Loading...
The Brussels Post, 1921-10-6, Page 7-4 • .4g 0.•••+•,• .•••••••••••••••••1•••••.n.r. ,••••••••"••••••,••••••••-- -,. Hunting Gazelles in Morocco . s aro relater to all reasieei mieutee later we see them NOW en the outline o w 1W bounderg over the Mee, • It WS not long before fresh herds (teetered; but, alWeee Ineeking away to the left, they succeeded In reaching the low stony slopes that form the; northern boundary et the Ralumanit Plein ..Ae a deliel trete Ifeld Avast' Ivo turn southward to neck more ad- vantageous ground: and, meal:ging from the storiet, our cars roil ammo etre level plain ee et pace of thirty mike' en hour. Game, however, is meaner here—though e great bustard tulle tp my gee, brought down by a charge of bucluthot. At last we spy a herd of a dozen gazellea in the open, and at an In- creased mused the epee rust forward. The speedometer of my ear marks forty milee an hour, but we are not gaining on the Metes, which eppear may tp keep their distance of four pr live hundred yards ahead of nil. At "mother signal, we increase •the pace .to ;fifty meet Ger hour. The plain is level, but there are stones and little undulations and many small water mums's, merely little declivities in the anresee, but none the less exciting to Pass over. The exhilaration is in tense. It is wondertul driving on the part of the chauffeurs, The care away from side to side and rise and fall, like boats in a rough sea. Wo are closing ppon the herd, and it looks as if my ear will be first to come up with them; but suddenly they swerve to the right and pass down. the line of advancing cars. The Pasha of Marrakesh's lithe figure Is dearly visible as he stands in his swaying car. The gazelles mum him, and with right and left barrels he brings down twp of them. It is; beauti- ful ;emoting. Kaid Hammoue car is the next, and he too shoots two gazel- le.% Once more the herd swerves, and, passing between the oars, breaks back to the rear. We allow them to escape —all except one, a young doe, which, paralyzed with tear, stands motionlese and is madly captured alive and un- hurt. It is carefully oonveyed back to Marrakesh to become a pet in the awkward spot. The gazelles are out pasha's houee. of rauge. You can shoot thorn only You may argue that this clase of witb a strotgun loaded with toed bullet hunting is not sport, that the gazelles or buckshot: to shoot with a rifle out have no chance of escape; but it is of a car roing at from forty to fifty not so. The risk is great, an accident miles an hour over rough ground is too may occur at any moment, and the Of eeetlY, Where thee tleeeer in 40 gentile and domestic a guise tele eint are a little 'readied to royal about parties being me4e up to hunt them, 1110000 or wildcats or rhinceerealet me hunted. In Morocco however, they are a particietely Melte tort of game, and a OOrrelthendent Of the ',melon 'IMM Writhe to eta paper an leterest- ing account 01 a gazelle hunting ex- Peditien: There are tour of us, liaj Tirane Glawl, the Pasha of Marrekeeh, 1{0d Manumit ot the Atlas) SId Ayadt, Raid of Bahamas and mytelf. There is a ear thr each for ue, and at the invita- tion ot my boat 1 take my seat beside the cheuffeur, with two beautifully dressed black slaves in attendance on the back „at. The kakis enter their ears, and we set out, Teo cultivated lands are quickie left behind, and the greet plain oeileeane na Iles etretchlug away before us, with the sways peaks of tbe Atlas bounding its southern horizon. Kaid Ayadi gives the senile, and the goer cera tweed out—a few bundred yard.* apart—and proceed at is slower pace, about fifteen mesa an hpur. The ground is atoneetrewe and rough, and careful ;steering is neceetary. There are trodden; of every .shape and size, loosely strewn ovor the plain, and; lit- tle channels worn by water, intigeite cant es -rough in themselves, but highly damaging to motor oars if the cars are not skillfully manceuvred. Our chauf- feurs, three Frenchmen ad an Algere en, are skillful drivers and accustomed to this sport of the "great keels!" Suddeuly one of the slaves in my car cries out, and roomy ahead of us I see a bora ot gazelles bounding over the plata. My carats on the extreme left of the line, and our object is to bead off the herd from the mere 'stony ground and turn them to the riget, where the plain is more level. Edging away always to the left, our car quick- ens its pace, rolling from side to side and bumping, Seizing every oppor- tunity of a few yards of good ground, we apuet forward, rely to have to slow down again in order to moss emne much to expect, There are lets stones ; stony surface of the ground gives the now, and we are making headway, gazelles a good chance,. Of the many angles and -run straight away, keeping The three cars