HomeMy WebLinkAboutPN1907_12_27. vottootostal 11Larbo.
• - - • - •
Dental - _
R. R. M. STENVART, Markham.
DENTIST.
Honor Graduate of Toronto University
. _Graduate Royal Collegtof Dental ilinresont•
OFFICIO—OPPOSITE THE POSTOFFICE.
Open daily 9 a. at. to e v. m.,
Residence. Main St., North.
AT UNIONVILLE EVERY FRIDIY.
i. ni.tit 4P. in. -Office civertiothmerfellit &
Silver's Store. 37M
- • _ Medical - -
A 14. BELL M. D.. C.-
- - -
M.•
l
9 Late House Surgeon of the Kingston
. General Hospital. _Successor to Dr. M. Bate -
=an Office hours 8 to tO a m, 1 to 3 p m and 6
-
$o8p ca. Pickering. Out: • -44-1y
--
(1 EO. N. FISH, M. A.
• VA PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Member of College of Physicians and Surgeons.
Ont. Associate Oototter, County of Ontario.
Office Hours -8 to 10 a. M. 612.d 1 .o&.and 6 toe
p.m. Brougham. Ont. 11—ly
T- HERBERT KfDD, 3f. V., C. M.
•ler • Member College of Physician" ani Sur-
geons of Ontario, Late House Surgeon of Gen-
, eraL Emergency and Burnside Lying-in Hosvi-
$ala of Toronto. Office in Alexander Morgan's
resident:kat. opposite Methodist ettirch. Clare•-
:: moot. Ont.• - 251y
PICKERING. ONT. . FRIDAY, DEC. 27, 1907
-...-Without a Doubt
We have thelaagest stock of single and
double harness the town has ever had.
Not only -the largest, but qualit 'the
beat, genuine hand -made goode.
HALTERS HALTERS
We have all sizes and descriptions,
first-class stock, all hand -made.
WINTER 1S-COldING
We have an excellent stock of
Horse Blankets.
HOREB. LAP. RUGS WHIPS GALORE
Curry Combs, brushes, gall cure, hoof
ointmentharness 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 Gears" eve;
shown in Pickering. Do your buying
now and avoid the h aro( bearer Xmas.
Let us put your purchases aside -for
you. only a small deposit 'required.
Our Xmas.goods include fancy cases.
toilet sets, jewel crises. jewellery,burnt
leather hookasouvenir_ goods,novel-
ties. holle stationery, flne perfumes.
Le tand many other suitable gifts.
ga....•
Pr REDavnt•i—We always have,* eom-
' plete stock. .
Stor:. Foono—Try our own large pee-
' large fOr 25r. 'Agent- for Hess and
Ctirne'ree Fi)ods, .. ,
EYES tEsTED FREE—Satisfaction
guitriinteed.- • •
Yon. PRESCRIPTIONS . carefully coin-.
. . .
. .
pounded'. -,--_ .
-t E. FAREWELL. Q. 0., BARRIS-
' ta • aanaeornszy Crown Attorney, and County
27-• otiaitor . Court 1101244. Whitby. 10-• •
L- T. HARCLAY. Brrrister-at-Lsw.
• Solicitor, Notary Public. Special Kauai-
"' Der for HMI Court of Juane". - Sucees•or t
- Mews. Dow & McGillivray. Brock Striet.
'
Whitby. 71y
, veterin/firg. ••- .•
, •
HOPKINFI,VETERINARY 60B-
- GEON, &reclaim of Pi' Ontario Vet -
rimer, Collee. Toronto, registered member
1 the °alert* Veterinary Medic& A.ssociation.
and rettdence one and one quarter miles
• art* of Green River. 'Office and shoeing forge
Alfr hours 8 to 11 a.m., and 1 to 1 p.m. Private
katiephone id my office F O. address. Green
74war. Out
•1) moans** garb*.
D
Issuer of Marriage
• Lioenses in the County of Ontario.
Ogee at store and bis residence, Claremont.
BIIN'rING, Issuer Marriage
-1E-1• Lieiitaes-for the County of Ontario. Of.
". %ma the stare or at• his residuum'. Pickering
liege. 1-y
. B EATON, TOWNSHIP OLE aK
D• Conveyancer, Commissioner for taking
Aeoountant Rte. Money to loan
ell farm poverty. "Issuer of Marriage
me" Whitevade, Ont.
•
POST1LL, Licensed Auctioneer,
• for Counties of York and Ontario. Mac-
_
lion sales of all , Muds attentied to on shortest
notice. Address Green River P. 0, Ont•
- •
. TF POUCHER, Licensed Ajaction-
• a.. ear, Valuator and Collector for the Conn
• ales of York and Ontario ' All kinds of "motion
gales conducted and valuations made at mod-
' erste charge. Astatee and consignment* con-
sistantly. managed and sold- by auction' or
• private sail. Mortitagea, rents, notes and
general accounts promptly collected and satis-
factory- settlements guaranteed. Phone or
. wits for term* and varticulara. Brougham.
• Ont. Dates mat be fixed by phone Nzwa
office.
Furniture....
0 A full line of first. -
•(siege furniture now
•
on exhibition in
. • •
• enr' ware rOoms.
Prices right.
R. S.-
Piekering, On
T. M. McFadden,
. _ Dispensing Chemist.
PICKERING, • - - 'ONTARIO.
agner & Co.
Have a full line ox rresh and cur-
ed meats constantly on hand.
- - -
Spice Roll, Breakfast Baccin,
Ham, Bologna, Weiners, etc.
_ •Highest prices paid for •
_• Butcher's cattle.
REAL .ESTATE
Insurance and - -
Conveyancing Done
House and Lot for sale or to rent:
Also Planing Mill for sale.
_150 acre Farm forsale.
If you went to'buy sensor rent, call
,at my pffice. Bargains.
-
Fat Hogs Wanted
•
have the eobtraet witlf Wight'
& Co., Pork Packers, Toronto, to
supply that firm :with all the live
hogs they reqoire, and would like.
• to have..your...hogs... I .will pay
Within 15e. of Toronto price until
.further notice. -•
Write, .phone o.r. apply to-
-John A. White
BRoro-HAm00 -
DOMINI -ON BANK
•
non Office, 'Toronto
•
Capital authorized ° '5,000,000
• .Capital paid. up_ • $, 3,8.00,000
• Reserve fund and'undi-
•
vided profits . 4,900,000
•Deposited by .the pulilic 35,500,000
" Tiotal-ass-ets" - • • • 49,000;000'
-
WHITBY BRANCH. •
_ General Banking Bnsiness
transacted. ,
• Special atrention given to.the collect
tion of farmer's sale ana
• • other notes.
• . • SAVINGS DEZARTMEZZT.
• . pepCeitti3 received , of $1. and
'apwardF.
•
in.terest allowed at higheS,
, --torrent ratea. • ' • ..
a .i.vegesofd4 roo'n-44-4 •y,•
• Po.' •
W. 7. Richardson.
-Nbtaiy Pubik, Pfekeiltni.
9ickering
First-class rigs for hire --
Day or night.•
-Bus meets all trains
Teaming promPay attended to.
Agent -for Canada Carriage Co.
W. H.
Peak,Pickering.
__Central
BUSINESS CALEGE
f TOriinto,•haS ktarted thous-
ands of young men and Women
on the Tay way to independ-
ence and success. ..Let“ts give
you the right start. Write for
Catalogue and plan togpend the
next six months with us. Enter
.• Address W. H.
Shaw, Principal, .Y.onge and
gGerrard Sts., Toronto.
•
STIM111111
1111?//71' -orr,
BRITISH CANADIAN
Xmas Offer -123 50 for 9 months' course.
*wilte before Dec. elgt, 15 years exeerience.
ARITISH OAN&DI.ANIBUSIZ4ESS COLLEGE
Yong° and mob:. Sts„ Toronto,
tMiss.May Lacy, of Dunbarton spent
a few days last week in the city the
guest of of Pat and Mrs. Pheney.
DUNBARTON
_MARKHAM .
. • -
HIGHLAND •
CREEK
Wesley Squires, -of Highland Creek,
came near losing his valuable cow by
it eating a sack of buckwheat, but is
now recovering.
The death occurred here Sunday
night of Mrs. Major Harper, the• wife
of the police magistrate of this town.
Mrs.. Harper was one of the moat
charitable women in this county and
to -day her good deeds are. recalled in
mournful sympathy with the bereaved
husband and family. .
. WHITEVALE
• It is oar sad duty this week to chron-
icle the death of one of the oldest res-
-dents of the township. Ann Garland,
relict of the. late Patrick .Nowlen.
which took_place on Tuesday Dec. 24th
at the age of 7S years. ,Iler fimeral_will
take place today when her reMains will
he conveyed to_the R. C. cemetery,
Pickering. for interment. The late 31rs
Now la n wee a native of. Belfa.sa Ireland
and emigrated to Canada with her
father's family when- young. -They -set-
tled in the township of Pickering
where she bas resided fur the past
years. She mart iecl the late Thos
Larkin to whom shebad three children
John Larkin. of Whitevale. Mrs. I.
Gle-eson, of aireenweod. und -Annie
(Sister Georgenlia of. Loretto. Abbey.
Toronto: After six yems of widow-
hood she married the late P. Nowlan
try whom she had three sons, Thoine4s..
James and Robert. •
, •
SCAREQR0 •
•
Mrs.. Oke. of thfr village. had the
misfortune to have jaer poeket picked
of 820 while shopplag in the city last
week.
Our village had a lively niSpearence
on Monday last when the voters turn-
ed out to record their votes for their
favorite candidate forCentre York.
The workers in •the Washington
Sabbath School are busy preparing
for their anniversary on the 12th and
Otlfaof January. when a big time is
expected. ,
The local option campaign is being
vigorously carried on by the temper-
ance workers and many good Meet-
ings have been held_ throughout the
township. Every voter shiruld turn
out and record bis vote when the poll
is opened:
There will be a lively time at the
ronnicipal- nomination at Woburn on
Monday next. While we' have not
heard of .any new aspirants for the•
council, there will be a keen contest
between Andrew Young, the present
reeve, and W. D. Annie, comiciflor,
for the reeveship. •,
00*
"'•• -.GREEN RIVER • r: ,
•
Merry Christmas and a Happy New
Year to all, .
Nellie Wilson: of BrOoklin, is spend-
ing her vacation at her home bete. •
Miss Gertie Robinson is visiting her
sister, Mrs. Mussleman; of Stoutfville.
A large' number from here attended
the anniversary in Whitevale•Sunday
last. . , • ,'
The heavY. snow storm on Monday
made good sleighing in this pitt•t of
the township.. '
Da•H.-Hap%ins attended the Veteri-
nary Medical Association in Toronto
Tuesday lagt.
Clarence Young's sale was well at-
tended- Friday last and good prices
were realized._ .
Geo. Barnes. Of St. Catharines, was
thaguent•of•Wm. 0. and Mrs. Barnes.
a few days; last week. •
Mrs. P. R. Hoover has returned
home -after spending several weeks
with her daughter in Toronto.
Miss Minnie -Wilson, who has been -
in Toronto for some man.ths with her
aunt, has returned to her hoine.'_
At the teacher's Meeting held last
week, the following officers were ale
painted: for'th-e year : Supt., Mi. H.
Hopkins ; Men's Bible class, A.- E.
Lehman ; Ladies' .Bibie...class, 31 rsa A.
Hoover. • Teachers for other .classes
are Mrs. Elias Bice, Miss Lillie Barton,
Lily' Wilson, Eva Hopkins. -Sec'y-
treas, Stanley 'Hoover, ;
Roy Caster; Organist; L. Wilson ;
Stewards,. Howard' Hoover, George
Gray.'
`Don't forget the Sabbath school
anniversary next Sunday. Aftert.00n
servie kt 2.30, evening service Fit.7
o'clock. Special music at each service.
On Monday evening a grand enter-
tainment will.he given by the school
and others. An old fashioned fire-
plitee will he set up from .which the
presents willhe distributed at the.
close of the program. All are invited
to conte and have a •good- time wittrits
in closing the Year 1907. Doors open
at 7.o'olock, concert at 8 p.. m. Dec.
29 and 30.,
Zlacksin ithing1 Preventia. Drukgists everywhere
drngeists some little Candy Cold Tablets
To check 'a cold quickly. get from your
are. row dispensing Pretentics, for trey
are not only safe, but decided y effective
and prompt. Preventics contain no, lnin
ine, no laxative, nothing harsh or sicken-
ing. Taken at •the "sneeze stage" Pre
ventios will prevent Pneumonia, Bro.])
a - specialty, • •Lc.hitia, La Grippe, stc. Hence the cane,
1Preventica Gond Ecr feverish Clad':
01•Ca:B=)•;;),,T I ren. "'mantic* 25 -seta,' °
The unaersigned having bought out,
the blacksmithing business of G.
Law. is prepared to do black- •
smithing in all its lines.
Horse -shoeing -
•
- •
- The large audience present at the
Odd -Fellows' Concert on Friday night
last was delighted with the entertain-
ing programme.
The pecking of the manhole of the
boiler of the Speight Wagon Co., blew
out on Wednesday afternoon conse-
quently the employees had tr short
holiday.
SeinatorCampbellsubmitted theplans
of the new post-officeto the village
eouncil at a special 'meeting last Sat-
urday :Memnon. • The councillors ex-
pressad themselves as delighted with
the appearance of the proposed build-
ing and the aecoincidation it would
provide.—Economist,
• • ••CHERRY,WOOD •
Another old resident of the town-
ship passed away on Christtuas Dav
in the person of Mrs. a:Ibarles Smith,
at the advanced age of 79 years, after
an illnees ofeight weeks, .from an ab-
SnSf. The funeral will take place to:
day (Friday! at 1.30, When her -remains
will he conveyed to Erskine cemetery
•for interment. Deceased, who was a
native of Yorkshires England, emi-
grated to Canada at the age 6f flve
with her parents. settling in Markham
townsip, where she resided for five
•years. After residing for shrive years(
in Uxbridge she Moved to Chertywood,
where elle bag lived for 34 years. She
had a family of six. two' sons and forrr
datiitirteia, two of the latter being
dead. Those surviving are John and
Maintain and -Mrs: C. K. Petty. of
Cherrywood, and Mrs. F. C. Qnivell.
otiMount Albert. Her husband -also
survives her. She wa'w an honored
member of the Methodist church and
highly -respected.
•
••_ WHITBY '
The people of the Bay Mourn the
loss of Mrs. Eliza Donnely, who de=
parted this life on Suhday morning.
December 15. Mr!.,. tonelly was an
old and well known resident of the
Port-, and web highly respected by
all her neighbors:
Abdo K. Aziz, of Sunderland forme
resident of Assyria. hasapplied for
naturalization.
Mrs. Wm. Balmer` *as et Guelph
last week attending the an.nual Pro-
Vinaol'Convention of Woman's Insti-
tutes held at. theAgricultund College.
Mrs. Balmer was a delegate from the
Wh it }Ty bra rich.
Saturday's snow storm- delayed the
trains from the east many hours. The
20 p. m. train going west- did not
reach here till 3 o'clock in the morning
and the morning train due here at 5.05
didbot reach -here till noon on -Sunday
At the General Sessions held last
week theinterim appointment of the fol
lowing County Constab'es was approv-
ed. Carlson Stevens, Oshawa; Alfred
Hatterfleld, Cedardale; Frederick Wan
stall; John Rose Hadley, Pibkering
Township; Alfred Hind; Oshawa. .
• -
Mr. lind Mis. J. 0. Henry started on
a -trip last Tuesday, intending.to go
as far west as Denver and south from
there to spend the winter in Califor-
.
nlia
Mrs. Wm, Beer -that was, but Mrs.'
John • Darly now that now is, of De -
trait. has been .visieing hersister. 'Mrs.
Thos. Bruner, Cedar Dale, and also
friends in Oshawa. "
Souse' imposter is going AbrOugh
East -Whitby culling himself Rev. Mr.
Tucker and pretending to collect
for the immigrant relief fund of Osha-
Wa. No person is authorized to either
receive or collect, except4, P. Ownes
andehief -.constable Hind. _• If.such a
man conies along telephone the Osha•
wa Police.—Vindicator.
Died.-0-n-Lob=3.4; • Cnn. 6, Darling-
ton. on Sunday. Dec, 15th, 1907, Cleo,
Wilson, in his 6Sth year.
The Bish-p-Bethune College closed
on Thursdayfor the Xmas. vacation,.
which extends over ' a period of three
weeks.
BowinapvilJe. -Dec-17, An.
Rowe Tapson, beloved wife`of Har-
ry -Lorne Martyn, lather 24th. year.
—Ref ol• er.- • •• •
MROUOHAM
Dr. G. N. Fish. was a city visitor
on Monday.
, NV. White is vititing with his
Cult At Cern-Wall. _
E. W. Bodell spent the Xmas.
'holiday. at Co-bourg.
.00
Mr. Pronse, -of Brooklin; spent
Sunday at J. Routley.- - — • -
Mr. Keast of Lindsay is. visiting
*Ulf his brother-Thos.-Keast. ,
D. Hogle, of Ha•rtney, Mall.,
ealfed.on his friends last week.
G. and Mrs. Hainilton, of Kes-
wick, are visiting -at C. Philip's-.
Miss M. NVilson. of Toronto,
spent the holiday with her parents.
C4earing- sale at the, Alger's
stores of mitts of 10 per cent off. *
N. Tomlinson • is visiting at, his
home on Yonge. • St. during the
holidays.
0. White, of.Edmonton. N. W.
T.. spent a few days last week
calling on friends.
.Mr. Wm. Hanson has served
his time (If one year with ,Mr.
a 11 on o
;414v4s. R. and IV. H. Phillips
NNW
NO -
aye You
a Friend?
Then tell him about Ayer's
Cherry Pectoral. Tell him
how it cured your hard cough.
Tell him why you always keep
It in the house. Tell him to•
his doctor about it. Doc-
_
tors use a great deal of it for
throat and lung- troubles.
"1 bad a terrible cold and eongb-and was
threatened with yneerneola. 1 irlad Advers
'ata'ettr;Yeisirtliliitaelriirgignaly__"amimegiieUider41
eoujh 1.1,31151rne."- IOWA Z. WHITMAN. Mom%
smteAramu.
KW.
Nat 'tam
tiers
•One of Ayer's Pills at bedtime wag
•hasten recovery. Gently laxative.
- NOTICE 00
'991
.. •
Our shop will he closed eVary
. -
Saturday afternoon.
CaSton.]erqj11 please govern thetri• •
• selves Accordingly. •- _
Good stock of ladders on hand from
neap 12e per round according
to size, etc. A •
• . .
W. H. JACKSON, BrockEriad.
_ -
WestArn. Bank •or
---
Canada.
Pickering Branch.
Ineurporated by set of Parliament NM
A ti tho ri zed Capital . -111.000,000; la,
•Subscribed . 555,000.00
Paid up - 555,000.00
Rest Account ,•' . 300,000.00
Assets - -6 000.000.00
acneCowaneivita; nt T. H. _____
. Csier
Special attention given to Farmer." Sale
Rotes Collections solicited and promptly.mado
Farmer's Notes diacounted American and
Foreign /exchange bought and sold Drafts lea
mud, &Tellable on all pgrts of the world
• Savings Bank Department.
•Interest allowed on deposits at high-
est current" rates, and credited or -- '
paid half -yearly to depositors.
KERR, Mgr.
Our business is growing so rapidly that •
we found it necessary to have •
• more room, therefore, we have
moved into the building
!ust west of the post.
• office and are
prepared to supply you with fine fresh -
groceries. hardware, graniteware and
chinaware, home-made' bread. meals. •
flour, coal oil. etc. More lines to fol- • '
low. See- our display of -Christmas
fruits, confectionery, china and , '•
glassware..
GEO. 'PHILIP, Grocer, .13roughatn
1
1
1
eismomins eimpasietsmas
Borman
Jewfier, Whitby
-
Is showing. this year a
• _bigger assortment of
• Suitable
Xmas
. *lifts
..Than ever, and you •
•will save
•
10 Per Cent:
, anyway on all purchases
• made from him.
• Open Evenings • -••••
Order•your purchases now and
have them put away for
future delivery.
Zia=assett,
Jeweler and Optician,,
Brock St. $orak.
Whitby,' •, Ont.
•
• •
•
IE :NEW :P1SURANCE int
troduaed in the House By the Finance
7- • - .?"-" Minister. -
•
.
• A despatch from Ottawa says : The, deposit the national securities or their
. • .
Gm
overnent insurance bill. was intro-
s -es duced by the Finance Minister in the
s Muse on Wednesday afternoon. The
ss. Government, Mr. Fielding said, had had
Hie help of able and impartial experts in
• preparing the measure.
The bill deals with the whole question
• -..:•••of insurance, and is a consolidation of
, • . stall insurance legislation, the changes
being made chiefly in regard to
• --"surance. The powers of the Government
are enlurged in the matter of the with-
' • drawal or refusal of a license renewal.
