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About Hillsboro independent. (Hillsboro, Washington County, Or.) 189?-1932 | View Entire Issue (May 29, 1908)
Topics of ' the Times g as 9 4nmp'Sf Ifi" !t will be noted thut .Mr. u.ssHeTT make no dtinctl u nil kind of an archists hiih tl alike l him. tabor, of Increasing cflMency In th tank, of wldeulng opirtuiiltle fir repfaw-e or refusal, of d.-e-iiliig com prehension of the meaning of work. tlllH U tO nUIHtlf fMM Of til gMttest rta of Hf. It bul.l 'cm th.it Mr. Humphrey A'ard hits b yet en.s.untered hi In no one with the i-oiirageou triemi in.css 10 rii-lHln to her gently 1,111 e '" '."J."" I firmly that her Innocent reference, to J .". i .j.i, ! "Anicrlcsn ! "Mm', -h'uJat. 4T The Firm of Girdlestone which he had allows the to alip tbroufh his nngr. , g fy an hour before b tiually ahaiidouea 'reh, and acknowledged i0 miulM.f that ba bad ts-en booilwlnked fr tm) ,bird time, and that a Ion wk wJUj tapse beforo h could bare snt,,r aoc of solving the mystery. II turned at m M,,iy and reluc tantly away from t ,,; and walked across to Waterloo bri,tf. It waa some consolation, however. that he had bad one fair crack at Kara iir,i,e. He glane- eu uowu ai uis kim.ki,., whi,b were raw I.rlef message, but he probably thlnka tlie liluck Hand needs manicuring The I'nltcd Wiites of Hussla has been pr.s-lalmed. hut will probably Uot be 111 working order for some time to come. Canadian girls are very successful nurses. Many of them come to the Htates nml marry a doctor Inside of all mouths. A rciuiHylvanlu wlfe-beuter waa scn temssl to "go home and pray." For the second offense the Judge nuiy avuiis'l li i in lo go to churi'h. A minister iiiiincd Pysho Jumped rnmi an in'iiiii liner ami was drowned. And now there are more gisid fysiic in ?: li i r ..: re. So in lie li cure seems to be essential to our health In I hew days that the wonder Ih that anybody survived under the old condition.. And yet millions did. The i!,iivery that Hie carry mill Ions of germs on their feet will arouse a still greater hatred to the bahl man on whom bond the tiles will wle tlielr feel. Commislore Vanderlillt and Jay (Jould were pretty constantly before the public, notwithstanding the fact that each sun-cried In avoiding timtrl iiionlal mistaken. The Uiissliin dumii Is reirtcd to have voted b) Increase the salaries of Ita members. The Increase In probably demanded on the theory that doing nothing Is hard work. Many women s'mre Emma Goldman's sentiment conci ruing the matter of talking when she pleases; but, for tunately, most of thorn are polite enough to refrain from using the em phasis employed by Emms. The time may come when In addition to the book tlM'y have published and the clulia to which they belong people who get Into "Who'a Who" will be re quired to mention the ruse In which they have figured a co-respondenta. A New York doctor linn carried n rabbit', foot for five yenra nml claims to have ewaped all Injury during that time. Hut Hint's nothing strange. A good many of us have been currying aci'ident policies wllll the wime result According to riporlM, the Peking lu r.ette, after n brilliant but brief exist ence of only till years. Is nlsmt to mis js'iid. Roino of the "Old Subscrlliers" who have "been taking the paper ever since It started." probably have become illvsatlNflcd and withdrawn their sii-port. Kvery young man ought to snder the advice which a successful lawyer gave lo the niciiilH'ts of a college debating sis-lety the other day. He said : "There are many audletii-es awaiting you, anil when you address them you must first hnve made out your seeeh. your argu ment, nnd you must present your cause so that when people are passing out you can hear tlicm say, 'Aye, that la true: I Is'lleve what he has said.' If you hear them say simply that It was a good spi-eeh, then you hnve made a good scceh, nnd not a good nrgu inent." I'anlcs, not financial, but of the type which stampede rattle on the plntns are n-spniiMlble for more loss of life at tin's t tin ii any other cause. The peo ple In the burning building lose their self control, and are moved by the brute Instinct of self preservation, regardless of the coiisHuence to others. In the 'oIIIiiwimhI school all was orderly until the bead of the priM-esslon reached the door. There was an obstruction and a pressure from behind. Then pnnle! The more those In the rear pressed forward In their frenzy, the more Impossible was escape. The same thing would have happened If the imprisoned throng bad tiecn grown men Instead of selnsil children. . rew weeks ago there is-curred In one of our New Kngland factory town an event of isvullar significance In these days of grave and x rplexlng la lHr problems. It was the funeral of. a iiieiory worker-an old woman who had never lit her life received nmro than a dollar nml a half a day. In 111 