_ _ K, , _ _ if _ ‘-, 4 _ .‘ i-_ I _. - _ fr . :___ _ - ~ '--f-;~’j.v_-1-_ 5 --A ~--~‘~---~-~- -_...»---~--- Z 5 ~-~_ ',;".`:_:___’_=;h, " `§`_ 5;.` 5.1,; '. _ $3; __ __ Y Y f‘ n`*~ f ‘ ' 2'* 'x ~ -. ~ r 1 » ~ - ` . _ . _ _,r 1 _ ' -‘ `"* ‘7~ _-"-f-:-_--*---;_r=_-;'¢~_-_Y-_1_;-_-L-;z-~ -~=f _ _ _ __ ______`7____ _ __ ,_ ___ _*_ _‘_ __ _* __ _ ____ ___ _ _____.t 'Q "' 1" 1*? K3’ `l’T ’ ‘ * 1 7' Y 1 ll Zi ll li 1 i’vtii'¥~'if°3;f.""_il@*¥i.'>°’..i-..~»'fi _‘ 1 ‘ ' ,C,HA;RL0T"1"Ef0WN.lPsmcB EDWARD ISLAND 'cANADA. sA'rURnAYiJUNs .7 .905 ' T pg,-;,,,¢,g»,»;,;$“g ’ ._ 4”`”"_'_"": H* ` T ’_'.`°.‘“i_ ff ' f if-' .nr V' f _Qs " '“""”' “ ' ,V I' »~ '- _ ,i .1 ._.._ u , ‘Vi ' ., 1 4' _ , -» _§,' 1.-. li' " he ~ ,_ 1 -' C. ~*;'f~: -we . = _ ____ ' va.- -'- \ fu*-_}5 r -by ~7‘,‘E' THs'»MAYFLowE;@ .5ToNE,PLYMoUT1f Plymouth, England, June I.-Your cox-` respondent sprang ashore yesterday from the gangwayof the great ocean liner, to find this serene island in the throes of four Huliday, Sin\kespeare‘s Birth ny, Easter Monday and St Georgds Day. The two latter RN religious ohlorfaiioes, 'bitt the Blink BDU' day is secular, ooceurring once in each of the four seasons, when all worlnnen solemnly lay down their tools and rest, hy playing as hard as they can-running, cricketing, jumping, boxing, pienicking, boating, horse-racing and exercising with unusual vehemence and violence. Then, feeling much relieved and refreshed, they go to work again. On this blessed Bank iioliday, not only do all the banks shut tlieir doors, but so do all other English institutions except churches and bar- rnonis, Ani-arir president oi the Bank or England had the patriotism had vm- nnnn or mind to iwdaln that the anniver- sary of his important demise should he constantly oeifbroted-thus originated the decree that ill il thc island with leisure. This Piymouthls one of the most at- tractive and beautiful of English cities. If I had been one of the Mayflower Pilgrims, I wof1_idn't have left. Some' pictures of its and spacious harbors willbe sent yoil' in' time to upper with uiia latin.-_ also in tha ixwulte ineinorial of tlpfllfiilng of the English inet to annoniitir, ,the Spanish fleet of 1-iiiiip in tha aid times or Elizabeth; ina fine n\onumg§i|tm8in Francis Drake. who was playing “nine-pins" here, when the cry came thlththe “Invincible Ar- mada" was in light; but who was D00 privilegedto meet it, bcpausc, as inscribed upon the moniinlght, "Be blcw with his winds and thoyfiiore scattered." I Blind yon also photoimalis ora _sharon na.-as built of cobbiestoiioii.. o "sam i" W’ harbor, with n corner 0_1 the fine Recrcaf una Pier, and the ‘sid Bollaiophan, which kidappod Napnioini ‘and nuwlles here a schoolehip for tniddiiss. It is much colder than utmalharlithig spring, but vegeta- tion soenis, hlligd, brilliant to one just from New York, and M! the H00. ll B\lP°\`|’ park on the very lull of tho' city facing the sea are two or three acres of gorgeous 2 ,_ _ . flowers ranging from roses to verbenas, and entiruly unprotected. Plymouth has awonilerfnlly picturesque waterfront, easily lending itself to com- merce, pleasure and ricfeuse.Perhaps. its appnrentpugnaoity leads all other features. it is one of thc hundred mimic Gibraitars which England maintziins in different quarters of the globe. Every promontory and point. of vantage bristles with steel. Thereis a section of the British Army here, just as there is n section of the ditto everywhere. Battleshlps and armoured cruisers and protected destroyers slumber in the-oiiing. There is ii naval school here and a naval hospital and a naval dociryard and a naval laboratory and the marine barracks and a lot of other sult- water eontrlvances. Yesterday we rode on the trolley out to salcnsh, a suburb of Plymouth. -*H1080 young women an the terror of tha saline sportsmen. These flsherilamsels bluntly refuse to acknowledge the physical su- - =s= -f we or ..h ti- 1 rm ~ "H - _ _' V , :i¥ta;ouil»y“f£;l.‘y:\?l_ fiotgvaiilyiliir wasp';:- ‘ "A “' A it ` OOD, th _i nnui _nniiaat ‘ .ii .ea ..Z'.'.§.'i§i.;r .ff.....i...'°.§f”.i.f'-`iiI§5:'.`.1.'f ~e»-31@~d»»T"'°“° . _° °°“ “°"' .°" " 9 ' 1 iihvrfh S CON V/‘"6" .'::.°:; f;_ ,_ i., ' _ _I ;hrslsi_4u’|_." ‘ ~ . ~ A ` V rl 5 "‘I kno)V~bismoalwellyooars,"mid the ` _ __ L_ __ ' I _ ~ .,, _ _ vlliurnviiyoaauaone-'ofrlthl Hinds pm- ‘ ‘ " ` ‘ " fb hm” ¥foasisnsi~ pam* Itis an manga to NCR! lv Hdrdwmun ‘Paint _ ... .,jJt.___. _,.. l l>¢rlority. 'of the' “mnle'.Vxuan," as Queen Anthonyoalis hliyir.-'§'h$t xi qusrterof aaentuvy asc Home cl'.‘_ use ambitious girlies concluded th`at`thhy would like to fwin the prize ln'tiie-annuoi itgattii, espn cially' as it o'asiir.lovlng__eu'p 'of gold and silver anii_ would holdivgalloa. They made a .ueiiar skin. dressed ln` serviceable kiltios. set.tl»d»down'_to Practice. Kailash ly sont word to_n.ll‘ths.‘Devonsl\iro boys themark on raoingfday, and, ae- thelmar chant said. who _told-‘mc_of it, “I'il he ‘nnged.sir. hef~ they didnt csptuie the ,given-y and carry it. ri_way_itoftheir deal" vanshirewas astoniihod‘,'but thc girls insisted thntit was-',»l\_0 accidental spurt, and since that time tl\ey’i\ave won about half of the réizrsttas in -front of the town. Every not they send ur the wilsss yell -1,7.;-s-sill We are eon|ingl",.e..,;‘j_€_’. _,,,_._¢_»_ “Noi 'WUI Hiivelft anything for you!" exclaimed is Chiwilun, sitting with his wlf_`o_ one couple of chairs in Bt. _Jamcp Pai-lr the other day. The .remark was addlomsd tol an obyidas beggar approaching _and cittending his hand without _lille obssqnlousness of msndicnn. posted. for,\tbo speaker new saw that the But I. nm hauuhorizad so oolieot a °° *iw “W5 'im 6° ”»‘°-'° °° -i 'i ul” -iii 4 J min i ima. .1 our scawvsmrss .=ee..n1sh"»wief'°-° Z'-` W' c‘n M __ ._" A . ._ ' , ii J ‘vm‘A‘“m’~i , t °”“ on H GOOD- »~'=~ fe ed ~:.:<.°:~.:r.:>.'..~:~..i:.r::‘.:+.-r:::.: yhhits arseui¢\l»°°|°|’i°8 "*‘.“°" "d 'avi in-only yon-¢iii~a'm¢`¢uapniiaa i ' °'°.‘§z.2‘;"'w‘$ T1°=i’»<%f-‘2»’?.‘.¥."2_‘-IS‘a.n.i".*_f’.f rr..:»'f~‘*f'i"'f#*"t"'“’ '"“'""°‘"°‘_ _ ' “You lrslaaimpadaat soonadrai sad. Write-us forbookllt ` _ you _Ulm tbl Kioglsaidmo. Youve 'pauileouikv 'mf' ,_ I i»\“\l‘f_¢n§i'_' ii°lliPkl|'i'\i_°'Am¢rl¢l\\\. "sa’ no lnunuiimnrigsieainan, iyiagia waltidllh jeqyirphgl tlsoughtiie _if-_<=~l~f'f. _ _ _ F _ . _ _ »p~_u- 'HL _ . _?2EcpEATroN'P1se ' I b i W 3, i`|_ .-17 § ann.. wa. 1... i.. ruins.. an _A'z>1~fA1JA1*fs*1~foz>IAL.A'r1DLvNoUTH __ _ in ' But he rose _from the chair,-fished two coppers from his pocket, handed them to the beggar find, with 'ailnal' execraticn 'of "nil such despotic trick`_s," indignantly left the park to. itsvlciorillls custodian. Now, was that worth wiiilei Why, of _course not. The tourist didfsirsotiy the ‘wrong thing. He get Nd in' 'the fsoe, not ‘ ador the collar, and, without abolishing ,tho custcm,lost his penny, his temper and ,his dignity. - ` A good many thlngshete are “different _kts . 5- " , 1~ .. .,i: $31 ..\ _ . ,,__,__ Tim gift!! Ynrtolrsis I r I- ,|.'¢\-°~‘-_vhsiriw ,. x xnaiaaiqainiasimfiai __ f , °,i,,,,,,,, _ _ Q' __ /U_ 'iiiiiaraugy and i. 7 ».\` ` liologysnd Publis Hama. , _ _ Writ! 'of éllellddf lb ` M _ 'rho secretary, '. ' lrhool ol lllning, i ii- Kingston, Oni. i av- V l' .I .'|_ to" what they are at home. The first railroads were invented und constructed hero mid in the United States at about the sumo time. The result was that each country independently deviseil names for the various parts and functions of the compound vehicle, mid these .names called here an "engine," our iircnisns “stoker," our cnainecr a“drlver," iind our car a “cnrriage;" our mils are called "irons," ournwltcha "shunt," our bag- gage *‘luggagc,"'our conductor it "guard," our baggage cars "baggage vim," our trunk a "box," our buying ii ticket “book- iug," our dcpotn“station." Instead of shouting “ali aboard!" the guard snys, “take your seats." Moreover. the freight train is known as the “goods train," and the accommodation train is“the pnrliir lnoutury." 'l`he switcli-wiiiier becomes the “pointsman." _ Here is certainly variety enough to eouss lively controversy asto which is best, and even contention. Why not oom- promisc on the conclusion that both ways are good and neither is besti Ol course, the unfamiliar phi-aeeolngy is sometimes confusing and puslilng to the visitor in either country. Tife Boa' ton woman who went out in London to lad a dry goods store and buy s few yards of calico and nspool ofthrsad was smnseil and dlnzy when she could find neither. She ultimately learned; how- ever, that the dry goods stu!! is n "haberdi\slinr'n" on Regent street, that calico is “prints” and that a spool of thread is n "mel of cotton." She also learned that har accustomed coal was arequlie dissimilar. Our locomotive ink ‘ooala,‘ that hor native tor-ent was “ai #=~»~»»=,\s:~.<~.~..'.+,-wp -6:1, ...,.. £5* _¢$ga`_.J».', ' _A _ L .1 ,xy gt Aw' --W-IQ ' i i wood," that a sugar howl is a sugar “bssin," that canned tomatoes are “tiri- ned," that candy is “sweets," that crack- ers are “blscuits," that linen cuffs are "wrists," thata druggist is a "chemist," that nn overcoat is is “t.opcoat" and a vest a “wnlstcoat;" that rare ment is ni- ways “underdone," and that to be “sick” in England is to be nausested. Of course, here is stimulant to endless disputation if parties are unamiabis. The Englishman is much inclined to stand up for his own uses of language as being ob. viously correct and entirely superior on the ground that England is older than America. At which the argumentative Yankee resorts to etymology and philos- ophy, and brazeniy calls attention to the fact that the word “sick” is used 78 times in the Bible and Shakespeare and not once in the English sense. Yes, it is by all means wiser to imitate the Romans when one is soiourniniz on the Tiber. Perhapsl have said that nl» ready in this series of letters. Never mind ifI have. It cannot