Ontario Community Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 16 Mar 1893, p. 3

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

MM have .he whole of Equatorial Africa. Previous x o cui.atiaii it wa* t'.s actdal duty of no ' lovenimenl to interfere in Central Afri- can politic ; there was merely the utter helplisme** of the poor downtrodden crea- ture to appjml to the phllanthropi : tptrit oi the civtii/nl woi Hut i.ow tn.,1 the Kuropeaa nation* have planted tbeir dao througaout the Un.i they jr* Umn.l to make the** rsspscted by pro tectiag the native tribe* from the lawless j band* of Arab* who are constantly persecut- ing them. Central Africa will ooted any bythewnitemaaf he will not deoiet free* his neu.iiah oeouDatioa till compelled by force. The key, wb ~h be hofctotTancn souice of treasure in Central Africa can not be wrested from him without a n*r strun'e iff Arab slav.r will not tolerate legiti Till i; IIMN SLAVE TKADC. Th Trail of the Arab HanUr Littered with Whiteaad Skeleton*- a I reel indetlrr a*l " II I* rird l.in Worth wr Than Hsnsiaa II.' Tar traba*** l n> I ratnrel '> < T 1 1 !/ alien. The slave trad*, with al! the ini'i eonflictions attending it, is all the time rapi'lly increasing iu central Africa. The Arab Viave-hnnter, after gaining wealth, doe* not retire. On the contrary with the proflt of each new venture he bay* more gun* aad ammunition aad hires fresh bands of pillaging follower* so that be may en- large the *pher* of his murderous exploits. Veritable armies of Zanzibar!* aad Mange- mas, officered by Arab*, are constantly engaged in the capture of the native* and rubbery of ilieir ivory. The viilagenof the interior, dreading always a visit from some horde of rsiders, hide away their elephant tusk* in tie jungle* and the swamps. The Arab* make no praUnse to legitimate commerce . with their superior weapons and overwhelming numbers they can, without difficulty, overcome the poorly armed na- tive*. Actually the slavs traffic is subser- vient to the aquisition of ivory, for the Arabs capture the native* and than ransnei theni for ivory. The slaver* havs several stronghold* in Central Africa, the principal of them being Tabora, Kareuva, Ka*ong->, Xyangwe. I'jiji and Stanley Falls. Large hordes of hired robber* branch out in M direction* from .hose depot* and swarm over the whoie and. Their plan of action is to stealthily iiirround a village by night : then at .arly dawn a few muskets are fired to in .imidate the villagers. Bewildered at the -nd* awakening the poor creatures rush >ut of their huts snd fall an easy prey to the inhuman villains, who leap luto the village from all side*. All too** who resist are shot down or stabbed, and the remain- der, old and young, are taken prisoners and are herded into a stockaded pen, ami there guarded night and day. VI Tlv K- IV II IV. .CD t"R HORi. The Arab* then open up negotiation* w.th the surrounding villages and f i change their captive* for ivory. One big tusk weighing tiS po-nds will grant the release of one (lave. Th* Arab* remain in such a camp till the district i* drained of its ivory. Then the slaves who have not beau pur- chased are loaded d<->wn with ivory and the mer-iles* pillagers move along to a new hunting ground. The chart of Central Africa is constantly changing. To-day some traveler map* down a flourishing settlement as yet untouched by prowling slaver*. Th* vilUgvr* or* friendly and indnstuno*, and well kept plantations ol grain aad fru:ts flank iliv long . row* of neatly built hut. A few weeks I In the current number of the Aodover hence the woods around it will echo back Review i* a paper under the title of "Reli- the ring of musket shots and the dying \ gious Instruction in Publu School*, groans of those who dared to itefead th-ir i S. Burton, who seta out by propounding the homes, and naught will remain of that happy ' question. *' Shall the public school giv* any settlement but charred ember* and a few kind of religious instruction T" His argn- decaying bodies, silently explaining ia ment i* addressed mainly to those who ghastly eloquence the reason of the change. ; hav* already decided in the negative, not Many of the tribes who were living near , because they object to religion* instruction the rivers no longer dwell on shore : they j of the young, bat h*can** they foresee ob- have scooped out monster canoe* which are . jection* ti it* being imparted in Slate roofed with matting;. The cat ivcs occupy | school*. He asks those people, wko, he mi i-n r>*Ltiiv talarMir Ilas4 Wblrk !!