girl Sereatntailoud-
ebilt her cries were hesitantly cheeked
the Skiing hand of her would -ho-
e, Yet. VI, (fifth her ceeurely end plao-
n24
Pilfee ens
•
WER.7, THERE.
A woman with an exceptinnally clear
tomulexIon rerently Sat for her photo-
graph. On receiving the proof she
look 11 back M the weld and corm
ained nf a number of small 'pole nn
the face which marred an otherwlee
(+erten picture. The photographer was
ht a loss to arenunt for Iles, an exotn•
Mallon of the negative failing to give
the slightest clue to the Retiree of
tiouble. A fortnight later an eruption
of spole broke out on the woman's Mee.
kehleh proved to he the first outward
tymptnma of very severe attack of
tonatipox.
—
TOO sr.w.NTIptr.
"WIt
in Iter Mouth, he left the intends]
1
n by the only Aervant, an lerture
per, to await the Intlitelltheie "1 eti
. Pie an hourkfte watehed, reaped
v doesn't that scientific leeturer
re some humor into hie popular
se"
wee herauee he hag too much
ter tho attraction of gravity,''
and so inheritors of that tradition of the o me, and - Deleetive Inspector Sn
sea which has inspired fur a thousand and Pete -live Sergeant Haines were
YUrs the makers of our island story.
signed to show me the oily. We
The residuum was moiety enough,, haul- (tad the notorious whoonspet distr
ers of ropes, "wallets and drudgers of
al one lime the worst slums In Lond
the after•guara," held in derision by the
but thie district has been praetica
seasoned sailor, and treated according -
cleared of crime, and I he very wo
ly Marryat mentions a ship conunts- „
slum of London Is the `Guinea'
stoned in his sea -going days, which was
treat, where there is a large fore
"manned by men uf nineteen nations, population.
and professing amongst them fifty -see- „
Scotland Yard deals with all kt
en trades." Sheriffs of auunties were crimes /3 this respect is dif
directed to find recruits for His Majesty s
fleet, and the order was ofttimes filled en m o p ,
t tro ur local de artnient for
Scotland Yard men are assigned
ty informing healthy prisoners who work up counterfeiting cases and 01
were under sentence of death that they
crimes against the governnient Tli
could either join the navy or be hang-
ed. "1 11 be hanged If 1 do," said a Dur -
set prisoner when the sheriff gave him
the option of fighting the French.
"You'll be hanged If you don't," was We
sheriff's sigefficant rejoinder.
It may be profituble to Inquire how
the helots of the lower deck fared in
other vespeets than disciplinary details.
The seamen whom Dibdai glorified was
allowed a gallon of Leer every duy. His
allowanee uf water was one quart. The
likuld became putrid after being in cask
for a few days, and then becatue seveet
again—a phenomenon which puzzled
even the pundits for many years, but
which is now comprehended in the light
of bacterial expert/rime After a few
weeks in the hold the water became
thick end slimy, "full of green grassy
things." When the beer supply ran
short—as would surely happen when the
fleet was for many weeks away from the
home ports,
English Pollee.
Detective Thomas Burns, of headquar-
ters, laziltimore, Maryland, who return-
ed from London, England, on Sunday,
brining with him John Sullivan, for.
tnerly a motnrolan on the United Rail-
ways,' who IS wanted by the Baltimore
authorities on the charge of manslutigh-
is enthusiastic over the organize -
nen and methods adopted by the Lon-
don Police Departmeitt.
"The London constanulury," said De-
tective Burns this morning, "is a won-
derful organization. The great oily W
policed by uboui 17,900 men. There are
atout forty men in Scotland Yard, whleh
is something like our detective head-
quarters, only vastly larger. In addi-
tion to the plain eclothes men in Scot-
land Yard there ore about eight hun-
dred plain clothes men +scattered about
the various pollee districts.
"The London policemen work In eight
hour shifts, but, of course, the detec-
tives cannot work on regular how's
there any more than they can hero.
' "What particularly impressed me in
England Ls the universal respect of all
classes for the law and fur the pollee.
London policemen and detectives go
absolutely unarmed. The people there
have such regard for the 'pollee and the
law tttey represent that officers are not
bbligzd to carry espantoons. blade
or revolvens. The only appliance
carry is a small whistle, with w
they can summon assistance, but
thts is seldom Used,
"1 was greatly interested In the %
a" the London traffic squad. Whe
London. policemeue holds up his
traffic stops immediately. He is a
lutely imperial. A peer of the re
a rnember of the Royal Family or
omnibus driver knows that he
obey that uplifted hand. All 1r
stop; until the feoeby' lowers his h
All the time I was In London I did
see one man resist arrest, end I sa
number of arrests made. The police-
man making the arrest simply put his
hand on the offender's shoulder and
told him he was under arrest. Whatever
the crime or coMplaint was, the prison-
er walked along with the policeman as
11 it were a matter of eouese.
"The English °Metals were very kind
tall
ns-
Ily
est
dis-
gn
n ds
tee-
the
to
•r
ere
are Iwo Scotland Yord men who are
considered expert; at deteeting counter-
feits. In the last year these two de-
tectives here serured thirty convictions
of counterfeiters.
