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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" Eyes carefully * tested.   *\ufffd\ufffd-  A proper fit guaranteed;\"'\"-  -WILS0N>'Optician;-'     '* * '- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  {^ '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    APR I'J 100\/  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \\\\    -     -... __\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  ' ^  *#M*  ,--t.\" *,\ufffd\ufffd.%>& i  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd#t\ufffd\ufffdl  -^rA'-  >ceivtf easeful-; attention \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\".*\ufffd\ufffd\/' \"  \"when left with us ^^  ,WJ!JS01>CtlifeJewafi^:  ,*'? >*),\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  VOL; 10, NO I.  MOYIE, B. C,' APKIL 13. 1907.  ,?$&-*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd VkAfc  m  ItZ'f  *i, I5-!  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdm  .HATS for the Ladies;  HATS for the Gentlemen,  HATS for the Girls,  HATS for tne Boys.   , -~  Never before has the.people of Moyie had  such a stock'of Hats to, choose from,\" all  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd the newest and latest styles in straw for, -  \ufffd\ufffd   - ' Ladies, Misses and Girls.   Prices-range   -  r... . -irom 25.cents-to'-$2.50: ...;..,   \/ -    \" -  - vQur spring stock of the celebrated \"PITT._  \" -' -HAT\" has arrived. See our show window,  fcCAi\\iPBELL&CO  --\"*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd**=  r*-*TM,ry''  ^     -.<\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;   k-  *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ^ir  \/.\\v;\/j:;\/^L;Stocks,;;\\_: '  - - \"are -today'the best stocks to* inv.est m.   ..' '-  '\" International Coal & Coko,   -   *.       ; Alberta Coal-S*. Coke,       .  Nicola' Coal & Coke,'      -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' *, .     ?. 0. Amalgnmated.      . -  r- \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd        Wire or Write. <\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      ..:_.\",\/    \\.~  Beale & Elwell  Fire Hall Concert  The committee in charge of getting up the entertainment to raise  funds for the building of a new  fire hall held a meeting Monday  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdevening to - further discus? their  plans. - The entertainment will* be  in the hands of the different committees ad follows: -   ','*>  PROGRAM\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdE. 0. Kamm,-Chas,  O'Neill, W. P. White, A. P. NaSi  donald and E. A. Hili.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' FINANCE AND. PUBLICITY^-  P. J. Smyth, O. A. Foote and J. W:  Fitch.  WAYS AND MEANS-J. P.  Farrell, .Jack McTavish --and -V.  Desaulnier. ', '  Robt. Campbell, aa president of  the board of trade, is an ex-officio  member of the above committees.  ' According to the present plans  the entertainment will be held on  Wednesday, May 1st. -.  - Another meeting will be held iii  the Central\" Hotel sample rooms  next Monday evening \"when the  program committee will arrange  for talent and for practice.  WILL TIE UP  '-\"'COALMINES  Twelve Horses Killed.  FITCH'S.  Hotel Eodtenay  *    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      - j    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   .-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:,       -     * - -*#  -The best of accommodations  for tbfTrayeling Public.'  i - *. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd--  Largo and Commodious Sample Rooms..      - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Billiard Rooms,  jVlcTAVISH & QAMERQN Proprietbps.',   __  \" \"    \"'. *'\"      ''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd''}\"    ,4..     '-*..-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- ---     3  WWWWWWWWW ^jor-zgr g^T$rz^ 3^1, \/jnjr ^m^tz}*-^ %  ,-,s, --,  ^^iw^'iW ,        '\"' Y .' 'H  StaniteicTsi Underwear  is known .fro,^ .poas|; |;p c.paat as the best manufac-  .    turedonMheJc.b'iiL.tii^ent.; - Every suit gi^ftranteed  ifrer.fectunshrinkadle. : ..-  - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Wc have-it in suits f^qni $2.50 to g.QOl. per suit.  THE   LEADlNa   LADIES':Al$fi ME^-^URN^HER.:     '  A peculiar [accident happened  over on'the coast last week when  twelve horses, owned by the Lady-  smith Lumber company, and valued at $2,400 were tilled at Cray-  croft island as the result ofvalog  becopiing overbalanced, which in  runuingdown .the 'chute, pulled  thp^tiri? jglf- tean-is Qf hoises  with it. Five'of the horses'were  killed outright, and the remain-  fyggeypa ^ere so severely torn  and injured that they had to be  shot. The $nji\ufffd\ufffdal8 wsere Jerked off  their feet like a shot and'taken  down'the side of t^e' chute, \ufffd\ufffdome  going all the way .to- the water  and* the rest being ' dropped all  along th\/\ufffd\ufffdrway, as screaming with  \ufffd\ufffderror they crashed into stunts  and other debris causing their  harness to break.   .       . '*  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi--*      _  .passenger Traifl -en\ufffd\ufffd.I.  . The passenger train service  p^er the Spokane International  was begunjast Monday, and daily  trains are new being run whiph  connect with both C.\"P. R. passen-  \ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd*.* trains at CurzDn, two miles  West of Yahk. Tlie train leaves  Spjkane about six o'clock eaclj*  morning and returns about eight  in the evening. The-fare from  Moyie to Spokane over this *rout\ufffd\ufffdj  is $5.55. The through jfcrajn service between St. Paul and Spokane  yill be inagurated about June 15  Since the opening of the road to  passenger traffic the ticket sales  at the Moyie office for over this  road have run a-~i high as seven a  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdday and never below three a day,  Canadian Poet Dead.  AU Canada mourns the loss of  D,r. Pjrumnignd, who was \ufffd\ufffdt-*iqken  arid died of paralysis at Cobaltlast  week. Drummond immoralized  the rural Fronch habitant in his  fa^-tqj-ts dialect poetry. Probably  his greatest classic was \"Tbe  Wreck of the Julie Plant.\" Next  perhaps, in point of merit is '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'Jobu  Bapti3teTraleau.\" He waa born  in Ireland 52 y eis ago.  ~1&j!\ufffd\ufffdL WWWWrt+.ii- W -v- W^WW^W WWWW\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' WWW~Wi<rsrWW  I    Impertai Bank of Oanacia.  I   SAYINQS DEPARTMENT.  uepp8UB of $1.00 or upward? received.  1 -  There is \"no better investment .than $ Savings  13    - ^ank.depQsi^..     ^ , -  . ;      '  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdji,   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   *   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- Once opened it grows whetUet added to or   not.  a 1?^^' -^'RtfejJ a| .current  rat-as  and  com-  '^ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi   pt-*UEded twice a yeair.    s'\\      -    \"  \"'  \ufffd\ufffd   ^RANBKOOK BRAkcH.  I     ' \"     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd F. M. PIKjKHAM, Manager.      |  PayrQl) was $34,248.  Wednesday was p iyd*\ufffd\ufffdy at tho  St. Eugene mine and -So 1,218 wns  disbursed. Tlie town wns lively  ac4 t^e|^ was considerable money  in evidence.,. As u-<ual :-a_ good  portion of thu money was sent  out of town.  A. L   McKILLOP  K^sosr,  Miners on Crow Vote  to Quit.  LOCAL NEWS.  WILL NOW? MQYIE  Good Supply of Coal on Hand  ' - and Plenty Water to  Help Out:  At a mass meeting qf the miners of Coal Creek and {.Fernie held  in Fernie on Wednesday afternoon it was* decided by .a, referendum vote of 741 to '42 to, quit  work unless the operators conceded their demand..       |Y  The miners ask for an advance  of 10 per cent upon all fates. The  minimum rate for outside labor  shall be $2.50 for a tenfjiour day.  That wages be paid\" .every two  weeks. That the eight hour bank  to bank day be established at < all  mines in Alberta. The px%ct date  is not stated when the men shall  gO OUfc.'- - -       ; \"        I  Fortunately the strike -will not  affect Moyie, as at the St. Eugene  mine there is sufficient coal stored  to last for a considerable \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd length  of time, and besides at this season  of ths year ~ the compressor and  other machinery can be run to a  great extent by water power.  Successful Social.  The social given under the auspices of the Methodist'Ladies' Aid  proved a hugh success. The day  was ideal for the sale of ice cream.  Whilst the sale ' cf ,ri3freshment3  proved equally\"good. Everybody  of importance in the townmicje  it a point to_ba there. During  the evening an iuforxnal program  was gone through,-Miss Hobson  and Mr. T. Sowerbutts providing  the vqcal, and Mr. Pickering the  instrumental music. On - the  whole, a very pleasant evening  was spent, everyone declaring it  to have been the-j oiliest evening  of the year.    > -  The ingn-ib^rs of the Ladies' Aid  wish to'thank the mauy ladies \\x\\  town who donated cakes for the  occassion with such liberality.  A Clean ESoxjng Contest.  Over one hundred people wit  segged-the-bo-f.Bg-contest\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTljursd.ty-  e.vening between Peter Dayjs fti Toronto and \"Kid\" Foley of Pernio. It  was a ten round bout and was declared a draw. It was a cood, clean  affair and those who witnog-sed it were  giyen au excellent inhibition of the  manly art of self defence. The con->-  te8tanta were simply sparring; fur  points and from all appearances they  \ufffd\ufffdere pretty evenly matche-i Allen  Macdonald ofli-jiated an referee and  did so with entire satisfaction to  everyone.  Albert Oill and Jim Sentner went  on for three rounds and did spine  pretty f\ufffd\ufffdst' work. \ufffd\ufffd{Kid\" Foley' waa  their referee.  M. A. Beale w^* .transacting  business-in Moyie1 Thursday and  Fnday. -. ,.  J. A. Dewar of\" the Porto Rico  Lumber company, was over' from  Nelson this week.    . u  Tnere was a big dance at the  Hotel Kootenay Thursday evening.  There'will be a meeting of the  Moyie aerie of Eagles next Mon^  day evening. _   '  & Wo\" have the finest range of  spring bats ever shown' in Moyie.  F,. A. Hill.      -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- \/ !  John Taylor is in the Cranbrook hospital and is suffering  from, a severe attack of tousolitis.  Try. a suit of Stanfleld's underwear. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd You -will-then- wear \" no  other. ' At Hill's.- '       *  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \\  Gentleman asking for Mr.' Skill-  ing in October. Please write and  send\"address'to Fernie P.- O.  'Revl Mr;5 Vance' of Marysville  will have charge of the service in  the Methodist church- tomorrow,  April 14th. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *;*\",_;-. '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  There will be *a dance at the  Manhattan Hotel next Monday  evening to which an invitation is  extended to'eyeryone.' .. v-*. ,.  '- Mrs' W, Gibson and \"children of  Greenwood were in Moyie \"ior a  few days this week visiting with  Mr. and Mrs. R. CampbellY'  Dave Porter went over ' to the  Coeur d'Alenes this week to look  after some mining interests which  he has there. >   .  Ar- T.. C larke was transacting  business inCranbrook .yesterday.  Mr. Clark expects to go north in 'a  very few days.   '-    Y   \"-   ' '  F. B. Hawthorn, who travels for  the Kootenay Cigar Co. of Nelson,  was in Moyie thi3 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd week\" andy as\"  usual had a few   now. stories  to  tell.\", \" Y-V'  5_-*i       . i \\  J;F. Leheney, who took,such  an active part in theLast. Provid-,  cial campaign, is now in .Vancouver aud*\"is on the staff'of the\"  Western; Clarion.' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-- *\\ . '-  * John Boyd left yesterday for  Eurekv, Mont., wher& he owns  Borne Jand and wh\ufffd\ufffd re- hi-3 brother  and sister live. Mr. BDyd will be  away from Moyio fop .a month Or  two.  Roy Clothier and an older  brother are now iu the lumber  business and are located a fen-  miles south of Elko. Roy was in  town this week meeting his many  old- friends.  The Moore Concert Company have  made a**ra\"i}geH)ent8 to give a show in  Eugle Hall on tlie evenings of Saturday, April 20, and Monday, April 22.  Tlie coinp\ufffd\ufffdny_i8T*)>d~tbrbe ono of \"the  best on the road. Arrangements have  beeu made for a pianf) and seats for  the hall. Ticketa are now on sijje &t  the drug atjrp. ,.    -    *  ^TKEf*. SEASONS; FOB  WALL PkPiBBiNG !  AND PAINTING  '   \" \ufffd\ufffd rf    .    - vf\" ' .  -J \"     +   * ' ~m.  is abouthefef f^-.;.  -  -  .    We are-     '':-''  now ready   ,    \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-,  with a .large range of  .  beautiful, and' artistic  patterns; all 1907.designs.  WALL   PAPER.  Come and look\" over our book-of samples and  you will find that\" you cancelect a   paper suitable.,V'\".  for any room in.your house^araTmoet\", any \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd price.*-:*7 '  ' '. We also have\" a full stock of Rea*y Mixed Paints,'  Oils\/ Brushes, and everything necessary for renovat-.  ,ing your house.-. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd '4   \".\"]-'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd        '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  * -       - * \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ' r '  -. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd - r.   . .- -.  MacEachern & Macdonald  Moving to \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Kingsgate.  D. J. Elmer has moved his family to Kingsgate, where he is now  permanently located, and is building a new hotel. Mr. and Mre. D.  A. Ayres are now occupying the  Elrmfr. residence in Moyie.        \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \"<;\"  . \\  Whooping;   Cough.  I have used Chamberlain's Cough  Itomedy in rny family in o-ises of  whqoping cough, and want lo tell you  it is the best medicine I have ever  used.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdW. F. Gaston, I'obio, Ga.  This romedy is safe anil sure. For  sale by the Moyie Drug it Stationery  Co. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd i, - *   '  mmmm^mmmmtm^m^!^K3^Kmmmmmmmmmmm4mmmjmmmmmmmm  Dimock: lias Resigned.'  * The report is in circulation that  H. H. Dimock has resigned -his  position as collector of customs at  Kingsgate and intends moving to  Moyie, '-where h&has 'recently become interested in the Cosmopolitan hotel.   % *  Later\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHarry ' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Dimock \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd is   in  town   today   and  confirms   the  above.\" He does   not  yet- know  w-hen\ufffd\ufffd-'his  .effect,\" but  move to Moyie as soon as it does  \"Swiftwater Bill\" Has Quit.  \"Swiftwater Bill\" Gates, who  has made and spent several fortunes, but who is now \"ou his uppers\" in Seattle, says he is through  with Alaska for good. . He has  settled down and from now on he  will be content to lead the simple  life.  \ufffd\ufffdjhe Crosby^ Fund.,  The committee in charge of raid-*  ing funds for W. ,H...F^ Crosby,  which is composed of Sim Potter,  J. P. Farrell, 'TKos.'Botes'and  James Roberts, wish through tha  Leader to give an account of the  money raised and theu3o to wheh,-\"'  it has and will be put.  By subscription i...'.$330.50     *  - '.By . concert ..'.... 78.50;  \" .y -Total fund raided.  ^AW.^.   '*  -\"J-55-     -^J  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*:  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd '\"'*\\il  aw* r  400.0l>~ -.,- -. - ;<'_)  ~ The committee have done what , \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd * ''. \/*  they considered was best for Mr.-* .. ''.7  Crosby's \"interests.^ Ihey, have, v {^'f  purchased for him a small stock of t. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd f i ''Jl  goods and set him up in, business f' -.   - *'~'  T-r ' -* \" f       *   * S      4 ? * - '    '   ^ 5 ' '  in the Hansen store on south. Vic-* > 'L I.*>' a  toria street.^. The billsV-frbm !the,. **. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* f '.'-,  wholesale men will be met'by iho.^fi-. -'\/\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -  commitiejsCaa they.<*ome-^due,-*;-\ufffd\ufffdnd'ri^-^'''*^  rresfgnation-^U-takej-fcUey-'^op^^^  b-.it.ia his intention to t;e^gt   W'-Mr'CrosVs.'welf^  and also protect' the' f iinda \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd which. '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.'{ '' - -,  were so generously sabscribed by -', .-*' '  the people. r ,'..'-.  The committee wishes to thank  \".   Y  those who donated   money, ^and.  also the different wholesalers, who,  \/   -    t~  returned their bills  ag*inst   M'*.    .'.' * ,7  Crosby  to the committee receipt- ^ \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd** >  ed and m irked \"paid in full.!* 1 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'  ' -;' ,  I. 0. 0. F. Anniversary.  GEN\ufffd\ufffdB\/-yL  NEWS  NOTES.  There is   a  great demand for  lumbermen along the Crow.  Jt is said that J. U. Carter, district passenger agent for the C.  P. R., will move to Spokane about  (jhe first of Way.  ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Wah:Ying Yat-Po is the nam\ufffd\ufffdi  of thu new Cninese uewnptipet*  published by the Chinese Mission  ip Vancom pr. They have their  own plant.  WATCH   REPAIRING.  As C. P. R. watch Inspectors\" we are in a position to,  repair your watch thoroughly  so as to make  it   a   reliable  Dr. Mowburn who has been in a  St\". Paul hospital for some time  sufferit g with blood poisoning,  expects soon to bo able to return  and resurne big medical practice  at Lethbridge.  Fred G. Erb, the C. P. R. agent  at Silverton, committed suicide in  his   o!Iice Wednesday afternoon  time keeper.    We guarantee, by shooting himself with hisjo vol  satisfaction.  ?\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd<--  ' Mr. \ufffd\ufffd. A.-* Hill   ol   JJqyie is qur  agents \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Ys , . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *  W: F. TATE & SON.  Jewelers and  Graduate Opticians.  -   \"    chanbrook:, b. 0\".  Qtficial Watch Inspector for C. P   ft  Oxpn't* Nest Pass Division.  ver. Deceased was a man of 53  years of aga apd leaves >a wife  and child.    I^ome Frqm Ireland.  James Cronin was on Thurs-;  day's westbound train on bis way  home, from Ireland and en route to'  his toni > iu Spok ine. Mr. Cronin  is lookiug well and had a very  gopd tr'p. \" \"    v    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  The Odd Fellows' anniversary  service in Moyie this year will be  heidatt;he\"Methodist\"chuich~and  will be conducted by Rev. Thos.  Sowerbutts, the pastor of the  church. The members of .the order will parade to the church and  will appear in regalia, as is their  usual custom. This service will  be held on Sunday, April 28 th.  Mrs, A. Peachoy,    dressmakor and  costumier. Care Mrs.A. C. Clarke,  Mannarino Will Survive.  James M.innarino, the victim ot  the cowardly assault made upon  his life by his nephew, Paul Man-  narino, near Sirdar, two weeks  ago, has been pronounced out of  danger. _Se_wilLsoon\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdbe\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdable\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdto-  leave the hospital at Cranbrook,  where he has been since the time  of the shooting. Drs. King and  Green located the bullet by means  of an x-ray and extracted it without much difficulty.  FOR SALE-A 225 egg incnba:,  tor and outside brooder. Cost $44.'  Will be sold for $25. Apply to  Farrell & Smyth.  ClFm5aking Powder  A Y l  Pure, Wholesome* Reliable  *  4  *&  Made from cream of tartar derived    \ufffd\ufffd1  solely \"from   grapes, the most deli-,  cious and healthful of all fruit acids..  Its use is a guarantee of perfect food;  and a protection against the ills that:  follow the use of alum, alum-phosphate and other low grade powders.   .  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd The. mixtufw called baking powders that sell for ten or.  twenty-five, cents a pound, or a cent an ounce, are all alike, -  ijnadc R\/Ql*a alum apd costingless than three cents a pound^  r:Y  .js-.v.i'.. >.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-.~vi  c-   ?'   -C  '  v*      .-**\"*.  V.T*.-. .*.,  -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHUM .1.1-   +4l^4m\ufffd\ufffdH4jmr JCt  THE LEADER, MOYIE, BRITISH COLUMBIA.  , CV-U1 Ijr \\Jl |g vcmcmca m  Graustark  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdI  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWrtt*. KM. t*  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi\/v* ? \ufffd\ufffdf  (Continued From Last Week.)  as ne was about to open tbe door  through whlcb he bad entered tbe room  '  lt swung  wide  aud   Count  Marlanx  '   strode ln.   Baldos paused irresolutely  and then proceeded on his way without paying the slightest attention to tbe  . commander  of   tbe   army.     Marlanx  '   came to an apiazed stop, and bis face  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd flushed with resentmeut.  \"Halt,  sir'.\"  he exclaimed  harshly.  \"Don't you know enough to salute me,  1   sir?\"  Baldos turned  instantly,  bis  figure  -   straightening like a  flash.    His eyes  '   met those of the Iron Count and did not  r waver, although his face went white  with passion.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    \"And who are you, sir?\" he asked ln  cold, steely tones.   The count almost  '   reeled. -^  *>    \"Your superior officer! Tnat should fefc  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' enough for you!\" he half hissed, with  \".' deadly levelness.  \".      \"Oh, then I see no -reason why I  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd should not salute you,' sir,\" said Baldos,  ,\",* with one of his rare smiles. He salut-  ;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ed his superor officer a shade too elab-  '   orately and turned away,   Marlanx's  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd eyes glistened.  \"Stop!   Have I said you could go,  *. sir?  I have a bit of advice to\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  *,..     \"My  command  to. go  comes   from  '*\" your superior, sir,\" said Baldos, with  \".Irritating blandness.  c    \"Be patient, general,\" cried Beverly,  In deep distress.   \"He does not know  any better.   I will'stand sponsor for  mm.\"   And Baldos went away with a  ' light step, his blood, singing, his devil-  may-care heart satisfied.  Tbe look in  '5 her eyes was very-sustaining.   As he  left the castle be said aloud to-himself with an easy disregard of the consequences:  ' , .\"Weil, It seems that I am to be asso-  v- dated with the devil as well as -with  angels.   Heavens!   June is a glorious  , month.\"  , \"Now, you promised you'd be nice to  him, General'Marlanx,\" cried Beverly  the instant Baldos was out of the  ' room.' \"He's new- at this sort of thing,  ^ you know, and, besides, you didn't address hiin very politely for an utter  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd * \"stranger.\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .   .       -  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .1 \"The insolent dog!\" snarled Marlanx,  ', -his self control returning slowly.  \"He  shall be taught well and thoroughly,  \"'never fear, Miss Calhoun. There Is a  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 'way .to -train such recruits as he, 'and  :. they> never forget what they have  ^.Jearned.\"  J'Oh,. please don't be harsh with  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\" him,',' she' pleaded.*: The- smile \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd of the  '\".'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIron\"Count was not'at'alFreassuring,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd< - \"I' know,he will be sorry for what he  has done, and you\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  .['     \"I am quite sure he will be sorry,\"  -'said he, with a most agreeable bow In  submission to her appeal.  ;\/ -; \"Do you want to see Mr. Lorry?\" she  f.. asked quickly.   \"I will send for him,  general.\"' She was at the door, Impa-  ' ' tient'to be with the banished'culprits.  -   ' \"My  business with  Mr.  Lorry  can  .   wait,'! he began, with a smile meant to  be inviting; but which did not impress  her at all pleasantly.  \"Well, anyway,  I'll tell him joxi're  here,\" sbe said, her hand on tbe door  knob. .\"Will you wait here? Goodby.\"  And. then she was racing off through  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\"the long halls and up broad staircases  '.-\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtoward, the 'boudoir- of the  princess.  _ ..There is no telling bow long the ruffled  count remained in the anteroom, for  \"   tbe excited Beverly forgot to tell Lor-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd * ry that he was there.  ..r    There were half a dozen people In  theroom.when^Beverly entered eager  your n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdin a dUngeob, with'Baldos as  guard,\" decided Miss Calhoun.  \"Beverly, dear, that man in no ordinary person,\" said the princess quite  positively.  \"Of course he isn't. He's a tall, darV  mystery.\"  . \"I observed him as he crossed the terrace this morning,\" said Lorry, \"ne's  a striking sort of chap, and I'll bet my  bead he's not what he claims to be.\"   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \"He elaim9 to be a fugitive, you must  remember,\" said Beverly tn his defense.  \"I mean tbat he ls no common malefactor, or whatever It may be Who  and what do you suppose he ls? I confess that I'm interested ln the fellow,  and he looks as though one might lik\ufffd\ufffd  him without half trying. Why haven't  you dug up his past history, Beverlyl  You are so keen about him.\"  \"He positively refuses to let me dig,\"  explained Beverly. \"I tried, you know,  but he\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdhe\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwell, he squelched vie.\"  \"Well, after all Is said and d*ne, he  caught us peeping today, and I am  filled with shume,\" said the process.  \"It doesn't matter who he is, he nust  certainly have a most unflattering \ufffd\ufffd*pln*  Ion as to what we are.\"  \"And be Is sure to know, us sooner  or later,\" said tbe young countess, momenta rlly serious.  \"Oh, if it ever comes to that I shnll  be In a .splendid position to explain lt  all to him,\" sai'l Beverly. . \"Don't you  see, I'll have to do a lot oi explaining  myself?\"  \"Baron Dsngloss!\" announrod tiie  guara or tbe upper hall, throwing open  the door for tbe doughty little chief of  police.  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"Your highness sent for me?\" asked  hie, advancing after the formal salutation. The princess exhibited genuine  amazement.  \"I did, Baron- Dangloss, but you  must have come with the v\/lngs of an  eagle. It Is really not more than three  minutes since I gave the order to Colonel Quinnox.\" The baron smiled mysteriously, but volunteered no solution.  The truth is, be was entering the castle doors as the \"messenger left them,  but be was much too fond of effect to  spoil a good situation by-explanations.  It was a long two miles to his office in  the Tower. \"Something has just happened that impels me to \"ask a few.  questions concerning Baldos, the new  guard.\". . ,  \"May I first ask what has happened?\" Dangloss was nt a loss for the  .meaning of the general smile that  went around.*  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd '.'It ls quite personal and of no consequence. What do you know of him?  My curiosity is aroused. Now, be  quiet, Beverly. Yon are as\" eager to  know as the rest of. us.\"  \"Well, your highness. I may as well  confess that the man Is a puzzle to me.  ly.   She was panting with excitement  .- Of all the rooms in tbe grim old castle  .-the boudoir of the princess was the  ., most famously attractive.   It was really her home, the exquisite abiding place  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd of an exquisite creature.  