( 4eaL Annout. iijtnt comce tram Paris that the r"rei';h ar->h.p hoe taken possession of Kergnelen * Load, otherwise known as the Ink et DeeoUtioa, situated in the Antarctic Ocean. TIM island u said to emtain bed* of coaL France has vlauM* .. .'ir sosne time, though it kts ben included in Use be* of Brnif h poeM**-**v*. The Island u an in- teresting place, though little wa* kn wra of th* Arab siaver pswerfuU, equipped in i l ,J^^^^ l j^ '', **J bserve th* . ) and the transit of It wa* diacovere 1 in 177'Jl.y a Breton sail- : or, Kergurleu- Tremarec, who was sent oat ! eatery. Then had beta a tradition tor a I loo*; time taat a continent existed in the Ztt t *Xtt&?ZZ ^ a land which he % uuted in IMS on hi. way to th* West Indies. Th* oaality of th* land was in attar doubt, tstanss of th* af the rosord *f the mended to establish tnxling pasta on the pper waters of the Congo they were treacherously murdered to a man. When Jaoioes and Joubert bo lit a jam- son on Lake Tanganyika in the interests ef the Anti-Slavery Society, the Arab* immed- iately constructed a for t near by and com- menced an attack, and grave fear* an en- tertained that the white men have ere this shared the fate of poor Modeller and his frwnd*. The lappi tssiiia of slavery is a giant under- taking, bat stern mease r for its accom- plish -nent are being- carried out with (rand deliberation. The Congo Free .State is all the time strer gthcning its frontiers to the ( west. The English and German i are about to pot well-armed nnboatson taegreatUkee Tanganyika and Nyassa, The native* will I* taught to konw the white man's inten- they will ruadtly enlist in a cnned by explored thtst vatvn? notion*. Kergneleo the South Indian Ocean, discovering ia the I early p*i t of ITT- the island which ha* ever sine* borre hi* nan-. He did not esTect a landing upon it, and, being driven off by lempetnoue weather, retarned leUaoriUa*. In 1773 h* sgau .am* ia sight W th* island, j but was a second time driven off by severe 1 weather. In 177* another Fren n orBcer broagut a frigate into what is now called Christmas Harbor, and on* of his men Acted a laadiac. takic g posnssmon of th* m- Uad in the name of the King of franc*. Th* island was visited by C*pt. Cook in 1 770, who christened it llesolation Island, hetuis* it was m ungukriy barm W vege- table aad animal life. From that Urn* un- in i- i f. riKt-r A jeraniam leaf Sfplisii te> a brue is haaflsm Asiones prodooei uia stuJon Wrels of salt laet year. The mamagm e( nuson are } nor eextt. of the whoie nn:::ber. The Swe.liah mtle is M.OM ywds long, and the Viea*r peat mile u 4.JM yard*, TKe bee* dsM*ps*jM corks cost over 4 zOBtseach. The eugic inaterc w* tiie invenliem of Roger Bacon in 13ML The carUsst assjsannsi sstsMishs*! in Swede, was beaded in 1*43. Faahion plate* cacao tato ase dviag the (Jongs, bells, and horns have as dinner call* tine* the eighth century. A patent aa* been issued for a lock which caa be apsralid only by a magnwtiacd key. Britain mines -JD.WJO,'"" barrels <A salt a ysar. New York city lay* claim to over i women bicycle rider*. There an in toe United States, .,33 public or kubscnption librarian, Shoe* with heel* *LX inches high worn at the Court of Louts XIV. Many suits of armour in the fourteenth century weighed 175Jb. *a.-h. Henry Rochefort refuses to receive ad veru**moau for his paper f rotn < .ennaai und*r any irmsjetsn.