| 7 . : in the NOTES AND COMMENTS Under the ordinary conditions of mod- ern dyiving life it takes a lot of energy and constant effort to hold one’s own. Even the able bodied: feel this. If one 4s crippled or handicapped in any way it is often a serious problem how to live. A dwarf who was arrested for stealing declared aN tee had to selal ” starve, « “A hasn't a chance as long as he’s et ae if he wants {4 bea thief he has the best chance in the world. There. are men in every large cily the year round looking for dwarfs to assist them in their work.” ‘The context indicates that the work con- sists of robbing stores by pushing the dwarf through the transoms, In’a way these ulterances of the mis- shapen youth areva reflection upon our eivilization, The ancients solved the problem by Saha {6 death all chil- dren who gave any evidence of being weaklings. Modern thought is repelled sons that the dependents should be put fo death as the cheapest and on the whole best solution of the situation, But while such opinions find no favor with the majorily it is undoubtedly true that | &4' 4 person who has anything abnormal in lis physical makeup has. a hard time of it in life. The giant and the dwarf are in the same class. Nobody cares much about having them around. Some people can- not endure the sight of the crippled, even when their hearts are moved by Blories of misfortune. It simply irri- fates them to see the evidence of suffer- ing. But opposed to that is the almost pathetic remark wasn't small I would not be asked to help in stealing. Td get -a man’s job and a man’s wages, and I'd live on the y | is but the echo, often mistaken and m of the dwarf, “If-1} > THE COST OF it Is One of the Man Can Have “If thou wilt - perfect, go sell that e to the poor, and thou and every man on the street or in the store knows it one value forever remains perma- nent, unvarying, and that is character. Every other asset may be swept away and success still “one * He Te remain; every other aid may failure only Eva a4 aig Jacks. the wealth of charact Character is that, of which mepula bor, e last, the ulti- Fis, the trend of he whole being towards the bests it fs the passion and power that holds one true despite all persuasion. It is the one thing worth having, be values depend. leaves poor him robs whom the soul, the er to appreciate, the purity of heart which sees God and the good, the peace and quietness of a good con- Science, have fled. wise ever above all others. Jove righteousness more the way of virtue, ward look, and the approval o! A GOOD CONSCIENCE above all other prosperity or advantage. luals, the imperishable value ever has been that of character. square,” Thi set. comes not to a man by accident. He who is rich in character, Tho oft-repeated sentence, “I wish |whose success. in many ways is built thal I had your chance,” is used in con | UPO hi cee this way, does no! ratulation, in reproof, or in half envy. |My gsutay gayest 4° be, Bpods trues Ki only emphasizes the thought that there | ter; it costs more than any other thing, are many people in the world-who really {for it is worth more than all other never have much of any chance. Such | things. : i may be due {o prejudice or it may the result of environment. The raisin, ot figs from’ thistles presents auitienties usually regarded as impracticable of so- Jution. The making of men and women o children raised under certain condilions is just as imposstble. It follows as a necessary conclusion, st bi he which every boy chance with every other. That would be a genuine democratic society, But we have not reached that state yet, and there stil must be thought and a little who ave normal in physique, strong and healthy, and who perhaps do not al- ways. realize what such an equipment}; fneans {o them in the battle of life. Pe ee BIRD MIGRATIONS, me Do Not Dare Travel by Day — Night Has Its Dangers Too, fe birds that. are surest and switt- as the swallows, do not | 40w2. f hesitate ce tae tah day. Those less “alrong of wing a conspicuous plu- mage ee not tisk “the daylight. he night migrations: Tavs their ul Fate vclal di The gas ane ge 25 in their vicinity, to say nothing of church spires and light- | } houses, are. the bi i ligh rove a friend to many of our: night foraging birds dur- ing eason, when a wei is always easily secured iether viein Many screech owls have been seen reamed these lights in ican the present St girl had equal : slow and toilsome and at great price. If you would be perfect you must pay come | wil is best and | us e whole world stili |S have set this treasure |! Happy the people wate the clear eye, the te : CHARACTER Greatest