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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1907-07-25, Page 1r L� VOL. XX. BLYTH, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JULY 25, 1907, No, 49. WHY You should have your photo taken at McArter's Studio, Blyth, BECAUSE We buy in small lots and therefore our stock is right up-to-date. We use the best stuff in finishing that can be pro- cured, We don't dabble with cheap paper and card board like so many photograpers do. Our work is right up-to-date and just a little better than the ordinary. Look at our show window and judge for yourself. It would be a pleasure to us to have you call, Ground Floor Gallery = T. B. McArter Mullett. Wo aro pleased to say that John Jenkins is improving 88 well 88 Can bo expected. Mrs, James Snell returned home after spending a couple of tveeks with her son, Humphrey. Mrs. Welt° and Mrs, I, Brownlee, went west on Tuesday, Mrs, Brownlee intends to return, '1'hontay Pairsorvico is ill from blood poison in his arta, Mrs, Fairservico returned home last week from George - Fall Term OPENS SEPT, 2nd This management during the past year trained oyor two hundred young ladiesu n d gentle. men a8 200 steno grap h- ors, book- keepers and telegraphers, and placed thein in excellent situations in leading Cana- dian and American cities, Individual instruction. Write for catalogue. WINCHAM BUSINESS COLLEGE George Spotton, Principal town, having gone there to attend the funeral of her niece, Miss Snow, A few days ago Frank Glow had a narrow escape from dent le He sees working in John Carhott's gravel pit, and was buried by a cave-in, Prompt assistance was what saved him, It is our painful duty to announce the death of a beautiful young lady of Georgetown, in the person of bliss Bessie Snow, nineteen years of ago, Two weeks ttgo she passed to the great beyond, she was the second daughter of '1', and M rs, Snow, her mother being a laughter of the late Anthoey'l'aylor, of the 11th con, of Hullott, Hensall. Master Wilfred and Miss Verna Woods. of Loudon, are spending a two weeps' holiday visiting their grand- parents John and Mrs, Shepherd, Tuesday was observed in Hensel! as the auntie! civic holiday and the stores and other business places were closed. Tho Methodist Sunday School had their pid•nie on that day to Grand Bend, The home of Wm, and Mrs, McEwen, on the London Road, near here, was the scene of a very pleasing and happy event on Wednesday of last week, Tho occasion was the marriage of their dau- ghter, Miss ,Tessio to Robert A. Fowler, of Woolsley, Sask., and formerly of Hensall. The important ceremony was performed by Rev, Mr, Smith, pastor of Carmel church. Another of the old and worthy re- sidents of Hensall has been removed from our midst. James Sutherland died on Tuesday last and the remains were laid to rest in Hensall union ceme- tery on 'Thursday afternoon. Mr. Sutherland had reached the good ego of 83 years, 8 months and 8 days, Isis death was clue more to a gradual wear- ing out of a robust physical constitution than to any particular disease, The Mcn'$ Furnisher The right store to get the right stuff' at the right prices. Ready-to-wear . Clothing We have just a few suits left and are going to clear them out at about cost price to make room for fall goods Sults that range In prion from $8 to $15 are now selling at from $5 to $10. All well cut and made. Lots of odd Pants, gond quality, 000 to $3 a pair. 5 dozen Overalls, without bib, striped cottonade, blue and blank, at all prides. Also about 6 dozen with bibs, ages 32 to 46, all prices from 50o to $1. A special line of Boys' Brownies at 25c. BIg bargains in Boys' Two-piece Sults and Odd Pants. Our Regular Mid -Summer Clean-up in the Made -to -Order Department. Black and Blue 'W'orsteds from $12 a suit up. A few Light GreyTweeds left to make up oheap. As this is the time of year we always clean out our stook almost anything you ask for has been reduced lu stock. It not we will reduce It for you, Remember we carry tbo biggest range of Men's and Boys' Furnishings In town and can dress you from Hat to Shoos. S. A. GIDLEY L "Sr T 1I Hon. Edward Blake Resigns. • EDWARD BLAKE A Canaddlul Associated Press despatch says that Hon, Edward Blake Inas re- signed his seat in the British Manse of Commons because of ill -health, This information verifies statements mule when it was first announced that ho had announced that he had suffered e stroke of paralysis, that the great jurist's heart's desire was to come home to Canada and live in retirement a- mong his own people. 'I'itne passes swiftly, and few realize that Mr. Blake has boon practically an exile from his native land for fifteen years, with occasional visits that probably increas- ed rather than deadened the feeling of homesickness. When Mr. Blasco ac- cepted the invitation to become Nation - list member for South Longford in 1892 he was still on the sunny side of sixty, and there was hope that ten years of hard fighting might result in the establishment of an Irish Parliament on College Green. That hope remains unfulfilled, although much has been done since 1892 to bring the English and Irish people closer together. Mr. Blake is in his seventy-fourth year, keen of intellect as ever, ono of the greatest jurists that America has yet produced, but enfeebled in body and sorely needing rest. It is probable that Mr. Blake's friends will ere long bo able to greet hien as in the old dans, when the keen fnco and leonine locks were pointed out to the stranger as those of Ontario's greatest orator. Some of the chief "dates" in Mr, Blake's career may be of interest : Born at Cairngorm, Ont,, October 13th, 1883, Called to the Bar and began practice in Toronto in 185G. Declined the Chancellorship of Upper Canada in 1869, Become Liberal loader in the Legis- lature of Ontario in 1869, Premier of Ontario, 1871. Member of Mackonzio Government without portfolio November 7, 1873, Minister of Justice, May, 1875. Leader of Liberal party between 1878 and 1887. Brussels. Miss O1'ma Cerro was visiting Miss Ada Johnston at Wroxeter, Harvey Buchanan, who is teaching in the 1Vost, hns arrived home for his vocation. Miss Eva Cameron has secured a school for next year, 7 miles from Owen Sound, Frank Davidson, of the Met'opolitn.n Bank, Brussels, is away for his holi- days at Toronto. The bowlers who attended the 'Lon- don tournament returned home sadder but wiser, They won a game. Alex, J. Ross, of the Customs De- partment, Ottawa, is home for a well deserved holiday for a feiv weeks. Principal Cameron, of the Public School, will receive n salary starting on the 1st of Sept, of 81000 a year, Misses Ada and Estella Moore are visiting their grandmother, Mrs, Wil- son, at Listowel, Miss Nellie Fox ac- companied them, Miss Gertrude Ross is the first choice as teacher for room No. 2 and Miss Marion Smith is second choice. Both young lading are residents of town. Reeve Leckie 811(1 son Bob, and J. II. Clunoron left town en a trip to the West, 7'I1oy will be absent from 4 to 6 weeks. They took the boat et Sarnia, The usual good record of 13ruosels Public School pupils was duplicated et the recent Entrance Examination when 15 seholat's were can(lidates, all passing 9 Room'illg honors, It, G. Norman, who has boon teller in the Metropolitan Bank here, has been promoted to the head office at'l'o- ronto, R, D. Cardiff will now handle the cash a8 his BllccessOr. 44.4 Leave 0,20 a, m, 3,00 p, nn, BLYTII, Arrive 1,30 p, m, 0,45 p, m, Wingham. Big I. 0. 0, F. excursion to Sarnia and Detroit en Saturday, August 10th. \Vinghain was defeated in lacrosse last Wednesday at Goderich by a score of t•8, J, A. Morton was in Ottawa attend - the annual meeting of the ,Masonic Grand Lodge. L. Bec'oroft and Otta Diehl left last week for Toronto to accept posit ions as oporatrrs on the C. P. Jt. IV. 'P. h'ylo, inanager of the Neriher') Bank at Stonewall, Mate, was visilintg ar, his parental house in town for n few days. The fall fair this year will he held on September 26th and 27th and promises to bo hotter 111811 the fairs of previous yen vs. Principal Musgrove, of the Wingham public school, has tondo a record show- ing its his pupils who wrote on the recent entrance examinations, 'Thirty pupils wrote and the full number pass- el, twenty of the number taking honors. Principal Musgrove and his pupils are to be congratulated on their very successful showing, Walton. Mrs. A. hoard, from down East, is visiting her 8011, A. Hoard. D. Blake, our jeweler, paid a flying business tris) t0 'Toronto last week. Airs, McPhee has gone to Londes- bore' whom she is going to make her home home with Mrs. Crisp. W. H. Humphries was ticketed by the C. P. It, for the West. He will visit his daughter, Mrs, Hall, at Gains• boro,' Sask, The Dominion Express Co., have opened their office at the station and Mr, McKay, the station agent, will look after this department. Mr. Paths, of Peterboro', hns been placed as foreman over the section gang hero. IIe will its the near future move his wife and family to Walton, Monday morning, 15th inst., an Assyrian pedlar, named John 'Thomas, was found dead in bed at Thamor's hotel hero, He 118d'spent Sunday in the villege and not appearing for breakfast a messenger was sent to his room to call him, Not receiving a reply the door was opened and rho man found dead in his bed. The coroner at Wingham was called up but on hearing the particulars did not think an inquest necessary, the death being no doubt from natural causes. Tho body ,was forwarded to London for interment. Clinton. Howard Jackson, son of Isaac Jack- son, who is night money clerk inTol'on- to Express Office, is home on a holiday, J, Miller has installed a five horse power gasoline engine at the House of Refuge for pumping purposes, the windmill having been found to bo too uncertain. AL' Doig, formerly of Tackersnlith but now practising law at Sault Ste Marie, Mich.. was in town for a short time on Tuesday, He is getting to be as large as the typical American alder- man, and it is evident that life at the Soo agrees with him. Douglas McTavish, formerly of Stanley, who is at present visiting his sister in Stratford, has under consider- ation an offer to take charge of an In- dian Industrial School in Alaska, which is under control of the American Board of Missions of the Presbyterian uhurch. While on the roof of the Ontario street church shod helping to take the building down, Segs Fisher's foot went through the sheeting and he fell over head downwards, It gave his ankle a wrench and the exposed nails pricked Itis flesh somewhat, but other- wise he was uninjured, Elmo, the seven year old son of \V, G. Doherty, had ono of itis ankles frac- tured while at a picnic at Bayfield, With another boy he was hanging on to the step of a livery wagon when his foot swung over into the wheel, but strange to say it tvcu not that leg but tine ono he was standing on that was fractured, Acting for the firma of McWilliams & Everett, of Toronto, D, Cantelon has bought the brick building near the G. T. R. station in which the knitting company was formerly located. It will be fitted up ns an evaporator with the most up-to-date machinery, 1Ve un- derstand that it is the firm's intention also to add to the buildings and put In a canning 1)111111, Tho appeal of the Clinton Knitting CO. against its business assessment of $1200, and the assessment of its old "factory on Golden Terrace at $800, came up before Judge Doyle on Tues- day. The contention of the company is that its assessment of $2000, as fixed by the bylaw which granted it the loan, covered all its premises, and the old factory still being in use as part of its pretllises, should not be assessed separately, The haw relating to busi- ness assessment was not in operation when the loan was made to the knit- ting company and no provision was, therefore, made for this unforseen con- tingency—the company claiming that the wording of the by-law should ap- ply. Mr. l3rydone appeared for the company, and Charles ()arrow, of Goderich, for the town. The Judge rosorVed decision on both points, The Store for Quality. Watch for this space next week and act quickly. G. M. CHAMBERS & CO. n I rTH Goderich. The tug which W. Marlton left for Blind River, The rood on Dunlop's hill below the C. P, R, bridge hes been widened, making a great itnprovement, 0. 1?. Blair and two sons, Masters Wilfrid and Allan, left on a trip to the West. They will be away three or four weeks. A number of those connected with the C. P. It. engineering staff here are contemplating going to China on engineering work next month, Al lie Anderson returned to town from Listowel, whore he was with a 0, P. 11. surveying party, on Monday and loft the following day for Winnipeg to take a position in similar work, The lawyers of the town of Goderich have agreed to clew) their offices dur- ing the months of July and August at the hour of 1 in the afternoon on Sat- urdays and 8 on the other days. The Messrs, 1Vorsell are busy these days soldering and rivetting the roof of the new elevator, Upwards of 40,000 bolts and 150,000 rivets will be used on the job. They are also repairing the roof of the G. T, It, depot, several hundred slates having become de- tached, A surveyor was hero last tveelc lay- ing out the ground for the switches into the grounds where the new G,'1'. R. freight shed is to be built and a number of men are at work preparing the ground for the switch, It is under- stood the building of the sheds will be proceeded with right away. Tho elevator hns been snaking re- cords in loading ears the past week, and has boon sending two or throe trainloads east daily, A record per- formance one day last week was that of loading 2,060 lmshels of oats in ono car. The steam shovels are now being used for unloading I,nd have been working beautifully, The School for the Blind at Brantford. '2o the Editor of THE STANDARD : Dear Sir :—I ask your assistance to enable ole to get into communication with the parents nr guardians of all the blind children in Ontario, 1111(101' the ago of twenty -ono years. 'Plio Institution for the Education and Instruction of the Blind, maintained by the Ontario Legislature, admits ns pupils "all blind youths, of both sexes, between the ages of seven and twenty-one, not,being deficient in intellect, and frefrom disease or physical infirmity, being residents of the Province of Ontario," It is not necessary that the applicant shell bo totally blind ; the test is in- ability to "read ordinary type and attend n school for the seeing without sel'10ns injury to the sight." The initial difficulty is to locate the children who are eligible for admission, 811(1 11 will be helpful in the future if your readers will send me the names and addresses of blind children under seven. as well as of those between seven end twenty-one. Should you favor me by the publi- cation of this letter, I would ask your readers not to depend upon the parents of the children with defective sight to attend to this matter, If all could witness the gain in health, happiness, knowledge and self-reliance that comes to those who, deprived by their af- fliction of access to the public schools take advantage of the educational facilities afforded by this Institution, none would grudge the time and trouble required to widen the scope of the school's influence. Send me the names and addresses, and I will by correspon- dence or visitation to the rest. H, F. GARDINER, Principal 0, I. B. Brantford, July 1907. For quality and quantity ask your dealer for the new big plugs of "Bobs" "Stag" and "Currency" chewing tobaccoes. TO ADVERTISERS. All advertisements must be in this office by Monday noon to insure inser- tion in issue of current week, How Much are Tooth Brushes ? That depends. Depends quite a bit on the IaIND of a brush you want. Not a bad one at all for 10a— it's a real good one for the money. But around a quarter we prom. iso you something really extra —bristles of the finest mater• sal and there to stay. Small brushes for the children from 5o up. And by the way, you'd save dentists' bills if the children were taught to take proper care of their teeth, • WHITE CITY DRUG STORE Dr, W. J. MILNE TELEGRAPH IMAMS aro wanted badly by our Canadian Railway Companies. They are forced to advertise for them today. With 3000 miles new road building the demand will be still keener. Why not get ready 9 The work is clean and nine and the salary very good. Wo prepare you quloklyand at little cost. Write UR for free particular's, Central Telegraph School, Gerrard East, Toronto, W. 11, Shaw, President. BA MARKET REPORT.—Wheat 85-85 ; Barley 40-40 ; Oats 40-40 ; Peas 74-75 ; Butter 16-17 ; Eggs 16-17. DISASTER IN LONDON, MANY PERSONS KILLED. Collapse of Two Stores ---People Buried in the Ruins --Heroic Rescues. Full Particulars of the Great Horror --Many Pathetic Incidents, LIST OF DEAD, W. J. Hamilton, of Hamilton & Long. Frank Smith, manager of Hamilton & Long, formerly of the Canadian Empresa Company. W. Tamblln, 14 years of age, 54 Oxford street. jos. Long, of Hamilton & Long, Nr. Tanton Howitt, 505 Maitland street. . Tanton Hoelltt. Clara Mallen, 430 Hill street. An unknown mon, London, Ont., despatch: Tonight Lon- don is a city of mourning. Practically without warning and with a crash as of thunder a toter -storey building on Dun- dee street, known as the Crystal Hall, collapsed this afternoon, burying in the ruins a number of thodo employed in the promises. The building was occupied by W. J. Reid & Co., china and glass wet t• housemen; Hamilton, Long & Co., cloth - len,; F. A. Brewster & Co., who run a five and ten cent store, and McCallum & Westlake, photographers. The cause of the disaster is us yet totally unex• plaincd, but alterations have recently been in progress in the Reid warehouse, and it Is supposed that these may have had the effect of weakening the sup- ports of the structure. Another view Is baeed on the fact that some years ago this very spot was the scene of a de- structive fire, which practically left only the bare walla standing, and may have weakened the foundation upon which the building that fell today waa erected. Up to the time of telegraphing this morning, eight dead bodies have been re• covered, two of whom have not yet been identified, and the injured number at least a doeen. The work of rescue is still proceeding vigorously, and it is feared that the death roll will be con- siderably increased. The catastrophe occurred about four o'clock, and eye witnesses declare that it was the Crystal Hall that gave way first, the walls falling outward zeroes an alley, which divides the block, carry- ing arrying with them the premises occupied by Brewster and the photographers. The most intense excitement prevails in the city, and it is with the utmost difficulty that details can bo gathered of the ter- rible affair. t !¢w the Building Fall. F Mrs. Martin, of King street, who saw the building fall, says she was passing Tho Advertiser lane, when she heard a wrenching of timbers, and then a smash as the whole front of the building col. lapsed, Immediately there was a cloud of dust, and the ruins were hidden from view. "There were two women walking a few yards ahead of me," said Mrs. Mar- tin. "They were apparently sisters. Ono waw walking a few feet ahead of the other when the wall fell, and the foremost one was engulfed in that awful debris before the eyes of her sister. One woman was crossing the street with a baby in a carriage, and escaped by only Inches" Narratives of Survivors, Mr. Frank Reid, manager of W. J. Reid & Co., confirmed the good news that all of his staff had escaped with their lives. How they had escaped he did not know. Ile said that he and 11r. Dromgole were standing inside the store when he beard a terrific crash, as though tons of dynamite had been exploded. He immediately ran to the back of the store, and was caught for a short time, but managed to work his way out. Mr. Dromgole escaped through the front of the other store. Struggling All Around. Mr. Howard Houston was one of those employed at Iteid'e, who had a narrow escape. Ile described the scenes as the worst he had ever witnessed. Ile did not know how he escaped. lie waw people struggling everywhere about hint, On the sidewalk the thought there were several people caught. One stout woman waft caught under two feet of brick. The scene of the disaster is in one of the busiest streets in the city, and occurring nt n time when the thorou41- fare was crowded, the disauster created a tremendous sensation. 1''or a moment or two people in the immediate vicinity n'east appalled, and u panic secured in- evitable, Somme rent the air, and men and women rushed about in the utmucst confusion. Front where the building had stood arose a thick cloud of dust, which for a time completely obscured the scene, Among the first to realize the situation were some of the business men in the adjoining offices, and telephones were quickly at work. Within a remarkably short time five fire wagons and ambu- lances were hurried up, and scores of willing hands applied themselves to the work of rescue, The news of the catastrophe seemed to spread like wildfire, and before nutty minutes elapsed crowds were surging down Dundee street in a mad tush, which the police were helpless; to stop. 