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(MEWS,\n\u00a7 ii .y\u00a3A$\n-:iW?rt<-06lif6rnia,flaunel,underwear at' cut  prices.    Before  our  new ' stock.-\/#*\n-.- --lilttliVS-'Ji'J.J' t , i    , \u00bb.W\nJj.pmves wo w;l^ba\\e a ppecial .reduction oh clothing we nrb offering WAlN\nU4>{\u00a7^5- >.;'.'\"(-r-      \"...    i.  \"'I    ;     \/ -' \u25a0 %?\nTelogpftms W6?e Spat lo Musai-Si Drawiy\nShaueh!io\u00bbjy. liostodk utid\n\u2022 Blair,\nrMNBRGOK BRANCH.\n\u25a0\u25a0it'\u00ab\">\u2022\".'-J^T.\nCANADIAN MIT\nsi i i \u25a0\nPaid Up Capital, $8,000,000.\n*\u2022* ***\u25a0    % i \u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0**' i    '        ' r    *\n.   j. W. H, StWHE, mgr;\nfe.JiAQjss||f    ^ \u25a0\"..\u25a0'\u25a0 '       <   \u25a0     ' ' *     nuonEs\nFURNITURE and XrH33E.P,T4KING'CO.\n.\u201e '      * MOYliE and' CRANBROOK, 3.  C*\t\npeW\u00abrSets .-....$12.50 \t\nfHotebcomb.-bedroom sets'. ..... 11.50\nmattresses   \u25a0\n'.'\u25a0. '!'..'...   0.50\n. ?!\u00bb\u00ab,\u00ab\nffi<i\u00bbpnnj\n.yfcuiVVantfsccJ....,\nj.. ji -SK^adsfttjJvi r  <     ; .\nand\n\u00bb    *r \u25a0\nMatrosses J......,\t\nAnn chairs,'well upholstered:'\"..\n'Lounges upholstered,in best jute\nJfjf   ,.      ' \u25a0 i    <-.    .   \u2022- : ,        >-\nh;^^\/^'^T'hese are only a tew of our prices. Everything in tlie furniturp\n,';\"&|S3^yme just'as low in price. -\\\\rc'are ipanafactttrors- of all kinda ' of\nI,,T-\u00bb^^upholstered \"goods and mattresses. \\Vp Veil retail at wbole3alo\n??,#plprices. Wc^akccarpels arid lay (hern FREE 'OF OHAEGK.\n\"'.\u2022ii..iv.w..t-m...-..[iate8 gjv'enion finisinn^ hotels tlirbughout.' We make great.\njtionB in half-dozen lots'.1 =,-'      \"'\u2022--'\u25a0       -\u2022\u2022->'. r   -\n\/a\n;).7f)-\nLast Monday morning Agent Mans-.\nfield opened the new C. P.' E. station\nat Moyie for business, and since that\ntime all business which was 'formerly\ntransacted at.Moyelle has been clone\nat this place. The mdrning the office\nwas opened the Movie Board of Trade\n'sent out-the following telegrams.\n\u25a0   \"      Moyie, Jan!'2.2:\nJ. C. Drewry,  Eossland\u2014Moyie'\"has^\nr O*        .l . ->\na station, and the\" bpardof'trade sends\n(* ' t\nyou greetings. \u25a0 JSoard oi Trade.\nt ,, Moyie,' Jan. 22. ,\u2022\nHon. Hewitt,Bostoek. M. P., Kara?\nloops\u2014After severe struggle arid\nweary waiting, we 'have at .last telegraphic and ver}*\" limited depot' accommodation, Hearty thanks for\nassistance. <. ''  Board of Trade.\nr,Moyie, Jan. 22.    -\nT.G.   ShaughnessyJ Montreal\u2014Appreciate   appointment * of   agenL and,\neatabli'shmdnt'of 'telegraph  at \"Moyie,'-\nbut deplore excessively  meager apology for depot. , Board' of\" Trade.\n\" Moyie, Jan. 22.\nHon. A. G. ,Blair, Ottawa\u2014After\nsevere struggle and v\/eary wailing,\nMoyie hss at, last telegraphic and'\ndepot'accommodation. 'Hearty thanks\nfor assistance.\"' ' Board of \"Trade.\nQ. It. U'uir cj'as in Lethbruigci {,1ns\nweek,    '.\u2022 t\nE. \/\u2022'. Beattio   wm  put   from Gran-\nurcok TixeEday.,   >   ' ,.\"\n'   ' . \u00bb, i\nS. u. Goldberg has retnrried fiorn\n\\Vest J-Cr.cienay.- ' \u25a0 t\nA. \\y. AfcVittio of Griiqbi'ook js in\ntown, \u2022'\nW. A, Hamilton and Tim ffarrell\nwill loavd ne^t Monday foi' Spokane,\n&I. MacKay,\" manager of tho Koote-\nnay supply Co., Nelson, was in Moyie\nThursday. \u25a0   , \u00ab u \u2022 \"\nMiss Edith Gilchrist left Tuesday\nmorning    for   'Fort   Bteelo   to   visit\nfriends.- , -'* '\n,   *\u2022\nMr.-and Mrd. Foley are now occupying their new residence' in the  Lake\nShore addition. ' ,\n-..\u25a0,   . ,-, .\nMr. and Mrs. W.'R.  Hocking have\nmoved'into their'new   home   on \"Half\nMoon avenue. ', ''\n, R. R. Lowe, representing F. R, Stewart & G(?., \"Vancouver, was in 'Moyie\nthis week.  ,'\nR. L. Henderson, of Fernie was ,iu\nMoyie 'Wednesday druining up business iu the piano and sewing machine\nline.\nSJitjS Holt loft Tuesday for Edmonton, Alberta,, and Win'. Mills left on\nthe same day;1 on ' the same train fpr\nthe oiirau place. Draw your own conclusions. *      .      '\nr% N r\nChurch of England Service   will  be\nheld tomorrow   morning   a   11. a.m.,;\nin the'dining room'of the Moyie Hotel\nby ihe1 Rev. C.  A.' Procuiner  of  Fort\nSteele.\nGAMfT.f fS.p1\n$t< Eugene Concentrator to 3e Enlarged,\nWO&KBOOVXOBBaor\nt\u00abmhoi'    ftiid JttaclUne-ry   Al^eafiy\ndcrad for tlio \"Work Which\nJs Laid Out.\nOf*\nAccording to present indications the\ncoming- season   promises   to    be an\n\u2022 i> -\nexceptionally   lively  one  for  Moyie.\nManager Chas. Biesel * now  gives \"out\nthe information that  the St.   Eugene\nconcentrator will oe enlarged so as to\nhave a capacity  of ' between  350  and\n400 tons'' per day.   The lumber , and\nmachinery  have    been   ordered,  and\nactive work will begin probably within\n.two or three weeks' time. ' 'R. K. Neil,\nof Spokane, the designer of the present\nmill, was here'this  week   in   company\n.with J.  B. Hastings,   of   the   Center\nScar , Mining Compai-ry   of Rossland.\nThey    made  an   examination   of   the\nvarious workings   of the   mine,   and\nalso the  concentraor.    Mr.   Cole   will\nnot have'charge of enlarging the mill,\nas was'at first intended, and he'is iiow\nin New Mexico.     '      -.\"'\u2022'\n3Io.:\niri J^apjor Xronl.lo.\n\"fttUntlertaltcrfc anct Kn\n\/ A'.,-<\u2022-,W \u2022       \u25a0,     > .,j   ;,'  .\nmbalrnera,\nMAGGS &-'-HiU.GHES,\nV2*\nm\n<u- Ci- \u2022\u00bb * * \u00ab   -*\u00bb i-\nRegularJMcals Served,in*'the Dining\nRobm,^with  Short\/jOhders \"between\n\u2022    ,ii  \u25a0'- \u2022    ,\nmeals.\n'if \\\nas-\nm\n,JJp   to   date-' the,, following replies\nhave been received:\nllossland, Jan. 22.\nMovie   Board   of   Trade\u2014 \u25a0\\Varniest\ncongratulations.    Our courso vvasjust,.\nhence oni- victory.    By united   action\nwe will soon make Moyie the  pride of,\nEast Kooteuay, \u2022  J. O. Drewry.\nMontreal, Jan. 2?.\nMoyie Borird of Trade^\u2014Mr. \\Vliyte\nwill attend to station matter.\nT. G. Shaughuessy.\nFrom the last telegram it y\/ill be\nseen,that, the Canadian Pacific' railway company is friendly disposed\ntowards Moyie and that & station of\nregulation size will be. erected early\nin the spring, as per statement made\nby Mr. \\Vhylo some time ago.\nT)kj only \u2022 poition   of   Moyie   lake\nwhich is open'is a strip  imecliat.lv op-\nposil'the'new   G.  P.  R. 'station'. , No\ndoubt'tho reflection of the station has-\nsomething to do' with this.\nA'special meeting of the board of\ntrade-v.-ill be held at,the scho6r house\nthip\"evening at 8 'o,\"\u00b0locK- ' As important busine'sa'is to be dealt with, even*\nmember should be present.\n' w.^^Jje^dquarters^fbr Commerrcialjfand IVlimng iVleii.\nlEur avenue;\nr -  !\u2022>\u2022-..\nMOYIE,  B. p.\nm\nSub Kecorrdinjr Ofllcoj.\n, Prospector: We are imformed by\nMr. Armstrong, gold commissioner for\nSouth\" East Kootenay, that the Gov-\norment has instructed him to establish\ndeputy recording offices at Kimberley,\nFernie, Moyie aud Cranbrook.\nv-j''\\'H-v)iV\nP.   W.    FRITH, t'rqpriet\u00abr.r>\ni'\n\\.\nA'\n'^This hotel is rj.ow pper) tp tfte public, and is- well furn-\n. jplipcl phroughout. Nono but Iho boot bmnclp pf winee,\n:' liquoi's nnd oifiars Uept fp sf.oolf\u2022      f      ,      ,      ,    f\na ;i -i\nSj^^^ljM^eiwarf *jwtfg^M>J\u00abafc\nFIM8T   CLASS      4CC03mODA.TIOXfl,\nMOYIE, B,   0\n^fetg^^-^'53>SS!$:^S\u00a9Si$i5i$^S\u00a7i$'eg\u20ac:\u20ac*\u00a7^^\u00ab,e\u20ac\u20acSS\n?-. CAMPBELL,   A. T. CZAJRK.\nt .Siis Hotel is New and well Furnished.  The\n\u25a0\"        OV 4C       \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   \u2022:\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.':;\u25a0.\u25a0 .  - ...\n; ''HTal&lesv are. Supplied* with the Best the \u00ab|\n, Market affords. The Bar is Filled with |\n\u00bb \/ the lest ftalids of Liquors and Cigars. |\nn v\n^d-\n''t .^^ \u25a0\n>        1*>\ni \\ \"' A\nSo Spokauc itrsll.\nFor the past four days no mail has\narrived 'iu Moyio from Spokane. This\nis occasioned by the quarintine\nwhich is on. There are now said to be\nbetween 10 and 50 Gases of smallpox\nin Spokane, and in order to prevent\ntho spread of tho diseaso all outgoing\npassenger trains* and mails \u25a0 aro fumigated, which necessarily causes considerable delay.\nAil passengers arriving at the boundary line  from   the   south  over   tho\nGreat   Northern   Railway,   Spokane\nFalls & Northern railway, l^cl Mountain railway, find any stage lino, aro\nrequired to furnish   tho' mspootov   or\nany officer in charge  of the carrying\nout of thepe regulations, with a cortifi-\ncaio from .the health officer of tho town\nwhich she or.he has last  left,  con tanking the following particulars: (a) That\nhe or she has not been in any place or\nbuilding infected \u25a0 wi tli 'smallpox;  (b)\nThat he or she has   not. lived in  any\nbuilding or place   which  lies  dahge'i-\nously. near  any  infected   building or\ndistrict: (c) That he   or she has been\nvacillated since the loth (lay of   January, 1900.    , \ufffd\ufffd  '   ..   \u25a0\nMessrs. Desaujiiier & Batley of .the\nCentral hotel 'are fitting tip and' furnishing several new rooms.\" This they\nare doing in  order to  keep \u2022 up   with\ntheir constantly  increasing  business.\ni i .. .-\nLast Monday evening  an   agrcable -\nsurprise was given Mi. an\"d Mrs. F. W.\nFri.th at the Lake Shore ho tel. ' Dancing v\/a's indulged in for several 'hours\nand a general good time was had.\nThere are now 63 names on the\nMoyie voter's list,i and D. J. Elmer,\nwho'has charge, thinks the number\nwill easily reach the J00 mark. He\nhas still plenty , of application blanks\non hand and will be pleased to fill-\nthem out for those wishing to have\ntheir names placed on the list.\nA Dastardly Triclf.\nSome contemptible and 'unscrupulous person, broke' into the triinK'of\nMaggie Frazer' at Uie t Lake ' Shore\nboarding house one night this' week\n,and stole $30, thus leaving the girl in\na\"nost .destitude ci^u^stances. , T^e\n'money 0was the savings of several\nmonths' hard work, and the girl has\nbeen out from the old country but a'\nshort time and is not familiar with'\nthe way's ,of frontier life. The deed\nwas a   most   dastardly' one,   and  no.\nNelson-, B.'(].,'Jan: 'SK\u2014Tho labor.\ntrouble i'n the Qldc\/ah. ceilntry .geerngfcc\n\u25a0lia-vo reached a erisis\/wrjich was '-precipitated by the-iarr-iyaP-'Of $& ' r+qii-\nunion miners<at the Payee irano near\nSandon. A party of-'aboiit'r2Q union\nmen, headed by'Mr. Hagler the secretary of the uniqn. wpijt tp the -rjirjo to\ntry to dissuade the npen frorj going to\nwork, [t is claimed, they aftpr^ard.\nrogorfced tc threats, and Hagler >^\nflLiotod flg'thrgfltening victories, sayjng\namong other things, \"If you want ctirfcy\nwarfare we will give you all you want\/'\nMr. Hand, superintendent of the\nPayne mine, telegraphed superintendent oi the Payne mine, telegraphed\nSuperintendent of Police Hussey at\n\"Victoria for police protection', and\nS. A. Kelly; in charge of the provin-\"\ncial police office here, left yesterday'\nfar Sandon.\"J\nIt is impossible to learn hero what\ndisposition, if a'ny; 'ia being made',to\nafford the extra protection asked for.\nPrivate advice from. Saticldu today say-\n'that there is;.'nothing* riew. in the\nMtuation'\"there, save' tliat Hagler has\nbeen arrested and is under $1000 bonder\nfor unlawful iis'sembly. The'situation'\n'is 'regarded by many ' as'' critical,\ntliough union men here asert' that\nunder no circumstances will there be\nany violance. '-'< '   \u201e\nThe   Slocan    mine   owners    seem'\ndetermined to work their mines at the\nrate of wages  they  offer,  namely, $3\nfor an eight hour day,' now that' their\n\"c'omproiiiise offer of $3.25\"has b'eectre-\nfused by'the union.'\" To do' this, men ,\nmust be gO't in ffo'ni   tlie outside,  and\naits union, men \"resent very'keenly  the\nimportation ol nonunion\" laoor. r Tue\nresult. is'thiiDad't ate' of extreme Densioii\nundoubtedly exists, and   the state  o'f\na^airs is not ameliorated cfby9i fhe  fact\nthat some of the most influential spirits\nin tlie   Sandon   union  are   men   who\nhad to flee from ' the ,,Coeur d'Alenes\nduring the reGent labor troubles there.\nThese men- form a- violent element,\nand are' hardly held in.  check J?y  Jthe\nstone should be left   unturned'In  ah\neffort to bring  the  culprit, 'to, \"justice.J moderate minde'd minerc, who \"are  jn\nShch people should.no't .be sllowed'to'J raajo.rjty'.\nlive in any community. ' They  are  a\ninenace to the city' or town  in' which\nthey reside and .would  even'contaminate the inmates of a penitentiary\nBoer Forces Strengthened.\n. Lqndou,  January  2,u.\u2014A dispatch\nto the Times from   Spearman's  camp,\ndated January 2o   save:    '.'The  Boers\ntoday ban   more guns,\" and are  prepared to   ugbt   almost  interminably,\nhaving entronqhed their ridge,   which\nstretches jn   an   almost   broken   line\nfrom   tho   prakensbcrg,   njany miles\neastward.    Firing continued   through-\nout the day.    \"We have  not  advanced\nany further, but we threw up entrenchments during the nighr, from  behind\nwhich the   muskotry   duel  continued\nfrom exactly tho same position as yesterday.\nThe Slssqni oracle JBaKt-\nPreparations are being mado for tho\ngrand Masquerade ball which will  be\ngiven by the Moyio  Quadrille  on  ihe\nevening of Wednesday, February 14th.\nOne of the main feature of- the  dance\n.will'be   the  cake  walk,   and   already\nsome of   those   intending   competing\nfor the prize are practicing.    The best\nof music   will  be  furnished  aud  no\nefforts will be spared to make ihe  affair one of the swellest events  of  the\nseason.-   -It has been decided-to charge\ndancers,an admission, fee  of: $2.  and\nspectators 50 cents.\nCollection From tlio PHUlppinea.\nF. L. Titdworth, bookkeeper for the\n.St. Eugene Consolidated Co., is perhaps the only person in Moyie who\nbook an active part in the war in \"the\nPhilippine Islands. Mr. Titsworth is\na Spokane boy and served with the\nWashington state' militia. He re-\nceived an honorable discharge last\nNovember, and agai'n resided in Spokane until he caiiie to Moyie about\nthree weeks ago. Mr. Titsworth has a\nrare collection of relics such as swords,'\nknives and photographs, which he \u25a0\nbroughi lrom'the Philippines.\n\u25a0 '    i                                        IfJIyciarfrOni the day be   was\nlHEADQUARTERS^^Oft.\u2022'O^MMK80iA.ib; \t\n\u25a0:-'   ANb'\/MININ-S MEN,.:;,,. ...  \u25a0, - ,\u25a0\u2022''\u2022;,.,-'..-\n\u2014 ,   ! \u2014 J- \u2014        inuxisir coi.umiua. p\nIf Adam had worked 300 days  each\ncreated   to\nfy\\ the present time at a  salary  of  $50 a\n^j day' he would bot'hay.e earned by. this\ntime as much  property  as   is   owned\ntoday by Rockefeller or Vandcrbilt.\n'\u2022\u2022\u25a0 Lakd Frozen Over.\nAt last Movie lake, is covered with\nice. Yesterdaj' nrornihg.it was only a\nthin scum, but this .morning it is\nmuch thicker, and it will likely be\nhtrong enougljj in a day or two for\nskating.\nOld I'eoj.le   Mario Young.\nJ. C. Sherman the veteran editor of\nthe Vt-'rhior-tvillc {Mich.) Ecb.o, has\ndiscovi-red the remarkable secret of\nkeeping cid peoplo voi:ng. For vsars\nIk: has. avoided >yervousnes3, yicepless-\nneds, indigestion, Heart trouble,\nConstipation and Bneuciatisni, by\nusing Electric Bitters- and\" he' writes;\n\"It\" can.'t be praised top highly, ft\nguntly siirnulate'j tho kidneys, tones\nthe ctomach, aids digestion, and gives\nnsphmdiij appetilo. Tc lias worked\nwonders- for my wife and me. It's &\nmarvellous remedy for old peopled\ncomplaint-;.\" Only 50c. at Hope <fe,\nBoatties drug store. ' I\nliis WlJ\"\u00ab Saved Him, '\nMy wife's good tidvico saved my  life\nwrites P.M. Boss of VViuficld, Tenn.,\nfor I had such a b.ul   cough   I   could\nhardly breathe, I steadily  grew - worse\nunder doctor's treatment, but my wife\nurged me to use Dr. King's New- Discovery   for consupt'ibn, - which   completely   cured   me.     Coughs,   Colds,;\nBronchitis,      Lagrippe,     Pneuno'niia,\nAsthma, Hay Fever and   all   maladies\nof Chest, Throat and Lungs   are posi-\ntivly cured by this marvellous   medicine.    50c.   and .\"Fl.OO,    Every  bottle\nguranteed.    Trial bottles free at.Hope'\nct Beaties drug store; '\nWhplesale Dealer- in\n1      .1,      e   r . *      -^' i - >\nProduoe, Butter,\nEg^s, Cheese,\njFruit.Sj Oysters, Ete\u00bb\nWines, Liquors jan^,\n^i^^rs. -DrQwry^s\nCelebrated Aless\nStp.ut ai^d Lager,\nG-olderi %m teaiad\nof Mineral Watarg.\n-Rojssland Boer ixi\nKegs and Bottles.\nAgerit for Pennsylvania   Oil   EeSnjng\nCo.   Correspondence it:vit.ei}.\nCTtA-YHIJClOp.    (L. C.\n^\nSTAR OF INDIA\"\nThis is \u25a0?'\u25a0\nOf  s|ieeially   fine  flavor put in   half\npound and   pound   packages.    Exceptionally fine for family use.-\nlTEY -a package.\nliletal.'Quotations.\nNew York, Jan. 25.\u2014Bar silver\n5f>:|- cents. Lead, |4.70 @ $4.75.\nThe firm that fixes the selling\nprices for miners and smelters\niiuotes lead at $1.45 at the close.\nMacdonald\nBe     G*\nm\n\u2022'Sit\n'J   1\nI\n\"\"1\n'til\n'\u25a0l\\\n\u25a0n\n\"y\nm\nm\n>\naattMiw-fj\nfflSWRSBST-Sf \u00a3 -V'lVi* 'filMJU-t'^.i-UJ*,  X'  .*  >  'I ._  {  _, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,)     '  we.-c   f  i  In ti-  '  \"!'...  .'m  ij ,-   \"  a  W   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;'  '\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd      ,  \"1  ,  ,\"'   t>,'  too.    '  .-;. i  didi-'  :\"1 .\"-  .j      \\  if l ; ;  on  - 1  -, '  woi   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  *     1  real  1^  get  -  pay  my    -  pra.  SiOJ  He.  1 .  If '  (           I  he  ; ; i  Cor'  ii  V  \\vi    ,  i  th:'  '  no  \\  thi  ' ;  to  <  'wl, ,  i  of  lot  , *r  cr.    ,  n' \ufffd\ufffd  ol-   '  I '  p: -  r  St  , 1  lo,     -  J  tfi  ii'  tc  t  Cv J;  *>  i  > *  t  <;'  li  \"    \"   \ufffd\ufffd  |  t '-^  (   \"  ;  V     .   ' -  ;'1-  v. 5.  I  c  G ,  I r  a  d   :  J   '  p    :  6  C   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  f   '  i  i' .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  LUCU1'   '    \"  UliU  By WEATESELEY 0HUS3TBY.  \" rOoyvrl(r2i>% isga-Lv  VTeather'.e.Y CUL-saoT.j  CHAPTER XI.     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  A-DISREPUTABLE BROTHER.  Lady Florence Mostyn the receiver of  stolen  goods\ufffd\ufffd\ufffda possible thief herself.' I of the sort, arid it is absurd your\"nskiug  Each stago I gained iu  tracing tho his- \" ~\"  tory  of   thi? woman   only showed   her  a^ain, and said if I cared for her I  should icspecc her wishes in the matter,  mid I did.\"  1 groaned inwardly.  George's infatuation for tho -woman -was too suhlime,.   -  \"Then can you tell ua joothiug about  them?\"  \"Nothing, except! that if I believe  anything in the world I believe that;  her connection with them waa everything I could have wished, and if yon  are ray friend you will respect her  wishes as 1 have done.\"  Nonsense, George.   1 can do nothing  character in a worse light. Yet I could  not doubt tho evidence, for each word  of the landlady had corroborated rim  tale told me by Air. Einnecuro Vaude-  lear. . I did not stay Jong at Hinton, nnd  all tho further evidence I collected simply substantiated what Miss Pridgett-  had told me.  I hastened hack to town and acqnaint-  , ed Mabel with the result of my mission.  \" Sho did not* say much, but I could gather from her' looks, her horror at rhe  news, that the woman George had loved,  to passionately was the aider and abettor of thieves.  Suddenly she said:   .  \"Duncan, I begin to' have n ' ray of  hope. This Lady Florence Mostyii may,  afrer all, be what Georgu thought ber4-  a good .woman. What if she -were the  tmwiliirig accomplice of these men?\"  1 shook hay head.  \"I wish I could believe so, Mabel, for  I have thought of that possibility.\" But  all the evidence seems to prove the contrary. She was sorry when the two men  loft her, and 'downright glad,' Atisj-  Pridgect said, when they'returned fies-h  from the robbery, aud,I am afraid she  was their too willing accomplice.\"  \"Poor Georeo!\" Mabel sighed.  \"It is  awful to think of. '.I am .sure it will be  terrible  news for him when  he knows  what   you have   learned, for he had no  suspicion of  it himself.    Or'  course lie  had not.   Ho  believed the woman to be  absolute  perfection;   but  surely,\"  she  wentr on,  \"when she disappeared, and  George was making inquiries, he would  hear of these men. Lambert and\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdrwhat'  ,   was his  name?\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDacre. bavin;,' visited  .her and of  the friendly relations exiting between them.   Did ho not mention  them to you', Duncan:-\"  >J  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\".No, he did not, and from what he  said I should uofc have gathered be knew'  of their existence!\"        i ',-.  \"But he must have heard of them.  Duncan. Perhaps now he would speak  to'you about them. He'may bo able to  tell you something of them that would  lead to their identification. It seems to  mo this is a most important clew, and  weanust,leave uostono unturned til] we  iind out who these men were aud what  was their relationship with .this woman. 1 think you ought to see George at  once on this point' It may be a very  vital oue.\"  It seemed to mo that Mabel might be.  right, and if so, painful as it would be\"  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"'George to disensa this episode in his  When I had Instivinitecl him,?ic had welcomed my appearance.  sweetheart's life, I was bound to take  advantage of any information he could  give us. The next day I obtained tho  necessary permission to visit the prisoner an Holloway, and lost no time in  seeing him.  When I had last visited him, he had  welcomed my appearance, but now he  ' looked up vacantly when I entered, and  there was scarcely'a gleam of recognition on his face. Ho eeemed utterly  crushed, and I felt the man was on the  v highroad to madness.   '.  He listened to the messages I brought  from' homo without  replying  and  tat  with his face in his hands, staring fixedly at the  stone llooi of his cell.    I mid  him of the further developments of  tho  case, but   he mado no comment, and I  despaired of   being   able  to runse  him.  However, when I mentioned Hinton, lie  seemed to interest biniEelf a little, and  then 1 told him of my recent visit there.  \"George,   old   man,\"   I   .said,   \"Tie  come here for information,\"and I don't  want to go away without it.   Last, time  I was here you told me of your meeting  the lady at. the  inn, but,  yon   said hhc  was'alone.   I .have learned   that though  she was alone when you met   her there  had been two friends of hers 'staying in  the village before  you came.   Did   yon  know this?\"        '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-'.' '       V  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'-.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'This- question seemed' to rouse him.  from his lethargy. He started up almost  fiercely and said:  ., \"What  business  is it of  you rs to go  ferreting in the matter?\"      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;''  \"My dear fellow, we are not doing it  out of mere curiosity. Each piece of in-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdformatiou we gee hold of we hope tc be  one step toward your, innocence bein^  proved.\", '  George paced tha cell with feverish  unrest: \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-''.  \"Don't yon think.I wonld rather die  than have any evidence raked up which  may lead to  nothing, and only serve oh  Bhow up the unhappiness of her life?!*'  .   \"Then you knew of those men?\"  \"I did.\"  \"Did you ever ask her about them?\"  \"Yes.\"-  \"What did she say?\"  \"She told who one of   them was, but  Id say nothing   more   about   them,  asked me not to refer tel the'matter  me. Besides, if Lady Florence Moatyn  was what you believe her to be, no  harm cotiM come to her good name by  these investigations, and unless,we get  some further evidenco on rhis'particahvr  incident slio rung the risk of being considered friendly with two very indifferent characters.\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd<  I said this with brutal frankness. I  could not'stop to think of George's feelings; it was his life I was\" trying to  save. *        ,  I think his first impulse was to strike  me.- He made a step toward me with  clinched fist, then he hesitated aud  said, with unnatural quietness:'  \"You seem to forgot you are speaking of a dead wouiua and one whom I  wihhpd to make my wife!\"  \"No, 1 do not, George, and it is that  very reason which forces me to do what  I can,to unravel this mystery. Only by  doing so can we know her as\" she really  was.\"  ' Georgo sat down wearily.  ,   \"For God's sake. Duncan!,' let us finish this talk! What do yon want jae to  tell you?\"  \"You just now said you learned who  one of those men was.   Who was he?\"  \"He was her brother. \"  \"Her brother!\"   ' '        ,'       \" ,  \"Yes. A man who had gone under  and whom she was trying to' keep  straight.  That is all r know. \",   c   .'  , This was certainly news anil a very  plausible piece of'deception on the woman's .part. Here she was consorting  with a couple, of, thieves. .Her lover  asks, \"Who are these men?\" \"One of  them is m.y brother,\" she replies\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"a  man who has gone astray and from the  paths of virtue aud whom I am trying  lore-form.\" And tho robbery, I reflected, grimly, was tho first fruit of this  ; reformation ; but, of course, I kept my  thoughts to myself.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'Well, George, this,is surprising in-'  formation,\" I said, \"and it .may be of  -the greatest use to  us.    This brother of  hers must be found.   Which of \"the men  was he?\"   -  *      i '  \"I don't know. I have told you all-  more than I had any right to.\"  _ ,\"'! don't think so, old fellow. If any  information you can give holpsto save  jou, you may bo sure1 she would not  have wished yoa to withhold it.'\"  George uiadn no reply. ' His excitement had died away, und he was now  gazing stolidly at the floor, seemingly  nnconscious of my presence. '' '  ,' I left him with horrible forebodings  in my heart. Even if ho saved his life,  bis mind threatened to become unhinged. *   i-  -  My next step was to find out if there  was  any truth   in   the  existence of  a  brother of Lady Floreuco Mostyn.   The  \"Peerage\" would give mo this information. I opened the bulky \"Englishman's  Bible,\"-as  it   is   inoht' appropriately  termed,   and  found   the   dncal list   of  Lundys. .The present owner of the titio  was given as Francis Guiberfe Mostyn,  sixth dnke, Marquis of  Lamford, Viscount  Dartrey,   Barou  Coulton, K. G.,  F. R. S., etc.  He married Lucy, widow  of   the  late  Hobert  King  of   Warra-  Warra, N. S. W., and had issue a son,  the present Marquis of Lamford, and a  daughter, Florence.  That was all. \"No other child was  mentioned. The Marquis of Lamford  was a well known man\ufffd\ufffd\ufffda devout  cburchmau, a pillar'of, the state\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdand  he was the only son. But stop! The  duke had married a widow. She might  have a child hy her former husband. I  wired off at once on this point to Wrayi  and had his reply by tho next post.   .'  \"Yes, \" he wrote.  \"TWe was a child  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffda I-oy JJobert.    lie.was about o yearB  old when his mother married \"the duke.  Of course that was before my time, and  1 never saw the  lad, but I have  heard  others speak of him ac times.  He seems  to have been a  bright, intelligent  hoy,  but very headstrong, and   he never got  on particularly well with, his stepfather  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdin fact, ho always seemed to be in hnt  water with tho duke.   As  long as his  mother  lived   matters   were   smoothed  over, but she died when  Florence waa  born, and then tho lud'.s troubles began  in earn<vt.  He was brought up with the  other   children,   but   the  duke   treated  him with coldness and indifference, and  tho tutors and domestic-.* took thuir cue  from him.   His happiest days were those  he spent at L'ton.  Ho was heut to Christ  Church, and thu bar was intended for  his final destination, but   at Oxford ho  got; in with u fast set and came ru grief.  Hik allowance there was small  enough,  and-.whenlie exceeded   it ho dared  not  apply to. his stepfather.  Ho'got into'the  bauds of the'-!il'ews  pretty   heavily too.  Then he got mixed up in  some scandal  (the particulurrtof which I have forgotten, if I ever heard them), and was sent  down:    Tho duke   paid  h-is debts, gave  him \ufffd\ufffdJ0p and-turned   him out of   the  house, and \"from'that day to this he has  never been seen in Lamford.    I .believe  he wentto sett   in a merchantman, but  nethiiig definite has ever  been heard of  him from   that day.    There  have  been  rumors of his being seeu in all sorts of  places under all  sorts of  conditions\ufffd\ufffd\ufffda  hanger''on' at   Monto Carlo, a   billiard  marker iu  Melbourne and  a bar waiter  at the Cape, but theso are only rumors.  All that is definitely known   is that he  has gone to the dogs.\"'  Mubel   seemed   immensely   relieved  when I.read..her this letter.  \"There, Duncan; eo sho hada brother,  after all! Yon do not know how glad I  am to have this news. May we not now  believe she waa doing what she could  to redeem him?\"  \"I don't  know that we are justified  in believing that, Mabel\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdat auy rate,  not with our profent information. The  robbery in which sho seemed to be an  accomplice scarcely looks like an at-  tempc to improve his morals. But, firsc  of all, we have to identify tha brother.  Which of the men was he\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe one  armed man, Lambert, or the other  Dacre:\"  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \"Lambert 6eems the more likely. According to Mr. Vandeleur, he had led n  wild, roving life, which would fit in  very well with what Mr. Wray writes  abcat the brother.\"  \"Yes, that is so, Mabel, but the other'  man may have beon equally wild.    We  seem   to  have  very little information  about him. I must ask Wray to get me  a description of  the   brother's  appearance.    That will no doubt help us, as  Lambert was  fair and' the  other man  dark.   But even then we cannot be sure  that  be was really her brother, not until we  find  the  man  himself,   which  may not be an easy matter.\"  ,  \"The one armed man may have joined  a theatrical company again.\"        \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd?  \"He may, and in that casa it ought  not to be difficult to trace him\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdoue  armed actors are not eo very common.  But I hardly think he wonld take kindly to the stage again after a successful  robbery. You may depend\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdupon it he is  busy with other little ventures in that  direction.\"    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd       0 \"        ' ''  \"You take a very gloomy view of  things, Duncan,\" said Mabel, with'a  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdveary sigh: ,   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \"Perhaps I do, dear,' but the farther  we get into this awful affair the more  mysterious and complicated it becomes.  That must be my excuse. V i  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd I wrote off to Wray for particulars  of the brother's' appearance, and the  next morning first thing I set off to call  opon Mr. Keighiey Gates about tho  mysterious photograph I had seen in hi*  rooxa.       . ' ,       ,->  ALL   IN  THE   SAME   ROLE  To b\ufffd\ufffd continu\ufffd\ufffddL  RAT-HER TOO SMART.  A   Transaction   In   Which  tie  Mean  aian Wfti Badly Beaten.  There was an auction sale in the little  house, and one after another the widow's  few possessions fell beneath the hammer.  Presently the auctioneer took up a large  lwvl which happened to be full of sugar,  and the poor woman, anxious to save its  contents,-hastened into'the next room to  find something in which to put it.  Just as she returned the auctioneer  cried, ','Sold!\" and the-purchaser insisted  that the sugar was his. ' The widow'  pleaded for the little that was much'to  oher, but the man was obdura'to, and murmurs of ' indignation arose from the  crowd. Angry at this demonstration, the  man turned,' and his eye rested on Mr.  Wise. ,      .' i  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMr'. Wise,\" said he, \"you are a lawyer.  Am I right or not? If you say 1 am iiot,  I will give, back the sugar. If you say ,1  am, I am entitled,to it, and I'll keep it.\"  \"My friend,\" replied Wise in his gen-  est tone,\" \"you  put a delicate and un-  I A Ktinnjr Story  of  four  Staters  Who  I \" .\"iVon! on tint Sfnj-re.  I Thf'.'iirical Maiin-.-i-i- ItosvnthaJ, fhft  hti.-^raad of Kat'herino CMermaii, tells  ibt- following story:  \"There   were   four    of    the   Osterinan  girls who weni on the stage, and it is a  singular fact that they all made rheir debut in the same role.    It happened ibis  way:   The   family   liTe   in   Toledo,   and  when  Charley Jefferson   put on   'Hands  Across  the  Sea'   Annie   Osteruian, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd who,  was then an ambitious amateur, was en-  gngert   tn  take  the  part   of   Lucy.   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Slr\ufffd\ufffd  adopted thp stage name of Belmont and  scored   such   a   success   that   she   got   a  haadxmie offer to join Sol Srnitli llnssell.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBefore  she  left   Jefferson   asked   her  whether  she  couldn't  suggest   somebody  to take her place,  rind she replied   very  modestly' that   her   sister   Bessie   was  a  bright   girl   and   auxious   to   go   on, the  stage.    So Bessie was sent for, and also  made a bit, but before long she went to  .Mr.   Jefferson   and   told   him   she   would  have to 0,-uit. as she was about to be mar-  lied to Chief Wall of the Toledo fire department.     'However,'  she said   hesitatingly,   'I   have a  sister of  the   name of  Kaliierine, who'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 'Great heavens!' exclaimed Jefferson.  'This family beats the record! Telegraph  for- Ivatliei-ine immediately!' Kniherii'itt  arrived and proved such an acceptable  substitute that the management was de-  lighied. but in the course of time she attracted the attention of 'Stuart' Hobsou.  who engaged her to be his leading lady.  Again Jefferson was in despair.' 'I sup-*  pose there are no more sisters?' he said  ironically. 'Oh, yes.' replied Katherine.  '1 was just about to reeommead my sister Lillian.'  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"Glory halleluiahr yelled Jefferson.  'Send for Lily!' Lillian came, on and  played the part successfully until she  made -up her mind to retire from tlie  stage. When she announced that intention. Jefferson never turned a hair. You  see, he had become accustomed to it.  'Sorry, very sorry,' he said: \"And will  you please wire to your sister this evening?' 'There are uor more sisters,' said  Lillian,mournfully. - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \" 'So more sisters!' exclaimed Jefferson  aghast! 'No. sir,' she replied. 'Alb we  have' left now is the house dog. but he's  very intelligent.' \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNew Orleans Times-  Democrat.  MEN.QF  MARK. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd <  I     General  Jotrbert.   the   Hoer   leader,   ix ]  l t;S years old. !  ' Sir (lentrd Smith has,re\ufffd\ufffdigired ihe gov- |  j ernorship of Western Australia.,  George Bartle, who died recently, was t  keeper of *he great seal of the United ,  Stares for orer \ufffd\ufffd\">0 years.  The mayor of Mafeking. South Anica. '  i.* Frank Wkitciey. a native of Bradford, {  England, who went to Natal when he |  was lti years old. j  An admirer of Admiral Dewey in At- j  Inuta has pre.ented him with a valuable  ITEMS OF INTEREST  Hailis are entirely unl-nUWn in n  households. h,\"\ufffd\ufffd.  The largest glass bottle visillx \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  world Is located m Ah-on, ins.        'b-  Among Colorado's relics  dwellers Is one building that  probably G.O0O pcopl.v \"-\"'\"ii.j  Not 6 per cent of all the WlJIOlr  America, spend as .much monev i  ..\"1  per year on their clothes. \" '\" ^  A   biographical   work   Issued  a ( i  'Distil)\",!)^'  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdigo  entitled  ans\\v(.r.M5  Dewey.  A Lynn (Mass.) man. in  the (Question of the registrars of Vl,.f f\ufffd\ufffd  as to what his business was. -,nj,]\\ll  was a \"wealth producer,\" biu\"u'(jl','.Jtl;  not explain how he produced it.     u'''&  The connection between bees :u,(- UM  may not ,be obvious to ordinvn. ,,3f3  tals, but Germany has an nS<.()l\",,ui'M  called    the    Bicncu    nnd  Stldeuz,!,.^,  wreln. which has existed 00 y<-:.p..;b'.fc$bt  now has 0,135 members.  I,. rv  Englishmen  Ashing for \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Job-t,.rs ,$H  autograph leiii-r written by Admiral Fur- ! ^ea,s M \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdv  mam in which nceiirs the i-hrase. \"That \\ Sons 'of   * ermont\"   includes   j>,    \"  young Dewey i? a \\;ery promi.-iiig chap.\"   \"brother,    but   makes   no   menu,.,,\/'  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\\1. Louhet, the prc>iilent of the French \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  republic, has received the Order of the ,  Chrysanthemum from the'emperor vC J a- ;  pan. It is conferred in cmnmenioratiim j  ot\" the recent French treaty of commerce f  with J a pun. i  The Itev. Sam Jones of Georgia is in j  exceedingly poor health and' has been I  compelled in consequence to cancel all his :  engagements in' preach until, the lir.st of J  January next. lie ii*'under, the care of n |  physician in Louisville. i  Lieutenant Valentine 10. Gihnn of Bi>s- j  ion iiver-iops\"all other members of the  Mas-snchiiseitK state militia, being 0 fert  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffds\" ihcJie.- in height. lie served in tlie Spuu-  sh-Aifierican war nnd is .conceded to be  j a fii'M (-lacs marksman. '    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,  ! !C\\-Seji:itoV Henry G. DdvIs of YVe\ufffd\ufffdt  Virginia will present to {hat state a h.imo  for orphan children. There is at present  iki such in.stitiitioii iii We>t Virginia, a-nd  destitute orphans are hoarded at various  pln<-cs until homes can tie found for them  in good families. , j  Charles   Broadway   Itouss'   son.   Peter I  Winehe-ter Houss.  recently  selected   the j  site -in' the   Mount   Hebron  cemetery   at >  Winchester.  Va..  fur the $,\")0,0oU marble  miiiiMileum  which New Vork's blind uill-  Tronaire is to build  there.   It is promised  lo be the finest in the south.    ,  (Johanda. who  posed, as'the king'of a  .Karlir   tribe   in    South    Africa    at   the j  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:>,'  I'-t, .''?  fill;  DETECTIY.E' DISGUISES.  Kinsale recently caught u niassiv.. i  .substance on their anchor, whi< h ^..-r,.-i  cleared of the dehrls attached u^Iy  proved to be an smelior from on.- (,f', y<'M  ships of the'Spanish uiiriiiaii;i. ' '\"'';*,\ufffd\ufffd  Ladysinlth Is called after the \\\\'.u-\\J^l'  Sir Hurry Smith, toi-inerly coijjii.,; ^,'|  ing general iu South Africa, sin- v.-.J.^I\"  Sptt'iilsh girl lu whom, (ho gciieni \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,'!>$$  pi-oter-llon when he was; a sul,ai\":.vv\"  In the'petiJns'nl.'ir war and who kijJtf'i-j  (lUetitly married him. Hai-rlMim^ v*f  named after her hiishand. \\#&  ,  ; \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -i-j  POINTED  PARAGRAPHS. ,f%  \ufffd\ufffdA man usually lltuls it'a hard jufcr\/'Sv  get n'soft one. \"   v%Vt  ire od'l flj.-w-',-'*r  'in n-gn'-tt::;*;-jj$k  )m  tl  pleasant respons-ibility on me. , Hadn't  you better decide the matter for yourself?\"  \"jN'o,\"   replied   the   fellow   curtly.     \"I  know what your opinion is goingto be,  and I want you to irive it so'that this  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwhole crowd can hear it.\" '  \"Then,\" said Wise, \"I advise you that  the sugar is yours.    The widow cannot  take it from,you.   She has no redress.\"  o   \"Ah!\"  cried the  man,   turning to  the  spectators. ' \"What did I,tell you?\"  ..    \"Stop!\" thundered Wise, whoso manner  at once changed.    \"I've advised you at  vour-persistent request, as I can prove by  these people.  r It remains for hie to tell  you that I charge \ufffd\ufffd1. Is. for my advice,  aud  I  demand  immediate payment.    If  you trifle with me in the matter of payment, you vrill most certainly regret it.\"  The man turned scarlet and, fumbling-  'in .his pocket, produced a guinea, which  the lawyer handed to the widow, and the  crowd yelled its approval.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-London An-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwers.-  i The Fool Pox.  \"When the pursuit of wealth tempt*  you, my son,\" said the sage, \"remember  the fable of the fox that hungered for  some wonderfully fine grapes growing in  a garden the only entrance to which was  through a hole in the wall. It was bo'  small that he had to fast three days before he could crawl through it. After he  had got inside and filled himself he was  too large to crawl back through the hole,  and was compelled to fast another three  days before he could make his escape  from the garden. So he went out as poor'  as he went in.\"  \"Yes,\" said the ambitious young man,  \"but why didn't the fool fox take a lot of  grapes to the hole and push them out  through it V Then he could have carried  away enough to keep him fat for a  month.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdChicago Tribune.  They Are Sot Permitted In the Secret  S\ufffd\ufffdrvl\ufffd\ufffde Bureau. \"',  \">'o such things as disguises are used  by the men of the secret service bureau,\"  .said the chief of that organization a few  days ago. \"The hoy who reads the 10  cent literature describing the many lightning changes and disguises made' by alleged sleuths of the government and other services imagines these stories to ba  true, and the impressions he receives' remain, with him for a long time. As' a  matter of fact, no such thing as-a disguise for a secret service detective is  known, and 1 do not know of. a case  .ever worked by an operator of the bureau iu which false faces or other articles of this kind have ever been vtised. 1  do not know of a reputable detective in  any city or state who uses' disguises.  They are not effective, and the best informed men in the running down of.  criminals believe that they do harm and  quickly exposo the man'who is attempting to operate a case.  \"The men of the secret service of the  government freijueutly clothe themselves  to suit the vicinity and the people among  whom  they are at work.     For instance,  if  a'man is at work  in  an  agricultural  vicinity and   among   people   who   would  suspect the attire of a well dressed person,  ho does  not'wear the  best   clothes  or linen which has been finished, by Chinamen or a  sterfm  laundry.     His  .-mire  is in keeping with  his situation and circumstances.    He may let his beard grow  long and become careless in  keeping ,hl.s  clothes dusted.    If he is at work in a city  among Italians, for instance, he deports  himself in such a way as to keep from  advertising himself as a detective of the  government.     If  he   did   not.   he   would  be  unable to  acquire  information   from  the class of people who were perpetrat-  in  United States. Everything depends on  the necessities of the'case, but under no  circumstances would wo permit an operator of the bureau to bother with such  cheap articles as wigs,' false faces, mustaches and the like.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWashington Star.  Men autl women \\yho i  gel even by marrying.  Don't' waste ,\\ ow time  the,lime you have wasted,.  Get  lihorhl  In the world  (f von ci-^'liU  .,,, \"#;J*'  $$\ufffd\ufffd  World's fair, and  who sh.vs he had, then i  $''L'.0(lLi\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd worth of .diana.tuls belonging to  the royal family! Is now a house servant  in a hotel at Louisville., He was robbed  of   his   diamond's' soon   after, the   fair  closed, he says.   .  Cecil Rhodes has'a preference for most    ...  things Dnteh-except Boers.   Mr. Rhodes ! \"in, do\" ' fiC'1 -f !u'-'it] '\ufffd\ufffd the saloon:  is a man of. great culture: he is very fond        -More good1 intent lout  would  In-  of the classics. and has had typewritten  Iranshuiotis speeiaVly made for him.   He  is very versatile iu his hobbies, bupy man  as hci\"-. nnd his menagerie of wild animals is a  wonderful affair.       ' ,  Although [hi\\ second Lord Tennyson,  the governor of South Australia, is not  a poet, he has poetical tastes and sympa- j  thies.' ,He has just been entertaining 'JIJO  members of,the South Australia Reading  union at the .government house, Adelaide,  and giving them a lecture on the poetry  of Gray, the < author of the immortal;  country ehi\ufffd\ufffdrcb.\\ aril elegy.  rb'cl out if ihr.y didn't live foivu'i.  If all the. world's a si'rigo. every tiffi^  uiiiTht ty have .some son of a show. j^  . A man's;'face Is \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:pt \\u i,t. |,-s U]Hf.;;.P|\ufffd\ufffd  time   ihe   first   time   ho  trier,  to s!i:iiefj?i  JEWELRY JOTTINGS.  mseif.   , \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd '       trS  \\ oi] have no doubt observed that H Ispfij  only  after you  have made a  :ui\ufffd\ufffd:n\\e^fi  that people begin to tell how it oimlj^f?  have been a voided.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdf:i>i<-iM-n \\,iUli      ^.[J   . ^_ -        -     j.-ij.k  ^     A  IVInv Precaution!. ,    ? ji?  \" \"Mnrse Tom.\" Waltl the old faial^'8  servant, -r wants my Chrls'inas.ni,'\\m  tight now. of you please, sub.\" y'ffi  wait  till Chr'-;: i;f$|  \"Hadn't you' better  Fob chains continue much-in   fashion'; mas conies''\"  \ufffd\ufffdr,men\\ ',..     .' '        ' .'   ,,    f     \"N'o. fitih-dat-wtnildn't he l.us-iru-MfeM  Exquisite smelling hot lies come, in Fa-j kase you know voWll'. .Mar.eTotn ,lr.M#  vnle glass  with -Silver inoutitings^.,-1 ,..\ufffd\ufffd,,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Vi\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.u', ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd * , .     l\\M  Broken\" enamel  ?tiek>. will, tt\" gem be-    1? \"nl'''     T T\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd '{\ufffd\ufffdU Js T*   *R\ufffd\ufffd  tween.  make a  pr.etty \"chain  for a  girTi f ,  ,1! ^ T' ',rJIMk ^'know what da;ujM  especially in blue enamel and pearls. f It Is.' -Atlanta .Constitution.      ,^      {^||  Particularly suitable for a watch brace- I \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd        - - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd zzzz:j$fj$  let,is an auti-muiie or ,s,<|f closing affair'    \"     '   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*-*- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' -r~\".\\f  of English in vein ion.  which adapts itself}  lo any sized   wri-t  ainl  has m\ufffd\ufffd  fastening \\ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>  to become iiiicl.-i:-ped. '\"'.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'  A   very   light   liatiil  of gold   is  used  in  fine   rings,   set    with   diamonds,   pearls, j  emeralds or sapphires, all of which serve  as engagement   ring--,   with  quite  a  fcsl- ,'  ing existing  for the eolnn-d stones. '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Tho priiii-i\"-s gown'is giving increased'!  vogue' to girdles. The-i- eoine in linked i  ] plaques of gold or \ufffd\ufffdilv\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdr or in heavy j  chains fastening ;ii tlu- front with, one '  end hanging in a jeweled pendant.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJewelers' Circular.  THE.WRITERS.  Adolph  von  Pichjer. the Tyrolese poet, ;  tho   violations   of   the   laws   of   the \\ celebrated his eightieth birthday recently. I  Why He Wni Excused.  At the Dublin city sessions one morn-  ins; a juror prayed to be excused, and  suid he had a doctor's certificate that he  was not fit to serve. He handed up a  closed envelope to the recorder, who  found it contained a letter from a well  known Dublin medical man. Amid great  laughter in court, the recorder read this  letter aloud:  \"This man has been asking for a certificate that he is unable to serve as V  juror. I don't. know\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' whether\" he is a  knave or a fool, but he has little brains,  and he reeks of porter.\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Trouble JEnouicli For Two.  \"He   carried   the  letter  around' in   his  pocket for five weeks.\"  \"Then what did he do?\"  \"He wrote to his father-in-law asking  him what he'd better do.    His father-la--  law wrote back aud said he was awfully  glad his son-in-law had written.   The letter reminded him that be had a letter in  his own pc-cket that he bad been carrying  around six weeks.\"  \"Didn't be offer any advice?\"  \"Not a word.   So Briggs fussed around  and  worried  and at last opened  the envelope to see how much mischief he had  done by retaining it.    What do you suppose it contained?    A   recipe\" for making  tamarind jelly clipped   from some newspaper,  together  with two almanac- jokes  and a sample of cheap gingham.    Briggs  fluug the whole outfit in the fire and felt  better.     But  he chuckles  every   time   he  thinks' of   his old   father-in-law  aud   the'  burden    he    may    still    be    carrying.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Cleveland Plain Dealer.  It   is   trot   generally   known   that   Rud- |  yard  Kipling's full name is Joseph  Rud  yard  Kipling.  Hall Caiuc is rapidly buying land in the  'island of t)liin,\\, Jii.s aspiration being to be I  one of the  hygest. landed   proprietors  in  Crcat Britain.  Italian-physicians declare (hnt the'paralysis of the (origin- and tight arm from  which' the poet Cndiiicci sutlers is a result of overwork.  Theodore Woros, ihe artist, has presented his latest picture. \"The Spirit of  Bohemia,\" to the Bohemian club of San  l'Yanciseo, of which he was recently  elected an  honorary  member.  I'nlolil Vuluc, \"Wlilrli Pmltlvolj < \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Pinijilex,   BluckluutdS, Krzerun, suit  Itliemu nnd livery Porui <>l  Skin   DIsettiM!, Is  DR.   CHASE'S-\" OINTMENT  PITH   AND   POINT.  It seems easy to pay. a note before it  Is due.  The secret of good looks is often a good  stomach.  After uII. nearly everything is knocked  down to the highe-t bidder.  The fun in hitting an enemy is not  worth the pain of the blow the enemy  will give In  iet urn.  j      As groat as may   bo tho difleri'mci'  i opinion  as   to   the   various   tyjis i\\  j beauty, no one can sco   beauty m ,i f-uc  i that is disfigured by pimplis and li'ui  j hoads or scarred by traces  ol et'\/i ('ii\"'  i ether skin diseases.  j     In   society the   low-neck   drc-\ufffd\ufffd '\"-  I qneiulyieveals i-houldcrs and h.-u- >-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  , e ed wi tli pimples or other   fkin  iri  ' tioi.'s repulsive to tho sight.  Why are women coutunt tu tri i\ufffd\ufffd  j cover up such blemishes by |\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdh(f\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  , and harmful propitratious win1\" l''\ufffd\ufffd  ! ecu Id. us well cure  them  -and iii.ik* 'll1 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Not Coittnffiopi.  The reminiscences and recollections of.  W. G. Grace, the veteran English cricketer, contain one good story, a joke, made  by.Tom Emmett, a famous bowler.  One Saturday afternoon Ifirnmett was  bowling for. his club, but the fielders  dropped catch after catch with such systematic persistence thai he lost his temper, threw the ball oil tha ground and  said:       ', '..'''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  . \"I'm not Koing to bowl any more.  There's an epidemic on this ground, but,  thank heaven, it nin't catchin!\"  A. Uubloun Compllinenr.  An ambitious but awkward goltisl was  trying out the links at the Presidio and  had made one rout'id uh'der. the giiid'auco  :of a youthful caddie.. It was a round ;of  unspeakable disasters: .'','.  \"You. should join a club, sir,\" said the  caddie, as the two turned homeward.  \"You'd have a (hie chance for the  prizes.\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'Do you think so?\"  asked  the! gentle--  ma\/i. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdbrightening up at this word ;6f: encouragement. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\", \" '  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAye,\" said tlie caddie fervently.  \"You'd get the biggest handicap of them  all!\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSan  Francisco Wave.  There  Is  nothing so  trying as a  bard  day's work once a -.seek.   If you work ev- j skin (;lc:lr,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\\.L'ea,lthy^''aud,ual:llr;t.^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^ l1-  ory day. you.get used to it. j j,,,, j'^'prepartifciou so well 'known ^ Ur  Oppqi'lunity. \\\\UU-\\i knocks but once at j Chase's Ointiuont\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  every door. -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdght   io-. get  soh.e  calling |     Eczema or Salt Rheam ttlav 'b.i t ^u  cards. \"It linds so many of.us out.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAtchison Globe, -',.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Her Fortune.  \"My face is my fortune, Blr,\" ahe saii^  And it was no fairy tale, either, for she  was a bearded lady and drew sixty pel  from tha dime museum.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-Philadelphia  ttecord.  Dear Hunting.  Pi-lend\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHave any doer hunting?  Sportsman\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdI killed a cow. |  Friend\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThat wasn't deer.  Sportsman\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIt wasn't, eh?   The ahot  cost me $40.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPhlladelphl* Record.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd UllJlIBt.  \"If you keep, oh as yon have begun,  Mabel,\" complained the young husband,  .running his eye over the expense account,  \"we shall never, be a,ble, to lay up anything for,, n rainy day.\"  \"Mow can you say so, Henry.\" exclaimed the young wife, righteously indignant, \"when yon know I have two of  the loveliest rainy day skirts that were  eve? made!\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdChicago Tribune.  THE  HOM^DOCTOR.  A   strong   solution -'''. of , Ijorax   applied  twice a day will eure.ringworms.'  _ A large tabk'Spoont'iil of black currant  jam  in  a  glass of  boding   water, .drunk  upon retiring, will relieve a cough.  The majority of poultices may he mixed  with boiling water and allowed to boil for  a few minutes. This will help them to  retain the heat. >''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Bathe a bruise freely'.-in hot water to  which has -been added., sweet oil and a  few drops of turpentine. Uiil> .genflv for  20 minutes, nuii bind: and blue marks  will be prevented.  jas  the   most severe, of   'skin  dist i\"1\"1  which destroy beauty and   cause m1\"'*- ,i  misery from the terrible ftching wilic\" |  aceo m panies t hem.  That Dr. Ohasei's Ointment Jius'turt'  Some people have never pin-chased a  gold brick for no other reason than that  the gold brick man has never suspected  thera of having the \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdprice. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Atchison  Globe.  UPPER CUTS.  New York tinder the Ilorion law has  bocoini- ih,.. <-hi,.|-\"'pi-izoiighijng sla(^' (lf  the !i(.'i)ioti. an--eniiiienee mu at-, all to be  desired.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSyracuse   Posi-Stiini'hird.    ,  More horror is being .expressed-'at the  idea of pulling ofl\"another, big scrap in a  civilized eomiirimity. So it goes. 'Jiu.  scandalized throw up their handswh  the pugilists ''cominue to just  ch\ufffd\ufffdir\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdI'hiladeJuhU Tiuinn.  put  j i I o  U3  (1  some of tho worst cases of Eczcina tlnj  have existed is known to ail \\vh'J n'\"  the lestimonials freqnebtlypubli.-ih\"1\"1  this pa per.    That it,  cures- Er\/A-mn i*  suflicienfc proof that it will quickly. buU  ish the lesser   skin   diseases, ! t-uoh  \"  pimples and blackheads.  '-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd No preparation is of such incsti\"^'10  worth in a woman's  toilet,, for bi'Mil^  curing the   pimples   that  Inc. usua11'  troublesome   at   regular    intervals it  gives instant relief to   the  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffditching '\ufffd\ufffd  which women'uro subject,and ahsolutu  ly cures piles.  Dr.Chaso's Ointment, 00 ceuH \ufffd\ufffd  box, at all dealers, or by mail- our\"  ceipt of price hy Edniauisoii, ttatcs i\"(1  Oo., Toronto.  Everybody is coughing except thobe  who use Dr. Ohases' Syrup of Linden  and Turpentine, the most popular &m  successful remedy extant for croW  bronchitis, asthma, cough*. \ufffd\ufffd\"<' coi(ii  35 cents a bottle.  'A  vt r.  n a...  THE MOYIE LEADER.  MOYIE,    Ii.    <;.  SCRAPS OF SCIENCE.  i Don't Waste  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Your Money ou  Worthless  Catarrh Cures.  JAPANESE CATARRH   CURE   CURES.  '-ui.-n  11 M  \"Is!,,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'ttoi  on  Tlsc  greatest distanra to  which   wire- I aml is thft  Ic-ms messages have been sent is A'.) miles. I ONX.T guara>\"T\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdI> CURt.  A sciolist has calculated that the eye- l The proprietor* of Japanese Catarrh Cnre are  lids of the\" average man open nnd shut j daily receiving Hi.iuykrtersof grotjtude from  ,.,,   f.-..,.   .i,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.   Jiaoa cum   ,- -      .u       the catarrn-amu-U'd  in  all  pans  of Canada,  no   fewei   than   -1.000.000   limes   in   the , During December and January  we  sent out  course of a single year of his existence.      | over three thousand free sample boxes, and in  (I'l'iii'i-nnhii\"! c-,.,ti\ufffd\ufffdf;,-.\ufffd\ufffd *)>\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,,. <l \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. .-.o I SO per cent, of the eases the people tell us that  m%-\ufffd\ufffd '\" \"--lapnic... .t.Urstics slrow that ,o-J , ev*\ufffd\ufffd (i,camall sample has uoms them more pood  &\ufffd\ufffd\/.<> V,,I,\"I1UC lsl-1\ufffd\ufffddR have risen out of the sea ; than many dollar*'  worth of ao-call&i  A  BOSTON   MAIDEN.  Slifi StO'nJ ir|.u;i  llie  l\".:.]t.':in  p.'atl .1 '11,   rj.ji:  In vvundi-r 11-, rl:0 11 ;-n <hci ::i)\ufffd\ufffd..:il <i..;,  'Nc-.illi   p.-.tlu.  liv (;rj:,ij  i_t<i;ul   j-ri'jw   1,1 iiwh cap.  PL-*!.  Thr^ugn conjoin de.-u.  \"Great swncry,\" to brcai. the ic? I ij'd.  \"fnconiprorit'n^iWc,  rrijiw-uc,  rrrjr.d 1\"  Arid sh? K'pliod. with rs..ic! of qjK-enl.v  licad,  \"It boars the l>\ufffd\ufffd;nrl.\"?    '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd '  omens  ilments.  binee lire beginning of the century.' Nine  , 1   , ^''TiW&WltJiIai'criC  IJ i! I A%Ai<tK*W%MiM-. ,   .  Hat lopped aud solid  NAPOLEON   SLEPT.  \ufffd\ufffdS.fl,-tTanKe Explanation  from an KiiKlishmuii   i Griffiths & Mric-iilicrson Co., Ul Church Street,  of IVclliiiKton's Victory.  ish hook  on \"Wateiloo  ronderfully interesting  ..._.,.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,.,   ^. about   Napoleon.    It  fi^v&^fli.'Xells'\/Kow* Napoleon slept in the battle of  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^iMW^1' urged that, throughout the  v-J^vh't'^iM^aAip^'e\"11 Napoleon was incapacitated  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;\/vC^S^^idioSease and in a semi-comatose con-  ... ir,'.'';:\ufffd\ufffd^;55'ditioii at the moment when energy was  ^^^^^^.o^all things  the  most needful.     The,  or'''-^l'SW(*Vl^1'seems   t0 te .that .Napoleon was  \\^V^^JBufficring  under   the    influence    of   a  '^tCPfhfitirSijige\" and  mystei  cures.  Japanese Catarrh Cure is the  result  of  a  pro-  ! serration pertc-ctui  by  yours  of  experiJiieni-U  i study by  one of   America'*  most   successful  ........      !..   *       , , -     .. .   a  of  Tbe  cry  rts:  tiie  orifice 61 the iio*'c to thu imieViirost recesses of  , the middle ear, eariug invniinbly all forms of  1 catarrh of the u&*e and thi-o.-a, rind all forms of  , oaturrh'J.1 de-u'iioFS.  Sold by all drwggiBis. Price, 50 ' cents: six  i bottle-s,iz.&x' A iree oamp'le sent to any ad-  j dress. Enclose .\"'-cent stump. Address, The  1 Griffiths <te MireiilnT^oii C  ! Toronto.  \"Those  towering  p;ri\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-3,   how  graceful  in  tl:  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIr  I\"  !(i<\\  ,  Swaj r-  d   liy  me  passing   br  rt'Zc  lii^.-r  toi  i<!  to  roots!  ,  r>  Arc not  tl.fV  ionij:  vi\"    And s  Uv fi  if.   u<  pJu'i  ,  \"Say.  j in'I  tlX-'V  U-aiiKV\"  HIDDEN. JEWELRY   IN    INDIA.  j Tho Hindoo'!. Favorite Metliod of K\ufffd\ufffdeaplne  ' ' ' ' the Tux Gatherer.  i     Xcver during, lt3   existence   has   India  ( been so rich in jewelry as now.   The peo-  i  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ^ ,,,...;rr.-.Btra*n'ge'  inj'sterious maladj-, the  .    .spaMA\/vJaTzarp; w;ith brier flashes of dissipation,  l,4lh\"v'^s'i^??SSl^ not unna-ttu*ally .generate dis-  :^'^^M|;ease'S from which  the  ordinary man is  !::;*;;?p|fM^.fre^di.sea.ses. .thereiore. which but'  0^0^x'ji0ly' present   thcinselves '-to; the ob-  i-i'^li^^lfSphxyation of medical men. Thero still'  ..   .. ..,r.... \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.>,\ufffd\ufffd-,..,..,. i    a ,work, winch,  onld  be  reat  fie investigation might  . ed than in examining  ',.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ^^ftliil'*w^^-*;y'S'-ca*   -\"lt->   mental, conditioirof  ''.!'7-|^-S|^>sach men as P.ope. Swift and Napoleon  :1''eiMS^aJonaparte. ' \"What is certain in Kapo-  H&ismM&QOn s case is that ms maladv had'been  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'iirt,'lli^i!^5?o\ufffd\ufffdient' of \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd buttle his wonderful power  nii'i'^rfS1!^ \ufffd\ufffd<-lUt'   a      correct decision seemed to  '             ; so much so that for the time  Itnost abandoned tlJe reins to  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdyffi  .;,j^||:;^eliance.   -At Wacrain and at Bautzen  m a%%|^S'? s-\ufffd\ufffdPfc w-hilo   the   noise of battle was  .'.V^%.toHi\"pllin\ufffd\ufffd.' around him: at Waterloo, seated  ij-jl^lw?\/?1!? a ^v\ufffd\ufffdouen chair, .his  head drooping  l:i)^^Mli^on   *lis   :uVns-   resting' on . a   table  R#^i,stretched ont to accommodate li'ismaps  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ^l^mS^\"      Papers,   he   slumbered   heavily.  \"~,<4-5''^l^?^^v^OUs  f\ufffd\ufffd1' the moment,' even at- Oris  'J |'^>crisis of his fortunes, of the events that  '   .?.i^?.tweVii deciding his destiny.\"  plo are always adding to their stock.' Sav  lugs from nearly all souroes are disposed  of in this way; and these savings are being constantly made\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdoften ac the expenses of clothing, sometimes' at the expense of greater necessaries of life. Tho  making and the storing away of -wealth  in this form is tho national peculiarity ot  the count)-}'.  Jewelry is regarded as tho most stable  kind of wealth, aud\" fortunes ; aro never  counted without estimating the value of  the stock in jeWelry. Tt can always be  plcngerrdr di=posed\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdof. The market for  its stile Is never closed und. never '.He?  pressed. Tho most ignorant native who  wishes to sell ,-i piece of jewelry knows  its market value quite well. He can1  scarcely be cheated. -  ' Jewelry forms tlie greatest factor in  matrimony., The mast lowly bride has  hcr-stridhan, which\" is occasionally equal  in .value to Jive yours' income of the  bridegroom. Thero is often a scarcity, of  clothing, sometime* a'scarcity ol\" cooking  pots, general]]}'not a particle ,of furniture, hut nearly always a stock of jewelry. The wife that has no jewelry possesses nothing -else; sho can not be  robbed. The family that dqes not have  jewelry is absolutely indigent. ,  One of tho greatest bori.'ts of the jewelry owner is that his hoards can not; be  taxed. A man may own jewelry valued  at a lakh ot rupees and pay no income  tax. .This is a source of great satisfaction.\" Jewelry'yields ' no recurring income-! bur it is prized more than Government paper. If it. never increases-it never  diminishes, is a national saving, common  among mon and women alike. No'native  marriage, except among the most impoverished, rakes place without a transfer of  jewelry, and very frequently of new jewelry.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLondon TidOSUs. ,  f'Whai niigliu  power ;it-rv<-d llio'liur.J rtui .-|,llt  Tlir<e   mijjlity    rotks   .siuir    arm    liurlej    '.Kni  Iiatlc!'-  Witli upturned .jtyes gbe .uiswere'!,   '-Hu-.n'i it  A <:ra<;iA(-rjac-kl\" '  \"TIipw' rugged canyon -walN on sillier Mde-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  I'l-i'isem rlic-y not v. rnui-i. imptoin^ iru'-ai'\"  Sho tumid lior i'.ycs upon tbi;r:i and re-phed,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    \"Well.  I  irsould ^-rurit!\"  \"Didat note ihe golden haze'\ufffd\ufffdhit h  dn-anni\/  Spread o'er the lulls .wlien day begjn 10 dawnf\"  She liiouf\/bl a tnorrierit Jiid' lliuii answered tan,  \"We. 1 cauifla on!\"     \"  \"How irisij.riiifit'ar,'t  we  mortals btcrn ;  SurrouiKivd by the \\voil.3 of ujiirre, t,utli  ia   tliis.\"   -Sire   wift   rt-plied:    \"Well.    1   f-rrould  dreurnl '  ' We ain't so much!'\"      .  o  \"SuppirsB ll.tsc t;rcat Wjlls tou'trrin-j bvrilieud  Should close u|*jtj us liJ ihii ui\\rul th.-iMUi\"       ,'  She   ehru^tj-L-d   lii-r-  slioulOf-isi  orrc<'   or   i\ufffd\ufffd,in-  unci  IiJIJ, c  \"I'd ha\\e k b|jo.t.rn '.\"  \"Ase you from Ucii'.i, may I BeV..\" . And t],e  Cuvc me a r-'laine; ihai Lau'icd iny hliir Iu i i-rt  And said: \"VVfll, 1 should murmur-; ,-Nii'.'   I ha  K IJosibn jryurl.'\"  ,'   , , ',   ' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Denver   i'obt.  \"Women are coming to 'understand  that the Backaches,  -     -    - -'     d  ft Headaches, Tirec  *-.\ufffd\ufffd 4''7,y H \\\\^) Feelings and Weak  ^lW^>i.\\M$ Spells,  fr  V  Ctti $Lp-Us Atf-n^o  \"X^Lf> M^bc^y  into the blood, taking with them a uml  titude of pains and aches.  oin which  they suffer-are due  to wroug aetion of  tho kidneys.  The poisons that  ought to be carried  oil   aie   sent   back  'I  m  3:1  , M  Ml  m  m  iff-*  drive away' pains aud ache's, maVe women  healthy and happv\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdable to enjoy life.  Mrs. C. H. Gillespie, 204 Britain Street,  St. John, N.B., saj-s:   '  \"' Some time ago I had-a violent attack  of La Grippe. From this, severe kidney  trouble arose, for which 1 doctored with  ii number of tho. best physicians in St  John, but received little relief. Hearing  1'oan'e Kidney Pills highly spoken of, 1  began their uso and' in a short time found  them to be a perfect cure. Before taking  these pills I, Buffered such torture that 1  scuk- not tum'over in be'd without assist-  'ineo., JDoan's Kidney Pills have rescued  mo from this terrible, condition, and have  removed every pain and ache.  t\/sTW   ^  &7u4\/ &Z\/  C^s^t<7lsCAs<is*  'SUJfFfCR \"MO MORE. There- are thousands who live mi.-.tiablfi lives because  dyspepsia dulls tho lacuitles and shadows  exisience with the cloud of depreasion.  One way'to dispel tho vapora thut beset  _the victim1! of tbi-; disorder i--to \"order  Tib em a course of Parmelee's Vegetable  Pills, which are among the best vegetable pills kuown, t.eiirg e\ufffd\ufffdsy tp take and  are ino>t efficacious in cheir action. A  trial of tbem will prove this.   ,   >    .     \"  ,  tiJ^MI^-\"1  NVaiU l0 sel1 yon lhis l)0om-    1'  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd!'^.|J,!-|;i!^oiiig to keep on writing poems until  !   t\\   ,r-*' Vliuniug  5      '\"'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA', tt*V'f>w  AtUnLi Constitution  *  V  Third Day Out.  Ton ought to he o\">ei it by this  ,\">.\ufffd\ufffd*JJ,\ufffd\ufffdti;tie.\" said the seasoned u.neler, tiy-  i5^fOJhg to petsuade his fi lend lo come to  -A*  thtj table   \"and  jour stomach  should  --*&i,'bt!>fl's roii'*-h as oak\"  d zlLT lubhei  \"V\\>*T*t^ SIC|, 0- more\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdChicago Tribune  it   isti t,\"   tesponded   the  land-  vi Iili a  feeble ellomto smile.  1 i\ufffd\ufffdvj   1 ^(^Ifl rot hep  DIclrej'B   I'liilosiipli}  . ,,,^Hea\\cu   is   i-ughi}   ciw-i   tu  ,R  \\ou,   but  +\ufffd\ufffd, i, t3orae mens pa\\s if It) toi a sp\\gla>s, onl}'  !\"}v ^^tei^nuss it \\\\ hilst dei  looUur lei it __     ' ^\\Vi^-)e Ul-1-' --'*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd UJt!t <l bushel ei happiness i meanVdo'so  \ufffd\ufffd$<j(is done itigit de toll.s dat hub ti high ole i  -<-, *) '\"^tiuie on a pint me'isuie  \", i '(%* You   cant   mike   hay   whilst   de  ^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^\"shnjos. will a thinnometcr in one ban  ^i '.' a|riliibu Ih in de Mithi'i  Ji   i >1\",l)e   ia in  dm   \ufffd\ufffdings  at   his   moiK   is  imightN   li.i|)[n   inetiii, but de tumble  (t''BQiiie iihii\ufffd\ufffd   mi i 4ot no \\oice lei  \\. Atlant i I'liiisiitniuin  How lo Incrcaw Flo\ufffd\ufffdli. ,  For breafkfast a thiu woman takes  either milk, chocolate, or cocoa. Commence tho meal with a basin, nf oatmeal  porridge, eating ,with either milk, cream  or golden syrup, .varying it with maize  and milk, or any of the fattening meals.  All the milk taken'must llrst be boiled\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  never forget that. As to meats, you may  eat fat hacon, an omelette or scrambled  eggs, and plenty of butter and honey on  wholemeal bread, hue uo toast.  At lunch a glass of milk, alone If you  can digest it, if not, with a third the  quantity of soda or mineral water. Potatoes, omelettes, macaroni, milk, succ and  hatter puddings, salads with plenty of  oil and cream, but no vinegar,' shell fish,  oysters, calves' aud sheep's brains, hut  u- little lean meat as possible, is pre-  MCiibcd  Some women will   ilnd   tlu-ee-quarter*  of a gla>s of stout, alone or filled up with  alkaltne v-ater, at 11 A   M , very fattening, but if you are Inclined   to \\bilhous  ne'-i, no beet or stout should be taken.  Then for dinner choose a vegetable  soup made v;ith a milk \"stock.\" Pen,  tomato, IcumI, haricot, potato and tanot  soups cire all good. Dark fat incuts in  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdspaiing quintities, pork, fLslr in abun  dime, suoh as turbot, cod, mackerel,  mus-( Is, o,nd s.rlads, v, lcii both meat and  \\tgetables Vinegar and acids of all  kinds aie atiictly forbidden, but a nap  attci lunch is* uot; if you cau indulge in  i ic without fear   of   a   headache,    b}    all  To Avoid Tliimiess. ,   .,  ,      \" i -  A restlctss life and excess t ot mental  work riot only reduces llcsii, but \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ca\"ses  indisposition in ihe shape of headaches',  indigestion anil nervous prostration, consequently kiss of appetite, and emaciation a<*. a natural result. -  Retire to bed .-is early as possible never  later than 10 P. 31.. and rise, ]ate. ' Allow yourself plenty of time for your  toilet; which must include a- tepid, not,  cold, bath, and tbe oatmeal bag in it  should not he omitted. A warm bath  twice a week is a good'thing. Leave off  the curly cup ot tea and substitute good  cocoa instead, made eutivcly with milk,  and as much sugar as you can take.  Work while you sleep without a gripe  ,or pain, curing Dyspepsia, Sick Headache  and Coustipat ion and make' you feel better  in the morning, Price 25c. i  AT   THE  WINNIPEG BUSINESS COLLEGE  \"We t\ufffd\ufffd-KClr Shorthand, all  liusiriess  Sub-'  jects   ami   Telegraphy,.      >fo   r_r0li(!;iys   ar  Xmas     Individual   IriHtruet ion.    .Sfmieut*  may uiitcr nt airy lliuo.    Gi-t 1'articularu.  G. \"VV. HOSaLd, Sr-c.  LUCAS, STEELE k BRISTOL  Importers of Groceries  WntB_ \"QS. iruDiinoii.Ont.  flrcle Teas  L. S. & It. ColTee\ufffd\ufffd  , I.. S.&B. Extract!  1..S.& B. Spice*  W.    V    V.  nr,:t  ALOG   OF    f  SEEDS, etc., (900  Farm and Garden  Implements.  THE ONLY PRINTERS' SUPPLY HGUtt  IN THE K0RTHWEST  We keep a. large stock sJvyays on hind of tTPL  PRINTERS* < MATERIAL \ufffd\ufffdd. PRINTERS' MACHINERY; can fit out Daily or,Weekly Papau  or Job Outfits on few hours' notice. W\ufffd\ufffd xis*  \"\"Ply READY-FR.'HTS; STEREB-PLATES. \ufffd\ufffdw  PAPER \ufffd\ufffdnd CARD STOCK.     .  EVERYTH1HQ FOR THE PRINTER   ..  'Toronto Type Foundry' Co., Limited.'  175   Owen St., \"Winnipeg.  HIGH\\ GRADE   PLOWS',    SEEDING   MACHINES,'  t V. .->\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd!-........        M..........   ]    !\ufffd\ufffd.. ...... ..-t      \\l'....l....ll..l  l-'orGood orKvil.  On trillesj that scciu light as air, dcop  and '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfar-reaching Lssucri arc Irung. ' A  word, a smile, n^frown, a, nronicut'd hesitation, a thoughtless at^p\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwho can tell  what destinies shall' turn on them?r For  this reason God has'determined that men  shallgive account in, Uie day of judgment, for every idle word they shall'  speak. An idle word may he a potent  word for good, or evil.  UNIVERSITY NOTES.  Students govern their,own dortiiirorii's  at the Univensit v of Pennsylvania.  s'lolurnhia university has added wu pro  fessoi-s to its German department.  At Illinois university a Saturday^-our.se  for public school teachers.engaged 'during  ihe week has,opened.  , The University of Cafifornia has esl:i,h-  lished a chair of Cantfin'est, the principal  dialect of the Chinese language.  Wesloj'An university, r.r .Middlntown.  Conn., on. account of higli rates <>f iwinrd  in the town. hn<- opened \"coinmiiii*.\"  wheiv students can oii'tain meals at ?\"_'..\"()  a  week. ' '      *  * Tbe groan lung healer is found in that  excellent medicine sold as Bickle's Anti-  Cor.sumpuv6' Syrup lb soothes' and  dimini-.hes the sensibility of the mum-  Drane of the throat and air passages, and  is a sovereign remedy for all coughs',  colds, hoarseness, pain or soreness in the  chest, bronchitis, etc. It has cured many'  when supposed to be far advanced in consumption..  FREE  SEND  FOR ,  OUR  T   M    PPPTTTIMQ >  Tiri*.'\ufffd\ufffd^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. i HIGH-GRADE,, PLOWS, , SEEDING   MACHINES,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJ.IYI.    IrJCirtJftLlJNb,     WlIllllTJeff ' Carrlntr\ufffd\ufffd--.   Wiiiiwi.,1 I'.arruws. WiinlmilJn  ,   ' ' ,     -^.Oi&c.    COC1CSUUTT I'tOWjCO.,  U'liinlpt-tf.\"  NATIONAL   LIFE ASSURANCE  ,    !      CO. OF CANADA.  AairNTS Waji'tbd i\ufffd\ufffd C\"kukpbesented DurrKicm  NARES &  ROBINSON,  WINNIPEG, MAN. 0  31an[i(f\ufffd\ufffdri Alan, ami 'N. W. \"i:  ii  [If  I  '5.1  '.!  DOMINION    LANDS  SCRIP   FOR   SALE.  Write  Vox  w.  u\ufffd\ufffd   for   fall   information,  can SAVK  MOXJiY.    ,  H.   SPROULE,   &   COMPANY,  Real Estate and Financial Broker*,  ' 375  Main St., Winnipeg.  Ch'URCH   AND   CHURCHMAN.\"'!      WOES OF THE  INTERLOCUTOR.  The  averaev.' i-.-iiury  p;lid   to Methodist  AXciv.li'miscineut.  A. man to hang by the neck thirteen  days and nights was the attraction at a  Montmartro cafe recently; the doctor^,  however, stopped the performance at the  end of tho fourth day, the man being in  a critical condition. His name is Durand.  He attained notoriety some -time ago hy  standing on a pedestal at Marseilles for  twenty-eight consecutive days.  THE PUBLIC should bear \"in mind  that i)r. Thomas' Eolectrio Oil lias nothing in common with the impure, deteri-'  orating class of so-calltd medicinal oils.  It is eminently pure and really efficacious  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdrelieving pain and lameness, stiffness  of the joints and muscles, and stores or  hurts, besides being an excellent speoific  for rheumatism, coughs and brouohial  complaints. '  THE  NURSERY.  Us?,  pea- malt  hi   the bath .water of t  delicate child or one whose legs are weak.  \"*A   baby   should   never   be   frightened  with   stories   told    by   an    ignorant   or  thoughtless nurse.        .       \"  A child may he made gtntle or rough,  according to the manners and actions of  those about him. for his greatest desire  is to imitate. - \"-  If you should have a nursery, it should  have a southern exposure. Babies, like  ptants. need plenty of sunshine to make  them vigorous and health*.  preachers in the Urn't.-d States last-;viir !  wu|- \ufffd\ufffd473.35.        , ' ' '!  Ira D. Sankey. the .singoi  who used to '  he associated with  Mr. .Moody, is to become  an  evangelist  on   his own   account  aad  will  conduct  a'M?rie\ufffd\ufffd of, revivals  iu  v.'irions cities this winter.  In a church at nirmm^ham, England,  it is the' custom 'to disperse the. choir  among, the congregation ::nd to' arrange  as ftir as possible that the congregation  shall lip grouped together according to ;  ihe parts they sing.        - j  Father .Osborne of 0the Episcopal i  Church of Sc.John the' Evangelist. B<.*- j  ton, who has spent seven years ainoug :  tiw lepers of South Africa, is raising a '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  fund to establish an American medical !  station for .the benefit of thop sufferers I  from leprosy iu that part of the world.     :  .sun  a  is  singin.  . \\ ^Patiently Bore Disgrace for Years.  IS  *  A Victim of Circiiinstaiice*..  \"Fohce of habit,\" said Col. Cartel, \"is  a \\er> pow'ful thing x\\. man i* likely  to get lmpio&sions in his minil, suh,  which load him in tho most unexpected  diiectinus, suh.\"  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Custom, are very hnrd to contiol \"  ' lJMttly so I have in mmd the cjimj  ol an cditrih in ouah cit\\, suh A line  gentleman he was., too, in many re-.pei.Us  >uh lint folne ot Jiribii got him into a  ut\\ einl anassin' not to sa) Im^iudous  Jin dlcaineut \"  ' Did Iron\ufffd\ufffd\ufffddid Ire indulge in too  una h '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtimiiiiiin\" ft  ' Nothing ot the soht. No, tub But  in btlonged to the literary school AvhUh  mnki \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd> fti'iimm use of tho pionoun 'v>e'  In it-. cditoitMl wntlng And would joh  l\ufffd\ufffd lievo It, sob, that man ^roto 'wo' >\ufffd\ufffdu  often that he got to thinking ot liim&trll  in I he plui'd number and inadveiteutlv  \\oud sivteen tmiLN at the same election \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWashington Si.u  'i. Uolirsioji iimd a Snare.  \"Fiicnclb\"' 1 should say. so. Never  suspected th it I had so many. Have  to h t them ri one door and otu the  other       Cost  Jot  of   fellows  yon   ever  'i\\        (Jive   em   a   Id1; V.ttig party   tonight '  'I ben the misguided youth sat down  i id drew a check against the guner-  (>i*s logic he had received within the  month .mil i evented an insinuation  ih.it hi- finish wa.s visible\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDetroit  I'i < e l*u s-s  \"1 had for years pttieiitlj  bomt   the dls-  ^ grace,  suftcrlng,  iniseii  and pih.itloa-j due  to  mv-   lriisbund's  diluklrig  lnljlts   Jlcrriue  , of jour marvelous leuieih   for the cure of  .dnuikLimcsi,   which   1   could gun  in\\   hua-  ti.and sccreth,   1 (iPcrUed to ti>   it      I  nro  ^curcd   i prcKige   irul ml\\cd  it   in  his rood  \"and collee,   mil.  as  the ninod-i   win, odorless find Insteliss, he tiid not liiiow   what it  ' was that so tjutf Mv relieved his cr-nlru.- for  liiiuoi       Ho  soon   be^'ti   to  pick   up   flesh,  his   appetite   101   solid   food   returned,   he  Btuek  to  his viiii.  regtilniU,  nnd  we   now  hnve   i   InipiH   homt      Aftei   lie  v is  com-  pletolv  (tued   r   told   him  of the deception  I hrrd j)i uilsed on him,  when lie   icknowl  edged   tint   It had  beta   his  snlng,   is  he  I ^lad not tlie resolution to iirwii oq* of his  (Own  neeotd      I   heirtlh   advise   ill   women  'afflicted as.  I  vus  to give  jour  lemedv  a  trial.\"  4,-A pnriiplilet In plnbi, soiled en^olope,  Bent free giving testimonials and f'll In-  .ronmtlon, wllh dheUloim how to t'iKe or  admlnislLT Samnrlj Presr tlptlon Corro-  Bpondence rorrslilored sacrerllv torrfiden-  tlal Address The Samaria Remedy Co_  , 23 Jordan street,   Toronto,   Out  'I hi I ft \\, Ir >ot Jlonct.  borne    petiple   are    now     working     a  -cbemo to    ride   liomo   free     The   oth\ufffd\ufffdr  (\\cning  i man v.is s\"en at   Twelfth and  Walnut streets to get   on   a   Seventeenth  and Nineteenth street ear     v\\hon tbe car  had    started   ho   asked    the     conductoi  whether he vas on a Bating  avenue tar.  1 he r oncluctoi s rid no,and accordingly ho  got   off.    afrer   he   nnd    been   carried   a  square     Jle got on   the   ucvrt car, us, t|io  r irs run    vci)   close   un   \"Walnut    stiecr  This car was   a   Fating   stieet   car. and  when the car ban   stftly staiLed ho asked  Ihe (ondiutor v hi thei it w<is a Daiuastii  avenue tar.     'ihe conductor  politel> told  hnn that those cars inn on Market street,  and he had gained a   square     Iho   next  (at  was a   ( hestei    avenue   car,   and   he  kept it up uiifij he got to the bchuvlkill.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Philadelphia. C ill  Hcrelj   it   SiiKirrextlnii.  I     Long\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdI lavi   von loigutten that S-o jou  hollowed of me some tune ngoV  Shoit\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Oh, no'    I snll have it m tniinl  I     Long\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\\\\'( II, don't vou think this would  I be  \ufffd\ufffd'   o'oud   time to  uheve  jour   mmd  of  it\/  An  Offer Declined.  \"Now, Mi Beefy,\" coldly said the  handsome \\oung widow who was doing  hei own nun Leung, \"while I am fully  conscious oi the honor yon wish to confer  upon rue. 1 must tell yon that I have no  picsi tit intention of marrying again and  utii thiit'luie loinpe'led to refuse the  ofli i in vimi h ind.\"  'Hub Hub but. inum,\" st.imtueied ihe  aston shed Imulier, \"I hnve never offered  v on mv  Ii ind   -mil \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnil\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \"I Ik n w hv ate you trying to weigh il  on the s< .tu t, v,th the meat, sir?\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSpare  Miuneiiis  A   Sense  of  insecurity.  \"No.\" said Mr. Cumvos. \"I don't think  I shall ever try to run' one of them  one;-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthat is to say, one of those there  horseless carriages.\",  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIt's not at till ditircult,\" said hra  daughter.  \"Maybe not for some,.people.' But I'd  get my mind so tangled up tryin to pro-  inu'iicc ihe thing's name that I'd be plum  sine to let ii run away w.ith me.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Washington Star.   Important to  C.vc-llM.-. arid   Lacrosse J\".oyt>.  Mr. Mack White. tho well-knowr.  maiucr of the'Toronto I^acrosse Club aiu  Osgoods TTn.ll Football Club, writes: j  'consider Grillich's Menthol Liniursnc tui  equalled tor utnlotes or thote training. ]  have used it with thu Iwst success, and  can heartily recommend U. lor stiffness,  soreness, sprains aud all forms of swell  ing and inflammation All druggists,  25cts. -  There never vvtis, and never   will  be,   a  universal panacfa, In one remedy,   for.all  'lis to wnieh flesh is hciv\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe very nature  ot many curatives being Mich ' toliat   were  the germs of otner and aillorenUy   seated  diseases rooted in the system  of' tha  patient\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwhat would relieve one ill in turn  would   nggruvaiti   t\/io  othrt'.     Wa  hare,  however, in Quintm.- Wine, when   obtain-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdihle in a sound,   un-tdulr.eraTed   6tare,   a  remedy for many and grievous ills.  By its  gradual and judicious ufc the frailest systems   are   led   into     convalescence    and  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffditrengDh bv the influence whiuh   Quinine  exerts on Nut lire's   own   restoratives.    It  relieves the drooping saints of chose with  whom a chronic state of morbid despondency and luck of inu-re.st- in life   is n   disease, and, by   tranquilizing   the   nerves, \\  disposes to sound and   refreshing   sleep\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Imparts vigor to t.\/ro aocieu of tha   blood,  which, being sr.i inula red. courses throughout the veins, strengthening tho   healthy  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnimal functions of the  system,   thereby  making  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd activity    a    ueces\ufffd\ufffdnry    result,  strengthening the frame, and giving   life  to the digestive organs,   which  naturally  demand increased substance\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdresult,   improved appetite. Northrop and Lyman, of  Toronto, have given to  the   public   theis  superior Quinine Wine at the usual   rate,  and, gauged \"by the opinion of scientists,  this wine  approaches   nearest  perfection  of any in the market.     