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The Blyth Standard, 1907-05-16, Page 1
VOL, XX. Western Canada Lands I take this opportunity of notifying my friends and the resideute of this district flint I have lately opened offices in the Union Stock Yards, Chicaco, Live Stock Exchange llldg,. and in pertnorship %vith Mr A, M. Lundeen am pushing the sale of Western Canada Lands exclusively, We have many large blocks for sale suitable for subdivision, also many smaller improved farms and Tots ie the growing city of Calgary, Al• Berta, Wo list only such properties as wo consid• or of special value and have on Iutnd now one or two snaps which are flirt cheap and will give a large return on the purchase price, One Spooinl Snap—Section land, 11 mils+ from Calgary, all fenced, good house and well, $17.50 per acre —homestead in adjoining township 17 tn1Ies from Calgary free to purchaser of the section, Lend all around this section selling at $25 per acre. We invite all those cortenplating settling in rho !Vest or who are looking for investments to coin- municate with its at. once, No bettor or more profitable investment can be (mint thew iVestern Canada Lauds, John S. Laidlaw LUNDEEN & LAIDLAW Live Stock Recol'd Building, Union Stock Yards 17.20 Exchange Avenue, Chicago ************************* How Much are Tooth Brushes ? That depends. Depends quite a bit on the BIND of a brush you want. Not a bad one at all for 10e— it's a real good ono for thu money, But around aquarter we prom- ise you something really extra —bristles of the finest mater- lal and them to stay. Small brushes for the children from 6o up, Seaforth. Mrs, John Shine had the misfortune, a few clays 1tCo to trip on a plank on n sidewalk and falling, had some of her ribs fractured, A young man named 11Iowat had the tops of throe of his fingers taken oft' by the jointer in the Furniture factory, on Tuesday morning of Inst week, In the intermediate series the follow- ing games have been arranged to be played between Clinton and Seaforth, viz :—May 30th, Seaforth nt Clinton ; June 7th, Clinton at Seaforth, W. K. Pearce, manager of the Dorn' ion Bank at St. Thomas, and G. M. Baldwin, also of that city, cnmo to town Inst Thursday in their automobile and remained for a fow days, Both gentlemen were former residents of Seaforth end their numerous friends were glad to see them, And by the way, you'd save Seaforth will have the following dentists' bills If the children senior gasses In town this season :— were taught to take proper Guelph on May 17 ; Berlin on 28th ; caro of their teeth. Stratford on Juno 4th ; Waterloo on Juno 14th ; and (Dalt on Juno 21st, Tho Fall River team plays an exhibition WHITE CITY DRUG STORE gamer team wonon t' a ay 21th, / the championshihe Fall p at the Pan-American Exposition and Dr. W• J. MILNE were the only team in America that defeated the famous CO 1'11111111111S, It is getting near the time that you will need something in BLYTH, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, MAY 16, 1907. Proposition of E. Livingston. To TII 11 MIUNICIP'AI, COUNCIL. OP TIIE VILI,A0D lM' Jil,YTtt Gentlemen, --As my present factory for the menu facture of handles, pulleys, sling sticky, hoops and heading is unfit for such purpose, I hereby make the following proposition : 1 will erect in Blyth for tho purpose of manufacturing the above articles a brick factory, 311 feet by 75 feet, two storeys high, and a dry kiln adjoining, 36 feet by 20 feet, of brick, 8 feet high, with fire proof door between the two uildings, will bo of cement concrete, 20 inelios wide, in th0 proportion of one of port hI nd cement to eight of sand and gravel properly mixed, with the bottom of Faid foundetiort 24 inches wide and one foot thick, The first story brick walls will he 11 fent high and 13 incites thick, the sec- ond story brick walls will ho 11 feet high and 9 inches thick with fire walls on factory and dry kiln, Tho lower floor, 1# inch maple tongued and groov- ed, '!'Ire roof on both buildings will bo Corey's lire proof roofing. On each of tl►e fl buildings will be back plastered inside throughout, The total height of brick walls on factory will be at least 24 feet, and all the work on buildings will be done in a good substantial and workmanlike manner and subject to the approval of the Council of Blyth or their represen- tative before any part of payment is made, I will place in the factory the follow• ing machinery :-- Largo bolter valued at $200 Trimming saw tnachine...... , , , GO Axe handle lathe 250 Sanding machine 50 Cant -hook lathe,,,, 500 Walton. Chuck machirne...,.. ....... 50 Rev, W. F. Kerney, of Holmesville, Rip saw machine.... 100 Turning lathe 75 called on friends here on his way to Pulley machine.,,.., 225 attend the Convention at Brussels, planar. James Smillie and his (laughter, Miss Swing cutting saw •.... ,, 275 Mary, purpose leaving soon for an ex - Finishing sander 50 tended visit in England and Scotland, Heading turner,,,,,,, 250 Some of our football exports will Hullevsand shafting 600 Play with Seaford' teams this season Belting 300 and will no doubt give a good account Broom lathe 200 of themselves. • Heating piping...... 1f,0 Jno, :!McNamara. of Houghton, Mich., Separeto engine 500 was renewing old friendships in this Urs kiln boating appliance 300 locality, His parents were fortner residents of Leadbury. Mrs, Otto Frederick and daughter, Janet, who have been visitors at A, I will complete the buildings, place Johnston's for the past month, return• tho above mentioned ninchinor,y there• ed to their home in Cleveland on in and hnvo the factory in running or- Thursday The confirmation service hell in Sr, der by November 1st, 1907, and will 0111- George's church, Walton, on Sunday ploy in connection with this factory, 16 morning, April 28th, was largely at - 111011 the year around beginning with tended. Bishop Williams, of London, the year 1908. was hero and preached a very practical I will expend on the two buildings discourse. 1'hn rite of corfirmntiou p g• was ndtninistered to 13 candidates, Rev, Mr, Lang -Ford assisted in the service. miffing the by-law, provided should tho by-law be not carried the said marked cheque shall bo immediately returned to the molter thereof and the agreement shall be null and void ; pro- vided also should the egreeIneut enter- ed into he faithfully carried out the said rm,rked cheque shall he returned to the maker when tho balance of the loan is paid by the said corners t ir)n I he tnortgngn and iesur'anco completed and handed over to the said corpora t iuu, Paymont of the balance of the Irwin (81500) shall be made to ore on ,bv cum- piotiot of the aforesaid buildinta, machinery therein and in running order subject to the approval of the council of Blyth or their representative as the fulfillment of agreement, Six weeks notice in writing shell be given by mo when first and second payments of the loan is required. 1 hereby agree to ronplote an egreenunt as set forth in this proposition, E, LIVINUSToN, No. 39. This is the store to come to if you are look- ing for tastefulness and quality. Our new Spring Curtains are the best we have ever shown, exclusive designs. If you have any idea of purchasing curtains, see ours. Lace Curtains at 25c a pair Two dill'erent ilnes of Lar.- Curtains, 21 yards long, good width, special at 23.; and :13o per pair, Nottit;uhr.m Lace Curtains, :t yawls long and 12 inches ss ide, very special at 30c per pair, Lace Curtains at 75c Nottingham Lace Curtains, 11.1 yards long and 12 inches wide, special at 730 per pair, Lace Curtains at $I.25 a pair Nottingham }rice Curtains, :31 3ards long, 48 Inches wide, edges all lock stitch- ed, beautiful design, exceptional value at lifensall. $1.23 per pair. Mrs, Miller purchased her residence Lace Curtains at $2.50 on Saturday for $1005, The Misses Eliza and Alice }loll aro Double '!'bread Curtain, nice defile!), off 011 a trip to Sacramento, W. splendid wearing curtain, edges well Iln- `l'ho Opera }(ease was put up at auc, ished, extra well finished, extra value at tion on Thursday but was not sold per pair $:.,,0, the highest bid being $1125, A load of beer kegs being loaded up and shipped out of town was wistfully gazed upon by a number of our citizens on Tuesday afternoon. Lust week $2400 was paid for hogs at Mensal! station and title week it will greatly excel' that amount, as a big shipment was made on Tuesday, At the quarterly Board meeting on Tuesday night question of separating the Methodist church from Bethesda and making Hensall a station was dis- cussed and referred to conference, mentioned together with machinery placed therein the suet in value of fully $5000. Tho aid I ask Is a loan of 83000 at 8 per cent, interest re -payable In fifteen equal annual payments of principal and interest together with a fixed yearly assessment of $1000 on tho dry kiln, factory rind machinery (except school tens) for a period of ten years, Pay- ment to me of 50 per cent. of the loan (Sl500) shall be tondo by the corporation of Blyth when all the brick work is completed and the roof on buildings Spring finished provided the agreement here- inafter made is carried out as far as Furnishings the work has proceeded, 13y way of security I agree to give the Put away your heavy Underwear and corporation of Blyth a first mortgage buy a suit of our Poros Knit, Spring Need- for $0000 free from all liens or,encum- lo Underwear, in three shades,—white, flesh and blue, at 411,60 a suit. We have a bratces on the said factory and mach - Prone!' Balbriggan at $1 a suit, and a inery named therein also on dry kilts Lisle Stripe as low as 50u a suit, W.G.B. au(111natittg appliances therein together Shirts at 75o to $2, Demand the brand W. C. 11. We have it also on our with pert of lots 10.1, 105 and 100, Me - crew stook of Collars, In all tho now shapes Donald's survey in the village of •Blyth and sizes, Talo a look at our stook of upon which the said buildings aro to be SPRING- HATS er'ented, I will also insure and keep insured the said factory plant and machinery including the dry kiln and heating ap- Rea ymtowear C1othingpimnces fn insurance companies sntis- factory to the Council of Blyth with loss (if any) payable to tho said cot• poration as their interests may appear. No mno11inor' shall bo removed from the saki factory except to make room for now or more modern nnachinory without the consent of the Council of Blyth.. I agree to hand over now a marked cheque for 8100 to bo retained by the corporation of Blyth as a pledge for the faithful performance of the agreement to bo entered into, and also in the event of the by-law granting the said loan B11111 and exemptions being carried, as surety y for the payment of expenses }n sub• Just received a large shipment of Farley Tweed Single Breasted $5,00 to $15, Fancy Tweed Double Breasted 86 to $12, Men's Summer Two•Plece Suite 88,50 to 4113. Men's White and Colored waists 900 to $3,50. - A Finley Chooked White special at 41,25. Everything new In hosiery and Ties at 15o to 75c We can dress you from hat to shoes, We are the only ex- clusive and carry the largest stock of gents' furnishings in town, THE POPULAR CLOTHING HOUSE S. H. Cidley Subscribe for Tiin STANDARD, Tho WestYork byre -election will take place on Saturday, Juno Ist, Thomas Hawley, of (Jo'lerich, is dead at Harper Hospitnl, Detroit, of Bright's disease. Ho was about 65 years of age, Previous to going to (Joderich a few yours ago Mr, Hawley wrs n resident of Detroit and practised law here. rams111111111monfoomill11111101 The First Step Often means so much. It has meant suoeass to thousands of young people who wrote for our catalogue as the firat step to• ward a good salaried position, Take the step to,dav, Address Central Buslneils College, '1'o• ronto. W. 11, Shaw. Prinolpal, i...m.rr.inemenne n Rigel FARM LABORERS AND DOMESTICS I have been appointed by the Do. minion Govorutnent to place Im- migrants from thu United King• dom In positions as farm laborers or domestlo servants In this vicin- ity. Any person requiring such help should notify mo personally or by letter, stating fully the kind of help required, when wanted and wages tittered, The number ar- riving may not be sufficient to supply all requests, but every of. fort will be made to provide oaoh applicant with help required. ANDREW W. SLOAN Canadian Government Ifimployment Agent, Blyth P. 0, Lace Curtains at $4 One of our special line, double thread Nottingham Curtains, plain centre with beautiful border, exact copy of the real Brussels net, very special at $i, Lace Curtains at $6 yards long, extra line thread, Batten., burg pattern. Ask to see this line, splen. did value at $0 per pair. Bobbinette Ruffled Curtains Plain net with ruffle edges, with lace and one row of insertion, 42 Inches wile at 13c and 23o per yard, Swiss Curtain Muslin We have a full line of Swiss Curtain 11u..1in, all size spots, 12o to 25e a yard. Door Drapes 2 special lines at $1 and $2 each. Highest price paid for Butter and Eggs. G. M. CHAMBERS & CO. BLYTH PHRENOLOGY AND SCIENTIFIC PALMISTRY A Study of a Lifetime. No Fortune Telling, but Legitimate Science. Prof. -O'Brien Canada's Greatest Phrenologist and the only recognized Solentitlo Palmist, from Toronto, whose methods were approved of by Judge and Jury at the Toronto General Session, March 15, 1001 ; only Lecturer on Scientific) l'alrnlstry in Canada. Is Now in BLYTH FOR A SHORT TIME ONLY AT QUEEN'S HOTEL By request of several of his patrons and their friends he is now making a tour through Canada, rind the success he has achieved in every town has never been equalled by any- one in the profession, Prof, O'Brien is recog- nized by the press medical faculties and scientists generally as the foremost Phreno- logist and Scientific Palmist of modern times, and should not be classed with those travel- ling cheap pretenders who bring disgrace on these sciences and mislead the public, Hundreds of skeptics have been convert• ed by him, Prof, O'Brien is an enthusiastic investigator, a careful student and a con- scientious business lean, His patrons rank among 1110111 Premiers, ,Tudgos, ,Members of Parliament, Lawyers, Doctors, Clergymen, Bankers, Editors, Phrenologists, Merchants, Mechanics, etc., and their families. Prof. O'Brien gives instruction in n practical way, which is worth more than money to every young Haul who desires to secure tho highest type of man- hood, physical capacity, mental and moral culture. Those contemplating change of business should not miss. consulting Prof, O'Brien. Nothing against the Law undertaken, Your PAST, PRESENT and INDICATIONS of FUTURE; events, ire marked in your hand by Nature, correctly delineated. MARIR,IAGE ADAP1'AiIONS EXPLAINED, Palmistry is mentioned 1483 times in the Bible and was practised 2455 years 13, C, The most careless observer must perceive that the hands differ in their shape and lines—for their are no two hands alike—the fingers, palms, lines, eta. differ as greatly in different 1)001/10 1117 the noses, eyes, hair, ears, lips and teeth differ ; as the will, manner, step and gait differ ; so the characters differ also. By the outcome of their characteristics, their natural characteristics, their chtu'ncters aro formed. A call on Prof. O'Brien will prove to the most skeptical that Palmistry is a pure science and has no connection with the vulgar fortune tolling. Don't miss consulting 111111 as it may he years before you will have the chance of consulting such an eminent man in his profession. An examination from Trim now will bo worth thousands of dollars in after years to any young than or woman, If you are 11 skeptic, COME as Prof, O'Brien will enlighten you free of charge on the science of Palmistry, and explain to you WHY and HOW he can read your hand, Call and see the autographs of all eminent people examined by him, 'Perms within roach of all. CHILDREN, HALF PRICE. HOURS r 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. LOCATING DISEASES A SPECIALTY. MADAME O'BRiEN IN ATTENDANCE. Intending patrons should try and call during the day if possible, as so Dian only can consult him during evening, also come 115 early as possible as Prof. O'Brien will not bo able, owing to other engagements, to remain in Blyth more than a few days. Soo what the Stratford Beacon of August 23rd, 1906, said :—Popular Phreno- logist Ilore—Prof, O'Brien, the well known Canadian Phrenologist and Soientl- fre Palmist, is in Stratford again on his third visit, and is staying at the Albion Hotel. He is accompanied by Madame O'Brien. Prof. O'Brien stands in the front rack of phrenologists and palrnists, and is well received wherever he goes. During his previous visit hero he gaiued the confidence of the public and will ho gladly welcomed here on this visit, USS COUNCIL BILL DISCUSSED. Objcetion5 to the Bill—Present Rule a Failure— Redmond Wants Home Rule, I,cn Ion, .1l:1}' 1:1. ('oinpnreil with prey- {rive; the way for hemp rule. if the hill 1aus home rel(' till',. the Measure of to. li',•s1',i shit tie, new council In ;1 confer, 11111(1 sell government11 upon 'hell 1 11,11'e n;lv It might pave the way. Iiit, on the other hard it i.: a failure, it Irei:rull. InD!'r'ly givi" tO the ('I>unl'1I inigllt pry'.:,'lit considerable nhstaeles; oorttrol of eight department's now man- i Kulsurely the Unionist; will not refuse aged by Gnveru.nu'nt Irl;Ir11.'.. The Come Ireland an opportunity fur training her cil i, partly elective, partly uppuinlptil by people on ;lapin -0 any right they O fight tete CSosvn, soul swllfle tJle LI'rd Licufelt to possess, be(au)s,' if the nlrnsere prover mticeessfnl, one of the difficulties in the ant, of 1roll1nd is given ismer to mtllify I way of Koine rule twill have been re- itx+ measures, the ('row•n retains IN)ntrol moved." of five important departments, inclnd-Grossly Unfair, Says Balfour, ing the constabulary. The eontivl of this Mr. Balfour, the Opposition leader, branch has always been a thorn in the ehnraetcrizcd the hill as grossly unfair, flesh of the Irish p.esple. as the Irish nlennhers of Parliament were It is natural and quite to be expected �entthlt)f(nilrs,i\vhilorthrllinusclnferfn Esl(on that this halfway measure is wholly mon, w olid be unable to soy a word in pleasing to no 1>,)Iitieal party. The Union- the analogous busine,3 ,'bout to be iota regard w' it as a stop tow'ar'd house transferred to the new council, Thentle. They object to giving to Ire- ' measure would not legitimately relieve land the management of many depart• the u-pirntions of the Irish, 11 - would menta of local affairs while the Irish ' only cause confusion in the adagnistr,•t- rnenlbers of the Mousse of Com -tons re• ; ii,'1 ;'r'I eot.lil real grievances on Scot• Iain the richt to legislate in similar af• land and England. He declared that fairs for England and St9)11:11ni. They ' there was is, oiled \stlio l was desired criticize also the plat of Government by i in animation with the government of a Council through eight minmitteee ns Ireland wind' \yould Ix' furthered by complicated and cumbersome. The Rud- the extraordinary proposals of the Irish leaf' are di,mpppointed that the measure Scrretnrv, Store preposterous susses• falls so far short of actual home j tions regarding local government had rule, and the Irish members are even 1 never been matte. They would cause col. more disappointed with it, The Irish lisim's with the authnritic:, and inevita- leaders, however. nre maintaining a dip blv involve ;l breakdown of the whole k\matie attitude until they have time to ebudy the provisions of the hill and learn the sentiment of the people, A Nationalist convention will be held in Dahlin soon to decide upon the policy of the Irish party. The Laborites will support the measure because they nre all home rulers. To prever.t the find reading of the hill being deferred until to -morrow, and scheme. The proposals would satisfy neither the l: glish nor the Scotch, and still le„ the Irish. Redmond on the Final. ,Toho Redmond, the Irish leader, said that until he and his colleagues had time to consider every feature of the bill and elicit Irish public opinion in regard to il, no one could expect him while Walter Hume hong was still to give either a deliberate or a final opeaking, Mr, Birrell !tiered the closure. judgment. \(r, Gladstone proposed to Then amid a great uproar and protests solve the problem by the full and frank concession of self-government and au- tonomy to the Irish people, but what the present Government offered was not honte rule nor a substitute for it, The Irish still demanded home rule, and rested their olninl on their historic right and the admitted failure of a century of British government of Ireland. As house rulers, Mr. Redmond thought they were jtert.ificd in regarding the scheme as consistent with the mainten- ance of their aspirations, and proceed - A Brilliant Audience, cd to apply certain tests to the scheme The audience was worthy the Mater. regarding giving general and effective lewd and Parliamentary oeenaion. The control to Irish public opinion vvcr the entire Ministry rerupitd scene on the 'matters which the bill dealt with. front benches, Mr, Balfour lounged in JJe said he did not like the nominated his; characteristic, lnn,uid attitude op- element, lir. Redmond agreed with Mr. pesite, with George \Vvndhanl, the form- Balfour that it was not demn;nttic, er Chief Secretary for Ireland, beside but if he was told that the Govern - him. mint's object was., to give n large repro, The flour of the House \vas parked, and sentatlon to the minority, who were sus - the galleries held n notable assemblage, picinlls regarding the action of the 1114l - 11101117'111Z a nn.lnher of Peers. some of the jority, then he would be perfectly visiting colonial Premiers, notably Alfred willintr to accept this undemocratic Deakin, Premier of Australia. and scv- principle, Ile believed that the minor - oral Bishops. Members of the Irish it.y's fears were honest, but groundless, clergy were eonepicuoust in the gaiter- '!'here were no limitations to which the her. would not go to meet these fears. (:on - Mr. Birrell rose to an oratorical tilelght tinning, Mr. Redmond said the poi' ver *hen lie described. the present system of given to the. lord-Lienttenant appeared Irish allnlinistmtinn. 