The Clinton News-Record, 1899-05-18, Page 3JACK,
Aeie*le". • • :geositio: 40*
Tlien out et the Mess or motionlese
tigaree there emerged at different
Poiate teree young Iuditine. tail anti
enagnitleentle formed. Beneath the
ellear, dark skin, whici bad been oiled
and eubbe4. teetil it glteteeed 1k bur -
Walled copper and etretched like rube
bar. one eould see the play pt the
powertee Alesoles.
Pembroke leaned over to Oviston,
°Ga41" he timid excitedly. "Look at
the tallest chap. Look at those,
musolee over the shoulders and in the
bok. If b bal be�fl a flrinLty CoLtege
Man lad, year, rather think we'd
.have won.' .
"lie a my favorite," pu.t in Carl-
ington; beak him to see the dance
th'raugb Lve emelt him before; his
ammo is White Eagle, and be s a fine
time with the beet of the ernm• while
the muitictene saw "The Song ot the
lertive;"
I ring, 1 Sing ,under the center ot the
skee
'Hader tbe center of the aryl
Under the center of the elty I MOW,
Under the Oenter ot the sky; •
The birde ot Ole breve take, flight
around the eke-,
A flight around the sky;
The birds of the brave take a flight(
Mike a flight,
moon. •I I I II 111 11 • 1 1111 1 .1 1. I 11
I
LIK lirATIMIt Wig SON
wok,. BRIEBILELLIONADIEL
Men l'flaso Are irellanwiss 1144004p11 Of
Varese* leareats.
It is remarkehle what a number of
• prominent znert hey* *oaks IwhO er*
OIQm1 XO11OWhg in hei taotst�ps,
Many striking instances are to be
found among etateamen. Tbe. Marcel*
of Salisbury% tiftle son, Lord Hugh
Itiehard Heethoote Cecil, ***veritable
"obi ot th� old b ," and
• be a PrOnatent pereonage in the pOlie,
ties of ths future. Even now be is one
of the Wt. listened -to• members ot the,
*nee, and being a no Mean orator,
he will undoubtedly go far, Moreover,
he Starter' bis: potiticial dareer in an
• egoellent !school, that of private tee -
retell •te the preeeflt Penal Alia*
The hie& et tee breve take a tlight. ter. ^ • •
.ThMr. lierrhert Gladetone Hee for many e 'merits on bleb repeat my name, . , .tua. —
years sesiumay rollowoutne high ex*,
• Repeat ray. name* -
Repeat my name; office when . hes famous parent was
Tee spirite on high, the spirits ea high, amp* set' by his lete fatherBe bald
Xadion." Premier ter the laet time, andt in the
First one set of nansiebteis wouldsine
hey alt look gam" remarked i ' neist Liberia Aaminietration Ire will
• and then another set wou 4 tales up
, Stirling; they must be the pick of the, words; like the antiphonal (seems probably- be found ha the Cabinet,
. „ the tribe. The one with the red brow- et a cathedral choir, wniie the .two
The Colonial Seoretary has reitigna to
• . , band looks Wieltedp theugh. I rather, dancers swung staggeringly aroundtee
' hope the torture will be a little too aiam op0,00, 45.,w mt. ward ali .4.4.1. waihmg be wend, of lee son, Mr, Auaten, Ohara-
julich far 12b11-", ' uphill now smiting end she/ping Week-. beriain, M.P. Nce only are father and
The three Indiana were moving ward aa the earth, reeled under their on vrominont ' politics, but both are
noiselessly around the ring, keeping trembling limbs. The sweat was run-, aimaat idcutioa/4 Aunt and figure.
perfeot time with one another as they Wog (Lowe. their rigid bodies like rain! , tire same height ther dress exaet_
, raised. and lOvvered the foot with a an a their sinews were milling fax out
veura' an eye
eastiglass,
-double blow on tbe grotind, showing front the panting ohly eets and enapPing , nd eoir
tele . unions
flashing eyes and the quiok. nervous agony nautie them give to the lariatb- A. WEAKNESS FOR OReleelDee
Oxen: intense excitercient only •by their back again in a horrible way, as the
Movement of that limbs. Six medi., Miss Kenwood, covered her face tVith
, ,cine -men arose slowly, two approaching her handkerchief end began to "7
each of the three Indians. They stood ;softly- The men moved 'restlessly and
- for a moment mirtterinia some 'mane cast anxious glances at one another
tation, and then metionecl the young and tele women. Stirling put an arra
Indians to lie down on the ground., arOund his wife. .
They then stationed themselves on the 4'1 euPPOse it's.impossible to get out
right and the lefti of each, and began of this," he ventured. .
..._ .. ....
- geatlyEto rul3 the eeaving oheste. it . •Captain Ralston shook his head:
. . _
• was -li e the even, practose4 avork of "Quito impeasihwT-, -ge--- x---,-aturaed
. ' a good Masseur, only there' was no grim), • •
spot on each breast that they kneaded, He had. hardly sPoken when, With a Wel, Parliamentary address of a son
4 and
rubbed Qattid, net be larger thee, 02,y; 01 mino„n fear and rage the must be very deem to a fetheretheart.
