"ee74b6a7-141e-4fbf-8b8a-ef4531b815e9"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "2016-04-21"@en . "1906-11-24"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/mpadvocate/items/1.0311622/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " Mt Pleasant Advocate\ntmmM to ths ititti-u of Mt. PicaMHt and South v__twivw.\n**1\nKi-iTABtSffiH-b Ariti_ 8th-, 1899. Wiiotu No. 402.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\"'\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0- '\" '--\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 '- 'im*m*e*mm*a*\nMt. Pueasant, Va-CO-Vb*\nIjtll.-IIT i.HM\n,. B. 0.i BAWrtUUT. Nov.y 34, 1908.\n(Eighth Year.) Vox. 8, No. 89\nG<t Crown*\nana\nBridge Work\n$5.00\nA-ridge showing the four fro_t teetli replaced by c*6-\"v_i_g t_e\neye-teeth with Porcelaine Oriiwnir\u00E2\u0080\u0094the t_o_t natural of all Dental\n%ork know_ to the pfTdfessiOn. -\nGiva us a call and let us dhow yon Samples ol Onr Work.\nNEW YORK DENTISTS\n14& Hastings St. Te'leP-ohe im.\nOfflce Hours: 8 a. m., to 9 p. ih.; Sun&iys 6 a. nu, to 3 p. th.\nLocal Items.\nFoi. Local News Rend Tu_ Advocate\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 im\nChanges for adVeH-cmenw should be\nin bof oto Thursday noon ti insure their\npublication.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0r.. ' r. '.< . fi\nRatepayers should not fail to turn\nout and vote for tho Market By-law\nand the Incinerator By-law today,\n' Tli- i-fl i- {tf.rrT - 'ii;.-- \u00E2\u0096\u00A0>\nAieiandra Hive No. 7, It. O. T. M.,\nWill have a Social evening alter their\nregular business meeting on .Monday\nevei-Ug next in K. of P. Hall.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094____\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2;-_---__ -\nFree Demonstration of Otoffl & Black-\nwell's-Jollies today at H O. Lee's JWest-\nminBter Avenne Grocery.\nSale of LndieB' Skirts at cost for t\ro\nweeks'Only at Mrs. W. W. Merkley,\nWestminster avenue, near TMrt.\n.. 'ir-.,\nHOUSE\n! SLIPPERS\nt. !\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0_.:o-.\u00E2\u0080\u0094s=g_\nGifts to\nOld Country\nfriends\n\l yon intend to send\nChristmas Gifts to\nfriends in the Old\nCountry you should get\nbusy about it now.\nThis particularly applies to articles in\n'our line \u00E2\u0096\u00A0Whioh 'have\n, to bo made np.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0NUGGET \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 JEW-LERY\nfor instance.\nTHE JEWELER\nCorner Hastiugs and -Granville -Sts..\nOffloial Watch Inspector-. P. R.\ntt]____ %bsoribei- are requested *o\n(report any .carelessness in the delivery\ngive a!\nGi-Ud Eu'tert*inil-e-t 1_ \"t!ho Oddfel-\nlOwV lH-H. The proceeds will go\nto wArdB -hying uniforms.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 :o: fs\u00E2\u0080\u0094.\nFlint's Bromo Grippe\u00E2\u0080\u0094PM$ oure tor\nooldin the head\u00E2\u0080\u00942Bo a bos at the\nM. A. W. Co.'s Postoffice Drug Store.\nThe vote on the Market question last\nJanuary was in 'tie vie-iltiy uiijort'>y .in \"ftwor >of _atving!\na Ma-cdt was 8887., If is to be\nhoped 'the -seine difference will he observed in voting on the By-law today,\nand that the majority in its favor\nwill be even greater.\n lot \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i s,\nThe Woman's Auxiliary and the\nGirl's Guild of St. Michael's Church\nwill hold a Bazaar and Supper on Wednesday Dec. 5th, in Oddfellows' Hall,\nMt. Pleasant.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ioi \"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\"\nMOUNT PLEASANT METHODIST\nOHUROH.\nA hand of twouty-five S-_3-Onar.es.\non their way ito .lapuu and West China,\nsent ent J\u00C2\u00BBy tho Ciinoda Methodist\nOtaM1*, will be in the city, on JBunday.\nThe pulpit, of Mt. Pleasant Methodist\nChurch will he occupied morning and\nevening by members of this band,\n- In the morniug Rev.. K, W. Wallace\nB. A., B. D., author of '.'The Heart of\nSa-Chnan,\" will speak.\nIn the evening Rev. W.E Sibly B.A.,\nand his wife, will deliver short addresses\nAll are weloome.\nF-roesned Honse, two lot- 60-120-ft.\neach, fonood; fruit teoes; flowing wall\n17 feet deep; price ?***.\"\u00C2\u00BBo, <|800 cash),\nterms to suit. A new honse and not\nvery far Irom csrjino, '\nMrs. R. Whitney, 24M Westminster\navenne.\n..''-\n.- WinskiU's Masquerade Dane* given\nin Od_ta\u00C2\u00ABcwni* Hall on Friday last,\nproved a vary enjoyable occasion to his\npupils aad other guoBts. Firat prize for\nbert costume (a lady's nmhrella', was\nawarded to Hit* McOallutn ;h\u00C2\u00AB8t gentleman's costume <* lent her suit case) went\nto Mr; McOaHom. For the best; we-\ntained charaoten, lady and gentlemen,\n(silver sewing wt and gent's slippers)\nwas won by \"The Ewswnnies.'' Two\nspeoial pri-cee were awsrded to Miss\nMay and Mr, Alexander for excellent\noMtnmen.