Daily British Whig (1850), 22 Oct 1909, p. 9

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---------- The 1 hh -S qa YEAR 67-- NO. 247. : ow : : KIN STON, ONTARIO, t FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1909. N- JITNING lr Noun OLE 50YEADS 5 EE. Ls DH PR Jovy Sted ord' Lrovisiers : : . es . A. struggle wit her xe The Graphic Tale of the 7: \N 7/85 oy ri a dent oh da Duly Survivor of the Kane [= -- tu rl." ohn | miraculous SeQrYY grass, which rows ey hoy ; bh dh oe small celery. 3 on J 5 5 A . $ «age +h R CE . {| "We flung - ourscives upon it as men it Snag 8 . ' wy ¥ : dying of thirst in the desert rush up i {on a well of wate. Within an howe after eaijng that marvellous grass we could feel its offects in the easing of 5 ¥ our aching, mad, rusty joints, av survivor, of the experiences of a polar \ / * y Wi £8 ex . allie § » Sig Fi Ns gr - . though we 'wire experimeing a res expedition fifty-siy years ago. \ / : 3 . : ; jah 3 0 Ra pa rection from a deathbed. . It was October "4th, 1833. The ti y a oY « : " Ron f : . my | 'While we were there, Carl Peléeson rible experiences of the members of the : ! /// = elisg kd g TER bf \ ff IR hi tealled from the heights that the 168 Kane expedition, in the second cruise ! : : ' which had hemmed us in was on the in Arctic seas of the brigantine Ad move, We hurried to the Seareely had we gone a mile vance, in quest of Sir John Franklin experiences fated to go on for lor ; 8 ; J Ry ; . | al TN shore than a heavy mist fell, th months to come--had aldreaay hecun . 7h HR rq ie 5 ; i 5 LR iss : : he ' now, which wymo so thickly that the The desperate and subsequently ia 7 \ Lo SR ee ME : i Rh f 3 20 Soa a oacs, as we worked them, froee | mous "Boat Journey," so thrilling! ) \ p x NS ! ; SH a : Pe AS 3 into great clubs of solidified shash. We recounted by Dr, Jona I: Hay ; wa were utterly helpless, and took refuge in tho midst of its bitier strugglds fon a cake of ie yo bigger than a On a low, rocky plain between Whale small house and Wolstonholme sounds, starving on : gd 9 3 x h ho = ; : 4 = ! Our weight all but turned it over. the stone lichen they dug from the \ N 3 ea ; aii SR le . Sciung up our tent. on that precaki- rocks for food, amid blinding snow, - 2 PRR § et EF. al" : " - ~ : ous, toppling refuge, we lay under its the party huddled in their improvised | 5 : v i a ' --- cant protection, afraid to take the tent, : | i ws -- . _" " sleep wo so urgently nevded best the Porson had Sy, jokes for hs \ S moment of the tiny iceherg's overturn now and hen wrote Dr, aves, n 22 | catch us unawares. Alter two hours telling of the battle against the low A Wo/rus Avr a rk oa oat of ving despair, "and Bonsall entertain | on whisk Sur tnt stot cracked i ol us from time to time with some | | broke, floating away. igi rollory." mos, water-tight, seal hides, A when they emerg from the tively cured. is the only recourse, and' that. too of- = lar explorers in 'the old dave whe i : original drolle of | a) th th : & ww of tie shi { *The 1 Ioiamoke" alassis No. sal s tin. failk to shve the ra ar , MH y hen AN Arclind tent Shh ud we dans To-day one of that old, old polar fashioned and sewed with the infinite vr of the 1p. wr London-smoke glasses w 18¢ ten, fails to shyve the victim ife apt. Bonsall met privation and hard- |: B had expedition survives--Bonsall who | patience of the Eskimq women, whose | Explorers provided ti res, upon [were kngwn then as 'railroad glasses'; ] "In the latter part of February, ship so corfully. The two terrible] 3 2s avn fugking a bottom of "entertained with ome origing . most prized possession was a steel | their departure from United [they have since proved indispensable 1551, Lieut. Brooks took ont one of forms were sewrvy and despair tarpaulin, designed to keep out the Jer het Capt. Amo Ponsall, ; ewing needle fit for that all-impor- { States, with: hollowed hemispheres of jin Aretic work. HH. by any chance; ajour sledge parties to. lay out caches They worked as. allies; the humaz moisture of the melting 100 os SNOW deiphig, 'the m wn whose opinion tants labo {wood that fitted ¢ the eye cavities {man went into the open without hs}ior a