- The ftlinister may rut .off or refuse te.
renew a license for .any violation of the
-. • OWERS OF INSPECTION. . •
The powers of the insurance superin-
:.. tendent are widened and he is empow-
S, • ered to inspect the- offices of U. S. coin-
-.ponies. The superintendent is also em-
powered to make. valuations where
kieemed necessary. •
Trust funds are to be held by trust
1. companies, the private trustees es they
drop. off, being replaced by sueh corn-
.' ff. ponies. '
.; .DISTBII3UTI�N OF S1..7nPLUS.
•iniatead of Calling off annual distribu-
lion of surplus on deferred . dividend
pellcies. as suggested by the insurance
tionirnIssion, the bill calla for.a distribu-
, :ben bike -in •Itirte years. These funds'
art, to be shown as liabilititiesin. the re-
• pt rts. but depreciation in the value of
..• accurilles arc to -be allowed for... •• -
The insurance..commission
mended that, the expenses of . new bust-
., 1. mess be shown separately. TheJiil eon:
"I.- lams asClause its provide for -1t.°
•
• FIXING SALARIES.
. •
s- • Head office 'officials rire 'not to hate-
• .ans share in commissions. This was
••-•• another insurance eommission sugges-
:: ---tion.
- - FaIary -of ".O(tft-or upwerds is -to be
, ,• paid except by Gisler of whole Roard of-
. Directors. This. WO, the t;omintision
ess
Suggested. No salary agreement is to be-
' . made for more than five years. In case
cf all salaries or commissions over
$4,000 per year are to be shown in the
:,.; _annual reports. • . • ,
-S• • • . -REBATING PENALTIES.
Rebating Is not to be.visited upon the
'directors or managers, as •recomruended
by tire Insurance Cominissien, unless, the.
•
director or manager knows of the re-
bate. The penalty is $1,10) and the giver
es: • and taker of a rebeie is liable le. a $100
s• penalty.- Pension funds may be estab-
lished when authorized by the share-
- 7s.shokiers an polieyhoklers" entitled to
eStoste.
The United Stales .regulalien' as, to
voting. • recommended by the commis -sen. has been dropped' as difficult and
• scf doubtful expedience. The bill,- hew -
ever, provide .proxies niay-only be
• used when executed within two, months
a'rneeting.
The commission's recommendation for
standard policies has been moderated,
'the biff providing enly for standard pro-
visions to he contained in all policies;
, other provisions.may be allowed hy the
--superintendent of insurance. • feeveral
changes are made in regerd ki fraternal
- insurance. • • • .• • ,
• NEW BUSINESS SEPARATE. ,• •
•
lhat there he a separate policy for each
• Gevernment deposits are to be. in Do-
•
' minion or. Imperial securities," direct or
'• -• • -' ••
. guaranteed, and foreign companies may
Underw-riting by• persons not in an
.rate from the new, which is to be csJn-
ducted according to the National Frater-
line of business, sueS as life, accident,'
• sickness, et".
Incerporeted company is forbiddeb.
Existifig business is to -be kept sepa-
naf Congress ofstiortality. 11 is proposed
own countries. • • • •
The present act authorizes investment
hi public securities. There is nc change
.here, but the provision is enlarged, com-
panies being allowed to invest in guar -
Indeed Government or Imperial or Pro-
sincial securities..
• Outside of Canada, where a Canadian
company -does business, it may' invest
in bonds securtsi by real estate at a
twenty-five per cent. premium, with no
default of interest fe.r live years. • De-.
.bentures onsessa,yeare preferred stock,
paying four per -cent. for seven years,
and common stock paying five per cent.
rot- ten years, may also be invested in.
• The Government reserves 'the right to
refuse- -foreign securities. • While com-
panies may invest -cis a bond it is pro-
vided that no more Wm 20 per cent. of
Steck of any company may be purchased
by one...company. 'This prevents the
formation or acquisition gl .subsidiary
ecmpanies.
Loans may be made up -to CO per cent.
cf the real estate secw•ities.
Out side investments are termed to 20
per cents, of the securities instead of 10
pe cent. as formerly.
Companies . are gisen -five years in
•whien to readjust their investments,
farther 'extensions to -six yenrs being al-
lowed where necessary by the.Govern•or-
in-Councll. .. •
The bill, Mr. Fielding wild. might not
please •evcrybotly, -but the _Government
had. kx-iked for the happy. medium be-
tween the wants of the companies and
tilerecommenrinticin of. the Insurance
.Cerninission„ .The.rne.asure will be sent
Ln Tho- Ranking and ('Amtnerce Commit-
tee on its second reading, the cornpan-
is; ;being free to put their eases before
t"+committee. ,_
• - 'MED SISTER'S CLOTHES. 1
••, . •
Boy Was imitating Ilis_Parents
jog •Eaula.
•
A- de.spatch from Owen. Sound saye:,
On Wielnesdayrnorning•Mrs7.- J. tfathrea.
of Syclenham Township; near Walters
Falls. killed and prepared a .quanlity
of. fowl •Tor the Christmas market. and
in eosdoing; used a roll ef lighted paper
to singe_ the- dewie. after the' birds. had
been plucked. The operation- was wit.
lieSsed• by her two -and -a -half -year-old
scn.. That same evening. when Mrs.
Calhrra went out to do. the milkine she
left her sell with his sister, eighteen
riiorithS of age. in the house, and, dur-
11 g her absence. the little lad &sit a roll
ef Paper and li1 it at the fire and un-
dertook to imitate the morning's op-
erations hy -holding the burning paper -
• his -sister's cloth:ng. \\ hen the mo-
ther returned shortly attereshe was heir;
rifled' te .find sthe little. one terribly
turned. about the ,becie, rind. in. half an
!cur death ended Ps eufferings. •'
DANGEROUS EXPLOSIVE. -
. . -
Fong in Room Occupied 'by Two Con -
lifts at Montreal.
A despatch from Skint reel says:
Enough nitro-glycerine to blow up a hig
building Was -found by Mr, Millen Her-
sey. city analyst, in a hand satchel taken
'from the room Where Ratline and Har-
demin. two dangerous criminate, were
living at 8,8 Champ de -Mars street. The
two men, wero brought up before Judge'
Chequet on Friday. and pretended to
knew nothing about the explosive. Be7
sides. nitro-glycerine there were a few
sticks of dynairille, four detonators with
fuse attached. a bottle of cyanide of mer-
cury, and -a . lx.ittle, of chloral lydrine,-
CORlinonly, called "knock -out. drops.",
The men 'already .Stand. convicted, of rob-
bery of ,furs. . ,
EXPLOSION IN COAL 111
E
17b Men. Believed to Be Dead in Pennsyb
vanian Colliery. -
.•41.• despatch front Oonnellsville,
says: A great trembling of the earth.,
n dense cloud ot stroke from the mine
Opening on Thursday told of the fourth.
vent znine•disaster Of Ibis distriet.'The
eceno was at the -Darr Stine,- of the -Pitts-
- Lurg Coal Company- 17 miles west of
Connellsville,.and in the neigliboilesel
of two previous mine explosions I hat
have a !reedy eta Wiled upvatds of 100
lives. When ltigh1. is -Stied down over
• Rte.:Sr:el:en milletg vilInge it was al-
most certain that. 175 minors lind
in the 1)arr. Officials- owl iniiicrs
, d disagree 11p(111. 1)/0 nuniber-ef men 'n
• the mines. The fernier cairn that af-
• ler chocking the - they had 145
nien in the mine working on checks,
and upwards of 30 or 40 working asi
day laherers., haulers end tile:knell.
The miners (pi -1y that there aa at least
ese men in •the pit. After working all
eay •the reseuing parties were able t.
lorate only five todies.
'rhe explosion s one et the. most re-
- sparkable Ji the ,story- of this regkon;
, •
for -it 'is 'absolutely devied 'bf any el
the great ranine scenes witnessed aftcr
si disaster. Women have been sitting
ell day abut the mine mouth, and sto-
lid faces listen to the comment- cf the
Miners and the- spectakes.. •
'While the fan :as not destroyed by
theeXprosion, the ventilation was seri-
ously affectei, and 'Ihe, parties were
tumble to penetrate the mine for any
considerable distance. The bodies of
thc Men found in ••• the •itlain heading
were horribly mangled, • ,
Directly in front of the rescuing
pnrtv ivtidt penotrated JoNe. 21
healing, is an immense frillend it is
lefieved lo 1e .two hundred feetin
length. Tliis vill have to be reinev-
eel :before further prelgress can beeninle
iieliehing the entembed mennee
(51y hope given out for the lives f
the men Is that the force CT the air
current may isenetrale to them. and
tens keep ihese Ake 'A•ere eiet '110.11ed.
by the f.:'e the explosion elive.•nn„
ti! the great fill can be removed. „
lEADING MARKETS
:•DREADS,TUFFS.
Torontb, Dee. 24.Manitoba ,Wheat -
No. 1 northers, about nominal at $1.1S;
NO. 2 northern, 21.13; No. 3 northern,
q.10;. feed wheat. Ole to 62c; .No. 2
'feed, 51c to 52c, lake ports.
Ontario Wheat -No. 2 white or red,
('4c to 95c, outside; No. 2 mixed, 92c to
93c, outside:. -goose, 85e.
• Hour -Ontario whiter wheat 'patents,
fez export, $3.60 bid; -Manitoba patents,
special brand, $5.80 to $6; seconds, $5.-
20; strong bakers, 25.10.
Barley -No. 1.. 70e to 72c; No. 2, 68c
1. 70e outside; No: 3 extra, 115c to 67c.
Outs -No. 2 white, 44c to 45c, out-
side; mixed; 43c to 44c. outside.
el'eas-83Mc outside. •
liye-Ne. 2, 78e.
. Corn -No. 3 yellowAmerican. 7034e
to 71c Toronto freights;'new, No. 3 yel-
-low. 6i3eSc to 65e, delivery after Jan.
I:. new No. 3 yelkw; kiln -dried, 063c
te 67e. • . s
Buckwheat--02c,•otitside.
Bran -$19 to $20, • in bulk outside;
shorts, $21 to $22. •
. COUNTRY PRODUCE.'
. .. • .. -
Butter -Receipts are abode • equal to
requirements. •
Creamery prints ...0 .. 28c to 30c
• do. soiids 26e to 27c
Dairy prints 23e to 24e.
• di solids ..... • .... 22c to 230,
Inferior ..... . • . , . . . . . Wic to 21c
cheese.--43xe fe,e large and }3c for
Eggs-Siorage..- 22e per dozen in case'
kts; set cis, 26e, strictly' nesvola4
nominal at 30c to 35c. •
Poultry -For ' the best eldsa of- stock
there is a a fairly good- demand.
Chickens, choice - • • .• Sc to Pc '
Old fowl-
Inferior chickS and fowls . ..4cto• 5e
Young geese -• 'act') 9c
Young ducks_ ..e '8c to 9c
Young turkeys. c.hOica 10c le I2,Sc.
Thin turkCys• .. • • tic to Sc
Potattoes-Steady at Kr to 85c'
per.
tug in car lots on track- her'.
Beans -$I75 to. $I)5 For primes and
6/.85 to 81.95 for hand-pieked.
Venison -Him -quarters. ['Mc to 1e;
front quarlees„ Sc; carcases. 4Mc-: to
90- •
•Heney-Strained. steady at 11c to- 12c
per pound for 60,..pennel '• palls, and
12c to 13c for 5 te 10 -pound pall&
Combs at 21.75 82.5() per dozen:
Baled Hay-Timthy quoted -from 217'
L 217.50 per -ton on track here.
Baled -Straw-Quiet at 89.511.be 210.50
per ton en. track here. ern
. .
•••• ?" :4721
- - e
ONE QUARTER ARE INF
-••••,
e•
•
• :::•••
•
. , • -
Terrible Ravages of Bovine Tuberculosis
in New York. - '
A despatch from Ithaca, N.Y., says:
A startling revelation of the terrible
prevalence.of bovine tuberculosis in New
York State and an exposure of the utter-
insullicieney of the means noW furnished
by the Legislature for the control of this
disease has just been made before the
Tompkins County Medical Society by Dr.
V. A-. Moore, bacteriologist of Cornell
University and the foremost expert in
iJ4ne in the United States. Dr. Moore
ed that of 1,086 cows tested by Dean
a. •
Law -of the Cornell veterinary college 16, •
•1;14`,L cent. had •the disease. The -official. •
reports orthe State in 1904 showed that *.
of 2,417 animals tested 16 percent. had.
the disease. The State tests for the per-
ioe. of 1904-6. included 3,088 animals, of -.I's
which 22 per cent. were infected.
lir. Moore reached the -conclusion that . • :
of the one million eight hundred thou :• ••
sand milch cows in this State 440,000 . -
tar, infected- with tuberculosis. This, he. • . • •-•
said, would be a surprise even to cattle!,
men:
•-
-common to medium, $2.25 to $3.50;
choice cows, 23.25 to 24: common cows,
21.50 to 22: canners, 85c to $1 per cwt.
Prices of milch cows ranged from 819
te 850 each.
• Calves ranged froth 3 to 6c- per•lb. --
Export ewes sold at $3.75 to $4.25;
bisks and culls, 83 to $3.50;larnba, $4.50
to $5.50 per cwt. "
-The top price of hogs was 25_50 per
cwl. Lights and refs sold at $5.25, and -
sows at 63.75. per ewt.
• TWENTY-FIVE KILLED.
Military • Pd
oluder Slagane .Biew Up at
• Palermo. Sicily. -
• .. . •
-A despatch from Palermo says 1 A
terrific' explosion occurred on Thursday
evening; in the military powder Maga-
zine, where a lnrge quantity of dynamite
was stered, and was followed by a num-
ber of leesee.explosion.41, the. whole town
being badly shaken • and" dile People.
thrown into ,a ponle. . Annost Mune-,
diately names shot high in the air and
spread to the rums of heuses that had
ifallen-, adding greatliy to- the terror of
those whe•Wiere' in. the immediate teigh-
tx 1.11.640 of the disaster. , It Is estimated
that about twenty-flve persons were
kilted. and, .a •.hundred others iniered.
‘Vild'rumorS folloWed faSt- upon the•ex-
plosion, placing Abe numbers of kilted
and wounded ink the thousands, and
•troops were ordered outeld nid tire fire-
men in 'clearing away - the _wreck and
-serobring the Wounded: SeVerai honses-
that -stssodi above the 'nirielizine partially
cellapsed and their destruction was eon-
pletedtiv the fire One, of .these was an:
. ... _ . „
enligeantS' lodging house, and a num-
ber of emigrants were till -ed. -
PRON'ISIONS.
SmoSed and Dry Ss-tted Meat -Long
clear bacon, 10c 'to 10Mc; for tons and
c-aSes; -barns. medium and light. 14e to
15e;.heavY. 1234c to 13c; barks, 163e to
17c; shoulders, 10e; 'rolls 10c L.> ttiMe;
breakfast bacon. 15c to 13e; ;Seem
i71.61t.S 'out of pickle. lc 0 se- than Snicked.
.Pork--Sheel, cut„ 222.75 to .223 'for
barrel; 'mess. $1S Id 219.
Lard-Tiero.s, 11c; tubs, 12c; pails,
'.
'MONTREAL MARKETS:.
• Ntentrenl, Dec: 24 --There' is •a very
firm- !Ole to the . kcal flour 'market.
Choice spring wheat patents, 26.10; sec-
onds, 25.50; winter wheat. patents, 25.-
75 straight 'roflorS, -25.50; do_ in bag.
22.60 to 22.65; extra,. 211.05, to $2.10..
Millfeed-Slanikoba bran, 223: slieejee
225; 70 -0 -aria bran, 22.3.50 to,.224; mid-
dlings, 227. to 229rer ton, including
bagsi. milled Montle, 222' to 232. and
grain meuille.. 235 to 237 per ten. e -
Betted Oats -22.75; eorn, 21.20 to 8E-
10 per bag.
Clieese-Neventher . tail -ends, . 12c•to
1234'; Octobers. 12%c to 12Y,i-c;•Septem-
bers. 13c to 133-c.
Butter -Grass woe's, -28e; ciereent 're-
ceipts, 2634c to 27c. , -
Eggs -Newly -laid eggs. 30c to 32c;
selected skoek. 24c to 25c; No. 1 -col(1-.
storage. limed, 20c; Nu. 2, 14c to 15c
per dozen. ••
provisions -Barrels short ent.•triessii
$22.50 to $23: half barrels. 81.1.75 to.
212.25; clear fat backs, 223.50 to 224.50;
long cut heavy mess. 821 to 223; half
barrels doe. $10.56 to • 211.25; dry sail
*.long Clear backs, 103- to liMee barrels
plate beet, 213.50 to .215; half, barrels
doe $7.25 to 27.75; barrels 'illeayy•mese
leer, 210 to 211;, half barrels doe 25.50
in 26; compound lard. 10c to lte; pure
lard: 1234c to 13c; kettle -rendered 13Mc
to 14c; hams, 1234c to 13%c. accord-
ing to size; breakfast bacon. 14c-10 '15c;
Windsor bncon. 14%c to 153-c; fresh
killed abattoir dressed hogs, $8.50 -to
$8.75; alise, $5.75 to $6,'
"•
•
•
•
•
11 is'1Zsiewn• that up to Friday 93 per-
sons mot-. timer death and no loss than
100 ••were • injured by.' toe tei•rilie explo-
sienS on Thursdaybight in the military
rs-wder inegazine at Palermo. The work
• cf rescuing the wounded .waie continued,
,until daylight under conditions of, thc.
grealest elinteinly. • After the firm had
been, extinguished - the' teems used' an
electric searchlight. The -lodging house,
fe e emigrants. destroyed by Itie dames,
hes- given the. largest contingent of vic-
tims. fnere were many heroic rescues.'
. .-.
: NEW P kCIFIC SQl.tDRON. •
•
Esquintalt Will be Ntide the Base for
• Cruiser Fleut• .. .-
. A..despatchfrom reunion says-: • For'
seine time past. reports have been cur-
rent that the 13rilish Admiralty' was
eensidering the niw naval dostribution,
and it is now announced -that ,,a; Paci-
fic .arid North American squadron will
b constituted in May next, wiliteEsqub
malt me-thre probable base. The new
squatiren wilt consist of six cruisers of
Lite county class and the present. fourth
(senesce •quadron, which comprises the'
three flest-class armored cruisers. (:r -'s.
ey EtPi1tfs hd Ilegus, and the thiel -
lass pixnected • cruisers Indefatigable
and Brilliant. Though it would. be a
Mistake to exaggf.rate the importance
et' this rilovb, it possesses some signi-
!nonce as showing the. British Admie-
ally's' .view cif . the changed situation,
which the cruise of the American bat-
tleship fleet will bring about. The po-.
sition of Canada inethe scheme is not
yet known. „ ,
•
•I3UFFALO MARKET. •
:•
Buffalo. - Wheat - Spring
firmer; No. 1 nerthern. '21.10%; No. 2
red, .21.03e. winter higher. Corn' -
Higher; No3 while.' 58xe: No. 3 3.•el-
k w. 610. Oats -Firmer; No. 2 mixed
49c; No. 2 while, 553c. Rarley-95c to
21.15. Rye -No. 1, 90e on track.
NEW YORK WHEAT MARKET.
New York, Del. - Spol
steady; N. 2 red, 81.04% in elevator
rind $I.06% Led). afloat; No. 1 north-
(Tn. Duluth, $1.21X, f.o.b. afloat; No. 2
hard winter, $1.15% f.ceb. afloat.
' CATTLE MARKET.
Tel -onto, Der. 24. --Export cattle were
riot in particular demand. Export bulls
sold at $3.25 lo 24 per cwt.
Good to choice steeryeld at 84.25 to
$4.60; medium brought $3.60 k
• • TWO COBALT ACCIDENTS.
Joseph Tesnicre Found Dead at Bottom
of Sliatt.
• A despatch front Cobalt seys:. Joseph
Tesniere„ aged about 30 years, 8 French-
men with a married sister in Montreal',
was found dead at the bottom of the four
shaft at n depth of 152 feet on. Tuesday.
Deceased was working in the drift at the
80 -foot leVel. Having left ,Nverk with his
companions he returned-te secure a.pair
°Li -MIAs before ascending; nail nothing
More was seen of him alive. -
'Wediesday morning Supt. Leysen- of
the Townsite mine •and J. MeNight, a
young Scolehman, met with a blasting
accident. McKnight was gericusly• in-.
jhred --about the head and was removed
le the Red Cross Hospital. Both eyes
are said to he lost, and the doctors have'
no hopes of saying his Ole. Supt. Ley-
sen is cut about the face and has one
wrist lx.ne broken. IL appears Mc-
Knight encountered loose powder in the
end of the draft. probably in a caste'
bele unknown to him. Supt. Leyson was
close le McKnight when the explosion
Lock place. •
Canada's flour is tee dear -to selt in
Japan. reports W. T. R. Preston.