- a silver dollar. As they worked, the atil.Tokuirdol-nd drierwszwidthertebtn° rtt:berhwer" rilE;amiCritimlabtertjaelatiES:070.63.67" with
A few, years back there woe a pleur-
al:Li' episode m the J:Intaa, on the
°Wono edr. Austen Chamberlain de-
livering speeoh. •
o
• After it as verlaalr. GlailittOne
• °raised over to Mr. aoseph Chanaher-
lain, and congratulated him on his
sons success, arid /a bia suesequent
epeeeele the -deceased ,statesinen re-
„ • varying of the stroke or position. The
niareed that •ewe ea event as the
•rth th° tmet°113 be t° side of the opening and held np th• e Mr. k.ocattr,-- member for
' beat ftl • •
.
gain out ver so and there
'. ,. r 7'broken elide of his lariat. The rope East 'Grinstead, has been able to write
ran a sahattea, sympathetic, murmur
'
had amxted-the worst •inedicine that " ALP." atter his name since 1895, and
threngh the crowd. Froth out on the could,
Prairie one could hear now and then ehappen to an Indian, The those who know him hatimately bear
the shOrt, fierce wh' y of a bronco, Medicine -men, Terror-stricken sank to witness to-the'possession of muole of
their knees but the young bravo stood the ability wet diptinguishes` els pee-
' . and the sun beat own on the, Pine . up defiantly, although he reeled from ent 'Mr. Gosobett, jr., tees not yet done
. • , , houghs mere hoti then ever, and they faintness $ °rill across the open any great thin s but he is slowly, Yet
- . . . tau g 9 9 ,
, ! gave forth o, faint-, refreshing odor. , e in-
,- •Ottptain Eviston . turned uneasily -to Jr him,'
. space laritia his broken lariat dragging surely carving, out a position -eh hi
he pausal on "the 2acige of self, and will be one of the leadifig
the -women. • . . the circle, just below the little. party lights of the Conservative party in the
1. Yon D. he awfully sorry you came of whites, and -tnreing his back to coming century. - -
in about a minute," he remarked. them, he began to harangue the In- There can be no doubtwhatever that
'"Perhaps . you had •betten not look-" dians, He looked like some devil as, one of the mast tragic evente in con-
- • He might as well have spoken to he stood there, his wicked face bedaatb- 1 teniporara politica was the death of
.
• ' stone walls .The eyes of the girls ed . with paint and showing ghastlY. Lord Randolph Churchill, just ...at the
,•.
zenith of his power,. It is,. therefore,
all the more pleasant to retlept that.
his eon, Mr. Winston. Churchill, seems
d I,vp,I tn1ra nn hio f,,thr's mantle
• were fastened on this prostrate Indiana even under thit red, with agony and
• „, ..as and
held -there; by et maga 'Id rage,. his bloodsh.ot eyes rolling
and their breath came in etnok,- uent' - from .side to side, his breast 'crimson
evene gasPs• They did not even hear with the blood that now flowed freely
.him. Be he turned again to look,.,and from the lacerated flesh, and the Not long Ago he made his first speech
aft he did Bindle saw the „medicine men quivering nostrils and uppe?r, lia telling on a 'politioal platforni, which he de -
draw from their bags sharP little even 'better than has wbrds the wrath livered in a, way many " old" Perna-
• „knives like scalPels. and Malta 1•Wo that alone, as keeping his trembling wintery hands". could not surpass. In
parallel incisions in (lath! lienutubed limbs from snj under him. His another walk which his father follovved.
• .. . breast. blot a drop of, blood jawed voice, in spite of his faintness, was slightly -that of authorship --the son.
. •
from: the wounds; and the sinews thus strong enough to make itself heard biaa followed. air. Winston Churchill
laid' bare were drawn' out carefully above the din by those nearest him. being only in the twenties: has nuiPle
and skilfully, and short - pieces of °I Yellow Wolf, am brave and fear- time to make his mark. .
wood passed beneath' them, to each less,'o he shouted.; l'I do notefear death TURNING FROM POLITICS,
-end of •which a leriat was tied. The or any kbut of torture; but who can
f anedicine-men then took each Indian prevail against evil powers, that tome One fin" m"
by the shoulders and helped him to no one knows whence? Our medic ne- plea a tar000e mon with -sone &atm -
y. distinguishing e?ratna
his feet As the ' Indiansan ,avo „1- I ed to become equally distinguished. in
stood .upright, facing the excited, vitiated the Beeditre of the Indian, pro- Literature, for instance, the case of
' restless throng they gave one trim- ethey had not thought to propi- aux. Jestin McCarthy. maymbpe ialte:
" d ita th Kauko of the white
.phant, scornful look about a,n then te e -Re is a most versatile man- . jour-
-is the white man nutlet, novelist, and historian. Ms son,
IVIcOarther, was for-
. =Dyed forward until each. had 'taken Mari. Why
up a position beneath e cross-beeM-, here? Why is our „lodge invaded, ___Mrer',..Trustin nuntly
another, go far .they did not seem to Children of the White Mother per- an M -P-• and he is following
in 11 the tiler paths his father has
. . • .
and about equally distant from. one our &nee made public.? Why are the
a o
he at all affected by the torture, ex- nutted to-eorae teem among .i Have trocL. Moreover. in bneiflstanoaneJ
„ eept thatthe pupils- of their eyIss had we lost ell freedom, all courage? Did passedN`s parent, having added tbat
eontraoted to pin -points, and there was they not exercise ma evil hiflu.ence over of the dramatist to
• a peeuliar rigidity about their limbs. -the Reaver, who lies fallen *aald helPe dens.
Among miters, many bleve eons who
. ;Thor vvere the picture of proud un- less, lee who was so 4itrong-" The
. tbrown. oveie the cross -beams and murmur as he foil, half fainting, to Irving leas two sons whearabelieved to
his other :ream-
-concern while the lariats. were being. words died away in an unintelligible -ere he tb:e" profesaion, Sir IlelarY
• 'fastened there. and they put the the groin:id. have. a great histrionic future. Sir
Shrill' little whistles. whieht "they were "'What Acme he say, Doyle il" demand- Squire Banoroft„ too, lies a so ri who is
leas blossoined out as a uw-
ability.
