"3506f7d0-7c5d-48f5-a330-426f284a5e79"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "2016-04-21"@en . "1906-05-26"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/mpadvocate/items/1.0311566/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " \"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\ *t\u00C2\u00A3\n-.. h\nMt Pleasant Advo\nDevoted to th* Interests of Mt. Pleasant and South Vancouver.\nSingle Copy 5c, Three nontlia 95c, Six Months 50c, Per Year $1.\nKSTAB-BHED Aran. 8th, 1899. Whole No. 876.\nMt. Pleasant, Vancouvbb, B. O., Satubdat, Mat 28, 1908.\nI ocal Items.!\nYAe McOnaig Anotion and Commis-\n** '*!>., Ltd., noxt toCai'uoigc Library,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2fast-iira street, bny Furniture for Cash,\n\"Xndunt Auction Sales and handle\nMaP-_n.pt Stocks of every description,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2ritlstactioulguarauteed. Phone 1070.\nMrs. De Thwornicki and little son, of\nManchester, Eng., nre visiting hor\nfather Mr. J. F. Boss nnd family, Sixth\navenue, east.\nThen will be a Sale of Work and\ntee Cream Social on the lawn of Mt.\nPleasant Baptist Ohnreh next Tuosday\nthe 39th, from B to 10 p. m, Be sure\nand attend, an enjoyable time ls\nassured all.\n, :o:\nMn. Morrison' and daughter, wife\nand child of Mr. J.W. Morrison, arrived\nfrom Minneapolis, Miuncsata, last\nFriday. Mr. and Mrs. Morrison are\nresiding at tho comer of Eleventh and\nOntario.\ntbi\nRead the New York Dental Parlors\npdvertlsement iu this paper, then go to\nJew York Dental Parlors for your work\n10:\t\nOn Tnesday evening next the Girls'\nntortaining Society of St. Michael's\n.hurch will give a Social beginning at\no'clock. There will be a good musioal\nih\u00E2\u0080\u0094iram. Ice cream and other refresh-\nlents will be served.\nOUR PRICES\nARE RIGHT\nDentistry as we practice it is a serious profession,'\ninvolving education, carefulness and skill. Therefore we can not compete in prices with the ignorant, the careless or the unskillful. Comparison will show, however, that we charge less than half as much as\nmost private pmctiouors.\nBut you ask, let ho work as good? We reply, it\nis better Indeed, no dentist who trios to practice all the different\nbranches of dentistry oan achlovo such magnificent results as we do\nwith our corps of skilled specialists\nMoprwK\nsrr\nIF YOU ARE IN\nTROUBLE WITH\nYOUR TEETH SEE\nUS WITHOUT\nDELAY.\nNEW YORK DENTISTS\n147 Hastings St. Telephone 1666.\nOfiice Hours: 8 a.m., to 9 p.m.; Sundays 9 a.m., to 2 p.m.\nrwtff-'ii*-T*gB)g\nX*%a.) 'Vol. 8, No. 8.\nThe Season for Painting is now on. .\nOUR GOODS ARE THE BEST MONEY OAN\nBUY AND WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD.\nI A PI-.** I *M m- PLEASAN1\nJ. A. rieTT, Lf 0. hardware store.\nTel. i 4 7.\nOntario Maple\nSvrup\nWe have just received onr usual large\nconsignment of Eastern Maple Syrup.\nTHE PRICE will be the same as last\nyear and the quality equally as good if not better.\nPlaoe yonr order with ns at once as It will not But long.\nGood Butter our specialty.\nGood Potatoes $1 per sack.\nFOR SALE: a small Upright Piano;\npply at \"Advocate\" Office,\n_ 10:\t\n1}te Twenty-fourth was generally\nelebrated in Vancouver. Many picnic\narties from Mt. pleasaut spent the day\n1 tho Pivrk and. other sylvan resorts,\nnd many took in the excursions to\n'ictoria and Nauaimo.\nFOR RENT:-flat of 6 rooms, $12,130\ner month. Immediate\n.pply at \"Advocate\" Office.\n:o:\t\nThe Ladies' Aid of Mt. Pleasant\nlothodist Church are preparing for\nHandkerchief Sale in June. There\nill be strawberries and joe cream and\nrery attraction that goes toward mat\nig a -\u00E2\u0080\u0094mmer evening enjoyable.'\nThe 86th Annual Report of The Key -\nI Bank of Canada has been laid on our\nIblo. It is most attractive typographi\nIlly and beautifully illustrated with\nlews of their many bank buildings\n1 the cities and towns of Canada,\nlei\nChas. Raunle, teacher of Violin and\nIonlet. Special attention given to young\nils. For terms, etc., apply at Studio,\neleventh aveuue.\n]\nCUNT PLEASANT METHODIST\nCHUBCH.\nRev. A. E. Hetheriugton B. D.,\niBtor. Morning subject: \"Fellowship,\"\nveiling \"True Citizenship.\"\nThe sacrament of the Lord's Supper,\nUl be administered at the close of the\noruing service.\nCome in and see our list of good buys,\n1 good terms and good titles I\u00E2\u0080\u00942444\n'cstminsijer avenne.\nStationery\nBmm ****\u00C2\u00A7 *^*m ****** *****>\nWe have a complete\nline of Papeteries,\nLetter Pads,\nWriting Paper,\nEnvelopes, Etc., .\nat down-town prices.\nAlways open.\nM.A.W.Co.,Ltd\nfit. PLEASANT BRANCH.\n'Phone 790. Free Delivery.\nIQolden Wedding.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mr. and Mrs.\nim- Wells of Seventeenth and West-\ninstor avenues, will celebrate the\nibileo Anniversary of their marriage\n1 Saturday May 26th They will be at\n.Die to their friends during tbe after-\nson and evening; refreshments will he\nrved from 2 to 7 p. m It is requested\niat no presents begiven.\n:o:\nBy properly adjusted glasies Dr.\nbwell at the Burrard Sanitarinm Ltd.,\nI\u00E2\u0080\u0094eves eye strain which causes head-\nihe and other nervous troubles\n :o:\t\nMr. Roland Burnet, son of Mr. and\npa. Bnrnet of Thirteenth avenue,\nrived from San Franoisco on Saturday\nst. Mr. Bnrnet has been hi San\nrancisco* since last Fall, and came\nrough jho terrors of the big earth-\nrake safely; np to the time of his ***-*>\nGENTLEMEN\nbuy your Furnishings\non Mt. Pleasant.\n] | We carry an up-to-date\nline of\u00E2\u0080\u0094 -v..\nMEN'S HATS,\nCAPS and\nFURNISHINGS\nGive us a call.\n1\nW. T. MURPHY\n] [ 2416 Westminster avenuo j i\n\! Mt. Pleasant. \"; \\n!l I\n^00*0000********00*00*000*\nRING UP 914 for a good load ot\nCedar Wood $1.25 a load, or leave orders\nat 608 Seventh avenne, east.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Crocker\nBros., Dealers in Wood.\nThe Maple Laef Seniors after a hard\nfought game were defeatpd hy the. Now\nWestminster Senior Lacrosse\" team. As\nit is the first match the Maple Leaf\nSeniors have played there, is no discouragement over the result ef Thurs\nday's game.\n' lei \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 .\nThe veiy latest styles in Canadian\nand American makes and designs in\nWinter Shoes for Men, Women and\nChildren at R. MILLS, the Shoeman,\n119 Hastings streots, west.\nMr. Wm. Brodrick of Bellingham, ie\nvisiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs\nBrodrick, Muir Block. . opt\nComer Seventh sad Westminster 1\nCOOKE'S DRUG STORE\n**m*^mmlA**m**jA^^\nEVERYTHING POR THE BATH\nSponges at prices ranging from 5c to $5.\nAll the leading makes of Toilet Waters and Soaps.\nA Special line of CARBOLIC SOAP \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 cakes for JOBBING YOUR PRESCRIPTIONS TO U*-IT WILL PAT YOU.\nThe COOKE DRUG Co. Ltd\nCorner Wkstminbtbb and Seveuth atx-TOM.\nCASCADE\nTHfe BEER Without a Peer.\nBrewed right here in Vancouver by men of years\nand years and years experience, and a brewery whose\nplant is the most perfect known to the Art of\nBrewing. Is it any wonder that it has taken a place\nin the hearts of the people which ne other beer can\nsupplant ? Doz., quarts $2. Doz., pints $ I.\nVancouver Breweries, Ltd.\nYancouver, B. C Tel. 4_9\nFor Sale at all first-class Saloons, Liquor Stores and Hotels or\ndelivered to yonr house.\nj t**m*is**i*ime4em^\n&S^ \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0096\u00A0_____-_!_____?\n-\nBICYCLES\nFine line of New Wheels jnst in. Anyone prepared to pay Oash can\nget Rook-bottom Prices ou the best Bicycles made.\nW, J. Annand. manager, Vancouver\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 cle ^.IIIIUIIM* AUT0 a ^CLB qomPaj\nWS Hastings street, east.\nTelephone 1286.\nCOMPANY,\nam** Bicycle and AntomobUe\nRepairing In all Its branches,\nNeatly and Promptly done.\nI 000*00004*r**000**0*0*mm0*'000000X0*0kme10X0^\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n'\nSnOBcrlbers are requested to\nreport any carelessness In the delivery\nof \"The Advooate.\"\n\".'.'.1 '',',-.'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0' ..' Special Values in \u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nLADIES' COSTUMES\nCo; tu-nos mado of fine lustre; skirt 9-gore with wide pleaits and flare\nhot em. waist front and back pleated, latest style sleeve, deep cuff tacked\nin chad is of emerald green, brown, navy and block Special $0.60 each.\nWash SuitB, including muslins, ginghams, print, chambrajs and linens,\nin a large variety of shades and colors Special foi $1.60, $2.60, $8.60,\n$4.60 and up.\na. ross & co., **fiat?srst-\nBarclay\u00E2\u0080\u0094Hatch.\nThe marriage of Mr. Lome J. Barclay,\nForeman of White Se Biudon's Printing\nDepartment, and Miss Sara Harriet\nHatch, daughter of Mrs. S. Hatch of\nThirteenth avenne, took place Wedues\nday morning at the home of the bride's\nmother. The ceremony was performed\nby Rov. Mr. McGee. Miss Florrie Hatoh,\na niece of the bride, acted as bridesmaid,\nwhile the groom was suppoited by his\nbrother Mr. W. G. Barclay. The ceremony took place under a floral aroh,\nand in the presence of tho imm-vdiato\nrelatives of the contracting couple. The\nbride was charmingly attired in a gown\nof cream silk crepe de chine, trimmed\nwith lace and chiffon. She wore the\ncustomary bridal veil and orange\nblossoms, and carried a handsome\nboquet.\nAfter the ceremony a wedding breakfast was served. Tho newly married\ncouple left on a honeymoon trip to\nPortland and Sound Cities.\nThe groom's present to the bride was\nan \"Art Bell\" piano, aud to the bridesmaid a gold locket and chain. Mr. and\nMrs. Barclay are both well-known and\nactive workers in fraternal circles, and\nthe many handsome and costly presents\nthey received testified to the esteem in\nwhich they are beld by a wide circle of\nfriends.\nMr. and Mrs. Barclay will reside ou\nSixth avonue near Ontario street.\n*mmm**m*m\u00C2\u00BBs***'***mt******mm**'****^ ,\nTelephone 20 21 Bran an an Ss Edwards\nWe have the largest selection of\nStock Pattern Dinner Sets\nin the oity\u00E2\u0080\u009410 diflercnt lines of which yon can buy any part.\nLet u\u00C2\u00AB show you our latest arrivals. Thoy are Beauties.\n97-piece Dinner Sets $7.00\n98-pieoo Dinner Sots, heavy gold borders $12.76\n98-pieoe Dinner Sets, illuminated $15.00\nBesides dozens of others to select from.\nBuchanan & Edwards\n662 664 (ironvllle St.\n'Phone 2021.\nI**0**0*l0**00f0tr*00**'***'0000e'00**000000000*0000*00400*\nCentral Meat\nMARKET\nNinth ave. a Westminster road.\nMoat of all kinds continually\non hand\nFRESH FISH DAILY.\nPoultry and Game in season.\nBest of Vegetables on the\nMarket.\nWoodrow &\n*** Williams\nFrank Trimble, Manager.\nTelephone 984. Prompt Delivery.