'With faces strained with anxiety, and laboring under the greatest, excitement, ;many women pressed eagerly forward, tearful that some of their friends were buried under the vast heap of debris which lay piled before their eyes. So keen was the crowd to take part in the work of rescue that for a time only confusion prevailed. The arrival of a atrong force of police, however, helped matters considerably, and soon the work of clearing away the wreckage was pro- ceeded with. The first to be taken from the rules was Mr. John Loney, of 75 Cartwright street, who was immediately removed to Victoria Hospital in the ambulance, where it was found that he waw suffer- ing from deep scalp wounds and internal injuries. Fears of Great Losses, Meanwhile the most appalling rumors found currency among the dense crowd which watched the operations with bated breath. Some declared that there must be over 100 people buried under the ruins, others estimated the number at 50, and there were few who seemed cap- able of taking an optimistic view of the situation. To add to the excitement some foolish person suggested the dan- ger of fire breaking out, Forttmatel7 there was never any approach to this dread contingency. What the crowd apparently did not recognize wee another danger much closer to them than that of fire. While they swayed to and fro in their anxiety to obtain a clear view of the rescue operations they seemed entirely oblivious to the fact that over their heads jutting out from the build- ing adjoining that which had fallen waa a huge piece of masonry which hung menacingly In the air. Fifteen Girls Saved, Ono of the most thrilling incidents of the work of clearing away the wreck- age was the rescue of fifteen girls, who were pinned under a great pile of de- bris. As soon a.s their cries were heard ten workers eta.rted with their hands to clear away the rubbish. It seemed a hopeloets task, but the men toiled on with a determination that was heroic. Inch by inch they worked their way down, tearing aside the ,ptanke, heaving out of the way stones and never stop- ping to rest. After what appeared to be an interminable struggle, a struggle that was watched with intense interest by the crowd, they were at last rewarded, and as .the girls stepped forth or were lifted from their prison, evidently Httle the worse of their experience, the pent. up feelings of the epectators found vent in cheers. At the rear of the. Hamilton & Long stores cries could be heard from a lady and her small baby, who were pinned fast in the debris. It was thought she was the wife of Mr, Hamilton, of the firm of Hamilton & Long, The baby was still alive, but all efforts to release them seemed to be of no avail. To the front and east side of the mumbled mala of wally and deltic bands of citizens, rich and poor, fought desperately to keep from the clutches of death the lives of no one knew how many The thought of young girls be- ing imprisoned was the most agonining. Sawing, burrowing, fighting literally tooth and nail, the men of London work- ed their dangerous way down into gloomy little fissures, tearing at the timbers like bearers, Burrowing Among the Wreckage. No mon ever worked hatuder. As soon a.s an opening presented itseif there were rescuers ready to descend, how far they knew not nor cared. Amid the noise of the picks and hammers a,s their wielders hewed their way into what seemed an impenetrable ulnas carte the oecaeional cry of someone in distress or the moan which betokened only too plainly that there wn.s gritn work elinaul, Now a worker would pause to listen and then he could be seen applying him- self feverishly to his talc. There were parties nt work in soy• eral pinces, and all wero frequently re- lieved by now detachments when they could be relievedt Some it MAO rim• possible to relieve until the task hod been done. '1110we were the men who hnd curt their way under beams and slanting ceilings bulged down with a great weight into dark little 'holtlowe in which bodies were found. Until they had sawed and chiselled and out their way through the network of things that held them buck it was impossible to enure out again. For four and five hours some of the heroes labored cramped un- til they wore almost unconscious. At the entrance to these eaves there were other little parties at work, parsing in water, making. tho small entrance bigger, and with the care of skillful surgeons fight• ing for the tires of those ittrprieoned. Nor were they all of the clave ac- customed, to such arduous toll. De- picted and horny -handed homes wero joined by prominent bueineest men, who throw oft their coats and vest) and buckled in the strength born of deepcmttion. The fireman, the police. man and the young clerk vied with each other for places on the fighting line. It was a fight, and one of the grimmest ever waged. Cheering the Workers. To say that the scene was thrilling is to describe it moot inadequately. Eagerly, almost impatiently, the crowd waited for results, and they wero not disappointed. Occasionally the work• ere would stop, throw down their im- plements and signal to others. There would be heard the cry: "Briug a stretcher," and the call would be an. ewered with a cheer from the people below, and prompt action o tithe part of those who were attending to first aid. Again the rescuers could be seen tender- ly lifting something which did not re- quire to be seen to be understood. Care• fudlly, almost reverently, the form would be removed to one of the waiting am- bulances, and then work would be re• sumed. For the most part, however, all that could bo seen from the street was) the incessant digging and hewing and bur- rowing, as the reseue bend plied their desperate task, Slowly but surely an impreesion was made on the vast pile of debris, as wagon after wagon was filled, and passed out of sight. A Pathetic Incident. Among those most prominent In superintending the operations was Mr. J. A. Cottam, who, with a megaphone, kept In touch with all the workers and shouted his directions. Men were told off to watch overhanging masonry, which threatened every moment to col. lapse, and other precautions were talc - en to prevent further disaster, Dark- ness was falling when there occurred one of those pathetic incidents which is in- separable from disaster. Faint cries had directed the attention of the res- cuers to a certain spot tvhere, after much exertion, they aneceeded in getting in touch with a little girl, Ethel Earl by name, who had been employed in the 1 reweter• store. To the cheering words of the men toiling above her she responded with rare pluck, crying out that she would bo brave and try to help her rescuers. Carefully the tim- bers and 'masonry in which ehe was embedded were removed, and alio was tenderly lifted nut into a place of safety. The spectacle which she pre- sented moved even the men to tears. Her clothes were stained with blood and dust. Smiling faintly she stood up and waved her hand to the crowd, which burst forth into cheers that had in them a deep note of emotion. The effort she had made proved too much for the little heroine, who sank back into the arms of her rescuers and had to be carried to the ambulance wagon. An Unknown Hero. While this was happening there was an unknown hero, who would not give his name to anyone, but who woe working down into the depths of the pit, He wanted to give sir to a party of girls who were sixteen feet away and ho ao- coruplishod his task after four hours of the most desperate work a man could tackle, Ed. Peterson's Rescue. It is believed that there are still eight persons buried in tho ruins, .Just after the little. Pollock child had boon taken out the workers succeeded in getting out Ed. Peterson, a tnan about 35 yearn of age. Peterson is a farmer from near St. 'John's, and at the moment of the catastrophe was In the store of Hamil- ton, Long & Co. making a purchase. In the *fall of the ceiling she was pinned to the floor beneath a mass of wreck- age, and, though the rescuers could hear his mile, it was some time ere they were able to reach hits or to re- move the timbers which pinned him down. At Peterson was being carried out ho said: 'Thank God, I'm all right." His escape was nothing short of miraculous, In another part of the building a lady with her two-year old child was pinned in. Here also an excavit.tiem was being made, but it was found to be too small to allow a man to go through, and a little newsboy named Wille Spettiguo offered his services. The boy got down all right. and after about fifteen min- utes' work succeeded in tying a rope around the child. Willie was drawn up by Walter Towel, who was directing thia part of the work, but when an 'at- tempt was made to get the child the rope slipped. Willie was willing to go down ngain, but could not get at the child to secure It safely. Infant Found in a Cellar. A two-year-old infant, the child of a junk dealer Warned Pollock, was taken out of the ruins in the cellar of one of the wrecked buildings. A peculiar feature of the rescue was the fact that the mother and baby were imprisoned in the same place, and that when a rope was lowered down itnd tied to the baby a half an hour ago the mother untied the rope. ''The baby cornett out only when 1 do," she declared. Later, how- ever, Mrs, Pollock permitted the child to be taken up to safety. The infant amiled faintly when it reached the air above, and although it was covered with blood, did not, appear to be set -l- onely injured. Dr. Stevenson, who, with the many other physicians of this city, was close to the scene of action from the start, told a. pathetic story after a lull had come, and the wearied workers could listen. He was down among the ruins at the roar end of the building nt about 7 o'clock, when ho heard a voice which he for a time could not distinguish, He followed the sound, however, and finally owe to a point where there was a looseness, and it was from here that the worde--or rather the nwsie -tante. It seemed to be the voice of a young man, and he was singing, "Nearer, My God, to Thee." A great effort was made to get at this victim, but it was next to an impossibility, and the strains of the great hymn soon diad away. A Very Brave GirL After bravely keeping up, looking u momentary death in the face for three hours and a half, with the suffering weight of hundred:► of tons of wreck - ago and debris pinning her down, only held from crushing the life from her brave young body by the piste, Miss May lierdingharn, of 358 Ottawa ave- nue, fainted dead away as soon as the blessed air of liberty wafted itself into her nostrils in the cellar of tho 0. B. Graved Company. When her cries were hoard several men went with crowbars and picks, and started to break through the wall where the moaning could bo heard. Harder and faster the rescuers plied their tools until at last ono of the bars broke through, and in a me wont they were in the enclosure under• heath. Then they heard a girl's voiocr cool and brave, asking there just where they were and what std xt they would take to release her. When told they were going to saw right through to where she was, she told thorn to never mind her, but to get others who were Buffering more and who were close to her, ligwever, she was not heeded, and her rescue was effected. "Heaven bless you men for what you are doing," said the girl. "But could you get me some water!" "Not yet, brave little girl," was the reply, and she composed herself to 'di- rectingthe work of rescue, telling, the men where to saw and chisel, so that the support of the immense weight above would not be loosened. Thrilling Experience. Percy Robinson, a young man employ- ed at Hamilton & Long's, was rescued shortly before 9 o'clock, and when taken to Victoria Hospital, was found to be only slightly injured. "The first intima- tion that I had of anything being wrong was when 1 heard a noise, which seemed like a grinding, and then came a crash," he said. "1 remember finding myself falling and auddenly canto to a stop with a heavy timber across my leg. I thought sure that I would stifle, for I could hardly get a mouthful of air, and my lungs seemed filled with dust, It seem- ed an age before I heard any sounds, and then finally somebody moved a board. No one will ever know the re- lief that came to me with the little draught of air. It gave me a new lease of life, and I was certain that I would be rescued sooner or later, It was also a great relief when the men finally got all the stuff removed and I was free to move again." Miss Blanche Westlake was In an upstairs room at the time of tho acci- dont occurred, and when the floor was suddenly swept from beneath her she grasped out for anything •which she could find. The first thing that camp to her hands was a piece of wood jut- ting, and upon thio she hung for the space of several minutes. Her cries were not heard, hut finally Mr. Albert Moore, of the Wortley Road, spied her and im- mediately called several bystanders to- gether. They called to her to jump and she answered their request with little hesitation. She was caught he strong arms, although her downward flight was one of some thirty feet and she was not seriously injured, Mise Westlake was somewhat affect- ed by shock, but will recover within a couple of days. History Repeats Itself. It was stated last night that a simi- lar tragedy to 'the Reid Building was narrowly averted 25 years ago. The circumstances, as related by one old clttizen, were in effect that carpenters wire at work on the top storey tear- ing fiat an old scaffolding that, had been condemned. The rotten scaffolding sud- denly broke and, save for the presence of mind of a carpenter named Nixon, the wall would have given in, it was stated. Tho presence of mind of this workman saved the building from col- lapse. Time who were at the scene of the accident, stated that a great deal of credit was due to Mr. Walter Bartlett, for organizing the crowd, which gath• ered on the scene. It seemed that the great proportion of the crowd, which gathered ne the duet cleared away, was rather dumfounded at the suddenness and apparent awfulness of the calam- ity, and did not make any move to effect the work of rescue, Seeing their henitaney, Mr. Bartlett sprang to the top of the ever -remem- bered pile of debris nt the entrance of the ruin and made a neat little speech, in which he called upon them, one and all, to come to the work of rescue, as citizens and as heroes. The inspiration in hie tones brought a ready response, and in it minute scores had piled into the never•to-be- forgotten night of tragedy and hnd corn- meneed the work Welt will stand out through Hies as a tribute to the hero- ism of Tendon's brave citizens. Mr. Bart- lett deserves commendation no more than num. else, hut his net is known and should be eiironieled. WRECKERS WERE FOILED. Train They Planned to Wreck Saved by Plucky Couple. Connelsville, Pn., July 22.-- An at- tempt to wreck Baltimore & Ohio 1)uquesn.e limited train No. 12 a short distance wait of Sa.ndpateh tunnel last night sus frustrated by Stephen Kavrri- g*a.n, a leverman its Snndp&toh, and It girl with whore he wee 'walking along the track, Just west of the tunnel they discovered a tie faertenecl across the mils, and \Mien they attempted to remove it they were fired upon from the bushes. They hnptily fled to Sand - patch, where Alley flagged the Duquesne, which wuis crowded with Elks bound for Philadielphia, THIS WIFE IS ACCOMODATING. SEEKS DIVORCE SO HER HUSBAND CAN MARRY AGAIN. Husband Will Marry Miss Dempsey and Recognize Children—Planned to Keep Secret—Defendant, Known in Boston, Gets Salary of $15r000, and Wits Herself is Wealthy. New York. July 22,—Stating that her husband, Joseph '1', Cunningham, had proruised to marry another woman this morning and give this woman's children his name, Mrs, hotbed S. Ounntrtgham, of No, tW tliftou place, Brooklyn, wade ap- plication yesterday before Judge Scud- der, in the Supreme Court, fur a final decree of divorce, Cunningham for five years; has lived at No. 5,817 Fifteenth avenue, Borough Purk, with Elizabeth Uempeey, who has pelted as hie wife, the coruplamt alleges. 'They have two children, and it is be• cause of her love for them, Rasa. Cten• Hingham said, that she had decided to seek a divorce. Cunningtuun is manager of the Nation- al Electric Uompany, of No, 111 Broad- way, and Ids wife states that his salary is $15,000 a year, They were married thirteen year ago, in Boston, where both are well known, lie was prominent la polities and an associate of Josiah Quire cy, burs. tArnninghem was wealthy. 'Three years after we were married Mr, Cunningham fell In love with Eliza- both liz -both .Dempsey, whose father conducts a grocery store in South Boston," said Mrs. Cunningham, yesterday, "After ho disappeared, I followed him to &oklyi and found hire with her, When we sep- arated he gave me a auttertantial augur, but 1 refused to get a divorce. "After a few years he bougtrt his children to sew mo and I fell In lore with his eldest daughter, who is a beautiful child. 1 have seen the child every day for two years and loved her as if she wore my own. Both children aro images of their father. "I have met the woman several times and have been at their residence, but have never been intimately aasodiatd with her. About a year ago it wt;,sagr'eed that Mr. Cunningham would marry her and give the children his name 0 I would get a divorce. We endeavored to keep the entire matter from the public for the sako of the children." HIT AT,BiSNOPS. OUT OF FAVOR WITH 1111 NABS OF THE PEOPLE. President of British Churchmen's Union Awakes Horror Among Orthodox Churchmen—Says Some Very Plaia Things About the Heads of the Anglican Church. London, July 22.—Ray. W. Moa- ning, president of the Ohurohman's Union, preaching at St. Andrew's Church, Ley.tonetone, of which he is the luaus - bent, attacked the bishops of the b ngllab Church in a manner which awakens hor- ror among orthodox churclunene He Mid the bishops had fpllon upon evil days. They were fawned upon. by the clergy preferment, and are out of favor with the macs of the people. Their adherence to their quaint style of dress .affords ground for the suspicion that they aro out of sympathy. with the life.of'the age.. Their almost unvaried alliance with one political party has given the domo- ora cy ground for doubting the proclaim- ed comprehensiveness of the national church, Their largo incomes have been a cause of dissatisfaction. Business men have doubted the statement that these ' itmomes are treed for the administration of the diocese rather for the recipients' private purses because no aoounts are published, The rough sense of justice of the Engliel► people is undoubtedly sound when it hears with indignatum that there are 1,130 livings with an avern.go stip- end of £67, while the bishops' atipeth are never lower than £3000. These things the epeaker deolared,rteed readjustment. A committee of clear- headed business men would right them in a few weeks, Human relationship ought to be established between the clergy and the bishop.). The latter now know noth- ing of the former, except rumors of die• eesan gossip, A junior clerk sera more of the senior partner of a business house than a clergyman of a bishop, Some per. conal relationship would do more to to - crease church life than all the meetings of Duchesses in the drawingrooms of Lon- don that were ever held. 1 ANOTHER FORGER. The Banks at Guelph Defrauded of Small Sums by a Farmer. Guelph despatch: Some of the local bankers have been done up again, al- though this time the amount is not seriously large. A farmer living neat Aberfoyle, it is alleged, forged the' name of Mr, Wnt. Barytes', near Corwhin, and also of another farmer in that neighborhood, to notes amounting in value to about $250, Mr. Santee is a well-to-do and respected farmer, and consequently his notes, or at least thooe that were supposed to be his, wore promptly received by lir, Ilenny, into whose hands they first came, and by four of the banks In t.hi:s city. BANISHED BY THE KAISER. Prince Frederic Henry Ordered by Him to Cairo. Berlin, Jule 2•'. -Prince Frederic Ilcn• ry of Prussia has not been slow to fol• low in the footsteps of his young bro. ther, Prince Joncliim :111n•eeht, who a short time ago 'minted the displeasure of his royal and imperial euu;in, the (ier111:111 lslier, 111' 11llii virlg his name to be coupled with that of the ni tress, 11111e. llnrie Sulzer. 1'rinte Frederic Henry has been tlntrltlsst'd from the ('ol- oneicy in the Omelet!' army and baniilu'd front the country by the pereona1 com- mand of the The I'ritit'e is 33 years Of age arta ii the eldest son of the late Regent of Ilrunswiok, 'I'h0re came 10 the earl Of his august cousin certain scandalous ru• mors, on which the latter acted at. once, ile called the Prince into his presence, with his own hands tore the decorntione from his breast, and then landed hint it document which ordered hint until fur- ther notice. to report weekly to the (ler- num Consul at ('airs. 4.• WORK Of COUNCIL. r -- SUBJECT OF ADDRESS BY LADY EDGAR, PRESIDENT. Women Welcomed to Vancouver by the Mayor and the Officials of the Local Council—Praise for the Victorian Order of Nurses—Reports Show Great Progress. A Vancouver despatch: An interesting session of the National Council of 1Vo• 'mmn opened this morning in St. .1n• drew's Church, umber the presidency of Lady Edgar. \loss Edge, president of the local council, presented the address of welcome, which was suitably ucknowl• edged by Lady Edgar. The ple,sitk'nt aIso gave lel address, in which the work of the council, its aim and scope were ably sketched, Particular reference was made to the fact that the council had been Mainly instrumental in sorting the Victorian Order of Nurses in Canada, The council has now entered 011 a new year store anxious than ever to keep ftp the good work, Venerable Archdeacon 1'endreath ex• tended greetings. The archdeacon is president of the local branch of the \'ietot•ian Order of Nurses. Rev, 11. J. \\'neon, of St. Andrew's Presbyterian (,lurch, also spoke, emphasizing broadly the undenominationul character of the work, 1)elegates from Victoria land New \Vestntinster extended pressing invita- tions to the council to visit these cities. It is probable that in both cases the 111• V11111lell will be accepted. At Victoria the council will he entertained by Bishop Perrin and Airs. 1'011111. An interesting feature was a letter read from lies. Mary 'Wood -Smith, Pre- sident of the National Council of the l cited States, expressing regret at not being able to be present, Mrs. Smith lost all her property in the San E ran• cisco fire. 'Mrs. Willoughby Cummings read the secretary's report, which stated that the council haat grown both in numbers and in appreciation of the magnitude of the work, and the realization of its possi- bilities for good. 'Three life patrons had recently been secured: Miss M. .1. Scott, 11rs...Austin and Ludy l'ellntt, 'Toronto. The report wag adopted. The treasurer's report showed total 0 penditures, $1,273,75; total receipts, $1,55.1.09. Mrs. Jessie 1101'.tvin, Vice•President, Manitoba; Mrs. Edwards, Nice -President, Alberta. and Mrs, llet.ngan, Vice -Presi- dent, British Columbia, gave reports, Mrs. Edwards spoke of the probability of councils being forinod at Calgary and Edmonton. Lunch was serviel 1►y the ladies of the first CongregationnI ('hureh, Importnrt report denting with immi- grntiun were received nt the afternoon session. The ladies engaged in automobile and rode around Stanley Park, and Mrs. Alexander Henderson gave tea at her residence, This evening a public meeting WIN held in Pender HaIl ll. Ald, Ramsay presided. Mrs. A. C. Edwards, of Mac- Leod, Alla., spoke o11 peace and arbitra- tion. Three hundred guests attended. the re.. 00ption extended by the city to the dole- rnles on Monday evening. The guests were welcomed by the Mayor and Mrs. 1lr.thtane and officials of the local coun- cil. The %lnyor rend nn address of wel- come, whie)) Lady Edgar neknowledged. e.s LOOKING FOR ROOSEVELT, Man Who Says He is the Devil at Oyster Bay. Oyster ]lay, July 22.—The usual sum- mer visitation of cranks to Oyster Bay in the hope of seeing the !'resident be- gan to -day \vitt' the advent of It tenni:ut of seventy years, who wanted to go to Snganinre 11111 to pre=out a claim for F,4 1,00%000, Tho seeret Hervice guards intercepted her stn, placed, her on boatel an outgoing' train. They were uiable to discover' what she based her 0htim on. Just as elle ons leaving town an old man appeared at the village post office and announced its It loud tone: "1 ant the devil, and tun going to see Pried - dent itoo:sevelt," lie has not yet 'been apprehended, by the !'resident's guards. •-♦ Cigarnutkers' international Union is now combating it loekout in Georgia and a strike at !!lobes, Ala., the latter for an increase of wages. There is also a strike at Ilnvana, Cuba. 1 The Rightful eir 1;13•' !i,1 Iha: 1011,:1111; ;1'1per 1nIIII1t1I1'• 111' '1,11;11 111'.1,:11'0 11'111111 111011. 111 111'1' 110111 1101. 111111;4 111'11110! (1jvi. up all 1)1! 1'1i111IS.'1' 1.!:11,1,' 11 ,,u i;l the 11`•1111! l.rl: J':)rle 1\';111" 11';1, ;In inn,(4;'nl, 1:!1;114.1 1111'1 111:1 lifieril''::Lion! 1!11' Sl 1, o!4 •111! 111'1„e at o1101' In al'tlit iu '1,1 t'•Ili:lnt 11x1..1!' for her 11,1)1' lover and l., 1.1111111'. •!11' 111!'1 Leon fearful :1114 tle(1lb!ing 1111 the 1.1,11' Iron! John 1,o'ker'3 holt;,' to this 1'1'1'1'; step lest she shnulll 11:, loll; 11'1'y foe. the 4an2l'r Ivo; ene:,llntel'rl, on.r. •!: :) (1':'11, delicate gill, calls :It'll(• 11!1'• I t 1.J ;, 11vrr 01 :0 44,.,,1'1.11: 1111'I 1:,1' a i)4r•11 13;111;11 111'111;11:; to Il.': , 1141, •'.11. .2.1'01v 'uilil 13` t' 1110, her 11:1111 41 '.1 r, :11111 ,mirk 11(11 kern l0 plink. 11(1• 111'1'14• .I'':14y 10 1101. "I 1,11V II lou kl'•.)\1. 111111 1 h31v4 int' f):.Q141' `;'1;144 lv .101111 1.01:10'?" ',ill! 111111''.• 11. dem:trie!, •'h" know v 11411 enough how, 11:01. sIi.' II•I:4,1 t e 11111'•tii ii 11 ':.1111 1.1111•, The mat laigited a short, scornful lough: then he said: ,Tun aro a hr;a\( little tvolnn0 and a gnull aetreis;" 1111 .there was it note of admiration in his tiirc ns he spoke. "1'011 thought f dill not see you giallo! up 11t the window Iicl of •Inlnl Loker's bed hall' an hour Igo," he »Tilt on, in quick, low tones; "you did not :+ereanl not' i nike any fuss, tis most women would have (lone on seeing a face lake )line phi'ring in upon t111'111; von knew it 'vas your only. chance 10 get the evi• dello. that \could clear an itl111100 111:111 frim the suspioirnl of IL Prim'; rola showed It pl)1r!I:y spirit, Miss Dalton, to •jt there and n'ritr' so quietly, tvhl,n you 1:1141\• '1o11 1)11111''4 ugly face was looking down 1111011 you. lint dill 3•ou thin!: 1 11'011141 101 y011 get away 3vilh that evidence. Not nii all --3)l\• business is too profitable to be stopped by hav- ing my likeness displayed to the world 'vel though it was taken 11'\• a hand ns pretty IIs yours, So make hliste and pass it over." he said, not tinl:indly, for her dan11tle:s spirit iiad really inspired hits with admiration for her. "Vim eannnt have it." 1',dithit sai(1, firmly, while She made nn effort to free Herself from the grasp of 1141• captor. The next i115t111t she would hove screamed for help ill spite of his ihr(11t. but h., anticipating (hjs, thrmy one powerful arm tiroud her slight forte, placing his other hand nt the sante time firmly over her month, and, 1;(1111! her from her fret !a5 easily as if •h. iloa 'firm ft child, he carrion her within the shadow of a 4001\1111 in the low buj1d• tag before referred to. (ince there, he set her down upon her feet again, though he still kept, her mouth firmly covered with his Mold, "I've got to have it, Wye hell'?" he said, fiercely; "if not 11y fair moans, why, then, b1' foal. I've no tv'ish to harm you, null if you'll give it up quietly l'II let you go; if you tron't, it, will be the worst for you, that's all. Will you give it up, \oil your head if yon moan yes,' Editha could scarcely breathe, his hand was so heavily pressed over her month find nostrils and she Ives absolutely pow- erless in the strong null's grasp, She knew she was at itis mercy, but she knew also thnt he could not get pos- session of her treasure without moving his hand from her fhcc, wllieh would give her an ndvnntnge over hit)), be. enuse she could cull for help. So, instead of nodding her head n,s he hod ('0nnnnn(1ed her to do, she resolutely signified her defiance by It c;eeilled shake. 