1Ie called i)nhlin in go far beyond the ordinary veto Castle a failure, saying: "There it stands, limit=, If that was so the provision did remote, without a friend, and nlelan- nwav with the genuine character of the ripely, while the current of Trieh life power given to the Connell. Apart ew'1'p9 pant. No eo'ernor had entered," from that, he thought the control tests }vr' eontinned, '(Inc gloomy portals of genuine and complete, Dublin Castle without a. sinking of the , After expressing doubt regarding the heart almost equivalent to abandoning' workability of some of the minor fea• Jape," ! tures, of the hill, Mr. Redmond took up I what, ine termed the most serious of all tests, the finhneia features. Ile said he was strongly of the cpinion that the fund of 3,210,(X)0 was most inadequate. The whole amount would 1)4' mortgaged at once., leaving nothing for the develop- ment of Ireland. Therefore, it would be impossible to successfully work the new scheme. The pollee department WM the only one in 'which a real saving could he effected, end that was withheld fron tent, Incidentally Mr, Redmond confessed that, although he viewed the question from a pole opposite to tint of Mr, Balfour, he felt the force of come of the letter's arguments, In cunelusien Mr, Redmond said thn1 if the measure showed itself workable, even with mod- erate nueoess. hi party would gladly accept it, '(r. J3i►'rell npokn for nearly an hour nevi Norco-gnnrtcr.1, Among his 'aer- ated hearers were Alfred Deakin, the Australian Prime Minister; Sir Ereder- ick Borden, CnnndianMinister of Militia and Defence ,anid a large body of clergy, headed by the Bishop of Sligo, ds• and ehouta of "gag" the closure sone ear- rie(1 by 417 rotes to 121 and the bill paused its first rending by 41t1 to 121, The House then adjourned. After the hill had been presented and encpininerl by Mr, Birrell it was 0111IP1z• ed and ridiculed by A. J. Balfour nn behalf of the OppoNition, .John E. Red• intend then ddlivered n hrillinnt speech. noteworthy for ite dignified and force- ful exposition of Ireland's claims for complete home rale. Parnell had said that one way to goy - ern the island 'ens to send a loan there to hold the halatee of all parties and •administer the country in a spirit of courage and independk'nee, but the Gov- ernment had no sueh lnnn in its eye, "I would rather write the biography of a deceased autocrat," 1[r, Birrell said, "thnn live under his rule. Such men do not make good history." With all its shortcomings, an elective hotly would he educational, and tench the frisch people self•reepeet. To Remain at Westminster. Nobody, said Mr. Birrell, believed that the present system of the administration of Ireland' was sound in principle or eco- nomical. It had been switched off from the great current of the national life of the people. Under the proposed new scheme the [rish members of Parliament would continue to sit at Westminster in undiminished numbers, but he hoped (hereafter to find a more profitable chan- nel for their inquisitiveness in managing iocxt1 affairs at home. Mr. Birrell went on to explain that, tine council being elect.e(1 by a local Gov- ernment Board frarrchise, peers and wo- men could vote. The constituencies, roughly, would be the sante as those of the present Pan'Iiann' nta.ry arena. 1le did not think 107 members. wore ten many to discharge the iunpnrtant dutie,.s assign• ed to them. '-['lac council would be elevted for three years, and authorized to estate Hell as many conrnie:ion:+ ns it pleased, but it must establish finance, public works, education and loe,'tl government committees, the chairmen of which would be appoin't'ed by the Tmrd Lieutenant, 1t was proposed to establish a new Educa- tions Department for primary and sec- ondary education, to be placed under the +ontrl of tine council. Religious Equality. Under the hill nny English subject would be able to hold the office of Lord Lieutenant without preference for sly religious belief. A clause+ was also In- cluded providing that no preference sehotever shall be shown to any reli- gious denomination in appointments, and Oat nny mottling front such preference stall be invalid, NOT ON KISSING BENT, But London's Lord Mayor Succumbs to Carnival Girls' Attractions, London, May 13, ---The Lord Mayor, who, when he entered office, scathing- ly criticized the frivolity of his pre- decessor in h1'stownig kisses broadc4unt \viten on an official visit to France, has succumbed to the atttractions of the girls and women of Cornwall, of which county lie is a ►uttive. Taking in the annual festival of his native town of Selet;on, he is making a sort of triumphal tour of the country. It was not Ills nature to ho on kion- ing hent, but the first day an old woman among the admiring crowd re- quested a kiss, and the Lord Mayor thought just one would not derogate hie dignity, especially as the recipient was aged, but it was the first step on the downward path, and Inc is now being swept along 011 a torrent of kisses, given and received, by females of all In conclusion, Mr. T3irrel said: "The age, until all the womankind in the Government, hal; been told thstt the hill neighborhood are delirious with joy, TREASURE -SEEKERS FOILED. Disastrous End of a Cruise for Pirates' Hoard. Ness' Orleans, tiny 13, -'Ilio Amslinl, widen', nrrivnd Int night, hrougllt the crew of the stoutest .\Itiquin, a priwllte vessel I> IImging to Earl I''il:'nil!isuu, Th„ .\ttigniu is a large vessel Knill on the ,tyle of ;111 auil- iin'y crulisel'. She Honed (1'1,111 Bristol, Englund, ,toIt: f nl Tampa, Fla., null Belize, British .1IIrinlrnw, siI 'tn port she deft (ur ;1 voyage ;wound ('ape Ilona her dc:tin.lti,,u being Covo, Is. land, off Ili west coast of Central .1!Herbs', where it twa, the intention of (Inc Purl, her owner, to search for treasures 011 ('gyms [eland, which was a piratical retreat of old, beim* said to contain u Targe mount of buried trea- sure. The vessel was beached and wrecked off Northern Two Keys, off the const of Honduras, and is n complete loss. The owner and crew escaped narrowly. Tho I':url and Countess hitzw'illiarn went to Belize, where they were eared for by the British ('oloninl authorities, while the cress were sent to New Orleans and will he forwarded from More to New York. Beautiful Girl Ends tier Life by Asphyxiation. Pathetic farewell Letter to tier Dear Mother. York, Tits May 13.--.1fler writing a pathetic letter to her mother in blood drawn from her, owls body, Miss Elsie llgenfrilz, a pretty 2 -I -year-old brunette of this city, conutiitled suicide to -day by asphyxiation at the honk of Attorney G. \\'. Macon, former canditiutc fur the Lieutenat-Gos'ernorahill of I'csulsylvaniu, impaired health caused the young woman to end her life after an unsuc- cessful effort to regain good Intuitti ut the local 1 os-pitnl, She went to the house of Attorney Jlaouu, a friend of the ltunily, fon' the purpoee of rex'uperating. This after- noon sine was found dead in her room, three gala jets having been turned on and the window closed tightly. Lying beside her was a letter addressed 1.o her mother, and written in blood, Jt read as follows: "My 1)cares1 J1 others—Do not grieve, for I cannot stauyd it any longer. You have been a good mother, trust in God and prey for your daughter. 1 aura Ho HON.). 1 unlet ,10 Illi; and no enc know, what 1 have 'suffered, mother dear, and papa, do not worry. 1 trust we will uneel in a better world where there will be no sorrow, Love to you and my friends who have been so good to Inc." The letter was unsigned and toward the end the writing was only faintly discel•nnble, BROUGHT TO BOOK. REMARKABLE TRIAL OF USURERS IN PROGRESS AT MUNICH, Princes, Counts and Barons Milked for Hundreds of Thousands of Dollars 'by the Swindlers—German Officers Squeezed, Merlin. Ably 111•-� A remarkable trial, which is likely to occupy some weeks, opened at Munich today, The defend- ants are charged with squeezing offi- cors of a cavalry regiment by means of usury, and with forgery and other frauds, The preliminary investiga- tions revealed that in certain nlilitury circles in South Germany a life of de- bauchery was led. '.I'hc defendants eeem to have got malty officers in their power and sucked them dry. Among the victims were Prince Henry of 1lnnunn, Count Pucci, and Barons Von '1'hungen, Vol' I,atugpuchoi and \'uu Dore, The usurers milked Baron Von '1'humgen of $I:,l,0I10, Baron Von Lang- Ouchof of $10(1,000, and the others of large. sums, Artillery Lieut. lioecke, af- ter being victimized to the extent of $105,000 and ruined, quit the service and started to recoup himself by joining the swindlers, He is now one of the neeueed. Jle run a disorderly house in Mannheim, and seems to have gone far to regain the stoney he lost, Seven hundred and fifty wituasses lutve been summoned, .-• NO CHANGE IId S'rRIKE, Carpenters Still Out and Many Are Leaving Town, St. Cutha'ines despatch: The strike of city carpenters rennt1iii unchanged, de- spite a lengthy conference between em- ployers and the men, (sold today. The session lasted several hours and the question at issue wee earnestly argued from both 8t41nthpoints, It is understood th4tt several propositions looking to a compromise were prude, but none proved satisfactory. To -night Organizer Tweed, of Toronto, is conferring with the carpenters as to the action to bo taken in reference to a future campaign. The strike is causing delay in local building operations and ninny of the men are leaving the elty to accept positions in other places; Soventl left to -day for Niagara False, Ont,, where. 40 cents per (tour is being paid, al- though the male is 35. ACJR[SS TAK[S HER OWN LIF: Was Faversham Co. in "Tl Squaw Man". Divorce Leads to Tragic fled of Miss Nelson. New fork, \lay 13, Mrs, \Vail:we 1\'iddceoluhe', 'elle-c stage a;11nc ►vas \Inriel Nelson, c nnnuittell suicide in her apartments at the hotel 'hewing - tun, 142 lett 72nd sh'o't, yesterday, shooting herself inn 1ho head, "Miss Nil - eon" had appeared in fairly impnrtint role,' in both this country and l':nglltnd, omie of her last ('llgageilltllts having been with the Willi:nut Faversham Company in the "Squaw Man," but, elle was known better in Ncw fork IL$ a c0111- 1/0801. shun all menses, She wrote );a►•• coal nutrehes, w'h'ich found pupulua' favor, among other the .11m -wish l'rtradu and T'o'go' 1'rnel ice, Jiro. 11'i'Idc 'onnce had bIs'nl living apart from her hu,bnnd, whip i; also on the et414,m, Sine had two or three of her women friend, in Iter upau•tnlents on Monday slight, and they did, not leaver until about 1 o'clock next morn- ing. Om of the hotel nl;ticL.s (1iscutered the body at about neon lying on the parlor floor, fully dressed, A revolver was near by. (hi the pallor table were three noir:~ pinned together. The filet, nmrknl (immediate) merely contained the re- quest that notice of bur death should be sent to 1Tar.lace \\'iddosen xe, her husband, at the hotel Longacre; to Jh', Douglas Ifissel, of \Vest 81s1 street., her physician. 'I7,e eeoond note friends- -God bless y you always." The Ills1 note was to her husband. Here it is: "besot 1\':tlly, --,Since this divorce trouble 1 hnve not fell right-- hcntenches mind 5 11netiml't the heart. Have decided to rest. Bury Inc near this dear old city. I'ubllsh the man- uscsl•ipts of my anisic that remain and put, out the song of "'1'hc Litt to Chrys- anthemum" on tine ptanto, It would do well for vaudeville. 11'eyhln•n might do it. Everything to Ailsa, 'l'Ilere'n jewolry at 'I'iffnny's in storage. God blast you, "(Signed) sluriel." and send my original '"l'rystiug 'rime" to read: "To my dearly and keep 1', S,- Be s arc n)anuseript of 13oozy," The diool'oe suit in which \Ire, eornbe referred to wits one begun b yhcr against her husband about six months ago. Ilcr comtsel was E, ii, P. Squires, of White Plains. Ile said that the suit was tried Inst Saturday in the Su- pteaIle ('ours of \Vdndbcvtcl' county, No co-respondent was natud lin the fiction, although It specific charge was mad againet the Innstrand, Be did not defend the notion, and, uctiordiin tot 14tw•yvr Squires, an interlocutory dt'>Lree world \uldoubtrally have been handed down thie week, Although "Miss Neleon" brought the suit, it looks as if sine really did not wont, the (toffee. She returned to the hotel in tears after the trial of the ac- tion on Saturday and (m the mune day the hotel maid noticed a revolver in the room for the first time, Miss Nel- son told the ntuid that she was going to use the revolver in a play. Dr. Bissell said that he had been treating Miss Nelson for three or four yours for n. nervous affliction, She was very bad, srmietinles, he said, and had hallucinations. Miss Nelson was about 30 year's old, She took the pert of Mess Hobart Chi- chester Jones, 4111 Atnericanlady, in the original "Squaw a\[an" Con>Ipn.ny. Iter husband played (Inc1•role of tin© Rev, Belnehnsor C1liswick, Sin also acted with her husband in "A Message from Mars," when Charles Hawtrey, tho Englleh actor, toured the country in t1ni t play. Mlsst Nelson at eine time was undersMldy for Margnret Isling- ton in "Henrietta." She had devoted her tirne altogteher in the last year or so to composing, Before she came to this country :Itis,; Nelson was fstva'rably nonceived in England first in livery Arthur Jones' play, "The l inrs,'' and then 111 ":The Two Orphans," and in "Bootle's Baby." ITer lnarnh, "Target Practice," was played in (Inc ",Squaw 'Lan," others of her works were 'Soft, Fulls the Dusk," a serennule; "flue, Wizard," a march. Miss Nelson, before she went on the stage in England, attraoted some notice as a violinist. She was an Eng- lish girl, !ler husband milled at the Hotel Ben- nington late in the afternoon and took eliars1' of the body. 1[e refused to say anything for puhliealion, BREACH OF PROMISE, Montreal Young, Woman Gets Het Money Back With Light Damages, Montreal, Mny 13,—Mr, Justice Cur- ren to -duty hoard a suit for bread of promise which offered 1501110 unusual fea- tures. Miss Aleziuu, plias Aatnnda. Jus• hill, dressmaker, sued Mr. J. E. ])u'rocher, a young business mato, for $1,000 on the ground that after obtaining from her $500 on dotes and giving her in return n policy in the French -Ca,nedIan Artisecs' Soclety, he abandoned her used refused to carry out the arrangements for their marriage, and for )nsry of limo caused because she gltve up her ordinary' work it short time after their engagement, be- muse Du'ocher did not want people to say he had married a working girl, The plaintiff was given $1-55 damagas and the amount of the loan, LABOR RIOTS. STRIKERS AND STRIICE-BREAKERS FIGHT IN SAN FRANCISCO. ilTore Than a Score of Persons Seriously Hurt, Some of Thenl. Fatally—Eight Persons Shot—Strike-Breakers As- sailed, San I'ranciseo, Cal., May 13,-- The strike of Ilse 1,7(10 nnnlornu'u soul con- ductors Of Iho 1'nitccl Railways de• veloped this afternoon into a riot, in which more than a score of persons were serioumly In�r•l, Hone of theta fa- tally. Slriko•blvmkens in the uniform of ca' iaspcctons, ntriksN and their sym- pathizers (ought on Turk street. for more than an hour. Eight men were shot, among them a policeman and Detective Bell, Several of them e•i'll die. The Weeding ss'11s; Bono by strike-breakers from eau• windows in res- ponse to showers of paving stonnes and bricks hurled by ilio mob, which chased the ears through block after block, piok• ing up (heir wouraket rah they ran. Finally a dozen nn moue of the guards were, arrested by reserve.' from the central 'olive station, noel a union crowd boarded the reclrmnst ear and started it back to the barns, Arriving there the striker; charged and revolver fire was opened from the barns, In this eatoo rotor several more men were ,shot, A nonunion wan threw a switch nt Tnrk and Fillmore titrants, mud the derailed emir shot into the side- walk maiming two !nen, In the e,tannpede that followed scores of women surd chil- dren were trampled upon. ♦.• JAPANESE 1 REATIES. MONROE DOCTRINE FOR ASIA— JAPAN AND THE STATES, I'su•is, May 13,—M, Kuriuo, the Japan- ese Minister here, in au interview to- day, is quoted us making the itnportunt statement that the melee of treaties be- tween Great Britain, France, Russia and Japan, guaranteeing the territorial status quo in the far East, impliod an engagement to prevent other countries from inspiring territory there. Minister Kuriuo denied that the Franco -Japanese entente was in any way earned at the United Stated, adding: Japan, in spite of the Sun Francisco inci- dent, luta always been most sympathetic to the United States, because she was the first to trent Japanese people on a footing of equality. If Japan could ob- tain advantages from an understanding with the !United States it is entirely pro- bable that the Government at Tokio would not hesitate to negotiate with IVhington, Coasntinuing,,.lis Kurino said that us Germany had 110 possession in the far 1';nst, Kiuo Chou being simply leased Chinese ground, a treaty with her sim- ilar to the one between Japan and France, would be useless. GOT FIDDLER, LOST HOUSE, Father of Hungarian Countess Revokes Pro -Nuptial Gift. Vienna, May J5,—Th house which Countess Vilma Festetice r nttded, upon her gypsy husband, Rudolf Nyrtri, af- ter she eloped with him, is no longer his, The )souse was given to the Colin - teas in nntioipatton of her marriage to Count Spreti, to whorl 6110 wars en- gaged at the time she met tin Gypsy musician, but now, on the ground that WOM[N N[[OW ON [X[CU1]V{. `Veli li of the Women's Foreign Mis- sionary Society. Mrs. Shnrtreed Delivers Icer Last 06% Annual Address. Special Reference to the Missions in China. Drell t(or11 de.p;,inIn \\Milo ulis ionnr• le' front all part, of ('China and repo,. ,en(ntives of nuissi,m organization, ,-'It• toted 1111 over the world 'sere bringing to 11 du -t the great ecichration ul' the ccntcnal;w of l)r, [Wort Morrison, the famous Plower alissiunany at Shanghai, IH1(u delegates of Ont. ‘Tenon's' N1 reign \Iis•sionary :society ty of the lh•e•byleriula Church of ('!lunch \Vere assembling at Ilr.lnll'ord 10 attend the thirty-fir,•I an- nual nouvieti en of the western Bili -ion I, I' t}rnt bully, which was letnl,li•hed in 1.':71/ for the purpusc 1/1 ftrlhcring '1111,- !.,101111 nli,- ,iot a t' work anlulug 110 heathen lural thildrtn of the ()dont all of 1Int ten tern Canadian Indian;, The dole - eater; were representative of every di•• tela of the 1)muiiliun west of (,!Hebe, 511111011 bund the convention, whioh \•ns opcuo,i yesterday afternoon in %sun I.hcsl,ytcn•• lain (Sheryl', with the I'reeideul, Mrs. Shnrlretd, 'Toronto, in the chlor, will extend ever lustily and tw,-nnorruw. Nn - j1iuual in its scope, the suciclj' has ,1 membership of uvcr11,(100, while the ;els- diaries number 12,742, and mission band, tl,•itt!I, nothing a grand total of ''ti,l.:I +worker,, all imbued with the desire to further the u-nrk of Christianity ill fin.. sign Enol, Last yc'un' the :society had 11. revenue of Oyer $I,,3100, and, excluding legacies, there reuttincd a balance int ttnnd of over $1,1)00, l in her opening nd(t•n,r, in st'hieh ;he took occasion ts, autlsnnu'c her iuten• lion to withdr'uw Froin outlive 1,(11.11111' nn the hoard owing to ill -health, \Ir.. Shortrced itulicatcd that slur, was ml t altogether iu sympathy with the nwn1o• stent to amalgamate the 11'nlncn', 1tonle and Foreign 1lissionnry Sncietie-. '1'he a ft clitoral proceeding); were large• ly devotional, and belittled n memorial eert'icc' for members who had plr-,c 1 hila}' during the year, The President , oil tht foreign ('I;un- mittee of the society had issued n call to Canadian Presbyteries to celebrate the \lorrisnn ventcnury in some inngible luny, and they worn glad bra juin It 11 missionary workers everywhere in inn- ol•ing the memory of Dr. Morrison. end ill praying that a great impetus Io ;alt missionary movements might result Irian the conference rat Shlunghni, Ino, Slunk reed then outlined the steps that had helm Liken with n view of bringing, ''bout an nnullgnntntion of the \\'ninon': ITrnne and Foreign Missionary Societies. She claimed. that the \I', F, M. S. had been an acknowledged influence and n power fon' gond in the church, as well ns its her mission work at home and nhroad, and that ns in society they stood in a unique position to the missions of the ohnrch, inaving when orgnnizcsl assumed the sole reopnusibilily in the western division of her work fell heathen women and children, 'J'he work, mere.'1 over, had 'crown to large dimensions, re gniring each roar increaser) support, There was abun(lnmee of work for oath to do, and ample noon' for both to work and exert an influence, for good in their her marriage to the musician slakes congregations. her unworthy of belonging to the Fes- hone' officers hod notified. their inicn- teties family, her father, Count Paul tion not 111 seek re•elr'etion, these inclnsl• Fetnteties, line revoked the gift. ing ,bliss Smellie, [tome .Sccrel;try, who This is in aecor anco with the was leaving 'Toronto, Mrs, Shorlretd con - gallon lasv. '['Inc Countess is therefore eluded 'by iutinlalinh Uhut, owing to penniless, It L.1 stated that she is seri- Continued ill -health, .site herself mold iusly ill. It is also staled that Nyari nc longer retain office on the hoard. has been promised an engagement in I in the evening an address by Mks New York at it salary of 850 a night, Craig, 'Toronto, on mission work among �•o 1 the 1ndinns, illuetrateil with limelight FARMERS SUED. Views, rat 1/11/11)0 a gathering which fill - TEN ell the church tel overflowing. 'I 'oohing on (Inc liquor problem, '[iss Craig ex - Action of the Stand��—ard Bank Against plaints! that Wherevert'ailn':ty enc.;trne'- Ekfrid Township Man, i lion erns inocen:11 ng there world 1Iny Iliad rll'inik1ing going o11 nmollg the In- AGlene-oe despatch: Ina case lseefore dish,. 'I'ht (lorernntcut worn doing all ,Judge Elliott at Glencoe to -day ten Ihpr,;;ihl1 comld, hnwcyet, Ln )rill n farmers of the township of J��kfrid were ,,Inep V to Ilse truffle, :1nnt.her di.5ndvnnt sued by the Standard Blink of Cannula; f age under which missionaries sad knell. Durham branch, The bank holds notes ors 1nhurts1 wn6 du! .prevalence oI nutde by these farmers for the amount bud tyro 4000111e a 11101100e l0 hhc while the Farmers' $20 each 111 favor of the ,Intu tlers. but the Indian Department had Manufacturing & Supply Company of established lel hm>,piln.l, which it was Durham, The defenclanhs claim that hoped would) miles reit the st'onrge, N11,14 the notes land been obtained by fraud Craig claimed shalt the education of [n- and that no value had been received for (liner children was aceoglplishing exeel- thenl, Ju one of tine crimes the claims 1'nt results, were not -suited, in the others judgment was reserved. ercnlesi; nnlong the Indian dhijrben, ft -.es* PRINCE RUPERT ALL RIGHT • Mr. Nicholl, of Vancouver, Sees No De- crease of Actlrvity, Montreal, May 111,-1[r, Cleorcte A. Mo- Nieholl, purchasing agent for the (brand Trunk Pacific at %'uncouver, B. C., Is hero for n few days ou business, ][o statc(l, that so fa' nH Ito could Hee from Vancouver there wee no truth in the re- ports that there had been a, practical ce'elation of work at Prince Rupert on recount of the disputed ele n' of the Indians to an increased price for the land required for terminale and town - sites, Preparations for the establish- ment of a terminal city and the building of the main line are going on as rapidly us possible. HANGED, BUT STILL ALIVE, :Negro Said to Have Revived After Being Dead, Turf 1\'nrth, 'remise \ins' 13,--- \1'nrrt w•as received !!oro to -day that John Arm - strung, a negro, whowas legallyhoused in ('olmnlhns oro :\hull 10, officially Arlt• nnuneell dead, awl the body 1111'llerl 1)5101' to Ids rclrttll't's fur final disponi, r(ef wiyod and iY niiVI', Il is 'they'd the ~tory is tine, 1►eeainn a Arnnslronng's feel touchn+l (Inc rroluul \\hen line 1bop fclh An-nnsir)tg Uhero' , officious uIcld, nllllough I1s'inn , andfnn11 Is declared by nttorncys the 8[n0.e is powerless 10 cn- f(,iee the original verdict of death, llepnrh; •slur re11111vcs nre trying to keep the . re'v'Iwnl of the noun, n set'rtl, lest the nuth leuri[ies should nlgaln sn'iz(' and exoeuhitt, 4r 1%1.11 13' 1101\ : (-I:,' hall been in ,411d!1.ty for nearly l\t'u yc,m;s, 111111, prrrlla)re, she Intl aileadw gi1ell Iter !wail to ,1)1ue w"III11', fu1 t1111;1le I:a II, ‘VII" vital(,( p!ar'e her in a I,n4uu befitting her I,dlut;; .