"eb6b5dc8-3771-4dd6-9895-1ac602f8d3ad"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "2015-11-27"@en . "1911-10-26"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/chilliwackfp/items/1.0067551/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " aek Fr\n*\nPUBLISHED IN THE GARDEN CITY OF B. C. YOU WILL LIKE CHILLIWACK.\nVol,. I.\nOHILLIWAUK, B.C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1911\nNu. 8\nLillie's\nSpecial\nPrices\nI* i nt\nTODAY\nA NI >\nSATURDAY\nWhile\nllnlise\nI'nlTee\n, PC\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0lb.\n.45\nBrultl's\nBeat\nCnllei',\nper\nIII.\n.40\nKnclisl\ni Brcu\nkfust C\nnffct\n.35\nllei'kcjnlic Ten, per lb. .50\nBraid's licit Ten, per III. .40\nPrincess Ten, tier ll,. .35\nBrouko Bond Ton, tier lb. .35\nPry's fnenn. Iiiill pound tin .25\nCowan's Coenn, \" \" .25\nSmith's .lain, 5 lh. pulls, .75\nAfternoon Ten.Iuiu (glass) .25\nEXTRA SPECIAL!\nSee oar Window Display ol\nPICKLES\nat 25 cents per Bottle\nMlielline Sll I I! m\nper lb. .25\nHam, Boiled, per IB.. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2*><>\nUncooked Ham, Sliced,\nIHT \u00C2\u00BB)., .30\nWhole Hum, per lb., .21\nPERCECTION FRUIT CAKE\nSonictliini! S|K?ciul fnr Afternoon\nTens nnd' Receptions, per lb, .30\n3mok ' Fish and Fii'.'i\nin Season.\nChloride of I.imc, 3 tins for .25\nB. C. Cream, 20 nz tins,\n:\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 for .25\nCome to US and get\nSATISFACTION\nLillie's\nCash Grocery\nWe liavc roceiveil direct\nfrom Knglmiil n large\nshipment of the famous\nShoes\nFor lVfen\n&Boys\nSee our\nWindow\nDisplay\nR J. Mcintosh\nChilliwacK\nLocal Items\nI-.F.Ctoft,atMoo Studio for photos\nCounty Court Thusdny Nov, 0.\nThanksgiving Monday Oct, 80.\nAshwctl's fnr Hehis Sweet Pickles\nand olives in liulk.\n0. \V. W-abb was n visitor tu\nVancouvor tliiH week,\nI Robt. Cannichael was a passenger\nto Vancouvor, \"Tuesday.\nFred .Toudry was a Sunday\nvisitor lo Now Westminster.\nIt, A. Henderson wuh 11 business\nvisitur to Vancouvor this wcok,\nSec whal Chapman offers fur\nChrist inns, i\" tht' Kri't* Press,\nI Chief of Police Derby is advertising three acres uf land in this Issue,\nMr. aud Mrs.,I. Howe Bout spent\na low *li ys in Vancouver ibis week.\nii. \V. II. Ash well ia un a bust*\nnoss trip iu Vancouvor this wcok,\nI Chilllwack's new meeting place.\nMoot yuur friends tit Ashwell's big\nstore.\nVuu :ir\u00C2\u00AB- helping to advance Chilliwack when .vuu trade al Ashwell's\nbig store.\nMm. II. Eekerl ami children\nspent iln- week-end witli friends iu\nVancouver.\nA very attractive program is be-\ning presented at the Lyric Theatre\nthis week.\nTea will bo served at Ashwell's\ndig -tun*. Friday and Saturday from\n3 tn 5.80 p.m.\nWomen's and girl's mats at give-\nway prices. Henderson quits busi-\nncss Saturday.\nHendersnit's doors closes forever\nnext Saturday. Merchandise literally K-vrit away.\nA. M. MeKclvie, of the Opera\nHouse, was a visitor to the Terminal City, Tuesday.\nAfter the doors close forcv r don't\nrsgrot you missed th\u00C2\u00BB* lost day... f\nHenderson sale.\n\"K.\" shoes for men and buys are\nfeatured by It. J. Mcintosh in the\nFree Press to-day.\nThe four foot concrete crossing\nwhich is being laid across Westminster street at Main street, will\nlie a great improvement. We ho|>e\nto see many more in the near future.\nLadies rest room at Ashwell's big\nstore, at rear nf Pry Goods department, is now open.\nChas. Ken-and family havo moved\nonto tint ranch recently purchased\nfrom J. T. Maynard.\nMeet mo at Henderson's next\nFriday or Saturday you'll find me\nat the bargain counter,\nIf ynu want to lie well informed\ntake a paper: even a paper of pins\nwill give you some points.\ndipt, and Mrs. Milne, ol Vancouver, have been spending a few\ndays in the valley tills week,\nYou can gel a good dunr cheap at\ntho Chilliwack Planing Mills. For\nprice sec tho tulvt. on page 6.\nMiss Olive Wondwnrth uf the Post\nOftlco stalT, was in the Royal City\nfrom Saturday until Monday.\nIt. S, McCabe, nf the Cily Restaurant has sold uut tu Wuug Luck,\na Chinaman from Westminster,\nMillinery renovated*, also new hats\nsupplied; latest styles; moderate\nprices. Apply Crooin, Mary Street.\nStandard books, -KK1 of them, are\nadvertised by II. .1. Barber, the\ndruggist and stationer this week.\nThe Chilliwuek Candy Kitchen is\nserving various and delieiuus hot\ndrinks, The list Includes the best.\nJames Burton, nf Denmark &\nBurton hardware merchants, spout\nMonday in Vancouver on business.\nFront room for rent, suitable for\ntwo gentlemen, lioardand residence\ngiven. Apply ('room, Mary street,\nInvitations have been issued for a\nHalloween dance to be given in the\nOpera House on Tuesday evening\nnext.\nW. S. Wilson left on Sunday\non a business trip to Princeton,\nwhere he has interests. Good luck\nBilly.\nMi*?s Clndys Kipp, of the Burrard\nSanitarium, Vancouver, spent a few\ndays with her parents in the city\nlast week.\nD. K. Munn, local manager for\nP J. liar* & Co., spent the week*\n-ami 'n W*tttain$ter ami Vaneouvei\non business.\nSmith's Bakery have something\nto gay about the price and quality\nof Purity flour Ibis week that will\nInterest you.\nThe twelfth annual convention of\nthe B C. Sunday School Association\n1 is being held at Westminster yester-\nJday and to-day.\nThe Gilliert Co. has a speeiiil removal sale announcement in the\nFree Pree to-day. Look up the\nbargains offered.\nRemember Henderson's going-out\nof business sale ends Saturday Oct,\n*28. Bargains for everyone. Come\ncurly if you can.\nMrs. Claude Hill and daughter,\nof Hum a by, spe'it Friday aud Saturday witli her cousin, Mrs. N. S.\nMcKcnzie, Cioro avenue.\nHouse-cleaningtime is here again\nand W. It. Stevenson the Valley\nPainter and his staff of workmen\nare kept busy papering, tinting etc.\nCanada has declared war ou\nTurkey. The ranks of the latter\nwill 1h*. sadly depleted after tin-\nengagement scheduled for Monday\n.1. K. Parker, of East Chilliwack,\nwill shortly commence the erection\nof a new borne two miles east of the\ncity. Contractor Callieck has the jub.\nMonday Oct. .'10 being Thanksgiving Day and a Statutory holiday,\nIhe Pust Office will be closed. The\nwicket will be open from $. a.m. to\n9. a.m.\nW. R. Nelems, real estate agent,\nsold last week, lot 2 in block 25,\nFirst avenue, to TI103. Hardy, of\nVancouver. The owner was Samuel\nL. Carson.\nThe I. D. Smith Co. will see that\neveryone who comes to Hendersun's\nlast-three-days-it.-busines-ssalc gets\ntwo dollars worth for every dollar\nthey spend.\nThe restaurant and fruit store\nthat has been doing business in the\nIrwin block for the past few months\nhas been closed out. Failure to pay\ntent was the cause.\nMatt Robertson left on Friday for\nWinnipeg where he will take a\ncourse in the Manitoba Agricultural\nCollege. Matt has been a clerk in\nAshwell's departmental store.\nG. R. Ashwell & Son have a half\npage advt. on page eight, of the Free\nPress to-day, in whieh you will\nfind many items of interest to thc\nfrugal buyer of the lines carried by\nthis fine store.\nBent A Goodland have sold to\nMr. Creelman, of Cloverdale. the\nCusack property nn South Humas\nroad. Mr. Creelman will take possession in time to prepare for next\nnext year's work.\nThe Free Press is not the only\npaper that believes in boosting the\nhometown. The Cumberland Islander remarks that it is \"pleased to say\nthat thc town lock-up is comparatively comfortable.\"\nCITY COUNCIL HELD SPECIAL SESSION\nA special meeting uf the City\nCouncil was held oil Tuesday evening in the Clerk's office, all tho\nmembers being present,\nA letter was read Dr. Pagan of\nthe Provincial Health Department Wostmii\nstating that lie had received ;i colli-\nmunlcttticn frum Chilliwack making complain! of an unsanitary\ncondition uf a septic lank in centre\nuf city, ami asking the Council tu\nwrite him as to what the Board \"I\nA Big Match Industry'\nDominionJNatch Company of Westminster Will\nErect Big Factory. Deroooslratioa of New\nProcess in Old Irwin Store.\nMatches manufactured at New\niter ami un the market in |\nBeginning on M lay uf this\ntek a change in the mall service\nwent into effect. The mails are\nnow made up fnr the east and west\nat 7.80 a.m. and o p.m. The incoming mails arrive at 12.15 p.m.\nland 9.16 p.m., as formerly. The\nchange in th.; outgoing mail from\n... ... .. i ., i i twolve o'clock to five o'clock allows\nsix months is ono of tho new novol- ., ,- , . ,. . . \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 .,\n cm. . of .1,.' Pacific coast, A l\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB'\": '\"'\" r\u00C2\u00A3lc\"\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0084\u00A2 ''\"\"T\"'1'\" '\u00C2\u00AB\nsite litis tan scoured,'plans aro l'>fa*r?ail\ncourse of preparation and construction work is expected to start in it; Nelson, Oct. 'JL\u00E2\u0080\u0094Parties of men\n,. u. ... ,, i fow days. The now concern is and boys are scouring the mountains\nHealth was doing In the matter. Ul,own utJ t|10 r>utuinton Match Co., |n the vicinity of Rooslnnd in search\ninstructed in ^i*-1--' Limited, of New Westminster, of Mias Maude Bruce, sinter of Mr.\nMessrs. H. Proctor and F. M. Blake,j Leslie Bruce, principal <>t the Ross-\nrepresenting the company, are in |land Public School, who went out\nThe Clerk was Instructed tu\nthat the Board uf Health\ntending to the matter, and\nnt-\n!,\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 has i-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00C2\u00ABt\nneon nor beard \"f since noon\nlay. Ai t n Mi- Bruce,\ns a ncl 1 te;i'.-l.--r, was seen\nand the local member, Mr\nhad interviewed the Govern men!\nwith a view to having a public bill\npassed validating the By-law as il\nstands, but in this they were unsuccessful. The only alternative is\nto submit the matter to the ratepayers in the form of a now by-law,\nwhich will be dune at tin early dale.\nbe used by the new company. Isume miles ..tl in the mountains by\nMr. W. II. Parker, whu is tho Mr. Charles Williams, who uked\nSuperintendent of the Pacific Coast her if site wen- about tn return\nand for nineteen years home. Sl..- replied th.tt she was\nn experienced match maker, was \"going farther yet.\" That is the\nI the mn ny inventors to work | last heard of iln missing ^iri. and\nJ. . '?.'.' ;*d\"ng this line. After a great many\nill yesterda,\n-^^\u00E2\u0080\u0094f. nd [i tu ,i Lite hour\nyears of patient toil, and at an j hist night -..mi. parties trailed\nenormous expense to himself and mile after mile ovei \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ickly-wooded\nfriends, he finally succeeded in per- mountains withoi \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ti dingany trace\nfeeling a match cutter that is ad-1 of her. [Miss Bruc- - kao*n to\napted to tlio use of any kind of tlm- many in Chilliv ,* uught\nber that Till make matches, sueh as a department i -....,\nfir, spruce, hemlock, bass wood, as-1 for six months \u00E2\u0096\u00A0. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 .4.\npen, I In wood, poplar, alder, etc., 1\u00E2\u0080\u0094Editor, j Ln \u00E2\u0080\u0094 -t-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 which can bo obtained nt a fraction from cold and h \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nA young man hailing from San-L* ih0 COst of white cork pine, and after sixty ho\neouver ami giving his name as .1(,rfurm;, ihe work automatically, elements, found her M01\nScott was the object of considerable j w|.|c|. jlftg heretofore been largely; day night to tli.* \-I*,m \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 1\n\"\" \"I:\"~ '\"\" IM \" done liy hand, thereby meeting she ws supplied \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ti \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 1 -\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nevery requirement of the match warmth by Watebi \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 -\nmanufacturer. To give an idea of later taken to mra*.\ntlio originaiity of our machine, ilthaek. She is n. 1 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 t\nmight bo of interest to you to know a physicians, *\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ..-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 m\nthai nur patents were passed upon , will be some weeks \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 --\nby the United States Patent Office, covers from the tert \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Pinal\nami completed within two week***,'\t\nwithout a single reference tu any j\nother patent over granted. I W\"' ,\"'^\"p::'' \":\nMillions of dollars have l>een spent to Mr. and Mrs - Pugh. -.san\nin trying to perfect a machine that * Born\u00E2\u0080\u0094In C^ilBwack n 1 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nwould cut match sticks from the[24, to Mr. ami Jtrs. A S \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 idut\ncheap wood, ami at the same time, wn( ;l J|(J1\neliminate the great amount of ex- j\nponso of hand labor heretofore Bom\u00E2\u0080\u0094OniThumlay, Octobar *itf,\nsearching during Thursday aud\nFriday of last week. Ho put up al\nthe Harrisonliouse and in company\nwith another boarder set out to hunt\nlast Thursday. The two men\nseparated ami that was the last\nheard of Scott. It being supposed\nthnt he had got lost or met with\nsome accident, diligent search was\nmade for him Thursday night ami\nFriday. As the circumstances became more fully known and his\nmovements traced by K. F. Robert's\nbloodhound, it became evident that\nthe erstwhile hunter had vamoosed\ntaking the train al Sumas for parts\nunknown. His debts and worthless\ncheeks discovered since furnish\nreason of Ins quiet but earnest desire\nlo leave Cliilliwnck, without harassing the tender feeling:\nby going away iu the present-\nany of them.\nnecessary. The match manufacturer! to Mr. and Mrs. Jack Satuar, Yu\u00C2\u00AB\nequipped with such a machine would road, a son.\nbo in a position to manufacture\n.. . .matches for at least one-third less, Walt Paper. WaH Pip-\nI rnencts t|iau U)M*,or ,iny ot|It.r process, and paper\u00E2\u0080\u0094 HciwMrJewring anra\ntherefore, drive all competitors out here again. We it\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 I of the field\nOn Monday afternoon, Mrs. Clor- The patents aro owned and con-\ndon, secretary and Mrs. Roberta, trolled by tho Dominion Match Go,,\nconvenor, of the Home commlttco Umlted, with head offices at 6 and7\nof the Aid -Society, took a pleasant Canadian Bunk nf Commerce lll.lg.,\ndrive through the valley in Ihe in- New Westminster, B.C. A large,\nterests of tho Children's Hume In j fireproof plant will soon be in opcrn-\nrV ui\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^ '.argil\nassortment on band vueu wttjatoA\nreduco in order m make nom Sn\nour new stock A ruction if S)\nper cent on all vili paper :i me\nstore, tin- \ 1.'.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Pain! uul \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 t-i\nPaper House\nOpera House One Night\nWednesday Nov. 1st\nAnd His Excellent\nMAX DILL -nSSrg\nin\n^jkx^m*\ns\n\V. II. Ntov.'iin.ii tlif Vnlloy I'uiii\nlor will not k.'i'p yon waiting to\nliuvi' your iiiipi'i' liungiiit; tlono as\nhi' Imi 11 staff of first-class work-\n111011.\n::',:.' \u00E2\u0080\u00A2'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2i\W'\n\"The Rich Mr. Hoggenheimer\"\n50 PEOPLE 50\nPrices: $1.50 - $1.00 - 50c.\nScats on Sale ot ALF. WHITE'S MUSIC STORE.\nlion on the Fraser river, where the\nraw material can be tlnated to within 'Jfi feet of the saws, and when-\ndeep water vessels can be loaded with\nthe finished article for any part of\nthe world; with a side-track Into\nthe factory where cars can lie loaded\nfor interior shipment.\nit has lieen trulv said that more\nmoney lias beeu lost by the timidity\nof men iu not grasping opportunities when presented, than in had\nspeculation. Another great truth\nis that \"one gtx-d investment is\nworth a lifetime of labor.n Any\nman the age of 40 years can recite |\nnumerous instances uf fortune he\ncould have made had he accepted\nthe opportunity when presented.\nWe are presenting au opportunity\nto you, now, for the first time, of\ngetting into one uf the most profitable Industries in the world today,\nwith possibilities uf exceedingly j\nlarge dividends only limited by the i1\ncapacity. This is not a speculation t\nnut au invesmout of your capital in f\nan established business. Vou must\nact at once if VOU wish to secure a\nblock uf this stock at the present iZ\nprice, $7.60 (par value 110.00,) for it\nthe enthusiasm shown hy the men If\nwith mono) to invest proves to us\n' it the limited amount nf stuck\nat this price will soon l>c exhausted.\nDominion Match COMPANY, Lth.\nNEW WKSTMINSTKII, B.C.\nil. pitocTOK F. M, BLAKE\nllEI'HKSKNTATIVtS\nVancouver. It is the wish of the\ncommittee to arrange for a carload\nnf fruit and vegetables from this\ndistrict and the generous response\nof the farmers who were interviewed\nSpeaks well fur tho success of the\neffort. There are at present 128\nchildren in the homo ami as the\nsociety is largely dependent upon\nthe public fur BUpport it is to be\nhoped that everyone will try to help\nthe cause in some way. Contributions of clothes, vegetables, money\nor in fact anything is acceptable as\nit all works in somewhere in the\ncaring for of this large family.\nThe committee wish to thank all\nwho BO generously helped and regret that they only had so short a\ntime in tho valley and were not able\nto call on all. But if anyone feels\ninclined to help in this cause kindly\ndrop a card or phone to Win. Beer\nat the B. 0. Klectric station and he\nwill ece that the donations are collected witli the rest. Tho collecting\nwagon will l-e aiuutul the first ol\nthe week, so please help the little\nones if you can. The ladies of the\neumnuttcc expressed a wish tn visit\ntho valley at some future date as\nthey were delighted with the drive\naim the crops thoy saw along the\nway, \t\nMAX WU. WEDNESDAY NEXT\nMax Dill, who is the greatest nf\nlaugh-makers to the people of\nAmerica, is rolling up a merry\ntriumph iu the \"Hich Mr. Hoggenheimer,\" which he brings to Chilliwack opera House ou Wednesday,\nNovember 1, Max Dill is funnier\nthan he ever was in his present\n\"Hoggenheimer\" rolo. A series of\nextremely comic adventures have\nbeen provided for him and bright\nlines and good joke; are also his\nportion. For nearly three hours he\nkeeps his audience in roars of laughter. Perhaps thero never has been\na more hilarious bcenc on the slagc\ntlum that in which Dill impersonates a rlvorcabman and is surprised\ninto undertaking the Joy of driving\nIns own wife tn '28 Bkfdoo street.\"\nThe scene is irresistible and it is notlmont\npossible to describe how tbe audi- The unknown comet whicli\nencos almost fall off their seats while trunumeis have been watching for j J\nit is going on. Bock of Mr. Dill tslsomolimo past ond endeavoring to \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n'a great, big, musical show wiih Identify may now bo seen by dwel- X\nplenty of pretty girls, clever boya lent on the Pacific coast who have \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\naud an abundance of tuneful songs, (sufficient curiosity nboul it to rise\nThe most popular uf these song hits I at 1,90 iu the ruing and look for\nare: Daffy Dill, MIm Pah* Pink It in the Eastern slur. It will W\nPan sol, Little Old America for Mo-, lobservcd on n parallel with the\nI'm in Vaudeville, Bye and Bye, moon, with the tail pointing up-\nI've a Garden in Sweden, Bug P.v'n* ward. Local early rlsors had a good\nSerenade, cive O'clock Tea, I'm view uf lite comet on Saturday\nGlad I am a Boy, and others. morning. Il wu** worth seeing.\nWhatYouGet\nA t Chapman 'i Studio\nfor Christmas\nPi nt - ' raj as, Bn mides,\nFrames, M aid ags md\nMatt* Camerai, ft r 'a..*\nami renl *\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\" land\nCameras bought ami -\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 d\nSupplies, films, 0.a.-. Ofl\nand developing bt ima*-\nteurs. Post cards and fiewe\nof Chilli-crack sold Tben\n3D. Open rrnninini\n400\nvolumes\nCLOTH BOUND\nBOOKS\nMessrs A. K, Stevens and II. L.\nLegge with fifteen men an- lioring\nfor coal on Sumas mountain. They\nhave now gone down considerable\ndistance and hnve every indication\nof getting thc desired black\ndiamond.*\u00E2\u0080\u0094AbU.tsford Post.\nThe Chilliwack St. Ardrew | ami\nCaledonian Society is completing \u00E2\u0099\u00A6\narraiigements fur a Scotch conceit;j\nto be given in thc near future,\nFirst.class singers from (he COOStix\nassisted by local talent will furnish jf\nthe program. The beat Scotch\ndancers of the const will also be\npresent. Watch for later announce*\n1 JUST arrived!\nPir.\ncl fr.'iii England\nIncludinR\n*****\nStandard Fictli\nin\nli'\nay's\nFavorite I.i\nluiiry\nG\ntiV-\nFavorlto I.i\nPoeU, etc.\nl.i-.iry\nH.J.BARBER\nDruggist and\nStationer \u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0,. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 .,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 .,, \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nFREE TRESS, CHILLIWACK, BRITISH COLUMBIA.\nA PIONEER TRAGEDY\nMIDDLESEX 3TOR> OF \"EVENTY-\nNINE YEAFS AGO.\n* if Low ot LlttU Thomai Crouse ol\nWestminster Tot? nthip In AprU,\n1632 It One of the Talcs That Ari\nAll Too Common In the Records ol\nthe Heroic Men Who Built Up\nToronto\u00E2\u0080\u0094Younger Ltd Wae Saved\nThe livea ol Uiu early pioneers of\nOntario, il Uu-y could bt* hilly tol-i\nwould oot i tat ii romance, tragedy ami\nluiih.is such un iu tlm hand* uf an\nable writer would UU volumes. Man)\nof Uu- moat pnthotto stories wlitcit\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0till linger around tlm concession\nlines in rural Otrtar*> will booh pair\niWOy Hlld bu tin mora unless bo tut\norganization in formed to insure Iheli\nbeing gathered together mid placed iu\nbook form Ior Uie future goueratloui\nto read.\nin tin- Township of Westminster,\nMiddlesex County, wtth ita northern\nboundary on the River Thames, there\nare many authentic stories ol the\npioneers of ', iu district which deserve\nio bu told to succeeding generation\nH only to inspire them with the same\nfeeling of brotherhood, heroic eooragj\nand persoverahoo which distinguished\nthese early settlers, There huve* beeu\nlliree st-parate surveys of the township, On the first and second cun\ncessions, running parallel to the river,\nthe lota ure a mile aud a quarter iu\nlength. Tile second survey, wllicn\nwas made along the west -id.- of th.\ntownship, ahii..m at right angles witli\nthe first, gave concessions two and a\nhull mill's wide. This is kuown a*\nthe North Street survey, and the roml\nwhich runs through it is purt ol tin*\nold Talbot rood of Elgin County\nTne remainder ol the township waa\nsurveyed several years after the se\ncond, and the concessions are live\nsixths of a mile wide. Iu const-\nquence ol this variety of surveys a\nmap of the township looks something;'\nlike a section ol a crazy patchwork\nquilt.\nDigman's Creek runs across the\ntowuahip from east to v.-.tt, crossing\naud reorossing some of the concessions nearly a dozen times, und close,\nto this creek occurred one of tilt\"\nmost pathetic incidents associated\nwith the early settlers of the town\nship. Here lived a family named\nCrou-ie. about three-quarters of a\nmile smith of the second concession\nbut at the time when they settled in\nthe locality there were no road-\nsimply old ludinn trails and the foot\npaths mi !e by the incoming settlers\nOn the 4th of April. 1832. two hub-\nboys, members of the Crouse family.\nwhich. by the Way, was a large one\nwandered away Irom home mid w.-r-\nlost in the woods. Thomas, the elder\nof the two, was nearly five years,\nand Nelson, the younger, barely three\nyears of age. As soon as it was real-\ntied that the children were lost the\nsignal was sent around and the set*.\ntiers, though few ami widely scattered, came From nil directions in au\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2ver to the frantic calls of thu parent*\nlor help to search lor tlieir missing\nchildren.\nThe blessed feeling of brotherhood\nwhich was such n striking character\niatic of the early settlors never showed\nitself umre strongly than when ior\nrow or trouble fell ou any family, and\nwork waa abaudutied, homes left with\none to car.- for them, while old\nunto tne si,uu was Unit of a little\nchild, there was iiltsohltely nothing t'i\ntliow llmt n wus thnt of tliu boy\nThe Crouse family a few years after\nthis inovjd to another farm on tlm\nfir-i concession of lho same township,\nuud thai prnperty is still iu lh\u00C2\u00BB hiind-\nof descendants of Mr. und Mr-.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'.'rouse, lliu boy Nelson who wu-\nfound beenme a skillful millwright\nand died two yours ago near Strath-\nroy nt the age of 80. He was very\nhighly esteemed by all whu know him\nIsaac' Grouse, an older brother of the\nlost children, soil lives in ihe ctt>\not London, il.- was a successful\nbridge-builder, and many of the\ni.i'.dges in the County of Middlosei\noid elsewhere bear tesliinony to the\nexcellence of his work. He. li\nvery hlglily esteemed. -T. o- in Saturday Globe.\nA P.rli,\nIlo..\ni. Goat.\nSomotimo, it i\nTlmrii is fnr Inn\nI la nl |ii'raiiiiaimi i\nll t\nI.. I,,' Ihe linal\n'i'. nn ainiiiiil nt\n:\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Tnriilllii .l.iek\nvnr.ls. nllo iluil\nwhich is pruvi'ibi\nkiai.t. Hv miaou\nworthy ol Hi,' in\nV ,\nnlil\nol i\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0seniles the t\t\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 in .tore l,ir llii\nil. duplicity hei\ni.i JuJm. lit\nreuai.li nl In- pin\nho tins linen .In\niiii.'!\n.1 nothing worn\nuuin Jerry. Ami\ntie ' uj, lu Iii- na\ntlmiiith In- Might\nAl the sliek y\nare uut II'eling,\nvery oldest inlinl\nj,\nirdt\nJer\nleiiiinli doe, n,i\nII,. is nol sad\nLe.\n' where career,\nry U one ot ihe\nits. His pnlrinr\nchill beuril 1 1-\nln Ins ;ij |,..|ira:u'i'\n. \u00C2\u00BB'l\ntouch il illgnilv\nueli al once (jive,\nhim a standing with Impressionable\nnew arrivals.\nBut. as the French sny. \"Reveiiotu*\na tins inoutotiv\" Of tht.1 \"nioulon*1\nJerry coiialitutes hlinsell the leader\nand, incidentally, the betrayer. Tin*\nsheep as is natural under such cir\ncumstances, are ruiln-r (lurried. They\nshow a tendency to disperse them\nselves over the laud-cape in a way\nwhich is trying lo tlieir guardians\nThat is where Jerry earns his iitimuu\nity front slaughter. He is trained b\ninix with the strangers on the most\nfriendly terms. He is the shaggy per\nsoul(ication of the chairman of a civic\nreception committee. But just whet*\nfie is the centre ef attraction, one o'\nthe -lock men culls his name, Hu re-\nspends with an Obedience horn of long\ncustom and the knowledge that lew-ill be -imply repaid, The sheep follow him in tin ndmirtrg phalanx. 