WANT RELIABLE WOMEN, ALL ver Canada to work for us during wre hours, selling our n.i.m p. Tolle: Requisites, Teas, C experience LM{V Work m. remunerative. _ The Home S:: tiew nby Avenue. ‘Toronto, C neus OU EVER STRUCK NTO laments Soilcited man‘s Sympathy St. Fast UE NO,. 11, 1909 LAND WANTED CHAMPION" j CAS and GASOLINE ' ENGINES Gillesple, Dept. "M* Eddv‘s Matches WANTEDâ€"WHY NOT HAVE HELP WANTED. FOR SALE. king sample case, best TO RENT I must give satieâ€" action or you don‘t ‘ay for it. ALEâ€"RETIRING ON D ON TRIAL t place in all Canâ€" and tinner. Viviaq viation W B jurns, etc iming enâ€"I have rmned how to Cure wil d colds."* Neuralgia. ed happy and cooz of & held confâ€" free treatâ€" ndsor, Ont. for a free een placed ._ Perhaps as done so first Rus nv secont â€"SET MILL, Manitoba, 10 wned locally se days ind over Have I lisLinetiomn pioneers that the loon were er it wa® eloresiaâ€" lie Courâ€" : brothers s to call L was to to whous om. ‘The ared . by it discoy ind Toronteo to take you and are my loctor‘s ur péin i te fiast e imak Mail. p Both Lichans , d the , _ wad _ anmic A n dge â€" it h bhaueâ€" fully the T he ©p FOLICE FOUVGHT ANARCHIST. Two of the Latter Killed in Conflict in Russian Town. Â¥Yekaterinosiav, Russia, March 15â€"A sentence of penal servitude for twelve years has been imposed by a military vourt on a man named Rappoport for participation in the murder t CGeneral Zheltanovaki, Governor of \gtlutorllo- slav, three years 4go. 0 0 0. 00__ < ) . of the former v latter wounded urbs of The story is that the start is to be made â€" from Cadiz _ on July 25, with the :\'_eet Indies as the destination of the rip. The Count is said to intend to follow the course of Columbus‘ first voyage of discovery. o Zeppelin Said to Purpose Doing It in July Over Columbus‘ Course. Berlin, March _ 15.â€"According to a telegram from Zurich, Joseph Brucker, an Austroâ€"American journalist, has arâ€" ranged with Count Zeppelin for an airâ€" ship flight across .the .l\tlamic. % % ~ At the conclusion of Miss Kinrade‘s cxamination the inquest was adjourned for one week. Two facts stood out in the evidencs. The first was the statement by Earl Kinrade that he understood that his si<â€" ter had practiced with a revolver. It was, he said, common talk among the family. The second was that Florence Kinrade denied emphatically that she had ever handled firearms, Apart from these facts the evidence was also noticeable for the new clements introduced into her story, and that perâ€" sons in the neighborhood heard nothing of the shooting at the time it is supâ€" posed to have occurred. _ ________ Then the slight, blackâ€"clothed figurs collapsed, and the constable in attendâ€" ance caled for Nurse Walker to come to her patient‘s asistance. Apparently sh> had collapsed utterly. Outside in the hall the nurse, who had been pacing the hall with anxious steps _ and _ bated breath as the ordeal within the closed doors went on hour after hour, was heard to say, "They will kill her." Her anxiety for her rhargo was marked on her face as she hurried into the court, and no less disturbed was Mr. Clair Montrose Wright, Miss Kinrade‘s fiance®, who came in with the nurse. Dr. Beuee Smith and Dr. Clarke, who had been inâ€" tently watching the ease, hurried to the girl‘s assistance. _ _ Tenderly she was liited from the stand, and was being carried from the eourt, when with one blackâ€"gloved hand flung out, as if to ward off some approaching peril, she shrieked: "I see that man, 1 see that man; he will choke me; he will shoot me," and shrick after shrick rang through the building. _ #r Such was the sentence with which Mr. Ceorge Tate Blackstock, K. C., elo=»d his second examination of Florenes Kinâ€" rade in the inquiry as to the cause of the death of her sister Ethel under cirâ€" eumstances which make it stand out with ghastly prominence in the evriminal annals of Canada. The girl, who had heen subjected 40 one of the most try ing ordeals that ever a _ girl passed through, leaned back in her chair in the witness box with white, drawn fac> and drooping eyelids, and one tensely stretehed hand clasping the rail in front of her. Throughout the court, not «o crowded as on previous occasions, went a deep sigh as the hearers appreciated the meaning of Mr. Blackstock‘s last reâ€" mark. Hamilton man . there, would be le rade,." Mrs. Hickey, to whose house Flov 1= went after the shooting, told a plain, straightforward tale of what happered. Dr, W, J. MeNicholl who was among the first to arrive at the houre, was briefly examined, and stated that when he got there the house was full of the fumes of burnt gunpowder. Both Miss Kinrade and her father, who was on the stand two hours, spoke of the family being scared by mysterâ€" lous men, supposed tramps, and by an to break into the house. Beâ€" m,.