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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 20, 1908)
Y THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL. PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER ' 20. .1908. tiSJ.' L' pp- n'D'nQflb,; : ... r3 . ' r .t-r Pi " . - . i y 1 KIT M - -Jh . . '.,. . v- w, . j unp OPP cJOB "0T ,TBfcE?iCK, H BWPOT ORB, : tkoto y ocriw 3X 0 NCE In the days of long ago, when guantltltg. In tfie fertile and un- for the bfly. hl son. ana tne girl, nis the woria wag young ana pu.ny and roaj and all the tribe was proa- midst of the rejoicing sorrow and death, man M as an ant among the perous and rjcn and contented. like a creeping fon, spread over the vaat. ahapea that roamed the i0ne rtay a w)nter storm howled 'land. Vast firea burned the forest land and swam tha aea.- giant along the' shore, a . bedraggled. Wing ? rov i away the deyr. of colossal -Ire left a worn-out .hoe, party pausing on th e h'n the t t - asp. cafelessly thrown on the edge Of the lbeVrShTWind towarT.th Pacific ocean. Long and low like .an As they stood It dashed upon the rocks Htt' hi,,"1"8J,v sudden fierce Oxford, with high arching Instep, upder, and ww broken into many pieces,- iVk afroma" ffiJ whfch .the restles. wave, washed ut puunu. vu , drew a young gin raat nouna 10 a of his people, sickened and died Btorm and baked by aun until at last It broken spar. More beautiful than any 1 ' " , th" aMnn Kkmed in turned to atone woman ever seen by mem the warrior. Wise men of the nation, skilled n turned to atone. eased BDollbound at her hair, fine-spun the medicine of the gods, fathered in And now. today, half burled In the filie the ripened silk of their -orn; at solemn conclave and besought the great sands of Nye Creek Jpeach at New- her skin, smooth and fair with the spirit for a remedy for all the trouble, port, the big .tone .hoe .till 1U. ever rosy tint, of the- eaHy ther nswenngd thw.seent washed by the surf, wort smooth by ot AprlJ- Unlashlirir her from the cause of the plagufr that had stricken tourist climbing, aolld and crowned by broken spar the hatdv warriors carried tho people. It was not right and could romantic fable '' . ' the girl reverently to the village where not be he said, that the chief of the romantic rame , women warmed her back to life. Siletz should wed the daughter of an,' Years andJyears ago, so the story . hutv. hef .a unknown race, whose skin was white runs, far back before the whUe man D"h?5f not red, whose -lialr -shone golden cam to bathe in the breakers of the 5r.vW?u,Jg2',tt,J' ' jVian reared Uke the morning sun through a mist and grea-water or live along its sandy 2 hl own wMU I she erew In race whose eyes were blue like the skies of shores, the Indians of the SUet. were a her as his own, mie sne grew in grace Hnrinetime ITnlesH the lovers powerful -a wise and a great people. J1-.-: lut led Wr .f faction and' walked the"? lip and down the coast were the hunt- .laced princess spread la'Lfn'Jw.;"e' ti, alMrt the nl.ieue would nursiie Ing grounds of its warrior, wberwrom ; Time paused and, the cftiefta.in'8 son - Vtt u'wS? aM the great ' thn TriniintAiiin thev took the deer, ttus Joe, ever, near the adopted girl, was the people unuiau were gone, ine great elk. ?ndUttthebealr?y From the Ashing chained, to her by the power of her PHt ald "0 streams, leaping down to mingle their many graces and, wooed and -won her broken off and the young chief too K a. fresh water -with the ocean's brine, the hand, joe ruled tne neart or me ngea "ui amu.K u.r, L,fr. W.?L yilt,S,f in irA.t rhief tain for his love was srreat. both would be well again. The sun would MIITIA lIDlldtlllCII. V TT vrv v fw - - i , . . "eJUnpFF cJOE' c?tlOB INdHTO-ATLOOTire. r