Show A ST A remarkable Alot is III printed bY y the thc York herald and other It ItIs Itis Is the story Iton ot of a 0 French CAnadian JOlle Joseph h Zotique lit In Joie Jole his hll alleged adventures In an extreme north northern era ern I latitude The Tho gentleman himself believes It i Is said lnla that h lie ha has been bean lit North 1010 among n a strange race ot of people and scientists are 8 said ld to listen hllen with attention to hi his marvelous talk According to the Herald La Joie Jole first appeared In this country countr five months ago ACO First In Do ton then than In New York lIrk and later In Washington homet ho met Inet anti conversed with celebrated and men ot of science clence At present he Is II In at Ute the of McGee ot of the and he Is II be beIn being In ing to n a most rIgid tort ton for the purpose of ascertaining his ore La 11 Sole Jole It seems I is n a lion con or of the tho frontier from the province ot of Quebec Ite Ife vas railed to the life ot of B a hunter nd inured to the hardshIps ot of the regions In iSSO ho be says lIaS he started with his father tather from Montreal for Battleford Northwest Territory lie He left his lather ather there and pushed on through British Columbia and Alaska And In arrived nt at Great areat Hear Dear Lake But Dut game heln being scarce he determined to so go on In company with n a partner named George Georce Then the story goes rou on UI 01 the mainland thy th y crossed Union Straits to 10 Island Jalan With deli and slog tile puShed u hed across aeron the frozen and Islands during the three yeArs to Grant Orant Land lIntl Tow Toward the ot of 1592 the they found near Cape e lag In this vicinity they learned from the of nn an Iron post left b by some On this the they found tM the tot tul marks degrees of latitude north 0 decrees longitude ude west To the tho north ot of this a few miles they made modo their eam camp In May tny 1192 Thu camp was established at the june Junc Junction tion of two to immense icebergs and White While proposed that the they separate and take n a ten days journey y on these diverging points point of I lee to find the belt beet hunting La 11 Jolt Jois while returning felt felton felton on tilt the seventh day n a tremendous shock hork like In an earthquake It meant that the let ice si Jart and that he va adrift the other dl day In ton that La 11 Jole du des description of this phenomenon was Wal accurate ate The berg to the north Pot For thru three darll daa hl he on fish hoping hope that n A wind that had sprung U ut front from the south Routh would drle him back to the maInland For a period ot of days he was adrift he amId of snow mo bail batt bailand and sINt Land vas II on several t rAl os 00 Jut he be was unable to ret get ashore On the tho morning ot of th the thIrty seventh day having eaton eMon six of oC hi hidOK dogs dOK and suffered many torments torment La IA LaJoie Joie Jole found that the he borg on which he had haa drifted had bad touched land He got fot ashore with the lie remaining do dogs s lIe says WI that the farther north the tho drifted the milder b the climate oUma tt That nl night ht La Job Jole wn was Awakened lIy by the tho barking of his dogs lie jumped to hI feet feu I and found that he was WIl surrounded by a tribe of natives who ere shooting nt at him with bowl and La Ia Jot Jol was armed with n knife and club but buthis his hll double suit of skin hInt lIca from th the The next day they were Willing to treat r peace la Jolo Joio held two to wounded II as hot hostages rell rind the tact fact that ho treated them ni al lowed hIm to put through a little on good terms with tho remainder of the party which con ot of about lie describes the men whom lie he joined as 81 belonging J to n a strange race speaking it tongue entirely that ot of the oilier natives whom he had on hIs Their heir l complexion he stateS 11 of Q a reddish brown hue an and their e eyes cs and hair were either black or brown The men were ore very large moro more titan than I feet reet In height TheIr clothes made ot of and after n a tn fashion The They tO took k him to theIr camp In which wu sas a bl big lent framed ut of whole whale covered with whale lie He remained In the tho camp months and learned a Law tOI words of their Ian 1 lived lIed h two o years among the nn lyre said La Ja Jole and learned In that time thIr language and how to their hieroglyphics I then than de to return to c Ii I ordered the to build Inc n a boat bont was constructed of It waA thirty teat teet long nO wide And four deep Illet i set upon the return journey with two of the natives nUvel To go 10 aver lIer And detail my hardships during durin the subsequent subsequent quent ot of live five months would be merely to repeat in III lesser degree the Buttering ot of the trip rip to the tho island aland The great change ot of as al wo we came south so affected the two faithful tel leI lows who were with tao that both dIed before I 1 reached the mainland I reached Alaska In the fall ot of 1694 I there sold my Iny boat for a atrain atrain train of dogs ard journeyed overland through Alaska and Columbia to Ottawa About a Quarter ot of Q a century n ago o n a similar story circulated through thu pa paper pore per true origin was never neer dl di covered But Dut It had some effect ot of keeping the tho interest In Arctic cx c and th the present story atory ma mah may h have 8 n a similar effect even een if It It ii Proved to tobo be a fiction |