she entered the employ of the emu puny, and In the forty stx yer since that time had missed but, flvibiys from i,it machine. When, nftir l,,n service, the is.mp.niv offered to retire her, she refused When they wl.1 to raise her pay she refused again, say lug that her work was worth no more than she was receiving Receiving less than Ave hundred dollars a year, s!i had work. si happily, lived coiitent'e ',y, and even saved a too.lly sum. Wlicii she died, the factory was clos.sl fr nn entl -c day. im.l lis nltbrs, from :!lf pres dent down, ami the thousaud ci iloj..s followed her to her grave. age n lieu tll( material denu; :nl, of ;r,. are Increasing so rapidly that jrst r day's luxuries Uvoine to d i.v's n'-. lies. It gives one mi use to .1 is-over wrh bow small means the great things. Joy In work, content, honor, may stili b,i von f the soul Is resolute. To have more than wo use, we are told. Is rich es; to refuse ottered aid Is power; t.l work for pride In one's work Is Joy. All these-easily for less than Pvs bim.lr.sl a -year; and all the v-n,i.,. this quiet worker had learned ths great svn-t that the true wealth 1 In iue faithful doing f the work, not In the dollars It brings. It Is an old lesson, but one that cannot ls graven too deep ly uhiii our hearts. To put oneself it0 one's work, looking fr reward in tha Joy of having a plac la the world's ..te the Indlclous grn-ie. luey in dl. nte what. If one dared haxard such an Imis rtlneni'e. might be called bland, early Victorian Ignoran.-e of America which shows how little Mrs. Ward hna read of .Mr. lloweus. no little she has gathensl from Mrs. Kree man. Mr. Wlster, or any of the dis tinguished realists she so jfMbly mum. The American peasant!" Imagine one of the Yankee farmers In a Mary Wil kin novelette addressed as a peasant. We guarantee there would Is" some echoes of "the shot heard roumi me world" right there, while the applica tion of such nn epithet to any or iu flourishing models from which Mr. is- ter drew would lie extremely iiazariious In their habitat. It Is to lie fear.sl Mrs. Ward's easy reference to Mrs. rYct-nVm rf-.in.r :;v. uMvr vi-rut denote not so imieh nn acipmlntani-e with them as a knowhslge of the pres ence In her nndleiiee of their creators. This Is an amiable device of public speakers, and In this case It explain why Mrs. Ward so Ingenuously cites work that conclusively shows the non existence of the subject of her dis course. Hut Mrs. Ward has ts-en In Washington recently, nml she undoubt edly was enlightened there by some of the several hundred friends of the "American farmer." Peril np It has been revealed to her that he Is not only not' K8snnt,M he I the great American sovereign, the bos of tho country. HI wife patterns her attire after the city modes, hi daughter marcel her hair and knows nil about Ethel Harrymore, and his son I a varsity man to n con siderable degrts?. if there are nny American peasants In America Mr. Ward Is the sole custodian of their se cret whereabout. In America we feel assured that, like the celebrated Mr Arris, "there nlu't no slch person." A. CONAN DOYLI ifWfWTfWfWfMf, CHAPTEK XVI. (Continued.) Telling about the Indiana of the Pa cific const as he found them In 184(1, Paul Kane, the Canadian artist, tried to give an Idea of their language a he found It at that time. The example which he quotes would have delighted Max Muller, and It may Interest some readers la till country. In his "Wan derings of nn Artist" he seems not to rerull any particular Individual of tho name of Clark who might have Im pressed the Indians of the Columbia Itlver, but American readers will nt once think of th comrade of Major Lewis In the famous expedition of 1HIKV I would willingly give a ssclmen of the bur! xi rous language of this people, wvre It possible to represent by any isimbluatlon of our alphabet the hor rllile, harsh spluttering sounds which priH'issl from their throats, apparently uuguldisl either by tho tongue or lip. say Mr. Kane. It I so uiltieult to acquire a mastery of their language that none have been able to attain If, except those who have bis-n born among them. They have, however, by their Inter course with the English and French traders, siHS-eechsl 111 amalgamating, after a fashion, some words of each of these tongues with their own. and In forming a sort of pnlols, hartmrnu enough certainly, but still sumVlent to enable th.un to communicate with the traders. This pntols I wan enabled after some short time to acquire, and could con verse with most of the chiefs with tol erable ease. Their common salutation Is Clak hoh nh ynh, originating, as I lielleve. In their ancestors having heard. In the early days of the fur trade, a gentle man named Clark frequently addressed by his friends. "Clark. Ikiw are you?" This salutation s now ii)lled to ev ery white man, for tlielr own language affords no