All druggists sell  00 mj PAY GASH!  \ufffd\ufffd-*<*  J u.st ilim'slo  Reiuii-Cee.  -Mrs. Virus\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-.John. 1 have long thought  you wore a coward, and now I know it.  1 have reliable information to the effect  that daring the war, when your country  sadly needed your .services, you shrank  flora your pulriotie duty and sent a substitute.  Mr. Virus \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Vcs, and I wish I'd dune  the same (lining my courting days.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Richmond Dispatch.         THEY WAKE TU>: TORPID ENEK  GILES.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMachinery not properly supervised and left to run itself, verv soon  shows fault in its working. It is the same  with the digestive organs. Unregulated  from, time to time they are likely to become torpid and throw the whole system  out of gear. Parmelee's Vegomble Pills  Were made to meet, such oases. ' They restore to the full tho flagging -faculties,  and briug into order all parts of the  mechanism..  Pay in SCRIP for Dominion Lauds and  Save 20 per Cent. Discount.  For full  information appii  tu  Alloway \"&. Champion,  BANKERS-AND    BROKERS  Winnipeg.  Or to any otlice of the JIEKCIIANTS' BANK  Ob' CANADA, or the UNION BANK OF  OANADA iu Manitoba or tlio We^t.  A. ' Luckless Mortal Hired to B\ufffd\ufffd  Swamped \"\\Vith.GaKr\ufffd\ufffd. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  .It is generally considered that the undertaker has a mournful and depressing  life, unenlivened by a gleam of sunshine,  but his career is a continual picnic compared to that of tho interlocutor at tht  minstrel show. This unfortunate gentleman -puts in his .whole life to see th\ufffd\ufffd  points of \"gags\" hurled at him by th\ufffd\ufffd  end men, failing,to guess the,most palpable conundrums and being a mark generally for the comedians, iu the midst ot  which he must rise, gracefully and announce iy a'well'modulated tone:  \"Mr. Manuel Romaine, the celebrated,  lyric tenor, will now render that beauti- '  fill ballad, 'I Loved You- Once, I Scorn  i\"on Now,'\" and  subside grandly into hii*  seat, until   the  song   is   ended   and  th\ufffd\ufffd  liniies and  tambo are ready to throw a  few (more. bricks at him.  It is a peculiar  feature of the inter*  locutor's' mental make up that he nevej  sees  the joke until  the end  man swat\ufffd\ufffd\"'  him   with   it. -   He   isn't' supposed  ,tcv  When   Bones   sniffs   with   scorn   at   th\ufffd\ufffd -  interlocutor's'recital   of  his   feats  as  a  life   savor,   in   which   he   recounts   th\ufffd\ufffd ,  thrilling adventure whereby he recover*  ed   the  switch, of a  half drowned  lady  and  returned   it to  her,  Bones says,-La-  dignantly:  \"Why, you're not a life saver at all!\" ' \"  \"What am  I,  then?\"  asks-the interlocutor in surprise.  \"Why, you're , only a hair restorer,\"  answers the comedian. Then the interlocutor has to look indignant for a moment and once more gracefully rise and  with a bow announce the pleasing \"baritone, who will favor with the latest'  song, entitled, etc. It's a hard life. Ha  never has a come back, which is som\ufffd\ufffd  slight recompense for getting a jolt now  and then. All the points are reserved,  for the comedians. They, get all the  laughs, which are invariably oa the pooi  interlocutor., \"  He knows that any attempt oa his part  to take a rise out of the end men would  be fatal  not only to the even  tenor of \ufffd\ufffd  the perfoimance, but probably to the interlocutor's job.    All  this must be very  depressing   to   that, functionary   in   his  hours  off  the  stage. '   He  must  take  a  very   oblique  and   moody   view   of   life.   '  It is but  natural  he should  burn  for a  chance to \"get back\" at the comedians,  io hand  Bones a tingling \"gag\" and get  away with'it. to''make Tambourine wish   \"  he had never learned the trade aud then  retire   gracefully.      If   the   interlocutoi  could do these things just once, it maj  be  he   would   consider  his  life  had  not  been spent iu vain.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdChicago Chronicle.  J.   D.  O'BRIEN.  UKOKElt   IN  Grain, Provisions and Stocks  Prlva \ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \\V~iro Connection vvi'h'a'l Loading  Markets. Grain and Securities bought, Sold and  C . rrlcd t n Jtarjr ns. C \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdrrw-ujotjdence Sollcited.  Priyato Cypher-Code Furnished upon Application. ; .      - .-; .  148 Princess St., Winnipeg, Man.  I'.O. DltAWJEB 1287.  When it comes to healing-, up old  running sotes oi. long'standing-there  is no remed) equal to Burdock Blood  Bittets.  Bathe the sore with the B.B.B.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  that lelioves the local irritation.  Take the B.B.B. internally\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthat  cleats the blood of all impurities on  which sores thrive. .'.'  Miss D. Melissa, Burka, Grindstone, lM.ig-dalen Islands, P.Q., gays:  \"It is with pleasure I speak in favor of  I>.ri 15. which cm ed me-of* a. .running: sore  on mv h g. 1 consulted three doctors and  the v i,ave me salv e to put on, but it did no  pood I'inally my leg- became a solid  running sore. In fact for nearly a month  I i ould not put mv foot to the floor. .  \"1 was advised to use. B.B.B. and die!  so Thiee bottles healed up niy leg eiri  inch su that I have never been troubled  with it since.\"  , .Tyro Theorists.      , .,  ...   \"It was a very .unfriendly thing, for the  professor to do,\" said the man. with'white  hair and gold glasses.    \"He sot his hoi ikon the market at the same time .'l.'.pub-.  lished mine.    But toy  publisher says vve  control   the. trade  and. can   coiiie  pretty  neat- squelching  his  work.    That's some  comfort.\"'  .\"What were yOur books about-V\"  \"lCcimomics. of cout-se. 'W'o both'wrote,  on  the terrible evil and  injustice .resulting from  the modern tendonc.v  to 1ai.-tifi-  eially restrict competition.'-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Washiugfou  Star.       ;   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .\".   -    - '''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' '. .  Kn\ufffd\ufffd:liiH(T\ufffd\ufffd   Great, Chniioe.  \"Why should England  be afraid to go  ''ahead and declare war against the,Boers'!  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWe're-''   friendly;  to'   \"England   now.   you  know.     It   couldn't   be \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd another  Majuba  Hill or Jameson affair.\".  \"What has our being friendly to England uot ; to do with if? Vou don't  imagine that we .would join her in a war  against-those South Africans, do you?\".  \"No, but we could farm out Joe Wheeler to her, couldn't we?\"-Chicago Times-  Herald.  Are  Readily, liemoved  by Our  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;'Constitutional Treatment Without .the. Necessity \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdof. Operation.  Many people, aro afflicted with lumps or  Uunois in -various' parts of the body that do  not seem- to cause them much pain or ineon-  veurence. Tumors, it must not bo forgQ.tt.cn.  are serious, aud should not bo.neglected for  several reasons. In the first place their  growth may involve or impair some, vital  part of the body; in tlio second place they  constitute, a drain on the system, and in tho  third pluco they frequently devo.op into  cancers, as'any physician will substantiate.'  l'W'people care to have their growths re-,  moved by tho surgeon, as'they dread tho  pain-oE the operation. \"With our pleasant  home treatment it is different. You simply  tuke iho remedy internally. It goes through  the system, searching out and neutralizing  and destroying those poisons from which  tumors and cancers . develop. You have  nothing to suffer and nothing io dread.  After a time you will notice the.tumor lessen-'  ing in size and \"gradually disaupee.ring till it  is completely cured.  Send two stamps and vve will mail you our  Ireutlao and testimonials, Stott <fc Juav,  BoA-iuauvihe, Out.   Meution this paper.  ! \"A .Now llflt.  j       Mauy sensitive persons are   sturtled by  j  tho abrupt mc.i.sivi;   sound   given   out by  I  the ordinary   electric b.\"U.    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdM. Guerre, a  ,  Paris electrician,    who Inn been working,  ! on the idea that this characteristic  of the  ; electric bell   was   not   irremediable,   lias  I prciducid a bell which gives a continuous  , musical sound.   Tho note Is very .soft, aud  |.sweet, although!penetrating, aud   is said  to be an   exaggeration of   that   obtained  by rubbing the edge of ; a   glass with the  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfinger..   Instead,of n .bell-with a hnmme.-  nud 'ii spring   interrupter, a steel    bell ii  used, which is its own interrupter.  When  the circuit'is-closed   by   the   pressure   ol '  the button at the -'other', end of tho   line,  it Is  released   from   the   electro-magnet.  forced forward and released   again   for a  number   of   times   with'   great   rapidity.  Tlie vibration set. up produces   tho pleaa-  iug.  humming   instead   of   the  -familiar  sound so   irritating   to   nervous ' people.  The pitch:of tho note can'at any time b\ufffd\ufffd  'changed:-   Pur ins.taiurc,-   should  there be  sickness in a liouse and > it.   is desired . to  iv^uce.-,t:he carrying; quality   of jt-Iie nolo.  ir- '-an hi! lovVci;cd-until'it  i's audi bio only  to ihe servants, or others whom   it is in-  tc-ndc'd to sumrnon. .       \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   \"  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  i  it Xcvc;- Furgut H:.4 Kiiulne\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. '  couching in stance of Insect instinct  ju-t been published. A writer say\ufffd\ufffd:  i'timid a cockroach | struggling In a  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ijv.i .ii' water. 1 took haif 'n walnut shell  i-.':\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .'1 b.iar.. 1 ]>ut. hini iuto.it and gava  .rii'u i.vi.i wotn'ieu toochpieks for oars and.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi.it .him. The hca'D moruing I visited  ,i- :, ar.ri he had pur. a piecoof white cot-  .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.'.-i t.n-e.-id ot: (rue of  tho   toothpicks and  r. i .'ir- uu.;t hpick'\"o'n   end. as   a   signal of  i-ii-ss. i-ie lsad a hair ou the other  .i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd :i;.ti:k, and-'thcre that cockroach sat  i '(b-!i.i:ig. The cockroach, exhausted, had  ,::-lea.asleep.    Tho sight   meltiug   me to  \":-.i-.-, 1 took that cockroach out; gave  :i::r'-a spoonful, of trruel and left., The  . j; ;..-:!  n.-ver   forgot   my   kindness, and  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd n.y house is choels full of cook-  .i.-ii.-la'.-i. \"  \"41  MrorBriiosiiWitaqr^ai\"^^ ij*a,vzz*'\ufffd\ufffdM*^:mjz.J:j\ufffd\ufffdz^J\ufffd\ufffd. ...\ufffd\ufffd..*. .u. n.-^..  ffi'jiwijsacsBSsssrarrf.  sggawsamcataegaaaa  ar-*:,'rr^-rr;r.-**rr*r^-,'jia*i-^^  111;  IV  1\"  \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \".Ii  we\/c  In ri;  \"Y  .'oi -  a w  \"I  too.'  didr  \"1  If 1  ou  WOl  real  get   <\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  pay  ' my  pra-  \"1  sioi  it  II e<  If ' '  be'   ,,  for  wi -   ,  tin '  no  ti;\ufffd\ufffd'  to -  ,wl   \ufffd\ufffd  .of,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdo     i1  er  ol  p;''.  si       '  .Ie,.    '  S\ufffd\ufffd  a(  u     (  C    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd''  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd THE HIE LEADER.  Published in tho interest of the people  of Moyie and East Kootenay.  u  V. J. SMYTH & CO.,    -    -   -    l'ubll'sljors.  fwLR  JOSEPH -JfEIUEIISTAUT, I'rop.  Lagc-r beer sold  by the  Keg or dozen  bottles.  KATES OF SUT.SCKIl'TIOS;.  One Year S2.00.  SATURDAY, JAN.  27, 1900.  The Moyie Miners Union now has a  membership of 75.  Bottled Beer  in Stock....  COCKT WOVIJ5.  So. 4005.  jtfeots on the iirsrniid  third Thiin-day of each  month. Visiting brethren invited to attend.  F. J. SMYTH, C. R.       LEWIS THOMSON. F. S.  Outside Orders Givcn'Rtnct Attention.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Coast steamboat men figure on mov-  'ing 30,000 people   to  Cape  Nome  iu  the spring.  !C|  ml mUkbm  ntw%txm~ m. L.' .'JL-Lrjutft a-jm Ja ant-ruM1  )   f  J  i  t  v  r  S  ii  -f  I  d  I  V  e  o-  a  V  v  8  t  fi  {  r-  h  d  .0  ' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd t5:  b  h  Ic  e  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'.'t.  , 1<  t  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdc  If-'Adam had worked 300 days each  year from the day he was ' created to  the present lime at ft\"salary of $50 a  day' he would not have'earried by this  time as much property as is owned  today hy .Rockefeller or Vnmlorbilt,    ',  Moyie   Miners'   Union  i      <r<  Meets in McGregor hall every Tuesday  evening. Sojourning members are  cordially^invited to attend.  M. L. Hoi.,LrsTER,  Pres.  \\\\r. R. Hocking,  Cor. Sec'y  Wholesale   and  Retail Butchers.  SAW AND PLANING,MILL.  SHOPS    AT  Military candidates arc no longer iu  vogue. .Admiral Dawoy is scarcely  mentioned now for the presidency,  una General Joe Wheeler, who is com-  1 ' it  iug homo   from   the   Philippines,   is  named no more   for   the   vice   presidency.    No ona wants to run   ilobson  ^TOf^unytliing\/  and 'Shafter is  on   no  Assayer fand  Metallurgist.  CliANItltOOK,  !J. C.  J. .R.-COSTIGAN, Q,C.  oirici::   Bank of Commerce Bids;  - ~pr~ SSr* -OK**?\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- 7>\ufffd\ufffdZZ>  .political slate.   It is a. case, of every  , man to his trade, and  the politicians  Continue in   business at   the   former  SUllli,  Fub(L  A   misplaced   comma    has    got   a  Greeley county', Kansas,  paper  into a  peck of trouble. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd The journal in question  recently  published ,an  item   in  which the following sentence occurred:  ''Two young .men  from   Leqti   wont  With tlieir sr.rls to  Tribune   to  attend  lbs teachers' institute and as  soon  as  they left, the girls got drunk.\"   The  Comma belonged after tlie  \"girls'' and  the Jatfer aro  milking ic  hot for the  fed i tor. , ,    .  Hi  it  MERCHANT TAILOR,  CRANBROOK.  ,    - , ' o  Repairing Neatly and Promptly Executed. Special Attention Given  to Mail Orders.  Suits  Made to   Order.  CRANBROOK,  B.C.  Fernie \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ' Fort Steele  Cranbrook Moyie Wardner  Ali;Kinds of Rough and  Dressed Lumber, Sash,  Doors and Shingles. . .  for prices Apply or write  <3h R. MUIR, Mgr.  3IOFTJE,    B. C.  ^>  fi$s- \/yr-z^-r-z^r-zyr 2.*a\" tys. ^-yr^s- iprzp. *przy: \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdzpriprrprtp -zyrzynqx-ip: *js~ajt t^.-z^:\/c.  3  FT!  !rtaaBEKs*aaxwaaaiiWKBtKmn u  LEWIS THOMSON.  Moyie,  Notary Pubuo, Accoon-  TAXT,     Cb;,!.M ISSION ^?AW1)  iKauRAnrcii Aai3KT.;  ( \"',     B.  C  W. F. GURD,  . KARKISTEli, SOLICITOK, ETC.  CRANBROOK, '       ,     B. C.  VRUG  ASV  ISTATIOKKKY STORE.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPatent medicines,, toilet  articles, office stationery'  and school  supplies. . . *  LsNDi\".\\'G Lusj'AHY: If you want a hook  ask for it and it will be procured for  you without, delay.  1   ' IT PAYS} TO.DEAT. \\VlTTl  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHOPE & BEATTIE;  Clieinisfcf! and i)rugjrists,  '   MOVIE,  B. C  \\ COSMOPOLITAN  f-BOTBL.   .  AT' QtfiB. MINER'S  The only  house   in   East  Kootenay  heated throughout with hotair.  First clatjfi'.'In   every  rcapect...   Special  rates lo boarders.. Good sample  room'  for commercial men.  European plan.   Open day and night.  SMA*X\\v:AfU8GKAVK. Projid.  ORAKBROOK, - -   B.C. Ll  3  f  k  remner.  A. STAPHENSON  One of the most sensational murd-  Ore iii American criminal .history was  that cf Anios J.,Snell, in  Chicago,  in  an eieven-ybars,   many  1888;   iiok\\)z  Hi which -;vcis spent iu, a vain attempt  so run dov;n the murderer, hive eince  slapsed and now comes a clew to ihe  whereabouts of the much- sought for  criniin'al. A returned minor, William  .'.Rigler, from the Cape Nome gold -dig-  kins in Alaska, gives the information  ihat may yet  lead   top the  arrest and  Willie  Architect, Contractor and  Builder. Complete plans  Furnished and Estimates  0!iven on all kinds4of \ufffd\ufffdwork  free of charge. ' .   ,  UNION BARBER SHOF  conviction   cf the    murderer,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 1  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTascofct.  KSxmroKxzrMvxx  * The ilag of the Transvaal is a very  iflimpie affair, it consists of one broad  vertical bar of green -next the \/Jag  polO; and three horizontal bars, respectively rcd7 white and blue, the rsd  being at the top. > Take for instance,  the simple red, white and blue flag of  Holland and sew a .-vertical bar of  green 012 the flagstaff end of it. That  is all. The Boers speak of their flag  as the \"vierklcur,\" the four color, just  as the French cell their flag the \"tricolor.\" 'The Orange Free State flag is  a simple recta'ngle of vivid orange.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd AND BATH ROOMS.  T. F,. COttlNS, l\ufffd\ufffdroi>.  MOYIE; B.-'C.  GO   TO   THE  itQ - ' j|0|  McVittie & Hutchison,  Fire and Life assurance. Min-'  1 t e j  Brokers, Land Surveyers and   ' \"  Conveyancers,  and 'Notaries  Public.' .    -   -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd J,  I,eave Order.' at  LeacW  Office. MOYtE.  PATRONIZE    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     -  WHITE LABOR  By Sending Your AVort To tbe  taie snore  You  will,find a  full line of  general   hardware,' including  Stoves, Tinware,  Agateware, Oils,  Paints, Glassware  A Call Solicited.  TlNBr\/Oi? l'S 0O2fXKCTIO>*.  Moyie, B. C.  .  A FULL LINE OF  CRAWBROOK,  B. (X  Drygd6ds,c-Gents, Furnishings, Boots  and Shoes, Crockery and Glassware,,  Groceries, Flour, Hay; and Oats;  Letter orders promptly attended, to  .c PRICES   RIGHT.  mu.auw.wr'yaaaamtfc tmjftM lummfm  V)'  11  \"*\\ \/T\\ T\"\\ '  ~N   T\"\\ ,  n  Q  1  \\  N  A '.  i  A    .  V  h  1  It      A.    X.    JLmJ     N,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd         im        tLmm\/   JU       Jk    J-~\/    A      X,  [a-  0  u  BREWERY.  I   1  PHILIP -CONRAD, Prop.   '  GOOD work. prices., re a s ok a ble  I'lKirnitAminajaaittauKaa  xvfrr-iimKPKXimEajjJtiMUA.  wm  ! G351  5SB  yi  JEWELRY.  Just received a splendid line  of fine jewelry and silverware  for the holidays. A suitable  . ' stock to select an Xmas present from, ' '\"  W. F. TATE,  Ck'.-.InTieook, B. C.    '        JEWELER.  IX       KEOS  AND  BOTTLEff.  -BREWERS  OF\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   '  e     FINE LAGER   BEER  AND PORTER \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .  .  Orders Promptly-attended to.  R. Rie terer and Co., Props,  NELSON, B. ,C  For your outfit,    The largest stock in  East Kcotenav.  ftEID 8c CO.,  Cranbrook, B. C.  vxxvp'sx wiiT-' \"H \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd I'U'L-iLfirmviaui  Vol. 1, No. .1 of The Miners' Maga-  Bine, published in Denver, Colorado,  and edited by Ed Boyce; has made its  appearance. It ic a monthly publication and ic the organ of the Western  Federation of Miners. In its solutat-  ory it says, \"We will at all times nnd  under all conditions espouse the cause  of tho, producing masses, regardless of  religion, nationality or race, with the  object of arousing them from (be  , lethargy into which they have sun):,  and which makes fhem willing to  live in squalor, while ctheir master.1,  revel in the wealth .stolen from labor.''  K. K. ft N. Co'o Time Card  . S. S, ALBERTA\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLeaves Kelson  ;\"or Boncers' Ferry Tuesdays and Saturdays at 7 a. m., meeting steampr International from Kaslo at Pilot Bay.  Roturning leaves Bonners Ferry   nt  8 a. m. Wednesdays and Sundays.  ROBT. IRVING, Manager.  crrrratMMMx^m -<maiWM,,im  MOYIE,     EAST KOOTENAY.B. C  The above hotel is  neatly   furnished.  Board $5.00 per week  Per day. $1.00 and up.  The bar is supplied with  the best'brands of Liquors and Cigars   BOOTS    AND    SHOES  Repaired and Made to Order.  R. A. SMITH,       Moyie.  next door to blacksmith shop.  ADDRESS  NELSON. -  P-XJWJSTJ t !\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_Uai'JB lUBPmj-Jiaj  orl Steele  COMPANY.  (LIMITED.)  r, Ac Mcdonald,  CONTRACTOR and BUILDER.  Plans and   specifications '   '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  given   on   abort   notice.  Union wages paid for skilled labor.  Moyie, B. 0.  New York's  four hundred,  the   delightful   band   of   which    Ward   McAllister, a .southern cad,   was  so  long  the director,   runs   now   to   dogs   in  place of infanla.    Any person walking  along Fifth avenue of a sunny  winter  morniug will sec five  hundred  nurses  ont with dogs to tun that are out  with  babies,    In the   paiks   fine    c.iniagea  . whirl by,   but  in   thou-   arc no   baby  faces, lace, encircled, rosy and smiling'.  The muz&les of poodles are  ihiustout  from the laps, of 'Women lolling oh  the  upholstr.ed . seats.      ''Perambulators\"  roll'up'pud doTvn. .'the 'side' ^nlkc . m (  tlie quitcr pant- oi '}.!;(\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ' f'ily,  bl\\i  i\\y4j  ])a:i|:e:5v'ivome!i iiiibvjb\ufffd\ufffd- ihaiti '&\\l'p.\ufffd\ufffd'dc.\\  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd im'-' yfcp-ahd ' piuit.-  Cuddled pti   >\ufffd\ufffdj\\l\\  tiii'.o'ws-, anuqf*!ed  into wand,'? .-o^'il?''I  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-        ...-:.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  ''     ,        ,   I  bhi.uk.6t3. are p:<;\"5. :iud-Japi'.'-iorjO p^oc--1  hr'siianielo anc! long bodied, Gtinkiiig\/j  iH.uohlegged  dashshounds.    In \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd every.  lp'viwh m'ti'iifcion there is a dog  which!  it\ufffd\ufffdsi. h6u:-:ohokl pet.    The dog- show'is  ^C \"f the swell functions of the year.  Prices Given  and ' Orders  Taken'on :  Everything,  in the Printing  Line.at the  vrc ca*ry complete lines of  i  Men's Furnishings, Boots Land  Shoes, Groceries  and Liquors. I .  Mail Orders Given Prompt  Attention,  Cranbrook,  -  1'ori Steele    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Warrtuci  I'll I     I   HIM Mir  III   I I, || . i    HHlMi.nniwlnl.il ||   in    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd|  . . - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' LAUNDRY.  '    '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd i;''      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;,- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd '.','.        .   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Good   war-hing.    No  chemicals   used.'  Prices heaj) cheap.    Near Moyie hotel.  (CITIZ-K^   OF ^CANADA)  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:'ij;| \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd?>'ii\"i'!   ivji-.-!.  f;  &  ?r  i  a,  .f^.IV'f c\ufffd\ufffd  im  i W-ri-h, \/:rc*.:';;-^r?ii.nir\"r-Trv'tj|:  t-Picerc?-c;hcaTjcr tkr.i?. nnybrdy  Kz:  AMADIAN PACIFIC  RAILWAY  AND SCO\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPACfl-JC LINE.  Xh ix <j L    a il u.      V Y .-til O JL  To all jioint.s.    Gives   the  only   direct  service froro the \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  KOOTENAY      COUNTRY  Through first class sleeper daily  to and fiom Kootenay Landing. Tourist cars pass Medicine Hat daily foi  St. Paul, Fridays for Montreal and  Boston, Sundays and Wednesdays foi  Toronto.  DAILY    TRAIN.  EAST WEST  12 :01 lvc .... MOYIE lVe. 10:02  Connection tri-weckly at Macleod  for Calgary and Edmonton, and daily  at Medicine Hat for all points East.  Connection daily at Kootenay Landing for all points, in West FCootenay,  Slocan and Boundary districts, and,  for pacific cOast and main line point.?  Via Revelstoke. :\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\/  THROUGH TICKETS ISSUED and  ,-  BAGGAGE .CHECKED TO  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'..,   DESTINATION..,  Ch(?ap 'Eate!?,,^-tlie,OlcViOountry,,,,,  A'pi.ily idhhit^iIIMipsv^iaia.^rcIl!; Tlbketc and  'l^r2'''\"r.;.'.!c:L.-r.';lc^ tc' Nor.rs^t Locr.l  l_    l:;^. Wm%^'K k    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ':\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, :M:r      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  vv.'r.L*;^.:-fi8%flEfii;- Age\ufffd\ufffdt; filoyie.    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \\:,K ANDERBOH-j .-;      '-   K. J. COYIylV.fV-r  T. P. A. Nelson.      A. G. P. A,, -Vancovoi'.  -^CR'PAtft,,  eg cd  en r-*  CUT OUT AND SEND TO US. NO. 30.  I  I  ._-,.\ufffd\ufffd^ ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  ASSATIHlKa1  iSELf'ON,  B. 0  Christmas   is coming.    Get  your pictures  taken   to ; send  home.( \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd PREST,  the, photop  graphoi-,, will-visit Moyie. ;.dn  eachi .-Saturday, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   FlachlighC  ipiotureo: taken ati the Moyio  ,or-\"at<; ypur'-r roori:^ojidipupa,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'losycji'jyqur'.i.qrderc  at- o'ics,  ^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdc,,t^o.So,,d,olc,y..,,  Cr.njbrook,  Photographers,  Mciyio,     ITort, Socio,  *iVanlC(l, a  I'lirlnor.  To buy half intrest in brewery, or .1  loan of $ 700 dollars, on   good   mtrrst.  Object,   to    increase     Urn     browins  business. JOS. NIEDERSTADT.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   \" H   JIM I \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWI1HHMW\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd M'MIHWUWIHIII'MWMUW-HWlWI111\"  MINERAL   ACT    I8W.  (F0JIM   V.)  Ckktificati: op Imphovkjients.  wotick.  oociciy Girl, J'ky Pilot, Bunko FrnCUotii  IMnmond Jnhilee, Ulnclr. 1'lno, Sniper, Klondike  aud Boor Fraction M.iucml Claiu3.& ..-Bituatu in  the. Fort Steele Mining Division o.C ICast Kootenay '.District;' .-.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .   : -; .-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'   \/'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd''.'.-..;'.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Where:loeatcd.i-bn MoyieLalie..' i. ...   . ' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'  . Take notice thatiJ, Tliof',, -T. McVfttie, jagent  .-.for Chas; C.ijrarrpll,.F;,.M; (j. No.-.B 9007., and  Timothy Farrelli:Fr,,M, C.Jno.' '30738 . A, 1 Free  Winer's CerUiJca-le No. Jit 9C0.1, intend,' Mxty day\"  from the datoiijcrcol, to ,apply. .to tlio: JiliniuS  Bocordpr -foi-.r, Gortifloato oi Imprdvoiioiits, lor  the purpose oX obtaining aCroAVii Grant of tlio  abox-o elaiips;  ;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   :'.....-,,'';\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-'  .'!-And further, ialzeiotlco .that tlctioh; under  csotiou87,-ini43t.'bo qomrdenced before tho Is-'  tiuauco of such Cortiflc&to of Iniprovomeuts. .  \"''-. \"\/.',  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     . THOSi.T.McVlTTIE.  Dated this 6th day of Deoembor, 1898.  SUBSCRIBE   POP,   THE  LEADXSf.  ir-.  >!?, j  &Wi^^ZW?$","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Moyie (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"The_Moyie_Leader_1900-01-27","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0183591","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.3000000","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-115.8333000","@language":"en"}],"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.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Moyie, B.C. : Smythe and Musgrave","@language":"en"}],"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\/","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1900-01-27 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1900-01-27 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Moyie Leader","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0183591"}