{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0183798":{"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP":[{"value":"2de7f950-1ee2-495c-8764-2777bc0e6f6b","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2016-06-23","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1908-05-23","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"Published in the interest of the people of Moyie and East Kootenay.","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/xmoyie\/items\/1.0183798\/source.json","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format":[{"value":"application\/pdf","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note":[{"value":" ***&*\n>*.\nwty*'\n^ *Ul.   \u25a0, \u00ab^|JnHKtf^^R<r.\nMAY 27 1908\n\"^CTORIA, ?  \u00b0\nCARTERS  FOR\n. ^sKas\u00absssas\u00ab^aHB^\nvi4-^\/^^\nZ\"'iW^^Y^\n\u2022z-t \u25a0\u25a0: v.\nW flfin\u00ab.    \u2022    A  '*\nP^SOTjrVENIRS\n1W.TOWILSON, Jeweler\n\u25a0CRANBROOK.\n3s*        ''\n\"3,000,,;-? \t\nfry \u00bb.v\n,    TTr j\u00bbnA< iirs   fi nrh\nOUR GJL^ooi.S DO\nW. H. WIUUN, Opticii.\nCRAMikCCK.\nir\nMOYIE, B. C.i   MAY 23\nE\ni Clmft(.rftjp\nMM\n^Hundred\n$f$p2, Men^s fancy\/spring shirts. \/r Varibus \",assorfc-\nSfeSSaents of .fabric,' including zeffersl   gingham's, ' *j\n'\u25a0-..paramata and new. melven crepe.        ;   ., *    ,    i*~\nThese\"new artistic designs,and patterns- are\nW.best ever sliown tJy'us'and\"-'the'\" rapid sales\nrhich we are nfalcing-is ample' reward- for - the\nfeafe arid trouble lekercised; in selecting.' They . J\narc'alwayV sold-'oh1; sight;, ': *   ..,a<\"\"'. ,   ' ^ '\",' \"?Z a\nBHy\n-Vlf'^    T*f-    \u2014\"\"     '\n'.y^i:\n*5\n$&\n\u00a3<      4.\nVJ\n.fi'\n\"A,-\n\"nil\n-Tobaccos,\n&*\u00a3$jf&i-L.\\ a Ay:<*\n, 4^- I\nI        GENERAL FLOAT        |\nA daily paper is to  be started\nat Pernio.\nK. of P.' Grand  Lodge.\n- Some strawberry patches at\nCreston realized laat year for the\nowner8$l,000 an acre. ,\nLieutenant-Governor Mr. James\nDuasmuir(6f British Ooiunibia has\nbeen electedca director, of the C.\nP. R.. ' \u25a0 ,  ,       .   -  ,v   ,       ,   '\nP. J. Deane, fortaerly publisher\nof,the-Daily News,v will\"'open a\nreal'estate arid mining brokerage\noffice'in Nelson.V'\"'      *\n'The O. P. R. has ordered two\nnew Empresses' which will be,, larger and better than the present\nPacific liners.     \\ ' \u25a0>' 7'   ,',\nCohfeetionery\ny?tk,-y\n,v*-^-\",.\nai^J.\n1-^Sx <.>..\nf< *%}fl-\nf-r-r^-VJe \u25a0\n,i   \u201e i\n..ri^j\/'-.-MOYJE\nIv ;i?\nIXUKOOjK.\n& _\ni!ir8rLife*: and; Accident Insurance:   i \/.\n*; Seattle' is\u00ab'ready for the , fleet\n\"and its visitors who will viewki't:\nPreparations have \".been made tb\ncarecfor 200.000 \"visitors, \"i -. '\u201e h -'\nE.,A. Hni,'who was-at Victoria\nas a delegate, to the Knights of\nPythias'^ grand''Lodge, returned\nhome with his' wife and- children\nWednesday . afternoon., The\nlodge was in session two days and\na good hatch-of important business was gone through with. The\nsession next year will be held at\nRossland the second'Wednesday\nin Alay.?'\"*' ' \"\nThe    following   officers     weroc\nelected and installed today: grand\nchancellor'J\/H. A.  Brown,  Revelstoke\",   grand vice-chancellor, , R.\nA.. Towaley,'. Vancouver;   , G.  P.,\nJ. Thomson-Cumberland; G. K. R.\nand.S.^ Emil Pferdner,. Victoria;\nG. M.'E:\" Thos,' Walker, Victoria;\n- G. M.'A^.C. \"Rawlinson,' Nanaimo;\nG.I. G., J.'*Fleishmanr 5*erniFf=Gr\nCome^and^ seev me; at the\n\u00b0t&&&>y\n>i*,\nBABY\nM\nmim&%oKEM'L\n\u25a0.   A^ZAWAfykA^7ijA\u00bb-z,\n1 n >thei Morley :zBuilding.\nj \u00ab ij> i-t;\n* \u00abl* <t- .^.-.t V*.<srf\\,*A -^l\/.\n- AV\nPoyie\n_;jEmm.C,oldman>fAthe -- foremost\nwomen anarchist is America, will\ndeliver a series of lectures in Spo-\nkatie commencingMay 29th. \u25a0 \u25a0\n\". A: <\u201e -\/ \"A :   '',     ; ', \u25a0.-\n; Nelson-will have a building at\nthe Calgary fair: The display of\nfruits,' minerals, '\"etc,, from _ the\nKootenay-promises'to be'one - of\ntheJinesG of the fair and will fbe\nthe largest and'best-ever seen,' in\nthis part.of the west.\n0, G., E.v H.fs, Winn,- Rossland;\nP. C. C-, Jr-Hammer, Grand; Pot'ks.\n* i \u2014 :      ,        '',\ni    , t\n\u25a0 The Moving Picture, Show:\n., Rawhide, Nevada, is, overdone\nin, business ,' and population: The\nsurface showings around the camp\nare, good But no \"depth has been\nproven. There \"are about ',8,000\npeople in Rawhide arid much sick-\nnesa>'--.^'(.-'-i \u201e  .*>   '..7,\"~t.\"    _> ,;\n\u25a0'The'\n1 - j- 11    \\\n-'ladies .of'\n1 1 i,v p?.\n\u2022\u25a0<-~~i\"hiU.A -\nCo-(teerative\/Association, Ltd\n\" -Vj*r:v*v\".-.. '*.' \"'tvvf^   , *  ,    '\"'\"\/>\n, \u00bb .\u00ab,\u00ab-;,Have- that\" i:      -\u25a0   *   , .'     ,*\\\n3^??:5e*:^\n\/Made by    ; ',;\u00bb    ^ ,    - ,\u2022 ; ,\na'<- (-Methodist\nchurch put in'Missouri, resolved to\nuse'the'mpney^they ,h'ad thonght\nof ^spending on. 'Easter,, \"hats'.to-\n.wardsjlftin'g^a\"$700\" mortgage\"\" on\nthe church. -\\\", ' o''    l   A   \u201e        *\nThe people of Moyie'werer given\na  .rare \u25a0 treat^last.  Wednesday\nevening when they attended the\npicture show'giveatby Prof. .'Sfc-\nHenry of .the   Cranbrook' Opera\nHoused\" The'    moving   '.pictures\nwere' clear,and interesting ' and\nthe illustrated  songs  were very\njjoocL' The show from   start   to\nfinish wasrfequal to any 4n \"the\nlarger(l cities.? After   the    show\nthere was ah hours's dancing and\nmany. 8topped,to enjoy  the--'good\nmusicfurnisri.ed. byiMr.\" McHehry.\nThere.wiU'be\" another^show next\nWednesday evening\"with' a complete   change ^of-.,'-,program    and\nthere will again be a dance' after-\nwardslh^^'jj \"A'' \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-'    '    '\n^CathblicjNews Items}\n* r-'.V   I\nshed\n5'Best!\nilled\nid Cigj\nCIAL\ntt*.\n'IS II\n3>D=\u00bbv3\nCOLD\nniituo'r |\nBc\u00ab.l iM\nJorqusli'\n^; A full range of pattern and'styles just-to hand:\n\u00a9'-        '\u00ab\u25a0  . '  SUITS $15 to- $32..-\nwJR^Terms Oasn. >'-Depo3it\u201e Accouiit3 Op3 ne d\nH\u00aefe; (   \/\" ' FAKRELL   BIiOCK., ' '\" \u2022* ,   ,' ,\n&tEKK^gaEKS^gaB06Barr2^ 1&&EJiZEZB\u00aem 7'\n\u25a0\u25a0r-rVi'Wm&ter >    ,    .   . \u25a0 -   - <   -\n-MOYIE'S    LEADING   HOTEL.*     \/ - \u00a3\nHotel Kootenay  \\\nThe best of accommodations .-  *l   j\nfor the Traveling Public.        \u2022 |\n^L&rco and Commodious Sample Eoosne. Billiard Booms.\nMoTAVISH & CAMERON Proprietors.\nJMail advices from Honolulu say\nthat a re^uent has come from the\nleper settlement on Moloksi'that\nwhen the fleet shall;*8jH close\nenough to the shore along the\nnorthern' ,coa3t of jNtolokai, so\nthat they may be seen from the\nsettlement \u25a0 which the lepers are\nnot permitted to - leave.\nMany cuttlefish farms\u2014great\ntanks where the fish are bred for\ntheir black milk, which gives us\nIndia ink\u2014are to be found on the\nChinese coast. To milk a cuttle-\nfish'the queer creature is driven\nslowly and, gently,into a compartment or lock lined \u2022 with metal.\nThen the water is gradually\ndrawn off and the fish in the end\nfinds himself left high and dry.\nHe becomes alarmed, he squirts\nfprth all the sepia in his sack.\nThen, milked dry he is returned\nto his tank again.\n'^Father, L\/CgiQinel .will hoM services in- the- Catholic {church- to-\nI night at half past seven. u Mass at\n10. o'clock 'tomorrow .morning.\nFather Choinel will leave\" on, the\nafternoon train in order to attend\na moeting.'of the priests at the St.\nEugene mission on Monday morning. , Z\nRev.'Father J. il. Tavernier, O.\nM. I. parish priest at Fernie, has\nbeen named superior of the priests\nof ^ this district, and, .enters in\ncharge on Monday.\nI        LOCAL ASSAYS    '      |\n' Don't overlook getting , your\nminers' licence reneswed. ,\nMiss Lillie Tjvrson was up from\nFernie visiting with her mother\nat the International hoteL\nPat Morris left this week for\nhis ranch near Macleod, Alta.\nCarpenters aro makiog' good\nprogress on B. A. Hiil's new residence. . ' '\nH. W. Sharp, of the Sharp &\nIrvine brokerage iirm of Spokane,\nwas in Moyie last Sa'turday .and\nSunday.\nMethodist church,' tomorrow\nevening at,7:30. .The Rev. Wm.\nBoulton's subject will , be: \"God's\nFirst Enquiry.\"\n- The ' ladies of the Pre3byterian\nchurch will; opent their icecream\ntent today, andMt -will, probably,\nbe open again Monday,, r. '\nAll Odd Fellows in Moyie* are\nrequested to attend   lodge   next;\nTuesday evening.   There will   be'\nwork on in'the  initiatory degree\nand a lunch will be served.\\ -\nJames - Thorn, ' Gordan Blphi-\nstone and Matt Marshall left this\nweek1 for. a visit to Scotland.\nThey .will , probably be absent\nthree or four months. ' '\"\n, R.' J. Brimson, who for a long,\ntime held,the ppsition of electrician at,the St. Eugene, left on the\nflyer Monday night for Montreal.\nJ. A. Crawford, , Ernest Mci\nQuade and G. T. McGregor .were\ndown 'to ' Cranbrook .\"Thursday\nevening', attending-\u2022  a ,- Masonic\nmeeting. '       4     \"   , \u00bb   ,,-'        \"\nMrs. Goldwin Stewart and baby\nleft yesterday fort Calgary on a\nvisits They will remain'away until about July  15. ;    <   ' .,\n'_Miss.MaryP'Ncill is\",here from\nAshland, '.California,-to see * her\nbrother, Chas.' O'Neill.    '\nJ. W. Pitch 1 is now ' located in\nhis new quarters and. is in better\nposition than-ever to* carry on his\nbusiness    \u2014   .....    t  _,  r\nmo of Die year lo do your,painting, while the days are cloudy and cool, and' before\n<the dust begins to fly.'     '' -    ' 1\n^     a We 'carry Prism Brand ready mixed'-paint, in\n>al1 'tlie'^eadihg colors.    Also  whit\u00a9  lead, oil, tur-,\npentihe, varnishes,'paint brushes, etc., etc. ,\n\\ '    With Prism Brand mixed ..paint   you  can' do\nyour.own work'as, well as any painter.  J   v\n.  ^   Try a tin on j'-our kitcJien ceiling or wainscot-'\ning, and he convinced that with Prism Brand you-,\nare a painter.' '    ' ,    r      \u00bb\n-.\"MacEachern &; Macdonald\ng&J4aaaa&.^Hegig*fliagg^^\ni\\\nJhe Football Game.'\nPremier McBride Comins:.'\nHon. Richard McBride, premier\nof British Columbia, and Hon. H.\nE.-Young,' minister of education,\nare touring the interior of the\nprovince, and are in Nelson today.\nThey will probably come to ' East\nKootenay next' week and will\nspeak at Moyie, Cranbrook, Fernie\nand other points.\nThe Cranbrook Races.\nJust & Clothes   Basket.\n*%&}\nBRAND,\n\u00bbW\n'GYIE\/Si\nTORONTO\nWhy is it\nthat 90 per cent of the travellers are wearing\n20 CENTURY BRAND\nClothing?\" Ask\nHILL,\nTHE    FURNISHER.\nhyZp\nfpBr\nto\nImperial Bank of Canada.\nCapital Authorized $10,000,000..\nCapital paid up .'4,92o,000.\nRest\u2014 .\u20144,025.000.   ; ; ;i\n(Savings bank department,\ndate   of  deposits\nThe crowded car stopped at the\ncorner. \"All right in front?','\ncalled the conductor as he pulled\nthe bell- \"Can't yer wait till I\ngit me clothes on\u2014ye lobster?\"\ncried a feminine voice. A blush\nrose to the face of every passenger, and all rubbered. ' It was\nonly a wash women trying to\nsling her basket of clothes on the\ncar. \t\nYale  Locks.\nWho is the fellow with the\nlong hair?\nHe's a Yale college boy.\nWell, I've often heard about\nthose Yale locks.\nCARPENTER WORK.\n*^^?Interest allowed ondepjoalts from\n!l|f\u00a7cred4ted quarterly.\nand\nI0RANBROOK BRANCH. j\nJ. F, M   PINKHAM, Manager.       \\\n             ' ..\u25a0\u2022.'.'\u25a0.\u25a0\u2022&\niVpr- j^VZfri jy^yr<y. iyt .oarer ,<yrTffr-Jffree\u00bb  tyr-\u00bbf>:Mfr> >cyrTytyr  33^\nAll parties desirous of having\nany carpenter work done cannot\ndo better than communicate with'\nWm. Bridges or Wm, Meredith^\nAldridge, Prices' reasonable;\nWork first class. Orders may be\nleft at Fitch's store.   l!\nTwo engagements are \"announced at Morley hall next week.'\nThere will be a dance on Monday\nnight and a moving picture snow\non Wednesday \"night.\nThe mother of Archie \"Fleming\narrived today from the east.\nMr: and SI is. V. J. Campbell\nhave gone to Seattle to see the\nfleet\nHoward Springer, son of Mr.\naud Mrs. S. L. Springer of\/the\nPorto Rico Lumber company, has\nbeen very ill with pneumonia, but\nis now thought to be out of dan-\ng r and recovering.\nThe pulpit in the Methodist\nchurch last Sunday evening was\nfiilled by \u2022 Miss McMillan of the\nSalvation Army, Cranbrook. She\ntook the place of Mr. Bjulfcon,\nthe regular pastor, who was away\nto Vancouver attending\" the conference meeting.\nSt. Andrews Presbyterian\nchurch. Divine Service Sabbath\nevening 7:30 p. m. Speaker W.\nT. McCree.\nRussell Hawke, printer's \"di^vil\"\nin the Leader office, will leave on\ntomorrow's flyer for Spokane,\nwhere he will spend a few days\nwith Arthur Lutner, Cecil Lirson\nand Alfred Carlson, Moyie boys\nwho are attending the Bl.iir business college. Russell is a giod\nfaithful boj^, and richely deserves\nhis little vacation.\nThere    were appropriate exercises     at   the  school  yesterday,\nwhich was kept as Empire  Day.\nThere were lessons on patriotism\nSome of the members of the late and national songs were sung  at\ndancing dub have .arranged  to I the suggestion of the  minister of\ngiyea dance, in  Morley hall next education. ^\nThe foifebill mxtch between\nMoyio and Cranbrook list Monday-was full df;interest from\nstart to finish. Io was bqth'fast\naud exciting, and neither side\nscored a goal.' Tne Moyie.team is\nto be congratulated,on putting\nup such a fine contest considering\nthe little practice they have had.\nAnd just as m-icli ain be ' sii-1 of'\nthe Cranbrook bjys, who ,'playe I\na splendid and sporfc^m mlike\ng^me. Tae_ M iyio bjys^giye\ngreat -credit to tha hospitality\nshowa them by the Cranbrook\nmanagement. Bjth-teams'were\nentertained at the theater at4 the,\nconclusion of'VaVma.tch.^''Folio.v-\ningis a' list' of the Moyie boys\nand their positions. '      ,\nGoal\u2014F. Pdrkins,    <    -\nLeft \"Back\u2014A. Gill,\n, Right Back\u2014A. Clark',\n, Half Back\u2014Sanvage.\nCenter Half\u2014 M. Marshall\n- Right Half\u2014Waldridge,\nLeft Wing\u2014Crowe, Kerr.\nCenter Forward\u2014B. Marshall,\nR. Wing\u2014Lindsay, Chad wick,\nReserves\u2014 McLiren,    Turnball,\nWilson.\nMETAL   MARKET.-\nNew YottK\u2014Bar silver, 53 '\nLead, $4.75.    Copper, 13vcts.\nLondon\u2014Lead, \u00a313, ' 5= 3d.\ncts\nChris.  Foley Heard Front.\n-\nLiberal   Delegates.\nThere were two days' racing in\nCranbrook this week and the\ntown was filled to overflowing.\nPeople flocked from the surrounding towns and Moyie contributed\nlargely to - the share of visitors.\nThe races were good and, some of\nthe fastest horses in the northwest were there. '\nVictoria Day.\nNext Monday will be observed\nas Victoria Day. There will be\nno school, and the stores will close\nat 1 o'clock. The post office will\nbe open between 5 and 6 in the\nevening.\nDance Monday  Evening.\n' At the meeting \u25a0 of the Moyia\nLiberal Association li9ld la3t\nnight J. P. Farrell and R. 1 A.\nSmith were elected delegates to\nattend the Liberal convention\nwhich will be held at Nelson on,\nThursday, June 4.th. l\nChris. Foley arrived at  Prince\"\nRupert  a few days   since   from -\nSeattle, .where he ha3 been living\nf jr a few years past.1 Like 1 many\"\nanother old-timer,'he' would likr\u00bb ^y .r,.\nto'make,a stake for his<remainingV o|\nyears, and hopes to do it in-Princot-\"\nRupert.    In1' 1900 -'he,-'\"contested1\nYaleCariboor' district    .for v; the\nDominion house as tthe \u25a0 candidate\nof the labor .party  and1 was\" de-'\nfeated bya few votes by^W-'A'.'*\nGalliher,  the  Liberal. candidate. ,\nHe was then working ih a mine at\nRowland.    Mr. Foley_ was one  of'\nthe  members of the   committee\nappointed by the  Dominion government to investigate  the  Chinese immigration questiou and  thd\nreport of the committee  led' the\ngovernment to increase the  Uhiu-   (\nese entrance  tax to $500  which\nhas had the  effect  of practically\nstopping     Chinese     immigration.'\nMr.  Foley,  on la.iviGg Rossland,\ntook up his residence ac Vancouver, and he contested that district\nas  a   Labor    candidate\/   against\nMacpherson, Liberal, and was   defeated.\n#P\n'-    A'4\n-\" -T-0j-  r\niM\nj%\\\n4f*lf\n*>\u00ab\n''.1'\nMl\ntZ i\n\u2022 i' '\nV>',\nf,A\nr\ni'l\nU- I\nSoo-Spokane  Trains.\nSpeaker ol ths House.\nBinks\u2014Very few women have\nany knowledge of parlimentary\nlaw.\nJinks\u2014You should hear ray\nwife. She has been speaker of\nthe house for the last twelve\nyears.\nMoyie now has the full benefit\nof the Soo-Spokane train service.\nThese trains both east and west\nnow stop here to let off and tako\noa passengers. T.ie company is\nderiving considerable business\nfrom this part of the service, and\nit is proving very convenient to\nthe people  here.\n\u25a0n.,'\nSi-    I\nA\nFOR SALE-T.vo good, substantial houses and lots on easy\nterms.    Apply to F. J. Smyth.\nThere will be a half holiday\nnext Monday on account of it being Victoria Day. The stores will\nclose at X o'clock j>'.; m,\nMonday evening, and they extend\na general invitation to: everyone.\nTrouble at Michel.\nThe strike situation at Micbel\ncolliery remained practically unchanged today, the men having\nfailed to report .for work in the\nmorning, the plant was therefor\nidle.\nRfvv. and Mrs. B Hilton arrived\nhome yesterday from Vancouver\nwhere they were attending the\nMethodist conference. Mr. Boul-\nton will be stationed at Coal\nCreek for the next year.\nW. R. Inman, consulting eye\nspecialist, of Winnipeg and Vancouver, annouuejes that he will be\nin Moyie--next Tuesday, Wednesday and to Thursday noon,\n6 A\n-mA,\\\nnA'%1\n\u25a0\u25a0ziZZ ; i 4.-\"\n'.\u2022;-,.'    .-\u00ab\n41   ,\nTHE LEADER, MOYIE\/ BRITISH COLUMBIA.\n5\/)e\nREFUGEES\nBy A. CONAN DOYLE.\nAuthor  of   \"The   Return   of   Sherlock\nHolme*\"\nrViFM-itrht, 1159''. hv IWn\u00ab-r iS- Brothers\n-    ' W\nl'-.r\"      5-3.V\nf\"'>* v> \"\n,4.  '>r<    v. M\n(Cont'nuedi\n\u00bb'. v\n,^'t     \"4\n.V   f'\nii\ni\"\n\u25a0 77 < -r' -i i,   .\ny\u00b0i iij\"    ' \u2022m'<   \"\n'-*   a,       I\".        ' ' I\nrW\u00bb,  *\nA\\'srl.il'^i\n'\u00bb\u25a0(  'I'      II     -.1,4'\nJ\/ t -, -   . \u2022'\n,uh'-^7Ai\n...1      \u00ab I. J'iIh'      i\n'{\u2022 '->%t'^:\n\u2022t,       i!\u00bbif \"4,    4  T'   7\nit '  J 4H *fc '    ,\nI ' <sr t'**>  .J    >   w\n1       4.\" ,*.   V j,J, V\naa\n;-#-; ,\n4>\\? .V     ',     -,>,   * ,4\n|-''l l^-j >-r    '      '\n, i'$i&i .it. \u00bb\/,i-  -\n.; |,t> tyf-.&r b* - \u25a0.,\n' f^ A    *v    vi i  ^\n'A'&f.A <'*\u25a0'\ni-  ,   S' * ^  f      i* r      ' L.\nifa $ &> '   '\n#;&*,l'\nf 4 lW . 4\n&?\u00ab- '   r\n-'ti. .\n'V''.?\nfii.Vi, <\" Iv-\n'\"|l,ij,g!      <        rt\n4^'te .\nfJ,W^U'\n*i .     #J, S\u00bb\"ii '\nt   V^\"K^'-a J ,  4\niijy'iSfwSSai*.   .\n^Jv;-.^.'\"!-:'\nlVJ    '^'   Ut<J    i'   *4     .\n\u00bb^f%J-.\n';?r?K\n\u25a0*rtfl*FJ\n! \\\n\u25a0\u25a06('!'4-^('^^\nCHATTKIt VIi;,\nLOIt nw'il.1 a wool, tiro king -.vas\nconbtiinl, to lira new liuinor.\nTla* roulinu of liis life roriuiined\nlrncliaii^ed, save thut it was the\nroom of the trail be.iuty rrulier 1han of\n^lnie. de Maintuiion which attracted\nliim in the afternoon. ' And iu syni-\njmthy Avith this sudden reiapse iuto his\nold lite his coats lost s>omethiiig- of\niheir &oinl)Pr line., His walk was brisker, and he pra\\e a youthful .flourish to\nhis cane as a defiance to those \u25a0\u00ab ho\n. , had been in his r-eCorumtiou the first\nis.vniptnnis of age.\nArid a*  the kins brightened, so all\nJhe  great court  brightened  too.'   The\ngalo;is  began  to resume (heir former\n,       r-pleudor. and rjay coats and glittering\nembroidery v Inch had him in, druwors\n'   for years were seen once more In the\n%ills of the palace.    Tlio .Montespim\nauterooni was crowded every morning j\n,,.   with men and women who .had some\nsuit'to   lie   urged,- while'her   rival's\nchambers   were  ris  uu&erteil  as  they\n,,      had been before, the king first .turned\nla ftracioiis look upon her.   Faces which\nhad been long banished from\"the court\n'       began to reappear In the corridors and\ni- '      gardens   unchecked   and   unrebuked,\nyh'le the 'black \"cassock pf the Jesuit\nnnd the\" purple soutane of the bishop\n' -were less frequent colors in the royal\n\" circle. , i\n' * '   But, the church party was never seriously alarmed, at this relapse.    The\ngrave eyea of priest or of prelate followed (Louis,in his escapade as wary,\nhuntsmen  might watt.'h a young deer\n,whicli gambols about In the'meadow\n.   under the impression'that it is mastor-\n\"\u2022    Jess when e\\ ery gap and path is net-\n,       ted and it is in truth as much lu their\nLands as though it were lying bouud\nbefore (them.    They waited, therefore, '\n,      and   they   silently, planned   how  the\ni       prodigal might best be dealt with on\nhis return.      [ ., ,\nTo tins end.it was\"lliat his confessor,\n,,   Fere la Chaise, and Bo'.suet, the great\n'    bishop of Meimx, waited one morning\njipou Mme. de Maintenon in'her ,cham-\n,   Iier.' With a globe beside her, she was\nendeavoring to teach geography to the\n,   ,   lame 'Due du Maine \u201eand' the mischie-\n, vous little Comle de Toulouse, who had\nenough pf'their father's disposition to\n'    make them averse to learning and of\ntheir mother's'to cause them  to hate\n,  > 'any discipline or restraint. '\nMme.! de   Maintenon   dismissed   her\ntwo  pupils  and  received   the  ecclesl-\n,, astics   with  the  ml.vture  of affection\nand  respect which  was due. to those\nVho  were not 'only personal  friends,\nbut great lights of tbe Gallican church.\nThe last few days had. cast a pallor\n\u25a0,,  over her face which spiritualized^and\ni     reunea the features, but she wore\"unimpaired her expression of sweet se-\n\"I see, my. dear .daughter, that you\nihnve sorrowed,\" said Bossuet\/glancing\nat her with'a kindly ancl yet searching\n\u2022eye.       ~ ' ,<\n\"I have indeed, your grace. All last\nnight I spent iu prayer that this'trial\nmay pass away from us.\" *     ( c   j\n\"And yet you have no need for fear,\nmadame\u2014none, I assure you. Others\nmay think lhat your influence has\nCeased, but we, who know the king's\nheart, think otherwise. A few days\nmay pa,ss, a few weeks at the most,\nand once more it will be upon your\nrising fortunes that every eye in\nPrance will turn.\"\nThe lady'b brow clouded, and she\nglanced at the prelate as though his\nspeech wore not altogether to her taste,\n\"I trust that pride does not lead me\nastray,\" she said. \"Rut if 1 can read\nmy own soul aright there is no thought\nof myself in the grief which now tears\nmy heart. It is for (he king I grieve,\nfor the noble heart, the kindly soul,\nc-which might n-.e so, high and which Is\ndragged so low.\" - r\n\"For all that, my daughter, you are1\nambitious.     Would   you   not   love   to\nturn tho king toward good?\"\n\"I -would give my lite for it.\"\n\"And  there  is your ambition.1  Ab.\n, can I not read your noble soul? Would\nyou not love to see the church reign\n,   pure and serene over all this realm, to\nsee the poor housed, the needy helped,\nthe wicked turned from their way s aiid\n'the king ever the leader in all that is\nnoble and good?\"\nlior cheeks had flushed, and her eyes\nshone as she looked at the gray face\nof   the   Jesuit   and   saw   the   picture\nwhich his .words had conjured up before her.\n\"My daughter,\" said Rossuet solemu-\n%    ly, -\"it is time for: plain speaking.    It\nis in the Interests of the church  that\nwo do it.    None hoar and none shall\nover hear what passes between us now.\nltegard us, If you will,\"as two confess-\n|Ors, with whom your secret is inviolable.    I  call it a sci-rot,  and yet it i.s\n.none to us, for it is our mission to read\nthe human heart.   You love the king.\"\n\"Your grace\u2014rather!\"   She turned in\nconfusion from one to tho other.\n\"There is no shame in loving, my\ndaughter. The shame lies only in\n,yielding to love. I say again that you\nlove the king.\"\n\"At least I have never told him so,\"\nshe faltered.        .. .,.,.,\n\"And will you never?\".- \u25a0\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\u25a0.'-\n\"May heaven wither my tongue first!\"\n\"But consider,   my'daughter:-. Such\nlove, in  a soul like yours is heaven's\ngift and sent for some wise purpose.\nAVe speak for the interests of the holy\nchurch,' and   thope   interests   demand\nthat you should, marry the king.\"\n\"Marry the king!\" The little room\nswam round her.   \"Marry the king!\"\n\"There lies the best hope for the future. IV'e see in you a second Jeanne\nd'Arc who will save both France and\nFrance's king.\" '.   i\nMadame sat silent for a few moments. Her face had regained its composure, and her eyes were bent va*\ncan tiy upon her tapestry frame as she\nturned over iu her mind all that was\nimolved in the suggestion.\n\"But surely\u2014surely this could never,\nbe,\" she said at last. '\"What king of\nFrance has married a subject? See\nbow every princess of-Europe stretches\nout her-i baud to him. The queen of\nFrance must be of aueenlv blood, even\nas trie rast was.\n\"All this may l,e overcome.\"\n\"And then theie are the reasons of\nstate. If the king marry, it should be\nto form a powerful alliance, to cement a friendship with a neighbor nation' or to gain some province which\nmay be the \"bride's dowry- What is\nmy dowry? A widow's pension and a-\nworkbox.\"\n\"Your dowry, my daughter, -would\nbe those gifts of body and of mind\ni with'which heaven has endowed,you.'\nThe king has money enough and the\nking has provinces enough. As to the\nstate, how can the state be better,\nserved than by the assurance that the\nking will be saved in future from such\nsights as are to'be seen in! this palace\ntoday?\"\n\"Oh, if it could be ,so! But think,\nfather; think >of those'about hiui-^the\ndauphin, monsieur his brother, his\nministers. You know how little this\nwould please them and how easy it Is\nfor them to'sway his mind.\"       ,      ,\nThe faces of the two ecclesiastics\n'who had dismissed her other objections\nwith n smile and a wave clouded over\nat this.       f ,       r\n\"My daughter,\" said tlie Jesuit gravely, \"that is a matter .which you may\nleave to the church.    It may be that\nwe,  too,   have  some power  over  the\nking's mind and that we may lead him j\nin tbe right path, even  though  those\nI of Iris own blood would' fain hav.e it\notherwise.    The 'future only can show\nwith'whom the, power lies.    But you?\n> Love aud duty both draw you one waj\nnow, aud the ,church may count \"upon '\nyou and you upon the church.    It will t\nserve you if you In' turn will but'serve\nIt.\" \u2022\"\u25a0   '\n\"What higher wish could 'i have?\"\n\"You will be our'daughter, our nuecn,\nour champion, and you  will heal the\nwounds \"of the sullVriiig church.,   The\nHuguenots  must go.    They   must   be '\ndriven forth.    The goats must be  divided from the sheep.   The king is already in two'minds.    Louvois  is  our'\nfriend now.   If you are with us, then\nall will bo well.\" -\u201e    '   '    .   ,\n\"But, father,, think- how many there\nare!   And think, too. of their sufferings\nshould they be driven for*b!\"\n'  \"Their cure lies in.their own hands.\"\n.   \"That   is   true.    And ,ye(   my  heart\nsoftens for them.\" l    ,\nPere la Chaise and thecbishop shook\ntheir heads. '     '\n\"You would befriend God's enemies,\nthen?\" ^\n' \"Xo, no; ubt'if they.arerindeed so.\"\n\"Can you doubt, it? Is it possible\nthat your heart still turns toward the\nheresy of your youth?\"\n( '\"Xo, father; but it is not in nature to\nforget that my father and my grandfather\"\u2014   - i\n.\"JN'aj-; they have answered for their t\nown sins. Is it possible that'the church\nhas been mistaken in you?' Do'you,\nthen, 'refuse the first favor which she\nasks of you? You would accept her4.\naid. and yet you would give none1' in\nreturn.'' < ,\nMme. de Maintenon rose withjhe air\nof one who has made her resolution.'\n\"l'ou are wiseroth'uri I,\", said she. \"and-\nto you'have been committed the inter-\nrests of'the church. I will do,what you\nadvise.'* -\u00ab', \u201e\n''\"You promise it?\"~    [   '     '& >-\n\"I do.\" '      '    \"jw,   ,\n.   Iier two visitors threw up their'hands\ntogether.    \"It is a blessed day,\" they\ncried, \"and generations'yet'unborn will\nlearn to deem it so.\"       ' ,\nShe sat half stunned by the prospect\nwhich was opening out in front of her.\nAmbitious she had, as the Jesuit had\nsurmised,  always  been\u2014ambitious  for\nthe power which would enable her to\nleave tlie world better than she found\nit.    But close at the heels of her joy\nthere   came \u2022 a   sudden   revulsion   to\ndoubt and despondency.    Was not all,\nthis fine prospect a mere day dream?'\nAnd how could these men be so sure\nthat they held the king in thes hollow\nof their~uand?    The Jesuit read  tlie\nfears which dulled the sparkle of ber\neyes, and answered her thought's.\n\"The   church   redeems   its   pledges\nswiftly,\"   said   he.     \"And   you,   my\ndaughter, you must be as prompt when\nyour own turn comes.\"\n\"I have promised, father.\" ' '\n\"Then it is for us to perform.    You\n\u2022will remain in your room all evening.\"\n\"Yes, father.\"\n\"The king already hesitates. I spoke\nwith hirn this morning, and his mind\nwas full of blackness and despair. His\nbetter,, self turns in disgust from bis\nsins. ID have to see and speak with\nhim once more, and I go from your\nroom to his. And when I have spoken\nhe will come from his room to yours,\nor I have studied his heart for twenty\nyears in vain.\" They bowed low to\nher, both' together, and left her to ber\nthoughts. \u2022   i\nAn hour.passed, and then a second\none, as she sat in her fauteuil, hers\ntapestry before her, but her hands listless upon her lap, waiting for ber fate.\n'Iier life's future was now being settled for her, and she was powerless to\nwnaiy. rne aoor openea, ana sne saw\noutlined agaiust the gray light of tlie\nouter passage tbe erect and graceful\nfigure of the king.\n\"Sire, one Instant and mademoiselle\nwill light the lamp.\"\n\"Do not call her.\" He entered and\nclosed the door behind him. \"Francoise,\nthe dusk is welcpme to me because it\nscreens me from the reproaches whkh\nmust lie in your, glance even if your\ntongue he too kindly to utter them.\"\n\"Keproaehes, sire! - God forbid that 1\nshould litter them:\"\n\"When I last left you\", KrancoNe, it\nwas with a good resolution in my mind\nI tried to carry it out. and T failed\u2014I\nfailed. I remember that you warned\nme. Fool that I was not to follow\nyour adAice!\"\n\"We are nil weak and mortal, sire\nWho bus nor fallen? Xay. sire, it goes\n<o my lic-irt to \u00ab'\"<\u00bb you thus.\" \u2022   ,\nHe was standing by the fireplace, his\nface buried in his hands?, and she could\ntell by the catch of his breath that he\nwas weeping.\n'  \"I   cannot   do   without   you,   Francoise!\" he cried.    \"I  am  the loneliest\nman   in all  this world,  like oue-who\nlives on a great mountain peak, with\nnone to bear him company.   Who have\nI for a friend?  Whom can I rely upon?\nSome are for the church; &orue are for\ntheir families; most are for themselves.\n.But who of them all is single minded?\nYou aro my better self, l\/runeoise.  You\nare   my   guardian   augel.     What   (he\ngood father sny\u00abs is true, and the nearer\nI aiu to you the farther nm I from all\nthat Is. evil. \u2022\u25a0 Tell  rne,  Francoise, do\nyou love rue?\" ,      '        >     f   '\n\"I hiive loved you for years, sire.\",\nnor voice was low, but clear\u2014the voice\nof a w.ornan to whom coquetry was al*-\n'horrent.    \u201e .' ,. <\u25a0<\n- \"I> had hoped It, < Francoise, and yet\nit thrills' me to hear you\u201esay It. ,,WIU\nyou be my'wife, Francoise?\" t      ' '\nAnd   so   the   moment  had, In   very\ntruth 'come.-'   She  paused  for  an   instant,  only'an  instant, before ,takiug\nthis last great step, but even that was\ntoo long for the patience of the khig.\n\"  \"Will you.no^.Frnucolseniie cried.-\n\"May.God mako me worthy of such'\nan' honor,LsJre.'\" said she.   \"And hcre'l\n'swear that if hea veil, double \"my* life\nevery hour shall  be spent in the one\nj endeavor tp make you a happier man!\"\n( 'She, had knelt down, aud, the kiug;\nstill holding her'hand, knelt down beside her.' . ' '\n4 > ,\n\"And.I swear, top,\" he cried, \"that if\nmy days'aiso are doubled you will now\nand torever be the one and only worn-\"\ntan for me.\"-' ..\" - ,\nAud so their double oath was taken,\"\nan oath which .was to be tested in the\n'future, for each did'live almost double\ntheir years, and yet neither broke the\npromise made- baud iu hand \"on that\nevening in the'shadow girt rhaiu'ber.'   *\n\"\u2022 (To 'be' continued)\n(METALLIC\nCEILINGS\nAre Artistic,\nDURABLE, SANITARY,\nand FIREPROOF\nEasily applied, Cannot\nCrack nor Fail Off\n' Sand us a sketch showing \u00bbhap\u00ab\nand exact measurements of your\neellings , or walls, and we will\nsubmit designs,-1 estimates and\nIllustrated booklet free.\nWRITE4-US  NOW\n| Metallic Roofing Co., I\nLIMITED J\n,< Mannfactnrcrs\nTORONTO & WINNIPEG\n,   WESTERN   CANADA    FACTORY\n797    Notre     Dame    Ave.,    Winnipeg.\nKaiser's   Read\"   Revolver.\nEmperor William TL isc never without his reyolvor,\" nrut lie.is extremely\nskilful in the use of tlse weapon. It\nia inspected and freshly pruned every\nmorning, t=o as 1,o make sine it is in\nperfect, working older. \u201e\n1'irmly convinced that he Is going\nto'die by the Hand ot nn anarchist\u2014\nthis'fate liavuifj'been prophesied for\nhim >2ong ago\u2014he is detei mined to\nmake a stern fight for his life! aud lo\nhave at any Title tho satisfaction, if lie\nfalls of inflicting sonie injury upon\nhis assailant.\u2014P. T. O. -\n, .The.'change of dietary that conies'\nwith spring and ,sumnier\"ha<b the, effect in weak'stomachs of setting-up\ninflammation\/ resulting in dysentery\nand'\"cholera morbus. , The, abnormal\ncondition \"will continue if not'attended < to ond :will cause an exhaustive\ndrain on the system! The\" best available niedjeine is' Dr., J. ,JD. 'Kellogg'^\nDysentery Cordial. -It clears* the stomach and bowels of,irritants, counteracts -tlie inflammation'.- and,   restores\ntlie organs  to healthv  nctjon..,.\n- *^ , ,    i i    ii -\n'Enjoy th'e present so wisely that'the\npast may , be , pleasant to recollect.,\nand tlie'future, not alarming to'contemplate. ' ,*    -       6\ni TO CURE.'A^OLD  IN ONE DAY\nT.ake    LAXATIVi:(UROMO\u201e  .Quinine\nTablets.' ^Druggists \"refund J money 'if\nit fails, tp cure.' 'E.r'W.\" Grove's srgna-\nture is on each box. \u201e 25c. '  ',-.'<   ,\nSAT ON RED HOT COALS.\nKenr Fought Battlp With Glowing Embers of Camp Fire. ,\nA Yakima Indian whoso name \u2022!\u25a0\nfecumseh, who says thut there flows\nn his veins the blood of the old i ok-\nma chiefs, is a great hunter arid an-\n-iniilly decamps to the sides of .Mount\nBaker, where he considers himself un-\n'ortu late if he din's not succeed in\ningoing two or three beins and piob-\niblv a cougar or two, A deer he is\ntui'e bf, for he know* well the haunts\nif the fleet-footed animals\nTeeumseh tells a good joke he per. <\npptinb-d on a bear la*,i fall on tlie oak\nsovered slope's of Mount Uaker. lo-\njuinseh ami a ypung, brave tie had\n>,ith him fur the purpose of giving him\n\u00bb few lessons'in bear'kilhng Jeft lop-\noenifh late in ths fall, and in a day()\nir two were with, their pack horses\nA-ell into the country where bear was\nmown to be plentiful.\nOne  evening   us, they   came   into  a\nrreen little vrje, whore the luxuriant\nrra.-ses   afforded    cropping ' for 'their'\ntorses,  they killed a deer and made\n;nrrip., The night threatened  to be'a\n\u2022aim- one, so they pitched their camp,h\nbeneath  the 'wide-spreading branches\nof au'old oak- tree, 'where they wouidi\nbe somewhat sheltered from the rain,\nas well as provided with fuel for camp\nBres.   They hung'the deer to the limb\nof a  tree,   built  a   fire, .cooked  their\nnipper,  then   spread   their ^blankets\njeparatelv some ten feet above the fire,\nan the sloping hillside.    -     \"       \u00ab    \u25a0\nSoon after they hud wrapped thcm-{\njelvqs   well .in   their   blankets  there''\nsame a heavy shower of,rain.   The oak ,\ntvood  thoy had'used  for' thoir camp\nfire had burned'down into n ?fine glowing bed of-timbers. 'Uio'\" rain that now\nJell had thc effect of .smothering out\n'ill ojitside evidence of tlie bofj of coals,\nbut they =were ther^Jufet tho same, a\u00ab\nthe evidence, boon drvcIppodV\n\"About'midnight,\" Teeumseh says,\n\"there was something doing, Glancing^\nout .from beneath the .covers I saw tha\nbiggest boarJ tlmf ever Rre'w walking\ndown' the .hillside- between - me >wa\nthe other fellow.  He was so,big,T did\/f\nnot breathe'., He got down'pretty'close\nbvthe fire; then T \"guess he, snielled'-:\nas,  for he, turned' around,.let, out'a\nrrowl.-^at. upon    his    haunches\/rind-\nmowed'' lights \/The, clouds'\" had' gone\nand the'moon-shone out'.so 1 could\ntee him mighty plain\u2014too plain\/' \u25a0  ,-\ncamselVs   broken- English^\nQUEEN OF ACTRESSES\nPRAISES PE-Rfci\nS^ooo^oooo^:^^\n*<i\n\"\/ Am\nGlad To\nWrite My \u00a71\nEndorse^\nOf The,\n' Great :\nRemedy\n\u2022Pe-ru-iia,'\n< I Do So.,\n\\ Most\nHeartily.\"\nJulia Marlmi\ntion\n\u25a0The ^ nerve f ccnwrflj*re<iuire^.au$i3j;\ntion. \\Tf thc,.,digestion'tis.impaired,\nthe 'nerve ^centerft , bec;Oip<(^aii\"rftfj^^\nand-jiridisrestion'is the result.,\nTOMMY' BURNS .HONORED.1\nthe\nBoxer's    Friendly    Challenge    to\n' '   '.w     i. r*\n' ^ Lord   Chief   Justice.       .   , -\n* Lord Alverstone, the Lord Chief Justice,', was one of the guests, at,a recent'dinner, of the Sphinx,Club-at-the\n.Hotel Cecil, London,-Eng., when*the\nhero of \u201eth\"e .evening, and ' ijriucipal\nguest was,Tommy, Burns, the' champion heavy-weight fighter of the world.\n^ Mr. PVlBalch presided,'ond amongst'\nthose present'were Lord Kmna'ird,'ah \u2022\nex-international footballer^ Air. Guy;\nXickalls, one of the Oxford coaches;'\nand Mr.   Varie '.fennel]. \"      \u25a0*\nLord Kinnaird, in a neat httle\nspeech, advocated clean amateurism'\nand   clean   profijaaionalism.\nMr. Guy Nickalls said he was of the\nopinion that where commercialism and\nmoney crept in sport crept out. Sport\nshould  be a pastime' entirely.\nLord   Alverstone   agreed *that,   \u2022\u25a0 for\nhealthy'and good sport, the more publicity   the   better. , lie t would , like   to'\nsee  betting eliminated  from  football,\nas-it did a great deal of harm amongst,\nclerks and others. .   \u25a0\u25a0       '\nToo much publicity was given,, he\nthought, to people who made records.\nThere was'.'nothing so deleterious to\nspoit as the unhealthy rushing after\nrecord-breaking. He wanted not only\nto encourage the man who made records, but to elevate the general standard of sport among competitors andv\nthose   who   played . ,. . ,\nTommy Burns was -called upon to\nmake a speech and simply said. \"My\nlords, Mr. Chairman, gentlemen, I\ncannot hope to beat the Lord Chief.\nJustice as a speaker, but I wouldn't\nmind taking him on with the gloves'\n(Loud cheers, during which the Lord\nChief smiled a grim smile.) My opinion is that if you have no publicity,\nyou have no sport. I consider tlio\nPi ess boys my bett friends, and I\nconsider every knock they may give\nme a 'boo\u00abt-up'.\" '\nThis little effort of oratory was\nwildly1 cheCi'ed.\nAs Lord Alverstone left the room he\nshook hands cordially with the champion.\nThey were, already'discussing ttheir\nsummer .vacations'.    \"'  , * .,\n..\"But don't you,\"think,\" said thefoth-\nlete,  \"that everybody 'ought ,to -learn\nlo swim!-\" \u00ab _ 7s'     ' 'f*.'v'\n\"Of course, not\/\" said the dys^etic',\n\"Wha^, would, you think* of a iish thai\ninsisted cupon learning to'walk on1 dry\nland?',';-   -y \u25a0\u25a0\/-\/ ,\u201e        <.,:   ---.-*, '-,';-\nSLEEPING DRAUGHTS 4\\ND'   ''\nZ .. W SOOTHING -MIXTURES\"^\n\\ ' r \u2022  '-. ',t       '\n'\u2022A wifee mother-will'never give h6r\nlitle one^a. sleapin'g'.draught,.^soothing mixture, or\" -opiate' of \u25a0' any kind,\nexcept,, upon the\/-'advice vof ^.a' corn pet;\nent ^doctor, \"who has.seeii lhS*-\"child.\nAll these i .things- contain ' - deadly\npoison. When-you give your1 baby, or\nyoung child. 'Baby's. Own Tablets you\nhave the guarantee of a government\nanalyst that this medicine does -not\ncontain one paiticle\u201eof' ^opiate ,,cr\nnarcotic, and therefore cannot possibly do harm\u2014but always do good.\nMrs. Geo. M. Kempt, of- Carleion\nplace, . Ont., r,ays:\u2014\" I, have ' given\nBaby's 'Own Tablets 'to my baby\nsince he wa\u00bb two weeks old. ,'He was\na very small \"thin baby, but* thanks\nto the Tablets he is now a big. fat,\nhealthy boy.\" Sold by , medicine\ndealeis cSr by mail at 25 cents a box\nfrom The Dr. Williams' Medicine\nCo., Brockviile, Ont.   <, \"       ,\nShortt\u2014Yes, T'beliove some fortunetellers are on the level. Not long ago\none agreed to tell me something about\nmv future ior a dollar.\nLong\u2014Well??.     '    '       '*'   , '\nShorts\u2014I gave her the money\/ and\nshe told rne the time would come when\nI would wisli I had my dollar back.\u2014\nChicago News.\n\u2014    . ,\nItch, Mange, \"rairie\" Scratches and\nevery form of contagious itch on human or animals cured in 30 minutes\nby Wolford's Sanitary Lotion.\nKnicker\u2014A man claims to have a\nfoi inula for making diamonds.'\nBocker\u2014That's >nothing; can he\nmake a pitcher?--New York Sun.\nKing  and   Empress. v\n\u25a0Referring some time ago to the visit\nof tlie Dowager Empress of Russia to\nEngland to .see her lister, Queen Alexandra,   writes   an   English   correspondent,  I  mentioned  gossip which   was\ngoing  around   Mayfair  regarding  tlie\nsupposed   ill-feeling  that   existed    between King Edward and his sister-in-\nlaw, or rather the coldness which had\nbeen very long-standing, and that this\nyear,   as   last,   the   Dowager   Empress\nwas just waiting   for  the  King to go\noff to Biarritz to come again to England.   Tins gossip coming to the ears\nof   the   King,   he   took   very   effective\nmeasures to kill it.   He postponed his\ndeparture   till   after   his   sister-in-law\nhad arrived.   He wa.s with the Queen\nwaiting her arrival at Victoria station,'\nhis  jovial,  genial  face  beaming with\npleasure.   Gently,  courteously, he assisted ,her   to. . alight   from  the   royal,,\ntrain, \u2022 affectionately    embraced   her,\nnot  ori   both  cheeks,  as  most, of the ;\ncorrespondents   reported,] but  full  on\nthe lips.    Then,, after other greetings\nhad been exchanged, he led the Dowager Empress to a royal  carriage and\ndrove alone with, .her .to'\u25a0Buckingham\nPalace, to the, intense delight of the\ncrowds,   Queen   Alexandra  and   Princess Victoria, who had driven to'the\nstation with thej King, following irran-\nother carriage.\nMinard's   Liniment,   used   by    Physicians.\nThe Little Hand. \u2022      <\nThe little h*ind I pressed\u2014ah, rne!\u2014\nThat  I but pressed and did depart,\nHow tenderly 11 think ot thee!\n1  wonder fondly  where thou art.\nI  wonder whether thou shall e'er\nFeel once again my tender clasp.\nWith thee the world and all  were mln\u00ab.\n1  saw  tlie prize within my grasp. '\nThe littlo hand 1 pressed\u2014ah. rne!\u2014\nAnd  held  wllh all  tlie lover's art\u2014\nA royal Hush\u2014tlie liouso wns plneDed\u2014\n1 Jeft tho pot and did depart.\n-Cornell Widow.\nHere' Teeumseh\nfailed to' describe what'took place\u201eJbut,.\nIt' seems'-.that-the\"1 bea'r.Kwhun  he got\nthe'man smell,'got mad and hoisted,\nhimself \"orr- his haunches -Veady^for .a \"'\nfight,, evidently-making 4,no calculations as to what he was,going to sit,\ndown   in.-   His   tail   quickly   -worked\ndown through'the'outer-coat of dead\nashesl,  Not.to.be^outdone, ther(undcr\ncoat of  live   embers  quickly   worked'\nup through to' the* tail.   ,To say here\nJhat Bruin got mad would beLputting\nIt mildly,, for he let, out a roar that\nihook-tlie hills about. '\/ , t        \"\"\"\u25a0\u2022,\nVK'6'w, .Tecurnseh -is an  Indian who\n'appreciates a good joke and .he does-'\n,i't'hesitate'to laugh .when something\ntickles ..his'' risibilities.\" ,He laughed ,\nnow,  foru the - bear\/, iri' attempting*- to'\"-\nextricate v his \/tail^ from, \"* its   perilous\nposition,,'stepped \"full, back  into1 the\nglowing sbed.of 'coals. < Then;,a',cit;cu3\ncontortionist'never made'a bigge\/', f66r\nbf-',hirnself than .'did thatrbear.-^JDiii--\ncafdirigctail. dignity,- lieitproceeded  to\"?\nput to ihe-r>nd~theto*ause;of:,hi3\".dis.\ncomflture. ,.\"W,ith a Jim;Jeffries' swing^\nHheilbear's big fright -paw, swept^ down -\nInto'th'e^bed of-coals,'throwing them\nriglit'^and left -rlowrF the^Hillside.'-cauB-\nIng^a'-pyrbtcchnic '-\"display.,, that' -was.\"\nso'miithing \"beautiful,, but   the'. more\nBruin fooled-with   the fire the^more\nhe got burned; and, the'more\" he \"got\nb'u rned \"\"thc-'morc, entertaining .ho \u00a30-\ncame,  amusing, the^'staid^\"old fIndian\nwith his  contortions  and V gymnastics\nIn a manner highly gratifying.' \u2022 V   \"\n\" The   noise   Bruin, made   awoke   the-\nyoung Indian. \"He wns a Carlisle man\nwith the reputation of being,Bomewhat\nof a'sprinter, but no oftort of his on\nthe   atheltic   field   evpr ^equalled    iri\nspeed the move' he made now to reach\na limb  that hung  out  from  the tree\nInvitingly  near  the  ground. \u2022 With \"a\ngymnastic   dexterity   that   made   the\nbear-pause and gaze with w6ri\"der.'th6\nyoung Indian swung himself,up into\nthe tree.    In the meantime Mr. Bear |\nhad aboufclean up-his foe, the fire,\nand now, decided to turn,his attention\nto Teeumseh,'who had been so \"audacious  as  to laugh.    Teeumseh   is 'an <\nold man., but h\u00bb  didn't propose thut\nany young Carlisle buck should show\nhim   any   pointers   on   getting, up   a\ntree.    In  the  friendly  branches  of a\nnea'by' 3crub-oak Teeumseh spent the\nhett three hours waiting for \"daylight\nlo 4;orne nnd  tho bear to go.    When\nmoining did   come,   courage  returned\nio   the   two   bunWs.   They   took   up\nBruin's trail, -which  Teeumseh   said\nwas  easily   followed   by   the  odor  of\nburnt, hair.   At ten o'clock they found\nBruinl and-- Teeumseh  avers,  without\ncracking  a smile,  that the  bear  was\nsitting   \u00ab--ith   his   tail  well   pmbodded\nLa tha waters of a mouulam stream.\n* * \u2022 \u2022r* \u2022 \u2022\n-\u2022 ir Peruna\"Ij\" not-'a j nervine^norfc<a ,J\n\" stimulant.'''It bcnefits,;th[e<rnervas *.\n\u2022,, by .benefiting. digestio.H\/.^V-VV'\n\u2022  \u2022-\"\u2022'\u00bb'\u2022'\"-\u00bb  \u2022  \u2666'#\u2022\u00ab {\u00bb'\u2022\u00a3\"\u2022*-\u2022  #'\u00bbw\u00bb<<i\nPerunaL frees _, the \\8\u00a3oniVchl4 of,' toi-\nlarrhal'.copg'estidns and 'normal 'digestion iv theyjseha a iMvSti^ijfo--\n.\"In. >.6thec,.words.\" Peruna' goes- to,'the\nbottom^ of'\"the, whole, difflcuUjy wlieri\nthe'dujagreeable ^mptpnJ34dia.ttl>Iiearv\n'. Mrs.' J.. C,,4 Jamison; .'\"Gl^'Mtt^chainV\n_\u201e   \u201e w_   many    ,...\nrhedieiner also^was! treated|tiy,'three\nicetorsi A\" ',>'* -i' ?.7'&\u00a3;*4-.->*-\nThe-ynsaid tha^I'-bja^dsneryous dys\n>sia., \u25a0*! was' put'^on  dSliquid'die)\n^.^^bkT;ili\u00bbwiriedicTnerfoM'4J\nit'eSj.'SOJ- ^ck agrliii aliunde*1\n2MmM getting cun'd. i\nr'; ,r-saw a testimonial of qtrunri\ncase was'' airiijlaf''' to wine,' Ujnr<J\nby,, PeruriaVso,! thought i writ!\nh^artTfalr-'^.-,-,,-... \\ T\n$'AfL pfo\u00aburjidr a bottle at ouaj\nigozninencfed ^taking U'.\"'\" 1 h\u00bbTs\n^yeral^b^tUe^afta am' pnlinlr\n\u2666V* * \u2666\"'\u2022\u2022,\u00bb<\u2022 \u00bbr\u00ab t \u2022'''\u2022 .'in\n'fi&t'jl (t\\ave\"gained. In strenjthrl\n,*;fe\u00abl \"lifcift a^T aitferent 'ptmrir, \\)%\n* lleve.Peiruria \u00bbs all that is cUse\n* for   it \" \u00b0-\n- \u20221Jj\u00bb\"\"'\u00ab'{.\u00ab'\u00bb\u00abr,J'\u00bb\"\u00bb<\u00ab , \u00bb~\u00bb. a  * \u2022 1 1 11<\n* ^orviriea^rjiichi' as coal ^f'l'tfi^^j\nti'ona.fare^cloingja great dfalifaMgfJ\nS)e%^4riKaicinea,' lvujid' iifadsctt a^\u00ae\u00ab\ndera. \"itr6s;all, 'alike,--lu-art fcyaA\nfind'should\u25a0 riot -be,used.  Thu>A\nt\\foi5l3f be? all   right if tlie jipsf\nwere codUL' Peruna corrects \\i-.t\nj\u00bbBn.r.-^ A\".\u00ab,     ;\npeps\nfor^thrce months\n^MANUFACTURED. SY-;p\u00a3RONAvDPUQ 'MANUFACTURING  COWrt,\n\u00bb->-. ;-;V, ^^'\u25a0'\u25a0\"^C01;UMBUS,i\u00bbqH I of- u;-S;* A'i. j\n, l^\u201eThe :HU5bahd':a;Samolc,\n, PILES.CURED., IN 64TO'J4' DAY8;;.X'\nPAZO^piNTMENT^.'isfgua'rapleed'to\ncure.any case of'-Etching;-Blind^Bleed.'\nln%\\qr;,'Protru'diagl.PileB^inv; 67,to<'->U\n.days \u2022or,\"mdneyirefunded.f' 60c. >V^ j\n4 V.' ; '- -~-  ,.-\u00bb\u25a0\n,Upton Sinclair, in an address before\na^body.of' Chicago. SocialirUs,* said*~df\ncharity^ 7\\r    '    .---\u2022>'J.'.\u00bb.''\u2022,,    v-,^\n\/'\u25a0'The average charity, the-charity''of\nthe rich,'seems rather futile to. inc..\nThe rich oppress the poor enorm'ofuslyv\nthen they help them \"slightly. -11 iSj\nlike the 'yjtirjB ludy angler. \u25ba *--\n,''',Why^.;said a m'url^tp this young\nlady, 'do you always carry a bottle of\n\u25a0liniment with you'on your fishing excursions?' \" \" *\u2022 \"\n\"\"She sighed. ; .A ,-\n\"'1 am so sorry,' she sard plaintively, 'for the poor little fish.;\" And so\nwhen I, take one off the hook I always\nrub-its' cut mouth -with some liniment.' \".           \" '      .     ' \\    '\n.'Mr.^Kipluij; 't*lls fi Mt\u00abj jt-\nsmiii t-. liian who,^o'wne<3'a vjttg\nBrorej. olid one day lifcanlaiv-M\n'*       F* * Jf' \"\"   *\"        \u25a0\" \"1\nsay to>tv woman.:'*.      -       .-:\n^'\"jNo;., madam, weirliavu not as\nfqr{a-rong-time,\" ,:      -   .   ,\nAhe.tjsnjArti.eni'plciyoriVuftlied.ii'*\nwTonlan^rtria-fsaid:    -, -   '   r'v-.^-lfa\n^vRlT(a^fferco ^limqrJH ^.^f]\n\u25a0-\"We havs-plentv in'r*^civ4,!j.\"|ti>g!gj\npiontyt(ilpstairfl.'J*,i,.        ., . f\"\"\t\nVjjrrid\/'aW 'cler\u00a3-loqk.Hl dHI\nafterward 'the {.mart i>roijntrV'T.!Wtij\nW that ihe clerk's lernnik-,,!^!^^\nt'6 tho WfVlfi?!^\n...,    ,   \u201ext\u00bbv\nV'ork. Tribune\",,\nWorms in children, .if-.tlicy be not\nattended to, cause .convulsions, and\noften 'death. Mother 'Graves' Worm\nExterminator will pi'otect tho children\nfrom- these- distressing, afflictions. ^\n-' TnE   SOLDIER'S   FRIEND^  1\"\nmade rin -^answer  ..   im\u00bb\u00abv>\nhaven't Jiad .anv   rain   lutMy'-fe^\n,    \u2022 . .       <glm\n' A Pill for All Seasons.-r\\ViW\u00a7glSl\nsummer, in any, latitude; vlie.^tiB\n^Ti^11 70ne lor* Arctic *rtcm^lllii\nPin-melee's Vegetahlo'Pill's c\u00ab.i^P\nponded upon to do th\u00abir' w.prifflS\ndyspeptic Will -find them n Vjffif\nvvays aiid^ should carry tliern wiggl\neverywhere. They-are made \u00bb\nstand any climate und aie nsrjapoii\nto*\"keep' their freshness nnd <,f!ws'^\nThey do not \"grow stalc\/a quai'S\npossessed in many pills no\u00bb i|\nmarket.\ndies]\nThe   First   Kiss.\nTho  rios.'on  gin\nlla\u00abl  told lilni j C3,\nHor ho.-iil   n whirl.\nWe  must  con fens.\n\"Twaa like a pl.iy cor ipclly stacfd.\nFor he and she wore now v.:.gj(;f;ii.\nTho Boston chap\n....!   ....   Surve.\\(.-d  with   pride\nI Her claasiu rniip, '\nSwei-t nnd four cred.\nJP.rlscllla.\" he niiiilr: bold to statu,\nthln^  tha,\u00ab  we miBlii  osculato.\"\n\u2014 PIllHlm'rer   t>nat.\nEnglish Colonies In America.\nFrom the, founding of the \"first English colony In America. Virginia In\n1007, to that of the Inst, Georgia In\n1733. was a ce'ritury and a quarter.\nDuring this time thirteen colonies were\nestablished, extending from New\nFrance on the north to Now Spalu on\nHie south, ancl laying; claim fo all the\nland from the Atlantic to the Pacific,\nthen called the South sea.\nMexican Prisons.\nTbe term of a prisoner lu n Mexican\npenitentiary Is divided Into three periods. The first is occupied with penal\n'iibor. The second Is labor In the\nirnlrilng school, with a little pay. Tbe\nthird, \"preparatory freedom,\" Includes\n\"Marry the 'k-lnrj l'\u2022\nturn In. one way or the other. Daylight turned to the pearly light of evening, and that again to dusk, but she\nstill sat waiting in the shadow. At\nlast, however, there came a quick,\nsharp   tread,   crisp   and   authoritative.\nInterior of the Earth.\n,- Science does not know what the interior of the. earth is. The best scientific opinion is that the central core\nof the earth, some 7,600 miles in diameter, is in a gaseous state, but exposed to such a tremendous pressure\nthat it behaves like an extremely rigid\nbody. Outside of this gaseous core is\nliquid matter, perhaps a hundred\nmiles in j thickness. Upon this rents\nthe crust of tlie earth, thirty or forty\nmiles  thick.    The enveloping  atmos-\nwhich   brought  her   to  her   feet   with. . .--r-..0 ._\nflushed cheeks am] her heart beatlur,'    P\"ere ,nlav reach anywhere from SO to\nI 150 miles.\nAs Advertised.\n\"What's your tiineV'i asked the old\nfarmer of the brisk salesman.\n\"Twenty minutes' alter 5. What can\nI ilo. for .you?',' \".'\n\"I want them pants,\" said Ihe old\nfarmer, leading tlw way to the window\nnnd 'pointing \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 at a ticket marked,\n\"(.liven away at 0.10.\"\u2014Judge.\nA  Real   Grievance.\nBobby looked askance a't the piece\nof cake given him at supper.\n\"What Is it, son?\" asked his father.\n\"Titin't fair,\" sajd Bobby, \"for\ngrandma to cut my slice, 'cause everything looks bigger through her spectacles..\"\u2014Harpers Weekly.\nSilenced. ,   '\n\"Ouch, barber!\" gasped the'victim\nnervously. \"There are several hacks\nin that razor.\" -\nThe   big. barber   swung   the   lather\nbrush around savagely.    \"Well, whru\ndo you  expect In a   ten  cent shave\ngovernor,\" ho roared, \"electric.cubs?'1\nSt Louis Tost-DIsoatch.\nSagacity   Shown   by  Trained-Dogs  at\nPart1 of Jan- Army.'\nFor dogs to be enlisted In every great\narmy of the world, either In the ambulance department or as scouts and dls-\n\u2022pntcb bearers, Is surely something of a\nnovelty.\nIn the Franco-Prussian   war out of\n120,000 killed and wounded 13,000,were\nreturned as \u2022'missing.\"   And who shall'\nsny what these men endured? ' Every\nwar of the\" future,  however, will se\u00ab\nthe dog lessening its horror.    Iu Germany his education Is at this moment\nbeing taken In hand-by n voluntary society   'with     nearly    2,000    members\namong them some of lire must able of-,\nfleers   In   that   country's   g-vnt   army?\nThe war dog-proper Is used for sentrj,\nmessenger nnd fseoutlug servlee, wlillt\nthe ambulance dog's training inclines\nhim   only   to  scour   t\\.e   battlefield   In\n\u25a0earch of the wounded and missing.\nThe   needs  of  rnoder;n   warfare  not\nouly call for vns't enlarging of the hntv\ntlefield.  hut also compel the troops to\ntake every ndvautiigc or natural cover.\nThis and  the  Tact that  wounded  men\nwill use their Inst strength to seek protection    from    artll'ery    fire,    cavalry\ncharges  and   the  wheels   of  guns';br\n.crawling Info thlclw bushes, ditches and\nnatural   holes  wl\/. show., how difllcul''\nit Is for the overworked stretcher bear\ncrs of, tiie Red Gross department -to nrv!\ntice .prostrate figures not readily seen;\nMoreover,  modern   warfare  Is carried\noh   largely   by   night   attack,   nnd.-nt.\nnight, too, the wounded have to be col\nlected.    The ambulance (log, however,\nIs .independent of artificial light and relies only on his power of scent.\nRecently during the great Austrian\nmaneuvers 'JOO.mon were left lying 6r\\\nthe field to represent the wounded, and\nthe stretcher bearers,  working against\ntime.'overlooked  thirty-eight'.of these.\nWithin jtwerrt.y   minutes J lit   Viennese\ndogs nnd  found  (hem  all.     Each  tlog\nhad about his neck a  tla.sk' of. brandy\nor sotiji and rt roll of blindages.',  The\nwounded man, having 'made what line\nhe can of this..relief, gives the dog his\ncup or belt,, and the nnlrnnl  races din\nwith  It (o the ambulance attendant\/!,\nwhom hl> then conducts to Ihe Bpotl-\nXV. G, Fitzgerald in. St.. iNlchplus,     ,\nServant\u2014You'llv have to call\n- Collector\u2014That's^ what ,t\nyesterday.\n'Servant\u2014Bht'Mr\". 'Skinner Is\ntai.ln.lk ito you to-dtiv.\nCollector\u2014You needn't, \\>crrJ\nthat\/,   I'll   do nil\" the\" t\/ilL-w-geSSld\naclelphiu Pre'sa. *r  ^. - ISMS\nAsk   for\"Mi\"nara's\"*and  takfonf\nWhcie's the fire?-Can't iw'\nNo ' Oornme rnouf full n'-\nAridnighL  came  and .-till\nreni'aiiied.'\n\"Do you   like   mu<>iei\"   w-'\nbonutiful girl, just to.bii'.ii. tkj\notony. \u201e ,\n\"Passionately  fond  of  it.' r\ntlie bore.   \"In fact, inu-rc \u00bb.!li\n,cnrrj; me-away.\"\n, Slip ViisheVf'over h> ib-' I'H'\nplayed several populai ma   v\n\"Vou are still ln>n\\\" -!to -i-\ninp^upon' (he slool.\n\"Y*'s,\" v-nwued   tin* I\",','\n\"Rul  h-thruight y.i'i   .fl !\u00bb\nwnvs .onfried you nuiii '\u2022'\n.\"So 1 did-^-inusie.\" 'jlur.'if'\nti.senl   -':  . ft<s\n,    \u2022\u25a0\u00bb\u2022 ^   .,      -- . fas\nat\n'fhe \u2022usual  spring conditio\"y-fe\n.A. W.  Cl.as\u00ab's  Nerve Food isi^M\n--     - ,f'^-\nVigor comes  fmrn i-11\"' .   , ftr&\n'  Almost every hod j s IK ml IJ |^\nand -wntorv- in tlie, spiuig\nuHence tiie   tired.    Iiun.\"1\nthe,.loss.,.of.,.ei.iei-gy   in<l \"\"|\nthe! .general'   wenkin^-, d\norgans.:\nThe' appetite fnil.s   'lip ^l\"\"\nporfq'c't,';.tli'c;''f]Uoi'ir.ifc' mid 'up\ngaris Hi-e-irregtiliiir.   irt*f m\nis a: burden  insteau <lf \"\u00b0\nit should -bo. ..\nYou\"\"cn'ri   '-'feel    .\\\"iii fU\nstrengtlMiiid. vigor \u00bbli\"iJ     g;.,;\nChase's  Nerve   Fond    i.    >\u25a0%\u00a3#. ajjg\nblood -is made ri.'h.im'l l,,irt  Amigtfoi\npetite   Hl,a.'|H.iH'd. d.t.. -;l\u00bb'\u00bb V \u00a3{^^\u00a5aQ-'\nand   everv   organ   in   tin    Vj*f\nthe  beriofil, of  the m\"  rt      W?\ntaining blood. ., \"Sj\n\u25a0Stirnirlniits giv,- h i\u00abl [, ^\nWliat'-iH' nhsolui.-ly.n'V,; 4^|\nred  b'lood H,K.'h  \u00bb-; '- ,l\"      f\u00ab\n!^y'.?:::'A:.^:,( !?'..\u00ab J. 4l\n135\nm\nVouc'im av,i!.l Mil J ';; ) Z^^\nmont-'find-siiff-'n\/g. , , ,K 'ioulfim\naches, tlu...(l\u00abj\u00bbr.;.^iiiP'f M V* Jbef\u20ac\u00a7\nby the t.se of 'Dr. A- \u00ab r ^fflffihM\nPood.:- no cts. \u00ab,!\u25a0 '! ' >1\u00bbI\ninnnson. Bales .V <\u2022'>, J \u00ab t>l\u00bb^|fii\nPortrait and fliguntiiri''o'-   B^Ma\u00abW\u00abiaB\nPortrait and sigu'it'1\nM.D.,  the famous\nthor, on ovory \u2022\u00bboX' THE LEADER, MOYIE, BRITISH COLUMBIA.  nsSpring  ...tP^hJood  and cleanse the'  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSDMAuW. Chase's Kidney-  FEED   ON  POND  LILIES.  Remedy  f  .Mas\/  a 21\/arfaJ  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOOOOOOO^jd  Jr-i tile t(ej>j  flopped !sl,^j  'ad again.\",!  cine'for n^jj  in nnd {w<c{  ri'd.  ual ol(i;mjijir.|  wine,' Uinf<i,  uught 1 vnvulsEJ  'Otile at oifes a  Jt.V  1 'tlSTi  aru'enUrelj;  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'< i m  . in strength i  int pMiop,-  II that is tii*  .- 0    *-   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   f   I I |{  5 coal lar't\/i  jreal deal sf t  .id' iifadsctt;  -heart dfp'carl  used.  Thi! i  t if tlie ,'l.fi  corrects Stif  ING COMPAQ  5 J\\   irtOIJ ji-j  u-ned 'a dry r  litanl a i.-\ufffd\ufffd^  igiilonfi  have  been   col-  .fysteni,  ,._, ireflrTlanguid feelings of  j.iidigesticfn,'the pains and  LJ! ^couragernent' and  des-  >W&*zM&  ^^jpqiipns^an only be e'limin-  'Wft^'-^eaHfthrt action  of kid-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, ,7^mmmOMieu.  M^^ifM&^Qlt&e'H   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Kidney-Liver  WjprdiniHlyjailaliyfin'the bowels and  \"-'^n||th|^l^^\/and    kidneys    in  ering   poisons? from  Kg-  ^gnijot possibly  be pur-  fHirj.+v^i action of the liver  ^ <je mereCpliysics arrd  Sfc-'accorhplish the de-  \ufffd\ufffdt#  3&ase,,'s     Kidney-Liver  nmpt action    of    the  Jmorc than this\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthey  ga^thful and \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd vigorous . ac-  nd^kidjieys.  JMVc;they are the great-  licines and are bound  JJ&ISOne pill a dose, 25  dealers or Edmanson,  joiitp. Ont.    Portrait  pi... \\\\\\ \"Chase, M.D..  ejlpt' Book author, on  r*> -  Jptimist. 'A  J^go'4 there was. a flood  \" iBsylvania. *- <An \"old  ^st nearly everything  ^ajstfsitting on,-the roof  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBJplt' flouted along.-wlieii  still .washed' away.  3i;tree  Ithes  janj  'can  swim.  ticks  n.  aMfthe \"crop would be'  s,.away above your  Moose Are Exceedingly Fond of These  Pretty Flower*.  At first thought Jt would appear Impossible that such large, gaunt denizens of the forest as moose 'could in  any way be Interested in flowers. They  are, however, exceedingly fond of all  kinds of water lilies; Kew people  know that',these flowers 'grow from  .thick snake-like-root stocks which are  so firmly attached to the bottom that  the strongest man cannot loosen them.  It Is from these firmly moored root  stocks that the much admired leaves  and flowers strive toward tbe light'  A well known naturalist who studied  ^he habits'Of the animals In'northern  Minnesota,' where mob^e are more numerous than in any other part of the  world, often found' two' ot three big  bulls engaged iu gathering their morn-  lug-meal on tho' lake bottom.' Tho  great' beasts ^would slowly stalk about  In three,or four feet of -water, and  often their heads would be under water  for, half ak minute at a time,' so that  their, backs ,Would look liko bowlders  Jufit protrudliig\"froui the sUeam; then  u' pair of, magnificent' antlers would  come up, 'and,tho water would be  shaker, out of the big ears\" with a flap-\"  ping noise that could be heard for a  quarter of a mile, and' tlieu4 the big,  \"long muzzle would*,be leisurely chew-,  Ing a dripping, mouthful of .water lllj  leuves^nnd other'plants gathered from  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd the bottom.,      [' '   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      . r Z'     ,  : So intent, were the huge animals on  'gathering fiowcrB that several times  the naturalist cpuld=,.row,' up close  enough 'to. secure a good photograph  befow' they splashed noisily , back tc,  the'shore and disappeared, la the black  spruce.. When the moose find a good  Illy pond,.they continue feeding'' la' It  'until the plants 'are almost exterminated.' -      J..     '      !\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdr\" '  sA,v.-;',\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"-   - ''\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd - --:  VA .   .ASKINGS   DREAM.   ^  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  A SEA PICTURE CRITIC  He Knew Ail About Ships and the  Wild Ocean.  ART COMMENTS OF A SAILOR  m**  got, Dave.\",'Them win-  Iii* anyhow.\"   '  ie\\ People.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMany roils'  gpri^.'but Dr| Thomas'  Dntinufes'.' to' \"ipaintairi  1\ufffd\ufffd .increase its, sphere  iS}h \\,year. ' Its sterlin'g  \ufffd\ufffdro\\ight\"i< \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd to, the- front  grey; and it can; truly  Jfbf the, people \/'Thou-'  ffitted by. it\"'and wQjtfd  reparation?;- .. '-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd(    \\'\"~  ^ay.^.the \"suffragettes a  liiight in my 'speech,  xi\\to be<appreciated.\",  Jsayj;,'\" '. w ,r '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-  ine* suffragettes'^vould  \"ints on the-sands1 of  imm  havu not Lei,  -, rufthed.n'*-  -' - - f'i  V-xiieJA \"-%  in'r\ufffd\ufffd<-tiv,,t\ufffd\ufffd-^  Or  looked diisi  t iSropricVT  rernnikn,!^  tho wo'iis-i  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdain  lutcly'  Irdtf  ifeisiri  wp.na  &m  sons.-r-Wi:  ,ivtiide^  vlie.  clic 'ttenii\/  o> 1*1 Its ,c\ufffd\ufffd  th\ufffd\ufffdir' \\v<iit;  them a 'i.t;  rry tliern raj  are made ;,  md  are u  less nnd <,  talc\/a quair  pills now ii  gl8t  ^THIS?;\",-^'^- -*\"  ^undred;Dollars_ Ret  |^f Catafih that can-  [all's\" Catarrh Cure.  ||3:v& ,CO.-Si Toledo, \"O.  ^arsigned,- have known  |\ufffd\ufffdh'e lasjt 15 years, \"arid  tfectly. ?honorablo^l-5 in  IgaWaqtions -and.^finan-  ^arry but any\" obliga-  iiiVfirrhr*;,\\'i ;'\/'\/'  |Kinnnn. & .Marvin, \"-,  j.iDruggists, Toledo, 0.  ' i Gure - is taken indirectly [ upon \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd the  Sjepus surfaces of the-sys-  \"nials sent free. Price  Sttle.   Sold by all drug-  Belief**'In the-.Vision' M|ght- Have  v\", , ,v.' T^^^Changed'JHistory^ , ,\"T, '\\ -'  v On June' 12,\" WM, Charles'1.'slept at  , the little^,Irin In^Naseby^vIlhig-i. . Scoufi  hail vbrpejgut,ne\ufffd\ufffdws or. the approach 'oi*  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdvthe pnrlinnienta'ry army, and ;the kuig  was resolved to give them tiattlev r \\ .  'Vlu the middle'of the night tbe lords  \"of  the^bedchifnilK-r, \"who^slept In the\"  outer room, were disturbed by',an ex-  traordlnury, nolse'ln the'klDg's' room.  ' Upon'entering, they'found Cluirlea slt-  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtlng bolt upright In \"b'ls bed and ln-a  aiuch excited shite.       ',    . ' , \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  ''On  asking\"what! the nolsih'was, the  king said  he bud heard\\no noise, but'  . tbatJ't,helr^entrj\" had  roused him from  -an extraordinary dream,   lie said.that  'Strafford hnd'stood \"nt the'foot of, his  'b<Kl u\"nd'lmplbred,\"hlm,tnpt to'give bat-  ' tle.for'lf, he \"did he would'be so\" disastrously , defeated- as., to . threaten   his  ;c'rown and^even his life.  '        v   ' ' \\\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   :  .^.T^c'nex't,morning Charles told^Prln'ce  . Rupert'and .hlslgenerals'of bis dream,  \"but declared'that-he would fight' They  -^hV yalri' tried,to dissuade hiin.'. In the  ' evening'news'farrlved,'that the, enemy  .. were close,.ht Iiund.'*Thnt nigtit Charles  ^agaln dreamed the same dream. ,Straf-  ''ford warned, him that Jt\ufffd\ufffdwas the last  ;tlme^he would-.try toohelpj-hjajv',  Tho \"Death of Nelson\" Reminded Him  of How 'Arkness Come Off the Main  Yard\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe Blood Red Sky Without a  Cloud That Foretells a Storm.  Crude perhaps ond curious, the out-  'corne of a  life apart, sailorraen   have  yet an appreciation of the arts, writes  David,  W.   Bone' In, the   Manchester  Guardian. '  Once in the Walter gallery I was  looking, lit' \"The, Death of' Nelson.\"  .There ,-was a man with the look of a  seaman standing near. He bad a slight  smell of drlnk'and was chewing tobacco. , He.' too, was' Interested Jn the picture, and,\" recognizing me as seaman\"-  Hke, he,said something, and'we'got to  talking about A'elson .and bis times,,  about [ ships and pictures. , \"B'gad,  male, 'them fellers\" (the, painters he  meant) \"knowed what they was,  n-doln*. Look at that 'ere jjliru\" (Ian-1  tern). \" \"Looks as its\" trimmln* was forgot ' Won they brought th'' admiral  down.',, '*- * * An* them eyes.\" point  ing,to a wounded fceapian In the near  foreground, \"them's, th* eyes o' poor  'Arkn(\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdssn wot come off th', main yard  las' voyagejiu' struck th' fife rail full  on!\" ,    r Z v'    , _      ' '\"   *  lie told; me of the saccident, how\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd it  happened, and by Ids \"eyes' and rude.  Birnple speech I saw It all. As plain before,me as the figure) of the'stricken  seaman I 'saw 'Arkness come off the  mrrlnu yard; ^clutching.\" wildly^ at the  sheets and Hfts'as lie fell.^ I heard hlni,  strike-the rail,, with, a,f sickening thud'  and lie stretched. 1 saw^'tbe running  figures'on the'deck; n'rid\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\" 'e'never  ,Iareted;'th,'4\"nlgh't:-\ufffd\ufffdWe' b'uried^'im Jout,  there. Tnltal it was.\" said my speaker.  Involuntarily twisting a shoulder to an  imnglnary'-southwest. ~ ,  MThere^was'a sea picture, afship.com-  Iiig   up'- toJrthe 'Isle   of, Wight\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdclean  curving sails',-a  good!sense; of, move-  ' ment \"and   a , fine,  breezy  atmosphere.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \"J est j\" wot - ItwIs.\"'  said   my' frieud,  \"'oraeward^bound.   'Let 'er go, boys!\"  a burst of epthusiasin.jhat made'some^  visitor glance around\/alarmed.\"' 'Ome-  wa'rd  bound It Is.\"',  There.,were other  ..fine pictures, but we did\"not feel that  .we had\ufffd\ufffdn right to do more;than look at^  them and admire.   With sea pictures it,  was difTerent.4, They were our-world.\",  and 'who had'the right3 to criticise the  wny,a\"sea was'moving,off the sky if  we had not? Too often had we watched, anxious eyed,' forf a break^ in   the  clouds not.to know the*-way of-wind  IRONING is  * heavy work  with common  cooked starch.  It is a woman's  pleasant, successful occupation with  Celluloid  Starch. Requires no rub-',  bing-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdj ust  soaks   in.  Iron's, don't stick\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"-there's wax iii  the starch'. Your grocer has iter can get\/it.,,7   ; \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    '   sis  Ce\\WW\\A &\\a\ufffd\ufffdc\\v  Never Sticks.   Rcquiras no Cooking  The Bnwtford Starch Worlat,XlmItal, Hrantferd, Carud*  LUCK  BRINGING  JAUfc\\  ii Father's Dodge.  A father was''lecturing his young  ^hopeful, upo'n the evils, oi staying out  late at night Slid getting up' late' in  ,the' unjoining, \"you will never funoqnt  to anything,'\" he-Continued, \"unless  you turn-over at new leaf, llemembcr'  that the early\"bird catches the worm.\"  \"How about Athe w;orrn, father?\"- inquired the young, man. \"Wasn't he  'rather foolish to get up *so oinly?\"  J'My son,\" said the father, solenujlyj  \"that, worm 'hadn't been tp bed 'all  night;-, he ,was on.hiVway home.\"  Mado Up  Into  Fanciful  Ornaments by  Jewelers.  Jade has come again particularly Into i  favor for wedding and birthday gifts, ,  more because of its reputation for luck  bringing tban on account of Its beau  ty or Intrinsic value.  The idea of Jade being endowed with '  the virtue of influencing good fortune  to its wearer or possessor arose in Chi- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  na and was, of course, cultivated sedu- j  , iously by the wily yellow man, whose ;  land produces so'many fine specimens. !  Indeed, -so great Is the reverence for ;  jade in the Flowery Land that state I  property is made at once of any part of J  the country in.which a specially fine '  piece is found. The most exquisite I  .specimens of jade are said by experts ]  to represent all the hues and effects of  sea foam. It Is not such as these, however,, which are now passing generally '  as lucky gifts. 'Tlieir'eventual end is I  in the collections of wealthy connols- '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  seurs.  '    '    , , .  Chips of jade showing more or less j  of flaw are now being extensively j  made up by jewelers into fanciful or- I  naments. Quality, therefore, should not I  be expected in such pieces of jade. '  They are appreciated merely, for their, ]  soft green color and their accredited !'  'luck carrying sentiment \" j  Women have found out, moreover,  that .the particular green color of jade  has the effect when' in proximity of  whitening tbo skin.   They are pleased  F0R5YEARS  EACH SPRING  AND  TROUBLED THIS LADY TILL ZAM-BUK CURED.  Mis* Mary Levesqne, 313 Stadacina St, Hochelaga, Montreal writes :\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"I hare found Zam-Buk an excellent remedy Tor  skin eruptions. Up to this Spring I was bothered for ilmc^t  6ve years with a red rash, snr.&ll pimples and noreson my lace and ou  thc scalp thro' the hair. Nothing I uied would clear thu lash from the  skin until I began uainj; Zam-Uuk. This salve has effectually and I  beliete permanently taken oH those unsightly pimples and sores from  both scalp and face. I shall recomrrend Zam-liuk lo all my friends.\"  For healing er\/ema ..nd all iltmdlstaje Z\ufffd\ufffdm.  Bulc is without e\ufffd\ufffdju.\ufffd\ufffdl.   Ituj.oodforrbrumatli.nl   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd...      , ,-.  when well iul,bej in. Piles also yj\ufffd\ufffdld to Zajn-Bulc    K*\ufffd\ufffd! '.&> I \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd * va \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  AH stores aud drujjists, j\ufffd\ufffdc. ur Zan, \ufffd\ufffd>silc Co.,  Toronto.  l^k  Make the Farm Pay  A Fairbankt-Mor\ufffd\ufffde  Jack-of-A!l-Trad\ufffd\ufffda  GA80UNE BNOINE  will pump water, saw wood, shell com,  run cream separator, ln fact furnish  Eower for any purpose.  Every Farmer Should Have One.  Cut out thhr advertisement and send  it to  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd JHE CANADIAN FAIRBANKS CO., LIMITED,  \"  92 & 94   Arthur St.,   WINNIPEG:  Pleasevsend'rne  (without cost  to me)  j;our.catalogue with  nill   Information  regarding your Gasoline Engine for farm use.    ,  47.  v  Ail  lx.1  til  !j.\\.rN    CKUr  I IV1\/1M3   '   %      1 with the heavy jade'bangles that slip IB  ' '      f-^r- 'A^rVin    D.MDF F^ f over tueuana aQd are tipped at the j  ' \\ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd('    ^Ml^lL'    r llTirl-.Lo 4],extremities     with <*.silver.   'Originally  Disappear>,,. Underf a<\ufffd\ufffd Treatment  with Dr\/Williams^'Pink Pills.   \/  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd7 There'Join be'health ana vigor only1-  when  the, blood \"is''J rich'   -and    red.  There   are  thousands  of   young - men  just appioaching manhood who need  the -rich;-, red   blood, that, only    Dr.  Williams'\"Pink Pills can, make. They  have no' energy, ^tire .out at, ,the. least'  exertion,  and  who  feel  by  the\" time  theyj,have; done. thetirJ\"dayJs work, as  though, the da'y\"wast'.a* week long.7   In  some'-cases Atheie- is' a further!, sigh of  danger iri'the \"pimples and disfiguring  .eruptions   whicri   break 1 out 'on   -the  face.->'<These-are   certain, signs   that  blood'is out,of 'order-'and that a\" complete breakdown may, result.\" In,this  emergency.  Dr., Williams1  Pink- Pills  is  the   medicine   these  !young    men'  should' take.-'These  <,pills, actually  rnake rich,, red .blood,  ,They clear the  fakiu',,of  jiimples' ,and, erux'rtions   and  bring health, strength and,energy.  _,,Here._ is, Jhe experience   ot 'Adolpjie  Rolland,  ' of   St'f   Jer-Qrne^   Que.',',.'a  such were, made_for the ankles ofoChi  nese   women.'' Oold   bangles' \"of \"mat-  . finish, -with three or Ave pieces of jade,  , set-iu- across thelr'to'ns, are also, very  .much,the rage a't present. ,       .   *>,    I  Jade(Abeads pre a reigning'fad*recall;  Jn'g * somewhat^ J;hee ^'barbaric ''b'cads*  which, in ancient times ,wero worn by  the women4of'Carthage.   According to  the quality of jade beads, they can.be  found either worth many dollars 'or \"a'  -very small sum.' Ind^sd, \"the, Incxpen^  slve ones have considerable effect of  beauty, especially wheu worn'over soft  white' dresses.1     1  * '  > 4,  A ;Satisfying Breakfast for   rrive  -,   z J' ,: ^i \\       * .     \ufffd\ufffdi  \"- '    \"1       Dear Living Yields to  ?amily Pills for Consti-  m  ms,  _^_ady\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIf  any    of    your  '\"i} city are loking for    a  kope  'you'll recommend  jtGuest\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdI    donjt     know  Isffebut I have a few ene-  ive  to rail.  what  Skinner is:  Kjn'i,  UMlTij  Iier t\/iJL'i'?-  ld  takf Mi  Can't wi'  f  full us'-J  id    etlll  It'  l.bll'.li. tbi  tif n.   1  1111-14\" M.lli  > ill.' I\"\ufffd\ufffd  tl .'lilt   ,  ^^-- 4 ,  Bssgjiaye been the cures work-  ^p^^oUoway^s Corn Cure.   It has  [al.'bowejv'fof^its^own  not   \"found    in  otsipreparations.  g....\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdx ^SosJa'ck.\" kissed   you    twice  aStfnight^Dicl^you protest?  ffi^el^Iiideea? I  did,    at first.    I  ^ae-S^S?\ufffd\ufffd*nii:and said, 'Jack; how  ^a^^ffi&ihen?       '  $f?is8^1i$then lie    showed ' me  ^gra^-Boston Transcript.  liniment,    Lumberman's  ifl  fane  Met  N  'fl  ISweet Scents. <-  'YV*?^r \" scctlt t0 p,aco amon\ufffd\ufffd  pjjl|p^,is usually  liked by  the  '3|Bni? nnd' here Is a most ex-  M)ne  ounce  ot  powdered  |.pue of powdered cloves  (Jpwdered cinnamon.    Add  jounces of powdered ce  Stho same of dried invert-  |Mlx,   sift and   put   into  'lay  between  sheets   and  |[!for the slips, or If pads  It toe bhelves It will an-  fir tree balsa in. gives  ffresh fragrance from pads  |flIhJd with It, nnd these,  id|jfnsliloned lavender, can  Siproved  upon   for perfum-  ^The\" next'\"morning \"the~klng led hla  army'* out \"and', by sunset he had lost  ,'caunon.' baggage and ,four-fifths of- his  troops and,, as' events \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdproved,i;tbe war  as well.     ,  Strafford's ghost rwas rlgbt. \" Had'  Charles not,met Cromweirttf Naseby  It Is quite likely'he ^ would jiot, have  me*- hra.'rlA.tft. .a1^ttll,llA|,n]|  ^..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\" .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ~..^.. ....... \ufffd\ufffd,r-*r  u.tvllUlli  'He   Made iHimselt    Unpopular.  \"My   dear   hoy,   I'll   have to  cancel'  lhat  dinner  invltatlou \"for  uext  Sunday.\"    ,      v        . , .    . s  \"Called away?\"  \"No. The fact is our cook didn't liko  the way you ulluded to her salad, the  last time you dined with us,\"*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCleveland Plain Dealer. . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'  ,  '     .     Always Getting Stuck.  Slubb \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd What Is Coggwood doing  since he bought his new automobile?  Penn\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdKollowlug the horses.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   Stnhb\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAh, plajing the races, eh?   '  Penn\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNo; following the farm horses  thnt low his 'machine to town every  time It breaks down.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdChicago News.  Groundless   Fear.        .  \"1 did think,\" said Cbolly Suobberly,  \"of going <In for politics.\" hut I *was  nfwald 1 wouldu't know just bow to  tweat my Inferiors, don't y' kaow.\"  \"Your1' inferlor-s?\" remarked Sbarpe.  \"Oh. you wouldn't be likely to meet  utiy of them.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPittsburg^ Post  OVEREATING.  J it ion f fogBjww  Food i* Ifi  r'M  |.|\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd0<1  ill? .. ^  o,fe*v\"  pre is  f Hair?  M\ufffd\ufffdc()nib?   Why so?  ^twune^hca'd'arnuch better pi  \ufffd\ufffdn,,^T  Is  ace  Sfe'l\/^Better keep what is left  ihfrglbelones! Ayer'sHair  l^olr^Jie^improved formula,  UiciflV^stops   falling hair  ,is|not a particle of doubt  ^^\ufffd\ufffd]We speat very-posi-  ul this, for we know.  ! change the color of the hair.  Dr. Wiley Says It Causes Less Trouble  Than   Undereating. '  Hlessed Is ihe man who does uoi  Irriow how he eats, says n doctor. A  mouthful of food should pass ou Its  wnj automatically and without tha  know\/edge of the man who cllews It  He who mixes mathematics with his  food by counting twenty-eight times  on each bite is on the road lo emaciated, sad raced dyspepsia. Life has  nothing tliar Is worth while for hirn.  I fall to see the use of wasting too  much time ou one bite while there Is  another just behind it inviting attention  Some one quoted me as advising  meat eaters to bolt and not chew their  meat. I did not give such advice, hut  I pointed out two undcnlnble faetsP-  the herb eating nnlmals devote much  lime to chewing,   while  the flesh  eat- I said.  $W   '' Tornus* with isoh bottu  J#?'_ _\ufffd\ufffd.     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  tyers  Show it ta yorur  dootor  JUk him about it,  than do an ha isys  ; feature of  be said to  t'^?\/,n|aS4greW0P\ufffd\ufffd railing nair.   Then it  |KOO|*fltfdjep further\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdit aids nature in  '^WStoriflMtBe-'bair and scalp to a healthy  '\"M^Ask'for \"the new kind.\"  rtha J. 0. Aj\ufffd\ufffdt Co., LowtU.XMUv\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  ers do very little of It     A conclusion  may be drawn from these facts.  Overeating   causes   les\"   trouble   to  ; the system than does undereating, arid  were the score even between the two  It would  be. the, part of .philosophy to  lean   to   the  side   of  the   partaker  of  miich food, for a goodly part of life's  hfinpiness  Is found nt  the, table   with  n\/'ucirinnl appetite.    I 'atin against the  capsule   men,'    The   time   will   nevei  corne when tbey  will  haven  place In  the world as \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdcaterers to palnto  under  ordinary conditions.    It Is entirely' pos.  Bible to condense  the nourishment ol  a   whole meal into a few [relicts, and  these have their place\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdas, for Iiistancft.  when   It   becomes  necessary   to   nulKe  enforced   marches   with    the   lightest  possible burden.   l?ut thc system would  not thrive for long on such a diet, foi  there must bf>  the  necessary  bulk  to  on* the- water.-* the scud \\of^ a cloud  b'reaking'freejn n welcome shift' WeU  we \"knew the'curve of-u stantfing sail  and the relation it hore to the sense of-  movern'ent ' v   \" -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd , -' ! v      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ''  t  For a cclty of the sea.'Liverpool has  no''great' representationZot, her:fore-'  mos't \"industry * on  her 4'charnbeV \/walls'  Sea', pictures''have ,apparently ,no' .at-,  traction for her chlefest\/citizens.' There,'  was\"'little  call   for, sea  critics dow\/t^  uStalrs. so we went to art exhibition' of  modern \"art   In   the \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd> upper   galleries.  Uereiwe found ourselves properly eon-  :frouted.  \"Setting Sail After a Blow,\" it\"  was, a\" large canvas, a  ship pitching  heavily in  the swell of a recent gale  and  the crew putting the  canvas  on  her> It held a great message for my  mate (black smoke and an ever throbbing screw b'ad.not yet dulled his sea  fancy).  lie was highly pleased. \"Them  seas  wot ye  gets.off th'   Plate!\"    He  wanted to' show some word of cheer, to  swing his right hand to the left shoulder In sen man like admiration, but the  cold gray eye of a tall hatted official  was    upon    us\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"nub,    sailors!\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdand  there   was   a\/ group   of   young  ladies  near by worshiping at the shrine of a  corporation  purchase, so he contented  'himself    by    nudging   me    furiously.  \"That's wot I calls a picture,\" he said.  A sunset over, water claimed our attention.     A   blood\" red   sky   with   nd  clouds, only a slight density near the  horizon.     1   said   It  was   remarkable,  perhaps   unreal.    ' \"That's .where   ye  ain't in it, mister!    Look a', here!    if  ye wos t' take all th' colors in th' locker- so's ye 'ad lots o' red an' yeller in,'  je'd had a1 sky t' match it    Ain't--ye  never 'enrd o' what them dagos calls  blood o\" Chris'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthem dagos wot loads  ye  hallest  In  th*   Plate?\"    I  had  not  heard.   \"Well, It's ji sky like that, an'  it comes afore one of them 'pamperos.'  \"Mill'   1   wos  lyin'   In   Monte   Video  oucet, an' we 'nd a sky all blood red  \"au' uever a cloud, an' tb' fishln' 'boats,  wos all com In' In; not rowln' shipshape,  same   's   me   an'   you   'ud   do;   them  shovlu' th' oars 's if they wos pushin'  a barrer.\"    Tie spat Into a dark corner  nnd said something more about dagos,  tlieu  continued:  \"Nex\"  day   we 'nd   a  gale.    'OwIIn',  it was, au' her drlviti'  Into It same 's  we wos off th' Horn,  an' a big Gorman bark drlv' down ou  us an' took th' fore to'gal'u'mast out o'  'er  an'   th'   boom   au'   started   all   th'  'endgear.   Two ships wos drlv' ashore,  an' that's wot comes out o' them skies  wot they calls th' blood o' Chris'.\"  It was an Impressionist picture that  annoyed my mate\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdan Impression of n  scene In dock, with musts and funnels  nnd hulls all mixed up. The coloring  was good, but the ships might have  been ninepins or egg boxes or anything.    At first he was perplexed, then  amused, then indignant.  \"Oh.  !\" he  What's   thlsV    Ships   b'gad,   or  young man 19.years of age, who says:  \"lor,'more, than a'year \"I    suffered  from  general -weakness,  and '1  gradually 'grew., so ,weak.,that .T^wab forced  to abandon my v>ork>as a clerk. 'My  appetite failed me,   1.had^occasional  violent heada'ches and I began 10 suffer  from .indigestion-.    I   was Jailing  so'rapidly that I began-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd to,-fear that  consumption was fastening itself'upon me.   Our,lfamily,doctor .treated ine  but I did,not gain umler, hiscare.' A  wasTiiV a'very discouraged.state_when  'a frierid ..from ^Montreal,'came , to see  m'e.'s sHe'fStrongly'-'a'dvised'.nie'to  try  Dr., Williams' .Pink-PillsT*  I 'did  so  and>.inside.of \"tlir.ee,^eeks.J-' began lo  fee.l better,,,my appetite \"began, to,improve and-I seemed tofhave-a feeling  of'new courage. h> I continued the pills  till'1 (had taken ten,..hoses- and I 'am  now enjoying the,, best heoltli I  ever  hadj   My cuie \"surprised'many of''my  friends-who  began  to\" regaid me as  incuiable, and I-strongly advise other  young men  who  are* weak  to follow  my, example and give Dr.  Williams'  Pink  Pills  a  fair trial.\"    Bad  blood  is  the cause of all  common diseases  like   anaemia,   headaches,,   neuralgia,  rheumatism,  sciatica,  indigestion,  all  nervous   troubles,  general    weakness,  and the special ailinents'that only women folk know.    Dr. Williams' Pmk  Pills are tlie' one cure, because they  go right to the loot of the trouble in  The  blood.    They    change .. the.   bad  blood into good blood, ancl thus bting  health,   sti'ength   nnd    energy. ' You  can get these pills from any medicinG  dealer,  or   by  mail  at, 50c  a  box,  or  six   boxes   for   $2.50     from   the   Dr.  Williams'  Medicine   Co.,    Brockviile,  Ont. -    '  Shredded- Wheat,  with  a pint.'.of\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  ill;, supply \"-'all'  ergy^needed 'r,for<  day's work\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdand  ' is , about   five  Russian J Apples.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdrare and core the  apples, 'fill with'mince meat, put in'a'  -pan with, enough water to keep from'  ,, burning, a',l\"ittle butter, \"and'\"sugar and  bake. ,, '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd < ,,v \" , * '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd - y w  ,, Fried Apples.^-Wipe , and core' tart  apples and cut into slices\" about one-  fourth1, of an inch thick. .'Put into a  frying pair with'enough water to keep  from burning. When partly cooked,  add rutablespoonful of .butter and sug-'  ,ar to taste. Apples may also be fried  with onions, taking one\" medium sized  onion to two apples.\",'  , T    '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd J\"   \\  , . Apple. Salad*.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPare, quarter and core  ^six 'tart 'apples.. Cut the quarters,'in,  halves    lengthwise \"and    then'   slice.'*  'Wash andT-crisp tlie lettuce,and arrange it in'a salad bowJ.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \"Add the'ap-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdple and sprinkle, over It a finely chop:  -ped'Spanish  pepper and  a  cupful of  chopped  walnuts aud almonds.  ' Pour  a French dresslng.over all and serve.  Apple' Fritters.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOne cupful'of flour,  t vatu   mmm     Em   MBa  mama  -I J 1    trli ..'      \"..,,,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ->  'Combines;Health' with\" Economy.  'J  'o'i-M   r-.    <k\"V>      Vi   .        ^r;^'\ufffd\ufffdr-r>\ufffd\ufffd  1  SOLD  ' HIS'MESSAGE.c  one and one-half level teaspoonfuls of  baking\" powder,\" two\" leveir ta hiespoon-.  fuls   of   sugar,   two-thirds   cupful   of I  milk,  one  egg  well   beaten   and \"two i here?'  It Wat  Rather, Important, but He Wat  <i 'In No Hurry.     , \"   '   '\ufffd\ufffd '  \"Hello!\"    \" ,      - \" i  - \"Hello!\"       \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\" \" ..-'  -  \"Hello, confound you! -.What do you  want?\"    \"-',' -    \"l,~'  \\    \". ,   . - ,,,  ?'ls this7(5445?':   ,y   '     \\.T;- A-   A .'.  ','Of course!  Why'don't you go ahead  and talk?\",-  \",    \/,,  r    '      *'  \"Ofcu-you needn't'get mad about, noth-  'Ing.'\"i'-'--'.       .-,.<-.''   \"4*.    :\"  \"Well,-my time's   worth  money!    I  can't' stand\", here .all   day   jabbering,  'Hello!' to somebody I\",        \ufffd\ufffd   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    >   ,   ,A  '   \"This is about the first'time I ever,  used a telephone,-and\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, -'  ',   '      '   \"  '\" ,\"Did you call, me up just for prac-,,  ;tlce?:,\\B \"   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    ,  >,        \ufffd\ufffd-,,,,,,.  '-\"No, of \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdurse not.\"     5\" ' .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'-   ^    '\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \"Did you call me up\"to'tell a funny,\"  story?\"      ,,   '  .  \"No;'I\"-i-       . > , ' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' v-  ,  \"Well, why don't you'go ahead then  with your business?\"  \"You don't give me a chance.    A3 I  was saying\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \"There you go again.' ..Say, how,Jong  are  you   going to ^keep   me. standing  An American actor 'was once seeing London from the top of a 'bus  As they swung down the Strand he  asked' the dtiver to ( point out the  places of inteiest.  \"Kight you are, sir!\" agreed the  driver, touching his hat. \"There's  Luggit   Tl~ where.^they   ,'aiig ''cm.\"  Auittle later:, \"There's Parliament  'ouses, whci,e they make tlve laws v,ot  does ii, across tiie way. ^  \"An' there's' Wes-tminster Jiabbey,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\\\\here tliey buried the good tins wot  didn't get 'anged :\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTh'e Argonaut.  I 'cured a horse of the Miinge with  atlNARD'S LIXLAfKNT,  CHRISTOPHER   SATIXD15US  Dnlhousie.  I   cured   a  hor\ufffd\ufffde  hndlv   torn   hv   a  pitch'   foik,   with   MINARD'S   LfM-  M F.iNT.  St   Peter's, C li.        KDW. LINLIKF.  I   cured  a  horse of.  a hnd  swelling  with MINARD'S I.INLMKNT.   '  TIIOS.  W.   PAYNlv  Dnthurst, X. It.  medium sized apples cut Into small  thin slices. Sift together the Ofiour,  baking powder and sugar, add gradually the 'milk, then the egg. Beat  well and stir Iu the apple. Drop by  spoonfuls, into deep, hot fat. .Drain  on brown paper and serve .with maple  sirup or a sweet sauce.  Apple Souffle.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFive good sized tart  apples, two tablespoonfuls of melted  butter, one-half cupful of sugar, juice  and grated rind of one lemon, three  eggs and nutmeg. Tare and grate the  apples, add the butter, sugar, lemon  juice and rind, then the yolks of the  eggs beaten stiff.'    Pour into' buttered  baking dish, grate a little nutmeg over ( \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ' -  the top aud bake for thirty minutes in I Keep Minard's Liniment in the house  a  moderate oven.    Serve immediately  \"You can sit down If.you want to!\"  \"I'll sit down on you 'If ,this Is supposed to be a joke!   Who are you, sir?\"  \"My   name  Is   Brown.    I   moved it.  directly   opposite   you   a   few   week*  ngo.\"    * .      -  , \"Well,   Bro-n-n,   I'm   sorry ,1   have  spoken so harshly to you, but I'm not  feeling  just  up   to   the  mark today.  Hope you will pardon me.\"  \"Oh, certainly.\"  '\"What was it you wished to say to  me?\"      \" \\    '  [I'liiim ii'iii wiw \".nm  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIT PAYS TO BUY  KING:0F-  > QVER-4LLS  anfeHIRTS  BECAUSE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  -. . 4 ir*  They   wear   longer,' fits=ca3.erT?j  r--^j      '    '\"..   '--?r,     .,.\ufffd\ufffd.  ^.and ,cost. no   more   (often*-'less).  u than the'inferior kinds.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdl ,. 77 *      ' .* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Ask your'dealer\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdunless,he is  \"   \" . >\"  '      ,     \"v '   r i  prejudiced he will tell you they  are the  best  R.J.WHITLA&CO,  Limited.  WINNIPEG.-  .Eminent Statesman\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWhat are the  infernal newspapers saying about mo  now,  Chicksey?       ' '; .  Private   Secretary\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  auey    haven't  mentioned your.name for    a month,  Senator.,  Eminent Statesman\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDasly the newspapers !\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdChicago   Tribune.  ENGLISH  SPAVIN  LINIMENT re^  \"Why, I wanted to tell you that your I moves   all   hard,   soft    or    calloused  house is on fire.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA_ B. Lewis in Success Uairarjna.  with hard sauce.'  I'm a Dutchman!\" He burst iuto a fit  of rude laughter. \"Ships It Is. mister,  an' look at them tawps'l yards! Ships  wl' tawps'l yards below the main, an'  n hangman's gibber ter th\" miz'\/.en gaff.  Them fellers 's got' some cheek, mate.  That's wot 1 calls It\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdcheek\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdt' be  palntin' things like that *01y sailor.  Look at them-\"  1   Queer Milk. '' ''','\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd',;..  ' Many specimens of unconscious humor are received by the editors of that  mouumental work, the \"Imperial Gazetteer of India.\" A district was snid to  (re \"nn extensive rolling plain, consisting of alternate ridges of bare stony  hills and narrow fertile valleys.\" An  Interesting Item of natural history was\"1  afforded by the remark, \"The buffalo  differs  from   the cow  In giving milk  .,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,*, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* <\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.,,\ufffd\ufffd, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. iZTif^&'T^VA'lJTt*  Glojfcj..  Tn an rmiateui play a fugitive from  justice was supjiosed to have escaped  fiom his purMicia by concealing himself under the table. The table was  small \"and the terrified fugitive somewhat, lengthy. i  The commander of the piusnim:  party lushed on the stage niul fell  over the legs of the man he was  searching  for.  Picking himself up nnd ludicrously  rubbing his shins, he convulsed Lis  audience by exclaiming m true dramatic ..style:  \"Ha' ha' The dastardly villain has  eluded us  again.\"  -   *  Bedroom  Don'ts.  Don't cover, your head with bedclothes. Covers should be light, but  .warm.  Don't sleep tn too cold a room. From  55 to GO degrees F. Is about the right  temperature.  Don't fill your bedroom with knick-  knacks and draperies. Have it as  plain, clean and dust free as possible.  Don't expose the pillows to the sun,  as it draws'the oil out of the feathers.  Tbo bed nnd bedding should be given  a dally sun bath, but the pillows  should be placed out of the suulighf,  but in a direct current of air.  Don't lie in the same position all  night 'Turn from one side to the  other.  Don't doze all evening, but If ton are  tired give in to it and go to bed  Eveiy man who has decision of  chataelei will have enemies; and the  lnan who' has no doc-ision aud no  character caii have no friends.  The, poison who has once^ exper-  ienped'vilie pleasure of a cup, \"of delicious \"Salnda\" Tea\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthat feeling of  satisfaction that its purity n'nd flavor  gum antee,\" i.s not easily persuaded to  accept  a substitute. 28  1    The' be-i way \"to get money,'as well  j.as the stue.-t, th to woik for it.  |        WHAT CAUSES  HEADACHE  From October to May, Colds are th;  I most frequent causes of Headacht  LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE ra  moves cause.   E. W. Grove ou box 25*.  lumps and blemishfes from horses,  blood spavin, curbs, splints, ringbone,  sweeney, stifles, , sprains, < sore arid  swollen thio.it, coughs, etc. Save ?50  by use of one bottle. AVarranted the  most wonderful Blemrsh Cure evor~  known.  \"Do you believe in ghosts.5\" asked  the man who lesents all supeistition'.  \"Xo, suh.\" answeied lMr. Erastus  Pinklcy. \/'An' all.l's hopin* is dat  dem glioses'will leinme stay dat way  *sti<I o' coiiirn' iou.ii' tryiri' to con  viuce me.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWashington Star.  l^'  U  p  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdsJLe i  J* \ufffd\ufffd  4PS!  Some Things to  Remember.  Tho fact that a parrot Is green is no  Don't go to bed with a scnsitlon of j 6ute sign that he Is not a bird of rlpo  hunger. Take any light, simple food  you wish nnd that agrees with you. j  Don't go to bed with cold foet. See i  to it thnt your feet are warwr beforo !  you get iuto bed. t  tern.  How Parker Showed Off.  Parker was learning the alphabet.  One day at luncheon his relatives Impressed It on his mind that P stnuds  for plates and for prunes nnd for peeper and for Parker. He was letter perfect, and the next day at luncheoi  was called on to show off. \"What does  P stand for?\" asked his brother. \"It  stands for,\" looking carefully ovei the  table\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"it stands1 f-ir, dishes and for  sauce and for salt ^rd for me.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPro  cressive Age;   ''\"'. \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\"'.:  He Ought to  Know.  Mrs. Hens-4'Jest.look here, John! I've  found a ten cent piece lu this chicken's  ,'crawi 7.   .\/\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd..; ],_    \".,, ;;'.V'    '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Mr. Hens\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWa-al,' tbet makes ..one  authentic case, an' the fust 'l. ever  knowed, v.*h'ar there wuz money in  chickens.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJudge.  Uncle Allen.  \"Some, men,\"   muttered, Uncle Allen  Sparks after the tiresome speaker had  ! sat down, \"remind me of an old water  \\ mill   that's   running   w'ith empty   hoppers.    Their wheels keep on going, out  they don't turn out auy grist.\"    i  experience.  The great drawback about yellow  journalism Is not that it is yellow, but  that it is r\ufffd\ufffdad.  There is nothing so wonderful but  that it might be more so. Niagara, for  instance, would be far mon.\/ marvelous  If tho water flowed the other way.  Many a uiau is modesty Itself until  his children are born. It is then that  he begins to put ou heirs.  It may be true that money talks, bui  It Is so frequently tight that its conversation Is hardly worth repeating.  There Is nothing that so destroys  one's pride of ownership as the early  morning'call from the tax collector.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Success Magazine.  They Soothe'Excited Nerves.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNervous affect ions \"are usually attributable to defective dieestion, as the stomach doinin.'ites all the nerve ccn-  ties.. A eouit,e of PnirneWs Vegetable Pill-, will still nil disturbance's  ot tln^- character, and by restoring the  Mtonuieh tu normal notion ielie-w; the  tier vet. fi<>m nutation Theie i^. no  -edatrvo like thern and in the collection of iiH'gul.iutii'^ of the digestive pi-oces-.es, mi preparation has  done j\ufffd\ufffdo effective woik, aa c.in bo testified to by thousand.-,  She\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe idea of 'mi a-telliii' unv  \"4iw- ehildien ought to be fed' Why.  I've buried ten o' mv own.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe  Tatler.  \"Why do you wish to be a street  car conductor when you grow up, my  boy '  a-ked  the minister. ^  \"llecnttse   thev   always   huve     Mtch-  nice. drrty hands,\" said the small  hoy  v ho  obieived   thing.-'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Detroit   Fiee  P10-.S.  \"Can you be ti listed with a fteciet- '  he asked  The woman drew herself up pioud-  ly-  \"You have known me for  ten yeais  haven't  \\ous\" she replied.  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"i|ies.\"  \"Do  you  know  how  ohl   I'arnr\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd','  Philadelphia Ledger.  There Is OnSy One ''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  z: a ^Bjr&fffs^ Qi&Snm&** \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd}  That is    .  LbmMswb Bromo Quinine  USED   THE WORLD  OVER TO CURE A COLO IN ONE DAY.  zZiAi  <^ZM  Always   remember ' the   full   name,  for   this   signatiire   on.;. everj'   box.  4hr&0L* ^: -  \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  >w.  '> 1 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  ,  717  J\ufffd\ufffd*  ,\ufffd\ufffd  '        * *'\"  A fc-r '  .<.'    4  '\ufffd\ufffd\", I  ,A \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd%V-lA \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*  rV- E ^  >\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd!   ^.   \"  .. f'W. ,',?,v <-  r I*;-; ','v-i!'o ;  * ' '';\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' \ufffd\ufffdj^7- '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  -f ,' r -i   ' -f iK' '  \\A-y7Vi' '  iiM-'^-li ft,    '\"  : iilT\ufffd\ufffd.f a.'*   ,,-  ' ,fj,   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'  ^..toy- ,'   '  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdT\" >.rv.*-'<4r *   ..  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd?. ->i* Ar.  r ,  V\ufffd\ufffd  P*y .tn, , si ;-*  iff'S w-^'i?\"?     J  *! i<\ufffd\ufffd (.-''< .'l*b.      '    \"  'i-vw-afc '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  '' \\   ,\"*~  , '^-Ml-  \"'  -,i.>v\ufffd\ufffdj4\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>j - 'ir ,f 4,  '4^VC  ?$  '  i  |TVt-r'  II ,t  rJti'VA C; IN,  ^\"''..Vi.'-.  .VH^vV*1'1'''  :\ufffd\ufffd*-&< 'k,\"*\ufffd\ufffd  g|t'M.Wiii.-:i  > I.   -,'1.4.SV.r.'A T 4  .4.f.i-3fe>^>!.' '  -  ittVi;IIU *\",-?>>\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'-     <  A'f Ji^Siv>', '  f#|^^';  fc II J.1\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd!'Mr^T^*', i1   *\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     i'*'     r  * rrC'^*+L''V\/ i- ^d    i1-  'fTO,tfi?  i]*'i>t.^fv.: rS-4.- '  'Xs. <\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd <y<Ki  1 r\/ 'j.  iSA\"',i  4rA^Z '  W>-A'\\!  n*  '(\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:  THE LEADER, MOYIE, BRITISH COLUMBIA:  TBE. M0I1B LEADER.  Piblifhed in the interest of the people  of Moyie and East Kootenay.  F. J. SltYTlI,1 Pdju.iShek.  LIQUOR LI ENSIS  ACT.  BATXB OF SUBSCRIPTION.  Oae Year..  ,.\ufffd\ufffd2.00  Notice is hereby siv^n th^t one  month after date ljntend to np-  ply to the Superintendent of Pro  vinuial Police for'a reiieVval of iny  Hotel Licence ,to sell intoxicating  liquors, under the .provisions of  die Statutes, in that behalf, in  the premises kuown and described  ns the Manhattan Hotel, situated  at ACoyie B. C, to commence on  the 1st da> of July, lt>0S.'  Philip F. Johnston.  Moyie, J   .',       '   May 1st. 1908  SATURDAY, MAY 23,190S.  TALK OF   DISSOLUTION.  Vancouver Province:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDissolu-  ti'jri of Parliament at the end of  the present; session andr' the' general elections in October!\" That  is the latest news from Ottawa.^  The intelligence .which is r.a on-  ably auLuoutic will not occasion  f surprise, nor will it be unwel-  <coaie. Sir Wilfred, Laurier ap-  pears unable to ,humble himself  sufficiently'' to , so modify . the  Elections Bill that it, will, be acceptable to ,tbe Opposition, aud^  unless he does so there  seems  to'  47 .  bono alternative but, an appeal  to' the country. Nor will it^strike  the. average .observer \\ that the  , A Most Valuable Agent.  The glycerine omployed In Dr. Pierce's  medicines greatly enhances the medicinal  properties which it extracts from native  medicinal   roots'and   holds   In  solution  much better than alcohol would.   Jt also  possesses medicinal properties of its own,  being a  valuable demulcent, nutritive,  antiseptic   and    antlforment.     It   odds  tfTO&Uy to tho efficacy of tho Black Cherry-  bark, Bloodroot, Golden Seal root. Stone.  root   and   Queen's   root, contained   In\"  \"Golden Medical Discovery \"In subduing  chronic, or lingering coughs, bronchial,  throat and lung affections, for all ot which  these agents aro recommended by staxidr  anl medical authorities.  In all cases where thoro Is a wasting  away of flesh, loss of appetite, with weak  stomaCh, as .In the early stages of con-  sumiftlpn, there can bo no doubt that ily-  cerino\/acU as a valuable nutritivo and  aids Mio Opiden Seal root; Stone root,  QueefV*. ro6t and Black Cherrybark In'  promoting digestion and building up tho  flesh arnmircngivh, controlling the cougb  and bringing about a healthy condition  of tho while system. _ Of course, itimust  not be ermccted to-v\/ork miracles. It will  not euro resumption except In its earlier  Stages. ' Tt will r-nrn very \ufffd\ufffdj-vf>rp. nhstl-  Bate-hanpoii. chronic coughs, hronchi.tr-  andTirrT'.ireaI trouhlps. anachronic soro  tTwnri, wii,h hoarseness. In acute coughg  It Is-nbt so eitective. TTIs In thc lingering  hang-on coughs, or those of longstanding,\"  Government's , chances 'of succe s * even when accompanied byblceding from  j lungs, that  it  has  performed   Its most  marvelous cures. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Prof. Flnley Ellini  Hand Painted  i  \"We have just received a  .   shipment   of   beautiful  hand   painted   Austrian  \"  china  which   we\"   must  1     sell at once and at    a  great reduction.  - Don't miss  this  opportunity.    -   Come * early  '     and get a>small   tea set,  chocolate    set,    or pre-  - serve   set    Sugars' and  creams,'  Butter*', dishes',  celeiy1    trays,     qracker  - jar? and salads, etc.  ' Tii is' large  and  beatihil  assortment will    be- on  sale  for  the  next. two  1     weeks so call and see   us  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd early.       t -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd''\";'  KOYIE vDRUG \" .AND  STATIONERY   STORE;  I  0. O. F.  U'ildey Lode* ^\ufffd\ufffd- , 44\"  Meets TuMda% evenings in  McGregor  hall, on   Victoria  street.    Rojournmn  Odd Fellows cordially invited.  H. J. Lowes ^S   '  F. J. S*yth,\ufffd\ufffd  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Noble Grnnd. becr y-  St. Eusr*na XodBO No. 37.  k. of p.  3Ieets evi-ry Thursday  evening in 'MtGretor  hall fit 8, o'clock. Veiling brothers invited.  W. J\". Feltham, p, A. Iliix  Chancellor Com. K.\" It. and S,  ' will be any the less by a  dissolu-\"  tion this year, and under the   circumstances   existing,' than, they^  will be a year, hence.   It is true  that bjr  going to   the    country  > now, and aa a result of  the deadlock over the the Aylesworth Bill,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd the ministry will bear all the opprobrium' of    having  sought   to  engineer such .a  dishonest   measure through parliament and will  do bo without securing any of the  bebeflt  which' the  ace   was   de-'  eigned   to bring' them.   -But   on  the other ,hand   the \"keen sympathy which1 would   unquestionably have been aroused in .the  E-.st with two disfranchised provinces in the West, will be ! absent,  and in addition  the  fear  of further disclosures of  a scanJalous  1 nature in tne administration will  be *et at,rest.  a;tt' Med. College,  icerlne:  , M. D., of Ben-  icago, says of gly-  \"In dysDepsIa ltservesan excellentpnrpoeo.  Holding--a fixed quantity of tbe peroride of '  bydroffien in solution, It is ono of tho best  m&nuf sctuTod products of tho present time li>  Its action upon enfeebled, disordered stota-  achs, esixjctally if there Is ulceration or c*\ufffd\ufffd  Uirrbal eastrltls (cratarrbal Inflammation of  stomach), it is a most'efficient preparation.  Glycerlno will relieve many cases ot pyrosis  (heirtbunO and cscesslvo eastricrf(stomach)  acidity.\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   v       ,  \"Golden Medical Discovery\" enrtcbes and  purlfles the blood curlnsr blotches, pimtjlcs.  eruptions, scrof nloas sveUlngs aod old sores.  or ulcers.  Bend to Dr. E. V. Pierce, of Buffalo. N. T-. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  for free booklet telling all about tbe native  cedldnal roots composing this wonderful  medicine.   Chore is no alcohol la tt.   ,  Zt.   Joseph's' Convent.  NELSON, B. C.H ,' . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd ' -  ' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdT-^.  hoarding and Day School ^conducted hy the\/Sisters of St:'Jo\"seph, kelson,  B. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd C* ! Co'mmercitil ' and businefin  courses a specialty. Excellence and  J swift .progress cliiiracteaize each'department. Parents should ^write for  particulars. One month' agsures^the  public of the thorou'ghnQas tof the  Sisters' rhethoda of teaching. \"Terms  comrrii.noe January^ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd April and Sept  Pupils are adriiitted'durine term.  Moyie   Miners'   Union  \/     No:7r w, F. of M.  Meets in McGregor hall every Saturr  day eveniner.     Sojourning   members  are cordially invited to attend.  John Taylor;    * ^Thos. ~E.. Kelly,  ' ' President. '    ' ;       Secretary  ''r V        * 'i j \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  ' '*' [     BARBER.'^: \/ ,  7 First Class .Work  SDTJEL  - KOOTENAY  Shoe Repairing  Mining  Shoes  ,    Made to Order  ,r: A. SMITH  SHOEJIAKJSR,'  myte\"%     ' - \ufffd\ufffd , '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  ,      ' ?' >    STOP AT THE  COSMOPOLITAN  THE CANADIAN BA  OF COMMERCE  HEAD   OFFICE. TORONTO  fit (  ES>'\ufffd\ufffdAUHSBIB  B. E. WALKER, President ( ' - paid.Up Capital  ALEX. LAIRD, General Manager ' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd i-\ufffd\ufffd-_, * vapurfl  A. H. IRELAWD, Superintendent of  Branches. . \" \"  Rest    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Total A^s,\"-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfe  BANK  MONEY 'ORDEBt  $5 and under.  Over $5 and not exceedfng; SlO. *    q rA.  \"    $\ufffd\ufffd0        \ufffd\ufffd  . - $30,:....  ]0\ufffd\ufffdn  \"    $30        \ufffd\ufffd .\"     '      $50 ',5ccnu  Thesis Orders are payable at par at'any office in Cnn;ida of  (Yukon excepted), arid at the, principal banking: points in ji,u rj,  V    They Arc negotiable \ufffd\ufffdt $4.90 to Ihe \ufffd\ufffd pterlinjr in Great Britain _  They form, an excellent method of remitting small sums-of mont  and at small cost, and may be obtained without delay at any oi6M  nited Vj  CRANBROOK BRANCH.',1  R.T.  is  oia,|  CosiTiQpoiitan Hot  . '    \"   HARRY DIMOCK,   Fropriclor.   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd '''\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \"    '<\":,. -.-- '. \/    <\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     \"      .\"' \\, \" \/* Neares^Hbtel'to'.i'hc ,St. Eugene mine.  : \\: >\":Headquarters: for ^Miners.  ilOl ^SUmJlEp WITJI'DKBTBRANPS OF LIQU01U5AXDIJ  ' ,   Rates $1.00 ;a day and up  Where' \"there's a ^will  there's   a  feast for lawyers*  Courtesy is a key.    It will open  more doors than a crowbar,  Thinking of'Spring  Palnting% Etc? : ,  l I. ,     ,     ,  '   .      THEtf   REMEMBER'\",   Z \"\ufffd\ufffd  B. H; SHORT;,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  (      CRANBROOK,'B, .0,<.    \/'  '    Box   33. '   '  ,Will send competent  man to paint, kalso-  mine or paper your  home.  CALDER  BROS.  NOTICE.      ,  Ta&e notice that I intend to  apply to the superintendent of  Provincial Police after 30 days  from the first publication of this  notice for a renewal of the licence  to sell liquors by retail on the  premises known as the \"Interna  ttonal Hotel\" at Kingsgate, B. C.  May 14,1908. Albenfc Mutz.  NOTICE.  Take notice that I intend to apply ifter 30 day3 from the first  publication-of this notice, to the  superintendent of Provincial Police for a renewtnl of the licence to  sell liquors by retail on the premises known aa  the ''International  Hotel\" at Moyie, B. U.  May 14, 1908.       William Kydd.  .NOTICE, j  Take notice that I intend to apply after 30 days from the first  publication of this notico, to thc  superintendent of Provincial Police for a renewal of the licence  to sell liquors by retail on tho  premises known as the ''Cosmopolitan Hotel\" at Moyie, I). C,  May 14, 1908.        H. H., Dimock.  CONTRACTORS  AND  BUILDERS.  Work by the day or contract.  Estimates cheerfully given.  All work guaranteed first class.  MOYIE, B. C.  The attention of tbe  Lands unci   Works Department having been directed to the fact lhat,  town lots in a townsite named Prince Rupert,  being a subdivision oi Lot 642, jRange^S Coast,  District, jjltirnted on the rnafnlaud   .between  thc mouth of the Skeena River and>K\ufffd\ufffdien\"Is  laud,are being.offered  for sale,  it has' been  deemed neccessary to.,warn thu public that jthe  i-aiJ to^nsite is not Mtuatcd at thu terminus of  the' Grand Trunk Pacific Railway, and, is' not  the rtownw.te 'which  is owned jointly, by  the  Government of Rritlsh Columbia aud the Grand  Trunk Pacific Railway Company..)      J\",,..  4 ' j     ','       'I      *{l r*  -    t ' ' ' F.J. FULTON1  , Chief CrimmiBsIoneF of Lairds and Works,  Lauds and Works Dep-artmeiits, ,', '\" '\"  1 Victoria, B. C. May 1st, 1908.  LIQUOR LICENSE  ACT.  Notice is hereby given that one  month after date I intend' to ap-  ply to the Superintendent of  Pi ovineial Police fop a renewal of  my Hotel Licence to sell intoxicating liquors, under the provisions  of the Statutes in .that behalf, in  the premises known and described  as the Moyie Hotel, 'situated at  Moyie B. 0., to commence on - the  Lat day of July. 1908. ;     - c  ' v Philip F. Johnston.  Vr  Moyie\/B. C, May 1st. '1908.  Harvey,   ,McCaf^er '&'  a \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'-j- -. Hacdonald. * - \ufffd\ufffd^  ^Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries-, 'Etc.',  Cranbrooli, ,-; - , -p^ u.  W.F\/GTJRV\/Z     ' J  i '. \"   \" 4   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd '    ,  -    BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, KTO.  CRA.NBEOOK.  B. C  C, H. DUNBAR  , -x,  BarriBter'.'SoirdJtor; Notary Pablic.-Etc  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.-;    CranDrook,vB;6. ;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' r  .,__,,,.  DR. Tab. -miles,  'ji ,,   .   \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>-       ' '<*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      x< .    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-   ,    ,  ^\/DEBTTIST.\",;;\/   ,,  Cranbrook, rZ -, \ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd B,;,C.  ^ .j  George H. Thompson,n  . B&rLB.isTKn, Sox-rcrroR \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-  \/ * ^ tary'PuBiK3,.4o.   '      -     '  CEANBEOOK;\"'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBBlTisu'CoLUMni.A.  *H6g?TTTi.r'>  V. .   , '    WHEN IN ' ' ''    .-' ''''.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdv   '\" *\"   ' - ,{ Yif      -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \", >l   i>  \"-   '-- CRANBROOK  -, . ' ' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,'      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      >      ' -,^-s i,r0   i     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,^  K. H.IS.UAI,L, I.l\ufffd\ufffdn\ufffd\ufffdc\ufffd\ufffdr.   _    '     *   . ,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, Good rooms, good  tableB'and.'bHr  ,\"   add  first class gample roo-Ub... ;  Win'^rJewelt  -   1 . \"ol  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Express^and Gener- <  al-;r Delivery -.Bu'si- *-  , t      i' j. (      i'    -, \/' ''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd - pv \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,  - ness.i ...\"_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd I\/iv,eryi ;,and>',  -'Feed Stable. - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd '*-A , \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 1-  tt   rr_ i    (\"t  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ',    ' 4.  rS<  i;    Leave Orders^at ,'  ,ltir\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. .tl  G Wynne's Store, r v  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdZA\"7 \"--,'y k.\\\\rZ'~i  British\" .Columbia  'Moyie.- 5-- j .J. A- British^Colun  ' \\*       .4V ', \\  '   '   -' ,f      -     '\"'|JV  -4.''^- Z'VT.   777J.\\iZ'\/inA7\"'^  <\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  '*'. tv  }\\:a^- '.n  BUY YOUR     ,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPobetooo sj.  , t, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-  FROM  A B. Stewart   & Co,  T. T. SLeVitlie, C E., P. L S. H. Y. Par )r.er, C  McVITTIE & PARKER  PROYKfCIAL LAXP  SuBVEyiSG  UAILWAV   A   MINING   ENGINEERING  Estimates Furnished,  offices     ji'rZ:  Fort Steele P. O, Box 25.    ,  Cranbrook P. O. Box 11.  INTERNATIONAL  HOTEL-  ,        - ,V Y '.I'\"\/. , \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-  This hotel is now* under;   new  management, and is first class  <     - 't   >     Zi       ,    .    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  in every respect.\"      '  ; ,'  B. E.  TAYLOR, Mgr.  SEND CYOUR-WORK',TO \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTHE  '\ufffd\ufffd^KC^ENAY'^!';  ',-:;,STEAM,'\"^^  ,     LAUNDRY.      d   \\  1    '       ; ,\ufffd\ufffdKELSON      j     '\"  ,;   All Wliite Labor.  Leave work with the' local agent,  A. B. STEWART.  MOYIE  LIQUOR LICENCE ACT.  Notico is hereby given that  one month after date we intend to  apply to the Superintendent of  provincial Police f6*.' a renewal of  pur Hotel Liceqce. to sell intoxicating liquors, under the provisions of the Statutes in that be-  h*lf, in the premises known and  described as the J\ufffd\ufffdootenay Hotel,  situated at Moyie, B. C,, to commence on  the 1st day of (July,  .JQu8. '  MirTavish & Cameron,  Moyie, B.C. May 1st. 1908.  FOR SALE-rFresh milch cows,  For particulars write to  jj     MORGAN LONG,  Pincher Creek Alta.  JUST ARRIVED  A   fresh \"supply; | of  our noted  Imperator Hams  and Bacon,  Hams, $15 per 100 pounds, 16\ufffd\ufffd  cents per pound single   hams.  Bacon, $17 per 100 pounds; 18$  cents per pound single   slabs.  Try our Shamrock  Leaf Lard and Empress Creamery but  ter.  THEY  AREA SPECIALTY  P. BURNS & CQ  MOYIE, B, C.  W. R, BEATTY  Embalmer and Undertaker,  Phone 9.|, CRANBROOK  LINOLEUM  CARPETS  When furnishing your  home or holel don't forget we can furnish you  promptly and complete.  MAIL ORDERS GIVEN  PROMPT ATTENTION  Standard Furniture  Company  NELSON, -   -  AGNTS  B. C,  Mason rt Rit-ch Piano Co.  O&termoor Mattress.  Globe-Wernick Office Furniture,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*        i , aa\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdaa\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffda\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdaapa)p\ufffd\ufffda  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  i   ' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      '\" .-^THE--  DE9ACLKIEK     BBOS,    Fop*.  Lari<e sample room in connection  with house for commercial men. Bes  of accommodations. I  Headquarters  for   Commercial and Mining Men.  Ql\/EENS AVENUE, MOYIE. B. 0  GENTLEMEN\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  If you want a stylish, up  to date tailor made suit, call  and inspect our spring goods  before ordering elsewhere.  We guaratee all  Our Work.  Cleaning, repairing and  pressing done.  Prices Right.  C. A. FOOTE  i   Merchant Tailor,  MOYIE, BO  O   F. DESAULNIER  . ' DEALEK  IN  p vva  t \\  PROMPT  DELIVERY.  Queens' Ave.      MOYIE  A. L   HcKltLOP  ASSAYEK'  NELSON,  B. C  Summer    Excursion  Rates East, $60,00  From Moyie to \"Winnipeg, Du-  lutb. Fort William, St. Paul,  Sioux City,  Cuicago , ' $73.50  Sfc jljOuis  07 50  New York 108.50  Toronto ,. 01.40  Montreal   108.50  Ottawa 108.50  St. John, N. C 127.30  Halifax  '....135.50  .Sidney, C, ]3 111.00  Tickets on sale May i and IS,  June 5, Q, 19 and 20: July (J, 7, 22  and 23; August 0, 7, 21 and 22,  1908. First class, round trip,  NINETY DAY LIMIT.  |,  Routes\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTickets good via any  recognized routes in one or both  direction?, . To destinations ea9t  of Ohicago are good via the Great  Lakes. '  For further information   rates,  sleeping car reservation apply  I     C. E. McPHERSON, G. P. A.  Winnipeg, Man.  J. MOE, p.P, A.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Nelson, B.C.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd v.-i \"7i77i-',  ...    \\- ni, ^i.'-!*.,'\/!^ j. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd :l i ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* v \\b..j. ,\\-ia}-r t'  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi  t     .1 1   * ^ <\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd t'   j   a r>  up.  Ci|anbF^lCSC0Dpetali# M  \\A-i.\\7,   .*       \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'   ^LIMITED.   -     .     i  'Z    \\ v :>   -   > .-1   .-,M'. i\\ f: Z'A AAVi-.A    ,    r  j-.:: MOYIEvr#p.TE*  I   ,~ '  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      '   ;'-   ' P7F. J-OHJVjSZOJY \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   ''  This Hotel,is,'New and well Ftirnishedl  Tables are Supplied with the Sej  MarKet affords. The Bar is Filledf  k  the Best Brands of Liquors' and  \ufffd\ufffd '   HEADQUARTERS   FOR COMMERCIAL!  $ AND MINING MEK .   '    _ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  jb   fftftTjB)      '   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      _-v i   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ' \" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   ^ - ^       _ iitrTisnf  \ufffd\ufffdimii!^Wll^T\ufffd\ufffd^l\ufffd\ufffdnm^S^^BS^S^Sl sesem  Mjyie -Beer^^  As  made by the   present brewer is   ndniiW  BuhI Boor in East JCootenay. Willi llicBe=l\ufffd\ufffd  lie Purest Spring Wnter it is unexcelled lo:^  IiiBist on having Moyie Becr.  Bottled and Draft Beer.  m  0HAS. INDERWIES, Mg-\\  ?.:'<{\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  urn   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   V \ufffd\ufffd. ^ J  Property for  Tl.   J  1*.   .I  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -l  IN ALL 'PARTS OF TOWN  '. - J. SMYTH  Insurance, Real Estate, Collect^","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"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.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Moyie (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"The_Moyie_Leader_1908-05-23","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0183798","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.3000000","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-115.8333000","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Moyie, B.C. : Smythe and Musgrave","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/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\/","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"The Moyie Leader","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}