he whispered too often into the oarliup of the American tourist in England. Nothing so makes f0l" Peace as topcur into the joints of a conversation the amicable oil of aequlis cence. I must not close this letter without It word about the Barbican. This is n clus- ter of fish whnrves on the senwiird side of the city. Fish are them in great plenty and in marvelous beauty, and fish women, muscular and crying the cries of their tribe. And under their shuffling and muddy feet is a grey paving stone some three feet square, bearing the legend “MaytioWer, will." For this is the very spot where the Pilgrims took ship or fur-ofi' New-England-the British “Plymouth Rock." They hated the rod of persecution because they were at the wrong end ofit, and they bravely faced the ocean nnd the 'winter and unknown land and panthers, wolves and Indians, that theymight enjoy the blessed privi- lege of doingas they had been done by. Men and‘women who endured all these things they were, and each other, and as my foot pressed the British-P1yma'uth Rock, I thought of several things. GAM BLER SLAYS PREMIER. A1‘nr:Ns, June 13.-Theodore P. Dclyan- nis the popular premier of Greece, was stabbed and mortally wounded by a pm- fessional gambler named Gheraknrls at theiuain entrance of the chamber ofde- pufies at 5 p. m today. The premier die within three hours. The assassin, who was immediately arrested,siiid he commit- ted the deed in revenge for the stringent measures taken ny Premier Dalyiinnis against the gambling houses, all of which were recently closed. , i n-s_~..___.!._-_rs-_-gi.-,e _u _J R i-:ASQ N N938 WHY YOU SHOULD USE Red Rose Te B Because' it is composed of both indian and Ceylon teas. The tea bush is indigenous to Assam in Northern india, and botanists are of the opinion that it is' the parent species of ali the cultivated varieties in india, Ceylon, China and elsewhere. in a wild state, it_groWS C0 I nigh; of Qfggon to twenty feet, but the cultivated shrub is only three to four feet high. _ _ Assam being the natural home of the tea bush, it is ,wg sm-pi-iging that this and other districts in Northern India produce the richest, most pungent teas grown in \h€ world--teas that command higher prices than even the iinest Ceylons; but Ceylon teas are VCU' n“"°"Y md fragrant and seem to be specially made to blend with * the Hehe.,-, mg", syrnpy tea ot' india. When combined, the C¢yl0ng give point and piquancy to thoriiquori the Indians, richness and strength. The distinctive characteristic of Red Rose Tel, thu! rich, fruit flavor, is obtained by blending these fine _.__._.._.-Z---- . indians and Ceyions; an|l.anoth_er very lf“P°"'““t f:*“: of Red Rosa viz., its uniformity of iiavor_l I Z year toundils secured th' “UM WW: ‘°°‘°lh'“K :ld pouibioto obtain where Ceylon or indian tm are u sions. The Blue Label is recommended, and unless you like V", Wong gm, me only three-quarters as much for I drawing as you use of other teas. ' ir. rl. st: John; N-B- emciiui mum. wlwrll _ ' um 5.13' , _ § Wi;-lu _ F , silk, iii->”x "`l.. f . \ i i i ,~ _ ` l ri \ i 1 < . > J-i i. 'f72'i:';» ii 4 l l _ 5, 1.. , i v _-,i _ne-_ ,. _ _- -.a-..-¢ _ ,_-._,.. -3 U _, 1" “i ' i?`g'.i.i'"‘ " Jéi Q . ii if ,_._i . ¢‘l§lFQ"é”> 1.. lr 3 = its-iwiilfiiriw “§@..,<_..ne.“ s .3 iii \ `G_ l iii »¢._» os it" 1