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BY- HENRY YOULE HIND, A., (FOllMEHLY PKOFESHdK OF CHEM18TUY ANO OKOLOGY IN THK UN1V11.U8ITV OF TUINITY COM.KOE, TORONTO.) Britisli Scientific WitiiesB at tJie Halifax Flslieiies C<;inml88io<:, and Oftlcial Compiler t>f the Analytical Index to tlio, Douumenla of llie H. "Here is wisdom. Let him that hath understanding count the number of the beast : for it is the number of a man ; and his number is Six Hundred Threescore and Six." — (Verse 18). The Number 42. "And there wis given unto him a mouth speaking great things and blasphemies ; and power was given unto him to continue Forty and Two months." — (Verse 5). (42 months, or 168 weeks, or 1176 days). The Number 2. "And I beheld another beast coming up out of the earth ; and he had Two horns like a lamb, and he spake as a dragon." — (Verse 11). The Numbers 7 and 10. "And I stood upon the sand of the sea, and saw a beast rise up out of the sea, having Seven heads »nd Ten horns, and upon his horns Ten crowns, and upon his heads the name of blasphemy," — (Verse 1). As the result of various endeavours 1 mutt state that I have arrived at the conclusion that no other L'roup of figures but those named, (666, 42, 10, 7 and 2) will satisfy the conditions required in the perpe- jtration and masking of the Frauds herewith exposed. The o^'.ourrence of this group in well-known sacred writings suggests conclusions which any and every honest believer in Christianity will willingly reject phould any other explanation of the agreement be reasonably admissable. Of the frauds there is, unfor- Iunat9ly, no possible doubt. lu the published letlera 1 liiiil the honour to address to the Hon. F. T. Frolinjjhuyson, Secretary ( State, dated Oct. 16th, 1882, Nov. Ist, 1882, Nov. 30th, 1882, I pointed out witli conaideriiblo detail, tl concerted agreement between the Canadian and Ignited States Tixport ;vn(l Import (iguros during tlio tisc; year 1872-73. I now turn to the year 1874, which exhibits further dwelopinents of surprising concevtc fraud. During the fi.scal year 1873-74, as manifested by thei. work when analyzed, the conspirators adopte two standards, by which to adjust their forged returns. Tlieso standards are as subjoined : — 666,303 The Ottawa Standard. 303,666 The Washington Standard. 909,5)69 The General Standanl. Mr. Commissioner Johnson of the Canadian (customs Departuieut revealed his work by the abatnu tion of $666,303 from tlio Exporls of the Province of C^u"bec in 1874, as .ihovvu by the document titled "Appendix — Memorandum concerning Article XXI of the Treaty of Washington." This fact is i lustrated on ])age 19 of the Cougrcssioual Record for January 7th, 1881, (a) being a copy of my publi; ed letter to the Governor General of Canada, entitled "Fahified Departmentiil Repcits," dated Nov. 23r( 1880, page 34, which letter formed the subject of very di.stres.iing discussion and decei)tion in the Senal and Commons of Canada. The record will attach itself to the life history of the misguided speakers a conscious heitrers. (1) The subtraction of 666,303 from 969,969, revealed the guide or standard, 303,666, (being 666,30 reversed,) of Dr. Edward Young, Chief of the Bureau of Sbitistics at Washington. ' Mr. Hamilton Andrews Hill of Boston, who prepared the Exhibits jireseuted at Halifax for the Go' crnment of the United States from Dr. Young's official figures, accidentally omitted in his enumeration ( the United States FishExports in 1874, certain free Foreign articles exported by the United Stites to (,' nada in that year. Mr. Hill gave $79,133 (2) as the total value of the Foreign and Domestic United States Exports Fish to the Dominion of Canada in 1874, omitting the Free Foreign items. Herring" to Nova Scotia, $ 320(3) • All others not elsewhere specified" to Quebec, 3,790.149 388,229 i;w,2;i4 $4,504,578 Trade Returns. *78.597 778,672 .3,791,152 39:^,772 i:»,2:34 $5,177,427 Difference. $(MH).:iO:i 1,003 5.543 $672,849 {Letter to His Excnllency the Oover»or-0en«ral of Canada, entitled ''Fi^ls^|ted Departmental Reporta.'' (1) -'l>ebat« In the Sennteof the Dominion of Cannda, on Tuesdiiy, January IStli, 18SI, on charges madn by Professor Uind See SBiiate Docamrnts, ulao Hannnrtl "Coraraonii Debatt-s" on Wednenday, Pebriiary 9th, !S81— in reuly to motion lor ooi pondeiioe. (8) DocunipntN and Proccpdintrii of the Hultfaz ("ommisnlon, page ^t.^.'in. (8) ComiDorO" iiiid NavlifHtlmi RcportH fur 1S74, (iHge 32rt. (4) Commerce and Navigalion Keporln for 1874, pa^e XZ6. to the Do (Canadian The iients 666 Aftoi the numbi expose. First igaiust thi hers an ar Second- in arithinc Thin arly rekti Foun ury Dejia d use of 1 Befor ■vith the fi I atta 0 all Hriti ion lioade The f 'uited Sti i^^3, here *JirJal Ui nvil .""fl'lin. I ifhec, Ontat ritlsli t'oluii i'Wfoundlanc liitli W. In' lll»h Oulaiu 3n, Secretary o irivblo detail , ll liiriiif,' tlio fisc ) rising concertc ipirators adopte to the Dominion, the clue to the secret of the conception and compo9ition of lx)th the United States and Ciinadiau ligures in revealed, as prchcnted below. Total U. S. For. and Dom. Exp. of Fish and Shell Fish to the Dominion, $158, I 969 Deduct Mr. Hill's omitted items, J, \ 666 i by the abstir ,he document c This fact is i { of my publis dated Nov. 2'M( ion iu the Sonal , (bemg 66r,,:M [ifax for the Go lis enumeration ( States Exports Remainder, 151, | 303 The tiguics to the right of the line form the half of the reversible quantity 969,969 and its compo- nents r)66..'50.T ; 303,666. Thus— 969, 303, 969 The total Fish Trade Standard. 666 Dr. Young's Standard. 666, 1 303 Mr. Johnson's Standard. .\fter niucli continuous labour I have ascertained beyond doubt that these figures are derived from the number 666 as hereafter .thown, and form the basis of the fraud it now becomes my positive duty to t'xpo.se. I shall prove : — Firnt — That the Uuited States and Canadian Fish Trade aggregates for several years are forgeries ' against the interests of the United States in the matter under review, forming by the aid of masking num- lod speakers an ],j,,., .^jj aiitlnnetical proportion with the above standards. Second — Tliat the relation of these forged aggregates is masked or concealed by selected numbers also iu arithmetical proportion. Third — That certain palpably fraudulent, or omitted entries, or abstractions from Exports, are simi- arly related to the same standards or masking numbers. Fourth — That these and other deceptions have been effected in the Bureau of Statistics of the Trea- ited St ites to (. ^^.y Jjepjvrtniont of the United States and in the Department of Customs at Ottawa, by joint and concert- )d use of numbei-s identical with those found in the thirteenth Chapter of Revelation already cited. IJcfore I explain the system I must illustrate its application and power by means of examples, both ivitli the figures as u.sed by the conspirators and by reversing the figures and producing the same results. I atti\ch a full table of United States Exports of Fish, Shell Fish, Fish Oil, and Products of the Sea 0 all IJritish North and South America for the year 1874. The masking items are contained in the sec- ion lioaded "Products of the Sea" and include the items, Sperm to (Quebec, &c., $94.') Sperm to British West Indies, Src, 210 Whalebone to Quebec, &c., 838 The full Canadian alleged Fish, Shell Fish, Fish Oil, and Products of the Sea Imports from the ■uited States for the year 1874 are given in my letter to the Canadian Secretary of State dated Feb. 8th, S83. lierewith resj)octfully enclosed. TAllLE 1. portant differeiii h and Shell Fi o on pai!« 4;i5 of tl y statement, of i I'otill. 504.678 tent:— •acle returns. hsH than the tin stent : — ;rence. ,ooa .54.1 W,849 { Reports.'' by Profo»»or UindJ to motion lor corf Thk Fi8c.\i. Ye.\r 1S73— 1874. >jtkial United States Fish, Shell Fish, Fish Oil and Products of the Sea Exports to all British North and South America in the fiscal i/ear 1873 — 1874. oyii Scotin. N. liriiniwink if P. E. I. ipbec, OnlHrlo, Manitoba, (fo Itlnli Columbia, k'wfnundland and Labrador, lltiih W. !nHle« & Brit. Hon'1ura», (ilinh Oulana, DOMESTIC EXPORTS. (Masking Entries.) Kl«b Dried or Sinoki-d. Fiiih Presb. FiDh Pickled. KNti other cured. Bhell Miih- Oyitera. OllK- Whale or Fish. Product* of the Sea. '. E. 1. $ 7,982 113 11,409 4,1188 0.488 3,001 « • flS 18.3 9 6,442 65,923 13,603 iiperm, Whalebone 946 838 496 1,807 3,117 ' 'luraii, ll,Kl« 1» e,44» 7,860 2,648 1,747 ■2,41H 1.3S 1,940 1,960 8.19 ttparm. 210 Total. 2iM\ 449 17,W 2I,6M 71.976 19,080 1166 KM 6 FOREIGN EXPORTS. Nov* Sootli, New Brunt-, wiok aod P. E' lalitnd, Quebec, UDt., Manitoba, Rnpert'i Land ^ N. W. Territory, British Columbta, NewfoundlBDdif Labrador, BritUh West Indies and BrlUsh Honduraa, British Guiana, Total, Herring Plokled. Free. I Dutiable •320 I $3.0M SM 4,371 Maolierel ricklud. $3,«08 517 All otV«r" not eUewhere apeolfted. Free. • 7,34« Dulliible $4,770 1,!2M 'Oi 220 4,12& 13.8TS bardlritn and AniihovIeK In oil. • 1.128 35,391 1,603 141 .18.258 WliBle or Fiih. •le.uW 8905 SS,09I Simniary of Doniritli- and Foreig BxportH t» hII British North and Boutli America. UK li%h\ 123,630 j ,„. Fish. Shell Fixh. WImiu and Ilsh Oil, 44,l)i» Suerni, 1, 1.^6 Whalebone, KW •241,770 Summary as given in Table XIV. of United States Statistics presented at Hali/ax in 1877, ^■'^f/* 335 "Proceedings and Documents of the Halifax Commission." Year 1874, . Exports of Fish from the United States to the Dominion of Canada and to the other Provinces of British North America. Canada. Other Provinces of B. N A. Total. Foreign. Domestic, Total. Foreign. Domestic. Totai. 48,847 30,286 79,13.S 2,889 1,803 4,rf»2 83,826 Free items omitted by Mr. Hamilton Andrews Hill : — Nova Scotia, &c.— Herring, Pickled, $320 Quebec, &c. — All others not elsewhere specified, 7,346 Total omitted , $7,666 I Hut 7 inj,' i]uantil Their lion, will } Summary of totals :- (A) Total foreign and Domestic Exports of Fish and Shell Fish to Dominion, Lcds free articles omitted by Mr. Hill,.... (B) Total Fish, Shell Fish, Whale and Fish Oils and "Products of the Sea" Exports to all / British North and South America, $241,779. Total Domestic Exports to Do 153,566, without Sperm Total " " 155,559, with " Total Foreign Exports to all British America 86,220, without Sperm " " " " " " 88,21,S, with Grand total of Expoi*ts to all British America 239,786, without Sperm " " " " " " 241,779, with $158,969 7,666 $151,303 & Whaleboi^ ii I & Whalebofl u I & WhaleboJ There^ liiasking ni porta less t (\) Tne (i) The jiropurtion is ■erms ol tlie r lion the prod I "'Ituleof riiri NoTK — Ur r>B('ernpi| |,| inipstli' and Forelgi hII BrI'.lih North iitli America. )M,630 j jpj , ItOII, 44,lt ili« i|iiantilles Kworn to In evidence at Halifax In 1877. s The relation may be expressed iw follows : — 728,663 — 666,303 = 303,666 — 241,416 and 728,fl63p/»w 241,416 =666,303 7. Island, 2«5,723 i«6,2»I 19,238 1,865 $728,921 (T) "Sptriii" |iM6; Sp«rni #210, «(ittal to Sperm IISS. 8fv Tablt* of Exporta under headinK "Products of thu Sea.' United 1 )educt Tl W M. ()f cour jiorts of I lioh were uw, Skiui To Ad The sev These n w all aho 1AL Standard! mENTIiV THANH "SpOTin." "When we compare thsse figures with the suinfc total of the Ash items :for each Province In tlM Trade ami avigation Reports for 1874. we find that Ontario has. - - - 119 dnilais loo much. Quebec has 109,216 •* •' Xova Scotia has. ;J80 " " New Brunswick has, .104 •■ •• ' P.E. Mand has, » " ■ •• ' Total, - - - $110,358 too much. On page .S«9 wu find tlie transformed entry, "Furs and Skins, the produce of fish or Marine Aniualh" im- iited from the United States, *1 10,256, which number Is made up of the fcllowiug: "Fui-s. Skins and Tails— uudresscd"--Imported from XTnited States, Quebec, - - • Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, til09,213, page 115 880. •' 170 718. " 217 Total. «110.25<( "Tliese Terrestrial items being thus transformed Into a Marlnt^ item, «ere then added to the Fish imports om the United Stales In llie proportion given." Especial attention iH directed to the addition of the. number 2 to the alleged importw of Quebec.' iinbec haa |109,21.5 too much, and the transformed entry is only 8109,213. This m an important fea- iro, which will be noticed aubscquently. The 2 (horns) are incorruptible element*) of proof. They ap- !ar in 1875, and are partly developed in Example XXX VII, and Example XL, to which the reader is re- ned. Dr. Younf,' mu-^t h>vve known all ^boiit "Apjiendix — Memorandum." i...r{El-ATIOX TU .