'Ti.*\ndone. He leads them to their destruction an.l th.-n forsakes tin-in. Man's\nwisdom spares Jerry iu order that he\nmay do iin- trick again, aud again\nand again; and then some more. Duy\nafter day he betrays his followers to\ntlieir late. The sheep are separated\nfrom the goal, hut it is the goat which\ngoes free.-Toronto Star.\nTHE KING'S CHAMPION.\nWestminster Hall, Where His Challenge Used to Be Uttered.\nWostiulnster halt, In London, was\nbuilt originally by King William Ru-\nfile (lOfiO UOOt nnd iraditlou guCN thnt\nthu oak of li- i-elliugy was brought\nfrom the forest oi Shillelagh. In Ire- j\nlaud, Umber which possessed peculiar\nproperties rendering It hateful lo spiders and Ihelr webs. Richard 11\ntransformed the hall. Leaving the old\nwalls aiu tiding, hi* buttressed litem\nstrongly nnd raised over them the\nmtlglllflceut roof of onk Which Is sllll\nextant uud intnet It Is iiluety-iwo\nfeet high, The length of the hull Is\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0JIM) feet. Its breadth sixty-eight feet,\nlt was large enougb for mounted men\nto enter lu order to ctiulleuge uuy who\nwould dispute the rights of the king,\na ceremony Unit le quaintly described\nas follows on (he occasion of the coro\nnation or Ilk'hard ill mid Queen Amu*\nIn 1483;\n\"In tlio iifternoone the King nntl\nQuccno entered the hall, nnd ilm King\nstitu In thu in Idle, uud ye Ouecno on ye\nleft side of the table, und ou every\nside of her stuodu a Cuimtesse, bold\nlug a cloth of I'lettstitiee when she\nlisted for to drink And on the right\nhutiil of yo King ante ye Arch bis hup\nof Canterbury, The ludyc* sate all on\none side In ye mitlle of the hall, uud\nnt lho table against them sate the\nChancellor nud all the Lords, And nt\n(bo table DOXt Ihe cupboard sale ye\nMayor of London. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 At the sec\notld course ciiuh* luto ye hull Sr (tot)\ncrt Dluimoek. the King's Champion,\nmaking ['rocluHindoo ilint whoever\nwould say that King Richard wns not\nlawful! King, he would fight with him\nat tho utterance, aud threw down his\ngauutlett, and then all the hall cryed\n! King Richard\nJ \"And then one brought blm a eupp\nof wine covered, nud when he hnd\n^ drunlt he cast out thu dilulte and do\nj parted with the rupp. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 At tbe\nend of tbe dinner the Mayor of Lon\n'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 don served iln* King ami Querne with\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Wceto whu*. nnd hnd of each of ihein\n| a cupp of gold und u cover of gold,\n; And hy that time thai nil wus done. It\nl was darke nighte, uud so ihe King re-\ni turned to MU chamber, and every man\n' to his lodging\"\n! Tbe last time that the halt wns tbe\n, scene of the challenge of tbe king's\ni cbampkm was at tbe coronutlou of\n| Ueorge IV.\nWEST'S OLDEST CHURCH\nST. ANDREW'S IS MONUMENT TO\nRED RIVER SETTLERS.\nA Good Returt.\nDr. Rutherfo'd. Live Stock Commls*\nlioner Ior Canada, who used to be in\n|n litlcs, got back neatly at a m. tuber\nuf Parliament, a short time ago,\nTin- doctor was under examination\niu tin- agricultural committee, and in\nspeaking oi Canadian cuttle he produced an old photograph which he\n-tai.d he had obtained In the Province\nol Quebec. II - said that lie had found\nit i*n tin- ham of a farmer, aud In*\ntmil.ngty related how. by a little care>\ntul manipulation he hat) managed to\ncarry il away with him.\nH. II. Miller, lie- member for Boutl\nGrey, thought he saw a chance tu\ntake a fall out ul the doctor, so lie\ninterrupted with the comment, \"I\nhope you lefl the bam. docti\nYes,\" said Dr. Rutherford,\nlee, I've been out of politics tor\nyears,\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094Canadian Courier,\n'Yd\nand young gathered and formul them\nselves into search partiei to* look In: l\t\nthe boya. The gathering Included ' Wireless Achievement,\nmen from as far away as Barilla, \ Another remarkable stride iu the de-\nChatham, nnd even Windsor ou th-- velopment of wireless telegraphy ha-\nWeBt, and oil the east from polntf been made by Ihe recent sending of a\nUtility n lies distant, for the news I message from the Marconi station .it\nwas carried from log cabin to hit- | Glace Bay, Nova Scotia, direct to tin-\ncabin. All came on loot, foi il the*. ! Eiffel Tower. Paris, France, and it.*\nhad brought conveyances they would {re-transmisslon from there to the ita*\nbay* been useless in the forest. At j tiou at Dakar, on the coast of French\nthat tin.*, howev.-r. horses were tea\nand the beast ol burden was the. slow\nbut useful ox. Every inch ol tin-\nground within easy distance of ttie\nhome was searched, but no trace ol\nthe missing children found. The party'\nW.-st Africa. The message was received at Dakar within one hour jl\nthe tune ii was cent from Glace Buy.\nThe apparatus at the Mar coin sta\ntion there js now. one of the most cum\nplete ..I tiny of tin Marconi Company's\nthen divided itself Into sections and I stations, end tiie >ower Ior the transformed a long line foi the purpose of mission uf wireless waves is being\nclosely searching farther away from\nthe Crouse home. A nutiibei of tinmen stationed throughout these long\nlines had guns or the useful dinner)\nhorn, and the system ol signalling\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0was arranged so that if the children\nadded to wheuevt-t necessary.\nA 300-Mile River.\n. A new Canadian liver, at least 300\nmiles long, has just beeu discovered\n\u00C2\u00ABre\"t>unT'i't c\"ouid\"bI' made\"\".\"!,'.'.''.; ,\"\"IJ, Wf1\u00E2\u0084\u00A2,,!. ^\u00E2\u0080\u00A2.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\"'T'llH'?1. 1,1\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2lot..- the wholt Mt\u00C2\u00ABnl ol Ihe .caret, i, '' '\" 'h,\" tlllu| Lrow llrvcr. a III'\nTl. .n. - , S!S ,l -k\"\u00E2\u0080\u009E 1300 Hides up it n a gasoline launch.\nThomas, a distance of about seven T)l, ..-.-.p. :. \u00E2\u0080\u009E,.,,,?\u00E2\u0080\u009Ei..,...i ,..\u00E2\u0080\u009E.. ,.\u00E2\u0080\u009E,,*\nmiles, not a Stick of timber had been - T,,c *Vm& riSSSthiKCfc\u00C2\u00B0S\ncut. and this was the district it was ' ' tl,1,lv J *'lL*J\u00C2\u00B0/\u00C2\u00AB? 155 \m\\\u00C2\u00A3\nagreed to sweep. Hearing one of the JjiH S?S S . M Id ,1 ft\nmany curv.-s ol Digman's Creek lat-* ,,u*;\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB**\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB'\u00C2\u00BB'*' \"'\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0<.\u00C2\u00AB \"d'\" \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00C2\u00BBjtor\nIn the evening, a Mr. Patrick found \"\u00C2\u00BB'\u00C2\u00AB l0 ,lltf *[? J r0,*v*\"-, Th\u00C2\u00AB %>*\nthe younger boy, Nelson, seated on a WplM is a tributary ol the iukou\nlog, crying and almost perished with \"iver. ^\nthe cold., for the twu children had\nfniie away barefooted. As Well as thu\nittle lad could till, he explained tlmt\nI Ball With the Walt ef a Child.\nA gueerly shaped gong which occu-\ni plea a position ot honor lu the center\n, of tbe cily of Seoul, Korea. Is suid to\nhe oue of the largest lu ibe world and\n> Is called \"the bell wllh the wall of a\nchild lu Its voice.\" When first cast\nthe bell sounded wlib a harsh and\ni cracked note, and the auiierstlthma .-tn\n1 peror. fcuriug au 111 omen, consulted\nwith his magicians. These gentlemen\n' held a long confab and finally staled\nthat the hell would never sound rluht\nuntil n live child was given lo It. The\nmass waa then melted ngttln. and a\n' live tin by wiih thrown Into the molten\nmetaL The wall of npony uttered hy\nthe Utile tot as the bronze cnctllfcd\n1 It seemed to be repealed every time\ntho bell wan tolled, nnd todaj the\n- Korean*, still clntm that the wait of a\nchild can be beard ln tbe voice of the\nmetaL\nBut She Wasn't Satisfied.\nLady .L-kyll. who was fotid of putting herself nnd olhers with such ques\n(Ions as hiid lieen eoinui.ii enough n\ngeneration before Iter, In lite days of\nthe \"Athenian Oracle.\" asked William\nWhlston of berimed oamp and eccentric memory, one duy ut her htHhnnd'i\ntable, to moire \" dlfllcilty which occurred to her In Ibe Mosaic account\nof the creation\n\"Sin. e It plea-ii'd Cod. air.\" ahe snld.\n\"to create iho woman out of the mnn.\nwhy did he form her mu nf ihe rib\nrather than nny other pnrtV\"\nWhlstoo r-cratrhed hU head and answered: \"Indeed, madnm. I do not\nknow, unless It be that thc rib li tbe\nmost crooked part of the hndy.\"\n\"There.\" ber husband snld. \"you\nbare It uow! I hope you are eatlsfled.\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Bout bey's Doctor.\ntiter had gone in search ol wild outoiie,\nand ibut he, being unable to keep up\nwith his brother, decided to wait then-\nwhile Thomas went farther utVld.\nMr. Patrick heard the older boy\ncall back two or three times w.u.U\nof encouragement to hie little brother.\nTht signal wui sent uut t,.at ona of\nthe children had been fouud, and al\nmost everyone bit sure that tin n\nwould bo no difficulty lu locating\nThomas, lor he could not be very far\naway, seeing that he had been heard\nshouting lo Nelson. Bui although ii>\nsearch waa cofttimnd all that night;\nand the neii day. aud tor MVeral dlfl i\nafter Thou i was never found, I\nWhat btcaOII \"f hla was Qevsr even\nknown for certainty, Home wougnt\nthat the .'uar of stranger* whieh char\nactirixed all the children ol the earl)\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0pioneers- Ior th. v seldom law -trang\nen\u00E2\u0080\u0094had inuucud Tommy lo hide m\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0ome place, Slfd in thai hiding he had\nprobably perished. Other thought thu:\niorne wandering Irtbe ol Indians had\ntarried hllfl away, but. whatever tin\n(\u00E2\u0096\u00A0tu ol the lad was, no trace ol iniu\nwae ever found from that day to this.\nThe marks ol his little feet were .\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*.\nIly traceable on the opposite bank\nfrom where NuNon was louud on Dig\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2leift Creek, at the point where be\nrll.nhed up out ol the wet-r liter\nrmislitg the creek, but that wae ill\nihnt indicated even the direction tl*\nhnd taken. ..\nll tea- almost a week before the\nsearch was finally abandoned, and lor\na long while alter the father still he-\nlieved that h.i boy niilivi l-Jtt*\nforest. While at work \u00C2\u00A3? \u00C2\u00ABn\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00AB! in taxable property,\nThm Increase ha- been largely due t..\nthe bul mat ilia city ha* decided t>>\ntax properly In the harbor ot M.mt\nreal and has idded iwi.oim.ooo lo it. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nlist as representing the anseasabu\nvaluer1 Iu th.- pltipOllj between lh-\nfa.vimeut wall J*'-<1 Uie M I,awr\u00C2\u00ABoc\u00C2\u00AB.\nThe Re*ort Ssreastle.\nI \"Thnt new family next door borrowed our ax again this morning.\" bis\n. wife told Jones.\n\"Well, \u00C2\u00ABIiv did you lend It to tbem,\"\nbe complained.\n\"How oould I help tt7\"\n\"Vou mltzht hnve given tbem aome\nkind of nn excuse.\"\nMrs. .biiiet waied snreastlc.\n\"Yes.\" she snapped, \"1 might have\n; told them that you were going to use\nIt-or aome oilier cruzy. Impossible\nI lulng.\"~Youugsiown 'ivicgram.\nA Hospital Nuree'e Hands.\nAa an ctumpU- of ididciuark* hnre\nyou ever lioll.nl Ihe hands of tbe hospital QUfsel 'I he soft whin, hand\nwhieh in thil.aii Is iK.iipl.il In cooling\nf.'ti-reil bii>WK..Io.'*t n-.i result nml ctiuhl\nnot. It Ih n skilled tiaml. but lis work\nUi*km 11 rmi-jn und chapped, 'lr>\nbulbing your band* in dUlnfcrtaobi\ntwenty lliu.-. 11 Uny and you will tiinl\nHint. l.H.k afler Ih.-iu as fOD may. thej\nwill soon he seuuied wuh tracks.\nWblcb an ciihi mini often turns to\nlilee-llng cuts. Ami as they are work\ned hard for some twelve or thlrieen\nhours ri d-iy Un* nurse lake\", n r-oine\nwhat larger ibte in iloree than nmst\nwomen. If you ever see the photo\ngrnpli of n bnspllfll iiii-nl* you may oh\nserve that she pieh-rs to heep those\nliondi in hiiil her uucit.- ly.nd .nt/tuou\nk-lo.\t\nLeelng the World.\nA new light 011 the servant question\nIn Rngland la shed by Mlsi l-oaii* tn\nh.-r book, \"The Common Uruwth.\" \"I\nl*ked,\" she nf$, \"one capable, ileadj\nservant of live or s:x and tWctll) \u00C2\u00ABhy\nshe changed places eeery year and by\nwhat curious chance her ml stresses all\nlived -,, Ur tt one another She replied frankly, 'I lov* to see the world,\nsiel '.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ihe only way I can sfford te\nItavel,\"\nThe Ignorant Patriot.\nA very raw mrult wns being put\nIhroucb nu examination In geography\nwherein hv prowd himself nsionlsblng-\nly Ignorant. Al Inst, afler a failure\non his part of unusual flngrunce. Ihe\nexaminer scowled nt blm and thunder\ned:\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Idiot, j nu want lo defend your\ncountry tn.d you don't \u00C2\u00ABrvu kuuw\nwhere II Is!\"\n/il Up With Him.\n\"Ton bnd a h ,.'. old time In Hu\nrope?\"\n\"Ves.\" replied 'he relumed tourist:\n\"I had. I tins done up al Monte Car\nlo. helil up In the Apclililuca und laid\nup In Itoine.\"\nHer Ability.\n\"Are you nhle 10 keep your eervnnta\nnny length of timer\n, \"Is-t mo mo I've bnd my husband\nNit yenrs.\"-Ki. I...11N I'ust Hbpnlch.\nKeep tour heart high That 1* tbe\nsum of philosophy -Cousin.\nLedy Qodiva'e Coslume.\nThe rued quesll in ol how lh* principal character should be dressed iu\nthe I.n.ly fJodlva proeessioti at Coventry, tor tie- coronation oelebrallonsi\nwas lottted In favi.r ol the rcprcsenta-\nlion as carr.ed out Im-ally in the\n, Inst coronation program, The lady\n. then npjieaiitl In silk fleshing! with\na gau/..' cape carried under the lelt\nanil to the right shoulder aud a long,\nflowing n, .: ,-,.veriug the grealei purt\nI nl her figure. Other suggestion* \u00C2\u00AB<\u00E2\u0080\u00A2**\n! lhat the chnrnrter should he represent-\n, .-I as a Mercian countesa or that ths\nilady and her attendants ih.uld be\n1 children. ' I\nFine OU Stone Church Near St. Andrew's Locks Was Built About Six*\nty.Two Yean Ago By the Selkirk\nPioneers\u00E2\u0080\u0094Rev. John West Was Its\nFirst Minister and Some Are Alive\nWho Remember Its First Service,\n\"I hear the tread of pioneers,\nUf nations yet to be.\nThe first low wueh of waves, where\nS.i.ji shall lull a human aea.\"\nWe will soon be celebrating iu Canada west the centenary of the landing\non the bunks of tho Red River ul the\ntlrst of tin- Selkirk pioneers, says Our-\nahl Wade in The Globe.\nThe portion of what is known as\nthe Province ol Manitoba was lirst\nsettled by Lord Selkirk iu IbTH. In\nI a country where historical records\nand memorials are all tou scarce, as\nin tho west, whieh is practically de-\nvoid of any marks ol appreciation of\nthose who did su much for Hub couutry, it is to b,> hoped that the coming\n\"Selkirk Cetiteuii.ul\" will bu marked\nby a luitubla memorial to the founder\nj ul the \"Ited Rlvoi Colony.\" He was\n' a pioneer Imperialist and one of the\nI lirst advocates of ICmpirc-buildiug by\n: colonization.\nIt was iu the autumn of HI- when\nthis kind-hearted Scotchman's first\nparty ol Highlanders reached \"The\nlied\" via Hudson liny and I.nke Winnipeg. The '\"Sett lenient\" llici eased\nslowiy by ua'ural growth, by dls<\nclung d and retiring employes ol the\nHudson Hay ami Northwest Cotnpau-\ni ies, Uie Coming ever ol a lew cun-\nI grants irom toe Mates, and the Buttling nb ut (hum oi hall -breeds,\nI \"Wherever British lutlucucq has\ngenu thruUfflloul tiie wm hi, Ihe Christian faith of thu British people has\nfollowed,\" wrote Uryce, uud tne lirst\nclergyman to urri\u iu Rupert's Land\nwas in connection with ttie Selkirk\ncolony. To-day beautifully sltuuted\ni on the banks of the Red River above\nlower Fort Carry, near St. Andrew's\nLocks, and many miles below \"Old\nFort Garry\" (Winnipeg), stands the\noldest churcli in Canada west. It Is\nthu link between tho past ami the\n' present. Thi* solid stone house or\nworship still holds great interest [or\nthu visitors to tins historical spot,\nespecially to those who are descend-\n1 ants of the settlers. Beside the many\ninteresting \"tablets\" erected to the\nmemory of \"Tha Pioneers ol Canada\nWest\" which one sees on the walls uf\nSt. Andrews, not ine least interesting\nis a beautiiul memorial Window over\nthe altar to the memory ol the \"pioneer builder of churches in the west,\"\nthe Rev, Archdeacon Cochrane, placed\nthere some thirty-two years ago.\nSt. Andrews Parish, which is so rich\niu history, has one historical advantage over Furl Garry in that it .-*,;,\nretains its original name and identity,\nwhile Fort Cany and other places are\nlost in name to the people of to-day.\nThe old Church building und rectory\nare iu a good state of preservation,\nund the latter is occupied by toe\npresent rector and his family.\nMr. Bryce, writing to the Kev. John\nWent, who was the first minister ol\nSt. Andrews, **\">*- \"H\u00C2\u00BB arrived In ihe\nRed River Settlement in October,\n1820. and at once began his labors by\nholding services In Fort Carry, and\nin ltfiia he erected the lirst Protestant\nplace of worship on the Red River,\nand when In- r-turned to England two\nyear* afterwards the second minister\nof St. Andrews, the Rev. William\nCochrane, and his wife arrived at the\nSettlement, and to Mr. Cochrane, afterwards created Archdeacon, is given\ndeservedly much of the creJit of laying\nthe foundation of the church uu the\nRed River. He not unly laid the foundation of the Protestuut Church in\n, Canada west, but he also supervised\n, the erection of this pioneer church\nsixty-one years ago. It was not until\nMl thai the lirst Protesunt Bishop.\nDr. Mountain of Montreal, visited th.s\nthen remote spot. In ltH'J the Diocese\nof Rupert'e Land was established, and\nthu Rev. David Anderson consecrated\nits first bishop. To this church belonged, besides the settler*, nearly all\nthc BngU*h**peaking halt-breed population of the clony, as well as a large\nnumber of the Hudson Bay Co.'* Jl*\n1 fleers.\nDuring Uie sixty-two years of its\nexistence the pans], has hud, besides\nthe Revs. Mr. West aud Archdeacon\nCochrane, Ihe following incumbents lu\norder named: Rev. Dr. J. P. Gardiner,\nArchdeacon Hunter, Rishup Young,\nBishop Qrltdale, Rev. a. 1.. Fortin,\nRev. Mr. Barber, Rev. Canon J. W.\nMathesoii, Rural Dean Johnson, Rev.\nMr. King, Rev. 0. E. Brownlce and\nRev. A. J- Warwick, the present in-\n. cumbelit, who still preaches to the descendants ol the settlers twice every\nSunday. There are still a lew members of the pariah living who were\npresent ai the opening services sixty-\ntwo years ago.\nThe old municipality of St. Andrews\nhas a lUperflelal area ul \u00E2\u0096\u00A0bout Ave\nhundred miles, and extends from\nPaikdale to Winnipeg Bench, along\nthe west shore ol Uie Red River. The\n, municipality where Lord Selkirk established the flm colony, exactly one\ncentury ug\u00C2\u00AB. has just been born to a\nlow life, and 11 f.-w yearn hence will\nse- this picturesque valley become one\nof the most uttiacllve and densely-\npeopled suburban district* In Canada.\nSt. Andrews, however, still affords the\ntravel*! a rare glimpse of the olden\nlime*, as hire are to be aerli the\nsouare-hewn and ptetunnui cabins\nof the earllesl Hitler*, inhabited today hy their ions and grandsons. The\nsnelenl fort re** ol the Hudson Bay adventurer-* Sllll (lands ii- il dbl when\nit entertain Selkirk's governors ot\nS lop-.n' voyageurs.\n\"Uur brave buflalu-huuters, oh, where\nate they ii..w?\nThose true sons \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0( Ireudom now follow the ploW)\n8U1I if'', and his labor provides for\nhis all.\nIn this great land el ours, wc old-\ntuners recall.\"\nA GREAT CHIRCHMAN.\nChancellor Burwash Is Young at\nSevonly-Two Ye rs of Age.\nA splendid typo (of Canadian, a\ngreat Christian geii letunii, a.,d a\nchurchman w^ ;<*, lull a-nuu will never\nj be measured is Dr. Nathaniel Bur-\nwash, president arid d i/iiicclior of Victoria CollegS. who cdebrctod bis aev-\nenty-secoud birthday recently. Meu-\nll.n the name of Chaicelkr Burwash\nto anyone who has et er cume iu cou-\ntact with him ia an;/ way, and you\nwill heur froui his lips 01 see iu his\neyes a tribute of resp-ct to this great\naud guud man. This can be suid ol\ntew mortals, either in Toronto or elsewhere, but it ia a simple fact.\nUne day a member of the staff of\nIhls journal was chatting with u dealer iu rare bouks. The name ol Dr.\nllurwa-h was brought up as a man\nwhu owned a fine library. The dealer's attitude at once became one of\nactual affection, and he took Irom his\npocket a letter which the chancellor\nnad written to lum years ago, aud\nwhich he alwti.-s carries. The Jitter\u00E2\u0080\u0094\njust a brlol note\u00E2\u0080\u0094was oue of those\nmanifestations of courtesy so easily,\nyet so rarely, given in this hurrying\nagu. lt was to thank the dealer for\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0; securing a certain book, una a delight-\n1 lul note it waa. Moat ot us, with our\ntrivial duties, aro \"too busy\" for such\ncourtesies\u00E2\u0080\u0094not so, however, men who\nhave big duties and big minds like\nChancellor Burwash. 'Ihe doing ol\nsuch little tilings, which did uul nave\nto be done, wus, by the way, one ol\n| tlm characteristics ol Gold win Smith\nwhich made him deeply respected eveu\n: hy those iu disagreement witli lu*\nviews.\nHomo newspaper workers havu occasion to call up many prominent men\nj by telephone irom time to time, aud\n1 in this way tbey havu experiences\ni which cause them to modify their\njudgment of certain characters, al-\nlhoiie,h well enough known perhaps in\n1 a mure personal sense. Call up Chun-\n1 eel lor Burwush any tune and ask his\n; view uu nny subject, aud you wlH not\n; only get a view worth while, hut\npromptly and wilh distinguished courtesy-even io an unk'nown. bothersome\nperson. An.l the chancellor's voice is\nso young and fresh you would not\nbelieve him to be past thc \"alloted\n1 span.\"\ni The courtesy of Dr. Burwash helps\n, you to understand how, in all cou-\ndiets id theological opinion, he calm-\n' ly holds his way and yet escapes tin-\n] kindly criticism. Other men may he\na* absolutely sincere and yet mil-\nunderstood. But the chancellor can\n; no more lie misunderstood than the\nshining sun. The influence which\n, his character ami attitude have had\nI on Victoria students would alone\nmurk him as a towering figure, but\nids influence has gone Out Tor many\nyears in many directions.\nChancellor Burwash was horn in\n: Argenteufl, Qu>bec, of United Empire\nLoyalist stock. With a broad e-iuca\n\ tion on a broad foundation of virtuous,\n1 virile manhood, he entered the Methi-\ndist ministry in Ontario in 1SG0. lid\nbecame a professor et Victoria sn\nyears luter, and was appointed preif*\ndent and chancellor iu isn He is the\nauthor of a number of theolngic-tl\nworks, also of \"The Life and Times of\nEgerton Ryerson\" and \"Development\nof the University of Toronto as a provincial institution/' As preacher.\n, teacher, writer, and administrator, he\nhus shown high ability. But his ability, great ai it is, is as nothing to hii\nstrung, steadfust, end peculiarly winning personality.**-Toronto Stiu Week\nMajor-General O'Grady-Hsly.\nThe deuth took pluce at Cumb.-rb y\nHug., recently, ol Mujor-Ceueral R. II.\no'tirudy ..\u00C2\u00BBiy, aged 70. who command\ned the Canadian Militia from July.\n: 11)00. to 1002. Gun. O'Grudy-llnly''\n' lather wus ulso connected With Canada, having been in enmmund ol the\nImperial forces in Hahlax in 1477\nami acting as the Administrator of\nCanada while Lord Uuffchn. then\nGovernor-General, was absent in\n, Washington, To the late general is\ndue the credit for the establishment\nol Canada's School of Musketry,\nwhich, to use Sir Frederick Borden \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nwi.rds spoken in October, luh3. has\n\"proved oue ol the mutt valuable adjuncts thut the militia ol Canada na*\never possessed.\"\nGen. O'Grudyllaly acted as ADC\nto ihe general in Canada from IS70 t\u00C2\u00BB\n' leTo. and had thus gained a tb .r\notigh acquaintance with Cana linn cou-\n, ditions before his appointment to the\n: militia command, lie did distinguished service iu the Kgyptian ex-\nned.Uon Ol l*\"\"J and again iu tbe\nHatara expedition, 18SS.\nTHE SCOTTISH'DRAGOONS.\nEastern Townships Regiment Ranks\nHigh In Canadian Cavalry Corps.\nThe I3tlt Scottish .Light Dragoons\nIs u cavalry regiment from the Eastern Townships in tie Prjvince of\nQuebec. The regimett, although organized only in 1903, has attained such\na degree of efficiency that it ia to-day\nlooked upon as one of the best cavalry regiments in Canada. Last year\nit won the Turner Efficiency Shield\nfor being the best 'regiment ia the\nProvince of Quebec, 'and at the camp\nwhich just closed at tVarnham it again\nwon the shield., \u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\nThis regiment wh-n organized tn\n1903 took the place ol the old 70th\nInfantry, which previously had been\nrecruited Irom the Eastern Townships, lt consisted at fir-t of five\nsquadrons, \"A\" being located at Stan-\nstead, \"B\" at Knowlton, \"C\" at Waterloo, \"D\" nt Stanbridgo East and\n\"I'.\" at Cowunsville. Two years ago_\nwhen the -Hitli Stanstend Light Horse\nwas organized \"A\" Squadron was\ntransfererd to the new regiment, and\n\"I,\" Squadron changed to \"A.\" The\nregiment was organlted during Lord\nDuudouald's regime In 1003. The\nlirst commander ol the regiment was\nCol. Charles A. Smart, who was succeeded by Col. D. M. Stewart, and\nhe in turn hv the present command\ner, Col. li. il. Morrill. The present\nsquadron commanders arc: \"A,\" Mai\nli. 11 Baker, who is senior squtidrun\ncommander and will likely succeed\nCol. Morrill aa commander of tho regiment; \"B,\" Ma). Miltiinore; \"C.\"\nMai. II, Slowart, and \"D,\" MaJ, Bus-\nsell.\nThe change from au infantry to a\ncavalry regiment has proved very\npopular among tbe young men of the\nEastern Townships. There is now no\ndi tli unity about securing enough\nuieu to keep up tho strength tif tin.1\ncavalry regiment, whereas there had\nbeen considerable dill.culty iu obtaining sufficient to nil tin* ranks of\nthe infantry. Tito fact that the regiment has won the Turner Efficiency\nShield two years iu succession is in\nitself a very good guarantee ol its\nstanding among the other regiments\nin tin- province.\nChristening Midland.\nAt the extreme southeast, end of\nj Georgian Hay is tne inlet marked on\nthe Bayfield chart \"Mutidy's Bay,\"\nnow better known a* \"Midland Bay,\"\nIt is the exact shape of a horseshoe,\naud the waters are deep enough, even\nat thu shore, to permit the old sailing ships to lock their spars in the\nbranches ol the trees. The buy is\nwithout ruck or shoal, and is by long\nodds the best harbor on fresh water.