- of momor'v Miss Kinrade her evidence clearly, although eviâ€" my under high nervous tension. Mrs. Kinrade, the dead girl‘s mother; Ernest Kinrade, her brother, and the younger sister, Gertrude, were all exâ€" amined, and all denied having the slightest idea as to who was the murâ€" derer. They also unamiously denied that the relations between the various memâ€" bers of the family were otherwise than of the most affectionate nature. Her evidence is also remarkable in reâ€" gard to the incidents connected with her scojourn in the South, and because at Rochester and Buffalo she claimed to hare stayed as a guest at houses the addresses of which and the names of their owners she cannot remember. Apparently she was introduced to her m“ruawldnbys)(homwl:: woman given to trw y whose present whereabouts she does not know, and who introduced herself to the xfl at the MacNab Street Church. So r mas her connection with Bawm, with whom she was associated at a vaudeville theatre in Port;nouth, is concerned, she mdmitted that roposed marraige to her, having knodeg' of her engageâ€" ment to Mr. Wright, but she said that she regurded his attentions as a joke. Sithel. The story which she told reveals so far no new fact, although in the course of her evidence there can be observed certain discrepancies in comparison with foundation is being laid for a startling revelation. At 20 minutes to 2 o‘clock, in answer to a direct question by Mr. Blackstock :s to whether sho could idenâ€" tify her sister‘s murderer, Miss Kinrade with a littie crz answered: "I don‘t know his name, but, Oh, I should know him if I saw him!" and faiated. Doeâ€" tors came to her, and on the motion of Mr. Hobson the inquest was adjourned t 7 o‘elock toâ€"morrow evening. For three nours Florence Kinrrde was in the witness box, and she was Mti erossexaminsd 1y Mr. Blackstock wi Hemaiton despatch: The Kinrade murâ€" der mystery is still a mystery, but if the Hine of questioning followed by Mr. Blackstock for the Crown toâ€"night is not one of admless irrelevanceâ€"and Mr. ‘Inquest Into the Shooting of Mis: se MURDER Her Sister Declared She Did Not Know the Murderer. FLY ACROSS8 ATLANTIC. eC J eIe 0B C was an encounter in the subâ€" this town yesterdry hbetween ts and the polieo in which two rmer were killed and five of the ft March 1 then o n only you tw That will do. Mi If there y you two of says it understands _ experiments with the Vickers, Sons & Maxim Co, adaptaâ€" tion of internal combustion engines to large ships has proved so successful that the Admiralty has decided upon a new iype of battleship, outdistancing _ the ’ Dreadnought type almost as far as the wtter outdistanced its predecessors. The new ship will be a veritable moving fortâ€" ress, able to move all its heavy guns in North Portal, Sask., March lo.â€"The D rush of settlers from the United States boung for points in Alberta and Saskatchewan is now on in earnest. Yesterday twenty carâ€" lqads of eettlers‘ effects passed through on &oloolln.sndmtutyubenaun in. All the passenger traing are croweded with settiers. Indications point to a Yery heavy immigration from the western States IMMIGRATION RUSH. Seitlers From the Western States Pouring in. to the a complete circle and fire all of them on either broadside. J‘robably the new ship will be armed with 13.5â€"inch guns, and will have a displacement of 21,000 tons and a speed of 25 knots. London, March 15.â€"Mr..~John Burns President of â€" the Local Government Board, sail in the House of Commons yesterday that he was giving his atâ€" tention to the report of Dr. Witiiams, Medical Officer of the port of London, that recent consignments of American meat were received in a diseased condiâ€" tion, and that he was considering the matter of formal representations to the American Government, Importers of American meat have entered complaints of the treatment reâ€" ceived at the hands of some of the in spectors. at English ports. It has been suggested that the American Departâ€" ment of Agriculture, in addition to inâ€" specting meat before it is shipped, should have officials here to examine it upon landing in case there should have been any deterioration on the New Type of Battleship Outdistances the Dreadpought. way over Thomas Lewis, national president of the United Mine Workers of America, declined to comment on the developâ€" ments of the day, beyond stating that he and his committeemen would meet lo discuss the situation. _ The miners will meet the operators again at 2 o‘clock toâ€"morrow afternoon. British Aathorities Considering Pre ventive Measures. Philadelphia, March 15.â€"The anthraâ€" cite operators met the committee of hard coal miners in the Reading termiâ€" nal here toâ€"day and flatly refused to grant the men any of the demands they laid before tnem ar* at the same time proposed to the mine weekers that the present agreement, which expires on March 3lst, be renewed _ for another term of three years. This _ decision, though not unexpected by the mine workers, «ame as a great disappointâ€" ment to them, % Mine Operators Want to Combine Present Agreement, O‘Brien is ment for t REFUSED DEMANDS. Toronto despatch: _ Dr. Stephen B. Pollard, of 425 Jarvis street, and Mrs. Mary Tinsley, of 370 King street west, were arrested by Detectives Newton and Kennedy yesterday on warrants charging them with procuring an abortion. _ Dr. Pollard