Loading...
The Wingham Advance, 1909-02-11, Page 3•••••••••••••,—• - — — --,,—,•••• • ••‘•:+r-• 1•s- 6 5 , o o ELEPtiANTS KILLED FOR 1\79...R.Y. •trign..1 Terrible Slaughter Goes on Annually and Fortunes Are Made in Tusks; (By Frank G. Carpenter.) Zanzibare-Sixty-five thousana ele- phants were killed in Africa. last year and more thau a million and tt, half pounae of ivory were taken from them awl. shipped off to Rome. Of this fully one-third. eaum from Zanzibar, another third was from Portuguese East eine West Africa, aud a large part of the Wane() wae from the valley of the Cou- go. Cape Colony furnithed a hundred thousaed pounds, Egypt three hundred thousand peunde, and a large part came from, the Niger teritoriee 'Ina Lagos. During the bet six months I have been traveling through the lands Gt ivory end elephants, I saw tueks for JAM in the Egyptian Sudau. At Mombasa, aliONV11 $60,040 worth of ivory in one pile, anti duriug my travels through legenda, ana German Last Africa I pass- ed ,eiany long lino of porters carrying elephants' tualts on their heads or tied to long poke or rested on their shoulders. Great Ivory Market. Zanzibar has for years peen oue of, the chief ivory markets of the world. There are companies here which have their buyers and tradere scouring Ger- man and British East Africa, as well as the Portuguese possessions, farther south, These men take beads, cottons, and other merchandise vo trade with the natives, and when they have actiumulat. ed a cargo they send it on the heads of porters down to the seacoast. Much is now coming to Lake Victoria and over the Uganda Railroad to elombesa. A oreat deal goes to Tabora, in the centre of Getman East Afriea, and thetace on east to Bogomoye, on the coast oppo- site Zanzibar, while other -caravans bring ivory to•Mogoro and it is sent thence by railroad to Dar es Salaam. There are herds of elephants about the slopes of Mount Kilimanjaro, and the hunting goes on in the forests of the Great Rift valley. In British East Aiel- lo. it costa $250 for the right, to shoot elephante, and a hunter dares not kiU inoie'tlitin two during a season. lt is against the law to kill the baby ele- phants or the cow elephants there, and the Bathe regulations prevail in Uganda. In the British Sudan a license is requir- ed to shoot any kind of big game, and this is also true of British. Central Af- rica. In German East Africa hunters are charged a few yupees for thoir elephant shooting licenses, but they must pay a royalty to the government ou all the iv- ory they get. As it it ,there is consider- able profit in the business and in .the German colonies a fairly good huntee often. makes big Money. A single ele- phant May give tusks worth a thousand . dollars and upward, and an old bull may produce three ar four hundred pounds of the choicest ivory. African Ivory the Bast. This African ivory brings the highest. prices in the markets. It is superior to any other in the size of the tusks. I have seen some which are nine feet long and there are some which weigh 200 pounds each. The average weight of a tusk is much less -than this, and one of a hun- dred pounds is quite valuable. in India the average tusk does not weigh fifty pounds, but that of the African elephant is much heavier. Many of the tusks are broken when they are brought into the market. The elephants use them for plowing up roots and tearing down trees, and also for fighting their enemies. The average tusk is strong and elastic; but it eau be broken, and the ends are some- times snapped off. Ivory tusks are al- ways sold by weight, and the traders tell me that in buying them of the nat- ives they have to be careful to see that pieces of iron or bits of stone have not been driven into the hollows of the horns to make them weigh more, Pulling an Elenhant's Teeth. Many of you have been in the hands of a d,entist and have seen how he almost breaks your jaw in pulling a molar with a long root. The tusks are really ele- phants' teeth, and it Is difficult to get them out of a dead elephant. They are fitted into a bony socket and the roots •go almost up to the eyes. A tusk eight feet long may heve two feet of its root imbedded in the skull, and if it is taken away at once the head has to be chopped to pieces to get it out. In addition to the tusks the elephant has six great teeth inside lie; mouth on each side its jaw above and below and these are almost as firmly imbedded as the tusks themselves. The tusks are hollowed about half way up. The small. eat forms a big load for a man, while one weighing 150 pounds requires four porters 'to carry it. Such men are paid from 3 to 5 cents a day for their labor, so that the cost ot transportation is not heavy. -C onNs CURED IN 24 HOSTS You can painlessly unmet> ally cum, mess hare, tent or bleeding, 1 y applying Putnam's cern Extractor, it no er nui us, leaves en sear, contains Rendus; harmless Ins...sites. animated only of healing mune and Mena. Moe some in nee. Cure guarauteed. soul by ditiegIsts betties. Ileitis° substitutes. PUTNAM'S PAINLESS CORN EXTRACTOR prepared by making fire in a hole and toying the foot on the Imeninis :seek utouth df the help and a layer of green leaves ie spread upon them. :1 &- meet of earth ie placed on top and the meat is allowed to eook and steam for several hours. After it is taken out ths skin is removed, when the jelly-like inter - lox is ready for eating, 1 am told that it is so tender that it can lei scooped up with a moon, The ordinery elepli int steak is black in mime end when enoked it looks and tastes a little like corned beef. Groat Ivory Trust. The European nations whielt have colo- nies in sSfetea are