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'rVII, PICKERING, ONT., FRIDAY, DEC 6, 1907
refeaviit,enat garb*.
,,Dental;,
D
R. R. M. STEWART, Markham.
DENTIST.
Honor Graduate of Toronto University
Graduate Royal College of Dental Surgeons.
OFFICE—OPPOSITE THE POSTOFFICE.
OpenyResid n e, Maito n St., North.
AT UNIONVILLE EVERY FRIDAY.
a. m, to i p. m. Office over Summerfeld Vit=
Silver's Store.
Medical
M. BELL, M. D., C. M.
A• Late House Surgeon of the Kingston
General Hospital. Successor to Dr. M. Bate-
man Office honrs'8 to 10 a m, 1 to S p mond 0
to 8 p m. Pickering. Ont' 4.s-ly
GEO. N. FISH, M. D.
VI PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
' Member of College of Physicians and Surgeons.
Ont. Associate Coroner, County of Ontario,
.Office Hours -8 to 10 a. m, and 1 w 3 and G to 8
p. m. Brougham, Ont. 11—ly
• T HERBERT KIDD; M. D., C. M.
!J • Member College of Physicians and Sur -
;germs of Ontario, Late House Surgeon of Gen-
eral. Eazergenoy and Burnside Lying-in Ho9pi-
tals of Toronto. Office in Alexander Morgan's
residence. opposite 3fethodi'et church, Clare -
moot, Ont. • • 251y
Legal.
r E. FAREWELL, Q. 0., BARRIS-
E7 • TER, County Crown Attorney, and County
elicitor. Court Rona.. Whttbv• 10-1`
T T. BARCLAY, Barrister-at-La•w:-
- 1J. Solicitor.Notary Specta'1 Exami-
ner for Bigh Court of Justica. Successor to
Messrs. Dow 5c McGillivray,' Brock Street..
Whitby, ily
Vetertnary.
•
HHOPTINS, VETERINARY SCR-
• GEON, Graduate of the Ontario Vet-
erinsry College, Toronto, registered member
�
ba andares. 1, ace oneanMedics'
d one gn��rr
artgglation.
miles
north of Green River. Office and shoeing forge
tours 8 to 11 a.m., and 1 to 4 pm. - Private
telephone tamy vele* P, O. address.' Green
River. Out
•
•sse ntlite (garb*.
HOPPER Issuer of Marriage
rio,
Orelce the
et store and hisresidenceyClaremonof t.
Trt BUNTING, Isaner of Marriage
• Licenses for the Qonnty of Ontario. Of-
** es the store or as hie restdsaoe, Pickering
• Tillage. 1-y
R.BEATON,TOWNSHIP CLERIC
• Conveyancer. Commissioner for taking
atmdevim, A000natant. Ete. Money to loan
' on farm pprrrtrty. "Issuer of Marriage. Lio-
acs" Whitsvale, Ont. r -v
FPOSTILL, Licensed Auctioneer,
. for Counties of York and Ontario. Ano -
Ilion vales of all kinds attenn*d to on shortest
sotto«, Address Green liver P. O., Ont.
POIICHER. Licensed. Auction -
A_ • ear, Valuator and Collector for the Coun
It.. of York and Ontario AU kinds of auction
• sales conducted and valuations made et mod
'omtEstates asonacin
salymanaedd and auction or
private sale- Mortgagee. rents. notes and
general accounts promptly collected and satis-
factory settlements guaranteed. Phone or
'write for taraii. and. Ont. Date. marl flied articulbbrys.phone Brougham,
w
-.dice. 7
Furniture....
Without a Doubt
We have the largest stock of single and
double harness the town has ever had.
Not only the largest, but quality the
best, genuine hand -made goods.
HALTERS HALTERS
We have all sizes and descriptions,
first-class stock, all hand -made.
• WINTER Is COMING
We have an excellent stock of
Horse Blankets.
ROBES LAP RUGS WHIPS GALORE
Curry Combs, brushes, gall cure, hoof
ointment, harness oil, metal polish,
Get your harness 'at
THOMPSON BROS., - • Pickering
Xmas Shopping at the
PICKERING PHARMACY
By the time this reaches our custom-
ers we will have on display one of the
best selections of "XMAS GIFTS" ever
shown in Pickering. Do your buying
now and avoid the hurry nearer Xinas. ,
Let us put your purchases aside for
you. only asmall deposit required.
Our Xmas goods include fancy cases, I.
toilet sets, jewel cases, jewellery,burnt
leather hooks, souvenir goods, novel;
ties. holly stationery, fine perfumes,
and many ether suitable gifts.
PURE Dnuos—We always have a'com-
plete stock.` •
STOCK Food,—Tryour own large pac-
kage for 25c. Agent for Hess and
t'arnetae Foods.
EYES TESTED FRE1—Satisfaetion
guaranteed. • •
-
Yot-lt PitLe••CItIPTloNs carefully coni -
pounded.
T. M. McFadden
Diepensiug Chemist.
PICKERING, - ONTARIO.
Wagner & Co.
Have a full line or Iresh and cur-
ed meats constalitly on hand.
Spice Roll, Breakfast Bacon,
Ham, Bologna, Weiners, etc.
Highest prices paid for
Butcher's cattlk.
REAL ESTATE
Insurance and
Conveyancing Done
House and Lot for sale, or to rent:
Also Planing Mill for sale.
150 acre Fartn for sale, - -
If you went to buy sell or rent, call
at my office. Bargains.
CHERRYWOOD
T. Wright Sundayed with W. Dixon
Miss May Lacy Sundayed with To-
ronto friends.
A. Taylor has finished plowing on
the Kerr farm.
A. C. Courtney has rented T. Rees-
or's farm for a term of years.
Mr. and Mrs. Plant is spendiug a
fortnight with F. and Mrs. Lacey.
H. Courtney and W. Hollinger were
visiting friends at the -Highland Creek
on Sunday last.
W. Laker, of Toronto. has bought G.
White's farm wbere he is going to
move in the spring.
WHtTEVALE
The annivert;ary and Xmas tree of
the Whitevale Methodist Sabbath
school ,will be held on Sunday and
Monday, Dec. 15th and Orth. On Sun-
day at 2.30 p. in., Mr. F. L. Fowke, of
Oshawa, will address a mass- meeting
of children. Music by the children of
the school, assisted by the home choir.
At 7.13 Mr. Fowke will again speak.
Music will be furnished by the Mount
Joy quartette. Special collections at
both services. On Monday evening
an entertainment will be- given by
members of the school. consisting of
dialogues. recitations, :motion songs.
choruses and drills. Prizes and gifts
Will be distributed from-, the Xmas
tree at the conclusion of the program.
Adinission, adults, 13 cents : children.
10 cents. Doors ..open at 7.30, pro -
grain commences at S o'clock.
' MONGOLIA •
•
Mrs. Rennie visited friends in Stouff-
ville.
• Mies Veneer is visiting • friends at
Linroinville..
W. G. Reesor "spent a day at Cedar
Grose recently. • • - -
John Madill spent a day with his
brother at Greenwood.
Mr. and Mrs: Cook, of Epsom, visit•
ed J. B. Turner recently.s
_
Miss M. Hoover called on3Irs. J. F.
Burkholder a few days ago.
-Robert Laurie, of Scarboro, spent
Sunday with his father bere.
Lloyd and Melville Turner spent a
day at Claremont last week.
Mr. and Mrs. McDowell, of St. Cath-
arines. is visiting friend• here. -
Frank 13aker, of the 9th line, spent
a day witb his brother Harvey:
Robert Pugh, of Altana, called on
Henry Wideman the other day.
Miss Nellie Wilson. of Green River,
called on Edna Reesor recently.
`Ralph Hamilton; of Stouffvtlle. call-
ed on a few of our farmers here.
Mart Reesor, jr., spent a week with
his sister, Mrs. Penny, at Cedar Grove.
Mr. and Mrs. , Burkholder, of the
9th line, spent' a day with Mrs. J. F.
Burkholder here.
Tom Judd, whb has been with his
brother the past summer, has ,taken
up his abode in Dunbarton. • Come
again Tout.
_111. V. Richardson:..
d foil line of first.
Oleos fnrnitare-now
-on exhibition in
oar . ware rooms.
Brines right.
. S. Dillingham.
Pickering, - Ont
Notary Public,' Pickering.
dickering �iverr�
Fat Hogs Wanted
I have the contract with Wight
�t Co.,•Pork Packers, Toronto, to
supply that firm with all the live
hogs they require, and would like
• ‘to have your hogs. 1 will pay
vvithiu 15c. of Toronto price until
'-further notice. .
Write, phone or apply to
'=John -A. "White
—BROUGHAM • .
•
First-class rigs for hire',
Day or night
Bus meets all trains
Teaming promptly attended to.
Ageni for Canada Carriage Co.
1W. H. Peak, Pickering.
•
GREENWOQlZ
R. Devitt spent Monday in,the city:
A. Davis has returned to the city.
George Lane was home over Sun-
day.
H. and Mrs. Calvert and Miss Cal-
ts spent
Mrs. Wilson.
Miss Ethel' Wilson. has returned
home. after spendiipg a few days with
friends in the city. -
Died—At Greenwood, on. Friday.,
Nov. 29th. .Ivan John, infant son 'of
Arch. and Mrs. Davie.
• F. L. and Mrs. Green were in Whit-
by on Monday and while there attend-
ed a lecture at the Ladies' College in:
the evening.
The trustees of , this section have en-
gaged the services of a young man
from the neighborhood of Cobourg to
wield the rod for the incoming year.
Owing to the bad roads the cottage
meeting which was to be held at 3liss
Liscotnhe's on the 21st of December,
was postponed until Thursday Dec.
12th.
Gus Gibson, formerly of Greenwood,
is renewing old srtp.aintances in. :the
neighborhood. He expects to spend
Christmas with his father, Robert
Gibson, of Yorkton. . .
Quite a number from here' attended
the funeral of the late Mrs. Harbron,
of Claremont, on Sunday last.- Much
'sympathy is felt for the old gentle•
man, who in his declining yearsis left
alone. they having almost attained
the 50th anniversary of their wedidng.
•r•
i ongni iSZ ieF sit kFli
Central
BUSINESS COLLEGE
of Toronto, has started thous-
ands of young men and women
on the easy way to independ—
ence and, success. Let us give ai
you the right start.- Write for 8'
Catalogue "Van to spend the
next six m n s with us. Enter
any time. Address W. H.
Shaw, Principal, Yonge and
Gerrard Sts., Toronto.
SIMMTIVIT
'DOMINION BANE
Bend Office, Toronto
Capital paid up $ 3,600,000
'Reserve fund and undi-
videdprofits 4,700,000
Deposited by the public 36,000,000
Total assets ' :11,000,000
WHITBY BRANCH.
General Banking Business
transacted.
. __ . 74-A-1-- _ ry.4,-
it,
-Numi
Li, .4 .,,,. __„_.a.
. BRITISH CANADIAN
l3usiness Coilete Great training, Small
coat, Good positions. Feee Catalogue.
Everybody welcome.
., R. A, FARQUHARSO3, B. A.
Ccrner Tonga and Bloor Streets, 'Toronto
"-...t J:•.P
potato car from Toronto this week
that the stove and part of a car lining•
had been stolen out.
See desplay of China, candies, per-
fumes, and fancy dry -goods at Croke..
by's all this month. There is no use
in going to the city to buy when you
get as good satisfaction at home.
The new Methodist church is being
rushed ahead towards completion.
The carpenters have the floors all laid,
the lathers have the basement com-
pleted and the furnace was installed
this week. The plasterers will be on
the job neat week.
The Upper Canada • Bible Society
meeting for this place was held in' the
Baptist church on Monday evening.
Addresses were given by the local
clergymen and Rev. Jesse Gibson, of
Toronto; who illustrated his remarks
by magic lantern views.
At the last meeting of the township
council, the election officials were ap-
pointed and preparations completed
for the next inunicipal contest. This
township will willa have. a deputy -reeve
next year and as the present reeve
will seek the suffrages of the electors
for the reeveship again,. Mr: Forsyth
will run.for deputy this year ' and look
for the reeve's place next •yeas• All
the other councillors will seek re-
election. J. Kennedy. who missed a
place at the council board last ye
will spruce•up again this year for a
NO 9
The Taking
Cold Habit
The old cold goes; a new one
quickly comes. It's the story
of a weak throat, weak lungs,
s tendency to consumption.
0 Ayer's. Cherry Pectoral
breaks up the taking -cold
habit. It strengthens, soothes,
t:pais. Askyourdoctoraboutit.
g I tl a terrible cold, and notbinR relieved
•::n. 't trice Aycr's Cherry Pectoral and it
•�:ec'e t;y bro:e up. my cold, stopped m
r : •l d', ; +ori -nerd testy part of miibody. }
., n;.t •q•.md rftii work for me "-M&-J, F-Lv'rs,
Ulue.
l --tZG:ce by t• 0. Ayer Co.. Lowell.
£leo •maauActnrors of
.• SARSAPAIILLA.
. „1,1 CI'[IAllt VIGOR.
eri tYte bowels regguiar with Ayer's
Pitts. Just one pili each night.
seat.
• BROCK ROAD
Mrs., G. Tool called on Jirs. Axford
Sunday. •
Still the wedding bells are ringing.
this time in the mirth.
Roy and Mrs. Connor have recently
moved into D. Reesol•'s house.
Miss Trickey, of Whitevale. spent
Sunday with "James a .nd Mrs. Kayes:
Myer. R. Witter and daughter. Miss
Gladys, of East Toronto, are visiting
at James Kayes. •
The Young People's Bible Class, of
Whitevale Baptist church, spent an
enjoyable time last Wednesday. even?
ing at the home of their teacher, Jas.
Kayes..
OF;EEN RIVER
- NOTICE
Our shop will be closed every
Saturday afternoon. .
Customers will please govern them
selves accordingly.
Gond stock of ladders on hand from
• Ile to 1'--c per "round according" •
to size, etc. •
W. H. JACKSON. Brock Road.
Western Bank lox
-•Canada•
Pickering Branch.
Dr. -and Mrs. Hopkins spent several
days last week at Balmy Beach. To-
ronto.
Mr. and Mrs. St. John. of Stouffville.
visited Sunday with O. P. and Mrs.
Ferrier.
Some from here attended the anni-
versary services at Cherrywood on
Sunday and Monday.
,firs. O. H. Doten attended the
funeral of her sister-in-law, who died
in Toronto last week. -
Miss Delia Barton has_returned to
Toronto after spending . some time
with her parents here.
Misses Pearl Doten, Gertie Robin-
son, Vera Banyard and Maud Doten
spent a few days in Toronto last week.
Much sympathy is extended to Mrs.
W. G. Barnes, her brother. Mr. Monk -
house, of Stouffville. having died on
Friday of last week.
Preparations are now being made
for tbe-Sunday school anniversary and
Xmas entertainment which takes
place thelast Sunday and Monday in
December.
Incorporated by ant of Parliament lase '
•
Anthorized Capital
Subscribed
Paid up
Rest Account
Assets
81.000.000,00
553.500.00
-
655.000.00
300,080.00
5,000,000.00
Joamt Cowan, Beg, • T. B. 11afla.Lals,. len.
President NW's
' Special attention given to Farmer's Bale
Notes . Collections solicited and promptly made
Farmer's Notes discounted £m*eiean and
Foreign Exchange bought and sold Drafts-le-
med. ayailabls on all parts of the world _
Savings Bank Department.
Interest allowed on deposits at high-
est current rates,and credited or
paid half -yearly to depositors.
GEO. KERR, Mgr.•
_ -•
Opecial'atTention given to the collet•
tion of farmer's sale and • -
- - other notes.• • ..
SAVINGS DEPARTMENT.-.
•
=epcsi.t5"received of $1. and
• upwards.
Interest allowed at highest
current rates. • •
Corner viand act or paid quar-
terly.
;1�laeksmithiKg
The undersigned has'ing hovght out
the blacksmithing business of G.
Law, is {weltered to do black-
- smithing in all its lines.
horse -shoeing = a - Sjacialty.
QC)M= N 4 LAW,
PICKERING, ONT
GRAM
E. W. Bodell was in the city on
Tuesday.
J. -M. Gerow spent .a couple' of
days in the city -this week. • . . . •
Dr. Callaghan, of Bancroft, call-
ed on friends on Wednesday.
. Mrs. Arlin and son, of Brooklin,
spent Wednesday at Mrs. J, Beer's
Mrs. H. Wright, of Richmond
Hill, is visiting her mother, Mrs,
Beer.
Thomas Puncher w as in Whitby
last week attending the 'County
Council.
F. W. Cowie, of Toronto, spent
Sunday here ate the home of his
mother. -
Mrs. M. Mechin, of Toronto,
spent Sunday with-. Hugh and Mrs
Mechin. '
•
• Alf. and Mrs. Fish, of Toronto,
spent Sunday with ,. Dr. G.:. and'
Mrs. Fish.
Miss Marie Willson, of Toronto,
spent a couple of weeks with Ed.
and Mrs. Willson.
. Mrs. '.Moore, --of the North-West
spent a few days here with Ed.
and Mrs. Willson.
The oyster supper of the Union
Sabbath School has been :changed
to Monday, Dec. 23rd.
Here is an Xmas. present.' Buy
your Furniture at Claremont
Store and we Will supply the mar-
rlkge licence free. J. H. Beal:
Boyd and Mrs. Burk entertained
Ed. and Mrs. Willson and , family
with their friends, Mrs. F. Norton,
of Keswick, and Mrs. Moore, of'A1-
berta, at their home on Monday
evening, it being the anniversary
'of Mrs. Willson's birthday.
GOODWOOD, .
Dr. Darling is seriously ill at pres-
ent.
