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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":" f   1  \"Don't forget tbat we are  expert in the art of  \"EYE TESTING\"  MOYIE HAS A PAYROLL OF $53,000 A MONTH.  \".\"- -'.-\/ Y4,^''\"<'$]  FOR  Reliable Jewelry aad Silver--  ware  W. H. WILSON, Optician  .CRANBROOK.  All good judges of flour agree  Ogilvie's Flour  has no rival. Notwithstanding the recent advance  in flour we are prepared to quote exceptionally low  prices, having bought before the market advanced  sacks, $2,90  1.50  \ufffd\ufffd        .75  Ogilvie's Hungarian,  98 lb.  49 lb.  24 lb.  We have the eelebrated ROYAL HOUSEHOLD, which  has become a household word. Try it.  CAMPBELL'S  T. D. Edwards, ft Winnipeg  fraudulent stock broker, was sentenced last week to ten years in  the penitentiary.  Rudyard Kipling ia now on the  coast taking in the Bights of Vancouver and Victoria. He will be  in the west about three weeks,  and will leave for England the  last week in October.  MO  E. G. GWYNNE,  I'igars, Tobaccos,   Confectionery,  FRUIT, ETC.  FARRELL BLOCK.  MOYIE.  McGillvery and Erickson, the  crack drill team of Sandon, won  the $500.prize at theSpokane fair.  They broke \" the world's record,  driving the steel through' 53 inches in the time limit of 15 minutes. The two men were banqueted when they reachedtheir.  home town.  The Society Girl.  Conservative Leader  at Cranbrook. ;  WAS ML RECEIVED  The Crancrook Opera House was  Crowded Jo the Doors'to  Hear Him,     '  Beale <&  Chas.   Farrell  intends    doing  somefuther development work on  the Society   Girl   property this  fall and winter.   Ho intends moving up to the mine Monday to begin , operations.   There- are between 800 and 400 tons of ore  ready for shipment, and Mr. Farrell is anxious to get this \ufffd\ufffdi the . .,. .  ,.. 4.     i_.i  xi-       i         \ufffd\ufffd.,-, city as pleasant as possible, and  market while the prices of lead;..\/      *Y      .   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.. \ufffd\ufffdZ, ZiL^-A  ,   .,         \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   -    m\\    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,,_ __   __ it is needless to say they succeed-  R. L. Borden, leader of the  Conservative party of Canada,  was given a rousing reception  at Cranbrook on the night of  October 1st. Every attention  possible was paid to him and his  colleagues, J. G. H. Bergeron and  Cr. Reid, from the time the train  arrived \"in - the - afternoon until  they left .that evening at' II, o'clock. - The band and \"carriages  were at the statiou when the  party- arrived and a flig was  floating from every flagpole in  town. The people of Cranbrook  showed the right spirit ajid cut  out politics for the time;*' Their  sole object was to make the distinguished visitors' stay In their  [Head Office  IBAMBROOK  Fire, Life and Accident Insurance.  Qive Me Yoiir Orders  FOR PRE$ERVING FRUITS.  {prunes, Plums, Pears, Crabapples.  and silver are.good. - There are  good buildings at the mine and a  big ore bin. Several' years', ago  Mr. Farrell shipped over! $10,000:  worth of ore from this property.*;  At that time he had a foi-ce of'  30 miners employed.  The Co-Operative Store.  yOU WILL FIND MY  PRICES RIGHT.  s . -  J. W. FITCH.  P0RT0 RICO LUMBER CO.  KOUOOH AND DRESSED  LUMBER FOR SALE.  Vloyie,  British Columbia-  Those interested in the starting  of \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'-co^)pew6vq\"8^re-r in*Mbyie  say they are' making' satisfactory  progress, and are getting- everything in working order as quickly  as possible. Last Monday an election was held to select officers  for the new organization. They  are:  President\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJ.   L.   Gibbons, Al  Brydle, (tie.)  Vice-President\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEd Barr,  Secretary\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJas. Roberts,  Treasurer\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJohn Blackburn,  Trustees\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJohn   Taylor,    Wm.  Eidd,   R. J. Brimson and   Alex  Cameron.  [ *)xjc9r. T\ufffd\ufffdz.s\ufffd\ufffdzjt-tej-\ufffd\ufffd* a5rjSsj&tjC\ufffd\ufffd.jfa_s\ufffd\ufffdijJtsJfcaCts{\ufffd\ufffdjftt.rfr JiV*\ufffd\ufffd**ir T&t.3&t.3\ufffd\ufffdt.3&t jfe  u  F  li**  I*  MOYIE'S   LEADING   HOTEL.  Hotel Kootenay  The best of accommodations  for tiie Tilling Public.  Large and Commodious Sample Rooms.  Billiard Rooms,  MoTAVISH & CAMERON Proprietor*.  WWW^W WWWW ^*<\ufffd\ufffds zjnj-r *$r7jr-A5rz$-? i^cw'W^^ WWWW'  \\k Few of Our Leaders:  SLATER SHOES, STANFIELD'S  UNDERWEAR, 80th CENTURY  CLOTHING.  |3all and see these hew lines before purchasing elsewhere.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      Ae     HlLLe,  THE   LEADING   LADIES' AND MEN'S   FURNISHER.  Methodist Church Notes.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA-stheRev.-Wmr-Boulioii-has  been invited to conduct special  services at Marysville andWy-  cliffe tomorrow (Sunday) there  wilt be no morning service here  but the evening Ber vice as usual  at 7:30 conducted by Mrs. Boulton.   All invited.  The Free and Easy social will be  held on Friday evening next,  October 11th,  say they  ed '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \"'\"'\"    -5'     \"'-  The  new    opera  house'r was  crowded to the   doors when. A.  Leltch the chairman, called the  meeting., to order.   Short  talks  .were made by, J.,A;  Harvey of  of Cranbrook, and, W. R; Rose,  M. K.A., of Fernie   before the  main speakers of the.evemhg were  introduced.. Mr.' Borden is ^ cool,  deliberate* epeaker._J3Ia iihot.the  persuasive eloquence of the* suave  rhetorician in which the skill of  the actor  is\"5 mingled  with   the  craft of the politican.   He uses  no oratorical tricks, and does not  depend on highsounding periods.  But he knows'what he has to say,  and he puts an array of facts before his hearers with a> clearness  and a   sequence   that leave no  room for   the   equivocator.' He  has too much respect for his audience to decend to mere gallery-  play,' and scorns to force a point  beyond its legitimate significance.  So little of claptrap or padding is  there in  his   discourse, that he  might be addressiug the Judical  committee of the privy Council  instead of agathering- of- citizens.  Mr. Bergeron then closed the  with, a talk that was both  clever and full of wit.  Messrs. Borden and Bergeron  were cheered to the echo an the  close of the meeting.  l&AkAA-Okfl^&A&flhflh-&&^&.5&&flMfc<kfl\ufffd\ufffd&\ufffd\ufffdfe(  iWV-vVVV-V &-9&& 99W 999imWt\\999itW\\  LOCAL ASSAYS  Ixw9t994999fl99^999999vw9e*913fl9iml  Chas. Inderwies, the* new  manager of the brewery, was in  Cranbrook Tuesday.  Thos. Kelly and E. G. Owynne  returned from the Spokane fair  Monday.  A. J. Pilger, for some time  manager of the Moyie brewery,  has gone to Regina.  Miss Craig is visiting In Spokane.  Mrs. McTavish and Miss Maude  Bolen were Cranbrook visitors the  first of the week.  James Cronin passed through  Moyie Wednesday on his way to  his ranch near Cowley.  V. Desaulnier waB in Cranbrook  Tuesday buying furniture for  his new home on Lake street.  - Mrs. A. C. Cook of Ryan is visiting with Mr. and Mrs. R. Campbell this, week.  Colon Campbell, at one time a  resident of Moyie, was on yesterday's eastbound train, enroute to  Cobalt-  Albert Pitman, Henry Salt and  others ' have been making some  very -sobstaetial improvements on  their places. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   -  Chas. A. MaeKay, manager of  the Cambrian, was in Cranbrook  Tuesday.  J. A. Dewar, general manager  ofthe Porto Rico Lumber company, vas oyer from -Nelson this  week looking after his interests  here.  If You Are Doing  Any Building,  Come and see us.   We can supply you.with,  NAILS, in all sizes,  BUILDING PAPER,  IdATHOID ROOFING,  BUILDING COTTON,  TACKS,  WALL PAPER,  WTNDOW GLASS, any size,  HINGES, KNOBS, LOCKS, etc. etc.  MacEachern & Macdonald  That Appeal Case.  The wife and child of Mr. Thos.  Bates arrived in Moyie last Monday from Burnley, Lancashire,  England.  Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Jacoby were  here this week from Phillipsburg,  Mont.,.viaitingVwithMr. and Mrs.  JPKnp\"Conrftd:-.  *-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd--.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.,      ---   - -  -  . .. -->\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- -.,*. *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd->.,..'.>-  ...    - ^  M. A. Beale..of Cranbrook, who  has been in England, all summer,  has set sail for Canada and will  soon be home again.  FOR SALE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdComplete outfit of  household furniture,' for sale by  the undersigned.       P. Higgins.  W. A. Boyd left Tuesday to Inspect his ranch, which is situated  on Tobacco plains, near Eureka,  Mont. Mrs. Bjyd accompanied  him as far as Cranbrook.  It is expected' quite a number  of Moyie people will go to Kings-  gate next Saturday evening to  attend the housewarming at D. J.  Elmer's new hotel.  On the 7th of July P. F. Johnston of the Moyie Hotel was up  before magistrates, E. A. Hill and  J. P. Farrell for allowing a game  of \"Black Jack\" to be played in a  part of the premises of the hotel  to which the guests and the public  have access. After hearing the  evidence pro and con the case was  dismissed for,laak of cjrco'jj ra-  tive evidence.  The prosecution was not  satisfied with ..the decision giyen  and appealed the case to a higher  court and subpoenaed new evid  ence. On Thursday, the -3rd of  Oct, the case came up before his  honor Judge Wilson,in Cranbrook  who'sustained the decision given  by ..-the local, magistrates, the  appelant pay rag-th* costs ~bf the  appeal.     .*-.,.   - 5        \"V  Taking in the Fair.  METAL   MARKET.  New York\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBar silver, 661 eta.  Lead, $175.   Copper, 14\ufffd\ufffd eta.  Lohdos\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLead, &19 15-3.  Coast Mil's Closing.  The -coast millmen have been  greatly discouraged by the result;  of their  travelers' visit   to  the'  northwest now in progress, and as,':  a further result,  two mills have.  already   practically, shut  down*  and others   are-\" running   slack.  The yards are stocked   to their  limit in   most cases and unless  orders come in shortly a general  down is almost certain tb  The millmen are very reticent on conditions, but all admit that the present- situation is  'serious*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      t-~- r- \"\\^..^.;--. .--  shut  follow.  Quite a number of Moyie people are taking in the Spokane fair  this week. Last Monday the  Soo-Spokane ttain stopped- and  picked up the following: Mr. and  Mrs. Kamm'; Mr. and Mrs; Harry  Stewart, Mrs. Klingensraith, Mrs.  Foote, Geo. T. Batchelor, Rube  Scott, Hurley Scott, R, Maoken  and Jas. H. Johnson.  Bought Old Fire Hall.:  Paul Jensen has purchased the  old fire hall and ia having lt moved to his lot on south Tavistock  street, where he will have it fixed  up as a dwelling. The reel, hose,  nozzles and other equipment has  been moved to the new hall.  Three Boys, Two Girls.  Men Laid Off.  Last week the Morning, Snow-  Mr. Keaney accompanied by his  daughter, Mrs. Moran, came up  from Spokane. -  Mrs. Stappard, sister of Mrs.  A. MacFarlane, is here from  Lerdville, Colorado, on a visit.  Mr. O. B- Forrest has rented the  barber shop next door to the  Leader office and has the -place  open for business every evening  S.hool Election Monday.  f^t_^'fvrly!Z1W^^'yn\ufffd\ufffdir'i\ufffd\ufffd*v'W^^WWWW:W:^Wi- WWW^W^v^^Wi^b  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    ' -       '        '\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'     ------    J- *- j  Born\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSunday, September 20,  to Mr. and Mrs. August Segurn a  a daughter.  Born\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSunday, September 20, to  Mr. and Mrs.Willis a son.  Born\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThursday, October, 3rd,  at the Porto Rico mill to Mr. and  Mrs. Wm. Kinrade a daughter.  A son was born to Mr. and Mrs.  J. A. Crawford at the hospital at  Cranbrook on Tuesday, October  1st.  Born\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSunday, September 22, to  Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Gibbons a son.  storm and Hunter  mines, Coeur after 7   o'clock.   His   place   will  d'Alenes, laid  off several miners also be open every Sunday fore  and it is estimated   that in all  about  150 men   are.idle.   The  Snowstorm was notified by the  smelters to curtail shipment and  at present has    about  20   men  working in the mine and 10 ln the  mill.  Times Dull in Butte.  The~duly~qualifled votersof the  Moyio school district are again  reminded of the meeting in the  school house Monday, October 7,  at 8 p. m. for the purpose of electing a trustee in the place of Geo.  H. Edwards.  Several Men Laid off.  The hoist at the Lake Shore  workings broke down last night  and as a result quite a number of  men are laid off. The suspension  of\"work_will probably-be for-oaly-  a few days.  Many'New Buildings.  Senator Borah Acquitted.  Imperial Bank of Canada.  Capital Authorized $10,000,000.  Capital paid up .--\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd4,830,000.  Rest\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1 \" 4,880.000.  Savings bank department.  Interest ailowed'on deposits from date   of  deposits   and  credited, quarterly.  CRANBROOK BRANCH;  J. F, M, PtMKHAM, Manager.  ^h.ytrL^xsvs ste.T^s&z.sSr xSzjgzjSx-ii-si:-^<  *  f  ft  - -,   \ufffd\ufffdw.  ^A., .A.,   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJ1.-  WV, -'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*  yJ\\S  .?\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdt44.*~S~AjJt   _...%.. vi..\ufffd\ufffdL      &  Qulaty. Opraint and Swelling Oared,  \"In November, 1901, I caught  cold and had the quinsy. My  throat was swollen so I could  hardly breathe, I applied Chamberlains Pain Balm and it gave  me relief in a short time. In two  days I was all right,\" says Mrs.  L. Cousin-3, dtterburn, Mich.  Chamberlain's Pain Balm is a liniment and is especially valuable  for sprains an swellings. For sale!  by The Moyie Drug -ft Stationery!  Co. ;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\/  Times are rather dull in Butte  owing to the closing down of the  mines. It in ex pected that 2,000  miners will'be thrown out of employment. The loss of this payroll will be a severe blow to Butte  and in fact the entire northwest.  However, it is not anticipated  that the shut down will be of any  considerable length. ,  WATER STOCK SALE  Ei^lit hundred and ninety  shares of stock in the Moyie  Water company. Will sell  for 50 cents a share, the  price paid, for it seven \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd years  A pply \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd to Nv%. Farre!t  noon.  The Moyie Fire Brigade have  decided to give a danoe in their  hall every Friday evening Ur help  pay for the new building. The  dance last evening Was well attended.  The baby of Sam Wormington  died Tuesday afternoon after a  lingering illness, and the burial  took place Thursday afternoon in  the Moyie cemetery. Mr. Wormington seems to have had more  than his share of bad luck this  summer. His wife died only a  fewmonths ago,  Mr. Robert Crichton, who has  been in tbe employ of R. M. Cal-  der, contractor, has gone to Spokane,  where  he  will   represent  Underwood \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd& Underwood, manufacturers  of stereoscopic  goods.  Mr. Criohton  is an enterprising  young man from Old Scotia, and  will undoubtedly be aucoeaaf ul in  his new undertaking.  United States Senator W. E.  Borah of Idaho has been acquitted  of the charge of conspiring to defraud the government out of valuable Idaho timber lands;  Waiting for Timber.  Work on the Cambrain shaft  has been delayed somewhat for  the lack of suitable timber. The  men are now working on the new  boiler house and doing assessment  work on the west side of the lake.  Twenty-five new buildings have  been erected in Moyie during the  past summer, and most of these  are good and substantial residen-  ences. The list includes the new  Presbyterian church the fire hall.  Higgins Place Sold.  Patrick Higgins this week Bold  his residence in Moyie , to D. A.  Ayres, assayer at the St. Eugene*  Mr. Higgins intends moving with  hiB family to Rossland shortly.  Nat Raiss, the carnival king,  will take his show to Hong Kong*  China, for the exhibition at that.  city in December.  ... -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdH  , y..*.?.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  ago.  Cream  <&<\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  akkg  .Cfcsnir)er!;tta''s r^nW--*: iu-*>*cdy.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNCW foils.   Buy it now.   It n;.->y v-iv.- >--ir  The finest in the world  When ov&ring ask for Dr. Price's fey name, el\ufffd\ufffd  the grocef jnay forget the kind you ate accustomed to^ t.i.-.v.: V, .k.v.\ufffd\ufffdA.*fiC ..-.\ufffd\ufffd  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-. \ufffd\ufffd;->\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  ,i-i  y*r\"  rVr;->-  THE LEADER, MOYIE, BKITISH COLUMBIAN  ii4m*t.  ENSID  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  BY MARY J. HOLHES  Atithor of \"Dora Deane,\" \"The English Orphans,\"  \"Lena Rivers\/' \"The Rector of St. Mark's\/'  \"Tempest and Sunshine\/' Etc  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd j CHAPTER I.  I -    *  i The good people of Devonshire were  'rather given to quarreling\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdsometimes  about the minister's wife, meek, gentle Mrs; Tiverton, whose manner ol  housekeeping, or style of dress, did  not exactly suit them; sometimes  about the minister himself, good, patient Mr. Tivertan, who vainly imagined that if he preached three sermons a week, attended the Wednesday evening prayer-meeting, the  Thursday evening sewing society, officiated at every funeral, visited all  the sick, and gave to every beggar  who called at his door, besides superintending the Sunday school, he was  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd earning his salary of six hundred per  , Sometimes, and that not rarely, the  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdquarrel crept into the choir, and  'then, for one whole Sunday, it was  lall in vain that Mr. Tiverton read  the psalm and hymn, casting troubled  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd glances toward the vacant seats of  'his refractory singers. There was no  'one to respond, unless it were good old  'Mr. Hodges, who pitched so high that  few could follow him; while Mrs. Cap-  1 tain Simpson\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwhose daughter, the  organist, had been snubbed at the  !last choir meeting by Mr. Hodges'  daughter, the alto singer\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdrolled up  her eyes at her next neighbor, or  fanned herself furiously in token of  her disgust.  '   Latterly, however, there had come  up  a  new  cause  of  quarrel,   before  which  every   other  cause  sank  into  Insignificance.    Now, though the village  of  Devonshire  could boast but  one public schoolhouse, said house 'be-  ing  divided   into    two  departments,  the upper and lower divisions,. there  were  in   the   town   several     district  schools; and for the last few years a  committee of three had been annually  appointed to examine and decide upon the merits of the various candidates for teaching, giving to each, if  the decision were favorable,  a little  slip of paper certifying their qualifications   to  teach   a  common   school.  Strange that over such an office so fierce  a feud should have arisen; but when  Mr. Tiverton, Squire Lamb, and Lawyer Whittemore.  in the,full  conviction that they were doing right, refused  a certificate of scholarship  to  Laura Tisdale,  niece  of  Mrs.  Judge  Tisdale, and awarded it to one whose  earnings in  a factory  had  procured  for her a* thorough English education,  the villagers, to iise a vulgar phrase,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwere   at  once  set\": by \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd the; ears,   the  aristocracy   abusing,'- and  the   democracy   upholding  the  dismayed  trio,  who, as the breeze blew harder, quiets  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdly resigned their  office,- and  Devbn-  shire was without a school committee.  In this emergency something must  ibe done, and, as the two belligerent  'parties \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd could'; only * unite on a stranger, it seemed;,%, matter of-special pro-  'vidence that'only two\" month's before,  ,young Dr. Holbrook, a native ol the  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdmodern Athens; had rented the pleas-  lant little office on the village common,  Iformerly occupied by. old* Dr. Carey,  inow lying in the graveyard by the  laide of some whose days he had prolonged, and others whose days he had  'surely shortened.. Besides being hand-  isome, and skillful, and quite as familiar with the poor as tiie rich, the  lyoung doctor was descended from the  . aristocratic line of Boston Holbrooks,  'facts-which  tended te maka  him  a  favorite with both classes; and, gTeat-  ly to his surprise, he found himself  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdunanimously elected to the response  ible office of sole Inspector of Common Schools in Devonshire.    It was  in vain that he remonstrated, saying  he   knew  nothing    whatever   of  the  qualifications requisite for a teacher;  that he could not talk to girls, young  ones especially;.that he should make  a miserable failure,'and so forth. The  people -would  not  listen.   Somebody  must examine the teachers, and that  somebody might as well be Dr. Hol-  brool^atrahybodyf  \"Only be strict with 'em, draw the  reins tight, find out to your satisfaction whether a gal knows her P's and  Q's' before you give her a stifficut.  We've had enough of your'ignoramuses,\" said Colonel Lewis, the democratic potentate to whom Dr. Holbrook was expressing his fears that  he should not give satisfaction. Then,  as a bright idea suggested itself to  the old gentleman, he added*. \"I tell  you what, just cut one or two at  first; that'll give you a name for being particular, which is just the  thing.\"  Accordingly, with no definite idea  as to what was expected of him, except that he was to find out \"whether a girl knew her P's and Q's,\"  and as also to \"cut one or two of  the first candidates,\" Dr. Holbrook  accepted the office, and then await-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdd rather nervously his initiation. Hi  was not easy in the society of ladies,  unless, indeed, the lady 6tood in need  of his professional services, when he  lost sight of her at once, and thought  only of her disease. His patient once  well, however, he- became nervously  shy and embarrassed, retreating a.  \ufffd\ufffdoon as possible from her presence  to the covert of his friendly office,  where, with his boots upon the table  and his' head thrown back in a most  comfortable position, he sat one April  morning, in happy oblivion of ths  bevy of girls who must, of course,  ere long invade his sanctum.  \"Something for you, sir. The lady  will wait for an answer,\" said hia  \"chore boy,\" passing to his master a  little three-cornered note, and nodding  toward .the! street.  Following' the direction indicated,  the doctor saw, drawn up near his  door, an bld-fashi dried one-horse wag-  wi,* such as ,is still occasionally seen  in New England. A- square-boxed,  dark green woeon. drawn by a sorrel  horse, sometimes cElledby the genuine Yankee \"yellow,\" and driven  by a white-haired man, whose silvery  locks, falling -around his. wrinkled,  face,; gave ,to .him a pleasing, patriarchal appearance, which interested  the doctor far more than did the flutr  ter of ;the blue ribbon beside him,  even though the bonnet that ribbon  tied shaded the face of a young-girl.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe note was from her, and, tearing  it open, the doctor read, in the pret-  itiestof ail pretty, girlish handwriting:  \"Dr. Holbrook\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"  Here it was plainly visible that a  ''\"D\" had ,been written as if she would  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdhave said \"Dear\/' Th*^ evidently  -changing her mind, she had vvith her  <\ufffd\ufffdn gar. Moiled out i)ya ''DY' and foo\/L}  lt*\"into an oddly shaped\" \"S,\" \"so tha't  it read simply: v \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \"Dr. Holbrook\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSir: Will you be at  leisure to examine me on Monday  afternoon, at three o'clock?  \"Madeline A. Clyde.  \"P.S.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFor particular reasons ]  hope you can attend to me as early  as Monday. M.A.C.\"  Dr. Holbrook knew very little ol  girls, but he thought this note, with  ite P.S., decidedly girlish. Still ha  made no comment, either verbal or  mental, so flurried was he with knowing that the evil he so much dreaded  had come upon him at Inst. Had it  been left to his choice, he would far  rather have extracted every one of  that maiden's teeth, than to have set  'himself up before her like some horrid ogre, asking what she knew. But  the choice was not his, and\/turning  to the boy, he said, laconically, \"Tell  her to come.\"  Most men would have sought for  a glimpse of the face under the bonnet tied with blue, but Dr. Holbrook  did not care* a picayune whether it  were ugly or fair, though it did strike  him that the voice was singularly  sweet, which, after the boy had; delivered his message, said to the old  man, \"Now, grandpa, we'll go home.  I know you must be tired.\"  Slowly ] Sorrel trotted down the  street, the blue ribbons fluttering in  the wind,; while one little ungloved  hand was seen carefully adjusting  about the old man's shoulders the  ancient.camlet cloak which had, done  duty for many a year, and was needed on this chill April day. The doctor saw all .this, and the impression  left upon his mind was that Candidate No. 1 was probably a niceisb  kind of a girl; and very good to her  grandfather. But what should he ask  her, and how demean himself toward  her? Monday afternoon was frightfully near, he thought, as this was  only Saturday; and then, feeling that  he must be ready, he brought out  from the trunk, where, since his ar-.-  rival in Devonshire, they had been  quietly Jying, books enough to have  frightenea* an older person than poor  little Madeline Clyde\/riding slowly-  home with grandpa, and wishing so  much that she'd had a glimpse of Dr.  Holbrook, so as to know what he was  like, and hoping he would give her  a chance to repeat some of the many  pages of geography and \"Parley's  History,\" which she,knew by heart.  How she would have trembled could  she have seen the formidable volumes  heaped upon his table and waiting for  her. There were French and Latin  grammars, \"Hamilton's Metaphysics,\"  \"Olmatead's Philosophy,\" \"Day's Algebra,\" \"Butler's Analogy,\" and many  others, into which poor Madeline had  never so much as looked. Arranging them in a row, and half wishing  himself, back aeain .to the davs when  he had studied them, the doctor went  out: to visit his patients, of which  there were so many that Madeline  Clyde entirely escaped his mind, nor  did she trouble. him again until - the  dreaded Monday came, and the hands'  of his watch pointed to two. ,  _ \"One hour more,\" he said to himself\/just as the roll of wheels and a  cloud.of dust announced the approach  of something.  Could it be Sorrel and the square-  boxed wagon? Oh, no; far different  from Grandfather Clyde's turnout  were the stylish earriage and the spirited bays dashing down the street,  the colored driver reining them suddenly, not be-fore the office door,' but  just in front of the white cottage in  the same yard, the house where Dr.  Holbrook boarded, and where, if he  ever married in Devonshire, he would  most  likely   bring   his  wife.  \"Guy Remington, the very chap,of  all others whom I'd rather see; and,  as I live, there's Agnes, with Jessie.  Who knew she was in these parts?\"  ^was~the=doctor's=me|ital=exclamationf  jas, running his fingers through his  hair and making a feint of pulling  up the corners of his rather limp collar, he hurried out to the carriage,  from which a dashing-looking lady of  thirty, or thereabouts, was alighting.  \"Why, Agnes, I beg your pardon,  Mrs. Remington, when did you  come?\" he asked, offering his hand to  the lady, who, coquettishly shaking  back from her pretty, dollish face a  profusion of light bi'own curls,; gave  him the tips of her lavender kids,  while she told him she had come to  Aikenside the Saturday before; and  hearing from Guy that the lady with  whom he boarded' was an old friend  of hers, she had driven over to opll,  and brought Jessie with hor. \"Here,  Jessie, Bpeak to tho doctor; lie was  poor dear papa's friend,\" and 1 very  proper sigh escaped Agnes Rom in {-ton's  lips as she pushed a little aurly-  haired girl toward J)r. Holbrook.  Tbo lady of the house had spied  them by this time, and came running  down the walk to meet her rather distinguished visitor, wondering, it may  be, to what she was indebted for this  call from one who. since her marriage with the supposedly wealthy Dr,  Remington; hftd rather cut her form'  er acquaintances. Agnes was delighted to see her, and, as Guy decllni'd,  entering the cottage just then, tha  two friends disappeared within the  door, while the doctor and Guy repaired to the office, the latter sitting  down in the very, choir intended for  Madeline Clyde, This reminded the  doctor, of! his perplexity, and also  brought the comforting, thought that  Guy, who had never failed him yet,  could surely offer some' suggestions.  But he would not speak of her just  how;'. he had other matters to'talk  about, and' so, jamming ftjs penknife  into \"a pine table covered .with; similar  jams, he said: \"Agnes, is seems, has  come to Aikenside, notwithstanding  she declared she never would, when  she found that the whole of the Remington property-belonged to your mother,- and-not your father.\"  \"Oh,\" yes- She got over her pique  as soon as I settled a handsome little  income on Jessie, and, in fact, on  her too, until she is foolish enough  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdto marry again, when it will cease,  of course, as I do not feel it my duty  to support any man's wife, unless it  be my own, or my father's,'' was Guy  Remington's reply, whereupon the  penknife went again into the table,  and this time with so much force  that the point was broken off; but  the doctor did not mind it, and with  the  iaefied   end   oontinnad 4n  roiOfP  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdf&ffgOT irtaTKs, WhITe \"hS coritintied.  \"She'll-,hardly marry again, though  she -may. She's yomng\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnot ove*  twenty-six\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd+m\"  \"Twenty-eight, i! thet family Bible  does not lie; bill she'd, 'newer forgive  me if she knew J told\" you that. So  let it pass that she's twenty-six. She  certainly is riot more than*. three years  your senior, a mere5 nothing, if you  wish to make her Mrs. Holbrook,\"  and Guy's dark eyes scanned curiously  the - doctor's face, as if seeking there  for the secret of his- proud young  stepmother's anxiety to visit plain  Mrs. Conner that afternoon. But the  doctor only laughed 'merrily at the  idea of his being father to Guy, his  college chum and long-^tried \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd friend.,  Agnes Remington \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-reclining languidly in Mrs. Conner\"^ easy-chair,  and overwhelming her YfJormer friend  with 'descriptions of the '.gay parties  she had attended in Boston, and the  fine sights she saw in EnK\ufffd\ufffdpe, whither her gray-haired husband had taken her for a wedding tour\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwould not  have felt particularly ' flattened * could  she have seen that smile, or !heard  how easily, from, talking of her; Dr.  Holbrook turned to another theme, to  Madeline Clyde, expected now almost  every moment. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd There was ,a merry  laugh on Guy'a* part, as he| listened  to the doctor's\/ story, and. !,whcn it  was finished, lie said: \"Why, I see  nothing so veiy distasteful in (examining a pretty .'girl, and puzzling her,  to see her blush. I half wish' I were  in your place. E should enjoy tlie  novelty of the thing.\"  \"Oh, take it, then; take my place,  Guy,\" the doctor exclaimed, eagerly.  \"She does not know me from Adam.  Here are books, all you will need. You.  went to a district .school once a week  when you were staying in the country. You surely I have some idea,,  while I have not the slightest. Willi  you, Guy?\" he persisted more earnestly, as he heard.-wheels in the street,,  and. was sure old Sorrel had comes  again.  Guy Remington .liked- anything savoring of a frolic, but in'bis mind there-  were, certain conscientious scruples:  touching the justice of; the thing, arid1,  so at first he demurred* while the doctor .still insisted, until at last he>  laughingly consented to commence the  examination, provided the doctor  would sit by and occasionally com\ufffd\ufffd  to his aid.  \"You must.< write * the : certificate, of  course,\" he said, 'testifying that she  is qualified to teach.\"   :  \"Yes, certainly, Guy, if she is;  but maybe she. won't be, and*-my-orders are to be strict.\" '  . \"How did she look?\" Guy\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd asked;  arid the doctor replied-. \"Saw nothing,  but her bonnet. Came^in a queer old  go-giggle of a wagon, .such as your,  country . farmers driveY Guess she  won't be likely t-> stir up-the bile of  either of us, particularly as I. am bullet-proof, and you have been (engaged  for years. By the way\/ when- do you  cross the sea again for the fair-.Lucy?  Rumor says this summer.\"  \"Rumor is wrong, as usual,, then,\"  was Guy's reply, a soft light-stealing  into his handsome eyes. Then, after  a moment, he added: \"Miss Ather-  stone's health is far too delicate for  her to incur the risks of a climate  like ours. If she were well.acclimated, I should be glad, far it is terribly  lonely up at Aikenside.\"  \"And do you really think a wife  would make it pleasanter?\" Dr. Holbrook asked, the tone, of his voice indicating a little doubt as to a man's  being happier for having a helpmate  to share his joys and sorrows.  But no such doubts- dwelt in the  mind of Guy Remington. Eminently  fitted for domestic happiness, he looked forward anxiously to the time when  sweet Lucy Atherstone, the fair English girl to whoin he had become engaged when, four years before, he visited Europe, should be strong enough  t\/\\ bear \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd transplanting to American  soil. Twice since his engagement he  had visited\" her, finding her always  lovely, gentle, and yielding. Too  yielding, it sometimes seemed to him,  while occasionally the thought had  flashed. upon him that-she did not  possess a very remarkable depth of  intellect. - But he said to himself, he  did not care; he hated strong-minded  women, and would far rather his wife  should be a little weak than masculine, like his Aunt Margaret, who  sometimes wore \"bloomers, and advo  cated women's rights. .. Yes, he greatly preferred Lucy Atherstone, as she  was, to a.wife like the stately Mai \ufffd\ufffd  garet, orUike Agnes, his pretty step '  mother, who only thought how sh\ufffd\ufffd  could best attract attention; and aa  it had never occurred to him that  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthere^mighube-a^happy^medium^thau  a woman need not be brainless to be  feminine and gentle, he was satisfied  with his choice, as well he might be,  for a fairer, sweeter flower., never  bloomed than Lucy Atherstone, his affianced Bride. Guy loved to think of  Lucy, and as the doctor's remarks  brought her to his mind, he went off  into a reverie concerning,her, becoming so lost in thought that until the doe.  tor's hand was laid upon his shoulder by way of rousing him, he did not  see that what his friend had. desig  nated as a go-giggle was stopping in  front of the office, and that from it a  young girl was alighting.  Naturally very polite to females,  Guy's first impulse was to go to her  assistance, but she did not need it,  as was proven by the light spring with  which she reached the ground. The  .white-haired man was with her again,  but he evidently did not intend to stop,  and a close observer might have detected a shade of sadness and anxiety  upon his face as Madeline colled  cheerily out to him: \"Good-by, grandpa. Don't fear for me; I hope you  will have good luck.\" Then, as he  drove away, she ran a step after him  and said: \"Don't look so sorry, for if  Mr. Remington won't let .you have  the money, there's my pony, Beauty.  I am willing to give him up.\"  ... \"Never, Maddy. It's all.the little  fortin' you've got. I'll let t^e old  place go first\"; and, chirruping to  Sorrel, the old man drove on, while  Madeline walked, withY a beating  heart, to the office door, knocking  timidly.  Glancing    involuntarily    at ; each-  other,    the   young  \"men   exchanged  smiles,   while   the. doctor   whispered  softly:. \"Verdant\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthat's sure:    Won  der if she'd knock at a church.\"'   .  As Guy sat nearest the door, it w\ufffd\ufffdr-  he who held it ajar while Madeline  q&ipe in, her soft brown eyt3 glistening with something like a tear, and  her cheeks burning with excitement  as she took the chair indipated by-  Guy Remington, whp found himself  master of ceremonies.  Poor little Madeline!  (To Be Continued)  The Explanation  \"Why do so many people insist on  having nurses for their children?\"  asked the motherly wpman.  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThjjti is easily explained,\" answered the unpleasant man: \"a nurse en  ables a woman to send, a crying ftaby  out Pf her own hearing and let i| sf,ay  on the sidewalk to annoy the neigl)  bbrs.\"-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWashington Star.  ta.rcK  Saves time, because it  makes ironing easier.  Saves linen, because it  fives a better glosa with.  alf the iron-rabbins*.  Saves bother, because it  needs no cooking,,;'just  cold water. And it  CAN'T stick. Buy it  by name.  JO-  DISCUSSES -\"ALL-REB\"  ROUTE.  Foolish Habit  It is sheer foolishness to sit in a  chair fully dressed, perhaps for  hours, with aching and weary limbs,  consuming tobacco and whiskey long  after the pleasure has gone out of  them, just because \"it isn't wor'.h  -while going to bed when you're sure  to be called out as soon as you're  asleep.\"  Night work is, indeed, the worst  part of a doctor's life, and in hospital it is just as .trying as private  practice. For although the general  practitioner has to dress more fully  and tq go longer, distances, the Rouse  surgeon is often sent for because he  is at hand and bound to come,  although it is 'clear be can do no  good, when\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdunder like circumstarir  ees\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe country doctor would usually be spared.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLondon Hospital.  A Time for Everything\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe time  for Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil is  when croupy symptoms appear in  the children; when rheumatic pains  beset the old; when lumbago\/asthma, coughs, colds, catarrh or earache attack either young or old; when  burns, scalds, abrasions, contusions  or sprains come to any member.. of  the family. In any of these ailments  it will give relief and work a cure.  The Rev. Mr.Freuder of Philadelphia tells this story of himself. > .  . Some time ago; he Vas. invited to  dine at the house of a friend, whose  wife went into her' kitchen to give  some final orders\/Incidentally, she  added;to the servant, \"We are to have,  a   Jewish rabbi for dinner-to-day.\"  For a minute the,maid surveyed her  mistress in grim silence. Then she  spoke with decision. \"All I have to  say is,\" she announced, \"if you have  a Jewish rabbi for dinner, you'll cook  it yourself.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSeptember Lippincott's.  WEAK,  SICKLY  PEOPLE  Will Find New Strength Through the  Use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills  A great many young men and women are suddenly seized with weakness. Their appetite fails them,  they tire on the least exertion, and  become pale and thin. They'do not  feel any specific pain\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdjust weakness.  But that weakness is dangerous, lt  is a sign \"that the blood is -thin and  watery; that it needs building up.  Dr\". Williams\" Pink Pills will restore  lost strength because they actually  make new, rich, blood\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthey will, help  you. I Concerning :\" them Mr. Alfred  Lepage, of St. Jerome; Que., says:  \"For several years I have been employed in a grocery, and up to the  age of seventeen I had always enjoyed the best of health. But suddenly  my strength began to leave.' rrie; I  grew pale, thin and extremely weak.  Our family doctor ordered a complete  rest and advised me.to 'remain out  of doors as much as possible, so-1  went to spend several \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd weeks with  an uncle who lived in the Lauren-  tides. I was in the hope that the  bracing*mountain air would help me,  but it didn't, and I returned home  in a deplorable state. I was subject  to dizziness, indigestion and general  weakness. One jfkty I read of a case  very similar to my own cured  through the Ube of Dr. Williams'  Pink Pills, and I decided to give  them a trial. After taking four boxes  of the pills I felt greatly improved,  so.continued their use for some time  longer^and=they=fully^cured=ime,i=1I  am now able to go about my work  as well as ever I did and have nothing but the greatest praise for Dr.  Williams' Pink Pills.\"  The blojd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdgood blood\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdis the secret of health. If the blood is not  pure the body becomes diseased or  the nerves shattered. Keep the blood  pure and disease cannot exist. Dr.  Williams' Pink Pills make rich, red  blood\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthat is why *hey cure, anaemia, rheumatism, indigestion,. headache, backache, kidney trouble and  the, secret ailments of girlhood and  womanhood. Sold at 50 cents a box  or six boxes for $2.50, by all medicine dealers or by mail from The Dr.  Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville,  Ont. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd        '  She was a splendid servant, but she  didn't, know anything about gas to  cook with, so he went lo the kitchen  with her to explain about the range.  So that she could seo how it was  operated he lit each of the many  burners. While still explaining, a  message called him from the kitchen  and he left her, saying, \"I guess you  will find that it will work all right  now, Martha.\" ''\"      - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  He^didn't see the cook again for  four or five days, then, upon entering  the kitchen, he said, \"Well,-Martha,  how's that range doing?','   ....  To his utter consternation she  replied: Y  \" 'Deed, sir, that's the best stove I  ever'did see. That fire, .what you  kindled for me four days ago is still  a-burning, and it ain't ever lowered  once.\"        .  W,    H:    y.    No.    6\ufffd\ufffd5  Will Benefit the Whole Empire, Says  Hon.  L.  P.  Brodeur.  \"The question of the * 'All-Red  Route',\" said Hon. L. P. Brodeur,  Canadian Minister of Marine and  Fisheries, \"is of the utmost importance to the British Empire. It is a  subject upon which all politicians,  irrespective of party, are unanimous.  I notice that not a \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd single opposition  paper in Canada has adversely criticized Sir Wilfrid Laurier's proposal.\"  \"It is not Canada alone,, but the  whole Empire, that will, benefit by the  All-Eed Route. We are-struggling in  favor of the scheme, but it must not  be thought that we are seeking it  solely in order to benefit ourselves.  Need I reiterate that the projected  improved steamship service will bring  the distant parts of the Empire nearer to the Mother Country.  \"Commercially and strategically,  the 'All-Red Route' has advantages  over the Suez Canal route, and it  must prove of enormous advantage to  the Empire. Ganada is, in a sense,  prepared for the clny when it will bo  an accomplished fact, and when sho  will be linked up more effectively  with Now Zealand and Australia on  the one hand and with the British  Islands on the otlier.  \"We are building a second transcontinental railway\ufffd\ufffd\ufffda Grand Trunk\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  which will have.as its termini ports  probably P:\ufffd\ufffdincc Rupert town on the  west and Halifax on the east. According to the terms of the contract  it must be completed by 1911, and by  then we hope that the inter-Empire  route will have passed beyond the  realm of probability.  \"The question is a big one, and we  in Canada do not expect that a scheme  so far-reaching can be; settled off-hand  in a few weeks. I have heard nothing  that would lead me to think that there  was a. tendency , on the part of the  British Government or a section of the  Ministerialists to disavow the approval given by Lord Elgin at the Conference. I understand that a committee  of-the British Ministers is now _ at  work considering the. project,, leaving  the question of the subsidies to be  considered, at a later date by a conference composed of representatives of  the Home and. various Colonial Governments interested: I cannot for a  moment believe that eitherein* Heriry  Campbell-Bannerman or any member  of the Liberal party has an intention  to oppose ; an Undertaking^ which  would be of ; such great value to the  commercial prosperity of the British  Empire.\"  NEW SHRINE DEDICATED.  A MESSAGE\" FOR  PILE SUFFERERS  From Two Ladies Who Have Been Cured of \ufffd\ufffdxti\ufffd\ufffdemely  Torturing Cases of Piles By  Dr. Chase's Ointment  Memorial to Jesuit Fathers Killed by  Iroquois  Indians.  At Waubaushene, on Sturgeon Bay-  about 1,000 \"pilgririis\"- from various  parts of Canada and the United  States witnessed the dedication of a  shrine to the memory of the Jesuit  fathers, Lallemont and Brebeuf, who  were put to death by the Iroquois Indians in 1649.  