appropriate expression. Wash Uar at l-nllman. The I'll 1 1 inn n Company, whose presb dent, Hubert Todd Lincoln, is the only living sou of the Isst friend the plalii ssple ever bad. Is strong on economy. Those of us who know have I .t t grumbled at the fact that the .rter. who close down the lllileniilit.sl iipHr berth where one's ..,d m,.,, i( hardest. Is paid only $jr. a niontli. Now, the Interstate Commerce c mission tells us that of tin $,;n,, year the porter must giP np to i. company each year I.Mi fur two mil forms of a grade which whoh.,i,. clothiers have offered to supply ., 4,p per rent less. Three four! I,' ,,f ,;. porter's wnges Is paid by tl. ir.ue;. I:;g public in the form of tips The Pullman Company Is . ,. I.'ed at $:"ini,n;o, and t ,,.lirM Its etis kliobb rs rut a "melon" (.f ,,, 1-V; but does Its frugality it" .p. Cilnk you. at holding up t. ,rtr!l the public an. I the railroads? k.t fr-ni It! Herewith is a further er,,n,i, of Information from that hard wovj, . commission : r.sMictlc travelers have liHiUeil apu, fnor on the praeti.-c ,,f rov.riir; tl.e blankets in n IstiIi with a .!,.., ! l,.le sh.el. This is In ,-,. f,,r ,,! wi-i int Is known ns il ,tr, sli.vt rule." wbli h as inlopt-d J;,.,,,, nrv 1. p to that tirce th- Pullman Company waslie.1 the bliink.-s every sit months. Nw the blankets are washe.1 every elKhteen months, or st P.tervals of a year nnd a half: till, fortunate traveler. Ignorant C the disclosures of tha high official tnuckraker : "Tliou hast no tlgure, nor no fan tasies. Which busy cure draws n the brnln of men ; Therefore then sleep'st to sound." Success Mngizlne. It was Saturday tlie linru paiuruay in. CinlleHiono and bis ward bad di- SMared. niuisdale bad fully made np bis mind that, go where he would, Exra should not escape him this time. On two consecutive Saturdays the young nier chant had managed to get away from him, and had been absent each time until the Monday morning. Tom knew, and the thought was a bitter one, that these days were spent in some unknown retreat in tlj- evtew.y.of K.nte snd.of per guardian This time at least he should not get away wilhotit revealing his destination. The two jouug men remained in the olliie until two o'clock. Theu hra put on his hut and overcoat, buttoning it up close, for the weather was bitterly cold. Tom at once picked up his wide-a-wake and followed him out into rVuchurch street, so close to his heels that the iu Inging door had not shut on the one before the other puss.nl through. Ezra glanced round at hi in when he heard the footsteps. There was uo longer soy pre tense of civility between the two, and whenever their eyes met it wns only to ex change glances of hatred and defiance. A hansom was passing down the street. and Exra, with a few muttered words to the driver, sprung in. Fortunately an other had just discharged its fare, sad was still wai'ing by the curb. Tom run up to it. "Keep I but red cab in sight, he said. "Whatever you do, don't let it get away from you." The driver, who was a man of few words, nodded, and vhipped up his horse, It chained that this same horse was either a faster or a fresher one than that which bore the young merchant. The red cab rattled down Meet street, then dou bled on its tracks, and coining bark by Mt Paul's pluuged into a labyrinth of side streets from which it eventually emerged upon the Thames embankment. In spite of all its efforts, however, it was unable to shake off its pursuer. The red cab Journeyed on down the Embankment, and across one of the bridges, Tom's sble charioteer still keeping only a few yards behind it. Among the narrow streets on the Surrey side Eira's vehicle pulled up at a public house. Tom waited patiently outside until be should reappear. In a very few minutes young (iirdle stone rame out again, accompanied by a tall, burly man, with a bushy red beard, who was miserably dressed. He was help ed Into the reb by Eira, and the pair arove on together. Tom was more bewil dered than ever. Who wus this fellow, and what connection had he with the mat ter on hand? Like a sleuth bound the pursuing hanilsnia threaded its way through the torrent of vehicles which pour dts-n the London streets, never for one niomeul losing at,ht ot us qnnrrj. Pres er.fly they wheeled Info the Waterloo road, close to the Waterloo station. The red cab turned fh;irp round and rattled up the In. line which l, n,U to the main line. Torn sprung out, tossed a sovereign to the driver, and followed on foot at the top of his speed. As he ran into tlie station Ezra (Jlrdle t.uie and tl.e red-bearded trnnSer were inmiedintely in fmut of him. There was a great swarm of ,Ms,,,e all around, for as it was Saturday there were social trams to the country. Torn was sfraid of losing sight of the U0 men in ,ne crowd, so he elbowed hi, way through a. quickly as l,e could, snd got immediately behind Hiem-ao close that be could hnve touched them with his hand. They were approaching the honking ,,., wh R gl,nced round and saw In, rival standing hT. half r . W"','r'-'1 -"" to urne, sn 7 1 fmi""'io"' The latter It is one thing, however, to ratrh a man by the throat. . ,n()h)lr "J. 17 !Ti,llVh''n "'"t P er T T ,B.l,."""ln.l football m tin k JSm r-'l l"ard.sd rough, ho charged bun so furiously, was nth nml c... . , " '"oscuiar arms, unci gme a l ,,.,,..... ... . . r jcrs in wincn articipated. The .a i ud bieediug, ''hi,s -.. .i.,-.