long expedition that was to fol- vitality, sapped av its well rho fon which it' rests. Bat fo- , Wik or " Nomi 3 10 \ 8 : 1 - ! free | oo. win eo often called for-on } Over the dra i Shetland wool 1 were arade, with a horizontal [Elasses our "first. question to Mm on}low. There were hali a dozen men in the rotting scurvy, sinking to the low liam Godirey, a Whitehall sad in alle or - ¢ 1 \ ' : . : various aspects of the Cook-Peary con- (were d ' kin breeches ending at | slit, cut with a saw, through vhi us retura $, How are your { the party, among them my own step- est point, while the very souls of the | OW, parw. tryst hye drop . y ; { | 8 Te aker . vi thi < troveesy as the opinion of one man . where they overlapped the | the wearer wa upposed te peer. R | brother, Jefferson Baker, who, when he men died within them aid left mere. | Iv ante the on. But the alin, overs pini 1 y {tent hottom syoped with him | en whose very hones hold the memory In view of achiovomints hroug the world's altention "of late, it interesting to learn, from the lips of a of hoot tops and wore drawn tight with | Were almost exact: copies ol the ' "We had « an from Nova } rned that I was resolved - on the useless hulks of sturdy, daring, sea | thos: feardul flied with ironey loath thow shields which sere anil-car i by tia, named ary Riley .* who st | voyage, vould not be restraified . jrom traine rthietes x bag. His weight all hut dragged ihe wo fearful conflict # with the wen | a leather tho 1 "Over the sweater came a body coat, |the Jskimos and ually worn on thi® glasses before starting an a sled nlisting too = With the records of all Arctic work | *h0le tontiul of Gs over: the sharp, now "Ee h his lip «ill ready with 1 ith hood attached, that |} no op- | the sledge. journeys the huskies to|joarmey which® lasted: several days. | The sun, during the sledge journey filled with such evidence, it is astoi- | ee oF Limberg, Sh ley bu in 470m lis ups, si Bpay Wi Ring +l | yr t slaw-hlindne 6 MoS \p- | When he react the ship he yoked fof ths ' came 8 vi thi ¢ tas hauling. hint the ice saving grace of laughter despite % |Cning except the one at the neck. It|proevent w-blindness, the most i he reached the ship he loo He f that party, became unusually warm, ishing that the Seon' of the intimate |" ip to the ice on which we | 1 Hing «© esol t \ bright 1 for ble § Om rey at | i 1 werti 1 ols i four-score years, has come a group of Was drawn on over the head. It was palling 5 u lesolat nag omfortable and completely at {and their own exertions put all of relation between physical health t and i Y atin fale skins. with the: enap- [porth ease. . {them in a perspiration that can be morality shonl ° ast ok] ramp It takes 4 hook for In Habs to those impressive memories which tell made of buffalo skins, with the enor pars { ould he we waited nearly 3 hat Arcot 1 ti t } mously thick, heavy hs side, But, | blessed forethought, plas hd your eves hold out, Ri omfipared only with a Turkish bath. [hali a century {6 lave its promulga ' of the adventures during' what Arcuce « Xp oration moan wh i » ¥ » {4 1 In bleak weather. the hood was |3 he tinge of "London smol I asked him. : : { Exhausted, they slept as they ware ttion. The conditions - .duriag all of ater boat journey of the Kané ex. the conquest, of the pole was a mu drawn up over a skullcap of sealskin, | it ak rk, wire-sereencd feames. Never felt"a thing," he responded. | withont making change oftheir soc fthose minor expeditions were extreme { pedition's party, bent on: escape - ab derous mirage in the cyes. of men, from which the adventurers found it | bad y been incloded sn the Kane diy. 