"ee74b6a7-141e-4fbf-8b8a-ef4531b815e9"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "2016-04-21"@en . "1907-06-29"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/mpadvocate/items/1.0311591/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " sant\nJUL3-\n/c-\nDevoted to ths interests of Mt. Pleasant and South Vancouver.\nit-STA-UsuED April 8th, 1899. Whole No. 428.\nMt. Pleasant, Vancouver, B. C, Saturday, June 29, 1907.\n(Ninth Year.) Vol. 9, No. 12\nLocal Items.\nUniversity Graduate will give tutoring eveuiugs ; address P. O. Box 48ii.\nCity.\nHAVE YOUR TEETH\nEXTRACTED ?\nWBWM__MM___________-_-MHMJM(BMaBBWBj|\n10 years with all Rental Work.\n_-_______\u00C2\u00BB___.\nj NEW YORK DENTISTS\n147 Hastings St. Telephone 1586.\nOilice Hours: 8 a. tu,, to 9 p. ui.; Sundays 9 a. in., to 2 p.m.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 __*-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u0094> OK\u00E2\u0080\u0094*\u00E2\u0080\u0094>\u00C2\u00AB__js\u00C2\u00BB'*ic:^ri?-\"*3at\u00E2\u0080\u0094i___-_esB_mpMflBH_BnH\nMr. and Mrs. I. W. Morrison have\nbought a home on Yew St., Kitsl-\nlano, and moved into It on Thursday.\nW. R. Muir's new brick block on\nEighth Ave. and Westminster Road\nis up the first story.\nMr. W. J. Allei^ is building a new\nresidence on one of his lots on\nTwelfth Ave.\nThe families of Mr. Bickle and\nMr. R. Sparling will leave next week\nfor the summer's camping at Howe\nSound.\nai_______\u00C2\u00A3ri_i';Si'-\nfcrrr^ I *,'**'*^Tig*.ili7_\u00C2\u00ABm^\nly\nere\nThe most effective piece of\njewelry is the La Valliore,\nor neck chain mid pendent.\nIt is the fashion for tlio present, nnd eomiug seasons dictated liy tlie lenders of society\niu tlie Bast .ind Europe.\nThe great scope for tlie urtis-\ntto goldsmith has placed in\nour cases many beautiful designs in gold iiiiil enamel set\nwith precious slime* that can\nnot but bo admired.\nLet us show yon the latest iu\n14\u00E2\u0080\u0094kt. gold jewelry.\nHZNS7Y DIRKS &\nSONS Us?.\nJi'wrx-.i.s & Diamond Ikuc\u00E2\u0080\u0094ants\nOoruer Hastiugs und Grauvil'.e Sts.\nGeo. E. TBO R BY,\nManaging Direct\n^-3T-l__E_ri__!_\nUSE THE PHONE\nCall up 790 $\nThe strawberry and ice cream social given by the Presbyterian Woman's Auxiliary on Monday evening\nwas a pleasant and profitable function.\nMr. and Mrs. Chas. Rummel returned Friday last week from a\nmonth's absence, during which time\nIhey visited Washington, R. C, New\nYork, Montreal aud Toronto.\nMrs. W. G. McMullin .and little\ndaughter are expected to arrive today from a nine months' visit with\nrelatives in Ontario.\nFlint's Bronio Grippe\u00E2\u0080\u0094best curo for\n00\u00E2\u0080\u0094I in the head\u00E2\u0080\u009425o a box at the\nM. A. W. Co.'s Post office Drug Store.\nk\nWatson Co.'s\nnte PLEASANT\n1 DRUG STOKE\n<\nFor looal news subscribe for THE\nADVOOATE only SI fnr 12 months\n\t> when in need of anything\niu tlio drug line.\nOur messenger service is\nPREE ANS) PROMPT\nTrv It.\nMrs. Chas. Kendall is expected today with her little son to spend the\nsummer with her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. N. S. Hoffar, West Ave. and\nTwelfth.\nRev. G. A. Wilson, pastor of Mt.\nPleasant Presbyterian ChurciL for\nthe past eight, years, has accepted\nthe office of secretary on the Missionary Board.\nSTOVES & RANGES\nAll kinds\u00E2\u0080\u0094all prices Air-tights from $2.50 up.\nGRANITEWARE, TINWARE, WOODENWARE,\nin fact, everything for the home.\nWe are always pleased to bave you call and inspect our stock.\nI /_ F_\u00E2\u0080\u009E++ I *_rl Mt' PLEASANT\nJ. A. neTT, LTCI. HARDWARE STORE.\nTel. 4 <17.\n0000000000000000000000000J9\nNewSpring\nFOOTWEAR \u00C2\u00BB\ni\nWe now have a nice variety\nof New Boots and Shoes for\nMen, Boys', Ladies' und\nChildren.\nSee ns before buying your\nnext pair.\nOur prices are right.\nI\nW. T. MURPHY\nJj 2415 Wi'stmiuste:\nr avenue\nMt. Pleasant.\ni!_Tr_\u00E2\u0080\u0094..wfiinuttf-t\u00E2\u0080\u0094_\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0. raamvumvsx\u00E2\u0080\u00A2_\".ic\u00E2\u0080\u0094si**-*i..\"**.-mo_sxvsrrrj-s-;c******ot:.,&.^^\nKind's Heat flarket\n<*\n...\nI R. Porter & S&ns. 2321 Westminster Ave. &\nI Wholesale arid Hc!a5I f\n\u00C2\u00AB Dealers in all kinds of Fresh and Salt Meats. Fr. -'li Vegetabh s always 5\n}- in band. Orders solicited ironi all parts of Mount : , lasaul end Fairview S\n$ Prompt Delivery, Mil-ill FISH DAILY. Poultry in season _\nI Toi. 2308. - jjj\n? **** *_ sfr^sctw.- \u00E2\u0096\u00A0**f**\u00C2\u00A3- ***;\u00C2\u00AB^ss^'*n^**--4'^^r<**^'^*0.A*^*.^r**^\n\u00C2\u00ABWl\u00C2\u00BB**W\u00C2\u00BB'**W.^*,Mf?'Wl'i\ni\ns\nP\"^e^0QOp\u00C2\u00AB0W0O'3\u00C2\u00A3_OO0\n1 STANLEY'S\nr*)5533SGOOO\nTwo 50-ft. lots and tiye buildiug, on\nWestminster nvenue; (20 i) 0, half cash\nMrs. R. Whitney, \"Advocate'' Office.\n\u00C2\u00A700,000 CAPE\nGRANVILLE\no E K ECi\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'_\n\"The Advoente\" wishes any cnreles -\niifiss in delivery reported to the Office,\ntei iphone D1405.\nMOUNT P__ASAN_ BAPTIST\nOHUROH.\nRev Herbert W. Piercy will preach\nmoruiug nnd evenluing on Sunday.\nTlie Snnday School will attend the\nservices in the Methodist Church.\nChanges for advertisements should be\nin before Thursday uoou to insure their\npublication.\nSix thousand rolls of newS\ndesigns and colorings at ro-y\nmarkablo low prices. This fs^\nno remnant sale, but genuine'!\nbargains can be had. it\n1\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nThis Shipment was delayed y\nand as they have arrived be-S\ntwenn seasons the prices will J*\nsurprise you nnd range fromj | TSiewSTSeU Q .Sill 0&11 fs\nBe a roll and up.\nWhite 0oi k.\nFirst-class lu every respect.\nVaneou-i er'i Loading Bestaurauj,\nWall Papers arrived tills week.g\nYou will have the opportunity?\noC buying papers of tho latest^\nWm. Stanley & Co.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Pa.'I'.U-HANH! hs\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nNorthern Rank BLOCK.\nNiuth & Westminster avenues.\n'Pho:***. a.1006.\n^************^<***-/.**0*^\nRead the New York Dental Parlors\nadvertisement in this paper, then g\" to\nNew York peutal Parlors tW yonr wu*k\ncf Commerce\nSAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT,\nDeposits of ONE DOLLAR and upwards\nreceived uud interest allowed thereon,\nBank Money Orders issued,\nA General Banking Btisincstl\ntransacted.\nOFFICE HOURS: in a. m. to 8 p, ox\nSattriiats; 10 a in. to lam., 7 to N p.5ii,\nEast tnd Branch\n444 Westiniiister C. W. DURRAr-'l-\naveuu_ M -.nahkU,\nI THE ADVOCATE, VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA.\nr\"\nDARREL of THE\nBLESSED ISLES\nBy IRVING BACHELLER..\nAulhw af \"Ebea -olden.\" -Dri aad IT Eta.\neOtf-YltlGHT. 1903, BY LOTHROF PUBI.:3HING COMPAWT\n(Continued.J\nCHAPTER XXIII.\nTROVE and the bank official\nwere ln Hillsborough soon after\nsunrise the morning of that\nmemorable day. The young\nman rapped loudly ou the broad door\nat the Sign of the Dial, but within all\nwas silent. Tbe day before Darrel had\nspoken of going off to the river towns\nand must have started. A lonely feeling came into the boy's heart as he\nturned away. He went promptly to\nthe house of the district attorney and\ntold all he knew of tbe money tbat he\nbad put in the bank. He recounted all\nthat took place the afternoon of bis\nStay at Robin's Inn\u00E2\u0080\u0094the battles of tbe\ncocks, and the spider, and how tbe\nwounded fowl had probably sprinkled\nhis sleeve with blood.\nIn half an hour news of the young\nman's trouble hud gone to every bouse\nln the village. Soon a score of his\nschoolmates and half the faculty were\nat his side\u00E2\u0080\u0094there ln the room of justice. Theron Allen arrived at 0 o'clock,\nalthough at that hour two responsible\nmen had already given a bail bond.\nAfter dinner Trove, a constable and\nthe attorney rode to Robin's Inn. Thd\nnews had arrived before them, but\nonly the two boys and Tunk were at\nhome. The latter stood ln front of the\nStable, looking earnestly up the road.\n\"Hello!\" said he, gazing curiously at\nhorse and men as they came up to the\ndoor. He seemed to be eying tbe attorney with hopeful anticipation.\n\"Tunk,\" said Trove cheerfully, \"you\nhave a mournful eye.\"\nTunk advanced slowly, still gazing,\nboth bands in his trousers pockets.\n\"Ez Tower just went by,\" said be,\nwith suppressed feeling. \"Said you\nwas arrested for murder.\"\n\"I presume you were surprised.\"\n\"Waal,\" said he, \"Ez ain't said a\nword before in six months.\"\nTunk opened the horse's, mouth and\nstood a moment peering thoughtfully\nat his teeth.\n\"Kind of unexpected to be spoke to\nby Ez Tower,\" he added, turning his\neyes upon them with the same curious\nlook.\nThe interrogation of Tunk and the\ntwo boys began immediately. The\nstory of the fowl corroborated, the\nsugar bush became an object of Investigation Milldam was ten miles away,\nand it was quite possible for the young\nman to have ridden there and back between the hour when Tunk left him\nand that of sunrise, when he met Mrs.\nVaughn at her door. Trove and Tunk\nHosely went with the officers down a\nlane to the pasture and thence Into the\nwood by a path ttiey followed that\nnight to and from the shanty.\nThey discovered nothing new save\none remarkable circumstance tbat baffled Trove and renewed the waning\nsuspicion of the men of the law. On\nalmost a straight line from bush to\nbarn were tracks of a man that showed\nplainly where they came out of the\ngrass upon the garden soil. Now, the\nstrange part of It lay In this fact\u00E2\u0080\u0094the\nboots of Sidney Trove exactly fitted\nthe tracks. They followed the footprints carefully Into the meadow grass\nand up to the stalk of the mullein.\nNear the top of It was the abandoned\nborne of tbe spider and around It\nwere the four snares Trove had observed, now full of prey.\n\"Do not disturb the grass here,\" said\nTrove, \"and I will prove to you that\ntbe tracks were made before the night\nln question. Do you see the four\n,webs?\"\n\"Yes,\" said the attorney.\n\"Tbe tracks go under tbem,\" said\nTrove, \"and must, therefore, bave been\nmade before the webs. I will prove to\nyou tbat tbe webs were spun before\n2 o'clock of the day before yesterday.\nAt tbat hour I saw the spinner die.\nSee, ber lair Is deserted.\"\nHe broke the stalk of mullein and\ntbe cables of spider silk that led away\nfrom it, and all Inspected the empty\nlab-. Then be told of that deadly battle ln tbe grass.\n\"But these webs might bave been\ntbe work of another spider,\" said tbe\nattorney.\n\"It matters not,\" Trove Insisted, \"for\ntbe webs were spun at least twelve\nhours before tbe crime. One of them\ncontains the body of a red butterfly\nwith starred wings. We cut the wings\ntbat day, and Miss Vaughn put them\nln a book she was reading.\"\nPaul brought the wings, whlcb exactly fitted the tiny torso of tbe butterfly. They could discern the footprints, one of which had broken tbe\nant's road, while another was completely covered by the butterfly snare.\n\"Those tracks were made before the\nwebs, that ls evident.\" said the attnr-\ni ney. ' ''De** you _now who made the\ntracts ?'*\n\"I do not,\" was the answer of the\nyoung man.\nTrove remained at Robin's Inn that\nnight, and after the meu had gone be\nrecalled a circumstance that was like\na flash of lightning ln tbe dark of his\ngreat mystery.\nOnce at the Sign of the Dial his\nfriend the tinker had shown him a pair\nof new boots. He remembered they\nwere of the same size aud shape as\nthose he wore.\n\"We could wear tbe same boots,\"\nhe had remarked to Darrel.\n\"Had I to do sucb penance I should\nbe damned,\" the tinker had answered.\n\"Look, boy, mine are the larger by far.\nThere's a man coming to see me at the\nChristmas time, a man o' busy feet\nThat pair in your hands I bought for\nhim.