\nThirty-five years ago the laud along\nthe waters ol the buy was an unbroken\nwilderness. To the south, about half\na mile from the water, there were oue\nor two farms, the merest clearances In\nthe woods, which had been cut out\nby one or two settlers who were half\nfarmer and half trapper.\nThe location ia uu ideal one for a\ntown. There is enough r.at laud close\nto the water for business situs and\nfactories, while as you go further back\nthe land rises in terraces so that the\nresidents can have an uniuterupted'\nview* ol a magnificent sheet of water\nbeautiiul iu calm or storm.\nTiie place took the fancy of a number of capitalists in Port Hope and\nthat neighborhood, who had become\nInterested in a scheme put forward\nby the late Baron Adolph Von Hugel\ntu build through the Midland Counties ol Ontario a line of railway (rem\nPort Hope to the Georgian Bay. They\nI-- i.vud it as their terminal point and\nchristened it \"Midland City.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094Canadian Century,\nCAME FROM THE RANKS\nj NOBLE NAMES IN ENGLAND HAD\nI HUMBLE BEGINNINGS.\nWhat Did Hs Say?\nSome Cauudo-tus were di-.cu-sing recently the humor of elections, when\none citisen declared that Ihe lint\nGovernor-General of Canada, I.-rd\nMuuck. had been the author ol the\nt.it bit ol election repartee.\nJurtng the course of a British election. Lord Monck met his opponent,\nand Die two discussed political issues\nin ao entirely friendly fashion. As\nthey parted, the opposing candidate\nremarked: \"Well, may the best man\nwin!\"\n\"1 hope not,\" said Lord Monck.\nIli'luiy does uot record Uie answer\ntj this r, mark.\nThe Ketchesons.\nThe reunion of the Ketcheson\nfamily held recently in Sidney Township, Hastings County, was attended\n1 by about 600 of the descendants ot\n' the founder of the Canadian branch of\nthe family. Wm. Ketcheson was born\nin Howden, Yorkshire, England, iu\n1759 and came to the States with hi.'\nparents in 1773. In 1736 Wm Ketcheson, one of the old loyalists, came\nto Canada, settling in what is now\nHastings County, lu 1800 the King\ngranted him the patent of GOO acr.-i\n1 ol land on the tilth concession of Sid-\n, ni-y. and there he built himsell a\nhome, which still stands and Is in\nexcellent repair. The farm is occu-\n. pied by George A. Ketcheson, a dl-\ni red descendant of the original pioneer.\nThe title of lieutenanucolouel was\n, conferred on Mr. Ketcheson for ser-\nvices rendered the country in the troublous days of l-ia. In lsl*. at a\n{ reunion of the family of the veteran.\nI there were living eight children, 71\nI grandchildren, and b'J great-grand-\n' children. The descendants to-day\nnumber nearly 1,700, scattered all over\nthis continent.\nShortage\nDuhl \"Thi-. hook says th.\nfourteen original jokes.\"\nKeene \"What a pity some\ntrot rOStl\" Judge.\nA Fashionable Wife\n\"M-'i your wife lately!-\"\nRare Relics Fer Museum.\nTwo rare altar blocks ol carved\nbrown et'jue nf tho time ol Mt-riowe\nhave beeu acquired ly 1' I. Currellr,\ncurator ol the provincial museum. Tbe\nstones wire taken Ir- in I . tombs of\nthat dynasty, alocg with gold from\nthe King's treasury. Pert of the gold\nhas already reached Mr. Curr-lly.The\nrelics will be placed iu the archaelo-\ngical section of the new mo- um when\nthe building is cnnpU-t.il Two vases\nend other relic* have also been acquired.\nCanadian Vegetables,\nIhe growing ul vegetable* is one of\nCanada's youngest iuduMr.ee, and It\nill n..*.'i\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BBn!y so, tor there must lirst\ndevelop adt-tmtnd before 1 supply will\neprug up, and this demand did not\nexist until the country becini* dotted\nwitb Cities and towns, But young es\nthis n.lu-try ]-, it has tilready attalii-\nrd proportions that -iij* it is ol cou\nlldftable, impnrtsuc*.\nPaid Fer the Privilege.\n8ome people have a great and clear\nIdea of their rights, and don't fail to\ninsist on getting them.\nA woman was fitting near a front\nbedroom window in Toronto the other\nday in order to watch over her child,\nwho was getting his first natural sleep\nafter a severe illness. Worn out by\nwork and anxiety, the mother lell\nasleep. She was awakened by an Italian push-cart man, who was loudly\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2calling, \"Banana ripe I Banana ripel\nTen cents a doxen I'\nLeauing out ol the window, th*\nmother put up her hands and begged\nthe Italian to be quiet.\n\"Aw, what'* the matter with your\"\nhe said. \"I pay leu dollar for holler\nround the streets.\"\nBe. Un Advancing.\nThe Berlin B>ard of Trade Is proud\n' \u00E2\u0080\u0094because the tow 11 has been getting\n'.along There are to-day M,G00 people\n-in B.-rlin. two more than last year.\nI Ol course, there had to be real estate\n1 activity to house these additional citl*\nsous, so hammers wero quite loud\n'during the past twelve months. One\n1 hundred and forty new houses went\n' .up, several faclor>i'*, ten factory ad*\n,.diiion*. and a fireproof public school,\n: which cost the city 1100,000. 1140.000\n; was put Into local improvements. Hy*'\nI dr.. Klectric power Irom Niagara has ;\n' lust begun to light the houses and\nI tutu the wheel 01 Industry iu Berlin..\nLiterature Is Accountable For Severe!\nof Britain's Peerages and Many Are\nDue to Commercial Success\u00E2\u0080\u0094Lord\nMorley Was Editor ef The Pall Mall\nGazette, and Lord Milnsr Wrote\nEditorials For Him.\nLord Wolverhampton is the eon ot\na Wesleyau preacher, aod up to tb*\nage of fifty was not eveu a member of\nParliament, but ..imply a public-spirited Wolverhampton lawyer. Lord In-\nverclydo is great-grandson of a Glasgow Presbyterian minister. Hi*\ngrandfather was a clerk in u shipping-\noflice, and eventually, with Samuel\nCuuard. established tht world-famed\nfleet of liners. Baron Ulautawe, a\nWelshman of Swansea, also represents\nships and shipping, and ia ihe first to\nbear the title. Lord 1'irrie entered\nth.< famous shipyard ol llarland ft\nWolff ns a hoy of fifteen, and is now\nChairman ol tho company.\nLord Morley rcpn-seiile literature\nami journalism, for he lirsl rose into\ntiium by Ins writings and hy tun edi\ntoruliip ol The Pall Mall Gaxetto, And\nit may not he generally known that\nLord Milner, then Mr. Alfred Milner.\na distinguished young University\ngraduate, was ono of his leader writers. l\u00E2\u0080\u009Eir.l Burnhain, also, whoa.- lam*\nily name is Levy l.awsoii. is the proprietor and ruling spirit ol The Daily\nTelegraph; whilst Lord Northclifla\nowes his elevation to the |Hierug.* tu\nthe lad that he established The Daily\nMail.\nU>rd Glonosk, too, who was so long\nknown as Sir Algernon Borthwiek,\nwhose decease with so much regretted,\nwas proprietor ol The Morning Post;\nwhilst IhiLIi the Bar] ol Crewe and\nLord Tennyson owe their titles tu\nliterary lathers, for the first is the son\nol Richard Muuektou Mllnes, and the\nother of tlu* late Laureate. The Viscounty of llambletlon may also he In*\nchidi>ii among the press ix-crage-,, (or\nit covers lb.- sobni(Uct of Smith, to\nbo seen on hundreds ul railway book-\nStalls, and it originnlly sprang Irom a\nUtile news shop in the Strand.\nBrewing has produced a crop of\npeers. Tho title of 1-ord Hindlip covers the well-known name ol Allsopp.\nl,ord Burton taket> hie title from the\ntown in which Haas's ts made. Lords\nIveagh and Ardilaun both built their\nfortunes on bottles of stout, fur they\naro both Guinnesses.\nliord Allerton was known, aud\nknown favorably, lur many a long\nyear in Leeds at Mr. W. L. Jackson,\ntho tanner. As everybody knows,\nI-onl Armstrong gets his millions aud\nbis title from the well-known Armstrong gun made at the great Klswick\nworks at Neweaatle. Lord Ashton is\na philanthropic and highly-respected\ncitisen oi Lancaster, where lie is engaged iu the manufacture of oilcloths. Lord Maaham has great mills\nat Maiiningbatn, and practically owns\nthe town from which he takes his\ntitle. Two of the most remarkable\nromances of the peerage attach to\nLords Mount Stephen and Strathcona,\nwho l-Mh began lite as Scottish shepherd lads. They emigrated lo Canada,\nwhere both mado huge lortune before\nreturning to the old land, and each\nfound his way to the House of Lords.\nBanking has made peer* in the past\nand is making peers still. Lord Kin*\nnaird is a banker, and so are Lords\nAidenham, Avcbury, and Rothschild.\nLord Kinnaird. however, belougs to\nft very ancient Scottish stock, where*\na* the others are recent creations.\nI Lord Aidenham was Mr. H. II liibb-,\nla director ol the Bank of Kngland;\nI Lord Avcbury was Sir John Lubbock,\n'the founder of \"Bank Holidays\";\nI whilst Uml Rothschild i* the descendant of a Jewish money-lender of\nFrankfort.\nI The Karl* of Craven spring from\na laborer's cottage in one of the most\nInsignificant villages of Yorkshire,\n-and their ancestor went lo London in\na carrier's carl. Eveu the Marguess of\nRip. n. although he has s little blue\nblood in his veins, traces his descent\nto a plain Mr. Robinson, who had a\n'small business in the county town\nof York; and although it is a far cry\nback to 1445, in that year the ancestor\n1 of the house of Russell was part ewu-\ner of a barge.\nI The founder of Lord Carrington'a\nI family lived and died a Nottingham\n-draper. Lord Dudley is the desceu-\ndent of William Ward, the son of poor\n1 Staffordshire parents, who was ap*\nipreuitced at a u-nder age to a London\n.goldsmith \u00C2\u00BB'-'* I,lI>de * fortune, while\none of the forbears of the Marquee*\nol Bsth wa.- au undur-lorester of\n, Shropshire.\nShe Had Him.\nJodge Austin, who was among the\nguests at the Law Society's batiquet\nat Bristol, told a story which shows\nthc power ol a wutuun's tears in a\nCourt of Justice. Om- miserably cold\nnight, at the dose of a long sitting\nof tin- Bristol County Court, a poor,\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0hivenng woman, with un ill-clad\ninfant in her anus, asked Judge Austin to stay tin- execution of a warrant\nmainst her husband. Tears poured\niow.ii her ch.-eks as she told a piteous\nItor) ol want, and hi* helm* ut once\nt-implied wilh her request. Drying\nher eyes, she thanked him (or the\ntH-.it As she pantd out ol the court\nshe winked al the pulic-man at tho\nlour, saying, \"Had the old chap lhat\niimr\nA London Miser.\nTo be worth a small fortune, and\nfi-l live Uke a beagar, were the nocul-\nar If alar es in the life of nn elderly\nman named Charles Phillip*, who\ndied recently In a cheap lodging-\nltouts-i iD I/mdon, Kng He ass a\nbachelor, and seemed poor and uii*>\nereble. After his death he was found\nle hnve been entitled tn property vsl-\nnod at alwut 114,000. He had served\nIn Ihe Lancer-- and spent some tllM\nin N*w Zealand, whrre he made money, lie had lived (<>r many year* at\nUo-t. -I House. \u00C2\u00BB|M-ndlug about eisrW\nMats daily ou wm-JL\nPoor Recommendation One Advsntsgs With Ihe Muckrakers\n\"IL- mentis well,\" she said. \"So vou have adopted n luihy to \"You suy Qaraton made a complete\n\"Suy no more,\" he replied. \"I know | raise*\" we n*k ol our friend \"Well, eonfeailonf What did hi* get live\nof ihem now oiacljy what sort ol 1 fool ho Is.\"I ll may turn .mt nil right, but don'l roanF*'\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0- Deli-oil Free Press. you think you nrr taking chance-*- j \"No. fifiy dollars, He contosscd lo\n\"N..| a chance,\" In- all\u00C2\u00BBwer\u00C2\u00AB.. \"No1 Ihe liiugiirinos.\" I'uck.\nIsidore wus turning over the pages matin ho* ninny Ind habit* the child) \u00E2\u0080\u0094\t\n of his new read.r. The picture of a' may develop, my wife can't say he In- Bowly Visitor\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Do you hnvo many\n\"No; bm 1 gee by ihe society papers row greatly excited him \"Teacher,1 bent- sny nt them from my side nt wrecks slmui her.-, boat man \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\"\nthat she will he home 111 September.\" teacher.\" he called. \"I vonce seen a] ihe house.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Life. Itoniman \"Not verv ninny, sir.\nWashington Herald.\nFather\nA dual existence\nI* liitl-iT's hv right\nA toiler hv day -\nFloorwalker hy night\n\"Did youi1 Where*\n\"Iii the street. A mun hud Iht uud\nTlu\nChicago woman wai\nHand, \"An* you married or\nYou're the first I've\nin Ihe Tit-Biti.\nIhe VSS going In kill her for her milk.\" j unmarried j\" Ihundenil Ihe counsel. Ho \"Darling. I don't know whnl to\n for ihe defence. \"Unmarried, (our I say to yonr father.\nThere nre IH recognised syitemi ot I time*,\" replied Ihe witness, uiiblush- Hhe--\".lusl sny, 'Mr. Miiim. ' wish\nWlrelosi telegraphy. I ingly. M \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\"> fOM daughter,' then dodge.\" FREE PRESS, CHILLIWACK, BRITISH COLUMBIA,\n\u00C2\u00A5\nI\nSHUTT\nUSE THE COCKSHUTT ENGINE\nGANG FOR YOUR FALL PLOWING\nLIMITED\nCRICUlTURAL\nIMPLEMENTS\nA GRANITE BOMB.\nTHE SPREADING PLAGUE\nRifle and Pistol Cartridges\nThe advent of smokeless powder called for improved methods In\nthe manufacture of rille and pistol cartridges with the result that\nall cartridges are now made better than formerly. Winchester\nrifle and pistol smokeless and black powder cartridges are made\nin the most complete plant in the world, by experts, and can be\ndepended upon to be sure fire and accurate, and of maximum\nshooting strength. They cost no more than many inferior makes.\nAsk for the Red WBrand\nSOLO EVERYWHERE\nJack Frost Hurled It Down Into tht\nYestmite Vallsy.\nDelicate frost tracings on tbe win\nd*iw panes seem to he tbe work of fan\nelful und harmless sportlveness, bui\ntbe hand tbat forms tbem Is capablt\nof gruuter deeds nod of otber kinds.\nMr. J. sineiitou Chime, lu \"Yosetulti\nTrails,\" describes au einerlence thst\nmust huve beeu wonderfully Impres-\nFelt So Small\nnil i\nKhl\nBogga Did you gel\nnight?\nWogga- oh, yoa.\nHoggs- Th.-n, th- doors won\nlocked UM vou feared.\nWogga Ind I they were, hut\nwife yelled ul me uh I wua going\nIhe steps, ao 1 crawled in through\nwindow.\nraincoat suits you\nMakes you look ten\nTailor\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Tho\nsplendidly, sir\nyears younger.''\nCustomer\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Good. Then vou can\nsend in the bill in 1921.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Fliegende\nBlaotter.\nIt Has Bseoms, In a Mtasurs, a World-\nwidt Menace.\nThe terrible bubonic plague, whlcb\nappeared ln Hongkong In 1SIU, spread !\nfrom there to Bomhuy aud iu tbe next j\ntwelve years curried off more than\n0,000,000 victims, bus been almost qui-\nestont for tbe pant few years, but lu\n1010 It appeared In n virulent form iu '\nHarbin, hus since spread to other clt-\nIUIHI nil 1 n uitii miuuci.unj MU|\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB>>- , _ . . \u00E2\u0080\u009E,J \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n.Iv. to tit. .\"octntor. tlo Had bean lL'\u00C2\u00BB \"'\"* '\", 00w, n *'\u00C2\u00BB\"\"-\"H\u00C2\u00AB \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB\"\"\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB>\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nMore uliirm ig than th, ru,.,,,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009Er- Mra 0, ,.,.v..r... \u00E2\u0080\u009E, preloott|\nam* of tho illat'iiai.. In Miindiurln to North Channel, Ont., tells how 2am,\nthe dlBcovcry of tho ulaeoae In tba Buk cured Iter bony. Blm atiyat\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Mv\neastern rouatwlHo cutititloaof Bngluud, | btiby'a liend mn. luce wna \t\nBABY'S TERRIBLE ECZEMA\nHands Tied to Prevent Scratching\ne Doctors Failed to Relieve, But\nZam-Buk Worked a Cur,\nDon't wait till Wednesday comes around-malte\nsure now that you have one of\nEDDYS WASHBOARDS\nTHE BOARDS WITH THE lABOR-SAVINC CRIMP\nNo oilier Waalihnard can live\nVuu Hie Bam,, genuine Balla'actlon Made in .lin.ronl atvle. .nd\naiwa to .uil tlio taat.'a ol didcrent P'Op.e. At all good Orooere.\nWANTED \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Repreaentntlvea, etthei\nflex, locally, on good, neceaaary a,\nbread! salary two d\u00E2\u0080\u009Eliars por duy nnj\ncommission; experience unnecessary\nJ. I.. Nichols * Co., Limited, Toronto\nRST MD HEALTH TO MOTHER V 0 CHILD..\n\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*.*, Winmlovy'-, SiHniitM-; SvRer he* bee* '\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Mil lor .ivt-r SIXTV YKAKStiy MILLIONS t-l I\nMOTHKKS >>t their rtH.bKtiN WI1IU. [\nTKKTHI.NO. with l-KHK'-t BUCCRSo. It\nRlioTllKS the CHII.I1 SDl-.fc.-.'S tilt OUMS '\nALLAYS sll PAIN Cl'KKS WIND COLIC. \u00C2\u00ABnd ;\nU the list Tr-iin-.lv fur UlAKKIIiKA. ll it to- ,\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0uliudy hamuli--..- He sure anil sik for \"Mn I\nWio\u00C2\u00BBlu*>> Soothing Bynip.\" and lakt no utbcf\nkiwi Twenty-live itDtu but**\nTha \"Wellington\" Hat\n(or men. Cunadiun-uiade. Guaranteed best list value in Canada.\nAll Uses nnd ahupes in \u00E2\u0096\u00A0mil and\nstill (elts, Ask your Dealer, or\nwrite at once to\nCHAS. C. PUNCHARD & CO.,\nToronto, Ont.\nUnited Watch A Jewelry Co., Toronto.\nTHCit,IC\u00C2\u00BBtOyt*',?aSffiiJJffI'^.\niT.eftUT. \u00C2\u00BBna yoo\nii* Due* Dot\nt ..If . CM \u00C2\u00BBei\ntwill...d.'i.vr.'l. Do k\u00C2\u00AB tittaa.\nAHSIlUniSt:. Jf,., I:: B'.-nl t-t\n_,. Bin,.. 1ml. riJm-i \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Vjrl.o-r V\u00C2\u00AB.tit Hu,.-\nSAM Mr-M Md-l.'S ur Lmuii-nl*, KnUrj. t\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 SfctUUBda, i.-ltrv\u00C2\u00BB. W.-n\u00C2\u00AB. nM AIU;*\n\"*\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0096\u00A0** painqakki*. frleell Ulaod SIJDa b. i-\ntts SI tlrtwiuii 01 u.-iirrrru. Will UU rim mult\nUjtie write. lUnuf*ctut\u00C2\u00ABd oclr If\nU.I.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0/\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0**\u00E2\u0080\u00A2: f.0r.,ll7l*r*i\u00C2\u00BBP\u00C2\u00BBBI#f-,ll**afrtal.fa-\u00C2\u00BB.\nUm fwii-Wai *#\u00E2\u0080\u00A2* sUitm Mi a w\u00E2\u0084\u00A2* 0a, Wkatjai t\nTk* tfUam In nf\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB* ri\u00C2\u00BB.\u00E2\u0080\u009E>, ,1 Co.. wit-,!,-*(* l**J.-.*rt\nA ltm*M,|hly Mil n.*-- |] tin, di lUmnwf\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0tuC.I-.i Knii-hpfi.^rl t.i.fd i-it.tif HI\nVutlc*reivrvnrd hut* In a i-wm Mu-iik,\nwtu\u00C2\u00ABt, *aay l \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \"\",* aud tmea.\nAid-tit -\nW. W OREEHER,\nsi th. tNW Hall Hill,\nMO* TRIAL, PQ.\nCaatlo\u00C2\u00AB WU. teem\nHE SAW THE POINT.\nAnd For That Wary fttaaen Ho Didn't\nJoin In ths Laugh.\n\"They\" were chatting In tbt amok\nIng room of \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ilttit Kcnlnklljlto Paket\nrssrt MaatscbnpplJ coaster, on \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 two\nmouths run among tut Islands below\ntbt equator, wben some ont iiie-iltlng\nof tbt Mi'uj peninsula some oue else\nssld, \"My Impremdoii of ibe Htrali*\nSettlement* ean be summed up In a\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Ingle picture\u00E2\u0080\u0094a strong black man\nstanding lu tbt reoter of a mudd>\nat ream, trying to spilt a rock wlib h\nshirt.\"\nNow Mis always provokes a langb\nIt la referable and Infallible. But to\nmy surprise, aald Frederick 8. labaro\ntbt novidlst, out ot tbt smoking room\ncontingent, on this occasion It partial\nly railed. What was tbt trouble?\nTut delinquent, tat ant man out ot\nseven who didn't laugh, waa sallow\nsaturnine and l-.iiki.nh\n\"What's tbt mi iter, old chapr ask\ned tbt nostllSL \"Lion't you sew tbe\npoint or art yon waiting until lomor\nrow 19 wakt up *o It T\nTbe other mSn turned hts head\nwearily. \"See the point V ot snld sad\niy. ''1 sbotiuJ ifcink I did. I might to\nI.\" t'nglniiiy. \"t-ui tb* man wbo own\n\u00C2\u00ABd thr ahlrt\nTben we, ktowtng ht bar) lived\ntwenty live tenfi in tbt orient, ntoanie\nslleut; our iNu-riiter c-eas-HL A sjm\npathetlr iiieinn -limy aemended il|K>n\nus. Knglb>iiuiHti ur uul. w# took blm\nto om heart -*f iiesrta and msdt t\nhnitUei ul niiu.-- ItuiUuioro Aiuerksu\nJoW-oi. R stallvaa.\nOno ot tbe eunujr* auvial eustom-\nprartit-e-i ny i^\u00C2\u00AB Cfuw aa wall as by\nmany otbtr Imltan tribes it thr\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0uiuther in iu\u00C2\u00BB iHbuo\"-thHt li to say\na man Is nnd'r im rin-umstanres per\nmined to bold coiivtnuUun wltb bls\nwlfee mother Anuiuer ttrangt n-g\nulttlon la that relating to tbe playing\nOf p.aclleai ]\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ken. A man Is ool per\nmlttod to Jest wlib suy out benlMRM\nbut U limited to ibf Indlriduais whose\nfstben belonged to tbt aatnt clan as\nbit own taller Wltbln thla group\nhowever, pra tlrslly sny Ubttrt*/ la at\ntowablo. If \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 man dlarovers tbat a\n\"Jokablt rt stive\" bat committed\ntomt foollsii sr di-*grac-efui art bt can\npublicly twu blm wltb it. and tbt nor\ntoo derided *nust not get angry, but\nbldt hla tlmt for mm* favorablo op\nport unity to i*eullaia,-Aincricsn Mn\nstum Journsu.\ns|>endluR some weeks In esplorlug tbt\nVouemlto valley uud the \"great rocks,\"\nlike 1CI Cnpltan, Hint wall It In.\nBliiudluK one Juy of late autumn '\nabout Ihe middle of Ibe valley, I was I\nm nrt led by a report like a cannon abot. [\nwhich tilled the whole valley wltb\nechoes Unit roared and boomed, re-\nplbil nnd multiplied, In a long contln- i\nued, glorloun tumult.\nAs the deiifetilng sound died away In I\nsullen nniilerlnga under Ihe visor of\nEl Cnpltan I wus nhle to dlsilugulab\ntho iiuiiit of attack hy the lung, cist-\nterlng di'Hiviit ot a vast quantity of\nrock.\nThe night had lieen a cold one tn tht\nvalley, aud on ibo seven to eight thou- |\nBund foot levels of iho upper rim lbs\nt*'tii|ieruture must havo dropped si\nmoHt to sera\nl-'rost. working quietly wltb his\nArchimedean lever, had just succeeded lu shining from the shoulder of\ntbe sentinel a trltlu uf fifty tun* ur so\nof grunlte. Fur m-ar a ibiiu*utid feet\ntbe bowlder fell fdieer, swift nnd silent; then, striking the cliff, It hurst\nlike a lii'inb. shuilered Into a myriad\nflying utiurds nnd splinters and dis\nlodged a Fiuolher of friigments that\ntrickled dowu tu the valley lu a atreum\ntbat lusted for minutes.\nTben from the xput where tbe bowlder bad struck du\u00C2\u00ABt began to rise luto\nwhere BOVCrnI deaths have occurred.\nUntil l.KMi little wus known regurd-\nlug the mode uf propagation of ibis\nterrible disease, although the dlsense\nItself In us old ns history, 111 IPOG\nthe Indian plugue rcHcnri-li com mission dellnliely triu-ed (he H|ireud uf (he\nepidemic to the ileas uu the black rata\nof the country. The rats themHelves\nhave the disease. A flea whicli sucks\nthe blood uf the rut lakes the germs\nInto Its Hloimich. If the Ilea bites a\nhuman being within n period of three\nweeks the germs are transferred and\nthu human being coutniclH the disease.\nUntil recently It hud been supjiosed\nthat uuiy the black rut Ih susceptible\nto the plague and thnt only the Ilea\nknown as I'ulcx cheopls could transfer It Later discoveries, however,\nbave shown thut the common brown\nur Norwuy rut Is also liable to the disease nnd thut it may he transferred by\nthe ordinary rat Hen.\nStill another matter of great Interest\nhas been disclosed hy the cases in\nF.ugtniid, which ure not the bubonic.\nbut J be even more deadly and more\ndangerous pneumonic plague. The bubonic form, In which the lymphatic\nglandi swell and suppurate. Is trans\nferahle unly through some such medi-\npbic i t- id sores. Tbe Itching uud\nIrritation wen- (earful, nud the little\none's plight wus no serious that at\none lime we feared lict oara would be\neaten off hv the dincuse.\n\"Wc had'to keep her liaiids lied for\ndays to prevent hor rubbing ami\nscrutclllllg tiie sores. Doctor alter\ndoctor treated hor in vain, until we\nhad bad live doctors, They all agreed\nit was a frightful case of ccxema, but\nuntie .it tin-in did uny pcnuutiant\ngood.\n\"As ii last resource we were advised to try Xuui-Hiik. The first box\ndid so much good tlmt we felt sure\nwe were at lust working in tin- right\ndirect inn. Wa persevered with [he\ntreatment until wo hud used thirteen\nboxes, uml ut the end of thnt time\nI uiu glut! to suy Zam-Buk hud effected a complete cure.\"\nFor ccxema, eruptions, rnaliCB, tetter, itch, ringworm and similar skin\ndiscuses, Zam-Buk is without equal.\nIt also euros cuts, burns, scalds,\npiles, abscesses, chronic sores, blood\npoisoning, etc. All druggists and\nstore-, at 60 cents a box, or post free\nfor price from Zam-Buk Co., Toronto.\nRefuse imitations.\n*4\nBKAIN .WORKERS\n*ho ge' '.ttie exercise, feel better all round for\nan occasional dose of\nbk*\n\"NA-DRU-CO\" Laxatives\nThey t(Jfl\u00C2\u00BB up the liver, move the bowels gently but freely, cleanr* th.\nsyjtem and clear the brain. A new, pleasant and rel.rble laia'.lve, pre;i.-<*\nby a reliable firm, and worthy of the NA-DRU-CO Trade Mark.\n25c. a box. If your druggist has not yet slocked them, send 5!>. >?i\n^\nwe will mall them.\nNATIONAL DRUG 4 CHEMICAL COMPANY\nOF CANADA, LIMITED. MONTREAL. 2-\nV\nMALADIES OF METALS.\ntbe sunny nir. slowly building up and i Um as the rat and the flea. Tbe pneu- | curisus Contagious Daaaia Thst At-\nburgeonlug like a summer cloud aud ' - \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 - \t\nevery whit un snowy. It was the Hour\nof granite, powdered lusiuotaueously\nby tbe terrific shock.\nmonk furm. ou tbe other hand, is directly infectious.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Youth's Cotnpanlou.\nFELLING BIG TREES.\nConsistent\nCltra-I Bee Cynthia bee decortted\nber room wltb guns, pistols, swords\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2nd tbe like. Cora-Tee; sbe always\nhaa been \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 great girt for having arms\nabout ber.\nThe lnuocent seldom Ond as uneasy\ntfllow.-ifcwper.\nSt.\n> Tho Great WasU That Comes With\nMaking Up Their Beds.\nIn logging operations thu felling of\none of the big trees requires much\nskill tn order that It muy not he bro-\n\ ken lu the full, us such un accident\n: means perhaps tbe loss of fully fSUO,\n': owing to tbe value of the wood. Aa\n1 yet, however, the old method prevails ! I*0***1 <\u00C2\u00AB \u00C2\u00AB lem|*\u00C2\u00ABture beiuw tbe\nI of cutting It part of the way through lowing Hnt ut mercury sbuwa a\nwith the crosscut sow worked hy two I klll(* of \u00C2\u00ABni|ittou of pustules In wblcb\nmen, the nx being used for an incision tu,! \">\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0' '\"\"^ ltH \u00C2\u00AB\"-!