it ;' 1 Interesting Experiments at Hmotiig I , Animals, Fowl: ad W1 r.-tkii.th'.etg that A't:lu"¢ lo the occult bat an acme mun-u: In mess it". and hon"; n mare than and Impou- ur P. from t're popular “midpoint: - uchn to net-“n: “patina" in the hypnotizlng " animus. Some at leant. or the phenomena ot 'iiuuotittrrt were omen“ its anew! “not. PM it in in no way numbing that they should hive bemtributod u. the unnatural. Evan nowadays they any rather a myntery for which swan-r has been unuhh» an offer any minute etrylanvtLon. Tie hypnothlu ot n hen ts In ox- porimen! that dam bark to a period cannula: below Manner "I born. k is easily .ccotrtttliatted by bomb: the bird’s beak to the ground and drawing from tho and of it a "might max line. Thin being done, the Mn " remain in that attitude. perfectly tin-I, for many minutes. The Men formerly entertained was that the hon mistook the chalk "no for J' piece of strung, and so believed lt. uif unable to escape. But this notion In born proved tt mistake. " tho Ian he. wit-ed in my abnormmi lltl-’ tudrs -on her back. (or 'ifiiiiiiri--"ral its'rnznml m at moving' for a tow: .iuumu, she, will, though gently re-} haw-d 'yereturon. be uulblo to mo", haw"! wen-mum. be null: . muscle tor quite I qrhtte, A mum-u pie treated in the “no way, though vigoro My reaming for n time, will pro-elm: become helpless and rigid. lying meticulous after the humming hand‘! hare been taken away. It will thus remain for ttTet or tra minute. seemingly uacontseiotrs; but a match movement in tron! of its new " I high squeaklug nuts. Gil, canno- it suddenly to jump to Its teet.l as ttlvrt as en-r, - . I Ttve phenomennn wells to be hypq sworn: other words, pun-ling ot: the phtertrrtor of an terttfttrittl 'i':',,,,;,".} Young alligators are auhjec'. to moi Theories of Several Furious Scientists Set Forth in THE GRAND FINALE OF THE UNIVERSE PROPHECIES CONCERN- ING END OF WORLD. we“ “in! pred "a: hr in i n 1cuttro' past it ttas bun .oticssd dual tit" _.'ip.u. of the Icebergs In 'dw south Polar region hat but In- I'nus‘xfg. A bhrx, 580 feet high Md tttree ttturs lung, was noted by Cup- tay. S'fLHH‘r-s, ot the Edmond; Later, ..., humus Scott passed be?†over (A: iert high. while the crew of the Agnew as u m'mntain ot ice tower. “alum- them to the astoahhing h."hirl cf serenrtv 1.000 feet above the tay: rim-Ah.) ID", human as teet hit Aunt» saw shove all: of n no. level. b"| level I " mm wimlalml tha: the tow!“ lhhknesa or this latter iceberg was†90t'd feet. or upwards of a mile and} t's-tartetc'. i, Knocked to "Kingdom Como." -o'nsty, very large Icebergs In“. Men mate numerous in Southern human than ever before was known. and this is caused by the tact that no Ruth Polar regions have gm. steadily warmw. The be!†looting In to the northwards have canned un- pahllolodyold snaps In South Attic- nml South America. In Buenos Ayn-u Huan- was recently a heavy snowstorm. u occurrence fever before known In lint latitude. What does all this imply? Adeord- in; to Prolessur Lewis and other Bri. lish scientists, it mean: that we no on the Vere ot a second Deluge. Att- other ttood will destroy a pm. it not the uncle. of the world. ttru. of the most celebrated min!†Is that which is observed'now and then from the neighborhood ot Glaciers, my: in Alasku. when, in the omnee,1. - a "at sheet of glacial ice, a city l h 'een as if suspcjnded in the air. It] has buildings of beautiful and hypoa- I' amhiteetstre, tall churches with - and tantrums And many Met: ot houses. plain to the 'lt"'.. tMy, itt Alaska, where, in the distance. ', William Scoresby, the Arctic ex- aleve a vast sheet ot glacial Ice, a city I piorer. describes a simiiar mirage is “Hun as it suspended in the air. It i which he h'eheid trom oil the coast of he. building: ot beautiful and 't?oos-lartsertlattd. He writes: "The general in; anhitecture. tall churches with appearance ot the coast. as viewed Mum and buttresses and many through a telesseope, w“ that " an mots ot houses. plain to the View. [extensive ancient city, abounding in This is the no called Silent City 021mm: of castles. choline, churches About The Duke of the Abruui law l and tTtott1trttetttT-a grand and interest. It a few years ago when he visited in; phtutttuunagoritt." Mun. Many attempts have treertl Ateaturo ot Arctic geography which we to photograph it. but for someinppeare on all the map: ts Crocher moon ttttexp/ttned, without suceesi.',Land. which Perry though he saw lane person: have [one no tar as to! from n mountain peak in Grant Land. declare that it in a View ot the city of The troops of Napoleon when he lento], in nth-land. wee in Egypt were rather frightened Irregulamies of he formation. plus Iminalion, doubtles- ncconnt for the strange vision-an uplifting oi the uuppoood scene ttoing attributable to lingo. Optical iitttqiortig of this kind no not uncommon In Arctte Ind Ant- arctic "glam. ' Thoro -ia I famous mime culled “rm. MOI-um." Intel JP gemston- h â€an from tho neighborhood ot Reg- no. in Italy. Hon the elect pro- ducod h duo to u - d baud air, which by I'm a! ttabt britt- Into H" I ItMttrted pm“. of the A well-km an muses! i,uviiiitiirage Mocks the Traveller 4.4M! Ii-kmm‘n scientist has lately xgutirx mat the 0nd ot the my um be 39 tar oit us we Let us look " a few similar my num- during the past few '4 This Article. In " “an t " sum-a. sort of irtfhteatee when laid on Nu‘r backs and compelled to "mm for in mm in that In“ pliant-o. The brine is true oe "on. But 'ttt elm-r case the ere-tum no pathw- x,- m-tored to full couch-dun by [um-wing sharply upon their :0... Oddly enough. mute! such conditions. the skin or the trpg turns olshtr, and its heart-tseat and breathing become- {cnblun _ A 10mm, " stood omits head and new m thutyosuluu for a short time, renting upâ€) its big claws†and amon- nae, loses consciousness and, though releosett,utolda the attitude tor a long time. " does not easily “to up again, even lt.thrt"m into Inter. again. vvvu ** "q.VWV.. a.-- â€"_.... Most sumo; of " experiments in this line are some that have neatly been made with. the "norttalo"--tut exceedingly venomous snake native to northern Africa. It I. a mighty btrtNy and litely creature; but, it grabbed and held behind the neck. it becomes rigid and harmless. A quirk motion in irort of its eyes. or blowing on its nose. restore: it to its customary activity and ferocity. This is the kind at make which! since earliest times bu been used ii) the snake charmer: of Egypt. The“ magic-worker today, an of old. picks} the serpent up by the beck of the, ceck, handles it freely. In" It down' and presently mtoren it to "to by his breath or the pass of n hand. This In permit“ worthy of note in connection with Un- biblical story ot the rode which Aaron and the professional magicians of Pharaoh‘s court tun:- formed into snakes. . Animals subjected to this sort of ireutmen' seem to enter a suspen- slur. cf WM. Experiments of the kind have been succeastully tried on the octopul Dogs and cats do not res- pond ,cC!srw"tori1.v. 't be best subject '3 cite hen. The ice-cup at the South Pole is runners" hundred miles across, and ct enormous thicknen. Supposing the mums ot the South Pole is really growing warmer Wt will happen? Why. this icerap will crack and break, and a “and such as mun has never sac-n will surge out on every side and awown over the iov-lying lands of the Routine": Continents. in old days mu' ancestors dreaded comma. because they did not under. stand them. Our fathers know more about them. but feared them because they supposed their heath to be solid. in which case a collision would mean dlsaster to our plpnot. We are now aware that a comet il a nebulous body, and, therefore, that c1811 if one did hit an, and on. it would not knock I hole in the arm's crust. nor thrust “a uneeretttoniously out of the way. But Monsieur Mumllle Flammnon _ the well-known French iatronomer _ has suggested a horribly possible suggesmm namely, that comets may he composed of noxious gases, which. if they came In contact with our at- mosphere, would poison it, so that all life would be extfnguishod. The chemical compouition of come“ is as yet imperfectly undtrrstood, but it. is easy to imagine a comet bearing gases In in train which would absorb the tt'trottett in our atmosphere - by a Comet. The remit would be that we should be lo". to breathe pure oxygen. Oxy- gen quicken: the circulation and the mental and bodily lotivity. But an over-dose ot thin an in fatal, and ttttw in; once inhuled it, man and all living things would die in raging fever. _ During the Coal Age the Mums: phore of ma: earth was heavy with carbonic acid. It was not tit for man to breathe. Only mm and reptiles Bouriahed in the hot. ate-my swamps and Itagnant air. 'Gradually the [but growth ot vegatatign absorbed the noxious gases, the sky cleared and the atmosphere News tlt tor warm-blood- ed creatures, I At was: man is bunny engaged in grabbing up the coal which is com. posed of the vegetation of tan-bonnet- tar-away Sicilian shore. To the Ital- ian peasant it appears as a city, with palaces“ towers and mupsrssts--tht' mysteripua home at the (airy Morgana. The troops of Napoleon when he was In Egypt were rather frightened by mange: And during the recent In the British in Mmepotamia were obliged on " lets! one occasion to stop Mhllng becnuse of the confusion "lain; from an illusion of the kind. As everybody knows, mirage: are very common in ttot desert regions. A her ot warmod and nrened air serAes as a mirror, retieretittg object: above 't Thus, "hello; the "r, It my produce the effect ot u that ot "tor. the “steadiness ot the hated Mr tending ripples to help out use pic- tnro and road» u MOI. Gumbo. N. But In _ no prompt- cionsneu by their noses. h conditions. "9 water, and out times. Also, in cutting down the forests which still absorb the super- tttMttttt carbonic ucid. Every scuttle ot coal which in burnt, and every match which is struck. uses up a por- tion of our supply of oxygen. An eminent British scientist recent. ly declared that the world's oxygen is gradually getting used up, and the air getting fouled, so that the time is in sight when we shall revert to the car- boniierous era. ' Man will grow puny and finally dis- nppear, while gigantic tlah hind rep- tile. will once more regain the sup- remety. Sllmy, repulsive-looking rep- tiles 'slmihr to those ot prehistoric times would inhabit this world again. If mankind gives up the present wutetul mo ot troar-coal-burning “one in destroying 1.600 million tons of oxygen every year-and takes to using electricity for heating as won " tor lighting purposes, hem again gets Already the seasons seem to ho changing. Thunderstorms. especially winter thunderstorms, are becoming more and more frequent, and this A Gold, Gold Earth." What, then. will happen when the tax upon atmospheric electricity-is a hundred or a thousand times greater than it is at present? Will fruit tree- bloom in January, and snowstorm: ruin our August harvests? Will thun- derstorms become ot daily occurrence and of tropic intensity'. One well. known meteorolobist is convinced that this is so. Let us hope and trust that he is mistaken, and that the sun. our great source, not only of light and warmth, but also of electric power, will be able to rectify the meddlinga ot man with the mysterious. unknown forces ot Nature. seem to be caused by the interfer- once with the electric currents of the earth and air, At present the energy of the sun is so great that It all Its heat could be concentrated upon this planet, Ilnety neeondn would stance to melt all the le, at both Poles, and another eleven seconds to evaporate all the water in the world into steam. l One day his who went to a distant ‘frtend who had a telephone in her l house. During the afternoon the tarm. ier @ught shelter trom a thunder. : storm in the house of a neighbor, who islao possessed a telephone, and who .persuaded the farmer to call up his. "wite as a llttte surprise. Yet the sun in trhrinkintr--at whaf rate is not exactly known. Professor Barnes has declared that the process is far more rapid than we have any idea of, and considers that in a very short time--geologieaur tspeaking-- we shall begin to feel the decrease of heat. The picture he draws of the earth's condition when the sun dies in appal- ling. The water will turn to a flinty material harder than stone, resemb- ling rather diamond thou anything else. The air will solidify and tall " rain, which, collecting in hollows, will lie in mirror-like pools, smooth for ever, because there will be no wind on that dead curth when all the atmos- phere has been 1iquet1ed by remorse- lesa cold. c The sun will rise and let dull rod. like a lamp ot halhcooled molten iron, and the stars shine brilliantly in the dead black sky. An old farmer couldn't really be- lieve that people who were miles apart we.e able to converse over a telephone wire. _ Following Instructions, the farmer put the receiver to his ear and, after the usual preliminaries. shouted: “Halloa, Jane!" _ Just then a tittsh ot lightning struck the who, and he tell to the floor under the force of the shock. . Rising to his feet and shaking his head wisely, he said: . "It's wonderful. That was Jano' right enough!" Mrs. Lloyd George I: exceedingly proud of her clever daughter Megan, and recently she told with great gusto the story of how, when barely nine years old, the little girl worked early and late canvas-lug her father's con- stltuency during a hotly-contested election. To one old fellow (said Mrs. Lloyd George) who 1nd been employed It Cnnnrvon Cums for ttttr yum, aha naked, speaking in her and his native tome: “le will you vote tor my father?" “Indeed I will," VII the reply, "but you Inuit [In no I km if I do." "Ah," said the mu. lulu. with in arch smile, "tmt can would be bribery and corruption!†' J'i-tGaiiiAitat"atnoottohefttt.e.d.Br, And askt, "What sort of people in this landt" The prophet answered, lifting a happy hand: "Well, friend, what sort of people whence you came t" "What out?†the traveller iiG"rted--"knavuirand fads!" "Watt," said the prophet, "When your fervor cook, .You'll find the people here the very same.†_ . Another stringer at the dusk drew near, ' And paused to ask, "What sort of people here?" ' "Well, friend, what were the people whence you came?" "Ah," smiled, the trtrmyrtr,."thtr. werelgood and wise." Once where a prophet in a. p.113: thad,tPr, "'fiiln.r'Tr"ia are "iaiiiUGirtriinsr in his eyeS. "You'll find the people here the very same.†‘ --1ildwin Markham. confronted by unknown dan- No Mistaking Hi. Wife. His Price for Hts Vote, You Fund Your Own She follow: me shout my Home of Lite; (This happy little guest of my dead _ youth'.) - She has no part in Time's relentleu "rite, She Iteepts her old simplicity and truth--- And' laughs at grim Mortality. This deathless Child that In†with mr This happy little ghost of ., dead Youth'.) My House of Lite la weatttoristairted with "BWP- ' . to Child in Me, I wonder‘why you any.) . It: windows are bedimxned with rain and tears, The walls have lost their ross, its thatch in gray. One after one itl guests depart, Bo dull a hoot is my -old heart. (0 Child in Me, I wonder why you stay!) For jealous Age, whose face I would _ forget, Pulls the bright Bowers you bring me trom my hair _ And powders it with snow; and yet--- and yet I love your dancing feet and jocund air. l have no taste tor caps of loce To tie about my faded tttee--- I love to wear your ttowerty in Tr hair, 0 Child in 'Me. leave not my House of Clay Until we pass together through the Door, When lights are out, and Lite has gone away And we depart to come again no more. We. comradee who have travelled tar Will hail the Twilight and the Star,' And 'smiling, pass together through the Door.' Why be afraid of what is roan'd the corner that you never turned? There may be a beautiful adventure hidden there. It is a poor, dull soul indeed that is not stirred by the lure ot what might 'be waiting for us gld our little, pitiful tears not halt and hold us back. I It each man made his earthly pil- grimage in solitude profound 2nd lirye, he might make his pathway as direct as he chose. But--thank God Ifor it--our membership is in a multi- ' tude, who have a right ot way that is |equal to our own; we may not assure 'ourseives a footing or a passage by =crunhing them in the mire. We can- 'not go where we woulu and we cannot turn the corners. like heedless motor. lists. without thinking of the rest. Ronda that By straight as a hee'a way from a town to a town are not the most tun to travel. Give us ever the winding route so that we may not see how far we have come, how tar we still have to go. Let us have curiosity piqued and pleasant surprise: pro- mised by the changes ot direction. Who would have the highway of his life a perfectly straight course, with never a deviation. It would not be interesting. We should pine for variety and picturesquenees. “God's idea of beauty is a curve"; and " ture had a reason when, in obedience to the Master Mind, she designed her trees in green cascades ot circularity and set her rivers winding round their bends and gave us the sickle of the new moon or of the ocean beaches or ot the graceful tonus of fruit and titywer and the human frame. Even so in life's Journey, we learn that it is rarely possible to go exactly straight from point to point. It ls like dancing in a crowded ballroom: one must constantly deter to the fact there are others present. Their movements inevitably affect and direct our own. Last night. is I was standing In a crowd, I saw a face I had not seen for years; A face I'd thought forgotten long ago: And buried with my youthful hopes and (can. I met him suddenly, and in a flash My measured life changed to , whirling state, - My very footsteps taltered on the path That years had made so staph: and so straight. A ." The heavy walls I'd built to hide my . pain, . 1n but a single instant tell nway, Amt left me helpless In an unknown land. . Groping throulh endless inky night. . for any. Twenty 'thousank priests serve in the temples of Bangkok,.6'um. - TheChildinMe. Round the Corner. Remembrance. Tues all to no or strength. DI you our watch an out or no claim“ am; with n norm? It is worth which- iu. " one hint ot wind 'iollovod another. the in. vu randy. A branch might hunt. the top might he carried nwny, but the body ot the mo Mood am. It had been prop-ring tor that btittte, for you". Flt below, the mob. like militnry marvel, were can“ toe epoch! duty. A thong-ad, . million at them, apt-ending in 111 direction, wen honing the trunk firmly in its _ place. That in a lymhol of tho strength at the man whole trust in in God. The _ roots ot faith had trust go tar into the Pere at God "Thouxh- In host [should encamo against me, my heart a.“ um fur." "God is our refuse bone-I at God "Wen lott'l should cum minetme, my 1ternrt-';4 shell not fear." "God is our rstuwrl and strength." 1 Trees, become strong by resilience. ' A furniture manufacturer state. that the .March winds make the best grain, and the grain is developed when the tree'apringshnck utter a gust ot wind. People who are never called on to re slat, are umtesratsrerhsped in cheructer. A young man who wee in Frnnee with the army, recently ind this told ot him by his pastor. He was I nary gent, and " cnpteln was an im-i unornl man. openly and brazenly. The l sergeant rebuked him for the example he was sitting his men. No Jt2';J/il mienloned man is supposed to repri- mand an oilicer, nod it went hard with the sergeant. He won reduced to the ranks, and life wee mode misernble for him. He bore it in (rim silence. One day his captain sent for l?.')," Said he: “l've been thinking about! this and the way I’ve treated you.‘ I'm going. to live straight after thu.! Tomorrow you take your old place} as Brat line sergeant." Do the Years Bring Progreee? 1 Trees grow. It is an impressive moment when a tree is felled, and you count the rings. The record of each year's growth is there. No yenr has been left out. There have been no "oil years," and no idle ones. Looking back can we say that each year has idded to our growth? th. have we stood stationary? There are people, not a few ot them, who hue not grown a particle tor twenty years in anything except axe. and they will b deny even thet. They have the some ' notions they had years Mo. They , have not broadened, greatenezl in any particular. Such persons may well so I to the nearest oak and learn one ot the great lessons ot life. TORONTO A tree grows because it remain Ini one place. A squash. vine wander-I Iimleeely over the ground. but the; oak. the elm, the white pine stain height. A tumbleweed will true] further in a season than a tree will in a. hundred years. The tree devote- ite energies to unveiling upward; it specializes in altitude. And treoe for that reuon are the symbol of unin- tion. They get the tar look. They typify large and high ideals. AI Joyce Klimer said. "A tree that look: " God all day, and lifts its loony arm. to pray." An eminent writer any: that the present generation is prone to wander in the direction where the greatest excitement lies. We ere not given to steady, upwnrd development which creates the Butstst menhood. The trees in our trout yard will teach us better. The tree is a parable or life. In' spring it puts forth new lite. in sum- mer it bears its burden of fruit, or spresds its shade for the tired truel- ler. in autumn. it cases toil, drops it: leaves and prepares for rest. There is no haste, no hurry, and there are no regrets. Everything is done at the proper season. And there are the seasons ot the soul. Neglect them, and the loss can never be fully re- placed. There is the season of child- hood, when religious impressions re. main, are planted in the soul. Then comes the age ot adolescence. when most of life's great choices are made. And adulthood follows fast, with its burdens and its toil. Trees exhibit forethought, frequently to a tar grub er degree than their human neighbors Early in the sixteenth century one ruined on the blends Talley Ber. Juan Bermudez. sailing from Spain l muda potatoes, Bermuda onions. Ber. to Cuba with a cargo of hogs, had the 1 much mien are familiar all over this misfortune to be shlpwrecked in a‘country. The motor oil plant grows group of islands thitherto unknown l without cultivation on the minds, 1 to Europeans. They lay in latitude " ' “CL tlf importance in medloine and degrees 16 minutes north and lanai-“'6 aeronautics, for cantor oil H a rut, tude 64 degrees M) minutes west. and l ricunt of high utility in aircraft, apparently were exceptionally vow-i In the tortunnle Bermudas thero aw- lar with the Fate which marks some 1 no reptilél to Alarm; .the indigenous mariners with disaater. Henry May, l mull lizard in not even dangerous in an Englishman, came to grief amoux‘appe'nmuco,’ and the' green tux-no in them in 1608, and Sir George some". I tramllteblo into delicious soup, or Virginia bound, had R similar (at. in l, birds end an: tho igltuidtrhavts a splen. 1809. Tho name of Bermudas por- I did “one; Bermudian: would ttt.'t petuatet' Junn'l ill fortune: Some" ( starve to deem even should the '.ttV was given to the intends u on altor- '. portatton ot men came. native name. but is seldom It n†The original capital of Bermuda: lieu-d nowadays. The" lovely “I“ we: St. George, on the inland ot the with their mild mi eqatthltt clitttttte mu. name. founded in 1795 and In. are known to thousands of Canndlms, under) them has been celebrated tttig year the three hundredth anniversary of the founding ot the House ot Ag. humbly. Mild to be the oldest raptu- nentative politicnl body In the British Empire alter the Mother ot Farm. menta herself. Sir George Samara esubushed the iiret settlement on the Mandi. but he died before he wu able to carry MI project fully into tttNet. In "" the blond: won grated to " “about ot the Virgin; Comm, m Hoary More and I may of “It, â€tum. Tobacco v" the int - on. Three tiiiiilfiil tii/Grille Lovely Bermudas Sea-on: of the Soul In ad Tras ' Y?., wink doclduou troo- crop unva- luvoo, so that with asked branches they my. “to “New. wrasatio with the wind- uid blast of February and Lunch. 11.. up moods to 1 large extent. Into the inner part- of the unwuu. ...- --- trunk Ind the root â€atom. Thu. pro- DIM, they our.†to Father Winter. come on! Lest the winds blow, lot the bun-rd: rive, lot the mercury doe- conll, we no randy! I lay, humans are not " " who u that. They do not prep". tor the Inevitable. And I mun la a tool. T he in a unpletou. who, knowing an Mia: otornlty, we before him. mm 39 menu-sum: to that and. The 0mm lmmouble. un- fullns we. in ybnder new exhibit' 2Garitttaiitwsesee than he - B..-."" ,7,, Tree. weak to an ot eternity. They are Iolemn. They hue their own lungâ€, In which they seem to con- - - .. ---- " Ill-x "w-W'v .- -e_-_' _ "no of the mighty matters of lite. death, and Immortality. The all! mm. ulna um unple- weak out phinly, was the tall white was: vhuper to each other in a tongue that nu no oaths, Ind conmm no un. clean thoughts. They are like . no. ot elem man. whom sin has ttot mu- red. "The righteous shill tiourUlt like a pulm tree," an the Psalm-t. _ How did they do it, those old te'. _ lows? Take I novel by Thackeray, tor “ample. It in }nouumenul. Looks lit, it one ot them womd be I life work. The more paneling ot lt swim I mod- em mun. Yet Thag'keny turned out'., volume alter volume " it time and} energy were interminable. And his} work wan practically Meet. No} alovonlmeou, no cal-62min“. no huts, j iUGeG-ttcisoritiaome". To-du we; have every “ca-mot; to speed, overyi time saving device, all knowledge; ell-lined and eotttpertditutted and stored in convenient libraries Bat where are the Thackeray“ Or the Goodies. Dickemel. Hum: and mu. nos? lulu!“ In vvuvuulvnu .-..._...._. -_" ___'" where are the Thackeray“ Or Lucio! a pistol attot. Then strong nrmu (leeches, Dickemeu. Hague and mu-ure needed to prevent the open boat nos? (trom being battered to pieces against Men of their day were compound to I the nice! plates of the muler’s side. unite time. A journey of n few mites 1 With nondertul hainnce. one at the took all an, or several days. A din- l thtttermett sand: in We rocking on". ner lnvolved sitting up all night and l, waiting hie chance' to throw the cue» drinking one'a eel! under the table. 1 aboard at the proper instant. It take: A message to n friend was am a IO. , a keen eye and a quick bend to throw word [elem-em, but a beauzitnlly pen-zine been can, when both boats an nod and excellently expressed my. I rising end inning tslterturtely, rocking- Such letters were preserved and hand- _ home fashion. ‘* -- ___-., -_1 r_:...,.k.v no on. ad down. Later may were put mm print. How may letters have you written which will he handed down? And how would you like m hare the but later you ever wrote put Into print? Chances are that 'lt you write. more than two page» you apollgae. And you “so it. “Your. hastily.†The men of the ox-cnrt days did thins- thorouhly and well, in the dun of the wireleu, we tave no time." A any»): Dickom' relic will shortly be no more. Jacob's Mud, Belmont- coy. Enxlud. on which Manda the residence of mu Slkeu, of "Oliver Twist" fame, in going to be demodeh- A rural minimum once flowed mm the home ot the famous cr!metster. and one “punched the homo by new: ot n rustic bridge Now t'ue mllHtre-m has d.hnpptrttred tor “my and horses and names. huld swujf ' l Bill Biker home Jacobi bland the" lung 1 most in- terutlu binary. Film and picnlm used resul‘rly to be held there. Frees. stun. “d t1owttrtng hedgel. making the “one a truly rural on». Now all In amputation. and soon only the old plans of Jncob'a Bland. carefully treasured wlmln the ur-red Dravincm ot the Bermondsoy Town Hull, wlll remind us of in former glorlu Work is to be resumed in the old copper mines of Finland, which were discovered in 1757 and operated in n primitive manner for 180 years. In the fortunate Bermudas there are no up!!!“ to nlurm;.the indigenous and! “and in not even dangerous in appeiranco,'und the' green turtle is "annulus into delicious soup. or birds and tut, tho Mandi- have a splen- did "ttret Bermudian: would nqt an". to deli): évuu should the im- pomuon ot men PerSytr. The original csplta'. of Utrmudn: was Bt. Goons, on tha Island ot the same name, founded In 1795 and In- corpoutoa three yours' later. ' " James Coehurn danced the mtttt of government to Hamilton, on the Mala Inland. toundod in 1790 and “women not! In IN8. Although a Bpuu'urd'n name din- â€uni-how the group of Islands. tilng. Iuid weak- from non ot tho unit. composing the Bowman; the Hun ltluud. St. George, Pout, Smith, " David, Cooper. Noland, Waited. Ire. lud an moi. boll. typical The population than may mun. 1:- MW your with ma the distinction of boll; tho oilolt "ir-tttttg colony In it. In†. Demolishing An Island. [otheDuyoofOkl in the Autumn- When an cool winds ot autumn chm the air. an hardngptho rot] British nah. sour-non south to warm" inter: and an In “(I no†the coat, up a Undo. amp-pot. “I. hon-lug tor-mime chat Other!“ of tho Unwed Kingdom, at it In nun-ted that t.tit0,000,000 Ian-ruin If. llndod in Britain duh: one am. Hundred. of tt.tttng craft I." out Iron: northern and poncho": pom to reap I invest amount the shoal- u 'they travel down tho out can“ of iScouand 1nd Each“. Win“ . pu- ' -. --. n.‘ main-1n- ’the - - when both boat. we ruin: and telling alternately, rocking- 3 home fashion. 3_ At Vermouth ond Grimshy at the. lunch ot the year. runny visitor- l come from the North. To listen to the loamy hunter had chatter at: they {tend their way from the ration, e â€tr-“er would imozile that they lwerr plenum-trim"; Ere long the (tee would dieeover " minute. i The sound of close rtng upon road l way 1nd pen-loot; no mere pleasure- it.,".':'",.": theâ€. hut Scottish usher-lea I Mes, who hove iollowed their mentolk down try truth to help in the hul'VeM With their broad arms Br?t'ettt and colored showl Inns, they are pol" eonelitles to he remarked upon. " mulch Lenin. " When the tUh in eventually hmugr: . into port, the women busy themwlwt . It the cleaning troughs. being drasso‘u jior their tut in oilakin aprons arm 'IClO‘Il. These inlhnttriou. women a": mnever idle, he, strolling to their work '.bttsy hands are employed with kr..' "ting needle. end wool, making. ' 'x'tr' ' _ Iiee" for the helm- at home. ' Out of the harbors round our t'OttFin the (“Elk ot the block is heard. arm. . .1“ the an! mono up the meet, the m ‘jting nun strike. upon the brown um ' : no. turning them into sheet- ot wow I in; red. The smacks move cut of the hurtsor under the freshening event“; ‘jhreele. Al the morning mints bogm th0 lift. they eliently slide into purl, T the - nruticelly washing the gun l‘wule, the (looming huh cover-mu the ', deck plenkin‘. I Once nlonuide the any. the det. d rlcke are Inoon It work hoisting the 'tt mull! of . ni‘ht'l catch. The shining I heap grown with every additional bau- _het, and soon. " the brightening amm- ,,' in; light, silvery rays tUM1 mi: from who me of herring. ' Hustle and Dale. ! What a change of swat" "lu, at though a music wand has been wauul "‘0'†the inner harbor, cemimr than) r- ' who were uleep to come to Me A j, short moment before you would have "l,r.eard the lip of “Nor nzniml the . '; walls of the harbors; Low 3'!†air in ir/ye, with clamoring "w it“, h. "g'ng .01 r‘asks, Pd t?.ypetetatu"ty,., I Tile 0"»le . L... {than iriiirLiis-rsouth of masks, 'md t?.ypeteta 'uttt'uy- The annexing! . L... than! and their a"ista8oeCtntsr. NI nor"- ever nnh looks than in to be swan nun being cvuntéi, welzhod. and parked into barrel, to do dosmtclwd about, the (main. " the In! wagorload rattles "my to tho station. the splash at 'IthJl'Oln tho hone I. ttmird, no computed " the awn-h of mop and brooms, u the qnarside and marktn In Gounod la main.“ ot vb. mar row-'1 humâ€. Moot Ind ttgtttaottr'ted l tum u- tho Hunky, trot, the world below we. The long brown path boron mo lad. in: whomur l ehoooe, Hetwotonh I not not ttooddoeturte, I mrtrotf m (cod-tonne. Honduran t I...†no non. PM mg In Ion, no“ nothing. Don Vlth â€I â€In. “burl. “on“ "tteh-, Inna: pad “but I and no on. inmomwn ThoOpenRoud. “our 'AnEiduhHoe amt-i the In: and out when numb Miami on." you tt to aim I . C h" “I Idem“ tot - M . Sunday to I “60“.“! Queen mu I Beattintt duke cost him I . - - nun to a well, Maud " bank balance “It at “.000. You cal thnt -ttatity ,vlticlt coal - II . luxury Winn-h few At â€in art-M Itouser, Yul“ an I Kmdnum n m up! In commaâ€. â€andâ€. “d" Both Mn 1 xl' . x. not! mph!“ can“; but our“ and mu " (I. occasinn I - nttt cc‘lnv I doâ€; yam In an hour, Wm M: - room» Miami HAM Qm‘gm-l; tit, M tor ' u tttme mum a m~+m In 11mm twice In a 'tu,ae-o,toItt tattmrl'sy, N Mum for l m ot a Ms" 'oeutret of tlte h (a no purpm and “clamâ€: My furnitur- lean risk to th VIIIW. tho ho hauled try tsatlit evoq, knqu t an to be rem Exercises One's I It in a curiou> and till It", whatever ltourw th . ll We eyes of thc 1 property so long as In- HD ll loudly the host. h It. "on, But this it IIâ€. no Seven-Kn m was gaunt-co; and. M. In one could ph - more gravofully all on own Royal “I. King. houn- - which he usual MI "I. rettt to an: to neat under bin this ohm" thr um " submitted tor amendment before in Issued. pe " " tt at tt h GUN" ties " Dun k to“ .r.\. or ti luau “a in ad my be Fulton Union up)â€. tr lorm I tye, '. Oil , .t. bur of departure " â€was 88.1. 8004-31! can at he toot. th In to the atatton Tl MM PAYS l m mutt I 19†tron We on will.“ up "