7'he num uttered a round oath nt this. Evidently lie had not anticipated any Such determined resistance, and for n moment he appeared undeekled what to (lo, "1'd like to ,strangle whet little' life there is left in that traitor out of him," he muttered, angrily, referring to Jolla Tooker, 1 -lis sentence was hardly emunlete1 when he uttered rt suppressed howl, 1':ditha's white teeth ;11111 suddenly closed over the fleshy pnrt of his palm with a force that mn(1e ilius cringe with pain, and at the saline time remove some- thing of the pressure over her mouth. Inking 11dvnntnge of this; she threw back her hend with nviolent motion, and sent forth n shrill cry for help. The cry wns her salvation, and llrip wn9 nearer than either of them thought, A quick. firm trend soon sounded up- on the pavement, find then the tall fora of n policeman became visible close at hand. The villain saw that the `game Ives up," :1101 that, the wisest' thing for !lint to du would he to get 0)111 of the why, and, with intoner fierce oath, he releas- ed his hold upon his victim, mid hent, a hah'ly incl ;inglorious (1'cteatl, ;'owing retioeit1ce upon her in future, With succor at hand. end the disap- 114, pl'al'lllle'' , I 111'!• e;lllil'(', i',.IItthI',5 ('1111x• age (11111 .:rem:til tailed her utterly. Iles' 1141'11., hull Iroejrell » t1'rri'lle f• 1. 3, hicli l:.•d now to ;LI;: 11:e penally. �l1' Illi! 0"i (,omit, nil' 111 i!I 11vstr'I•i0'S, hill ln:lke x111' 11.141' 4j•lurh;un9', 1111( stn' ('11111, 111 .; 0'#'41110.: terror :Ind t re111Illlllg lu 1!14 p'IIj'emon who 14141 tne! t4, Ile(' :lilt, "Aro 3,111 hurt, )Ii.'? MI the villain 4(11'1' li, 11111.1 you?" he ask01I, ".c,', !'111, Nola;11111t, 1111! he fright).ne,t 1114 1„r'i!013," .h,' \chi=111'14(1. slinking as with Ihr :(gue, and her teeth chattering audibly. "Poor thin,! poor thin;;! this is a hail p1acl f 1• =n4h it; you to be in." hr an. s3;1111, ;1it'inely. ''I though: to %vatcll for )'ou," h.' lllh )inueI, "until you come out from ,1311 1,01:(1''4 11011'., »all 11100 take yon safely through this dismal street : !'ilt 111)')',' 13:43 11 s01'!Illlllagt! ,lawn here I,p:'4(, :111,1 1 hall to go. Itut 1 11:1.4 11 •'1'1 o' 11)ul;ing for you as I came along !1:11'!:, x114 1 .11,;141'?I'(1 ;Il (1114)' 1!111!. it Iva, 11111 \rlh'tl 1 114;11(1 you ery out, 1)141 the areovil stool iteyt ling from you''" •'\'o: hilt ho Iv:lit4,1 something NII!ell he know 111;1(1, 311141 1 Nnnlllut give it to him," "11•uu)(111't, oh?" repeated the 41114(• 111:10, with x i311le (111141:1e at her spirit unit re.olu14 tone. "Should you know hint if you should ever meet hit)) again?" In' 11skr4, 1111,.;1'11113, "11!1, 1'" 1:,111 i all;11'1'1'(''1 11'1111 11 x111141;,1', 10.1i lig that it would In' i1111103• .j111, 431'1 to f4hg1't, (hat repulsive Cave 111:11 3:14 so strolled her at the Iriudow in John Lek41'5 rlti•!'r:thi' !wine, Sly 11':1, II ,1; ll(giIlIli1(g t0 recover her '•tl'el'_t1,, :111'1 .I'lnitit'tI her t'''a,lines.5 t1) _,1 1+0 it 1':'i' 1.'+•1.11^I!:IIIIII 11 +1:1,1 a1I`,11l(;,"lly her. Ohl' 1'41)1'I',1� lu get. 5111`:,3 11'0111 tin' 111.11 :l ;110''4, :1111 telt es if she would never 41,)1'4' enter a by -street, :Igitil► its 0" .114 4).1 'I'l'l' mai; readily trent wiih her to the iu'xt rt:'.','t, 31;111 \':all,''1 to spy 1101' safely seated. in It (;l r, ;:n4 i0 less 111:111 fifteen 111111111(,; ,i(1. 11',13 uu(e Inure ill 1100 01'11 31x)11;"0, home. heort431 thankful for her (•vap4 Dont :1 ruffian'3 power, 1111,. I):11; on expressed x0111. sul'pnise at, her tieing ,:It s0 tat(-relnnrketl, with some jlldiil'errno(, 1311t she looked pole, owl asked if she ''3a3 un,t well, titll then 1111.10.1 that 'limier hall been 1v:1iting 1'nr more then half on 1411111. She 31103113' rep!i'nI 111;)1 she 3305 well, 1114 r,'sr(t1(41 1110t he .3)4(0111 11x10 trait• ed diluter 1 n• her, but she had been un- avoidably iIl'taine.!. 1:1111111 1),1!11,'11 (:ne33' that she !!lust loop her 11,3)1 ('010,41 regoviling that eilreitnrl•s, '1'111' time 11141 rink( Mimi .she could not trust. her dearest inters-ts in the hands of h('1 father. Ho' 1:3031 110 131)0111 have 110 s\'ulpat!ty frith her 1'v:1f:rililg the con- fession -1i( 11x,1 0) hinrd, and 31(iluld op - pow 1,111,41 than ;1111 her in i1101:i11g it public 111 3inliioate 3:x114, .lout she I:a4 resolved to go to Mr, 1'r! - ton 1111 the 1!1;11033', p3); the preeiuns 011- ',k'IIt'1! til 1;i.: 10111113, and gobbet by his over \rise et:tinsel. She retired l0 her 03311 1'111115 as moll Its dinner 31:03 lll11;11C!It'(I, 1111d 1111- 11rr4iilt)11' set herself to 11o'!: to mnl:e 11 ('111'01'111 copy 01 ,(111111 .4)1-101'1,, 1 of il'5- 3i011 to . .:I3 to 1':0.14, Aril then, with something- 0i the feel. creel:Mg 031,,1 tlltlt r,hr 11x,1 esp.'rjencrd whit'! 31 'foul !)rake's po',vor, silt' looked around fol' a safe 43044 j3) w!lieil to 11.1')4 the original. She 31(1111)1 no'. Eike it hI )13' and put it into the safe, for she knew that bur- glm'3 w)l T not trouh!t(l nowadays :11.1''(1 114111!11 such thin 2,5 let them ha \ -e et or sol 1)liil;lliintll!,! ;l !eel, end she could 0l 1, sleep until it 11,13 safely ills:,0.3(1,1 tn. F1111(wl:(11., "\\lhlt shall 1. d'.) \\Atli it':" s'11C said, 311th 1113.1he:l eller!;s :1101 iinxiotts 'lrotr, , "'Sonielhing 1c1:, hie 1 rl(it ,ode it even fel. twilight." \u dra3ter with any common lode would lie at 3011' (lace, 1+.111 l'10130114' 1-1111( 1,1111!)1 -not prep it :Aunt her ilar'io,l, 1111'1 fol' it IOng time it %vas It 11111tte1' t!Ili4.! caused bol' 1!1)14)1 perplexity, :\!I at OI!(')! 1;'er e1•e, lighted. In her jewel -1,0x, which 33.15 finite :a 1+1;14 0110, there 11'41.; a raise+l 1•41\•et (111.513011, with places on it for the different articles of jetvclrl' she 31x5 in the IM11ft of \rearing. '1'Itis cushion 31;)4 504111'0!1 gilled to the bottom of the bow. 1\'ia,t Inn'_') of im- pending evil could b.irc inspired illlitbu with the idea that underneath this tyuul(l be a safe 'place to' hide her evidence? She carefully pried it from the box, folded the papers just to fit the hut1011, then, pressing the cushion fleetly h;tcl: into its 'plice, she once more arranged her ,jewels in theil' accustomed positions, and then, n,ppureutll' satisfied \yitit +ler work, sire 1-050)11011 '1)04' sent and, began to 33'1'114 Ill' Ilccollilt of her alll'eilttil'es to her dolt' one Ilcro3s the sen. 1t is said that "coming even't's Gast 044 taeladelo0061100437030601.2441.0110 That hacking cough continues Because your system is exhausted and your powers of resistance weakened. Take .S'cott'.r Erna! iono It builds up and strengthens your entire system. It contains Cod Liver Oil and I-Iypophosphites so ,, prepared that it is easy to take and easy to digest. 06604444 4'c04000000040100611.1.406 0 • AL1. DRUGGISTS: SOc. AND $1,00 11;+•it' sha+!',13 til'(,+( 3t'.(<'.}:#', 1..1! (ior:Pia::1;e eliiid of 1':((.11 gl'llrllltioll, le. It, trio, of 111.1. 1 I'.,1.. 11 led on , . ,. _ I •u:1 ,1 , '1'11,',1', i, ('1'1'10111, 1(114 tIC:t 14 till!! it l',a', 11; „•e it .1101134 be a (l,Iu ht.,r. ,l fol' 11,,.11!' W„1' • 1;0:3'11' tie.(( 3, `.il...4 1 11,'• 0(I' ! Coot, II.',1,11 :lel' Ili:co:I, 1e, 1S 3),Iltoll till, 43(;•3,'.1 ,,y u' 1' 11+(':+' 1 3 ',,, !,.1;,'f 11,1.41,! tia o1,:,igo,1 to ,,.rI1:G,' L.:e 1,4 .i„ 1l,1rili11y +',115,'1' :! .0,4111 3. ,i.' '1' ' ,'l- I j .:I: ,' n 11,1', :CA ;1, 14'1;,4111:111' t'.,' ,'.1,. . f0 ;1111 111:1 11111'1'1' .11, 1111 ,i!,l ! 1 !;I 1,'.0 1..30 0'3431'.1, 011113 III'•! 11 11 1111 11 11111.11 ,l,l' 11.'t, i j , „1 111' I,il Ib t4( 0.11 ir:1•ril.ia (: ' 11;1,1, 1j•,' 0111II11 0111111,1 3)I' 1'111. off (1.,111 her ap;1".11anee a1 11.1' 1.11',,1:;31 •1, 1.111!', j 11;•1: I•,aln'}; ',f the fondly :(111! 241,4l in '11(1, 13'1)'. 'IIIIet!Ii:l, 111111.111, 3''I' ::l 111,' • 1!{I' 11';11' 114Ill" 111'\t 43'1 '-t 1'!l:!'! ,3'011111g girl Ilial al.v i , made 1: 11 ;1oie... I','.! 1;1»!'1!:0', It the311,x'„'Ill 1!,u',l:il.,'#S1 over .111,'1' ?,!I-•. 1):111 ,ii - 111',1111, 1.1 1'' t \,,!l! 1 l;ul tvittlollt I4giti!110te issoe, 1!(' 111.0111' 111111 1(11.1'tlelll'i'IS' 4••41 ;Int! 111 ' ,. o.1:11".;, title, 111111 111111#! 01(111'! 110'• her 101100 op;;0,jt' 114' (.11111'1 IIr1#n1:11:. . 4•111 1,, Li• 1••:.t'•, l i'.,. 'I're,,,:(I :( (I(3,'1 I'Very morning term 111e rine. I! to 11:1' 1 1 , : ;,';:t 115;1;,' 11'4;13, 0,5,„; ,,,in-,!. ;', 11:1' Ll'',hkf.l•f. fiat!, + 11.,+1;,3u1:,4 111' (1;11, 111!1, 111. Dalton, angry at 1!111+ tiwul! I in tl,e 43.1')'1 'Uf an nttoa• i„:, :u'1. ui 0411 411 to \'111 1'311 ""i :4:..11• ;", l '' '' 1 1. !! ,. i' :1.;:1.:1,1 1..114, l+,1' ,.LIt,', ,,.(:, 1 her, ('11x111' ol'der(+1 :1 •1'11':11)1 1.1 .1' ;11111 I , 1;4 (',',111'11, :(1111 1111' 10'1'.•(,11'(1 propel l'i 1011140 her, :(114 tI'!1 1101' 111' 3)1(, 11011:11'! I•, Ih" I'1lfi'llllll'III of is.vel'.)!! 1#1:1.;1(1' 1.'1I1!'- tol' 111 I', ;! ill'„ !n'-ISt,ltl+111.; ),1.3'1.1";0111"y1. 1!1 flit' 1, moo ((011111 '4 3 The girl h1l'tenell to Ito hi; 1,i11'1ll:,, hut. .non returned, Ni111 pal,' 1111 1 :'1• (righted (.I(.. saying dull .1Ii•s Ed:tha 31':1, not in her elianl11(a', 1,111 bed h (11 il't 1)0,911 114411!,X4 during the night. 1(11,1 that b0111 sitting room awl I)'Il1'll'':II were in the 4irlr't 41)11('1,1011, 111', I),,Iton 3)1)5, of course, instantly nlarmt('+l at this sthrt.lih'! intellez';14,'. 111111 h:lnte'111:01 111 01100 10 investigate the matter, ole (1011111 it 1(x3 01).11 worol tlr)n the girl half 41x104, 1)I'aw,I's, iso\"4, clu,rls 1414 been overturned and (1113 1 1'1! of (hell' eu1(1en1.5, a1141 lot' '.4 31101'4'1 Ill el'ery 1)11)1.1 0(3 upon the flour, eh,!11,,, (11:4 1)411, Clothing had blc3) unfolded, shaken oat, and then thrown hastily aside; dresses 31410 lyin', 01'1.'1 (Ohio':, 1l it It their Dockets 111111, (I insi4o 114; 1111+1 t'iflyd of thea' tomtl'nt3. Etitta'., costly writing des!: NII, overtul'ne(l upon floor, her letters and papers sea tiered h1 every 111141131)0; and 111'"11 it was for 111" first time that lir. 1);Ilton 1:111w for 1, certainty of her 0011,1'0,+;';511.1','!;, e Earle, for, stooping down to phi: 11;1 these letters, he hall gathero1 up with Uth„'.5 tho t. Hint the young (11,)11 1,,1,1 (:('llt moos;(1the sea to her, 'I'l'l, 11na'lluis of \1'y'liff', at the 1;11:'1, we spell; of 11(1 1.U' begilllling of the 411,1;1. 31 r, 1.0 olio child, It ''1'lltelltt'r, `i311' :1 poi., 0 f age, II'' had not 111:11.1'10,1 11111(1 101111 013,11 11111'111:; 14'011 Ill ,114144 intv'1 Ivy u (oqllelt0 11'1(4')) 1;)1)10 it young, il::l1!, 1.141.014' 0,,111i11', 11110 111; pro31:';.3-, :1)11 for inaa1)' 14:)1•3 he c'uilil not endure311 the thuu',ht of marring.... 11111 he had at length wedded. fl gentle, I'\'ab!,0 girl of 11'111 51110 hail riven bird! to Illi, I:ita' (slU.h1.''I., 1)0.1 110 111'110 41,,!• (11'''31 1111,1'4 !rrallletl 1110'111, 11 11114 114411;1 gl'I'.lt d'i•oppoimtment to /the um(Illis that the chill! 11113 not n HANDLING EMPLOYEES, H, H. Vreeland Tells of Ilia System and Its Success. if, Ii. Vreeland, 31.1'111118 in System, ;"II, how the .;('11 Turk (Cly It;lilw:i)', of 41!1:,41 he i.5 1'1'(j4('nt, 34(93(3 111 11111111 4,ilh II,: character 1111#1 utility of 1'),0111) 01lIf110:1,•,•.,, 11 -heli 111, Wrv(Iand (03)1; 1'11:11','4 1110(4 Were 11111 131) Moll Who hall 1--4:1 it 1111 1.l!#' ('#1"11)1.;11,\' lite 1+':1!'S, Al Illlll 1;1111', ii (ill 4)11;,1oyee hail committedn 111;1!'11 ofi#'1141', he 3lould Is' laid off. 114 was ;!111,,•!1 no chance 10 defend hinl.)'lt, "It 31x3 iii 18k15," .nye 111'. 1'1'001114 ''111111 0111' 1'44014 51.10)41 begtLIl \1.01 kill},'. '11,10' ilu;'ll,teil ,1,i111u41 of the loon 3)':h( u•l,nllert'IhI. 'I he knowledge flirt facts von- t''rning their ability, 01111 t.)1eir (i.pl'a• Where Things Are Different. tion ti make 'l,1. ('1 this ntijlity, were placed (01 record, 11t•'1;glt !I 1110 1(11el't'nt, I ('0111 111)) iu everything Geeriii4''•1'111'1 felt 111 1;0111 r touvh 31';1.11 the 111x11• 1, I11." ;#1:11,41, 111111 Li 114111'e11i. 111'11 a1'( a'e11(:'I11 and kllrw that they 11UN 11111 1f :1;111, at f.114llty; 111(! 01)41131' 1111!1. lot{i• :Ill llill#III'tllllitt' 431101 l(1 any of their Ila l' !, 1,11 '1111(1'.,1'11'; the !x1;011 l.i II3r li'11o11•, The men 041'0 well aware that 1.1(1'31' 41'1',1, 11114 111110411 1)4:10)511 thein, 31'')' 10111..i!u:lllet than 11,0 1'.Ilg!j,h1 10 1.1'. lint they :11.11 know that 5tal('llleilt$ 1'e• !hive i'.Ilgll'h p:Il:lll1, 40 weigilt. to 1;111'1'11- lilting to their !lull eolidhlt and t'lfleh'iit ,I') 4"11!1(13(410. 11151•.1 IIitlltlpll' i, 1' twrll ill'r1'111 111111 5111100 in (Ile 1'((!11•(1. 11 nine anti 41314'' by 111;13} two; owl "The (1113) 1113/10/1 ('11'1(1 of installing this •1•.st,'n,, a11 otfeet 111;(31 has condi!.one i, given thirteen fluor:I."y pollee., 144 1.(11'1111 110110 it, lift, is in bringing fur every EngIi•h ,hilli0g, 0111 !lie ,laying qualities of the men, Js it at, f1:lVit(g #1:iy 111' 131a1'1l'l' (1111: 14'1111'(' 3.1)4,0 J1I'r.nllill 1'rcul'lli 3)I tht' t'lll- 1je11,44 m inn;; Ij11r of i.Ilit44rn 31';1.1'1 43114. 1 111034(. 3'411, si:olid, its 1 halve said, 41).:1141 0111 ;slonil r; 1';4111 I/011111'I'+, there were not 10) of thele who had been ..:n; but the little marilm Valice w;1,4, ;t 11'1'1' 1,1111.1 1111 ane 1110110111g little 11101 ('(1' a 41(':11 1):11'1 lit 1,11' I'el:t, 11:14 1.,l\4, 111111 the company five years; I{OW OU per of humanity, although exceedingly high. x14 Illy»1111' in Wheat ;11111 1',111, in tial 4111. hale 111(11 in the x111;11 that (4;1;1.44 :1114 willful, as \1114 be 11'.'11 4.1' t1'r umd egg, ,111'1 chicl(en, Illlll vel s, 1111,1 length of time, 'I'It" gold 11,11' oil a 1110 - long. ('„inti':'I'ti 4.111((1_ 1'11' 1'ltIdl ,t, :11'' 111:411 ('11'111:1::', 01' l'n1Uh1ct1,1'5 s'e're 13 a 00111• to 30133 ' 1.h.' htiniluunl I,'n"th ui loon 3i"!It to 4111• 1141 111)1.1141 1'111 4114'. 311.03) :1,1.4 11,1, „ „ ^ #1, "11 ;Hl Wllipulee I.;00011,01 of mis'ol• only twelve years of age, after which she 1),,,,, II IL;III 1':„1l t" .11,11 U!' 411'1,1' illi 111IL'1 or 11e'glet't l,' l5 1,1'1114111 Ilp foi' ''''''*''''''r:11 1';1" !),It 1.#1 lh f'al'l! ''''1.111'1' 1, Sl i'ot 1.110 Cvll 14,1! (,11!14': I(" I, net 11 fret' agent, trial. ,ill oppul'1111ut1' 13 411'011 Illlll to :.'lillull. U1'#.'.I'n'•'' 11'1111 01111.1",!4 11' 1' The 11141'11. .1011 11x1 the right lflll''i4:hllt' :;1'0110' 1111 the 11•Itlles.i,!s 111,Yt111(' 01('11 if {)lin e•L.r '1111:1 reading 1!1'4111'1) novel, " the 110:1.,1' awl 10 part 01 11)141 1:111.1, 'h,' hi:t to tall' "', I ' (I,''1':' 1.'11.111 she 4111 1.h). training of her 1 I t r , 1 throe Iht1•,s in )111 the (1111,'1' children II.1ve the right finding them. 1111411 ever'ttljag i5 ready,wli!'I ::11.1,.1 rebellions 11111;'1' to the rvl,uliioler. If there orenothe #1ivi3ion superintendent t1lel(5 the 'I1114 11:0 nlotherle-411 girl was Loft to ehil(Irl'n, and the 11113) Makes a deed of volume of the 'el'nrds containing this Net -or hod those beautiful Poon!; 110011 ! 3)f? 11('11..1' 11{111.•11 after 1(4'1 0)3331 will, tale, It must he ;I:Ii'lll'l1';1(111ui:114',1, Illlll 111111'., ri't'I•h'#' 11:1411'1' 1115 :11'111 11111 goes in 511011 dire confusion before ;1111.1 it js 3)',,t 111‘1411:2011:111:,,-)1 he 11un#,•Ioe,I at 113)1' ""1-""f I:!3) '1'.;1; 11) 1) as the .,1.3"0111 10 1he 'court' 1110(11 :1111 holds tiro 'trial' in:.; seemed to be missing but and 1.'11x1.', \1;1.11 1{11 1.11111).1 '11;1,1111 to degree IIC11' .top the tr:lilsoc1;011 :lull 'J'ile division .11 mriuti'udent 1.4 I rrlu4',', tl0 01011111:' 31011 14 (.'Illlll', 1 ,!' !hall i'11.01r1'1 w111011 flail 1/0011 lak('ll (1.0111 It -411111'01111:10 the 1,11111 1111,1 1 1, 11!10 01lAil'; judge and jury ill III04 cd;('3; (111(1 114 I,, G11111 i'iie�f, '1141' llltll.re •''lo'r'd 114 /1.;),:11111111.1'-::::11 11114('1' 1.x114, N'!11' Ll all 1''`;::.11113 111 111:' 114 11;1,1., I I �, It�n,l 11:;11. 3,'11; IOft slluulingl 1;1141.}• 1 ,,.Iin ;ill Io•oha.r;lit.1, 1111.11 ,den 1)1' 11'1111 1'1;0) 1;,i, Illi# tlltlt, the ift! 11111,' 1 gave 311111;' i„1 11)ll',; 11)1' ' , 1':111011,. 111';11' 1 „1 1i10 I1t,1)) 1!I 11 i'l 1, 1110!1'1' I.; 1111th• :'11'1 I'i'I'I:, :;1 114 1.11,1'!'' 1.'11:1'11 ;#!:IIT. :111'1 ' : ' :1 ver !llmon hilt all deireular water- '!Mollis' ill its binithllg of 3o 111;1111 lot'tit3 A 30(1 (;11'51 14x3;11'; 3) 1'..lilxl 41')41'1':1•, 111.! to l,ltllle!UUe the decision but the proof, 13'1111'1: ,34 had teen in the habit ;(x,,1,11)4 sh„3)''I, in tilt booming, be nut` 11 15 11.;1;111,1 jut" :1, 111:1111 119114, 4315 t(ctital facts in the (:1.1. If he employee t enl,,h,3(.. +If 11'4;11111!,' 111 stormy weather. 1•:41tha J0i' 1'114 151,1,_:10,1 1-,l','I1(1 :111'1101x11111 • 1',!',1 ;(; 1!1.0:`,' x11,1. 1!11141'411; 1.111 (11' l 1s ;Itglllll+91 111! 13 0,114 1111, all the 111.114 110;3,'1( was gone ---1 hilt was evident, :lull sun ;elect, 13'0 113('4, x11,1 the 1111''1' 10,:; #I,n'il;, the trial. S110)11)3 hl, hl, 1 , lou one 1i1)1)1 brie 1(3 k110N• 011011 (11' will• 1)il:'111:Ir ti;' ,llllnll(1• of 11o61'1,)) \•ml+:(''; l! lli1,13,'11 111,115,;: 1;11.' ";11'!1 111 01'441' 4(l Ilge f1, 11114 J):'g114 111 l0 ;1 (( 11 101 I'\tell! I)Ilt (11.1', l�trt'lll.l \')'.l!' l)1)' iItli'I;Ill. permitted ,--1301 original ilivi,ion, t0 1114111•.' (air- Ilut .Ililicll'llt to eouse his disehl •g' 111. 1);111131 Wil -1 11111ly stupi(nt at her 1..) 1j lit sv,11 distant '141;11134: of lir.;:, II;131,) leen x1:14,4 by the yolhlL,41 j• (tune (11411 fol' (h. ti 4 rjr•l r , 3)l. (1111511:11(4 b1 , :1111:1 the thought flash'! 0311111 111111 tli 01,4: 1,11('(1:_ It 331(', 1111;1x' t!1':! sea, 1r1u, f11r(11Ice, 111113 the shat',' that i, il;r hrariug of the trial, ,hal 1',r•' might have ilei to 1':1111(, in South Sussex county. Itt (113 Ir;'t,-1)4(1,4rt �h,trl:l^tvn, in 1111 ' ".\5 to the 114114)11'1 of keeping se Put Ile soon 41.1113;1,, There! Ie.ative3 conisi=ted of father, l 41114 the -.L 41 this 14,'x1 for ,c1' j p,'1•;1111111 Ice0111s of till' employees: Tiler 1111, knew bel' (11111(1(1' well (•11011:;11 to :I:'1'x41', ::41+1 full!' g;(4, 1,.s,3)111114 (101!1:-,,t• 11.0 :111,1 rat4t'0! in 3030 1) :1,I'Uxltllate13 1 1:)111 that. if she 31•x; 11)11(111 10 1(11311 tor,, the laltnr a; full of flus :111•:1 I0j4• I l i 1,1' );i bodies, containing SOO pages each, 111Irl' 11'111'lll' .l:1' 11;113,1 Ili it boldly, (hili 115 1110 (lay is long; nml no 011e was ' e!osl'ly rolled, 'J'hese pages are indexed openly, 1111,1 111 d(!fiane(' 01 the 001'111; 1,1,11';' !411vw11, II;) to 11115 time, to 0131. SUMMER AILMENTS ::11,11 a pogo is reserved # each 111(#,('1131'1', she 111141• 3011111(1 ' 11:13'(! g"111' til' '':11'1'01 111;111.1011 awl got 1111111' I l l for lath 111:111, "Phis system is now employed by rail. :!wa3' 111111 left tltiu_r; in that style, i:t!;•. t\'itl10111 regretting the blight days that i reads r"ulrolliIlg !1.0 per ' Can Best be Banished by Dr, Wil : 1 LI cent. 1.i t)1#! log nuthii;t with her for her own cont. Lad flown till too quickly. for trackage laid in this ruunt'1'' 'Theo )in• ;1`11'1 1111;13. , We have said 11111t Mario! Vance 11118 Iiams' Pink Pills fPale People. { 1111 is ;_eaeral 111x1. ;t 11 (8 '(Inc 11.111. # It 3);l; 11 411.4 ,11141 inc'uulplc,l#.11 ,1 wilful. and n little incident will 3('1'1'4 to p 1511130 one 1f th1e in•ollI('nls !Which ere) I':,' 1111 lr1T, prove 0111' assertion. Upon reaching her 3;, .'1:1111111 1,+:!1 blood gets ;11;11 and confronts 1114 employer o r of great num- Pink ;mil weeks 0111')' (1010103 111 1114 destination on this eventful summer, the 31x1'1'1, Von f1el .111(411' wretched- prove 1',f men -the ability search fl 1 her, 1)etentives were employ- obstinate little lu:trelinuess•elect had in• tire,! 11.1)1.11 1, t. dull, your nerves areir• 'I'o Ino ( hu. a of obi, 1(1014 i, as greatt t , to know them. '•4, the police were notified and slver• si.tod upon being introduced into the 111.x1;!4, your whole system is mil of 1 a benefit as it is to our men.", 4 31lllrnl, 10(1'4 inserted n all the load- society frequented 111' the Suri•')' 11111111)' oval, '1'111'11' is jll.t one medicine 4;111 , ing papers, tut. all wilhuut !wail; n') 3).s )lain hiss Vance, devoid of either (3;i . e o 1 tianial , sunnurr feeling. ')3),t one! oho" (01:111 In! gained 113 to the title or any particularly alluring future medicine 1,(11:(1 33131 give you strength and' i11��� whereabouts of tic Missing girl; and prospects, Sita to endure11the tag of 41411 1111 hal• i PARTY. • 11, Dolton Was at last left entirely "11 shall be so much happier not to be 14.1 11.:11'; ---!►r, \'I'jlljaul,' 1';111: fills, :done and desolate in his beautiful home. hnmprrrd with all the terms 11111; erre. 1 3(1'; 11x11 114141..1 thousands, Perhaps 1 COMMANDS Uuly 111' thing 13135 3j3c)vercd that )1101134.4 1111111 are so irksoino at home, (111(1 )'on+' 11).14)11.11'.. u:u0 •11340(1)' toll \'un SETTOU TO VISIT WINDSOR .4'•111441 to 1111,' ally bearing on the tent• which papa 1s s0 tenacious of," said the the;; 11;131' helped them, '1'1141'14 the 1 SENT OUT TO IiU111BER 018,500, ter, and that was her adventure ulth tee 111314 1»41, ns x114 persistently argued, 11114;0;114 that 1!i31kes (11x1 !111).1 1;111 red i unknown 1(1(33:ul after her \1313 to Rohn ),c1' paint 0;1.11 the, family. 1.10"11 13)1)1 evl'lyunl' 1,4)14, 1'11 g'();1 i' Form of Invitation -Special Trains From toker'S 111111.1'' "liut 1 111)1 in doubt as to the propriety 11(alth--they 11'311' fail to 110 that, Airs, 'I'll' )11i('(uI1tlI 3t'llo 1a,1 rescuv3 her I London -All the Equipages From I of such a proceeding for that 3111 reason L. .\. ('It•rierr, the popular stewardess . 11134 nu aorom)t 1f lie I:new 11' thT -lour papa would nut 111/111'01.0," 31.• of 1114 11x(( I" l'urtirr flub \111111.411(,! Royal Mews, 111111101', 1111(1 1.h; a -1131'1:111)13 lton welt 1;111• I ikI •'� 111111.144 11a(lnm Surrey, 11;31;„nig to 1'c• 1.1:11„ says; "1'111 two years 1 3vus a 3 self to see the wretched family, thinking fuse the bright girl's '(quest, yet fearing 1:,3),x:111.1. sufferer from',renrral debility.! perhaps some 61141.1141 information ))light,(.ver before within living memory has even more to offend the marquis. The least wort: fatigued 1110 and 301111'-' 11!' 1:1('2111011 1'1'0;11 1.111'111. ! # 811011 n 11,x81. COI1C011se rof !hell anti women 111, please let ale b( happy' in my times 1 cowd not work :at all. 1 0)11111 ' Put John I,oker !hail (lied the day fol. 011.11 13111. for a little while. At home 1 nit rllisr 1111 hand shore 3)#y head with distinguished in every branch of national 1!(131,1, 1'.lbthn ,s visit there, and after the alit 1111' i01(1y '!'Ills and my 1,:itI1' That, 01!1 feeling pant; 111 all 111)' muscles. " ' 1'1 funeral the family had disappeared, 11113 +' #, ! I 1 life, been 41111.44 together, as that 1311;111 n I # until 1 hate the word, and long to get 13,14 1,3(.11 weak :1111 5lcu'tjute' hetmul'' , will as3(1111 le at the great garden party no low I::,ew anything 1f them, oat of 111)' strnit•jncl:ct and enjoy n so 1!izi, that, 1 would fall Inness 100(11)1 . '1') salt that Ni'. Dalton was not ex' 1111.1:' freedom," sighed 1111 fair pleader, lean 1(4011131 something for "Pim". given t' b), the Jing 111111 Queen to 1.111111: 'remelt. null distressed over the strange of ) ! . the (lull 3)t Ascot 11 elk, coaxjngly, \1'1:114 in tills (•o(1djtjon 1 0111, i1111'I,rll fair would he very unjust to 111111, , Fur the brief space of three lours the Ile availed himself of every 111, 'l)le 1'1414 was no resisting the i1sinuat• to 111 Ih', 11'illi:un.' Pink 1 111.4, 1 'ltd life and interests of the whole empire means to solve the &Pailful mystery; mit tones, the sweet blue eyes, and the 111111 3,1' (1)' lima' I bad tnL).n len were focussed on the grounds of \Vindsor l'1)11111'1'1(e )1x11 111'41141 seen, Ile lens pretty,41111;11g month; so for 1;1;111. 