trying to keep the elephants from being destroyed. This is especially so of Belgium, which hopes some day to form an ivory monopoly. A great part of the elephants. are' etill liv- ing in the valley of the Ceugo, and so many have died that it is expected that ivory will grow more valuable from year to year As it is now., the amount sold brings in millions of dollars, and most of this comes from the aactions at Ant- werp. In that city there are- several hundred thousand pounds of ivory on hand, and sales are made abont four times a year. These sales are duly*Std- vertised- and buyers frpm everywhere come to attend them. The other chief markete are Liverpeol and London, Daring a recent visit to the Colonial Museum at Brussels I saw one of the heaviest elephant's tusks ever found. It weighs over 200 pounds, and as I stood beside it it reached high above my bead. The biggest ivory tusk ever discovered wee brought to Wpm,. in Geiman East Africa, in 1880, 'and. was shipped from there to Hamburg, It was almost ten feet hi length. America Gets the Best. The ivory dealers here tell me that the best of the ivory goes to America, and that the second and third class tusks are consumed in Europe. Tho fourth grade ivoey is sent to East India for filagree work, and the poorest .of all goes to China, here it is used for inlaying fur- niture and boxes, The best quality of ivory is employed in making piano keys and fan sticks and also. for the little statuettes cut out by -the Japanese, Much of the produet goes into• billiard balls, knife handles, emnbs and fancy articles. During a. visit I once paid to Sheffield, England, I was shown about $100,000 worth of ivery which had been brought there to be used for knife handles, and I saw them sawing up the tusks- into strips for this purpose. In such work every scrap of the material is saved, the shavinge sind dust being valuable for making ivory black. or artists' pigments: Mammoth Spechnene of Ivory. at tits head of the lake, there are. four Ettrepeane, and at Bismarekburg, on the southern end, there are only two, both nhont are officials. At Alwasuss on Lake Visteria. II, found abont twenty Europeees, equally divided between the military and eivil braueltee of the Gov - (ailment. Anion& th•e Washashi. There is a queer town on Lake Vic- toria belonging to the (lemons which I have not ment•itivell in my Katmai let - term. 1 eallea there during my tour around the lake, It is knowu as Shir- ati, anti it lies near the bouudary of lire tish East Africa, Ihe country alma is beautifully rallies The 11111S slope gently up from the l'5ake, and upon them staud. hundrede of thatelied huts, an tn. dian businees ecetion, and a fort belone. ing to the Germans, .The people are lac the Kavirondo and a little like the Masai. They are dark brown in eolor, are well formed, and of a good height, I talked. with mi. chid who was fully seven feet tall, standing like a giant above his fellow% who 'imaged, I judge, about 5 feet O. • 'Die Washashi, like the leavirondo, do not woery over their wardrobes. Those saw were almost naked. Many of the womeu had oulya string of beads about them, and sante wore fringes of beads two . or three inches long hanging from their waist belts. The men were -often clad in 4 single goittskiu, which was shifted so that it covered now the back and now the frout ref the persou. wore jewelry, I saw many dandlea who ha& on great coils of wire, and one whose arms and legs weee weapped 'with brew; wire the fake of a lead pencil, Another man had coils of this wire on his. upper arm, end that so tight that ;the flesh seemed to be growing over them. e counted the strands on one woman's calf. It had eighteen parallel strands of the thicknes-s of a lead pencil, from where the sweiliug began to the knees. Otherwise the lady was bare to the fringe apron which ran around her waist. Rook. for Cattle and Men. Many of these natives had shieles of enormous size made of skirts fastened to e framework and painted in bright col- ors, ane they haditead dresses of ostrich feathers which looked odd in contrast with their nude bodies beneath. They all carried spears, and were celebrating a war dance. The houses of Shirati are round huts with thatched, roofs and walls of up- right sticks clinked with mud. ¶the in- terior of each house is divided into two compartmeetts, one for the men and the 'other for the cattle. The cooking fire is made in the centre of the hut, the blaze being usualise started by means of fric- tion, just as our Indians made fire be- fore Columbus came. The people sleep on the ground, using- pillows of wood. Outside many of the huts I saw gran- aries. Tbese are tail, round wickerwork baskets made of cane or plaited yushes, clinked tight witb cow dung, Some of the most remarkable ivory used within recent yeare is that which has come from the mammoths found in the tuhdras • of Siberia. This is from huge animals which lived ages ago, but whose bones, protected by the frozen. soil of northern Asia are as good to -day as when the animal's died. It is even said that in some cases the entire car- casses of the mammoths have been found, their frozen flesh, skin and hair having been thus kept for these thou- sands of yeare. The first of thie frozen ivory was found over 300 years ago, and about seventy years since the annual output was estimated at over 100,000 pounds. It is said -that more than 1,000 mammoth tusks were sold in the year 1872. At present the greater part of. said ivory is going to China. It does not compare in quality with our elephant ivory, the greater part of it being poor, while some is absolutely worthless. : Germans Enter Into Competition. Digging