\"\n\"Day before yesterday,\" said Tunk\nthat evening, \"I was up in the sugar\nbush after a bit o' blckory, an' I see\na man there, an' I didn't have no Idee\nwho 'twas. He was tall and had white\nhair an' whiskers an' a short blue\ncoat. When I first see him he was set-\ntin' on a log, but 'fore I come nigh he\ngot up an' made off.\"\nAlthough meager, the description\nwas sufficient. Trove had no longer\nany doubt of this\u00E2\u0080\u0094that the stranger\nhe had seen at Darrel's bad been hiding ln the bush that day whose events\nwere now so important.\nWhoever had brought the money, ho\nmust have known much of the plans\naud habits of tbe young man, and, tbe\nnight before Trove's arrival at Robin's\nInn, be came probably to the sugar\nwoods, where be spent the next day ln\nhiding.\nTbe young man was deeply troubled.\nPolly and her mother sat well into tbe\nnlgbt with blm, hearing the story of\nhis life, which he told ln full, saving\nonly the sin of his father. Of that be\nhad neither the right not;, the heart to\ntell.\n\"God only knows what is the next\nchapter,\" said he at last. \"It may rob\nme of all that I love ln this world.''\n\"But not of me,\" said Polly, whispering in his ear.\n\"I wish I were sure of that,\" he answered.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 *\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\nAmong those who got off the train\nat Hillsborough one day was a big,\nhandsome youth of some twenty years.\nIn all the crowd there were none had\never seen him before. Dressed ln the\nheight of fashion, he was a figure so\nextraordinary that all eyes observed\nhim as he made his way to the tavern.\nTrove and Polly and Mrs. Vaughn\nwere ln that curious throng on the\nplatform, where a depot was being\nbuilt.\n\"My! What a splendid looking fellow!\" said Polly as the stranger passed.\nTrove had a swift pang of jealousy\nthat moment. Turning, he saw Rlluy\nBrooke standing near them in a group\nof villagers.\n\"I tell you, he's a' thief,\" the boy\nbeard him saying, and the words seemed to blister as they fell, and ever\nafter when he thought of them a great\nsternness lay like a shadow on his\nbrow.\n\"I must go,\" said be, calmly turning\nto Polly. \"Let me help you into the\nwagon.\"\nWben they were gone he -food a moment thinking. He felt as if he were\nfriendless and alone.\n\"You're a giant today,\" said a friend,\npassing him, but Trove made no answer. Roused incomprehensibly, his\nheavy muscles bad become tense, and\nbe had an odd consciousness of their\npower. The people were scattering,\nand he walked slowly down the street.\nTbe sun was low, but be thought not\nof home or wbere he should spend til\nnight It was now the third day after\nbis arrest Since noon he had been\nlooking for Darrel, but tbe tinker's\ndoor had been locked for daye, according to the carpenter who was at work\nbelow. For an hour Trove walked,\npassing up and down before that familiar stairway, In the hope of seeing\nbis friend. Daylight was dim when\nthe tinker stopped by the stairs and\nbegan to feel for his key. The young\nman was quickly at the side of Darrel.\n\"God be praised!\" said the latter,\n\"Here ls the old Dial an' the strong an'\nnoble Trove. I heard o' thy trouble,\nboy, far off on the post road, an' I bave\nmade baste to come to thee.\"\nCHAPTER XXTV.\nROVE had been reciting the hie\ntory of his trouble and had\nfinished with bitter words.\n,'\u00C2\u00A3ih.TX,A \u00E2\u0080\u0094C, tl>__ IMS\u00E2\u0080\u0094\" 0-.1.1\nT\nthe tinker as Trove sat betuTe him\nwltb tears of anger In his eyes.\n\"Watch yonder pendulum and say not\na word until it has ticked forty times.\nFor wbat are thy learning au' thy\nmighty thews If they do not bear thee\nup in time o' trouble? Now ts thy trial\ncome before the Judge of all. Up wltb\nthy head, boy, an' be acquitted o' weakness au' fear an' evil passion.\"\n\"We deserve better of blm,\" said\nTrove, speaking of Riley Brooke.\nWhen all others hated htm we were\nkind to the old sinner, and it has done\nhim no good.\"\n\"Ah, but has it done thee goodl\nThere's the question,\" said Darrel, his\nhand upon the boy's arm.\n\"I believe It has,\" said Trove, with a\nlook of surprise.\n\"It was thee I thought of, boy. I hud\nnever much thought o' blm.\"\nThat moment Trove saw farther Into\nthe depth of Darrel's heart than ever\nbefore. It startled him. Surely hen\nwas a man that passed all understanding.\nDarrel crossed to bis bench and began to wind the clocks.\n\"Put away thy unhappfness,\" said he\ngently. \"No harm shall come to thee.\n'Tis only a passing cloud.\"\n\"You're right, and I'm not going to\nbe a fool,\" said Trove. \"It has brought\nme one item of good fortune.\"\n\"An' that is?\"\n\"I have discovered who ls my father.\"\n\"An' know ye wbere he Is now?\" tho\ntinker Inquired.\n\"No; but I know lt Is he to whom\nyou gave the boots at Christmas time.\"\n\"Hush, boy,\" said Darrel In a whisper, his hand raised.\nHe crossed to the bench, returning\nquickly and drawing his chair In front\nof the young man.\n\"Once upon a time,\" he whispered,\nsitting down and touching the palm of\nbis opeu band witb the Index finger\nof the other, \"a youth beld In bis hand\na cup, rare an' costly, an' lt was full\no' happiness, an' he was tempted to\ndrink. 'Ho, there, me youth,' said oue\nwbo saw him, 'that is the happiness of\nanother.' But he tasted the cup, an'\nIt was bitter, an' he let It fall, an' the\nother lost his great possession. Now,\nthat bitter taste was ever on the\ntongue o* the youth, so that his own\ncup had always the flavor o' woe.\"\nTbe tinker paused a moment, looking sternly Into tbe face of the young\nman.\n\"I adjure thee, boy, touch not the\ncup of another's happiness, or It may\nImbitter tby tongue. But If thou be\nfoolish an' take It up, mind ye do not\ndrop lt.\"\n\"I shali be careful\u00E2\u0080\u0094I shall neither\ntaste nor drop lt,\" said Trove.\n\"God bless thee, boy! Thou'rt come\nto a great law\u00E2\u0080\u0094who drains the cup of\nanother's happiness shall flud It bitter,\nbut who drains tbe cup of another's\nbitterness shall And lt sweet.\"\nA silence followed, In which Trove\nsat looking at tbe old man whose words\nwere like those of a prophet. \"I have\nno longer any right to seek my father,\"\nhe thought. \"And, though I meet him\nface to face, I must let blm go his\nway.\"\nSuddenly there came a rap at the\ndoor, and when Darrel opened It they\nsaw only a letter hanging to the latch.\nIt contained these words, but no signature:\n\"There'll be a bonfire and some fun\ntonight at 12 ln tbe middle of Cook's\nfield. Messrs. Trove and Darrel are\ninvited.\"\n\"Curious,\" said Darrel. \"It has tbi\nlook o' mischief.\"\n\"Oh, It's only the boys and a bit of\nskylarking,\" said Trove. \"Let's go and\nsee what's up. It's near the time.\"\nTbe streets were dark and silent as\nthey left the shop. They went up a\nstreet beyond tbe village limits and\nlooked off In Cook's field, but saw no\n\"Down to your knees, man.\"\nlight there. While they stood looking\na flame rose and spread. Soon they\ncould see figures ln the light and,\nclimbing the fence, they hastened\nacross an open pasture. Coming near,\nthey saw a score of men with masks\nupon their faces. ,\n\"Give him the tar and feathers,\" said\na strange voice.\n\"Not if he will confess an* seek forgiveness,\" another answered.\n\"Down to your knees, man, an' make\nno outcry, an' see you repeat the word.':\ncareruiiy us l speas thefil or you' go\nborne ln tar and feathers.\"\nThey could bear the sound of a scuffle and shortly tbe phrases of a prayer\nspoken by one voice and repeated by\nanother.\nThey were far back ln tbe gloom,\nbut could bear each word of tbat which\nfollows: \"0 God, forgive me\u00E2\u0080\u0094I am a\nliar and a hypocrite\u00E2\u0080\u0094I bave the toagas\nof scandal and deceit\u00E2\u0080\u0094I have robbei\ntbe poor\u00E2\u0080\u0094I have defamed tbe good\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nand, Lord, I nm sick\u00E2\u0080\u0094with the rottenness of my own heart. And hereafter\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nI will cheat no more\u00E2\u0080\u0094and speak no\nevil of any one. Amen.\" <\n\"Now go to your home, Riley\nBrooke,\" said the voice, \"an' hereafter\nmind your tougue or you shall ride a\nrail In tar and feathers.\"\nThey could see the crowd scatter,\nand some passed near them, running\nnway ln the darkness.\n'Stoop there an' say not a word,\"\nthe tinker whispered, crouching In the\ng'-ass.\nWhen all were out of hearing they\nstarted for the little shop.\n\"Hereafter,\" said Darrel as they\nwalked along, \"God send he be more\ncareful with the happiness of otlier\nmen. I do assure thee, boy, it Is bitter,\nbitter, bitter!\"\n(To Be Continued )\nMOTHER'S DAY OFF.\nA Novel Plan That Worked Splendidly\nTry It.\n\"I'd been married twelve years before it dawned on me tbat witb thu\nexception of my wife, every one in\ntbe bouse bod a day off ouce a week,\"\nsaid the man.\n\"I suppose a woman does generally\nhave rather a bad time of lt in that\nway,\" I remarked.\n\"I always had Sundays,\" he continued, \"the children bad Saturdays aud\nSundays, too, and one of the maids\nhad every Wednesday, while tbe other\nwas free on Thursdays. But when I\nbegan to tblnk lt over it seemed to me\ntbat tbe wife never by any chance got\na day entirely to herself.\"\n\"What did you do?\"\n\"We talked It over together first,\nthen the wife consulted the maids, and\nas soon as tbey grasped tbe idea tbey\nwere as keen as mustard to do wbat\ntbey could to help.\n\"Finally we decided that every Tuesday tbe servants, tbe children and I\nwere to be left entirely to our own\ndevices. Tbe wife might stay ln bed\nall day If sbe liked, go away, shop,\nvisit, look ln at a picture gallery or, In\nfact, do anytblng tbat she liked. She\nwas to have absolutely no responsibility for meals or anything on tbat one\nday every week.\"\n\"And how does tbe thing work?\"\n\"Splendidly! Vie maids rise to _ie\noccasion, and w* vie with one another\nln trying to keep everything running\nsmoothly and are as pleased as possible when we can manage to speud less\nthan we are allowed for the catering\ndepartment and yet show good results.\"\n\"And the wife?\"\n\"Isn't like the same woman. I tell\nher she seems to bave discovered the\nsecret of perpetual youth, and sbe assures me that lf only every woman ln\nthe world hnd a chance of trying tha\nsame plan there would be more bapp;\nh\u00E2\u0080\u0094 lies around.\n\"After all, 1 don't see bow any ons\ncan expect a woman to keep bright\nond happy lf she never bas any regulur\ntime to amuse herself, do you'i\"'\n\"I think you've probably hit on an\nidea tbat heaps of people would be only\ntoo glad to put Into practice If they\nouly knew of it,\" I said. And so I pass\nlt on In case readers may be interested. .\nHigh Collars In Vogue.\nWltb her usual perversity, Fashion\nbas decreed tbat collars Increase lu\nbelgbt and ln comfort too, strange as\nthat may seem. It is, however, easily\nexplained. Since those llttle \"val\nlelncs,\" or featberbones, tbat give the\nnecessary support bave for some time\nreached fairly up to tbe ears, they\ncould become no higher; but tbe change\nIs In tbe transparent covering which\nIs made of soft lace entirely or In combination with some filmy material. Instead of being rounded out, as It formerly was, tbe collar is now made\nstraight; hence lt must be a little looser, so that It shapes aud gives properly\nwitb the neck\u00E2\u0080\u0094therein lies the comfort\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094while the top, whlcb Is unstiffened\nfor about balf an Inch, turns over in a\npretty careless line, thus adding to\nthe soft becomlngness.