55ol, 110.31':, I was in perfeel health and am C'aytie, 1n1113swse134 o111o, and i( lens not in happy weeks the chilli of the aristocratic now sill( 'so/ look ,flier 1111 my duties ' invitations 1i of been issued to the for, Lis lot mi. to frond 3)\'e' anything either !marquis 01 \V).eliffe was simpll' 1,1iss without the bast fatigue, \\3021 1 be-' (,;43) embassador. loud \lieisters with the troublesome or disagreeable; full the 11;11!un Vallee, and It Merrier quillclle ',,,11 taking the Pill. 1 was a groat sof- personnel of their embassies and lege- ',mina, those five -Kate, JIIn Caroline nod 3,74'1'--30.4113 I feel "5 if 1 11(3)1 31)5 ill )' s1:n'oe from which 114 a'1. 1111!1.11 4rv1s , i lions, the members of 1..114 Gos•crnment onu3uln(iu) may perhaps be etigil l(il h} .Isabel with ,Mlu'ioll-»lade c1111d not ---11):11(1;5 1.1 111', \\•illi:un3' fink 1';115," ! , representatives of the colonies, the house the following soliloquy with himself, ') .Isabel, been found clsewihee ill all 3uiitla In. 11'ilijnms' 1';1111 fills strike IIg)1t hold of the i<iig and Queen and of the he sal one night in the library, consider- a 5Ta 011111111. et the rout ill u.laen13l, Ilehilit)', rhea; 1011.1.1 faaily, 11113 to Wooly peers 11114 ing the (11'15 and eons of 11( future:TheHonorable :lnllrew Surrey's resi- m;ltkm. inrlige.t1,nt, the secret ills of I JlhoIlll,ers lir Parliament, naval and hili - l( any have 4111,E 31 (l5 It must charming one, 0111• 31'(un(u 11x111 gill'. 3114 girl:, ay., • 3'11''11 tail' officers, clergy :old ministers, and --h3111111I to lalilha-if she Should not 11101x11! the sen, 11114 that 14111 it wns t)1(y make new blood -111(3 do just 1,11113 reprc.entntiles of 1.111 nntsicnl, dramatic be --•!Hing, hers -fortune then will be - hood by the surrounding neighbor. on,' Ihing, 1)111 11113 411 it 13x11 -;;110(1 1114 Iltel'I(I'1' 1(I'nfe:(91o119. 11111.4, I suppose." loud 'l he 1101110 of the Nymphs, 111 blood 113.81.3 brings good 1141111111, `oto ! '1'114 im3;Otions 1.3'0)1 couched in the .11;11 even while he spoke a strange bona, of the chlu'nling belnitic3 residing 11) all nu 11111 ' 4(011113 3)r 1,1' 17111.;1 at :;1)1 follol'ing lrrms: 1'x,1: settled over his face, there wns a there. 41111.3 a hox 3)r sl., hose, for :142.60, from , 1.e; quaver in his 30;44, 11114 111 was as But dire calamity and sorrow were The 1)r. 1\•illi111us' llelliviue Co., 'hack- 1 The ford Clinmberltin is commanded lu I ( ; by 11(11 ei'nootjc3 to invite white ns the immaculate tie 1311;111 he (Icsijnul to o'e31 0)0 3111114 beautiful ane! vine, Un.. to an afternoon party 011 Saturday, the I out his 1141111 careless nymphs e►(. their summer boli �, # wore n) day, begun willt so much of happiness 1111(1 promise, should end, and the )lemur!' of it was the metals of saddening their 'whole Miter life. . 1)u1'iug one of their Hoary excursions and !denies, Marion Votive made the 111(1111)11111)11(1' 1)f It )'ollilg 111a11, 13'111 was introduced to her 113 1[1', George Stunner, 1 -re 3vns about twenty-two years of age, not handsome, not even' fine looking, but pns.sesoed of a singular fascination of manner' that attracted her front the very first. CIIAPTER '.rwe11(y•0u(' or two years before our story opens, there resided in Iiiehmnnd, (114 of the beautiful suburbs of Lond011, the 1;1;111 ll0n0r:lble \V11rrentoll hair• Held \ 11111(', :,Iarquis ill' 1Vycliff(, 1111(1 %vim 11131) pu0.sessed another' title; but of that more hereafter. 114 was 1114 eldest of the two children :'f 11 previous \', 0 114 11 11111 Fairfield Vance, whosr strange will treated Si) 11111011 dis- en.;3ir11 au�l r('ll!nrk nt the time of his dentli several veto's before. There were 4)11!1 two olrilda'c0, 3)•c '11:130 51111(1, ill^ ,prrsr.n't nla,rgu'is (111)1 his 111110, n,llhough coni, tlera l)1y v'o'm11:1(3' 1111.11 tinisCi.f, 1'111,1 Iner1''lell,'l)4')' 1':114;'1 Ill life, 41 111011' ,of I1itl'1;11')' profession, t1 ou:J)1 of a 110(11111)' 1111111 respcetal)'le f:ulnily- Tres,sailjll 1))- nature, • She hail one ohild, a 0011. Artlhln' T'res- 5a.13(1, 111111 'falt'11or of the 'Patti '1'ros'alia of caw sfoey. Arl.hur Tress.4':t'iia died' -w'hen 'his sol 1'11111 11)114 ow!r1• three )iealr3 of age, mud leis gramihnn(1(1r, the uu»rquils' sister, two !elm's ofter lrtu'd, The alt! ninrgnis' will, before Tafer'red t'o, 'hod ^111.'1111101 11118 e5tat'tes in at 1'1'1'1' 'peenlina' and rather perplex'in'g 3100')'. alley were to desecnd to the eldest . _3)d +111110, 11)1)7, ftenl 4.30 to 7 o'clock. \Voll:ed on One Far;) 74 Years, Windsor Castle, Morning dress. :1t a meeting of the committee of the The gliosis were conveyed in carriages from the station up Castle 11111 to the S)1[10111 Agricultural:133uciutiun at Slid.castle, the route heti! kept by soldiers bury to make the (sward of annual pre. and a special force of metropolitan police. miun's .for long se•1'i(e in 11151)11ralry it ()wing to the large number of carriages that were required the resources of the was announced that '1(411)05 Fletcher had royal (news 3)t Windsor were supple - heli recommended. whohad!seen seven.melded h)' ns ))'Win equipages as poll(- ty•f(1ur years employed upon Hillsamebe spared from the stables 3)t llucking- fur)1I, but as )iii; master had never been 110111 palace, a member of the association his east' '.I'he King 11114 (,)111.411 received the ('4o he continuer -13 not he considcr(d. guests on the cost lawn. Special interest There were 1»43)(1' -five competitorssntta4hed I1 the party, owing to the pros1111050 Vent (10014 110t 0X000(1 .1.:5 who have ewe of the 1<ing of Siam, who was the easlioro Exclias rci.kod longest on the same farm or front Saturday tn AIontlity, The Grand guest of their Majesties nt Windsor - the class for laborers in Imsbandry Silo atlantic Cfify 1'01' (.ht' 511103' lun3ter 01' mistress, 44)11! thv 1)11310 and Duchess of.l'Tesse foul Prince rrizrtnhel.c Were: William Dunnet I, 1'r Ailb•o' of Clree.ce were nlso present. "Ilm by Sir Cuthbert Quint". \Vias the sintel)' walls of the castle as +r whose rent does lint exceed ,C who lin '1 It background, the royal flower !1114411 ('h;irle.3 Foyers, sixty-one )'eluw; \Vi11j1in1 tiglow- with summer bloom, and the �a n d eta 1'n Curler, fifty'603'em )'rats; Pobert : (11)1, 'l:uleidn:acope of colo' thnt sons provided Q,� p� fiflytluce years, 11111 Walter Clov,.fiflii, by 1.114 lliesses of 3,111. ladies and the'bril- Via. Lehigh Valley R. R. 11111'1 ycfu's,-From the I/011(1011 Stnndnt'd' Bent uniforms of militaf'y officers and +'� Indian princes, the scene was one of ex - mu Suspension Midge, Frilly, July 1' The Sunday Worm, 1.i ptinnnl splendor. 'rickets !11(x1 115 days' Allow atop (1'1111»de1phla Inquher,) The 11rrnngenents for refreshments over 111. [llilndclphin. For tickets and 1llnlster (meotIng n 11111811 boy on Sunday were on on exceptionally Magnificent further particulars (all on or write L. afternoon carrying n 411.1.x1.; of 1.11111 )- scale, (locals were served in marquees 1', 11.. Office, (id King street east, Toronto, •101111 n)iivtin 1 (3)040)balol) oilo9e outhnt'li what x1131 Ipso in 31111 beautiful orangery, which 01'1.0;11.. 110, they got roe chasing worms on a Sunday. contains the famous Osborne statuary, FI S 1) ' 1 1' i 1 ] 1 PAGE Fowl—THE I3LY'TI-I STANI.)ARD--juis :511i, 10o7, JAS. McMURCHIE BANKER. A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS TRANSACTED, BLYTII, ONT. ROTES DISCOUNTED. Sale Notes a specialty. Advances made to farmers on their own notes. No additional security required. INTEREST ON DEPOSITS at Current Rates We otter every a000tumodation con• sisteut with sate and conservative banking principles. UNLIMITED PRIVATE FUNDS To loan on Real Estate at lowest rates of interest. REAL ESTATE AGENTS. Persona wishing to sell will do well to place their property on our list for sale. Rents eolleoted. CONVEYANCING Of all kinds promptly attended to. INSURANCE. We represent the leading Fire and Life Assurance companies, and respect• fully sulioit your account. OFFICE HOURS: 10 A.M. to U P.aa, Business Bards. A. B. MACDONALD. Barristert Solicitor, Notary, Eto. Sue. ceesor to G. F. Blair. Office over Stan. dard Bank, Brussels. Solioltor for Metro• politan Bank. F1i)UDFOOT, HAYS & BLAIR, Banisters, Solicitors, Notaries Public, Eto. Offices—Those formerly occupied by Masers. Cameron and Holt, Goderlch, W. Proudfoot, li.0. ; 11. C. Bays, G. F. Blair, 0. E. LONG, L.D.S,, D.D.S. Dental Surgeon. Graduate of the Royal College of Dental Surgeons. An honor graduate of Toronto University. Office over James Cutt's store, Pretoria block, Bluth. At Auburn every Monday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. W. J. MILNE, M.D.C.M. Phyetolau and Surgeon, M.D.C.M,, UnI. verslty of Trinity College; M.U., Queen's University; Fellow of Trinity Medical College, and member of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario. Cor. oner for the County of Huron. Office, one door north of Comnmerolal hotel, Queen street, Blyth, F. SCOTT BRUSSELS, ONT. Auctioneer for Huron County Terms reasonable. Sales arranged for at the office of THE STANDARD, 13Iytb. Blyth Livery AND Sale ntables Go GI o Q Dr. J. N. Perdue, V.S. PROPRIETOR. /i oa osa Gie First•olass Horses and Rigs for hire at reasonable rates. Beat of accommodation to Commercial Travellers and others requiring rigs. Veterinary office at livery stable. KiNG AND QUEEN STREETS, BLYTR. FALL TERM OPENS SEPT. 3rd sta. ( ►I r traUord,� Thls sohool, which is an old and well established one, stands to the forefront as the greatest Commercial and Shorthand school In the west. Our teachers are ex• perienoed instructors, courses thorough and practical. ' We assist graduates to positions. Write for our tree catalogue. ELLIOTT & McLACHLAN, Principals, e4-< /%70* 420.,s1t2.414,-e...0 771t4tret4Z 1 upwards ?rtpc gtuth gtiut iwb, J. L. KERR, PUBLISHER. THURSDAY, JULY '25, 1907 People We Know. Miss King, of Detroit, is home for her vacation, Mr, Jos, McKay, of Stratford, was in town yesterday. Miss Emma Leith is spending; her holidays at Kincardine. Miss Eva Carter Is enjoying the lake breezes at Owen Sound. Mr. A. W. Robinson paid Seaforth a friendly call on Saturday last. Mr, Roy Sites, at' the Bank of Hamilton, is away on his holidays. Bliss Miller, of Milverton, is the guest of her sister, Mrs. C. 11. Beene, Mr. Will Davis, of Goderich, was smiling on old friends on Wednes- day. Mr. Harvey Buchanan, of Brus• cele, was to visitor in town on Satur- day. Mr. F. Carr, of Toronto. is spend- ing a few days with his parents in town. Miss Hotham, of Mitchell, is the guest of her friend, Miss Minnie Moser. Miss Bernice Moore, of Toronto, is spending her holidays with her par- ents here. Mr. E. Kraehling, of Arcola, Sask,, is at present visiting relative and friends here. Mr, Charles Richards, of Brussels, passed through town on Tuesday on a wl.eeling trip. Mr. Walker Moore, of Toronto, was a visitor at Mr. A, SteinhofT"s during the week. Mrs. Chas. M. Hall is visiting at the home of her parents here, Mr, and Mrs. J. E. Bennett, Mrs, David }''foody expects to leave next Tuesday for a two months' trip to the west, Mr, and Mrs. G. M. Chambers were enjoying the Old Boys' Re- union at Kincardine this week, Mr. Jahn Fraser and Mr, Wm, McDonald, of Jamestown, spent Sunday at the home of Mr. James Cutt, Mr, Robert Stuart left last week for the west where he will visit his son, Dr, Stuart, of Cupar, and also other friends. Mr. P. Scott, of East Wawanosh, represented Blyth Lodge, A. F. & A. M., at their Grand Lodge at Ot- tawa recently. Mr. Stephen and Mr. Wm. Merritt, of London, were guests at the home of their cousin, Mrs, James Cutt, Dinsley street, Mr, Earn Bigley, formerly of 13lyth, accompanied by his friend, Nit'. Nilson, of' Chatham, wad it holt. day visitor in town during the past week. Mr, Robert Brown left Saturday morning for Toronto where he has secured a position es stenographer., His many friends join In wishing hint success. Mrs. T, IV. Scott and family went to Toronto last week where they will remain for some time while Mr. Scott is away visiting relatiyes in the Old Country, Mr. Ed, Moser, of Winnipeg, is enjoying a week's holidays under the parental roof, He looks as if the west agreed with hint, IIe ex- pects to return on Tuesday next. The Cradle. BRADWIN.— At 53 Market street, Galt, on Friday, July 19th, to Mr. and Mrs. A, E. Baldwin, a son. JOHNSTON.-111 East Wa wanosh. on June 28th, to Mr, and Mrs. Chris, Johnston„ a daughter, Thu Alter. BoURNir—DoyI,E. -- In St. Peter's Catholic Rectory, Goderich, by Rev. George R, Northgraves, grand uncle of the bride, assist- ed Rev. Donald McRae, pastor of Goderich parish, Mary Caro- line, eldest daughter of His Honor Judge Doyle, to Francis Swift Bourne, M, D., of Seattle, Washington, late Major Com- missioner and Chief of Staff United States volunteers in the Philippines. 25 Cents gets The Standard balance of year POR MALI:,—Tho following are to be sold before the first of August as the pro• prietor is leaving town :--,\ good driving mere six years old, 1 cutter nearly new, 1 open buggy, 2 knitting ntnchinus nearly new--teeso machines will be sold cheap and full Instruction will be given hew to operate them, Terms cash.— (EO. DAWSON, Blyth. BULLS 1011 SAL'.. --Two Thoro'bred Durham bulls, aged 2 1.2 years and 1.1 mouths respectively. Robt. Wightman, Blyth 1'. 0., Lot' 2, Con, 9, Motrle. POLLED ANGUS BULL FOR SER. FICA;.—The undersigned has for ser• vine on lot 30, eon, 14, Hallett, a Regis- tered Pulled -Angus Buil.—,lonN WAI.• DEN. Executor's Sale. Estate of John Canting, sr., Lot' 22, Con• oessiou 13, Township of Mullett. This exuullent 150 acro farm will be offered at auction on Wednesday, &ugust 7th,1907, at 2 o'clock p. in. at Brown's Hotel, Londesborough. This is a first-class farm, has good build- ings luuludlttg commodious brick house large bank barns with stone stabling and other outbuildings, all modern farm im- provements and conveniences, good water and a good hardwood bush ; near to t chool and market. Information will be promptly given upon request. EDM.L'ND LEAR, Blyth Ont., Executor. W. BRYDONE, Clinton, Oat., Solicitor for the Estate, A Successful . Wedding Is impossible without the help of sa jewelry store, Try to think what such an affair would be without the presents. Try to imagine a ringless, giftless wedding. It's unthinkable. • So you would find It hard to get along without us at such a time. We have a groat big interest1:'g array of gift articles, And the beauty of it is that the majority of them aro anything but expensive. We suggest Silyerware, Clocks, Fancy China, Etc, Call and take a good look through. FRANK METCALF Jewelry and Stationery. ROBERT H. GARNISS BLUE VALE — — ONTARIO Auctioneer for Huron Co, Terms reasonable, , Sales arranged for at THE STANDARD office, Blyth, Brussels Monument Works We buy by the oarload direct from the quaries, Get our prices. Wo employ no agents. WiLSON & HUNTER BRUSSELS — — ONTARIO. CHEAP READING OUR CLUBBING LIST. The Standard . 81 Oi' Tho Standard and 'Weekly Adver- tiser 1 65 The Standard and Weekly Wit- ney9 1 60 'Pile Standard and Weekly Globe 1 85 The Standard and Family Herald and Weekly Star 1 7t 'file Standard and Weakly flail and Empire 1 6:, The Standard and 1-Iamilton Selni- workly 'Times 1 80 The Standard and Weekly Freo Press, 180 The Standard and Toronto Week- ly Sun .. 1 8'' 'l'lle Standard and Hamilton Twice -a -week SpLectator,....... 1 80 'I'Ini Standard and Toronto Daily Star 2 25 The Standard and pronto Daily News , 2 25 The Standard and f'armer's Advo - rate...... ... 2 80 The Standard and Daily Adver- tiser 2 6" The Standard and Evening Free Pre ss 2 75 The Standard andToronto Daily World........ , 8 25 The Standard and Daily Free Press . , .. 8 5' The Standard and Evening Globe 8 50 The Standard and Evening Mail and Empire 8 5u The Standard and Daily Mail. and Empire4 50 The Standard and Daily Globe. , , 4 50 Send all subscriptions direct. to 'I'HE STANDARD, BLYT}I, ONT. li 1A NI'Tel l'l.El'S "Qllrrniie'y," "Boss" nod ".Stat;" chewing Iohuc.C')cs, in big plugs, Quality always rho same, Fall Fairs for 1007. Toronto. Aug 20 to Sept I) London Sept I1-14 Exeter Sept. 1017 `en forth Sept, 19.20 Blyth Sept. 20-21 Ripley..,, Sep 2.1.25 Uodarich Sept. 21.25.26 Winghatn Sep'. 2(1.27 Milverton.... Sept, 20 27 Atwood Oct. 1.2 Brussels .Oet, 8.4 Tooswater .....Oct, 13.1 TO WHOM IT MAI' CONCERN. --The publisher earnestly asks YOU to send hint your subscription as soon as you can. "A favor dune quickly is a favor done twice." "Tho aura to whom a thousand owo Each ono his small amount, Is oft distressed, for these small bills A noble sum do count," Please do not neglect this because it is only a "small amount," We have It thousand or more other small bills out, ranging from $1.50 to 85,00 ; and every one of them is important to us. They altogether "a noble sutra do count," Don't keep your share back, In our business, every- thing we get requires ease. The men employed must be paid every Saturday. Paper, type, ink, mach. Inery and everything else must be paid with little or no delay. The printer Is not allowed to wait one year, two years, three years etc , to pay the bills that he owes ; so it is easy to see why his subscriber friends ought not to keep his wait• Ing;, As we are now drawing hear to the close of our Ilrst year here we desire to have our subscription lint in to good healthy way and to do so we are placing our collects 111 the hands of the "Canadian Publishers' Col. lection Agency" who make it specialty of collecting overdue aconnts. The list will be in their hands after Aug. Ist., su do not be offended if you receive a notice from them, Belgrave. Mr. IIaggitt is putting down a well on the school grounds, Chas, AlcClellttnd, sr., is visiting friends in Port Ilul'on this week, Geo. Taylor disposed of 30 head of cattle last Saturday for shipment. Clegg & Johnston shipped a car- load of cattle and a car of hogs oe Monda y. We are pleased to see John Stewart around again, although it will he Seale time yet before he will be able to resume his duties in the blackstnli h shop, DOCTORS USING PATENT JIEDICINES The Honest Physician is Anxious to Cure and Uses the Best Available Remedies. The proposed legislation through the Dominion Parliament for the reg- ulation of the manufacture and sale of patent or proprietary medicines is of the utmost importance, and it is receiving a groat deal of attention, not only by the proprietary medicine manufacturers, but also by the leading doctors and druggists. Every manu- facturer of reliable and high class remedies welcomes the bill as a step in the right direction. Tho discussion has brought out the fact that the best physicians in Canada and on the con- tinent approve of and proscribe Psy- chine in cases of the most difficult character. In a recent instance of very serious throat and lung trouble the patient had been using Psychine. Two leading United States specialists were consulted, in addition to two eminent Canadian physicians. Upon learning what the patient was using, a sample of Psychine was taken and analyzed, with the result that the Thysicians advised its continuance. hey proscribed no other medicine but Papillae, with the result that the pa- tient has fully recovered and is a splendid walking and talking adver- tisoment for the wonderful curative power of a remody that will "stand up" before the keenest professional criticism and analysis. As a builder up of the system and restorer of all wasted conditions, Psychine has no equal, and the best and most earnest physicians recognize this fact. "At the age of 25 my lungs were in a terrible state. 1 had la grippe the year before; it settled on my lungs and I kept steadily growing worse WI 1 got down so low 1 was in bed for elx weeks. I had a consultation oI doctors, and they mid they could do nothing more for me. Thea I started to use I'sychlne, I took the medicine for more than a year. It certainly did wonders tor me, I am Isow se strong as 1 wu before my sickness." YR8,11. If l[ B, orpeth, Ont. Psychine, pronounced Si -keen, is the greatest of toniat, buildingup the sys- tem, increasing the appeite, purify- ing the blood, aids digestion, and acts dirootly upon the throat and lung, giving tone and vigor to the entire system. At all druggists, 60c. and $1 or Dr. T. A. Slocum, Limit♦d, 179 Bing Street Not, Tot'aaty. 1 \1 ,SA1 jut )14 Starting Friday, July 26th we are going to sell remnants 5o gids of Dress Goods • 0 00 I �0 i0 10 From 1 to 5 yards in each end, goods that sell from 25o to 51,25 per yard. Wo want to clear them out away below cost prig. A lot of Prints, GInghanls and Muelins, all new goods, hist colors, ends of 2 to 0 yards. All will be sold at great reductions. 50 Remnants of Flannelettes and Shirtings All good staple goods. They will be money savers for you. J. A. E S Et 7_41Tiff 0 LDEF IP) P N r See large bills for particulars of sale ---July 27th, for 13 days. Store will be closed Friday, July 261h. 0 LDEN MYTH This brand—on a bag or barrel—is the nark of a BLENDED FLOUR of Ontario Fall Wheat and Manitoba Spring Wheat, milled by the best millers in Ontario. Ask your grocer for a Blended Flour—and look for the above brand wherever you buy. „ "Made in Ontario" Subscribe for The Standard, JULY 25 111 t90E 13LY`l'H STANDARD PAGE Fiivt, THE RIGHT HOUSE A RELIABLE; STORE WITH WORTHY GOODS ON SALE r AT MODERATE PR 10E3 FOR OA 811 AND FARM PRODUCE.� Men's Two -Piece Outing Suits : Navy blue tweeds, fine hair line stripe, first- class tailored, trousers with cuff bottom, regular $6,75, sale price $4 oo, Men's Suits for $9.00. Men's single breasted models, in all colors and rY� the season's choicest novelties, workmanship, ma- terials and styles of the very finest. Very special VA at $9.00, 0 Special offerings in Boys' Suits, VA 0 Crockery VA \Ve carry a full line of common Cups and PAr Sancers, in white, edge line sprig, maple leaf, pink fir/ and blue shaded, also in bowls, pitchers, odd tea 2r pots, sugar bowls, and a splendid choice of dinner r ware and toilet sets, r� For a good dress buy Priestley's Dress Goods. Ar Highest prices paid for Farm Produce. E. BENDER, BLYTH lid BUTTER &EGGS 'Tier gypsies passed through town on Monday morning. ^( iT11 'xM1]) THE evening train on the G. 'T, R. Saturday evening did not get to As wo make a specialty of handlluR produce we are paying the highest cash lir 1 th till 8.30. prices for Butter and I';ggs at our store, PIUINCII'AL I',tU'rLEY has rented When you have any of those for sale get tho house at present occupied by our prices before going elsewhere. Principal Lough in Clinton. 1VANTED.-Large qua ntities Butter Grain (Ikeda paid after banking hours and Eggs. Clearing sale of all Summer goods during July and August, Gro, E. Kixo, Wingha in. MOMILL'AN & Co. SUMMER SCHOOL. -The third 808- Dineley Street (Blyth slum of' the Goderich District Sum- mer' school, for Bible and Missionary study and Evangelistic effort will be held in Ilarbor Park, Goderich, July 29th to August 4cI1, Special atten. tion is called to the fact that the concert, which was announced to be Friday evening, Aug, 2nd, will be one day earlier, Thursday, August 1st, in the new North street church. Among the noted minlaters who will address the different services are : -Rev, W, Itussell, hi, A,, Toronto ; Rev. A. Sutherland, D, D., Toronto, Missionary Secretary of the Meths• dist church ; Rev. 0. N. 11icCumus, Listowel ; Rev, C. E. Manning, Tor- onto ; and Rev. W, W. Prudharn, 13, A., B. D., DLIsslonary from Japan Rev, S. Anderson, el' town, is Chair. 111A11 of the Music Committee, and will no doubt look after his work in first class style, Tito Milverton Sun of last week hats the following to say about the baseball match on the 1 2th between the tenm from that town and Blyth : -'flee baseball match players at 131v'th on July 12th by the Milverton and Blyth teams resulted in a vie. tory for Milverton at the close of the eighth innings, by 11 score of 5-2, The Blyth 'tggregatlon are fairly good hall players, but have not yet learned to take defeat very gracious- ly, Mr. Brown, of Mnukton, acted as referee, and was most linparttnl i11 1)i8 decisions, ns he always hi, yet he was continually interfered with by the player's, It is not necessary to elaborate on the gnnec save to state that considering that many of the 3111vertrnt players had not been on at b111 fields before this year they did exceed well. Had it not been for at couple of errors 111 throw- ing to bases the Blyth team would have been shut out without making a run. at our store. TOWN TOPICS. IIAvt': you ordered your coal yet? WE wonder if' the summer gli'I feels as cool as she looks these days. THE Kincardine Old Boys' and Girls' are holding theft' re -union this week, THE dal( v' papers during the past week have been filled with drown- ing suicides, murders, accidents etc, Certainly this is a fast world. Diary had a little car- "I'was run by gasoline ; But since it went up in Ole all, Our Mary's not ben -zinc. CONTRACT,- W. 1I. McElroy hos a contract to make live thousard or more apple barrels for D. Cantelnn, of Clinton, We can guarantee a good job will be clone. Sum Evert SINt.ii -Tile Clinton News -Record of lost week retnnrks -Several from Clinton awl still more from Goderich township, who attended the celebration in Blyth last Friday, have since had several dates severe Illness, the complaint being of a weakening nature and rendering them Incapable of any exertion. It is supposed to have orlgleated from the food they ate, LAs'1' Saturday the Edits!' I'eefiiVed fair Papers of the Dawson Daily News, of the week of June 29tH, from ani old employee of the Brus- sels Post, Mr. Adrian 'l'hourit, who now liven in Dawson, We notice that the prim of the paper is 25e a copy (roar pages) and $2 00 a month or $24 0 year, If some ol'the sub- serihers hove as hard n time paving 118 do some of'l'air, STA NDA aDstlb- scrthers, the edltor would likely freeze to death, r•ntltt' .1ai(I Base Ball Match To -day at Milverton between the Seniors of Blyth and the home team. 1 he tram will leave on ,; p, m train C. P R. ;l (1 '.et urn can the evening train. Game called at 6 o'clock sharp. Return fare to Milverton.••.$1.20 Children under 12 years, half fare, cheer the boy,4 to victory, 'Pickets can only be purchased at J. McMurchie's at this rate, New potatoes and green peas are THE ruin early Monday morning on the bill of fare again, was highly prized by the forme I'S. Son Vi.NIit cards have already ar. LEAVE your order for job work at rived through the postofflce of the THE STA NUM no office, Very best in London disaster, typo, p,.ncr and workmanship, Dose's forget the Blyth Full Fair '1'118 howlCl'H are gsing to take 1►. w111 soon bo here. Remember the rink and maybe two to Goderich to date, Sept. 23rd and 2.1t1, attend the tournament in a week or THE temporary cattle pens have so. been placed on the 0, P. R. property CHOI' reports front the neighbor - but the scales have not been put ing townships aro quite promising down yet, now, Some say they will be better LAST Saturday E. Watson shipped than last year. 3 cars of cattle to 'Toronto on the C, TIIE rare to Milverton and return 1', Ii, Thls is the first shipment of is $1,20, for the baseball tnittcli to - live stock over the road from 1313t11, day. (;o and enjoy a ride on clic A number are talking of taking In new 0, 1', 11. line. the Baseball match at Milverton to. Wolin was received of the death day, Thu teats leaves on the 3 i). of it son of R. J, McGill, formerly of in, train and will 'lrrive back on the Blyth, The young 181111 was killed 9,45 p. in. We hope the boys will by a construction train, Ile was a be the victors, promising young man of le) years 'I'fF: waste basket is the receptacle and was employed in the offices of of touch printed matter, Is it the one of the great railways that centre last resting place of yours ? Our in Chieauo. work escapes the oblivion of the ON Tuesday of this week R Mel - waste basket, because its so attract. R. Sellars, our popular and well. 1ve its worth keeping, Its excel• known dray inan, hauled the first lance gives it worth, Try us with shipment of freight from the 0. 1'. R. your next order. and also delivered freight at the 'l'In, Wing ham Sunday School will station for distant points. We ex. run their popular annual pic-hie pect to see Mr, Sellars make a for - excursion from Mitchell to Kin- tune now since the opening of the caidine on Wingham's Civic 11ulhday, new road along with the G. T. It. Thursday, Aug. 1st, The G. T. lt, A Sucr,ESS.-The garden party will run two special trains on that held under the auspices of the Evan. date calling at .rill intermediate gelical church at the horse of .T. G. stations, Fares, adults 95c ; child. and Mrs. Mosel', 131yth, en Monday ren 50e. Fut' dine and all poral- night was a success, The lunch culnrs see posters, served by the Indies was excellent TIE following were ticketed to and everybody did justice to it, A distant points by C, P. R. Ticket short, but good, program was pre - Agent Me,llnl'chie on Tuesday of sented after a number of selections last week :-Robert Stuart to Strass• had been given on the gramophone burg, Sask., and return ; Joseph owned by 31r, hoar, of Clinton :- Ilabkirk, from 13russcls to Yorkton, Quartette, "Clover Blossoms," Misses Sask, ; Finlay Walsh, to Cupar, Minnie and Enema Maser and Messrs. Man. ; and un Tuesday of this week Murch and Carr ; piano duett, Misses Mrs. Ballantyne, to Winnipeg via Emma Moser and Pearl Gidley ; Owen Sound & Upper Luke steam. solo and quartette chorus, Miss Lily ship, Carr and Miss Minnie Moser and THE ratepayers of Blyth will soon Alessi's. Wilford and Carr ; solo, be up against a stiff proposition and "Just for To•duy," Miss ]Iothatn, of that is -are they going to 'allow Mitchell ; address, Rev, J. L. Small, Blyth Public School to get in a rut 13, A, ; solo, Mr, ,Murch ; address, or are they going to pay a sufficient Rev, S, Anderson ; quartette,Misses salary to keep a good teacher at the Moser and Carr and ,llessrs. Wilford head of the school. No school can and Carr, The proceeds amounted do good work if the teachers are to over $50. changed every year or so, The writer remembers attending the The Tomb. Council meeting last Nall when StIORTREED.--In Seaford], on July Trustee Mains stated to the Council 17th, James Shortreed, formerly that an increase had been given to of Morris township, aged 66 Principal IIartllcy, and it' they years, 4 months and 9 days. wanted to keep loin they would still ATTRILL, - At Nicholls Hospital, have to raise 1)18 salary. One Conn. Goderich, on July 18th, Edward elllor stated that the best thing the Cleary Attrill, of Ridgewood Board' could do was to get a cheaper Park, Goderich, of congestion one. Mr. Hartley goes to Clinton at of the brain. a salary of $900, and at the last School Board meeting held in Brus- sels the Board there voted another WILL KISSING $100 to Principal Cameron which brings his up to $1000 a year, andBE PROHIBITED then the Board is lucky to keep him as he had an offer of $1 100 to teach in another town, The ratepayers The Osculatory Process Denounced can easily sco that to keep up the by Scientists as Extremely standard which Blyth school now Dangerous --How the Dan - holds they must be able to supply ger Can be Removed. the cash to keep a good principal here, e'ver'y person in town will A keen discussion is being carried wish Mt'. and Mrs, 1Iurtley continued on by some of tho best �sof kissing, as to " rho danger and crime of kissing, led success In their new home, by Dr. Somers, Health Officer of At- A 6000 GAME, -Last friday even. lantio City, and Dr, Nalpasso, of the lug the IVingham juniors came to Medical Faculty of Paris, Thoy charge town to play a friendly game of the kiss with spreading grippe, scarlet fever, measles, mumps, whooping baseball with the juniors of this cough, typhoid fever, diphtheria, cry- burg ryburg and a good game 1t was foi' sipelas, meningitis, tuberculosis, nnd the spectators who wont over to the many infectious skin diseases. They park to see it, The hone boys had suggesto l gisoftt oticeson tin e subrailway sta.- and to keep moving till the seventh 11- tions, street ears and other pnblio nilgs when they got their battingplaces, but they say it would bo use - eye on tho ball and they did not lose to post them on verandahs, in stop till 5 runs had been scored. cosy corners, porches, shady nooks, During the several innings Wing. or moonlit lawns. They also propose haunt looked like winners hut the compulsory legislation for methods of disinfection of the mouth and purify - boys tightened up and saved the ing the breath, especially with a view game, Winghatn received 5 coats to the protection of the innocent babies of whitewash while Blyth was de- who aro particularly subject to infoo- �, Con. The greatest and most effective r. players and scute :- d 4 times, Following is the purifier and germ destroyer known to players medical science for the mouth, throat Blyth -It a and breath, as well as for the blood, Boll, lb 2 2 stomach and Lungs, is Psychine, that Somers, 2b 2 1 triumph of tho medical world that is Taman, p 1 2 attracting almost universal attention Craig, I f ,, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , 0 2 because of the wonderful results at- McMIllan, tib. 1 0 tending its use. One of its recent tri - Carter, of 0 4 untplts is told ae a stertor of experi• Buchanan o 2 once in the following brief statement: Wambold, olldd, rf,..,,,,.,,, 1 2 Coombs, ss,,.,9,.,... 1 2 Three Millinery F Apprentices Wanted VtF We will require three millinery apprentices for the fall and winter season, and this coming season will afford splendid opportunities to those who wish • to learn, Apply personally or by letter. Vit• • Men's Twee Suits at 2.50 ▪ r We have a few of these suits to clear in sizes 36, 37, 38 and 39. A lot of them have been sold • F but we wish to sell every one of them, and at the Vg' above price no person can afford to let this oppor- tunity pass. JF Remember a Tweed Suit for $2.50. *t Another lot of Men's Tweed Suits at $3.99. Yes, these are more money, but they are worth more as they arc quite a different class. We have sizes 36, 37, 38 and 39, and while they last we ven- ture to say no other firm in Canada can show you as good value, A Real Tweed Suit for $3.99. Do you want a better suit. $ $ $ saved. To the above job lines of suits we have added a lot of Men's Tweed Suits left from our spring buying which are put at less than cost price. Space does -*i not permit prices, but an inspection insures a pur- * chase 15o Black Cotton (lose, double dved, splendidly finished and aeamless, 8 , 0, O!, to sell at per pair 125e. Black Cotton Hose, warranted fast dye, extra well shaped, seamless, sizes 83, 0, 1)3, 3 pairs for 2.1e. `trio Cashmere (lose, extra spliced heel and toe, seamless, perfect fitting, 85, 9, O5, reduced from 25c to per pair 20o. std CASII PAID FOR BUTTER AND EGGS. POPLESTONE • & CARDINER * Successors to McKINNON & CO. Bargains in Furniture and Carpets Tltls manunoth store with Its 0750 feet of floor space Is crowded with beautiful goods ready for your Inspection. We offer two specials this week. Solid Oak Bedroom Sot Dresser, stand and bed, bevel plate glass, 21x311, worth $32, for $25, Parlor Suite, 5 Pieces. Sofa, rocker, arm chair and two reeep• tion chairs, regular $25, for $20, J. H. OHELLEW .SASH FOR BUTTER AND EGGS A FULL LINT; OF Fresh Groceries -ALWAYS ON HAND. Meats of different kinds. Salt In barrels and bags. Five Star Manitoba Flour and Choice Family. A. TAYLOR g '21 \VIngham- it o Mehl, 2h I 2 Britton, 0 0 8 Phoning, ss ...... .... 1 2 JI itaheli,, lib 2 2 Ronthior, rf 0 4 ]told, If ...... 0 4 Campbell, 1b,,,, ,,,,, ,,,, 0 2 Young, cf.... ,.., 0 2 Drummond, p...., 0 8 4 24 By innings- Winghain .. 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 2-4 Blyth.,.,.,' 0 1 2 0 0 0 5 x-8 D, Davidson, of \Vinghaun, was the umpire and succeeded in keeping peace. Dr, Slocum Co. 1 am sending you photo and testimonial here- with for your great remedy I'SYCIIiNI(. Your remedies did wonders for mo, I was about 28 or 80 years of ago when I took PBYCHINE. The doctors bad given mo up as an incurable consump• five. My lungs and every organ of the body were terribly diseased and wasted. Friends and neigh - bora thought I'd never got bettor, But P81'ClIN11 saved me, My lungs have never bothered me siuoe, and l'syehlno lea permanent Duro. lila5. LIZZI1( OARSIDB, 619 Bathurst Bt., London, Ont. Psychine, pronounced Si-koon,is ad. mated to be the most wonderfuof all disease and germ -destroying agencies, For building up the run-down system and curing all forms of stomach ,troubles and diseases of the chest, throat and lungs or head, it is simply unapproaohablo. It is a reliable home treatment. For sale at all druggists, No and $1.00 or Dr, T. A, Slocum, Limited, 179 king Street ,,Wept, To. ronto. • BLYTH Are You in Business For Business? If yen had an opportunity of addressing 1,000 people in a hall with the privilege of delivering an address on your business and the wares you sell, you would be apt to make that address as interest- ing as possible, so that your hearers would listen and you profit by it, It is just the same with an advertisement in TIM STANDARD, You have the privilege of talking every r"oek to hundreds of people and if you aro selling honest goods and tell the people about them in a straightforward manner you cannot avoid reaping a benefit. Wo stand ready and willing at all times to assist our patrons in preparing their advertisements -yes, give them assistance that would cost from $5 to $20 if a city advertising expert were consult- ed -ami do it free of charge. But bear in mind that no man cxi got out its good an advertisement for your business as you can. You know all the little details, the goods you bought ata bargaala, and all that, Just drop in and have a talk about it, The Standard, Blyth, Ont. ..r• URRENT COMMENT Down in 'caws :I I t'lc Elly ha; inst (inns' into f,'rrr roil:brie.:; that Aloof.... on hotel b,'d, h' 1101 Ic,s than 'lino foot long They :;r0W 1,111 mom there, aut't 1111'11 \tat'[ •tei'leci 111 having t', str1'1,41 to 11:111:,' Lreal 111 ell:11. a.0 -- Edward '1'. Parker, Coe I',.itel . 'It's+ coal exp;'rl, -ars that ;5 all(hI,lcitt' al' l) „its 11'i11 11:11',' l4o0n e'c- lnluted. 'Ilion, is said 10 he het a ii:0- ited supply --about 4.7li5,210,750 tela -- 111111 it i, being neat up at the rat,' of over ti3,1u0,011) tons a year, 1)11 , 1 an act Oil( come into effect ., 't•: '', '' ;1 '. i; 10 •ell eucaine or any of its salts or de- rivatives saw•' upon a physician's pre- scription, treat evil has Lieu done by the sale of snitlffs all( mixtures which . have made hosts of slaves l0 the Cokaitle habit. Philadelphia has entered into a part- nership with her street railway company under a .i') -yea; contract, thus renewing all the f ranee Use; is.ned .11) year. ago. The company agrees to pay the city a fixed crawly sunt and also to establish a sin!;ing fund \vhiclt inay, if desired, be useil at the enol of th0 peri, Id to buy out the various lines. ♦.* aayol' \1'lio was chief 1111tg• istrate in San Francisco Inti)!! one of thy worst periods of kraft, extortion and blackmail that any city ever experi• c'nced, hal• been sentenced to a term of five year,' imprisonment. The liraZoll sroundrol protested again -t the judge "lecturing" hill 111 passing sentence, and promise; to be a candidate for the ins'• oralty at the fall elections. Ile has great faith in the evil elements that have controlled Saul Francisco. -4.4. Tim pro'illent of the Erik P.ailway is alleged to have said, at the recent rail- way and steel makers' conference, that his road hail about :32,000 tolls Of fails Isla; itlong they right of way- of the Erie between ('hicago and N0\v l'ol'l:, which the ncul.l:p !!lent dol; not dare to lay for fear many of them will break under the "drumming wheels" and spread death and destruction, It is time .xmu'• thing .was done if that is tine, to safeguard the public, 1 The following is the 1e•'r,rd for the last five years celebrations of ouritei:h- bors' national holiday: Killed. Injured. 1903 ... ;1111 3.9-;-3 1904 ,,... 1,;3 3 -si j 11)01, 1 S2 tee 1 11106 ... ... .. .... . .. l.-)'3 15.303 The figures for the last Fourth will not he forthenming for some time ye•t, but it is probable that they will ;Itn',t' few. er fatalities. 'line figure,; given are from the .Tmn'nal of the American sledi,.tl .t. tsociat1)1r, --o- 1):'. of London, \wal'O3 girl.) agai.,st, the t'r•l'/:' for the nurses profes- sion, and t';'ie,1a1ly against tl'aining! 111 !1'):;i,ita!,, where it is said 50 per cont. co 10'' 1 ifl•t(lllin graduates are broken in h,'aith by the severity of the work t:l'C iruil.sed upon then:. There is a nlnworau'::t in some of tha hospitals now to reduce the term from 3 to 2 year's. l'hysi loll: say the course it is pretended to toile?,) 11111',;7:1 i; ,111 ilnpossible nor, 11101 it i:; Potter to turn out practical, phy sir calls able gradt:,ttr, at the end of two ycatrs than to send them forth worn out and broken down of, the on•l of three. In short, that any woman who (0!illot learn to obey file physician's instructions ill two years ought to seek another avocation, 'rio Montreal \Pities; chides those newspaper ; no,'n in I,llehe' and by the sea for talking "Iyra: 'ling" in connection with some, serious crime,; that have been committed down that way. It says "they do not squarely reeon1111 11l lynch- ing in silt!' Cages, but they assume that the: people want it 1)011 give all the a1•411 - 111011t•+ fit• it. It tion 11 k.; if these papers know that ''it is tie pride of Canada that there never Wn:, a lynching in this (u itary," There aro occasions \[•hen people feel that any kind of a death (400141 be loo gond for some fiends in human shape. Put, we should always remember that a3 a rule the law is sure and certain, and generally metes out the proper punishment to Such peo- ple. Sometimes there is a miscarriage of justice and sometimes clemency i3 shown [which should not be shown, but take it all in all there is no need for the services of Judge Lynes in this country, and We agree with the Witness that it is not the duty of the newspa- pers to encourage the citizens to super- sede the law, a A ilorse with a Sfrained Shoii!der is sound as a dollar in 24 hours after you rub the sore spot with Fellows' Leeming's Essence, It gives instant relief in all cases of Strains, Bruises and Swellings — draws the pain right out — strengthens the weak back, shoulder or knee. Whether you have one horse or twenty, accidents are liable to happen any time, Keep a bottle of Fellows' Leeming's Essence handy so yon can have it when needed. Sec. a bottle. At dealers, NATIONAL DRUG & CHEMICAL. CO, LIMITED, MONTREAL. I 11, Signs of Long Life, "Bacon took a deep interest in longe- vity and its earmarks," said a physician, "and Bacon's signs of long life and of short life are as true to -day as they over were. "You won't live long," Bacon pointed out, "if you hove soft, fine hair, a fine skin, quick growth, largo head, early eorpultwce, short neck, final' mouth, brittle and separated teeth and fat ears. "Your life, barring accidents, will be very lengthy if you have slow growth, coarse hair, a rough skin, deep wrinkles in the forehead, firin flesh, a large mouth, wide nostrils, strong teeth set close together, and a hard, gristly ear." —Minneapolis Journal. Get this FREE Book The PEDLAR People In'a before you build. Tells why fire. proof nietal material is cheaper from first to last—tells why ono kind is the cheapest it's safe to buy. No matter what you mean to erect or repair, indoors or out, send for book. Ask nearest office Oshawa Montreal Ottawa Toronto !,union Winnipeg Finding the Difference. Some people are going to be mighty surprised when they find out that there is a difference between real goodness and a receipt for pets rent.—Florida Times•Union. ITCH bli.nre. Prairie Scrntcbcs and every form et contagious Itch on human or animate cured In 30 minutes by Woltord's Sanitary Lotion, It never fails. Sold by druggists. •5* Cow Carried Away a Golf Ball, On Saturday two goiters were doing the round of the Bury Field links, Newport Pag- nell, when a most remarkable Incident oc- curred. , One of the golfers in making a creek shot struck a grazing cow on the hindquarters. In dropping the ball lodged in the whisk of the cow's tall. Expecting to see the ball fall when the cow moved, the players approach- ed the animal, which started off on the run, the ball still lndging in the tall. The move- ments of the animal caused tho ball repeat- edly to strike her on the legs, which made her kick out viciously. For fifteen minutes the .players Rave chase in the hope of dislodg- ing ,the ball, when a specially vielous kick Gauped the ball to fall to the ground.—From the London Evening Standard. 4.0 Minard's Liniment Cures Distemper. ••• What's the Use? (Toronto Globe,) The list of drowning fatalities continues to grow. There seems no remedy except to ropeat and repeat tba warnings. Wild Geese Late in Northern Flight, Skowhegan reports Unit itt 3,30 1.))), Saturda\ a flock of wild geese, estimat- ed at 4,15) or mop., flew over the city, bo1111d Ilor'th, 11 bile they were passing over the (11(111 the air wits so full of 1111,111 that it seemed like the apprnsu'h of a storm cloud. The first gentleman to witness t!a rrlurrlr,lhte Might \vas tumor (1. \1'x n!, vho is 0)) early ris:'r. The nap. di lig 111 111ci1' \►illgs awakened hint from it sound sleep, and hi, first impression 1105. until he went 011) 011 the 111.111 80(1 sn\w wll:it it 1.0aIly was, that it Ives thunder. The remarkable part of it is that the goose were going no►'Ih s), late in the season. It is past their breeding time, but as everything has lwet so backward this spring it i, presumed the birds waited for warmer weather before leas• ing the sonthhuld.---Le\tiston Journal. London's Exposition in rgo8. An exposition in London is officially nnnouneeel for the sunnier of 1908, to incline senile, art, products, mamlfnc- (111a'i :111.1 i;w,;oars of '1il1.'atn0 of the whole British empire, together with those of France and all her colonies, The preliminary arrangements were made last November between the offi• cines of the Governments name( and a site for the exhibition agrlP(1 spun. �finnrd's Liniment Co., Linlit'1. Dear Sirs,—This fall I got 1hrotvn on a fence and hurt my chest very had, to I could not work and it hart ale to breathe, I tried all kinds of liniments and they (id 1)1e no good. Ono bottle of MINAII))'S 1.)NtMr;N'I' warmed 101 flannels mut applied cn my breast, cured me completely. (', 11, i't),;.1I.') t1L Itossway, Digby ('o., N.S. Red Riding Hood's Wood. Jnck killed his giants in Cornwall i11 the days of l' in!_ Arthur, and 'cont Thumb flourished at about the saute time, while at much Inter date the babes were left by their Wicked Uncle to die in n wood in Norfolk --distinctively in Northwest Norfolk. Northwest Norfolk also contains "Lit- tle lied )tiding hood's 11'ood." Twenty years ago it was a lovely Ttmmt for the nature lover. in the heart of the woad ons a lake, in the nlidde of the lake nn island, mid on the island n ,tiny, unin- habited cottage. Flowers were every- where in profusion, especially spring flowers ---wild in the wood, cultivated in the cottage garden, whir)) was kept in order by the owner's bailiff. It w0111(1. have been nkind to tell the villagers, who firmly believed that the episode in the life of little Ped (tiding )food actually occurred, that Germany claimed to have sent us the story.—London Chronicle. Sto:i:s Cotte —end all stomach and bowel disorders. Makes puny babies plump and rosy, Proved by 50 yearssuccessful use, Ask your druggist for it— Nurses' ail' Mothers' Treasure 251,.—G bott:es $1.25. *nal Ding & Chemical Co., Limited Montreal. Testing Bulls With Automobiles. That the automobile can bo used with great success In determining the cour- age of young bulla intended for the bull ring has been demonstrated by Pedro Fernandez Somellera on his San Isidro hacienda in this state. The novel experi- ment was made a fete days ago with a twenty-two horse -power car. On all haciendas where fighting bulls are raised the young animals are "tested" with a view to determing their future fitness for the bull ring. Those that prove their courage are marked and left to grow up for future contests. Up to this time the tests have been conducted by men on horseback, armed with pikes, like picadors, But M. Sotnel- ! lora, who is an enthusiastic motorist, this year decided on an innovation by intro• dueing the motor can' in place of the horseman. Accordingly, after the young bulls had been herded into a large cor- ral the machine was driven into the en- closure. The occupants wore awned with the usual pikes. The experiment proved an exciting sue - cess. Several of the young bunts charged the machine at mad speed, and it was only by clover driving that the car and itis occupants were kept clear of the horns of the surprised and apparently indignant animals. The bulls) that attempted to mix with the automobile have been credited with exceptional bravery, and they are ex- pected to bring fame to the San Isidro hacienda by their future performances in the hull ring.