The crops would .grow, shine. The which to make their trow, of renuncia- n streams would run to the sea once more, tlon one to the other, and, their prayer come back to the granted .at down hand In hand while the Tho srnnie would mountains and; plenty would land. fill the tide crcp in and dashed higher and higher ou the rock. Grieved bevond words at the message There, amid the dashing spray, the , , of the great spirit, for the wise men two lovers, the young chieftain and the shared the universal love'for the golden nameless fairhalred girl, plighted their haired princess held by all the tribe, undying love, and. when the tide had - they yet bore the tidings to the tribes- cut them from the land shouted defiance men. 1 at the wise men watching the shoreward A council was called by the old men rocks. . i of the Silet and the lovers were sum- The tide reached the full, paused and "nioned bofore it. where the words of the fell again, and still the young lover. ' great spirit were told them, but the lov- hurled insults at the tribesmen and ehal- ., f.rs, blinded by their affection, sourted lenged the great spirit to separate theqi. tho hifh command and refused to obey. The waves washed lower, and lower : Then the council, determined to save about the base of the great rock until the remainder of the tribe from the di- m last the avenging warrior, clambered ' vine displeasure, decreed that the girl through the .pray and up its sides. Should die, and that the young chief pledged to carry out the sentence of the should be held captive until the sentence council. But the young chief, standing had been carried out. on the highest point, clasped the prin- Standing In the doorway of the council cess in his arms and lifting her high lodge the young chief looked out upon sprang out Into the open sea, shouting the sea, restless, surging .along the wild defiance as he feh. . sands. With a whispered woTd to his And today the summer pilgrim, rest sweetheart, he suddenly dashed away jnK in the crevices of the giant stone with her. to where, half burled in the snoe, may listen, . If he Is wise and sand stood a vaBt stone shoe, cast off knows the way to the heart of the red from some giant foot In ages gone. Its man, to this tale from the Hps ot one heel to the shore, Its toe washed by or the last of the Bilet, whose age the never ceasing surf. ; dimmed eyes light with the fire, of Clambering up the steep and slippery youthful memory asjje tells the slte sides of this rock the lovers begged the man how Jump Off Joe received it. pursuing tribesmen for a short time in name. - .. ' THE LAND OF SHADOW-Slave Hor rors That Persist in Portuguese West Africa B writer from any large number of visitants, ap pears to be proved by the testimony of all who have penetrated into the in terior. The work of such organizations as the Congo Reform association and the Angola league is not likely to come to an end until the traffic has been suppressed. Meantime for some time to come such books as Blndloss. will serve who has a useful purpose tn conveying informa- nnnin., . A r ..A 1. 1 M .nUtn f.a Arn wrltorO fmm Atir(K Another Rnfflish as everybody kndws. may not "Srwtional scandal Among m V an appreciaVon of what is go- " ' T - " ' wn or sell a .lave in any part the authors who have been down to tho ing on unaer Portuguese aominion ' A XT A T A 'O A T T From the St. John Sun. i viaaniataA nnaut actaintt whlnh th Henrv W. NivftiHOn. Mv. Nivinson trol, but he must hae labor, . picked ln African towns the famous old slave trail that tuns up nd there are ln nractlce wavs of eet- 2TT:.n nr ti, mnmlmi slave trade ln from Beheuela on the west coast, nar- MMmt.iA.. mi ii. I, m.ji thnr- f munv thril. rowlv twistinfir . around