- of at!afar- nissusi. win, a half smile He i.ui urn mjurea nana ia bis pocket, nd locking up once more laius awara that a red faced gentle,,,, wa, aproaching ...ra.u amgni, excited umllDer. It could not be ...jj ult ,he red faced gentleman walke.1. llHitll.r it be ,aiJ that the red-faced g-.uieman ran. His made of progress-ion mKUt be describ ed as a sun-esslon of ,lort .nd unwieldy Ji.nisi, which, ss he w, rather stout gentleman. aps-ared t0 idicste some very urgent and pressi,,, ,,, fof nurry. hj, fu.-s wss bathed iu ,,Kl,inlill. .nd bis .s.llur had bes(me ,vij inJ shaMless fiom the same can,, jt apieared to Tom, as he gaxed at th.sie rubicund, thjugli anxious, feaiiih- , ihev should b well known to Uita 'TUnt gu)nHy bat. those specklcss gaiter. i the long frock coal, surely they ,!,i i,,.,, to none 'very min 0( hi, , red l..r,l,.,l ... i'srucipatp,,. ltlt ha!f,;;n:ri,,",;;;,;,,,r,,7" ,lrib'1 ,i "lr' nd he rauie down " r IW VOitmnt rhsi,i,h,i,o,e e . ,,; r 7"n,,,n i.m l,i. ",,'rJ particle of breath "ni Ins enormoiu ly ""is liirlitmst hl,...i .... . now no, I i "o aiiams laili.-r n ml t , , ... mollier sere ..... . . """" "r nw " "'e wnula as he saw J- to d iB, f f . nothing loth, but iii,h 'a 1 ' w..h .m,!lv .,,,.f .. ' U'n hii :m 1 ,, . rr ' l'r' W never knew a person who was ot saturated with soma fool notion. '""'t'fll ,,. "''"er. Mil I,,,,, , n .UPT '-" was a short. ea,.r rallv '"'I S'Tir I ,...,1 ....I..;. mot I . j 1 1 . 1 ii,.,. , "'rr 'I n ''' '" ".uld hardly follow 1,. '! ' " r""'' "f railway servants and 'or.. 11 " " 1 " -li m I,,. f .i: 1. r,,., ... . . i.'i.i 1 1 '1 . ' 1 .1.. i . r t - "' 11 nn.L-.... ....... 1 , . ,. .. i. mm 11. ami uieeu nz stne.'s!l.., furiously .to 'li the result that Ihev lln.i. , ,, "pari. i-.ventimliy ""il r.un by the i-ol- i '" n vice, "I 'T.. .y. ... m .... .' . . , .-rnniriK His .V llfl.T ." ' ti.ar ' 'a iisii,i,,.r. Tom had forih,.ni where a blow H"s Mi.il t iiitf out the I n. I, 'll.T. "I f irtf,. '"'''I li'ii, a. 11., 'Irn 1. 1 "He'll bis eneinv, I k y. 'l".. n.n n: some t II tl 'loin. "I'h. f tl snd the guardian of "'i.iitiially. ". K-nVliuan ' sshsined. Keep I'd J'T then !" Thi. la.t "ne inlly energi.ti,. effort on the Wo i'r.si.ner to recover his free- I know they will '." t'H .... . 1 1 in ... .. .1 hi. ,.., '"'spsir, for both Ezra and Hurt f )"'" H"" n"n' "lier than ''"" I,,.",,"'""'1"'-4'' M 'lit-pesr- f..'nIl'Tr ,n too well . ' lt be succeed..,! in the constable's no trace of his ene- '.'stanilers gave a dosen . ""''"If from ; " " c.,,,1,1 r,n,, " " a iloren rushed frntnon" A'' ""r m,"'"""-- " the gre :,f.r.m to 'no,h'r ow I hi. k.,. .. . ' eontfl rare torn lUia bair at tus tboush. .... ... -as . sea imw mj ua other than the gallant Major Tobias C'lut , iirr Jllljesiys Ili'lU Ol tin Line. As the old soldier approached Tom he uuo-sriieu ins po.-e, , t(,Ht when be even tunny mine up with him be could only pun ami pant and holdut a soiled letter, "Iteud !" he iniinm.,.,! . .iaculnte. Tom osned the l.ttPr nad glanced bis eye over tne contemn, ,ilh , fa, w,,.h had turned as pule ai the uiujor'a was red. m nen be tinisli. ;, , turned with out a word and began to run in the direc tion from which he had w, the major loiiowmg aa quickly u bU breath would ptruiit. . CHAPTER XVII. tr . . v -. oau come out with some ague idea of making a last atruirsle for her life ana ireeuom. W Itli the couraae of de- spsir, sne rame straight down to the ave nue to the sole ot wb-re esi-ape seemed possinie. (food-morn in', missy. cried Stevens. as she approached. "Vou don't look extra bright this niornln', but you ain't aa bad as your good guardian made me think. You don't seem to feel no diliicultv in sret- liu about. There ia nothing th- matter with me.' .. - , in. sun answereu earnestly. "I assure ycu there is not. My mind Is as sound as yours. ' That's what they ill saya." said th ex-warder with a chuckle. Hut it is so. I cannot star In that House longer. I raiinot.i .Mr. Stevens. I cannot! My guardius will murder me. He nieana to. I read if iu bis eyes. He as giMid as tried this morning. To die without one word to those I love with out any explanation of what haa passed that would give a sting to death." ' Well, if thia ain't outragia!" cried the one-eyed man, "perf-ctly outragia ! Go ing to murder you, sayi you I What'a be goin to do that for?" "lie batea me for Home reason. I have never gone against hit wishes, save in one resert, and in that I can never obey uim, (or it is a matter in which be has no right to command." Quite sol" said Stfvens, winking his one eye. I knows the feeling myself." Why won't you let aie pass''" pleaded Kate, "lou may have had daughters of I ymir own. va no ir . if j were treated as I nave seen.