'And why not--aren't my 'When we brought them back from [but thiv proved that only a very fow | A0Y cost and it takes (wo books to more than half a conlury ago requisite to cut the entire erown. The outfit Without these early forerunners [eyes perfectly dood ? that short trip, helpless, Lieut. Brooks tchowe spirits, endowed with enormous ell of the famous Kane sxpodition gs I'he garb of those early explorers, hy atr of the bead, worn long, = wave {of the modern .gutamonile goggles the "He stood there - for Ah instant lost #ne of hix toes, John Wall Wilson | reserves of vitality, can maintain cour | whole ? said, was planned on the same PH maple protection except in the lower {whole party. must havy/ heen i | Hookn al me in the pride » lost three, and my unfortunate broth- | » amd. devotion to duty under crush And throauh the most appalibg ciple that a fireman applies in fight temperatt roi Indeed, Captain . Bon- {for they found the i woods strength hen suddenly er had his foot frozen as high as the | adversities I those adventures Amos Bonsall foe often . found 'it necessary, when | guards worse than eless ) hdic} © On, 'my God! he cried es instep, Two. days aitef we. got him | ° was iti the latter part of Aug- {bh bale and strong, always choeeful ing flames, for clothing that keeps out Jl : tho heat works as effectually to keep J) 1 2 : x rte | Wandgring « italerable "suffering. He back to the p he died of the lock- Just, ISM." said Capt. Bonsall, "that od cheering, fated to Jive and eratk bodily 1 oy out the cold. 7} alorelse or | "break | Even, va ome . hid wk precisely as though some giantViaw consequént upon the freezing of Kane ralled us all together and | his joke add smile more thaw half & Thermometers, during the expedi- : . atk p ot them on s lavaid «tl EN 1 i now- {1 had smitten him. full in the fs his feet ' explained that, as we were practically | coninry "aftarwdrd during the days ' tion, registered a minimum tompera- ood head keep "off het atstroke. blindness. ~ "In that instant the may had gon Whenever the Jrost.reaches to the | wrecked in-- Rensselaer Baw, he could {When all thy Avorkd is quarreling over ture of seventy-cight degrees bolow ja very time when he rémoved 4 "A. man amid the Arcti . 3 d Tor hive days he was an apr jbhone the injury refusés to heal until [ not. "in conscience. attempt to main- | the disconary of thal {ervible, man: zero, + Fahrenheit. Starting - from the |, \p Tim wou have been to invite | Captain: Bonsall, "may go foi HG t ee ! bone and all slough away. During the | tain naval organization. All who illing North Pole most useful garment of all, ) » loss of & from the coll. hree days without his eveshields, ) know ask apt, Be following winter, Dro Hayes, by acei- | wanted to try to reach 1 pernavik, | HM a Napoleon, in spite of his taith nature had provided, he wore next t The nose he fore part of the {imagine that he has escaped thelall, * etry h \ 1 i jdent, immersed both J8et in the water. | 1,200 L300 miles to the south tonsall live now to prove there his skin a light woollen shirt on | cheeks, the lower portion of the brow readful penalty. But when |} h sm toes left ? x n fi He irom one foot, the small toe | cou 6. though he devised othing in destiny, docs not an or came un sweater of the coarses ind ali hail to be exposed to the air. no rns to--the ship a sho the | hites { next nerhiborsamd: from the | against it, Ponsa ll live now 1p prove there is a wool, made in Scotland, with draw matter how fearful the chill. That {eves descends him, and will} So long as the frosting ets ol i + ureat toe and the two be: I was one of those to undirtak ry real and powerful sort of "des and ocks of the same matopadl, he meant that -evervbody had frosthitten | writhe wit} > 5 ) t sari the skin and the superficial fl : ide it." : the adventure. The whole + speddition ny in an inheritanee of 2xfeptionnl t be dis $ weeidents wope not, ' had scurvy, and Dr. Ka wh it health aud strength and cheerfy w I'he hoots: were bought of th lei diately brought out the red inflamma now. blind the victim nev 1-1 But it bones are involved, amputation © catest danger that menaced po- worst, was the most id or hat 2 » EH afl chorful on I ! ) St § f . - . = we -- ne Sl : . semen -- HEI ther women, it was yuite dead herself the pleasure of ending, 1 act that Teonnd Van Ausdal and] After tha" there, wore days. together LATCHKEYS USELES felon curled up in a blanket just dn 2 Cupid, however, had other Aiews, \ ' i i * a aunghter, Chepulpo, Mexico, ha \r- {disagreeable ; days when the fogs hid cides the door, on the stones's Wath . > Open Door is Rule in Su . + which every interioc courtvard and en anual two weeks t, th