on my right keep a sherds teat we saw the four gazelles the bush between himself and me. I little in the rear in order to ;facilitate ' that we shot and the one that we took have not known many aninials to do 0 my turuing movement; but they too I alive were our whole bag, though we ninre clever thing! . are making goad Pace. At times, for I covered over ono bundred miles on the But the rhinoceroe Mr. Akeley holds a few minutes, we are traveleng at over peen alone without counting our ride up to scorn. "Many experienced hunt - forty miles an hour, and once or twice , to and from Marrakes.b. The handling ere" he writes, "consider him as one I ' the gazelles ere almost within range; I of the cars required the greatest ekill, then some little watercourse or some ',and the shooting is by no means easy. extra stony pater gives them their iTo hit a mulling gazelle from a motor chance, and they increase the distance car travelling at the rate of flay miles again. At last our couree seems dear, , an hour over rough ground needs no and Or ear bounds forward. The pace ' little skill. is splendid but rather terrifying. Half t We return to a late luncheon at Kaid standing, ball kneeling on the seat, I Avades house—a meal beginning with wait to get my chance to shoot; then ' a roast sheep and continuing with un - suddenly the car swerves in a way , limited counsel of meat and fowl and that nearly threws me 4011—and stops. ! swmtseeenost of which is lett un - A. yard or two ahead Is a dry water- tasted. The afternoon is well on, and course, a metre wide perhaps, half a the -anima of the Atlas are rose 'wee metre deep and full of boulder% an the rays of the setting sun as we roll impassable barrier—or rather a harrier back to the city along the straight that makes us :search for a practicable ! weite road. Before sunset we are in passage and allows the escape of the : the pasha's palace, having covered gazelles, whose course toward the ; more than one hundred and eighty stony ground is now easy. A bow, miles since our start in the morning. SELF PRAISE Tho Mae wilO tele' fere geed he le Weed drop that Stunt in haste; he Merely Wetter Men aigh, "Gee sthiee and thine he thews poor tette, 1 hope that I have sterling we:tie se welch my neighbore toll; I hope that 1adorn the earth on which 1 deign te dwell: 1 hope ens loaded to the Oasts with qualities so line thie, I'M a model to all bards who writa the litting Jere. But met thew them by my detach, which are in daily view, and not by empty words! or „roses, or with my loud bazoo, . My merits will bo known to ell, though I 'ani &met do not need to hire a hall to tell haw geod I am: If 1 In anything oxcell the town will know the fact; I do mat need to ring a bell attention to attract. The man who's prone to emphasize bis claim to harp ' and crams soon Ando that all the other guy& expect he'll jump the therm True worth in Modetty arrayed is meet and pmeing fair, but when let brezenle displayed we gums it Ione there. With blue prints of my merite bright your ears; 1 Ethan not veX, though I may be a ahleing light, a credit to my see, The Seasons. CLEVER BIRD AND STUPID BEAST don't like winter, occasionally some Often we meet people who say that — --- _______—___-------- 11 they don't like summer, others who IL 1 weo dont like autumn, and once in a while some one who doesn't like spring. Seldom will anyone admit— or boast—that he likes all the seasons equally, And yet if a luau; were to keep a record of the clays In the year that simply 'from the point of view a weather and physical comfort he en- joyed, there would probably be no sem son that would establish a decisive claim to his favor. And if there were any such, it would almost certainly not be spring. People are generally governed in their likes or dislikes of the seasons by the extremes rather than by the average of weather displayed. Per- sons of cheerful and optimistic spirit are likely to remember a season by its shining days rather than by its stormy ones; and persons who are easily af- fected by adverse circumstances take their strongest impressions of a sea- son from those days when it is at its worst. By that reasoning it might ap- pear that to such persons all seasons re equally bad, and that to the others all are equally good. But impressions are relative; and anyone who shud- ders and shivers in cold weather Is pretty sure to prefer summer, however hot it may be, and one who really suf- fers from heat is likely to think that winter is the best time of the year, The law of compensation that Emer- son preached applies in our attitude toward the seasons. It we did not of the most dangerous African ane have foggy and windy and rainy days, mats. I cannot. quite agree with that. we should not appreciate nearly so