—Guadalajara corres- pondence Mexican Herald, sea e, Minard's Liniment Cures Gnrxet in Cows. FJel Mrs. Vanderbilt's Cheap Gown. We. Vanderbilt, of 1hiltaro,:' 0.15 re- cently appeared in a yellow ,gown made by a cracker woman of the North Caro- lina mountains. Thu material was grown, spun and woven by the same woman and cost its wearer just $26. It is hoped that the almost lost art of hand spinning and weaving may bo revived if a fad for homespun among wealthy women can be (started. This is a pleasing hope.—Ex- change. Minard's Liniment Cures Colds, etc. �•0 His house is cool on the hottest day, for Ute ceilings are high. its roof over- hange, it has jalousies instead of glass windows and it k bare of thick carpets .0.11•.MY•MM•. on 1 .•r ; j • St . •rye i / ,,----•---�` . �llg Don't take risks with your skin. Use the soap that you !:NOW is free of harsh alkalies and in- jurious colorings and perfumes— "Royal Crown" Witch. hazel Toilet Soap It is trade of pure vegetable oils—and soothing, healing witch -hazel, 3 cakes for 25c. Insist on having "P,oyal Crown" Iifltch•nnzel Toilet Soap, 10 Getting Tired of Bosses. ']'he people are less and less well dis- posed toward bosses. They .wont none, of them. The political boss is codling into constantly increasing disfavor. '1'1) vote's aro more and more awake and determined not only to knutt' but to transact their 0011 business without waiting to be told by any self•cnnstitut• cal guardian. 'There have been recent examples showing that conventions Dan b1 eoutrol1,0,1 by t'lr politicians, but, that the voters are free and independ- ent, and that when they go to the polls they cast ballots according to their 0(111 i(eas and as they choose, ----Utica, N. Y., Press. Bvory packet will kill morofliosthan 300 shoots of sticky paper — SOLD DY -- DRUCCISTS, GROCERS alio CENERAL STORES loc. per packot, or 3 packoto for 25c. will last a whole, season. The Refuge Against Old Age, Robert Louis Stevenson wrote r " Cling to your youth, It 1s the artist's stock in trade. Do not give up that you are aging, and you won't age." In this familiar and homely advice is hidden the secret of the artist's power and charts. Ho never grows old; things never become commonplace to hint; the colors do not Inde. As a matter of fact, they never fade; it is the perceptions which become duller, the Interest which be- comes less keen. A good many men and woolen have discovered that it is a good thlug to aasocfato intimately; with persons younger than themselves. This is one refuge ngafnet old ago, but the real refuge Is with- in. It 1s the assertion of one's immortality, the consciousness day b) may, In all relations and occupDatlona, that ono 1s going forward and not backward; that the world, which grows sadder becauao one's companions go out of it, is growing brighter because ono le pushing toward the dawn and not toward the suneot. There is a groat mass of mis- leading and cynical philosophy about old age. Poetry is full of Images of disenchant - moist created for tho greater part by dis- enchanted men. There was a profound truth In the old Grook picture of tho spirit begin- ning Its lite In a strongly hulk house, pro- tected from all tho elements; finding pres- ently that tho house begin to bo loss se - euro; discovering at last that It begins to crumble, and at tho end that It Calls In ruins —only to leavo tho loan 1rels udder tho ape* sky.—From the Outlook, New York. f.► ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT Removes all hard, soft or callous] i lumps and blemishes from horses, blood spavin, curbs, splints, ringbone, sweeney, stifles, sprains, sore and swollen throat, coughs, etc, Save $60 by use of one bottle, War- ranted the most wonderful Blemish Cure ever known. Sold by druggists. *14. Completeness of French Census. France is it country where the census assumes ahnost the elevation of high art. Tho cult of detail of the personal kind carries passion for statistics to its apotheosis. There is nothing like It in this country. The timid bachelor who cares to know the Department in which women outnumber men, and are there- fore least likely to reject a suitor; the woman yearning for matrimony who would learn where cion are numerically the preponderant sex, and therefore emu - pelted to respect the law of supply and demand, need only east their eyes over these abundantly classified statleties. Similarly, one may find at a glance which province or department most in- clines to bachelordonh or spinsterhood, which to widowhood and which to di- vorce; where all the deaf and dumb come from, and where blindness is in fashion. This last is perhaps the most curious in detailof all. Why, for in- stance, should there be 103 blind people to the 100,000 in Corsica and Holy 46 in the Department of Vienne? --London Globe. 4•I• Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria. •.♦ The Spirit of Militarism. (Philadelphia Record.) Tho Moron in the Philippines aro nearly all killed off In the 'work of benevolent as- similation, and General Wood Is now got - ting ready at oloii apo to protect tho army no0 fleet of the Unitech States against an im- aginary enemy. Gray Horses in Blaine, :After the disquisition on the value of grey horse.;, Ila compared with horses of 1)1)101' eal.,rs, 111; 1'II 1'kl1lll'sL Wl'itel' sagely note';; "You may change It former'.; reli- ',ion 1)r' polity';, make hila think he is rich and 11011114010e, 000x his wife. to run altw,ty ►tits Pon, 01 ;,011 hi'u a (leg, 11111 Poi will never illukk hila think a firel ho1•;k 1.; 111)1 1l jewel. I real! solllYWtlere 104,e1lly 11111 grey horses were not up to the stnutLuel, or words to that refect, 1 never was so astonished in my life 1 halve always thought, and du 11110, that glt'y or white horse, were the hnndsont 0.st, tuuglhest. breed on the planet. "I'hr celebrated Arabian horses are white of dapple grey, 1''antous gen)rala in all win's have ridden 1111111' or iron grey elm rgers, ('ileus 111011 select grl'y h,,rse; to (raw the bund witgons in street parades. A great peeking company 1)l whys sklc0ts 1'.'rehc)ou horses, not so much for the color, hitt I,Oe:w;e their feet will sl and travelling 1111 the pave. lnentti better than ons draught 110011 It is raid tint t Jnn11 of .1 11, rode a milk• [white horse, :111(1 51, Joh, the revelator, saw a Whit:. 11(11'50 in Ionwen (1(oy, vi, `i), Half of the draught horses in Aroostook' lure white o1 grey, and another (kende will see 01) poi cent. of th0'n1 of that color,"- From the Lewiston Journal. Ira i V ��-Im W `� Y p�►I�� Nervous men and women, unstrung nerves— sleeplessnights—depression—weakness—pale.,nese—pain and:W.411n8-41ecasc when you take a • 4 a' M9 .CoUA•'e' 'r • :►Uaa14.0.,• TRADE MARK RCG151EA60, Tablets. They bring sunshine into your life— restore you to health, and strength, and happiness. If you are nervous—if the system is run down —and cipecially if you have any weakness— cure yourself %%1th Mira Tablets. 50c. box - 6 for $2.50, Drug stores or The Chemists' Co. of Canada, Limited, I-tamilton—Toronto. t0 JP 4I• The Bac'sslider, 'rhe June brides 01 whit', bathing suits d silk stockings, pared the beach 111.111 I ^int. "There i3 only 0110 thing --" )en(1 the blond bride sighed, "There is only one thing more remark• •bee than the fortitude with which Tom .ave up smoking as soon as we ben u)' engaged." "And what is that, dear?" asked the !n'unettc. "The haste with which he took it rap ,gain after our marriage." --From the Jlinneapolia Journal. 4.4. We,Us&Co. (Toronto Telegram,) Ontario le the hoino of nearly 2,1,00,000 free, happy end contented people, who have pro- duced fewer triurnphs of art and literature than any similar community of tree and fair- ly well educated citizens on earth. ISSUE NO. 31), 1307. Celluloid M71 Starch Easier ironing given better finish on things starched with Celluloid Starch, the only no - boil cold -water starch 0 that can't stick. You will like it best, once you try it. Buy it by name. Any good dealer. Saves L abor -- .awe- . T i m e --- L inen, Too f01 Haunted Rectory Abandoned. Luffincott, where the rector refuses to reside in the rectory because he saw the ghost of 0 pn'devesMor named l'ar• ker, is a remote parish of \Vest Devon, in 1)114 pie tnresgtie volley of the Tamar. '!'here are about thirty „haunted" rec- tol•ie'1 and t•ieara{les throughout the country, but clerical ghosts have uevcr hitherto liven taken so seriously, though 1'ielding'$ truculent Parson 'l ru11iber would make it formidable apparition. 1lowevtr, the litahop of Exeter intends to stop the present week -end visits to the rectory of rowdy ghost layers—who 0(1111inl,4' do not "do" their "spiriting gently„ ---by declaring the living vacant, As the population and endowment of I.uffinrott are both exiguous, the parish could be worked, without disturbing the ghost, by uniting the rectory to sonic adjoining benefice.—prom the 11'estrnin- ster Gazette. BETJ[U THAN SPANKING Spanking dem not cure children of bed-wetting. There is a conMitutlonal cause for this trouble, Mrs. M. Sam - tiers, Box W. 8, Windsor, Ont., will scud free to any mother her successful home treatment, with full instructions. Send no money but write her today 1f your children trouble you in this way. Don't blame the child, the chances dee it rant help. it. This treatment also caress adalts and aged people troubled with urine dtificulties by day or n;ght:. ♦. • i�. Something in That. It the people aro neglectful of their pen - Ileal dutlm and vote aeeoraine to the artless of bosses, then they would faro amity badly under municipal owners/Up and soar pe4- vato or public ownarnhip instead td them•, pelves nod tho bosses, thon they would get good servko under either private of public owuorship. It all C0inea back to Ma,• er's willingnoss to be Independent of tbo hose. c ti ., r ;.,;µ'k•r t,'+.f 0 ?. L i'..' LAMENESS Whether it is a fresh Bruise, Cut or Strain—or an old Spavin, $pilot, Ringbone or Swelling—you cnn cure your horse with Kendall's Spavin Cure. Thos, Castles, of Newark N.J., bought a horse—lamed with Spavin—for $100. Ile cured every sign of lameness with Kends Spavin Cure—won five races with the horse—then sold the aninisd to hb former owner for $1,000.00. WRLLnfonox, N.Z.,'Nov. sndf'95. "I have found your Spavin Cure a very fine reosatilsr all sorts of lameness in horses and I am never wittiest it," j, wIS1i1Y, Get Kendall's Spavin Core ---the rexnedy used by e nations for two generations, $1. a bottle -0 for $i. by= book—" Treatise On The $load)' t:•., •Y,,.,. —will save you many a dollar if carefully read and acted upon. Write today for a fret: DA. B. J. KENDALL CO., 27 �✓ ' ir, Ci,OtraVrlo FALLY, • VERNON; U.et*. ASK YOUR DEALER FOR Duchess And Priscilla Fine Hosiery For Ladies Rock Rib and Hercules School Hose Strong as Gibraltar ' Limit of Strength Princess Eayptlan Lisle For Children's Fine Dress Little Darling and Little Pet For Infants Lambs' Wool and Silk Tips All Wool Fine Hosiery Manufactured for the Wholesale Trade by the CHIPMAN-HOLTON KNITTING 00,, LIMITED, HAMILTON, ONTARIO ' Eddy's .:,r'a1,, Toi'let '•'' 0.7',,4 • Are the VERY RES'!' values going. WE invite comparison as' regards QUALITY and QUANTITY of paper supplied. Compare by actual count the number of sheets in the so-called cheaper papers with the EdJ'.y maks, and you will find that you get moro for the same money in Eddy'b. Always Everywhere in Canada, As for EDDY'S MATCHES Talks on.. tanking by Mail CECURITY a Vital Point An important consideration to every one with money to deposit is the matter of security—the strength of the depository. The immense resources of the Union Trust Company are represented by— An Authorized Capital of $2,500,000. A Paid-up Capital of $2,500,000. A Reserve of $400,000. 4% Compounded Quarterly Thinking people realize that four instead of three per cent. interest an savings deposits means one-third added to the earning power of their money. To put it another way, it amounts to one-third clear gain to you. Then why be satisfied with 3 per cent. when you can get 4 per cent. horntho Union Trust Company? Our booklet E sent nee on re- quest, gives hill information on Banking by Mail at 4 per cent, interest. Write for it to -day. The UNION Company pany Limited TEMPLL BUILDING, TORONTO Capttet red Reserve, $2,900,000 Wild Geese Late in Northern Flight, Skowhegan reports Unit itt 3,30 1.))), Saturda\ a flock of wild geese, estimat- ed at 4,15) or mop., flew over the city, bo1111d Ilor'th, 11 bile they were passing over the (11(111 the air wits so full of 1111,111 that it seemed like the apprnsu'h of a storm cloud. The first gentleman to witness t!a rrlurrlr,lhte Might \vas tumor (1. \1'x n!, vho is 0)) early ris:'r. The nap. di lig 111 111ci1' \►illgs awakened hint from it sound sleep, and hi, first impression 1105. until he went 011) 011 the 111.111 80(1 sn\w wll:it it 1.0aIly was, that it Ives thunder. The remarkable part of it is that the goose were going no►'Ih s), late in the season. It is past their breeding time, but as everything has lwet so backward this spring it i, presumed the birds waited for warmer weather before leas• ing the sonthhuld.---Le\tiston Journal. London's Exposition in rgo8. An exposition in London is officially nnnouneeel for the sunnier of 1908, to incline senile, art, products, mamlfnc- (111a'i :111.1 i;w,;oars of '1il1.'atn0 of the whole British empire, together with those of France and all her colonies, The preliminary arrangements were made last November between the offi• cines of the Governments name( and a site for the exhibition agrlP(1 spun. �finnrd's Liniment Co., Linlit'1. Dear Sirs,—This fall I got 1hrotvn on a fence and hurt my chest very had, to I could not work and it hart ale to breathe, I tried all kinds of liniments and they (id 1)1e no good. Ono bottle of MINAII))'S 1.)NtMr;N'I' warmed 101 flannels mut applied cn my breast, cured me completely. (', 11, i't),;.1I.') t1L Itossway, Digby ('o., N.S. Red Riding Hood's Wood. Jnck killed his giants in Cornwall i11 the days of l' in!_ Arthur, and 'cont Thumb flourished at about the saute time, while at much Inter date the babes were left by their Wicked Uncle to die in n wood in Norfolk --distinctively in Northwest Norfolk. Northwest Norfolk also contains "Lit- tle lied )tiding hood's 11'ood." Twenty years ago it was a lovely Ttmmt for the nature lover. in the heart of the woad ons a lake, in the nlidde of the lake nn island, mid on the island n ,tiny, unin- habited cottage. Flowers were every- where in profusion, especially spring flowers ---wild in the wood, cultivated in the cottage garden, whir)) was kept in order by the owner's bailiff. It w0111(1. have been nkind to tell the villagers, who firmly believed that the episode in the life of little Ped (tiding )food actually occurred, that Germany claimed to have sent us the story.—London Chronicle. Sto:i:s Cotte —end all stomach and bowel disorders. Makes puny babies plump and rosy, Proved by 50 yearssuccessful use, Ask your druggist for it— Nurses' ail' Mothers' Treasure 251,.—G bott:es $1.25. *nal Ding & Chemical Co., Limited Montreal. Testing Bulls With Automobiles. That the automobile can bo used with great success In determining the cour- age of young bulla intended for the bull ring has been demonstrated by Pedro Fernandez Somellera on his San Isidro hacienda in this state. The novel experi- ment was made a fete days ago with a twenty-two horse -power car. On all haciendas where fighting bulls are raised the young animals are "tested" with a view to determing their future fitness for the bull ring. Those that prove their courage are marked and left to grow up for future contests. Up to this time the tests have been conducted by men on horseback, armed with pikes, like picadors, But M. Sotnel- ! lora, who is an enthusiastic motorist, this year decided on an innovation by intro• dueing the motor can' in place of the horseman. Accordingly, after the young bulls had been herded into a large cor- ral the machine was driven into the en- closure. The occupants wore awned with the usual pikes. The experiment proved an exciting sue - cess. Several of the young bunts charged the machine at mad speed, and it was only by clover driving that the car and itis occupants were kept clear of the horns of the surprised and apparently indignant animals. The bulls) that attempted to mix with the automobile have been credited with exceptional bravery, and they are ex- pected to bring fame to the San Isidro hacienda by their future performances in the hull ring.—Guadalajara corres- pondence Mexican Herald, sea e, Minard's Liniment Cures Gnrxet in Cows. FJel Mrs. Vanderbilt's Cheap Gown. We. Vanderbilt, of 1hiltaro,:' 0.15 re- cently appeared in a yellow ,gown made by a cracker woman of the North Caro- lina mountains. Thu material was grown, spun and woven by the same woman and cost its wearer just $26. It is hoped that the almost lost art of hand spinning and weaving may bo revived if a fad for homespun among wealthy women can be (started. This is a pleasing hope.—Ex- change. Minard's Liniment Cures Colds, etc. �•0 His house is cool on the hottest day, for Ute ceilings are high. its roof over- hange, it has jalousies instead of glass windows and it k bare of thick carpets .0.11•.MY•MM•. on 1 .•r ; j • St . •rye i / ,,----•---�` . �llg Don't take risks with your skin. Use the soap that you !:NOW is free of harsh alkalies and in- jurious colorings and perfumes— "Royal Crown" Witch. hazel Toilet Soap It is trade of pure vegetable oils—and soothing, healing witch -hazel, 3 cakes for 25c. Insist on having "P,oyal Crown" Iifltch•nnzel Toilet Soap, 10 Getting Tired of Bosses. ']'he people are less and less well dis- posed toward bosses. They .wont none, of them. The political boss is codling into constantly increasing disfavor. '1'1) vote's aro more and more awake and determined not only to knutt' but to transact their 0011 business without waiting to be told by any self•cnnstitut• cal guardian. 'There have been recent examples showing that conventions Dan b1 eoutrol1,0,1 by t'lr politicians, but, that the voters are free and independ- ent, and that when they go to the polls they cast ballots according to their 0(111 i(eas and as they choose, ----Utica, N. Y., Press. Bvory packet will kill morofliosthan 300 shoots of sticky paper — SOLD DY -- DRUCCISTS, GROCERS alio CENERAL STORES loc. per packot, or 3 packoto for 25c. will last a whole, season. The Refuge Against Old Age, Robert Louis Stevenson wrote r " Cling to your youth, It 1s the artist's stock in trade. Do not give up that you are aging, and you won't age." In this familiar and homely advice is hidden the secret of the artist's power and charts. Ho never grows old; things never become commonplace to hint; the colors do not Inde. As a matter of fact, they never fade; it is the perceptions which become duller, the Interest which be- comes less keen. A good many men and woolen have discovered that it is a good thlug to aasocfato intimately; with persons younger than themselves. This is one refuge ngafnet old ago, but the real refuge Is with- in. It 1s the assertion of one's immortality, the consciousness day b) may, In all relations and occupDatlona, that ono 1s going forward and not backward; that the world, which grows sadder becauao one's companions go out of it, is growing brighter because ono le pushing toward the dawn and not toward the suneot. There is a groat mass of mis- leading and cynical philosophy about old age. Poetry is full of Images of disenchant - moist created for tho greater part by dis- enchanted men. There was a profound truth In the old Grook picture of tho spirit begin- ning Its lite In a strongly hulk house, pro- tected from all tho elements; finding pres- ently that tho house begin to bo loss se - euro; discovering at last that It begins to crumble, and at tho end that It Calls In ruins —only to leavo tho loan 1rels udder tho ape* sky.—From the Outlook, New York. f.► ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT Removes all hard, soft or callous] i lumps and blemishes from horses, blood spavin, curbs, splints, ringbone, sweeney, stifles, sprains, sore and swollen throat, coughs, etc, Save $60 by use of one bottle, War- ranted the most wonderful Blemish Cure ever known. Sold by druggists. *14. Completeness of French Census. France is it country where the census assumes ahnost the elevation of high art. Tho cult of detail of the personal kind carries passion for statistics to its apotheosis. There is nothing like It in this country. The timid bachelor who cares to know the Department in which women outnumber men, and are there- fore least likely to reject a suitor; the woman yearning for matrimony who would learn where cion are numerically the preponderant sex, and therefore emu - pelted to respect the law of supply and demand, need only east their eyes over these abundantly classified statleties. Similarly, one may find at a glance which province or department most in- clines to bachelordonh or spinsterhood, which to widowhood and which to di- vorce; where all the deaf and dumb come from, and where blindness is in fashion. This last is perhaps the most curious in detailof all. Why, for in- stance, should there be 103 blind people to the 100,000 in Corsica and Holy 46 in the Department of Vienne? --London Globe. 4•I• Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria. •.♦ The Spirit of Militarism. (Philadelphia Record.) Tho Moron in the Philippines aro nearly all killed off In the 'work of benevolent as- similation, and General Wood Is now got - ting ready at oloii apo to protect tho army no0 fleet of the Unitech States against an im- aginary enemy. Gray Horses in Blaine, :After the disquisition on the value of grey horse.;, Ila compared with horses of 1)1)101' eal.,rs, 111; 1'II 1'kl1lll'sL Wl'itel' sagely note';; "You may change It former'.; reli- ',ion 1)r' polity';, make hila think he is rich and 11011114010e, 000x his wife. to run altw,ty ►tits Pon, 01 ;,011 hi'u a (leg, 11111 Poi will never illukk hila think a firel ho1•;k 1.; 111)1 1l jewel. I real! solllYWtlere 104,e1lly 11111 grey horses were not up to the stnutLuel, or words to that refect, 1 never was so astonished in my life 1 halve always thought, and du 11110, that glt'y or white horse, were the hnndsont 0.st, tuuglhest. breed on the planet. "I'hr celebrated Arabian horses are white of dapple grey, 1''antous gen)rala in all win's have ridden 1111111' or iron grey elm rgers, ('ileus 111011 select grl'y h,,rse; to (raw the bund witgons in street parades. A great peeking company 1)l whys sklc0ts 1'.'rehc)ou horses, not so much for the color, hitt I,Oe:w;e their feet will sl and travelling 1111 the pave. lnentti better than ons draught 110011 It is raid tint t Jnn11 of .1 11, rode a milk• [white horse, :111(1 51, Joh, the revelator, saw a Whit:. 11(11'50 in Ionwen (1(oy, vi, `i), Half of the draught horses in Aroostook' lure white o1 grey, and another (kende will see 01) poi cent. of th0'n1 of that color,"- From the Lewiston Journal. Ira i V ��-Im W `� Y p�►I�� Nervous men and women, unstrung nerves— sleeplessnights—depression—weakness—pale.,nese—pain and:W.411n8-41ecasc when you take a • 4 a' M9 .CoUA•'e' 'r • :►Uaa14.0.,• TRADE MARK RCG151EA60, Tablets. They bring sunshine into your life— restore you to health, and strength, and happiness. If you are nervous—if the system is run down —and cipecially if you have any weakness— cure yourself %%1th Mira Tablets. 50c. box - 6 for $2.50, Drug stores or The Chemists' Co. of Canada, Limited, I-tamilton—Toronto. t0 JP 4I• The Bac'sslider, 'rhe June brides 01 whit', bathing suits d silk stockings, pared the beach 111.111 I ^int. "There i3 only 0110 thing --" )en(1 the blond bride sighed, "There is only one thing more remark• •bee than the fortitude with which Tom .ave up smoking as soon as we ben u)' engaged." "And what is that, dear?" asked the !n'unettc. "The haste with which he took it rap ,gain after our marriage." --From the Jlinneapolia Journal. 