\nThe Strider Shoes for Men are pro-\nnounoedin style, rare ia quality and\nsuperior in workmanship. Thoroughly\nreliable und contains alii that anybody\ncan give fey $6.00.-11. MILLS, 119\nHastings stre\u00C2\u00ABt, west.\nA. E. Bull and B. F- Cryedalo have\npurchased the 44-ft. oorner on Seventh\nand Westminster \u00E2\u0080\u00A2vnnuea, at present\nooonpledby tbe Wm. Hatrisou Drng\nCompany apd Mrs. Fa-trim, the. deal\nbeing put through hy Muesre.\" KuhsoII\nH McQ\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB|\u00C2\u00BB.\nI t*% *\u00E2\u0096\u00A0' -\nSnbetribers are requested to report\ndiiy carwlcjsnoiHj in the delivery pf thi*\n.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB.. .s . .. mm i\nSTOVES & RANGES\nAll kinds-nU prices. Alr-Ughts from |2.B0 np.\nGRANITEWARE, TtNWARE, WOODENWARE,\nin fact, everything for tb* home.\nWe are always pleased to have yoa coB and inspect onr stock.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 * \u00E2\u0096\u00A0__'** \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 *_* Mt\u00C2\u00BB PLEASANT\nJ* A. rlett^ Ltd. hardware store.\nToi. 14 9.\nJnst received e, shipment of\nHouse Slippers for Men,\nWomen and Children. The\nassortment is'hard to beat,\nand they ate marked at\nprices to sell quickly.\nRanging from ,\u00C2\u00A3Se to *jmjm\npor fair.\nSee tis for MEN'S\nFURNISHINGS.\nMen's Clothes Pressed and\nCleaned.\nW.T. MURPHY\n3415 WcStmia-ter awnnc\nlit. Ploasant.\n\"The Advooate\" 6 months for 50c.\nBuy a 25c box\n. _-o\u00C2\u00A3\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nBEECHAM'S\nHeadache\nPowders\nandueo-how quickly yonr\n_e\u00C2\u00ABfl aoho can be_elie ved.\nCan be obtained Irom\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nW.M.Harrison\n& Co. Ltd.\nrm INDEPENDENT\nDrug Store\nOor. SS-rtunr \u00E2\u0080\u00A2* WERTMiwsT-sn\navesdf-. \"\"Ptione 11336.\nMt. PLEASANT.\nNew Xmas Fruits\nRaisins, Currants, Peels, Figs, Dates, Shelled Almonds,\nAlso Pure Spices and Extracts.\nGood Apples ft per hox Genuine Ashcroft Potates\nH. O. Lee,\n2425 Westminster Ave.\n'Phone 322\nKing's fleat flarket\nJt**A****00**m0*m00*A0*^\nII\nR. Porter *% Sons. 2321 Westminster Ave. j 1\nWholesale and Retail |\nDealers in all kinds of Feebh aad S_LT Mbatk. Fresh Vegetables always : \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\non hand. Orders solicited from all parts of Mount Pleasant and Fairview, \\nFRESH FISH DAILY. Poultry in season. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i\n1\nProm\nft*\nDelivery.\nkjMm*me*a*j**4**rmi*J^^\n*m0X0p*i*0mmmm00*^*0mmm00*m\u00C2\u00BBi***mmp*0m\u00C2\u00BBmmpmp00m0mmmmmpm^\nHAPLE LEAF CIGAR STORE\nThe last whiff of Our Cignrs is ae food as tke first. Como _ere\nfor your cigars and avoid disappointment.\nSOFT DRINKS and CANDIES always fresh,\n2448 Westminster avenue\nBest Creamery\nButter\nGOOD APPLES\nfrom $1.00 to$l 60\nper box\nMcKinnon & Gow,\n148 Niuth Ave. Opposite No.3 Firo Hall\nTelephone BI44S. Prompt delivery.\n$3,000, yi cash\u00E2\u0080\u0094will buy\n44** ft. front on\nWestminster ave.\nJGood business property,\nMrs. R. Whitney, 9444 Westminster ave.\nTheCanadianBank\nof Commerce\nSAVINOS BANK DEPARTMENT.\nDeposit* of Ohb Dollab and upwards\nreceived and interest allowed thereon.\nBank Money Orders issued.\nA General Banking Business\ntransacted.\nOFFICE HOURS: 10 a. m. to H p. m\nSatctdath: 10 a.m. to 13m.a 7 to8 p.m.\nEast End Branch.\n444 Westminster O. W. HURRAr*'**,\navenne.\nMacaws.\n-NO-lCBr,.-^\n\"The Advocate\" wmies any enrolew.-\nness in delivery ror\u00C2\u00ABrt\u00C2\u00AB-I to the OfJU'e,\ntelep^M\u00C2\u00BBe B1406. THE ADVOCATE, VANCOUtEB, BRITISH COLUMBIA-\nOlive's Courtship\nBY LAURA JEAN LIBBEY\nAuthor of \"A Cruel Revenge,\" \"A Forbidden Marriage,\" \"A Beautiful Coquette,\" \"The\nHeiress of Cameron Hall.\"\n\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\nt\nx\n\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\nm\n\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6*\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\nfContiinii'il i\nCHAPTER X.\nIt was tho most enthusiastic camp-\nmeeting that had been held thereabout for years, nil the farmers anil !\ntheir wives and their daughters declared, as they clambered into their\nwagons and carry-alls and jogged\nslowly homeward. The old traveling\nevangelical minister was a success,\nthey voted, and they would have\nbeen well pleased, to have heard him\nagain.\nAs for the minister himself, he was\nglad to see the country people enjoy his exhortations so thoroughly.