-ai Monaco, with iu territory of eight square miles aad iu standing army of 1 >. porpoa* t-j hav* a universal exposition next year. Last tear salesmen ia Covent garden Market raeeivod from Jersey and Gm of fnut aad T>e journey, of Stanley and Livingstoee *' toppod there and made a survey, and and the other explorer, who have revealed ' ** "* Uler in the -me year from the ' to the world th,. blood .tamed history of **>. A nencan and .erman astroaoau The number of clergy Ministry of the church of * u 1.473, or five more vioos year total. to the during than the pro- wUta " th* world have Africa mirk the beginning of a noble work J* 1 '$&**** it had almost been forgotten U*t_tw*nty-nTe The** tiny trails panned en ti chart *t *" *** M n.arkiug the journey, of whoa* brave soul* who hav* heroiculy fared the dangers of ; " .- T- . j, that savage land are being worn t/hrand , . T ^ . uj ~l th *- * ' roads by whole armies ^rto are gradually th * IaJ ,'? =?. tl * in an th* Arab nlnnderera. Only a C *P* " *** Four-tin Ls of the snginss n? u working in bean Bonstrected dnrinf the Bonstrected dnrinf the yean. In ordinary Knglih writing / ' only . : oecor* twenty two Urces. while " ~ in the world : for in so part of the 'Jon'.j- Bent are the working lusss SB well off se m TsnansAir* ; nowhere an wages *o high, boon of toil sa short, -ad the oast of livmg The carnage in wh. ->en takes her railway ieemeys u one of the ka higtaly nolisim. and the sertise. are w hits & end geMthfead. Thechairwhi the Qaeea eccanse* j* very large, and fa the 1 engine. Within easy reach of t est Pullman cars which baa **r bsna built. Thswalu of the saloon are of ' wtu.B faee* tat* chair a silver plate, ia which an knobs *r part of the caning*. Thro* other easy - chain occupy a space in her compartment, b***JM*Vmt> ft Ba*sVl^U*ks*M*Bri t*%*U*at. XaM CsWsMC is a velvet pile, and th* cartaiasar* hang n *il ver poles ; the door * " are also of sohd olver. The furniture. Viiyae, Ae. , wer. selected by th* (jaeen herssW. sal th* saloon ia asada to , poonbl* th* white drawing-room at Wu There if a wonderful grape *> t Oail- lac, a town in southern France. A.taoagk the plant u only tea year* from the cutting it ha* yielded as many a* 1,:S7 bunch** of fins fruit m a angle yew. There is bat on* other vine in cultivation that i* known to ex .el this prolific shrub, and that is the his- torical vine at HirnptT Court, wkich w*. planted in 17i*. In on* yoar this vine us* born* 2,o> bunches. M. Raspail a French naturalist, that last summer 15.5 little nightingale*. rnaVthr at*. fly-catchers, warbler*, and a* an wer* caught for fashion purpose* in two fl*ts alsns, ia a smaU part of tho Department of Meartae and Moacll*. Throoghoat th* whole prov- ince, it appear* that a like xt*rminauea goes on, so that at l*att con*id*r*bly ovr a million of litUe atrds moat b* annually destroyed. Varans isn* are employod of the fonthowd vicums. Imrkityeven being oallod in aid. Wires are stretched, aa inviting perchss for tired birds, which have creeled the Mediterranean of the *"' P*er s, Hatuo Roeasn Catholic c few year* must now eUpoe before the two **> d -j = * y C.*W 9) IllU - L uvw *B/smmnnmni mnnniBnimj a,u*5 n*mmj _ . ti s CTOS* (words, and with but one possible re- ! Iu ' ^'9^ ' "bout eighty tjvemile, Kmt I'M * I < mm Ikf-MKilTn ^^VMntv.mnA OHK suit. The Arabs, cut off from their cnast supplies of ammunition and harre.l fiom Northern support, will be crushed by the well arnsod forces of civilualioo and regi- ments of resolute natives. If aeoossary they will be annihilated and tbeir povrer thus destroyed forever. *. li-io.. lB.irvrit.il In ine and f* extreme breadth seventy-nine, but the shore* are s* it regular, being p*netrat*d for inland by bay* and fjord* that no port of the interior is more than twelve miles from the sea. The area ia only about :TOO square miles. The island throughout i* mouataia i out, tJieoenling from the sea in SOBS* di- ' reclioa* the appearance of a series of j**yl pmkt. Ther* are several high mounuias, th* chief peak. Moant Roaa, having an ele- , vatioa of til-JU feet. The nature of the . score, with it* it*)p aad irregular line, has prov: le.l the island with a of well *he tered harbor*. Th* will be the inrch in London to twenty-nine mem- lid , leaving -Melbourne t. uil of men seekia, work. "P f ,f tn " ** " No ' " 11 hooul come her* at pres*nt the st Ellen Terry mad* th* statement that she did not know where she was bora, she had been deluged