much as wo do meshine and blue sky Of course, If he runs over you, you are likely te get hurt, It is also true that and soft breezes. If we never looked as soon as he smells you he is likely out into utter blackness of night, with to .start charging about in a terrifying blasts of wind and snow beating manner. But you have only to get out against the panes, we should not. look of the way and let him charge by; up at moon and ears and the silent sometimes even that is not necessary." spaces of the heavens with quite the One day when Mr..A.keley, far ahead same love of their beauty. Even the of his gun boys, was going along the most wonderful things in nature might bank of a river ho heard the thrash- grow stale in our eyes if there were ergs and snorrings a a charging thin- no contrast in the circumstances of oseros. Be carried only a camera. "There was," he says, "nothing to their appearance. ___.—e--.. climb. Between me and the thicket Enterprising. from which the rhino was coming was about twenty-five feet of open seam. A. business man advertised thr an Behind me was a thirty-foot drop to off ce boy. The next morning there the crocodile -infested waters of the were some fifty boys in line. He was Tana River. The only hope I saw was about to begin examining the amin- e bush overhanging the brink; it look- cants when his stenographer handed ed as if it might hold me if I swung hint a card on which was scribbled: out on it. My mind was made ep to "Don't do anything until yon see try the bush and lot the rhino land in me. I'm the last lid in line, but em. the river. Ile came ful tilt into tho telling you I'm there with the goods.' opening and stopped with a snort. His --e___. head dropped. His epee almost dosed. Odd Afflictions. I'Ie looked as 11 ho were going to Druggists frecpiently have to listen sleep! 1 felt a poke in my back. I examples: to amnsing things. Here are a few reached behind and took my rifle from "My little girl has just been 00r - the gun boy who had come up. I ated on for egg noggs in her head." drew a bead on the old fellow, but I "What can you recommend for my could not shoot. A stupider or more sister? She has Vera Cruz veins in ludieroes object I never taw. There her legs." he stood, half asleep and totally ob- _______e_....— livious, while L with the gun half The Avergae Man. aimed, talked to him about his ugly A French statistician estimates that at the age of fifty yearn the average man has sleet 6,000 days, worked 0,500, walked 800, amused himself 4,000, spent 1,500 eating, and has been ill 500 days, The ostrich and the rhinoceros are stupid, So at least moat persons think, But Me. Carl 10, Mosley; who has spent years in hunting, collecting and studying 'wild ultimate, says that, though they are right about the rhinoceros, they are wrong about the othrich. The ostrich, be declares, has brains, and to prove it he tele tiler ex- perience of his In Africa: "One day I had been for some time following a wary pair of ostriches when I came to a wide opening In the scrub growth in the centre of which was a dense green birth a dozen feet in diameter. A beautiful cock ostrich broke into the clearing just below the bush, and as I raised my rifle he dis- appeared behind the bush; so I held myself ready to catch him when he passed ant from behind it on the other side, I stood. there until I bet foolish. Then I ran quickly to the bush. The ostrich was nowhere to bo seen, but lies trail told the story. As he tied come into the open he had seen me, and so when he got bellied the bush he had stopped short, turned at eight Facing the Futur e Optimistically SCOTLAND YARD TO see-essissesesese; 'Canada is better able to face the British manuteetarare Will endeaater Otero than almost any'other country to 'meet this delnentl• Unusual Mena are alto beteg lalten to „cure the ;right tend of 'agouti in deralee, a director at the Bane of Eng- this Country. It eppeers as if tee lend awl Goernor of tee ,liudeon's Bay United Stele* eerie. with ceMplecenee CoMpene, et the recent annual, meet -no tohteheep aventtiOgnane4f dClueneg;gueinur i141gthet eorporatthe in London, Taying here are few ram euttide Canada better tido to fermis On. the business, In the world," said Sir Robert Kire teture Of this. °mere, tor in addition to being one of the leaders' in the emu- niereini and finencial lite of Great Brl- tain, he is heecl of a company that has been trading le Caarade for over 250 years and bas travelled it front to end. He ehould know whereat lee peeks. There ia no corporation that knows mere about Canada and few drat have been as successful; 40% on the common stocle the rate during the lest three or four years, le a pretty fair return. Teeing advantage ef the action 01 the United States In placing WO duties