{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0305668":{"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP":[{"value":"7ed7d702-6e5b-4679-b422-38418ed1e09c","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":"1903-09-26","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\/1.0305668\/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":" \u25a0<b\n\u25a0fi\n\u25a0M\nS.'\"Ss^-\"\n\u25a0-\u25a0*SJ-.'K  .^bV\nP;   ll'llf   ,,'\u25a0\n'\u25a0(fS \u25a0' fi-'S?-\n111 i':'l-'l\n3 a5*.vif'W--3    l*-i      5*p3.  ',   iji,\n5\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0&?\u2022 SSf  S'S   s*t     ?\n#*.\nroK$\u00b0 2;T;\n**%v\nft'r\n;.--3;=.i.t;--Cr=;^  ^.'*^^-;^-bv''-.-v^'^\u2022,'^\u25a0^.-^-\u25a0\u2022 ^\"'^ v*- '\u2022-\u2022\" >~.v, idii. 11 LKb   Hi M , fT  f A I \u2022\n' , ' '* 5\n!'\n' \u201e -\u2022'\n\u2022A a ,\n',-iV   i\nV.l\/\/\n' r, \u2022.) e   C\nS'w t-s ' fA\nk\n-V.O m\/ ft. G\u201e S\u00a3.PTKMBER,26, 1903\nt V,iin,3  .'LU ly  (he    i(.'!l.-;    ,\/'   ih,.\ni'\"0-.b.iiii'\u201e\u201e.-] r. p, joir.oti-.v j-bipinsr-r,\n_ -it-.-raubr^ik ilmtT. ?'. 'bibb'\"rtbb\n\";,';*, \".'j \u25a0 vbioJly 111 iTrv,r ,,,.,] ^^ ,,,..\u201e_,,-],.\n,\".y, i ori .e.-l by  PiKm,'   7,\"iIK.-\n8\nP\nHOW TO MARK VOUR  BALLOT.\n~\" ^   i    The irowt  enthusiastic   meeting ii:\nTHOMAS   CAYEN\n-iZiir.d   ;,;o\n-'rf-'h. ?.!r. C.\nf?\n^f>\u20ac\u20ac\u20ac\u20ac\n'ilk\n.  ci.p-niru--\nst  idei-ipb).'\nen, and  three ,\n'\u2022Upp'-.rti'i= were    on II i, I\nX  j ,>''''* il'id tilei;- -iyi-U.;;,.., r\/jiiJd  *,,,,    p,, !       \u00a7\nWitiad,^   Th-rroi''.n..  3k,  biii   -,obed   the! $\nbp_- bo.'it'.in. nb i.-F only live   c;r:;i:.e-r-;  out! j*:\n> -i.    bA.b'i'.'i!   ',   LiboMl :iii<1 .'uiip-' l]i\n\" \u25a0'\u25a0 i ' '. Dr. bins-, ,u.d t:,c-  P-i-.r\" w.151 jg\n\u25a0 ri\\{\".< Un   t.Po -(.p.. pu.-po-.ebl.'f ,,^,|b;i .      '   \"\"'\nd:,'t'-.P cay-lb\nM .D.ahPe;,   I pt.yr.b  o L--.,!i i,i!o\n.,!*') -.-Pill i.   in    lt    -.n-Lbt    \u201ee.-;\\'[,tlllp\nj ii-.in:ii..:i .;, ;. padhiicii Joe Marti.i.\n:! now d't;Pp.i iho iio.*t- by ::a\\ big\n..li-.I lu-\u00ab(...-\u25a0 in bli.juk lli.'A \"J;.b i-\nPti.'d lor Lhe Ictdorbp., -,r >\\jf. \\A,h\"TA.\np.'irts\n' Labormp ni'ji), yon iaive now an\ni)pportun,ity to pat a man from your\nown ranky in the lojpslatuie, at Vic-\nl-.^ria, arid it is up to you to' take ' advantage of it,. Mark your bult'iU on\n'.hdobei ^.>rd for Thos. L'aven.,\nA. ri. tiooi'eve,  C6:ice\"r\\.'.ii'\n1\nI\n*i*\n%\nM   |inM,e   I.O.O.V.  hell   lust   Sattuday\n|j   ] evening.    SUnding   room   \\y.is   at   a\nI!\nc J\n8\n'i^^s^^s^^^m^^^^^^s^^^s^j^^s^s^Si^ ^ssssisBKaaasalf]\n. J. H. KING\n.-5\n'B\n'\u25a0JSSS^KM^\u00ab?^^iSSE^iSS3t^^\n.-(Into for  Kosi-luii'f,   bas   been   niaeJo  a\nCANADIAN   BANK-. ^\n'Paid Up Capital: $8,700,000. \\\nReserve,   \",   \u25a0- 8,000,000.\nDorrwils Uoceivcd.    Present JUie of'interest a per cent\nIliHBiiilfl:; BliWCH-       ' ' FlCa\n\"CranbrooK, Sept. 21st, 1903.\nEditor Moyie Leader: Eegarding- the letter\nwndi-|in. the Cranbrook Herald'. of the I7th under the\nheading* \"Engineers Explain,\" Signed by TV S.\nGill, Secretary, wherein the inference is giyen\nthat members' of the B. of L\u00ab E. a,re opposed to\nMr. Oaye'n, we, the undersigned locomotive en-\n\u2022 pollingpi\u00abce. 'a. v. Sutherland win gineers at Or'anbrook take exception to the, a.r\nmember of J'r'unijr ^r\u00abjI3riJo'*-\u00ab yabinet,\nlie lake,-;\u25a0 tin,- portfolio' of ^provincial\nsocr.eiiry and niitiifter uf   educalioin\nAt the election iu Moyie next Sutur-\nD. J. J\"'!iner\"-j-.lore \\vill   bo  used'bid   a\n! be deputy  returning  oflieer, (and  Ed\nSSIati.l-:^-^--\n5,\n^^BaKSSSSBEEHSBa^Bffia^^\n?\n.\u00a3\nfy\n**#--\u00ab\n8\n\\J\nJil.VV:6ll.\n'\u00ab rf>, \u00a3M*\nIjcpai Estate, Commissi on, Insurance and*|\n| ' Financial Agents.   Brokers. ^\nOnly tiwSironp^A^dMorb   riebnblc   \u25a0\"*\n^bnilii:     ?-i)\u2022\u25a0-\u2022*i -;    t'-J**^-1-\n!>'iird bee yill bo hi a clerk.\nThc Conservative committee rooms\narc now open every afternoon and\nevening, ami vb-itois are always wei-\ncoinc.\nif Ab,\n...pbVecouiaeinb.\n:,|Mi.i.-.-    ttepreji'-y.ledi.    bimnc\nalio\nII, at otil'-e*\ntil'.Ml'-tHUi\nMOYIE, S. C. p\nXiStSSSSS\nc-*.*j-_r\u00bb^- *\nirnper\nr\\prJAVL, tAulhcrimn\n(WPI'lAL, Ct'-U'-l   tip)..\nyanaa&t\n)? I ,OdO,000\n^ i\ntide, as it is MISLEADING AND . UN AUTHOR-\nIZSD by the B. of L. E,   as a body, \u25a0 It is well\nknown   that  labor organizations-; or unions,\n! especially the B. of L. E., as an order, or union,\nThe .Liberals win hold a meeting; do not take any part in politics.   Mr. Gill?s  ar-\nin.ho.baii^hiy^euu),. | tible is not in error whe^ fee says, in effect,, that\"\nNeWM..:,t.n.irket.* i^g gf of L. E. as a body has  taken 4no \u00abpart\n?,Ie.-=-b-.   Ibiiri**   .'c  yTnPiPP   of  Crar---, ', . j -\nb^uicbaveeM^Kb. a m-at maiket m! whatever in p&.rty poiixics or giver, any prom-\ntbe j-\\rrc\u00bb bWicmd are .--oiiciun.^ \u00bb| iscto supi)ort Mr. Caven as* a body.   Mr. Gill\n! was simply overzealo'us in the, interest of the\nI candidate lie favors, But we;'locomotive engi-\nineers at Cranbrook, as individuals believe that\ni\nIMr. Caven'will best represent our interests, a's\n;he is a member oi: organized labor, and in case\nj'of his election would'safely guard our interests\n; in the legislature.   Therefore, we bespeak for\nia;:    Tuesday  evening   was  in   every j ^jjjx your eameSt-SUppOrfc   aiid VOte.\nshare Of the public patronage.\n\u201e   LOCAL   NEWS,\n0. .1.   J dii)-on   his   intnni'5 !  homo\nfr wn hi-i .-.'Hii-neiA ,,>uti.-i^\nMr-\nJolici    i?!.i(.'h burn   v. .1-1   do-vpn\nfrom Kin.beiloy on   a 'visit, for\ni,.\nTiic, d nice   pA  tlie   K-u'eaay   hulel\nHPPP OiTlcE,TOKOnO\u2022   9^^^, apd   Gen. M.,:.\nT.b MKKRlTT.Preb.    V*' W MO^*T Chiol Insprcor.\nP II s b   Visual Gen. Manager.    W.MUi    .   \u00bb,\nbr.-y\nv,*.iy a success.\nA. li. Trw-o o.' .\u2022fpukiint'  i3  -p-endir-;\n| a few days in town and i-J   stcp-pinj;   nt.\n*}\u2022 : tho Kootenao .\n? j     The- w^ter in the bke\n\"JOil\ni \u2022 >0   C u. t.\nFnlhs\nChii'plBROOK\n'.riiii-s.'-i'tt.'J.\nA\nr.a.\nHA'\n7ljs\"^VV\"KTMJiXt--Ii>,*\u00ab-rt'sirt1Uivri-d au deposit.\n,   \u25a0      11 \u25a0      ,.      r   r.n. ..?.'     bulled   fAa-le:   unt.\n-Pd, nvtbbvblo in idl   l'-ui?   in   (.iitJ.oi!..     A^-^-\n'. *,*\u201e:,- iVentioti given io. celled ior.J:.\n\"\"^  p, Hi MARSH, Mimagor.\n,   ......   .-..-\u25a0-.   \u25a0:.* vh'ii^i  ^v-i----'-*1-\n\u25a0\u00ab.- -**- *--- -^\\Ti:--3\nT.'V V, . b.   PA,'OS   b.A\nJSJoconb\nTin    11 ~j;.'bru.   rf.::ulay   Schcol\n.tvp.{ fe-sula: st-niccs   vbii be combined\ny ; iu \u2022'* ipeoi.ii inven   .erviee  g;i  J.-r.n..f,y\n'   l   v\u00a3i\\W.\u00a3 A. i.u hii;l.    Ab nb\nj'a'.t:-ii'i.\n'^\n\u25a0Si\ns    1\nV\nC\" TO 1.1,'\n\u00a57 alter Edwards,\nBen. Xvlurgatroid,\nOhas. Mag-ee,\nA. Jar dine,\nl-T. A3 Ohaput,    ,   -\nJ- H. Casla&e,\n33. Gr, Brown,\n.J, M. Robertson<\nrf\u2014~7* 1\" \"Si     J\n:? s^i'V-v\n \u201e.-, \u201e,r-r-*\u00ab.*\u00ab*\njft.-u-ims,\nW. Neil.\nE. G. Ruiiley,,'\nW. A. E,ose,\nJohn Fennessey,\nOl?.as. Yeandle,\nI, T. Sarvrs.\nIf. Boyal,\nD, Drain,\n*..\u00a3        *      3--? r-: --\"*. r* 17*\nly. Muni'oe.\npiemiurn a:id tlio cr^v.-d v.'ti;\npaid, close attention to tho ppea'-ier\nThfjr_oJ^'ore a uuod nuiribi-r' cf Indie.-:\noru-ent.' A. IA >Licdon-j.Id, president\n(if thc ?.loyie Coi.sprvritP,-o ..-socin tion,\noflii'iated as ch.iirman and introduced\ni Jio diiTorent .-jpertkers. .Berfidod the\nohairman on lhe platform were Tho.?,\ndaven,, \u2022 W. A, tSIncdouald, F.J't. Simp-\n-\u2022\u25a0.n, A. VP..Si:tbev!,'.n.b I>. ,J. I'Amor,\n1','d JiiP. and F, .1. Mmylh.\nWhen Isfr. Otveii io**o lo spe-ik he'\nwa-: yretled with a hearty applnuao.\nMr. Caven i.s a plain, eassy speaker, lie\ndid not talk at' any \"real . Icirgth or\npluiige into tlie dcep-fr issues, prc-\n\u25a0.eriin^ to U-avo those in the hands, of\nMr. ?,Iacdon:iid, who war. to follow him.\ntie explained bow be o.iir.o, to enter\nthe nice, mid wlial he would if elected,\nand there was little doubt in.his mind\nbut be would. He had beeu%aresidenL\nof the district since 18(}8 aud thought\nbid reputation would hear close inspection. He spoke well of Dr. King\nnnd said be held him in high esteem\nas a. physician and gentleman.' He\ncoiibidored,, however, that he was more\nclosely allied and hud more, in common with tlie working people 'ot the\ndistrict than the doctor did and was\ntherefore more entitled to' their support in this election. When be finished speaking he was lite rally, deluged\nwith the bouquets which were showered\nupon him by the ladies who were present. A handsome bouquet was also\npresented to Mr. Mncdn'nidd of Nelpon.\nA. YV. Sutherland, principal of tbe\nMoyicsehool, made'a neat speech in\nwhich he ' eulogized the difibrent\npi link-* in tlio Conservative platform.'\nand-wound up by painting a ludicrous\nword picture of tbe two candidates in*\npue con Ies i.\nAn invitation had been extended to\nDr. Kirie, the Liberal candidate, to be\npresent, but it was impossible far him\nlo be th'^ro, so his, place\"- was filled by\nF, E. Himpson, who spoke fur the allotted half hour. Simpson knew bo\nwild up against a bard proposition.\nbut b\" waded iu and did admirably\nwell under the circumstances. He\nreceived a good hearing, and did not\n.-*ay nnvthiiiK that offense could be\ntalk en to.\n\\V. A. Macdonaid   K. C.; of  Kelson,\n! was the last, speaker, and was   the- star\ni oi tb.e evening. Macdonaid is a strong,,\nj t'urci-able speaker and   had  everything\nl hi-j own way from   beginning   to  end,\n| lie handled both Dominion   and Provincial politics with   case,   and when\nsomo   of the   local   Liberals   tried   to\n' \"butt iu'; and tangle him he  disposed\nof'them one by   ono,   in   short   order.\nHe    considered   AIcBride  thoroughly\ncompetent man to nave  at  tho  head\nI oi a-Tail 3;  a.-vd   I bought   ho must be\n! .-.early right when u \u2022 il eral lieutenant\nior er.P.c-i   unor.   a  Conservative\n13\na-Tc*wir\u00bb^u.B '-~- -~-^\u00bb-\u2014.-  .^\u00ab.^..-.\u2014,...\u2014 \u2014^^\n'D'e* *j'., .I2\u00abicc!i'-,\nG. A. Kin.-; at: 1 bis men are g.nt::H.\nVi.tt't-.s lEi'Bri.-tci-t'e!.\nUOVO!\nin take tlie   k-atl.\nI.ilei.i1* o: the d:.\n! Mi-\nIIt-   .cookc   ol  thc\nir.ee and of Josepk\nin,   whom   b.e   en'pivalicaily  de\nclared would bo lender   in   ct\ntuey\ncn\\:nnioci:, \"..--\n.PIRB INSUEANOB AGENTS.\nCUSTOMS IblOKKb\nAy; i^ales, Perfect Protection,   Before Inswing\nCrtmuare Ow Rates.\ni , - \u25a0\u2022 \/       i x *   .\na Abu waijb. raiytlViiig, skvU^a ,-^- -\n.\u2022ii'j very nicely   with   their\nI'-olIowiiiT pro lhe nuir.bor of   '.(Uers | got ^nto power.    He .-aid tbat  Martin\nv;xi not dead : that bt* v,-a-; tlie l.veliest\nn the\nhe* i\nI , , .      .*' I l,'i , ,rr.*i ;\\\nLU v-      *_, I \u00bb      \u2014 * L\u00bb ^ *- .11.\n:i'.-t';jtraU)\nr.b\nii~n b*-t\nrhev ; C'ii-.nbi'jjA riding\nThi-:\no-.ri'.je\n.'.-r\niii.-h Colt'.ivl\nl. U-'UlV\nMr.\nnuine\n,'b   will   be  inalailed   this:\n. tion, ne::t ^ati-rday  October L-iti\nva-v ; M:i'-donald   spolre   at   leivjlb    on   thc\ntdec ' lend tarAb'uesLK.n  and tbat it 'vas tho\n.mieobed tanP. and not a   bonus   that\nb.'!, and  v.bL'ii   \\\\ns is completed   they\nwill rep.'i.\" ':\u2022'\u2022\nC:-.\n\u2022\u25a0ir.\nPerl  ;:'teeP\nV-yie.\n.he piY pie v.'.tnlt-o,\nThre-;   olicir1,  vr:\":   gi on   for  Mr,\nCa-oi; and liie '>.\"-\nAkJ\n>*  a... jC*. \u2022 v\"J*i.   * -ri\n'.i,)::;ing-i\n.|;o  mi:::-\n,;l'.-3.\n'.-.-.  ?:.:\\i\\ .\u25a0-.-.v.-.'O i\\: A..c . !.\\\nTiiore is yet   a  chaiKe for ; yrjrv3. ,pc\nbe;;,,';' O'pcucd   Lei\"or?  anew ] y.Audii'.;-.\ni It van and\n,' id\nb<'-' Ca-'Oi; and liv:'J'\\\"--e:',..,i!:vc party, and\ni'jo! lhe meetinp va-* oh so.! -\\ith the  slog\nan\nr.\u00ab!~\" \"\u00bb\u2022\u00ab\u00bb*\"\nZ^\nt'.v.-^    |i',|\"   I t^Tt?\" fc*l     .   M    d\n-\"\"\u25a0'\"\u25a0sl T\n7\"7\"-bS^S7^\u00ab^^S^S^^^^\n' .- 7. v ' ._ w-<.>.,\u2022 J\"      ' ti ,'.-\u2022\nFit\na\n''^\u2014:\n. jjJSF^- 1\np. bKSA.UX.'NtTi'.t Jt)'-<>3'\nlyubo spmplc lOuin ::>_\nwith botboforcnnina-viyai\n'Of accommedabour:,\n.' i\nriie.latedt thing in   -.\n. \"Boots; -.'atiid\" Sh\"o.esv\n\u2022 flats and. Caps; \u25a0\n.'.' 11-,   '  .. \\l>  TAltii'! . I\nTbe lead   tari'T question   is   :tiil   a ;\n..i'b'.u-Ming issue iiiA.'ritiob Columbia. g,U ,\nI woo ib'arPVand not :y.l.!Oin.s   that- was i\n;a>Ped.fyr   from    iii?'  Liber-.yi   ^dyorn- j\n1 irbn..,    Livti,   ihe   people 'were   lt:rned ;\n.  .ii.\n7-1\n'\/ i\n\u25a0A\n* \u25a0*\u25a0  i\ni 0\nun'\n('.\u25a0ii l-'.i- e the King.'\nGEiVtRAL   K'FWS   W0TE8.\n'Mllfi'\nf. <-     V\n1'crnie.\n,,i;,\ny ' :;iver\niatey for\n ';.Ae;tiyi and Mo'risM'\"   'v.r-   threatened\n' -~') \u25a0* I this week, bo.t    an   -aiiiieabPc   adiust\u2014\n; ment ol tb.cir grievances^ was made.\".\nThere\".was another big rock, elide  at\nM-p\nb   tbe\niovih-\nl,,Tiii}k V\/ednoedav. mnrninr, bui- fortc-\n.Iii.iv;-,\n! 1\nlioi;   iiu:<ac.cb.\n(!in\n?rs ! iiomirji.' ck-c!'.;o:i ..for  -y. Ayproseybtivfl  i nate-b'. no. damage was bene,\nand all depending o:v tno   nu;n:ip  in\nAuslry realbc full well tli.il ii  tbey e:;- | f\/{^\/^\/\nat, the  ..jCgibbni.e   Assyni.bU',   Ay  the\nPbanbrook    P'loeloral b-istrici   are   as\n-r^*\u2014^r, ,,u.\u201ejc-\nM.|,\nnomas   Jbomiid\nsxor- AT THE\n\u25a0PA>\n^biquppters for' Conlmonciai- n\u00bbt\u00ab Wl'nmH\nivies:\n'^!\nf.v; :'\nS'\n^, I\n.\u2022.,**l i\nIV\nz\n'ii      5\nGlassware,.\n^\nSirocenes, \u25a0 &^\n\u00ab\u00abk>\u00bb:. \/.\"i-'iiiii!],. _\n^^^^^Wv^'i^^^^1\n'piacfcaciiem *s\nR\nMETAL. MARKET.^\n\"That lh3   silver-lead- mikislricc  of \\\nthe troviucc be fostered and, encour-:\n\u2022iced' by   the imposition of  ir.crenscd |''-    _  %\ntusfoms duties ou lead and lead pro-. .Aev; \\ohk\u2014bar saver, \u201e,.;\ndti'c.la impobed into Canada, and that , po:u]. AIM\"}. Cupper'. -bU.To\n'PeConservaiiveiuemhorsof thcDcm- ; ,-SPf,itR^, $587 A\n;inioi,,Ilou,c be prgal to-^W^ *\">;!-    Lo^d^Leacb bil 2a. bd;.\n!<)0tio:i mtrodiiceii foi-toUcli a purpo.oe.   I     :   .\ncinl;\n'7;\n11.0,\n,e,v\n;, pi;i;.,    ''\"RAH^BOOH\n'(\u25a0P.iod ;e.io:n.-. good   tabby and pp.r.\nand first ciasi aumtiio roonie.\n\u2022fl^vi \u2666^X^X-fr&fr^E-^\n', i\n', .,\nII. 1\n\u25a0}A\nA \u25a0'.!.'\n<  vi*\nI '.'\".-',\n.,,1  .   li\n,,'b'b'\n. i\u00bbIS\":\nP;bb\n'i P\ni .\nBY SYLVANUS COBB, JR.,\nAuthor d \"The Cunmaker of Moscow\/' \"The For-\nfcuaacs of Cocttui,\" \"The Shadow of the\nG\u00ab28\u00a9fcine,*' E*c, Etc.\nTfhe\nFIou\nBY ROVAL WARRANT MILLERS TO H. R. H. THE PRINCE OF WALES\nS   **\/0.9\ni   iu.\n^ '\n\"That    is    a    question,    my    child,\nwhich 1 will not  directly answer.    If,\nas   wn      suppose,-  your  foster-mother\nhas died  intestate,   and  no  hens  appear,   L   shall   administer   upon       ihe\nestate  under  directions   of  the  court,\nand   I   am  sure you   will   be  carefully\nand   tenderly   considered.   ' You   have\nlnm'o  than   the  claims   of   a  servant.\nIL   is   in   evidence   that   Madame    St\nt.'Jair  regarded  you  as   her  daughter,\nand  we  have  no   doubt   that    she intended   to leave ymi very much  if not\ntho   bulk   or\" her\" property. ,    So,       if\nyour  claim  is  alone*  opposed   by    tho\ncommonwealth,   tho   court   may    find\n, pood* and sufl.cieiit reason for making\nample provision in your behalf.\"\n''But,\" whispered Christine, \"if\nheirs appear\u2014\"\n\u2022'And establish proof of kinship,\"\nsaid Adams, \"there can be no a 1 tor-\nnative. But, even then, you might\npresent a claim'for services rendoied.\n1 should feel justified in allowing- a\nsum that might make a sung little\nfortune in itself.\" \u2022 ,\nChristine- thanked him, and'suffered\nhim to pass on.\nLater in tho evening, raid Wa\\-\nbrook.camo over, nnd sat with Chns-\nline in the little drawing-room where\nthey had passed their happiest hours'\nof life. They talked over the whole\nmatter, and Christine related what\nthe  administrator   had   told   her.    \"\n\"But, my love,\" cried Paul, \"you\nhave no cause for alarm. Let the\nwtirst come, and what can it amount\nto\"' Kupposo you never get a penny\nof this property, have not 1 enough?\nDo you think I could love you \" less?\nIf you do,  you do  not know mc.\"\n\"But, Paul, there may be more of\nevil in this than we can See. 1\niviiow your lovo\u2014how .pure and noble\nit is- but are you your own .arbiter\nin  this matter?\"\nPaul drew back quickly, and his\nface  flushed.\n\u2022AVhat do you mean?\"\n\"Forgive me. dear Paul.    1 do  not\nfear  without,  a   cause.       Your   father\ndid  not  regard  me  kindly   this  evening.   \u25a0 All \u201e    the    others  were   friendly\nand   sympathetic. He  alone       was\ncold and formal. At the last, ,he\npassed by me almost as though ho\ndid not know me. Have you seen\nhiua since?\"\n'''No. , He sent for jne as I was\ncoming out, but I was on my way\nhither, and did not answer the summons.\"\nDaily,\nMilling:\nCapacity\ndid not seek his aid.\nHon    Nathan AVaybr.ook  Intel an  in-\n1 crest    at   slake,   and   he   was,   moreover,  amply  qualified for the  work of\ninvestigation,  hut.'his pride stood   in\nhis ivn.v.    Had  Christine been  a  legal\nheir,   so  that   the  investigation iiiielii\nhave   1-o.riin   and   ended  with   the will.\nhe    would    undoubtedly have  enf.'icei\ninto       the  work:   but  lie  saw   plainly\nthat   the   very   first   stops,   of   opposition\u2014should      opposition    bo    maile\u2014\nwould  he to question the maiden's inherent  right,.      This   would   bring-  tho\n\u2022 ruth  to thc surface,  aiid  it   would  bo'\npublished   in   nil   the  papers     of     the'\nday    that    the     son  of Hon.   Nathan'\nWaybrook had been afiiaiioed     let      a\nnameless foundling,   and  thai   ho,   the\nhoiiornbhi parent, had boon willing to\nsacrifice blood to wealth.\nOf iho household there wore none to\nhelp. Old Hagiir had followed Toin\nto tho silent: shore;, anil Lora was)\nalone left to bear, her young mistress company. But Lora could do\nnot him.' toward lifting the \\uil that\ndarkened the future. She had sceii\ntwo old wills destroyed, and kneyw\nthiir    Madame    Rachel   \u25a0 had   ordered\n\u25a0\";;\u2022;; 'Ta7'^ 'Sb^r- ,,;,\",;\u25a0 b*o\u00abo\u00ab*o\u00ab>\u00bbco\u00ab\u00bbo\u00abo\u00ab>\nboon sent to summon the two work-j O\nmen from lhe garden, but she could j \u00a7\nnot dei-laro for what they had 'been i <\u00a3\n.summoned, nor did she' know , that.'P\nthey had been admitted to Rachel's I \u00a3>\npresence She had only conducted } <\u00a3\nthem io an ante-chamber, where,Mr. j ^!\nHalford   had  received   them. 'o\n.lohn Downey,' tlio gaidener,  was ob \u00a3\naccount' only so\" far  as \"he threwT      a : <\u00a3>\nvery uncertain  and  misdirecting glimmer  upon  the .disn pneai mice of  TChen . .       ,\nSanders and Seth  Davis.   He told of!     Half waF between the fort and the > them curiously\nthe    coming to  his  cot  of  two' men j Arizona border lies-LindeH's Rest.    It\nwho     were    engaged    in  looking- up : is a low wooden building, dull vellow\nhands for a great, work' out West.\nMONTREAL.\nKOY.1t MIttS, water powef,  Flour      4,500 Hbl\u00bb.\niiLKXOKA MILLS, water power, Flour      \u00a3,G00 nhl^.\nCITY MILLS, water power,  Corn Products      8,000 tibia.\nWINNIPEG.\nWIMXIPEO MILIS NO. 1. steam, Flour  3,000 SShU.\nWINNIPEG MILLS NO. 8\u201e steam, 0\u00ab\u00bbt Products    .._ : '.  300 \u00bbbli\u00bb.\nr.                                                ' .\u2014\u2014\u2014_\nTOTAL DAILV CAPACITY      15J.30O ftbln.\nFOKT WILLIAM MILLS (under construction)  3,000 Bbls.\nHead Office:\nMONTREAL.\nThe Company own and operate, in addition to the above mills,' 100 elevators., distributed throughout\nManitoba and the Northwest, having a storage capacity, of 3,500,000 bushels, which, with terminal elevators at\nWinnipeg aud Montreal, and including a 56o;ooo bushel elevator under construction at Fort William, give lhem'a\ntotal storage capacity of upwards of 5,500,000 bushels. '\nDIRECTORS\nC. R. HOSMER, President; Director Can. Pacific Ry. Co.    F. W. THOMPSON, Vice-Pries, and Man, Director.\nHON. GEO. A. DRUMMOND D g. S. CLOUSTON H. M. ALLAN\nVice-President Bank of Montreal. Gen. Mgr. Bank of Montreal. Pres. Merchants Bank of Canada\nW. A. BLACK,        -    ,  -\nWestern    Manager,\nWinnipeg.\n\u00ab     3y   IJZOLAl\n\u00a3,. FO'R'RES'TE'R\nCopyright, 1902.'  by T. C.  MeCluro\n, months when he wont away, it seoru-\n;,od belter, you know. lie was so\n! young, and he thought ho could make\n! n fortune out here. I guess lie hasn't.\n;' though.\"\nj Lolita\" laughed. It was comical to\ni think of I.lndcll making n fortune or\n\u25a0 anything else. It was growing dark.\ni nnd already a few couples had made\n1 their appearance and passed indoors,\nj with a gay greeting: to, Manuelo's\nj daughter.    The strange girl  looked at\nLife is a riddle that, evert,\nson  of us  must, 'give up.\nA   man   talks   to  amuse  ,,i|,\na woman talks to amuse h-i-,\nnail\n\u25a0I\nCHAPTEll  A'II.\n\"Don't fear-opposition from my father,\"  said   Paul,   in  reply  to   Chris-\n'1 tine's   words,     \"If   my  father\u2014-'\"    But\nhe will  not\u2014he dare not.\"\nAfter a pause,,he arose and walked\nto and fro across the door. He was\nevidently talking a full estimate of\nhis father's character.\n\"Christine,\" he at length said, sitting down'once more by her side,\n\"my father has given his .nsent to\nour union. Neither you nor '1 was\nresponsible for the cause which influenced him then, nor can responsibility be laid to our doors in this pre-,\nsent case. If ho withdraws that consent,   I   will   marry   you   without  it.\"\n\"Paul!\"    '\n' 'I am resolved, darling. No power of earth shall separate us?\"\nChristine, who loved him so deeply\nand so devotedly, and who felt that\nher all of life was bound up in him,\ncould only rest her head upon his\nbosom. Yd he had not lifted the\nburden from her heart. She who\nmust, if.siifl'ering came,  bear the pas-f\n\"And I think,'\" he said, \"that they\noffered Sanders and Davis-great pay.\nAt,   all   eicnis.   Ihe.v   said   that    good\nlike .tlio sun biUed plains around,\" and\nthere isn't even a cactus sprout to cast\na shadow near it.'\nYankee farmers, who knew how .. to | Saturday night nt.Lindell's is a thing,, i\nwork, were in great demand to\" fill j to dream of evermore once one haa j\nthe places of directors and overseers, j lb'ed through it-\u2014the crazy,, witching j\nI\" fancied 'that mv two men bit at j Mexican music; the dancers with their j\ntbe bait, and as they wore under \\ lithe, southern grace; the violet smoke- ;'\ni-ontract with me for the season, the   '\nIt is the dance.\" said Lolita shortly,\nj resenting the amused surprise in the\n; other's eyes, -She would show- her she\nI was not afraid to speak his name as\n1 she had. \"Al-iain. he like to dance lots\nwith me.\"\n\"Yes?\"    The stranger looked at her\nkindly.'    \"I dp not wonder nt it,    You\nare a dear, with those big brown eyes.\nAnd the other\u2014does lie dance too?\"\nWho--Tod?    No. no.    tie is not'one\nHE COULD NOT\n:    UCEHIS\nchose to slip off on,-the \u00abl\ny.\n.*\u201e..-,    .. ..mi,, ci   \u201eu un,,,^otoci im   everlasting  cigarette-and   1\nnot   (jiiilo   a   weeks   wane*,   wore    due       .*i , -, .,\nto   th'* missing   mon,   Madame   flachel i  , ^ \u2122S se\u2122^cn th* su.\nrings cm-Hug over alj; Lindell himself,,; bit  Mko   jAmlo\\l    He  is   still  and  all\nwav off somewhere.    He never care to\n....   \u25a0    ..              ,     ,      ..        .                 I tall and thin\/ with his happy eyes and\nUnco  it came to be discovered that ! ,\u201e.\u201e,.,\u201e..,;\u201e\u201e.  ,. \u201e*,\u201e\u25a0 .\u201e\u201e,,   \/ol|fa_\npaid\nmmer L.ln-\n| deil came to San Luis; a slim Mexican\n.... > in-;        1 nuu        till-'!)      WCl'klv, -To)-,1  ;   , , \u25a0    -       \t\nlWiiey's  hypoth.-s).-   seoined   eniii-T. \u25a0 girl,, with long lashed., teasing eyes of\nconsistent,  the   more -~o  as he t'oiti'i-    velvety brown and dusky hair curling\n, opinion witn  the f.im-ips wl i'-l;\nliis-c>wn , pi-O'iidi.-es, ho had niag\naround her small, piquant face.\nLindell    was    merely   a    gentleman\ncc|  hi-\nfi .-111\n; if'od   into .f.w-ts.     And  so  thi*-    e-'\"- , tramp in those davs, one of the crowd\n\u00b0^St\"n:Ce,'.^hich' ,Ubd?r  n*s'id   Sl'ru-   of boys who drift\"here and there' once\nthe spirit of the gypsy is upon them.\ntiny, might have led to grave sus\npicious in, other directions, .was, in\nthe end, passed over as oi* no material  consequence.\nOnly one other person remained\nwho was at all interested in, or cognizant of, the merits of the en.-.e. and\nthat was  Caspar  Hugo.\nWe      would    not  forget Paul   W'uv-\naccomplishing nothing, caring' for\nnothing, but happy and true hearted\nand quick to lend :i helping hand when\na call comes. He and Tod Xorris cani\"\ndown together, with plenty of grit, but\nneither cash nor credit, except at the\nlow. yellow half way house where old\nbrook.     But his inteiest was not of a t Manuelo kept ORen inn with his daugh\nkind   to   be considered   nuclei-  the  cir- ' ter. Lolita.\nConstance-;.        J.foreover,      his   father\nwould    not      suffer  him  to  interfere\nOnce  the youth had-ventured\nupon\nthe  declaration   that  he  would    take,\nthc law in the ca&e upon his own icb\nsponsibiliiy.     Ordinarily,   .Mr      Waybrook,    senior,      would    have      been\nThose things happen of themselves\u2014\nmoonlight on the little rough veranda.\nLolita singing 'comical little snatches\nof American songs in 'her soft, broken\nEnglish, under Lindell's tutelage, with\nher small brown lingers playing lightly\nwroth at  such  a manifos'.tti m  of\/ii-| 011 her mandolin:\niol dbrespect,  but in the present  in- ' \"I can't tell why 1 love you, but I do-0-0:\ns'ance  ho  lCgardod   it  simply    as    an .There   lolta   girl   in   town   so   sweet   liko\nebullition  of precocious obstreperous- \u00aby, UI\u00b0\"\u00b0'\nlies*-,   and,   with   an   ironic smile,      he!       ?ut lh\u00abe som,ethin? I can't tell.\nasKod       tho  young   man ' how   old\na*\nwas.      Paul     guessed that ho lacked\ntwo   weeks   of   being   one-and-twonty,\nI        S.-erti to hole nu; in it spel\nI can't toil why J lovo you, but  I do-0-0.\nsive  part,  had   no  strength    of    willland  tho reflection came crushing  up\nbut  to  endure.        She   had read  her  -\ndoom   in   the   coldness  of  the  father,\nand though the impassioned vow of\nhot- lover was grateful to her soul,\nshe dared not accept it as authority.\nPaul, when ho made the vow, had\nnot entirely considered the power of\nhis father's will. Vet he had spoken truly\u2014he had spoken from the\nuttermost depths of his heart; he had\nsworn only that whicii he had resolved to fulfill. He could not then\nrealize to what depths of misfortune\na war with parental authority might\nlead.\nHad there been parties at hand of\nMadamo Rachel's kin, or had there;\nbeen even one strong man, with\ne-ool and level head, deeply interested\nenough to demand and pursuo investigation without fear or favor, many\nincidents connected with the closing\ndays of th\u00ab deceased, and especially\nconnected with tho matter of tha\nwill, which were now suffered to pass\nlightly away, might have been dragged up to new and startling proportions.\nChristine, the party most directly\ninterested, could not act for -herself.\nIDvery sense of modesty and- decency\nforbade It.    She  knew that in  truth\nshe was hut a nameless foundling \t\nthat she had been all tho years of\nher life an humble dependent upon\nMadame Rachel's bounty, and that,\nyunder tho question of stern right, sho\nhad claim only to gratitude for fa.v-\nora already received, . rather than\nclaim for favors in the future. In\nshort, when brought face to face with\nthe bare facts of her life, she shrank\nfrom publicity as the true heart ever\nshrinks from the exposure of inherited  misfortunes.\nI)r. Arkwright, though ' a true\nfriend, and plainly conversant with\naffairs at the Prookside, was not the\nman to institute proceedings at\nlaw. He was a quiet, plethoric individual, following his profession\nfrom tho impulse of long habit, and\npossessing energy for littlo else. Had\nChristine appealed to him, he\"'might\n' ave made an effort in her behalf,\nwas a gallant, man,'-'and ieallv\ntho   beautiful   girl.      But     she\non him that ho  was as yet     but\nchild in the eyes  of the law.\n\u2022So Caspar Hugo was the, only remaining man to whom inquiry could\nbe directed. We will pass over the\nmany interviews held by other parties, and come to the final consultation with the'clerk by the Hon. Mr.\nWaybrook. Thus far, Hugo hud sustained his reputation as an honest,\nupright and devoted clerk, and Nathan Waybrook, fancying that he\nposs.js.sed great tact in reading human character, expressed himself as\nthankful that Halford's business had\nbeen left In such capable hands\nThoro had been no loophole through\nwhich a possible suspicion could attach to the clerk. The secretion or\ndestruction of a will would not seem\nto havo benefited him. not in the\nleast, but, rather, he should have expected benefit from the presence of a\nwill.\n.Mr. Waybrook was welcomed to\nthe ollice by the clerk, and ushered to\na chair of slate, as though h- had\nboon a magnate of supreme en.inencc.\nHo bowed .condescendingly', and felt\nevidently happy that he had lo confer-with1 so perfect and proper a\ngentleman. .\ni\\Ir. Waybrook opened his business.\nHo did not' wish to be'intrusive;'-but\nho wished the utmost possible\namount of light, with a view to a\nfinal- settlement of the matter, in his\nown .mind;\nCaspar Hugo bade the merchant to\nproceed; He would give all the light\nhe had-to give, and, he would render\nany assistance- that lay in his power.\nAnd he would do it all with the utmost cheerfulness.\n\"Do you think it possible,\" asked\nWaybrook, \"that Mr. Halford could\nhave written a will at Madame Rachel's dictation without your knowledge?\"\n\"Such a thing would have been utterly impossible,\" answered the\nclerk, emphatically,\" but very politely.\n\"Then it is your own private opinion that no new will was made?\"\npursued  the merchant.\n(To be Continued.)\nLindell would smoke and smoke and\nlook up at her as' she sang, \"lazy and\nhappy and full of a joyous, don't care\nirresponsibility that comes to one.\nsomehow, with the climate down there,\nand the music aud the white,\" strange\nmoonlight.\nOne Saturday Lindell and N'orris\nrode away to town, seventeen miles\naway, with a promise to return in\ntime for the dance. Lolita watched\nthem out of sight, and .Manuelo laughed when ho heard her singing. She,\nwas the prettiest girl this side the\nborder. The American boy was clear\neyed and young and quick lo laugh.\nIf they loved, why not? There were\nthe house and a good bunch of money\nwhen he was gone, and little Lolita\nwould sing evermore. II(* smiled\nb-hrewdly.  Maybe, perhaps, quien sabe?\nAt 7 the mail coach from San Luis\ndrew uj) at the yellow hom:e. and a girl\nalighted. Lolita was firing n hot shot\nof smiles and repartee at the driver,\nP.illio Slogan, when she saw her and\nslopped short. The stranger was fair\nand blue eyed, and, though the Indian\nsummer day had been hot and dusty.\nsheMooked cool and charming.\nLolita was dressed for the dance.\nShe wore yellow and had wound a\nlong red silk scarf .about .her shoulders, crossed it and tied it below her\nwaist on one. hip. Rillio had. just told\nher she looked like one of the little\ndark red roses the ladier, wear in'\ntheir hair over at San Luis on the\nplaza when she caught sight of this\nother girl, and she hoped Lindell would\nnot see her.    There was a difference.\nMr. Lindell and Mr. N'orris? Oh, yes,\nLolita told her. They were living\nthoro. 'i'liey has! gon(> for a ride, just\nti short ride. Sho brought a chair out\non the veranda and fa iked with the\nstranger after the coach bad gone.\nShe called Lindell Allan, this girl, and\nNorri.s Ted, and she hoped they would\nreturn  soon. b\n\"Vou have not seen him for a long\nCine, yesV\" . said Lolita. her eyes lull\nof a. half frightened suspicion.\n\"Not for a year,\" said the other softly.    \"We had only been married a fow\n! dance.\"\nTlie music had begun, and the blue\n: eved girl rose hesitatiuglv.    \"I  wish 1\n1 could go and meet them.  I want to sur-\n! prise,him, you know.   Could 1?\"\nI     Lolita rose, too. In quick, hot anger.\nThey would meet, and he would take\nher   in   his   arms and   kiss   her.     She\nthought of last night and th'e night before aud the nights before for weeks.\nWas it for this Lindell Lad sung and\nlaughed with her and told her her lips-\nwere  the  sweetest  in   all   tbe   world?\nSuddenly she looked at, the fair, calm\nface beside her. and a flood of wild, unreasoning jealousy swept over her.  She\npointed southward.\n\"If you walk that way straight on to\n\u25a0here  the  ground  dips  and   the cacti\n'\u2022>w  tall    you  will   meet  theu;.\"   she\ntold her.   \"It Is only a short way.    You\ncannot miss them.     It  is only two or\nthree miles to the next house, and thoy\nmay have stopped there.\"\nAfter the girl had gone she went in\nto the dance, laughing, with the He\nfresh on her lips. There \\yas no house\nfor thirty miles that way, and once\nshe had passed the giant cacti she\nwould go down into Death valley, that\nterrible wilderness where only the\nsnakes and the Gila monsters and tarantulas could dwell in safety. One\nnight spent.there, and Lindell might\ncall and cry for his wife in rain.\nNever was there such a dance at\nManuelo's as that Saturday night. Lolita danced and sang with feverish ga'y-\nety, her eyes ever on the door, wutelling for'Liudeli. Then suddenly, at the\nvery height of the merriment, she was\nmissed. Out into the clear, bright night\nshe went silently to the shed where\nthe horses stood, and, choosing her own\nrough little mustang, she mounted and\nrode away toward Death vallev.\ntne sappnire darkness of rbe skies.\nManuelo   could   tell   you ,tiie   rest\u2014 |\nhow   the  two  Americans   returned   tit ,\nmidnight, and Just as they were to lead\nthe  search  for  Lolita  there came the\nthree   figures   through   the   moonlight,\nand Lolita fell at Lindell's,feet.\n\"I bring tier back to jou.\" she said\npleadingly. But it was'.N'orris who\nsprang to the stranger's side'with n\nglad cry, and Lindell held tlio MeiJcan ',\ngirl lu his arms there before (hem all j \t\nand told her she w-as all in all to,him.     1       - c-\nSo that is why it is  LlndeH's Rest   Till <* Dodd's   Kidney , PilLs   Drove\nnow.  and   If  you  stop  there  on   vour     '        , ... '   _,.\nway  to the  fort or to San   Luis old , Away   H,s, Rheumatism.\nManuelo will tell you how It happened [   '       '  .\nover a little glass of the deep red Mexican wine he loves and bid you shake\nhands with his handsome son-in-law.\nAnd if you are courteous and pleasant\nLolita   will   Hash   a   smile   up  at   you\nfrom under her long, dark'lashes.\nAnd Lindell? lie Is perfectly happy\nand full-of a gay.'careless conte'iit that\nconies but seldom to a man in this\nworld. It comes with the moonlight\nnnd the music down there\u2014and Lcllta.\n,Story   of   W. J. Dixon, has \u00bb\u00abH tli\u00ab  Raloj\n.' Klver Settlement Tulkini;.\nBarwick P.O., Aug., 81,\u20141..Special;\n\u2014Among the settlers here thV cure ol\nWilliam John Dixon of Klio'sniausm\nit causing much talk. The Moiy ol\nthe,cure, as told by Mr. Di\\..n himself,   ir,  as   follows :\n\"During- tho summer of'1901, i had\nan attack of Typhoid Fever, ,uid alter I got over it -Rheumatism set In.\n1 had pains in my back nml hi ray\nright hip so bad that I hud tu use &\nstick t'o walk and had no comfort 1;\nsloeping.\n\"I could scarcely dress n.ysuil lov\nnearly  ttt-o months,   and  for O.irtt or\nwife siYll f (iUU woeI<s 1 could not lace my right\nI shoe' or put mv right leg on my left\ni knee.        ' \"\nI      \"  My   biothoi-     advised     mc  to try-\nDodd's   Kidney   Pills,   and   aftor tai- '\nj Ing   three boxes,   1   began  to walk, do\nDodd's   Kidney   Pills   take   the uric\nacid   out  of   the -blood  and  the rheu-\nThc War  It Cock.\n\"I   was over nt   Allegash   the  other\nday  for the first time In  four yean*.\"\nsaid the Kohnck philosopher, just a bit\nsarcastically, \"and 1 found my nephew j\nLuther   and   his   estlmnhle\nsquabbling   over   thc   same    question\nIhey   woro   quarreling  nhout   when   I\nwas   there   before.    The   only   cluing.'\nthat   I   was  able to  detect   was  that, ]\nwhile In (he-first place they appeared j my, work  and luce up my shoes. And\nlo   know    what   they   were   jangling j the best of it is, ,1 have'had no rhpu-\nabout,   by   this  time   they   seemed   to     mat-sin since.\nhave forgotten what the original bone.1\nof contention was, and they were quilt\nrelin\nway  of  knowing when they   hnd   fin\nished. j\n\"Well,   when   my   appearance   inter- ;\nrupted them Luther was atartAed to see j    q-|ie United States go\\ ei ni-.e'.i I'\nhow much thinner I had grown In four ! coininisMon will raise gre-ei, '-.i'l\nyears, and his wife was astonished at\nthe way I had grown fat. Aud nt it\nthey went, quarreling over that, and\nthe original question was shelved for\ngood and all. I came away feeling amply repaid for taking thc trip. It Is a\nsatisfaction (0 know thnt you have\ndone a helpful act. and I expect I did\nthem a great favor by breaking the\n.monotony and giving them something r\nfresh to wrangle over.\"\u2014Smart Set.\nmonotonously along without any j ',\"\u00abL,'sni g\u00b0c3  with  ?t'\n1\nFlorida's    orange     and       j.-..'.1; a..\ncrop   is  estimated   ;> t   S^.noo o..n\nCAUSED BY THE HEAT.\nA    Ivitdh   m    FiiliyM   -lili.    on en    .1 Uriel\nO rof.d    .Mothers.\nDuring the summer months 11 ni h\noften appears on the l.t'-e n.il*. .ml\nbodies of bobies and 'timili .'iiliii'M.\nwhich is liable lo nblu.i t !..\u25a0 .y.yi\nmother; it is due to tl.e ,\\.,'-**'\\--\nboat, an'd while not diiiiirei.n.- 1*\nthe cause of much suflering lnn.i.-'li-\nato relief is gk-cii I.V dnsiu\neruption liberally with l!,tl\\\nl'owder, which may be had\ndriig-g-ist's, but to cure the I.\nmedicine must ho given   thai   v.\n,ii \u25a0\u2022\nI IMP\nbl,'\nHonpltublc  Pat.\nA certain sportsman took a shooting\nIn Ireland.   lie was assured that It was\na good sporting territory.   When he arrived   this   was   corroborated   by   the j tho blood of the lit tic sulTeie;    A!\"\nhead keeper, a typical Paddy.   The lat- j \u00b0wn tablets will bo found It n-> un\nter   declared   that  the  country   fairly   hk-ssing  in  sue-h  <-ns*c-s anil\nbristled with pheasants.   So they wehl    \"\"\"*\nout after them  and  In a day  put up\nfive.   The next day tbe tenant Inquired\nMill*\".'\nrestore the olearni-ss and l..-,i,,i\" \"'\nb.iby'h- skin. Mi-.s. Clifton Cub\" e>.\nKincardine,   CJ.tt ,   mils \u2022       ' M-.   vn \u2022'-\nhad a rash   bronl-   011\nIf Lindell loved this fair, blue eyed j after partridges and was told the rum.? ,' .\"j, over), or I )\u00abriv\" I 7\/ 1\njirl, he would hate her for sending her | tale. *. Tho shoot yielded about six. i rhio. but the enip't ion ne\\ .\u2022\u25a0\no her death., The thought terrified her. ' Woodcock,    ffrouse,    capercailzie    nnd; until   I gave  her    liuby's    o\nlots,     and   aftei    u**inu   ilinn\ng\nto\nVnything   but  his  hate,  she   thought; ; every kind of gnme.  Paddy  told  \"his\nanything but the look lu his eyes when i 'onner.\" were as thick as leaves In au- ' time the rash entirely dis.u\nhe knew. And was it not right? She \\ tumn, but theycotild not be found. At ! h'lVl- nlKO Kive-n her the Ta\nwas fair like him and gentle voiced. ; last he said angrily. \"Are there many\nShe was not a Mexican girl to smoke* j rhinoceroses on the estate?\" \"Shure,\na cigarette with und slug to in the | yer \"oniier,\" drawled Pat verv slowly,\nmoonlight and laugh when her love I \"not many, not many.\" but brfghtening\nwas won. ; up> ,.you may put up two or (}jree roimd\nShe caught her breath In deep sobs, | the lnke In the summer.\"    Long befor\u00ab\nand   the  tears   fell  on  the  mustang's    the  summer,   of  course,   the   tenancy\nhei 1.1\"\nil. ' 1\n\u20221\nil\n1   I\nbrown neck as she urged him on oyer\nthe miles that lay between them and\nthe valley, and nt last there Avere the\ngiant cacti \".ahead, guarding the entrance to the valley like grim sentinels.\nShe'turned toward them bravely, but\nbefore the mustang had gone a \"dozen\npaces past them he reared and backed\naway from something that lay upon\nthe ground.\nLolita knelt and caught her breath as\nher' haiid    touched   the   hand   of   the\nwould be at an end. \"Yoa confounded\nrascal!\" roared the tenant. \"What do\nyou mean by telling me all these lies?\"\n\"Shlire,\" said Pat, with a true Hibernian grin, \"an' wouldn't I be.glvin'-yer\n'onner a pleasant answer?\"\u2014London\nTatler.\nDifferent  Now.\nHarriet Martlneau visited the United\nStates in 1840 and reported that only\nseven occupations wera open to women.\nstrange girl,    it was warm,  and. she ! ;?^ey were teaching, needlework, keep-\nraised   her 'head-upon   her  lap.    The !   .2 boardera. working In cotton facto\nid ue eyes opened wondei-ingly.\n\"It. was such a long way. inid I could\nnot find them,\" she said faintly. \"You\ndid not know It was so far. did you?\"\nLolita pressed a kiss on the hand\nshe bold., It was a white, daintv hand\nNo wonder Lindell loved it. Shehelpcd\nher uj) to the saddle, and with one arm\naround her for support she guided the\nmustang back over the long stretches\nof sand and <-,,:, \\ink0i] \u201e\u201e\u201e,\u201e. on\nthrough   the   night\nrlea,    typesetting,    bookbinding    and\nhousehold service.\nconstipation   with the-   best of i>\"   i('\nthoy    act   goiills'   but   pr.mip'''-    \u25a0\" '\nalways   make   baby   quiet  niidi.'-'1 '\nI   think   the  Tablets   n   spleiiihe!  u,\".l\ncino   for  young     children\"       \\ud>\\ *\nOwn    Tablets   may   be   hod   fi\"i\"    \u2022'''\n(IrugjriatH at, 2\")'cents    per  b<.'-    \u2022'\",l\nBaby's    Own   -.Powder- .at  th\"    *\u25a0,'\"\"'\nprice.      If you   prefer   to  ori!e';r il'1'1'1'\nthey   .will-'.bo'sent- postpaid    eui    i'1\nceipt  of  price  by  the  Pr.   . Willi'm*\nMedicine'. Company,   ni-ockvill-'.  ,)n'\nCider.\nOlder is the only alcoholic beverngfl\nthat la not taxed. When sold fermented, 1b bottles, It contains ordinarily*\nor' G per cent of alcohol, but tbW\namount may be increased largely w\nadding BUgar\u2014sufficiently, indfced, to\nrender tho .beverage quite intoxlcfltlos:.\nTree*  nnd  \"Water.\nThe minimum rainfall at which trees\nwill grow Is twenty inches.        b\nManuelo's showed\nFrntt   Snnce   For   PiMl.Ilnj*r\u00abi.