Up Dead Ivory. Have you over 'heard of deaa ivory? There is a. vast quantity of it still left in Africa, and thousands of pounds are shipped to the ports every year. Dead ivory comes from animals which have died a natural deeth, or front tusks which have been gathered by the chiefs of the villages and stored away. Iiory has always been an evidence of wealth in Africa, and some of the petty African kings have piled up ivory as our misers hoard money at home. Some of them have buried it neat their villages and others have made stockades of ivory tusks about their dtvellings, During re- cent years some of stich Ivory has been gathered together but there is said to be much buried ye't to be unearthed, In addition 'to this is the ivory of elephants which have died natural deaths, This is (imposed of the etotmoits tusks of aged elephants Which have dropped in their tracks or have beee killed by lions and other wild bettets. Their bones lie where the huge animals fell, and. the earth and leaves have covered. them so that they are frequently hidden front view. I am told that the pygmies have killed many elephants with poisoned arrows, but, not knowing tbe value of 'the tusks; lutve left them lie idle where they fell. Some of this dead ivory has been injured by the forest fires, but that imbedded in the Mud or covered with. vegetation is still of great value. Elephant Meat Geed to Eat. The Germans are now competing with the British for the transcontinental trade of Central Airica. The old slave route began at Ujiji, on Lake Tangan- yika, and came across German East Af- rica to Bogomoyo, and thence by boat to Zanzibar. The slave traders loaded their slaves with ivory tusks and made them carry them across country. When they aot them here they sold both slaves and ivory to the Zanzibar berehants. In such cases many of the slaves. were female, and were used to supply the harems of Arabia, Syria and Turkey, as well as of Egypt and other Mohammedan countries of North Africa. Such merchandise was known as black ivory, in tontradistitic- tion to the elephants' tusks, called White ivory. amee Germany has gotten possession of the niainlana opposite here the ivory trade has been diverted to Dar es Salaam, and a large part of the preduct now goes there. This trade will in- crease with the building of the railroad, which is now being pushed on toward Lake Tanganyika. It will go to Tabora, and from there probably on to 'Ujija with a branch to the Victoria Nyanza. The shipping of Dar es Salaam is rapid- ly increasing. That port lets a good harbor and. the largest steamers are now ca'lling there. Queer African Natives, • The Germans tire rapidly exploring their colonies, and they are finding some strange things away out here In the Af- rican. wilds. They have altogether 7.- 000,000 ,,or 8,000,000 of the natives fa their trart of the white man's burden, and they are divided up into many nes tions and tribes. Some of tbe most in- telligent are about Tabora, and it. is front there that the colony expecte to get the labor to eultivitte the pinata. tions along the sea coat, The natives of Mat region have a king and subor- dinate chiefs, and woinen are so highly regarded that they are sometimes eleat- ed as the chiefs of their respeetive vil- lages. These people believe in 'spirits, and they think that the dead live again as mullets. Every chief has a hut in which the eplrite are eimposed to dwell. They have medicine men and 'witch doctors, end. they think that a good medieine man ean change hinatelf into a astimal at will And thus torment lds etiemiee. Edutation of the Negroes. The Germans are ruling these people to some 'extent through their chiefs, and they are establishing erhools te teach them. The misaionariee ate aiso at -work itt different parts of German East Africa and the Government has high satiate and manual training schools, with European teachere, who use colored essistante. This work is just in the beginning, but it promiees to grow. Eifty-two eolored tettehers are alreedv employed, and the eeliools have several thousand pupils. There are but few whites in the in- terior of that, colony, and almost none exteptitig officiate. in Tabora there are eight foreigners,_ of wlicart six are Mita tary offieete. In 'flip, en take Teta 'walla there are only fonr white men, I met the other night an ota elephant hunter who has matte many thousands of dollars in ivory. Ite has not only ;shot elephantis, bet retort them, and he tells me the meat Is not al all bad, A good eleea animal often weighs as inuch as five tone, aed when MT is killed the natives come in for miles around and hlt46 greet best. They cut up the huge besot with Tt3t,S IsniVes and tear tbe meet off In attips anti muoke it as we smoke beef. They nuke elephent eteitits ana rietsts and they eook the •••• ...ire • WEDDING OUTFITS ARF, CliEAPER.„ DIFFERENOE if; IN QUANTIV, NOT IN, QUALITY. The Oside of To -day Is Willing to Buy Frocke Soon After $:se is Married and Even to Weal. a Travelling Gown That .Has Been UeetiseBuy- Abroad. • *- AFTER FIVE YEARS Of SUFFERING Dodd's Kidney Pills Effect An- other Grand Cure in Nova Scotia. s - (s, y. Sun.