■)().'<. 660 THE HKVKH8K OF 066,803, EXA.MPLE VI. United States Exports of Fi«h and Sfidl Fish to all British North and South America, $19o,G(»6 Deduct sum of masking Articles "Sperm," , 1 155 (Sperm |210 and Sperm SfHSS) "' .__J 8 the different Tails — tmdress 0 concfitions, bii ;o the transform [etail in' my puli loral of Canada ly letter, nd the imports « o $728,921 in tli Se»." Then $194,451 With 109,215 Mnko 303,666 U. S, Exports loss ''Sp(Miu." "Kuhi, Skins and Tails — undressed." »1 94,451 Young's SUndard. Of course the converse is true, so that when from this number 303,666 the United States unmasksd [lorts of Fish and Shell Fish are deducted, we get the fraudulent item, Furs, Skins and Tails — undressed, $109,215 lich were added to the imports of Quebec from the United States ; and when from ?03,666 we deduct ur«, Skins and Tails— undressed" we get the United States Fish Export* less the masking items "Sperm." To Add RXA.MIME VII. 666,303 . 109,215 "Furs, Skins and Tails-— undressed." 775,518 To this quantity add 194,451 The U. S. Fish and Shell Fish Exports unmasked. Total, 969,969 The general Standard. EXAMPLE Vllf. The several items given belqw Hece.«wiH-ily make up the Standard :— 1194,451 U. S. Fish and Shell Fish Exports less '^Spomt." 109,215 "Furs, Skins and Tails— undressed." 666,303 . -Johnson's Standard. 969,969 The general Stan,r ravcals t)ie properties of tlio fif,'u<*s couiposiiig the United States details of Exports us • and no otheB "'xhibited in the following reversioiM of those figures. x'ports that ol ^«»*«/ — From 303,666 take th3 masking number 838, (Whalebone) the ramainder, which 1 call tlie » Nov'ii Scotial I'^irs*' Itemainder, is 302.828, " ■ for there ifl SecotuJ — Reverse 151,303, the United States total Foreign and Domestic Exports to Canada, less the n" Article XXB ^^^'^ Foreign Articles omitted by Mr. H. A. Hill. It becomes 303,151. From this 4aantity also taJie i?0 was appom ^'^^- (Whalebone) The second remainder is 302,313. the inuiiltiti/ m Third — Reverse 151,303 a second time, and from 303,151 take 210, (Sperm) one of the maaking 1 iHmntities. The third remainder is 302,941. brce upon tliS _\,jf| these rcmaindei-s, onotconfori| First remainder 302,828 wn >" ;"*;";■ Second remainder 302,313 .knowledge I Third remainder 302,941 Records ol hxP ' an Figures, b^ ^^^^^^ ^,.^^^^^2 Deduct Johnson's Standard 666,303 The remainder is the United States Total Exports 241,779 t, THE M.v«kin| EXAMPLK XII. The same result n>ay be obtained by reversing the items and deducting the Whalebone and Sperm together. 04 ■ 303,666 9 I 303,151 303,151 13 ■ f 838 Whalebone. 79 I '.t09,968 I 838 Whalebone. Deduct, 1886... ■( 21-0 Sperm. 34 ■ !J08,(»82 [ 1886 md the C;anadia§ 666,303 ^•'^ ■ EXAMPLE XIII. 134 I * The number 908,082 can be derived in another way. Thus :— 303,666 Dr. E. Voung's Standard. 241,779 U. S. Total Exports. |,eo Table)' I Difference, 61,887 ncluding Spfvig ^^^^ 728,190 Canadian Imports less 731. 666,303 Mr. Johnson's Standard. Difterence, 61,887 And 969,969 The (ieueml Standard. I^ss 61,887 ;,;h 908,082. I fJives 908,082 EXAMPLE XIV. im of the \'n\\M The general Standard, 969,969 is obtained from the Ist, 2nd and 3rd Remainder added to 61,887- 6,303, thus :- |ms :— FiTst .amainder 302,828 Second do. 302,213 Third do. 302,941 61,887 969,969 12 These are necessary results arising from the artificial structure of the uuiubei'H imployod. Tliey nv-'M Hy tl be varied to a great extent with surprising results. Put in the form of six-sided squares the nuinhei-s mamiportauc be made to read up and down or down and up with the same results, giving the Canadian Imports or thAnns the United States Exports vertically. By reversing the figures ond deducting or adding the embodied maskf ing numbers very curious and interesting combinations appear, which it would be out of place to intro| duce here. One curious illusti-ation of the eflect of reversing the figures employed by the conspirators I bog \\ submit, because it reveals the importance of the masking number 731, whoso origin is deploniblo. EXAAfPLEXV. ■ '*'^"' The United States total Exports to all British North and South Amoricii, lf*«» the masking iuunl)cj 731, amount to 8241,048. (See Example ID Eeverse this quantity ; it becomes S40,142. _ * -^ I Sot ns Deduct it from 969,969 lithmetica 840,142 Remainder, 129,827 Reverse this remainder ; it becomes 728,921, which is the amount of the Canadian Imports from tlJ United States, sworn to in evidence at Halifax in 187V. L i . ■ 'loin t The Dkuivation of thk Maskino Numbkrh. EXAMPLE XVI. Put the Standard 969,969 in the form subjoined, and the masking numbej-s may be deduced by tH process of continued subtraction directly from the Canadian Import items and the United States Expdi This is items. [J The re The Standard 969,969 is equivalent to 333,333 W the Mas 333,333 I It is s^ 303,303 Basking N id that til 969,969 ^rther otwi From $728,921 The value of Canadian Imports, li the hkIi Deduct 333,333 (1) 395,588 From 333,333 Deduct 2141,779 The value of United States Total Exports. (2) 91,554 From (1) Deduct (2) 395,588 91,554 (3) 304,034 From (3) 304,034 It.I^ "^^ Deduct 303,303 If "'*' P'" ^tremos IS (4) The remainder is 731 The general Masking Number, ■ ''*^ From (3) 304,034 Deduct 303,666 Dr. Young's StAudard. (5) The remainder is 368 Mr. Johnson's Masking Numlwr. (9) From (4) 731 The general Masking Number, Deduct (5) 368 .Fohnson's Masking N\unber. The remainder is 363 Dr. Young's Masking Number as used in Example 1. (t) Hei- my publlthod letter to the rnnadlan Secretary of State, dated Ve\>. 8th, 18(n, in whlnh the mm of thii mMklnt ■umba (~'onvr> 4«*«lovrd In relation to the dataila of thf Import* rrorn the United Hlaten. ■ '"iivi< >rod. They ni he numbei-s ma iinskinK munlx' mports from lli 13 Hy this method of taking to pieces all the ma-skiug uuinbers ciiu bo tliscoveroil. The deduction is of uportouce in regard to the conception of the entire Fraud and its relation to the number 666, which Imports or thi »rm8 the basis of the whole, as shown in the next example, embodied mask F place to intro jjj^ Number A6tt, the Basis of the Frauds. irators 1 bog t( plorable EXAMPLK XVLI. Divide 6t)fi inro two part-s as ))olow :- ■M\:\ 066 8et aside the quantity 363 as the Ijasis of the Masking Numbei-s. The relation of 363 wa ii Iirm in an ithmetical proportion is shown further on in the M.vsking 8ekie8. Then 666 and 303 Added to 303 added to 666 e deduced by tl ;ed States Expo Gives .loin these systems, they become 969 gives 969 plol. ihiimMklni Bumli tU')6,303 :l( 13,066 • ' 969,969 This is the ratio the conspirators adopted for Imports and Exports, and it is written 666,303 — ;}03,666. The relation of the elements of this liatio to the Masking Numbers is shown in the next example and the Masking Series. It is shown in Example III. that the United States and Canadian Exnorts and Imports, when the asking Numbers 368 and 363 are deducted, form with these quantities an arithmetical proportion, d that their sums are e >ual. Therefore they aie couplets in the same arithmetical proportion. It will be rther observed that the subtrahend is the reverse of the figures from which it is taken, and that the system the right is identical with the figures revealed by the omission of Mr. H. A. Hill. The liEi.ATiox ok thk Maskinc; Xumbkrs. EXAMPl.K XVlIi. 666 Le.ss 303 ilUil 731 ■M\X Leaves 36;-i Leaves 363 Therefore 066— 303 = 731_36N The difference of the four quantities taken in couplets, being equal, the four numbers form an arith- etical proportion, 666 being as much greater than 303, as 731 is greater than 36 and the sum of the tremos is equal to the sum of the moans. The relation of the Masking Numbers may be further shown by the process of continued Hubtraction. From 731 From 731 Take ()6(; Take 303 Remainder, 65 4'_>8 From 428 Take 65 li'euiainder, 363 l)r. Vouug's Masking Number. C-onversely : to 30A add 65 and we get 368, Mr. Johnson's Masking Xuniber. EXAMPLE XIX. The Masking Nunihor 731 may also bo obtained by the following arrangement of 969,969 :- From 728,921 From 30^303 Deduct 666,666 Deduct 241,779 Itemainder, 62,256 From 62,255 Take 61,524 Remainder, Remainder, 01,524 731 The general Masking Numbov. The Relation of the Denominational Masking Quantities. EXAMPLE XX. Less 838 731 107 945 Less 838 107 Therefore the four quantities are in arithmetical proportion, 838 being nn much greater than 731 945 is greater than 838. The denominational masking quantity Sperm, $210, is related to the foregoing numbers in a diffeii manner, which 1 shall soon describe. The uniformity in the relations op all the quantities involvei). EXAMPLE XXL 1. The arithmetical proportion which the Imports and Exports, less the masking numbers nii with thtt Standards is thus shown : — Firgt Arithmetical Proportion. 728,553 — 666,303 = 303,666 — 241,416 or 728,553 2j/m« 241, 41 6 = 666,303 /;Zm« 303,666 2. The arithmetical proportion which the leading masking numbers make with the basis of the fr is thus shown : — Second Arithmetical Proportion. 666 — 303 = 731 — 368 or m^plm "^f^i = lilplut 303 3. The arithmetical proportion by which the Denominational masking numbeif ai-o linked to forms the third aritbmetic»1 proportion. Third Arithmetical Proportion. 838 — 731 = 945 — 838 838 ja/fiw 838 = 945 pitui 731 4. The arithmetical proportion by which the numbers 210, 10, 368 and 168 ai-e related is t ghown. , Fourth Arithmetical Proportion. 210 — 10 =368 — 168 and 2\0phiH 168 = 368j^^e Klonici .103 !K)!i Th( Tlie .sun in; See pri Hrl ot Derb' 69,969 :— u '•'he number 368 is an imporUiut iiuautity in this uiutter. By an iudepondout process and by use ol' K! (juantity 3(58 with the details of the Canadian Imports from tlie United States, I proved in my pub- ta>'y of St«te; the Canndisn Beoretary of State, and to the Rt. Hon. \nr\ (It Der^y, dated January Hth, IHsa. 16 The NuMKiticAi, I^Kii\rio\ of thk XirMHGiw kmplovkd. KXAMI'I.K Will. f<38 (VVhaleboiip) is thn saiiif iis «)4r> (S|mini) f(45 ' " " " 210 " " " 839 066 " " 731 731 368 " 168 weeks 1176 days 700 " 368 " (I « 4t m\, 168 anil 4 731. 210 and 4 .'568. :U):i, 210 111 1.1 I 168 iiiid 42 368. 303, 16S 363, 303 368. 36.3 * 666, 42, 10, 7, 4, 2 Tiio sum of the .Series. 303. 42, 10, 7. 4, 2 42 (montli.H) X 4 (wot^ks) 42 X 7 X 4 7 (heads) X Ut (horn.s) X 10 (crowns) 303, 42, 7, 4, 2 In all cases descending to the figures or to multiples of the figures of the Mashing Serirs in Kxaiupl XXII, No. III., which forms the foundation upon which the entire fraud is built. The conception of 168 is the number of weeks in 42 months. The conception of the masking end Sperm $210, is 168 weeks and 42 months; the conception of 731 and 368 is the arithmetical proportioi which governs the relation of all the quantities used as masking quantities and standards, and tliey are n spectively equal to the sum of one element of the ratio 666,303 — ,303,666, and the masking numbers ii The Sehieh. The Relation op the Fraudulent abstractions from Canadian Exports to tuie Numbers perivei FROM THE 13th Chapter of REVEi,.vrroN. . EXAMPLE XXIV. The quantity $672,849 taken from Dominion Exports to "other countries" in 1874. Less 666,303 taken from Quebec. Leaves $6,546 taken from Nova Scotia and New Brungwick. A. The origin of 666,303 I have already deduced. The conception of its origin is 666. B. The quantity 6.546 is equal to 3.'584 The Differenck between United States Exports and Canadian Imports. 42 ) Months. 168 UVeeks. 11 76) Days. 700 Heads — Horns — (Jrowus. 666 The number of the Beast. 168pVeekR, ) ,„,. 42 ^ Months, ) " 6646 Or 6546 can be compounded from 1176 days multiplied by 5 5880 The number of the Boast 666 J). E. In V. 6546 Or 5 times 168 weeks multiplied by 7 and 666 ; Or 5 times 42 months multiplied by 4 (weeks) 7 (d.iys) and 666 ; Or in various other ways from the figures in columns I., II. and III. in Example XXII.. the Series. EXAMPLE XXV. C. The component parts tf 6546, namely : — 11003 abstracted from the Exports of Nova Scotia. And 554.1 abstracted from the Exports of New Brunsw> :k, ink thus related. By usii liports inn The co: the Unit |»iada, con The arl Jrs, the rat In tlie |u number But th( Ji's found i I subm f75, propo ■ the Frau If VMh cll; the 8(>rio3. owns) UBS in Kxaiuplt e masking entvj itical pvoportioi and tlu^y avo if in" numbers ii UMBEnS PKniVH I 1874. nsr.. [idian Imports. :anipl« XXII.. 1), KIO.'^ is 700 ( Iloatls— Hornrt— ( ho svns ) (7x10x10) .303 Tlio (|uantity tnkon from 666. 1003 K. .*».'»l.'l is 1 176 «lavH multipliod bv 4 4704 36H 303 16H Or :i543 3.'l84 TlIK Dif'KKRKNCK. 1003 Tho (luantity taken from Nova Scotia Export^t. 700 "Heads," "Horns," "Crowns." 210 (1G8 weeks. 42 months.) 42 Months, 4 \\'i'.'ks. ;l.i43 In all cases being the sums or multiples of the group of figures found in the 13th chapter of Hevalation. KXAMPhK XXVI. K. Fix)m Deduct Ad.l Th(' sum is 069,969 The Standard. ti7 2,849 The total abstraction from the Expoft'S of the Dominion to "other countnes." 297,120 6546 The (piantity taken from N. Rvnnswick and N. S. .303.666 Dr. Young's Standard. KX AMPLE XXVII. C'ompounding 'he (juantities inJ^xamjile VII. with the tjuantities in the foregoing example, we get — 0. Deduct. 672,849 The total abstraction from Dominion Exports. 109,21.'! "Furs, Skins and Tail— undressed"— added to Quebec Imports. 194,4.t1 United States FLsli and Shell Fish Exports — less Sperm. 976,5 ir. 6,546 Tlie al)Htraetion iVoni Nova Scotia and New lirunswick. 969,969 The Staiidanl, By using the interchangeable items forming the aggregates of the United States Exports and Canadian iports innumerable combinations can be produoui whicii equal 303,666. or 666,303, or 969,969. Thk Con<;kpth>n' ok thk Fraud. The conception of the Fraud is a concerted arithmetical masked ratio between tiie forged Exports tho United States tp all British North and South America and the forged Imports of the Provinces of mada, concerned in the Treaty of Washington, from the United States. The arbitrary value of this ratio is made equal to a concerted arithmetical ratio between known num ra, the ratios together forming an arithmetical proportion. In tho pi-esent case, the equivalent to the ratio of forged Exports and Imports was compounded from e number 666 as described in Example XVII., and masked by ratios forming arithmetical proportions. But these masking ratios were themselves in arithmetical proportion with, or dependant on, the num- ra found in the 1 3th chapter of IJevolation. " I submit a preliminary table of those ratios and arithmeticivl proportions for the years 1873, 1874, 75, proposing now to show that the Fraud of 1874 was preceod^ by the Fraud of 1873 and succeeded the Fraud of 1875, ^11 boing based on the same figures, such figoms being identical with thoweifound in <• 1 3th chapter of Revelation. 18 PnELiMi.vAiiY Table ok Katios. 728,553- 731- !)45- 603- 368- 368- 368- •JIO- 10- 732,156- -666,303 660 838 - " 42 210 358 i- Equal to \ 7 168 And -668,5i group of notable numbers, which numbers have been for mauy conlurie.s openly and waiii ingly applied through the hallowed instrumentality of Divine Ixsimratiox, aud are widely kuown as w. curing in a limited portion of Sacred Writings. It appears to be irrational to assume that the perpetrators of a secretly arranged and artfully ma-ikcd fraud of vast proportions should employ this group of notable numbers, and use tliem still groupeil togctlim for the purpose of concealing fraud, without intentional appropriation. Nevertheless, it being impossible to define aud limit accurately the bent of human thuught, alttiuugli the agreement so far is most striking and exact, yet the benefit of any doubt attaching to what appears t be an added and most sacrilegious scorn of iruth, must be given to the unfortuuate and misguided culprits, Meanwhile I turn to the records of the years 1873 and 1875. The corded C omitted i lireceede( This Thei irithmetic The YteAH 1873. EXAMPLE XX VII I. I\ The total United States Exports of Fish, Shell Fish, Fish and Whale Oils and Products of the Si to all British North and South America in 1873, amounted to $19'>,726. The total Canadian Imports for 1873, sworn to at Halifax in 1877, amounted to S279,049. But there were omitted from the Canadian items the following: — Ontario— omitted— Whale Oil .'. 83,901 Quebec — omitted — Fui-a or Skius of Marine Animals 17,425 Nova Scotia — omitted — Whale Oil . 794 New Brunswick — omitted — Whale Oil 125 f 22,305 And there were substituted for "Whalti Oils" the following "Crude Oils," land products, wliicli w.i added to Canailian Fish Imports from the United States : — Ontario— "Oils Crude" !?358 Quebec— "Oils of all kinds Crude" 73 Nova Scotia 0 New Brunswick — "Oils of all kinds Crude" 1455 ^1880 Deduct this quantity from 822,305 "Oils Crude," Ijvnd Products 1886 Leave Products of the Sea, omitted 320,419 Which is the real difference between the alleged Imports by the Provinces named from the United Stall and the false Imports for 1873, sworn to at Halifax in 1877. Ftefer 2& Multiply 9195,720, the United States £xport8, by 2, the product in 1391,452. Multiply the Canadian alleged sworn Imports from the United States by 2, the product is $558,098. To thiH quantity add the omitted items as corrected, namely, $20,4 19. The sum is 9578,617. Add these double Ilxpovts and Imports : — f 578,517 391,452 1 uo olhtM' nuin] Lhu pvopoitioiis ui ports, alleged Cnstoinl ies. The Iniudl )i3nly and wani-F ,' kuowu iiK oc] iirtfully iiiiwkt'ti ;roi>pe(l togftlitnj ought, althougl what appears tJ gguidcd culpvils. 969,969 The Standard. Therefore twice the i-ocorded United States Exports to all British America in 1873, and twice the re- I corded Canadian Imports from the United States in 1873, sworn to at Halifax in 1877, added to the omitted recorded quantities in 1873, make up the Standard 969,969. Consequently the fraud of 1873-4 was hireceedod by the fraud of 1872-3. EXAMPLE XXIX. This relation may be put in another way, as subjoined : — Canadian Imports from the U. S. by Provinces concerned in the Treaty of Washington in 1872-3 $299,468 United States Expoi-ts to all British America, 1872-3 195,726 " Canadian Imports in 1872-3, sworn to in evidence '279,049 ' United States Exports to all British America in 1872-3 195,726 " 969.969 EXAMPLE XXX. The njasking quantity 20,419 can be discovered by the process employed in Example XVI, which iirithmeticians will understand. Put 969,969 in the form of 333,333 * 333,333 303,303 969,969 From twice Canadian alleged Imports 558,098 Deduct , 333,333 acts of the Sel dian Imports foil 224,766. ..(1) From twice United States alleged Exports 391,462 Deduct 333,333 58,1 19... (2) To (1) add (2) 224,765 .58,119 acts, wlucli woiJ 282,884... (3) Froni 303,303 Deduct (3) 282,884 $20,419 The value of the quantities omitted. EXAMPLE XXXL deferring to Exam])le Xlt it will be seen that the masking entries used in that illustration for 1874«r« 1838 Whalebone. 838 Whalebone. 210 Sperm. the United Statfl Total, 1886 TumiiiK fo Kxami»lo XXVIII tho vibHtitutod "Cru.lfi OiU" for "Kiwh Oiln" in IH73 an. 338 "OilHrrmlo" 73 "OilHofiill kimisCriKli'." Hftft " " " " Total, 1886 Thu Viiluos buing tho »uiiu. Thiit ia to «iy, the viiluou of Dr. Edwiml Youu^'h iiuMking ({unutitii6t> The Number of the IJoast. 42 Months. 10 Crowns. 4 Weeks. 2 Horns. 1455 And 73 is 42 Months. 10 HOTOB. 10 Crowns. ' 7 ' Heads. 4 W«eka. tlio And 338 is 303 -303,666. 73 One oloment of the term of tlie ratio 666,303- ' 42 Months. 7 "Heads." 4 'Weeks. 2 "Horns." 358 If any one of the qunntitios 358, 73 or 1 455 be changed even by unity, this exact relation cannot An The fiRur .loin Hut Theri liu arithuH l(Hee Exar This librnied frt ll3ih Chaii Thei carried out. But these are alleged Custom House entries, falsely used in 1872-3 for the purpose of fra Imports w aormal po }03_303, The and they form part of the aggregates which make up the quantity 969,969 ; therefore any change, e by unity, in any one of the entries so used, would destroy the relation of the whole. It can be shown that the Fraud of 1874 was another form of the Fraud of 1873 by combining nnmbers of 1874 with thoaa (if 1873 revemed, aad deducing the masking number 731 of 1874. It would be out of place te discuss the theory of the process of reversion, which is contrary to all ceired relations of figures in practical life ; it is essential only to prove the fact. Competent arithn lalifax is cians will understand that it arises from the artificial structure of the numbers employed and their rela to 666,303, 303,666 and 969,969. It is • dangefbns and dishonest artifice in Government or in i-ecords. I have deduced an Algelmncal formula which discloses other properties. EXAMPLE XXXII. Bevei-se the addenda in A. (Example XXVIII). The quantities then beconje B 715,875 254.193 Deduct 970,068 969,969 Keujainder, 99 By the further process of continued subtraction we obtain the components of 7Sl. From 728,921 The Canadian Imports of 1874. Deduct 715,875 Double the Ijnports of 1873 reversed. Prom Deduct Remainder, 13,046 254,193 Double the United States Exports of 1873 reversed. 241,779 I J. S. Exports of 1874. There ^tion to tl txample. To do lie Canadt Rbmaiuder, 12^414 lU'O iking (luant itit'ii $73. ,6C6. relation cannot J by combining of 1874 1 contrary to all 21 From Dfldiict l».04fl 12,414 |{»iiimin(lflr, rt32 And 632 ikMccI to 99 is 731, The MiwkinK NiHulwr of 1874. EXAMPLE XXXIII. The following Example is important and curioiw ; it develops the new ratio produced by rerersinB the hgUTOS. , r J tt <-• From 969 or 632 and 337 Trtke 632 added to »37 added to 632 .Join those systems. 337 Gives 960 Oives 969 ^32,337 ) ,,,, „ , ,, 317 63*^ C "*^"' "'^*'''""'d IJal lo. yti9,969 Hut fi-om A in Example XXVIIl, 578,517 and 632,337 also 391,452 Added to 391,452 less 578,517 lem .337,632 Gives 969,969 Gives 53,820 Gives 53,820 Thevoforo, 632,337 — 578,517 =391,452 _ 337,632 and the four quantities taken alternately are m arithmetical proportion. It wiU be observed that the position of the twms of the new ratio is reveised (See Jjcample III.) This example i» introduced to show that the oonapiiators might h»v» selected othw ratios than tkose . oT^^J""" ^^ number 666, and other masking numbers than those identical with the fiaures in the 13ih Chapter of Kevelation. The ratio 632,337—337,632 is derived from the aggregate United States Exports and the Canadian le purpose of fra Imports with their hgures reversed. It remains to be seen what the teal ratio i« withtheir figuiws iBK the n nnv chanae. e normal position. I must first show how tbn nmitt^H minnfifv QH i.iQ oan \^ a^^..^a t^^ ^.^ a.-- ««« D any change, e aormal position. I must first show how the omitted quantity 20,419 can be derived from fcha ratio «66 - j03 — 303,666. * EXAMPLE XXXIV. mpetent arithn lalifax is obtained in the following manner )d and their rela >mment or in «ed. The quantity 20,419 being the value of the items omitted from the Canadian account* submitted at Multiply United ^^ ates Exports by 2, the product is* 391,452 Multiply Canadi . submitted Imports by 2, the product is 558,089 From 666,303 From 391,452 Deduct 558,098 Deduct 303,666 Difference, 108,205 87,786 From the First Difference 108,205 Take the Second Difference 87,786 Remainder, 20,419 The value of the omitted articles. Therefore, it is clear that the ratio 666,303—303,666 used in 1873-74, possesses an intimate r*- ition to the U. S. Exports and Canadian Imports of 1872-73. This relation is shown in the foUowinir .xample. * EXAMPLE XXXV. To double the United States Exports to all British America in 1872-3, add the items omitted f«Jm le tmadian fiffures of 1873 sworn to in evidence at Halifax in 1877. Double of the United States Exports 39 1 ,462 Canadian omitted items 20,419 •Sum, 411,871 Then And 411,871 303,66r> fJivflH KW.iOfi (;ivc« 108,20rt Au«l th(* four qunntitieN fonii an arithmetical i>ro])Oi'tion : — 666,303 — 558,0«>8 = 411,871 — 303,666 Taken in connection with Dr. Young's doUiils of thi Fisli Tnwlu of 1872-3 us worked out froju own figures in the accompiinyiug MS. Table, (1) it follows from these exact relations that Ih: Etlwaj Young, while in the Bureau of Stiitistics at Washington, must have known all about the (luantity $20,41 the flubetituted land items enumerated ; and the ratio derived from 666, with the masking numbers f ployed — and this knowledge he poasossed during the fiscal year 1872-3, adjusting his (Justoni House trieft to the ratio, as shown in cited communications to Uie United tStates .Secretary of State and in the companying MS. Table. • Changing the signs : — .558,098 — 666,303 = 303,666 — 41 1,871 Therefore ; double the Canadian Imports in 187H ai-e as much less than 666,303, as 303,6(>6 are than double the United States Exports added to Canadian omitted articles. By Example XXI, in the year 1874 :— 728,553 — 666,303 = 303,666 _* 241,416 Therefore, 728,553 _ 4 1 1 ,87 1 = 558,098 — 24 1 ,4 1 6 Consequently the sum of the unmasked Canadian and United States Imports and Exports of 187i exactly double the sum of the masked Canadian Imports and United States Export^) of 1873, with omitted items adde 9m" with examplen. Tho utr«ct of tlio adilitiou of 2 to thn iiUogml inipurtH of 1874 ia Hhown iu Kxiunple V, it being [liorno iu mind that if the Hubtmctiou hail boou iimdf from 728,921 instoad of 72H,!)ll), tlio romaindor kvould have been 1334. ThiH ih important hocause 1334 appoiirs in other relationti, at) soeu iu Example :xxviii. TuE Allkoed United iSTATES ExroiiTt) to Britihh America in 187A. ed out from that iJr. Edwal uantity$20,4l| ug numbore UHtom House! \te and iu the « 303,0«r> are 1 EXAMPLK XXXVII. The Hum of the alleged United St^vtes P^xports of Fish, Shell Fish and Products of the Sea, to all r.ritish North and South America in 187ft in 1^268,128, To Add Deduct |J727,.'587, the Canadian Imports from the United States. 268,128, the United StatcH Exports to British America. #995,7 1'). 8969,969, the staiulaid. Difference, $t25,74H. But this Diilorence is the sum of the items omitted in Canadian representations at Halifax in 1877 If tlio Imports of 1873, together with the sulwtituted items of 1873 and the Masking Numbera of 1874, as lliuwu below. Exports of 187 of 1873, with I le values emplo}| or the Canad lations to the sstroyed. supervision of I but a i-epetitionl Mr. ("ommissioj t«i8 Bureau of No. I. Substituted Items in 1873. 358 "Oils Crude." 73 " 1455 " " ■ice Example XXXI. for equiva- lent Masking figures.) No. II, Omitted Items in 1873. H,961 Whale Oil. 17,425 Furs or Skins. 794 Wliale Oil. 125 Whs:. Oil. (See Example XXVIII.) No. III. Masking Numbers in 1874. 838 666 42 7 2 (See Example XXIII. for equivalent quantities, also Example XXII.) 1886 22,305 1,555 22.305 l,8S(i l,or)r» .71' ly 8728,921 re he transformed 25,74(1 The Difference. But 838 is the United States denomimitioxial entry '"Whalebone" which is equal ^o 666, 168 and *, crefore 1555 is the same as 666X2, 42 (months), X4, 4 (weeks), 42 (months) 7 (heads) and 2 (horns). , The Difference — P^x ample XXXVIII. The difference can also be obtained directly from the relation of the Exports of 1874 to those of 1875 nceiilod by the Masking Numbers ; one operation thus proving the other, and the correctness of addi- ns and conclusions, as well as proving that the frauds of 1873, 1874 nnd 1875 are of one and the same aractor, the Masking quantities being practically the same, because the ratios of certain different Masking nibors are equal. This Example shows clearly the effect of equivalent arithmetical ratios. 2f»8,128 United Stataa Exports of 1875, take 1334 (See Example XXXVI.) 1,334 or 1164 From From Take Then Less 266,794 241,779 United States Exports of 1874. 731 or iiei 241,048 266,794 241,048 of KiBH »nd 8llKl-l^ Gives 25,746 And the Ratio. .1.334— 731=1164— .561. il S4 Hence the foUowinK remarkable relation : — Prom Take Ami 995,715 969,969 From Take 266,794 241,048 25,746 25,746 995,715—969,969=266,794—241,048. Therefore the entire Fish I'l-ade of 1875 of Canada and the United States as represented, is as nuia greater than the Standard, as the unmasked United States Exports of 1875 are greater than the unmaska United States Exports of 1874. Dr. Edward Young, in the Bureau of Statistics at Washington, must have known in 1875 all al)o| the Canadian contemplated omissions of the foregoing items from the accounts to bo presented at thg preaching Halifax Commission, or lie could not have exactly adjusted the United Stjites accounts to sij the Canadian figures. His published items of P'ish and Shell Fish Exports in the Commerce and Navia tion Reports for 1874, are all made up from his Custom House Entry Series of 1872-3 — namely, t| Series 3 to 989 inclusive, as described in ray letter to he Hon. F. T. Freylinghuysen, before cited. EXAMPLE XXXIX. The difference 25,746 can of course be obtained from the arithmetical ratio 666,303—303,666 in t§^»' $25,7 the following manner : — From Take Remainder, 61,284 From Take 303,666 268,128 35,5.38 Then Less 61,284 35,538 727,587 Canadian Imports from the United States. 666,303 268,128 United States Exports to Hritish America. The: 25,746 The Diileroncc. EXAMPLE XL. The effects of the addition of 2 to the Canadian Imports of 1874 is thus shown :- If from 268,128 we deduct the difference. 25,746 The Remainder is 242,382 Deduct 241,779 The United States Exports of 1874. Difference, 603 But 603 is the difference between 1334 and 731, and the fonr quantities are in arithmetical j^ro tion : — 242,382—241,779=1334—731 SliakJ lian Impol And Also 1334—731=1164—561 603— 42=1164—603 Which brings the quantity 42 (months) directly into the ratios without its conversion into weeksj shows the relation of the quantities already known in former Examples, namely, 731, 666 and those which appear in 1875, namely, 603, 561 and 1164. mted, is as imu lan the unmask n 1875 all al)o sen ted at th-i i s accounts to s luerce and Navi, 2-3 — namely, t lefore cited. 3—303,666 in » SUMMARY OK THE WHOLE. The relation of the Canadian Imports from the United States by Provinces concerned in the Treaty of Washington, to the United States Exports to all British North and South America during the Fiscal years 1872-3, 1873-4 and 1874-5. 1872-3. ..$678,517 The double of the Canadian Imports joZ«w the omitted items $20,419. 391,462 The doubl «f the United States Exports to all British America. 969,969 The Standard. 1873-4... 728,553 The Canadian Imports less 368. 241,416 The United States Exports less 363. 1874. arithmetical pit lion into weeks 731, 666 ami 4 969,969 The Standard. 1874-5... 727,587 The Canadian Imports, 242,382 The United States Exports minm S25,746. 969,969 The Standard. Jut $25,746 is equal to $22,305 Canadian omiited items in 1873.— Example XXVIII. 1,886 Canadian substituted items in 1873.— Example XXVIII, 1,655 Sum of Masking Numbers identical with numbers in the 13th Chap- ter of liovelation, as shown in Example XXXVII. The Ratios are as subjoined : — Canadian Ratios. 1872-3. 666,303 678,517 87,786 1873-4. 728,553 666,303 62,250 1874-6. 727,587 666,303 61,284 United States Ratios 1872-.3. 391,452 303,666 87,786. A, 1873-4. 303,006 241,416 62,250.. .B. 1874-5. 303,666 242,382 61,384.. .C. DiPFKRKNCES. From A take C. 87,786 61,284 26,502... D. From A take B. 87,786 62,260 25,536.. .E. From D take E. ' 26,502 25,536 966 Shake and sift 960 and out tumble all the Masking Numbera with the quantity 2 added to the Caua- iiin Imports of 1874 : — 966 is equal to r 666 42 10 7 4 2 731 — too much in 1874. 731. 168 42 10 7 4 2 2 966 26 Example XXIII shows the numerical relation of the Masking Numbers used, portions are as subjoined : — Canadian. The ari*,hniotical prd 1872-3... 666,303— 578,517 1873-4.. .728,553—666,303 1 874-5. . .727,587— 666,303 United States. 391,452—303,666 303,666—241,416 303,666—242,382 And investing, permeating, dishallowing and veiling all, is the Number 6ft6) with its fatal inipoij Ib it not time to lift the veil and scan the features it enfolds] THE MASKING SERIES. The full, sufficient Series from which all the rjuantities have been derived is as subjoinad : — 6B6 "The Number of the Boast"... Revelation, Chapter 13, verse 18 42 "Months"- "Weeks"— "Days" " " " 5 10 "Cro'.rr.3"— "Horns" " " "1 7 "Heads" " " " 1 2 "Horns" " . " "11 TiTe relation of these figures to the masking quantities and the elements of the ratio 660,303-303,066 is shown in the following arithmetical proportions • — 1. 2. 3. 4. I. II. III. IV. 731 — «6« "The Number of the Heast" = 368 — 303 603 - 42 "Months" = 1164 — 603 168 - 10 "Crowns" --= 368—210 10 - 7 "Heads" = 7—4 363 - 2 "Horns" =368— 7 i!uok of oiiiil Fra -V Fmii (I under If coiiutt All tl ('tween C iiud pSiK These t people. iniil)lv so a' fev ii'l upporl oils of \w IIkai.s,"! 1875 727 2275 1127 1875 1127 3002 2275 727 3002 uaA. 1127 — 727 = 2275 — 1875 If any one of these quantities be changed even by unity, all must be changed, for they aie mutual dependant. But the figures in II are a group bv themselves in sacred association, and inseparably link with 606, and with the ratio 666,303 — 303,666. The other masking numbers will be found in Example XXIII and in the "Preliminary Table Ratios." I have limited the exposition of these frightful characteristics to the Exports of the United States all British North and South America only, but I regret to say that they extend to certain records of United States Exports to other countries. Application is seen in the questions relating to remission duties, and the table of percentages found at the bottom of page 1879 in the tainted "Documents and 1 ceedings of the "Halifax Commission." I have also reason to think that the ratio 666,303 — 303,666 is of nuicli wider application, and is ing into our morality and religion with consuming power. CONCLUSION. No othcx figures will satisfy all the conditions involved in this vast imposition. The arithmetii proportions are convincing. The analogy is so striking that appropriation suggests itself at once. T impression is strengthened by the relation of 168 (weeks) to 4 times 42 months ; 210 to 168 and 42 ; and 10 to 368 ; all the numerical relations shown in Example XXIII, together with tlie fact that th numbers exactly make up the diflereuces and the fraudulent items noticed in E.xample XXIV. But arithmetical proportions cast doubt aside. If there were one failure in all the relations I have pointed o or in any necessary relation, it might justly be urged as an objection \o the view of appropriation, but far as I have been able to analizo the relations, there is no failure. in the icri.shwl fi iiilu'iit or liy this 1 111 liuw, if itliorify oi iiiilifr"66t What '>i>, or Ke; A.MMO.V. It i.s lu iili^ whicl ref( lie Fraui lusi' i'('co I piuss I HSSUIl tlod. I'ho ex Xo Uo (") "Si< iititrutli. •iiiiiinlcred (liJ thigf )iirly. {S« 1) '-Bii !»'li is any I 1st! aii'l « rilioole'.s "VVIinii I rt' deeply l''.Sl! coiivu ill t'itlier tl II IVtili (2) See (The alx) fi letter inUmietical prJ its fatal iiupor^ )in3il ;- These fifjures are the snine as tlioso inystfirioiis and symbolical numbei's which are clispluyod in the I look of Life. They have hcon impiously a|ipropriiiled to mask a gigantic and long continued interua- oiiid Fraud. A Fraud which lingers still, only awaiting further ap[dication — a Fraud which was consciously submit- il under solemn oath, thus falsely attesting belief in the Providence of God and hy])ocritically invoking ic countenance of the Divink Author of that wonderful message to man it further defames, (a) All this took plice .secretly, and as long sw it remains officially unrecognized it is still taking place ictwMien Christian Nations of the same origin and blood, of the same language and spirit, in a time of pro- iind peace, under professions of mutual esteem, and when '^silent lai/en irdur arma" has no longer force. 'J'hese ''hristian Nations acknowledge the same beneficent God ; they number one hundred millions I l>coplo. Time and again they offer to Him thanksgiving for blessings conferred, and on bended knee uuibly solicit a continuance of His mercies. A few mi.sguidcd men hive thought that human reason is enough for man, and possessing the power ojiportunity, liave disregardcil for selfish purposes, the moral anil material rights of one hundred mil- oiis of |)eo[)le tliey were bound honestly to serve, overlooking, in their agnostic blindne.ss, that the Hk.\|)s," from which spring the "Horns" wearing the "Crowns," bear "the name of Blasphemy." they are uiutual Inseparably link ■liminary Table e United States lin records of t g to remission ocuments and P ication, and is t PAJiT II. In the gross presence of this amazing contempt for the religious iuipuLses of two great nations and the lorished faith of millions of individuals, ajiart from all considerations of honasty or comity, is it not in- niil)('nt on every iv\\] believer in Providence who poHse.sses the opportunity, to .survey the ground cover- liv this momentous fraud, and gather a projter conception of its design, its influence, its evil tendencies tl how, if officially comloniMl, it may affect the faith and lives of those millions who are subjected to the tliority fit moneyed inlluence of men who are led by the pernicious ju-iuciples and sellishjallurements the iiiilier G6t) upholds 1 What 1 have revealed of my discoveries is but as the vestibule of a gilded temple, in which neither )ii, or Keason, or Human lleroisni, or Human Virtues are worshipped or symbolized, tut simply — AMMON. It is not just that on a single unaided man should be thrown the responsibility of tearing the tapestry 111! wliich masks the entrance. It is now eiusily torn aside, but it is a work of great labour to catalogue 1 describe the objects exposed to view. It is enoug'-. for me to have proved that thore i.s an unfulfilled State duty of great moment which if- ;ts tlie culture, the relations and the religion of the English-speaking race, and a duty which requires aid of many men and many differently mouldedjninds, sufliciently independent and fearless as to look ■oj,';int and iron-clad fraud full in the fac; and say — 'you shall not prevail.' riierefore, I forbear or delay what ought to be the second part of this letter, developing further gross iti' Frauds based on the number 666 and itts associated emblems ; because [ trust that those in authority lusc records have been defamed by tlieir sacrilegeo\is application will publicly take the matter up. I piiss on to tlie object of my presuming to address the President of the United States on this subject. 1 assunu) that the "Fisheries Question," as far iu ihe "Ante Treaty Si.itus" is concerned is practically tii'd. Tlie exclusive rights to the North American Fisheries are shamefully lost to (Canada. No (fovernnumt of Her Majesty would attiuupt to defend the diplomacy of "Appendix — Meraoran- The arithmeti If at once. T , 168 and 42 J»e fact that thi XXIV. But I have pointed ol ipropriation, but (a) "Su' Statlord U . NorLlicottf advocated the oatli because it implied a belief In God and fear of punisliment Miitrutli. (I) Bel Sir Stafford li. Northcotte had previously accepted (2) the proceeds of a fahe oath officially uhihUred for Ihfi nation, and .suborned te!ili.iiiiinyofficifiil.{^ provided Jor the. nation, iu an international matter. did this fur a (Government of which he was an inniienllal member, and iu u matter to which he was personally mrty. (See Exhibit 0.)" (1) "But the Kigbt (Ion. <;entlemaii'a cniiteiition is not an answer to the question of the oath, because If the :ttli is anythiiii; it is a test of a man's lielief lliat there is a Supreme Being who will punish him if he says what In ihi'. a.i\i\ wUtitn lie dare not invoke nnh'Hn hf in lelllnii the truth." — ( F/df- the TlmeH report of Sir Stafford H. rthcole's speech on the "Parliamentary Oath's A ;t. 186(1, Amendment Bill," May 3rd, 1S83.) "VVIiKii they see the profitssion of religion and the interests of religion ostensibly associated with what they I' deeply eunvinced is I.n.iiistick, It leads to questions about religion Itself which common'j end In impariug I'W. convictions and that belief, the loss of which I believe to be the most inexpressible calamity which can II either upon a man or upon a Nation "-( Vide report in the Times of the Right Hon. W.E.Gladstone's speech ilic 'Parlimeniary Oath's Act, 18t«5, Amendment Bill," April 2(Uli, 188:^.) (t) See Exhibit E. (Tlie al)ove are extract* from a letter by the writer on "The Recognition of Go«l by the Nation" acbonipany- II letter addresseit to Sir Staflfurd II. Norlhcote." \'f I m S8 dum concerning Article XXI of the Treaty of Washington," or the invasion of the United iStates IJiiii' of Statistics and the secret introduction under alien iniliieuce, however assisted, into the otticiiil douuitiei of the United States, Canada and Ini]»erial England of the ratio derived from the number 6Ht), and kindred masking numbers so fearfully related. No christian English Government would wish to defend a false oath administered for the nation ; suborned official witness ; perjured testimony preferred and accepted in the name of Her Majesty t Queen ; and an award stolen under these blighting conditions. No unfettered Imperial iStatesman breathing the breath of a free born Englishman, and even wiel ing hereditary and unearned power, with centuries of history behind him, could so stretch the panderi license of any .Colonial "responsible" Govetament, as openly to defend the jjrostitution 1 havi>. de.scrilit and contemplate the repetition, as manifested by the official announcement elsewhere referred to, (1) these blasphemous indignities in the name of Englishmpn. llJut that which gives present strength and power to all this wickodnoss and tlii.s secret injn.stici! those of our free-born race who acknowledge the I'rovidence of (iod, is the apparent inertness of th« (io e. iment of the United States, and the tranquility of the leaders of public opinion. This has been a most sagncious and doubtless justifiable policy under the hitherto known circumsta ces, /hich did not comprehend any knowledge of the use of the ratio 1566,303 — 303,6()l) ; and further, li t(;ctio» ol cause it has been associated from the first, with marked protest on the part of the (iovernment of the Ui which I jriiiiinatii what the' Of ti ivorse exj iiuately Now 'islieries hat vast ted States, coapled with frequent and courteous warnings by the United States Press. But while it is certain that different United States (ioverntnents have been successfully kept in ign( ance of the magnitude and blasphemous character of a portion of the deceptions wliicii have been pract ed, this lack of information may also be properly regarded as a providential occurrence, permitted for wise and beneficent purpose, until the proper hour should arrive. I subjoin one of the most recent illustrations of the manner in which these warnings have Iwen ceived by certain of the Canadian Press, and how a portion of that Press has been unconsciously used deceive the Canadian and British Public. The extract is from the St. John TeJef/raph, the ncoguizedi gan of the Hon. Isaac Burpee, the Minister of Customs, under whose official supervision the ("anadi iiillions o Customs Returns of 1874 were falsified, in continuation of and in sympathy with the pre-existing frai lave b«^en practised under the official supervision of Sir L^jonard Tilley and his allies. (kxtbact.) "Professor Hind has published some more letters about the Fishery Award, and has managed to secure ai tice from each of the leading New York dailies, which agree that Canada ought to meet llie Professor's clit^rgeB fraud and answer them once and for all. But it is not probable that Canada will do anything of tiie sort. T charges have been published far and wide, and if anybody has read them, which is doubtful, no one \\n'< believ them. The Professor is very much in earnest, but not one of the very distinguished people whom he huR .nldresi has thought his ease worthy of attention. Our New York contemporaries refrain from discuHsiiig tht: charges, the alleged reason that, having suffered by the so-called frauds, the United States ought not to seek to exp( tbem. This may be all right so far as the United States government goes, but that th ; United Stales press woi )ai&B the chance of ventilating a $6,0!<. John Telegraph, Aug. Vith, 188.S. Other viciously misleading 8tatement« have appeared in papers under the control of the last nam ermine i, nee in pi The « Statesman and his money-mongering friends. Hence it liappens that the leaders and certain misled ( o the fro gans of both political parties in Canada became entangled in the same abuse of trust and pursuit of hallowed power or gain. So far back as the 2nd Sept., 1879, I ventured to bring under the notice of Lord Salisbury (Letl No. 62, herewith submitted,) the bearing of the remarkable passage in Mr. Secretary Evarls' despat< "ch inori dated Sept. 27th, 1878, which coming directly after the dismissal of Dr. Edward Young from the'Bure of Statistics, was well calculated to arouse suspicions that what I had already pointed out to the latt A. .1. Smith and others, had been discovered at Washington. "That which relates to the maintenance of good understanding and good neighbourhood between I United States and the British North American Provinces can, least of all things, be admitted as an timal.',e element in a pecuniary compensation. The importance of such maintenance of good underatiu jj- /, ing and good neighbourhood the United States will never undervalue." ' The ruthless abuse of the time-honoured principle "Fear God and honor the King," has led witli in Canada to that disreputable misrule and official untruth which is the prelude to a fading belief in I Providence of God. , These are three cancer-like evils, compared with the check to their increase and spread, all just ui will regard the partial loss of territorial exclusive rights as of fleeting moment, and the destruction of ba {, — ly won diplomatic triumphs as the mere bursting of bubbles on the even flowing stream of that peauo international life which is dependent on "good-neighbourhood." But they will not the less fail to Ic with nil their fe ries ag( ill-gotte la fiom an States L near the 'foverno furnish i Ire this com weak an< At ] |ucnces For !»'))ening With niniciitioi line wort 1' tjie proi This such r SfK'Ctiug toruutior '•In requentl, iite suffic "This s (I) See tlie aocumpsDying letter to the Kt. Hon. W. E. Oladitone, In which special reference Is made to Mr. Whltchcr's ''Me randum for 8lr J. A. MaedonaTd." and rree:". * by that Canadian Mlatesman, and ninde public by that StuteaniHii ; that naiiie Mvniui dum embodying the horrible deMrmlnatton that thes; flgurea roust be maintatned, because they are wanted for tini> uKaiu. wliicii vx< WM aeceptad by that gtateiman. Tlio If to evoi In subi attest f ses any 8 99 1(1 states Biirel tticiiil docuniei( )er »)Ht), and ,r the natiou; Her Majesty tl and even wiel h the pandeiiJ h;ive descrihbl t'erred to, (1) 3cret injustice •tuess of the <.io| aown circunist ; ; and fuvtliev, 1 [inient of the UJ uUy kept in igm have been practi I, permitted foti igs have been consciously use(l| the 1 ('Cognized don tlie C.'anadi pre-existing fiai aged to secure a 'lofessor's eliw-ges] ig of llie sort. T no one liii'^ belie loniliehas.tililresi shig tht: cliarKes lo seek lo ex States press woi iich froui our ciei { papers disnuss lil lof the lust nam certain misled and pursuit of (1 Salisbury (Letl |y Evarls' despa' „jj from jut to the liun the latt irhood between admitted as an If iiood undersUw with measui'eless soom at the men who have already virtually pawned without jiledge the birtliright of their fellow-subjects — won by brave men of the same blood with their lives in open palm near two centu- ries ago — in order to save themselves from just obloquy and national reproach, as well as to secure their ill-gotten gains. I am thankful to be able to state that I have received no aid, or help, or hint of any kind whatever, from any person or thing, apart from the documents kindly supplied to me, at my request, by the United Statas liepartment of State under the administration of your lamented predecessor. These are referred to near the bottom of the last page of the printed and published letter, herewith enclosed, addressed to the (lovernor General of Canada, dated Oct. 26th, 1881. But the documents thus kindly supplied did not furnish mo with any information whatever specially pertinent to the subject of this communication. 1 respectfully ask that the specified enclosure, which opens many a vista, may be considered « part of tliis cummunication. It embodies a just tribute to the true and the good, with a lasting rebuke to the weak and vile. At present the whole matter of "the Fisheries" a.s8umes an aspect pregnant with most serious conse- |Vience.s to two nations if not temperataly and publicly handled. For there can be no doubt whatever, that the men who could descend to the encouragement and pro- cction of thost! oH'onces again-5t religion, honor, comity, and the real welfare of the people they governed, ivhich I have described and proved, would not shrink from involving the two nations in ill-founded re- iiiiiiinationH and hostile aspersions, if not much worse, in order to conceal their delinquencies and secure hat they have got of their gainw. Of this there can be no reasonable doubt, because it is merely the human strategem of employing a ivorse expedient to shelter an infamous crime, and it would be the continuation of a practice already inor- inately put in force. Now that the notice of abrogation has been given, and equal right* to the British North .\merican "isheries virtually .secured to the United States, may I not venture to ask of you, Mr. President, to use hat vast power Providence has so unexpectedly caused you to assume, for the manifest benefit of many lillions of i)eople under separate rule, but in belief or credence joined, whose principles and impulses ave been cruelly outraged, and some of whom unconsciously live in the shadow of deception and the iM'pening gloom of official untruth. With this view, I respectfully ask you to cause official publicitt to be given to this com- uinication and its enclosures, assigning as my reason for this appeal the same thoughts, expressed in the lime words 1 addressed to Lord Salisbury more than four years ago, and before I had discovered a tithe f the proofs of those official offences against God and man I have displayed to view. This is my reason, as then submitted to Lord Salisbury in the enclosed printed communication No. I"2 ; such reason being based upon the conception that between enlightened Christian Nations, mutually ispectiug and admiring each other, public opinion, properly grounded, can be the only true basis of just ternational policy in the presence of detected criminal dishonesty. In such a matter the bright sunlight of Public Opinion is surer and better than the dark paths m frequently trodden in the practice of modern diplomacy, as the brief history 1 have been compelled to re- late sufficiently proves. "This course will anticipate by a very brief period the exposure which must occur, but it will beckon the front, to be heard in self-defence, those whose tactics have been of all things, best calculated to un- orniiae and wreck the principles upon which the Treaty of Washington is based, and to shake confid> ce in positions of Public Trust." .,.>:* ,«t The accompanying letter addressed to the Kt. Hon. W. E. Gladstone, touahes on kindred' iiiktiflirs ich more especially concern the loyal subjects of Her Britannic Majesty. I have the honour to be, Your most obedient servant, HENRY YOULE HIND, M. A,, , Official Compiler of the Analytioal Index to the DooumeotB of the Halifax Flaherien OommiBaiOB. Viiiifsnr, Nova Scotia, November idt/i, 1883. has led with| fading belief in [pread, all just 1 de,struction of mi of that peacci Ihe less fail to l«l J Mr. Whltohcr'n -M* Un; that Mine Heniui 1 u»e HKSln. wliioli eM fhc Might Honourable II'. K. Glad. stone, M. P., Premie r of Her Ma^ Jestif's (Tovernment. The accompanying letter to the President of the United States is an appeal which must commend If to every sincere christian man on moral grounds. i In submitting a sim'ilar appeal to yourself 1 feel that I am addressing one whose woi-da and life ac- |s attest sincerity of lielief not merely in christian doctrine and ordinances, but in the obligation which jfes any and every man reverently to recognize a Creator. 30 The subject of my letter to the President relates to the condition and use made of the United States Commerce and Navigation Eeports for several yeai-s, a.s secretly moulded under alien official patronage aii(i[ influence adverse to the interests of the United States, and sought to be concealed by the continued pro- fanation of 8acrearlianu?ni assembled, have officialiy received this tainted w cord. Tn their unconscious hands has been placed a foul witne.ss of official Fraud and unbelief, so veil»i| in scon. Mil disregard of what we humbly and confidently trust is a sacred mes.sage to mankind, that in who ventures to defend further concealment, or by any excuse gives aid and comfort to tlie enemy of oii| race, seems to palter openly with God. For there are features distinguishing the tTrtUsactions i have describi-d whi(!]i will not e.-^cape tlii' tention of any thinking man. Apart from added jdiysical crinu". nothing worse could Ixt created in fielio^ or accomplished in fact. These transactions violate every leading j)rinciple of religion, law, honour, rule and comity. They degrade and debase, with a view to conceal heinous fraud, for selfisli individual pur[)oses, llij merciful message of Redemption vouchsafed to the human race ; and in their defence it is urgcfd that tlmi are necessary for use over again. They are essentially a Government work, treacherously and traitorously practised against anoti Government and friendly neighbouring people. They have for their object the pecuniary gain of a score or so of utterly unscrupulous men, ami tli continuance in political power of those who aid in this unludlowed and CHRisT-scoffing work. The scheme so successfully pursued has involved abilities of no mean order, but befogged with At in istic views. It has been encouraged by great personal influence, nmch prolonged conceited action, ii bounded audacity and very large pecuniary resources. The defence of the scheme and the efforts at concealment have been on a par with the perpetration the outrage. But they have all been darkly human. It is now my duty to inform you with sufficient fullness respecting this matter, as developed by I discoveries I have made ; for there is a far nearer approach to home responsibility than has yet openly iii any eye, or has yet greeted any ear. The subject lai'gely concerns belief not merely in the Providence of God as extendtnl to the nati but individual belief in the existence of a God by those appointed to assume delegated power. It is therefore a matter from which none will dare to say you will be led to .'•iirink by iuiy considei tion whatever, for the confidence and the comfort which your acknowledged sense of the existence of Providence inspires and encourages, arises from the continued jjroof you offer to the Nation of truthful p fe.ssions as sustained by consistent practice in life. The further investigation which has suddenly led me to the discovery of the ratio ()6t»,3()3 — 303,1 was incited or prompted by the prior detection of palpable fraud in the proof copy of the (^ase of 1 Majesty's Government officially placed in my hands by the Secretary of the Halifax Fisheries Commissi to enable mo to carry out the joint instructions of the Agents of the CJovernment of the Queen and of United States. This is a most important point, for had not my attention been drawn to alterations in writing in t proof copy of the Case of Her Majesty's Government which disclosed gross fraud, it never would have curi-ed to me, humanly speaking, to have conunenced an inquiry which has been attended with such t rible results. It is also apparent that if Ix)rd Salisbury had chosen to have looked ttt the absolute proof of this }j fraud which I took to England in tlie .same vessel which carried Sir A. Gait and Sir Leonard Tilley, 1878, the Fisheries question might have been quietly and diplomatically settled before your advent power, without knowledge of the ratio 66G,303 — H()3,666. Your colleague, the Rt. Hon. A. J. Mundella, used his utmost exertions to procure an investigatij but Lord Salisbury would not look at the proofs which were repeatedly proffered. In all this we iii discern an interposition for a wise and merciful purpose. — The cup was not yet full. In consequence of Lord Salisbury's action that ratio has continued ready for further use by thoseBlo'i! to bo s V I 'IS a i)rov lit' secret I New \ uld for f icied nu iiriiig, sh 1 pre '(•rby \vM l)3,(iGf) ii iicce,ssfull I!ut I 'illcy win uiidou w Wher uitliern ] iiitish Cas I the Cast luulied at JKl eighty In an iiy hands, ii.x I said t liocumei liiji'sty's C A grea id lOlGHT . iliately pi ; the chai Now, i tiites tliere ou of diitii "•ii;;.st the i ituess reail land based 1 have e Goverj very of t :iwu.— 1 dee] dress to til, 1881. How deve ig of ceitai I'ud jgiiory of ilitiou to u liglit. It "Ir" hfw ■'ind a dis Colonial 'iiipany h pulling as Iiy tile 'XI of the '■Ntallbnl '1 Fisherit 1 harvest f'li an ungi 1 do no H' light to I'wnality. Iionr to us T 31 ITnitod States! ])iitron!i|;eiUi(ll jontiuued prol irns of (Jaiiiida M of Ciiniuliil ve at tlie disl udcv tlieir iiol lich has cU'ttI iilioriiil rarlii-i budit!« nut oiili iit'd, but it euJ with .» list uj this tuinttid vi'l iH'lii'f, MO veiU'i .ukind, that iiJ 0 I'lu'iny of ou| , tisi!;»|iti thi- Mil roatiid inii pci'iietration ( ievcloped by t' us yot openly m I to the natio L)\vev. by !vny considei ho existence of n of truthful pi he secret, either directly or by virtue of the usufructuary ])rivilef,'es it conferred. I Nuw York, London and Amsterdaiu, as will jire-seiitly apptiar, are now nijide to lelil for gambling atrocities, practicidly based upon the concealment of the successful employment of the iicifd numbers in the 13th Chapter of Revelation, vhich liave been used to shelter the most anti-Christian, luring, siiowy and dangerous fraud of its kind the world has seen. 1 presume it is unnecessary for nie to state that I do not suppose that either Lord Salisbury or Lord )frby had the slightest knowledge of the use of these numbers, or of the presence of the ratio 6G(),303 — (iJi.tiGl) in the United States or Canadian liecords of Government. This knowledge I assume has been iiccessfuUy kept from them. Hut Lord Salisbury's poi-sislent resistance to cdbrts made to induce him to look at proofs, Sir Leonard illt'V who received the $5,5(K),0()0, and Sir Ale.\ander Gait who fleeced it, being at the time both in .oiidon with niy.self, is only partially explained. When, in Mny 1877, i was summoned to Ottawa from the charge of a Scientific Expedition to the Cuithern Liibradoi', undertaken by me for the Governuiont of Newfoundland, the printed copy of the Jiitish Case prepared under the official supervision of Lord Derby was placed in my hands. In that copy f the Case the amount claimed from the Government of the LTnited States was twenty-two millions eight uiuhed and eighty thousand dollars — being twenty millions for Canada and two millions eight hundred jid eighty thousand dollars for Newfoundland. In an official table of the Canadian Fish Catch for the years 1869 to 1876, simultaneously placed in iiy hands, I (piickly discovered u leading fraud and pointetl it out. On our journey from Ottawa to Hali- IX I said to the British i\g''nt, "Your statistics are wrong." This and much more is narrated in the print- document*, entitled 'Coirespondence respecting the presence of Falsified Statistics in the "Case of Her iajesty's Goxernment," presented at Halifax, Juno 15th, 1877." — Published November 10th, 1879. A great fear, as 1 now understand, fell on the British (Commission when I announced this discovery, 1(1 Fight Miixions ok Doi s were at once struck off the British Claim for Canada. The Case was im- icdiately reprintei^. 1 hohl uic proof cojjy, anil 1 have printed copies of both of the British Cases, sliow- thc change. Now, is it not well to consider that beneath that twenty million dollars claim against the United tiitos there lay hidilen the number 666, the ratio 666,303 — 303,666 ; the figures relating to the remis- ou of duties on page 437 of the "Jiecord," secretly prepared in the T^nited States Bureau of Statistics i;i.st the interests of the United States and moulded in unison with i i, ready to be produced ; the ituess ready to be suborned, the false oath ready to bo taken, and a reduced but not checked National mud based, according to the views of many, on undoubted blasphemy '? 1 have further respectfully, but regretfully, to ask your attention to the printed letter I addressed to u Governor General of Canada, bearing date Oct. 25th, 1^*81. In this letter I almost hit upon the dis- very of the ra'tio 666,303 — 303,t)66, but it pleased Providence ihat the veil should still be kept closely rawu. — The cup Wiis not yet full. 1 tleeply regret to h.»ve also to call your attention to the printed communications I was compelled to dress to the F^irl of Kimberly, as Secretary of Stute for the Colonies, dated Nov. 5th, 1881, and Nov. til, 1881. 1 closed the latter printed letter with these words, not then fully knowing their real import iiuw developed by the ratio 666,303 — 303,666 ; but having so strong a suspicion of the impious bear- g uf certain figures that I penned the words with almost prophetic force. "Under any cii-cuinstances, the infamy of the Colonial Office Pamphlet and Map, jointly with the giiery of the Fishery Frauds, both being indi."<.solubly bound together, are instantly important. For in lition to these mattei's iis they now appear, there is that which crouches behind, and when It springs to f,t;^3()3_303,6 the (Case of ei'iesCommissK (.)ueen and of in writing in -ev would havi ed with such _ roof of this j; ."eonavd Tilley o your advent ■ an investigali all this we er use by those! iglit, It will make the dry, dead bones of tho.so who pleaded at Kuunymede quiver and quicken." "It" hiis now sprung to the light, and under ciicumstancej and conditions which reveid a state of Socie- aiid a disregard for humane and upright principles which are simply appalling — for Lord Kimbeiiey, Colonial Secretary, must have known ex u^kio more than I choose even to hint at. The Hudson Rly pinpany has for half a century been to Canada the source of many known evils, but none so trying or so palling as tho.se which must soon come to the light. — The cup is now full. l>y the use of the "Blank Appendix," together with "Appendix — Memorandum concerning Article XI of the Treaty of Washington," and the number 666 in all its dreadful deformity of truth and honor, V Stail'ord H. Northcote and the liarl of Kimberley have virtually exchanged the British North Ameri- Fisheries for the ])abuluui of l>and speculations in the North- West Territory of Canada, and the ;li harvest the Stock Markets of New York, London and Amsterdam ali'ord to tho.se who deal therein on lib an ungodly basis as the number 666. 1 do not wish to speak of the Deity with the slightest approach to irreverent familiarity, or assume I' right to interpret His dealings towards mankind with any seeming tendency in the direction of judicial vsonality. But if wo are permitted to recognize, according to our faith, what may with becoming reverence pnnr to us to be the guiding hand of Providence, interposed we know not how or when, then lacknow- Ige to bo swayed by the feeling that this matter of the British North American Fisheries may be accept- is a providenti.il instrument for directing public attention to the condition of very many of our fellow- S2 subjecta who aru societly docoivod, cnwhod, and Gotl only knows how crnelly oppressed, by protoi and decorated injustice. It may a^so be properly viewed as a warning or check to the very few who have selfishly uh( power and wealth they have been pennittod to inherit or acquire, for their own or their friends uiuli protected benefits alone, despising and tminpling on the claims of others and neglecting the d I'ies w belong to station and opulence. Inherited domination over fellow-inen involves vast responsibilitios, and when joined to uneai splendor and a further heartless search for power or wealti), the finger ot the Almighty, time and a] appears to be stretched forth to check the arrogance which may have swollen into inordinate presumpti and in which there can be discerned no fear of (Jod, or loyal honour for the throne and its just surrouudii or charitable thought for the millions so far beneath. The IJritish Nortli American Fisheries have been virtually lost to our country in such a further st for power and wealth, with utter disregard for Christianity and human brotherliuod. "Fire Bricks and Clay," as substitutes for "Fish," are a mere shadow of the grosser substance by w article XXX. of the Treaty of Washington was won for the Uud.son Hay Company during the negociat for the Fishery Clauses of that Treaty. It is horrible to think that by a process I have discovered the nundier 68,093, which forms basis of the Exports of FUli uidii from iho United States to the Dominion of Canada for the years 1 1872, 1873, 1874, 1875, 1876, should be found in the figuroa used at Wiiahington in 1871— as test by the late Sir A. J. Smith — by Sir Sttifford Northcotte and Sir J. A. Macdonald, with their joint att^ic Qui /licit per aliitm f licit per tie. (1 ) Neither Lord Salisbury nor Sir Stafford H. Northcote would look at the Tables of fraudulently ed Dominion Fish Catch for the years 1869 and 1870, which were again presented in 1877. The transformation of Prince Edward Island Exports and Imports from the United States for so ii yeai-s was similarly msed over again in 1877 ; coal, lumber and salt figure in the list, while superiiiijK on the.se and other frauds there lay in 1877 the number 606, the ratio 666,303 — 3(18,666, compivssc the secret invasion of the United States Bureau of Statistics. To crown all, there were added the witness, the false oath, the money won and the honours conferred. Eeverting into originating hands in 1878, the old machinery for the old plot of 1871-73, in pan vealed by Sir Francis Hiucks, was revived, and a stronghold outlined and fenced, into which no conspii possessing a strain of honour or truth was permitted to enter. From this stronghold they have unloaded their bonds on the Stock Markets of New York, Loi and Amsterdam. This jjortion of the matter gathers torce when it is known that Dr. Edward Young, for so years Chief of the United States Bureau of Statistics, is a Canadian, and closely related to the fami the late Sir A. J. Smith ; aiso that the family of Sir StalFord Northcote is connected with the fami Mr. George Stephen, the President of the Canadian Pacific Kailway Company, who is a cousin of tho Donald A. Smith, of Hudson Bay Comiiany notoriety. Those are matters which the pecuniary i)rotit ing from the sustained ilefamation ot the Christian Keligion, supplies the only excuse for reluctant n here. The Hudson Tiaj Company is primarily responsible for this amazing fraud. The ex-Governoi that Company, the Earl of Kimberley and Sir Stafford H. Nortlicote, have taken no heed of my ])ri letter entitled "The Conspiracy of 1871," transmitted to them and Sir John Kose in February, ISf^i fore my second voyage to England in relation to the matter. I beg to enclose a copy of that lettiu', ai request that it may be considered a part of this communication. The motives I have therein assignnd the triuniph of the number 666 over that synd)ol of our faith. The Cko.s8, is my warranty for this ad The joint influence of these .statesmen as manifested by inaction, silence and submission, has cti ated in the guarantee by their Canadian allies of the greater part of one hundred million dollars worti Canadian Pacific Eailway Stock, based on Canadian Public Securities. This guarantee is given by some of the very same men who initiated and countenanced the use ratio 666,303 — 303,666, and invaded with othei-s the United States Treasury Department, defamir records with the number 666 and the a.s80ciated sacred emblems every chri.stiau man is bound t fend to the uttermost, as mercifully delivered "for our learning." (2) This guarantee is accojited by some of the very same men who consjiired with the donore in The documents I have cited in my diti'orent communications since June, 1878, disclose each link i chain. To these communications and documents I respectfully refer, as a whole and not singly or in s ed parts ; and to these communications and documents as a whole, I refer for every statement her('in| therein made. And I further beg of you to contrast the individual and isolated splendor created by the millioi money these men are winning through practices compared with which heathen idolatry is virtue with the increasing bitter ci-y of homeless despair wrung from evicted Irish heart?, or the hopeless <'ii(luro( inanity Is (2) "All righteousncBR, Sec ray printed letter addreaii<>d to the Hon. F. T. Frelingliuvien, dnted Nov. 3Utli, 1882, ripture U given by InaplrHtlon of God, and 18 protituble ' ^ '"" "^ ., r, iii herein ussignoil luty for this ac inssion, has cull ion dollars wurti luiced tho use tment, clefaniiii m is bound t tho donore in ISO each link i lot singly or in tatenient heri-in] id by tho niillioi latry is virtue the hopeless reotion, for lu-trui endurod from year to year l)y tho London poor in th«(ir unlovely and starving homos, or the eflfoct on hu- , iii:inity of a fading belief in the I'rovidenco of f Joil, fo-ttcrod by protected crime. Is it not well to think of tho cliildren of all h(\lpioas poor ; and is it not well to think too of that iiit'ssigo the gamblers have scotfed, — "Inasuinch as ye did it not to one of the least of these, ye did it not to .Mk." There are now two or three points to wliich 1 bog earnestly to solicit your most serious attention. KiKHT — The blasphemous decei)tions which I have outlined in my letter to the I^esident of the Uni- ti'd Stales, ])() it roniombored, were with iufiunous audacity oHicially stated by tho man who was moat fa- miliar with thoir pernicious use and unholy origin, to bo necessary for the "future disposal of the Fish- ciics (,)ut!stion," and for this purpose it was essential that their "reliability should be maintained." This otiicial avowal roused lue to renewed and ceaseless action. Tiie circumstances wliich led to the publicatinii of this declaration, coupled with subsequent events, apiiear to form such a striking illustration of the merciful Providence of God in respect of our race, when ligiitly viewed, that I subjoin the extract and name the men. A "Memorandum for the Right Honourable Sir John A. Macdonald, by Mr. W. F. Whitcher, Com- uiissiouer of Fisheries," bearing date Ottawa, 23id Doc, 1880, was laid before tho Canadian Parliament in )hi' second week of Mu.oh, 1881, according to various new-spapora. Tills (locumont full of lies was published at length in the (iovornmeut organ — the Toronto J/oj7 — un- der tlu' cijitiun in large letters 'T!ie Hind Charges," itc, X:c. Mi. Wliitcher says in this document, and Sir J. A. Macdonald receives the statement and publishes il : — "Tho statistical tables forming the basis of argument on tho chief commercial feature of the inquiry, "liaving been derived from the Tkade Uecobdh of botu countries, may readily be examined in detail, "luul |)roved beyond question. Their general effect being incompatible with the alleged use for improper "purposes should be a sufficient answer to the charge of tampering with them. "7'//w riatis (if ecidauce, huweocr, i'k intiiuateh/ related to the whole itubject of the inijuiry; and having "ii/'sii ail inqiurtant /leurin;/ on the future diitpusal of the Fisheries quasi ion, it is of the highent moment to 'iiiaintaiii itn coiiipleti' reliuhility. "if innocent mintuhex exist which Mr. Hind has been enabled to torture into any semblance of wilful version, these might bo now carefully ascertained and acknowledged." I make no further comment on this extracted passage from an official document laid before Parliament, wliich abounds in like outrages. I leave tne man and his master to those "thorns which prick and sting," ciiuiiied ofl'shooti* of tho spirit in which they have paltered with religion, honour and truth, and sold lieinsulves to evil and tho lust of power. You will become aware that the Marquis of Lorne as Governor General of Canada received this docu- iH'ut in the veiy niiilst of proof showing the infamous falsehood of its contents and bearing. Lord Lome ook no notice of the warning sent out to him in February, 1878, by that gathered flower of honour, Lord lederick Cavendish. With his eyes blinded by the fancy-formed glitter before him, he sidled into the mis of his glozing tempter. You will become aware that the Right Hon. the Earl of Kimberley, as Secretary of State for theColo- ii's, also received this document. The F2arl of Kimberley as Secretary of State for the Colonies possessed very moans, official and otherwise, for knowing the truth of tho wholo matter. This document is specially Ihuled to in my printed letters to the Governor General of Canada, dated March 28th, 1881, and Oct. •")tli, 1881. To these published lettoi-s I respectfully refer you. No language can portray the measure of responsibility which falls on these statesmen now, for have ley not sold the promise of Redemption and the Sacrifice of the Cross to the Dagon who glossed over u> number 666 and pictured the endless stream of gold it would win. In tho sustained presence of this kind of rule — religion, country, life, property, character and comity erome the sport of tho agnostic's brooding conceit, and are controlled by the masked hypocrisy of those lio in secret and in fact scoff at Christ and defend "The Number of a Man." One source of the money which paid for all this work is a consideration of great moment. It will be werved that tho dutiable portion of tho Fish Imports and Exports in 1872-3, prior to the coming into peration in July, 1873, of the Fishery Clauses of tho Treaty of Washington, was very large, both m Ca- jada and the United States. Yet these dutiable items conform to the ratio 666,303 — 303,666, and con- lueutly to tho number 666 and its associated sacred emblems given to us by Divine Inspiration. There is only one conclusion which suggests itfolf — the people of Canada were made to pay for the raiid which hivs deprived them of their Fisheries, and which has assisted in building up the mammoth rtunes and politictil power of the patrons of this work, through the idealized North- West, and its frozen tness. Second — The presence in the United States Commerce and Navigation Returns of entries fearfully l^ifiod after the manner I have described, constitutes a heinous crime against the State, compassed by werful home assistance not difficult to trace. This is a matter which the President of the United States ill treat as he considers proper. But in Canada, the same crime has been perpetrated by the Govern- [Ont of the country. — Who is going to bring the perpetrators of this crime to justice? Shall they «h- I I 34 cape 1 Should no legal means be available, then steps in Punnc Ovinion. For if the symbol 6tt0 under which the conspirators have worked, and so far succeeded, (loutinj Christianity, Imj permitted to triumph for the men who used it, or who |)rofit by it, eitluir by diplomiicj undue influence, or expediency, then Fkaud ia high placo\and all the brood of Kuauk, uplield ])y a bliij ])hemous use of Divine Inspiration, triumph over the C/'russ and (Christianity. And why should the n\eans taken to secure basely won splen'" titled "Falsified Departmental Reports." Over this exposure the .Senate and Commons of Canada as stumbled under merciless and guilty guides. Mr. Whitcher then used in June, 1880, the figures framed under the mask •^'i the number (Itifi, whj had been successful in 1877. 2. When the Marquis of Ix)rne permitted the impostor Macoun's, 'big' 000k on "Manitoba and North-West" to appear under his patronage as Governor-(ieneral in 1882, ho allowed all the false and funs with desecrat i.sterdam, the name leading figures and statements of this Government impostor, which I had pointed out! printed letters addressed to the Earl of Kimberley in 1881, to appear over again, and under the glaiiil attached to the name and office of the Governor-General of Canada. And so on in many other cases. The Society for The Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts ; The Society for Promoting ( tian Knowledge ; The Royal Geographical Society ; The Geological Survey of Canada ; The Departme Agriculture at Ottawa ; The Department of the Interior ; The United States Consul at Washington, «fec., have been used in a similar manner for diffusing false information. All this you will find outl in my letter to the late Archbishop of Canterbury, published in August, 1882, and in subsequent lelti Is not the cup full now 1 I have been twice to England on the same mission, and remained there in the aggregate more half a year. For five years I have tried every means that a private man ia my position in life could comma call — first, individual official attention to the subject, and then this course failing — public attention the dealers in the magic of the number 66(i were permitted to jjrovo too strong for ine. As already st( the record is not only available but has been already transmitted. What is the conclusion ^ The conclusion is that the cup was not then full, and that the 1! North American Fisheries were permitted to be the waiting blessing for millions of our race, and ;i suspended warning to the few who have known no human brotherhood but that of their order, and joined to the worshippers of Mammon, have trampled religion and honor and sympathy under foot. For the conspirators have used the decorated official coward's meanest device in order to keej) gains. They have continually crouched in silence beneath iudictnumts which the lowest of folia would have had the moral courage to meet, if they were not miserably and fatally true. There is no of words which can sufficiently degrade them as men in their Judas work. Therefore, for the sake of the faith which alone can give hope to the lives of the million, am tain the promise of a peace which pa.sseth understanding in the trusting hour of death, permit me vo fully to solicit from you a full and just opporttmity for Public Opinion to be fairly formed and fail find expression on a subject which is -not only of moment to every individual, but of vital importa the welfare of the Realm, But not 'sago to n |i"itted to ich is thi( mimickir |iien's nigl In ever! koice and! ■Shall tjJ mitted tol iber 666 [ It'll warnil h' to sca( lit and blJ hulsor, 36 Beeilotl, tloiilini I- by iliplomi";! phold by ft blii icii bo i>eniiitu< iiiylli. »a I will Kivey( iv oiil>oiiunily d I irt IV tate for t'.io < 'o I'nirlv an.l willi locoit moio fttio lis stivtomont. other. Tho (lo< I been trananiit >th Feb. IH71), to my resiions^> ins ot" Cftuailft a numlor COfi, wl" "Manitoba ami 11 the false and pointed out under the glam or Promoting CI The Departmeu \t \Va.shington I will find out! subsequent lelti Let rao ronclnde with ii controHt. You will rectMvc thin fioiiuiMinicatioii nliortly bi'tbre ('hristmnH, and uut tho 8ami) time that tho l)alancn of the authorized swollen and ' waterttd' cipiktlof tiii« < anadian I'aei- ilailway, KOKTY-KIVK MiM.ioNH OK Doix.MJs, i.s to be issued to the world, according to the oHicial uu- unot'iiiont of Mr. (leorge Stepluai, tlui Pri-sident of the ('oinpauy. This 45,()0(),0()n dollars worth of swollen stock is guaranteed by the stattiMnien under whoHo piUronngo ! olticial supervision the number OOti and its related .H.acred emblems were introduced for the purpose of iiid, into United Htites and Canadian Records of (iovernment. This 45,000,000 doUara worth of stock is |)mctically issued by the same men who by means of "Kire- ^cks and ("lay" a.s substitutes for Fish, and a hundred other similar devices, gained Article XXX of the icaty of Washington for tiie Hudson liay Company in 1871, and who Jointly with Mr. (feorge Stephen |tl ])is associates now own thirty million acres of lauil in the North- West Territory of ('anada fiei! from atiou, by contract with *he same Canadian Stjitesmen who havo since guaranteed their bonds, who have (I the numbi-r (166, anil who patronized the evolution of the (piantity $18,^,708 out of tho United .States minercH and Navigation Iteporta, specially adjusted for tho purpose, to prove the value of remi|ted du- on Fish. — (Doc. and Pro. Hal. Com., page 1881, Kecord— 437.) TIk! preparation and evolution of this (juantity developes such traitorous viloness that 1 have not in- lu(!('d its relations into my examphw of tho power of the number tiliti. Its concei)tioh is not human. I .M.\.V'.S LIFR OK PROPEKTV IS SAFE IF THIS .MF/rHOD OK PUOTEOTEI) FUAUIJ IN THE MANUKACTCRE OK FALSE iiK.vcK 18 PRHMrrTRi). This (piantity when jiroperly applied to tho mathematical formula of the Fmud 1 OH^e deduced, pruvos that no other numbers but those fcikeii from the 13th Chapter of Revelation will sa- yall tlie comlitions involved. In a variety of ways this formula provtis blasphemous ai>proi)riation. Now please observe that all this connected chain of injustice and crime has been brought about and fected because the proper autliorities have refused to look at the jiroofs of lieclared and i)alpable fraud the matter. This is shown in my printed and published letter and Argument, dated May 27th, 1881. (■ coUiiequences of this neglect are now looming into view. During or about Christmas week, when every he!-rth where the English language is spoken becomes ous with Christmas emblems or carols, these forty-five million dollai-s, born of the number 6G6, and desecration of the Divine Word, are to be thrown on tho stock markets of London, New York and isterdam, whore they virtually assume tho form of the tempter's bribe for betraying Christ once again till! name of the Nation, by the official ignoring of the principles and foundation of the Christian Keli- n. But not even the faintest glitter of this golden stream won by the tramplin^r ander foot of a merciful sago to man divinely inspired, will reach the vice engendering dens of the London heljjless poor, or be mitted to soothe the awful desolation of evicted Irish hearts at Christmas-tide, or illumine the gloom ch is thickening over unreciu d labour in the land, or arrest the downward rush of the thousands who mimicking the giant patrons of fraud, or lessen tho black despair which comes with the wage of fallen lien's nightly sin in the teeming I^ndou streets. In every Church and house of prayer throughout the realm, there will be attuned at Christmas-tide, oice and feeling, the joyous and loving words, — "Hark, llie heiald angels sing." aggregate more could comman lablic attention As already st; md that tho T.i our race, and a ,heir order, and thy under foot, order to keei; lowest of foUal ue. There is no the million, ami ,]i, permit me lo formed anil fi>i if vital importnn •Shall the men who have not this sweet nimic in their souls, and who scoH' at its gentle suasion, bo litted to spread throughout the world the Christloss power and the dismal, foreboding success of the ibev 666 1 Shall these conspirators be permitted to steal for swindling purposes, any part of those ed warnings against Antichrist vouchsafed to us in a merciful gift from God 1 and shall they bo al- pd to scatter undisturbed for their mutual profit, within and between two great Nations of the same it and blood, the germs of rankling distrusc based on profitable Blasphemy t I have the honour to be, Your most obedient servant, HENRY YOULE HIND, M. A. British Boientiflo Witness at tho Halifax Fisheries Commission, and OfBoial Compiler of the Ana- lytical Index to the Documents and Proceedings of the Halifax Fisheries Commission. "mlsor. Nova Scotia, December let, 1883. CONTENTS. Lbttrk to the Puesident op thk United Staiks Introiluotion and Part I < Argiumsnt— The Ycivi 1874 Exiim|il(jM relating to the Standard 909,969 Examples relating to the elements of the Standard 6U(j,3()3— 303,666 Examples relating to Fraudiiltiut Entries Examples relating to Fish and Shell Fish only Examples relating to Canadian Fish only Examples relating to "Fnra, Skins and Tails — undressed" Examples relatiug to United States Fish and Fish Oils only ■ The Number 908,082 The eftect of reversing the Figures showing alleged Imports and Exports Another Form of the Standard The Number <500 the bnsis of the Fraud •Origin and development of the Ratio fi66,30H — 303,666 rr. ., The relation of the Masking Numbers The relation ot ' <> Denominational Masking Numbers The uniformity oi all relations and the Arithmetical Proportions The Difference between Canadian alleged lMi])orts and United States alleged Exports The Numerical relations of the Numbers employed The relation of Fraudulent Abstractions f»om Exports to the elements of the Eatio The Conception of the Fraud Preliminary Table of ll^itios The Yeak 1873 Examples of the same Fraud The new Ratio produced by reveiMng the Figures of Exports and Imports The Relation of the United States and Canadian alleged Exports and Imports in 1872-3 to the ratio 666,303—303,666 The Year 1876 The alleged Canadian Imports from the United States ; The alleged United States Exports to all British America The ell'ect of the addition of 2 to the Canadian Imports of 1874 Summary of the whole iu the years 1872-3 ; 3-4 ; 4-5 The Resulting Number containing all the Masking Series and the quantity 2 added to Canadian Imports of 1874 The Masking Series The Number of the Beast and other figures taken from the 13th Chapter of Revelation to mask the Fraud Conclusion of Argument pag| 3- 3—1 7 7 8 8 *<- 10 11- 12 13 13 13 14 14 15 16 16 17 18 18 18 21 22 22 23 24 25 25 26 26 26 [>cal t( ai ,<'ttor to ntroduct tatomeij ho dedu ir Staffo lio usufr ir J. A. ] ho swolli in Apj)ea of 1 contrast Hiich sh Nota '75 estfibl iiiiely : — ill satisfy Errat. '1 Kxanij -1 lines 'uiii, the 1. for "U FACi 3— a 1^—1 7 7 8 8 ...... i'—'i 10 U- 12 13 13 13 U 14 15 16 16 17 18 18 18 21 _3 to the 22 ".'. '.".'.'.'.. 22 23 24 26 D Ciinadian 25 26 )n to mask 26 26 PART II. ippeal to the Preaiflent of the United States for Official Puumcitv in the intoroat of Kkl ion ami guud-nuighhourhood v 27 — 29 ,('ttor to the Right Honourable W. E Gladstone, M. P., Premier of Her Majesty's Government luti'udiiction 29 tutPinei.t of the character of the Fraud 30 'hi! deduction of «8,0()0,000 from the British demand 31 iir .Stjiilord Northcote and the Earl of Kimborloy 31 'ho usufructuary advantages and profits of the concealment of the Fraud... 32 iir J. A. Macdonald 33 'lie .swollen and ' watered' guaranteed capital of the Canadian Pacific Railway and its Patrons 34 — 36 m Ap]>eal for a fair opportunity for Public Opinion to be formed on the matter in the interests of Religion and good neighbourhood 34 contrast — Religion and Charity versus profitable Blasphemy in the concealment of Fraud 34 hicii .shall prevail? 34 NoTA DENE. — The mathematical formulu deduced 'rom the figures employed in 1874, in 1873, and ^75 estiiblishes the fact that no other Ji