\nFor a Oame ol\nPool or Billiards\nOrop In at\nO. McCUTCHEON'S BARBER SHOP\nBit. Ploasant.\nFIR8T-OLASS\nBoot and Shoemaklng\naud Repairing dono at\nPeters' Boot & Shoe Store\n2464 Westminster avenue.\nUse\nRoyal Crown\nSOAP\nTHE Beht in tiie Wont-. Drop\nus a post card asking for a\nCatalogue of Premiums to be\nhad froo for Rot_il Crown\nSoap Wrappers.\nROYAL CROWN SOAP CO.\nVANCOUVER, O.C.\nPARIS\nNovelties .\nWe want yoa to come in and\nsee these goods\u00E2\u0080\u0094these exquisite, dainty Parisian\nthings, fashioned as only\nParisians know how to fashion them.\nSide ud Back Combe,\nBelle in Colored Leathers.\nHet Pins, eto.\nTrOxToy\nTHE JEWELER\nCorner Hastings and Granville 8ts.\nOfficial Wateh Inspector 0. P. B.\nCatsup, 2 bottles. 28c\nUpton's Pickles 25c a bottle\nNo. 1 Potatoes $1.28\nper seek.\nMcKinnon & Gow,\n146 Ninth Ave. Opposite No.J Fin Hall\nTelephone aU4t. Prompt delivery.\nLawn Grass Seeds\nClover and Timothy Seeds,\nPratt's Poultry and Animal Foods.\nPiatt's Lioe Ciller.\nHolly Chick Food, Beefecrape, Ku\nFLOUR and FEED.\n5. keith ams.jsfa.ssar-*\nTsh'PDOBS It 17. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nTheCanadian Bank\nof Commerce\nSAVINOS BANK DEPARTMENT.\nDeposits of On* Dollar and upwards\nreceived and Interest allowed thereon.\nBank Money Orders issued.\nA General Banking Business\ntransacted.\nOFFICE HOURS: 10ft. m. to $ p. ta\nSaturdays: 10 a.m. to 12m., 7 to8 p.m.\nCast End Branch\n414 Westminster C. W. DURRANT,\navenue. Manaoi*.\nIf you in- Tbb Adtocatb yon m__\nthe looal news.\n\"*- _\n*\u00C2\u00A3\"-: \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0eaaaaaBBaoeci:\n/\nTHE ADVOCATE, VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA.\nft* ttfttf T *\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB ** tT-M-t-ttf f TTttf f tf Um ||(n\nI Linked by Fate:\nBY CHARLES GARVICE :\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nAuthor of \" The Verdict of the Heart,\" \" A Heritage \u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nof Hate/ \"Nell of Shorne Mills,\" \"Paid V.\nFor,?* \" A Modern Juliet,\" Etc |\nf++H~\u00C2\u00BB-\u00C2\u00BB-H t + \u00E2\u0099\u00A6 \u00E2\u0099\u00A6 \u00E2\u0099\u00A6 \u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6+++\u00E2\u0099\u00A6 \u00E2\u0099\u00A6.\u00E2\u0099\u00A6.\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6,\n. S J ' \u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2S.S-' *\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 *\wt*r0iisy\n(Continued from last week.)\nmc turn ran its courso'in the\nlight, desultory nmnnei- of tublc-talk,\nand Lndy Fanworthy, in her black\nsilk and priceless let\u00E2\u0080\u0094, leant back\nwith the serenity of the hostess wher,\nher dinner is going well, nnd looked\n.thoughtfully at Vane with the expression in her keen,eyes which Lndy\nLetchford hnd noticed.\nPresently Sir Chandos Oi'ine's thin\nfalsetto voice was heard in a moment\nof silence.\n\"Dropped in at the Mounts last,\nnight,\" ho said: ho hail run up to\nTown to interview his beauty-doctor\nthe duy before. \"They're going well\nand strong. Was in time for thnt\nfirst piece: deuced clever! Harcourt I\nwont behind to\u00E2\u0080\u0094cr\u00E2\u0080\u0094see a man 1 know\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094told me thnt he's commissioned tha\nauthor to write a comedy; and llur-\ncourt expects a big success wilh it,\"\n\"Quite a new man, and very young,\nisn't he?\" said Julian.\n\"Quite a boy. His name's Herbert\nWood,\" replied Sir Chandos, signing\nto Prance to fill his glass\u00E2\u0080\u0094for the\nfourth time\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"and e orinnl.e. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 lin\"\ncoun nasn't seen him yet. He s a\nfriend of the Polly Bainford who's\nmade such a hit in the first piece;\nand Harcourt communicates with him\nthrough her.\"\n\"Quite mysterious and\u00E2\u0080\u0094stagey,\"\nmurmured Judith Orme. \"You remember the piece, Lord Lesborough?\"\n\"Yes, quito well, what I saw of\nit,\" said Vane. \"I ehould think the\nauthor would write a very good\ncomedy. We must all go and see it.\"\n\"1 say. Shore,\" said Sir Chandos\nwith the flickering of the eyelids and\nthe twitching of tho lips which always followed his fourth glass of\nchampagne, \"I had a regular fright\njust now.\"\nJulian raised his eyes. \"Metaphorically speaking, of course,\" he said.\n\"You were in tho Seventy-second,\nWir Chandos?\"\nSir Ohandos showed his perfectly\nconstructed teeth.\n\"By gad, yes; we weren't easily\nfrightened. But I give you my word\nI was\u00E2\u0080\u0094well, rather startled. I was\ncoming down from my room the short\nway\u00E2\u0080\u0094a little late\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094he smiled and\nbowed to Lady Fanworthy\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"and I\nran up against the most extraordinary looking poison. Sho didn't\nseem to hoar mc, when I came behind her, and when she turned\u00E2\u0080\u0094well,\noutside Madamo Tussaud's I've never\nseen anything llko her. A walking\ncorpse,, by George! And I fancy sho\nmust be deaf and dumb, for when 1\napologized for running against hor\nshe Just turned and looked at me\nlike\u00E2\u0080\u0094liko a statue, touched her lips,\nand ears and glided Into that den of\nyours. Who is she, ch?'*v'.*\nJulian watched Prance fill hieAglass\na_d stopped him when it was\nho^lf full, beforo he replied, quite\ncasually:\n\"She is an old servant of mine.\nHer namo is Beborah. I'm sorry she\nStartled you.\" .\n\"Oh,vthat's - all right,\" said Sir\nChandos, but grudgingly. \"But you\nmust have a queer fancy. If she belonged to rile I should send her to\nBarnum & Bailey's.\"\n\"I'm sure you would,\" said Julian\nSo smoothly that thero was a general laugh.\n\"Tho fact is,\" said Vane, with a\nnod and a smile at Julian, \"uo ono\nbut an old and faithful servant\nwould stand tho awful smells of\nJulian's den.\"\n\"You go in for chemistry, I understand, Shore?\" said Lord Lisle. \"A\nmost Interesting study. 1 used to-\ndabble in it, but quito unpvofession-\n. ally. What branch have you taken\nup?\"\nJulian shrugged his shoulders; the\nslight shrug which hinted at his\nSpanish blood. \"Oh, well,\" he replied, modestly, \"I ain trying to find\na new color.\"\n\"Reallyl How interesting! How\nclever you must bc!\".excluimed the\nyoung girl. \"I hoj- it will be a\nnice color, one that will suit us\nladies.\"\n\"Any color I am fortunate enough\nto discover will possess that virtue,\" he retorted with u slight bow.\n\"One of these days Julian will\nawake to find himself famous,\" said\nVaei; \"and in quite a new lino for\nthe Mannerings. 1 don't think nny\nof thein has come out strong as a\nscientist.\"\n\"I should so liko to see your\u00E2\u0080\u0094laboratory; is that the right name?\"\nsaid the young girl.\n\"Julian smiled at her Indulgently.\n*\"So you shall; whenever you please;\nthough there is very little to sec.\"\n\"Tako my advice, Miss Liminiiig-\nton, and\u00E2\u0080\u0094don't,\" snld Vane.\n\"You'll see nothing but pots and\npans in a variety of gluss and iron;\nand you will bo assailed by a smell\nthat will hniint you moro than any\nghost you have at the Grange.\"\n\"Lord l-sborough's advice Is\ngood, I assure you,\" snld Julian\nvitli a charming frankness and modesty.\nLady Fanworthy, who had boen\nlistening to tho conversation with a\nnon-committal sniilo and drooped\nlids, looked up and around the table,\ngave the sign which every woman at\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2once sees, and no mnn ever notices,\nand the ladies rose and followed her\nto tho drawing-room.\nVane gathered the men round him\nand sent about the claret-jug ari_\ncrardled port, and set an example by\nlighting his old briar\u00E2\u0080\u0094tho briar\nwliich he had smoked on tha Fairy\nIsle. Tho conversation promptly\ntook a sporting direction, and Vano\nboro his share of it; but every now\nand thon he became preoccupied and\nabsent-minded-, and presently he\nsaid:\n\"Won't any- one tnke\nwind? Orme?\" '\nSir'Chandos filled his glass, tossed\nIt off, and rose, a trillc shaky, with\nthe others.\nWhen they entered tho drawing-\nroom, Judith was nt tho piano playing ln tho soft, Indolent fashion In\nwhich .Women play while they nro\nwaiting for the men;-and sho slopped nnd looked-mechanically rit Jul-\nia'n.^for, as usual, everybody wanted\nto^luiii- hlin sing.\n\"Is it too soon after dinnor, Julian?\" suid Vann with his band *m\nany more\nJulian's shoulder.\n\"No,\" he snid, \"if Miss Orme will\nplay the accompaniment.\"\nSlie looked at bim, beyond him.\n\"Yon usuully play your own,\" she\nsuid.\n\"This is a new one,\" he said; \"and\nI can't play at sight.\"\nSlie sat down to the piano, with\nthe faintest suggestion of resignation, and played the prelude, and hu\nsang.\nIt wns Pinsiiti's \" Tis I,\" and hs\nsung, it\u00E2\u0080\u0094well, his rendering of the\nfamous song would have satisfied even the composer. The conversation\nfaltered and died out. and every ono\nlistened in a profound, an emotional\nsilence.\n\"Oh, it is beautiful, \u00E2\u0080\u00A2lienutiful!\"\nmurmured the young Miss l.iinniiiig-\nton. \"What a lovely, lovely voico\nMr. Shore has; and how exquisitely\nhe sings!\"\nVane, who happened to be near her,\nnodded perfect agreement.\n\"Yes; my cousin has \u00C2\u00AB wonderful\nvoice, hasn't he?\" he suid, warmly.\n\"Ask him lo sing 'Kathleen Mavour-\nneen.' I shouldn't be surprised if ho\nmakes yon cry.\"\nJulian song \"Kathleen Mavour-\nneen,\" and succeeded in bringing\ntears to tho eyes of more than Miss\nLlmmington.\n\"First rate; splendid!\" said Sir\nCharles, with a half-defiant glance at\nhis wife. \"Sing us something else,\nShore?\"-\nBut Julian courteously declined.\nWith the Spanish shrug of tho shoulders he left the piano and sauntered\nto the French windows, which had\nbeen left open, for the night was\nwarm, and passed out on to the terrace. He thought that he was done,\nand he lit a cigarette and leant\nagainst the stone railing, his eyelids\ndrooping, his long lashes sweeping\nhis sallow cheek. Music excites the\nperformer as well as tbe listener,\nand his h.art was beating quickly.\nWhile ho hue. been singing his eyes\nhad rested upon Judith Orme's profile. From her beauty lie had drawn\nthe inspiration which had . enabled\nhim to move his hearers as they had\nbeen moved. And now his heart was\naching for her, as it always ached\nthe moment he was out of hor\nsight. At first he had fought against\ntho passion which had taken possession of him, had tried to argue himself out of it; but ho had long ceased to struggle, and now surrendered\nhimself as the demoniac surrenders\nto the spirit that enthrals it. And\njealousy was adding another torture\nto that of unrequited love, for he had\nseen, almost on tho first day, the\nday ho had called on her with Vane,\nthat sho was in love with his cousin.