HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1905-07-20, Page 6' FOit.. ciVER SIXTY 'MARS.
Mrs. WilslOw's Soothing Syrup Ilea . •
been IfSed by million% ot MOthere for
their -children 'while teething If die-
- tuthed. by night and broken of your
e reSt by a sick child buffering and
Crying with pain of cutting teeth wild
0,,t, Q;)ee and Pt a bottle of
WilSlow's Soothine Myrup" for child. '
ren teething. It will relieve the poor
little sufferer immediately. Depend
upon it, Mothers, there is no Mistake
Omit. It. It eure3 Diarrhoea, reglie
Late. 'the Stomach and Bowels, cures
Wind c olio, softens ibeGuru, redneee
Inflantrnation and givea tone and en-
rrgy to the whore spiel% "Mrs.
WingloW's Soothing Syrun" for child-
ren teething, is: pleaSant ,',to the taste
sad 10 the prescription of one of the
WOOand hest fereale physieians and
nursesin the Vatted States. Price
24 eentie a 'bottle. Sold by all drug-
gists th,rougliOnt the world. Be •sure
Rad. Olt for "Kra. Winslow's Sooqi-
ing Syrup."
* ..........,
ONTARIG. VI''TAL'4TATISTICf3.
I,ateat Recerd of Births, Merriagea and
' :Deaths. •
i
he *thirty-fourth annual .report of
: the Registrar -general Of the Province
, of Ontario gives many intereeting de.
tells regarding births, rilarrlagea and
, -deaths' for the year. ending Deeernber
34, 1.003: ' .••
estimated population was 2198-
6 02, and the number of births, includ-
ing still -births; 48,742. Of this 25,071.
, were male and 23,671 female, a.rate of
22.1 per thOusand of the population,
whieh was less than the rate wall
European countries; areeerding to the
returns Of 1900., the latest available,
with the exception of Prance, in which
country it was 21.9. This rate, the
report says, is UnSatisfactorY, and in-
dicates that natural !Conditions are be-
ing Interfered . With. Nipissixig County'
has the highest birth ,rate per 1,004,
viz., 49,3, and Prinee Edward ,the low-
est, 14.6. There was a marked falling
off in 'Perk County, where the increase
was 596 in 1902 and 61 in 1903, The
• number Of twin births. was 492, or 31
• less than in 1902, while 4 triplets were
registered, the saine as in 1902. The
nUmber Of infants born out of wedlock
was 780, �r 16 per 1,000, births, coin.
: pared to 39 in -England and Wales in
, 1902, and. 62.$- out of each .1,900 births ,
. in 'Scotland in that year..
The ,marriages registered nuMbered,
19,830, or 9.0 per: 1,000 Of, the Popu1a,7'
tion, an Increase of 1,842 over the pre-
•ceeding year. The lowest Marriage.
; rate was in. Rainy River DIStrict; 5.5,,
: and the highest in Essex.County, 23,3..
h The latter figure is an abnorinal One.
•; Ontario's marriage rate is considered
satisfactory. June was the most pop-.
Inter mend.; for ratirrietgeS.,•r,BY denone
'nations the,..,Methodist Church .44111
, leads in the *tin:her of Marriages, 32.14
; per cent. of the Whole going to 1 that
I church; the Presbyterian. Churoh , .had
20.63 per cent., the Church of England
17.20 and the Roman Catholic, Church
• . 15.95.
' The deaths, including still-bIrths,
numbered 29,664,' a proportion of 13.4
Per 1,000 ofthe reporting population,
slightly, in excess of 1902, but •lower
• by 0,2 per eent. than in 1901. The rate
..,, for 1903 was, however, _the highest reJ
corded With the exeeptien of 1900, when
It was 140 per. cent, Of the total
deaths, 8;634, or 29.1 per cent, happen.
ed .before the fifth' Year of life, and
6,700, or 215 per cent, of the Cotal, oc-
curred in the first year of lifo, Ow'
tario's infant mortality Was thus 111
Per 1,000 births; that of England, and'.
1 Wales, for 1902 ,was 133. "'The months
-.. of June and September werelhe health-
iest of the year. While the deaths from
enteric fever showed but little Change
over those .of the preceding year, finte
1 infection Was general, not a city hav-
ing been free from its. bantfid•Inflit- -
ence. .. The mortality from.,this 'disease
was greater in rural districts than else-
where. The deaths from tgberculosts .
in 1903 were 2,723, and in 19022,691.