The' little chapel was solemnly-  blessed and dedicated under the title  \"St. ' Ignatius of the Martyrs\" by  Archbishop O'Connor, assisted by  Fathers Barcelo of Midland, Kidd of  Penetang, Birrel of Peterboro, Hay?  of Brock,. McRey' of'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd> Breckton, and  the Jesuit fathers in charge at Waubaushene, His Grace walked through  the chapel sprinkling with holy watei  the seats, \"pictures and articles used  in divine service, converting the place  from an ordinary building to a house  of God. After this; all the priests  united, in chanting the litany,of the  saints. Solemn high mass was the  next part of the.service arid then the  sermon of the.occasion by Rev. Fath-  ed Mbyne of Orillia.  ': St. Ignatius of the Martyrs is situated bri what is known as Martyrs'  Hill, called so on account of the belief that the summit of the-hill was  the exact spot on which \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd the Indian  carnage took place. It is. of wood  and is shaped. somewhat after the  fashion of a canopy in that, save for  the sanctuary, it is not enclosed - by  walls, the . roof being supported by  pillars. Y  Standing \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd among the vast assemblage were cripples, lame persons and  halt.. Mariy of them had come a considerable distance to seek a cure for  their deformities in the intercession  of two martyrs who were being honored. . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  No cures, however, are expected for  aJEewYlays__\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd__\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  . Lumber Mav Be Short.  . New Brunswick lumbermen unite in  the opinion that there will be not  more than sixty or seventy-five per  cent, of the lumber cut on the St.  John River this coming winter that  there was last season, and there have  been few, if \"any, men sent to the  woods yet to prepare for the opening  of operations. Wages will not be as  large this year as they were last year.  It is expected that $30 will be paid.  The stringency'in'the money market  is one of the reasons for the present  doubtful outlook of the lumbering  business. Lumbermen find that they  have to pay larger interest on loans.  Then a presidential year in the United States as a rule is a poor year for  lumbering, and-lumbermen on this  side will.wateh with interest the result of the elections. Then, again,  the cut this year has been a heavy  one, nnd the market is felt to be  glutted, and will be more so nt the  end of the present sawing season.  Americans In Ontario.  There are only seven genuine United Statesers in Kingston entitled to  the privileges of citizens of a foreign  country in Canada; In all Ontario  out of 5,000-or more persons of American, birth, not' more than 200 can  register.: The -rest have lost their  rights, as they vote in Canada and  do business here. They must pay  taxes, as they' get Canadian: protection and. advantages. They had not  taken the oath of allegiance, but  through-'Canadian carelessness they  vote on property qualification, some  of them, also voting in United States  elections. ; In Kingston there are 250  Americans, but only seven are registered. It is said that the demands  -\ufffd\ufffdf citizenship will shut out mariners  .'.iving in Canada from service on  United States vessels.  Mrs. Geo. H. Simser, Grant, Russell  county, Ont., writes:    \"Eleven years  ago I began to suffer from piles, and  as   they   caused   keen   distress,   and  became worse,  I doctored for them,  but   with   little   or   no   avail.    They  were  bleeding,   itching  and   protruding,   and  oh!  the  torture  I  suffered  at times can never be described.   It |  was  with   suffering   that  the  bowels  moved,  and,  as  nothing brought  re-'  lief, I could only endure the misery  with  an aching   heart    and without.  hope of cure. |  \"Finally a lady friend told me  about Dr. Chase's Ointment curing  piles, and to my surprise I felt relief  nt once on using this ointment; the  little tumors soon disappeared, the  ulcers healed, nnd the bowels became  regular. This was five years ago, and |  I have never been troubled with this  terrible ailment since, .(-a thousand  thanks  to  Dr.   Chase's  Ointment.\"    j  Mrs.   Capt.   Clinansrnith,   Salvation ;  Army,   Essex,   Ont.,   writes:   \"It    is  with pleasure that I write to you in '  praise of Dr. Chase's Ointment.   Two  years ago I was taken with a severe  attack of protruding piles;- and ...be-,,  came so bad that I had to keep my\"  bed, and could lie in no position except on my stomach. Doctors could  give me no help, and the various  oils and ointments used proved of no  avail..  \"One Saturday night,,when I was  suffering untold .agony, 'my. husband  went to the drug store for a box of  Dr. Chase's Ointment, which I had  heard of as a cure for piles. Although I had almost given up hope,  to the wonder of those around me, \"I  was able to be up and on my feet  by Monday, and have had no difficulty since. As a treatment for all  kinds of sores and burns, Dr. Chase's  Ointment works like magic.\"  To persons who have given up  looking for a cure of piles or hemorrhoids, this letter should bring new  hope. There is, we believe, no more  effective treatment for piles than Dr.  Chase's Ointment, 60 cents a box at  all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates &'  Co., Toronto.  Gunpowder.  There   ls   no   standard   gunpowder.  Every nation seems to have Its own  'orinuln.  Tho Honey Record.  The average amount of honey taken  'rom an English hive is fifty pounds,  louble the American average. The  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdecord \"take\" from any hive was 1,000  pounds from a stock of Cyprians.  Maine's  First Sermon.  The first sermon in Maine was de-  iiyer.ed at Mquhegan Aug., 9, 1007,^..  A Clergyman's Fall,  In a small church in one of the mining towns of Pennsylvania, says the  Philadelphia Lodger, - was a pulpit  both antique and unique; It was  about the size and shape of-a flour  barrel, was elevated from tho floor  about four feet and was fastened\" to  the wall. The ascent wis by narrow,  winding steps.  A minister from a neighboring  town, a man of great vigor.and vehemence, ' preached there one Sunday..  While preaching he bent forward and  shouted out : with great force \"the  words of his text:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \"The righteous shall stand, but the  wicked shall fall.\"  Just as these words escaped from  his lips, the pulpit\" broke from its  fastening, and he fell, out and rolled  over on the floor before his congregation. In an -instant he was on his  feet again' and said:  -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \"Brethren, I am not -hurt, and I  don't mind*-the fall much, but I do  hate the connection.\"  Shock Might Be Fatal  Policeman (holding   down a tramp  on sidewalk)\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNo    damage,    ma'am;  he's, merely having a fit.  Kind Lndy\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGracious!   Shall I get  some water and throw it in his face  Policeman\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDo you    want    to kill  him?\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSeattle   Post-Intelligencer.'  Tested by Time\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIn his justly-celebrated Pills Dr. Parmelee has given  to the world one of the most unique  medicines offered to the public in  late years.. Prepared to meet the  want for a pill which could be taken  without nausea, and that would purge  without pain, it has met all requirements in that, direction, and it is in  general use not only because of these  two qualities, but because it is known  to possess alterative and curative  powers which place it in tlie front  rank of medicines.  If your children are troubled with,  worms,' give  them    Mother    Grave's.  Worm  Exterminator;  safe,  sure  and  effectual.    Try it, and mark the improvement in your child.  \"      A ;   \"You are charged,\" said the' court,  reading the formal complaint, \"with  having wilfully, feloniously and wit'*i  malice aforethought appropriated to  your own use and behoof a certain  article\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdto wit: a vehicle\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdsaid vehicle having been wrongfully and feloniously abstracted by you from the  premises of one John. Doe on or \"  about the fourteenth day of August,  Anno Domini 1907, contrary to the '.  stntute in such cases made and provided, and against the peace and dignity of the people of the State of  Illinois. What say you? Are you  guilty.or not guilty?\"  \"I'm not guilty. Jcdge.\" protested  the prisoner. \"All I done was to  steal a buggy.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdChicago \"Tribune.  Minard's Liniment for sale everywhere.  \"Cheer up; there is a silver lining  to every cloud!''  \"Well, what good is that? I  haven't got an airship.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPick-Me-Up  Minard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia  Cape Colony.has 20,000 acres of  vineyards, ' containing . 60,000,000  vines.  Itch, Mange, Prairie Scratches and  every form of contagious Itch on human or animals cured in 30 minutes  by  Wolford's  Sanitary  Lotion.  A Man Without a Country  As Richard Croker, the ' former  leader of Tammany Hall, has remained \"away from here\" already more  than two years, he may be surprised  to find himself in the position of n  man without a country. J. Lewis  Donovan, clerk of the United States  Circuit Court, points out in\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, \"How  to Become a Naturalized Citizen of  the United States,'!^ just published,  that naturalized citizens who return  to their original country and remain  there for two -years are presumed to  have lost their American citizenship.  All reports from Glencairn would indicate J that Mr. Croker.l is   not' dis  posed to renew his allegiance to King  Edward, particularly after that little  incident at this year's Derby.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNew  York Tribune. *   Y ..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \"THIS IS IT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  St George's  Baking Powder  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe baking, ponder that makes  the best Bread\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe whitest Biscuits  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe lightest Cake and Pastry\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  you ever saw.\"  \"Order a can NOW\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdso you will  be sure to have ST.; GEORGE'S  for your next baking.\"  Write far free copy of our new Cook-Book.  ...   National Drug & Chemical Co. of  Canada limited, Montreal.        ae  A  Pastoral  It was a beautiful night. The  gentle zephyrs of the evening played  musically amid the silky leaves of  the turnip trees and the onion bushes, and wafted from across the distant fields the delicate fragrance of  the growing cabbages and' the far-off  odor of the bean trees.  \"Betsy,\" he cooed, as they sat on  the rickety wooden fence surrounding  Mrs. Filligan's pigsty, \"'Ow bee-a-  utiful is luv! Jes' think ov it,  Betsy.' When we,.are married we'll  have n nig all on our own, all to ourselves.\" ' >  \"Willyum,\" she whispered, resent-'  fully, \"why should we want ter buy  a pig? -I shant want,ter buy a pig  when I've got yew! \\' ''  - Then all was silent once more, except that the , gentle .zephyrs still  played amid the fronds and cabbage  bushes, and the silver-throated frog  still sang from the' roof.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdReynolds'  Newspaper.  A  vl.-\/  [Underwear  Defies the Gold  Stanfield's Underwear it the  most perfect protection against  Canadian winters.  It is just ihe right weight foi  warmth\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdyet not too heavy foi  easy; comfort  Stanfield's  ,,UlisIlI1IlkaWc,,  ia made of Nova Scotia.wool-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  the fine** in the world\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdand it  guaranteed absolutely unshrinkable.  See that your dealer gives yoii what you  want\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSTANFIELD'S Underwear.  THE PUREST, CLEANEST, MOST  NUTRBTBOUS  CEREAL FOOD MADE BS  One biscuit with milk  or cream will give all  the energy needed for a  half day's work or play.  Heat in oven before serving.  TRY BISCUIT FOR BREAKFAST.   TRISCUIT FOR LUNCHEON. THE LEADER. MOYtE, B&ITlSH COLUMBIA.  Q^Amgle  What you spend for underwear buys most real vali  in fit, comfort, service\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  only when each garment    bears    thi  trade mark in red  that   guarantees  you satisfaction  or   youi  A^INSHRWKABfc'EX  & Trade tfcrnr  Made in many fabrics and styles, al  various prices, is-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd form-fitting sizes lot  'ijgte women, men and!  children. See that  the PEN-ANGLE  is there\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdit insures  your money's worth.  A Judge in Skirts  The first woman justice of the  peace to. bo appointed in Lynn, and  tlie second woman to be named to\"  this, position in iissex county, is Miss  Louise .'Fairchild, daughter of Mr.  and Mrs. Henry 0. l''aii child, of 95  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGrant street, Lynn. Miss Fairchild,  who is only 21 years of age, has just  .been appointed a justice oi the peaco  by Governor Guild. She is a native  of Milford, Conn., but moved to  Lynn with her parents when a child.  She was graduated from the English  high school, of Lynn, and enter..]  Boston University law school, from  which she will be - giaduaied ncx*  year. After hei* graduation Mi.ss  Fairchild will practise law in Lynn.  She will have the distinction of being the first woman to enter the  legal profession in that city.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBoston Herald.  OFF TO THE SOUTH frOLE.  No person should go from home  without a bottle of Dr. J. D. Kel-  logg's Dyso- t-jry Cordial in their  possession. ivi change of-water, cooking, climate, etc., frequently brings  on si-miner complaint, and there- is  hotli'iig like being ready with a  sure remedy at hand, which . oftentimes saves great suffering and frequently valuable lives. This Cordial  has gained for itself a -widespread  reputation for affording prompt relief from all summer, complaints.  \"Now, Patsy, if it should come to a  real issue, which* \"\ufffd\ufffdould\" you rather  lose\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdyour money or your- life?\"        t  \"Me loife, begorra. Oi'm savin' me  money for me ould age.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe Bohe  mi an.  Minard's Liniment .Cures Dandruff  W. J. Oliver, the lowest bidder for  the construction of the Panama  Canal, said of a contract that a  friend  had  lost:.i  \"Oh, well, there's a.bright side to  everything. Had you gotten this contract you-might have lost money on  it. All things have their\" bright side  It is like the cnsu of the rejected suitor.  \" 'Oh,   Mabel,'  the -youth \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd moaned,  burying his face in his hands,'aftei  his rejection, 'make it easier for me  to bear, can't, you dear?'   ,  \" 'Yes, Will,' Mabel gently answer-  pd. 'I snore terribly.'\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWashington  Star. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'.'.,  CATARRH CANNOT BE CURED.  with LOCAJ. APPLICATIONS, as ihey  canot reach- the seat of the disease.  Catarrh ls a blood or constitutional disease, and in order to cure tt you must  take Internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh  Cure Is taken Internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces  Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the  best physicians in the country for years  and is a regular prescription. It Is composed of Y the best-tonics known, combined with the best blood purifiers, acting directly on the mucous surfaces.  The perfect combination of the two Ingredients is what produces such wonderful results In curing Catarrh. Bend for  testimonials free. ..  F. J. CHENEY & CO.,   Props.,   Toledo.  O.  Sold by Druggists, price 76c.  Take Hall's FamilyYpills for constipation  \"I wish to see Miss Bluffham,\"  said the- young manYwith blonde  shoes .and tan hair.  \"She is hot' in, ^sir,\",answered the  maid, witli\"'a. glibness that told of  long practice, in the ways - of deceit.  \"Are\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdare 'you sure?\" faltered the  youth, nervously twisting a moustache that only became apparent  when attention was thus directed to  it,  The maid's eyebrows \"elevated  themselves. Y  \"Do you doubt her word, sir?'-' she  asked,  reproachfully.  Blushing deeply over his unworthy  thought, he turned and went away.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCleveland Leader.  Ill-fitting boots and shoes cause  corns. -Holloway's Corn Cure is the  article to use. Get a bottle at once  and cure, your corns.  Y He\" Could Stand Exposure  -   The   Arctic   expedition   was  about  to  start..      , '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-.    - . Y   -  \"I would like to join the party,\"  said the Btranger who had just arrived.  \"Well)\" replied the celebrated explorer,, \"we want only men who can  stand s*evere exposure. Do you think  you could come under that heading?\"  \"Well, I should say so,\" replied  the. stranger. \"I was exposed as a  San Francisco grafter, but it never  fazed me.\" '  And then the explorer took him  along in hopes that he could lose  him up hear the.pole.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdChicago-Daily  News. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  :A Good  Hair-Food  Ayer's Hair Vieor, new improved formula, is a genuine  hair-food. It feeds, nourishes,  builds up, strengthens, invigorates. The hair grows more  rapidly, keeps soft and smooth,  and all dandruff disappears.  Aid nature a little. Give your  hair a good hair-food.;  Deee net change the color ef the hair.  A  yers  I\ufffd\ufffdnnlt with (tdi botU*  Show 1% to your  doetor  Ask bta -about lt,  tSwn do aa h* says  Latest British Expedition Sails Under  a White Flag.  The latest British expedition towards the South Pole left London re-*  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdently when the Nimrod Bailed from  ;he East India Docks. It was an-  lounced that the King and Queen  vould visit the vessel when it calls-'  it Cowes.  The Nimrod is an old sealer, and  is well suited for work among the ice.  The destination of the vessel ia Port  Lyttelton. There the travelers will  bid farewell to civilization for many  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnonths, while the Nimrod, under  Captain England, carries on a series  of scientific investigations along the,  ice fringe.  According to present plans it is intended that threa of the land party  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdhall go due south to the Pole, three  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdlue east, and three along a line between 'the course taken by the two  other parties. Should all go well, tha  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.and party will have reunited* at the  oase by Christmas, 1903, ready for the  arrival of the Nimrod in January.  1909. .  Lieut. Shackleton \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd feels great confidence in tho motor-car which forma  part of the outfit. With this machine  the task of haulage should be greatly  diminished. It has been subjected  to most careful tssts, and the experiments regarding tho freezing of the  petrol have proved encouraging. The  expedition is well ' fitted out with  scientific instruments, which have  been  lent by the  Admiralty.  When the Nimrod went down the  Thames a white flag, -the significance  of which seemed to mystify the seafaring fraternity on tho quay, wavered from the foremast. An interesting  fact is attached to this piece of cloth.  According to shipping. usage, the flag  of the country to which the vessel is  bound will generally bo displayed at  this point, and as the expedition will  visit a veritable \"no man's land\" a  white flag becomes necessary.  It is hoped that in future vessels  making for the land in question will  show the British Hag.  ROYAL HOME LIFE.  Spectators   Witness   Pretty   Scene   at  Buckingham   Palace.  Several, charming glimpses of the  Royal home life were vouchsafed to  a large crowd which gathered at Buckingham Palace the other dav to witness 'the departure of the King and  Queen for Hampstead.  At an upper window'\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-^'* the main  entrance of the Pair \"*=\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Queen  could   be   observed    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -i-'M    by  the children of the Priii*** \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd and Princess of Wales. Her Majesty was  fondling and kissing the children,  who appeared eager to return her caresses, even at the risk of disarranging the pretty toque, with its long  blue feather, wheh Her Majesty had  donned for the occasion.  Unattended even by a nurse, the  elder children shortly afterwards left  in a brougham' for Marlborough  House, while the baby, in a very  homely-looking perambulator, was  taken for an airing in\"' the grounds  of the nalaca.   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  A little before this Prince George  of Wales, a sturdy little fellow, clad  in a sailor huH, made his appparance  at the top of the steps at the side entrance.  Apparently ,in some clandestine  mannpr he hnd orocured a broom  considerably bipger than himself.  With this ho commenced to sweep the  carpet laid at the' entrance steps, evi-  dentlv with a v'^w to prenaring for  the-departure of his grandparents.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIn reply to th-*5 remonstrances of his  attendant the little prince put aside  his broom for a few minutes, but,  again, to the amusement' of the spectators, he soon reappeared with it,  and commenced sweeping away more  diligently than ever.  l-0\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\\.J\ufffd\ufffd    #-i.to._\ufffd\ufffd  ABOARD  A  MAN-OF-WAR.  Brave Irish Lady.  Seven children caught by the tide  while bathing,at low water from the  shore of Sligo Bay were saved by the  courage and presence of mind of Mrs.  McNally.The ladv, who is a native  of Sligo, 8<iw the little ones standing  on a small island a quarter of a mile  away. This -'.is submerged at high  water,- and, as the tide had cut off  \"their escape, their danger was extreme.  Although unable to swim, Mrs. Mc-  Nally dashed: to the rescue. '' The  strength of the incoming tide more  than^once\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthreatened=*=to==overcpme=  her, and her foothold .was \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd the more  uncertain owing to the 's'imy mud.  She reached the island, ..and took the  two smallest children in her arms,  but then the water wag too deep to  allow of her return by \"the way she  came. .   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-. -  ;,'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Fortunately, she recalled how it was  possible to wall' back bv a circuitous  route on a mud bank. With the two  babes in her arms and \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd the others  clinging franticallv to her gown, she  hnd a long and dangerous struggle to  land. But reech the shore she did,  although in a terribly exhausted condition.   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      ..'''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\".   Y. .' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ;\"..'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  You need not hesitate about using this  Dew Hair Vlgorfrora any fear of its changing the color of your hair. Tbe new  Ayer's Hair Vigor prevents prematura  graynesa, but does net chance the col at  of tbe hair even to tbe slightest deneo.  \ufffd\ufffd    \ufffd\ufffdi\ufffd\ufffdi*g-ttaJ.O.AyocO<s,LotrsU.K-\/i>\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'-t'  Magnifying Choir Leadar's Voice.  In the old village of Braybropk in  Northamptonshire is a monster trumpet, 5 feet 6 inches in length, and  having a bell-shaped end 2 ieet .1 inch  in diameter. \"\".'.':  The trumpet is made up of ten  rings, which in turn are made up of  smaller parts. The use of t^his trumpet\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdonly four of the kind are known  to exist at the present day\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwas to  magnify the voice of the leader in  the choir and to summon the people  to the church service.  At the present time neither the choir  nor the service is in need of this extraordinary \"musical instrument,\"  but the vicar of the church lakes care  of the ancient relic and is fond of  showing it to all visitors.  Abstinence In Denmark.  In Denmark there are5 at present  fourteen total abstinence associations  representing a membership .of 122,207  persons: The growth of-temperance  sentiment throughout the'\"land is.  shown in the increase of 21,757 members in these societies during the past  two years. No less than 38,884 members are enrolled in one of the Ordera  alone.  Cuban Custom.\"  In Cuba a bereaved family keeps the  windows of its house shut and darkened for six months. It destroys  the value of the clothing on the dead  und hacks the coffin before burial. This  Is done that there may be nothing in  the grave worth thieving.  Life  Largely Made  Up of Scrubbing5**,  Regulations and  Inspection.  The day's programme aboard a man-  of-war is calculated to make the boy  who wants to nm away to sea sit up  and think twice. It Varies somewhat  according as the ship Is In port or at  sea and under different commands, but  In any case, from f> o'clock In the morning till 7:30 at night..it is a rather  strenuous round of scrubbing!* and  drills. The recruit realizes very soon  that the expression \"shipshape\" means  a good deal.  Saturday morning ls a tremendous  cleaning time, called \"field day,'\" which  ls followed by a half holiday in the  afternoon, and on Sunday morning the  captain himself Inspects his ship from  keel to truck. Tbe marine band is f-ta-  tioned Just below on the hurricane  deck, and tbe bluejackets stand on the  port side of the quarter deck and the  marines on the starboard, all ready  for Inspection.  But life isn't all scrubbings, regulations and Inspections. Ou the larger  ships the governtueut furnishes athletic supplies, ond each man-of-war  has ber champion boxer nud baseball  and football teams. These teams are  managed or supervised, at least, by  officers, and many an ensign or lieutenant who has won his \"N\" at the  Naval academy plays shoulder to shoulder with his bluejackets. Such familiarity would have scandalized old  Commodore Porter beyond words.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSt  Nicholas.  A  PARASITE  CREEPER.  \" I thought I must go on sufferinr  from piles uir.il I died; but Zam-Buk  cured me,\" says Mm. E. Reed, of Steen-  burgrOnt.-J, and adds:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"I wu so weakened  that I could hardly movtt about, and a little  work caused ma neat agony. Tl.en I heard  of this grand balnv and I am thankful to  sar that it has curodme.\"  ,&in-B*ik al\ufffd\ufffdo oiu-m cult. Km. bmbes, stUlbau.  kmu, utun. (haled itacc*. ut. fMt. roufb red \ufffd\ufffdMn  patches, and til stta lsjia .. mi eiirtut. DratgUti  aud iteres at 000. * Tht*. tt Ztm.bvk Co..1tavuie. S  hoMe'.-rllH.  New Zealand's Vegetable Caterpillar le  a Most Peculiar Plant.  The most extraordinary object I have  ever seen,Is the New Zealand vegetable  caterpillar. The- rata Is a parasite  creeper which first destroys Its forest  host and then crushes it to death and,  usurping Its skeleton,'becomes a tree  itself. If the rata seedling is dug up  It is found to be springing not from a  seed, but from the head of a perfectly  formed caterpillar.  It is supposed by some that the  caterpillar,'which ou dissection proves  to be Internally the- exact counterpart  of Its living Insect relative, swallows  the tiny rata seed while Iivinr* and,  burrowing Into the ground, becomes.  Instead of a chrysalis, the germinating  home of the seed, which by some  agency turns Its unfortunate foster  mother Into wood.  Others, however, contend the caterpillar Itself is produced by the rata,  urging in support of their theory that  If springing from a seed the shoot  would grow out of different parts of  the caterpillar instead of Invariably  growing out of the head.  The insect vegetable is yellowish,  about four Inches long and Is fully extended. I have seen them freshly dug  up and others that have been kept for  years, and all had the appearance of a  perfect Insect carved In wood:  The Elevator Eyes. <  One of the greatest hardships suffered by men who run elevators\" in tlie  tall office buildings downtown is tlie  bad effect lt has on their eyes. The  cars are ran at a high rate of speed,  and, as the men have to look straight  ahead of them most of tbe time, their  eyes soon feel tho strain of the constant motion.  \"I've worked In the subway,\" remarked one of these elevator men,  \"and 1 thought that was pretty bad,  but It Isn't a patch to the way my  eyes feel after a day's work In these  cars. If you ever run across an elevator man who seems unusually bad  tempered toward the close of the business day, just look at his eyes and you  will be apt to forgive him. They generally show the strain that has been  pat on them for eight or ten hours.\"  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd v   . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd: \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  As Exemplified.  A learned professor was dining with  the Diltzes and the table was set with  tbe best ware that Mrs. Diltz's china  closet afforded. The guest was par-  -tieularly-lnter-ested^ln-the^display-nnd-  admired it greatly. Picking up the  plate In front of him and noting the  stamp of the manufacturer on the bottom of it, he remarked:  \"I presume you know that china, or  the art of making it, was discovered by  accident?\" \\  Just then there was heard In the  kitchen, where the maid was busily at  work, a loud crash.  \"Yes,\" answered Mr& DUtz, with e  pained smile, \"and most of it ls broken  In the same way.\"  Wigs and Fans. *  \"There Is one thing I want to warn  you about.\" said the wigmaker to the  man who was buying bis first wig,  \"and that Is the electric fan. Whenever you see an electric fan ln motion  give lt a wide berth. If you don't It Is  apt to embarrass you. Electric fans  and wigs are deadly enemies. Nothing outside of an Indian and a tomahawk will lift a wig from the wearer's head quicker than an electric fan  In motion.\"  A Fairy Tale.  Dear little Maudie awoke about 2  o'clock the other morning and asked  mamma to tell her a fairy tale.  \"It's too late, darling,\" mamma replied. \"Daddy will be in shortly, and  he'll tell  us both  one.\"  Our Language.  \"He's the coming man.\"  \"Yes; he's one of the best fellows go-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdng.\"  The great repuhlie shall live as Ions  is the poorest citizen freely expresses  hia personal and political opinion, and.  *io longer.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBaltimore American.  , i >i m^ ii\ufffd\ufffd-^ i\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdftawniiii  iY r \"*~if'   \\S\\\\*tmxam\\  Smelling Salts.  Smelling salts, may be very cheaply  made by adding lavender water to the  common lump ammonia.  A Famous Old Church.  The Pilgrim Congregational church,  near' London, founded in 1G16, is the  oldest of the denomination in the empire, and it was from It that.the London contingent of the men ot tbe 2t\ufffd\ufffdj:  flow(W was recruited.     ^ j  Devils In Petticoats.  The Russians are reported to have  said when they first saw the highland  regiments, \"We thought we had come  to fight with men, but find devils in  petticoats.\"  Lobsters.  Lobsters gain in weight half a pound  a year.. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd __1  A Doubtful  Question -  At a, dinner party a clergyman was  much more bored than edified by a  young lady who told him a long story  of her aunt's narrrow escape from a  railway accident. \"Owing to the congested traffic at tlio corner of Lane,\"  she told him, my aunt just missed the  train at Victoria, which was wrecked  at Croydon.   Wasn't it providential?\"  \"Can't say,\" snapped the cleric, in  a grating voice, \"didn't know.your  aunt.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIllustrated  Bits.  To Those of Sedentary Occupation  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMen who follow sedentary occupations, which deprive them of fresh  air and exercise, are more prone to  disorders of tlie liver and kidneys  than \"those who lead active, -outdoor  lives. The former will find in Pur-  melee's Vegetable Pills a restorative  without question the most efficacious  on the market. They are easily procurable, easily taken, act expeditiously, and they are surprisingly cheap,  considering their excellence.  \"Freddy, you shouldn't laugh out  loud in the school-room,\" exclaimed  the teacher.  \"I didn't mean to do it,\" apologized Freddy. \"I was smiling, when all  of a sudden the smile busted.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Harper's Weekly.  ENGLISH SPAVIN IINIMENT removes  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdII hnrd. noil or ccllouied lumps and blem,  dies, from horses,' blood spa-fin, ' cnrb\ufffd\ufffd\"  iplintB, ringbone, Sweeney, stifles, sprains, Borr  md swollen throat, roughs, etc. Soto $50 b>  ue ot .one buttle Warranted the most won  Wful   Ble-niah   Ourt?   eTir  known.  It was at'a theatre at Manchester.  The King , aged and infirm, was  blessed with two sons. He was pacing up and down the stage with a  wearied, troubled look, exclaiming  aloud:  \"On,which of these my sons shall  I bestow the crown?\"  Immediately came a voice from the  gallery: \"Why not 'arf a crown  apiece, '-guv'nor?\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLondon-Mail   Minard's Liniment Cures Burns, etc.  The bus was going along at a good  speed when an elderly gentleman of  ample proportions' threw his dignity  to the wind by falling into the road  in trying to alight .whilst the vehicle  was in motion. Away__went the bus,  while tlie conductor watched the in-  iured passenger ruefully rubbing his  bruised parts. Presently the wounded  one dashed after the bus with' frantic  speed.  \"Didn't you see me fall, conductor?\" he shouted.  \"Yes, sir. I never seed the like of  it before.\"  \"Then  why  didn't you  stop?\"  \"Stop!\" ejaculated the conductor.  \" 'Ow was I to know you wanted to  get on and do it again?\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPhiladelphia Inquirer.  St. Joseph, Levis, July'14, 1903.  Minard's  Liniment  Co:,  Limited.  Gentlemen\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdI was badly kicked  by my horse last May and after using several preparations oh my-leg  nothing would do. My leg was black  as jet. I was laid up in bed for a  fortnight and could not walk. After  using three bottles of your MINARD'S LINIMENT I was* perfectly  cured, so that I could start on the  road. Y   -  JOS. DUBES,  Commercial Traveller.  =Another-Name=  Wifey\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWhat is the scientific name  for the mosquito, Fred?  Hubby\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdI don't know.  Wifey\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWhy, what did I hear you  calling it the other evening?  Hubby\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEh? That was only my  name for it!\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPick Me Up.  The talk around the table shifted  to fish and fishing, with the usual  consequences .  \"Well, gentlemen,\" said the man  who was fortunate enough to tell the  best story, \"the best day's sport I  ever had was off the coast of southern  California. There were three of us in  the boat, each of us had three lines  out and we simply couldn't pull them  in fast enough.\"     '  \"What kind of fish were biting?\"  asked an indulgent listener.  \"I do not know what the natives  call them,\", said the fisherman, \"but  they were big enough to be ichtKy-  osauruses.\"  \"Maybe they were whales, Frank,\"  suggested an ironical member.  \"Whales!\" exclaimed Frank, with  a look of disdain, \"whales, indeed!  Why, man, we were baiting with  whales!\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLife.  CAflCER SCOURGE.  A Faw Years Will Settle the Question  of Heredity.  \/Lt the sixth meeting of the general  committee of tfye Imperial Cancer Research Fund held in London recently.  Sir Wm. Church said that the vexed  question of heredity in cancer would  be settled in the course of a few years.  By removing tumors surgically mice  had been got to breed, and by successively crossing them with other  mice naturally suffering from cancer,  any hereditary tendency which might  exist was bein*\/ concentrated.  In his review of the work done by  the committee in learning more about  the terrible scourge of the world, Sir  W. Church stated that 1,232 cases of  cancer had been reported from the  London hospitals during the past  year, being more than a quarter of  the total number of deaths from cancer in the metropolitan area.  Knowledge of the existence a*->d fre-.  quency of cancer in aboriginal races  was steadily increasing, showing that  cancer was not infrequently associated with native customs or religious  rites, which acted as sources of chronic irritation and apparently determined the character and position of  the growths most commonly met with.  Referring to family liability to  cancer Sir William Church said that  the probabilities of dying from cancer were to-day one in twelve for all  men above the age >oi 35, and one in  eight for women above 35, as contrasted with one in twenty-one for  men and one in twelve for women  twenty years ago. It wac still impossible, however, to state whether  the approximation of the figures represented a real increase of the disease or not. '  Referring - to alleged cures , for  cancer, he stated that no curative  value could be attached to any of those  which had been tested. Particular  attention had been given to' trypsin,  but it was without any effect on the  growth or development of tumors.  In conclusion, Sir William alluded  to the unremitting attention with  which Dr. Bashford, the general superintendent, and his assistants, Drs.  Murray and Haaland, and Mr. Bow-  en, had carried on the work- of the  research, and the assistance they had  received from Drs. Copeman and  Hake in examining the gastric secretions of mice.  The Prince of Wales in his presidential spee-rfi referred to the handsome gift to the fund of \ufffd\ufffd40,000 from  Mr. Bischoffsheim, a vice-president,  and his wife, in celebration of their  golden wedding. He added that  though many new facts had been  ascertained as to the disease', they did  not as\" yet justify- hopes of a new  treatment.  AUSTRALIA'S FUTURE.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtfovernor-General   of   Commonwealth  Speaks.  Lord Northcote, in opening the Federal Parliament of Australia at Melbourne a few days ago', said:  \"The imperial conference was at-  tewled by delegates from all the self-  governing dominions, who were received with the greatest cordiality by  the King, the Government and the  people. I am confident that the meeting will promote a much better understanding and more 'intimate relations between Great Britain and her  oversea dominions.  \"You will be asked to consider proposals for the amendment of the tariff;'in order to place the national industries on a sound and permanent  basis under equitable conditions. A  bill will be submitted for the encouragement of new industries by^means  of a bounty. The financial relations of  the commonwealth and the states will  be further discussed with the state  premiers.- Great issues are affected,  including federalization. The question  of old age pensions will be considered.  \"A progressive scheme for the improvement of harbor and coastal defences is,\" continued the Governor-  General, \"under consideration. I regret to inform you that the new mail  contract has been canceled. Fresh tenders will be invited to-morrow. Arrangements have also been completed  with the Orient Pacific Company for  an extension of their current contract  for another year.''  After referring to the discontinuance of the San Francisco service the  Governor-General said that the service  via Vancouver was being renewed for  two years subject tb the concurrence  of'Cahada^Md^FijiYProvisiolTlvould\"  be made for. faster vessels and a reduction of the duration of the voyage.  A Horse with a  Strained Shoulder  Is sound aa a dollar in 34 hours  after yoa rub the tore spot with  Fellows' Leeming's Essence.  It give^. instant relief in all  cases of Strains, Bruises and  Swellings \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd draws the pain  right out \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd strengthens the  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'.   weak back, shoulder or knee.  Whether \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd you have, one horse,  or twenty, accidents aro liable  to' happen any time. Keep a  bottle of \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Fellows'  Essence  bandy so you can have it when  needed.  50c. a bottle.   At dealeri.  NATIONAL DRUO A CHEMICAL  CO,  LIMITED, MONTREAL.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ' 7\\ -Running T-legTment.  The Bersaglleri are tue men of  Italy's crack regiment They never  walk, but are trained to run Instead,  ind their appearance at a review always , creates the wildest enthusiasm  among the people, who think that there  Is no other regiment ln the world that  could accomplish such feats. And perhaps they are right  POINTED  PARAGRAPHS.  Every good fanner has three or four  Jobs laid up for u rainy day.  The man who ls old enough to  know better ls usually old enough to  die.  People talk about \"different temperaments,\" when they really mean  different tempers.  Some men aro so mean they like to  take their wives' advice so they can  tell them later how worthless It was.!  There is this Important difference,  between a friend and kin: Every time:  you see the friend you don't have to  explain something.  How \"set\" old people are In their  ways! If an elderly person should be  asked to change his seat at the table,  how It would-rattle him!  People are not devoted to your Interests. You must have noticed it. Therefore you should give your Interests a  lot of Intelligent attention. For If you  don't   do   It   no   one   will. (  i  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1  Eyes Keen For Colors.  A young man who had made.application for the position of olerk In the  silk department of a largo store was  questioned closely as to the exact  shade of a great variety of samples  shown him. \"We do that,\" the superintendent esplaln<,d, \"to make sure  tbat you nre not color blind. A dry  goods store ls the one place where  color blindness Is a positive bar to  efficiency. Very often you hear of  color blind workmen ln all other  branches of business. There are, it appears,* even color blind engineers and  color blind artists, but the big stores  ; absolutely shut out men who have not  a keen eye for all colors.'---N\ufffd\ufffdw York  Pert.   ... ' ,\/YY-  ABSOLUTE PURITY  NATURAL GREEN TEA  Is daily converting   thousands of drinkers of  the  artificially colored teas of Japan.  H?^?.nt,^a?\ufffd\ufffdr'irL7ui;%k5S:- 40\ufffd\ufffd- 80\ufffd\ufffdun* eo\ufffd\ufffdp8r >ound-At an \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-<\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  1   WANTED  THE GIBLETS.  An Incident of Revolutionary Day* In  South Carolina.  There are Innumerable stories of  Revolutionary days In Charleston. The  old ladles used to tell with glee how,  when the British were supposed to be  out of the way, the young fellows  would come home to dance with them.  A. message would go to the nearest  cousins and friend's and a supper be  cooked. It might be only*rice and bacon, bat lt was good to hungry men,  declares Charleston's historian, Mrs.  BavenaL The dance and the feast  would continue until the stars grew  pale.  Often these merrymakings were disturbed by the enemy, but there was always a negro or two on the watch, and  the harsh note of the screetch owl or  the cry of the whippoorwlll would glvs  the alarm, then \"partings in hot  baste,\" a rush for the horses, a sharp  scuffle, a hot pursuit and perhaps a  prisoner taken.  The young men had odd adventures.  One young fellow betrayed himself by  his appetite. He was pursued and had  taken shelter at Mrs. Motte's place, on  South Santee. She rolled him up In a  carpet and, pushing it against the wall,  told him to keep quiet until the enemy  had gone and she could release him.  Unluckily he beard through the .open  window hte hostess giving directions to  the cook about the chickens which  were\" to be dressed for the dragoons'  dinner. He could not bear to be left  out and thrust his head from the carpet chrysalis and cried out, \"Keep the  glblets-for me!\"  The soldiers heard, and be .was at  once caught and carried off to repent  at leisure of his indiscretion.  DOUGHERTY  ISLAND.  Slang   Will   Creep   In.  In a paper contributed to Putnam's  Monthly recently   Herbert   Paul,   an  Englishman,  deplores  the  decadence  of the English language.    He thinks'  he may bo forgiven \"a passing'qualm ?*-  when  he   finds   such   a   phrase   as  \"queering the pitch\" in the leading'   '  columns of a great newspaper which  \"used to be a  fountain  of classical,  English.     He is  not so \"futile an\"d :.  pedantic   as   to   wage   war   against  slang.   But its proper, place is surely  private  conversation.\"  Is it?   We ourselves are moved to   '\\  record  a  passing  qualm.    Only   the  other day, in a household where the   ,  Lares and Penrt^s were shipped direct from the Athens of America, we,  overheard  a conversation between  a  nice   old   lady  and   the   ten-year-old'  danghter of a Radcliffe graduate.   It  bore   somewhat   remotely   upon   the  virtues  of thrift,  and so we * ennnot  be quite sure whether the old lady's  manifest    bewilderment    arose   from  the irrelevance or the phraseology of  the child's   impulsive  avowal,   \"I'mY*  going  to  plant  all   hiy  dough in   a   .  bike.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLife. ,' '  It  Is tha  Most  Remote   and   Desolate  Spot on  Earth.  