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The Goderich Star, 1907-05-17, Page 7"Iv VP erre Vf • 0 A G One' la: Nith, A.1 'eye In kitherk ITOV1406 4.1 cAiratier ye 041 000904 wher 0,„! Eiaaka) 1.49144g10,i thQ,:h% Johtwoo ▪ 110,014 110, kite* Peeetede bitnael torait 1C1Ye PetStutal" eatst xtr= 01 the Ifp • offoredr al , .*.„ittra 'eltand ......... :AT DIAN ?fro „ , ___ isi to sii4040111. Wally thstall op** II r int* VW " .. woo. w.. 04104413/00111; ten, *WM whale Wag le skew " iltil PO** ewe- to. *OA of OkIaluctiorto of tiro DO Dim 1W VIM* vast, DittatIont *1101041, Ike *kW* for Aciikstoto k Ineromitolatilell woo ref*, kt OK* OW 1041PPI71 Ind ibit 441411104,1* OrelfOtili lakeile,.41400ot fag 40 Um 4,^ reachhag oft0Cia, Ow** IllOralitto *Or .00711t0Ot. io. IttunbOrl Of 31461, evil,/ a litilittlito to tha tradot intitintaholon kr fho VellAirri AO inv1403HOODIIII, : - --.-,, .... ,................... UW401114E5! FREAKS , 1.3014S(41. tillik,XII- DIZ 111110D. IN : 04110rokitlifc; 1°41104%11041* 114e4Afelitis Ake. '1*R S tuieltil. '14 Viiitititil INNIS Oi ' *41404 _ r * l'hO terrible Cale IXO Ite i 40110 :ono .11 : Iti A P, 10..0 -1 .. .,.,2,w4.1.0.,-oorlii,v.,.se„.14411.71T.10113.1rartarSty ;11411:4111:451talittilitilLitinTinlittlha• 1 i MI l'Atte WO, orit kN t-tny,S e."- Mon to the filet that dese lo the urea t*- -- - - "----.'"-- --"--'----.------ ---- StrideA Seleitee litleintitterief lateilittle Or e 1144 tee x 4is • Tt 42 • •• Liu the 1404, •ierieeS tilleti'LiLIILTI?Iting the testi% gial le the toittirealg et v.hT. 4 theAte. TearittlAtinetiter$ Ore *Ie.' '1":„Citt 'tertatnie AMMet 001111/11011. Ot Rat opportualitz: eine*. remelts heye.beett proovetx,ot,sivor, 7.404, mttomiAltf4 go. won elloirt to -mom t4e , . -a. et, ineMit nil ell ey whee'',e4" see $40-neeee se,,,,pis ,,,,.. VaiMat*eit Virittvrettilknerialied% v'' ' ' ."7.' Seale ide of the stunendou ne-- • •,,-• - -%k - - - -.. "' — '31 '''''IVI;r of : tbW4 SU terrartetin terees le 8h°-rin . :.. „ . hv the Cherigea•effeeted ht them in eee• gr*epier'-'s. MOIMitilia have been obIrten Med or trot oleos farmed isla de I wen ratillife or- .. .4- es.tio, yreas, wide wtovi: stretches et soastemo wiped out ear ttestaass,', ins Sesetemees, • ese, 'en the ffibledlind eboUt 150 miles south, West a the city Of Mexico, a piece td lend four, square miles In area. was slid, deftly Weed ;550 feet, and nutnenous genes optteered, one el thou....the ete. 0a110 of Joruilb-being nearly 1,700 feel high. JaVa, in 177e, suffered In the on milt % ay foe tract of country tit- t u V - ' u "11 °Ines lung bY six broad WWI' SWALLOWED UP ENTIRELY, a mountain at 9,000 feet being reduced to 5,000 feet only in the process. In 1822 a great earthquake In Chill poaduced. a permanent elevation of from 2 feet ta 7 feet over nearly 100,000 square Miles ot the country between the Andes Ond Hee coast, and geologists have dis- oevered traces of sea -beaches at a dis- tune* *lend which prove that aucti up - littings must have occurred previously several tenes. In the disaster at Lisbon in 1755, when nearly the whole city was wreck- ed in six minutes and over 50 000 PeoPle perished the largest mountains in Pots tugal Were shaken to 'their very tom- dations great masses being hurled into the adineent valleys. A new quay, built It marble on which a huge crowd es. s ' th f Ilin build., nailed for safety from e a g legs, suddenly sank, and it is recorded that not ono of the dead bodies came to the surface. Moreover, of the ships engulfed, ne wreckage floated, and the spat, though previously comparatively shallow, was afterwards slated to be un - fathomable. An hour after the lewn had been sheltered the sea suddenly re. tired so ler as to leave the bar at the entrance of thee Tagus dry, and then milled in With a series of gigantic waves from 40 feet to so feet higher than the highest tide, completely swamping the city. The effert of lies earthquake was felt over an area of unwards of 7,000.- 000 square miles, nnd the velocity with which the. shock travelled was comput- ed et about , TWENTY MILES PER MINUTE. A district \stitch has experienced the most. esh•aorninary changes from earth. quake is the valley of the mississlppl, which in 1811.12 •was convulsed/to such a degree that new islands and takes twenty mues in extent, were formed rn the inereditee space of an hour, while other hikes were drained quite dry. The cemetery at New fnadvid was prelpitatt cemetery at New 'Madrid was precipitin. which the town is built, and the bank tor fifteen miles above, sank 8 feeet, For years afterwards the forest present- ed "a singular scene of confusion, the hees standing inclined in every direr- bon and many having• their trunks and branches broken." About the same time Caracas expert- eneed. violent shocks; the ,stisface sindu, toted lilie a boiling Weil; rani)" irernic subterranean sounds were heard, The whole city, with its magnificent chureli- es, was ruined almost in u 'moment, and nearly 12,0011 ihtifibitents wero slain. Cameos has been coiled the (Sly nt ear•thquakes, and it is estimated that the damage Calised by them is equal to sit annual charge of 84 per head on the RePulation. In an earlier earthquake at the same plaee, in 1790. a hags part of the forest of Arlene sank, forming a lake 800 yds. In diameter and 80 feet deep. An instance of the miming and el-fis• Ing of fissures is afforded by the Cala. Lirian edn•thqualvi•s of 17811, wiliell last- ed fur nearly feur years. It is slated that men and cattle were engulfed 1 y erneks in the surfaee. rind in sorm• roses thrown out again rillye by the nest shock. with edlEAT JISre OF NIUD AND WATF11 • • History repeal% ilself curiously, for one chronicler of iliese isirtliqunkes relates Mut numbers of tni.9erentils wen, seen robbing the dead und dying, even ship- ping Mem or thew ciothes; alai more Mini a verituo 001' 1111.• SIMI'. thing hikes place under- iihnost iderilinal CH'. eunistances at Salt Frulinseu, Another reinurkullie incident is 09- . eiirdeet. Near seminar% tin eslenNive ellVfn ground and °vellum' were hurled by 0118 01. III,. 811.04.1.41 II difdillicr ef •2011 ee in 4/ 11 % 11 1/./. 0 oe in 1 41/11 I. % l' 1 '11 '6 11. 1 1 onall intialsteil hetes, standing en the am sell ei i i eitheut iniiiit to 111., I 1 I 'il 1 bedding er 00,111'illik• Niert,O,,r. 11:e eave trees conlineed to 4,ee nil bore gr , n :I go /41 (•rep Me 1.11cm-lug yisir. ilintbiblait Nis bad ninny important • geotogietti rite rtges effeeted liv earth- quakes. In 1762 Chittagong nns vas ••ri v a iti 1.11, ir ear I 4essiing in i il i k ii ii ntanh Weer.: nem throsing .111 ester .. . _ . . rind lillItl lif sillptitin.11‘. smell. Th -11 tosly square mile, 4,1 4,.n,:t suddenly and is rmanerilly sulisided. one of the Mug \fountains entirely disaitissired. and im• i•Ilier sank so low Mut only the summit e mottled. At the same Imp' ii ,',/11',.. ., i '4, 4 1 RI 1 1, 1 .1 • , t -1-ono rig ri., . g aim .., I at, I, Itienree. an island farther itiong the ',Rat, Again. tit Caleb 10 11419. Ille 1,0 . ,, . • . N Ohl e 4 a ',mitres. Wen' S111/Itleritell. "011„ tt, „ ;Mil (11N.111 iiVe nides '110101 a 1.,,,,,f, ,.1,.‘nied in,,,n),; I W114 raised. inelisilring 5 one !WV 1711104 liV Pithy'', 111 pliletel. .# ,,,,,, ,,, Ix hat had be,.11 0 [440 f • tiv levet „Initi. ' • PAINTING TIIE IAA. — Germem Florists Produce Strange Effects 11) Ole Use of %Milne Dye. Fasti14.11 10 114/W51 14 111'4 tals,sn a 1reok men in fl4...many er late 1111.1 there is g rent ,lerrintial in vellum 4011•11',.. for Horan.: 4.1 hie.. 41,1 tuici.ci in nature rt 11. %de .. ,v‘4•4,1 lire 1 111 1.