Fall frosts nip .western wheat, it ii
sat4, because. the tenderfootsows •isSs
grain, -too late. 4
-
WLND BLEW TRALN OYER. . '
Curious Railroad Accident Reported.
From Sardinia. •
A despatch from Cagliasi, Island or •
Sardinia., on Wednesday, announced _ .
that a. strange' railroad disaster had oc-
curred near Lanusel station. A severe
ssile of wind was blowing as a '<iconic-
tiVi, druwing len passenger 'cars fairly
full of people approached Lanusel.
.Suddenly a stronger gust than. usual
truck the train, ‘vhich, after -balancing •
rb.jtLe 111.1)S for a few seconds, was corn- •
p'ete y overturned, the locomotive and • -•
cars- being tumbled •Into a ditch along-
side the track. Happily, however, only
'twelve persons were injured, two of
whom being severely hurt. ••• •• -• •s•
• '
• • - INSANE MAN DROWNED.
Suicide of John Strong at -the London.
Asylum. • _ - •
•
A despatch from London. Ont., says. -
.I hn Strong, inmate of thie.asyleim, .
broke a-A•ay feign a...party on- Friday • " ••• ,
and drowned himself inthe reservoir -
ed' the instilution. dived through a- -
bele in the- lee and disappeared.. The -
telly was not found for 15 minu'ee. rte -
was sent from •iknsall a year ago as .7
not .dangerous. - -
- :
•BrtEtliS ALI. RECORDS. •.- '
Torpedo Boat Destroyer Tartar Steams'
37 Knots per Hour. - •
A despatch from SoUthamplon, Eng- •-
;poi; says:,. The turbine torpedo boat .
destroyer Tartar broke all records in -
feet steaming in her Anal' trials <.iver
Ole official course on Tuesday, attain- • •-•'
ing a speetl.of 37.037 knots. She also
eetablished new record._ for a sie - • -
hours, Icial, rov,iring 233 mgt.; in that -
Line and maintnining the unpkcidented; ,"
speed -of 35.363 knots. • • .
• 1 ,1,11C: WHEAT C.ONTII.SCT. ,; •
. •
C.P.R. Will Ship a Million and A Half
- Bushels to Europe this Winter. •
A despatch from Fort William ..says..
Eastern • Imes of the Canadian Pacific
Itailway will he busy. this winter. The,
cr..R: have inride•a contract for the de-
livery of 1.500.000 bushels of grain to
Ebropeen markets, this tvinter.• The.
grain . will be shipped viathe all -rail
route to -St. John, where it will be:taken
t the old country 'as ballast in C.P.O.
steamers. A large amount of grain is.
being ehipped' through here now.
•.
S $50,000 FIRE AT ARNPRI1011,
Premises of Suspender and Umbrella • • •
• •
Company Destroyed. •
A defspatch front Arnprior says : At six .
o'clock on Saturday night the premises. '• •
of the :Montreal Suspender and Umbrella
Connally. a fine fourstorey solid brick•
factory. were burned to the groima. Sur-
rounding buildings caught, but were
saved. The loss is estimated at $50,006_
The.town 1415 Al claim ot-nthe building for
835,000. 11 is totally covered by insur,
mice. One hundred employees were on
the list. •
•
• ."
_ • .
• •
•
- SENT TO A FORTRESS. • s-' -s• • '
Famous • ,Russian- littcrateur Incur, •••..
tievernmental Displeasure. •
• A espatch from St. Petersburg says:.
Prof. Anitchkelf,, the celebrated littera-
has been sentenced to 18 months' •
imprisonment in a fortress for carrying
en, n propaganda against the Govern-
ment.
•.17: • .•••:-
. .•
• 'BLEW OUT HIS FIR.tINS. •
Kingston Student Commits Suicide ,lts'
NVinnipeg IIoIcI. ,
'
A despatch from Winnipeg says John -
Grialeei Herald, it ntrdicti 1 Stildent ,from
Kingston, One, whet came here Dce. 9fh,• • .
Mew out, his brains in the Strathemia
f',.1 cn Salholay. 11 said to be due
hi a 01vo affair. IPS fetidly is pieniinent
in Rim:e'en, his -father being a profesSor
at QUE4'11.6 University. •
GREtT FIRE .AT ST. JOHN, QUE. •
Niain Buildings of Drain Pipe Factory
Destroyed.
...‘ dospalch front St. John, Otto., says
The main building of the standard Brain
pipe company ,worn kOalty Pstroyeir hy
fire 00 Sunday night A heavy wind
fanned the blaze. and in n short time the
immense, structure was a mass ef flames.
The firemen saved the power house and
the ()Mee. --Jhe•loss will- !Ay- reach
L25,000.
t sa
• ' tt4+4 + 4-s + fit+•+++-♦-+•#++ + +4+4+++++++++++4+4++++
-+
-+
°Or, A Great Mistake,;
:1'i'+-+•++++++++4 ++++±++++
CHAI't 1JR XX.—(Continued). •
"Suddenly, something occurred to my
anind- Not long beftre we left Nice a
rather disagreeable incident occurred.
cld friend of mine, who also knew
+Carlton, had taken upon himself to
s:Teak to me of the lite the young fellow
bad been leading.
""Now that your daughter is engaged
t� hinr,' he said, '1 hope he will settle
,dawn and cut louse from his- cid
friends and associates.' '
"I :suppose I replied a little shortly;'
for in the end we had rather an argu-
7tsent, which ended In his telling me that.
he doubted 'if Carlton were even then
'leading a decent life or behaving as the
/ran who was. engaged to my daughter
a/meld behave. -
"'Why, I was, in,his chambers the
•:other day In town; he said, '1 called on
bins unexpectedly, and his. s _roornare
:.hint
with photographs et some, of the
'w'orst women In town. This,' perhaps,
wbuld not be sa bad in itself had he the
• dec•ency to at least hide Miss Gaunt's
pirture, which was, . on the contrary,
!displayed .rather prominently.
"Well, I was. not pleased with this
•conversaticn 'at the time, but 1 did not
take so much notice 'as 1- should have
- dcne, for my friend was a man of ex-
ceedingly puritanical views, I knew.
II: would 'consider an actress, even of
latent, quite an lrnpossible, person;- and
I imagined he wes exaggerating in his
,story. Carlton had probably been guilty
-of an act of.very bad, taste, but no worse,
1 thought, and 1 put the matter from my
u:ind for the time. •
"When' Y' looked ai'uund" the:room that
night in Regent Street, however, .the
. ccnversation recurred to me. There
ewers) no photographs there on this occa-
aion ; but my eye .caught- various narks
` cif the walls and on the plush which
covered the. mantelshelf, which told me
"'that that certalnly some had only Lately been
=removed.
"\Lhy have you removed your' photo-
"graphs ?" 1 said. •
"'Vivienne koked,up •in surprise, and
• Carlton flushed and stammered -
t. "Hiti •confusion made me doubt him for
t',e first time, and L felt myself growing
angry,•
"I wns about. to broach the .subject of
guy visit, and to do so. I ani afraid,
rather roughly, when suddenly the door
_in the hall cpened, and a girl looked
:quickly into the room.
"'Hullo • ('laude -old man !"she id
•sa ,
• and then -suddenly noticing us, she slop-
ped, a bold kook` aiot nd, and stood
e.eeer a moment staring at Viyiesrne.
"She was painted and over deassed,
ihcugh pretty; and Vivienne's eyes turn:
�- to' inine in sudden .disgust. Hooked at
•t arlten. . I never saw a man so over -
a helmed, and yet, Colonel Gordon, now
That I come to think of it under the light
of subsequent events, I am not ,cure that
.there was • net more wonder and amaze--
inent in•his flhce than any other expres-
eien. -
"'Good God,' he said,•'what's this?' •
'But the girl left him no tinleto speak.
With a laugh and a quick 'Another
tine—sorry you're engaged.` she nodded
••ttr him, and left the room. We heard her.
rustling down the passage, and we heard
: the !tont door close behind her before
anyone looked up again.
"I was the first to break the silence;
.f.'r Vivienne's eyes were flashing- and I
sav- that the . incident had _further
`affected her already overwrought nerves.
"I cannot regret that this has hap-
epened, Mr. Carlton,' .1 said, 'for it has
s• made it easy for me to say what otller-
%vi_se might have been difficnit.. I am
• •lorry to tell .ycu you must consider your
engagement to my daughter tat an end.
"Carlton turned white and slarted for-
,e-nrd suddenly, _ -
"'Good God 1" he cried: 'i iht wily
.n•hy, Because of—because 01 Haat wo-
t een, \Vhy, I swear to you that 1 don't
:,:even know 'bier'!"
• "i stopped him quickly. `D,: not lie,' I
.;Raid. 'But at all events, tell nlr, •this, aria
1 regret to ask you the questionin the
-presence of my deughter here.-D'o you`
.'knew Mary Charters?'
"For a moment Carlton al -tempted to
-,pull himself together, and it was then for
She first time that I noticed lie had been
"•drinking. Ile •locked imploringly nt nhc,
and then turned to Vivienne; hut the
-expression in her eyes of anger and
•''iccnlempt_•miede him -bend his head.
"'1'es' he •said.. •
"'Then -but you dared to enter}eit de -
.cent man:, house and ask for his (Riegle
•Rer's-harrd, while that story Was'. true!
;I. cried furiously. -
"Ile flushed, and then, turning from
.in' stepped towards Vivienne.
"'Vivienne, I loved you,' he snid, 'I
piece ye,u.'
"Vivienne shuddered and drew henseif
''away trent hits. 'Them, quickly draw-
.. ing herself up, she flushed her eyes nt
• tine in anger and contempt.
• 'And you dare to speak to me !' she
'Said.
"r:arlten staggered at her lone and
' The expression on her face. Ile hnd a
rine} temper, as 1 have toldl•-yc u, and he;
was, ee 1 have also said. under. the in-
• eizener of drink . The sihlation was a
•,crueler it eer him; however much he was
tc. Mame: and 1 have, Ceti hrlp nim,
thought • since that he might not have
ebeen so much 'at fault as • everything
-• - •iron- ram•>",;t -V +n alvnv P,t4 hitt:�.w iF••n
++44-4+4+44 4++++++#+44 +
may be, nothing can excuse his subse-
geent conduct. • •
" 'Then emu throw ire over?" he cried
furiously.
"I did not reply, and Vivienne turning
in contempt iroin his tone, his spoiled
n+&u� re get the upper hand, and he
turned in a moment into—there are no
of words to describe hia•eondition—a
rasing nsadnian. On a table -near the
door were scattered some knives and
veapons which he -was Tond of collect-
ing, and seizing one of these he men -
mewed to flourish It wildly. Every in-
stant 1 feared he was about to slab him-
self to the heart, and I was moving [or-
atard to seize him,. whenhe thing the
weapon back again on to the table
with a cense and a bitter laugh. and
commeneed a wild speech in . vvtsich he
insulted Vivienne and uttered inipreca-
tions on myself. -
"L had taken Vivienne by the hand to
lead her away, when, • reused apparently
tet a •condition of frenzy •in which- he eor-
get alf sense of decency, Carlton uttered
the words which brought_ about .all • the
tragedy. •
"' cannot tell you what he said, but f
trust tell you something, Colonel Ger-
don, which, though it is painful for me
to telt, is, unfortunately, well enough
known, and is necessary to my story.
"1 regret to say that my wife is—io not
wcrthy to be Vivienne's • ntr.ther. the
left me some years ago, . end=ante her
subsequent behaviour has embittered my
life and saddened. Vivienne's,- who 'was
devotedly attached to her; 1 can forgive
Carlton much. 'I can remember his fur-
ious and uncontrollable temper; awl the
u'hshappy condition he wase in, but, dead
a.; he is poor fetlew, f can !lever forget
the insult he paid to Vivienne and niy-
self. - -
' 'Go` then,' -he -cried .[urioi.61y.- "1 am
Weli rid. of you,' and then came half. a
dozen words which no one but a mad-
man, as he was then, would have dared
to utter,
"Wild 'with anger sprang forward 1'rward to
strike. hitn, but Vivienne was het re me
facing him with bkazi>'ig eyes.
"'You ccward r she cried.
"And ,then suddenly, without a warn
ing, the electric light went out and"the
- room was- in utter darkness.
• "1. heard a swift movement, a try,'
struggle, and then -a deep groan : eeme
heavy body fell to the ground, and all
was still. •
"Startled eand''confused, 1 lord for a
moment hesitating Then 1 .atfrnlpted to
grope -my way to where i- remembered
the: door' to be. I • had not, gone -Niece
steps when I stumbled. anti fell .,ver a
t.c.dy on the: goer. - I felt nty' fundi !vet
with 'some ' Warm and sticky liquid
which made me shudder, moll spring
again to my feet: I ealled'md Mildly' and
rushed for•w,ard.• but elle roonh• w•as in
utler..darkness 'and strong;,' to •nle. I
shtick the -sharp corner of the ii autel-
picce and staggered back dazed. 'Man
as I was, for a• second i could have
scrennled like 'a child.. And. then. a
suddenly •as it went out, the electric light
! fleeted on again, -almost blinding ine
with els glare.
V t-tAnd- what a -sight met my. eye:. On
the floor lay -Carlton, stabbed to the
,, heart, and covered with blood. • Krnlel-
' ing beside. him, with her facts pale 'as
death, and her epee turned to my ,hands
with all expression which 1 shall • never
turf/et. was,Vivienge. i
`Father !' • she cried -wildly.- 'Olt,--say-
it s not -true ! • it, cant be—it ciul't' be
Vile ! 13ut, oh God i It was •my fault:
I! was I ! It was I !'
"And then we both turned; foe there,
stinhding in the doorway, looking at me -
with
with his cold green eyes, was Usher.
."Ile remained there for a elemelil,
looking from Vivienne to me. and then
hc'•cnme forward. •
''"I 'thought I heard a cry,' he said.
"Then lie saw the bodyon the 11.or•,
and seemed to •takd in the situation -at a
glance.
There is not an instnnt to lose.' he
rsaid, looking at neither of us in ear(ic11-
lar, , 'This may. be 'disc•overed a any
mon-lent. Even -now someone nihl' be
• coming upstairs. p can save you is-•th.
You must let ma think and aiennge for
you, Conte, yon must leave .t io in-
stantly. Ile is quite dead, see! there is
no question- ahotrt 'that, There is only,
one chance : instant flight. You 'cnn
hesitate,•you -can decide, lat-er. Now -you
1.must copse !' 1
"1 1.egnn to stammer something. but
the innn's devilish quickness • guarded
him. 'Think- of your daughter.' he said,
ant:- turning to me: Look at• yoiu•
1.bands,' he said.
"fie seized me by the arse. • 'I knew
I where to tike you, he snid. ':once"
! "On/eel, overwhelmed, helpless, 1
{
obeyed, Vivienne nne .hnc>,, killed 4he nlnn
ons all that 1 could thin:: my daughter
1.had killed hint, and her life was at the
merry of each instant. God help nm. i
.1 nt vet: doubted iJ was she that Altaic]; the
blow—how c(.uld i? Who conk eve
1 ee ne it bet she? and had not her words
tn'en secinedl to tell me so.
1 "Vivienne wns .staring Pt me with her -
re;:• find fear in her eyes;; she wns'hard-
i Iy cnnscieurs, i could see. nisi every
moment i expected her in fall senseless.
Usher seized one nrm, and I tont: the
l ethjer, theregh i myself had little know-
-• kelfeeee. whet I dig. . '.'Wet descended the stairs cautiously,
'.1,tk '1vvt.3tt4t�iY!A,+it. every • eteee •; n
"At the door Usher stepped forward
and looked out, and I Peered over his
shoulder. Under a lamp -post, not ten
yards away, stood a knot of ycung men
list:ghing and talking. I turned to 16ok
al Vivienne: She was lying insensible
on the ground. Usher muttered an oath
and stood .for a second biting his fin-•
gers.
"'We cannot carry her,' he said, 'they
wil' see us,'
"Even as we spoke three of the ycung_
men left the group .and came directly
towards us. - -
"'They must not see her 1' whispered
L'lser: 'At any' cost that 'must be pre- i
vented.' And quick as lightning he drew
nee slut into the street, slammed the
door- behind him, and walked. me swiftly
cn , talking. loudly in an easy -voice.
'''\Ve can go back as soon as we'have
lost .sight of then;' lie Whispered between
lws sentences, • - : • • • -
"But. we were not to get off so easily;
and Itis • very cleverness was his undo-'
ing, for almost directly we heard a
shambling stele come after us, and a
thick: uncertain voice hailed 'Usher by
name. -
• "Startled, We both swung around. and
saw before us one of tete young then
vete had caused the contretemps 1-te
was a young fellow in everting dress
with a - very flushed face and tie all
awry-. and there, was no doubt• he -had
been d•irieing heavily.
'Just come from Jimmy's; he said,
thickly. .'Come along. Ushor, old boy. 1.
ant going back there.' -
Usher nodded and smiled- 'ant js,at
-now, Wilson,' he said, carelessly; 'we
are just eft somewhere.' -
"'Alright; sald•tihe young renew elheer-
fully, 'i. will come too.'
"U'ssher ground his teeth; and,: for a
moment I 'thought he' would- strike the
man. But ho restrained himself With an
effei't_ .
I am sorry. \Nilson,' he said, suave-
- ly, "but not to -night. -To-morrow 1 will
de. weat you tike.' • _
'To -morrow be hinged r returned
'the young man. - "To -n ierrow'sh long
way off. May never even sce to-enol--
rov, \\'tris your tat- friend?_lntreduce
n, and we'll nrai.e a night of it.' -
"Usher turned away and caught my
arm.• 'Come one he'said; 'and leave this
exit—
"The younge fellow had- dropped. -his
cane, and was groping. drunkenly for it
on the pavement. but he looked up as.
Usher • spoke.. • . • •
-
"'Wlit:'s a fool " be said, 'Always
knew : you were a cad,. Us—Us�Usher:
Corse and fight!'
"teeeIcer sh1'ugge4 his., shoulders- and,
drew me on; the young pian iolkowing.
,"1''s, yes. come and light, if you're
so damn clever,' hQ called •afti'r-us, reel -
in;,' along. 'Your friend -1e see. fair dues.'
"Usher did not repiyor turn his head,
trot we incrca-. d our pace in the hope
that we should shake. off our unwelcome
censp4snion, while -K.s wondered vainly
'hat was happening to Vivienne..
"slut there•is nothing so-4-bstinate as
a tipsy..man who gets -an idea into.' his
a tscad: This young foil lied token um-
brage at U: -dire; -remark,• and with the
persistence of the offended drunkard.
w' - deternllne+l• not to, be shaken off.-.
"\\'e increased ours speed till we -were
almost running, but still our. pursuer.
, r u reeling and tripping,
hist resolved; we turner!, a,nd •meeting.
hiin: attempted 14, argue him into leav-
irel; us -to ours'le•es, but it was usele- ;
h,• would fight Usher c.r .continue .to
Pursue 'us. and nothing else- would 'satis-
fy him. I believe. Usher would have
wittingly fought a,dnieq ef. him: and 1
ani sure I would. but 1n fight in thr,'rub-
li 2 -str - l: meant a - -! \vd, and elle
knew what more besides; wed 'wt;; ;ere
,t our 'wits' end. •
"i leaven knew Loa far We loi,T: that
drunken idiot died night, wandering
re end nn.t. round_ iele.teem g,1he..reore..de-.I. The tuition. „for_it.y car's course bas
sorted streets, fist fear that -he should been ftxed•at ;5150. payable in luemlhly
lake it into his head to change• his Inc- instahuents. , Examination wilt Le held
lies end leeiiiile more obstreperous), at the. close of the course next April, "and
never dnvine- to go far from ilte scene cc•rt•itleates of proficiency will he given
of ,the crime: yet teat•hil to go near be- the graduates. The training will be
c:-nfined almost exclusively to the field
o: balloon construction and operation.
_In France there is no actual sc9tool
fear training aeronauts in which a_defsnite
emirs° is pulSued: Stich practice and
in.strurlion in nerosiation as is oife'rcd
is provided by the clulis and by the
gover•nilterit in conncctiou with the
ilery' service`, th'
In I'al'i+ ere are 'four impeetant
ereen'anticnl seiciett+'M, 'or haltoolling
chaps, and Live sinti.lar organizations ex -
elsewhere in France. These clubs
were created for the • promotion 'and
•
•
shambt ed aftc•
scoundrel, but you must remember that
he was,, the only absclutely cool-headed
one of the lot of us. Carlton's death
alone would have been sufficient to up-
set me; 'I had been worried and harassed
when I went to the poor boy's rooms
that night; and, in addition. I' had, or
thought I had, the horrible knowledge
that my daughter, in an, outburst of al-
nsost-juslifiabte anger, maddened by a
cruel insult, had stabbed to the .heart a
plan whom we had both been fond of,
and- who had so nearly been her hus-
band. • It was true, as Usher said!. that
the blood upon my hands would con -
stet me at once should I be discovered
near' Carlton's rooms, if anyone knew
already of the murder; while Vivienne,
who was at all events safely out of the
flat, might easily escape suspicion if
seen, and, at all events, would certainly
be less open to danger with Usher than
with myself; ,for, as he said, and as. I
thought then, what possible quarrel
could he have with Usher?
"Yes. the devilish coolness of that man
mastered me then, and it amazes me
now, Colonel .Gordon, as 1 see it aston-
ishes you, too; and 'the more I realize
what tie did that night. the more I under-
sland the fact that I never for one second
suspected the real truth.
"As I lay in that cage there. -with the
knowledge of his treachery broken to
rete for 'the first time by your interven-
tion and his abduction of myself from
Minden Lane, I have pieced it all out,
going through the different scenes of that
night again and again; with every look
an& iuchdent recalled to my mind as.
icleartr as when it occurred, and 1 can
ser: it all. or nearly all And yet,
strangely' enough, with all his clever-
ness, with alt this cold and calculatfng
wickedness, it was Fate. after all, which
brought about what might have --been,
t•ut for you, the complete triumph of his
plans. For the• tragedy, tit final tra-
gidy of that scene in the fiat in Regent.
Street could not have been foreseen by
me even cleverer. than he. -though with
hgdhtning astuteness he :seized on his
opportunity and used it to further his
schemes: :lie -could •not •have foreseen
Ci:rtton's murder. though it' was he—yes,
it was he, the villain! --who c)mmitted
it; end he could not, have foreseen Lan.
en; s mad insult. or the terrible doubt
wfc}eh chine to both Vivienne and myself
when •we - realized• that the buy was.
dead: ; . - •
"But he- foresaw ,niucls, nay, he plan-
ned it. it was he, 1 cannot doubt it
new. Who wrote, or caused to be written,
tae anonymous lettere which upset
Vivienne; it was he seho sent that poor
girl.: Mary Charters, tel - us with tier
store, wasich . 1 fear -was only; .too true;
wn he -I have thought since, remem-
bering poor Carlietee amazed look, iveo
planned that that other girl should burst
Into the room. when he knew that Vivi-
enne. and I would be there. And his
objcet? Ati. that is •clear enough now!
Nivienne. will be' a, rich woman, and,
with Ler affections free, any woman may
Ie won.. Usher. 1 see It now. must have
hated poor Carlton and wished him out
efeitte way.; and he planned the scene
that night. it was al the scene that his
plans stopped, however; pias quickness
and devilish culculation helped him with
(fs, be continued)
the_ res.1.
-a •
1 \l'CIiT
Institution: Where the Management of
Galloons is Taught.
A flew niouths • ago' a seluxol• was
opened at Chemnitz. Germany. for
thcs.lreticnl-and pructical training in the
construction • -and managenment of air -
§}tip:.. The director, neer ['ai,l Spiegel,
men of exceptional ability, and of
broad experience in evetylphase 01 bale
ken c•+tnstrucbon :atid management Ile
fres male nver ,;Oil ascents,,
cause of our drunken friends pursuit,
n ,
"11 \•a.s l lultil we had becu' waik-
ire: for, 1 should think, 'nearly an hour,
tta,! L:-hev,- w•Itu lead- L`ecn thinking
deeply. et lengtls-came to any- deep ioih
'Tide -will never end' as it is,' lie -said at
length. 'And Ile risk .is terrftl . I in-
tended to take both you and your (Luigi). -
ler to a place which.,I .know of. find
where you \fuuhl be in saflety : this
mauiire has spoor that idea, 'I`iro're-•ie
only, tiling -le he done; yon roust go
there by yourself, leaving tte to settle
w'int lii[rr.'•
-"1 ceornrilenci'd tri 'epr,slitlate, but he praetiee ofbnlleening as a sport, as Well
c'yntint,elleeeIi i yon• ilial are the Hall- ;e for sr.ientitic ;laity and experiment..
get- id the present. tnernlent. With that In seine of these young mere are. gii•en•
hloed on year hands, grid nervous as you 'prat -teal trtsiliing, -taught the' Il'ieory and
look. any aUenti•- re . attracted in. von construction and .hoe of balloon.',. their
hilt •be fatal. Thal (diet -3v111 -ilea proper care and navigation. -
t'leuble about ynli if •you leave,>.uc. and If the students acquu:c a. certain pro -
When" yon are clear away' 1 will settle fl:-i1ncy end -Iia" a-pnrescribed examine
with' hint pretty quickly.' ile smiled lion, they are pertllllled. ellen drawn for
savagely, 'ile shall hpve all 11$' oriel;.
Then I will -return'to the flat, •fetch your
delighter._•eind follnw yeti.'
"'But wily should 1 not go there my-
self ?' 1 saki. -• -
u rt,r e
,. �trembling lit n a li c, floe, hand -
and
r 1 tilare taught and "'With these send. and I nl i t.
t tmoi� p .
and, agileted as. you err; ho said ling amid care of the G+overrirn'ist Nil -
..e, -,‘„.1 }ravens:..that would.. certainly be.
Dial. yon might be seen entering. or
fund there. amt the 'While story must
neilttery service; to enter the • 11olaitkan
d'Acrosticts, establisher) in the old zoo-
Icgicel garden•, located between Ver-
sailles and St. Cyr. 'the'post i; under
the control- of a conunundan1-, and the
lckins. of w•Aic-h -there rug) .sevej•al of a
capacity of less than 900 cubic metres.
The seeonl.d „and more important in-
cnnre'nu,t; while 1, even 'if I mere. seen, 'shitiltien et (tris kind in Frnnee is known
car easily excuse myself. 1 could have ns the! Etablissernen( (kntral chi Materiel
de 1':\erost'nlion' elilitnire, et Chien's
Aicuden, rnic]w'ay between Paris and
Vete:antes, 1t his • been in existence
nun•de'r. As fnr Niles iier,nt. lake my leo•,ear.-, and is (livid,'cl•iotei lou
we ed. i shalt gel Iter n\toy nnohiserced, +rnr•rnl departments-- the, factory \\'Mere
4(4 -11(0 will seSpect her of the rrimc.'t e balloons and equipment' are made',
"In the end.' hsue-retted in convincing 1 reel the department of t,;st, endd evperi-
nie that lie -was right, end -I •yiclde:rl, 1!e. Intents. Therei-. n0 tie ftlsit•' .muse., of
gape mc_ nn address. wlrispere,el lnw instructirnt. ft was (here that tedium!
enough to.es."ie:' Ilse carer our, pert ie pewee leeeeiyeeree. years .ng„ '1111111
nnrinns fottlnr�'er• grasped niY hardd. and ane experinlenle'e1 twills I's 'France, the
peiuling In n 'cab which I• hailed, nd- first dirigihic l;,alloon.
v 1se,1 nl,' .to I.:01) my harms in my pork. •'
et-, drive• ass nine aS wns,
to 'the
h nse he nle'ntieeted, and lie ,low en1i1
h.! enr;e. •'
"1 w•ei11;1,'r rents, cif t47,1,r •. }'aw f e'er. 011
I►ak't; atledr nly, :'.if to !tate t>d4'ii gllidrdt
,i,,.4 !- +ew1•+;'i c.altr"t+et.'ty by c•;e'ti ,it
rite possible quarrel with Carlton, and 1
had no appointment with him which
could. Transpire nnieennnect me with tine
.l:ecksere-''llen•ven bless him'
c•,rtflelrni.'
deck and. -tl •l e;uis}g.
NC:'i?5.t71r--"ILi_ wl:a!, w ty : J'ick.s-lnl --
Ita teni im+ as1 unshrella'r ' .
+++.7+7++++.41+1::++++++++.14:40+
t+
About the farm
+
.,+
114+++++++4+4-++44+++.*
POULTRY KEEPING A BRANCH OF'
FAR\! WORK. s
When a farmer is found w:ia liar hens
in the barnyard, simply because it •psi
an old custom he learned Item boy -i
hood, you will be sure to find a man;
who .does not take the interest in each{
individual branch of farming that he
should. Many failures which might!
otherwise be avoided are caused by .at
tempting too much without having ex-
perience. A profit should be derived,
from all things on the • farm, and the
necessary details in the -raising of pout-'
Ory cannot be attended to without a�
knowledge of poultry raising in all its
individual lines. Any farmer who,
•keeps fowls' on the farm, and there are,
not ninny who do riot, must study the',
indivldual-.characteristic of the birds as
well as he does the wants of his other`,
stock, and then there will be more pro=
fit from poultry. So many seetn to
think they must have poultry on tne'
farm to supply the house with eggs
and fowls for the table; but they rare-
ly stop to consider that if a little more
care were bestowed on those. birds, be-
sides having ell the eggs they needed,
they would have enough t.s sell, and
while they were having chickens for
dinner they might as well have
money for rime nice. healthy birds.,
from. the same flock which they hav
sold to someone who did not have'any.1
There Is_ great profit in poultry, more*
Ger the capital tnyested than for anyt
olher stock, proportionately, u the'
birds are attended to, but when lovvls�
are .allowed to roam and eat only telt
fuse from the barnyard, drfn'k.m '
filthy water,- 11 they lay enough -eggs
supply the farmer's 'table ho may con
sider himself lucky. The farmer thou
learn. the particular breeds and their
uses, and also make a specialty of those
that are best suite:! to his Climate- The
test breeds for pay ing will, in • all' ,pro-
bability; produce a failure unless they
are surrounded ,by conditions. suitable
for success. The common barnyarli-
stock is .not' as good as any other. Sol
many farmers .will not remove that
stumbling; block, and as long as they
cling to former conditions and old cus-
tome in the poultry -business they wile
most surely fall to improve along othet,
other lines. Good houses,, warm quar-
ters, cleanliness, pure water, careful se-
lection of breading stock, culling ,out,
stock. systematic deeding, and proper,
attention, all are conductive to the sue-
reee of raising poultry on the farm.'
Fowls should • be ready for sale vvfieni
the best season arrives, sn' as to get the, -
adr'entage of high prices. and they
will not 'be in proper condition. nor
ca.n they _Le gotten into that condition.
in a few days, unless daily care is be-
stowed. The farmer must work from
day to day with the object in view, and
then rind only then will the be sueeess-
tul with l.oultry.
-;.FAn`I NOTES.
We -should not be satisfied -with halt
crops or 'dcpeed upon poor stock,' It
is easy ti grade up our, stock' to a higher:
standard of production. All there
things are the fernier's aids, and •he
rust Make them ae•geo:t us he can.
Dont leave home on every lowery'day
and fritter away valuable hours at'
places of public resort, when there is
so much work to be done about the
premises. Make a memorandum of we
items of work to'be done on rainy
days. Suppose you should get wet a
little—rain will not injure you.
Tho. day is not far distant when the,
tiller Of the -soil will. be••not'.only tha-
Ilonest or independent farmer, but the
intelligent man:- Ile 'will 'dignify and
!.•e honored by the labor with head.
rind hand, which will give 'him wealth
and his home will be graced with. com-
fort and. refinement;' But- we must be
content and bear in mind that all such
imiiroved conditions• come by 'steady.
application and are of steady growth.
They: arc pot ninde to order,
Having spoiled my cattle for the Inst
twenty years, 1 have learned something;
its a practical way, -of the nutritive,
value, of plants; writes a correspon=
dent. \\'ith corn, my greatest -success;
all things considered, was from proal-!
cast sealing, two bushels to the acre,'
making a magnificent growth in stalk;
leaf arid color; four acres cut' and placed
in shock, wintering thirteen head o
ca]11c .bo- the• first of April,' without g;rai
and with only an occasional feed
1''ay. if. as is said. such corn is worth
less duff. my stock must have -died: it
fart, they came through in [air condi
lien. in giving.this test 1' am not adi
vocnting the feeding of corn. exclusivelyi
any forme .
e
' . •BRISTLTS.
Noel) salt, charcoal end.- sulphur in
every pig pen and _pig yard.:
Cleanliness and pure clean water are
tee -meek in the. care of pig,.
I tat d -wood' nshes are fine for giving
strength h, the bones,
\ lilthy hog tun is tin. inviter of din=
ease; 'and; should not be tolerated. '
1 -he gest niedirieo for a -sick hog is
just, le let hila .atone Mei' refrain from
Peeling, him file he act; as if he were
n .r' 1 !•Il✓ult'I� enriv 10:e,ling and
s eSe..11e ee eal'ofecterey liir,iug.ti the
w'i'h•wlt tie rL;.'uT fi: c -^.•lover
hay
or 'alfalfa.' •
x:ckrnng pew
# p ibllkasd every Friday morning at its 011ie
Pickering Ont.
BATES OF ADPEBTISING:
First insertion. pez line - - '10 cents
loch subsequent insertion, per line - 6
This rate does not include Legal or Foreign ad -
Special terms given to parties making eon-
- Mots for 3 or 6 months or b77 the year. Half -
'pearly or yearly contracts pa; able gaarterl7.
Business cards, ten lines or under, with paper,
11103e ear, $b 00, payable loadvance.
otioe In local columns ten cents per line,
ems osntaper glue each subsequent insertion.
*medal contract r tea made known on applioa-
ea. No free advertising .
Advertisements without written netroettions
alllbelaserted until forbidden and charged to•
5 ..: ptifng17. Orders -for discontinuing advertise
lents must be in writing and sent** the pub -
doh Work promptly attended to.
im so11
The People's Cash Sto
TERMS
S2. 4vim lyttas; •I.Oo fpaid inadvasea
JOHN MURKAR, Proprietor.
;PICKERING TP. -.NOMINATION.
On Monday neat -the electors of
.. this township are called -upon
to meet in the towpship hall at
'Brougham, for the purpose of
-.nominating candidates for muni-
cipal honors. It is very uecceesary
• that able men be chosen as'it will
require strong men to -look after
the interests of the township as
county roads system is about to be
established. From present ap-
pearances) there will be a, lively
contest not-unly for the reeveehip,
'but also for the subordivate posi-
tions.
• The Western Ontario Commer-
• -Ica! Travellers Association have
felt the want of proper at•commo-
dation in the municipalities where
- local op ion is in.f ,rc•e.. Ata.meet-
log ot the association in London
the following resolution was ord-er iicenee act
cri to to. be pre.sented t, the Pro-
vincial Seeretary:---We . consider
iand .e that the lo2a1 ,option
clause uf the
Good Clothes --
at
Saving Prices
Made to order
in.
4 days
SANTA CLAUS' DEPOT
(Phone Message from Santa Claus) -
Wishing all a Merry Christmas, also stating that this store for
be his Depot for Christmas.
All the beautifnl.things are arriving daily : •
Toys of all kinds --Drums, Bugles, Whistles, Automobiles, Trains, Sleighs,
Sets of Dishes, Building Blocks, Noah's Arks, Horses. Sheep,
Dogs, Pigs, Men and Women. All these things
- can walk and run all over. We cannot
tell you all about it here. Just
watch our windows.
We also have a large as rrtment of beautiful goods for Christmas
Presents. Colne early and give us plenty of time
to wait on you while purchasin•g.
•
Remember Friday 13th Barbains-7 lbs Rolled Oats 25 cents.
1 lb Mixed Peel 15 cents.
Borgains for Friday 20th inst-3 lbs ,Royal mixed -Candy 25e, 3 lbs of
Rock Mixed Candy 25c, l lb Shredded Cocoanut 20c. These prices
for dates mentioned. - .. • -.
•
The Semi -ready Company have appointed as_
their agents in Pickering the well .known firm of •
John Dickie & Co.
....... ....
The agency is. for the Special Order Depart.
meat, the firm carrying over 100 cloth samples,
from which selections may be "made, and the 'gar-
_ will bo made and finished within four- days.
John -. Dickie • & Co; will forward the exact
measurements with the Semi.ready Physique Type
.'chart, and a good fitting -Suit or Overcoat can
be guaranteed...The prices do not. vary, being the
same in Pickering as is Toronto. or Montreal.
•
Semi -Ready, :Lilnited
:Montreal
•
should be so amended a: to rerlttire
the nir11ficipalities adopting local
option, to provide quit dale places.
for lodging, eating and 'snlnole.
rooms tor the travelling public,
when they are peel a -ed to pay
for snc-h acc•omodation. That such
- places be: placed and ri Ful er-
'Vision . at d piontir restrictions
and that the persons in charge
'should be held• rerpn,.ible fur
their maintain/ince. i he lic-
ence comm issioneri are a gtlaI-
;: •-fled pets )ns - to direct where
such public houses shall be main-
tained; that all such lodging
houses and eating houses be play
ed under special licence, and n
tnemo'i 11 he clth certificate for'
,aelexnlim ss and sanitation ac•coln
�rAr' pony eaen request for licence.
We would also suggest; the smut
-- method being adopt sl Leforo
the granting of licen nes for tit
sale of li mut•.••: '
Simple Home Receipe.
-'Get from auv prescription pll:trina•
cist the foilowing ;
Fluid Extract Da}•adehon;•o .e-halF
• mance; t'oml ound liaigun: one ounce:
Compound Syrup Sa1-aparrrka, three
ounces. - .. ..
• Shake well i•n n bottle and take a
teaspoonful dose :after. each • meal and
at bedtime,
• The above is -considered by an emi-
nent authority. who writes in a New
York daily paper. as the ftnest r1 e-
•scription ever written' to-Reliel Back-
ache, Kidney Trouble, .Weak Bladder
anda all forms of t riaaary 'difiicultieS.
This mixture acts promptly on the
eliminative tissues of the Kindeys, en'-
'ahling them to fitter and,straiin he
uric acid and otherwaste matter from
the blood whicfi causes Rheumatism.
• Some persons who suffer with the
• ".'nfflictibns may not feel incliaed. to
place much confidence in•tbii:5 sitnple
mixture, yet those who have tried it'
say • the results are simply surprising.
the relief being effected without .the
• slighest injury to the stomach or oth-
er organs. -
• Mix some aand give it 'd 'triad. It
certainly conies highly recommended.
It is the.. perscription of an eltainerat
- . authuity, whoa entire reputation, it
is said. was established by it.
A druggist gq st here at borne when nsk-
.ed, stated that he could eithei• supplt-
the ingredients or mix • the persa•l ip:
tion for our readers, also lecuanti en s
1t as harinless. - ...
New Harness Shop
• • Christmas is ,rapidly a',pronc•lainn.
Order at once a set of single nr'duul,la
'harness before the ru.h. I'rict• and
• • quality cannot he Nola afly whelp.
:tingle sets as lr,ty as $13 for hub you
' would pay at least :$15 anywhere else.
Carriage harness $2.5..') all rot piste
. 'with collars. Team harness rness 133o and
,upwards. Halters. collars, blankets,
'' whips, or`any part of harness aalavays
on hand. Repairing done at any time
evening as well as day time.'
I am also prepared to half-sole your
• shoes. or to do repairing of any kind.
, Don't delay.
-Large Saskatchewan robes, 51x72,
148.25.
('owe along with your choioebutter,
eggs and poultry for Which I will pay
-. the -top -price.
J R'• DISNEY ',Balsam
D. Simpson & Co.,
Pickering.
"Siekardsoles opeelal Yea lo 5cod Jea."-
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 freshm
and new at money saving prices. Coe in and leave your order.
,We willdeliveranywhere.
- New Advertisentetyts.
rt UTTER FOR SALE -The undersi n-
1 ed bas for vale a good cutter w pith will to
e,ild obese, Thos Patterson, Claremont to -la
t^'HOICE Buff Opingtons and Boned
Roc cockerels for sale, from goof lap.,
stratus, Buy one or more and Breed up yotia
flocks $1.00 each F L Green, Greenwood:
11-1a
OR S A. LE. -- One gasoline engine,
.wilt. generate 0 H 9, Nearly new. For
este at less than halt price. T Caster, North
;;laretnont. - ttf
[)I -PR FOR SA LE.—The undersign -
1L ed ac to:: sale a number of tboaoughbre9
•cotch Collie pule, Apply on the , prem --as,
'ot 19. con 1, Flatting. A CCourtrrey. Dunt4r-
ou 1 O - :0-11
N\T001) 'FOR •SALE.—•'Thr tindet•-
`-i.;ned hay for 'a: shout 11,0 e...rds of
'ordstf hardwood. ktrau'ar cubo-tners ate ad•
at•ed to get rh, it a•ocd as -soon •as' poes:l'e.so ue-
,.1 to be dieanpoieted, A J Pouter Ilex!:
Komi. St( .
«'hen the Stomach, Reap. of Kidney
serves get week, then these organs always
all, Don't • drug rhe steanaah, nor
t mutate the It ar$ r Iii latera. That
siinply a makeshift. Get a urescription
nown to druggists everywhere as Dr
4hoop's Restorative.. The Restorative
s prepared expressly for these weak in
side nerves Strengthen these nerves,
build them up with Dr Shoop's Restore
;ive—tablets or liquid—and see how quick
ly help will conte. -Free sample test
seat on request by nr -Shoop, Racine, %Vie
Your health is surly worth this simple test.
8 ,Id by T M McFadden.
•
The Publisher's
Claims Sustained.
UNITED STATER COURT OF CLAIMS
The Publishers of Webster's International.
Dictionary allege t hat it "iy i n-fact,tho
tar Unabridged thorou;rhly re-edited in every
detail, and vast lyenriched In every part, with
the purpose of a lapting it to meet the larger
and severer requirements of another genera=
tion."
We are'of the npinton that this nittpatinn
most clearly and accurately describes the
work Jhat has bcc.n accotnitdtsliccl n t 1 the
•resultthatl ❑.4been reacted. Thol:ict.i.,rary,
as it now stun . hos been thou,:'-hly re-
edited in every detail, has been c wrvctecd in
ever part, and 13 admirably a' lap' e t t o meet
the aster and severer requircn,: nta of a
generation which dr,niands morn of p, gwlau•
philological knowled,iti than any generaitiun
that the world has eve r contained.
It is perhaps needles to add lila a.we refer
to the dictionary in our judicial work as of
the highest autho,ity in accurac3-of defini-
tion;
efini•tion; and that in the f:;turcas ititho past it
will be the source c:f'cor,'stattt reference.
.C12.1.RLES C. 1 OTT, C.1: i.•f Justice.
•• LAWRENCE WELDON
i0115 Ia,tt 15
TANT0N J.. r,r.T.r.R• .
f/ CHARLES Ir. 110 W ItY,.
Jude..
The above refers In WEBS;TER'S nail
INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY
THE GRAND PRIZE
(the highest award) was given in the Interna-
tional at the World's Fair, St. Louis.
GET THE LATEST.AND BEST
Fou trill be iatrrtatrd,nnrtr
apeciralr ; ],.yrs, Bent free.
O- & C.-MERRIAM CO.,
PuBLaeMBRa, , r
CRIN FIELD, MASS.
— -
9
FOR SALE.—A few Leicester ram
lambs. W L'Cohrtice, lot 17, B F Conces-
u oe. • . . ltf
j, -,OR MALE,—A few choice I3arred
11' cock Cockerels. light color. JOHN GOR •
LEY eiclieriog PO 11.11
FOR SALE.—One-40 H. P.st.eel boil-
, r to splendid condition carrying 190 Ibe of
steam-. one heavy base slide valve engine 9lex e
in. cvliuder, than would matte a'eplendrd outfit
for saw . or chopping mill. Can give prices for
the enmple machinery for Chopping mill, M -
so one in H P gaaolin engine, tons engine 1s be
ine•all thoroughly overhauled and can be guar.
anteed tt.ea vood as new. Can easily be mounted
. s 'porttble engine, Also a large stock of plow
points for sale at W E itisebrough'a anop, Clare
umot.. For prices of the above machinery write
Robert W Currr., Isi Lippincott St, Toronto St?
Caretaker Wanted
The undersigned,will receive. appli'
cxtiOns up to IS 1a. In., Dec. 3lyt, for the
p•,.it ion of caretaker of .Piekel ing pub-
lic school l:ur thus year I )1).5. For fur-
ther pat•tieulars.apply to • .
\V. G. HAM.'
"Bti -iness Knowledge-. anri • Everlast-
nag Push- are two essentials
to success. Attend .
ELLIOTT
01,#/111/
Cooking: Raisins,
Seedless Ra lulus,,
Seeded Raisins,
Eating Raising, ...
'rangePeel,
.Lemon Peel, Sage. • ••
'Citron Peel, - • - . • • Thyme,
Pnre Honey, (comb) - Czearii Tartar,
Pe Honey,. (extral'ted)1Prtlne_s,. .
Icing Suugar, (white-) '4einx.., all kinds.
'Pure Lemon Extract, 'Vanilla Extract,
Oranges,
_.Lemons, -
Walnuts,
Currants,
Pure Spices,
Cocoanuts,
Almonds,
Peanuts,
Filberts;
• • -Craubet ries,
Savory, .
Nutmegs. -
Maple Syrup,
Jelly Powders, • •
:Mince Meat,
-Alinond Extract.
Everything goOd-in Groceries. Our Teas and Coffees are 'the. best in.
. Lown by a long margin, and prices are right.
_JAMES' RICH ARDS ON
BUY YOUR GROCERIES AT THE GROCERS.
.
in the price of Corn Chop. l
TORONTO. ONT.
And prepare for first-class business
positions such as are open to our stud-
ents. Hundreds of our students are
going into good poslticins jevery year.
Let us twain you for one. We will do
it riatht. Winter Term opens Jan.6th.-
Write for catalogue and • see wherein.
we excel ordinary business Colleges:
W. J. ELLIpTT, Principal.
Cor. Yonge and. Alexander streets. •
n unlimited supply
on hand.
Whitby Steam _
Pump_ Works !
A good easy. working pimp is
thee. saved. Tirne is money.
•
•
`V'e llandle.nll, kinds -and guar -
tee satisfaction.
C4: tech tanks made to order.
E. W. Evans,
};ruck. street Whitby.
Let Others Relp you
To recover your stolen in °petty.
The \
,fickering Vigilance 'a�anittee
WiL;:c14.,tilis. t
Members having property stolen et•„,trtani-
tate immediately with any merither
of Executive Committee. ,
Membership fee • -
Tickets may he had from the Prestdenttlr
secretary on application.
Arthur Jeffrey' • • Jr Ar O'Connor,`
DICKERING
A. Full Lone of
arm' Winter` Underwear
:and choice Fresh Geoceries -
always 'kept on ]land
George Parker, ; • -
W. .J1.,H.OTBIOHARDSON5S
'Important showing of finest dreplayi.off
' • China. A
very large assortment of
Stationary. Books, Dolls, Toys, put i
._received for the Holidhy trade. Call .
and see tbem.t;
Snbaoriptioos taken for all Magazines.
Weekly and Daily Newspaper
secretaGp.Pere, in. s T. _.T 'T—T- ' ..sew- T..4' ,S .1.'1"1Q/r"'1'N:r ~�
•
___.
•
• -4-177--
'-'1•2•=• • •••'";°- •
CLAREMONT
P . •-•?:r---F7o-r—s—eli—ooi re—ports seeanotlier
. --' • -eoltimn. • •
•.c) ...:- 11. MrsV. Bingham was in Toron-
‘
• ( to 0111 clay.
.. Nels a g g had a bnsiness
•- . trip to Perth this week.
•MIss Margaret Macnab was. in
• - & the city ou Thursday laSt. •
•
• - -•k Miss Olive Powell visited Mount
--- ' I "Albert friends_last week.
- -ir• ' • • i Dr. Kidd had a business t(rip to
'! the (AV ou Tuesday of last week.
ti James Latimer, of the Sovereign
- Bank, spent Sunday in the city.
Thos. Birkett spent a few days
• • / in the city during the past week.
• - --• Mr. and. M. Andrew, of Toron-
• to, are visitiug at Joshua13undy's.
- -. Mrs. Geo. Davidson spent a few
' days with Mrs. Thos. Gregg last
•- 3 __ week.
P. Macnab, sr., has had au In-
dependent phone., placed in his
Messrs. Gregg & Coates made a
shipment of hogs •to Peterboto-on
Monday.
:
' Dr. R. Brodie and Melville Bro
• -`,1 die spent Sunday with friends iu
- Unionville.
Mr. James Coates aud his
-mother, Mrs. Coates, -sr., were in
the city last week.
We are glad to hear that George
: -Neil, who has been ill, is able to
- • t be out again.
. • B. S. Palmer and -•Geo. Cooper
spent Xmas. with Wm. Watson,
• -of Stratford. •
Mr. and Mrs. Hill spent Christ-
- , Inas with the latter's brother, Geo
•4' Pugh, of Whitevale.
Thost and Mrs. Stephenson and
,;•,' family spent Christmas Day with
i relatives in Myrtle.
• There was quite a heavy fall of
- snow on Monday which improved
-
sleighing considerably.
We congratulate W. E. Rise -
'?rough on his securing first -prize
- .tc.,r his mare at the Xwn fair.
Mrs. Hainer fold children •of
• _Woodstock. are visiting •the form-
-r's parents. N. and N'irs.
J. H. and Mrs. Beal.spent Christ-
mas Day with the. latter's. brother
••, John :Allan -ay nsai-arife •of NV.Iiit-
• kw• •
• s
- ..... - .„ Quite a large urunber patronized
• • ° • our rink on Saturday evening last;
•.;••• - there being (pate a number. from
- • -:.'_Stbuffyille.
The bazaar in- Erskine church
was quite a success in every re -
The proceeds. amounted
'to over 865. •• •
•
• E. E. Ball, 13. A., of the Clinton
I. Collegiate Institnte, is. spending
his vacatisti at the home of his
rarents here.
The Independent Telephone
• • • -Central has been moved ito• W. M.
. •:Palmer's shoe store which makes
first-elassoftice.. Those wishing
• ' use the phoue will find it very
• • - --.-. The '-'At Honte°- which was held
• in the Masonic Hall on Friday
»ight last W11:4 a success. There
• . 'Awere sixty-five couples present.
•
• Calvery's orchestra, of. ‘1. filthy,
. • •
vas present • and' fninishod.
auntaiance of :first elass.mljsk:.
• • - . •A most -en,joytible time was so(nt
by all those who attended. •
Two weeliCs- from hist Sunday. be-
ing the-iirst Sunday ef t 110 N.PW
Year. the annual thankoffering
....Will be taken up in th'e•Methodist
. "church. This"WaS 'destgnetl to
riurnigg • ex.penses and to
• ..avoid pew rent,.. It will be taken
--Tat both'ehurches.. Next • Sunday
. envelopes' is be presented to the
. • •
•
• p,eople. •
••
- The Christmas Tree • and 'Enter-
• . tainmeet held on Monday evening
in connection with the Methodist
, • 'Sunday ScImo-land Mission Band
-was a decided success.. In spite of
.the stormy weather a large mou-
lt• •-,bep..Were present and seemed to
• enjoy, the evening fully. The
17: program, which- consisted of clior-
,;:.--uses, songs, and recitations, was
•,:furnished by the children. of the
• Mission Band and School. When'
• ,.• this part of the proeeedings was
at an mid, Sa uta Claus (al te red
.• • and. distributed the.presents from
- -the prettily decorated .tree
• occupied the chair arch. The
• • r was Oveo. pied by the pastor,
•-. Rev. Mr. Totten: and the sinking
of • the ehorn-('S •• was undtr he
' • , -leadership of T. Stephensen, cyhile
:Steplieds,!»,1 presided at the
• •-organ.
A
•
•
. I have found a t•ried and ttod cltr
:c6; n y that ivill •araighti.ii.tke
•:distorted of chwit, rrinrili.s. nor Min h0117
•grcrwthi bark to age''. That IA
I can now.siirely 1:10 the pns and pitngs of
In (;..rmnny—witit a Ch..rnkt in the City of
' ipermstsdt —1 found the last „ingniili•int with
• • !Which Dr. F:hrnp's Tilivoimatie Remedy wa4 made
• is perfected, dependable nt.i.scription, Without
• • • that last ingrertieni. I sueresafully treated many,
many cases of Rhenran t ism it now, at laStit lint,'
iiformly cures all curahic cases of this hercenfore
• much dreaded disease. Those sand -like granular
vvastesfound in Rheumatic Wood seem d issnlve
•, , ;and pass sway under the action of this remedy as
• ifreely as does sugar when added tn pure wabw.
And then. when dissolveri. these poisonous wastes
• freely pias from the system, and the clause of
• •• . ,.Rheutnatistri Is gone forever. There is now no
leo need—no actual eiZell.741 tt suffer longer with -
lout help. We sell, and in confidence recommend.
-fir Chonn9S
_There .axe.a..great many eyes ..ou
the lookout for Santa Claus. Good
sleighing has -arrived to .help his
moVements.
Miss Bessie Maenab,. who is
attendiug the Jarvis Street Colleg-
iate Institute, Toronto, is home
for her tholida,ys.
We are pleased to .hear that Mr.
John'Beelby, who has been ill for
some time•with typhoid fever, is
recovering nicely.
We are pleased - to see Wm.
Waddell- out. again . after being
confined to his house for somUme
with typhoid fever.
Miss Mildred Forsyth, of Moul-
ton Cottage, Toronto, is spending
her vacation at the home of .her
parents, D. and Mrs. Forsyth.
Alex. •Bowes and daughter of
Brandon, Man., are spending the
whiter months here at the home
of his parents, R. and Mrs. Bowes.
Messrs. John Gerow, J. J. Har-
vey, Robt. Leggitt, Geo. Adair
and • W. A. Henderson and son,
Elwood, were in the city on Mon -
1r. Andrelvs, 'of Toronto."occu-
pied the Erskine pulpit on Sunday
and gave two very able 'discourses.
He will preach again next Sunday
when, it is hoped. there will be a
goofisat tends:ice.. ,
The members of - the Masonic
Lodge purpome holding an oyster
supper at the opening of their uew
hall on Friday evening, The in
stalletion of officers will also take
place on the same evening.
James Underhill. returned home
ou Saturday frorn his trip to Que-
bec, having finished his work
there. He expects to make a busi-
ness trip'to Utah and other West-
ern States in the near future.
On Sunday last Rev. J. Totten
spoke in - very cbinplimentary
terms of the Circuit report as
prepseed by the PIcKERING. NEWd
OFFICE for the Claremont Metho-
dist.circint as the reports were'be-
Ingloteded out to the people. The
mechanical work is very satisfac-
tory. . The. showing of the report
reflects credit on the people of the
circuit..
• -At • the -4 regifitte nteetitik• of
the Masonic. Lodge on. Wednesday
evening of fast eek the foltowing
I. SALE, —Two limises anti lot s in
I. the Village of Claremont. Oue, s two
storey, El rootia. rough -cast d with mod-
ern conveniences sad garden, The other $
frame dwelling with five moms and all conven-
iences. Possession as may be Loved upon.
..T be location is one of tbe best in the v-illage.•
Apply to Foster Hutchison Claremont. • 6-18.
TIME TA B LE•ItPielsering Station '
T. R, Trains goingEast does as follows.--
N. 6 Mail . 9.26 A. M.
" 12 „Local .• 2 43 P. M.
'' 14 Local . - • . " 6.04 P. M.
Traias going West dues as follows—
No. 13 Locsi . 8.41 A. M
.11 Local. . . 2.18 P. M.
••• 7 Mail . • 8.35T. M,
.'dandav included.
officers were installed for the en-
suing year: W. M.—Thos. Pat-
terson; S. W.—Robt. S. Philips;
J. W.—John •Forgie; Sec.—A. E.
Forsyth:- Treas.—A. E. Major; S.
D.—Thos. Wilson; J. D.—L. Mid-
dleton; O. G.—S.• • Rumohr; Q.—
Tobias Caster; S. 5.—P. Macnab,
sr.;'J. S.—James Latimer; Chap.—
Joshua Bundy.
ALL SICK WOMEN
SHOULD READ MISSICRWALM'S LETTER
I i An Porte of Canaille Lydia E. 'Philtbase's
Voirstabi• Compound Has Effected Shodler
Cures.
Many wonderful cures :of female ills
are continually coming OS light which
have been brought about byLydia E.
Pinktiam's Vegetable Compotatd, and
through the advice of Mrs. Pinkham,
of Lyles, Maas., which is given to sick
women absolutely free of charge.
The present Mrs Pinkham has for
twenty-five years made a study of the
ills of her sex; she has consulted with
and advised thousands of suffering
women, who to -day owe nql only their
health but even life to her Mpful advice.
Mise Annie E. Schwalm, of 326 Spa-
dina Ave., Toronto, Ont., writes: - -
Dear ?dm. Pinkham
• "1 have fond Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege-
table Compound a specific for female weak -
nese with which I have been ttoubled. for
years. I also hail irregular _and painful_
periods affected niy• general health
until last spring. 1 • was. only a wreck of
my former self. In ruy 91 irtion• I was ad.
ised to use your Compound, and am -so
glad that I did so. I found that in a few
short zniiiitlis the*, way no toace of female
weakniNs, oltr,stretigth gradually rettirned,
and in a iiiry sttort time I consielered
myself & perfectly well woman:" I appre-
ciate my good health and beg to assure you
that I ara most grateful to you for discover-
ing such a wunderfal remedy for suffering
womaa." - • • •
The .teetimmiii19. which We are -con-
stantly publishing from grateful women
establish beyond a doubt the power of
Lydia - E. Pinkbain's Vegetable Com:
pound to conquer female diseases.
Women suffering from any form of
female weakness are invited to prompIly
communicate with Mrs.. Pinkha,m at
Lynn, Mass. She asks nothing in return
for her advice.- It is absolutely free, and
to thousands of women has proved to be
more precious than gold..
LayHts5 C Sweet to Eat
A Caady Bowel Lauda.
ur Fall IYlillinery Openin
October Ist, 2.,nd and 3rd.
. .
•
•-Come and inspect our Stock. •• -:E\•erl.toclY, \Veleowe.
. '
MRS. -HERKS &• DAUGHTER
, .
veryborly come to
e Al er tores
CLAREMONT - BROUGHAM
::To their, hristmas Goods.
Everythingfirst-class_
•
and at rock bottom prices
HaviagpurChased the Harness Business froM F. Bodell, the same
will lie conducted' in connection with eur regular business, •
•
under Mr. Botlell's personal supervision.
• •
First•class material will be used and every satisfaction, guaranteed.
71.-__T A T 'n7-1
7 -Merry Chsistmas and Hippy New Year
TO ALL MY CUSTOMERS:
.
•
Many thanks for yon kind patronage during the year a
the same Solicited for the coming one.
_ . • .
The Corner Store. "• W. M. PALMER, Proprietor
•• •.
STOVES
•- If‘will pay yon to get our
prices for Stoves be-
fore purchasing
Our prices will snit you
We sell all the. leilding lines
and make of Stove
Our specialty is
• Furnace Work
The People's Tiusmith
Charles Sargent,
-- Claremont, Ont.
MACHINE SHOP !
The undersigned having purch-
ed B. Wagner's Machine Shop in
-Kinsale, is prepared to do all
kinds of repair work and general
hlacksmithing.
Satisfaction guaranteed. -
-Prices right.
, Call and see us. . • •
•
•
JAMES PENGELLY.
Kinsale. Ont.
- ,
, is the time to (10 yotiefall
:-Paptring andPainting. - •
If you are doing any you had
better have it done right • •
- . the right price by • -
W. B. KESTER
Painter and Decorator.
Pickoring, ' - - Ontario
A tickling congh, from soy cause, te
quickly stopped by Dr Shoop's Cough Cure
And it is so thoroughly harmless and safe,
that Dr Shoop tells mothers:everywhere
40 give it without hesitation, even to the
very young babies. Tin who'esotrie green
leaves and tender stems f a lung healing
motrataitions shrub, furbish 'the curative'
properties to Dr Shoop's Cough Cure.
It calms the coulgh, and heals the sore
Ind _ sensitive bronchial . membranes.
No- opium, no chtnroform, nothing
list-sh used to injure or -suppress. Sim
ply a resinous 'plant extract, that helps
to 'heal aching lungs.' The Spaniards
-ells this shrub which. the Doctor uses
•:The Sacred lierb.". - 'Always demand
Dr_ Shoop's Cough Core. Sold by T
IJ.‘Icl'adden.
•
oortngs
•..
•;Leaye your.orders at the 77
PICKERING LUMBER YARD
fdr Ontario and New Brunswick
white cedar shingles.
'Patent Roofing and all kinds of
building material..
W. GORDON & SON.
' No Ad
• ez.
• '
2 MI 0
itr
• -g
; •
O '• 5
CI !JO a NS
'411 r31.• EN a
it
igE,
!.1
RI
a
ibm el al
car 1
It II f(t ,71' C3 hi 'Pi
31 Se. a t *el ' NI
cr .-, a - - • . x
1 Wit C" 0 O.1
1 h!,1 CO
-a ... 8* Jan i 7ig
..“-. Feb re;
bir (0 ..31 ''-'''-' Mar 1•4 tri
...
• .., ,....,„ ' , • ..4
,.....:imA.pnfir
:.. y: Julyill.
n . ,: •
• ,...., .-. ...
c.• ....,
a
_
. , .
-.,1 44
• ' .6.° 31 8 ,..::-.5 Sept'
V
t • ea. '
,... ., . ....
4., Za, Cr- • ,, i ';' •*.o
.Nov...0,
. ‘,„.11 ,Dec :7
January 1901-,•-Whithy 9, Oshawa 10. Pickering
13.• Port rerry 11, Uxbridgs17, Cannington 16,
Iteaverton -15, Li ptergro gel 14
The hest place to buy ' -
Wall -papers
- Is AT
BinghEiniS
Over 200 samples t1 choose from at
4c. per roll up.
Mquldings to mateh all papers.
a full line of the:4*.1I •
?pinta. Oils and Varnishes, afwais in
'.. •
• • ••
•
....
GAUSSat 11 1
,
Of all materials and design
kepti n stook. I$ will pay you
to earl at our works and- inspect our stook
and obtain prices. Don't be misled by
agents we do dot employ them, consequent-
ly we can. and do throw off the agents
ciec°ermtarninlen
certainly save 10
call solicited, by perpurcoehn&ts.whin, gf ricohyou will
will
• . . WHITBY GRANITE CO.,
- .3 a,.. Wbibby. Ontario
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,
CLAREMONT (Dowswell's old stand.)
•
Trial Catarrh treatments are being mail
el out freo, On request, by Dr Shoop, Ra
cine, Wie. These tests are proving to the •
people—without a penny's cost -,--the great
value of this scientific •prescription known
48 druggists everywhere as Dr Shoop's
Catarrh Remedy. Sold' by T M McFad
den: . .
-BAKING !
bread cinstantly On hand ..
the shop. • Wagob on the road
every day in the week. ' "
C'aii.-Cs. 'of -all kinits 'made to order
- -
• shortest notice.
Ice•Creain Parlor in ,connettion.
Thomson,
Claremont: Ont.
LEARN DRESS -MAKING BY-MAll
in your spare time at home, or
Take a Personal Course at School.
Te enable all. lo learn - we teachon
cash. or instalment plan. We also teach a
personal class 'at- school once a month.
Class commencing last, Tuesday of each
month. These lessons teaches 'how to cut,
fit and put together any garment :front the
plainest shirt waist -suit, to. the most elabor-
ate di ess. The whole family can le-arn from
:me course. AN'e have taught over seven
thousand dress.making,-and guarantee to
five hundred dollars to any one that -
cannot' learn bet Iveen, the age of 14 and -
4o. Von •cannot learn' dress -making as
thorough . teaches if you.,
e.•03•L itt shops for year-. flewalieWirnita- '
114415 tIs Nytt entpies, no one outside the
school. This is the dilly 'experienced -Dress • 1
Cutting School 1 Lan id and ‘..xt•elled hy -
10110 iran. t1l&r:tlntrv_ Write at once
particulars, 0 s well:Ave cut our rdie ones
titd 1. r, a 1.11.2rt.t line.. Address , .
SANDEF.ii' DAESS-CUTTING SCHOOL,
,.•• • . 21 Erie Stratford, Or t , Canada
. .
CUTTERS,
•
'1
.BUGGIES,
IHARNESS,
: ROBES,
BLANKETS •
Call and see them,
These goods are all first.class
• el* rt.A.e.rtcw •
++++++++++++++++++i
About the House
. SELECTED RECIPES.
Raisin : Sauce.—Eight medium &zed
, cooking apples, peeled and sliced- as
. for commie apple sauce; one -hall a
•lemon, rind left on, chopped fine; half
•; ' a teacup of seedless raisins. Cover
.e; well with boiling water and cook until
,seft, then add cup and a hall of sugar
,;u- and cook a few minutes lohger. Serve
cold for breakfast or as dessert for
dinner: Aa excellent sauce—better than
'any medicine. _
Baked Milk Toast.—Trim off the crust
- from slices nearly half an inch thick.
toast a light brown. Have on the
range a pan of boiling water, salted;
as you remove each slice from the
toaster diji quickly into boiling water.
and ,lay In a well buttered pudding
dish, buttering the toast while smok-
ing hot. and salting each slice. When
•s- all the soaked toast is put into place,
• • cover with scalding milk ui wfhtele has
o
been melted a tablespoonful butter:
eover closely, and bake flfteen
• tes.
• ,. Fish Panada.—Fry • brown , several
•slices of firm fish, boil and slice three
potatoes; slice three tomatoes
and one large onion. Place in deep
• baking pan. Alternate layers of pita
toes (first). fish, tomatoes, and onions;
sprinkle with sail and pepper and small
bits of butter till fish is full; sprinkle
, • bread crumbs on lop; pour three-fourths
.cup of cold water over, and bake slow,ly for three hours and you will and a
delicious dish.
Uses for Bacon Mnd.—When buying
▪ bacon the cheapest way to buy it is
• by the Side. As It is used cut each
eeee slice down to the rind, -using pieces to
_grew ,ca,koegriddle with.' Another good
so way to use the: rind Lii-when baking
beans. • After the- bean . jar has been
filled cut the rind tha.shape of the jar,
'• cutting it larger than the jar, because
ft shrinks. When baking cover the
beans with the rind • side upe This
keeps the beans- from becoming dry and
gtvea them a good flavor."
".." • Supper for Cold Night —One pound,
15 ..9nts' worth, veal steak,. cut in
• • • Small squares end fry brown; take Irom
•e•Ilrying pan and put in your onions
▪ sliced fine; fry done. but do not let
*brown much. Have cooked a dish of
spaghetti, to. which add half a can .of
eeee tomatoes; put in veal -and nions, and
1cook • all together fifteen minutes. Sea-
son with salt, butler -arid a dash of red
' • fepper. Serve hot.
Quick Coffeecake.—Cream one cup of
• sugar and one-half cup of butter, add
three well beaten .eggs. mix . well -le,
• ,gether, then add one-fourth cup sweet
one-fourth cup Beer, end one-
"'' halt •teaspeionful baking powder; beat
well and put in Iwo buttered piepans,
sprinkle top with chopped nuts, sugar.
and cinniiheen: "Fine with a Cup'ot cot -
tee -made and - strained, adding a cup
'or cream, and kt come- to a boil to-
gether. .
Rake Sausage.—put the Sausage in a
pan, two or more inches deep, and
Lake twenty minutes to half are .houe.
Do not put water in the pan. Turn.
Them over when half baked. .The sau-
sage is better cooked this way than,
fried saves -the stove- being spattered,
and the odor going through the house.
and the -fat may be used for frying -po-
tatoes, etc... .
Veal and" Peasse-Boil, one • and one.
half pounds veal. -tender and pick up
,into nieces; salt eued 'pePper.- Make a
cream dressing of one pint small
half cup butter, three tablespohnfuls
Bolin: Add ' this, with one can peas
drained, -to rueat. Lastly add one pint.
cream. Sprinkle with cracker crumbs
and bake in a moderately heated oven.
Queen -Pudd.ing.—Bake an angelfeod
cake in a long loaf tin. Whip one
quart of double cream, add One' chp
Chopped w.alnut meats, sweeten and
flavor. Place. cream . 'oblong mold
and pack in ice for three or four hours,
br- until' Well frozen. When reedy to
Serve cut the cake and cream into slices
Ene inch thiCk placin-g the crearli-on
the cake, and. garnish ;plentifully with
maraschino cherries.
Tomato Toast.—Toast some nice
pieces of bread and pour over them tho
tomatoes, prepared es follows; Gook
together fear medium - sized tomatoes
and one medium sized onion, pared
and sliced fine; cook three-quarters of
an hour; when, done pour off water
and season to taste; then add one cup
of sweet cream or milk and a table-
spoonful ot butter.
HINTS. • . .
Keep a Pafr of Pliers.—The most con-
venient thing about a .house is a pair
of pliers. For cutting wire, Lighten-
ing loose mats, Pulling leads, or lifting
hot pans without handtes they cant be
beat. • ." • Make- Own Lamp • Wicks.—When
short of lamp.evicks take an old woolen
shirt, cut the width of your lamp wick.
_teem both' sides. It will wotk as well
as the ones you buy and will save you
buying wicks for your lamps.
. Varnish New Stove:Boards.-Before
using a new stove board apply a light
coat of varsiLsh on upper side, and, no
matter how often you clean board with
a damp.. rag. the stenciled figures never
will come off.
Hang Up the Broom.—When you buy
a. broom it 1s well to' bore a holo
-hole-through the handle. about one or
Iwo Lncbes from the top with a gime
let. Then run through this a piece of
'cord. This may be hung on a hook
and be. out of the way.
Make a Walnut Huller—Take a -board
four feet long, six - inches wide._ and
one-half Inch thick.• Bore a belie the
size of. a silver dollar eight inches from
One end: Then saw down the middle
cf the beard into the hole. Insert any
size' of a Walnut and you wifl see hew
easy the hull come off. , 'Use a mal-
let or a heavy piece of wood-' --"7" •
Make Doors Fit Snizgly.—There are
various ways of curing an
door, but -the following is the simplest
and most effective of all: Place a strip
of putty all along the Jambs, cover
edges of door with common chalk, and
then shut It. The putty will fill
all open space. the' excess being easily
removed with a knife. The chalk rub-
bed on the edge of the door prevents
adhesion, and the putty is left•in place,
where it soon dries and leaves a per-
fectly fitting jamb.
Make Your Quilting .Frame.—To make
irkexpensive quilling frames and cur-
tain' stretchers, take four 'clothes poles,
wind them closely from end to end with
heavy strips. of • cotton cloth. fasten
ends_of cloth with tacks. Purchase four
small clamps at 4 or 5 cents apiece to
fasten the poles at the corners, and you
have the beet of quilting. frames. Quilts
may be sewed or pinned to frames.
And -for curtain stretchers -1 find them
better than the boughten ones, . as the
scollops may be pinned at any desired
size. _• .
To Clear . Cistern Water.—When cis-
tern water her become unfit for use
lake one pound of pulverized alum,
dissolve, it in one quart of -water, and
after pouring it into the cistern shr
thoroughly with a long pole., This.
should toward evening. The
next morning -add one. pound of horax
and stir' again. Allow from ten to
twenty hours to settle., This will ren-
der the water perfectly clear and pure,
regardless 'of its former ,condition.
tare ef Net Curtains..—It is almost
innxissible to iron 'plain net curtains
so they hang evenly, and this k
especially nese where • they are mPly
hemmed. Inthe hem hove -!r, lies
the secret of • "(tiling them -up" quickly
and perfectly straight. In making: hem
ends first, then side.. with an inch and
a half hem, or deeper- if desired. • When
washing them, lay sheets or newspapers
on the floor. . Get the unpainted,
iar-
rov molding that is used to finish
-screens-otwo -pieees long enough . Ger
the sides. and one for each end; slip
through hem; tack straight.. and secure-
ly to the floor, and let -remain till theife
hughlydry, The moldiags costs bet R.
feW cent.; and can be used, for years.
. • y
• •*,
SAILORS' HOME COKING'
'11EN BRITISH JACK TARS ARE
. JOLLIEST
•
Ptictiire on • Board a Great Battleship[
- - When the Crevi Reach .
• . Home. . .
The day breaks cold and grey. but
whet' does the weather matte when
Jack is gcing home? Green seas dash
furiously.agairLit the bows. flinging bub-
bles of froth high into the air, then
splashingon to the dripping decks..and
,streaming aft in miniature rlyers.
Scuttles are closed, and down below
the air is damp and foul. Lamps, still
berninge swing monotonously • to- every
rot • rifles rattle nbisily in their -rocks;
and -as the ram dips deep into the heavy.
swell the cruiser pungent odor of fresh
paint .mingles with the -smell of oil ris-
ing through the open engine -yawn hatch
toform a naUSeating riiixteiee"froth which
there Ls no escape. •
Nobody seems to mind the discOmfcrt
• -day. The sentry is whistling softly to
himself, and the eorporril gelling his
rounds pretends ho does not hear him.
Up on deck groups of offlcers, in sea-
boc ts and pyjamas, are- , shivering con-
tentedly in the bitter wind, as they
eagerly search for the. (lest glimpse Of
home.' They 'smell the country even be-
fore they. see It this misty morning --a
fresh young smell of gross and trees
after rain. Strange as it may sound. it
is this smell that makes the greatest irn-'
pression on the sailor,• •
. READY TO LAND. es
Arrived . at SpIthead, the cruiser
anchors, waiting for permission to pro-
ceed into the har.or and take het berth
alongside the jetty. • Bourg pass by
wearibh. but at last the Welcome flags
stream from the signal station ashore.
Theenarine guard, a thin streak of scar-
let, forms across the quarter-deck, with
Ib e band in readiness behind. The cap-
tain takes his- place 033 the bridge, the
engine throbs slowly. and . with. penant
proudly flying from the masthead the
. great ship sweeps majestically towardS
• me harbor.
Clarence Pier is soon pa-ssecl—a eeeth-
frig mass cf human faces and waving
handkerchiefs: Victoria Pier is 'left be-
hind with Its group of cheering borgoien.
A tiny torpedo-boat shoot, past, its crew
standing to attenbon. Opposite the Vic-
tcry. flying the flag of the Commander -
in -Chief, the. tingle sounds .from .the
bridge. With a flash ef beranets and a
rattle of rifles the Marine guard presents
arms', and alt officers and men on deck
salute while the Natkenal Anthem
crashes from the, band, . •
GIB'S THEY LEFT BEHIND THEM.
But now the jetty is in sight with its
waiting crowd, and glasse are turned
,to scan each face. Two and a half yearn
lege ,the ship left this port to the strains.'
of ."The Girl I,Left Behind Me," and
weeping wives ashore had stopped their
ears to the mocking ecuriet. , New the
hand is jiregling merrily, and. the yearn -
in,. lo'oks WO. the happy faces ashore
bring. IT-Mtet/te many glass watching
I them from the ship.
They are ell there, from the captain's
wife to • the stoker's beby:, - The .same
eager look is on every wornan:s Nee:
torenardened hands grasp the -renting in
loving anticipation With a touch as ten-
der as that of the soft little palm of the
Marine subaltern's; young bride.
As the ship draws closer faces can be
dotinguished without the aid •of glasses
Discipline is forgotten for the moment
in the joys. of recognition. A' midship-
man he waving' his can .:frantically. tc, a
white-haired .old lady. whd replies with
her handkerchief. while she endeavors to'
mop her eyes with an umbrella. 'Stand-
ing next to liner a pati' -faced woman,
tears mingling with tenderness in- her
tired eves. Ixths•a baby up and down, to
tho delight of a seaman standing in the
t°vvso'
Son the gangwa.ys are rigged and the
visitors streem on beard. Married offi-
cer,. seek the secrecy of their own
cabins. The nien. less fortunate, draw
their wives into the shadow of a gun,.
or behind: some sheltering cowl,
Too shy to take advantage of these in-
sullicient ecreens,.a ycling,stoker ancl his
Wife lean side by side over the gunwale.
They were only married two drive; before
the ship sailed, and their eyes have much
t . tell. There they . stand, obi ivious to.
ell else, unlit' a bachelor officer, en -
'catty
• JOSH. WISE SAYS.;
.
'"I've allus • noticed in . eerticier .1111,
. ... ....
lots of men with forlyne-s left 'ein an'
Who never worked a lick in their life
are about th' •fiostt' give advice on hoW
t' be-successfhil.". . • . • - . •
• 441040000414,40000.0.4114:40
A Boston schoo` lboy was tall,
weak and sickly. •
•
His arms were soft and flabby.'
He didn't have a strong muscle in- his -
entire body.
The physician who had attended
the family for thirty- years prescribed
Scott's Emulsion.
NOW:
•
4 141
To feel that boy's arm you
would think he was apprenticed to a
bli.eiravvi;4,
gaged himself, perhans: syrapeth
pat.4 his cabin at their .diepos,1:
A- ,1.11-11-3.111SE f'Ori THE Wfj
Further on ari old Marine, n e s-
perieneed end his basal il I, )fds W.- CO fl isa
his greyThatred wite wile the, vehemence
cf , true affection. -trite Iter-haiid.s. he
presses his savings—some forty pounds
in all. For the sake of her momentary
surprise he has pinched and saved for
teve Jong Y_eftr5... _What:matter. Mai Ile
sent her nothing during the wholecorn-
mission, leneiing her to Nuppo et his six
children by her unaided efferis ? - - 11-0
meant feirlhe. hest, and hers is a 'soft
hone. . ae'orld hnrdened ea she is, she
ts upon the- deck 'ara-.setis, ' while he
lerowe the hnhy into the air to hide his
own emotion. - . .. .. .
Some on.- board- are les,: rewtimi'd.,,
Thenwives live in ether ports. Three
Long weeks mulct elaiee before tee sets-
seya off and the leaged-for reunion
(emes. With hungry eyes and ninety
tart- •they \vendor ahoul thh (lecke
oatching the happinese vf their corn-
radeS. • -
J.ehlh TATs AT lif")el*E. ,
seem •ha nee$ms re 11 nn . I he jell y.. Cgri--
,.-er, in anutti drive ,;11 with their happy
. Parties of nail :evenp oe eesiel
What it is
What it does
BRICK'S TAST
IIIEGISTERIED
Itis an extract of fresh cod livers, containing
all the virtues of pure Cod Liver Oil without the
nauseous grease, combined with Phosphorus in
the form of the Compound Syrup of Hypephos._
phites; nutritious Extract of Malt and the Fluid
Extract of Wild Cherry Bark. •
. It will promptly relieve, and if its use is -con-
tinued, permanently cure chronic bronchitis, all
pulmonary affeetions, crodp, hoarieness, nervous -
disorders due to an exhausted condition of the
. system, prostration following fevers, debility at
change of life, or constitutional weakness at any
age, and all blood disorders. -
We positively guarantee "Brick's Tasteless
to do exactly what we claim it -will do as printed
• • -Ion the label of the bottle, or any advertising
matter, and every druggist who sells "Brick's
- Tasteless" is authorized to refund to bis custom-
er the full purchase price ;I` one bottle does not
ph•erwe do show a (leaded Improvement, which imProve-
'dint will result in a complete cure if -additional
bottles are taken. -
We therefore request you to try a bottle of
"Brick's Ta.steless " on our recommendation, and
_
if no improvement is shown after taking it, return
•the empty_bottle to the druggist from whom Too
purchased it and he will refund your money.
Can we be fairer ?
Two Sizes -8 ounce bottle 50c; 20 ounce bottle.00
womenkind. "Local" men have all gone
to their hothes, and in ,the Ship an at-
inhephere. Of " gibe!. happiness -has re-
placed the 'excitement of the morning.
. Between • decks men are seated at
trestle -tables. writing letters- lereinee.bit-
ing their pens as they try to express
themselves, and' smiling happily as they
catch each other's 'eye. Others have
slung their hammocks, and lie awake
peticefutly &earning of the welcome
awaiting thein. The ship is no Ignger a
ship of war but' one of_peacee For there
is peace in alt men's hearts—the peace of
horneccming.—London Answers.
-DIE FROM, DISHWASHING. •
Nearing Routine of Many Mothers!
Lives. •
More. wamen. have 'died through t -he
mendingof socks and endless wash-
ing of ellishes and daily striving to
make ends meet, which. meet but sel-
dom, than of. broken. bcOrts. .
Nobody WneleS a story in- which the
heroino dies gracefully over a heap of
ironing; but nature has 'written them
again and again. and .we have not al-
ays. had s:ght to read them. The
way to keep the flies out el the oint-
ment is simple and easily discovered.
We must keeo-great, higeloving hearts.
Brains do net always help us to avoid
ungenerous ,behav,oe.Intellectual
'wealth cannot supply the place of a
ileeighlfuth tenderness ....byconstant
watching wise."
The daughter- who interprets Chopin
in the -parlor while her „mother, strug-
gles in the kitchen may, be clever, a
product ot ehis enlightened age, but
she 'is not a_true dalighter, ane the
mother's life is being reams...el and
nipped hy the 'too ecnstanl burden.
• •
A RHEUMATISM RECIPE
." .
PREPARE TMS SIMPLE HOME-MADE
MIXTURE .YOURSELF.
••
Buy the Ingredients from Any Druggist
In Year Town mid Shake Them in a
Bottle to Mix.
•
. . . .
A well-known authority on Rheuma-
tism gives the -readers of a large To -
ionto delft paper the following vein -
tilde, yet simple and harrilesS pretscrip-
lien, which any one can. easily prepare
at home:
Fluid Extract -Dandelion,- one -halt
ounce; Compound Kargon, one ounce;
Com ne lend ...ceeyrn p - Ss rsap a ril la , three
ounces.
• Mix by shaking well, in a bottle, r,and
take a teaspoonful afteieeachetheal end
bedtime.•
.hfie states that the'ingredients can be
eetained from any good Prescription
formacy .at small cost,- and, being a•
vegetable ,extraction, are harmless , to
take.
Tthise pleasant mixture, if taken' regu-
larly kir a few days, is said to ever-
ceme almost any case ef itheumetisne
The pain and swelling, if any. dimin-
ishes Wilh each dose, until permanent
results ere obleined, and without
hiring .the. stomach. While there ire-
-
many so-called Itheumatism romediee,
patent medicines, etc., sonic of when)
de givegeolief, few realty eese tome.
Tient Tesulte, and ihe a 1.)01'4. win , 110
(to)le, be greally appreciated by many
sufferers here at this
Inquiry al the drug Shoe; Of 6y6n
small towns- .eleci.t.s -the inforinalien
•
.THEIR FATE NEVER KNOWN, -•
Balloon Mysteries Which Have Never
Been Solved. •
' Considering how much the balloonist
has to rely upon the vagaries of the wind
7tor guidance and speed. it is astonishing
that aeronautics have been attended .by
so few tragedies and mysteries. In. the
balletm &pertinent of the British Army
fatal accidents have been -very rare in-
deed. Twenty-six years ago the War
-office balloon Saladin was lost at sea.
and to this day no one knows what
actually happened to .one'ef the °calf -
pantie of, the car—Mr. Walter Powell.'
NEP. The balkion ascended from Bath,
carrying, in addition to Mr. Powell, Mr.
Agg-Gardner and Captain -66w Colonel
—Templar, a veteran aeronaut whc has
han . many exciting experiences in the'
nit. and who male his first vOyages'in
a balkion while still a schoolboy at Hat;
row.- •
His two companions were -also expert
balloonists. The three formed a 'jolly
party, and had arranged to dine with a
friend living a few miles fronirthe Devon-
shire mg.. The balloon got into- some
nasty curents, however. and, as the sea
was seen to be near, a very rapid des-
cent was decided upon' at Bridport, Dor-
-set. At the flret bump against the earth
Colonel Templar called to the other two
to jump. Ile and elf. Agg-Gardner did
so. the latter breaking his leg; but, for
some reaeon that has , never. been ex-
plained. Mr. Powell neglected to follow.
. The ba.00n, relieved cf the weight of
two men, shot to an immense height,
and was carried ont across the channel,-.
and Mr. Powell thus vanished complete-
ly from the ken of men. Hundreds of
newspapers have staled that no trace of
11 was ever seen again. but this is nal
so. Some years after the rieyfel event a
part of the car. with ' its, lashings 'still
complete; was found in•h mountainous
district of -Spain, and afterwards identi-
Pei: in England.
It- is not a little. remarkable that,. al-
though seems of balloons have been
driven cut to sea, cases in• which 'this
misadventure has ended fatally ere.few..
More. than •a century ago, when Major
Wiley made an eecent from Norwich.
England, he_ was compelled to descend
in the sea, where he remained for seven
teems: until his ptight was seen and ho
Seas rescued• by. the crew of a.regenue
cutter. Some years. later. th 1812, Mee
Jetlleti Saddler narrowly escaped drown-
ing. in an attempt h-, cross. the Irish
0.hannel; his balloon dropped into tho
some hinds off Liverpool, and he
was on the point 'of succumbing, when,
rm:ee Crime in the form of a fishing -
boat. "
The.atteropt whirti Ale Wellman, the, ,
well-known aeronaut and EN pforer,
iri-
tis making, .to teach the North Pole,
a -t hein ash.eriolis disafinearance. of
dree,•the Swedish explorer. whot.,
years ago, -v into Nortli •
Pltia_reesesin
Pacees!leeeh intention to cree."t.litn
Neal) Pole and descend on the opposite
sele, and on July 1111. 1897ehenendcd
with two eompanions. Strindherg.
and FranOol,' from Danes. Island. Spitz-
hergen. Om' carrier pigeon, epparently •
liberated forte -eight holies niter Ilia
elertewas shot, and twp floating buoys
with messages \here ultimately found.
Notliine Wee, howeeer, has been heard
•
ef the explorers.. •
•
. .
ri
SNI.VI.T. BEGINNINGS.
cardinal Welsey. e•as the son ot
butcher. •
wee- the sett of a weever. ' "
Sir flichant Arkwright was the son of
o barbere
ee. a I t.waA tt It' $4fl ercr7-1,1; a r, •
Stor,hdil,n) wns Iho on of a collier.
cite or • (rtn tvas the son of -a
assa
-
..4a4?•-f.-'....aalissi •
ass'
BUSINESS ARISTOCRATS
assa•-•
-••••.-iss
rounded by William Henry Sm about
thelinie of Waterloct so that it is near-
-
Ing its first century, and has always De-
. .
longed to the family. The founder was
uEsT tommEREIAL succeeded in 1841 by his -son. also Wil-
NVIIEDE liam Henry Smith, the noted statesman
BLOOD BUNS. and Leader of the House of Commons,
who made the busine.ss the huge -con-
-
Some EngRsh Firms Have Been in Ex-
istence for Three and Four
- -Generations. ,
The siortunercial life of England pos,
•nesSes an aristocracy cf which many
•" families cazi trace an nnbrol sn descent
' as heads of famoue business houses
ttuough several generat,ions. says Lon-
don Answers..
• The well-known firm of publishers.
• Longnitins, Green & Co., for instance,
- was founded as Icfng ago as 1724 by
-- Themes Longman, and a Longman has
•sisien at its head ever•since, the present
bead of the firm -Mr. Thomas N. Long-
,.
• man -being the sixth of his line. The
‘.
_ - leunder was succeeded. by his nephew,
- Thomas Longman, in 1755, who was So1-
,.
lo -wed by his son. Thomas Norton Long-
man, in 1797; after whom came the-lat-
ter's younger seri William In 1824, fol-
-• lowed by William's elder brotherThom-
2 a; in 1877; and, lastly, ttie present head,
• who sticceeded to the management of
-affairs in 1879.
It will be noticed that, in the most
- blue-blooded mannersevery head but one
•••• has been christened Thomas. The office
eif this- firm to -day occupies the stte it
• did at its birth nearly twc hundred years
•.ago -with additions, of course -and from
., the outset has constantly'esed its sign of
the ship,
WIELDERS OF THE -HAMMER.
Very nearly .as good is the record of
_
•
the Tattersalls, •the- farrious horse auc-
. tic3neers. •- Founded in 1766 by Richerd
Tattersall -known as "Old Tatr -11, scon
• became the greatest business of its• kind
7 in the, world: At his death in 1795 his
eon Edmund 'took his place, and was
-• followed in 1811 by his . son Richard-
: .. known 05 MQ Dick." The latter's son-
s -known, as "Young Dick"--sbeceme head
In 1859, and continued to rule until 1870
- • • 'when a consin, Edmunds -succeeded, al
-ss ----" •'whose death in 1898 his .scn-salso Ed-
_1mnd-followed and still conducts the
•'bustness. Six successive -Tattersalls
• • 'have thus wielded the hammer in the
rostrum, threa of- whom were Richards
' ' -and three • Edmunds. The" business has
. . •- always been in London.
: For about one hundred and fifty
- years the family -of Fry has earried on
In Bristol the -great cocoa business bear-
.' ins; its name: Fcur successive members
-all Josephs -in direct descent, have
-'ss..--..2-.•-iceinducted it th-roughout thittsperiodestrie
!sunder. Joseph Fry, from about 1760 to
„his death -In 1787; his son Joseph to.
. 1835; the second -Joseph's sen Joseph un-
• Iti!' 1886; and dint Jcseph's ion Joseph
• from, that date up to the present.
• •••• THE LO.NG LINE OF "THE TIMES."
• "The Times" is one of the greatest
*Tiewspapers in the world. •R was started
•
4
ais
• In 1875 by John- Walter, and four sue-.
••••', cessiste Walters have owned it iri • the
hundred and twenty -odd years ol its -ex.
- - !stews,: The founder died in 1812, and-
, left it to his son John Walters who also
• s• bequeathed it to his seri, another John
•--Nailer, -in 1847: . This gentleman was
2. chief until 1894, when his son, Mr. Ar-
thur Walter, succeeded him, and is still
• Die chief at Printing lieuse .Square.
.ss ' A noted publishing house is that PT
-3ehn Murray, the publisher of "The Quer.*
.. • • testy Review." It was founded in 1768
.• • -• by John'•Manfurray.. and has'always be-
- .lenged to his, talented (ninny. -His son.
• ' who took his place in 1793, dropped the
• 1 snlaq.". became John Miirray, and nian-
aged affairs until 1843, when his son
•
-.1c,hn Murray 'succeeded him, to be fol-
•_ kwed by John Murray of the next gen-
eration in 1892. Mr. Murray's room at
. the -firm's offices in Albemarle Street. is
' • most 'historic one, adorned with por-
traits of Men famous in literature who
'have there met his ancestors. •
-. • ' The C.oults family have -been at the'
•head -of the best-known private bank in.
. 'England •for a -century and a half.
• . !Thomas Coutts started Colitis' Bank. in
• .1760. He had no son, so his daughter,
• -who-married. Sir Francis Burdett, fol -
Jawed him in 1822, and Sir Francis's
daughter, beloved by all as the ,Baroness
• .• alurdetaccutts-being made a peeress in
," lies own right-sbecarne the chief owner
in 1844 .until her death not long ago,
when her husband, Mr. Burdett -Coutts.
• inherited her interests.
Another old banking familyris that of
• the C.oxr.s, the Army agents. Richard
-. Cox fetinded the bank. in. 1785, and live
generations of the family have held.the-
, reins since then., the present head being
• •Me ilubert Arthur Cox: .
• - " - A 'PERENNIAL TBIO. •
• , The family record of the heads ci the
• brewery than of Barclay, Pea:ft:ins-0z Co.;
Js unique.. In 1781 David Barclify -bought
• ihs Anchor Brewery. and took as his
• partner. John Perkins and Sylvenus Be-
a sari, and 'from- that icly there hos ale
, • waYs been a thirstily, a Perkins, and a
•• • Bevan .concerned in the management,
•rach family having been reprisented
• through four generations.The .firm haa
; teem established where it. is in Sobt11-
• wark for over aye, hundred years.
A • . -The firm Of booksellers and news-
agents W. II. Smith & Son, known froni
on end of the country to• the other, was
_
• 9u;ck ease for the worst cough—quick
elief to the heaviest cold—and SAFE
o take, even for a child. as,
it is Shiloh's Cure, a -a
old under a guarantee COUldha
o cure colds and coughs Colds
uicker than any other
edicine—or your money back. 34years
success commend Shiloh', Cure. aka
ures
cern that it is. He died in 1891, and his
Son Mr. W. F'. D. Smfth, M.P jsisinCe
been its head.
Three generations cf Blackwoods-all
Vsilliams-have managed the affairs of
t:se famous publishing house. Mr. Wil-
liam. Blackwood began the business in
lf.04, and left it to'hts son•Major William
Blackwood in 1834, at whose death, in
1861, it passed to the Major's -son Mr.
William 13Iackwood.
THE COLLLNS •QUARTETTE.-
Fcur generations of. Callinses have
looked After the affairaof the publishing
house of, that name, and, curiously, they
have all been,Williams, like the Black -
woods. Mr. William Collins founded it
in 1821. His son; the talented Sir Wil-
liam Collins, succeeded, and left it in
1895 to his son Williani Collins, who died
In 1900, ant) his nephew Mr. William A.
'Collins became the firm's head.
Pears' Soap has claimed to be match-
less for the hands -and complexion since
1789, when Andrew Pears began the
business, and the family have . always
been at its head. -There have been three
Pears as chiefs in the hundred and
eighteen years of the firm's existence,
marking -four generations, for the foun-
der was followed by his grandson Fran-
cis Pears In 1838, who left 11, in 1865 to
his _son Mr; Andrew pears.
• The Marshalls have cwned and con-
ducted the business of Horace Marshall
& Co., wholesale neurtagents, since Wil-
liam Marshall' founded it in 1840, his
sons, A. J. and Horace, following him;
arid now his .grandsons; Mr.. Horace B.
'Marshall, is the head. •
„PITH; POINT AND PATHOS. •
• S.
• .Wisdem as the jevvel of great. price
dug from the Mire of failures and loss-
es -
-Some people seem unable to under-
stand Abat religion is more than say-
ing over the creed.
There is, plenty of .goodness in . this
world if humanity- woubl -just stop
hunting for wickedness. .
.The penalty of greatness is pat yoU
hirve to give your past -to your enemies
for dissection,. .
_
'Sometimes' a Woman proves herfit-
ness for* politics by making a man think
he*ants 10 marry her. •. s • .
;t s funny to- see the .cffort soma
people make to look perfectly happy
and contented.
- As Christmas afiproaebes the smoker
'begins worrying over the 'cigars be
knows will he gisen him. • • .
The swise husband geeth forth and
Purchases his neckties ere his wife
bins her Christmas gilts.. .
. It is strange that a-man'sfriends all
-go broke about the. time he has to bor-
-rew money. ..-
When n man wants to tell n bru-
nette ho. admires atiat atyle et beauty..
there is generally a blonde- standing
Within ear -shot. • • _
•
• 111. fitting bouts and shoes
cc rns I lo llew a y's Corn Cure is the
arLiele ta use. Get ce bottle 'at' once
and cure your corns,' . •• •
•
A ycung officer, tiding through a
Scotch village one day in full uniform
and mounted cn a splendid horse, -was
!mica anrkoaed by al lad following him
along the street. Ataast heasaid to the
baaa-abid you never. see a. war-horse.
tafore, my lad?". ''''Yes," said the boy,
have seen a ,wrtur: (worse) horse
many a time, but never a 'aur rider.'
yes, it Ls bisiltRiating to ha., -.a skin savored
with foul eruption& It is painful, too. Why not
end the trouble and restore your skin to. its nat-
ural fairnass with .Weavar's Carats/
"Thumper.•occasionally says lhinas'
thafare wonderfully apropos,"said ene
statesman. "Yes," answered the other;
"he's like our parrot at home. It doesn't
know much, but what--it-docs know it"
keeps repeating anal some circum-
stance arises that makes the remark
seem marvellously apt.' • . • •
. Te-diacern and deal immediately with'
causes and overcome them, rather than
ia battle with effects ,after the disease
has secured a lodgement, is the 'Chief
aim of the nw4ical men,end Biekle's
Anti Consumptive Syrup is the result
of patient study -'along Ibis particular
tine: _At. the 'first appearance' Of a cold
the Syrup wiU be feuna a most eITici-
ent 'rerriedy, arresting development and
speedily -healing the affected part -5, sa
that the ailment disappears.
EATS WITH HIS EVES.
New Sense _ Developed by Man Who -
Gannet Taste. .
McKeever, N. Y., toasts of 'a man
who eats with, his eyes. Charles E.
lade had deve!oped what he calls e
"chronic appetite." Some -time ago'
Mr. Dale, whe has passel middle life.
had a tad attack ef scarlet ,fever, Which:
te tre ad his sense cf taste. aor 0
time he despaired of ever enjoying again
the pleasures ef the table, but eventu-
ally he- began ta nelicc that: (gods al
dIfferent celori predticed different scn-
sritions. Ile tnaes---a tiite of feted and
then enzes intently on what is left on
*the platter. Ills theery is that, his.
sense c•f ta-tr, has s.ornehew been hand -
al -With Ris sense -of sight. :117-: leing
his favori:e eater, the red. fools .givd
•
• 1. OPIUM THEIR CURSE.
Light on Recent • Accidents in, the
. French Navy.
The judicial authorities at Marseilles,
‘France, have recently received a large
number of confide:alai lettersfrom the
wives of naval officers • stationed at
Mediterranean perts, ocmplaining that
their husbands were obtaining:supplies
af opium sainewhere in that city.' The
-aultaarities decided to act in' the mat-
ter. and -the other day ordered a search
ef °the stores of several Oriental furio-,
sity aealers, Several tbeusand, (killers'
worth of the drug was feund and seiz-
ed.• The dealers will be prosecuted.
According to the statement made,
by those who, have investigated the
matter, the opium habit recently has
teem:I-sad to an alarming extentin the
navy, and it ls even said that .to this
account may be laid the responsibility
for many. of the- accidentsthat have oe-
cvred. The naval authorities have
-baan endeavoring to eradicete this evil;
but up to the present. with little sue -
cess.
' • - "
• "
Pains Disappear -Before IL -No one
need suffer pain hen they have avail-
able Dr. Thomas' Eelectrie Oil. If hot
iu the house when required it can be
procuced at -the nearest. store, -as all
merchants keep it 'for sale. Rheuma-
tism axe] -all bodily pains disappear
when it is appaed.,- And should they et
any Lime return, experience teaches
thee user of the Oil thaw to deal with
Scale men start euato look for trou-
ble and. then pick out a place where
there isaa one chance in a hundred of
„Ariding it.
• ••
Imitations' Abound. but inlist upon wetting
thegenuine. "Thal) & L" Menthol Plaster
has It
stood the test of years. It cures aches and
pains quieter titan any -plaster.
She -"And are you- really so much.
better since you -returned teem abratie'
Ife-"Yes. <mac another naan."
She -"Well, I'm 'sure all yeur friends
wilt be _delighted to hear dr 'Arid
he is now wondering if she meant any-
thing.
. . •
11yourehlldren are troublea with
worms. gale them "Mother Greases'
Worm Exterminator; safe, sure and ef-
fectual. ,Try it, and mark the un-
provement in your child.
a -A MEAT TEA. --
In the barber's shop the. 'Scissors
clicked merrily Away, and the barber's
"deg lay. on thefloor close beside the
chair, looking up intently all fhe time
af. the occupana• who was having his
Lair cut.
• "Nice dog." said the -customer.
. "Ile. is, sir," said thearber. '
"He seems very , fond of watching
yeti' cira hair." •
'It ain't that. stra.explaitied the bar-
ber •smiling.."Sornetimes I make a mis-
take and take a little piecc•off a custo-
mer's •earl" - . •
• • • •• •
...ITCH, Stange, Prairie Scratches awl
every torrraolacontagious Itch in human
or animals cared in 30 minutes by Wo! -
lord's Sanitary•Lotion. IL never fairs.
Sold by all druggists.
•
"Mr. Bubkins." said the proud fa-
ther, shaking the. young man. warmly
ha the hand,: 'let me 'tell yoirthat• you
are a man after my own heart." "Oh,
alo, sir," protested the blushing suitor;
after -our daughter's!"
A Plensent Medicine. -1 here .are
some pillwhich have no other pur-
pose evidently than ato beget internal
disturbances in the patient, adding lo
his trouales and perplexities rather
than diminisbing' them. One might aa
wen swallow corrosive material: Par-
anelee's Vegetable Pills have not, this
drs.agreeable and InjUrious properly.
They are easy to take, are not unplua
sant to the inste,• and- their action is
mild and soothing. A trial of them will
prove this. They offer peace to ah-,
dyspeptic. .
• —
-emir youngest<laughter gel -
Hag along with, her music?" "Splendid.
ly." answered Mr. Cum•nrx.' "Ifer in-
structor says that she plays Mozart M-
a way thin!. Mozart- himself would -never
Lave dreamt .of."
— ••
Lass if Mesh, sough, and pain no the 'chat
may not mean consumption, hut are bad signs,
Allen's Lung Balsam loosens and boatts- the
cough: Not a.grain of opium in it . .
"George, I saw' that Singleton wo-
man • to -day carrying' -the salk umbrea
la that she borrowed from me atathe
club- card -party.". "Why .didn't you
ask her for it?" "I was jaSt going to
when I remembered that I berrowed it
arora Mrs, Trlimper."
1
KIRNET.:
ei 14.1.1.SAN \ ,N.,>> -"-";;TO/
IttS kJID N lif
-,,,c14 ClikC P.
a 14 l't hit LI rot Oiler' ? Pl(r*If
1,,,,G III .r 'S D I SigjOIS ... -- 1
E.re5 .... .
'
,
1
• „,411-5
`aalSsalsaaa--
• a
RAW WANTED
'FURSI N
ANY
(KA NTITY
Or AAA. KINDS
• _
- , •
WRITECOR SHIPMENTS
P RI CE LIST - sougrio
'JOHN HALLAM ill FRONT ST.E. TOR ONI 0
The Colonel (who has just told his
test •story and been rewarded wilt a -
feint smilea-alleally, countess, you
worrfen have no sense Pt humor. When
heard that story I simply roared.'
Countess -"So did ..I, but it was last
year. ---
Great Things From Little Causes
takes- very little to derange
the siomach. The cause may he slight,
a cold, something eaten ordrunk, anxi-
cly, worry, or some other simple cause.
But if precautien.s Ik not taken, thts
simple cause may . have most serious
rensequences. Many a chronically, de-
bilitated constitution to -day owes its
destruction to simple causes- not -dealt
with in time. Keep the digestive ap-
paratus in healthy Condition and all
111 bO;well. Parnielee's Vegetable
Pills are better than any other for the
purpose.
. . -
Tornsen-"Was. Dr. Puff's -treatment
of your rich uncle satisfactory?" John-
son-.-"Quile so._ I came' into the for-
tune recently." . .
•
.NTbs heat of the TrepleS fades rory sheets.
It takes away the energy. "Terrains" Is the
best tonic to brace you up. It stimulates the
system. It makes the weak strong, - 141. pleas-
ant to Sake. All druggists sell it.
• Pater -"My wifies learning the piano,
my .daughtea's learning the violin. and
my. sons learning the. banjo." Satera--
"Ani you are !earning nettling?" "Oh,
-yes; I'm learnaig 10 -bear itat - • -•
liaasea
rata,
YOUR OVERCOATS .
sad Wad &Ms scald lost better dyed. II -as semi
ef etas la mar town. write Ansel Nestreal. Sea Ill
IBRITtiat AilitalOAMI DIMINO 00. ... •
Get th• frs• beak
that tees "Whoa Poul-
try Pays," and is packed
witti facts you ought to know
about tea up-to-date waiie se
into poultry-lannung wahout
describes o.itiu and isce
that makes mincer certain. Coots
to 5•4 44.
Explains
how we Sad
you a cash
buer foi
your 'rod.
net.- Proves
h y POSE,
Ins [scuba -
tor, Poor.
INN Brooder
and our do.
ash -dare
way of sel-
lingl.as,
esteem you
the right start. Send for book to -day,
before edition is Fase—sa charge for- it.
With the frae testes wise NU &Una *num Is est •
Peerless rostuy.rorrradt (haat without rather
sa ars et ready mossy • . how to sate sure .
tears _you start that peuarrialatat ran 5e7 rss
Gerlas hews NOW.
*dames That
LEC-HODG1NS CO., Lipialg;4
245 Pembroke St. PEMBROKE. QNT.
wier NEW YORK "
TIME new FIREPROOF
HOTEL NAVARRE
7th Are. atrial Set Is St.
300 FUT WEST Of BROADWAY;
hiazimism of Luxury at Minimum Cast ,
toed on. roo( for 25 YuleaeriV inwrtir
and a ygiinor
• hundred. That's a roof of
.-- "OSHAWA"
GALVANIZED
STEEL SHINGLES
Put them on yourself—common sense and a
hammir and snips doe. it The building
they cover is proof against lightning. fire.
wind, rain and snow. They cost less because
they re made better, and of better material.
Write us and learn about. go.° F I NG.
RIGHT. Address ' 205
The PEDLAR People rit
Oshawa ltualayst Ottawa Teraina Loudon Winstpeg
4
Eller/ Viomme
mins/Tested and shonld Imow
sheet the wonderful
MARVEL Whirling Spray
The DaW Ys.I..L eyries's
Best -11 oet cenvem
lent- lt ammo
trthehe cannot so Wt.
liar draggistfor It
A 11 V 8 L. accept ne
ether, but seed Stamp tar
illowanted book-sealtW, It ens
Mt peirtionlars and directions tn.
!aim 510 to ti.twit,: • • •
,WIK MOB SUPPLY CO.. Who_ ,dser Oat.
Gionorall Assoto for casings.
Accessible, Quiet and Elegant. Within Phu
Minutes' Walk of Theatres, Shops sand Clubs.
New Dut,ch Grill Booms-.Largeat la City.
Cable rare Pass Hotel to all BoAlreads.
European Plan. 11.60 per day without bath,
412.00 per day. 'with. bath, Suites $&50
upwards. Send for Booret.
STEARNS & DABS. Props
INCHESTE
Smokeless
Powder
Shells
di LEADER
and " REPEATER ",
_
The superiority of Winchester Smokeless .!
PowderShells is undisputed. Among intelli-
gent shooters they stand first in popularity,
records and shooprng qualities. Always use- -
them -
•
or Field or Trap Shooting
ASK YOUR DEALER FOR THEM
FACT
WITH
PoWer, Heat • Electric' Light,
to Lease for a Term of Years.
Central location. About ten thousand square feet In
four floors and basement. Excellent shipp`ng faellitles
•
•
:;••Ff.
s
4
4' •
j .• S. Lidgett is spending . a
Month at her home.
-Geo. W. P: Every is visiting
'friends in Lindsay. - •
r =Frank Shepherd 'spent a few
days at Port Perry.
-Found-A boy's woollen Oitt.
Loser call at Ibis office. .
• c. , .=Thoit: R. Gormley, of 'Neweas
is home with his patents.
-' -Miss Mabel Wright is holiday-
ing at the home of her mother.
-Mrs. A. J. Boyes, of East To.'
--,rontoas in town on Tuesday.
• --We. 'wish all our readers
--*Eitopy tali Prosperous -New Year.
' -Wand Mrs. Pickell, of Oshawa
,, spent . Sunday with ..Pickering
"-friends.
• -Fred and Mrs. Peak, of Toron-
'-' to, -spent Sunday with W. H. and
• :Mrs: Peak.
• r -Found.-A email brooch, con-
:taining, photograph: -Loser call
• at this (Ace.
-Borri.-On Sunday,Dec. -22nd,
it Toronto, the wife of - W.- A.
' Ham, df a- daughter. —
-Dr. Henry.will be here as um:
al next Tuesday to attend to his
• ..professSionil duties. -
-The AllaWay family had their
Xmas dinner with John and Mrs.
Allaway, at Whitby. •
-Dr. F. Logan, of Detreit. js
'spending a week with his parents,
Wm. and Mrs. Logan. -
• -John and Mrs. Annan are,
spending the holidays with
friends in London, Ont. -
.--Edgar Seale, . of onteeals is
spending his Xmas holidays with
,his sister, Mrs. ([)r.) Bell.
- Rev. F. C. Harper, of -Niagara
Falis,fatiebt R couple of days last
week with Pkkering friends.
M. E.. F. Campbell"is
-spen- ding her 'Christmas vacation
with her relatives in Strathroy,
. =We wish our numerous mato.
Mete a bright and prosperous
• New Year. M. S. Chapman. •
-Owing to the holiday next
week ive-would request all changes
of advt. to be in our -heeds by.
- noon on Monday: •
-Rev. Mr. Greatrix, of Port
Perry, preached forcible- mission-
ary sermons in the Methodist
Church on Sunday last.
-Rev. J. C. and Mrs. Belt are
spending . Christmas With their
daughter, Mrs. (Dr) Gibsou, of
Linden.
' -Harold McBrady, of Chicago,
is spending his Christmas vacation
at the home of his parents, R. and
Mrs. McBrady. -
-Ed. and Mrs. Banks, of New
York City, ar8 spending a •few
weeks here with the former's
mother and 'brothers.
-George M.- and - Mrs. Palmer
are spending- Christmas' in l'oron-
lai with' their daughters, Mrs. F.
Doyle and Miss BethePalmer.' •
-J. Hand Mrs'. Wagner -are
spending the Christmas vacation
at thebome of their son: Re*. B. N.
de Foe Wagner, of Shannonville.
-R. & and Mrs. Dillingham,
and John and 2r! Boyes and Miss
Edna Boyee, spent Christmas
with A. J. and Mrs. Boyes, of East
Toronto. .
-Misses Gladys, Marie and Jean
Bateman are spending the Chrirat-
mass vacation at the house of their
grandparents. Squire and. Mrs.
Buutiug. • —
-The rate -payers of the village
will meet at 7.30p. m. on Monday
next for the purpose of ..notnina-
tine Candidates for -the office -of
police trustee.
-Christmas Day passed off very
quietly here. There were the usu-
al family_ re -unions, but the rain
and sleet made the day unfavor-
able for any out door sports.
H. J. Nosworthy, • of the Regina
Leader Publishishing Co., spent
Christmas with G. and Mrs. Cor-
nell. He has just returned from a
three week's business trip to -Bos-
ton. — •
-The pupils of the Entrance
Class sat the Henry st-reet. school
Whitby, held a concert on Thurs.
day.afternoonwhen they present -
their teacher, Miss Minnie Itogees.,
with an -address and a beautiful
jewel case. _ _ _
-Whir to hi's departure, the
teacher of S. S. No. 2, Pickering,
Mr. G. W. McGill was made the re-.
cipient of EL bean ink -stand by
the pupils of the school. The pre-
sentation was accompanied by an
address expressive of the high re-
spect in which Mr: McGill- was
held by the pupils of the section
During the tinie in it Lich Mr.
McGill. was teacher in the school
there has been rapid progre-s
made and there is'a general
• Ing of regret at his departure, t
Next year Mr. McGill teaches near 1
Bowmanville, where his borne is. 2
--We are in receipt of the Cana- P
dian Red Book. an excellent pub- t
Iication containing i n forma ti on
concerning the Dominion of Can- 1
given in a eoncise and_pro-• h
ry classified form. . . deals N
LOCALISM
•
• ---T. M. McFadden spent Christ-
mas in the :city.
-In .the abseuce of Rev. J. C.
Bell, the morning service in the
Methodist church will be -con d ue
ed next. Sabbath bY, Mr.
Rogers and the evening. service
has also been provided for.
-We 'Congratulate Miss Kate
Herr ore having passed a most suc-
cessful examination it the closing
of the Model School term at Whit -
WAS Kers haa.accepetd a posi-
tion on the staff of the_Markham
PUblin School.
—4 week agolast Sunday as
sotne children from 'near the lake
shore were. driving home from
Sunday school some boys of the
village began throwing snow -balls
at the horse, causing the animal to
run away. It was running down
Church- St. and was rapidly gett-
ing beyond control of the the driv-
en when. some men whom they -
were meeting succeeded in stopp-
ing.the aniinal before any damage
was done. Such conduct on -the
part at the village !children is dis-
gracefulas the parents of those
children noeirefilse, to let them at-
tend Sunday school, when they
have got -to do so at the risk uf
their lives, ' • •
-The annual :school meeting
was - held pursuant to statute in
the school house On Thursday
forenoon. The attendance as tisrial
was quite small. and .not much
interest was manifested in Sehool
matters. Robt, Miller occupied
the chair and M. S. Chapman acted
as seerctary.- A motion that was
submitted to allow David Harper.
the former principal, the stir'', of
$25 was voted down W. D. -Rog-
ers was elected trustee in place of
John Murkar -whose, terni had ex --
eked, and J. H. Bundy was elect-
ed in the place of Mr, Kerr who
resigtied owing to
From the Sitstaluta-Timee of
Friday, Dec. 14th,..sve clip the fol-
lowing: "On Tuesday.pight at
5 o*i•lock. the marriage- took place
of Mr: Fred Clarke,. of Sintaluta,
to Mks Bielby, of •Rose
The happy event occurred at the
residence of the -brides brother
ip tho. presence ony of intimate
relatives and friends. • The
Rev. John Lewis officiated.
Mr. Clark is a properons young
farmer living about ohs, mile
north of town and we join with
his host of friends in wialsing the
newly married couple long
life and happinese. The NEWS
joins its congratniations and best
wishes.
-Among the holiday visitors to
Pickering were : . Miss Mabel
Clark, Dr. and Mrs. Bateman,
Lloyd Bateman, Ed. Gormley, W.
Brokenshire, Miss P. J. Wright,.
Arthnr Rogers, Mr. and Miss
White, Norman and H. G. Kerr,
Fred Bunting, Miss Cora Gordon,
Misses Maggie and Josie • Moore,
Lloyd Shirley, Miss Kate Wood-
ruff, Miss Gertie Allaway, of To-
ronto, J. B. aud Mrs. Horn, and
family, of St. Catherines, A. M.
Kerr, of Ingersoll, W. -Haney, Of
Cedardale, Rev. Mr. Grant, Clara
Ham,'J. W. and Mrs: Law, Miss B.
Shaw, M. and Miss Shaughnessy,
Fred Logan and wife, Miss Irene
Rogers, Robert and Mrs. Gormley,
Frank Lidgett, Murray Simpson,
of Toronto, and ethars.
• -At the last regular meeting of
Doric Lodge, No. 424, A. F. &
A. M., the. following officers were
installed for the ensiling year :
W.. M. -John Gormley
. 1. P. M.-sRev. E. 0. Harper
S. W. -F. M..Chanman
J. S. Jephson
Chap. -Geo, Kerr •
Treas.-W. J: Reath' • •
Sec. -M. S. Chtipinae
8. D. -Alex. Findlay
J. D. -J. R. 'Winter •
D. of W..Sparks-
S. S. ---Jas Gordon .
A. Bunting
Orgauist- Geo. Parker
I. G. -C. H. Ham "
_ Tyler -R. S, Dillingham • -
Auditors -R. 4. Buutiug and
Esl. Gormley • ,
-Eighty week]y newspapers in
the States have advanced their
price from $1.. to $1.25 and 1.50 --
of -thew to 1.30, giving as a rea-
son the incteased Cost of paper.,"
wages, etc... The Canadian pub-
lishers are struggling aton g at the
old- rates under changed
conditions The editor of Kenney
(111.) Gazette says : "We feel
that our patrons will justify this
advance when they eon ider that
only a few years/sinceprices of
farnt• prmlnets 'I'N'ere far bolo*
prices of to -day. Then eggsere
10 cents per dozen,- now 15 cents
o 25 cents; then hotter was 10 to
cents per pound, now 20 to
5 cents; corn was 25 to 30 cents.
er, bushel, now 45 to 60 cents:
he -paper on which The Ga-
ette was printed :cost 2.25 per,
)endced.younds, now 3 50; labor
al • advanced 20 per eel.) t.
We inightseatirme tins cornpatsL
. -Ed. Wilson; of Brougham, as
representative -of the township
Sabbath School Association paid
his official visit to St. Andrew's
Sabbath School on Sunday, and
Mr. W. H. Jackson, of Brock
Road visited the Methodist Sab-
bath School in a similar capacity.
-Mt. Lebanon Academy S. 8.
N'o. 4, East, was seen of a most en-
joyable and interestiug °cession
on Friday afternoon last. The
quaint old school -house was speci-
ally. prepared and decorated by
the busy hands of the pupils. F.
W. Hobbs ably filled the chide in
his usual cordial manner. A -choice
progranime was rendered by the
pupils assisted by Misses Hattie
and Edith Law and Miss Luella
Hobbs. Refreshments and short
addresses by Messrs. -Rogers,
Brown, G. Cornell, Hall, R. G. Car-
ruthers, and Mrs. Robt. Cronk
added much to the enjoyment of
the afternoou. Before dispersing
however, the chairman called Miss
gdwards to the platform when
Miss Vera Brown read a well word-
ed and appreciative address and
Miss Eva Wood, on behalf of the
school, presented her with a china
tea service. Alias Edwards made a
suitable reply and after the sing-
ing of the National anthem the
large company dispersed to their
several homes amid many, -Xmas.
Greetings.
STOUFFVILLE
A re-spresent at i v e from the Toronto
News was in town on Monday inquir.
ing into the'working of local option
here and reported it very satisfa(Story.
Fcnthe past three or four days city'
detectives 'have- been quietly working
on a•-' burglery which took place
at the hardware store id Padget tk.-Hay
Mnionville, . on Satikrilay night. The
thieves •obtained- entrance to the
store- through the front window and
secured booty to the amount of csbout
$1500. They were evidently surprised
their work as a number of articles
kieereleft on the sidewalk. The school -
house was entered the dune night; but
nothing ef value was taken. --Tribune.
UXBRIDGE
Greater Than
mas Groceries
Gooe Groceries make nice Cooking.
We have a full stock strictly fresh.
R. A. BUNTING,
- Piafering
TBE FOLKS! - - - - -
• ..
11 •
Generally -they deal with us
Have you seen our choice display
Of Silverware, etc.
]It's well worth your while.
The ice races at Port"Perry.--are
vertised for the.S and 9 of Jsauary.
At the 59th annual Meeting of the .
Grand Divisions of thel3ons of Tem-...•
as
Port Perry. it was decided to estab-
D. 1..
perenee in Ontario. beld recently at t
bah a sick and funeral benefit system.
A deput*ion from the Ontario Coun-
ty Councitswaited on the Minister of
Public Works, Dr. Refiume, Tuesday
for the purpose of obtaining the ap-
proval of the Government of a county
road systam. The scheme consists of
150 miles of road to be constructed at
a cots of 1120,000. of which amount the
Government is asked to pay third.
The scheme will also include the
improvement of the King-
stpn road through Pickering, Whitby -
and Oshawa, and also the improving
of the. Reach road from from Oshawa
through, Port Perry and •Cannington
to Orillia.-Journal.
-
SCHOOL REPORTS s. '
• The:following are the names of the
pupils of S. S. No. 10, Pickering; of
highest standing for the,month of
December. V -Mabel Cassie, Maud
Barclay, .•Meda Hogle, Ilia, Phillips.
Sr. IV -Blanche Mechin. Mar, Bar-
clay, Edith McGregor. Jr. IV -Lillie
Hogle. Sr. III -Maggie Duncan, .Al.
ina Hamilton. Jr. III -Archie Mech-
in, Nellie Norton, Libbie Farthing.
Sen. H -Roy McGregor. Roy Percival
and Jennie -Duncan (equal); Olive
Routley. Jr. II -Marion Routley,
Elva Carr, Gladys Hogle. --Pt. II-
_Lyman- Barclay and Earle Crockett
(equal), Eva Flanson,Sarah Norton.
I sr. -Cecil Phillips, Jr.' I. -Lorne
Brodie Eva Routley. David Hanson.
Average attendance 34. N. F. Tom-
linson, Teacher.: • -
Promotions of the senior division of
the Claremont public school. Names
in order of merit. To Sr. IV-Jeat,
Bennett, Harold Dickison, • Harold
Graham, Mary Adair, Hillyard Bryan,
Clifford Soden. , Jr. IV -Robin
Thompson, Victor Hayward, Beryl
Knight, Minnie Gleeson, Ethel White,
Clarke Rawson, Magnus Morgan, Lila
Slack, Willie Evans. To Sen.'III-
Verna Stotts. Edwin Ball, Principal: -
Promotions of the junior diNision of
the Claremont pubiic school. Names
iii order of ineril. 1 o Jr. III -Kath
leen Rawson, Maggie. Gleeson, Wal-
lace McFat-lane. -Ralph Brodio, Ethel
Shepherdson, Magpie Adair, Velma
Hayward, Mabel V hit. To Sr.
Viola Forsyth, Frrcl Middleton, Annie
Spoffard, Dora Brodie. Florence For-
gie, Robert White, Roy Forsyth, Bes--
sie Bennett, 'To Jr.j1.-May
Fior-
ene.
The DepAtment of Education,
Toronto, has issued circulars inti-
mating that teachers nolding third
class certificates will not be cut off.
withont a chance. The announce-
ment is nincle thnt a summer school
of normal school standards will be
opened next slimmer for teachers
with third-class certificnteswhose
success and ability -1S attested by
their inspectors. At the slimmer
school they ma y'elalify for sopond
class Certi five tes. Fu thermore W hen
a sea rr•i tY of teachers exists thi rcl-
class eertilie4tes renewed
,
• ,. -Our Brent collection of Christmas Fancy Goods this season far
exceeds any display of choice articles ever before shown in Town.
• In fancy china we excel. Pages could not enumerate the differ-
ent articlee. • Our assortment is double what we have ever shown be-
fore. We especiall invite every buyer to visit our store.
• One glance will more than couvince you that Dickie's Store is
the place to do your Christmas buying. Our stock in Fancy Dolls,
games, books, work boxes, toilet articles, fancy leather goods, burnt -
wood work, albums, mirrors, and a great variety of fancy boxes,
handkerchiefs; ties, Christmas cards, fancy tinsel Christmas and Pick-
ering post cards and hundred of .nice things we have not room to
mention here. ,
. - • .
We are busy iu our .Grocery Dept. and have the finest goods to
supply the Xmas wants. .
... We especially invite you to see our nice Christmas collection of
ayerytiOng.
:,,Prices for Christmas Cut in Half .,...,:. .
We advertise nothing but what we canny out.
• .. -Just a few sainples: •. .... .
. .
. .
. .
3 bottles any kind of Essences, 25c; Lemon or orange Peel, l5c lb; 3i lbs cur- • -..
... ..
.
- rants. 25c; 3i lbs off stockkval. raisins, 25c; Icing sugar, 5ic lb; Citron Peel . •
18c lb; Mixed lemon or orange peel,'15c ib; 3 June Rose soapI5c; 3 hot- . ... •
,:•• ties perfume 110e;:sweet oranges. 20c; Sour lemons, 20c; Peannts. 15
lb; Walnuts, 20c Ib; Almonds, 20c lb; Valley Violet, 15c.
e -Buy your Xmas Groceries at the cheapest. market and that is at the • • .. '-' .:; ' •' -•'''•. -
Farmers' Supply Store, - • Pickering •
XIVIAS GIFTS
For old and youbg.
ome very ehoiCe goods in
Silver Berry -Spoons, •
• , Pie Spades, Fruit Knives,
.• •Coffee Spoons, Butter Knives, • , ,
" Sugar Shells .etc:, all A quality
• . •
- Carving Sets in cases 5
A beautiful display of Parlor Lamps, HallLarnps, •
Hanging Lamps, Night Lamps, etc. .
- Hockey Skates all sizes, Hockey Sticks and Ankle