on Canadian exports which, if nothing else is bound to make it more difficult to cell A.merican goods in Cando. througlt the rising rate of ex- change, the British are making special efforts to capture Canadian tmde. An- nouncement to this effect was recently made in the British House of Com- mons. Samples of American goods that have been sold very generally in the Weetern Provinces have been taken to England with the result that thut "it le an 111 wired that blows no- body gmate" The grows mercantile Marine time page RP the Canadian register at the end of June wee 1,003,000 tons. Af. an indication of whet this meant it may be reed that the total grose tonnage 01 1511 other Breeds Dominions outside P1 tee United Kingdom ie only equal to 400,000 grope, The Canadian Pa- cific now °Coulees an important place Among the fleets of the world and tat recently acquires] a further 22,004on vote, the Empress' of Chinas Thirty - eye yeare ago the Conmany sent. out Itis first voted', "The W.B. rent," a eauing the) of 800 tor.s, trona Yoko Mime, Japan, to Port Moody', near Vet:louver, ten days before tee Trans - Continental route was opened, up, Italian shipping interests being able to book a great many more immigrants than they can land in the United States under the present Immigration liestridion, Act, are apparently Welt- ing to Canada eis an outlet and so the Nevige.zione Generath Italians' hes in- augurated a Canadian service, the fled established line between the two coun- tries. The Destination of Canada's Crop. During the seven yeare 1915 to 1921, the total exports of grain from Canada amounted to 1,222,664,772 bushels. Only fifteen per cent. of this went to the United States, the balance of 85 per cent. going to other coun- tries. Of the total exportation of grain during this period, 416,950,748 bushels, or 37 per cent., left Canada by Canadian sea ports whilst 541,900,- 167 bushels were exported via the 'United States. Grain, however, ex- ported through the customs ports of Abercorn, Ceatitook and St John's, P,Q., has to be hauled f or long dis- tances on Canadian lines. The quan- tity of grain destined for other coun- tries than the United States end ex- ported through these three ports dur- ing the seven years amounts to 137e 449,846 bushels, which for practical purposes may be regarded as an addi- tion to the quantity exported through X -Rays in the Factory, I Last fine Round. The next development of the uses of I Just as two Irishmen were in the large field, one of thorn radiography will be the application of . middle of a X-rays to industrial purposes. i turned and saw an angry bull =king Experiments welch Mom been !nib" them, Progroae for some thrre point to won• I NVItla a yell of warning he bolted and derail possibilities in the near future: Just managed to clear the hedge. Fes when every great factory and foundry ' conmanicn, less nimble, ran wildly will have Its owa radiograplier and l round the hedge to end an opening. eboratory. I Twice he went round without eseap- Tharp Is n� reason why the X-raYs, 1 erg. Then as heepassed his anxious hitherto used only tor medical and sur- friend for the third time he shouted: gical work, should not be utilized In "Tell my miseus . my insurance detecting flaws in, saY, an ingot et policy is in the bottom drawee This motel or block of concrete. Progress is my last time round." in this direction only awaits the per- —Measurments, fading of sufficiently powortul appal, A two -foot rule was given to a la- self. About that time my porters peus. The importance of this to the borer in a Clyde boat -yard to measure came into hearing. The rhino pricked metallurgist end manufaaturer meat iron lete The laborer not being up his eare charged through the sa- ted anti .off through the bush," Mr.. Akeley believes that the thin - °cores is more inquisitive than ;feroci- ous. His eyesight is poor, and when "Well," replied Mick, with a grin of he amens something he Mums Marg. satisfaction, 'it's the length of your Ing toward it to investigate. His rule and two thumbs aver, with this blundering bad manners are getting The hump et a camel is said to taste Ince beef, and is regarded as a Mem of brick tied the breadth of my lien shct so frequently that already an , great delicacy by the Arabs and heed and my arm from here to there, old rhinoceros with a large horn is a econtanic value of the bird steps are to keep affoat airplanes a ppe °there bee a finger." being taken to protect it and its eggs. ! to fall upon water. rarity. e'seeseserresseemeeesseereseesessesseseasaseeesseessereareseseetes s ._ _ e . ..........---- --a.— REGLAR FELLERS—By Gene ----- - bo obvious, and retouch work is mils,. well up in the use of the rule, atter hindered by the absence or the nacos- spending considerable time, returned. miry funds to prosecute whet are set oe•, Mick," asked the plater, , necessarily very costly experiments. e what is the plate?" 