Assets a in This World. which it might have been achieved. inds character in his sleep. The education of the even more definite than the education of the head. The school of eee has an infinite variely of courses and ap unending curriculum. Folks. who are sighing for goodness wwful when the; a8 2 janhood or womanh ABOVE ALL OTHER THINGS; do you desire this enough to pay for it your case, your coveled fame, your hetished gold, peraps your peat of mind? Is t “aa £50 of mi This does not mean that this prize ee eternity falls only e those who devo! themselves wholly to self-cullure, to the salvation of their oWn souls. best thought litte of themselves, ee Sai of the ing, to e things that blight by laying paying the truth and honor and purity, love and kindness and justice might remain oman. The world's wealth depends not on what we have in our hands, nor even on what we can carry in our heads. It depends on the things that we have and the beings we are in our hearts. Fools 2 5 houses, shelter, , rags, and toys,, who might live to make a life, and t mould liv to honor enduring; the gain of all ie that Tends. the heart every sacrifice that is a paying of the price of perfection, HENRY F. COPE. THE SUNDAY SCHOOL INTERNATIONAL LESSON, iT, 28. Lesson IV, Jesus Anointed in Bethany. Golden Text: Matt. 26. 10, THE LESSON WORD STUDIES. Note.—The text of the Revised Version is used basis for these Wor dies. Chronological Sequence of Events.—In point of chrono lesson plage in’ the ‘record “of Matthew, as is also the case in the narrative of N i anointing. of Jesus by Mary in eth Teally occurred on the evening pr fetig diekeringpnel: entry Joma’ event is given ils Sn oa) mothe: md ce to observe the exact chronological order in their narratives. The supper in the house of Simon occurred on the evening of Sat- to early hours of the day triumphal entry: occurred (Nisan 2) and which ended Sunday evening at s —_— 6. Now when Jesus was in pers shows it to b belonging elsewhere chronological- ae the leper—-One Simon whom, apparently, Jesus had heal ie of leprosy at some previous time. been aemre in jouse of Simon, ‘at which Martha was among those who eI AN arus and of Ne Some Naty: the sister of Laz- : Mar' or a passionate lover to see and swiftly not aortas front! the. Wording of the narrative at this point whether or not Mary was the e far more: profound than its meee ten nto these. good tid: ings, that is, the tidings = the life and death and mission. o} 14. Then--Apparently very soon aller the events, connected with the supper dousaHeigltp ea Bellin 5. Weighed unto him — Actually pieces of money. Money even, in: very _ small nt, as of @ it is im larger quan- {ilies in. Ihe: great barking hetwes every- where in the world. ‘The of the time coins even more important. Thirly pieces of silver—Thirly shekels, worl silver lars. ‘The sum paid to Judas for the be- common slave, 16. From that time he sought oppor- nily—A convenient place and time ed DREAD OF TINNED MEAT. thing. = tinned meats to tho ApEn Degen: Lonlod sine Boston. MRA leans for the months of June and July in 1905 as compared wi say you desire character, the perfection | full price, selling al) in order that right} © p | cogmizes aunts in the| © eruder coinage cl made the weighing of the ‘ lrayal of Jesus was the market price of ¢” {uni betray him secretly and to deliver ie ni} unto them. an iY. pany mi Great ps Sa Have Fallen off those for the same months this year are. u wk FOR x MAN-EATER A LUCKY SHOT WHICH LAID THD TIGRESS LOW. ‘The Genuine Man-eating Tigers are Rare and One is Seldom Killed. Although. ther in nsid- erable number in sant etist ae = In- the price of perfection. Unless ‘the pas- there are fortunately few man- an sion of life is this perfection it never} ers. A man. eauine liger is not distin, will you ession. Dreams of | ished, as would suppose, by leal goodness only waste the hours in|size o dled into this pers jous habit oF casuist, nor sheer vice; he no does he take to this dread- 2: & & S le and will not attack unles aera eh ee iat | a cos aN ia the wise The villagers, when news i brought in that a. tiger wn one of YeGchersDUESO Si Fear SURE aay fisleseatiie ind. cunweeaiea hard nate heifer, which they know from lon experience must have .had her ae broken at the tiger's first spring, but more with the hope of savi spot and make a dem Uger alinks eff into the Soran lesa until things become quiet age when he returns he needed: meal has heen removed. This may happen o same tiger, but there: comes a ne figer has learned his lesson and, inl- stead of slinking away as elires to a coig the “kil” to wateh it and c savag This