} •all 11.e tells about hard Utiles and the exteavegan e S\ elothee have heard nothing; at I 1 about the fall- ing off in bridal enters," s.tid dreee- maker long in basitiees. "At one Ohm we all 11Sett 1,0 get 4011,0 ,,N0it14 Wil011 vie -tomer risme in with a tem.:liter to order a wedding troeeeeau, (vett timegli 801110 Of the Nice knew that before tile order was -finielred they might, hove to work Welds. "After one or two interviews with mother and daughter I myself, 1 remote - her, 011 0110 Or two ma %Moue used tO wske up in the- Misfit and begin to figure out poeeible profit.; and man !tee. should invest them; and it never imp - period that the peofite were less thou 1 espeeted or the trottsseatt smaller time we at firet planned. On the contrary, as the time. for the wedding grow near one extra garment After anothr would. ba taeked on until, as we all expeeted, the last few days toned us pushing all other ordere one side to put the finishing stitches in fifteen or twenty gowits mut wraps, to say nothing. of negligees mid the wedding. drese "After the last try on of the wedding dress, on which occesiou nearly °My employee in the house would. eome to the fitting room door to get a peep- at 11 and the bride, when the sainiug satin wao packed away in billows of team pa. per and carried home by tied or my trustiest measengere, we actlialty felt lonely mall the next wedding' order came in, Occesionally we had two wed- ding orders on the earpet at. the same time, ill which case the excitemeut was more intense. Every leading dressmaker at the time- speak of had this expert- ence. "It was not so common for the moth- ers of girls now in society to run over to Europe as soon as they got engaged and buy part of their trousseau as. it is 'now, and none that I met ever dreamed of waiting until she was married to buy this, that or the other garment, lt was about eigbt or tea years ago thet the trousseau bad 'reached its greatest point of luxury from a dressmaker's point of view. Even then, however, there was a great falling off to be sure in the quantity of bed and table' linen and underwear included in a rich New York girl's bridal outfit, but that didn't effect the dressmaker's profits et all. Both in quality and quantity evening gowns, street and calli•ng costumes, writes end negligees and fancy eeekweer were at their most extravagant point, end it was ahnoet never that the bridal gown was bought on the other side, • "Here is one order just as ie is put down In my November ledger of 1809: Six dinner dresses. Four ovening dresses cut dancing lomvothu; afternoon eeception costumes cut demi-train, high in the .bodice; Four canine eostumes, three of them matched with° fauey coats. Three street eostumes. Four. tea gowns -cue .witk a long traTiilvLo long evening wraps, - _Three negligees -long. ,eli kia.tfe Three negligeee-ehort. Two long afternoon wraps. "The evening wraps were of white•and gold brocade, white chiffon and yards and yards of fine Viennese lace, and of pink satin and velvet brocade combined with quantities of creamy lace, I have forgotten exactly what kiva. The after- noon evra.ps were made of dark velvet, combined. in one ease with fur, embroid- ered white satin and lace, in the other with fine eloth of lighter BIM& elabor- ately embroidered and braided, The street costumee each lina its coat. The dinner gowns were of the richest satins and velvtts . offset with superb laces,• and the bell gowne. although made of tulle, 'chiffon and other thin goods in - eluded also quantities of handsome laces' and embroideries. .0.0f the reception gowns there 'were two . to be Worn at the two first. mere tions given by the bride, and these were handsomer than the others. One, I re- member, waS almost entirely of white Irish point lace, and another was of pale blue crepe de chine almost covered With hand embroidery. Iltis order was not exceptional then or for two or three Pilaeraftelartetlt.at there was a decline not in quality hut in quantity, the last two yeare showing a sharp cutting down in the number of gowns and wraps ordered In New York by even the wealthiest - brides. In- seine easee economy has noth- ing at all to do with it. It ie no longet the fasetion to have mote gowns than are needed to take the bride over one season. In the ease have quotedsthe bride planned reception, (linnet and even. ing gowns enough to last from Deeembee, When idle was married, tm to the next Deeereher, and negligees . sufficient to last even longer. "Brides of to -day heve stopped doing that, I am sorry to say. It is no longer considerea bad 'form to buy new clothes three months after the wedding" and Charge them up to the husSatel. A feW weeks ago the mother of bride who is rich in her own right told nie when or- dering the wedding gown: 'Make it so that it eati be need Afterward for a din- thheirnggotwonLe.vhich is now quite it e0111111011 "Trusteed of laying away her bridal dress the modern bride Weill% it, slightly changed, at hoe first reception or et stic. eeeding reeeptions given in het honor, oa else has fhe 'coreage etit low se that it can do duty in the evening. "The bride I refer to, who expecte go South after her marriage 'next week, is ordering mostly summer dresses, fled itok many of them at that; for in April elle will sail for Eurepe to spend slit months in travel and naturally will buy what she needs in Europe, tanning probably with it lot of new things for next whiter. So far she has ordered -from sue her wedding gown, two dinner dreseee, one handctome street teeturne, five dainty eostutnes, made mostly of lace, lawn and ehiffon; tWo negligees, a light .evening wrap and one Meg carriage s Tap. "There is no attempt to economite ie wife: the vest of these things; that is net the "'Rey, send the kid 'ilowit to the news- point. The modern New York bride gee; paper offite to tell the editor want on the whole far letrelsomer elothee then my eta/store jast so soon as bee done ed- her mother or her granthnother dreaMed Wit' the papet There's. gent lusee of 'buying, and part hriee Mueh for waitin' for 11 air cute "--Washington them; but ehe (aloha as to quantity.. Star. mut that ie Nut for the dresantakere end for the dealere in line thaterie, N.Vhote What Was 'Handed to Him. former generation, ef loides bought me. Pastor -What have sem dom. with all dergatmenie by the dmen at leas:. this year Chrietmae preeentst generation Wive them by the, half 1102C11. Shylle---MitdC. Inge Pool ITOWI: of Mrs. Margaret Brady Tells How They Relieved Her of Rheumatism and Made Her Stronger in Every Way. Green's Brook, Pietou County, N. Bs Feb, 1.