4.4. We,Us&Co. (Toronto Telegram,) Ontario le the hoino of nearly 2,1,00,000 free, happy end contented people, who have pro- duced fewer triurnphs of art and literature than any similar community of tree and fair- ly well educated citizens on earth. ISSUE NO. 31), 1307. Celluloid M71 Starch Easier ironing given better finish on things starched with Celluloid Starch, the only no - boil cold -water starch 0 that can't stick. You will like it best, once you try it. Buy it by name. Any good dealer. Saves L abor -- .awe- . T i m e --- L inen, Too f01 Haunted Rectory Abandoned. Luffincott, where the rector refuses to reside in the rectory because he saw the ghost of 0 pn'devesMor named l'ar• ker, is a remote parish of \Vest Devon, in 1)114 pie tnresgtie volley of the Tamar. '!'here are about thirty „haunted" rec- tol•ie'1 and t•ieara{les throughout the country, but clerical ghosts have uevcr hitherto liven taken so seriously, though 1'ielding'$ truculent Parson 'l ru11iber would make it formidable apparition. 1lowevtr, the litahop of Exeter intends to stop the present week -end visits to the rectory of rowdy ghost layers—who 0(1111inl,4' do not "do" their "spiriting gently„ ---by declaring the living vacant, As the population and endowment of I.uffinrott are both exiguous, the parish could be worked, without disturbing the ghost, by uniting the rectory to sonic adjoining benefice.—prom the 11'estrnin- ster Gazette. BETJ[U THAN SPANKING Spanking dem not cure children of bed-wetting. There is a conMitutlonal cause for this trouble, Mrs. M. Sam - tiers, Box W. 8, Windsor, Ont., will scud free to any mother her successful home treatment, with full instructions. Send no money but write her today 1f your children trouble you in this way. Don't blame the child, the chances dee it rant help. it. This treatment also caress adalts and aged people troubled with urine dtificulties by day or n;ght:. ♦. • i�. Something in That. It the people aro neglectful of their pen - Ileal dutlm and vote aeeoraine to the artless of bosses, then they would faro amity badly under municipal owners/Up and soar pe4- vato or public ownarnhip instead td them•, pelves nod tho bosses, thon they would get good servko under either private of public owuorship. It all C0inea back to Ma,• er's willingnoss to be Independent of tbo hose. c ti ., r ;.,;µ'k•r t,'+.f 0 ?. L i'..' LAMENESS Whether it is a fresh Bruise, Cut or Strain—or an old Spavin, $pilot, Ringbone or Swelling—you cnn cure your horse with Kendall's Spavin Cure. Thos, Castles, of Newark N.J., bought a horse—lamed with Spavin—for $100. Ile cured every sign of lameness with Kends Spavin Cure—won five races with the horse—then sold the aninisd to hb former owner for $1,000.00. WRLLnfonox, N.Z.,'Nov. sndf'95. "I have found your Spavin Cure a very fine reosatilsr all sorts of lameness in horses and I am never wittiest it," j, wIS1i1Y, Get Kendall's Spavin Core ---the rexnedy used by e nations for two generations, $1. a bottle -0 for $i. by= book—" Treatise On The $load)' t:•., •Y,,.,. —will save you many a dollar if carefully read and acted upon. Write today for a fret: DA. B. J. KENDALL CO., 27 �✓ ' ir, Ci,OtraVrlo FALLY, • VERNON; U.et*. ASK YOUR DEALER FOR Duchess And Priscilla Fine Hosiery For Ladies Rock Rib and Hercules School Hose Strong as Gibraltar ' Limit of Strength Princess Eayptlan Lisle For Children's Fine Dress Little Darling and Little Pet For Infants Lambs' Wool and Silk Tips All Wool Fine Hosiery Manufactured for the Wholesale Trade by the CHIPMAN-HOLTON KNITTING 00,, LIMITED, HAMILTON, ONTARIO ' Eddy's .:,r'a1,, Toi'let '•'' 0.7',,4 • Are the VERY RES'!' values going. WE invite comparison as' regards QUALITY and QUANTITY of paper supplied. Compare by actual count the number of sheets in the so-called cheaper papers with the EdJ'.y maks, and you will find that you get moro for the same money in Eddy'b. Always Everywhere in Canada, As for EDDY'S MATCHES 4 1:3). Niof.ce that prevailing prayer. 1. "'y l i i j l 1 +,•� 1'"yti 1 «( j • Span;; f ruin ;e ,,(Ilse of real nerd, either es. - i;.• ._ fur ollra('IVc's or others, Is not daunt- e,l to dift'ieultiee or hindrances which LESSON IV. --July 27, 1907, limy. appear to be in the t'oy (Mutt. 15: 2' -Ti), 3. Is a humble prayer and takes the l(lv;eet place (I';xod• ;12:32). 4. Im• p"glume. (Glu, ;12.21-`2.i; Luke 11:5.8; 18:1.7). 5, Pleads the promises and test,( in then) (1s the ground of all faith. `such a 1)t•llyer sees the promise, believes is ,111(1 takes no denial. 32. If thou wilt forgive -'Phis pr,Iyer is broken, the sentence,' are incomplete; it is the language of a heart struggling under a burden. If not, blot nu'.. out -- This i$ 0110 of the meet pathetic Verses of the ]able -F. 11. Meyer, Under the Iuw God speaks of blotting mit the yin• nes; under gruel Ile is seen blotting out (tm;, ue''. t„el„' u., aids ":,:)u:c us a the sin. --"toady, Of thy book -'Phis no III,t ul. 1 hey were 110• doubt has refereium to the book of gen- m;l.ulm;; s()1u ei-.ole image of God, ellogies whioh Mose;( hall prepared under suuu',mlu;; t,, strike their icn5('s, 1tic God's direction. If Ili,( people mint pet•ish e'ua not "a1'c gnaw out.' 1C, 1. HOW Ile deeir(se to perish With them. 1':Inl couu'Iuptuuusts then s;mke of 1losea, hall a similar experience; see Honn. 11. 3. Neither of these pns8:ige8 have ;Ins r('• ference to eternal banishment from God. but both Moses and Paul 110(1 reached the place of stela titter self-abasement before stir - likely th.'y 'night have suppuar11 that the Lor(( that they were twilling to sif- Jlu,ea halt perched in the ti►r, tt'lIIe % fes' the lose Of every earthly' bleesiig anal they Hao had iuwcsted the. top of the to die if need be, for the welfare of the nn,1ultltin into which he went." people, 2. Break off -Implying that the Oct 33. 11-hosoever hath sinned --(loll will int of ed an effort 0 rad sacrifice of their blot none out of Ills book hut those that port. 'ilio prevailing View' has been that by their wilful disobedience have for - part. Aaron, lulxleu, to dis,'ululo the people kited the honor of being enrolled in it. fru:u 11i?I4 'impulse proposed tills great :34. Mine :\ngal-'Ih1s must lave been ,Oe1: iL' 1101)111g they would withdraw some inferior guidance no Moses after- their uenuuul, '11118 is not an iunprob;al,;,, \V1lyd obtained a promise of (gal's spec - tilde view, but the fact( �huw that he was ia3 presence with them (chap. 33, 1'2.10), morally. weak, ;and Nicked the sterling \\'ill Visit their silt- [will ;tot destroy' quai►Ucs of a great spiritual leader, - the as a nation, but they shall suffer 11'hr(1. ('one. Ile lurked' courage to (1„ the nnlsequcnces of their sill. 35, Plagued the people -'This does not the )fight ill the of strong opposeAN AERONAUT tI)u. 1;0111011 c, 141)1'-"13u1h loci and mean that a. pestilence was' sent, but that A FRUGAL PRESIDENT, woolen wore thee(' orn;►inente unit w•u sufferings and punishments of various lm,1y suppose that these sera a part ot kind~ frequently befell those who had ABLAZE IN AIR. President Fallieres Trying to Curtail the +gull,' which they brought out of Made and tvorshiptel the calf, Egypte," 3. Brought ythem them -The Egyp• PRACTICAL, AI'I'LiCA'IIONS. Expenses. tial► rings, as been on the r11Ol(tllln'at;, wei e 1.o1)111, massy piltee 01 metal; 1111)1 as it Ives rings of this sort that the Israelites wore, their size and number 1niet, in the general collection, have pro. ld(I 'e 1 :a hug(' ,101'0 of the p 101008 ma. tt'ri,(1.---J., I'. s3: 11. N[W[OUNDLAND The Gallen Calf,-Exod, 32: 1-S, 30-35. Uut. of :;tyle. 1.'�Ii:':until y'• 1. Israel enters into idolttry (V,. 1.0). 1. Jloses deluyed- lle eels ill til,' mount forty days. lhlth- creel t:1.•m,e(, e.,• - . he's cairn' in a tu• 11111( :,e(1 ,11.(1 .. 111(( all tela0ll:''', 111,I1it• lug 0.11 h.(t'1�1;1 00 u0l,'ct 113 religious sur• ship 1 eels 1 ,r thee), ,(s Utey 1itendcd uneer 11,, (';II _ .'t (,n to r: tura to 1'.gypt. See .ssas i, he, 111." Cebu :tenet --1 m, 141"'IP° Dar 1.1 CII:t11.40 ilurIng :excel' '11111. uugratet(l1 are they, \\'bile God drli;;llt; t,, ',moor hint, they delight to cumt,'ue' hint, 111;11 this to the lac,' et :1ali„1, Itis biuthc► and milistitute, "It 11 STATES' [ISfl DISPUTE. Britain and U. 5, Anxious Over Situation -The Hague May Decide. Wo8hinest on, July 22. -The approach discri1110nate ago ihist Americans, claim - of the first Of August, marking the be- ing that in so doing they were not in• lringiig the treaty rights of Americans. ginning of the new herring fishing sea- The llritich givernnu'nt has apparently son on the coast of Newfoundland, is a been ((riven finally to concede the mound - matter of 1):e greatest concern to the nes of this contention, or, at least, it state de )artment for it finds the fish- has been negotiating through Atnbas- I ' sailor Reid on that basis. cries controversy between American and Great Britain in u confused and unsat- isfactory shape. The modus vivendi entered into Inst year, the tertns of which are greatly against the wish of the Newfoun(lland• ers, American fishermen were permitted to ply their vocation unmolested off the shores of that island expired with the close of the fishing season, It was the expectation of both the Aneriean and British governments that before the opening of the next season sore. permanent arrangements could lie reached that would remove all future friction on this score. The Newfound - :enders, however, were insistent upon their tight to legislate locally for the fisheries so long as they did not in terms Indications to -day are that it will he difficult to reach any kind of a per• nuunent settlement of the trouble and the whole effort of the negotiations is apparently concentrated for the moment on the drafting of some form of modus vivendi to guard against the develop- ment of friction on the fishing shores that might in the end have serious re- sults. The fact is that the occasion is one that calls for touch mutual conces- sion if there is to be a new modus vi. vendi, and the Newfonudlanders are not anxious that there should be until they have some sufficient assurance that they can have a satisfactory permanent ar- ningemmnt. To that end they have sug- gested a reference of the whole subject of conflicting treaty and legislative rights to the permanent IIague tribunal. .3, And glade it 11 molten eel( (11. V.) This ictal seems to have been thegod Apis, the chief deity of the Egyptians, wul,hipped at Menlplis under the form of a Itte Ox, three years old, 'These be thy gods -The next verse and in fact the e hole narrative show that they were worshipping Jehovah tinder the symbol of it calf, and so were violating the sec• 011(1 commandment, \'cries 7 and 8 show that they had not sinned ignorantly, but knew they were breaking the law. 5. When .\al•ou saw it -Alien he saw the excitement of the people and their delight in the image which he had mode, he proceeded at once to build an altar• bcfole it, 1'cast to the Lord -Aaron eve dently did not intend to supersede the sol.leip of Jell: wall, but he permitted and even encouraged them to offer this worship through the idolatrous medium of the calf. "Never think, when you take a start in idol -worship, that you will atop there. The idol must have an altar. Tho alta' toast have an offering. The whole must have a temple. Every sin is self•perpetuuting, Begin to love stoney more than (nod, and the great idol of mammon will soon make ca temple of your life,"-l'elollbet, 0, Rose up early -1t idol -worshippers and atutsement• nlOkers rise early to begin their revel- ries, surely Chl'istialls ought to be equal- ly energetic in the service of their Alas - ter, Offering,' - The burnt -offerings were wholly conetuned on the altar, but the peace -offerings were 0111)' partly con- .sun►ed and the remainder eaten by the priests and the worshippers. Drink- \Shat they drank is not said but we most naturally suppose wine, which V113 ..s0 00/11111011 at jovial feasts,-\Vhe(l. Coin. '1'o play-'I'hie probably means singing, dancing and merry -making of an inde- cent and licentious kind (v, 25), Such orgies formed a part of idol worship. 11. 1Hrael's great punishment (vs, 7-20). Our attention is now directed from the ucen('.s on the pilin to those in progress in the mount, Moses had finished his forty (lays' communion with God and .had received the two tables on which Jehovah himself had with his own fin- ger written the tela connuuulmeuts.'Sud- d0n1)' God informs (loses that tho peo' plc had corrupted themselves and com- an:l1ld hint to hasten down, at the sante tune declaring it to be his purpose to destroy them 'let mike of "loses a ,great nation. But Moses promptly de- cliiter this offer and earnestly pleads for his people. When "loses came near a111(1 beheld the people in their idolatrous riles, he shattered the tables of the law, which were in his hand., on the rocks of Sinai, lee then burnt their idol and ground it to powder and caused them to dt•inl: it. Ile summoned talose who were on the Lord's side and coil• mauled 1110111 to take their swords and :slay the idolaters. The three thousand :slain were pt'ubably the leaders in the trnusgression, "Those who were guilty of this breach of the covenant were lia- ble to the penalty of to capital cruel (ron►pnro v. 33), and lattice the order for this tearful slaughter.'' -\\'bed, Con. Comp:trt 1)out, ;33:8.11; Luke 14:20, The Lev: 's rose above personal 0114 family considerations when Jehovah's honor was at stake III, (loses makes intercession for Is- rael (r's, 30.35), 30. of the morrow :After Moses had executed justice on ' the principal offenders, ye have sinned - 1 hough they had escaped death they were not to suppose they were iluto• cent, or to look upon the sin es a trif- ling tiling, n.n atonement-IIe thought that lid migbt be made an instrument; 01 reconciliation. -Bush, 31, Moses re- turned -Ile again went ftp on Moult Sunni, and said -Moses pl'evailed in prayer, (1011 still hears prayer. It is his will that we pray (Matt. 7:7-11; John 15:7). Why then are there so ll Many' unanswered petitions? Because ronto Exhibition grounds is to be coin- tomer that the pet was a monkey, need there is .so :much airiness praying (James silenced at once, not a rat. 1. l'uttiig (:tan in God's place. `('Make 1131g. s g e1 for tie fur this ,loses, the nem that brought us up" (v, 1). Uo(1 11:111 said, "I brought thee out of Egypt" (1•:x011 20, 2). 'They for- get God ;1011 looked t0 111.141. \\'e ae in danger of this sin when we turn away Our hearts fromleaning on laud exclu- sI)'.'l)', when we take 0144' eye's fi'o:n I_io,l and ,et then( upon n than however god- ly or gifted, when we go to church tc hear 1t man speak instead of God, 11, Putting gold in ilod'. place. 11 was a gulden calf that Israel worship. ped (vs. 2-4). The rich young ruler made a god of his "riches" (.1latt, 19, 22; 1',;11, 52, 7), 13ut the poor 111011 dislrc:4se4 .about his pr0ju'ty, and coveting his neighbor's prosperity, i3 a wor.1hip}rcr of money as su►•ely as the rich 1111111 whose heart is set upon his w0altl►. The covetous man is 011 idolator (Eph, 5, 5). "'Tete love of money," lust :money', is the root of all evil '`1, 'Pint, 0, 10. 'There was a rich man in paradise ns well ns a rich malt in torment (Luke 16, e2), "Abram was very rich" ((sen, 13, 2), but lie trusted ill God and acknowledged all he had as coiling feel!' Him, and belonging to 1Iin1, while 1)ivee trusted in his riches -turd not the giver of thein, 111, Putting appetite in Goil's place. "The people sat dowel to eat and to drink" (v, 0), Esau made n god of his "belly" (Gen, 25, 34; Phil, 3, 19), A gentleman seeing n paper of tobacco on the ground, %thet•e some devotee of the weed had (lt•opped it, said, "Somebody las lost his 1(103," In India there are household gods, street corner gods, andtemple gods of every size nod shape, but not 0110 is so odious as this pocket idol at W110130 shrine so many sacrifice health, panty, nlmley, ti►llc 0114 Ile:tVO'. IV. Tutting pleasure in God's place. ''Tho people rose up to play" (v. 0). This was a heathen custom, 011 idol- ntrmis feast, followed with dtnlcing to music, .itch as worldly people indulge ill to -day. A young lady gives the fol- lowing 1'e1130113 why she Will not dance: 1. fleecing is injurious to health and usefulness, 2, Dancing will lett(} me i41' to close contact with pernicious con- p011y. ;3, Dancing requires a freedom with the other sex I believe to be wrong, 4, 11 [y parents would be anxious about; 1110 if 1 were out late. 5, Good people disapprove of dancing, and it 'is not safe to set myself against them, If a thing is (doubtful, I wish to be on the safe side, 0. 1)ancing to bad ad name, 01111 1 1101111 to study things that are Imre, lovely cold of gond report. 7. Dancing is generally accompanied with drinking, 8, Drinking is a share to young men, and I ev0uld not have anything to (Io with lending then( astray. 9, f nite- ing unfits the meal for reflection and prayer and I nlelut to (lo nothing to cstraiige me from 111y Saviour, 11. TIII, PROPIIET'S INTERCESSION, \loses Wein the type of our great In- tercessor (Exo(1, 34:9). At the battle of Rephidim when Moses held up 11i.3 bands, Israel prevailed (Exod, 17:11), lliri,un ions healed of leprosy because "Anises cried punto the Lord" (Nun. 12: 1:3), At, the rebellion over the report of the ten spies God pardoned Israel he - 011030 of Moses' prayer (Nutt, 14:20), Through his intet'cession "tile Lord re- pented of the evil which he thought to do onto his people" (w. 14). The psalm• is! sets.: ":Ugly made a calf in Horeb, And 1)'o'ship0(1 a molten 111111ge, , , , Therefore he said that he would destroy them; lritd not Moses Itis chosen stood between him in the breach, '1'o turn away wrath, lest Ite should de- stroy them" (Psis 10(!:19:23). Paul prayed constantly for tato churches (Eph, 1:15, 10:3.14; Phil, 1:3.5; Col, 1:3; 1 'Tess. 5:23; Acts 20:30), Ile need to 11811 them to pray for hint (110111, 15:;30.32; 2 '1'hcss, 13:1; 1[ele 13;18). 11'e are hidden to "pray for one anoth- er" (James 5:10), A. C. M. EUGENE RAYMOND, IN "CANNON ACT," BURNED BY POWDER. He Clings to Fast Descending Parachute -Itis Shoes Torn From His Feet byi Explosion - ow in Hospital. New York. ,lull 22. -Eugene Ray- mond, n balloonist, of this city, is in the GeneralUospit,tl at Passaic, N. J., suffering from serious burns about the face, neck, 111-1113 and legs from his feet to his waist, resulting from an accident at hillside Park, Belleville, N. J., on Sunday (afternoon, •while he was more than two thousand feet above the ground, 1t is believed however, that he will recover. Raymond was giving an exhibition of whatnlv'onents cal} the "cement act." lie ascended on the inside of n sheet metal cannon attached to the end of his lie 1111(1a receptacle filled with powder, to be shot off high in the air :a second or two before he slid from the cannot with his folded parachute, giv- ing the appearance to those below of a men being blown fro iethe gut's mouth, When the powder exploded part of the force told fire of the expleysiun went the wrong way and caught11}111. • His shoes were torn from his feet, his light clothing were ignited 1111(1 part of his hair tris scorched from his head. Raymond set off the powder with n keg fuse, There was to blinding flash (111d he felt pain all over: his body, but his presence of mind enabled nils to retain his grasp on the parachute. HO said last night that his physical pain was noth- ing compared to the fear that his para- chute might blaze up at any time, and that he w'ottid be dashed to the earth. The flnmee did not touch it, however, and he landed safely in a field in Nut- ley, some distance from Hillside Park; Ile will hove to remain in the hospital for several weeks, Ile had performed the same fent many tinges without accident, 4•* AN EARNEST OF PEACE. ---a I Yamamoto Sends Flowers to Wounded U. S. Soldiers, Boston, July 22, -Edmund L Walsh, seaman, died at the nava} hospital at Chelsea this afternoon, thereby becmt• ing the ninth victim of the accident on board the battleship Georgia in Cape Cud Bay yesterday, Twelve in- juredrenl11in in the 110spitItl, of whom :lidsldpnlat Janes Cruz, of Nebraska, at►d Seaman Jas. 1'. 'Thoulas, of Brook - lye, N. Y.'., are not expected to recover. Two great boxes, one addressed to "lidshipnla► Cruse and the other to the sailors of the Georgia, were received at the naval 1►ospitn1 to -day, When they were opened they were found to content tut imncnee cluster of flowers and in - 83d0 of each box was the card of Ad- miral Yamamoto, the Japanese naval officer who visited Boston yesterday. TOOK MONKEY TO TEA. Baroness 1Vlontardi Startled ;nests at Carlton Hotel, London, London, July 22. -Baroness "tontnrdi t'pp1'tu'ed rat the Palm Gotta of the Charlton1101,31 ot tea. time yesterday with a tiny monkey couched snugly in a Nation 1(11(1 beautifully embl'Oidered sill: pouch suspended front her right, shoul- der, Attention was almost immediately dInt the 111114s1)111 sight by an ex- cite(( lady sitting nearby, 4w'ho 3nllig• nuntly burst forth to 11 whiter; " if that lady is bringing a rat to this hotel to tea 1 amu going to leave," A minute liter the little monkey came out of the pout► and attempted to climb to the top of a carafe, which it promptly tumbled over, spilling the con- tents over the table, The perplexed o • waiter now made an investigation and Work of the, sett wttll op )osite the To- at once explained to the indignant c;18 - Paris, July 22. -The French Presi- dent las nearly solved the problem of econun$y in the running of his house- hold, 11t the suggestion of \ladante 1'alliere8, who ever since the election of het• lhieband strongly objected to Waste of 100110y 111 the appuintnlente of the President iai table, Soule months ago the chef in the Elyeee Palace was (1iseliar;e0 and st cor- don bleu, or as woman cook, installed in his place. This, hoyeVele (11(1 nut 110.Ve the effect of curtailing the expense; very much, l'resident Fallicre8 Inas now' ordered that hereaftee the costly fish, which was generally returned to the kitchen untouched, shall be dispensed with, The President has also expressed his abhorrence of hothouse fruit, shying that ae event' kind of fruit has its own season it 13 11301033 to hurry up mat - tors. it is ealculutcd that if the 1'resi- dent's wishes are carried out his house expenses will be diminished by at (cast $4,000 a )•ear. FILLING LINDSAY JAIL, Two Mord Alleged Counterfeiters MiltCep a eArrive, ' COBALT STRIKE. MINE OWNERS TO STAND BY THEIR OWN WAGE SCALE. Consider That, With the General Increase Granted, Their Employees Have Been Well Treated. ('ol,alt, July 22,--- Two or three of the alines have been won over by the union. These the 1''oster, 'Tem- iskataing and 1Iu(11on Bay, and 7'eu(• i$eiti418nguo, the latter t411 ;' u work• ing, while the Foster will resume op. erntion, '1'hultsday, with probably a force of 80 men. One of the union leaders states now that the Foster men were called out through 11 !Ids. understanding, The general opinion is, that the other mine owners intend to hold out to their own se. ale, 'J'hey claim that the new schedule they have adopted means a general in- crease on all the mines, a table be- ing computed by experts which so far goes to show that on inn mines the wages all round had been 3nercas• ed $39.07 [s'1' day or ower $12.0013 an- nually' and that on those tet there were on the pay roll 1,0113 men, These thine; are the '1'retbew•ey, tat Rose, (tight of \Vey', O'Brien, Nipissing, Coniagus. Buffalo, Silver (lupe'', 'Town Site and Colonial, On one of them alone the in- erease would be nearly $5,000, and 011 another $0,327, With such 1t general in- ereaao Ole mine owners feel that their emltdY,"es,)►ave,,,en treated fairly, and consequently are now not likely to give way to the union. Some of the man- aget•s, in fact, refuse to take back anion )nen even at the revilers' scale. One man applying for work to•11:ty tens first asked if lie was a union man or a sympathizerwit(► the union; not being a. union marl he wee given work. FALL LAIR DATES, Abingdon .. . , ,Oet, 18, 17 Aylmer ... , , , , , , Sept, 2, 3, 4, 5, (1 Baden ... ... ..... .... Sept. 18, 19 I3arrie ,,. ,,. „ ,,,, Sept.23, 24, 25 Jlecton ... ... . , . ...Sept. 28, 27 Ilinbrook ... ... . .. ... ... Oct. 7, i; Bracebri(ll;e .. , ... Sept, 26, 27 Brockville .. , . , . Sept. 10, 11, 12, l3 Cayuga ...... . .. . . . ... Sept,24, 25 Caledo1 ... . .. ... . . . .. Oct, 3, 4 Caledonia ,,, , , , , , , , ,, , Oct. 10, 11 Cookstown .. . , . , , .... Oct, 1, 2 Collingwood , , , , , , Sept. 24, 25, 26, 27 Dunnville ,,, , , , , , , , , , , Sept. 17, 18 Drtunbo ... .. . ... .. . . .. Sept. 24, 25 Fergus ... ... ..... ... Oct. 1, 2 Fort Erie , , , , , , , , , , , , , Oct. 3, 4 Galt... .. . . .. ... .. . .. Oet. 1, 2 Georgetown , , , .... , . , . , „ Oct. 1, 2 Guelph Sept, 17, 18, 19 Ingersoll .. , ... „ , , , Sept. 24, 25 Jarvis ,., .,, „ ,,, .... Oct 3, 4 Kinutount . . . . . . .. . ...... Sept. 10, 11 Lindsay . , , , , , , ,,,Sept. 19, 20, 21 4Safot'ef , , , .. , .. , :'r Pert( i+0; 27 veron ,.,,,, t, .0 Milton ,,, ,,, ,,,,, ,,, Oct, 10, 11 Mild►nov , .. , , . Sept, 23, 24 Midland., ,. ..... Sept. 20, 27 Mt, Ilope , , , , , Oct, 2 Niagara -on -the -Lake , . , , Sept. 23, 24 Norwich .. , , , . , Sept. 17, 18 Niagara Falb; , . , , , , , . , Sept. 20, 27 Norwood .... , , , , , Oct. 8, 9 Oakville ,,, , , , , , , , , , , , , Sept, 26, 27 Onondaga .. , ... ... , Oct. 1 Pnris .. , ... ... Sept. 20, 27 Peto'horo . , , , , , , , , , Sept, 26, 27, 28 Roekton, . , , , , „ „ Oct, 8, 9 Silncoe . , . .. , ... , , , Sept. 24, 25, 20 Shelbourne , , , , , . Sept, 24, 25, Snlithville .. , , , , , , , , Sept. 27, 28 Stoney Crook , , , , , . Sept. 2(3, 27 St.rathroy , , , , . , , , Sept. 16, 17, l8 Thorold , .. Oct, 8, 9 Tilhsonburg , . , , , , .... Oct 1, 2 Waterford. .., .. ..,, Opt, 3 \Vnterdoyn , , , , , , , _Oct,.1 Western Fair, London , , . Sept. 0.14 \\'ellnndport , , .. , , , , , , Oct, 10, 11 Welland .. , .. Oct. 1, 2 Woodstock , , Sept. 18, 19, 20 Lindsay, July 22. -There aro no de- velopmente ot any note in connection with the counterfeiting case, Bouyea and Wynn were ht'ought hero this morn- ing by Detectives Rogers and Parkin- son. They were arrested ait Sault Ste, Jlarie, charged with being accomplices of the cuttnterfeitelrs, whose headquar- ters is supposed to be in Lindsay, 1)etectivee Parkinson and Ilogero will likely return to :Montreal tonight to bring back the young firemen, Eweleigh, who eras the first to give the police be formation respecting the eotugt0rfeitig, 111 all probability l':weleiglr will be used as King's evidence. D'u'ke is understood ha re said' t!