is for the first {ime and the mon eating habit a ondent himself ( cerlaia defined paths through ihe jungle. night, ond he also are soon re- who becomes peculiarities of man ya man-eater, Keep out of sight. CUNNING IS NEEDED, Much ingenuity and per: weeded to bring a man to 5 pu do the latter.” Mary. saw and did the} tiger, few have had the good fortur exceptional thing, and her act therefore|to bag a genuine man eal was o specially commendatory, lucky experience happened to me soi 2 repare me for buridl--We are| years ago while oul had not troubled them for yee been brought in that a tiger had killed and eaten an unfortunate woman that very afletnoon near the main ‘about a mile away. i slart at once, as the st sink= after a hurried meal, —proceed- ¢ road accompanied by sonie aif dozen: et the -vilage scrub jungle and some ha a r e unfortunate woman's lothing were pointed out to on bushes by the Hc of the road, Having | & poet he men who ac- panied us se ani to consider they the done all that was required of a and took up a position on the road a 6 a respectful distance. The light was fast ‘fading, and we tered. the fuller the brute had taken was easy to fol rom on und where he had made his meal and what was left of the corpse, but no sign es and watcl for an hour hoping against hope that the brute might be in the vi tren the ‘¢ ple. of small trees that ‘we selected @ corpse. ‘The light was most se a few feet helow Mhele whereabouts ducing the doy waa nA ceeaele, ri Tsk, Con elas Te ale ae dol annd-was grad ne, A Siwy. Pre rete yee excitement April ®, page aa Sunday School Ban-} June, 1906—4 cae ae Tost sient "Ol a ae dark Sern orning Ama ner, for April, 1 Juliy, 1995—24,000 cases. The shadows were never in the same 3 eeding fe ointment. —“Oint-| “July, 1906—To date—Nil. two minut veliare and. even, ard, vel recious” I lins | wea labelled. our's |if the brute had retumed d neither of us The special kind of ointment] beet extract was imported in barrels, | Could possibly have seen sufficiently’ to named by the evangelist—nard o The names of the American firms: ship- have hit him inthe gloom of the over — was extracted from the blos-|ping to Albert. Docks were Armour, | Hanging trees, i ae pete of the Ini or Arabian nard-| Swift, Cudaby, Hammond, “Libby and | tained for about an hour ae . ‘The other évangelist give three} McNeil. 4 he Eu Ton ee aes num) hundred denarii as the value of the| “The t in canned goods is dead! vestigations in owls, began making 1-| ointment. feos -avteonual: Ibea' PTRE unltahon on: Ines Ubiecrnas: affect aired ie teaati or eoolmelne ue ve captured one of the owls and kept{ille more than, seventeen cents, and) ed everything that goes into a tin | ete the asin enllinty toe one “baather it Jong enough som sae was the average are wage of a com-| meat,’ vegetables, fish — every et Tee aaMats tien vaflectitig oe ing ‘“ i, | Mon laborer. actual value ot the} Such was the verdict o! maging be: ay BS ee a tia. Segue bre set of li ointment, there! te; in our coinage | director of ig firm Jargely interested bed ree Sok wea he caspee Std provided these particula: ¢ {would be a little more than fifly spies tinned a ene ea dP ay ander lids lor but in purchasing value it A retail aes related an amusing in- oaieatal Chace forth i nal lent G between three and five hhunarsd ‘eid je deep, far-reaching, and ae tee: ee MheH aBpal halt spay. ‘with a liitle dark line. The: ars Diller atipathy to all things in tins | cand a ous commotion subdue the strong light of day whien| & ‘They had indignation—Not all of BUSH Ne nee Drees ane ses pub ahead of us in the direction of the vik 4s 80 trying to owl eyesight, ‘The outer | {he disciples, apparently, shared 1 this} "A a ly came in to a pound | lids close only in sleep. indignation in from the ac-|of a famous cee ssa I count by other “evangelists: “But reaclied down the fin. co ontai Fn A HASTY FLIGHT. there were some that had indignation j and began to take out the pideuils, when tii at «1 famong themselves, saying, what} the lady exclaim you, no| Lights nae oun 2 ae en ie purpose hath this waste of ointment tinned goods (or. me! shouting, and the tent ubbub gave been made?” (Mai 4). ALL. TIN ODS. HIT, us the impression that the tiger had FOSSILS ‘AND GOLD. 10, But Jesus perceiving it—Perceiving| “Trade is paralyzed,” said_an ‘officiat| Killed some one else in th vig die Th, Alaskan eae nee ollenethe alts dhetes bidlen sods Soe ee ‘het one discovered that the lights were roa tire bodies, of extinct animals, such the manna, the mastodon, deer an se are Soundanily ined ie layers & above the gold-bearing gra So] 4 intimate is this