---(Speeicile-That diseased. Kid- neys lit% the cause of the ills from whieh so many women suffer, end that they are cured eonspletely and. permanently by Dodd's Kidney Pills, is once more proved in the case of' Mrs. Margaret Brady, of this place. "For five years," says Mrs, Brady, when interviewed regarding her sickness and cure, "I was ill with Kidney and Liver complaint, which ea,used Rheuma- tism, Neuralgia, and Heart Flutterings. My neevotte system. was affected and. my blood seemed to lack vitality. "I tried medicines and was under the doctor's care, but received no benefit till I Used Dodd.'s Kidney Pills, and Dia- mond -Dinner Pills. They relieved me of Rheumatism and inede me droner and better in every way. These remedies and. no other eurea me." Dodd's Kidney Pille alwaye cure diseased Kidneys and all diseases that are caused by diseaeed..Kidneys or imptire blood." trunks arid feet in hotel in the ground. wo are thallium, one being a dotter Zhe foot le tessesidered dellemi. It is and the other a trailer, At titennberu, AND THEY NEVIM GOV IT. Stich Uncle lebenezer-So you are named atter me. aro you entail Slephew-Yee. Ma sald it was too bad but we needed the money bedly. • • 4. — Speedy Barber in Squash. an 'mg one of those sleepy, one-horse, baelswetet towns, like Squesh," ;mid Repreeentative Burton, describing at. a Hot Springs dinner town that he die - liked, "Squash is the limit. A gentZensan ar. eived there thasother day and wattle a hair ent. Ifewfound the barber shop, and, after shaking the barber vigoroasly, managed to awaken him, "'Haw long will it take you to tut my heir, barber?' he asked. "Not long, boss,' said the barber. . "And he rose, yawnea end etretclice. himself, Then he called -upstairs V; hie A ••••• 1 THE EARTHQUAKE.. HAD GIVIN UP HOPE • -• •.•wre Some :Idea of the Dimensions. of the NO A WOMAN'S WORK.' coastroPhoe e Te"\- LYDIA, E. P NKHAM Nature and a woman's work cour billed have prod.uced the grandest remedy for wountres ills that the world. has ever known. • In the good old-fit4hioned days of our grandmothers they relied upon, the roots and herbs of the field to cure disease and mitigate suffering. The Indians on our Western Plains to -day can produce roots and h.erhs for every ailment, and cure .cliseases that bailie the most skilled Physicians who have spent years in the study of drugs. From the roots and herbs of the field Lydia E. Pinicham more than thirty years a,g.o gave to the women of the world a remedy for their pe- culiar ills, more potent and effica- cious than auy combination of druzs. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is now recognized as the standard remedy for wontan'a Ifxs..T. M. Tweedale, 1:2 Napanee Street, Toronto, Canada, writes to Mrs. Phikhaan: "I was a great sufferer froin female troubles, had those dreadful bearing down pains, and. during my monthly periods I suffered so I had to go to bed. I doctored for a long time but the doe- ter's treatment failed to help me. My husband saw Lydia E. Pinklman's Vege- table Compound. advertised and got a bottle for me. I commenced its use and soon felt better. I kept on taking It I was well and. an entirely differ- ent woman. I also found that Lydia E. Pinkham's 'Vegetable Compound made childbirth much easier for me. I :vvould recommend your Vegetable Compound to every woman wile, is afilicted -with female troubles.' What Lydia, E. Pinkbaan's Vegeta- ble Compound did f or Mrs.`riveedale, it will do for other suffering women. (Toilette Settialey' Nighte In attempting to gawp the dimenehme :11 the tettnettutale e 1 11.1011 by the earth. quake in Calabria and Hens, one le aidea eome extent by the litter detalie ap- peering in the English masa We are tied, for instance., that a train, crowded with paseengers and running at 'full speed. along ths seashore, was etignifed by the tidal wave and disappeared in an instant, and thet two trains, lull of .pasio engem ready to start fano the station at le eelo, were wallowed hi the same way and that nobody escaped. 'lettere ere many storiee of the fate of individ. .ehowing how petty are human pae. elone put:oats in the preeeuee ee huge 0 'diria.,ter, The Duke of Aosta, in wa ver the rei ne 01 Palate eante upon the Leidy of 0 dead man, iu hoth of Ills entd bands silver and bank notes. As tee world collapssti' he seized his money, but it was of no, use to Idol. In tenting away wreckage Meesitut the seitiehere bawd the bodiee of two polieemen, and between them the remains 01 prkoner With halldertft4 04, hie wrietse here the outlaw and the agents of jitetice met like sentenee, Two erieets„ who arrived in Messina, declared that -they were .the ouly maims of the five thousand inhabitants of Scylla, and explained their escape by the feet that they happened to eave been in the vault of a eltareh when the shock came. Stories. ate told, too, of great sacra acre and aets of heroism, A Russian sailor, on teaming teat a lumber of wo- men and children were Imprisoned in the third staeey of a wrecked house, climbed the wall with great dariag, and rescue the people. No sooner were they le the street than the wall collapsed,- burying reseued tuttl rescuer in one grave, In another easa a company of eeldiers were