everv trea and - . u . j . nTrilrh r. dUB onen- .UnR stories of adventure. In a story bush where shackled tilaves from time ner the golden grain of tho great west. made his living by giving lesson are not way. which are discussed open- wnch may be caIled the "Uncle Tom s Immemorial have walked after the Af- over 5,000-of the youth of eastern Can- these. . M. deBonheur, a white-hal THREE INCHES OF COLD STEEL-- Dancing and Fencing Necessary Accomplishment A By Heinrieh von Schuetz. hand and dlrectea mine witn ner ngni. my mm "J"" " iVL MONO accomplishments which Tills will never ao, ine oia man neurr sne saiu """llr7" Crieu. JWOIlBieur IIIU9L J UO OU mi' mni yuung icujr J nv.v tt . were considered necessary in an f nT morf! You must attack with vesterdav? educated young man during the wjth your full force. Don't be afraid "My bride to be. I expect to marry time of mv youth were danotnrf of Juliet; she's able to look out for her in a few weeks. What is the mat and fencing. To learn these I LT!J X.Uf fta ffi teith..y? f" X0U "lck? ' J.eBAe.r,d.ay-heJMa.r,tl,rne.. Provinces went to an old French emigrant who more!" "Puil down your mask, please: son in if waa terrible to me to have to are no longer children playing." haired, thrust against this child, with full I adjusted my mask and we began. a , i . .A i .a . v. . . iy, ana, so iar as one can tusccrutui, Cabin of west Arrica. ana wnicn nns, ; '";" . punmg Dim hui eauuy gd& started last even ng the Ion Jour- tali rniiitarv lnnUfnir man riolnrert iorce, dui n mm iu ur auu " -.'j .. are by no means satisfactory to tha been published In England under tlw In, front of the jother, through the vast nev to Winn peg from which point they I,1' . a lookln man, declared went through all the movements, Juliet as If posseed by a demon and at- are by no mean, .atiaraciory to ma Deen puDiisnea u rs f ,. - d , Hungry'countryracross Angola to Congo 2,111 be distributed throughout ManitfJ ' hImse!f' read' t0 lve -me 'esson. !n parrying mv thrusts with the greatest tacked me with fury. Once when her negro for whose benefit they are some- title of r he oera "P"'sv TVn2.territofy and to th anMn m f.n.in, flSk m. easl Eowinir herself a. much of a foil passed close bv my eyes I noticed and the fact that he is not as a rule ca, missionary to whom the souls of cown over tne oia trail are. caned "con content to recognise thi. obligation 4s gayageg torn from their homes under tracted laborers, but the fact of slav very seldom taken Into account." a system of quasl-slavery were sacred. ry according to Nivinson, Blndloss and Such a conditloh, prevailing la many yh,J work lth its vivid pictures orthe- first hand observers is plain. The tne times aaiil to he devised.. In this, and rAA pinHin mlatpa with enluoden This rbute is not deserted today. All n th kar..cil r whn r namni tn hiirln. master as her father. that the point was unprotected. a few other matter., the iiegro'a opinion based upon actual happenings in the along it Mr. Nivinson found discarded or these trains were made up In St. "Immediately if it suits you." I re- Then came the dancing lesson and Stop! ' I cried, there is no button i. not hnmmr deferred to It la his Portuguese colony the story of an x- sftackUw. skull, and rotting bodi--- j0hn. Two came from Halifax and one plied. . as the old man was unable to dance pa your foil." ' , .2 1. not however deferred to. It Is ma trid .Englishman, with romantic the symbols of a traffic that results in from Sydney. The remaining one start- "Certainly, I am at your service." juiiet was my teacher for weeks. As I ' "t know that monBieur; I took It oft particular business to gather rubber , fdens of chivalry and duty to his fel- great proportion of deaths enroute. . a