"London has an efficient harlx,r pollee.
but they operate entirely with rowboats
along the Thames."
acks
they
hieli
even
vork
n a
and,
bso-
atm, „a
an Civil and Military Guzette, We have no
must standard etiquette, nu standard dress.'
eme We mostly copy Europeun etiquette ts
and, wilde with Europeans. Even a theigull E
get shakes hands with a Bengali, speaks in
w a English for a few minutes, and then
VIAITERSAS ANARCHISTS
won ni-ters ATTIRE TRAGEOVS11010 FAILING NE
thEr Mfg IVRQ,NO TQ LliSS IN IftrtASONS UM FOR AllAaiROZiENG
'SSW%
0I4 LONDON.
RAGE OF PEOPLE
REVIXTO Or "MAMIMMVO" Olt rnik ION OR WOMEN AM 113WX
itit'SXMOK,
• kArniiii MUM-
tau It 411. . Ito nib' Own ve MOM
s Boo a Shortage ot Foreign,
Waltman.
Qince the bomb outrage during tho
/wedding procession tit Me Klee and
Queen Of there has been a great
ateirtege of foreitm weitere Lelident•
lehey are reptilly imbibing anareitielle
had' doctrineet and refuse to
Work us they did in the pest.
it appetite that /during the peat few
lyears they have banted clubs for re.
treatton after aurk hours; but In the
last few weeks they have rapidly ehang-
ed Irons purely social to anarchistto
tabs, AnarchisLs trout abroad have
arrived to preach the ductrine of Soca'.
ism, urgine them to work less.
"Formerly waiters paid for their
len. metaurant, paid for their
lean linen, and were willing to work
long hotu•s," said the proprietor of a
tvell-known London resturent to e press
tepresentative. "Now we have even to
tupply them with their clean collars
and shirts. In only a few cases do they
pay for their tables, and they wilt only
Work short hours, and insist on having
the restaurant cleared up by special
sweepers Instead of doing ft thernseives.
BECOME BAD WAITERS.
"They are developing Into a race of
tad waiters, In my day we served an
ineprenticeship of three years, At the
knd of this we knew ntlr trade, and
could tell at a Noce wtiat our clients
required withou being asked for it.
'Now you have to ask a waiter for ev-
trything you want—and even then he
often forgets. /to does not know les
business. He refuses to serve for three
years, expecting to serve as a fully qua-
lified waiter directly he gets a meatier-
ing of English.
"Its Socialistio tendencies of the
last few weeks have made hlm insule
brdinate and rude, not only to propene
fors, but also to our cu.stomers. If you
dismiss him he itninedlately obtains a
berth at some other restaurant, so
great is the demand. He brags of this
to your face.
NO REFERENCES.
"Formerly, before engaging waiters,
they had to produce the highest refer.
ences. None aye now called fur. The
'result is we are forced to enguge men
ho prove to be dishonest
eleatel proprietors abroad are also
experiencing this, and are forming an
aseociation in which every proprietor
sends the name and full description (
eny dishonest waiter in his employ In
the other members of the association,
+warning them not to engage him. The
Itssoclation started In Switzerland, and
has spread to Prune° and Germany.
Soon we shall have to the same thing
in England."
UMBRELLA AND SHOES.
Their Importance In the Eyes of the In-
dian Native.
India is so vast that different etiquette',
prevull In dinerent districes says the
intIvIlege Granted by French 'Gov
mond — The Riding Astride
Hablt.
Caen of %Yemen in male Mitre Ire
more frequent than may be eneleneenel•
NUnterines mental latee fought ill battles
as ecultn1011 Soldiers. The stery of those
who have for MMus memo donned
kivillan undo attire may not be ao m-
inutiae, but It is equally extraordinery,
&We the f.ondun Express.
Rosa Donheur's cusp is, Perhalm, tho
Most famous. This celebrated animal
painter petitioned the French Govern-
ment to allow her to wear male dress
at the horse fairs NItich she hud to at-
tend in meter to +obtain unityrial ler her
lectures. The petition was successful,
end for many yeara Mine. Bonheur went
ubout France univereelly respected In
the guise of a "Men -woman.'
Nor was Mnie. Benlieur the only lady
whorn the privilege Wes grented. At
Nast three other %%mown—a soUlptor,
belenlist and journallst--hold a like
Permission from the French Govern -
anent, and utilize it to the full.
It Ls usual, and peemissible, for wo-
*nen to adopt niale attire in certain
forms of athletics and (Tort and in sUch
occupations as gardening, farming, end
colliery labor. Wes have had women
footballers in this country, but the sight
has not been edifying. In hunting, cycl-
ing, mowitaineering, hockey, etc,, the
\veering of semi -masculine garb is
ALMOST A NECESSITY.
• Ur. DO Mk Says rivisq Say.
Their %was Is the Carlo 01
The cieslom of rentag astride is grow-
ing among horsewomen, and of course
this cannot be dune In skirts. Lady
Violet Greville informs us that numbers
of ladies of title are adopting it, einem/
them the Duchess of Westminster, Lady
Camtlereagh, Lady Constance Stewart-
itichardeon and the lion. Mrs. Euirbairn
—to mention only a few.
Thu lailies of cerluin hunts—the Ex-
moor Hunt, for instanoe—long ago took
to the nide astride habit. A few days
ago a lady even had the courage to up-
prar horeback in Regent's Park -id-
Ing astride in a three cornered hat,
&kite coat. top boots and breeches.
Male attire Is usually adopted by wo.
men for criminal purposes tie fur the
ne-essity of earning n living.
In Lhe latter category are the 5,851 fe-
males who work tit the cold plls
Great Britain either above ur below
ground. A very large proportion of
these, eepeetally In Laneusitire, wear
timusers at thetr murk. (deny other ex-
aniples of men -women workers may be
cited.
"Lady Jack,' the daughter of a distin-
guished naval officer, works on a farm
ewer St. Mary Crap dressed in a neat
Nurfolk sult, with cap, leggins and boots
to moteh. Tall and muscular, she shares
all the rough work
WITH THE LABORERS.
A wagoner who was knocked down
and killed at Cultunbes, Eranre, lust
December turned out to be a woman.
She wus noted for her feats of strength,
which gained fur her lite nickname or
Iron Arm, Site cuuld use her fists with
such skill thut few men cartel to stand
ea it, hie.
"Capt. John Tweed,' sailed the Attun-
e, for years us a mato skipper, the
ecret being revealed by a post-mortem.
sitter elcleaan, a fifteen -year -yid Scot -
lassie, caused a simeatiun four
yours atm by dres.sing us a boy and
wurking first In u real mine anti then
running away to sea as a cabin boy.
She successfully completed meveral voy-
ages befure her sex wus disrevered.
With regurti tu criminal inaequerad-
ers, n London detective useerts that
scures eumen tire weuring then's
clothes in London fur nefarious rea-
sons.
Mabel Trueluve waq recently sent to
Pill fur a inunth for traN okiing on rail -
'ways in male attire and defrauding the
companies, Gertrude Chumnan, six-
teen•yeureeld girl, was caught at !dist-
ley nd ng utt a stolen bleyele in a
young mans cy, ling clothes. "Paul
Downing." elle was bruught up at Ihe
Afatisluil fluuse Ili September lust year,
I'llOe'ED '1'0 BE A WOMAN,
num WAS SERVED OUT,
one-lhirri of a gill to three parts water.
Thi4 generous and ambroseal Mixture
wr s the spirlfotis bas's of the "Yo -heave-
ho" and "Pesti-round-the-grog-buys."
ditties %%Oh ehich Dibdin is supposed
te have largely recruited the Royal Navy
In the days when this "Tight Little Isle"
wns working Its Imperial desteny.
The Inner man of the lower deck in
line-o'-buttle eh;p, frigate, corvette, and
gunbuat was made fit for deadly fight
wilh one petind of pork and half a pint
of peas on Sueday. ono pint of oatmeal,
two winces of butler, anti four ounces
of cheese on Monday. Iwo pounds of
beef on TM allay, and assortwi menu,
comprising "salt horse" ori other dap:
of tee weelc. And that arrangement if
the blueelackere diel obtained for seven-
ty veers after Trafalgar. with the ex•
ceptIon of the oatmeal, and butter.
It mattered not where the seamen were
greying, In lite sweltering Tropics or Me
frigid Antarelic. boiled perk and ebul-
lient pea -soup, salt beef and "duff.
wnli a vagrant raisin or two, was his
portion. It was so when
Milt Around the sea-girt ban
The Bunter of the recreant Gaul,
Berne, Nelsen, hurried a half-starved
fteet Into the vortex of an international
vengennce.
t'ntil the Rattle of the Nile the pay
of an A. 11. Was 33q. a Month, nn or-
&tory seaman received !es., and
landsman Pa. 6+1.' a month—when they
got It. Communise fhe tried and trust -
oil friend of Nelson, was In commend
et tiln Mateety's MO "Canada" when
hie men refutiel to fight or fire a ghat
Until they had reeeived their arreare
pay. Cormvallis knew the British no•
lure better than did lite "flogging cap-
tains" who were painfully frequent in
the DerVIce. He (sailed an hands on tho
quarter -firth and thug
ADDRESsED THE CIIEW.
"My lade. the money ean't he paid till
We einem to port, era eta lo your not
fighting. 111 clap you alongside the flrat
large ship of the enemy 1 gee, when Om
devil himself catie keep pm from 11."
MN appeal to cottrageand cupidity wag
much more suereseful than an applica-
tion of tbe "ratge.nineetalte." however
V ()Misty applied.
the cleyee-1800.1a03—Vithen the fed
DOCTOR AND PATIENT.
Is Deception Justlfied?--In Patients'
interests It Often Is.
Should doctors rnoleld In order to
cure! Are misrepresentations a inteli•
bine?
Sueh are the questions raised by an
article In the "Hospital" on the medical
bonscienee.
"It not infrequently /irises,' says the
'writer. "ist the relations (if the de, ler
eice•nitlist tpilsrespenititientilisentil,ueitk icisern1,1;exibiLigg ;4114.1711;i
as to how far he Is juslilied In with-
holding the truth, or In adopting sute
lerfuges of manner or speech with the
Intent to deceive.
"1 4 now generally recognired thiil
inany inurtild conditions, eepeelally
h. those of a nereous or neurasthenic
order, soggestIon furins a useful
therupeutic measure, and this frequent.
1! Invelves method:: of deception.
"In all cases it le essentially the id-
terests of the petients themeellee that
the (Pieter lets to consider. Reece In
their intereels, and In their Interest,
°lone, Is he justified in adopting me
%oils of epeerh or action which may
'mislead or deceive.
"kVe !MVO no hesitation In
that a doctor will not further Ihe
'ests of his patient, nny 'mire Ihm, 11
own Interests, hy n frontal al
taek epon pernicinu, WO; .Aggre,
Rive plain speaking will effectually driv.,
the palent nway to droner dis
ereet doetor. but wIll hnve no effect up.
1141 his eonsumptIon of liquor, 11 Is onl,
hy secorine Ills conlIdenre. by rcf 1,
and diplomstir treatment, thin one ran
hope to Influence such an Individual."
14i
TIIE MOON NOT '117.1' kr).
The growing belief aniong astrono-
mers that physiral hes net -el
eeneen on the rnoon—until rerently tee
Iteved to be a duet, airless, waterless
world—Paused so-11'1BI attention to lte
direrted to our satellite during Me tolnl
lunar eclipse of Mat Febritory as n
suit nf wItich two observer., werking
Independently, noticed a /narked In
mince in the diameter of 1110 Plater
Littne Immediately after the paseine
the earthet shadow. In itie eetrere me.
cat Journal Profeseor kerne/ poling
out that title phenomenon hos miw been
attested by no many reliable [disci...ere
that ft may be 1°6100 upon lie (metope,
ty confirmed. The interposition nf the
earth between Itte moun ;led tbe eon
Must nereqsartly conniderably 1.,-.%er 11,1.
temperature on the mounei surfnoe. and
(he inereasze In the size of filo rral,•r
mentioned le believed to be tine to the
depoettlon in ite vielnity of Iarge gunn-
illicit of hoar frost. %tech. of rourqe.
pteauppoece the pre.sence of moisture of
same kind.
breaks forth into the vernacular I We
shake Minds wftli a European on part-
ing, but by Mistake again touch the
hand to the brow 4n a ealatini; so iee
both shake hands. e•Anum and do the
like; and no sober -Minded European
ever cared for the anomaly.
'The umbrelle is the entblem of royal-
ty. the sign uf a Rajah. So natives gen.
erally fold their umbeelles before 0
Rajah, and nut befur,) anybody else,
however greut. is not a part of the
dress, but u protection from the ruin ur
sun, a neceseury appendunge, pist
the watch and ellen', You fnight 0.5 well
ask a European to tuke off bus water-
proof coat. A coolie Is not bound lu fold
his umbrella when a Brigadiee-General
rides past. But u menial generally closes
down the umbrella on seeing his muster,
whom considers his "king." But no
Indian,Thovvever humble, uught tu fold
up the umbrellu, even before u magis-
trate, becalm° he Is neither the master
of the humble passerby nor his superior
ollicer, nor is he buund to salaam him.
Hut if he does. nu Wien. In it st.U11.1.
Uses generally fold the ennbeellii befide
a master or superior Telleer. and nut.
any other citizen. huwever greut---und
this is no insult.
While going to Sell 0 native chief in hie
palace the native visitor or onleidi takys
Oil Ills shoes if the naseption tiuutil has
u tartish and the !Neill is eilitig
musnud. But if hs rl.ri.IVeti tbe
uteltig-room. furnished after llie Euro-
pean style. the bill/PS ure allow ed
surne states nu motives can go to a Ba•
jah without a pugree. In ethers tee
pogree is taken uff and toseed ut the
feet uf the liajult.
It is ridleulous In u Europeim /Peru the
Hindu point of vie lu urder a until
I.) take oft his shues. his \Oat
ask our priest tu do, su LLe may
touch the dust of Ills feed ,1 Munslit
when mildly r,•1,1.11,ed hy his SI1111b
I/11 tile shore, lart rceutatited the whole
scene to his better Inilt, suLing "'<ula
hartiara ger ka gurda ientDi Lueglila
(1 he brother-indaw Wunts the of my
feet.)
although dreseed In a jacket suit, with
brown leather leggins, vvrIlle shirt and
;collar and w detteense hal,
. The uniuzing aci%entures of the "mum
'woman' Catherine Cowrie were intd at
length by herself in 191.11. She was then
uge..1 )ears, fifty uf which she hud
lived slruiLlously as a mati, in men's
clothes Deck laho,Ing. planting, sea-
/natisim, painting and decorating v‘ere
.ce.ipalmns ber„Y.he mar-
ried l'ereivul uuortie at the ago of 15.