\nLove makes the dullest man quickwitted and sharp-eyed whero the woman ho loves is concerned, and Julian had discovered that Judith was\nnot heartless, as tho world considered her, but that her heart had been\ngiven to Vane. Fate had willed that\nhis cousin should not only step in\nbetween him and the Lesborough\npeerage, but thnt ho should stand between him and tho woman whom he\nloved with an absorbing passion\nwhicll wns neatly akin to mndness.\nWith a gesture of despair he flung\nthe end of his cigarette away nnd\nwent towards the end of the terrace,\nAs lie was descending the steps ho\nsaw Sir Chandos Oi'tiic coming out\nof the smoking-room where he had\nbeen for the hrnndy-niid-soda which\npulled him together after his dir.ner.\nAt the same moment there wns tho\nfrou-frou of a woman's dress, and\none of the Indies stepped on to . tho\nterrace from the drawing-room, and\nJulian heard Sir Chandos suy, cautiously:\n\"Is that you, Judith?\"\nJulian went softly-down the steps\nnnd stood under the terrace listening.\n\"Yes, father; do you want ine?\"\nreplied Judith, coming towards him.\n-They slopped almost immediately\nIthovo Julian, so that he could hear\nevery word, though both father and\ndaughter spoke-in.a low voice.\n\"Yes,\" said Sir Chandos with a\nslight hlccAugh. \"Look here, Judith*,\nI wnnt to talk to you. I'm getting\nanxious, uneasy. You don't seem to\nhe making much of this gnme\u00E2\u0080\u0094now.\ndon'l he offended and turn away\nliko that. I won't have it! I've been\na good father to y'ou\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"\nShe laughed with a kind of weary\nscorn.\n\"1 am listening,\" she said, coldly.\n\"Well, then, I'll go further and suy\nyou seem to nie to be milking a\nmoss of it. We've been down here\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nhow long is it'.'\u00E2\u0080\u0094and you are no 'forrader' than you wero lu London. I've\ngo! eyes in niy head, of course, and\nI ran see, anyone could see, that\nLosborough isn't in the least smitten. Tlie mnn Rooms to be llko a\nblock of Ice, confound hlnil 'Pears\nto me you've completely lost your\nold power over him\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"\nShe leant against tho stono coping,\nher hands clasped lightly, her eyes\nfixed on the darkness.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Now don't go over tho old\nground and tell mo it's my fault,\nthat's all post and gone.\"\n\"I was not going to do so,\" she\nsaid in a low voice. \"It would tic\nuseless.\"\n\"Quite so,\" ho asserted. \"Nothing\nis more painful than that kind of\u00E2\u0080\u0094of\nbickering between father and daughter, especially when they understand\neiiih other as you and I do. What I\nwanted to say was that, in my opinion, l/pshoroiigh isn't a marrying\nman, that ho doesn't Intend to marry; and that ho intends this Julian\nShore to succeed him hero. You can't\nhelp observing this\u00E2\u0080\u0094tho fuss Vano\nihnki-s over tho fellow.\"\n(To be Continued.)\nTwo Kinds of l-'i-iirlnf.\n..he-Prize lighting Is brutal, but did\nyou ever know fencing to hurl nny\none?\nHe\u00E2\u0080\u0094Why, yes; tho barbed wire kind.\nI have.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Yoi'iU'rs i-lutesinnn.\nA Biter Left.\n\"now docs your grandmother get\nalong now thnt sbe bas lost all ber\ntocth?\"\n\"Oh, all right You know Bhe bns a\nbiting tongue.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094Judgo.\nCONSUMPTION OF LIQUOR.\n.Jorwsr Is the Least Intemperate of\nAU the Nations.\nAmericans are only moderate drinkers compared with those of other countries. Tbe average citizeu of tbe United States, counting iu the women aud\nchildren (which ls not fair, but serves\nfor the moment as a basis to figure\nupon),\" consumes lu the course of a year\nliquors which contain one and a third\ngallons of pure alcohol. But the Frenchman, who, though formerly one of the\nsoberest, has become the worst drunkard in the world, absorbs annually\nthree and a half gallons of alcohol.\nThe Belgian and the Swiss come next,\nwith a consumption of two and four-\nfifths gallons. Then follow the Spau-\nlard with two and a third gallons, the\nItalian with just a trifle less, the Englishman and German with two and a\nteuth, and the Austro-Hungnrlan witb\nabout one and three-quarters gallons.\nOn the other hand, the American citizen by no means stands at the top of\nthe list in respect to sobriety. The\nSwede drinks only one and n sixth gallons of pure alcohol in a year; tbe Hollander drops considerably below him,\nwith one gallon even; the relatively virtuous Russian, notwithstanding his\nmuch advertised addiction to vodka,\nabsorbs only a trifle more than six-\ntenths of a gallon, and, finally, the Norwegian, who occupies a proud eminence\nas the most abstemious man ln the\nworld, barely exceeds a modest half\ngallon of the stuff In a twelvemonth's\npotations. It might be added for tbo\nsake of deflnlteness that the average\nperson ln the United Stntes annually\ndrinks one and a third gallons of proof\nspirits (which nre 50 per ceut alcohol),\none-third of a gallon of wine and sixteen and a quarter gallons of malt liquors, chiefly beer.\nECSTASIES OF MECCA.\nScene at the Annual Visitation of\nMohammedan rilicrlms.\nMecca, at the season of the annual\nvisitation of Mohammedan pilgrims, Is\nthus described in Everybody's ln \"Withe Pilgrims to Mecca,\" translated\nfrom the narrative of Ibu Jubnyr All\nof Bandar Adas:\n\"Like a gigantic catafalque, somber,\nshrouded ln mystery, the Kaaba rises\nout of the seething sea of white garbed\nhumanity that crowds the great sacred\nsquare of Mecca. Its door ls covered\nwith plates of solid silver studded with\nsilver nails. From the exterior of the\nroof, above a stone marking the sep-\nulcher of Ishmael, which lies at the\nbase of the northern wall, there projects a horizontal, semicircular rain\nspo.ut five yards long, twenty-four Inches wide, made of massive gold. Within the roof Is supported by three columns of aloe wood; the walls are hung\nwith red velvet alternating with white\nsquares ln which are written lu Arabic\nthe words, 'Allah-Jal-Jelalah' ('Praise\nto God, the Almighty:). The building ls\npacked with pilgrims, praying, weeping, beside themselves ln an ecstasy\nof passionate devotion. Mingled with\ntheir voices there rises from outside the\nchant of the Talblh, the song of the\nwinding sheet, which every pilgrim\nmust slug on entering Mecca, on donning the sacred Ihrani, on entering the\nIliiruui, aud on starting for Minn, the\nvalley of desire, and Arafat, the mountain of compassion.\"\nGreat In Ills Line.\nMr. Robert Burr once Bhowed a portrait of Mark Twain to a silk merchant\nof Lyons. \"Tell me who that ls,\" Mr.\nBnrr said. The merchant gazed at the\nportrait and answered, \"I sfhould 'say\nhe was a state.man.\" \"Supposing you\nwrong ln that, what would be your\nnext guess?\" asked Mr. Barr. \"If he\nIs uot a maker of history he is perhaps\na writer of lt; a great historian, probably. Of course lt ls impossible for me\nto guess accurately except by accident,\nbut I use the adjective 'great' because\nI am convinced this man Is great ln his\nline, whatever lt Is. If he makes silk,\nhe makes the best.\" Mr. Barr told the\nFrench merchant who the portrait represented and said, \"You have summed\nblm up lu your last sentence.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094London\nNews.\nSpeaking of Aurcslry.\nMr. Chase has such an exaggerated\nrespect for the blue blood of Boston\nwliich runs ln his veins tbnt bis manner ls slightly patronizing. He was\nlately Introduced to a Syrian of good\nbirth and education wbo lives ln this\ncountry.\n\"And may I Inquire,\" he eald blandly\nIn the course of the conversation, \"lf\nyou are of the Christian religion?\"\n\"My family was converted to Christ's\nteaching at the time of Johu's second\nvisit to Lebanon,\" quietly replied the\nSyrian.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Youth's Companion.\nHU Intellectual Slse.\nCbolly Nitwit\u00E2\u0080\u0094D'ye know, Miss Cutter, though I've only Just met you,\nthere seems to be a\u00E2\u0080\u0094er\u00E2\u0080\u0094sort of Intel-\nlectual sympathy between us. You\nknow Just how to appeal to my tastes,\nyou kuow. Are you a literary woman?\nDolly Cutter\u00E2\u0080\u0094No, I'm a kindergarten\nteacher.\nThe Face.\nIf we could but read It every human\nbeiug carries his life In his face ami ls\ngood looking or tlie reverse us thut life\nhas been good or evil. Ou our features\nthe flue chisels of thought aud emotion\nare eternally at work.\nLike the Stare.\nShe\u00E2\u0080\u0094You've been out every night\nsinco I married you, and you swore\nyou would bo ns true as tlie stars\nabove. He\u00E2\u0080\u0094Well, ain't tho stars above\nout every nlgbt too?\nInveterate, organic mistrust ls always\nits result of bad education er Ignorance.\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Rat in owl.\nA Small Matter.\n\"Oul, madams Is 111, but ze doctor\nhnlf pronounce It something very til-\nfling, very small,\" said the French\nmn Id to an Inquiring friend.\n\"Oh, I am ao relieved, for I wns\nreally nnxlous about her,\" replied tho\nfriend. \"What docs the doctor say tlio\ntrouble Is?\"\n\"Let mo recall. It wns Bomethlmj\nvory leetle,\" answered tlie French maid.\n\"Oh, I have lt now! Zo doctor says zat\ninndame has zo smallpox.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094Philadelphia Ledger.\nDigest Food\nAmong the First Indications of Exhausted\nNerves\u00E2\u0080\u0094the Cure ie\nDr. Chase's Nerve Food.\nTho most importnut function of the\norgans of the body is the digestion\nand assimilation of food, and in this\nprocess is consumed an enormous\nquantity of nervous energy.\nAs the result the moment disorders\nof the nerves arise, digestion is impaired and the very source of health,\nstrength and vitality interfered with*\nTo prevent physical bankruptcy the\nnervous system must be built up by\noutsido aid, such as tbo use of Dr.\nChuse's Norvo Food, a preparation\ncomposed of tho vory elements of nature which go to form new blood and\nnorvo colls.\nBesides this restorative influence-\non . the whole system, Dr. Chaso's\nNervo Food has an immediate and\ndirect effect on the digestive system.\nIt stimulates the nerves of taste and\ninduces a good iluw of saliva to aid\ndigestion. It excites the glands of the\nstoinaeli and produces a plontiful supply of the gastric digestive fluids. It\nsharpens the uppotito and arouses\nhunger.