from pnt du Chene wlch the Prince "But you have not yet told me what Krew more skillful in fencing I often on purpose. I want to tell you. mon- and the fact that he is not as a. ru e ca, missionary to whom the ouls of cown over tlhe old trail are. called 'con- umberland strait by special steamer. "My usual charge Is four lessons for through the wire netting of the mask few weeks you are not going to look. 1 ne excursion, naa an the reatures or one iouis a or. lhivb mm suit your and I noticed a change in ner race. The as you do now. xne otner gin loves similar excursions of previsus years, "Excellently, and I wish two lessons child had become a woman. Her eyes you for your handsome false face. She UrltH , at Avnf..l.r.a An V. ... n aoi.h Oft ' ' I - . .Ull.llll.. ....IaJ... . . . t .1 1 . V.., . . . T ' parts of the "land of shadow, as th Afriean compounds scorched with plti- ict'"f hay -been t oug ht j on account ter was the number of excursionists. "You don't need to take two lessons nor had they the expression of the ahall mark it. I shaU never allow her Kngllsh novelist Harold Blndloss call- le8B 8unsnine and perpetually walletf In . 2, r.f.L AI1" by which was much larger, than Is ordi- to become a good fencer and I can o skillful fencer, but I could see in them to love the face which I admired from never lining snaaowj i ine '.""Jf - V" tmul narny tne case. Another feature which in your eyes mat you nave courage, the awakening of a woman's soul. Also the dav I first saw you. Never!": , -est, of foot wide .trails lead- Vive tM Journey brought to so distinguished it from the average har- Let me test your eyes and your wrist, her appearance changed. She was less "But JuUet " ermlnablv through'. Quaggy caueo emigration offices on the coast, vest excursion was the absence of Follow me." ane-ular. still more sraeeful. but her n . . ii . t-i OVA I nuu Ola DOVAiI 1i a I n t rrt s a wkAl .a ....... : . . . i .. v. i . ' - AMVrV UUt. IIIUlloiQUli .V J- ra PUO fc'a treesana "iurnj '-r-""' "i J5 .i'r.'; aIBnKennes 1" rl.8ntlnB".-. . The class Me took me mio large, very ngni face and shoulders remained unchanged, t doubt . you wni be alive a few For several days father ch. k t attars- m mnr fnrl. had eaten nothing and OUBiv. however, and It was only with gese dominions of east and west-Africa. T' ,.nd , 4een t0 be one In which to work in the rubber plantations. Oth- .ionlsts and the crowd ii unueriies national Org with headquarters now urging British and explain. I I Mil 1 1 I L I TC I 1 1 1 LI1H UUUUUUUU C.Vb.T.t.J 1 . . of the Congo Reform, a.sociatlon' even v-lack forest, after the r a smooth, plausible settlement of , interminably throufjhv'. quaggy ff".' questions of proprietorship inthe BVTamp8 among fallen treesand thorny flfiZ i.ono rr niam apiionrs m n" vcc. creepers where a sour steam rises aaj XV;.. . ,L.i., iL v e" men or men wno rormea tne living freight room wnicn coniaineu no reacnea, m ueijiuni. awouiin iur and night, has already rami narizea """""" ""JV"' - 1 o or the three trains which were made up cept a few chairs ani a- piano wnicn was in need, the frequent agitation regarding the tMousands of English people with the &nl''tPS SiiaPr . . here was excellent. Some whiskey was in those days was far from being as and daughter trarrio in tinman Dinri in tne ruiiu , ... A . k. u.