\nBe careful not to let lt be a degree\nlooser tban Is absolutely necessary for\nshaping Itself and attempt lt ln none\nbut the softest thinnest material or the\nresult will be tbat moat unbecoming of\nall things, a thick neck.\nTO VISIT KI1G EDWARD.^\nHeiress to \"Carman Sylva's\" Thron*\n. One of His Cleverest Nieces.\nThe Crown Princess Marie of Kou-\nmania and the Crown Prince are to\nbe the guests of King Edward and\nQueen Alexandra during several weeks\nof the London season, and will be\npresent with their Majesties at Ascot\nraces.\nThe princess is the eldest daughter\nof the late Duke of Coburg and of\nthe Duchess Marie, and is one of the\nmost gifted of King Edward's nieces.\nShe was little more than a child\nwhen she was married to the heir of\nthe Roumanian throne. Ignoring conventions, she is frequently to be seen\nwalking in the streets in Bucharest,\nwith one or more of her beautiful\nchildren, but otherwise unattended,'\nand while the exhibition was open\nthere last summer visitors would meet.\nher roaming through the courts with\nher little girls like ordinary tourists..\nThe princess is greatly beloved in!\nher husband's country\u00E2\u0080\u0094indeed, her\npopularity is second only to that of\nher mother-in-law, Queen Carmen\nSylva. 8he spends most of the summer at a charming countrv seat at\nSinaia, on the borders of Roumania\nand Hungary, where King Charles\nand Queen Carmen Sylva have their\nsummer palace.-\nTwo years ar_o the princess visited\nEngland, and lived during a part of\nthe summer, with her children, in a\nlittle villa at Cowes.\nHer beauty and her magnificent\ndresses and jewels made the princess\na notable figure at King Edward's\ncoronation feteB. She is very fond\nof outdoor sports, and her hobby is\nwood-carving.\nBOY BURGLAR'S OUTFIT.\nArms and Make-Up of Leader of Juvenile Band.\nAn amusing story of the exploits of\nFrank Taylor, the boy burglar of\nRobin Hood Lane 8tation, who was\ncharged with shooting at Mr. Damon,,\na solicitor, of Carshaltou, was told\nrecently.\nTaylor was caught in Mr. Damon's\nhouse, and when his story of having\nentered it by mistake was not believed, he fired a shot at Mr. Damon from\na revolver, and attempted to escape.\nj He was captured after a struggle, in\nwhich he bit Mr. Damon's hand severely.\ni Edwin John Barrett, 14 years old,\n1 was also arrested as one of his accomplices, and he made a confession\nin which he declared that he had ac-\nI companied Taylor on ten expeditions,\ni the object of which was robbery. He\nj said that Taylor forced him to ac-\ni company him, and stand outside while\nTaylor entered the houses.\nThe police stated that they found\nthe following articles in his room:\nA pair of handcuffs.\nBlack velvet coat, with ruffles and\ntrimmed with lace at the cuffs.\nPair of jack boots with spurs.\nThree sword bayonets.\nThree air guns.\nA broech-loadinir fowline piece.\nSeveral wicrs and moustaches.\nA theatrical make-up box.\nThey also found a larpp quantity of\nsensational literature, nnd they learned that the boy had taken lessons in\nwrestling and in the use ol firearms.\nOn the Scrap Heap.\nIn an Irish court recently an old\nman was called into the witness box,\nand being infirm and just a little\nblind, he went too far in more than\none sense. Instead of keeping up the\nstairs that led to the box, he mounted those that led to the bench. Said\nthe judge, good hnmoredly:\n\"Is it a judge yon want to be, my\ngood man?'*\n\"Ah, sure, your honor,\" was the\nreply. \"I'm an ould man now, and\nmebbe it's all I'm fit lor.\"\nThe judge had no rendv retort. '\nHow an Earl Won a Bride.\nThe \"ashes\" were not the only trophy Lord Darnley brought back in\ntriumph from Australia. He brought\nback a bride as well. At one of the\ncricket matches the tall young Englishman lost his handkerchief, and\nthe day being extremely hot, enquire.!\nof his friends if any one of them had\na spare handkerchief that he might\nloan.\nImmediately a very feminine 'kerchief, sweet scented and of delicate\nfabric, was handed to him from some\ninvisible source. It was a most acceptable convenience that hot day.\nand after the match he expressed his\ndesire to thank the kindly lady. An\nintroduction to Miss Florence Murphy followed. She was the daughter\nof a Victoria magistrate and a member of Sir W. J. Clarke's household\nas governess to the younger children.\nThe acquaintance so romantically\ncommenced ripened nnder the kindly\nchaperonage of Lady Clarke, an engagement following which stood the\ntest of a long absence in England after the cricketing tour. Then the\nfaithful swain, wno is now a representative Irish peer, returned to Australia, claimed his bride, and bore\nher ofl in triumph.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Tit-Bita.\nHides In a Chimney.\nAn amusing story of a bookmaker's\ndevice to escape arrest was told at\nLiverpool, when John Cain, aged 28,\nwas remanded, charged with keeping\na betting house.\nThree detectives went to the place\non Saturday, and found Cain standing\nat the back door taking bets from two\nyoung men. When he say the office\u00E2\u0080\u0094t\nlie ran in and fastened the door, having previously let a bullterrier loose\nin the yard.\nThe dog having been pacified, the\nofficers burst in the door and searched the house, but Cain had mysteriously disappeared. After a long and\npatient search he was found up the\nchimney of an upper room.\nCain was quite out of sight, and it\nwas only beeause soot was notice-\nin the fireplace that suspicion of the\nhiding-place occurred. Detective Sergeant Whitley pnt his arm up the\nchimney and caught a boot. Cain waa\nthen carefully pulled down and taken\ninto custody. He looked a sorry spectacle. . a . . \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n** THE ADVOCATE, VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA-\nfl\n5aves A Lot\nof Bother\nThe starch that needn't\nbe cooked..that won't\nstick.. that gives a brilliant gloss with almost\nno iron-effort..isn't\nthat the starch you\nought to have them\nuse on your clothes T\nBuy it by name.,\nyour dealer sells it\n&_\u00C2\u00A3\nIIIIIIIIMIIIlIU\nTHE THIRD HOUSE.\nirss\nIIIIIIIHIliTiiiillilllllllllllirTT\nA South Dakota woman lias contracted to fuii'.iish several English lords\nwith 2.000 prairie dogs to assist in exterminating rabbits ou the English\ngame preserve's.\nPEEVISH AND CROSS.\nPeevish, cross babies are sick babies\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094the well baby ls always happy. Perhaps there may be nothing to Indicate\njust what Is the matter, but you may\ndepend upon It there Is something\ntroubling the little one or he would not\ntbe cross. A few doses of IJaby's Own\nTablets will remove the cause and\nmake baby happy. They are a certain\ncure for the minor Ills of babyhood.\nThousands of mothers keep them continually ln the house to guard against\nthe sudden Illness of baby. A Tablet\nnow and again will keep the little one\nwell. Mrs. James Jewers, Beaver Harbor, N.S., says: \"I have given Baby's\nOwn Tablets to my baby as occasion\nrequired since she was a day old. They\nhave always helped her, and now at a\nyear and a half old she ls a fine healthy\nchild. The Tablets, I think, are Indls\npensable to mothers of young children.\"\nSold by druggists or by mall at\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2cents a box from The Dr. Williams'\nMedicine Co., Brockvllle, Ont.\nA pigeon post, has been organized\nbetween the West Indian islands of\nAntigua and Montserrai, to supplement the deficiencies of the existing\npost and telegraph service.\nA Small Pill, but Powerful.\u00E2\u0080\u0094They\nthat judge ot the powers of a pill by\nits size would consider Parmelee's\nVegetable Pills to be lacking. It is a\nlittle wonder among pills. What it\nlacks in size it makes up in potency.\nThe remedies whieh it carries are put\nup in these small doses, because they\nare so powerful that only small doses\nare required. The full strength of the\nextracts is secured in ...s form and\ndo tneir work thoroughly.\nNew South Wales offers $30 a head\ntdwiard the passage money of approved\nagricultural1 and domestic servants to\nthat colony, and $20 a head for otlier\ndesirable immigrants.\nParents buy Mother Graves' Worm\nExterminator because they know it is\na safe medicine for their children and\nan effectual expeller of worms.\nThere are altogether, foreign and native, 25,799 persons that are actively\nengaged in bringing Uie gospel to India, while ten years ago there were but\n16,180.\nA Bath (Me.) shipyard has a contract to build what is expected to be\nthe largest six-masted schooner iiilnat.\n1\ on-alcoholic\nSarsaparilla\nIf you think you need a tonic,\nask your doctor. If you think\nyou need something for your\nblood, ask your doctor. If you\nthink you would like to try\nAyer's non-alcoholic Sarsapa\nrilla, ask your doctor. Consult him often. Keep in close\ntouch with him.\nA\nWe publlih our formulu\nyers\nm W\u00C2\u00AB banish aloohol\n_#___ from our modioli,..\nWe urge you Xo\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 u.ult your\ndootor\nAsk your doctor to name some of the\nresults of constipation. H is long list will\nbegin with slck-headscbe, biliousness,\ndyspepsia, thin blood, bad skin. Then\nask bim if be would recommend your\nusing Ayer's Pills.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094AUie by the f, O. Ajet Ce., Lowoll,\nYoa cannot possibly havu\na better Cocoa than\nEPPS'S\nA delicious drink and a sustaining\nfood. Fragrant, nutritions and '\neconomical. This excellent Cocoa\nmaintains the system in robust\nhealth, and enables it to resist\nwinter's extreme cold.\nCOCOA\nSold by Grocers and Storekeepers\nhi i-lb. and J-lb Tins. \\nLegislative Annex of the Special Interests In Congress.\nThe third house, as the lobby Is sometimes called, ls tbe legislative annex\nof the special Interests. It ls the\nhouse of special representatives, and\nIts membership is a curious study ln\nthe widely different\nIts meeting place Is the lobby and\ncommittee rooms of the nation's capital, the hotel rotunda, the lawyer's\nofflce, the street, the banquet room,\nthe little back room, the bar, the road\nhouse, the home, the brothel\u00E2\u0080\u0094anywhere the legislator may be found and\npersonally approached. That is the\nobject of a lobby\u00E2\u0080\u0094personal contact\nwith the people's representatives and\nthe Influence upon legislation worked\nthereby.\nIf legislators were perfect, there\nwould be no lobby. If they were perfectly wise, there would be no occasion for the lobbyist who desires \"to\ninform\" them; lf perfectly honest,\nthere would be no occasion for tbe\nlobbyist who desires to \"make it worth\nwhile;\" lf perfectly patriotic, there\nwonld be no occasion for the lobbyist\nwbo desires for himself \"a little personal favor\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094at the people's expense.\nI The existence of a lobby Is premised\non human frailty. It Is present to\nprey on human weakness, to warp the\naction of the legislative body by appeal to vanity, Ignorance, cupidity or\nfear.\u00E2\u0080\u0094GUson Gardner In Success Magazine.\nNot Labor Lost.\nThe safe bore a paper stating thar\nthere was nothing of value wlthhs\nNevertheless the burglar blew the receptacle open, finding the statement\ncorrect \"Well,\" he remarked, gathering up his tools, \"it's worth something\nto ascertain that there are still people\nwho tell the truth.\"\nECZEMA AGAIN\nOVERCOME\nZAM-BUK CURES A CASE WHICH\nFOR TWO YEARS HAD DEFIED\nEVERY REMEDY TRIED\nA Farmer's Grateful Testimony\nNo case of eczema, skin disease, or\nulceration, should be despaired of until Zam-I.uk has been applied. The\ncase of Mr, Francis Penott, of St.\nAnne's (Man.), i.s a powerful illustration of *\u00E2\u0080\u0094im-Buk's eflicacy. He says:\n\"I suffered from eczema for two years,\nand tried a great number of remedies.\nNone of them, however, seemed to do\nine any good. The ailment wus mostly\nIn my legs, and both these were\nactually raw from the knees down. A\nsmall sample box of Zam-Buk was\ngiven to me, and even so small a\nuuantlty as that did me a llttle good.\nI then obtained a proper supply, and\nliy the time I had used a few boxes I\nwas completely cured.\"\nZam-Buk differs from ordinary\nsalves and embrocations In containing na animal oil or fat. It is compounded from rich, healing, herbal\nessences, and Is an Ideal natural combination of power and purltT'. It Is\nhighly antiseptic, and instantly kills\nbacilli and disease germs, which settling on to wounds and skin diseases\nset up festering, blood poison, etc.\nFor cuts, burns, bruises, ulcers,\nabscesses, pimples, boils, skin eruptions, scalp sores, spreading sores,\nchildren's skin troubles, chailng sores,\netc., Zam-Buk Is unequalled. It also\ncures piles. All druggists and stores\nat 60c a box, or from Zam-Buk Co.,\nToronto, for price, 6 boxes for $2.50.\nr*e***m*VBmVetme*tA*m^\nWHEN YOU COME TO THE ROOF\nPUT ON OUR FAMOUS\nEASTLAKE METALLIC SHINGLES\nLightning has no effect on them. They are absolutely fireproof. Eain and snow\u00E2\u0080\u0094heat\nand cold\u00E2\u0080\u0094can't iust, crack or warp them. The perfect fitting side lock (exclusively\nEastlake) n..akes the roof absolutely leak-proof, and cost of putting on much less.\nour guarantee:\nWe guarantee Eastlake Metallic Shingles to be made of better material, more scientifically and\naccurately constructed, to be more easily applied, and will last longer than any other Metal\nShingle on the market Our guarantee is absolute. Our Shingles have been made since 1885.\nEastlake metallic Shingles are made either galvanized or painted. They are\nhandsome in design, attractive on the house and last a lifetime. Our\ncheapest grade will last longer and costs less than the best\nwooden shingles. Our best Metallic Shingles make as superior .'aqoaprobo'\na roofing to wooden shingles, tin, slate, etc., as these were mk*\nto sod roofs. Let us send you tha proof. Write us.\nComplete information free.\nTHE METALLIC ROOFING _=*\nCOMPANY, Limited. -~f\nMANUFAOTURKra\nToronto and\nWlnnipig\nCANADA'S MINERAL WEALTH.\nTHE CAREFUL KING.\nA Story ef a Perelan Monarch That\nPoints a Moral.\nOnce upon a time a certain king of\nPersia went out bunting with all his\ncourt The chase that day happened\nto be long, and tbe king became very\nthirsty. But no fountain or river could\nbe found near tbe spot on the plain\nwhere they rested for a short Interval.\nAt last one of the courtiers spied a\nlarge garden not far off. It was filled\nwith trees bearing lemons, oranges and\ngrapes. His followers begged the\nmonarch to partake of the good things\nIn the garden.\n\"Heaven forbid that I should eat\nanything thereof,\" said the king, \"for\nlf I permitted myself to gather but an\norange from It my officers and courtiers would not leave a single fruit\nIn the entire garden.**\nThe higher ln life a person is the\nmore careful he should be, for all his\nfaults are copied by those beneath\nhim.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Chatterbox.\nTwenty minutes of rain in a year is | An association of Cape Town busi-\nsoinetiines all that southern Egypt ness men has been formed to secure\ngets, and\ncountry.\nthere is no dew in that\nKeep Minard's Liniment in the House\nA 500-mili canal, projected to drain\nUie great swamps of Florida, would\nreclaim 6.500,000 acres of land.\nProf. Adams', of McGill, Optimistic\nAddress to Empire Club.\nProf. Frank D. Adams ol McGill\nUniversity, Montreal, iii a recent address to tlie Empire Club, Toronto, on\n\"llie Undeveloped Resources oi tlio\nDominion\" said that it was somewhat\nlike carrying coals to Newcastle tor\nanyone from a distance to speak upon\nthe mineral resources of the Dominion when Toronto is in itself such\nuu important mining centre.\nThe speaker went on to show bow\nthe mineral output of the Dominion\ncompared witli that of twenty years\nago. In 1880 the total mineral exports only amounted to $22,221,000. In\n1-11)0, which is tlio last year for which\nofficial reports havo been made out,\nthe amount was $68,574,000, while for\n1906 it may be safely estimated as\nexceeding the seventy million mark.\nThe country was generally regarded'\nas an agricultural one, our mineral\nresources having less attention given\nto them than they deserved. The\nspeaker pointed out that this view\nwas to a great extent erroneous, as\nthe mineral output of the Dominion\nhad now reached two-thirds of the\namount of the agricultural exports'\nof Canada. j\nProf. Adams then asked this question, \"Will this increase continue, or:\nwill it decrease?\" In answering his\nown question the professor argued\nfrom geological data that the growth\nnot only would in all human prob-,\nability increase, but it was quite)\nwithin the bounds of possibility that,\nstill greater riches might be discov-'\nered, the existence of which we are\nat present ignorant of. The remainder of the address consisted of a'\ncareful analysis of the products fromi\ntheir various districts of the coal,'\ngold, nickel and copper, iron and sil-;\nver in the Dominion, and pointed out!\nthat so far as one could judge byi\npeology these products were not likely'\nto (liininish. .\nMysteries of Planting.\nTbe devices adopted by nature for\nsecuring the planting and distribution\nof seeds are very interesting. Some\nseeds have wings, so that they may be\ncarried away as far aa possible In falling from the parent plant Others, like\nthose of the milkweed and dandelion,\nmay be said to be provided with balloons, Inasmuch as they are made so\nlight by feathery appendages that they\nare readily drawn up to great heights\nby warm currents of air. Astronomers\nused to mistake tbe floating seeds of\ntbe milkweed for meteors until a noted\nstar gazer set his telescope at a near\nfocus and wns thus enabled to examine\nthe floating vegetable germs that passed across tho field of view. Certain\nburs are seed vessels that are provided with tiny hooks in order that tbey\nmay catch in the fur of animals and\nbe carried afar.\nA married man thinks he could hava\nsaved a lot of money had he remained\na bachelor, but be couldn't\u00E2\u0080\u0094Chicago\nNews.\nEnjoy Life\nj Good health makes good na-\n: ture. If everyone had a sound\n| stomach there would be no pes-\n! sir-iists in the world. Do no*\n1 allow a weak stomach or a bad\nj liver to rob you of the joy of\nI living. Take\nBEECHAM'S\nPILLS\nand the world laughs with you.\n1 No need then for rose-colored\nj glasses. Beecham's Pills start\n' health vibrations to all parts of\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 the body, while putting a ruddy\ni tint on lips and cheeks. There's\nhealth in every box. Health for\nevery man, woman and child.\n(Beecham's Pills\nShow How\n, Sold Everywhere. In boxes 25 cents.\nthe permanent establishment, of a diamond cutting industry in the colony.\neV.rr.txt.it to at** S.tl.f.ollon.\nOombauWa\nCaustic Balsam\n\u00C2\u00A3ramps\nOrftttMMdp-Jnn together. A cramp\nanywhere 11 a Hidden and very pnin/iil\nluiiti in tmii of the tnuaclea. when in\nthe arms, lege or bowela, rub the part\nbrjekly with the beat mueole relnxative\nJohn\n'C0N*S Anodyne\n* LINIMENT\nPerform the ruhblnv by working the\niniiBulet bark ami forth with the palm\nof hand; tun plenty of Limnitiiit. Take\ndropped on eiigar foretnmach cramps.\n*>$ rente, thrnn tunes aa much -j A*rge\nthe kiss with spreading grippe, scarlet\nfever, measles, mumps, whooping\ncough, typhoid fever, diphtheria, erysipelas, meningitis, tuberculosis, and\nmany infectious skin diseases. They\nsuggest legislation on the subject, and\nthe posting of notices in railway stations, street cars and other publio\nplaces, but they say it would be useless to post them on verandahs, in\ncosy corners, porches, shady nooks,\nor moonlit lawns. They also propose\ncompulsory legislation for methods of\ndisinfection of the mouth and purify-\n' ing the breath, especially with a view\nj to the protection of the innocent babies\ni who are particularly subject to infection. The greatest and most effective\npurifier and germ destroyer known to\nmedical science for the mouth, throat\nand breath, as well as for the blood,\nstomach and lungs, is Psychine, that\ntriumph of the medical world that is\nattracting almost universal attention\nbeoause of the wouderful results attending its use. One of its recent triumphs is told as a matter of experience in the following brief statement!\nDr, Slocum Co.\nI am landing you photo and teatlmonial her*.\nWith lor your great remedy PSYCHINE. Your\nremedies did wonders for mc. I was about 2- or\n80 years ot age when I took PSYCHINE. The\ndootore had given me up &a an lncurablo onniio\u00E2\u0080\u0094p-\ntlve. Ily lungs and every organ of the body were\nterribly diseased and waated. Frionda and neigh-\nbora thought I'd never got better. Bui PS YOU IN Et\ntared me, My lunga have never liothered me\nainoe, and Faychlue Taa permanent cure.\nKK3. LIZZIE OARSIDS,\nSlu Ha Ilium St., London, Ont\nPtyohine, pronounced Si-keen, is admitted to be the moat wonderful of all\ndisease and germ-destroying agencies.\nFor building up the run-down system\nand curing all forms of steimach\ntroubles and diseases of the chest,\nthroat and lungs or head, it is simply\nunapproachable. It ii a reliable home\ntreatment. For sale at all druggists,\nfiOo and $1.00, or Dr. T. A. Slocum,\nLimited, 179 King Street West, Toronto.\nHis Imitators But No Competitors.\nA Safe, Speedy and Positive Cure for\nOmh, Splint. Sweeny, Capped Hook,\nStrained Tendoni, founder, Wind\nPuffa, aid all lameneaa from Spavin,\nRingbone and other bony tutnoi-K.\nOur.i all akin dlaaaaaa or Taraaitea,\nThrush, Diphtheria. RemoTaa all\naoaeher from Eoraea or Cattle,\nEr-\ted?.e,?r..te*!:/!,'iro.\npre\nJr.,\n-.**\u00C2\u00AB..., our. _._,.__,_, \u00C2\u00AB..-,\nTtvary bottle ot Oeuatie\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2ffairintad to .Irs aatlattotl\nper bottle. Bold by dniajlst\npreaa, eaatgaa paia, win fu\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094r6n.\u00E2\u0080\u0094rac!\u00C2\u00B0si,(5\n- J\u00C2\u00ABIste. \u00C2\u00AB sent by ex.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 \u00E2\u0080\u0094, \u00E2\u0080\u0094..\u00E2\u0080\u009E.. ps.ia. wllo full dlr.-ilons for\n_\u00E2\u0080\u00A2* ,n,\u00C2\u00BB- IJT.Ioncl for deeorlpure olroutara.\n. leeHmonUla, eta. Addreaa \u00E2\u0080\u009E '\nTke Lawrence- Williams Co., Toronto, Ont.\nW. N. U. No. 636\nFOR BREAKFAST OR LUNCHEON HOUSEKEEPERS FIND A REAL SUPPORT IN\nTRISCUIT\nIt Is the wholesome Shredded Wheat wafer. Displaces ordinary white\nbread or orackers, beoause of Its superior nutritive qualities, whether\nserved with soup as a orouton; witb cheese, preserves, cocoa or chocolate, or toastod, with butter.\nTry BISCUIT for Breakfast; TRISCUIT for Luncheon.\nAll Grocers\u00E2\u0080\u009413c a carton, or 2 for 26c. -tfisiiTii\nTHE ADVOCATE, VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nPit. PLEASANT ADVOCATE.\n(Established April 8,1899.)\nf-jF'l'K.B : a 4 5 0 Westminster avenue.\n.JNciLiSH Office\u00E2\u0080\u009430 Fleet street,\nLondon, E. C, England Where a\nfile of \"The Advocate\" is kept for\nvisitors.\nMfts. R Whitney, Publisher.\n(Subscription $t a year payable in\nAdvance.\nS cents a Gopy.\nTel. B1405.\nVancouver, B. 0., June 29, 1907.\nimportant News Items of the\n. Week.\nLocal Items.\nMr. J. P. Nightengale has returned from a short holiday trip.\nMr. and Mrs. Whitley Murray\nhave returned from a short honeymoon trip.\nThompsou's Cream of Witch Hazel\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nbest for chapped hands. At Mt. Pie-n.-\nant M. A. W. Drug Store.\nMr. Prank Marrion, general manager of the Nanainio Gas Co., was\nin the city a few days this week.