To lounge on  her divans, to loll  in the chairs, to  glide through her priceless rugs, was  the acme of indolent pleasure.    Few  -.   were they who enjoyed the privileges  ,   of \"little heaven,\" as Harry Anguish  had christened it on one memorable  night   long  before tthe  princess  was  Mrs.'Grenfall Lorry.  \"Now, how do you feel?\" cried the  flushed American girl, pausing ln the  door to point an impressive finger at  \"'.the princess, who was lying hack In a  huge chiili*. the picture of distress and  .  annoyance.  \"I shall never be able to look that  * man in the face again,\" camo dolefully  from Yetlve's humbled lips. Dagmar  .was all smiles uud In the fittest of  humors. She was the kind of culprit  who loves the punishment because of  the crime.  \"Wasn't it ridiculous, and wasn't it  Just too lovely?\" she cried.  \"It was extremely theatrical,\" agreed  'Beverly, .seating herself on the arm of  Yetlve's chair and throwing a warm  arm around her neck. \"Have you all'  heard about it?\" she demanded naively, turning to the others, who unquestionably had had a jumbled account of  tbe performance.        \/  \"You got Just what you deserved,'.'.  Bald Lorry, who was immensely  amused.  \"I wonder what your august vagabond thinks of his princess and her  ladies ln hiding?\" mused Harry Anguish. The Count aud Countess Halfont were smiling iu spite of the assault upon the dignity of the court.  \"I'd. give anything to know what he  really thinks,\" said the real' princess.  \"Oh, Beverly, wasn't It awful?    And  .how he marched us out of that room!\"  \"I thought, it was great,\" said Beverly,  her eyes  glowing.    \"Wasn't  It  splendid?  Ing?\"  \"He Is good looking. I Imagine. But  I am no judge, dear, it was utterly  Impossible for ine to look at bis face,\"  lamented the princess.  \"What are you going to do with us?\"  asked Dagmar penitently.  tan-r eriea' ucveny,\"as\"-tnougn\" a cherished ideal had been shattered.  \"Not if w are to believe \/the tales  from the 2\ufffd\ufffdrfli. Here Is another complication, bovi*ever. There is, as you  know, Count Halfont, and perhaps all  of you, for that matter, a pretender to  the throne of Axphain, the rugitive  Prince Frederic. He is described as  young, good looking^ a scholar and the  next thing to a pauper.\"  \"Baldos a mere pretender!\" cried  Beverly in distress. \"Never!\"  \"At any rate, he is not what he pretends to be,\" said the baron, with a  wise smile.  \"Then you think he may be Prince  Frederic?\" asked Lorry, deeply Interested.  \"I am inclined to think so, although  another complication has arisen. .May  it please your' highness, I am in an  amazingly tangled state of mind,\" admitted the baron, passing his hand  over his brow.  \"Do you mean that another mysterious prince has come to life?\" asked  Yetive, her eyes sparkling with Interest  in the revelations.  \"Early this morning a dispatch came  to me from the Grand Duke Michael of  Rapp-Thorberg,' a duchy ln western  Europe, informing me that the duke's  eldest son had fled from borne and ls  known to have come to the far east,  possibly to Graustark.\"  \"Great Scott!\" exclaimed Anguish.  \"It never\" rains but It hails, so here's  bail to the princes three.\"  \"We are the Mecca for runaway royalty, it seems,\" said Count Halfont.  \"Go on with the story, Baron Dangloss,\" cried the princess. \"It Is like a  book.\"  \"A description of the young man accompanies the offer of a large reward  for information that may lead to his  return home for reconciliation, and\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  here the* baron paused dramatically.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \"And what?\" Interjected Beverly,  who could not wait.  \"The description fits our friend Baldos perfectly!\"  \"You don't mean it?\" exclaimed Lorry. \"Then he may be any one of the  three you have mentioned?\"  \"Let me tell you what the grand  duke's secretary says. I have the official notice, but left it in my desk.  The runaway son of the grand duke is  called Christobal. He is twenty-seven  years of age, speaks English fluently,  besides French and our own language.  It seems that he attended an English  college with Prince Dantan and some  of our own young men who are still in  England. Six weeks ago he disappeared from his father's home. At the  same time a dozen wild and venturous  retainers left the grand duchy. it The  party was seen in Vienna a week later,  and the young duke boldly ^announced  that he was off to the east to help bis  friend Dantan In the fight for his  .throne. Going on the theory that Baldos is this same Christobal we have  only to-provide a reason-for his preferring the wilds to the comforts of  our cities. In the first place, he knows  there is a large reward for his apprehension and he fears our police. .In the  second place, he does not care to direct  the attention of Prince Dantan's foes  to himself. He missed'Dantan in the  hills and doubtless was lost for weeks,  but the true reason for his flight is  made plain in the story that was printed recently in Paris aud Berlin newspapers. According to them, .Christobal  rebelled against his father's right to  select a wife for him. The grand, duke  had chosen a noble and wealthy bride,  and .the son had selected a beautiful  girl from the lower walks of life. Father  and  son  quarreled  and  neither  The Ono and  the Naught.  Oliver Wondoil Holmes once sent two  poetlcil letters to tho \"postoflice\" of an  Episcopal ralr nt 1'ittslleld, Mass.   Iii'  one of them the first stanza wns:  Fair lady, whosoever tliou art,  Turn thla [>oor leaf with tondorcst care  And hush. oh. hush, lliy beating heart.  Tlio ono thou lovost will be tliere.  On turning the \"poor leaf\" there wns  round a dollar bill, with some verses  beginning:  Fair lady, lift thine eyes and tell  If this Is not ft truthful letter,  -.'his Is the one C.\\ thou loveth well,  And   naught  iw  can   make  theo  lovo It  better (10).  Occultism.  It Is noteworthy that supernaturnl-  Ism prevailed just ns strongly nt tbe  other side or the globe among the aborigines or the new world. The coming  or the Spaniards had been prophesied  to the Mexicans by their caciques, and  the prophecies were sung nmid loud  lamentations nt their festivals.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLoudon Onlooker.  The Hot Wind From the Desert.  \"Khamsin\" is the hot wind from the  desert which blows out or the Sahara  upon Egypt' .The word means fifty,  from the Idea thnt it lasts for fifty  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdlays. , The \"khamsin\" is terribly hot  and dry. and sometimes - brings pestilence wltb.it.  HEALTH IN SPRING  Nature   Needs   Assistance   in   Making  New Health-Giving Blood.  Spring is the season when your  system needs toning up. In-the spring  you must'have new biood just as the  trees must have new sap. Nature  demands-it! ' Without ne,v blood you  will'feel weak and. languid; you may  have twinges oi rheumatism or neuralgia, occasional headaches, variable  appetite,. pimples or eruptions of Uie  siun, or a pale pasty complexion.  These arc sure signs that the blood is  out of order. A tonic is needed to  give new energy. Dr. Williams Pink  Pills are the best tonic in all the  world. They., make new, rich blood\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  your greatest need In spring. They  clear the skin, drive out disease and  make tired, depressed men and women  bright, active and strong. Mrs. John  McAuley, Douglastown, Que., proves  the great value of Dr. Williams Pink  Pills in building up people -who -have  been weakened and run down. She  says: \"Dr.. Williams Pink Pills' have  beeji of great help to me. My blood  was weak and-watery and I was badly  run down. -But through the use of  \\ the pills my health was fully restored.  I always recommend them* to* my  friends who 'may be ailing.\"     -'  There are fraudulent, imitations of  Dr. Williams Pink Pills, and to protect yourself see that the -full name  \"Dr. Williams Pink' Pills for \"Pale  People\" U printed on the wrapper  around   each   box. ** Do   not   take  any,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-   -       *.,-.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ~.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   --- -. . otht.p   p0.ealled   pink   pills. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Tf    your  would give an inch.   Christobal would    de.,-er nas not got the genuine, send  \"What are you'going to do with ust\"  lie comes here a vngabond, but he certainly does not act like one. He admits  that he is being bunted, -but takes no  one inu his confidence.' For that he  cannot be blamed.\"  \"Have you any reason to suspect  who1 he la?\" asked Lorry.  . \"My Instructions were to refrain  from questioning hlni,\" complained  Dangloss, with' a pathetic look at the  original plotters. \"Still, I have made  Investigations nloug other Hues.\"  \"And   who   Is   ho?\"   cried   Beverly  eagerly.  \"I don't know.\" was tbe disappointing answer.   \"We are confronted by a  queer set of circumstances. Doubtless  you all know that young Prince Dantan Is flying from the wrath of his half  brother, our lamented .frjend Gabriel.  He is supposed to be in our hills with  a half starved body of followers.   It  seems Impossible that lie could have  I reached our northern, boundaries wlth-  ' oat our outposts catching a glimpse of  him at some time.  The trouble is that  j his face is unknown to most of us, I  among the others.   I-have been going  on the presumption that Baldos is in  j reality Prince Dantan, but last night  the belief received a severe shock.\"  \"Yes?\" came from several eager lips.  \"My   men   who   are   watching   the  Dawsbergen . frontier \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd came   in   last  night\" and\" reported that  Dantan had  been seen  by  mountaineers no  later  than Sunday, three days ago.   These  mountaineers were in sympathy with  hiin  and  refused   to tell  whither he  went  We only know that he was in  the southern part of Graustark three  days ago. Our new guard speaks many  And   isn't   he   good   look--''languages, but he has never been heard  to use that of Dawsbergen.  That fact  in itself Is not surprising, for, of all |  things,   he   would   avoid   his   mother j  tongue.    Dantan   Is   part  English  by '  ! birth and wholly so by cultivation. In j  . that be-evidently finds a mate in this  J Baldos.\" I  not marry his father's choice, and the  grand duke would not sanction his  union with the fair plebeian.\"  Here Beverly exclaimed proudly:  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'He doesn't look like the sort of man  who could be bullied into marrying  anybody if he didn't want to.\"  \"And he strikes me as the sort who  would marry any oue he set his heart  upon having,\" added tbe princess, with  a taunting glance nt Miss Calhoun.  \"Umph!\" sniffed Beverly defiantly.  The baron went on with his narrative,  exhibiting slgus'of excitement.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"To leud-eolor*to tho-'matter,-Ohristo-  bal's sweetheart the daughter of a  game warden, was murdered the night  before her lover fled. I know nothing  of the circumstances attending the  crime, but it is my understanding that  Christobal Is not suspected. It is possible thut he Is Ignorant even now of  the girl's fate.\"  \"Well, by the gods, we have a good-  Iv lot of heroes about us!\"* exclaimed  Lorry.  \"But, after all,\" ventured'the Couut-  \ufffd\ufffd'.-is Halfont, \"Baldos may' be none of  ruese meu.\"  \"Good heavens, Aunt Yvonne, don't  'Mggest anything so distressing,\" said  *etive.   \"He must be one of them.\"  \"I suggest a'speedy way of determining tbe matter,\" said Anguish.  \"Let us Bend for Bnldos aud ask him  point blank who he is. I think It is  up to him to clear away the mystery.\"  \"No!\" cried Beverly, starting to her  feet.  \"It seems to be the only way,\" said  Lorry.  \"But I promised him that no questions should be asked.\" said Beverly,  almost tearfully, but quite resolutely.  \"Didn't I, Yet\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdyour highness?\"  \"Alas, yes!\" said tlie princess, with a  pathetic smile of resignation, but with  loyalty ln the clasp of her hand.  (T'> Be Cnntimwd.l  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' .-.orEshaTF.  The raw horsehair used in the manu.  facture of haircloth for upholstering  purposes ls just now high priced lu  this country because of the situation  whlcb during nnd since the Itusso Japanese war hns prevailed In liussi-t  whence most of the hair comes. Tho  best of such clolh must havo a certain  width of weave, which depend5; upon  the length of the hairs, and In t'ais respect the Russian horses are superior,  having tails which sweep the ground.  Much of the weaving Is done In th!*i  country. For the narrower weaves oil  the cloth, used by tailors In lining  coats, the hair, from American horses  on tha \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^esteiirpjnins Js^used.  er  to the Dr. Williams Medicine Co.,  Brockville, Ont., and get the pflls by  mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes  for $2.50.   :  The Oldest Scot. .  James Grieve, who was born ln Bor-  chilly. Glenquolch, in Glengarry, on  New Year's day, 1800,' is the oldest liv-'  ing Scotsman.. He was a shepherd up  to a few years ago.;. He can remember  incidents of nearly a century \"ago. He  lives very simply- and seldom eats  meat. He married in 1822, and three  i,of_bis_ ^fourteen   children   survlve.-  ', Greenock (Scotland) Herald.  , Th* Pa-cifie Squadron.  | Secretary Mercalf says that the gen*  I eral navy board does not intend that  ; the American fleet in the Pacific shall  [be weaker than that of any possibli  'enemy, and there Is reason to bellevl  | that before long two divisions of bath  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtleships, numbering eight of the most  .modern vessels flying the stars and  : strtoest .will be stationed In the Pacific.  A New Snlt Cane.  1 The latest Improvement In ladletf\"  sult cases ls that they are made oa  'aluminium ' \"bodies\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthat Is to say,  (With an aluminium frame covered  twllh leather, weight being thus re\ufffd\ufffd  jfluced and strength Increased, while1  tit Is Impossible for the case to be cat  with a knife, as has sometimes happened when a robbery has been commit'  ted.   Liszt.  Liszt smoked large black cigars.  When giving lessons he walked up and  down the room, muttering to himself  and emitting volumes of smoke by way  of accompaniment to his remarks. He  smoked constantly while he worked.  Wire.   '  Wire was first beaten out by a hammer, but the artisans of Nuremberg In  1350 began to draw it which was the  great step forward In that \"art  \"You are^Jp spend the v-malnder of      \"Then he really isn't Princ\ufffd\ufffd nm*  Dream  Happenings.  \"We haven't that .article in stock.  said tbe druggist  \"Can't you give me something equal-  iy as good?\" V  \"No, sir.  There IsuVaiiythin-i* equally as good.\"  WOMAN'S PERFIDY.  The Way  It Was  First Disclosed    to  George Brandes, Who Lived Almost  Entirely Life of  Intellect.  In his ydung manhood George  Brandes lived almost - entirely in the  life of the intellect. Once he missed  keeping an engagement with a girl  because he was absorbed in Hegel's  philosophy at the time when he ought  to have been at the trysting place. He  tells about it in his \"Recollections:\"  \"With a passionate desire to reach a  comprehension \"of truth, I grappled  with the system, began with the encyclopedia, read the three volumes of  'Aesthetics,' the 'Philosophy of Law,'  the 'Philosophy of History,' the  'Phenomenonology of the Mind,' then  the 'Philosophy of Law' again and  finally the 'Logic,' the 'Natural Philosophy' and the 'Philosophy of the  Mind' in a veritable intoxication of  comprehension and delight. One day  when a young girl toward whom I  felt attracted had asked me to go and  say goodby to her before her depart-'5  ure f forgot the time, her journey and  my promise to her over my Hegel. As  I walked up and down my room I  chanced to pull my watch out of my  pocket nnd realized that I had missed my appointment and that the~girl  must have started long ago.\"  Once before in earlier days had he  missed another engagement with  another young lady, one Henrietta.  For tlie sake of Henrietta's beautiful  eyes and under those eyes he , had  soundlv thrashed another little boy.  Then Henrietta asked him if he would  meet her the same evening under the  old bay tree. Dr. Brandes writes:  \"When we met she had tw,o long  straps w'ith her and at once asked mo  somewhat mockingly and dryly  whether I had the courage to let myself be bound. Of course I said I had,'  whereupon very carefully and thoroughly she fastened 'my arms together  with one-strap.'Could I move my  arms? No. The- \\with eager haste she  swung the otlier strap and let it fall  on my back acain and again. *  \"Mv first 'smart jacket' was a well  thrashed one. She thoroughly enjoyed  exerting her strength. Naturally my  boyish ideas of honor would not permit me to scream' or complain.' I  merelv stai-ed nt her with the pro-  found'est astonishment. She gave me  no explanation, released my hands,  we each went onr own way, and 1  avoided her for the rest of my stav  Then Henrietta went away and. told  people. f'This,\" says Brandes, \"wap  mv 'first experience of woman's perfidy. This was my first real experience  of feminine nature.\"  Costliness of London Streets.  From several maintenance points of  view it is, in many cases, cheaper and  better in the long run to pave with  Caithness flags than to lay granolithic  even with the first cost of Caithness  flags. Similarly there might be circumstances making it desirable, says \"lin-  gineering\/' to discard the macadamized surface qf.a roadway and pave with  'causeway setsYeven with granite rather -than with .whinstone-rand.this  notwithstanding the .very great \"difference in tlie \"respective \"costs. Such  consideration\" of the price <\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd of paving  lead one to moralize, and wonder if  the laying of wood paving blocks irr  \" the streets of London ' comes withn>  the eternal fitness of-things in respect  of economy in maintenance.\" .The  amount of money- annually spent in  the maintenance of the London street5-  must be \"beyond the dreams of avarice.''  . Tt -must be reckoned- in- -millions,  for the streets are always up. And in  Glnseow, with its granite causeway,  while the first cost of street paving is  probably much the same as in London, the life of granite sets will at  least be five times longer than,thnt of  wood bloc'-s. and granite causeway  has the n-lditio-ial 'virtue ' of * being  more sanitary than wood paving. But  wood block pavine is less noisy, and  ns thi5-, is the1 reason it is being used  in London, who will 'say .that much  monev in maintennnoe is not well  onent if it lessens th'e infernal din of  ihe tTPTTiendniis traffic of 'all kinds in  ',he pt'-eet\" of o\"T. (Treat cities, and  ten-Is to diminish the mental' agony  snd Dhvicnl torture'which the noise  of the n\"mb->5-less street vehicles, increasingly inflicts on the people.  .Desertir\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd the 'Land. _   _  There is no mistaking the significance of the rep'ort on the exodus from  the country  into* the. towns just issued by the British Board- qf Agriculture. The figures \"are startling.' In 1881  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.hern were nearly-a million .agricul*.  tural-laborers arid farm  servants'in  Great Britain; .in 1901 there were less  than seven hundred thousand. In the  same  period  two  million    acres    of  arable land were laid down to grass  And simultaneously there has been a  widespread introduction of. labor-saving machinery, and consistent efforts  on the part of * landowners and farm-  -ers    to ' reduce '<expenses,,  save,    of.  course, in th'e case of rich men, whose  ef-tates are tlieir hobbies from which,  thev do not expect dividends and to'  which they do not look for maintenance'. Thus there has hot only been a  marked diminution of the demand for  agricultural laborers owing to econc-(  mic causes, but there has also been an  equally marked desire on the part of  the  rural   population  to    get    away  from the fields into the ciMes.   '      *--,  M.P.'s Hearty Eaters.  The report of the kitchen committee  of the British House of Commons show  that from Feb. 13 to Dec. 24, 165,451  meals were served in the House. Of  these 126 were breakfasts, 39,825 luncheons, 47,968 dinners, 795 suppers,  75,213 teas and 5,150 meals at bars.  The cost of the meals reach a tbtal of  $96,445 or an average of 58 cents. This  includes $31,445 for spirits, wines,  beers and mineral waters and $5,480  for cigars.  Tar~and Feathers.  Tar and feathers are not a peculiarly American punishment. -Richard the  Lion-Hearted first proclaimed this  punishment. It was when he was setting out for the third crusade that  he gave warning that ''a robber who  shall be convicted ot theft shall have  his head cropped after the fashion of  a champion, and boiling pitch shall  be poured thereon, and the feathers  of a cushion shall be shaken out or  him, \ufffd\ufffdo that be shall ba known.\"  FAILING EYESIGHT  AND TORPID LIVER.  Good Sight and Good Health Returned when  *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   . - ... , _ ,  the Liver was Set Right by   ^  'S  To. persons who have not considered   house and  the relationship of eyesight to general.! of- them  1 cannot speak  too highly  health tills letter will prove especially  interesting.  Mrs. A: R. Prlcp, Nose Creek, Calgary, Alta.. writes: \"I write to tell  vou how highly we think of Dr. Chase's  kidney-Liver Pills. Cor they are unsurpassed for torpid liver, constipation,  and  kldneyvtroublesv     My    husband  derived great benefit from  Dr. Chase's   of   all   poisonous ' impurities  Kidney-Liver Pills a couple of years  ago when he was feeling depressed  and regularly out of sorts. His eyesight *wus failing and the lamplight  hurt his eyes so he could not' read at  ull and had made up his mind to see  an oculist.  \"I advised him to try Dr. Chase's  Kidney-Livor Pills, thinking he was  suffering from torpid liver. He did  so and nfter using less than two boxes  his eyesight entirely ' returned and  he felt fiuite well again. We would  never   be, without   these  pills   in   the  * Dr.\"* Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills are  marvelously prompt and certain as a  cure for sluggish actloil of the liver.  While awakening the liver they also  regulate the bowels and invigorate the  kidney action.  'Jn  this way the Altering and excretory  systems are . thoroughly  cleansed  and   tho  suffering  cause of pain,  sickness and  removed.  In every family there Is need of Just'  such ix medicine as Dr. Chase's Kld-  ney-Llver Pills to 'cure' constipation,  backache, biliousness, indigestion and  prevent dangerous and fatal disease.*  of the kidneys and bowels. One pill a  dose, 25 cents * a box, at all dealers,  Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toronto. To  protect you against imitations the-  portralt and' signature of Dr. A. W.  Chase, the famous receipt book author,  are   on   every   box.-  NURSERY NOTES.  A little girl three years old should  have ber hair washed eyery week.  An ill ventilated nursery ..is ,a fre-.  qucnt causer of babies. being restless  and fretful at night.      '. .     .\"  When bread Is given to children un--  der a year and a half,_ old, it should  be sliced very thinly, buttered\" lightly  nnd given in small quantities.  A baby should be kept out of tbe  wind and in the sunshine as much as  possible. Protect \"the eyes from tbe  sun always with a dark unibrellal   -1 was cured   of  Acute  Bronchitis by  MINARD'S \/LINIMENT.   -       - .      - * \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Bay of Islands..  J. M. CAMPBELL.  * I  was  cured   of  Facial   Neuralgia  by  MINARD'S\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;L1NIMENT. -.  \\ Springhill,   N.S.        WM.   DANIELS.  ' I was cured   of Chronic  Rheumatism  by  MINARD'S   LINIMENT.  -.Albeit Co.,. N.B.      GEO.  TINGLEY. v  SIXTY-ONE UNKISSED YEARS  Milwaukee - holds the record for the  unkissed, according to a statement  made under oath by William Battel.  Bartel is 61 years oi age, and testified  that he hail never bten kisstd by a  woman, nor had he ever kisstd anyone. He\ufffd\ufffd was a \"witness\" in a case  where a saloon had been raided ae a  disorderly house. It was intimated  that Ba.tel had'hugged .and'kissed a  young woman present. Bartel denied  the imputation, and with dramatic  pose and  flashing eyes said:  \"I have never kissed a woman in my  life, and no woman ever kissed me and  never will,-so help me- God I\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMilwaukee Dispatch to Chicago Record-  Haiald.        ,   ,.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAri immense natural cave ' .of *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* great  beauty \"has been* discovered-underlying  three'of-the principal-streets of\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,Con-  stantine,  Algeria.  A Liniment for the Logger.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Loggers lead a- life, which exposes them to  many * perils.' Wbunds,'*cuts' and bruises  cannot be altogether avoided in preparing timber for the drive and in  river work, where wet and. cold combined are of daily experience, coughs  and colds and' muscular pains cannot  but ensue. Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil;  when upplied to the injured or administered to the  ailing*'wo'rks wonders.'*'  i        \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-*.-- [...  '  Six  ivireloss \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd telegraph*., stations   are  to be.established in'Alaska:*   -\"' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\",  Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria  Two deaths occurred among the  S^S* white.laboreis in the canal zone  duiing February.\" The sick rate wa's  24- to every 1,000 persons for the month.  The annual death rate has' fallen to  4.2 per 1,000. ,,-,--,, ., \";  .-: The -Flagging Energies Revived.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Constant application to business is a  tax upon-tlie energies, and if there be  no. relaxation, lassitude'aud depression  are sure to intervene. These come trom  stomachic troubles. .The want of -exer-  oise brings on nervous iriegularitiis.  and the stomach ceases to assimilata  food properly. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd in this condition Parmelee's Vegetable Pills will be tound a  recuperative of raae power, restoring  tlie organs to healthful action, dispelling 'depression, and reviving the 'nagging  energies. V-   '  The Italian-government is again'taking up'the work of excavation at Her-  Ciilaneum.  Minard's  Cows.  Liniment  Cures Garget   in  The famine stricken Chinese have  been practicing 'cannibalism in localities where the distress is most acute.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBEiYOUlt'OWN BOSS. Little\" Capital Re--'  quired. Will 'send you for $1.00, 20' Formulas 'and Processes\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd(regulnr price $3.00)\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  any one of which may maVe you a small fortune. Many are especially valuable to Farmers.  They include*Mirror. Making\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdrenovatinc .old  Mirrors\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBrightening old . gilt frames\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdmaking* Imitation Stained Glass. To make'i Good  Paint .for about one cent a pound.* Fireproof  Composition for-Roofs\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHow to Fatten Calves  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHunter's Secret for Catching Game\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSpcret\"  Art Catching Fish\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAlso Chinese Method of  Catching ' Fish\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdArabian Charm - for Training  ilorscs. Many Veterinary Formulas Invaluable  to every-horse and stock owner.*. '.To make  Old A~pple Trees Young, and many '.others\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  KAY & CO.,  1122 Caxtoh Bids., Chicago.'     '  i Drumhead court-martial, the- Russian  government's most terrible weapon for  visiting\"; summary vengeance _upon le-  voliitionists \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd and . otheis was .attacked  in the duma .and. probably will' be  abolished.\" .    -.'    C\ufffd\ufffd'':  -     i :     ,     .'    -  -,\" <   *-..'>,-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdirW'  m*M  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd$\\&\\WmhM$3**m  E^TLAke-  Tried to ,S tea la Crown.  The most barefaced attempt to steal,  the royal crown of England was by  Thomas Blood ln May,' 1671. Blood  disguised himself as a clergyman and  was actually making off with the orb  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnd scepter when tirrested.  uest of trroot.  DIggs\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdYour friend Bright has an  Idea tbat be knows a whole lot  Biggs\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOh, I don't know. He Is always lamenting the fact that he knows  so little.  _DIggs\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWell, that proves my statement\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdChicago. Ne;ffB\ufffd\ufffd  ;S^E;;EL^S;H[N.G'LiE's-  ffb-fti^ffii  FOR THE  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-ROOF-  There's Truest Economy  in choosing :===  Jit! ACT!   AI\/t}\"  ~ptai-^jltA'ivC\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  METALLIC  SHINGLES  They last Indefinitely.  *   -*Are fire, lightning, rust'fcnd-  leak-proof.   . ,  ~ Fit together perfectly by means  of their special patented side  lock, can't possibly work apart.  And   aroYmora quickly, and  easily laid than any other shingle *  on the market ,   .  Galvanized  -'Eastlakes\"  are heavily coated on BOTH tides  with all the galvanizing material  that will adhere to them.  .Painted \"Eastlakes\" are  thoroughly covered on both sides  with reliable paint  V Eastlakes ** have been tested  by years of service In all. climates,  everywhere giving thorough, last*  Ing satisfaction.     '  Write and let us give, you <ur--.  ther information.  -M  WESTERN: CANADA FACTORY, 7W NOT MME AVEN0E., WUiNIPEQ.  HEAD OFFICE   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd TORONTO-  THE  REALLY TASTY TOAST  For Breakfast, or. Lunoheon, Is  Served with butter, cheese, or preserves, It Is-more. Nourishing than,  bread, and more Toothsome than white flour toast,   Unequalled and  indispensable for light, quick lunches in winter weather.  TRISCU1T is ths  wafer   of   the  equally   wholesome  shredded whole  wheat  BISCUIT  All Grocers.     Send for the \" Vital Questions Cook Book,\" prepaid. -  CANADIAN SHREDDED WHEAT CO., LIMITED,  Zi CHURCH STREET, TORONTO. f HE LEADER, MOYIE, BRITISH. COLUMBIA.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-i i im* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  m  A MOTHER'S MESSAGE  TO MOTHERS  WHAT   ZAM-BUK   DID s FOR    HER  CHILD  \"If this statement Is, the means 01  leading some mother to^intrbduce Zam-  liuk to ner home, I shall be very glad.\"  So hays Mrs. K. Watklns, of 26 P&rgut  avenue', Montreal, and continues: \"My  boy, Walter (9), while attending scriool,  contracted some sores. These spread  and became fao bad that some of T.hem  on the heel and ankle made It almost  .impossible for him to walk. I useu  various ointments, but the sores persisted. One day Zam-Buk was recommended, ami we got a supply. lt  seemed to take the soreness out of the  place to which It was applied right  away, and the wounds began ro heal,  ln about a week's time tne sores, which  had defied other treatment, were completely healed and there is now not a  true of sore on his body! I believe  Zam-Buk to be the best balm c\\er  produced.\"  When a mother rubs on to iho delicate skin ol children a balm j>- sulve,  she needs to be as cureiul as it she-  were giving a child un Internal remedy. Zam-Buk is pure\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnee !i< n. ali  animal 'fat and all mineral matter, anu  may be applied with wondertul benefit even to the skin of young babes.  Zam-Buk heals sores, cures eczema,  spring skin eruptions, ulcers, ringworm, Itch, barber's rash, blood poison,  bad leg, salt rheum, abrasions, abscesses, cuts, burns, scalds,- and all skin  injuries and diseases. Of all stores  and druggists at 50 cents, or from Zam-  Buk Co., Toronto, for price, ti hoxes  for Jli.GO. Baseball players and athletes And It best embrocation.  KING EDWARD A BARGAIN.  British Monarchy Maintained by Revenue From Nation's Land.  Prof. Masterman, of Birmingham,  has pointed out that we get our monarch at considerably under cost \"price.  About a hundred years ago, the  Crown'lands, which then formed the  chief source of revenue, were taken  over by the nation, and they now  bring in rather more than it costs the  country to maintain tho monarchy.  As to the curious maxim in \"English  law that \"the King can do no wrong,\"  Prof. Masterman explains that this  means that the law courts can take  no cognizance of what the King does,  but politically every action of the  King must be sanctioned by some person who can do wrong, and who can  be punished for doing wrong. The  King has to act through certain definite channels, and the whole' of English constitutional history lies round  \"the-contest to limit those channels.  The position of the English King  of to-day differs from that of the past  in the substitution of influence for  liuthority.  . They   Drive   Pimples   Away.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA    face  covered with pimples is unsightly.    It  tells   of   internal   irregularities   which  Bhould long since have been corrected.  -The liver and the kidneys are not performing their functions in the healthy  ,way  they   should,\/and   these   pimples  are to let you know that' the blood protests.    Parmelee's -Vegetable  Pills  will  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd drive them all away, and. will leave the  pkin  clear  and  clean.    Try them,  and  * there  will be another  witness  to their  excellence.'  'Announcement was made! at' the' last  monthly meeting of  the British' Astio'-  nomical   association   that   the   next   re  . turn of Halley's comet might be looked  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   fo-; on May 16, 1910. '    \"  Minard's  Liniment Cures  Distempe-  * There weie launched by Scottish  shipbuilders duiing January' and February of \"this year  sixty'-Kwo' vessels of  . 82,854 tons. This is easily the largest  \"output   on   record    for    the   first   two  \"months of tho year.,       Y  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"-  Sai  oriralcoholic  ilia  rsapari  If you think you need a tonic,  ask your doctor. If you think  you~need~something~for~yduf  blood, ask your doctor. I? you  think you would like to try  Ayer's non-alcoholic Sarsapa  rilla, ask your doctor. Con  suit him often. Keep in close  touch with him.  A  We publish our formula*  yers  We banish aloohol  Irom our medlolnss  \" Wo urge yon to  oonsultyour  dot-tor  HISTORY OF A FOREST  MANY TREES START IN THE RACE,  BUT FEW CAN  KEEP PAOE.  ONLY THE FITTEST SURVIVE  Ask your doctor to name some of tho  results of constipation. Hie long list will  begin frith sick-headache, biliousness,  dyspepsia, thin blood, bad skin. Then  ask him if he would recommend your  tiling Ayer's Pills.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMad* br the J. O. Art Ot., Lowell. Kase.-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Yeu have heard of biscuits\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdand  read ofbiscuits\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdand eaten biscuits\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  but you don't know biscuits\ufffd\ufffd\ufffduntil  you dy ftfooney's Perfection Cream  So<fa. They-are everything that  the ideal biscuitj-ahould be. .  The air \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd tight, moisture-proof  package brings them to you fresh,  crfsp,\" inviting.  _ Practically every grocer in Canada  hu MOONEY'S. Your* will get  tfceni if you ask.   In I &^ Ib. pkg*.  ^PERFECTION  &5l^rfBpNtr 'miprtiiitior \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd<:{:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdif- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\"'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd: .;.'.. sfiufr.oiio.; xiNioi-:.' -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>.  Real Struggle For Existence Starts  When the Trees Are Large Enough  for \"Crowns\" to Touch\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThen Begins the Race Upward to the Light  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEventually Only Fastest Growers  Survive.  It is important\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdin fact, essential\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  for anyone who has to do with planting or tending forest trees to under-  etand something \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd of the history and  natural development of a forest.  Take the case of a forest where the  trees are but a few\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdeven two or three  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdyears old. This san sometimes bd  observed in nature where a fire has  burned all the timber on a tract or  where all trees on a tract 'have been,  blown down, and this tract has subsequently been seeded'up and covered  with a thick growth of young trees.  For a few years each* little seedling  has a chance to grow as it will. It  will have many hardships to contend  with \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd dangers, for instance, from  frost, drought or excessive moisture  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdand naturally many of the young  trees will die from such 'causes. When  these are overcome, however, each littlo tree can grow at its best rate for  some time, enjoying as much as it  wants of soil, space and light.  As time goes on, however, and the  little trees increase in* size, there  comes a time when the crowns of the  trees\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe term \"crown\" meaning the  foliage of the trees as a whole\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd b^gin  to touch, each other. .This has a  beneficial effect on the soil, much of  Which has hitherto been more or less  exposed to sun and -wind; now evaporation is hindered, and,' moreover,  the soil is enriched by the leaves and  twigs jvhiSh fall from* the trees and  which, by their decay, fottn new humus.  The effect on the trees themselves  is a remarkable one. Now begins a  struggle for existence. Now that the  crowns of the trees have-touched \"and  even begun to interlace there is obviously no more, room for tliem to  grow in a horizontal direction. The  great need of the plant--that part of  it, at least, above the ground\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdis light,  Aa there is'no chance-for-the tree  to get more light by growing horizontally, so it spends its strength in  growing upward. Eventually the fastest and strongest growers are tlie survivors. As growth in height goes on,  the light is cut off from the lowei  branches, and they become sickly and  finally die. In time the dead  branches are blown oft by the wind.  or knocked 'off through being struck  by otherrbranches,.or are broken ofi  In some other way.   -   -.   -  Meanwhile the fastest-growing trees  arc getting the most light, and so  they have the best chance for development. Having got above the other  trees, they get the chance to spread  out sideways, and so to hinder by  their shade\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfinally, probably, to kill  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtheir slower-growing -companions.  This process will go oa for years and  tens of years, and in the^nd only a  small proportion of .the,, trees which  originally, started in the race will be  alive. As>an actual instance, the re.  suit of work done in the Turtle Moun  tain Forest Reserve, in Manitoba, bj  the Dominion Forestry Branch, may  be eited; there it was found that,  while the average number of poplai  trees per acre when the trees are but  ten years old is four thousand (4,000),  when the trees have reached 80 years  of age, their number hajjf been reduced to three hundred (300). At 40 years  of age, there had been 850 left, and  at 60 years 425 had remained. In another study made by the United States  Forest Service in.\"New' England, the  White * Pine was the tree under investigation. -Where there; were two  thousand two hundred (2,200) white  pine trees, per acre at ten years of  age, at 60 years of age there were but  two hundred and sixty (260) remaining. At 30 years of age the number  had been just abont halved, being  1,090; at 40 yeamrf age BM^had been  left, find at 50 years of age \"400.  In forest tree planting a hint is  taken from nature, and Uie trees are  planted  close  together\ufffd\ufffd\ufffda tree every  -Iour-to- six-feet The-ercwns-of these  meet in a few years\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdsay, six or eighi  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdaud so \"the ground is shaded. The  great majority of the trees die, oi  course; the forester knew.this would  happen, when he planted .the trees.  But the close planting is' much the  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdcheapest way_ of. preserving the moisture in the'soil and further enriching  it by the forming of new humus.  The trees which gounder altogethei  in the', struggle are known as \"suppressed\" trees, while those that towei  above the rest axe known as \"dominant\" trees. Those betwixt \"and between these two extremes, that man-  ago to tive on, thongh they do not  keep pace with the dominant trees  aro known as \"subdominant\" trees.  Finally, however, growth in height  ceases; the chief reason for this ia  that tne tree is no longer able to pump  op water so as to gave a proper supply to their crowns. The tree continues to grow in diameter, however, foi  some years after the main growth in  height ceases; and that, too, at a  pretty rapid rate. Eventually, even  this growth in diameter falk off largely, thongh it continues\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdat a less rate,  of course\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdto,a very old age...  Trees often' live* to a -very .great  age. From a forestry standpoint,  however, it is an error to-allow this.  Very old trees, when cut down, are  frequently found to be mofet or less  rotten at the butt; and the best utilization of the timber, is secured by cutting the tree down before this age is  reached.  F. W. H. Jacombe  Ottawa, Feb. 25, 1907.  *- __^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-  ' Some Definitions.  Argument\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA device generally employed to convince ourselves that we  aje right.  Holiday\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA thing happily conceived  to make tu? appreciate the restfulnesa  of work.  *~ -~. What. Causes Snow. . .  Snow is the-condensed'vapor of the  air. frozen and precipitated to the earth.  When, the air is nearly saturated with  vapor and Is (acted on by a current of  air below the freezing point'.some of  the vapor Is condensed and frozen into  mow. The largest flakes are\" formed  wbe.i) the air abounds.wj\ufffd\ufffdh vapor.  Your Doctor  Can cure your Cough or Cold,  no question about that, but\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  why go to all the trouble and  inconvenience of looking him up, ,  andthenofhavinghisprescription  filled, when you can step into any .  drug store m Canada and obtain  a bottle of SHILOH'S CURB  for a quarter.  Why pay two to five dollars  when a twenty-five ceirt*  bottle of SHILOH will cure you  as quickly ? ' '  Why not do as hundreds ox-   .  thousands - of   Canadians have  done for   the  past  thirty-four  years: let SHILOH be your doctor whenever a Cough or Cold  SHILOH will cure you, and all'  druggists back up this statement  with a positive guarantee.  The next time you have a  Cough or Cold cure It with  SHILOH  LOVE ADDED A GROUP.  IN DOUBT  On a famous riflo range there was an  important teiun match one day, and  tha men were firing in pairs, one for  each team, side by side. The best shot  on the home team Was given to aiming  so I0113 that bets weie made on  whether or not he had, gone to sleep  at the firing point. Presently he with-  tlrew his head from the stock of his  rifle, lowered the ban el, and asked his  opponent in a low tone:  \"Did I flie or did you?\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdForest and  Stream.  BABY'S DOCTOR  \"With a box of Baby's Own Tablets on hand I feel Just as safe as if  I had a doctor in the house.\" This  is the experience of Mrs. John ' Young,  Auburn, Ont Mrs Young adds:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \"I have used the Tablets for teeth-  ing and other troubles.of childhood  and have never known them to ran.  Hundreds of other mothers are Just  as enthusiastic in their praise. Colic,  Indigestion, diarrhoea, worms, constipation ' and other little ills are  speedily cured by this medicine. It  is absolutely- safe\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdalways does good  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdcannot possibly do harm, and you  have the guarantee of a government  analyst that the Tablets contain no  opiate, or poisonous soothing stuff.  Sold by medicine dealers or by mail  at 25 cents a box from The Dr.  Williams Medicine Co., Bmckville.  Ont.       \" -  How Pitcairn  Island Became a Brit-  ish  Possession.  I There recently died in a London  workhouse infirmary, poor and forgotten, a man whose one-time attachment to a young and high-spirited girl  had the result of adding a whole  group of islands to the British Empire.  | John Strachan, the individual in  question, was one of the pioneer Australian    gold-miners;     and     having  I \"made his pile\" he went to Melbourne  I \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdas was' the well-nigh universal  practice amongst   the   \"diggers\"   in  , those days\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdin order to spend it.  There he fell in love with Lily Ambrose, the pretty daughter of a yrell-  to-do innkeeper. He would have married, her forthwith, but her parents  objected, whereupon he and she set  sail for the Southern \"Seas in a forty-  foot cutter, and eventually settled on  what is now known as Marion Island.  Constituted \"Effective Occupation.\"  Here they lived many years and begot sons and daughters, and this was  held to constitute \"effective occupa-  1 tion,\" when, some time afterwards,  the question of the ownership of the  Crozet and adjacent groups (to one of  which Marion Island belongs) was  raised in a semi-acute form between  the Governments of France and Britain.  Pitcairn Island became an appanage of the British Crown after a somewhat similar , fashion. One John  Adams, a mutinous sailor belonging  to_the Bounty man-of-war, ran away  from Tahiti with the wife of a local  chief, and others of his messmate\/*  followed his example. Together they  sailed into the unknown, until they  sighted \"an island mountain that  rose like a great BUgar-loaf out of the  sea,\" and* thereon they settled, burning their ship after having looted her  of all available stores. The mutineers  remained unknown in England unti1  1814, when the island was accidents!  ly rediscovered. The Union Jack wn*  then hoisted, but it was not until 183!  that Pitcairn was formally annexed.  Really Worth Reading.  At certain times ln tbe year, and  particularly a month or two before  the Christmas holidays, - new, books  come into newspaper offices for review  faster tban any one man can possibly  read and reylew^them with justice either to himself or the books. Ho  glances through them hastily, unless  they are by noted authors, gets a  salient point here and there'and \"writes  them - up\" as best he can.-' Then he  forgets all abont them.  \"A friend came to me one day 'and  expressed his gratification at the way  I had written up a new-novel by a  comparatively unknown author,\"-said  the literary editor'of a Chicago paper.  \" \"You expressed my idea of it exactly,* he said. 'It Is one of the remarkable books of the year. The plot Is absolutely unique, the treatment of It is  bold' and original and the\" dialogue  crisp and delightful. It will make a  great hit.' *  \"'Well,' I said, 'If it is as good as  nil that I'll read It'\"*  iTest It as You Will  The buildings for the forthcoming  Gi'eat' Irish International Exhibition  are practically completed.  State -at Ohio. City of Toledo.  Lucas County.  Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he  ls senior partner of the firm of F. J.  Cheney & Co.. doing business ln the city  of Toledo, County and State aforesaid,  and that said Arm will pay the sum of  ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdvery case of Catarrh that cannot ba  eared by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure.  FRANK J.  CHENEY.  Sworn to before me and subscribed In  mv presence thla 6th day of December.  A. O. 1886. A. -W.  GLEA8ON.  (Seal.) Notary  Public.  Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally  and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. St\ufffd\ufffdnd for  testlmonlalt> free. *  F. J  CHENEY   ft   CO.,  Toledo.   O.  Bold  by nil   Druggists.  7 ..-  Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation  THE LATE MR. C. B. RECORD,  ' FOUNDER OF TUB RECORD FOUNDRY.  Reproduced above, is a portrait of the late  Mr. C. B. Record, the founder and original  head of the Record Foundry & Machine  Co., of Moncton, N.B., and Montreal,  P.Q.  '  - Previous to Mr. Record going intotho  manufacture of stoves, those used in  'Canada were almost wholly of American  manufacture. The character of the work  turned out by  the   Record   Foundry &  Lonaon uu\ufffd\ufffd>.\ufffd\ufffd 0\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffda> \ufffd\ufffd\"u '-'awe a ihe- ,, iun.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. -j   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    '.,'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'' .   '  ca*ious living selling cut floweis at the I.Machine Co.,at once gave their stovesa  street    corners,   may     have  their    one            may  day's credit system, which shopkecpeis  ullo.v them, abolished.  Mother\" Graves' Worm Exterminator  does not require the help of any purgative medicine * to complete the cuie.  Gi\/O it  a  tilal.and   be convinced.  R3v. R. J. Campbell, the woll-known  Congregatiunalist minister, made his  first appearance on a Socialist platfoim  at Liverpool  a few  days ago.  Minard's   Liniment  Cure* Colds,  etc.  The Wonderful Carp.  People marvel at the mechanism ot  the human body, with its 248 bones  and sixty arteries. But man ls simple  ln this respect compared with the carp.  That remarkable fish moves no fewer  tban 4,38-j^ bones and muscles every  time it breathes.   It has 4,320 veins  standing, and as a result a very large  business soon grew up, largely owing to  Mr. Record's untiring industry and perseverance against many obstacles.  Although Mr. Record retired from active  business-as far back as. 1879, the solid  basis on which he had established the industry, has resulted in its growth from a  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdsturdy pioneer into one of the largest stove  manufacturing plants on the northern half  of the American continent. With two  large plants, one in Moncton and one in  Montreal, the Record Foundry & Machine  Co. are known from Halifax to Vancouver,  and their \"Calorific\" and \"Admiral\"  furnaces and \" Penn Esther\" ranges  lecognized as the standard of Canadian  excellence.  How the Gems Rank.  -In the gem kingdom the ruby, tbe  diamond, tbe enferald aqd the sapphire constitute -;the big four\" and  take precedence-Hind ln the order named\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdof all other precious stones. , The  pearl ls of course not a stone. It has a  standard.of Its own. The expert test  of tbe gem is Its color, Its degree of  clearness and its perfection of cutting.  Upon;tbe last depends.Its brilliancy.  In the diamond the \"brilliant\" cutting  holds first.place. Tbe other stones aro  cut altogether differently\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthey are  crystallized In different systems\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdin  fact, they differ ln another respect, the  diamonds being a mineral carbon, the  finer ruby (the oriental) a variety.of  corundum, the emerald a variety of  beryl and the sapphire a colored variety of corundum. What Is technically known as the \"step cuf'ls an essential to bring out the fire of the last  three.  *ift-||  -,-.   Is  fH\\  fi I  GREEN TEA  Bs \ufffd\ufffdanaranteed to ho Absolutely Pup\ufffd\ufffd and of  IncomparableQuality.,  Lead    Packets   Only,  ,40c. Mc, and.    60c    Per    Lb.    At    All    Qrccare. .  Plaster of Paris Bananas.  Bunches of bananas that are absolutely unfit for food hang, out in front  of the wholesale produce commission  houses. Some of them nave remained  there until they have grown rusty with  nge.        . , *      ,',    .  \"Couldn't get a' finer looking bunch  than that,\" said one of tho dealers  the other day, \"even If lt is plaster of  parls. We used to put out the real  nrticle for a sign, but tho peddlers who  came down here hud a way of pulling  one or two out of the bunch that happened to be hanging there on the  hook. Tbe small boys, too, had a way  of making a grab for a banana frr two.  By the time the bunch'was on duty  under the awning for_an hour lt was  no longer presentable to the aesthetic  sense. So we began to cultivate the  make believe article, which is not  quite so palatable, but just as good for  advertising. And even at that some  youngster in bis haste will grab plaster of paris fruit and get away with  lt before he-realizes tbat he-has made  off with something bad for his digestion.\"  . Sfnaie*  The Greek word, translated motto  oiealit all tho circle of the arts and sciences\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdeverything that 'was 'taught- by  the muses. Hebrew tradition ascribed'  the art now known as music to Jubal,  3875 B. C.\" Greek legends-made Hv* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  aguls, 1.500 B. O, the fouuiler.of ti\ufffd\ufffd  science  ,_     r-t- .        , .    ,  The merits of Bickle's .Anti-Consumptive Syrup as a sure remedy for coughs  and colds are attested by scores who  know its power in giving almost instant relief when the throat is sore  with coughing and the wholo pulmonary region disordered in consequence.  A bottle of this world-famed Syrup  Will.save doctor's bills and a great deal  of suffering. Price 25 cents, at all  dealers. ,  How the Pulse Varies\":  The human pulse lias rather a wide  range,-but tbe general average may be  put about as follows: At birth, 140; at  '.wo years.! 100; at from' sixteen ,to  nineteen years, 80; at manhood, 75;  old age. GO. '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd There are, however, great  variations consistent with health. Napoleon's pulse is said to have been only  forty-four in the minute. A case is  also related of a healthy man of eighty-  loven whose pulse was seldom over  thirty during the last two years of his  life and sometimes not more tban  twenty-eight. Another man of eighty-  seven years of age enjoyed good health  nnd spirits with a pulse of- twenty  nine, nud there is also on record \"the  curious Instance of a man whoso pulse  in health was never more than forty-  fire, nud. to be consistent in his inconsistency, when ln\ufffd\ufffd had fever his pulse  fell to forty instead of rising, as is  usual.  New Haven.  A Meal of Locusts.  \ufffd\ufffd* the West Indies the negroes eat  freely of the big grub found ln palm  trees. The fat, white morsel, which  they call \"grugru,\" is not cooked or  salted. The aborigines of Australia  live   almost   entirely   on   a   butterfly  -^-The-name ot Quinnipiae-was changed\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdknown-as-the bugong. LThe-flies-ap--  to Mew Haven by order of the Connecticut conrt in 1640.  Frog and Snake Eggs.  The frog deposits its e\ufffd\ufffdgs in shallow  water, where the warmth of the sun  promotes speedy hatching. The common snake often selects a bed of decomposing vegetable matter. The crocodile and the clumsy sea tortoise go  ashore to\" lay their eggs.  Robinson Crusoe.  .The first story ever published serially  was \"Robinson Crusoe.\"   It ran for a  year In the London Post -  .  For DandntfF.  Put 5 cents' worth of flowers of sulphur and a quart of soft water in a  clean glass bottle big enough to admit  of violent shaking. Shake several  times a day for a week, then let stand  until tbe water is clear. Pour lt off,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtrain and bottle. Rub well into the  scalp with tbe tips of the fingers. Tbla  Is a sure cure for dandruff, and it als\ufffd\ufffd  gives the hair a beautiful gtosa,  Original.  \"My wife Is a most original woman,\"  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdsaid Brown. \"Why, when I proposed  to her Instead of saying, This ls so  sudden,' she said, -Well, I think if*  about tima,-\" ...  A Dorse with a  Strained Shoulder\"  is sound as a dollar in 24 hours,  after you rub the sore spot with  Fellows' I^eeming'a Essence.  It gives instant relief is all  cases of Strains, Bruises and  Swellings -7 draws the pain  right out \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd strengthens the  weak back, shoulder or knee.  Whether.you have one horse  or twenty, accidents, are liable  to happen any time. Keep a  bottle of  Fellows'  L-eemir\\gfs  Essence  bandy so you can have it when  needed.  50c. a bottle.   At dealers.  NATIONAL DRUQ A CHEMICAL CO.  LIMITED, MONTREAL.  pear in batches on the rocks, and the  native's smother them with smoke from  fires built below. It is said that a Hottentot, with an appetite made sharp  by the simple life, can devour 300 fat  locusts at a sitting and feel better satisfied than if he had paid $S for a ten  course dinner. The Arabs dry the locusts and pulverize them Into flour  for breadmaking purposes.' The Moors  make a stew of them, and after boiling  ln water for a few minutes they are  eaten with salt, pepper and vinegar.  The locusts found Iff Central Africa  nre enormous, and the native negroes  cut them in two and fry them in fat  nnd find them not only appetizing, but  nourishing. A flight of these big locusts is avmatter of tribal thanksgiving.  Wrestling For Exercise.  Wrestling, tho \"microcosmosof gymnastics.\" is n fine form of bodily exercise for those who enjoy hard muscular  work after-the tedious business hours  of the day aud may .be practiced\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  adapting *it to circumstances\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdby the  mun of a ripe age as well as by the  boy of ten or twelve, especially the  form known in this country as catch-  as-catch-can (which is about identical  to one form of Swiss wrestling). I ex  changed the Greco-Itoman (or German gymnastic) style for this one  about twelve years ago. and I was  then over forty years old,-and still enjoy lt much If my opponent is of my  own weight or a little lighter and if it  is deprived of its potential roughness  by a gentlemanly spirit of the partners.  The Coat of Arms.  The original coat of arms was fie  surcoat, or sleeveless tunic, which the  knights of the middle ages wore over  their armor for the purpose of distinctive marks.  \"Making a Needle.  It takes eleven complete processes to  make a needle. The first* is gauging  the \"wire, and thj last are drilling' the  eyes, finishing the points and papering.  Each needle will pass through the  hands of over a score\" of workmen.  Women are to be appointed5*to ('the  police    force  of    Ghent,  Belgium,    ac- __'  cording to advice's received  from -that\"-  oity- , '- ,      . y    '  , ^       r \ufffd\ufffd  The  never    failing    medicine,   Hollo-   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  way's Corn Cure, removes all kinds of  corns, warts, etc.; even5 the most*difti-  ,  cult to remove cannot   withstand   this  wonderful remedy.        .- -       -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd< -*    < \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'  n     '   Y^-***   ~*  The income tax bill as presented by  the   , French     government. ,is     being  amended  so much in the , lower house . -  that* it is believed it .will'not pass.-    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*  -  PASTOR AND PEOPLE  PRAISE  Precautions of Old Time Doctors.  It was formerly the practice among  physicians to carry a cane having a  hollow head, the top of which \"was  gold, pierced with holes like a pepper  box. Tbe top contained a small  amount of aromatic powder or of  snuff, and on entering the house or  room where a disease supposed to be  infectious prevailed the doctor would  strike his cane on the floor to agitate  \"the\"powder-anil-then-ifoply It-to~b~Is  nose; hence all the old pi hits of physicians represent them with canes to  their noses. _   ,       ... ..  Before you get  Pen-Angle  garments ' tnl  Uie 1 brink  is   takeni  oat.  to*  ^Snakes With Two. Heads.  I have lately been assured by more  than one of my friends that they-have  Been In northern India snakes with two  heads\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1. e., without a tail, but with a  Becond and perfectly formed head ln  the place where the tali ought to be.  They assure me that; there are specimens in northern India museums and  that these freaks of nature are frequently fouud by the natives. The rider Is added that the natives declare  ihat each head lives and .performs active service for six months in the year  in turn. \" The snakes are said to grow  to about three feet In length. I myself have killed a small.snake with  two beads, but these were both at the  same end of the reptile, a very different matter, which is, I believe, a well  known freak and In the same category  with two headed calves.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPioneer.  Pen-  _  Angle _  ^Underwear\",,  Fkeeps you*om\ufffd\ufffd  Fty.aB well aa  J warm.because the \\  'short fibres that ,  1 make some under-  \\wear itch are taken^  out of  Pen-  ^      Angle wooU  Teruft \/far*:  In a yariery of, fabrics, - rtyles and price*,  tn all sizes, for women, men and  children, and guaranteed by your own dealer.  Man and His Dress.  The we'll dressed man wears clothes  \"that no one ever notices; at business,  except tn the very warmest weather,  usually dark. No one ever notices  clean linen, while linen soiled ever so  slightly is very conspicuous. No one  ever notices a hat unless It is of ultra  shape, dlrtjji-'or shabby. No one ever  notices shoes'unless they are loud or  need blacking or are run down at the  heels or shabby. No one ever notices  clean finger nails, while those needing  attention are always conspicuous. The  man should not be lost sight of by the  conspleuousne\/is of his clothes, either  from being overdressed or shabbily  dressed.  STAMMERERS  The ARNOTT METHOD is the  only logical method for the ct*re  of Stammering. It treats the  CAUSE, not, merely the HABIT,  and insures natural speech.  Pamphlet, particulars and references sent on request.  THE A R N OTT INSTITUTE,  Berlin, Ont.,  Can.  unm  A iiight bum ot Ure\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffdre\ufffd\ufffd Is ofUn  worM thmnadMPKnwlone. jRu-nxat  thluz to do !\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd to exclude, th\ufffd\ufffd,tlr. Carer  tht burn with cotton Uttan and-uto-  nte that with tha *Jw\ufffd\ufffdyf ntir rallaf,  J0H<^  Bcmora tba cotton In t> few mlnnbta  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdad nur with naallne, ui&jisjitwtth  talcum powder or flour. OecanonaUf  lay orar thii a cloth wat with liniment.  li canta. three timaa aa much SO cents.  I. B. JOHN80N 4; CO., Boiton, Haas.  }4% -   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-.. -u  College of Cardinals.    \"-        *  The sacred college Is composed of six  cardinal bishops, fifty cardinal prlesta  and fourteen cardinal deacons.  Iron Production. *  The leading technical paper of Ger,  many points out that the United States  Is striding forward bo fast in the pro  ductlon of Iron that now It not only  leads all the other nations Individually,  but comes near to surpassing them all  combined. In 1905 Germany producer.  11,000,000 tons, England 9,500,000, the  others smaller amounts down to 47,onO  tons produced by India, while the totn'  product of the world outside the United States was 31,000,000. Yet in thai  same year we produced 23,000,000 ton\"  more than half tho outside world's to  tal product Figured by. percentages,  the gains of Canada and Japan aro  more remarkable than ours. As com  pared with' 1904, Canada, very nearly-  doubled and so did Japan.  airKElK)  ' Charleston's 8 o'Clo'ck Dinner.  Most of the people ln Washington  dine between 5 and 7 o'clock., This h  called an early dinner, but the Wash  Ington people always were a slow sel.  The usual hour of dining ln Charleston  ls 3 o'clock. It Is an old English cus  torn, we believe. At any rate, we fan  cy It is something of that sort because  we cling to it so tenaciously. It ls n  very Inconvenient hour to most peopl*'  who are engaged ln business, but it is  the habit and very hard to break. We  have the advantage of from two to  four hours' over tho people of Washington, at any rate, because we aro  Just that mucn ahead of them on tho  principal feast of tho day.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCharleston  News and Courier.  ii Marvellous and Triumphant Recortj  7     \ufffd\ufffdJ Victory Ovar Dlseasa. , .},  Kd medicine has ever effsctad as Iain  1 number of wonderful and almost mar*  veUotb cures as Psychine. It has bad one  contiriuous record of victories over diseases of the throat, cheat, lungs and stomach.  Where doctors bave pronounced eases ;  incurable from consumption and. other  wasting diseases Psychine steps in and  rescues numbeiless people even from the  very verge of the grave. Com-hs, Golds.  Catarrh, Bronchltfe, Chill5--, NlghtSweats,  La Grippe, 'Pneumonia, and other like  troubles, all of which are forerunner! of  Consumption, yield quickly to the curative powers of Psycmne. ' -'*  j Mrs. Campbell, one of the many eared,  makes the following statement:'  I cannot refrain from tolling all who softer  ot my remarkable recorery wiih Fsrehlae. In  April, 1903,1 caught a heavy cold whioh settled  onmylanssand gradually led to consumption.  I could not sleep, waa subject to nisht sweats,  my lungs were so diseased, my doctor oonaldered  me lnourable. kar. Mr. JUhaffy. Port Stein  PreabytcrUn Church, recommended Dr. ttocum'e  Psychine to me, when I wu UtIm In Ontario.  After using Psychine for s short time I at* and  slept well, the night sweats tnd cough ceased.  Hontti ago I stopped uktnjr Psychine, as I was  perfectly restored to health and fc-nlar I never  lelt better ln my life.  Psychine has been a godsend to me. Has. Ahd\ufffd\ufffdhwo*\ufffd\ufffdmi.i. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Cottonwood, KlW.T.  PSYCHINE never disappoints.   '  PSYCHINE has no substitute.  There 14 no other medicine \"Just as  good.\"  I   At aU dealers. 50c, and 11.00 per fecttla.  I        ._, II not write to  BR. T. A. 8L0CUH, UmitiiJ).179 Hag tt W\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd TCRORTO  1    Dr. Root's Kidney Pills aro a sore  and permanent cure for Rheumatism  Brlght's Disease, Pain In the Back and  ' all forms of Kidney Trouble.   25c per  box. at all dealers.  $200.00 IN CASH  iKSW!,.. GIVEN AWAY FREE.  Not One Ceat of Your Money Required.     Read Carefully if You Vtah  to Earn Part oi the Above Amount;  1  Can you arrange the lets of mixed letters below, into the names of six well known wild animal, ; if ao you can ihaie in the diuributisn of tha above Priie : Try : It ls no assy task, but  by patlenco and perseverance you can probably find ihreo or four. It means money to you to  do so.  To the person who find, the largest nusiber of names, wa will gire tha sum of One Hundred  Dollars (SlOO.00) in CaOi. To the person who finds the second largest number wa will give tha  sum of rofty Dollars ($30.00) in Cash. To the person who finds the third largest number we  will give the turn of ThirtyOgllars ($30 00) in Cash. To thepenoa who finds the fourth largest <]  number we will give tha sum of Twenty Dollars ($20.00) In Cash. Should two persons send ia '  equally correct answers for the first pure, the fiist two arixes will ba equally divided between  them, each receiving the sum of Seventy-Five Dollars ($75.00) Should three persons send in  equally comet answers the first three prises will be equally divided between thess, each receiving the sum cf Sixty Dollars (fBO. 00). .Should four persons send in equally cerract answers the  whole sum of Two Hnndred Dollars ($200.00)will be equally divided between thein (each receiving Fifty Dollars ($50.00). Ajjd so on in like proportions. In order to help you a little wa  have put a mark under the first letter of each name.  'Mo. 1 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\"  INOl  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Me. a\"  REAB  Me, 9  OFLW  He. 4  IORETY  *Mo.a':  UFLFAOB_  M.0  XOF^  1 WK DO NOT WANT ANY Or YOUR MONEY I  .We mean exactly what we aay.   We do not require you to und ua any of your money    There  Is only one simple condition attached to this Competition (which is rot to send us any of tout  money).; When we receive your reply we will write you. explaining what the simple condition '  it.   It you can find ANY of the name* write to-day.    ENCLOSING STAMP FOR OUR  REPLY. Canadian Medicine Co.,     Montreal  SIMPLE am>  LASTING  results are obtained from the use of  Alabastine.    \"Homes, Healthful and  Beautiful,'* our splendid new book, explains  how .'Alabastine  hardens and improves with age, will not rub off, and is  purs and free from decomposing matter.  Send tan cents for a copy of '\"Homes, Htalthful and- Beautiful,\" with  many dainty, new Ideas for ths decoration of your home.  Alabastine is sold by \"hardware and paint dealers everywhere\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  a 6 pound package for 60 cents.  Ask your dealer (or tint cerd. NEVER SOLD HI BULK.  W-    N.    U.    No.   631  *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *.'M  'y-~**l  <s%\\  \\-*Y<-|  m   WILLOW  PARIS. ONI? THE LEADER, MOYIE, BRITISH COLUMBIA.  Ti MOYIE LBADHB.  Published in the interest of the peopli  ' of Moyie and East Kootenay.  F. J.-SMYTH, Pl-blisiieb.  PATDKHAY   ATS. L (!., 1907.  Xttlt: happiness. Paople get  tired of hearing of your t  The poacert in aid of the fire  hall will be a success, because the  talent is here to make it -t-ueh.  -*fow for a good, strong pull for,  a fire hali. It is up to every property holder in town to do hi5? share.  Jn Nelson a fruit lund boom ia  In full sway and the laud brokers  -are-mid to be growing wealthy.  Sever, were there so many  Eastef\" btJ&nets in evidence in  Moyie. This as unfailing indication of prosperity.      ' i  The Dakota a WrfC-fh  Tije Great Norther liner Dakota,  which went on a rock abont 00  miles from Yokohama last  week,  said to be a total wreck, and it  ill be impossible to save the big  aael.   Her stern rises high in tht  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd and the fcrepart is totally sub-  irged aa far as the second  b lies about a  mile   off shore,  laear eape   Hojimasati    At   the  time of.the   disaster   there   were  I seventy passengers on board including fifty-five saloon   and fifteen second elsss, but- there were  no fatalities- *Tua   recent interview Jim Hill made the statement  that   he   would    build  boats as large as the Dakota' and  Minnesota, that they were too big  to be of practical service.  GREAT    BARGAINS  Two story building and lot, situated  in business center,   Store roomI5i40.  Terms, one-halt down, bait  payments.    Cheaper if   spot   cash  paid.    Clean.title.   Biggest bargain  Will Be Lord Athabasca.  The Montreal Witness says Lord  Strathcoii'4 will retire from the  position of high commissioner for  Canadai arid that Sir Wilfrid  Lanrier is to taKe his place and be  raised to-the-peerage under the  title of Lard Athabasca.  Rediiced Rates for Settlers.  The Canadian Ptveific  Railway  Company announce reduction  fares   from    Canadian    Atlantic  Ports to the   Kootenay District  Chicago   apparently   does pot | for settlers   arriving in   Canada  wfint municipal ownership. May-  hr Dunne Was badly defeated at  the election last Tuesday, falling  18,000-votes behind P.  the'whaler. \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *\"'-  General Booth eays \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfcjjat tainted  m5meycatfWpiiriflE*dtay -Sashing  it In* widow's tears. Soap and  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwater would no doubt be'just -as  feffecUve and save the holder the  fpoqb]e of hunting ijp a weeping  widow every time he suspected  imparity in his cash.  i  -,.'?'    -   '^r^->g*. -*,.--  The Cranbcook Herald has  tared upon the teeth -year -of its {  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdpnbltiation,\" and ifr is nbW  fold batter newspaper than it was  fnitB' first year. The Herald has  boenrgbotl to Cranbrook, and in  return the people of Ccaobrook  iutve been good : to the Herald,  thus making* a strong combination;  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOld Man\".Simpson is certainly to  be congratulated on his enterprise.  Moyie PuHic School.  Keport  lor March.  SENIOR'DIVI3I0S.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGeneral- Proficiency.  P(fth  - Classic-Arthur    Crowe,  3361. .-*:--;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  1. SeuiDr Fourth Class:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdChristina  Biaokburo; 3024; William Attwood, 8328; Martha Keaney, 3130;  Bassell H*wke, 3123;. Mabel Lutner,. 25*0; Edith Hawke, 2309;  Lillian Schulze, 2280; .EDhel Bren-  Kra,I603. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\".\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. ''-....  . Junior Fourth Class:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCecil Larson, 2588;Hwry Crowe, 2153; Al-  yerm Brenton, 1744.  . Third -; Class:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNina Attwood,  2983; Louid - Elmer,. 28% Oscar  Butch, SQZS; Wellington Brentoi.  2320; Frank -Conrad, 2282; Dorothy.  Blackburn,. 2111; Locatta 3-lrown,  IB70;. Annie HavFUas, J*67s-Ven  Brown, 1850: James l'att, 1012.  . J.IUtt,A. aa-rille, IM.. Keaney  IT. Crowt1, -E, lirenton, A, Brenton and W. ilrentou wora^ahqunt  for (periods, rang ing from 3A to GJ  days. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd . - '  . ,, .JUSINOH DIVISION'.  fiacomiOlagBi^Uoy llur-jh, 10-10;  Ttoy MuEwfaBrn,- 1-198; Willi**.  H Co wort,i 1S1U- I'M ward (ilbb'ona,  IWdj \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdToUn Ula-'kbura, HID;- Kva  StiusoD, HOil; Jlelia Orowe, 138U;  Jimmy- Knbcrteon, 13U5;.Teod  Crowe, 1328, Oeorge. l-'ttrogl'a, j  1259; -Tenny Put ton, H37. <.. .  . First Class;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdArthur Blackburn,  I2U3;' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Tammer- -. Edwards-'-1-384;  Eddie \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. I-utner, 1283;.ilary Me-  CSoach* 10D1; Icene: Elmer,- 865;  Clara Whitehead, 8ft5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -..  after April 25th.   The rate from  Montreal to Moyie is $29.75.  Through reduced rates from  Great Britain or the Continent  quoted  agents <  Nel=on.  been a very grcqt mifferi-r  from Ihe dreadful disease, rheumatism,  iber of ve.iis. I have tried  many medicines but never got much  rebel from   sny   of   lliem   until  two  ago, when I bought a. bottle  Cbamberijiii's Pain Bclm. 1 tonne!  before I lud used all of one bottle, but kept o:i app'yin; it nnd booh  lelt Ijke'e diflBrent-womin. Through  my adviSe niiiny of my friends ba^e  tried it and eiti tell you how wonderfully it bas woikc-d.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJlrs. Sarah A.  Cole, 140 S. New -Se., Dover, Del.  Ghamberliiir-'eEainB-ilmiaa liniment.  Tbe re:ief ircna \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd pain which it affords .18 aloue worth nuiny Iii me s it e  It makes rest nnd sleep possible.'  For sale by the Moyie Drug& Station .  .13 Co.- *   -  TUP CANADIAN BANK  COT COMMERCE  '  ESTADLISUES.l  B. E. WA1KEB, President  at-rt  LUSD, General Manager  A. H; IREXASD, Saperlntenaent of \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Paid-up Capital, $10,000,000  Rest, - - - 5,000,000  Total Assets, - 113,000^)00  BANK MONEY ORDERS  -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd--\"- ISSUED AT THE FOLLOWING RATE5 : '   *    ' '  $5 ind under -:.\".     3 cents  Over $5 and note*cceedine$10......    G ceota  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd?'    $10       \ufffd\ufffd'-.->*-\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   fi.:. $30  I0\ufffd\ufffdi>i9- 87  These Orders ai  YukS-jei'   \"  CRAHBRGOR llfiiHCH. *  F.G.MALP1S. WSR  CALGARY BEER,  The Best Bottled Beer made in Canada today.  For QUALITY and PURITY it is UNEXOELLBBr  A. L. McDERMOT  Wholesale Wine and Spirit   Merchant,  SOLE AGENT  B.   C,  George H. Thompson,  Barris-ckh, Soucrron, No  tary Public, &c.  GEANBKOOK.      British Columbia  W. E-' BEATTY  ' Eoibalmer and If oder'.alter,  Pbone 89. GEANBKOOK.  Notice of Sale.  Mr. Wm. Hear? ol OUatlonooga,  Tenn.,luil ibeumatum in his left arm,  '^lio slrangtb seemed to have gone  out of the muscles no that it was u-*e-  Je\ufffd\ufffd (or wor>,\" ho sny*. \"I applied  Chsjunbctliiia't Pnin B *lm and wr^ppeil  M>e arm io flannel at n'[giitlnnd lo my  roliflf I f\ufffd\ufffdi-ud tbat the pain gradually  lull me and Mia eirenRtli returned. In  ,tJiroe H-'OK-i tlia rheumalienj huti dlt-  ' uppiiarqd tvod has nut since retunifld.\"  ^f ir.iuhirtl with rlieuitmliin- try a few  tyjpiio^tipiwof P\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdin Hilm. Y\"u nre  CErt^in to tie pleased witb tlie rt-liet  wtfioli it  ailiirdn.      For  enlrt   by   tbe  Hnicursoii, E-^i  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdbe ISTE im atio s \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  These are only a ievf of the many bargains we have.  Just choose the lot or pieee of property you desire and call  on ns.    Ten chances to one it is on our list.  The time to'buy Real Estate is when the market is  rise.    Moyie is a great camp,    Why not own-a home in it?  FARRELL & SMYTH.  Insurance.    Beat Estate.    Collections.  MOTIB.  PROPERTY  .HOTEL., Mojlt  (ui!' oonilirions cf  Oio Uqiic Rirci-.ttunce  iv ol Jliunli, VH1.  Ai.LKH.^OlUJ,  JASlKrt HOil'BTS.  immllntaoyij  lullowii  i-iluil Unit-, IU '  mm-. Pfl.'V\"*\"  ialuii,Oii!iiwjlViai\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdli\ufffd\ufffdtmto |i  D\ufffd\ufffdWd tlieiSUi'a\ufffd\ufffdbI if^ichtS5*?  OL'R EAStEE GliEETINGS  tafees the form of'an offer to supply  vou villi an uousally handsome Eitst-  er omfit. We have eeuured an .excop-  tionally attractive collection of modish  fabric-  .  TO MAKE INTO   OIjOTHISG   FOB  YOU.  Tlie \"patterna \"are exclusive. You  cannot get them elsewhere.. The carl  ittyou call tlie lyider your, choice.  SuchTgoodfl are loo line to remain long  unordered.  Cleaning,   repairing  presBtng 3one. .'-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  % A.' FOOTE  MOYIIJ, B. C  MINERAL ACT. '*,  '   (FOBJI  F.>   '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-  CBaxiFicATs of Imfboveuektb.  H'i'ioJJ.uii^  ary Ui.  TAKEKOTIClSthi-.tl, Cliurlc-i A. M\ufffd\ufffdnK\ufffd\ufffdv.  '. JI. C. Mo. D. *TS! ttetlon iu Bgtol fcit Tbe BUole-  [\ufffd\ufffdi;Kny HicilnBCompiin5-. Uijiile-1, Non Fer-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdoiiil UibHIly, Ffeii JtlucrtliofliOj Ko, B. CM,  intoadi ililj' day! ItDtn Uie data hcrcat, to  \ufffd\ufffdP!ily tn tho Jllnlng Kcooider (or a Certlflcnta  becummuftuJ twfora't  :ortlBc\ufffd\ufffdIi al Imnroirumon  IJid'-yalKEbruiity.A.I).]  FOB THE WEAK  *e ia no finer tonic than our  BEEF, IRON ANTJ WINE.  Only tha best and purest iBgret!-  ienta are emplopBd in its racking  and its effects'see immediate and  pettaaaen-t. -  -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-   KEEPABOTTI^E  in the liaaie.   5for that   tired or  l-undowG feeling there ia nothinK  hotter.  The Moyie Drug  and Stationery Co,  Cie*ars,  T obaccoa  F*2-*ixit a,33.<i  C3stxxt3t-y  FEOJI  A B. Stewart  & Co,  -E3EOT*\"-EIIj  MANHATTAN,  Comfortable  Rooms and  Best of  Table Board.  Summers & Thompson.  l'ltOPKIIiTORS.  E.3, 5WYPE!  Tobacco,  Ertiite, E'o  PATSEELt BLOCK,  St.   Joseph's  Convent. I  HBLBOtr, B.C.  ionrdmg and'DaJ School conduct-1  hy the Sisters af St. Joseph, NelaoQ5)  C.   ' Commerclftl\" aiid   uuainesii  courses n specialty.   Excellence and1  awift prograw cliaraoteMie anoh department.   Parent! should write for  partioulurs.   One month'oaiuroe tbe  publlo ol  tbe   thorough**ens  ol   the.  Sisters' molhoili of tB\ufffd\ufffdoliln-j.   Terms  comm.uoo January, April aud Sept.  Pupils are admitted during .ertt<.  P. BURNS & CO  JUSIS   RECEIVED    A  SHIPMENT OF  HAMS  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAND\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  BACON  In   all  the   Principal  Cities and   Towns   in  British Columbia.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd wm,t. c..;.;  MOYIE    HOTEL.  P. F. J0BMS1OJV  V  m  I-  i  | Tliirf Hotel is New and well Furnished The ;  Tables are Supplied with the Best the \\  MarKet affords. The Bar is Filled with \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  the i^est Brands of Liquors and Cigars,  HEADQUARTERS FOR COMMERCIAL \\  AND MINING MEK '  X \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd...-.        \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd        \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd        -    .    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd BaiTIsn COL1FMBIA   ;  STOP AT THE -.  COSMOPOLITAN  HOTEL.  WHEN IN  QEANBEOOK  !. n. BMAIX, a\ufffd\ufffdn\ufffd\ufffdc\ufffd\ufffdr-  Gonil rooms, good (able* and bar  and Srot olnns sample rn-ns.  Wm. Jewell\"  Express and General Delivery Business. Livsry and;  Feed Stable. .  Laaye qnlere at  fiivy'nm'\" Slow.  :OYIE BiHwl) Colum'iia.  jj|\ufffd\ufffd;|l|t.,!  DBBABl-SIKR BB03,   Prop!. ' I  Lwifo sain'pie  room  in  conneollon  with bouse for oommorolBl men.  Best  ot aicommodntions. '' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"'  Heodqiisrlcra tor   Oom-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdmerolal-auil -UlningMen.  GREAT STOCK  REDUCTION SALE.  We are overstocked to the extent of $20,000, and  , this surplus must he reduced.        - _  SALE BEGINS TODAY.  WE  WILL  PAY  BAILWAY FAKE  Any person purchasing $15 worth of goods at  sale prices, providing not- more than half is grocer-  ies, will have the pncij of their double fare ticket  refunded. - \" \"    -  Cranbrook Go-Operative Stores  \" LIMITED.  Moyie Beer:  II Ab. wit by the present brewer ia   admittedly   the  If Besl, Beei in East Kootenay. With the Beat Malt and  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdlittle Purest Spring Water it ia unexcelled lor quality.  || Ii.aiat on having Moyie Beer.  Bottled and Draft Beer.  JULIUS MUELLER, Proprietor,  '  \"mOYIE, B.C,  0. F. DBJAULNIER  PHOMPT ^E^IVEEY.  Queens' Ave.-.'-'- MOYTE:  A.  GKENIEB.  _Oran^vQok, B. C.  hWqW MAKER, \\  TARPAULIN,'  BLANKET (rtAKER.  Mado on short no,tiee and at|  \"' \"lowest piicos.  PEE3T PHOTO CO.  CltANDttOOK ASD MOVIB  CANADIAN  PACIFIC  REDUCED  Atlantic  PATES  Seaboard ,  TO\".       \"'__\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd i     '  Kootenay Points  Effective [or Trana-Alia alio\"' Pe.?son-  .. gera arriving on or BUbsoijuont -to  ArKIL 20. I  OOLONIS*   BATES,  - From. I'oidla  Ontario, Queheo, ^afitimo PtovIncBa  St, Paul, phiougc, Bad tlnite'd , Statea  On wiodrtily till April 30tb. '  aeud^yovirlfie'i'-lawlililelUe rtitea_  fli-filo-55\/. Full purtimilata on! UppliiJa\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Uoa tu lopal ajio^ta or wr\\i\ufffd\ufffdi'' \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'    '\"  \" ). Attwooa, Agent, Hoyle-","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. 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Titled \"The Moyie Leader\" from 1899-03-04 to 1911-04-28.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. 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Smyth","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. 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British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. 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