+n(I culture; aIIIl ((hat leisimes haul he, w•bu keel(( hcnrcfnitII be a nlau'I.ed elan her Iaw•yer, and had a long 1 al k \V 11 h hila regarding her u0cle's, strange be- quest, I1 (vas the first he had iieirt1 (if it, for she had been loth to Kat' tune. 1lbnmf it, levering her father's bitter leiposit ion. But it could be put off no longer nnil It,lril(h noon,, ..,t)- -Irl imagine that sb" she hoped \Ir. I)alton would be ashamed vreuld I,'sats (tf I int 0>:rrlit, perhaps, \yil,!1 ,11 1t,fn-+' his siii litre when the paper il Des, o,;; feeling of pity? ; should he presente(1 by the (,\\gees and But even t.huugn he reeulle'I (1111; \with though lir. 1'eltnn \vas semen•I0l1 s)r- .,.���1,..hinl,elf, ,.1111 tried to schen( his 11)11111 to I pr•i;t'tl at the information, yet his adieu'. \!tills; Mat hi.must((ewer presume to 1,:'• ;(Ilion lel the fair ;girl iiicreast',I fang, ' ""�'�"�"�`" lieve that Millet could cherish anything fold at. 1(t. observe(( row Ilearti1y she deansds neon 1',dilha's ine„a1e, giving as of regard fur hint, even though she hall aitpeare,d to second Mr, Forrester's last, e reason fur so tieing that he had loaned signed herself "aver your friend," yet wishes. i rgely to n friend of late, v;ho, having he e>peri"nced a (hill feeling of despair "1 will make out the pliers (with (glen• kelt.,( to pity :is he bit prone.eee, he (ea; i creeping 111'('1• hint, 10(1 even the pro,(• °are, Hiss 1;11itlet," l01 said; "you w;ult senmwhat (rippled 111 his own money if I port, of his approaching liberation could theta for ('.('ideas I)iy - they shall be fair.not cheer hint, ready, ,hitt n fine gift it \\•ill be for Ibe I:Iithn, 'gellel•aus auul leader -hearted to ( Ile had a little buy itt whit.11 ile ureas• Seeing loan. Poor fello(v. 1 always, felt: o' onn)•,e erodited hi; ,lIIt)I IOIII- tired some (tried and faded flmyors---thti wn•Iy for hill. he \vas su(11 a premising o fails • t chap" and I m glad hes going to have lout immediately surrendered 1be utast el last . he hail received from her •and I � " t )- her income into Ili,( hands. and it k he 11(ukod lit these occasionnll(' \wit.. 't 'nntetllin't to start with --he'll nee(( it needle;., to rimier!, that it, slipped mourned smile 011 11 s\wellin;e Lender- 1""1 ,°11"10,1-11 wall over,; n)11l's 118101 through his fingers in the easiest loan- Ill„ in hi, heart. and hiss eyes gre\W agtiii 1. hill)," t'er imaginable, :led he presented him- misty (with unshed t:8l'd as he remelt'. '\'(;;, sir: but 1 beli(wo lir, \Valvae ( e' day ((lilt (1 ,ane• bend the sweet (areal, impulsive girl \who \will live down his misfortune 110(1 'ante self ho her on (g art I 1, 1 I t t I 6 11(111111 the rrsprr( (very ane who ewer t.ualily that, was a; surprising. know'• had so generously -land up 'Ind e'Ifcn't• l:n(ll him," hoot of said, fbono c. in his habit s, as it \venld in :1 Letter ed hint el .tat crowded culn•t-room. She did not like 10 hear Earle pitied (,else have ben eom)n0'ndable. Ho remembered how she had gripe:' I But, for the ,resent he said no mom over her mvu rclnctiueliv given cviden'�',', 111 that way, as if he had fallen into 1 1 sudden temptation and was guilty; slip In her on the subject of either Sir. (vibe,' hard tone so far toward co)viet•know he wits innocent 111111 she 1\;utt0d 'Fressalia's attentions or intention'' in„ bite -- how Si(' lead laid her hot e\r'w int rl,e t(1 4,,111; 511 tan. His ma mite. wills more illfln'd•iunat(4 cheek upon his ham( and subbed out, "you \rill comm Hutt dints with us that end land, and lith(., begin( to feel than her plc,( for Ili; forgivenees, and her ditty, 'will you ant. lir, lelton ? (,10,11 she lad perhaps spoken more .,(;Lily Iunk of firm faith sued trust. in Ilii:i snwsle 1'nrlr to dinner, T want t„ mal:e and severely than she ought to her only when she had tall_ him that the 'did net the ds\ pie:amtttt fat him if Tran hr parent; consequently she exerted herself nerd to prove his innncrnee to her, she is sn r!lonr ;ti world, yin knmw,g more to please Rine for the little while \\ )lli,l tike his (wall in the fact of the sl0' lidded, they remained 01 \e1V1)11'1' whole world." Mr. Felton synched the flushed face 1(r. 1)811011, w•at(hing his opportunity. :\ strenge thrill always went throng(( keenly.:( nu,;nrnt, then said: hinted to \l1. 'I'ress:di:l lhnt perhaps+ it Ilii: as le thought of the burning tears keenly. Yon, Miss T;dithai T 51:1111 ho would not be well to furry had onlb.ry to ;it 11;01 shell fur 11110 and hiss sail fall", happy to do so, ars i not somewhat alone a crisis, etre though they had only a ,11111 wlieh had rained upon the hand in the world -that is, if it will be. agree - few days longer to remain at Newport ; \chscll Mh had iii clasped in both of ilde In all parties. Mayr you (,(lard this hal he rayl his! a cordial invitation to lu'r:;. ma(((re over with 11 r. Dalton. Does lin visit thorn in their oily home, 011011'111' It was at sort of said pleasure to Inn(: 0pprnwr of the pleasures you are tall: aging him to hope that on 8 nnnr inti• {,iota 111)(01 ill illi', 1111(1 think how kind ing?" mate acgnaintautce he Could 11111 fail to sl)' one been, and in his oven heert, hg I';dithe's ewe (1o01cd, knew that he loved her as he could ucr- "NO." silo answ•rrt'K1, reillel a 111ly; "papa e1 leve ;amber: but he had 1(o right to dies not 1111)1111'e of my giving .lir, think of her in that (vary. if she halt \1'ityne the money; but of cn5p, it only remembered hint nceasinitally, it mint be dine, 11 vias 1:11('10 1iinrehnrd's 'Wt0lhl not he "!lite so hard to bear )tat \vis(►„ she had net. krill her premise ---she hill ".1hrn1! Excuse m1), ,iii„ Edith:), bat forgotten 1,111( in spite of her ('argot' ! ,• te:tatiurs that she \I- fluid not. Ile would gladly have gone away from the city as Sone es he should be liberate (d, and thus avoid the p:ein of meeting :Intl partings \vita her, but she had \reit• ten and requester( it and 1 must I his package '(gain while he would t "Nor 111 marry -iinl - -1.111 proridin.; be (V(, \\o1•li;l\' -Ito matter 111:11 111'1'lu!•• lune -'kiss nwl'rlalket VIII!, It':• \110,1 !u -l. tiro in life Ile tweepiell," If Earle \\'ai '' e(e11,1 11:1\0 hest(•'( there 1\n;;!e 11„11' Ile 11,,111,! bei(,, hie,,.,':1 their :(Ilthe;. ".1!1:1!" i:er father ,•110,1, hither'\: "p"r!rl1, V I do even !eve tit this " "'Mather!" \lies I).ilton 'had ri•t nolo from her chair, 1111 stead (elle"! v deal"!!ling the citrag i men: but ,',1.' wa- very 1.a11e. •'bithl•r," •110 repeat:'.1, "1 cau;!ut um,ler•t•ul,l \why Son '.'11011,(1 lie .n e\ecrli:Igly hit lta' tulwal1 111' 1(111e!,,'te1 1 1111 p.m to (liff,'r ;rn:11 phi n{nm any point ; ;Wit her Can 1 1114 1'10 I'd tit''],unit in y ern' ri',Itt.1 1r0.lt 1)1.11'1 of Ise ,lllrill,g t!(1. 1151 Iw„ full toad t1( he gentle 1nil in(lul'ent svihh )o,' 11111i1 after 111:1 111111:1 ,111'1 1 liieh:lr l dig 1, lied it 1, ('cry h lr l I. ,'r n ' 111 1:1%1r 11111r -,•( ell ,11)11 alll'.er. I:111 - iti.ea•ri do nut (!till(: 1 intend to he ,lis• dee-pi'l'l 1111 el' w'lllllll - 111It 1 0"11-i 11'1' 1.1:11 rloihrer twit n-ui' ;s't'all, of-:' 11,1i 11 Tight to ,110,110 10 IIIc ill the \10,1 ' \'ell have hone iled',iv r(",arlsl'. 11.(1 al- tll't' di^p)ri(( 1(f Illy 0lf,'ellndi,-. They alto my u\vu, to bo 1)(.,1 \\•„:1 \vll„tt• "IT and 111)00 \lhnevl'r my heart shall dietide. lleai me out, (,lest -e," she said, •t••+ he wars about to an,1_riiy im't.rr0pt firer, "I chin( Haat I have a perfect n,nd Isn,lieputable right to judge for mync'It in e matter so vital to ley own inter - eels end hap(:ir.e•; 0011 n41,'u 1111' l;vo• per tial(' run,''- I .,ha111 exerei•o 1i1,1I right, Please do not 1ni,nml4r,t,ulnl nn', 1 !.'atrc 114) de -'ire to til-lrea-e vol, liar to go coml.-to' to your (V1 -11r14. 1 velli( nal -1.01)1 In t1. -(e. chiles; but you litre win the fair \alidee Thal, gentlemen app):need to ser the wisdom of all this, 1(111unlarly as he had 11(11 iced and been somewhat hull by her avoidance of lila, and Ito dict not force his attentions upon her, nor reel: to nor,npolizc her society as he had w„un I, 1 )e' nl„r,' doep'.y t Ilan you 1al!1 herot(th rc ,Ione, 111:,,1,(0 In filly, and I tun I ,p.',i1 tro1.1�'' tie the last week of 1',dilha's ,tilt' ;it (1u',' for all(, i gannet ullnw ,11111.:11' the sea -side \vita nuu•ktd by only plea - not even IIIV own lanae('-- 10 ,is:')ne n; 1111' future lel' It'(, , vitt(( e1'r1115, and 1111'1'(' was nothing 11( "I)„ I ander-+,null yin to nnr:ul that loot: upon with regret as they returned to their holo( for the winter, you ((unit 'mitre' a )Ian wV hill( eva'tV•It was the lust of (letoher when fhr' hent Inuke(1 (hien 11(1111 and dt.,pi.:''I, 11 left; Newport a iid the tweity•third of yeti htl'pene+l to take a fancy to 1li11 ' December (vas the day sei, for Earle 111, I)i!t; It d'9°8r sol, 10 0 yoicp of t'iaul• \I'8yne's release from prison, der, and nttep:y 0uniunn(I':'(I by the girl': Ile had entered the tenth of April, indiTentlenec, lint, according to the State law, a pri- lt would make lye diffelen('c to me , sone(• was allnwtxl two days of mercy whether others despised Ilial or not, if it' (Very 111011 Ill fill' 1)1'0111111 ube(11011w be (\1)s mentally guy equal, and 1 roisid- to the rules of the institution and the prod Lina worthy of my affe('lion,'' was faithful performance of all Elul les; Net - the brave, proud reply. sequently Ile had gained during the three "Even if disgraced as n felon, as Earle yeall'S, throe mniths and eighteen (lays, 1Va100 has been disgraced?" Editha knew' of this through 111. For- '•I:veil if Ito lead in0ncontl' suffer' i rester ,turd thole \Vayne himself did not disgrace, and expiated another's demi.. keels a more ,aerate account of his time as Kull(' 11'ayne has (lone, and is doing," than did the fair, brave girl, who, des - she answered, quietly; but the deep l)lne pito everything;, (('as so true loud first 11 oyes teen, hidden now beneath 111e whit:i friend to him. lid;; two very bright spots had aet1led The first duty upon returning to her nn her cheeks, and her hands 1 reeilded huhu' \was to \y►•ite 111111 a litilo not, nerymt,ly' "1(r, 11'atyie," it ran, at little formal, per; it was cruel to wring It('r serer( front 1111104 .011 account of 111\ 1)alton's sneers her thus; but he \vas her father, and she and insinuations, "in about two months must hear it as patiently as she coul(1. I shall expect to shake hands with yam His next words, however, acted like nice more. \\'sll you 00100 directly to ply an tieetric battery upon hell. pomp al that 111110, mus [hnwo nn sopor They \vele spoken hoarsely and men. [mgt message for you, also a pttel:age a(ingbys belonging to you and left in my care 1t' "Edit 101 1)1111011, you are n fool, and 1 Ucnle llichard, just before Ito (lieu(. u'nuld see your whole life a wwreek lee Ever your (rived, fore 1 would sec yoc wedded to bien•" ''Edit,bn 1)f ien , "'Thee((: you, papa, for your flattering ?a 1 I 1 \\'hen this note was handed to Earle estimate of my mental ftumlties, 0111 811(1 he instantly recognized the hand - also for the tender, fraternal interest writing, every particle of color forsook which Vett manifest in my future .apps- his face, his 1)011(1 trembled and a mist 11(';; hut ,if youspleasc', 11'(! will ('lost' gathered 'before his eyes. the discussion here," h Ile lind not 50111 that writig since his \Title uplifted hand, flushing eyes„ and lovely flow els had eea,sed 11( comp, 111111 a lnutgl►ty little bend of her Slender its familiar characters aroused so many body, she glided quietly from 1110 room, emotions that for the moment he ens d. "('ride, in het )ort defiance ill her eye." nearly ((hist it, it port., Ile then.( it hastily into his bosom. '' for he could not 011011 it with 5o tunny Stunner Dalton lookell al, her in nnmze, eyes upon 1111)), and thele it hay all 110) and .round his teeth in battled rng;e' long agatinlst 111:1 beating heaa'l, \waiting CIIA1'TIII VI[[, to be opened 011011 he could he alone and "\I'hetvl" he exclaimed after a 1110•• 1)1)01)ser(e1, 111 1, "sty beloved daughter is develop- read attlast want lie lidd!weal: the disappointing and ing a surprising spirit. 1 had no idea r .nd it, n 11 g It seemed cold and distant - a (Dere there wn5 so 11111011 grit bottled up ;uglier (meet( ''111''51. to 0)1)110 and get (('111(1 little body, 1 shall hove to mind my belonged to him and receive the mese 1)'s 1111(( q's, 111 all my plans will amount mes- sage •(dtubtless something regarding his to nothing; it will not do to arouse 'het "', R untagoni5m like this, I mast remember sit►lhts) which Ltthard Forrester had the wisdom of Burke, who sagely re.• left for 111111, tuarked: `Ile that lereStles with us ills heart was full of bitterness, for strengthens our nerVOS and sharpens nti• since 111, hon rester s death he had net skill, our antagonist is our helper," 1 ^ren a single friendly face or receive(' have no desire to strengthen her nerves, 0110 word of kindly remembrance from )1r sharp() nher skill-elcarly, opposition 11 on(', , won't (10 for \':(lith, Dalton; we 1111191 110 could not forget Edilha (, long 110• employ (diming smiles, Soft ipecehea !.glee1 of h1m-t1i0 long, weary n1ol111 :and strategy, I must take heed to my dnr111g w•hsch she hnd Promissed to sen ways, else my independent, fiery little hint some token, and none had conte. banker will ,yet be refusing 11)0 the She hal (Aloe' cares and pleasures; handling of her plethoric purse, and that, under the circumstances, is n pleasure 1 should 111i55 exceedingly, Nevertheless, I intend to have my own way about ear. train matters and things,,, ,Such was Sumner Dalton's muttered ('011uquy \with himself, after luring been so abruptly left alone by his indighnnt daughter. For some time past he had made large her 111110 (rag probably 00°1111100. by 11or feshiulable friends and 0cg10intll)e''S, and it could not be expected that she would give notch thought to a miserable convict; doubtless she would not have remembered hint now had it not been it duty She nw•ol 10 tin wishes of hpr un- cle, lie reasoned, with it dreary pain in his heart, Ed' 1:110 twos, hp knew, ne'rt'Il or roan 000000000'x' O00O0-n-OOc0000000 4' Rickets. 0 0 Simply the visible sign that baby's tiny bones $ 0 are not forming rapidly enough. 0 • Lack of nourishment is the cause. (!� 0 Scot'.( aim tulrit'on nourishes baby's •entire system. Stimulates and makes bone. v Exactly what baby needs. 4011 d.Yf1TiL,1,vb� �ii:'i +'. ,1:' T'.. •: �::.1',-.+., ALL DRUGGISTS: 50o. AND $1.00 how old are you?" Mr. Felton asked, re. fleetively, "I was twenty the twentieth) of No - ember, but--" "Then you will not be of age until the twentieth of next November, 1 ant sorry to disappoint you, but since this beiuest' further curtailments 1(t I ' ' ' u' lava was not included in the \\ill of Mr. For- Richard 'm - =..---- • r anent lutist in acts-defcu0c the Master i tea,• rester, t i you are under ages you 0:111 The Appetite for Ilot Mince Pie, 1'l;unLt.rs have had to fight sur the lib 1110 any Forrester, , hi('h his kiml frken(b, rester, no property to any oar \vithnut Rielard !'1.rr0ster, had left far taint, '' } Tho fart that `oelet;u of the'1'r( a, I tilt)• tt their own business, '1'1(0 serious Mr, 1)allon s nnetion. ' a Y a ul,lrctio(1 1(u the 1)111'1 ,)f the union to the Ili (eyes dwelt fondly over those three111.(11(1),'5 face was, very sad and per - mom l'ort.'lyun i; fend of hot miner i,10 inU'uductiota of additional help neressi last, wards, veer your friend," 01,'11 t)lrxed' and rats it stalling n1) in a quiet: bullet( fated in a growing community has prate They were 11100e0typed, whit site 1)1igllt "So pert told me himself," she sighed. I tical( ,laced the ullius in I►' nti kin11ly have written to ;a}' nnforltmate p p mom eppusit( [.0 \\'bile House Ila; :set y 1 the position (S 111010 110 tea}, Mi'. \'((tons that l 01111 0i the deg in the mautge ut.rsnn; yet his lice did hrithten, nnrl give 1?:11.1() this money without his sign- the Wa•thinglol correspondent.; to groin;, ° manger. they were like precious ointment to has ing the papers?" \V0 don't l;itou why a place in the Kept Out of Work, 11111;rd spirit. Hud rheer0d the i()w re "1 nm afraid not. Tie is your natural 1'resi'lcnl's cdduet should chin;;,: a ".All ,journeymen from (,tent 1r'ri1- ru"l'es, wwil of hs:; (stay nota bittle', „sl;ltrlinn and everything' will have to 1)0' nm, c,,ntin;lcd (lir. .Merrick, "and Yes; 1 will obep her summons," ldehr emerdiiwl t1. his approval, at lanst ltnt.sl nn1u1's tas,ie 1(r in ar.y degree affect his from ether places, 11(011 perfectly quits • said with n sigh, as he folded the tin) fhe twentieth of next N'o\emhrr, nearly appetite. I ► tied, are refused the right 11( wort:, ('wen sheet. enlrfully repla(ed It a Il5 rayl'\' a year." 11 by shouldn't Secretary Colt01y„)t though the employers are perfectly (vili- fied, ,(111(1 then returned it to that sine)' l relish ho, uii::cr sir. Almost cvrrwbudv 111" "les.' tlr\' ,a ,I) sur the > bel T'nr10 Richard mode m() 111011150 + pie? ! g y g tr.'s packet near his heart. "[ will pi to her; that, T would give it 'to lir. \\'at.yne just else docs. Of c.nn's(' th^ brand that one lege of belonging to the 111001), (;yen I will look into her deep, clear eyes and as 5(x111 ns Itis time expired, and 1 must ' ..cls al at quick hind' (0111110 is out IIIc i aster payment of the nauncy ((avec is fair beautiful ItOrtsett face (nuc 1100 more; J will (10 11,' Editha said, nbno5lt in tears. !meth', ,juicy and luscious article that 1(u guarantee of work. 111 met, (lege t ft hand e .,;,tin, each if She had hn)ed that Mr. Fel10e 0011(11 , 1 mother u=1.,l .0 make, ,(111(0(( with 11,1 las been :a increasing prejudice against, it be in a long; farewell. 1 shall brat her find a way to help her out of this trou- ' (sett raisins and sti)mleted with cider allowing British ,lumbers to obtain spent: my name, and then T will go " 1 away from her forever. '1'o stay where 1)1«; ( master 5ompatimes,„ Iuqueezed out of old fashioned apples work, Favorites have first chance, ( should be sure to meet her, even once fhe law is 0 hurl t gathered from the orchard out back of J hen ,!",un there h:hvr hreu o'slrict10n8 - be said, 5}mpnthetizing with her evident the hon.;', it' fhr educatiol o[ aapprcuti(0s, 1','10- 1)1 (('111 in 1011)1(1 lnttoihertotouldlsee lbo noer ir dislrp=s; abut i (\ill make out tIt�pcin lint mince 1dc is mince pie, :t.ml there pleyers, t1( lay knowledge, (tie resist - ! 1.1111 I e of bent. I erg ns }'1111 1105110 111111 perhaps \t is no other pie to take iL's place. Cos- ed to the last extremity this conditions I "But, oh, my darling!" be cried. in a advise and prevail upon your father to i good ; apple 1 s do (that is right on Christmas Day." Lard pie is , r (d and so is at) ele sir, but regarding the gess;cling; of the number r(1iIl of anguish, "if only this terrible"1"141.11. nn da think !l. i.l n(ht Earle neither has the uplifting po\yer and the of apprentices, because in an expanding blight nerd not .1110 come 111)1111 tae- sa ry she y soothing(, gratifying power possessed by country there is always at demand for 11111(1 hove this alone to askYd if I might hitt have won X01(, there would tea1�r(,rly. i1111100 pie when served hot, with a crisp skilled latb0r, (0t onl1' 1lase npprcn- have come a day when I could have gi1'- brown crust, itces been limited in numhrl:5 but boys ^ "t'ertat1nly, df it was Jur, 1'orreSctr'a ' en you such It position as -but, oh! why was his ,11'11 to 11'0 applaud Secretary Co'telyou for ,11)11 hale finlishrd their time', ,11(11 \chose (10 I indulge in such rain den:unlpg5?- wiry., s,.nu, lhl mon` the high quality of hes gastronomic judg slryices buye been p 1')id ly sutisfucl(try it can never be, and Cod alone can help do with ;is he eltose; 'hitt I ala :s.orry 1r 11(011( and rnngI')t111)10 him 111)1111 the 1)u; to their employers,have been reftas0dl 1110 to bear the dread future,,, was net able to add ,t codicil to :1.1 session of a► digestive apparatus tht 1t permission to work because ,1(f failure 1101 nottt'iihstnndiut his despair of 110• It would 11.1\0 ..i\c'd all Oak tion,.(, Lir • eapablc of taking ease 1(t s1( toothsome a I to pass examinations before the journey - ver being anything but an ohjcet of no one could 11'1(1? g,.tiu.a11 that. Do not product without giving its owner dis men. Boys who have sewed some 11010 pity to 1 11 1W01111111 W110 tnhe idolized, :101 ,da.,,ouragr'1, however; we may he ,comfort, (tt the trade in other cities have to those last i•\\o 11101)1118 of his stay were 11:)1',, to pct. -,.11110 161, Dalton t", s0(. gain when they come The 111111' 0)111(05 in the. live ( of sante ' commence all over a" the brighter for the coming of that lit• things as we do, 1'u'n shall hatie the! • obliged. for the 5111:0 ' to '.l'oonlu," tlr, white -winged messenger which Etitha Papers by the (windy-fiflgt„ nun when they me c g had sent 111111 1111(1 Whsolt da y an night "1 have been ein!:!ng," liaifhet r.�ai;l, j of other members of the family afraid Men to Take the Places, musingly, 118.1, "(belt if you could have i1'br of nightmare, to r. .11tan from eutt,iug I City contractors do not seen( to view lay Whose his 110,111, nunee pie, but the knowledge (hat there, will teed( 11111'111 the probability of u "flaile will be free the twenty •thit•(1, fore, and 'lye could gut, papa to segs it, ;are others who appreciate it 11.1111 who -Christmas comes two days later. I it 101',.1 save some 1(a )Icus,lut footings. : 1 I e.d•ike among the builders' laborers or 3 ' 1 caul Ont it Wilk temerity and a knif', I , will have the papers conveying Uncle . 