\nEspecially where appetite and the\nability to digest have diminished, ns\nin nervous exhaustion, anaemia, the\nresult of sickness, overwork, or worry,\nDr. Chase's Nerve Food is by all odds\nthe most effective treatment that can\npossibly be obtained.\nIt ensures good digestion, regular\nhealthful action of the liver, kidneys\nand bowels and the building up and\nrevitalizing of the whole system.\nMrs. George Fuller, Lakeland, Man.,\nwrites: \"I am very glad to be able to\nstate that I have received great benefit from the use of Dr. Chase's Nerve\nFood. It has cured me of nervous\nheadache from which I used to bo a\ngroat sufferer, and I am no longer\ntroubled with twitching of the nerves\nin the arms and legs that I used to\nhavo aR soon as I went to bed. I nm\ngrateful for this cure and shall nlwnys recommend Dr. Chase's Nervo\nFood to anyone suffering ns I did.\"\nDr. Chase's Norvo Food, oOcts. a\nbox, at all dealers, or Edmanson.\nBates A Co., Toronto. The portrait\nand signnture of Dr. A. W. Cluiso,\nthe famous receipt book author, nre on\nevery box.\nPEDIGREES TO ORDER.\nThriving Trade In Coats of Arms.\nWith Lineage to Fit Them.\nWltb all our boasted democracy certain classes of Americans are as keen\nIn their pursuit of uotable ancestry\nwhich will entitle them to display\ncoats of arms as the most snobbish\naristocrat could be. An authority in\nheraldry made tbe stutement awhile\nago that only forty or fifty American\nfamilies at tbe most are entitled to the\ninsignia of nobility. But nobody can\nconvince the average citizen who has\n'made money\" of any sucb thing, and\ntbat supports very comfortably a\ncoterie of \"genealogists\" In New York,\nLondon and Indeed many of the larger\ncities here and abroad, who make a\nbusiness of discovering loug lost relatives iu the age of chivalry for worthy\ntwentieth ceutury descendants.\nGenuine old armorial bearings In\nmauy cases represent puns or a play\nupon tbe family name ln the design,\nwhich makes it comparatively easy\nto cut distinguished ancestry out of\nwhole cloth, ball mark and all, and\nhave the \"fake\" look passably \"actual.\" For Instance, the nrms of Sir\nJohn Pecbe ss they appear In a window\nof the chapel at LulIIngstone, Kent,\nconsist of two peach , trees bearing\nfruit, an old English E being Imprinted upon each poach. The Bacon escutcheon shows u boar nnd the Lamb\nfamily's three lambs.\nThis tendency ls well Illustrated\namong Uie Americnn families which\nreally have Inherited coats of arms.\nThe arms of the Staudish family consist of three standing dishes, the\nWheelocks of New Jersey display three\nCatherine wheels, while tbe Carters of\nPhiladelphia huvo three cart wheels,\nand tlie emblem of tbe Astor family\nIs n yellow aBter. How a coat of arms\nmay be utilized for decorative effect\nappears ln the new Hotel Astor, which\nIs one of tbe most sumptuously furnished of New York's great hostelries. In\nfrescoes and wall hangings, lace nnd\nlinen, rugs nnd carpets, on glassware,\nchina and sliver, the aster appears ln\nevery conceivable form, fitted to every\npossible scheme of design. This, too,\nis au ancient use adapted to modern\nusefulness.\nWben lt ls suggested that the use of\nfamily symbols Is undemocratic the\namateur In genealogy reminds us that\nWashington, John Adams, Ltvingston,\nJay and many another Revolutionary\nchampion of equal rights used a crest.\nFurthermore, there Is a tradition, at\nleast not disproved, that the most inveterate hater of monarchs, Oliver\nCromwell, was having his own family\ntree looked through for titled ancestors\nat the time of bis death.\nLINCOLN'S DISPOSITION.\nOrdinarily Cheerful, Il Held a Strata\nof Deep Meluucholy.\nHopeful and cheerful us he ordinarily,\nseemed, there was in Mr. Llucoln's disposition u strain of deep melancholy.\nThis was not peculiar to hiin alone, for\nthe pioueers as a race were somber\nratber than gay. Their UveB had been\npassed for generations under the most\ntrying physical conditions, near malaria\ninfested streams and where they breathed the polsou of decaying vegetation.\nInsufficient shelter, storms, tbe cold of\nwinter, savage enemies and the cruel\nlabor that killed off all but tlie hardiest\nof tbem had at the same time killed tbe\nhappy-go-lucky gayety of an easier\nform of life. Tbey were thoughtful,\nwatchful, wary; capable, Indeed, of\nwild merriment, but it has been said\nthat although a pioneer might lnugh he\ncould not easily be made to smile.\nLincoln's mind was unusually sound\nand sane aud normal. He had a cheerful, wholesome, sunny nature, yet be\nhad inherited the strongest traits of the\npioneers, and there was in him, moreover, much of the poet, witb a poet's\ncapacity for joy and pain. It ls not\nstrange thnt as he developed Into mnn-\ni hood, especlnlly when his deeper nature\nbegan to feel the stirrings of ambition\naud of love, that these seasons of depression and gloom came upon him\nwith overwhelming force.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Helen Nico-\nlay In St. Nicholas.\nTHE BARK OF TREES.\nA Mixed Costume.\nIt Is said of the late Lord Salisbury\nthat he once bad to dress at breakneck\nspeed for a levee nnd In the absence of\nhis valet plunged at a heap of things\nnnd threw tbem on as tbey enmo. He\nappeared at court ln tbe coat of the elder brethren of Trinity House, tbe trousers of a deputy lieutenant and a hat\not the royal archers. Putting on the\nfinishing touches before the mirror, he\nhung bis sword upon the wrong side\nand gartered himself about tbe wrong\nknee. He bad assumed a waistcoat\nr.ade ln days wheu he wns of less ample glrtb, bo that between the hem of\nthis garment and tbe waist of tbe trousers was a gap which all but himself\nobserved.\nNature's Provision I'or the Relief of\nthe Growing Plant.\nThe practical cultivator understands\nthat nature makes provision for getting\nrid of the bark of trees as the trunk increases In size. On the growth of the\npast season may be seen small olive\nspots. These are formations of cork.\nFrom year to year, in subsequent development, these little patches spread,\nreally eating their way through the\nbark. This ls the provision which nature makes for Dually rifting the bark\nln each species of plant. These cork\ncells have their own special lines of development, and tills ls the reason why\neach kind of tree has Its own particular\nbark. Tbe characteristics are bo prominent that clever observers con select\ndifferent kinds of trees by their bark\neven at midnight. As It is the evident\nintention of nature to get rid of old\nbark, lt ls a great help to the tree to assist nature ln this respect, and any\nwash or treatment which aids the\nplant in getting rid of lt ls a practical advantage. Soapy water wash or\nlye water ls useful, and even scraping\nhas been found of great advantage.\nIn a rough sort of way lime wash Is\nfrequently used, the only objection being the white and glaring color. It ts,\nhowever, the cheapest and tbe best of\nall bark treatment.\nTHE USEFUL YAWN.\nHew Cold Theory.\nProfessor Frederick Soddy of Glasgow university holds the theory that\ngold Is gradually disintegrating into\nother materials. Ilo has visited the gold\ndeposits of Western Australia and New\nZealand, and he expresses his conviction that ln all probability gold, like\nradium, ls at once the product of some\nother parent element and Is Itself\nchanging to produce \"offspring\" elements. Tho professor laments the inadequacy of bis resources ln tho way of\ngold upon wbicli to experiment nnd\npoints to the tons of gold perhaps disintegrating in the vaults of the Bauk of\nEngland.\nUnfamiliar.\nIt. Is said that a candidnto who was\nmore famous for bis Interest In sport\nlhan bis knowledge of politics was addressing a Scotch political meeting.\nJust to test the candidate's Ignorance\nn schoolmaster sent up a slip of paper\nasking bis opinion of tbe Decalogue.\nThe caudldate wus utterly puzzled\nand turned to some one on the platform\nand asked hlin what the Decalogue\nwns. The man on tbe platform, being\nsomething of a wag, whispered In his\nroply, \"Flogging in the army.\"\nThe candidate at once turned to the\nmooting and said, \"I would, If elected,\ncertainly do away with the Decalogue\nnt once, um, gentlemen, let me ask\nyou to write all questions In good,\nplain Scots language, for there are no\nforeigners here I\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094New Orleans Times\nDemocrat\nmis Lnng Ventilating Process Serves\na Doable Purpose.\nThe net of yawning Is distinctly beneficial ln two ways. In the flrst place\nIt serves the purpose of lung ventilation. Tbe lungs are not filled or exhausted by ordinary respiration. There\nls a certain quantity of air which physiologists call \"residual air\" left In the\nrecesses of the lungs after the ordinary\nrespiration. This In time becomes vitiated and affects the blood and, through\nIt, tbe nervous centers.\nTbo result Is a yuwn, wblcb Is really\na stretching of tho respiratory chamber\nto Its fullest capacity and the filling\nof It with freshly Inspired nlr which\ndrives the vitiated nlr out Yawning ls\nalso beneficial in bo far as lt opens,\nstretches and ventilates tbe vocal, nasal and auditory chambers In Immediate connection with tbe mouth.\nThe cracking sound often heard when\nyawning Is due to the stretching and\nopening of tbe eustachian tubes, which\nform a communication between the\nmiddle ear and the back of the throat.\nThe deafness which often accompanies\na cold is due to the congestion of these\ntubes.\u00E2\u0080\u0094London Hospital.\nHeroines, Ola and Ne-rr.\nMost modem beioines are married\nwomen, whereas the nice oneB ln\nShakespeare and in novels before 1800\nwere almost always unwedded maids.\nYou like Beatrice and Portia and,\nabove all things, Rosalind. You do not\nlose your heart to Lady Macbeth\n(though a flhe figure of a woman), and\nyou do not desire to compete with\nOthello ln the affections of Desdemona.\nThis may be a too nice morality, but to\nVictorian taste eveu widows, ln novels\nat least, come under tlie ban of tbe\nelder Mr. Weller. Nobody but Colonel\nEsmond ever cared for Lady Castle-\nwood, and Dobbin Is alone lu bis passion for Amelia.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Andrew Lang in London Post\nCost of London's Crimo.\nLondon ls paying the penalty paid\nby all large cities. Crime is Inside\nher gates. In round numbers ehe has\nto pay nearly $8,000,000 to keep criminals ln check, for that ls the sum paid\nout to her police, courts, prisons and\nprosecuting officers. It falls to Include\nstolen property, losses due to the Idleness of criminals, losses to Injured parties, etc\nSerious crimes, such as burglary,\nhousebreaking, counterfeiting, etc.,\nare Increasing.\nArrests are moro frequent than formerly, and each arrest adds to the expense and loss account of the city.