working desperately to release seine un- fortunates who were pinned down under heavy timbers, when an aajoining brick wall collapsed, killing all the soldiers and ending the agonies of these whom they were trying to rescue, Of two regi- ments, stationed at NeesIna, only ten men survive. Of another nature was the experience of the Marquis of Seminole, who Was bnried alive in the ruins, but In reeponse to shouts replied: "Snk.e others! Don't think of me. I. am in a. bar and have ail I want ent and drink." William Maxwell, the English war cor- re.spondent, declaree thet the Chineee tete. of Port Arthur, after bombardment by eea and land, was not half so ruinous as Messina. "Six months' cannonade by all the artillery in the world." he says, "would not produce the results of ten seconds of Nature's riot." We are told that the epeetnele. when witnessed by the commander of the British steamer, Elbe, was so horrifying that hie hair turned wbite 0 moment under the greet elinek that he eustainea. ft. The dimensions of the disaster may be realized front `the following table giving the destroyed cities and towns with their populations and the numbers stair:: The chief towns destroyed arei Messins 100,000 .. l00,000 Reggio 80.000 .. .55,000 Monteleone. „. „ 10,000 .. 1,800 Pizzo 0,000 • Deetroyee Palmi 34,00-0 .. Obliterated . Regnant 10,000 1,000 Gavei 3,000 1,000 Sant' Farman_ .5,700 Handful of Survivors The eollowing Calabrian towns were also-devaetatedi Villa San Giovanni, San Robei•it, afaropa, Mlle, Santo Stefano, Seminar's, Caunetello, Catasono, Boole, Catena, Pillar°, Gioia Tauro, Galileo, Mate, Villa San Guiseppe, Saa ine, Gerace, Montebello, -Nieo- tern, Gallina, Archireggio, Sinopoli, Cano eso Calabro, Iotio„ - The Sicilian towns. of Noto, San Ore- gorio, and. Risopto were severely dam. •eged. . Iv manship and fine lace, andenaturally she doesn't care to lay in a eupply of such expensive things to store them up to get oldafashioned, When it collies to costumes she feels the same way, prob. lacbsii:i.sleintiment about the trousseau than the eame now there is a good deal there was formerly, brides of to -day be- ing quite willing even. to wear a traveling dress wilich has done duty several weeks before the wedding, Sometimes they pre- fer to do this, in fart. Catch a bride of twenty years ago doing anything of the sort. If -there wee one thing more than. another abouleiterhieh she 'was fussy it was her traveling dress. Now it is her diuuer dresses that she cares most about, and I must say that the modern trous- seau contains far _more dinner gowns than it used to, whether bought here or on tbe. other side. • "The popularity of European honey- moons is another reason for, the cut in size of some of the troessearta So soon as a bride -elect tells me: ant going abroad directly we are married,' I know what to expect -that she. will wait ttutil she cbmes back before ordering her most expensive gOWIlS, and that a few of these at ieast will be bought in Paris, London or Vienna. "The cost of the 180o trousseau I men. tioned was $0,500. The cost of the trous- seau I aux providing for the bride who starts South after her wedding is $3,500, Relatively the drop ie the number of gamin*, tilde from lingerie, hosiery and 'such things, containea iu the modern 'trousseau of wealthy New York giels is SO per cent., and the drop in the relative coat of the New York trousseau of ten years ago and of te-day is 40 per cent." --- se* 6 The lingerie, liswever, of ths -modern tattle is a inoavel tIo way of work - ENTIRELY OUT. TkIBUTES TO THE WIRELESS. (Boston HeraId.). But Dr, Williams' Pink Pills Re- stored ligorous Health. mmion,,,, tio obt kind Will $01110tilOPS 1.0111.Ve 010 eymptome di.ra,e, though 'hey never tomb the dieeaee itself - they never cure. etatin- ary unelivinee leave behind them indi- gestein, 0011.11ipa tion and Mathis -hes. Purgatives leave those taking them fev- anOweakentel. on the other 1180(1 Dr. Williams' Pink Pills do direct. good to the body, the blood and the nervee. They fill the relies with new Mt blood; they tone and strengthen OW 11011%. they ettre diseaee by rontiug it out of the Wood. They always do good • they eennot possibly do hams. airs. George IL Moneton. N'e B., saye: "A fesv yeers ago nfter con- finement I coutraeted eevere cold and although took eonsiderable medieine, 1 get no better. In fart, my conditinn was gradually getting worse. was all run down, had oo appetite 'and grew so sveak that eoeld not do my homework. At last the doctor who was attending to1d my husband that I was going into a decline, and I feared so meself, for a sieter had died of consumption. When almost in despair 41, friend. Hug - wetted me taking Dr, Williams' Pink Pills, and I got half a dozen boxes. Be- fore Joie taken them all I began to get better. Then I got another half dozen hove, and before I had used them nit I was aide to do my lioneework again and was in better health than I had enjoyed for years. 1 believe 1)1., *Wil- liam' Pink Pills saved me from going eonstunption and 1 warmly reeotu- mend them to every weak persen. Seta by all medicine dealers or by mail et 50 cents a. box or six boxes for $150 front the 14). 