with information, seat by post, intended to dear up that un- certainty. All th* gold in th* world not counting that *tiil in a virgin statai would not make a block of more than i!3 :ufcic yards. A cube of the above dimsxs*ns could b* put and land is the south of Franc*. parch brag kUlca by the means of etoctru hock*. Captain Bower, after ns*si*4 the plalsaa ef Thibet at it* widstt part by a root* new Mgaagraphy, ha* returned to .Simla. He my* h* ha* .liaoovcred the hnkmt Ink* in the worid- Her- pacha 17,9*) feet abu>< these*. Hehaa explored .Vrt) mtms ef n*w ground, at aa anraff* *irau*n ot IMM fe*t, tracaiag and riding ever a frost-bitten and a!: '.e.t H'r'-^ land of . 's day thor* wa* no scsnsry the only decoraucn In thoa* da y* do mar* :eot each way. generally magnificent an.1 often .ingularly Haa-lel, th* famous corn'ooaer. mod. when picture*^ A diotrict of i nnmd.rsl.ls si- traUtng. *. "** '! '" "". <*.* hungry, for nve, and then eat the who)* picture*! u-. A diatr tent in tke center of the island by mow-D*Ids, whs* as eait and west to the) sen. the cartful lookout for the Arab* adv they can avoid him by flight down str< The cunning Aral<* pur|ioeely ke*|> native tribe* al enmity among theinwalvos by employing om* as allies agaiast a neigh boring settlement. In the cannibal r**rion* the payment for such servic* is "meat." or, I sideration of the essentials to be more explicit, the dead bodies of thoes ship, and advances tu the crueliy lam m the raids. These Arab* sn- th* ni-st brutal aad barbarous Th* lands* undoubtedly of volcanic origin .lu-lging from the abundant fossil remain of tree* it most at on* tune n*v* been thickly clothed with woo-U and other the** all th* yoar throufh, and by keeping sayr. are maiuh responsible for th* policy of vegetatiom, of whioh it ha* in later time* - tho pwbl'c-tchools in this panicnlar, to re- b*** denuded, a* doubt by volcanic tsmsssW their decision. Accepting tho aijgm that the function oi the "-tate in re- spect to its chillren is "to tram them up to b* gold citizens of the State, aad good members of society," ho passes to th* con tiais of good citizen- proposition thai the training must be both intellectual and moral, and then raises th* quest K-P morality be inculcated if religion is exclud- ed ? He maintains that it cannot be. He says : " Grant that we have a perfect code of moral* carefully taught and strictly en- forced in the school*. Le* the pupiU be taught that it i* wrong to steal, to lie, and to diaobey parents. Let the atmosphere of the school be made a* hostile to theee vice*, and a* friendly to the corresponding virtue*, as th* teaching and practice of th* inatructer* can mak* it. How shall this excellent instruction bemad*) etTcvtiv* outside the schoolroom, an Ion into life when school days are over ... if they accept th* general rule that upon th* whoie honesty I* th* beet of policy '' How much will this avail in the hour of tempta- tion? The entire secularization of inttmc- ion in the public school, by the exclusion of religion and th* Bible, cannot tail to lower and degradr the tone and spirit of the school. . . . Th* religious people of this nation who believ* in our public schoo'i.be- lic- tint republican government rests on ' frequent this part the virtue and intelligence of th* pr< an.) that the public school is nenstsary to train the generation about to conic upon tho | stage in virtue ou.l intelligence, anil that v irtue that is rooted in intelligent | will withstand the in- and customs amon.i '.he interior tribe*. Cer.