■(______■ _BmK_^_SH MHHg ^/w^-' _V> HasalatgeT eucu lotion than nnv Newspaper in N Kootenay. Bent »d- v ertieing ividitii mm *j The re-ire.entr-'i. »• of the rch Lardeau country. Sent l > any address for $2 per an. in advance. TROUT LAKE CITY, B.C. March 28th. 1907. No.23 NOTICE. 0KE ASSESSMENT ijHTRKT V . igtt'reby given, in ai- .-irdiince with Hu* s-tatuic-.. Hum rovinclill Revenue Tux. iin-l nil ' guessed taxes nml lm'»'*«• Tux. SOeSSOll OHd levied Uli.ler tlie Aseessmenl Ad, I'.ioiM." and liiendliients thereto, are n.uv due nd payable for the yen 1 *.*«'T i.. 10 at th-i. Government lilliee. Itw istoke. This notice in terms of iHcqttivaluni i<- » pcr.-m.-il all person* TIMBER NOTICES. ){ able nd by m« upon for taxcn Dated nt lu vcUt.'ke. I: •' lie 12th day of Kwhrtutr*,. lVt'T. .'i " FKKD. FHASEU, Deputy Aosoosor. Notice ite hereliy givOO that within two mouths (iniii ihoilrst publication hereof in the Britiah Columbia li.uctle, I intend iu apply to tue linn. Chief Commissioner of Land*- uud Works for n Speeial Li- penes to cut and carry awuy limber from Iho following described lands situated in West Koulonny. No. 1. Cnminenolng cl a post planted about I miles *. 1;• Fish (reck, marked "A. Mowing's South West comer j...-t" tbence noith SO •chains; tlietiei (nut 80 chaius; tln-lici* S'lltli 80 Chains; Ihenee west 80 ohaina to tlm point i.i commencement. Located Jnnuaiy 18tfa. 1907. A. Gowing, Locator. TIM 111-; It NOTICES. LARDO NEWS. TIMBER NOTICES. Notice io lord..v given tl.ut Itbili two -months from tl." fir**' olilicationlor."! in the liiin-h olomblaGa/'t'- 1 -'"md *-•' »)'- y til UlO Hot. Chief (:..liimi>e;o:i •of Undo A Wo.li- f-r .-p-nda ■enseo to c-ut and canv swiv niber from t ■ "• folio* ins descrih Mandaaituau* in Weal K.mynov: No. 1. CominenciiiK nt a po.-t ianted ei the :.nn*r-*.cctiuii "f ,e Woaterli houii.l.iry <-f I*'-1 IM With the Southerly tnmii'lai'V LotW98, marked "A tooMeK ortb Kaat ">ri.tr p-t." i-1"''''' «thl60chsii'». ti."."' w'-1 »" isitl«, theorv uurtli 100 chains J 40 chai>is to the pofnt ■nent. N. Commencing at a posl planted aleml 4 milea up Fish I reck, imilked "A. (iowiug's Soil'h Eaat corner post," tuence north Mil chain"; tl.etu-* west 'SO limine; tbence souih 8tl chains; Miotic*-) east 80 ohains to the point ..f c im- inencenicni. Located January 18th. II) >7. A. (inwiuc. Locstor. wixt»mtm\ immenceiu ImuIm! Locateil the '-Sth dav of I'cli- iary, W- j-fc liowing, Locator. oittei .iomnuiieing at a post ited 4 »1"' Norlh W*rt corner Lot 6693. marked "A. Oowlng'o orlhEaat corner pus'," tbence uth 80 ci., w ■' v iains, tlie.." i "i. * enoeoaot M) chaina to the point common.-'ii'-nt. Locate! :' - '-•*' ■-'■ ' : ' orrrto: [ A. Gowing, Locator. ■yglSSs" ami "tih'be" mineral cl.iin « uu Hi.cut lake Mining 1 »*\in..n- Loeated * t ......iiie inni 1, Brace White, act |U SSjifit tor llie BpyglOSS Mining Co -ee Miners Certilicate Ko. B'.mo. In* t,j, Khiys Iron, the ilate heriof, I" ■ply tHu Mining Uecur.ler f.,r a Cer Icatl 1 i provemenis lor Ihei ufpose r'.'i.Hii; a CrOWfl tirant I I thr above SioM, Ail Hlh.rr lake notice that OCUon ,irr .-Hi*m:'.7. must be c.niitiei -1 •[...«■ i-muiice of HM-li * ertiticate Imu^Knienlo, ■a,'iiar. Mod. WOT. Uses whits ■l.MllElt NOTICE. NOTICE. Notice if, hereby given lhat CO .lays after the firs: puhlu'.itio n of this notice in ihn Ilrilish t'.duni- hia Gas-Hie, I intend to spply to iln- Il'in. Chief Oommis-doner of Lands and Works for n special license to cul ami carry away tiip Iter fiom the following deOOTibod land situated in Wi.-t Kootenay dlatriet, N'... 1. Commencing at a post planted about \ of n mile nortiierl from Seholis House, Piwfa River West Kootenay. marked A. Gowing's South Weet ooraar poat, Ihenei; north Su chnins; thenoe east SO chaina; thence south 80 chains; thenoe warn 80 chaina to he pi-in t ol commencement. 1. ited January IGth 1907 A. Gowing, Locator. No 2. Commenciag nt a post planted about i of a inih* northerly from Sihules II.iu ae Fish River West K.-ot.*nay. marked A, Gow iug'H Southeast corner post; thence north 80 chains; thence weat 80 chains; thence south 80 chains theaCO east 80 ehains to the point of commencement. Located January Idth, 1907 A. Gowing, Locator. Notice is hereby given that 00 days after the firsl publico tion hereof in the British Columbia duette, I Intend lo apply lo tin- lion. Chief Commissioner of Lauds iiii,I Works for a special license to en! ami carry atvay limber frum ilu* rollowiwrdescrlbed lands situated in West Kootenay district! No. l. Commencing al a post planted at N )*.'. comer ofll. It. : Ndrthey's linil.er limit about 8 ini lea from Beaton on Fish River marked "A.Gowing's N. W. corner j post" ihenee east 80 chains; thenee I south 80 chains; tlience wesl 80 chains; theuce north HO chains to th.- point of commencement, I.oi-ajeil February llth. 1907. Arthur Gowing, Loaalor. No. 2. Commencing C posl planted about 200 feel north of Fish River and about 4 miles from its mouth, marked "A. Gowing's' N. E. corner post, tlience west 1*30 chains; thenoe south 40 chain J thence cast 1G0 chains; thence north 4') chains to the point of commencement. Located Feh. 12th. 10 IT. Arthur Gowing. Loeator. I iir.lo, Meroh 25ili.-Geo. Stead left for Denver, Co!., whnre he intends lo procure machinery to operate tin; Placer ground ut Goldhill, this summer. From Denver hc will pn to bia home in Philadelphia, l'a., for a short visit. John Ulvili, of Goldhill, has nearly completed the Miners' Hotel addition at (loldliill. James Murphy, un old Lardo pioneer, returned to Lardo to see his old friends. Frank Brewer of Nelson is spying out the land mound Goldhill with a view to purchase. EIG HT HOUR CANYON CREEK. /' DAY. GOVERNMENT AND OPPOB rTION A I.IKK SUPPORT 8 HOUR SMRLTKRLAW. lien Lawson, of Nelson, started to work at Coldhill, getting out telegraph pole". V. S. Mc. Donald, thc C. P. R. station agent at Lardo, lift to take a position at Sandon. Mr. McKinney is his successor. K is hereby gi*-eii lh it 30 .ilr-Mlcr dale heiv f, 1 illlci . nati- npplicai.il.n to uta ion Biuf Commissioner of Lands t Ba for n special liccilfO lo '-■< .iBcarry away Umber from i'i f-Kuvinu ilesciilri .1 lainI '*il" ed Iti,.' Lardeau dii Irict; Icncing al n pest planted nc mile ahoye Camborne •cut side of Fish Creek, a- o qtinrter-milti from its marked "J. C. lOtlth- rner" ihcnce north 80 H ihcnce west 80 chains; 1 '■'- I Fotith 80 chnitiH; ihcnce B chains lo the point of cotn- Biteiit. lm. ■.<*.. located March 10th. 1907. m Croft. NOTICK. Notice is licrehy given lli.it will, in two im nths from tin* fust publication hereol hi iho llrilisn Obi* uinhiii Gaiette, I intend t.. apply; 10 the llmi Chief Coinmir--i.ini r ol I..in.!- and Works for r\ l.il luvii* sua to out and carry aaray timber from ihe following described landi situated ill Weal Kootenai . No 1. Commencing at a posl planted on Ixmngton frock, about •i miles frum Fish f reek, iiiuiked M. Bon I on'I South Woot corntrl post; thedce east so chains; thence north ii chains; thenco west K0 chains; thenee south 80 chains to thc poiut ul commencement. Locnted llth. day of March. 1907 M. Beaton, Loeator. Nu. 2. Commencing at a posl planted on Lexington Creek,aboul 2 niitesfroui Fish Cimk, niiukt-il M. Ilea tons North West coi tier post; thence oast 80 chains; thenoe south HO chains; thenco west 80 ehains; thenoe north 80 chains lo the poinl id commencement. Located Illli. day of March, 1907 M. Ueaton, Locator NOTICK. Notice is hereby given Ihnt 60 • lavs after the first publication of this notice in tbe Rritisli Colum* bia Gazette I intend to apply io the II..n, Chief Commissioner of Lands and Works fur a special licence to cm and carry away iim- licr trom tho following described in,.Is iHuatedtn West Kootonay. No l. Commencing at a post sci about 20 chaina nest irom the N. U corner of Lot 0118; tlience eaat 100 chains, tlience south 40 chains tin net* weat 1*80 chains, thence north 40 chains to point of commencement. No. 2. Commencing at a post planted on the 8. W. corner of No. 1. thence eaat i00 chains, tliri.ee sonth 40 chains, thence we_-t 160 chaina, thenco north 40 chains to the point of commencement. No S. Commencing at a post planted on the S. W. comer of No. 2; tlience eaat 160 ohaina, thence south lo ehains, thence weat 160 chains, thenee norlh 40 chains to |Miiut of commencement. Located December 27ili. 1906. W. Ogllvie Locator POPLAR NEWS. Poplar, March 2o'.h.—A merry , party assembled at the residence of Mr. E. R. Vipond at Poplar, a few nights ago. to do honor to Mis» Lena Vipond, who was celebrating her 16th. hirlhdey. About 25 went down from Gei- rard Tlie 'Review" extends best wishes for many happy returns of tiie day. E. R. Vipond is wot sing 25 men on his logging contract at Poplar. CERTIFICATE OF IMPROVES* BNTB NOTICE "U spd I" minertl claim, t-i'iia- hi In the rroat Lake Mining Division ol West Kootonar District. Where located: Sear hea.i of Pil- vin Cap Creek TAKF N'OTIfE that I, A. E. Jowett, Free Minor's Certificate No. IIS51-0, intend, sixty dais from date hereof, to apply to the Mining Recorder for a Certificate of Improvements, for tlm purpose of obtaining a Crown Grant of th - above claim. And further take notice that action, nnder seotion|87, must be commenced before Ihe Issuance oi such Certificate of Improvements. Dated this 8th. day of March. A.D. 1907. A. F. JoWlTT. Today*) se ision was the m-'St interesting since ihe legislature open. ed. The chief incident wis t he unanimous ad iption of the iet*. ml reading of Hawthomthwaile's bill to restrict the hours of lab ir of smelter workmen to eight* The s.nie bill had been defeated at two previous sessions, ami upon its re introduction this session, llawthorntliwaic expressed tin* opinion that it would be killed the third time However, after Haw- thornthwaitc had moved '.he g.*- cmd reading today and Haywnrd (Cowichan) had expressed his intention of voting for it, Premier McBride rose and announced that he was prepared to support the bill this year. He stated thnt his tuir of the Ko ter.ay during the recent campaign had opened I.is eyes and lie now realised the necessity of the measure The principal clauses .f the bill are aa follows: "No person t. nil be employed in or about any smellsr suiting, handling, removing or snieltinj: ores or matte in any stage of preparation, for a long-r period than eight hours in any twenty four hours. "Any owner, ajjent. or manager, or anyone acting nn their boimi', employing nny workman or person in contravention ..f tins Act, shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding one hundr.d dol'ars nor less than twenty dollars for each workmen or person so employed, and any workman or person so working for a longer period than specified in section two of this Act, Bhall be liable to ji penally not exceeding one hundred dollars m-r less ibnn twenty dollars. "Twenty-f ur hours for the purposes of this Ac', shall mean from midnight to midnight. "This Act shall c in- into force on the first* day of March, 1908 " TRAIL BADLY NEEDED TO OPEN IT MERITORIOUS PR0PERTIE8 UPTHECBEKK. TO WRITE OF A lis One of the mo-it promising portions of tlu Lardeau district is Canyon Creek. Wh.