Alfred McDonald returned from the
west on Friday. •
J. G. Crosby visited his son in Good-
wood last week.
Rev. Mr. Wright is the new Angli-
can pastor here now.
• Born, to Alex. and Mrs: Williams,.
on Mocday, Dec. god, a daughter.`
Misses Allen -and. Scott, evengelists,
are holding services in the hall here.
The Methodist Sabbath school enter.
tainment will be held on New Year's
night.
The Baptist Sabbath school enter-
tainment will be held on Christmas
night.
S. Morgason and son, of Toronto,
visited at the home of the,former's
father over Sunday.
T. Wagg's•sale was very successful.
A large crowd was present all day and
bidding and prices were good,
Mr. Buckindale's 'sale on 'Saturday
last was largely • attended. Horses
Bold very cheep, An old one sold for
15.t.50.
-
It was discovc_ed on the return of a
Now is the Time T
To buy fruit for your Christmas cakes
-and 'puddings, •
We have the finest raisins ever im•
-
ported. See them before buying:
Also, seeded raisins, fine off stock Val-
encia currants, citron and lemon
.peel, almonds • and walnuts.
Extracts, assorted flavors,
3 bottles for 25: cents.
I^_ing sugar, cake coloring,
chocolate, etc. •
GEO. PHILIP, Grocer, Brougham .= .
GINO
i
orman
Bassett
Jeweler, Whitby
IIs showing this year a
`.. •bigger assortment of
Suitable
:X311as
Gifts
:Than ever, and you •
will save .
10 Per. Cetit..
- anyway on all purchases
made from him. '
Open Evenings
Order your purchases nirieand
have them put away fort,:. •
future delivery. :- ,
Norman Masse
Jeweler and Optician,
Brock St. South,
To check a cold quickly, get from your
druggists some little Candy Cold Tablets
called Preventive. Druggists everywhere
are row. dispensing Preventici?, for they
are not only safe, bnt decided y effective
and prompt, 'Preventics contain no gain
ine, no -laxative, nothing harsh or sicken-
ing. Taken at the "sneeze stage" Pre
veotics will prevent Pneumonia, Bron
chitin, La Grippe, stc. Hence the name,
Preventics• Good for feverish chill
ren. 48 Preventics 25 cents. Trial
1•11oxe3 conte. Sold by T M MoFaJ
den
1
i
Whitby,
1
r
, ' r
•
..;is•e•••.k
. • ' . • . •
: "..
s.
MISS HARRINCTON OF DETROIT
SAYS:
"1 Caught
a Sever'd
Cold Which
Settled in
Catarrh.
I Began
Taking
Pe-ru-na
And Found
it a Faithful
Helper.
I Heartily
Recommend
Pe-ru-na."
It
tablespoonfuls of butter, the yolks of
two eggs, and two sh.akes of pepper.
Mix thoroughly and use to fill tb.e goose.
Rob over with salt and pepper, and
sot to cook in a hot oven. Baste on
the platter, diose the apples at the
two sides of the dish. fill the centres
of the apples with currant jelly and
put. a few springs of cress !between
them.
Pot Apple Pie. -Peel end quarter
enough ,nice tart apples (greeuings are
the best). and slire in strips shout half
a pound of. fat salt pork, and mix a nice
-
light biscuit dough. Then take an
iron kettle .and lay strips ot the pork
across the-lbottom about half an inch
apart; then lay on that loosely some
of the quartered • apples, then sugar
and cinnamon. then she* your bischit
dough in. strips about the same as the
pork and lay crosswise, leaving about
an inch between each strip. Repeat
this operation until you have used up
your material, having the biscuit dough
on top. Then pour down the side of
the kettle carefully a cup of boiling
water. cover and cook slowly for one
hour and a half, adding -boiling water
and towels are essential when conking.
While sprits on furniture may be re-
m.oved by rubbing with spirits of cam-
phor. .
Don't use .much. water for plants at
this season of the year, as growth Is
at a standstill.
The down of milkweeds •makes a
softer and cleaner fillingfor pillows
than do feathers.
Save wooden meat Skewers, as they
.are useful for getting into corners
when scrubbing paint, etc.
A discarded safety razoie blade makes
the finest ripper inisiginable. Keep one
in the sewing room.
-When cooking fruit or hIlies, if the
:syrup boilsover,- a little salt sprink-
led on it will stop the smudge. •
Sugar, flour: soap,and starch can. be•
fought in large quantities at a saving.
for the o will not spoil. .•
Turn your plants at least once a
week that ani sides of them may have
a chance at the sunshine.
Cotton cloth for pudding and dump-
lingbags will ibe • needed; also .bands
for binding the beef roast.
Steel shoe buckles. -. which have be-
comerusty and tarniehedmay be suo-
cessfully cleaned with emery pnwd.er.
Utilize the tire in- range °reheating
skive the day before to oi.ve oatmeal
the hours a.nd hours • of cooking ft
needs.
Heat. light and inCieture arp the arch
_enemies of .canned frith, preserves, jel-
lies. and similar'sto-ree. FOr this rea-
_son the fruit eloset should be coot.
dark and dry.
Bent pieces of whalebone can be
strertgthened by •belng pieced in 'odd
M153 GRUA HARRINGTON.
_ •
rS CELIA HARRINGTON, 303 Seeond. Ave Detroit, hlich.. writes:
"Weakness has filled litany months of my life with suffering.
"Thro-ugh carelessness I caught a severe cold two years ago which set-
.
fled in catarrh and seriously interfered "-With the - regular "functons of -the
body and made rrie nervous and irritable.
• •
. "I began !along Peruna and .urd in it a faithful helper, as it enriehed
my blood and levigorated the whole s'Ysthln-r • .
"1 'have no pains now. and am aiways
reliehle medieine."- •---
"1 heartily recommend Peruna as a
Health and Strength Restored..
.Mrs. A. E. Stouffer, Capeama, Kansa*,
- writes:
Peruna has given rne' health and
strength; it is the best medicine that
Wad ever made fior women. My friends
Stay they never saw such a change
* woman. I talk to every one about
Peruna. 1 cannot say too snitch for
IL"
Pe-ru-na in Tablet Form. -For two
_ years Dr. Hartman and hie assistants
- have incessantly labored to create Pe -
rune in tablet form. end their stretta-
' eus labors have just been -crowned
•,- with success. People who object to
bquld medieines• can now secure Pe-
runa Tablets. which represent the me-
dicinal ingredients of Peruna. Each
tablet is equivalent to one average dose
of Peruna.
- . For Tears an - •
Mrs. Charles Gros Iretan
I.orette. Quebec, Canada. 'writes;
'For years l• suffered from•a disease
that the doctors did not :understand.
"One day I read in the .paper about
your. excellent remedy," Perana. 1 pro-
cured a bottle_ of It and took. it award-
ing to directions.. It was not long un-
til I observed a change for the better.
'1 can say that'Pertma •hos cured me.
I could not take anyonouriahment ex-
cept ,milk.
. will at all limes say a good Word
tor /Atomise:. 1 botd. It In the highest
esteem.-
. • . • .
Catarrh of Head and Throat.
Mrs. NN illiam Hinchliffe, SO
Myrtle .St., Beverly. Mass., writes' that
Peruna has done her ,a great deal of
gond for catarrh- of- head and throat.
MOSLEM WOMEN'S SHRINES.
Odd Gun Covered With Prayer Symbols
-The Tomb of Joshua.
•
Among the ruins of the. old city of
•
Bagdad, to, the left of the Tigris, sterols
a large square brick strueture Ln which
the Moslem keepers solemnly assert
the body of Joshua is buried, says the
Sunday School Times. It is useless to
test their statements by the apparent
age of the . for the small
square. bricks .of its walls, guthered
from 'the ruins of the Arabic period,
inay indicate only a •rec,oestructione
The present. building is not. iineient.
the .e.ntrance, protected by a portico,
leads into a large" open 'court, which
.e surrounded by chambers.
At the further end of the oourt, oc-
cupying the entire rear of ' the 'build-
in,1.• is the shrine., a spacious window-,
less chamber, lighted only by the dhoo.
- • and entirely destitute of furniture
tow these to boil until tender.. When
tender add chopped meat 'how io lie ly
+
, • - - • _ . eookeih. Also add nearly a cup of
• rice i-ookeecil, salt, and pepper to taste.
•
- About the House
4 Banbury Cakes. -Make a_ good pufr-
t paste. and roil it out .thin; divide it
uito halves. and cover one-half ;with
Banbury mincemeat; then moisten the
-. •
1g with with the Whit -e of anegg. Iroottie
ether half of the. paste over it. prese
- together.. had mark it our in Oval
• : ,COOKINti RECIPES. • - forms. Slate" it- over with the white
- ..ellrown Breed pielding.-Half a pound 10 ...g d •pounded sugar. and bake
f e , on . -
i on. a.1 in in a.. well -heated oven for half
-of stale brown bread orated.. hallt .a
pound of currants, ditto of shred suet, Ian hour. When 11.1he, doodo the cakes
• with roi sharp knife the moinent they
aiur • sugar and 'nutmeg. htixeuposi ,
•
eggs, a spoonful itf brandy. and tvviee.
-es much crerim. Beal. it in a cloth or
basin for_sltili;ffieengo.r_ylofouiri. strowuet,,rte;potato .atii., iut five pounds= -In weight. suizge.
- with skins on until tender. then peel " °en necessary.. This is delicione
. -.. Tut key
a ad . moth. To each pint add one tea.
whl.(i-li,hts'-TRelans."-.ith whiPPed cream..
Cone.he 1 f teespoon f ti 1
%spoon salt,' three' etkakes pepper; two_
- tablespoon,. butter, three tablespoons
tartaric aeiti. 'One-half teirsa. winful bi-
are •laken. horn the • o.ven,- and serve
them when. required.
Roast Gosiing.-Set a young goose
DRINK PLENTY WATER ---
TELLS HOW TO g'1,.T.Ec . ni4m • . -
Ir.
AND T YS. . , .. ,
. .
• •
•
Gives 'Headers Advice -Also. Tells of a
Simple Prescription to Make a Home -
Made Miiture. • '
•
•
Now Is the time when the deatoreets
busy, and the patent medicine manu- •. ., .
lecturers reap the harvest, unless great __•, •
cure is taken to dress warmly and keep ., ..
the feet dry. This is the ativie of an
cld eminent authority, who says that ..
floolinatisni and Kidney trouble wea-
ther is here; and also tels what to do,
in case of an attack. .
Get from any .goad prescriptien phar-
macy one-half owice . Fluid Extract
save .far the ()parse reed mats which. Dandelion, one ounce Ceenpound Kar -
cover the brick floor. lis centre •is .gcn, three ounces eximpound Syrup
capped by a large dente ; and thehealLs Sarsaparilla. Mix by shikking In a bot, -
have recently been whitewashed, ye.t tic and take a teaspoonful. iter 'meals , ..
in place.s beneath the thin white coat and at bedtime. Also drink plenty el
. ..
' water. •You can't drink too much of it. L. _.
er for two QV three hours. 'this
will rnake them pliable. They should
then be ppessod under.a heavy weight.
To 'make potato 'cakes. peel enough
-potatoes; .grate on a coarse grater. and
stir in three to five- -es: then 'add' a
lttto-fleur; stir • well -and fry In hott
Lard.
When a :cinder flies into. one eye im-
rnediatelY close the other eye.' put yOur
finger, on it. to • keep it closed. Then
•keep injured- eye even as fir • ae-pos-
aible. Don't give. in, hut keep it up.
The best -way to break in a yew. pen
k to a lighted itiateh under the
ipert for an •inatant, and- then• plunge
info the ink. This.will remove all
the- oil or grease on tis ,surface.
no ferhlizers: until. your • plants
begin bogrow again: A ptant that is
not grow. ing k oot a conditic.n•
make 115.es -01 strOng.feod.. The aipplica-
tiont o! 'it Will do harrro.inetend .of
ge.ht.
•stioes of • brerict• placed' nit the 'grate
itt •1 he oven. -and al,lowed to tviwin.
thr-aigh slowly .W.111. kitind 'have.
rieh misty flavor .unlike.,that- of ere"
dirtary trefet. _Better vi:hile hot or not,
as. dosired. •
To make ".goo.l. • floor- .polish: place
two small cakes of beeswax and. a 'pint
turpentine• to a gem jar. Stand jartrrrj,le of .
‘Varm. Water' until wax
is Melted. -Esta wife); a soft, cloth on the
floot• or farni,ture, with rnil,k. •
• •
ARE YOU' TICKLISIII •
appear the more ancient Hebrew in-.
sc.riptions %Odell were once the interior
deeeratioro. .
The tenth beneath tlie centre or the
d.orne is protected by a large rectan-
gular panelled case'of dark wood, and
excepting in one place. where a panel
is missin,g. it is invisible.. At the head
of the case are two .tiri projections,
about which are tied number of
strings or rags torn front the garments
of the visiting pilgrims. One day.
while 1 was standing at the bead of
the sacred ' tomb a. .young !vloslem
woman e.ntereoi, . and with eyes Wet
with weeping she tore a small rag from
her. garment and 'tied ..it about one of
the projections,- white she mumbled a
prayer to God that before a year lienee.
when she should come to untie the rag,
she might present her laisliand with
Just try this simple home made mix- ..
lure,. and don't forget- the water, _
tit the first sign of Rheumatism,
or if your back aches or you feel that
the kidneys are not acting just right.
This Ls said to be a splendid kidney h •
regulator, and almost certain remedy —
ter all forms of Rheumatism, -which is
ettused by uric acid in the blood, which s•-•
the .kidneys fall to alter out. Any ora •
can, easily prepare this at home and at -
small oost. -
Almost any druggist In the smaller
towns can supply the ingredients
named, as they are commonly used in...
the prescription department. -
THROUGH A NAME.
a ctUld. . Wlien Pecede Have Coouritled Stticida .
.
11. was but a•repetition of the picture •' on ACCOUllet of a Surname.
ot Hannah, the mother Of- Samuel, . - .
while she was at the temple weeptng Dr. C. B. Gravestone. a physician of
and praying before Ell -the priest. • In England, who was made a bankrupt
h - of the East the picture is recently,. inforthed his itreditorif the other •••_ -""-•.' •-•-•.
da that he had been ruined by his t" - • ,
name. . • .
After a. similar'fashion- .an. Islington .e.
baher named Shortweight was: brceight • -
to undeserved poverty a couple of
months. back; while an alien butcher.
summoned at the Whitehapel County
Court abolif the.same time, altrtbute4 his
insolvency to the fact of . hie being ...
muted Katzmett. ------- • - _- ..•
. At the • time wen alt London was - -
flocking to see Pinero's clever play, The
Notorious Mrs. Ebbsinith, a real Mrs.
Ebbstnith committed <suicide. At the in- • . .- .
quest ii- transpired -trust certain dtscredi- •• • 7
tube passages in the early life of the ... '
mythical -heroine of the drama coincided
with certain passages in the Me of the -
deeeased • These Corning to the know -
carbonate of soda- one pound flour,
• sweu-peetpecerteilltitn;110111117, tva.) ounces plenty of „nu._
rants. one-lialf pint milk, 'one egg
•• -end fill turkey. but do not stuff too
. Method--Rnb. Alto*. ,tartaric acid. soda
teak and' flout. together through a hair ,Sif,VP.
1011. • .
Vett S1C'W-21kk. pounds of Ne3 \‘'011.: bolter into the.'flour. ?flr1
an iron skillet hih. orattains hot
Make a hole in the middle of the flour.
Well together; 7.6nlogisi- been Investigating Natures
Plirpose in Ire.,,towiii•g apoti.-varioib:
Are rolled, in plenty of Hour. placed Ut
Find eurrants. Nlix those
nulls tlici 'feeling of tieklisimess. He as-
sorts, that it iS. for. their preservation',
end that it has played an iinportant part
in the Survival of Alio fittest.- "_.
In puppies alai kittens-- you wHi find,
that the noel: is the tuo41
-and their playful ronips .theseiiiiiials
Se.011 1...1111.1 to 4l4'fin1(1 111.1t 1)1111 et *the
anatomy. this.losson is ‘usrfal, to them
i after life. as ravines and felines- al-.
most invariably attack ono nnather at
neek \Olen they • fight:- it is the dune
A...ith lions and tigers .kts with puppies
and- kiltens,.:‘.tinii• their licklisioless in
play is Nature's iii hod oroyiklaig for
their in maturity.
\\'11,11 .1,0.9111:eys. are tickled. they grin
imil make a laughing -sound
Ilial !MAO by a rhild.
• It b4 intrreistii, to note that th,
ighr
animals are more' ticklish .than the
lower- a fart. wort h mentioning when
rip sedate person assures you that he
aniit. in 111.. bast ticklish." Another
pOilit about this. sensation is that it is
almost unique. for. it conihines al. one
Of.risuro awl pain, and the Porson
tiod-od gen'erolly loss 1,) say whiell
still common. Before the Government
buildings at Bagdad steads big cart-
oon which the 'ignorant Arab women.
aware of .1ts. tremendous power, believe
can answer prayer. The otd gun
13
half hidden with the strings and rags
tied about it, eech-to represent a pray.
er, end (void it speak it "might tell'
strange, stories, of the oonfesstions.wtdch
the confiding women heve poured out
to it. So %Alb the tomb of Joshua."
There the-is:Om-en gather, and pray for
.all kinds of favoll. [Inn in the belief -
that the pro)het'. - will in 'some" way.
cause them to be granted.
Lees -than- half e century ago the
tomb of Joshua was in Jewish hands,
but the Turkish officials caused a num-
ter of them -to be arrested. as they were
bearing.. the body• of -a noted rabbi there
for burial...They were imprisoned for
attempting' to bury a Jew at the Shrine
ce no? great prophet. They . were fin-
ally released-upn the payment of large
_sums- of money, but the care of the
tomb. • taken tram' thento
'then the tomb has been 'forbidden •to
And, like.most Moslem. things,
now straws s.ad • neglect. lee t .!.41:00 u f
r•olloi.v• Jewish woman ai Ai)
ern,,sw. the o1,1 boat -bridge' we might'
• .
liogo ,.f her elients---she was a fourt
dreosmaker-dier" business surfeited. and -
in the end she chose (teeth In preference
to facing the ordeal of the bankruptcy
curt. Needless to say, that the nomen-
clatory coincidence, wits altogether for-
tolious, so far as Mr. Pingo maa con- - • - •-
cerned:
Perhaps. bOWPWV, the •ritost wholesale -
series of inetances ruin brought about-
thrttugh a name- occurred during the.
Boer war, when dozen!s of people whose
sornatnes chanced to be identical .wIth ' • •: •
• f the late president of the now de-
.see ter bun tou.ard the. i°11111 lnd fi,nrt St',111.11 .‘frieari Republic. were
_way which she is forbidden to _enter, •terallv hounded -out .of house'
d• tance hingingly at.the door -
While -her l-ips.titter_ a prayer With th.e
hope That the long burled leader. even
so far aWay,. may, )tar and answer it.
MOTORS FOR 111Pi-4.
Stcanuturbincs, *says a wailer In lag
Nature have hardly entetad the domain ' sien of the same unpoonlar pationsmice.
while a certain Emily Kruger, a factory - .
worker. was driven insane j. •
panionsl senseless and cruel banter.
. •
•
.
hy inv-j.nipetheti^ people of ultra-patrio-
11c tendeitules. . -
Tbus. in, one Week; during the height
el the war. fever_ an Ea..A.End imndon
fishrnonger pained Kruger Was 1'4a -red. to
atand4 n a boutishitig .anti lucrative
busineSs; a puirnes,inan-baker Nulled ,.,.,_
..fijn-tsirlf tsecause he could not face the - 7
jeers and taunts entailed by his posses- ..--
lot the; prOcliciu ag 'a molive Pt We'll. for
,
groat ships beforc• they art' threaihned
\\elle ,the rivalry of ga.s.rnotors.• Nit.
James, MacKechnie oT- Barrow-in-Fur-
nes.s. England, regards -Oor..ent expert -
mi.; a; having demonstrated the.
licability • powerful gas-rtsolors
pens .
for oeean-going veseehs. Aleolig the
adventages claimed for gas-rnoteirs are"
their more effectb.e transformation of
h -it into wdrk. their "rt•latiVe lightness
Nature's Pitrpose in Itestowing h Unem
and 'compactness. and the absence of
smoke -Stacks. Thls last item is urged.
•
Dr
as a matter of prime importance, for
- • -
the. eritinent
laixi.• and- fried quict,ly to.a -meo browns
. Over thi-• meat •is then thinly slieed as
onion and a earrol, with -plenty of s -alt
and-pep:7.er. -It is -then covered wi
tli
tolingtin,s, and Tirlie• the Liiins"for'nhont
water and allowed to simmer .y
t minutes. this mixture' makes a
gently about. ' and liatt hours,, Vf•I'V •c.ake, and if put into a tin
• The gravy .prepares the
should be baked one. and a half !fount.
getribilbs git o • a (inc' flavor. . . same quantity of flour. soda., and
Chines6 itice•-1143.11 onti cut' tartaric arid. with half a of milk
• rico in larrie, kettle of wa-ter till Slakes
„.are den., through. Drain. ..After fry-
ing ono gk.iod sized 111V I hani, (-hop
finewith one hardtoiled egg.. Place
in Skillet :with rice and. a little of the.
barn drippings and a few mushrooms
- • cut fine. Heat and salt to taste. Cut
tne' a few Oeeii nions, and scatter
in .on placing in -di.-h. Inexpensive,
• wholesome. and makes a pretty dish.
F•- African flrea (.4 r pint of
'cream to a stiff froth: lake off all' the
• froth that arises. and ....it On ic1-7. NIaltoa
.• Custard of one pint of iilk• and two
• tablespoons of ci5i.nslareli. Dissolve
' •:•-onc-half package • of gelatine in two
• ; • 'pints cold watr,r. Mix .grlatirre NN•lth
and pour' in the milk:mixed With the
egg.• which should be well beaten; rnix'
quirt:h. and. set the 'flongh on 'baking -
_ tsweetenod ens,tard: flavor %dill
la then stir. in wh'.,ppoi.1 oreani find •-:et elean '111ref114, \‘'0611 and xi, Ip' dry.
• on ice to harden. Cal, off the fret and Igegil dint not the
4... Homemade • i-•ney. r Ms 'skin 011.:1 loo 'of the
(half jx-itind) Ism! s•ttel. 11..4-0 this, in hone• 11'W's• n•-4 a itlitoty. • l'itss
- pieces. but in' warm skillet. Haul kiln' g'4')41 :71/•ed- fresh r(0:•10e's
steivo until 111(Y110.t. then add ,fi ri-er, add ill) 00../111 ,c11.01.11.-.41
ri e pro, N 1 • .
the sarreo ben 'l " teaq""111.1 San, .V.N..j of yours a Work ,
nit n 1111-' sal . wilt Make either %bread
tea-rakei. if ‘Vzint61 quickly. ,
HOUSEHOLD HINTS. •
„ loehee'should always be kept. in a
dry place...
Kiepflry supplies in glass pi•esin-ve
jars. labelled.
Kix,p a nor of cheesecloth' for -tarp
and strainers. • •
'
T4i, clean a •spongit 11
with riloohol• and •ether. .!1111M1 .1V1r1..4.
Apples. should never bee tbtil•:ed in
tin. which darkens both ripples iitd
juice". • •• • - • •
.... • ..
•k1tiz wpron leasin'of warm r', elcr
L(U.l 4111 • • , 11 fine and 1' 4,14.• 1 in a tablosporm of lint-
..,(14;tilt11atr.
• •At..L
.
'.1•ra; an I if talks
tro loud. 1 ion Leo expen;ive seal
•
•
warships. ..._ • .
THE THING TO DO. ••
•
"When a pa.senger offer,. you a r.ot-
'tar to take his -fare out of," said the old
oenduetor, "you walit -to elm him up
to see :if he objects to pennies.'
"What for'!" asked the beginner.
"So's you kin- serape tog.etliec all
You've 'got an' give 'em to him. 0'
course.'
. _ . .
44040,00.0004:0046,404,44004,004114
•
•
0
•
. •
Nursing baby? —
it's a heavy strain on mother.
-- Her system is called upon to su?ply
' nourishment for two.
Some form of nourislirnent that will
.be easily taken up by mother's system
is needed,
.Scott'J Errustvion contains the
gi.eatest poscible amount of nourish.
0
Invent in easily digested form.
Mother and baby are ; wonderfully
helped by its use.
Au. DV_IGGI!...Tai SOe.ANC
0044541.444104904010k433§44 ,el4tsr6:4
- _ .
r
FINGEAPO.STS TO FORTUNE.
Create a personality. This is perhaps
Oita of the greatest secrets which lead to
success. • Amongst your own little circle
let your influence be felt, gradually the
circle will be.�dened, and you will have
a larger Qe ert that influence.
Never neglect opportunity. There
• see many people to -day who know that
they have not won either wealth or fame
because they were afraid to, venturee,
afraid to take the path which suddenly
.o1•ened out to then. To succeed wants
courage. If an opportunity suddenly
looms, before you, there is no time to
pcnder as to whether you have the
necessary qualifications to undertake it.
The place is there ready to be. filled; it
must be taken, and you must al once
.resolve . tofill ft. Make no enemies.
This at first, may seem impossible, but'
•-nothing is impossible to him who wills.
"If you have friends, you have enemies,"
•`is the popular belief, but that is not so. -
GETTING RIGHT. -
Possible Boarder: "Ah, that was a rip-
• ping dinner, and if that was a fair
Sample of _your meals 1 should like to
..cense to. terms.'-' - -.
Scotch. Farmer: "Before we gang any
farther, was that a fairsample o' yer
„_ appetite?"
Mr: Kipling's Canadian Tour '
• • Ontario -and all Eastern Canada is
: deeply disappointed that Mr. Kipling,
upon the occasion of his recent visit
-- • - to Canada, shoeld -have only seen 'The.
• West from a Car Window" and the
' East not at all. The older -provinces -
are always proud. and, never jealous
o1 the West, into which they are send-
--- Ing their shekels and their sons. With
all his powers as a word painter, it is
_:-hardly to be expected. that Mr. Kip
ling can do justice to all of :Canada.
• He has not seen the thriving cittes and
towns of Ontario, with its splendid
- >failways,• mills, and manufacturing in-
dustries. He had only a iketing glimpse
- of Toronto, and saw nothing of the
Scare ,or more other industrial -centres
• of the Dominion. It is too bad, Cana-
..dlans believe, that he should have spent
the . most of the time • whleh -he„ was.
able to. give to the. study of conditions
_til the Dominion to 'the troubled shores:
' of ibe Pacific. With no desire to mini-.
_- mlze the seriousness of i tabor dis-
• turbances out there. 'or tri dLeguise the
• • fact tbat Canada is in re need of
more men to carry forward the -work
--in hand, Canadians would have been
proud -of Some pen pictures •by Mr.,.
Kipling of -the industrial East. where
the people are prosperous and” happy.
this convtrtion is by no meals kcal
—it is widespread, unlversaL ("Cana-
da,'' London, Eng., Nov. 16th, 1907.)
•
Mei "Mat"l, yoti grow more beaatiful
. every day'" She (pleased): "Oh, Jack;
you do exaggerate 1" He: "Well, then,
every; other. day !" •
PLACID AT THE RACK OF THE SP17E.,-
. The D a L • Menthol -Piaster allays esam trous eta
bite went, They ate
pu ralgia, bsokacke and muscular pain,` - -
Arad gentleman- finding -a couple o -f
hie niece. fereeng the other day with
hroernsticks. .said:—"Come, conte: my
-
• -dears; that kind of accompltthmrnl will
. not help you to get husbands."• "I know
it, uncle,", responded -one of 'the ' girls,
"biet it will help us to keep our_husbands
.,i.. order when we have them." -
gooTogt3 TBOUGBT BABY WAST The notary arrived. The door was
CONSUMPTIVE. PpeRed to him by Marcel, who oon-
ducted him to the supposed sick man's
A LETTER TO ANXIOUS MOTHERS bedroom. The windows were closed
-fe written by Mrs. F. W, Kittle, of and the curtains drawn, darkness be-
Kirkdale, P. Q., who says: "My Iittle ing relieved only by a night light. In
4 -year-old boy suffered since he was18 the bed ley Vincent, who, in a feeble
months old from a bad leg. 1 tried voice, broken with . terrible Qts of
alany salves and had doctors attend coughing, explained that he wished the
him, hut none did him any good. 'i'he notary to Prepare a power of attorney_
doctors told me It was in the blood. to enable his nephew to draw, the $4.•,
and he was in oonsumption• I only 000 worth of securities from the bank.
wish now 1 had bed more faith in ,The notery, who said he was com-
Zan-Buk, for it immediately healed the pletely deceived, and feared. That his
boy's leg. Ile is now nearly 4 years client might expire at any 'moment,
old and looks far from being consume- drew up the document. The nephew
tive. Be is now a strong, healthy, boy, obtained the securities, and decided to
thanks to Zam-Buk. I -hope this letter .t'o• to •Paris to negotiate them, "when
will Help many anxious mothers" the notary accidentally exposed the
Mothers Take Heart. Don'L be dis- plot by meeting one .of M. Laurent's
.couraged because everything has failed friends," and asking him if he were
to heal your child until you have tried still alive. The youths were arrested at
Zam-Buk.. • Zam-Buk is Nature's Heat- the station.
ing Balm, and quickly overcomes and +
removes all skin diseases. It is gqu• It is better to trust to your faults than
•
ally good for young and old. to be (else to your trust.
For all skin diseases Zam-Buk is
•Iri • Nature's -Storehouse There -are
Cures. — Medical expertments have
shown conclusively that -there are me-
theatr l virtues in even ordtnary plants
growing up' around us • which give
them a value that cannot be- estimat-
ed. In Is beld by -sorne that Nature
:provides a cure for every disease which
• fiegiect and ignorance have 'visited up-
-on man. • Howeyer, this may- be, it is
well known That Parmelee's Vegetabte
pills. distilled from roots and: herbs,
are a sovereign remedy in curing all
.:..disorders of the digestion. • . -
-• • HER ONLY HOPE.
Tess: "Mary Brown . 'is spelling her
naine•''M-a-e: flaw." _
Jess: "-Let .her;. that's .about the only
'chance she wil ever •get to change ber
Dame." '
rrCII, Mange, Prairie Scratches and
•- every form'of contagious Itch in human
or animals cared in 30 minutes •by WoI-
lord's Sanitary Lotion. .il_nevet' fails.
Sold by alt druggists.
..TEAL ,STICKERS.. :.
The leacher had been reading to the
•;class about the great fet.ests of America.
' -- "And now. 'boys." she enneunced
4• afterward. "wl,ieli <•ne if you can tell me
• -•the pine that has the lbnpaest and sharp-
est needles?" .
•Up went a hand in the iron! row. •
"The porcupine. Mn'aol."
a1 It kers fester Trial Proves its Excellence.—The best.
without equal.
cures u . testimonial one 'can have of The virtue
ing sores, ringworm, cuts, . e,bretc et Dr. Thames' E^_lectric- Oil in the
chapped hands, boils, eczema, etc., treatment of bodily pains, coughs,
etc. All stores and druggists sell Zam- Dolls end affections of the respiratory
Buk at 50 cents a box, or .goat -paid organs, is a. trial of fit. - If not found
from the Zam-Buk . Co.. Toronik,• the sovereign remedy it is reputed to
CURING 1T. be, then it may be rejected as useless.
and all that has been said in-
Its proise
'He doesn't spend much time at hcme, denounced as untruthful.
you say T'-
"Na, he has become so grouchy of—.
fTeacher-="'Thtrunk is the' middle
late he puts -in his. time at his club, and part—body. • Freddie—"1 say,
leaves his wife at home alone." • teacher, 1 'think you'd. better go to the
"Why, he used to dote on her?" .circus and see the elephant!"- -.
"Yes, but now .,hes_using the club as .. _ - ;
an anti -dote." ea. Ea— night
-.• BTR! EAST TO LET a cold hang g
sad day we are rase t0 wall be gone, bot It
stnZe•
A cure for Costiveness --Costiveness wtth as Allyn'■ Ln 1lal■as will eh.ae its.4-
Comes from- the 'refusal -of -the excre- eaacealsd resCore �th.
tory organs to perform their duties .
regularly from contributing _ causes . She: "1'm surprised at your kissing me.
usually disordered digestion. Parme- in the' conservatory •just now :" He:
tee's Vegetable Pills, prepared on act- "My dear Miss Peechleigh, it's a failing
entitle principles, are so oompoundhd lit mine. I'm a chronic osculatory kiep-
that certain ingredients in them pass, tomaniac 1"- -
through- the stomach and act upon the ,•
bowels rya as to remove their .torpor There is• nothing equal to 'Mother
end arouse them to proper action. Gravies' Worm Exterminator for de -
Many thousands are prepared, ,to bear stroy-ieg worms. No article of its-. kind
testimony to their power to' thus' re: has giten such satisfaction.
sped.—
. • SILENCE IS GOLDEN. -
"Have ..poo broken off your engage Joakley: 'There's ..a. fellow who, gives
menta old man" Vthat's the -matter?" himself dead away every -time he starts
"Well, I was hard up. you see, so 1
turned, rand was• able to 'reetizb Leon talking."
quarrelled and had all my presents 're -
Coakley: "You doral say? What's the
trouble',." •
them. Couldn't possibly have raised the loakley: "Ile makes his living by pos-
mcney • any other, way."
- . • ; ing-as a' deaf •and•dumb beggar. ' :
MARK TSIIIDISTINCTION: A purely local 6 M Fondma—"Tfierel lent baby the
itema
THE VALUE OF -
COD LIVER OIL
?Co physician would dispute the valve
ot COD LIVEN OLL in nervous and
pulmouary diseases, it the naweous
grew did not so derange discal aa>aea
to more then counteract the good
h7 the therapeutic principles of the
In " BRICK'S TABTZLESS " there
L no grease I1 inerrant@ the appetite,
stimulates Lbs digestion. invigorates
the nerves by nourishing them. and
CURES Coughs, (wilds and Bronchitis.
It. timely use is an insurance *sabot
serious consequences. as the weakened
system is a prey to germ diseases, suet
as Tuberculosis, Typhoid and Typhus
Fevers, and Diphtheria.
Brick's guarantee with every bottle
is an evidence ot our faith is this
matchless Preparation.
BRICK'S TASTELESS"
b pat up' in eight (el Dance bottles.
. retail D fifty (3e) coats, . and in
twenty (M) *nem betties, retail price
one t1) dollar
moi.: ss.rut,. r" to .ry,: `;� , .0.
Spe9lal • Notice,
111180 wYl 1►q sew s�tijht otane�
♦ W nldte flail Oedee ri
EAHC 0 CO. LtE, Meatreal, tae
T-il
FEATHER DYEING
G...1as cal oarliar.ad Rid 01n« ete■eed he"
Bao be we by le per as tieb..1olweb
BRITISH AMERICAN DYEING CO.
MONTREAL
Every Want
d .p■aid t sow
• There is • something wrong with the
bride w•ho'doesn't select a -homelier girl
than herself for her bridesmaid.
"Does your husband sleep sound?"
asked - Mrs. Cobbs, .in the course. of a
call upon Mrs. Dobbs. "Sound?" re-
sponded Mrs. Dobbs. "Welt, 1 should
say sol I don't believe you or any-
tody else ever heard .suali sound. 1t'a
enough to stop. an alarm clockl"
Wea ee of the skis one. barbers itch. to Doled r'
wesvee+s Comte alone. But where the bleed% image of his lather''". OtdChum—".4b-
loaded with. is arity, such ea Bait Sheds, solutely'' Same- lack' of expression,
a�'°'h°"ta a °"cL red nose, no teeth to _speak of—
by-George, • prematurely bald,,
Wearer's Syrup •
• -
A
A. striking example of presence -of
mind had just occurred in the hatBr
ltsson: and the .leacher considered 11
an opportune moment dor inculcating
_upt.n her class the many_ advantages
c r resour efulness. "Now, -children,'
she said, "supposing a tiger were to
seize one- of you in its hungry jaws
cnd carry you; off into the jungle,
what would you do?' No reply. "t'Qtl
tel •me,-Tonuny " she ,continued; point-
ing to one. of the brightest youngsters.
Tommy hesitated- . Tornmy.'
she said: "Would you cry dor hemp?"
"Nee ma'am;" e.aid he: "Moldier.. say*.
httle boys shouldn't . speak at meal
hates."
-}le.'Tell -..me, rorfd•ntially, how
niuch 'did that bonnet east -you?". She
—`George,- there is but one way in
which you, can obtain the right to in-
spect my: millinery bills:' He popped.
Often what' -apperir 10 be the most
trivial occurrences of life prove, to be
the most momentous. Many are dis-
posed to regard a•cold as a slight thing.
deserving of little consideration, and
this neglect often results in n-iost seri-
ous ailments' entailing -years-ofsuf-
fering. Drive out colds and coughs
with Bickle's Anti -Consumptive Syrup, -
the recognized reitiedy .'for all after -
Lions of the throat and lungs. _
"Do you knows, Znv' husband had a ter-
rible- habit of sleetping in church. but
he broke himself of it." •"Hoa••.?" . "Gave
ur going." .
WHAT -DO PEOPLE NEED who are ran dews
ataesaic, p Nstle.n? "Ferrovim," the bee,
tonic. It makes strong, it gives new life..
Stere are many nice but only one ' !» s.
rad
"Your daughter •is a skillful, performer
on the piano. is she not?" asked the
family friend. "Yes," answered Mr.
Ci.nningham.. "The way -she • can play
forhours without getting en earache or
n sprained -wrist proves to me that she's
unocmmonly expert."
Holloway's Corn Cure -is the medicine.
tc retrieve all kinds of corns and warts
.and- only costs the. small sum of twen-
ty-five cents. •
ROBBED UNCLE Bl SMART TRiCK.
Ilk Nephew impersonated Ilim to His
. • Notary.
same
and,
1"
Shiloh
"dm Use Shiloh's Cure
h.a for the worst cold,
thrsbarpest co'atgh
ur a --try it of a guar-
- -antee of your
money back if it
Cures doesn't actually
CURE,quicker
Coughs , - that' an; t g u
yo
ever tried. Safe to
hike. -nothing. in
and Colds it tohurteven a
baby 34 years of
success commend
Shiloh's Cure --
2 ee. , ti0c ,fin tut
QUICKLY
LTR 1 egi N
Win
aaeeaa ter OonaMao"
161.111 SOLD WATCH FREE
Aso RING
w...ts 1r1
tecs m to lac" LO 5 ain eu
ranted toa6,4
1ni'ir.1 sit
vita a
Ewa, both ;flea
tree ter
only 114 Jew vim
erelitea,..a4stteesa 10mr 1n ,8.1 .vim
LI
.set inter. Et to and int
R lona a
wax*
) e0 rul'Dept. bis 1:MMa. ue�
arr'Skat+�
For Hockey
Practically every prominent hockey
player in Canada—for the past forty
years—has used Starr Skates.
i6 different styles, to suit all kinds of ice.
" Rex" and t" Micmac" Hockey Sticks are
strong and accurate.
Our agog Skate Book illustrates and describer them..
_'Write fora free copy.
The Starr Manufacturing Co.; Limited
DARTMOUTH. N. & CANADA. • 21
• MARCH OF'F10E • • • • TORONTO, OwT.
CT
WiTH
Potter, -Heat, ' Electric _Light,
to -Lease for a Term of Years.
•
Central • location. About ten thousand square feet in
four floors and basement. Exoeilent Shipp n; biennia*
Standard Firs Sprinkler System._ Low Insurance rate.
MURRAY F.. WILSON, 81 Adelaide St. West, Toronto
r
Put them an with no tools but a -
hammer and tinner's shears,—can't
- go wrong. They lock on all four
sides, are self -draining and water-
shedding
atershedding on any roof with three or.
more inches pitch' to the foot. Make
buildings fire -proof, - weatherproof
—and proof against lightning.. Cost -
least in the long run. Made of 28-
- gauge toughened sheet steel—only
• one quality used and that the best—
• .bent cold and double -galvanized. -
Last longer with no painting than 4
any other metal shingles heavily -
•
?tercel -Laurent, aged 17, was sen-
reneed at Nancy, France, 'to eighteen
months' hard labor, and a fellow -stn•
d&-nt, Emile • Vincent; to threw' years'
penal se;i•vitude, fur d-ftniiding Lau -
rent's uncle.' who hail pr.-aulised to keep
a sharp eye on his wayward nephew,-
'arcol, otter a few weeks at his
efeae7s tense, 'discovered: That -he -had
c, nee worth of stock at a certain bank.
lien);-ing that every. afternoon the. uncle
wen f to a cafe, the two youths bought
n,'whde beard. and wig, and Viircent
snccevicd in mnking•Iiimself up to lobk
like: M, L•auren4. . Then Marcel- went,
1r his uncle's notary and said, "Aly
uncle its very ill, and ,require,s your
presence_ this afternoon."
painted: Guaruiteed in every way
until 1932. Ought to last a century.
Cheap as wood shingles in first
cost.; far cheaper in the long run. '
' " Oshawa " Galvanized Steel Shin-
gles cost only $4.50 a aqua re.
10 ft. x 10 ft. Tell us .the
area of. anyroof and hear our
tempting oer for covering it
th the _ cheapest roof you
can really afford to. buy. L e t
us send you FREE booklet
about this roofing question—tells
some things yen may hot know.
- :
-
Oshawa Galvanized Steel
Shingles are GUARANTEED. in .
every way for Twenty -Five Years
Ought to feast a. Century
alla
a0P 1•a
our- MONTREAL TORONTO . OTTAWA ..
.. ea�reatWarehouse : 1121.3 St. W. 11 ColborneSh L33Sussex St. , and are offered at prices - -
a ti - _ that sell them.
d• Cowan, •Brougham.
has
L These &oats -dee 'a11 first plass
Wittfu' 'tering Ctws
s published every Friday morning at its Odic
Pickerinit Ont.
RATES OF ADVERTISING :
awe insertion, per line - • 10 cents
Each subsequent ineertioa,per line • 6
Migrate does not include Legal or Foreign ad-
Vsx•tdsements.
' Special terms given to parties making • con -
riots for 8 or 6 months or by the year. Ralf -
Pearly or yearly contrcts payable quarterly.
Badness cards; ten lines or under,_witb paper,
One year. i6 00, payable in advance.
• 1!'Notiee in local eolumns ten °eats per line,
'Eve ceetaper line each subsequent insertion.
Pedal contract r. tee made known on applies. -
on. No free advertising .
Advertisements without writter Detractions
ill lbs inserted until forbidden and charged ao-
• eotdingl7• • Orders for discontinuing advertise -
WO mast be in writing & d dent to• the pub.
advertise-
WO
Job Work -promptly attended to. -
TEEMS
111.Ja pisyear; *1.00 !'said in inane*
JOHN MttRKAR, Proprietor,
' SCHOOL REPORTS
The Report of S. S. No. 6, Pickering
for the month of November.- Names
• placed in order of merit. V ` Class-
- Elmer Willson. Sr. IV -Donald Will-
a-. son, Hazel Kayee, Archie Jackson,
Fannie Keyes, Florence Robson. Wil-
lie Percy. Jr. IV -Gertrude- Hnm-
phrea, 'Kenneth McBrady. Sr.
George
1--
George Cowan. Jr. III -Lulu Hum-
phrey, Loretto Goodwin, Olive Brig-
nall, Frankie Jackson, Nicholas Cow-
- au.' Donald -Davidson. Maggie -Stew-
art. Pt. II -Lorena Ellicott, Lorna
• Gascoyne. Ptr. I Sr. -Walter Brignall.,
Wilment Shea. Pt. linter -Wallace
,_Ellicott, Marie. Cowan, Willie Riley,
Esther, Gascoyne. Pt. I Jr. -Clifford
Hubbard, Johny Brignall. '.41iss F.
A. Meek, Teacher. -
The followingetre the names of the
pupils of the -highest standing for the
- month of November in Brougham pub-
. lic school: V: lass-'Slaude Barclay.
Mabel Cassie, blyda Bogle. Sr. IV.-.
Mary Barclay, Blanche MInchin..Ar-
=- thur Farthing. Jr. IV. -Lillie Bogle,
- •Sr. III. -Maggie -Duncan. Alrna--Iialn-
ilton. Jr. 111. Archie :llechin.• Lila
bie Farthing. Nellie Norton. Sr. II
Marion Phili , Regis 11 Piiiilips.'Jennie
a* Duncan: Ji. 1I.-1lr,rten • Retitle•y •
Elva Carr, Oleelys-Beale: Part 11.-.
;:I.gmanBarelev. Sarah Norton, Peart
Crocket. Part I :+r. -Cecil Phillips.
Part l jr.-Dtrid Henson, Eva Rout --
ley, Lorne Brodie. Average attend-
ance 34. " N.F. Tomlinson. Teacher.
LXBRiOGE"
Fred Diggle, who was on, the staff of
the Dominion Bank here two peers. has
been appointed managerof abranch at
•Deloratne, Man. His friends will be
pleased to hear of this appointment.
Somebody broke into "Peter" Har -
`sellas barber shop 3foriday evening and
got away with six or • seven dollars
- worth of "tobarto and some email
-. • change. He bas nc oats who -the guil-
ty party can be.
Messrs. Gould and Faros.: have had'
the insurance adjusted on the mill and
,'contents. When asked if they intend
rebuilding. H. J. Gould replied -that-
they had not as yet decided what they
"+would do.' Hoe:ever it is likely that a
"chopping mill will be built there any
_,way.
Bricklaying was imminent -es' y ester•
day at the new factory and•;ood pro-
-- grecs is being made.
The Arlington hotel ha, Leen very
much imbroveit in ,its exterior ap :n••
ance by a thorough painting. It looks
larger and brighter.
- . Our tea lers will be arirpprriced to
learn of the death on Monday from
heart di=sease of John Alfred Junes, of
Quaker Hill. Mr. James was in the
milk business for 30years here and
was a man respected' by all for his up-
right dealings and sterling wot•th.
Most of our hunters were back last
week and on the whole they had good
hick, one camp getting two or three
bears in addition to its quota of deer.
A number of the latter have been hang-
ing in town butcher shops: The.bears
were disposed of in Toronto. -Journal
WHITBY
• At a special meeting of the 'town
council held on Wednesday of each-
. •week, the special committee of which
-tee Reeve was. chairman,- reported in
favor of accepting the application of
'Thos. Bell as chief constable,and care-
taker of town property, at 3anze salary
as before. A motion to that effect was
carried, and ' a' bylaw will be ' put
through at next meeting. -
Master John Bryck, the five-year old
son of John Bryck, of Brock street,
was with his father at the Vinegar
'Works on Monday whe:r he fell -into a
cider vat. The depth of cider Was al-
most -a -feat. and the child might easily
have been . drowned. Alf Littre bear4
splash of the fall and quickly pulled
the little chap out. Johuwy- evidently
had too much ciderthitt time. 'OP SALE-A-ftity Leicester rat"
Surveyor .Yarnold, of ' Dolt Perry, .• lambs >,`Y L Courtin?, : lot 17;B F Concee.
has been in town this week surveying
Backache, The Blues"
Both Symptoms of Organic Derangement in Women
--Thousands of Sufferers Find Relief.
^�n"•z Ji?
g,.
.. son - : !o.
The People's Cash Store:
T : F1Ff '/D►AY BARGA/NS .
- '•-This is what you want for
XMAS CAFES .L ND PUDDINGS
Best Raisins and Currants, all this season's fruit, not half old
• and new mixed, all fresh aid clean, 4 lbs. best Raisins
25 cents ; 3ilbs. best Currants 25 cents. ,
Ouly Friday. -No smaller quantity sold at price named.
• Other Days -3i lbs: Raisins 25. cents ; 3 lbs. Currants 25 cents."
Best large cooking Figs F cents per pound.
Best small cooking Figs 5 cents per- pound.
How often ..lo u c' hear n -omen say: "It
sreuis as though my buck would break„'
or "Don't speak to tae, I am all out of
sorts?” These eignidrant remarks prove
that•the system retjuires attention.
Backache and "the blues" are direct
symptoms of an inward trouble which
will sooner or later declare itself. It
may be caused by" diseased kidneys or
some detanprement-of-the organs. Nature
requires assistance and at once, and Ly-
dia E.• Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
instantly- .asserts its curative powers in-
all
nall those peculiar ailreenta of women. 'It
has been the standby of intelligent
•American women for. twenty years and
the ablest judges agree that it is the
most univervally surxesaful remedy for
woman's ills known to medicine. •
Read the convincing testimornals of
tfrs. Oakes_ and Mee. :,fraa a -nee. •
Aire. J. P. Q'. cs of Prince of Wales
Iiote.l, Heal of S:. 3farearet's Bay, near.
Ilalifes, lialifae County. Nova Scotia,
'Canada, writ s
Dear Mn. Pim' rt • • •
wiutt ,:.r 1'c^etzble C.'npelmet
di ' .tom [ that' itis o
r • r. I rfnl :r t^rs'.• :d th_t- a: y w.,r uon
71.. l' tr•• 1�.....1 1ti i :," .017 "t t. i!ly Wt.
-uL'er trc ni srl:ttlltrt::t a:xl rile :.ill + Or1
M G•41t'i :7 ,„i :of di 'Worth. !•i.'( b.:ea 4
6 :1,c,1 t:-• fr 'mr
si. !cls, aillr. ;ran .r,,.a tc. i•:c:t;ncr. i
b. iit.sy .;T.., . 1H+ r..•....i'y ever hay a pl,;r,
n..w, and wi1:> h.;:,.va:-seas rarely y::t,1.,
one. As r^;uiat.','r strenzthet'er a&•'i •S
toatic, I Vane • it has. no superior -an.I 1
• c r, tai ray en.! arse it.'
)Irs. Anca R. slue aree of cornu
Queen ani \VeL'ingtonStreets, Kingston,
Ont • v -rites• : -
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:
"Lyrlia E. Pinkham'. Vegetable 'Corn -
pound has done all the good in the world
Ask Mrs. Pinkham's Advlee-A Wom
;S 1r.cs1POakes
fvr me. I suffered with irdgularitie , back-
ache and severe pains all through my body,
and was very nervous and blue. I think
I used a dozen different kinds of medicines,
some prescribed by the doctor and some re-
commended by friends, but one bottle of
Vegetable Compound was worth more to
ale t hats all theother medicines put together,
My general health began to improve as soon
as I began to use the. Corppolutd, .and in
three weeks I was a perfectly well woman."
When women are troubled with irreg-
ular, suppressed, or painful periods, weak-
ness, dtaplacementa or ulceration, that
bearing -down feeling, inflammation. of
the female" organs, backache, bloating
(or flatulence), general "debility, indi-
gestion and iei;vcus prostration, or are
beset with such symptoms as dizziness,
faintness, laseitude, excitability, irritabi-
lity, nervousness, sleepleesnees, aoelan-•
choly, "all -gone" and 'want-to-be-left-
alone".
want-to-be-left-
alone ', feelings, blues and hopelessness -
they eh old remember there is one tried
and "true remedy. Ly'lia E. -I?inkham's
Vegetable - Compound at once removes
such trouh.$••
N,.)" other euro n record
.1 cure=" of ferrrale" trnn! Ies: No other
rue.'Lane in' the werl.i lra rrrcived-this
V. joiz •spr - 41 anal u:icltl: Iifieel endorsement.
Refuse to buy any substitute,
FREEADVI E TO WOMEN'
,'' t ,•;;tl. wt:' :.•n is cordially
inite•i le. t ,iteto Mrs. Pini -ham if
there i?aytiii-tsanut her Rkiiirtonis
d.:1ts .not. ely• er• land. Mrs. ' .Fink- .
heis the daughter -in -lea .of-Ltddia. E. ”
II na hate . her aseistan tbef • ,-.'her decease,
and for t-xt etv-five years since.her advice
has-been."freely and cheerfully given to
every ailing woman iyho:asks• for it
Filer advice and • medicine have restored
to health innumerable women. Address,
Lynn, Mase. -
an Best Understands a Woman's Ws.
Miss Kate -Miller who has been resid
Ing in Markham since the sale of her
farm over a year ago. Thursday had a
sale , of household effects :and will re- I
Move to Toronto add remain with fri- `
ends there for some time at least.
John Jerman and flcniily left.Th-urt
day evening for Tor.:ntn wbere they
will reside in -future. Wehav-been in-
formed that Mr: Jerman's teeidenre
will be taken by las: Ley, of Ellesmere
and that Mr.. Ley will .reniove to Mar•k-
ha"m in the near future. We trust this
u.formation is ecir•rect. •- The death of Mrs. 'Jane Collison re-
lief of the bite Watson Collison. of Bos
Grove, rernove-, one of the oldest rand -
respected residents. of this section. She
-.was-.iso•-lice- m.ual health up to three
weeks ago when an illness set in And
she passed away Wednesday morning.
The funeral takes places thisaftel•noon
to Box Grrsve Cemetery. - -
Agincourt is to have a new industry -
that may proye.important.. Geo. H.
Pearce; well known in Markham; and
who hris been managing Mr. Ley's shop
at Ellesmere the past three years. has
taken premisea at. Agincourt and will
soon have a miniature foundry in oper-
Mist; Marjorie Milne who had a. very
light attack of scarlet fever, is now re-
leased from quarantine:
Mitch Cows sold well etJas.Torrance' .
sale at the Franklin House on Friday.
One cow sold for $64 and the lot aver-
aged 0.49. •
Died. -At Dundalk on Sunday, Nov.
24th, 190i,,Tames Purves, aged -44 years
and 9 months, a former resident of
Scarbore. -
•• After three weeks with lamplight
our residents were well pleased to see
the electric light turned on.for the first
time from the new 1200 light dy-
namo on Sunday evening. "The glrtlity
of light is a decided improvement and
will be more sri when the -new boiler
-is-. used to supply the power.-E`ono-
Wrist.
Neu, itIverti.aerr:ent:c..
the site of the new post office. OR- SALE. - 1- i '`f
ltd
Died. -At Toronto, on Thursday. ' •-. 'rti"5 1 : Milch • Cnws.
Nov. 21st, 1907, Hilda Cadwell helov- I' for gale.. nes.Appto L yi aictoa, South o.
: t, leremont �'i,inee. 8 3
ed wife of Thos.' •Jlutton,-formerly of j�+OR S \Ll . One gasoline engine,
• Whitby, • .vat gencrat,1•3 11 On a olin new. For
• Miss Campbell, sister of Messrs. R tt-
J. Campbell, merchants of Whitby for
years. died onThursday,Nov.21, at the
home of her brother, in Marshall, Mo.
,r,'.,Mrs, Campbell lived here up to fire
"go.
'wedding took place on' Wad -
13, at 12 o'clock, noon, at
" . and Mrs. Wm Ashby,
'Their eldest daugh-
Sa fan marriage to property^ and paving expenses. Arthur John•
nYtiet,"`k gown Line. - .told, Greenwood, out. • - alo
sale at less thau half price., T Caster, North
Claremont, • - • • t•tt
F1, OR SALE. -Seven roomed house,
nearly new. and one half acre lot with
g,,od well and -stable, Abundance of frntt; Wi11
sell on easy terms or rent. Immeliate ro<,ses-
sion. Mrs. W Cowie, Brougham. 0-11
STRAYED. -On the premises of the
undersigned, Lot 11; con 7. Township of
Pickering. on or about the 8th of Nov. one roan
steer Own,r may have the same by proving
life. • Rev. J. wQ ., tier i.. -
tor, conducted tt short service
• the house about noon hour, af
which their friends repaired
Salem church where n large
gregation bad gathered.
"""4..TO RENT -.—A good farm to
-'ted in the Township of Picker.
0::Road, 21-9 miles from Picker-
• • • a'good state of cultivation,
Jt orchard of the beet Trutt.
'rrthei<particulars apply
�slrlag Village. 38tt
fe '
Pickering.
"giehardsan's "opeeial Yea is So'd
YOUR CHRISTMAS :"CAKE
Won't taste half right unless you use Richardson's good Groceries, Fruits,
Spices, Extracts. etc. Look through this list of good things. All fresh
and new at money saving prices. Come in and leave your order..
We :Will deliver anywhere.
Cooking Raisins, • •-- Oranges,
- " Seedless Raisins, Lemons,
Seeded Raisins, -=-. •-'Walnuts;
• "'Eating Raising, -Currants,
Orange Peel, Pure Spicas,
Lenox Peel, _ : Sage.
-Citron Peel, Thy me,
Pure Honey, (comb) ' • Cream Tartar, -
'Pure Honey,•(extracted) Prunes,
-Icing Sugar, (white) l.c•irtgs, all-kilicl:b,
•-Pure Leruon Exttaet, -7:Vanilla Extr iii t,
Cocoanuts,
"Almonds,
Peanuts,
Filberts,
Craubet.ries,
Sa vory,
N.utnlegs, _
Maple Syrup,
Jelly Powders,
Mince Meat, •
• Atniond Extract.
Everything good in Groceries. Our Teas and Coffees- a -re the -best in'.
town by a tong iiiargiti, and piit•es are right: --
I)EAS.-To let out to responsible
L farms, Enquire at Post Odic.. Picker•
tcgrforeampiee and prices. Chas. id. Willoos.
SIM
OOD ISALE.-Tnd
1 signedFObarL lot aa.l . abouthe leo .ueordser-
of
curds of hardwood• • Regular cuatcmert: a•tlbrl-
v.,'od to get thole hood ae soon as possible so as
o. t to be disappointed. L J Yoynter Brock
Road." 9tf
1;10R S a LE. -'1'tvo houses anti -iota in
1 the V::Jago of Claremont. (ipe.a two
s:prey, t+ roocie.i: rough-caat,dw: fling w l•.la mod:
ern coevrateu. ry cud garden. The o(l . r a
!ram. awslIbrg with tare raott:e am! all eonven•
calicos.. Po$rrs.tcti as WM'be.. agreed arca.
Ttte location is .+nacf the best' in the village.
Apply to Foator Hutchison 1 aremort. 6-16
'•Business.Knrinledge" and Everlast-
ing Push' are btv;?-esssetatlats - • :
to success. Atteiici
ELLIOTT
TORONTO. ONT.
and prepare: for flrst-class -business
positions such as are open to our stud-
ents. Hundreds of our students are
going into good positions every year.
Let us twain you for one. We will -do
it riuht. Winter Term -opens -Jan. 8th.
Write for catalogue and see wherein
we•excel ordinary business colleges. :
W. J. ELLIOTT, Principal.
Cor. Yonge and Alexander streets,
Whitby . Steam
`Pump Works!
PICKERING
A good easy working pump is
time saved. Time is money., -
• Ve handle all kinds and guar•"
tee satisfaction.
Cistern tanks made to' order:
E. W. Evans,
- y _ Brock. street . Whitby.
Let Others Help you
-, To recv-vet' your stolen property.
The _- -- -
9iekering . V igilanee "t ornnuittee
will do this.
Memberahaviog property stolencoMMtini-
• cote immediately with any member
of Executive Committee.
Membership fee " - 111.00. -
Tickete may be,bad from the President or
Secretary on application.
Arthur Jeffrey, J. A. O'Connor,
Secretary. President.
Exec, Com. -Geo. Leng, D. E. Pugb, 0. 8.
Palmer, Pickering, Ont, -
Dumbarton
Important showing of finest display off
' China. A verylargeassortment. of
Btatiotikry. -Books, Dolls,' Toys, jet
received for ;he- .Roliday trade. Call • and see %hem.tl
8abeoriptions" taken for all Magazines,-
" Weekly and Daily Newspapers
W.
'Srocir Street, - • _ W14it1o37"-
:e
"w.
1
•
CLAREMONT
•,-Nelson Wagg was in King City
',''tan Saturday • -
Mrs. H. Mechiu, of Brougham
'luaus in town on Tuesday. -
- Foster Hutchison has es.mpleted
bis rounds•ax- colt ector, -
Peter ,'Mat.,, 'had a bfisiness
trip to thecaItfili- on Monday.
Thomas Green. we regret to 're-
-'—'port is in Very Ivor health at pre-
sent.--
Miss Twin, who has been. ill for
some time, su
till contiues,a in very
..critical condition. --
. 'All roads lead to•--Ciaremont
.'-.Furniture Store where you•can do
':,'. just.as well for your mouey.•
• Dr. Harry H,aglilton, • of British.
.I•Voll}mbia, is visiting at John Mac-
nab's and with other Claremont
friends.
-- Alfred Hoskin, felt op Wednes=
day evening for Burnharn.thoype,
where he experts to remain for
the winter. -
The Bell Telephone Co. have
'` " moved their central office from D.
.H. Alger's store to L. .Bryan's
•barber shop.
John and Mrs. Stephenson, of
• Pickering, spentThursdnyand Fii•
_play of last week at the home of
their•son, Thomas E. and wife.
On Friday last, the infant child
of Arthur and _ Mrs- Davis, of
Greenwood, died. The funeral
took place on Saturday to Salem
_cemetery..
Miss Smith, of Listowejl, has re -
.,turned home after spendiug a cou-
ple of weeks here assisting in the
. flinging at the special services ,in._
the Baptist church. • '
' The - Ladies' 'Aid of Erskine
' church met on Wednesday last at
the home of Mrs. Magnus Hender-
son. There was a pleasant and
• profitable time spent by all. - _
Jame$.McFarlane is being urged
by his friends to stand for the
' reeveship of .the • Township. - In.
Messrs. McFarlane and Wilson,
,the uortherp part of the township
' have two able representatives,.
The A. O. U.. W. lodge of _ this
'Village ` purpose • holding an
oyster sapper in the near future.
It ie expected that one cif the of-
• iceri of the Grand Lodge Rill be
presen-t-to give an address. Wateh
out for bills. -
' - Claremont Public School- Sen-
ior Division. Honor Roll. for No-
vember, IV --Jean Bennett, Jen-
• - nie Rawson, Harold Graham, Sill'-
yatrd Bryan, Clifford Soden.. III
Sen. --Victor Hay word Robin
Thompson, Ethel White, Beryl
• Knight, :Minnie Gleeson. III.Jr.—
' Maggie Morgan, Verna. Stotts,
' Clara Neal, Clifford Tarr, Ret-
• .,ta Story. Edwin Ball Teacher.
- Junior Division. • Sr. IIs—Hath-
leen Rawson, Ethel-Shephert3-
_ son, Maggie Gleeson/ Jr. II—Vi-
• -Shepherd-
','son,
Forsyth, Robert White, Fred
.. Middleton. St. Pt. II—May- Fior-
, Ante. Robin Storey. Inter. Pt. IH
Hilda Middleton, Hnriorie • Neal
Clara Underhill. Jr. Pt. II—Eva
Wilson. Verna .Evans Hazel Man-
- tle. I a—Hazel MiAldletn•• n Mary-
. • Tarr,
nry-
Tarr, Mildred Brodie. f b—Vcta
Stephenson.. Vera Wilson. Willie
Forsyth. I c—Maggie. Shepherd•
• ' son. Ina Mantle, Jahn Neal. Mis'
-:-'lit. L. Heaslip, Teacher. -
- Rev J. W. Totten on, Friday
last reeurned from Tot ten haul
..—'!where his mother's funeral took
lace on 'Tuesday of that week.
The service was conducted by the
pastor, Rev; S. L. W. ' Horton,
- °whq was assisted by Rev. T.
= • Campbell. a f-ormer paster and
• 'Rev. P. Nichol, ,the Presbyterian
minister. There were present
• sat the funeral all of Mrs. Totten's
surviving children a number of
]her grand -children;- and •some o>r,
.1her'..,great-grandchildren, • as well
as alarge number of friends.. From
'the name Totten is derived the
',name of the thriving .village of
Tottenham.'
• A comnlittee`of. our citizens com
posed of Messrs. R. Ward, G.
- Johnston, W. Birkett and J. Bun-
dy waited on the county council
last week and presented the peti-
• tion•from the ratepayers of the vil-
lage• asking that body to give Clare
.. 'mont the status of police, ail -
lege. Ou Thursday,. Nov. 2Sth
•Mr. Todd, reeve of Pickering
•• -introduc-ed"a bylaw to that effect.
The by -lacy passed • through itti
various readings and finally car-
• ried. 'A; a result• of the passing
of the -by-law, Clareniont"'will
-have much more money to:expend
on sidewalks and other local im-
provetne.nts, It will now be in.
:order for the ratepayers ... of
Claremont • to seleet three able
' men to conduct their local affairs.'
.A fall resulting in a broken or
fractnred bone caused. the. death
of. Mr•s._W. Harbron, she having
previously been turu'h reduced
physically by disease. • All the
efforts of physieans and kind
.friends.could not prolong her.stay
here. She passed away peaceful-
ly, trusting in the merits of her
Saviour. Hers was a beautiful,
' :clniet,-kind and sincere Christain
life. Rev. J. W. Totten, her -pas-
' tor, _conducted a -short service in
• the house about. noon hour, after
f _which their -friends repaired _ to.
.Salciu church where a large con-
gregation bad gathered. Rev,
J: -W. Totten preached from
the words in Psalm 116, "Precious
iu the sight of the Lord is t' e
death of his saints." He was as-
sisted in the service by Rev. J.
E. Robeson,'•of Greenwood.
Thomas Phillips, the yell -known
house -dealer, of Essex, is here this -
week . purchasing- horses for his
stock farm. Among others he.
purchased a she month's old colt
from Arthur Johuston, of Green-
wood, '.for which he paid the_eum_
of two hundred dollars.
Few Here Kntow Tlttis.
When an eminent • authorityan-
nounced in the Scranton (Pa.) ines
Times -
that he had found a new way to treat
that dread American disease, Rheu'tna-
CUM.],' with just common, every -day
drugs found in every` drug store, the
physicians Were slow indeed to attach
much importance to his claims. - Tbss
was. only a few mouths ago. Today
nearly every newspaper in' the court,-
try.
oustry. even the metropolitan dirilies, is
announcing it and the splendid results
achieved,_ It is so simple that any one
can prepare it at • home at small cost
It is made up as follows : Get from
tiny good prescription pharmacy Fluid
Extract Dandelion, one-half ounce ;
Compound.Kargon, one ounce; Com-
pound Syrup Sarsaparilla, three
ounces. Mix by shaking in a bottle
and take in teaspoonful doses after
each meal and at bedtime. These are
all simp:e ingredients. making an ab-
soltitely harmless home remedy at lit-
tle cost.
Rheumatism, as every one knows, is
a symptom of deranged kidneys. It is
a condition produced. by. the failure of
the kidneys to properly filter or strain
from the food the uric.acid and other
,natter which, if not eradicated, either
in the urine or through the skiff pores,
remains in the blood, decomposes and
forms about the joints and muscles,
causing the untold suffering and de-
formity of rheumatism.
This prescription is said to be a-
splendid.healing, cleansing find -invig-
orating tonic to the kidneys, and gives
almost immediate relief in all forms of
bladder and urinary troubles and baek-
;ache. He also warns .people in a lead=
ing Nesv York paper against the in-
ciiscrinnnate.use of many patent medi-
cines.
BALE REGISTER,
SATURDAY, DEC. 7TH.—Auction sale
6 acres of standiug timber, without
being culled, at lot 3. con. 3, Ux-
bridge, the property df Wm. H. Rad-
cliffe & Sons. N. E, Smith, auc-
tioneeu. -
•
TUESDAY, DEC. ,10TH, 1907—Auctiore
Sale of real estate, stock and house-
hold furniture, at lot 16, concession
2, Pickering, (south of Spink Mills),
the property of Arthur Locke. Sale
at 1 o'clock sharp. See bills. Thos.
Poucher, auctioneer.
WEDNESDAY, DEC. '18TH,- 1907—Auc-
tion .sale of farm stork and imple-
ments, the property of Mrs. Andrew
Allison, on lot 28, con. 2, Pickeringg
10 Month's credit. See bilis-for full.
particulars. Sale at one. Thomas
Poucher, Auctioneer.
•
Indigestion
- Stomach troubles but a symptom of, and not
In itself a true disease. We think of Dyspepsia.
Heartburn, and Indigestion as real diseases, yet
they are symptoms only of a certain epecido
Nerve sickness—nothing else.
It was this fact that first correctly led Dr. Shoop
in the creation of that now very popular Stomach
Remedy—Dr. Shoop's Restorative. Going direct
to the stomach nerves, alone brought that success
and favor to Dr. Shoop and his Restorative. With-
out that original and highly vital principle, no
such lasting accomplishments were ever to be had.
For stomach distress, bloating, biliousness. bad
breath and sallow complexion, try Dr. Shoop',
Restorative—Tablet/I or Ltgaid—end•eee for our-
self ha will do. We sell andrecommend
Dr. Shoop'.s
Restorative
T. W. '-NitfADDEN.-
I'OR SALE,—One 40B. P.stee•1 boil-
er In Splendid condition carrying a.SO I bs of
rt'am. one heavy base elide valve engine 91 : vet
In. cylinder, this ,could make a splendid outfit
for saw or cboppingmill. Can mire prices for
the c,mpl3to machinery for cbopplL.r mill. Al-
to one iu H P gasoIin engine. this engine is bo
ins all thoroughly overhauled and can be guar-
anteed' it as 000d as near Cin easily be nionnte•;
as portwbleen,tine.-Czoa-targeetock of plow
points for sale at W It k..r! rough's shop. Clare
moot. For prices of the above machinery wtiee
Robert. W Curry. 1x3 Lippincott St,'Serouto 5tf
Our Fall iYtiIlinery--Opening
October ist,.2nd and 3rd.
Come and inspect our Stock.
Everbody Welcome.
-MRS. HERKS & DAUGHTER
LIFT; FORCE AND"
and SUCTION PUMPSO÷
Constantly on Hand.- - Prices Right. -
Wind—mills erected and Repaired, -
Direct telephone comtnnrnication with ail• ,arts' Of Pickering,
Markham, Scarboro,- Whitchurch, Uxbridge and Vaughan townships,
also Stouffville, Markham and Pickering villages, over Independent
'system. . - - .
Brantford Gasoline Engines and Windmills.. '
Orders promptly attended to. Repairing done.
John Gerow°Q0e's°r '°
Gsrow A Eon, Claremont.
•
LAREMONT
BROUGHAM
For their Christmas Goods.
Everything first-class
--- -and at: rock bottom prices
•
Buy her and Save Money
Rubbers of aril sizes and kinds- • Felt goods of best quality.
Men's heavy t.ubbers re=soled and heeled.
•
4 Rose Bread Flour-
Quaker Flour
•
Ivory Flour
Choice PastryFlour A call solicited
Chop and Bran •
always on hand
-
The Corner Stere. -
. W. M. PALMER, Proprietor
It will pay you to get our
prices forittoves be-
, fore purchasing
Our - prices will suit you
We sell all the leading lines
and make of Stove •
Our specialty is
•_ Furnace Work
MACHINE SHOP j
The undersigned having purch-
ed B. Wagner's Machine• Shop in
Kinsale,: is prepared to do all
kinds of repair work . and general
blacksmithing.
;Satisfaction guaranteed.
Prices right. -: -
Call, and see us.
--JAMES PENGILLY
Kinsale. Ont.
Is the bine to do your fall
Paporing and Painting. •
If you are doing any you had
• better have it done right-
. .,at the tight price by
-W. B. K E S T E R,
Painter and Decorator,
Pickering, - ', - Ontario
A Ladling cough, from any cause, is
gtrio kly'stopped. by Dr •8 hoop's Conga Core
And it is so thoroughly harmless and sate,
that Dr Shoop tells mothers everywhere
to give it without beeitotioo, even to the
vera yoeag •batiei The who!esorne green
leaves and teuder stems : f a lung healing
monntainoes ehruh, furnish the curative
properties- to Dr Shoop's Couth -Cure.
It ca.me the cough, and .heals the sore,
and sensitive bronchial membranes.
No opium,, no chloroform, -. nothing
harsh used to injure or suppress. Sim
ply a resinous plant extract, that bappse
to - heal aching.. longs. The. Spaniards
calls this shrub which the Doctor uses
-*The- Sacred Herb." • ..Always demand
Dr Shoop's Cough Core. Sold by T
M McFadden.
goolings
- Leave your orders at fhe
PICKER,ING LUMBER YARD
for Ontario. and New Brunswick
white cedar shingles.
Patent Rooffngand all kinds of
building material.
W. D. GORDON & SON.
No las
scs� orb i c
�C Tit . e tib 1
°o .14
-a es 0 M o
Y
7.d e Q a a. It. C. Oil=
i I cCi o$ •a 4 Q G ::,,.,,i..7.14.''.14:
utyNow MatagS ,aur :n9:°aro°v f°�e,� e ° ° s B a v°?O!O=, mm a .y.r:.a )n Vr.+1eb w °'w.
- "` ,.•ar 4arCaa ax May; �C__ Jne'CCC.
el
v i` -$'no' ca' dept M
•...a4.. oct.! hr •n w r. r7, 2D\ov. 0.,Ln .Dac�IJanuary 1906 -Whitby 9,' Oshawa 10.Pickering
13, Port Perry i1, Uxbridge 17, Caanington 16,
- Beaverton 15, liptergrove 14 .
Of all material' and desfgu
kepti n stock. it will pay you .
to call, at our works scd•inepeot; our stoat
and obtain prices. " Don't be misled by
agents we do not employ them, consequent-
( ly we can., -and do throw off the- agents
commission of 10 per.cent., which you Willi
certainly save by purchasing from um.'
call solicited;
WHITBY GRANITE Co.,
. Whitby, Ontatdo
•
Farmer's Trucks!
Bring in' your old wagon: and get
the wheels cut down. Make good
farm trucks.Buggies and other vehicles repainted
at reasonable rates.
"Thomas Patterson,
CLAIEMONT (Dowswell's old stand.)
. Trial Catarrh treatments. ars being mall •-ed oat freo, on request, by Dr Shoop, Ra
cine, Wis. These testa are_proving to the -people—without a penny's cost—the great
value of this wile' c ifle prescription. known"to d`rnggista everywhere as Dr Shoop',
Catarrh Remedy. Sold lig T M McFd•
den. - •
BAKING !
First-class breadconstantly onhand
at the shop. -Wagon on the road
every day in the week.
Cakes ofjs l kinds made :to -order
shortest notice.
Sce-Cheam Parlor:in connection.'
W. A. Thomson,
-• Claremont.. Orse..
LEARN DRESS-MAKINC BY MAIL
your spare time at home, or
Take a -Personal Course at SehooL
•
To enable allarn we teach on
cash or instalment -plan. • 'eVe also teach a
personal, class at school once a month.
Class commencing last Tuesday of each'
month, These lessonsteaches how to cut,
fit and put together any garment from the
plainest shirtwaist suit, to the most elabor-
ate dress. The whole family can learn frotaone course. «re have -taught Der -seven:
thousand dress -making, and guarantee to
give five hundred dollars to any one that
cannot learn between the age of 14 and
40. You cannot learn dress -making as
�i• •,'� -thorough as this course• teaches if your
work in drops for years. Beware of imita-
tions as we employ no one outside the.
-school. • This isthe only experienced Dress
Cutting School in Canada and excelled by.
.-none in any other country. _ Write at once
for particulars, as we have cut our rate one-
third te.r a short Kure." A'ddress': —
SANDERS' DRESS-CUTTi`b3 SCHOOL, .
31 Eric St... Stratford, Got , Canada
Having purchased the Harness Business from E. W.•Bodell; the same
will be conducted ' in connection with' otir • regular business,.
• under Mr. Bodell'spersonal supervision. _
First=clfiss�material will be used and every satisfaction guaranteed.
R
The best place.to buy
CUTTERS,
BUGGIES,
HARNES.S
ROBES,
BLANKETS,
Call and see them,
These goody are all first plass
and are offered at prices
- - that sell them.
R. J. Cowan, Brougham..
Wall -papers -
— IS AT— •
Bingliams
Over 200- samples to- choose from -at
4c. per roll up.
Mouldings to match all papers. Also,
- - • - • -a full line of-the:best° -
Paints, Oils and Varnishes, always in
stock at lowest possible prices.
Don't forget the place.
= w. G. BINGHAM, -
North Claremont
•
4.7 ••s -
. • •
• - -
•
i!no.
• • • .,.
•-• • e - • ese • oesseeeset es-Seeeo_ e • . esee •
* ++44++++ ++++++++4++++ +++ +4+44+4+4+ 44+ +44++++
" •
• ++++++++++++4++++++++ + +4+44+4444 4-4.444+44+44 4.
• .• CHAPTER XVI. --(Continued).
pounds to 'tart your ollIce with. 1 arn
Ile must know a lot," he thought on- glad to help anyone belonging to my old
o•-• easity. "Why, he knows the house rcginient, Sterrett. You can pay me
'-• : • .where she is even; they have their bands back when you like, or—but we will
'• on her Buy him? Why. I would buy talk of that later on. Is it understood?"
hundred Sterretts to save her little Sterrett rose, and with another salute,
ar:ger. Thank heaven, that it is this moved towards the door. "Quite under-
.- man, and that he can be bought." .• •stiood, sir," he said.
• As he reached this point, Sterrett "Thank heaven !" said Gordon to Iiini-
..../eeked up. it was impassible that he self, aS the ex-corporal.diappeared,
• 'Could have guessed Gordon's thoughts, "that I had three hundred ounds ! And
Lut probably his expression enlightened now for Mr. Gaunt."
him, for he put down his knife and fork
with a sigh of relief, and drawing
up, apparently prepared for Gordon
tO speak.
-:,-• •. "And if you had thin-money—this bit
' • ef money you speak of," said Gordon,
"what use would you make of It?"
"Oh, lor, sir, 1 'ain't likely to get it
-.- first. Where's it to come from?'
"That's hardly the question; from
'• isome ones pocket, I suppose. If it
- • cattle. what would you do with it?
• . "Go into .the inquiry business. , sir. It
'would suit me."' .
•" The inquiry business? Oh. the pri-
'?" vale inquiry agency- busins?"
- "Yes, sir. Take a little orflce and be
'my own master. I'd"de a lot for that."
' • Gordon hesitated a moment. No
more humbug, Sterrett." lia% said, at ta.st,
r 'what's your price?"
_ '• "Well, sir; I've ukulele/a 1 could do
or- ••
ail 1 wooled on three hundred pounds."
' " • "' • "And what have you got to offer?"
••• - "Beg pardon, sir."• •
-. "Don't humbug. Sterrett. Vv -hat .are
•sejling; .
1/4 "Veet11. sir, I don't (rata khowl:obut,
• lor.. here gees r
He drew his chair up towards (tor-
•
• - 'dons, and bending •down spoke love
and clearly. •
"'Joumustn't lake.offenee at what I'm
going to say, sir. It may be that 1
baven't got anything to sell, • after all.
,' • . -11 may be that 1 am wrong in my ideas.
If so, you must- teit me, and I'll...clear oul„
) •• lint' no harm done, 1 bepe."'
-.. • "Oerteinly. • /f you've nothing lo sell,
- 1 won't buy -IL That's understood. Go
On."
"Well. sir. you know this Regent Street
nuirder?"
•
. -
Or, A Great Mistake.
• 'There ees a gentlerrum murtlered in
e•
. Ili- own miens; not kr robbery, but for
teazle retie whi.:11 no .one knew any-
, .--- thing about. There was nothing nmch
ITTOWT1 ahout. this gentleman or his
affairs orhis friends. But two of his
• friends were known, at least their names
Ir....or*w• ere. A lady. a young la,dy. and a
• gentleman, her lather. When this mur-
r. ." crane they -.went off: They had 'been
• • 'Slaying at the Dorien }tole). and then
••-• • they disappeared. It teemed likely they
• yrright tell us something we might like
. -:•-• to know, end we started Woking for
'Weil ?"' , a third man appeared from_the opposite
- o' _them. 1 was put on tate yob.
•• . "Well, 1 found- 'em. At leaSt,'Irfenind side, and struck savagely at him with
_ •
his belt.
.00 -ore of 'tn. The young lady." , ' Gorden parried the blow, arid.calt
•
the victim of the ex -corporal's stick lay
helpless in the road.
Goreat and Sterrett leaned over him
and monied at him, and the ex -corporal
with a grunt, arose again, '
"Heil do in a minute or two. He's
coming around. We'll leave him to him-
self." .
Gordon stared. "But the seoundrels
ought W. be • punished," he said. "1L
wont do to let such brutes off soot
free." '
Sterrett shook his head. "Better let
'eni go, sir," he said. "You don't want
to go giving evidence against 'em. You
ain't hurt badly, are you?"
- .CHAPTER 'XVII. •
When Gordon passed out of -the res..
taurant the night, was dark. The street
1,1 which he found himself was a small
one, and badly lighted; and for a me -
Men!. he stOod still looking about him,
and rather uneartain c1 his immediate
whereabouts.
Presently two nen, walking slowly,
passed him; and. making after them, he
inquired bis way to Pentonville !load.
"Bight you are, gu-v-nor, we're just
gang there," said one of the two. - "I'll
show you."
Gordon thanked him, and turned along
wits him.
-They had not gone far when Gordon
suddenly hesitated. Flit> mind was busy
•engagetl in reviewing the events of the
past few hours. and in speculating upon
what he should say to Mr. Gaunt, but
the long time in Rothvilie had -trained
his senses to a high .pitch of :acuteness.
and his quick observance] wa.s always at
work even when his brain- was engaged
in other ' pursuits. 11. had suddenly
snuck him that. some signal had passed
between the Iwo men at his side, and
that there ,was an air of tension and
watchfulness in their •-walk and plan-
ner which was peculiar and • rather mi-
w:countable. .
He edged a littl 2, towards the side of
tht pavement -away from -them, and in-
stinctively buttoned up:. his coa-t.
• The man nearest to him noticed the
movement and quickly nudged his Caen-
-peini.on. who -stepped to the other side
.o' Gordon. .,
Goinon leaked.. round .him. He had
1e; the men teed him on a lifile way
without faking much heel of the read
they went, and he saw that they -were
now -in an almost deserted :part o1 the,
town; one of the narrow, badly -lighted
crescents which: lead Off item the Pen-
lonville
Even while he looked and hesitated he.
heard a -little click to one side of -him.
He guessed she • meaning of the sound
ir,stantly.. One of the man had ta_ . lien off
his belt.
"Hooliaans r' he thought, and quick
ns lightning ha ,sprong.otit. into the mid:
Le% of the 'rad, but -even as he..did ade'
Gonion rubbed himself all over, and
wiped uway the blood from his face.
"No, 1 am not hurt 111111C11," lie said.
"I'hey never got a real blow in, luckily.
But they would liaee done if you hadn't
turned up, ieterrett. It was most fortu-
nate, or most clever, of y4,u.1 thought
youbod gone long ago." • • '
"Y, sir," replied Sterrett, but to
which reniurk'Gurden did not know.
"But, really, 1 don't see why • the
brutes should go, Sterrett," Gordon said'
again, after a second or two.
Sterrett ,hesitated. ."Why do you
think they went.foryou; sir?" 'he said,
at. last.
"The usual thing, robbery: 1 suppose."
"I don't, sir. Why, If they had wanted
your watch and chain, or your money,
they would have had them long before
I hit that chap down there. • Why, Bill
Smith, who was dodging 'abcia, wait-
ing to get' home with that belt of his,
could have had all you'd got on you
long before you'd : done punching , the
other chap. But he was looking for a
chance te, knock you out. They might
!aloe robbed you afterwards, but that
wasn't what they: were playing for."
• Gordon. thought' deeply for a little.
iI remembered Usher's attempt just
now upon his life. after he had suc-
ceeded in getting the letter which con-
tained Vivienne Gaunt's address.. Ile
11 haa that letter; he knew the young
gel's whereabouts, and .Usher was cog-
nizantof his.. knowledge. The gambler
would be aware that Gorden would not
tong delay before he made use of the,
address; might he net even have guessed
that Gordon would go straight from the
hotel to Charles Street? If •were
playing the game which Gorden suspect-
ed him de playingetlotdc,n's communies-
boll with both Mr. Gaunt and his daugh-
lee would be highly exasperating to
him,' -,Wae- it possible •that he had
tracked Gordon to that Muse. and thak.,
this -attack was but the sequel to the -
affair. Of the ravolver ?
..ingHebevrorkeethill ant,
Ss>1,errefarita. s*Gh4e.rd'U'esn eostualrci. ed wondland, provided.of eouree, that
distinguish in • darknes.s', with al
blank. expreesionles.s face.. - • the soil are suitable. -For vege'able
tee lecaition and -mechanical oondisin
rne-
"Anal that could ahee want to knock- pot -1.111/4g new land is very deairable,
out for lie asked quietly. . not only teeause of its - comparative
'Sterrett • shook his bsad. 9
know. sir." he said: "Do ,you happen 1.0
know a...street celled- -Minden Lane?"
'Gordon started. "Minden Lane. Yes,
; do. What about it ?" _
"
"Mightit be anything to de with tait,
eir?.
Gordon' stared at him with an en-
'-ennn-y feeling of • arretiement. \Vas it
yessible that this man had discovered
the. whereabouts of Vivienne's father,
teo? . .
don' :
t knewSterrett,'" he said. "but
you are a most extraordinary fellow.
%%hat on earth da you know about Min-
den Lane, and do you come to
kuow about it?" -
• Sterrett. filloWed what was almost a
smile to cross his uneopressive>face.
"Well, sir 1 don't mind telling you.
There's nothing in it, atter' all. I ain't
clever. IL ain't cleverness that gives us
Most- of our chances._ It's just accident
and dodging abeut. When 1 went out
of the esstauraint just -now, I found that
the waiter had given me a bad s1-
pence.:and I -went hack to change IL
l'ou was gone. sir, hut 1 get -my isix-•
pence changed all right and went out
again. When got a little way down
the street I passed two men talking' to-
gether nt a corner; and It struck me
that, 1 knew one -of the voices. I passed
as close as' I could and took a peep,
turning my head away so they shouldn't
see- me. But, .as it happened, they were
too busy talking to notice. The, chap
whose voice I. heard was a had kit, sir;
Jeff Sullivan -o -hes pretty well known to
us. I can tell you—and there ain't much
"And the • other?" asked Gorden
quickly.
•
he won't do." .
"I don't know, sae and what's more,
oculdn't see him; It was more know-
ing Jeffs voice that made me recognize
.him, for it was nearly pitch dark. But
the other was a tall, thinnish man,
loned like a toff."
"Ah
•"Well. 1 couldn't Wait to listen. they
World have precious soon tumbled to
me, but I jut caught a few words as I
passed:. It 'was Jeff who said them, and
they sounded like 'He's alt right; he's
gene on, and they're, after him.' And
then I thought the other oneesaid soine.
thing' like: 'Well, you make 'straight for
eterden Lane.'
"1 know Jeff. pretty well, and 1 guessed
there was trouble where he was core
cremes'. Someone having gone on in
Irene and 'they' being after, smelled to
me very like trouble for someone, and
I look • a stroll down the, street in case
I might hnppen to see what was going
Then I beard you going it, elie
dirket trouble . about .the Minden I.ane
part -of it. till now; then it slruek me
tlint vouinig-ht le able to put two and
two legelhere:,
"Like most wonderful things, it's very
:simple when it's explained, Sli,rretl.
But 1 am very grelefel toyu role ttirtS.
ing up when- yon did. • And new yeti
have just pessitily donee vele a greater
spry iCe elite Teti do- yeu- know
teliniten Lime?"
"Dewn by Jrimenek's, sir?" -
night? It's a bad part of London for—
get a gentleman."
• "1 ani certainly going," said Gordon,
smiling. "And I don't suppose lt will be
worse than a night at Rothville."
"It, won't be so bad, sir, we'll hope;
but if you'll excuse me, sir, ['11 come
along, too, if you don't mind."
Gordon laughed. "1 ani not quite sure
if 1 want you, Sterrett," he said. "I am
not quite sure yet which side you are
cm?" _ _
"Well, sir, in a manner of speaking,"
said Sterrett, 9 might say 1 was on the
side that pays me best, and that's you.
Of course, that is, so long as there's nO-
thing illegal going on."
"I don't think there will be anything
illegal," said Gordon, "and if there.is, I
expect I shall,,have to pay you niore;
that's all," he continued to himself.
"But," he said out loud, "I shall 'certain-
ly be very glad of your company.* Will
you come?"
And they turned into the Pentonville
Bowl.
- * • es r .
•
."Yes, sir. At No. leharles -Street."
Are ye.0 certain?'
• "Oh. yes. sir. That's' sure enough.
r;auht, the yoong lady is: , There
'eine no doubt she's the one we want to
. and there ain't,. no doubt ,shes
there" •• . •
..weor
"Well, sir,. I -was here on business ;
"jaist deaging alxiut, you know. Mr, and
..isecing if I could pick up anything, when
• . saw you come to No. 42,.and ask fur
•V,e young lady."
• • • "You weren't there. There was no one
atabout."
Yes, 1 was. sir. I was down in the
•lair, •talking to the cook. Well, sir,
you stayed some time, and thinks I, you
...o.must be a friend of the young tady's,
•-•
and this busiaass may be a very unples-
ant for a young lady to he mixed
••up in." ,
• • ' "eadeogreat heavens. Yeu •den't think
she _ hod anything lo do with the—the
affair?" •
"Oh. no, sir: we don't know any-
-• thing about that yet; but the young Indy
may have to proye she hadn't, sir.
• That.is. when we find her. In a man-
.-- 'nee of speaking, we haven't tonne tier.
• becauee 1 haven't reported yet.," •-• .•
• "Yee won't find her, Stereo -O.- .
" " "No, eir?" ' •.
"Ni. Bat the question is. will riny-
--001••elSe. for •a -week? I want i*WA,Pbf."
"A WePk, 4t). sir; new a month either,
1! she keeps quiet, and if 1 don't report.
•• l'ou see, sir. it was , vhnt •
yOU
• niight. cell nn accident my hitting on
• I was just -taking iv stroll one
Gordon smiled, as be reineinlored
Sterrett's:shale:. 'and what they led se
"And?" he said. "Well. sir. 1 dent
•limew that it much twitters how ,I, did
,•11. 1 nin't left the kirce just yet. and—'
"I ,ndt'rstand' ieplil Ceseen. "le
• e.
rapid glance at the fir man. They
were upon him already, and.Sa a second
a', three were stashing at. him silently.
Gorden had, fortunately, not been
taken by surprise, and he 'WaS a good
tighter, but he had no weapons but his
ftsts, and these were at a terrible disad-
vantage against the erael.buckles which
his eipponents. swung with suehoptec,
tleed skill.
Ile had knocked ane man down, and
-he lay with his legs kicking helplessly.
in the gutter,' bilt the other to] were
pressing him hard, and he felt the blood
trickling down his tape from more than
one wound.
• pesperal-e, at length, he charged mad -
:y at the neerest ruffian, and escaping
the swing of the. bell, he seized him by
-the throat. "The other one will de- for
rrie".7elow." he thought rapidly-, "but
wifl give Ode one something he won't
forget."'
11e had a, good gill of ' the man's
throat, and he squeezed it tight while
punching him with his disengaged hand,
het 'he heard the third man's hurried
breaelling airiest on his shoulder and
felt that tee.deadly, belt was only *all-
,
Mg a chance le descend.
But to his 'surprise nothing liajipened;
and euddenlye he heard a cry ,and then
a thud in the roadway._ .
Hie own_ antagonist gave a groan -and
ceased bp struggle. while a man ap-
pearing .suilelenly al Gordon's -side, said
quietly. "Can you manage him, sir ?"
"TInther," said Gordon cheerily, but 1
think- Ite's• had enough. • \Vliy, its you,
Slei-reLt 1'
."ycs, me. Bet wises, • this
yeseve get here? Oh, Bill Smith: it's
yeu, is it? Let•hitrr gee, sia; 111 look
fitter hinir"
Gordon. rolonsed the half=choked enrin,
(11141 1,P.1:1.qggered. blue: into. the ',midway.
• "Nov .then. Bill .Smilh." said Sterrett,
"Meisel be treutile :about this. 'But 1
all you know?" you, Bill, ' and I'll _give,. you n,
e,..• "T iti e nearly elleshe I theuelit eou. heeidee. y•ou'veelead a hiding ne
eereight. likeSe • hear itoo'hen I saw you reedy, lads, god. hill hard.
eflthe Isse, lied I (nuns out r, ,
you. N& liriti den'. lees, eir " And •ejezingelie• nniazed Bill by his col -
giving hire n twist nolund he
"There's, S11110 seid, 1 dnresny. Slot.- •lar• eel
•.*- reit 1 IIII rove glad you dill 'eerie- • I ,Lent. him Ili•ing with n hisrly kick. The.
• (To be coctinued),
• About the Farm
writes advocate the use Of rosdedlust.
Good poultrymen says this is undesir-
able 'because A Lacks vitality snd
loaded down with germ life. You'
are at liberty to have your own views
on this questioo41. main thing s
to provide the The hen se4e
her dust bath, an she is deprive4t
of it she will not do her best. Aliens
insect pooder or mite destroyer scat- ,eo.
tered in the dust will help keep then
hens free front flee. Many *poultry! -
raisers prefer ashes for the dust bath.
•
4. • 4
if -4+44 +++4+++++++4-44+÷t
CHOPS ADAPTED TO NEW LANDS.
New land because of the large quan-
tity of vegetable matter it contains is
exceedingly lose. The leaf mokl also
gives 'the soil a dark color and fertile
appearauce. Humus or decomposed
vegetation Is an essential element in
productive 1Ls. It improves' the tex-
ture so that the soil is better able to
retain heat moisture plant fooct.
New land is that usual-
ly crops. growing s -Suffer much
from lack of moisture. 11. will genei•-
ally produce a good growth of stalk
but the. yield of grain will be poor: If
not overtaken by a severe drought the
fodder will likely grow to a good size
while the ears will be small and faul-
ty. •Among -the grasses clover seems
best adapted to new land. Indeed.:
upon serh soil it will invariably thrive,-
evhfle, ueen old neighboring fields it
may be difficult or impossible to .secure
.e stand-. , •
Filth Of all kindsdo well upon clear
-
• tIihflkyo•iir rill right. on..1 ,per-
. , taps sornelhine ifrOre 111011 111L, 0111(T.,
• t(41 It fit -Tend,- on you. ,,C8I1 1 rely on.
?", ' .
''Vese sir; qt -le sir: .end t an retyeen
y)11. sir?
•:. • "ertainly. If yorO
cu me le my plane' tem. The man Gordon had knocked
iss000rr1w--1 sill • g ress deali. firsi hail _recovered rind. vaniehed•
j aa•oince you three hundred 41! .the first sound of Sterrett's voice, but
•osa 7
impetus neerly teloofellew
hie hem]. it helped him en his way,
quid recovering Weisel!, he sped eihreely
rend wttliout a Word.
-sterrettgazed alter him for a 1I10-
1,14,141. and then turned to took nroUnd
• :1113TfON CHOPS. '••el •••
Ewes that are safely in lamb should
be given a little extra food.
The quality of the lambs and the
strength of the ewes in the spring de-
pend upon the care and feed from'
now on.
The demand for lembs in midwinter ,
is growing rapidly. 4! •
The supplying of these lambs is a •
high art branch of sheep breeding," •
and is well worth the steantion„ of per -I,
sons who are adapted to the business.
Dry beds are indispensable 'to sheep -1
A damp pen will invite. all kinds or
trouble.
Dry cold is health fax sheep; .evel or • •
darn.p is death. •
A feed trough with a wide ixitiorri Is .
always preferable. The grain is then, • - •
thinly tepreati aver the bottom and the.
sheep must, eat it slowly in 4xinsequencep;
A bushel of masigokis or turnips tie
day for forty ewes- is an excellent rip'
petizer to supplement the other 'food:.
Any ewes in your flock that will. pot.
•
bear lambs this seeson- Weed 'them out
and get. them off to market.. ,
A gcod many farmers still follow tbe • •:,
practice of ,feeding tbeir sheep on the
ground out Of doors. It is a costly
way of doing: Not many of us can af-
ford it, and none of us aught to afford
IL •
Lumber is, high .in price_ but hay
and grain is higher. A few boards will
make a good rack • for feeding out of.
Pat a tight bottom ine thse'. ra ck and- -
save grain. •
In arranging for . the- winter qiiare
tees the flock should be divided &taxi -M -
ng to age, size. etc. Not more -than, •'
twenty-five. thirty should be kept in
one pen.
• .•
KING. OF KIDNAPPFILS.
Nolorioui ••Ahanfihni Johnson," el San
_ Francisco.
freedom from foul growth, but because
such eoils. contain a large supply of
organic lbe most neces.sary
and PNpervssive of vegethbie -fertilizers.
It Sie.' light and sense' thereby enabling
the tender sprout after germination to
more readily • push- its. feeble Sarni
through the surface. elipon old land
frequeolis a erust will form .on , the
surface, or • the soil . beet:lone _baked,.
therehy. preventing .sced from corning
up.
"Yese-site T know Sr ' - •• e -" •
..
"Ti1(11 tell me my quickeel way to get.
there at, ones- Illness -no time to lee."
' "leiiir best way went(' he 14) take the
Tufo Nom the 'Angel.' sir; bill you ain't
geind down thee': alone ril. this time of
• .
WET OR DRY FEED. '
An old Ineehod of (colitis news and
Working cieten-' was to -feed about half
a bushel to each of cut straw wet with
water a.net mixed with chop or meal
ground from corn. rye. and oats. They
:were also given all the hay they could
eat. The cows ' were leefet in the Lame;
yard day and night with an open shed
Lc go under when it Stormed and we're
.feel corevetalks. and hay for. fodder' end
were a lopped with buckwheat bran or
wheat brait mixed with r.sler, rnaking
a "elope' which- was so thin that the
oow ,could . almost drink it. .Sornee. Imes
littleechop sees added to make it Sh-
er elt was •-fed in 'swill- pails 'a.nd
wooden boxes, and the sews .did well
ion it.
IL may' be 'objected that' the mess
as eaten too fa.:41, to produce the 'best
results—that if the feed had been given
dry -the cows would htive.been oblioeed
I. cat• it more slowly, and the saliva
from the mouth woukl have become
mixed With it, which is supposed to
aid digs -Stem. • There is not much
doubt that animals will do better when
obliged to eat their meal slowly than
when allowed to gobble it down hast-
ily In slop. In either 'case the meal
lies in•the animal's stomach in a small
oonepess or Ijompacit heep, whereas
meal or contracted food should be fed
ir sucton- manner as to 1111 the stomatch
se the organs of digestion- can easily
lay hold upon it.
_ • 'O..' .POULTBY NarEs...- •
• ,.
When geese have plenty 01100111 they
do best when allowed to forage tend
select their own fot provided-eaheays
that there Ls plenty of grass.
A single union of male and -female
fertilizee all the egg e the .hen. will lay
for the season. hence one gobbler will
suffice for twenty' or more' hens..
11 :leo many .hens are allowed to run
with One cock there is always risk of
tenma eggs proving, infertife.. On nn
overage :ore- rock 14 a •dozen hens is
suflickrrL
Now that the, bad. o•entlier.- is coming
en _aye] tee ehiCkenee and poultry ere
more 'Closely housed, clean out your
chieken houses, give the roosts. wells
mid; roof 1t thick coaling of 'whitewash
midthen with your. serayer spray every-
tbing.with kerosene. if once n flock hes
hecorne lhorceighly• infected with lice -in
the fall -it, is TICN1 147 impossiOle to era-
dicate them -hiring the winter when
they will be • mostly 'valued. will be
greatly diniinished.
Provide n liberal supply of floe earth
for winter use in the hen house. Some ani already engaged-
•The "tehatighaled", • liusetan sailor
Gedart; whai reeide so sensational an
escape at Falmouth. England, the other
day- hem the %es:eel on board of shich
had been 1llegel4 lured, was, it
row transpitee the Virtue/ of one of e_
-the- many agents or the notorloua.
"Shanghai Johnsen," of San Francis'
(o_
ThLe "ging of the Kidnappers," as he
-his been -net inaptly •chnsterese is
known and dreadedof all: skippers
trailing to the Pecific ports. His in-
flUence. exlends from Asia to Magellan.
Strait. and no vessel is safe from hfs
machinate-ine. ile has been :known to
steal. entire .cesevs, and on one occa-
sion, 415 sn act of .revenge. he laid tea
the whole of the -shipping. of Mazate
tan. • an. important Mexican port. •
The principal boarding-house at -San-
Franetsco- svai a seri of 'cross between
' up-to-date eelane hotel and .a medi-
level Oriental harem. Here, before- the
earthquake levelled tt. to the ground,
elaelt." was 'decoyed, and given the
time et lees I:fe for a week or O. His
days. were- .spent In carousing. his
-in- revelry, until presently his
turn come 144 be "signed on." . Then
a heavy dose- of laudanum -loaded rum
was given him. and next day he woke.
up . to find himself at sea, with_ three-
rnonths'. "advance wages" to.he worked :
off. •--
But JOhnseites pet enterprise was his
"Seantan's Training College." _as he .
grandiloquently called it. l'his .was
nothing trots rior less than a. factory
for turning out bogus sailors. Old,
broken-down tramps were lured- to the'
"college." 'end there transformed in a
few days into very good Imitation sea-
men. That is to say. their hands were
roughened with' pumIceslone soaked in •-•
weinut juke, they Were clothed in sail- • - '
ors'. togs plentifully daubed with' tar, • - •
and they were %aught a smattering of
salt -water Bueof everything.per-
lainieg to -tree seamanship they were,
et course. totally ignorant.
, Many a areal ship has beendest. ow- •
ing to her'skiprer having been palmed
oft with one of Shanghai Johnson's
counterfeit crewS.
. ' ••• :zoo,
_ •
SUNSHINE .1ND LEMONADE.
• • • -;
The hygienic qualities . of lemonade
have long been popularly celebrtited,.
and recent scientific research ,shoWs
that this pleasing summer drink de-
serves its reputation. Monsieur ,Biegel,
writing in the Avehises of Hygiene,
says that in..a hentimade containing six
gramper liter, of ;citric arid the bacil-
eheiera is killed in half an lour;
and that•ef .1yetioid iT 21 hours. - But
when 'he same .lemonade is permeated" - '
with sunelene, the , eholeritebacillus
polishes In Rye minutes and the fy.
1.110 14 beeillus iri•two hems'.
11. rillored her, but his Pride AVA5 -
•veis great.- "Elsie," he faltered, "do
Jive n1?.- relieve the Isom of the •
ori her (noir :eid cold.
"No." she said. N. Mie elanueringel
lie laughed unpletieruilly.
said. "1 feared you did, that was all, _
and 1 just asn'ed to warn you that I
•
r'"T,trs�.. moo;:
PARLIAIENT OF 'CANADA
--- peeeh of _His Excellency the .governor
General at the Opening. -
A despatch from Ottawa says: Old
timers cannot recall a more brilliant
.scene than that which ihe Senate
Chamnrbers presented on Tillursday at-
. , ternoon on the occasion of .the opening
,` . ,f the fourth session ef- the tenth Par
lianient of Canada. Outside the Pariia-
r. ment Buildings the crowd was not. as
large tis usual, this being due to the
fact that teem early morning snow had
steadily fallen. So large was the at-
lendance of ladies, in the Senate
: Cbanibee, cs2ecially fame outside points,
that seats usually set apart for the
Senators were this year gallantly sur-
.-:
.; le the fair. 1 v* -ii. i the cen-
•irc of 1he_I'roi. the !Eric- reserved for
-the (lease/Julie representatives. clergy,
Deputy elieisters and other important
personages. were occupied by the
ladies. Overt thirty, Senators had to
••'stand bet --ow the bar in the rc_seervatian
'set apart 'for !his day for Conuirone'rs.
The booming`of the" guns on Nepean
•Ptotnt was the signal for the .arrival
or his Exeeliency, •who entered the
o chamber preceded by a brilliant staff.
After his Excellency had taken his
• seat on the wool sack, Black Rod
was despatched "to summon, the
bens of .the Commons.
SPEECH FROM THE THRONE.
The speech from the throne- was as
' follows:
IHon.. Gentlemen of the Senale:. '
Gentlemen of Ibe House . of Commons:
In again meeting you at a period of
. the year most convenient for the de-
spatcb of business. it gives me great
pleasure to -be able to congratulate
,,yyou on the remarkable expansion of
ithe trade of Canada ,with other 'coun-
tries. the total trade of 'the past year
• *far exceeding that of any of its pre-
.. tdecesso.';s.. A gratifying result of this
expansion was that the revenue of the
lass fiscal period of nine months was
more than sufficient to meet expenses
;en consolidated fund. National Trans-
continental Ratiwey,'capital and spectal
outlays, all expenses of the Dominion
of every kind. and leave a balance of
over three million dollars to be applied
In reduction of the public debt.
The stream of immigrants coming
to Canada -continues to increase in
. volume, the year drawing to a .ctose-
showfng a larger number than any
preceding year and it ts. gratlfying La
ttserve the many coming from the
Isles. . °
The Derninion - has been blessed hj
e, large series of prosperous years, and
though at the present moment Its bust-
• Hess is being restricted by the financial'
stringency .tchichy: prevails _throughout
the- world, 1 feel assured that this un-
' favorable condition will be Temporary.
.and that the' illimltahle res ;urges of
- ',,Canada and the world-wide recognition
• of there 'give us ample guarantee-. of
continued material progress,
THE COLONIAL. CONFERENCE. -
•=
- -.LOCALISMS.
—Percy Hilts. of Belleville,visit-
ed friends in town on Thursday
last.
_g. G. Kerr, of • Toronto spent
Sunday at the home of his parents
--__._-here.
—Mr. Hilts, of Toronto, spent
Sunday with Thomas and Mrs.
Brya
—i. W. Hopkins, of Toronto,
spent a day last week with Pick-
• ering friends.
—Mrs. (Dr.) Bateman, of Toron-
to, visited .her parents, B. and
Mrs. Bunting, over Sunday.
—Joseph Gibson, of New •York
City, paid a flying visit last week
to his sister, Mrs. L. Squires.
—Miss B. Bunting is spending a
• week at Little Britain, the guest
of Rev. J. E. and Mrs. Moore.
—Mr. Auguste Cameron, of Knox
College,. occupied the pulpit in St.
Andrew's church, on Sunday last.
—Mr. Morley, a student of Wy-
• Cliffe College, Toronto, -officiated
.in St. George's church, on Sunday
>' -.last.
—John Dickie was in the city on
Tuesday.
—See the fine display of Xmas
Gifts at the Drug Store. They
are swell. t
—John Dickie & Co. have been
appoiuted agents for the Semi -
Ready, Limited. Call and see
samples.
—Bargains for Friday, Dee. 18.
1 lb. mixed peel 15c., 7- lbs. rolled
oats 25c. Our bargains in raisins
and currants is good for this Fri-
day, Dec. 6th. D. Simpson & Co. *
—Geo. White, of Duubarton, has
disposed of his farm to a Toronto
man. John Creighton who has
occupied the farm will move to
the fourth concession, north of
Cherrywood. • - -
—The regular meeting of .the A.
O. U. W. will be held on Tuesday
evening next when important
business will be transacted. A
full attendance of members is re-
quested. George Brown., D.. D. G.
M., of Saintfield, is expected to
make his official visit, that evening
—The many friendsof Miss Be-
tha Palmer, will •be pleased to
know that she has so far recovered
from the effects of the recent oper-
ation as to be able to leave the
hospital, and is now with her sis-
td -Mrs: F. H. Doyle. -:Although
still very weak. Ler progress to-
wards recovery -is very rapid, and
she expects to be at the hoiue of
her perants in a short time.
—We are indebted to Geo. W.
P. Every for a copy of a recent:is-
sue of the Daily Cataract Journal
of Niagara Falls containing a his-
tory from the tiuie of its organi-
zation to the present of the Drlim-
mond. Hill . Presbyterian church.
The Jutttnal in speaking of Mr.
Harper says, "The Rev. Mr. Harp-
er•_is a man of learning far beyond
expectations in so young a • man.
He: is possessed of a magnetism
that draws his congregation, and-
especially- the young folks, to him.
Rather than powerful and pro-
found. •his sermons sire sweet and
appeal to the reason and under-
standing of his congregation. He
believes in giving in his sermons
something that will stay by his -
hearers And not in. showering
upon 'thew an array of beauti-
ful phrases that hold a momen-
tary attention and are almost
immediately forgotten." •
-leer many friends will regret
to hear of the death, after a pro-
longed illness, of AnnTool, relict of
the late D. M. Decker, of Whitby,
wipich took place at the home of her
daughter. Mrs. Mabee, of Odessa,
on. Satu rnay, Nov. 20th. at the
age of 74 years. Mrs. Decker was
a native of .Pickering, having been
born on the farm now owned by
R. Deverell, She lived in Pieker-
ing until about 25. years ago
when Mr. Decker was appointed
gavernor of Whitby gaol, a po-
sition which he held until his
th about six years -ago, Mrs.
Decker being at the same time
matron of the ggaol. For the
past two or three years Mrs.
Decker has resided with her
daughter, Mrs. Mabee. The
funeral which took place on Mon_:
day: to the Disciple burying
ground was largely attended, the
services being conducted by Rev.
Wm. Forester, of Toronto. She
had five of a family, Mrs...(Dr.)
Mabee, of Odessa, Charles and
George, of Buffalo, the' others
having died in childhood. A-
mong those from ' a • distance
who attended the funeral
were, Mr. McLeish, ' Mr. . and
Mrs. W. IH. Field, and Miss
Woodruff, of Toronto; Dr. T. A.
and Mrs. Young, of Markham, and
Wm. Tool, of Barrie. ..
• —It is with deepest regret that
we report the death of one of the
oldest. residents of this township,
Elizabeth Madill, relict of -the late
Benjamin Hartriek, at the age of
80 years, 8 mouths and. 22 days.
About six weeks'ago,'she contrart-
ed,a cold and being in a weakened
condition she. Was 'unable to shake
it off and she gradually sank 'un-
til death ended .her sufferings on
Monday, Dec. 2nd at the home of
her daughter, Mrs.' Thomas Wil-
son,- Her- funeral took place
yesterday when her remains
were conveyed to the Union
Cemetery . for interment. -The
deceased was born'.on Yonge
Street, Toronto, in 127. From
there she.moved with- her parents
to Markham, thence to the third'
concession of Pickering. While
living. there in 1840, she married
Benjamin •Hartriek.. Shortly
after this•she with.her husband,
moved to the base line,' where she
ever since resided: Fur a number
of years she has been in
very poor health She has
trine of a family, Mrs. Thom-
as Wilson, of the base line
with 'whom- she has been liv-
ing in late years, Geo. B.. of Hart=
ney, Man.. and• Mrs. John D.
Rosa?, -• of Brandon, .. Man., the
other members having died some
years ago. She, is also surviv-
ed by four sisters and one broth-
—John and Mrs. Boyes returned
home on Monday after spending a
week with their relatives in East
Toronto.
—The township council will
• meet att Brougham on Monday
-next for the transaction of gen-
eral business. -
-.-Russel Carruthers, who is now
completing his -comae iu Whitby
Model School, will teach in S. S:
No. 4 East during 1908.
—This week at Richardson's
Grocery—Finnan Haddie, Ciscas,
,Herring, Oysters, Cod, Fresh Sal-
mon.- Leave your order or phone.
We deliver any where. . -
-Miss Mabel Wright, who has
taughtin the Ty-roue.public school
successfully during the past year,
has been -engaged to teach in- the
Brock Road school for the conning
year. .
_Say boys ] a large 'shipment of
Skates. Hockey Sticks, Skate -
Straps, Shin -guards, Ankle -sup-
porters, Pucks &c. has just.arriv-
ed at Chapman's. -Call and see
them.
—Mrs. Wm. Rosso, of Brandon,
tr Man.. and George Hartriek, of Un-
derhill, Man.. are here at present
owing to the- serious illness and
death of their motber, Mrs. Benj.
Hartriek.. -
—The first severe frost of the
season occurred on Tuesday night
when the mercury registered about
zero. Some report the tempera-
ture as being several degrees be-
low zero.
—Our merchants are now busy
preparing for the Christmas trade.
,a -large stock of fancy goods has
been laid in by the respective mer-
:• --Chante. There is no use in going tc
the city to buy your presents when
- • yon can get as good satisfaction
honse—..,
-and deal with your home` m�erreh
`'ants. You will thus save money.
—Rev, W. Moore, of Braeside,
has accepted the call extended to
him by St. Andrew's, Pickering,
rand .St- John's, Brougham. His
induction will take place on Thurs-
day, Dec. 12th, when Rev. W. R.
Wood, of Dunbarton, will preside
and induct. Rev. Mr. Kerr, of
. West Hill, will preach, Rev. Mr.
• • Hodges, of Oshawa, will address
— -the minister, and Rev. Mr. Wood
ravels address the congregation. .
—Our residents should. not for-
get the fact, since winter has now
arrived, that a by-law is in force.
in our village, -making it the duty
of every property -holder to keep
clear of snow the sidewalk ad-
jacent to' his or her premises. If
`:this -duty is not attended to, the
`police trustees have the power to
.`engage a person to perforin the
work and have the costs charged
• up against the person thus neglec-
' ting his duty, and. have the same
collected as taxes.
• —The • Ontario Provincial Fair,
which,is one of the leaditig fairs of
the. Dominion, will be held in
Guelph frojn Monday, Dec. 9th to
-Friday, Dec_. 13th. The railroads
-will issue single fare tickets for
.=the round trip, good going -from
-Dec. 7th to Dec. 13th, both inclu-
sive, and good to return_ up to and
including Dec. 18th. • A .popu-
lar programme is arranged con-
sisting of addresses by promi-
nent men, and the musical part
of the programme will beunder
the direction of Capt. T. E. Rob -
'son, of London... _
—The anneal meeting of the
. Pickering Vigilance Committee
-rill be held in the town hall,
Pickering, at 7.30 p. in. on Tues-
day, Dec. 10th; for the election
:.'of officers for the' ensuing year
and, the transaction of any
other business that rna•y conte be -
;'.fore the meeting. A full atten-
• dance of members is requested.
••_' The Association has now a mem-
- bership of about' 150, and there is
no doubt that the existence of the
Association has been effective in
-Choice Separator Butter at 25
cents a pouud at E. Bryau's.
—G. W. McGill, who has taught
in S. S. No. 2, daring the year,
has. we understand, resigned.
—W. H. Field, of Toronto, spent
a couple of days last week with
his parents, John and Mrs. Field.
-Mrs. W. V. Richardson and
Miss Annie Cornell spent Monday
and Tuesday visiting with rela-
tives in the city.
—Mrs. John Field, who has been
confined to her bed the past three
weeks through a a severe attack
of bronchitis is now slowly recov-
ering.
ecov-
ering -
-The special services which
have been conducted in the Ai -al-
ley Methodist church by the past-
or, Rev. J. C. Bell, have been con-
cluded.
-We have just completed the
publieatiou 'of the constitution of
the Pickering College Old Scholars'
ssociation, which can now be ob-
aiued from the secretary.
STOUFFVILLE
W. and Mrs. Cameron moved with
their household goods' to Victoria
Road on Tuesday.
Died.—At Carterton, St. Joseph Is-
land. on Friday, Nov. 8th, inst., Eliza-
beth Lehman, wife of Jesse Grove Ree
sor, aged 65 years, 6 months and 1 day
Asleep in Jesus. Mr. and Mrs. Reesor
were formerly well known and highly
respected residents of Stouftville.
--Tribune. _ . • -
`q••
WHITEVALE
•
Wade Toole is spending the winter
at the Agricultural College at Guelph.
The work in that great college is being
appreciated by the farm lads.
Fred -Wilson, of Toronto, called alp -
on Thotnas Beare hero recently. pur-
chasing produce for his new business
in the city. Fled is doing welt.
In afire that visited Sintalut , Sask.
on Monday evening of last week, W
A. Wilbur's boarding - house, alon
with a number of oth-er buildings. w
consumed: Most of the furniture wa
saed, yet the loss will' be cons)ide
abvle-
Col. Britton. of Locust Hill, rel'ebrat- i
ed his elst birthday on Sunday.- -Al-
though bright and cheerful. he has
been confined to his room for some
little time now., •We all—wish the aged
veteran many happy returns of his
birthday.
The Whitevale Bible class bas just
closed another successful year in its
good work.. - They recently met at the
home of the teacher, James Kayes, of
Brock road. and were entertained. It
meets every Sunday '. morning at 10
o'clock.
Muui-cipalaffairs forthetownshipare
beginning to be revolved in the minds
of thefpeople. There is a talk of a lively
election for all tbe..oftices at the com-
mand
ofthe people. Reeve Todd will
likely retire from the field, while Jas.
McFarlane. of Claremont, islooked up-
on as his successor. Now that the coon
ty council is made up of reeves and
deputy -reeves. a keener interest is felt
in the local offices. - -
When the Stomach. Heart, or Kidney
nerves get week. then these organs always
tail. Dont drag the Stomwb; nor
st•mdate the Mart or Kidneys, That
is dimply a makeshift., Get s prescription
known to druggists everywhere 'es Dr
Shoop's Restorative. The Restorative
is prepared expressly for these weak in
side nerves Strengthen thew nerves,
build tbenl op with Dr Shoop's Restore
tive-tablets or liquid—and see bow quick
ty help will come. Free sample test
sent on request by Dr Shoop Racine, Wis.
Your health is surly worth this simple test.
Bold by T M McFadden. _ - -
TIME TABLE--Ptokering. Station t3
T. R, Trains going East dues as follows—
'No. 6 . Mai! 8.26 A. M..
12 Local . . 2 43 P: M.
" 14 Local . . 6.04 P. M.
Trains going • %vest does as follows—
No. 13 Lo al . 8.11 A. 31.
11 Least . . 2.18 P. M.
7 Mail • . . 8.35.P. M,
*Sunday included.
The very best, 5 ga11c
for $1.00. ts
E. BRYAN,
Pickerin
g
as
9
Grand Display at Dickie's
!Choice Xrnas Groceries, Etc.
y �E have a long time enjoyed the reputation 'of keeping and of
Wselling the best goods, especially iu fresh, clean Groceries. We
have now a very choice stock for the festive season, including
-Candied Peels, Pure'Spices, Extracts, New Fruits, Etc. Our Citron,
Orange and Lemon Peels are the best. Our new Currants, Raisins.
and Figs are as good as money can buy.. We make special mention
of our new select seedless Valencia rtaisins--these are very rare, extra
choice and.cheap. Every one who wants the best, grown without
seeds, will buy them—nothing so nice for the Christmas cake and
putting in the New Years' pudding. . -
Choice new Oranges, Lemons, Spanish Onions, Cranberries,
Cooking and drawn Eating Figs, shelled Walnuts, Almonds, Mixed
Nuts, Candies. Best Granulated and Yellow Sugar very cheap. Pure,
fine ground Icing Sugar only six cents per pound.
Remember, we keep the best in fine•Teas, choice. Coffee ground
in one minute; Chocolate and Cocoa, Farley Biscuits, Etc. . •'
We are expecting a big rush during all this month. Bring
along your order, small or large, and we will be sure. to please you,
and at the sante time you will see our big display- of CHRISTMAS
FANCY GOODS. We will tell you more about them next week.
1 SANTA CLAUS will again [Hake his head -quarters at our store.
Jol�� ickie
Cedar Timber Wanted
�-�-- -•gin.
•arc-�"'�"'
'-;;111;;40411,.
SOUVENIR
is the
Ei\DER
We give you a written guarantee that this Range will work
perfectly, if directions for use are followed.
" BUY +SOW. - Your money will be cheerfully refunded.if
Range does not work satisfactorily. .
All - kinds of heaters, Oaks and Base -burners.
We need your business—You need our Ranges. They're the beat.
Hardware and 'Stoves
S
HAP
• Sealed Tenders will. be received :
tip to
Saturday, Dec. 7th,1907
•
For the suppiy•and delivery of the fol-
lowing quantities of good and sound
sawn cedar timber and posts. for use
of the Municicipality of 'the Township
of. Pickering, viz :
L The following to be delivered on
siding south of Spink•s Mills, Picker-
ing Village : — —
10,000 ft., 5x6, 16 feet long
2,000 ft., 5x6, 14 feet long
1;500 ft., 10x10, 16 and 18 feet gong,
half of each length
1,000 ft„ 2x6, 16 feet.long
100 round posts, 8 feet long, not
leas than 6 in. in diameter at top end.
2. The following to • be delivered at
the Village of Brougham*: . , .
5,000 ft., 5x5,•16 feet long'
2,000 ft., 5x6, 14 feet long
1,500 ft., I0x10, l6 and 18 feet long.
half of each length -
100 round posts.'S feet long, not
less than 6 in. in diameter at top end.
3. The following to be delivered at
the township lumber yard in the Vil-
lage of Claremont :
2,000 ft., 5x6,.14 feet long'
.
1,500 ft., 16x10, 16 and 18 feet long,
half of each length
1,000 ft., 2x6, 16•feetlong -
All of said timber to he delivered at
the places named not later than the
15th day' of May. 1908. The lowest or
any tender not necessarily accepted.
Envelopes enclosing tenders should be
endorsed "Tenders for Timber."
By order of the Council,
DONALD R. REATC)N. '
Tp. Clerk, n-hitevale. P. O:
November 16th 1007. 7-0
;;,:•putting a stop to thieving that I er, Charlotte Bell, of Whitby,
was so prevalent a few years ago. Saenh Peters, of Gwillimbury,
Every farmer especially, should
secure the protection of the Asso- llary Ann Madill, of Markham,
• dation by becoming a men: bet-. Ellen Sharpe, of Mount Forest,.
Attu nd the sauna[ !nesting and and Henry Madill, of Brough-
hav'.. your lame enrolled. ;.r:—,_,:. am.
Seasonable Ho�ds
C Parlor Cooks, Beaters with
STOVES and RANGES daplex grates,
Oil Heaters, Etc.
- . Nails. Tar, and Felt Paper,.Locks,,
BUILDING MATERIAL Hinges, Glass, Putty,
}
1. Hammers, Saws, Asea, Etc.
Carti•ldges, Shot, Powder, -
HUNTERS'SUPPLIES .and
and• •
111 Shells, loaded and empty; "Etc.
Well -made Root Baskets 25 cents and 40 cents -each; also a' nett
-stock of Horse Brushes,'Curry Conry. -
•C
Shoves and Hardware
N
-NEW-.GOODS FOR FALL
• =Our H. B. K. Brand of Underwear, Top Shirts, Socks and
Storni Coats are guanteed to give satisfaction. ',va8
r .
077=7R.C.A.'Ta
Before buying call and see our special beaver cloth,
t lined with otter collar. •
R. A. BUNTING,
Pi
n
el