-- monies involving human sacrifice and can- nibal orgies create a demand lor slaves, which the Arab will supply when the pay- ment is ivory. The Arab slaves are not merely a few brigand tribe* -attcied over the land, t-ut \ powerful, well orgmi/ed system occupying the heart of Africa. From the numerous slave depot* large band* of hired robbers are constantly going and coming starting unt with their musket* and a few loads of ammunition and returning with (laves and ivory obtained by theft and murder. The ivory eventually reaches Zanzibar, on the east coast. When a goodly pile has been " collected ' at on* of the stronghold* a caravan of slave gangs carr-e* it to the Indian Ocean. Kvery tusk, already foully purchased by innocent live*, demands still more sacrifice )>efore the delicate substance, daintily carved, grace* some fair one's boudoir, where amid ill retiued surround- ing* it* bloody history is buried. A -TI.V I'.VTII. It has been frequently said by tra\ who have followed th* tru'e of the claver that, so htlervd is the way with ^ruining skull and whitened skeleton, that shufful you lose your bearing* these grim relic* 'nld guide yon to th* coat. M.nley Kails in Kvi Tippu Tip had TO.OOO pounds of ivory which has been "col- lected' by his numerous bands in about ten month* To carry this to th* coast 1500 men wuuld be required. The Arab* them- selves admit that two-thirds who etart with such a caravan never reach their destination. Weakened already by hunger and iil-irett ment, many succumn to tne hardship* of the -.MOO mil* journey : men and women stagger along till they fall from sheer ex- baits' ion. .Many f the women have babies beside* their load of ivory, audit they show sign* of lagging behind the child i- matched from them ana left to perish on tl v way- tide so that the piccion* tusk may mil be borne along. Often a slave. of breaking down, i* killed by a savage Mow on the neck with club. Hi* body ia then cut awuy fivii iheslav* fork, a new ir.an take* Ins lo.vd, and the i-avan: < its journey. It is a wonder that any ot those carriers reach their destination. Given enough food only to keep life nV-kmng in their emaciat- ed bodies, covered with tt.tering sor* from the ohtOng fork And chain, goaded l>y th* cruel lash from morning tiJ night.. t!i.-y are dnven along the trail sufcTering all the ind'guiti^s ami peraeoa:icn which ll.edfvil- i*h nun. U of their u lous masters can invent and carry out. Mi explorers who hav* penetrated Central Africa liave f mod everywhere theism* piti- ion*. Tho occupation of C'*ntrai .irioa by th* m must ::ievitably hasten the a!u>ion of the iant i __ _ . , action and submsrsiaa and possibly by change of climate. Th* soil is ri.-h. an i it was a mailer of Croat surprise among the mam- ben of the expedition which visited th* uland in K to observe the transit of Venus that their should b* subtile v*g*- ta'.ion. Th* flora is remarkable ia not producing a (ingle wood-producing plant, not evru th* ' aiillrst under-shrub. There have been found about twenty flowering plants on th- island, they be ag of little size, however, an>( thoroughly Antarctic, corresponding generally with the flora of the Falkland Island* and Patagonia. As th* climate M by no moans rigoron* even in winter time the conclusion must b* reached thit this (tat* if things wa* brought about by some i sudden volcanic upheaval Ther* ia found her* but one useful plant, a *on of wild cabhag*. which is the only , known ropreeeutativ* of it* specie*. It ha* a lo*g, sout perennial root stock and a hsad of nave* very similar to the common gar- dsa cabbage. Capt. Cook first discovered this plant and directed attention to it. Th* denss white besrt of th* clnaterof leave* taste* like mustard and ere**, bat is coarser. Th* rnot stocks have th* flav >r of horseradish. The cabbage is nod by voy- xger* as aa artk-I* ot food and i* much in ' | request nsBoag th* whaler* and sealers who , of th* oceac. U " '" ' gian t* *npprsH sla^ '-'rench, Congo Fret religion* convict, -n evitabl* assault* of temptation: and that, therefore, the future citizen must receive somewhat, early in lite, some kind and measure of teligious instruction, and that the brat inspiration for the work of teach- ing spring* out of the religious faith.' He the* proceed* to argue that th* State is the proper agency for imparting this in- struction. Not of re< igion. There must be no Slat* religion but of such religions truth* a* the Mate judge* to be utetu! ard necessary to mak* good citizens. To this eud b* pleads for th* introduction of tho Kible on the ground that "nowoer* e'o i* the fundamental truth that the we're of I lie Mate, in the long ran, depends un the> righteousness of the citizen so strongly laid _ down. ' So inii u.