\n\"oil any  kind  0f fruit with  a  little\nwater until It Is quite noft, then rub\nthrough a  fine sieve with the back of\n\"'\u2022i-  <he  lights at     f   ^\u00b0\"tltfn   \"noon.     Sweeten   to   taste,\nko fireflies against ' v. '''\"'1   po\"r   ovor   tho   P\"*-ding.\n-Mce for boiled or steamed puddings.\nPipe* In * SkyncrnpcP.\nIn nn up to date skyscraper there nro\nusually from ten to twenty miles 01\npiping of all sorts and slzes-w'K*\npipes, gas pipes, sewer pipes, speak\",\u00bb\ntnhea and vp.ntilfltlnn rb.e'g\nThe  Mnle  Dackii. \u25a0\nIf a horse touches his ears in tf\"  -j\nunder a low bridge or through a tim\nhe will invariably throw his IV'-1\"   J\nand   receive  a   hard  knock.   Vv!u    -\nmule's  ears touch anything\ngoes down.\nbis IX\"\"5\nmeBBWMM-MBWKWi \"41\nOur Fall and \\\nin\nt<}\n\u2022j Ea fey 6\nH.'I'UDGLK,   S'Kj-oIUENT\nntev Catalogue\n-U-iite     HronChiti*.\ne'l'Ii'S   LINIMFAT.   ,\nM.   CAMPHKIvL.\nIslands. - ' ~\nCured    of  Facial   Neuralgia.\n\\ltl>\"S   Ll.ViMKNT.\nWM.   DA Nil'\"-I.S.\nN.S.\nKb. ui\niljiy^fbrth^ asW\u201er WritHor\n,   Three Mail Order Specials\nLadies' Dolla\nj, Tho three following'bargain's urr*\n,; eis.    We have seemed  a large qj\n, fill ordcos lecoived  afle,-   October   is,     19-V   *\u00a3'  ?ttDnot  *U\ni ^ sure  of  getting your sh,,,,- \u201e,   .i,,.\u2122 '   X   \u00b0\"-   To  ba i\u00bbJ3itiv\n'. L \u00b0'   tfeCM' ws w<\"\"d advise ordering at ouw. ill\nLadies' Dollar Gloves for 59c\nreserved  fer oin   Mail  Order custom-f\nar- if!\nely\nMail Order-Extra |,\nSpecial Ladles' '\nFrench made' real\nKid Gloves, glace\nfinish, ' 2 domes,\nblack and white\nonly, golf, and Ij\nblack or -white 'ft\nembro ide ry.\nThis glove is made\n,pf genuine kid skin\nand will Bt, look\nand wear aa well a*\nthe moit eipcnsive\nRlovei. 'Regular\n$1.00Quality. Until October 1 st,\n1903, per pair 59c\nOL   WHO  WON.      '\n\".\u25a0i.'.i''.    f-'\u00bbr\u00abt    Exiierlcne-!-\n\".(\".-.    Vol-1;   Cltr.\n\"    ,.   Greeley first went  L.\nt.iy,   a   green, .awkward\n-   be  met with diseourag\"\ntwo days  he tiamped   ;i <*\n'\u2022'-   i i-iti.ig nvo-thirds of the prm:\n,; i'e\u00ab i-j {no tiwn and always r.*-\n-iig a i old iefu-eal of his services.\n'.s- biographer. Mr. W. A. Linn, sa;, *\u25a0\u2022\nt by  .-atiirday  night  Greele-,-   iv..;\n,' \"!  i ii.it  tl.o c-.'ty offered  him no\n.- of a living,    ii.o decided to lem-\nii,\n' U'J 'C,    ,  i.i I\niii.'diri'- ,i|' j\nHi'tW: ,,,\n1 I '-I *c oi, ,,\nnot   broken.\n,    L    I  I -    ,|    ,\n- ,i , i   i ,i\n,-i      .\" '.\n-     I'.'\"! e    a '\n<j.-\u00bbt-npi ,m.\n,>-.* lee,f i'.j\n1    IIIMl-e    !!'\n,111    \"M\n. inld'*.\ndl.-ut   thing\nMe e   il   the*\nlor\n'.il 'i-i,ir.c:\n( '.r.! .1 ill.\n'.. C .ins\" 'e if   \u25a0 I-\ni i.,\nben ..:,\npilf nvj.\n,\". pot.-.lu c-ui' in haii* and i ub-\nuii'-.'i-.s -staiJit-d with vegetable\nv A\\   remove  tlie  di.*..-oh>rut ion\nOver S.-jO.u'hi women motors will, it\nes <--.. ,<J go Ui ihe pell*, at the coming    \u25a0.'isiruliaii   federal   '\u2022!..'( Horn*.\nv.h\niiili'-    u,ij   .'.nt    come   near\nspi inkle d   wi'h   1 ui pent uie\nclol h.-^n-\nDIZZY\nl\u00abS*\nh(\nfur c.e eoimn-y on Monday, before !\nJ '*\u2022'. .it ;,:'i- was Rone.\nA \"hapjjoried that some acquaintances\nMoil Order E<tra\nSpecial, Men'a Tan, ,\nMocho Glovc-s, -with !\npure   wool fleeced '\nlining-, i dome fastener ,half piqueeewn.\nThis glore is made\nby one of tho best\nCanadian maker,aad\nia   an   AI  glove   in '\nevery   respect. ,\nof hi; landlord, who Called on\nI'.'d him of an oi'iiyo where a compo-\ni: \u2022(\u25a0 wa-3. wanted. ' Greeley went there\nMonday mo-ning before ,the place iv.\\*\not '\u2022') Hi*; appearance was'so uncouth\nth.it he would have been rejected there\na -*o if the foreman had not had difii-\noti'ty in getting a compositor for a\npi'-e o of woiik he wintee* done.\n'i'',i* was setting up a small New\n'I'-:,',.lent rt-i(3i narrow, columns, the\n\u2022 \u2022\u25a0-*! uitei-fperu'd with references to\nn-ites- marked in (\"n\u2014k and other un-\nu-uai ehai'.ictets So complicaied was j\nthe ',,>.!C ,t;!f] so pi-.],_. could'iho c-orn-\n! n*-iior earn at it that \u2022several intr'i had\nabaii limed the .,io;ic almost as soon a*'\nth\";,  had begun it.\nSundir 1 Te:l  \u00b0f a Run-down System and   Exhausted Nerves-Strength\nC.rtrvn*<z VS\/J-f-h -tho.  tie A \u00ab*.-?   Fir.    r\u00bbfr\u00bb \u00bb*.<\u25a0>\u00a3\u00bb?,-.   M.-.\u2014,,*.   e-~~-i\nComes WEth the Use of Or. Chase's Nerve Food.\nThe   f,'iv..:i:iaii\n.'d   the   work   to\nCOMPANY TORONTO, ONT.\nLIMITED   DEPT.  N. W.T.\nggafd'4 LKT-cst Cnres Distemper,\nTl.c  A.ulriultr *'' ttiti Bn.Hct.\nBtrlti.y ibfui'-'l, the ballet is properly\na thealilct-i exhibition  of   tho  art  of\nliDclsg in Its highest perfection, com-\nplylng \u2022jfii.'r.illy with the rules of tbe\ndrama a* to, h.u composition and form.\nItirosli.cx'.s.tPiice In Italy as far back\nii L. D. iy\u00bb.'lie court 'of Turin in that\ntij orkifli' t*'.',cclal use of it and the\nnrtl tnmllr aud nobles taking part In\nIt   Th^ rb. t was first introduced In\nFranc? : i \u25a0     :\"!gn of Louis XIII., and\nboii (li>i :   ,:\\irrh and Louis'XIV. oc-,\nCfidoajiir took part In Its dances.\nfIn Its earliest presentation rthe ballet\nippeare-ii  (i-xterously   In   combination\nirltb t.'.t- odier theatrical  acts and* is\ni&ld to ha-, i> \"completed   the  chaotic\nmedley exhibited in   these spectacles,\nFilch?>-m ;\\i once mythological, aile-\nsorleal. f.iu'tistic,   warlike  and  pastoral,\"   'Lie i..uler will not   be slow to\nobserve than   its   development  in   the\npresent il.-.y  has   not  apparently   lost\nlight o.\" i!..*!-.i conditions.\nAbout ibr year 1700 women made\ntheir first appearance Jn .the ballet.\nffWch up lo that time had been performed (.T.Aubvely by men, as was lhe\ncssealpo w.<h plays and operas, but no\nw>aan bailei daucer of any note appeared mi:,! i7f)o.\n' Dizzy?    Headache?\" Pain! {^Ah* Heart: -uritii l b\u00aba\u00bb. takm\u00ab\n\u25a0 -\\ unci i c(J   i }uilf u*iil i id\n, i\nr i\n.it\n\"Thought    st    meant   death\nSUre.\"-Mrs. James   McKim^ of   DnanvJUe,\nOnt , says of her almost miraculous cure\nrotn  heart   dlseaBe  by  Dr.  Acrne-w'a   f3ur\u00bb\nhsck  of vnttr PVPC?       ff'c tr\/inr ' tfcls  roniody 1 despaired  ol my life. I had\nU\u00abClV UI   yUeJT CyCbr       IS S yOlir , heart  failure and     extreme     prostration.\nli^'-,\/irf       I I CA    ,&T7^r*'e    Piilo    .One   do.<=e  crave   me   auick.   relief   and   o\ntr> rxyci   b    r\\ 11J>. , bottle  cured  me. \"The  nuderinc-s  o!  yea\nGently laxative; ail vegetable, r^uj^11^ m\u2122 inagic\".\nSold for 60 years.\nne\nyear\u00ab\nLow oil, 2\u00a3sao. i\nIWantyi\nm\/^mw^fm, mt*m ^i ^t*\"\n.'our raousfache or beard\nia heautiftsl brown or rich black? Use\n\u00bbtn i- CT3.\nJ2LI\nn. r \u00bb\\iLa co.. \u25a0\u25a0cAs-'ecA, y. n.\n>!.'\nI.w.lijll\nOreeiey. believing 'that in 'half a day\nthe b-.y would piove hims-'lf incapable\nof pei-formim: il. \\'i'!,\"n the proprietor\nsaw tlreele-y at '-.ork he a\u00abked lhe forc-\ninan why he hired Mint fool and said,\n\"Pay him o'f t\/uiltrht.\"\nI'.'-t il,<- foreman did 'iot pay him off.\nThis bc>y 'had .w-orked on a New Eng-\nlanel farm,1 had eait wood in the winter\ncold and in suinni'*r had worked in the\n. .*\nfie!.Is under the noon i^un. Lie was not\nafraid of toil. He set that Testament.\nWl'en' the foreman examined the first\nL>ii cf ho found that Greeley had sei\niik'-v typo ard s'-t it better than any\non.' eKe who bad tried.\nTo    many  people   peculiar  spells*, of ) \" I    have    used    four  boxes    of     Dr.\ndi7zine-.*-.s nnd   weakness   aie   a  sutirce I Chase's      Nerre     Food,     and      found\nof  almost,  daily   ahnovanee  ,ind __elis-}1llf'\"'   tin   excellent  medicine.      I    was\ntie'*s     Koine   see 'flii.sbos   of   luht   be- \\ '-' l>ubled    more   or  loss   for    nineteen\nfoi.-   the'in.    und    become   blind      ,uni '.vra,s   with   sev.-re  headaches,      which\nda\/\/led ;   Ktth.-rs    I'Tvp.'iie.iCi.-      sc\\ere | made  me   useless   as   far   as      accoiu-\nattaciis of  headache.      Tb\" cause     js [lAjs'.ing my work was concerned,\nexhaustion    of    the   nervous    'system I     \"The   nerve   food   seemed   to     build\nand   de.'icicnc-v    in    tin-    qtinbtv     ,indj,ne   ,!P   generall.y,    and    so    made     a\nquantity   c.f  blood.    In   all  such   coses i thoi ough   cure   of  my  old   trouble.   I\nl)r.   Chase's   Nerve   Food   is   the   most I would     not    think    of beitifi;  without\ncc-i lam a-, weil ,i=. ihe most   thm oi.gh 'J f1'\"     Chase's    Xervc    Food     in     the\ncine  obtainable..-. [hci'u.se.    and   would     strongly   recoin*\nMrs.   Sviiion*.    -1.2  Bt    Claii 'stroot, i \"lend   anvone   suffering   as   I   did     to\nI3olle\\.IJ,'      Out.,       st. ites .       '\u2022 Soirio \\~'is c   't   a   trial      II   sitccoiidi'd   in   my   ,\nweeks,atro  I  hi'niui  a course o:   trent- j ca*-e   after   a    great    many   lomedles\nwith   l)r     .\"lias,''*   N'ene   t-'uod, \u2022 h.id  failed.\"\nfnii'id    il      a   \\ i-i v     *\u2022 ttisia'-ioi v '   '  '\u00b0   the   thousutids  of    women    who\nmr-iii\nnu\\l\nim cj,i mi,\nwi'h ni'i\nfiji tot in\nboth. M\"l\nWCal.n.'ss   ,mcl    di\/,-\nVel'V     (llStl e^'ll-!\nti o.il mei't      i'i\\      ii'\n,    1    v.-.i1*   foi 11101 i\\    11 nublei\noils  e\\h;i-.i-.ti<)i:   and a\nhcai t       \\\\ iii'in'\\ ei-   m'.\nme    J    *a Kind    ba \\ .\no \u25a0\nare\nueak    ;,h''s\nheart   a-1'1''\n\u2022 I i -   , i f\n.lie.-s      whit 11     were\n\u2022lis    mean*   ui   this\n,\", 1\",   lle\\*,     luMilili;\nst r ont:\nSe 'in-*\nnif-i d\no:. \"' i,\nAir-,.\n<-.!\nI \u25a0 e\n, and i b<- ,n (,cm c.f i he he.i'-i\nte he \u2022\u25a0(-\u25a0giilar. 1 can lo'com-\n[ii    (i  i*-i'\\   \\, )\u2022*,-(.   J-'ood   as   nn\n'1     I,M-i ,(,\/)'\"' '\nI,.-it., s        I'lai!' v    ,7! !      Wale:-\nI', ti > l.'.i'.ugh.    Dni   ,\"'sl;i(es- \u2014\n-, lc-tims of nervous headache\nletler 'should < prove pf incstim-\n\\tilue. If they will but follow\nihe advice of Mis Clancy they can\nIj.,* cert it in of .great atai lasting-\noenei'it\nDi Chase's Nerve Food, fit) cents a\nbox, at all dealers, or F.dnianson,\nHull's- SL Co , Toronto. To protect\nvilli against imitations, the portrait\nand signature of Dr. A. \"\\V. Chase,\n(ho famous receipt book author, are\non ovc-rv box.\nSHORS  OF'CANTON,\nEvery\nThe\nt D'.tl  lii'.'r.^fi-j- Ilopi-euontecl\n!:\u25a0   Hit-   Ctitiii'so   f'ily.\nm-'ieb.n,*' ,-bli-ys aie the para-\ndb-' e>r Uie -\u2022'y.-aimey who visits Canton,\nCI. 'i.i. Tin- nI,',;)^ have open fronts on\nr-iiher .side the iian-iw lane, and every\nart a\".e| iudu-iry. .':.\u2022\u25a0 lioipcliest trade\nami the nios: f-. *.