{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0184159":{"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":"1907-03-09","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\/1.0184159\/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":" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *.  '   Kyes^caref-ully^ tested.  A- proper'fit guaranteed.  ' WILSON,' Optician.   *:*' ;  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMAR 1'5 1907  ^TORIA\/i0'  -~'*7\/V?t|  Tour\" \":hl eh' - wilt,;'?ft*'  cciyc c.iret'M hut'hti'oa,  when4ei't with'xi*:-'*\" ,; '  WILlSGN; the Jeweler. \\  -\ufffd\ufffd,s|  itr*<l  VOL. 9, NO 48.  MOYIE, B. C-*    MARCH .0.. 190T.  ^KYKAH  Where There Is an  Absence of Progress,  the bacilli of decay is sure' to be  present, for without growth'.there can  - be no progress. Growth is 'progress.'\"  The store that does not .expand in  stocks and ^patronage) must be, contracting. - There can be no'\"stand  still,\" in the, wide-awake,   go-ahead  , present. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd , '  WE ARC PROGRESSING.  * >.  Our - stock  of spring\" goods -*\"ls  larger than ever.   .  R. CAMPBELL &CO  3MCOTFIES  \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSi5*    -\"iS^V^  VOTE ON  \"    NEW ACT  Left  with   will  Workers.  of  Majority   of Miners -and Mill  Men at St. Eugene Want  Sunday Work.  A vote is being taken at the St.  Eugene on the Lord's .Day Alliance  Act. This vote is taken at the request  of a committee of mine  owners   and  GENERAL NEWS NOTES.  The Provincial legislature is id session, i'r.  Ontario is over four fifties  aa  large  as England. -   1 I'  A.F. Walker lias been appointed  chief of police of Perni^,  -v. *  Four fire e*ca*p3h will be added lo  Rossland'd public school,  Victoria city is Only half-way between London and Hong Kong.  -  \"T  Henderson's new oily directory estimates Winnipeg's population * at  136,000.     .    __Sl*'  The distance from Halifax to Vancouver is greater than from London to  Halifax. -  -~  WILL MEET  NEXT WEEK  Associated Boards of  Trade,  te , difference 'is. only' n'-i  matter of titste .arid a h w  c rits- in >p\"rice.'   ISorne*  people   prefer   Mocha,  others Java.   People   .  \"'mayf say,_that t.v;  and coffee are not - -  .   i*h>i  \"-l.555.*5-*!  Vv,-*5^ *'l  . ^ *    -\ufffd\ufffd, 1  ..pi  : *-.- j  Coal Stocks  are today  the best stocks'to invest'in. '  International Coal & Coke, \"    AlbJrtaCoal & Coke, -  Nicola Coal & Coke, B. 0: Amalgamated.  Wire or Write.    -->\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   -,~   , v     .    ..    .  Beale &  CRANIIBOOK  -JCQTO B. 0.  I?-  W  Spring Cleaning  \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   . \"\/*\" \/ l .will be here soon. _  .  Bjop handles,' Brooms, Brushes,  Soap, Gold dust, Pearline,  Bon Ami, etc.,  Savannah, Ga., on Sunday.  The Yankee Girl''group in Ymir  camp has been bondedtfo A. H Stiles,*  of Seattle, for %40,060* -  \"       ri^~ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *       **    . I'r   ,-\ufffd\ufffd - '  !Dr. Oronthyatelih-3, hetd of the Independent Order of foresters, died at  inn at xjieison lor tne purpose oi  going \" 1-t- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*** -   ---\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-- j  into tbe question thoroughly... .The  blank-circulated is in the form -of,a  petition and is addiessod* to Premier  McBride. Of the men \"working'in- and  around the\"St. Eugene v mill, 54 have  yjted. against the euforcement of tbe  act and 14 for its enforcement.' The  vote among the miners ia not yet  complete, but at present jt stands with  a mojority of 10 against .the, enforcement of the act.'. A. similar rote is  being taken' at all of the' \"pjiriea and  smelteis in the'Kootenay5*,, and tti6 result of thig ,vote!will be slimmed up at  a meeting of the, managers-of the  mines, smelters and-*- sawmills \"which  will he held in Nelson on Thursday,  14th of March, 1907, for the purpose  of. taking such steps asm iy be deemed  necessary in regard to this most important matter. ,  Tbe local Board will Submit  Two    Important   Resolutions. *  healthy- drinks.   Nonsense!  thoy are abuse\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdl by . excess,  Like everything else,  We   sell   the'piirj;\"  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Vancouver city water works, belong-  ing'tb and managed by'the city, made  a profit of nearly $51,000, last year.\" , ..-.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd The Strt>thcona hotel in Nelson\" was  sold this week to R,;-W. Webb, a recent  arrival from Australia, for $40,000.  In Spikane there -are 129 persona  whose wealth' passes the $100,000?  mark. Of ' thisVnumbjr 20 are  rated as being wirttf$300,000 and up.  Owing to the high cost of living in  the Panam t canal zme, the \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd engineers  and dredgemen on thecmal' will appeal to the president for higher ,w4-zes.  Miss. Dandurand Married.  FITCH'S.  Miss Lily Dandurand was' married  in Rossland last Saturday morning, to  A. Brunelleqf Prince,'Albert^-'S'askats5  clie wan.-,\" 'Artliurt!J3ajtidurand'Tw-ant  oyer to Rossland to attend,the wedding.  Miss Dandurand lived in JMoyie for  some tin*.e with her paropts, and- was  well and favorably\" knowa here. *ljr.  Brunelle and his bride passed through  Moyie Monday enroute to their home  at Prince Albert. - < ->5-' ,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>5^<^:>*^^>'  ,&^8mWS2ki  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *  .   -\"'\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   MOVIE-Sx LEADING   HOTEL:        ' $  Hotel Kootemw  |  The begt of aeco^modations \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  fpr % toyeiing PuWie.  Largo and Commodious Sample Booms.        '  Milliard Booms.  -        -      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd * --  MeTAVISH * CAMERON Proprietors,  WWWW\/?:\ufffd\ufffdr?J^x-75Jr^ \/jrzjr-zos* WWWW t}St^ ^\"^-^**--5^\"5^ i-ja'  DON'T  ' Thai 20TH GENT URV BRAND Men's fine Tailored Garments-  f;he very n^akeof clothes t^at all t^e best dresse4. travellers  wear, the *clqtlii3s that are wflrri by'thousands of young men  ' jai Toronto^ ifQjjtreal, Winnipeg\" and'all the lading Cities,  , pan be obtaine4 rigl^t |iere. . Dozens of patterns to. pbpose  \" froin--grei*t a^Jp-'grosjt fit, inoderate .pruje.   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.        -\\   '  E. Ao HILL,  THE  H2  LEADING  LADIES' AUD MEN'S   FURNISHER.  ns  i; WWWW.-v* T^t* t WWW*& WWWW  Imperial Bank of Canada.  SAVINGS DEPARTMENT,  imam  *>  Depoaits of $1.00 or upwards received.   -  There is no better investment than a Savings  Bank deposit.  x -  Once opened ilk grows whether added to or .not.  Interest  allowed at current   rates  and  eom-  p-.ucded twice a year..  CRAOTROOK BRANCH.  J. F. M, P1NKHAM, Manager.  W.-Sfa isStj&_T&-3fa jSrxtr.tjrys&r 3&tj\ufffd\ufffdzjs&zis&r .\"-iijfe^ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *** *^ ro*s***i***e 4J1A  License  Commissioners.  Th\ufffd\ufffd flowing appointments, re-=  epeciing license commissioners ,for  South-E^st Kootenay,.have appeared  in the last issue of the Gazette:      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .  Granbroik Dietriot\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA- Doyle, E. A-  Hill, D. Speers. Inspector, F. R. Morris. K  Fernie District-rR. J. Cole, J. Car=-  michael, E. L Wrigglesworth, Inspect  tor, J. H. McMullin.  This Is Payday.  1  Sunday falling on the 10th of tbe  month, the men working at the St.  Eugene-will receive their cheques today. The amount paid out for wages  will be $30,000.    _  'Farrell & Smyth have many  gams in real estate. Look over  list (n ppgvfour.  Dar  their  A GREAT COUGH CURE  is how physicians describe our cough  medicine- Such praise is'yaluable, for  with a bottle of our remedy in tbe  house many calls from the doctor may  be saved.  ' THE' BEST TIME TO CURE  a cough is when it begins. A few  doses of our cough syrup then will do  the iwork thoroughly and quickly.  Belter be prepared for emergencies by  buying a bottJ5** qpw,  The Moyie Drug  aad Stationery Co.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Ediffund B. Kirby, formerly manager of the Centre' Star ami War  Eagle mines at Rossland but now a  consulting mining engineer and metallurgist, has his oiBoe at St. Louis,  Missouri. .- ',   *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  L^rge woolen mills have been established at L'thbrid^e and contract**  have been made fqcthe first supply -of  wool. The company has\"booTr3d\"-o**>-  ders for f JO.OOO worth of .blankets.  - The R'>bert Simpson Co., Ltd.^' the  big departmental itore of Toronto,1 is  following the lead of the. T. E-.tou  Company by starting up a branch  store in Winnipeg for their western  trade.  - President Roosevelt intends comiug  to South East Kootenay after the expiration of his term of office to hunt  big game in the Rockies. His private  secretary is already in correspondence'  with parties in this locality to arrange  for guides and aceommodiations.  Dr Mewburn ot Lethbridge, famous  as the most eminent surf-eon in West  em Oaoada,is seriously ill from blood  poisoning.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdT-Latebt-inforipfition-from  Lethbridge is that hU condition re-  maius much the came as it has been  for the last few days. Dr. Colvin of  St, Paul, has been sent for in case  becomes necessary to operate.   .,  it  Miners' Union Election.  The Miners' Union held their regular semi-annual election last Saturday.  In most cases there was no competition. Following is a list of the officers  elected:  Pre-ident-*Jos. McLaren,  Vioo President\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJohn Taylor,  Financial Secretary\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJas. Roborts,  Recording Secretary\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHugh Q. McDonald,  Treasurer\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdrJohn Blackburn,  Conductor\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMike Torphy,  Warden\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdsMatt Petchnick,  Finiace Committee\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHugh G. McDonald, Chas. A< McDonald, Joe Mc-*  Liren.  Trustees-xrAlex Cameron, Jas. A.  McDoi*gall, Allen Ford, John Oavaov  a\ufffd\ufffdgh,\"      '-  Is Criticaily Hi.  Mrs. PbilJP,Conr$ 1 is Jying critically  ill at her bo ine with 9 83vere attaGk  of inflammatory rheumatiem. Sever-.  al times this week her life was des-*  paired of, but she is reported to be  resting easiei today.  'Manitoba Elections,  PremierRoblin and his government  were returned to power in, tbe Mam*  tuba elections Thursday. - The Oon-r  servativeB have a good working government, holding a majority of a^Qi}1' }0  seats.       *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'  The annual meeting of the Associated Boards of Trade of Southeastern  British Columbia will be held in Green-  wood .next week, opening on Wednesday, March 13oh at 3 p. m. --  Members of the executive of the' as-  - *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-  ' '  sociation and the presidents of all local  boards.of trade are ex-oflicio member's  of (he associated board.  - Each' bewrd  affiliated is entitled to*elect two   dele-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *.--. ^    -    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*   1 --   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   ' >\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  gates.^ ,   .  _ In all probabilty .Moyie -will -send  two delegates. -Tlie delegates elected  are E O, Kamm'and A' P. Macdonald.  R. Campbell, as president of the board,  is an_ex offijio. member .The alternate-tare E. A. Hill and J. P. Farrell.  From Cranbrook R E. Beattie\" and  J. D. McBride are the delegates.  ,~ The Moyie boird will submit, two  resolutions.- - Oou .dealing ..with the  lead tariff, and another on tlie' matter  of coal and coke being shipped out of  the country when.there is suclC-great  demand for it at honie.       .    - .-,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  -LOCAL BOAItD   MEETINa..   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  The Moyie board of trade held -a  meeting ia the sample rooms of the  Central hotel aud tliere, was a good attendance. The following - coinmittens  submitted their reports: The telephone committee reported * progress.  The electric light com.nittee had can-  ' ' ... \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     aQ(^  and  wholes*onie kinds that.y'ou like.  GROCERIES n  in great variety\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdpalate pleasing and price tempV.  ing. Ask' thy purse what th&u shouldst. buy ' and.*,  it'will say our groceries.-   ' ,     \"    '\"-\"'\/,'\"  MacEachern & Macdonald  LOCAL NEWS.  met  visaed the\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtown \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd and 'had  fuuml almost ''e'veryoaff\"willin-f'  anxious to;take lights, providing the  price Wa8rat,all reasonable. The *)om-  taittee.od' the 6re hall sub to i tied a  plan for the building and an outline of  tbeir.scheme-of laising the' money.  An eff>rt will be made to pracure-, a  piece ofground from the C. P. R. upon  which to erect the building. < The  building will be a substantial and attractive structure. T<v*\ufffd\ufffd resolutions  were*passed to be submitted at the  meeting of the , Associated boards.  Another meeting of the board will be  held at the Central sample rooms next  Monday evening, March 11th.  New Spokane Road.  *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFor the \"pew service o'n-tho~raiiway  between St. Paul and Spokaue over the  Sou line, the C. P. R. and the Spokane  International there aro now beiug con  B&ructed in the Angus shops in Montreal six of the finest trains which have  ever beon turned out by tbe employees  of these works. The trains will be new  in every detail.' Every point ot construction and equipement has .been  the sulijaot oi most minute care, and  the trains will einbidy every modem  idea of the carbuilden*-' art. The trains  will all be completed before the opening of the road for passenger transportation in June. The exact mileage between tho .Twin Cities and Spokane  over the Sao-.Spoku.ne line is fourteen  hundred and seventy-live miles, the  shortest route in existence The time  card of tne new road has not yot been  definitely arranged, but it ie hinted  tbat it will clip twelve hours oil the  present time tables.  Adams Jury  Disagrees.  The jury in tlie Steve Adams murder trial at Wallace, IJah*>, could not  agree, and was therefore discharged.  Tlie jury for many hours stood at 7  for conviction and 5' for acquittal, and  lt was only upon tho last ballot that  the jurymen steod evenly divided, six  for couvicliou ond six for acquittal.  This m 'ans that the case must be tried  over again.  In Sunny California.  Tom Camoron, Go. Parker,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Monly  Howe and Tom Galon are all now at  Copperapolis, California. Thpy ar*  working in the mill at the mine of  which Gio, Clothier is suporiqtendeut  The fishing season opens March .25.  Wm. Bird was iu Cranbrook Tuesday^  W. D. Hill was up trom Cranbrook  1 1       1       ,-   * *   t  Sunday.     .   ,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,  HoUse for rent.   Apply to Farrell &  Smyth. .   ,.-'; '   '        \"''''  Everything for spring housecleaning'  at Fitch's.    ,- ; -  ' -      -i    ,       \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-.'    \/   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *   \"  Henry Sait was down- to, Cranbrook  -Thursday.-- *.,'..*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-.  For Rent-pA> very . desirable room  for rent, over   postoffice. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  '- D. J. Elmer-came up from *'Kings^  gate yesterday;  , W. H. Laird is expected home . from  the east in'a few da-, s.  E. G. Gwynne has installed & .new  cash register, in his store.    -..-.,  Real1 Wr-P5.-'Bromley's* ad. on \"tha  fourth page of this paper! \"*     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd '-    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdv~  -Arthur-Pickering has left San Francisco and is now in Vancouver.  -   Dr, King waB   up  from   Cranbrook  Sunday on professional business,  , Mr. LaBonte returned to Moyio  Sunday from tbe Coeur d'Alenes where  he has been tor ecveral months.  Mrs. Walls came over from Mis.oula,  Mont., this week to eee her sister, Mrs.  Oonmd, who is dangerously ill.  Mrs. V. J.tCampbell, who has been  visiting in Seattle for several months,  returned lo Moyie Sunday.  Rev. J. P. West man was up from  Cranbrook yesterday to attend.a meeting of the trustees of the Methodist  church.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOrder.your spring suit-from_C\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA.  Foote, ths tailor. H-j has a good line  of suitings to select from, and all the  latest styles and patterns.  The subject at the Presbyterian  service Sunday evening will be \"The  Teaching of Christ Regarding the  Sabbath,\" with sp-acial reference to  the new Lord'a Day Act.  F. B. Hawthorne, ono of the most  popular men on Ihe road, was in Moyie  this week drumming up business for  the Hudson Bay and the Kooten&y  Cigar Co.\"  METAL   MARKET;,  , ^kw Yoke\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBar 'silver, 684  cent*  Lead, $6.   - -.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\" <   -   >'\" '  \ufffd\ufffd\"'  LoNDON-^Lead, \ufffd\ufffd20\"c I   '.      ''   \"*.  At Prince Rupert.  HAVE A LOOK  little one at what's going to linppen in  1907 a', this   tailoring   establishment.  You'll see-men and youths come and  go, and all for what?  FOR MADE   TO ORDER  SUITS  and that's all. Nothing worries them  after we sund home Iheir suit tailored  hero. It's O, K. every time. O. K.  in fit, stvlo and prtro. Commence  the New' Year by buytog a suit.  Cleaning,   repairing    and  pressing done.  C. A. FOOTE  MOYIE, B. C  \"There is practically no such plica*,  as Prince Rupert,\" said Mr. * Chas; E.  Tiadull, who returned on the-'steamer  Tees from a visit tothie,, future'; Grand  Trunk terminus,\"' says the Vmcouvur  Provino-*. .\"What is to be kuown as *  Prince Rupeitis as yet only a construction camp\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdjust like what Vancouver  was 2-1 years ago.\"    ,'      '-.\"\/!   *  \"What does the site of the place look\/  like?\" Mr. Tisdall was asked.   '       ...    '  \"Just at present it is nothing but a  muskeg.\" Baid*Mr. Tisdall. Ai reported in the Provinoi) th'e , entire site. U'  covered wi(h from, six inches 'j^fS'lx!  leet'of moss and decaying vegetation!  But the slope of the ground is-such  that it can be easily drain.d, aud when  this is done it should prove very rich  land. In my opinion tho Gra'iid  Trunk officials are perfectly right iu  not allowing any one to' come there  vet, There is no need for aay one  who is not a laborer or engaged, in  clearing land. Quite a large clearing  has been made, but it is nothing but iv  construction camp so far.\"  \"At present there are about250 men  there, of which fully 2'JO are Japauese  who are employed in clearing the towu  site. The rest are w.iite men,  among them being many Vancouver  people, The buildings as yet ouly include those necessary to shelter the  men and-provide-living\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfauilitior^for-  them, A fair sized wharf has beeu  constructed, and rails bave beeu laid  running up from tbe wharf to several  large storehouses. A donkey engine  hauls cars Up from the wharf t*i these  storage sheds in which everything \" is  put to keep dry as soon as it is lauded.\"  Grand Master's Visit.  Last Tuesday evening Grand Master  Simpson of the British Columbia I. O.  O. F., paid the Moyie lodge au official  visit. With him were R. E. Bdaltie.  Chas Smith and W. T. Huynes, members of the Cranbrook lodge. Refreshments were served and several short  talks wero made. The grand master  complimented the members of Wildey  lodge very highly on their good membership, their excellent financial stand-  ins; and on tho way iu which they conducted their business.  WATCH   REPAIRING.  As C. P. R. watch Inspec--  tors we are in a position to  repair j-our watch thoroughly  so as tb make it a reliablo  time keeper. We guarantee  satisfaction.  Mr. E.  agent.  A. Hill of  Moyie is our  W. F. TATE & SON  Jowolers and  Graduate Opticians.  CRANBROOK, B. C.  O'Eoial Watch Inspector for C. P. fi  Crow's Hen Fas* DiYi\ufffd\ufffd*on,  .\",-'1|5|  y. 1 V\/k  , ;>-|(f'*;|  \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.p\\  -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd<\\  -3*  \/\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffdi ,-5>)W'\ufffd\ufffd.T  v.:'\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  .*rV  j^  THE LEADER, MOYIE, BRITISH COLUMBIA.  .'.:<**''-'  .. '.Wi-V\"*-\"  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^\"r  I-Sk  v?,V  (Oontinued From Last Week.)  in tne meantime Beverly was conducted to tho horn* of tha Countess  Rallowltz. Her meeting with the  princess was most affectionate. There  wero tears, laughter and kisses. The*  whole atmosphere of the place suggested romance to tlio eager American  girl. Downstairs were' the royal  guards. In the halls were attendants.  All about were maidservants and obsequious lackeys, crowding the home  of the kindly countess. At last, comfortable and free from the dust of  travel, the two friends sat down to a  dainty meal.  \"Oh, I am so delighted,\" murmured  Beverly for the hundredth time.  \"I'm appalled whon I think of the  dangers you Incurred ln coming to me.  No one but p very foolish American  girl could have undertaken such a trip  as this. Dear me, Beverly, I should  have died if anything dreadful had  happened to you. Why did you do lt?\"  questioned the princess. And then they  laughed joyously.  '-'And you went all the way to St  Petersburg to meet me, yon dear, dear  Yetlve!\" cried Beverly so warmly that  the attentive servant forgot his mask  of reverence.  \"Wasn't it ridiculous of me? I know  Gren would have forbidden lt If he had  been In, Edelweiss when I started.  And, more shame to me, the poor fellow ls doubtless at the conference with  Dawsbergen, utterly Ignorant of my  escapade. You should have beard the  ministry\ufffd\ufffd\ufffder\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdah\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd And the princess  paused for an English word.  \"Kick?\" Beverly supplied.  \"Yes. They objected violently. And,  do you know, I .was finally compelled  to Issue a private edict to restrain  them from sending an appeal to Grenfall away oft there on the frontier.  Whether or no, my uncle Insisted that  he should be brought' home, a three  days' journey, ln order that he might  keep me from going to St Petersburg.  Of course they could not disobey my  edict,* and. so poor Gren is none the  .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwiser, unless he has returned from the  conference. If he has, I am sure he ia  on the way to Ganlook at this very  minute.\"    \" '  \"What'a whimsical'ruler you arel\"  cried- Beverly: ''Upsetting everything  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdensible just, to rush off hundreds of  miles to meet me! And Axphain is  trying to capture you too! Goodness,  jrou must love me!\"  \"Oh, but I did have a trifling affair  of state to lay before the czar, my  dear!-, Tomorrow we shall be safe and  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdound'in.tlie castle, and It will all be  very much worth while'.' You'see.'Bev-  crly, dear,, even princesses enjoy a- diversion now, and then. One wouldn't  think anything of tbis adventure in the  United States; It is the environment  that makes It noticeable. Besides, you  traveled as a princess. How did you  like it?\"  And then the conversation related  particularly,to the advantages of royalty as viewed from one sldo and the  ' disadvantages as regarded from an-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd other. For a long time Beverly had  been wondering how she should proceed ln the effort to secure ubsolute  clemency for Baldos. As yet she had  said nothing to Yetlve of her promise  to him, made while she was a prln:  cess.        - '' - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'  . \"At any rate, I'm sure the goat hunters would not bave been so faithful  and true if they had not believed me. to  be a princess,\" 'said Beverly, paving  the way. \"You haven't a man ln your  kingdom who.could be more chival-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdrous-tban-Baldos.\"  \"lf be is that kind of a man, he  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwould treat any woman as gently.\"  \"You should have beurd him call me  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdyour highness,'-\" cried Beverly. \"He  twill loathe me if he ever learns that I  deceived him.\" -  \"Oh, I think he deceived himself,\"  spoke Yetlve easily. \"Besides, you  look as much like a princess as I.\"  \"There is something I want to speak  very seriously about to you,'Yetlve,\"  said Beverly, milking ready for the  cast. \"You see, be did not want to  enter Ganlook with me, but I Insisted.  He had been so brave and gallant, and  he was suffering'so intensely. It would  have been criminal iu nie to leave him  out there ln the wilderness, wouldn't  it?',' t.\"  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \"It would have been heartless.\"  \"So I just mude him come along.  That was right, wasn't it? That's what  you would.have done, no matter who  he was or what bis objections might  have been. Well, you see, it's this  way, Yetive: He is some sort of a fugitive\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnot a criminal, you know, but  just some one they are hunting for, I  don't know why. He wouldn't tell me.  That was perfectly right if he felt that  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdway, wasn't it?\"  \"And be had fought a lion ln your  defense,\" suppleinented'Yetive, with a  schoolgirl's ardor.  \"And I had shot him in the arm,  too;\" added Beverly. \"So of course I  Just-had to be reasonable. Iu order to  Induce him to come with me to a hospital I was obliged to guarantee perfect safetjr to hint. Hio men went  back to tbe hills, all except old Fran*  the driver. Now, the trouble is this,  Yetive: I am not the princess, and I  cannot redeem a single promise I  made to him. . He is helpless, and If  anything goes wrong with him he will  hate me .forever.\"  \"No; 1ft will hate me, for I am the  princess, and he is none the wiser.\"  \"But he will be told that his princess was Beverly Calhoun, a supposedly nice American girl. Don't you see  how awkward it will be for me? Now,  Yetive, darling, what I-wish you to do  is to write a note, order or edict or  whatever it ls to Baron Dangloss, commanding him to treat Baldos as a patient and not as a prisoner, and tbat  when he is fully recovered he is to  have the privilege of leaving Ganlook  .without reservation.\"  \"But he. max, be a desDerat\ufffd\ufffdv offend  er against tne state,. Beverly,\" plaintively protested Yetlve. \"If we only  knew -what be Is charged with!\"  \"I'm afraid it's something dreadfully  serious,\" admitted Beverly gloomily.  \"He doesn't look like the sort of man  who would engage In a petty under-;  taking. I'll tell you hlsstory, just as  he told lt to me,\" and she repeated the  meager confessions of Baldos.  \"I see no reason why we should hesitate,\" said tho princess. \"By bis own  statement he is not a desperate criminal. You did quite right In promising*  him protection, deir. ind I shall sustain you. Do you want to play the  princess to Baldos a little longer?\"  \"I should love It,\" cried Beverly, her  rfyes sparkling.  \"Then I shall write the order to Dangloss at once. Oh, dear, I have forgotten, I have no ofllclal seal here.\"  \"Couldn't you seal It with your ring?\"  suggested Beverly. \"Oh, I have it!  Bend for Baron Dangloss and have him  witness your signature. He can't get  away from that, you see, and nfter we  reach Edelweiss you can fix up a regular edict, seal and all,\" cried the resourceful American girl.  Ink and paper were sent for, and the  two conspirators lent their wisdom to  the task of preparing an order for the  salvation of Baldos, the fugitive. The  order read:  To  Baron  Jasto Dangloss,   Commanding  the Civic and Military Pollca of Qrau-  stark:  You. are hereby Informed that Baldos,  tho man who entered the city with Miss  Calhoun, is not to be regarded as a prisoner now or hereafter. He ls to bs given'  capable medical and surgical attention  until fully recovered, when he ls to be  allowed to go his way ln peoca unquestioned.  Also he is to be provided with suitable  wearing- apparel and made comfortable in  every way.  Also' the members of his party, now in  the hills (whose names are unknown to  mc), aro to be accorded every protection.  Franz, the driver, ls to have his freedom  If he desires lt.  And from this edict there is no recourse  until Its abatemont by royal decree.  YETIVE.  \"There,\" said tbe princess, affixing  her signature. \"I think that will be  lufficieut.\" Then she rang for a servant. \"Send to Baron Dangloss, and  ask'him to come here at once.\"  Fifteen minutes later the chief of  police stood In the presence of the eager  young interpreters of justice.  \"I want you to witness my signature,  Baron Dangloss,\" said the princess  after the greetings.  \"Gladly,\" said the officer.  \"Well, here is. where I signed,\" said  Yetive, handing him the. paper. \"I  don't have to write my name over  again, do I?\"-  \"Not at all,\" said the baron gallantly. And be boldly signed his name as  a witness.  \"They wouldn't do that ln the United States,\" murmured Beverly, who  knew something about red tape at  Washington.  \"It Is a 'command to you, baron,\"  said Yetlve, handing him the document  with a rare smile. He read it through  slowly. Then he bit bis lip and coughed. \"What is the matter, baron?\" asked Yetive, still smiling.  \"A transitory emotion,' your highness,  that ls aU,\" said he, but bis hand trembled as no folded the paper.  you? Goodness, hTk head almost toucl? '  ed the ground!\"  \"He was bowing to you,- Beverly.  You forgot that you are the princess to  him.\"  \"Isn't that funny? I had quite forgotten it. The poor old goose!\"  Later, when the coaches and escort  were drawn up in front of the Rallowltz palace ready for the start, the  princess called the chief postilion,  Gartz, to the step of her coach.  \"What was the meaning of the disturbance I witnessed this morning?\"  she demanded.  Gartz hung his head.    \"We thought  the man was \"crazy, your highness. \"He  had  been telling us such  monstrous  lies,\"be. mumbled.     ;;  '.. \"Are you sure they were lies?\"  \"Oh\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdqul|e sure, your highness. They  were laughable. He said, for one  thing, that it was he who drove your  highness* coach Into Ganlook last evening, when everybody knows that'I had  full charge of the couch and horses.\"  \"You are very much mistaken,  Gartz,\" she said distinctly. He blinked his eyes.  \"Your highness,\" he gasped, \"you  surely remember\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \"Enough, sir. Franz drove the princess Into Ganlook last night. He says  so himself, does he not?\"    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \"Yes, your highness,\" murmured  poor Gnrtz,  \"What more did he say to you?\"  \"He said be had come from his master, who ls in the hospital, to inquire  after your heulth and to bear his thanks  for the kindnesses you have secured  for him. He says his master Is faring  well and Is satisfied to remain where  he is. Also, be said that bis master  waa sending him back Into the mountains to assure his friends that he is  safe and to bear a certain message of  cheer to them, sent forth by the princess. It was all so'foolish and crazy,  your highness, that we could but gibe  and laugh at the poor creature.\"  \"It is you who bave been foolish, sir.  Bend the old man to me.\"  \"He has gone, your highness,**, ln  frightened tones.  \"So much the better,\" said the princess, dismissing him with a wave of  the hand. Gartz went away in a daze,  and for days he took every opportunity  to.look for other signs of mental disorder in the conduct of his mistress, at  the same time indulging in speculation  as to his own'soundness of mind.  Ganlook's population lined the ch'nt  thoroughfare, awaiting the departure  of the princess, although the hour was  early. Beverly peered forth curiously  as the coach moved off. The quaint  half oriental costumes of the townspeople, the odd little children, the  bright colors, the perfect love and reverence that shone in tbe faces of tlie  multitude Impressed ber.deeply. She  was never to forget that picturesque  morplntr  (To Be Continued.)  BILEANS SHOULD BE  ON ALL FARMSTEADS  \"HANDIEST    AND   BEST    HOUSE-  HOLD  MEDICINE.\"  Farmers and larmers' wives say that  Bileans are the handiest and most'effective family medicine ever discovered.  Xou have indigestion' bad? - Two\" bileans  taken after each meal will rid you ol  the pains like magic I Uohstipation, perhaps, is your trouDio ? Bileans cure it  without causing a single pang of griping ! Headache, biliousness, heart trouble,  piies, and all * disorders arising from  faulty liver and stomach action, art  cured quickly  and surely  by  Bileans.  Mrs. V. Lavonture, of Beaumont, Alberta, says: \"jror over ten years 1 was  ailing\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdcould not sleep, had pains after  iood, constipation, headache, ana seemeu  without energy, a tew boxes of Bileans  gave me uacn my health.\"  ' All druggists and stores sell Bileans  at !>Jc per ooz, or from Bilean (Jn., vo-  i*t>nto, lor price..  6 box for vi.oli.  The Dad\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMy son, I want to tell  you th'ut the, secret, of my success,  as it must be of any man's, is hard  work.    I \"*\" *-  Son\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSh! Dad, I don't care to  hear other people's secrets, and I am  too much of a gentleman to take advantage of information gained thnt  way. Say no more.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCleveland Leader.     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ..'. .  WEAKENED BY LA GRIPPE.  WOMAN  RAZOR SHARPENER.\"    CHAPTER X.  BIRIGHT and early the next morning the party was ready for the  last of tlie journey to Edel-  * weiss. Less than twenty miles  separated Ganlook from the capital,  and the road .was in excellent condition;-Beverly^\"Calhounrtlred_and~con-~  tented, bad slept soundly until aroused  by the princess herself. Their rooms  adjoined each other, and when Yetlve,  shortly after daybreak, stole into tbe  American girl's chamber Beverly was  sleeping so sweetly that the.intruder  would have retreated bad it not been  for the boisterous shouts of stable  boys in the courtyard below the windows. She hurried to a wludowand  looked out upon tbe gray cloaked morning. Postilions and stable boys were  congregated near the gates, tormenting a ragged old man who stood with  his back against one of the huge posts.  In some curiosity, she called Beverly  from ber slumbers, .urging the sleepy  ono to hasten to the window.  \"Js this one of your friends from the  wlfderucss?\" she asked.-  \"It's Franz!\" cried Beverly, rubbing  her pretty eyes. Then she became thoroughly awake. \"What are they doing  to bim? Who are those ruffians?\".she  demanded Indignantly.  \"They are my servants and\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \"Shame on thctn! The wretches!  What has old Franz done that they  should\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Call to them; tell 'em you'll  cut their heads off if tbey don't stop.  He's u dear old fellow ln spite of his  rags, and he\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  The window sash flew open, and the  tormentors in the court below were astonished by the sound of a woman's  voice coming, as it were, from the  clouds. A dozen pairs of eyes were  turned upward; the commotion ended  suddenly. In the window above stood  two graceful, white robed figures, The  sun, still far \"below tho ridge of mountains, bad not yet robbed tbe morning  of the gray, dewy shadows that belong  to 5 o'clock.  \"What are you doing to tbat poor old  man?\" cried Yetlve, and It was the  first time any of tbem bud seen anger  in the princess' face. Tbey slunk back  In dismay. \"Let him alone! You,  Gartz, see that be has food and drink,  and without delay. Report to me later  on, sir, and explain, if you can, why  you have conducted yourselves in so  unbecoming n manner.\" Then the window ,was closed, and the \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd princess  found herself ln the warm arms of her  friend. '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'..-  \"I couldn't understand a word you  said, Yetive, but I knew you were  giving it to them hot and heavy. Did  you see bow nicely old Franz bowed to  Penalty of Politeness. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  The \"tradesman\" has his troubles as  well as his next door neighbor, the  \"business man.\" One day last week a  wholesale fish dealer in' Fulton market  was approached, by a fashionably  dressed woman, who, after asking the  price, decided to buy a pound of  smelts. Although It was not customary to cater to retail trade, to be congenial he decided to oblige ber.  \"I would like to have them cleaned,  If you please,\" she said.      .   .  The Ashman cleaned them.  \"Oh, yes,\" the woman considerately  remarked after looking them over,  \"will you kindly take all. the .bones  out?\"  \"Certainly,\" said the man. But he  said'things to himself as he went behind the Icebox and extracted the  bones.  After flfteen^minutes' labor he wrapped tbe smelts* in a neat parcel, which  he handed the woman. *  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \"I am so much obliged to you,\" she  said. \"You see, my. cat absolutely refuses to eat fish if they are bony.\"  As the fashionably gowned woman  walked out the fishman said some more  things.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNew York Press.  Health .and Strength Regained by  'Taking Dr. Williams'  Pink  Pills.  The after effects  of la grippe    are  more serious than tne disease itseit.  its victims are left low spirited and  depressed;    they   are  tortured    with  lieadacnes and bacicaches; fever   and  clulis.   It leaves the sufferer an easy  prey to  bronchitis, pneumonia, rheumatism and often tnat' most dreaded  oi   all  diseases,   consumption.       Foi  Uie   after  etiects   ot  ia  grippe  there  is absolutely  no medicine can equii  ur. Williams .Pink Pills.   Every dose  helps make new, rich, red blood that  diives disease from Uie system,    and  makes weak despondent men and women brignt, cneerful and strong. Miss  Lugenie   Donaldson,    of  St.   Jerome,  s.......  lound  a  cure    through    these  p...b after other, remedies had failed  to nelp her. She says: \"I took la  grippe and did not seem able- to  o.iuKe it off. lt developed into bron-  cnitis; I coughed day and night and  grew so weak that I could -hardly  move about. I tried remedy after  remedy, but as nothing seemed to  help me\" I began to dread that consumption was developing and that  my case was incurable. A friend  urged me to try Dr. Williams' Pink  Pills and following that udvice I took  the pills -faithfully, following the directions given for their use. I am  thankful I did- so for' they fully restored my streugth and I have since  enjoyed perfect health. I will always advise sick and ailing people  to give Dr: Williams' Pink. Pills ' n  trial for I firmly believe tliey will  find great benefit from their use.\";  , Rich, red bfood is the one thing  needed to maintain health , and  strength. Dr. \"Williams'. Pink Pills  actually make rich, red' blood. Thai  '.s the reason of their great popularity in every country in the world.  That is why they cure anaemia, general weakness, rheumatism, neuralgia,  indigestion, St. 'Vitus .dance,- partial  paralysis and the ills of girlhood and  womanhood, with all its distressing  headaches. See that you get the  genuine pills with the full name \"Dr.  Williams' Pink Pills fqr Pale People\" on the wrapper around each box.  Sold by all medicine dealers or by  mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes  for $2.50 from the Dr. Williams'  Medicine C:.   Oicckville, Ont.  She Houea .10,000 a Year and Matyea  a Good  Living at It.  A womqri in Kansas City makes a  living, and a good one,-too, by honing  razors. She ls the only '.woman razor  sharpener in this clty.% She declares  she Is the only one In this country.  She sits at a window in a little shop  with her hones upon a low stand beside  her and works. She sharpens between  fifteen and thirty razors each day. She  gets 25 cents apiece. The day she  sharpens thirty razors she makes $7.50.  If she sharpens ' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd twenty -*- razors.: she.  makes $5 for the day's work.  * She uses two hones, a \"hickory\" hone  to cut, the-razor, down fast and an imported German water hone with which  to put on the finishing touches.  \"How do you know when the razor is  just right?\" she was asked.     .  \"Well, sir,\" she ans.wered, \"a man  went one time to a great painter and  asked him bow he mixed his colors, and  he told him, 'With brains.' I might  make you the same answer. It takes  brains in tbis business as well ns In  any other. And I've been doing it for  eleven years too. You hone up fifteen  to thirty razors, a day for eleven years,  that's, let's see\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthat's something like  10,000 razors a year\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthat's something  like 110,000 razors in eleven yeurs\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdyou  do tbat, and I guess you'll know something about it if you've got brnlns  enough to go in out of the wet.  \"Then look at that thumb nail of  mine.\" She showed a nail all lined  with razor cuts.     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \"That's one way I tell. I try its edge  on my thumb nail. I can tell In a jiffy  by'that.\"  \"In boning a razor what art ls re  quired?\" she was asked.  \"Simply put a straight bevel edge on  your razor and quit when you've got lt  sharp,\" she answered.  \"But not every one can do tbat,\" was  suggested.  \"No, I guess not. If they could I'd  have to go out of this business.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdKansas City Star.  EXHAUSTED NERVES  LEAD TO INSANITY  if is Wise to  Keep the Nervous System  in  Full Health and Vigor by Using    ,  Dr. Chase's Nerve Food.  The leading artist of a great .New  York newspaper committed suicide  recently because on ins return, home  he found his apartments in disorder,  the .painters and decorators being in  possession.  This -is an illustration of overwrought nerves leading to insanity,  and, whatever may be -ptie last .straw  to unbalance the mind,\" there can be  no doubt: that exhaustion of the  nerves is always a cause of mental  collapse. ;   ,'     - '  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Diseases of the nerves are common  to all walks of life, and \\ne earlier  symptoms are sleeplessness, nervous  neadaches, loss of memory, inability  to concentrate tne mind,* indigestion,  Li red, languid feelings, discouragement and despondency. r  Dr. Onase's Nerve Food cures uis-  eases of tne nerves in the only natural way, by actually increasing tne  amount of nerve force in the body.  By. its regular and persistent, use  the most severe.forms of nervous'ex-  naustion, such as partial paralysis,  prostration, and locomotor ataxia, are  thoroughly and  completely cured,.  Mrs.   J.   Hatcheri,,;\"224-. Sherbrooke  street, Peterboro', Ont., and whose,  husband is a \"mbl'def a,t: the Hamilton Foundry, states:  \"1 had an attack of inflammatory  rheumatism, which lelt .me in a very  rundown state of health, and in- fact  my whole nervous system seemed exhausted antf worn .out.' i :could;: npl  sleep, -and at tinies.the pains in;my  head were almost unbearable. As a :  rseult'of these! symptoms I was 'unable to attend to my housework, .and  felt miserable\".most.T of; theHime.., On  the advice of a friend \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.'!'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd began -using  Dr. Chase's Merve J-'obd, and cari ;say  tnat it has proved a very great'benefit to me. 1 am able to'do .my own  work now, and ;:: feel stronger; \"and  heauuier than.'1'have-for years.-- I  can truthiuily; state ....at this is due  to the used pr. Chase's i\\erve Food,  which 1 consider a great health  builder.\"' ;-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd--'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   -y:iy  Li you would feci strong and \ufffd\ufffdwell  and avoid all the ills and weakness  so common at this season, enrich  your blood and revitalize your nerves  by the use of -or. Onase's .Nerve  Food, 50 cents a box, 6 boxes.' for  $2.50, , ...at-.\" all ^dealers' or Edmanson.  Bates ;& 'Co.; .Toronto.  Rich Old Cncle Sam.  Some European nations whlcb are  obliged to face huge deficits in tbe national exchequer must look with envious eyes upon the. bursting condition  of Uncle Sam's treasury. So plethoric  ls the situation at Washington that it  now seems probable $117,000,000 of  public debt will be wiped off the books  next July. That It can be erased with  ease there, now appears to be no doubt.  It Is estimated that allowing for another Panama canal bond issue of $30,-  000,000, the United States .treasury can  pay off the maturing 4 per cent bonds  and still bave left a working balance  of more than $60,000,000. To cancel a  ninth of tbe entire -funded debt of the  nation at one clip would be a notable  achievement. It would, be the more  gratifying to the country when it is  remembered, that the money has been  accumulated \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd out of ordinary revenue  after making outlays in a broad spirited fashion.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPhiladelphia Press..,  Spllllnar of Salt.  It Is a curious fact that the popular  superstition of overturning the salt at  table~belng unlucky\" originated in a  picture of the \"Last Supper\" by Leonardo da Vinci, In which Judas Iscariot  Is represented as overturning the salt  \"The Woman In -White.\"  In a letter to Charles Dickens, Wilkle  Collins, intimated, the fact that the  rreat work upon which he had devoted  lo much time1 was finished, but that  the finding of a suitable title had occasioned hiin much' trouble. Eventually,  feeling somewhat run down in health,  >e left London for Broadstairs, a re-  lort which was a .favorite with both  Dickens and Collins. While lying on  ihe cliff In a meditative mood one  bright morning his eyes suddenly riveted themselves on the white' light-  louse which stood boldly out .In the  foreground under the dazzling rays of  |he midday sun. As he gazed Collins  m a semiconscious manner addressed  himself In a whisper to the light-  louse. \"You are as stiff and as Stately as my white woman,\" said he.  'White woman! White wo\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe wbin-  in ln white. Eureka I I have got itl\"  Ind so the book was given this curl-  nisly inspired title.  The French Idea.  The Frenchman, of the middle class  lacrlflces everything In order to obtain  tor his children some official position  pr other, a mean one, perhaps, but a  lure one, leading after thirty years of  penury to a pension, verging on destitution. This Is one aspect of the decay  of the French race. It Is easy to nn-  fle'-stand that two races aire not evenly  armed for the straggle for life if one  be made up of aspirants to official poll tion and the other of individuals possessing initiative, daring and energy.  For this reason do Latin races decline,  while. Anglo-Saxon races grow and  multiply.  Du Rapiat had two teeth that  caused him dreadful pain., so he repaired to the dentist and bargained  about the price of pulling them out.  The dentist agreed to three francs for  the first and two for the second.  \"Well, then,\"' said Du Rapiat,  \"pull out the second one now, I'll  come tomorrow about the first.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBon  Vivant.  Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria.  Talleyrand afc Coolt.  Be a cook\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdsome sort of cook, even a  ship's cook. Remember Talleyrand.  The-Britlsh-antborities-gnve himTtwen-  ty-four hours'' notice to quit London,  and he embarked on a Danish vessel  for America. The vessel was held up  at sea by an English, frigate. A  searching party was sent on board.  Talleyrand pleaded with the captain  not to declare bim, as he had no liking  for. the Tower of \"London, \"i 'will pass  you off as the ship's cook,\" said the  officer. \"There is nothing else.\" After  some wry faces the prince' consented;  and with a very ill grace assumed tho  cotton cap, kitchen apron, carving  knife and other appendages in keeping  with his new office. When the English'  officer demanded if there were any  Brench passengers oh board the cap-  tJdn replied, \"Yes, one poor devil.of <a  limping French cook.*- Being'Immediately called up, for Inspection, Talleyrand made his appearance, saucepan in  hand and with such a piteous' countenance that the Englishman laughed  heartily and consented not to make a  captive of him.  , Sicily'5-1 Brigand*.  How strong Is the influence of the  brigand In Sicily Is shown in recent  proceedings at the Caltanlsetta assizes,  where four of the band of the: notorious chief Pallia Molohe were1- to be  tried. The jurymen nnd witnesses instead of appearing sent a joint petition to the courti praying to be excused  so long as the chieftain, who has already n dozen assassinations to. answer for. remain* uncaiitured.     '-'  Clothes  Locked  Ont.'  ' The newest hotel in New York's Tenderloin-boasts one feature which tbe  sophisticated guests regard with suspicion. In every room there is a Bmall  closet with' two doors. One opens into  the room and the other on the hall. To  this outside door the.valet possesses  the key. The Inside door,Is locked by  the guest after be has put his clothes  Into the little closet in order to bave  them pressed and cleaned before tbe  next morning. \"1 know the house is  responsible for the clothes If they are  lost,\" said one guest who had refused  to avail himself of the new: convenience, \"but.lt makes a man very uncomfortable to feel that he has locked  bis clothes out < and that another has a  key to them. Then the fellow with  only one suit would have to wait a  long time before the proprietor sent  out to buy him another.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNew !York  Sun.  The Keen Eyed Camera. '  A woman with an exceptionally clear  complexion recently sat for her photograph. On receiving the proof she took  it-back totheartist-and-complained-of  a number \"of small spots .on the face  which marred an otherwise perfect picture. The photographer was at a loSs  to account for tbis, an examination of  the negative falling to give the slightest clew to the source of trouble. A  fortnight later an eruption of spots  broke out on the woman's face, which  proved to be the first outward symptoms of a very severe attack of smallpox.  Cornelias Vanderhllt.  Cornelius Vanderbllt Is slowly but  surely earning his way to the front in  the national guard of New York. In  1001 he was elected a second lieutenant lu the Twelfth regiment and ls  now senior first lieutenant in the organization. He has been detailed to  the captaincy of one of the companies  and wlll.'SOon become a regular captain. The members of .the regiment  show no jealousy over this promotion,  as they say it was earned by good  work as a soldtoi*.  Plant  Trees  to   Protect Ships.     '  .State .Forester G. B. Lull has been  experimenting with the planting ' of  eucalyptus trees around the hills  back of the harbor of Fort Bragg, in  Mendocino county, so as to afford a  windbreak * ior the ships that enter  the harbor. The .trees grow very  rapidly, and in the two months have  grown several inches. Hundreds of  trees will now be planted. .'  The big lumber companies have decided to plant thousands' of trees on  tlie .vast areas from which the .lumber has. been cut.' The planting oi  trees to protect ships is decidedly novel, and is an experiment that will  be watched with considerable interest,  everywhere.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSacramento  Bee.  Heart-8lck People.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDr. Agnew's' Cure  for   the   Heart   is   a   heart   tonic'   that  \"never fails to cure\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdis swift in its effects  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdgoes closer to the \"border land\" and  snatches from death's grip more sufferers   than   any    other    remedy    for   any  'family of diseases and ailments in the  category of human sufferines. Gives relief in JO minutes.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd75.  - \"Soc here. That horse you soldme  runs away, kicks, bites, Strikes .and  tries to tcai* down the stable at night.  You told ine that if I got him once I  wouldn't part with hiin for $1,000.\"  \"Well, you won't.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPhiladelphia  Inquirer.  Minard's Liniment Co.,  Limited.  (Tentlemen,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMy daughter, 13 years  old,' was Lurown from a sleigh and  injured her* elbow . so badly-.it remained stiff and very painful for  three years.   ,\ufffd\ufffd'our   bottles  of -ffln.-  liU'ti liijNIMIiNT. completely cured  her and she has not-been troubled  for two years.  Yours truly,  J.   B.  LiVESQIIh;.  St.  Joseph,  F.O., Aug., 1900.    *-.-\"  Thought it Was Something New:  The bartender was from Boston.  \"Is this my whiskey?\" enquired  the patron,'as he tapped the bottle  the white-aproned expert had pushed  toward him. .-.'..  The bartender smiled.  \"That is\" your alcoholic distillate  from fermented grain,\" he replied.  '. The patron-frowned,\" he said, \"but  if you recommend this new stuff I'll  take a chance and try it.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCleveland  Plain- Dealer. - '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd '  - '  Minard's  Liniment Cures Distemper.  \"So your servant girl has left you  again ?\" said Mrs. Naybor.  \"Yes,\" replied Mrs. Sububs.  \"What .was the matter ?\"  \"She didn't like'the way I,did the  work.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPhiladelphia Press.   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Tlios. Sabin of Egllnton, says: \"1  have removed ten corns from my  feet with Holloway's Corn Cure.\"  Reader, go thou and do likewise.\"  Ben Franklin was experimenting  with his kite and key.  \"Wonderful!\" exclaimed the curious throns, when they saw the electric spark on the key.* \"But could  you perform the same experiment at  night?'\"    \"' ' '    ;  \"Oh, yes,\" replied Franklin, \"but  I suppose I would have to use a  night key.\" '  For even in those days Poor Richard was known as the man who wrote  jokes for. his almanac\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdChicago News.  Itch, Mange, Prairie Scratchbs and  every form of contagious Itch on human Dr animals cured in 30 minutes b>  Wolford's Sanitary Lotion.  Miss Skreecher\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWhat sort of songs  do you like best, Mr. Suphrer ?  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMr.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSuphrer\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-j-The-songs -of ^the  seventeenth century.  Miss S\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHow odd! Why do you  prefer them ?  . . '  Mrs. S\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBecause nobody ever sings  'em nowadays.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPhiladelphia Inquir-.  er.  Heredity is what a man blames  his mother and father for, and environment what he blames his wife and  children-for.  It is easier to prevent than it is  to cure. Inflammation of tlie lungs  is the companion of neglected co\ufffd\ufffdds,  and once it finds a lodgement in the  system it is difficult to deal' with.  Treatment with . Bickle's-. Anti-Consumptive Syrup will eradicate tlie  cold and prevent inflammation from  setting in'. It .'costs little;-and is ns  satisfactory as it is surprising in'us  results.  A NIGHT CAP  Take two Beecham's Pills on retiring and avoid-any ill effects'  from a late meal. Then you will  sleep soundly, awaken with a:  clear' head arid a high opinion  of the great stomach remedy,   .  Beecham's  Pills  Sold Everywhere.     In boxes 25 cents.  IVIIVI  The ARNOTT METHOD is the  only logical method for the cure  of Stammering. It \"treats the  -CAUSEi-- not~merely-the\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHABITy-  and insures natural speech.  Pamphlet, particulars and references sent on request..  THE     ARNOTT   INSTITUTE,  Berlin, Ont.,  Can.  V  Mrs. Griggs\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSo you .managed . to  get to the bargain counter for me.  Did you see anything real cheap  there ; ' ....;..  Griggs\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdYes; I caught a glimpse' ot  myself in a mirror.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBoston Transcript.*        ;*      : -.. ',*-:  Bott and Anew Flaking.   ':  In the south seas and in various  groups of Islands In the; Indian ocean  the aborigines shoot fish with the bow  and arrow. The art Is extremely difficult, as in taking aim at an object under -water the archer has to allow for  refraction. If he were to aim directly  at the fish as be sees It, he would, of  course, miss. Long practice has, bow-  ever, made the natives expert to a  wonderful degree la this sport  No. 626.  ..'i*5*- Crocodile555! nnd the Care.  One does not usually connect crocodiles with a health resort\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdrather tlie  reverse\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdbut the creatures are quite a  feature of the Indian bathing place of  Manghaplr, about nine miles from Karachi. This town Is a place of pilgrimage for pious Hindoos, but lt Is chiefly  famous for the .value of its waters In  the cure of the dread scourge of lep--  rosy. The waters are hot, and more  than 60 per cent of the sufferers who  bathe there annually, lt ls said, are  cured. The\" crocodiles are rather noteworthy In that they llvo in the hot  water, apparently suffering no Inconvenience from Its temperature or medicinal qualities.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWide World Magazine.  Terror Blanches Hair.  It has been repeatedly affirmed that  Queen Marie Antoinette's auburn hair  -turned white In the days of the reign  of terror, says the Caledonian, and an  English surgeon named Parry states  that just after the Indian mutiny he  actually'saw the Jet black hair of a  rebel Sepoy, who was under examination and feared a dreadful death, turn  white in the course of. half an hour.  In the time of the commune in Paris  tbe dark hair of Baron Alphonse de  Rothschild waa blanched in a few  hours. _.    The men who have achieved success  are the men who have worked, read,  thought more than was absolutely  necessary, who have not been \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd content with knowledge sufficient for the  piesent need, but who have sought  additional knowledge and stored __ it  away for the' emergency reserve.\" It  is the supeifiuous labor that equips  a man for eveiything that counts  most in life.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCushman K. Davis.  BROOKS' NEW CURE  Brooks' Appliance. Now  dlacovery. Wonderful. No  obnoxious aprlugi or pods.  Automntlo Air Cushions.  Binds and draws the broken  puts together as vou would  a broken-limb. 'No salvos..  Ho lympbol. No lies Durable, cheap. Pat. Sop 110,'OlJ  SEfeT   ON    TRlAk.  OATALOaUE \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdREE.  C. E. BR00K8. sen Bcwu'buc.,  FOR  MABlff\ufffd\ufffdUtW\ufffd\ufffda  >'<>C  STATELY  HALLWAYS  fHE  ' when decorated with  Alabastine have a lustrous  rijshness.\ufffd\ufffd Our illustrated  book, \"Homes, Healthful and Beautiful\/'  tells why Alabastine is the most jdurable  of all wall-coverings-how it destroys  disease germs, and how you can decorate your home with Alabastine at much  less cost than with any other material.  Send ten cents for a copy of \" Homas, Healthful  and Beautiful,\" with many dainty, new ideas  for the decoration of your home.  Alabastine is sold by hardware and paint dealers  everywhere\ufffd\ufffd\ufffda 5 pound package for 50 cents.  Ask your dealer lor tint cord. NEVER SOLD IN BULK.  rO  LTD  V^l LLOW   STREET. PARIS. \ufffd\ufffdNT s?f ?'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd&>\ufffd\ufffd* -*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ~'X&??,'  v *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*-\/ *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'*- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'  THE. LEADER; MOYIE, BRITISH COLUMBIA;  i'.- . ^^^\/j^^^'-.V^a  -' .   -*..\"     \\ -*-,  -        Ji'-Wf55^r  ***   ._, -     '*.* ;V* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\"-'-5-'1-'  * ^ ',---*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'. ^tJ -        --^'.'  , --^'r*s*-*r?-Kl  . i^^YJfAmrtT    , .  * W\/feaS*Sfc'l  rs. Cora B. Mi  Makes a fortune  Started  a  Few Years    Ago with  No  Capital, and Now Employs Nearly One Hundred t\/lerks and    -  Stenographers.  Until  a  tew  years   ago  Uib.  (jora  li.  Miller lived in a, manner-similar to tliat  ot thousands or otner very poor women  ot  the  average  small  town  and  village.  Hbe  now  resides  ln    fter    own    palatial  brown-stone residence,  and  Ib  considered  * one  or  the most  suocesbtul  business worsen in the  United States.  i'i*.  ii        \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd..,\"-     , ii        il        . .     N  *W*\"*''      --if '? \/      *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     5     A'  Mrs.  Miller's    New  Residence,    Earned  In  Lets   Than   One   Year. |  Several years txso ilr\ufffd\ufffd. AlUler learned  of a unlet and simple preparation that  oured herself and several friends of fe-  uittlo weakness and piles, bhe was besieged by so many women needing trei^  ment that she decided to furnish it to  those who might call for lt. tihe started with only a few dollars* capital, and \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  the remedy, possessing true and wonder-1  fill merit, producing many cures when  doctors and otner remedies failed, tno  demand grew so rapidly, she was several  times compelled to seek larger quarters,  title now occupies one of the city's largest  office buildings, which she owns, and almost one hundred clerkis and stenographers are required to assist* ln this great  business. I  Million   Women   Use   It. -   ., I  More than a million women have used  Mrs. Miller's remedy, and no 'matter  where you live, she can refer you to ladies in yuur own locality who can and  will tell any sufferer that this marvelous  remedy really cures women. Despite the  fact that Mrs. Millers bualness is very  extensive, she is always willing to give  aid anil'advice,to every Buffering woman  who writes to her. tihe is a generous,  good woman and has decided to give  away to women who have never used her  medicino Viu.uuu.u*) worth \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd absolutely  ViLU&.  Kvery woman Buffering with pains in  the head, back'and bowels, bearing-down  feelings, nervousness, creeping sensations'up the spine, melancholy, desire to  cry, hot ..Hashes,'\" weariness, or piles from  any cause, should sit right down aud  send her name and address to Mrs. (Joro  B. Miller, Box- MM, itoKomo. ind., and receive by mail (free of charge ln plain  wrapper) a oil-cent box of her marvelous  medicine; also her valuable book, which  every woman should have.  itemeinber, this offer will not last long,  - for thousands and thousands nf women  who are suffering win take advantage of  this generous means of getting cured, uo  If you are ailing, do not suiter another  day. but send your name and address to  Mrs. Miller for the book and mediolTf  before the ClO.OOO.oo worth is all gone  \/  Indefinite.  A  well  known New  York    lawyer  says  that in his earlier professional  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   *' days he was glad to expand his slender .income  by bill collecting.      On  i,   one occasion he had a bill against a  , * man  who,    incidentally,    has    since  achieved a success which   puts him  ,   beyond the necessity jot such an indefinite statement as He,made on that  occasion.    The  young lawyer    found  . him with his feet propped-up on his  desk, while he 'gazed' dreamily at the  -- ceiling  through \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd a cloud   of. tobacco  . smoke.  \"But, really, sir, 1 must insist that  yi\\)i give me somo definite idea as to  when- you will settle,\" the lawyer  said, after having been gently rebuffed.  . The author consented to lower his  .eyes and to wave his pipe languidly.  \"Why, certainly, sir\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-though there  sseems to me to be a rather unnecessary commotion about .this trifle,\" he  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffddrawled. n  \"I will pay the bill as soon as I  think of it after receiving the -money  which a publisher .will pay me in  case he accepts the novel which I  will write and send him just as soon  as I feel in an energetic mood after  a really good idea for a plot has occurred tb me !\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHarper*^ Weekly.  i\\ It Is Known Everywhere.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThere  is not a city, town or hamlet in  Canada where Dr. Thomas' Eclectric  Oil is not known\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd--wherever introduced it made a foothold for itself  and maintained it. uome merchants  . may    suggest   some    other   remedy  -----as -equally-beneficial. Such~recom-_  mendations should be received with  doubt.    There is only one Eclectric  Oil, and that is Dr. Thomas'. .Take  *   nothing else.  Rare   Coin   in   Collection   Box.  London.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA gold coin\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdone-third of  a guinea\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdbearing the date 1802\" was  found in a collection box in Peterborough Cathedral, with' .a request  that it should be sold and the proceeds given to the Cathedral Eestor-  ation Fund:       -  ** -      '  Pllo Terrors Swept Away.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDr. Agnew's   Ointment  stands   at   the  head  as  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'a reliever, healer,* aud sure euro for  Piles in all forms.    One application will  'give comfort'in a few- minutes, and  three to \"six days' application according  to directions will cure  chronic cases. It  ' relieves all itching and burning \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd diseases  in   a  day,.    '35- cimta.-^5*\".        : ' '    ' ' ':.'.  Young. Husband\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDon't yoii think,  darling that niy smoke is ..likely to  spoil .the curtains \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  Young Wife\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdYou are the best, and  -' most' considerate husband' that'\" ever  lived; 'dear.** Of course\" it' would\/ \"'  Young Husband-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWell, then, you  had better take, them down.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIllustrated Bits.   , \" -   .  Desperate  Coughs  Dangerous coughs. Extremely,  perilous cougfr^. ' Coughs that  rasp and tear the throat and  lungs. Coughs-thai shake the  whole body. You need a regular medicine, a doctor's medicine, for such a cough. Ask  your, doctor about Ayer's  Cherry Pectoral.' *  Will AB-alnkt Will. '  A certain prosy professor of physics  Is so great a. misanthrope that he deliberately announces }lils lectures for,  the days when he \"has reason to think  that bis students will least;want to attend. He commanded their presence  on an election day once and drove them  nearly wild by delivering a tedious essay on' will power. ' *' _  ' \"If he wills it, a man may accomplish anything,\" be droned. \"Let him  make up his mind not to die, and he  will live In spite of disease; let him  decide that life ls not worth living, aud  be will drop peacefully out of it. I  challenge nny student to cite an Instance In which.the power of the will  has not triumphed over everything.\"  UP shot tbe reprobate of the class, a  youth beloved by all his companions  for his daring humor.  \"Sir, 1 accept your challenge. \" Xbu  are wrong.\" he said.  \"Pray meution an example,\" retorted the professor dryly.  \"With pleasure, sir.' An hour ago.I  willed that this lecture should be  brougut to a speedy conclusion. I've  willed the same tiling sixty times sluce,  but up to now It hasn't come off.\"'  \"Nor will It,\" said tbe professor, \"for  I have not only willed that this lecture  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdbould last another hour, but am perfectly willing tbat It should do so.\"  And It did.  A MIDI nnd a Find.  It was tbe habit of tbe Rev. James  rfptirgeon.   grandfather   of   the   great  preacher of that name, to pray encu  .-venlng uuder a certain oak tree in a  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdecluded   wood   In   Honeywood   park.  One night be dreamed, the story goes.  i hat Satan  appeared  and  threatened  'o tear bim In pieces if be followed his  iccustometl route to the tree.    There  vjis another* path by which be might  -o In safety.   Itememberlng his dream,  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdpurjjeou felt sorely tempted the^uext  light to take the route ln which Satan  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdas not.   But this would be to capit-  late.    Trembling In' every  limb,  be  mde bis way by the path in which the  HDKer  lay.    He reached his goal  In  .ifety and ln prayer and song returned  umks'for delivery from peril.   When  is prayer had ended he rose to  re-  iru.    In his path lay a piece of solid  ild \"as large as a curtain ring.\"   AH  iqairy fulllu-u, to discover an owner.  o retained it and when he married bad  s wife's wedding ring'made from his  urlous find.  Brewing.  There has been uo nntiou. no* mat  lur bow uncivilized, that nt. one time  or another bas uot made 'and used iu  toxieating liquors. The art of brew  Ing was practiced by the ancient Egyptians and later by the Greeks, ltomaus  and Gauls.  Minard's   Liniment  Cures  Garget   in  Cows.  No   One   Suited.  \"It's too bad about young Gold-  rocks and the girl he is engaged to.  Neither of them is good enough for  the other.\" \"Why do you think  that ?\" \"I've been talking the m-it-  ter over with both '.families.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMilwaukee Sentinel.  .- .,,'.*\"-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd - Hot Shot. \"  With our foreman at home shot  three times, a printer in the Bloimt-  ville jail half-shot, 'another in the office not worth shooting, the Comet is  issued under great difficulties this  week.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJohnson City \/Tenn.)    Comet.  The Poisoned Spring.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAs in nature so  in man. pollute the spring and disease  and waste are bound to follow \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd the  stomach and nerves out of kilter means  poison in the spring. South American  Nervine is a great purifier, cures Indigestion, Dyspepsia, and tones the  nerves. The best evidence of its efficacy is the unsolicited testimony of  thousands  of  cured  ones.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd76.  \"Our postman,\" says a Philadelphia  business man, \"always rings our doorbell good and hard when he leaves  any mail. He comes along regularly  as clockwork at 8 a.m., but does not  always leave mail for me, and, consequently, the doorbell does not always ring. When I want to get-up  early I just buy a postcard in the  aftei*noon-and-mail-it-to^myself.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGood Digestion Should VVait On  Appetite.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTo have the stomach well  is to have the nervous system well.  Very delicate. are the digestive organs, in some'so sensitive are tliey  that atmospheric changes affect tliBiu.  When they, become, disarranged no  better regulator is procurable than  J-'armelec's .Vegetable .fills. They win  assist the digestion so that the hearty  eater will suffer no inconvenience  and will derive all the benefits of  his food.  ZAM-BUK   SAVED   HIS   FINGER.  Mr. Wm, 0. lidwards, IMj.U.U.A.U.f.,  l'.O.M. lO.O.i'. and iM-.O.A, - S-jbopfterds  one of the most widely known men in  Iriendly society circles and 'who 'Uvea on  I'eter street, says: \"1 cut the miadie  linger of my .left hand and blood poison  set in. Wot only tho \"linger but the whole  hand became swollon and intlamed. In  a few weeks ono or the leaainj; doctors  in Toronto Haul the only way to save my  band was to have the linger amputated.  A second doctor confirmed this. 1 tin a  to i'aco an operation. At that Btage Zuin-  liulc was brougut, to my notice aoU . i  got a supply. ' ,  It seemed to soothe it and draw* the  sorenens completely away. Within a low  days 1 could do away with the slini5; in  which I had carried the hand, and in  u few weeks' time there was not a trace  of tno wound* to be seen. Today my  finger is as sound an a bell, whurcao  had 1 not used Zam-iiul', X should- have  been a' linger less. 1 paid over S'&i in  doctors lees, and when 1 think or. the  trifling cost ot Zani-liuk i am amazed at  its  wonderful value.  l5'or all poisoned wounds, chronic sores,  ulcers and abscesses, .Zam-Buk is especially suitable because of its high, antmep  tic powers.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \/.am-Buk also cures eczema, itch, .-scalp  sores, ringworms, -lOtcnea on tne,. lace  and body, chapped places, spring eruptions, piles and enlarged veins, as an  embrocation \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* it, cures \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd rheumatism* \"and  sciatica, and rubbed over the chest relieves the tightness due to fie'ere colds.  All stores and druggists sell at M cents  a box, or post tree from tno. *6am-i.uh  .(Jo.. Toronto.    l>   boxes  for  Vi.bll.  EDPP RAY \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd aend one cent stamp and  mEE DUA . name and date or ' this  paper and dainty sample box will nt5  mailed you.  The Earthly Explanation. -  \"My dear,\" murmured the sick man  to his wife, \"I am nearing the golden streets. I Hear .strains of sweetest  music,  unearthly  in its  beauty.  ,1 \" .\"John,\" said his wife, \",what  y *\ufffd\ufffd% hear is a phonograph in the next  flat.\" \"So it is. Darn those people,  anyhow. No consideration for their  neighbors. Go and tell 'em to -stop  that infernal racket at once.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCleveland Leader.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Moonlight, bat No Mo-tin. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  , Dion Boucicault seems to have been  forever rushing breathlessly from one  task to another.' This amusing incident,  of the busy dramatist's career Is' told  In \"Famous Actor Families In America,\" by Montrose J. Moses:  \"Boucicault was never to be outdone, whatever the circumstances. So  Intent was he during the rehearsals of  The Shaughraun' regarding the other  chnracterB In the-jcast that on the opening night when be reached tbe theater  he suddenly realized tbat he had whol-  y forgotten to pick himself out a costume for Con. So he rushed to the  property room and on with an old coat  that bad done service for Tony Lamp-  kin and on with an old cap belonging  to that same Individual. Grabbing an  odd pair of boots from a discarded  chest\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdand he was readyl But disasters came thick and fast on this occasion. The\" second * act called for a!  moon. Just as the scene was about to  begin tbe < stage orb exploded, and  when tbe curtain rose the audience  was amazed to find a black hole where  the moon should bave been. A burst  of laughter showed their further appreciation of a slip In stage management, for silver ripples quivered on  tbe water, a case of moonlight with  tho moon Ieft'out.\" *  Before you get  Pea-Angle  Sanhents  ail  teihrink  i\ufffd\ufffd   t\ufffd\ufffdkeni  out.  to*  Pen-  Angle1  'Underwear'^  'keeps you com-  Tfyas well*as  'warm,because the V  'short fibres that  Linake some under-  ^wear itch are taken ^  out of  Pen-  7&S     Angle wool  Trade fane  In a variety of. fabrics, styles and-price*,  m aU sizes for women, men and  Children, and guaranteed by your own dealer.  Minard's Liniment Cures Colds,  Etc.  Tlie Boy\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPlease, sir, I've come for  the job of errand boy at this shop.  The Boss\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBut I don't want an errand boy.   I've got one already.  The Boy\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNo, you ain't, sir. .He's  just bin run over by that cab over  there.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPick-Me-Up.  HOWS THIS?  W\ufffd\ufffd offtr One Htinind Dollui Reward for onj  ess* of Catarrh that cannot bo oared by Hall'a Catarrh Care.   F. J. OHBNEY & CO.. Toledo, O.  We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Oheney  for the last 15 yoars. and believe him perfectly honorable in all business .transactions and financially'  able to carry out any obligations made by his firm.  '  WilBIKO,   KnfMAN 4  Mabvtk,  Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, 0  Hall's Catarrh Care Is taken Internally, acting  direotly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the  system. Testimonials sent free. ; Fxioo. *I6o. per  bottle.   Sold by all Druggists.  Take Hall's Family Pills for oonstlpation.  Any good doctor trill tell you that a medicine like Ayer's Cherry Pectoral cannot  4o its best work if the bowels are constipated. Ask your doctor if he knows  jLt-qrthinK better than Ayer's Pills for correcting this sluggishness of the liver.  i aw am t. O. A\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* Qo\ufffd\ufffd Iiowell.  The Gambler's  Hands.  \"That man is a' 'night worker\/  probably a favo dealer,\":jaid a detective to a friend, as \"the two\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:st6od  on a street corner the othei* afternoon, while the person 'alluded to By  the , detective passed by..''*>,\"Know  him?\" asked the lrierid.<-y \"Not  yet,\" replied'the detecti've';rJ,rbut I  may later.\" \"How do you.'know he's  a faro dealer, then?\" \"I don't know,  it,\" was-the reply, \"but that he-.is  ,in some.; such business is evident from  the peculiar pallor of his face, which!  you \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'may have noticed. You wouldn't  get that particular shade if you worked in a bank or at a desk \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd all day  long.\" It's the artificial light and the  bad ventilation that \"does it, I guess.  Keeping in the noise of the rattling  chips keeps out the air in most cases,  and those dealers work as steadily,  and as regularly as anybody else.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPerhaps you noticed, too, that his  iiands were smooth and clean,\" in .far  better condition than yours or mine,  or the average business man's. The  n-ofessioiial gambler may not like his  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd illor, but he takes great pride in  ^vis hands.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPhiladelphia Eecord.  ' \"You are a liar,\"' declared a member of the Constitutional convention.  \"You are another,\" retored the accused.  \"Gentlemen, gentlemen,\" expostulated the Chair mildly, \"just pair, and  !.et us have peace.\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Philadelphia  Ledger.  Little Johnie\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMother, tell me how  papa got to know you.  Mother\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOne day I fell into the  water, and he jumped in* and fetched  me out.  Little Johnny\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdH'm; that's funny;  he won't let me learn to swim.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTit-  Hits.  \"Why, William!\" exclaimed .Mrs.  Jorkins the other morning early, as  she met Jorkins at the door.' \"How  dare you come home in this condition  at this outrageous hour ? You promised faithfully that at New Year's you  would stop your loose conduct.-and  turn over a new\"  \\  Catching at an extenuating suggestion he thought he saw in these words  Jorkins hastened to explain: \"Thash  just'it, Mari'. I did turn over anew  one, but it belonged to the loosh-  leaf syshtem.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdChicago News.  LETTERS   FROM   MOTHERS.'  Every day we get letters from mothers telling of the benefit Baby's  Own Tablets have been to their lit-  _tle_onos. J3ome_ pr_aise_ _them_for-_coj*t.  stipation, stomach and bowel troubles; others for breaking up colds and  simple levers; some as a great help  to teething babies, while others \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd go  so far as to say that the Tablets  have saved their little one's life. We  have thousands of letters\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdall praising the Tablets, for they never do  harm\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdalways good. Mrs. Eobert  Pierce, Bell's Kapids, Ont., writes:  \"I would not be without Baby's Own  Tablets in. the house for a day. When  anything ails my little one I give hei*  a Tablet and she is soon allright. J  am sure otlier mothers will find them  China'* Flood Peril.  Thousands of men work all their  lives at securlug the' banks of the  great Yellow river In China. Yet every  now and then the tide sweeps away  all opposition, and the loss in human  life ls greater than any war ever  caused. In 1897 tbe river burst Its  bonds. Day after day the torrentrflow-  ed twenty miles an hour, thirty\/ miles  wide and ten feet deep. The flood has  been described as tbat of five Danubes  pouring from a height for two months  on end. For 2,000 years the Chinese  have been embanking this river. The  silt which the waters bring down from  tbe mountains builds up the bed and  raises the surface of the water. The  banks are raised higher'and higher to  keep in the water, and for mile after  mile the river runs'over a bed whose  level Is far above that of the fields-  through which It takes Its way. But  tbe weak part of the embankment - Is  always found out. The river always  breaks through. And then a province  Is swept out of existence, and people  die by millions. The death roll ln 1887  was estimated at from 2,000,000 to  7,000,000.  When Hatha Were Scarce.  ' In a guide to etiquette published early In tbe last century tho writer says  that \"soap does not Irritate tbe complexion. Some of.tbe finest complexions  wo bave known-have been regularly  washed with soap every day.\" The  same authority remarks that \"the dally  bath is now the rule, rather than the  exception, and common sense has triumphed over the decision that washing  wns Injurious.\" - And then the writer  has - a dig at ber great-grandmother,  \"whose only ablutions consisted ln wet-  tlug her cheeks with a cambric handkerchief dipped in rosewater.\" \"In all  rfur directions witb regard to the bath,\"  adds this early Victorian dictator, \"lt  \"must be borne 'n mind tbat-we only refer to those In sound state of health.\"  ,\\ '    ,    Amends .Honorable.'*1*\"-  \"We want to do the square thing,\"  wrote the editor of the Hickory Ridge  Missourian, \"to old Spike Thunder-  bash, of the McKinstry neighborhood.  Our readers will * remember that we  have' spoken of him sometimes as  tlie ragtag and bobtail of all creation. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.'.  \"That old scalawag has played more  mean tricks on us than he' has warts  on his. hands, and we've given it to  him'hot and, heavy .every time. We  'don't allow no man to get tlie * bulge  on us without coming back at him.  \"But we've forgiven old Spike. A  short time ago he dropped into oui  sanctum and asked how much he  was behind on subscription. We told  liim eleven years, and he dug down  in his jeans, fished up a dirty wad  of bills, and squared up. .It's the  decentest thing,he ever done since  we've been running a paper in this  town. - ' -  '\"ihe old scarecrow v. as drunk when  e done it, but we don't lay that up  igainsf him., Old Spike has'some  ,-ood points, and we shan't say an  other word about him until he trieb  to-run for office again: We'll- show  him up then in all his hideous deformity, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' but in the meantime him  and us are good friends.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdChicago  Tribune.-'1  Destructive Shellfish.  In the tropics rock boring and wood  boring shellfish are among the greatest natural agents of destruction ln the  shallow waters of the sea. -It was not  until the builders of iron ships launched tbe present navies' of peace or war  upou the deep that the hulls of vessels  moored' for any time In harbor wero  safe from tbeir attacks. The shells of,  tbese mollusks are elegant and beautiful. Tbey are often not at all obviously adapted for boring. Frequently they  are very thin, looking almost like hardened paper. Yet they bore through teak  or oak, hardened clay, chalk, rock and  concrete breakwaters.  Shoe Etlauette In  India.  Indians take off their shoes when  there Is a farash upon which they have  to squat. Tbe mud from' the shoes  would spoil the sheet. A native visitor\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd to -a-European-shou!d-on-no-ac--  count draw his shoes, there being no  farash. If any deputy magistrate does  so he is a crlnging'slave.-lmitatlng the  sahib's chaprasee and showing that he  Is as humble as Rain Bakhsh before  the sablb. If bis socks are torn and  tbe toes are out it Is a regular Insult to  the sahib.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLahore* Tribune.  Brockville, Ont.  Small Willie was playing with two  ragged urchins in front of the house,  when his mother called him in.  . \"Willie,\" she said, \"don't you know  that, those boys are bad associates  for you ?\" *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd#.   .  iV-!'Yes,f mamma,\" replied the little  pri'il'bsdpher, \"but I'm a good associate for them.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDeseret News.       :  Towne\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdShe says you're \"an impertinent.; cad.\" What.have you said  or' done ?\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'..  Browne\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNothing; that's the trour  ble. When we were out walking yesterday the ;wind blew\/ her'hair'.about,  her face most -;>Jie.cqmirigly,_''.and\/she  said, .'\"I know'\".t'jhX a perfect fright.\"  I didn't . say, a-J*word.-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPhiladelphia  Press.  - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd',    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,-':*-Jl?;\"'-,v.-  ,'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd :'\/w,-'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\"'   '  Mother G-raves*'-;',Worm .Exterminator has no v eqiiar ' for destroying  worms in children, and adults. See  that you get the genuine when purchasing:     ' :\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"' '.\/'.,:  \"ii!\"  \"Well ?\"  \"What's woman's rights ?\"  i    \"Everything they want. Run away.\"  ' -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCleveland Leader.  A number of railway -.. men were  once discussing the question of accidents. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd yy'\"\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;     ;:  \"The roads in Scotland,\" said one  official, \"used to have a bad name,  indeed, in respect to accidents.. No  one thought of embarking on a railway journey-unless he had provided  himself with an; accident policy of  insurance.   ;;   \" ':l\"'.\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Y;  \"The famous Dr. Norman Macleod  was once about to set off on a long  journey through the Scotch counti*.  Just as the trainSvasipulling out the  clergyman's servant put his head in  through tlie .window and said:  \"Ha'e ye ta'enari insurance ticket,  sir?'  \" 'I have,', replied the doctor.     -  \" 'Then,' replied- the servant, 'write  ye'er name on it and gi'e it. to me.  I They ha'e ah ,awful habit \"of robbin'  1 the corpses on this line.\"  'Nero and  Bis Noses.  Nero never liked a person with a  large nose. He flippantly told the sorrowing relativesof Plautus\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwhom. It  Is alleged, be killed\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtbat It was only  on Inspecting the corpse that be discovered tbat .Plautus had so lurge a  nose, and: If- It had been pointed out  before be would have certainly spared  his life. '-Life with' such a nose,\" coolly added Nero, \"would have been ample penance for any crime.\"  -A Recognized Regulator.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTo bring  the digestive organs into symmetrical  working is the aim of physicians  when they find a patient suffering  from stomach irregularities, and foi  this purpose they can prescribe notn-  ing better than Parmelee's vegetable  Fills, -wn.ch will be found a' pleasant  medicine of surprising virtue in  bringing the refractory^ organs, into  subjection and restoring him tb normal action, in which condition only  can vney perform their duties' properly-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdVon Moltke's Taciturnity.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Von Moltke's objection to tho waste  of words is illustrated by German  army officers, who tell this story:  Just before the train pulled out of  the station a* captain of hussars entered the general's compartment, and,  recognizing him, saluted with \"Guten  morgen, er ajllenz.\" Two hours later  the train slowed up at a way station.  The captain rose,-saluted, and with  another -.\"Guten morgen, excellenz,\"  left -the .train. .. Turning to one of  his companions' ,Von Moltke said,  with an expression of the greatest  disgust.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"Intolerable gasbag.\"  \"My Kidneys Are Alt Wrone I How  shall I insure best results in the shortest timo ?\" It stands to reason that a  liquid specific of the unquestionable  merit of South American Kidney Cure  will go more directly and quickly to the  seat of the tiouble than the \"pill form\"  treatment, and when it strikes the spot  there's healing  in  an  instant.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd78.  An alumnus ot St. Stephen's college  said of the late Bishop George F.  Seymour:  Bishop Seymour founded St. Stephen's and we trestsure here many anec  dotes about his wardenship.  The bishop was very fond of trees,  and one day, walking with a young  lady, he 'pointed out to her some of  the\" fine trees in the neighborhood.  She'professed great interest and delight.    She cried:  \"How the noble aspect of beautiful  trees stirs up the keenest emotions of  the soul!\" Then patting a great,  rough tree trunk, she went on, \"You  superb-oak,-\" what- would-you-say-if  you could talk ?\"  The.bishop smiled.  ''\"I believe I can be his interpreter,\" he murmured. \"He would probably say, 'I beg your pardon, miss;  I am a beech.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdRochester Herald.  PASTOR AND PEOPLE  PRAISE  A Proper Punishment.  \"You're not going to bar me out, are  you?\" the newly arrived spirit pleaded.  \"I guess not,\" 4 replied. St Peter.  \"You're the street railway magnate,  aren't you?\"  \"Why\ufffd\ufffd\ufffder\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdyes, sir.\"  \"Well, just hang on to one of those  straps over there for eternity or so.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Philadelphia Press.     \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:,'-..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\".-',\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  More Direct.  Little Bess\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMamma, I wish we had  a piano. Mamma \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd We can't afford  one, dear. You should wish for a goose  that lays golden >eggs.- Little Bess\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  But why not wish for a hen that would  lay a piano?'  DoIhk TLcm Up.; \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \"I wonder what that Chinaman  Is  doing up so late.\"  \"Shirts,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 'I   suppose.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNew  Orleans  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdritnf>H.*nom>>prgt \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd _1 ; \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Svrlss Savings Banks.  Switzerland bas 557 savings banks, In  which 1,100,540 persons, or more than  a third of the total population, are de  posltors. ,.  (PRONOUNCED Sf-KEEN)  K Marvellous and Triumphant Record  of Victory Over Diseaso.  No medicine has ever effected as large  a number of wonderful and almost marvellous cures is Psychine. It has had one  continuous record of victories over dieea*-  ea of the throat, chest, lungs and stomach.  Where doctors have:; pronounced esses  Incurable from consumption\" and other  wasting diseases Psychine steps in and  rescues numbei less people even from the  very verge of the grave. Coughs, Colds,\"  Catarrh, Bronchitis, Chills, NightSweats,  La Grippe, '.Pneumonia, and other like  troubles, all of which aro forerunners oi  Consumption, yield quickly to the curative powers of Psychine.  Mis. Campbell, one of the many cured,  makes the following statement:  I cannot refrain from telling- all who roffet  of my remarkable racorery with Psychine. In  April, IBM, I caught is. heary cold which settled  on my lungs and gradually led to consumption.  I could not sleep, was subject to night sweats,  my lungs were so diseased, my doctor considered  me Incurable, key. Mr.- Uahaffy, Port Elgin  Presbyterian Church, recommended Dr. Blocum's  Psychine to me, when. I was bring ln Ontario  After using Psychine for a short time I ate and  slept well, the night sweats and cough ceased.  Months ago I stopped taVriiur Psychine, as I was  -perfectly restored lo health and to-day I never  lelt better ln my life. Psychine has been a godsend to me. Mas. Amdbbw CiMraiLL,  Cottonwood, iSw.T.  PSYCHINE never disappoints.  PSYCHINE has no substitute.  There is no other medicine \"Just as  good.\"   ,...  I-Ionster Spider Crabs.  ' \"I have collected specimens of crabs  in all.parts of tbe world,\", said a,naturalist, \"but I shall never forget the  pleasure I experienced In securing a  monstrous specimen of;.the Japanese  npider crab, the largest ever found.  The \"combined length of the feeding  arms of this monster was more tban  twelve feet, while the body portion  was about twenty taches across. When  alive,, it weighed* about'< seventy-five  pounds. One of ...the oddest things  about tbese creatures ls their ability  to assume a disguise. -This feat they  are able to perform owing to the flexibility of their pinchers and to tbe  booked hairs and spines with which  their numerous arms are studded. By  means of their pinchers they tear off  small fragments of sponges and seaweeds. After first putting these to  their months, which contain a glutinous  saliva, tbey place them on the surface of their limbs and bodies by  sticking tbem fast with a rubbing  movement By tbis method the crab  succeeds In completely changing' Its  appearance and rendering itself Indistinguishable from' the materials common to the bottom of the sea. Whilo  crawling along lt seems as though a  portion of the ocean bed was in motion,, so close is tbe resemblance.\"  Forests of Stone.  Stone forests are found In various  parts of the world. In. many cases  they are hardened by some peculiarity  of the atmosphere and are found standing Just as they were when clothed  with green\" foliage thousands of years  ago. 'The Little Colorado river, ln Arizona, has long been famous as a locality for such finds. At one,place more  than 1,500 cords of solid stone, tree  trunks, sections, limbs and logs, were  found by tbe government surveyors.  -Most of them were slllclfled, -many  seven to ten feet ln diameter and from  twenty to eighty feet ln height. Geologists say that the\" petrified trees of  the Little Colorado were once covered  with marl over l;O00. feet ln depth.  Some of the trees have been changed  to Jasper and havo assumed various  hues; others resemble opal, and when  broken open the core Is often found  lined with crystals of the most beautiful tints. \" .'    *  Dear Mother ;,\ufffd\ufffd??*:.'--*!*^8  Your litsla ones are a coa-tast can isV 'Y^&J  r.n .~t *w--~.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ^il^     tt,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^.ii *        \\  i '    f\ufffd\ufffd\\\\  Your little ones are a cbesla&t can isV  Fall -sad.Winter weather.    Ther^wfll  catch cold.   Do yon know about Sniloh't  Con-tt-mp-ion Cure, tne Lung Tonic, and '  ivhat it hasdon-jfot so many? ,k is said,  to~fee tho orilV' teBabla tataody for all  *\ufffd\ufffdseues of the ai\/5 partsges in children:  Itis absolutely harmless and'pleasant id.  take. Itiigusrant-wd to cure otyon^ money  n returned.   Tha price is 25c per bottle,  aad all dealers in medicine sell ;-ji*-  5HILQH  TteMm-5-dr*d--s--nMbe\ufffd\ufffds5-*^  He Wins the Palm.  Many stories have been told of mean  men, such as he who used a wart for  n collar button and be whose birthday  gift to his son consisted In washing tbe  windows so that tbe lad might watch  tbe cars go, by. This man, however,  seems to .have won the palm. Thero  was an extremely-mean man-In New  Hampshire who was the proprietor of  a hotel. By his direction rules wero  posted in the hostelry forbidding almost every conceivable privilege to  those not guests of tho place. There  was absolutely no chance for the cas-  unl loafer to get newspapers, pens. Ink,  stationery, etc.- There were not even  free seats ln the office. One day be  chanced to observe a chronic loafer  gazing at tlie old clock that bung ou  tbe wall. The next day a sign was  placed over the clock. It read, \"This  clock Is for the use of the guests of the  hotel only.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSuccess Magazine.   -  ProOlarate 'Spendthrifts.  The wealth of many' of the ancient  Romans was reckoned far Into tbe  millions. Mark Antony during bis  somewhat checkered career squandered no less than $735,000,000, and Tiberius left at bis death over elgbteen  millions, which Caligula spent ln less  than a year. Records show that this  spendthrift paid $150,000 for one supper. Horace tells us that Pegellus. a  singer, could In five days spend $40,-  000, and Clodlus on a small wager  swallowed a pearl -worth nearly $40,-  000. The estate of Crassus was valued  at $8,400,000. Lucullus dined at the  rate of $8,000 a meal for several weeks.  Lentulus was worth not less than sixteen millions, and Aplcus squandered  nearly five millions of dollars in a few  weeks.  Irritating Americanisms.  One of tbe most irritating of Americanisms ls the use of \"limb\" for  \"branch.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"LImb-*_for_\"leg\"bas\"al^  ways been accepted as an Ainerlcau  prudery, but what ls tbe matter with  \"branch?\" Careful Anglophile writers  are beginning now to reintroduce,this  latter word, but \"limb\" has hitherto  been the transatlantic word with all  authors. If lt Is also old English we  shall not mind so much, but Is lt? Tbe  Joke of the verse ls at least 1,300 years  old, but how old ls the English version?\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLondon Chronicle.  5HAWA  Galvanized Steel  HINGLES  ^x^&Mm&Xiax^^  The cheapest good  They do \"shingle is the  costless  \"Oshawa.\"Good  for a century's  weather-wear. Guaranteed  for 25 years without your  even painting5\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"Oshawa\".  double-galvanized \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdshingles,  need no paint 'to 'outlast  any roofing thero .iB.  Make roofs fire-proof*,  too, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd guaranteed'in  every way .you want.-  Cheap in first cost as con-tin on wood shingles, yet  more durable than slate.  Sold under a written guarantee that really ,meanff.  something to the buyer.  Ton cant  afford any  other kind  1  I  Easy to  pat on  With a hammer,  a snips, andhorse-*  sense   anybody  tan roof buildings - '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  right with \" Oshawa '.-, Gal-    -  vanized    Steel    Shingles. *  They need no cleats.   They -.  lock on  all  FOUR sides.  '  Made in only one' grade\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  of 28-guage semi-hardened , .  sheet steel in the pat-  dented '' Oshawa''. way \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.' .  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Oshawa *?'  Shingles are  an invest-' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*  ment, rot an  expense.  ''5S**'\ufffd\ufffd**--''W^-'<^ ,  T.t-jhrptng  proof, too  More than lOOf arm  'buildings -were'  damaged in Ontario alone last year  by lightning. Not one of them  would have been harmed if  they'd been \"Oshawa\"-roofed.  These shingles insulate a building\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdmake it safe against every  element. Let us tell yon what  it will cost you to roof the  \"Oshawa   way. '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*  Get our free  book 'Roofing Eight'  before yon  Roof a Thing  m~*m\ufffd\ufffdnmH*rrHmJtmL4*tfffl  Hast Be Good.  Plalsantln offered ln payment of a  bill a gold piece which had a suspl-*  clous ring. \"Here, you've given me  one of those false coins that tbe counterfeiters have Just been arrested for  making,\" said the merchant \"Impossible,\" answered Plalsantln. \"It Is dated 1803. If It were false, sureiy It  would have been found out before  this.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGaulols.  Three *WiVes.  The Beggar\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPlease, sir, will yott  kindly assist a poor man who has  three wives to support? Tho Pedestrian\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWhy, do you mean to say yon  are a bigamist? The Beggar\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOh, no,  sir. Two of them are the wives of  my sons-in-law.  The.  PetllarFeople  *    Of Oshawa  Montreal  21-3 Craig W.  Ottawa  1 3 Sussex  Toronto  11 Colborno  Winnipeg  TO Lombard  London -  (BDundoa  Vancouver  615 Penflor  W^-Z&i<X\ufffd\ufffd!ifftXtt2&&e\ufffd\ufffdi  You cannot possibly have  a better Cocoa than 1  A delicious drink and a sustaining  food. Fragrant, nutritious and  economical. This excellent Cocoa  maintains tlie system in robust  hanlfls      nrtA  vuilii|-*wifu\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   hi AC    If    t\/fc    mmmlmi-  VUUI\/IV-7 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ftU \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd IVOWI-  winter's extreme cold.  Sold by Grocers and Storekeepers  in i-lb. and; i-lb Tins.  What Shall I Do  for this strained muscle?  RUB ON BRJSfcLY  -Johnson's:.  AnodynofinimeRt  '  M f   It wsi originated 96 years ago to  remove Inflammation and take tha  soreness out ol strains and brtslses.  14c., Uu-m timas tu much Wo. All dealars.  I. 8. JOHNSON \ufffd\ufffd CO., Boston, ltus.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBBHBEnBHBsaMHBHn  Delays Are Dangerous.  .\"But this Is so sudden! You had better give me a week to think It over!\"  \"Very well,\" dear.   And, perhaps, it  would be as well If I thought It over  I myself at the same timel\"  Breaking; In.  Mother\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDear me, the baby has swallowed a piece of worsted. Father\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  rhat's nothing to tbe yarns she'll have  to Bwallow If she lives to crow m>-  Roaffh  on  Abdul  Aala.  When Abdul Aziz, sultan of Turkey,  Waa deposed Queen Victoria telegraph- ,  ed to his captors in French, \"Soigne!, |  le bien,\" or \"Take good care of him.-'   Bi. T. A. SLOCOK, United, 179 Dof SI \ufffd\ufffd, TOBOHTB  The  -wires.'said,   \"Saighe-z   le   blen,\"  which means something very different  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnamely, \"Bleed him well,\" an error  of the-wires which reads grewsomely  I ln the light of tbe fate which befell  that unhappy monarch.  At all dealers. BOc, and 11.00 par battle.  :   if not writs to  Dr. Root's Kidney Pills ore a sure  and permanent cure for Rheumatism  Brlght's Disease, Pain ln the Back and  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd11 forms of Kidney Trouble.   2Sc psr  Box, at all dealers. . .  Cnvlnre.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Caviare is got from a Russian flsb  which ls caught by the natives on the  coast of Astrakhan. It is the roe ol  the sterlet species of sturgeon, and it  is put through a decomposing process-  before being shipped to civilized countries to be eaten.  Alexander's Epitaph.  A most suggestive epitaph Is tbat on  the tomb of Alexander the Great, \"Suf-  flclt huic tumulus, cul non sufficerat  orbls\" (This tomb suffices for him fot  ; whom the world did not suffice).  WmP'Bntmdio atvaBtflttfmtmtloac  BomhauIt*&  Has Imitators Bat No Compititors.  A Bute, Speedy and Positive Cure for  Curb, Splint Sweeny, Capptd Book,  Strained Tendons,   rounder, Wind  Tuffs, an! all lameness from SpiTis.  Eintbone  and other boar tumors.  Cures all sUn diseases or Tansltes,  Thrush,   -Diphtheria.: Bemorea  aU  Bunches from Horses or Cattle,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*e \ufffd\ufffd HumtnRemtM-y for RheumaUsr\"-  . Sprains, Sore Throat, ola, It Is lDrslub  \"ETery I--\"'- -----    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -   j  bottle ot Csustlo BsXssjn sold Is  Warranted to kIto tjitlslicuon.  Price Sl.KO  per bottle. Bold by druratsts. or sent by ex-    ..~... \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd4 v-Ufrgists, v. n..\ufffd\ufffd ... _\ufffd\ufffd  press, chuges paid, with Cult directions tor  . Its use. t**TSend for descrlpUra circulars.  IcUsttmonlAla, eto.  Address \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,  1 TheLawrence-WlinsnuCo.,Toroato,Ont.  --111.  -'<*i  W.    N.    U.    No. 626. sii-n-i  THE LEADER, MOYIE, BRITISH COLUMBIA.  .Published in the interest of the people  of Moyie and East Kootenay.  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdP. J. SMYTH, Publisher.  ..^JNJON igfijUB IiAQEI,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.BATB8 OF SUBSCRIPTION.  One Year ',.' :\"....\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.,.'   ..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd12.00  SATURDAY, MARCH,   9.1907.  KEEP  LEAD   DUTY  UP.  It is not at all likely thivt   the east'  - tfern   Canadian    piint   manufacturers  i will have any influence with the Fed-  eri\ufffd\ufffdl government in   persuading   that  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd body to lower tlio tariff on Ihe lead  they wish to import from foreign coun  ' tries. Tho lead industry in Canada is  )n Iho einbyo state aud is now .only  getting on its feet.   Therefore no good  ' reason can be urged for the lowering  df tariff on lead, and it would be most  'detrimental to the lead   industry,   lt  - would doubtless result in the lowering  of the price Qf  lead  and   this  would  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd cause a number of tlie lower grade  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdmines to shut down, hamper the manufacturer of lead and generally' paralyze and important industry.  ; Tbe Bossland Miner prinls the following table of the tariff rates now io  force: Dry red lead, 5 per cent; dry  white lead, 30 per cent; white lead  ground in oil, 35 per cent; bar and  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdsheet lead, 25 per cent; all forms of  manufactured lead, not otherwise provided for,*30 per cent,     The   British  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd preferential tariff Is, bad in bars and  sheets, 15 per cent, manufactures of  lead 20 per cent; dry red lead, and  Dfange red lead free; dry white lead,  .'Y20 per ceut; white lead ground in oil,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 25 per cent..  '*<-, Lu \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  ,'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     j   l-W-i\"  ::\ufffd\ufffd, The anti-piss bill does not  control  7 --Ihe use of tie passes.  That a deliberate conspiracy was  formed among the officers of the penitentiary and the detectives to implicate the leaders of the Western Federa  tion of Miners, in tbe assassination of  ex-Governor Steunenberg, and that  the conspiracy was to be, backed by  false evidence obtained by threats and  bribes, is in effect tbe charge mado by  sieve Adams ia court. Seems like  preliy despicable work, dosen't it?  Big, Dairy  for Creston.  F. K. Hurry a few (l.iya ago , com  pleted the purchase of ten acres of  land near Creston station. He has u  crew of men at work now preparing  for building in connection with a dairy  business; which he intends to establish  there. Mr. Hurry intends to start out  with a herd of ooe hundred cows, and  will do business under tho name of the  Dominion Dairy Oo.  \"H? .'It is necessary that a ' man's wife  -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.Bljould \"beef\" when he pomes home at  . pis-ht \"corned.\"  =~;HeaVen will possess small attraction  for aoipe women if there are  no' bar  gain counters-  ' i   *  n-tt-  ':,'. Though in-tli6 illuminating business,  the Standard Oil Company's motto is:  \/'Keepjt darlv\"s  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd If you meet a man whose appearance and manner you do not like, it is  dollars to doughnuts that he dosen't  Jike yours.   So there you aro.  Moyie Public School.'  Report for February,  SEMOR DIVISION\".  General Proficiency.  * Fifth Class:   Arthur Crowe. 3327.  \"     ~Senior~Fourth\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdClass:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'Christina  Blackburn 3370; Martha Keaney, 3366;  \"   William   Attwood,    2915;     Russell  Hawke, 2741;    Mabel Lutner, 2077;  Edith Hawke, 1886;   Lillian Sohulz**,  1702; Ethel -Brenton U36.  Junior Fourth \"Class: Cecil Larson,  249Q;-Harry Crowe, 221Q; Alverna  -. Brenton, 1775.  \/Third Class: 'Nina Attwood, 2442\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Wellington Brenton, 2177: Oscar  Burch, 3077; Dorothea Blackburn,  1947; Annie 8aville, 1877: . Loretla  Brown, ifH8; Vera. Brown. 1542;  Louise Earner, 1392; Frank .Conrad,  1272; Jamea.Batt.QU.  Number of days absent i  J. Bitt, 10;  F. Conrad, flf, I, E'mer, 7;  M. Lutner, 5; U.\"Brenton, 3J;  II. Crowe,   J;  L. Schul-*5**,   1;    N. Attwood, \ufffd\ufffd;   A.  Crowe, ^; W. Bronton', -J; A. Saville, -\ufffd\ufffd  DEPORTMENT.  L. Slmer, 98; C. Blackburn, 98; M.  keaney, 98; L. Schulze, 98; E. Hawke,  :98;W. Brenton, 98;'H.Crowe, 97;  O  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBurch, 97; F. Conrad, 97; VV.'Attwoo I,  96; E. Brenton, 96;  M.   Lutner,   96;  . N.Attwood, 96; J. But, 96; L. Brown,  '95; V. Brown, 95; A.  Crowe,   95;   D  BUckouro, 95: A. Saville;95; V. Brenton, 94; C Lirsou, 94; R. Hawke, 93,  ' JUNIOR. DIVISION.  .   S-mior Second Class:   Roy Burch,  '1408; Roy   McEichern,   J340;   John  , Blackburn\", 1209; Willie Stewart,, 1149;  , E.lward Gibbons, 1133;   Ev'i  Stinson,  * 1029; Jimmj Robertson,   613;   Jenny  \"Patton,5SS.  .\"; . Jimmy Kobertson and Jenny Patton  ,- were absent more than a week.  ,;'   Junior Second  Class!   Teed Crowe,  -970; George F.-ro^lia,863; Bella'Crowe,  <787; Li\/.*4i**Siville,.379.  Fir.xt Class;    EJdie Lutner.-1092;  '\"Arthur   Blackburn,    1055;   Tammer  .\/BIwAnls, 897; Irene Elmer,700; Mary  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-M-fJ-iiftiv, \ufffd\ufffdi)4; Clara Whitehead, 537;  i\/i.-rt H\ufffd\ufffd'Jjacl),*J70.  3t.  Joseph's  Convent.  i?p<.son, b. c'.  hoarding and Day School conducted by tbe Sisters of St. Joseph, Nelson  B.   C. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   Commercial    and   business  courses a specialty, Excellence and  swift progress charaoteai-se each department. 'Parents should write for  particulars. One month assures the  public of the thoroughness of, the  Sisters- methods of teaching. Terms  commence January, April aud Sept.  Pupils aro admitted during term. *  MINERAL A-OT.  '   (**OUSf F.)  Cektifioa'-Jb of Imi-roybsients.  NOTICE.  \"Cambrliin\" Mineral Claim, situate In the  Fort Steele Miali)(- Dlvibiou of East Kootenu>  District.  Where located:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAdjoining and to west end o'  thu 'Iroivu Granted mineral claim i'Lake Shore'  at Moyie, Bust Kootenay, D, O.  \"TAKE NOTICE that I, Charles A. MaeKay  F. M. C. ho. B. 762 actiuK as agent for The Black  MaeKayS'liiing Company, Limited, Non Per  sonal Liability, Free Hiner's Certiflo No, B.' 6%  intend, 'sixty days from tne date hereof, t,  aRply' to the Mining Recorder for a Certlficat  of Improvements,- for the purpose of ohtalnin,  a Crovra Grant of the tCbove claim.  And further take  notico  that  action, unde  section 37, must bo comraencod  before the issuance of such Certificate of Improvements.  D**.te4 this 12th day of February, A. D. 1907.*  CHARLES A.MACKAY.*  1 KOTICE.  NOTICE is hereby given tbat 30 days ofto  date, I intend to apply to the Houorabfc Con  mlssionerof Lands and Works for a speoir  llceqse to \"cut and carry away timber from 'tin  following described lauds, situate In Kay  Kootenay, tq wit:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCommencing at a po\ufffd\ufffd  planted qii the North East bank of the Nort.  West Fork ot the Elk River above tho Canyo  and situate near the Northern Boundary of 1  Podbielanclk's coal claim, thenco East -1  chains, thenco North' 80 chains, thence Wet;  80 chains, thence South 80 chains, thence Eas  -10 cbclns to point of commencement. -  Dated the IGlh day of January, 1U07  .   *,  .    .-    ,  .    -       - A.J. FARQUHARSO*  NOTICE.  NOTICE is hereby given that 30 days afle  date. I intend to apply to the Honourable Coir'  missioncr of Lands uud Works for a specli,  license to cut aud carry away timber from ' th  following described' lauds si tun to in Eft5  Kooteuay, to wit:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCommenci'iK at a pok  planted about oue mile South of Lizard Creel  aud oue mile and a half SVt-st of the Crow'  JfPsf Southern fiailwoy, thence Went 80 chain!-  thence South 80 chains, thence East 80 cliainu  thence Noith 80 chaluB to point of commence  ment,  Datpd the 2fith;day of January 1907. ',  A- D. MACDONALD  by A. J. FARQUIIARSON, Agenl'  -BUY^YOUE  Oi^^rs,  G&,zzxcl\\r  FROM  A B, Stewart  & Co.  Agent for  Crows'  Nest,  'Steam Laundry.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   jiiiiii-jiojiiiiiii.imJMMiiiinjwi   I..J.IH*  * \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTUE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'  1.  I. O. O. F.  Wtldey -Lodge No. 44.  Meets Tuesday evenings in McGregor  hall on Viotoria street. Sojourning  Odd Fellows cordially invited.  A. MacFarlanr, .     F. J. Smyth,  Noble Grand. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   Secr'y.  DBSAVI.NJEB BROS,    Props.  Lur.,e sample .-room in connection  with house for commercial men. Best  of accommodations.  Headquarters for  Commercial and Mining Men.  Queens AVBNt:g,     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Movie, b. c  Under New  Management.  C0SM0P0L1T0N  HOTEL.  P, J, HIGGINS,    Prop.  The Miners' Headquarters  St. Epgene toclgeNo. 37  K. Of P.  Meets every Thursday  -vening    in   McGregor  hall at '8 c'clock.   Visiting brothers invited.  C. ,A. Foote, Thof, Makbden,  Chancellor Com. K. R, and S.  Moyie   Miners'  Union  No. 71 W. F. ofM.  Meets in McGregor hall every Saturday evening. Sojourning members  are cordially invited to attend.  J. L. Gibbovs,  President.  Jas,  JRoberts,  Secretary  MOYIE AERTE NO. 855  Meets third Monday of each\"month  in McGregor Hall.  b\\J. SMYTH,  Worthy Pres.  J. H. HAWKE,  ' Worthy Secr'y.  Harvey,    McCarter &  Macdonald.  Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries, -Etc.  Cranbrook,   -   -   B. C.  W. F. GURD,  BARRISTER, SOUOIXOR, BTC  3RA.NBB.QOK. .. B. C  O. H. DUNBAR  *  -        '     \"'-     \/  Jarrisler, Solicitor, Notary Public, Etc  Cranbrook, B. O.  OR. F. B. MILES,  Jranlbrook, B, O.  ^55555,,\"5,-\"l5,555\",^\"^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWP\"\ufffd\ufffdS555>555555>SB5\ufffd\ufffd  aeorge H. Thompson,  Baebistks, So^rcj-jop, No  tary Puauo, &C-  5RANBROOK,    - British Columbia.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.. ;\\   TmZ  W. R. BEAT  *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ^\ufffd\ufffd-  -   - X.  Embalmcr and Uudeftakerr  Phone 89. CRAN3R00K,  Wm. Jewell-  Express and Gener-  al Delivery Buai-  ness, Livery and  Feed Stable.  keave Orders at  Gwynne's Store,  VI0YIE -        British Colutn'.iia.  ^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdii|p|!*!i  IMPROVED  PACIFIC COAST  .    SERVICE.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   Leave Nelson 7:30 a. m.  Arrive Vancouver 11:50 noon  Arrive Victoria 5;45 p, rp,'|  ONE NIGHT EN ROUTE,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_\ufffd\ufffd*t\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd=\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Vancouver=Viotorift\ufffd\ufffd Route*  S. S. PRINCESS VICTORIA,  Victoria-Seattle Route,.  S. \ufffd\ufffd. PR NCESS.MAV.  STANDAitD SJiEEPIISG CAR.  Nelsonr-Slocan  Oity.  '     Berths $1.00,  Car   can,  be  occupied   at   Nelson  Union depot at 9 p. m.  J. Attwood, Agent, Moyie.  J. 8 CARTKB,  Dlst, Pass. Agt.  Kelson,  E. J. COYLE,  -Ain't Gaul. Pans, Agt  Vancouver.  PREST PHOTO CO.  Ckanbjiqok aro Mqyuj  GREAT    BARGAINS  J.7ST  the canadian bank  of Commerce  B. E. \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdV'ALKER, President  ALEX. LAIRD, General Manager  A. H. rRBLAIfP, gnperlntendent of  Branches  Nearly ail of the Lots in the Moyie Town*  site have been placed in our hands  for Sale.   Here are some  SNAPS!  ^360  Buys lot aad large building, suitable  for house or barn, on Victoria Btieet.  . $x,soo  Lot and seven room house,   House  well finished and jn good lopfttion.  $500  Lot in  center  of  business*'district  with small building. '.'  -      $400  Will buy four room house und two  lots.   $200 down and balance on time.  $300  . Two room house and ' lot, < in good  location,' House rents for $8 a month.  $700  Largs warehouse and lot on Victoria  street.  $4,000  ' Large boarding house close to mine.  All furnished and ready to move in.  $800  Three houses bringing in a rental of  $34 a month.  $850  Seven  room   house on   Tayistock  street, * -  Good residential lot in  Farrell  addition.  $350  Two lots and   two room  house  on  Lake street.  Eleven resideptsal lots* in lake Shore  addition.'  $eoo  House and lot, and garden.  $75  Will buy good residence lot,  $175  Let in EarreU addition.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-    $500  Foui  room house 'and lot._ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Good  location,  Eight lots in Lake Shore addition at  a bargain.  $135  Good lot in Goyethment' addition.  Tljese are only a few of the many bargains we- have.  Just.choose the lot or piece of property you desire and call  on us,. -Ten chances to one it is on our\"list, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  The time to buy Real Estate is when the market is On  rise,   Moyie,is a great camp,   Why not own a home in it?  ,,_, ..UT..  \"si        '\"lv .  FARRELL & SMYTH,  Insurance.    Real Estate.    Collections.  (ANHAT1  i       -        \ufffd\ufffd  Comfortable  Rooms and  Best of ;  Table Board.  Summers & Thompson,  PROPllILTORS..  *Bwrnnvji&wmmhmmi'jiiji minami ih\ufffd\ufffdim\ufffd\ufffd i-   mi  A. L McKILLOP  -nt-i  NELSON, *  sstsmes.  \"fflssaaa  B. C  'iW<,  B  O. F. DE3AULNIER  DBAIER IK  PROMPT DELIVERY.  Gt leens' At e.     MOYIE  P. BURNS & GO  * WHOLESALE ANU   RETAIL  MEAT    MERCHANTS  Fresh and Oured' Meats, Freeh  Fisb; Game ani Poultry. We  supply only tbp bpst. Your  trade solicited,  WABKBT8   .  In   all the  Principal  Cities and   Towns   in  British Columbia  MOYIE, B.' C.  Sy^^!?.  STOP AT THE  COSMOPOLITAN  HEAD  OFFICE, TORONTO  ESTABLISHED 1867  Paid-up Capital, $10,000,000  Rest, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd - - 5,000,000  Total Asgets, - 113,000,000  Brandies tlirpughout Canada, and in the United State? wi England  BANKING  BY  MAIL 8s  Business may be transacted by mail -^ith any biunch  of the Bank, Accounts may be opened and deposits  made or withdrawn by -SWi-V Eyery att-ention is paid  to out-of-town accounts.  CRANBROOK BRANCH.   ji'K MALPAS. MGR  J. T. MARION  UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER  Late cf the New Eng'and Undertaking  Parlors, Spokane, Wash. ,  CRANBROOK,  3C  Granbr ook Go-Operative Stores  \\LIMITED.  rN0 CURE-  NO PAY.  If your watch doeg'not give  entire satisfaction\" \"after we  have repaired it your mapey  will be cheerfully refunded.  W. P. BROMLEY,  - MQYIE WATCflMAKEE.  A 999*\ufffd\ufffd9999999m6*#GGG9999999999\ufffd\ufffd99999999$9999&9.99.9999  MOYIE    HOTEL, j  . r IP. f:joemsiom \"I  Thw Hotel is New and well Furnished \"The \ufffd\ufffd  Tables are Supplied with the Best the |  Market affords. The Bar is Filled with \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  ^      tjio Best Brands of Liquors and Cigars,  I  | HEADQUARTERS FOR COMMERCIAL  % AND MINING MEN  jjj  MOTIB - , -        -     \"   - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd BRITISH COLDStBIA V  GGGGG&ze *GGeGGWGG*GeGG49?99G*GG999\ufffd\ufffd*9999999'iW\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd9im '  Moyie  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd y^L. ii - ii    WHEN IN  ORANBRQCK  B. H, BMALIi) Managcp  Good rooms, good tables a,nd bar  and first class sample rooms.  As m\".da by the present brewer ti admittedly   the  Best Beer in East Kootenay. With tlie Beet Maltand  tbe Purest Spring Water it is unexcelled \/or cjuatity,    ,  Insist on baying Moyie Becfi  Bottled and Draft Beer.  E.fi. SWYNNE  Oigafs,        Tobacco, Confctionery  Fruits, E!c  FARRELL BLOCK,  JULIUS MUELLER, Proprietor,  MOYIE, B. C,  \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdo',. -t-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-   '     A..J","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"Frequency: Weekly<br><br>Titled \"The Moyie City Leader\" from 1898-04-23 to 1898-12-31. 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Smyth","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"}]}}