window wed thare, : un : formation that the father the doctor they were strangely perfect P nny { * ( ' ( V $ Ie 3 \ \ a } . i H thanoe is paved, and all of th aper of oid : ade best b nd solicit | reach, sorawling al 1 lini the wined but one night. say in ug Those were the days when she forgot { Em 44 a . ; Nealds, Yok it. is a position : 1 3 | i i p i to Iw bac sly was the ; bent-with-her w wi l i aving that business required bis her: great stature and that she was : ; toe in the land of | sought after, and the g iatekespee ra ks youn he had 4 ¢ | fnea ashey her fin : 0g dition for a fiw days and hespoaking not like ather women. Bat there were he atchkey." sail a mining engineer | highest among the servants, i" rame and disappeared befor he vulsivelv at every twi ; very care and attention for his dag still other days when she would give | who had been in Mexico for tM8 past | or r-vealizod hi proximity ox the tor- | {hey came in contact : i tor during his abscage. ; The maid * s all her Searing and half of Ber like if gear, + we Frais J Shela, Haly, S anil | A Treat For The Doctor. su s route by which he had approach "Tm falling sha sheicked # ve !tifieed in like manner, admitting in ads | she could be young "again and sma woughout Latin America there is a |oetober Lippincott's Madge Carson h n yled. In her philosophy of! life there [me ! Save me! dition that sl id accepted a gene- | and: pretty. For those weee the .wo- |smvant in every. house and hotel, A Philadeiphian who hath si i ; 1 x : 1 N 1 ane ten 3 3 » . \ : 2 #4 heroic proportions « ore, 1 were other things worth while hesides The limb responded toa st pull, | rous tip for any serviees she might | ben men lance d, and in Pauline % { whose business it is to open the door | tortunntily rgnined his health as 3 that, to herself she Ve ecmed | hee beloved theories of healing, and |ecomine slowly to th ind ' ender father she had found the ideal of ber [ly Mexico vou wonld think, heing so last vear the subi of an exiofged young. At jst what "ed g : thiz faut had opened wide the daor for [when the girl was helped in an il { vam to Chepulpo brought the womanhood and youth near this country, that the Amcrican | .yamination by preialists we talk and petting ; over FCupid's entrance a chair to recover { response that Vag. J al bad ro- |. But the end came with the release latchkey would be common. But auen The examingtion: seems to. ha news but if" thes . iv deed . It happened one bright wérning that : 3 bt. Lite} antl nureha ; CC properts dzom_auarafitine ; They wore bidding in the finest hotels iy the copitad the Liishied Dr. Bla. said -thed been they -- had-also ended bedford ha } reason of NI. an eXPert Darsman the stoop Food-in e wi % Pauline s big doprs- are closed at on vino elock tor one of the doctors, wham they memory began and without any particular inconveni- |} wT filled with sudden tees, : r and to gain admittance alter that algne fob a moment, 'for I have 5 " wry ta go { ie ve ir f 2 Usually people spoke of her a see or dang a herself, = rescued | Hy 4 : ry } Ie he ol . ) hour vou have to pound on them with | ficed that his eyes are positive man self-centered and somewl] il boat from dui ¢ on the rocks just | ; ; : ( the elosct never ad a mother and --love the | the great knockers that hang outside ing. 1 assume. then, that my case is but that was because nat vor 1 cde 1 ohnitely flagged "chan . . . : gil ¥ t1 oct tt. Pauline' After five minutes 'vou hear a shepy | ot FAV ahs a . ; ' : 12 eo, snd | to fe jo ctor = : . : s F practice had made hér pa ne web, to nrprise found in the rin ' fray day bran ha w doctor, © 1 OWINE = 1 srant Wibhin,. ther some muttering "Well." hesitated shysician ade the art of concealing her o 1 on wd © upconscious, a A ; 3 han father whispered when Pauline had and the Spanish, ward which mens, } A re ad 3 st. of all $hose i \ : ty Wad ated Yrom A Blnh nn the bar, | (linsed away. "I'm a fortunate man, I'm coming.' Fibally. the. small' deer Irgsech. "1 hardly feel justified in. 0 PAS o f OS¢ In & fg faint I 3 } anne! ' n : x X & ) yo oh SEY t i 3 eve: guessed that, Who Si me lio ly_grateful, | Same a knock 'at her d ; ye channcl, had boon | Madge, to have at last found the one-1. Po PCC TNE A LB CUNO Praying: that, Hat | wndersiand Tos eo PSEC i 0 2A iffer 1g} ' ) ory 4 a 2 saved > : i or : « v o i : > he ORE ! » Sot cen herself and her sister eo had 1 i the boat- "he 1 k in 1 the ~ : placarderd, the | orand woman. Will you, Madge, could barred avd id poet ® ug i Dr, Blank that he is going tof ence between hersedl and het i t v 1 { » 1 ¢ a . 