\u2022.:\u25a0.iting pursuit,\nHnives in the dark p issage. Black\ns'.i'i'i.-iHL' si'4itli,>o-i-ds ]ir',c!.;iiii the busi-\nne**s in (.ha.'..' leu's c )' nd or gold. Tan-\ndemoniuui tritiinjih-* in a series of yells\nas the chairmen *. ream for pass room.\nTh\", nolo.-*. Lut the i-ode-iri >n in -tlio eye,\nand the manelarin \"(t'jies tho stranger.\nThe njiiive lilts his buim hat sidewise\nto avoid a crush, and often the coolies\nswing aslant in the alley or cluck into\na store to avoid a c-ntasivuplie.\n\u25a0 The Chinese ns a people are modest\nin  their  dress.   'The   person is  rarely ]\nJatnrrhfor twenty years and\nc.v.vc;if ?n  a tsw  (.iays.^uon. .,\u201evi!i-\nJtii.ips.  of  Scranton    P.i..   says:    \"1 hme>\nli,*n   a   in'v. ivi-   to   Cntuirh    for    twentv\n\u25a0.\u25a0.'..\"\u2022    rotistur.t   hnwkniff,  drooyiiiir io   t (\u25a0<;\nl!.)..ii   ot'.cl   jtairi   in-the   bend,   verv  otTcn- ,\nm\\c   in-iMlh I   tried      Pr     Aitnen's   Co.-\nt.\u00ab':l..-i-    Powrtc'i Tito     tir<-t    svoplicntioi)\nci:v.    ii'.ltint    t'f'-.'f        After   tipittc   tt   few;\nliot (n..-   1   whs  cut.el     .\">0   cunts\u2014 1\nFor\nSpavins,\nIngbono\nSplints,\nCurbs,\nKnd ill forcu el\nLemeness,\nb&nchrf or booy\nhr. B.J. Kendill Co..  I h\u00bbTo   u\u00abd your Kendall'i  SpjTb\nCure for ,o ywrl \u00ab.d huro  fou.d  It in  i^\/mlhtU \"~**\nK Houbio ..th. Your, tn.lv. I- ^^\u2122s\u00a3W'&?V\u00a3,\nAs J llnlmmt for family u\u00ab It ha no jjn.\u00bbI._Prloo S1 ^\u00bbK\nfnr CR     A-)c 50<ir dtu!-;ist for KENDALL'S bl.M*o\nCURE: tI\u00bbo \"A Troatiee on thn Horsd.- th* book fr.j.\nDr. B. J. Kendall Co., Enwtiurg FftJl*, Vt\nexposed. Wom^n wo.ir cloub'e bieasl-\ned sacks whicii l\\i tirtlit to the throat,\n,iiid men are u-uahy covered. But\nunder the stress or\" hard labor ihe man\nat the forge Is )-'.ripped to the waist,\nand in the fou.:<Ay a nearly nude\nworkman stride** -L;\n).-* iron so(.-**aw like a\nhorse iu the iron-bull!. The butcher\ncleaves his ih-sher on  the block amid\n.w ^rvd ever\nIn the public eye and in everybodies\nmouth. Always reliable\u2014popular everywhere.\nJ. M. FORTIER, Jbimiteti. MONTREAL.\nSBa5SSSSSSBcBCDS3B3\nI.\nCURE\notkddnu\n:*,.|i i-liiiii        t !'e\n^\\ .. b,i     !'i.l!*e     ..-*     [\na . \\' a \\ -,   [111**1\"* -ed\nl: i' un s\n*i i 'ei I I;\nlo    ol1'.\nuna,\nipl\\\\\nill-\n\u00abii,\n'\"\"iiie-U  anel  Women.\nTheiiu.'i!i)i;y b(-lwoen comets and women nu.e  lot-mod  the  subject of  the\nfollowing p-Toratiou  from  an evening\ncontemporary:  -'Comets  doubtless   an-\ntwer \u00ab.oi;h' wise and good .purpose  iu\nthe creation;   so  do   women.    Comets\n<*re !iK-o:np.c>hensible, beautiful and eccentric; so are women.    Cornels shine\n^hb peculiar splendor, hut at night are\nmost bnlliiint; so aro women.    Comets\nare onv, iopod   with   a    lucid   nebula\nthrough whicii their forms are visible;\nso aiv those of women in  their light\nand (>:,.e tut; ntlire*.    Comets confound\nthe mo^i learned  when  they  attempt\nwasorbiln their naluro; so do women.\nCoim-t*. -pially  excite  the admiration\nof the philosopher and of the clod of\nfl)e Milhy; ho do women.    Comets aud\n\u25a0worn- ii ....,, therefore closely analogous.\nn  im\ni''\n'S\nrll.ct\ne.-u-.in\n.hlliile\n|.i   I\nI    I\nENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENTj\nnomo\\oe nil hard, soU or calloused-\nlumps nnd bh\"ml>he?\u00bb from horses. Mood j\nspavin, curbs, splints, rlnprbone, swaeuey, ,\nptitlc.i, sprains; cures sore unci awoollen i\nthinat. coutrha. etc Save $50 by the\nuse? of one* bottle Warranted the n>o\u00abt I\nwosidei.'ul   lUcr.-noh   Curo  \u00abver  known. i\nSold   by   all   liru^Kttets. ' ;\nTen cents\nto clear your house of\nfifes and\n**\/\u00ab\ni;, i. 11'. in\ntut,\n\" na!uiv of each being .nseruta-\n, -    ...   . .,*.., w, ...-, ....-*......\no.e. nil i!-,,(_ ri'in.iln.s for u^, to do i*'- to\nTlo\\v\nlovt\nv\"lh adinlratlon the one und  to\nti.\" other to  adoration.\"\n>'tri<l,*k Rna  tUt. snse.Io.iarr.\nA8l0l'v 'a told of an attempt made by\n\u00ab ^yi'thsh missionary to obtain a foot-\ncold m Abyssinia.    No sooner hud he\nwsuri to preach than ho was brought\n\"More. King. Menelek, who asked -him\nnJ' be had lcrt his'home in Scandl-\navia tn order to come to Abyssinia.\nne. missi0nar.y .promptly'' replied that\ne nail come to convert the Abvssiiiian\ncoT'    \"Are there   no'.Tews   hv your\n-unirj-r  asked' Menclekb   Tho'-mis-\nfcvnary., m. \"\"ted   (hat  there   were   a\nj, ''.   \"And hi'all   the  countries  that\n*     \"nvo P-'issed through did you find\ntintiM3 \u00b0r !,0,lthe\u00bbs?\" the king con-\nBlnn       \"Jewa and heatlieus,\" the mis-\n\"Th!   ; ' n(lln,ttcrt'.     '\"'nro     plentiful.\"\nbovo!,V8nla-Meno,ekl \"cnrry this man\nreiun    thn h'ou[Un'  aml  lct bim  not\n-1('wr   \"'I1'1 lH> ll:ls coin'crted all the\nand hcaih,,,, .which  lie between\n\"^ C0,1>':i'y_ii..i] mine-\nCon   r    r\"\"Mf<U>< \"Teelmft'O...\nnisi's -\"\"' ,(,,,ar(\"(> is smoked by tho\n\\nZZ\/UV'iU ('oun,'-.v Places in Eng-\nivnieiu' 'S ('alk>d l,y (1'u,n \"tlif-'Tmest\nHin,MV -,\u00b0;! \u00b0;'rni '''\"b^hirrh.\" H is\noftl,,'    \u25a0 ' ,nV(1\"-'(,il form of the leaves\nK^ZZZ <',;^,'\u00ab-1- a Vhtk found\n\" Ulll! ui chalky roil.\n.. in I   i\nI'.i\nin p\n(i.t\nw il\nik*-\nii.-.ii   a   ei.:.\n,i 1 e   il  *.;i.n\nlei ! ('\u25a0\ni\",i,\n' e, MI ,\nTWO years Abod.\u2014Kor elR-ht jonrg\nI Mi.lf-iod us :to one ever .lid with rheii-\nntfitism ; for two years I lay In bod;\ncould -ie,t so nine h \u25a0*-\u00ab food myself. A\nfil.-f.l      i(.i-oii.iii\"ri.fcd      Mouih      Amoi Icin\nim t|c      ,\"..t,>        After   ihrce   elo.*i'**    1\nrniiIn -'it ui'- l'o-clnv .1 at-'i r.s.stronir as\nov.ir I ii-i,s7'-Mr\u00bb' John Cook, 2S7 Clinton  M too!.   Toreuto.\ndried rat*, and ykius of fowls stretched j\n'taut on tlie rack. A'-.-xt door the gold\nDealer hammers in his caye. Beyond\ndie kindling man piles high his forest\nof fagots. Near ny the miller is beat-\nin--,- lhe meal tliromrli coarse sieves,\nibs neighbor skins rish and hopes to\ntfeit them from the box where they\niloat under a feeble spurt of water. In\nthe adjoining den beautiful einbroider-\nie-.s are piled mountain hiirb, with silks,\nsatins and brocaded taffetas in wondrous designs of dragons and flowers.\nIlau Cheung Tai patiently transfers,\nthem by the hundred from shelf to table in the hope Ihat some stray bit may\ncatch tlie buyer's f.-n.-y. beat hers aro\nan important inuii- r.\\, ami fans, folding or open, line ihe next shop, painted\nin   every   fanciful   conception.\np*i \u2022\u25a0   iiiip.irle.l   last   \\ i ,\n*\\\\ I.U i:>  of   -.*. Ai i hi.'*.   101\n1 t i\" t ,  fi,\u25a0 Mil .sw ti \/ei land.\ni\nl *   S i . 17 i ,-\n.r-iiMh.s     of\ni\\,\n.1'.'\" no no ,it.i tion in sivmii lh>.l\n1 I> 11,-llouu'-; l).\\i*iMitorv Coi-.h.il t-*\n.\u2022' l .leiilil the !,Ccl I'K-ilii nil' p\\ \u2022\"\" ni-\n*' l! Ml li\\ '-_!ltt'!-, , cl'bi i-1k>\u00ab'.! . Jhi!-\ni 1 .ul '-uiiiiner i-onm'-nun*. **t-<i f*n-L-\npi oini t!\\    t;i\\ es    i ,,'ic,'   ,' mi\nThere are S00 Chinese students in\nthc colleges of Japan, and ,50eJ more\nare to lie sent.\nIt\n\u25a0i    ..lib    to      i-'T'.'ct    a    ;.o = ili\\t*      cine\n-\u25a0is   'hould   ni'M'i   ho   uiitiout   ii\nv. ber   ih or   chiUiien   aic   teothin\n' t.hi'I.N\no\ni;.\nmi\n\u2022die-\nii\",\nI'it'udi\n-ib'.\nill..\n1 \\v.el\\\nholds\n,ii\n,1\ncgr.\n'.'   Ill\nu-ts.\n r.\n\u2014\n .-\u2014\n\u2014.\u2014\n'llav\nti\nel\nev'-i\n'\/A\nal'\nliOHt\ni >.i i e\n'-\u2022SI\n\\l,;li    i\nits '-IT\n. e\nn\ne   1 .\ni  ii-\n.te.'\nschoi\n'is.\n1\nI'A-e\n\u2022v\n!\n'.l-,.'ll\n0 ,'.\nill.'\n. is   1\nin rn\nw\nit.il .,.\ndebt   c\n>f'\n\u25a0y\nIbtl\nmi\nhi\n-; ,s 1) e >\nulele\nThe'\n1\nn\nted\nSI\n-,t.\nS     IY''\n-.-.     t\nal.\n;s- h;il\nthe   W\nor\nId\n's   c\nrop\nII\nrub\n.... r.\n(\nRELIEVED IN 30 MINUTES.\nOr. Agnow's Heart Curo is tho\nftfystic Remedy.\n:- This reinat-kivble preparation Rives .-per-\ni foci   relief,in  80   atlnutes   in   all. oosm^oI\n' ; oru'tmic or sympathetic heart disease and\ni sivcdilvelTects a cure. It is ft inacio\n\u25a0IromcNlv for, palpitation, shortness .of\n! bi-e\u00abth.   s,t.otl.'ertnK   spelts,   pain . .\u00bb   ^\nI' ; side and all symptoms ot a dit-easoci\ni h\"art. It . .tlso Strengthens ,tho ncrvos\n| and-   cures -stptnach   disorders.-     Sold   by,\n,    all   druff.cists.-b -\nI' Dr.Agncw'.s Liver Pills are 111-- bcsUOdoses l(b\nGroicsque   Kugllsli.\nNo doubt pureltasers in other lands\nhave reason to smile at English attempts to worthily describe English\nwares in a foreign tongue. It is to be\nhoped, however, that our business\nhouses do not send forth annouuee-\nni'-uls quite so grotesque as some that\ncome to this country. Here is a form\nissued by a very considerable continental firm: \"Docs your dressing case\nneed, by chance, a sup-M'tino antiseptic\nsoap, :<n energetic perfumed lotion, a\ndelicious cream, an impalpable, velou-\nli'ne. a very delicate and lasting extract and unniatchlessly eflicient dentifrice? Or do you wish to buy those articles to make a pro-ent. the most de\nsii-ableone, to a very clear person on its\nsaint's or birth day?\"-London Express.\nAyer's Cherry Pectoral\nquiets tickling throats, hack- |\n| ing coughs, pain in the lungs.\nI?   relieves   congestion, sub-\nThere  iieu'r  was   and  never  will   he    a\nuniversal   pmi.icea.  in  one   remedv.   for all\nills   io  v, L.-ii   (lesh   is  heir\u2014the  very    rui-\n\u2022 iMc   o:'   tiia.v    (.uiatives   beinr'   such   that\n.*e i'   i hi    p.-  ins   ot other   and   iliilereiitlv\n-.<-.. ^ecl   ,iis .   es   looted   in   the   system   uf\n\u25a0 l,e   i..itiO.it-  *vluit,    would    rt.'lii've   one   ill\nhut- j in   I'lin   wi*    -1   n\"<> rav'ate  the other       N\\ e;\n! Mm.'   liovvev   \u25a0     Tn     Quinine   Wme.     when\nul-'...nal.le  it    Miu-.icl,  utiadultc'i-aied  sttile.\n\u25a0:hhI\\   '. i   U-..-.11A   and  iriievous   ills    ilv,\n.'--  '...f-uuii'   and   iiuiicio'is   use the  fi inlost\n*v*l.'ii.-*   a-e   1...1    nit o i i-onv ttUsceiiCi*     und\n-. 'i,.tl'    I v    ihe   ln.luenct*   which   Quinine\n-*\\i I ' .*   on    uaUiie's   own    re-torn I i\\ es     ll\n.-\u2022\u2022beves      the    droopina  spirits   of     chose\n' irilh    'whom   ii   chfoi.ic      statu  of   morbid\nde'-pondeiicv   and   lack   of   intert'ht   in   lile\n-   a   disease     and    by   trviiiqiiili7ina     the\nneivcs,   disposes   to   sound   and   rufresliiiiir\nslee|i\u2014imparts   vit>or   to   the  action of the\nblood,   which    bei.'itr   stimulated,     courses\nih touch      the     veins.      st reticthenintr   the\nhe^itJiy   aiimtal   functions   of   the   svstem.\ntht reby   mukinc   activitv   a'  necessary   re-\nsuli.   st reimrheiimc   the  frame  etnei   civinc\nlife   to   tho  dicesuve  organs,   which   tiatti-\n-.-i'.\\   ilemniKi'   increased   substance\u2014result.\niinjwovecl   iLiipeiito     North)op   <fc   Lyman.\n|   >f   'i'o.-'.mLo.      have   civen   to     the   public\ni th'*n   Simeficif Quitdiip  Wine  at  tho  usual\n| t.!', .\u2022    i-,,i I.    huaaecl    bv   the     opinions     of\n~t-..,-niis\"t    the   wine   approaches      nearest\noerirct >..' .   of   anv   in    the\ntlruuui-t-.  snIl  it.\nmarket.\nAll\nin older to redd with profit ilie at-\n, tent mr. must be rendered so firm\nJ ibe.t it sees felons just as the o.ve sees\n! beid'es\ndues inflammation. It heals,\nstrengthens. Your doctor will\nexplain this to you. ,He knows\nall about this cough medicine.\n\"We hvre nsgd Ayesr'f Cherry Pectoral In\nour family for 25 yo\u00bbr\u00bb for throat \u00ab.nd loop\ntroubles, and iro think no medicmo \u00ab<*.uala it.\nME5. A. FOMl-llOY, Appleton, Minn.\n\u25a0 2J0., 50O-, Sl.M. J.C  AtTBCC,\nAll dmrglst.. r _,_ Lowell.    .VTn\u00ab\u00bb.\n.rt'sr 'rni-: thint, tit vt'k WAXiT.n\n\u2014 \\ pil1 that net- upon the stomach and\nv^ l t- so compounded that certain tn-\ne t \".belli- of it ptescfvc their power,- to\nn -i lipoii th*- mte-tta.il can.ils so as to\nib'.'r ' hem of i'WkMh Ihe le'ention of\niil'ii'i (,<n:ic)t hut ').- huitt'il was lone\n.-. l*.\"l loi In- the medii-al prol'e.-si.iii I'\nv,,'- ,el.eel li, !'.i fin.'lee's \\'i-cei nl.le I'ilN\n'..hull ,ue ihe \/eMiii of inncli e\\|),'rl\n-'.'.I- md ,ii',' s. lenl Uic.illv ri.-Pii'od us\na   I.Oii'm,  .md   uu   al'et :in live  m   one\nOrij?tn   r     ''Pants.\"\nThe. words breeches, trousers and.\npantaloons are now tisod-interehangea*\nbly, but originally the significations\nwere quite different.. Panttiloons were-\nat 'first nothing but. long stockings w'brn\nin Italy as a. sort of religious habit by\nt!ie devotees of St. l'antaloon. Breeches-,\noriginally reached -from tlie waist half\nway to tlie,knee and finally to the\nknee, 'where 'they were fastened with\na buckle.. Trousers are the present\nstyle of leg gear, a combination of the\n\u25a0former two.\nAyer's   Pills   greatly   aid   recovery.\nPurely  vegetable,  gently   laxative.\nMot to \u25a0 oi\" the  circus  manager:   Give'\nevery man a show..      , b\nfSnard's' liniment' Cures; Colds, ufeb\n,   It's   easier   for   the   average,     youth\nto   raise  p.. row   than  a. moustache.\n\\ shoiihotn bull It.is bce-n sole) at\n\u25a0 tbe .sliiiv. of the Nortltuiidici land, Ag-\n\u25a0Agrii-tiltiii'hl .Society.\".in I'higland fc>r\ndesp'ate-h   to   Amei-icit   fer   $1.,\"iOib\nilaariTs Liaimeot Cares Garget fe Qam\n', ASel.f-possossio'n   is   nine . point's   with\ntbe\nlawver\n\u25a0Ovc\nmen ;\n-work   is   a   vice   to 'which     -few [\n.'re''in o position  to  pi'-ad guili-y i\nHer 'K.Jjcflit.\n\u25a0  \"What right.has she to star?\" asked\ntlie envious Thespianb\n\"The   best \"righ.t'   in   the   theatrical\nworld.\"  was   the  reply.     \"She has so-'\ncured an 'angel.' \"\nResults from common soaps! j\neczema\/coarse hands, ragged\nclothes, shrunken    flannels.1\n1 i W|\nTo complain of destiny is only to expose our own feebleness of soul.\u2014\nMaeterlinck.\n0s?\nZilf^Mifl\nREDUCES\nProsperity gels followers, but adversity distinguishes them.\n\u25a0SSPSNtSS}\n!>ti f!.f- t3;c flcfrtyi.n  J5ar 17-\nC'a'tarrh Cannot be Cured\nwith   LOCAL   ArrLlCATIO-N'S.   as    thev\ncotthot reiach the seat of tlie disease.\nC.-itarrh is a blood or .coiistitut ioo.-il ei*,s-\nei.so. n:id in order to cure it von must,\ntake interim! remedies. .Hairs f-otarih\"\nCere   is  I nkon .internally. . owl  nets  direel-\nv on il-.e- bUSoil and miieous .su rfftces\ntti, ll's I In til ,t,i Core., is net 11 omick ine'l-\n-,-Y,e. II was oroscribi-il bv 01;,* \u2022>' '*\"\u25a0**\n'ie*.t physiei-.os in this count r.v for v*-\u00bb .*\nin.! is- n.-rPffiilar oreseription. It is com-\nw-en-d i,f * hi'- f-.est tetiiis ki-.-.'.. 11 ,-.-e,;.i,i\nf-il     wiih    the    b.'Sl . l.loi'l!    tuii-ili.'r*..     ne.t i,-,.-\nIboctly     on     'he   mt.ienti's    sin-'\";! .-.*=\u25a0\u25a0 ' 'h-e-\noerfect   coicbini. t ion 'of.ili*'- I wo    irer'-e-li \u25a0\n\u2022>',ts   is   vv 11 ti t'   produces   si'-.-h   wondofii)'  r\"\n^e.'.ts   in   ciirinc   Ctitarrh..    .Send   for   'esol-\n\u2022n.eiials   f:-..'.* .       \u25a0 ,\nM\"     .'.-     niKN'KV   J;.   CO,   ..rnpv     '!'.*! i\"h. '. >\nSold   Iiy   ('.ritcaists.   price, \"ISr. \u2022\n\u25a0 \u2022   Itall'i-   l-'nmily    Pills   * re   the   best.\nT'-ho Rifoi-ma Medico states tliaf\nwith .*i.- -pulse-hejits to the tniniite\nthe blood (lows a distance of, seven\nttiilos nn  bout\".\n*. ,\"\n^   JSp^-TH^i.\"^\n,v -    -     \t\nar.\nr-TSHFWTW\nmmm^mM^\u2122^\nturv*'\n.ia*rh.*w*.r-v wiVIvA.k. 1 \"*H.wrunl-'Vfr\u00abb.7 Smn kin'* iff \u25a0\u25a0\u00bb!\u00ab\u00bb*\nftSRSBL ..,.. -,.-\u00abi.   w~m-  r~-.     j.jj..a\u00bb\u00bb\naa\u00bbsgFgaig^5\u00abgJw^a!at^Brwfc.vf4 tfcrUffaraaaccfc*'^\ns*\"iy\n\u25a0 ;'.-   . t\nt\u00bbl\n1    \u25a0\n-   * i\n\u2022I\"   \"I\n(\ni\n'. ve\n. i*\n,\n- i'\ni t\n,   i\nI   A\nt    A\nAt\n\u25a0sr>r,-^r^rrac?3(c^sasc\u00aba\u00abe\u00bb3P:assw3siicr^^\nsHaraxEsriscswa\n3SSE3!\n!||'i ' f\nn * : <,.  i\nis *\n!   -\nLiiO    iOJiiLj   i:-Diiwiiii\n>.j     'IO*   i<'\nrc.ii'ni^.\nic\u00bb   i cnr\n^x^ey**m*^ty^'t?rrzz.f  ^rrr^ij-\u00bb-\u00ab\nlb*,  n u-iv oil..-. ; l!.-,.:i!;iliiiii   more\n\u25a0      i pnuple than smallpox and yellow fever\n\" - - i combined.   \/In an army it,  is.  dreaded\n.i:fo?i'Si of the people [ mon- th.in a battle. It require*, prompt\n... ''a* t Kooionay.    ^  I md   ei-- ttivo   treatment.      Chamher-\nbim'u Colic. Cholera and Diarrhoea\nPemedy has b, en iis.nd in nine epidemics cf (.\/*cntPry in the United\nSi.lies wiih perfect success, anil ir. lias\ncui, d the moi-l maligna nt cases., both'\nof childieu and adults, and under the\nmost rrjinir conditions. Every household *honli! li<i\\e a bottle at'hand. It\nmay ,-ave a   life.    Sold   by   all drug-\no\\Z ,\nU1T3-. or sttrsc r.K'Tto.v.\n'b'.OO\n\"*?=\"-&\na -?-\nlit;!   !      \u2022\"'\n.\u2022.vp.itPAY sKrr.^O, r*)03.\n\u25a0ni!; ru'.KiD'nr i.vhojs,\no\nThe Con = erva\".iv- pirty is  now   and\nhas been a* all times thp fiiend   of the j ?_\nworkin;,'   men.    Theiei'orr*,   in   asking    gf.\nwoikingme.- for their vole   and  influence in the --oimng eleclimi. the <Am-\npervafive pirly have   a   liiA-it   to   nidi- \\\nst.mti-.ite those facte' by bnnghig lo the.\nnotioe of org.ii-ized labor   ciue   of   the\nmany acid   p.i**'3cd   by   tlie   Crun-erva -\ntivesin the i'T\\-d lum*\", ia favci of Hie1*\nwage earner.\nOo.tl Yinir-i 'de^.-la':,r!n Ait   ibOh\u2014\n\"pr.mii-its lb '   t mnhmuoiA   of   .vomrn\nand  \u2022 i.i'd.    -,   ...i*1 * \u25a0'    '   -\u00bb<:   {\"liiivs\"\nfomi ...ib i.*-' ...-\u25a0!. :  *  .- -,\"A  -it!   pi*\nvb., -t .'. .-    \" .-ci. nl     j.^c!  ol.on   o'\ninc.. v,r>>''-..i^ hi  .'.i'\"\"-\nbri.bi. tbbi.nii... ,b ol'av Ac I. ib'M)\n\u2014 provides eooip. ::'e t'Ki'i for e.iUb\nl.d'ud. e'le , the; unit ':,,e: '.tio rr-ii'Mf' r\niinc! -jtco^ui.iii,\nMechain:--; Lien At '.    ^ '1\u2014njnk'oL-. j\nthe working ni.in h.v tjvme him a lien\n\u2022)g,.iu-'t anv prcpei'y on which he*   hiia\n-..Tk( I, 'int.- prnvins; f-eUruy for wage\nMntfiun\nv. 2     &\u00bb s\nHILLti:\n.Cl\\\nfV<.?>J.\u00abnx. A iUlJi.119\n-u <-\n^.MlA\"^IJ-W.lgiwSr-^M>\/H.\u00ab'fc*'''^*aaw\nBarber Shop\nIn STUNrE Building.\nResidential Jots   on,[.Campbell\nstreet.\nResidential    lots   on   Tavistock\nstreet.\nHouse and lot on Victoria s-reet.\nHouse nbd  lob on   Lake Shore\navenue.\n.Business    block     on    Victoria\nstreet.'\nGood dairy business near town.\n' Mining stock,\n' * \u25a0 FOE BENT.\nOffice rooms and living  appart-\nme.nts on Victoria street.\nHouses for rent.'\nWe do   a   general   commission\nbiisinesa,\nFarrell & Sntyi\nMovie Laoor union\n-     NO.'365, A. L.U.\n' Meets iu the I. O. 0. K. hall every\nSaturday evening at 8 o'clock.\nVisiting brethren  are cordially in-\n\u25a0 vileel  lo   attend   these meetings.\nL .      ,.   *     .- -     - -   v^_...\\..^*,    3\nR. A. Smith,.\nPres.\nP. F. JOHN,-3TO.\\,\n,    Sec'y.\nBox obi.\nAMOYJK, B..C.\nwiw.Mi mrmnii\ni ;; ih r\nL.isploye:^' Lbibihiy AC. I\u00abi'l--ir!\nv 'k-*   <\u25a0..\nu i:i lor mjurica i2ccb<?i'   h-   f^ctone--|\nu.d on railways, '   I\nAppieniiots .md :,Ibor\u00ab Act. ISI'Y\u2014\nprvshJcd for ..ppientii-iug of child ten\nnot umlei 1-i \\ears. r\nAi rest and Jmpiisomnent. for Debt\nAct 1897\u2014practically abolished imprisonment, for debt\nQpefc. Wendnesdays\nand Saturday\nC I\nW. JR. StONB, Prop. - '\n^Jt\u00abfV\u00bb<-'t'^-J.''\u00bb.rV?\u00abP-(V^^ '   *\" .'\u25a0'*:\\1''*\"<e,lL\u00bbMl.rl\\.l\u00bb i\u00bbM~m\\\naud\nEmtoaliriefi        .    .\nCoflius, Caskets, shrouds'-bi fill 3i5c;\nand styles constantly kept in stbckA\nOtEce over Impeiial Bank o'f  Canada.    Telegraph and  mail   orders   rc-\nCredilors Relief Act   1902\u2014provides I oaivt* prompt  atlentioa.    Open   night\nthree months pnoiily io  Morkin j;men ; and day.    Phone 43, .\nfjr wages anil salary, when   imployeis\nproperty 13 seized fur debt.\nLabor .Regulation Act, LS9S\u2014Japan-\n1 *\nese and Chinese \u2022 \"cleded  from   work\ninu.   on   \"aib*. j*.?    lol^irrisuh   and   tele\ngi.iph and t-Aevlsoree   lAies  and    pub\nlie work*.\nWorknuu. s Comi-ensiilion Act LOO'i\n'\u2014piovides for injurufc to workmen\nand compensation to woikmeu in caiC\nu.f banki uptc\\ of impi.-yer.\nl)i'cci\\e.l Work'neu* *.ct J'X'2,---de-\neeplne    repn M-iii.ilu.i\"-   to   worlimtn\nCranbrook;\nx? ip\nSirs. W. A. Prest,\nPhotographer\nCr.iuUvooJc       iVIn^ici      fori Steele.\nCrJliP   YOUR\nVT\nty \u00ab. \"O O Ci\/ K-- i v\/ ID \u00ab\niKchinil   piihi'.slui    and   d.mi-.iHes   can   }?ruit, Tea, 00X168;\ni.ecou.ciid. Stovepipes ana\nbhops   tsegulation   Act    I'-'iJU\u2014J.io. I &  -\nrides for a limited   number   of   hours j Tinware at\n^ i\nfor cbildren and lemaic f.uiploye'.s-.       j\nThe above acU-    aro  all   credited   to!\nthe CunsorMitive nai i\\ t'ud vduiiot   be !\nlepurlmtt-d.\n\u00a3Se: -figeosite'\n- \u25a0    Oures Pain Instantly\nin any part of body-\ni\nWithout    taking   a drop  of\nmfeflicine.    All thb superficial'\npaina'are relieved without tlie\nbig risk ol   talJiug  duiifeefotis,  '\ndrugs into, the. system,    its\n.   Work   is    simply   marvelous:\n'-\u25a0'\"   Pridej $3\u00bb00.\nCHRISTIAN      NIELSEN;      Agfent\nUdYm, ii. c.,\n\u25a0nr \u2022*,'n*'-^'^,^~H-fch,1ff.rTriiPe,\".,y^,\"i';'-'ajT1-t*y*'*,iric'':f*T*:iaTpM\n0. F. DESAtJlNlER.\nDB^tlsR IN\nuUfl :\nPROMPT DELIVERY.\naueens' Ave.    ' MOYIE\nwaw\u00ab.miyrtimi ci^i'i.'^u-gii^'MLjei \u25a0 i^c*ac\"!wiija-^jt j.t\u00bbb\nOSM0P0UTAN\nPPflCi JWCV'\nW. II. F.  CROSBY, Proprietor.\n\\-1 * r c- (\u25a0\u25a0\u2022 v\n^*. J J JLr*   v . -I ,\nB. C\ny.t.  '.jute's.\nNot n .ir.nuti. should  bo   lo'-t after .\u25a0\nchild    b.iov,.*-    ;.\\ oiptun. .    o'    cholcrb\ninfantur.:. The 'ir.~t t:.:i!.-! al h-o.-'-nt .'* j\nni\"    the    Aj \/.-;\u2022   t:.e.i:id   be   Mi'Iie'ieiiM\nwarning.    J!    i.'u-K.'.lia'a   ;.r,d   pioper ]\nIroatnient    ii;    A'~~    ^liot1^   cont'o-\n'iuences    will   he   a-'ir'etl     Chamner- ! r>     (j.      (.'.miinereial     and\"    business\ni un'.*.    (Jolitb   '~'i\\\"\\y-.n.   :,Md   7A.ar.'!'.c>ea b'*our-eb   >   --pecialty,    Excellence   and\nb-uiivlv ; * l.'it   rA  n :\u2022:\u25a0:\u25a0-')   of   tboiH-   sv\/ift   progi(\\*(j   fchaiaclc-aise   encii   de-\n\u2022t-lJ-tment.    Parents   bhould   write   for\np irticuhir.-*.    One month   assures   the\npublic  of   the   thoroughness   of    lhe\nftiM-hoid mi.'U'c! I'.r'e   ti '..ottle 1 s^terb melliods   of  teaching,    Terms\n.b hj:\\1.    (bi ;l tn (i-iy.     b tsur,   y.o'c A miiiii. nco .bmu try,   April   and   Sept.\n\". -   Joseph's   Convent.\nNj'.'r-OS, B. C.\n|     jio.cdi.-.g and V.iy School  conduct-\nO'l h-y the bit-ter? of St. Joseph, Nelson\n\u25a0 o -j  i-ii.tlio-i?  vr\\d   by   it j  aid  th, j\n\u2022 O'i'-n - i'.'-u ilii'r clnl ireii s  h\"Pc\n'.i i:,c\nAn  -\u2022 K' i\/V   i'l dnvgi  k\nPupils are admitted during tc-rtn.\nj,.L     ,PI I I.I Wtl\"<\u00bbllf il\">WI   n  M\n-iTiis lialcfoa Hoi Spp\n\"i .  i'     \u25a0;>'-\". *!-\u2022     1   -'.I' \u2022\nIi       . ,'       , v \\ ,        Jt.l'l'Ml       '   )     '       |\n\\    .\/, r > ,- *'        .'     ' \u2022 '    -Ai. V ,.!.'    1 nur\n_.i .if,. j ,,,   , i \\,  i      11   in   i , e r   I * I e TO.\n,!,.\u2022; ',ca iL.'ii'iii,.''1:   ,-   \"   :i   .\u2022 '.'-\u2022 '. \u25a0   ,..._,     \u2014,     \u201e __.      ...      , ._\n,\u201e!;.:,>. .1... v.d SAIlxvUV^    IjAXE-,   13.^0.\nMeets every Mon'day evening in their\nhall on Victoria street. Sojourning\nOdd Follows cordially invilc-d.\nC. A. Footk.'   '       \u25a0    F. J. Sm_yth-;\nNoble Grand.    , Secr'y.\nMoyie Board of Trade,\nMeets on the first \"Wednesday    \u25a0\nevening of each    month at\n3 o'clock sharp   in the court\nhouse.\nJames Ckonin, Hon. Pros.\n' A. P. .AlAcnor.ir.D, Pros.\nP. F. Johnston, It. 0amiw:u,,\nVioe-Pres,      \u201e Sc'c'y.\nr r   l\nBnrrTffr.T|T.| .j rwrM|^|i1T^r.\u00ab^r,^.r-^^-rT^raf^-*\u00bbWi^\u00bbn\u00bbt>.'l-.iii)f\u00abTl\u00bbm'^^\nHarvey    &   Mc Carter, \\\nrOKT STKMLK, 13. C   ;\nIlarrcy, H-IcCnrtor \u00a3; rSnlcliIiiu,\nKEVEL3T0F.E, B. C.    -\nI '\nBarristers & Solicitors.\nW. Ii1. G-UED.   ..\nli\nK i*,..),\nA.J1 *W\nit!\n\u25a0ei-\n\u00ab9\na.\nJ.10i3 \"k*^\ntcllfl\n6^1 t?&i\nThe H.ifost buy of the season, and you will double your\nmoney in three months. The company have 12 cliiim*,\nwhich surround the ,St. Eugene mine\u2014the largest, fcilvt-r-\nlead mine on the American continent.\ny ir\nlasury.Stock Is Now-Si\nal 10 Gents a Share;\nli'\n'ri\n'A\n4.\nI\n<f-f\n\"or Parliculai's apply to\nIiAIlHISTKll, SOT^IOiTOK, TiTiD.\nCRANBROOK. B.,C\n'   ' ' o\nCranbrook: B, C.\nGeitlrg-e H. Tlioiiipson,'  -\nBarrJsxhr, SbLrcrroK, No\nlai-y PuBi\/ic, &c.\nSolicitor for tlje Imperial\nBank of Canada.,\nORANliitbOK\".-,     Bitrnsu CoiA;:(i;rA.\navzrz^x*srx~:'j\u00bbjL. a.'jjiuj^*'ai,\" 'j-i xsg'ocaKr,^\u00bbtf'^:*i'-i-*iUiJiLr-ja'y\u00bbi,\u00bb'M\nt-ioYiii's i.ii\u00ab.j:sg hotel:\n2\nOur aim is to plcafe patrons.'\nGood   draft and   bottled  beei-\nahvayp on  hand.\nJOSEPH NiLDERSTADt. Prop.\nJt\nT-IOK.ST\u00ae\n\u00b0,    TO'AlbO  FU0M ALL\niJ-'-LiesJ\n\"HH 0# fesi \"t\nVIA-\nThe he's!.- of^'accommodibiou!:\nfor\/.he (raveling public.\nP. J, McMahon, Mgr.\nwul mumr* ri\u00bb^\u00abe*i\nFOR   FINE   TAILOIUNG   00    TO\neg     F1 SHOTS'8\n\u25a0 hi i yy i l\nMERCHANT \u25a0 TAILOR.\nFine   Suitings,'   Overcoating\nTrousers,   Imported    Goods.\nMOYIE, E. C\n\u2022he c.ti \u00ab.\"- 'jiiPe ;.-\"-',ukb.'- . 1) i\" \u00bb'.d ;\niin.b.'hlv Iv i. md.il by 'he P1 -\u2022]'\u25a0* (\nitlio foln :-'*p,tK:.nc bn-* year. rA 11\u2022 * i\n;,iir open-. <). t .1 . . - i'ti! ''i\" ; \u00b0\" !'.- 1\nI.'Uli. T!)Ci'\"\".i ' Pr( '^,( ''(; -m !\u2022 ,\ns-iili - aud i ', * :..'\na f I '.V (', i \\ -  \u2022 (    -      i\n,b.   I.    I.,A   \u2022     '   '  \u25a0 \"1\nII\n)\n.    I\n(  In\n\u25a0,. >     a 11.. i  j ' 'I '\ni-   e> , i.    .\n.'il-     -   C I.\nn       I -.   ' 11 -     ! c, i\n\u2022 i!\u00ab(.-r.' .c.   !,.Mt3i-   f   > o-i'i-.u   tiian   a' \u25a0.;\n\u25a0 (  \"   .| ^  I i, i-\nVno [v'.uvi Cornpleid\n:\\z::lk'    Resort   on\nthe     GtbibiiAtii-     oi\niv;\u00bb;'j\"is America,\nI\", \\T!- \u2022' <   ..'\u2022   -di   riei-Vous   and\n\u25a0:ri    -     \u25a0;\u25a0'..;\nis   '.'\u2022'.\\ l !.!'..\"\"      ileal   all    Kidney,\nmi i \u25a0   :. jch .'.iVmcnts. -\n.Tevufiiibn-ji.   Remedy\n'*:< *.  M.(\\e-  '\u25a0 \u2022   '\n111 v    . i'\nRb t.\n! io: all ib:- t.m itic  i rouble^\ny., , a    i   , '     TlA; MS--\"*)'\") to$!S   per ,\\ve\"ekb ac-\nT h\u00b0 bit 'U- ml I'll rtx.i tn c <  h ,-t  (..iki   i       *-'*\"' ''-'<.    A ,-.       .   -,;;.,,   ,\n11 \"' '     \"       \u201e>       .  .   ,   icoidni''to ii-iiknccin Hotel or-villas,\nienced ly all   who   vse   Chainn?il,nn ,*\u25a0 ,\nStomach and   Ltv?r  Tiibkfs   and   lhe j ^\nL,\nreal\n.EAST KUOfENW BOTTLiNG  CO\nI \\j r*. A r< u JW 0 A,  u    o .\nAreated Waters of all\nJNprtiierr\n1*1 .o is ^^\nCM; W   <s\n' '   :    T O    '\nSpokane,   CeaUlb  ,\\tul'Coast  Point?.\ntt.'Paul- Dultiib, Atitineapolis\n'Chicago anibPuin's East.\n2TRAiKlS bAfLY g|\nFAST TIME \u25a0\u25a0\/\u25a0 \u25a0\nhealthy    con.In:uii   of   the   body   and j \u201e_ \u201e . \u00ab-,   \u00bb.\njinind which iheycrcale make, one feel   -i\"L    J U U   fiAVJ!<\/1\n'ovful,    For cale by till liiiggiiU.\nrzl*J^t.1.-?t^'\u2022\nWATC'i   KSi'AIUIMG   A   Sl'EC I.VL'iY,      1\nW0 Ia TATE,\nCIl^NBROOK,   B,  C.     |\nNev?   Equipment,    Throughout, , Day\nCoaches, Palace  and. Touriot\nLOTTO SELL, I \u25a0 .Sleepers, Dining and,;.Buf.\nA HOUSE TO REN?. . . -'fet Smo.ldug and Li-;     \u2022\n:ji;UN0 STOCK TO BELL, j ,'.;,      brary Caro.\nfor-l'IcUete,'\u2022 iialcc, .Fokierb and\n\"Full information,-call oil or ad-\ndrees any- GiTiil'Itoriheru Agent\nor write    .\n0^cianbaAch.:n^.iai';l0i'   the 0. P. j ]?ox 85,    , M0YIE i GI2 First Avendei '   \\&\u00a3auw, \\V**U\nOr if you wi&h to in'bbji;\nin any of thece\"oonsu'lf\nFAhRELl- & SfVIYTH,\nM f *\u00a3\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 d fi\nOrden\nC:**5.\nJii'GU.ti.i.\nJso.d.a .vV.atcr   anci, -ayprions,\n\/\u00bbvrv. \u00ab\"\u00bb\u00ab.\u00bb\u2022-*\u00bb fn-\u00bb**\u00bbV m*<m \u00bb\u00bb\u00bb#r*ir **\u00bb.\u00bb\u00ab\u25a0\u00ab\n0;    QilQM'Q:    P.   fHl'\nft** \u25a0     ktBe \u00bb?'\"\u25a0\u00ab \\      \/if     2 bS8\nI \u25a0\u25a0:\u00bb \u25a0    P 41 ? 6. i .1V b' i^   , ii w.\nb'-     V\/.l'lOI.Ka'A'Ui A1J2J KliTAli.\nMEAT     MEKGHANTS'\nFresh, and Cured;,Mealo;- Fro\u00bbh\nFish, Game an5- Poultry. We\nsupply  only   the  best.     Your\ntrade solicited,    .\nBaiA.uK'K,a:'o\nIn'   all   tiie   Pri:\nCities and   Towns \u2022 in\nBritish Columbia.\nFARRELL & SMYTH,\n'$\nI\ni\n^ BOX '3o.\nMOVIE, lb v.   3\nM \u25a0\u25a0!    HIWlK Wi \u2014H 1   Wl I III  III 1 \u25a0 II 111 II11 IIWI \u25a0Mlia'lBIIII\nd SP0KANfis OCTOBER   5th to  ,13th.\n1\ntenth ax;:uai.\nPC\no\n\u00a71\n' MORE THAN ^0,000' LNT PREMIUMS.      , ,\n_^^__ r _ ___ \u201e\u201e_ \u2122\u00bb          \u201e__.__-._ .   \u25a0   - \u25a0 \u25a0      . .   ,   -       -       . \u25a0\u25a0   '1 *     t-  - - S\n\"\"\" .*\" i \" \" I J\nGreatest Attractions   Biggest   Amusement j\nitures Ever Secured.\nS     A-.----'-   - -,\u2014 .-\u2022-..-     ..--,     A. ,,.--_- fl\nI    AOPLCOLTUJtAL E^ bIBITK,    KTC>0K -SUOW\/   b'liVIT IbVIU   @\n| . MIN1MG DEPARTMENT,    FIXE AUTS DlrfPI-A v. ; , |\nI , EiaKT BAYS EAGING.   '        *       |\nI    0\\'ER :10G irOHHE.S S^TERrdb BIG EVENT EACIT J)AY ' |\nI'. ,.    . $10,000 TN PURSES. \u25a0    |\n|    ljov.-c io.vn   Clrcct Carnival   Every   ^ighl,, Vaude\\l:Jl-?   Special tie,-*   |\nand If:-.;!* Clu\u00bb\u00bbi- Circus Feature.'.'*'.\nI Special L\u00a9\u00a5\/ Rales m. All Railroads, 1\nsi s, \u2022    \u25a0 r*. r. \u2022, . .-       ;\u25a0 .1 .       ii-_:,., .-.._ l* \u00bb*;,,.,-.   ! ;,.. I'.\nCommi.-*sion   Privilege:; im  cale.     >\\>Ue for Premium \u25a0 i\n^! ii. cj. rri-i1:.;,,;,-.,,. r**.- >\u25a0 i.iui .\u25a0\u00ab.\u25a0-. f\nIIrI I iiIS I lljjL\ne?# x&\u00ab   ST \u2022is' a    .*)   s '-\u00ab' ^\nDrag' and Stationery Store.   ,.\nOfe. Slatiouerj-\nDrugs, Chemicals,\nTolls! Articles      '   Schoo^. Supplief-\n\"r?Tl-'c.i*       -fyff^r^       \"\"\/\"\";?\u2022 ,rf-^~^*\\If~%'~iV7T5 \u2022\n.3.\nBritish Colu;i-cia\nlc^\u00ab^)l^ Kry^^wri^MMiMi \u25a0Aii,\u00bb^MM\u00bbii**er^r^-t*v\"--y3?r^jBytX^^'i^ '-s.-;*rr->.*tcr?y*i\nIlly I 1>A4J    \"    JDllJ\"^ 'v\/'\/ AW IU A \u00ab\nXIUDlMiSTAWr, ItlKHTt. lA'AA.'d. CD.\n\\\\ ort'A!^   flftr^     ^h E-'ffT'&*''   '\u25a0?e\"^bf1    r-i* ZfY^;;*1\na,   benji ttimtykr bz zwtm;- :\u25a0. .       .,:: -,\nQuality not excelled In.tlie country. \u25a0 JTryit ^;i^\n\u2022\u2022.-\u25a0. \u25a0 ;.-'\u25a0    ;\"    \u25a0'\" '\u25a0 'be-Gontixiced'.'.'       \u2022\u25a0; ,    \"b.. \" \". \u201e\u25a0\ntl^urra^r.^if^^'vc^wfJM^ttSfc.wcot-^iMK^^ft'iM^ m\n1\/\nH\nI\n\/ft\nT'T^A-v-\"-,- p^\nZ>.'F. J'OJlJVSlOti \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\nti\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u2022>\nif\nis\n\u25a0 ip\n| Thut Hotel is New and well Fumislied. The *\u2022\nTables are Supplied with tlie Best the |\nMarket affords. The Bar. is Filled with J\nthe Best Brands of. ladiiors and Cigars.\nHEADQUARTERS $\u00aeki COMMHHCiAL\nANDMXNINO UEM\n4\\ I Ail),.'     t\"'l\/*\n(ft  3tO>.'ii:i     -\nhaiTisri \u20acoi,5'\"'! .:u  Jj!\nR39!E>^qcSqsaE^*^^","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"Frequency: Weekly<br><br>Titled \"The Moyie City Leader\" from 1898-04-23 to 1898-12-31. Titled \"The Moyie Leader\" from 1899-03-04 to 1911-04-28.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Moyie (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"The_Moyie_Leader_1903-09-26","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0305668","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.300000","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-115.8333000","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Moyie, B.C. : Smythe and Musgrave","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights":[{"value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http:\/\/digitize.library.ubc.ca\/","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"The Moyie Leader","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}