\nEstimates put the bill of the clty'o expenses as high as (10,000,000.\nIn other words, each taxpayer or head\nof a household of five persons pays\n16.81 a year for London's crime. Nor\ndo these millions make up the total\nloss. There are the hundreds of thousands taken, consumed by the criminals,\nhidden away, lost or destroyed. Add\nthen to these the amounts paid by private parties to prevent burglary, etc.,\nwatchmen, caretakers, burglar alarms,\ndoor and window fastenings, safes, re\nvolvers, life protectors, dogs, etc., and\nono begins to get a fatrly good Idea of\nwhat are the losses due to crime ln a\nlarge city.\nA table prepared ln London puts the\npolice and courts down for $9,149,000,\nthe prisons for $583,980, lost property\nfor $1,216,625, loss of Injuries, assaults,\nfor $1,216,625, loss by Injuries, assaults,\nInals, etc., $1,167,960 or a total ot $13,-\n090,886. These aippalllng figures cover\noften only the well known Items.\nEdivnrd tlie ( tiniCssor.\nEdward the Confessor, llie lust king\nof England but one before the Norman\nconquest, wus so called becnuse of his\npiety, his meditative turn of mind and\nhis devotion to religious duties. He is\nsaid to huve been better fitted by character and natural temperament for the\nUfe of a Norman monastery than tor\n'bat of klug of EugUiud.\nA Sure Cure for Headache.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Bit\nlous headache, to which women are\nmore subject than men, becomes so\nacute In some subjects that they are\nutterly prostrated. The stomach re\nfuses food, and there is a constant\nand distressing effort to free the\nstomach from bile which has become\nunduly secreted there. { Parmelee's\nVegetable Pills are a speedy altera\ntlve, anil in neutralizing the effects\nof the intruding bile relieves the\npressure on the nerves which cause\nthe headache. Try them.\nIn British Columbia the dry season\naffected tho output of placer gold.\nTho Yukon continued to fall off, and\nwill do so until under moro favorable\nconditions the permanent forms of\nmining lower grade bodies of gravel\nare fully established. British Columbia and Ontario, since tlio development\nof mining at Cobalt, are now credited\nwith 98 per cent, of the silver produced in Canada.\n/larion Bridge, C. B., May DO. '02.\nI have hanmed MINARD'S L1NI\nIENT during the past year. It is\nIways the first liniment asked for\nere, anl unquestionably the best sel\nl\u00C2\u00BB- of all the different kinds of linl-\n*\u00E2\u0080\u0094.t I handle.\nNEIL FERGUSON.\nThe average income of beggars In\nPails is about $7.50 per week.\nElectricity will be in general use in\nSwitzerland as a motive power on the\nrailroads In a fow months.\nOnly those who have had experience\nan tell the torture corns cause. Pain\nwith your boots on, pain with' them\nff\u00E2\u0080\u0094pain night and day; but relief Is\nure to those who use Holloway's\norn Cure.\nA new smokeless cartridge Is about\no be Issued to French Infantry sol-\nlers.\nOver 2,200 locomotives were mnde\ny one firm ln the United States last\near.\nThe French army will be equipped\nlth a complete corps of urmored\nmotor cars.\nA kleptomania case In Pails when\nnvestlgated showed that a woman\n'lth a mania for coloring meer-\nchaum pipes had Btolen 2000 of them.\nPostponed.\nA bashful young couple who were evidently very much In love entered a\ncrowded Btreet car in Boston the other\ndny. \"Do you suppose we can squeeze\nin here?\" he asked, looking doubtfully\nat her blushing face.\n\"Don't you tblnk, denr, we bad better wait until we get home?\" was the\now, embarrassed reply.\nThe Clock.\nThe clock has a strange way of telling different talcs with the same face,\ntf It ls telling one man to hurry np, lt\ntells the next mnn who looks that there\nIs plenty of time.\nRealism.\nWhy ls the cow purple ta the picture!\nBecause the girl's parasol ls red.\nThe cow, In fact, is purple with rage.\nThis ls precisely what ls meant by\nrealism ln art\n/linard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia\nChatham Island, off the coast of\nEcuador, South America, abounds ln\ncats, every one of which is black.\nThese animals live In the crevices of\nthe lava formation near the const\nund subsist by catching fish and crabs\nInstead of rats and mice.\n\"Bought my Life for 86 Cents.'*\u00E2\u0080\u0094This\nwas one man's way of putting lt when\nhe had been pronounced Incurable from\nehronlc dyspepsia. \"It was a living\ndeath to me until I tried Dr. Von Stan's\nPineapple Tablets. Thanks to them today I am well, and I tell my friends I\nbought my life for 85 cents.\" 60 ln a\nbox\u00E2\u0080\u009480\n^5,000 bs paid to sny\nparson who proves that\nSunlight Sonp contains sny\ninjurious chemicals or any\nform of adulteration.\nis better than other soaps,\nbut is best when used in\nthe Sunlight way.\nSunlight Soap contains\nno injurious chemicals.\nSunlight Soap is pure\nsoap, scientifically made.\nEvery step in its mami'\nfacture is watched by an\nexpert chemist\nSunlight Soap saves\nlabor, and the wear of\nrubbing which common\nsoaps require in washing\nfabrics.\nYour money refunded by\nthe dealer from whom you buy\nSunlight Sosp if you find sny same\nfor complaint.\nlew Brother. Limited. Teronte\ni\nLast year 12,099 Gorman children\npaid visits to tlio clinic ns a result of\nthe movement for the free care of\nchildren's teeth\nMinard's Liniment Cures Burns, etc.\nIn Russia it is unlawful to give\nkisses in public. A kisB in tho street\nis penalized by a line of $3.75; nnd on\na street car, by a fine of $3.75; nnd\non a post card renders the sondor\nliable to a fine of $2.50.\nActors are never stranded in Russia,\nbocause when a mannger takes a company touring, ho must deposit with\ntho government sufficient money to\nbring all safely home.\nThe Pall of Rheumatic Pains.\u00E2\u0080\u0094When\na sufferer finds permanent relief ln such\na meritorious medicine as South American Rheumatic Cure, how glad he ls to\ntell lt. C.W.Mayhew, of Thamesvllle,\nOnt.. couldn't walk or feed himself for\nmonths\u00E2\u0080\u0094four years ago three bottles of\nthis great remedy cured him\u00E2\u0080\u0094not a pain\nsince\u00E2\u0080\u0094isn't that encouraging for rheumatic sufferers?\u00E2\u0080\u009482\nThe royal families of Swedon, Spain,\nand Italy all own lots in New York\nnnd King Edward ancl Emperor William are also holding property in the .\nAmerican metropolis.\nGesture language still exists in partsj\nof Australasia. Some tribe_ possess so-\nexcellent a code that it is almost as.\neliicii'ut as a spoken language.\nA 8PRING TONIC.\nmedicines.\n\"There Is, a singular Idea that prevails among many people that lf a little is a good thing more Is bettor.\" snld\na physician, \"and an lr ml\u00E2\u0080\u0094liable\namount of barm Is done. There nre\ncases where n little quinine does good,\nnnd tbe patient, Instead of going to a\nphysician and finding out how much he\nwants, buys a quantity at a drug store\nand takes so much that it ls a positivo\ndetriment When persons have been\nsick and obtained a prescription, tbey\nImagine they know just what to do the\nnext time they arc ailing nnd Increase\nthe dose, often with most disastrous\nresults. The careless use of medicine\nby those not familiar with Its consequences causes more trouble tban almost any other source of ailment to\nwhich the human body Is BUbject\"\nDr. Williams' Pink Pills Make Rich,.\nRed, Health-Giving Blood.\nCold winter months, enforcing closo ,\nconfinement in ovcr-houted, badly ventilated rooms\u00E2\u0080\u0094in tho home, in the ,\nshop, and in the school\u00E2\u0080\u0094sup the vi- \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\ntality of the strongest. The blood bo-\ncomes clogged with impurities, the>\nlivor sluggish, vho Li\u00E2\u0080\u0094 \"vs weakened,\nsleep is uot restliil\u00E2\u0080\u0094you wake just,\nas tired us when you wont to bed;,\nyou uie low-spirited, perhaps hove\nheadache and blotchy skin\u00E2\u0080\u0094that is the\ncondition of thousands ol peoplo overy\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0spring. It comes to all unless the,\nblood is fortified by a good tonic\u00E2\u0080\u0094by\nDr. Williams' Pink Pills. These pills,\nnot only banish this feeling but they\nguard against the more serious ailments wliich usually follow\u00E2\u0080\u0094rheumatism, nervous debility, anaemia, indigestion and kidney trouble. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are an ideal sprin\u00C2\u00A3\nmedicine. Evory doso makes new,\nrich, rod blood. Every drop of uew\nblood helps to strengthen tlio overworked norves. Overcomes weakness\nand drives the germs of disease from\nthe body. A thorough treatment\ngives you vim and energy to resist the\ntorrid horn of tho coining summer.\nMr. Mack A. Meuse, Sluico Point,\nN.S., say.. \"I was so completely run\ndown tnat I could hardly work. I de-\ncidod to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills,\nas I had hoard them highly spoken of,\nand a few boxes worked a great\noliango in my condition. I am again\nfeeling as woll and strong as evor I\ndid and can recommend the pills to all\nweak people.\"\nIt is a mistake to take purgatives\nin the spring. .Nature calls for a medicine, to build up tho wasted force\u00E2\u0080\u0094\npurgatives only weaken. It is a medicine to act on tho blood, not one to\nact on the bowels, which is necessary.\nDr. Williams Pink Pills are a blood\nmodicine\u00E2\u0080\u0094thoy mako pure, rich, red\nblood, and strengthon every organ of\nthe hody. 8old by medicine dealers\nor by mail pt 50 cents a box or six\nboxes for $2.50 from the Dr. Williams' wodicino Co., Brockville, Ont.\nW N U No. 678\n____i\n___________ THE ADVOCATE, VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA1.\n)0r\u00C2\u00ABjCer*3\u00C2\u00AB8KfX85)*X8\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BBK9\u00C2\u00BB^\nWESTERN CANADIAN EDITORS s\nA Series of Articles Describing their Lives, their Alms\nand their Influence,\n51\nM.E.NICHOLS.\nbaaoottcii'jsesi-Ci-KKiooooxioi.i\n........\n' '-.-';*.\n^,:^'jV'-:5\n:r:;\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n;f\\n. . \" .\n-\n. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Mk aB\n;\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 :;\n'i?-:W-tTf^t\n[.,;.\nJj\n:ferjj\nm I\n,.'' \u00E2\u0096\u00A0_\nBr\n,:-,\"\niL.\nw\nWW 'A\nM. E. NICHOLS.\nEditor-In Chief, Telegram, Winnipeg,\nCanada.\nThat the Canadian West is not on\nly the country of opportunity but tho\ncountry of youug meu, the prominent\npositions held by many in the Province of Manitoba, who are ln the\nfirst years of the fourth decade ol\ntheir lives afford ample evidence.\nNo more striking example could be\ngiveu than that of the success met\nWith by Mr. M. E. Nichols, President\nof the Telegram Printing Company\nand Editor-in-chief of the daily paper\npublished by that company. Mr.