\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00BB \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n s *\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-- \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-* on being\ntsoks Tin, Brssa and Lead.\nI Tbe alleged cuiitugtuus diseases ot\nj metals is a ttip.it- thut bus been men*\ntloned frum lime iu time, but shall be\nmenitoned again because It tends to\nprumote uniformity lu our views of\nmineral life and uther kinds ut life\nuud tu discredit Ihe fiiahlon ot regarding anything lu nut ure as dead nud\nInert\nIn a lecture before tbe Suclete de\nCblmle Physique at Purls a prottMOf\nspoke of the fact Ibat tin wbeu ef*\nJoseph. Levis. July 11, 1903.' \u00C2\u00AB the oppo.lt. .We. the truuk being 11\"\"*** ^\u00C2\u00AB*\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB \u00C2\u00ABW \u00C2\u00AB*\nMinnrtl's Lintiiieut Co., Limited,\nGentlemen,\u00E2\u0080\u0094! wus badly kicked by\nmy horse lust May and after using\nseveral preparations \u00C2\u00ABn my leg nothing would do. My leg was black ni\njet. I was laid up iu bed for a fortnight nnd could not walk. After using three bottlese of vour MINARD'S\nLINIMENT I wns perfectly curedi sa\nthat I could .-tint on the road.\n.IOR. DUBES,\nCommercial Traveller.\nfelled by means of wedges. I \u00C2\u00AB'ut ttl11' \u00C2\u00BB Wl* \"*ltn\u00C2\u00ABr \u00E2\u0096\u00A0#0\"\u00C2\u00BB to P0***\nIn felling the tree, a number of | \u00C2\u00BBf b-^^ up lutu a bundle of Bbera.\nChoUy-*-'*The dentist told me I had\nti large cavity that needed filling.\"\nKthel\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Did he recommend uny\nipecial course of study?\"\nTrial Up to Date\nHrei'i wut aecun.-d ol bribery. Hi\ntiduiittiil the charge.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'Wlmt. Mr!-\" the ju.Il*.. thunderetl.\n\"Whal, you ii practlalng lawyer, admit without r-hiiliic that you hrilM-d\ntiir witneaaf\"\n\"Yen, your honor.\" -.aid Hreef Itant-l\nity. \"Hut I bribed him lo tell lite 1\ntttiili He hud been brihid hy Ihe\nother ildo lu li.-.\"-N.-w York Trl-\nbum*.\nArouitd\nThe young woman m the \u00E2\u0096\u00A0(ern ..i\nthe boa I had whliperod loflly the\nword \"Ye-.\" \"Hilt \u00E2\u0096\u00A0lay right where\nyou nr,'. .luck.\" ihe udd.-d hastily: \"if\nyou Iiv tu ki-- iih* you'll upH.t the\nhotlt \"\n\"How do you kimw**\" hoarsely de\u00C2\u00AB\niniiii'l. I Jack, a horrible lUBploion nl*\nready taking noaeeulon uf hint.\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nItleaa.\nA Imrxe mil live Iwenly-ltve day*i\nwithout aollil footl. merely drinking\n-siit.r, K.'vt'iitriii (lays wlthoul plthet\neating or diiukiiui. mid only live diiyn\nwlu-n parlakiUK \"I Mild fo**d Hilhoiii\nwater\nPlssi-Fes In the Reeklea.\nto some st tbe high plateauo or\nmesas of taw Itoeky mountains tbsre\nare to be fotind e abort dlstauca from\ntbe edge cracks or flssureo oot more\nibao four feet wide aod often ae much\nas eighty feet deep. During the ter\nrifle bllssarls that rage In tbe winter\ntbeee crest'es sit tilled to tbe level,\naod rattle %ud faoraee wblcb are oot\nacquainted wltb tbe country frequent\nly drop Intr tbem. tbelr struggles only\ncausing thr.i lo sink deeper and deeper. Ibe e-a-ka, into which tbe ona\nnerer penrtistee, ere like rrfrtgera\nton, end 'tt bspless brulte, when\ndeath has -i-nt to their relief, beeome\nto all Inier-ti and purpooeo uummlea,\nA Remady tor BIMoua Haadachi.-To\nthuac .tiilij.Ti tu lull.uh hi-atlni-he Par-\nuiii.,- V|.|*i-ttil.li> 1'lllrt nr.. r.riniiiiH-iidi-tl\nin the way to -i> Iy relief. Taken affording tn iliri-.tii.ii-* they will aubdur\nirn-aiiitiritif* nf tht* atumarh and ao a.t\nupun the ntrvf-H and blood t**hkcU lhat\nthi* painN In the bend will ira-e. I'hrrr\ntiri- I,-* whu nre nul at K.jitu- lime rtub-\njret tu bllliKi-tneai* and familiar with lu\nalivndaiil evil*. Vet ii'Hii- m-rd auffcr\nwith th.-.- pill-, at hand.\nA red-bended man met a bald-head-\ned man ou the street one .lay. The\nred-headed man said tu the hnld-lu-ad-\ned mnn:\n\"Hull' there don't seem tu hnve\nbeen much huir where you came\nfrom.\"\n\"oh. yes,\" replied the bald-headed\nman, \"there was plenty \u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0' hair, but\nit wan all red. and I woiildn' hnve\nIt,\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094 UppinOOtl'l Magazine.\nMinard's Liniment curat burns, ttc.\n\"Why, Willie, you don't seem lo he\nenjoying youfielf.\" \"No. uncle, I'm\nhaving 'i inivr.ih!.' lime. Auntie told\nin,* to ent aa much an I wunted\u00E2\u0080\u0094and 1\ncan't.\"\nThis affect ion la cupnble uf being com*\nmiuileuied by cuntaci, fur tbe appllca*\ntion uf a few graius uf tbe puwdet to\nthe surface of n block of perfectly\nwm ml tin brings about Its trausfuruia*\ntion to a few days.\nlu anuther traiismlttabte dlsmse of\nsmaller oues are frequently cut down\nto form a bed uu which It may fall so\nthat It will not break on account of\nIts weight. Here Is n great waste,\nsince tbe felling of a fir ISO tons lu\nj trelftbt in.ij* r..|itlrc tbe t-ucrt'lCC or U\ngroup of other trees which at inuiu- .\nrity would equal lt In size. In tbe tin the siructure of the metal Uchanr\n\"clearings'* muy he seen thousands of , \u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 autl *\u00C2\u00BB*'*\u00C2\u00BB*** crystalline. This dis*\nthe young trees which have been cut ' *\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00AB '\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB n \"peclal tendency to attack\ndown merely for \"heds.\" Join,\u00C2\u00BB which hnve beeu soldered, but\nDodouhtedly n mechanical system ' 't attacks brass aod lead as welL\ncould be utilised lo the work, such as j Ho\"'* <1\u00C2\u00BB \u00C2\u00AB*\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB*e \u00C2\u00AB'\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB \u00C2\u00ABud or*\na lwrtohlo power derrick, ibe tup of j miulaed than tbe earthy mluersia.-\nwhlch could bo aitucbed to a tree hy Ceuiury rath.\t\ntbe block and tackle system, thus ol- '\nlowing the trunk when cut through to ' Punished For Looking Healthy.\nbe lowered gradually by means of, In the days of tbe Puritans tbe-Jiorke\nrones of steel cable wltbout the tlm- were not unknuwn as n penalty fur iuug*\nber being injured und tbe crushing of l\"g ton beaitby. Hnddhiess of cumpiea*\nIbe smaller trees near It.-W. A. Doy I''-' ***\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \" trlme when a gauut visngo\nIn Cassler's Magazine. *<\" regarded as an outward sign of\n______\u00E2\u0080\u009E_\u00E2\u0080\u0094 laiii'tity Dr. Kctifi-rd. writing in tne\n\"v,l, ,U\"*' j..,.\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E I bla coiKiii inn wns aecuunted dangerous.\nmerged. Maps of the sea made twenty\nyears ago show nn Island near tbe\nnorthero extremity of tbe hrj-e wblcb\nwas uot found during a recent survey,\nand It la supposed tbat this has been\nlost ln tbe rising waters. The Turkish\ngovernment sold tbe mining rights on\nthe shores to a syndicate fur about\n$3.riO.0uO, and If tbe sea for some unknown reason continues to rise tbeee\nholdings will be almost unattainable\n* hu need tu come ulgh mi official tea lot a\nbuuse might be sei in tbe stocks only\nfur looking tiei-h on a frosty morning.\"\nFew uf the January facet tu be tt-vo\nIn u Ixmdoii street, however, would run\nany risk ul drawing duwn this penalty,\n-London Cbruuh-le.\nFOOD FOR A GENIUS.\nDltt lhat Enabltd Mrs. 8lddens ts\nRise to Lady Macbeth.\nIt ta not altogether easy to Imagine\na Lady Macbeth eating chops. Yet het\ngreatest Itnpersonntor got her Inspiration from tbem. If oue muy rely on aa\naltogether delightful authority. On a\ncertain occuslon, writes 10 V. Lucas In\nhis book \"The Second 1'oHt,\" the painter Hay dun puld his butcher, whu reciprocated hy expressing greut admiration for tbe artist's painting of \"Ales-\nander.\"\n\"Quite alive, sir.\" snld the butcher.\n\"I am glad yuu think su,\" said tbe\nartist.\n\"Yes, sir; but. as I have often said\nto my sl.-u.T, you <-uuld not bave palmed Unit picture, ntr, if yuu bad uot eat\nmy meal, sir.\"\n\"Very true. Mr Sowerby.\"\n\"Ah, sir, I huve u fancy for geu'os.\nair.\"\n\"Have you, Mr SowerhyT'\n\"Yes. sir. Mrs Sldduus, sir. bos eat\nmy meat. air. Never wus mii-b a woman fur chops, sir: Ah. sir, she was a\nwonderful cruyture!\"\n\"She was. Mr Nowerby.\"\n\"Ah. sir. when n-lie used lo act that\nthere chtiracier nut. I-\"id, sucb a\nhead, ns 1 say tu my slHipr-ihut there\nwomnn. sir. Ihnl murders s king be*\ntween 'em.\"\n\"Oh. Udy Mn-beih\"\n\"Ah. sir tlm't it Udy Macbeth- 1\nused io gel up wlib ihe butler behind\nber carriage wheu hIiw acted, and I\nused to ser ber muking quite wild sod\nall the people quite irlghteued. 'Aba.\nmy lady,' says I. 'It it wasu t fur my\nmeat, though, yuu wuu'dn't be able to\ndu tbatr\"\nPaid for the Privilege\nSome people hnve u gnat und clear\nidea of their rights, uul don't full to\nInsist ou getting them.\nA Toronto woman was sitting nedr a\nfront bedroom window in order t-j\nwatch her child, who \u00C2\u00AB\"* getting bis\nfir-;t natural sleep after a severe Hi*\n-ii;-.-. Worn out by work and anxiety\ntha mother fell asleep. Bhe was awakened by an Italian push-cart man,\nwho wai loudly calling \"Banana ripe!\nBanana rfpel Ten cents a dosen!\nLeaning oul of the window, the\nmother put up her Itandi and begged\nthe Italian to be quiet.\n\"Aw, what - the matter with vou.\"\nIte Mini. **l pa) lei lollat fei holler\nround the itreets\n1 Wart- will rtodtr th.- prettlMI h\u00C2\u00BBn.t*\n' utiii-'ii'i. Clear thi n r-~^i\u00E2\u0080\u009Er, \u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB*,\nby twins Hollowar'i C\u00C2\u00ABr* Cart, f\u00C2\u00BBnua\na.tri iboruuKtily and pslaltrul]\nMother\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"N - 1 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ml . * l\nus fur away a* \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 - - ; ... \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ii\nJon.- boy. He'd the * rst m\nyour schoi 1 '\nBobby- ! always do. He i at ths\nhead ol ti.. asa all the tixm :\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 i\nYork OI.-I\nMinard's Llnlmtnt rttlsvts \"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-.~ i -t j\n\"Mr Cll avi \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 .,. j i \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0. out\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 for the fact that found a ph-cs\n: rubber tin wxam .\nbought hen :\ni \"My dear mn :\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 show that the , \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nkite hor* - \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ~i\nTimes,\nA pin icratel\n; poison, i rustj \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\ni hi do bo Ham . -\n1 at once draws \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ul i ,.: |\nmokes blood ; i h\nCards For the Puppies.\nA novelty in I'aris Is tbe lap dog\nvisiting card. Poms and \mg\u00C2\u00BB which\nf hTwt!y iff lhelr.?1?treMe,H!ni\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"'s' \u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 -\"\"\u00C2\u00BB*\"\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB w\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB*\nfashionable elide.(have their;o\u00C2\u00AB \u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00BB iW|ltlHl mumt \u00E2\u0080\u009E,\u00C2\u00AB Kr\u00C2\u00ABi y.u.u king\npasteboards tucked away In little pock-\neta of their outdoor coats. Sucb dogs\nMurdtr as s Pine Art\nIt has lieen popularly suppi-oed that\nNuiHjieoti wat directly ami iiidlm-uy\nre-[iont.ilde for more deaths tliau auy\nune else of modem times. But that\nestimate must be n-vlwed If the statement of Miss Souibey In \"Sturm and\nbave two seta of cards, whlcb are duly\nleft on otber dogs at the bouses where\ntbey are culling with their mistresses.\nOue card gives the dog's real name and\ni'shukn, s cmileiiqrorary of Napoleon,\nwbo \"Is believed tu hare u.voinited\nfor the lives of over a million uf hla\nfellow creature*.\" There still eih*ted\nsl tbe time nf Mi-s Huuiheyt visit a\nvery old lady whu bad kuown tbe dee*\nA Class -Student\nTbe lete o.-n im. railed. Tlwr -***\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 n\u00C2\u00BB Veum cml win .hort-\nllln I Irritable, iiisily mirriea M lt\u00C2\u00BB )ourn.j; lo and from Itrltnln bj \t\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0ml .'U'H.'il uml hul,' I,.un. I uiimiiry' ..r.r.l days and thu. put ,11 uaera of ^i^li'o.'.nnurrr bloiMlt luouoiuv-\"\nuinl r..ii,.iiiiritli,'ii lulling lh. new rout. In po..,..lon of an In-\nMad Uuy hul known that il.,-\u00E2\u0080\u0094- cumtiaralil. Konomlc .dv.nl.|. o.,r\najrmploma t.ill ew Jer\u00C2\u00BB\"j\nn lung letter truiu a banket ot .New\nVurk addr-Msed lu Aleiandei llaauit<*D\nwbeu he was -4\u00C2\u00AB*.retary ul the tr#nsury\nThe banker bud heard thai Huuilltua\npur|>used tu bund a cuttuu mill at I'at\nerann. X J Tlux (irujet-t tbe banker\ncuudemued and united that it waa the\nopiulun uf all the merchuuts In Nc\u00C2\u00AB\nVurk whom he knew that not tu a bun\ndred yearn would the cotton mltiiug\nbusluess lu the 1 tilled Suites employ\n200.\nHamlllon went sbead and niutmeo\ntbe Indusirlnl t* **ti lie naiu.-d I'aiefMin\nnnd alm> ptanind sud tlnum-ed a c-^m\npany fot dereiuniu-f. a water |nwef and\nfor lltMueinj* cu(*|iuratlonn theieaL\nMuuilitont ortglntl couiimuy. kuuwn\nns the Huclfty Hor t\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00ABfui Mamifac\nHires, eilats to this day tt I'aiersua.\nTbe sgeul whom HatniHun tent to\nEnglanrl tu buy etfltoo mill mar ninery\nwas Instructed to bare It 'knocked\ndown\" and placed In amaii bote* mat\nwere to be markvd \"Itibiea Kot ine\nMururtsns of I'eunayivaunt\" It wn*>\nut that time agnimu the tawt uf Kng\nland to ahlp any Ithid ut tiidimtrtai ma\ncbluery out uf tbe klngdmu Hutnii-\ntou's brother aud twu of bla ageura\nwere caugbt trying to amp the cmtoo\nmill machinery to l-aim-on. and tbey\nwere Impri: ued fur tea muoiba\u00E2\u0080\u0094Cot\nton.\nWaldo and tha Picsh-d Ptpp\u00C2\u00ABr\u00C2\u00AB.\n\"Now. demV.\" said Uie ourte. \"I\nwant you lo lean this ulce little poem\nabout I'eier I'lper deked a path uf\n(tickled pepfira.'\"\n\"Shan't!\" answered the Huston chlM.\nmucb lu ibe mauoer of uther children\n\"Ob. naugbry, naughty! Why, Waldo, wby won't you learu thla pretty\npoemf\n\"Kor two reaaoua,\" anawerrd Waldo\n\"lo Ibe flmt place, tbe alliteration of\ntbe line you quut-f la at* etct-wnre aa to\ndestroy any lltt\u00C2\u00ABary finish tbat such\nadveutltlotiR aids to metrical conpoas-\ntlon might lend 'f u\u00C2\u00AB*d more sparine**\nly. And. In the second place, coeilder\nthe ImpuHtibiiity of nicking n *m\nsiiiI .-nlil it in *.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2.! .. -in .n\"0 thaaU\nwith th* Oil. uul u* -\u00C2\u00BB-iitt vill n \u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00BB\nproven'ion -it pmiii* n Uh ni- i* mu\n-h-i'il't x ''ill. ae ,!..nt:i>-i',ii. ir -ur-iui re\n\u00C2\u00ABUHtiiui.\"l. Sothmg UUld M .\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2er is i\n'lre*)Min\u00C2\u00BBx ic Im ton.\nIniiiitii-in- Strnnger\u00E2\u0080\u0094' \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 if -i\nyour* threw i srgH minn u nn mrt\nnow. missing ny uuul imll m\ninch'\"\nProud Patent\u00E2\u0080\u0094'\"Ton wg le m ad\nyou?\"\ntndfgnam *irriiiif*-r - ' >u-'\nnu--. rj mn\nProiul P ir ': Thi n * * is mi ny\nboy?\"\nHow'3 T*U3 1\nWe ..fT-r Une !I iii.tr-l )<.ilnr> le-\u00C2\u00AB-ir*l\nfor aa* '-leM. nt '.urn CtUU inn..! \u00E2\u0080\u00A2*.\nrureti by ll.ill'- Catftrrt*. Cnra.\nV .1 <'HK\"tHV i '< \" ii.-ii- -\nWe. th,- air-lershpitd, ts - raown 9 .\nObtnef for ':ie laei sfteefl \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 na -\nllf*ve h,:il >-*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2.' I ll..- : or ii |,1 ,iui-\nnet* traatai -.. u- md laopttaH** une\nrarry ml UU inliir-i.li. na iimic i- n\u00C2\u00BB\ntlrm.\nWALDIf*; KXT^ \u00C2\u00BB'-' i l \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 :\nWhole... - *\"U'-*: '- \"o\u00C2\u00ABl...\nHall'* Catarrh Cart i **,-n Btr-raattr\nsating dirtetly i\u00C2\u00BB-\"i the ilon-l iad diu-aiu\nmrffUflt 'f the ,/\u00C2\u00ABtorn. T\u00E2\u0080\u0094.i.in..Fii-u-. -*ni\ntree. ftuta \"S -::\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 it .\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 <\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0* Wg IS\nColor Trinsitiwi\nAn aged red man wa . |\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0. in burning the gras -\nta young broker *\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 . attw \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n[turned to hia :.. nu md i\nI have aome fun aith I ma\nj \"Simbo. it you bum thai iraaa\nentire lawn will t.e ,i.- blaea u nra\nare.\"\n\"Oats all rnrht. mn,\" raaponoeri\ntne raagro \"Some a daaa l.tvi thmi\ngra.t* grow up an' b*\u00C2\u00BB as tr-en .ia you\nar>-.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094,lud||..\nMttplig Tl-ilngi Along.\n\"The family in tbe nest flat bei\nthree phoni-grapha end four boya eriU\ntoy eipreae wsgont.\" aald Mr.\n(irowi-her't wife. \"Whal on oartb\nshall we dor*\n\"Send fur tbe piano inner and ant\nblm buw much ne ti take to work by\ntbe day.\"*Wothingion Star.\nGood News.\nJ \"My dear, om landlord aays be'e going to ran-, our rent.\"\n\".Had to near ne ran do It I rant\"\n-HtlMtDiire American.\nBtroHlng ilong tho boardwaft r *\u00E2\u0080\u00A2,\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-\nlantlc City, Mr UulUgan, *.n.- Tar-nlthy\nr.-tir.-*l eontractor dropped i piarter\nthrough \u00C2\u00BB crack in tha plunking v\n(nend eante along a mmute laitsr and\nfound him iqnatted down, induitr-.*\nfiii-ly jH'kitiir d t-jro J- liar hill thrr.ugh\nthe Imeherous cranny with hfa tors*\nQnger.\n\"Molllgan, what th-* dtwil ar- *-\ndoin - ' Inquired th- friend.\n\"8h*h,\" laid M- Mu'! iin \"I'm\nt ry mi ' to make 11 **\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-;\" \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\ntear Up this board \"\nThe Man at the iVr \"Madim**.\nI'm the piano-tuner'\nTh.' ft'oman \"I IMn'l \u00C2\u00BBnd an \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\npiaiio-t. uti.-r \"\nTb.- Man \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 l kn * H i!- th\u00C2\u00AB\nneighbor-, did ' igoMewi\n\"Keep youi - \u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\ngentlemen,\" sold a th**stn<*sl m\u00C2\u00BBn-\nug.-r: \"th.r*- ll \u00E2\u0096\u00A0' \u00E2\u0080\u00A2' ' ' ' ''\nbut (or some in. *.i'Ii' abls rati \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nkui ha* ifoti- ni\nThen m boy ihouted (\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\"> \u00C2\u00BBli- gel-\nlery: \"Perhepi it didn't like the\npliy.\"-Tlt.Blti\nDltsatisflnl Hualiantl \"Ihlorc wo\nwere lliurried I wu* led to believe ynll\nwere well oil,\"\nDlisntla(1crv,' K,a\u00E2\u0080\u009El\nC..y M.n.y.\nI an working my way\nA F.m.u. War Fleel.\nTbe baltleahlp. of the Atlantic Oeet\nTills iriat rntofltln Ir, nlm, ill wbk-b Killi-d uul ot Hampton Ituad. ln\ncure, hy tormina new, rich hliiial ami' December, 1007, on tbe f.nioua .round\nliy i. I.iiit.liiis- lh,' wasti',1 niTvt' lell. | tb. world crulw-the Alaham.. Illinois\nNu medicine ia inure curtain to prove. ii.tnc, AlbwourL Ohio, KcrMri*.\nI'l-iii'lii'iiil, tor clch .lose mill, jo tin' Kentucky, WIkomIo and New Jereey\ninn a certain ontounl ol rich, ,>,i _rj' every one of tbem la Ueted\n\"Dravo glrll Uuw do you nro moav\ni*l\"\n\"WelL father give, me 110 for every\n.Inglng Meaon I dun't uka.\"-Luoa>\nrill. Courler-Juurn.L\n'Aids Nature\nblood,\nNervous tltaogsee come\nund fun only he overi-omo by pntieiit\n\"In reaerre,\" and their plat-en ln tha\nlid ponlitoht treatment. ProventlonI \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 have been taken by newer and\nis always hitter than cure, and for auofo powerful abl-pa.-ArgooaQt.\nthis rention you ahould emleavor to\nkeep llm dyxtem at high water mark\nhy lining Dr. (-hase'ii Nerve Food nt\nthe first sign of trouble. bO ct-nls n\nbox; 8 hoxos for S3.M; at all denlera\nor Kdmaiiion, Bates & Co., Limited,\nToronto.\n\"Ntlllt\" Grant\nHie Protest\nDoctor-Now, ourse. take tbe pa*\nSenfe temperature. IMtlent (feebly)\n-Oh, doctor, do leave me oometbuif\nn my system.--*-Baltimore American.\nOld Gentleman I'm g''*d io are thai\nEllen Wrensbnll Oront, affeetlonale- ,uu *n ,\"\",*'m,,h \",-f .\"'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 wA M r0BI\nly remembered by most American wo- i m\"8 Dro,hfr u\"\u00C2\u00B0 'n* \"ku,ffl \"\"''\npie a. \"Nelll.\" OrtM, wa. tne {\u00C2\u00A3 u,,\u00C2\u00BB* H^\u00E2\u0084\u00A2 Siitt?1 J\ntUM of a pmldtot to he married at mni wn u th* W* woUl4 ,,--r~\"\niht White Uaoe* A. P.\nThe great toecest of Dr. Pierce'* Golden Mediesl Dit*\ncovery ia curing tresk atomseht, wotled boditt, wetk\nlungi, and ob-itlaete and lingtrlng oought, it btifd on\ntht recognition of Ihe fundamental truth thai \"Uoliicn\nMedical Discovery\" tupplitt Nature with body-building, tissue-repairing, muscle-making mtltrials, in con-\ndtnttd tnd concentrated form. With this help Nature\nsupplies the necetiary strength to Ihe stomach to digr-st\n'uod, build up thc body and thereby thruw .iff lingering\nohstinttt coughs. The \"Discovery\" re-eslthlishes tht\ndigm've and nutritive organ* In sound health, p-.rifi.-s\nand enriches the blood, and nouri Hts Ihe ner-.es -m\nshort tsttblishcs sound viguruus hcsltl..\nIt your deafer altera anmatklnf \" fast aa tfoorf,'*\nIf la probably better FOP} Ml!*, -it paya better.\nHat you are thtnktnt of lha care not tha prt.tlt, am\nthere'a aothlmt \",utr aa good\" for yon. Sag a*.\nDr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Adviser, In Plain Rnglish; or, Medicine Simplified, lOOg pages, over 700 illustrations, atwly revised up-to. Address: Dr. R V. Pierce, Huffalo, N. Y. FREE PRESS, CHILLIWACK, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nCHILLIWACK FREE PRESS\n-r.irm.rlv (The New Km.)\nr ,\, H.MtHKIt, I'ulilWicrtuu! I'niprlutor,\na uml iiuiilislu-il everj Tluirmliii\" from ii-\niti,',- WtMlmiiislir Sliii-t. riiillbviii-k.\niniii.ii nrliT ti mi iht vent in advance u> mi\nn.l. iMiijiiri' - to Unitni StatesItaM,\nAllVI-.KIISlNtl HATES\nvertlslui rutm dopenilciil mt lemi or\n,imiv n-v.1 llllll *\u00E2\u0096\u00A0> ill >>*- Himb' k'KiWii\nii, in I tic puiillslier.\nim ul Kiiiiiiui loc pel I'l.iint line ciu-li\nnl vert Iwinoiitj, i ten I pel word raicli\nn jih\ntin,i\n-Mors l\u00C2\u00BBr\u00C2\u00AB\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 nd\nfifth\nb t \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00C2\u00BB a1\nSold by MorchantB'of uliilliwiwk, Koswlalo, und Atcliolitz\n\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6+<*^*>*+*+++++++***+^^\nif\nDairy Farm ! |\n80 Acres, nil cleared nml iiikIit t-ultivnlinn. 7 Room\nHouse, Hum and Outlidiises, Private Water Sup|)ly. *\nGood Orchard, Buildings valued nt ffSOOO, beautifully \u00E2\u0099\u00A6\nsituated, 200 yards from School, 2 milos from l'osl +\nOffice, 4 miles from Church. Tliosuil is tlio hesl lo he \u00E2\u0099\u00A6\nobtained in litis valley and produces I tons of liny {\nper acre, everything in llrst-class condition.\nPrice $26,000,\n$10,000 Cash, Iitiliinco to suil purchaser.\n| CHAS. HUTCHESON & CO. \\nI\nREALTY AND INSURANCE AGENTS\n!\n*****************************************************\nQUARTER ACRE PLOTS!\nSitttatod ten minutes walk lo|)ostofilce,\nAll in firsl-elass state of cultivation,\nhigh, dry and level, with wide frontage\non Charles Street. Each quarter-ncro\nlias a number ot choice fruil Ireos in\nfull hearing, and the prices arc tpiite\nrcasonnhle.\nL\nW. R. NELEMS\nThe Chilliwack Specialist\nilium.', ctuii must t\u00C2\u00AB' in imi lulur tlmn\nVVi'iilli-nlil) mi.titniK'\nTHANKSGIVING\nTho Puritan PitU.ers, wim mivi* u\ntlm world tlu* ClIHtntn nf w-Uit\naside onoll ymr tmu du,v in whirl\nwc aro culled upon Hnk'ninl.v I*1 n\ncount our hlcssinan. * vine. I <\nfound knowledge i-t liiiimin u\ntiinl niiltiro'fl needs. Mint in imn'1\nhu) prone to think upon the ' hunl\ntimes\" through which he huu pnwil\numl to forget tlic lmpplni'W It i-\ntrue thnt ho cotistitntly turn-* IiIh\nface to the past nntl talks of ''the\ngood nlil times.\" But thai h more\nbecause he sees chiefly thu evil in the\ndnys thut nro now thnn thut ho it-\npainstaking in t nting tho good-\nneKS nf the Almighty mul All Good\nin tho past. The sotting aside of n\nday of thanksgiving hrought with ii\nan influonco working for sweetness,\nsanity and ofliciency. The mun\nwho is always brooding on his\nwrongs in tho weaker for it, and\nIn- who revives his courage with recalling the happiness and successes\nof the past, therchy renews Ins\nstrength for the morrow. Thanksgiving has a deeper meaning than\nthe more offering, by the voice or\npun, of tllllllks for favors from the\nAll Giver. True thanksgiving is a\nforce in the life. It is not content\nwith the formal uttoranco of gratitude. Il translates this gratitude\nInto action. It recognizes that tho\nreceipts of blessings carries with il\nresponsibility for extending happiness to other.'-, und returns thanks\nto tlio Oivor in serf ire of his\ncreatures' and in seeking to bring\nabout tin- prevalence of 11 is will\namong men.\n; \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Phone I 197 Phone R 197\nAbbotsford Timber $ Trading\nCo., Limited\nOffice and Yards, YOUNG ROAD\ni\nWo have a comploto Block of Long Joist*. Rough {\nnml DroBfletl Lumber, Lntli, Shingles, Kiln Dried\nFlooring, Coiling, Siding, Moultlinga nntl ITinisli.\nLime, ('-in.'hi nnd I'IiihU'i*.\nI'l'ninpt nlli'iilimi giVilli to till ordoffl.\nTH0S. KIRKBY Local Manager\n.*+++\u00E2\u0099\u00A6+\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6++***>*+\u00E2\u0099\u00A6<* \u00E2\u0080\u00A2>\u00E2\u0080\u00A2>\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00C2\u00AB*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2>\u00E2\u0080\u00A2> *>***>*t\u00C2\u00AB't4 4 4 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2>4**4*>4*>e*f'>f*\u00C2\u00BBt*>e*a*t*'><>e\nTHE POLL TAX\nThe day laborer with a family\nwho earns $00 a month cr less docs\nnot want any taxes to pay. British\nColumbia is a rich province, rich\nin natural resource*, from whieh a\nlarge pari of thc expenses of government are secured. That the \n\u00C2\u00BB>r\nman should hnve to pay $'.\ a year\nshame. The excuse that hy\nlevying a pay roll tux is tho only-\nway to [*rt at the Chinamen is hut a\nlame one. The collection of thai\n*?;t deprives thc worklngmon nf sum*'\nmall luxuries during tho month in\nwhich it is paid, and he gets few\nmotlgh. Oil limes it puts him in\nleht In thai extent or he has to do\nwithout some of Iho necessaries of\nlife, lt is only the man who ha:\nlived aud kept house mi 850 or SU0\na month, and that within recent\nyears who ran thoroughly appreciate whal the tax means,\nMany nf ua hud to live on or jmt-\nhups less than the sum above\nmentioned, Imt thai was ilm-ing\n(he time when commodities wore\ncomparatively cheap. Now they\nare very dear, and even those with\na much larger salary liml it ilihVnlt\nto make both etuis meet. Take tho\nhead tax of nil together and let\nthose who ran afford to do so pay\nthe taxes. The |MHir man pays\nenough already in the shape of\nduties on everything ho eats and\nwears,'\u00E2\u0080\u0094Victoria Times.\nTwo farmers, ono a Canadian and\ntho other un American; and both\nresiding on the bordor on tho\nprairies huve boon arrested for\nsmuggling oats and barley at which\ngame thoy were making a good thing\nby using what is called tho chain\nsystem. Tho Canadian farmer\nwould take his grain over lo tho\nAmerican farmer during the night,\nand the American would tako it to\nan American elevator, The profits ;;\nof courso arc divided, lu smuggling barley Ihciv is n gain of abmil\nliir. n bushol li Ml .put*, -mow\nthai tli. former* tilui \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 : \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i rr\nlieliovo in reciprocit;, win Ll-nr ihey\nvoted for it or nol,\nPotatoes\n. Stored.\nPotatoes stored in\nin trust nrwif whit\nlimine, three itioiitlis\nfor Two Dnll'ir .\nI.i oral itilMiiii'i\n: ii .-,-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0.. if i. . ,i\n? THE MERCHANTS BANK I\nOF CANADA\n18(11\nmn\n1'aid-up Capital uml Reserve\n$11,000,000\nM v i-.iiiin.'il In Res| nilile People.\nAccounts Opened on I'.-iviinilile Terms.\ni\\\n\i -,. :\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i ii-, Mttiiiiuei' *\nt\n..A*********************\nOil,' llllll, III, in lis,\nflirlllli'ls' Assiiciiltiilll .\nnniiiiiil mooting tiinl tn\nHritisli |iivf,'i- uiinli\nnil in ti J\nI Lli U.\nVANC0UVE11 . B. C. f\nlower st hml of living fur i lie | ************ >\nCiiiiiiiliiin iKi.ptn. N.' ilulllil lie\nn il thill t\" li.ivr th,- prim'K ul\nwoollens nml i-iiilini goods s,i lhul\nIKOplo I'ltlll'l ilri-ss tiMiiv clll'tipl.V\nwould iniiki' tin-ill I'i-i'I llml lln>}\nwort! neiirlng .-h.-upi-i- i-jutlies.\nThere is nomi'tlting in the argument,\nfor huh iln' pletifiireof wearing g 1\nclotllCH Ilea ill tht' t-,,iisi-i,nisln-ss\nthat tlii'.v rust it lot uf iniilH'V.\nHow really etover this manufacturer\nWill tu ilisu'ii thin I'lusivi' trait in\nhuman nature.\nThe milliliter of an Oiilai'io fair\nis I'ntitli'il tu the Carnegie i Ial\ntor optimism. The .vol weather on\nshow ilu.v ri-iliii-i-il thu gate receipt,\nto J.7.60, uml ho cheerfully boasted\ntlmt his (nir excelled nil rivals in\nthe iirolougeil preelpitation uf\nmoisture,\nj. ri. i>OOh\nI Inl Air i'liriini'i's,\nRoofing mul Cornice,\nMetallic Ceilings,\nStoves nnd Hiiiigos,\nOoilOI'al repair work,\netc.\nEstimates furnishod\nPhone 94\nLive upon the sunny side of life,\nand kei-p away from tho grottcher,\nwho know- nothing but hard luck\nstories.\nWe Have Moved\nTHE CHILLIWACK HARNESS CO. hn\u00C2\u00AB inovnl f\t\nlho Knlghl lllonk In the htiilillng f ,-. I> Il| I |,y\nlho Kiwi l're.9, o|.pi\u00C2\u00ABlle the poslnllii'i,, ivlii'l-l- jolt will\nUinl ii\u00C2\u00AB fully i.ptippi-,1 I , i \\"in- ,1,'in.mil- i i-lin,'.\nUV i'itrr.1 n lull li iih.-l\"-si mul,- of liitrnem nnil\n; i*s->,ri<-. iii priees thai .pell y for ti\u00E2\u0080\u009E- fartnt-r.\nOUR REPAIR liF.PARTMENT\nIn propnieil to give.von ej plim.al ..rviiv, mul n ,-ull\nThe ChilliwacK Harness Co.\nOpposite the Post Office\nWe would like to remind reodors\nof the Preo I'tess of the coming scs*\nslon of the Provincial Tax Commis*\n-ion whieh will Im* held in thc Court\nhouse, Chilliwack ou Wednowlay,\nNovoiubcr8, at III a.m. Tho meet,\ning will Ire opi-n In the public ami\nany porson lutorosltitl is invllotl to\n1 alteti'l uinl give tllU Comilllwloil the\nInnofll of Iii-1*piiilous nr vim- mi\nIn iu.iti,, Hml mti-i i.i< iiuiflldoroil nf\nin**!*' than hi*.11nary Importunec,\nTheiv is Iln- jmll tax, pOtTWIial pl'o-\n|hi(.v Uut, Lilllbor lIUUSi mineral tax\nI and \"lln'i |*M>ll I.- whirh euine witlllll\n| tho scope of llm Compilation, Auy\n'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'oinplaini- iiiiiI nuggoalctl amend'\ninciitH will hoi nidercd.\nTlu- siuteiiii-ni ihnl iKilitenwwniid\njiiiiisiilciaii.ui for ot hem i-; nol iu evidence among thc youth of the laud\n!*< mislciiilinji. A new hath itMim\nwiw o|-*-nrtl in connection with a\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i\u00C2\u00BBiy'-*ic|i...i| iu Toronto lho other day\nnntl Ihe hmt rue tor Invited the pupils\niu the (it-si tlivision toeoino forward\numl lokoH plunge. With iidmirablu\ngallantly the front row prom pi I >\n-irpp.-il niilside to give the rear\nHi in l'Is a rhaiice.\nHot Drinks for\nCool Weather\nClam Bullion\nTomato Bullion\nTomato Nectar\nBeef Tea\nHot Molted Milk\nTea, Chocolate, Coffee\nTheae delicious drinks served\nday and evening, in our\nTea Rooms\nWe Make Our Own Candin\nChilliwack Candy Kitchen\nS. JOHNSON\nOLD TIMERS!\nTAKE NOTICE\nlu ua effort i<> eatuhlish n rgnllrcrv uf\nI.i.iii.ri-! of tin- fruer Valley, I Mill\nitlvu in overy man who ban been a re*\nsi.liiii ol iln- valley nol lets thou\ntwcnty*tlvc yean ami who i^ eligible\ntn iiioHilx'whlp ia Tin- nl.l Ttiiwn\nAmiociiiifon, <\u00E2\u0080\u00A2!\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 lurge I'latlnu l'ini-*li\nijliutoKrupli \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0! hitnsclfi Haitablo for\nirAiningi free.\nI'i'.iviili-il. thai lie will come ta my\nBtutlio before the tir.-t of NovciiiIxt\nnext mul give ii few momenui *>f hie\nlinn- in uu effort to obtain a likeiicru\nllmt will not only be a credit to himself ami the pioneer*] \"f I lie Valley,\nImi the Sttullo us well,\nL. F. CROFT. Photographer\nTh. He. Studio Chilliwack, B.C.\n**************************\nt j\n! Macken- I\n| Smith *\n! Lumber\nAUCTION SALE\nffygi ic Dair^ Farm\nThursday, November 9\nCommencing at 12 o'clock sharp\nLunch Served on tho Premises\nWc have reeelveil luslMiclloiiH from lliu Llqtililaloni in w-ll tvltlmiil re*\nNi>rvi- tlic uii.li-r-iiKutiiiui'il sunk, |iu|ilcmt-itu-j ami eiiul| tit ut the\nllyglcnlu Dairy Kami, Mut\u00C2\u00ABnul, Otirunl Station, II.U, B.C. Klectric, on\ntin- .luti- above meiiliuiied,\nTKIt.MS $2ft.OO and under, Cntih. Over tlmt amount throe montlm\nt'tnlit A eaa taa* *aau*AAa\Aa\AAAi a a iaAAAAA\u00C2\u00AB\AaaAaaaa\nrww www twwtw ffvffffwfff w www wwwwwmrnmefm\nS. PUGH\nElectrical Contractor\nWiring for Power\nnml Lighting\nA comploto line of\nFittings and Supplies\nChilliwack\nImplement and\nProduce Co.\nPotato Diggers\nSacks\nFencing\nImplements of all\nkinds\nFhoaee\nWe Have Listed Exclusively\nA Few Blocks of 5, 10 and 15 Acre Subdivision, situated 1 1-2 miles\nfrom the city on the beautiful banks of Hope river. Peaches, apples,\nplums and .small fruits in bearing.\nThis land is in a No. 1 state of cultivation and unequalled for early\nmarkct-gai'deniiig*.\nFor Further Particulars, Apply\nF. J. HART & CO., LTD.\nThe Chilliwack Specialists FREE PRESS, CHItLIWACK, BRITISH COLUMBIA.\n*\nBARGAINS BARGAINS\nWhat is a bargain '! Attend\nter f-r nr\nGilbert's Great Removal Sale\nwere bargains in tbis town it is here you will find tbem. Wben wo move into tin- Henderson Mi\nbe in a few days, we expect to bave something entirely different from anything in the past\u00E2\u0080\u0094A I,;\nwhore a lady may come nnd purchase anything or everything site muy require, and that article, tu\nit may be will bo the vory latest style, tho last minutes production. Think what this means,\nLadies' Store rigid hero iu Chilliwack, What dues il inoun to us '.' First\u00E2\u0080\u0094We have several\nwe will not carry in our new store. These must bo disposed of quickly, a big loss to us but a gr\nyou. New Goods\u00E2\u0080\u0094Hats, Caps, Shoes, Clothing, Gloves, Mitts, etc. Carpets, Curtains, Linoleums,\nfind no place in our new location. Ladies' and Children's Boots and Shoes, and several other si\nhavo to be disposed of for We Positively will not move any of them.\nand yuu will\nsunn knowfor\nif ever there\nre, which will\n.adies Store\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nmatter what\nAn Exclusive\nlines of goods\nat benefit to\nOilcloth, will\nlo lines will\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0I\nProbably our greatest loss will Iw in our Shoo Depart*\nnit'tit for wo havo it largo stock and t*> dispose of it\nquickly moons prices must Iw right, and so thoro will\nlu- no delay wo havo cut prices away below cost price.\n.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'or iostitn mr $4.00uml 85.00sl sore\nour 88.00 ami tft.60 shoos for 82 00, and\n82./K) shoes 91.IHI per pair. Children's -.In\nto 82,ail a pair for I1.2A. Up to 81.50 ai\n.I.V. a pair. Up to 81.110 value for 20o., a\nis all new. Also out* Utihbers ami Ituhlie\nnow 82 IM.\n82.00 anil\nis worth tip\n(181.75 for\nid lho stock\nHoots for\nWomen and Children nl ibe. same low prici\nMen's Shoes at Just Hall Regular Prices\nLadies' Costumes, will be\nfine of nur specialties in our\nnow locnlion, at the same\ntune we do not wish tn\nmove any tif those now nn\nband, therefore grout reductions have been made.\nSoma are spring suits but\ntbey are all stylish ami the\npupiltur styles for next year.\nTli** prices make it worth\nyour while to buy now,\n885.00 and 830.00 suits\nnow 812.50.\n825 and 820 Suits, 89.50.\n$15 and 812.50 suits for\n$0.50. Cheaper suits arc\ngiven aw.iy free. Separate\nikiits also como in for a big\nredaction.\nSlimmer Suits worth up to\n812.50 [or only 82.50.\nMen's Suits\nMoil's Salts will I'm.I nn place in\nnur new Btnre, Ladies don't\nIm.v tin-in, si, nut thoy go. These\nsuits wore made by tlio greatest\nuf all tailors, Gopploy N'oyes and\nItniiiliill of Hamilton, Thoy are\nthe finest tailored goods uf anv\nmake iu Canada nnd if tvo have\nyour size, 'Our Stock is Limited'\nThe prices wo know will plottso\nyou. 820 and sii'l Serges lor\nHO omit. SIW nnd 885 pure\nKnglish Worsted goods only \"l/i.\nOthers at *:',, SI, nnd So. Separata trousers away down. Pick\nthem up gentlemen. Such an\nopportunity inny never occur\nagain. Fancy vests worth up to\n85.00 for only 9,'ie.\nJ-;*- lints worth up to82.60and\nIllfifftrS-sKSl s:i \u00C2\u00B0\u00C2\u00B0 \"\"\"' \"\"'-v *' \u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\"\niw!\u00E2\u0080\u00A2H\u00C2\u00ABKHsJ Hlelsons the world tainoiis\nMon's lints including nil\ntin- latest and in-west shapes\nnml colorings, The fainoilfi\nlltu'i'ington huts worth 80\nnml 88.60 fur 81.50.\nOranvlllo & l'o. Now Vnrli\nffS)\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2iffiS/-\nm\nm\nH\n***\u00E2\u0099\u00A6*******+++\u00E2\u0080\u00A2> -.****+**-h**h-*)*\nI Communications \u00C2\u00A3\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2>*+\u00E2\u0080\u00A2>**++*++*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2.++++.*-+++++++*\nFREE READING ROOM\nToil,.. Edilor;\nThe autumnal tints and fnlling\nleaves remind us of the upproaching\nwinter; a move or less dreary period\nexletunco for many when in litok of\nwork or amusement. Cannot some*\nthing bo devised lo brighten Ihe\nlives of i hose who possess no home\nbut an hot.'I, at least for ti time,\nwhere scattered and dismembered\nnewspapers represent, practically\ntlic sole relief from t-niiui? The\nestablishment of a free library has\nbeen recently mooted, but such an\nInstitution requires considerable t\nH^'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0:^^';\u00E2\u0096\u00A0v':\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2^:;\u00E2\u0096\u00A0:\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2:\u00E2\u0080\u00A2v;\u00E2\u0096\u00A0;\u00E2\u0096\u00A0::\u00E2\u0096\u00A0:\u00E2\u0096\u00A0vH^^v\u00E2\u0096\u00A0^^:\u00E2\u0080\u00A2^;\u00E2\u0080\u00A2^;\u00E2\u0080\u00A2;:;;';'^:\u00E2\u0096\u00A0:^:\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'^:H\u00E2\u0096\u00A0;'++t\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\n! !\nlAre You Clearing j\nI 1AND? I\nthe best thut can be\nhud anywhere 81.50 lo 86,\nseveral shapes and colors\nami all or rathor your choice\nt'aps of overy doscrlptlon\nfor men and hoys at the\nmost ridiculously lowprlcos\nReally we hate to let the\nother stores know how\ncheaply wo nro soiling them.\nClosing out our Carpels, Huns, Linoleum,\nShades, Poles, etc. also means a (\u00E2\u0096\u00A0real saving to those ne tiiiiL*\nnew carpet or Moor\ncovering, We won't\nmove thorn. 00c to\n75e lines For .15e per\nyard;n0c lines for 2fia\nper yd. ; 8oc oilcloth\nfor 16c. We mean it ...\nami wutii yon i.i believe it. 'Uny *vom bo movwl\nuuw stun-. Carpet squnrcfl wortli *m fur 94.76; I\nworth ST..'>ii im ?.\.oo; worth $fi for $2.75, \Vindow\n.-oltl everywhere for 7fic now !15c, Clieatier ones\nCurtain jwles with wood ends, rings ami bracket\n[.It'll- forS5e. White enamel poles, ju-t tin- thlait\nrooms, with silver ends, brass brackets, only ISc,\nrods 5c each und dozens oi other bargains,\ntorlH.l-\nllnus\nSALE STARTS TUESDAY OCTOBER 31st\nami its Bargains, llargains, everywltcre at GILBERT'S GREAT REMOVAL SALE. Old store opposite Posl (jfS\nOffice, New store, where Henderson now is. The same plume 150. The same courteous treatment. The same 7f^\nGilbert Co. Buy early and often. Terms cash. No goods exchanged, no money refunded during this sale. ife.\nChilliwack, B. C. M\nThe Gilbert Co.\n\u00C2\u00A5hte^mn4rn^y\iw-VKSA.\nFOR SALE\nDKAKE- II.i. km-*, stallion, Rcglrrteml.\n.Ut*..\nDOLLT Pay Mare. Oyeors, best family\nman* in tne provituf.\nHAUL\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Brown mare, <\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 years, p..-I\ncombination in all liuni*-*** iiiiil M*Tdlc.\nHAROLD G.-Sirn-I poll - years put, h\ngood prospect t\" make W&wj,\nFor further pnrtlcitlan apply\nH. H. GERVAN\nOilll, Time, ur K*rl..'all>t.it*\\nMUSIC\nMiss Olum Davison, teacher in\nPiano, and pupil nf Mlsa McGulre,\nAHiertu I'*>ll*'(,'!-, Edmonton, is open\nto reeeivo primary pupils, I'npil-\niniiyiM-gin ut anytime. Terms,cte.,\non upplientinn.\nI\u00C2\u00ABl4\u00C2\u00BBcti Frlnctu A\u00C2\u00AB.i CMMwick\nR, A. HENDERSON, r.K. &M.E,\nAH-toeiATK MRHRkn OF THR CANADIAN\nBOCltrV ov iivu. i:ni.jnki:ks\nB. C, Land Sduvbyok\nRoomit 10 a Ui Westminster Trust Work\n0IIIIJ.1WAOK, II. O.\n\u00E2\u0099\u00A6 I\nSt. Andrew's and\n; Caledonian Society\nOrganist Wanted\nWANTKD\u00E2\u0080\u0094AppHcatloiu for tlio position\n1 nf organist of si. Thomas' church,\nChllllwaek, will be recolvwl in wrltiiiti\nby the i-uderstitnco' nol later ilmn Sat*\n, nrday, Mtli Nuvmibcr, 1011, Applications i\" suit.- niiflli(teatIons and salary expected, V.. Dctiiir. Secretary,\nWatch for the\nScotch Concert\nParticulars Next Week\nApplications Wanted\nWANTED\u00E2\u0080\u0094Applications will In iwclved\nby tliojtnclcraignc-tt, In writing, f*\u00C2\u00BBr tin\nIKvlttcff of matron \u00E2\u0080\u00A2>( tho neit Chilli*\nwaek Hospital, alaofor a man and wife\ntbu former to make himself -wnernll;\nuseful 1 tin- latter tn havo u knowledge <*f cooking an.l id <|,. general\nhousework, Applicants to give refer*\n.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2titer urn! Mate salary expected,\nlJ.iiir. .M.-iii-iiAii, -S-.n-uicv.\nwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww+ww+w+wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww+wwwwww*\ni>ii\u00C2\u00BBa>a>>->-\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BBa>>aaa>a>*a-\u00C2\u00BB>>>i>S)a>s>>s\u00C2\u00BB>nxstss\u00C2\u00BB\nFor Rent\n[ l-iilt IIRNT-Hoouu ami ofllceswitli hoi\nwater heating. Oeo, It- Asliwi II A Hon.\nipilal and a liberal income, iu\norder lo sustain it, even though\nsupplemented by a Carnegie grant,\n.Many great, important ami successful enterpriser! have sprung into\nWhig as Un- result ur modest and\n nomiciil hul determined, ofTort.\nI'rriiiit mt' lu suggest that, if our\nyoung city cannot bear Ihe onus\nand responsibility <>f n freo library,\nyet the nucleus nf uue mlglll lie\nformed by thc ereatiuti uf ;t free\nrending room, supported by\nvoluntary contribution.-.. No doubt,\nthe local papers would generously\n-upply free copies of their product-\nIons, The public might be Invited\nin tender offerings of tllsrnrded\nmagazines and bonks. Oi started,\nour genial M. I'. might In- induced\n doing sn realizo what n noon it\nWould Ih-Iu the town and pedestrian,\n' if ihe progressive townfolk would\nlg*-t after thc official wbu has charge\nof tlu- laying uf side walks ami point\nnul to liltn the dire noccssityof hav-\n, ing, at least, a twu plank walk from;\nih*- depot to the town, There being\nun light nf auy description along the j\nroad one cannot tell whether he in\ngoing Into a mu\u00E2\u0080\u00A2>*\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2>->*>+->*>+*+\u00C2\u00AB*4*-Ht \u00E2\u0080\u00A2>\u00E2\u0080\u00A2>**> \u00E2\u0080\u00A2>\u00E2\u0080\u00A2>*> 4 4++*>+\u00E2\u0099\u00A6 *>+++*+-\u00C2\u00AB.-*\nCOLUMBIA CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC\nVANCOUVER\nfraction \"f Voice, llano and Vii.Hn\nin Cliilliwnck weekly.\nApniv t>> i\u00C2\u00BBi-t..i .-Mm to tin- CMwrntori I\nWM llrumlniiy Welti Vwtcouver\nand OUT IcH'tlrl Hill .nil .ill )I>U.\nJOHN II. CLAUOHTON\niiAiiitisri:it. mm.n ituii.\nNOTAltV l-l'III.U-\nWrslininstiT I'ni-i Iluil,ling\nCHILLIWACK, 11. C.\nC. T. Vr\u00C2\u00BBdenb\u00C2\u00ABrg\nCONTRACTTOR ANH BUILDER\nDO YOU WANT A GOOD\nDOOR CHEAP?\nWe havo in itook a mtmbor <*f atondanl iloorn, nwortc-l\nsixes, which wt- purohnicti ;ii n mmp prloo. Wo hnughl\nthese doon riulit nnd will soil (hem rl|tht<\nThe Prices Range From\n$1.75 to $2.15\n('*iiu|nirr these with .i-itulm* prices .nul conic nntl loo the\nd'Hirf. t'liim- early ai they will nol last long nl llicse prices.\nP. 0. Box 243\none R 121\nChilliwach Planing Mills\n**************************\nB8TIMATE8 FUKNI8IIED\nrialck.r Sl.\nCkilllwicK\nI....II......I..........I\nTHE EMPRESS HOTEL\nCHILLIWACK, I. C.\n(I],|l\u00E2\u0080\u009Esitr II. 0, r Sl.ili.-n\nKitt,',l with modern t'oii-\nvonioncoi and comfortably\nItmiislii'd tlir,,uul,,mt.\n0. \u00C2\u00AB. HuLINNAN, Pro|rl.l.r\n...I...H.\t\nTlio man int.'tit wlily on enjoying liiinaclt, and havitiK a giHid tiliii\nia nibbling a rat biscuit,\nH. C. POOK\nBucctwor i\" WM. .tlltlllllAI.il\nIIKATIXO AND SANITARY ENGINEER\nSTEAM AND lit IT WATKlt FITTING\nBATHROOM FUTURES A SPECIALTY\nKhtiiimti-s Given\nWELUNGTON STREET\nPltonc 58 P.O. llm 208\nSPECIALS!\nSt-vt'iiil brand now cottages\n.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2imi hungnlnuit in dtlTcrcnl\njiaii- uf tin' city fur sili- nu\n<'\i'.'|i!|M|i;ill> .'il-* Irrill-ninl\ntit extremely low nrtces, fur.\nsnlc for ii few (lays ai a\nItiirj-ain.\nWe also havo onqlrles fur n\nDairy Itanch for rent, must\nliavc iii li'n-t 80 acres mid\nin shnpe t\" operate.\nWe wimi llitinm of largo\nan.l imall lilocks nf land\nwhere the ii>tlit prices nml\nterms aro quoted, Our ar*\nrnngonients for veiling land\nin eastern farmers i- iu|ier*\nlor In any in iln- vallt-.v It lid\nit proper oflbrs pro made,\nWO ran sell tin- land.\nTub tiui.i.iw.M k Land and\nl\u00C2\u00BBi.vi,ni'Mi,\T('t>. I.Tii. :ir\u00C2\u00AB* in\nn position i*> handle large\num-Mnpol hloeks of laud\nnow nud \u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2- Invite all WltO\nhavo such laud tu sell to\nnotify u- and quote their\nvory besl price ami terms\nnn same. Thin Is n matter\nwhich deserves prompt ami\ncareful notion.\nt'nll nml qpe un.\nP. 0. loi 147 Fhemt 171\nT.J.PolleyHCo.\nChllllwaek, B. C.\nCfiurch News\nA two w.rk.s' aorlosot inoclal wr-\nvi'T-. will U-jjin in Oook'fl I'rcslty-\nti-r'uin ciutroh on Sondiy Ootobor\n2\u00C2\u00BB. Il.v. ii.i.. Pldgcon, >.r Nc\u00C2\u00AB\nWi'stniinsii'r, accothpanioil by a\nph\u00E2\u0080\u009E1 s..|iiist, will conduct tl..' Mr-\nviooi, whii'li w ill in- hold every ovon-\nmi: i-xi't'iit S.iturbiy.\nN,-\i Buniloy llicro will l\u00C2\u00AB- -i\u00C2\u00BB-i-L.I\nicrvlccfl in tin- Mctliodiil I'linri-li in\nrecognition nf tin- Notional Tlinnki-\ngiving Day, In iln- morning tho\nYoung IjwIIoi Clioir, under lho\ndlroctl f Mrs. o, II. II. W.\nA-li.M-ll, will rondor nvcrnl loen-I\n-,-l,-,-ti,,n.s ,,f itiii-i,', nnil tli,- nmion\nwill Im given by Rov. T. W. Hull.\not Surdis. In tin- ovonlng llii*\ni.isinr, Rov. A. K, Rolnrli, will\npreneh i.n.l tho Mrvleo will l.- \u00E2\u0080\u009Ef\ni'.|.'i'ii,l i real.\nTb.' Union Tlianktiglrlng nrviai\nI,, bolioldoil Monday next ut 10.80\na.m. will Ik- la-Id in tho ll.,|,ti-i\nChurcli a- tin- City Counoll .'i.iil'l\nti,,t sn' in way clour t'i provide\u00C2\u00AB\nImll fur the gathering, Whon llm\nnow City Hull in linMu'd It will\nlimit,' nn oxoaltonl placo lur iuoIi\ni public gntliorlngi, bul in llw mean-\nlime Ihe Minlitorlal Anoelallon\nhave dt'i'iili'd to tti'i'i'iit tbe kind ill-\nlir n(tlir Itaptlitttonoinlnallon ami\n| hold tin' nrvico lliero. A very\nl.rinlit IntaroiUng lervlee will bo\n] ai-r,iii|{od tn Iiini one hour, and it ia\nIio|k-i1 Uml thoro will la- a good at>\nlomlaneo, A cordial wolcomo will\nI* ogtonded lo all.\n**************************************,********\nv.\nNew Seasonable Goods at\nBARGAIN PRICES\n.lit-i arrived ilirecl from th.- Mill-.\n200 Pairs of Wool Blankets and 200 Comforter*.\nwliieli I am putting i'ii \"ale at Cost, i- I have an-\niith.T shipment yol tn come,\nJust Look at Them in the Window\nSIikni worth uf l-a,v Curtains, Net, Madras, -.rim.\nPortioroi ami Tnblo Covent, to I\"' sold at prices, that\nIor Lit: vahir, huw never been heard \"f in t'liilli-\nivack before,\nW. B. TRENHOLM |\nThe Leading Fnrnltare Dealer Westminster St. J\n*****************************************************\nChilliwack\nRoller Rink\nTh,' ri.lliiw.i, I. Il\"ll,-i Kink i \u00C2\u00AB\nrjaim for tin amaan.\nAFTISNOON\nT\u00E2\u0080\u009E.,'l'l>iil> to I n,'\nIVgNINC\ns-.tii-'I'liiity lo T'i'\nCom* and enjoy a r-Wataat\nPastime\nJAMES O'HEARN\nHead the Free Vtm Want Kit,\nBritish Colombia Electric By.\nPAJIgSOl '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Utavl.:\nWcnbonml-\ntan< IrHv. Arm-c\nTrain, Ch\u00C2\u00ABk, w,-iu,ii, V.n.\n:t I.DOa.io. II-1\" U-M\na LIS p.m. J.W .30\n, ; LOO p.m. I \u00C2\u00A5> 0.30\nL-a.e Arri\"- Arrive\nTrain 11*1.1 \u00C2\u00AB',-ini.i V.n.\n1 ii .1,1 a in. -v, 0.4!\nLa-ll-\u00E2\u0080\u009Ein,r\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nLav \,ii\'- Arrh-e\nTrain Van. tVaunln, Chttk,\n'.' .... VUlB II,. !. Ill 12.1ft\nt .... la.ismon I.SO .i.so\ni H Sim p.m. 0.10 O.in\nL-.vu Ariivr Arrive\nTrain Van. W>\u00C2\u00ABu,,iii. Itt.-ln\na 3.03 p.m. 4.OS 11.30\niiii.ii.iir IKRVtrS\n- I.VCI, .'l,illi\u00C2\u00AB.,'k I ii i I'.il) t'-vi-pt\nj \" Van,\"iiv,r \".i.i ' \ Siiml.y\n, All pOSRmlll lr.il\" liati'll.' 1 vfi.s*.\nI FREE PRESS, CHILLIWACK, BRITISH COLUMBIA.\nPAID IN\nFULL\nNovelized From Eugene\nWalter's Great Play\n...By...\nJOHN W. HARDING\nCcftyrighl, 1MB. by G. W Diilinih.m to\n\u00C2\u00BB**^aa^mmamm*mmaaemmmeme>memmmm,*\n(Continued,)\nin- Venlured no furlbur retntirk uml\nlunsud Iniu hla gloomy n-tli-i-ilotm.\nKiiitiia put ll*?r tl rill arutiiiil his neck\nimi snuggled in-1* fin*- ugalnst his.\n\"Pooroltl buyl\" she murmured, \"That\nHtbnck wt* ttot lodny when we had it\nnil flJHKl up was mgtl In null..' you\nfeel Bore nml slum, fiever uilutli ebcei\nup. Vuu know wlmt Jlmsy says, 'Hard\nluck can give you an awful buttlt*. but\nIf you're on tbt* square yuu cun baud\nIt ii knockout punch buna* time.'\"\nit was no use, however. Joe'a sulk!-\nnesa bad sunk In; lii\u00C2\u00BB temper was vicious, deep nnil Ingrowing, \u00C2\u00AB tomper\nsuch as she bud never suspected In\nbliu, and uil ber petting, uil her loving\ncoming, could uut wenn blm from It.\nShe pressed ber cheek more closely to\nhis and fondled blm, but he Jerked\naway from her embrace and surlily\nBought another chair.\nAs he dltl so the bell rang from\nlowustalrs.\n\"I'll bet that's Jlmsy now,\" be muttered.\nMuch hurt, but disguising her feel-\nlugs, Knmin hurried luto the kitchen\naud pressed the button that opened\nthe entrance door of the house.\nCEIAITER IV.\nTHERE was a knock, tbe unlatched door opened, und Juuies\nSmith walked In.\n\"Anybody at home?\" he demanded briskly. . , ,\n\"Not a solitary living soul,\" Emma 2uch \"\"J^\" !l 8'' dcr \u00C2\u00A3m\u00C2\u00BB \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ^\n_ - . \" \u00E2\u0084\u00A2 1 In ..ui.,,,, i.i-,.11 i.-liAii I... ,,h.,ii l.v.l ,,*.\n\"Why, Williams,\" he replied.\n\"Loin have donu Hint.\" BUld the superlu tendont, \"But whin's the matter\nnow, JoeV\"\n\"Ills luck.\" went on llrooks \"Tho\nOrinoco isn't siTiiti'lu-d. If any one\nelse owned U ship ami she gut lnio a\n. muss lilii* (hut tin- cbuiices are u bun-\n. dn.-d tu one lhat she'd have foundered\n| \u00E2\u0080\u0094been a complete loss.\"\n1 \"That's right,\" assented Smith.\n\"Rut Williams-bo don't lose her, He\n! couldn't.\"\nI \"I should think you'd he ghid,\" re-\nmarked Emmn. \"She's a brand new\ni ship, Isn't she?\"\n\"No, I'm nut glad,\" be declared furiously, rising nml walking about Iho\n] room. \"I'm Hred uf him. of Ids rot-\n' leu uiii steamship line, uf till uf it -\n\ ynu hear? Of till of It.\"\n1 \"Joe, plea.se!\" she protested, \"You\ni kuow I\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\"1 know you've slaved and bnre wllh\nme Itui'- ajih: Mere I um handling\nalt ttie money uf Unit line, ain't lhat\nhu, JlttiHyV\"\n\"That's right.\" admitted tbe latter,\n\"Itut what's the mutter?\"\n\"Milder'.' Isti'l It matter enough Uml\n1 I sinmiii du nil this for n mean, miserable livlugv 1 Butter ami work, and\nwork and suffer, fur thut nasty, nig\ngardly Salary nml thin I-east, this wild\nanimal of n Wllllums, keeps us all\nstarving- yes, Bturvlugl Don't I de-\nHerve something a little better? Do\nyou know what 1 could do? I could\nsteal thousands, uml no one would\never know It!\"\ni \"Joe!\" she ejaculated, greatly shocked.\n\"Ob. I'm not going to do it; but, witli\n, all this responsibility, when I ask for\n! money I don't gel it-nut n dollar. Yuu\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 tlo, Jlmsy; you're single ami you can\nquit. And then Williams\u00E2\u0080\u0094what dues\n1 he do? Comes around hero to my\nwife with my motber-lo-lnw-d\u00E2\u0080\u0094n blm\n', -and rubs it In.\"\nEmma boked at him pleadingly.\n\"Joe, you mustn't Captain Williams\nmeans well, but\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nlie turned upon ber savagely.\n\"That's It\u00E2\u0080\u0094he means well, ne\nmeant well when he was a south Pacific trader, lie meant well when be\ntreated bis crew like dugs. Fie meant\n, well wben he'd kill a sailor with as\nassured blm. \"Come In.\n\"Hello, Joel You a dead one, tou?\"\nbe said.\n\"Almost,\" replied Brooks, brightening up a tittle In spite of himself under tbe influence of his friend's good\nnotured smile and cheorliiess thut positively emanated from him. \"Just\ncome up?**\n\"Yep, and I reckon lu about time tn\nhelp,\" he said, glum Ing at tbe crockery on the table.\n\"Just In time.\" assented Emma,\nwhose drooping spirits also began to\nrise under the diversion caused by his\nadvent, \"But first explain what you\nmean by not co.nliig to dinner.\"\n\"I couldn't come, really. I tried my\nbest, but I hnd to attend to such a lut\nof business that couldn't be put off\ntbat I wus unable to get bere In time.\nI hope you didn't wait long for me.\nI'm awfully sorry.\"\n\"You luuk lt-1 don't think.\" *he\nscolded, \"(io oi:; get busy If you'it\ngoing to!\"\n\"All right,\" he answered, taking up\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 small pile ef cups and suueers very\ngingerly. \"Where do these go? If\nyuu left It to me, like as not I'd Ix\nputting a soup plate behind the door\nand slip n broom Into the sideboard.\"\n\"Tbey go rlgbt In here.\"\nlie stopped on the way to the eMe\nboard and turned to Brooks.'\n\"8een the latent eitra. Joe?\" he In\nquired. \"Tbe Orinoco wasn't lurdl*.\nscratched getting out of RIo Janeiro.\"\n\"You don't say!\"\n\"Kind iV scraped over the bar. She'll\nonly be a day late now.\"\n\"Do Iw careful with those cups. Jlin\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2v.\" admonished /mma. \"They're\neblM.**\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Don't you suppott I know thntr\n\"1 mean real china.\" sbe empbn\nsized.\n\"All chluu and Chinamen look alike\nto me. Here's the paper, Joe. You'll\nfind all about the Orinoco on the Inside page.\"\nlie drew It from hla pocket, nud an\nbe did so one uf tbe cups balanced on\ntbe saucers slipped off uud sinoshed to\nbits on the carpet.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Now. Jlmsy, you certainly ure going\nto get It,\" commented Joe, rising and\ntaking the paper extended to him.\nSmith looked sppeallugty at his\nhostess.\n\"Jlmsy,\" abe chldi-d, assumlnc an\nexpression of mock gruvliy, \"how\ncould you-my very best Sunday go i<>\nmeeting china! How could yuu!\"\n\"Not how could I-bow did I't\" be\ncorrected, afoopltig and picking op tha\npieces. \"You kuow, Einmn. I've bud\nbutter lingers ever Blue* I was u little\nshaver, and I guess I always will\nbuve-lli business und everything else,\"\n\"Why, bow do you mean?\"\n\"I've been clumsy nil my life, that's\nall. Everything I've ever hud In my\nbands ibut wus worth much I've gen\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2rally let slip und fall, out lu Colo\nredo wben I was a kid ar id Lead\nWile they us.d 10 aay thut I sun\nwould turn out to Iw a BSWed \u00C2\u00AB>ff nml\nhammered down, good tot DOthtOI\nman. K\u00C2\u00BB ymi hi*** Iba wa) things Iih-..*\nturned out I've broken about -v.-..\nwi.ii mul prophecy.\n\"Uow broken even?\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Taking tbelr side for Iba book, I\nwin tbe lirsl lH-t ami laW the set-mid\nThere ain't Uot llllll sawed \"ff ana\nhammorrd down about me. Is itiere1*\"\n\"I should say mil.\" iba snld. with a\nmerry laugh- \"You've been pulled out\nlike n plocs of inffy\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Then I win. bul It wns In rtmihi\nMillie aome lime. Never really did\nstart to grow unill I wns fifteen, uud\nIben I Just eased OUt Into my presenl\naltitude, imt tba second proposition\nlhat good Tor UOlblng bit I guess they\nwlu.\"\n\"Nonsense, Jim**, How can you suy\nFij> li a thing! You're good for u whole\nlot.\"\n\"Emma.\" tin declared solemnly\n\"there have been momi-nts of financial\nsCIngcncy when that de* hirnilon seem\ned to he fpfii to doubt.\"\n\"Jlmsy. you're tin Idiot!\" she Itiugh\ned.\n\"IHacoven-d!\" be avowed, bOWlBR\nceremoiiloiiHly.\nBrooks, wim had l*een reading the\npaiirr. threw ll down angrily.\n\"D-n him!\" he growled.\n\"Joel\" exclaimed his wife reproach\nfully.\n\"Do who?\" lunulnd Siultb.\nHe meant well when he cheated natives, murdered men, smuggled Chinamen Into this country, sunk vessels\nfor insurance. He meant well when\nhe came east, bought the Latin-American company uud put your father out\nof Inisiness, and now\u00E2\u0080\u0094now that he\nhus his money. 1:1s minimis maybe, be\nmeans welt when tie refuses tn give\nhi| \".en a fair share of what ttiey produce. Means well? Yes. he does\u00E2\u0080\u0094\naoff\n\"Joe. nre yon crazy?\" demanded Ids\nwife, alarmed and a llttto angry at hi*\n, outburst,\n\"Well, there's a whole lot of truth\nIn what Joe says.\" put In Smith con\nCltlaIlngly, \"You see, Williams did\nstart out as a captain of a south Facile- trader, but. like must of them\nfellows. I guess In* stole a good deal\nmore than he traded. He bud the reputation of lH>ing (he strongest mun on\nthe roast \"r in the tropics.-could break\na man's arm with as much ease a*\nyou'd snap u straw. He's harsh. Williams Is\u00E2\u0080\u0094 harsh! When he cume east\nhe got coitr-J of tbe Let In* American\n. He loved money, und he got It -most\nuny way he could. Yes, Joe ought to\n, nuve more, that's sure. He ought to\nhave more.\"\n\"You know I should.\" went on\nBrooks, somewhat inoiiiiicd by his\nI friend's acouicscence and support and\nr drawing a bulky pnekethook from ihe\nInside pocket of bis waistcoat. \"I've\ngot control of all thc money of tbe\ncompany. That's my Job Why. here,\nthis alone Is the afternoon collections,\ntoo late to put In the safe, nearly\nrf.t.t-.ii. mure [ban twice hs much as I\nRet in a year. I could take It all and\nthen nut be caught or at least uot for\nmonths, but\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'Why. Joe, I'm surprised!\" his wife\nbroke in.\n\"of course .l..e wouldn't (nke a cent\nthnt don't belong to blm,\" said Smith.\n\"I know thut. Williams does too, So\nI guess be .Inures him safe and dun't\nsee the least bit of use In paying him\n! more.\"\n\"Rut I won't stand It!\" Brooks declared, waxing wroth again ami fling-\n, Ing himself in hla chair. 'Why do you\nget raises. Jlmsy? You've Is-en advanced time and time again.\"\n| \"Lord, I don't know.\" he replied. \"I\nJust tell Ihe old fellow lhat I calculate\nI'm wirib more money. -Come acresi\nor we separate.' I say, and so fur he'i\nalways come.\"\n\"I was so ehiii to bear of your last\ngoisl hi' k.\" remarked Emma sincerely\n1 A look of regret came over Smith's\nface.\n\"I only wish Joe hud got It Instead\nof IM,\" be said.\n' Brooks Jumped to his f.-et.\n1 \"You don't need to wish that.\n: Smith.\" he cried excitedly. 'Tin no\nObject of chirity-iio. | ain't. And\n! you're like nil the rest or ibe capital\nimlc crowd grind, grind, grind Well,\nlook out. there's going ta In- a sinuslm*,'\nyuu understand) a Niunshup, and yuu\nall go millionaires, toadies and-well.\nthat's all I've got to suy.\"\ni Me matched Ills but fr nu a hook hi\n' Die hull nnd uent nUl without another\n, word, shimming the front door U'hlnd\n{ him so hem ily Mini the glasses on the\nsideboard \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 mi.\nmonth, and bo weal\nI could hardly walk\n1 cramped and ha<\nbackache and head\nache, aud waa s.\nnervous nnd weal\nttiat 1 dreaded t-\nsee anyone or hav\nanyone move in tie\nroom. 'I'be doctor\ngave me medicine t*\nease me at tbosi\ntimes, and said that I ought to bave at\no|H-raU>>n. 1 would not listen to that\nand when a friend of u.y husband tol<\nhim about Lydla K. Fiiikham'i Vegi\ntable Compound iind what tt bad doiu\nfor bis wife, 1 was willing to take it\nNow I look the picture of health am\nfeel like it, too. I can tlo my own house\nwork, hue my garden, and uillk a cow\nI can entertain company and enjoj\nthem. 1 can visit when I clioose, am\nwalk as far as any ordinary woman\nsny day lu tbe month. I wish 1 could\ntalk toevery suffering woman and girl.'1\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mrs. II km A IlKTItUNB. Slkeston, Mo\nThe most successful remedy tn thli\ncountry for ttie cure of all forms ol\nfemale complaints Is l.ydia E. I'ink\nham's Vegetable Compound,\nlt Is more widely and successful!)\nused than any other remedy, lt hei\ncured thousands uf women wbo havi\nbeen troubled with displacements, in\nfl Animation, ulceration, tlbroid tumors\nIrregularities, periudie pains, backache\nthat liearlngdotvn feeling, indigestion\nand nervous prrstrat ion, after alt othe\nmeans had failed. Why don't you Lry ii\nH. H. NIGHTINGALE\nSTOCKBROKER\nInvestment and Loans Negotiated\n33 MELINDA ST., TORONTO\nting along Inisiness is a funny game\nSuch a lot depends ou what a mun\nmenus when lie gels along, Some get\nalong wheu they have got u lot uf\nmoney, some when ihey have u wife\nand a home and a bunch of kids, some\nwhen they are able to pick pockets\nund foot the cuppers Getting along\nnnd why you do or why ymi don't depends a good dent on win-re you want\nto get.\"\n\"And you. Jlmsy? she questioned,\n\"nuve you been getting along?\"\n\"Oh, yes. I guess so. I ain't got a\nwhole lot to kick about! perhaps a lit\ntie less, maybe a little more, than Joe.\nBut the great idea is nut to get sore.\nJoe's nil right Maybe he's just being\nprepared for a betVr living, When It\ncomes he'll appreciate It more.\"\n\"Somehow I don't seem to understand him at I used to,\" she confessed\n\"There's been a change that worries\nmi*\u00E2\u0080\u0094that worries me greatly.\"\nThree sharp rings of ihe bell put an\nend to further conversation, and sbe\nrose, disappointed, and pushed tbe button.\n\"That's mother's ring.\" she said.\n\"Please help me to bring some chairs\nfrom the parlor. We can't go there because everything's covered up and hi\ndisorder. They're papering ihe room,\nI shouldn't wonder if Captain Williams were witti them He takes\nmamma nnd Helli out in Ids new auto\nmid has brought tbem around here\nquite frequently of late.\"\n\"Hoes he ever take you for a ride?\"\n\"He asks me to go, hut I won't.\"\n\"Why not?\"\n\"That's Just what I can't tell, There\n1b something about ths man that Is\nrepulsive\u00E2\u0080\u0094 be looks at me so strange*\nly. And then I knuw Just how he has\ntreated Jik-. nnd\"-\n\"And whal?\"\n\"I don't like blm-that's all.\"\n\"That's enough, It seems to n-e.\nAfler ail. I guess lie figures all to the\nhad with women - d.s-eut women.\"\n\".Mamma and I'.etb like him.\"\n\"Well, yuur mother never did shine\nup tu me nmre'11 Ihe law allowed, and\nss for Belh, she's n nke enougb gin,\ntm\" ber education hurls her, t think.\"\n\"FlushI Mere they nre.\"\nAnd tbe little woman hurried Into\nthe hall tn npf-n the door fur them.\n(To be continued.)\nL\u00C2\u00BBnp-*it Family Tr<\u00C2\u00AB.\nThe btggHSl itin.lt> Ii.e In ibe worlt\nIs believed io be the which im.-et\nthe j- \u00E2\u0080\u00A2m.iL'v or 'Mi.-n KlltnlM-ih bar)\nlo King I ini id am) Hi-ice io Adam\nor al hitsl ns u.-.u to Ailuiu us onu\ncould get Ihe ...nl of tiruis I- given\nIn nlni'isi every .-a-e. nith full pat\nth-ohim of the dales of ht rt lis nnd\ndentin ii..- ta imi \u00E2\u0080\u009E| pioviiinu rental\nof ariOS I\" al.um|..i,.-,| in fori- MetllUSS\nlairs iiini'. t.ut in.- . nun mensural\nfurtf the 1...-1 und i-rriHiulj does tags\num- ibreugli a mate ot nubility,\nAn AM.nhot, |i>t.\n\"Yecs\" remarket! i ruung husband\nai breakfast *iii-*i idm-nlta are pretty\nP\u00C2\u00ABid ' I*\"\" jrnu Hunk (here ungbl\nto l.e a llltli' nior.-\"-\n\"iour luniimr u.sde ihetii.\"' Interrupt\ned Ihe n lie quirk iy\n-'*..\u00C2\u00BB iii'iiif ended the biHliand,\nwiih ii tl...uul in-Hi-uHou.\nFELL AMONG THIEVES.\nAnd tht Old Man Didn't Know Whlch\nSet Was tho Worst.\nAn old mail from rural England\nwith tils wife wus on u Holiday In\nLondon nnd decided on an evening ut\nB tbeuter. lie looked up tbe advertisements tn ihe papers sud selected a\nbouse where \"'All i-tuba and tbe Forty\nTbieves\" was being played, it was a\n\"cheap\" house, ttie price of stalls being given ns two nnd sixpence. Tbe\nfarmer was surprised, however, on arriving at ibe bos ottice to be met wltb\na demand for U shillings tor tbe two\ntickets. Tbe extra Blxpenco per seat,\nIt wus explained, wns for booking.\nThen he was culled upon to pay six-\npence for a prugrnm, nud tbe female\nattendant who ahowed him to the\nBeats also asked fur sixpence, In addition to wblcb thero was u shilling to\nbe paid for bats and coats being isken\ncare of In spite of bis protest thst\nthey could luko cure of them themselves. A footstool was brought for\nbts wife and was accepted without\nsuspicion that It would be charged for.\n: but the attendant who brought It de- ;\n' manded another sixpence, nud dually\n! opera glusses were timided to tbem\nand payment of another sixpence re- ]\n[ quested. Then the fanner went In\nsearch of Ihe manager and. Uniting\nblm, said In a lone of deepest disgust:\n\"You may do what you like with these\ntickets. There nre so ninny thieves In\nfront of the house that we don't think\nwe want to ace iho forty on tbe\nstage.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094l.ntido-1 Answers.\nTHUNDERSTORMS.\ni Thty Kill Over 300 Persona \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Year In\nM\u00C2\u00ABtl,i.jaic#r.\n| Thunderstorms never occur In the\narctic regions, ami even the north ot ,\nI Scotland very seldom suffers from\n: aucb n visitation. The nearer yon get\ni to (he cqililtor the inure frequent uml\n1 Bevere nre itie electric manifestations.\nIn puns of Central Africa the overage\nof thunderous days rises to the astou\nlahing (oial of UNI per annum.\nYet there nre curious exceptions. In\ni Java and Sumatra, both Intensely hot\nI climates, there ure but ninety-two\nstorms yearly, and lu Uorueo uuiy ]\nfifty.\n! Tbe (.old coast of Africa bns only\nsixty a yeur. which Is less tban occur '\ni In Florida, though the latter country\nIs outside (he tropica.\ni In Jamaica there Is a thunderstorm\nevery day during thc rainy season.\n' which lusts for tlve mnntba. These\nstorms almost -ihvays occur between\nvlddny and a lu (he afternoon.\nPerhaps the must astonishing fart\nwltb regard to Ihuudersiorms Is thut\ntte island of Mauritius, which Is only\nCM) miles east of Mudnguscnr. has. on\nau average, only oue thunderstorm In\neighty years. Yet In Madagascar the\nlightning Is more destructive than any*\nwhere else In thu world, the annual\n1 death roll being over SOO.-l'earsou'B\nWeekly.\nAfter a day\nwith the mow*\ner,the binder or\nthe threshing\nmachine you\ncun get tin--\ngrease and gritno off\nyour hands in a mitt\nute witli \"SNAP\".\nAt your dealer's\nSure Return\n\"Out to luncheon\u00E2\u0080\u0094back in five minutes,\" read the Blgn on tho door.\n\"An- you sun- he will get back that\nbooh? naked tin- anxious caller.\n\"Yes'in,\" mi it I the wise office boy.\n\"lie ain't K\"t the price ol a t.li.juili\nute.-' lunch iu his clothes.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094Toledo\nBlade,\nCoetly Privacy.\nAlthough a waiter, he was very human, bo when be perceived that tbe\nyoung couple whu had been assigned\nto bis table had many matters teudei\nand confidential under consitieratiou\nhe retreated to a respectful distance\nand stared at thu opposite wall. Tbs\nrestaurant proprietor disapproved ol\nthat huuianltarluu attitude.\n\"Don't stand away back there,\" he\nsaid. \"Oo up nnd bang over tbat fellow's chair buck for awhile.\"\n\"Oh. no.\" expostulated the human\nwaiter. \"They want to talk.\"\n\"Of course they do.\" tbe proprietor\nretorted. \"That Is why I want you to\nbutt In. I*very lime yon come near\ntbey will send you lo the kitchen for a\nfresh order io get you out of the way.\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094New York Times.\nTo Men Who Lend Inactive Liver..-\nRxerelH in the opec air ta (he beat (onto\nfor the -toiiiiirh nnd nynlem in n<-r:.llv,\nhut (here nre those win. ure comuellcd to\nfollow rwdontary oeaupatlona snd (he in-\nactivity tendl in restrict the healthy action ot the dinatlva orR-iit* nn.l -n-k-\nin-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 follow-.. Piirtti.-l.-..'- VcRi-tablf Pill.\nreitulnti- the Htouiach and liver und re-|\nritori- li.ii 1* li. action, It is win to liave\nu packet \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2[ ih.- inii- alwayB on hnnd.\nHawkins\u00E2\u0080\u0094'\"How's Henpeck getting\nnn since lii^ marriage? He used to\nvow Mint no Woman COUld ever gel\nahead of him.\"\nHagg\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Oh, ho's still leading: I;\nsuppose sin's behind\u00E2\u0080\u0094hold ing the\nreins.\"\nMinard's Liniment tor sale everywhere;\n\"Isn't your speech a little ungram*\nmatlcal here and thercf\" \"Perhaps.\"\nanswered tho new M.P.j \"but, you',\nue, I've got to keep it from being loo\nseverely grammatical. Some .d my\nconstituents might Ibiuk 1 was trying1\nIn pul ou air-,.\"\nComplete in itm-it, Mother (braves' Worm\nt-: in-rnu mi tor does imi require the on-\n-i-iatt. i- of nny other nicdi.-iit** to make\nll effect!Te, It a-1 - not fuii t,. do ita\nwork.\nTHE EARTH*S_CHANGES.\nWhat tha Fossil Ramalna ef Plants\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0nd Animaii Tall Ue.\nThere wua a time wben even tho\n(Hilar regions Mounted with many ot\nthe splendid aud varied forms of Uf*\ntbut now adorn lho tropics.\nTbe fossil remains of these ancient\nforms preserved in the bosom of lbs\nrocks curry us hack perhaps millions\nof years In the eurtb's history and\nshow clearly what wonderful revolutions ibe surface uf the globe has ua*\nderuunc stme the tlrst plants and tb*\nlirsl animals uppeured upou It\nWho would think of meeting a rhinoceros nowadays on tbe prairies of\nnorthwestern Canada unless perhaps a\ntraveling menngerie should pass tbat\nway? Vet tit one time, as discoveries\nof recent years prove, a creature closely resembling (be rhinoceros of India\nand Africa dwelt In tbat now comparatively cold, snowy and barren region.\nRemains of these extinct ancestors\nof an nnimnl that tn our day thrives\nonly lu tbe tangled tropical forests nnd\nunder the hot equatorial sun hnve been\nfound buried In tbe Canadian rocks,\nwhere now ihe cold blasts of winter\nblow over treeless plains and sweep\ntbe flanks of i-e Incrusted mountains.\nTbe rhinoceros of tbut remote ego\nwaa no less formidable u beast tban\nIta descendants, fur the skull of one of\ntbe skeletons discovered Is three feet\nlong, while some uf lu teeth are four\nInches across.\nThe fossil remains of many other\nforms of animals hnve been found to\ntbe same region wltbtu recent years.-\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nHarper's Weekly.\nWell, Well!\nTHIS I.\u00C2\u00BB HOME DYE\nJhti ANYONE\n.can uae\n'I dyed ALL the\"\nDIFFERENT KINDS\nv-\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u00A2- of Good.\n== \u00E2\u0096\u00A0UK II. SAME Oil*\nI used\nDYOLA\n|ONCDVC\u00C2\u00BB*ALL NIND5\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00BB\"\u00C2\u00BB|\nOLEAN and SIMPLE to Uee.\nNO.tuncc.lu.lnnh, \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 WRONC, llvt (or IttfCoo***\nonr hallo culnr. All coin, a dun. mm l)rii||l>l or\nDralaf. FRtrfi C.nU.r C.rJ.nJ M'llKY Kimfcl.t It.\nTb* Juliu.ut>K..li*iJ.<>a Lu.. Urn if J. Mmlml,\nI\nUp to Date\nj \"Yes. Windy Marker has another\nbig idea.\"\n\"Going i\" put on Shakespearef\"\n\"No, no. He's getting up a Cumor-\nri.-t vaudeville net.\"\ni \"A Camorrist net I Why, what do\nthe actors do:-\"\n' \"Just Bcream and throw tils.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCleveland Plain Dealer.\nGrim Relics.\nA prison sale Is beld annually tn\nParis, 'i'be articles offered for sals\nare the clothes uf murdered people,\ntbe Instruments wltb wblcb tbe crimes\nhare been committed nnd tbe effects\nwblcb have t-ei.mi.ed to tbe deceased\npKsoners. Articles which bave been\ntaken to tbe prefecture of police and\nbare not heeti claimed are also sold.\nTbe proceeds go to tbe Paris almshouse. Um-lnliued Jewelry hi usually\nbojght by ordinary brokers, but tbs;\narticles which havo belonged to crlm*\nInals, es|>cclalty those who are ooto*\nrlous, are bought ut blgb (.rices.\n\"What ar.- In*r duy.-> at home''\"\n\"Oil, a society lender hu- no days nl\nhome any inure. Nowadays she bus\nher telephone hours.\"- ^sinurt Set.\nDodging a Difficulty. '\n\"Are yuu going io send the Sparkler\ni girl n weddiug presenl?\"\nI \"So. old Sparkler aud I bad a squab-\n; bit* yesterday r\n'Thill's too bud Wbut was tbs\ncauser\n| \"1 really cnn'i nlTord bla friendship.\nHi has tlve marriageable daughters.\"-1\n: I'leulaii.i Plain Dealer.\nA Fatt Talkar.\nThe orutoi spoke nlsitit the things be\n1 had uot suid. the things be did nm be\nI lleie ind Die things h** would imt do\n\"Tbut fellow.\" observed ihe sniiur.\ni \"is talking at lh*- rale of about thirty\nOois au hour.\"-Judge.\na Faithful Likeness,\nRnpie|gh-| realty dou t think lbs'\nph.ilograplier FBUglll my ei press Ion. du\n1 you'/ Miss Keen Hooking at pln-toi-\nI dull I are nny.-ltestnii iranscrlpt |\nA GENTLE LAXATIVE\nFOR THE BABY\nStomach and bowel troubles is the\ncause of nine-tenths of the ailments]\nfrum which litib- ones suffer, Let the1\ntittle Itomacll nnd bowels lie kepi'\nright und baby will be happy, healthy\nami llrong. The only Mire and suit-j\nmeans ol keeping baby's stomach audi\nbowels sweel nml regular is io give,\nlum an occasional dose of Baby'i tiwn\nTabid*. These TabtctS are ti gentle'\nlaxative; Ihey sweeten the stomach,\nregulate Ihe bowels, expel worms.\nbreak up olds nml prevent or cure\nthe doxens of ailments that afllh-t th.\nbaby. Tin- Tablets are sold l.y uiciii-\ncine dealers or by mail at SS cents a\ni-.v from Tlo- l)r Williams' Medicine.\nCo.. Itrockvllle, (hit. I\nChsrms ef Lsbrader.\nPeople ore uul apt to think of Labrador as a particularly delightful land\nto dwell ln. No tourist thinks of going\nthere for a summer vacation. Vet tl\nMr. II. 11. l'rt< nurd's impressions,\ngathered while bunting big game, are\nto be accepted, Labrador possesses\ncharms of scenery that It would be difficult to mntr't elsewhere In tbe world.\nTbe words thut be quotes from Halts*\ntba. t \"Yellowknif* Indian,\" beat Indicate ths nature of these sceuest\n\"You say tbe kingdom of heaven le\ngood, my father, but tell me. Is It\nbetter tban tbe land of the musk ox\nId summer, when tbe lakes ar* sometimes misty snd sometimes blue, snd\ntbe loons cry often? That Is good, my\nfather, and If heaven Is better I shall\nbe willing to dwell tbera until I am\nvery, very old.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094Youth's Companion.\n. Altaeki \u00C2\u00ABf cholera and dysentery pome\nQUlckly. there -elil-nii hflnr nny \"line\ninl of the visit, lt.-me.lial action mint\nl>e taken m-t n\u00C2\u00AB quioktj* if (he patient\nU to In- sn-cil Brent -miTcriiiK and jut-\nmun.-nt injury to the liniiiK nn-ml)rr.net\nnr the howeln. The readiest preparation\nfur tin- purpone Is Dr. J. P. KVIlntr -\nliv-i'iH.-rv (Vntlat It ran lie aut at\n-iiiiill eon at any drui*. more or lonersl\ni.-iil.-i -. nnd It will nlTord relief heforu\na doctor ran lie . nihil\n| \"I suppose you wilt soon be diving\nI up vuur motor and getting an airship?\" \"No. at nil,\" replied Mr.\nChugglns, \"There's u.i fun iu going\n, away up there and frightening a lew\nMinard's Liniment Cures Dandruff\nOn* Man Overeemss \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Natien.\nJean Angot. who died In .Ml. was a\nFrench men-hnnt lo the African and\nKast Indian trade. Wbeu some of bis\nships bad been taken by tbe Porto*\ngues* be nti.-d out au armed Meet tbat\nkept l.lsiK'ii (no. knded until the government of I'ortui-al tlidemnlfled him\nfor bis losses. At oue time he waa Immensely wealthy, mil he lost In speculations and lu money lent to tb* king\nof l-'runce, uml tin- closing years of bts\nUf* were passed lu destitution.\nA lew days after sol I opeud u\nteacher was testing ihe members of\nom- of her old classes on wlmt they\nhod remembered of the definitions -b\nbad luiii-hi iiuiii diiriua tin- preceding\nterm, Finally she asked tin- brighl\nboy ol lb*- class ibis question\n\"Now. Robert, lell mo tvlial a hypo\norlte Isf \"\n\",\ liypocrlte,\" replied Robert wllh\nnilt b.-*italio|i. \"is a kid w'al COniOl U\nschool uit' (i smile on In- mug \"\nA Strong Playtr.\nMother wi.r.t d\u00C2\u00BB you think you will\ni make out of my daughters tnleotf.\nI Professor-About a dollar a lesMiu, if\nj the plum, holds out\nDOOD'S\n^KIDNEY 'i\nh. PILLS ^\nHt. M.n.pftty,\n\"lt.< tin. tiMl\u00E2\u0080\u009E,imili'(l fallh In hlmaelf.''\n\"In n.tii'r words, be haa a munopore\nnf thi- rillh In nlruatlt, rl.l\"-..'Ulca\u00C2\u00BB.\nB\u00C2\u00ABoril Ill-raid.\nHero la n ttr,'lly qulbblo Irom llio\nnow million \u00E2\u0080\u009E( \"Uglo lor tho Million,\" wbtob Bbirnor Knowlaon line\nprpparnli\nl.nvi.l s\u00E2\u0080\u009Ei,i in his wralli, All iiu'ii\nnr,' liar,.\nTl\u00E2\u0080\u009E-r,-l,,r,- l.nvitl was a linr\nTli,-i'-l'ir,'. wlinl llnvid sai,l \u00C2\u00ABns nol\ntin,-.\nTlnT'-fni,-. Iinviil Vila mil n linr.\nllm if Dnvld was mil n linr. wi,,,. hi\nMill wns hui' nami'ly, II.at al] tm-li\nnr,- linrs. Now Vurk Qlobo,\nMn \"I, iin- dock running, Wllilof\"\nWilli,- \"No, nm; U'a iu.l .1 m.l,,if\nft ill mul \u00C2\u00AB.'i-rinr lis lull.\"- luiii!\"\nThey keep th*\nwhole system\nIn the pink of\ncondition.\nTheir alngular euratlva pro-\npertlu discovered by an Indian\ntribe- Introduced loCtvlllMtlM\nnearly a cenlury ago\u00E2\u0080\u0094com-\npounded since I0S7 In tht\nComitock Laboratorlea at\nBrockvllla, Ontario.\nDr. Morse's\nIndian\nRoot Pills\nhave a remarkable record for\nconsistently curing conatlpa-\ntion,biliou.uies\u00C2\u00A3and Indigestion,\npurifying the blood, banishing\nheadaches and clearing ths\nU akin, 25c. a boi everywhere.\nTht Truthful Milkman.\nMr. Ymincwcd We never gtt an/\n1 cream on tbe milk. Why Is It?\n1 airs. Youngwed It's sll right, dear.\nI I've spoken lo Hie milkman about it,\n1 end be eiplalued that Ibey All lbs bottles so full with milk there's oo room\nj left for any cream on lop.-Loudoo\nTelegraph.\nNs Heps.\nI \"Well, how nre you getting oa wltb\nyour admirer. AlleV\"\nI \"Uh. I hnve -,'iveti up sll bops now,\nj We got stu- k In a lift for three hours\n1 yesterday, and even tint didn't uske\nhint propohu.\" I'liegendo i.lntttr.\nTht Ptnaltv.\n'There neems la lie s penalty provided for everything but stealing a man's\ndam; titer\"\n\"There's n penalty for ihnt too.\"\n\"I'd like tu know what It Is*\n\"Hard Inbot for life.\"-Houston Post\nAnd these, according to (he examination papers in one room, nre what\nAndrew Carnegie is, wns, and did:\nInvented the mower and reaper.\nMember of the President's cabinet.\nA British spy.\nWent over in Prance to get help lor\nthe Dtlltcd Slates.\nBest after-dinner speak in America.\nA steel magnet.\nInvented wireless telegraphy.\nGeneral in the Hpanisb-Ameriean\nWar.\nItenil uf the Steal Trust.\nThose who pan command tbemsslrss\ncommaud others.- llazlliL\nA Reason\n\"1 never judge n wotiinn by Iter\nClothes,\" observed Itlikilis.