►ut if 3m goes down many others +will go do1wn with him, but that he or Logic will be used as King's evidence is out of the question(, ♦•*- POPE TO POSSIDLE CONVERT, 'Hopes to See Atiglidati Minister, W1id Asks Blessing, in Cassock. Rome, July 22,-A report that the Pope has been suffering front ill -health is unfounded, Among the pelsuus whom the Pope received in audience this morning lie noticed an Anglican clergyman, w'ho was recognizable only from the style of cellar he wore. Ile was kneeling and implored the Pope's blessing. A .Mall crucifix 'hung 040111nl his neck, A chamberlain informed the Pope that the clergyman had tendencies to- ward Catholicism, The Pope patted Ilia' paternally' on the shoulder and smilingly said be hoped that upon his n"xt Visit lie e•ottld be eve:ll'iug besides 111e collar a cassock, These simple evordl.3 of the Pope are likely to result in the clergyman's con- Vl'1.Si01► to the Catholic faith. ♦•s SUSPECTED ROBBER. Arrest of Thomas Hazleton in Mont- real. Montreal, July 22-'I'honns 1Iazellon was 111•rcstcd at Midnight last night on suspicion of being implicated in • the 1'rovhlcial Bane: robbery at St. Croik, Quebec, When apprehended he, gave his 11:1110 118 'T1101101S 1lnzelte11, and there was found in his .possession the sunt of $3'15 itt bills of' this bank, When a1'1"08ted he took .the Matter coolly, and said: "So you linve taken me at 1118t," \Witltent making 8ny'furtl►er remark, he ateconpaiied his captors to hradqunr- t01'3, and on being searched, the roue)' was 'd}8co•cred in his breast pocket. Chief Carpenter stated this morning that he regarded the St, ('roix bank robbery as one of the sulurtest pieces 01 safe -cracking he had ever cone ltcrese in the course of his long experience in criminal urattcrs. ARCTIC WEATHER IN AUSTRIA. Ten Degrees of Frost, With Snow and Cold Rain Tie Up 1f1ttoads, \'senna, .luny 22,-A ai'(dden cool wave has struck Austria-'1l'Ungary. Ten degrees of frost were registAre(l here to - (ley. and severe floods 000 reported front \'O'riull.s places, .1 cold Iain is falling, 011(1 there is Snnl11111 wi,itors at mountain hotels are slimed in. The mountain railways are not w•orh1io.. Stich. conditions bevy not prevaile(1 before in 130 years. ••o THE ENGINEER DEAD. Fast Passenger Train Sped Unguided Almost Into Cleveland. Cleveland, Ohio, July 22,-lfundreds of lives were imperilled today when Floyd E. \Vebebr, engineer of n fast westbound Lake S(u)re passenger train, was stricken nuc0nscione at the throttle and the train sped almost into Cleve- land without guiding hand, The en- gineer was overcome by the intense hent, ]lis condition was finally noticed by the fireman, who stopped the train, Fishes' Moving Day, Sir Charles Welly of Deuton \ivier hos had one of the large ponds. 011 his eytete, known as the Church Pond, it Denton, emptied and 1tle the coarse fish 40100ved therefrom and placed in the \ottillghnln and Geanthnnt C';lane, The sight wart 1t remarkable one and a largo nu1m})01' of spectators watched the proceedings. A11 kinds of vessels were used for the removal of the fish, and six big loads were transferred from mu' water to 1110 other, It k computed that 10,000 fish were removed' to their new bonne -From the London Globe. If all the si:ies were sunshine, Our faces would be fain To feel once more upon them The cooling plash of raid. If all the world were music, Our hearts would often long For one sweet strain of silence To break the endless song. If life were always merry, Our souls would seek relief And rest from weary laughter 111 the quietarms of grief, -Henry Van Dyke. Prayer. Our Father in Heaven, the heavens db- dare wClare Thy glory and the firmament .bow- etl► forth Thy handiwork. On every stile we see the evidences of Thy presence and power. But we bless 'Thee that Thou hast given to us 0 clearer revelation of Thyself than in the world of nature. Thou helot not left us to find out by our own groping the way of life. Thou hast given us Thy !raw which teaches Us our duty to Thee and to our fellow men. And Thou hast also spoken to us through Thine own .Son, As 'Thou hast given us the light, give 11s grace, we pray Thee, to follow the light and to abide to it, For- bid that with the light upon our path. way we sll0uld chose the way of dark- ness, Let Thy love be shed abroad in our hearts so that we shall 'rejoice to do Thy will. Enable 11.9 to grasp the great (spirit of love that underlies all Thy law, and bring these wills of ours into such complete harmony with Thine that ser- vice shall be our delight, Aralen. My People. (I1. Sam, vii, 10.) I will appoint a place for my people, and tvi11 plant then) that they may dwell in n place of theirown and move no more. 1, My people. Mine by ownership, providence and redemption. I have given them to my Son and no one dares to challenge my right. 1 have given my Sou to then( and no one says Me nay. They are chosen and called and kept. "Jacob is the lot of mine inheritance. The Lord's portion is Ills people" I1. They are planted. 1Iow did you get that ornamental tree in front of your house? You went to the bush and made your choice, you uprooted it with care, and brought it home and planted it in a favored spot. Just so, the wild olive tree is brought, tended, grafted, cared for, in time the fruit abounds. Trees of righteousness the planting of the Lord. Planted in the courts of the Lord. Are you n tree of the Lord's right hand plant- ing? If not, Christ has power to root you up and cast you away. Take care, and look to your evidences of a clear title. ' M. They are placed. Happy is the man who is in the place of God's ap• ni11tluetlt, He leads not by the shortest way, for character is of slow growth - nor by ilio Cas;°Et WL4Y1 II0 11ibg minister of our selfislulessfor. rarjQe npti'e in the wisest way and in the most useful, and these have often tears and pain and loss. 1. It is a place of their own- discov- ered, prepared, kept, given grapes from vines they did not plant, cities they did not build, the old corn of the land they (lid not reap. 2. It is permanent. They are to "move no more" in relationship, in alli- ance, in devotion, and freedom from enemies. Sometimes the Lord's people may be considered in Egypt waiting for tiro De- liverer. Sometimes in the wilderness watching pilot cloud and pilot fire. Sometimes in Cannan fighting the bat- tles of the Lord, 'Those stages mark great advances -and in all teller T.dcrd calls them "My people.;" a ;� IT, V. Miller. •Most Unhappy. The otic ‘‘'ho is incapable of happiness is the most to be pitied of mortals, It seems strange that there should he, in this beautiful world, souls so dark the.t neither by night nor by clay is there star or sun. Elft there are those out of whose lives the sweetness has gone for this world, and the only joy they have is in looking forward to the day of rest in the grave. Life to them has lost its clear outlines , They aro in the haze of the final twilight, and there is only the mist, that follows the sun- set. This is not the will of God. 11 fits neither witlt His purpose nor man's mission. It is neither a tribute to this world, nor a rightful preparation for the next. The sad of heart should consider again the cry of the Psalmist: "\Vhy art thou cast down, 0 my soul; and why art, 111011. disquieted in me?" Out of that shadow he lifted his eyes into the sunlight: "hope thou in God; for 1. shall yet praise (limn, who is thb help of 111y countenance, and my God," -Selected. Useless Forebodings. What a vast portion of our lives is spent in anxious and useless forebod- ings concerning the future, either our own or that of our dear ones( Present joys, present blessings slip by and we Bliss half their sweet flavor, and all for 41111 of faith in 11itu who provides for the tiniest insect in the sunbeam. Oh, when shall we learn the sweet trust in God 0111' little children tench is every d11y by their confiding faith in. us? \Vo who are so' mutable, 80 faulty, so irri- table, so unjust; and Ile, who is so watchful, so pitiful, so loving, so for- giving! \Vhy ecus 1101 we, slipping our ]land into His each day, walk trustingly over that day's appointed path, thorny' or flowery, crooked or straight, knowing that evening will bring us sleepv peace and home 7 -Selected, PAGE EIGHT --THE BLYTH STANDARD--Jui.v 25Th, 1907. Synopsis of Canadian Northwest Homestead Regulations. ANY even' numbered section of Doml- mion Lands In Manitoba, Saskatche- wan and Alberta, excepting 8 and 26, not reserved, way be homesteaded by any per- son who 1e the sole head of a fatuity, or any male over 18 years of age, to the ex- tent of one-quarter section of 160 acres more or lees, Entry must bo made personally at the local laud otlioe for the district In which the land Is situated. Entry by pros.), may, however, bo made on certain con- ditions by the Lather, mother, son, daugh- ter, brother or sister of an intending homesteader. The homesteader Is required to perform the homestead condltlonsunder oue of the following plans : (1) At least six month's residence upon and cultivation ot the land In eau!' year for three years, (2) It the father (or mother it the father is deceased) of the hornesteader resides upon a tarns in the vicinity ot the hind entered for the requirements as to resi- dence may be satisfied by such person re- siding with the father or mother. (3) If the settler has his permanent resi- dence upon farming laud owned by hire in the violnity of his homestead, the re- quirements as to residence may be setis- lIed by residence upon said land. Six months' notice In writing should be given to the Commisslouer of Dominion Lauds at Ottawa of intention to apply for patent. W. W. COIIY Deputy of the Minister oj Interior. N. B.—Unauthorized publication of this advertisement will not be paid for. Take Rival Herb Tablets for Stomsob Liver, Kidneys and for cleaning the Blood. 200 days treatment $1, 30 days' treatment 25e. For sale at Dr. Milne's Drug Store Wholesale from the RIVAL HERB AGENCY Kincardine, Ont. TURKEYS ,' N7CTAN'TED We want to buy your Turkeys and will pay the highest market price. Write for particulars and state how many you haye, The Canada Poultry & Produce Co., Ltd., Stratford, Ont. Entrance Examinations. The following is the list of candidates pissed by the boat of examiners for passed Huron with the marks obtained by each, A card giving the number of marks awarded has been Boni to twit pupil. The certificates will be issued before the re -opening of the schools. On account of the difficulty of the lit• el'at11r'0 paper the pays 111111.k 11115 been reduced front 8:a) to 37e. The highest marks obtained in each subject are as follows heading—EIgio Goebel, 15. Writing—Cora Washington and Mag- gie Disher, 48. Li term tire— Marjorie Gunan, 82. Arithtnotie—Anna Allison, Aggie Gemmell, Mary Nixon, Garnet Wan - loss, Edna McEwan, Elsie Gaiser, Her- bert Mitchell, Milton Haugh, Edith Treleaven, Tena Buckingham, Jennie TIME TABLE. LONDON AND WINGHAM BRANCH. SOUTH. NORTH. Rol pin am pm 6 40 3 30 Wingham 11 50 7 35 0 43 3 33 Windham Jct, 11 48 7 25 6 52 3 44 Belgrave 11 40 7 13 7 011 3 56 Blyth 11 28 7 00 7 14 4 04 Londesboro 11 20 0 52 7 47 4 23 Clinton 10 15 11 05 0 3.5 8 05 4 39 Brucefleld 9 58 0 19 8 15 4 47 Ktppen 9 50 0 11 8 22 4 52 Honsall 9 44 6 05 8 35 6 05 Exeter 9 30 5 M 8 46 5 13 Centralia 9 18 5 43 8 59 5 26 Clandeboye 9 09 5 34 9 ski 5 30 Liman Crossing 9 03 6 30 9 12 5 37 Denfield 8 55 5 25 9 21 5 46 Ilderton 8 45 5 15 9 29 6 54 Ettrlek 8 35 6 07 9 35 5 58 Hyde Park Crossing 8 26 5 02 1) 37 0 00 Hyde Park Jot. 8 24 5 00 9 46 0 10 London 8 15 4 50 Connections are made at Wingham for all stations on the Palmerston and Kin. oardtne branch. Connections are made at Clinton for all stations on the Buffalo and Goderioh branoh, and all stations from Stratford to Toronto, Connections are made at Lucian Crossing for all stations west to Sarnia. Connections are made at London for all stations east and west on the main line. Our Big . ,Offer To all new subscribers from now on . THE STANDARD will be sent till Jan. ist, 1908 for the small sum of 25c Subscribe Now My Hair is ExtraLonq pastuasemmoimemmsommteamnsome Feed your hair; nourish it; give it something to live on. Then it will stop falling, and will grow long ,and • h- '+y. Ayer's Hair Vigor is the only hair -food you can buy. Por 60 years it has been doing just what we claim it will do. It will not disappoint you. "my hair used to be very short. Hut sitar ysiud Aysr s Halt Vi ora abort rima It bodes to now, Bud now it 1`. tourteau boehu long. This seems a splendid result to tea after bolos almost without any hatr."—lies. J. 0.. YOU. Colorado Springs, Colo. X'°' Aly io. IounnaAa r$ .1 Lowell, Masa. I J sAesAP,tntLu. CHERRY PECTORAL McNair, Harry Treibnor, Myrtle Stin. son, Willie Sellory, 100. (1raminar—Ural Stoddart, 91. Conlnosition—May Redmond, 86, Total—Mary Lacey, 528. (io1Natteit PUmLta &moot,. Our Eye Examining is not merely placing different lenses be- fore the eyes ; but a diagnosis bringing out (by the use whof which we view the interiorc s t the eye) with errors of refraction or causes of eye strain, enabling us, by the use of the glasses ground in our own laboratories, to attain absolute accuracy. THE TAIT-BROWN OPTICAL CO. EYESIGHT SPECIALISTS 237 Dundas St., London, Ont. IEOMESEEKERS' Round Trip Excursions t0 Canadian NORTIIWEST Lease Toronto TUESDAYS JULY AUGUST SEPT. 30 13 and 27 10 and 24 tickets good returning within sixty days. VERY LOW RATES for second -dao tickets to Winnipeg and all important North• west towns TOURIST SLEEPING CARS on each snBerths additional Berths mut be reserved early: eryheavydeand. Apply to local agent at lent a week before excursion leaves. Ask nearest C.P.R. Ticket Agent for more Information or write C. B. FOSTER, Dist. Pur. Agl., C.P.R., Toronto For tickets and full Information nen McMURCIIIE AGENT BLYTH, Harold Aitken Sarah Beacons Fred Bonnett. Nellie Bhtclt..., Ellis Britnicontbe Conrad Carey Adeline Clark (l abet Doty \largaret (Jolt Elsie Goebel Nina Kerr Isabel 'Matheson Hector McKay_ Annie 1lcliiiinon Angus \IeNevin Percy Paulin Garwin Prang Percy Ramsay Alex, Saunders Stella Speiran Oral Stoddart Elizabeth Stogdill ..........470 Ruby Stot hers .89 1 Alex. Straiton Watson Stratton Mary Sutherland Lillian Thornton,.., ,889 Coni Wash ington.,........ 435 Ernest Young • ....409 Harold Young, ... 425 4'12 400 425 4130 892 '170 457 4'26 471 41(3 117 460 4'3'2 419 '188 870 405 4'31 477 446 ,493 971 403 .133 All Sorts of Dishes In All Sorts of Ware. It's handy to know that you can Dome right straight to this ntoro the minute you need sornething In this Ilue. And yon can be sure before you oomo that what you wish you can got. Sonie Elegant Dinner Sets Beautiful and attractive designs, new ppatterns. 'Toilet Sets, the latest ideas. We have a large kapott order arriving this week. (1OUlitt1CU SEPARATE SCHoo►,. `V'illinill Doyle. 1')2 Russell Fox......,. ,.470 Mabel Lacey 523 t 1`VilliePitulen.,., ..'• ..••di0 col,noIINE, No.1-Howard Jones, 412 Stephen Wilkes.... 370 Rota Wise 870 2 -Lorne Moore,... 411 11 -Florence Young . ,072 U -Edna McEwen.... 4;38 Ella NICl.nt►►r 371 Mary McManus '102 Edna Sandy 471 9-linino Clutton.... 4073 Mabel Young—.4'37 (IODEItIOII TOWNSHIP. 1 -Carrie Graham 465 2-11arry Haack() 411 Ruth Thompson 415 5 -El nut Bottles................870 Lucy Marshall.— 463 6 -Roberta Johnston 428 1lENSALI, PUBLIC SCHOOL. Win. B. Bell... . 488 Pearl Drysdale,.., •448 Arnold liabkirk ....418 'Nines H. Bullard.... 370 Luella Ortwei n .... 408 Irene Pope.... 870 Harry 11, ylcArthur....... 441 dames J. McArthur441 Lilly Youngblut ......482 Alex. Smith.... 8133 IIAY TOWNSHIP. 2-I3ertlia Munn 403 8 -Maggie H. Wilson 43.4 Wesley Caldwell ,..411 Wm. Grain 416 W m. 13. Wilson 382 10 -Wm, B. Elder 870 Alpine McEwon ....1370 14 -Eliza M. Tl.ompson 442 STANLEY TOWNSHIP. 7• Claudia Cochrane , —876 14 -Murray M. Fisher ........481 Agnes Gemmell 450 James J. Jnrrott ,.., .442 Rena M. Mclleath. 370 (Remainder will be given next %reek.) Soaforth. Steel fire escapes have been erected on the furniture factory building. Arrangements aro rapidly being completed for the hig celebration in Seaforth on Friday, August lOth. Howard Hartry has quite a curiosity in his garden, it being a cherry true bearing both ripe fruit and blossoms at th' same time. Out of twenty pupils who wrote at the recent entrunco examinations from the Seaforth Public School, 18 were successful in passing. Carl Jones, an employe with the Robert Bell Engine and 'Thresher Co., Limited, had the misfortune to have the top taken off three of his fingers on the left hand while engaged at his work on Saturday last, He will be off work for a few weeks. \Ve are sorry to learn that Wm, Sclater, of the firm of Sclater & Finlay- son, of Regina and son of Wm. Sclater of Seaforth, met with a rather serious accident in Regina ono day last week. An automobile was passing along the street and the driver in some way lost control of his machine and it ran onto the sidewalk its Mr, Sclater was pass- ing, along, knocking him down and CASII FOR ALL KINDS OF PIRODUCE JAMES CUTT causing such injuries that he had to be removed to the hospital, The Last word received from him by his friends here ((11(101111ct'd tll(tt he was improving although still confined to his bed. •r;.':1' 0,17 I rhi.'• 13' r • f041:4-Prwe; uc; A place of safety and secur- ity for the accumulations ot all who work and save. Deposits of any amount accepted and interest paid 4 times a year at highest current rate. Interest compounded quarterly. is solicited at Blyth br T. W. SCOTT Your account anch. ,AGENT 0+111111.4.4, ur Bi!.Offer The Standard will be sent for the balance of year to all New Subscribers, in Canada only, for Exeter. Miss Mae Wood left for Detroit where she will cuter upon a course in training in nursing at Harper Hospi- tal. A married ladies' choir had charge of the musical part of the services at the Main Street church last Sunday even- ing. Misa Edna McCallum, stenographer for Gordon, MacKay & Co., Toronto, arrived in town and is spending her vacation with her patents et the Bend, \V.'1'. England received a nasty bite on the calf of the right leg by a dog be- longing to Mussell Baker while wheel- ing from Crediton to Centralia, The wound is healing nicely and—the dog is dead, A number of people visited the can- ning; factory Tuesday afternoon last when operations were commenced. Owing to it slight accident to the pea titres er the work will bo delayed for a couple of days. Pete Coleman ons at London recent- ly where he had the X rays put on his foot. It was found that the local ph .; sician was correct in his opinion of the case and all that can be done is to nurse the foot carefully. John Heywood had occasion to bring into practice his former experience in capturing swanning bees, A swarm had settled in it tree on James Walter's lawn and Mr. Heywood, completely covered with mosquito netting, as- cended the tree and captured the entiie lot. The license commissioners met hero for the purpose of taking up the matter of granting it license to the Metropoli- tan hotel. 'l'1►e hotel was cut off when the licenses were granted in April ow - Jug to the population being too small for four licenses within tho municipal. ity. It was found that the population is larger than the commissioners thought and the hotel wits given a li- cense for the balance of the term. The hotel has boon newly painted and im- provements made in the interior, 2 ents We want 400 New Subscribers and this will be easy if the parents send The Standard to their children in the Northwest and other points. Figure it up and see what the postage will amount to if you send it yourself. The Standard is the only thoroughly in- dependent paper in Huron County and the circulation is increasing steadily since last September. Morris. S, Jordan, fish Zine, has disposed of his handsome driver for a tidy stun, Crops are doing well and will sur- pass the expectatitans of a few months ago. Wm. and Mrs. Wheeler, of Aline, visited relatives and friends in this lo- cality, Miss Mary Jane Cloakey hits return- ed home after spending the past six months in Toronto, L. J. Williams, 5th con., has sold his farm to Samuel McCurdy, who got pos- session on the 15th Inst, The price paid for the farm was $5000, and for the crop $400, Sydney .Jewel, of London, England, who has been spending the past six weeks with his grandmother and other friends on the 4th line, has gone to To- ronto, where he has taken a position on the C. P. R. ns engineer, After an illness extending over the past nine mouths from a kidney ail- ment, James Shortrend paid Nature's debt on Wednesd'ty of last week, pass- ing away rat his home in Seaforth whore he bad resided for the past three years, going there when he sold his farm to his son J. W, Mr. Shortroed was (16 years, 4 months and nine days old, He was born in the township of Esquessing, Halton Co., and carne to Morris 80 years ago when he bought a fine 100 acre farm, Si lot 16, con, 9, owned by the late John Henderson. Mrs. Shortreed's maiden nnmo WKS Miss Caroline Brodie, of Morris, she and the son mentioned above and en adopted daughter survive. The subject of this notice was a man of industry, sobriety and integrity, esteemed by all who knew him. He was a Presbyte• rinn in religion and a Liberal in poli- tics. Deceased was a brother to John Shortreod, a well known resident of the 9th line, and a brother and. sister live on the homestead in Halton Co. The funeral took place from his late resi- dence, Seaforth, leaving at 1,00 o'clock for Brussels cemetery. Rev, Mr, Lar- kin, of Worth, nonthuoted the service at the home and Itov. Mr. Milligan took charge at the grave. The bereaved will be accorded the sineere sympathy of many relatives and old friends, • An advertisement in THE STANDARD pays. Do y ou wish to reach the people? This is the first consideration of every advertiser. The next is what locality to cover. The homes in Blyth and surrounding country. are reached each week by our paper. You Have Got Your Eyes on This dvt. If it were only your own, think of the thousands that would see it and read it and come your way to buy your goods. Advertising pays when insert- ed in a home paper like The Standard DO IT NOW. - - 'Phone No. 4. Your Printing SHOULD BE AN INDEX TO YOUR BUSINESS ! 00111111=16. 411111111/11N•11011111•1■11111111MMINIOW Poor 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. High-priced, experienced workmen only are employed,' because they should do—and do—better work than inexperi, enced help. •••••••••••••o•o• We will convince you of tliis if you will trust us with your next order.