\nNlcholls is not a western mau In so\nfar aB years of residence may be\ncounted, but he is western in his\ntrend of mind, his virility, his energy,\nhis Independence of thought and fearlessness of expression unrestrained\nby the fact that he ls a loyal and\nleading exponent of the views of a\ngreat political party in Western Canada.\nMr. Nichols has only been a resident of the Canadian West for a\nshort time but his career and work\nare familiar to the readers of the\npublic press throughout the Dominion. There have been few Canadian\nParliamentary correspondents who\nhave contributed brighter or better\ninformal articles to the papers they\nrepresented In the Press Gallery at\nOttawa than Mr. Nichols during the\nnumerous sessions of the Dominion\nHouso in which he represented the\nToronto Telegram. To Mr. Nichols\nmay be given the credit of Introducing into Canadian parliamentary correspondence the bright style which\nIn now demanded, containing not only departmental news, quasi-editorial\ncomment and picturesque description, but also the personal note as to\nthe parliamentary characters that\nhad hitherto appeared in the public\neye of the Dominion merely through\na verbatim or curtailed report of a\nspeech. The clever, racy communications of Mr. Nichols to the Toronto\nTelegram during the Parliamentary\nsessions at Ottawa became a feature\nof that paper during the years he\nwas the Ottawa correspondent of\nthat newspaper.\nUpon Mr. Nichols becoming Edttor-\nln-chlef and the principal editorial\nwriter on the Toronto World the\nsame clever brightness distinguished\nhis style that had given him his reputation as a special correspondent.\nIn close touch for years with Canada's greatest Parliamentarians and\npublic men on the vantage ground o*\nspecial correspondence nt the Dominion capital, compelled ln tho course.\nof his calling to follow the prncress\nof measures of the eron'ost moment\nIn their passage and In th\u00C2\u00BB dohntos\nof parliament. Mr. Nichols obtntnod\na polities] nnd personal knowlodejp\nof nubile affairs that, h-i served him\nweP Rq nn prtlrnrlnl writer.\nMr. NlcholB' ability - was recognized by that astute Parliamentarian and newspaper man Mr. W.\nF. Maclean, M.P., President of the\nWorld Publishing Company, and a\nfew years ago he was tendered the\nposition of managing editor of \"The\nToronto World.\" His success ln\nthat position as editor of the leading\nIndependent Conservative dally ln\nthe publishing centre of Canada Is a\nfeature of Canadian journalism and\nattracted the attention of the lending\nConservatives of Manitoba and the\nshareholders of the Winnipeg Telegram.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Mr. Nichols shrewdly saw the opportunities offered a young man as\nmanaging editor of a great Conservative organ In Western Cnnndn nnd\nthe desirability of financial Investment In such nn enterprise and he\nbecame Editor-in-chief of tbe Telegram and President of the Telegram\nPrinting Company. In the few\nmonths that he has had editorial\ncharge the evidence of his personality and hlB newspaper acumen has\nbecome apparent and the Toleernm\nIs considered one of the brightest\nns well as one of the best Informed\ndally papers published In the Dom\nlnlon.\nMr. Nichols la a yonng man to\nhold such a responsible nnd Imnort\n,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0<>\nA eholos ot which ws offer te the Individual as.\noerins the larsast Member of subscriptions during IM ts\nTHE BUSY MAN'S MAGAZINE\nUi\u00C2\u00BBr# arm ni\u00C2\u00BBny oth-_.ii. Et-h-t oomfwtltor ***\u00E2\u0096\u00A0_\u00C2\u00BB win on:\n\u00C2\u00BBlv\u00C2\u00BBn on \u00E2\u0080\u00A2very \u00E2\u0096\u00A0rbacrlptiou Ulttn, \u00C2\u00ABr*rr oa\u00C2\u00AB kwtng p*ld fer\nrnntintN \u00C2\u00BBr\u00C2\u00BB * careful \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Uotion from\npublication* of thtmoTld. It !\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 -poblitb\u00C2\u00ABd by tb* propria\nllko any oiln\nnu publication* oT tlio world. It ia pi\nr-Twart) and Metal, Canadian Maonl\n- . .\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u0094MM Who Br* Cun ml a* \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 leading publli\n8ubs-.f-T.pt ton* ara not difficult to Moura- a bni-l. ulerk in Ontario took iff la \u00E2\u0080\u00A2___\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 mak by\nwriting to hia frlanda.\ntora of The Canadian Oroctir, Har-Iwart. and Metal, Canadian MaoLlnary.* Tlie Dry*\nBariawand other auar-tufu) paijera -and Vho ara Canada^a leading publiahi\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\"\u00C2\u00A7\u00C2\u00A3_\n\"THE BOW MAN'S M-GA-INI ta tha beat I hav, .vtr had tha olaaaura of rM_lu.\"\nm A '\n\u00C2\u00A7 abwwjlptjon $1 p year payable Ip\n' Advanoe.\n_\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB\nTel, Bi405>\ntheoity which ii destined to be the\nbiggest part ot Vancouver lu population\ninthefat--.\n|\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB_\u00C2\u00AB__ll\u00C2\u00BBl*\u00C2\u00BB*W\u00C2\u00BB\"\u00C2\u00BBV-SSSSSsssss\u00C2\u00ABssss^\ny*KO0Dy\u00C2\u00ABr\u00C2\u00AB, B.C., KatM. 1\u00C2\u00AB0o.\n*_\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n*pm\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Pr*\n\"THE MARKET QUESTION\nThe agitation fur a change in the site\nft\u00C2\u00BB the proposed City Market from\nWestMi-ster avenue to Cordova street\n\u00C2\u00BBhonld not meet with any recognition.\nIt ls of vital Interest to the cititeus of\nMA, pleasant to see that the agitation\n(does not gain any force and thay should\nbe alive to the situation; alio, watch\nthe attitude of their representatives ln\nihe Council opon tbe question.\nWhen the people of the oity bave\n(decided br vote where the Market lite\nahould be, it la strange tbat a handful\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2f agitators should have the nerve to\nposaa (forward and endeavor to set aside\ntbe plebiscite.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Tho slowness of the Market Committee which has moved forward no faster\nthan it had to townrd building, ma}\naccount for the restlessness and agitation. Certainly tbe Committee gives\nthe impression of negligence and\nInsincerity. The work on the Market\nBuilding should now bo well advanced.\nThat Cordova sti est, near the vaudeville theetro, is the hcort-of-t he-city\nnnd most oonveniont for all the people,\nla pure nonsense. In a few years Cordova ;etrect will be what Water street\nli today.\nt&ovx about the people who are' to\n-bring produce, fU , to the Market?\nMnst 'tbey be complied to tne\ntbe U. P. K., and ths tamline\non OirJova street only for transportation. The site chosen\u00E2\u0080\u0094at foot of\nJVestmlnster avenuo on Mt. Pleasant\ntide of False Creek\u00E2\u0080\u0094hoi the advantage\nfit roads, 'tramline, Great Northern Railway .find is aooe\u00C2\u00ABsuble by water. Boats\nfsa como direct from tbe Fraser rivor\nand unload at tbe Market; the freight\noats of tbe Loin Island Elcotric Railway\ncan reeoh the Market easily; the Great\nNorthern can unload farm products at\nthe doors; the farmers oan drive rlgbt\nlo the Market via Weitmlnstor rood and\nWestminster avenue. The C. P. K.,\ncau build a track to the new Market\u00E2\u0080\u0094it\nbeing the 00 X means of trail, por -alio 1\n\u00C2\u00ABhich does not at present lead direct to\ntbe selected site.\n1\n.The City Council should take immediate notion to pnt a stop to the agitation\njwhich bae been started, and the Market\nCommittee should attend to business\nnae expeditiously.\nMt. Pleasant dtiaens should be alive\nto the interest of this growing part of\n\"Tbe Oandian Inter-Ocean,\" Vol. 1,\nKo. 1, ii, the latest publication received\non oar exchange table. It is published\nat Winnipeg, and its aim is to be a\nNational Monthly, aud judging from its\ncontents it will be such . a publication.\nThe editor is O. H. Mackintosh. Them\nare prominent names among the con\ntribute-, for example: Hon. R. Loinieux,\nEon. R. McBide, Hon. Hugh J. Macdonald, Rufus Pope, H M. Ami M. A.,\nBon. G. W. Ross, and many others.\nThere sbonld he a club organized on\nMt. Pleasant for the purpose of advancing and protecting tbe interests of this\nlocality. There are plenty of business\nsnd professional men and other men of\nstanding to make such a clnb or association a sueoe\u00C2\u00ABs.\nIt's Some Trouble\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094to secure Fresh Eggs at this time of the year and dependable ones cost\na little more. But we make It our business to secure the best, and you\nwill always find them jnst as good as we say they are. Fresh Eggs 8O0\na dozen Good Cooking Eggs at Siie.\nFresh Creamery Butter, 2 for 666.\nBARGAINS IN FURNITURE.-IO^ off for cash.\n5T W/ftllarfi, We'to-hute- avenue ft\no lo TV ailttWC Harris street. TeleDhone\nHarris street. Telephone 1366.\nss^s srii *** ssjs t*j* *** tap *a* m*i *** *** f***\u00E2\u0084\u00A2~ mp\nTHE\nGASH\nSTORE\nC. O. C. F.\nThe Canadian Order of Ohosen\nFriends, Vancouvor Council No. 2Ua,\nMt. Pleasant, will bold their next\nmeeting on May Bint, instead of\nMay 24th. A full attendance of the\nmembers is requested as thoro is very\nImportant business to transact, as to\nthe continued success of tbe lodge.\n-NOTICE.\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\"The Advooate\" wishes any earnings\nness in delivery reported to the OMot\ntelephone B1405.\nWe miss to-day's oppotunities beoause\nonr eyes are swollen with the tears shed\nover yesterday's failure.\nBorne see very little good in life,\nbecause they are always looking for the\nworst of it.\nWe fail to see our neighbor's virtues,\nbecause we spend our time searching\nfor his faults.\nOrders\nfor\n-NOTIOE.-\nPersonal notices of visitors on\nnt. Pleasant, or of Mt. Pleasant\npeople who visit other cities, also all\nlocal social affairs are gladly received\nby \"The Advocate.\"\n|Why She Did.\nWhy did she coldly answer \"No\"?\nBecause.\nWhy, when she stood and watched him\ng*>.\nDid she permit her tears to flow?\nBecause.\nWhy did she kneol, wheu it was late,\nBewailing her unhappy fate\nAnd vowing it was only hate\nFor bim that had oppressed her so?\nBecause\nWhy did she toss awake tbat night?\nBeoause.\nWhy did she hope be never might\nAgain intrude upon her sight?\nBecause.\nWhy was it, wben he came next day,\nThat to bis arms sbe flew to lay\nHer face against his breast and say:\n\"My prince I My king I My heart's\ndelight I\"\nBecause.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Chicago Record-Herald.\nSee When Your Lodge Meets\nMONDAY.\nThe 2d and 4 tb Mondays of tbe month\nCourt Vaucouver, I. O. F., meets at\n8 p. m.