- at a rev a nroniem. . J ' 1 ul lv .wiiro ncvi lit AiiKuiiL nr mnn. in AfMun. amnnv tk. was iub auuviij - ui ic .nin- ihM.. i. . nnrnetuai. cruel sirujtKiH iw - - - . . a, noisv. dui in soite or these n animation of Antl-HIavlsts. ihBre "orchids and parasites ?e. "e Porl? " tne .Portuguese back, evervthinir about the IT . t ioKam huh la. .. . . . . -- - . , i iHianas or Nan nnmo and pinAinA - . . . . , . .. . . uck the life DIOOa irom ihb ir" ,v,. . weni Binoomiy nniii me last the mienerence oi tne thrive upon their ruin while creepers "j"'yp uia ".Per- cal excursion trains pulled ou American governments, .i Htranle them and tear them down nr r," rsz "' JL" """"unruj. naif past 12 this morning. a Mpanrvui ipennr in nuniuo i . . . ,, - 'r . ... .... i . .t iikijl uiiupr mi. train un at iio n n. th. . " . I . . 1 . . . rOtltUI- - .. aniiotnr yvAnn I I . ...... . w " ' " " " ' ajnd the united states uiai ine prooiem th.- ,teamv bush OrmsgiU, tne .,'"" " '""u prouuee hour later. Harvest excursion train, very little, to of the government or central f Arrica EnuBhman, out of regard to a promise ""'Vrrt,"'"A"lH"t'';g Perl8ri are usually accompanied by a number rather strange to me that a lame ma will nvr be settled uhtfl a flood of fl "5" J" L i'..it; irnnn trader, with tha wiwi higher death rate than almost of r n .ictotlv,.. hm ihi. .k.,ih s ai.lo tn elve lessons ln fern lltht hit been let In upon"the actual L", 'i .uVj..,),!. r.f a Portue-uese anywnere else on the globe. no nlaln rlnthea men wero nn ih ini.. in. .hih phIIs fur the utmost aaility. .iYuatlon In thedark continent commandant, rescued an enslaved, ne- tra .r Jllh??rV "con' The. composition of. the excursion but' I soon saw that he was a master la vnen tne -rniuuiHTinnii xvnis lr. from the hands or one or tne i,-rf ' w. '" "ro crowa. was aoout as usual. A rew familv hand. The iirpi rencing iii I -eopold'. virtual abdication-from the faVlyer of the region, and wa. ..Zri0 "'o"ned partle. containing women, and chlldreh folloWed Immediately by the first? danc- lou tjongo wb inniiuiinu witness to one or the occasional pri- rnninr mnnthmr iraf ZX '!c':u were 10 oe ooserveo. out ine great Ing lesson, (luring wnirn im ' hastily concluded that the work of the e? the oppressed and to the .tern "ner oermitt!!if?- T,y majority of the excursionists were men. violin himself. After we had practiced had Conao Refoj-m association had been ",?2.tii.n with which the Portuguese "e'r. rJ?"te to return td their, and younir men at that. Until the last for a little while he suddenfy cried: hav rrowned with success. Yet one hears at ""m..dan, .nnnressed it. 'P ov,r' net In train left the Union depot presented a Kaerebleu. This is one of my bad I the American head c.rfunlv .-nA rf ttiatn tira nnM . Tntf my mind, however, to do so right arm all Uie way from the wrist to the y and, not to hurt the feeling, ghoulder and as soon as she saw the ?,c.ur: Sn?"? LUt, 2 w?V,.U w-lrlf iraani! vf1- .th.ouAht. ? . Mt effort that I -ucoeeded 1 imio v 'v. -- . " uijr itrnMuns. i inienuca xo ao po wnen rr-vincr hr thrusts it a i n f 4 no fni a nnH TTiankH wh lift a number r i u i . , . parrying ner iiiruaw. nr x n m iw w iihii liiu uiu ktii i ichi.jh o"f tnu . 7 , "l Kaaln IIU, Ul TheflSt fencing and took' posT on opposite f'th? -en-jtlve old man I pretended "ah. T th?ew away her fori and econd an me 1 ! noticed that be was a little lame, at I ? would be unable to j com. for heii toward me. I fell to the floor. be sure, out it seemea ;K V v i ; -""- f" but still naa sirengin enougn io wnis- " i-L 'u Bjrcauy r-uevea. per: -please break on the point, Ju .. The old man at flrst absolutely re- fi, fused to receive the money, but at whan T t-ame to once more mv arm t he said: 'Well, you may do Just had been bandaged and I heard Julift 5" r ' f"1 groan: "Oh, Arthur, my neiovea: l .d.?I." .M? P00."61 f ''wi Rave killed him! I have killed him for i mm u ii x whom 1 ahould have been happy- to ve th let that the campaign probability only Just Even more iru nfitkn2wn th" faCt 1 "houI1 nev,r sacrifice my life. Oh, Ood help me, thought so. 