A ennui,- cub driver named 131,11y Sey-
mour held license In London for three
years. Sit- looked a rather short itrid
stout cabby, but she earned her live-
"uu the rank." Migrating lu
111ww-1 "" the heNt ur the 11:11.Neettelf).nmitd).
she worked there fur six years wItiwut
que,tiod as a licensed lituldhiy cal,
diet er. Fel!Ing Into the 'lends of the
police, her sex was dIsCoVered In Wab
ion Jail, Afterwerd elle disappeared,
but if Is quite possible that she may new
lei haul( London, a respected elderly'
rubby perched up on her hansom.
KENG'S NEW T111.1N.
ni a Triumph of Luxury and Comf0:1
Greatly Iteduced.
IL I. doubtful if any train in the world
' an be cumPared xx int 1 h.. ro, el train
.e. ently completed for the London oral
triLveslorn Itailwny 4 ompanv. 'rho
1,41,1 1, romp ised of his carriages. nuit
,, titled ihreughout with PS.1.1'0 nnagin•
able renlrenn,P PIP e,,,olora and m \.
ury. dreornllon ul
strd lo 1.0 unequaled nnv rolling
IP P‘i•lPflPe, the relor scheme in•
1.iiolina touch j,fold mid Rory while.
T1,•• clin•ng car Is e eonch.
kitchen a model. I he Ileejefig care'.
ego. fire genuine Iroimplis n end
enience. The moil ,,, men I con' r
mires of lh, 4), 1„
,411011 Of ring nre sorh that. even
et MIN. mile+ an no !loll, wi-de
n 'Wier on perfert e,011(,,rt.
(Julie numher f ro,n1 Iraois, an
sumplie nop.,1111, rwidilalned
1.e.- different firilish eompanl,•s
tor tho use of thrir ‘Injestics. Three
euntuanie, the enst roast
r elle ‘zirs.11and 11,, GI. ,1 Nerfltern„
the North ien 4'e, n and N r' British
are 10))5 nhout 1 , laidd 11 lovni Ira rl
fer their eber-tes•
'have hern sulandled 1,, 1,1% ifajes'v,
The Irnin he /milt at the tir,•nl
Northern a orlo r,
When en the r ,nte,ent the b:lng Ire,.
'travelling 0,P, Ili, 1,0,1 lin, 1,1,1,1,
rd, in R !Writ)] r ,rrnlor carriage \Lit, h
reser,e,I for loin
e1,1T1'11 kl I An wipe.
N.inr %stir, or. Idrit,01 ii4ritimi • ,,,
rue n t1111111,-, small
shore- and fedi, are Po% /11Ni Wilti
ring! eniitnIn 511.1 ts mit and soda ,n
ewe, Tee.] if IC 4 peoporie.110 1,14
hen ell! 't serves Fl n wiraPfig
e.e..e,sie•I I it • , ies1 is rot into blocks
nod hanihed in ii.,• same trimmer 04 lo”.
011d it IR o rriale.1 that. one uf the lake0
containo 20,000 tons el UM material,
- —
ACETYLENE G.1S.
Fourteen 1.'ears 01.1 niut Now in ( se In
inery Chilieed (:outairy.
The !Id% WIPP ill till` 1140 fit flf,i)ipne
llirn,P Pry tourt, ago
has het•il I•f
Important oi s 111,, production
01 Nile , r1,111,' if found
Ill all piirts
way, Sweden. Hem o. , inn Wilily.
Spain WO Ifungery ot nn,
rind Sault 'sle. Marie ill l'oilr
Steles. and nt sevcro! ;notes •i, nmida.
l'heri• Is tie (.01,011 ,, here
Seel.tlelle tiot Iti use. till1 Insurniec
Englianoing. In 3111111 hill! 11111/1,
Ihe ruredif., ‘,1
(.‘11unirtL., 1,:solyaki\ mg the prodit. cape, I)
rolciiirti carbide Is In rippeohnot 11,1141
anthrnelle ‘•onl. It is appr..\onalelv
/ Mil ni condonation i•011sosilillit
IWO-1111(114 ,11.` ,t1114'11
111 Pre4;4•111 11111111011,1'1I, Und
roe 111111/P1J /»PliPli I'S' Ulf' bent .1 an
"lesdric err ,if emit nem, Isdeithehts
esp,, luny consItio, 1,s1 e1,4•ti fur.
eard,,,I,, 1, pie, ed in
wafer the lime deserts Ihe ciodadi. ,,,11,
i(!..).c"otintelidgulicitki:),1411 rinii"t..s;',111.:•1"1111'4., ile°;11: I I
forum a nee. nlioinee ii)drogen rind
15"01,11710710. UT° hYdr"."." k"""" 1'0
No .,I'ler v, hod, hes 1, on i.(•1
(11.0,51 MI 11 '0111'111 f' -/l1 N. 00 is ento,lee
d inv, I .1 wont
leld of Uhl ns a. . ar
oide In Ile, ,1
soler, eye feet or a1 (.1% lerie 1,, (.11, 0
tumnd or carbide, 5, Jen,. lin, mg
approxinuilety len limes the Mumma.
valim uttlirleirje city jp,-,
Weight e.r e eight the 11111ifinto mo-
no/nil/Ha peerr II peurel relronn
',whale Is emodiltrably cscess of the
ilhimitinting power of .,11,
other monmi. 1)vrn 11,0 or the fnetlify
w 1-.1i 11 ran 14, II on-r,rt,..1, And
11,e steip••, end 11.ely will, who it
r 11,0.1 )4' lailiZed 11,1031114 1.1 "dont
• for geneteilon extreerde
time te et I, ,,r..tiod
•I•ienn rorliole is rtrev parki.,1 In MO
pound siwet sleet drums). hermeheelly
eve ireneported eith
sinfelLi and ,s 'Oran danger 1.1 detention. ,
nun. are at lee cost, to tho most die.
tent CoUtlif103.
ii;fegileh Petagle.
"The ged of tide etennirY Mat'
believe," said Dr. Emil Raab to a re-
presentative In discusalng the pathetle
tregedy which MIRO le light at the Isle
quest of Mr. Allred Pearce, a 'clerk, whet
eonunlited ituteide because les efforts
al "Ineete-billeye" In living beyend
twang had ended in Mil malty.
-this sad tan ts 1101 uneotntnrin
ono," Dr. Reitilt continued. "it only
eiteeets hem ended lit trattedy, and
therefore in publicity. Mr. Pearce has
been a victim to a whole national eye..
'tem I pity tam; 1 du not blame him,
BLS OWN EXPERIENC.E.
"Thirteen years ago, Whell I came
England, I looked 4round for a cota
of cheap rooms, It was necessary f
sue to economize, I had left • fend
in ilungary. Nly wife was in tieltealt
I hail X500 werth of debbs, and X-40
the world..
"1 soon discovered that those tw
ebeap moms were an impossibility u
less they were ao tar out Of the beide
track as to be useless to me. I was
obliged to take a flat at £80 a year. My
house rent was therefore double my for-
tune. This is an exempla of the ex -
pensee of Imperial Englend which ne-
cessitates the game of 'make-believe.'
"There are more eases than one can
realize of the atruggles of the man who
have £1,000 a year and spend £2,000,
They are every -day occurrences.
ENGLAND'S FAILING.
to
le
or
Iy
Aggik NOV is Pow Niettot 004
Wiollto Map C9414101041
deopittches nieelee4 titt CROON*
town from Victoria, 11. ee, eanfeln no,
account of the diecovety on Prince Al.
Arctio Ocean. of a
wirtktio 'peolo who had never oot
While men, and who lived ureter must
Cendlilene. end „nein arnad
ewith ruda OpVer Wives, Paws and ar-
•liewa.
The dlecovery of these people was
feetitie by Cepteln lIthlteinberg, of the
*Want Whaler Olga, while his vessel
Wtte wintering in the lee, and tie:coin-
inunicated the nature et htei Ond to the
linkers at the aralsh revenue cutter
Thette, who brought the news to Brit.
Ish Columbia.
Captain Klinklnberg, who has had a
long experience In the command of
whaler* In Arctic waters, and Is Li very
tiering 1111113. decided to proceed an a
hunting and exploration eePadition
hind, and induced some Estrintos to se-
e (company him. The party were twined
le• with rifles, and when they had travel -
tea a distance of 250 mites In a north-
1vesterly direellon over the snow they
titscovered trams of people who fled at
Aheir approach.
"Imperial England will not economize.
Everything ts luxurious, of the best.
One French servant will do the work
nt four English maids, and yet the Eng-
Ilsh woman continues te engage her
tour sei•vants, where she can only an
lord the wage of one.
"An interesting feature of the sad
ease we are discussing is the fact that
the wife of Mr. Pearce wns left in en-
tire ignorunce of the threateuing cake
"This is also typical. Imperial na.
Lions look down on their womankind.
There aro three stage-s—a man may
despise his wife, disregard her, or treat
her as a baby.
"I do not wish to suggest that t 11
Englishmen despise their wives, but
they ull treat their 'women us If they
Item children. In France we would not
eeenture to disguise our affairs from
bur wives. We treut thetn as our
(friends and comrades,"
TELEPHONE POLES AIRE SCARCE.
The Shortage May Be a Serious Thing
for the West.
A serious problem faces the telephune
and telegruph mummies uf Lament and
the United States this year, anti one
Which may delay construction of some
uf the tut -go projects cuittemplated
titter mitt:bet-la und Manitoba Government
Itale.eitu,OPhtt'heintensP:Ivlo,ses• aroOtailYPrudobuoeul't late;ceetle:
varieties ut trees will do; they have tu
bi of a certuin sine, heiget, and wetght,
und they have to have the greatest len-
Vie strength thut cun be found in that
velght. And Militermore, the crup only
ripens once In u century,
.'rhe two varieties are native larnarac
anti BrIthdi Columbia cedar. The Alher-
temarac will outiust the B. C. cedar,
but fur some reaeon there are no Alber-
ta Minaret' 1.(eles in the market, and
British Columbia hus the monopoly. At
the present time demands are pouring in
Lin the British Columbia lumbermen so
lust that they are afraid tu book the
(Adore. The United Slates telephone and
telegraph companies. Whie,ii have here-
tiifOre gut 114011. telephone supplies in
Colo! ado und Idols), are Invading Bri-
tish 0Am-tide eilh orders lin) large 13.9.
lo swamp lin! nfld they ere
all afraid to accept the businees offering
for fear they will nut be elle tu get the
labor to take the pules uut uf
WUUtin. Agents of the W'retern 'Cele -
phone Cu.. the Postal Telegruph Co., of
the Bell und of several independent tele-
phone companies are 10 British Luluirt-
bla ut the present niument, and the first
two alone lia%e utelers to place fur not,
less than one million pules. At the same
lime the hlunituba Government has an
agent lit British trying lo
place or•ders fur half million poles.
The Bell company. hid' also contem-
plates extensive uddileme to their sys•
tenni this 115,4 011 agent un the
ground. lie All.eitu Guvlo'llIIICIIL Is
calling fur leiel,rs nutee tuniaruc
for the pule line 1,, 1 loyilminster, but the
1111. flint they t% ill not get
what they %tent and will have to limn
1,, Urifish Columbia. 'rho Yale -Columbia
Lumber co . the Shusvvap Lumber tee.
and the Hellish Columbia Lumber Lo.,
nii uf ehipped poles to .Albertu
summer, l'1111111 Ulla they have the re.
fusel of tirders ter half u million poles,
with no u% ut lab le labor impply.
The situation Is intereeting Ednion-
to11111115 view of the fucl !hut the
exien,Ions \Lill call for a large number
phone construction and the electric light
et poles next summer, and unless the
poles cull be seetired there is likely to be
lets uf trouble Mr the city.
SEN I I:Nil; SE117,11
1.1re greely cannot he grabete.
'the ,eiusti. al buss is the enerny'.s
14,0 SiTI• Snit.
'11. ,1111u1(1,,,,,,‘1,13 rena.1,;;I:oer does more Itain
The empl y life IS the Ilint
think+ of 11,01.
Vattll Goa riutlitng
Chip 1111 Mull.
110 1% 11,, n rich nething
not be having all.
ivt‘o s...v jey aro lirst 1,,
oinplam v, hen they reap ni,ne.
\truly n good de4s1 has died In int.in.
lion for lack of n lippr,o•intion
Large Idena 1.4 •,!NrItutillty earinot lake
„1 (Jennie tden, ,,1 right.
Whale\ rr 14 gained at 11,.. ost •.f
i•loirarter g,•Ls un lho wrong side of the
ledger.
A good ef relnpou, fo,,,1 ,4 spoiling
les•ause it is being iised f• r for -trim,
It is not the sign of the rtes.,. but iho
spirit of 11,•• rfuss th ionises lion le
1,gion
There no fl WAS.
and le•ne of them ci•otlied 1,, •ei
1,,r,
4, the beet way 1,, urt emir he,rt so
livd, int! the flIPPi tee
cro•sl ii, a rtnircli rims! lie e
voor 1•',Ither
i. the .11‘ aubstliule for 1.
%luny n mon has femol 111.• re•il ro•hos
To ooen your helut to , hio'her
The rentest 4,10.1 lb's! ss I i i,,fidg
II, 4. 1,1,u.A. the . 4 1 rut. g,i0.1
"T. 1 1•14,r •irin clothey
n 1 tt. esik, thee nhoot ,•,•14,0,1)1
gnereent. r "info!
Yon determioe (O., 1.1essIngs 11,111
ree Ivo to. the •• f the door at who 11
y eir beiletli• itii
evil are mire tit Ia. 414,0[1[4,1W, ,n
(reenter% ,0 yoilf leeeeingq y count
enly teor tediet
The people %%twee s,,nsit,dittea are .111
nn trip of the skin always 111'44 plIghlrill
1500 00 1h1811. !restates.
The plan of paving lite tvorld by new
loon is nee leadieg a lame man home
by fencing in the road there.
VILLAGE OF 600.
Cuplten KlinkInberg succeeded in
overlie( ng them, and found that they
numbered ubout 150. When they saw
hun and las party they came forward
in a rather threatening manner. They
weee armed with roughly -made copper
knives and bows and arrews.
Veering un attack, the cuptain order-
ed the rifles of his small party to be
levelled at the natives. This hud the
ethic! 441 frightening thorn. One, who
apparently was the chief of the natives,
then advanced towanis the captain and
terg doing likewise.
Thep became triendly, and subsequent.
ly Captain Klinkinberg leorned by signs
front tut old Wolman who came from
Prince William Land that the natives
had never seen white people before. lie
proceeded with the natives, and found
a village with about 1300 pepple In II.
The sole means of subsistence wus by
hunting attd [letting.
NOT UGLY PEOPLE.
The dress or these strange people was
not like those of other Eskimos, Lut
‘1 as somewhat similar to that wean Ly
the Greenland natives. 11 eas made , f
bull tanned skins sewed together with
deer sinews. Their winter huuses were
of sad, with a lining of skins, and unite
different in shape from those of other
known tribes in the Arctic regions. The
natives are nomadic.
The utensils ln the huts were of the
must primitive description, the main
fashloned from bone, and „wine from
waive copper. The only articles seem-
ingly brought from civilization which
Captain KlinkInherg could disouver In
the villege wee a piece of steel, with the
end of it beaten into a spearhead. This,
lie believed, lied been fuund neer tha
coael, und betonged mite ship. The
men und women were small In Mature
anti In features nut Italy. Captain' Kline
klnberg eonsidere them an intelligent
people.
- _STRIKING IT RICH.
Mr. WhItntarsh Tells of Ilia Experience
In Auetralia.
Tales of treasure -finding always pos-
sess u faseinaUoutor ail classea uf read-
ers. Even the mature mind seldom
loses its delight tn such &tortes. Mr.
Whilinursh, in his "The Wurld's Hough
ilantl," describes his own experiences
u• a fortune-hunter. At the time ut
Which he writes lie %vas a euung fel-
low, and with ide eider and mute es-
tarletieed purtner, Suin, uas 10 Austra-
lie iieeking fur guld.
We hud Just Mashed our tuidday meal.
Early Iti the morning I had erussed an
cid track leading to some deserted work -
Mgr near by, and un it had picked up
a piece of honeycomb mineral which I
could not place. I thutight uf It now
and tossed It Liver lo Sam, suyIng,
"tierele bit of stuff 1 found. It
tueks like volcanic."
Sunt laughed.
"I Liut,.1 %sunder it painted you, son-
ny,' tie said. "II u lilt of coke, sirup -
ped from wagon. prubably."
thieve al IIIP VIII care-
lessly begun h. 1..,iiiel 11 between two
bits of ruck. Suddteils elle of the stones
spill: the fru, kSI.1 c, ntion-
Mg grape-like clusters of dark green.
oll, here's surnething new, uny•
way," 1 saki.
SUM'S Nee changed as he looked st
the stone, Ile tried the green substanoe
xvith his knife, It (-II1 11110 nct‘.
"Chloral silvor!" ho cried. "\\ here
did N,,u (Ind
I riliow.1 011)1 exact spul, and he
wilily scrambled round on his hands
find knees. No stune like it %vas lu
found.
" "It doesn't belong here." Asserted
Sam. "tieing roiled , it rutted duu n the
hIP. and it inny have rolled a lung 'Any.'
"I• couldn't have mane turn said I,
mereIng to n iturk acrub growth.
"mut.; nettling. The serub is per -
hop• Ilny year old, while the stone may
lew, been woeking down kir Illty Moto
sand \L'e'll look IP) the hill."
Wo took n &reel, lino tov.ard (be sum-
mit of 111,• range. Near a small hill
v,iiit tilnek, uneven crest av found
sum • rt0.10 peraltur r,dirld stones.
"`i onder', our dole, la 1." allot Sitio.
I he i•rest , the small pr wed te 1 e
•,,uree , epe.emen. A few 'nit-
ro, ,.sorl, with Ito, lout bare a
seam of oie seLen feet In vodth. Li
long !is I leo I shill !ergot the
ee and pray" that
e 11,1,1 not !ahem n , roglit and
could net legnil, peg out n ,•lutiii.
1.'11 Ilk, tan 110,1 and Mailed
for lean. Thai afternoim tva4 a weti•
wise, Immo, ere.. 1 (ereletted my sUir
eu, ,1 hill Iroglh. joill,.1 roy ev,.r
ro, end 1,11111 n 4 In less
I ir hour,' .4(1,11 lie
fin ,•4 Olken iit nitri,:r 4
ri,//11 on,' lir.. iired 30111, Isn.i‘,9. OUP
ein.r11 t14
II 'API II es TErrIl.
Mir ros4 01)1( Inspect I( 01 01 1114( Harr
,thoo It to bo Itough as Rost).
\%et ful
the hair sloo, a sm eolered with
/4:1.)14. • 1,1 se 1,11;0,1 teeth, and tnor,•
..irongh e ceurse, rough
rusp. Dealers hi nitrite» hair ran tell
1.1 moment wit her tilit• littisi offered
them fia,t1 Uff combed wit.
I too th,s hy rubbing the hairs
tlioeigh the tinge's, If Ilic hair has been
rut from the head, and hos not been
misplaced, lt, remain., In Ile original
pflmtion*, tea if it has been pulle,1 or
combed (me and put together regardless
of the direction in nhicit It grew, one
portion of it will elm to the right and
1110 ilihor to the left. II, does the; 1.e.
rims° tho foggtel edges engage upon
teem other end putt in upposile three -
strafed drawing n hair tirst one way
ttorin. The phthosaaphy et this is dellIOn-
I arld then the other. through the lingern
Iwhe h elip easily toward tho point. while
eoneeternble testiattince et felt when tho
I lingere are droWn trent tite point to -
%scads the end Inlet the head.
•
llisLeentest=neee-se.ei.