Slime 1870 returns and estimates show
this disease responsible fOr about •90,*
000 death's. • The maximum of deaths
was 3,484 in 1900. There were 125
suicides rerbrted, deathe. frein acct.,
dents 1,2411
:Prolonged Torture
of Piles
Was discouraged 4,* 30 years'
stiffering.-Nevaje expected '
to be well again. •
Mei: W. Emma, North Street, St., Cath.
arines, and whose husband has been caretaker
of the Central-Schooffor nineteen year,,,statel:
"I wish.to add n2y testimony for Dr. Chase s
Ointment. For thirty years I was severely'
&filleted with piles, which gave me such pro,
longed tortutethat.I'
did not Ingest ever to
be well again.. Thave
been treated by physi-
cians who have groWn
grey in the practice a
medicine 'without
taining relief. X don't
suppose there ever wail
• a more discouraged
1
•sufferer than X WAN. 1,1, 1111k"FinallY X WAS for-
tunate enough to come
114 across Dr, Chase's
I, Ointment, and after
using a few bone fey
long-standing com,
Fattrililff plaint departed, and I
was free front every symptom. 1.2nay say that
if this ointment could net be got for bee than
ten dollars n box, X would not be without it,"
Dr. Chase s Ointment is a positive and par,
anteed cure for overy form of piles, It is Hafer,
surer and less expensive than, an Operation,
63 ets. a box, at p.11 dealeal.
4 .ste 41.1.
•••••040Y4144.1.1111.11•111.1.1....6•11w.
INTERESTING •-•
"Correct English
How to use. it."
A MONTHLY IVIAGAZINE DEVOT•
ED TO THE tisn ENtutrsif.
Josephine TUrck Xiaker, kklitor.
Nitta! Contehts Pot Thin /110fith.
eetlfSe Of tnglish lot the lit:ginner.
Course in English for the advanced
•
The Art of Converse/Lion.
How to Increase One's Vocabulary.
Should and Would. HOW to* 1.1Se 'I hem.
Pronunciations (Century DietionarYi,
Correct English in the Home.
Correct- English in the School.
What to Say and What Not to Say.
.Course in. Letter -Writing and Penet• .
Alton,
Alphabetic list of AbbreViations.
Dusiness English for the Business. Man
Compound Words //ow it) Writ)
Then:
Studies in English Literature.
Si a year Send
Ple4Setatilit5010 cOpy,
• iitittfidt posuroht ovanstont
* •
It May Bo Lying in Sarno Cariedi it WIGS RAMSHED 111 11101
Attie—Story of its Wander.
Mg* and Disappearance.
The Duke Ot.Montrose, who recendy
arrived in the T.Yriited State* on a visit
of some duration, writes the Marquise
de rontertoy, In he New York° Tri-
bune, IN anxious to discover the ,where-
abente of the heart Of the' met fain*
ou 01 all hie ancestors, Zanies Graham,
Marquis et Montrose, winch, regarded
u the .talieman Of hie family, dleae-
neared In Prange at Boulogne, after
the mut extraordinary vieissitudee,
about one hundred yeere ago, and is ne-
hued to be hidden away at the Present
moment in emu private collection of
. curios, relic§ and bric-a»brao in the
• United States or Canada, atUl incloeed
In that wonderful Intle siteel'ease made
of the blade of the great Montroee's
• sword. The lefarquie o Montrose, it
mar.be remembered, atter lightIng
bravely for King Chemles was taken
• Prisoner by the (woes of Parliament,
• sentenced to death and executed. at
• Edinburgh. in 1,650 under circumstance
of great indignitY. The body, •after
• hanging three hours to the gallows,
was quartered, in accordanee with the
• sentence, the hea.4 being set upon • a
spike at Tolbooth, while the llmbs were
dienerses1 In various parts of the king-
dom, the arms being omit to Dundee
and to Aberdeen, where they were
nailed •up against the principal city
gates: The dismembered, trunk was
Inclosed in a little short 'ellen" and
burled on the 13oreliginntlir, Which was
the usual place of execntton and of
burial of theworst eriminals, a PlagE
of evil reputation, little sought:by daY
• and trinch shunned by night. •
.