association ac fos- ‘sil animal ins and the auriferous ‘deposits that’ Monsieur Obalski, wh« dately explored Alaska, says that the fossils serve spectors as indexes Consequently the an almost certain fagieaton Sra gold will be found in the ‘The eabins of man: males “ara pea nled with huge tusks and see unearthed diggings. criticism. {rouble ye the woman— Words das fault-finding disc ‘one of the iseiptes, that should not this shil- ings, and given~ to the poor?” (ohn 4) cariot, A a See es in Be Sense af oble or ~praisewor' ‘deed don under the spiraton of “inlense ae pissonale devoti ve have | “the poor always with you; ate @ ye have not always—In the words of Ua as Jesus points out a difference between general: ethical gations nd ales ‘arising out of special ete _ The seine recognize “but it takes ani obit: atl and he people ‘seem to es euyinian: in a “The ullimate effect wil ‘be to the ad- frit TN largely ‘affected. Sone of colonial packers, I” believe; t fust now everything is-at a stend- There have been no failures yet ectly REARS to the unsavory re- elation: bul « the end of the year. I imagine a go cot TERE of the smaller firms will be sent to the wall.’ —j—_— GOOD DAY. FOR HER. Ler—“T am sorry ae signe see you esi Hee “rhoinns—-Well, are was ‘siccan it a ‘turn eot & ae easily} wet day it wisna jenius | in. But J sentthe ae back down the rox that it was none ot man and a dozen villagers, each with a light of some sort come S in- Strugted to felch us back; the yellin and shouting were merely to keep their at have done credit to th music of the lion house at the Zoo at feeding time. The effect of our how! was as laugh- able, as it was slarlling. Every man seemed to his light or lamp and sheen sudden ‘lapkness and si lick SShulle and ely 1 when ne | eturn to finish his prospt fe | slaves, and within a monti\she really hietoie for ute.’ » % is1t?”. “A relreating footsteps. Im the momentary S confusion Ihat prevailed 1 noticed {be figure of the headman. who nee % Higttod: -toren, athe Yong handle of which for the moment got mae with his feet when he tuned start back in his Might. our arrival in camp short! af- course, we knew better, anee from these men to hunt in the morning. © sunrise. nes, my. companion je of trackers taking the dry lor signs of the ee my Shikari accompanying me down the road, having previously agreed lo make a detour through the forest énd meet the ‘others ata junction in tha ea a couple of ihe river river about a mile down. -1 continued along the road until within a few hun- dred yards of the kill, when I left the road and entered the sernb, to look for tracks and to approach the eorpse from he opposite side. s just | breaking as we silently scaled some broken ere a shik bove me, Sly. giant my posi: vi was not ready go- ing away trou a Pater gat al took a snapshot with my ight barrel, DUE INS beale disappeared before I could use my lef. My disap- pointment was Kens. the. chine had and I. had EON PROVED FATAL. We returned to the r aintenpaitiorehileant to the Dy companion, and@sat down to blow my tobacco, in utter. dis soon appeared, as they shot and made for my dir now joines forces and ane took up the tr 1d astonishment we found spot of blood and then another, and be- fore we had gone a hundred yards in the scrub quite a patch of blood had heen left on the ground where the brute d_ rested: for evidently oe u in the tiger ini Ahosjungles are the low growl as he pass- Took no further nollee, af her, greatly seared, but w 0 inform us that. the tiger Cs ered direction was very The: ground in. Wis broken and the un- dergrowth almost impenetrable. We hunted high and low ill the sin went, Gown aul mete fone a. Netubr camp without succes was not until the following after- r had noticed some vultures wheeling an the alr over: the lunge y three miles out, closer spection found the tigate Tying den in @ patch of high grass. Willing hands on brought the ear cam was a full-gi oe tigr the. pinl i Sr eondiiions arid-any. ballet nnaaneaven a back leg and burst in her stomach, —— WOMAN RULED THE TOWN. The Population Was Enslaved by Her Cookery. Never has’ the ing, queen® aroused enthusiasin. ai jarring c more interest and jects than reign: the town of Florenee, . She was Florence's only woman resident. Floreneo is a newiy founded and rap- idly rising town, owing its exister to th oe 2 ja undeveloped dots that it attracted tush of en: ferprising westerners, with the result that the town acquired a population he- wh the single ss Sh in ext male population, Pishe followed rush to the new city in the hope of establishing « pros: perous school wving to: the total lack of pupils or the iikelihood of got ting then, circumstances soon led her to make some more effective peal to the needs of the mata Happily, hee educational equipment éluded a course of cookery and domes- Als Goanomy In Western college, and - a established a_restauri eer Sa the first which ae ad rx ss srienletie eal popu! hitherto been” subsisting ie camp fire ions, in fact. by virtue of her mbes mayor) _and. absolute queen the tov © Natipauy trom The firat inpre Was, the eenest competition for te of so powerful a princess, but a_young engi eer named Austin was finally the lucky 5 peepee oe pits, , Stvles ipeadingyt.. “I see. that ‘ofessor Wisemi the prophet, has ested: lake the want wilesotve lo an end next Christmas Day.” Jo! am } “Before or after dinner, pa?” ad been courting the girl gladly reilerale that stalement now,” @ replied, In eat tones. “No noble Bone of ok s fired with a eee ambition, priyes:Fagohution mn, than f “Well, Tom, I want you to do Something “Speak, darling ! sk me to be your wife. eve abel fooling long enough,” ITHE POLICE OF LONDON We “Bobby to fay e extension of a branch of the ni h|neapolis and St. Louis » it, C oi. iat information ea rende for aly WALKING GUIDE-BOOKS TO POINTS OF INTEREST. Salaries Paid the Men Who Guard the} ‘ Greatest City in the World. tig Tourists having occasion to enlist: the rule, intelligent. ‘This is because’ only ean! good ‘character hey get uy upon the rolls a rigid civil service exam- controvertible certificates of i the constable—as the London is called—is ye feo i favor. If h oes his is sure of his Sate and a pene The 0 take money male instant dismissal, the soe erik the location of its famous: plac jirect_ one to the resi- Tenee ‘of : living ce! nea or to a aueinh nook immortalized by Dickens. And y these men are wofully underpaid. Den joining the force, the recruit must be content with A SALARY OF $330 A YEAR; and it is only after a jeonsiderabie term, of praia that he receives his maximum wage 0 "The pay_of New York patr aioe ranges from. $900, ab the be- ginning, to A New York roundsman gels $1.5 sergeant, a captain, s 4750, and the chief inspector, $5,000. on the London foree, a. sergeant, Rayon wilh a roundsman, gets $720; an inspector, cor- responding with. he New York sergeant, 81 Si pert ater aes corresponding nerican metro- ‘so great as between the men ean. A posts London taxpayers $9,331,145 a ry to maintain the police foree, Which amount $7,251,069 45 paid for sal- tax, rather than tack of Goppeclatnl of services seeking aes ger is work, ‘The latest compensation published statistics of the strength of “Here, howevehscave _eompleiely last London's. police superin- him, and s not until about midday | tendents, that we ater got touch of him. As-|geants, and 14,1 cending a hill on chance, over a mile men aig sipeantcndeaie ‘ame upon old woman | tor: ts, and 1,627 ex a, being questioned, | were aeaayen on special dutl early that morning, {nection with var at her work, she| partments, ‘Th P re looked after public welfare in the usual mannel ch member of the force is granted one day off each fortnight, so that one- fourteenth ot the: entire: foree és. con: ot ‘ aadition, the average number being 47a day. The men of the force work EIGHT HOURS A DAY. guard the greatest cily in the world, ‘The district to be Peale ex- Aaa over & mals ol mi! from. eee 88, an Gel ee 002 sq. are! sive of the old paclionL Rae A the ily of London proper, which consists of “one squat mile in the heart oH the wet gathering of humanity, 1 @ population of 26,897, and under tie Lord Mayor has il separate and ¢ y government and its own polie remainder of the metropolis is posed of twenty or more separate cilies, each with its own cheat councils and. other mu officials, but all together nating that past commonly. known es London, different snip ech RULE ENE ever, have no control over Hie police that’ guards thelr eteeets, The: Melro- politan force,-as it i directed by the national government lou he f the home secretar ed: by dlsmissol, house. Visitors Uhat most polieemen nccop tips. If you ask him how best to proceed to some point of interest. and reward his, cour. a. shill: ouch Its helmet anid thank ing, you. voluntarily or in the uiseonge of duly there is a class of rewards. the general practice in the force se8 report to headquarters such rewards, as nay en. given. and secure permiss! fo retain them. A constable or. pi ni s life ro hpretyy AS eral thing the policeman is allowed: to keep the reward; but he cannot réceive anything from people’ in the eomnmnnity sen he is employed to watch. In such he is supposed to be doing only es ath and paid duly. GOOD SENSE AND TOLERATION mark {he conduct’ of the pen hese Corubhynices nat thy London e toy Bl heh havshiveas _oF insolent orders inight in- cite riols. The policemen do nothing 1 irritate a erowd that 1s disposed. to be yond antired: dom give onde done courteous ae ndon lice know the Lon ot harmony tgny or iad 3s paso Teco in preventing crin his bringing offenders tg Hens Fever murders, in f They were silling on the other e held in sofa, and she looked with ineffable ter | check’ to a commended) 28; €01 derness_ into. hi ble es.