'he's rolna to die " let a couple of week, pass before I .ii trrint- amiia nuartera ln thla cltv -'."L 1-ZI,Z m,m. V"""" ""a some run away into tha mn.t ..immi .nnuarnn.. k.i- j vi.. i i. tmnhllnr ma ao that ama tr. tha hn.,.. .v t "Kr""1" , .. , of reform-hai In ail J Explained onl By the dlf ficult'y .V.'d tb5i-l,"li,,aB wded" wiVh "hundreds" of " h'arveTterS ifc't da'neeny more." found a veTy greitchTnge. Juliet had 1 w. my 1 t begun ; . wlth whlcfc the natives get together. YhZt twJ drama ? h-Mfn?-i l"" a mdthelr friends. -xih, let us watt till some other d.y become an unusual beautiful woman. , "pieas-Vlve me- J" iLSf Jrtf" The outrages justify resistance. m "The huTnn" JJD!'J fh "Lt?" . The total number of excursionist, then. " 1 began, but lie Interrupted me having had plenty to eat she had filled jtfet? tha? v wem Aini mm " ; T land says the to awaaen o me mru ' urms v,a who has a streak or rurnanism. wlth hot , "lT" and horror., ana a X,:.-. 'V 'L' "T pecteq tiona tn a una wnrre iiic ixia di ini ..n inin..iiAa and hnrmri. ana .1 . . . r -.- ... . i.v. u lis oeciea. ine last or tni narvaat tminm ri... h hathen cannot hear, and those of the I'"1hink tomt of them can onTy be Jtlon at th 2tho dl"P- Passed through at about 6:S0 thl. morn- H limped across the floor and called danced White men may, ji neema, m prupmai- wa.hed out tn blood. That law atanoa nrnwm ing. jnto the next room: and ea oy masses in nn lauicurai n.i ,. haa alway. done. The great, iraoe , W "Juliet, put on yourjnancin. siipprra until JubbVT d.videnVl.."" W'ti. Berlin an! rUnlm they' Yf II i f T A ATT 11 XTOX1 7 TT T T VnTT "2 foment . ."r Ju.iVt appeared. She Brussels acta of a few year, ago Portu- oom to die. worked out In a few year. -.X "J X XX. JL VV X UULj 1 L- wa. a tall. Willowy girl, with ,a wealth cn tc gai pourva iwni "" '" on the pluntatlona. .it I. a tnmg irai t' n -r T i- or oarK nair ani om ui. .1 n w k. bI.v lrmA. From mint . ., . I U v Kf I . .... .,. mAnth with van- full . r".7".-"-. "Ii3,,.fi.a "... innAnta. " P.""'. ...v.a - X XX. X JJV V j 3 T"3 re c t .VJ"" ' t -..1'i, tlnue, ci to the fact that a substitute has been Je of g,n Roque added one to the long oevised wnicn is prowing; 10 on jui u j.t cf martyred missionaries, Y profitable and. Ju.t a. abhorrent to hu- The rebellion ln the atory wa. crushed inanity. . jUBt as the Kngltsb adventurer pre- One of those who have recently .hed dieted H would be, and a. revolts in tha llaht of aneclfiC Information upon ...1 tha Ifrlun trihaa have the true situation In Portugee West .ucceaalvejy put down. Ormsglll. Africa t. General Francois Jouharf , - Bptte or hla Indignation at abuse, ni.wt n mraanlsina-the-"Agola league" of which Hrrnl whether tha nld bllef that there "'"y, intention to kill you." i-the point of your .vina nan n niv tn aar ana hm fliia.1 - . .. .. . . - be- fram lh. M.rlltm. Prnvlnr.. i. nnnh t. - iUV "a i . --Vn nn nlraM aiav here and nt w i..u.-' i..r .1.. roll, juueu mat your liiner may i ilstered excess of what the C. P. R. officials ex- I shall find 'somebody to take my man looked the same u ever. wh.n "SJ'.-jIj . .-a r .. ' ,.k . 1.V . "L.t v '""-T? It wa. as sharp as tne point or a with Juliet while he criticised t, r ..... T h. .ha nama corrected. Thus months passed. V..i.. ' it anrf 1 ti lr t- one day the old man said: Mon- Sa' a. a memorv of that tlimi. threa yS2. !! btCWB ma"ter- J inches of cold steel. , , h you nothinr more." . . . . - begged him to allow me to eon- HOOTS IX MAA DALAI. - vlrrg a. an exctiae that I had . 8he looked on 1Mrn IO "rm m' '.u-' t. -..M-e bile dur- ' ' xHl rsBinwna""' inn is very true, monsieur, lr you J U never know what you can iln n.i... .,..,.11,1.. in .- jur.. moment like a Eirl of Id, until you try. Toil do not know from your anticipation when the test Ing the next one migni '""J, '" until vuu ii v. i mi no nsir w n - g rum vaiur Hniiftinaririn m-ftan r na iaai iiik a,aiTy aa v un-- . - - have until some grave emergency tlon. and the artlnclal and supersenl- heur." ... JIl VJaVh yai2a?' w .! confronts you and new and per- tlve will become In.lgntflcant: "he Bhe me de a courtesy acoordlng to Jave to 'teach row alona. V ,hea you t condition, arise. worlt. the flesh and the evil will be on the custom of the time, and I bowed "le T , It Is barely possible that If tha K..t . "J.n-7T-L" ..pi..7h "-.a."f. "Yuii.t I am too weak- todav to dance. -How .traan thins, happen in lifa. Stand the Kiod We Wear. They are wearing boot, in Uandalay. Not exactly "our .regular 14 quality now reduced to $J.I9." though thea wer- common when tha boot fever first "cam up like thunder' tha way things Kav. Dr. J. D.-McMillan of New Tert aa a han unnn tha nerro and that he command wera to ma at thi. nUn.ita, brain anrf a in.in. h.art takina- .'.n tha, mo you will please alve this gentleman Just aa my admiration of Juiiet I say An mm. an tn Mandalay. according to la president .nd treaaurer. General waa mada to serve the white man saasO take up your bed and walk, that you new and the stranae. treading easily, his lesson." ... . admiration, not love, reached it. ell- M vinllna Plenaar. at the closo of the Boer war. Bot founded on mora I., an would be equal to the occasion and howbelt carefully. In the hitherto un- -With the greatest of pleasure, father max I fell In lore .with soothe girt . " . ' ' M finding that be bad the choice of ) aur- upertltton and aelf-interested aophis- throw tbe crutches aside, bang the roll- known path of peculiar helpfulness, dear " and aa . I was aocsrpted. my mother But It I. piaasure to learn rrom rendering to the British or Portugese, try. Other primitive peoples had.ehe Ing chair Into close quarters and drag Never make a rash or positive assertion Well, begin then! Don't loo at gave u. her bleawlng. I continue my tha Indian World that there ha. been a rhoaa the Utter. He waa sent as a fcnaw. died off before the-white nan. forth tfie Springs, tbe mattress, the tick- ags in aa long as you live. madamolwlle's eyea, monsieur. Look at laaanna, but no longer took anv inter- - vfandalar footwear That . prlaoner to Hsbon. Afierwards be ar- but tha African, had thriven in their Ing. the comfort-, patchwork? counter- - For. don't you are. even with the her feet; It is her feet .that are dan ,st In them. Never bad I been hit i , ,v ' . raaged lo take a tract f land in Hortu- bondage, filling . Brasll and the West pane, and dear only know, what else wwrst happening, that ytm are still on Ing One. two. three " harder than during them last fnc!nr authority admit, that the Burtnan gee terruorv wnerw r wrww - inotes ana uie cotton-growing atatea oesrae, ana strut forth upright. eartn. an active, breathing peraonalltyT inn it went on uniu me ifnon waa laajaons. There wa. an angry glimpse- that Is. the amancipntea anij enmpara. ...iiv-r. r7 r - " - " ii -ar. r1 . u. m;sitrin or ma. nnw i'". u iwumru ana una un. Aim . . - in uiien fi.t ana wnn ner roil en- tlralr wall-to-do Eurmin WHO can tf- were rre-i.tly called upon to eend mim lw all conditlena. and tet even where that stomachs ordinarily weak, can be- yet a dar fac lies beneath th sod. tbe "Thla i. enouah for today monsieur: ja., min . serpent and threw It . . .1, w -J V n- " men to assist In a war against Kaf- liberty had been offered they remained come cast Iron In the twinkling of an chair is vat-ant tn the family now, a you will make an excellent dancer. The 0 , f mr h,B1 M aag aa if I bad ford tT!ln anout nt srrar'i , .a firs. They returned with a atory sf m subject people, and