-u\c a booc, h* argue*), showing sigu*ii< worthy a p'acc in the public schools *f a republic, wheihvr it is inspired or not. Sectarian t*chii:g, he say*, should b* kept cut of our school*, "not I y excluding frvm them vtrvthing that any sect teache*, bin I y strict ailhvreuc* to the principle of teach- ing that, and only that, which make* for good citizenship.*' Summing up, he my*: "Th* danger that our school* will come un<ler sectarian influence u sot so imminent as that they will become practically athei*- ti. 1 . and Uic former calamity, h-->ull it uccur. would not b* so disaslroa* a* th* latter. The State rocognuej aad prot* -t* the riht of each *-ct to tench such doctrines M it deem* e*et lia! t it* own exi*tnc* and irtowtli. Ha. the State itself !e* liberty titan it gnarantets to it* humble*t ssct ' Shall the- State permit any party or *sct to it* ruh: to teach its fut arv citixoa* n\ thing whatever that it .ie\n* imsntial to rsown security or welfare? To do *o Krit- woaki be the> subjection uf the State to a (at* and 1'ortu- sect," fce*n lae InOtan*. ""," l . h ", *<V ~ B ,2 ^ . th l "'^ 5tUt * $ '.overnment U l< Tramcar conductor* receive only > >(d. fora day s wag** lath* city of Berlin. Th* day is eighteen hoar* long, with s half -holi- day once in two week*. A I'ans laundrya* has discorded all He merely use* plenty of watt potatoes. and can cleanse, wi ing any alkali, the worst soilod ton* or woollens The Chines* gardener* are the per: truit growers in the world. Marco Polo even asserted that thy prodac* pears of th* most delicKMM fragrance, and weigh- ing Un poand* each. New '-uioea is extremely rich in plants, the number of specie, discovered ia the sixty-five year* sine* Lussa brought horn* the tint collection being two ,knnsnnii. *r a* many as are known from th* whets o' I -erinany. >everai observant ladies hav* discover eu that vegetarians have dear complexions, and ftav e either renounced the as* of meat entirely, or partak* ol it spanasly. Lady Pkg*t,'wile ol tne British ambassador a: th* Austrian court, i* on* of th* recent con- vert* 'o tegetarisjussa. A wealthy sMtch g*ntas*aan, whv had intended to give each of ha* jaaghters a legacy ot h-r weight in sni psand bask note*, had an official of th* tank of <cot land to ogure out th* matter tor him. It wa* found that toe larger would get a* her share .'C.344 . the slimmer :!.:'. There ba> beea recently a inecr Udiev' strik* in ' crmon) a one of th* garrson towns. The .-undact of th* men. whc nc- giected th< unmamed ladies ID order to dance vtl -ir fn*nd.< and sv<ioajnt*nc**.di*ple**M thr alighted mnid- n* and their moth***, and at th* last regi- mental U:i net an uamarnad girl wa* pros- used on th* wer* tapettrie* and ecrtaia*. th* acton sad a-tr***** had to than merely repeat their lint* : they had t* supply th* scenic **Vt what littl* there was a* w*ll a* the action of th* nco. They has! no racs* with n and a moving nenrsms, nor any saw with a roil buzz saw acd real log* to faU backjpoa. ip talnt The snull proportion ot veswis *tru y lightning at sea is e. -client teaumeny to the etfe- -..veneoa of the measure* that hav* la* protection of sbia* The plan sully at the lower end TJTh th* riffir i*s*rhis*T sf the Tsmt, a woo lea skip. Th* upper end* in caa* of upper of th* rods extend a litUe above the taps of th* masts, and have platinum points. In iron vessel* -oaneeuou is mad* with th* mass ot metal, and ia both case* UM> light- ning is almost invariably dissipated without *y*t*m m of groat valv* on board men -oi- war. wh*re thor* are Urge oaantitMS ot powder, and wore it not for the protection thas afforded it would be positively ifangersas I* b* anywbor* war veseel during a thunder two way* of noar a Of the ting th* lightning rod with the sheathing, on* a* t* run th* rod thrensTh the deck*, down th* mast*, snd !