-n the matter of console-ring ' tho roads and trails appropriation [ for the coining vear, the fact should not be lost sight of that a t.'ail from Cuirard up thc river I bottom to the for.ls, is absolutely j necessary for the ccouoniie development of the numerous high* grade properties locate! along this creek and iis fords. Thc present trail runs alone the mountain side and nt some points reachea. an elevation of 3000 feet above lhe Lake, where a trcil n- ■ong thc button) would reach the ford-: by a gradual climb of 800 fer' at the most. We intend in thc next few issues to 'write-up' tiome of the properties giving an idea of the work done., and the ore showings. Al the head of the south fork are situated the Grand i-'olo and Copper Peak mineral claims, at an elevation of from 6000 lo 80*00 i feet. Thc work consists of numerous l open cuts, slipping, and two tunnels—one in aboul 55 feet, the oth j Ihnt would liatrn the true ring to it, the author WOOld, of nOOOOSitl , require to live there lor a time at least, ile wunll Imve to ntu.ly tht cliSMCteriOtics of the we-Hern per. pie—have to become one of Ihem, living their -JhIIv life and ahmrinir their joys and sorrows, lie woiil.l have to mis with Ihem socially ami in n btisincM wtv, in short, bs a "Westerner" its » q*jtstioii ol knowing local conditions. The same reasoning applies to lhe ''Leckie Bout" for the Western Miner, the Prospector and (Iin Lumberman. The makers of the "Lei-kie Hoot'' are Wes'erners with Western experience. Th-y know whnt to make and how •u i ake t. Ub not so much a question of price as ofq ualiv. Their sole aim is to meko "a better boot for the snmo money"—and the LECKIE BOOT" is it. V J. HIE CO. LTD. VANCOUVER B. C '-# Timber''cruisers'' of tiie Can- ad'an Pacific Timber Company, are covering the limits oi the imiii- t.nny. situated around Trout Lake It is said that a lugging crew will ue put on at an early dale, on Tiout Creek. f A. G. FRASER, TROUT LAKE CITY GROCERIES HARDWARE FRUIT Gents Furnishings GentsFnrnishings . I, ■ , i.-l—pnn n ■*««»•«■«■« —«""• Tne work on th** Calumet and II chi, nt Rapid Creek, is being shoved ahead. On the l"lh, the tunnel was in 180 feel and the ground looks very fitvnrubte. Assuming iho lead continues down at the same angle, about 20 more feet would tap it. This property has a splendi'l go'd showing on tlie surface. A shaft was Itink a distance oi aboul 7."> ft. nnd carried gold values all Ihe way n Local and General. NOTICE. All those interested in roads and trails in the Trout Lake Miring Divition, are requested t. attend a meeting to l-c held on Saturday night, April 6th. at the Oddfe lows' Usll, to consider the expenditure of the annual appro] - nation for such puipos s. cr ioo feet, in the Oral the ledge | JP^asasaaaEasasasarasas ii t lo 5 feet wide, with about 22 inches of mixed grey copper and silica and a fi ur-inch vein of high- grade sh pping ore. In tunnel number two, the face Staa a vertical depth of about 100 feet, and has a vein of pay oie 24 inches wide, similar to that in the number one. There bus teen no average test mode, bnt picked samples gave assay values 553 <>ts in silver, ami 17 per cent coppeV* In the fare . f tli,. tunnel I hero is now about 4 inch's of ihis ore, Tiie trend of the vein runs easterly through the Copper Peak and lhe walls nre of slate with a soft gangeon the hanging wills. The Cupper Peak claim has some excellent surface showing*, but very little d > vei. pint nt has been dune. An open eut hss, how- ever, demonstrated the similarity of the ore to that of thc Grand Solo. The owners ar.* Neln R.'dinennd P. A Lindgren. The Ruby Silver group, consisting of fire <• aims, lias the same formation as iht Grand Solo On t! e (i. "1 Shot ciaim a tunnel has 1 n started and is now in about 10 feet. The pay streak is 12 inches wide and of the same grade as toui -1 on the Gran 1 Bolo On the Ruby Silver cl i.n, number one tunnel ia in over 25 f-et and ■hows it pay stn-ik giving values ..( 128 • ii, silver, 8Q per cent lead an.l 4 per cent cupper. The loot wall Is grauito, and the hanging wall slate, with n inches nf .- ft gunge mailer. A good cabin b*u b. en built fir lh" accoiimuiiaiH,,**. ,v. ■•' fa. The ,. in'''-, Gua Bergh, T. n.i Lindgren. Nell Ih dine and Martin Nelson intend resuming work on the property as soon as llie 'rail is up. n. Next week, the lVdr > and Minnie K. will leceive attention. ti Kev Scott Scnr. and Mrs. Scott, left on Wcdncsday.'Jiiiorning for Bait Lake City, Utah. On Monday evening a number of friends gathered at the Parsonage and gave a "God speed'1 t.. tho rvvrrend gentleman and hie wife. Commodore J. nscn of thc ('. P. II. steamboat service, cau.e in from Arrowhead a f. w days ago. to sze up the situ ition ro breaking the ice. The commodore says lhe ice can be (.'one through in thren or four days, and Instructed Captain Core to L-et down to business at onee. Hurrah! fnr the commodore. Bert Fowler came tip the f^ike frum Ponl.ir on Tuesday. Chni lie Copp hss gone lo Victoria to interview the government on behalf of the Sliver Cup Bachelor! Club, who have entered o protest agsinyt the proposal nf the Trout Lake "Bt chelor Maids" WC* icty to lax lhe "cligiblrs." We expected to have a "write up"' on the dance given by the h<> tei men ef Camborne last week. Our correspondent has failed us, but look out fm* it next week. Should the owners he fortnna'e* enough to strike at the proent workings, we enn look for sotnc excitement arnnnd Rapid and! Poplnr this smytuer. Jack 'Jl-vus - In oharge of the work. j-^M i LARDEAU MINING REVIEW, TROUT LAKE CITY, R. C. £<&, The Two Vanrevels fAtt" By BOOTH TARKINGTON, r Tk> loooMissSS hn IaOlaaa*- ml -M-anala-ar fOnntinued From Last Week.I Siuee the world began lille anil Industrious philosophers have speculated much upon the thought* of men iilu.ut to die, .ni it caunot be too Ingenuous to believe that such thoughts vury ss the men. their characters ami conditions of life vary. Nevertheless, pur- iiinnt with the traditions of minstrelsy sod reinsure. It li coai.'slTsblt that young uuuiurried men called upon to luce desperste situations might, st the crucial uiutuetit. rush to a eotnuion ei perieuee of summoning the vision, each of his hes it's desire, aud to meet, each his doom, with her name upon hi' lips. Au extraordinary thing occurred In tbe present Instance, for, by means of some fragmentary retnurki let fall at the time und afterward recalled, such as Tappinghum Marsh's giispiug. "At least It will be on her father's roof!" snd from other things later overheard, an inevitable deduction has been reached thnt four of the five gentlemen In the perilous case herein described were occupied Witt) the vision of the same person, to wit. Miss Elisabeth Carewe, "the last, the prettiest, to eome to town!" Cralley Gray, alone, spoke not at all. but why did he strain and strain his eyes toward that empty pedestal with ths grotesque carvings'/ Did he seek Fanchon there, or was Miss Carewe the last sweet apparition in the fancies of all five of the unhappy young meu? The coincidence of the actual appearance of the lady among them therefore ■seemed tbe more miraculous when, wan and hopeless, staggering desperately backward to the gable ridge, they heard a clear contralto voice behind them: "Hadn't you better all come down now?" it said. "The stairway will ba on fire before long." Only oue thing oould have been mora shockingly unexpected to the five than tbat there should lie a sixth person on tbe roof, and this was that the sixth person should be Miss Betty Carewe. They turned, aghast, agape, chop- fallen with astonishment, stunned and Incredulous. She stood just behind tbe gable ridge, smiling amiably, a most iueun- "iindn't ynu better all colne dotcn nourf " f-ruoiiH little pink fun In her hand, tha am..ki* wreaths purtly obscuring her and curling between the live aud her white dress, like mists Coating ueross the new uni.iii Was lt but a kindly phantasm of the bruin? Wus It the lueurnutiou of the last vlsiiii, of the lost volunteers ! Was It u Valkyrie usKuiniiig thut lovely likeness tu perch upou this eyrie, waitlug to bear tbelr heroic souls to Valhalla, or wus ,t xiiss Betty Carewe} To the chief she spuke— all of them agreed tn Hint uflorwurd- but It was Cralley viliu unswered. while Tom could ouly stare uud stand wuggiug his lu-ml ul Ibe In ell* phuutom like a mandarin mi ,. sbelf. ' .M.v nn.ll..* i heaven!" gasped 1 Hey. "II" inn cume up here'-" 'There's I in the roof on the other side of Ike ridge," she said, and sl..- began to fan herself with the p.i.k fuu. "A stairway runs nil the way d»wn ..i.t Kelson showed u.e through these buildings yesterday and that aide i-hi un nr.* ici in. so sorry 1 dldu'l think of II until a m,uncut ago, beea use you could hnve br.'ifcUl Jhe wuter up llmi wny. Rut .l..n't you thluk you'tl better cum down tow?" I'll ATI hi: VII HOT suvnge Hun doi * ,i,i urns Vandyke' doi demon Apache could b h:, to dwell upon tin if niliid of the chief nf tbe lt"!i*i, volunteer Are department therefore Iel the curtain of nier.y doat and, Wlthoul a word he turned mul dragged the OOSSlS to the eiisteru eaves, whence, sfter n warning gesture to those heluiv. be dropped It to the ground, nnd. out of compassion. It should he lil tie mora than hinted that the gesture of warulug wus very slight. When the rescued band reached tha foot of the lasl flight of stairs tbey beheld the opcu doorway ns a frame for o greut press of Intent and contorted faces, every eye still strained to watch the roof, none of the burrowed spectators comprehending the appearance of the girl's figure there, nor able to sea whither she had led the five young men, until Tapplnghiiin Mnrsb rnlsed a sbout as he lenjM-tl out of tlie door and daueed upon tbe solid earth uguin. Then. Indeed, there wus a mighty uproar Cheer nfter cheer ascended to the red vnult of heaven. ^Vuuieu wept, men whooped aud the people rushed for the heroes with wide open, welcoming arms, Jefferson Unround aud Frunk chenowetb and (.encrul Trumble dashed ut Tom Vuurevel with Inco herent cries of thanksgiving, shaking his hands and bttetlpg.blfli.bysterlcilly upon me unci:, lie greeted tbem with hi Iter ht lighter. "Help get the water Into the next warehouse. This oue Is beyoud cou- trol, but ive can save the other two. Take the lines In- through tbe door!" He brushed the rejoicing friends off abruptly, aud went on In n queer, hollow voice: "There are stairs—unit I'm ao sorry I didu't thluk of It until u moment ago. because you could have brought the water uu that wnv!" ▲ remarkable case of desertion had occurred the previous Instant under his eyes. As the party emerged from the | warehouse luto the street Tom heard I'ruiley suy hurriedly to Miss Carewe: "l.et me get you awuy come quickly!" I saw him suddenly seize her baud uud. j eluding the onriishing crowd, run with ! her rouud the coiner of the building. j And somehow, through what inspiration or through what kuowledge of his partuer's"teuiperuuieut,"heiiveuUuows. I the prophetic soul of the chief was unhappily assured that Cralley would offer himself as escort to her home aud fiud acceptance. But why not": Was It Cralley who had publicly called bis fellow mau fool, idiot, imbecile, at the top of his lungs only to lin.l himself ihe proven numskull of the universe! Tom Btood for a moment staring after tlie vanishing pair, while over his face stole tlie struugest expression that ever mau suw ihere; then, with meekly bowed shoulders, he turned agulu to his work. At the corner of the warehouse Miss Carewe detached her hand from Crttl- ley's, yet still followed him us he made a i|Uli k detour rouud the next budding A minute or two Inter tbey fouud themselves, undetected, upou Main street iu the rear of the crowd. There Cralley paused. "Forgive me." he said breathlessly, "for takiug your bund. 1 thought you would like to get away." She regarded him gravely, so that he found lt dlillcult to read her look, ex- cept thnt It was seriously questioning, but whether the Interrogation was addressed to him or to herself he could uot determine. After a alienee she snld: "1 dou't know why I followed you. I believe It must have beeu because you didu't give me time to think." 