|sidering the vast territory of crowded ski she murmured, with a tremor in| humanity in which criminals may her voice, “didn't you tell me once you}rome lost. During 1904 the number ot would be willing to'do any act of hero-} persons arrested in London for all ism for my sake?” lary, and 1} offences was 126,530. — Of these, 3,167 ae convicted in the i courts, 428 were convicted. b: 0 were acquitted and 21, tz were dis- ‘he proportion ci yharacter, Once ap- | froy in the anes on opposite sides ef the} 9! nwillingness to inerease this | ans do no - | lay arte spam, the Italia ay, the Chine : sions or “briltient |S -| May and October siderable sum, in the ogaregale, was: saved the public in ee Be of recovery _ of lost property. 2 pul be con- veyances 52,131 to headquarters to ty nae anon THE NUMBER OF AN TAL ACCI- D in tue streets of London has dee) mae During 1904 the number of, policemen injured while-in- the discharge of their . 346 were iselp- | other from a liquor dealer, ven: lor’ be legil | on to the attention of the authorities. theso 14.491 persons were arrested, and 10,880 were convicted. Presenting this record to the punto, the members of London's police forct think they should be better paid for their services, ——-4-" f CURIOSITIES OF DIET. Strange ee That Serve Man for Food im Many Lands. ues Se ea SER BA not east and bird and fish; the ellis one inset orld RAT” s helerogencous table, says Ehamber' Poudel: The turtle is the cornerstone of even au mide banquet, ~ nok urprising that the land tortoise is used as food wherever he is of all sorts ane Africa, America and Au australia, and whab 3s the crocodile or alligator but a lizard da: ® z sas a = e great rivers ef other parts of Africa, South Amee® ca and southern: Asia the ungainly rep- tile is devoured with relish, ropes t take kindly to it as an article of diet, although they try it out of curioy Ot viper felly’-and the tate Frank Buek- dnd), tioas Saloon enthusiasm knew ne bounds, ass hoaconstric: tor tasted like veal. Frogs are eaten from East to West from China to the United States, The French were the first to frog up at table, but the Sranicees Ji then ‘a close second, Who some day the British w ment the entente cordiale by ado) the Gi mane Snails, slimy and repulsive, are look- ng Gallic taste for the hopping ampy south of Europe and the United Slates any sentimental repugnance i lowe eigh against the ite a nutri qualities of the Jand mollusk. The snails are collected by women and! enya nm and are ed in el rest food to impart to them the requisite flavor. John the Baplist lived on locusts and ey, and innumerable people re- gale themselves on the same food to~ any African races are the chief eaters: toca, a apis fin rtens the he When fa- zlh “stalks: “the Tent ihe Arey pitt 9. powder tl dried ects he a stored, and with four ie it Honey is irs ccommenes tan Tavon, bul the Cingalese rance to the reath ‘mM Brazil, the Bast Indies, Mexico and: amony the Indians of North 2 A ants ave largely consumed, re th larger termites of Africa, ta natural Be ‘will not miss their with the There rt ni accounting for tastes and consequently one is content with bald- ly stating that in, N parti. cularly. large — spider: ad dn Brazi} eighteen, yee long senlifed are great- ly enjoyed. When the take mnedv ertente for caterpillars, eagerly eaten in many regions, as are silkworms in Madagascar and’ Ceylon, oeares oak ey ST. LAWRENCE ROUTE TO ENGLANK It Was Onee a Social Crime to Go Vio Montreal. The London Mail s more than five years a “TL ts zo that Allan Jiners Victorian and Virginian, are on biners, while as Ben Pa. cifie liners, ct Emp ee and” the Empres: have the of Bri tain, ch Se. V "seventeen s, and ean cove * the ase bee eo ae and ‘Liver o Nir tw anit four heii on Ae fist : ip knots. ax the ic ing that Can adinns. should be ‘ing. to the point where they di think at ging via New York pelea ee ee “A dog,” said mi 2 Mike, phe the few caine qutit Toler Plodding Pete. seemed to consider {i lalement for a moment, and then a 's SO. One was folleri en Nghe e trap Sat could lering me ye y Keep morica \ } | j ;