0411101 Meat Like Beef. To Protect the Swallow. United States and 1,668,930 barrels valued at ,$18,870,895 to other coun- tries. Of the exports of Can- adian wheat flour to other coun- tries than the United States, 1,- SCRAP OW 11,111-10DS IN FERRETII4O CRIMES OF THE WORLD. Sweeping Changes 'WM Give London One of Best Staffs of Bogue Chasers, The Scotland Yard teetern, genera, and feared by the wrongdoer le the fOur corners of the earth for Wulf a century, will be scraped, soya a Loes don despetch. The old order of thine win be revolutionized, A thorough em organization it beteg directed by Glen. Sir Willianl Horwood, Commleetteter, et Pebee. He bat Metered far reaching reforme A.s a reauff, London le toon to have a new detective force recruited from the beat caul smartest brains of the Metropolitan pollee. Some 'Mangos al, ready have been made. "At present 00 per cent. of the Orim- Mel Inveetigations Department is 01n - played as inquiry offices," ono atillel, says,. "The department 'has been ale lowed to become en inquiry bureau with only 4 smell nucleus of the staff red detectives. We leve mttny dale mem but their energies have not been directed in proper channels. It is a tredion tif Scotland Yard that bee° a raember of the 'C. D,' (Criminal In- vestigation Department), always a 'C, J. D.' Expert Criminal Harmful. "Now it will be the duty of the department heads without partiality or favor to tell when a man is getting 801,964 barrels valued at $17,329,860 dale. During the last three years pro - were shipped by way of the United grew has been made quietly until now States ports and 2,884,929 barrels a detective three of 800 bat been valued at $27,190,791 by -way of Can- adian seaports. 4 State Education. A political speaker remarked the other day, "Is it not just as reason- able that the province should main- Muirmed in such a meaner as to en- able the men to take the field against the forces of disorder. "The expert criminal is the meet harmful to society nowadays. It isn't the dull witted fellow but the bright, alert, intelligent, well educated chap who; stops at nothing. To meet this tain a school for blacksmiths as that type face to face Scotland 'Yard must it should pay for the education of doc- produce his equal in ability, skill and tors who charge high fees for their resourcefulness. There's been too ;services?" He had not reasoned far much merit given because of a system enougle One learns a trade in less that hitherto exiated. All this must bo time fled at less expellee than one altered." learns a profession. Besides, the ap- The official said that the new policy prentiee is paid while he is learning, means that sweeping changes will be whereas the student is under great put into effect which will perhaps expense during his whole university change the complexion of Scotland course, leo one is deterred from be- Yard completely, but he was certain it Canadian seaports, viz., 415,50,748 coining a blacksmith solely because of will be improved. bushels and making the total to bei the cost of learning the trade, but 563,400,594. many e boy would have to give up his In the period under review, the' ambeson to be a doctor if the province Personality. heaviest export shipmente of wheat bore no part of the cost of his mete - were made in the three war years, 1916, 1917 and 1918, the largest quan- tity being 189,643,846 bushels for the year ended March 31st, 1917. For 1919 the quantity fell to 41,808,e97 bushels, the smallest of the series. The total wheat exported for the seven years was 818,696,828 bushels. Of this quantity 713,522,796 bushels, or 87 per cent., was destined for coun- tries other than the United States, 451,691,743 bushels or 63 per cent. go- ing through United States ports and 261,831,053, Or 37 per cent., going through Canadian seaports. The latest returns of Canadian ex- port trade show that more than. one- third of Canada's exported wheat and one-quarter of its flour in the season just elapsed, went to the United States. From September lst, 1920 to May 31st, 1921, wheat exports am- ounted to 122,549,52S bushels, valued at $268,262,638, of which 47,656,963 bushels valued at $100,689,425 went to the United States, 28,171,966 bushels valued at $60,079,446 to the United Kingdom and 46,720,609 bushels valu- ed at $107,493,768 to other countries. Of the wheat shipments to countries other than the United States, 62,873,- 194 bushels valued at $109,238,164 went by way of United States ports, arid 22,519,871 bushes valued at $58,- 335,049 by way of Canadian seaports. Exports of Canadian wheat flour for the nine months ending May 31st, 1921, reached a total of 5,432,405 bar- rels valued at $56,713,745, of which 2,617,963 barrels vallued $26,149,756 went to the United Kingdom, 1,245,611 barrels va_t_...Inecl at „.