'The Heart Ftemoved• .
Montrose before his deatb had he-
• qtteathed his heart to his niece • by
• Marriage, Lady Napier, to whom he
was netsienately devoted. On the night
after the exeeution Lady Napier caus-
ed the .trunit to be dug up and the
heart to be removed and brought to hex
by -trusted and devoted adherents. Sbe
theri had it embaltned'and inclosed in
a little .steel case made of the blade
of .her hero's sword, „nnd pliteed the
'case in a fine geld filigree box, which
had belonged to her husband's kills.
nian, ,Iohn Napier, the inventor of the'
logarithms, Shortly before her 'death
Lady • Napier despatched the casket to
the son of the Marquis' and Ms sue-
cessor, who was living in -exile in Hol-
land, In some way or other, probably
through robberY, the heart Was lost,
and all' hope of recoverincit-had long
been given up, when a friend of the
Graham family recognized the gold fill -
gree box inclosing the steel ease in a
curiosity Shop in The Hague. He pur-
chased the relic at one° and rettrned
IL not to Lord Montrose, but to Lord
Napier. • •• ••
,On the death of the. fifth Lord Na-
.
pier It passed into. the Iceeping of his
only surviving daughter, Hester,' 4am--
ware:Mrs. Johnston,.*hose, hughand
was a conneodere et the 'Royal navy., •
While .on a .voyage out to .India with
his Wife and her possessions on heard
the coffin/4(101.es, ship b.eCinie engaged
'in a lIght With a French..man-of,war,
and during the eourSe of the .enceunter
a splinter' struck the casket, .shattering
the gold 'filigree 12ex containing the
,sheart,Vut fortunatelyleaving ,the steel
.casket intact... Iii India-:•IVIrs. Johnston
'-caused'a clever goldsniith to construct
a geld filigree box in tIie. place of the'.
one- destroyed, and this in turn ,was
placed in a•Silver•urn, ori the Outside -of.
'Which was engraved, in twe• native, die: -
loots a short account pf• Montrose's
life and death. • .The :urn; soon ,came.
terbe,:regarded by the natives as some-
thing ,uncanny, and the report spread
that it Was a,' talisman. Before 'long
the urn and its contents Were stolen
,and for a long time could net be trac-
ed., ultimately evidence was procured
tending-te show that the relic had been
sold for a large 'sum of money to
powerful chief 112 the neighborhood, ofMadura.
. • •• In Return For a' Life,
Tears e -Went by, and one 'day s'Mre,
' 'Johnston's seri happened 'while out
, Sheeting to save the -life of the'.ebild
of this' Madura chief from death by
laying low a tiger with a tiritely bullet
.just as it was about to spring. The
Chief; .in true. Oriental. fashion, •offered
to 'give Young J:elinston;:anything he
might 'cheese: to ask, andjohnstmi
naturallY availed himself' :of theiv:oP-
portunity to beg for the resto,ratton-
et the urn containing the heart of
Montrose, -The chief readily complied
,With•his;'-request, and - it:-marte add-
,
ed, was later On Put .to death by the
.Engliali. foe. ie'bellictrif,agsainsil,„the.133.-
bob .of', Arcot. after hairtrigln.:, 'vain
eonght Irm.nunity by relating 'his sur -
vender of • the. Montre'ffe, yelfe,,' The
Yohnston familY returned to tUrene. in
1792, and, pa:daft* threugh .Frtince•. on
their way te England, were ar,reeted
the revolutionary, 0Overnmenti‘ 'at
Bonlogne,'.Adt befOre, however, they
had time.t,ti ifitetiSt thelitiver urn; with
its incioSUrest ,te an Englishwoman
living theto, •whe promised to keep IL
hidden •until it 'cOuld,'Oafely-beLtortvey-
.ed, te Londdii. l'ITrifortittiately the, wo-
Man • in question died Soon afterWard,
and the .Tohnstori .fa,22.itly, on the retie
totatiOn- ef peace; Were unable 'to: find
any. trate 'of the silver urn and of:the
heart. • , .