- n i nau money you should-hart it. but I have lo. do let me gos -.maps wnen I- 1 . u you sre on your is1 imi " ..-ui mi memory of this one good deed may out wrlgh all the evil that you have done. See here is mj watch and my chain. You shall have tnai Ju "i ' uie through." , . "It'a see It l" "l"1"' 11 smi r.xnm- Ined it critically. "Eighteen carat it a only a Geneva inougn. " ex- pest for S Uelievs e , n I..,., fifty n.iin.1. u- "And you hiisii ' t t k to 111.V friends. l)o let me pass. good Mr. Stevens, for my guardian may return at any moment." See here, uiissy, pievens sain soieiiui- ly "dooty Is nooiy. " you through that gate. As to this 'ere watch, if so be as you would like to write a line to your friends. I II post It for you at Pedsworth In exchange for it, though It be only a Geneva. Vou sood. kind man, cried Kate, all excitement and delight. "I have a pencil in my pocket. ust snail I no lor pa- tier?" She loosed eagerly rouno ami spun a small piece wiu.-u .n iiiiuiix .." wood. With a cry or joy sue picseo u out. It was very coarse ano very .....j. but she managed to scrawl a tew lines upon It, describing her situation and ask ing for aid. "I will write the address th long dusty lane, with tha bar, with ered hedges upon either aide, and the dreary line of the railway embankment beyond. There waa no pony carriage iu sight. tihe hardly expected that there would be, for she had taken a short rut, and the carriage would bars to go soiue dis tance round. The road along which it was trsveling ran at right angles to the one which she waa now overlooking, and the chan.-es were equal as to whether the ludy would turn round or go atraight on. In the latter raw, it would uot be possi- Me, for bee to her -irtrnH.-.n ... U.r AUNIBALISM STILL PRACTICED CT THE SOUTH PACIFIC ISLANDS r rj hesrt seemed to stand still with anxiety aa she peered over the high wsll at the spot where tlie two roada crossed. Presently she heard the rattle ot wheels, and th brown pony trotted round the corner. The carriage drew up at the end or the lane, aud the driver seemed to b4 uncertain bow to roceed. Then she took the reins, and the H.ny lumbered on along the road. Kate gavs a cry of de spair, and the laat ray of hop died away from her heart. It chanced, however, that the page In the carriage was just at thut happy age when the senses are keen and 'on the alert. He heard the cry, ami gluucing round be saw through a break in the bulge that a lady was looking over the wall which skirted the lane they had pissed. He nelitioiied the fact to his mis tiess. "Maybe we'd better itor back. ma'am," he said. "Maybe we'd better not, John." said the buxom lady, "people can look over their garden walls without our interfer ing with them, can't they)' "Yes, mam, but she was a hollerin' at u. "No, John, was she though? Maybe this is a private road aud we have no right to be on it." "She gave a holler as if some one was a-hurtin' of her," said Johu with decis ion. "Then we'll go back." said th lady, and turned the pony round. Hence it rame about that just as Kate waa descending with a sad heart from her post of observation, she was electrified to see the brown pony reappear, and come trotting round the curve of the lane with a rapidity which was altogether foreign to that quadruped's usual habits. Indeed, the girl turned so very white at the sight, snd her face assumed such an expression of relief and delight, that the lady who waa approaching snw at once that it was! no common matter which had caused her to summon them. What is it, my dear?" she cried, pull ing np when she rame abreast of the place. Her good, kind heart was touched already by the pleading expression upon the girl's sweet face. Ob, madam, " said Kate, In a low, rapid voice. "I am shut up In these grounds, 'and shall be murdered unless help conies." Be murdered !" cried the lady In tin pony carriage, dropping back In her seat and raising ber banda in astonishment It is only too true, Kate said, trying to speak concisely and clearly so as to enforce conviction, but feeling a choking sensation about ber throat, aa though an hysterical attack were impending. "My guardian has shut me up here for some weeks, and I firmly believe that he will ;:1 6 w A Ak. I Je"V fc'issw I X r vY Jxl ' til luteaUxttiiou pi'"? tliut catiiillinlisiii riot only still exists, but Unit It la prac ticed to-day In maybe twen ty spots nu thu earth's sur face. Tho evidence brought to Seattle allows thut the j natives on many of the South Sea Islands or the Pacific? have never given up their taste for human flesh. Within the pust three or four years these shocking fensts bnve taken pliu-e In the Solomon group. In the Admiralty Islands, New Guinea, New Hebrides, St. Matthias, the FIJI Islands and elsewhere in the great western ocean. It Is only a few, inonH.s since nn authentic ruse of cannibalism wus reported to the New Zraluinl iiutliorltlrw from the Solomon Islands. A famous war chief muiietl Oneliungu wu the chief culprit. A giuilM.iit was sent to the acen ami Chief tliieliuiigu was ronie!ed to pay a tine of Indemnity In pearls of a value of .-ii,o anil sign nn agreement to abstain hetviifn-r from such orgies. Chief Oneliungii Is shown at the right of the picture. Ciiiiiilhullsiu In tho Solomon group is common. Tlie wives of the Solomon Islanders nre their slaves, to fondle or kill, us they please. Should a wife dis please her lord he promptly kills her. and with Ills remaining wives he feasts upon her reiiiuliw. Conditions are much the same in the Admiralty group ami In New Guinea. In some pnrts of the latter group the children are taught iimiihnllHin at the nge of or 7 years. Native custom ri.s-s not permit the Intended victim to know Ills fnte. He may have assisted iu building the house and launching the ramie. Jn surh event, he la simply knocked In the bead 'from behind without a word of warning." The illustration shows a war canoe of caniilbuls nnd cannibal wnrrlors sli.H.tlng arrows from ambush pooooooooooooooooooooooooo W AT tTTT SifTY sn wa . ) ansa oooooooooooooooooooooooooo It Is not often that a person who haa been Iu the rlaws of a tiger ran tell later how the exerlenoe seemed to hi in. John P.radley. on Kngllsli siKirtsman, had the good luck to escape with his life from auch a predicament and In bia "Narrative of Travel und NIori- teua what the sensation was like. He waa hunting tlgera In the eaatern part of Iturma when he met with the adventure. Two other Eng lishmen were with liltn at the time. We marched along carelessly with out observing order or caution, and were not prepared to take advantage of A k bar a warning, when he exclaim never let m out alive. Oh, don't pray Ln ..ti... ...km. ... . r..n don't think me mad I I am aa sane as ,, ' . ... . t.- I l"1". O" Ill I Hl...''. you are." (To b continued.) PETEB THE CHEAT'S WINDOW. ,,,H,n the back," she said. "When you get to Hedswnrth you must buy an en vIoe and ask the stotnie people to copy the address on it." I bargained io post u for uie nrnni, ba said. "I didn t biiruain to buy envel opes snd copy address.. That a a nice pencil case or yourn. .now i ii inns clean Job of it If you'll throw that in." Kate banded It over without a iniiruiur. At last a sninll ray of light seemed to be finding Its way through th darkness which had so long sinrniiniled her. Ste vens put the watch and neil case in his p.s-ket, and took the litile scrap of paper on which so much (leN.ndrd. As Kate Handed it to him she nw over Ins shoul der tliajt coming up the lane was a small IjM.ny carrfnge, in which nil a buxom lady mid a very small pn--e. The sleek little hibwn jMiny which .h-,.w jt .imbbsl along lit a metlioilicai pace Mn.li snoweu inn. it was entirely must .-r of the situation, While the whole turnout hml sn indeserib alde sir of rouifort ami t,Hsl nature. Poor Kate bad Ihm-ii so separated from her kind that the sight of peopl.. h. if not friend ly.- were at least not IkhmIi- to her. sent a, thrill of pleasure into 1,,-r heart. There was something w lio.,,m, nml prosai., itiieh mind so too, alsnit thia homily eiiipac, was inexpressilily sooth;,,, to a worn by successive terrors. : "Here's some one a-eoniin'," cried Ste vens. "Clear out from here It's the gov ernor's orders." . "(Ih. do let me Mar and say one word to the lady I'' Stevens seized hia frP:1f ,i ii k savagely. "Clear out I" lie cried jn a hoarse, ntigr.v voi.-e, and made a step tnnr(ls her n if ,e would strike her. she shrank away from him, and then a and.lcn ttioimlit seis ed her, she turned n, nn through the woods as fast as her f.,.,,. atrength would allow. The Install, that she wss out of sight, Stevens very deliu-rstely and care fully tore up the little slip of pnir sith which she hsd entriut,.rf him. and sat tered the pieces to the wnil. Kste llnrston tlw) quickly ss she could through the Wn(M .ninil'ling over the brambles snd rra,,jrf through the brisrs, regardless nf fin 0r wrstches or snything else which r,,,, atand Is-tween her snd the possibility f safety. h siswi gained the ahi tBj msnsged to mount on the top of it p; the aid of the barrel. Craning Lr neck, sb could set How h fireatesl f th Romanoara Mullf h VUr of t. reterabarav. I.I t tie nirtre lhan 2N) year bar elapsed since leter tlie tireat, after driving the Swedes from tho delta of the river Neva, laid the foundation of St. Petersburg, which he described na his "wludow losiklng out Into Kuroie." Ouly a monarch possessed of the In domltnble will nnd of the despotic pow er of the most roinarkuble of the Ilo innnofTs could ever have succeeded in building a metropolis on such a site. For it Is set Iu a swamp on the banks' of the Neva, at the mouth of tlit river, and when viewed from uuy lofty height, conveys the Impression of ii huge flout laden to the very water's edge and riding on the surface of tho waves. Peter suiwrlntended In person the building of his capital, making his home In a small cottage, which la on record as having been the first building In .St. Petersburg, and which Is still preserved on Ita original lite and In Its pristine condition In the island citadel of St. Peter and St. Paul, carefully protected by another structure built over and around It. Its length Js about S5 feet: Its breadth SO. It contains two rooms and a kitchen. The room on the left was Peter's sleeping nnd dining room, and Is now used ns a chapel. Among the relics of Peter the Oreat which nre kept In this cottage Is a bout w hich he built w ith his own hands, the remains of Its sails, nnd the bench oil which be was wont to sit nt his door.. When he started building St, Peter burg. Its population consisted of a few thousand soldiers and sailors. At his death the Inhabitants numbered nearly tisri.txm. To-day Its population excc-rii a iiill'lon and a half. I ntil a few years ngo the law enact ed by Peter the (Jreat remained In ex istence, requiring every vessel arriving In St. Petersburg or Kmnstadt to brlrr" a quantity of stone commensurate with her tonnage for use In paving tie streets and In formlni the foundations of buildings, esplanades, etc. Peter netn.illy went to the length of Issuing n ukase prohibiting, under the most dreadful penalties, thp construc tion of stone houses anywhere In his dominions save nt St. Petersburg, nnd isnnmanding nil provincial authorities to dispatch every stone nmson on whom they could lay hands to his new me tropolis: while for a long period 40.000 men werp drafted annually from other provinces to St. Petersburg and employ ed In constructing the new capital, un der the sTsonal supervision of Peter the Croat, the real founder of the huge Muscovite empire. The cottage In which Peter lived for a time while studying shipbuilding in Holland Is still In exlsten.-e. It was bought by the first (Jueen of Holland, a Ilusslnn grand duchess, and was pre sented by her to her brother. Cr.ar Alexander I. It remains to this day the projierty of the Muscovite crown a little bit of Russia In the Nether In nils. Possibly no other city of St. Peters burg's slr.e and age Is able to point nut one man as Its builder, and show house In whh h he once lived. Encourage the modest man too much, and b will become tain. A straggling volley was fired after it. and although evidently not struck, the beast stoped, and rearing up on its hind legs, clawed the bark of a tree Just as a rat scratches th leg of a chair or a table. Mr. Orant and I firm Imullnneoiis ty, but without effect, and iiefore a thought of the rrenture's Intention had time to flnah through my mind, I was down under Its paws. Seizing me by the left thigh, the tiger shook me as a dog shakes a rut, and then, growling horribly, dragged me nt a tremendous rate through the thick undergrowth of the forest. I heard the frightened shouts of my companions and the report of several shots, nnd then n dlz.lnrss on me over me; but I did not lose roiisclousness. As I wns Jolted through the forest. I several times caught hold of the trees; but the tiger, growling fiercely, shook me free In an Instant. All this time, although quite calm and collected, I felt a atrotig desire to preserve my existence, and never for a moment ex perienced that apathy with regard to the danger that some persons have de scribed under similar circumstances. How long I was In the Jawa of this brute I cannot tell. It seemed to me nn nge before the creature st(med. My companion afterward declared that I had been dragged at least half a mile from the spot where I was flrst seized. They followed as fast ns they could run. and although I was unaware of It at the time, never lost sight of the beast. To this circumstance undoubtedly owe my life, for had there been nny delay In rendering me nsslstnnre, It must buve Isvn fatal to tne. The moment the tiger liultisl It re leased my thigh, nnd seemed to Ik at tracted by the approach of my compan ions, although as yet I did not si them myself. Taking advantage of this release, I tried to escape to the shel ter of some tall bushes near nt bund. In nn Instant nnd with a terrible ronr the crenture pounced iiim.ii me, seizing me this time by the shoulder, and at the snme lacerating my chest with Its rluwa. A shot wns llroil, nnd I henrd the bul let whistle overhead. Fear of hitting me had caused them to n I m too high. A seisuid nnd third shot were eiuiilly unsuccessful ; and the tiger, nguln re leasing me, began to lick up the blood which rsir.ed through my Jncket. I be gan to feel very faint, nnd could not suppress a groan. Several times the tiger dnbls'd his paws, apparently In play, nlsmt my fuce, but did not use Its claws, fortunately for tne. Presently the lienst seemed to ls seized with a Midden rage, nnd Is-gin lo spit like nn angry cat at some one approaching. wiHso fisitsteps I could hear, but whom I could not see, owing to my position, for I was lying flat on my back. There was the sharp hang of a rifle close to my head, a heavy weight f.-el across me, and then I comprehended that my friend wns pulling me from under the dead body of the tiger. A HOUSEHOLD HINT. Artirl Pat A war t Keep Shoal4 B Alphabetical!? ralala;ae4. The mistress nf the house waa look ing for something that she bad put away safely and aecurely. She thought h bad put It In a certain trunk, and opened that trunk and scattered th contents nil over the Ibs.r. Hut It was uot there, and finally she put all the stuff back In the trunk and searched elsewhere. At lust she found the thing she had been looking for in the rlght-hiind cor ner of the top drawer of a bureau In another room. She did not seem much annoyed by the uiincvssnry effort, but the man of the house smke up. "Why wouldn't It be n grand thing to catalogue things tlmt you 'put away.' so thut you would know where to find them?" he asked. "An actuHl catalogue?" asked the mistress, thinking of the boxes and barrels and trunks full of things that she "huted to throw away." N hy not?" demanded the head. "If you would make a catalogue of the things you put away from time to time. and arrange It alphulietJonly. say a page or two for each letter, vou wouldn't have to go through a dozen or more trunks and boxes when you want ed to find something." Y es," assented the mistress - "but I generally find what I'm looking for right awsy." Tho head .11.1 not press tlie point. A lllfe Inter ail soMlvcraore nrn slon came round on which the mistress wanted to wenr great grandmother's on m co brooch, which she had not worn for ten years. Hhe went to get It out and It was not there. And then: 'Where could I have put It?" said she. "1 was sure It was In the small est sole leather trunk, In that plnk-and-blue box." Then began the search for It, with the brooch, always dearly prized, grow ing dearer every moment that It was missing, and the search ts,k hours and cost great trouble anil worry. "Here It Is!" the mistress gleefully exclaimed. when she found It. "Where do you supHise It wns all the time?" "Don't know," said the head, who hud been wheedled Into the hunt for tlie brsM-h. "Hut If .when you put It away you had set down the plac, where you put It In the catalogue I sjK.ke to you about, there wouldn't have been all this fuss." "Oh, I always find things sooner or later," returned the mistress. "What worried m waa thinking we might have been burglarized and not have known It." Youth's Companion. Apple Pie and Jaallre. The routine of the criminal court pr.K-eerilng had lieen mnrked by only one unusual Incident, und that was the alacrity with which a certain hard character was sentenced for sixty days to the workhouse. "Judge," observed the district atto.-ney nt the close of the dreary session, "you seem to relish the privilege of sending that man. to the workhouse. IMd I Is cose Impress you?" "Now, look lit re," whispered the Judge ns he beckonis! the attorney aside, "that man is a worthless fellow, always drunk and never contributes a rent to the support of his wife, who Is a most deserving woman. I feel sorry for her. nml whenever be Is in prison she conies to our home nnd nss'sts m.f wife In the kitchen. And." chuckled the Judge as he tapped the attorney' shoulder cheerfully, "she ihss know how to bake apple pie." Argonaut. Fall of nemlnlseenee. At the different army stations In the West It Is the tiractlce for the officers on leaving their post for some distant station to sell off everything tl.ey dn not enre to keep. In connection with this custom In "rtenilnls ices of a Soldier's Wife" Mrs. Ellen p., Idle tolls on amusing story. There wss a very estimable woman living nt the garrison, a veritable Mrs. Malaprop. She told us of some Jew elry she had lost, and among tho things was a b.png chain with a beau tiful "pendulum." Tlie lady hnd nn auction before she left, after her husbands death, and when some silver-plated knives were put up for sale she rose and In a sob bing vole said : "Oh, dear, no I I ran not sell them! They have been In dear John't mouth too often!" If your mother was one of the kind who let the children play with every thing In th house, you had a good time, but you haven't any heirloom. Somehow, we always dislike to a cook amok or chew tobacco.