1:11lianee Medicine Co„ Brockville, Ont,, JAPAN'S WAR LOSSES. Estimated to H;v-e-E-xceeded the Size of Entire Peace Force, "Aeeording to the information in' the hantie of our General Staff," writes Gen, Kuropatkin in :McClure's, eutire peace 'force of the Japanese army con- sisted Of 110,000 men, of which as many as 13;000 were on perpetual leave. The rAlie,Oroove omfenthe territorial army numbered "Thus their entire force .of soldiers, according ta our ealculetionss consisted of only. 41$,000 men. But according to calculations Made on the basis of data published by the Japanese sanitary to their colors, which erea.ted extra- alauttilotiolr,ities, it is evident that daring the war over 1,000,000 men were summoned ordinary drain on the tomes of the popti- "The losses in killed and wounded were very great. In the cemetery of 'honor Tokle alone 00,000 were buried who had been slain in battle, and to time meet be added 50,000 who died. of their wounds, Thus the Japanese suffered battle losses of 110,000 merea-that is to sny, number almost equal to the entire army otta peace. footing. "Our lows, compared with our army. 1,000,000, were several times smaller than those of the ,l'epanese. During the war 554,000 men were .treated in the Japanese hospitals, 220,000 of them be- ing Wounded. Counting in with -the kill- ed and woundee those who died from dieease, the Japaneae lost 1 35,000 men." • • O. One cif the most significant and virile Of the younger and "coining" American poets is Harry H. Kemp. In his poem, The Song of the Wire - leas Telegraph, he touches on that phase of the daily present-day miracle which is uppermost in the public mind just now because of the salve, Bon of crew end passengers of the Republic. The Wireless sings With silent and lightning feet pass swift as a dream. I leave behind on the wings of the wind creatures of steel and steam. Who will gather. my fling reins and bridle my headlong speed Who will hold me back on 1117 whirl- wind track as I carry the hid- den' creed? Do you think you have conquered time, laud slaves of the narrow tail? . Tourist -I understend you have relics of the Battle of Waterloo for sale. Bost -Vo aid have, but they.are all sold ate the swords father buried last week won't get rusted before next 0111/1111er, Odd Australian Aninials. AUstralia prmluees those loWest of the quadrupeds, the ditek-billed Water Mole end the Australian porcupine aat eau. They, Moll with the kafigarbos, may be described as the gronndlings of the mantnialieu family, for in respect of their ettneture they are of a inueli lower grado than, say, a dog or a tat, This interiority et seen not only it the brain, but in malty other details ef their bodily anatomy. In zoological eireles the prevalent 'opinion is that this mole le link be. tweet' birds on the one bend it11(1 1114.11. teals on the other. Theee "lowest" .quadrepetle lay eggs birde, the yoitug Wog, subsequently hatehea from the aggs, whereas in the kangaroos anti all higher mainnials the young are bon' -tdive and 11011rieltett IlleittIS of milk. A Vivid Recollection, pert anecdote, not included in the late Mem. Blaim's l'ettiiniSeente4, T4141.48 that else %sae met et. a public reception by a former acquaintenet mho atked if stshe hot forgoitets bets "I 4o not recall your fece. hut re- member emu diets veey seid Ure. I will leave yOu a thOusand nines be- hind in the teeth of an open Whengaledie storm -wrecked steamer Drive through the mist and the swirling spume I push a way to the outer day and tell of the vessel's doom. I have come unseen with secret speech, I have guarded the tate upheard; / have put mine.eses on the journey's end and delivered the faithful word. Don Marquis has hinted at the same aplendor of achievement in his lines: But now they may howl, the storms, and growl- at, the rk of the linemana,s hands, But'gone is theif pride with the boast of the tide that bit rit the deep sett strands. For sentence thrills through the bastioned hills that has neithet yoke nor form, Not reeks of the. might '01 the elutes - sprite that lashes the earth with hie Storm. s Tilted and btidled, and shoaled and girdled end botind with a link - The brute powers eotver at the lberstisin7ain, like poWet that dwelle lituntin Ilfan has, stolln the wings f the tleathlees 'rhinos. filet renge where the spirit -is lord. He is leegued anew with the Silente through the etrtinets hi a Arend - less eord. • e. Jersey's Summer Hotels. It 1171 Militated that the :summer ef the White litountaitie are ot th $6,000.000 ; o . Vermeil t , the aistne ; Mes saehnsetts, S10,000,000 ; these Of the Catskills, 143,000,000: ssf the Aditondeelss, $7.000,0e0: et Cow neetleut, $4.000.000, nrtd those 01 NAY, leratly Oyer tl$0,1)011ANI.e.-FrOm the Hotel World. Up in the World. The Maideelio r know auythin' about them people that list moved in three doors bes•ant? 'I lie fl arl,age e ti --Na tit, I denim nothin' alma Sen -but they have ase. ful swell swill.--Tua. Part la ly Reformed. Mice Justice -4 ought to send you up for a year. Yon a re 11 hopelees Yagamond-With all due rcepeek, • y'r honor, that ain't so. I'm bairenoughe hut I ein't as bad as- I used to be. k"r twenty-seven years, y'r honor, I was ti baggage smasher ou a railroad! A Working Passenger. A persistent lawyer who had been trying to establish a witness' suspicious connection with au offending railroad was at last elated by the witness' ad- mission that he 'had worked on the rail- road!' "Ah!" said. the attorney, with a satis- fied smile. "You say you have worked on the P. T. & X.?" "Yes," "For how long a period?" "On and off for seven years, or since I have lived at Peacedale, on their line." "All! You say you were in the employ of the P. T. & X. for seven years, off and on?" • "No. I did not my that I was emploee ed by the P. T. & X. I said I had. work. ed on the road, off and on, for that length of time." "Do you wish to convey the impres- sion that you have worked for the P. T. it X. for seven years without reward!" asked the attorney. . "Absolutely without reward," the wit- ness answered calmly. "For seven years, off and on, I've tried to open the win- dows in the P. T. & X. ears, and. never 'owe have succeeded." -Youth's Com- panion. • 4. A Grown Up Baby. "You'd like to be in South America during 4; revolution, woula you.? What for's" round, I'd like ta YC'e the wheels go Curiosity Gratified, Former Customer (after a lorig sence)-What has become of the, pretty blonde that used to feea hungry at this lunch counter? Dark Shipned Waiter bee. What yon goiu' to order, sir? The Professor. free easietil•Or W1114 writing ',meet/thee in 0 small notelmok. "Making au aciditiou -to my visiting." he explained. to .the doetor. ”Toor visiting ilea queried the does tor. • "Yes; this is a reeeril of the elinie cane havo hail in dc,ilgieg automo- biles." Its Claim to Immortality. ''I don't see anything remarkable in your peem," said the editor, handing it back. "You don't?" howled the would -ix. contribistor pointing with a quivering finger at die word 'loathes" at the end of the fourth stanza. "Dicl you ever 000 a poem before that had a perfect rhyme for 'clothes'?" WetneS3. Man 'with thn Bulging Brow-Awfel sloppy, isn't it? Men with the Bulbous. Nose -It ain't half as sleepy for you as it is. for me. aly overcoat's in soak. • THE NEW ARITHMETIC. noses -How raticit Is two times oue, plus 047 Jog144,--Why, throe, ot course. Bogge--elo; a man, wife and balsy; two and elle t4 carry. 41. The Queen's Maids. The queen demands of her maids that they shall be musical, neat in their at- tire and whew picture hats. Otherwise, the ia very easygoing with them, and the kindest way miiisters to their plea- sure whenever it is possible. A maid of hobo nn longer receives the eoveted "dot" of a thousand pounda on lter mar- viage. as of yore, but the rank of "hon- orable" is still here -Gentlewoman. _ Proems Mustaches. Moustaches are not worn by Imo eX• posed to the. severity of an Alasken winter. They wear full belittle to pro- teet the throat nial face, lint keep tho upper lip elean shaven. The moisture (rem the breath emigrate so quickly abet 1110114Ttlehtt becomes imbedded in a mind Nike of iees and the atee at frozen in a slime time. Would be N.ice. "These sectional hied:eases ere fine thinge. You tee siart in a 4111:111 way alai ttild to them ese ;von van afford it." "Good idea. Why dome( soniebnay invent a Factional hat for lailiess" Willie -era, ineesage isn't -gona oat. .Itt - Aro yon talking aheut Willits -Why, Mr. Tangier. reir Simeet• :Wool tometinteudtrit, kept felling us nee the time totirty that eEtiti mild his birthright for e pet of meeteage, seeton- IrletS„ Terminology. Offieieus Salesman -Wouldn't you like to look at eome of our ovetcoatinge or Suitilyrs? Dyspeptic. Looking Customer -No, but if you will be kind enough to tell me m here the drtig department is I'll take a look at your pillings and } orons plas- tering." • —.- In Despair. The campaign poet tore big hair. Savagely ernmplirg (teem or more sheets of paper in his hands, he threw them Mtn the wnete baeket. "No!" he exclaimed in a wild, hoarse voice. "There is no rhyme for king!'" Untimely Interruption. Orlando Speonainore bent OVP1' the fair hand and reepectfttlly kissed it. "Young 111,1111,"' sereehed the parrot in the eage overhead, "is there anything the mattei with my lies?" For ExaMple. • "To .make a long Story short," said 'Uncle Chinner, "we collected the maple sap, emptied it into a huge iron. kettle. and put it over a big wood fire -to boil down------" "To make your long story short, un- cle," interrupted one of the listeners, "suppose you boil that down, too." Introducing Her Resolution. . "johnny," said Mrs. Lapsling, putting on Mr wraps, "I've been in the house ail day ond 1 need the fresh air. If mind baby a little while PH go anti take a, preamble Around the bloek." Length, Excited. Caller -Sir, in the Thunder- bolt this morning you saia niy speech nt the bangeet Inet night, AVIA "about 2,000 yarde long." I want to know what -- Reporter (with gasp) ---Colonel, help me, I wrote it "2,000 words!" eheettes A Smile or Two. - Patient -Neter, what do you. call Nisi fever of miner Doetor (looking at clinical thermome- ter) --Well, I'd cell it a bargain --103 re- duced to 08. ---The \Veep. "Think the Jae:imam will liek us7" "Not the slightest ditnger." 'Why not r "Bemuse we won't let them." ---Nash- ville American. "Life is largely a pretense." "Say the rest of it," "I used to have to pretend Mint T. liked cigarettes when I was a kid, and now it's the same with graud (mem"- Washington Herald. "Jennieee called the ola from the top of the stairs, "give that young man this dollar note." "What for, papa?" asked hes daughter in eurprise. "Why, maul him to pay nur milk- man his bill. I know he'll 1110(st 111/11 as he goes -out," Not Disposed to Evade. Paterfamilias (reading itooter's dectoi, T have no paitetlon to paying yott the utedieine, wilt mum the 71,11.4. luott Twain. - Sob's Quandary. fetnise 1.t.tul Is like a Ouse, With drawers end things inside; Some 11111 ter dates tied wits to seen. Tit( its,t last dose mid wens Vor STates 'bout 1,i..11 bey,. la 1.,:tr11. ..A11' ta.c.ltiets,-graIa ate 7.:0.:17 1119 111 an. 1',1 M.., 70 haaw Whru rry drawer la noi. Hot and GoId. versa mai, ion. have uo oh....rved Teat - 1...ratIrA r nee•-• A isev nee: I 1 1,nria/Tt:: rani I 7lir!: ht. Vr.II 1141i1!4 11.7. Poor Johia. Al"..1.•w T t,'71 1014•‘,.: t% 1! illy 114%,,41,, 1.1. mesa Yri.tf I., nth VI- 1 .1k,st 1,.;:r4:10 filt.w- 91... ...IT. "Ph ..'4 11- e..1.'1,,,:st) I .!tat.11 T... Iny • , Wanted ttr Know. 071:: mete, • till sos1 e'er heae she if s ;aloft' the rutin blintfr 4,1.rt No 4.11I, (..,1whiT,14. '11141,.: 14) IV:14 .1 1.try t.v).1 *Ito'. WI %Ws male Na. TT Ti.tal. 1.4,o.. WItaI