% /III 5,41r11 long stalks n feu hours lo•fori. they retail hill ii riturib Then the stint, nre pill in , . v•sIer In VI 11101 Incline ,hes time 11.4'11 les( !yet \Artist, rarrin144.4... 111w, and ' • • , • i' ,111gle•A are 111. 011,111141 Ill the WO IMP the most natural results. • A, the .41111, such, up the naler Ilie amlitie fp./018111 is tarried through nfl the lute t ...owl. 4.1 Ihe 1,1,,,,a,H, end , pi i ,,,s ,te , ., I, le ii- role. ,..41 itint after ii feu homy 41.4 '' lor IC rrormiell,i. 4.4iai.11-1.81. i4,,m,.. isms. Amu,. on,' vven beautiful effects , re Seclired IA slopping Ihe e ok ding pot . I,s 1 144 ,rP i 1 1,1 PIM i Piet.. , 1 110 ‘A I Id,' petals will then Is•delleale1( seined n ill, open or red-, these being the eotor,i !nos' sw.cessmily uses. . ,einee the discovery that the, flowerf, lire eimply dyed there Is n grent miler% menu fionstilittrista. Mit, pronninire Ihr nrcerv4 11t1 IIIIIIMUPOlig frond 011 tin titre. both imelisto• and %Wear., 1 els does not pment the demand 5 no, theil fiewees Assn Vending. — _ers— - The smeller a man is, the more , a . perating he ts to his fellow mortals - . ...li POWtR OF T E ,, 9. GO U TIODLER p. *SIN MEW 111110 MOO PLAY. --- - --. . , . • WOW WOO f*: OtatellOtreer CitIO,* Thom: ' . -- '' . 114. 4441"*SAR . Till* reeent 111104W4V-• Inerriege Or ilia lazoteo.viia4..Fottiocit witu tto, gro„ 6,0044404iitittion.i. 'Atowasittiikilt ,thoNVirioiogehtliit.474,0114144; ,, , _ . , , _ , .,.. , s.: lilitiat Atletria And lihnotry *t Is 190 g4„' ' - r r ' ' ' . . )414* 01 *AM IttnrbelenOt 40. -elle •Or thl , fix*, Hungaphot %owe ner tio: titer 4.• rmokt .P.Iwk,rostiti4,' Itt4 ter. Iowa 14,t uant l'Oggni . pi numenNof WeillItY MADIA*.,threbilik ' WhOge Viik;• f9r/POrirt41,hfOrtilitt011it40110 Cowl- Oa* la also. OamtaateCatillt Itto FANAsit .ariskorior .17,41 041404 Ivo ologed ,coult, suridi -,400.aue...09D„ en. •Nite,..Confetate'rend hew girpor hos, 12- and CA- e. neves AVM. g "Ins IS 101e; "Oen goroyc threelvomikt 4041o,, in:40; baelt Wens 111':e gileVilselai leW0.• -01 tadeta- eat* ,e,,m4,0e,,,*miee 490,0)0410*, ro, eeer legotte dintee • -flew the latehere vete. opened tor eine ' .ss, feebiddwa eseet, th, g Awilerty,..m„ ,,w. ont,"4,. who, .provos MO Mettler inet4 1010,,sliell t - WO- .*Oraelvill.ei:t14.1.;-47 OhJeot Of 'UjArelidVrvItti 'reiti**101.114.40i-.4)11/lare .:4elit: nutiwgf*.l.hoi:Araingt:givIng a OW Cerkittren''1411et'sr00014„..''''' TOO' Vrtitteie oatereresseesioestetrees, reestiegiteesystena wisettee andieWierintlerletblYsittnedliOnleS swerthysstaintstileirl, „ ell, ins evening drepv AIWA* 'W. ttie-lanlfgltflable• In a small 'root lho...resLot Nyhtdh • Wae on copied be: edneVidillninteeOrner a 1101e. gypey WO lostt.red.„41reee Wife playing with O. 141000. A'llesitillee girl wits the . , Countess:, She hiei4liaenet,. unaffected meniners' tA,M1:$01t.j.dtealliy. *Yes. The men tliOn'.-1)ndalt. alltisega young bro- ther, lestif.-"rbet,ffiber01 was Josef's wife. '" ' '7. ' • • • ' ' •' '-' .."- "THE COGISITESS',LOVE STORY. . %. . .., . . . .. "The Ofel0411.es iii hi' i , sin .,genuoUs, nsPe- illOuS inanitere IttOdily teld. her story. She math ,ter,Wite 11ylret with my me- tiler in Meniell. a 1,40 pggtnning of last . Year whet).- f 'Ar0i, law. . Alia Ile' was giving se eblert $11' a ceffee liouse'ilo which My Alt 43•CotMt,4prell, took•us one evening,:ssiteis,faseilina,ted at Once, and (Merl hiiktilee.ktille coffee house several. liele-,e.,Wie 'Were introduced by a society. lady, '10T S!.ItudYil playing ;had de hi 'I -its od' I I d been ma co , amo , a . le ta netted to teeny Of' the:beat houme in the city.. 1 seen klilt. that Vcould love no one but hiM. Lardy Rented tO liveWhen . . hearing Ifith Plays , rosined Count Sires IS to releese.,11144/r0111 irty ellgageMent, but he refuen1;eingt my .parents sided against. me. In rMay, When Rudet sea- son was atter, lifteaed hie band had ..to return to- Offienteirg. LWas miserable, but we eeriespoilded, allict as he asked mo io big lettehreto ohne ed marry hitt if I loved hnteenough' to e the wile cf a wandertng4rpsy 'fiddler, I Joined him here. Mye,Ta her fellowed me im- . InediatelY 'and . •disdoveked my. biding- plae,e and Weir Isleelitaeg •to Munleb. He aid I '32:61St-mistly..C.01111t. SPreti or he.. would havomesleaked up In a convent aril lunaticSapyltute. We only come of age here at::24, .e,0,1 had to pretend to obey, 1 was slew up . in a boarding- school at' Munich' end earefulty guarded until the day ladCntionth WhiCh had been fixed for my wedding. Lets of presents arrived and everything had been arrang- ed, but a weelt.before the wedding my '24th birthday arrared, and then I left ev- .erytiOng, ran aWay and carturbto stay with Rudi's perehts here till We could be married. I wrote to Count Spett and told him hoWsorry I was, for he had always been very kind, hut I courd love him no longers. All my .relatives were dreadfully angry, especially my uncle Time° and my aunt, miry. but they . o could -ttot •eto anilleng, th ugh my fa- ther sent. a lawyer -to try to bribe Ruch not to marry .me."' • . - " -COM1NCe' zeMERICA. • . - At this point the' Countess turned to- wards her husband with a smile, and Ito replied vvItIsSif loving kiss. Then she continued: "We were married at the .regIstry 'as eOon• as possible, I t- - se- Iled a house in 'Budapest, which I own- ef! in my own right, aed other proper- ty on my husband: I shall not stay in this cottage very long. Rudi is going to play at Budapest, where he has been promised $50,:a nig:ht. Then we will go to New York. My only desire fa to follow him around the world and hear him play. "But I .am quite happy., Ilene. I never knew a real home, for father and I were separated. I spent most of my life at a boarding school. Hehe I help.wilh the house woric, and my sister-in-law Kathy, and I are old friends, for curl- ously enough, we were at school to- pther In Walla once, and now we are together again. We talk French to each other as in the old days. She has her mmanoe, 100." ' , Kathy, Josef's wife, belonged to a prosperous family and was married to ssor at Munich. She eloped with a profe , Josef a year ago. Since then her hue. band has secured a divorce and she has been married to Josef. A third brother with a -German Baroness and ran away , k now giving concerts in America. tie colvicrs ESCAPE 4.11111.100 41,141111 101141111E14 Diknfoli'l OK taromilotoor. IPIIcaDitti AIM be** Wed** ei • WOrItiVieed Iketithli qlor Phil c'' 0. illOtHe* There helie heed lisW 'Sheller Seen:ea.' !A wormicivoi .$0.04 vt,44 ., ,unidon, pz...., 05,,,,,t,..,3,,,),,,,.......„44 tr.?: ,, . . 0 0 In r scio preeheeg$ Wreelied IL. and fier- ' .' ' . '''. . ' ' '' 1 ." ' - 0944 011 'WO beiges 'held it Seattli tinny ete ward** 44 hay. the Irom h4 hell.e.se •41,440 0,0000 .A0 - . tleAte ,'heettille AMON oss the t4endon,0414 hthil.. ' cr0Wds 0,t .040ple Videlied thO Millt's, OM. Seat* On' the tile.; heard WM 010 .11Ste laii 404•AtouThittill14, tilt ally, Saw 111107 'ot 0004, atto 40,1,40tAtttAtt swoop ,tut. , 0 stop t,w41., • - : , jot' Otero 4t, tho . rieen, elated Hest Ihersdattlillia ei01011, in &nee— Ws esShnlete et), at Peditl, 46.00... • .. • •• :',. preettagn" neret 'spolye . .7-7.,...„.„,.... ,...,-., ..._ _. Altill,':MeCieys •GA,Stili) Men Wher•egi Olga ter thel tVolsOli SetUtday, te; Tes gar441,, ;..,,,, itt laa rs, to Iv 8.3 A. ea!, ..,At.araa,, lets SAtiree Wee age, no 'Medea crltio. iletil'011iothreeitt IlufgA he .rdhae Malik VIII- . , 'lefty list( ' -ditgr,..stn."411,44Wea.i5te:"Ing IN* 4014316011:nt eighteen . months 1014 WO' bet* seed live yenrs for .blirillaTY4 . erOn_SittuIdae„. ethout e_lettent,.2so wee, eTeOnel lee eXereme Yalu Wait ether' 0010404 , when. bO,Haide a dealt. frOM the LIU a and began to shin tip a rain. Water epetit to the. toot ot C bklek. clitilb108 4vith marvellous speed he Mantled- the Mai herare the other can' Vices.. had been hurried back to their cells. Then he gave a great shout of I:y and began crawling along the ridge one ot the corner turrets. . Here he wrenched off a tour foot Pleat ef teed piping, and with this eS tieWeapon went back along the ridge smashing the sky- of the steep root in lights and shouting and sing g ad the time. "OH, THAT WILL BE JOYFUL" Having destroyed all the glass In thse row of'skylights McCoy attaoked 'Me dormer Mildews on, the root. Walking along the narrow ledge in trent of ia0 wmeows he pushed the pteee ef Weal; timough. each of the small panes with which they are Med. The man's antics on the roof were amazing. Every moment he seemed in danger of being dashed to pieces on 'the ground below. He waved his ear', ,, then tlireW it from the roof; next he threiv his boots over, and then bis pri- .son badge, which telt outside the pri- son Yetis, There was a rush. to securP tt, but tegice kept the crowd which had gathered.back. . That the sound of the breaking glass and his own wild cries had drawn a big eroved to the north side of the pri- sets seemed rather inspiriting to McCoY. "I ani....,,out for the day," he shouted, "and I, *hall never go back alive." Then he began to sing, "Oh, that will he Jewell,' and "I wouldn't. kave MY itt- lie wmaeh hut for you," were samples of the molodies. STOOD ON HIS HEAD ' By ttee Lime all the prisoners had been Melted in. their netts, and 'Me pre son officers were using all their skill in efforts.% capture McCoy. As the -Warders climbed cautiously out ort'ethe iv.iot Mclkiy wrenched off tbe Wee and hurled them from the roof, yelling as each one crashed 4..n the grofind, "That's tor any (with an oath) warder who tries to take me.' Every. unie a warder's head appeared a tile whizzed .past It. pursuit on th,e steep no -Of, Up and down which the frenzied men ran, was impossible, so it was decides! to leave hlm alone for a time. And so, tor Over three hours, Mcesv ran .about the roof rinaing, „off Ws, which he threw to the ground' Or beep. ed on the copings, , and ' smashing the sashes of the broken windows. • Once he actually stood ots his head ip the centre of Lhe 1.001," divaling himself _of his coat and shirt, presune ably fet ihe sake of greater freedom et movement. He 00ffirilUnicalai by signs with the crowd below. ( v, WARDER PARLEYED. About four o'clock he was driven by a shower of ratn to shelter in 0114"- f the corner turrets, and the warders' chance had come. They climbed quiet- ly up the winding staircase inside. McCoy, heating iheni. rushed out and swarmed up the smooth •)optrig at the entgi of the roof of 4.: block. Sliding down on the other side. lie found the upposite tower full of warders and be- Elm to climb, hack, One of the warders in the lower par- ieyed with him to distract his attention while Warder Dennis climbed from a •Intiow and stealthily crept after w . Ille c,onvict along the coping. CAPTURED AT LAST. Just as McCoy reached the high ridge of the roof Warder Dennis struck Rim heavily on the back of the knees and sprang on him ere he had lime lo re- cover. The crowd below cheered the plucky warder. A s,econd later warders from the two i Isl 1 1 ' If ewers ..ec. swamies. up „Ite ridge aim nung themselves on the struggling num. • In one mingled heap of kicking, 1.1A nth- Mg humanity they slid down the reef. . end were lirOnght up against on, id the 6irner towers, warders belaboring Sterov with their Staves -- - A few minutes later and meo,e, handetiffeil and with his legs stranfasi, . . wns bundled through a window into the lower and earried down stairs. Ile had been on the roof five hours all but n few mlnules• and had preen, II • k d f et. y neer e the roo . , SHOTIVRSINGINGO NG , .04,,,,,,,, . VW' 110SE. 1,4ALT11146 604,14, now-, , . , 1001. IRO* $010094111410Kee it it401111# *Sit ' ' ' filiiteder's , ' A-REIng (tell 1# it iritill0Pbent6 WV iitteettf°e••kitnitittk)4 'elitittntlitirrhinnit:edit"fl'teilleirith Angland,,atChriStine6, A, slekidebrAYee Wing Ohared 'Oat la III0 V11146 While. ' ' ' • ' ' • - •• - ' ltellSer and the inSIDIallellt Mr %MAIM 1°43114 out/ anlinlihP"Qiiek4i14"tY* 14 f"ifs•rdtafli 4 iir"tisl 4it"t° 4*. ‘V/1°11 laPt "Ino "VIII IVIntillb"" "4' nintle4" 414" lci"4 ." ' . • ''''te innes tor 4o010 l'Pa'atit 0i Adhere aPelteed Rtei ire et tA ittell nitireg4 MR*. tiers end lita Skirted etterre01118.; With Oi °0404eAton- nealed (100Per?• %MP 1.0it Ur big"' 4 8trOrti-eDigttrtitleittl?011244 4. Co9Per dled train tile iiki He$ he nCeetved-, ' ' rillriDetiliellritelal riots at Atlanta. 0. IOW LinwsettLivitsemarogoopottgrLoottoarymte4 Botes:,ty the fle. ‘te.srstimsuittit..Alf, MVO at h)'' all tile ethlita eeeres •ece4efi. end tea ilddled„ ,w 111 bullets, ,re es reds seeets a brutal ene unprovoked OltIrder, And so, itte, MAO, IL,. Rut if mimt, h,., pprapmftnrecr that itt" Ai-p*Itt.' tie"tha"r -Art,"-ts""b"—Ated--by-ail Th -e- 8°uthegieCIQNTIWI(119Lr(4LuATLEthcF411J11tVo. "Marchintf through Georgia" loll tiOng esPedullY Wilted by the inhabitant* of the State of 0001114, Of which Atlanta is the capital, for one line of the refrain runs, "As wo go marching throueli 6e°44118'"; and many citizens can well remember the days when the' Northern armies 'ravaged their homes with fire and sword to those verY worde, sung to that identical tune. , For a precisely similar reason the Austrlan National Anthem le,,.ableorred by the Hungarians. Lord Chain% neres- ford discovered this somewhat unex- pbetedly during a recent vislt of the eletilterranean Fleet to Fiume. tie sent- a band usliore to play in the evening. The performance was loudly cheered we til the tune in questkm was struck up, when the a pplause suddenly turned to a perfect hurricane of groans, lessee, und execrations. Next morning the tenet PaPer of the town, the Muffle ifillitP, published a manifesto and an urology, In which it was expluined that "the hiss- Inge were not nice* for the bond, but for the hideous ahd etated notes of the ACCURSED AUSTRIAN ANTHEM, ta Which no Hungarian oan listen wall' out elenching ins fists and giving vent to his 1110114nnit°11." • Aguin, a man might as well play minliteOrIcks with a hornet'e .nest es sing "The Wearing 01 the Green" In 0" Orunge quarter of Belfast; while con- versely, an individual desirous of getting his skull cracked could scurcelyhit upon a likelier method of achieving h1s pur- po.se than by striking up "Boyne Water" at an Irish Nationalist meeting. Years ago, when King Leuise .Pliiiippe was living in exile in England, the band of the 14th Regitnent played on the tele mice at Windsor while that monarch was on a visit to Queen Victoria. As was their custoni, they introduced into the prograinnie their regimental march, and none was more surpeised than - their hundmaster when Louis showed evident signs eif n grave displeasure, while cer• iain members of his suite, forgetful of eyen the ordInuess rules of courtesy ob- served between the guest and host, rose as if te depart. The explanation came later, when it was discovered that the air cif the munch in question was identical with that of the . . , FAMOUS REA OLU tIONARY SONG, ece, Ira," to the accompaniment of which, shouted by thousands of angry throats, tile iMilappe King has only a short while previously been driven ,from Paris linintlif Ittronee • • Even to this day the tune is haled by thd French loyalists. as is also this "Car. magrade," while many ultra -enthusiasts anknosst thern cannot even listen to the weildsnown strains 01 laa "Mtitsteillalfie" without expressing fureible elLsapproval. The "Willett on tho Milne" Ls tabooed lti Alsace und Lorraine by mutual consent, because of the disturbances it invariably gives rise to between the rougher ele. ments of both the French and the Ger- man populations. In Vy'arsaw, the other. (lily, a man was Shut hy Terrorists for singing the Itussian National .Arithent. ._ ..._ . , CHILDREN GET DIVORCED .4-.,,,,.,9 AV NAV EWA WHO $.0.0N ME IIISIOSOILE . iw 101114100,NY, '. e • 'Where Verlt Iftuttle ..41$1111 ' *if* *tea Akirriett OW, IiteOeten4 . ., • Oile Or MO %Viet Retinae Ila MIMIC= , Ullirifihticreellet Marriage Were leSS Oily of eCeetinidiSie Witt prebetiLlt diVerell Wellid•be MOO ' • • • dlitiettill Init UMW nreaellti eontlitiorla it IS 11 " "SI MI? 4 Ciii" °Ili*. i"a " 141:teei ki Pt "Arded III ttie SlUt" " if is f" 41 g"ill "Ilan 14 "I Utber UutWt17" AS 4 reSiliii °I 4114* Phi d Intirelegea It 10 net StIrPrtaillel le filidNtliet there are MIttlerou,s4 divorcees Whet are atilt In the School -MOM. OM of the 0102t recent and intereets lig elnaVe44oceaf littlet tIhicille5tilt:11, 41101.110:- PhiS, Who, **Ugh Only )11st peer feele• teen. and still at ectioot, le Kling fOr di. verge. iteeffixillig to affidavits, the child eves Merrled On She Memphis side of the MieSlan 1 River Bridge and lived With her lill inelecee,es,week, the gentle. man she Married muse ot Mr. Lane Hopkins, who eee BoAnDED evmi Imo 4104434. 1, Hopkins was very Mich struck by it", child's beauty, and aSked her to marrY him last, Septetnber. The enterprising eoung man -he Ls only tesenty-tbeee- aeoured a license, and then invited he tie MISS Hope to accompany him to Crittenden County, where Justice J. J. Hogue married them, Then Mrs. Hop' kilts returtted home and never said allY" thing about her marriage. A week later Hopkins took his bride to the haunt of his Juther, where they remained for a week, when the young wife went back lo her mother. Since that thne she has had no further communication with her husband, and on telling the facts lo her mother divorce Peeeeedings were al once instituted. The child has now ee- turned to seltool, and while she is tot- lowing her studies the papers claiming absolute divorce have been flied. . Two yeale ago a young gentleman .1 the tient° of Henry White, a boy of fle teen, tell in love with a girl of seven yeurs his sentor, and they were mar- tled. The boy was at school at the time, end when the news berme public his father and mother were so enraged that they had the bride arrested on a charge of kidnapping. The charge failed, how - over, and finally divorce Proceedings were comnienced. After several weeks' delay the ease came 00 and Mr, White was Olice more a tree men. IIE RETUNED TO SC.11001., %here hP t4 "t the 1"*""1 Menteht - another example of ii boy who has al- ready gone through the doubtful pleasures it marriage end divorce while still tin. eel the age of sixteen. An Intereeting case of a chttd marri. ; size find divorce eomes from the Stale of New Jersey, where a orettv ----- child of fifteen, the slaughter of it well-to-do provision denier. eloped with an assistant in her father's store, a gooddooking young inan of twenty- three or four. This young man, whose Mane MIS stated to be Perrin. was de. dared ta- be et -excellent character, hie only indiscretion being that he fell in loye with his niuster's daughter, , rhe child seems in have rellirtied his affectIOn, but her tallier and mother IsItglied at her, never dreiiming tbere war aaything serious in the alluchinenite. iiut one morning they uwoke to II hist 'tun the lovers lout been "busy.' tor their daughter bail flown, lenving iss hind a nole saying that she (slut(' not live without "Albert," and had therefore run away with him to lie married. ' the father did his best te trace the elopers. but nothing was heard of the fie. a furliii /M. Then the ininaways 1. . mew returned lo her parent:. and ex• Wattled null she line la•en mrirried to ., ,.. Perriii in Plaiiillelds, but that NI., 41111 , II'd 11111111 I'are 1‘11. Ille life. 'slid 'r '1" father Andel olitain 11 dtvoree she woutldp 1'e VerV agreeable 10 fall in uith tt , suggestion. The hither thereupon tool: sleps le. liliVe 1114s marriage unntilled. lett did not succeed, and had to full buck upon Titg PETITION ron nivone.E. niilefli was subsequently granted. 'me child has been given back her ski mime. und I, now living in a boarding' solmol aissil ten miles outside JerseV I.il. Tlie y01111.1 11111r1 1.114 stated Mit he slIn I' Wes llie girl. mut when she reaches 11 rompetent nge Ito hopes to make her his ikite nom, Ont• other Interesting instanee inny he mentioned. This was ii i•ase In whirh two children -11w girl but sixteen end the boy a (i•ur itItler had run nway frein sehool rind soreeedist In getting a inegistrate to mrirry them. In suety a matter th•i parents of both bride rind Ifrideffroom were almost tinWerieSS, as neither the girl nor the bny eould be arelOwal 4,f kidnapping, !Insist( had 11,,,, girl been a 1.4,111' Older she might limo; been jib -weeded agninst tal thci charge. An annulment of the marriage Was demanded, but refused. tor tho reason j Mut nothing had been dime (sintrary ) the law. Then the ynuttifill entiple were • k I to eonsent le a petilimi for di. .14 41 yore,•. Find as eseti was without money, • 1 t i tt e . t , found married life do• 1 114 co i i i• • ii i 1 ti Ilien at Ins! consent d i ideillv ildile 1 . . r rind the di( nree wits 01.1ontral. ---- --4"-- sTEEL PAVEMENT IN PARIS. — pee.ct. Ai _As a _OM_ fir.are _Or 11 is EY 1 I # GI #: I '4 t 1 Horses 111141 lo 14, Very Durabie. Potts 1... .'51,4.1 ',nettling 4.4.111. 11,.• lillost ii „ mg in pu( ement. 'I his call it si, id 1,„„,„,,,.1,1. t,,,1 it ,„ ,.,.,,,t.„. ,, ,,,,,, 1, 1,. emends!! iiinforced vvilli a steel 11,110..- ‘., ik. •11,,, ittat t„,,,,,,,,, „r ,1 1,„„, 1„.,,,, ,..1,1 4)11 1 110 11110 S111111•Mnr110 In fr..1,1 * ,4 Me I ,,11)..er%.11.,,,,• .4 kris 00,1 1 nd ils• I, „.,. .11 , n .,4,1 pm., , 1 14,, 1,.,‘,,,,„.rj , 1 , , ,, , , , . . Ise!, -1 1"'Il''' '""1 ''''''„ " II,' .1,r","': kik. of •hii limiting ••••• sgs s, •••• ineen 11, 1,,.1 4,rilhilll 4, 1.111 11 ,'N'li,.II 1,„, ..,.„,,. r,..,,,,,i,t,,,,,,,. 1,, 1, ...1,,s isfr , 1, , ,„,„„ , , .t tt,tt, ,. n hes eiii( iic e• es• i'-'',1'" '''• --,-,': ': , ,,, 1, set,. tom thi,v ure 4.1t1a1 5 :111/1 111110/. st 1 .. 1,10It, 411,• lir. alige.1 . ,,,..., l. gellier , I, e 1.ed ,s r4 ugh 4,11/ r....• .... I) ...... 1, lised 1 ,t 4.d Ito, h itits,..e...,1 1 hen s .,,,,t., I • t red ..Hotet.11 ,.. .11.A.,110.1 11., 1"1" ft 1 , 1 1,0 Iltem al a Iv, t.•11. , a... ail. to 0.0.....1 .14.A 0 11111.1 .1 I1'.,Ists 'I 14,11.1 10„„,„. 0,11, 41„, „i„...4 trim,. j,,„, 1,.,,,,,,,t , r ,,„.,,,, ,,,i, n„. ,11,j,c, is,. , r the prong' •1 to, s,„, 1 n,,-, ..g._ 4.... ,,, . I..., 1 lat•I'ler ilnit the •t..... f •••,,i,, I, 4,-.. tont e‘cr‘ V ',eel 4 .f :1115 wido. M.1.-1 res, 111 1,,,,:t ,•,. tie•te eii,i ft nrir1 ..#1 tlin roll. nr I I .; ,,,,,,,., ...,1 if! 11, 13 A .s i -.1, 01•• a , h.,,i,,,, ,1„,•,1,1,, 1.,,, ,i -i 1,, 1,, .,,,,,•0 ,,,,,,4,,, . 40, ,,t, 5, 1,., I, h,,,,,, ‘,,„ 1,3,,, -. i ...14, 4,,. 'mg 10 n11 v....M.4,4N Hot, on v M. li Ile ,, 0,11, ,,00r ar.. 11,.. FIN ...holt.% ism iiiisi• I. poll hen% % 1.,H.1,- .1 .4,1 1,,- 51,t,,,,,,,, t, H.,4,4,,,,, In 14.1, ,,,„te ,,,, „,,, ,„, ,,, ,1 t„ ,, , ,1 I„ 41„n 1, , 1.11.,,, 1,w.i,nv ,1.,,, ., .11., ,,,, ,„ 1..,, nod III ftw h. t 'hnt .4 .. l• 41.,1 41.14... 4 , ' .1.010.4'..1... r.II• 1..5 • '.. 1,....! II... , „some hod eis! In to i sipiary n ..1r. I ft ••fiie ii„ fiv th-io 1 sins., ts•,1 !of %A t,,•e '1)5 ‘1. /1. ./. /It 1• • I II 4 '',ro. 4•• ..1' 0 , 1...1,.....1 11,... 1.1 n nn 14, #1i1 Ott .11 Ai 7.14 'I 1. , I.. I .. 4 1., 44 4,11%. 4/...411 %%01 ,I1 ....... ....t....• • ,•, 4,.1 ',ale.' 171 II l, 4 . ,, •n. 1 11./m/r. •4r, Mods -f list "1 iva sift lane 1,, Ei• 1.1.'10111M 1 'I 1111 1 '14 4 ,ed 04 or "ms Irwin' 1.1.no t# 111 1.10111.1, nto ' Wm% 1 sss "I.1.11 I .1.411 1.... n her % .04 :. . ,, - ) ., ke,,V1 1 11,1% .40 met I II. v. 11, 1 .1 Introdute )iin ' ii, Or IMAM= 111011W0 AU *I ANIIICA. . , 4E1,111,141 *au . SOWADOI IS INDIA, ' WOW fie lite 144,0 ght4140 WU.* ilko4 00 Ai* Acti 'Melt 90011- WNW to me artioci tle tie 4teeli 4r444gSlauitiet'iftedi'4"Atith' rgtotertg Saran reeds) etti;e3 0 ih 1 til hi 11 t 1.1". I '''i 1 01% c4 00 1. it Oft3 MA I. Luelsitow Ws eggle undo he ti" fit "lc 19i.'44.<4 A 44(°"14 eiir'd "‘"il tt r144 atrek uPrh""u kveru ffIg" 44111U1 4A"ke al net* 16.tiVr arlh CAI legleS autt Tenth' They wee am, tan men, in the prime c all three had served throttiti Mee. David woe a sergeant litt\g'41 hblit9/ohreirSittraree° *Putt ats* th palace, John Ready took ea I medal and gtwe R to Ids brat telling him that be had a pr that lie would be KILLED INTHE ATril and Mut Davtd had better euhitts'edateDinraavsni,dd baturriLdedd Lot h:realeasoputnorpl: Ready replied that be had m hte utother might know that I du,, -.1. ,his duty. Well. the n place, 'ind irk the inner eau palace thsve was one dlvisk a regiment eleitiemounted ea est with swords us eeen as circular shields, andeettet Pa Ord who got into that epee outnumbered on thls oeeasem we were everywhere else. C James Ready was attacked 1 armed with sword and shieh feather bonnet was emceed , sower got one out at Win, his he,ad, welch severed his in hvo, the sword cutting rig the breastbone. John Ready the assistance of his broths late; and although his bayin the side of his oppottent and en home with ti fatal thrusl se he came within the swi same terrible . sword, week p„weritti firm ef a tall ma was also cut right thyme shoulder dingonally across end hie head and right arn CLEAN SEVERED FROM Ti • The sown' delivered his se sword at the same moment eelyed the bayonet et le thisingh his heart, and bol dead together. David Ready ant, seizet1 the tutwar that his brothers, and used It w effect, cutting off the heads If they had been mei•e heads When the fight was over ; that sword. It was of °Min well balanced, curved about clrele. ns sharp as the slum and the blade na rigid as cast my eeperiettee La etet none 4 ',est English swords Could ht this one, A sword of that qii cif' through a man's skull o without the least quiver, al an ordinary Birininghain t eut through a willow. .„,____,„,...__" IX , tfatikoa iwrel molioreePeen *I rffil Illitaillea 41"0.10Melie „ „. , tape Cologr. • . ihe gnat' %Pr elinalitie01 :A• . -, ;Re tekey, end .sniest, * the ; 4,tuidethe,r4ticor di:44"*"11AW9tki$1* .til the. 01 urititinuth4 ,,Weit.., coo att-lit Ohl Or -egging*, IWIte,,Ce 31. kr$ the 4114410". Q1 -444104K." ei Werkin litta etielninc0 et CenSed Mein Ki be, 0404004, e' Aew, Ander iiew 01141,uons '" 3414''' 1344reall'e4 r Y°11"1' : tile )S kited InpaIable:qUallUitea, I are fledging:to tha heir 41010, 40;41414g a, X0114140i, Write* "In 'V9rre4POirte. - . ' tteritteess seesenets'"" ,flilkell, PP* ittilt 'Me' Valtet '4004111110 t° i the dfstriets. athilitVefiligede L *Mal Attlee WeneSVentitil is less whele *tee- erte, Melsing tlepeetkete, ' TtienelindiS nets 44-:,ettisiertgetUarsOggiteslbseler rts, horteedepoelteeperallel ini put S. Illnils the- VeldlehreS . " . , __,,,„410,,,itti_gq- .41,00,4x. tor ,tn,any ,,,,,,,,,40,4,140.;94 .40-bri4„. „trots, .0ned AS 1111Prefituhle, ta .belleg by irePreVed-XlettehlnelrYllr ist theesiSS cif eneeste , itio;. a. 0110$‘'Otleiti"0*,"11401 44('' 4 0.00:,•greer ittilnei' e.- "Ilittl lie..thesenin et !QM Miele 14. MHO "dllikee-e-flaiiO4 Weet 6 ..-f 1 el, About eighteen:Mil iv. Meg ''"Virb4eS."1".J41,1ressl-P,,;44:417, 00PeitY tele esCisesrese seserr•seo her groltett 440 VITO= ieseperi Mless Under r geftereile teente, 'r'0•901t"..-th°rsilKO'sle#94,„Clittet Me, veal belie- heme agnost trimsformed.,litteStritestling kree lilt StdelikstiaAleditifetile ;UMW. dtggiek. ROM Peen' till eeteeeergeA(04140Ilepit is . ftiechititien.!g::-1110';.41..1nOlid liggees -. . ..•.. - ,•• - !"..-- ' le: Films weeetywnsttee .t, .:,''''' ::.. , tei fnatia 'CAMP, ,dirediriMPOs i'kle Weet, for IttAlgx ' 111101114 arty the mitterli,--,•„0,Vbet:, lealte IS .from the conottivo‘whicti a -royalty on all Andes .srSuelt teenee, thin 1110Se iliggere,' Who ectly .the Meet IlidePendent' ien in the Werld,--are Peeking itteresera le Ode new Ek".,,,Dora-' ie inajotity di thein are „deting he are working individually .. . ' elaims; others Jelve lotetted ' Vitt). an on a larger settles 4 , . iiirn thut ts:mose:. uneatable; course, are not, se kielenate, ep on working; .Witbr We'helie i lammined in Men Ots,lheir , Algona reould a' morts.•gros- ..orlindstio -ebovici*,•;.be Totind ig luo band of workerkalong. filsibe. ' . , ' _ fri III parts ;of the world, na- ,4114 Masses -are' to be found , ,, vatiopio4 000,00,0 wows A. woo' .110„110-1‘,4*"'" . . nod' . wadi- .'iLD'' 4 , , . , ., , , . ' 41400 Vs** XI* . . :- • • ' - ' Sir Ian 11. liehlItgailw relgtekl II* stOTY orlt httautilul Imo, tn. thik laomo ot 0 i1.0etere' litVesit gilteg. so billow g gAte. IA Young lady. who, COMO, OlSo day:110k "11 40.44* *ectt*.' ShOtAt** *Wit .to biklberried.,aud toartiodlo lb* Oolf :men tile. lovedl ' lag, .uniootoktgly,, When a foidi,sh,, gees awettse serest weestalaarty 4: Y011100410' 1044/14 tette* UR 1101112,04 " ,'14---“Nrit...011.. Ill-, 4.7-41' et ste-T 'let 1110- 41f4t0y Mlied it- the brit*Artioni r tifittle404TOOIMY,..04,11Sitt• there V011td, he ie. -se tretible hi irilakit4ent niteretems, le IMMO weta . mites ellitereide. sue; VliaMbero's 401.1rutiksolho tattoo marks Zers. rrygaPpeeeW,ithseentiltiVel,Aintigh 4.1Lugly • 1:44. ceotti"uttw• ktosoytte-aig" oo'10"oy.:14100:eher."0 *lir lloiseetessess,.whasese wear a bit. -of orange: Peel frPili tile. ita,'Veliteht,Lto AO ,ro, ee.way,.,reptapee itt.. *lot itto word,4 4,Nyillkt, Aro. you thinkingSaceill" WO•ef ,IterterelkestireVitte, tiottsseatetest1r ,; 0 ara to e, that doetors',* the East Encl. 4. Lendens 1,41'144V' eit4. Pevides taeilialite ter ar billing4 49theiVr give WI, ele.e Mut 'Medicine et'Siv.dlePeeseTr. for' etAlleileer Otolitraet- wentle wen voCieee' ' • Paid- it Mess that tees ofsthettelleda, Of 111"Ii"• 14 Great W40004.1114 Ow9Ittaa eYster.ii er4ielt PreVetts InewisTking eines, or beentiffiettliMIJ iltalrletie reenete "Mein- cal atffi rtil;_eilee •„an,A 40400 /Or Vireo' „ ,. , _, peace a wee*, _meutetno anst ereSSIngs itee ;even:. peevalese .4. .• - '- • ' • A gray haired, were:looking .practi- tiouer,,elever, and only. thirty -gee, onee said ilete:he could retire had 411 debte been peel • by Serener elld Prettent• pa. dents. EVery cloetOr bas to think a geeat deal *nit Ins fee*, bis eklienses are SO 8 e 1..r Veil" rarelY doce it aledic410040r become gill. Lawson Telt sets doWn Ale average Weenie Of Medical men Ire'Eng- tend at 200 Pounds a year,. Notneof the researeh work done •in 114.014144-0"Pind for,. and. Vete' little. of the herd work. Doctole • epp.ear to ibe "0TO bY ell'", quetteIram euieg patients for their MIS', • .. , eeee.--,-4----eleee • . HEART' Or LOUIS. XVII. • - .' ''''" ''Europe_cur. Its Strange 1ourneye Over. lops•Gplhadral Guaidians. . . . et the heart of Leuis.XVIL now reata in .,.: tire mausoleum ot exiled Vouch royalty at Goers, in Austria, A Is-,onlY atter the raost extraordinary vicissitudes. Sealed n a glass jar, hiddeti behihd the books of the library of the physieian who made the , auteeisy of the Dauphin's corpse, stolen by that, doctor's,ressietant, enshrined in the &Star of a Oardinars oratory, robbed and desecrated by a riotous Parisian ntob. r,ebevired. int= a heap of offal and dirt, 'eta upSat public om etion and then conveyed with, much ceremony aenoss Europe -first Se Venice and then to Aushitt, the. adventures of this poet lit te dried up eitoreel of but/lenge are streely of a chilmeter to encOurage roy 1 personages irtsfthe belief that their iast sleep will i•emnin uncle- teirbed, says the Family Doctor. . hut it is not only mobs whs interfere with the repose ot•the illustrisfus dead. Cut•iosity •promptS many to-,OPen the ,- temb of the great personagesewho have made history in tidies long ago. And, strangely enough, some of the ptincipal offenders in ibis respect ard the very people to whom hes been confided the care of these dead. ' The tate Archbishop Benson of Canter bury used to speak with horrorsofra well- known, end popular English dein who . boasted that, duringslOstentit se -alas he had opened and ekatnined every tomb in his cathedral; and the priinate was outspeken In his indignation when he found that during Ins absence the dean ef his own cathedral at Canterbery had broken. open the tomb of a mediaeval Archbishop of Canterbury and had re- moved a mitre of cloth of .gold, a ling and a chalice which are now preserved behind glaseetiva recess in the northern aMbulatory blithe eiasilica. In fact, Dr, Beeson alwaysI to look ,at them, declaring that hle ing 60 would eon- stitute a sort of Ileel recognition on his part of what had been done. 114 i Brittoli7134ers.v. '''01eti: trn ens, Canedians, Germans , itees"er in harmetty., The eoi- 10.1..‘,. pr°feli:44*I 114411"`exe ersaitired actor'', Inigt iii;ii.sci• IY,",`Sleil narvy, all -toilStageth- r lide with a vinuand pod • geetIfying to see, and "'erim W'llula"wa artimig‘11"-In• $ Vsaw were of .ra lately level in&in some. 'illstallag,lich, s sttea of great. guilt ana , One pocket some. thousands ' warth had beenAlseeVered, Canadian • admittett haying 450 010.ot ri weeles Vireek•Ee, ','Posseeelon et°11es-w°01a 0"° ,sfe days' wash. • The,ravenues nri the claim LieensesMid,_ •enY- he eomp'any,..are conakierable, Dspeets as well as. thoee. of the ‘, eeseenetularly - ..diggetS_Nee - ALLUVIAL' DIGGINGS. . ,, 'onto' those on the r#Yer banks II 'diggings shuate: ,na pet ••--rs---- about sixteen* miles from the ifile Deontletaifte 'AN Puede- t, tiles controled liy lbst Pniel Mining. Company, These :over 'ati (enormous area, partly ision ot Kimberley end partly comprising .no less *he eigle miles, all of 'which haS proved mondiferous to a paying de% alluvial wash of peenomen- e has been found, Alla dlit- arth many thousands 'of dol- ly discovered. - e monds found here, limeever, dolly different frotn• the river th as to color and shape, and Ruiner in that they show no ing water worn or of "travel,' *se with Mose recovired from liver diggings, while he large , of carbons and garriets (al- id in dry alines), in the same tate. despite their being. soft ad many experienced mining and diggers to -come go the , that Mete dIamonds erect a al origin and:are derived from n of pipes •(yet undiscovered) imediate Vicinity, and that n y are mines of wonderitillech- which the ditutionds have been nvn in bygone•eges by a stow iream from the East, and . the layer of gravel which hree distinct neds Of varying s. The gravel,,already proved nondiferous to an extraordin- :: oVer an enormous area, has ore than $150,000 et ,gouil . I and the fact that diamorids discovered mid workings pro- plotted by Individual diggers ed art enormous rally in Ihs -- --- 1, and what was yesterday a bare veldt la now. a Pries (1 well -ordered camps. An un- el application has been made i. and no less than 40,000 eady have been, allotted by the to . Individual diggeta and in lots of ONE TO NINETY CLAIMS. are allotted on a sliding scale Is figures and a ten per cent. nd hold Out ,reasonable peos- the individttal digger to. make 3pecially In view 'of the fact ondS in reedit , yea* have iy inevetteed MAIM°, Stones enty years .ago sold .ati $4.50 110W brings Sll„5 to lf$0.• re however, tit entourage still st ',liners, lite MIMI eampaity 1 a standing reward ef $20,nito IISOOVerY of' tiny ono of the ' wilt Wad to 111,0 develoPhirrd I Me dry Mines, Width ere -exist In the area it centrals, company Itself 10 going th for stennstle Old setellt4iPt testing !M. . *berg ''AllIet, tfie .05mpany condutang, mike the gutdr Mert MIllifig thOtiet a 0(10 t N the *Spahr:Mini .prospect- ritIfYibit teiitilts. Tan 'pipets Also:Were& Mal ,tbe Mine, ha red to be diamoodire.rous. to a two, luttatrod reef. -rim ofil- is Mactd at MY diefeleulliy ilie i S' 410001) thdt: AM nitn0 ton s itflOralti3O fatit 'to lesee0 Whi lig OttfOrilr fiela There WO . o3t olhat pee" in Ito CO 115,%/11.0 tlawritta WOO 'ett d tr1.10" thodhttertniftts ladt't MO, a rAtilliCry tri4hatkitt ate 1' Peit186411(14 ht it #11tlitir1 Of at 11,81110c , 14tV am% llAki .Prfli*Eftir Itero. 04 dtggors iti a pot. 40401 $ulattetlegitlyi co. 41-----, GREAT IMPOSTOR _ LWE STOW/ OE A GREA LEG TAXIL. -,--- Author of the Famous ", Hoax, Is Called to Ari For Ms teins. ' Tha end of nne- or tit, 1,,, mate intpoSlurs of niodeen I nutineed in (Ile fullnwing br elf*vsalanoritis-froiti `a ,,i'u eurrealsaidelit :„. -rho Petrie publishes Ilie ' dram ot the suill.cierical Lesi 'resit." Taxirs real name was ow j Pages, and he wets born a fifty-two years ago. Edue Jesuits, he found filmset( in 1 a mere yoUlli on a i !largo 1 tt.,..... t.ns unvos been snrn '...'(`:" " it came out filled with a vIr against 1114 4,1.1 iiretlruelnrs .ions . . .. , . , t elf whote-hearteiny in ,.., , , .. i •rie a I pre ipii wino a . • t•ron quarters in the Latin mauler loured forth a enristant stre I , „.„e, ghleIN wIll toonsehomn II" bitter rind scandalous ubus thing (710141.1111. r: MATEO SENS V1"1 ,.. 45 Taxi, (Tented ''' this ishout Framer-. by s'udds , -- R - , , „ „ , .,,,,„,,, 1 '"' Pell' '""' "1' ""`"" expressing repentance ter hi ,,,,,.. _....._. „., _. .... ..,,,,.„.„,,,, "" .'-'-'"!.."1.. ''.'!;:.1::.1:1. "'re. arins. Nig ii Archbishop (if Puris. gave hi i •t d 1 vt X.111 sent ( " oln, "II ." • ,. • solution of the lloty see, Now commenced n fresh sii • merit tinmplileits. this lir against attnn•-k and Freemn, , 1 .1 . . ,,. h rem , of i itidoxy ri iiii , 40,1110111 railliippili and hip . , , „ , „ „. ,, „. st,,v,,, 1.11. tie. MAIM nli, I as thing in 111,141/1 11. Early iii hi, oriiiiiiii•ii im iniori,,,s14.11 Mihail' lis n series of ret .: il.P.Illig 1. re.•1104sorir v V.1111 MAI,. %%hi. It vo, k114.%11 kJ 1.' elk Ili Peri, ..“ r . .. 11 Vs“ 1.; \1; 40. s,11101 ,„•,,,., . 1, we i ,• %%as SIR), hed. ' ' ' ' .. 10141%...1 H44,4ther rag, tie Hp il /...1 0/11 / lila 41,14/.15,1 % -1 11 • lined ei-lbee ,,t owl 1 1440.1 111A,11 .114 th ,1111i 1.% u. deep in , r 1..r. ,,„,„,..„.„ sf„, ,,,,u, tumid \ .iiighitti. she « t, 1.10,1.... „r 11,- I 41.11.-ri 441 , nil ii fesiir .1,,,,,i we% ,1,1 .114 11 • la• 0,, , 11, . , htii.. ,,," pi.,..„ ,,,,,, ' ' .„ 11 5,1, P.,1,1, II' 1111"1.: -if ••". I" the chilli h sch ,1 ii•i•••rit , il it., Ms tared ibal ie. , )1 '.., . .1 0 ak 11.• 1 \ :111" 1111000114.. 1 ,.,,,,,,.,n. ,,,,,,,, ihr ..,.rui,,, 1 r ' ' . io. soh ssW-e.astili) um " ‘ a t 1,,„,.. ‘e. r.., i).ttint ou i• 1, , ,,,,,re 1.,,,,,1 ..‘,41.4e, 11 4 1,,,.. '1 • MI II' %I. 111-.NEI•U 14,, 1 4.111,ii " \I) '4,11. 4' 11 h., . .1 ti,.• 1 great 41,441 .4' 4 N, on, ,•11,,,,,„ ,1, ded, but ., 1,4 you ‘t. 15t11119.4.1, 14., ' \ p so \Isis. " I 1 '" ''''' ft' 't'f*"" finut ... •1 1.•/,q..•1',1/41 /410. "1 t...4 but 14...,‘ ,•4141 ,..t. ! .1 4, iirse when l'ion''‘ 14 t.co' ,,E,,,, . West 1.4. Ihe ina .1 A q111.1•11, 1,1711, 1 wr„, , mile), , ,,i% A \ D itor.s Ndri 1 4... * LONELY DOUGHERTY ISLAND. — No Landing Ever Made There Med Sight- ed Only Tnice in a Century. Which is the loneliest, most desolate and most inaccessible island on. the face of tbe lobe? Many people would doubt - g roze s, w c less plump tor one of the C t hi h were recently brought into notice owing to the wrecic thereen of the Norwegian „exploring ship Catherine, and the subse- quent rescue of the castaway crew by 11 T ki B li t t • d le ura na, a ri s 1 s earner e- rom Cape own or a, pur- spatched f ' T f th t pose, says Pearson's Weekly. But Hog Island, the weeternmost of the group and the one whereon the wrecked tnen spent. most of their time, is by no means an undesirable pla8e ,of residence b tin& it d ' h ., u o ing as oes In aces and rabbits, penguins, albatrosses and sea elephants. Heard lslarui, in the same seas, Is far more isolated, as well as more barren; bill it possesses, as does Hog, a sheiter hut for castaways, and is visited by whalers emisioneny. So too is 'South Georgia, but it has no shelter hut, and as it is right out of the truck of ship- ping, any one unlucky enoogh to be cast away thereon would stand a very poor chance of ever getting off alive. BouVet !eland, in the same seas, is visited evert more rarely, and on the last occasion when a ship touched there five corpses wer.. found frozen on the beach, grim meniento of SOM. unrecorded Ira- gedy of the sett. Possession Island, In ita turn, is still lonelier and more Mhos- pitable than Bouvet. But probably the palm In this dtrec- non must be ascribed, to Dougherty Island, on whiell, so far as is known, no landing hes ever yet been effected. It has only been sighted twice In a can- tury, and is officially described in the Admiralty stilling directions as "the most remote and Isolated spot on earth: .e CHILD sup:1ms IN GERMANY. — Number so Great That causes ore Being Studf,od - Cfitee Not to Blame * ' sur I e amon school children has be- ' c d g • male .1,4 frequent in Germany that -the authorities are devoting serious atten- llon to the muses cif IL In Pruesia alone there Wert. 1,152 eases between 1882 and 1905, or something like three a month. The yearh• number has been e‘en greater in 111e last two years. it la said, A general discussion of the sobjeel t..ok place lately In Berlin at a meeting of the society of School Srint- laticul. Uf the number given above. 812 eaSeit \here of children attending the lower d 1 'I I • d "It'l It 1 i h • ..111 e 4, a" 104. s lin . . le 1 g el, Hit in spite of Ihis the tendency te KM. 1 s e limiest. ii Ds reels, vy i los . .14 • .1 - t " • in - Ila number ef children over 15 yenrs mei kin iheiliscives W1114 111.•/01 fair limes OP grviiI ns the moldier below 41,41 040 T114. loN .., 41,0, we!'" kali' lillies • as numerous Hy the Otis, In a great majority cf rtist•P Ilie Mil 4-.4. 41 44. ‘4,11% (41111111, It a 0.014, t•I 1 1 1 • ti,1 1 1 . mar borne and tell al .s,I,...4 .,r aflis . ,,,, .11 . ..,,i,. ,11115,. 11'10.1111.: -1 Iol. 1 1 '''• l'"'• *"."11 n lien shoot matters sere ivinnected with them. 1h:intik' had 111,44 HIr..vg....41 elements in Ilic hone, in int.re than :I Iliird 4,1 Ilie ,,......4 fear of puni,limimt. dread 4,f i,5iiiiiiiialiiiii, 1' 1 1 11 I 1 111111Ir" 1/, pti-•• 1 V11 . , . lot 1 , itimi- fe,irs V.fis the Mini.. .•;111.4 BO 111 1114114 ..f these ,ie.e... e• lisp, .1 map, 11s .I.1 (he'll, It %Ad. 111.. ,111.111.1,. 4,1 the parenlp a,•Iiiai i.r. eypecleil. Mid led di roi•Ity ti., hie .1,4..1. '1 114. lark 4.1 r..m.....4.0,14.11, 0 belv.eeti 11... Hrfttill 15.v...r.., .4 011111% 1 11.1/111,11 and nit results ev.ii led from 'loin 1,5 a rig ,.1 schisd NA ,1,111 .0114.44 1.,4 t., 4141. 1.HH,•4 I f troutile. 11111 the Mini, iido renders .1 ft"li" 1.‘ Iti" ""1""1"." ''t 111.""'.11" Parents that 'be ebil,1 ratittl he able I,. ,1.. ,0.1,„1 11„, ,.„ ii," ,,,,,,, h t.1 , y.1,,it c'hrr '1,11,1ren .1., "Ile 51111 11 he V,111,- '0.:0. 11.-,•rilo.,1 tiv , rie of iti, stssihers ns a sin, 01.• or..• v• king di, hint. II" ''''''1,15"47 '''' '' "i "'I ...rile i 1,11,.... in ... .. Hamm 1 • I 0 r . fl r 1 11 • t # 1. 1 I el nys ii re 'tr. t•licit den' e'nl :•I II"' l''''‘4 ... 111 \I' Ill. l''" i"g* "111' "r "" ''' l'Iren.'' g' ,„1„„, ‘,.„ &Au. 0(1 Itt ITI• 11•111% ,.r. nee s (.11. P.0'1311'41 rn a Palli •1•,i) -II eleizris' ‘..111.• # f Iliese r0.4., v. tt .• 1 tileen 1,1e i., 11 It II I thi oris i atv esti, i e iis, in, -iii ing :Let. 4,• 1.111 in th- 1,11'eril., 4 ' I lie rert,n,44.riV 4 rises wen' 1•1!!!,,st with .,111 excetdadi ilia, I- 11.1111,111 eaufO*1 rI.nibes.' ft 411 1,,,‘ '4'1% I , shame 91 lle. rnisecniiiiet , f rel'iltidis. ispeciam ,,e, erns. The mamas, ,,f morbid tmsriles a , 'is 11...1,tit11,, (tort,. 1.1.4 N.4 gr. 44‘4.1. 4'4.40.1 1,.. 4.0441.1 for the II c!'r% no! 11'1' '"•!'d Is'ng 't 'I"sicro 4 'e i fe le•I I,. sti,. ele 1,1"..I,I! '111'.1ren 1 1,, sr, ,is.fts 0 4.1 4 ,....s ,4 I 4 111I1 5 4 5 If raw in fitness'! • f li• "' "..`i '11,..1. • .` 'n Press leil ...ffires 4.1 fp 1.1.131....1 (HAVE ion HIM le, "1 oein issie Molt\ onto 1 111141 /1 55..M#111 5%11#. 1, 1114 d rc,1 -1,t,,,s,t, . .st,,, en,,,,,,,,ennael ssssis sp. ' . Duffer tw ere lee 'dente ef I•rertil. tole! hgent girls in the neighborhood.' —44— DODGING A ROGUE ELEPHANT. Indian Official's Game of Hide and Seek With a Big Beast. • S. M. Fraser. Chief Commissioner of Coorg and resident of Mysore, met with an adventures In Coorg near the Gannett border during his recent tour. Mr. Fraser, accompanied by Mr. liar- Hs. Assistant Commissioner ; Mr. Mc- Carthy and Mr. Haller, were riding along a narrow zigzag path through an almost invenetrable Jungie when, nays the I.on- don Standard. he heard an elephaut moving parallel ,.AvItli them. Mr. Mc- Carthy rode to the next bend to see if the coast was clear. At the moment Mr. McCarthy turried'the bend a tusker came out on the path above hlm, and without a moment's hesitation gave the usual squeal and charged. ShouUng Itide I" kir. McCarricy gal. loped down the path, and, With this fly- Ing start, passed . Mr. l'-'raser. who had not got up much pace, not fully realizing the danger. The.rest of the party Ms- appeared around the next bend. Mr. Fraser turned kilo an opening in the jungle, only to find It a trap of impene- treble g.rowth on all sides. The rope elephant was within a few yards of the horses tall, . Without an Iffietenre hesitation throw - ' ' ing an arm ("OW •a tree while passing, he let the hoMe galltm bean under him, fell to the geffilnd on all fours, flung nig. himself 10 elnOlde oletir 6E -the Phara'''' elephant's path, and then springing to his feet took refuge behind a larger tree some Pokes deillY• No soener did the elephant miss hls man than he pulled up. turned around d r welded st wly to hunt for Min. 9,9 E 0 _9 , _ m Fraser in the meantime moved r• . d .11 ' I I t b ellently deoun le teee, ceep ng I e• I esl Maisel' and the elephant. Pon. 0 a , . , . tunatety after„solite inittutes the eiephat 'it oved off and disappeared. Mr. Fraser 1 ,, I f I t emerged irelll his p ace o emcee men . - _ ... . Mt daaldgen lit any Way. Tne anoie - _sees,. PeTtY was nuststwel 1 • *ewes, MARY JANE'S 11101ffS. :Domestic seeeafge tit 'Wellington, New Aland. heee fettled a union and del and that their work on Mondays, Tum., c yti, frrldaYg 0110,aturditre shall ceo-Se a ' /.20 ia tIta.r.oliltigt on Titurtuaya Surtdaye fitlevo in (be afterhoon ; on WodneAdays at 10 p.m, Mt do '0110 te beitelne by fen o'clock 011. • tla ThlitlidaY, when, they may stay out • 11 midnight. , — _.....0._....._... ....,._ , , „ i ne value oi a eollege education is leo 1 1 811M e men. because It takes them ti,11 king to get over II. The biggest gun in the world 1,, ',MN of 16K•in. lion. at Cronsladt. The pro • yt,• .•tst q - 1 Jectiie Is 4 feet mug, ono e igi. -IOU pounds. 11:3 range is 12 miles. The world's locomotive en gille.1 We, -.mighty . 414,000.0oo liorse•poWer, esclud• Mg niolnrs. Steimiship englnes are nril one-third of this power. 4.1 se. . 3 01111#1e. uncle said this morn- Ing Hist there ulisn,j anoth„r wommil like you In the world." sAll. the ,b,nr fellow I Did he really, Freddy ?-' "Ai., and he said it wag a Jolly ineet i I 1 ..-- - .4,-(• oe• "Do vou think that moonlight promo „, ,, 4 • as . eo . a e. are dange.. us. to simily es " " know they are said to be? I don t about that, bitt they certainh are re sponstbie kir much riunblIng talk." , you mop ng e bout the "What iire t house fne. Tommy? Why don't you gi, se • . • ,•• •er and play With Charley Ponders- .. ,. ' Cause I played with him yesterday . and I don't suPPese he's Weil )01." . Mrs. Goldinglon : I am Maze(' sir, Id ' that you shou propose to My daughter You have not known be r tk week:, The ,,,.. . v. ity suitor : "True, Madam ; but I have known You for some thne and ever bud( , Y., ' gs it our daughter takes after you. Ile Y Y got the girl. Singleton : "What's the matter. old man? You scent to have trouble on v tint mind." Wedderly : "My wife told me 1,, order something hi town, and I'll be banged if I can 1'r:windier Whether tit nue ------ -- :--- a sefee or a tea eel" "I'm Weld that her of Thine win Idli himself by overwork.' "Overwork ! I didn't, know 10 ever worked." "Oh, 1 re- far to melltal and not phYsical work. Ile overworks his brain frying to find .or not doing anyildtig ire does- ekeuse_s t tilt ear° abouL" .. wilv TAN sums wisAn wieL„ , " „ .— Dressing Used for Them Does Not Con- lain Acid--Inacking Does. It seems pretty certain that, for some reason or other tan leather keeps softer than black leather. One explanation of thie nray be that in the greater number of eases the blackening used for polishing blurt boOts has strongly acid properties, Whereas the pastes used for poliehIng broWn boota ate never acidsand oonstst of a varnish made of *Os and WaXel. . In many 'of the formulas given for talking blacking a very large W1)0111011 id of oil of vitriol, or strong sulphuric ac , 14 directed to be used. The chief ingre. Al diorite of hoot blacking, cfccordIng to le London Lancet, appear to be leery black, treacle atid oil of Vitriol. SometiMes hYditettarle odd 19 118ed• ' The object of the acid apparently Is to dissolve nut the mineral ,atottor 0%101Y phosphate ot Wolof tho ivory black and so to 'Whoa it to a very fine VOW Ade. Tito result is that lila blacking is try ttetat it tot Villt 110101iLlein nekt, (Mainly wilt phosphate 'add. M t% thatiet of filet vre Wm found. auditing lite Sulphuric deld in bleeking Mitch Ive: *Ivo ottooked (0 thAr wiltr WW1 dtletro .upott it; -- — Pf )1\11 II 11K *AIM 1 "s,.., ... a geed .leal like 11 ' 'lei, Often inss,•0 a lahn - -- 0,1.. 'II ,,.• ,, 4, 911 5:ar for rpt 1.. ....., n•l, rtni.#1 " \#1, erpl 1., •,,t 13.1 s,444114 111 111 "1 to . .. , ,. e , , , 1 . pr. fni, I 1#11# n Nil I 1111 Ihe other Ito a t.eti rack ' VeWaslied than payi ceVered St liatey; fs.'" espegi ngposile I on the V Kfraberlay NItoto# ferity of, the..p with the banlca agIcally ve of 10 preeloUS" night WO `", ito great' 'sad OK • , MINE Frijol -11 site 'Ha I `I. the elver their. Cla ibex: pey is the con • ere vim! ,,.,• Moss of J de,. and -1 in large 2•se?, sYnt; Se r': , eingle syndicates . • average , some, of • _bet ko e ttat „, class, an k 'POO k • ; • 'than amo the Vaal • Men fro • - tonalities r efdlas 'Ales ' 1 , lege grad army offl er side h Mlowshlp is prelatic The fin average, with the Value. I ter dollars and one cleared 81 had in h from a th vive ies by its p Whine! bright. TI In addit the antwi with, but Vaal, inel berg Wes Diamond buildings In the Di Barkly, ty square to be dia gree. An • rIchne monds w lars alrea The din are essen Mones, bo they are sign of b us is the the Vaal voportio viays. fop unworn stones, le engineers eonclusio purely loc the erosi in the I the localit ness from washed ci running ledged in Tubs in 1 thickness be dia ary degr yielded stones. This fa hove been fliably have ea new flei stretch Of Ierge and frecedenl or Share Melina air company Syndicates 40 FROM Claims ef Moder royalty. a peels for Motley, that din enormous which, tw per !tarot In onto further t has offer for the pipes GM of any o known to while the propo sy devatopirt 44it Paa .8.1 been 11.00 rtf -omerferte log whit have be6 ',Oat pril dspit Ot dal reur ditotlora. Ma 1110 ,',.ttot. toad. Oro tortio prolVtlyi LK11 iota Steady n they • dry tnlitt• Sonia icA$ &AO $1004140 441411411... dian AU* 1101CO3 ait- Mot AO, AVM tt.- . kilo ftvid, alIvo, e, and 1 the und 'do Viten falt. Ilegurnfs Crimea her David, esentenent keep Ms heir moth - out of se. John fear, and e huddled Mt took rts of the rt held by valry artn- azors and rty of the were far , as intact a- entering y a sOWar . Re.Ay tf, and he, right over skull clean lit through sprang to r, but too et reached was driv- , in doing p of the ed by the , and he h the left the -chest, were E BODY. Re of the that he re - In Ready h 'nen fell t serge- Ict I lea both terrible of men aa f cabbage. examined ry weight, a quarter - pest razor, -Iron. Now, our very ive cut like ality would thighbone easily as lade woUld DEAD T FRAUD. Anti -Christ" sWer st consuni- MIMS 19 an• et telegram rts France) lows of the etitiptileteer mil Jugend- t Marseilles ated by the insult wileti 'bout which e obseuritv. lent. haired and flung O all anti- Itead- of Paris he ain et pans , filled with el' every - a sellsatiOn nly making out publicly s lurid past. epee v, ordinal ni 111.S bi•ne him ihr. at, ries a Yelle- n'. directed sons. NI III It'll.; iftsutindllig I bad Sonia. Ilie ninellres ainntig the 11i114.11.4 e(111 ( 1 • carried , it r ecloc„.its..c mote) ' 111101,..v.hat 1. ail Cuff rSe Iv% SuCti ; • ilog.elsn't is response!" me?" asked tot tt-te two. one of ttr. cations and