\nTUESDAY.\nMt. Pleasant Lodgo No. 18, I.O.O.F.\nmeets at 8 p. ni.\nTHURSDAY.\n. Vanconver Oonnoil No. 31 ta, Can-\nadian Order of Chosen Friends meets\ntbe 3d and 4th Thursdays of the month.\nFRIDAY.\nAlexandra Hive No 7, Ladies of tbe\nMaccabees holds its regular meetings on\nthe 3d and 4th Mondays of the month.\nCome and see us\nOur stock is fresh and of\nthe best. \"Best\" in all\nthat goes to make things\n\"best.\"\nSmith\nTha\nGrocer\nJunction of Westminster Road and Ave.\n'Phone 3068.\n*************\nSUMMER\nHATS\nDAINTY MUSLINS and\nDIMITIES.\nCrnms Best Prints.\nMt. Pleasant's First-class\nDry Goods Store\nW.W. Merklev\nROY-.1. Bank of Canada Building\nCorner Seventh and Westminster\nAvennes, Mt. Pleasant.\n*00000000000**0000*000*000\n*00*0000**0*****00*0000*00\nnuiRs\nthat famous\nBREAD\nThe Bread that is Good to Eat.\nHandled by all the Leading Grocers\nor delivered at your door.\n24 Loaves for $ I cash.\nMUIR'S BAKERY\n'Phone 448.\n00000000*00000000000000*00\n***00000000000*00000000000\nHome-builders\n will find it to their advantage\nto obtain from\nw Great-West\n** LIFE\na copy of their oironlar\nA WISE PROVISION\nwhich explains how a small\nmonthly payment will provide for the repayment of\nloan and interest, and how,\nin the event of the death of\nthe borrower, the home will\nbe left free of encumbrance.\nGeo. H. HALSE,\nMANAGER.\n4-26 Richards St. Vancouver, B.C.\nWork\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0#..*.\nat\nttf he Advocate\"\nTickets, programs, bnsintes oaidi,\nenvtdops, let-rbeads, milk tickets,\nla (set, then is nothing too small\noc top large in oommoroial printing\nfor us. Orders solicited.\n\u00C2\u00A3444 Westminster avenue.\nMT. PLEASANT.\nWoman's Trials.\nThe bitter trail la a woman's life Is to\nbe childless. Who can tell bow bard tbe\nstraggle taay have been ere she learnt to\nresign herself to her lonely lot? The ab\net thU link to bind nsrltal life\ntogether, the abtenee of this one pledge\nte mutual sOeetioa Is a common disappointment, Many unfortunate couples\nbesoms estranged thereby. Even lf the\nIM*\nestranged thereby. Even If tbey\nSo out drill apart, one may read the whole\nextent ef their disappointment in the eyes\nof each a ahlldleet couplo whon they rest\noa the children of others. To them the\nlargest family does not seem too numerous.\nIa many esses of barrenness or childlessness tbe obstacle to child-bearing le\neasily removed by theeurs of weakneeson\n* >f the woman. Dr.\n(script!\nrestoring health and frultf ulness to many\n1 part of the woman. Dr. Pierce's Pavorlte Prescription has been the means of\nrestoring health and frultf ulness to many\na banaa woman, to tbe great Joy of tbe\nhousehold. In other, but rare eases, the\nobstruction to the boartng of children hu\nbeen found to be of a surgical character,\nbut easily \u00E2\u0080\u0094movable hy painless operative\ntreatment at Ibe Invalids' Hotel and Sur-\nK' al Institute. Buffalo, N. Y.. over which\n. PUree of the \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Favorite Prescription *\ntatse presides. In all eases where ehll*\nina are desired and are absent, an effort\nshould be mods to And out the real cause,\nsines It Is generally so easily removed by\nproper treatment\nIn all the various weaknesses, displace*\nRente, prolapses, Inflammation and de-\nlltatlng, catarrhal drains and In all\nousness and debility, Dr.\nrite Prescription If ths most\nesses of nervi\ntjeree's Favorite Proscription li the most\nefficient remedy that can possibly bs used.\nIt bas to Its credit hundreds of thousands\not sores \u00E2\u0080\u0094mere In fact than any ether\nremedy nut op for tale through druggists.\nsepeeiaHv for woman's use. Thn Ingredients ef whleh tbe \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Favorite Pndcrlptlon \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nIs composed have received the most\npositive endorsement from the leading\nmedical writers on Materia MeiUcn of all\nthe several schools of proetloe. All the\nIngredients ere printed in plain gngUsh\nen tbe wrapper enclosing tbe bottl*\n \"\" msf'\n_ _ay know exactly wbat\naba is ttklnj. Dr. Pierce takes his pa-\nfamous medlebte may know exactly wbat\nsbe Is taking. Dr. Pierce takes his pa-\nUesits Jato his full confidence, which he\noan.affotu to do as the formula after\nwhUih Ibe \"Pavorlte Prescription\" I*\ngtWgjrlll bear the most carrtiil exaav\n' WrTFisree's Pleasant Pellets sie the\nGut Youk Flowkiuno\nShrubs 8 Perennial\n****** PLANTS ******\nFRO JI\nItfAAoxUa*. The DAHLIA\ni-wccicr, SPECIAUST\nNursery $ Greenhouses, corner of\nFifteenth and Westminster avenues.\nMt. PLEASANT CHURCHES.\nBaptist.\nJunction of Westminster rood and Westminster avenue. SERVICES at 11 s. m.,\nand 5:3d p.m.; Sunday School at 2:30 p.m.\nMbtuodist.\nCorner ol Nin i snd Westminster avenuos.\nHKRVK'KR sl 11 a. m\u00E2\u0080\u009E ind 7 p. in.; Sunday\nSchool tad Bible I'ltn 3:90 p.m. It.v. A. E.\nHe'thsrlnglon, II. A., U. P., Pastor.\n-\"urionaie 123 Eleventh avenue, west. Tele-\n'-oat B1249.\nPresbyterian.\nCornsr Ninth; avenue tnd Quebec street\nSERVICES st 11 \u00C2\u00AB. in..snd 7:30 p. ro.; Sunday\nSchool tl 2:30 p.m. Kuv.'leo.A.Wilson, II.A.\nI'tiior. Mtnte cornsr of Eighth tvtnus snd\nOntario slrett. Ttl. 10M.\nSt Michael b, f Anglican).\nCornsr Ninth avsnue tnd Prince Kdwtrd\n.irsoi. 8EUVIOES tt II \u00C2\u00AB. 111., nnd 7: 311 p.m..\nHoly Communion lit tnd 3d Hiindays In etch\nmonth alter morning prsycr, 2d snd 4th Sun\nlays ttl 1. in. Sunday Bchool tl 2:30 p.m.\nRev. a. If. Wilson, Rector.\nRectory 372 Thirteenth tvonae, cast. Tela-\nphone 1117119.\nADVCNTI8T8.\n.dvent christian Church (not 7|U dty Ad-\ninltsta), Ssrsnlh avenue, nesr Westminster\ntvtnuc. Services 11 a.m., tnd 7:80 p.m.,\nandty School tt 10 a. in. Young peoples'\nsociety ol Loytl Workers of Christian Endsa-\nvor mer ti every Sunday evening al 0: .3 o'clock.\nPrayer-meeting Wednesdty nigbtstl8o'c!ock.\nReorganized Obvkob or .Txsus Christ\nol Utter Day H\u00C2\u00ABin ., 2M5 Westminster ave-\nuns. Rorvirestt 8o'clock every Sunday eve.\nDinghy Elder J. H. Utility; Hundty Bchool at\n7 o'clock. Prayer-meeting every Wednesday\nevening at\u00C2\u00AB o'clock.\nWESTERN CANADA'S\nIndustrial\n*** Exhibition\nand Agricultural Pair.\nW j n ni peg\nJuly 23d to 25th, 1906.\nThe Farmers' Annual Summer Holiday.\nThe Largest Exhibition of Live-stock\nin Western Canada.\n$800.00\noffered in Prizes for What.\nInteresting Butter-making Competitions\nopen to Amateurs aud also Professionals.\nThe Grandest- Collection of Art,\nArt Treasures, aud School Exhibits\never got together in the West.\nTho Carnival in Venice and\nTho Knakenshue Air-ship\namong the Special' Attractions.\nEntries close July 7th.\nCheap Excursions on all lines\nFor Entry Blanks, eto , eto., apply to\nG. H. Greig, President.\nB. J. Hughes, Seo.-Treas.\nA. W. Bell, General-Manager.\nnovelty and are meeting .with a good\nBlack velvet ribbon is enjoying a distinction it haa not attained before in\nmany seasons. It will be very extensively employed for the trimming of\ngowns and accessories, and in small\nknots, loops, bows or rosettes, it will\nserve to relieve and give character to the\nmonotony of a one tone or nout\u00E2\u0080\u0094il-tinted toilette. It also finds a plaoe on f osh-\nionable hats in a supplementary role.\nColored velvet ribbons are employed to a\nlarge extent, but at present blacks are\napparently In the lead Some of the\nlatest coat of black chiffon taffeta are\ntrimmed on revers, collar and cuffs\nwith black velvet ribbon ,and have a\nlarge bow with very long ends, of a\nvery broad width of same, on the front\nAdvertize in the \"Advocate.\"\nWoman's\nRealm.\nEvery preparation is being made for\na big trade in broadcloths.\nThe crowns of hats are receiving\nmuoh attention this season.\nPompadour silk covers some of the\nsmartest carriage sunstados.\nPlaited or check shirts are\nworn with plain cloth pony jackets.\nSuede lisle gloves are gaining in\npopularity as the seasons advances.\nIncreased showings are being mado\nof silk petticoats trimmed iu lingerie\nstyle.\nJeweled buttons and ornaments, with\nan oriental richness 'aje muoh in ovi-\nThe Cheapest Place in the City, .de'\u00E2\u0080\u0094u.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0The coat shirt, a novelty of the season, has sold well throughout the coun\ntry.\nValenciennes, baby Irish and\nbatiste insertionst are strongly in evidence.\n. with wash suits, the washable gingham petticoats will be looked upon witb\nfavor.\nYokes ard very prominent in waists\nof all descriptions, excepting in tbe\ntailored effects.\nVoile of fine but heavier weave, more\none he twine order, will be good property for fall. r\nHand painted parsoleare a charming\nPROGRESS.\nSome time ago there was a notable\nautomobile procession in the city of Buffalo, N.Y. It was notable for its size, and\nalso for the fact that it was entirely com.\nposed of automobile wagons (like that\nin the cut above), built to distribute\nthe .advertising literature of the World's\nDispensary Medical Association, proprietors and manufacturers of Dr. Pierce's\nmedicines. In many a town and village\nDr. Pierce'a automobile has been the\npioneer horseless vehicle. These wagons,\nsent to every important section of the\ncountry, are doing more than merely\nadvertise Dr. Pierce's Remedies\u00E2\u0080\u0094they\nare pioneers of progress, heralds of the\nautomobile age.\nAnd this is iu keeping with the record\nmade by Dr. Pierce and his famous pre.\nparations, which have always kept in\nthe front on their merits. Dr. Pierce's\nGolden Medical Discovery is still the\nleading medicine for disorders and die.\nesses of the stomach and digestive and\nnutritive systems, for the purifying of\nthe blood and healing of weak lungs.\nWomen place Dr. Pierce's Favorite\nPrescription in the front of all put-up\nmedicines specially designed for women's\nuse. The wide benefits this medicine\nhas brought to women have been well\nsummed up in the words \" // mates tvtat\nwomen strong and sick women well.\"\nThe reputation of Dr. Pierce's Pleas*\nant Pellets ss a safe and effective laxative for family use is international.\nIt may be asserted without fesr of contradiction that no other firm or company\nengaged in the vending of put-up medicines can rank with th. World's Dispensary Medical Association, either in tba\nopinion of the medical profession or of\nthe intelligent public. The Invalids'\nHotel and Surgical Institute, which is\nconnected with the \"World's Dispensary,*' is alone sufficient to prove this\nsupremacy. Here is a great modern\nhospital, always filled .with patients,\nwhere every day successful operations\nare performed on men and women whose\ndiseases demand the aid of surgery. No\nhospital in Buffalo is better equipped,\nwith respect to its modern appliances, or\nthe surgical ability of its staff. Dr. R. V.\nPierce, the chief consulting physician of\nthis great institution, has associated with\nhimself nearly a score of physicians,\neach man being a picked man, chosen\nfor his ability in the treatment and cure\nof soma special form of disesse.\nThe oner that Dr. Pierce makes to\nmen snd women suffering with chronic\ndiseases of a free consultation by Utter,\nis really without a parallel. It places\nwithout cost or charge the entire resources of a great medical institute at\nthe service of the sick. Such en offer is\nuot for one moment to be confounded\nwith those offers of \" free medical advice\"\nwhich are made by people who are not\nphysicians, cannot and do not practice\nmedicine, aad are only saved from prosecution by artfully wording their adver\nReal Estate!\nSOME GOOD BUYS-\na Lots, each 88x130, all kinds of fruit,\nlarge barn; 6-roomed house; price\n$3,300; terms\nFine Orchard and Chicken Ranch on\nTwentieth aveuue, 4 lots, lots\n60x188, house of 4 rooms. Price\n$3.000; terms.\n7-roomed House, lot 4%xl80, Eighth\navenue; price f 1.860.\nDouble corner, (3 lots), cleared, on Fifth\nand Manitoba; prioe fl. BOO.\nTwo lots, on corner, Tenth avenue, all\ncleared; price f 1.000.\n12.300 buys a New Modern Houae\nof 7 rooms on Fifth avenue, forms\neasy. Value good.\nDouble corner on Tenth avenue, cleared,\nfine location. Price f 1.000.\nHouse of 5 rooms, electrio light; bath\nond all conveniences; FINE\nORCHARD. Price f2.100; f760\ndown and easy terms. Situated on\nEighth aveuue.\nCottage of 6 rooms, electric light, and\nall conveniences; situated on Eighth\navenue, east. Price f 1.800; $600\ndown and terms.\n2-Btoroy Residenoe on Sixth avenue,\nlarge houso, beautiful lawn, fruit.\nTerms. Prioe $8,360.\nHouse of 9 rooms, Eighth avenue; fine\norchard, lot 149x128; prioe $3,260.\nOash $1,160.\nLots on Fourteenth avenne, near St.\nCatherines, for $160 eaoh; terms.\nOno-balf Acre, (6 lots), cleared and\nfenced, 8-roohi house, chicken\nhonse, on James street, South Vancouver ; price $900. Very easy terms\n10 lots on Twenty-fourth avenue,\n88xl22>^ feet. Corner lots on\nOntario street, $700; 7 lots Nos. 7, 8,\n8, 10, 11, 13,$200each, No. 13 corner\nlot $360. These lots are partly\ncleared. Very easy terms\nHouse of 5-roomn, Eighth avenue;\nelectric light, bath; lot 33x120.\nPrice $3,000.\nStore on 28-ft. lot, on Westminster avenue; building rented; flue location,\nnear Ninth avenue. Prioe $8,600.\nTerms.\nHouse of 7 rooms, corner Lansdowne\navenue and Scotia street; lot 60x130.\nPrice $g.00fl\nLot 86x133 on Westminster avenue;\ntwo-storey building, in fine conn\ntion; leased for 8 years; title n\u00C2\u00BB.\nfeot. Price ft*\"*\n8-roomed Cottage on Gordov*\neast; trees and flower giudon-\nlovely home $8.7.1\n6 Lots, cleared and plowed, William aud\nPark Drive; on cnrlino. Easy terms\n $450 each\n6 Lots on Grant street\u00E2\u0080\u0094Urnuilviow-\noverlookiog the city; very choioe\nlots. Terms $8,860}\nDouble Corner\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nWestmiuster avenue, Mt. Pleasan ,\n$7,000. The best corner left on\nthe Hill.\nGood Investment\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n4 Houses on Ninth, avenue- II\nrented; $4.aoo. Terms.\nDESIREABLE PROPERTY ON\nGRANDVIEW.\nBeautifully Situated Resibential\nLcit on Burrard street; $1,800.\nList your lots and property\nwith\nMrs. R.Whitney,\n2444 Westminster ave.\nMt. PLEASANT.\nTelephone 111405.\nTHE ADVOCATE\nv!*ts*t*** mja mj**tfe*^**7'* *^*mf**7>t mft******\nIs Issued\nin the interest\nof lit. Pleasant\n_ South Vancouver.\n\"The Advocate\" gives all the Local News of Mc. Pleasant from\nweek to week for $1 00 per year; six months 60c. An interesting\nSerial Story is always kopt running; the selections in Woman's\nRealm will always be fonnd full interest, to up-to-date women; tho\nmiscellaneous itmiis are always bright, entertaining and inspiring.\nNew arrivals on Mt. Pleasant will become raedily informed of the\ncommunity and more quickly interested in local happenings if\nthey subscribe to \"The Advocate.\"\n2\n5\nt'scments so that they give the Impression thst thev are physicians without\nmaking the culm to be licensed.\nThose who write to Dr. Pierce, chief\nconsulting physician to the Invalids'\nHotel snd Surgical Institute, Buffalo.\nN. Y., may do so witb the assurance that\nthey will receive not only the advice of\na competent physician, out tha advice\nof a physician whose wide experience\nin the treatment and cure of disease, and\nwhose sympathy with hutnan suffering\nleads him to take a deep, personal interest in all those who seek his help and\nthat of his sssociste staff of specialists.\nDr. Pierce's Medical Adviser (in paper\ncovers), 1008 pages, is sent free on receipt of ji one-cent stamps, or 50 stamps\nfor the cloth-bound volume, to pay ex.\npease of customs and mailing only. Ad.\ndwssDj. R.V. Pierce, Buffslo, N. Y. ,\nBUSINESS NOTICE.\nLocal Advertising 10c a lino eaoh issue.\nDisplay Advertising $1.00 per inoh\nper month.\nNotices for Churoh and Society Entertainments, Leotures, etc., wheke\nTHE OBJECT IB TO RAISE MONET\nwill bo charged for.\nAll Advertisements are run regularly\nand charged for until ordered they\nbe discontinued.\nTransient Advortizors must pay in\nadvance.\nNotions ol Births, Mnrriages.snd Deatbef\npubliRhod free of charge.\n3.\nArgyle House\nThe Big Bargain Dry Goods Store of B. O.\nBig Removal\nSale!\nU_5f\u00C2\u00B0 Day by: Day the big crowds come and buy, and\ngo away satisfied that they had got the best they could\nbuy for the money. Just read these prices :\nLndies' Silk Bolts at \"half price; colors cardinal, navy, sky, white, blaok,\nmyrtln and brown. ,.\nLadies' Silk Belts, worth 40c for 80o each.\nSummer Hats; colors cardinals, pink, buttercup, cream, white, sky and\nblack, worth 40c for 35o a yard\nLadies' Piqne^nits, worth $6 and $6.50 for $4.50 eaoh.\nWhite Chock Dress Muslin, 35 inches wide, worth IOo for 1%o,\nWhite Fancy Stripe Dress Muslin, worth 10c for 60 a yard.\nDouble-faced White Satin Ribbon, worth 10c for 5o a yard.\nSatin Duchess and Taffeta Ribbon, worth IOo for 7)^c a yard.\nBig reductions in Curtain Nets and Loco Curtains.\nMonsseline de Soie for trimming. Ladies' Pique Suits at cost.\nJ. Horner,\nmm**. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 , /\nAOOWestntlnsterAve.Ow- Carnegie Library.\nMt. Pleasant Lodges.\nI. O. O. F.\nMt. Pleasant Lodge N o. 19 meets every\nTuesday at 8 p. ni, in Oddfellows Hall\nWestminster avenue, Mt. Pleasant.\nSojourning brethren cordially invited\nto attend.\nNoble Grand\u00E2\u0080\u0094G. W. Jamieson.\nRecording Secretary\u00E2\u0080\u0094Frank\nTrimble.cor. Ninth ave. A West min 'r rd.\nI. O. F.\nCourt Vancouver 1888, Independent\nOrder of Foresters meets 2d and 4th\nMondays of eaoh month at- 8 p. ni., in\nOddfellows' Hnll.\nVisiting brethren always weloome.\nChief Ranger\u00E2\u0080\u0094A. Pengelly.\nRecording Secretary\u00E2\u0080\u0094M. J. Orehnn,\n814 Princess street, City.\nFinancial Secretary\u00E2\u0080\u0094J.B.Abernethy\nAddress: Care \u00E2\u0080\u009413Wostmluster uvenue\nLADIES OF THE MACCABEES.\nAlexandra Hive No. 7, holds regnl*.\nRoviow 2d an., lth Mondays of each\nmonth in Knights of Pythias Hnll\nWestminster avenue.\nVisitiug Ladies always welcome.\nLady Commander\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mrs. N. Pettipiece,\n25 Tenth avenue, east.\nLady Record Keeper\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mis. J. Maitir\nNinth avenue.\nCANADIAN ORDER OF CHOSE1.\nFRIENDS.\nVanconver Council, No. 211a, nieot\nevery 2d and 4th Thursdays of enol'\nmonth, in I. O. O. F., ,Hall, West\nminster avenne.\nSojourning Friends nlways welcome\nH. W. Howes, Chief Councillor.\n393 Tenth ave , east.\nMiss A. Chambers, Recorder,\n2228 Westininstcravenuc. Tel. 760.\nCORRECT ENGLISH,\nHOW TO USE IT.\nA Monthly Magazine devoted to the\nUse of English. Josephine Turck\nBaker, Editor.\n$1 a, year; IOo for Sample Oopy. Agents\nWanted. Evanston, I11.,'U. S. A.\nPartial Contents for this Month.\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCourse in English for the Beginnor;\ncourso in English for the Advanced\npupil. How to Increase One's Vocabulary. The Art of Conversation. Should\nand Would: how to nse them. Pronunciation. Correct English in the Homo.\nCorrect English in the School. Business English for the Business Man.\nStudies in English Literature.\nE. & J. HARDY & CO.\nCo_pant, Financial, Press and\nAdvertisers' Agents.\n80 Fleet, St., London, B.C., England\nColonial Business a Specialty.\nTHE ADVOCATE\nis only $1.00 a year,\n50o for 6 months,\n25c for 1) months.\nGet your work done at the\nGlasgow Barber Shop\n2 doors from Hotel\nFrank Underwood, Proprietor.\nBATHS\u00E2\u0080\u0094Bath room fitted witb Porcelain Bath Tub aud aU modern\nconvcuieuces.\n60 YEARS'\nEXPERIENCE\nTrade Marks\nDesigns\nCopyright* Ac.\nAnyone fonning a sketch and -oacrlptlon may\n7 aacwrtaln our oiilntnn free wfieihor an\nmn is prohablf patentable. Communlca*\noor opinion free %\nihly patentable, c\nctlrcunlldontlal. If\n, Oldest ijioncjr tot\nqutckljr aseortnln\nInTontlnn Is probably patan.\t\ntionn strictly ronOdontlal. Handbook on t'\u00C2\u00BBumu\nuti.\nreoclTt\nsunt free. Oldest suonry for -.ecurlnffpatei\nPatents taken tlirouvli Munn X Co. ra\ntptcial natter, without ohanta. In the\nScientific American.\nA hsndioinelr Uln-trstsd weakly. I.smost dr.\n-illallon of uny sclenllfln Jnurnsl. Tonus. 13 .\nrenri four monttii. 81. Bold by all nowsdealers.\nnrsncti Offlce. _I r Bt, Washington. D. tt\nDO IT NOW 1\u00E2\u0080\u0094If not already a Subscriber fo \"Tho Advocate\" become one\nnow. Only $1 for 18 months.\n*$\u00C2\u00A3$[ Kitchens\nKitchen drudgery is reduced to a minimum when gas is nsed for fuel.\nIt takes only HALF THE TIME to prepare meals as compared with\ncoal aud wood ranges, and the kitchen is COOL and COMFORTABLE\nto work in.\nTelephone 31\n\u00C2\u00BBud our representative will call, measure your promises and give\nyou an estimate of cost of installing gas.\nVancouver Gas Company.\nOptics : corner of Carrall and Hastings streoti.\n\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00C2\u00BB ******** ***** am \u00C2\u00BB*,*\u00C2\u00BB-,\n\u00C2\u00A3\t"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "Mt_Pleasant_Advocate_1906-05-26"@en . "10.14288/1.0311566"@en . "English"@en . "49.261111"@en . "-123.113889"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Vancouver, B.C. : Mrs. R. Whitney"@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 . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives."@en . "Mt. Pleasant Advocate"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .