THE DAILY WHIG, SATURDAY. APHIL 19, RLS a MONSOON: Is seid 'only Get 2 packet from your Ar-- ----_ : m g f R in Scaled Packets, Never in any other way. grocer and try it. It is delicious. » x | liaise, i i dG, ITS INEABITANTS. Only Siz Prisoners for Serious Of- fences Last Year--They Break Into Jail There--Easy Going Outport , Prisons--Unique ~ Re- cord of ope Magistrate. New York rt Nid, March 30.--The i 2 E f ¥ & FEE i fl HERS $9 Bun. St. John's, criminal 3 tics of Newfoundland for 1901 have been published. Pro.- = g community of 200, in world shows sp clean a record, % It is practically & crimeless country. The calandar shows no murder, man: INDO-CEYLON TE no ; Fr have had sentences ex a . There have been only three murdets in Newfoundland in thirty years. In enth case the offender was ' One case occurred fifteen years ago and the prisover got a life Ar perving thive he was set or pet years he was se to work ne "e rs the | prison grou : the w went in to get his breakfast. When he re- turned the prisoner was gone, and has never been rec Fork river, in Cass county, where he Mrs. King have been living since ber, most of the time in a tent. r. King says five young women from Mi solis are. i their nearest | Pair}'s Celery / Co pound store clothes, have . discarded wearing skirts and jackets made from blankets. They were armed when they went into the woods with lathing hatchets and meat saws, but they have substituted fourpound axes and them gators all the Varied : isn e Blood and Re- ---- Bvery Trace of NomYH PACINIC COAST and KOOTH. A ¥ POINTS. VER 1 t., (940,05 dae UM | $43.55. Mont. Sufferers fr REE Mont. 1943.05. ! rheumatisn SETTLERS One-Way, SossadsCinee ommnton Manitoba Canadian North-West. iorbid prinfle in the blood whe hy yp " mati isnt. This morbid principle is uflovid, which circulates . CONWAY: , A. POLOER, JR. Gen. Pose. Ash. the blodland acts upon the Gen. Supt. i i ~kME. BAY OF SPOKANE, Wa. the varied forms of cular, muscular, in mbago and gout, bind that there is a ; and QUINTE RAILWAY. ley NEW SHORT LINE FUR ed . Tels leaves City Hall Dopod ab 4 | "11508 "RJ, WILSON, O.FB Telegraph permanent" hanish- ment of everyfrm of rheamatism. If your joints painful if. the knees, elbows ankies are swollen, | fl Paine's Celety Com- Smee all yout trou- ind u have inflam- i Raumati accom: pa i acute darting pains in the sciatic lve from the hip down the leg, Pal Celery Compound taken at one Il soon drive out the ! disease, j¢ you strong and agtive. io od eho writes about lows : Jo After givinglyour Paine's Celery Compo a through testing, I am pleased 'to say § few words in its la , vor. For years 1 suffered ter ribly from tism. '16 seemed to ; ie that 1 was Proed to endure all ETI RAND vil MONTREAL HORSE , Cornwall, Oni. happy eure as fol SHO MONTREAL a pains that a mortal {eould po perience from the I tried many of the dfnes, also doctors' pever found a cure dl & supply of Paine's It worked like a Bo strike at the very 1 am now cured; , and in every man. eotgidor it a plea Tih, 9th, or 0th, s sure and. duty Paine's' Celery are afflicted wil ¥ pound to all who rheumatism." i is the only scientific The Newioundianders are a gurious compound, They have all the Irish hatred of an informer, and the same cigerness to thwart the officers of the law, Hence this fleeing criminal was aided in every way: until be was put on board a fishing vosesl bound for Boston, where he settled down. The next case of manslaughter shows the reverse conditions. It was that of the mate of a schooner convicted with the captain of ing the death of sailor by brutality, He was septenced to five years. One day he escaped. The Newioundianders felt that his punishment was deserved, and while none would inform on him none would shelter him. He was hunted down al- ter un week, starving and footeore, and hauled back to his cell, In both of these cscs a reward of $400 was offer: ed for information leading to the ¢ ture of the fagitive; but nobody sought it, although . secures, ii. not aundreds, were in the secret. . x Almost. all the prisgpers. in the. peni- tentiary last year were, us has Leen said, convicted of petty offences. foreign sailors who visit St. John's and, when intoxicated, try to take chorge of the place, ave responsible for about one third of the couyictions within the city. One of the most amusing incidents in the history of the prison occurred about ve year-ago. It is mot un- common for people to bresk out of jail, but this ease was one of breaking in. A prisoner; recently he tarned | one ¢ in a tipsy mood, broke in through a window to whiskey and tobacco to his old cell mate, and robbed thé prison larder to got supper for 'himself. A" minety ay term was his uwitimate reward. he island' has but one town, St. John's; population, 30,000. All the other communities dre fishing vil W some of 5,000 people, others of A others of but 50, In the larger of 3hese outports dare magistrates and "In one outport the jailer was wont to let his privoners ont daily to till ir gardens or dry their fish, they returning at nightfall to be locked up. But one day & scamp betrayed his con- and éscaped, and a more strin- Ldriroigly recommend | On ing from the fishéry, liked his pri q so_ well that when a term twonien swws for the playthings. The experiences of the young women would fill a hook, but they ao not compare with the astonishment of the two bachelor storekeepers in the wilder ness when the five damsels paraded up to the store for supplies. One of the JOuDny women was in of some: thing to protect her ject, as her shoes were worn out. The best the bachelors could offer was German wool socks, and while she was waiting for « air of small-sized lumbermen's ov 00s to complete her outfit Miss Home steader pranced around the forest with the aioresaid socks and a pair of birch bark soles lashed to her feet with binder twine. r. King is euthority for ' for the statement that the young women are hecoming expert in the use of their axes. Lhey can cut down trees, but the stumps look so much like the work of beavers that an experi trapper would think be was on the train of the dam builders. The young women are more careful mow, for in felling a tree, they managed ip drop it on one of the cabins, and the own- er was compelled to visiting until her house could be ail. "They ure the grittiest bunch I ever ¢aw and I did't think they gould stay one night in the woods," i Mr. King.' "But they appear to en joy it. Yes, they are all yolng- from twenty yeurs up. They will come out in a few days and go to Minneapo- lis for & while, but they will be back on their claims again this sunimer, It will be easier for them to in then, for they have cut three miles of road through the timber, 'and when they strike that road there is no danger of their getting. lost, unless the beavers a cross cut on them while they are away.' - Made Church Fit The Organ. ire A ally built 2 ans are Pi to ir el but Jet it he recorded that in one stance at least g church was made to fit a pipe 3} REBOUNDING SOLE. VENTILATES SHOE. PREVENTS CONCUSSION, DISTRIBUTES PRESSURE. SPREADS WEAR EVENLY. DISPELS PERSPIRATION. DAMP-PROOF. SPRINGY. WRITE FOR CATALOGUE. . FOR WOMEN _FOR MEN church. Andrew Carnegie donated a pipe organ to the church. According to . Larnegie's system, cach organ is specially desi ol gto built for the church in ich it is to be placed. regres Pp iT pipe OF ' 1 former always demande a plan of the church which is to have a new organ, in order that the organ will fit into F. G/LOCKETT, Sole Local Agents for the SLATER SHOE. -------------------------------- the 'space set mpart for it. In the case of the Belmont. avenue church, a blue print of the plans were sent cn to Mr. Carnegie"s architect, and he to make his plans, and now the organ is almost complsted, A short time ago it was discovered that a mistake had een made in the blue print. and that the organ loft was aa mall to hold the organ. It MOR ice for. the jailer and | Wes necessary 'to tear down ihe TOR PACTS cards together night: | organ loft and sebuild it in order to Bh o he ville Thos make room for the new instrument. the soci i sl | This work: has now been done and rm 1 the everything is ready for Mr. Carnegie's gapirad refused to. leave, and the jee had to be called to eject him. violently and was sonignond io. a yfacthes am, at the close of w tried same 3 fesd him to left. the cell door open, and when his. hu compelled: him, be moved out and away. In another of these prisons. only last summer it was a E Liverpool Service, RTLAND. Avril | 1H E | : ii! £8 ¢ «01 EL §ok i 5