• The Search Kept Up. .
ihe search was taken pp by the late,
Duke of Montrose, and has been pre-
secuted"With a good deal Of vigor 'IV
the present Duke, everything tending to
• show that the relic has found. its WAY
te this country, It ie possible , that
the silver urn has been •disPOsed
separately: bat there can be no Mis-
take about the little steel case and
about the filigree casket of Indian gold,
The present Duke Of MontroSe would
give 41 large sum to recover ..the relic,
blotto has -furnished . the theme for
coofult:e most celebrated novels.
r711 4 h he not be able to furnish
the full ah1utxt required himself—for
he IA not rich As Dukes go—there is
no tree Scotbh Graham who Wenid not
gladly contribute toward the recovery
of the heart of illOntrOSe Mid the
bringing sheet Of its finding a final
resting place on SO:Atli:4h, soil after all
te extraordinary Wanderingel and
eissitudeat,
• inclueiVe Affeet ion. •
no loved her for hersele alone,
Put he would riot have loVed the sante
MO he not known her fortune was
• Deposited hi her own.
. Ratio sPInden Days,.
frarne buifding at the corner of
Prineess and Ontario streets, Xingekton,
• Ont., brought there from Carleton Is.
land in 1794, is the object of much in-
• terest. It is being renovated, The out.. ,
or boards have been torn off, revealing
the nature or •the log houses. /t was
constructed over 109 year ago.
The walls consist of some of the
largest beams ever seen In the Lime-
stone City. . Their 4eittbout 0,venty.11.0,
feet long and a foot and a half wide,
and eight Indies thick, A:11d in a. splen-
did state qt preservation, notwithstand-
ing that they were put together over
125 years ago by the British twiny while
stationed at the _Island.
The plaster has also lasted' all that
tirne, and its underdressinN 0010111ft of
hay and straw. „The building is one II
the landmarks of Xingsten. and Will net
#10_400,101/0.44:
VSNIERAISLIS• USAGEZ OF SIENCH'
PASSES ,FROM CANAPA.
olflo. Province Judges Tamely %Os.
mit to it Demand That They Surren-
der the. insignia of Their Ronk and
•Offic,--Other Eriglieh Cuatome Hon -
tired in britioh Collimbia Which Ara
Not Observed In Other Provineee,
British. Columbia is the only Previa°,
Which has .preserved the old Nnirltsh
custom which obliges judges to wear
wigs. With thelirst week of April was
reported tns' first Iviglepti .sitting,,of the
British Columbia, Appeal court, This
was the result of an enactment abol-
ishing the wig, passed at the last ses-
sion ef the Leglidature. The reason for
this odd piece of legislation we do not
haatvp.altheng11 one need not seek far
, for arguments against the practice,
gays the Nail and Empire. At the same
time we are surprised that the judges
of a Province.which so keenly regards
English precedept in all matters, should
tamely Subrnit to a, demand that they
surrender the insfgnia of their rank and
ofilee. Thie, apparently, they haV.a
&mei and thus passes 04y from Can-
ada a Venerable -usage of the bench..
English Ctistornit In 'the West,
British Celumbia, Is not, however,
wIthofie 'other customs drawn from the
Old Country, but not honored in 'other
PrOvinces, In British Columbia, as in
England., the rule of the road is "Keep
to the left and you're sure to be right?,
If we had this custom here, all trailio,,
going down -flange street would be' on
the *Mat side of the street, and all
traffic west-bouncl on. King street
would be on the Routh side of that
thoroughfare. The advantage of this
practice lies inthe fact that as the
driver Sits on the right Aide of the
vehicle, be '•wilf be better able to meet
and pass ether •conveyanee's. In rail-
ways this rule IS OMOS't universal,
Another English' custom • M British
Columbia • affects the publication of
turning newspapers. Acting • On the
theory that the real work for any
given lasue is done on the previous
day, in the,Paciftc.Province there is no
1VIonday morning ,paper... There Is,
however;•one on Sunday, for :whieh the
work Is done .on. Saturday. 'Tbeeep tra-
ditions are jealously 'preserved, . al-
though their learned' friend', the wig,
has. vanished froth 'among' tbent. •
Traditions Of ,the .13ench. •
•'We.do not fear that the' British Col-
umbia judiciary will suffer in influence
and dignity by, the loss of its horse-
hair, although it must be " adniitted
that not long ago a jndgis in that Pro-
vince made himself ridiculous In the
way he handled a conternpt case, ' This.
was merely annitpleasanVexception t�
the 2sstab/fshett precedent of fearless
fairness which ha.g distingeished.B.rW
ish When Court was.