\n\"No,\" pul in Mrs. It. sarcastically,\n\"a man wbo gets tn as many burlesque shims as ynu tlo wntlldii'l.\" Mil*\nivailkec News.\n\"I'ii, you know VOU lohl me lo count\ntwenty before 1 nunohed anolhoj\nhov'-'' \"Yes.\" \"Well. In order to\nmake it work out right you have got\nto go around tho nolghborhood and\nmake iho other bom promise to count\ntwenty before Ihey lake a puneh at\nme.\"-' Houston Post.\nic oi i ir\u00C2\u00ABr i.iu.\nit know \u00C2\u00BBii>l\ntil in suit irstl\nry nivi-rtiwij\ni Mass of Humor\nParents Decided He -Could Not Ba\nCured. \"Cuticura\" Soon Made\nHit Skin Perfectly Clear,\nA Toronto msn. Mr. Huberl Mann, of 7tt|\nQtitvu HI. I.ft-i. emyet \"Our t.o> \u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00C2\u00BB* bum la\nToranlo mi Oct. >\u00E2\u0080\u00A2>. n\"'\"4- **l|,! v,!\"'n it'\"'\"\nUuuilii uld \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 fliKtii rtvib ipi-vsri-d on hit\nchw-k. Whal \u00E2\u0096\u00A0i.|\u00C2\u00ABtn-.l IO\nIn* s wal'-r lili-i-r voultl\n(una. w ti. ti It timk**,\nn.aii.-r wnitl.1 nia out.\nMartini: liev, tili-tin until\ntin fillire face, head ainl\nnli.i.ilil.-r*i BretS a mem nt\nm*I.- und you 11.1 iii I nul\nBBS A pirti-Tf uf > i.-*r ikiii.\nWe .Inl mil '\n, lo do lor lilin\n*. annul erery\n\y i.-en-.lv miiiiiiii avail, in*\n.t.s.l Him.- \"f iln-in only\n-.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0I I.-.I tu l.ts niilT<-rltiK anil\nun\u00C2\u00BB In parlliular. IM \u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nll.-in.'ly, ahmwl |ixt Iks\ninfant Into loiiviitikii-J.\nThe ftiiuly dOCtOJ (it*\n\u00C2\u00AB-n1..-.| lor tuiii lilin did\nnot 'lo any K'ssl. \u00C2\u00ABi -\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nh.ik turn lo a tit-stilltl.\ntn-.l.il as an out nail.-nt iwne s\nHH iiiiil lir ni won***, if sflytbtu. Wl lh**n\nrtllisl Iii anottu-r ilislor and iii-ldo \"f \u00C2\u00BB \u00C2\u00AB\"\u00C2\u00AB*\nIhe bay waf., lo all SMmmnOBI, CUM and\nIhf tint mr nai.l his work was .lone Hul lbs\nwy nt-\u00C2\u00BBi day ll hroke out sa bed ss t-vrr.\n\"We il.n.l.-l lliat II nmlil out be i-iirrd\n{ad must run ill colli**-*- and B0 we Juil krnl\nh anus tiaii'tatpst to hii sl.le In prevrnl hla\nIrarinit lib tl. di. Tlm nillcura lleiuislks\nwire mMmrn.'ii.hsI. We itanSd UBtU IhMB\nIn May, |BW, an.l noa Hi*' cun* Ml nnwM%\nt'ntit-iira ma.|e Iih skin jHrf.slly elr-ar and\ntie Is .'iillo-ly fr.s* I.uai Hit nkin .l'.-.t'-\u00C2\u00ABt*\u00C2\u00BB.\"\n(f-.mif.li Itots-rt Mann, May 3. 1010.\nla annllier Nlt.-r, ilaled June .19, 1911. ha\nB'htv \"My hoy tim m-ver isd any umia\nIrunlila iliioo using (\"nlntir*.\nFur tiittr.' lhan s rfenrntlnn rMllcnrs Soap\nan>1 titiiiiiiiuil have afToTil'il tlir imst \u00C2\u00ABm*-\nCfisful tr.-atin.-ni for skin and witli) tmnblrs\nSI in fan is, rhil.lrm and tdtill*.. A *\ut\* m>I\ni od.'u -niflli-l'-nl Althniiffii -old hy tlnig-\nf'i.1' and <|i-alirs Ihmuithoul lha wurltl, a\nilii-ral ..'iin-lti nt eacli. with 8M. b0H OS\nlh<- skin, -n ill ho \u00C2\u00AB.iit free, nn -.r.iilleilioo lo\nI'ot'rr hnnt A cliem. Corp., tti (Joli\nAvi,. noilm. I!, n. fi\nW. N. U\u00E2\u0080\u009E Ne. MS. TT\nFREE PRESS, CHILLIWACK, BRITISH COLUMBIA.\n*y\n{\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0099\u00A6-MS^MsM'M-M il-HH *******\n- THE =\nI BLACK\nDAGGER\nA Story ol China\nBy CLARISSA MAOCIE\nCopyright by American Press Association, 19LL\n4-5-S-r*-i>5^J\nGarland and Harpetb met on the Pa.\nelfic liner Troplco, and frum Ihe tlrst\nattraction of congenial natures tbera\ndeveloped a warm personal liking.\nGarland was from tho stale of Maine,\nand Ilurpelh was a bou of California.\nOut or 70.tssi.tssi hunum souls fate\nhad drawn these two, ono from tlm\neast and the other from the west, to\npiny the principal parts lu a strange\nIncident\nThoy Iind left the fairy Islands of\nJapan far behind nntl wero drawing\nnear to tho Hut outline ol the China\nconst\n\"Aro you going to slop over In\nPhiuighalV\" asked (Jtirhiud, with a\ntouch of Yankee luqulflitlveiiess,\n\"Haven't heard you say.\"\nThere Wns \u00C2\u00BB lillle pause while linr\npclli's eyes Bought the rising const line.\n\"Possibly.\" lie flipped the won)\nrather sharply\nGarland glanced at blm curiously.\n\"You know I really didn't mean to pry\nInto your nfftilra,\" he said apologetically, \"it's nn her n natural question for\noue tourist io ask another.\"\n\"Surely; no harm dune,\" returned\nHnrpeth ipilekly \"Uow about yourself-ymi going In slop over''\"\nIt wns Garland's turn to show embarrassment 'lite ipik-k look of Interrogation he Mashed at Ills companion\nwas met by Uitrpeth's expression of\nlanguid itnlliTi'H'iice. It was quite\nplain Hint Hnrpeth had asked theques*\ntlou merely to make eonvcrsntlon. not\nthat he eared a rap about ihe matter.\n\".Maybe I'll atop over to seo the city.\"\nssld Garland.\nClumsy Junks rame teetering over\ntbe seu to'.turd tbe mouth of ths\nYsngste, hut the Troplco left them\nfar behind ns sbe steamed up to ber\nanchorage off Wusung and landed ber\neager passengers on to tbe little transfer tugs that would convey them up\nthe tributary tidal river, tbe Dtiangpu,\nto hospital.ic Shanghai.\nIu tbe crowd Garlund and Hurpetb\nmissed earh other, accidentally or by\ndesign. Garland could scarcely wait\nfor tbe tug to make ber landing at tbe\nJetty before be was off snd swinging\naway up ibo bund toward tbe hotel\nof bis choice.\nTbe electric lighted hotel, with Its\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Ir of western luxury mingled with\nIts quiet eastern service. Impressed ibe\nYankee wanderer most favorably, and\nbe retired to bis room and bnib. whistling cheerfully at tbe prospect of the\nexcellent dinner tbat be was Biire\nawaited him below.\nItut when tbe meal was concluded\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0nd he had enjoyed tbe gastronomic\ndelights which his fancy bad conjured\nup be retired tu ihe smoking room to\npore over a queer little map drawn\nwltb brush strokes of tndln Ink ou\nmottled tissue paper.\nIt was an hour afler midnight when\nbe left the hotel nnd made bis way\nalong the bund to where a flight of\nstone steps ted down lo tbe river.\nHere were several sampans moored to\ntbe landing, and tbe coolies immediately fell to tlghllug for bis patronage.\nOe settled the mutter by stepping Into\none of tbe little boats, nnd. being\npounced upon by Its delighted owner,\nbe was soon paddled out Into the\nstream, which glistened lo tho moonlight like molten silver.\n\"Ktioynnj;! 8flbef be cried sharply.\nTbe coolie nodded bla bead and\nwhirled the sampan about until It\nbeaded up stream For a mile be pad-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Sled steadily wlib bis long sweep like\noar nnd then suddenly mo the boat Id\nbetween blgb hanks on tbe north shore\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0nd grounded lu the mud.\nAs If guided by some Invisible hand.\nbe who could nut recollect ercr bnvlng\ntouched font nn this soil before sought\nfor and found a narrow path winding\nUpward to where a mined temple\ncrouched nmutig a group of distorted\nwind blown cellars Tbe moon sent\nlong rays down and here nnd ibere\npierced the secret places with nn liln-\nmlnstlng nmi-h It showed Garland\ntbe outline of a dark arched opening,\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0nd he made for It fearlessly.\nJust before he reached It be drew\nfrom his pix-koi the little map be bad\nStudied earlier In Hie evening and turn\ned tbe flash fro in his pocket light upon\nIt\nPocket I no tin- (nap and snapping off\nthe light i*> bob) It In his left haud\nwhile bis riihf hand closed around\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 small repesllni revolver. Garland\nplunged Into tin- opening io find himself In the crooked passage, whl.-b was\nlighted down lis b'ticih by Ihe moon\nwiih h hung above Its roofless walls.\nOn ellher side of Ihe while stone\nwalls there stood oul sharply Ibe little\nblack daggers, which seemed lo point\nbis way. Glancing to ihe right snd\nleft, he followed ihelr guidance until\none last elrelllll curve of tlio passage\nbrought him sharp.* up ngaliwt an\nother arched opening which gave forth\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 dump, earthy smell. (In the stone\npost of the door wns painted another\nblack dancer polnilng downward Gnr\nland dashed mi his inmp and saw a\nwriggling flight of broken stone step*\ndropping down Into n black pit for\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0n Instant he hesitated, and then, wltb\na shrug of bis shoulders, be aUppsi\nhs counted iw-f-ntv seven steps In all\nbefore his feet (uut ind soft earth, He\neitinguisiied hh ligbl f\u00C2\u00ABr nu instant\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0nd tried io pb-rc. the darkness wua\nbis eyes.\nHefore be snnpp'-d on Ibe llj-hi ngnln\nbo wns startled into rigidity hy ihe\nBound of fu.it-.ieps irending Ihe pus-\nssge overhead. They came rapidly\nwltb sharp, nipping clicks ol lent lief\nboot heels on Blum* This was imi ihe\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0oft padding ot le tod unlive slippers;\nIt was the trend of it fearless mutt\nWearing Ktiro|tesn lou-gcur or periuips\nAmerican hoots like bis own.\nGarni nd muled imckwnrd nud away\nfi .ui lbs sti'iia until b.a back struck\nshnrply against n cold wall. There ha\nstood, a part ot Hie enveloping black-\nness, while llu* (outsteps stopped at\ntho nrctictl door, and Iheu by tbe tiara\nof tl sputtering candle Jammed In ttie\nneck of n soda water bottle Garland\nkiiw a pair nl trousers descend the tlrst\nfew steps. Then ns Ihe innti eiuue\ndown the candle Maine lighted his siilri\nfront und reached his chin Just aa a\nwhiff or air from out of nowhere in\nparticular extinguished the light\n\"Dash it all!\" muttered tbe mao in\nEnglish, nud Gurluud felt a queer IlltlS\nthrill of relief that tbe interloper was\nuot a Chinese.\nAfter hour- fussing nnd a Una) exela*\nmillion uf disgust because he fulled to\nAnd another mntcli ubout bis person,\nthe newcomer tlung bis candle aside\nand seemed tu slop and consider tbs\nsituation.\nPerhaps he heard Garland's carefully\ncontrolled breathing, fur suddenly lis\nasked, \"Who's l hereV\"\nGarland hesitated nud then decided\nnot tu answer. I'crhnps ihe stranger\nwould go nway nuw lhat he tvds without a light, lu tie- meantime he would\nendeavor tu reach his goal by edging\nalong the wall ugalnst wblcb ho wus\nleaning.\nIlls feet made no sound In the soft I\nearth, and he had made considerable ,\nprogress when lie hecniuu conscious of\nheavy breathing behind lilin. and tie\nknew thnt ihe uf iv coiner was follow-\ning lu his wake.\nGtirlnud reached nn angle of ibe\nwnll, followed ll around, turned again\nsud once Ugltlll Into a small squaru recess which had a window slanting upward in Nome cunningly contrived\nopening above ground wblcb admitted\nthe niOUtlllglll to throw a silver clotb\nover a slouu table. Gu Ihe stone table\nwas n small shadowy slit perhaps tbe\nwidth of a dagger's blade.\nThe two men reached the table together and lu the moonlight stared\npanting))' at each other. The uiuoti\nlighted them up in their lips, and above\nthat their faces were In darkness.\n\"If yos'va got n light for heaven's\nsake turn It ou!\" growled tbe uewcom*\ner lutpaileiiily, and Garland, as If It\nwits the must natural thing lu the\nworld fur blm to hnve met a fellow\nwhite man un thla secret errand ot\nbis, snapped mi Ids lamp and threw\nIts broad white beam across the face\nof-Harpetb.\n\"Garland.\" said Hnrpeth stupidly.\nAnd ihen wltb ilerce suspicion be\nwentun: \"You followed me. 1 thought\nbetter of you than that, old man.\"\n\"I was here tlrst,\" ejaculated Garland. \"I'm blamed If I don't believe\nyou're following me!\"\n\"You bad au errand here?\" Harpetb\nput (he qtiesliou hesitatingly.\n\"Yes, and yours Is probably ihe\nsame,\" said Garland, wltb a trace of\nrelief lu bis tones. \"I was fearfully\nafraid somebody would find out und\nget tbe cinch on me. but somehow it's\nao confoundedly spooky down bere I'm\nglad of company, even If it's u rival\nfor\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094 He puused suggestively.\n'The black dagger f\" asked Harpetb\nquietly.\nGarland nodded. \"1 guess you've\nmet with Wall Sung Loo. baveo't youi\n1 saw him lu Portland.\"\n\"And I In Los Angeles,\" admitted\nHnrpeth. \"Did he sell you information concerning the black dagger\nwhich contained one of tbe biggest em*\neraid-4 in tbe world and wblcb waa\nconcealed by one of bla thieving ancestors in this spot? Did be tell you\nbow you could reach It. and aa be was\ndying and might never come back to\nthis country he would sell a map of\nIts location for Sinn'* Well, be told\nme the same yam, und I took a chance\non It too, since l started, however,\nI've hail a thousand misgivings, tbs I\nchief one being that tbe uld rascal\ndidn't believe ihe siory himself. 1 b***\nlleve that to lum it was a tradition\u00E2\u0080\u0094 i\nnothing more, snd be made money out ;\nof It\"\n\"He stung me. too. and yet-I'in go*\nIng to try for thut black dagger. Harpetb. Here's tbe black dagger be gave ,\nme. 1 suppose you've got Its mate.\nI'll Just d.-op It In this Bilt Well, by ]\nJove, It touches something that's glv* I\nlug wnyl Now. wont do you think of\ntbatr\nTbe table top swung up and slipped\nback Into n recess disclosing a small\nsquare stone receptacle In wblcb waa [\ncrushed n heap ot tattered yellow silk,\nwhich dropped to dust under their Un*\ngers. lu the heap ot dust was \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 dark i\nobject which llnrp-eth's lingers drew I\nto tbe light It was a small dagger i\nof finely leiupeieii steel, almost black j\nIn color. In ihe hilt was set tbs lur- J\ngest emerald the Americans had ever |\nseen.\n\"It's a good thing It's big enough '\nts divide, so we won't quarrel over\ntt.\" snld Garland, and the oilier oodded\napproval\n\"I wonder If Wih Hung l.oo knew I\nIbis wns here'\" in-gait Garland specii- j\nlutlvely as they eu.erg.il luto the open\nsir.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\"Never.\" Interrupted Hnrpeth, -wltb :\na grin. \"Indn r believe it himself and I\nthought he'd stnilg us for fnlr\u00E2\u0080\u0094 hardly\ncalculated wed **mne mil after It\"\n\"I'm not sorry, though.' chuckled\nGarland as ihey went hack along tbe\nwinding path to ihe river, where two\niiiecpy coolies awaited tbem wltb asm- j\nHunting en T***at'h*reua Bet\nSnipe shooting on an Irish bug ts\nan et eel lent lest ot s gunners skill\nami enthusiasm Au csperieiirt-ai hog\nsimmer if ne finds bmiseir going down\nthrows himself fiit on bis side or iwk\nend st the Btme lime throws bis gun\nto his ntieiitlint generally an unshod j\n\"ginu-Hin.\" who rarely falls lo .-Bleb\nIt Ihe sensailou of being bog-ted Is\nvery unpleasant, but It a man throws j\nhimself on hh side or back there Is |\nstrength enougb in ibe peal tu sup- i\nport his body.-'Torty Ore liars of I\nSport\"\nA Ortst sVhssl.\nIjney. In the Isle ot Man. Is tbe\nhcMd.-nniters uf the lend mines of tbe j\nIsi'ind It la celebrated also for Its !\ngreat wheel, which was erected tn\nWit. Its diameter 1b seventy iwo feet,\nsnd so splendidly Is It set ibat iter*\nla un oscillation, and It baa been g*>tiig\npractically ever sluce Us crscUm\nT -/lee Tee Much.\n\"Two heads are better than aa**,\"\nquoted the wise guy.\n\"I Iind one quite enougb tbe owning after,\" replied tbe simple \u00C2\u00ABn*>-\nPWUdelpbla Hecvrt\nA GALLANT GENERAL.\nHow a Gunnor'B Life Was Saved at\nths Royal Review In Dublin\nDuring the progress of the Royal\nreview ot the troops iu the Iri-.li command, ut Phoenix Park, Dublin, recently, there was a thrilling incident,\nwhich, but Ior the heroic act ot a\ngeneral officer might have resulted iu\n.ne death of an artilleryman. The\nlatter fell Irom bis horse as hii bat\ntery was galloping past His Majesty,\nuud lay unconscious right iu the path\nof the cavalry, who were coming al-jug\nin a mad charge. It looked us ii tho\nmun would |*l* killed, but, with great\npresence ot mind, Brigadier-Genera.\ni!), A. Funshawe, who, as commander\nol the artillery, wus riding on tin-\nright ol tne column, at once wheeled1\nnia bursa round in time to meet the\nHussars. In consequence of the cloud,\nof dust raised by the artillery, the\ngi'iiciul run a great risk of being rid-\niti-ti dowu before tho Hussars bad\nnine to open their ranks but the\nlluaasra smartly opened just iu time\nto avert \u00C2\u00BB catastrophe. Gen. Fan\nshuwe's two aides-de-camp bad in thu\nmeantime dismounted, uud one ol\"\ntin-in placed bis arm over the un-\nuDIUCloUH lllllll, leal, by suddenly\n.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0.tailing up on recovering conscious;\nness. tu- should again risk ins lil\".\nin Hi;.\" way the whole remaining\nni dy ol cavalry galloped past Uiu\nmile stationary group. As aoou as\nIbe danger was pussed, the gutinc-\nivus removed Slid the general and hi-.\nnldea-dU'Cnnip rode oil, ami some time.\nelapsed before tin- facts wen- known.\nThu Incident was made known to Lliu\nKing m-xt day ut the garden parly\nut Viceregal Lodge. He scut tor Gen\nFaushuwc, ami expressed to hllll, Ilk\ntin- warmest terms, hid appreciation'\nuf the enrage uml presence of mind\nwhich bad been displayed. Tbe lol-\nlowing order lias now been issued by\nMajor-Gen. Campbell, commanding\nthe tmops ut the Currugh:\nThe General Officer Commanding\nthe Filth Division wishes to place ou\nrecord, fur the Information of all\nranks, his appreciation of the conspicuous gallantry displayed by Brigadier*\nGeneral V.. A. e'anshawo. who placed\nhimself iu front of a fallen driver of\nthe Royal Horse Artillery aud pre.\nvented him being ridden over by the\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Jrd Cavalry Brigade, when galloping\npast at the Royal Review in Phoenix\nPurk, Dublin, on 11th inst.\nJVlUady'e\n)Vli-'0r\nThe Gold Penny.\nThe most valuable penny eVcr coin*\ned in Great Britain was tbe gold\npenny of Henry 111. Un Augu.it Id,\nlit!?, u writ dated ut Chester wus is-\nsued, commanding the Mayor of London to proclaim in thut city thut the\n\"gold penny which the king hud\ncaused to be made should be Immediately current there and elsewhere\nwitnln the realm of England, and all,\ntransactions uf buying and selling, at,\nthe rate of twenty pennies a sterling1\n(i.e. twenty silver pennies) lor every\ngold one.\"\nIbe time, however, wus by no ui'-ana\nfavorable for the issue of the pieces\nof a denomination so much higher\nthan hud previously been known. Accordingly, the city of London petitioned against these coins, and the\nKing issued a proclamation that no\none should be obliged to take them.\nThe coins, nevertheless continued t..\nbe current, uml in 1205 their value wus\nraised from twenty to twenty-four\npence; probably equivalent in pur-\ncnusing power to two pounds sterling\nof to-day.\nIt is unlikely that any great uuin\nb.-r ol these coins ever was struck, lt\nH probable that, by reason of tlieir\nhigh value, they would soon be melted down, for they were ol pure gold\nwitiiout alloy of any kind. The collectors of to-day know of only three\nor four specimens. One of thesj was\nsold tor mote tuuti s-jw), anotuer for\nSiOU, and un..liier for 11,000.\nQss and Matches Wars Novelties, j\nWe left Geneva somewhere about'\nlKi\ uud 1 mnde my lirst acquaint*)\nui.ee with Kuglainl. I recollect be-\ning very iitucu struck by tbe gas,\nligittiug iu tin- streets and simps,\nthen recently introduced and stiil a'\nmatter ol Interest. The muster ol\na lodging bouse taught me how gas\nwim uiude by in.-itns ol a tobucco j\npipe, tuc bowl of which he tilled\nwith eoitl dust, covering it with put-\niy ami placing it tn the Are. In a '\nshort tun- gas enough was generated.\nto be lit ut ttie mouthpiece. Lucifer\nmatches ut tbut time were quite a\nnovelty. All lighting had previously [\nbeen done by Hint und steel. At first\nthen was a complicated arrangement |\nby which Ibe Lucifer had to be held\niu a bottle of some putporation, which\nlighted it. Rubber Lucifers were ol j\nlater date.\u00E2\u0080\u0094From Wolff's \"Rumbling\nlitC. ii lei' li i.tlM.\"\nRsvsngs.\nAdmiral Sir Arthur Moore occasion*:\nally permits hiinsell what may be\nculled \"tin soft answer that Btimu-1\nlate wrath.\" Ou one occasion, during gun pruct.ee nt a floating target.\none ol ttie guns nud.- rather a bad\niu:-s. The officer in charge was summoned to the uiimirul's speaking tube.\nDown Hunted ti.e gentle inquiry In\nsir Arthur's most r-uave tones; \"My i\ndear sir, do you think the Lords ol.\nthe Admiralty supply you with live\nshell tor tue Mile purpose nf shooting,\nmackerelr\" Thc udlcer hud his re*\nveiige. however. Ior the ueit shot\nIrom the gun he was in charge of\nknocked ibe target' to piecei and stop*\nped practice lor the rest ol tin- day.\nJuvenile Gams.\nHere ure sum.- Instances of curious.\nmistakes made by lehool children in i\nexaminations i\nOxygen u a thing that has eight\nsides,\n11.. cuckoo never lays its own egfl.\nA mosquito Is u child ol black and\n-.l.i'i parents.\nA blittard is tbe inside of a hen.\nA meridian is tin- name ol the place\nwhere the* keep time. (\n\"Parasite\" is thc slang name given\nto an Inhabitant ol Paris,* it should)\nbe written \"Parisian.\"\nThe following has sn odd ring about\nit uud ought to he true: \"liaslc Wai-]\ntun was such a good Usher that men\ncelled him 'Judicious Hooker'.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094 i\nUvup.1,,1 Post\nThese wordi wers Pops's: \"Whsteve* Is\nIs right' Out now ths song\nOf mmli-rn pessimist Is this;\n\"Whatever la Is wrong.\"\n-ChUh-iic Utei-dard aod Tint*\nFirst Cat How sweetly you slngt I\nmver heard anything so entrandngl\nWhat wss thnt last song)\nSecond Cat (sentimentally)-If I had,\nnine thousand Uvea to live. I'd Ilvs\ntbem all for you. Women's Hams\nCompanion.\nWhitening ths Skin,\nThere Is nothing heller ilmn lemnn\nJuice fnr whitening tbe sklu and iiink\nlug It smooth and soft, imi It must\nnever be applied undiluted It is much\ntoo strong.\nThe besi lotion to mis with II when\nll Is lo be used on the face Is ruse\nwaier. To three parts of rosewutet\nadd one part of lemon juice and wlib\na soft linen rug dab this all over tin-\nface. Then rub It genii) Into tin* skin\nuntil nil ibe tiinisiuic is absorbed,\nTo obtain ihe cited ymi desire you\nshould wash youi face Itmruughl) h:\ntepid water In ibe uiuruliig and (boll\napply some of Iln- lemon Juice uud\nrosewnter lotion Instead of using\nsoap and wnler fm I'teniiHlug dorluu\nthe duy. Just wipe your fine ovei with\ntin* luilou. wim n \ou will llml quite\nelTeclunl hi removing nil the dust.\nAl Itlglll, before retiring, wash yuur\nrace ttinroltg'.il) in imi water which\nbus In softened wllh toilet naliueal\n(or ordinary on I men I tied up In a mu*\nHue bagi. dry well nntl tin-u apply some\ncold cream Leave this on your sklu\nfor live or ten miiiutes, then wipe l\u00C2\u00BB\noff gently wiih a soil rug.\nCars of ths Lips.\nPomi'fliues girls with good lips spot,\nIhelr beauty by careless Utile tin bits ot\nwhlcb tbey ure unaware nnd no one\nhas been kind enough to lell t lie in\nA faulty closure of the mouth will\nalter tbe entire expression It gives a\nlook of heavy vut-aucy and stupidity\nand la often due to Improper breathing\nBiting or gnawing the lips or cou\nstiinily moist en im-. tbem with tbe\ntongue Is a bad habit, due sometimes\nto excessive nervousness, but often to J\na desire to make tbe month brlgbt red\nSuch treatment not uuiy makes ibe ,\nlips thick aud colorless, but ibe dell ;\ncote muscles become distorted aud\ntwisted, or a protruding mouth Is the |\nresult. A few minutes' study before\nihe mirror will show just how io bold\ntbe lips ln order to preserve their free, j\ndelicate curves.\nUnwise Nsglsct.\nThe girl wbo tuns or freckles easily\nmust never neglect her complexion for\ns single day lu summer. Hummer\nfreckles ure not so had as the perma-\nBent variety, but both csn and eUould .\nbe avoided.\nIt Is advisable to go collarless In '\nsummer both to give the throat a little ;\nfreedom from restrain and also to al\nlow tbe neck to tau, no thut the dread- j\nful line between sunburn und white\nBklD is safely avoided\nThe present pretty fashion of col-\nUrless frocks Is a boon to the girl wbo '\nwishes to develop a well rounded\nthroat, l.tneti collars will line Ihe neck |\nAny tight or stiff collar will spoil the\ncontour unless constant massage wltb\na soothing cream Is persisted lu.\nPuffy Eyes.\nPufflness under the eyes Is usually j\ncaused by bile hours or eye strain ;\nApply tbe following eye wash to the\neyes twice a day: Ten grains borax j\none ounce camphor water-not spirits\nof camphor. An outwurd application\nto the skin beneath tbe eyes will alsu\nassist tn removing tbe pulUuesa. To j\nthis mis together twenty grains of tan\nOle st-ld wltb one ounce of pure glycer\nIn snd paint the sklu beneath Ibe low I\ner lid, using a flue ctimel's balr brush ,\nAccompany ibis treatment wltb a\ncourse of gentle massage to the skit\naround tbe eyes nnd In a short tlmt\nall traces ur the trouble will bave dis\nappeared.\nCars ef ths Fast.\nA tblng tbat Is most important tn\ncart ut tUe feet while traveling Is the\ndally aod even twice dally change ol j\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0tot-kings. Guides who con dud tramp 1\nlog paril-*i through the woods Insist I\ntbat eacb trumpet ahull carry several\npairs of fresh storking*, and when a j\nStop Is made beside a stream Hie feet\nart bathed In tbe cool water und ibe I\nBlockings changed- It Is said thai i. '\nihls way ous muy wulk many mori\nmiles.\nLsvsndsr Wster.\nTo make hi vender water purrhasf\ntbe dried flowers and nbo u few drop-\nnf tbe esseiiihil oil Steep Hie (lowers\nlo alcohol, keeping Hie bottle closely\ncorked, lu a few weeks pout off tin\nliquid nud ndd more alcohol Th*\nsame flowers will make double th\nquantity. A llnie essential oil should\nbe ndded It la not cipeindve nnd\nmakes tne wnler vsqulsliely fragrant\n\u00E2\u0096\u00BA or the fly slashes.\nTo Increase ihe growth of the eyelashes, making tht-m long and thick\nUse Hie following lol Ion: Sulphate ut\nquinine, tlve grains; sweet niinoml oil\none ounce Mix well Applv lo iln\neitreme edge of ihe eyelids, using i\nVery line camel's hair brush and ink\nlog cur* not to gel Hie oil lnio tlu\neyes. \t\nEyibrew Tenle.\nFormula for uu eyebrow tonic: Om\nounce of vaseline, nnehnlf drum line\nture of eanibarlries nud sic hi drop-\neach of oils uf lavender and rosemar*.\nAfter washing the face smooth tb*\neyebrows carefully with an eyebrow\nbrush upon which a drop ot tbe Nut-\nhaa been placed\nDUAL PURPOSE CATTLE.\nf-Vnts or Excellence Ctslmsd For tlu-\nRed Polls.\nThe Ited Polls ore tlio supposed\nfanner's cow\u00E2\u0080\u0094first, because the great\nbulk of farmers live by diversities\nIt Is often \"catch as catch cun.\" Often\ntt Is too wet or too dry, too hot or too\ncold, for u crop to mature perfectly ot\nsufficiently for food or reproduction\nStock the farmer must bave for labor,\nfood and fertility. There are success\nful apeclallsta among farmers, and\nIbere are special breeds worthy of all\nhonor bestowed by enthusiasts, bu;\nItrd Toll cattle ars advocated **\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nIWClSlly for ttietr combination milk\nuinl beef vuIuh, says C B. Plumb ot\nlliu iiini. Aj-rk-ultural collej,n lu\nHro-kiml Itt-il foil herds have intuit)\ntmieii butter showings in milk pro-\ntliieiinii iii,in In America, The or-st\nRed Poll record in Kiit-laini lhat\nthe wt Iti-r Is aware ut la 13,124\np.iumla lor 817 days, The heal record ot Ited Poll cuttle iiinler i..-.-,t Ul\nAinericu in mi'- wua of Uie cow\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Joid Drop, wllh a record fur tim\nyear or I1.W-, pounds ot milk and\n&10I.H jii.iunl.1 of butter fat. I-iiuiK.\nly spe-iking, Ited I'oll cnttlD ure not\nrecognized as Iln* equuls or either\nttie Bliorlliorn or Annua In beef pro*\nductlon, The Ited I'oll cow shown\nher* wus chanuilon at Mm BuRolM\nshow in [England.\nthe average farmer Is by necessity re\nquired to \"average up\" at tho end of |\ntbe year, and those things that meet ,\nbla environments best he soon leurus\nare his stundbys, writes Jobu bl. Him\nshaw In Mum! New Yorker.\nTherefore we claim tbe dual cow and\nespecially the ited Polls are best nulled\nto thu conditions uu the great majority\nof furuis east, west, north and south.\nWe are proving this every year by.\nrecords In milk, butter nud beef. It\nbus been proved by public rest over\naud over again, both here and tn r.ttg\nhind, that the duul cow often ranks\nfirst with any competing breed The\ndual cow will often thrive where a\ndairy bred uue would sicken nnd die\nThey (tbe Ited Polls, eat brush, weeds.\ncourse fodders nnd damaged uud over\nripe buy that would go to waste II\nfed to the more delicate dairy cow |\nThe elements of the weather and In\nstifllclci.t shelter do not shrink the i\ndual cow to u shadow like her dairy\nsister, though care nud feed are appreciated by these cattle, nud profitable\nreturns are often tbe result ot care\nand pro i >er nourish ment.\nCows average from 6,000 to 10.000\npounds or milk per yenr. with butter,\nvariations from 300 to 000 pounds nu\nnually. Many cows with spis-lnl care\nnrs capable of going fnr beyond this;\nbut, as a rule, they nre supposed to\nbustle much of tbelr owu living and:\nhelp keep tbe family on Hie wastes of\nthe farm. Tbe dial steer properly\nbandied often tops tbe market side by\nside wltb the beer bred brother and Is\na valuable asset over tbe dairy steer lu '\nthe farmer's feed lot. Last but not\nleast of the good merits of the tied\nPolls, nature has been kind to them j\nand us In giving tbem a beautiful\nhornless bead.\nBrtStBALL_SCORES.\nOdd Way tba Plays Wrrs Recorded\nBack In the Sixties,\nThe baseball public uf today, necua*\ntouted <<\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Hie [illume reporting of\nguuies. wherein etieh run in compounded and luiiny a pluy analysed, is offered the account ot a gstne played In\nSyracuse in ISiW The eoutestaots\nwere the Central City* of Syracuse\nand the Athletics of Philadelphia, and\nthe score was 41 in lit.\nThe game wus delayed a half hour\nby the difficulty In Hndlng nu umpire.\nTben the report cues nn lo stnte:\n\"Tbe game opened loosely upon both\nsides, nnd nt the mid uf ihe tlrst Innings the score stood Athletics 5, Central Cily 4 ch side making lis tallies\npromptly from the loose playing of\nthe out club Afler the lirst inning tbe\nAthletics played more carefully, while\nthe Central Cltys crew mure careless\nuntil Ihe 11 fill Inning, when ihey became mure (li'iiiiii'iillr.ed ihaii was Hie\nUnion tinny ai ihe baiile ol Hull Run,\n\"Considerable tlisBiiIlsfnctlon was\nmanifested and expressed, and in Iwo\nInnings rightfully hi, ai Hie evldeut\nuue shied decisions ol (be umpire.\n\"We will not particularise, but suf*\ntice io say that several of the players\nou both sides did well, while others,\n.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0specially the Central Cily side, were\nnot fully up lo their stundard efforts.\nThe fnllowing Is Hie\nSCORE),\nCentral CUv ft U AihtPiici, o ft\nCrint--i.it.-ii .lit l i riavtiursl. rf.... it *.\nPorter, li i l McUrlfie, P I I\nBoiwell, cf i a ttanclnte, a I i\nA.tuns, rb I ' WIlHIus, as 6 ii\nIn nl Kit. p -i i Hsler, 2b I 4\nJohnson, o I l Merry. 3b ! i\nTelford, Kb i a t utnttert, lb.... \"*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 >\nVale, lb 0 f Hensentlerfer. cf I 4\nSedgwick, rf.... t J bcnallvr, If 4 I\nTotala 12 fl Tmils 11 'I\nRUNS IN EACH 1NNING3.\nCentral city 4 I 0 1 I I *J I 1-11\nAtblellrn a I & 1 II 6 0 0 3\u00E2\u0080\u009411\nI'ly Halls CaUKlil-'eulrnl City: Adams,\n4; Poriur, &: Johnson, li Crultendeti, >,-\nUoswull. 1-18 Altiietlcs: Itadcilffe. I;\nFisher. I: Kerry, I, Cuttibert, li eeuseo*\nderfer, 3-ia\nHow put Out-Central Cllj*: Fly. II)\nfirst hnao, 7; Second nase, I; foul houn-l.\n4; homo base, 'l-ll Athletics: Fly. 11)\nfirst base, 9; aeronri hnse, I; third buso. l,\nhomo base, 2: foul bound, i\u00E2\u0080\u0094'H\nUmpliQ-8. V. ItitltlUte, Union Baseball\nclub, Ciimileii, M i\ngcororfi-Portcr and RrownsIL\nUow would Hint go In n sporting et*\ntrn today V Tbe only familiar slgus are\ntbe criticism ol lho umpire and Hie\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Herman names In the Athletic lineup.\nEMBROIDERED GOWN.\nA Pr'tty Study In Blue sed\nWh.te For Afternoon Wear.\nEdith Is being trained In tbe way\nsbe should go. Hhe Is sometime* re-\nbelHoaa, and th* day she was Bts\nsbe returned from ber outing In lbs\ncountry wltb renewed determination.\n\"Mamma.\" she cried breathlessly\n\"ours* took n* to see renl cows, and\nwbst de you thlnk-lhey were chew\nbig gumr-nsrper*s Magasht*.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0ome womsn say ihsr wsnl I* wxte;\nB-ama ethsrs say they *sosi'L\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0om* mss aay w*-n sss them wstsi\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0sesa atbsrs mat w* m't\nR* had hie beak of vers*, his lost ss wet,\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0hs sent s-ietd* him. elsar toned as a bast\nHs lilted am Ms lug. It fall snd brake.\nThis isn't sswsisss,\" k* ssMi \"It a MN\u00C2\u00BB\nAlfalfa Per Hags.\nWhen fattening bogs for market j\nsome Colorado experimenters found\ntbat a rutlou consisting ot three parts\nof com and one purl of alfalfa wus ,\nvery wit--.factory For young bugs\nwblcb were being kept tor growth one\npari of corn uud three parts or alfalfa\nseemed lo give best results. It will j\nthus be seen lhat nlfalfu cun be umde,\ntbe principal ration for hogs that are\nnot living prepared for market. Kven\nwben put lu the feed loin tl Is proilUi\nble to feed a little alfalfa In cou nee !\ntion wltb Ihe grain. It enables the1\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0nlmals to assimilate more freely the\nfeeds tbat are given for laying on\nllesb. \t\n<-M-tij--f ii**t^ :-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-?;\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2;* \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nt*.\nTHC SWINEHERD. 4\nIf sows are expected to raise n ''.\nfail litter It la best tu wean ihe 4\nspring pigs ai from eight to ten ll\nWeeks Uld. 4\nIf Hie pigs nre allowed to re '.I\nmain wllh Ibe S>WS too long and _\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ;\nno attention i**i1d to leeching\nthem lo ent tbey pull Ibe sows\nduwu uiin.-ec-orlly. and tin-*\nmenus tl lutol, in such cases the\nsows would be tn m> condition\nfor producing fall liners.\nThe young sows Ihnt are lo lie\nkept fm breeth rs must be Sep\na nil .'il st \u00C2\u00AB i-ii*i Ing time from\nthoie ihnl ure is be futteiud tor\nmirket\nTber* should be placed In ev\nerv put yard aid pasture a Ian\nwith sail, ehtireoal. nir slaked\nlime, done meal and bard wood\n\u00C2\u00AB-lu-s su Hie pigs can bel|i tbem\nselves ni \"in\nll Is neeex-mry Ibal pigs have\nvariety ol find If Ihey are\nel|teeh-d to iin.ke rapid growth.\nThey must havu bone forming\nfeed as well a-* fat forming.\nAlfalfa has proved a splendid\nration for hogs tbut are thin ur\na little off reed\nTor the greatest profit the pigs\nshould grow rapidly from birth\nto market day.\nA CRUSHINGJETORT.\nMme. Songbird Paid Her Haughty Se*\ncisty Patron In Pull.\nLast yenr a prominent Huston society\nlender, In arranging a musical surprise\nat an elaborate dinner given to tbe\ntown's elite, called on n slimer of renown to engage her services for that\nevent. It chanced ihnt the singer wss\nmturnlly Independent. On Ihe other\nhand, tbe caller was notoriously\nhaughty. As a result this wus wb.it\ntranspired between tbem:\nAfter the visitor bnd announced ths\nImport of her coming, the slnser succinctly snld she would sing oue number fur t-'JiK). nnd that ll would bs s\nWagnerian selection.\n\"The price wc will not haggle over.\"\nssld Hie visitor, \"but Instead of thnt\ngrand opera selection I want you to\nrender one of tbe light nud populai\nditties of the day!\"\n\"For the Wugmrlnn song. $300; for\nthe popular ditty, $'M0,\" was tbe Arm\nreply.\n\"Itul. mndnme.\" eiiio*-tulntPd thc society lender, \"your classical song is\nmuch more eim-tlng on your power-;,\nso why should you charge more for\nthe llghfer and easier song':\"\n\"Ah,\" replied Die Independent one.\n\"the harder song is all fun to me; tbe\neasier mu- nil work!\"\nHo the prlrp wan (lied at WOO.\nJusi ns iho haughty visitor wns\nnboiit to deport, ah* turned to tbs\nartist and snld:\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*4>f course, I shall not expect you te\nn.tin-ic with my guests.\"\n\"Ah.\" was ihe biting retort, \"I shall\nthrow off f-t)\"- Life.\nSUBBOtOKSU SOWS.\nA handsome % *., ter ir\"\u00C2\u00ABni'.i;n\nwenr is shown : \u00E2\u0096\u00A0,. rutin >c\nchiffon opens Ilka t \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 11 tn>\ndersllp nf gray eblffoa -l-*er -nuw ills.\nThe two deep bands bek * in ,nn-\nbrotdered, uot bended. I .\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 : i -of.\nIer of soft, lustrous silk s btstvusd ut\nthe side with q \u00E2\u0096\u00A0mart Rnerta the\nbat Is of blue straw idorued wt'i\nsprays of white byacioib, Che dmrktl\nparasol of blue nod - til \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 una band\nof plain white wil Haeb r*I\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00ABi laau*\nand black velvet dots.\nCROSS STITCH.\nSems Hints Fjr Makltflg \"m WiWiii*\nYut EffSQttve Smap-i.tfarv.\nCross stitching may lie lorn m ein*\nvns of leveral U0 mm higrsssj if\nfineness nf mesh, i End vbldJ a \"ul\nof meaning for tbe varfcer rbu stthss\nto i\u00C2\u00ABs\u00C2\u00ABt.n ir Inrrssse i \"jatrern \u00C2\u00BB't*i-\nout harming tbe lymmetry if ua to*\nsign\nThe tttrcbM must, if \"lur-m. M\ncounted ou Hie tnateiiui lt3tnf nut in\nthe printed paftsro, mr if nau:ng\ndue alio wanes f ir gnntar ir ess\ncoersenss* in \";*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 -ansae :ih uh--** h*\nfecrs enn be obtained.\nA hiitnr palmed rug isetfls md mercerized cotton, wblcb can is Ibnblad\nwhen lb* pattern lomandh tt, tn *n*\nbest Implements ta -mnioy.\nOf course i {rent leal if LU* it>\ntrtctlTsness ( this eort lentnin\nUpon Hie <\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*>!\" i\" \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0T- *.i. lie i 'ie -nor\nof the canvas tod ie tbrssnt .\u00E2\u0096\u00A0* 4***n-\neral quaint cbinrx-IIke ina-ies in mm\n-dull r*ds. bines and irr*\u00C2\u00BB**ns. naft i\u00C2\u00BB\nthdse used fur ii.i gaiifla *mbiwidke*|\nIt Is se*i ft nl -banning \u00C2\u00BB rk '..r i\nlonj summer afiernoon in *.ie inr-*j\nor tn tie* tamauck indksr 'tie rrr***.\nCHIPPENDALE REVIVAL\nExtremtl*/ Poliis.\nTbe forms uf Mexican politeness to\nthe stranger are sometimes embarraas-\nIng. Mi.-s Mury Iturtun. who visited\nthe country to paint lundscupes and\ntells her experience ln \"Impressions of\nMexico,\" nii.vs lt:nt \"people seemed\nunxious to help me In all possibte\nways, frum Hie railway conductor,\nwho Invited me lo dine wlib blm, to\nthe very smart young man ihnt 1 met\nIn the post ul I ice v hen 1 hnd a number\nof Invitations In my bund nud wbo of*\nfered to lick ihe stumps for me.\"\nPapular'*/ a' Last '\nEfgiin C<3ur-\n. Cblppen.i.i * '\nj quite a re\nmany otber irtl u\nof the Uenrgss\nRncinnd is keenly\nthing that \u00E2\u0096\u00A0*i>u->nn\ni and Windsor cflSThk\n, rorlie resilience if\n| ronraius nm* lot\nhandiwork uf the\nlantury Mnrt-as st\nIta '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-.'\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ire i mloftnei\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 mgttnrsr via\n.-.. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0.*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ie sslrff\nmg '\",^inr\u00C2\u00BB 7 >f\nlatercsted in an7-\nbla predsesassrsntj\n-.V: .-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0] n ttU *i-\ntbe nyml ssopias,\n*H**\u00C2\u00BBciin.'ns \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\"* 'is\ngr**sc rr-*.'Miiia*\u00C2\u00BB\nShutting Him Off.\nThe Hnd- My sou. I war* to fell you\nthat the see ret of my success, as It\nmust lie or nny man's. Is hnrd work.\nI- Tin- Sou sb dad, I don't enre to\nhear other | pic's secreis. uml I am\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2uu min-h <.r n gentleman to inke nd-\n-nnfnge of Information gained In that\nH'uy. Say uo more.-Toledo Hied*.\nTasty Peiien,\nCustomer- The poison may be excel*\net.t, but the nits won't lake it. You'll\nhnve to make 11 more lusty. Drug*\nrlnl-I've tried ibal already, but lbs\nuppreuike buys ent IL-t-'liegeude Mistier.\nPlurals.\nThere Is considerably less renBon\nwhy Ihe plural of mouse should bs\nmice than why the plural of spouse\nshould lie spire. Any bigamist will\nadmit as much.- Puck,\nSunshine and violets.\nH.Hiili wind sin! *\"-ng.\nSonnets nntl trlul, la\niiuiii.um-, along,\nClou.Is loinmlpri.il.\nBirds on iln- wlng-\nlAvcly. el'it'i -nl\nvisions or spring!\nSnows BWlfttl BOSH -ring,\nBwlfl. stlnnlns pltelj\nMint ii.i.i is \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i'lieiiim\nlllgbwsy snd street.\nCOUghS, COldl anil wariness;\nIliill li'.lli!. thut I'lhlK.\nfSctsSi-i void of ctiefTlnesB-\nTb* rtsl thln\u00C2\u00AB.\n-Ws^hlnilton StSl\nThs Only Mourner.\nItandnll- Wns Hprntt n popular nsnll\n\"Popular! Tbe only mourner st ble,\nfuneral was tbe insurance company.\"*--;\ntit*.\n\"There's n stntlige man nt the door\n\"Ir.\" niimiiniced itie new servnut Irom\ntloston,\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'Wlmt does he WSOff asked Ihe\nmaster of Hie house tnipuliently.\n\"Hegudng your pardon, sir.\" replied\nthe servant, n lhads of disapproval\nninnlfest In Ids voice, \"be wants a\nbulb, but what be Is asking for la\nsomething to en I .''-Syracuse II em id.\nA wtimr.n ftf-ble. old sud ars*/\nOol nn a car on** day,\nAnd sli men -ilTerr*) her a seat\nll ofl occurs tht*> \u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*)\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n-Detroit rre* I'rtsa\ncntrrrvr *r.r *,n\u00C2\u00BBrs.\nThe chair llllisiralrd here !\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 a hand\nj \u00E2\u0080\u00A2ome >e( Hpl- Sl \u00E2\u0080\u00A2pe.ltner, of CbJppSIl*\nI dels style sbowtog lbs llebtoesi nml\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0rare yei streuath of the *<\\a 't'i*\nfrnmeworfe i\" ol nehegeny lb*\nsquare rbnlr seat l> apbubueesd in\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 tsjiesiry\nj The repnidneilons of ridpnendnl*\nworktnnnshlp are so seeuraie nnd\n) miln*lAktug thai. Hllhoiiu-h most of us\n| i-nin-nt iifford reil old rhipj,endsle fur*\n;'ilturi*. these Imitations, e*>p**cislly Itj\nint. form of i-hnlrs, ar* nut beyond tbe\nsneaua of most.\n\"Sny. old mnn. will yon tell me\nwhere the fish bite best ihls time ot\nday?\" our frleuj called out io Oar\nland.\n\"Yes,\" Garland answered drylv;\n\"wherever Ihey hnpi*en to be wbeu\nI tbey feel hungry '-Uutlag.\nI T^l FJ)S tlks a ety\AWr dl\u00C2\u00ABr\nHe wsrblrd like a cow.\nBut still he Bnng It lustily\nAnd rnlstd an awful row.\nIlls sii'Iltora sst sadly by.\nOne of Hum murmured: \"Ws*wl\nDla any srsy you use. old top.\nBul do 11 now!\"\n-Cltvtland l-sadse.\n\ FREE PRESS, CHILLIWACK. BRITISH COLUMBIA,\nThree Dozen\nSelected\nEggs $1.00\nASHWELLS' STORE NEWS\nSTERLING TEA\nas served Friday and\nSaturday afternoon\n40c. per pound\nBritish Columbia's Greatest Rural Departmental Store\nStylish New Suits\nW,- mi. iilTi'riliji l.i'li'-- Iwn 1'ii'i'i-\nliiilm-i'il ,-.,iiuiii'-- nf heavy TwciiiIh\nnml 'li.i^.iii.il Surgi-i. in llii' iiiiwosl\n-Iiini,'-. niiiiiin-'l ivilli inililiil-)- -ilk\nliniiil mul fmi.'.v I'Hii'iii-.\n& $12-50\nTin- funimifi \"Nortltway\" Gnr-\niiii-iii.-, fm- whiuli wc hit tho Chilliwuek ngctits, nre specially attractive llii- yenr.\nI.uilics' Coni ami Skirt Costumes\nunequnllotl tor lit nnil linisli, silk\nnml satin lined, no two alike\nPrices range frum\n$15 to $35\nWe nre helping to advance Cliil-\nliwock, won't you help u<.\n\"Empress Shoes\"\nfor Ladies\n,\ ctistoinoi'ot ours who is living\nin Vancouver for a slmrl time,\nwhen in Cliilliwnck on Sntiinlay\nhut, bought ii pair of these famous\nshncs. Our pricos arc lietter llian\nthe Vancniiver slnres.\nTry \"KiiipiTssl'.raml.\" we hnve\nall si/.cs al\n$3.00, 3.50, 4.00, 4.50\n\"Land-Over Shoes\"\nfor Men\nFor Style, Fit ami Durability\nthese shoes cannot be excelled at\nany price.\n$3.00. 4.00, 4.50, 5.00 pair\nNewest in Bench\nTailored Clothing\nfor Men\nlie sure ami see oltl1 l'llllgo for\nFall and Winter wear,\nChilliwack's Clothing Headquarters\nFixatnino onr\n$19.00, 15.00, 12.50 and $10\nSuits. Wo invit mjiarison, wo\nkuow onr prices arc the lowest.\nBoys' Clothing\nTwo piece Suits nf nice patterns\nin Tweed mul Navy Blue Scrgo,\nThree piece Suits in large variety\nnf shades, all sizes uml lowest\nThanksgiving Linens\nol in. Bleached, all linen. Tabling!\n8,*ie. value now Toe, per yard\n$1.00 value now Hoc. per yard\n48 in. Bleached Tabling, 25c. yd.\n50 in. Bleached Tabling, Hoc yd,\nCream Tabic Cloths\n82 in. * lit in.. 81.50 each\nBlenched Table Cloths\nlis in. .v 80 in., $2 and $1! each\nt',8 in. x lul in., $8.50 each\nBeady lle.nineil Table Nnjikins\n$1.25, 1.50, 2.50, 8.00, 8.50 ilnjc.\nBlanket Headquarters\nrine Wool White Blankets\n.',. 0. 7. 8, 10 Hi., $8.50 tn 11 a pair\nLight Grey Blankets\n,\"i lb. in 10 lb., $2,25 to 5,50a pair\nlied Blanket!\n$4,00, 5.00 and ft.OO a pnir\nFlannelette Blankets\nin White or drey with blue stripe\nborders\n$1.25, 1.35, 1.50 unit 1.75 a pnir\nTooke's Famous Shirts\nand Collars\n.Inst received uur new Fall line\nin these excellent shirts.\nPrices ns in Montreal\n$1.00, 1.25, 1.35, 1.50\nTooke's Collars in nil styles\n4 fnr 50c. all over Cnnndii\nKlctraiii range of Thanksgiving\nTies to choose from al\n35c, 50c, 75c\nFull Length Smart Fitting\nLadies' Coats\nA special line liniifjlil at il reduced price.\nWo are giving you the uilviintiigo of our\nguud buying. Full length tailored coats in\nlleilVV Tweed.\nWonderful\nValue\n$5.00\nNortltway Coats for Indies, full length,\nperfect lilting and excellent linish, in reversible Tweeds, Seal Pltlshl'S, Kte.\nAl Wholesale Prices\n$15, 17.50, 20, 25, 27 and $30\nWe hnve sampled lho best makers of\nIndies Coats ami Uml none to equal North-\nway's for Style. Fit and Workmanship.\nUnderwear\nhr. N eft\" s Special Ribbed Shirts\nund Drawers at\n$2.50 a suit.\nPenman's Natural Wool ni\n$2.25, 2.50, 2.75 a suit.\n.Men's I'nderwear in thicker\nribbed wool at\n$2.00 a suit.\nGrocery Specials for\nFriday and Saturday\nRolled Oats, 0 lh. sack . . 25c.\nSt. Charles Cream, per tin . . 10c.\nGold Seal Milk, per tin . 10c.\nKippered Herrings . . 2 lb. fm-25c.\nWitch Hazel Snap 3 cakes for 25c\nPels Naphtha Snap, per box . 70c.\nCranberries, per quart . . 15c.\nPastry Flour, per sack . . $1.75\nTen Pound Sacks . , . 40c.\nicing Sugar, per lb. . . 10c.\nPrepared Icing, per package . . 10c\nSalad Dressing, pet-bottle . . . 35c.\nPrompt Service and Fresh Stock\nIt's Time to Change for Warmer Underwear\nSee Our Range for Ladies, Girls, Men and Boys\n*****************************************************\n:\ni\nHAVE YOU TAKEN\n. ADVANTAGE .\nof our Special Suit Sale'.' If nol yuu\narc doing yourself an injustice. Just\nthink \"f paying only\n$15 for a\n$20.00 Suit\nDuring the last Iwo weeks large numbers have taken ndvntitngo ol our\nSpecial Offer nml WO have filled up\nour Bargain Tables and wnnt you lo\ncall and see tlio values wo nre\noffering at only $15\nI.\nChas. Parker\nYour Outfitter Fit Reform Clothier\nOwing n. the lateness nl tlio sen-: A minimum rallwny may I* aeon\nson, wc inulcr-tanii, Hopo street In operation in the store r nil-\npaving is not practicable this year, i iini-il by tho l^iwlon tnte, by\nnml that it will bo plunked instead, which the principle end practical\nTlio lied is so soft llmt tlm ruck Is demonstration ol lho Cull Auto-\nputotuot siRht almost by lho road mi'tie Sw'tch is given. II..- m-\n.roller, Tlio work slionlil linvo boon \" '\n\u00C2\u00A3 completed early in the season,\nLust week soinobody purloined\nvontion Im- proved il- usefulness in\npractical service mi railroads, and\niln- ingenious Imt reasonably simple\nmethod \"(its operation, iis safety,\nlino bicycle, the property of Mr. .u\u00E2\u0080\u009E| Us world wide usefulness, kc\nI Alli-iH-k, book-keeper at Donmark & j It a very Interesting invention.\n| Hlirton's hardware store, Tin-pre-; Mr. A. W. Grundy, of Vancouver,\nvlncial pnlleo huvo lho matter in has charge of the demonstration\nblind .ind il is hoped the guilty aud Is placing stock nt tlOOn share,\nparty will bo brought to justice mid Cali and sec the invention; it is\nI taught u lesson. worth while.\nM.\n**l*.'.**.! ********************************* ************\nCoronation Concert\n*****************************************************\n**********************'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 *** ** *************************\nA. G. Brown-Jamison Co. Ltd.\nst-rrKssiuis ru A, u. IIKOWN * CO.\nlt,a-k Onialieni lton.1 Machinery r,,iiuu,-i,,rs' Rnjulpmcnt\nMilling Miiel.inery Bollen Knglnc.\nlulcnlito Aiii.'iii'.l'il'--\nMill M Truck.\nFarm Implement. Dairy Suppll'1. Haarlwood Milking Michlnea\n1048 Main Street Vancouver, B.C.\n',****************************************************\n-Have You Seen Them ?-\nel perco r\u00C2\u00BB\niln* electric nitlio\npercolator.\nEL STOVO\nthe .lis,' nn nliich\nthe ,'1,,-lrii- iinr.'iit\nvilli di. Ilalil\neouklnir.\nALL HAT II\nOFIRATID\nMOM THI\nOIDINA*'\nLIMT SOCKIT\nEL B01L0\niln- liiin.ly uiiiiii-m-\nloll liriltil (Of lx.il-\nini* water quickly.\n\"HOTPOIKT IRON\niln- Imlifpcnsahle\nkitchen eon von*\n|.-ii..-|i,iii,.jnii-.l:iV\nl'l.i|i in nl .-IR\nrlillltwurk *.iHi\u00C2\u00AB*i*\nHint IlllV.' till'*' ll|>-\n|.iiaii.'i* pxhlaim-il\nI\nEL PERCO\nMETHODIST CHURCH\nMonday, October 30\nREV. ROBERT HUGHES ol Vancouuer\nwill thou) over 100 magnificent lantern views of\nLondon and the Coronation\nwith his wonderful electric lantern\nThe itory told with wit and humor and bright description.\nCommences at 8 p.m. Admission Free Collection\nUnder tht auspices ol the Epworth League t\n*****************************************************\nB. C Electric Railway Co., Limited\nLIGHT AND POWER OCI'T CHILLIWACK I\n.IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII.....H.I.............I........\nI The Marvel of the\n20th Century\nDon't Fall to See the Working Model of the\nONLY\nAutomatic Railway Switch\nIN THE WORLD\nNow on Demonstration hr a Few Days at the\nLONDON CAFE, Wellington Street.\nSeeing is Believing\nNissourians Welcome\nHarry Clii-l1mini, a negro ami\nAlex. Charlie, an Indian, goi sand-]\nwiched between a supply of boose\nand tlio Police department on Tues*\nI day* Tin* Indian paid a fine of\n!\u00E2\u0096\u00A0?\u00E2\u0096\u00A0.\u00C2\u00BB.\"., but tin* negro will have lo\nwork his line of 850 out at West\n| minster.\nA driver belonging lo Mr. Hatch\nnf tin- Commercial hotel made a\nI lively run along Yah- road Tuesdaj1*\nevening, turning down Nowell direct\nIto it's own stable. At the turn it\nleft tin- rig ami portion of Die\nharness came ti* griff. The damage\nWas not SOrioUB.\n' Mr. mul Mra. Dan. Mcintosh and\nson James, of Vancouver, ore tlio\nguests of Mr mul Mrs. H. J. Mcintosh this week. Eighteen ur twenty\nyears ago Mr. Mcintosh was a resident >>f tin* valley, Imt well! lo Van*\ncnuver, where he invested wisely\nand luis benefited by tho hlg stride*\nVancouver has made during Ihe past\nlivi- nr six years.\nIt. s. Carvnlth and S, Carloton,\nwho are serving on tlio jury at (ho\nSow Westminster Assixes, fame up\nfur lho week-end, returning on Sun*\nday. The docket tins year has been\nan unusually serious ami prolonged\ni ono mul although tlio court has been\nsilling for over two weeks, only\nabout half of (he coses have 1)0-811\ndisposed of.\n1 Tin* idea nf having permanent\nresidents In lho form of a batoholor's\nj hall ut tin' till- hall is a good nn*,\nserving a double purpose, tlmt ul\nhaving willing hands ready in the\ntime of it 1 and of i!.r>>uping a few\nuf the mom hers uf the brigade lo*\ngether enabling them to spend tholr\ni-vi-iiii.g\" profllnllly. It wns a move\nin tin* right direction whon lho\nCOUncll passeil litis motion.\nA blotting accident occurred hut\nThursday afternoon hy whieh Stirling Mcleod, nf Humns, had hii\nface an.) one eye badly hurt hv tiy*\nIng earth mul pieces ol wood. He\nwas in (la- act of lighting a fuw\nwhonn pernio! ure explosion of some\npowder he had placed aboul th*,*\nhole containing tho chargo, occurred,\nTho accident is a very painful ono hut\ntho young man is progressing favor*\nably,\nThe Royal WVMi Indie* Choir\nappealed in Ihe 0|iei*a HoUSC on\nMunday evening under the nusptcet\nof thc Hospital Auxiliary. Thc\neiilertaintneiil merited the large\nalleiulaiiee. being o( a li.gli-cla**.-*\nnrdor. Tho only unsatisfactory\nphase of the ovonl was ihe sninlineat\nuf the llCt receipts to the auxiliary.\nwhieh considering (he work and\ntlmoexponded by the ladi\u00C2\u00AB?s, i\u00C2\u00AB vory\nsmall lltdeod,\nPARSON'S STORE\nHART BLOCK\nPARSON'S STORE\nHart Block\nAdvertise in the Free Press for results.\n\u00C2\u00AB i\nJJ"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Chilliwack (B.C.)"@en . "Chilliwack"@en . "Chilliwack_Free_Press_1911-10-26"@en . "10.14288/1.0067551"@en . "English"@en . "49.1577778"@en . "-121.950833"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Chilliwack, BC : C.A. Barber"@en . "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/"@en . "Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives."@en . "Chilliwack Free Press"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .