's h m 'hlillE)flll)iii WWW , IO EUR“? What Canada Offered and What New- i. foundland Wanted. W Ottawa despatch says; In re- .‘u’d to the annexing of Newfound- land and Greenland to the Dominion It may be stated that in 1895 Can- ada offered to Newfoundland to as- llme of its debts 810,350,000. which was equal to 850 per head of her population at that time. As a yearly jwowance Canada was to pay allow- ‘aoce tor legislation $50,000 subsidy of Me, per head of her population up to 400.000. which at that time ya: 207.000 touis. the subsidy would have therefore amounted to $165.- BOO. Tho aliownme for Crown lands land rights of minerals and metals and timber therein and thereon was placed at $150,000. The amount which Canada was to pay on the idotrt was placed at $8,350,000 and "ieeocoooP, was given in excess of within, muting. as already said, $10.- _350,000. On the 82,000,000 Interest int 5 per cent. would amount to 3.100.000. making in all $465,600. Canada was to maintain general or .Dominion services in the inland. These would comprise Governor’s ‘nlary. customs. excise, savings banks. public works of a Dominion Icharacter, Crown lands, administra- 'tlon of justice, post office. steam- ;diip services. marine and lighthouse, inmates. p rrtentiarisr. weights and 'metMrurt'tr, gas inspection, arts. ag- iriculture and statistics, quaran- ilhe and immigration. insurance in- spection, geo'ogicai survey. Canada Ewan to maintain in regard to incum- 'housckeeper tor John Pun-ta}. its "tutu-r. who In 26. Phoebe Davis is "he sister of the former. According st,', the exinence at the inquest, the we women only were present at the mirth of the citd, while Pallister "buried the Indy next day in the iwoodnl'ed. whence it was dug up toe x'Oon-rtabln Alex. McKay by l’allster “and the 'tttTie girl when he went out to investigate, last week. , iiiiriGGiiriririGiiemiiii. and mail communication in at least as of- tumtt a manner as at that time be- Myir'ot" Death ot Infant In North ()nllin to be Investigated. ; Orlllia rtport says; A coroner's tary has brought ln a verdict finding "mat the child of Mrs. Christina Saunders. Wham body we viewed to- day. came to its death by violence. and we believe that Christina Saun- dersand Pi.oebc Davis are respmsmle for Its Ueath ; and we further recom- mend that John l'alllstcr be held tor the crime of concpalmg the birth. death, and burial ot the said child," The vrri'rtet is tlic, I'm-nut ct an in.. yestiertyt Into ti'e circusrutntiCat? iurrvurid'rni,r the birth and death of a child out in the neighboring town- ,lhlp of North or.uia. The child was born on Dec. 2. and, judging trom the p'mt-mortem. was killed by a. blow. after llvzng only a. short time. Mrs. Saunders. a young widow of '38 won the mother of ting guild. up}: There was a, Wound an inch and a half in length. and halt an inch in depth.extrndlrg into the brain. to ;wh:lc.h the surgeons who conducted che post-mormm ascribed death. The .Inquest was held by Dr. McLean. the 'local Coroner, County Crown Attor- .'ney Cotter, or Barrie. taking part. Mia maul! or the jury's verdict. the HMO womPn were this morning ittroutrht bofore Mr. G. J. Booth. J.P., 'and charged with murder. They {were committed for trial. Pallister will.) was commuted on a charge ot concealing a birth. All three were futon to tee county Jail at Barrie ttttq afternoon. ""vrrtdifriikrr.irrd do rot svem to rears, thehe position. and laughed freely at 2hetnqttest. They claim that the child Pays on Mortgage on the Pam of Ills Bovhood Friend. _ Sioux City. Mo., Pee. L'B.-.hn unex- pected Christmas mm from John D. Mkelcllcr has made Charles Aus- tin a happy man. for it Will wipe out a mortgage he has struggled for -drtMtM, years to tld-vi Mr. Austin has a seven acre ttle u farm on Walker's Island in the Mizsmri River. a. law miles from hsren He has not. two" prosperous, and In spite ot assim- . Be, <...... L... “a.“ nnnhlu in was still-born prosperous. and In spite ot assim- unce by 111.: Ions. he was unable to avoid the impending loss ot his p10- party. When " toy he was a closo friend ot Mr. 120} ".tiist and the two have mince oorrcindod with some regu- larity. Mr. Rexketeller learned of .the mortgage, uni. ascertaining the amount. surprised Mr. Austin With a cheque that will end his nuaneial troubles. The anancr of a an.» Cost" 5 to Light. ' Wienna. Dec. 1'.Sc--h curious echo ot the mucus. \sur m Emil“ Atrica has but. been [warm making known a you rcmautie storv. - 77-» 0--.“. Anqpl. a ,‘Ul’ *NM.c."'" ---_V Ihre years ago Baron Aczel. a. ycung Buzg‘xan nuhmun. c,worre'ei yer: senousnv with. h.s father. ant In consequence Jiuaxppcared from Budapest. lcm'mg no c.ue as to his Whereaboats or [he intentions. Short- " an.†hits Ilsappcnrunce his father died. and. having repented ct his an- - ‘towaris his son. Sstt him ar. PNY"tb'"e." The witow caused extensive on- quiries to be made as to tha- where- £130th of iwr wu. uni at last. " ter years of research. she! Jiscov- He} that a young man answering his ferertrtio.' had fought on the ande of the Boers during the Trans- 1aa) War. Therenpon the Baroness cut two detectives to South At.. M where they spent many months in an again-nay fruitless scarch'. ‘_. many. however. Just as the, Swen or. the Foot ot rellngnieninc MOI? quest. they heard ot gonna - _ . _----'- _ is} "towar is h tritonginar. ROCK FFELLER AS SANTA. Fouah'r FOR THE BOERS. HELD FOR MURDER. i,'iiir1uiiirGoao ill In ,mgarian Noble- ‘Glasgow Hertt'.d's Tribut: lo Out' l Nuiinnallty, tween the mainland and Newfound- land and between NewNtunttand and Britain. and the postal steam Ber- vwe east between Newuundltutd. Canada was to glvo $440.0)0 annu- ally towards the maintenance of police constabulnry. Tm natier- men of Newfoundland. Were to par. ticipate equally with' than of Can- ads. in any, bounties granted by: tho federal government. bewfound- land was to be mud in the Senate by four senators. a1 din the Home at Commons by ten mumsen- tatlvea. This offer was anended at- terwards by adding $35,000 ad- ditlonal to the yearly allowance, and increasing tho railway aid What Newfoundland “km tor was $150,000 of an annual lnunty1 to Newfoundland fishermen ; the pay- ment of 3150.000 for crown lands in Newfoundland and 8100900 tor Crown lands in Labrador; lounty tor a limltod period, to contain certain industries. which oo-nlederatlon miqtt destroy by taking tway tho protection than enjoyed; we estab. iishmtrnt or a naval brigade and bat.. tery of artillery: an annual grub. sidy of $650,000: Canada to as- sume the balance of the ootf. of rail- ways and public works on tho In- land as contracted for. This practi- cally mount that Canada was to as- sume the entire debt of about 815,- 000.000 instead of 810,000,000. loaf/Ital in the Transvaal. They set off roet haste to the place. and discovered that the patient was the man they sought. I , , the matter. Sir Mactronzio Bowel! who was then premier. naid that it was Im- possible to accept this and the ne- gotiations ended. Premier Bond, of Ncvwtoundlrrnd, was at that time a. colleague of Sir Wm. WMteurttyr and visited Ottawa in connection with Every v attention was lavished won him, and ultimately he was re.. stored to health. As soon as he is strong: rnongh- to travel he will re- turn to hie mother and hid ancestral estates. ' ' ' London, Dec. 2R.--The Glasgow. Herald says that Canadians are talk- ing of annexing Newfoundland and Crrcenlo.ttd in order to become big enouigh for the field of trentymak- mg powers. The main object is the magnifying ot Gamma Ixtyy!.etit.yy 'iicriGriGiooe that u": Units“ ox-g does not cover barren Greenland t', weak when one remembers the damn-t staty of Alaska. Denmark. how- ever. is no more likely to sell Green- lland to Canada than she was to sell the West Indies to the Americans, but the probable admission ot New- foundland bears testimony to the real national self-consciousness ot the wbieir-yArattprcd and not always congenial members of the Canadian fodcratlon. M Sir Edward Clarke, speaking; at the Clutrieton Conservative Club allian- c'ncster yesterday. said the tariff commission had nothing to do with the relation of the colonies to the motherland. At present Britain had no preference to give them. The questions: on which Britain had spent much money in different parts of the eastern world was insignificant com- pared to maintaining the splendid Canadian loyalty. Britain should be keen upon helping Canada to secure Newfoundland and Greenland. He hoped that colonial question-c ‘would be dealt with without waiting tor the decision upon fiscal reform. and that we would not be nlggardly in |deuling with colonial wishes. Londen Press ohm-s as to Probability of its Adoption. 'London, Dee. 28.-The News,reter- ring to the Australian elections, says it Has pmduced the boss. Probably tho maiority of the new House are moderate protectionists. and cer- tainly anti-imperialist, with not the smallest prospect of endorsing a. pre- ference. t f, The Chronicle's lehourne corro- spmdent wires that the tariff ls not likely to be amonded, and that Pt'e" rerential trade will probably be post- poned indeLnitely. as the free trad- ers number 40 and prDteetionitettr 35. lgrandrnther or the young I Duke. who U overjoyed at t -...-- The Standard says the rezult rests an tre maxim, "Australia for the Aus- tralians." Tue control has passed to that sectijn associated as a whale with most rigid protectionism. Aus- tralian workingmen are willing to accept the advantages of our fiscal innovator's offer. but there is no whisper of a. return. Much the name ntmral is suggented by the undisguls: d reluctance of Canadian Contervativcs to refrain from increasing the rigor oi the regulations giving. the Cana- ilian mttrmrtwtrrrer a monopaly of the colonial market. I PREFERENCE IN AUSTRALIA. Cannes. Dec. 28.--Tho good news from Gmunuea Ot the betrodxal of tho Grand Duke or Mcclc1emburrpy Schwerin and the Princcss Alexan- dra of Cumbcrril has tuna-d hearty I-L-jozcing at the Yuk Wecden, the wmtcr hum of the 1ormer's mother, tht? Grand {mamas Auy?tasim. " There Is no Ietm fftfl?ti:'i at tii, residence of tie Grand V e ich- ael iiieo1tsioMeh, the temal grandfather of the you ,Grand Duke, who u overjoyed at t happy Frederick Francis EV. Fiance ror Pruzccss Alexandra. event. bee It." CANAOA'S AMBLTIONS. "What ff ROYAL BETROTiiAL. this ND. it Fay in l ctance to year t' , Baltimore,' Md.-The Union Trust Com- pany, which went into the hands of a. receiver-on Oct. 19, opened its doors to- day and resumed business. Manila-The agreement for the sale of the Friar lands has been signed, to take effect in six months, the time allowed for surveys and examination of titles. Bufralo, N. Y.---) woodenware store of Kirkholder a Rausch. 165467 Michi~ gun street, was damaged by fire to-day to the extent of $00,000; partially cov- ered By insuranco. Detroit.--1n the partial destruction of a dwelling by fire last night Marguerite Nicolai, aged 2. was burned to death, and her brother John, aged 7, perhaps fatally injured by inhaling smoke. slutron.--The Sharon plant of the American Foundries Company, which has been closed for a week, har resumed operations, an agreement satisfactory to both sides having been arranged. Paris.--" authoritative denial is made here of the reports published in London that Foreigp. llipistfr Delcasse had of- fered to dispute. Pittsburg.--Typhoid fever is on the increase here. and threatens to take on the character of an epidemic. For the first 22 days of. December there were 410 cases, and during the last 21 hours 4it new cases were reported. Anhwerp.---Tho large vessel which went ashore in a fog yesterday at Nieu- wersluis, near Flushing, Holland, close to the spot where the Red Star line steamer Finland grounded on Saturday last, is a Dutch training ship. Tgondon.---uertry Norman, M. P., the author and traveller. sails for New York to-day from Liverpool on the White Star line steamer Majestic. He proposes to investigate the question of preferential tariffs in Canada, and will return in time for the opening of Par- liament. _ Manila,-Ladroues recently looted the municipal treasury at Bosoboso in Lu. zon. They captured the president and cut the tendons of his heels. The con- stabulary pursued the band and suc- _ . A fr AI, _ “LA‘A.- oeeded goods, Colon.-lveryth'mg is quiet along the Atlantic coast. The United States eon. verted cruiser Mayflower has returned from the Gulf of Darien, to which place she went aitep stopping at the Island of Pines. Detroit. 3Iieh.--Franlc C. Andrews, ftu‘nulr V‘M-Pmsidcnt at the wrecked City Savings Bank of this city, who was released from Jackson prison on parole at midnight last night, after won-inn one year and four months of his iitteon years' sentence, arrived in Detroit to-day. New York.--The North German Lloyd steamer Kron Prinz Wilhelm, from Bremen, Southampton and Cher- boutg, was in communication with Nan- tucket lightship at 8.30 this morning, and signalled that she had lost one blade of her propeller. She will probably dock to-morrow. about two days behind her best record. Dunbar, Scotlar.d.---Tho Town Coun. oil at Broxmouth Park to-day presented an address of welcome. enclosed in a sil. ver casket, to the Duke and Duchess of Roxturghe, and the tradesmen gave them a handsome clock, as a wedding present. The duke heartily thanked the representatives of the donors, and expressed the gratitude of himself and the duchess for yesterday's welcome. Lcndon.---The late Lord Abinger, who died in Paris on Dec. 12 from heart dis. ease. in his will left everything possible to his, mother. The new peer, with whom the deceased was not particularly friend. ly. gets only the strictly entailed pro- perty, about 25,000 acres in England. Lady Abingcr, the deceased peer's mother, gets the historic Inverlochy cas- tle and the town house, with all its valuable collection of pictures and bric- u-brac. Members of Secret Society Swore to Strange Compact. Findlay, Ohio, Dec. 28.--This town is wrought up over tho discovery, that a secret society of young peo- ple exists under the rules of which death or matrimony; is the alterna- tire. Jester Williams revealed the sec- ret. lie says the society has existed for a year. Frequent meetings were held and straws were drawn. The pet'son drawing the shortest straw was sworn to choose marriage or death within a week. There have been tt dozen marriages, but no sui- cide. I ' The Kaiser Gives a Toast to the Memory of Blueber. Hanover, Germany. Dec. 28. - The one hundredth anniversary of the formation of the former Hanover- tart regiments was the occasion yes- terday of a considerable celebra- tical. Emperor' William received the rcgimeglts and several thousand vet- erans of the old Hanoverian army. Bis Mujosty commanded that a jubilve medal be struck in commem- oration of the event. It will be made trom the bronze of captured cmnons and will bear a representation of the Waterloo column in Hanover. At a banquet given in honor of the Centennial. Emperor William, re- plying to a toast and speaking loud- ly and distinctly. mid: ---.. . _ Ln_-_l__ I .._l_- --. 'ci/r/it -iGlrrir"i1iaattts I false my glass and I hope all will follow the example: To. the heplth of the Ger- man MATRIMONY OR DEATH. ry pursued the band and suc- in recovering part of the stolen n2bit3‘xte the Russo-Japanese 'ieiriorinGsemory of Ita Incom- IN A LOUD VOICE. '""il:'miGii7 iFiiiiGi"'wiL, present at a c.1121 performance held at the Royal Theatre last night. a Workman to Aid Striking Saxony‘ Textile Artisans. l Berlin, Dec. 28. - Twenty-three workingmen's meetings were held in‘ Berlin to-night to raise money and) express sympathy tor the 8,000 textile workers at crtmtuitststaalu' Saxony. who tor eighteen weeks have been fighting tor a ten-hour day. and an increase or the rate for piece work. The strike has outgrown the proportions ot a local dispute, and now threatens the peace ot the en- tire German textile industry. the second latest trade in the country. Organisations both of employers and workmen in all parts of the empire are standing together shoul- der to shoulder, contributing to each other's support and swearing that the struggle must m {ought to a finish even if it be necessary to stop every loom in the Fatherland. A bitter Christmas awaits the strik- ons. among whom are hundreds ot women and girls. Only outside aid has thus tar saved them from des- titution and starvation. CrimmttseLtru is a military camp. Gendarmes armed with rifles: and re- volvers patrol tho streets and pro- hibit gatherings of workers either in public or priyute. Last week ti,- 000 strikers trumped eight miles across the border into the province of Altenburg to air their grievances beyond the Saxon law. ' " “JV..- -..- -i'_---"" To grant tho workers' demands in the lace ot the keen oompetltlon of foreign countries the employers say would be ruinous. The strikers main- tain that the present wagon and Loans can no longer be endured. , 'SPEAKER GULLY TO RETIRE Will Receive a Pension of 5350.000 and a Peerage. London, Dec. 28.--The Right Hon. William Court Gully has announced his intention of refusing to offer himself for rc-election as Speaker of the House of Commons on the cum- pietion ot his present term. He has new the office tor nearly nine Fears, and will on retirement receive. as usual. " pension tor the remainder of his life of $20,000 a year, to- gether with the peerage. which in the case ot cx-Speakera invariably takes the form of a viscounty. TORONTO '1] I Many Beauties Wear Lovely Trusts Not Their Own. According to a London hairdresser more lalse hair he used In England than in any other country. l great deal of the hair is imported by way of Marseilles, from the East. Birain) and Italy, and the amount reaches nearly forty tons a year. The chic! d’reuch harvest is reach- ed in Brittainy and Auvergne, where in some places the girls sell to the highest bidder, while the rest is sup- plied by rag pokers and out of town dust heaps. All huu' undergoes live processes before being made up. The lumps of hair are lirsL washed, and then carefully combed to sep- uu-u \vllunl -....V__,,. arate them,, next plaeed in bundles and afterwards arranged tn three lengths tor wigs, plans and curls, and finally sorted into seven differ- ont shades. They are, then sold to the hairdressers. who make them up and sell the false tre'sses at prices rang- ing; from a few shillings to several pounds. ' ___ - . w, --------. v--., " IIOunnufnlI_ "mum... Weil-to-do women have a "transfor- mation" tor every occasion. and an: is sometimes rather sparse on top and (Inning out at the silos when worn with a hat. The matinee, or the evening colffure is very ela- borate. . k In [1899 a girl ot 13 was murdered in Osaka, having suffered indignitio at the hands ot her assassins. The police arrested a youth of' 18 on sua- - - I I L...:.... "A" “5.3,â€. ‘rnn Licion. and he, having confessed, was brought up for trial. Owing, how- ever, to insufficient evidence, the ae- cused. Mutsuura. was acquitted. He has lived ever since under a social ban, the public being convinced ot his quilt. lint now, suddenly. four years after the event. a burglar charged with a major crime. has con. [eased that he was the perpetrator at the outrage and murder, and Ma- tsuum. questioned as to why he nude such a confession. alleges that he was tortured by the police be- yond all endurance. It in thu In: phrase of the affair that create: ex- cltement. for the nucleation against. the police doen not Item! atone.-ipan (Weekly Mail. ' I t GERMAN TRADE FIGHT. MOCK DUEL WAS FATAL. FALSE HA'R IN ENGLAND. Third Drgree In Japan. More than that, thls P:""'"""" u... nrchlst hunter has been an orgunlzel‘ of no small merit. He has himself practicallybullt up the Special Branch of the Scotland Yard detective ser- vice which keeps track of political criminals and cures tor the safety and public men In England, and he has chosen other men, almost with unerrlng instinct. and trained them in the work he has done so well. Probably in no other centre In the world does so many dangerous Criminals and reckless political. ex- lles and fanatics gather as in Lon- dd.t.. In no capital in the world do thaw whose lives are most threat- ened by this particular class of social outcasts feel themselves so safe. Throughout a long qttte1a1 career and in the most real sense, Melville has made his name a terror to poi- ticul conspirators in'England and outside or it. His intimate friends don’t know whether it is dread of the man himself or fear ot the or- ganization he has built up under suc- (-essive commissioners which has op- erated most in reducing anarchists tO a state of impotence. But the tear and the impotence are there; n A tall, powerful man with com. gray eyes. Supt. Moivilite in appear- ance ls the ideal detective ol the story books-a sort or Emgllsh In- spector Juvert is the idea you get of him. He is a man of lew words. They have been t:ecd1es.s Hts acts have spoken for him. -- ’ - . . --v _--.,r'sur a...“ "Aâ€-.. .-. ._._ When he has been perionaliy threatoned--aml at the outset ot Ins career the instances were numerous --lus method or dealing with those who made the threats has been mmmary and swift. There was a would-be assassin who attacked him once in the streets ot Soho at night. and another who got into his oniee wlth a revolver stowed away with a handkerchief in the breast re'c1',il or his coat, where it would tl handy. They were not nxospoutod. and no stories about thet Incidents were printed in the newx-pnpers then. But st was a. long while after each of these incidents betore the deuctive a life was threatened again. 1rVilte's pnlicy has always been to treat the Anarchists with con- tempt. Those who know him bent say that this has not been feigned; it is real. Whether it is or not it has been without one-Ct upon his con- stant vigilance, and from it the Att- archist has slunk away breathing vengeance and slaughter, to till his notebooks with vain annlhrmas and railings against "le vile M-lville." _ - -- . a ‘- r._:_.:_..l ........a. .-...-...-V __ The Spvcinl Branch of the Criminal Investigation Department Uulrr, in a certain sense. the place in England that the United Suites Secret Ber- ‘ice occupies in this country. It tur- ninhes the bodyguard for notable personages and keeps watch on the criminals from whom the penonuges have most to tear. It was Melville who walked by the German Emperor's side when the body of Queen Victoria was borne {mm Windsor to Frogmore. He guarded the Czar in England. and. to the story goes. took him out alone and showed him the senmy aide ot London. - 2 _ He guarded President Loubet when he tinted England. He has lnvmla- bly accompanied the King on hm continental journeys. Always (11.! at hand. but never' conspicuous, there have been few great public func- tions when he was not in alt: ndance. Thirty years he has had of it, and now he has stepped oat with a pen- sion and many mementoes of services rendered to the great. Melville came up {mm the ranks. Ho Joined the metropolitan police tome, away' back in the 'TOS, and tor a wear or two. he pounded the pave- mait--ixacceded along his beat" is tho London coprev's way of putting it-lure the rest. Then somebody saw the makings of a detective In him and put him in plain clothes. That gave'hin} u â€tart. ' Sir Hdward Vincent. called to put! Suitluud Yard in order after the 'un-i plication of detoctives in a greatl series of turf (mum; in 1b78 had been discovered, remind there a shrewd. businesslike {out}; detective named Melville, and unwe him a rtergeant over the head»: of older men. Import- ant cases were given to the young, man to unravel, and he rarely failed to achieve results. Though reorganized w: the Crimin- al Investigation Department. in it still is, it was a 1urpluszard sort of detective 'service in London then, at the best. A political sup-department did not exist. i The (Home .ufcNu'etary'e of t ice. which l controld the London Police Depart-l ment, didn't bother about the inn-i desirable aliens whom other coun-l trips dumped upon the British shorel‘ so long as they kept within the law. Consequently London was a hotbed of foreign Conspiracies of assassin- ‘ ation. The Orsini bomb outrage was planned 'in 3 Echo Mtaumnt. It the London detectlves learned ot any [of these things it was by chanc- from the political secret service p0- lice employed by. other countries. Thus they beam, long afterward, that Napoleon 111.. in exile at Chin]- burst. near London. was watched by French spies from a. wlndlnlll on tho common. near by. the My... tlona of the watcher- bcln: to in, ninthâ€: at.er. out._ .1 . "%i"iiiaGiiGiionte nlnewhem plug- nod. in London. were followed br. at- pol t his mouth rages in England “no". Follow“); Athena-autumn of Alexander 11. ot Rue-Ila came an attempt to Gyms-Ila the barracks at Ballard. new lun- cheater. and to blow up the Mul- don Home with hinting powder. Ourown John Moat was (ound pub- Hating a, seditious new-paper (med -twh, :Mumt to assassination. with monument w -'""e""-"" Then came a series ot Irish -ntte, outrages. Tue English Detective Department began to new: use“. " Howard vtaentuet up a. new iutrdepartmept ot clues-mum upon poliucal cumm- als In ttits detective service. He put Mehllle. my bright young detective sergeant. at Its head. and sent him abroad to gather data and material. and to learn French and German. the _. -~--..lnnnv Harm w 9..-â€..- v, and to learn French and German. the usual language of conspiracy. has new department was founded principally with the idea ot watching and en‘wlung the Irish dynamiteâ€. Ita scope speedily broadened. and in all It: work Melwlle was at the trout. ' " --- nu-.. "nother Meunler was arrested by MelVillo it"wseli at Victoria Station the night when the Inrtector was going name [tom the theatre with his wife. my ,“ws bound for the Continent with I a loaded resolver in his roeket and his lockeets fait of loose cartridgeu l But organized anarchy in England l is considered dcad. It has shown no life practically sinco 1891. "tie nothing of the Hyde Park orator. ll not dangerous. " is slutty the .suiety vty1ve letting oft ateam. She anarchists had not exrected such stringent measures. Then- at. guuxmtlons in the British caplm' haw: never recovered trom the h.ow. They renlizcu then that one man in London was not afraid of than and they have neared him ever ttince, -iitdGGrk begun in that ruiu' has bom- oontinued. A inc-clan (study ii row made of anal-ch.“ muons. _ Every club in known. and nothing ot moment that hummus within its wand goes unreported. Since (In adoption of that system. anarchy in Eng.nnd has been truttt‘cal‘y harn- less". There have been only two ml- Lortant captures In London since - Mtunier. the French anarchist con. cerned with anuchol In the NOW- ing up of the Cate Tery in Paris. and Patti, who after being current-l with n bomb in hm tocket bonny an- room-ed in uuurt that he had intend.. ed to use it in the Royal Exchange a few days later. and " he had been let alone both Melville and the Home Secretary would have been quiet" renamed with the stiletto. I Every known anarchist ls undo-r 5 Fund tance from tn" moment ho so“ ' foot in England. The Sprclal Branch of Scotland Yard works in compara- l Non wlth the political pollen of the ;(‘ontment. and It has rarely undo . a slip. 1 No Um man who built up the 'tF8- tram in thirty vents of steady work has stepped out. Whether the syn- Jun he has bmlt ls so ".rtrorut that all; lum- will not matter is a nun- _ ttott which tho Eng Nah I nth rl'feIo . jwalllng tor time to drclde. }SCHWL80\’S POINT OF VIEW "The revolver." he and. "makes too much noise." . Ht. may have been more or a boast- er than an anon. but the British authorltles took no chances. Be In still In penal servitude. - A An Original Essay on the Subject errMottp. . In View of the recent soap contro- versy. started by the London Lan.. cet, the following episth: on the sub- Pet, contributed by "A Schoolboy" to the Bologne Times. in ot some in- tenant. It is the gmateut nuisance manic to boys ; it gets; into thvlr men and noses. and mtcrferes with their end joymern of life. The Instinct again“ the use oi soup is shown at the curl- iest age. You juut watch a. baby! being washed and nee what (we. it makes. Later on when you are eight or nine you: ot age. and but. been having lurks, and not hot. and come home happy. your mother. when she new you. instead ot hug- ging you and being glad you ham enjoyed wane". says: "Oh you dirty boy, go and wuh your hoe.†That wouldn‘t happen It there was no soup. , Wanna. alto-tamarind that "man ,,-_...‘._ ‘IluL run}! u quite a modern Invention. made; I believe, for the benefit of tho ll- lustrated Papers. beau-e without it they wand not not enough caver- nsements to make them mt"--Prs cocious schoolhox! ' or the 21.278 people Mount Plum. by m 6.200 ware Brunt. Mel who mended M “In“ F09" I] " You 0.. drmist. to the Dr. l Brockrillo, Ort Shoot little 1 and w or opiaL minor :1 or twet aqua] th Don. Gm .00 how od int; happy ( and the You kn Own 'hn 0mm Own T put t Malcolm. H For the , the manic“ ’Im the vague tom. the ““1an that the: man‘s he“ had given in m tt'hq, w“ u that day w lowbozlin‘. l eat ulmoul u Inc. aurio 'ttt her. B.. could the be"? My about any not luvs mid barre away In: Min" m In y: to n trlUag clue rel that uh honest. Lonodn looking atrair entire!) car's v taociew-t the reply 1mm att datum Nor w mod We In. Lam round of wife. Mrs monk to D brought '"trhad his bun M'tsat ca that om km an Goliath can» '.' could un "Om. tttr Arr tt M‘ht a mm: There “new: . nough. over up Innate Had he n lovrlmst Whul E1“, was the of Malawi,- hvn I t tr. Hon he about than; to he! dv-p u‘ound I tnos-th, The an in: MN. and do. ho il " Thin cents they I “no“ THt " but In; " nxloul I“ bl n gut I t In“ m by Mrs. rylu 00d - w I H mo A od. “NW Id " It M r nu ov it it "