1f we should await until Cl11'istine. dray, any of the unskilled trade", They believe Ilichnrd'S bequest made out 01111 all ready :111111 he should infuse before I':cu !r it ought. to g'i\c 1.010 sou)' joy \whether it j that old country immigrants will readily q e does or not, -:Trenton State Gazette, 1 take the places of any strikers, because and he sh0ll have it for a. Christmas might make him very uu'contfor(ahk', o�d- gift, if I can get papa's consent:," "Perhaps that would be the bettor t as u. ](neral rel' the immigrant prefers '1.'.115 ]:1111.0. pl0nnrd a5 the nlonih of 1wnj, auKl .'viii attend 10 it for you as Ci1ILDt100D AIIME(�TS. i living in Toronto to engaging ill farm 1)ecenlber 011me in cold and wintry, and soon as possible," .'1a•. Fenton assented . : (work. :\t present it is known large num- gift, glorying more 1111(1 more 1111plttlelll with EEd1Ilin went 110111e in ratda'r :t doubt- '.I'he m)ther w'ho keeps Jlaby's Own hers of mea present themselves daily at every succeeding day. ful frame of nlitn.1. 'I'nbiets 111 the home has a feeling of the offices of the Builders' Exchange for "Papa has been more kind to me of I "What will 1'aan'bo d'1( if papa will not suciii•ity that her child'; health is , employment. \\lore are turned away lute -T do not believe but that 1 caul consent?" site murmured:, the tears chis- safe, These 'Tablets cure such nil• than receive work, persuade hint to sign the papers. and ing each other du'w•n her cheek,. ' 110 pleat' as (edit., indigestion, eonstiipa- After a 'westing of tire Structural Iron then I will ask Earle to r„it the Christ- will not have airy moues', :end, w'it:11 no tion, diarrhoea and simple fevers, Workers in the Labor Temple lust night Inns goose with tis. I will stake every- one to ,hold out 11 'Irg?lP1tg 11100d, be will They break up (,olds, destroy worms, • it was 0nnuuneed' than a settlement had thing; so lovely 111111 cheerful fol that he will becoue disheartea)ed, make. t0rt.hing painless and gist' the ' been a\'rrived at in regard to the question forget those creamy walls and the long, "A riea1' case of love!" lir. Felton child healthy natural strep. And the of wnges. The union men formerly i'e- longg months he has been so cruelly de- said, thoughtfully, upon Eile11h(t's (Uepa.r. mother has the g•ttn:rantee of at goy- epived 31) cents an hour an asked for 35 tallied there," lure. "It's too had, 'too, for, of course, ernment ,amt's( that the Tablets are ' cents, but a compromise of 321.2 cents Put She realized, even as she mused it 001111 never du for her to marry 111,11. absolutely sof'. Jlr,, Rubrrt Witt- was arrived, 1a i, The atgrc0cu►ut is good and planned i:bu5, plat, she would doubt- \11th t-u� 1i;ma 111)1111 Ms c111'18i1 11 1 sol, 1'ontbcrsu're, Uu1,, says: ". fol n year. loss Miner, trouble regarding these slat- I,oe.r ('Ila\w! 1.01(1 •have 0. 1:11(1 time of at i find 1111)3 5 U\\►1 'Tablet, just the It seems likely that Ole lathers' strike tet•s; and yet she hoped against hope. if Dalton won't give in, for 'people ere 1 medicine n11(1(1 to 1:001) children will b( 5011(,( Within the next few dn.y9. "Papa cannot be so cruel, T shall got mighty shy of jail -(deeds?, be they 110401 511 110011)1y," Sold by all medicine deal- A etmferenc0 has been arranged for, and Mr, Felton to intercede for nu' -it is promising; and hair father, according 11( ! ars 1(r by pail at _?.i centra a box front ; representatives of both parties will probe such a little sum compared with the my Amy of thinking, loves 1)101)11' tau The Dr, Williams' ms' lfedicine Co,, (bock- ' ably elect of 'I'lurrsday. It was ,stated whole, and the mosey would do Emilie so \►ell to give up a pretty sural la,'h-e teal vine, Un(, 1 Inst night that there Would Ise conces• much good; it will help him to hold lel) ghottsduld• i cions on both sides, his head until he gets nicely started in (')'o be ttoutinn0d,1 ' business for himself, I wonder if he is )experiments of Interest. ( The truck drivers held it mass meeting; changed much?" she Went o11, with heigll• ((Washington Post,) 11,151 uigfht, and it was given out 1)3' 0110 tenet color 01111 Ir quickly beating heart, ' of the officials that a committee of the q t~ ; �• ;�' Professor 1 isher, of Tnlo, recently conchld- .> .'.\\,.,..alis ,,a a„ 1 organization was meeting the employers 118 she remembered the strong, 1)1'(1)1(1 ' i :\. ed n scrteq of Costs of t.ho relative strength z,a t, �•i- �+a4: S 1•.a,' g ' wages raised free, with its dark, handsome rw'ea, the a 1 >''�; 1 ,1111 aulur8nce of vegetarhus and persons with 11 rides to having the vat„Y. leader l'et's manly mouth, wwhirh used t,o ►,;ti{:' ( s j(• ``a�, who txutnke of cnrn►\orous 11(.11(>nt along s from $41 to a,i0 a Month. , (,0 ,t a(� .')y ((1111 p111111lCtS of the vegotablo kingdom. t '111( rctlattion5 left ween 1110 11011 :Fele' f''('''`g \' (' ► '':' ''1`'' 15` 1'orl) sevu) sublects w'ero ed erlmoutcd )all'( into 911x11 n luminous senile w1'h(')lel' (c.1 ( .. ti yt1 ' �i + 1 i " ),•�t; R'llb, A111011g the Vrt;etnl'Inlln w'N'o 1llC11 1VI10 phone Company Alla the girl operators he looked tip to her. T wonder if he has n liked my flowers? -how fend of (hent had C•'It(n no exult [01 perlocts varying from ' 10•0 somewhat strained at present. The tour to twenty years. It is stated and (111 ' !els elnim that (lett company, trying he always Was. I will have then(( (WOO' y.`� l tr+t+l 1:, i' !? bo readily bellowed that The horizontal aril ; g , ' 1 y g where about the house on Christmas 1!q lj• a �, � "e test was among the most trying to both (to break: up the 11111011 by means of a, Dn}Y, There dluill be no other guests 1.X 1 \�:.•`:. ?, ' meat caters end vegetarians, T here were I number of petty annoyances. A cot►uutit- eept 11(1', Felton; i will coax paps. to `',j�' ( ' ' ' * •'';i ` " ) j \,glees ether lasts of great severity 11.1111 tat tee of the operators waited upon Judge let 1110 have It all 1)1)' own way for otter, �,ft' ;" L;; i 5 , all of them lho vegetarians1101s oto clod by long , eau be done,Itt' .�\1'inchestd r but nothing ' e . i odds, This may net suffice to put the , r and I will try and nin•l:r, \';nett. forget." ;?� t, \ � �j cat- tlemen 111111 -1110 butcher out of business, but lens( until Mr. W, L. Mackenzie King Thug day by day She thought of him ' �,!�Y it Is 0erinlnty n useful lino of experhnentn- returns from the west. 111111 planned for his comfort 111111 hn) )i:el- '1\,,,S K'I; .N' ( tion and should be prosecuted further, _.;-,� t 11, Rh �st�c' Hess. The days grew longer 111111 lnutzrr i I RI, EVafMA'� E t -40.....4.--... "That looks like a comfortable pair of 1; ;' , , S Pc tl'o , (;o her 115 the time drew nearer, 1111'11( ,+'„,y�"I':'p��,' ,',S: D�., A �u+11Ni 1 One ]�nn5lts editor advocates paying slippers that you have on," remarked 4'ir 1'� T6's ' rgil°''t 1 the members of the Legislature $10 a she became so restless. 11011'onS nn(1 i1)1 ) opao ion qt' : eels' as t Legislature Dxuggins to his friend I3uggins. "IIuh !" patient that her appetite failed, and allhe to ��o 6Y r od l dal' for their services and forbidding; broke in little Willie Buggies, "that de• her interest in other things wvnnc(tl, m��d lons`.,soldlonlr ' them to meet oftener than once in ten pends oe what part of the body they, The ..,,.,t- 1,11(11+'11 Christmas she sought ;w ycara•• aro applied to' CRIPPLED BY SCIM ICA. Made Well and Strong by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills After Doctors Had Failed. 11. \\', .t -hall :is one of the loud- ill;; merchants of n(11110r(1, S. S. :\ tee, hitt'; ago he (wars 11 great ',offer- er fr ,III tilt. 111•)'1 r'xrI•Ied•iating 1 -run Lle, . „(lira, 11'' •ay,. .\t rho tinge I ea. aalflicted I was (swing et Baker Settle plat, The at'Llck was r„ 5'• ("e that 1 hn,l been alt (fere 1'„r ,n111a' ; 1110. 11)' c184l., of 11!y log R'e)•1' :111 drn\wm e1) :1101 1 eoul'I only 111111) alone with the aid of a stick. The pain 1 suffered \(a5 terrible, 1 \vas in misery both day and night. Every ulonaenl 11,11 -ed 1110 suoh pain as only thus:' (vim have been tortured 'with serotic, 0,111 homy. I (('as (grater( by s01•eral ,1„(ter;, but they did not 10'1!, no. n bi1. In fart, 1 almost be- :.'ah11 to feel 1hnt. lay 0u1!dil!un wa.5 110!! it -s, w 111'1! J)1'. \\''nisi!,,' 1'101: 11!11, wort. hru11;01 to my attention, I ',(,t a hull deze) boxes. 1 had used ,('11111 the same quantity before I 11(1!0,1 an\• bem'fit. 13111 1 \vas 0m- dnnrage(1 and got a second half de>::•il hexes alts( before these welt. a!1 1 wc: west see of the trouble had if'nM t.:ol 1 Not only this, hut, 1 108: inlpro4rd in health in every twig, as it will be readily nndet:stuol Elea the leie ,sego of pain 1 had suf- 1'er"11 Irol left et• ha(ily run down, i t'ain't -i0'ak foo 'highly of 111: \I'iI- lauls' fink fills, 1 tau!'t reeonimend theta too strongly In t.1 her suffer- ers." 11!•, 11'illiams' fink !Ills dire sciat,- i,•a si!nplw beca;is" they !nalce the rise., red blood that meths' and t reit ih h, n' the jangled, aching nerves. I !sal it' wlty tine,' dirt seek nerve trouble as neuralgia, St. Vitus dance ,1101 partial paralysis. 'Iintt is O'itw they dug :ill ailments (lite to pew., w,!tl'ry blood, That is why Ihey milk(' weary, despondent, brok- ell•(i(,1w!1 mon :!itt women Bright, ac 0(1.11 r:tl't'gglt. \�a, hl'C yeas'.; ;(go, (utter( live 811(1 ,t rl:ng, glut only the teen- mita( ilhstat'ding the existence of an be. psll'. can do this, and t•I('V have tl'l'c(a,ent ((Inti( had still a consider - the full nlot,, 1)r. Williams'Pink ,11,10 ponied to rt'), the 1111(1,11 porf (decd 1 I+I; t' ! 1 ..,0 1 l )p!I' (411 thn wra)pc'r , a iiightwayea ti's act, and exacted a111 1111- 11„011,1 01(1,• b.ix, F„id by medicine (hue cullet. -:,sin w'ilcm they thought they dealer., ewerywh,'re or by mail at 5(1 11111 the nisi il1(\crs at Weir mercy. ca- I 1 'I„• 8 Las bine., fur 2dl) t ;;Inco that tiuu' they 118(1' by (oulbihit- b\ ad:',rr,sin'� 1)r, 11''illiains' lted.u' tion pi's' '(1 sur ,11(11111„sol adrauces and csnc Co•. Jlroekvlllo, Ont. shop manage - OPEN SHOP POLICY OTHER EMPLOYEES MAY FOLLOW MASTER PLUML'ERS' LEAD. Is Alleged That the Journeymen Plumb- ers Kept Good Hien From Work and Also field Apprentices Back -Many 3Ien Are \Vow Applying for Work in Toronto. 'I u('(,Itto reboil.: It 1,1 freely pl'edietc.. Ilwt the olt'lt shop 1);:ticy, (VLirll it:ts Itl- ready been adopted by a I'ew branches of the '1'or'ont,, Employers' A,s,,Cj0dn0, will *lir up a hornet:, nest in. liber circles outside the journeymen plumber,' titins. 1f the plumbers ro on :dike, and it, 500111, eerl:tiu that they (1111, 11 number 1(C lino, nl' trade twill be 111010 1.r less af- fected, hersewer, it k beliteed that Ila re are Muer employee, in the city ,rile dislike to make any )aur agree - :111.111s \', ith unions :1101 who will eadca- 1 nr to ;11:•0 nbtaliu the open :1101i, 111, ,sail\(, 1i, ,111'll'll'!i, 1"'1't'lal'y of tell' l':tll- pluyel,. .\r.,„I•t 1114111, admitted yesterday a :ftermoon 111.11. there \t'as al gruwiag Irel- in_; among ealplutv•rs in faviir of making ,1 -laud a ili11 1 lie c!o•.;'tl:bop. A IIighwayman's Act, "'1'111 0111, f esitai(l' 111 cultucctiull with, any pltO tb.•l,' tloll)1C 15 11111 1l'h,lydliig \rad;,-, or c1)11d600115 of 44111 h,' remau iced .\lclriel; ((ben a41:e,1 yesti•ruay ler some explanations, "J he Il(t'll, 01' lite gu,:l'!IP„a:+'11 lilimilllil.'i';, 1:1 ;l,,li earning ,n1101ior \\ :Ices 11( ally other iutlu..irial (vers: it' (,',11110;,1 1(l' .,ucil steady ciupiuy- 11(emt, l'la0lic•all4 the 11(01 are (.t'g,lg,'tl all lb" year 1o,uul, and it bat, sere) ove11 the policy to let eliwi,'ait Iwnlliilll'1r h1( it' ,tact: 111111'.,. 1 he clo•.ed'S1101) Idea llal., bt't proem to be a failure, '.nal there Ila., Lt.t'u ample th1tPt (unity fur 1.1114 pi out. Isle lar t '::el lues phu0b- JAS. McMURCHIE BANKER. A GENERAL BANKING BITSINF'S Tit ANSACT 1;[). 11LYrl, ll' ONT. NOTES DISCOUNTED, Sale Nates a specialty. Advances made to farmer() an their own notes. No additionel security required. INTEREST ON DEPOSITS at Current Rates We offer every accommodation con- sistent with safe and conservative banking principles. UNLIMITED PRIVATE FUNDS 'l'o loan on Boal Estate at lowest rates of Interest. REAL ESTATE AGENTS, Persons wishing to sell will do well to place their property on our Hat for sale. ]tents collected, CONVEYANCING Of all kinds promptly attended to. INSURANCE, We represent the lending Fire and Life Assurance cornpaniee, and respect- fully solicit your account, OFFICE ([OURS : 10 A.m. to 3 P.M, Business Cards. A. B. MACi)ONALD. Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Ete. Suo- cessor to G. F. Blair, Office over Stan- dard Bank, Brussels, Solicitor for Metro- politan Bank. 1 1{)UDFOO'T, HAYS & BLAIR, Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Public, Etc, Offices -Those formerly occupied b yy Messrs, Cameron and Holt, Goderloh. W. Proudfoot, K.C.; R. C. Hays, G. F. Blair. G. E. LONG, L.D.S., D.D.S. Dental Surgeon. Graduate of the Loyal College of Dental Surgeons. Au honor graduate of Toronto University. Office over .lames Cutt's store, Pretoria block, Blyth. At Auburn every Monday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. W..1. MILNE, M.D.C.M. Physician and Surgeon. M,D.C.M., Unt- ♦er3ityof Trinity College; M.D., Queen's University; Fellow 01 Trinity 111edtcal College, and member of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario. Cor- oner for the County of Huron. Office, one door north of Commercial hotel, Queen street, Blyth. P'. S. SCOTT BRUSSELS, ONT. Auctioneer for Huron County Terms reasonable. Sales arranged for at the office of Tin: STANDARD, Blyth. Blyth Livery A140 Sale Stables QOQQGVQQ Dr. J. N. Perdue, V.S. PROPRIETOR. GO 00 Q0 First•class Ilorses and Rigs for hire at reasonable rates, Rest of accommodation to Commercial Travellers and others re'luiring rigs. Veterinary office at livery stable. KING AND QUEEN STREETS, BLYTA, $rat: trafford, Was established 2(1 years ago and by Its thorough work and honorable dealings with its patrons has become one of the largest and most widely known oommor• Tial colleges in the province. The de- mand upon us for commercial teachers and office aesistrtnts greatly exceeds the supply. We assist graduates to positions. Students are entering each week. Cata- logue free, ELLIOTT & McLACHLAN, Principals. r $1 upwards (tot. Rl}jttt pitYitbat'i. J. L. KERR, PUBLISHER. IIUSDA Y, MAY 10. 1907 People We Know Air. W. Reid was ut \Vinglinni on Friday. Mr. T. E. McTaggart has returned for a few days. Prof. and Madam O'Brien are at the Queen's I[ot(cl. Mks Aldo Kmigh arrived home from °nit un Friday evennig of Inst week, Mrs. W. Argent, of Clinton, was visiting her sister, Mrs. Andrew, last week, Miss Alice Coad, of Wingam, is the guest of her cousin, Miss Maud Code, in town. Mrs, John S. McKinnon, of Toren• to, is the guest at the home of Dr. and Mrs. W.J. Milne, Dinsley street. Mr, John Rattenbury, of the head office of the Bank of Hamilton, was renewing old friendships in town last Friday. Miss Cassie McMillan was iniBrant• ford last week attending the annual meeting of the W. 1'.:M. S. of the Presbyterian church. James Dodds, formerly of town, has been appointed one of the staff of the furnishings department of Gordon, MacKay & Co's. wholesale, Toronto. Mr. Reg. Guodday has secured a good position with the T. & N. 0. railway and will leave shortly fur North Bay, from utero he will leave and join the company Mr, herb. Smith is with, Isis friends in town will be sorry to see hint go but we expect to see him back whenever it is possible. DIEM. -In East Wawanosh on Tuesday of this week Robt, Howard died at the ago of 62 years. The cause of death was a paralytic stroke. Deceased had a stroke about a year ago. The funeral will take place from his residence, con. 3, on Friday at one p, in. and proceed to Trinity church where service will be held, Interment will be made in the English Church cemetery. Mr. Howard was one of the first citizens of Blyth, and a couple of years re• moved to the farm in East Wawa - nosh, Owing to being crowded a much fuller account of his history will be given next week. THE house of Refuge Committee met at the House of Refuge and found all the departments clean and tidy. Tho resignation of the keeper was considered and the committee decided to advertise at once for keeper and matron, so that applica- tions may be placed before the coun- cil at its June meeting. The In. spector was instructed to employ a mechanic to put in a proper support in the new building where a sett- ling appears, and to purchase cows SO that the supply of milk will be sufficient. The inspector and physi- cian were instructed to employ a dentist, if necessary, to repair the teeth of the women inmates, and that Mrs. lisle and Mrs. Brown, two (aged women, be provided with suit- able rocking chairs. The county so- licitor is instructed to atttend to the transfers of property owned by Thos. Strong, of Honsall, and Ed. Hill, of Exeter, The inspector is instructed to make bill of charges for the maintenance of Mrs, Robin. son and her daughter, charging l'5 per week in each case, together with cost of medical attendance and other expenses in connection with these parties, and present such bill to the proper parties for settlement, lly, Bone, for years a resident of Unclench Tp., applied to be admitted to the house, His credit at the Mol - son's blank 19 $743,33, This will be transferred to the county. Two tenders for bread were placed before the committee and that of' Iiy, 13art- 11ff was accepted. C1101101i NOTES, The Official l3oard of Blyth ,Methodist Church has Invited Rev. u, Anderson back fur another year. * * At the convention of the Presbyterian Women's Missionary Society held in Brantford on the 7th, 8th and 0th. The financial statotnent of the treasurer, showed total receipts of 871,010.22, and a balance in the hank of 82,254.50, as compared with a balance of 81,510.22 in 1006, The Publication Committee 1'e - ported receipts of $4,025, and a balance on hand of $125. The circulation of "Foreign Missionary Tidings" inc'oas• ad from 20,400 to 21,307, s i`4, For the morning service in 5t. An• drew's church, the pastor dealt with "The exaltation of Christ." In the evening he continued his studios in the Parables, treating with the precious - PACE hOCR--T 11 E BLY'I'I STA NDARD--1IAV 161'11, i9o7. Hess of the Word es taught in the parables of the hidden treasure and the pearl of great prim+, The Presbytery of Iluron Sunday School institutes will be hell in Hen- son on May 220th and in Clinton on May 2tst. Tho annual meeting of the W. M. S., of the Blyth Methodist, church, was held on 'Tuesday, May 7th, when the following officers were elected for the ensuing year :-('resident, Iles. (Rev.) Anderson ; 1St vice NTS., Jlt's. ( idle~ 2ntl vice pee..N1 es. Aloins ; Itnc.•`ec., Mls. 11, 11, Meull'es' ; (iol'.•Sec,, \IA's. Shaer ; 'J'rena„ Jlrs. Reese ; Supt. Systematic (living, sues, Kish ; Can• vasser for Out look an'1 Missionary Ile - ports, Mrs, Chellety ; Organist. All's, D. bloody ; Auditors, Alry. Slater and Mrs, 11'. II. McElroy ; Mission ]lnnu President, Mrs, llylcsYoung ; Assist- ants, \1rs. 0idley, A1iss L. Ben tly and Mrs. Beese. A Hair Dressing Nearly every one likes a fine hair dressing. Something to make the hair more manage- able; to keep it from being too rough, or from splitting at the ends. Something, too that will feed the hair at the same time, a regular hair -food. Well-fed hair will bestrong, and will remain where it belo'igs- on the head, not on ;he combI Tho best kind of a testimor►ial- "Sold for over silty years." 21414.67 1,C. dyer Oo., Low.tl, 2duY. Also suituutautuere ot ty SAC.SAPL'11.1h. tf;p ei rs ells RbY PECTORAL. NOTICE The Court of Revision of the Assess- ment Roll for the Municipality of the Village of Blyth will hold the first sitting thereof in Industry I-Iall, Blyth, on Monday, May 2oth, 1907 at the hour of eight o'clock p, m, All persons Interested in oaid oourt are hereby notified to attend, A, ELDER, Clerk, Blyth May 3rd, 1907, Court of' Revision, TOWNSHIP OF HULLETT. Notice is hereby given that the meeting of the Court for the Revision of tho At;- sessment Roll of the Township of Mullett will be held in the Township Halton Mon- day, the 27th day of May, at the hour 0110 o'clock a, in., for the purpose of hearties and settling complaints against the said roll. Persons having business at the court w111 please attend at the said time and place without further notice. J AMES CAMPBELL, Clerk, Mullett, May 9th, 1907. FARM FOR SALE.--'1'he undersigned offer() for sale her splendid farm of UO aeras, ear,t•half lot 40, let can.. East Wawanosh. Good brink house, bank barn 4000, drive shed, pig pea, all on good stone foundation() end cement floor, I acre of orohnrds and small fruits', 15 aol'es Of bush. Farnm Is well watered and in good condition, 1 mile front Blyth and 1 mile from school.--Mns, G. :IeexiNn, Blyth P. O. Dinner Late Again! Children lata for (wheel, husband late for work, everything twisted. All because the eloek went wrong. Don't tinker with it, Ming it'to our clock Hospital. We will diag- nose its case in short order, Adjust it a little here and there, clean it up spite and span, and away 11 goes again endowed wit(► new life and vigor. The oost I Nothing near as much as the confusion caused by an un- certain clock. FRANK METCALF Jewelry and Stationery. ROBERT H. OARNISS BLULVALI4 -• -- ONTARIO Auctioneer fo!t Huron Co. Terms reasonable. !Sales arranged for Rt DIE STANDARD ofltpP, Blyth. Auburn. AnI►aFAS,-1lentenlbei', as announced Inst week, the 'Temperance Lecture in the'Tt'nlperaneo hall on the 2'Oth, Rev. \1l'. Clement is coming fully prepared to discuss tho Temperance question fairly, and the committee see no reason %vhy the attendance should not he tai'iio. Remember there is no admission fee but. n Vol 'vitt iou will he taken to inlet expenses, East Wawanosh. T)RATii or Krnatet:.- After a brief but severe illness there died on Monday evening Nifty (;th at Iter late resi'.lence an old and n►ucli r0;pect('d resident of this township in the person of Mrs, 11'n►. ICernick, sr. 1)u'eased hail been ailing for last few mouths with that dread disease gan- grene, but hot' illness tuns hot'no with resignation n id christian fortitude, Thus ~ellen the end came she passed quietly end peacefully away with a bright (lope of a glorious resurrection, ]Cernick was horn in the County of Armah, Ireland 1830 and clone to this country itt the age of 15 in com- pany with tan older brother. in the fear isra; she was married to ]ler hus- band, \Vin. Kennels, who n pont a year and a half ago pre -deceased her, She leaves n family of six children three boys and three girls to mourn the Toss of a kind and loving mother. '1'he funeral tool: )ilhce on \Vo+luesthty after- noon and was hugely attended. Brussels." Mary Fawcett is on the sick list with the mumps. A load of (1(ldellows service in \Yingha►n. l,i5ro\el Foothill Club plays in Brussels on May lilst. .lathes Steelton and bride left on Tuesday for 'he West. Charlie 131',y ons is off duty at the Siau(toid Bank on account of the mumps, Will, 1[nyeroft, of Hamilton, was home to attend his grandfather's funeral, who died on Sunday mno1'nilig last. Harry llartliff, of Clinton, refereed the football match on Friday evening last.. ]le was accompanied by Clarence Sheppard. Brussels 1»t.ermedintes defeated At- wood in football on Victoria Park on 1''ridny evening by a score of 1-0, Brussels line up was as follows J, Anderson : )teas, W. McDonald, A. Anderson ' 6backs, 0, Quoriu, 11. Brown, W. Stevenson ; forwards, W. Miller. J, 31and vary, A. McLeod, R. Cardiff and 1';. Kerley. The honor of the goal wont to Kerley tubo received the pass from Miller, attended divine Blyth Council. Special meeting \vas held in Industry Hail on Tuesday evening of this weet:. Present the Reeve, Councillors Gerry, Hill and Johnston, It was moved by W. Johnston se- conded by N. 13. Gerry t hat the Chair- man of the street committee proceed with the erection of awooden tank at the corner of Mill and Dinsley streets, size 8 feet high and 8 feet in diameter and that tho Clerk order sufficient 2 inch gas piping from the Imperial Waste and Metal Co., to lay front the Flour Mill to the tank, Carried, Moved hy' W, Johnston seconded by N. B. Gerry that the Clerk be instruct- ed to prepare an agreement and Ity•law according to the proposition submitted by Mr. Elam Livingston and which was snhlnitted to a public meeting on the 12th Inst., and very [ayorably enter- tained snhnlit the 5111110 10 a special meeting of Council to be held on the 20th inst. Curried, A written oiler was received (eons 11'in. C. Brent., 'Toronto, proposing to yell the 1I111 Debentures at 99c on the dollars, A 'el'baloffer by the Reeve from Mr, AU(ll'ew Sloan to pnrchnso the $3000 h111 debentures at par. It was moved by N. II. Gerry, senond- ed by W. .Johnston that the Mill De. hentures ,x,30100 he sold to 31r, Andrew Sloan at par and that the said behent• nreS be printed and completed by the Reeve and Treasurer and delivered over to Dir, Sloan on receipt of $3000. Carrie((. \loved by 11111 seconded by Johnston that the Clerk order 1001 feet 2, inch hose from the Canadian Rubber Co., of Montreal at $1.00 per foot, Carried, Moved by Hill, seconded by Gerry that the Clerk get 25 bills printed ask- ing for 1 lie tenders for 500 cubic yards, more or less, of:gravel to ho delivered in Blyth, tenders to be in by June 5t.h, Cat'i'ied. Moved by hill seconded by Gerry that we do adjourn until Monday even- ing, next the 20th Inst at 8 p, in, Carried, The Tomb. BALT,ANTYNa'.-ln Kincardine, on May Oth, John Ballantyne, aged 70 S'eltl'S, IlowAttn.-1n East Wowanosh, on May 14th, Robert Howard, aged 02 years, The hone of John and Mrs. Danby is sad because of the death of their child. a bright little lassie of thirteen months, which took place on Sunday evening 21st ult. While Mr. and Mrs, Danby were out driving in the afternoon the little ono became ill, and they drove at once to Clinton, and to the doctor's office, but when they arrived there death had already intervened, though the parents did not know it, and it came as a groat shock to them. 11 was their only child and its departure has caused a deep loneliness in their midst, TO ADVERTISERS. All advertisements must be in this office by Monday noon to insure inser- tion in issue of current week. When You Buy to the hest a(ly'ant,lge. Came to the store that gives you best y'alue for they least money, 1-1'tVe you seen our line 01-- White f - White Lawn Waists Some ex1l'tt special value at $1, 1111(1 some beautiful styles for S2, A full line of --- Boys' Clothing always in stock, .See the now Styles in tt';o•)'ince Snits, ILLINERV DEPARTMENT is still on the rush. Shipments of new styles arriving every day. J. AI......,o..... IBTJ'TM The 1►, S SHSE , Beallty and Wear - What a Shoe Combination WOMEN DELIGHT Tor -WEAR MPRESS %SHOE It supplies all that buyers could demand. A shoe designed sifter the latest fashion, hon• estly made and honestly snit(, stands for all that helps to make shoe excellence. The Lntpres Shoes for women sold at the following prices -$2.50, $2.75, $3.25, $3.75. Also Empress Oxfords, turn soles, dainty, Q') 4):, Gents' Furnishings See our spring; stock of .Men's Fancy Shirts, fast colors, goon large titters, till sizes, mil!' $1. GROCERIES IT is OUR A full and complete stock always on hand. SPECIALTY Batterand Eggs wanted. FOR WOMEN GOLDi BLYTH The Cradle. A.Nnra:w,--Jr► Blyth, on April 00th to 31r, and Mrs. WA. Andrew a Son, A9111►lllal',-[n 0ahyille on May 8th to 31r, and ,firs. 1[erhert Ashbury, a daughter, CHEAP READING OUR CLUBBING LIST. The Standard . $[ (10 TheStandarand Weekly Adver- tisor ... , . 1 65The Standard and Weekly 1Vit- Tllei Stsunlar(l and Weekly Globo The Standard and Family Herald told Weekly Star The Standard and Weekly Mail and Empire 'The Standard and Hamilton Semi- weekly 'Tunes The Standard and Weekly Jfi'ee Press The Standard and Toronto Week- ly Sun... The Standard and 1-Iautilton Twice-a•weelt Spectator The Standard and Toronto Daily Star TIetaStandard and'1'oronto Daily News ... The Standard and Partner's Advo- catellllll The Standard and Daily Adver- tiser 1 00 I 05 1 70 1 05 1 80 180 1 80 1 80 2 25 2 25 2 00 2 50 The Standard and Evening I'reo Press 2 7u The Standard and'1'oronto Daily World .,,, .,,, , f3 2i) The Standard and Daily Free Press The Standard and Evening Globe 13 50 The Sttaldard and Evening Bail and Empire 0 50 The Standard and Daily Mail and 1;mpire4 50 The Standard and Daily Globo, „ 4 50 Send all subscriptions direct to If 50 THE STANDARD, BLYTM, ONT, WINGRANI NEM COI1LEG: s1 (dilated with Clinton B. 0, Individual instruction, Write for handsome catalogue. (leo, Spittle!), I'rin, AN;11.1:1f, ME1;'i'ING of the Lotl►oldors ot tate Blyth [1rtiorn Burying Ground will he held on Wednesday everting, May 22ad, in Industry Hall at R p. m. A full attendance is reituested.•_.Ilwrr, SLATER Secretary, Sowing Time Is At Hand doing to sow any Field or Garden Seeds ? These worm days tell you that it's time to begin thinking about it It not to com- mence to work, We're interested, because we oan sup- ply the seeds. They aro the dependable kinds too which Is quite important. The Red, Alstke and Luoerne Clovers and Timothy are the highest grades, and the Mengel, Sugar Beet, Turnip and Car- rot aro all new stock. Also a full line of Plower and Garden Seeds. When you aro ready to sow call around. OASIi FOR ALL KINDS OF PRODUCE JAMES OUTT EI -n rTIX • 1 1\1Av ion, 1907--TI-IE BLYTH STANDARD --PAGE MVE, THE RIGHT HOUSE A RELIAI3I4E STORE WITH WORTHY GOODS ON SALT: AT Mout.aA'rto PRICES FOR CA811 AND FARM PRODUCE, House Furnishings Wei are prepared to meet your demans1s for Cur- tains aril Carpets, All classes of Curtains in a wonderful Variety ---an opportunity for the econo- uricel (louse keeper to obtain some of our best cur- tains at a bargain. Wo have a large variety to choose from in White Spotted and (Figured \Iuslins, also Art \luslins from 5c to 20c a yard. CPL. FtJP' r4 Carpets at special low prices. 1Tuion Carpets, reversible, floral designs, splendid %veering qualities, Cell and see our leader at 50c. Tapestry (Carpets, in bright patterns, htttractive colorings, reliable quality, selling at the lowest possible prices, also Wool Carpets. Liiolenms and Floor Oils we Carry in all widths. For a good dress buy Priestley's Dress Goods, ISMINIMISINSIONIMMOSESSMI Highest prices paid for Farm Produce. n E. BENDER, BLYTH o,4 irAvr VA flit i% %n m:/ viii ► %m► !►t! :d'msa.. ngto, . err; ►, Butter and Eggs Wanted Cash or 'Trade, lc more for pound prints of butter. A full line of Groceries and Woodenware at the cheapest Prices. Salt and A 1 g'lou.r A. TAYLOR - - BLYTH BUTTER & EGGS WAl>TTE3D As we make a specialty of handling produce we are paying the highest cash prices for Butter and Eggs at our store. \When you have any of these for bale get our prices before going elsewhere. Grain okeoks paid atter banking hours at our btore. MoMILLAM & CO. Oinsley Street Blyth TOWN TOPICS. THE weather keeps wtu'tn. THE barefooted boy has appeared again. REAn Prof, O'Brien's advertise- ment on page 1. A SPECIAL meeting of the Council was held on 'Tuesday evening of this week, Fon SALE, -Sante second-hand buggies for sale at my livery stable. J. N. Purdue, V, S. APPItENTICIE girls wanted to learn tailoring ; will pay wages from start to one that is It fair sewer, S. 3, O idley. THE Oddfellows will attend Di- vine service in Trinity church on Sunday evening when Rev, W. II. Bartley will preach a sermon to theta, It is expected that brethren will be here from Goderieh, Wing• hatn, Clinton and Brussels. 'Tho Oddfellows will meet in their lodge. room at six o'clock. THE special meeting called on Monday night to discuss the Living- ston proposition was well attended, though hate in starting, After the Reeve react the proposition and made a few remarks, quite a number spoke both for and against, On motion of Messrs. Sloan and Metcalf a resolu- tion was carried in favor of having a by-law prepared and a vote taken, The proposition may be read In this ing "you learn by experience" will issue on page 1. likely teach thein a lesson. Tat: dandelions are out. SoMIE members of the Oddfellows attended service in IVingham lust Sunday. THERE has been quite a number trying their luck with the fishing line at the trout creeks, OLD newspapers for sale, Good for putting under carpet, 5 cents a bundle at THE STANDARD, WHAT about the Base Ball team ? A meeting should he called at once to reorganize fur the season. MARKET 1i wire.- Wheat 70-70 ; Barley 48-48 ; Oats 36-36 ; Peas 74-75 ; Butter 21-22 ; Eggs 15-16. NEw cement walks have been put in at the residences owned by C, H. Reese and Frank l3oirlton which adds greatly to the appearance of the houses. DISASTROUS FLRE,--Word waS re- ceived here on Monday afternoon that help was needed at Clinton from our citizens, and at um the alarm was sounder[ and the fire er1• ghee and Hose reel was taken to the 0. T. R. station where it was loaded and the tout' train took it to that place, about fifty men accompanying tho engine, Within an hour's time from when the alarm alts given the engine was pumping water at Clin- ton, and nu doubt helped to salve the town from a sel'lons loss. The fire started in the Clinton 'Thresher Co's. works and also destroyed the Rat- tenbttry House, Dr. Evans' house and barn and Twitchell's laundry, besides many houses were destroyed by fire and water. Tho Stratford fire company was also present. The Blyth men did noble work and the "big cry" that the engine would not work should be killed for a few months as the engine was throwing a stream that could not be beat, The firemen returned by the seven train which was held for thorn. Clinton will likely get busy now and have waterworks as the water sup. ply now is not what it should be for the BIM of that town. The old say - Last Words of a Lost Number Whilo thanlcing 1113r many customers for the very hearty support since I have been with you, 1 would request you to give my succes- sor, Mr, George Dona+telt, the same, only more so if possible, As I am giving up possession on 22nd of May would like to see all sinil- tugt Patens in the store to buy all their requirements before that date, and also those who owe a few dollars to maks settlernont for saute, Wishing all the highest prospority, I am yours, N. 13. GMEL1 L ' r - $La YTXI Brussels Monument Works We buy by the carload (Brut from the quarks. Get our prices. We employ no agents. WILSON & HUNTER nttI:SSELs 1••••••111110rISISSIOSMINIIIIIIMINNIIIIMMOMMINI O`TAm0. A MEi:'t'INIu of tete lotholders of the Blyth Union Burying Grounds will be held in industry Hall next Wed. Ilesday evening. 'VuE dust on Main street reminds tis of the day of long age when there were no watering. carts. What is the Council doing; with the cart they own -keeping it to look at ? ON Wednesday evening of this week at six p. n1., Miss Marguerite ell, daughter of Mrs, John 13radnock, of Past 1V:lwanesh, wits halted in marriage to William J. Dobie of the same township. More paarticu• laws will be given next week, THE collie dog owned by L. 1I, (;oodday received a dose of poison last week and passed away to dug- dorn The person who places poison should be careful for they might take a long journey for the summer months, A JiEETINo of the directors of Blyth Pair has been called for Sat- urday night to consider repairs to hall and grounds, and to receive offers to rent grounds, Offers will be received by Secretary Metcalf until seven p. nl. Saturday. Las'r 'Thursday 1)r. W. J. Milne returned from Toronto with a large automobile which he purchased there and is now busily engaged giving free rides to the citizens of town. '('here are not many places the size of this town that can support two machines, the other being owned by I, Brown who has had his for nearly a year, Bt.vTI1 checker players went to WinghaunTuesday night and played four of the that town's team. Fol- lowing is the scum : won draw won Johnston 5 Dulmage 0 MacKenzie 2 1 Graham 2 Bainton 4 1 hill 0 Begley 4 0 Smith 1 Poon. O'BRIEN lIERE, -- Prof. O'Brien, the great Canadian Phreno- logist and Scientiric Palmist, has come to town accompanied by Madam O'Brien, who will be in attendance. They are now at the Queen's hotel, Read what the Berlin News -Record of Feb. 22nd, 1905, says :-WI11 Leave Shortly -There is no doubt a great difference of opinion about. phrenology and palmistry, but the most skeptical would he Inclined to revise their opinions after a visit to Prof. 'Brien, who with his aecomn, plished wife Countess 13envIni O'Brien are guests at too Grand Central Hotel. During the nine weeks of their sojourn in Berlin Mr. O'Brien has read over five hundred persons and as a testimony of his ability it need only be stated that the past two weeks have been his busiest, THE following from the Tuscola County Advertiser ref'er's to a former resident of' this vicinity :-Another "mother in Israel" has been called home, leaving many hearts sad in their own loss but , happy [n the thought that she "fought the good fight and won a crown of righteous- ness," Since recovering fl'otn a se- vere attack or pneumonia a few months ago, Mrs. Joseph England has noticed that the vulvular heart trouble from which she had suffered for several years scented worse, but 8110 was able to attend to 110r house- hold duties and last Friday arose as usual, walked across the yard to get the morning air, prepared breakfast and with her aged husband sat ;(own and ate. While in the act of raising it cup to her lips she let it fall, and at the same time started to full slowly from her chair, Mr. England attempted to reach and catch het', but site slid to the floor and before �J. J. England, her eldest son who lives just across the road could read her side she had passed away without a word, Jane Eng. land was 72 years, I1 months and 20 days old at the time of her death. She was born in Gillen8bury, Ont., and in 1850 was married to Joseph England and moved to Morris, where they lived until 1876 when they came to Michigan and settled in Al - mer where they have since resided, GF:NEItAL servant girl wanted by July 1st ; willing; to go to Bayfield during July 1101 :August. ,lppl y to Mrs. ,Jas, McMurchie. I,As'r Saturday the funeral of the late John Ballantyne, of hinetudiee, who died on'tite 9th, took place from the home of John Brigham to (turn's cemetery in (Millett, Deceased was seventy years old and known to many in this loea1ity. ]''(eller' par- ticulars will be given next week, THE follow fog letter was received yesterday from Clinton ;-'To the Reeve and (2 .u.'cil of Blyth ; Gentle- men, ---On behalf of the citizens of Clinton I tender ,you our most hearty thanks for the help so) promptly given in our hour of 1100(1. O,til' loss, now heavy, would hater been Vastly greater but for the arrival of your brigade. 1 trust that you may never require our help in a like emergency, hut should sun 1,0 unfortunate as to need our us nee at any time, I assure you it will he as promptly and cheerfully given. Please let us know what ezpcu-ie .,'ou incurred in sending help arid it will paid at once. Yottl' respeetfully, II, Wiltse, Mayor. 11o1v THE, DEAF ARE 11,tt)E To 'Tugenhaft, the cele- brated eye and ear specialist, late of New York city, will visit town and will be at Commercial Hotel on Sat- urday, May 25th, at which time he will demonstrate his wonderful Pat- ent Invisible Eau' Drum. Any per- son afflicted with deafness can he made to Vela' as well as ever. This is no idle boast, In the past few years there have been several eat' drum cures and not only have they proven defective and of no use in restoring the hearing, but were also clumsy and could be seen in the ear. The Invisible Ear Drum of 'Tugend- haft's is entirely different in this re- spect ; not only will it restore the hearing, but it is entirely invisible and Cannot be seen when once intro• duced into the ears. Mr. Tugend• haft was once deaf, and after squan- dering a small fortune in different remedies and so-called inventions, finally perfected his new drum within the past few years. In every case where his drum Has been used, it has affected a complete cure, See the celebrated specialist at once and bo convinced. No drugs used or no operation necessary, These drums also stop all ringing noises and neuralgia pains in the head, where the the cause is from deafness, The price of the Eat' Drum is within the Peach of all, and any person afflicted with deafness need not be so any longer, ,111...._11 Op 1.1S ..... 1::iiii..........at.... 110.41661 iii.n : ►� �r •� �r.J ►� r r f1J Do114,1 i•; >t: 11(3 C::1 11_11 1111 . "4. :,i: ''4 ::s1 C t; till /LJ► t::) ::s1 go crAl :::::C Jtti :41; uI Vitt ;::1 .;;: ::: ) :;t: 129 ill i:fi 'P1 4. 4.1 111 tul. 181 01:. 110` 110 POO pi 01' LDi '��t4. 18] •tit. tali Leif tut z�1 121] ti 11 XPi, RI tl`t2: 111: Cut zs:� Successors to 11zcKINNON & CO. r CSs'2tt:;f t1:s�2rst`:�sin;rIs1:is2:4s2Cts2:r,1ts�2tu2tsi'�L�t� t >!�t��s �a /l9vu.■ /./N./►1./ J.r1Ju J. r►J r4 J 41 I ouse Cleaning Necessities Nall Papers have taken a strong hold in our trade. Every clay this spring has seen wall paper Mass out of our doors and yet we have a *dig Stock of Beautiful Wall Papers Left Wall Paper, with ceiling and borders to match, at per single roll, 5c, 6c, 7C, Sc, roc, 1 212C, 1 5C, 1 7C, 1St', 2(C and 25C. Scotch Liioiellms and Floor 011s Our stock of Linoleums and Floor Oilcloths has not been broken ; we had the largest collection of these goods we have yet had and to -day we can show you beautiful designs in floral, block and con- ventional designs, in widths of 1 yard, 2 yard, 3 yard and 4 yard, at 25c, 30c, 37 I -2c, 40C, 50C, 70C, 75C, 90C, $1 00, 1.80, 2.00, 2.25. ,•111,./ 1111110 11011. Carpets of All Kinds Wool and Union Carpets at 25c, 35c, 40c, 45c, 50c, 65c, 75c. Tapestry and Brussels Car- pets at 35c, 40c, 45C, 50C, 55C, 65c, 75C, 85c, $1. Hemp Carpets at 12 1-2c, 15c, 20C. Nottingham Lace Curtains This is our record year on Lace Curtains, our selection is better, our collection is greater, our patterns are numerous, our ' values never better. Prices per pair 25c, 35c, 40c, 45c, 50C, 6oe, 65C, 75c, 85c, 90c, $1.00, 1.25, 1, 35, 1.40, 1.45, 1.50, 1.65, 1.75, 1.90, 2 00, 2.25, 2.50, 2,, 5, 3.00, 3.25, 3.50, 4.00, 4.50, 5.o0, 6,00. ....M1111101111•1111•r CAS1I PAIi) FOR BUTTER AND EGGS. POPLESTONE & CARDINER ter+ ■ N SP PENINC A Free Exhibition of the Most Beautiful House Furnishings WE 1- URNISH YOUR HOME including Carpets, Oriental Rugs, Carpet Squares, Linoleums, Window Shades, Couches, Tables, Chairs, Etc. One third of your life is spent in bed -Bay a now Bedroom Sot, IVe hale them from 512,50 to 550 Iron and Brass Beds are very popular. Here is the place to get, thein. Prices from 58 to 585 each, Elegant Sideboards -Quarter -cut oak, large bevel mirror, Prices Eton 510 to 5135, • A carload of Mattresses just arrived, made in our Berlin factory. These Mattresses are extra -well made. Prices from 53 to 55 each, Extension Tables -Eight styles to choose from, Prices from 55 to 515, Kitchen Cabinets make kitchen work a pleasure, Prices from 55.50 to 514. Special Sale of Parlor Suites 5 Place Suites covered in fancy valoros, worth $25. for 522. 5 Piece Suites covered in Wilton rugs, tvorth 550, for 515, The beauty of these suites cannot be described. 3 Piece Suites -Genuine mahogany, worth t140, for 585. 3 Piece Suites-Imitattion mohogany, silk covering, worth 5111,50, for 828. Come and see them, s nos and Organs We sell only high-grade instruments, such as----- " Dominion," " Bell " and " Heintzman " makes. Every instrument guaranteed 10 years. Terms easy. Store open evenings. J. H. CHELLEW BT�TH No trouble to show goods,. .60 CU1RRENT COMMENT .1; .\ 21-1:not (':Ii!,lllian line' i•• exlo et.'ll t4) !r. e't il-1it.11ion o•'; til 11 I!II!1('. 1)r..110x. 1,1:Uuun Itch think, 110 may 5001 .., able to diac Antr,irl ae break 1-t II' \t 111 .:ling 111 1.:11..1!all i, tear, elli::g l:,rl 1.) .2All ,uii'- an I',nr h\ :lir o,11Iisio!I at that ; ',' l .‘orad he iiitcri These p(1l)Il1e 11.1:0 ('01111.0.1 111,1 gl'e:tt vtm:uneutrs teal► to pearl'. 1', ill prr.La')ly itrgue 111t1t 11'(' sleoult Iv' :1 I1111re pe:11't'iill potpie if close, dy "toted" revolvers :flat bl,wie-1 nive-. The laud !. ea against 1)r. 'Torrey nt %:itr,'al Ila, !cern dnopped on pay• hent of the costs. and the seizure placed on his per<nnal effects and subscriptions !las been 1'111=0,1. The incident teaches soon, nlol'alat it Is not good form t1, in- terrupt a minister or question his views white he has the pulpit and the pulpit sp1 aker is not exempt front the duty of fairnc.., and reasonableness toward his bca.rr.3 and the public. 4 •.► Tito Bursal of Labor at 1Caslingtoli 11:4; issued some statistics relating to the increased 4,1 of living. At \whole- sale price: the increase in cost of 258 cnntroolliti(- in Mott over i1111.1 leas more that: 51.2 per cent.. and compared with 1 8S7 It, ri.s4, amounts to til)?.,; per cent. --considerably more than one-third. The rl tur.olilies include food. clothing, int- I)lotne:lts and utensils and building ma- terial. No doubt a similar coulparisen of prir(5 in this country would show a siu,i:ar result. The -tril,e of the plumbers in 'Toronto is said to be likely to lead to a general sy1!l;):tl ty .strike of the Union: in the buihline trades. The determination of the unions not to allow teen avithout union cards to obtain employment if they can prevent it vias 11131110 evident by 1111. secretary of the building trades' feder.::ed countil last night. if the union: adhere to that idea, and the em- ployers insist on Healing with nun indi• yids:Illy w'it:tont regard to the union 1nen11)ersbip, but solely on their merits, the chances for a wastofui and foolish labor war are bright. Tho danger of recognition of the "un- written law," of which we have heard so notch since Thaw's cowardly crime. 1111.s received an excellent illustration in the case of the deliberate murder by a Vit.. ginia ,judge of a young 7111111 11'10:111 he sut4per•ted of wronging his dar,hter. The father sought him out at his work 11111 shot hila down without giving hint :t chance to deny or explain. Now it tran- spires that the victim of sun(11111ay ven- geance was innocent of the offence int - pitted to him. \Neat must be rho re morse of the murderer? This "unwritten law" is nudely another way of express- ing p.,sort to barbarism isiu and unrestrained. private reogesaloe. The rope i13 the rent• edy for the "unwritten laves" obsession. In ',\'i=cot:-ill the other day, We are told, tint legislature resorted to the "\la'r ' Ann" :: ' tont of voting to break n deal!k ek on an appointmotlt. A 1; itd n7:u1y May 1;0 p;:zzled to know what meant by the `':'.(nry Ann" system of voliurr. 11 provides that 0.10'1 1Meu11)cr of the legislature shall vote his first and his rnecl:nd choice at the sane time. The second -choice rotes are to he added to the first -choice Vote!; in case the fir,;t choice dot's not result in a nomination. It is intended to take into considorn• tion the average of popularity', The sae• ce.s.sful candidate under the syistetu may possibly not have the greatest number of votes as first choice, but he must lie on the average higher in favor than any of his opponent,,. 11 15 a useful luethe.t of breaking caucus deltdlocks. 000 Si:' 5.11111;1111 'lrelV'I,l', Lord ,'.131\'1)7' (If Loudon, m:ole a remarkable confession when he said that since he Lccaene Lord !Elver and censed attending to Itis husi• nest: 't ha'1 become more prosperous. Another remarkable uttl:ranee of his i; that he ha', te,"en a ltunnlred and fifty public dinners in six months and has found Lem "ta.jot'aitie healthy, func- tions." Ile explains this by saying Haat he eschews heavy dishes and confiats littrself to vegetables 11.111"11 the former are brought an, and that he speaks ex- temporaneously. lie says: "I do not begin to prepare my speech until I stn o11 Illy legs. t:ktt4t3 melt their diges- tion and deny themselves all the legiti- mate pleasure which should be derived from a gond diluter because they are thinking over jokes aid elaborating cud - grams." The Lord illn;yor scents to 'be a bit of it philosopher, and atfter-dinner speakers aright do worse than follow his example at public functions. tiMr.�.r•M........iNamm.nnumnin�.,..w..-w.-r. AIi EXTINCT TRADE. The Dealer Says There's No Longer a Demand for His Leeches. The leeches, lilac hairletiS black cater- pillar, clung to slim reeds that protrud- ed above the water in the aquanaut. 'Trey were torpid, as though hypno• tizcrl, but when the !dealer put ono on his finger it fell to work as illNily 415 a Mul'ata•ia mosquito. It could be seen steeping and flushing. "That'll do, you little rascal," and the dealer removed the 14,0014 hurriedly, then sighed. "Mine is int extinct trade," he sighed, "like that of the armorer or the sundial maker, and I cu.u't make a living out of it any more. But in the past—why, great Scott, in the last lee('hes were so much used by doctors thick a doctor used to be called a leech. "1 used to sell to one hospital in this town 50,000 leeches a year. I had on ray books 200 doctors, each of whom I sup- plied regularly every nmorning with a dozen leeches, They carried them about in lilt e 1,r' eases, as they now carry bypcdertnic syringes. "My father had a leech farm for some years. He raised the Hungarian speckl- ed leech—that's the best—in a New Jer- sey poled out Matitwan way. Ile did fair. Ile got an annual crop of 25,000, "Leeches are no longer used because bleeding is no longer believed in. \'ou couldn't boost bleeding a bit, eould )'ou, in the paper? I might make it worth your while."—Philadelphia, Bullet.iu, This cold -water starch gets ironing - day over quicker, with less wear on the ironer's muscles and far less on the starched pieces. Gives a beautiful gloss. Needn't be boiled.. yet cannot stick. It's a atarchyou'll like. Try It ^e: Caring for the Fishing Rod. All rods should have the greatest care be they of solid wood split bamboo, or steel. Wet are not all inclined to send them to the rod maker every season for examination and repair; we would rather do that ourselves, at odd times. Scrape the rouph pieces carefully with the sharp edge of a piece' of broken glass, then revarnish with good coach or piano varnish laid thinly on with tt cancel -hair brush. Examine carefully, that no crack or opening is seen in the bamboo and that the silk is not frayed or untied. If the latter, some fine rel silk twist carefully wound will replace the frayed parts. If the thin part of the tip shows weakness, extra ties can be wound over it, and if the guides are loose, they should be retied; •also the fe'rruleh, if only slightly loose, should be taken out, reset and reglued—then true casting is mad:, 111(41'0 sere. Per- sonally, 1 think the plated or silver mountings are a !Mistake. i do not keep mine polished bright, for the reason that the flash in the act of casting scares both trout 1111(1 bass, especially on bright, sunny day's and low water. Tho time is near, 1 hope, wheat makers will produce a rod with mountings of a som- ber color.—From "On the Care of Tackle" by Louis Rhead in :The Outing Magazine for April. Minard's Liniment Lumberman's Friend, What Bread is Made Of. The schoolmistress had been attempt- ing in vain by meants of a lengthy lecture to mike her scholars grasp the names of the various ingredients that go toward the slaking of a loaf of bread. At length she sent ane of the children to the village baker to fetch a loaf, and on its arrival she held it up and began once mote to describe itis manufacture, Then, after half an hour's earnest talk, she ventured to question them on the subject. "Charley," she said to the boy nearest her, "tell inc what bread is made of," The boy instantly obliged, "Please, miffs," 110 answered eagerly, "holes and crumbs!" The "Unwritten Law." (Chicago Chronicle.) They are a little more careful about enfoicing the "unwritten law" in Geor- gia than in Virginia. Judge Loving in Virginia killed a man for an alleged wrong to his daughter and then discover• ed that no wrong had been done his daughter. Perhaps that 1t'n9 the reason that 1.. 1). Strong, of Macon, Ga., who accused a man named Smith of wronging his sister, considerately//1111041 until the Grand Jury had found a true bill against Smith, and then emptied five barrels of a revolver into him, As a reward for his nelf-rontrol the coroner's jury took just five 11111111tes to discharge him. Even if there is to be an "unwrite11 law" there is 110 lige in enforcing it too rashly. Ask for Minard's and take no other. 6.•' "i fear Il•1a will rzo linrd with me," said tie—f!:• 1; rrdl into the, boiling •1'ri.t a t ..1MM..MIMBIN•.—..m.,,--.fa, ELITE IMO DRESSMAIN13 GCHOOL Teaches Dross Cut- ting and Making In all Its branches by mail IS lessons). Tho test system ever in- troduced In Canada. Cost of full rourso 1s now only $15, Includ- ing ono of tho most perfect fitting systems In she given free. Adopt this metll•)1 and increase your In- c o m o. Satisfactory bank references given as to your safety In remitting money to us, I`or full porticuiars write to -day; ELITE DRESSMAKING SCHOOL a 24Iss Valens, lost rector P. 0. BOX 91 IDV6iA®AXIS, OGilT. AllowassaamissimmenimeW Nonsense About Dead Oysters, The value of n watch -dog is not plea- sured by the frequency of his bark. Whatever may be the service which Dr. Wiley, chief chemist of the Department of Agriculture, has rendered the cause of pure food he docs .actual damage by nuking such unjustifiable statements as LONGEST TELEGRAPH CIRCUIT., Ilow the Line Front London to Teheran is Worked. Probably the longest telegraph circuit in the world has been in operation tor over 14 year on to lines of the 1ndu- Europehan 'Telegraph Company, between !.eviler, and Teheran. Persia's capital. This circuit is 1,1)00 miles in length, and in its course it t.raterscts the North Sea for 200 utiles and passes through Bel- gium, Germany, Rus)sia►, Turkey in Asia system of transmission rind reception is employed 011 the circuit. Ily this system lnwsages 11re transmitted at to rate of from SO to '100 warts a minute, ac- cording In the nature of the cireult, as against. 25 to 35 words by manual:dome t.r;insnlissinn. On the London -Teheran circuit there are ten automatic repenting stations, namely, at Lowestoft, Emden, Berlin, \Vnraaw, ltortno, Odessa, liertch, Stik- ine)) Kaleh, Tiflis and 'I'nuris, 'rho bus- iness for 11 nil from \innehcrster and Liver - poll is also handled direct, with Teheran. It will be understood that automatic repeaters virtually mice the place of operators at the repeating stations. Itt the case of the circuit tinder eonsidern• tem there are repeating instruments and battorics at each of the ten repeating stations, As the line is divided into ele- From St. Martin's -le -(;rand. that "a dead oyster is n no-good oyster," and that oysters should be shipped only in the shells, and he is properly taken to task by the Bridgeport (Conn.) Stand- Minard's Liniment Co., Limited: oral. 'I'llat paper declares that for more than fifty yrars opened oysters have been sold in hulk with no signs of trou- ble, dissatisfaction, or disease of any sort. "It 14119 doubtful," the Standaard says, "whether the statement Wits in- tended as a piece of pleasantry, or as the few and precious words that wisdom utters, till the doctor was pushed from itis perch incontinently and took a back track without ceremony. He now has no objection to the trnusportation of opened oysters in bulk if the conditions aro sanitary, and only wants the law en- forced against the use of poison pre- servatives a14(1 the generation of pt0- maines in oysters, as if those things were the particular and express purpose for which the oyster business is carried on.—Leslie's Weekly. 4•m Worcester Up -to -Date, Son—"Does the dictionary include ev- ery word?" Father—"Oh no, my boy. New words are being brought. into me every day." Son ---"Is that so? Well, then, what's the Inst. introduced?" Dear Sirs, ---Your MI AIZD'S LINI- MENT is our remedy for sore throat, eol(Tr--, and nil ordinary 0ilments. 1t never fails to relieve and euro promptly. CHARLES 1V1tOOTEN, Port Mu1graye. Bull Fights in Texas. (Chicago Chronicle). It is with unfeigned pleasure that Tho Chronicle reports the result of a. bull- fight in El Paso, Tex. The matador W1_9 dreadfully mangled and fatally injured and all the picadors were more or less injured, 1t is pleasant to nee tdto bulla themselves discouraging this brutal sport but if the bulls do not put a stop to it the legislature of Texts ought to lose no time in punishing bull fights as sev- erely as holdups or any other crime whatever. 4.•• Father—"Ask your mother. She al- I Minard's Liniment used by Physicians. ways has the last word." --Eire, A Man. Who Shaves himself,' needs no talcum — no witchhazel-no "cream" -if he uses "Royal Crown" Witch=liazel Toilet Soap The witchhazel in the soap allays all irritation — takes away the smarting and burning—heals the cuts—leaves the akin soft and smooth. Not a shaving soap—but cooling and delightful after shaving. 3 cakes for 250. At Druggists and Dealers. 4 Remarkable Self -Control, (Tit -Bits.) "There's one thing I will say," remark - eel Mr. Millions, "and that is that my daughter Arabella has a fine disposi- tion," "Indeed 7" "Yes, sir. The way she can listen for hours to her oven playing on the violin shows remarkable self-control." When a Horse Gets Hurt ueE Fellows' Leeming's Essence But don't wait until an animal is injured, GET IT NOW—and you have the remedy that CURES all lameness in horses. If your dealer docs not handle it, send 50c, to National Drug & Chemical Co., Limited, MnNTr1EAL 13 1 O.0 Antf-Friction Roller Axles. To the Editor: Referring to an article published in your last issue, tinder the head "Will Anti -Friction Axles ever come into gen- eral use?" have thought it would be in- teresting to your readers to know that an anti -friction roller axle, claiming 1311 the features spoken of as being neces- sary in the paid article, will be on the market this year. They are being man- ufactured in Hamilton, but as the com- pany 19 also 111111111 factoring bearings for other purposes, they will only have three or four thousand sets for delivery this year. I uider.sanding the trade has been Waiting fur this axle for some time, 111101 the d'ifterent manufacturers have arrang- ed to divide up this year's output, so that each (scaler luny have at least one job equipped with what they believe wild he the future axle. It is said to be very simple in cos•:stnietion, that the rollers are conical in shape, and that the ob,jec- tional cage i5 eliminated. The low price is also 0110 of the strongest features, as well its the fact that oiling is seldom necessary, and even then the wheels do not have to come off. Thanking you for your valuable space, I tun, yours truly, A Dealer, o•* Did Not Fit the Case, "You shouldn't have hit that man who called you n liar." "Shouldn't, hey?" "No, you should have demanded the proof, and if 11e could not produce it ho would have been branded as the faisifior. "That's all right ethically, but I know 11e had tho proot." o•• asro Mango, Prairie Scratches and every form of oonteglous Itch on human or animals cured in 30 minutes by wolford's Sanitary Lotion It never fails, Sold by druggists. �•e, The Editor Refutes a Slander, (Ilometown, Pa., Banner.) The editor of the Bander was not knocked down on the street on Thurs- day last by henry Knowlton, the gro- cer, as has been asserted by an envious clique, 11'e sent our editorial can to the grocery to be filled and Mr. Kt/owltm sent back a very impudent message. We called on hint and told him what We thought of a mall Who was afraid to trust a country editor for 14 Dents and then walked off. No assault of any kind took place. -4•0 Wanted an Understanding. (Philadelphia Ledger). "You have alienated my wife's affec- tions," said the visitor, and there was a glint in his eye. . "And," said the man addressed, with a covert sneer, "you propose to seek fin- ancial salve?" "Salve nothing," replied the visitor, "i came merely to offer sympathy and to remark that if lay Home is brolten up the bull pup is my personal property. and don't you forget it," e.0 Gave Plenty of Notice. ((Baltimore American.) "Did your cook give you any notice that ate was going to leave?" "0h, yes; she broke two windows, one of my most costly ornaments, throe dinner nlhtee.. o whole poreclnin tea service and the vledge." Before deciding where to locate in the \Vest, lot us tell you about these lands. The best wheat fields —the richest grazing land—aro in this Province. 1Vrito its for full information about crops, climate and special railroad rates, etc. Local rcprceentative wanted in each county, TELEER & OSGOOD Eastern Selling Agents 200 CORISTINE BUILDING MONTREAL Sad Waste of Eyesight, (Iloston Herald.) The secretary of the Now York As9o- ciation for the Blind reports that there are 65,000 blind people in. the United States, and then makes the astonishing statement that "two-fifths of the blind in our country need not have been blind." This is worth verifying. If that can be done an educational eiunpaign should be begun the country over to put an end to such needless waste and suf- fering. Of course, some cases of blindness are due to accident and to other causes that could not be avoided.But every conceivable preventive which the educa- tion of parents as well n,S of children can provide should be the subject of legislative action. o•� ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT Removes all hard, soft or calloused lumps and blemishes from horses, blood spavin, curbs, splints, ringbone, sweeney, stifles, sprains, sore and swollen throat, coughs, etc. Save $50 by use of one bottle, War- ranted the most wonderful Blemish Cure ever known. Sold by druggists, '4.• Valuable Time Wasted. (Cardiff Tirnes.) "Toinmy," saki mamma (who had noticed revere bruises h1 his face), "you've been fighting again." "Yes, mamma." "And didn't you promise me that when you wanted to hit anyone you would always stand still and count a hundred?" "So I did, mamma, and this is what Jacky Jones did while I was counting." -4.* Crime costs the City of New York 05,552,134 per annum. ISSUE NO. 20, 1.907. Wolves in a Game Preserve. After having spent $1,400 to rid the company's game preserve on Grand is. 1111111 of 11 wolf vyhich Wad playing 11411'00 With the deer, the Cleveland Cliffs iron (bm1)4111y has (discovered evidence that three other helves have evaded the vigi- lance of the gamekeepers and aro work- ing havoc among the game on the is- land. The island is stocked with 1110080, cavi• buo, elk and other special of the deer family native to :\111011ca, and with do- mestic an(1 foreign game birds, and it i6 efared that there will be a heavy slaughter before the wolves can be got rid of. An organized hunt for the marauders is now in progress, but a big swamp in the middle of the island nmke8 wolf• hunting difficult. It took thirty men thirty days last winter to round up and kill the first wolf that entered the pre - servo ,and during the tithe it was being chased the wolf slaughtered n score of deer. After this wolf finally had been killed the company stationed' gamekeep- ers about the island' in 1111 endeavor to keep away the wolves, which cross from the mainland on the lea—Marquette cor• respondent of St. Paul Pioneer Press. Everyone Run Down depressed --with headaches, indigelaioa, conitipa• lion, boils, tumours, scrofula or other results of impure blood—can find speedy relief in Mira Blood Tonic. It draws out the poison from the blood and tones up Stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels. Pure, safe, palatable—contains the medicinal virtues of curative herbs which aft in a natural manner on the system. Price, $ I a -bottle -6 for $5. At drug-stores—or from The Chernies Co. of Canada, Limited, Hamikon--Toronto. tie sure to pi Me genuine—ark for O •Yt'LQUai(':�"'-Lttkb.) 4 •).. TRADE MARK REGISTERED. Machinery in Abyssinia. So far owing to the difficulties of transport, but little machinery has found its way into Abyeeinia . Early lust year two traction engines were suc- cessfully brought into the capital by the Emperor's orders, for tho purpose of road -malting and two more have reach- ed Adis Ababa during the present month. The head of an important Brit- ish firm mune personally to interview the Emperor on the subject, with the result that the nlnshines were adapted to the country and the best to be obtainer!. 4.• Keep Minard's Liniment in the house. O a• Realism on the Stage. 'Trio most realistic Play I have ever poen." "what is there so realistic about it?" "There aro four nets and they aro sup- posed to occur on four successive days." "Well?" "Well, did you not notice that they have a different servant oach sot?" • . . q+T: ••T ..'i"a;4"' A lame horse is a dead loss. It costs as much to keep a lame horse, . as it docs a horse in harness — and the cripple brings nothing in. You can't afford to support idle stock. That's why you cnu't afford to be without to �.end�ll's Spavin Cure It takes away the vain and stiffness from Sprains and Bruises—draws the soreness out of Strained Muscles and Tendons—CURES Spavins, Soft Bunches and Swellings. Used for two generations by two nations. l3 KATIRINE STATION, ONT., Dec. 16,'04. " I have use Kendall's Spavin Cure for a none Spavin of 4 years standing, which has entirely cured the lameness and greatly reduced the swelling. Another bottle of the Spavin Cure, I am sure, will complete the cure." HOWARD AROCK. x1.00 a bottle or 0 for t)6. Sold by dealers everywhere, Write for free copy of our famous book—" Treatise On The Horse." You will find a need for it every day, Dn. B. J. KENDALL CO., 1Noeauno FALLS, VERMONT, U.S.A. 29 41:•111'.. %Ilg".�tl !it.ku" -4 .'P l,Y'i r�%,,. , /:. , )'W1 YYte..� V .i.'lJ0tll rtl'::'i: .i T''.2 0)?: • .1111111earma. ASK YOUR DEALER FOR Duchess and Priscilla Fine Hosiery For Ladies Rock Rib and Hercules School Hose Strong u Gibraltar Limit of Strength Princess Egypte Ude For Children's Fine Dress Little Darling and Little Pet Fc r Infants Lambs' Wool and S1& Tips All Wool P'Ine Hosiery Nlanufaotured for tho Wholesale Trade by.the CHIPMAN-HOLTON KNITTING CO., LIMITED, HAMILTON, ONTARIO, IrOmeve outimper In three and six-foot rolls, is unexcelled for all building ani lining pur- poses, inside walls of summer houses, refrigerator planta, eta GET OUR PRICES. The E. B. EDDY CO. Limited HULL - CANADA Agencies In all principal cities, 6.66 ..O'.naaer,eTc.c Sunday School. :;011 'I.,—JUNE 9, 1907. The 1 s;iver,—Exed, 12: 21-30. l,.,lunleutary.- 1, "1110 ('ai,a'.\or 111,11 (1u.(.(1 (%s. ILI''2.3). "t Poo retiring !nun I'll arauh's plr.•,'r.ne, 1,4•:,,,, I..ut nu (1,010)101ly '%llul!rl\1''u to the hind of (.11,11.(, to 111,11;1' a(1.1ll;enl(nt Ior the (lepa;'tlue til 1,1 ptx.ple, which he nu\\' a,at\ 144 h' ,'I' at ilaud, '1';:rr had prti• !)ably', linen gathered thither by degrees and ine.,411.,,1014:,ly, p(rh:lp.,, terming tillei,i t_Il.h into an immense caravan, ready to 111o'.l.' at :111 lean's \\.11lung. :\ new (Tien was about to begin lit tele hiatury of I,r:it'I, In commemoration of their depaa'tme, the feast of the Passover \vas instituted, 21. Jlo,sea enllcd.. , . the elders—Tho Lord 111141 given :11o," and .\:u'un 11111 ilt4tructiun5 (v.;. 1.911), and now they premed to hairnet the people ( r, 3) though the elders, A Iamb It \V: , 10 he without blemish (v. i)), that is, e'ilire, whole, sound, having neither d'. feet nor deformity. 'I'Ilis was a type 4)f Chri„t. See Ifeh, 7. 20; 1 Pet, 1, 11), 'l'he Saviour—the Land) of (10(1 \vas •(1) per- fcet, (2) innocent., and (:i) slain as a siterific'e for other:,. (•I) "Ile was olfere(1 tit the season and 111 the very horn' of the pa ehal sacrifice,” ('i) Not n bone was broken. (0) ile is 111)11. to take away our sins (John L 211)..1eeordueg to your families- If there wore not enough per- sons in one fancily to eat a whole Iamb, 1,11011 two families were to join together. The rahhims tiny that there should he rat, least ten pencil; to one paschal lands and not, more than t•Wenty. "'There may be a want of persons to feet( upon the 1imb, thou!h thele con be no 18(k of foal for Mem to feel upon. Every 1111111 `ac- cording to his (.nting' may feast to the full upon ('hrist." ---Spurgeon, bill the pa,>5o•et'—The land) Wna to be taken tip on the 10111.11 lay of :1bih, or Nisei], and kept up on the tenth day of .\bill, or Nisnn :toll kept until the fourteenth and killed in the evening. "The rabbi's mark foto' things that wore required it► the first I'as;oto1' that, were ester requi1''d afterwards: 1. 'The eating 01 1114. lamb in their house; di,pen<ed through Goshen. '1'114. laking the lamb on the tenth day. 3. '1'Ite stri;:iug of its blood on the doer•posts and lintels of their houses. '1. '!'heir eating it in haste," ', Hyssop - .1 i.o;b with an Itrotlnttie odor. Y. sometimes grew on Walls. The lintel The upper door post"' (W. 7). 1Vith the blood—The life is in the blood. aids typifies the blood of Christ which %va•. ',het ler the Sins of the world. None , 'ti tint This regalntion was peculiar to Co. first celcbrntiuu and i111endei, 11': `•o�rl.' I11h1!:, to 1111'\•ellt 1(007' sllspieiull 11 .0'111112 to the:u of being agents in the iniganding destruction of the Egyptians. Thar.. i' an illusion to it in Isa. 20, 20, "I. ...I., F. & 11. During the night the I:I,t,h \4n; to be roatsled rued ente►t t\ith ltr:l'aren+'d Io'1.111 lull bitter herbs (vs. s•1 91. 23. :>.'e1h the blood --The blood e:1; :t sign 01' token (v. 13). It was a hit;;( of Gods mercy, love, prutecti(tt and deliverance; it was also at sign of the obedience and faith of the Israelites. 'The Lord will pass over—It was tallied "tile Lord's peaso\•0r" (Ws. 11, 27), 1)e - cam -,r the destroying angel passed over the dtr'Iling of the Israelites, while de- r11'n;l::g till! Egyptians. 'The lle.stl'oyer, whether angel or pestilence, could not pass the 11110 drawn ill blood. Each sanc- tuary home in Israel was thus made It symbol of the fold whereof Christ ii the door, and only behind His WWnnds can sinful man be safe from the dest'oyer,", 1\ 11.11, (.'uiu. 1 I, The Passover to be kept :1') :t mem- orial (vs. 21-27), 2•I, Shall oh;erre— The en1I::!utedal character of this feast as at perpet(1,)1 reminder of the supernatural ((1011(1 of the nation, and es It mattes of education to all the generations of the people, is hart' minutely emphasized and enforced.—'1.'erry, :111 ordinance...for eve'—No human authority was to Miter or set aside this institution, but i11 order to ken)) iti remembrance hod's mercy in bringing them out of Egypt land Ilis judgments on their oppresura, it was to be observed annually and celebrated with solemn religious joy 1(v long a.; they 1'01111)111e11 It distinct people, 25, 'I'lle Ilitd--'rile land of (.'nn:u!n, Its lie hath promised—'1'o :lbrahunl, Issnate find Jacob, ICe'p this service•—IL Was to their "national birthday anniversary," and needed It special commemoration. 11• Wats first oo(11Huuo1•ated by (laking the date to be the beginning of tlr'it 1'('ns (t. 2), it wars 1.110ir Nt'w \'eu''.3 'J:Ite work of redemption, tie: ap- point(ent of the feast, the change in the calendar, were all divine. '.('Ile souse() et al! ens Gud,"--1''Ioubot. 'T11i9 au111i- t0rs;11 slay (1) "kept before their militia the grant truths which the events cum- lllel1)nl'((1e1" and (2) "ever 1•elllitlded i hem of the privilege and duty of be• ginning 1)Ile W their lit''s, Of Making 11 Hell' era, a new epoch." 20. 1Vi(h your children, etc, --The chil- dren should be thoroughly instructed in rilylue things, .Every home ought, to have a family religion. 1Vhnt, wenn yo ----They were to tell of God's wonderful deliverances to their children and their '11)Idrert's children, and the mutual Passover festival would be. It constant reminder of this duty and of f;od'ss mercy, It would lend them to love, trust; and worship (lod, IL continued till Christ our Passover was slain for us, and it still perpeLlutted iti the Lord's supper, the Christian's memorial of the 27, Bowed tho head—They recognized the words of \loses as from God and reverently worshipped the one who had promised Lo deliver thein. IIs, The firstbor11 slain (vs, 28.30). 28. )loses g rdirections, lord and ten careful i c now the Israelites aro equally careful in carrying them out, 29. At midnight— Clod's judgments 'orale upon sinners when they least ex- pect it, and in their moments of fancied nei unity, The (Inrlcness cannot hide front (god; we know not wlntt will be in the tlpproltching night. 'J1he wleked may ttwako to find that tate stern messenger '+ir r-•,1'11'141,".,as`' (SG:ii� ;T'enataSS. , ir.: r't'1 ,V.t.:•rsis4'1`' I'. A Pointer in Paint No matttcr what you are going to paint—the house, porch, blinds, fence, interior woodwork, barn—you will find the right paint to do the painting right, in RAMSAY'S PAINTS. Ask your dealer for Ramsay's Paints—or write us for Post Card Series "C," atliowing how some houses are painted. A. RAMSAY & SON CO., Paint Makers, MONTREAL, Established 13(2. 40 T H E RIGHT PAI NT TO PAINT RIGHT. of eternal ,justice has seized upon thele, the year to yon" (v. 2). 'Phis was Is- -Dons ('ones The Lord snIot'--in this rael's birthday. The year of bondage last, ',login. (nod is represented as de• Wa,s ended. The year of redemption n•as at''ndina in person to punish the I:gyp- j begun, 'J'lu! Jewish age begat with the (inns. 'I'la' firsthoru-- 11, has been sag- exodus and continued more than sixteen gested that this might not in every ease I hundred years. 'Tell at the end of the hare rneant the Oldest chili! in the faln• lige (heist appeared to pat away sin by ily', as that ehihl might now hate been i the sacrifice of hiluself ((lel), 9:211), 111111 111.1111 or absent.; but, iu:t;luuch as there time took another beginning,. I'aery not 8 house where ttasse_ was not 1)440(1, (Ieod, note, contract mid letter 111' (lead (12.:314), the word in 80)11,! Will 4.11 1n•d1:1y, IIs (111'1i1 111 infidel, Jett 1'154.; 11111;1 1181'0 Illy'lilt. rho ''mnost entity- or r:tlinnali,t bears the date A,1), 1907, ett," or the "best beloved," In this sense the 101'111 is frequently used, 30, (li'e:tt t'r'y --The Egyptians were ex• ('es.;ire 111 their manifestations of grief. "'I'Iu'y lVhippe:I, heat and tore then(- „Ive';, stet when as 10181ive died they ran into the !street, and howled in the 1(O, Inn ivien1)Ie :old fr:tntie (tanner." Hutt. dreadful !mist have been the 54e110 when there w:15 one dead in (Very hoose. No 5Hob !\;til ot1.1' 111'(1 up before or 5inee, 1'11.\("l'I('A14 .11'PLICATIONS, I, '1'111. provided lamb. "The I.dyrd sp,tk4'....t,(ke...,etery mall a lamb" 11',, 1, 3). Mede:nptinn i') Go'l's thunght, Jesus i, the Lamb of God (John 1:29), "Cod so loved....) lint he gave" (John :1: Ili). Ahr,thalt, the great type of the be,ttenly Panther, journeying to the place whore ('I:tist should aiterttard be camel - fled, sniff in answer to Isaac's question, "My son, (1"11 will protide himself a l,)" (Gen. 22:8). lr. The life-giving lamb. "'Phis i110011) shall be tint) yeti the lleg!nnin,g ot anuntbs: it shall be the first monde of rt; Galvanized Etstel 11 1 f<S Pt'r.lF il suer+�YRirAoryt;�,i;f>i�iii3'F�: T le cheapest good They do shingle is the cost less Oshawa. Good for a century's weather -wear. Guaranteed for 25 years without your even painting-" Oshawa" double -galvanized shingles need no paint to outlast any roofing there i s . Make roofs fire -proof , too, — guaranteed in every way you want. Cheap in first cost as com- mon wood shingles, yet more durable than slate. Sold under a written guar- antee that really means something to the buyer. Yon can't afford any other kind issziefis With a hammer, put 071 sense an body Easy to asniPs, andhorse- can roof buildings right with Oshawa Gal- vanized Steel Shingles. They need no cleats. They lock on all FOUR sides. Made in only one grade— of 28-guago semi -hardened sheet steel in the pat- ented " Oshawa " wtly ;ti=p :f13".w"•e.`(rVW . 1't More than 100 farm Lightning buildings were prop , too damned in On- tario alone last year bylightning. Not one of diem ould have been harmed if they'd been "Oshawa" -roofed. These shingles insulate abuild- ing—make it safeagn(nstovcry (,lenient. Lotus tell you what it will cost you to roof the "Oshawais way. Get our fret book ' Roof - i l} Right' before y o u Itoof a Thing "Oshawa " Shingles are nn invest- ment, rot an expense. Th . l:1', 4i Of Oshawa Toronto Lordon 11 Colborne ' 09 Dundns Winnipeg Vancouver 7I1 Loral mrd Iiia 1'encler Montreal 3414 Craig' W. Ottawa Bums sistosysOnitals •,1'a 2 and whether 1.11.7 trill 01' no, 15 a lesti- 110:1y Ilia(. nineteen ce'lluries ago .10;118 of Bethlehem, the, ltede'!'r of Men, \1':s horn. \\'h1'n 11'1! 1/e11et0 011 the Land) of 1:4(41 e•' begin to lite, Gip yea's 111 5i11 (1' (nnlmberell. The hour of our spir• it1111 birth is the beginning of our lite, Cefore 11' live in Christ, we are dealt in trespasses and sins (Epi, 2:1). 111. The Lamb of God (John 1:29), 'Here "at Iamb," as if there w01.0 1111 one. :\ White, gentle, pa1i1'nh Innib. 1. Sint- le:;�, \\ itho it blemish (t. 5). \Vo aro redeemed with "the precious bland of t Mist, ns of a Iamb tvithouL blemish and without spot" (i Pet. 1:18, 10), 2. S'et apart. "In the tenth day....lake.... a 1:unb....out from the sheep, ...and .. , .keep it up until the fourteenth day" (r, :1), and kept until the fourteenth (v. 11), Christ 'vas proclaimed in types and shadows for four thousand years, :1. Slain. "The whole assembly....shall kill it" (t. (1). So Christ Was saerifiecd by the decision of the Jewish Sanhedrin and the Gentile authorities, and \t'as the pub - bio and offieinl sacrifice of sin. 4. Sub; sIituto. The lamb (lust die or .Israel (lust. ('lu•ist, our Passover, the fin,,t- bnrn son of Jlnry and the fl•ist•born Son of God, is sacrifieed for us. V. The eaten Iamb. "'They shall eat the flesh" (v. 8. The 1:111111 Wins ant. only to Ll' PI:lin, it ens (0 he eaten. 'There t\•11; 1)l' ental. as well iv. a s'ac'rifice, 1 -heist (siva ilial. as, !nigait, live, Ito live., to r 1•trcngth01) 1111(1 110111'1511 1111(1 s:ltisfy. lie said, "My flesh is meal. indeed , ... he Lint ent'tll 'u', sten lie shall live by nip" (Join' 0; 66-117.) 1.:1 ,seciol feast. 'flit were to eat it with "tile house- hold." If the family was; ''to little for the Lamb" they were to enll in :1 "neigh- br" (t, 4,) Our neighbor is the eltsiest 111' 1.1 itch, \yas his first (.1111111, 11'11 is 1 -he rant' nl0sd likely to be influenced, "Be- ginning at Jerusalem" L; (1011'; way (Luke 24: 47; :lets 1; 8.) 2. A sacred feast. "Ent , ... with , .. , unleavened bread" (v. 8.) Leaven ,represents Dor• r(plion, ferment411nm, impurity, earthly passion, unholy desire, unrest, rebellion, (180(l:edie'0e 11n11 selfishness, 3. .1 sol• enln feast. "\Vi.th bitter 11e1.1)s they shall cal; ;'t'' (v, 8. Thoughtfully, sub. duedly. considering that the feast was of 0 'gent price, even the death of 1110 hinlh. 11is "head." his "leg," 1111(1 the "purtelanlce" (v. 9.) "'There is nothings in 410)15 \1'e 01111 afford 10 dente un111)- proln'ittLed. Ire would fill nli our life, satisfy all our being, and lead us into the fulness of union tvi1h biausetf,'' 1'I. The protecting lamb "'.Thus shall ye east it with your loins girded, your shoes . , , . your staff" (\'. 11.) Shielded by kis blood, gieded "with truth" for 4< set vice, with "feet 51010 \701110 the pre- paration of the gospel of peace" (E'ph. 0; 1.1, 16), with hands grasping the staff of peonni.ie, Ica lin go forth on the ,join'• lies of life to do his Will atnd magnify iris name, VII. The renlelnbercd launl), ('This day shall be unto you for as -memorial .. , inor in ibis selfsame d;t,' have 1 brought vein' ernrics nut of , ... I';gypt" (-s. Et• 17.) Even to this 11,4y the ,1e1vs keep the 1'.i85m'er, but t\')tbout any sacrifice, wad a( unwittingly, but surely, bear con. ,tail testimony tha, Christ our P11 0V01' is 101,111ccd 101' us. The last sup- per commemorated the sufferings and ({cath of the great 1'asehnl Land) Who gave his life tit s:rte 11 In; t :add 111111 ('. 1l, SWAN BOAT DROWNS GIRL, Scat Platform Slid Into Central Park Lake, New York. New ford:, May 13, -.-Thrown into the S9L11 street lake 01 t'oi tr,ll Park yester- day afternoon because of flims' cun- structiul and 0,11'08'-' swon bleat, two 010'10) five young vetuile I and two buys, who survived, coItril,00t- ed to the death ((1' n 10 -year-old girl, '111'y dill not know she ens 11114101' the plank platform (n which the benches of the swan bunt rested and which, floating, offered 1110111 a champ of safely and rosette.. \V1►'( tits 0ttanuuat was tilted tits platform slid from it, carrying the pass- " climbed pass- engers with it. I Inc y cl11n x 1 n1on this floating piece until it sunk deep, pressing into Ihe bottom of the like the head of the girl drowning below. The dead girl is Mary \Iurplly, 10 years olid, (laughter of 11'illilu! :Murphy, painter, 247 East .17111 street. In addition nine people were sent to the Presbyterian' Iloapital, IONNINENISIMILIP .“11,~11111111.111111111111.1t, MATRIMONIAL BAIT. St:j',ns::d Notorious Woman Swindlers G .4,rrestecl at Evansville, ,illi,'. Ind. \l.lt 13. 111 the t 1i1,, \loiet l�,:'.I,te: and her its .141'. ,ii: lolls' Lslte.e iIa\' hate t o , hat!:! ;t halal -.. in,l sr- 4 004 di.- . „ .I1 1 1;,(,1ih' in h"th the Inked l an0 !:I, Ilm 010)1 (0,1111 H.11 ssensi• ( 1)!,'f t:, 1, from people in all port • of 1''Io 111.!1\, \\ h.) 11,11" mill t: lot Li 0 far t11h,11ILdi101 en1l'.'1'1'ldllla llle 104.0 \Vinin'1! .riui'd;, that 1 (('y 1:141 84.:11 Ihen1 4:;l. :e;;. r states that the writer ha41 .1';1,11;-.'41 (0' 11 wife, and 11! or,' ,i( 11. \,',,000,11 all,w('1'Ir1 a111)1 i0rond,wl to dearry hi::!. 1. letter later conveyed the iaford:a- ! 11,11 that she w•a, ,heli and needed ! Oney, wanted to bay clothe before her marriage, or wanted money to pay her railroad fare to the holm' of the '(tee led hns'band, 111 ninny nose;, it is -aid, the looney 118- sent, and when the \10!01.( thought the \triter was nl11.31a y snsl''ptibltl i(,.‘• "snit(' ask for enough ln"ul'y t" pat' the (lather's u.') !tell a., the (taugh- tsr's fare. 636 FACTORY ACCIDENTS. Twenty-seven Resulted Fatally—Report of Inspector. .\t'tu'ding to the tine tee:;tli annual report of the Provincial I'aotury. In -- specters, \tllieh has just been issued, there \\'re 030 accidents in the fa0't oi'i4 , of 1Int :uio in nisi, of \tllieh twenty• sete11 le -lilted fatally. Ilia inajor;ty of the lu' iilellt s maenad i11 Totem() emO ars 1 Ila(liltti(, (lime of the \Voulel ii,pestois, Ili-, Annie 11ru\tn, states that she found child L,',!aor abIl;ed inn (ember tit lbs concern., ,lle Visited. 111 Illie) faclor1e, e;peciniiy there had appal -011 ly been 044 effti(t mole to ascertain the age of the children employed. 1\'b're it was apparent that the little wisher.; were Inkier 11 years of age, they \tete -0.01 home. It i, noted in the repot t that factor• ie, in general are cleaner than they Hs.41 to bt', but attention is called to the need for Leiter ventilation in 11u),t of these places, \li'. Carlyle, in her report, says that one of 111e lutist (11111 (11 thin:4s to ell - face i; 1h' regulation compelling foe• tory girls to do up their (lair in ,Hell it \1117 as to boat at -001 aeeidcnt from the i:lac'Ilinery, They battler, .she slates. to be ,sapped rather than put tip their loci:, in what they consider an unbe- coming style. BITES OFF HIS TONGUE. Victim of Odd Accident in "Cranking Up" Automobile. , May 13, \.. •, t 00th 0 I1 1 4. I t ,I t „leered hy an involuntary bit, of his teeth. Ilion .1..1rnold, the city's traction expert and a prominent electrieltl engin- eer, is the victim of n 111(1;1 petedi:r' :list painful automobile aevid(nt. Ile will be enable to talk for Some time. In "cranking tip” and automobile, a ,jolt brought Jnr, Arnold's teeth together with al temp and they bit off 11)( end of his tongue:, The severed pie•' hal, been restored to its plata., bat 111. Ar- nold n(Id ennnol. tall:, \\'ibh pencil :old a 'crntk'h pad ll' gate this expin11atio( of how the accident happened: "\\'alr4 w'1111 Illy In'Other in ills :lido, 10. 'tilled the engine, I got out to crank it. Spar(: lever teals ten fair ad- vanced. Engin' lacked hock and my chin (dm4.11 011 "(Haim., It (11 111y lenguo clean off, I drove inaviline 14) Verne,( hospital, \\there Or. J. M. Lilly sewed it un. 1 11111 (10111g 110 I411ki!) 101' ;44\ 01'111 d0.1';." mots SIMPSON MURDER TRIAL, Inquiry Into Remarkable Crime to Begin al Montreal Next Week, yl,ntreal, Jlny 13.- Inquiry will com- mence next, wool( into ono of the 110)4 serious. erinles Hint. has ever taken pine' in this part of Canada. \Villus( Simp- son, of Hudson. heights, (has„ in what, is believed to have, helm nu insane frenzy. ntilnelced hili 'wife and tW44 children on April 7 and kblhd (11111, ofiorwat(d.; n'urly 511(.c'eliig in killing himself, 10' \\'a; brought from Notre 1)nme 1lospitn1 this morning to plead to the charge. ile pleaded not guilty anti was remnnd('el for enquet0 :u; :1bov'. Ile has practically r"ny'redl from his self -in• flitted wounds, 'bat still inns 011' n,ppeau•- ems. of n elan who is undergoing 801)10 terrible experien0e o•. PERISHED ON THE WAY, Eleven Thousand I-Iorero Tribesmen. Die of Starvation. Cope Town, .\I:)y 13. -1.110111g it use - 104; to ftnt,har 11.;11;1 the (1ornl'In tiorps, 15.9110 Hereto tribesmen. n00,u'diig to in- formation received 'here Io -dos. from iter- innn southwest..lfrica. decided some time ng( to mote n(rth(nslw,n•d wihh Ili' 01)- ,1001 (f (Y.;ltiblis1ling n cell 1lnlocut in the 1,nkt Ngnuli region, but. only 4.001) of the natives, ren01)0(1 their deatin:ltion nf)es 'terrible sufferings, the remaining 11,000 having perished flttm starvation. BODY FOUND ON RAILWAY. Allan McGinnis, a Farmer, Killed Near Lucan Crossing, London, l)ul., despatch::1 spevial des- patch r"'ivied laic front t'Innd'boy0 stales that Allan Al'flinnis, n fnt•nler, �\ as lallcrb hot wool' 1,1)0811 laid (moan crushing about n11110ight lata night. 'be- ing s freight 1(l}, styled: by aI westbound fl 1„1 t n lit' \r1(, walking on the it, T. 11. trash. 11' was instantly killed, Nothing 1w11.4 l:nmtn of tin' neciden1 1111111 7,30 this morning, when McGin- nis' body was 'found by scetiomnen. McGinnis was 35 years of age'), and lived at `hipl:n, Huron county, a short distance from Plu•khill, ASTOI POPLI.. FUSE itmt.. } a` ., /1,, "t r�,,; rn F1 1't` f+ ; .,, ; 1 „,, 1, r,,,,, *, 11/4 ri ,.:, 1 • ..., . , 't 1's. r-' l 11';'! (PRONOUNCED 5 Ki:LI�) A, :auvCilota and Triumphant Record of Victory Over Di:lea ;e, No medicine has ever effected at large a number of wonderful and almost 111:1r• V0110111; ('111r8 0:1 Ptlychine. 1t has had on.. continuous record of victories over disc:•8 ea of the throat, chest, lungsand;itnnlari,, \Vlmcre doctors have pronounced elm... incurable front consumption and o!,ht't wabting diseases Peychine steps in (diol rescney nurnbell'ss people !Well from th0 Cry verge of the grave, Coughs, Colds, Catarrh, lir 1nc11itie, Chills, Night Sweats, 1.:t (grippe, Pneumonia, and other lire troubles, all of which are forerunners of Consumption, }yield quickly to the cura- tive powers of Psychune. Mrs. Campbell, one of the many crind, makes the following stl'.tel11ent : I rannnt r"fraln from telling all who suffer of myrow r.cet ,1 , o recovery with 1 1.y rlande. Ir Alni1, 1strl, I cling laa heavy Bold which Nettled o:0 my lungs amt gradually led 10 consumption. 1 cu'ibl ut,t ,I='.'p, eels subject to night bts•etts 11,; lousy wrrc en dtseared, my dovtor conI:'1erc,'. e •' incurable, liev. Air. Moberly Port 11, byt'-rian C'hurc'h, recommended Dr, blocuiu 1'rt-ll)'." to rue, when i wag 11')0;,1 111 Ontario Ain r 1(•.;;r! I'sychine for short time 1 at,' arm (1.•(8 x el i, the night (+scats and cueeh seas et. ).antis arm I stopped taking 1'sychlno nal v a' nerfe:tly restored to health and today 1 liner kit better (11 sly lUe. 1'byehino inn been a god loud to sae, Mrs. ANna¢w CO1111E1 1., Cottonwood, N.W.T. PSYCIIINE never disappoints. NSYCIIINJ', haft no substitute, 'there is no other medicine "Just u good." At all dealers, 50c, and $1,00 per bottle. It got write to OR, T. A. SLOCUM, United, 179 ging St, W., TOROMTO Dr. Root's Kidney Pills are a sure and permanent cure for Rheumatism Bright's Di3ease, Pain in the Back and all forms of Kidney Trouble. ,,25c per box, at ail dealers, MAIL BAGS STOLEN. TWO SACKS MISSING FROM TRUCK:. AT TORONTO UNION STATION. Found Later Behind Fence With Con- tents Missing—Were Taken Satur- day Night When Clerks Were Bus:- est—Lost Matter Was of Little Value. '4 t de "w) n'iyate detec- ' ul ,u1') I , ),dell: TWO I I I Litt'.; is the employ of the I'osloffice U1'• pertinent :ur searching for the melt \rho stele two mail lugs front a truck at the [Mon Station between 11 and 11 o'clock 111 Sntnrdity night. Inld w'hn, haviiig 1'111'(1 the bogs, threw then) behind 't fens' on the premises of the A. H. \\'iI- liunes Jlaehinet'y Company on Front '. l(01. I'i' thieves ni't' supposed to be trimly:, who were pude es in (h' 11111' of robbery they adopted, Its they. selected begs in which were newspapers ruin ('it• - '01,11' writ ter. r.0 ENDS HIS LIFE. Cigarntal;er of Dunkirk Drinks Carbolic Acid, Erie, I'll„ 1Iay 13,• --•''('all ale at 7 o'clock in the morning," were the 141=1 word,; \I..I. 1Vtncek, u. ('i3:u•nlaker, ad- dres‘4):1 10 anyone e in the world 5o far as is known. It was about midnight that he entered the office of the, National Hotel, where he boarded, and. asked for his key, '1.1)0 night clerk, 1V, 1'. Osborne, handed it to hint, at the sante time n=• miring the young 4111tH that Ile wonl4 not forget. 10 cull !hila. \Tencel: laughed and trent to his room. 11lhen found in the morning he lay across the foot of elle lied upon his bock and his feet nearly- tounhed the floor. fully dressed, '1''1 tl The Spirit Realm. "'Millions of rpiritnnl creator(; walk the (testi, both when we wake and when We 511 l'p.'' .1 e(1 as the gue.-,t, are ever utore it► number than the servants, how many millions, live and ,pore and have ,heir beim; in 1111., realm! The regenerate will': at 1^igc in (hits larger life, It is not a zone 1t 1.; :1 ?p)hert', i1 is not, in heaven, hilt here. The angel, of the. land encamp- ed, round about the sahibs. here on the t:'rth. they etre wilt here to minister, all of them. 1)r,H11es; there are stages in 10! growth and points of exrc111l'n('y 111 t.bi» 1'(910'4'). \'niers aur lecard, risio'1� 1111nc11ph1"rc Of 1111' \\•Im'l(1 \1)0(111 stifle (11141 r, n;li'I,iti1',; are imposed. Zacharias b!r,41 8 voico and saw• n tisiun, and \ray 11b'd•e1 1)y dumbness for his nnlx'lief. Ills :4,0, the gent forerunner, heard o sore and sat\' a vision. A role(! out of 40. 1''.o -.1111, "This is yiy beloved Son, in whom 1 ala \tell pleaswi ," At the 1rat r'_I,1alion we 1('arn the aa1110 let;• roe, 11 t(;no oat of the ('loud said. "This is 11 t• 1 o,4 ted ,Stn in whom I (1(n well pleased r 4:11' ye (line." '('here is a video in ,'ti'',y elou(1..11 the tomb these was a voice 11 11(1 n \ 10041): "hear 1101, 111. in no1, 11140, 11(1)4)141 Ile gneth before you into Galileo, 101 I have told yon." 11. ' doer opened in heaven there \'',I: :I tuic1 nod a ti"ion. Bay. iv. 1. 'Tic %•live of trnnlpet (400'.; said; "Come up hither and 1 will t,llow them things which 811:111 Inc hereafter, and immediately 1 was in the )spirit tend behold al thereto and One 5411 011 the throne." \\'lull) this \'iilinll 18 1011'1'' Is authority, i1lt;pil':ili011, discovery, chem., all these unite to bring us to the throne; blessed are oar 'ears. There i, not 8 saunen(rr in these coin- munications, there is ever delicacy of touch and correctness of perception. \\'heat John say; immediately I was in the spirit there was directness of rela- tion, n blessed nearness, a frcolunl from intervention of any medium; power 1O act without aid, tel(t;c'opie vision with- out a tcic'<,cope, marvellous discovery without human aid or learning. How plentiful it. the Iloly Ghost! Not, solitary star Alining in the night, but an i1nn;ph0re filling, sustaining, the life of the saints. Doubtless some may grieve and (pleucb, but this only proves the all pertl4;iwel1:,; and uplifting power. John in Pattltrr) silty 11 throne and was held by it. It is the eenlre of eter- nal power. 'Imre and therefore lasting, lasting and therefore pure'. John Foster says "There is something very eor►'o;ive' and deadly in at drop of a Christian's blood upon a throne; it r • ,••1 cntlm .to(un1 , • •1) the It f 1'l)\ s, it W'llt inevitably I 1 it. is. it. love that never fails to attract destruction." 111 one hour the mighty City of Babylon was made desolate. The birds fly 01 the air, it is their element. The fish lives in the sea, it is its home, Regenerate souls live at►d walk in the spirit, it is a larger home'. There 111)1.st. of necessity be al spirit balm. else how could millions of serv- ing angels attend 111)011 the saints, the they are not of the world. A wondrous kill thein. Like other children of God they are not of the world. A wonderous sphere where God and Christ and the ILoi)- Ghost, fill with life and fragrance their beauty, to 111e delight of angels and the redeemed. How' 5111811 11.1141 eV8110s- emt is the world of tinge, an 1111111(1 in the ocean of Gal! "rte tatl:otit up the isles as a very little thing," Il. T. Miller. heamasville, Ont, A Cloud -Capt City. I'robably the most strikingly situat- ed city in the whole tvor•id is Constan- tine, an inlnnd'towll of Nortll Africa. Perched, at an elevation of more than two thousand feat, (1n the summit of a vast towering block of limestone rock, it is almost, completely' encircled by n narrow gorge or canon cttt deep into the Ile Was u y c rctssec , 1\'1 1 11. creep• furiousmountains through which swirls and tat - chair. of 1t Ls coat, which he 141(1 1)111 (3 (4(1a (lies a 1'113ing torrent, its per - chair. (lis cyc(; won, 010804 and 'he h,nk- draudicnlwalls, ill Which (t footpath ed as if he !night he sleeping. lyes been hollowed out in order to en- able visitors to inspect this wonder of nature, rising sheer from the foaming flood more than eight hunched feet. Descending this precipitous pathway, now under overhanging ledges of rock, now on the very edge of at terrible pre- ciprice, beneath which the boiling (,urge is wildly Wining in n very paroxysm of turmoil, or now round the spur of al jutting ('rang, the visitor is awe -Artie]: and bewildered at the majestic grandeur and the august solemnity of the scene. Par beneath, the turbulent river—after the continuous rants 11101 the abnormal snows of the past winter, (tush fuller and grander than usual—swirling round a sharp corner of the ravine, leaping over it -steep Osentpment, into It boiling 'aldro1 beneath, and. then With a throb- bing plunge disappearing in the F<'111i- d:tric11043s of at nu.ture-burn tunnel scrltp- -el out of it projecting inatitm of Liu sol- id rock. Abuse is the up10111(xl beetling cliff rising in savage grandeur upwards towards the clouds, on it,s summit the Mille houses of -Constantine, , or the rounded dome of 1't mosque, built, upon the very e(ige of the precipice; or the sharp silhouette of some stately palm trees or graceful nod lofty encalyptl1R. Lower,down, on the other side of the town, is n most notable and imposing waterfall. Iles° the rivet' is apparently \eldeep, pursuing its r1( id 00111.80 mosst unruffled, then ending over the eel almost inh-10(1.1}, (11(1 healed Lite lofty ledge with unjectie sweep the de - wound up wonderfully."Mtge of wit* plunges into thebillow- Zuot-Mule is equally good for cuts, tossed, yawning abyss far beneath with braises, eczema, scalp sums, itch,, a deafening r'oatl', while n elond of foam barber'srash, blood poison and all and witul-driven spray rises high in the skin injuries and diseases. All stores nir far above the watery hurricane be- ,nnd druggists sell at u0e, n box. na:tth. A bottle and an empty glass upon 1.1u' dresser told iib( !story. 11'rurrl: I:ad taken carbolic acid. Mr. Moltke; int• mcdintely snunnonel, Coroner 11niJ'ys who tool: (~barge of the remains, On the dresser wits found a note a11- dres-sed to the proprietor of the hotel, is rand 118 fnilows r "\rr, Mankel1 "\fr. -mister will pny you w'hat i owe you out of my Wages. .'otify my par- ents, W. \\'meek, 30 (ieelot street, 1)unkil'k, N. Y. \\'sleek," 4 o O SORE, ACHING FEET SOOTHED BY .''.AM-BUK, (len, !women and ail'') engaged in site Who have to he 00 their feet ail drat, often suffer agonies from 4)1111;0q. .sures) soft curls,, horny. patches. (!(c, In other ease's, long standing and walking 11'nds to bad lc\;. V:a'l'es' vein, and ulcers. 9aun-13u1:. take; the pat.i0 out of 0111tfed sores, pre- vents suppuration nett poison from stuck1113•dye, and generally heals, Mis. K. \\'(dans, of 2(1 1?orinle ave- nue, 1lonUral, says: "My boy hnd a her' on Ilk hetiI, Whish \\•ns rubbed by his � u1' l 0 ,• unfit ii, became a very Ila t . n � bad w0HO4. ?Am-1luk took the soreness Clinton. -- Subscribe for Tile STANDARD, Inspector Robb, of Brussels, officially visited the Clinton Model School on tw3 days of Inst week. 11 r, Cou1i{T, n member of the Corn- wall lacrosse tPum, has taken a sltuu• tion with the Clinton Thresher Co. Rev. Rural Jean Gonne WAS fu dirus' eels on Tuesday and !Wednesday of last week attending the Deanery meet- ing and 8, S. conveutiou. The first month of the season for the Hough Cup will take place on Saturday of this week, tho challenging team being from London Collegiate. Dr. 1 L. Turnbull, formerly of Clin- ton, is wiuding up his timber, lumber and saw mill business near Listowel, which will take two or three weeks when he will leave for Calgary, where ho goes into practice with another medical man. .f W, Cook, V. S., of Duluth, paid a flying visit to his father, David Cook, sr., a few day's since. IIe tons on his way to Toronto Horse Show, with a millionaire of Duluth, who was anxious to buoy some good horses cool was taking Air, Cook along on account. of his expert knowledge. It happened that Mr, Cook, sr., had reached his 82nd birth- day the day his son was herr,, so that the yisit was unusually' timely. ....11.- :1n advertisement in T11k S'rAND.%RD pays. Take Rival Herb Tablets for Stomach, Liver, Kidneys and for cleaning the Blood. 200 days treatment $I, 30 days' treatment 25e. For sale at Dr. Milne's Drug Store W'holesalo from the RIVAL HERB AGENCY Kincardine, Ont. TURKEYS WANTED We want to buy your Turkeys and will pay the highest market price. Write for particulars and state how many you have. The Canada Poultry & Produce Co., Ltd., Stratford, Ont. TIME TABLE. LONDON AND WINGHAM BRANCH, SOUTH, am pm 640 3311 643 333 11 52 3 44 7 Od 3 56 7 14 4 al 7 47 423 8 05 4 39 815 447 822 45' 8 35 5 05 8 46 5 15 8 69 6 261 905 5:30 912 1137 9 21 9 29 9 35 9 :17 9 45 Wingham Wingham Jot. BB lythe Londesboro Clinton Brucofield Klppen Ilensall Exeter Centralia Clandoboye 9 Oil Lucan Crossing 9 05 Denfield 8 55 5 46 Ildcrton 8 45 5 15 5 54 Ettrlok 8 :35 5 07 5 58 !Hyde Park Crossing 8 2d 5 02 0 00 Hyde Park Jot. 8 21 5 00 0 10 London 8 15 450 NORTH. am Urn 11 10 7 35 11 00 7 255 1050 71:1 10:38 700 10 3U 6 52 10 15 6 35 958 (119 9 50 6 11 9 41 6 05 9 30 5 51 918 543 631 5 30 5 25 Connections are made at Wingham for all stations on the Palmerston and Kin- cardine branch. Connections are made at Clinton for all stations on the Buffalo and Goderich branch, and all statlone from Stratford to Toronto. Connections are made at Luoan Crossing for all stations west to Sarnia. Connections are made at London for all stations east and wort on the main line. Our Bi E0 To all new subscribers from . , now on THE STANDARD will be sent till Jan. ist, 1908 for the small sum bf 65c ..44 Subscribe Now PAGE L'IGlfr---•I'I-IE BLYTI 1' 11` 1 AIin- 11:1' !h' 907. Those who use it get well. A certain cure for all run down conditions and wasting diseases Highly recommended for Insomnia. THE PROOF. The (*Wiring Is a sample of thousands of Whinnies w DIN wonderful merits of PSYCHINE In tate moat difficult eases. Deo. toes an prescribing PSYCHINE In their praatiee with the most satlsfutory results. "Several years ago my wife was so seri- ously i11 of kmg trou- ble u for months to be unable to walk, at which time a noted physician told are that the next dress that l would buy for her would be a shroud. She used PSYCHINE and is now reasonably well. Rim. C. E, BLtttttl l., "Baptist Minister, Forest, Ont.' For Coughs and Colds take PSYCHINE. For Throat and Lung trouble take PSYCHINE. For Catarrh and Consumption take PSYCHINE. For after-effects of La Grippe, Pneumonia and Pleurisy take PSYCHINE„ USED PSYC111NE 20 YEARS AUU. "l'ea's ago I was almost a physical wreck, and was suffering with lung trouble, Friends and neighbors thought I would never get better. I bean to despair myself, Losing luilb in my physician, I procured another one who reeominended the use of I'SVC111N1':. It was surprising' beyond description the r.11eet it hail. I seemed 10 gall' with every dose, Imide of Iwo weelcs I was able to intend to my housework again. 'There are no symptoms of consumption about Inc now. "MRS. lIENDERSON, St. John, \'.B." For Loss of Appetite take PSYCHINE. For Indigestion and Dyspepsia take PSYCHINE. For Chills or Fevers take PSYCI-IINE. For Run -Down System take PSYCHINE. To Feel Young and Keep Young take PSYCHINE, An Unfailing Cure for all Throat, Lung and Stomach Troubles. A Reliable Remedy for diseases caused by exposure to cold or wet. For sale at all drugglate, 500. and $1.00, or Dr. T. A. Slocum, Limitod, 179 King 8t. W., Toronto Popular Stallions Royal Token. !'red Vungblut, Proprietor. CLY}rESDAL1:, Monday --Will leave his own stable, lot 84, con. 11,11ullert, and proceed to (1. H. Bair', Base Ltne, for one hour ; then to Paul Maedel's, eon. 2, Col. borne, for noon ; then to Ilobert Bean's, Smite's Hill, for night. Tuesday - Pro• ceed to Nile and west to \Vm. Johnston's con. 1, Ashtleld, for noon ; north to :1rrl eon, and west to Wm. Shaokloton's, eon. 11, Ash tielri, for night. Wednesday -Pro- ceed to Mountain's hotel, Dungannon, for noon ; then south to David Sproule's, 0013. 2, West Wawanoeb, for night, Thursday-Prnceed to James Finnigan's, lot' 21, eon. 4, West Wawanosh, for noon ; then to John Fluker',, lot 21, eon. 2, West Wawanosh, for night. Friday -Proceed to MoBrlen's lintel, Auburn, for one hour; then to Jacob Yungblut's, con. 14, Hullett, for noon ; then to Mason's Hotel, Blyth, for one haler ; then to Fred Shobbrook's, con, 13, Hullett, for night. Saturday - Proceed across 8th•9th oou. to Wm. \Vey• mouth's, lot 22, con. H, for noon ; then west to his own stable where be will rc• main until the following Monday morn. Ing. Imperial. John Wells and Wm. Murphy, Props. CLYDESDALE, Monday --Will leave his own stable, lot 12, oou, 13, ]lullett, and go east to boundary, then north to ,James Watt'', con. 14, Hullett, for mon ; then west to Wm. Wells', con. 14, Hullett, for night, Tuesday -West along boundary to Mason's Hotel, Blyth, for noon ; then south to Frank Little's, cou, 12, Mullett, for night, Wednesday -East to his own stable where be will remain until Thurs. day noon ; then west to Brown's hotel, Londeeboro, for night. Friday -South and west to John Allen's, eon, U, hlullett, for noon ; then east to Jaynes Dale's, con. 7, for nlgbt. Saturday -North and east to Alex, IReid's, con, 11, Hullett, for noon ; then to his own stable where he will re• main until tho following Monday morning. Cairnbrogie Hero. Daniel McGowan, Proprietor. CLYDESDALE, Monday -Will leavo Iris own staple, lot 39, con. 8, East Wawa - nosh, and proceed to tVm. Bennett's, lot 37, oun. 7, for noon ; then to 11014. Caul. tee, lot 89, con. 11, for night. Tuesday - West to Wm. Robinson's, lot 31, arm, 8, fnr noon ; then to Wm. Staokhou'e's, lot 30, con.5, for night. Wednesday -Proceed home for noon, where he will remake until Friday when he will be at the Commercial hotel stahles, Blyth, for the evening. Royal Celt, Raymond McConnell & Wnm. !Sell, Props. CLYDESDALE. Monday --Will leave his own stable, Commercial hotel, Blyth, and' proceed to Jacob Stoltz', lot 33, con, 1, East Wawanosh. for noon : then to David Wlleou'e, lot 21, oou, 1, 'Fest Wa• wanosh, for night. Tuesday --Proceed to Andrew Kirke, lot 17, con. 2, West Wa• wanoeh, for noon ; then to Mnuntan's hotel, Dungannon, for night, Wednee. day -Proceed to Gilbert Graves', lot 22, con. 7, !Vest Wawanosh, for noon ; glen to John Redmond's,'Westfield, for night. 'fhursday-Proceed to Gee. Fotherglll's, lot 31, con, 6, East Wawanosh, for noon ; then to Daniel Kelly's, lot 2, tun, 7, .Mor% Os, for night. 1''ridey-Pr'occed to M. 11. Belly's, lot U, eon. 7, Mortis, for noon ; then to his own stable, Commercial hotel, Blyth, where he will remain until the following Monday morning. Lord IRustam. J. A. McGill, Proprietor. CARRIAGE. Will stand nearly alto. gether at his own stable, 'W lot :10 son. 5, East Wawanosh. Will stand at 11111's tel, 13elgrave, on Wednesday evening. Thursday will go by way of Westtielrl, then north to Donnybroolr, west to Glenn's 1I111 and south to Dungannon for noon ; then south to Nile and east to Auburn where he will stand from tl to 8 o'clock, Friday evening will be itt Masuu'a hotel, Blyth, from 5 to 8 o'clock, King Stanton. Wm. Jackman, Proprietor STANDAJII) BRED. Monday - Will leave his own stable, lOt 13, eon. 1, 'Vest Wawanosh (Nile), and proceed to Me. Br'ien's hotel, Auburn, for noon ; then to Mason's hotel, Blyth, for night. Tuesday -Proceed to Robert Nesbit s, con. 4, Mor- rie, for noon ; then to }fill's hotel, Belgrave, for night. Wndnesdav--Pro• good to .James Dow's, eon. 10, East Wawa. nosh, for noon ; then to Md J trry's hotel, Lueknow, for night. Thursday -Proceed lo James Lanes, con. 10, Ashfield, for noon ; then to David MuWhinne 'e, eon. lis Ashfleld, for night. Proceed down the shore road to I'lerson's hotel, l'of't Albert, for noon ; then to Mallough's hotel, Dull, Bannon, for night. Saturday -Proceed to his own stable whore he will rennin until the following Monday morning. Bankf]eld's Baron. Raymond McConnell & Win, 13e11, Props. ~Ilial:, Monday -Will leave his own stable, Chas, Manning's, con. 13, Hullett, and proceed to .lances Corulch'e, lot 20, con. 4, I lullett, for noon : then to ,Tames lieynold'e, lot 22, eon. 1, I lullett, for night. Tuesday --Proceed to 'Phos. Mason'e, lot 27, con. O, ]lullett, for noon ; then to his own stablo for night, Wednesday - Pro. reed to I,awrouce Pleat zees, int 40, con. I I, Mullett, for noon ; then to Iienry Tay- lor's, lot 25, con. 1, West Wawannsh, for night. Thursday --Proceed to Patrick Kearney's, St. Augustine, for noon : then to David Charnnev's, con, 9, East Wawa. nosh, for night. hrlday---I'roueed to IIII1'e hotel, 13elgrave, for noon ; thea to J1obt. Craig's, lot 3, con. 0, Morris, for night. Saturday --Proceed to Mason's hotel, Blyth, for noon ; then to his own stable where he will remain until the following Monday morning. Lord Jim. A, Spuhl, Proprietor, CLYDE, Monday -Will leave hie own Arable, l,nudeshoro, and proceed to cop. 13, then 21 miles west to Wm. Door's for noon ; north to con. 1.2, Est Wawanosh and east 1:1 miles, then north to Samuel Welsh's, lot 30, on. 5, for night. Tues- day -North to Oth con. and 11 miles east, then north to Uth con. and east to Hill's hotel, Belgrave, for noon ; south along gravel to Itnht. Noabit's, con. 7, Morris, for night. Wednesday -East 1;1 miles and south to 8th line, then along gravel to Mason's hotel, Blyth; for noon ; then south to boundary and horse to his own stable, Londeeboro, for night. Thursday- Pro- ceed north 11 melee and up 131h con. of Hullett to Bien. llerrington's for noon ; then east to 'fetlock and south to John Hotppson's, con. 1(I for night. Friday-- \VI11 go west up i0.11 con. to his own stable where be will remain till ,Saturday morning. Saturday-Procsed wait 11 miles across 8.9 eon, to Chau. Lovett's, Base Lino, for noon ; then by way of Summerhill to 6.7 con., then east to gravel and home for night where be will remain the following Monday morning. Goderich. Last week John Hutton and Carr Harris, the two engineer's of the C. P. It, stnil so long employed in Goderich and vicinity in connection with the Guelph & Goderich hey., loft for the Pacific Coast, where they will take boat for Hong Kong, and cross to the Celestial Empire, where they expect to put in three years on a railway survey expedition, About ten years ago Oodorich had n baseball club that could down any- thing in this part of the country, and it so happened that noatl,v all of the key's were at one time or another con- nected with the Colle;;intc .1 mutilate, They are planning to get together next summer, and the Collegiate Insti- tute reunion to be held in August hap- pily nfrords is most Suitable occasion, The atones of C. C. 1. old boys who were members of the club that we can recall just at present are Herb, and Albert Robertson, Sid Melcohnsou, Dudley Holmes, Ed. 191t, Ralph (now Ili'.) Hooper, .Jaelc Snell, Charles 11114 Geed, Shan note J 00 Doyle -and there may be others, A rousing baseball game should be 0110 of the attractions of the two days' reunion, Base ball teams are getting ready for the 21tlt, for in addition to the Clinton, u junior nine is trying for a game the sante day, lhtvid ,1. McAllister, long an esteem- ed business man of Detroit, died hist Friday after an illness of several s'e'eks, llr, McAllister was born in Gullericb, and went to Detroit tvhile still a young man, 1 1 Wits ill years of al;e. The well known local grower of rose's, Jtegisirou' Coats, who recently received from Englund 1100 roots -150 different kinks, two of each -bas placed them all in genial soil and Jane should see some of the prettiest roses in this part of Canada. Jasper Brindley was brought up on remand before His Honor Judge Holt, charged with bigamy, The case, it will be remembered, was tried last fall, and as defendant had been advised by counsel that he had not committed an offence, the marriage complained of having taken place in Detroit, the case was sent to the Court of Appeal for judgment, The court held that being domiciled in Canada, defendant could not marry again, as the divorce ob- tained by his wife in Detroit was not valid in Canada. Under all the cir- cumstances, the defendant having been advised by his counsel, W. Proudfoot, K. C., that he had a legal right to marry, and the fact tint the case held been before the courts for nearly, a year, His Honor Imposed only a nomi- nal punishment of 24 hours in jail, which defendant, served and was thon released, thus endiug the long drawn case. Synopsis of Canadian Northwest Homestead Regulations. ANY oven numbered section of Dom!. wion Lands In Manitoba, S.nslrlttche- wan and Alberta, excepting 8 and 20, not reserved, may be hontesteadod by nuy per. son who is the sole head of a family, or any male over 18 years of age, to the ex• tent of onc•cluarter section of 160 acres more or less. Elrtry may be matte personally at tho local Land Wilco for the district In which the land Is situated. The homesteader is required to perform the conditions therewith under one of the following plane (1) At least six month's resident's upon and cultivation of the land in each year for three ynm'e.1 (2) if the father (or 'mother 1f the father le deceased) of the homesteader resides upon a farm in the vicinity of the land entered for the requlromouts as to rase donee may be satlstied by such person re• siding with the father or mother. (3) 1f the settler has hes permanent reel• dence upon farming land owned by him) in the vicinity of his homestead, the re• qulrcmonts as to residence may be butes- ned by residence upon said land, Six months' notice In writing should bo given to the Commissioner of Dominion ],ands ut Ottawa of intention to apply for patent. W, W. CORY Deputy of the Mlutster oj Interior, N. 1).•-lJnauthorizud publication of this advertisement will not be paid for, CAPITAL. PAtn 17r; TOTAL, ASSETS : 82,600,000 Thirty-two Million Dollars ltrtaPavx FUND: ts,raJ,ow BANK OF HAMILTON A General Banking Business Transacted SIMPLICITY is the key -note of our Savings Bank Department, No formality or delay In opening accounts or withdrawing money. interest allowed at highest current rates on all deposits of $1.00 and upwards -compounded half -yearly. We kindly solicit your account at our agency, Blyth, Ont. T, W. SCOTT, AGENT. "HINGE-STAVW" MAKE DILLON TWICE AS STRONG Hhort,stif, hard, steel W11-0stnyomake a"hlugo-Ilko" Joint at every intend wire on the 1)Illimr (outs, '1'hu,;o ' liInge'-atayn" give our fence a greater degree of ebtslielty-enahie 11 to withstand grouter stroll), They net like, and really are, btuges -make our tem awing or wring hack into sllmile after receiving a 11envyblo w, 111' tele 111111e Iiil premium ium canoed by a furiousnll armlet' animal endeavoring to push bin nay through to tieedow, Catalugue tells tiara about thea "tivlce no atroug"fano. The Owen Sound Wire Fence Co., Limited, Owen Sound, Ont. Me 'RSON BROS., BLY'1' KINE-STArCE JOHNSON, LONDES11O11O; AGENTS, TM OODERIC110 DETROIT $I.00 EXCURS!ON THE STisr\.hl1;ER GREYHOUND MONDAY, JUNE 17th, 8:00 a. m., Leave Detroit for Codericlr. TUESDAY, JUNE 18t11, 0;30 a. m., leave Codericlr for Detroit. THURSDAY, JUNE 2Oth,1:00 p. m,, leave Detroit for Goderich, FRIDAY, JUNE 21.1, 8:30 ant., leave Goderich for Detroit. WINGHAM and STRATFORD Special Train leaver Stratford, June 18th, 6:40 a, in., YJinaham 6;40 a, m., slopping at all Way Stations to (Wench. Returning, a 'pedal ]rein will !nave Gal -rich on arrival of steamer Thuutlry evening, for Chinon and way ►lotions 10 Winnlhaul roti Stratford. Goderich Band Moonlight Excursion, 8 p.m., June 17th, 25 cte. WHITE STAR LINE E. H. AYER, Ex'n Agent. Yo r Prinli SHOULD BE AN INDEX TO YOUR BUSINESS i Pool' office stationery indicates slovenliness. Tasty, well printed stationery bespeaks system and carefulness. The Standard Job Printing Dept. supplies only the better kind -won't pay us to turn out any other. I-Iigh-priced, experienced workmen only 'are employed, because they should do -and do -better work than inexperi- enced help, 40m010P0400044000 We will convince you of this if you will trust us with your next order.