\nJune 24, 1007.\nDublin, Ireland.\u00E2\u0080\u0094John E. Redmond delivered an aduress at Wex-\nlord on Sunuay at a ceremony attending the unveiling of a memorial\nl.o Wexfordiaus who fell at the bat-\nlie of New Ross, in 1798. He gave\nU deiiaut warning to British statesmen, saying: \"We told England that\nwe hate her rule as bitterly as did\nuur forefathers when they shed\ntheir blood on this spot. We tell\nher that we are as much rebels to\nner rule today as our forefathers\nwere. We tell her that sue cau\nphajnge that hatred only by granting\nfreedom', and so long as she withholds lreedom it will remain merely a Question of expediency whon and\nby what means we will strike at\nlue power that holds our country in\npondage,\"\nLoudon, Eng.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Premier Campbell-\nBannerman today moved his resolu-\nlion curtailing the power of the\nliouse of Lords before the fullest\nLouse uf the session. The galleries1\naiso vere crowded, those present in I\nthat pait of the House including!\nmany peers, who were anxious to ob- i\neerve tlie beginning ot au attempt!\nio reduce their power to control legislation.\nManager W. II. Keary and the 1\nmany members of the board of con-\nivol are actively engaged in developing plans for this year's exhibition,\nwhich is confidently expected to be\n.1.,: largest provincial iair yet held\nin British Columbia. Nearly all the\npopular prizes have beeu increased\n!.i value and a great uumber of new\nones having been added to the al-\ntCatty lung list of inducements to ex-\nliibiturs. Besides tlie regular prizes\nllie list of special prizes this year is\niftrger than ever before, and the\nprizes lu many cases very valuable.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Columbian.\nJuno 25, 1007.\nNOW Westminster.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The annual\n[fraviucial celebration of the Orangemen, which will be held hero, July,\n1 2, under tlie auspices of the Grand;\nJLodee of Bill Ish Columbia, promises;\nUi be tlie most important and most\nlargely attended yet held in the\npro. lace.\nLondon, Eng.\u00E2\u0080\u0094King Edward held\nthe last levee of the season at the\nSt. ,I_.!iios' Palace at noon today, the\nIndian Mutinny veterans again supplying uie most striking feature. The\nsecond group of survivors of the Mutiny, Including seventy olllcers, of\nwhom no fewer than thirty-three\nwere generals, and several civilians\nwere presented by Field-Marshal Sir\niSvelyn Woods. They made a brilliant show, all wearing their full\ncjreas uniforms.\nJune 20, 1007.\nVictoria.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The affairs of the British Columbia Dental Association, and\nihe manner in which the last examination was conducted, are to be\naired In court here. This afternoon\n\"our of the unsuccessful candidates,\ninstructed R. T. Elliott to proceed\nagainst the board, and to ask for a\ncommission of Inquiry Into the whole\ntpatter.\nJune 27th.\nMinister Delidado, representing tli\nRt'Jrtl-ilii! Of S::ll Slllv.nilll' HI Mi'Xl'.'\"\nP'rt'.vcd a telegram from I'^cni.ti'ii\n!**i-tllPl'0 BVill\" til' ' 11.\" \" 'l.'sl.' \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 (,'\nNicaragua was fitting mt 1 fl \u00E2\u0080\u00A2' n\ntl; ' glllll \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Ilt8 OU till' I'll.'.. \" wl ' Hill\ntb-it a,' ..'I ic \v\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ex.; cl 'd .1 1 11\ntru... Tho uinssaffH nridvt* '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0]-. t '-'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nEjalvr.dor waa fortifying its : - .-.\n_*,\u00E2\u0080\u0094,\u00E2\u0080\u009449 .....\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094NOTIOE\nPersonal notices of 1 sltnts\nfjlt. Pleasant. ;v|' ''!' ' '\" \u00E2\u0080\u00A2' '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\nngoplp m;1\u00C2\u00BB0. visit otber '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0< ':\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 n, :'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 .'\nIpcul _0ua||_ff;ii.;- u ;\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 nil ' \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ::\u00E2\u0096\u00A0;\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n''hy''' 'tl l1-A'' \"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 W??l \u00C2\u00A3 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0'.''\nThe B. C. E. Ry. Co. are having\nthe track rapidly laid on Ninth Ave.\nE., and consequently many people\nare investing in lots and homes in\nEast Mt. Pleasant. The work has\nprogressed rapidly during the week,\nhaving been laid as far as Prince\nEdward St.\nMrs. H. A. Gibbs has bought the\nbusiness lately conducted by Mrs,\nW. W. Merkley at Westminster Ave.\nMrs. Gibbs will continue at the\nsame stand and carries a first class\nstock of dry goods and millinery.\nMrs. Marshal remains head milliner,\nand the cut in prices in this department is attracting the ladies of Mt.\nPleasant, .South Vancouver and Fair-\nview, as well as down town. Mrs.\nGibbs has had the building enlarged\nand added new seasonable stock.\nRead her ad ln this paper.\nThe city has received a quit claim\ndeed from Mr. John Dunnan for the\nnortherly 52 feet of lot 31, subdivision of block 2, sub-divisioih of\ndistrict lot 200A, and all the tidal\nlands occupied by the said Dunnan.\nThe property may be more particularly described as the proposed new\nmarket site. Mr. Dunnan was handed $1,500 for the property and $150\nfor another consideration. The city\ntakes over al! his shipbuilding apparatus on the land, but it is under-\nStood that he may remove them if\nhe sees fit. This matter has been\nlong standing and would have been\nsettled long ago but for the multitude of bad.advisors who clustered\nnround Mr. Duriiiiin. These people\nreported when Mr. Dunnan agreed\n'1 bave the matter arbitrated that\nhe had signed something he did not\nknow anything about. As a matter\nof fact the arbitration agreement\nwas read over to Mr. Dunnan in the\npresence of witnesses Ave times.\nThe work on the market will now\nproceed apace.\nRalph S. Cummlngs, of \"The Advocate,\" arrived home on Thursday,\nafter a ten days' stay in Seattle,\nWash., with his uncle and aunt, W.\nCOMMON SENSE\nLeads most intelligent people to use only\nmedicines of known composition. Therefore it is that Dr, Pierce's medicines, the\nmakers ef which print e^ry Ingredient\nontcring Into thctfi upon the bottle wrappers n nil attest its correctness under Gat-,\narc daily growing in favor. Tho composition of Dr. Pierce's medicines Is opon\nto everybody, Dr. Pierce being desirous\nof having tho search light of investigation turned fully upon bis formula, being\nconfident that the better tha composition\nof these medicines Is known tiie more\nwill tlioir great curative merits be recognized. Being wholly made of thn active\nmedicinal principles extracted from 11a-\ntivo forest routs, by exact processes\noriginal with Dr. Pierce, and without the\nuse of a drop of alcohol, triple-refined and\nchemically pure glycerine being used Ill-\nStead In extracting and preserving the\ncurativo virtues residing In tlio roots\nemployed, tliesn tncdicinol am entirely\nfree from tho objection of doing harm\nby creating an appetite for either alcoholic bevei'Nges or lml.lt - forming\ndrugs. Examine the formula on their\nbottle wrappers\u00E2\u0080\u0094tlio same as sworn to by\nDr. Pierco, and you will find that his\n\"(iolden Medical Discovery,\" tho great,\nhlood-purilier, Stomach tonic and bowel\nregulator\u00E2\u0080\u0094tbo medicine whlcb, while not\nrecommended to cure consumption In Its\nadvanced stages (no medicino Will do that)\nyet doe* cure all thoie catarrhal conditions of head and tin-oat, weak stomach,\ntorpid liver and bronchial troubles: weak\nlungs and hailg-Oil-coughs, wbicli, If neglected or badly treated lead up to and\nfinally terminate iu consumption.\nTake tho \"Golden .Medical Discovery\"\nin time and it is not likely to disappoint\nyou lf only you give It a tlioroutih and\nMr trial. Don t export miracles. It\nwon't do supernatural things, You mnst\nexercise your patience and persevere In its\nuse for a reasonable length of time, to get\nits full benefits. The Ingredients of which\nDr. Pierce's medicines are composed have\nthe unqualified endorsement of scores of\ninedicnl leaders\u00E2\u0080\u0094better than anv ninniint\nof ley, or nonprofessional, testimonials.\nThny nre not. given nwnv to be c.'.eri-\ntaiented \u00C2\u00ABiiii hut. nt\" s-'ild hv dl dealers la,\ntt_$t.li;ilU14 Ut'ITO-O...!'.,:.. Ll'ISOIIj\n\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00ABBBf\nCASCADE\nTHE BEER Without a Peer.\nBrewed right here in Vancouver by men of years\nand years and years experiences 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 no other beer can\nsupplant ? Doz., quarts $2. Doz., pints $ I.\nVancouver Breweries, Ltd.\nVancouver, B. C. Tel. 429\nFor Sale nt all first-class Saloons, Liquor Stores aud Hotels or\ndelivered to vour honse.\nsets\nK. Cummlngs and Dr. Fannie Leak\nCummlngs. He also had the pleasure of meeting his cousin, Dr. Roy\nB. Cummlngs,. whom he had not\nseen since childhood. While in Seattle he had the pleasure of enjoying the hospitality of former Mt.\nPleasant residents, Mr. and Mrs.\nVernon Shilvock, Mr. Will Ziegler\nand Mr. W. B. Walker. Mr. and\nMrs. Shilvock reside in West Seattle\nand have a very pretty little home\non one of the innumerable hills\nof that suburban district. Mr. Ziegler resides with his parents, Mr. and\nMrs. J. H. Ziegler, West 47th street\nand Third avenue, in that portion\nknown as Fremont, it is a neat and\nattractive home on one of the innumerable hills. Mr. and Mrs. Ziegler\nSr. are most sociable aud hospitable.\nilr. W. B. Walkir res ties \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 nt \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0The.\nMonks,\" corner of Terry and James\nstreet, and Is one of its oldest members. \"The Monks\" is a club of\nyoung men who have a big house\nwith all the comforts of home for\nits 24 members. The housekeeping\nis managed by committees and the\ndetails are left to a lady housekeeper. The young men seem to vie\nwith one another in fixing up their\nrooms, and there are some very artistic arrangements with pictures,\nbric-a-brac, pennants and cosy corners. The lawn and flowers are kept\nin excellent shape. There is a hi e\ndouble parlor and a grand piano.\nThe vocal and instrumental music\nby so'nie of the members was fine.\nThe young men are genial and hospitable. Mr. Walker has a fine canoe,\nand Mr. Cummlngs enjoyed a line\nride in it on Lake Washington for\nseveral miles.\nMr. Clarence Bishop, of Tacoma,\nwas met one day and in the course\nof conversation he mentioned that\nRev. and Mrs. T. Bishop (formerly\nof Mt. Pleasant Baptist Church),\nwere now residing in Tacoma, Rev.\nMr. Bishop's health having made it\nnecessary to give up the pastorate\nof the First Baptist Church at Ballard.\nMiss Florence Burrett, another\nMt. Pleasant former resident, was\nsfeen and was looking charming.\nMt* Pleasant\nLodges.\nI. O. 0. P. i\nMt. Pleasant Lodge No. in meets every\nTuesday at 8 p. in , in Oddfellows Hall\nWestminster avenue, Mt. Pleasant.\nSojourning brethren cordially invited\nto attend.\nNouli! Grand\u00E2\u0080\u0094Stanley Morrison.\nRecording Secretary\u00E2\u0080\u0094H. Patter-\nson, 180 Tenth aveuue, east.\nLADIES OP THE MACCABEES\nAlexandra Hive No. 7, holds regnlar\nReview 2d nn.. lth Tuesdays of each\nmouth in Knights of Pythias Hall\nWestiniiister avenue.\nVisitiug i-iidies always welcome.\nLady Commander\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mrs. N. Pettipiee.e,\n25 Tenth nvenue, east.\nLady Rocorder Keeper\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mrs. Butchart,\ncomer Eleventh nnd Manitoba.\nJ-G.Ii.\t\nMt. Plensaut L. O. L.,\nNo. 1842, meets the 1st and\n3d Thursday of each mouth,\nat 8 p. 111 , in the K. of P.\nHull\nY ,.., AU visiting Brethren\nWj.j-_i:.!-'i? '<' cordially welcome.\nJ. Martin, W. M.,\n124 Ninth uve'ii'ic, cast.\nSamuel Moore, Rec. Soc'y., '\nsmith Vancouver 1'ostoilli'..\nI. O. P.\nCourt Vancouver 1828, Independent\nOrder of Foresters meets 2d nnd 4th\nMondnVS of ench mouth nt 8 p. in., itt\nOddfellows' Hall,\nVisiting brethren alwnys welcome.\nCiiiY.v Ranger\u00E2\u0080\u0094A. Pengpllyi\nRecording Secretary\u00E2\u0080\u0094M. .T. Crehan,\n887 l'lin..,.. sstruct, l.'ity.\nFinancial Secretary\u00E2\u0080\u0094Rnlpl1 S. Cuiii-\nuur.m \"Advocate\" Office, Mt. Pleasant\nCANADIAN ORDER OF CHOSEN\nFRIENDS.\nVaucouver Council, No. 21 In, meets\neverv 2d nnd 4th Thursdays of each\nmonth, in I O. O. F., Hall, Westminster nvenue.\nSojourning Friends always weloonie\nE. K. Flow-welling, Chief Gonnoillor\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0,!.' Ontario sircci.\nMrs. 0. G. Kiimie, Recorder\nHiS Seventh avenue, east.\n_\ni\nEL-*t$A\n-J*-___-\u00C2\u00BBi\"-.l-_--l-W.^\nTwo 25-Ht. lots, % block from Westiniiister avenue, !?(\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 no.\nCorner, 50x100, Ninth avenue, $8,000.\nProperty 011 Westminster nvenue\nbringing 11 rental of $100 per mouth.\n2 88-ft. lots, 9-rootned House, orchard\nsmall fruit... .$8,e60\nBountiful 9-room House, gns and\nelectric light, convenient to enr;\nThirteeuth aveuue.\nLot 2lixl!!2 on Westiniiister avenue\ntwo-storey bnildiug, in fine coudi-\ntion; leased for 2 vears; title perfect. Price #14.UW).\nOue lot, 25xl\o, ou Westmiuster avium; price {500, $300 down,\nbalance uu easy terms.\nSix-room I.oi-.bc on Howe street, (1,200\nciisli, balance uu easy terms. .\n5 Lots (comer) Westiniiister avenue,\ni.(-I82; price$8 500, terms.\nHowe Sound\n143 Meres\nCrown ('rent L-.itd.\nif: lf mile water-front.\nHeavily timbered\u00E2\u0080\u0094fir and cedar.\nr\nCash $1 000. Will ex'h'ngo\nfur city property.\nBuys 44-ft. on Westminster\navenue. Good business\nproperty. Increasing in\nvalue all the time.\n 0\t\nChoice Acres near city ; suitable to\n\u00C2\u00A3, subdivide; good buy; favorable\nterms.\na lot on Westminster\naveuue, nenr city limits.\n\u00C2\u00A5400 cash.\n$1 SOO\nbuys 11 flue lot on Loriii\" street.\nTlie finest locution nu this street.\nBny now before tlie price goes\nup; ijft.00 cash, balance ii and 12,\nLOTS on FOURTEENTH\nAvenue\n|.i00 and |0OO each\u00E2\u0080\u0094half cash.\nThese lots nro hijih and level.\nList\nYour Property witV\nMrs. R. Whitney, 24*id Westminster\nnvenue, \"Advoeiite\" Otiioe.\nI\nV\na\nV\nV\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2j\ni\ni\n2\nMrs. R. Whitney\nI 2450 Westminster ave.\n;>f4*tf-r^-Wr-Ww?- jcss-wr-., **0* \u00E2\u0080\u00A2'' *-.frTs**''*M:-^ THE ADVOCATE, VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA.\nDedicatory Services.\nThe opening of the handsome new\nMethod'ist Church I'l-inorrow marks\nun epoch of great importance in the\nhistory of the church and the progress of Mt. Pleasant, The opening\nservices will be specially interesting; Rev. Principal Sparling, M. A.,\nD. D-, of Winnipeg, will deliver the\ndedicatory address. Rev. J. P. West-\nman, Pastor, Rev. A. M. Sanford, B.\nA., B. 1)., Rev. A. E. Hetherington,\nB. A., B, 1)., Rev. Jas. Turner, Rev.\nJ. F. Betts, Rev. A. E. Roberts and\nRev. Dr. Robson, will assist in the\nmorning services, and Revs. G. H.\nWilson, Herbert W. Piercy, and Rev.\nMr. Lundy, at the afternoon aud\nevening services. Mr. C. J. Breutou\naud Ur. .1. H. Smith, organists. The\njn'Ogi'tuimie, prepared by Mr, R. u.\nSparling, choir leader, follows:\nMorniug Service.\nDoxology.\n Rev. A. M. Sauford,\nB. A., B. D.\n. .. .Rev. J. P. Westiuau\nInvocation\nGreeting .\nHymn 4711.\nPrayer.. .Rev. A. E. Hetheringtonn,\nB. A., B. D.\nTe Deum in F Kots_schnian\nChoir.\nAnnouncements Pastor\nFirst Scripture Lesson\t\n Rev. Jas. Turner\nSolo, \"Jerusalem\" Parker\nA. H. Kendall.\nSecond Scripture Lesson\t\n Rev. J. F. Betts\nHymn 074.\nDedicatory Address\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nRev. J. W. Sparling, M. A\u00E2\u0080\u009E D. D.,\nPrincipal of Wesley College, Wln-\nnieg.\nQuartette, \"Saviour, Again to Tby\nDear Name\"\nMrs. Terryborry, Miss McQuillam,\nMessrs. Sparling and Tellfson.\nOffertory.\nHymn 671.\nAlternate Reading\t\n Rev. A. E. Roberts\nPresentation of Church to President.\nDeclaration\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nRev. A. M. Sanford, B. A., B. D.\n(President)\nDedicatory Prayer\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nRev. E. Robson, D. D.\nHymn 676.\nBenediction.Rev. Principal Sparling\nAfternoon Service, 3. P. M.\nHymn 9.\nPrayer Rev. Herbert W. Piercy\nAnthem, \"Oh, Come Let lis\nWorship\" Mendelssohn\nChoir.\nScripture Lesson. .Rev. G. H. Wilson\nBaritone Solo, \"Galillee\" AdaniB\nMr. Harry Grant.\nHymn 105.\nSermon\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nRev. A. E. Hetherlngton, B. A.,\nB. D.\nOffertory.\nQuartette Hicks Bros.\nHymn 99.\nBenediction Rev. Mr. Lundy\nEvening Service, 7:30 P. M.\nOrgan Prelude Dr. J. H. Smith\nInvocation Rev. Jas. Turner\nHymn 108.\nPrayer Rov. J. P. Westman\nAnthem, \"The Lord is Good\"\n, Simper\nChoir.\nAnnouncements Pastor\nSoprano Solo, \"O God, Be Merciful\" Bartlett\nMrs. C. C. Patterson.\nScripture Lesson.Rev. A. E. Roberts\nHymn 747.\nSermon\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nRev, Principal Sparling, M. A.,\nD. D.\nTrio, \"Father, Lead us by the\nHand\" from Belshazzar\nMrs. Terrvlierrv, Miss McQuillan\nand Mr. Sparling.\nHymn 785.\nBenendlction\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nRev. Principal Sparling, M. A.\nD. D.\nOrganists\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mr. C. J. Brenton and\nDr. J. H, Smith.\nChoir Leader\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mr. R C. Sptoling.\nTlie erection of the new church\nedifice\u00E2\u0080\u0094one of the finest tn Vancouver\u00E2\u0080\u0094was begun ill July of last\nyear, and represents an expenditure\nof $35,000. The auditorium will\nseat 1500; the frescoing ou the walls\naud ceiling is beautiful. The light\nfalling through the stained glass\nwindows casts a softened glow\nthroughout the church, which Is\nvery effective. .The lighting has been\nwisely considered and no expense\nspared In fixtures appropriate and\nhandsome. The choir ls back of the\nminister's desk.\nThe handsome $3 000 Pipe Organ is\niu place und will be heard tomorrow\nfor tlie first time.\nThe Sunday school rooms, library,\nyoung men's room, dining room and\nkitchen are on the first floor and\ncomplete In every detail. The La-\n\"dies' Aid also have a handsome\nlarge parlor on this floor. The\nnames of the board of trustees for\nthe year are given below:\nT. Cunningham, R. Sparling, Jas.\nWells, W. Kerfoot, 1. W. Doherty,\nA. Peugelly, P. ti. Drost; _. P\nHides, 1. Mills, A. 0. Taylor, J.\nThompson, .1. Vague. Jos. Brown, D.\nE. Harris, W. Carter, T. Saeret, R.\nH. Duke, secretary trusteo board.\n\"Are you doing your share to help\nsolve tbe child labor problem?\" asks\nthe National Child Labor Committee in ils department ofileially published in the July Womau's Home\nCompanion, \"If you could look for\na moment into the great industries\nwhere children are employed at the\nsacrifice of education and virtue,\nand by their work doomed to destroy their future hope of health,\n.manhood and womanhood, your\nheart would go out to them and\nyou would hasten to the aid of those\nwho are trying to rescue these little\nones frum disease and premature\nage.\"\n i>_ho 'jdvocRto\" to always pieistd\nto rem ivn from i \r''{_.j>.v,IIS.\nROYAL CROWN SOAP CO.\nTrade Marks\nDcsions\ncopyhichts &0.\nAnv-on'^'MMlinff :t fI-.iM-.-1i unil dOSOrlptlnn m-iy\n**|ii!i i;!v iss'iThilii oitr oplntnn fruc iv.'i\u00C2\u00BBt_i.-r mi\nhivi'-iiinn li prolintilv p-iUMiUble. t'linmutii.-i.-\ntlntiiRtrlctjroonfldsntuUi Mud-bunk tin Patent-* \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\ns.-'ii fri*o. Olilnut mr-Piif-v f\u00C2\u00BB,r wr-urHi-* pi.'ems.\nl'lUuitij i.tki'ii tnnnjch Munn fc Co* receive\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2jjii' i'iln\u00C2\u00BBtkc, wttlieut, emirm\ in the\nScientific .American.\nA lut'i-Hi-it i\"lv ll!\u00C2\u00BBi(ifrnf'*ti '.vm-hlv. frfiTOQit elf. -\neulutii I nur M-.i-iii;i Iri [nnmill. Term*, $.t & .\ntytsT'x i 'Hi'- ti.'intUt-, \u00E2\u0080\u00A2*;. Bold by mi nowadeateMi\nMpfl&Co^eiBw,d**\"'New York\nHiaiiuli i ii' till, 1'* yt., Wiihlii.iii'.on. 1). C.\n%>W Subscribers who fail to\nget \"The Advocate\" on Satnr-\n\u00E2\u0080\u009E.y morning please notify\ni_HU;o.thse, Telephone txicO^\n... i\u00C2\u00BB J. riAKWV & _0.\nCOMPAMY. Fl.-CAXd.*!., PitKSS Illlll\n___.VI.1I -Situs\" _.\h.:NT's.\nit) Fleet _-_*.tr.. Lf.'iilon, E'. 0., England\nColonial Business a Specialty.\n*t*\u00C2\u00AB***47***'**\u00C2\u00AB**i:00*'**-i \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n>.\u00C2\u00BB0000000.90000.J^00**0* 90000.\nAdvertize-\nW TO ^mr.mVi^m^.^m.*.*J.~. -*\u00C2\u00AB.^*.s\u00C2\u00AB.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094IN\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\"The advocate'\"\n0 \u00C2\u00ABf rf* j*'t'^X^** \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB*-? 0r* 04*4*.?'I\n0**000000*9>0000000i>'P->0.r *>*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 * :\nThe persistent ndveiti-'i'is fhe chftp.l\nwho Wins out The \"occasional\" nd'\nisn't really u very gcjod business propos:-\ntioi),..\nBofore Starting ou a shopping lour \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nlook over the advertisements, lutbuo\nADVOriAflft... THE ADVOCATE. VANCOUVER. BRITISH COLUMBIA.\nSuits Every Taste\nIf you have been drinking Japan Tea you will enjoy\nALABA\nii\n^^^J GREEN TEA\nIt Has a Most Delicious Flavor and is Absolutely Pure.\nLead Packets Only, 40c, SOc, and 60c Per Lb. At All Grocers,\ne\nEnglish veterinary surged.is have\ndiscovered a new disease in dogs\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nmotor heart. It appears t,Iiat doga are\nyery fond Qf riding in mb,tor cars, but\nthat their hearts can't stand'it.\nTORTURING RHEUMATISM\n\"Suffered for Five Years\u00E2\u0080\u0094Cured by Dr.\nWilliams Pink Pills\nAgonizing pains, sometimes in one\npart of the body, sometimes in another, more often in the back or joints\n-that's rheumatism. Each day makes\nHi a little town in Louisiana a\nyoung woman skated fer four hours\niu a rink and won a prize. Then her\nheart gave out, and the prize is lo be\ninventoried among her belongings.\nCATARRH CANNOT BE CURED,\nwith LOCAL APPLICATIONS, aa they\ncanot reach the seat ot the disease.\nCatarrh Is a blood or constitutional die-\nease, and In order to cure It you must\ntake Internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh\nCure le taken Internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfacet.\nHall's Catarrh Cure ls not a quack medicine. It Was prescribed by one of the\nthe disease worse\u00E2\u0080\u0094increases the tor- best physicians ln the country for years\nture. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have\ncured thousands. They cured Mr.\nHorace Plante, o\u00C2\u00A3 Sorel, Que., of a\nmost aggravated case of rheumatism.\nI walked as if my boots were filled with\npebbles. The pains, starting in my\nfeet, spread to all parts of the body;\nmy back and joints became affected.\nFor upwards of five years I suffered\n.the greatest agony. Often I was confined to bed, hardly able io move. Nothing seemed to help me. I despaired of ever being well again. By good\nchance Dr. Williams' Pink Pills were\nbrought to my attention and I decided\nto try them. I got six boxes\u00E2\u0080\u0094before\nthey were gone I felt a great improvement. I contlinued the treatment and\nmy health gradually, came back till\nnow I do not feel the least pain\u00E2\u0080\u0094I am\ntotally cured. It Was a surprise to my\nfriends to see me on the street again\nwell and strong after five years of torture. They wanted to know what\nbrought about the change. I told\nthem Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, for I\ntook no other medicline once I began\ntheir use. Rheumatic sufferers give\nDr. Williams' Pink Pills a fair trial;\nthey will surely do for you what they\ndid for me\"\nIt is in the blood \u00E2\u0080\u0094 poor blood \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nthat such troubles as rheumatism,\nIndigestion, dizziness, heart palpitation, anaemia, weakness and a host\nof other diseases find their root. It\nis the blood that Dr. Williams' Pink\nPills act on. They make it pure,\nrich, red and health-giving. That is\nwhy they cure all the common ailments of everyday life. Sold by\ndruggists or bv mall nt 50 cents a box\nor six boxes for $2.50, from the Dr.\nWilliams' Medicine Co., Brockvllle, Ont.\nAn inquest was held recently in\nLondon on n woman who died from\nblood piisoiune caused by .he infection of a \"chapped\" hand.\nand Is d regular prescription. It Is com-\nEosed of the best tonics known, com-\nIned with the best blood purifiers, acting directly on the mucous surfaces.\nThe perfect combination of the two In-\nRedlents Is what produces such wonder-\n1 results ln curing Catarrh. Send for\ntestimonial! free. .\u00C2\u00AB\nF. J. CHENEY & CO.. Props., Toledo, a\nBold by Druggists, price \u00E2\u0080\u0094o.\nTake Hall's Family Pills for constl_iatlo\u00C2\u00BB\nWest Derr\" claims the only woman\nengineer in New Hampshire in Mrs.\nBertha M. Wilson, who ia an expert\nwitli a stationary engine.\nNot a Nauseating Pill\u00E2\u0080\u0094The t-xcipi-\nent of a pill ia the 8ubstance which\nenfolds the ingredients and makes up\nthe pill m ._,s. That of Parmelee's\nVegetable Pills ia so compounded as\nto preserve their moisture, and they\nmay be carried into any latitude\nwithout impairing their strength.\nMany pills, in order to keep them\nfrom adhering, are rolled iu powders,\nwhich prove nauseating to the taste.\nParmelee'a Vege.au. Pills are so prepared that they are agreeable to the\nmost delicate.\nA New York man waa abut up in an\nasylum for the insane a few days go\nbecause he played tag with children\nthe streets.\n**ome persons have periodical attacks of Canadian cholera, dysentery\nor diarrhoea, and have to use great\nprecautions to avoid the disease.\n-\"Change of water, cooking, and green\n''\"fruit, ia sure to bring on the attacks.\nTo such persons we would recommend\n\"Dr. J. D. Kellogg's Dysentery Cordial\nas being the best medicine in the\nmarket tor all summer complaints. If\na few drops are taken in water when\n''the aymptonis are noticed no further\n'-trouble will be experienced.\n\"Algernon Charles Swinburne, the\npoet, ia engaged in writing a new tragedy the subject of which is Ceaare\nBorgia.\nMinard's Lini-nent, Lumberman's\nFriend\nTo the mullahs, who were displeased\nat his Initiation into Freemasonry, the\nAmir explained on hia return from India thai tliere was ndthing in the craft\nopposed to Mohammedanism.\n\"ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT removes\nnil hard, soft nr tvilIoiisiMl lumps nnd blon.isbeB\nfrom horses, blood spavin, curbs, splints.\nTinehnnf., tweeney, stint's, spmins. sore nml\nswollen throat, roughs, eta. Save $oO by um\u00C2\u00BB\nnf nno bottle. Warranted tlie most wonderful\nBlemish Cure ever kn-.v,_,.\nIn the week ended February 4 fourteen infants wore reported in the cities\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094,\nfire-proof for a century,\u00E2\u0080\u0094our plain guarantee keeps it so for\n__._._._..._. _. cen^ Q. g^ ^ ^g man vmo buys it.'\nTfia\nFefllar\nPeople\nGet the f acts\nbefore\nyou roof\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 thing.\nOf Oshawa\nMontreal\nMade in ONE QUALITY ONLY.-of 28-guage/\nsemi-hardened STEEL double-galvanized\nThey lock on all FOUR sides-the ONLY METAL\nshingle that need NO CLEATS. Easy to put on\u00E2\u0080\u0094a hammer and a snips (tinners' shears) are tools enough. Cost\nLESS and last longer than any other roof. Tell us the\nsurface area of any roof on your place and we will\ntell you exactly what it will cost to roof it right\nt_-8C-lf\ns-kW. UO-b-nst\nOttawa\n\u00C2\u00AB_B_MlSt\nLondon Wlnnlpos\nl DundM 86, 78 Lombi\u00E2\u0080\u0094fl\nSt.\nVancouver\nfUPuduSk io)\nji\nPAGE FENCES A WEAR BEST\"\n\"of High Orton Wire,\u00E2\u0080\u0094well prove lt to you. COILED-nob crimped.\n._ _.,\u00E2\u0080\u009E __. ._ ^ gtajri tonk ___._, .., , .\nmakes lt stUl stronger In service.\nTHE PACK WIRE\nFENCE\n_ .___ This\nPainted WHITE over heavy\nCOMPANY, LIMITED,\ngalvanising\u00E2\u0080\u0094rust proof. Rxperienced dealerti to erect lt Leads all In sale\n\u00C2\u00AB0\u00C2\u00BB \u00E2\u0080\u0094as In merit. Get Illustrated booklot and 1907 prices before buyingI\nW-lU-rvill*, To-onto. Montreal, St. Job-. Wir-nipoall THE ADVOCATE. VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA.\n______\n\u00C2\u00A9\nc&re/t// to ste/tct we//\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2HILE housework, even to Its\noccasional devotee, suffers ln\ncomparison with outdoor\nsports, still, certain of its fea-\nVes may be made to serve the same\nlrpo.se in developing certain muscles\nI do those very Bports she craves to\nBow. _.\nfake paddling, for instance. The\nKvements may be almost exactly du-\nIcated with a broom, turning sweep-\n} Into a form of exercise which has\n[results In an added poise of the body\na In a marked development of grace.\nht, of course, lf she sweeps ln an un-\nUnly fashion. There are women to this\nlr who persist In sweeping toward\nIm, with the result that they become\ntied early and stand awkwardly,\n[ich ls absolutely unnecessary.\nBold your broom lightly and easily,\nAf /tVfe pi///\nbut firmly, and sweep away from you,\ntaking as much Interest In the way you\nhandle it as In the fact that the room\nIs gradually getting clean. Stand with\nyour shoulders well back, bending from\nthe hips, lf you find lt necessary to\nlean forward, Instead of stooping forward as though from the shoulders.\nTrain yourself to sweep with the\nbroom at the left side as well as at the\nright, developing the sides evenly.\nAs to rowing, plain, humdrum washing may be made to yield some of the\nsame benefits if you make a point of\nrubbing hard up, as well as. or. Instead\nof, down the board. There is not the pull\nupon the upper arm muscles thai rowing\ngives unless you do this, and the\nharder you pull against tbe board the\nmore nearly you come to the movement and the benefit of rowing.\nEven the washing of the llttle pieces\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094the embroidered table linen, which\nso many women prefer to do up\nthemselves, rather than trust to tho\ntender mercies of a washer woman-\nmay be looked to as exercise producers.\nOf course, there Is no discounting\nthe value which the keen zeBt of a\ngame or of athletics adds to the actual physical development. And the\nclean, pure air In which rowing and\npaddling arc usually taken Is another great factor which Is often lacking In doing housework.\nBut almost every sport has its parallel in actual tasks, which, if they must\nbe done, may as well be done with\nan eye toward the good in the way of\nhealth nnd beauty to be got out of\nthc_\nMathematics and the Dressmaker\n' 0NSEN8E,\" says some one;\n\"what can mathematics have\nto do with dressmaking!\nbsmakers do not use arithmetic In\nking clothes.\" Well, really, that may\n|rue, for a good many gowns look\nway and would have been much\nbr for a few moments expended ln\nillation.\nthe flrst place, everything mUst be\nlei-lied by rules, and it ls far better\npompare the waist you are making\naneans of a measuring tape than by\nfins of two pieces of the garment. For\nlance, suppose the hookB which sup-\n; your skirt In the back are always\nand one-fourth Inches apart, and\nI eyes on your skirts are always the\nse, any skirt can fit any waist, and\n^need never have either one to meas-\n. the other by. One and one-fourth\npes, by the way, Is the regular\nrsmnker's measurement for the hooks\nand eyes which hold skirt and waist together.\nHow much easier, too, when making\nbuttonholes and putting on buttons to\ndecide just what distance apart you will\nhave them ln Inches, and then work lt\nby means of a measure! The size of the\nwaistband, also, should be in Inches,\nwuh so much allowed for turning in and\nso much for lap under.etc. If the home-\nsewer will keep a memorandum of all\nmeasurements as to size of neck, waist,\nwristband and other equally important\nitems which she is liable to need frequently, lt will save her much jumping\nup and, also, the trouble of making\ncomparisons between things made and\nthose in process. She may even be able\nto cut without a pattern a fairly accurate skirt, one that will do for common\nwear, If she has the bottom and top\nmeasurements of the widths, with the\nlength of each.\nLoose Braids\nWHEN braids begin to loosen\nthere is pretty sure to be\ntrouble ahead, The flrst fow\nbroken stitches should, of course, be\nrepaired at once, and the braid made\nsecure or the heel may catch and a\nleg be broken by a fall But If a\nfew days after the flrst repair has\nbeen made another place breaks out,\nthere ls but one thing to be done,\nwhich is to rip the entire braid off\nand put lt on afresh or replace lt entirely, beenuso the second breaking\naway shows clearly that the thread\nwith which the braid has been sewed\non has grown rotten and cannot be depended upon.\nThe braid should be taken off, all\nthe threads should be picked out and ,\nthe bottom of the skirt should be well\ndamncned and pressed.\nCLOCKS AND THEIR\nSTRIKING\nTHE clock of our grandfather's time\ncame from England, and struck\nevery quarter of an hour.\nAnother ancient one plays old songs\nand hymns instead of striking.\nStill another contains not only a\ncuckoo, but also a mocking bird, which\nalternate in their cries.\nA clock that was once very common\nportrays stars, moon and sun, moving\nslowly overhead as the clock strikes.\nA heavy striking clock Is made for a\nlibrary, not for a bedroom.\nFit the clocks to the general appearance of the room. Often they are the\nonly misfit things in lt.\nThose little gilt clocks, with the intermittent alarm, which rings at Intervals of a half-minute each for twenty\nminutes, are just the thing for Miss\nLie-a-bed.\nIn France some of the new clocks\nstrike up to twenty-four, lnstead^if\ntwice twelve\u00E2\u0080\u0094a very sensible Plan. *0\n; BABY'S SIXTH ]\n/ MONTH\nihe Food Should Have the Most\nCareful Attention\nBy Dr. Emelyn L. Coolidge\nCopyright, 1905, by A. S. Barnes & Co.\nTHE nightdress should now be ot\ncotton and the skirt left off ai\nnight, lf it hus not already been\ndiscarded, but the band and ex\nthin shirt should be worn. Long white\ncotton stockings, which may be pinned\nto the napkin, Bhould be worn all sum-\nmer, and not short socks.\nIn summer lt ls Important to keep the\nbaby's head as cool as possible; therefore, do not use a hot sunbonnet, which\nshuts off all the air; muslin caps or\nlight pique hats afford enough simile. LC.\nthe baby has a carriage parasol.\nlf one expects to take a long sea voyage or travel a long time on tbe cars\nwhere fresh milk cannot be obtained, lt\nwill be well to accustom the child to\ntaking either condensed milk or one of\nthe best prepared foods which can ba\nmade with water before starting on thtt-\njourney. Begin to do this two or three,\nweeks before leaving home, and give\nthe baby one or two meals each day of.