____ t.W>* C0*U*WC^Mtt 4V** srvsW bO tVvMB *W mnW I vtasel. and th* other i* to ran it across the ' deck from the point where the mast eaten, over th* (id* aad down to the shisthing Th* latter plan id joasadered the sale* of , th* two. promise Indians immunity from white men's ' law* if they would consent ephyr and an boaat*d of .t Public fountains of hot water are being stabltshed in Paris on the automat ic *\ stem . i itting a halfpsany in th* dot. any oa* t-) giv* up th can obtain nearly two gallons of thoroughly good land* they occupy and go Uewiiere hot water, boated by the public gas (errice. without tusking a fuss. Yet ibi* appears The first fountau. put up a* an expvrimoat to b* about what has been >lone in the in- pruve>i a great succ***, as in summer few ter**t* of Senator rwttigrew s bili for the boucewive* in the poorer q lorters oar* to removal of th* Lower Brnl* Indians of < keep a rire. South Dakota to th* Robud reserve Th. , ,- mpUiB Gr.i fc . a ScotchmsD, wh* m.thoU emRloyed wa* a bosrus vot* af tr a know r n M th , King 01 Faa; corrupt canvas*. A half brood nam*d hm . iu . t die a. Many year. ^^ IVvid /ephyr and an Indian companion of ^,,,,,,11 o j Fanning Island, a <.oral r*f, aad *appli*d vam.1* with guaco Soon after settling therr k* made a H>urney of I.'**' mile* to Honolulu to limi a wife. "He returned with hi brid*. and brought up a m his lonely ttsand ham*. - -i* incvntsn* coatnyancos are used by thieves. The la'es: .<wks Ilk* ar. ordinary waiking-tticc. Mi*. M *o arranged that, by preening a >priag at 'he handle, the ferrule will spread apart and form a sort of (pring clip, that will lake hold of anything that i* withm rea. 'i t'n* thing t* ,-alle.l " The Continental lifting (lick." and i* ussd to take thing* from behind counters when th* shopman'* back is .urnod. T*e Moo colour of tira *ky is probably merely the colour ef th* air, seen through a length of about torty-fiv* mile*. It ha* hi* hav* (>oa(t*d of .-ecetving mooey to ev plain to th* Indian* for land grabber* that if they would go to Rosebud they would be removed from all annoying contact with that they might contivu* their plural mar- riage*. 'This i* an extrandinary and dis- graceful business for even the lowest hire- lings 19 be engage*! in. While lar** num- bers of people, are making every effor. to civilf* and e*lncat th* young men and maidens of ih* race, th*r* i* nicir v an- other large and influential class at Wash- intton ami in the 1'nited States Tsrritoris* even more methodically engaged in their degradation. Thank God the vicinusnes* to which w hav* referred nor* has not yet made itself apparent in Canada. Jfr*. . 0-faldm s*rs the ra- a>4 kwk u Wr like one been observed by thost who hav* ascended about tire mile* abev* the earth's surface that th* sky appear* *f a dark, inky 'me, owing to the very small reflection and di*- persion of the light, while the blue colour no longer app^r* above, tat below thsm. Skntlarlv, 'be blue colour of distant hills M owing to Ik* same csuss. Accerdiag t* th* t*stiiay<*y of a lav n*ck a rope that was hanging from the ceil- ' Consul at Manchester, th* dt-trct of which iiif. aa-l ;.iinpe>J from the cradl* upon whk-h ' lh%t city in th* centre enjoy* a greatwr ht-'had c'imbcd to reach th* roa*. When ' measure of prosperity than any similar iouud i>y hi mother WwasueasV. 1 commnaiiy in his *ws conntry. tbtrefor* It is said WalkervtTt* will sevur* the Canadian branch of th* tt.-Cormac* reaper work*. Th* *ev*n-yar-old son of Mr. Henry Cok, of Kast Selkirk. MA:- . whil* playing with a yenng*r brother iu an upstair* room ofhupareBU'rowdeno*. twiited around his frnm thu Doari iiulil m6 UcdU Long and Terrible Illness from Blood Poisoning rural *y Jfood'i SnraejMiriUev. Mr*. Vary E. O'Pslion. a very lady of rtaaa. Onto, was poisoned while as- rarMcsaas at an autopsy 5 yean ago, rrv.Mc lert- broke out o* her and throat. Her hair aa came cat 9n* wlg*e< but 73 Ibs., aad saw M prosarct of heta. At last shs becaa t* tak* Hood's Sar*aparUta and at one* t arored: couM SON vet out of bed and walk, to say*: - I Tirrsmr perfectly cured by Hood's Sarsaparilla sad am DOW a well woman. I weigh eat well and do m* work for a large My '-*e **** a wonderful r-- rv and . i* look at me In iifcial nisiinl rj atmoot like am* rate** i n *>.*,.* HOOD 8 PlLLt slUMl4 W ia every tasulj **t. Cae* **< .',*?. tr*f*n.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy