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HomeMy WebLinkAboutPN1905_10_27L. XXV. PICKERING. ONT., FRIDAY. OCT. 27, 1905 �s NO. 3 saffltstaitossaL garb.. Medical. F. EASTWOOD, M.D.. Sar¢eon . to Canadian Petite Railway ; Coroner lo County; Issuer of Marriage Liceotes. dont; Office boars—Before 10 a.m.. 1 to 9 .nd Row 7 to B p.m. Private tel -shone otiohwith Balsam, Greeawood.Brocgham on, A, Johnstone 1th con), Wm Cowie's 1c), and D Pngh's (9th oon) 8-17 . Dental. E. S. BARKER, L D. S.. D. D S.. Dentist. Btonffvilla. Honor graduate of oval College of Dental Burgeons and of liversity of Toronto. Hours -9 to 12 a. m., p. m. Office in Grn bin's Block, over Jew. store. Local telephone No. fit. Appoint- s may be otade tor evenings. Residence so ave. 1IABEE( AM every Monday and Isy. Office over White's store. 47ly Legal. FAREWELL, Q. 0., BARRIS- C88. Oottnry Crown Attorney, sad County or. Court Hoare. Whitby. 10-v W & 3IcGILLIVRAY, BARRIS• ere, Bo:icitore, deo. Oftoo opposite Post. Whitby, Ont Jno.Ball Dow, B.A.; Theo. iilivrev, LL.B, Money to Loan. 8y )Voter &nary. HOPKINS, VETERINARY SUR. OKON, Graduate of the Onterto Vet - e Co,.ege. Toronto. registered member Dntero Veterinary lledlca` Aseocietica. uesta: miles ofd r Green giver. ce nOSIa end e and one shoeing forge > in 11 a.m.. and 1 to 4 pm. Private coos in my office P, O. address. Green Jnt insurance.. RE INSC s &L Zgt7>t41.28CM company. D. M BYLNt. GUT fuatneea garb*. MAS DUN`S, Conveyancer, Cons - cow fox taking Aflldrvtt eta.. rant Ont STrso, Issnsr otontMarriaario ge case for the Ossuary of • the titer* or si his residence. Pickering 1.7 D BELDAM. auctioneer. die., o r urn , aoticite *aloe from bis numerous haat far and near Raise of faints, lax= d ever7tUing the is to be sold wt...b by ;be.rbeeriber wish th.utmos to the very beat advantage, 49'17 BEATON, TOWNSHIP CLERK Coot*econntah Rtcar e. Money for toaloang pro�ert7 leaner of Marr'atie Lin' Waitt.T.Je• Oat.. . • 't:1STILL. Licensed Auctioneer, r Cotoues of York sad Ontario. Atter t..,eor k ncts even nett to oshortest Address Greve 8i er P 0.,Oc dL'CHER. Licensed Auction- eer. Valuator and Collector for the :min -rk and Ontario A11 kinds of &notion .•piloted and vale&cions made at mod- arge, Estates and consignments eon - 'y managed sad sold 'op• unction or sale. Mortgages. rents, note, and ioeonnts promptly collected so l saes- , .ettlemente guaranteed. Phone or for terror and particulars, Brougham. Dated mat be fixed hyyphone News oney to Loan — 5 per cent.— r SpinkMills 1' Red Wheat .. 75 bas. Wbi e Wheat ., 75 bus. ',Bprintt Wheat 70 bas. Goose Wheat 67 bus. 4lanitoba Flour, $5.50 bbl. Family Flour, 4.50 bbl. Pastry Flour, 4.25 bbl. Bran $16 00 Ton • Shorts, $20 00 Ton Jumbo, $25 00•Too : - Graham, Wholewheat . Flours. Chop of all kinds.. Chopping and (zristing. PICKERING COAL MY. Yards at Spink Mills. Steve Coal $G.00 ton. Chnt Coal 5 PeaestCoaul 5.0000 ttton.n. Select Lamp Coal, $5.10 ton. .Blacksmith Coal, 11).00 ton. Full weight guaranteed.. Orders for coal left with W. Peak will be deliverd promptly. A bore prices Subject 10 Change eittioct Notice. Model. Bakery Co'y T ,t•rrtited1. L.11INNED 4.I: as! 1 i PICKERING LIVERY ! FSrst•elass vehicles for here by day or night 'Bas in eoaneotion mess- . in; all G. T. B. trains. Freight and express delivered to all parts of skis village . Teaming of all kends done on shortest notice. Sale and ma- . lmi»ion stables in connection. W. H. Peak, Proprietor Markham. There is an agitation for local op- tion in the Village of Markham which bide fair to take active shape very shortly. Both sides are on the qui vive. The. People's Plowmen's Associa- tion will have their annual plowing match on Thursday, Nov. 9, on the farms of Adam Scott and` Jas. Glee- son, Markham. J. F. Davison is sec - treasurer of the association. Furniture..... A full line of first.. class fninitnre now en exhibition in iris ware rooms. Prices right. R• S. Dillingham. Pickering, Ont agner & Co, Have a"full line of fresh and cur- ed meats constantly on hand. Spice Roll, Breakfast Bacon, Hain, Bologna, Weiners, etc. Highest prices paid for Butcher cattle. - nuance of all' kinds ' attended to l'Estate handled—Conveyanc- Ing done, on short notice. `ms to rent—some, particularly adapted for pasture. . V. Richardson. Notary Public, Pickering. ihreshers! e the Texas Eye Shades. The best protector -•" .of the Eyes. FARMERS We hire no clerks—no style to keep up. •Everything bought for cash and sold at the lowest price. Rain coats and boys' suits from $2 up; 3 -piece suits. sizes 21 to &; good tweed suite. Call and examine them. First- class groceries always on hand. • Salt of all kinds: ' Market at Greenwood every Tuesday and all kinds of goods on the wagon. Highest price paid for ali.kinds of produce. ' SL; PPLY STORE, . E. Bryan, Manager. DOMINION BANS Capital Paid uo, • $3.000 Reserve Fund and :$3 722 350 Undivided Pronto " f , WHITBY BRANCH. General Banking Business Transacted. Special attention given to the oollee tion of farmer's sale and other notes. Whitby. We regret to say Daniel McBrady has been, and is still, quite ill. L. V. McBrady, K. C., of Toronto, visited him over Sunday. - Last week A. D. Fraser was seized with such severe nose bleeding that he lost fully a gallon of blood. Natur- ally this weakened him to such an ex- tent as to lay hien up for several days, but all are glad to see him able to be out again. John Pile, of Brooklin, has sold his sixty acre farm of the Sth concession, \Shithp, to Win. Draper,. of Toronto, for $40 an acre. " Mr. Draper intends ceasing his tailoring occupation for farming, and we wish him every suc- cess. Win. Till had a card from bis son Arth-ur, from South Africa, on :Mon- day of this week, stating that he sx- 1 ected to sail on Sept. 12th. He will doubtless be in England ere this. and may he expected home in the near flture. Arthur has been in South Africa for a number of years now, and it will be genuine pleasure loth to himself and his parents to be back in Whitby once more. Brock Road. Joseph Hiltsha,s hired with Mr. James Kayes for a year. Walter Rodd, of Whitby, paid our burg a flying visit Tuesday evening. Mins Bertha Rudd, of Pickering, was the guests of Miss Farley, on Sunday last. It is rumored that Geo'ge Arm- strong will move to Brougham in the near future. Mr. and Mrs. Hall, of Whitby, were .the guest of George and Mrs. Keyes on Sunday. . Clarence Young and wife, of Green River, called on friends at the Brock Road -this week. Mies Louisa Hubbard n ill spend her thanksgiving vacation in the city and will return on Monday. Miss Annie Farley is at home at present looking after the domes- tic duties of her mother who is away on het' vacation. Quite a number fr•urn here took in the missionary meeting and entertainment in the Baptist church -at Whitevale on Thanks- giving night. W. H. Jackson and George Keyes and wife attended the fun- eral of the latter's uncle, Wm. Heard, of` Whitchurch, ou Wed- nesday.. Greenwood. • S. Carlton has been teaming apples to Toronto. M. Gleeson was in' Toronto on busi- ness this week. Ed. Gleeson had a business trip to London this week. Arthur Johnston visited his daugh- ter, Mrs. H. Clare at Tweed. Henry Ellingford is at present working in F. L. Green's mill Master Lorne Law, of Pickering. called on friends here on Monday. Mrs. J. F. Adamson, of Whitby, vis- ited friends here a few days. ' The familiar face of the tax collect- or was seen ip our village on Friday. We are pleased to see Roy Carlton around again after a slight -illness. ' Mrs. Nelson Ledgett, of Coleman, is visiting her sister, Mrs: R. Brown, here. - T. and Mrs. White, of Claremont, Sunday ed with Wm. and Mrs. Dol- phin. Mr, and Mrs. F. J. Seldon have got home at _SAVINGS. DEPARTMENT. =ere:mite received of $1. and upwards. I .teretat allowed at highest current rates. Compounded or paid half yearly, - E. J. THOBTON, >IuasQ>ast nice y Salem Corners. Mrs. H. A. Porter returned home after spending a few days 'With her sister here Mrs. Ed. Gleeson. Mrs. C. 'V. McKenzie and family, of Ashburn, spent a few days with her parents here, Mr. and Mrs. J.. Tucker. College Notes. .A new strident from Japan -has reg- istered. Naoji Shimni, a brother of Shoiji Shimni, a well-known P. C. Old Boy. Improvements in the College rinks are cotntemplated. Mr. Moore has quite recovered from his lameness caused by a.. sprained ankle. The second match for the Faculty Rugby Cop was played -on Saturday afternoon. The -"Blues" were again victorious piling up a score of 20-0 against the "Whites." The game was nevertheless hard fought, Capt. Hol- lingshead and - half -back Quigley of "IN hite" team putting tip excellent Rugby, but : which• counted little against the we t and good combina- tion of the Bl es.. . The seco annual cross country run for the "John Pogers' Cup" was run on Tuesday around a 5. mile course, Oscar Rudolf made first fol lowed closely by M. Miles second. F. Hutchinson was a good third t, L.:e F. Sutton followed up fourth. The holders of second, third and fourth , places get a cake each. The time of the' winner was forty-three minutes. ~rb SCa O The Searboro Agricultural So- ciety met at the halfway House on Monday night to wind the bus- ness for the year. The society has a surplus of $100 on the year's business, which. is .,.Fonsidered quite satisfactory-. The accounts were passed. OREEN RIVER. , We expect to bear wedding bells ringing soon. Miss Maud Doten returns to - the city this week. John and Mrs. 3lichell is spending a few days in London. Miss Sarah Jane Hut'hingg is recov- ering nicely after her late illness. bliss Cora Arnstrong i.s staying here with her aunt, Mrs. Eli Nighswander. Messrs. Alpheus Hoover and W. A. Fuller. of this place, attended an A. O. U. W. rally at Whitby on Monday evening. Miss Ruth Annis and Miss Phoebe Tomlinson were the guests of Mrs. John Morgan, of Claremont, last Tuesday. Marshall Tomlinson is visiting for a short time with friends on Yonge St. Miss Ira Fraser left last week for Saratoga, after spending a few weeks at her home here. Mr, ld Mrs. Pipher and family vis- ited le latter's mother, Mrs. O. P. Doten Sunday last. Misses Lizzie 3lorgan and Phoebe Tomlinson were the guest . of Miss Ruth Annis last week. Geo. and Mrs. Ferrier, of Whitevale, Mr. and Mrs. Bennett. of -Boston, were the guests of Dr. Hopkins last week. Archie B. Hopkins returned last week Prom his trip to Manitoba. He spent a fe.w days with bis parents here and left Monday morning for Hamilton. The eighteenth anniversary of the Green River Baptist church will be held on Sunday. Nov. 5th. Services both morning and evening. Special music at each ser'. ice.. All welcome. Brougham. • T. Brown has purchased a new driver. - - W. P.hiuips was in the city on Monday. Rev. S. Prosse . alle ends here Sunday, T. C. and Mrs. Hnbba Tuesday in the citg,,• S. Gerow, of thetroit, is home visiting his parents Miss Wallace, of Greenbank, is. vi'.iting at T. C. Brown's. Miss Pitt, of Owen Sound, is visiting with Miss M. Gerow. Mrs. Beal, of Claremont, spent Tuesday with Mrs. Mechin. Our school opened on Thursday with Mr. McMaster as teacher. - Mr. Widdifield, of Sto•iffville, spent Sunday with Miss Fenton. - Geo. Philip, sr., is again at his old homestead for a few weeks, Rev. Harris occupied the- Meth- odist pulpit here on Sunday even- ing. and Miss M. Harvey, of Pick- ering spent Sunday at Mr. Feas- by's. Alf. -Hamilton and_ E._ W.. Bodell were in Whitby on Friday on business. C, A. Barclay shipped a carload of apples .to the. North-west ou Tuesday. Joseph and Mrs., Burk spent Sunday with • Eli Willson, of Greenwood. • Born — At Richmond Hill on Saturday, Oct. 14th, the wife of Thomas A. Lemon, of a son. The Rev. A..M..Currie,. of Al- monte, will conduct the service in St. John's church next Sunday afternoon. •- 'ndrew Dimma , and daughter and : re. worth, of Cedar Grove, xisited. Mrs. Geo Philip on Tuesday. • It is our sad duty this week to chronicle the death of one of our residents, Wni. Cowie, which took place at rnidnight on Tues- day, Oct. 24th.. The deceased who was 48 years of age, had been ill only since Saturday with acute dysentery. Mr. Cowie. who had been a resident of Broughain all his life, is survived by his widow and two grown • up sons, for whom much sym'patliy is felt. He leaves -an insurance of 51,000 in -the I. O. F. and $1,000 in the Canadian Horne Circle. His fun- eral will take place to -day (Friday) at 2 p. nl. Service will be held in St. John's Church, after which -the remains will be conveyed to St. John's cemetery on the 7th conces- sion for interment. • , - The' Son of the Hair There are four verses. Verse 1. Ayer's Hair Vigor mak* the hair grow. Verse 2. Ayer's Hair Vigor stops failing hair. Verse 3. Ayer's Hair Vigor cures dandruff. Verse 4. Ayer's Hair Vigor always ro- stores color to gray hair. no chorus is sung by millions. " Before =tog Ayer's Hair Vigor 1 had my thin sad very poor hair. Sat i continued to use the vigor until my hair greatly improved 10 every way. 1 have abed 11 od and oa tog the past ten years."— Mai M. Detriments Newark. N. J. 704e trs J. saesXsset qers CURRY P'BCTOISAIL. The WESTERN BAN:: Of WAR incorporated by act of Parifamantl874 Pickering Esaneh. Atit lorize'l Ce ,.tai . ...... .... ......81000.088 Subscnbe-1 Capital. .. 60000* seat ..Conv...s. io.. .. ......... . IIDDJtinB Assets iies,�11T rtle1.806.70 Jcam Cowan, iCsc1, T. B. Clialtzets iip.clnJ atter r.00 `l ..n 50 Parers seg hoses Oefl c d'oce ac...o.ted end promptly meds FLOAM'rt jph tee J . oted Amencen ISA Foretell * ens, 1 -ant ar.-1 .',J prelate. lined, *yellsl •.ria sari interest ream rates. fri• anamafft8 "I say. waiter, there are two flies in this soup. "Only tsso' sir? . Onemust have got away. There were three when 1 left the kitchen I"—Yon- i i;crs Statesman. • Of all materials and design kept) n stock. It will pay you • 10 Dill at oar works Ltd inspect car stook and obtain prices. Don't be =Wad by agents we do not employ them, ooe,.gnenf- ly we can, and do throw off the agent& commission of 10 per Dent.which yon will esrtrinly save by purchasing from as. A. call solicited. WHiTRY GRANITE CO., - Opp. Post Of14ce. Whitby. Oetaste, TO RF1`T.—A farm containing 1501 sores, situated on the Kingston road. oras, and a ball tulles east of Pickering village. 'For particulars apply to W J Reazin, Pickering I 1 1 1 Cartlot be .described as t benq Our Ebony is black_ right through. We ilnport it direct from France. The real genuine article supplied in Hair Brushes, Coat, Hat, Bonnet, and Velvet Hand -mirrors, Salve pots and Manicure pieces. at a saving to you of about _20%. Our fall stock has just arrived Ebony pieces makes an ideal gift. There is no doubt as to quality. • We have all styles of silver letters. Norman Bassett Jeweler and Optician. Brock et. south, Whitby. ape The Strange Disappearance see again Lbs living, breathing, glow- ing, most beautiful original. To seek her? For what? • 'He ' did not even try to ansaveratho question, Thus passed ene week. And then, had he teen disposed to forget the beautiful girl, he could not have done ao. For'everywhere where the business of his grandfather too:( him -around among the neighboring planters, to the -villages ct 13-- or cf Q—, everywhere. he .heard of Marian, and frequently' he saw : her, though' at a distance, or under tncir- i custanccs that made it impossible for him, without rudeness, to address her. He Both saw and heard of her • CHAPTER XI.In the meantime old Mr, Willcoxen it' scenes and•society where he could ... .It should have been an enchanti-ng was very gradually' sinking into the hardly have expected 'to' find a young • home' to which • Thurston Wilicoxeit' imbecility natural to his advanced girl of her i•rsignificant position. returned after his long sojourn in ' age; and his fascinating grandson was Marian was a regular attendant of Europe. The place, Lell-Dulight. gaining some ascendancy over his the Protestant church at Benedict, might once have deserved its euphone cried.. Year by- year, this influence where; before the morning, s: reice, -lous and char ming name; now, how- increased, though it must be admin- she taught in the Sunday -school. and •"-ever, its delightfulness was as purely cd that Thurston'$, conquest over his Mere the afternoon service she ro- .traditional as the royal lineage grandfather's whims was as slow as ccived a class of colored children, claimed by its owners that of the Hollanders in wincing the And Thurston, who had been a Mr. Willcoxen was one of those land from the sea• - , very careless .and desultory a*.ten-- '- whose god is Mammon. He had in- However, the old man -now that dant, sometimes upon the Catholic herited money, married a half-sister Cloudy was provided for and off his chapel, sometimes upon the Protes- of Commodore Waugh for money.' hands -lent a more willing ear to the taut church, now became a very rite and trade money. Year by year. petition of Thurston to be permitted ular frequenter of the latter place of -- from youth to age, adding thousands to continue his education by a course Worship;• •.he object of his worship • to thousands, acres to acres; until of studies at a German university, being tnot the Creator, but the area now, at the age of ninety-five, he and •afterward by a tour of the Fas- ture, whom, if he missed frorn her Was the master of incalculable riches.tern continent. accustomed seat, the singing, and He had outlived his wife and their Thurston's absence was prolonged praying,send preaching for hien lust • • three children.; and his nearest of much beyond the 'origami intention, all of its meaning, power and spirt- •• - loin were Thurston Willcoxeu, the sun" as has beau related; ho spent two tuality, In the churrhyurd he some-- ot his eldest son; Cloudesiey Morn- years at the •university, two in tray- times tried to catch ler eye and bow ington, the sun of his eldest daugh- el, • and ucarly taro in' the city of to her; but he was• slava;, s cornplete- ter, and poor Fanny Laurie, the • Paris. lo y Iraffled .n his aspirations after a child of his youngest daughter. FL's grandtaiher would c^rtainly I neearer cornmun e1n. the was alaaacs Thurston and Fanny had each in- never have consented to this pro - attended from the church arid assise- herite•d a small property independent : Ringed absence, had it been at els ed into her 'addle by Judge Provo't.-_________ -. of their grandfather. ofra cost; but the expenses. were mit Colonel Thornton, • or solar. •ot`•er But poor Cloudy had been left an . by advanecs upon Thurstun's own "potent, gave and reverend s. i;g-' Thurston trembled with delirious 4414++44++4'4++44+44•-t orphan i❑ the worst see'.se of the. smelt patri-ne:�ny. . ' - nors," who 'hedged her about withplease:re -through all his fru^:e, but, word -destitute and dependent un And, in fact, %I -heti at last the' a divinity"- that it was Impossible, (_„ending his eyes, lest again ' they 4 the "cold charity of the world," ormtyoung gentleman retie -red to his na-.I without rude r'ss and intrusion, to shmild frighten or her inspiring 4 • 'the colder and bitterer as of un-- tier, county,, it. was hrc.luse his p'r>- break thro'i' h. Tie. more her was g1;,neee, he irt.:sw'e:•erl,. fervently: 4- About.th}� Farm •loyinl; rich relatives. pc'rty was nearly exhausted, and hi; baffled arid per geed, the nxurt easter "i know and feel it most profound- + e '1h, oldest end nearest kinsman ar.d r,•mittan:es e.'rr srnall.feR- and fe" be ' can•o his desire to cultivate , her .1). 4. Mr. �Yillcoxen-had, of courar, le- av natural gcardian cf the boys -old between, grudgingly itao ` ac<;ua:ntu:r_,c lied his course teen' And T •nn th tucht } c s, o1:e tho+ 'T to 1'e stoppedherefore nearly p.n-; clear to met) leg for his Wis.,u i truth; tl-•,.) . •I) in s'cr fart to ha 1 � .' eceived them into his house to be' meas. but perfectly free from th' 'tem 1,1` have been easy to as!( rcr- i •rover th debt et. Mit enyth•ne a' out 44444+4.4444:444 4.4444 reared rind educated; het rio educe-. smallest deet or degradation-clC mission of Faith to \i, it her at her' the '+ill.j.•cr ante now that Ma'ien, ....than .would he afford the, lads beyond g 1 1 o such Was rot. the cesie ih mere her life`„tai1:g1 '-11E1:P ",O 11 -' y IIht, ace :m )lishel, fastidious. )'>t prose but is in•.!nT. r, P^ 11 that dis 'n ;?d to the eillago school truthful. R,encrous, lant and a. and 'Thurston, tam>erin with his s crit int�7 his soul. . master wt, ru. 1 c; well teach piring-'Thurs,ton left the e'emote ,•wn integrity' of Ourpo-e, rather she sleuke again, earnestly, at- It IS 'very 'dimcult, to fatten than 'r.. i .,,.s , e dollar, salons and cxciUog sc,•r,cs ut L a`i. washed that this n:i•ch coserc'i am - d,•nlly - = pour :sheep in cold weather, of ave r a r•• ssel wh'' for '_he com;rarati%e dullness and c;uait:taice si,o.ld 1e inci.lental, and '•},1u -kr r 5,71 iced it meet pro- Get the snc;p to geed Condit c:c:av to dreariness cif his native place auri hie th:•ir interviews seem aceic:creel, so founely! 11: t ,'.•ep .kr,r el.•' c ani -beltiro v.-lnter legs in. :nstane. ; grandfather s house ' that. he ,ho::id not c.,rnn:it lint:<,•'f, that deep inline is the chrism o•r if you .vulue the levee, prnrluct many ', He had reached hes legal major;ty or in any way lead herr to form c. -t- that has aneointed y.,u a messenger e\eh condition niu51 be kept up. ho,s- just before leaving Paris end soun 'l,ectaeions which he had ro se;e;y and a Intiorer'in the cause;of human- A' poor sheep well ,at as much other ' after his arrival at home he was ape of being able to meet, Hew lung ety' '1'cld !ira'- -1 hosen,' 1-e • thou regeir' as much labor in $ecu r� nn the. poteted trustee of poor i''anny this cool and cautious foresight. ' also hfaithful, Tinge are many in- its fleece as n goad one. :able as. La,:rir's proem-tn. might death him, !t once he. were spired, `cnc,inted few a Mit few Ilereewmen who (herds.- their s This itis trot act wast 7 Ovist Fanny fn 1rcu ht in close companionship with'fairhtiil"'ups into smelt Pocks arc rrcogn x.aid,'the distant asylum in which she was. Marian, rep -mine to be sten. It hap I "'Thom, thin, art the hluh priestess es the most ,' icessful shepherds e and ' confined,. end ascertain her real "con- iui,ee.1 uric Sundae aftrrnu,in in t ct,e. that hast preir ed the censecrati d oil' have the healthiest axed bolt devc 10 clition. Ar>d hat ing heal lee p o- her t hat he ••adv Marian tale leave-' on my heed 1 will he faithful'" Ind sheep. ly in nounced incurab!c, thou;;h perirctic of • her vorrr,^,bid '. ce)rt, Colonel • llc stoke with such se,:ldrn a thus It :- a mistak ' e to ignore: the $toes' harmless,, r.e det,rmined to rehouse 'I'hnrnton, at the chlirchyurl gate, Jason, such abandon, that it had the ten side -cif hock _returns •when `''>`tly- , her from they confinement of the <lay and gayly and alone. 1 rn into the effe'c't of briesing Marian bac': to outcome of the business is y' lum, and to bring her home to her forest road that led to her own the moderatiu1i and neer iie of her estimated '''''1,2' • native ce.,rnty, where, am•.)ng Om! home. He immediately threw hinrs if oseat manner. He saw It in• the 'The siePherd who has a lot ,,.nil. ,.e, hi and et eams, she into His 'saddle and folloYeeti' her-, c•hantr,ed <xpression. of her 001101 71 uu(1 reit ;bre each winter, 'XL. ,erre that freedom.. ,with the assumed air of an indiltere`tt enc and west light or sh ole of Mete' P attest. how It !'oid his feeding pays quite as e • r,:,,, rude so desired by the genticrilan pursuing his 'own peep. "ins Pass:d over thus beautiful face as the average. a more liberal heart sick as. brain sick, and avh,•r.. lie overtook her near. elle ot.those-trnrnit:k,_d_ ot. trim? When he spoke il•• 1' 7<n,.un: 0:1+:11 ho that free uently intersect the is din it was composedly r they -the very best sheep, an • also hes oder tare might avail her. gatesq P Which an true to their specific \ r,e 11 at file setae time 011 Mr. irrlllcoxere far from ere'r- •rt)ad. Boxing -he hehe Passed hen-opened - "Yeti speak pe kh andthe teapr(eaairers a nL tihi of brerrls and full ul pro , e withheld from gn le to some ins oppusidi•,n to this plan. actually g (; ro . Cloudy, in giving his penr111ess grand- favored it -though from the leas pna?:aee. Marian sxnilol, and nodded' terms. 1 c' explicit what would y, „1 sh,,;lld be selerteri for breeding; son, the same prirticge• 4s worthy mo .ive of economy. Whit with a• pleasant: I_have me to do, Miss May!ield? Only Pete•"'• it was, he sought to' veil his penal- � was the use of ipcning money to• "Good -afternoon, Mr, Willcox:le ' � indicate foie work, and tell me hinw 1 ' In a majority of cases size is mony by conservative prlieciple, pay board: end nursinf, and medicrl as she «eat through. in set absent the. aecompii,hnu•nt ol:a se0ondnre consiclorati.11i. pro It was a great humiliation W the attendance, in tho asylum. when she Thurston ' closed the gate and rode' it, and never knight served tiegc•lady ;ut:!s that the animal is tat, sz boys to see that, while all the youths might he boarded and nursed ani , on after her. ',as T will serve'you!" and trim. of their own rank ar.d nerighborhuo'f doctored so much cheaper at home?', '.•Tilts• .s glo:'lot:s weather; Miss '1•,:Sin smiled. + Not 47ilyaloes it cost less to ,a' Ora entered pensioners at the local ,her the old man confidently looked Matifield." "leoce one you must make yrnlr- R pound of yon ng yeah. but colhi,' they two alone were taic:n forward to the time. when the •peer,1 "glorious, indeed!•" replied alar- 'elf a po':itiori fro_1 which lei fl inroarer is worth nuu•c in market, Irutn. the little day -school to le put fragile, falling creature would sink fan, •' gree pcor,lo! I do. not -Know that l The men who nlaklss his sheep to agricultural labor -a thing unpra- time. into the grave. and Thurston amu'. -ll "And the country. too, is periectl•: 0871 advise yeti how; but ecu will geod as ha.ran before sending time. ed in that locality at that become her Acrd heir. he calculated beautiful et this season. 1 never find a •vay, as-wsrese I a man-, 1 i,, rket, -need have no fear of that every dollar they could see of could sympathize a•,ith the poctewho should." phren. in market. When this' utatter was brought to her income would be so much add':1,I call auturnn•tl days `tee •me:ancholy i . ,' il1ing .a .woman, you htla'e done A 'thrifty animal,, full' of ro the knowledge of•Comerodore Waugh; to the inheritance when Thurstuu,days-Che saddest el the year,`'" Wonders' ' health and vigorous strength, as he strode up and dime his hall,:lshould come into it. 1 "Nor I," sats! Marian; ' for to me, "I•'or a woman." said Mitrian, with more capable' of resisting the poi ate indignint old sailor thumped his ;' Very soon after Thurston's return' autumn, with its refulgent skies, and a Blanco lull of archness and menet- ihf creeifaeious' dts^_ase$ sue. st heavy stick upon the ground, thrust home his randfather ave hint to , forward his great head, find •swore a R gorgeous Woods, and rich hlracst, •meat. 'than tke unthrlity animal, unrierstand the conditions upon which and its ,)respect of (:hnistnias cheer, "3 o, no; for espy one, man or wo ; If there are any sick, or unthr Hi!furerar by the chis Pandeeph,.w 1 he intended to make him his her.. llierarch that his randne,hews and wiAtry, trPQse has ever seemed a man: ]hut your 'method, linrian? I `,sheep in the flock, separate tl should not bee brought up like f clod-' 'l'h<y were two in number', vii„ that gay and festive season. The tears beg .cur pardon, Miss. Mayleld," he and if possible, raarket them hoppers. Thurston should peter leave • him great work is done, the hardest 1' added, with a blush of ingenuous i some way, It will 'not pay to vain while he liwctl; and, secondly, gathered, enjoyment is pre+eut, and embarrassment' ter thorn. • And straightway he ordered his car- "Nay, now," said the frank girl; ' ridge, threw himself into it, and rode that he shw:Id never marry without repose at hand."' i In buying sheep to feed this a his consent. "For I don't wish t) -"in the world of society," sail .."do call mo Marian if that name',. over to Charlotte Hall, where "he' ori- ° q" Thurston, "it is in the evening, after spring's ore readily from our lies ter, hue good ones. ' The 'Palma he lett algae ill my. old age, my dear fie g 1\ ) ,the toed is the same whether fail tared the name GI his taco your no • j the labor cr the business of t lativrs as pensioners at his own boy; tier do I wish 'to ace you throw the day I than the other. Almost all- rersuns,. god spec, or oar onus; the 'el yourself away upon any girl whose is over, that the gayest scenes of call me Marian, and I like it.." g' it p per cost. l fortune is Iris than the estate I ire;festivity occrn•, ,just preceding there• A rush of pleasure thrilled all !mice in -the profits. will bo -aa it 1} This done; he ordered his coachman tend to bequeath entire to yourself." ase of sleep. So I receive you through his veins; he gave her words i former to take the road to Dell -Delight, p• a rheanin and a value. for himself i with _the' sheep selected for br •thought of the- autumn -the ewnilig g P • where. he had an interview with Mr: "-CHAPTER XII. ,t that the did not certainly possess; ins, the natural growth and c «'illcoxen.. of the year, preceding the rest Y And as he met little opposition It was not fortunate for old 11fr, winter. 1�atura s years work is done he forgot that the grace extended t u atter of She' wool of the animal: frorty the old man, who seemed te Willcoxen's plans that his granson she Puts on hie mostgorgeous tugger him was extended to all -hey, that ;be mated should be a matter of think that it was no more than -tali• should have met Narinn 7Ia,lleid, and holds a•fe.stiial before she sinks she had even said as. much in ,the class importance. very words that gave. it, bio an-. The hest interests of sheep I severed: - lbendry does not so much call '"And if I do, fairest Marian, shall extraordinary weights as they I.' too, `leer my own Christian name 'fol the production o[ 'muttons UNLIGH SAP injure the surface. oilcloths and linoleums. . • • • Sunlight Soap washes ` clothes white. without injury to the most delicate. fabrics, or to the hands, for it contains nothing that can r .. Wash 'cloths and linoleums with warm water and 'Sunlight Soap, rinse clean and wipe dry. The colors will be preserved and the surface unharmed. Coinmon'soaps fade the colors Sunlight Soap deans, freshens and preserves injure either clothes or hands. Sunlight Soap is better than other soaps, but is best • when used in the Sunlight way (follow directions). . Equally good with hard or soft water. 152 LEVER BROTHERS Ule1ITCD. Toronto r4 irtrigo s ' _ 104 IMAM 40,00" affiliMt _;‘,e01 -11110°P.- that that the boys' uncle should share the For, on • the morning of Thurston s to Crhwuitct s s ecp. , expense of educating them, he sought ; first meeting with tine charming girl, Marian smiled brightly upon him. nut the youths, -whorl he -found in when he turned his horse's head from • a'Ycs;• my meaning, I believe, only the -field, -and bade them leave. the the arched-gete'way of 01d Field Cot- 11 ss d plough; and go and prepare their.- ; rage and galloped olT, "a haunting — . rd et (ducat-' sha-•c-'and 1»urge gay" attended, slim. Pcl, as befitted the grandnephews 01 t was- t at o )esu 1 u. - aria a gentlemanr with her , blooming face• and sunny 1 The lads were at that time Ler .too hair, and lotmded roseate reek and • ' simple-minded and too clannish to bosom and arms, all softly, 'delicate - feel their pri to piqued at' this o(Tee, 1•y flushed with the pure glow• of rich, • • ' or to take offense at 'the rude man- luxuriant vitality, as she stood in her in which it was Made. Cnnima- the sunlight, under the arch of, azure ' dere' Waugh was their granduncle, morning-glories, with her .grauef,l and therefore had a right t . educate arms rais-d in the act of binding up then, and to b� short with them, the vines. ' ' • too, if he pleased. That was the wry At 'first' this "image fnir eras nes in which they both looked at ' the, most untheu h't of he Was scarcely matter. And very much delighted consciot:s of the haunting .}'re_sente,. and'veryegrateful •they •were for' the or the life rrnd.light it gradually di;- •opefling for education thus made for fused through his.whole being. Ane them.' when the revelation dawned open, his_ And very • ?ealously they' -entered intellect, he smiled' to himself and .upon ..their academical studies. They wondered if;- for- the. first time, he ._ boarded at flee college and roomed was falling 'n love; and theri he geeee - together. But their vacations were grave, and tried to banish the clan - spent apart.; '`Thurston spending his gerous tliotight. ttiit when, day nft,it at Hell -Delight, and Cloudy his at day, amid all the bt:siiiess and the • uckenough pleasures of his_life, the "shape" stili When the 'academical course was pursued him, -instead of gcttiiig an- r Waugh, as r with,it or growingweary of i+-, reinpleted, Commodore g gry has been neon, was at some pains -to lie opened nig heart and trio':: it- i::, give Cloudy. a fair start in life, and and made it at home, end set it for the first time condes:cenrTed • t.) upon a throne, where it reig1Iod se- . use his influence with ')th'e hepnrt- preme, t'_iiT'isimtg •delight over elf his -y meat". to 'procure a favor in the' nature. 131:1 soon, too soon, this • shepei of a midshipman's a warrant fox•' bosom's sovereign hernme the despot, • Cloudesley Morningon, land stung, goaded end urged him to more pointedly expressed." � 'That smile --that smile! It lightened in music' from your lips.,, moderate weight anti choice'qua through all his nature with electric, ''Oh, I do not know," said the i Valuable as blood is in breed ,. beautiful ;;fel, laughing and blushing. l it has • a very necessary adjunct elevating tend inspiring his whole be-. "If it ever comes ria ora y, per a that is, individual merit. e• ins. His Face, too, was radiant with certainly not now. why,. the ven'er- is of little Value in itself u 1 f t atlswered the mafdcn's' able -Colonel Thornton calls hie hacked by individual merit, 10 as .0 e smile. 'Marian,' hut it never comes to me But something in his eyes caused to call him 'John!. " Marian's glances to fall, and the (To be Continued_) •. rosy clouds to roll up over her cheeks+ ' and hroiw Ii}- TAI{Ii--ABLF? GRAVEYARD. •However well grounded the tion ref •the wool grower may b Ally • t title, he is short-sighted- i neglects to look after • the mu side of his bueiness. Iltit' at Then'' 1'hnrston governed his col:u-:Tile Iced Indians of Pala, in Califon- same time, he should neglect tenenc'o-let no ardent or admiring 'ilie were converted to the Catholic quality of wool and the interest fClance csc•aer, and when he spoke. i. •tl• in the C•,'ht'cu.Tih tentura, andwool production. again }:is peeper rind avoids were Ilement Catholics to -clay. Though :'hcep increases so rapidly more deferential. I some. supe1'stitions p1<'wail, their be- mature at such_ en early age "i'r'e spoke of the world of acture, '. 'Aries Mayfield; but }tow is.; It 'with thr',lief iIl the. rp:+urrectiun Is "strong. .7>o- their flesh•is so wholesome for t licying that the dead fount remain that on the 1larority of farms worItl "et 'titan? Ton 'rune)' -nage to lfor some tinie ire. the grave, they o'.)- flock cart readily bo madct'profita most of the human race-autirun is i the herald r.i.a.:etson .r�lt of._festiw-lsrtyo exactly the hour at which the -•-nt is• claimed that one •sheeeep sty and repose, but' of continued pii'1e departs, 'and'thc' rude 'escioden <tech •col • can 1)e kept with- •v labor, r.nct• inerenscd.w.aut and' priva-•'cross over 'each grade in the cele- little if any additional expense tion. and suffering." • Itrery 'staters 1i7o• exact• hoer, minute, the;shcep consumes .much that' '' "'That is ht.'rause soetety is not in, earl dee: on which' the person -died. cow will refuse. • harmony with nature: ratan lira wan- Suspended from thm arms of the Lambs intended 'as next set der;ci.as far frons nature as from 'cross is an al'ar'm clock, with .Ihe ewes should - not he -bred art God,"Gad,said -Marian., ' . - - . ,.- hrtrtde. set 'at the particular hour. season ns it is better to give "And as much needs a ,Saviour to 'The, alarm nL the hack of the clot'.: plenty of time to mature well. lead him Lark to the one as to the held been set at. the same 1/te.m.:nt.: Wool is n product. from fe other,': replied Tht:rsto.n_ !The _prrsoti who- placi1 She echoic hist the Game as• fret. or flesh, 1•: "Fou now that. —yell fel it.?" ash:-ithc:'o • helis'rs that at ,Phe proper the flock should be fed and, nit eel Marian, ti:rning ip-n hint_ one o1.tneencn!, the alarm will sou:ndIand with a. view to wool growl her soul -thrilling glances. :will awaken the sleeping spirit. that of frne .quality. l (CZAR WILL GRANT LIBERTY overnnient Will Lead the Reform Movement. Tho St. , Petersburg correspondent I the London Telegram claims to now that ukases are impending ranting certain important liberties ' connection with the establishment f the National Assembly, to which very reasonable facility will -b.e given for making the political condi-J J.tion of the people practitally as free r as that of their Western neighbors, Wide -spreading changes will be made is the Russian administration, after which the Government will try to lead, instead of following, the reform movement; adopting lines- of policy which will run parallel with the re - terms demanded by the Moderate Liberals.- . The aim will be to allew- the•peo- vie, through their chosen representa- tives, to work out their own dcstin-� les on• national lines, The people will be permitted to elect freely -mem- bers of the National Assembly, can- didates will be allowed to publish addresses and. deliver speeches, the restrictions on the press will be re- pealed, and the people generally will to treated with confidei:ce. In a certain sorse the comigg• changes may be described as a revolution" trona above. EDWARD IS CZAR'S MODEL.. The St. Petersburg correspondent of the London Times says that Count de Witte is holding informal confer- ences with influential reformers, not- ably Editor Hessen, of the Pravo, and Gen. I{ouzmia, who expounded their programme at. great length. They received assurances that -the will give precise indication on this meeting the wishes of the nation. Count -de Witte declared that the Czar's greatest _desire is to become a constitutional sovereign. His ideal is King Edward, who rifles over loyal subjects without the terrible burden of responsibility imposed by en au- .ocratiG regime. IIe hesitated to grant a constitution solely .because he is yet unconvinced that the na- tion. desired it. Count de Witte in- timated that it would be the high mission of the National Assembly to express the people's will in, this re- spect, but he urged moderation, so as to avoid playing into' the hands of the reactionary counselors who surround the throne. ' - The correspondent adds that it is difficult to foresee success for these overtures. The Reformers are so pro- foundly sceptical, and suspicious of the Government that they may per- sist in their present intention of en- tering the National Assembly to - de- mand an immediate charter of liber- ties,. The Congress of Reformers, to be held at Moscow on Wednesday, will give precise indication on this point. " Th -e first electoral meeting was held in St. Petersburg Wednes- day. Several speakers urged, the ex- tension of the franchise, pointing cut that the capital, with a population of 1,400,000, has only 13,000 elec- tors. DOG ON LONELY VESSEL. Speeding Across Atlantic. _With All Sails Set, A New York despatch says: A sail- iavessel iri mrd -ocean,' deserted by her crew, but with sails set, and preceeding with fair speed toward -the shore of North America, was- ro.hted by the steamer Teutonic, a each arrived here on Thursday. The f,ritonic's offcers believe that ' the .t noel i g thebark Orion, whose cn:w, ..-.ording to a wireless message re- ced from mid -ocean last Tuesday. earl, rescued from their ahtp by the. re rner• Etruria. The Teutonic pass- .: she deserted ship about 40 miles e.hwest of the point from which wireless message was sent, • and --oat free hundred miles east of the rth American coast line, Only a .,.;.k dog was. seen •on the lonely sel by • the Teutonic's passengers. '`.r bark's wheel was lashed, and • r course teas _steadily southwest. r:rm the masthead a distress sig- , i was flying. DROWNED AT PORT ROWAN Two Young Men Lose Their Lives While Duck -hunting. A Port Rowan despatch sets: - Four young men, all residents of mouth Waisiegham, went nut in a small boat early on Wednesday morn- : ng hunting duck, While chasing a wounded c' le the sail jibed and the t pat capsized. Two of the men were drowned, Roy Smith' and Nelson ('ronk. The cries of the other two, Hiram Wrightman and John Griggs, were heard en shore. Elgin Hocka- fellow of this village was just stttrt-' :ng for l.nng Point, and, being told .)f the cries for help coming from the arty, he at once started in the direc- t ion of the - sound, and arrived just :n time to rescue. The survivors were in a very exhausted condition, having been' in •the water over one hour, holding fast to the boat. Lennie prince charlie - ,SAIL TO THE YUKON • Police Cutting.it From Edmonton. Make Gaod Progress. • An Ottawa despatch says: -Accord- ing to reports received at the Mount- ed Police Department excellent - pre Kress is being made by the police Py . tine. which is cutting a trail -north- westerly from Edmonton to the 1 u- 1 n: .at is expected that the party i will reach Fort Graham this fall' and spend the winter there, thence' continuing the trail to Tessin next j summer. Several of the Mouhted Police who wintered at Cape Fuller- ton, Hudson Bay, last year, .are go- ing back again by the Lake Winni- peg route this fall. ' HE MAN HAIR FROM CHINA. May Come From Thole Who Had - • The Plague. A London despatch says: -The In- quest in -the -case of an employe of a firm of woolcomhers at Bedford. who died from anthrax revealed that -n great part of the -human hair us '.1 artificially is imported from China,. The foreman said that it arrived in thousand -pound bales: There was no -unrantee th:,t it had been cut from healthy persons. . It might. - conic from those who had suffered from •Ithe ping re cr other contagious (as- ses. The enquiry was adjourned to w an c+.rtrination-of samples. HAMILTON MURDER CASE. Government Offers a Reward of Six Hundred Dollars. A despatch from . Toronto says'. The Clove, ement decided at the Cab- inet meeting on Thursday to oCer a reward of ,600 f;r the arrest, or fnfermaticn leading thereto, of the Murderer of the woman whose body was recently fnt-nel near Hamilton. A circular announcing the reward and giving a description of the man was: c,l in the case will bo drstribut ed i,ri'•.sdcast Iktectiv-e Greer, who is engaged on the case, urged that this should be done T.o a reporter a ho saw him during. the afternoon he said there was nothing new in the case that could be made public: Iie will de- vote his whole attention to it for some time. «. , • A DRUGGIST SUICIDES. J. C. -Luckham., of Guelph, Took Dose of Carbolic Acid, A Guelph despatch Pays: Probably worried by continued ill -health, Mr. J. •C. Luckham, druggist, took a dose of carbolic acid during Wednes- day night and is now dead. The - last seen of hire alive was about 7.30, when he left the hotel where he has been staying since purchasing the business frotn Mr. Law, -about six weeks ago, - Shortly before eight on Thursday morning, the clerk, M. H. Cook, ar- rived and was horrified to. find Mr, I,udkham stretched •on the floor of a hack room. Medical aid was sum- moned and the 'still •living man re- moved to the hospital, where he died shortly after his arrival. • A pe:und bottle of carbolic -acid' was found at the store. with about two ounces gone. Deceased left a note reading: "My God has commanded me til• His kingdom right away. Good-bye." JAPAN TO INCREASE ARMY Militarism Now Dominant in That Country. The Tokio correspondent of Tho 'London Times cables: -It is rumored that the Goyernmcnt intends to seek the consent of the Piet. to increase the army from thirteen to twenty divisions in -order that Jai a 1.e to discharge the obligations•of her alliance wi'th,Gre;at ]3ritain, It is believed that the Gov- ernment intends to station two army divisions -at Liaotung I'erii.nsula, too in Corea, 'the latter. tinder General Hasegawa, the former under Barc>a Oshima, who will be Viceroy of Kwantung. In connection with the refloating of the Pobieda the Emueror hits ad- dressed a massage- of thanks to the officers by whose ability the fuer battleships and two cruisers, besids other vessels, have 'been 'raised at Port Arthur and added to the Jap- anese navy. • FAMOUS MINSTREL 'DEAD "Co"bhBurgessiDies:st the Tor -- onto Hospital. • A Toronto dospatch_says:-Mr. Coln Burgess, widely known by' his stage name of "Cool" Burgess, died on Friday morning at the Toronto Gen- eral Hospital, ••where he lied be:n s patient since last June. Ile hal been suffering from t general - break- ,ip of his constitution. and had en- tered his 65th year. THE WORLD'S - MARKETS REPORT$ FROM TTiF: UADING TRADE CENTRES.. Prices of Cattle, Grain, • Cheese, and Other Dairy Produce at Home and Abroad. • Toronto, Oct. 'y4,--Wheat-the market is quiet, and prices are steady for Ontario grades. No. 2 white is quoted outside at 75 to 751c; No: 2 red at 7d} to.. 7 5c, and mixed at 74• to. 74c, Goose wheat, 69 to 70c outside. New No. 1 hard unchanged at 87c, Georgian Bay ports; No. 1' Northern at 84c, and Na. 2 Northern at 82c. Oats -No, 2 white quoted' at 32 to 32,c west, and at 32, to 33c east, • Earley -No, 2 quoted at 48 to 49c, and No. 3 extra at 46 to 47c, and No. 3 at 43 to 41c at outside points. Yeas Sales of No. 2 at 69 to 70c north and west. Curn-"1-he market for Canadian is dull, with prices pretty nominal. Ar a:ricah corn dull and prices also nominal. - 1iuckw'heat-The market. is quiet, at about e0c outside, Rye -No. 2 quoted at 60 to 62c west. Flour -Ninety per cent. patents made of new wheat for export are quoted at. 53 to $3.10 ,in buyers' sacks at outside points; do., in bbls, 53.43 to 53.50; Manitoba flours un- changed; No. 1 patents, $4.90 to 53; No. 2 patents, 54.50 to 54.70, and strong bakers' at 54.40 to 54.- 6". Manitoba flour, made of new wheat, quoted as follows: -No. 1 patents, 54.130; No. 2, 54.40', - and strong bakers'- $4,30 on trade, To - rent 0. Millfeed-At outside points Iran is quoted at 512.50 to 513. and shorts at 516.30 to 517.50. Manitoha bran, in sacks, 515.50, and shorts at 513, COUNTRY PRODUCE. Apples -Choice stock, $1.75 to $2 - 23 per bal., and cooking apples, 51 to 51.25. Beans --The market_ is 1''rm; hand- picked, $1 75; prime, 51,60 to 51.65 Honey -The market is steady at 01. to 71c for strained, arae 51 50 to $s per dozen conchs. I i Ops - i'he market is steady at 18 to 20c per th, fIev-Car lots of No, 1 timothy are quoted at SS to 58'50 on track here; and No, 2 at 56 to 30 50. Straw -Car lots quoted at 80 on track,. Toronto, - Potatoes -Ontario .stnckx 60 to 70c per bag, and New Brunei:rick, 75 to 80c' per bag On track Live Poultry-1•'at hens. 8 to 7c; thin, 5 to 6c; fat ch,ckens, 8 -to 9c; thin, 8 to 7c; docks, 7• to 8c; tur- keys, 13c; all live weight. .THE DAIRY MARKLIS. -flutter-Pound rolls are jobbing.at 20 ter 21c; tubs, gond to cho•roe, -18 to 20e, and inferior, 16 to 17c. Creamery .prints sell at 23 to 24c, and solids at 22 to 23c. Iiggs .Sales at 19 to 20c per doz- en in case lots: split's. 16. to 17c. Cheese -At 12 to 121c per lb„ the latter for, twins. IIOG. PRODUCTS. • Bacon -Long clear, 111c per Tb. in case lots; mess 'pork, 518 to 518,30; short cut, 5222.50, Cured Meatti-hairs, light to'medi- um,.131 to 14c; do. heavy. 13c; rolls, 12c; shoulders, llc; backs, 15 - to 151c; breakfast bacon, 141, to 15c.. Lard -The market is quiet, and prices are Unchanged. We quote- Tiercea, 101 to 101c; tubs, 101 to pails, .11 to 111c. BL?SINESS AT MONTREAL. • • Montreal, Oct, 24 -Grain -The market for oats was firm this morn- ing and the outside range, of prices advanced to.•37c:fe-r No. 2, thia be- ing' paid for sev'erc1 cars, - store Flour -The two large mills are to- gether' on .quotations for the first time in many., months, They .quote 54.50 per bbl., in bags, for Mani- toba. strong • bakers, patents being' 154.00. Dealers state' that their re- ports from Ontnrio •millers are .to the effect that there -is a .good ex- port demand _at: better prices than being quoted at the following figuresaa ' Patents, - 54:35• to 54.50 per bbl; straight rollers, in bhls., $1; hags of straight rollers being $1.8a to,' 51.....D5 and eetra •bags be= ing $1.63 to 51.75. Feed -Ontario bran, in hulk, 5'15'to'$15.50; shorts,' 520 to $20,50; Manitoba bran, in bags, $16 to 517;• shorts,• $19 .tom.. 520. Hay -No. 1.' 58.50 to 59 per ton on track; No. 2,. 57.50 to 58; clover, 56..to 56.50; - clover, mixed, 56-:50 to 87. Means -Choice primes, 51 .50 to 51.45 • per bushel;- -hand- picked, 81.65 to 51.75. Potatoes - New potatoes. in bags of 80 Ths, 50_ to55ct_in ..bags of 90 Tbs,,-65c. ,Honey-White'cloyer_, ill, eemb,_12 .to 1.3c per 1-1h. section; extract,. 6i to 7c; •buck'ivhcat, 5} 'to 6c.• Provisions -Heavy Canadian short cut pork, 522; •l ight short. cute_ S1 g., to 519; American cut clear fat backs, 520.- 25 t2 520.75; compound lard, ria to 6c; Canadian- pure ,lard 10' to 101c: kc•tele rendered, 11 to -1.2c; hams, 12 to 1.4c; bacon, jic; fresh killed abat- toir dressed hogs. 89,25 to 59. ;n; alive, 56.50 to 56.87e. mixed tote. Eggs-Strair;ht. stock. No. 1 candled, 1S to 19c, Butter-C"hnirest rronre- ery, 221c; undergrarles. 211 to 22-: dairy, 18 to 20c. Cheese -Ontario, 111 to llic; Quebec,-2-3Q_ll�c. UNITED STATES MARKETS. Minneapolis, Minn., Oct. 24 -Wheat -Close--Wheat, Dec„ 821c. to 82jc; :lay, 854,c to 86c; No. 1 hard, 841c; No, 1 Northern, 841e; No, '2 do., 811c. Flour -First patents, 54.90 to 55; se•:ond do., 54.70 to 54,80; lint clears, 53.70 to $3.94; second do„ 82.40 to $2,50. Bran, in bulk, 511.50. St. Louis, Mo.,. .Oct.. 24, -Wheat closed: -Cash,, 861e; Dec., 831c; May, 861c. Milwaukee, W13., Oet. 24 -Wheat' closed: -No. 1 Northern, 861jc; No. 2 Northern, 84 to 86c; Dec,, 87c bid.. Rye: No. 1, 60c. Barley -No. 2, .54c; sample, 36 to 53c. Corn -May, 4-41c bid. 'LIVE STOCK MARKETS. Toronto, • Oct, 24. -The limited number of good butchers' offered nrardo buying quite active. and ow- ing to the extent of the demand buy- ers bought extcneively the inferior stock. which always comes forward to the market.. Basin*in, distillery feeders was lively, auerices were a trifle higher than Last 4freek. Hogs were unchanged, but weak. Sheep and lambs were not in very_brisk de-- manri. Export cattle, choice -54.25 §4.50 Do., medium ,,.,.. 4.15 4.25 Do,; hulls 3.00 3,25 Do., light 2.75 8.00 Do., cow, 2.75 8.26 Butchers' picked 4.25 4.40 Do., choice ., ' 4.00 4.10 Do medium ...... 3.-60 • 8,75 Do., light. ,..A. ,...,,... 2.75 3.00 Do., bulls ' 2.00 2-.223 Stockers, choice 3.00 • 3.25 Do., common . 2.00 2,'25 Do., bulb 2.25 2.5.0 Ilcavy feeders 3.50 13,75 Short keep 3 75 • 4.011 Milch cows, choice • 40.(:0 55.04 Do., common ..-28.00 33.00 Sheep, . export, ewes .. 3.85 4.25 Do., bucks 300 fi 30 Do.. culls 3.00 3.50 I-amhs, pe;• cwt.- 5.90 ' 610 Calves, each • 2.00 10.1'0 Hogs • selects _, 6.00 _ . v.t.t0 Do., lights and fats5.75 0.00 POLITICIANS RUIN BANK. Cashier- Took Landamitn and Then _ ;Shot Himself.. A Pittsburg. Pa despatch says' - After an. inveat:gation of, the Looks of the Enterprise. National I!ank of A!legheey, %%heel dtselusert that' the bank svgs insolvea:', T. Lee Clark, cashier of the institution for years, went to fes home on Tuesday night, spent a a.1,, epless, nervo,:s night and c:n 'Wednese'ay took 'an ounce of lama rlanum and then shot hintaelf through the head, dyin 'et, '. r' In . An hour before the '1 his death wan receival at a telegram sane from the l nmp of Currency at-Wa,,hitigton to ci 1,c the doors, and appointing Bank Ex- aminer John 13. Cunningham as re- ceiver: The President of the bank, Fred Gwinner, on Wednesday announced that Clark had loaned 'thousands of dellrs.s to l'ennsylvania politicians, that he himself had endorsed a nota for 530,000 for Clark, concluding with the statement: "If the )shortage was only 5100,000 he would gladly Pay it himself," The bank has State deposits which will amount to $800,000, of which 539:8,000 is in the checking or active nccount and th'e rest 15 State sink- ing funds, Mr, • Go -inner, , in his statement, said: "Nearly 5700,000 of the 8800,- 000 State deposits ,of our bank is out. on. paper of State politicians. W. 14. Andrew has borrowed nearly $40,000; Frank J. Torrance has bor- rowed considerable. 1 do not know how much, ilut tho • bank, I • stttte,- is solvent." -NOTICE TO DOUKHO.BORS. Given Two Months to Make Home - stead Entry. A Dauphin despatch says: -The Doukliobors have been notified by the Minister , of -the Interior that • they havo two months to become natural- ized and rattle entry for their home- steads, -or their present holdings will. be given . o others. Peter ,Verettin to become British subjects.• In view pf this' steed serious complicatio are sure to result. • • WREATHS BY -THOUSAND Commemioration of Trafalgar Cans, tenary in London, A London despatclisays: In esery, part of the British Empire on Sat- urday, and wherever a British man -- of -war -floats; the one hundredth an- niversary -of Nelson's victory over the combined fleets of France ' - tihtk Spain off Cape Trafalgar waa eche- brataed. On all the ships of the navy at a -given -hour flags' were dipped, ' NV/. Ile the. bands played the 'Dead March." Nelson's old flagship, . the Victory, still lying in Portitnnuth harbor, -was decorated from' stern to - stern, and thousands -of electrio lights were. -strung everywhere for . the night illumination of the old battleship. It was proposed to illu- minate the Nelson Monument on Tra.fale-ar•-square here, but, fearing a tretnendoas . crush of peoplo, with the - accompanying accidents, the au- thorities forbade it. In London the day's celebration began with the hoisting of national flags on 'the Nelson column. immense er .r.is as- sembled, Olid When Nelsen i. famous signril, "England expects this day that every man shall do his duty," ` was unfurled, a mighty cheer went up, The day was cold n.nd threatening, but this did not deter the people from turning out to participate in the nation's holiday. Trafalgar - square, which was elaborately decor- ated, ecorated, was, naturally, the centre to. Which all converged, and much in- terest- was •manifested in the thou- sands of wreaths from the colonies, provinces and various cities of the empire, which were piled in immense masses at the base of the Nelson Column, Among the floral tributes occupy- ing' the .. inure • pronoine'nt positions was a wreath inscribed: "To the 'memory of the gallant dead of France and Spain, who lost their lives in the great conflict," The cretin= itself- was covered witli laur- el streamers. stretching from the top of the statue to the baste The boys of the Naval Brigade arrived at the scene from Portsmouth dng t the morning, and. aftpa,- ba:uttog"'e column by pres+-.::iag arms, piaci on it a wrea a from Admiral Togo. Sere see h Were .all largely at- tend.•-:, -were held simultaneouaiv in .t Paul's Cathedral; where NelsOa Is burled, and in other churches, TOGO'S VICTORIOUS ENT Hero of the Battle c Japan Welco A Tok - was; made of m the from The rt v'od 1030 g„1:: tern of State, members of the dat'!o hundreds of officials acid private rens, who extended him a warnq we come to the capital,. He was ac companied ay his staff and Admiral Katakao. Karnitnura azrd Dewa, t gether with their respective staffs. -The party entered flys Imperia carrlacps placed at their disposal and led by his Majesty's aide, Ad iniral Inouye, drove direct to th palace, reaching there at I1 o'clock when they were received in audien by the Emperor. Admiral Togo's carriage. escort by a bodyguard of troops pas through a triumphal' arch in front the railway station. The st were fines, with tin •adaniring crow who shouted hearty batllsais as' th party passed. along... Was ring of. the enthusiitstic' cheeks, isliigleadnieftl1'tliir noise of the bands, tea's audible. kg,' a great distance. - -a. dr.l • Genn -al Sakuma detailed three bat- talions as • guards of honor. . The battalions were composed 'from the Tokio garrison, and were under` cora mane of Major-General Togo. Tou guns located at Hibiya Park fire salutes: The day was a boautifu one, and all Tokio was out, irr spective of age, to welcome the tor of the battle of the Sea o pan. Admiral Togo, after his a ence with the Emperor, returned. to his ship. .a BONNIE PRINCE- CHARLIE He is. .Expected to Accept the Norwegian Throne. • The London Times-correspondeet at Christianin, Norway, cables: - The bill giving the Government au- thority- -to • make- a proposal to Prince Charles of Demnark to accept the Norwegian 'throne is -expected to be. laid heforo _the Storfhing very soon. 4 • THE--POBIEDA FLOATED: Another Russian Ship Raised at Port -•Arthur, _ ._ A Tokio despatch says: -The 'R'w- sian ba!tleshi;' Pobieda was refloa:,ed by the .roparlese at Port Arthur on Wednesday. The two British officers captured by 'Moorish brigands are still. held 1., the mountains. the Emperor warmly praised t service rendered by him, his office and men. _ , NAVAL •VICTORS, WORSH Togo, With Admirals and Sailori? Attends at Temple of Ise. A Tokio despatch says: -A de• spatch - from Yamada, Ise Provtnco, reports that 'Admiral Togo and the admirals under his command-, ' with their st.alFs and 2,00.0 armed and 1,000 unarmed sailors arid marines, proceeded (IL Wednesday to the great Temple of Ise to worship, making a 'most impressive sight. "- Premier Ketsura,' who assumed tat duties of Foreign Minister_ whe Baron Korr.ura, the -Foreign Mini ter, went to America, as peace plen ipotentiary, has been relieved t>f hi duties as Minister for Foreign Af fairs. Mr._ W. P. Archibald, of the minion Parole Office. says that s the parole system became opera' six years ago, more-than1,000 havo been released frotlp prison, only' a little-' more thin - per to havo beenoretuirried itss prison. • Vie f icktting gttrs published every Friday morning at its Oma • Pickering Ont. TERMS fi.*ipe:Fear ; Si.00 fpaidtaadeenee BATE8 OF ADVERTISING : VIM Insertion, . Saab subsequent insertion, per line • 10 is Thee rate does not include Legal or Foreign ad- aefrtlaements. special terms given to parties making can- aaaas for 3 or 8 months or by the year. Half- ' *early or yearly contract' payable quarterly. Easiness cards, ten linea or under, with paper, •4tateyear, $5 06, payable in advent*. • nisi" Notice in local columns ten cents per line, else cemteper line each subsequent insertion. a9?ecial contract r tee made known on applies,- •• en. No free advertising . Advertisements without written attractions ettllbe inserted until forbidden and charged ao- acrdiagly. Orders for discontinuing advertiae- .lawte must be in writing and sent tO tnepnb- - Sieben - Job Work promptly attended to. Murkar & Thexton, Proprietors THANKSGING DAY. This is the week Canada is call- ed upon to return thanks to the Diver. of all Good for the - any blessings He has showered down upon us. Never before in her history has Canada had great - e eason to show her gratitude ltilan she has this year. No other country in the world. has enjoyed the same degree of prosperity than has been the fortune of otir Dominion to en -joy for the past •three or four seasons. We have i]lad three or four years of bounti- ful harvest, which, coupled with -t,ae:•. ,good prices, has given us a weakll -iaf. its never before enjoy - os ► ed. meet y section of the cern- -.r7 5, ,, • „ �eitunity Is receiving its jut share the gix>tl things going. Jlanu- lf'actiiresr,Of all kitit are besieged with orders; and their plants are running to their full capacity. • There area very few manufactur- ers w ho do not tied it neces- sary to increase the size of their 'plaints in order to cope with their 'l'tl�rAa-ing bu4inc,e. .Mechanics ni,d laborers of all kind., have no ?t, ••.,ity° in eecurio.; labor at If risen ctin )x found C- Ile. they are not do from nt frt•ni c hoiee, unless f r nusickness. i+v reason y find ug, and n making year. n,,,re rapidly asst three years than any other country. There is more wealth in.C'nnada per head of her pemil itiou than in any other, and in nu other country -is the condition Of the laborer ao- '�, satisfactory as in Canada. We have good reason to believe that this period of prosperity is = to continue for some years to .come. - We have this year begun ••the building of a new trans-con- :ti•nental .railway which will open 'up for settlement, vast areas. of fertile soil, which will become the home of millions of immigrants who will add strength to the Dation. tion. - • Iu 130 other respect have we had such good reason for thanksgiv- ing than in the fact that We have 'enjoyed a period of peacle._- While other countries have been having their life -blood drained and their . wealth destroyed, and business at at, standstill, Canada has been al- lowed to concentrate her energies i'n building up the nation, and in -bringing happiness to her eon- -tented people. She has also been comparatively free from those labor .troubles that confront the 'eople.of other countries, troubles in which capita] and labor are at war one with the other and which - -cause so much distress to every . But while we have much too be thankful for, - there are certain :evils existing in our national life against which we must be contin- ually on our guard. The greed -for wealth and power lead to cer- ;.tain •evils which if not nipped in the bad, may develop into such .:. proportions that will be appalling <n the end. But if these evils are fought from the beginning, -the • future greatness of Canada -s a ...nation is assured. - Let . everyone join .in giving - • thanks on the day set apart by the Govenor-General for those manifold,bless ings.-whichare ours - in such abundance. -The Deputy Commissioner of Fisher•ie's ' has given notice that the waters of the Seugog, as far down as the locks at Lindsay, have been set apart for the -natu- ral and artificial propagation of fish for and during a period of two years from the first clay of Sep- tember, 100", .and that. fishing in any manner whatsoever is prohi- bited in that 1p,;riod. The penalty Stn and costs or three months imprisonment, N LOCAL OPTION. The electors and Christian people of Pickering Township were amazed last week ,it the action of the Council in refusing the request of the Temper- ance Alliance, to allow the electors to express their will in the matter of the seppression of the liquor traffic. We quote the seely of the Cotincil, ponder it over, consider it carefully, and we think you will be prepared when the day comes to act for '' Home and Country." . Mr. Alex Wilson, seconded by 31r. J. M. Gerow, moved that, whereas a deputation this day waited on this Council asking to have a by-law sub- mitted to the electors of this Town- ship for the local option provision of the Liquor License Act, the said depu- tation acting for a meeting' of temper- ance workers held at Brougham a few days since. And, whereas it seems to this Council that the people of this Township are not very desirous of having such a vote taken, as the small attendance at the said temper- ance meeting seems to prove. There- fore, that the request of said deputa- tion be not acceded to." The Alliance met again in the Sons of Temperance hall at Brougham last Thursday afternoon, and after bear- ing the deputation, who had waited on the Council, and also the resolu- tion passed by the Council and duly signed by the Reeve, James McBrady, and Donald R. Beaton, Clerk, the Alliance decided ..to ask all of the twenty pulpits in the Township to make October 29th, next Sunday, Tem- perance Sunday, and that sermons on the subject. as provided by the Local Option Act be preached. These ser- mons are to be followed by circula- ting a petition signed only by bona - fide electors. or those who have a right to vote at municipal elections. It is confidently expected that the petitions will be largely -signed, and will be presented to the Council at a future date. A rousing temperance convention i. called to meet ,n Bro- ugham, on Thursday, November 9th, at 2 p, m,. and a mass -meeting will be held in the evening at 7.30. The Rev. M. (', Tait, B. -A., of C•laremotit, Rev. J. E. Moore. Ph. 13 , Pickering, .end Rev. l',.R•. Reynrilds of R•hitevaje - were ••I7osen wi sreakere ' A ci.ijlwy:.;•n tcill t,e taken up to aid t►✓ tee:eer- ier*• pee'ple in their Fifty-five u:uni,-:palitiey has-. c'arr'ied the local option by-law - nd 1<o11,1 not think of going; hack yo the license systema again. Below' we gine the declaration of principles of the Alliance fair the total su pre,seen ;,f the Ii.loor tri'.fli: 1 1'hat If ne 'h• r right nor politic for the :tate '• a•!;,:.;1 legal protection tnd snnctioa to any traffic or system that tends to increase crime. . to waste the national reaourcee. to corrupt the social habits and to destroy the -health and IivPs of the people. 2 That the traffic in intoxicating heverages i'--hcit,tile to the true inter - pets of inditiduala. and detructive of the -1 svelte re..( societ y, and to be prohibited. hat the history and results of all part legislation in regard to the -liquor traffic aburdantly prove that it is possible satisfactorily to lirnit or regtt• late a system in essentially micchie- ylull. in its tendencies;. 4 That no consideration of private {eft, or public revenue can justify the ipholding of a system so utterly wrong in principle, suicidal in policy, rind tlisastrrnirjn results, -as thetrame' in into'ire ting liquors. 5 That the twat prohibition of the liquor traffic is in perfect harmony -with the principles of justice and lib- erty, is. not restrictive of legitimate commerce. and is essential to the in- tegrity and stability of government. and the welfare of the comutunity. - 6 That, rising above sectarian and party considerations, all citizens should combine to procure an enact- ment " prohibiting the -. manufacture, the importation, and sale of intoxicat- ing beverages as affording most effi- cient aid in removing the appalling evils of intemperance. •. „ New Advertisements. z.-. ie ro..i; ANTED. --Genera] servant, good iP wagee,paLt. 3LB8. E. J. THOk i. (, Whitby. 4tf. FOR SALE—A four year old mileh cow. half Dorham. Apply to Dr. R. M. BATEMAN, Pickering. 51-tf FOR SALE—A new milch cow. Ap- ply to Mrs. J. L. PALMER, lot 80, con. 3, or address Pickering P 0 51tf FOR SALE—One draught elding rising 4 years old. at lot 28, con, 1. Pickering W. J. GILMER, Dumbarton. 5116 T' EICESTERS FOR SALE—One 2- ♦ shear Ram, r;weltered ; three ram lambs. PETER ANNAN, Dunbarton, 3-7 CIDER.—The undersigned is pre- pared to make cider at cis pemises, lot 10, Con, 4, Pickering, every Tuesday. and Fri- day of each week, W. H. GIBSON. 2-3 RENT—A'conifortable li storey frame dwelling in Pickering Village. Pos- session given at once. For particulars apply to Mrs, W, T. Hartrick, Pickering, Ont. 5011 STRAYED OR STOLEN—A black small. short•tailed cocker spaniel dog about a year old. Had a good collar locked on neck, answers to the name "Toby." Any informa- tion as to his whereabouts will be thankfully recelyed by ES H STEVENSON, Brougham 1-3 •3 CARLOADS OF CATTLE For sale I have at my premises for sale feeding steers, heifers, beef angers, and new Milch cows. Cal: and eee them sad get prices. One and a half miles west of Brougham Village, phone or apply to John A. White and Sons. Brougham. Ont. 48 1 t FOR SALE—A farm containing 50 acres. being lot 13, rear of 9rd conceesioo, Pickering. On the premises are a dwelling, barn. stable. ere. Por particultan apply to LEWELLYN BOONE. or W. V. Richardson, Pickering. 42-11 T.rORKSHIRES—Young Yorkshires 1 for sale, Young sows ready for service. Young boar, ready for service. Also,, pure bred ready for service at the farts Prtoee right Call and see them "Grasmere Grange" B M CHAPMAN. Andley 961 SKATING RINK, HOUSE AND LOT FOR SALE -The undersigned offers for sale at a reasonable price, his large skat:y4 r;nk.. and also hu hones and lot sitns"1,2 the Vil:age of Brougham For parneef-ars apply to Frank Sandcrsou on des c usei or to V. Richardson, PickerW9 42 -it N OTE$. The Rev. Father Sherriden assures the Bickering Temperance Alliance of his vote and influence in helping to carry the local option by-law. -Rev. A. -(Jammer, of the Anglican church, Pickering, is an out and out -prohibitonist and. will unite heartily -in this temperance campaign—in fact the ministers are uniting in this.offort to do away with the evil of intoxicat- ing liquors as a beverage. C. Rogers, W. Denis, J. Fowlie, Geo Philip, E. Wilson, J. W. Hogle, B. Bunting, J. P., J. H. Rogers, W. Sparks, sr., and many other layman are deeply interested in this temper- ance measure: • ' All the ministers in 'Claremont. are red hot prohibitionists. - Remember next Sabbath is temper- ance Sunday throughout the Town- ship of Pickering. PICKERING TEMPERANCE ALLIANCE. • Sixty Weeks for et 75. The new subscriber to • The Youth's Companion for 1906 who at once sends the subscription price, $1.75 will receive free all the remain- ing issues of the paper for 1905. These issues will contain nearly 50 complete stories, • besides the opening chapters of Grate S. Richintmd s sequel, "The Uhurchchill's Latch- String" a sequuel to her storey of " The Second Violin" which appeared in the early weeks of this year. Madame Sembrich will contribute an article on "Sovereigns I Have Sung To," and there will be three stories by May . Roberts Clark under the title, "Tales of a Pawnee Herip."- - • -- These will give a foretaste of the good things in store for 1906, full illu- stra.tted annotincelnerit of which will he serif to any address free with sample c(pies of the paper. New subscribers will also receive a gift of The Companion's "Minutemen' Calendar for 1:06, lithegt,•aphed in twelcr rnlnr+,nil gold. ' T1 -1E YOUTH'S ('OMP.1NEO`. 114 Berkley Street, Boston, glass z- •;\TF. D- By a C'hicagoi 'a :.rent Houseperson of tru4twortnt• DIMS r..l somewhat familiar e:th tern. to -v as aeaatant ;n tiraiicL G:p 'e, salary 4, /S AC,: weekly. Permanent posit on. � :a yes 11i oat required. Previc.i4 rsperien.e act •esat,al to ecr,'ag:cg. Address.' 91aaager Branches, Como block. Chicago. 1.12 10,000 Barrels of Apples - 'CTTa�te3 Highest price paid for fall and ..winter fruit. •• F. E. GEE, -- WESLEY GEE, 41-3m PICKERING, Oat. Methodist Church Services as Follows. 10:30 a.m.. Preaching, 7:1 p. - - 2:t)0 p.m... Sabbath School. 8:00 p.m.. , , , , Epworth League, on Tuesday. 8:11) p.m NI rekly Prayer- on -Thursday, Rev. J. E. Moore, Ph. B. Pastor. SEEDS Alsike. Clover, Timothy-. We are buyers. of all kinds of seeds, either cleaned or uncleaned. We have the best cleaning milts -manufactured. It will -pay- you to see us before selling your seeds. If you cannot come send us samples by mail, we will give you prompt reply. Our shipments are made. direct to the best seed markets in United • States and Europe. Seamless • cotton bags 20 to 25c. each, 2 to 2i bush., weight 16 to 18 ors. H. iOWSlOzr dr CO.; WHITBY, Ont. Notice 1 Our specialty is Repairing;. Bring along your Wagons • and Std #e3. Horse -shoeing as usual. We have onhand a large stock of ladders at 11 cents'per round. W. H. JACKSON. Brock Road. ,`J3laeksmitking 1 The undersigned having bought out the blacksmithing business of R. ' Moore, is prepared to do black- smithing in all its lines. ' • Horse -shoeing - a - Specialty. j CFEOa-= -..: PICKERING, ONT. Butter, Eggs, Chickens. , Bring them tet Claremont Market. Wednesday market day. 1,. -E. EMERSON, Buyer, Mongolia. The People's Cash Store. WE want you to make this store your store, and if you hers we shall make it our business to see that whateve buy is entirely satisfactory,' and if you are not satisfied your purchase, we ask as a favor that you report to us at one we assure you we will adjust the matter to your entire satisfacti • Men's Overcoat-s—A special line, Splendid value at $S.50 and worth $12 and $13. - 0 • Men's, Women's, Boy's, Girl's L nderware for fall and Winter—a - assortment, with prices right. We have put into stock a special line of Men's Top Boots whic • are selling at very close prices, $2.25 ; also, fine Boots a 1$2.25 and $2.75, latest styles. Bed Quilts for winter $1.50; Blankets, $1.25 to $2.10 ; Rubber I lined Buggy Robes, beautifully made, $6.95. C+ R 0 0 M 1R01 S Choicest Fresh Cakes just opened, Lady Fingers, Machroona, Cake, Home-made Cookies, Maple Cream and dozens more the choicest biscuits and cakes to be had. Please try them. - Sewing Machine Needles, Oil,- Belts, ete., for sale. D. SIMPSON & COMPANY, - PICKER,=NQ-, -. 0 MT • ••Aillinerij 1 .:Ail/inert( We are selling out the balance of our stock of Spring and Sum Hats at a great reduction to make room for our new Fall Good -i. Gave us a call it you are wanting millinery.. - - C. A. Baker, • MIN Picker • f1. a We draw attenlit'n to u few articles generally called fur at this ... season of the year: Knitting Yarns. . Berlin., . Silkines,-Fe1t:, :Embroil Hoops, Towl Rings. Lamp Shades, -:Fancy China and Glass goods as vases, cups and saucers, e Also Underwood's Fountain Pens, Ink and Souvenir Cards M. & E. Boone, Picker kR>I FOR SALE OR TO RENT-- esing lot 11, con. 2, of the Teepee r of r,ckenn,;, and close to the ViilagP:f Pickering, cons.,ncgof 131 acre., more or leas. Soil is ;and and in a Food e:ate of caltivnucc. Un tine preoi:ses ,are a good wank barn, two frame dwellings, an a:;uodence of hard and' soft mat• • et For tt:rther particulars apply to JAMES I LONG, Picksring. 44.tf Pic7tserislg ... . Vigilance '-. Committee ! Formed for recovering property stolen from its members and. the appre• heneion of the• thieves. ;1embess baying property stolen commnni- cate immediately with any member of Executive Committee. Membership fee $1.00. - - Arthur Jeffrey, Geo, Leng _ Secretary. President. Exec. Com.— Geo. Leng, D. E. Pugh, C. S. Palmer, Pickering, Ont. Tickets may he, obtained from A. Jeffrey, sec., or J. A. O'Conner, vice- pres. Pickering Lumber Yard ! Our Stock Is now Complete. During Recent Months th 1PLT.TOTT TORONTO,- ONT. has received ten, fifteen, tw 14011 even fifty times as many for stenographers, bookkeeper.' as it had students graduating ing the same months. Some of salaries offered were from month to 51200 per annum. clearly indicates the best school young men and woolen to pat ize. Enter now. Handsome ci logue free. Cor. Yonge and Alexander sts. 19y W. J. ELLIOTT, Princi ig 11111 .115' I s N ed 1 al odea as no I a t - *t J. JA , sa .aa • �i1A�i. ise 1 .s. a•as at l 1 5.1.7i1;MB s. ...rras...�.m,_ s.e.rrk.- Why buy a . kinked hard wire f when ou can buy the carbonized db• In all kinds of building "material including rough and dressed, lumber, lath, cedar, ete. Our stock of Shingles is also com- plete in British Columbia, New Brun' swick and Ontario Cedar. All kinds of the usual Mouldings, Base, Casing; V Sheeting and Floor- ing always in stock. Cistern tanks and watertroughs made to order. —=- W. D. Gordon. root `Wood .IMPLEMENTS. Have a look at our new Twin Plow— three levers and on roller hearings. A trial solieited. Also, the "Perfection Fanning Mill"— one that, separates. A full line of *� TT fall implements. Prices right. THOMAS PO M CHE AGENT. P„ HERRING. .Brougham W. F. R• JONES, Balsam, 0 Also dealer in Brantford Gas Engines and Wind -mills, Grei celebrated Carriages. Farm Wagons, etc, 3 MONEY. TO LOA -On- first -Class improved farm property at •5° - 0 Prompt attention given 'to all applications • Applp to er kr r O LAR EMOII I qrs. J. H. Beal spent Tuesday Broughatu. Rev. M. C. Tait preached in arkham on Sunday last. Thos. and Mrs. Bray, of Toron- , are visiting S. and Mrs. Bray, this place. r. Durant and wife, of Dun - paid Wm. and Mrs. Dows- 11 a flying visit on Tuesday. var former teacher, W. M. umerfelt moved his household s to Pickering on Monday. first snow storm of the sea- •urred here on Friday last, an inch of the beautiful fallen. Ladies' Aid of Erskiue met on Tuesday afternoon •ii, e residence of Mrs. W. Ieorge Scott. service There will be a special n Erskiue church on Sunday, coy. 5th, for young people. F.verybody welcome. Austin Palmer and bride of Manitoulin Island, are here on heir honeymoon visiting sad Mrs. Dowswell and family. Died—At lot 4, c.in. 6, Whit- Dhurch, on Monday, Oct. 23rd, 1905, W. C. Heard, aged 61 years, months and 4 days. The funeral took place on Wednesday morn- ing, when his remains were con- veyed to the Whitby union ceme- tery, Oshawa, for interment, ser- vice being held at the house. The deceased lived here up till about two years ago and was well- known in this vicinity. Do not forget the 84th anniver- sary and thanksgiving services of the Claremont Baptist church, which will be celebrated on Sun- day and Monday next. Rev. Dr. Bates, of Toronto, will conduct Th no ;arly avi Th hurt dresses will be given by Revs. Blundell, Lamont, Booker and the resident ministers. Appropriate music,- both vocal and instru- mental, will be rendered. See bills for full particulars. On Thursday evening last the Woman's Foreign Missionary Soci- ety of Erskine church held their annual thaukoffering meeting, with a good attendance consider- ing the disagreeable evening. The meeting opened with a song service in which the choir was assisted, by Misses C. B. Simpson; of Pickering, and Mina Phillips, of Brougham, both of whom delight- ed the audience with their beauti- ful solos. This was followed by an admirable address ou "Foreign Missions," by the Rev. A. L. Geg- gie, of Toronto. Mr. Geggie is one of the best speakers in the church to -day, and there is a great de- mand for his services. The pro seeds of the evening amounted to about $28.00. On Friday afternoon in the Methodist church, at 2.30, the W. F. M. S. held their yearly district convention. There was a splendid attendance of ladies considering the day. The meeting was presid- ed over by the District Organizer, Mrs. Denyes of Whitby. Mrs. R. P. Hopper read the address of welcome ; Miss Burkholder, of the Whitby College, responded ; Mrs. (Rev.) Moore, of Pickering, gave a very able paper on " Missions." Miss Wilson also gave an address on Mission Band work. Greetings were given from sister societies: Presbyterian—Mrs. (Rev.) Tait ; Baptist—Miss Evans. In the even- ing at 8 o'clock, Rev. Mr. Totten presided. Mrs. Denyes gave the organization's report which was very satisfactory. Miss Burk - national flag and a Chine_e w-om- man's shoe. She gave a most in- teresting address, and one had only to look in her fare to see that she was giving heir best to the Master's service. Rev. Mr. Tait spoke briefly and to the point on the need of missions and the sacri- fices made by the missionary. A vote of thanks was given to the speakers, the choir for their ac- ceptable music and to the ladies for their hospitality. Kind Lady—Poorai1 n ! Would- n't you like a nice chop ? The hobo (suspiciously)—What kind uv chop lady—lamb or woodshed ?—Chicago News. PICK RING FRUIT Evaporating Factory 1. will be opened Sect. 25, 1905, ■ The SOVEREIGN BANK OF CANADA • Established May, 1904. Total Deposits on 30th April, 1903, $3,252,583. 30th April, 1904, 5,707,503. 30th April, 1905, 8,316,203. -31st August, 1905 9'138,437. Your Current or Savings Account Invited. Apples will be bought at the Pickering Factory and prices paid according to quality. Soft apples not taken. _ C. W. CARRUTHERS, 47tf Pickering, Ont. the services ou Sunday both morn- 'holder spoke ou systematic giving ing and evening. At 3 p. ni. al taking the words "The earth is Sunday School rally will be held the Lord's and the fulness there- at which Dr. Bates will- give an of " as hersubject. It was haud- address. _O11 Monday evening tea led in a very able manner. The w III be -staved from 5.30 to fcti-!-peaker of the evening was I)r. 1 wed by an interesting prugraln, Anna Henry, a returned tui--ou- An address, "Nazareth And the 'ary Iron% Cnina. She had with Sea of Galilee," by Dr. Bates will her a number of curios. among be the chief feature. Short ad- thein several Chinese gods, the OH3RATIONSIDES Two Grateful Letters from Women Who Avoided Serious Operations.—Maly Women Suffering from Like Conditions Will Be Interested. • �r f/Ptr Marked Every Morday F. C. Lafraugh, • Brougham. Ali. GOOD THINGS must win upon their merits. The International Dictionary has ,won a greater distinction upon its merits and is in more general use than any other work of its kindin the English language. # 8. Bayes. LL.D.. D.D.. of Ozlerd Cntveratry, Eniland. bas resect:T ease ;.. • :• ;. •1,;e,• a tnerveIOus w-,r1t :t>t ecu t; t >c,e •e ` a ditherer, mere esbausttve a.1,: :, motet* Every th.ng :s a It—not only as: we might erpe.•t t•: dud in such a worst, t.❑' ara w^a' few f us would ever have tbouugn t • • t wt f r • supp:eMent to the oew has have net r•.,t insr It lulu apathe I dtt thaBraila •••.,ktng through ent t IsLter tY Z1MR aBtontehmeetat.m � ne amount of labor that vat ;oto 1t. When a physician tells a woman, suf- fering from ovarian or womb trouble, that an operation is necessary it, of course, frightens her. The very thought of the operating table and the knife strikes terror to her heart. As one woman expressed - it, when told by her physician that she must undergo an operation.tshe felt that her death knell had on Oar hospeforle an or womb n who are t�rre operational It is quite true that these troubles may reach a stage where an operation in the only resource, but such eases are much rarer than is generally suppose • , because a great many women have been cured by Lydia E. Pinkham''s Vegetable Compound after the doctors had said an operation must be per- formed- In fact, up to the point where the knife mast be need to secure instant relief, this medicine is certain to help. The strongest and most grateful statements possible to make come from women who, by taking Lydia E. Pink - ham's Vegetable Compound, have escaped serious operations. . Mrs. Robert Glenn of 434 Marie St., Ottawa., Ont., writes: I am only too pleased that I did eo, for it restored the to perfect health, saving me the pain of an operation and the immense Mills atteniine the some. Pray accept my hearty thanks and best wishes:' Miss Margret Merkley of 275 3d Street, Milwaukee., 'Wis., writes: Dear Mrs. Plnkham:— Lose of strength, extreme nervousness, severe shooting pains through the pelvic organs, cramps, bearing down pains, and as irritable disposition compelled me to seek medical advroe. The doctor, after making an examination, said that I had ovarian trou- ble aaynd ulcerat hope. i eon, and advised an operation — and 1 only ycided as a last resort To this I rttato try Lydia THE CRAND PRIZE *.e highest award, was frfven 1,i the In• t•rttat1onal at the worlds Fair. ht. Louie. f R EE —"A Teat in Pronnneration"i - ruC'.ve ant: •-:;'r rtaining •.•, tbe whole taccut.• ' , iatrated pamphlet. Also wavers G.&G.MERRIAMCO., l pveusntns, SPRINGFIELD, Mase. YES We sell a lot of -- Our assortment is complete and prices low. — — Call and see — — jDOWSWEI L'S, ' :CLAR EMONT, ;few = -Maes 1 Arriving Daily. For the best lines of Boots and Shoes, Robbers, etc. Ccallon-- - • Henderson & Farmer, Claremont. We are prepared to do ill Moes of wo'k Promptly pertaining to the pump honors%. -Important showing of 6aest display of : Clans. A yery large assortment of Stationary. Books, Dolls, Toys. just - received for the Holiday sod eeeCall IgaDeariptaoas Weekly nand D Magazines. L ARMI FOR SALE QR TO RENT-- 1. known as the Henry Gordon station farm, being parts of lots 13 and 14, con. I, Pickering town -shin. and close to Pickering Village, con• .03ttag of about 110 acres. 800 .is good stay loam: in fair ,ta'e of cultivation, and good for either gram or stock-raleing. On tba pre- tnis„s are a good brick house, a large frame barn, with stone foundation, and good stabling also a good bearing orchard. For particnlare apply to J, N, Richardson or Lafayette Gordon. Executors. 60 YEARS' EXPERIENCE ATEtiTS. TRADE MARKS DeslGNs COPYRIGHTS &C. Anyone Bending a sketch and description may quietly ascertain onr opinion free whether an inventing is probably patentable. Commanica- , , 1 confidential. Handbook on Patent. Bent .- • s. rough speeeella 'sotto without charge. t in tnn he a Sci¢ntitiC Jlmnerican. A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir- culation of any ecientiec lournat Terme, 53 a ear : tour months, 5L Sold by all newedealera IUNN & Co;ee; V 1. We hiNew YlC. " To my eurpriee. the ulcerationhI healam ed, tibe bed symptoms lrousp ill; and I can- notexpress more mygthanks for what it has •done for me." Ovarian and womb troubles are steadily on the increase among women. —and before submitting to an opera- tion every woman should try Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Compound. and write t1rs. Rinkham at Lynn, Mass. for advice. For thirtyyears Lydia E. Pinkharn s Vegetable Compound has been curing the worst forms of female complaints. all ovarian troubles, inflammation, ul- ceration. falling and displacement of the womb, leucorrhoea, irregularities, indigestion and nervous prostration. Any woman who could read the many grateful. letters on file in Mrs. Pink - ham's office would be convinced of the efficiency of her advice and Lydia E. Pinkham's• Vegetable Compound. Dear Mrs. Pinkham:— " Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound is so well and widely known that it does not need my recommendation, but I am pleased to add it to the many which you have in its favor. I have suffered untold agonies from ovarian troubles for nearly three years, and the doctors told me that I must undergo on but as I was unwilling to do an operata . Vegetable Compound, and Ask !ft's, Plnkbam's Advice—A Woman Rest Understands a Woman's Wall -Pa'iers, Paints, Oils, STC. d largo fresh stock:now on hand. Prices in Wall jPaperlran;ing • from Sc. up. John ' arker, ;L'>'► 2abarton arne3 When you want something out of the common, you have it blade to order. So it is with your harness and collars. Don't take "what you can , get,"—get what you want. Then you will be satisfied. Not otherwise. - NEEDED Annually, to fill the new positions urea ., by • Railroad and Telegraph . Ootapasies We want Young lien and Ladles or goo' habits. to LEARN TELEGRAPHY AND R. R. ACCOUNTING. We furnish 75 per cent of the Operates andStationAgents in America. Our mix schools are the largest exclusive Telegraph Schools in the world. Established Ip years and endorsed by all reading Railway • '• crane. We execute a *550 Bond to every **indent to tarnish him or her a podaon pe from IRO to MO a month n states east o the Rocky Mountains, or from $75 to i3" s month in stats s watt oothe Bookie*, u on g BLACESMITHINCI While we make a specialty of shoe- . ing horses, we also do all kinds of repairing. Try us. W. E. R,isebrough, • Tlromson's old stand. 37 • CLAREMONT, ON T. guarantee absolute satisfaction. • :E. W. Bodell, 33roughana t e.a IWS • a l•a0x It• -x• A sol PO •,e 40; soli'PO roti 74 I,., Lino ,o m 0 gig S! en f I., O Sap% �" - _Ido . e o..,4 rap's, m i;O Liar 1a0 .. a4,l _J • I'l O t 6m p •arrLd e- Vamntuia m . sJ Soi.Q m 1i LI tj aQ C w fn i°3• ' a a Also prepared to do all kinds of ,iinaary 1906—Whitby 9th, 0*batva 10th, se paper hanging and slings paint I Brougham llth, Port Perry 13th, i7x• mg. W. J..Bingham. bridge lath, Cenningtonllth, Beavertail `- Claremont. loth.. tae, 'i'- deesie The undersigned is prepared t() do all kinds of carriage and wagon painting at his shop over \V in. Dowswell's wagon shop. CO o: a Sa 'a Btu. en' •'• cations. For full particulars reta! any oMschools oe at Cincinidt 0. to our tree. The Morse School of Telogra Cininnati Ohio Buffo"Atlanta. da Texarkana; Tax • Fano 2 PI 01if: Whitby Steam Pump Works IO Ca Wood, Irani L€tt'mei Force Ala° a steljlf Mss® :(i'7. o order. E• W. EVANS fl 71' •: • ," • • ' . • • ". . 4,. About the House ++++ VEGETARIAN DINNER. . . • a Cream of potato soup. Macaroni with tomato and cheese. • String beans. 'Cauliflower with mayonnaise. ' "Wafers. Cheese. Strawberry shortcake. ' Coffee. • . • . !Cauliflower is richer even than cabbage in proteid, the nutriment .„ Value Of cabbage being one part •.•proteid to four of carbohydrate; so ;that. cauliflower served on .entire • wheat bread, toasted and enriched :with a white sauce to which the yolks of two or more egiss have been .• adde-d. would seem to provide the lull measure of needful proteid, and •,... en a form that even the most pro- nounced opponent of the vegetarian, right consider satisfactory. If pr eperly taken care of after • the meal cold vegetables •dressed as salads are most appetizing at this season. The chief desiderata are . tenderness of the vegetables, just • enough dressing and no more, and •. .• a chilled state when served. Cheese • combines well with many vegetables. as it does also with grains and reaearoni. When delicately cooked and diluted with appropriate ingre- dients it may be used, but more •. .sparingly, than in the season when 'the function of digestion is more :vigorous. Tomatoes with Macaroni --Cook • --one-half pound macaroei in rapidly . . boiling salted water until • tender. weld one pint cream over hot water • add half pound cheese cut into thin shavings, and stir until the cheese Ls melted; add one-fourth cep butter •tind a dash of. salt and peprica. Ilave ready, baked in a serving dish, a _five or six tomatoes with the skin . • . nand core removed here baking: areA-' aedispose the rre.aroni in a wreath. •i:".Se*S4e.le .". armairl the tomatoes. pour the ...rerei4.214ilthect so mixture over the whole, and maxi! hot Cream of Potato Soup.—Boil five potatoes and an onion five minutes; drain, add t wo quarts .of boiling water. and cook until tender, then pass them with the. lieruld through a se. Season with halt and pep- . a.rel stir in tilt yolks of two - beaten with a cup of rich i, ..ne soup to • r nel '7,;• .10 the egg oaet . Have •e,1 a car - until eig salted eoup t „aarecr- , r WITH LAME' LEFT OVERS. • 1.mill) Croquettes—Two cups finely .. chopped cooked lamb, one cup boded • .• nee, one tablespoon chopped parsley, one tablespoon lemon juice, two •e.itablespocins flour, one cup cream, one tablespoonbutter, salt and pep- -- :elver to taste. Scald the milk; rub . .• the butter and flour together until • arnooth, add tet the scalded milk, • ;.•and stir until it thickens. Mix • the meat, rice, parsley, and seasoning well together'. Mix with the thick- ened milk and cool: . When -cool, :farm into %cone shaped ,crognetted. Irover with egg and bread _crumbs, and fry in smoking hot fat. Curry of Lamb—Two cups chapped cooked lamb, two tablespo-ons flour, _ two cups stock, one tablespoon orange juice, one-half teaspoon chopped mint, two tablespoons but- ter, one teaspoon curry powder, salt and pepper to taste. Brown the. butter; add the curry .powder, meat and mint, slid •ceok ten minutes or until the meat is well heated. and Throat Coughs hoarseness at times; adeep breath irritates-it;—these are features of a throat cough. They're very de-. ceptive and a cough mix- ture won't cure them. You want something that will heal the inflamed membranes, enrich the blood and tone up the system , • • • • • • ••• '1;• • • . . i• • . 12 IG seasoned. Add the flour, stir until brown, add the stock and stir until the sauce has thickened. Safason and serve in a rice boiler. In place of •a rico boiler, ane cup boiled rice and one of meat may be used, following the directions given above. Pilaff of .Lamb—One-half cup rice, two cups cold chopped limb, two tablespoons butter. Boil the rice in plenty of bailing, salted water twenty minutes or until tender. Drain and mix with the finely chop- ped meat, which should bo seasoned with salt and pepper and a few drops celery extract. Add the but- ter, melted, and when the meat is heated, -turn the rice and meat into a greased tin inold. Place in the -oven a few minutes, or until the pilaff keeps its form when turned out of the mold., Mutton Scallop.—Two cups finely chopped cooked meat, one cup to- mato sauce, one-half • cup bread crumbs, one tablespoon butter. Melt the butter, add the bread crumbs. and stir until they are thoroughly greased; season the meat with salt, pepper, a drop or two of onion juice or other ruitablo seasoning. Fill a greased baking dish with alternate layers of the meat, sauce and bread crumbs, covering the top with the crumbs. Bake twenty minutes in a quick oven and serve. :Ia.' • SPINACH. • . In cooking spinach in a = large lquantety of water, which must be I drained Irani it, the potash sults, its most valuable constituents, are lost. fresh lard and thoroughly heated in the oven before it is used it will never rust afterwards, no matter how mlich it is put in water. Braid for trimming washing frocks should be dipped in cold water and pressed dry on the wrong side with a rather hot iron before being used, to avoid shrinkage afterwards. • * ' PEARL IN THIS TOOTH. Successful Trick Played on a Paris Dentist. A venation of the pearl in the oy- ster trick has been successfully play- ed on a prominent dentist of Paris. A man who said a hard substance had sunk in a decayed tooth while eating an oyster called on him. Tho dentist extracted the substance, and found it to be a large pearl. The patient then declared that he had left his purse at home, and begged the dentist to accept the pearl as his fee. Tho dentist was tco honest to take so valuable a jewel, and gavo the roan $10 for it. When the client had gene he discovered that the pearl was not genuine. He gave chase and captured the man. At the police station the man con- fessed that he had played the same trick eight times sueecss'ully that day. ' PLOOD DISEASES. Can all be Cured by the Use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. 'Tender spinach will cook in fifteen More than half the disease in the or twenty minutes; if attention can world is caused by bal blood—weak 'be given to the process use 'a little-weaaan blood poisoned by impurities. more water and less heat. . Bad blood is the one cause of all the Spinach Balls—Melt two table- headaches end backaches. the lum- spoons of flour and half teaspoon of bogo and rheumatism, the neuraleia sugar. 'When blended add one table- and sciatica, the debility and bilimie- spoon cream and threcagaiarters of a rass and itedigestion, the paleness up cooked spinach, chopped fine. and pimples and all the distigering Peat well, remove from fire, add skin diseases like eneetna, that show two eggs, one at a time, Season how impure the blood flea:idly 'is, with scot and pepper to taste. and a It is no• use tryina a diaeretit few grains of main. Putter one cine for each dieease, because they taineepoon and fill a ith the spinaeh all spring !rem the one cause—bad mixture, making it level with the blood. To i ere disease yeti neat edge of the epoon. and poach in a get right dean to the rcot 'of tie s trceifie in the blood. That is Wil:at aucepan of boiling water four cr five minutes or until firm. The water mast not boil hn.rd, but simple sim-• mer g.ntly-at the sides. Six or l'r Williams' Pink Pids doe They make new rich, bleed. Commoti medicines only touch the synnnotrat niore balk may hc houked at onalong to thrCw tlie resPonsitality or of disease. lee Williams' Pink Talk root mit the enure Theo s i why time Lt drain in a colander while ' this astimisaing chance on the aim ITS SUPERIORITY IS GUARANTE gl Ceylon.. Tea has a deliciousness al .Sold only sealed In lead packets at 4oc, soc, and By all grocers. • ' Highest Award, - - St. Louis, 19 CLEVER BANK THIEVES THE COURAGE AND PATIENCE WHICH rFrrY SHOW. A Hong -Kong Bank Was Robbed After Three Months tel Hard Labor. In the whole catalogue of daring bank robberies there is no story more annedrig than that of the robbery at the 1 iong-Kong branch of the Bank of Western ledia. for nut only did the case display the most astonish- ing daring, skill, and patience on the part of the robbers, but their suc- cess has never been equalled by other bank -breakers. It was generallyunderstood that tl:e safes end vaults of the \Western 'lank were about the strongest ever built, and the robbers. course, knowing this, decided to attack tea hank in a way they believed the builders had never anticipated, and therefore ,it provided for. They rentea a ineuse on the opposite side ni the street end settled (awn to live like simple-minded gentlemen. Some three months later the mana- ger cif the hank had occasion to visit the aults. and to his utter eintze- • mentnind consternation he cascuyerea, that tee principal safe, which a day or tee) before had contained upwards ' uf • - -$2a1aCto0 IN BULLION: and other aluables. had been ernP- tied of a ere:thine It did not tao these mils cure when doctors and making a cream sauce; reheat the common 'medicines- fail. Pere is balls in the sauce. and serve, Rive proef:—"I IL Trryd agony from. Fmneil Spinach—The French stew in a little milk or stock, pr indigestion, ' says Mr. Fred. Filfis, spleach ,, of Grand Desi•rt, N It "I had no in a :little water to wh-Ich is -Piece o' appetite for my meals and no energy tatter has hem added. The broth is -eryfor my .work; my stoznach caused nie sed' with th spinach. .rt may be nwdless to add that spinach must fbe •thoroughly aahed. Scott' s Emulsion is just such a rcmedy. Jt has 'wonderful healing and nourishing power. Removes the cause of the cough and the whole system is given • new Strength and vigor • &kJ far free Jantplt 12 Piano 1:eys .ean be cleaned as can SCOTT & BOW'NE IL, Chemists any old ivory by being riffibed. with •. _ S FOl? I1011-F-.•I:IFE. salt rubbed ou earthen - ng dishes will take away •5estlon I eit them and. began tak- - -• lag them, and I soon 'fnun-il they were A new clothesline if boiled for half helping the. My appetite begun to an hour will become tougher, last improve, and my tome to digest bet - longer. and will 'not tangle. ter. I used the pills for a couple oF A slice of raw tomato ratitied on months aril I was wen. Now I ain to ink stains on a white chine or always rea ty for my meals and I can the hands will remove- the stains. eat anything, and all the credit Is The smell of tobacco ih a room duo to Dr. NN•illiam.s. Pink I constant distress, .and everything I ate lay like lead on my (hist. At time.s I fdt my life a burden. I wee; always doctoring, but it dla me no' good. Then a little hook. came into. rnv • hands, and I read that: • Dr, Willianis. Pink I'ills would cure nl will be gone in the morning if basin of water be placed there -over night. . Save scraps of ham, tongue or pressed beef for they help to season foraimeat and make excellent relish.: Cut off the flap of sirloin of beef arid sprinkle salt over it if the wea- ther be warm, then boil • and serve cold. All herbs used'for medicine should be gathered on a fne day .and be well dried In the sun, spread out on paper. In making buttorTholes, if the cot- ton is passed through bees W ax it will prevent its-I:netting and bo much. stronger. :Chamois gloves are useful wear for a railway journey, for they cun he' washed overnight ready for the next morning.. Make tea with soft water as often as possible, for it softens and opens the tea -leaves more thoroughly than hard water. Milk is not so likely to turn sour if -kept in a low, wide pan, but it turns very gum e ep in a ong, narrow vessel. Patent leather can be revived and brightened -by rubbingewith• a linen rag soaked with milk.. Then polish with a soft, dry duster: After frying do not pour off the fat until it has cooled a little, and then be careful •• to heep-bark•.the sediment, which: throw into the pig - tib. • . Soap suds shauld. never be wasted, as they prove a, very valuable . maa, mire. No one whia.is lucky enough to have a garden. should • ever throw away • soap suds. . Th p clear juice .of one lemon, taken without sugar, in a wineglassful of cold water, is a thorough remedy for muddy• complexions and erreptions on the skin. A fele hat may be • stiffened' by placing a•wet 'cloth on the .brini, and passing a hot iren over. this till et is dry. Pulling away • the cloth will raise 'the nap. - • • • Physicians assert that baked ;iota: toes aro more nutritious than those -crioked. in any other way, and that fried ones are the most difficult to d igest -• • • •• • • TOrall0, Joe. ted 31.00. Al! druzghtt • noisl in dipped : in e 1 cohol . 11 very. • yellow use a .place of flanuel moieten- ed with cologne winer. • If new tinware bet rubbed over with 11 1.1 keep the pills in the house all the" time, and I occasionenly take a few as a precaution. I can honestly- ad- vise all dyspeptics to use this medie eine, as I am sure it .will cure .theni as It did me." Give Dr, Williams' Pink Pills aaeir trial and they will cure !,oti, because they 'make that rich, strong blood that disease cannot resist. See that you get the genuine pills, with the full name "Dr. Williams' rink Pills for Pale .People,".on the wraa- per around every box. You can get them from your medicine dealer 1b mail at 60., cents .0..t3ox six 'boxes for.$2.50 by writing the Pr. Williams Medicine Co.. Eleockville, Ont, - A BISHOP'S STORY. It would indeed heti (timer bishop • who could not tell a good story on himself. The nate Bishop Dudley of Kentucky was wont -to relate with much relish an interesting experience which he once had in ,connectionwith waffles. . At a fine old Virginia homestead where ho was a freettent guest the wal es acre a t.„ 'good, , . . • Ono morning, as breakfast Crew near ' an end, the' tidy little linen - coated black hey who :hive:I-at 'teak approached Bishop Dudley and asked in a low voice:. . . "Ilishop, won't y' have 'n'er waf- fle?" • "Yes," said the' genial. bishop, "I believe- I will." • - - • "Dey ain'• no tem'," then said the nice little black boy• "Well;". exclaimed • the. 'surprised reverend gentlemen, "if there aren't any more waffles, what made you Lisa me if 'I wanted another one?" . I "I3ishop,". explained the little I bleak " boy, "you's 'done et ten a'renely, an' ,I Vaught y' wouldn't want 'no nioh" tit NOT SO FAR WRONG. • • • • "A typographical error," said a physieinn, "nearly catiiiiird me once to sue n. Chicago paper for lihrlael was called to Chicago to consult on a serions' case. A number of report- ers _were handling the Nese, and one them • wen., ahmit. . • •' 'The doctor felt the patient's pilo ami then pa -scribed foe trim.' "Bet the compositor made this hannlees seetenee rend: " 'The doetor felt. the patient's nurse ;Ina then prescribed for him' plc -minded gerillemen over the way, but wheel a \ lea was paid to their aleeda it. was found that they too had disappeared. While living quietly and respectably evincing no inclination to hide them- eelaa, but showing their faces fre- quently at the windows and walking in the_streets like the most honest fcilk, rebberst eoestracted a tun- nel' connecting the ilia:went of than nornicile with the vaults of the beak To accomplish this they dug a shaft (loam to a• sufficient depth .to enable them to tunnel under the road %vith- out being heard by passengers et risking a collapse of the .Cartil an•il they tut an upward shaft giving thorn aecoes to the vaults, ahere, one day e hen the bank was closed and they knew the safes were loaded with valuables, they quietly broke in and cleared away everything worth taking. One can easily appreciate the cour- age end.. patience of these•men, They. had to cut a tunnel between 110 fiat and 90 feet. long, sufficiently high and wide to allow the pas -sage of men carrying a heavy chest; they had to dispose of the immense amount of earth displacerl in cutting the tunnel eithout anyone knowing; and after some twelve • weetis' inces- sant labor in cutting the turierl they had yetto make a way through THE CONCRETE FLOOR of the bank and break into •a safe of exceptional serengt h. The hut time of the upward shaft under the bank particularly must have hien an anx- ious task for the rol-his, since at any moment they might have• bee 'treiyeel'themeelves to Someone atiove and it speaks voluthes for •the 'care with which they labored that rai one. suspected them or what was happen- ing until they had made their escape with $250,000 worth :of valualdes; the carrying away of which, -apart from anything -else, must have been far from a simple neatter. • An 0111,111y ,surprising feat was per - S201,01-40 worth of iiirtMonds from a Kit-nee:ley brink some yinrs ago. NV1106'1110 tunnel in this case was only al.out el0ft. long, owing to the fact that - he thieveswere able O. need themselves of a. big main-draiti to approach the hank secretly, other difficulties that had to be overcome were, nvich more formidable than in the Hong -Kong case. The safe in which the dieinonds were deposited was one of such rernarkaala strength that before entering on their enterprise the thieves evidently decided it would behopeless. to at-. tempt to break into it at the sides or door, as the work 'might' occupy too much time, and that it would be necessary for them to attncla it at the back, 1%hivh. acing !milt into a wall, they could work ' upon after bank hours, perhaps for eleys to- gether, if pecessary. And this de- cision was arrived at despite their knowled,ge that the wall 'into • which' the safe wes built was 3ft thick and • • ]3UILT OF SOLID GRANITE. Thi'y started operations from 'the drain running down below the street on which the lit -Ink fronted. by dig- ging n tunnel 20ft. long itt a lee) with the hank's vaults. This tunnel, c':t through exceedingly Oilfield% ground, opened on the foundations el bililding, which were, on ti e one hentl, too deep tri t oilseed 1:ter, re4gatl ‘, and on the other hand so thi solid-4ft. of the strongest n —that ninety-nine men of a h would have abandoned the env if only Lecause of the risk •of a passage through such a w neath the. feet of 'Jai office clerks and cver-passing pedeat the street. But the thieves fortune in diamonds in vie were men not easily frigh dishcarteetal, .ani they n cut a way through the foun but through two other wal less formidable, before they c on the final wall into which was built; and they made through this latter and the steel back of the sere in' quiet, workmanlike style th soul suspected anything wa until one of the bank officiat to the safe and found it ole $200,000 worth of EXQUISITE DIAMON/ Against t hese two as tei successful enterprises etarda tempt on the Mexican branc National a n k Americo.. w v uro attended the thieves, not they were any less daring o manlike, but owing to the bad luck. They constructed from a house they rented vaults of the Lank, but failed hours to teach the valuable an enormees sum of money, an accident. It chan.-ed that. when t had tunnelled a.. distance thirty yaras, and arrived Jii in the vaett where' the safe Wof the beasts they hail used up the _tunnel cellapsed cal slight subsidence of the ban (Jannis. At the same time ager happened, quite contrar custom, to go to his office. was Surpt.ibed to feed' a 'difil opening the door et the r cursory examination was suL show him that since closing wall of his loath had sunk causing the door to press floor. Probably- thls circumstan would not leave shattered th scheme, since the' manage have waited till the mornin a builder' in. by a filch time would have been eeaptied. he was considering the ma • thieves in the vault below ' ing frantic alerts to repair age to the tunnel suffIcientl • able them to complete their fore tlaybreak, • and the heard them working beneath The consequence was, he im took a light and a revolver scended to the vault. Two deajy appeared liefore him. 1 one dead, but the other 'disa in a manner. which utterly bre comprehension till he search vault and came on ehe mouth tunnel, uhich, of •coursci, ex everything.—London Tit -Bits.. • ,•••• SMILING BAI3IES. The weill• baby in never a holly. When baby cries or is it is taking the only way it let mother know thatahere thing wrong: That sornethi probably some derangement stomach nr buwels, or perhap pain of teething. Thesetroubl speedily • removed and cure Baby's Own Tablets, and baby again—in fact •there's a ami every (1050: Mrs. Mary E. A Lake George, N.B., says:—"I found Baby's Own Tablets .so for the ills of little ones t wou That is the experiencc. of all rit who have tried the tablets, anc know th's medicine is safe, fo 'guaranteed to contain no oPia poisonous 'soothing stuff. •E good for the child just tern o advanced in years. ' Sold h 'druggists or mailed at 25 cei box .by writing the. Dr. Wi Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. • • ' SWANS' LONG SWIM. Two Atistrolian black swans .recently picked up off Norfolk in the Pacific. They must have gilled 400 miles. The birds were very exhausted condition, but of froSlawater bath and plenty of they revived. The bla.01: swan powerful SNI. Wit, 40g) mil sea is a long stainn, even for hi 11'111:1 DEEPEST HAUL. Near the Tonga Islands, 1 Paeirre, some time ago, a list was sunk 23,000 feet below tftie face. That is the deepest hau made. It took a whole day o the net and mise it. Life was even. at that depth, err 1010' IV hi ere the tempera a was above freezing El 11 d th .-sivrei .000 lbs. to tho square i • :S A DUTY THE.READIN.G OF ROYALTY .TO THE PUBLIC ITIS VERY vaRIED IN ITS RANGE. IF BENEFIT EERIVED Literary Diet of Some Sovereigns —English Politicians and ODD'S KIDNEY PILLS. Churchmen. It is not every Sovereign, who, as Rheumatism -and Dropsy the King of Sweden confessed in a nada's Groat Kidney recent remarkable interview that he ciid, read autheers in at least four different languages every day of his • Grass, Asea., N. W. T., life; but there is one Royal lady, -(Special I think I who, if she would, could- easily the public know the bene- .'ed ene- ; ed from Dodd's Kidney 'he speaker was Mr. John veil -known• here, and he • sentiments of many, a hose western prai les who relieved of his pains and the great Canadian Kid= •been afflicted with Rheu- ,r years," Mr. 'White con - 'I tried doctors and medi- never gut anything to do good till I tried Dodd's- ills, meat they did fpr me lerful. know the Ilarris family, their little girl, Edith, cured of Dropsy by Dodd's ills I know that to be a weakness for French writers, es - tell you I feel like recom- Pe.'iaily Georges Cyhnet, the author Dodd's Kidney Pills even I • ' but h is than I talk." no Kidney Disease that rdney Pills cannot cure. 4 'IVORS OF LUCKNOV . eclipse even this record. The Queen of Roumania reads largely in several languages, ancient and modern, in which she became proficient when quite a girl. Al- though she loves her native German authors, she prefers those of France, especially'Pierre' Loti, her friend and biographer. The Ex -Queen -Regent of Spain also -.makes Loti-her literary idol; while the late Empress of Austria worshipped at the shrine of Heine YELLOW -BACKS FOR NICHOLAS, Tho Czar has a passion for Trench novels, and his favorite author is Francois Coppee; he also reads Eng- lish novels ant m1.azines with atia- ity. The German Emperor confesses • �ST�:T TELEPHONES. The • finest system of street tab..; phcaes in the world, the most soar•: veuiently and comfortably arraagttdn, and having the most nur> booths, is found in Stockholm. Ta that city the telephone has been grafted on the dafily life of the in- habitants until it has become indi- spensable. Street telephone pavil- ions are found at every cab -stand, theatre, restaurant, and in every thoroughfare, and they open auto- matically by dropping a coin into a slot. The booths are of attractive design and architecture. Tho floor is several i.nches above the pavement or ground, as the case may be, so the person using the 'phone stands out of the damp. in the most incle- ment weather. Each station has a gas -jet' which is kept lighted at night. It Is an Elixir or Life.—Since forgot. ten time• 'tett have been seeking for the Elixir of Life, which tradition says once existed. Dr. Thomas' F:clectric 011 is an ]Nixie, before which pain cannot live. It is made up of six essential oils, carefully blended so that their cur- ative properties urs: concentrated in ora' It has no equal in the treatment of lumbago, rheumatism, anti' all bodily pains. e Refreshing Fragrance of a hot cup of steaming • Study and labor cannot matte every man an arti=st, but no one can suc- ceed in art without them. 'Grslight Soap is tetter than other soaps, of also diligent il igen t nn_ Ie cs : u e tut is beet when tised in the Sunlight;Cray Eng a dau the wader of devotes German and Buy sl!yligl:t Beep cad fellow directions. English authors, and devotes part of __ 'very evening to reading to the Lie- vl'e expe our health to be the si=b- Rheumatic (`,, re .l rikes the root of ill press Fie is a great admirer of W. Kipling, and has taken the grcat''St jeer. of Sento miraculous iaturfrrence, ntiment and strikes it quick. II. delight in reading the Jungle Books aid r.'glec•t the lion:e'y .precautions writiht, of Itan;el street, (Brockville, to his children. vvby whish it night he securid, one, for twcl.0 years a great sufferer from rheumatism, couldn't wash him- ;' Survivors at Annual Almost all the French Pr'=iiiants s,ir, feed li?nr:-.,'li or dress himself. After Dinner in London. have been industrious r adcrv. The MAKE A NOTE of I'1', "'1'It9 D ,t• L" Menth•>1 ee l.e >Ix b bides was el>In u> go to i rpres,�nt, ' M. Lollhet, .has an enoril- 1'la-cur i...4. at:srctee'.`: 1 yea, tine. v.: ,rat ,•L.e of war's, 'end sn•:.s• "1 think pain has 1 dinner In co It en. rL ',•its l'•ud'uhe, tit.he.. .tv„i.1 +1.1:),I..telae. leis uta fwc',cr."—:!t 1h of books, etc"" 000 •ufi :nava C. ���� entry into L+.c• naw u 1 t 1..i 'I'll' world t•vulrl unaimmissingeMeanimagr TEA Is the comfort of ail the wcni n who have triad It. TIRED NERVES are soofhcd and tired muscles INVIGORATED. THE FLAVOR IS !!OST DELICIOUS. ONLY ONE BE 5T TEA. BLUE RIBBON'S IT. "Wanted, a strong horse to do the work of a country minister," is an advertisement which ap)zearecl in an English newspaper the other day. - Mother tlraves' Worm Exterminator is pleasant to take; sure and effectual in destroying worms. Many have tried It with best results. • Ii] inkir.s-"Flow - can I make 'my chimney stop smoking?"' Jenks - "Give it one of those cigars you gave me yesterday•" AN UGLY FAMILY of skin diaeates is the one generally described by the word Eczema. In all its firms it resists orttivary treatment, !Pat ii completely cured by weaver's Cerate used fu cut: - section with weaver's Syrun. Lady (to r:turnod mlesionary)- �nd how teas the king cf the sav- ages clothiel?:' Miit,i: nary-"I1•rn - princii>aliy with authority, madam; and nut much of that." He1p'eS8 as a Caby. —South American :'•a i :: of pus library Get the ge.iuine , C - -- • ` • l e the tetter and .iug force under (lr ale tntt.h reading. M. Faure e: as an '.t'- Shccring • mac 1'c unrcuic!nh!o, h'it bell liter ii c:ur tea•. hers would dwell ,ud Outram was hu in'c,,tcrate rewi r, with a preference fur rr\ c;nci has ;tap rxclrsc for ,icing dt:ll. on the duty of haI'I'i''•t '3 as as ell as, !..s1. month. 1-' '' }car. she !honks of travel 01id culrnlizati111 and pct soiree prn;>!r are dull. 7'h'Iy' on the i api�iness cf duty'. . u,;n::•cr attending ndiug the Irnrndi:ttcly after this early mora- t, 1 f a t t.tt i u • rs smaller- This. year the ins bath he would 'sh himself in Her tleut hktl o Pallet d Rnrlrtg, (mbcrod ten -three rep' e - • hic slur,:' with 111.9 tr.,ln hs O':.5 and 9.rn 1-,'n W I•'• r 1.l e ' t •I a' f the garri,t.n of flit t> eat l c e i end seveu of tl.c rali•ving',readi from two to t1 hours 1.r. e ted i�e h t'ts.i>ep.,a cu,stn st ,n, ,i,EDQ & CO reading and making n 5i ('a1'- Tn rete t I Lc tit ilii,',.0 n.r-1 ncr,u + pr'o ,rat. ,n D. 11. BAS' i ,r. •f i •:-ret fru„I ,r e th 1 was CII,A 1.y Lic, t, -Gen. root has a passion for history,.aril i Ioif 1.t which ere k, oven as curves are ar the li sets etre, e ' 1 I' I1 � ' vari•hrd I kc Monk1and Herd Yorkshires Good brL+n�ng stock (all ages) for sale at reasonable prices. JA]I1ES WILSON & SONS, Fergus, Ont. • which it is said., mars ,..; �-ns 1101 1J CARPET DVEIN and C:aanins. Thia !a ',specialty with the BRITISH AMERICAN DYEING. Cal• ales puticalara by pont and we are sure to e/Asti Address los than Montreal. > ' • • w ('1 d to c'.:Ino, t� .,, t ver dullness there may bo here is e11 their own. tit h t -:d r e notes. 1 • l vdee �..._. - -_- FU3 NANUFAOTUa[aa ;hv FSar er, o'hu was est devoured every book th.., ha 1 arm oc \ 1 C the Lett 77 3 g' Yi.atst ? ���� ills Tith '1lighlan.ie s (the I rc•f,'rence t e the 1-'rere ll in the relietln; fore l'he in whirl' his grancliath•r W73 et pro- minent figure, OYI'D-COIIEL.I,T • Our- late Queen. a5 the s nrltl kr.owe, was a great rrad'r a ti stu- dcrt In h,.'r -In 1 •r years eh> .1'- Praotioal Every day rLeesso�nsmon -"FA MA ' ae041 4 -c -g-. For 13o. post paid. FARM PUB. HOUSE. Dot 415, Chat ham,Oak BASTED() & 00.9 77 K na Cast, Toronto, FUR MANUFACTURERS Lalle,' and tI1,tea' Fur and Furdine,l Coate ani? Jackets. ' Everything' 'in Font. bead catalog. We buy Dm Furs and @3n.f 1.t. • Send f.r !'rice List. mist_ Lad it ,letter T1'.etn to n.>ent. A e ; c he n tt'c• �3 r or 1F..• A. , I e t , v y , I ,t., 5 ,. win, i;,• re i t ailments sz r t ,es 1 -t>; r ., a enc! 1.v t > 1.l o r rc..• rout( in kali an +our a.'cr i s at!trre i t•> r'itcii prre<r',t a veru du3(e — _ t�,> tlF\ run AND uit c' , f sickness es. . and *ate ill,.,:,, i ,;n, i, t-t.ta'I ga w the igestr. in 'rt I If fame he the last infrrr.ity of u Icg.l u,t VII }.r the dlgc•tltc ori7.1.,,, ties aii an invaluable corrtrt,tst rr t_ nub!u "1'111'.utt,biti+>n is often tho by lea :,sing the Hood they sitar the alln� of ,u>perfection-t. I first; though, whivt .prdpet;y directed it may bo no feeble aid to virtue,. "Ti1',in, al'c,:t illtr'ntion R,” soil the hostel ss t• ee. "1 ha' e a 1'Ittl:• I A Tonic 1,ir e 'u, 111“LI rrr.ul:i • ire . \.C•:tnl lc 1.••:l 1.'h if:e in airy i' U,. "..i oreughl.' i..«',• rlr a millionaire ti I elti t.'iI. .,.tit; a .•,+!++ all h "\\Lot ted 1, e:en; ere as, of the r li svi•lg Major-General J. S. Blaze. .r-Grnerel' F' •E. A. Charrt- Captnfn J: It. Yrarsn.l, l:nbertsoe, MaeDr Illener',tl ('.I2 : end fir. F. Der, veloped a gree' .kits !r,r tr,...i.•.n• represc ntatices of the, gar- 'fiction' and was familiar .• n i•• ,•re et acre Major-Gri•.eral If and of any note that appear.,: rel G. h lis Hewett, and llrt' favorite author Is Paid to have (1 Gore ]leo” lie. \'.C' bei' ;Mir surviving Corellf, but she did most and General Cook are 110 of her reading by deputy. as listen - tient (Come. all Light In- er• . m Many of our s'atrsmi n Gn:! tir.ie•I ay •1 torment of U 'm of norvoae wt� itch was practically anal- 1 ,,r n and r.•„ !•lefty no re the sul,press:un of the e itt'h.11tat' !—Car^,e- 1'i!I+ by act.nF motifs on 1)' +crrcunnv cl the nhiv tonic, t'nui „', ars, to t •.nithf'.+1 a: r'nn keep It gt,itty c the Lieu wild ,,., �.,:IS t!rcln to Liu vigor, 1I4•y its ICY 'est cash 'register eau L. I.'•+en ,n graduated a, ., ..,,•1 so love,, '..bat they can be d,sco atr any time wItlout return .ur tee a I- attig'O' tM9 lf0rtra LASES —Tho torture ,,,..: wash tuey were used to away • amid all their dlstracttonv l;t tr,e ' ,n.• _can rine!,'. • r-t.I ,;rte ra l.0 1.a, +rot - largt•ly tiinre qtr, (;latlslont's le, it i:nn:v' t , rieltl,, , la,!t of lot r' religion she, 11 nes Comber, of the 7Sth Ire 41'ath, \Tr Mnllry IS prehabiy ti rvli-ii,less human ince,- ?si _\\ ill lmns, or guide, and comfort. t 1 Sergeant Cu.1e. t.f the most industrious wader minas, 1,,,- `+ 'ih .e-ilt were also prest'nt. 1i1 kions.- ar.r! his rati,gc-is a•i:oust as wide as ;hat of his late chief. _ `<ir I1, IT. Fowler `15 a '.;lrittt.n for he e'e."; but nearly all his rcat!yn ;• is of n ponderous ,type, a' itis. a leas t •> of French itnc•nttd' is a theolt•;;y and history. Mr A .1. Pell- rlrctroplating delicate f,tur-is n rapid and a •lr'at reader, • to give them u Lrillian and varies theology and phil,..e+ph.: face. of goltr, falter r w.itir the, latest nave'! by Pa'.le •.r --4. rl-PL•A.TED L.\CE. • ' seirtbee c 1tnt , was 1 hotllour Dears ,t 1 eI. , „'I --d,. A iiair ,ra \c cav i::,' worked a ralraale.. and his elect or continued it.—_S_ - A !Sirens is true fairyland, n 'v, ret pbince;eif deiii i t. a•hattinof rc'. sfee iron the ftorme and troubles of th• w, rid. Eich .01,1, poor can em-uy• els'- , for here, at least, wealth no advantage. intellectual anxiety .muni 41 tvt•:LCO)!f d`( Stj 7,11I`IT4 °t[t°r at,>r•te is the I net reasoi ; that's an e'er 41rl.00,awny l,y+.1.l 511. Lul;IIa lrNopium . iu u, '!'leu 6" 51 ede..'t bads A Yeteirzn'9 Story.—Ucorga Low+- - Shorne?..:::. I'a.. wr:tea'. "I .sato eighty_ If ee'Q,>• o'er tesI, if we dent years of ace I have been troubled gives rtt:geify tri'int; trou!>l,s, if ice avail with ('atarlh far fifty scars, and in Pox 7 our`t+•ives of the Inanifol,l hlessii1LS, time have u:'e l a great 'many catarjp l i t Arca but ucu'rr had +n,y rc:pct until I Li' .0 (fit l v very kilt 1'.. I at. at c:.,.o p tcry TUN T Is': PLit' U spud for eaLJi.,g. UAW pus s WANTED. BEM Ftil Pillet L191 • Much. certainly, of the happiness and purity cf our lb. es eerend.. -- on our making a wise choice of our com- p•iniers and tr ient:a 1i lathy cho-eo. they `wtii mayrtairly drat; us dota if -well, they Stell raise us up... 1 h3, go {Ito!, in ur, O tto . • stn rrrgth, regret it. ,f It is amm�mrt d that a I1:ti ri: ; and Lord C: ns,:hen . pu:.n,•5 to c eunnc. 1 c. ' as !•neem formed for the do- n!'it,h stlrrotutd. us, • litt•ratitre as a hobby, the.only' one tCholern`i'nndlnallhetrn action lad that life. LS illurcCd t1. =I'm' !n-' e:sc4 Fir. A;r,cw's t'atarrhal Powder. of the process on an in- One box cure! me completely.' L0 i, h0 confesses 1.n. Cols, hard +1.f *!lath is upon 1, 1'�^ t..':,uv ►]el'11R t1CC Ale. do thin 1, the racial- (?''9 F1l(ITtJi'I' -- touts. -23 hq:ire they are ow arc that ,I,,,n•.w t+ e • s of the tnetallizeti lace are can never resist a hook that con oc Ur •i U ,vellugr a 11- watery ("fit, advantages. cf nu>nrv. I•t is- hell • :re covers, wainscoting arid d .you will get t that. the softs:os.; til 1.110 BISHOP'S atoll, Ir att.tcked do not atlas n1. gr' t dcsUoyrd, The ,lest seg- The I1 sl:op 01 Itipon l'eads tri !^l1.. tial ilia l,n,;ar .tuedicln.,, 'see. a dose FINSUMATL3a1 AND PARALYSIS, It a'uidd be easy to exaggerate th — Their -complete- home. cure, Post worth havitlJ, and worth working for never tail to cT:ect a cure.' free to 'readers of this paper. but it docs .not require trio great a THIS ]IF:IIRY MINSTRELS. For limited -period only, sacrifice; not, indeed, so great as is A' h:an.' O1n til.:•tratrd-fretttise, giv-. often -offered up to it. To.ntbo-.lir. Bum's. how azo you tee full I1' r•• t•>n 1 - 1't,ruuitit.•tn guts all feelin' die cl>•nen'•? If raft's.,,. with insirut'tu>t:s tt,r it (eine, 13u.nev—Fust fate, sah' ...kind .. 0' ll'.e eicte: haute curo_ describing the most. de tveathah. An' how am you feel- successful trr;i.twcnt in the world re • 1 ' ntnnatl•'d 1,y th,t 'Ministry and enilors- 1 ed b:; nu•ifiral hien. '1'111 highly in- structive book, w+s., n ritton by \11. "11, \,:air, a gent:tinin who has ultacle• a study of these di.ea:es• The preface is, by a brat tic e ' L' •'versify of c tati"rt cif sr""' blit iU •s Ifo has preLably the Altos:. D011c• ti-.: eat they may oleo • 1 0 em• brary in England', dirt' e Lora Bow - the trimming of garments en's death Lord dustier. -ttr'.irg is ornamentation of head- the greatest hookworm on the, lunch; and Mr, Fletcher Mot!lton. ttheee tastes nre •similar -to those of sir ,lames Stirling, is probably the greatest, reader at the Bar. Lord \Volsclry is a "greedy reader," especially of antiquarian hooks, and spends his early `hours reading and writing in his library: while among writers none perhaps have read more than .Mr. `:Irrcdith, who has nn un- rivalled 1,nnn'ledge, of French litera- ture, which he has for many years made his chief recreation. ;;r.'ss in.which you arra sure I have trade money. is gen- e other mart's, SECRET OF YOUTH. lnr,kcd for the secret of a spring of gushing, life • .toe's, which he was sure he •.-1 in the New World, A1 - and sages (thousands of !'aye spent their lives in • it, but it is only found by I ;,1,y people who ran' digest the1t food which 0 TiTAT TERRIBLE WOLF. "Yes " said.the. traveller, "I had .inti . rigs oOl . Ic some estitirlg experiences in llussia. lthtsial body the su that Perhal's the worst allair happened 1 couitcirt are th sura re- one nicht when, ten 1 .'I',, from m;: q c 1..s Borne, I discovered my' sI.ibrh tens ;e t.. t. - '•k of lion, -i,. any long • }-ears I. snrYered r less with chronic costive: tt•oit•es• I fired blindly into the painful indigestion. This peak. killing one of the wolves. To made life a great hiirden lay i'e'li,-f, the. others. slopped to de - you may, well imagine. your 1\2a, and in this way I *as • oars ago I.• began to use able to ficin on them. 'Rot- soon .is as food, Had auu thank- they. were on my se n' again, . and 1 did. It has been a ,bliiss_ again I ftred,I v, ith he same 'result, ii in every way,. I first no- I- kept on repeating this, until final - ,t it had restoretl lay. di' s-' ly'there was only ogle fierce lvoli his was a great Frain, but 1fo11otving my •sleigh, with• hungry .tluin.g to•' compare' in import- ,ryes fixed on ire in anticip ation of e ith the fact that in a short ';tlte supper he ryas, going to oinks ' my bowels were restored to ' of1 pie•" anal normal action. -' The friend who had listened 11 -ms h.' euro seemed to he complete; far to the thrilling story interjrct- . o }eters I have ltn'd none 'of the' ell a laugh • and said, ;'.\V1iy, man, ', r.,ithlr. •I tier; „the crape -Nee; eceerding t(1 my reckoning, that last -eery morning for breakfast wolf trust have had all the other •,uently eat nnthi.ne else, Th,, wolves 10eitis of him." made me coullortoblo and The answer came, reluctantly and 'riusly "Well, yes, note you men - . nod although T -will. be ..1- next fnext fail, I have become net tupj;le agilin. ct•ect -' in' reel can walk with anybody, • oe it." Name given by Pos- se, Battle Crock, ]Bich. a renson,'.'- the lir.tle book, "The Road ills,,, in every pkg. dial, nn .y I immediate relief. It acts with v.ntr!erful rapidity and net' k. 1n 'Tambo -O :1h ,feels ,bout like .a sow in' machine. Hours -1 low's dat? ! t n1 th' ','ambo-Iiiiid o' sew -sew. Iia, ha, .`'out t; 11" receive thcosu<,okt eeyhy are hal turn. -Address. ho \'ono Drug Co.., L>Y Iloncs-.\h's' got a question Ah.d I:uig tit • .\est, 'Toronto - like ter : sk au, 91r. Tundra, • Tambo-eAll right-, sah;, you kin cir- gashiate. 1,iones-What am de difleren('e lice tween a 10511 carrier and a handle factory dat does business by mail? .Tambo -Ah dol}1t know, sah. What clearwater lakes and rivers. 1. 151,1"0 am de difference between a Mail' car- in the Seine means satisfying the rier and a handle factory dat docs passion for fishing, and catchin, nn - business by mail'? thing, or' clue• one or two fishso ileacs -You am gcttin' so ignorant small that it is necessary to rise n dot you • is almost horizontal. Du magnifying glass -to find out .what 1'i1'crt nee am cdis; De mail carrier kind they tire. In this fishing seas- handlei • 1.'.o Coat , t •- ' . - , you will daily see an army of • da handles, uf:on NN Interlocutul-Lactic; and gentlemen. and the beauties of Paris for five de with you]. permission, Clarciice sin lung turning their hacks, g hours, holding out, fishing Irvine. the celebrated -English tenor, poles nod lines, the latter' sinking to will sing The Weiss. \'i ti 1'sr,d to ' no purpose, except to brim; up an Buil, 'We're Now (ah!igerl to Fry. nld shoe, incidentally. tion it, that last wolf did wobble a . - . !Mfrs, • Nextrlore--'I've heat .tbinkiu g of having my daughter's voice culti- vated. \\'nuld your" Mrs, PeppreY-- "Ily nil means, If you have , tried' every other remedy.'t FISHING IN FRANCE. , Now is the season for fishing in France; don't imagine that fish hero are the size of .yollr trout in your • t--45,000,600 AN ACRE... .. . .. The price to be paicL by the London County Council for a small stri-P of. land fronting Piccadilly and St. ,James's Street is thei,gl1st.feet t rFor the 1,2square to be acquired by the municipal au- thority for street improvements\the owners asked a sum that worked o•it at tho enormous figure of $7,500, ----- - per acre. They have :*.adly been awarded under arbitration ail amount representing about $5,000,000 Ter a' neve, including of course. compensa,. persons „t either sex desiring to make 315 to lion :Or distnrballCO., $25 per creek at home in whole or spare timo daring the fall and winter munth.3,.ln an entirely • new and highly profitable business t twill boar. She -"You ou ht to be ashamed of ed. booklet inaot.tigatfon. Send stam tta illustrate g ed booklet and full particulars, stealing a kiss."' IIe-"You are MONTTIRAL StPPLY CO.,Diontreal equally gatlty.; You received the ISSUE NO. 43-03, ---- stolen goofie..0 FEI1BOVI\f, \vil•AT Li IT; It is the name d1. the -best tonic. It builds rr; tii.i system, give*. new life, maker people well and strong. I3e sur0 you got the genuine ' Ferrovim." Visitor -"11°w• beautifully stillthe children sit while you talk to tht3wtl Schoolmaster-"1•es; I've got the pretty feel, trained. I told thea- _a.• the start that every time I coatekteis boy moving in his seat while I wits': talking to them I would tall( tea . minutes longer."- - Cash or Cur? • - Lf Shiloh's Ceneumpdon Curefails to titre your Cold or Cough. you Vet back all yeti • paid for it. You 1.:.-c sure of a Cure or • the Cash. IE it wadi t a_ tore coir, this ollcr wound 'sol be made. . Can anything bw• l.l;•cr ? If you have a Cole,, Cough, or airydiatlase of the Throat, Luta or Air Pse C� S 3r3 25c. per bottle. All dealers guarantee s As life wears cn, the love,_oi hus- band or wife, of friends and of child- ren, becumes'tl:o great solace ., and delight of age. The' one recalls t.i7e past, the other gives interest to ti: future; and in our, , children ate lice our, litres again. • • HELP WANTED. %fDfi -LOCALISMS. .-Mr. D. Simpson was in the - city on Tuesday. -Mrs. B. Hartrlek is somewhat .indisposed at present. - Miss Mullett is spending a few days with friends in the city. -Miss Mullett entertained a number of •her friends on Fri- • -John Cuthbert, of Toronto, called upon Pickering friends this week. - Norman Kerr, of Toronto, spent Friday last at the home of his parents here. -Mrs. Moneypenny, of Toronto, spent a few days last week with James and Mrs. Brien. -Mr. Thomas Wilson, of the base -line, has been under the - weather for the past week. -Rev. A. M. Currie, Almonte, will occupy the pulpit in St. And- rew's church next Sunday. -Mrs. James Palmer, of Bosan- quet, has been spending a • few weeks with P..i-rieri-lg-€rids. E. F. Gormley, of the Massey- _ -''Harris Co.. Hamilton, spent Fri- -, day, last with Pickering friends. - A good many of our residents made use of the cheap railway rates offered during Thanksgiv- ing-J. Gordon leaves this week - for his annual iludting trip. He - goes this year to the vicinity of North Bay. -R. A. Bunting on Monday moved his shack from his father's )lot to his own; to be convenient to his new dwelling. -Mrs. (Rev.) J. E. Moore is spending a week in London at- tending the Provincial Sunday 1School Convention. -We are pleased to report that • '.Miss Larkin, of the base -line, who -dislocated her elbow a couple of weeks ago, is improving nicely. -Mies M. Doyle -is offering for sale her large stock of poultry. As Miss Doyle leaves for New York in a few days they will be .sold cheap. -D. W. and Mr. Carruthers entertained a number' of their friends last Friday evening, it be- ing the twenty-fifth anniversary of their wedding. -The first snow of the season fell on Saturday morning. The mount of course was very small • :fftc lent to remind us that • preaching. ,:inerfelt moved his - t+ from Clarenj nt e and h:,• fa i1y ... rt v -Master Ackerman, of T to, is visiting friends here. -Mrs. and Miss Davis, spent Wednesday in -the city. - Wm. Eilbeek, of Newcastle, spent Sunday in town with friends. -W. T. Haney left on Wednes- day to resume his work at Brougham. -W. E. Vanatone shipped a carload of hogs to Toronto on Wednesday. —Mrs. W. T. Hartrick and Miss Leavens spent Thanksgiving Day in the city. - W. D. Rogers is having his rough -cast on his dwelling replac- ed by siding. -F. M. Chapman, of Alexandria paid a flying visit to Pickering friends last week. - Messrs. J. Dickie and M. S. Chapman visited friends in Osha- wa on Sunday. _ - Dr Henry will be here as usu- al next Tuesday to. attend to his professional duties. - E. L. Chapman was in Colum- bus on Sunday in connection with the Epworth League. -Mrs: 1lsworth returned to Belleville on Monday after spend - the summer with Miss Mullett. -The subject in the Methodist church next Sunday evening will be "Local Option, Is it desirable." ' -Mrs. Tuttle and daughter, of Colborne, spent a week here the guests of W. T. and Mrs. Har - trick. -Mrs. J. Wilson'returiied home on Tuesday after spending a few weeks in Michigan and Western Ontario, - Christopher and Mrs. Dale, of Toronto, spent a few days duo- soda into the pan, aucr a quart of water, and. set on the back of the range to heat. Shake the pan gently occasionally, and in a cou- ple of hours the burnt crust will rise, leaving the pan perfectly clean and as good as new. ;elite: H1H'. Bradford is fix' friends in Niagara Falls, Buffaloand other points. -Misses Kate and Dolly Kerr, are spending a few days with their aunt at Ringwood. -W. Bradford has returned to Niagara Falls. His many friends are pleased to hear of his recov- ery. Will Weston, of Audley, spoke at the League in the Metho- dist church here last Tuesday evening, -All the clergymen in the township of Pickering are asked to preach on temperance next Sab th. A young lady, whose beautyis equal to her bluntness in conver- sation, was visiting at a house where other guests were as- sembled, among them the eldest son of a rich manufacturer.. They talked on matrimonial squables. Said the eligible party : "I hold that the correct thing for the husband is to begin as he intends to go on. Say that the question is one of smoking. Al- most immediately I would show my intentions by • lighting a cigar and settling the question for ever." _• . "And I would knock the thing out of your mouth," cried the im- perious beauty. ..- "Do . -"Do you know," rejoined the young man, "I don't think you ',voul be there." . _ Never scrape an iron or enamel pot or pan, as that ;is what ruins it. No matter how badly burned on the bottom the contents may be, put a tablespoonful of «•aching lug the past week visiting friends in Pickering. --Mr. A. C. Cummer has been on the sick list for a few days, but was able though with difficul- ty to conduct his services on Sun- day. -E. L. Chapman, District Pres- ident of the E. L. of C.E. and J. M. Denyes B. A.. will address the League at Myrtle next Sabbath evening. -The senior department of our public school was closed on Mon- day owing to Mr. Flumerfelt mov- ing his household effects from Claremont. -Rev. J. E. Moore and E. L. Chapman will address the E. L. of C. E. at Claremont next Tuesday evening. and Mr. Moore will speak -at Glasgow at three services on Wednesday uext. -The Parkdale Collegiate Insti- tute !Jameson Ave Rugby Foot- ball team played a fr•ienely game with the Pickerin- College team on Satiirda fatting thein Ste Marie to e row resides. weather that we en having this fall has *en much appreciated by the farmers as it has enabled thein to get their roots in in fine condition. -Remember E. Cornell's.auction sale of farm stock and imple- ments to -day (Friday). As Mr. Cornell is giving up farming every- thing will be sold without reserve. --John Doyle, on Monday mov- ed into the dwelling -he .lately_ purchased from A. J. Howlett. A. Palmer has vacated the latter house and has moved into the the houseformerly occupied- by Mr. Doyle. - -The high winds of fast week caused ' considerable • damage I among orchards. Hnndreds of barrels of apples were blown 'from ' the tree and will be lost, with the ;,exception of those that will be taken to the evaporator. -The South Ontario Teacher's .Association will hold their an- ntial convention on..Friday apd >Stirday, Nov. 3rd and 4th. irtrose in charge of the program say that this year's meeting will surpass -all previous ones both in interest and entertainment. -One day last week as Mrs: P. orman, of the base -line, was en- ged in picking • apples, she was seized with a bk. causing her -to fall from 'the lad- der to the ground. As a result she received a fracture to her collarr bone. We are p to s'ty that she is now doing as. m‘r:g„ ho attended the weddit:.,:,,.. -e ). Stewart and Miss Maud Logan" on Thursday last was Miss Lizzie Westlake. of East Toronto who played the wedding march on the happy oc- casion. -The funeral cortege of the late W. C. Heard, who died at lot 4, con. 8, Whitchurch,. on Monday. passed theough the village on Wednesday afternoon en_ route for the Union cemetery where in- terment took place. -At this tinge of the year the life of the sailor is a hard one. Daring the late storm, the records show a loss of over forty vessels and twent three lives, and it is probable that this list Will be in- creased when a full report is received. • -The Markham and Pickering Telephone Co. have withdrawn their application for the privi-' lege of running their line into the town of Whitby. By this action the. Whitby people will now be unable to use this company, as a leverage to secure a better service from the Bell Company. =In a few Months the owners and drivers of vehicles through- out Ontario vc ill be face to face with the new statute :which re- quires that no one must have his sleigh runners narrower than four feet outside gauge. The new law is im eerative and penal- ties s ax's s en tae • Or I, = .en- forcements.. -The Postmaster General has tided--thataboaf -fifty cheap fake advertisement magazines are not entitled .to pass through the mails in the regular way as legitimate publications. Many of those so-called magazines are sup- posed to cost twenty or twenty- five cents a year, but in reality are free to advertise fakes. In future they will have to pay high rates and will be seen no more. • well as can be expected. -The automobilist's lot isnot one of unalloyed pleasure. Like all other human beings of an in 'or order they have their times -exation and trouble. On Sun - last a few of these gentry t Toronto for a day's pleasant ting and had got as far as Pick- ering when their machine broke down. They then telephoned to Toronto for another machine to build a line from Cornw take them back to the city. On its journey here it -got along nicely until nearly reaching Sale Register. FRIDAY, OCT. 27TH 140 —Auction sale of farm stock. implements, etc., the property of Edward Cornell, at lot P. 'tad con., Pickering. Sale at one o'clock sharp. See bills. Thos. Poucher, Auctioneer. R'sDN-ssDAT. Nov. 22nd 19115 —Auc- tion sale of farm stock. implements, roots, etc. at lot 28. rear of 3rd con., Pickering the property of S. H. Bur .bolder. - Sale at -one o'clock sharp. Bee posters. Fred Postill, auctioneer. "C S©R LE—.k quantity of -onions s1 good quality. JAMES FERf,t:80N. Chserrrood. 2-3 Are ter' Now lookin for eggs this wiNow.s tEiitame to get ready. I n- •.:; se.I setae of my sarpins la, tog stock Bud `,- turn Wt!te Arfandotte sad Bock DJ:te Cross. all good cards ago a f. a cood cockerels. Legt.orn sod W7a4dotte 7tie is your cbanoe fat s yes- of thoicugb bred, :bear, A number of pullets for sale at bsrgsin Irces Fi'ecui reduction to parties Durcbasang :n I, to of forty or over. maxi &14 Ix. POI LE, ftckenng. Ott.- • =-4. • - Notice to -Creditors - fiF- Levi Shacideton, deceased. tiOTICE is hereby given persuan; to R. S. O. 1897. Cap. 129. Sec. 38, and amending Arts. 'bat all persons hav ing claims against the Estate of Levi Shackleton, late of Township of Scar-. borough in tlte•County of 'i ork, Far- mer, deceased. who died on or about the 13th day of Septemlier. 190.. at Toronto, are required to send by post prepaid or deliver to Messrs. Mulock, Mulock & Lee, 72 Yonge St. Toronto, Solicitors for the Adminis- tratrix, on or before the Ilth day of November. 1905, their Cbristain and Surnames, addresses and description with full particulars of their claims or accounts, and the nature of the securi- ty, if any, held by them. And further take notice that the said Administratrix will proceed after the said llth day of ',November, 1905. to distribute the estate of the said Levi Shackleton, deceased, among the parties entitled thereto having re ' gard only to the claims of which said Administratrix shall then'have'notice and that the said. Administrataix will not be liable for the said Estate or any part thereof so distributed to any person or persons of whose claim or claims the said Administratrix shall not have notice.at the' time of such distribution. Mulock. Mulock & Lee, • 72 Yonge Street, Toronto The King o Needs no 4Comparison. Heaters 1 ART .a OUVENIR M. S. CHAPMAN'S. Seasonable Go�ds. Building Material Hunter's Supplies `ails Tar Glass Locks, Hinges, and Felt Paper. and Putty. • ' Shells, loaded and empty, Powder, Shot. Cartridges, Pruners, Etc. Steel Ranges, -;Heaters, Parlor Cooks, Coal Oil Stoves, Etc. Eavetronghing and Furnace Work promptly attended to. H. BUNDY. -T-he seheme of the Ontario Electric Railway Compapy to to To- ronto has received a j t for the present. Rights • w e secured pretty well along the route, but he Rouge Hill where it ran ( when the projeetors ackled To - into a buggy, smashing both the ronto they found tro ble in the auto and the rig. Another buggy I way. A4 present it. is impossible happening to come along at this I for them to get into the Queen oment the chauffeur Was driven' City because rights over -streets on to . Picketing, where they !are so blanketed. The projec- spent the remainder of the day !tors intend applying to the Legis- hrooding over their troubles% 'attire for aid in finding a way for They returned to Toronto by the proposed road to enter Toron- :1ldninto ouay niorR. ti.ltatf cu • Solicitors for Mary Ann Shackleton, Administratrix. Dated at Toronto this loth day of October, 1905. What about We still have the the old reliable brand -water, wind and proof. The heaviest Robe for the price on the market. • A. BUNTING, Grain Wanted) ok ti PICKERING 4 lekle4 �o Have just received 5 Baskets Choice Grapes come ana get some, inter will come ! And we have a very large and well assorted, , lot of Gents', Ladies', Girls', Boys' and Babies Underwear. All wool, union and Cotton. Great Values. The ttndersignedare prepared to pay the highest market prices joHN D 1 C K 1 E for all kinds' of coarse grain, to be delivered at the PICKERING• ELEVATOR. Grain bought every day. Palmer & Vanstone,. Picl�eri .g, Gait. '!ice Tasaa-rtesessat Italica e.T.s Tains eon O EAST DDS As POLLOWS:— No. 8 MaiL . . , 8:33 A. M. " 12 Loc.L , • 2:47 P. M. " 10 Loeii 8.04 nurse Sonia West DVS As roLLows:— No. 9 Looe" . . . 8:41 A. M, `Z:18 P. M. "11 .Ai .. MAIL 8:20 P. M. & CO Bargains .for Cash 3 Plugs of any kind cif Tobacco 25c. • 314, lbs clean Currants 25c. • 2,j lbs assorted Fancy Biscuits 25e.. 1 bottle John Bull Pickles 10c. 1 can Horse Shoe Salmon 16c. 6 bars Comfort Soap 25c. 1 lb No. 1 Gun Powder 'sac. 2 pairs Cashmere Hose Sc. '1 Full line Patent Medicines always on hand. 1W. LOGAN, 0 a Pickering,\Ont.