was taken to Agnes street police station and Mrs. Tinsley to Court street station, _ Both were granted bail last nicht, Crown Attorney Corley fixing the amount at two sureties of $1,000 each for Dr. Pollard and one surety of $1,000 for Mrs. Tinsley. The young woman in the case is Elizabeth O‘Brien, who came to the city from Windsor on Friday last. Acâ€" cording to the story she is said to have told the police, she, after being refused admiltance to another place, went to Mrs. Tinsley‘s house, ‘There, it is alâ€" leged, Dr. Pollard called and performed the operation. ‘The police received inâ€" formation of the alleged operation, and on the sirength of the young woman‘s story the warrants for the arrest of Dr. Poilard and Mrs. Tinsley were â€"issued. Aside from the girl‘s story, the police claim they have some evidence against the physician in the form of a Dominâ€" ion Express _ order, â€" which _ Elizabeth tion is not serious MOVING FORTRESS. Dr. S. B. Pollard and Mrs. Tinsley, of Toronto, Are Arrested. London, March 15.â€"The Evening News Paris, March 15.â€"Despatches _ from Toulon report that in consequence of insubordination among the colonial inâ€" {antry stationed at Toulon, Gen. de Ferâ€" rou, commander of the Fourth Colonial Division, assembled the officers and severely â€"reprimanded _ them for â€" not maintaining better discipline, _ He is reâ€" ported to have said to them; _ "Your men are wastrels. _ Ii they did not keep in the rear in the colonies it was beâ€" cause they were afraid of being punished by having their heads cut off." . The General is said to have added that he felt dishonored in having to command such seum. He has denied nsing these words, but the men became very much excited on being told that he had, and their officers bad great diffiâ€" eulty in preventing.them from making a | demonstration against de Ferron. | General Perraux supported the colonel of the Fourth Division, and _ protested against De Ferron‘s language. Both were therefore ordered under arrest for eight days. The Toulon French General at Toulon Gets Himse‘f Disliked. Ph« CALLS MEN "SCUM Ixpress _ order, _ which _ Elizabeth m is alleged to have given in payâ€" for the operation. : young woman is now under the of another physician. Her condiâ€" BAD MEAT. UGLY CASE. cident has made a sensation in Sask., Morch 15.â€"The bi Floulé our ideal b> a slum sociology or a protoplasa ses.ciogy, ez a M â€" un sceiology or the rantastical socielâ€" uzy of higher leve‘s? or should is .be t.e pittern set in Licn and 00 mrmepd. x to the race?t "I was afraid oecaus> 1 vas maked," said the guilty trans gressor, and so revealed at the beginâ€" ning the basis of all ethical science and the need of atonement. On these and kindred facts _ with absolute historic certainty were the foundations laid at the begifming. How else is the marriage law and the Sabbath law to be obligaâ€" tory on all mankind for all ages? Whatâ€" ever may have been since, whatever we may have introduced, these were seiâ€" ence and history at the start. And they are part and parcel of the Christian faith. Science and religion were so unitâ€" ed at the beginning, and from all man‘s mists and perplexities when reason and faith shall have learned their places they will be reunited in the radiance around the throne, If men want to be slack in religion and loose in morals, the preacher is not the man to encourage such a step by his doctrine, _ Dr. Carman is not a literalist; he is b’y no means a "verâ€" batim et literatim" man. But he is not ready to have his Bible wrested from him by antiâ€"Christian carons ~of interâ€" pretation ani a heathen court of apâ€" peal. _ "Mon are walking softly," says an esteemed irother, "in the presence of the problem of sin and misery." ‘This that this is ont a true account otf the origin of the universe, and the profoundâ€" ost, sarest science of the great f:ast car<c?t Again, "God created man in HJis own imageâ€"male and female created He them." Is not this a true acscint as wo see in our streets toâ€"dag? And w.ta its correlates the basis of our hi viogy, sociology, anthiopology and reâ€", lated sciences? is precisely the trouble in our time. Why are they not braced up by the teaching to walik manfully, courageâ€" With this marvellous rule of interpreâ€" tation Gladstone‘s impregnable rock of holy Scripture is levelled by a whifi of Huxley‘s breath, The Bradlauzhs and Ingersolls have all vanished unâ€" der the splendors of this. uncertain ray, _ But what if ons should venture to ask, what nceed of Bradlaughs anl It gersolls if they are (mt-Brmï¬smglu-.l ard . outâ€"Ingersolled within ths preâ€" vinets of the House of God, which is the Chureh of the Living God, the pillar ar«t ground of the truth? If there is scivnce or history up to its own date urder the sky, it is in my humble padg ment the first verse of the Bible. "In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth," that truth of the sword oi the eternal spirit throughout all the ages against all Atheisms, Polythcisms, A; emsticisms, Materialisms, Panthcisms urd materialistic evolutions. Wiil