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HomeMy WebLinkAboutPN1907_02_08• . • . • . • ,41 . , - • VOL. XXV1. Profestsittraml !Curb*. — • 'Dental. TR. R. M. STEWART, Markham. DENTIST. •Honor Graduate of Toronto University Graduate Royal College of Dental Surgeons. • •= OFFICE -OPPOSITE THE POSTOFFICE. ' .•• Open daily 9 a. m. to 6 v. m. 'Residence, Main St., North. AT UNIONVILLE EVERY FRID 9Y. - 10 a. in. to 4p. in. Oftice over SotemerIeldt Silver's Store, iTtf • - Medical fl EO. N. FISH, M. D. - "afl PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Member of College of Physicians and Surgeons. Ont. Associate gozoner, County of Outorio. Office Hours -8 to 10 a. m. sodi o 3 and 6 to 8 p. to. Brougham. Out. 11-ly # . Legal. K. r B FAREWELL, Q. 0., BARRIS- • TER. County Crown Attorney, and County elicitor, Court House. Whitby. 10-e DOW & McGILLIVRAY, -BARRIS- ars, Solicitors, &a. Orne.i opposite Port. • Cifiles Whitby, Ont Jito . Doy, B.A.; Theo. _ 001111yrey, LL.B. MOST to LO&O. By Veterinary. HHOFICIN 8, VETERINARY SUR- • GEON. Graduate of toe Ontario Vet- wrinesy College, Toronto, registered member of lite Ontario Veterinary Medics' Association. •_Deco end mientance one end one -quarter miles north of Green River. Office and sboeuia forge hours 8 to it a.m., and 1 to 4 p.m. Private - selephone in m y ces P.O. address. Green Myer, Out • insurance. 'FIRE INSURANCE. =TALL ZNIMILILIFOM Company. D. M. SpLNIE. Lou-? . " fusetneas garb*. • HOPPER Issuer of Marriage D• Licensee in the County of Ontario. Moe at store and hie residence. ataremont. BBUNTING, Issuer of Marriage • Li01.0111011 for the County of Ontario. W- iles at the store or at hie residence. Pickering DB. BEATON, TOWNSHIP CLERK • Conveyancer. Commissioner for taking affidavits, Accountant Eta. Honey to loan on farm property, -Issuer of Marriage Lie- - eneee" Wbiteval.. Out. f -t FPOSTILL, Licensed Auctioneer, • for Counties of York and Ontario. Atte- Mon sale* of kinde attenued to on shortest ninace; Address Green Biter P. 0., Ont. POUCHER. Licensed Auction - .1. .tr • ear. Valuator and Collehlor for the Conn • ties of York sod Ontario All kinds of auction Wee conducted sod valuations made at mod- erate charge. Estates and consignments eon. alimantly managed and sold by auction or private sale. liortgeges. rents, notes and _ general accounts promptly collected and sans- Isotory settlement/ guaranteed. Phone or write for term, and praticulers. Brougbani • Oat. Dates may be fixed by phone Rte. ogles. • REAL ESTATE Insurance and • .---c.onveyancing Done House and Lot for sale or to rent. Aleo Planing Mill for sale. 150 acre Farm for sale. • If you went to buy sell or rent, call at my office. Bargains. W. V. Richardson. Notary Public, Pickering. A full limit of fires - 'class furniture now exhibition in ware MOMS. on our Prices right. R. S. Dillingham. PICKERING, ONT., FRIDAY, FEB, 8, 1907 No a tit 0 itf et pox 1ig 2 it el im iets 13 1 B • arlictsa, eta e ow 3 8 • al ix 0 0,..3. .,„„,‘,-- es shipCouncil,the main features of w a have been considered by the cou f:9aggaTmaq 1.94E LI 4,, ▪ The council is open to receive -514 '111-0.v.a:43 a 11 lz g ; 4, il ,di gestions from ratepayersfor the ; =',9 a a1/11;a•a i : •al b ,.., :c , provernent or amendment of -.. a a • ...1 Om 4 ,..., 11 • ....' I" ' scheme contained in the by-law l'a, gal o' z a zi, a ... :.-: a,--. Jan - outlined below. a. me I if a.- i 1. Compulsory Commutaation e.- Feb.. . oil statute labor in all parts of the to Is ' - Mar 14 a i ship, excepting the village road 4. 21 I sions, will no longer obtain, and i 2: Apr . . :.• ...• cc ...I p to May * 0 CI hut the village divisions ratepa i 6.4 I • "1 a their statute labor or cornmut Me IC The following is -a summary of the more important changes to be effected ri by the statute labor by-law which will - be introduced by Mr. souther at the en next meeting of the Pickering Town- hich nsucgil: im- the and of W11 - rid i allvi- vers The Statute Labor Question. , have the choice of perform ro therefore, •2. In the villages Pickering D • a ...July ti• za rel . Sept Oct. ••• harton. Whitevale, Broughan." -- log tog Un - • ' L.: z-,:, NoT- .._ Claremont, all statute,. labor will c . ;sal Deo •":"4 Linos to be commuted. January 1008.W13itby 9, Osbawa 10. Pickering 3. The township will he divided i 13. Port Perry 14. Uxbridge 17, Oannington 1G, Beaverton 15, Uptezgro .re 14 51 road divisions, with an Overs of Highways for each. From the 1 to the rentre of the 1st concession a be divided into 0 divisiunsa--from 1 to 7, 8 to'13, 14 to 2], 22' to 27, c . rod on- rito- eer ake lot on- Spring Rep airing! Your harness /should all be over- hauled before spring work commen- ces. Now is the time to have it done. Repaired while you wait at Pick- ering Harness Shop. • THOMPSON BROS. CUTTERS ! • A number of good new and sec- ond hand cutters which must be disposed of, sell at a reason- able price. Call and see: them. • ,• " We will make it worth your while. W. H. Peak, Picker. Pickering Pharmacy We have on hand only a few Xmas lines which will go at and below cost to make room for other goods. Now is the time to get busy Money saved is money earned, -.calf and see for yourselves • Our stock is complete in Perfumes, Toilet Articles, Chamois Vests, Pure Drugs, Stationery. School Books, erg., etc. Caroefac and Hess Stock Foods always on hand. Coma here for Pure Drugs, M. DifcFadden, Druggist and Optician. • Be sure and KEEP .WARM this cold .winter by buying one of - Gillespie At Co's fur or furlined overcoats.• We have the annual catalogue for 1906-6 with prices of all kinds of furs such as ladies Persian lamb, Flecteic seal, Alaska coon, Tuckets coshes, cloaks and blouses, Neckwear, Stoles, ttaperines, Muffs, Ceps. Gauntlets and children's furs. - Men's caps,. collars Robes arA rugs of all kinds at the ' FARMERS' SUPPLY STORE, • E. Bryan, Manager. :Piokering, Ont. Wagner & Co. Have a full line o'r mesh and cur- ed meats constantly on hand. • Spice Roll, Breakfast Bacon, Hant, Bologna, Weiners, etc. Highest prices paid for Butcher's cattle. =itGOING EAST DO N as roe_ 1111XPlokortac Station 0.7.2 No. 6 Mem . . 8:33 A. U. 12 LOCAL • . . 2:47 P, M. i, " 10 . . . 6:04 P. M. TRAINS *onto WRIT DTZ As romows:— No. 9 LOCAL . . 8:41 A.M. "11 LoCi.L . . E:18 P. U. 7 Max------------.- OW 2. hf DOMINION BANK • end Office, "1".t-tronia Capital Authorized, paid up Reserve fund and in vided profits Total assets • . _ 8 4,000,000 3,000,000 ' . 3,889,000 412,000,000 . WHITBY BRANCH. • • • General Banking Business ,transacted. - • Special atrention given to the collec- tion of farmer's sale and other notes. . . SAVINGS DEPARTMENT. 7M493pcsite received lof $1. and upwards. irlttereset allowed at highest current rates. COX13..p1.1.11.4.0$11or paid half yearly, E. TROANTO uttng the first four divisio from- the lake to the centre of t 3rd range line including lots hr 28 to 35, will make the fifth d ision, while the same lots fru the centre of the 3rd range Ii to the centre of the 1st cone sion, will.be number 0. Then fro the centre of the first concession the centre of the second gencessi will be divided into five oth road divisions, with the lots as abov and so on throughout the differe concessions until the centre of t 8th concession has been reach From the centre of the 8th coneessio to the northern townline will he aim Harp divided into five divisions. Fro the country divisions will except eta h portions of lots as are i eluded- in the village divisions r ferret} to. There will be a total o 46 country road divisions and' village divisions. 4. The rate for -cornmutatio throughout the whole township wi be fixed at 81.00 per day. 5. A. day's work 'will consist of 1 hours, exclusive of the time occupied in going to and returning from work 6.• in the 46 country divisions per sons wishing to commute their stat ute labor; -will pay the con/rout:AU° money to 'the tiverseSr for the divi sion, who will -expend Sadie in- im proving the roads in that division The overseer will -have to make a detailed return of 11 - 18 creased their contributions. It was I Hoover was re-elected president, decided to increase the minister's sti- pend by 9100. The outlook f h Thos. Beare manager, and D. R. congregation for the future never was Beaton see y-treas. brighter than at the opening LI 1907. • - - . , • . , .. . •-• 1.61:11TEVA.LE. • - • . • - ......-- . ' -The -aEaveisary " set -Vices of the . . .. Whitevale Methodist church, will be held on Sunday, Feb. 10th, The Rev. J. , K. Oke, of Scarboro, will preach- at 10.30 a. in.. and 7 p. m., and the Rev. M. C. Tait, of Claremont, 'will occupy • the pulpit in the afternoon at 230 o'clock. 'Music will be conducted in themorning • by • the home choir; in the afterno-,0 by the Markham male quartette (Presby- terian) and in the evening by the Baptist- choir, Whitevale. • , - On Mondhy, tea will be served in the basement from 5.30 to 7.30 p. rn. .The programme will be given at 8 o'clock by Prof. S. J. Brown, the noted elocutionist of Meadow. vale; • Mr. Wilbur B.- Ttirner, bass soloist, of Toronto; Miss Mina Ise;1 Phillips.suprano soloist, of Whit - b), an _Mr, . Zeiglerr,.. soloist, of Markham. Admission 25 cent.S. Out In ne es-. to to on er e, nt he ed. GREEN — Pearl Thompson- is visiting with Pearl Do ten. -- - Miss Lily Barton. is- -visiting in. Toronto at present. Mrs Alph. Hoover is confined to the house•with- la -grippe. - - Miss Lily Wilson is at present visiting friends In Toronto, . to Miss 3Iartha Ferrier -is staying for a time with her -parents here. Mrs. H. Hopkins spent Tuesday lwashtiNste..-ith her...si_st7, Mrs. J.Ohn. Little Mildred, daughter of -Wm. n Hoover, i-•reedvering from an 11. -attack of pneumonia. "Robert Milne is at writing very low from the -effects of a stroke, which he had Saturday hist.' • 3liss Mary Doten has --bad to give up work for a week or -two aecottuton of /4 severe illnesti.. - -.John and -Mrs. Michell, Win. AMYMrs. Mrs. Michell spent Friday .and Saturday attending -a- silver wed- ding.. id n- e - f 5 0 a • a con/Mutation moneys paid to him and of its expend- iture. The 'work of all ratepayers in Hi• 'road division is required to be per- formed in -that division. • -7. All itatute labor is to be perforrri- ed at some time between the -lath day of May and the 15th day of July in each year. -8. Overseers,, after the present year are to be appointed exethe recom- mendation of the ratepayers of the re- Spective road divisions,. Recommend. ations from ratepayers of.suitable per- sons to act as overseer for the present year will receive due attention. 9. All -grading is required to he done not later than July 1st. _Graders 'with operator, and one team and driver, to be furnished- at the expense' of the general funds of the township; extra teams to he ettenianed by the road division in which the grading is to be done. . 10. Breaki-ng roads and shovelling snow is to be done under the superin- tendence of the overseers, who will en- gage men and teams necessary to do the work, and the expense thereof is to be defrayed from the' general funds - of the township. 11. Application -for use of the grader must be in the hands of the Council by the 15th of May in each year. 12. Application for grants of money for the improvement cd roads must be presented to the Council not later than May let in each year.- , All grants for gravelling, etc„ will be ex- pended -by letting contracts, by atic, tion or tender, to the lowest suitable tenderer. - fl-Ve are indebted to the kindness of Mr. D. R. Beaton, township clerk for the above summary. of the prOpeSed changes. -ED.) • --• • • • •111.;NB.iR TON Louis Parker and wife, of P.hiltidel- phia, is spending a few days here with the former'sparents,. Ge3. and Mrs. Parker. The Canada . Ice Company have a large gang of men -laying in -the‘ir yearly stock of ice. The--ice-this year is first-class and the work of storing is going on very rapidly. The annual meeting ot the Dunbar - ton Presbyterian church was held on the evening of Wednesday, Jan. 23rd. There' was a good attendance of meth - hers and adherents of the congrega- tion and much interest manifested in the review of the •year's wOrk: • En- couraging reports were presented from every department. The treasurer's report showed a balance to the credit of the congregation, after meeting all expenses, of considerably over two hundred dollarti. The total amount raised by the congregation for -all pur- poses was larger than in any past year being almost exactly twelve hundred dollars. The year's contributions to missionary purposes showed a' sub- stantial increase over 1905. The report of the Ladies' Aid Society showed a balance on hand of over a hundred dollars after meeting their usual lame •roportion of the year's expenses The GOODWOOD. The bear did not see his shadow on Saturday. _ • • Miss Ca iuplin went to- Dakota last week to visit hersister, who is ill. - Mr. and Mrs. Sintzel have returned from their two week's visit in Roches- ter. • The plans for the . new Methodist church are now completed and they present a very pretty structure of cement block. - - The ice -crop is being harvested by the villagers and the farmers in this vicinity. The ice this year is good both in quantity and in quality. The revivalists drew large congre- grtions on their opening' and at each service sang nicely and- addressed the people with great earnestness. Dur- ing the week, interest increased and some declared their in tention' to ieada new rite, but on ,Sunday • last a great break was made and the altar was filled with seekers after salvation. It was moat encouraging and will he ever remembered. The county annual. Orange meeting was held here on Tuesday with a large number of: representatives, over fifty being present. The most import- ant piece of business transacted, which relates to Goodwood, "that 'it was decided to hold the 'walk" in this place this summer. Goodwood has not heed selected for the 'Celebration for over twenty years past, but at last it has come (MP .way: - • -.TELEPHONE CO. MEETS, . The annual meeting Of the Mark -- ham -and Pickering Telephone Co. was held on Wednesday afternoon in the Oddfellci-WS'' hail, .White - vale. • There was a good 'attend - Ace of Merrarers, and a large amount of 'business transacted.. One very ifnportafit change was 'that of charging a rental of 815.00 on -phones used- by stock -holders, who are to be allowed six per cent. on the money they have in- vested- in shares. This change -was made without a dissenting voice. The auditors' report -showed. the Company to be in a good finan-. :cial condition, and the change made in regard to rentals will cause the revenue from this sonrce to 'increase from -$90 to $487 in 1907, besides the increase from the. - new phones which will be installed during the year. This change will put the 'Company in a much better financial- position and will enable them to extend_ their system much more rapidly than in the past. The directorate for 1907 will consist of Messrs. Alph. Hoover, Thos. Beare, A. C. Reesor, W. A. JitiDOS D •Fuller, VOR SALE. -A number of Pure .1: bred barred rock and Black minorea sock - reels. Also a good fresh, miloh cOw. W L Odor tice, lot 18 B P con., Pickering11.17 hy Peter to Doctors Because we make medicines for them. We give them the Formula for Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, and they prescribe ft for coughs, colds, bronchitis, consumption. They trust ft. Then you can afford to trust It. Sold for over -80 years. " Aror't Cherry Pectoral is a remedy that ehou,d be In every home. I bay, used a peat dem of it bard lioness and maids. mood t Lamer what a spiendie medicine it be. I am. nor reeonametri. It too frighty."-MArit Hyde Park. Mass. Made tz. C. Ayer 0o.. Lowell. Mem manalbeeterere et ,01 10# SARSAPARILLA Ib,Ju LUZ litia Ayer's Pills greatly. aid the Cs= Pectoral In breaking up a -NOTICE. - All sales made at the Picker— ing Lumber Yard after the let of January mast be cash unless otherwise arranged for. - , D. GORDON- & SON. 4 Western Bank _of Canada. - Pickering •Branch. Luoorporated by act of Parliament len • - • ._. • Aothorized Capital ' -11.000,000,M Stihscr.ibed '655.000 00 - • - • -555.000.1X1- - 800,000.00 - Paid up Rest Account Assets • Joint cesAir, Reg. T. licIfsxkair President cashier Special attention even So Foxy:Dees 13ale hates Collections solicited and promptly made Fanner'. Notes discounted American and Foreign Exchange bought and sold Drat,* sued, eyelable on -all parts -of the world _ - Savings Bank. Department. Interest allowed on deposits at high - sat current rates, and credited or paid half -yearly to depositors. --a• — GEO. KERR, Mgr. . • 1 11.111.11111=11.pos (AMITY and .Good Work . ' • - -• •' As an inducement to those out of town who would like to get their. watch or other re- pairing well done we make the offer for • ••-._1907. of returning any parcels -sent to us by -mail for repair .prepaid. . • • , I. Jeweler Bassett and Optician Brea et., south, Whitby. • a .;4 S e , neereeee czu.T• So Ire, 44+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ , ►r + + + WOO. 11090OR, GERVASE RIVKMAN'S ANtBITION. +-++++++++++4'++++++ ♦1$++++++++++♦ +++++++♦++ lune," Sibyl replied, kissing the little red fist, "not for all the lands . of Gledes- worth, shepherd." • "1,'losys you wouldn't, miss. Doctor Anriesley have• took a heavy weight on the shoulders of 'n.' A many have been bowed down by `riches, a • many, as I've a yerd zay." PART III., CiiAPT411 i. --(Continued). "He Is really such a goixi fellow, and It would make us all so happy to have en you near, . and -you would make -him- se `happy. And his mother wishes it, she :;even asked me to try to, bring it on." "Ohl" returned Alice, with a sigh of • relief, "in strict confidence, 1.. suppose, Miss Sib. A pretty conspirator she chose when she lighted upon you. You sweet goose, if you must needs amuse yourself with match-niaking; you could not hit upon a worse plan than to show • youieband " "But, Alice, do be serious—" "Dear child, I am serious and 1- wish • you to understand once for all that it is •a mistake, and to help me spare him the pain of a direct refusal. .1 saw it all .-rtnonths ago, and have done my best to put a stop to it. t even thought of go - ting away for a time." "It 1s -in- yoUr power to make him so thappy," said Sibyl, pathetically., "You eight grow to carp for him in time, you • - ;know." "Nevershe " h answered "f could never "And many have been crushed_ by poierty," Alice said. ' •`Zure• enough. 