\nthis food. This Is a good plan to follow\nsven If the baby Is nursed by his mother, for she may be ill or unable te>.\nnurse her Infant for some reason, and it\nIs best to be prepared for such an emergency.\nMilk that has been rapidly cooled and\nplaced in sealed and sterilized glass jars,\nwill keep from four to six days, if kept\nwell packed ln Ice. Enough food for\ntwenty-four or even forty-eight hours\nmay be prepared at home, if lt ls sterilized and packed in a little traveling;\nbasket which contains a small compartment ln which to keep ice.\nThe formula sometimes used for tlie\nslxth month is; Six ounces of top milk:\nskimmed from the top of a quart bottle\nof milk, ten ounces of milk poured off,\ntwenty-four ounces of barley or oatmeal\ngruel, four teaBpoonfuli. of granulated\nor seven of milk sugar, a pinch of bicarbonate of soda and a pinch or salt.\nThis should be pasteurized, cooled ln.\nthe usual manner, and given to tbe baby\nevery three hours up to 9 or 10 P. M.\nFrom four to six ounces may be taken,\nat each meal.\nWhen an exceedingly hot day comes, It\nis always wise to pour out one or even\ntwo ounces from each bottle of the regular mixture and substitute boiled water\nin its place.\nIf the baby is _.t all apt to vomit, It\nwill be best during the hot weather to,\nuse only four or five ounces of the top\nmilk Instead of six, and to make up tha\nquantity with the gruel. Unless the\nbaby ls inclined to be constipated, barley gruel is better to use in summer-\nthan oatmeal, for it ls less heating.\nAnother good plan, when the baby has*\ndelicate digestive organs, is to make\none meal a day, all through the very-\nhot weather, of mutton broth, made in\nthe following manner: One pound of the\nneck of mutton cut up, one pint of coldt\nwater and a pinch of salt, Cook very\nslowly for three or four hours until you\nhave half a. pint, adding a little water,,\nlf necessary, from time to time, as It\nboils away; then strain through muslin,\nand. when ccld, remove every particle\nof fat. This broth may be added to an,\nequal quantity of barley water and fed\nto the baby lukewarm through a nursing bottle.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2lII these simple measures help to ward\nu_f the dreaded \"summer complaint,\"\nand give the digestive organs less work\nto do during hot weather and while the\nteeth are being cut.\nPublic Manicuring\nHE was a good-looking man, well-\ndressed, and quiet in his appearance. He even rose to give an\nelderly woman his seat, ut which unusual exhibition of politeness the girl\nipposite looked admiringly at him. He.\nJId not whistle, he did not smoko, although it was a seat whero smoking was .\nallowed, and there was not a sign of a\ntoothpick about him.\nAnd then\u00E2\u0080\u0094he drew forth a pearl-handled penknife, and began to manicure \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nhis nails! More and mere absorbed ha-\ngrew, quite oblivious of the interest of\nthe girl opposite. And as he diligently\npared and scraped, his lips formed in a\npucker, and ho began to whistle. Little by little the marks of the gentleman\ndisappeared, and those of the boor Increased. A sudden motion tipped hia\nhat back on his forehead, and as ha\ndrew out his handkerchief to polish the-\nnewly manicured nails the foreordained toothpick came out with it, ond waa.\npromptly inserted In his mouth.\nThe girl opposite, who was an ardent\ntype-hunter, took ont the little notebook she always carried, and wrote\ntherein: \"Dr. Jeykll becomes Mr. Hyde\nthrough the agency ot a nall-flle!\"\nTerrifying Wallpaper\nJUST as the guests were sitting down\nto dinner a child's scream pierced\ntho air. The hostess hastily excused herself and left the room. A few\nmoments later sho returned.\n\"1 can't think what is the matter with\nBobbie,\" she said, aa she reseated herself. \"Ever since he has had his bedroom repapered he wakes up about this\ntime ln a dreadful fright and screams\nuntil I come. Then he tells me that he\nsees things coming out of the walls- -\ntonight It was monkeys, last night it\nwas spiders.\"\n\"Do you leave a light In his room?\"\nasked the doctor.\n\"Oh! yes, Indeed; he couldn't sleep,\nwithout lt.\"\n\"Then I think I know what alls hlnn.\nWhat sort Is this new wallpaperT\"\n\"It's a fancy flower design in red and\nwhjte\u00E2\u0080\u0094very pretty, Fred and I thought.\"\n\"Doubtless It was very pretty to you,,\nbut to an imaginative child lying there\nln the dusk those figured wallpapers are\nperfect torture. I should advise you to\nrepaper the room in jome plain op\nstriped paper.''\n\"It Isn't only children that art cop.\ntured by such wall papers, either,\" remarked the young girl next to the doctor. \"When my aunt was sick she said\nthe wallpaper drovo her nearly crazv.\nShe would try to make faces out ot it.\nand then they would come of their own\naccord, until- n|j the walls were full of\nthem.\"\n\"Well, all this Is news to me,\" said\nBobble's mother, \"and Bobble's wallpaper will certainly be changed - THE ADVOCATE, VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Juue 89, 19*7\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nLOTS!\n8o=ft. Front\non Sixth avenue. Good\ndwelling. Fine buy.\nOne 50-ft lot, ou Thirteenth aveuue,\nIJjdO; cash $:is!5\u00E2\u0080\u0094a good buy.\nBeautiful cornar, fine house on property. Iu desirablo part of Vaucouvor.\nTwo choice lots on Niulh aveuue;\nprice on tonus .$l.(i()0,cash$1.000,balance\n8 nuel 12 months; price all cash $1,525.\nTheso aro vory desirable lots.\nLots iu South Vancouver: Double-\ncorner, vory good buy; price $1,200, cash\n$500.\nNorth Arm Road: Ohoice lots for\nbuilding within the roach of the work-\ninginan; very easy terms. Pive.ceut\nfaro ou tramline.\nThree room pottage, 2 lots, fruit\ntrees and small fruit, Ontario street;\nprice $1,700.\nBeautiful new house on Ninth avenue, 2 fireplaces; price $3,000, cash\n$1,500.\nOott.igo ou Ninth aveuue, 6 rooms,\npretty homo; cash $1.000, balance easy\ntornis.\n50-ft. Lot on Slixth avenue for a short\ntime only fl,665.\nLots on Scott, good location.\n50-ft Lot on Ninth avenue j $2.\u00C2\u00ABoo,\noash $1,600, balance O. P. R terms.\n$4,500, % cash\u00E2\u0080\u0094will buy\n4,.4-fiiu frevst on\nWestminster awe.\nGood business property.\nMrs.R. Whitney, \"Advocate\"\nOffice, Mt. Pleasaut.\nW***** ^4'-s''!*^^-^^'iS0*<:*'**** T our a i'.: 1; it s\nJ.'rtrtlu r:i Bank Building, Nintbavenuo\nist\nLOTS for\nMrs. R. WHITNEY\n\"ADVOCATE\"\nQfflQO*\nRED ST Ml CASH\nGROCERY\nIs uow in full swine aud doing a nie o\nbusiness.\nFreshest and Cleanest Stock\nin the District.\nPrompt Delivery, Telephouo n.'ir.o.\nNinth * Wkstminstki. avenues\nNorthern Bauk Building.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Cham. SYMONS\nMERCHANT TAILOR\nI'll nnd Wockmnnahlp Guarantaed,\ndoming, ttopiilring, Prswilng and Dyelngi\nStiitaap-iugcil ninl in'essi-ii for \"fl, panta{ori-.*-,\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0.iiilli ft Westminster aves., Up-stairs\nant Musical Society Band discoursed\ngood music at the band stand near\nthe church grounds, which contributed largely to the pleasure of the\nlarge attendance. The Congregational Tea was quite up to the excellent standard established by the\nWoman's Auxiliary of St. Michael's.\nThe Cougregfitiou of Mt. Pleasaut\nMethodist Ohurch tendered Bev. A. E.\nHetherington B A., B- B\, a farewell\nreception. Mr Thos. Cunningham was\nin the chair and paid high tribute to tlie\nsterling worth of Mr. Hetboriugtou.\nMr. Hetheriugton was preseuted with a\nwell-filled purse from members of tbe\nCongregation and a gold-headed umbrella from the Ladies' Aid which were\naccepted with words eif appreciation b.v\nthe retiring pastor.\nFoster\u00E2\u0080\u0094Chase.\nThere wus a pretty home we'dding at\nthe home of Mr nnd Mrs. Isaac Poster,\nTenth aveune. on Thursday June 27th,\nwhen Rev. A. E Hi tlierington united\nin marriage lilr. Horace .B. Foster and\nMiss Editli M. Cluise of Seattle. Tlie\nbride wore a dainty white silk gown\naud carried a bridal boquet. Her goiui -\nawuy-gown was. brown tni)ot'-nn.i!e\n'cloth. The youug couple were tie\nrcccipients of many handsome presents.\nAbout thirty guests enjoyed an execl-\nleut wedding supper. Mr. and :urs.\nFoster left for Victoria for a short trii\nFor Local News Read Thb Auwcatb\nI desire to announce\nto Mt. Pleasant Indies\nthat I have bought tlio\ndry goods anel millinery stock of Mrs. W.\nW., Merfcley, 2_505\nWest avi'iiue\ anil will\ncontinue the business\nat same place. I respectfully solicit your\npatronage.\nSale eif Ladies' nnd\nChildren's Trimmed\nand I'litrimnicd Hals\nTU'.S1>AY and\nWEDNESDAY.\nThe \"Mark Twain\" Top Notch:\nDut probably the most difficult top\nnotch or them all lo win will be\nthat of Mr. S. L. Clemens. Such acts\nas \"owning up\" on occasions when\nit is noeessary for honor aud when\nIt requires courage to do so; standing by a friend when ol,hers aro\nmaking fun of him or false stato-\nuients concerning him. Standing up\nfor the right even if you stand alon?\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094and bravely enduring pnin and\noven disgrace without whining or\ncomplaint when It is necessary for\nthe cause of right.\nPerhaps the greatest test of moral\nheroism is championing an unpopular cause or person when either Is\nunjustly treated. An act such as\nthis sort will test the nerve of the\nbrave man, and the boy who does\nit wins the Mark Twain Top Notch.\nGet your work done at the\nGlasgow Berber Shop\n2 doors from Hotel\nFrank Underwood, Proprietor.\nBATHS\u00E2\u0080\u0094Bath room fitted with Porcelain Bath Tub and all modern\nconveniences.\nThis property iswitliin a block of\nthe tramline\u00E2\u0080\u0094carefare to Cedar Cottage is\nthe same as on the city lines. Fine homes\nhave been built in this locality ancl many\nhandsome residences are to be built this\nsummer.\nAcreage and Lots.\nFor Sale Exclusively By\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n2450 Westminster ave.\n>**<3__--__B3Z___-\nE-_**----___3_____-**^*-^^\n''3i0****************i^l*****900X?^^a^^\n*-C***S*4*\u00C2\u00A3**-0<*&90fr\n9a^t***mt*9#*&0.900&!?900*&\u00C2\u00BB&**&9.9>i?0P^ !\u00C2\u00BB.^J>*'P-\u00C2\u00BBs\u00C2\u00BB>\u00C2\u00BB*>\nELECTRIC RAYS TREATMENT\nNote : this is not the X-Rny, ns this machine is one of the Infest discover\nThe itiiysiif this Mac.line laa Microbe Destroyer liiul poifuetly harmless, tl euros or\nrelieves pains mm iliaensca ftlmoal In. tiimlv. Bitta Cancer, Skin diseases, M'eaH nml\nSine Eyes, Inflariiation of tho Kyea nr any purl nt tlio im.lv. Quinsy, TOn-lliii.s, Boro\nThroat, Neuralgia, Norvoua Headaches, ueiulnelios from Eyo-atraln.\nMuny disagreeable aymptons roinovoel ns by tangle.\nfull nr write, ynu wont bo disappointed,\nOant* H.&. WALTON\nHours 1 to 0 p. in.\nHave Fine Lots in\n$ afso ACREAGE\nI\nj 2450 Westminster ave.\nI 1\n****0***0t*0<4****0**04frl****:G*^*^\nGood cheer at menl time is essential to good digestion.\nOari yopr wife be always cheerful wheu she has to wrestle with\na coal or wood stove ?\nTry a Oas Rnuge and notice the dift'eoeuce,\nTELEPHONE 31\u00E2\u0080\u0094and ask our representative to call and givo\nyou an estimate of cost of gas couueotion.\nVancouver Gas Company.\nOffice : corner of Oarrall aud Hastings streets\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0nw.st *-! .'US.' ss'\u00C2\u00BB \u00C2\u00AB'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00C2\u00AB mm. . \u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00BB\nT*.\n\t\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n____________________"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "Mt_Pleasant_Advocate_1907-06-29"@en . "10.14288/1.0311591"@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 .