*first helel there under ;judges. who ,re-•
ceived ''•their 'aPPointment 'under Eng.,
lish Warrant, there were 'few •British
subjects West of the Rockieg.
fax -
the predominating -eleinent was the
Aineridan . bad inan, althea:14h :Limo
.wero• many' Ameritant 'of. a law-abiding
tYpe. These,,,conibiniug'Nvith the :Cana-
•clians, under the direction Of one'er tWo.
notable„ Judges, made war upon' the
. .
roughs, and ,s6on had. -'.the. count*" '
Cleared ,of• them, ;SO it cattle to pass
that at time When. a'triveler in • the
Western States 'owed' his existence to
an ability to :Shoot straight and speed-
ily, •-he might go anywhere in British
Columbia, and never see a weapon.
This' reform .was brought about -With,'
out recourse .to .lynch . law, and:of :it
the British, -Colueibia, judiciary rnitY
well be proud. .The tradition le more
•Taluable and honorable than even that
Of the • .
.11:e Wigless English -Judges. .
The icdnoclastie kegislators who have.
laid .sacrilegious -hands on ,the judge's '
headgear.need not flatter . themselves
that 'they are pioneers. ,A .long :three
age In Ipngland there were legal Nihl- .
lists who..aimed at -a similar reform, as
the following clipPing,•from. The. Lon- ,
don Times, of, July 24.,. 1868, proves:—
"During .the last tWe'-daya,..the learn -
:judges and .the bdr ha.ve been Sit-
ting -without their wigs, and in opening
a Cass. Sir Robert Center:called atten- •
tiOn '10 .the ' innovation, and apologized,
for not appearing in full•ferengic °es-
luMe. :Hie Lordship said he had. set
the example :of' leaving Off 'the Wig' in
consequenee• ef the unprecedented heat
of the weather,`.as he thought there
were lifnits to human endurance. Sir
toberttCoiller expressed the wish 'that
*his. precedent °might. be generally 'foe
ittered, and .hoped that the obsolete in.-
stitution of.'the wig wae.coming' to an
end—a hope in _which many of the pro-
fessien confute., ',•
13tit though Sir Robert and Six- J. P.
Wilde friade themselvestirea--conspieu-
ous, they died , without, : seeing any
further ..signS of the death ,ef the prac-
tide, '•
the 'Wig • and the Coil.
, _ .
Paradoxidal•A4 it .may scene the wig
dies herd,A;Oeapse it Is en,old., Strietly
• speaking .it etifne",in after ,-,the .Xlestee•
Won, and has•:-emer ,feinne •been worn
On the English bench; but the Wearing
of a indict:la' cap is of earitcr •orlgin,
arid datea. back , Tar AS English
Courts of justice... it • is not the wig.
self which IS the judge's proper iesig-
nia, but the coif, which is probably a
SurviVai.of the tine when Priests were
lawyers: The coif is a synall piece Of
iriee which 'was' worn by Judgfis.before
:the advent.of the wig, Membere -of the
StidiciarY desiring to be fashionable,
'and' yet not • daring to • conetal the
meted cell,. were driven • to *the exped-
ewlaimariamdossirclimitraeraotatimitiamiiissmemr
. • • '
If you
Snort• rode?
ra petiences of anglers, shoot -
%eels so.‘00 ers and caMperS, Or yacht*
Adveniute ring
-are In.,
• terested in country lifg,
IAA as your newsdealer for
R__Rustwenty.flve cents
FORESTsTRaA0Ar $11/3
„„„„, „,11 for four weeks trial trip. A
cut Au, large illustrated weekly
journal of shooting,
U
.At tory and yachting. A
irs fishing, natural
new depart-
ment has to
do *ith the
Country
sTTrtiloeuentinadtisitndis:
a year, Ill for
six 'months.
We send
tree on fe.
quest out
Catalogue of
the best
books on outdoor lite and recreation,
110101$1* AND Wrgt•AIVI PUB. CO.
• 344 BitedWay, Nay! Vorli4
Clinton Nowit-liecord
lent of having hole Cut through th*
top of this wig. ea that the coif might
show. In the Lord ("hict .3uciee*0 wig
tolley mai be seen a sound space cov-
ered by black *ilk Thie le the mark
of the coif which, boa Sittee disttppeared.