4 , : 0 v HRCON SIONS, hing vgl vou love me ¥ wl Gi an you step 1nsic eo hen, Hin number of mieresting pperations on irl were d 1 wv the swash of the] Madge Carson, M.D., bewildered and |Y24 dont want to doe in the park. |. , y : the nex wht Yow are ke pt ou Inte , gock® waching to the knees ™ noses und cheeks, for exposure imme- [needles driven ito. th : o leonsequences may ne << 1s at Jarton Bay. where she hand. split t a v5] o the ten days before. The clerk gave | the hotel and even the land, but to hut that his abouts was ot unkoown bolging pur i pillow and small, dainty girls with pietensions t use I ¢ we doct promptly great beauty, But she did, and rg : --bied A : : the Ison. But the doct was there, her! yibelieving, had but one thought : 0 there had been tines jor repaning Lacy x nel ; \ xe a \ ho i Kl rl ¢ hands ¢ ng the hot pillows: "I'm so different from other women, you git poriero,, as the kiwepey Kidney Losses Stop Madge Carson' wiffld have 'been t ET Juve A Pooh Lh I C1: Yerk : ministering every: wa she stammered; "so big and so-- bo the: is called, a piece of alver The escape of albumen from the sys- happy woman . i wrbed bh shrill scream and the ws another gra; * Different ¥°° he laughed. Of | Between eleven and midnight the 'fe tem is most dangerous. The trouble is Happily, though, ar her pea | : nity juired hu i p ker F ane ) which the doctor ° eve r- | course. That's why T love you. But [18 UD cents om twelve on unlilivay may not know it. Get to the mind, she 'was a warker, n ; und- | mom ind 1 ore Htc ih a ' sb by Wearicd by Iicossant: wi Fong not hig" 'Madge, queenly-. My queen.' mornipy he t y~regulated hy root of the disease--the loss ambitions y the t re: 11 da d h : thins ) C7 fshe slept in her chair, g sdde De. Carson is still a popular physie- |eutom--steadil incoeams, Between {uing Peck's Kidney Pills, In boxes sponsibilitics _ as eldest da had | it at Hreition of home, iy : Lia ee Ce. I at the md of ens il she [ian, but .from the heart of! a happy [one and three it is from (wendy five to la5. at J B. 'McLeod's, corner ceased the burden v popu phys | with ' 12 intention o CET hi 3 A tl home, she laughs with her husband at |loriy conts, and after three iL is bali 'und Broek' streets, (Wade's od ician bore heavily upon ev yi A i , and hit t h 1 ha 4 ' pee fe t he had x f wn to see big | Cupid's queer caper and smiles to hear [a dollar. y ahd corner. Princess and Strong shoulders But. even: so. ; t h for 1s ine. | secant s tl VO l \ i : the | him "Wonder at "the distorted lenses "Many a night 1 have heen awakened. streets. Money back if not sa life was a placid pyol, 1 tig : face | threngh which for so many years she [bw the pounding of the knockers in { tary. smooth turnpike, the bro . ? a working with emotioh:® beheld "Herself." v . won| the, neighborhood © of my hotel. of successhil sadeavor. She ad in ; earning to rid ome mu ri « Yes," she replied, "bh : ' met tig ® {timed Bne man for ten minnies before | The ongést telegraph ciragit hi mired as a strong woman a 8 ONS «= doet ele 3 Ao0ag L She turned awav then, | had I American rv cum ring {1 fell askep.' Probably he had neglee? . tween London "ai Teheran, the "api-. skilled in her professidn. but : : dropped on | ¢ 0) wnd h the manufacture of ~ ed to fee the 'partoro," or else + the Tal of Persia. It is 4,050 miles long. © sight, if she had pve wd a hbpe v s fay or ¢ red wen he | in i Pau ture arly objeelions to i 150 {keeper of {he pata was drank, as be! On' he tutni of England last yenr : 1 i \ had 1 offi ter disel the ' has come.'"! have been overcome. ' frequently is. These "porte usually | there woes 1400080 horas winployed, : that love might come to ti i Ee

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