of
leir. George Geeesmitle lias a
son and 4 brother, each of whom has
taken their cue.friOm.liint. Mr. George
• ,tome btirst Out with a ter.rdlo rattle; la' Saes, tar, that, we ava 0000,4 er„ writes hianwn mu p ,
to blow while they danced, to their ed Captain Eviston once more. 'winning aPura the eteger and
• mouths with as much indifference , Doyle, looking more unhappy than
'though they had been eigarettes. When ever, trenslated freely, shifting him -
tell was ready,: and tho medicine -Men; pelf uneaailr from and -foot to th'e oth•-•
• had stepped eileck, suddenle the tom- err. •
meal moos and
the Minix Indians began to de/06..1m, same sts the bother Hindian, an, Afr. george, jr,./s first mithiced comedy
13aok and forth at the -en& of therr thiak we hought n't Ito he 'ere." has just been published.-_ '
lariats; with long, Sweeping.. lunges, as Captain Eviston looked thoughtfully vein among preachers. /lees erten
• though they would .citnekly tear the 'before heel a moment, regretting most take to the pulpit. AT typieal.inetance
the masses of Indians broke had prompted hint to. tome unarmed to
which is afforded be thes offspring of •the late
celebrated' O. ele Spurgeon. His twin
sinews from their breasts; theetelestles keenly the feeling of dellowe
. into a Imating, and the medi- the danee. lie had thought that such labna are both Preachers, one behig the
elneeniehe liftitig ttie filth- hands, prayed irociuree .would.attpatl to the -Indians. Pastor of,,tlfa °March hia father made
aloud to the Gretee 'MontA.
t°. sort of Unfortunately, they had apparentlytemeeo• u
' frenzy Seemed to cOniniumeate its- net noticed or appreciated that piece
self to every Indian in the lodge. Their of refined seritiraelit, ire aroused him- FINGEE-PRINT TESTS.
• faces turned ttshY, and their Muscles self from his little reverie to fine the '
. - quivered as if thee were 'undergoing -eyec -uf all the ihdielell in the tePeo Tito Method Discussed in Novels or silents
some intense physieal- strain. The fixed scowlingly- or threateninglY tiPN .fjlng Cr:wimp's.
double throbs that shook, the whole ettnpressed excitement arid antagonism_ In deteccive.novels Iipger intsleft
•
restless fheels beat the • ground. in'on him and bis gees*. There was a
tepee. The swarthy faces, which an about them, erhieh Would. have been, by criminals, preferably in bleed, Play
- hoer before had been only vacantly sufficiently unpleasant if kb had been an important part; but truth seems
;stranger than fietion in the faet that
good-natured or sullen or social, were th:ere -witb. fifty good larivatee at his
01 psst0n an wi ness. A DOLAS, , . o e pe -
Indian beside Miss Page sprang into Winless of his -situation made hire( per. the finger -prints Elston of identifying
the Or as though scone devil within fectly cool, Four Inert and an brder- criminale in Indialuts been Made so
had broken loose. The young ty ,witli seven women to take date of perfect that it would 'enable any Intel-
ent persoti m a few minutes te die -
broke, whe was slightly- behirtd her. against five liuncirect maddened In- g
girl shrank beck femtly toward Pam- collid not hops to conteinl stieeeesf1111• 7
tinguish the individual, If necessary,
The men had 'put the women hi the diens.
center and AVAS trying' to proteet-them 'While Yeakreo eVolf still lay moan- frora other persone. now tieing in
from. ihe crowd of radiant pressing in ing and struggling enetien ground, an the world, or; if data were available,
- on all sides; but it was quite impos- old tenet seated • near hiln, and who from au oth" pemons who hsive lived
- • Whits to make them keep back or appeal Wed heard what he had said, arose, and
to than in any way. . spreading out his hands toward him, since the eteation of Man. The ewe-
r' This is awful; it must be worse- began to speak. soothingly,, at if to a tem is simplioltr itself, and there, • is
.than a prize -tight,!' the young gild said, chile. :none of the elaboration of process of.
with an unsteady little sled* at the Captain Eviston .reeognized Wait as t
' Englishman. Pretty Feathers, one of the frieneine i the e le d d li t iii
os. an e ca e mac nery re-
Pet/broke smiled. back sympatlestie est anci most sagacious of the Pei- (Attie:I for the an.hroponvtrio system,
eally and looked over et hit sisters•Rano. Alt that is needed is it piers of tin, a
were taking things Gabel doe h " arise be comfortete Cease tity Com- The ink impreesions of t ten diens
. anxiously-. Being ,Engleth girls, they "My gone, said •the 'old meat, softly, alieet of paper and- some grinteres ;Lek.
are teken and filed;,in the proper dom.
pertment ot,....ther.fproper pigeon -hole,
and chit on, the` classification of re-
cords and their distribution into the
pigeonholee that the stinceSS of the
system depends.
,Every finger mark shows idles' of
the "loop," or the "whore- type, and by
a siniple table of the combinatione of
these, types in the ten digits 1,024
main classes- are Made., There are
again subdivided. according to minor
detaile, and the ei ltbd iv lei° op Can be
farther divided, ad infthitunt if notes-
sary; but with the table before him
any person of ordinary intelligence can
pl.toe bis fiuger on the corresponding
bard to a reeord in his hand within
;Rye rainutea, no Matter how many
' thousanda earde there may be. rt is
oalculated that the chances are about -
.04,00140000 to 1 &gait/a two per -
sone having single fingers ideotioal
and the chance* satinet all ten tin-
iera being identidal Ott 106YOUtt Math.
ematiod altogether.
16046, p
ODD irtfRNITHRE,
Ponape the oddest suit of furnitige
is ewfted by .romph Berger, a hotel,
keeper In Badapeat, For Many years
he has Made it his lewdness to collect
matchboxem from factories of VatiOus
oottneriee. colleetiett aggregettee
4,000 bozos. tre ordered a skilled cab -
!net maker to equip a room with furni.
titre made of the.se boxer.. The out-,
fit tionsists of k writing table with
smoking *playable, a fire screen.* a
cabinet, a chair and other smaller
tutted's. . Thou the boxes are
erapty, they are tad so ingeniously
ihat the plots ere fully as strong as
the ardiaery fersiturs.
, there was a hot spot of red In each
cheek, and their blue eyes looked al-
most black from the intenalty- of their
excitement, ' • •
Sinidenly the Indian " cendidate°
leered thein dropped his Whielle, and
with a low groan fell feewerd on his
face in a dead faint, His attendant me-,
dioitte-men sprang forward, releneed
the lariats; and pulling the thongs
e free: the sin.ewit, ?mit upon his chest,
rubbing the wounds, and murmuring
incantations over him, After a long
time he slowly opened his eyes. When
fill toneciloueness returned to h'in and
he realized that he had tailed in the on -
deal, hie sprang to his feet in a frenzy
disaPPointment and rage. As 114
eyes fell upon the little group of white
people opposite him, a wilder gleam of
anger Tigbled up his faee, and point-
ing * shaking finger s,,t them, he
Istirieked Mit some imprecation. As he
ered baokward, the medlotne-
grappled with him and bete hint
tines and eliouting from the ring.
Ceptain nviatort tinned to Doyle.
" What did that Indian eh?, Doyle t"
he lurked. quietly.
'rhe orderly. wee tugging at hit)
gloves and looking Very uneorafort-
able.
'"F., says We .sete given 'int 'bed man.
. sir, sn' that '6 hin`goinc to get a
Blood Indian eonjurer k/l6We to
Makes Us All amides,"
"Ste), by tie and trenniate all they
say," cmtmanded the officer, tairaly.
Throughout this eel:sods the toni-
tonis and shoutings had not CenSed for
it moment, nor hal the other two dome-
ers stopped an Latent in their frantic
attempta to break their slueVra and So
be proclaimed "brevet." They leaped
gad artillig from side to aide. keeping
plaints --the complaints, .of child who
knows not leoer to take punishment.
Why shouldet thou think the Mantel)
of lite white man has interfered with
thy destiny e Hat the Moldier of the
Indian never visited thee before with
his displeasure IL e turned to the rest
of the Indian.e, who were listening, and
raising his voice, eried, "Yellow Wolf
bee spoken words of foolishness in hie
anger. Let us forget them as he will
forget them, and-"eignificantly-"a14
the white men wilt &reel thent."
There VAS a martian. of disapproba-
tion as he seated himself, hut many of
ib' indiane looked leea aggretteere, and
many once More turned I heir tit tention
to the circle where the litel
'White Eagle, still tlaneed, lie woe ai
moat anent. .and the quevering, faint
notes df whistle told how little
breath and life were still in hint. Mit
face wasgray-witite, and alight froth
fit:eked hie lip.. His body covered
with blood and great drops of per-
spiration, and his lower Webs, which
bled at first base unnaturally rigid,
now bent and twisted and doubled tinder
him at lie 'Wiped beck and forth, It was
evideot -Met eniees the anew.) Jam
buret he would faint from nein and
loot. of blood, end all his agony would
count for nothing.
Suddenly a young and pretty *query
eprang up from the mass of Indian
women oroitehing near the edge of the
Made end forcing her way frantically
Meares them, ruebed forward with a
terrible tryend throwing herself
with el! the strength of her young
lerly against White *mist,ftreed him
baok until fife elne1911 of Ilia eheat Snap-
ped like wleip-borde, and with groan
he toppled nv.z Wokward.
errs be thite14.1 „
(
HOW GORR OR MX RICH KO Oa.
MINED THEIR liTRALTIL
Th. alreaS ep eaWlrn a
inew400011, Jainides MN MOW
lit air ca-itarsity DAsen4t0 it.vicky hid
-re Moe er CAW Sarin, tile nitrate
gine.
It is a mistake to suppose that the
Money mines of Great Britain are pre-
empted, or that, Me titlee and big
landed estates, they pais from father
to eon by an entail impoaeible to break.
A toolleY Miner4. who hiser only hie
- pie*, lila &load and his grit, can ac-
ounittlate milliOna: under the Britieh
flag. , •
VerhaPS the Most dramatto fortintee
recently made were those of Col.North
the "Nitrate Wool" Barney Bernal/4;
tied "Kaffir King;" Ernest Torah Hoe -
ler, the champion promoter anti bunco
man, and Sir Thomas Lipton, what*
wealth ie roore legitimate' and lessi
speculative. At <me time the three
richest men in the kingdom, it was
Said, were • the Duke of Westminster
With 850,00010OG, the foundation of
i,Whicli• he inherited; the Puke of Ner-
telk with, •040,000,000, mid Col. North)
whose possessions it was understood
• amounted te ehe figure lent 'named.
Six Ikknahl. Currie, the owner -of' a
large Steamship system, was a canny
• Scot who began his business career
with' a salt of clothes very threadbare
:and all sorts of energy. ,
"Thomaii Wilson of the Tranby Ceoft
baccarat scandal, 'orrather, the pro,
- genitor* of the Wilsons, who took part
in that scandal, Was once a laborer,
Now his ronaily do nearly all the 'ship-
ping flash -zees in -Hull:-
THE WILSON iagusE FLAG
seems; to 'crowd out every other tlag
• around Sweden and Norway, and about
• the • east maid of England. Tim firm
probably ()erns 100 vessel's, and yet old
• Thomas Wilson, who founded it • Was
thareuglaly unpresentalale. It is Said.
that- after the family, Weenie sooielly
arcibitioee they used to lock hine,
a hall. room and put one of his oven
boaterefateis on guard lest he should.
• burst in on the snob company: •
Cecil, Rhodes was a brillient meteor
ine the British pelitioal and financial
sky. Hee rise toed fall --though he has
ttot If 11 11) whlmt
a poor man. mity do in the Britiale Em-
pire. He was the on of a poor vicar
'n r • N t 1,
Cape Colony, to ee mired of lung trou•;.,
bie. He' took up; .abode
Her-
bert Rhodes, bie brother, who had, a
Plantation. • • I
•
Rhodes eoneeived the idea of trite
()razing etie largerpart 'ot Soath Af-
rica.. He was one of. th kiret to think
of joinieg Egypt and Cape Colony by
conquering thee intervening teerie
tory. This is now a 4sectiOn-of'British
imp�y. -England
po y. Ana.
land she generally first sends .an
discreet but zealeua missionary to wit-
4fridAt.to be captured end eaten; then
follows the army to •punisli the out-
rage. The: army never leaves '
• o es was ne or strong
• gion, and instead et missionaries he
sent. real. estate agents,..more danger-.
one and. practised annexers. tlis agents
• were . known as the "chartered corn-
Psur:" and in it euch famoui potions
ita the 'Duke of Atercorn and the'Dlike
of 'Fife,' Lite Frinott Of Waleies,:son-m-
law were interested.
• TAB CHARTERPD.'COMPAhlY
r
bad a lot of 'policemen, who went along
to makeetrouble. 'Ahoy got into the re-
quired difficulties with, the Xittebeles
Rad then followed it war of conquest,
in wh ch. the .netives were murdered
Wholesale by Maxim nricbinere,
Veinal* to tire map of Africa, and
el -rebate Egypt, etetrige part of Cen-
tral Africa and an South- Attlee 'with
his hand, Rhodes once said to e friend,
"
One day all Met...will be England's --
that is my dream."
'' 1 give you ten years to wake up,"
observed his -friend cynipelly. , •-•
The " Uncrowned. King tilSouth Ate
rice:" is a professional bachelor. Ile
thinks' mateimonyedeetrors a man's aim
in. lire.. Ile won't have married men
around him, either as servants or
6lake, claiming that the fact that the
man married shows sixth a woful leek
of judgment that he -cannot be. use-
ful.
The usual (stories of jam -stealing in
lebodee's early life are told by hun-
dreds of old, ladies; who client to have
nursed lelta in boyhood. When he ate
three days' rations of jam. in' ten min-
utes, tied was remonstrated with by
hie mother, he observed, Well, when
I want some more 1 will go somewliete
and get it."
Another South African money wiz-
ards itvlaa did natioh juggling in London
wa
" BARNEY ' IIA.RNATO, '
of Weettehapel. Hie name eve Ber-
nard Isaac, his father being a dealer
111 Seeond-Itlanil elotbes near •Petticoet
lane, in his youth he' was a peddler,
but he accumulated nettling in the
WO of fortune. 116 weet to South At-,
rice, and joined a, circus, attending to
tbn horses, at first, endd by dint of
mental energy getting teniself enomot-
ed to the potation of eiovrti-ons for
witioh he was eminently suited -and
which he played IC good teeny years
subsequently in the financial eireus of
Chapel Court. At 'Kimberley he woe
peddling watehes, matches and 0611rt
plaster, and telling Lies about.his wares
to deluded miners. One dae he walked
over an Abandoned Seine Which bad
been qu.t isa a TaltaitOrttl. lie found a
'Seecarat diamond lying on the clay, et -
potted by the rain wasting away 'the
mud. Abandoned mince were. cheap at
Kimberly, and Barnato-hie circus
name -got palmation of thie one and
oftleroto
tstenarewl104134 alt.sitS000rt.n hattiotwt:e.pwuodrithy
4 million pounds.
nit
mate, *idly butlt„ vulgar in look*, man-
ners and mind. At that time refine-.
Mind, was not cheraoterietio of Min -
bowler, yet Baroatowaa thrown out of
Ike leading club there for bad man -
nen, and profane language. Tht mm6
thing happened to him at the Bend
CluT1311. KING OF TIM ICAFFIltS
-Weis bright. Hs mice got into a row
with hie lendlotd, that gentleman in-
eisting upou his leaving the house in
the eame condition as to plumbing as
that in which he lied found it. Ittrnate
put dee adverthement In n newels -
per : "Wanted, by a gentian in trier
agreed to leave Iris dwelling in the
r llortdItIon in wieleh he found it, 100,000
Ilarnato's nano aFad, 41;itildreshatt sof vat
,blaok beetle' " oll
13entatolled Iteli of mot rtitrilirisith
wit'', end he reale three attempts at
'Wade A fourth wee rucoeueful. Igo
ii3eurni. off tea 1,inion line steamehig inlay atgatiass nods
Africa and Southemirtoo end was time which hall, been put on the mar -
Col, Jelin Tetweee North, the eriteeee ket reeently are OM electric, rainbow
Xing, wan probably' a worthier Man fountain for luterior or exterior de -
Char Baroato. The Colonel is York.
a a OW or t
then
be eloold ralusege. give
"1/1 314CIIRIC 11"31"511. PLUMING HER WINGS.
uesetates, 'Wass me
t of her voyage betweeo Scut
drowned
"She Is getting to bas yoga' lady
•
"X know It, And I'm not glad " sad
the father of the young roles of faun -
teen.: It was the girl'. Mother who
made the firet remark, and, she add-
ed:
"We cannot litxpect to have her un-
• der our eye every minute now, as when
;she waa oat the naraary floor; end for
One. I'M not going to try, $ix* muat
plume her wings, 1 sunned. We eave
to carefully instruct her as to the dan-
gers of the outside world, and then
• trust her, God, keeo herr
• I think there is nothing more 'trying
to the parente of a high. and refined
matte of propriety than the epoch in
a child's life, be it eon or daughter,
when the little wino begin to appear.
This queation as to the hours after
school; while the girl is in school you;
know where she is; after few...games
out -where? She must have oxen:date
Must have the fresh Lir, must have re -
'Creation, play, frolic. Yet, with whom,
And wberef 'We older people know
that the atreets of a great town, or a
little village. tor •tbat matter, are full
of perils; we knowt the fright.), the•
Poseible insults, the lures and snares,
Yet are do not quite wish' to fully ex,
plain all these things to a ehild; the
explanation. itself le a tarnishing Pro-
cess. We do not like our child to look
upon life with a horrible anepicion,
nor bang the sweet outer* air with
"leiostly shadew•s. Still, there is the •••.
fact -it is a bad woeld. If the little
girl is out after dusk, we know there,
are lurking dangers; and if she does,
• netnews at the tea table, we know
not where to seek -her. One miglit aa
well look for a needle in a hayraove
•ae, to search for a person in a great •
tevv-n, when once that person has walk-
innansg the novel elearicel produc- now."
ma ration, An eleetric fan outfit built
allireman, He began life a
run by
When twenty-thret rein QUI wai; o y power furnished, by primary
- Pocket.) except les hattde. Teebnie whioh (*glared. to bp eheaper and
eel talent is net found in
tity in Chile and North. who had
large Oen"' very Dinah neater than matches for
leti-eosse utile emiciuueleui, went • household or store use. The rainbow
to boiler, mendingeeriveting and ma- fountain is a rainiature' of the well-
WOrk. HO made good wages, known electric fountains which have
• Wilen be beeeele better "401404 proved great attractions in parks and
with the lay of Um land he began to
tern an, =blows eye tewera the public resorts in many Parte of the
enormoue bees of Chelan nitrate. country and it is Made in a size and
After making motley in Chni, Manner that make it aa portable ea a
istOrt,TU WENT TO LONDON.potted plant. In feet, round about the
- and put his interests. into stock core- central portion, where the fountain
• Patilhe. Hoole7 and Barnette were men playa are plaoes for plants. to decor -
of vulgar manners, brutally frank in
their dealings, so was North, Au Eng- - ate and hides() tile waters,
nehmen of tbe lower cameos rztrely-pre- The waters are Made to, rise in the
motes himself to th.es, ways of a rank form of a thin oylinder by being forced
higher than his own,:
One of hiS fads was to rest from;
upward berweien the edges or a glebe
daY to Mooney at his country seat, of glass in the centre and, a pezforate4
There he ravened in dogs and horses glasa plate outsitie this. , Underneath
• and A ridiculous picture gallery which is another plate of glass which is diva-
. contained absurcleaube -sold to him at
large prices by alle etefriends Ile ran, ecl into seotions of 4ifferent'colors and
on dole in Chili ithout anyteing in battery cells, and an electrie lighter
his horses at the •
ram, meetings 044 tins is kept revolving under the Mull -
made a epeoialty of coursing. Some of tain by means of a Water wheel fed b
hie dogs were worth rabillotie sums., the falling waters, ' Under the colored
One of the Coloneler whereas for •
disk is an ordinary inCandescent 32-•
" getting in" with th robin!. was
•to establish' a "-sporting. • resort r, at candle-power erectrie lamp, winch
Ostend. This was to be a stort of Mottles lights the, daneing spray with tee
King of the Belgians,. lewd Roseher ihese fountains are supplied With an
o eotric pump whieh enables them to
eit at the Sante roulette tab* with the
Carlo where the Prince o Wales, h; ooloranr the revolving disk. , Some of
and other haughty personages -would •
Colonel anr/affably exchange epigrams operate without an. ou,t5ide. supply of
and bright remarks, while less torten.- -vvater. Such 'a fountain. can' be made
t t f
ut hujitatra looked on ha -envy... to tperate with power from a few
lionaires mentioned end a rxian 'who
t h
, reraar a le (entreat o t tail- cells or battery, and thus can be used
• stands splendidly ire -the- eYes-of Eng- where tb_eSee.be xie enrret't_te_itt
•
, a ie oraas on, is an , • •
gentleman did not naake his wealth lc is for such places that the 1183,,V
by selling worthless mining stcok, bin outlet eau beee made. 'levee cells
oPierate it, and it'is oak!, that.it wik
• ERIT/SE MEDICAL FORTUNES.•••
• • ,• WORK FOI4180 HOURS est oft your block.•
. _ Piqmetau_s Are Rich, Ma Almo_ st at a epeed ot. WO revolutions a minute It is indeed necessary to cultivate a
An or Thom Die poor.,,, Without. eliange of celltt. child•in aelf-relianee, The good wife
The large fortune' left by Sir W•or Tee new eleetrio lighter as made to was right. You may coddle till you
/tow 4.enner has ied to n-ineh writing, lie operated either connection with spoil. The ehild must learn to take
•eleoteic lighting circuit or indePen- care of herself, in a Measure and it •
-,••
• in the' lay press, but owing to imper- •
feet information as to the source • dentlir by battery power, and either
r William Jenner's wealth Waywere better that slie leere it while you
sonie of 51
5, ea eaele ourrent'_ that' parents ere alive tohelp hei- tbaa.
ranciv excellent mnizixing. has .1?00,,i the eleotrical coat of operatioais Most; after youeare gone. Then,' too, there.
made Upon imeound: ded.1,10f10/1S, sills 'trilling. It consists of an ornametnal is 110 doubt that very sensitive natures
tm, „lancet. sir wimara jenner wee body of chinaware into which arta& imagine forty horrors Which neeer•did
for many years at thte top of the med-
ehe nese °fee petal ,torch,, tee body of °cane: and never will. There are Par-
ical profession, having risene there by. 1".th'eb^ b'91"a 414'01 e•C, gasoline 'held mita who. seem 'to become careless of
•Iris genius, and having been maintain- mn cotton. The polifh of . tbe tbrah the whereabouts of their growing
ed there by edientifie acclamation ev- has
part of the
st packing of saheitoa. The metal children; and possibly their children
shape and thia ritorke the lighting de -
toren 11601K la made bell get along exist' about as well es those .
over whom parents worry every Mine,.
ery whit as much as by popular tavot.
During these • years beundoulitecliy* • , w •
vice. hen t la? ass put down into t
made a Veey le.rge inocime, hut not aii place it merely spree apex u e- t t they •ere °et of parental eye:
t the arms
Moome th'at would have enabled This, last sentence Might he
him et two bele °ranee evbich extemi, ito eight.
to save suoix a awn." x375001 an‘as wthilitlpettung in the . chain base, but disputed, but, for my part, I am sure
a Matter. of fact, a certain portion of arras art:* liaorsehd. titchlri:$ elttirize. that, my children were never one halt
the care to me:while small that they
bequeathed to fere by a brother But tee torch leaves them they make coo- have been sinceI frankly confess
,
Inc fortune' was derived from trade and apart at the same time until, just ae
undoubtedly Sir William Jenner earn- 'taws with two ‘ binding posts within that the mostrdifficult thing has been
. - .
lighter ane an eleoiric a •
a theof the torch, igniting
sp rh flies for me to know just how far TO trust
ed a great ,sain of /honey by the 'knee- acres
Ace of hi's profession and the fact meg. gasoline. Any number of the ifgbters
. c.rthem to themselves, and how der to '
jegitimafely act as a itineulus to can. be put in. asizigle electrial ei- keep a - vigilant eye upon them. As
paling medical Man to observe keenly tery or other ,power. . Wilea the he period, esuffered cult and worked with the same bat- each in turn -hes grown to the‘plum-
and work hard ligetera are attached to an gle tri
That a -few nieclical men 'tieve made h h i i
current cut off by a choke- colt
G ° tin 1 saw and fully knew the right •
g peri have tortures
g t o rcu t they •have moat • of HI
large fortunes ie well known, For in-
stance Sir Andrew Clark left -X203,-; coneealed within them, but in a bat-
* --e tendency -of* obaritote force of
will t d ight V end'
The true piece for oare Is at home.
•
"
970, Sir Oscar Cis3ctott left x1-400.7,4xgo. tehries
g connecltion is is no needed. In It is in that charmed circle that the '
supply _power -enough and this
Richard Quoin. left R110,82% Mr. Oen-
_ pc:Laden in the °Irma of a spark coil. evil. It is ear better to instruct the
gc:oldtlyeantd- '
L. T. Dumeereatoie left £107 000, sir is made to give the spark by the inter- ,BeciPi,rfi4Ouldeeedilarnelkiennoeewleiedgtee obfe
ry Horsfall left £106,'780, Dr. G. D. .
it Li a remarkable fact that in none of leave. her to discover these thi
son left L110,290..end Dr. J. H. Paul
t latter ease, two ordinary dry bat- v•-ork of protectioe mast he done. le
Dr.• Rhodes Amite. e left 4217,420,
Although there ' are a number of young thing as to the -weongs -and
Lottgetaft left X.107,003, Dr, Henry Dan -
the deco:Leal papers is there a single Discovery is attended with the danger •
• -
ngs.
lef, 4109,051 But all these fortunes atriertisement at electric lighting
1 ed and not made by profesaional prac.
tiee, are thrown. into the shade -by the stood that the eie ense would prohibit by haat: molenextPolfOrtahtelOnunrDeaiscol avnedryinhartis'ajanincilte-;'
• I f '' h t • 'nh.
. paratus for houses to be f,.el
teries. Of course it is well under- one wants to know more, one is lured
f at aot
P02 table ekotrie' lights in the market, dabgers of the outer world than te.
eatate •of Sir Ntrilliamf Gull, wh3se Per- e on by a false *teeming 6 tr
. • r gu ar house Una by battery now,. Discovery is a possession, to be concea-
1 '
, • er• but
there are many ,usest which ed to be even foolishly proud of ; the
William Gulf, like sir 'William Jenne; coultLhe •mede of such outfits be the he.y or .girl, who "finds ont for hira-
ad an enormous rofessionat income h
DA 8 P Imes( Al i ere the cost would be self or lierself" la apt to be a trifle , e
tiniugli fortunate investments, Pere trilling. 'They :Weivld be'of use in odd vain of the information/ and too:self- '
haps,. played the part in swelling the apo 0 whore a losn.P woull be either a confident 'in using it. Discovery is
total of leis fortune that faintly be- ,e0u,ce de danger or inconyeaience generally coupled with . a *companion.
quests .played-iti the case of Sir Wit -
liana. Zenner, The above names have in front of a clock tee to .reveal . the inforart the growing youth of the hid- ,
such as in closeta or cellars or to flash Far better, with your own olean tins, ,
been taken from lists compiled by thP time at night, wad a ver'y pretty ASO 434,116 Bittki 7.1404. .144 in: Wait tO_Aatell-- - -
apaizettlee Ind oehner ted ptilerioldV extten
for the eiable, where little incandescent thing in its Ohre hatefulness, and
°Nair the last ten years, - .,-Innlag, 'which woultLrequire onIy,.aaall win half the battle to ,begin with. Do
On the -strength of them* the seedie currents, wonla give all 'the Tight not' enter into noisome details ; excite
cal profession cannot be said to abound.
OM wiretlier shining in the front rant: neebrd:wd. Esr wonD IN no curiosity; tell enough to make the .
in pecuniary -prizes, Only eleven Per- ..
I
evil seem dangerous, fatal amid twat,'
a y. ogre') au. e tee inmate for them -would be fir place' of candles yoUng liVee•- You am picture the
dint
*
in. one of ite notorioualy . lucrative
branches, or blessed by accident with e°11elseelous Term by Watch Iforsetess Ca,
P
nage is Roams.
:To. -1- , • "If my child ever can go alone 1"
FLANDERS, traetive, but no more.
But though a parent sigh that, yet a
pecuniary advantages, re died dur- • . pe -rent ought to know that none of IlEi
amountthcs 1 igie0Ortttmo,00041,rwewhteutulyt •
,8itle tii3fr etwit, owl edvm roe del
•atiated a corn. other tonguea. have also naturally inten
Make More money, but the fortune of
parative failure. We are not setting ;similarly enriched in. 'ill countries Dor not be a along vi:oreua
up a wall that Medical Men do not 'wee e h
ular, ,,
r sue carriages have become pop- day of one's death is better thafi the
day of his birth." That is, if he pro-,
fig ing, virtuous soul. We re alt
Gull ought !Wt. to lead the tailalk to . 'With. few exceptions, all these verde
Mistake the feels as to the average fur true• 1 we go and come. The protection of a
children. We are all - at wheat, and
must meet the bears in the Woods ii$ •
Sir William jenner or Sir Willalm
are technical and th ' '
earnings of the medleal profeesion, The mgnifi- keen VVit,. a pure heart end a watch.
canoe is only understood by the elec- hut Providence -these are as much
profession ea Great Britain numbers trician and the machinist.: The mem.
eonie 28,900 pereons, and althoUghliew
hers of the Flemish academy of Anvers
and agton one man dies. rielf the, vast
, recently determined to frame a ward needed by the yeung girl's mother an0..
father as by the ohild berself, The
majority dee otherwise.' • larger the game, the larger the beatite
of "-the medical rofession or engaged
ever °mule to the time when We can
itig ten years isa. poese eiion • of more 4o•me •new words liaVe, necessarily 'saf Th
t-classlerew- beet, added Ix; the Englis go_rt .„ never e. Or• .
language are dangers to -young Wings ; there are -
'the horse. yet hawks for the oldest whigs. There
b I ' .is truth in Solorcion's lament: "The
to eh:We% Ike Introduotion 01
.0.4g4Itglorriliatielte4es ,c(; less carriage, and the v
which wouid be readily telligible, to of prey; that% all the difference,
•
all whe underetand the language of Still, for ail that„ it :nest bver, re*
GRAINS OF GOLD,
Flanders arid wile had ever seen a malt true that the Ix/nod of 7ot:it
herselges carriage; and the result tv Plueleele the Pelled et Punt ab°ve
Whets ignorance is bliss 'Hs "folly that after . Much deep thought thir
to be wise.. -Gray. • framed the following word; Y appetite and paesioneas ale° of thought
othe.re. The new-found powera of
and aspiration, knock with great
Let honor -be to us as strong *;.at obit- ' ' Snelpaaidelooszonderepoorwegpet-
gation aa necessity le to ()there.- raight against the young brtaist. With,.
, riage which is worked by means 'of pit-
113,1-rrh-t-iisteeitgly'Indus word signifies ea ear_ out these powers the chile would be a
orti:InillevIe: ni,e a seller nation and r wit
take. care of the 'revenue -W, E. Glade no hirses, and which is 1..eot r aright is the wisdom of age
I troteurq, which travels fast, Whieh has stick, a flat ; yet. to manage theft
rails." That is, from, one point of view
a fine example of multuntin pane), hut
un en and even age fails. The ter4
two infanciee are the safest times -in-
-- is the first present nature fancy of youth and infamy of old age
away.-41,fore. eniescen,t.": Yet theee ere not the, •
t raordittary 'Thng word la preferable to
, .
Brevity it; the, boa recommendation people however think diffeeentl
f $ d Philosophy at:laminates them "aotive
Ye an
gives to women and'the first it take e -.for then appetite and paesions are
it may be queationed -Whether Gros ex-
hale a• dozen ehert words. The rienaish noblest periods of life, by any mean*
-of ospeeche whether in a meter or an the acaderaltelans of AnVere have been Powe •
orator,-Cloero, highly complitriented by thew. on their Any one can, sleep ineocently; but tO
and yet re.
re " the% do fres anti appetites.
There is nothing so elear.eighted and Iinguistio skill as seen, in this unietua-mteuintogttilbura_tefittrii,lie the rah!
Sensible, as a noble mind in a low es- „. word.. - ' •
If idleness does not prodime vice, or . . ,...,........ `,_.-. My dear young readers, my frieed,
tate.-Ialte Porter.
MODERN CAVE DWELLERS. 81111Pme3716 *n*81'81°111 par8ayY°yuoub°, gtrilly toll
malevolence, it emninonly prodtteed . p tt o 1 i
be vrise for yourselves. COntrOl :Vont.
Mire dWellerS, or, to he t th
The tlights of the harden Mind are or rock dwellers, are net yet extritct.
° c 41(44 " 44t eelves. Be your own mestere in the
inelaneholy,-Sidney Smith.
not frrim enjoyment to enjoyment, but A freveIlitor, who elated the preidetorio tight rein in your own right guidance.
sense that you keep yourselves wsith *
from Imps to hope.,-,Tointson. eaVe dWeliinge near Halberstadt, In the May you is% 'whit YOur will ear;
for-naraeiy, et moat intense otiv
nmrignon201,1„.. tlohnua,spitetre,..4.0.inLatenuonity.Aatell vinairt or tomiteusteiu ten oaves brawn 8%11:forma: oieffterealfitterisehtttlaattett khettorptineto*
wP"'"- -"" ..6"... " '-‘.."'.. ......4".." ..^.."' '''' in Um reek end oecupled by forty per- (deer of the burning eendle.--Ilarkley
resting place, when bearing blearing*
efehatever Jae the Moth% of El itt./._ MOM. Thie Attie lettlenlent is WAR Harker. , 0
ea the slope of a rooke bin near the
eult it is always beet to overlook it i., vvrelliratgetn.ati6Thbey of athvet,srtdroAllitnage: LIBEL IN FIttilkteE.
gleat.--Patinion. constructed only forty y
n One teirtttillg
for folly eleareety on deeetve resent- in the rock. remit "home" hart a deer Ma" -a (11.6 V"fteh Paii"r4 k661) in
ment, Lut 7 .
'I'he shortest end surest Way to live Your,oftl!).,,.foszportedtiankroourOnInet in
with honor in the world Le to be in real: t %
ity whet we would! *plotter to 130; and -46,4 iron= "
Hare I•iounteins, found In the neathy
they descend to earthe:-.S. .
51 Ws rve,
k
t hotise was their employ Itartilless persons whours
re ago by a regiatered es managers of the remote*
the village.
0 Were too I t.. • 1
in winter t ve plloheatiolte. When a paper hite
published eny article of a libelous char.
are quite • acter, IA regard to W10011 the viothia
a nit ttuelmony Makes legal eanplaint, the regnetered
human virtues imams' and arena of their Inisa te, whose stout limbo' manager stamls trial as an offentler
va themielvse by the prectioe wad - • and reel vent% for thA truth of end ia subjected ie fine or imprison,.
hews.•orient* of them. ra eta eta went, porkies bet .
t their
s4
A
•
24.