It is worth noting that the only time a
coif could be concealed was when the
Iudge,„ pronouncing eentence, donned
the black cap, and that the 'original In•
of thte ealemn ceremony was
to hide the coif, not the face of the
Sedge. In tonnection with this euetom,
it la interesting to observe that when
an English Judge attends 8tate forte.
Ilona in Me official vainteltY he is re-
quired to carry withhim the block
ofth.
The- Gowns and Ono Lanni.
En the black eilk gowns, of • ICing,a
• Oeunael wo bave A memorial of the
death of a daughter Of JameaItThe
courte went Into mourning, and the
lontorn, not having a, dintinctiyo garb
at that time, were quick to fasten on
the bleak gown, to which they have
clung •ever since, though • the •acute
stage et their leyea grief must • have ,
passed ere tide. In. the triangular luta
Which hangs frOM' the heck of the jun.
ices gown we have a vestige of the •
golden age when hovers_ gave their nor* ,
vieert freely. The piece of cloth was
eriginallY' a. pocket in which clients
were wont • to ourreptitiouely Insert
their fees, much against the lawyer's
will, we may be sure. Every frilt and
-
furbelow, every form and ceremony in
a court has. Its explanation, and how-
ever useless any of them may seem to-
day. let us not forget that there was
a time when it 'served a usettil and
perhaps an, linpertant, purpose.
THE STARTING POINT, "
•
you want to be happy,
Begin where'You are;
• Don't wait for some ra.ptur• e
That's future and , far.
• Begin. to •ba Joyous/
Begin to . be
And soon you'll forget
' That . you ever) were sad.
If you . want to be happy.
Begin where you are, .
• Your windows to ,sunlight
And sweetness unbar.
• If dark scans the day,- •
' Light a candle of cheer
• Till .its ste.edy flame brightens
• 'Each heart that ponies near.
•
. 1
,
a
*se
'If you want. to he• happy• , -
.• .Begin • where Yoe are.
aod sets in each sky
Beavela's joy bringing stet,.
• Live /gravely beneath it, .
• .ThroUgh cloud and toward light,
And' under its radiance • -.• •--
. Your paths shall be bright.
• • Leonard. ,
• •The i.reper Wa*, . • .
"So 'Wiseman Is Married at last... He
used to say If he ever got married he'd
'manage his wife all .right." •
;
he's pretty shrewd: be S go
ing about it in the right way:"
• “I'S he? IIow?" • •.
••••"Letting• her 'have her own way."..
Tlibreughluees.
Thoroughness is, the twin brother of
honesty, When an employee gets the
reputation" Uf doing' a thing not pretty
nearly but exactly right It has more
influence with his employer than brit -
Scarcity of Codfish.
Reports just to hand indicate that
extremely high prices are being paid
for bank Oafish at iieurax which, by
the ways la the largest fishing °entre
on the Atlantic coast. The enornunte
Price of $9.25 per quintal was paid for
a cargo of bank cod from Lorienburir.
N. 5., recently, which it is stated 10
Oa highest price paid for We Class of
41412 for a, number of years.
Thle eCelditien et Walls is not °Ca-
nned to Canadian waters. By refersinfi
to th, Norwegian cgd fisheries it win
be seen that the output there also iti
considerably mailer than that of Wit'
0ea0011, notwithstanding that 1904 was
a very poet -year tor the cod fisheries.
En explaining the scarcity which eX•
1110Pecially• at the moment, Ur. A.
11 prittain, of Montreal, representing
Mears. lilaoit 'Brea. *-Co., Limited,
irsaitax• instanced the tact that
his firm made all arrangements to
Secure a large quantity of codfish from
Newfoundland, but owing to weather
conditions there .4 it was found im•
possible to sail on time. Purthernaftre,
when. the firet vessel eventually •eue-
ceeded in getting away at the begin-
ning of last month, she WV caught in
the lee and badly damaged, and had to'
be put in St. Pierre Island for re.
pairs. Through the courtesy of the
Governor of the Island the firm was
• allowed to tranship a portion of this
(largo by the steturfer Propatre, which
has just arrived a,t
The weather conditions all over the
Atlantihx coffit for the Month of March,
were Meet severe, the oldest captain of
Otto of the largest sehoonersi who has
made over 150 voyages to• $t, Pierre
having stated that he had never ex,
Perienced • such a quantity of ice so
near the island as this season.