Which is the loneliest, most desolate  and most inaccessible Island on the  face of the globe? Many people,would  doubtless plump for one of the Crozets,  ln the south Atlantic ocean. And yet  Hog island, the westernmost of the  group, ls by no means an undesirable  place of residence, abounding as it  does in hares and rabbits, penguins,  albatrosses and sea elephants.  Herd Island, In the same seas, is  far more Isolated as well as more barren, but It possesses, as \"does Eog, a  shelter hut for castaways, and It is  visited by whalers occasionally. So,  too, is South Georgia, but it has no  shelter hut, and ns lt ls right out of  the track of shipping any one unlucky  enough to be cast away thereon would  stand a very poor chance of ever getting off alive.  Bouvet Island, In the same seas, I.  visited even more rarely, and on the  last occasion when a ship touched  there five corpses were found frozen  on the beach, grim mementos of some  unrecorded tragedy of the sea. Tos  session island, In Its turn, ls stil  lonelier and more Inhospitable than  Bouvet.  But probably the palm In* this direction must be ascribed to Dougherty  island, on which, so far as is known,  no landing has ever been effected. Il  has only been sighted twice In a century and Is officially described In the  jidmlralty sailing _dlrectlqns^_as \"the  most remote and isolated spot on  earth.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPearsonJIs -W-eeklv.  Stc^rRoofei  Tbe \ufffd\ufffdtronge\ufffd\ufffdt wind that eve? blew can't  rip away a. toot covered with self-locking  \"OSHAWA\"  GALVANIZED  STEEL SHINGLES  Rain  can't  get   through  it   in 25   years  (guaranteed in writing for' that lenjr\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdgood  itury, i  proof i  apeat GOO  Write us and we'll ihow you why it     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd jr\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdgo__  for a century, really)\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnre can t bother such  a roof\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdproof againat all the elements\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe  cbcaneat  roof there it.  costa least to roof right.   Just address  The PEDLAR People *g\ufffd\ufffdjl  Ottaawa Montreal Ottawa Toronto London Wlnnlptg  MR.  LYNCH  PARDONED.  Irishman    Who    Was    Sentanced    to  Death For High Treason:  The King signalized his recent visit  to Ireland by granting a free pardon  to Mr. Arthur Alfred Lynch, who was  convicted of high treason in January,  1903, for having fought on the side  of the Boers in the South African  war, and was released ou license a  vear later. \"His release \"on license\"  tn 1904, also coincided with a visit  of the King to Ireland, where the demonstrations of loyalty deeply impressed His Majesty.  Mr. Lynch's release on license  granted him full personal liberty, but  disqualified him sitting in Parliament  or holding any position of trust. Tho  effect of the free pardon is to absolve the person pardoned from all  punishment due to tho offence, and  from all disqualifications and forfeitures which he may have incurred in  consequence of the conviction.  Born in 1861, at Ballarat, of Irish  parentage, Mr. Lynch started as an  engineer, became a lecturer, and  drifted into journalism. In 1892 he  stood for Galway City as a Pamellite,  but was defeated. On the outbreak of  the war he entered the late Paul .Kroner's service, and organized the 2nd  Irish Brigade, which operated in Natal, under Gen. Botha. After fighting  against , his own countrymen on  many occasions he was elected member for Galway City by 1,247 votes  to 473 cast for Sir Horace Plunkett.  At this time he was in Paris, having left South Africa, and on his returning to take his seat in the House  of Commoms We was arrested for high  treason. After an exciting trial he  was sentenced to death on Jan. 23,  1903. The sentence was immediately  commuted to imprisonment for life,  but Col. Lynch was released in the  foUowipg-^ear..,- .  Ancient   Astronomers.  The   first   astronomical   observatory  was   established   at   Alexandria   300  years B. O.  Growsome Cards.  In Peking, China, so runneth the  tale, a mandarin of wealth and taste  presented a luminary of the stage  with a nack of curds made of human  skin 400 years old and originally cup-^  tured from a pirate of tbe most blood  curdling sort  Lame Horses  certainly do need Kendall's Spavin Care.  Whether it's from* Bruise, Cut, Strain.  Swelling or Spavin. KBNDAU\/8 wi\"  cure Uie lameness\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdquickly\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdcompletely.  CcraJL, SASC, May l6th 'c6.  \"I have used Kendall's 6pavin Cure for  i and find it a sure cure.\"  tAKK B. ADAM3.  Price $i\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd6 tor te.  Accept no substitute. The great  book\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \"Treatise  on the Horse\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  free from dealers  or \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Or. B. J. ISO-ton Ca.  button Fills,  VtrmBaL 0 JJ.  A Surprise la Biscuits  Every box of Mooney'i Perfection  Cream Sodas you open\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdyou will  find a new delight in these dainty  biscuit*.  Whea you want to surprise yourself  give your appetite a treat with  I        Mooney's     <\ufffd\ufffd  I Perfection Cream Sodas  ^MaHBaKBaBBBHBasjBaaD)!55555!5-^--^  WILSON'S  FLY  PADS-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdvery packet  will kill  mora fll\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd th\ufffd\ufffdn  SOO oheots  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtlcky paper   BOLD BY   DRUCCISTS, CROCERS AND CEMERAL STORES  10c. par packet, or S packota for 25c  will last a whole season.  SHOE   BOILS  Are Hard to Cure,  yet  wilt remove them and It-are no  blemish. Does not blister or ro- ___  move tne bair. Cures any puff or swelling. Home can  ,'*s.,I0\ufffd\ufffdlre,,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *2-fl0 C\ufffd\ufffd bottle, delivered. Book 6-0 Free.  ABSOKniNE. JR, tor mankind. S1.00 per  ftottla. Cures Bolls, Urul-ies, Old Sorea, Swelling.  Vamose Veins, Varicocele, HvOrooelo. -lUaysPaia  t. F. TOOXG, PJJF,13rBommmfli SL, Spttasfteld. Kin.  LYMAN SOUS & CO, Montreal. Canadian agesrfs.  Alto furnUhtd bg Martin Bolt A Wynnt Co, Winnipeg,  Tne Hatltnal Dreg A Chtmioal Co, Winnipeg and Calgary,  atd llendtrtom Bnt. Co. Ut\\. Vanooume.  W.   N.   U.   No.   656 THE LEADER, MOYIE, BRITISH COLUMBIA.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"TWI  m  i  w  1J  1  il  1-53  II  i  I'  Published in the interest p{ the people  of Moyie and East Kootenay.  E. J. SMYTH, Publisher.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd t^-. \\~  hatbb or subscbiption.  One Year   \ufffd\ufffd_..|2.00  SATURDAY, OCTOBER, 5, 1907.  There should be no letup until  the Soo-Spokane trains are induced to stop at Moyie.   44t,   t*     fC  Twenty-five new  houses built  in Moyie' this summer, and a cold,  -'baekw&cl'aiiiftmer at that.  Have you observed the letter  -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd0\" is 'very' popular   now?   It  'stands for   October''' oyster and  - overcoat;    \"'      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     -    '    -Y  - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  With or without sufficient.cause  qv 'provocation,   General   Alarm  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' seems to be marching through the  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\" country. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,  1.1  -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd<-  Some men are born to greatness;  .-- -it*   *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- i  1        With luck their lives begin.  And  some' achieve ' distinction,  .\ufffd\ufffd   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd And others just .''butts irt.\"  Aceording to the advance not-  ices, all the girls 'i*n 'George -Ade's  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdplay,   \"The- Country Chairman,\"  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd act well enough to qualify a*S the  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Ladies' Ade society.    ,s-   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"'  Be  Charles Frohman's advice to actresses to '  '   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\"    '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"'\".\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  t \" - - '*  1 T   \"industrious  ambitious-  have \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- '  is not so bad)-' only - the \"behave\",  'part of ib should leafd^the 'list instead of\" trailing hi the rear as an  ^afterthought. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   >    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd---\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'-  The next CorrSferyatiye condid-  ate for the Dominica\" house from  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthis-riding iwiU'either-be W. A.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMacdonald of Nelson -\"or -A, - E.  ^Watts of Wattaburg. Either one  'can beat Galliher- or*-Hall to a  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd otanidstill\/'   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"  Have you received*notice from  the- assessor -to the effect 'that  '\"your-school tares' are--' now due  >and should' be - paid? ' If you  \"have not already'done bo don't  ' delay the matter, but pay at'once.  < It is imperative -that the trustees'  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdreceive-soule moae*-* soon 'to pay  off bills due since June 80th.'  i' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   '  when dealers charge such high  prices, f'l believe an explanation  of present conditions; is to be  found in tfye Jaw of supply and demand,-\" sajid fye. .\"The average  American wants nothing but  porterhouse steaks or choice iqeat.  Out of 500 pounds net from a beef  they bijy 100 pounds of the best  portions and leave the rest. ..The  butcher has to sell the rest for  \/ -    ...     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-  what he cai) get. Ha must charge  high prices for the desirable parts;  Cheap grades are not in demand  because housewives have deteriorated as cooks. . The cheap cuts are  as nutritious as the best but the  women do not know how to make  them * palatable. The people  themselves cause the high prices.\"  A. Certain Cure for  Croup\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdUsed   for Ten  Years without a Failure.  Mr. W. C. Bott, a Star City,  Ind., hardware merchant, is en-  thusiatic in his praise of Chatn-  derlain's Cough Remedy.* His  children have all been subject to  croup and he has used this remedy  the past ten years, and though  they much feared the - croup, his  wife and he always felt safe upon  retiring when a battle of Chamberlain's Cough Ramedy was in  the r'hdusa. *-Hts- oldest child  was subject to severe attacks of  croup, 'but this remedy\" never  failed to effect a speedy cure.  He has recotnmented it to- friends  and neighbors-and 'all -who have  ip&k it'--say it is unequaled for  for-croup and whooping cough.  Tor sale'by The JVJoyib Driig <k  Stationery Co.' '    .1       .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-.-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Did If  y      J  Eyer '  .Qjgur  to Von?  j '  Y, f '  The Pinkerton Detective Agency's- expense  'account'* for- the  special train that' brought \"Moyer  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHaywoodand PetibOne to-Boise,*  -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdincludes' among * other items: - 1  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdloaf Tye bread* 1*5 -cents? 1 :loaf  5 whiter bread,' \ufffd\ufffd10l cents*'' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd :8 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd dozen  Budweiser,$9; February 20,11906,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1 dozen-bottles of-whiskey; $22.50.  ]       .    .   . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   I    'I   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd r-T*-#i         ,     .   .   -..,  Last memorial day Vice-President Fairbanks' gfeve h dinner' at  -'his home to*President Roosvelt, at  which cockfciils\" and wines - were'  %ervedi' Last Weak \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPah baits' was  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnomiaated--' as * -a delegate -'from  Indiana to the Methodist\" cdnfeiv  -ence to be held it Balfcimore-, but  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwhen> the - ballots ; were counted  his namew\ufffd\ufffdt3 not among the* elec-  'ted. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd The cocktails'did' the work.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     '       ',' !|      ..-rr-ir\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIff r     , .-     i      !v  Sir C. Hibbert' Tupper rightly  gauged the feeling'of'the Borden  gneetirig-in \ufffd\ufffdhe: .Dominion Theatre  at Vancouver on Tuesday night  when-he said, 'with \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd a force aud  emp'aasi* that bf ought but' arer  spiuding chorus of acclaTim. '''The  man'rings''truel\"' Therein 'was  indicated the source of Mr. Borden's' strength.'* His' ability- to  fcarry the campaign! on .which he  has so'vigorously-entered,-' lies in  the sterling- straightforwardness  bf hi-i character, arid iii- the -hori-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdasty of his c*vuse.  \ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  what a heart breaking  'fetunt'this paying of rent  ;is?:.N:6*tliittg:left but a  'bunch' 'o!f receipts at the  ' end' 'of the yeah' \"'  \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'* *  not  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 9 -i:  Boy a l$t  and Build?  ar'    .  -      i  Patrick Cuiahy of the Cudahy  Packing * company * declares ' -the  American people \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' are living too  fast. 'They want 'the' best of  pveryth'.ig    and' are'   extrprised  Kit' . 4 . 4 ..    1 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      , I  Here are Soi^e  Bargains\" c-'-A'*,J  $750\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGood lot and house* on  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\"'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      business), street.   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   >  $200^Sfiverarresidential \"lots  at this figure,  $125\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-Also seveya! reBidentia  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- i ''    lots at:thi& figure. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   ..  i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-  $800 -For 320 acres of land'  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd!?*        one and  a  half miles  from Moyie,    100 acres  level. 'Running stream.  Trhee room house.  $1,250^5? acres\"6f !Ia'fid near  Moyie. ..    .,  1800\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPour room house, with  i'.  --.two    rooms-<-upstair1?.  'Beautiful residence.  $2,500^Large hou\ufffd\ufffdf-\ufffd\ufffd suitable  :'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'     for keeping boarders or  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdrootners. ,' Three - lots.  .-Will accept$2,000 cash.  Moyie is a growing'town  ind a permanent''towii.  It has a mbaithly payroll  ia'mounti'ng to $52,000.  F. J. SMYTH  -'' ' A\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd&NT ;    -   \" '  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   :<,< MOYI]S B. C.  How to Cure   a  Cold.  The question of how to cure a  cold without unnecessary loss of  time is one -in which' we are all  more or les3 interested, for the  quicker a cold is gotten rid of the  less the danger of pneumonia and  o ther serious diseases. Mr. B. W,  L. Hall, of Waverly, Va., has used  Chamberlain's Cough Remedy for  years and says: \"I firmly believe  Chamberlain's ough Remedy to  be absolutely the best preparation  on the majket f or colds, I have  recommended it to my friends  and they all agree with me.\"  For sale by The Moyie Drug &  Stationery Co.  LOO. F.  Wilder Lodge No, 44.  Meets Tuesday evenings in McGregor  hall on Victoria street. Sojourning  Odd Fellows cordially invited.  W. HyLaird    Y    *   F. J. Smyth,  L,  Noble Grand. Secr'y.  Dissolution  Notice.  Notice is hereby given that the  partnership heretofore existing  between C. J. Armstrong and B. J.  Riley has been this day dissolved  by mutual consent. * The business  of the firm will hereafter be carried o'n by B.J. Riley, .who is  authorized to collect all money  and to pay all bills.  C. J. Armstrong,  B. J. Riley,  Moyie, August, 21,1907.'  NOTICE.  Notice is hereby given tbat sixty days after  date, tbe Conioliduted Mining & Smelting Co.  of Canada, Limited, Intends to apply to tbe  Chief Commlssionei of Lands and works for a  special timber licence to cut aud carry away  imber from the following dlscribed land in  South East Kootenay district, commencing at a  post planted at tbe S. B. Corner of Lot 8645  (Half Moon Mineral Claim) about half a mile  East from tho .town of Moyie, thence North  eighty chains, thence 'East eighty chains,  thence South eighty chains, thence West eighty  chains to point of commencement. *  THE  CON.   MINING   &   SMELTING CO. OF  CANADA, Ltd.,  W.P.WHITE, Agent.  . Moyie, B. C September 26,1907.  NOTICE.  TAKE NOTICE that Alexander D. Mcdonald  of Morrissey B. C. Uillman, intends to apply  for a special timber licence over the following  described land5*,.  Commencing at a post planted about a mile  south of tbe South East-Corner of tbe McDer  mid* Timber- licence situate about two inlles  from the El]c Blyer on Tunnel Creek, said Creek  being about -three miUJS 8puth of Morrissey,  thence south^o'ebjups, jtfyence West 160 chains,  thence North 40 cbalns, thecco JJgst 1C0 chains  to place of commencement.  -Located 17tb June 1907  I r'.-.'W --W. J. Bites Agentjfor  J Alexander p. McDonald.  NELSON LAND DISTRICT..,  KASf    KOOTENAY.  TAKE NOTICE that Archibald John Far-  qnbarson of Fernie B. C., Contractor, Intends to  apply for a SDecial licence over the - following  described lands:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Commencing at a post planted about 4 mile's  tSouthof Fernie on tho West bank of the Elk  Biver at the South East Corner of Timber Licence No. 9496, thence West 80 chains; thence  South 80 chains, thence East 80 chains to bank  of Elk River; thenco up river to .place of ,P9J|i-,  meuc<>inen\"t. \",L ... ':.r.,7j' '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*--.{-.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd '*v 7:L''  Located 16th July 1907,  ABCH1J8A1* JOHN FABQUHAB80N.  ,  NOTICE... _   C&ANBRJ30K .liAND DISTRICT  ,'!'    :>-K(-rb5TENAY-'<i DISTRICT^'   '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Take notice that  Edward  Mallandalne,  of  Cranbrook, occupation Timber Ranger, Intends  to apply for a special Timber ;lice\ufffd\ufffdce oyer the  following described lands.    ,.     ......  C9*pi&ciJcJfnE a^a, post planted on the West  bank o'fMoyl&Loke at thp.N #. corner ef lot  5799.'\",,,,'   ' '_':   V   ,' '.'   ,  Thence \\yest 80 chains; thence  North 80  cbalns: th-gnce East. $J>> chains, thence, .Squib  along thc.-tvQst bojin^ary of Lot 3039 A> the Bv w  corner thereof, thenco followinfj-^he lake shore  to point of corimenrepent and containing 640  acres more or lesf, sub;eot tq tb,o Wiftr rights,'  if any7 of holders of mineral claims-therein^ \\  , .,,.\".,-.    :   'EDWARD MAJ^LANDAINE,'  Byr9n Catapbejl \ufffd\ufffdt'. Clf ir, Agent.  Dated U'th'j-j&v'W'. 'Y,-'.Y.'..,, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd',  BOX4.  60 YEARS'  Marks  . Debiqhs  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd=.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd T fWT.'\" **    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* CO\ufffd\ufffd>TBIQHlrs.&C.  Antofis soodln^ n sketch and 3d\ufffd\ufffdfa-jptfoh ma)  qalokly iscortnhi our opinion free wnetlier on  FnTonUon Is probuhly nitsntablo. Conimaolm-  tiom -itrlcllTOOoBdentlol. Handbook on Patent*  sent ttto. Oldest agency for necuriiur patent*.  Patoota tokon through Munn A Co. receire  tptcial notice, without cbai-RO. In the  Ah-indsonoly lllnstentcd wooKly.- T.\ufffd\ufffdiseiit dr-  calntlun of any scientific lonrnal. Terms. 83 a  year   'our months, ti. 8o d byoll tio*t\ufffd\ufffd(lcalora,  ^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdI>\ufffd\ufffdh ook. w v *v-JW\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdr'\ufffd\ufffd<-n,n.C;-  BDUOATIONAL.   -  LesBons taught in Arithmetic,  Book* keeping, Composition,-- Penmanship Languages and Science in  the evening. Apply to* S. Moore;  B. A. <-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Residence, Moyie-Ave.   \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -  St. Eugene Lodge No. 37.  Y::K^,:pf: ?.y  Meets every Thnreday  evening   in   McGregor  hall at.8 o'clock;  Visiting brothers invited. -  0. A. Tqote, 6. H. Findlay  Chancellor Com.    7'y.''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd',   K. R.and 8,  Moyie   Mine^s^ Uxiion  No. 71 ^rV. F\/6f M.'  Meets in McGregor hall every Saturday evening.    Sojourning * members  are cordially invited to attend.  Jos McLaren     '  Jas. Sobebts, -  President. Secretary  Harvey,    McCarter &  Macdonald.  Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries, Etc.  Cranbrook.'-   -   B. C.  W. I\\ GURD,  -      BABBISTKK, SOLICITOR, KXO.  CBANBEOOK. B. C  O.H. DUNBAR  Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public, Etc  Cranbrook, B. C.  DR. F. B. MILES,  -D'EXST-X'XS-T1-.  Cranbrook, B. C.  George H. Thompson,  Bahristrb, Solicitor  -   tary Public, &p.  CBANBEOOK,      Bbitisu Columbu  W, R. ^EATTT  J*  Embali  Phone 9.R.  Embalmer and Undertaker,  -       -* -     jr.t  CRANBROOK  '\"-?\ufffd\ufffd$-  DpSAtTLHIEK BROS,   Props.  Large sample room in connection  with house for commercial men. Best  of aocommodatiohs'.'  He&dqubrters for Commercial- ahd'-M-iD i ng Men.  Queens avenue,      \"moyie, b. o  !\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\",\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd', ''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'.-'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"V \"      >:.,..,. .^ '  -\"^'^Hbuy youb  C**J. &*  v^--  ^V-V  FBOM  K-\"Jf  St.  JbsepH's' Convent.  NELSON, B. 0.  hoarding and Day School conducted hy >theSis^era'of^t]-Josephy Nelson]  B.'\\C.'- ODmojercikl ''anfl-'-'btisihess  courses tf gf\ufffd\ufffdeei\ufffd\ufffdilty6- E-soelleaee'i'-and  swift' progrfiSer Dharacteaize each \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd department: \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'Parent's\" sHould write for  particulars.^ Qn<i'-mdn-};h; assures the  public of- tho' thoroughness:-of the  Sisters' metf-tods'i-of tpaohing. \"Terms  comm\ufffd\ufffd.noB Jajiqayy\/'-April .and Sept  Pupils are admitted durins term. **  FRESH  ^\/ *.   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd.   -K-y  Butter.  P. BURNS & GO  t        +*   \\>  e, b, a  A B. Stewart & Co.  YOU    RE4-D   MAGAZINES.  -- *.\\  :v.<-:i  jj -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd :-: \"T:?-  of course. Everybody does. You  couldn't begin- to -read' them '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ail,  but what you do read we\"will deliver at you*?-residence aB soon as  they are published,* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\\   . 5     ;   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   '    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  **'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  WE HAVE THEM ALL.  '     .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.-.-.*. v  ..-   ! i'-Xbi      \ufffd\ufffd,':   '<  Whether you like the solid, heavy  kind, the> fashion magazine ' or  those merely ibr'tt pIea\ufffd\ufffdatft:'i|our8  reading.- 3ive<us your order* tod  we will do the rest. ''   '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"'   '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  .-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd i  !\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   .1   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.-  The Moyie Drug  and Stationery $o.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffds-y?yy,^ l v> a  \"LET US STAND TOaETHER.\"  You to buy ous trousers and other  garments, and we \"make good\" our  asaeron that for stlye,: fit, quality  and price  YOU CAN'T DUPLICATE  OUR  GARMENTS.\"  It's abroad assertion but provable.  Our best citicens wear our clothes,  Ihey are walking proofs of all we assert, Our \"trousers sale\" is a \"special.\"   Don't miss it.  Cleaning, repairing and  pressing done.  C. A. FOOTE  MOYIE, B. C  STOP AT THE  COSMOPOLITAN  WHEN IN  CRANBROOK  E. H. BMAX1,, >lanM*er.  Good rooms, good tables and bar  and first class sample roo-ns.  THE CANADIAN BANK  OF COMMERCE  BEAD  OFFICE, TOHOSTO  ESTABLISHED tWt  \ufffd\ufffd. E. WALKER, President  ALEX. 1A1ED, General Hanager  A. H. XBSLAin), SnperinteDAefitof  .  Branchea  Paid-up Capital, $10,000,000  Rest, - - - 5,000,000  Total Assets, - 113,000,000  Brsmcbes throughont Canada, and in the United States and England  A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS TRANSACTED  COMMERCIAL AND FABMER8* PAPER DI8COUNTED>  84  SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT  Deposits of $1 and. upwards received, and interest allowed at  current rates. The 8epositor is subject to no delay -whatever In  ths -withdrawal ot the whole or any portion of the deposit.  CRANBROOK BRANCH..-. F. C. MALPAS. MGR  V  Cosmopolitan Hotel  DIMOCK & HAG ARTY, Proprietors.  Nearest Hotel to the St. Eugene mine.  Headquarters for Miners.  BAR SUPPLIED WITH BEST BRANDS OF LIQUORS AND CIGARS  Rates $100 a day and up.  HARRY DIMOCK.  JOHN HAGAKTY  l'V$.m  JEWELER  All kinds of repairing done.   English watches a specialty. Store  '  on Viccoria street.  HOURS\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd3 to 6 p..m.  Wm. Jewell  Express and General Delivery Business. Livery and  Feed Stable.  Leave Orders at-~-  G Wynne's Store.  MOYIE British\" Columl  A. L   McKILLOP  NELSOIT,  B.C  0--F. DE3AULNIER-- '-   i fc - 3s  DEALER IN  ro.coiiiffl  ... ' . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -     i T-'    -      .    -  PROMPT DELIVERY.  (Quaess|''j^va.     JJflQyiE  -   * 'tf      W.-C-*  RAILWAY  SECOND CLASS.  RjEpjJC^D RATES  From Eastern Points on Sale'  until  SEPT, 1st TO Oet. W  i,- ti   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'.  t\\ l   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 4i  .   ..tr'.  Montreal .:.:.....: , \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd4<j.io  OXifAWA I'. J: j..5.-..-.:....-*    8\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.85  - Detroit. Windsor, Condon, Oueljih, *  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .-.-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.-..,.. Tp-roiito,-I,9r^<l55jIe. \" '\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  i\\ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Correspondingiy Low   Rates  ' 'from Intermediate Poirite. ~  .1.1 .1 wj\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJ\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfa\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.  T*ei 'Finest** on 'the'' Coniihent  and this' Jpastest between! Spokane  and the *3Cwin cities.   '     *->'\" h \"  i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd i>    i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd i   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 5 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   j .       - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd3?fcB Cahftdi&fl Pa'ci^c^dperates  Sttiudei-ed Sleeping car'and'Tourist Cat! 'o^ TWtf Daily ;*iWscbh-  tinentol taains in 'each direction' '  For 'Rates, ReWrvatidris and  any inforniation- de-iird apply':to  Local agent, or\"-    '\"  ''    ''   l   '  JOHN MQE-,  ' Dlat, Pass. Agt  clson,  \ufffd\ufffd. J. COYLE,  Ass't Genl. Psss.Aio  Vaueoavs**.   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  -\/.5l\ufffd\ufffd,.**\ufffd\ufffd  Large Assortment of Go Carts and Baby Carriages,'  . },-.\/.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\" Ranging inj>rices^ from $4.75 to 40.00  '\"',v~ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd :\"     ', \" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   -~i\" t7r  Cranbrook  Go-Operative  Stores  LIMITED.  I MOYIE    HOTEL.  ^ P. F. J0EMS20M  This Hotel is New and well Furnished The  Tables are Supplied with the Best the  Mar&et affordB. The Bar is Filled with  the Best Brands of Liquors and Cigars.  | HEADQUARTERS FOR COMMERCIAL  S AND MINING. MEK  *  MOTIB  mt\\mnt\\m4m\\mmm\\X  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWW  I  BRITISH COtCMBtftY^Y  jj Protection Against Cold. ...  THE CDLEBRATED BANKHEAD  Briquettes   and Steam  Coal  NOW ON SALE.  \/  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ^r.J***    m*^.m%W^.Jfr.mmW.t  Lasts logger rand gives better heat than any Coal  \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"   v   *     on the market.  PO^'T PUT IT OFF.   Lay in your  '-\"'-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd supply now.  F.O. KAMM. Box 33.  -  -w*.\/ *.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'-.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-.-''J'iiL^J^-'i^'L  s  .\ufffd\ufffdii, '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   *  As mfldfl by tbe present brewer is  admittedly   the  Beet Beer in JJast Kootenay. }Vith the. Best Malt and  tbe Purest Spring \"Water it is unexcelled ior quality.  ' Insist on having Moyie Beer.'  Bottled and Draft Beer.  \"ii.  CHAS. INDEKWIES, Mgr,  MOYIE, B. C,","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. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Moyie (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"The_Moyie_Leader_1907-10-05","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0184238","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.3000000","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-115.8333000","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"Frequency: Weekly<br><br>Titled \"The Moyie City Leader\" from 1898-04-23 to 1898-12-31. 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. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Moyie, B.C. : F.J. 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. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http:\/\/digitize.library.ubc.ca\/","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1907-10-05 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1907-10-05 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. 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. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Moyie Leader","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}