made no effort to eye: how Sensitive framework ny PC- vlce you loved is stilled. But the time will come when I ahall feel pr-. mere berlnner tik permaner,t1y to h.K,i.. j ,t tbe captar-ef native and tbetT asle a. ah,!,, ,ff the while mane yoke." come cold steal, how nerves may be bird. sing, the flowers bloom, the snn tAhave glran you yeur first leasoca. iturins the danclns leaaon. Jollet '"' ,t"1 " . un " ' ' slave. When Oener. Plenaar protest-- of thl. work John Pamela. rrre- commanded like a clothesline stretched ahinea. tbe cMWren laugh, and you, Juliet, you may go." seimed bare lost all Interest In aprrorrtaten-s. in l.ia c:i:i.a!e cf ed against such conditions, the Portu- spondlna i-cretary at the Cevigo Re- nn whfrti other folk belonglnca bang yourself, are sane, unhurt. The roung girl made another cone- Vf , ' " gee drove him sot ef the eonntry.. 1H iorm aasorlatlon. bas-saM: out to dry. and how new power, the Ah, there Is always stmtirth. tey and left the room, while the old li-w- a, Mnr- r J. . Kara mv , A r"w Mr " ' ' he. -4noe hei snder auapiclon of try. -gince In connection with my work sfrenrth of a giant, permeates a fra- Strength for the nnexp-cted burJ-n, gentleman !1 to iw: , V waa VaikTna- wVth Zl n " r ,f r"r""",T !' f T Ing te orsaslse a fi:ibertng xpdl- n lh Onto Raform awe la tlon I have glle physique. strength for the htthertn tmpotaslbl "1 bop that I .hall b able to In- ' "V". i -t J k " m"n '"' ,n " 1 ' " tlon to vifect a revolution In Angola lmed somethiag of tha wretched con- Never say that yon cannot do this tasks, strength tn bear defeat, tn re-' Struct yon myself next time.- !T.j!,tL- i,r. ,.. ,'. - I' 1 ' r a. .,. 1-at LVmhtr he ws warnHi bv te onions of tne ratlvea of Portiirueae thing nr that thing; never say yos will llntjulah. to go down to the very gtea t two dsys later h waa feellog " . v. . 1 ' T l - t foreign office st Lor-"" of th. r-nl- rni. I wa rartlcnlsrly intereata n die it erer yon are called upon to under- and etill be able ts smile instead of to wore and Joltet bad to taaa tola r-la-o J-eoo lh """ J , i. tl-a to which as a Hritiah tnhKt ha tha nt1n, of kie storv. which la these go peculiar strain and suffering: never weep. - during both la-won, Warlng a mnafc, tleman wan ea J4 v u l I r n . r ..f t e 1 . - will be llxi.le if be stlra up troubl- In very coon "'""a Tha reader gain a, with- shndder end declare that yon will col- It 1. en of thn sBvateiieo of life fut a heavily nailed rle"n. e etoo. tnyseif aiono ts I -- m .i , - the -rcWsial Kie!or of power tint iwtin-1'i effort, a vIvM Imnreoalon lapse If over tha nr'cal la barnnrf what itm tnuch at ran! h la ranaratad: ' orroelto me. fo-.l In hand, while U.e r" h o"1 1n t" rr r- -1 . . i i - t a i r r i -' " With wM-h el maieaty the king Is at ef th atrorlona artnal sisrerv whlclt you at prenent comprehend. r nr streorth for ) t'lcaa nlcttie. for lr- old ecntlevaan rve Us raii : ood In frrnt ef jn I r-a- retain r;r-v c3 r't li fionte In tha rerlon, and f'ns Ma that you will enrac -0d snd "e)rt If regular ntenta. for onnit to stand at 'Talute! Tmn t took Irila tn.!ame1. f-U to .'"t"' " "' ' 'o4 smlcabie ln.ml c'ai-kned a Ma rtrpaty th hand of affliction Is s n--aTy otr til post; trvgih to fort s)f tn-i al a eras, tnynfe.ir, but at bar hand. - ' vr5' J .i r'ti',rV n vlfi I-'"t! e-r -ta-1 In tk cnrer.t wliarraad hu- yon aa on your tieishbor. make no rash ! small whims .and Ilka, and d Ready! ;-vr!: 01' " V t 1"- t '. ' " ' 'i r-v-r--Tiart r-.-'tiri siortritnt AfrMi Prg- limHstioB aa to vour roveri or your I'ke: munt for dTtv. for.tliJ wIUi I si tv a .-. -r t "-r r r -ii to i -r t . it ci-;- " ft..i,(s on your condatl . ti dying and ti, ueal. wi.1 J-I.t t trr f'i tr i-.l 1 ..- - .. M " ' T