Some of the details of the Canadian
fishing industry during the year end-
ing June 30, 1904, are as follows: Total
number,of Persona employed 1895, 84.-
364; do, 1904, 08,152.
Value of fish caught in Nova Scotia,
$7,361,603; • British Columber, $4,748,-
865:. New Brunswick, 34,186,009. '
Retallve values of fisheries et Oen-
ada, 1904: Codfish, 83,778,430; ,lobsters,
$3,625,382; herring, $1,998,950.
July: 20t'lle it*/
•••••••10.11/II/M.anaYlKallar
How Red Rose Tea' is Grown
TEA is a, native plant of Northern India. Trans.
• 4 planted to Ceylon it lost much of its strength.
and richnesl, but gained in fragrance and delicacy.
'That is why Ceylon tea I* nut a, strong tea.
That is why I hieurl Indit"Z" and CeYlon teas
together—that is how the strength and richness,
fragrance and delicary of Red Rose • Tea 'are"
secured—that is 1/71-7771eidk Rose Tea has that "rich
fruity flavor." •
is .good Tea
• T. IL Estabroolitts
St. John, N.13,, Toronto, Winnipeg
For Farm • Reforestry.
• Following out a decision to encour-
age %arra •reforestry, the Provincial, Ag• -
ricultural Department is looking for a
'plot of land in the vicinity of .Teronto;
says the .e4lobe, from three to eve acres
In' extent, with a view to establishing
a'nursery for seedling's, chiefly Pine and
spruce: ,A. site is: desired in, this lo=
-cony because . the groundis more
favorable for the , purpose than that of
the Agricultural College at Guelph, or
••in the neighborhood. of that institution,
where otherwise a plot would have been
secured, . It has not yet been.. decided '
by the department whether the seed-
lings will be sold to farmers Who are
interested in ,farm forestry, at cost
Price, . but Hon, Aar. -1Vfonteith thinks
that this wilt eventually be the result
of the plan. ••• ' • 4'
MrioNVMSandele:DreSiCUttingCOUrte
Wnit0 inVintin in tin, iimprmend l 1500
T naVE.IMmoved•my Parr Cutting Course so it can be taught at
borne by matt bettor than by pereonal Instructions, jt can be
btity;claid oter11,tailffichargentnpolatrouristeuthahnyroouskinx pfrcoecf at,
Pkdreutib.t' Tina be paid
coursein dressmaking, from takings, rannuren finish. I WM per.
sootily, examitte lessons, for who can instruct as well int the
inventor? No experience necessary. No adv, genuine without that
i4mriedrtrzair:nrtngt1Vg(r1Tb:Iltitrungbraetihagt
nrygeuillvienuttzttoef, el!, will be ta hs.!yino ons except my%
from wit ammo! Avow Mak SaNOERS' DRESS CUTTING angel. :41-•
Inyentor,. • IOUs to-dsy tor parikellat STRATFORD. Olibi pog 160
Itc4". wytIzTa..totrx:•••••044.1•••••:•••••,. ....,:rf,-.i'f***AV/itt.44kW..A"A'ggiON.***11A.U•309**.1
POTS
High Feeding.
•
In an old manuseript of 'Important
Events in the Chronology of New Sa.-
rum" are the records: •
•
'1655—Mr 'Handley a pituriber. roast:,
• .
ed a• shoulder' of mutton and a couple
of, fowls .oli the top of the cathedral
epire
"1762—The cathedral spire repaired,.
•lames Grist dress'd'a disn.of beton and
talent—Success lktagitzhie::„ beans ' on it. A new vane was ereeteri.".
1 MINNESOTA. LAKE PARK REGION
LAKE. MACDONALD, MONTANA
LAKE CHELAN, WASHINGTON'
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• • . .
piemmetaztasorotixt,itogitoor.• • ...tok,1,4t.:4;
• 0114.'110, "IA."1.6-'12!". 414'. •
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eree."*.Nee!i~eieseeeeeieieitioStAi, olOwkilerti eeseereoemetweewtewewsfeeweeerbeeiref;ele;e0Nre
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