'Taint for we to zay what's-goonwhat's-goonfon us,'Miss pilice A per- sonable. man, but a doesn't come up to the captain, the dnctor..doesna." "Oh, he is only a lieutenant. You mean Lieutenant Annesley, don't 'you, Master Pink?" said the ready Sibyl. "When I zeen he and you walking to- gether, Miss Lingard," continued the shepherd, gravely, '9 fes to rnezelf, 1 zes,.- 'Marriages is made in heaven,' • f -zes —. And Mam Gale, she zags" "Oh! 'Master Pink; you _won't_ forBet about the seeia__.nge, will you?" cried Alice. starting up. It is getting so late. We have. stryed too lung."ng." • And with hasty farewells Alice left the• • pletety crushed tier spi:rite; she slipped away to the soutiide of -her own roorn under the pretext of fatigue, and sat musing long at. the open lattice. Gervase in the meantime had taken his violin, and, leaning against the great was now almost gone„ drew his bow across strings so that they made an almost human cry, a sound that never failed to bring Sibyl to his .side, •incl she -carne"One.a weelc.is Me average you girls dairy catUe than if the foundation were out and sat in the -seat beneath him, } to me _ common females of mixed breeding, but lake and lowlands and holding the earth ( to the average o1 the herd from which still in their rni ley grip• I the sires have been chosen, "So Neufchatel Ls tames" Eleanor • asked, watching her brother's face of rapt admiration with pleated delight. "There is enchantment in it. Are there witches hereabouts, Nell?" he replied. T1if FORMATION FEMALES. In ono sense rl would be icorrect td say that a good dairy herd may be built up fro'ni any class of females that arta 'bile that is tr something of ilio kind. So nothing came_ it is also true l r at to . • rn suc of your flirtation, Ned?",on • high- grades of a beef foundation "Which one?" he replied, trangnily. will take a longer time lo produce good. while he played on in -silence strains son ;P and u e t - mounrnful aso tender that they drew Oh! we heard all-abou el. -Harriet the overcharge of feeling from her heart wrote me some long letter., from Aunt and -the refreshing tears to, her eyes, till -Eleanor's this summer•. Auntie told her the "Entbehehren sollst du, sollst entbe •alt 3botit. Sib;'I --" First. look [or, a cow- with a large, hien," which the lark and the breezes l hope Miss Rickman boxed the imps'acng area capacious barrel. open' and sung to her in the oils moon, seemed the ears well. I- rather widely spaoed in the ribs which! "The „I;ickfnaria, were pleased, _ auntie should spring well downward. Second, said, especially Gere/Ise." "Stuff! 1 say, Nell, tell ine whet these peaks are called?" "Of cciurse you' Bare. heard iibbut1 Pdul and Aiice Lingard?" ";Beard whit?" he asked, abruptly., fac- ' ing capacity. Fourth, look" for evident-• frig about with a• defiant 'gaze: , - • ' • ` e. of stall -aka as indicated by good widttn • •"It's not given out yet, .1 believe.. re- through the lower part of the chest, by - plied ['leanur, trii»quilly, not unwilling 'ern -active carriage and a bright, fulb M tantalize her brother novo• that she eye. Fifth, prefer the cow that has a: ' had succeeded- in interesting. him,-. "but_mcc, soft handling hide end sinter Coat_ of course, as Harriet says ;for fifteen; I Choose sires from that dairy breed must say Harriet is very observant), no- vvhlch may be preferred. The straight. body with half an eye can doubt what es dairy breeds 'that stand in the •front 'r ' going to happen. Paul w'.os like her shit- this country `are the Holstein,. Ayrshire, , critage., forgetting the basket, -in any case --have carets fora man of in Sibyl to follow it more- leisurely_ that itnoorrtr'alleal disposttfon- wen sup fashion. - •She walked se fast that she posing—" had reached the gate at the end of the "Supposing what'" Sibyl asked, with a field through which the cottage was ap- tumY' -coached before, Sibyl had left the gar - "Oh, nothing' I mean , it 1 had loved den, and waited for 'tier there yeah- .: hits, 1 could never be happy with such a man._ I am, like my mother- 1 saw her -flushed cheeks Sibyl's ready tongue was misery. Sibyl, child as t mores.. There was unaccountably tied when she joined her; -that in say poor father which made her n strange pain .was gnawing at her feel him her inferior; a Es not for me -heart, and ,Vice's attempts at common - to speak of his faeJts. If t once found place chat did not succeed. xvhat I could not respect in 8 man. „I. I cant help thinking .that thishis same same could not live with him. I have a sort fir. EdwardAnneeley•might just as weft' 4¢ e-_,, write to us, Alice; she said at , last_ _ 1* Alice," intercepted -Sibyl, quick. "That tittle note to mother -the day after 3y; "if you cart fact -respect` Paul -Armee he left tUe the briefest tormalittp•" ,,, "Bey, whom then can you respect`" "Perhaps," replied Alice, who had noa; "Oh, 1 beg his pardon," replied Alice, regained her self-possession, "he thinks breath .taken away by -this sudden the same of vs. You Can scold hirci wh en indignation::"I spoke widely. Of course he comes." • --"^--- l; respect conoid and true friend, Paul. "But t?.ilI he came:"'asked Sibyl; with in compariori with. the winged desires loin the party as before proposed, and .6everal genera But a husband -that b different : ' It is Stith an easernm in her voice that Alice which bore his heart onward to the gnat sea Alice once, irioc'e f there was no fear meet will be less noticeable with eal'h stopped her n•n. and looked with ut Alice l.ingard's preserrcr•. The three that he should trouble her • peace, ap-••succeeding generation._ something stronger and deeper than re- months' embftrgo.wns rxiw.taken Aft Ed �pearinK:t►tui at the eleventh hour, All CONTINUED SELECTION. Paul 'was. not yet engaged to Alice; the circurnstartces{ whieFi at the 1ime:had N.o master what the line of bretadinee ward suit. therefore free to Rrgcec• his ceemed.so strong in confirming the hopo where a high standard, in dairy. Elttal:- Qwn suit..... - tilate h[ngced stitheye1twere, cry' In ties 1s to be reached and ..maintained. • The frontier -is cleared; the intermit, g . tones• ;- there must be culling and discarding sweetest refrain in Zile. world. While..he plu,,ed, a .series df 'pictures rose before: Ger•vase's !bind. pictures in which he -saw himself' battling by con tinual thrusts the fate which- to Alice seemed'.so invincible,, until he had bound Edward to hissister. and Alice to him- - im- Alice heard the 'innate from her win- dow, and it drew tears .from her eyes. • - i-11hhPTF:R 11, • Its beautiful to be on the fine of rail which -curia=along the Jura: the mountain dow the whole -time, and when a girl ac- •Guernsey-' and Jersey,- named probables• rises sheer on oae side and the .. steep, l �epts from a InSll falls suddenly away- on the. other, while cepts ire the order (.f• relative. size.' 'That the traveller is kx r7te with bird -tike swift - with you mean to 'say," Edward asked. - • .Dutch Belted cattle, not very numerous, _ along P with slow and detinet utterance, • "Chat are much like the Holstein. •The.choice - seatrre�nwidiw�tie[fortstraight to -an ap, Paul is engaged to Miss Lingard?' _ 7. being made, don't .change the breed 1)iiire 1 say it is 'not given out. But from 'which •the sire is chosen, and exer parent block- which hinders further -pro - auntie already •rhal:es plans for' herself; cite great care in choosing the sire. grecs. But .a closer view show's a• black and decides not tci live at Gledesworth spot in the rocky mac,. tiny. as the nest The individual points of a good dairy of some _sec -bird on • a cliff; it grows as • with Alice. No{., la, they don't get on . sire cannot be given in detail here, but the distance lessens, till it becomesa delle well, -for Alice.is like a daughter to her, iwo of. -these will be mentioned, because- • ,, Ilarriet says: Everybody thinks. it a they 'are in a sense indispensable.. _The already possessed eel milk -giving quali- ties in a considerable degree. Mixed breedinf1 is no detriment in such a case.. lookfor evidences of refinement as seen ire a -head inclinitlg tolong,.a.neck long and slim, crops somewhat sharp, and limbs inclining to Rife.... Third, look 'or the present evidences c:` good milk giv arch and into that darts the train wr great lift for Miss- Alice. ,I.never much Cirst is, Ihe evidences of much stamina angry thunder and impatient panting, admired her myself. 1 believe she has and bodily vigor. The -second is, an and Peeve es blackness all around, andaft aw ttrl temper. lou haw her, of thick air, and. a vague distress of ;body course?" amplitude of soft skin on the underline and mind ter awhile. • 'l•hen gleams a, ut'Serursr. 1 was (here in•ttie spring,"' ht front of_ the; testicles, distinctly ttaoe- pale. light and a sweet rush of air fol- he replied absently, and turned his face able- milk vein's and miniature teats cf - lows, and out like a.-birddarts' the -long away to study the splendid vision of the i good size and wide spacing. train. as if suspended in midair by the The' performance of the ancestry of far -spreading mountains before him• }Eir bait should be examined. The more mountain -aide, tilt another tiny bird -hole growing.- welloves••up'the darting length of the train, which is soon cast forth once n*ore on the open., face!.10' his of the bleep cliff- .Air this is pleasant in i \\;hjhad he chill not be bet- means the hiving of targe quantities a l who. like -stillwmore pleas ani p one ter now, after t_scorting Eleanor on her milk, rich. in quality • and persistence in who, like rney's• length en, is impatient way to join her .aunt, jtmst to. leave tier i milk giving' for a• tong".period. o r the s e end: s• length sand, -anxious to_ and go back? U was too great an ad. The successive 'sires should- be chosen re Iit, vantage for l'aul to lee near Alice m ail from the same- treed. If chosen horn Ile uponwcocontinental.. al raiwa m&s it those montts:-what els nduld have been another breed disturbing factors are lions -Upon l.. and wondered as he' expec ? Naturnity he -would die out of chosen. This m•ay....not be apparent at journeyed nn, •and wondered how such her memory., however strong the tm- the first, bat it wilt .be Cater. • The an- ed1upend as steam came to he bestow- pr�ion•enade in those few blissful days _tagonism likely to result cannot be ex - upon rip got out it. But the sof the at Arden might have been. It was hard .-punned here. By adhering to the same spend {o be gat out el'd. avt then slew and bitter. but the ofity Ching was to face line of breeding the improvement should ejaphreBi would -have been Starr ;t tike a man. Yes. he vvoutd•go In and 'ter rapid and . Cdntinuous; •at least for • Lions, but the imprevt Stern and awful,, lt•,ese couched giant. .good performers in the upward line of beauty; l now, lying so still in their sno' his .ancestry the bettor. Good perforant beauty; the pitiless purity of the lonely I- on the art of ancestral dams appears, and- gtoct; . it --is rereteriCe that a husband 'And what can. you. not reverent& al ' - Dr. AnnealeyT' asked Sibyl, with such elemorseless persistence that Alice began able delay of the •custo{ris .officers at. an to wonder if Paul Annesley could be the seen or . sweepof Gtiatwa- iiame..of mut who had troubled her In the [l E b tt flood of lealotra agony Enid; ariii no* the long e w ^friend's peace of Mind. _ tars of Neufchatel shines grayty g "He is at the mercy of his own im- the shores in tale dine. misty_ morning, :pulses, she said. _ mortifying memory of her self-deception And is this the glory .of Alpine lake -land? And - they- are always good," paratied rhade. hee. ser hot -anti self-coutempt. that thio 'tang, gray' river b fv. een the - low every ot;•ee•r feeling -am swallowed up In gray chorea' \\'here are ttie mountains? _.. t o vindictively.. it, •and she longed for time earth to open•• %here..the . peaele gleam...of the far-off "You say a human thing etre you No, r6c - . ibex o! any being. Sibyl. t net hide her away torcwer, It seem.d as scow -peak., shaming the tee• -i ' eCliei•eirl sudden Misgiving int° Sibyl's dark, ar- dent eyes, and read all. -"Sibyl;'-she said. "oh! Sibylt" and she tried to draw her. nearer;_ gut Sibyl push- ed her back with a look Alice had never bei a and -v alked on in silence. i er thal..surged into her heart Sibyl felt capableof hating her friend; then the glances', the -hire of a head, the quiver with every .generation, Evidences �. of a lip, the Faltk'ring of an even step physical inferioril are sometimes " t:, r laded into nothingness now; .probably et,parent at birth, that the decision to: She hind neer even guei-ised at his -own discard such specimens may be made de otion' so much the better forthwith. As soon as it is known that "So that is -the Jun'gfrau,"- he said. at the --animals tall below the standard, the last, in response- to Eleanor's long cata- logue eye should not pity nor the band spare. of summits and ranges. "Not Q.' They should be sent to ,the shafnbles by you mean that?. les. \'cry tine. �'�• a short rut at'the earliest. possible mo- There were tears in iris eyes when his trent a r ' if she' had trotter never have been b ' lustre -of the white cloud-nia•.•�'s''-.wtwre can only give. my deepest. reverence to Die wtio aster of Himself. 'Giro than make .+o dreadful $ blander a he the blue shadows in ltnc' motsrt(ain•tlanks• sister looked down at bun, and his face „Every man. `vtlt: of • course, set his t t glacier and crev+i&se t h set down seg tartd 1 e the Marr thatisis not s slave.' ti - le folds .of the: wooded spur` 1 Lust imosa of Alpine art to reach to h et: eaa value this one es a friend, but- coo _ war doe n? There L.:- ittitlihngr Iiut a Breeds differ in man m i very threshold of lite; she thought she the distant bin o gtact fin• d was quite pale, w ,hch.signs she own standard. t[ he fat re: a s Id never endurr W hoe any fnlore_ tae. p rA11141 -emotrorr at the-l'>t 1 } is not likely g mo nearer. Pio ane ktaars what is in Then things came beef, to her memory.• P gr y c y s lendor. r tarnment to his work. IPsul Anrwaley,: arty tarn of tate 'may liitele irraig*riificart ,�iel:iils whwh had all of ay sk broodin heavil • over P \then oras Harriet. at Me�lirigton.' he their capacity to produce milk, hence. bring Him into a totally opposite diiec- passed wt.' 1)1 at the lime. - b a heeY of..coldSeptember gray water rattled asked. suddeii#y. . , grades 'of ther;• will also differ. _ ton; he might do any►aing. 1 tali you wltie.h_n° ' snowed the general, n;eamn slightly obi- the r anrlor breE'ze; -the' "hist flow, yhe lest in time for auntie high- I`III their breed of_,roda cattle or their - to the very strictest coalielence what 1 of the whole 'story, just -es • the festal .edges and r,wd about the banks rustle iT start. She wa 'awfully sorry to go: - wroukl tell no other human being. Itrain- lights `reveal Ihe general outline's of -a Mournfully; a turd:: ,will tins desolate - she she wanted to see thin ga come to a ori• grades, however, should tfle standard be burldm cry tc heard: no t✓eats glide ver the d•e e rrt a less• •than 6.000 pounds• of rd same for -him now: he will never be the• 8 y pc year, a Baine again, now that his Cwennrstar! es d d #1 fi, lonely telco; lire 'linen •e>iwp• pa. and Ed- r Y lk vvardleels the inward chid of disappoint- cKll bsbly more ? are •so Changed, and atwt he will' be, tient Iliac taalit y•• often brings 10 long ,p guidingl and a compel) !erred it was meeitab lerh. 0 hnr �'�+♦++++f1♦+�++�+t+++♦ enetet;eeew c_}earl • hoiv.thmg" stood between Edward andd Alice. •iw could it have been otherwise"? __`he felt the charm of Mice too der.ply herself ler iv r that -she s'hceifd have' faun ;.ang will' , e t full step. row street to i broad -eyed house t►.• • Heaven a ne knows. .4' yousay,ate, he hchs. , ,,,...brooded hopes. The train stopped to the Good impulses ant, vhat'ue thP' with. Dixie k thrat t#rfa3a t- pat of crie, of Granso;' lo sisr 1 am to watch• pragress andedcrio Id and young. This is pro- lhei denouement.'' -than twice the amount pro- ('Iu. be -Cantina - diced by the average hare! ,in.lbe.Unitei uta principle should chooEe rosil-!itrer.•- But for her ho dot out and lrofl t our; wit � • ' "And you- alone can give his_ life a ev E rylbrng had ;come o a I right direction.- urged Sibet. "Oh, Alice! " 1 rltbehren moist du:" wa.; the, message ,low purtai opening on the pavement, : �. * the woods and fields and aea had for her and Was S4)on standing in the' cool, • �tef fl think what it is.bo Mold lhle mans fele that' d+r ' it vias written in ttte deep, flaggail IrAlt. > lacped in. the am in your hands? - d led ', amid in the solemn she- bright. golden -haired girl, and the centre "And. what another--:" , sympathetic al is g bort and colored. "Dear. ' Jy : ittcijeed a stanch 6tiend " she home in stalely -chanting procession, its from other fair-haired girls Who. were the uncarpeted if 1 hold tb She cion -pt st>y, het' glances- _ s Sibyl; dewsabout the hills the rooks.eat-ling of admiring• and b P you 4TE rrtiaded, her of 'it, and the blackbird hitting up and down added, in a gentler voice ' "If he could ♦+�++++++�+++++.++++++� quire to expenrt one dollar extra •in Ihe 'win you taow-a heart is so easily caught fluting. mournfully. Flown in -the copses, staircase and sighing for the day• when urchase of cow's. Let him begin with at the. rebound." repeated it; menthe lark. Buttering. up' .fathere. and brothers should come' to; S'1'OC:I<. • P wa.rd.wilh the beginning of a songand t their forri^n homes. D:\IRY Eteee NFt1OM ('Omeav such as T.e hr•c• There wilt be s with me "loci's„will be fro rebound,,, replied � g . \\'hen d•vel,pin•' th • ci•hn", heal from evpense .r. getting • Sibyl, in so even a voice that Alice was dropping back into silelnce, had, the same \ 11 " he retnonGtr iteJ atter a sura of the platon'ic.nature of her regard meaning in hie music. , -- . for Paul. •"lire kind of .malady you in- She bused and allowed Alice to come spire, you dear creature, Ls incurable. tip with her. and seeing that she toad • People soon get over the 'slight Shocks 1 'been crj'ing., 1.<issed het with -a sent 'of administer, but you are fatal.” - passion. - - Alce smiled tenderly upon Sibyl, but "Do you remember the day' you first loads no rejoinder. anu they 'walked on came Co Arderr, Alice;" elle said, "when e ten seen c - -noiselessly over 'the r ch 'turf, deep m i i found you _crying in • your room after hearted thing. !reps and, let us stock at the outset, and tc, .once r . i t r a nenel - ar • t}tonght. Sibyl's regard for Alice had, as 'w'4 were seal to bed: -"Well, peck up your1 n r the closeness of the culling •n ti And you comforted me and we b• off to ,\rufchatei,b; the next tra!n,' IPc!inn that is prcciiced. le sorra 'he- t t b` friends.". ha said tollovv ing , - s}a-na, a R i dairy teed may About the Farm dales to -day. 'Che animals thus grown. must be prn- r•erly fed to hnve Mem grow into high pe dairy cows, They must be fed each food as: will'keep them in a sappy and growthy condition until maturity i:; reached. They must not be made -at ♦ 4 nor should they even the lean. • ' ♦ ♦ The system outlined s very simple + • ea laid inexpensive. The .man who wants • In get better dairy stock does not re - fetch them away o - ;. it bull but it he is resigned kiss. "if this kind, of • lliing•coelii •e'munon-sh- keit. •' ,lot, n, eesery to -ea -unable to -bear it clone, let same neigh-. only be done with some attempt at pr►• i to grei t esner.:3•', hal a few yeah- ...1 t irs help him tn•purchase it. or if -not, v;cy." . time are nee -enure in whim to ,t{'wm• 1 ' thzrt patr•nre his sire by sesidinta. -_"I dare says" sobbed• Eleanor,' 1, }•lisp .this. -.settee Prof. Thdreas ehave.• thei:• mitis for service nt a reasonable have not spoken English for months 'or The amount of time eallcd for will: 'n- price_ d! _will 'tot :eri w"r tho sauce pur- secn anybody from home for a year, soma extent, be dependent en the charac- rose lc get a grade buil. ever though.: Wait till goer act Heigiweh., y'otl hard• -1{,t of •the s!ock..ih.it.i.;. the is}tndaiir" a hi,i, gi c4. for l'- n :rtieaon from, tahta • ` • the other well knrv.. something -of wor- • ithip; her ardent nature invested • her • frie cis lies with a ro:mmantie enthusiasm that sometimes made tier calmer friend agreed always u e ht Sitter into the 1u- ; e, ' [ r� n nt! ' be built \V?!1' HE HADN'T Ff Cil'_ 11' - And now -my cras'end has made' a grist pit coca of the old sctxxl-mi i1 V�' up in two or 'h' -e r.eraiion; o: tor - 1 ct'Y, you po r Ekeii• 'end �'iiu-are carer nor - • r Thames Timxl!y Was about to take smile and often called fe ih a gentle re- to me than an,'1}?dy in : the whole ani- wresting the required l e rniiviun. 'Then; „d• L m: it h Short Sia butte from her Perhaps Alces affectio•n l cable d to five of Miss t 1 of t oft than 'oxer ^i mea for he always s for the younger : net morn• impetuous girl•. bin frrer'd ,tad Elini f M a f proper br^e3inc n ,vttert on the. v and- txil.,nunted manner tonged time may or required: v^ -v gee:etect horribly' ! r n verse. after bein g in r in shoot n require. rn four j briny ht_7m; o a he had "Cihrl " I'leanor'� live Lenera'nons o lr circa as!b i's, thou it iLix- \nil there i, t,ervasr out by the ricks `Ery fenunlne ;rxl: he her any -event to affil lt,r rhnngcs snih,gtit. "lo go, and then was -no help for it. This- . was J; y g 1 late. Let th the vvhote saerh \ l changes in he lice of implm'e- leg hctsv there r. ha. -no eeteranned f tt •put• eho pressed itself !ass ti v onalely, and had vvonderiug why -vee are so : a e tms v*i t last to triumph i , the i. errioon r •grca -- � . a strong dash et m o0 1 f eh r t i f should result froth" Mein near sea-sic.cr e s cure ti�rory into true -- ht ht of them and t Rest fad (tee,. arid rxu o erne . bey _ Eatran girls of thirteen, in the porch wilh'tiatcivial inipaltiality for te!ngso 'time the sheets vale tuaesE 'Cl 1;Sll.ows;. Engin yvrthse:elr tema.es a., tier' Mem:ie. rind inalantiy last their Lite. He hail *tateI einem to living in w•arin•.gatd 01 .autumn Sunsbine,li ate the can be gaol cnginn6•nti, tell cul es [Fent- cost Arden tr 4 _ shyness in the . fellow fining it erigcn- rooms at tilrxiin fr n byhti�:lrtsUnl net now hake nee:none, and of theheavy pall tray hr cost than may be tended 'common • -eared between -thorn. ing and corm unseen hands, C c such as 0 -re usually raid for cam• • • The 'first bar ova, to come that da,•. e�\pected-io-be teeatt•Et ti,. a .neat in his _had been.sw;ept array he Give to preference to -those 11 happened in Duniel ['ink's :solitary frequent visits to .tidi•u,., and behind ii:..spreadiir} iw':ty' into 'in• - , cottage.- which was built 'in a elle looketi at.Sihyt and saw that some- finite' dim distances, ces, e Imran ranbeneath .nenest -like hollow rmder the clown. The thing was wrung; and r�lire looked at. the ..n clear sky• liy g >ix iris eritertd the kir porch.' like the wet. brother -end sister with a sort of remorse.- white bHme-stiadoweiet Alps, their pure e come guE t.s . tliey were. and . sat in the summits .fuingtng ,pths of the pa - dirt:; smoke-hlecketteci ream, handling th arid discussing; the ninth: little. Pink by -turns, while Ihe• shepherd io•-ek�it on, with a pli eeed farms:. unto the deposed •baby in his.:Irens, nee _tt"wo_chubby chit- dren a hole elder r.itnging 16 his knees. "i „•,ok of Inti! tett of 'n," ea tel Ihe proud lather, .'entirely irely Eirs ye down. Miss • ' Sibyl. .eh c!o. "I w wire t carr~ hi -^t a tulle for a for- dlernal m xrccioit. nail:e haste home." o. a roan a tsirre sooner had he eat. on�oarc! Nothing had ever come be1v,'een them Then Ger•v'a_se snug sig ,em rain... is cross i • u hsd [[ts! mu two shy carne to meet them, scolding .them both And then a miracle hal Pt.lU d•`v,Bh thisLthe The plan..to be foi!ns'1 Ls in outline t titan he slq' 1 himself array in Itis c bunk.. and step*.' line a -lop till early, in spite, of i.ervase'4 welloaci4 d brother- liness, she vas rtot.surt: that sh:: had not driven -hint !rani his tioinc; and now :she had clone something worse to his sister: all this ova., n poor requital to the family io which -she bed keen tceeive'L-a lonely child. The yp.hon novo nrose, Boor should she set ties: wrongs richt? Hoiv comet she stanc1 ai .in.st the iron strength in reclined !ike of Fate'? • naked icthl .imily. ly. i; She felt such a .helplessness as corn- strong gods al rest• girdling about the High. one above' : t other, into -the very pale - blue ether (em e+rhead. -'Phare .I hey lay, ter- rible in their snow: grandeur. cledem- i,ke in their niarvelleus beauty. -'tinted with the delieale transparency of 'some airy, unsubstantial pageant. and yet so real and �n inipres.sive in- their massive reality. Such a repose they had in their next morning He felt ,nr perfect trim, and weft up on dick beaming wilh de- mon e_ mon stock.1' c •- "I've found a certain cure for sea. • -that. .have indications of a reasonable sickness, uaptnin:" he announced ki that am4tunt of .mills -giving capacity_ .Mate endive: al. "Go to your hunk 03 soon • with these a pure sire of one of rhe a.• y'ou get aboard anal don't show 'your • . . nose out cf it till you're near your •- destination;. It worked like :t charm ivith me. i hnven't, had .a qualm all night. \\'hy, what_ are..you .laughing at"" "Oh, -nothing'," . said the captain: "Only the' mac;iinery broke down just tit we se reel:0e,, Rad. eve haven't moved' dairy breeds .wjih proper form and breeding. tiatain all !h. female. pro- geny for future breeding that have been fr.und eto possess • Mee inelle iein;l-.rlrha- lily in a high c]egr6e. Discard those cf the eapposite• class as soon as their Cct d 'encs becomes known. --Continue Contine .e i > the same line :of breeding until the ex- out of dock all night.. The other pas- celtence snucht Las been reached. -or nt sengers were transferred . lo another least. continue it unlit the standard el bat, but We. .didn't know you were milk giving in the cows leas corns up rabeeird." • y4 ,74 P•e y iR1 Mi Ser • �•.4. tr ��r�.w A MOTHER'S • PRIDE, A mother's greatest pleasure is in teeing her little ones Sri _tit„ yieland 5,_ ie to the home, but the sick child is a regular little tyrant. A few doses '`•f . 'BbY's-Own Tablets will make the sick - 'h+ child well, 'or an occasional dose will :prevent sickness. There is nothing to equal these Tablets as' a cure for sto- erach• and bowel troubles. They -make ` teething easy, break up colds, exPe1 'worms -and cure 'simple fevers. Baby's Own Tablets are sold under the guar- • antee of a government analyst not to _ contain ,.one - particle of opiate -they never do harm - always good.. Mrs. G. M. Kemp, Carleton Place, Ont., says: have given Baby's Own Tablets to my little one since he was a week old, and have found them a splendid rnedi.- - Line. At "eleven months he weighed over twenty-six pounds." The Tablets bre sold by druggists or by mail at 23 ;cents a hox fro The Dr. Williams' • Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.. . ONE ADVANTAGE. d much pr'efec the man who speaks $ • From manuscript -don't you? • For though he may be windy, yet He knows when he is through. A BROAD STATEMENT. ` Dr: Leonhardt's Hem -Road will any case of Piles. This -statement is made without ' qualifications, It Is in the form of a- tablet, It is the only pile. remedy. used .-eternally. • . It is impossible to. cure_ an estab ed case .of. Piles -with ointments, su Cor'les, injections or outward-applian A $1,000 guarantee with every p age of Dr. Leonhardt's Hem -Roil. $1.00, all dealers, or- The Wits .f yte Co., Limited, Niagara Falls, On . -. COULDN SMELL IT. "Jane, don't you think tinct heart _of yours is a procrastinator';" "ryebeen suspectin' it, mum; but *;ways uses a breath perfumer an •Sant be . sure '' _ • VERY LIK • cure • any • In-. lisp- Fposi- ces. ack- on- t. . sweet - he • ELY. can't understand' bow a Man can :Commit suicide for love." "it happens frequently," , .• iskou"Weil. ldd regi perhaps so, y lifeut •' I did , I , .l, --fELL -DOWN FLIGHT OF STEPS (ROVED ZAM-BUj REST IN .THREE • - DIFFERENT 'EMERGENCIES. One . of the most valuable points abo • - etkn-Buk„the herbal balm, es the van -.• arty of uses to which_ it can be .applied Mrs. A. Livernois, of 231 Sydenham Toronto, says: "1 have used Zara Heuk for colds on. the' chest' and. knead atm rubbed well in -It gave almost 'n _ Slant relief to the 'tightness' and "stiff •-nese.' One day I slipped when de- soeading. the stairs and- fell to the bot - tome My right -arm was terribly dis- A%"f1-SUICIDE BUREAU NEEDED. People of Austrian Capital: (lave .a Ten- ' In Vienna, the seemingly gayest cities, an anti -suicide bureau, such has been established in London, is ba lY needed. The year's record of se'l murders shows that Vienna still retai her bad pre-emine-ice among Europea capitals in respect to the percentage her population who voluntarily cut sho their livece. The figures for 1906, just published show that. 425 persons. committed -su Ode, while another 707 tried to do •f but failed. The figures reveal some cur cus anomalies which must sorely puz zie psychologists. More suicides . tak place in summer than in winter. ' I the month. of May- when all natll're w” proclaiming the joy' of living, 48 per sons decided that death was preferabl and terminated 'their existence. drearer November, when the birds had ceased singing and bleak winds wailed mournfully through the leafless trees, only 28 persons yielded to the convic- tion that life was not worth living: The motives assigned for suicide also disclose some perplex:n; problems -For instance, only 31 persons committed suicide because of poverty, while two more shuffled off this mortal coil be- . life had dealt too- generously with them, and they had become satisfied with it. Sickness was the. motive .alleg- ed in 100 cases; while love affairs' gone wrong drove 63 to destruction, and do- mestic strife impelled 23 to flee to the other world where there is neither marriage nor giving in marc•iage, The .oldest victim . was a man- of -87; the youngest a little girl of eight. What dire tragedy of ' Childhood caused „her to take the leap in the dark does not appear but the bars mention of the fact awakens a feeling 'of infinite pity.. Poor little- mite! May her soul- rest In of as d- f - ns n .i rt t, i- e n as e The men greatly outnumbered the. • women, which can' hardly be -'regarded a.- proof of the superiority -of the male sex. There were 313 of them .wha took their own lees ill- the last twelve• months and of women, 113 -little more than a third as many.- In the- raethnds chosen for making. their exits, men showed a much 'greater -partiality • ler bullets than did women. Only twelve or the latter shot therneelves while 118 men chose that way., of .ridding' ahem - selves of the burden of Iife: Despairing iwmanhood displayed.: the greater pref- erence for poison.. Thirty-two - women. Swallowed fatal draughts. - Twentr-- eight women selected the moat ghastly term of suicide -throwing themselves from• top -story 'windows. BREAD THAT IS TWO YEARS OLD The Uungarian Has a Year's 'Supply the Shelves. , titIn Hungary they' •do not -eat fres -bread. Whether It -is because the Hu • garians believe in hygiene more eha their European brothers and sisters - not has ,never been told, but the Ara you' is partial to. stale bread, and. - staler the better. His "rozsicenyer,.. ordinary . black bread, as it is eaten the very large -majority of the Magy population, is carefully laid away on shelf and dug out for consumatie months- and- months after it has corn ourof the great ovens. If the huge lea weighing something' like five pounds an far which the Hungarian pays -six -o seven kreutzer, equivalent h about thre or four cents in our money., has carefu �Y been hidden away for two. years it considered all the better. The Hungaria never thinks of where the bread is t ccme from to -morrow. Ile thinks o ,here it is to. come- from •nexI. year; fo •tie has at least a year's supply. on lh shelves. The ' Hungarian bakes he bread 365 days ahead of time. He :\Vednesday •baking is for the Wednes day of :a year to come; her Thursday baking -for a Thursday of a year t come. • The immigrants arriving in America from Hungary bring over many of these immense loaves... They are cumbersome affairs and of ; ripe old age. The leaf weighs a trifle under live poundseand is •sr hard that to drop it on your • feet would be•• to "smash a foe an tWo, A hatchet struck into this loaf is hard to remove, and yet the loaf is considered a greet delicacy. -by the- Hungarians. who look upon it with the same pride that the German peasant looks upon his pumpernickel. • volcanoes of disease, the eruptions out di�charttea. Bad blood saver s Cerate, will:drire, the poison from the on h n n 'l the. by ar .a n e f. d. r :s n 0 e r n America tutored and swollen and became quite • '-•stiff. Rs f still had 'a supply of Zac,- �i`313k I rubbed some on the bruised limb and it was really surprising how quick• -ly it removed the discoloration, cured line stiffness; and. restored ' the arm to OS s proper form. Since that time I have 'tad occasion to use Zarn-Buk, for rhea-. • 'mat+�-m. 'and I 'have found it equally •,gond.•, T.am-Buk Is so • uniformly good .•be- cause it is composed of the finest her- bal palms, essences, and- juices known tt- medical science, compounded and relined in 'a ,special' and 'peculiar .way.' eft has such high• germ -killing power that it is unequalled . as an antiseptic; Ila healing virtue is -very great and r s a household balm Zam-Buk is absolute- • ty unique. it is a sure cure for eczema, itch, blood poison, ulcers, ct>,ronic sores,• rir.gwor'rn. children's rashes, spots,' etc. • • ft also cures -cuts. burns, bruises; chap- • ,._:ped hands, enlarged veins, piles, and n!' diseased or injured conditions. of''the •skin and subjacent tissues. • All d rug - gists and -stores sell at 50c. a box, post free from the Zam-Buk, Co., Toronto, 'far price. 8 boxes sent for $2.50. 'Send. one cent 'for dainty trial • box. THERE TO STAY. -"Well," said the tattoo artist, as he "damped his needle. "I have put'an el • 0 th chest and now I whnt m' ip on your I blood y money." `'I ain't going to pay you a cent, lad," - chuckled the old salt, "and, what is . t1lor'e, I have the advantage of you." "In what way':' - b - W`iy, lou can't, take it. out of my h hid h t n Ig u 'ni a su -b ,kens are .are bend mo aim -new knew. thing Like little f eczema pour et.•. a Wearer's Syrup HOLLOW: GLASS' BRICKS. - - The demand for' hollow. _bricks and eilding' blocks for hou=se construction as induced glass manufacturers to put o _ llow glass bricks -on the riaarket,. and. hey promise' to be used extensively f, r ovel and artistic effects. The first lass 'bricks, being,_solid, :pros ed 'a fail r-- account of their • cast, but the chow glass bricks .cera be made at lolllees' exr.ense. They ,ore .lighter._ rad stronger .than clay bi;igt;s and are, ch excellent nonconductors that walls nilt of them are proof against damp- ,-•sottnde_hcat and -cold The bricks sealed hermetically when hot and placed in . walls with a- colorless rtar 'made of special glass. The ' ding strength of the glass_ mortar i-. Ogres great as the bricks themselves. I rs, Mad•ison-"Hew do you ,like your neighborse" Mn.'sflyer-"r don't • ISSUE NO. , -d'I. • I haven't tried to borrow any - yet.'" The greet Ac 1r:an salt ravine at •Wiel- ireka has 600 relies of galleries, and em- ploys 9,000 miners. it has. been worked dor the Peet ;,& :Centu r ._e The Mark a sr X wiSNAIM KAtl_tX / .cot .lam' Trade marked thus in a atiterieq of erre., fabric* and cuforwomen. men and. Form Piped. are authorized to replace instantly and at qtr cod. any Pem•Angle fpr °n t faulty in malenal• or making. 206 • ells Pen -Angle trade, mark (in red) on every Pen -Angle, garment, tells you it will fitandwon't shrink,- your -own •dealer so guarantees it. Underwear ' thus trademarked is softer, -warmer, more flexible, better wearing. .", +v7'^? G tie!•?";. -+ -• et. u . AUSTRALIA'S WEALTH IN SHEEP, sticep raising, mainly for the stile of- the wool, but also in part, of course, for the meat. Australia now ranks second among theTgreat sheep -raising countries, Argentina being first with 92.000,000 !sheep, Australia second With 72,000,000, I and ,Russia third with- 70,000,000. But a sensing o' less first, than 106,260,000 head of sheep. 'lust was in 1891. _'Prolonged drought were -the Geese of the destruc- 1 tion of many millions' of Australian sheep, but- since 19022 there has been an e• annual gain. Yet these sheep were not indigenous to Australia, -They were first introduced in 1704.• being of the- Spanish aierino -species, LOTS! 8 E T T i A. fellow can't .live on love f But -lots, of rnen then; are, UNDERWEAR - Whom you and I have knowledge- of i Who live on their love's pa? They Advertise Themselves.-Imme ',"SWEEPING' ASSERTIONS.' Father : "Did .you- notice how grace- fully Ethel Swept into the room at the party lasnight?" .Mothers,s "Yes; -but when' iv Comes to sweeping out a room she's not much • If you are a sufferer from colds get I a bottle oL. Bickle's Anti -Consumptive Syrup - and• -test its» qualities: It will be found that no praise bestowed on it is too high. It does all that is claimed for it, and does• ft thoroughly. Do not take any• substitute • for Bickle's Syrup, be- cause 'it is -the best, -'having stood the. test of years. All the best dealers sell `t • ' NO HEART TO HEART. ' She -"And now, • Charlie. I suppose tomorrow- you will have to speak to ' papa about this?" -' • • - He -"Yes, dearest, I suppose_ I must." (After a ,pause) --"Has your (ether a s telephone." ately they were offered to the -pub) Parmelee's Vegetable . Fills. became. a pular' because of the good rey,,, r„ made for themselves. That reputatio has grown, and they now rank amen the first medicines for use in attacks dyspepsia and biliousness; complain et the .liver and kidneys, rheumatism fever and ague andthe funtunerab coiapiications to which these airmen give rise. . • Doctdr : "Did those red pills I left fo r little Waiter. do- him- any good?"' Mrs R.: "Yes, indeed, doctor. lie's bee sitting up in bed ail•day.iiaying urarbl�es with them." - a • • tio 0 e "'Queen City' ■ hones ire a ewe fifintabe finis -t i 4t■s dm a the best �M bland it cite enu al hen. 'Queen Cs►' i u alp rpean AM. asa.i., u.r.. 1O* peer pour 1e, u Campbell's infilling Co. nein P T j a• Queen City di- ----- - ic,'• FOR SALE, 0- •s5 acre ranch, 16 acres bearing orchard 24 saws .y fenced pasture, 3 cows, 3 horses, good home. halm n rad eau.A good home. 13.4. W AP.tEICY, Cordae, CULL Rig money riew'belmg made sell - le' frig shares of one of Cobalt's is safest, best and most reliable companies. A Irustworthy repro- ` 't' sentative- waffled for this dig• t trim. Write at once to n - Box 413, Toronto. CARPET DYEING place nos ensues. This isW • seeety with are BRITISH AMERICAN DYEING Ott . erre gasdmrapen eviIn avis we are fere tosendit YM■s Iles lana, ■ ea. need setre I _ ▪ • • Yee eed net shed any tears if ou: will p f' The pa L.- alensbol Planter on that lame back. Tris and be convinced Constituent="Nbw, Mr. VW'unn'out, wish you'd do your best to get my boy a. -good -Government posttivn.'• AI. P;— "Well, what con your son do?" Con- tituent-"What can he do? Great Scot. tiara, if he could do anything I wouldn't be bothering Your Doctor Can cure Cough or Coht no q�nnaabout that, why go to all the trouble and incoaad �� of lookitog him tap, hisptreseriptian $fled, when you can step into any drug store a bobtttle of S LlLOH'anada aS CURE for a ,quarter. when W y payttwo yto five dollars o a s bottle of SHILoa will cure you • it's telly? Why notof as hundreds of thousands Canadians havee • done far the past thirt3r-four years : let SHILOR be your doe- • tor whenever a Cough or Cold 1711011 will cure you, and an back up this stag with a positive guarantee. The next time you have a Cough or Cold cure It with f. e ILO • They Cleanse the ee•steni 'thoroughly, Parrnelee's Vegetable Pills clear the stomach and bowels of. bilious matter. cause the excretory _ vessels' lb. throw off impurities from the blood into the bow.els and expel the- deleterious mass from the body, They do • this without pain or inconvenience to the patient, who speedily realizes their good offices t a, soon as they begin to take effect, They' Ij have. strong recommendations from all ILande of people.. And when you hear a- Man- boast 'of his ancestors it's a safe bet-. that his descendants will have no occasion to boast of theirs. ' • A mattes et Itupernirrea a all these ,r o are 'era down ended bilitated Is the tact that " Perre►►nru " is the best tonic ever 0oa peumbd. IS giver strength and builds up the system. • Judge="And your wife aimed at and your head with a cup," Witness "Yes, sir," Judge -"Well, all I have to say" is' that you ought to be very proud of her." . The • never failing medicine. ilotlo- y's Corn Cure,. removes: all' kinds of corns, 'warts, etc.; even the most dille colt to remove cannot withstand this onderful remedy. . • . - • "flaw much coal is there; Susan? hoar long will it last?" "Well, ma'am, It will last quite a -while if you don't have any fires."_ "Then there isn't much lett' , "1'bere_ isn't arty left, ma'am " . - Pain is Punishment: -Pain Is a pct*. test of nature . against neglect et the • bodily_ health, against .carelessness- Be- girding the physical' ooaditioa.. • it steals in at the first opportunity and -- takes -up ' its abode in a man and i; is scmetim& "difficult to eject k. pr, Thomas' Ecteetric Oil. -will -drive ft eat in short order. Pain canned stay where It is..used, but immediately flees awey.. - • Sugar today is only otie.sixtlt . Ira • price of what it". was in the year of Waterloo. :. - • There le en *eel thewThe troebl• ties bed w weave ed. Allen's Linn lateen *nen the want ends. it allays hillassoatiee and dears the ata pa -eggs Before • Lister's' antiseptic lnveptaoae the deatlyr'ate in amputations .of. the Wgh. was 41 per -cent. It Is now about 6 per cent. '... Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator :-does. not' require- the help of any peer- , gative medicine to complete the curs. • Give it `a trial and be convinced. Sometimes a woman doesn't meet Sae ideal man -until she .L5 too old for. him te. -recognize her. . •. _ • - e A. .6a ::STEEL . M . • ■ T and Withy are (10 .b It f )_ • Warranted) with heavy I�lvaniziu five t Anybody who can drive8. sale, p8h�y� , beck of the roof anybuilding " ( straight can s building . ham with Qishawa tin . mer and ta . of tin- roof for• Steel uShingles make , gg�' •, n T's snips are a -plenty. your farm. They last a hundred years, III us the surface measure- of any Even cedar or cypress shies ::: will land we will tell with exactly what '� you as nuc • 'and .. zt cost to cover it air . Long before an of ' Ostia• for FREE * copy of wa"rhe -• Roofing shows a sign of wear. ht,."booklet, re ad of Slate f wine to y end theprofitabl twiceway to roof as much to . sense. put o—building on any' farm, vuon'tlastJabitlan i t .The booklet. is worth • • ' .reading, It tells why as ' ' '"Oshawa "'Steel Shingles make build- "Oshawa "-shi ' ings lightning..proof, ant are gU :ra;teed .ogled roof c forn water-proof; w i rid - you. It tells, too; why a Awa "=shin- proof, fire -proof, a A Oshawa "Galvanized geed. roof is safe prattler -proof fora are •GD Steel Shy from lightning, and -. vuarte,r= century, — ar Y • NTKED in e1itGlry way f• lives some sttirpris• u -t painting. • 4s$ht to Last a Century ms facts abort the 11se.' ■ witho Inde of semi- lightning erred -heavy sheet steel (28 - caused in Canada la guage _ book --where she l (we • Bet• your read tins .The dials Paop'la. . Of -Os'haw'a - -- TORONTO OTTAWA L 9t VANCOUVER if Colborne SL 123 Stream 8 69 La■alaaa+d 84. US Pomba 8t: moil R=AL 521 Craig Si C'- IN sb, "- •,1 SU. ffitittriug gtws lished aver -Friday moniiva alias—OM; Pickering Oat. TERMS • — 1!L,ls Per. fear; 111.00 :paid to aavaaas RATaa OT ADYal1TIAINQ : rest insertion. per line - - - - . 10 Dent - *soh subsequent insertion, pir Lias - 6 ' 'phis rate dos not include I.igai or Foreign ad- warNsemente. {special terms. given so parties making 0012,gaols for or 6 months or by the year. Ralf- ,- pally or yearly contracts payable quarterly.. Business cards tan Lines or ander, with paper, Ons year, $5 00, payable in advance. t=Slotioeinlocal oolumns tan cents per line, Ave lrafrteeCdsonn� • veinal contract emyknwoappliea- on. No free advertising . • - Advertisements without written natrnotlons 'vii ibe inserted until -forbidden and charged se- - Orders for discontinuing advertise- oat be In writing and sent to the pub- • Job Work promptly attended to. _-Murkar & Thexton,, Pro.lirietors NOTES AND COh[MENTS. The exceptionally cold Winter in the North-West - prdvinces,'and "the scarcity of coal is almost cer- tain" to affect to -some extent the imrnediate prosp-sets of the coun- try. The present state of affairs - proves' that- the present railway facilities are linable to meet the demands of ' that rapidly de- - veloping country: -In a country • with a climat-e so severe- as that - -of the North-West, the fuel ques- tion is one the greatest iinport- - since. ' No doubt, they have the supply, but it is necessary to have the supply at the doors _ of;the --consumer- whenever - he requires it. 'It is said that the resources of the railways have been taxed to the utmost in moving the wheat crop, -thus neglecting another im- portant duty, moving the coal isupply, The extensive net -work of railways now under construc- tion and also those whose ettnntrue- tion will soon -he. entered upon, will remove this barrier to the pro- - grecs -of the. country... But the present conditions will cause ,orae to -hesitate before leaving Ontarie� or other parts- with a more uicxl• erste climate and rushing t, the North-West. The opportnni- ties there are great for • making fortunes, but there are many who do not consider that the only aim in life. While fortrnes are made more slowly in -Ontario, they con- - .'aides :.this province . quite good. eAough for them. . : CHERRY - woos: - The Cherrywood Sabbath' schunl has been fortunate in securing tin- - -services of the -Stuart Moving Pit- . lure' Co., to give -an exhibition here on the evening of Friday, • Feb. 115th. This company. has ap- peared in uiatiy of the peighbt ring villages. and everywhere: .rhe,, have appeared, they have wolf ..great praise. In _many place- `where they hiive appeared once. thgy have had 'no difficulty in • • securing re:engfigenlen ts. I7o• not 'fail to attend next 'Friday even sag as you are' sure tote pleased. y attendiug_y-ou will nisi! confer a fever upon 'the S. School, under whose .auspices they are appeal - lu g. __.BEouf3811_ Miss M. Stephenson is visiting friends in the city. Miss M..Routley, of . Toronto._is visiting with frieuds. Miss Britton,. of Brookline is ''s. G. Philip, jr., is indisposed_this. week, but is improving. Miss Routley, of Brooklin, is vis- iting friends for a few days. A. Cassie, of East Toronto, is .pending a couple of "Weeks -at his home. . A large basket party was held at R. J. Cowan's • Thursday on night. - . . B. Feasby and his mother spent a -few days last week with .friends in Scott. , - J. Phillips; of 'Whitby, • spent a few days here ' last week with friends. Dejrs._ G. D. Linton is in the city waiting on her -brother, . who is v_ery.ill._ ' Messrs. E. W. Bodell and Wm: Knox were in Oshawa on Tuesday an business. R. Miller, of Toronto, is visiting with his .uncle,_S. H. Stevenson, for a week. Don't forget the hockey match here onFridaynight, Whitby vs. Brougham: Master J. Cochrane, of Whitby. College, spent Sunday under the parental roof. J. Gillman had -a hatching of 77 chickens come out on Sunday. The first of the season. Quite a•few from here Attended the hockey match at Claremont On Friday and also Monday night. Miss- D. N. Saegent returnd home on Saturday after spending a few. weeks with her -sister, Mrs. E. W. Bodell.-' The carnival here -on Thursday night was a huge success. The one on Thursday night: Feb. 14th Itromises equal results. - Be sure tb come Thomas Poucher is' attending the enmity council again this week. I )n Wednesday morning, the War- den was called away on _urgent business, and Mr. Potecher wns unanimously elected to the chair far -the day. - • . The annual coui'ert ' and box 'so- cial tinder the auspices of the Sons of Temperance will be held in the Temperance Hall here on the evening of Friday, -Feb. 15th: A' fine programme will be given iu which the following - :first-class talent will participate : Mr. Ar- lidge, soloist, of Toronto: the W hi teenier Male Quartette; Mr., Mrs. and Miss and Nighswander, of Atha and other local talent. Doors will be opened at 7.30 p. {n. BROCK ROAD) • The report of the pupils of S. S. No. six, Pickering, for _the ' mouth of January. reads as follows : Sr. IV—Ireua Alford, Elmer Willson -Willie Percy. Jr.. IV -Donald Willson, Gertrude Humphrey, Archie Jackson, Harold Hum- ;, phrey; Fannie Kayes; Hazel Hay- . es, -Arthur Badjerow, Roy Brig- ' mall III class—Kenneth ' Mc- Brady, Edna Lee, George Cowan, "Eugitie. Lee, Olife Brignall; Jose- phine Connor, Frankie Jackson, Loretto Gtiod vin: II class—Lull Humphrey, Nellie Lee, Nicholas . Cowan.- Pt. I sr:—Lorena-Ellicott Walter Brignall. Pt. I jr.—Wil- meet Shea, =Miss F. , A. Meek; Teacher the concert. will begin at 8 o'clock sharp, after which the boxes will be disposed of by nuc-. tion, . Admission 15 cents. Ladies ringing boxes will. be ,admitted free. The admission fee will be refunded to -those purchasing -box- es. Do not fail ._to attend this en- tertainment as it will be the best of the season. _ t'XBRIDGE. Residents of this part of the coun- try were considerably surprised while- - perusing the evening papers the oth- er evening when. they came across ,this item in the Toronto Star : "Wil- --lam' Douglas _ of...9911garion treet, Toronto, who was in Goodwood, Ont. reports that seven distinct earth- • 'quake tremors_ were felt there -early -Friday, Morning, ranging from 1 o'clock to 5.a clock.: He WAS visiting at the home of Mr. Thos. Sintzel, Stouffville road, a large roughcast . • house. The first shock woke him up, and the family did not dare tb kb'to bed again all night, as there were re- • peated tremors, which shook the doors • -and windows. Goodivood is 35 miles ..from Toronto, between Stouffville and Uxbridge." Good wood's people are • stili laughing. They 'consider the whole a joke on some innocent news- paper reporter. There ws,s no earth- quake, nor the least Indication -of one In future, Mr. Douglas should not be permitted to stray from home unles.4 accompanied by a•chaperorre:-Journal. WeaK id-neys • Weak Kidneys. sorelypoint y to weak kidne Nerves. The Kidneys. like the Bears,. and . the Stofmaeh. land theirweakness. not in the organ Itself, but in the nerves that control and guide and strengthen them- Dr, Shoop's Restorative la medicine speci5ealli prepared to reach these controlling nerves. To doctor the Kidneys alone, is futile. It is a waste of time. and of money al well: If, sour tack' aches or is weak. if the urine -scalds. or is dark and strong, if you have symptom@ of Brights or other distressing or dangerous kid• smy disease. try Dr. Shoop's Restorative a matlr. Tablets or Liquid—and see what it can and will 4o fo><you. -Druggist recommend and 1011 SALE • REGISTER. TUESDAY, FEB. 12TH—Credit sale 'of farm stock, implements. etc., on -lot 22, real. of can. 4, Pickering. the pro- perty of Gipson Conner. • Sale at 12 o'clock, sharp. See bills. F. Pos- till, auctioneer. Tv'ESDAY, FEB.-12rn—Extensive -auc- tion: sale of farm stock, implements, household furniture, etc., on lot 28, con. 8, Pickering, the property of Mrs. A. Johiiefon. Sale at 1 o'clock. No reserve. 8 months credit. Thorn Poucher, auctioneer. • - WEDNESDAY, FEB. 13TH 1907.—Auc- tion sale of farm stock. implements, -etc., on lot 11. eon. 2, Pickering, the - property of A. N. Ridley. Sale at one. See bills for particulars. - Thos. Poucher, Auctioneer. THI•RSDAY, FEB. 20.mit 1907. —Auction sale of farm stock, and implements on lot 29, rear of Con. 3, the -proper- - ty of Robt. Alexander... No reserve. Sale at one sharp. See bills. - F. Postill, Auctioneer. so ,Nero Advertisements. reat Clearing csf WinterGoods `� = For 30 'days. -If you -want to save money, See Us. Our customers come to us after season. They have satisfied themselves that our values are the best offerings of all others. .Those seeking extraordinary values will be intense- ly interested in our goods and prices. All goods cut down -to sale prices no coupons given. 'LADIES SKIRTS—Fine black vicuna skirts with straps, buttons and pleats $1.50, regular 32.00. Black Sateen Underskirts 70c. 90c and $1.00, regular 85c, 31.00 and $1.25. ' . Shaker Flannel Underskirts 65c regular 75c. DRESS GOODS—Gray Tweed 50 in. wide 25c yd, regular 35c. Black cloth -50 in wide 4,5c yd, regular 60c. Green, Blue and Red -42 in. wide 20c yd, regular 25c, . LADIES BLOUSES—made from wrapperette goods plain 40e, regular 50c Pleated and braided, with straps and button 65c, regular 75c. Pleated with bias front 4 in. deep cuffs 85c, regular $1.00 - LADIES UNDERVESTS AND DRAWERS—Suit 45c, regular 50c. Suits 90c, regular 51.00. Pre wool suits -51.75, regular $2 00. These are all Turnbull's make of goods. ' WRAPPERS—Winter weight 85c, Regular 81.00; Wrappers—$1.00, regular $1.25; $1.20, regular 1.35. FLANNELETTE Night Robes 45c, regu- lar 50c. MEN'S wool tweed suits 8.00, regular 7.50. Scotch tweed, double breasted, 9.50, regular 10,50, OVERCOATS—Frieze cloth 8.00, regular,9.50; dark -Oxford gray 9.00. regular 10.50; Oxford rain coat. 9.00,• regular 10.00. BOYS' OVERCOATS—Frieze cloth 5.50, regular 8.50. Suits -2.00, 3.00 350, 4.00, 4.26, 4.50 season These goods are all new'and up-to-date. We have hundreds of other things reduced in price which our space will not allow us to mention. D. Simpson & Co., FARM TO RENT;—The Howell • - lsroyertv between Oreenwped and Brougham. good -pasture.. love rental. Write, S Di Newton, executor. News oface. Kington.. Oat.' , lett Pickering. illinery Store will be closed during month -of February. Watch this Space for Re -Opening. MRS. _ HERKS &- DAUGHTER A r I1.i'H_COWS, FOR. SALE. The • coboth young. has for sale tern fresh premiilchses. - - • r cows, bosh young. apply na the premises. lot 10, con. 4. Pickering. Frank B `=mphrey. FOR SALE. —A rumher of heifers with calf For service Sharthorn ball • -Rising Starr" 66448, bred by Ed Robinson of -Mark/ascii.alaw -Mark/ascii. Dm Roan Jilt ,.Imsees by King of Diamonds Me. Terms 81.61.. Wart- - - nay Bros., Lot t0, Con. 3. Andley P. 0. 18if FARM TO RENT.—Containing 1021 i scree, being los 94 , con 8. Townshipof Pickering. 9 miles west of Claremont. On the premises are a frame bonne. S frame barn and en Aprf but. For !a sr particulars `ape a 1y to ,411.111111111.111111.11.1111.11.11 THE d trin g ponce and a g pen Possession xis-- f - F. Spoard, Claremont. large fresh stock riow ons hand. from Se. up. . Joh- Parkes. . Paints, Oils °r•ices in. W all Paper ranging Lv ssbairte a: Strong ,vada and ekllled Xmas to the front. Attend the famous And be_pruperiy prepared for business ptriitions. We deal only in High -trade Business Education—the- kind every young rutin and woman 'should hxv'r. Our school has now -the largest attendance in its history. Commence - now. - Prepare well and success is cer- tain. No trouble for our graduates to .get positions. • Catalogue free. W. J. ELLIOTT, Principal, 19y • Cor. Yong. and Alexander Sta. r.: oo s: estorative PICKERING PHARMACY, .. 'Sail( 'exe .est. In the•line of Business Training Institutes in Canada and • that is the well-known Zentr.l2uainess 'ollege OF TORONTO. •Best -in courses of Study.' :Best In numbers and experience -of - Teachers. Best in securing po- sitions, far Graduates. Have you read our catalogue ?. It ex- plains our methods.. Get it -be- • fore tbe- fore .you decide which school you will attend. •- -Winter Term now open. You will be welcome. - Eater . any' time. W. H. SHAW, Prin. If you are Constipated,' dull. or or • hued' a' sallow ' lifeless complexion, try' Lax-ets just once to see -what they will do for- you: I,ax-ets are little toothsome Candy tablets—nice to eat, nice in effect. No griping, no pain. Just a. gentle laxative$effect that is pleasing and de sirable. Handy for the vest pock- --ett or purse. Lax-ets •meet every desire. Lax -eta come to you in beautiful lithographed metal box- es at 5 cents and 26 cents. ;',dold by Pickering Pharmacy. Piles get quick relief from • Dr. Shoop's Magic Ointment. Remem- ber its- made ALONE for Piles—and • it works with -certainty and satis- faction. Itching. painful, protrud- ing, or 'blind piles dissappear- like magic by its use. Try it and see! Pickering Pharmscy. Let Others Help you To recover your stolen property.' The . ... -. . . £ickering , Vigilance tenmdttee - will -do this. Members having property stolen communi- cate immediately with any member of Executive Committee. _ Membership •fes - • • $1.00. Tickets may belied from the President 'or Secretary on application. . `UNIVERSAL: BREAD MAKER T., o. . ••"fir; Our' Dealer 'Supplying you. Coupons willl be found in each and every bag. Write us for booklet. - Arthur Jeffrey, . 1. A. O'Connor]FARMTo RENT.—Being lot 18, —Secretary. - President- con 8 Township of Pickering, south of sitting of 17n acres. On the premises area g brick dwelling,first•class-barn, and stables, an 'abundance of good a stet. there being a runn- ing stream, and water in stable, two good orch- ards. Fall plowing done. For thither partic- ulars apply to p.Forsyth, North Claremont. SOU Exec. Com.—Gen. Leng, D. E. Pugh, C. 8. Palmer, Pickering, Ont. Clai rat • lbout nue person in every* four :;u .s with Itching, bleeding cr prctru._ in • piles. There as yet to be four ii h]e tate Inwhlch Or: ClIa;Se's hint' n,ent will not afford prompt relief, an,: If u:,ed regularly, produce a perman- eat rind thorou'g4 dire. AA- yo[i1 neighbors abcnt it. The best people it the land recommend this treatment a the only actual -cure for- piles; 00 cents a box, all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates 8c company, Toronto. - INTMENT con - BAKING ! - Qaunont? _ 1.. Of all materials and design kepti n stook. -It will pay you to call at our works azd inspect our stook and obtain -price'. Don't be misled by agents we do not employ them, consequent- ly we can, and do throw off the agents commission of 10 per cent., which you will certainly save by purchasing from us. call solicited. On and after'May. 1st I will conduct business. in the store adjoining J. H. Beal's furniture shop, where I will keep constantly on hand a good sup- ply of bread and cakes. j Cokes of all kinds' Made 'to order _. shortest notice. - Ice -Cream Ptirlor in connection. W.' A. Thomson, claremonb, Ont.. WHITBY GRANITE CO., Sim Whitby. Ontarf o 'Produce Market W. C. LaFraugh, of Stouffville, - will be at Mechin & Pouchei's • store, Brougham, every Tuesday morning prepared to pay the high- est price in cash for Butter and ' -Eggs. He has also arranged with H. Mechin to buy produce for him during the week for either trade or cash, as d ; sired. W. C. Zia .-CLAREMONT. • Mrs. Henderson, we are glad to report, is much better this week. John Forgie, township assessor, begins his annual tour through the 'township this week. Mr. and Mra. Routley of Brook - lin, have been spending a few days with N. and Mrs. Burton. Miss Jennie Forgie left on Fri- day last to take a course in domes- tic science in the Teehnnical School, Toronto. ' The regular meeting of the W. F. M. S., of Erskine church, will be held next Wednesday in the church. Small congregations were the Forder of the day in : the churches last Sunday on account of the ex- treme cold. Miss Fletcherreturned to her home in Port ' Perry on Tuesday, after spending a week with Clete mont friends. Chas. Bray, who has been laid up for the past few weeks'with an attack of small -pox, is making _rapid progress towards recovery. - Their many friends here sympa- thize with Mrs. Bayles and family, -_ of Greenwood, in their sad be- reavement in the sudden death of Mr. Bayles, which took place last Friday. Business has been very quiet here for some days. The preval- ence of is grippe, pneumonia and other kindred winter maladies has had the tendency to keep a great many in -doors. A class under the auspices of the Baptist church will be held every Monday evening for the study of the Bible. The first meeting was held on Monday evening last when there was a good attendance. Everybody will be made welcome. Mrs. A. B. Dowewell left Tues- day morning to make a visitwith her mother, Mrs. Isaac Linton, of Ladona, Pa. On her return, she will join her husband and family in Toronto, after' which they will go to Fort William, their future home. :The hockey match on Thursday evening last between the team from the Dental College. Toronto. • and the home team resulted in a tie, the score being 8-8. The match was a -good clean game and ' wit• named lay a large number of spec- tators. At the Quarterly meeting held in the Methodist church on Mon- • d.y afternoon, the Rev. J. _W. Totten was given a. unanimous in- vitation to remain in, charge for another year. During Mr. Tot- • ten's pastorate the chterch has been in A most prosperous condition. and the most perfect harmony, has :existed in the congregation. - The hockey match on the Cale- donia rink here on Monday even- •.ing between Whitby and the home team was a decidedly one-sided affair. The Whitby boys, while good players, seemed somewhat afraid of the Claremont team and consequently lost manygoals to _-their opponents. The score at the finish stood 17 to 3 in fever of our boys. - Prof. Farmer, of McMaster Uni- versity, will occupy the pulpit in the Baptist church next :Sunday. On the Sunday following, Feb. 17, —Mr. Matthew, a student of Mc- Master University, .a young man - with.a bright futut'e before him, • 'will occupy the pulpit. It is to be hoped that there will be a good at- '-tendance at these services. •-• 'Judging from the large amount of black knot throughout the township, it would seem that the • law dealing with that pest is a dead -letter. It is not generally known that the law provides for a fine of not less than $5 and not ex- ceeding $20 to be imposed on those failing to destroy black knot on "- their trees. Mr. Sargent, of- Unionville, who purchased Mr. Dowswell's :tin- smithing business, was here on Monday and Tuesday taking stock and completing the deal. Mr. Ser - .:gent will move his family here this week and reside in Judson Bundy's house. We welcome Mr. Sargent and family as residents of Clare- mont and trust their residence •-here may be both pleasant and pro€itable-te-all. Two 'rinks of curlers ' 'went to following : 'G. Richardson, James McFarlane, David Gregg, G. Mor- gan, James Cochrane, C. O. Ben - vett, R. Rawson and W. G. Scott. An interesting event took place on Wednesday afternoon, Febru- ary ttth, at 4 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Johnston, of the 8th con- cession, when her daughter, Miss Mary Ann, was united in marri- age to Mr. Robert A. King, of To- ronto. The ceremony was per- formed by the Rev. M. C. Tait in the presence of the immediate friends of the bride , and groom. The happy couple were the reci- pients of many beautiful and valu- able presents, which testify to the high respect in which they are held by their numerous friends. Mr. and and Mrs. Johnston left. on the evening train for their future home in Toronto, followed by the best wishes of their many friends. Malvern on Tuesday for.a friendly game. The Claremont playerFs ••, proved that they were no novice, at the game as the score will show. The • rink, skipped by C. J. Mac - nab, won by the score of 26 to 6, _----- and the rink skipped .by by Win. Leaper won by, the score of 17 to • 4, thus making Claremont the winners by 23 shots. This is the first time.. in . which Claremont have defeated Malvern on their own ice. ,The annual meeting of Erskine congregation was held on Wednes- day evening, Jan. 30th, when the #reports of 1906 were. received and 'adopted. The total revenue for the year was $1360, upwards of ..1$100; of which was for missionary -purposes. During the year, a "new furnace was installed at con- siderable expense, and it is grati- fying to find all the reports so satisfactory. The board of Man- agement for 1907 consists of the A TREAT AT CLAREMONT. Stuart's coming Monday, Feb'y 11th to the Town hall, Claremont with his moving pictures. Do not fail to come and have a treat while your money helps the Public Library. Every one praises the great spectac- ular show and those who see it help the funds of the Public Library. It's every one's business to enjoy himself while he helps to increase the Public Library. You can listen an evening to the illustrated songs and the rest of the year read the new lot of books that your presence will add to the Public LA Come and hear Stuart. the charater Impersonator and be the one person. on hand to help along the Public Lib- rary. Do not fail to be there and bring all your friends that the funds may furnish the shelves of the Public Library. .. See bills. ALL SICK WOMEN SHOULD READ MISS SCHWALM'S LETTER In Ail Parts el Canada Lydia B. Plakhsm'. Vegetable Compound it., costed Similar Cures. Many wonderful cures of female ills are continually coming to light which have been bron¢ht about • by Lydia E. Pi.nkham's Vegeta:!e Compound, and BOB -SLEIGHS New Sets. Vehicles of all kinds neatly and promptly repaired. Buggies and other vehicles repainted at reasonable rates. Thomas Patterson, - CLAREMONT (Dowswell's old stand.) se Massey -Harris Agency Having been appointed agent for the Massey -Harris Co. in this dis- trict I am prepared to furnish any implement required on a farm. Showrooms in A. Morgan's old stand, Brock st., Claremont. JOHNS'rrON BROWN FRIIIT I I have taken the agency for the E. D. Smith Nursery and can supply you with all kinds of large and small fruit trees and bushes. I have moved my office to my resi- dence on Linton are, where I have a full stock of repairs for farm imple- ments.' L. D. Banks, -Pickering The best`pl a to buy Wail -papers — IS AT — Before Opening An Account examine the growth of The Sovereign Bank. In 4% years, ending 31a October, 1906. Assets have increased to .$25,343,401 Excess of assets over liabilities to the Public has increased to . ..- . . ' . . . - 5,278,557 Deposits have increased to 15,578,920 $1.00 opens an account in the Savings Department. ' Interest paid 4 times a year. , - The Sovereign Bank of Canada. E. S. Theaker, ' Tanager, Claremont. Rubber'! • Rubbery 1 Get your heavy rubbers soled and heeled and save buying a new pair. We make. a specialty of this. ' We handle 5 Roses Bread Flour also Choice Pastry Flour. Mill Feed and the Celebrated Molases Feed which is a superior feed for A . call solicited at . -"The Corner Shoe Store." W. M. PALMER, Prop. Binghams Over 200 samples to choose from at 4c. per roll up. Mouldings to match all papers.' Also, a full ling of the.best esinta. Oils and Varnishes, always in stock at lowest possible prices. Don't forget the place. _ W. G. BINGHAM, North Claremont i,i/1111!1I,►1A\ .\ ,:,,.. NOTICE 23 er O7B 8 To sell this month at Cut Prices. Af you have a small account, please look after it. - :. Dowswell, Claremont, the People's Tinsmith: To Farmers in the immediate vicinity of Claremont I have placed a big_ new 45 horse- power boiler and a new up-to-date Fain chopper of the very best make In the Foundry building and am ' pre- pared • to do grain chopping equal to any mill in the township Chopping Days—Monday, Wednes- day and Friday of each week - I sin also open to contract for shin- gle sawing . R. W. CURRY, Foundry and Machine Shop, Claremont.: through the advice of Mrs. Pinkham, of Lynn, Maas., whieh is given to sick women absolutely free of charge. The present Slit. Pinkhain has- for twent .-dve years made a 'study of the ills of3 her sea ; she has consulted with - and advised thousands .of suffering women who today owe not only their health but even life to her helpful advice. Miss Annie E. Schwalm,. of 326 Spa - dins Ave., Toronto, Ont., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham:— • "I have found Lydia E. Pinkh'am's `ege. table Compounda specific for female weak- ness with which I have been :troubled for years. I also had irregular and painful periods which affectel my general health until fast spring. I was only a wreck of my former self. In my'affiiction I was ad- vised to use your Compound and am so glad that -I did so. I found that in a few short months there was no trace of female weakness, my strength gradually returned and in a very short time I considered myself a perfectly well woman. I appre- ciate my good health and beg to assure you that I am most grateful to you for discover- ing such a wonderful remedy' for suffering woman." The testimonial* which we are con- stantly publishing from grateful women establish beyond a doubt the power of Lydia R -Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound to conquer female diseases. Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to communicate with Mrs. • , at Lynn, Mass. She asks nothing in return for her advice. It is absolutely free, and to thousands of women has proved to be more precious than gold. The undersigned having bought out the hlacksmithing business of R. Moore, is prepared to do black- smithing in all its lines. Horse -shoeing - a - Specialty. GFEORGFE -+t PICKERING, ONT. The Toronto - .World ! - First rate Market Reports and Fore - castes. . The Farmers' page is a special fea- ture. No farmer can afford to be without this daily paper with its live, up-to-date reports. Special rates now. . Copies can be obtained from John Dickie h Co. Orders taken by M. S. Chapman, or F. M. Chapman, Agric.•Editor, ." We have on hand a fine display of Dinner Sets from - $5575 to $12.00. Good value. • Also a faw Nice Lamps at Lowest ' . Possible Prices. Stock Food -! and Sommer Stock must go. Preparing for'winter stock, sol am selling • International ' Stock Food, Spreads, etc., at cost . STOCK FOOD. By pail, were $3.75. now 83.00 -By package, were $1.00(now 75c „ 6 .IJV "„ (Ic. ., .25' '' 2�C all'other preparations at same rate. E. W. Bodell, }3rougham Fat Stock Wanted We are anxious to buy any quantity of fat Hogs and Cattle. Highest prices paid. If we do not call on you drop a card phone, or =Full lines -of spring goods coming in Drills, Rock fast and ' Twills, Prints and everything you want for spring a ear. • Call and see them. °a:': ` Claremont Drug' Stor And see our assortment of Tooth Brushed • -' Tooth Powders Tooth Pastes 'Tooth Lotions Perfumes, Cold Cream, Witch Hazel Cream and all Toilet Articles in great variety. a LIFT, FORCE AND PUMPS-04- and SUCTION Constantly on Hand. . -Prices Right: selling to J. A. White & Sons _Brougham. Wind—mills erected and Repaired. Direct telephone communication with all parts of Pickering, Markham, Scarboro, Whitchurch, Uxbridge and Vaughan townships, - also Stouffville, Markham and Pickering, villages, over Independent system. • Orders promptly attended to. .. - .. .. Repairing done. . John Geraw J. Sneeeasor to - - - ' _ . Oerow k Bon, Claremont. showing of finest display of Chins. A very large assortment of Stationary. Books, Dolls, Toye, just received for th.e Holiday trade. Call • and ser them. Subscriptions taken for all Magasines. Weekly and Daily Newspapers W. J. 23. PIOH.AR,IDQON', Taro ck Street. ' "*JCT h.ttbyr We have accepted the agency for the Frost & Wood Co's Farm Implements and arenow prepared to supply you with as good an article for farm- ing as can be found in the market. R. J. Cowan, Brougham. 11\PI11IN LINBLf;=PdR1E BLNM�D'w Verdict of Coroner's Jury for Death of Golspie' Sailor. • A despatch from Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., says: "We ilnd that Sydney Neal came to his death from frost, caused by expo - sura. This exposure was due directly to ,Capt. Boult, who drove the said Sydney Beal from shelter when he might have him. We also think that Mate should be severely censured for '• not sending prompt assistance on his • arrival at Um mission." Such was the verdict given on Wed- • . kesday night by be coroner's jury on the Meath of Sydney Neal, one of the sailors sot the steamer Golspie, which was wrecked early in December at Brute "Harbor, and who died at the "Soo" oas- t from the e:.' acts of the subsequent hips which he, with several others, : Underwent. Captains Joseph Gantry and W. C Barr. of the "Soo" and William Kimball entad Joseph Andrews, of Michipicoten, 'apea'e examined. The captains gave evi- rdeaee regarding the negotiations that lbed been carried on' between them and the MacKays for the sending of relief to the Golspie after the wreck. They said that had tugs been sent up earfier than was 'tae :ase it would riot have prevented the men from being frozen as they were. _William Kimball, of Michipicoten, said that he saw Met) McLeod after he ar- rived at Michipicoten, the evening withe unfortunate sailors who had been him earlier were left out in the cold. Kimball volunteered to go 'out and get them, but the mate •tolfi him he had made the arrangements. Joseph Andrews, an Indian, told of be- ing engaged•by the•mate to go out -for the teen the next day, of finding them, and of their being taken to the hospital at Michipicoten: Capt- Boult and Engineer Andrews, Who had been -surrimoried at Hamilton and Coliingwood, did not appear to give evidence. Crown Attorney. MMcFadden accordingly decided to give th , case to the ;eay without hearing them. LEADING 11iAR1ETS selEt�., w.lao 5 c dteslet d lock° s quoted at 26c -to 26 ec: No. 1 cold stor- age, 21c to 22c, and limed 21c. HREADSTUEFJ. . BUFFALO MARKET. '•_ : •Toronto, Feb. 5. -Wheat -Ontario, No. Buffalo, Fob. 5 -Flour --Steady. Wheat t while winter, :7c asked outside, mined, -Steady; Spring firm: No. 1 Northern, fid; No. ° red, de, -70c:� d. rnixedt Beene. Winter nominal Corn --Strong; • WE* asked . 3 extr 70c bad. No. 2 yellow, 49nec; No. 2 white. 503;c. c bidy for 3 ex bushels. asked -outside, Oats --Strong; :tio. 2 white, .42%c; No. i3c bid 5.000 bushels. Peas -No. 2, $lc asked antsiie. allied. 40%c• Oats -leo. 2 white. 38c asked outside, NEW YORK WHEAT MARKET. arc bid. • - Manitoba Wheat -No. 1 hard, $4c "c Wyse.; No. 1 Northern, 82 ;c to 83c; No. R northern, nominally 793s c to WC. Peas --79c to SOc outside. Corn -No. 3 yetiow, Me to 51%c, To- teonto; No. 3 mixed. American, 503sc • astride; Ontario, 43c to 44c. Beicl'wheat--52c to 54c. • (Data -•-No. 2 white, 37c to 373Sc. ' Rye -69c to 70%c. Flour-Oatarlo, 9) per cent. patents, Win asked. 12.63bid; Manitoba. first, indents, 11:50, . seobnds, - $4: bakers' Bran- oardnaIly,. $1E to $20 outside. COUNTRY PRODUCE: Butter -The -market continues goat- paratavely easy. - Ineeaniery. pride .. . .. 2fic to 270 do solids. .. M:i .• c to ..4c Dairy prints .. ;.. .. 22,c to 23c do tubs e 19c to 21c New York, Feb. 5 --Spot firm: No. 2 red, 81%e eteva'or; No. 2 red, finIXe f.o. b afloat; No. 1Northern Duluth, 924 1. c.b: afloat;. No. 2 -hard winter, -8'13ac I. o.b. afloat.' . THE EARTH OPENED. Earthquake in the Solomon Islands. A. despatch' atch' from San Francisco says The Solomon Islands in the. South Seas were visited by a fearful' earthquake several months ago, in which the earth was opened and deep gorges created. The entire appearance of the islands was changed. There was no loss of life. The news was brought here -by Governor C. B L. Moore, who arrived on Thursday from Samoa. 1 -le stated that .a trading schooner • came into Apia with the news shortly before he sailed. It is deemed the that earth quake was the one recorded then on the• seismographs in various parts of -the world, Accord- ing to the instrument at. Apia, Samoa, it •lasted for- several minutes, and was said 1.) be the heaviest shock ever 'recorded. It was figured that it occurred soine- where in- the South Seas, but us no re-. port came. from any civilized island it was believed that it occurred at sea. • •A HORRIBLE DEATH.. CATTLE -MARKET. Toronto, Feb. 5. -•-Owing to. the fn - fluence Of a heavy -run of cattle at the Western Market buying wise somewhat slow. • - Export cattle were reported to be firm on small transactions The. quotations were: -Medium exporters', $4.30 to $4.60; good. $4.70 to $4.95; choice, $5 to $5.25 per cwt. . ._ _ Trade was not active in any grades Of butchers' cattle excepting the best. Best butchers' cattle, $4.40 to 14.75; heavy butchers' $4 to $4.35: fat cows., $3.25 to $3.75; -common cows .and. mixed lots., .in. eluding. canners. 81.50 to $3.25 per cwt. A limited dr.:nand obtained for light Cheese-(pto!itioos,are 13%c for large stockers and feeders. Stockers, 400- to Ixtad 14c fortwins, in job lots here. !300. ilia. si ee ne oil; • feeders, 650 to - Eger--New•lard, 2`)q; sclecl, 26c -to. 1 oe0 is* $3 n5 to -83.75: short -keeps, • $7e.; storage 2•Ie; • timed-, 22c. Poultry -The market„ is quiet, with very little demand. - - 40%16c/ens, dreasdd - 'Oc to 12c interior .... Sc to OOc • Vont .. .. e. .. ..., -. €e to 00c 'Clucks ...: ... _ .... 10c to 12c •-U'urke y; s ' ... - 110 to 122 fdonen---n c,!n_ 12c per pound for pdi's -`land $2 t, $ .5ir'for combs. :' Beane -81.e5 to -41.60 for handpicked; Feed pr nine $1.4{f to ' t.4:r: -- Polatons--Ontario. - s^arca at . 70c ',o • •'i~'ic ,,per b rb; eastern. 75c • to 80c,- in car -!lots hen. . - Baled nee-- en to. $1e.541 per ton 'or Conductor. Lay for.. Ten Hours Pinned .Ung[ Boiler - A despatch from Missoula, Montana, says: Two engines, upon which were riding a large number •of men • who had teen engaged in breaking the : snow ' tory dismissal of the Governor: b'ockade near Settee. Mont.,° plunged CIT1ZENS EXPRESS THEMSELVES.' over an embankment two miles west- f De Borgia,on Thursday, killing two men and Injuring nearly a score, some c f them seriou=ly. The dead are: D. R. McDonald, conductor, and Levi Burris, fireman: Condr.ctor McDonald's death occurred on -Thursday night after he had lain for ten hours pinned beneath a boiler, With his body partly submerged in the icy waters of the river. lin fellow -workmen. unable to help him, kept ,his head abdi a -the-water until he- died.- He steadfastly • refined to have his' leg amputated. - . - - RES!GNAT!ON -0f SNEiiENNA Citizens -of ,'Kingston Deplore th Government's Incapacity. A despatch from London says :, There is reason to believe that the resignation of Sir Alexander Sw•ettenham- as Gover- nor gf.Jamaica-has been accepted, though the officials of the Foreign Ottice• are rnystifyirtgly 'silent and refuse alt infor- mation on the subject. This official reti- cence is - attributed to a desire to com- plete the arrangements for a succession t,; the post before announcing tiweten: ham's retirement. It is expected that the latter will leave the island us soon as details' can be completed for handing over. the affairs of his• office. The Government officials here, -particularly those of the Foreign Office, have ex- pressed the opinion throughout that this was the only possible outcome of the Kingston incident. short of the, peremp- 1.150 to 1.300 Ms. 33.80 to 14.20 per -cwt - Lambs were weaker at 16 to 16.75 for grain -fed, wed 33.50 to 15.50 for .com- mon. Export ewes were quoted at S4.25 to $5, and export bucks, at. 33 to $4, per cwt. . - • Hogs were steady. Selects sold at $0.60, and lights and fats at $6.35 per cwt.- ? i1eh rsnne were• in_ Tatr .demand..and prices ruled steady at n" each, sccord;ng to quality. • --4. LEFT $5,400,4100. TO POOR. Murdered London Merrhant Had. an Imposing Funeral. - A despatch from London sans : Un- usual public interest 1n the tragic death a! kVl1ham Whiteley, who was shot and killed in his great department store, Jan. 2.1, by .Horace George Raynor,-- was shown beethe scenes at- the funeral of the - merchant on -Wednesday morning. Long before the- hour for, the ceremony thou-. sands of persons gathered about • the Whiteley residence and dense masses lined the streets leading to the. church. Most of the shops in the Westbourne Grove district .kept their shutters up and over a hundred carriages _followed tate hearse to the cemetery. Four of these were laden witb.floral wreaths. Accord- ing to the newspapers. Mr.- Whiteley -be- queathed 85,000.000 -to provide alms- houses and homes for the aged and de- serving. poor..._ -• A despatch from Kingston, Jamaica. says : A large meeting of representative citizens w -as held in Victoria Market on Tuesday to discuss plans for rebuilding the city. The followi,tg resolutions•were adopted by acclamation :- "Thn meeting deplores the enormous !o s caused the entire commiinity, and more particularly the mercantile com- munity-, by the wholesale ptlteging of strops and stores, such pillaging. being entirely due to lack of organization en the part of the Government, tire Govern- ment -not calling citizensr to iia aid, and its refusal of valuable succor offered by INVADED B NSt'MPTIt'ES. - Calgary Wants a Sanitarium for Eastern 1 . Invalids. • e the navy oil the United States, which. would have prevented ,much of the loss that has occurred. "This meeting with deep regret desires b place upon the record its conviction that. the chief' executive officers of• inn Government have been and, are still out. of touch with the community generally;, that this attitude on the part of the said officers would appear to render them in- capable of coping with the situation in the only 'way practical, namely, that of concerted action on the part of all the- - persons concerned." STRICKEN KINGSTON. - A despatch from Ottawa says : The Department of Trade and Commerce has received a letter from a Halifax com- mercial company in close touch with conditions in Jamaica expressing sur- prise urprise at the recent; telegram from Mr. Burke, commercial agent. for Canada on. the island, stating that there'was no. great need of aid from outside, and that renditions following the earthquake could be remedied by the local authorities - From advices received direct from Jamaica, the Halifax correspondents oh the department state that they cannot understand why such a reassuring tele- gram should have been sent to the Caan-r adian Government. Their information is' that the- whole city . was practically de- stroyed, and that for ten miles out to the surrounding country tyre is hardly a habitable house. CHAS. McGILL'S SENTENCE. FROZEN TO DEATO. Former Manager of Ontario Banke Gets Woman and Two Children Found In Five %Pars.. - Grand Rapids Tenement. A despatch from Grand Rapids, Mich-'`- igan,' says: Miss Emma K. Livingston and two children, her nephews,. were found on Sunday frozen to death In a tenement here. A third child, a' niece,. - as as found badly, frozen. • but alive. 1 he dead children were- Alfred Livingston, . aged seven, and Lincoln B Livingstone. aged three. The name of the little girl 1, 'Helen. Her -age is ten. None of She family had been seen 'since Thursday., • when two of the children attended school. It Is supposed that after the family retired Thursday night they be came partially asphyxiated by coal gay and the fire .died out and they were • • A despatch from 'foronte says Five years' imptieenment in . the Kxngeton i'eriitentiary was the sentence- imposed on Friday on Charles-. MCC ill, foriner gi'nered manager Of .the • Ontart,2- Bank, who •pleaded guilty in the Cruninal .- - si2e'� before Mr., ,hist -ice .Clime to the charge of preparing and signing false returns to .send 'to the 'department at -Ottawa. There were three indictment_. against=lfie. accused, c and he pleaded guilty to .two counts •Cna the first one. The court imposed sentence in these' cases and traversed those ..in which McGill pleaded not guilts until the next -Assizes. Mr. Justice. Clute and. the ..counsels in the case stated emphatically that the newspaper statements' regarding the dropping of the -theft charges. were in- cnreet. No understanding existed whereby the prosecution promised not to .go an with these indictments, which would carne up for trial in due course. A. despatch from Calgary says; . Cas, gary has ' been burdened in a .mast alarming Manner during the last 'few y-ea'h's; and particular -1y. during- the - last few months, with a large number of consumptives coming here. (rout eastern Canada. They. come here usually with a small amount of money •and are unable work. The result is that they are soon on the hands of the city. They also find ft•ozen to death. :LAD% 'VICTORIA DEAD. • Earl Gre)'s Eldest Daughter. Falls. 1'ic- . -dm to Typhoid A despaloh from Ottawa -says: Lad' - ;f3G0.000 FIRE .4T PiCIO!'ti. Victoria Grenfell, eldest daughter • f : - - their Excellencies, `ti. do has been in Three-storey Brick Structure Occupied from typhoid fever fur the past three weeks died shal'tty belo-re midnight on -. 1.- by Tao Firms, Destroyed. • - - 4 Sundaly night. - tier ladyship passed • A- despatch • from- i'icton:_ Ont.,- says: the critical fr,urte'nth day a week ago. f icton was visited shortly -after mid• , It was 'felt that if -she tided over three - night-Salu-rday -with; ,one of the worst i-perinds of seven days,..w'hich fell due .fires, in the history of the town. when on Sunday. her conditon would be eb- the Jamieson Bleck was destroyed, at solutely safe.. Saturday. the viceregal great difficulty in getting accbmmoda- a loss of about 54+1,000. The. building. family wrt r'.',•I, h,-fui.as to Lady - tion. Many heartrending•cases are re- a three-storey brlct: structure.- was ac- •Victoria's c-,ndition. but unfortunately- -- a • ported every day. At a meeting of the cupied by the dry goods establishment ' Sunday evening a relapsr' set in and she Calgary Board of Trade'. On -Tuesday of Ca'. y and Tanner; and A. J. Fra- l -gradually sue,•u-mbcd.. All the members l.NcfhES H.4ti1' \'{C'r1M3, night a resolution was passed catlins lick and .,Company, men's •furnishings: I e„ the vicerer•rl' party, including Sir. 'No.' Y t:mottrg and $ ..i>') to $' for No. upon the Dominion Government to as. The • cause of the fire is unknown. -11 .Arthur. Grentetl. husband of Lady' . ;t in car tat, on track titre ` Dcliv_eries coliin' Campbell, the . Ftorist, Compelled tablish a sanitarium some place in the was nearly an hour before the firemen i•Grenfell, were. pre=crit when the end are net eery ln'avy. rriounlain5' Where a ctlre can be effected •g'ot•Properly at work. The fight -to can -came. Lady Victoria Was married to- - • W ' '' • • . in the best form. Strew- $6.50' to $7 her on on track lie. .. • • -r' 1\1ON-TREAJ• MARKETS llontreet. Feh.,.5.--t,uekwheat--56C• to 116)1c per bushel.. • ' Corn- American.: No. • 2. yellow, :55c .-•)No. 3 mixed, G5c, ex -stere. • Oats -On spot, No, 2white, 52 c: No. * white, 41c. to 42c; No. 4, 40 ,o 61c 'per bushel, ex -store. ' Peas -Boiling, peas, 11 in carload lots, 111.10 in jobbing tots. • Flour-\faniloha spring wheat, -84.`:5 do • e lne4.60; strong ?rakers', $3.90 to $4.10; 'winter wneat patents, 54.10 to $4.:5: . astrsght. rollers, 83.60 to $3.70: • do ' in• 31.65 to $1.75; • extras, 31.50.. to 11.55. Minked M.::::t.:h;: liver-, in begs. A'^ Ito 122; sl;-orts,• 822 to 522.50; Ontario bran, in bags, 520 to:821; shorts, S-2 to 1129,56; n'rilled manilla. San to 825:- . straight. grain, $25 to $29. per ton. Rolled owls --Per -bag. 31.95 to'..i:, tar Gots $2.10' in jobbing lots. flay -Na. 1, 813.50; No. 2. 812.50; N. 3' $11.50; clover, mixed, S11;' pure clover, .$10 .50 to e11 per ban i -n car lots. provisions.--BarreLs..short ('UI 'rness, *22 to $23.50; - half -barrels. 811.75 to *12.50; -clear. -fat• backs. $21 to -$24.50; tong cut heavy m''ss.. $20. iff to $22: half- _ barrels do., 310.75 to 111.50; dry salted + bkpg clear bacon, Y1c to 12-%e• barreLe • sate beef. 51.1 to $lean); half -barrels do., *6 to $6.30, barrels heavy meas beef, fi150; half -barrels- do.. 14.75: compound lard, 8%c to lOc; pure lard, 11%c to 13e; $ieftie rendered. t:tm to 13%c; hams. 13e t4Xc, according to size; breakfast - • -bacon, bacon, 15c _to 16c; Windsor bacon. 15e •On t6c; fresh killed ahattoir dressed hogs, $10; alive„ $7 to $7.25. - Cheeses -October make is now Znoted • at 13%c to 1.1!4c. • • Rutter -Fresh -made creamery, 25c !o 25yc: We ern dairy, selected. 92c to Manitoba dairy, 20c to 21c; rolls to bastrets, 22%c to 23c, and half -bar dela. 2:o to 22 jya, • 4 despatch'Trom Montreal says: The Attorney -General of the Province has.I been asked to intervene in -the case. of William .1. McGee of the People's Mutual Building So,:,ety;-and see that a strict and far-reaching investigation takes Mane. The n•'w. .features. in the case are these: McGee will not be sentenced oi' the mere plea of guilty of theft. Every detail of -this rernarkable series of crimes Will be investigated by• the .t- tlrney-General :s • representative. Proh- ebly a score of warrants will be issued against McGee. Four men alone r,re :known to have -lost $15,000 each... Colin Campbell. the florist, will lose $16,000, and' as a result of the losses has been c:mpeii:moi to assign. Twenty other men will lase about 84,000 each. Two hun- dred pe'opie will lose sums ranging from $1 1•0 to $1.500.' McGee does not Even know, in many cases. which sig- natures are forgeries - and which are genuine. It is believed that his losses will' total a i'iriarter of a million dollars. The investigation shows • theft only a small part of the money has been spent. The question dew -is, Where is the money? .. •GIVES SKIN TO. SAVE BROTHER. London Mar Has Twenty -Four .Square Inches ftemoecrl et ilospitel. A despatch from London. Ont., says: -Samuel Anderson on Thursday under- went an operation at Victoria Hospitaf, when four -strips of skin, one inch t.y Fix inches. were removed and grafted on the side of his brother, James An- dersen,' who was- terril'h• tioeie ! :n 'September laet- while ..rurderlie:Ili r. G: 1'. R, engine in the Guelph remel- heuse. The whelp contents cf the tiro - box were emptied on him, burning 1•11, tram shoulder to hip. Roth patient_ are 1. doing favorably, and a complete cure is as parted. • Aid for a million dollar smelter ejected in the Cobalt district is from -the Government. - Co be asked trot the -flames was kept up with the greatest difficulty, as a strong biting wind -blew; and everything coated with ice as fast as the water issued from the hose: The loss is partially covered by insurance. Mr.: Arthur_ Grenfell four years ago. She was in the 2'Jth year of ,her age. - WILL RETAIN W'iHPPINiG POST. Delaware Legislature Refuses lo- Abolish It -Good Effect on Crooks. • PRISON, . ..... A despatch from , Dei., seryl : The Delawarl eguDoverlature on Tuesday' voted to contie nue the whipping past and public floggings for prisoners convicted of theft, felonious assault, house -break- ing and mayhem. • The Senate committee by the Revo :Hated reportina on the bill abolishing the, lutionists for I1 -l. whipping post said : "we do not say; that the public whipping post is not an. extreme punishment, particularly in treating Prisoners. • RECENT VICTIMS OF• TERRORISM.. street of the island on i\ ednesday and • died almost •immediately. 'Prince • Nakachtdie, at- Baku,. The as'ssin: • vho was. a• youth of 18, May •:5, 1905.. Gen. Czenolucki, at F ishineff, '.June 30, -1905. - - • Gen. Vontiarharskl, at War- saw, Aug. 27, 1905. Gen. Gakovloff, at Warsaw 'Sept. I2. 1905. ' - Gen. • Golotchkopolf, at Tiflis, Nov..22. 1905. Gen. Poll:owhikoff, at Poltava, - Dew 1..105.. • . . Vice -Admiral Kusmicli, at SI. Petersburg, May 14. ].906. '• -. Gen. Koz1of1_ at St. Peters- 4burg, July 14, ;1006• . Count Alexis 'Ign&left•.- at -St. • 1'ett'rsburg, Dec. 22'. 1906. • Gen. Von de f.aunit.?, at St.. k'elershurg. Jan. 3, -190.7. Lieut.:Gen. Pavtoi't, al St. Pe- tersburg, Jan. 3, 1907. dressed as a workman, .emerged from a 't tea house as Mt. Guidema was passing nn I Tris way home; and shot him twice in the stomach._ The Terrorist also sllot and inor.tally wounded -8 prison warden who accompanied M. Guidema, and who pur- sued the assassin. The latter disappeared and the police have been unable to 'find any trace of trim. as the • population of the island generally sympathize with the revolutionists: - winter time, but we do say that the whipping post is . a-. fearful - thing to. m _gentlean crooks.- robbers, and 'safe- blowers, for they pass Delaware by so long as she lays the cat upon the cul- prits' backs." - - - • The Governor of the political prison has been a marked man Tor some time. . He was accused of ill-treating political prisoners. - •• CHIEF OF POLICE KILLED. A - despatch Cram -.tia'rsaW: Russian - Poland, says : A hand of terrorists on \V d d 'nn * shot* and killed A despatch 'from SI, P.;tershi;rg says : M. Guidern•a. Governor r.T t.hP 1'.,oh,ical prison nn VasiliOstrof! ;Basil Island), a tor them and many. suspects are being suburb of this city, was snot in the main arrested. =4.---- EP TO Ci11MNEVS iN SNOW. Terrible 'Sufferings in Austria Through 'Lack of Fuel. m A despatch- PraVienna- says : Thera • have been immense falls of snow throughout Austria. Many persons are'suffering, severe privations. There is a coal famine fn some places owing to the railways being blocked. The meeting of the- Catician Diet -at Lemberg had to be postponed owing to the lack of fuel to heat the Diet building. .In some districts in -Galicia houses. are snowed under to the chimneys_ .'. FIVE MEN FULLED. ' powder' Exploded in • an Illinois Coal e ark Ry cave, i 1 e Nine. Victor Gruen. the chief of the se& -'t ' • police of this city, as he was driving in A despatch 'from Marion. 111., says a cab. The murderers escaped, but the R; an explcnion of powder in the John pclice and troops are senrching.Warsaw son City and Big Muddy coal mine at Johnson City on Tuesday five men were lilted and eleven hurt. + ing appliances. It is always good eeu- . '. aa+++++++++++++++++++++ I badly constructed er much wern cook- + I ni.my to have glean; fres h cooking ilten- +'sils at hand. Painstaking along thus bout the House i ling will rtmplove conditiorts that are ♦ I tx deplored in many kitchen; . Where. ♦•1 cooks are blamed for poor results. The . I seer- food is a :abject 'i ' that demands study and every heuee- -,.*+++++++++.44.4.4.44.***.***: wife and manager of affairs of this kind ' trust understand it to be able to sue- - HOUSEWIVES AND ECONOMY. f cessfulty supply the family larder. The best to strangers and keep for our near- est and dearest only what is left of okir brightness and amiability. • • CULTIVATE THESE QUALITIES An unaffer.•ted, low, distirret silver - toned vuic'�. The art of pleasing those around you, and seeming pleased with them and what iheZMay do _.fur •you -- The charm of making little sacrifices • r;uitre naturally, as if of no .account to yourself. ' -"The habit of snaking allowances for the opinions, feelings, or prejudices of A good memory. f rr faces and facts connected With thetn, thus avoiding giv- ing offence through not recognizing cr bowing to people, or saying to them •what had better be left unsaid. The art of listening. without impati- ence to prosy talkers, and of smiling at the twice -held tale or incident. and know what it costs at the time s f • purchase -then you have the, opportunity '— to select the best. freshest, most ,sea• ' RIIEt�IATlC AGONY. sonable, and all things considered, the cheapest in the market. The question ` -- • • r. t • oaf i the roost vital point at• Lssu,'. ! Nothing . Reached' the Root of the Trou- ucffers of elaborate entertainment. She Ther is no •doubt five foci makes .:r Lte Until Dr. Williams' Pink Pills •- does not desire'her household to "resent ho:le tanu.se yes, generations of . to the world an unstable weneet ed lar i eople, physically, mentally, and ;telt- Were -iUsed. • - • cede. The adjustment of expense.s in ally.• and all this responsibaity lays at • relation to. comfortable proportiorie_ both the doer of the housewife, sina.eshe, "I suffered almost untold agony from I.ocially arid economically is a question as a rule, regulates the expenditure „;f j•neufiitai..nr, For se've'ral weary months at vital import to her whole househuld and name. Now, in the beginning ,f . 'the new year she therefore opens up a , fresh and clean record sheet with As the new year dawns upon the tnrif- main endow or• should be to obtain qua- • :ty housewife, she resolves to keep a lity and naturally quantity will regi- , -tighter rein upon her purse strings, a • fate itself -one soon learns that.' closer watch on the many inevitable. Another thing that makes a vast :Jiffer- ttrains upon the family income. • she encs in the purehasin, of foods is (tie• has, no doubt, summed up last year's presence of the buyer in the 'market and .•accounts and marvelled at their proper- •sidre, selecting for herself what sere tions. She instinctively realizes that deems best. The thrifty, careful wo- between all the activities of life and ali man does her own marketing and does forms o1 expenditure, a proportionate r. at trust to ordering from her grocer. outlay in various lines must be intent- .. gently preserved so ttr.at the money spent for house, table, dress and en- :tertainment represents their true financi- - a!• condition' and standing as a family. A meagre table for the sake of extrava- pant clothes is a sacrifice unworthy • f . ter good .t:ense and sound judgment. Her charity fund can not be poured ink the s•ght un''ectn.' as the boys say. Many a dollar is saved by this personal in- sight arid attention. See what you buy the iarnily,-manages the income, or the 1 was -confined. to bed. .1. had the best bulk of it. in her own way. Gond, pal-. ` f medical treatment, but nothingseern- stable food of excellent nutr.tive value ed to reach the root of the disease'until may be chosen even in this day of trioti 1 . used Dr. Williams' Pink. Pills. •These ..firm determination to do a good deal r,f prices, and expensive living nay es... have curnpletely restored_ toy health. l! .nessing and get the best and most out greatly reduced by careful selse•tion an't 1'his • strong exnphutic statement s .ct her year's outlay. As she ponders close attention on the part of tne, h„ »u. e. , made by Mrs. Edna Morrill, of Wood - keeper. - - stock, N se„ a lady who • hrid practical- ty been given up as incurable by doe - MADE \\'1TIi Bi;'I-TER1ttf.te. tors. She further sayer: "I suffered i•,r i\ h Le uaM.•-Fine white Fuels,- tee„,O cver two years and rheumatism seemed cup: butter Dire cup, butterrnilk ons top, .'o tie llrnrly implanted _ in any systern. .see tet es. ten eggs, baking-pewee,.'!rr•�.: ' At the outset I was able to attend to teiespisees. trimer to• taste, flour fuer 1 anis hnueetiotd duties, but at night 1 eepe. • Beat- .-whites of eggs io ,a• serf !suffered the greatest pain. I at -.once 'froth. a vein the sugar: butter. etc., ail ' b- gar to take medicine, but • my. condi- the subject tier thoughts turn first fa .the question of food supplies. 4 has been estimated in a recent book' cn applied chemistry that at leust ten 'her cent. of the income of most families es wasted in high-priced footle which •certain very little nutrition-lhss squan- :dering occurring •as frequently where the income is small as where large ones are expended. Some of the most eapens.vel unix. in the whites Inst, a'.ni actually grew worse. 1 wa; at- • 'food materials contain the ieas-t nnuriah- Tea .Cake -One cup sugar. one table-'-rsrided by_ a skilful. doctor, but coag u!- ••nlent: Especially does.• the good house- .spoc•n gutter. erre-egg., orae- riip testier- I thriately forced to reinaht in bed, sue ttde learn • this in her experience; in ,stink, - t'ur-half - teaspoon soda, flOar.. o 1 faring untold agony with. every; armee- ,, marketing., Take for instance We dif- `"T.tuke a`farriv' Mitt batter- flu- ,.eke i; meet. Finally the doctors ford me the ferent cuts of meat • from whet -stte•� bcwd uo;d .,r waren,- - trouble was incurable. One day 1 was Tri ake•, her seieetion-the'so-catltd ,-!suite t Gra half; t:erIL-'1'ak•' tWo. cur.= tette: advised t(i. try Dr, Williams' Pink Pills eats, IDs parteitivu>e and gastrin creaks: t«rrutlk. 0rae•hatf rem sa, ylie aseeeet•' and --i decided to do so. Presently the • end litertb and loin chop; are reaally tee:spa•on sada, graham flour enou ;h + ;pans were not so sty er•. and I began • cooked and- very palatable• and yet- if 1 stir thick. Bake . , uun gem pass in a. f t'i tel myself gaining. Shortly after 1 property prepared with a tittle mire !fact oven, was able tb! o go a. aftand t les than n s an nate,"there 1r:Znt:aFry 4.00dfriet'ra of zneat . r;rrri,.'i•br.at3--Ti1ti«: 3ni? ctsp ar;e.tr. one,three months t was perfectly well. For -teat contain lest wieste and more nu- t cup rho:asse one cup sour crenr::.. n: this condition. my thanks are lzratelut- - -trrtive value and may be purchased 'orjcup• Lutterin,lk.-one-tabtespoori erieh .f tv due to Dr. \\,illiams' Pink Pills." .one-halt..stxe. l.riee peal for the ,t.eake esoda. salt and ginger, and. flour :e ntil Dr.' Williant,,' Pink Pills cured Mrs; and chops. The woman who is willing iesoiteratety- stiff. ifurri.11 by driving the rheumatic poison to spent the time acid pair), in prepare ' Breahl tst cake -.To one r.up• guar add tit of her blood, They actually Ariake nig these meats for •hue table use gee jou* 4.1.4.:„ one tablespoon butter- ur :ard, new blood. They dant act on the bow - them quite as 'r•eli•bing -a.3 any in the I c'u''t up buttermilk. one -halt :tea=pr,on els. They don't bother with' mere syrmp- market H snug 'be adruitted» that they cath soda' and salt, two cups tlour and tarns. They go right to the root of the • ',are not so easy, and .st i n a ,great tempi crrun n en. or, nutiiteg to tante. Title. •s Crnub!e in the bawd. That is sally they eelation .to spend the earn money : and- i z.. fE eaten warm, - have cured- the worst cases of anaemia serve a 6 -fee lime meal wits very .�rualti Doucl,nu's-Stir tr'etiher thoreseftriv 'btoodlessnescl headaches and -backaches, .effort, ..\fano familie'tc dint exclusively tari sup rul;ar 4111d elle egg. 1,1,1 ono kidney trouble,. indigestion, neuralgia, upon these '•telae and rirnpt,a thought t' salt. one teeopoun crone/ewe nervousness and the special ailments of .e'pensivr, cuts of :tient, cr.e-tall teakpoon - nutmeg, one-quarter 't'r1s and aomerr whose bloodsupply. • However, a. •an exanmple;.A nice breast i.tt ar'•pt n ginger, two cups 'buttermilk.. becomes weak, s2anty or irregular. Sold hof lamb. which •coat; from k to 12 cants' or"c'-tfdartt'r run sour •cream, viae .0"-11* t'y: ail medicine dealers or .by' -mail at is pound, stewed slowly; torn ..rt a..ile rro'a t+ endo and ?lour to mix stiff, All 5ne 't lox ar six bmtes for $ .5O from .- :Mc cool until the-er-u.t, ! ta! ri.<e..• Tiwy duiughr,utr are tighter 'if a!lowed i., ih� Dr. V1:iltl m�' Medicine Co., Brock - be served atter rem at int; tide fa! and. etiind a while torture trying, 1 viae, Ont. .• . •sneaking i, twain gravy. to else me.' t;•t • Cern lire:u1--1 ake •one, -quart .butter.- ' ---T • _istidiou.; .1i'..tsatilster .if lamb. car'f.it• mli;., torte sups cornmeal and two cups . CHINA NEEDS TILE FOREIGNER.• ty roa:t?d after Cha bone is removed wheat flew. Diesvtve one tablesp,r.n . — ::- tinVi a good dressin, •in-ert,-,! i» (moosoda ;fi thy Milk, add one iabter;,oun -Lett to fle•cr11 She Old Not Exploit Iter *float t0 a',fe;; of lamb and..,.,n'e de;een I gait. two tableapoina sugar lir na..la- Own (Resources. II even soreter meat.. The leg of Iamb '• rtes makes a de'it:ious cornbread. • :will co=t - 3ao'.rt neve -times: us ' mixt Buttrrrhr:ik - Pie -Beat •together. urte It has been asserted that China- is so rnoncy. .1 ono,, sett roast iif tx•ef salla- h?np.rig cup cd sugar and four egdi. add rich in natural resources that she could ;':.e:r and simmered in the prakr wenrr.'r- 04e—tali! ''up butter and beat thoroughly; .supply ell needs without going beyohd - not boiled, uitlr a brawngravy otay:be add tele and one -halt pints drat clan- her own boundaries. Her resources un - anode just as tempting fla ariy„;tiny, tri' batb rnui.. Line the pie tine with roast. a all depends_ neon' the cool: •pasty. •slice an apple' thin acid !ay n in-g-re.merob''r. • It roquires .;kill end ea•'h pie and lel the crust with Ikeeme. care to develop its liner !hzv'i• 'arid 1 lute: ;hoar with no upper crU..t. worth., One nirgrht take iufr; :vn sideee- ' -- able of adding much 'to the tion ell the 'IUG;renil weals_ in the mar- \\Nl:fi- TIIE III-ART-FINDSIII-ART-FINDSREST. articles capable •kit, and find equally istatahre.. .Tnif'l Thirst is"priibab!y no other sublet, n '=ountry'e wealth emtil foreigners came to- seeriseint,' • sloe, ter less than half the ; the wird about millet' there has txx•n •rhe a hand. Those she did produce r �tone}• expended for Iho..es rnns,t ont. I •s tr'as'h seol.ment u, home. •i'liere i # were practically ',only,. two -tea and silk. rtwnly,•,irad. Then: ton, there is another a no lartr:y so dull which does not pietui:u Here, _too, the undesired alien could leek in household- ea en •ahs which' • is '4 a };lice where the. weary heart ruay find not ba entirely eliminated. It was. the c,cca-cirane<1 by an untimely setetion 'r•1 peruse• and where lone ‘binds up itue.'circumstance that the alien was ready to 'f soil. Mucha imrtece.sary expense k wounda tine world ,has dealt. barter his silver for tea and silk which created, by ,tiuvin2 fgaf ai;f of season. IL ea the ideal home of which every gave these products their value as wealthe. `By selecting foods in season wtien I he I pian dreitain ,, and 'in which every woe.producers. Moreover, China is not at the sI!pply s h'lr»ntiftri, reasonable pris'e's woman hopes to reign some day is present day, as_ she was in the past, the. ' Tial,• be expe?get and obtained. This qua e:n, A Rous ` e maybe beautiful with- unly country where tea is procurable; s;pplies ninr. `ea;keriatly .. to. vegetables I in and w itbout; yet, if .consideration anal silk also is to be had elsewhere. which may be ' bntight in season and rbertraance and lore and patienru: JU ! that he will produce' tea for his own 'vari+:Qr nccor�J:n,Iy. - Fruits.and nut,;•ir'••t. fiirntsh it. !1• is as •lacking in tee a"•eo , conte under thio• •refs. ,f eeserit-ial Cho butes of a true !form' as drinking and silk for his own; wearing A great urnuitnt of fend is rendered i the bare skates in• the street. and be content to forge .the stranger's ,:,frnfit .for the tet,le or stomach. by using i • It it A pathetic fact that we give .fur silver. But how is'he then to pay fee the t tcundred and one articles which helms doubtedly are vast, if she only knew bow to exploit them. Yet, according to the:British Consul at Foochow. writing in the Review of the Far East, China produced very few Young China may say' with a•swagger learned ,to consider essential? Fin- Wes; - tern education h:is brought with it, Wes -- tern tastes. He cannot even make for himself out of Chinese tobacco the cigarettes he loves to smoke. In the yea 1, of trouble; te00, a Foochow official who had gone to Pc - kin to have aur ience o t. :rend w•ho on May 11 narrowly escaped from the Buxefe, told mi that one o1»Ilis. great hardships wits that the Boxer bands • eutside the .capital-thrieigti whom he had 1.-i make his way searched pers.on of Etiropcari make, Which t•hings ire chided handkerchiefs, buttons and the • like. He. added plaintively: `They would not let ine keep piY packets- of eigarettes."/ • ug Statistics _ show , that- in New Yolrk City alone over 200 people die every week from: . -consumption. And most of these consumptives . might be living now if they had not neglected' the warning cough. _ You know how. quickly . ` Scott's Emal<rion enables you to throw .off a cough or cold. ALL DRUGGISTS! hoc. AND $1.00., - 00000 likeness .to the European import, •only it is not s:; cheap; not so finished,, esot so durable, and altogether not so satisfac- tory. Do Your Children -GIT TO 1\ORK. :. Cough in --- aig 01 the th, nos which cru o ht hev bin 1 �1 ht 'An' a noshun seern.s to ,haunt you •!'het you're simmered down in sin, When the heart gets kind o' heavy, And the heels begin to shirk, \\'hy, you'll pull out hale an' hearty, Ef you just get down' to work. When the grocer's bill confronts you An' a snowdrift's at the door, Ei you stay inside comrnunin' With eh nailhead in the floor, You will find the world is empty • An' your troubles gittin' wus, For your sin. '11 keep a-growin' An' it's bound lb make a fuss. But the mini, you git• busy You'll begin to laugh an: say, There's a heap. o'' good religun In a-doirr' things to -day. So you'd better, grease your cowhides 'Fore the skies begin to • murk, An' you ne%er'll krxie• it's cloudy Ef you'll git right down to work. • cumosITT5 IN COMPL.1MENTS. Some .Odd Presents That « Have Been . Given to Rulers. : A very pretty compliment was paid by his renew; townsmen to President Fal- lieres of Franee•upon the occasion of his recent visit to his birthplace, the little town of Mezin. To widen the street the house in which the President was born had been pulled down some years ago. What was to be .one? The people of Mezin put their heads together and when their distinguiihed-Lellow-citizen arnved, imagine his delight at finding an -exact reproduction .of -his old home in papier tnache ! All was perfect, down to the very furniture, part of which had been collected from the country- around• rind part reproduced iii facsimile. The Presi- dent thanked his friends in a voice bro- ken with'. emotion, and tears actually streamed down his cheeks as•he finished his little speech. •• . The late French President, M. l.oubet, was.once the recipient of run interesting present. It consisted -of an immense album filled With thousands of press cuttings relating to •his visits to Italy and to England. -The album, which is of enormous size and .richly bound;- con-• tains not only cuttings: but photographs and illustrations of all kinds. It forms, 'indeed, a complete chronicle of his life written. by many. different people, and in more than a dozen difterent .languages. In India the native rgjahs consider it the highest possible compliment to be Ipresented with tine specimen of wild beasts, and consequently both King Fd - ward and the"Prince of Wales -have teen the recipients of many gifts of this de- scription. But when, one fine -day, two splendid Cigers arrived Unexpectedly at Sandringham, King Edward oras driven :-o remonstrate. "I have accommoda- tion,", he said, "for horses, dogs, cows, -cats, price, and even rata, but 1 meat draw the line at ugerr.” ` - - An odd gift was received by the Crown Prince at- Germany upon his coming of age. A diputat.ion of butchers attended, bearing an enormous and magnificent steak, upon the surface of which was worked in .suet. their greetings to the future monarch. • - .The late Prince Bismarck once'received from some' miners in \Vestptialla a bust of himself .carved in coal, and it is said that this odd present Was always car -e- h -lily preserved by him and looked upon somewhat in the Tight of a luck bringer. A• compliment which had ,serious re- sults was paid to an actor flamed Ran- son at a little mining town . in British Colunrbia. • The audience was so stirred by» Mr. Ilanson acting .that some -per- sons began throwing presents upon the stage, like spectators at a Spanish bull, fight. One burly miner. having nothing else handy, hurled a lump of gold ore. Unluckily it hit the actor on the head and 'knocked- him down. Ile' was. badly ,injured and it was weeks before he was able •to play again. -• I'erhaps the oddest idea of paying 'a compliment belong to a tribe of Indians ,o:t the Alaskan coast. When a' chief wishes to-do honor to a distinguished visitor he invites him, to 0 "potlatch." or feast. Then when all have eaten their fill the chief goes to the»edge" of Use cliff and solemnly casts info the sea as many of his possession's as- he thinks he can 'afford. This. is. held to be -•the highest . In _cigarettes we have one of the .few ' i.rficles ,which China can manufacture ithout going abroad foe the wherewith • - al, . She has tot aceo; it is not very tasty. She has also rice paper,, she has' evtsn a cigarette of her own• which •she tolls "Rtakuy.in,” -amt whirls superficially re- sembles the Egyptian or Virginian ciga Stillrette. the "\fel:uyin'' is only a cigarette "nf sorts." and Ls no more the genuine Ar•ticie than margar;lie is butter. -o it is with many other imports from Europe, simple things Which have become'neees- saries. In many cases China nes' the raw material, which, with her • imitative faculty, she can manufacture, into some- thing which really 'bears an' astonishing' • • What mother's or ,father's heart has not leaped into their throat when they. Crave been suddenly awakened in the. night by that hard and prolonged, erg that smothering, choking, croupy caught that betokens the most serious restatlia unless relieved at once? What shall io ? Ls they first thought, and without 0111 effective • and reliable remedy at hand: the child may *utter or die before relief ;an be given. SLOCUM'S TSF 0 EXPECTORANT •. II a quick and absolutely safe, reliable and certain cure for alt forms of Coup. Cold, Sore Throat, f-agrippe, Croup, Whooping Cough, Bronchitis, Asthma and all irritated and inflamed oonditiona j at the throat or chest. • It will saw 1 every mother many a sleepless, snai- 1 cus night, and the children es well as ' iladulneltsss. many an hour's suffering and P "I had twee suffering for over two months with an obstinate cough, ;as had ago my little =L We tried sates! re/Medias common to an irk I store without obtaining any rpprrent re is fats ws sen o growing wrse. 1 of a battle et CoAsdoote Expectorant from rix4 eI id . ur •- aide of two daps the ougb was , and the as- - 1 suits so ppeerrmaanent and rapid tam w e decided Se kkeetep C* ."te lexpoctorans is our ioae om- a0BYBT PALM, C.A.S Stettion. .. - • otti�►r Pio horse should be Without 4t. !t is 1- the greatest family medicine for- these troubles the worR1 has produced. Keep it on hand: 1t is a never -tailing fitted! 25c. at your dealer. GOOD FOR ()Li .Atin YOUNG. _ leERF'ECTLY HARMLESS'.. CHILDREN LOVE 1T. • form of compliment and much superfoi to merely giving presents tothe guest-- , London . Ti:i=Bits. - • • • ^— : ONE MAN'S LUCK. Sleeker -"«'hen I do any thing con- trary to my _wife's lushes, she» dOeSa'1 speak to me kr three or four days " Meeker --"You are . certainly a .ucky da�g: - 4 +GIRLS ENTERING _'WOMANDOOD - FIND BILEAiN A'BOON. - Mothers who have daughters just • rr the critical borderland over whirl the girl passes into the- fuller life of wo- manhood, will find Bdeans a great boon.. 1 hey make rich, red blood. and. strengIb- ea and invigorate the, internal organs involved in -the great change. Mrs.. T. Beadle, of home Place, Toronto, says: "'thy• daughter, Elsie (13), Was feeling bar from -welt this- winter. She com- plained of frequent headache and was always .weakly, tired.. and drowsy. She '- seemed;altogether without energy '•r strength. Eacti ' morning her tongue was coated and her eppelite failed. She was sometimes so dizzy that on stoop- ing she almost fell. and ..she was- also troubled a great deaf with-coh-strpetron. One single box ofBileans made a work of difference in her, and so 1 continued' to give her this remedy. Within a ,few 'weeks- they --built ' her up wofnd'erfully+ and they are -, keeping her in the best _ f health." Bileans also cure anemia. green sick. mess, debility. sick headache, constipa- tion, piles. rheumatism, sciatica; sal all liver and kidney ailments,' -They - tc'ne :up the system. and enable it 10 throw off colics, chills, etc. All drug- gists and stores' sell Biteans at-50c...a box, or obtainable from . the Bitean Co., Toronto,. foe. price. 6 boxes sent loco' ' w:,50. • . • lnvest-in Coal 'Stocks .!torr. rnt}ney has b''ei made fri,ui , investing . in Coal Stocks at low pries than (ruin any ether class of• in eslments. - • I , SZT'Y ALT ONCf�3 rr British Columbia Amalgamated Coal Company Stook AT 25 CENTS PER SNn*RE, COAL COAL COAL 'Phis has 'been the cry from Use Allantie to the thee Paieilic • and although every coal mine in. Canada and the tabled Slates is shipping every pound of Coal Ihey can produce,. still .,tte demand far exceeds the supply; .I:or- Uines wilt .1,e_niade during tIze next few years by investing in Coal Stocks • • et low e�.iirices. • The'Iii!iti<11 Conipli:, Amalgamated Coal Company.,cnutrol-over 17,0Aaa • acres of valuable Copt Lands situated in the famous Nicola. Valley, British . Columbia, about 180 miles from \'ancotjvnr, R. •C. We. only have a limited amour l that we will sell lit blocks • of 100 or over at llle iibove price..Li , • To any one, who intends investing in these shares we adetse you to wire,.us at once steting the number of share' you wish us to reserve, then ' remit by express order, bank draft or •registeret mail. Write for booklet giving full information about Nicola Coal District. For further information write cr wire us immediately. SHARP & IRVINE, Brokers, ars G" Spokane, Washington • We give as our reference as regards our standing Bank of Montreal, • Spe.ane, Washington. • • 4' LOCALTT —Mrs. F. W. Hobbs has return - ISMS. ed home after her visit at Myrtle. —Dr. Henry will be here on —Miss Mabel Edwards spent Tuesday, Feb'y. ' 19th, but not on the 12th. • —Miss Mae Pringle, of Toronto, is visiting with Mrs. W. H. Moore and other friends. —Norman Kerr, of East Toron- to, is home for a few days, being somewhat under the weather. —Remember A. N. Ridley's extensive sale of farm stock and implements next Wednesday. See bills for complete list. —Mrs. W. H. Moore entertained a number of young friends last Wednesday evening in honor of her guest, Miss Pringle. —Joseph and Mrs. Stephenson, of Belment, Man., are spending a few weeks with Ontario friends. They are at present with John Stephenson and family, of the base line. —W. Logan, who has been in business here for so many years, has sold- out to Mr. Ed. Bryan. Mr. Bryan took possession on Wednesday morning. Watch out for advt. next week. —Rev. Father Sheriden, who has been laid up with a very severe attack of la grippe, was unable to take his services last Sunday. We are pleased to state -`-"Sunday t her home in Balsam. —Win. Oke, councillor of West •Whitby, was in town on Wednes- -Miss Lillian Leslie, of Toronto :_spent a few days here with her mother. —Miss C. Taylor was in Toronto '. a few days last week attending .;:her brother's silver wedding. —Rey. F. C. Harper was in the ,city on Monday attending a meet- -ing of Senate of Knox College. —A number of our young people . took in the skating carnival at Brougham last Thursday evening. —Miss Olive Leslie, who has on the sick list for the past three weeks, is able to be around again. —Misses Clara Ham, Cora Gor- ..don and Maggis Moore, of Toron- to, visited their respective homes here over Sunday. —The te,wriship council will meet at Brougham on Monday next at 10 a. m. for the transac- tion of general business. ' —Mr. Spencely, the well-known horse -breeder, of Markham, was in town on Wednesday and. gave -the NEWS a friendly call. t —Gordon Bros': sale on Thurs.. that he is now_ recovering. day last was a 'decided success. —La grippe still continues as --.--There was a large crowd present severe as ever, there being very. and prices were extra good. • few houses in which no member is — 3rthur Gormley of the lake .laid up. In many eases, the at - shore was successful in bagging the tack is .exceedingly acute, Com- - first fox of the season in that din- pletely prostrating the victim. trict on Wednesday morning., _-On January 26th death from —D: and Mrs: Munro, of the pneumonia claimed one of Picker - base line, entertained a number of rug's former residents in the.per- frigeds last Friday evening. Dan- son of Mr. James Harris. Mr. _cinvas the chief attraction of Harris -was a veterinary surgeon the evening. in St. Catherines for some time, --The Stuart Moving Picture but for the past few years has -Co. will give an exhibition in the been connected with the inland - Grange Hall next Thursday even- revenue office in that place. He ▪ ing under the auspices of the was a brother of Mrs. F. W. - Grange Society. Hobbs, of Pickering. —Next Sunday morning- in the —De. Ira Tripp, a former res' - the Methodist church, Pickering, dent of Dunbarton and student of the pester will present the subject Pickering College_ and Whitby of `Systematic Paying or. the Collegiate Institute, who has Tithing System". - been in England, and Vienna for —Miss Clysdale, teaeher- in the ' rponths, has beet' successful in se - junior department of our public miring the necessary papers to school, is on the sick list this week -follow• the special , branches • hi and as a consequence -her depart- medicine, eye. ear, nose and went has been closed. throat.. He will return in a few —Mr. David Annan _Sr., __met months to follow these special withan accident on Thursday last branches of his profession in wher 'by one of the small bones of Cleveland where he has been a :.. _ his hand wasbroken and as. a• exon successful . general ' practitioner - sequence,he.now wears a sling. .foe eleven years. —Mr., Lynde, who has been.. in —A- new arrangement has come _ the Whitby branch of the West- into effect on .Canadian railways ern bank for some time, has been ;for the redemption of unused • appointed Mr. Carswell's siicces- passenger tickets. A circular has sor in the Pickering branch of the in issued by the passenger de - Western bank: ' He entered upon partnients of the companies stat- - -his duties in the bank here on ing that any wholly unused tick - Saturday last. - ' - .: - -eets sold -in Canada and presented —It will be remembered that last for redemption at 'the ticket office, September the body of a young where sold, within thirty days of man was found oh the lake shore date of expiration of such tickets Just east of the mouth of Dufins' aball be redeemed- immediately by Creek. As the body was not inden- the agent in charge of paid said titled it was. buried near the place _ticket tie office at the pricewori vo o whefound. Latez a man by theg must -be wrtten heavily across the name.of Horowitz, upon making face of the ticket in ink 'the inquiries, came to the conclusion time of its redemption. k ate pure _that the body was that of his bio- se of this regulation , is to make they: On Monday " Mr. Horowitz pose g • - was here and had the body exhu m- easier and more expeditious ' the ed and taken to Toronto to be settl&ment of claims in respect to '``given a decent bur -at -The unfort-`such tieket8. . - unate man' carried a certain amo- —The anneal meeting of St. -ant of insurance -which will now Andrew's congregations took -place. be paid to• the heirs. . - on Thursday evening last in the The ; _ " - , lecture -room. of the church, with arithmetic might form a subject • B. D:, in the chair. The various of cogitation ' for those who deal reports werehreceived and adopts o .the exact sciences, nf the ed. That of.the treasurer showed • ' long winter evenings,—"A farm- receipts to the amount of $935.49, er wanting to weigh -a pig had no and rp s nth on amount of $114.35.93 scales.160 lbs. and that of his that his wife The - open collections were the : 139 lbs.. placed a 'board over the largest in the history of the- -top of the fence like a seesaw -so church. The Ladies' Aid Society a perfect balance' was made, he also had a most successful'year, 'on one side and she on the other. their report showing a balance on : Then. they changed places :on hand of $124.47. 'The report' the board,. the • wife taking ' the from the session, W. F_. M. S., and pig ' in her lap which again per- from the Sabbath School were • .. fectly balanced the board. equally encouraging. After the How much did the pig weigh ? business of the evening was con- ' —Mr. F. H. Carswell, who for- eluded the -ladies served refresh - the past seven years, has been meats during which . a pleasant teller in the Western Bank here, time was spent socially. ' ' was notified last week, of his pro- —Wm. E. Anderson, Ph. B., motion to the managership of the whom many of our villagers will ley, H. Parsons. Jr. IV—A. Stanley, G. Richardson. Sr. III—B. Powell, I. Wray. Ir. III—J. Howland. H. •W, Richards, E. Richard- son, C. Richardson: Sr. II—H. Rich- ards, I. Jones, A. Howland, W. Rich- ardson,. M. Hazlett. Jr. II—E. Rich- ards. W. "Kennedy. Sr. Pt. Kennedy, L. Galpin, M. Wray. Jr. Pt. II—C. Munroe, I. Howland. M. Rogers, Teacher. - GREENWOOD. A sad accident with fatal conse- quences occurred here on Friday which has cast a gloom over the community. Mr. Thos. W. Bayles was at work moving a spile driver to make some 'repairs to his mill property. While crossing the bridge which spans the flume_a plank on the bridge was broken by one of the. wheels. This caused the pile-driver to fall, crushing Mr. Bayles to the ground. By exercising superhuman strength the great weight was, lifted from his body, but oneo two gasps showed that life w extinct, and that death svas almost instan- taneous. Dr. Fish, of Brougham, was immediately summoned, but his services were of no avail. Mr. Bayles, who was only 47 .years of age. is survived by a widow and two sons. The funeral took place on Sunday. when the remains were conveyed to the Salem cemetery for interment. The deepest sym- pathy is expressed; for. the' bereav- ed relatives. The accident seems more sad from the fact that only three -}_ears_ago Mr. Abram Boyer, whose _widow_ is. a. sister of Mrs. Bayles, met with instantaneous death at the same spot while also engaged at his mi l.work. • .. • ,. a .branch at Shakespeare. As a re- remember as a drug clerk in the -suit of the change. Mr. Carswell's Pickering Pharmacy for sorire residence in Pickering terminated years, and 'who was a prominent -on Saturday last. ' , Prior to his figure in the Calithumpiau pro- • . departure from -Pickering, cession. of :that time, - has just --Carswell , WAS made the .recipient been again beard from by one of a most beautiful cane by tt of our local lodges of which he number of his freinds as is still a member After manag- atoken 'of _the esteem in NVIiich ing Due-. of. the Petrie. drug shops • he was held. , The presentation iii Guelph, he drifted. west -,to which was 'accompanied by an Grass valley, Cal., later to Mon- appropriateaddress,- took _place Lana, then to Greenwood, B. C. on. Friday evening at the home During part ol• this time he was onro, where's large, in the drug business in partner, Mr. D. Mu ..number of_ friends had assembl ship with one. of. the Brodies .. sed for a social evening. Markham. For' the past Carswell, who was taken corn- four years, he has been in the pletel'y - by surprise, replied in drug" business at Gainsboro, feeling, terms, , thanking, the, do-. Sask., but has recently disposed nors for their much appreciated of his business there ata hRncl- gift, and expressing regret at some figure and returned to leaving Pickering. where he had Kingston, Ont., where he is now trade many friends. Mr. Cars- engaged in the study of medicine well, after spending Sunday at Queen's University. at' his home in Oshawa, left .ficHOOL REPORTS. Monday morning for Shakespeare. 'The NEWS joins his many Report of S. S. No. I, Pickering for friends in wishing him success January :P Sr.iIV—L. Hallett. J. How- 1ilo skew Sold of C7 bar► : , . land, p, L. aisdon, 7�ate►•man's .4deal coil, 5iwtain 9en� The best in the World. Just come and try one. Every pen Guaranteed e also have - A new lot of Ties, and Colors very pretty and the newest styles. Cheap Dinner and Tea Sets We have some very good and pretty sets we have marked away down. in price. Good bargains. Come and see what we are doing. ohn.Dicki&.&. ;Co, gain ! • Churns- •and wash- - in g ' Machines are %on..the motie. hapman oaw5wE et, Mea •a, ON" Can . :.. supply you. He's -got the right at right prices. Hardware - Stove Emporium The undersigned will be in Picker- ing every Wednesday for.. the benefit of ills inane cut tourers who *crit their: watches, clocks and jewellery repaired Kindlyleave them "at Dr..Haternan's drug store.. All work warranted, P. TA_ YLOR. $0-43: . Whitby. SPRING DALE FARM FOR SALE Consisting of 145 acs D es. situated on art of lot 16, coo 5. Pickering. Thus farm is one of the ben in tqe Township. has tine voting orch- ard, large new barn and sheds with stabling underneath. good frame hones. and driving house. also dairy with. .nevC? Eailto spring in same. well wagered by never failing •pig creek, well fenced with - wire, tile and soil tast- eless. near post -office, school and railway,For or T Poocbsr liroparticulars ugb iii Ou pats to J ii ogle Whitby Steam Pump Works'`1 A *good easy working• pump is time, saved. Time is money.. We handle all kinds and guar - tee satisfaction. • Cistern tanks made to order. E. W. Evans, -_ Brock, .street Whitby. • Croup eats positively be stopped in 27) . minutes. No vomiting—noth- ing to sicken or distress your child. A sweet. pleasant, and safe Syrup, called., Dr. Shoop's Croup Cure, does the work -and does it • quickly. Dr:, Shoop's Croup Cure is for, Croup done, remember. It does not clairpi to dire a dozen ailments It's for Croup, that's all. Sold by Pickering .Pharmacy. LADDERS ! Good.stock of Ladders on hand at `• .'l1c A ROUND. Liberal redtletioin if -faking a quantity. - ' • W. H. JACKSON. Brock Road. To stop a cold with "Preventics" is. safer- than to let it • run and cure it afterwards. Taken' at the "sneeze stage" . Preventics. will head oft all colds and Grippe and per- haps save you from Pneumonia or Bronchitis. Preventics are little toothsome candy cold cure tablets selling in 5 cent end 25 cent how. If you are chilly, if you begin to sneeze, try Preventics. They will surely check the cold, and please ba Pickering• Pharmacs', 2Otk Veeritur4 "rcnd �lotki�tg We have over 300 samples of reseed and Fancy Worsteds:. All up to date.- -Made to order. and a good fit guaranteed. • • Leave your measure fur h. -Suit, Odd Coat, Vests, Trousers or Overcoat. Work promptly turned out ... . See Samples_ Tor Prices. R. A. 'BUNTING, 4 Fattens' stock in less time. Don't forget some of.BIBBY'$ CREAM EQL:IVALE`T for- your calves and some PoultryFood your)'ens. - -, H. 1 50 pound bags, ' 140 pound bags, - or by the barrel. - - W. LO GAN' • d jekerillg 0144, tit„ e