it he sard, dare it be said, in these cirelos The rule of Interpretatioa set forth in the lecture might well startle us someâ€" what, considering that it had _ been previously pronounced, as is said, in a Methodist Church. _ "We must lay aside our theological _ prepossessions, forget what of religions we had learnâ€" ed." "Suppose we should read these wonders of GeneKs & rome _ other book, we would say at once myth, leâ€" gend."" But if it were interposed, there are other wonders in subsequent secripâ€" ture; "thea we must determine as to trustworthines and _ religious obligaâ€" tion by our common sense," his and mine. ‘Try that rule on the passage of the Red Sca, the giving of the law, the fall" of Jericho, the destrucâ€" tion of the host of Sennachirib. Myth, legend, all myth, and that stand is takâ€" en by other nationalists. Try it on the incarnation and miraculous conception of our Lord, on His resurrection, from the dead, His ascension into heaven, and the descent of the holy spirit. We would not accept it if read in another book, hence if read in the Bible all myth and legend. If German rationalâ€" ism or cven pagan naturalism has any lower standard than that I have not seen it. If the creation of the universe be a fact and not a myth; if the creation of man and woman be facts and not mythsâ€"I am rot concerned just now about the literary dress â€"and if the fall of man be a fact and all duly reâ€" corded, then we have history up to its date and the basis of all history, and we have science up to its date and the foundation of all science. This is imâ€" bedded in and a part of our Christian faith. Further than that: Is reveâ€" lation a source of knowledge? Is inâ€" spiration a source of _ knowledge? Is faith a source of knowledge? _ Can they shed any light on our other knowâ€" ledges? Can they attest and confirm history as relating to the acts of God and His dealing with men? Who dare deny it? And this is what is unhesiâ€" tatingly claimed for Christ and _ the apostles, that when they touch human history their statements are perfectly trust worthy. l While not specially fond of controâ€" versy or desirous of its continuance, I feel in duty bound as at the first to notice some issues that have arisen. One could hardly imagine there would be such a stir, but it is plain enough sore spots were struck, and I am sorry they were so sore, both on the irregulâ€" arities as to pulpit arrangements and the utterances concerning the integrity of Holy Scripture. This pulpit arrange~ ment was conceived in confidence and | good will, and likely «o would have terminated but for a manifest _ dis position t> introduce and propagate what is known as higher criticism. THE MEANINGS OF TERMS. Now the the address which originâ€" ally provoked the animadversions _ is before the public, men may judge for themselves. I do not find in it a word about the supernaturak, or miracles, or revelation, and scarcely a breath about inspiration, all potert and indispenâ€" sable factors of our Christian faith; nor do 1 find the feeblest intimation of faith itself, which of course is the faculty and the spiritual operation that connects us with God. We must believe that He is, and that He is the rewarder. "Through faith we _ underâ€" stand that the worlds were framed by the Word of God." These voices from the heavens with their attestations are ignored or suppressed. The voices from exhumed palaces and cities are‘ stifled, monument and inscription, tile and reâ€" cord, have no place in this> estimate. Yet we have much talk and reiteration of "unhistoric,"‘ ‘"unscientific.‘" , REVELATION AND KNOWLEDGE. ROCK LEVELLED BY A BREATH The following is from a letter written by Rev. Dr. Carman, which appears in the Toronto World: Methodist Superintendent Replies to the Criticisms of His Assault on the Scientists of the Bible. OUTâ€"INGERSOLLED WITHIN THE HOUSE OF GOD. c MAN m f l..ugyz Certainiy that will not be done AR | if you railroad the Bible, book bly book, P | into obliviou. _ The problem of sin is Peterborough County Farmer Was Fatally Injured. Peterboro‘ desptach: Russell Morriâ€" son was killed yesterday afternoon by the breaking:of a fly wheel of the horseâ€" power wootinw' machine on his farm at Bensfort, Sonlzg Monaghan, A fragâ€" ment m‘rï¬l-ted his leg, and death reâ€" sulted during the :\ï¬t from loss of blood and shock, Deceased was -Ed 27 and was married on New Year‘s Day. A Seventyâ€"Twoâ€"Hour for Transcontinâ€" ental Passenger Trains. Winnipeg, March 15. The _ dream of the C. P. K. operating officials / is about to be realized in a seventyâ€"twoâ€" hour service for transcontinental pasâ€" senger trains. ‘This was reported unâ€" officially toâ€"day after the conclusion of a conference between the leading western officers of the company. To do this it will be necessary. to mainâ€" tain a schedule. of forty miles , per hour. Whether this is possible remains to be seen, but it is certain that the running time will be greatly reduced. No lives wer lost, but Allen Wilson, an employee of the railroad company, was forced to jump overboard to escape the flames. The cause of the fire is unâ€" known. All the passengers had gone ashore and all the freight had been disâ€" clharged before the fire begun. â€" Queenstown, Mr., March 15.â€"Chesaâ€" peake Bay steamboat, Lovepoint, Capt. Clark, belonging to the Maryland, Delaâ€" ware & Virginia Railroad Co., was burnâ€" ed to the water‘s edge while lying at the wharf in Love Point last night, No lives were lost, No Lives Lost But One Man Had to Jump For His Life. f Guelph, Ont _ Despatchâ€"A sentence of seven years in Kingston Penitentiary was this morning passed upon John O‘Brien, alias Francis O‘Brien, by Judge Chadwick at the County Court House, O‘Brien was arrested in Mount Forest on January 28th, drunk, in the baggageroom, after three _ burglaries had been committed in the town. To these charges he not only pleaded guilâ€" ty, but to burglaries at Dundalk and at Chesley, as well. His honor, in passâ€" ing senterce, spoke of the career of crime which the prisoner had led, comâ€" mencing in 1903, and continuing in difâ€" ferent parts of the country ever since. He had been previously _ convicted of burglaries at Owen _ Sound, _ and at Orangeville, and in the neighborhood where he had hbeen living, was looked upon as a terror Burglar Gcts Seven Years in Kingâ€" ston Penitentiary. t months Los Angeles, Cal., Mach 15.â€"Mayor A. C, Marper resigned last night and also announced he would withdraw his nomination as candidate for reâ€"election as a special election called for March 26, under the recall clause from office by ter. He ha dbeen recalled from office by a petition signed by 10,000 voters, beâ€" cause of various allegations of misconâ€" duet made against him. Mayor Harper was elected on the Demâ€" ocratic ticket for a term of three years and he had served two years and three McGee is married and has five children, the youngest being only five months old. His salary" of $2,500 a year will be paid to Jhis family while be is in jail. Five days are taken off each month for good behavior, and if McGec earns his allowance he will be out in ten months. Petition of Voters Against Mayor of Los Angeles. McGee was convicted of intimidating workâ€" men during a« strike at the McLagon Comâ€" vpany foundry in September, 1907, and was then sentenced to a year in jail. ‘The suâ€" preme court of Connecticult granted him a new trial and his second trial was finished las: June, when he was again convicted and sentenced to a year in jail. His second uapâ€" peal to the supreme court was not successâ€" ful and toâ€"day he appeared in court to be sentenced. New Haven, Ct., March 15.â€"In the common pleas court this afternoon, Frank J. McGee, of Worcester, Mass., New England organizer of the National Mc‘der‘s Union, was senâ€" tenced to one year in .ae New Haven jail and he was taken there within an hour after sentence had been pronounced. Organizer of Moulders Must Serve a Year Jail Sentence, the highest The income tax bill passed is in reality an _ electoral platform â€" which the â€" Radicals and Socialists will go to ‘the country. _ No one imagines that in its present form it will be enforced. It is a cleverlyâ€"devised appeal to the masses. _ It shifts the burden of taxaâ€" tion as far as possible to the rich by dividing the taxable population into seven categories, the workmen and salâ€" aried employees, which include State serâ€" vants, paying the lowest, and the hated STEAMER BURNED. Paris, March 15.â€"The Country has Teceived the'pusnge of the income tax bill by the Chamber:â€" of Deputies _ with mingled feelings of rage and triumph. The commercial, moneyed and property classes generally, whose interests _ are voiced by such journals as The Figaro, The Temps and The Journalâ€"des Deâ€" bats, deplore it as a piece of criminal folly voted by a "cowardly _ majorâ€" ity," _ solicitous ~only _ of rcâ€"election next spring. On the other hand, the Rocialists and Radicals joyfully hail the pessage of the bill as marking the Beginâ€" ning of the millennium. ‘retuit_v and its one only an dabsoluteâ€" y infalliblé cure, If the Bible is right, on its origin and cure, men better be waked up, lest they dwell with everâ€" Threateved by French Income Tax perfectly solved as to its origin, its perâ€" bourgeois" and the landed proprictors lasting burnings FASTER TIME ON C. P. R. COFFERS OF RICH FLY WHEEL BURST. A BAD MAN. INTIMIDATED. WON‘T RUN. F4 You can‘t tell anything about a woâ€" man. Even the lady lion tamer would probably yell for help if she saw a Ottawa, March 15.â€"The annual report of the Department of Inland Revenue on the work of the Chief Analyst in reâ€" spect to the adulteration of foods and drugs was presented to Parliament toâ€" day. During the last fiscal year 2,626 samples of foods and drugs were anaâ€" lyzed. Of 68 samples of spirituous liâ€" quors analyzed all were foun dto be unadulterated. Of 257 samples of maple sugar on sale in stores 57 were adulterâ€" ated, and of 244 samples of maple syrup 20 were adulterated. _ Other results were as follows: Milk, 343 samples anâ€" alyzed, 58 found adulterated; cream of tartar, 130 samples analyzed, 71 adulâ€" terated; strained honey, 253 analyzed, Charges Waltee Blizzard With Having a Wife Too Many. The devil has offered many a woman | ‘There ars people who beliove ev»ryâ€" | ...:" a diamond tiara instead of a halo. thing they hear, and a lot they don‘t. portor Three constables who were present testified that both money and dice were there, and that Parsonson adâ€" mitted to them that he was caught in the act. _ The defence will be heard toâ€"day. si ADULTERATED FOOD Aanual Report of Inland Revenue 116 adulterated, St, Catharines despatch; Walter perjury a youth named Samael Parsonâ€" son is on trial in the Sessions before Judge Winchester and a jury, The proâ€" secution arises ont of Parsonson‘s eviâ€" dence in the Police Court recently, when he was charged with keeping a gaming house at 139 Munro street. He then deâ€" nied that at the time his place was raided by the police either money or dice were on the table. The vessel was 200 miles northeast of Cape Race when the lookâ€"out reported icebergs ahead. _ Officers crowded the bridge decks and with glasses swept the sea. To their astonishment the water was literally dotted with bergs _ of all sizes. The steamship soon found herâ€" self in heavy field ice, and finally was compelled to steam for twelve hours to eastward. She picked her way through fifty icebergs, some of massive proporâ€" tions and others less than ten feet out of the water. Toronto Youth Faces Jury Trial in the Sessions. Philadelphia, March 15.â€" Towering iccbergs and a great area of encircled ice cause consternation to the officers and crew o: the British steamship Tamâ€" arac when the vessel was within several hundred miles of the Grand Banks, on March 3. The Tamarac arrived here yesâ€" terday from Shields, and the report of her officers caused amazement in shipâ€" ping circles, when it became known that more than fifty icebergs were passed. IS HE A BIGAMIST ? Had to Steer For 12 Hours to the The Racine bill before the Legislature was condemned, Reference was made to the hecessity of having more informaâ€" tion on matters coming up before lawâ€" makers, and it was proposed that the (Girand Lodge unite with _ the. Grand Lodge of Ontario East and vote $500 to enable the joint legislation committee to make a thorough and searching inquiry into all the facts relating to the school question in those localities where the separate school supporters are trying to supplant or have supplanted the public schools. British Steamer Encounters Them Off Grand Banks. "evident that an effort is to be made to secure some special school favors for Rome as the price of granting an enâ€" largement of the boundaries te the Pxn vince which first since confederation deâ€" elared in favor of a national nonâ€"sectarâ€" ‘lan school of education. "It should be mentioned in this conâ€" nection that our most worthy grand master has introduced a bill in Parliaâ€" ment intended to make it quite clear that the public school lands of the west shall be used for public schools, and not for sectarian schools." There was prolonged discussion of the Legislation Committee‘s report, which said that: "In the Provincial Legighaâ€" ture we have a band of members who if they are true to our principles (ag we believe they will be) o}. equal rights for all and sgpecial privileges to none can make it impossible for any laws to ‘be passed conferring special favors on any elass or creed." In Manitoba it was Et, Thomas despatch:;: The Orange Grand Lodge of Ontario West will conâ€" tribute to the distribution of the Sentiâ€" nel to ministers in Ontario. Grand Masâ€" ter Essery was chosen representative to aitend the Triennial Council at Liverâ€" pool, Eng., in July. PERJURY CHARGE. Essery Will Represent Grani Lodge at Triemnial Council. Racine Bill and Other School Legisâ€" latior to be Watched. THE ORANGEMEN. FIFTY ICEBERGS. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Eastward. is made in but few sections of this country, and Mcade county, Ky., proâ€" duces as much usually as any other seeâ€" tion, with the probable exception of California. Most of the brandy for this locality came from there this year, but the apples had to be shipped from New York... The production is about one gallon to each three bushels of apples. "It may strike you as strange that the same quantity of apples will not proâ€" duce the same quantity of brandy each year, Bome years the apples are defiâ€" clent in sugar, and the amount of sugar determines the quantity and cuality of the brandy. A diot::lerh:y have an especially fine crop y one year, while the following year the same disâ€" tiller will get an inferior of brandy from the same orMâ€"l:nvfll‘ Courâ€" To obtain definite and comprehensive knowledge as to these resources, men with a knowledge of timber estimating should be sent out to traverse the enâ€" tire country, that at some digtance from the streams as well as that along the waterâ€"courses, Full and accurate reports from these men would do mueh to clear up the hazy notions now held as to the resources in timber of the leasâ€"known parts of Canada, just as was the case with the exploring parties sent out by the Ontario Government to Northern Ortario in 1900. Where Apple Brandy is Made. "Apple brandy," said T. J. Batman, "%s one of the most peculiar of drinks. It is made in but few sections of this Canada may well take warning and, before her national wealth is wasted to any great extent, provide for its econâ€" omical use. But the first step is to find out just how much there is, ‘Accounts are brought from time to time of great forests existing in Canada‘s northland, especially along the banks of the great rivers, _ These accounts are given by travellers whose routes have lain along the waterâ€"courses, where the heaviest timber naturally lies, _ Accounts from other travellers who have gone some distance from the banks of the streams indicate that in the drier regions the timber becomes much smaller and more scattered. More knowledge is urgently nceded as to Canada‘s _ timber resourcesâ€"know!â€" edge as to the extent of these forests, the amount of timber in them, the rate of growth and all the other particulars which must be known in order to enable those in charge to know how much timâ€" ber it is safe to cut without eutting inâ€" to the growing stock of the forest, Forâ€" estry experts themselves have so far had to depend to a great extent on eonjecâ€" ture in estimating even the acreage of the forests. as to show white Engineer C. W. McDaniel was inâ€" stantly killed and Fireman J. _ B. Brown was seriously hurt. _ No pasâ€" sengers were among the injured. An investigation showed that a switch had been thrown and spiked, while the signal light had been turned so Train Thrown From Track gineer Killed. Monroe, La., March 15.â€"As a reâ€" sult of the work of train wreckers, the southbound express on the Arkansas, Louisiana & Gulf Railroad was derailed twenty miles morth of this city shortly before midnight last night. Little Rock, Ark., March 15â€"The finâ€" ance committee of the Brinkley, Ark., Relief Association, headed by Congressâ€" man Joseph Robinson, has issued an apâ€" peal to the entire country to aid the sufferers at Brinkley, The appeal says that since Brinkley was destroyed 32 bodies have been recovered and more may be found, that 200 injured have been treated in the emergency hospital amd scores elsewhere, and that the proâ€" perty loss exceeds $1,000,000, with anly $6,000 tornado insurance. What Bl‘illt'ky Suffered by the Reâ€" cent Tornado. He was all alone and nobody could possibly learn of his plight. He hung there nobody knows how long, but long enough for the congestion of blood in the head to kill him. ow he must of struggled to regain his balâ€" ance and get back into the room will never be known. He hud beea dead many hbours when a neighbor, William Blanchard, who starts out early in the morning on his rounds as a mwilkman, spled his form danglhiog from the window sill yesterday. . fall headlong from the winitow the sash drop ped. catehing him by the hecis. New York, March 15.â€"Thomas Pope, T9 vears old, of Dover, N. J,, opened his winâ€" dow Tuesday night, just before retiring, aad leaned out to get a breath of fresh air. He lost his balance, and juet as he was about to Hung by Heels From Window Untii Death Released Hir. These lines are to be controlled by a new department quite distinct from the present raiiroad administration of Siam, which is administered by Genmany. There will also be a gradual abolition of British extraâ€"ierâ€" ritorial rights in Siam. London, March. 15.â€"Fifteen thousand square miles, of teritory have been added to the Briâ€" tish Empire by cthe treaty signed yesterday at Bangkok, Sizm, under the terms which Siam cedes to Great Britain the ‘States of Kalantan. ‘Tringamo and Kedah, which horeâ€" after will be adm@n:stered with the Malay federated States. .Under the treaty English capital to tse extent of $20,000,000 will be furnished for the construction of railroads routh of Bangkok. Added to British Empire by Treaty With Siam. THREE NEW STATES DERAILED BY WRECKERS TAKING STOCK. ASKS FOR HELP. STRANGE END. he was about to Enâ€" "And the worst of it is that every time I tell my husband how all of the women in the house hold me E-oul- ly accountable for everyth that goes wrong in the hotel, why, he only puckers up his lips and grins and then whistles the refrain of that horribly -h.n#‘;; song ‘Bomebody Has Got to Be Patsie.‘ 7 w "I am, however, at length ceasing to extract amusement from being conâ€" stituted the kick bureau of a large hmflyhowkmdlki::wolon'edhorlh manager who is go to ins wife in some little kind of an estabâ€" lishment of her own next fall or else have no peace of his life." "‘Are you aware of the fact,‘ she asked me in a most resentful tone, ‘that the maid on my floor hasn‘t put any towels in my room yet toâ€" day, and here it is dinner time? I wish you would b"uf some towels to my _ roomâ€"that it, mean I wish you‘d have somebody bring ‘em,‘ and she swished back to her own I‘ld},\k civu1' me no opportunity to tell her â€"as J certainly should have told her â€"that any time she ever found me running around a hotel hall with a ile of towels on my arm distributâ€" L them that time would synchronize with the falling of a foot of pink snow in August. e ./ ‘"But at the same time she went off muttering tart things about the woâ€" men of these days never helping their husbands, but sit.tixwl around all day with their hands in their laps or readâ€" ing novels, and she has been quite distressingly austere toward me ever since. ‘"‘The other evening I was at dinner in the dining room when one of the new tabby guests, a woman whom I had only met once, left her table and swished over to mine. * ‘But, madam,‘ I had to say to her, ‘I have nothing whatever to do with the management of this hotel. I have no more to do with its supervision than you have. I live here simply because my husband happens to be the manager of the house. But he considers my health too fragile to alâ€" low me to work around here in any capacity. Even if my health were rugged I doubt if he would permit me to serve as an attache of the house.‘ * ‘What should I do that for?" she asked ime, with every evidence of amazement in her expression. ‘Am I not making my complaint here to you?‘ , * ‘Well, the housekeeper doesn‘t atâ€" tend to her business then,‘ she came back at me, ‘and there ought to be somebody around here‘â€"fixing _ me with her birdâ€"4like eyesâ€"‘to see that she does attend to her duties.‘ ‘"‘Perhaps, then,‘ I suggested, "it might be well for you to make comâ€" plaint at the hotel desk.‘ * *But the honsekee’er has the manâ€" agement of the chambermaids in her hanl(‘lis.' 1 told her as gently as 1 could. ‘"Yes? Have you seen the houseâ€" keeper about it?" I couldn‘t help but ask and she flared up instantly. ‘‘No, 1 haven‘t seen the housekeepâ€" er!‘ she retorted. ‘I am not ocâ€" customed to .making complaints to servants.‘ " "The hall outside my door hasn‘t been swept this week! a testy old lady hurried to my apartment here to tell me while I was taking breakâ€" (nst; 'iu my room the other morning. No use in my telling thom that I had absolutely nothing to do with the management of the hotel; that 1 had never even set foot in the hotel kitâ€" chen, and so on. If I had told them those things they would have gone off among themselves and called me snipâ€" py and stuck up. Women living in an apartment hotel, you see, n(fon't consider, it seems, that the hotel manager‘s wile has any right or liâ€" cense to live in the hotel as a guest. They take it that she ought to do something for her board and keep, and the ‘something‘ that they phin'_\' expect her to do is to stand for all of their moans and wails over the terâ€" rible mismanagement. I shall spare you what they sgaid about the fish. From the pinning glances that they all bestowed upon ‘"Where on earth did you get such perlectlï¬' dreadful fish?" they all askâ€" ed me breathlessly, impaling me with their reproachful eyes. "I told them that no doubt the fish had accidentally escaped the inspecâ€" tion of the hotel steward. * *But that‘s no excuse at all" they fairly shriecked at me. ‘There ought to be lomebod;y to see that the fish served here isn‘tâ€"â€"‘ Oh, well, me it was perfectly obvious that they thought that 1 ouJ‘ht to be that some body to inspect the fish, "At dinner the other day the fish wasn‘t exactly up to the mark. No less than nine of the women guests hurtled ~straight to my room right after the meal. T enanP itÂ¥ ds & ced ic c in "I didn‘t want to be rude and 1 couldn‘t come out plainly and tell them that the roiliness of the water was a circumstance over which 1 had no more control than over the revoluâ€" tions of the planet Saturn. and s#o I had to just sit and !‘sten to their wails and do the best I could to comâ€" fort them. *‘Were you seasick coming across?‘ * *‘Seawick! Why the only thing 1 could keep * ‘Why, 1 wouldn‘t even bathe my dog in such looking water,‘ half a dozen of them toid me, as if I cared what they bathed their dogs in. "I told them that I Yemived that the water was a bit roily, but that 1 myself had to waeh in it or go unâ€" washed; but that didn‘t appease them., "For example, the hotel‘s filtering apparatus got out of order a while ago and the water came out of the spigots rather roily and unpleasant looking. Well every blessed woman in the house to whom 1 had been introâ€" duced and a few "that I hadn‘t met at all rushed here to my apartment to hold me personally responsible for the trouble. A.rsell to a party of women friends. “Theunï¬u&ullivehï¬u hotolotwhichmybuh.dh!ho mansgerâ€"well, I won‘t," was her plaint. "the wife of a hotel manager who lives in the hotel is what my husband calls ‘in bad.‘ The women guests carry all of their little griev» ances to her instead of to the hotel desk and take it out on her if the grievances are not fixed up instanter. My aeutmenu has become a sort of kick bureau to which all of the woâ€" men in the house promptly â€" repair “'hen things don‘t happen just to suit them . The wife of the manager of a big town apartment hotel was unboson h.rself to a party of woman fria A PROFITABLE PASSENGER The Hotel Manager‘s ! ° (N. Y. Bun.) ol a big upâ€"