'ihis. of course, made hltu eveu quicker with her thau before. "It's all over," he said briskly. "The lirst wurehouse Is gone, the second will go. but they'll save the others easily euoiigh uow thut you huve (toluted out that the Hues may be utilized otherwise than as adjuncts of performances ou the high ttopeOO." They were standing by a picket fence, aud he leuued against lt. overcome by mirth lu which ahe did uot Jolu. Her gravity reacted upon him ut ouce. aud his laughter was Mopped short. "Will you uut accept me us an escort tu your home?" he said formally. "1 do uot know," she returned simply, the sort of honest trouble lu ber glunee that ls seeu ouly lu very young eyes. "What reason In the world?" he returned, with a crafty sharpness uf as tunishmeut Sbe continued to gaze upou bim thoughtfully, while he tried to look luto her eyes, but was baffled because the radlaut beams from the lady's urbs. as tbe elder Cbeuuwetb might have said, rested somewhere daugerously ueur hla chin, wbleb worried him. for, though bis chlu made uo retreat aud wus far from 111 looking It was nevertheless that feature which he most distrusted. "Wou'l you tell me why not'/" he repeated uueaslty. Because." she answered at last, apeaklug hesitatingly—"lieeause It lsu't so easy u u.utter for uie us you seeio to think. Yuli have uot been lutrodueed to me, aud 1 kuow you never will be, aud that what you told me was true." "Which part of wbat I told you?" The question escaped from him lu- atuuter. "That tho others might come wheu tbey liked, but that you could not" "Oh, yes, yes" His expression altered to a sincere dejection his aboul ders drooped and Ids voice Indicated supreme iiiiiioyiiuce. "1 might huve kni.MU some on.* would tell you. Wbo wus il V Did thei sny why I"— "On account of your quarrel witb tny father" "My quarrel wiih jour fnther!" he ex chiiOied, und his i lit w-lth au elal isl jhsspris.- His shoulders atralgbteu ed Tie look a Step nearer her uud nuked-eagerly. "Win. i.i I yon that?" "My father himself lie spoke uf a Mr. Vaurevel whom he disliked and whom I must not Beet, and. remember nig whnt yon lin.l said, of course 1 knew that you were he." "nh!" Crslley's lips in*g,,u to form a smile of such appealing und in.mini ble sweetness that Voltaire would have (rooted bim. a smile altogether rose leaves. "Then I lose you." be snid, "for uiy only chance to know you wus lu keeping It hidden from you. And now you understand." "No," she anew-red gravely, "I don't tiiiilerstiind Tbal Is what troubles me. II 1 did and bettered you hud the light of the difference I could believe It uo sin tbut you should speuk to tne, ahould lake me home uow. 1 think It is wrung uut tu act lruui your OWO understanding of things." The young man net his expression us oue iudumllably llxcl upon the course of honor, cost what 11 might, uud lu the vury action his lurking pleasure In do lug It i.oppcl out lu tbe nicker of ii lu inkle lu bis eyes und us Instantly sought cover ugalu—the flea lu the ruse jar. "Tbeu you must ask some other," be suld firmly "A disinterested persou ahould tell you. The dlffereuce wus political lu the beginning, but becume personal afterward, aud it is uow a quarrel which eun ut-ver be patched up. tbuugh, for my purt, 1 wish tbut It could be. 1 can say no more, because a party to it snoiun not speak.1' ' Rhe met his level look squarely nt lust, nnd uo man ever lind a mot's truthful pair of eyas thun Cralley Gray, for it was his great accomplishment that be COUld adjust his emotjou. his reason and something tbut might be culled his faith to fit uuy situation iu uuy character. •You muy take uie home," sue nn- swered. "1 may be wrong and even disloyal, but 1 do nut feel It so uow. Teu did a very brave thing tonight to save him from loss, and I think that wbat you have said was Just whut you should have said." So they weut dowu the street, the hubbub aud ciiufusiou of the Ure growing mure uud more Indistinct behind them. They wulked slowly, aud for a time uelther spuke, yet tbe silence was of a kind wblcb the adept rejoiced to have produced thus soou--their second meeting. He waited until they passed Into the shadows of the deserted Carewe street before lie spoke. There he stopped abruptly, at which she turned, astonished, "Now that you have saved my life." he said In a low. tremulous tone, "whut are you going to do with It?" Her eyes opened almost as widely ns they had at her lirst sight of him la her gurdeu. There was a long pause liefore she replied, and when she did It was to his considerable surprise. "I have never seeu a play except the funny little ones we acted at the convent." she said -'But Isn't that the way they spenk on the stage?" Cralley realized that his Judgment ot the sileuce had been mistaken, aud yet It was with a thrill of delight that he recognised her clear reading of him. He had been too florid again. "Let us go." His voice wus soft with restrained forgiveness. "You mocked me once bpfore." Uo He Continued I UNCLE SAM'S NAVY. Th* Attraetlon-a It .Now Offers ta lirlul.t liiiinii Men. Tbe new law opening to the sailors tbe avenues of promotlou to the commissioned rauks will have a tendency to attract the better class of our youth who are ambitious snd whose circumstances have barred them from opportunities for advnut-emeut In otber directions. In l'.Kll congress authorized the secretary of the navy to commission each year twelve sailors ns war rant officers. To receive this promotion a sailor must I* less than thirty years old. must have beeu In the service seven years, served oue year as a first class petty officer und pass an examination upon tbe theoretical part of his calling. This latter requirement renders it necessary for him to devote bis spare time to study. If he succeeds In this test he Is given a teutatlve ap- 1 .inttnetit as gunner, boatswain, carl-enter or warrant inacblnlst. uud this duty being satisfactorily performed for one year he becomes a warrant officer at flMOQ per year sea pay, with au lu crease of $100 each year for three yeara. Tbe fourth year his salary Is $1,000 and nfter twelve years' service reaches $1,800. At sixty-two years of age he ls retired on three-fourths pay for life. Those whose ambition reuehes beyoud the wurrant officer can have It satisfied through faithful aud lutein gent attention to duty, as. after four yeara' service in that capacity, the us plruut is eligible to u commission if recommended by his commanding offl cer and upon passing another exumiua tlun. A bright uud studious young man euterlug the uavy as i^sullor at seveuteeu muy lu twelve or fifteen years ttecume u commissioned officer aud retire at sixty-two with the rank of captain.—Joseph Jeuklus iu Leslie's Weekly. One Centenarian In 107,000. The labors uf Mir George Murray Humphry proved that there ls ahout one centenarian to every 127,000 people uud that of seventy autheuticnt.-d cases oo one reached 110 years, three only are said tu have been 108 and one I'M. Tbe full exercises of tbe vu rluus poner». mental aud budlly. Is conducive to greut uge, so that there ueed lie no feur of entering heartily, actively nud with full Interest and euergy Into the assigned work of life, physical or mental The Inhabitants of any countryside. „h in Iielabole lu North Cornwall, point with pride to Ibe number of huh- nnd hearty octo- genuriuns. tionageiuirinus and ceute tiurians living among them as nn evidence of their healthy evlronment nnd hygienic lives. So In Paris, with Its 10,600 octogenarians aud (120 nonage iiiirlnns. 811 of whom lire iipprouchlug their hundredth .uir Six Inhabitants of I'arls arc more than 102 yeara of uge.- London Hospital. Tbaabfalraeaa. I am no friend to the people who receive the bounties of Providence without visible gratitude Wheu the six peine fulls luto your hut you tuny laugh. When Ihe messeuger uf an unexpected blessing takes you by tbe hand nnd lifts you up and bids you walk you may leap and run aud sing for Joy. even us the hi me man whom 8t. Peter healed skipped piously and rejoiced aloud ns he pussed through the beautiful gate of tbe temple. There la no virtue ln solemn Indifference. Joy Is ss mucb a duty as beneficence Is. Thankfulness ls the otber side of mercy.—Henry Van Dyke. Unfair. Another unfair thing lu life — the bride, with a wealth of linlr, Wears n veil, but tbe groom, who bus S On Iti spot aud really needs n veil to cover It, ts denied tbe privilege. DODD'S \ KIDNEY Your Doctor Can cure your Cough or Cold, no question about that, but— why go to all the trouble and inconvenience of looking him up, and then of having hiaprescription filled, when'you can step into any drug store in Canada and obtain a bSttle of SHILOH'S CURE for a quarter. Why pay two to five dollars when a twenty-five cent bottle of SHILOH will cure you as quickly ? Why not do us hundreds of thousands of Canadians have done lor the past thirty-four years: let SHILOH be your doctor whenever a Cough or Cold appears SHILOH will cure you, and all druggists back up this statement with a positive guarantee. The next time you have 0 Cuugh or Cold cure it with SHILOH em BIRTH OF A HYMN. Story of ilir oriKin «r "In the Sweat By nnd B>." a song of national circulation, "lu the Sweet lly und lly," Written by .-*■ Fillmore Bennett or Llkboru, Wis., hud Its birth In u country store. Mr. Ben nett told the story, which Is given lu "Wisconsin In Three Centuries," as follows: It was about time for closing business lu the evening when J. P. Web ster, whose melodies have made Wisconsin famous, came Into the store, feeling somewhat depressed. I said to Webster, "Wlmt Is tbe mutter now?" He replied, "lt Is no matter; tt will be all right by and by." Tbe Idea of the hymn came to me like a flash of sunshine, and 1 replied. "The sweet by and by. Why would not that make a good hymn?" "Maybe It would." he said Indiffer ently. I then turned to my desk and penned the hymn as fust us I could write. I bunded it to Mr. Webster. As be read lt his eyes kindled and his whole de meauor changed. Stepping to the desk, be began writing tbe notes instantly. ln a few moments he requested Mr. Bright to bund him his violin, aud he played with little hesitation the beau tlful melody from tbe notes. A few momenta later be bad Jotted dowu tbe notes for the different parts aud the chorus. I do not tbiuk it wns more than thirty minutes from the time I took my pencil to write the words before the hi mu and the notes bad nil been completed and four of us were singing It exactly as It appeared lu tbe Slguet King a few days later aud as 1: has been sung tbe world over ever since. A NAVAL REBUKE. Two Admirals, a I ni.ii.iu anO n Pool In Manlln liny. When Dewey's fleet was at Manila tlie late Admiral Chichester was then a captain. Uu oue occasion Admiral liledriehs, the liermnu, aeut out the Irene ou an unreieiiled errand uud without the customary notification to tbe commander of the blockading fleet. Admiral Ilewey had suffered, be thought, sufficiently frum that sort of thing, and so the ndmlrul sent a vessel across the Irene's boWS and notified ber captain that she would not be per mltted to depart w'th ,„t a statement us to her destination It wns not Ad mlrjl Dledrlcba' mission to quarrel with both ti,.- American and the Bng Hali fleets uii this critical occasion, so be sought to timi out Captain i'hlcl.es ter's purpose in case of u colllsluu. Uu lug on board .'III.Lester's ship, he au grlly exclaimed, "Did you see whut Dewey did iu my ship'.'" "Ves." replied I'lilcliester. "Whut would you have done If It bad been nn Knglish ship?" "Well," said Cblcbeoter, couveu.eut l.v assuming timt the Irene's captain had sailed without orders from Ilie drichs, "I'd have put my captain In nr rest, and then I'd have gone .,u hoard Ihe Ulympiii and apologized to Admiral Ilewey for having such a fool lu com maud of oue of my ships." A Poet's Homely Pace. The |H>et lingers was afflicted with a uotably unpleasant, cadaverous coiiu leiuiuee. which, witb all his mtelle,-mil puiver, wus u uiurtltlcutiou tu bun. To bide his annoyance, he Joked uliout bis ugliness incessantly and deceived his friends into supposing him indifferent to It. He once turned to Sydney •"•.until, who. witb lly run uud Moore, wus dining with Iiim. and said: "Cbat.tre. wauls to perpetuate this in' .*. ■ ■• fuee nf mine Whut pose r old vou suggest that I shutild takcV" "If you really wish to spare the world ns much as possible," sfild the wit, "I would. If I were you. he taken at m.v prayers, my face bnriod in ny bands." lingers laughed will, the olher per tons present, but he shut a malignant glance ,,t lhe Jester and, II Is snld, never fully forgave him for the bnuujoL Tbe Canadian Boom. Cousui Oeneral .1. Q. roster of <>i- tnwn reports that the number of Immigrants entering Canada during tlie fiscal year 1IXK'. wns 18U.IKM, nn Increase of 42,7!IK over liMC. The emigrants from the Culled Mutes number ed r.T.UHl. or 14,2117 more thun lu 1006. It Is suld that each British Immigrant costs gonads fl!!. At that rate t'unudu got 1700,000 worth of emigrants from tbe United unites for much less cool lu advertising, free fares, etc. runners and servants from the euutluent uf Europe cost the government $5 each. OBSTINATE FACESORES REFUSED TO CLOSE FOR 4 YEARS Zam-Buk Healad Them Inside Two Weeks. Have vou some eruption, oi Bore, ot ulcer,' oi wound, on any pari •*' your holly it hich bus hit ult • tela*- i-,1 iii clu're, ii" matter bow treated 11 s... that is , oo e loi Zam-tnis the great herbal balm The hob.'.l naps in.J .•■ * a ,o ilu*- balm are so powerful that they call Leal I ie in isi cases ol cl ic - orei, ulcers bin il p isuii and skin .lis as ■ llcie .no proofs ol this: Mrs \\ ll Taylor, of North Bay* Onl . Bays "I bad a seal} spol as In,, n. a len cent piece oil iu) luce. I iiml ii i,i bun years, uud liardlj i nighl during that time weni hi l.ui whal I applied .-"i'i crenin, oi oni'' ointment ur other, hot it .mniii aliiriy- be th.*..* I recently ipplieil /iiin-lliik, mnl ill nh.. .I n .leek's lime lhe sp I li:i I 'I s:i|.|>i'.*ll- *.l cuinpl t.-ly. I cannot I hank you .■in.ugh toi youi I. .ly. and I tell everyone i" be sm,. nnd keep Znui- duk in th."i ho ise." Mrs. s .1 Hold ii ol MS We I Hannah St., Hamilton, says: "My utile girl li id „ running - an liei ice winch il ii il ;>ll treatment, I op- ,'] ."I /-in-lluk, inul in iib"iil a week's 111ti<* the wound wos closed. I hue io'iiul Zam-Buk just :i- good foi other ■ km trouble! an I injuilei Mi J II Hamilton, et Thornbury, .*.. i " rhe ii m Zam-Buk I obtain •.I was foi s friend who had rm ob- itinate ■ ir hei t anple It h.*..l been treat .1 ot t t w ice bj a doctor, mi.I would heel up loi a short line, but WOUld Im-llk ."it llL'rilll Zam-Buk healed it permanently, and it ('im.- no -it,, whatever uf return, ing." Similar grateful te limonj is t* hand from met. and women i' nil pint- of Canada Zam-Bult is a snc c.i'c fm all -kin diseases snl injuries, such as cuts, burns, bruises, ectema p ■•. i isis, ulcers scalp -oics. cold sores, chapped hands, itch, rashes, tetter, face sines. !••' It is slso on unequalled em bro* nation, and rubbed srell on to pari affect 'I cures rheumatism, sciatica neuralgia, c Id* oi ehe t. etc. Mi druggists .-ell at 50c s box. "i may br* "I.tnu,■,I posl f.ce Iron, Z-un-tttik Co . Toronto, upon receipt "f pi .• • -ii boxes Ioi yi .'si The ex-mayoi of Edmonton advo* ■•it.- i lorgei -alary f.n the loayoi Ie ■ • ii- .I ii - the pies,.ni annuo] al- It nrune of U:20o inadequ ■I'liiituial service the presiding officei iv.- the citv Simi.pT Seeds. Tl,,. seed vessels of wild peas snd ,,0.„,s when dry open and curl up wllb „ sudden snap which expels the seeds sometimes to a distance or twelve to ' twentj feet. I n,leu tions of Ibis Uut.lt „,*,. seen 111 the cultivated vurl-tles, tbe ► red pods of which ul'tec curl with a snap when opened. Quite Obvious. M*,"lsti*ule Why did you steal this gentleman's wuti-bT l-lcLpocket I was lute for me grand upcrv engiigeiiient. nnd I wuuted tu gain lime Baltimore American. I'n. ml Horticulture. "A new uillkiiiuii le« our milk to- dnv." announced Dorothy. "Did he bare whiskers'/" asked ber mother, thlukiug perhapa it was tbe proprietor. "So." said the ruiir year-old; "he didn't have whiskers, but he had the roots." CHRONIC CATsh NOSE ANDTHRi "At ths Advltrs ot Irl.ndi \. na and th* RmuIi. h1w, J1** Batlitactorv.-'-Oo w,IUl M°"" Why She i uiiltlu-l. "No, 1 didn't have a very good time," ahe said. "I wanted tO talk, aud there wasn't a uian there." "But there were plenty of other girls." -uh. of course, but that was no sat Israeli fur they all wauled to talk t.... •• Tune tries all things, mul as Dickie'- Atiti-Cuii.-iimpt'V" Syiop has ,r i ihe leal "i yeai- " no* ranks „- a leading specific in ths treatment ,,, ,,]| ailments ..I the throat and lungl It «lH B I ill and subdue the most stubborn e mgh hy iclievuig the irritation, and reotore the alleetod oi nuia t" healthy conditions l'u* will sbutt Us value Try it nml be c.n- vinoeil "i its efficacy DAILY FAOING AWAY The Story ol t> Woman Made Well by Dr. Wd.iii.rn' Pink Pills. Bod blood means icul he ilth Thai is i.liy I). Wi I „n,s'l'i:ik I'i Is menu mod health l bej actuallj inni, new. rich blood which strengthen) ■veiy nerve and evt iy organ in tin* body Thai |s win |M„.ple \ih" OSS lir William-' I'mk Pills tec] bright. active and strong lira A.tlmt lanningan, Marahville, tint . uth-*- to the truth ul tin-,, -tiite- iieiits Mi Hanningan Boys "Km leilliy tlltee lr.il I oil, I .1 llotu wa.•nun .1,1".,.II,■--,,'».i nud during nut i.i insulted and took tnedl ti 'iu several doctors, wlthoul ei il ., - I' Mi complexion *. as ", ippe trance, mj lips 'in lied Id He-- | „uf. ••iel in,m headdiM dltsiness and lalpitation of tbe hear) My appi tits uu.- -,. pool thai I did nol cars ei I nt.* "i nut riiul 1 (.•i.-.i s,, ic.k. Bnd Hn- -" much reduced I '!• h thai my friend thought I waa di ui.ipti'.i \- i in, i .■ aid I loctotod without benefit, until tli. a-t doctoi uh,.in | consulted sdvis *f women wl." n e drifting into the "in ■ eoiiili'ioii i wn- and io all -neb I llolll.l sin V V llif * t ie lllllll llllll. f Di Williams' i'mk IMI-" Di Williams' I'mk 1'ills do nol sel upon tl..* bowels; tlun ,1,. nol tinkei with mere symptoms: they i'o right to the loot i,| t|„. tn,llhie III tbi blood 'I'liai is why they cun. eon mon ailments like rheumatism, neur- ih'iii. kidney trouble, headaches and backache- Sl Vim untie, ami thi peer.I ailments thru affile) bo man; ii um.n and growing girls. Sold bj .ill medicine deolen oi In mail al toe It boX ..I MX lior.es f,,| %o.rrl [,,„„ The Dr Williams' Medii Ine tn. Brockville, nm Ii.i.ir, It llnmo. Daughter—Have you found out yet what It waa that papa cut out of th» paper? Mother—Tea. 1 bought another copj I've read It all through, but to save in.. life I can't see anything wrong In It It's an article on the vulgarity and sll llness of buying furs thut nre Leyornl one's man na.-New York I'reea. Hon He Spent Ills Fees. James lt. Howe, formerly register of deeds lu Brooklyn, received fees amounting tu mure thun |00,txiu during his term of olllce, nud he bus given them buck to the borough lu the furm of a i'1'o.'.e ,*'|ii,'Hii'inn statue repie seutlug Washington at Valley Inrge. Tlie statue, with Its pedestal, Is thirty Ave feet In height uud wus conceived and executed by Henry Merwlti Khru dy. lt hui,nis in tbe plaza nt the Brooklyn end of the Williamsburg bridge and was unveiled recently with appropriate ceremonies. I Don't I'nre. I llotft llll,' T"t till' doll I l,r„|t» fOmai-ln-,1 le ■ iir.ilnsl the Willi)! Kin* is all in ji hundred mis. I don'l ntlli.l 11 al all' I don'l 'lire if mi Icc-on's hju.l; l dun i u'ImIi ii was through! I don'l cars for lha dull l broke: • tnn't rurr r tt I rlo! -'-^eliMtnrs The .Iln .lilm Bubble. IHd nny body ever sec anything like the disappearance of Jlu Jllau'i- A year or two ngo everybody was listening open eyed to marvelous stories of skill with which aleuder little men overcame giants by n simple twist of the wrist Teachers Of the mystic- art were appointed for West Point und Annapolis Then the American athletes very obstinately refused to be unjolnted by any of the little tricks, but flung lhe Jlu Jltsu expert! on the floor, uml Jlu Jltsu waa forgotten.—Bonne Terrs lies Istar. Maet took i ..ii,,,; "The World und Ills Wife" saya tbat thu "beauty doctor" bas begun tu discover a demand for ber services of a new kind. Female employees, such us Shopgirls, milliners, dressmakers aud those in other situations, try to retain ns much as possible a bright luok of youth, frnm no coquettish desire to pre serve their good looks, but simply uu- der the grim pressure ur otherwise lu evltable loss of iimiiluvmuuL The sealing sehoonera Umbrina and v..,., i, ive li it Voneouvei fw s nine uioiiili- cruise as Iai as Ooppei laland and Helmut - is Ons a) tbe ,i -n win, came to -ee the hunters ell from ths o-hori into tho ratci •"'*'••■■ s*"' e-es qaieklj rem aee) Litti. but Ssaratitns.-Dt v"" s"'" " ,'ui.i.in.I.* Tablet. «t. „"' ■•'.' i.»""».'"" I,-.- .imi contain lalurl inns or tin ih,*i sre ill,* part iik-elnil.- ,, ,. in Hi.- iiieilieiiisl el I, act t'*-m """ ait i.i.- fnui' and th.- tul.leis ar<* pre larvd in »» palatable f""i. »« lbs Iru.i „ll Ihei '.ire intlie.*«'i"ii w in » oanu '. sf« uhia/i tfCSp. Mr. Itaoul Won. in LaoOlue, l'u . Can I »rlie you a f,*« . ..... mi itllstsi i„.,,„ was •mict.d with c*-,u,,h ,i lkl"] «"d nam and hint . , ,„utB .■i.«tl> dlaaoaragaS i i uml had inul,- in ms u ' tag. 1 took trialin, n, (,„ , "Ul "I'lKIIIU,,.- IH,.' frlaoda i tu,,i ,.., n.i.,* nini lu.-hi. „ ol lour mo,,1 lit | me. Nettle, led istatrh tm ,, y.. ms derelopad uu,, n,. lAHgaf and ii,..r. pat i , '<•• icjiuri-il t.. ,mn ,-iis,. were traataS ai i „ ibmiiir. Parana mil arua ther llie laian ..ui mu- turn loii i. iiaiul ami tan. » f, „ aspaaranaa ,.f a ,,,i,i ■ ,,c, •«U* lOUIscM ..o.i, n t I'lilli'lil. hair tli.- j I lo lir lUrliuali toi i oi, I'lir.iin, Catarrh l.-ijUext A»k Your Druggist to. pr„ Almanac tc. ,90? M thai .1, -in rue h .11 "I J o" "p- . ,, I. ■ .iIhU , pleasure aba od i- d inWed yea mother, Imt on ipple ihared t- halved Hot Le Mina-d's Liniment Cures Diphtheria H l'T l.l". I.r Ural, the H«-J«. A thinkiug boi usked tbe editor oue day why running or any other violent exercise mukeu one hotter. I'erhups ul! the htm M1„i Kir|, rrwakt like tu huve tin* unset Ion onsaieio-fl for them. Tb« reason is that It iiim Ueri« the eltn-iila tion of tbe blood, makes olio breath, faster sud thus brings mure air land ovigeiii into the lungs. Aulmul heat I. produced by alow combustion, uud combustion !• nothing more than a liuioli of the on gen of tbe air with the combustible body »r with some ot Its elements When we take air lull the lungs by breathing, the uxygeu ol the air |»*tielrales tlie delicate i ••-«.■!• and enters the Wood, vnii.t, in riles It to the heart and theln-e to the difTeieni organs. Here It makes u ■ hemic.I uu ii.ti With p.irli.les of curls,,i frum llie tlaauea. ami that onion makes heal The faster yon breathe then 1 ,re tht mure on feu ion tuke lu uml the iiion beat is gciM-rul-d I'hlcugn Se»« June*' Hat vr Jonea'a Hat. It Is iiiii strange that hogs and girt. are somettmea botbwed uv.-r the right way to Use lhe sign of the possessni afler a imiiii ending In s. Qood iisagr U ShoUl e,|tially divided In the mutt." so thai either Jones' bol or Jimoa'a bo* it.ay la- Considered correct. Literally speaking, however, loess's l.rt is iu b. preferred, for the poaseaatee form l» nothing but u collirii'lion of "his, th< original form boring ben "Joaeo hb but." and most grammarians say lhal we should gii,, recognition In the sound io tin. contracted pronoun. Qeold llrowns grammar says. -I'd STOid s enncnrreiiee of hissing sounds tbe s l> sometimes omitted, and it..* spostropb-i alone retained to murk tbe poaaeaslv-i singular, as \i,.ses minister.1 but tix i iisioti should be sparingly Indulged. II Is In general less agreeable Hum Hit regular form.'' and It Illustrates th« point b.v quoting "Hicksv n. prefer* ble to • iii.-iiM." Bxchsnga 1 Ivershrewd I iwj i then a.h.t-iii "linl loi ... been menu I. ... HII ll.lv.H'Hte llll,... Vi sir; 1 s(1M n ., "li was OOM|iiouour :.,. The wit ioas -• • nu new word 11.• i. |. assertion. "Whin is the dill '.. lawyer, "botwt * -|l|CtC ! Hut he w.-is he i jM*lur,f 11„. „ •„ "i oan Bae ion i tie othei tawyen '! .i l.il eon-!,,. Mil,.-nds |. liiitiie.lt . Bil», I have ii iMMJ IIMMIA'I b„ t,*,. , ■•*. I.,1st I I, Ho ,„•, '. ,. illlllienls | oOfl navel need enj 11 rubbed l*-i«.. i ■luelllll. .1 '* cobl .1, th. ,'.i, be it is sh. tin- r. plain* V..tu I'uili lb J i Da ion in,on. * Well," replied the m, hi ., stent .; ,'.ek M« I p know il, • ii .'-iiiuiili, tlie ■ Ills " | \ lllllllliel ul sail"' I •.■iitic.l.sting ii, the Ida n iluew a I I. up ' -um company's Ulanli i,o*.'.,ii Morch Tin slightly damaged I'", th ■ tu t ' r IW.'i fatalities nsnsod b kaimit cured on ihe lo* I ('bullion, me, Thomas aero dro*a w d l.llllgle. KIDNEYS AFFECTED BY SUDDEN CHAMCI Most Painful Ailments Follow—Prevent!* and Cure Obtained by use of DR. CHASE'S KIDNEY-LIVER PILLS. W. N. U. No. 621 Tin* -unl.len lowering ,.f the temper. .in..* causes th.* pores at the skin t>. lose, anil thus throws uu lo the idliej lunch wnrk winch is t.tiltti- u'll.*- pei Ior .1 I.y the skin This. io doubt, aee...nits for the gr.iil pie- i.leii. •■ ..I kidne) dissos i dating the „il „,ul winter, Ther.* is u„ treatment winch so iinckly uffor.ls relief to overworked .n.i deranged kidneys ns Dr, Chaos's Kidney-Liver Pilla, beosuss thev net '11 the hver, ns well SI they k duds. ind when in healthful action the * Sl dues much of the work of hi '••ring the blood, which is otherwise lefl for the kidneys. Bright's I)is'*.*is■*. dropsy, uric nclil poisoning, stone in th.* bis Idsr, and heimintihin nre among (hi- most pain- ul forms of kidney disease, aiifl these ailments eon always be pro- ranted by the timely iih<* of Dr I'liases Kidiicy-l.ivei |'i||H. They •un iilsn iiHiinllv be cured by this treatment, Imi if you srs so iortun- ite as to he yel free of these flierid ml ailments, k.*, p so by using Dr t'base's Kidney-I.ivo, l'*jI1h to keep 'he liver, kldneyi and boweli in hciilthliil working condition, Mr ,1,lines ,1 .feiiKon, ()h|H, Alt,, , writes: "| ||„ve In*, n troubled cun i • I • • t.-11.1 v mu, |,MI,P |)||(,|( orn\nn | itippose culm' from derangements ol the kidneys, nnd I huve never heel. able to find u troatmont tlmt wus so, prompl un.l effective iu curing this iiiliiienl us Dr Chase's Kidney-Liver Pilla. At twu different tunes in my, lib* tin - preparation li L eiiio-l ii ( this treuii l hit'* le,,,- I imve 11 Ml 11.1 it llllll* Mr) lo Use imy tlll-tlll llie *'ll«Ml I feel ll mj duly lu ,1(1,1 thin ment iii tin- many otlie ■ »li"i ■• '" ".'.•uiuit'iiiiiitioii ■ I ellom in ■:, ing." Mi W. Ferguson black muh,ll . i tint., says "In mi mirk I] l-eiiding ovei a greal deal, ami I toe, ther »Ith the cons tan I ill pails of il,,. body, ami Union chungc of temperature i-lienj nr to inul from the fori.' l'i"S on ki.liicv disease nnd backaehij limes I would suffci so lli I lave tO .|iiil work to cis* iiiii lelt sn miserable nm i "'] lime I .lul not enjoy life v. IW "As lusi I decided liini i v■■' have to gel relief in sun f » having heard of Dr. Ohs • KiJa I nel I'llls US || SUOCS sllll COIjl baokaalis and aldtiey dintase. I Clin Using llieui T" mi lileiiiuire they help, d llie l.l i""'* i few boxsi eni teh* removed trouble,'. Thanks to Dl Cl a ■■ p.-ifecily cured nud hope III ' nny lake my nlvice ainl n Chase's Ki.lli.'l -Lnei I'lll 111 t'har"''H Ki.llic.V-l.ive. I'i|*j their direct llllll coinhili.'.l "'"','lj kidney, liver nnd boweln. I" .•me blllousnsss, oonstipati."1 . disenses uf llie ki.lni'.VH ,'n,'l"J dOSO, tlfit* a box, ul all I"™ K'lliiHIisoli. BstSI a Oo., 1 I 'I'10 LARDEAUMIXlN(;Kr.VIl.\V,THOrTI,AKKCITV.B.C mmmiiitn»»m/M» EDITORS : < n WESTERN CANADIAN A SerlOO Of Articles Descrlb |ng their Lives, their Alms and their Influence. JOHN VV. YOUNG. J 59 S n»»*ki*s»«a*ii**s IN W. YOUNG lice Albert Times. The weat i* ..Hermit clu.|iietit in-' ducements t<. 11.* ,.i ■* of the east. ••!•■*mt-m because the lu- duceiiielils i in.- union creased ftnui.ciul lewunl. a chance lo enter the politn-ul arena, and climb to ths tuji^.ii a cumin where ihe nominations lire imt cul uud due.I where ever pleoe acctu n. hi- ability, and his] courags. Uurj.ig tin* |uis| few years the iiiim- ber of tiies. . *.< ti wim lun.* hit the confines •: tb. ,*, i* ■■ make a pin*. i..i tlu-tn.-ehe- In Uie west has l»*< n .-vet increasing, and the effect i ts ing i.*li proportionate- iy One of ' i nt* .i"iiii W Young, wl" in company Willi Uo* well known young newspopei man, B. P, Lain ill charge of (be des tinies of th* I'm,. •' Albert lime Ml Young is n t'hatlinm ho>. was born and Drought up tie*,.*, eduoatod In the same town un.l Imr tilled ull the reportoria! positions on tit.* Chatham Planet, up '" the desk ol city editor The pai•*..i- "i Mi ^oung wen among tie .nili residents ol Chatham, his lather was u carriage builder, a mat, win, took an active inter- eat in all public uffuiis, and was uiue mayor of rhe city nl Chatham Both of Mr. "i uu dead lor ■■"■ >e«t- Equipp* i with a very fair educu tion and ■ good measure of self-n- lianee, Bi Young accepted hii tirst newipapi ' position at tiie age ol twenty, ind one needs no furthei Indication ' his perxeveranoa than thai he Stfj&iiicil with the -111,11* pa|s*, throaVii."..' tIiiiii eight yens, woik ing his wiiv up. llll tht- tune of bil ^^Bvi.t when the oi city e SilH taking over the 1'riiice Al bert.Bn" irom lhe estate "I III, laWjWl' Maveety, la-t year, the new^M. have more than trebled ti» plant, a I have lifted tie' Timet i< a hjBlevi' 111 western journalism taU^Btrn* Conservative stand, and n_fl| ihen inflnanee Wl in no SSSsttlH'.*. MtaS\ '*iiu- wa- married in i'ha thantii ', sn to Mi- Qousl to dough* lerflttlr M Houston poi mogii trateflen ! membei .•( tin* law line «I Bup*'u-i A Stone Wa*§i edict s bright fut'.re f..t Mt Yourf I, both journalistic uml poli Ural c n^aii.'i'oiiiitions f", pel between tins ar man ,.,„l il„* revolted ns- tieodfipi tie* southern pari ol Qerman soulbe iiptly brok en oil. ng ii I"-" louirai 1 in iln* vicinity nl Keetman- shoep. Har- rMi has Im-cii appin,ile I SI i lont ut dee -••.■..■tin-. 01 state toi Ihe wbun il he paper ked Easily Explained. ai is un up *n lettei I mithers. I . 1. l.-tt 11 " reptii d Smithes, iieiallv one ibul the in.m to 1 I- -•■tn would nevei reed Inin't s,-,, ]. m lhe news Cleveland Preos ADVICE TG MOTHERS. Sou have 11 baby 01 iming chll |n the huine always keeps bas 1.!". - 1 iw 11 Tablets <»i hand wmi until tin* UtUe one ,- sometimes an hour'i dole] o\e total. Tins medicim mt. much troublea, constipation, |u*a. -iniplc levels and Illllke- hg painless. II ohildron an* foby'i i>w n Toblsti nuike litem fond battel still an ucciisiui.nl nil kep them well The Tab- good lot children ol nil agei jure guaranteed to eontaln no m\ "i biitiiifiil drui: Mis Joseph Hawthorne, Ont., soys "1 I ,is. .I Baby's Own Tablets and pem just the thine to keep clul boll " These Tablets an n.l.l medicine dealers 01 you eon linn hv mini ul -J:'.,* „ box by ir ri,.* Di Williams' Medicine Brockville, Ont. Percy Oirouard has been torn lli appointed inch oommisiioner h.tli. in Nigeria rd's Liniment Cure-. Colds, Etc. tin* exception of one, the tin, B.C., public schools have (closed un account of the old now* abating. Pipes were (rosen .kin ul two-thirds of the icsi- THE EVILS OF CONSTIPATION SPECIALIST SAYS WOMEN IN PARTICULAR ARE SUFFERERS Why Bileani Prove So Beneficial A medical specialist slides tbut eight out ..I ton cuses nf headache, diasiness, sallow oomptoxion, und various ailmfetits peculiar iu women lor winch in* is aanoultod have iheii on- gin ni aoustipation. Although this ,,,.in.*,,1 ,s ve.i common timoiigsi buhl sexes, women appeal to be im* I "•II-"*. ..Ile.e.s llne.Uls CUIe con st Iplll lllll in Kiimulatiug the liver umi "•-..iai ,,*.• mie 11 iw. Bile is Uie ..in inn purgutlve oi the I. .1,. 111- te in- ie*.*,.1,1, | ,tM secretion Mrs. S K I 11 divin, of ,'18 Ht. Paul •s I'lo.U". y "1 lun.* la,.10 bile n* 111 '* n ' 11 ni-i..i 1 aud il./.,- , l.o.l 1.11 il ill s -.Ul I 11*, oil I sills lu.ein- do noi cause aui griping,und leu .mil c.ui- constipation bul also Improve tlie general health Mi. A Monogbon, ,.( Berlin, ie- e.'ili proved I us yaaetabie 1.1...*..,, 111 ,1 -linlliu way, He says "Inn uiiiin years I suffered from b ith son -tipui ml pile . Nothing I have .".<•. tried 1- I* bi compared Ioi li iieinial result t" Bileana. Thej Imve made me a different ma,,, and if any - .lien 1 would like l ash im '|ii, -ii, 11 on tbeu operation umi theii value I will bs glad lo give all iln* Information 1 can," s.icii i- iii,* 1,'stiii ..i exhaustive toots "i Bilean* Thii great vegetable reined) 1- invaluable nlso io, sallow complexions nine to bile in the blood), pimples, ores y. tallow skin, un.l blood impuntes generally. Hi- lean- also cure 1 tul 1 ct-Kt 1 i.n. debility, rheumatism, anemia, female ailment aiui irregularities, --run-down i.*>*l- nurs " livei end kidney complaint. ii odaehe, sl ■• pis ine s. w nd ips m pnipi iiioii. ste. \'l druggis'a tell ni BOc a box, 01 obtainable po t free ii'.m the Bil -mi Co., Toronto, upon roe ipt oi |. ic- BU b ixei for $n.W) The Skunk Industry. Tl..* skunk harvest 1- ou m Mains ■in-i it ia expected thai 11 will amount I.. 1 hi a| rl .- .1 1 iferoui lit) e uui- \i 1 a * p-sodueei mo e than -■'•- *ssi i* 1 ; kniik oil Bvory yew 11,, ; oi,, i sluable ootn- uu, Iili M I * • • I;. who tlillil,.- sin* neai ilskln cloak would prob- nl'i* be chagrined to kim* Utat :t i- mniii* ohiefl; of skunk ikins. Those 1k.l1 - which ■• •■ tie* fonndstion el manj Iin- "i diBerenl names, sell Ioi Irom £• cents ta V- tn sverag skunk will -. nl I n i|uritt "i ml Kashvilte American It Reaches the Sp it. There nr. f.n remedies bef. re the public today oi - , ioun in 'etiiiii ji.L.- pain „„.! In allaying and preventing pulmonary li.n' ti . in Thomas' Eclectrlc rti1 it I,* - demonstrated Its powers in thonattndi -I Inotanoei and a large nam bei of lestim, nial as t ■• 1" great '. slue Sl 11 me licine oould bl Were the? nsl"ll foi it It IS [01 sale everywhere The nol' in.ut. organised by tli ■ median Pacific railway foi Quels*,*. has lieen called off. owing, II i- said, tO the -''in ill v Ol WOlVel Much III- lere t has b ten show n In the outcome luy hum Tin- reeeutij arrived Englishmen, nli., linl been Improperlj convicted il Rmith'i Iill- "I disorderl) poo- lm i . u *, train and sentenced !•• om mi uth were honorabl; pardon- id l.\ Hon \ B \vlew ..th How the Parson Tipped the Winner. The Kev. Herbert M. Neild. who is in oharge of the Eastbrook Hull W.*n- Isyan Mission ,it Bradford,tells of nn amusing incident which gained him the e.-n „f worklngmen st He sor- Vices. "I was announced to spe*,k on horse racing from the title "What'll Win '•" In the ve try I found n p. hI- ciird which rend: 'He vour address "What'll Win-" Hsakler's Prids is noml business for the Cambridgeshire.' Anxious tn see whin proportion of betting men I bad m the uu..*.- than 2.ikki men assembled, I lend the card in the crowd. The am* we ring nnn at the burse's name told „ll l wished io know, and fm 40 umi i *s I had strained attention us I showed thai worklngmen wers be ing rogued and rooked wholesale by ui organised conspiracy an the pari of bookmakers, touts, tipsters snd 'ii i* I, The s.*.|i,..| was ast.mi hing. lliii-i.el's Pride won the r, m following Wednesday. As by magic It went through City, „,„l particularly workshbps, thai the parson nf Ensl- li.'.o', Irul lipped lhe Willi,.-, (oi tin- i 'aiiilii ul'.'i si, t,. " i'i m the Yo ng Men Before you get Pen-Angle nenti all brink is taken, out. •Siriiird'i Liniment Cures Garget in Cows. The boundary dispute between Bo- nit ainl I'linii'in bai been submitted to the president oi trgentins for nr- I., 11 nl mn Help youi children i" grow strong nml robust by counteracting anything that causes ill-health Ono great cniis ■ oi di e s* in cli,I.lien Uwormi Hem v • ih in wuh Mother drives' Worm Exterminator li nevei fails Lord Hun.b.nulil lormerly ooin- inanding the militia in Canada, has been promoted t" be ■ lieutenant* *.'• in-ial Bully Humor, lit Alliens (luiltni'til -,,„,tii.--. quiets and effects uui,*k mui ,i 1,-etii,* «tires in ull skin eruptions oom moti to I.i*I.i tlurinir taathlns utti< It it banaleas t,> tin- huir m rn*,.* .,t Bcald Ib-l.ll, illlrt OUI— KexelllS. Hull I'll.nni .i loi i.n Kkin Dlsaasai "t older people U iiu- 5S The Ouggenheimi .*f Hew Yorts have bonded three coppei cluiins at Booke B.C i". 0100,000 and claimi oi. Leach i ivet I ii 1150,000 Twenty-tin, | the smsi cooliea who left Calcutta on the steomei Indui foi Trinidad, (• W.I . died during the VC)Oge uml wen- buiied at sea. ae- eording to i report brought t<. New Tork by the Indus Measles and |.|.. un :i .•litis,.,1 i,l) the deaths. ttote tlorf la a variety ul iabrict, styles and price-L in all lllai lor womrn, men and cluldien, and gutitnteed by you, own dealer. A FAITHFUL DOG. His Ktorv Una I'liMned Into History With the Mil,-niiins. Many hundred years ago there lived it Alliens n dog v hose Faithfulness has .•nn-.*d iiiiii ti. la* mentioned iu his i'u.v. i.mi in the Grecian city his story k often repeated, The d -i.- guarded ine of the i then templei at Athens. Dne ulgbt i thief stold Into Ihli bulldog nn.t carried off some of the most valuable treasures, The dog vainly barked its loudest to frighten the thief ind to rouse the keepers, so tbe man Weill otT With !!:•• .jewels. BUI Ul.- faiihrui dog .iiii not mean te lose si^iit .r the rascal, and nil through tbe nlgbt ie followed him. By daybreak i in* poor in nini hail become rery weary, but .til In* kept the robber In si^-lit. The latter tried to feed lilm, bin the dog refused all food from blm, and. as bs nade frlendi wltli pnasershy, bs took tl Irom them Inatead, Whenever the thief stopped to reul tie* dog remained near him. and soon g report went tlii.uij.-li the country ..r tbe animal's itrange behavior. The keepers of the temple, bearing the story, wont iu o*iii*,*ii ,,r the dog, mui they found bun still nl tin* I I of tb,. thief at a town called Cronyon. The robber was irrested, taken back '« Athene nnd there punished. The Judges were so well pleased wuh the .1 tg*s sagacity nn.l faiihfuiiiess that they ordered liun lo Is- fed every day fm the rest of his life at pul,ii, expense. Tlu-y Cleanse the System Thoroughly I'li.iiiel.*. s Vevetuhle Tills ideal the st itiich and bowels of bilious* matter, oause the excretory vessels to, throw off nn).unties from the blood ; mr • In* bowels un'1 expel Die delel-' .tii.u- muss from the body, They do ilu- without pain or inconveii.eiice t,. th- patient, who speedily renlitcs theii P'""l offices ns soon as they Iv- gin t" take effect They hove strong te.-"tii'i"•!:.! ill.ui- from lift kinds of I pie, Large an t - 'I r ii have been withdrawn from the Bank ol Bngland bu shipment t>> South Hfdea Thi Stomecl.'w Weal or Wort" The ,,,,11,11, li tl lli, n-lilre tioiu win, li fi.,111 'In stsliill.ollil uf health. Hows meal or „,m \ health-. sloiaaiOi Beans i-1 Ir.-i ,b-.-tion i>, rbiM digesi.o.i ...'">"• It,,in- mul sliiulv n* ri, ,*entie- strumr nerve rantra *i."s s.-.,.l ,*ir, ulstiun .,. I, blood mnl gw>d lu-ulili South Am Nervine insken ami k.su- th. .....t,s, ll • i'.-Iu U. I .1 Mas lit I the National a bai iitt*t,*ke.| Mi Bolfoui foi lu- inactivity on tho tin iff nuestion Oewere ot Ointment! lor Oetsrrh Ihet Contain Mercurv, ae mercury will eurely destroy the ten.it- of sin,11 and completely deraofe the whole nysiem when run-nut. it throueb the in o* ous surfaeee. Such artirles should never be used except on presoriptions from reputable phyeu-iaui, ae the dam ace they will d is ten fold to the S"",! you can possibly derive fiu. them Hull . Catarrh Cure, manufactured by 1 J. Cheney A C*.. Tdedo. Ohio., cunteiot nu mercury, an I li taken internally ai'tuir '.''''il. upon the blood i.uc mn. ous surfaces of tbe system, ln buyiutf Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you eel iht Keumne. Il is tak tr internally aim made in Tohdu, Olio, li K J. ih.-n • A Co. 'I isuuio: lam free. tiold by Urussisls. Price. 75c per bot tie Take Halls Family Pills tur constlft lion. Itch, Mange, Prairie Scratthis and every torm ot contagious Itch on human or animals cured in 30 minutes b; Woltord's Sanitury Lotion. ... rj ghat i i agt I -■"-. h pe llai. uu ■ in* t." tt Kinpst m, . inl . snd b thi i Joseph Bhatelia, the for- inei |..'i to. ••! a I'i i itreel ,,, nfectionen st nc i verj anxious to li un .a in whereob iuti THE FORGOTTEN DEAC. There Are Few I uall.l. Inul Over Tho (eaturlea old. Some years ago there was u com spoudence lu the popotS, the malu ar guineut being Uiat there were very few tombstones lu the open thut ls. out side of a church-which could show .. record of over 200 years. 1.oul.ties- there are mauy tombstones of a fa. greater age, but most uf these are now undecipherable from the |s*rlshlug ma .••■rial used or have sunk deep into lie earth, lu which case there cuu he small doubt as to the Inscriptions having be come obliterated. The oldest record 1 have come Scron wus at Uodshlll churchyard, near Vent uor. where the visitor can see leglbl] Inscribed, "Annie llarde. 1002," but probably some of your readers muy know of tombstones bearing an earlier date The most surprising uuiiiImm ,i' old tombstones clustered together impossibly those grouped at Boiichurch. Isle of Wight, these ranging from I'll' to 17tC In all there are seven, having these dates: Itilll. 1818, 1638, l'i'.'T i.-,4>;. 1887, lTfc. 8o far that Is. during a three years search I have found tombstones of thi seventeenth century at i;odj.hili. it..,. church. Kr.uling nnd St. Lowrenci iVentnori. In the Isle of Wlgln at Wa teritigbury. In Kent, where there i.r. several In excellent order; at Tonl.ri.lgi Bristol, Ipswich. Harwich, Bouthwold Colwyn l>„> .'.hi parish churchyardi ami nt Miiii.ro..k. near Southampton I might nol'' lhal lu llll 1 hui.* sii hu found only thirty live tombstones ,,.. -.'imi years of age London Btaudard Pas ei by Win.' rm* you »■ I u. for, in;, child '■ You hav.* been standing on thii itreel eornei foi inch a long time. The Km Mo'li'i told t cross until th * e n ria| and not one ha passe i 11 Mondo I'lll,',! tic Or.cht't Dlseair — tntldiout I deceptive: relentless! has loUed SunUrads ul irlali li> tin-ill,nl -.un,, i. -t, in rlu lull* of IU Hi,aires mi I DOI until s,nth Allien run Ki.liit*. . i.n pr i. beyond I it- powei i" nni. iini, tn,, tul iti.** :, alaajB of anything Imt despaii i.i ni,* i n tun oi ri,, .ir- a form ul kid a, . ui ■< a . I A TORONTO MAN TRIES lomething New and la Delighted. | Peela Like a Boy. Mr. M. N. Dafoe, | 29 Colborne St., Toronto, saya: "I have been a i sufferer from dys- ; pepsla for years. I ! have been treated by doctors and have ' taken many medl-! .[s^--mt , -^cines with only1 ynry Ir*temporary relief. I !)mi^7 I 81nce UBln8 Dt. V / \\vJtt^ l^eonhsrdt's Antl* W iJC/TJ.*'! Hill I can eat anything the sain.* as when a boy. 1 Iiml they regulate both stomach und bowels. My old time i Igor lias returned, so that my spirits are buoyant and temper normal I give all credit to this wonderful remedy— Dr. Leonhordt's Ami nil" All dealers or The W'llsui, Kvle Co Limited, Niagara Kails. Out. eot . IN ARMOR TIMES. StreuatU of loull.k War lluraea l-a llie 111,, of Henry VIII. The size ol the Kngllsli war horse reached its ntaxlmura iu the reign of Henry \II1., wheii tbi relations of body armor to "bond guns" were analogous to those of the early ship armor mui cannon. There wai goo.) reason te believe, suvs the London Spectator, that by a.I.bug a little to the thickness Of tlie COOt of steel the soft, low \ e loclty bullet of the day could bs kept Ottt So it was for a time But the additional weight required a still larger horse to carry it. The charger hnd tn be armored us well ns his rider, and tbe collection lu the Tower of I.on don sltows the OCtOOl weight which ll carried The panoply of i'buries Bran don. I ink.* of Suffolk, tba brother-in- law of Henry VI11., still exists. Tbut of the horse ...vers the whole of tbe bin'', quarters, the back of tbe neck. forehead, mUSSle, enra, shoulders antl Chest, lt Is exactly like a piece of boiler plating and fastened by rivets. The rider snt In n saddle, tbe front of which was a steel shield ten Indie*; high, covering tin- stomach and thighs es the "breastwork" on an Ironclad's deck covers tba base of tlie turret. The total weight is eighty pounds fifteen ounces. To this add the weight of the rider's armor, ninety-nine pounds nine ounces, nn.l of the rider himself, say v it.en stone CM ponndsi. and the to tal is twenty eight stone twelve pounds eight ounces, or 4o4 pounds S ounces. 'lliis hears out Hullliishcnd's statement thai in the days of Henry VIII., "who erected a noble studdcrle for breeding horses, sspedolly tbe greatest sort," such ns were kept for burden, those animals would bear four hundredweight commonly. MAKING OLD OAK. Lonaoni ur.minsi i_tsr». There are 17,210 police ln London. Thii, iayi tbe report of tha commli- sioner for 1906, issued reoently, ls sn Increase of 364 since the previous year. The number of persons apprehended during the year for all oflenoei was 187.317, an increaae of 787. Of thane 8.178 were convicted at Sessions, 103,- 862 by magistrates. 681 acquitted, and 20,008 discharged by magistrates. Juvenile oflenoei increased trom 8,811 in 1804 to 8,679 last year. Burglaries alao increased from 474 to 612, while housebreaking! dioreaxed from 1,671 to 1,622. No fewer than 6,186 finger-print identification! were effected by Boot- land Yard aa againit 6,166 ln 1804. A Royal Collection. According to the Figaro. King Haakon and Queen Maud of Norway are making a novel collection, consisting of newspaper cuttings, divided Into two albums true and false In tin latter category are all tha comments and stories which have sprung from the lmugiiiatiim of journalists. These are inscribed. "Things we have neither laid uor done " It would be interesting !• learn in which album they have pasted up the newspaper cutting .e- lerring to this collection.—London Tribune, .J ii -1 tli" riling That- Want "I A pill that ii.'b upon the Stomach und yet is -u compounded thnt certain ngredienta of it preserve then powei **i act upon tin* intestinal oonals, so ,s m oleai them "I excreta, the re- .uiinm oi which cannot hut be hurt- lal, wus Imig looked toi hy the medi- •itl profession. It wai found in Parmelee'i Pilla, which an ths remit ul much export study, and ure Bcientiflcall) prepared us I laxative snd an alterative in ons sm • e.i n, H ( Ipliet*. The sttiry is told of how a ,tea,I.i constructed cipher saved Blr John Trs viiiiinn's life. This cavalier wus takei prisoner and locked np in Colcheatei • nstle to SWOll bis execution. On tit. second day of liis eonlliieineiil Ibe Juliet brought him u letter, which, as far a- the warder of tlie .nstle could discover was merely a note of condolence fron I friend. But tl.e letter bad ts-en eon coded op a cipher to which Sir John hnd n clew. Kvery third letter after s punctuation mark of any kind was tr tell What he mode out was this "Panel at cast end of .'Impel slides.' On the following evening tin* prisone, begged permission to pass a quiet hom In prayer In the chape! The request was grtinted. and before the hour hail pussed the panel hail dune Its work and the bird had down. .1 ii in.. \\ sdswortfa was convicted in st Catharines on a eeoond charge of having -"i.i li'iu". without ■ lieen •■ nni ■ th • liquoi 1' ie net pi -.vi. loin, option ol a iu..' he un.- sentenced lo bun months m the Central prison Trajan's I el a tun. Professor Itui.1. thiMluliuii archaeologist, has Jusi completed his greatest undertaking, the restoration i.f Trajan's column, this (ask hnvlug consisted In replacing no fewer than tlfteen pieces of marble which had fallen out of their vilaccs In the column, thus iiieiiaclng a possible collapse of the en tire structure. The grotto lieueath the monument has nlso now lieen filled lu. giving tils whole u firmer hold on Its foundations, ao that no untoward collapse may ever be feared lu the future. The loosening of thc restored portions had beeu occusloucd hy the fall of the hrouse statue of the Emperor Trajan which surmounted the column. /Indispensable in Winter.X There's a need in every home foe ^ IRAYS Syrup of Red Spruce Gum A faw duel, at the Brat sign of a cold, will illay all throat Irritation— tale away hoarseness—check the Inflammation— etrengthen the lungs ward off the cough. All the healing, eodthlng, curative properties of Canadian btiruce iblued with aroinatica. I'leuaaut to take, as eta. bottle. Ottm—coinbiue "THE ARABIAN NIGHTS." Mr 111,-hnr.l llnrloii'i. 'I'mnelntl..n i.t tlir Talaa. "The Arabian Nights' was lirsl in produced to Burops by s Frenchman named Gatland, snd ths first Unglltti versions were simply tranalatloni ol his. Then n !>r. Sell gave a very su peri >r edition, "I asioiiiilly corrected trom the Arabic'' lu tsiin. however, appeared sn English trausluiloit entire iy from the Arabic, with copious notei and Illustrations It i\us Bdward Wil limn Lane's, s gentleman whose long residence In Bgypt bed fully quullBed (tim for his work. This tiiinslntloti may be said to bine held tlie Held nn til tbe Appearance of ono by sir Kiel. urd Burton. Sir llichurd whs it during und successful traveler, wlu hud a re inarkuble facility In SOqulrlng euslcrn languages. Ile performed a pilgrim age to Mecca disguised us n pilgrim, a rent us dlillcult as It was during. In IrlTi he wus appointed to the post of British consul ul Trlest. Here hi* applied Ills knowledge of Arabic tu making a faithful trausliitluu of "Thi Arabian Nights Eutertuluuients," sup plemeutlng his work with copious notes und terminal essays which have been culled a mine of curious nud diverting Information. Its publication caused ii gre'.t sensation. Uetnlls were freely given that had previously been sup pressed llut the uccurucy of the trans Inilon us u whole was cundldly ue kuuwledged, nud Burton muy be cted Ited with bin lug mude luto the r.m* llsb language the finest translation ul these wonderful Arablau tales.-Lou dun Answers Young Wi hm .:.t ih.* animal -cl-i I want a dl)J \iim.ai s ilei V, ■ in idain . whit *. lu milled - 1 , ' i Vi No, black all i I in in dot p mourning Nos I o - i Mirard's Liniment Cures Distemper. A Kltehea Plneneli Ion. A tea strainer formed the foundation for It just one of tin* plain, ordinary ones of finely woven wires, but polished und shining as though made of some much finer metal It was lined witb the softest of s.lk and stuffed with a tiny hag of bran, which, in Its turn, was neatly tucked nway under a cover let of silk A bit of ribbon made a ■mail bow on the handle, and at tbe aanie time furnished a loop to hang It up by. Then the wire part was thickly seeded wiih pins and the novel cuahioa pot Ln plac*. Bnmlna lleteors. It Is supposed liun Betooes begin to burn when the) on wtthlo about 128 miles of llie earth ami that combustion Is coinplet.nl uud tl.ey disappear at from thirty live to lifty miles above lhe earth When W0 SM a fulling slur, therefore, we may consider tbut we bun* watched it through a Sight of aboui a hundred mllei before it finally burns out and tUaoDoears from view. Made It Even. C'ltran. when nostei of tho mils u Ireland, wai going tmi da] t.. a levee ni ths eaatie Tlien was I great i",-- oi .in i in*.',- wben nil rit once lie v.as startled bj the poll of the carriage uin'*' i him crashing through lbs baok rd hit Hs liaatil) pul his lu ad oul nl the s indov mc to ' The polt ,.( the tun i '»*.'■■ behind .- driven ititn u- " " \tinli ihau, it'i all ,, , mt said Pel i '. Inn po. nt * iln* im * Hi;.* I, One at Ike Malta of the Cablnet- makere' TraSe. You will have to go a long way be fore you find a body of meu more clever thun those cabinetmakers who produce goods to sutlsfy the desire of the public fur furniture mude of old and fancy woods. Tbey eau transform whltewood luto all kinds of exotic woods by menus of chemicals, and u chemist would be surprised if he were to huve the run of one of those facto rles for a duy. Tlu manufacture of "old" oak Is one of the easiest of their processes. Tbe boards, moldings, panels or whatever pieces are required are made of oak which has Just had time to dry sufficiently to prevent excessive warping. They are then placed lu a dark room, nn the floor of which and quite close to the furniture to lie "aged." are placed sclera) l*owls. plates and so forth, of II,|.ild amtuuula. The room Is tbeu her uieticully closed up. und the wood la left for a mouth or so. according to the age which Is reqnwed. The coloration will extend t.. u depth of nearly a quarter of au Iuch If the room ls kept i i.-ed for a few mouths That ls why there Is so much old oak furniture about. Of curse, a little relic, tion would show that It could not be genuiui-the forests of the middle ages would uot have furnished one half of It—but people do uot iilways reflect. - London (iraphk*. Shoe Bneklea. When Evunder Berry Wall, king of the dudes for twelve years and really the most inconspicuous mnn nbout town, because he was homely of face and a very bad dresser, besides being Kthor short and blotchy, undertook to relntriHiuce shoe buckles he mtde his first big failure as the sartorial dictator of onr "Jeunesse dorec." I thluk It was poor Al Claggett who said: "Why. Berry, you mnke a fool of yourself. Shoe buckles go with long stockings nud knee pants. You can't wear 'em with socks and trousers. ITiey In terfere with the set of the trousers around the feet. Then, of course, you've got to have a low quartered ahoe. Out It out, Berry, cut lt out." Wall Immediately quit. i When the Heir Falls Stop it! And why not? Falling hair is a disease, a regular disease; and Ayer's Hair Vigor, as made from our new improved formula, quickly and completely destroys that disease. The hair stops falling out, grows more rapidly, and all dandruff disappears. Z)oej not chnnyt t*ir cnlof a/ tlie hair. 7t tiers ForeuiU with ••eh bom* Show It to jour A ..'... A.l Ion, »b„ill It, than do m ha *.yt Wearloa Glasses. Wearing glasses need not he perma nent If tbe first hint of dersngement lu the eyes ls heeded a abort time spent under the direction of an ocultat will safely tide over the difficulty, lt is most restful to close the eyes frequently Tor u few mluutes. This rest does them great good. Particularly ibould this be done In trains und atreet cars. Many a. headache and smarting pain may thus be saved. Traveling ln public conveyances ls exceedingly hard ou tbe eyes, even for those that are strong nud perfect. The gaze should be confined to the interior of tbe cur. Looking out of tbe windows to tlie rapidly changing scenery Is a grent striilu No Rearels, "Hello, old man. Haven't seen anything of you since you got married. How goes It?" "Thanks, fairly well. But marriage Is u costly Job'. If you ouly knew what the dressmakers charge!" "So 1 suppose you regret It?" "Uh, uo. 1 married a dressmaker." A Bird Performer. 'uuarics uud other tame birds art sometimes taught to perform tricks but It always has beeu regurded almost uu impossibility tu train a wild bird Audrew Hume, the fumous Scotch bird lover, trained one uf the wildest ot Scotch birds to perform all aorta of reuiiirkubie tricks—to Jump uud keel time witb the sklppiug rope, to per torm ou the sluck uud tight rope, cllinl un upright rope, stuud ou top of a run utng currluge. druw cards out of a box, mount a ladder aud rlug a bell, go rouud a wheeling stulr step h.i step aud fly to its owuer's head wheu culled upon I •••••• and luriuii. "That young physician ls working hunl." "Yes," answered the veterun pcoctl tlouer. "He is ou the truck of a ills covery that will mean fame and for tune. He ls trying to Invent a m« name that will make some uld ullmenl fiishiouable." Ill.il,»».•*-•*,>» Horn The horn of the rhinoceros does uot grow from tbe bone, but Is u mere ex- ereacence of the skin, like lhe huir and nails It can be sepsrotod from the skin b> tlie use of a sharp knife. The Hank al Patoattea. The blessing ol Pa lectins is I small falcon, or bowk, which destroys 'h- Held mice. \\,*ie the hanks exterminated the human population would be obliged to abandon the eouptry. mm METALLIC ROOFING C? LlfltlTt D WINNIPEC The little book in each package (Ives the formula of our new Hair Vigor, tells why eacb ingredient it used, and explains many other interesting things. After raiding you will know why this new hair preparation duet iti work io well. t>I Ui*J. 0. Aj-jrUe., intu, The>'d Ba Grstelul. ••I lime nevei taken the trouble to truce my uli..* n> " • Well ii youi ancestors could speak ibev would piubably iluu.li you tor Uiat." Winter make« no change in Mooney'i Pcrtecciuo Cream Bodn. Moonry private curl bring these dainty bitcuiti tu sll points throughout the Northweit—in oider to nuke lure thst you get them tre-di sud chip from the ovem. sa Tbi ttly firm it Ctntdt tpirtu*l Prtvitt Frgiibt Csrt. When a Horse Gets Hurt USE Fellows' Leeming's Essence Put don't wait until un animal Is injured. GET IT NOW—und you have the remedy that CURB8 all lameness in horses. If your dealer doea not handle it, send 60c. to National Drug A Chemical Co., Limited, montrial 13 j Careful John' Bull. Kiu.--m.nis s|M,|K ,,f money are frequently expended hy various Qovern- t' IHy ern..-. often nppar- enth ivi.il. in Oovernment printing. Bi 'aui seldom baa to rut up with such losses, hut uii the continent and in Amoura corelesmssi or wantonness in misprinting money otders. telegraph f rma, nd bank 'notes had led to serioris loss The Koiser'i interference in all matters of art lm- Fatherland heavy liis^i.s I),,,, ,,( bj, p.rtl act- ■ | sovereign woi to lho*s Itii subordinate- bow the Imperial srmi should he printed After many thousand forms and document had been impressed with these ormi s lush authority proved • His Mi'.',',-iv t!,nt the new 'lesiL'ii waa not only wrong but also humiliating to himsell Fifteen hun- dte.l pounds' worth of -open were prom| -i redi to ■ • In hi."tlie. caae the 'aiser sub- edited the German money order form in uch a way thai the public could not moke hood .•. toil of it Finally the neu form had to ts- culled in, nnd nlntij; with tliousondl of unissued eopiea, leetroyed. The United States rome veers ago daatn ■ ed 1.000 000 telegram] forms owing to tbi misspelling ..f a single ■snid nrltlal H ,."„,|K The bridal wreath is usually formed lu Germany of uyrtle branches; In France uud l'.nglainl. of orange blossoms; lu Hay and Ireinh SwIWerlaud, of white roses; -u Bpaln, uf red roses • nd pinks, m the islands of Greece, of vine leaves; lu Bohemia, of rosemary; lu Qerman BwUiorlaud, of a crown of •trf.?.;:;.: Sow*.-*. You oonnol bs bopp) while you hav,- coins Ther, do nol delay In getting ■ I le ol Holloway'i Com Cure It ■ kinds ol eorno without pain Finliire with it i- unknown f-raosi Before prating lemons It Is well to wash them In „ i.usin uf lukewarm wuter, fur oa exam nation it win i* found that the outalde ,,f a lemou Is anything but .lea,, and if put under a microscope It will be dlseoTOrad to huve tiny bluck sp... Ks on it. which ara Uie minute ergs of an Insect. I,r„ui I all- About the year 17.is the t«euts und culls id the drum used in the SOnlCS were put Into a pet mai.eiit shape The tatt.s.. or iH'at of the drum calliuig sol diers to iheir quarters Sl night, was once culled "tap loo." from tbe Dutch word signifying ' No more drink to i.e tapped or sold " The noblest uiutite is the public good. -Virgli PASTOR AND PEOPLE i PRAISE PSYCHINE (PRONOUNCED 5I-KELI-0 A Marvellous aad Triumphant KecerO af Victory Over Disease. Mo mediciae haa ever effected as large i aumber ol wonderful and aimoet marvellous rurea aa Psychine It has had one jontuiuoui record ol vicleriaa over disaaa- ss ol the throat, chest, langsand stomach Whera doctors hava pronounced rears incurable Irom consumption aud ether wasting diaeaaaa I'svcbine steps in and i-eecuee nuui bei leas people even from the very verge of the grave Coughs, Colds, Catarrh. Bronchitis. Chills, Night Sweats, Im Grippe, Pneumonia, and otber llie troublM. all al which are lorernnnen'ol i 'i.nsun.ption, yield quiakly u. thi curs- live powers ol Plychlne Mrs. Campbell, out ol the many cored, makae the following italemeal: 1 esnnot refrain Iron Mlllu .U who sugar et bit remtrkebl* r. *,.,.-., wfll Pf.oklue In Sprtl IW] lesu-ftite betrj c"id wlm-h Mtti-nl on m> luiitiend fr»l.i4l:> l«l le oeutumBttoii I ",.i'' aet sleep mu wbJtot le nlflt ■*«•!• ITI? r nm mere -sMU-lMa fa/ llf'lut OSiUi'l.r-,1 ... ■ -•* f a«. Mr llinaft. Pott I , , rre.liyxeTl.tt t hurch. rT-cnni*n?B*l«d Sr lloeiin ■ N" hla? te m. when 1 wu U?ln| la Oaltrlu Aftet lultii l'iy, hliia lot • then tint 1 ele ud •lapt well iii- Mi'** ivmu .• I'-.ei nw< Monti'.. ait„ I tn,pi«d -aklni rttrhiua. u I wu iieria.-tijr rwaorert io health ml Usdsj I aatei fall Wttar la my Hit P.., I,in- hu bean > iod Mad ui me. Mu xsmiw i astiiii CoitoBweod, n.W T. PSYCHINE never diast-nointa. P8YCH1NE has no aubstiiiite There is no other medicine "Jolt as food " At aU l«ls. lie. aai 11.01 p.r Wttl. ll aet writs te HU HOCUS. UMM, III M| tl W, T0S0RT0 Dr. Root! Kidney Pills are a aura and permanent cure fer Kheumatism ■right's Disease, Pain la the Back and all forms of Kidney I rouble. {St par itox, at all dealers. ~HOW~ can I ever do my work wlxiii ui* unit' les rora til iUlWui-aJ Willi hlMUUMktlOUl .' Johnson's Ano^liniment Rubbed on Briskly will mnou t l.u iiifUtUQM.ti-mi, Utub«r up U» lUtioXllM, ftliil n.-as" v.ni govtl M i"''-* |tV tb-TM tin,t40 -aa iimi, t, 6(V All Jr»l«ti I » JOHNtmN 3. UO , bu-tluu. M»o* W N. U No. 621 I ,l,S.„.-l-l.,,t**^W..^lli.-i>. KEVI£W. .- i'ru.tad. i i • out UK.'!!/ sua 1'i.Luat.d .i r.i;:i»,i. »u -. Troai i •*.*.• «.«.i Tiiutnusr ri ■ K.lllor J'.oi -.ol nu J tttmi.lt respou- kiwid tor to« op-u.ions of 0ijrreBpon4euU es* i .,--'',I lu its columns All IochI*. Bill he ctisri/ird ut Iheisteoflo kuIi pei* line. iimi InMrtlnn, soil 10 etuu pe, ',. ur shcU stiUseilueiil Inseitio... o-iiiiui I uiiiin,! snd oiler ».'>«. i.i.iiie hui t-e nu..!.* w no.-ii ou spitllcsllon at oaks eo ua.. ii'iioii •!•» » sear, lu »,'• s-.uo. "HA- .Mi. THE foBt ©fifto STOBE, P atent Medicines School Supplies Dry Goods, Stationery, Notions. FEBGUSON FBEIGHTING AND PACKING OUTFIT. Contracts Entered into for Packing of Mlnin g Supplies Etc. to any Point in ths District. ©RIENTflL HOTEL. GOOD, | prompt $ S. DANEY, Prop. servicer FERGUSON. Any Work Undertaken Guaranteed Satisfactory. rfcvcustokk: es a. besl Wine', I.it|Hi)i'8 anil CijBfai'ii Rett a |>] a dav. J.A.STONE ■ — Prop. HOTEL ej VICTORIA Reve Istoke, B C ROBT L.AUOHTON PROP I'irst-claaa nccoi niinil ition for rnvollers Rates $1 and$ i 50 pe r day' E. R. VIPOND Poplar Livery. Freighting, - - - PackinJ Rawhiding A Speciality. 5tables at Poplrr. LAKEVIEW HOTEL TROUT LAKE* B.C, Bar well Supplied with Liquors & Cigars Large Comfortable Roouil, Excellent Ciiisiue and Attendance. ROBT. MADDEN Prop. TROUT LAKE HOTEL Tobaccos. Pipes Cigars. Aijrtita fnr Oimirlap Vtam;. Publiihing Office of the Lardeau Mining Review. Excellent Accommodation Best Liquors And Very finest Cigars £_ John Simpson, Proprietor, WINDSOR HOTEL TROUT LAKE, B C. Best Hotel in Town, Headquarters for Mini aid Commercial Mea. ACCOMMODATIONS ARE FIRST CLASS Central Hotel REVELSTOKE, B. C. ABRAHAMSON BROS PROPRIETORS. « First I'liirn in every respeat. All modem convenience!. Large Sample Rooms Rates $1 50 p;r Day Special Weekly Rates Grout Xafee wwmwww •j '/cm t My using Waler supplied by tho Vl-UlrniCt* © Companv you nre assured of abso- •^ lute purity. Government Analysis Sii-ddIy) (Bo to l,;uk up *,:ue:"cnts': *£ }r ' Hugh McPherson - - Supt. Trout Lake City Transfi er and Str-ge Line. | Ferguson ! Trout Lake am Beaton » *t*\mmJ*rmnytt*Vmme\ Daily Stage will leave Ferguson 7 a.m. Trout Lake at S Andrew M. Craig. It pays to use ll.c Telephone, A f* fUl ^^F TfI lengthv trip can often to tared. Offlcei \pt 1 1# [ y' f | f | <* at Ferguson: Cummins' Store : Trout l.ak.*. I'nst Office : al-o Rt Beaton, Com aplix and a it. ■•* ii.-.i.i. Starke? MINKS Fir*, We, Aecitlenl. Ileslih, rc*«iiiitiT« lor .V _ f>mlone Jluursncc Con.p. u Troul l.lkc, tertian.r. litt' • n.i Camborne. Lardeau Hotel ft Sandy Laughton Proprietor. WIIKN" visiting Ferguson you should slay at thu Lanli-au Hotel. Htp the visitor will hn surrounded with In.nn* roinfnrla. Excellent cuisine, trull ventilated and warm rooms, well slocked har, and everything which lends I..minis making your visit a pleasant and inrniorahle one. Rules from $1 day upwards. We strive tu plcsse ntir patrons. GERRARD FERGUSON. ... TLhc Ibotel Beaton ... | - BEATON, B.c. * J F. B. Wells REVEL8TOKE, ll.C. RAW FURS BOUGHT ifiX\f *•*•■ **•«■ j\ / * •?lt' Thursday each ' \/ N month. Sojourning llrethren eoniiallv Invited. i. I'or.l.lr.'l.Si*,*. F.C. Campbell.W.M CASH PRICKS PAID. ritOUT LAKE LODGE 1. O.O.F, Nti. II . /Bgftsk . !'■■■-" '. ...•• In i*. I.'l.l I.i \^9m9Sy*mW RETAIL Meat Merchants Dealers in all kin.Is of Freeh Meat TROUT LAKE. B.C Imperial Bank of Canada. CAPITAL AUTHORIZED B OOo 000 II. aj Illli. r CAPITAL PAID UP.. 4.,26.000. TOJWNTO. ONTARIO. I REST *%42e.0M l> R. WILKIE, President. Hon. ROBERT J AFPBAY.-iVits-Pt* branches i» the Provinces ol aiihtu. Sa»k»tcliew»ii, BritishCsluril Msnitoba, lliitari.. »n.l l^uci^r. A GENERAL BANKING BUMNE88 TRAN8ACTID. SAVINGS DEPARTMENT.—I«.-|i»it-> rt-.-.-i v.v| RDd iiit«rri".| t current rati- from date oi opening ol sccoont. I.u^r. ..f rrnllt. issasd a.allaiil. la uur l*nr r.f lli-r- world tl mwm on ilm to MllwlMas aad Mlnlos !•• n't*. Arrowhead Ilraiich— T.It. BAKER Review Job Dept. For High-Class Work. -' lltl-UUl 1 ■ 3Barber SI)op j OK — nm a — Oood Shave or Hair Cut - i .il i. on — fl William Schnell, piaouaoM. -.-.-.-, Hot and Cold Baths - . -CAmm*mttA»tL4'XAtAi^" lim. rj Mdvui, J A n»r»s*r A.M. r m. ii am HARVEY McCARTER & PINEHHAM BOLI0IT0B8, Ktc. REVELSTOKE 13 C Mollsllun lor liu|>.riai litnk ofiiotli. Imperial Barber Shop. For iioo.1 ll.. I'i.rrr Bl>sving u to C. A CHEESEMAN Tlllift i.lll' ITT VISITORS firri-ring st Bealon (the llirefholil of the l.»r'lf».. via Arr.'« dcii'l, will lin.l this ll"l. I to he folly equippeil for liiirh-rlai>s tta.le. Kxci-llt-nt scrommodatinii, A well spi.oiiite.i .-in.l i-i'.-irn'ii*. ilirrinj hall. The lien nl ll'ini*.". Spirits an.l Ci(iars. I'ersniial sniiervision in given to the rc-qui-pments of patrona. Vinitora to the lardeau rati relvon comfort at thii hotel. \ W. BOYD -:- -:- Prop LAND NOTICE. notici;. Any person having in eir pos- s'ssi.m LADDERtf or B ''KE'I> jbelonging to the FIRE .DEPARTMENT, are requested u, return ih-m IMMEDIATELY. A. M CtAjUa. Chief Q.B. H WILKIE, P.LS. Provincial hand Burveyor, Mineral Claims :5nrvr> e«i god Crown Urants Obtained JoCrtr.-. y,t: ye-ore <>!*■+, KM B r* Notice ia hereby given that 80 darn after dale, I intend to make application to the Cheil Uoamis- siniiei i.f Lands A* Works for permis sion to purOhsau the following .1.- icrlbed land?, situaird In \\'i st K*(jt.*iiiiv make applicalion to the Clii*f Cotnmii Isiotiin ,,f l.ainjri.t Wnrk? f..r per- minion lo purchaae the following |degcribod land .--iitinte at < ipe Horn, I'li'.r Arrow L:ik<. West I Kootenay lJia>r;.-r. O min* in .ii,* .it a poii planted at tin; Norlh East corner id Lot : 79.52, marked "A R. WhitebrendV ■"■v K. Corner" thonce north -10 ohaina; thence wvtl 80 chai-vii Ihenee ,-<.uth 40 chs inr; ti,. * i 30chaini t->; .nut ofcomineii i • i.'i't. nnd ioi t.iininjr ."520 . I Paled lliil lijtli. day of March 1..07. TTTTTfmmTTTTtrTrTTTTnMTTnrTfrtfTntTTTtftmmmmmmmnTmTtnTmTmmmmm^^ k TROUT LAKE CITY n A. If Whits THERE Imve lieen fortunes made hy Judiclooi Investment in ife.il Eatate, and m-rre forlunea will b>- made th.in e\er the next two or (lire* years. The one who reaps U.e harvest is the original investor, fur ii- lias his in..ney on a certainty. Now lei tts point mitio \ou il.ai there i- do belter spot nn fhe C tii:.-iit t*i lu v lieal Kion» "—its grown hss been steady. It is the head of r.svigslios, and • he terminal of lh* Lardo biased nf lha C.P.R. All roads (in ths Lat.lean) had in Trout Uke. Il is llie conimenial centre of ihs richest mineral district an ths continent, gnd hss l.m.king f.oili- liei provided by ilm tmperlal Lank of Cnnndo ; first class srhoel a. .oinin. .lai ion under i.'.e dirre- lion if B. Shannon, B.A.; a good wat. r f-> ■*-!< in : giviriiiiiriit ofleea ,* Ci'tinlj Curt ntniig*.; Mrih, diet Episcopal ni d Anglican ehurjhei and cottage llOSpilal, There ire vglnable ranch lands nn tlie ontnkiiis iwaitilif seiiUrs. [ta lumber resource! are magnifi *ei.i, and I band t-nw mill wilh a capacity of 60.000 ft per . w pro*pecta "ptning up nob kt.diss nf ore. 'Here will hn a l.ig rush this yrar, go if you would l.,.„ more, write at oure to ril bei r.f Uie agenln st fhe ndditSM-t Inlaw. til ' t. i Am tmmnmm. F. B. Wells General Agent Revelstoke, B.C. **"' • *..» I m,mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmimm kt. .