$12,198,107 to the Keep Airplane Afloat. The number of swallows that have French and British inventors; cora- migrated during the simmer 'months bitted their ideas in perfecting bags, to England has decreased during the to be quickly inflated with compressed t four yeare and because of the ' dr carried in bottles attached to them, ha -Ar • ee it,•,* VN-clAt Jose eNvet4 ovf. RaN) At4 Ne. Be..006ier Mt es 150,1-4' gid 14C. 10,0 BLA 1R10, Be--rot.E. Man -TONT ALL-Mr- "TtMt. Os' -l) 13e.A„si-L8' \gr.,Nivkr.re.! .1.........4;*••••••••••••.* Byrnes ' 4'. cal education. And what a price in Variety, we say, is the spice of lite, human lives would be paid if some Nature provides many sort of youth with a natural talent for sur- flowers. We'd tire even oe the rose gery were prevented by poverty from if we had no other flower. becoming a surgeon! The seasons alternate. Perpetual The education of its leaders in medi- summer or perpetual winter is mono - eine, in Lsw, in theology, in teaching, tone, in engineering, and in other walks of The weather changes. Sun all the life costs the country a great deal of time is as undesirable as continuons; money, but it is money well spent. rain. "Where there is no vision, the people National customs differ. Modes of perish." Where there are no leaders, dress and of architecture are not the the state retrogrades. Civilization same. Languages are minutely sub - itself cannot exist without education. divided into dialects. Canadians will require to become ac- Life at sea is utterly different from; customed to greater expenditures on life on land. To board a ship is the' university education. For railways, next tiring to "going from the world; for water power, for roads, there is we lumw to one of wonder still." ; abundance of money but, to provide A voyage through the air is not for these, the universities must sung like a journey by water or on land. gle along an pitifully inadequate All through our lives the rule of revenues. On the part of the general perpetual variance prevails. public tbere is needed some clear And so it is with persons. The inex- thinking on the relative value of edu- cation. Some Drawback. Two tramps were discussing the ways end meatus of living in this hard world without being laid up with bodily exhaustion. 'If it warnt sich a long way off, Bill, inc might go to the South Sea Island% Oolternuts sad bananas all over the place for nutine" Bill ruminated deeply -for some time, and queried; "I suppose yer 'as to pick 'em?" 'Yue o' course." "Ugh!" was the disgusted reply. "I knew there'd be some drorback." Change Color of Sleds. Scientist's have found that the color of birds in three or tour generations can be changedto white by keeping them in a white room with white tier- roundings and attended by pennons wearing white. haustible resourcefulness of Nature in creating so many types of character, so many races, infinitely various in feature, is amazing, Nature did not intend us to look and walk and act and Seel too much alike.' She meant us to own our souls, to de- velop Individuality, to speak out of. our mimes with our own voices; in!, short, to assert a personality. Life is too tame end tepid if we! remain neutral in the background a1 - ways. Seekers of the limelight and the headlines we have with us always, and they are odious. But it is possible to have a stroegly, developed personality without making a bid for noisy notoriety. It is important that wo should dare to be ourselves, that we should be willing to bo different I/ through' moral cowardice we invariably 'assent to the prevailing fashion on our opin-I ions, we make one more in a crowd) but a place of leadership la denied us. A controlling force wherever goes, whatever he dues, is tiro mare who has convietions, and takes sides, and does not hide on the defensive itk a twilight sone trying to assume the' tint of the hackgreund‘ It is a glorious event in a lifetime to meet ono who has a strong AXt vivid personality. To such a per we cleave where and when we find 540145 grateful that the contact gives 11g5 and accent and electrie stimulation t keep us going through "these h long days.' The average cost in Canada of Ira prisoning pritoner In ponatestl Cary is $2,800, To this met bo a41 the loss or damage resulting hem commission of the aline, togethe with the support given to depest4eat of the man imprisoned, as well AB tlsei ()commie loss to the date d the man's labor. Though a limited amount elven ivcrls.was 'done at the penitentiaries' fur,aft the 415HL row a revenue of :4143 3? 1 wal irtinua t' to the govern - 1st rt.