\nAnd he wondered, too, why the fair-\nhaired, handsome young man and\nthe pretty, dark-eyed young girl\nshould linger after all fhe rest had\ndeparted to talk with ^lim; and yet,\nafter a few desultory remarks had\nbeen made, he was not so very much\nsurprised when he wus called upon\nto wed them. He was only too willing, and bid them clasp each other's hands nnd stand before him.\nDespite the firm pressure of Glen-\ndenning's lingers closing over her\nown, the girl trembled. It was such\na solemn thing, this marriage ceremony. How blue tho sky looked\nthrough tho network of green leaves,\nanil how green the grass was beneath her feet, with its nodding daisies and harebells and timid buttercups. It seemed to take the old minister an age to adjust his spectacles,\nopen the sacred Book, and find the\nplace. And in the interim how tho\nfaco of tho heavens changed! The\nsun hid his face behind a cloud and\nthe light of tho summer day dark-\neneu; the wind sighed among tho\nbranches of the trees, like spirits in\ndistress; a bird that was twittering\nbut a moment since on a bough over her head flew oft with a startled\ncry. But neither the cloud, nor tho\nwind, nor the bird warned the girl\nthat sho was taking a step which\nshe would rue in anguish more bitter than death during all tho years\nof her after life.\n\"Make haste if you please, good\nsir, exclaimed Olcndenning, impatiently. \"It is blowing up for a\nstorm and it will be down upon us\nbefore we can reach home.\"\n\"The knot will be tied as quickly\nas it can be done, sir,\" returned the\nminister, who had by this time\nfound the place in his book.\nFive minutes, and the words Were\nuttered which could never be unsaid,\nand Neva, fair, innocent Neva, was\nthe lawfully wedded wife of Glendenning. Then the old gentleman\ndrew from his pocket a package of\nmarriage certificates and proceeded\nto (ill one out.\n\"I have so many affairs of this\nkind to attend to as I travel about\nfrom village to village that I always cany them about with me\nnowadoys,\" *he explained.\nHere, again, an unexpected dilemma -presented itself. Oscar Glendenning was -obliged to give the namo\nof Koger instead of his own. Por an\ninstant he had hesitated when the\nI quosl ion of namo camo up.\n\"It can not matter in point of law\nwhether I say Roger or Oscar,\" ho\nsaid to himself. \"It is the man my\nlittle Neva is marrying, not tho\nname. I can straighten all that out\nlater iri explaining the matter to\nher.\" He did not wish to startle\nher by mentioning it at that all-important epoch of their lives. And\nupon this one point, dear reader,\nrests all the sorrow of the girl's future. Only a few words! Ah! how\nmuch they mean 'tp, tho two stand-\nting his coming, was\nient, a\ii from the next\nwho was await:\ngrowing impatien'^^^^^^^^^^^\nroom he heard the footsteps of N\nva's mother rapidly approaching.\nGlendenning had buiijly time to release her ere the mower entered.\n\"Good-bye,'; he said, extending his\nhand to the girl.\n\"Good-bye,\" she murmured, striving hard to keep back nor tears.\nAnd, With a lingering glance, he\nturned, then walked rapidly from tho\nroom and from the house.\nfor it, and when they Htched it they\nfound him leaning against the pillar of the porch with a smile on his\nlips. He had preached his last sermon in this world, and had set forth\non the road ho had so long pointed\nout to others. And thus it happened (hat tho record of-the marriage\njust solemnized never reached the office of the count}' clerk to be duly\nli.ed there.\nMeanwhile, the newly made bride\nand groom slowly wended their way\nback to the old farm-house, planning, as only tho young and hopeful\ncan who have life before them, the\nhappy future they were to pass with\neach other. That walk homeward\nwas the happiest hour of Neva Glcn-\ndenning's life How pitiful it is that\njoy is so fleeting and sorrow lingers\nso long by our side!\nAt the gate they saw Neva's mother. She did not realize then, but\nshe knew afterward, why the girl ran\nto her, flung her white arm around\nher neck, covering her face with\nkisses and tears.\n\"Such i.n experience as we have\nhad a little while ago!\" began Mrs.\nGray, excitedly. \"Three constables\nfrom the next county wero in the\nhouse. They wore on a search for\nsome fugitive whom they have be\u00C2\u00ABK>\ntracking down for over two months.\nHe is somewhere hereabouts, they\nsay. Ugh! it makes me shudder even\nto think of it. Why, with su h men\nprowling about we are not safe from\nbeing murdered in our bods any\nnight. I shall have all the dogs kept\nin tho house after this night.\"\nGlendenning listened like one dazed. There was no doubt in his mind\nbut that he was the fugitive they\nwere hunting down.\n\"Did they mention the name of tho\nman they were looking for?\" he asked with whito lips, speaking with\ndifficulty.\n\"No. They did mention, however,\nthat it was useless to call him by\nany name, for, ten chances to one\nhe went under an assumed one.\"\n\"Did they describe him?\" asked\nGlendenning, still in that unearthly,\nhoarse voice.\n\"Yes, they inquired minutely ol\none of the farm-hands, for every one\nelse about the house was at the far\nend of the orchard. He does not understand good English and did not\nunderstand half the questions they\nasked of him. They rode on, but will\nbe back this way to-morrow. He\ncaught that much of their conversation.\"\nGlendenning's face had turned a\nghastly white as he listened, but he\ndid not utter a word lest his voice\nshould betray his emotion. A little\nlater he came to Nova as she was\nclearing away the supper dishes\nalone in the wide, cool farm kitchen.\n\"I must have a word with you,\nNeva,\" he said, hoarsely. \"I\u00E2\u0080\u0094I\u00E2\u0080\u0094am\ncalled suddenly away from here. One\nof the farmers below here who is\ngoing over to the village has consented..to take me. I must go.\"\nHe saw the words strike her as\nlightning strikes a fair flower. Tho\nglass she held in her hand fell from\nher nerveless fingers and crashed into a thousand pieces on tho floor.\n\"You are going to leave mc, Roger?\" she breathed, faintly, trembling\nllko a loaf ' in a bitter, swirling\nAtorm.\n. \"Listen to the rest, Neva,\"' he\nsaid. \"You are to join mo. I have\nplanned it all out. Hero is tho money for your ticket. You aro to buy\nit straight through to New Yeddo,\nand I will bo waiting at the depot\nto meet you. i not leave a note.\nYou shall write back immediately\nand tell them we are married, and\ning there. Then the' old minister pro- and tell tnem we are marriea,\nnouhte'd'them' -nan*****-, wife,,umjli. that you have forsaken all to cling\nto mo and follow my fortunes Be-\nTHE SNOB IN ENGLAND.\nPlutocrat Master of England's High Social Circles and Begins Now to\nDictate Terms Therein.\nH. B. Marriott \"Watson, the English\nauthor, -writes: Plutocracy spells snobbery always. The class which has established Itself on top always will receive deference from the class which\nls struggling up to gain admission to\nthose ranks. There is no hope of admission to them without money, and\nheneo plutocracy means snobbery. As\nwe are the most plutocratic nation *n\nEurope, we are also the most snobbish.\nIf ono wished to be amiable one might\nplead that the snob ls by way of being\n an idealist. He reveres a social status\nthe very thought that he had gone ] which he does not possess. In com-\nawny was some horrible ili't'tun ! parison with esrtain other failings char-\nwhich she could shake off and awake! acterlstlo ot other nations than ours\nfrom presently. I our national1 weakness may be oonsid-\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 ered venial. Snobbishness Is not crime.\nBut, on the other hand, it is one of\nAMAZING WEDDING.\nCHAPTER XI.\nThe long day drew to a close nt\nIan;, and it seemed to Neva us\nthu ugh long years of desolation had\npassed over her young head.\nIll almost seemed to her us though\ndeath did thgpi part\n\"May you hnvo a happy life of\nit,\" hq added, placing his trembling\nhand upon the girl's dark head. She\nthanked him through her happy\ntears. The certificate was duly mado\nout and handed to her, nnd he\nwatched them as, hand in hand, they\nturned from nim at length and walked down the magnolia-liordcred road\ntogether\u00E2\u0080\u0094watched them until a bend\nin the road hid them from his view.\n\"May Heaven find pardon for the\nthought, but I do not quite liko his\nfaco,\" he mutt&red, as he- mounted\nhis horse and rode slowly away in\nan opposite 'direction. \"The girl' is\nlike a mountain snow-drop, with a\nsoul as pure and white, while he is\nof the world, worldly to the heart's\ncore. Nature never makes a mistake\nin her handwriting on the human\nface, and fate either marked that,\nman for a criminal or a great genius, I hardly know which, handsome\nand polished though he be. I must\nremember to send in the record of\nthis marriage to the county clerk\nwhen I reach the next village. I\nWould make a note of it in my memorandum but for my being so unlucky as to forget my pen and pocket ink-well.\"\nBut the old preacher never reached the village that he set out for.\nFeeling faint, he stopped at the first\nfarm-house for a glass of water. He\nCat down on tho doorstep to wait\nlievo me, my darling, we will soon\nbe forgiven. You must start tomorrow night from Hempden village. The train for Now Yoddo stops\nthere at throe o'clock in the morning. You will be obliged to take\nthat.\"\n\"Oh, Roger!\" sho sobbed hysterically, clinging to him, \"it breaks my\nheart to leave home! I\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"\n\"It must bo as you wish, Neva,\"\nhe said, gravely. \"Your will must be\nmy law. If you prefer to remain here\na few months until I can return for\nyou, I\u00E2\u0080\u0094I\u00E2\u0080\u0094am forced to consent,\nmuch as such a decision would disappoint me.\"\n\"My place is by your side, Roger,\" sobbed the girl. \"I must do\nwhat you think best. I\u00E2\u0080\u0094I\u00E2\u0080\u0094will join\nyou at the place you spoke of, and\nmy earnest prayer will be that lather and mother will forgive me.\"\nHo took her in his arms and kissed her lips. It touched him to see\nhow blindly and implicitly she trusted him. And she wus the only ono\nin the wide, wide world who behoved in him. Ho held her reverently in\nhis arms one littlo moment, the\nyoung bride whom he had just wed\nded ^^^^^\nHow dreary the house seemed! Every hour In the day she found herself listening for his step or h.s\nvoice When the darkness of night\nfell, tho girl crept to her lonely\nroom, throw herself upon her couch.\nand cried herself to sleep, and in\nher dreams his face haunted her. Ah,\ndear Heaven, how lonely it was\nwithout him!\nEvery one noticed Neva's depression, and attributed it at once to\nthe departure of handsome, graceful\nGlendenning.\n'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Wo got rid of him Jest in time,\"\nremarked Farmer Gray to his wife,\nthe next day. \"Little Neva was\ngrowin' powerful fond o' that\nchap.\"\n\"I saw that almost a fortnight\nago, and it troubled me, I can tell\nyou,\" returned his wife. \"He was\nvery bright, but I thank goodness he\nhas gone for good. She will mope a\nlittle while, no doubt, but she is\nvery young, and she will soon forget him.\"\n\"I tell you what, wifo, it don't do\nto bring theso hnndsome city chaps\nin one's home, 'specially whar a\nman's got a susceptible young darter,\" said Farmer Gray, as he puffed vigorously at his pipe. \"This here\ncxperanco has learned me a lesson\nthat I'll be apt to profit by, I'll\nallow,\"\nTho long day drew to a close, as\nall days must, and \"Night drew her\nsable curtains, and pinned them\nwith a star.\"\nEvery one at the farm-house retired early; it seemed long hours at\nthat, from nine o'clock at night until four in the morning.\nNeva gave her father and mother\nsuch a hysterical hugging and kissing, when she bade them good-night,\nthat they wondered at it.\n\"Poor child! she's worrited still\nover tho going of Glendenning,\"\nmuttered the farmer, brushing a tear\nfrom his eye as the door closed after her. He made no remark concerning tho matter to his wife, lest the\naffair might troublo her mind. \"It\nwill soon all como out right,\" muttered the farmer; and, still thinking\nover the matter, he dropped off into\nan uneasy sle-\n[TO \u00E2\u0080\u0094E CONTINUED.]\nFOR THE PLAIN PEOPLE.\nlln-ilnrj Milk That Mny Be Vended\nat Moderate Cost.\nWhat Is to be done for the grent\nmass of people who cannot afford to\nbuy certified milk delivered In glass\njars ut nn advance price? The following scheme has been suggested to milk\nproducers by the health authorities of\none city:\nMake the milking pail, shipping can\nand delivery can one vessel, holding\nabout fifteen quarts, with a small 5%\nInch opening nnd a tight cover. Milk\nthrough a sterilized cheesecloth strainer\ndirectly into this\" can until it Is full;\nthrow the'stralnors Into a pall; put\nou the cover and sink the can in Ice\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0water. This can Is shipped by rail, or\ncurried ou the peddler's wagon, and\nused for a delivery cau.\nThis milking pall and cheesecloth\nstrainer must be sterilized by steam\nor simply by putting tho pall containing some water nnd strainers on the\nstove to boll for five minutes. A cooling, tank should be mnde so that it\noverflows at a level just below the cover of tbe can. This scheme ought to\nmaterially lower the cost of clenu milk.\nFor the house peddling we offer one or\ntwo suggestions: The nsunl method of\nusing a quart dipper or a lightly closed\npall with a spout that can be corked;\nthen tbe peddler tutus tlie pail upside\ndown to mix the milk, removes tbe\ncork and pours out tbe required amount\nInto the customer's glass or tin quart\nmeasure, the cleanliness of which the\ncustomer is responsible for.\ntho most offensive properties to the\nsuperficial eye of the observer of social life. \"Tommy,\" said Byron of\nMoore, \"dearly loves a lord.\" Your snob\ndearly loves a lord. But that Is a detail ln his character, for he has a perfect social code by which he directs his\nlife. He has been In existence so long\nnow that he has organized himself. He\nhas become almost respectable by reason of his antiquity. And his opinions\nand ideals have obtained currency ln\nall classes of the community. They\nhave tainted the once Independent and\nautocratic views at the aristocracy.\nHowever stupid the aristocracy might\nbe, lt at least developed Its own ideals\nand habits in former days. To-day it\nhas accepted the traditions of the snob.\nTo the snob (and through him to the\nEnglish social world generally) lt Is essential to have gone to a public school.\nOne recalls Du Maurler's picture of Sir\nGorglus Midas regretting he had not\nhad the advantages of Eton to the duke,\nand his grace In turn regretting that\nhe had. The public school has been\ntaken over by the snob. In the famous\nVictorian days thore -were pursuits definitely barred to \"gentlemen.\" who\nmust either enter army or navy or become barrister or parson or doctor lf ln\nwant of a profession. But changing\ntimes have changed all that, although\nthe snob still has his preferences. Theso\nprofessions are the \"safest\"; they convey respectability.\nThe snob remains with us with certain altered characteristics. Once he\naspired to reach an aristocracy which\nwas by no means founded on wealth,\nand his aim was thus not wholly Ignoble. But the wealth of the mtddlo\nclass has contaminated society, and tho\nold ideals have been supp\u00E2\u0080\u0094.-ited by the\nnew ideal of .noney. Plutc .-acy reigns\nsupreme and unashamed In London society, and the snob no longer merely\nloves a lord; he loves a wealthy man.\nIf one Is to judge by the papers, London society ia made up of Americans\nand continentals. Occasionally English\nnames appear, but the cosmopolitan\nelement bulks largest ln Importance.\nThe cosmopolitanism of society only\nbecame possible by reason of the snob.\nHe pushes his way in, and the sicial\ncircles which once would have been\nshut against him open to receive him\nwarmly. The plutocrat Is master of\nthe situation and is beginning to dictate terms.\nIt Is he now (or she) who 'breeds Independent opinions and starts new fash-\nIons and generally Imposes his (or her)\nwill on society. .\nCouple Married In London While Liv*\ning on Continent,\nInquiries by the Zurich police haver\nbrought to light an extraordinary story\nof the alleged marriage In a London\nchurch of a couple who at the time-\nwere on the Continent.\nM. Blarek and his wife, the latter of\nAustrian nationality, were recently arrested at Zurich as dangerous Anarchists. Investigations resulted I\u00E2\u0080\u0094 the-\ndiscovery that the couple had been,\nmarriod by a remarkable method. They\nsent papers relating to themselves to\na friend in London, who, it Is stated,\ntook them to a clergyman, with tho\nresult that the marriage ceremony was\ncelebrated, although the bride and\nbridegroom were at Zurich. English,\nmarrlage laws have become notorious\nIn Switzerland, adds our correspondent,\nand the term \"married in England\" ia\none of reproach.\nIt Is possible that an explanation of\nour correspondent's message may be\nfound ln the unscrupulous personation\nby paid agents of the couple who desired a record of their English marriage. The marriage laws Of many\nContinental countries impose restrictions not known in Britain, such, for\nInstance, as considerable length of residence and the consent .of parents.\nHere, with a residence ot under a\nmonth, lt ls quite possible to be married, and such marriage being confirmed by the foreign consul ls binding in\nthe country from which the visitors\ncome. Hundreds of couples visit England for the purpose of a speedy marriage.\nIt ls quite possible, therefore, that\nan unscrupulous agent In London\nmight procure two persons representing themselves as the couple whose papers were in his possession to go>\nthrough the marriage ceremony. \"When\nit was completed, the papers and evidence relating to the marriage might\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0be forwarded to the real couple, \u00E2\u0096\u00A0who\nhave all the time been on the Continent\nBENEFICENT MICROBES.\nAMBULANCE DOGS.\nFamous British Scientist Eulogise*\nTheir Virtues.\nA discourse on beneficent microbe.)\nwas delivered by the famous scientist.\nSir Michael Foster, at the opening of\nthe new baoterlologloal laboratory presented to the R.othamstead experimental station by Mr. J. F. Mason, M. P.\nSir Michael thinks that bacteriological research may show that microbes,\nso far from 'being enemies of humanity, play an Important part ln providing the nation's food.\nHe declared that In the work at\nRothamr.tcad there had hitherto been\na lack of any study of the part whlcb,\nmlarobca play in the work of the soil\nand the plant. We heard a good deal,\nhe said, of microbes which were our\nvery good friends, and some of the-\nbest of them were those working silently and unseen ln the soil.\nThe struggle for existence waa\nfundamentally a struggle for nitrogen,\nand there were microbes in the soil\nwhich were making the nitrogen of\nthe air eatable by humanity.\n\"Thanks to Mr. Mason's gift,\" continued Sir Michael, \"I hope that much\nlight will be thrown on the action of\nmicrobes in producing our natural\nfood.\"\nFour-Legged Recruits For Red Cross\nService In England.\nThe value of ambulance dogs ln time\nof war was demonstrated at the annual\ninspection of the Royal Army Medical\nCorps (volunteers), by Col. Sloggett, In\nHyde Park. Three dogs train for the\npurpose by Major Richardson, of Forfarshire, were put through a variety\nQ'f experimental work in finding\n\"wounded\" soldiers, and the trials proved most effective.\nThe animals run about. with loud\nbells on their neck, and protected from\nbeing fired on by wearing a saddle\nwith a large Geneva red cross. They\nproceed in advance of the stretcher-\nbearers, and on discovering a patient\nsit down to \"mark\" or watch him till\nthe ambulance arrives. Dogs trained\nby Major Richardson were extensively\nused by the Russians in the war in\nManchuria, and they were pronounced\nto be partlculatly useful.\nThe excellent ambulance Instincts\nof the degs was of great Interest to a\nlarge crowd, who keenly regarded\nevery detail of their movements.\nMajor Richardson was warmly congratulated on the success of the exhibition.\nTwo of the men of the corps fainted\non arriving ln the park after their\nlong march from headquarters ln\nGray's Inn road, and had to be medically attended .by their comrades.\nA Wonderful Escape.\nFiL-sclii tried to assassinate King\nLouis Philippe of France In July, 1835.\nThe king was riding along tbe lines of\nthe national guard In the Boulevard da realized\nToo Much For Her.'\nMiss Gabble\u00E2\u0080\u0094Miss I'assay ls getting\nbetter, I'm told.\nMiss Knox\u00E2\u0080\u0094Yes, I really believe sbe\nwas scared back to life. She probably\nIf she died her exact age\nTemple. There came a crash and a\nrush of bullets. Louis Philippe's arm\nwas grazed, his horse was shot In the\nneck, Marshal Mortler fell dead and\nabout thirteen other people were killed\nand thirty wounded. Fieschl had taken\nthe upper floors of a bouse several\nweeks before and there rigged up an\noaken frame four feet by three feet six\nlr.ches, supported on four poets of oak\nand itself supporting twenty-live gun\nvarious\n_ ,.___ barrels fixed in grooves at\nnnd from whom fato was part- angles so as to command an area of\ning him, but ho contented himself by twenty-five feet In length and ten feet\nsaying that the parting would be jn be|g_,t When he fired the train of\nbut for a few short hours. That was p0Wfler that let off his battery the king nightingale on her tour of the Unlt-\nthe lirst and last caress Oscar Glen- _oum jjave been killed if four barrels ed States and fell in love with her\ndenning ever gave her. Looking from . . t miaged fir* during her successful enx-vgemeot.\ntho window ho saw that the farmer, naa not Dunl BUU lwtf u\"aami \"*\"\"\nwould be published In the papers.-\nPhlladelphla Ledger.\t\nJenny Lind's Son.\nThe fact that W. R. Goldschmldt has\nJust been appointed chancery registrar\nof the royal courts of Justice of England recalls an interesting romance that\nperhaps not many people know\u00E2\u0080\u0094that\nhe ls a son of the famous songstress of Philadelphia Tress\nthe laBt century, Jenny Lind. Nor ls It\nperhaps known outside of the family\ncircle that his father, Otto Goldschmldt,\ncelebrated his seventy-eighth birthday\non Aug. 21. It is just a little more than\nhalf a century since the famous musical professor accompanied the Swedish\nSir David Wllkle.\nIn the June Issue of The Strand, says\na correspondent to T. P. Weekly, ther\u00C2\u00BB\nls an article on \"Artists' Models,\" particularly ln reference to cases Wher\u00C2\u00BB\nmen have sat for women and vice versa. One of the Illustrations given Is\n\"Wllkie's Fiddler,\" and In the legend\nunderneath the picture we are told that\nthe old woman ln lt (no doubt referring to the fiddler's wife) waa taken\nfrom the actor's own head by means of\na mirror. Now, fhe head1 that was Uius\ngot by Wllkle ls that of the servant\ngirl, who Is leaning on the baok of her\nmistress' chair and grinning at the antics of young hopeful with the bellows\nand the poker, who Is Imitating the fiddler. An excellent likeness of Wllkle\nIt ls. He was not what might be called\na pretty man, his face being the typical Scotch one, and that, as James Bos-\nwell said when flrst introduced to Dr.\nJohnson, was a thing which he oould)\nnot help; but to suppose that the coarse,\nalmost brutal-looking face of the fiddler's wife was drawn from his own ls\nnothing short of a libel on the artist.\nIt ls told with reference to this very\nfigure ln the picture that a lady friend\nof the artist, visiting his studilo whilo\nthe picture was ln progress, remarked,\n''Man, you've made the fiddler's wife-\nvery -ugly.\" \"Well, madam,\" was the\nartists reply, \"fiddlers' wives are not,\nas a rule, up to a very high standard\nof beauty.\" I might Just add that the\nfigure of the man cracking his Angers\nto amuse the child ln tho same picture\nls said to have been drawn from Mao.\nready.\"\nNot a \u00E2\u0080\u0094 omer.\n\"Mr. Schlrk,\" said his wife's mother sternly, \"Mary tells me that yoo\nwon't help her at all; that you won't\neven hold the baby.\"\n\"That ain't so,\" replied Schlrk.\n\"Why, I held it for her quite a long-\nwhile last evening.\"\n\"Indeed? How long?\"\n\"Why long enough for her to go>\ndown cellar an' git a scuttle o' coal.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nDelay Fatal.\nVisitor (to widow)\u00E2\u0080\u0094I nm so sorry t\u00C2\u00BB\nhear of the sudden death.of your husband. Did they hold a postmortem examination?\n\"Yes, and, like those doctors, they\ndid not hold it until he was dead, or\n' they might have saved his life.\" THE ADVOCATE, VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA.\nWASTING BRAIN\nAND NERVE FORCE\nAnd Undermining Health by Useless Worry--\nlUew Vitality Obtained by Using\nDr. Chase's Nerve Food.\nBrain and nerve force is squandered\njn a way which would he utterly condemned in the use of money. And of\nwhat value is money as compared with\nihealth I\nBy useless fretting and worry, by\noverwork, and by neglecting to take\nproper nourishment, rest und sleep,\nstrength and vitality arc frittered uway\nand no reserve force is left to withstand\n_.,e aii.'ii'K oi iTisease.\nDr. Chase's Nerve Food is valued because it actually increases the amount\nof nerve force in the body, overcomes\nthe symptoms arising from exhausted\nnerves, and gives that strength .and\nconfidence in mind and body which is\nnecessary to success in life.\nNervous headache, brain fag, inability\nto concentrate the mind, loss of sleep,\nirritability, nervousness and despondency are among tlie indications of ex\nhuusted nerve force. These are the\nwarnings which suggest the necessity\nor such help as is best supplied by Dr.\nChase's Nerve Food.\nMrs. J. B. Tardiff, Mariapolis, Man.,\nwrites.\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"When I began the use of Dr.\nChase's Nerve Food my health was in\na terribly bad condition. My doctor\ntold me that I was going into consumption and for nearly three years my\nbowels were so loose and watery that I\nwas continually weak and run down.\nIn spite of the many remedies used I\ngradually grew worse and worse. I\ncould- scarcely get around ihe house\nand suffered a great deal fiom backache, stomach and kidney troubles.\nDr. Chased Nerve Food proved to be\nexactly what I needed and by keeping\nip this treatment for a time I got so\nstrong and well that I did my own\nhousework and sometimes worked in\nthe fields without feeling any the\nworse for it. It is a pleasure as well as\na duty for me to recommend Dr.\nChase's Nerve Food.\nIf you would be healthy, happy and\nsuccessful, test this great food cure, 50\ncents a box at all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toronto.\nThe Cat Had Chickens.\nThe old housekeeper met the master\nat tho door on his arrival home.\n\"If you please, sir,\" she said, \"the\ncat has hnd chickens.\"\n\"Nonsense, Mnry,\" laughed he. \"You\nmean kittens. Cuts dou't have chickens.\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'Wns them chickens or kittens ns\nyou brought home lust night?\" nsked\ntlio old woman.\n\"Why, they were chickens, of course.\"\n\"Just so, sir,\" replied Mury, with a\ntwinkle. \"Well, the cat's had 'em!\"\nCheapest of All Medioinea\u00E2\u0080\u0094Considering the curative qualities of Dr.\nThomas' Electric Oil it is the cheapest\nmedlolne now offered to the public.\nThe dose required in any ailment is\nsmall and a bottle contains many\ndoses, lf it were valued at the benefit\nit confers it could not be purchased for\nninny times the prioe asked for it, but\nincreased consumption has simplified\nand cheapened its manufacture.\nDarwin and Dooka.\nOf Darwin lt Is affirmed that he\nseemed unaware of the difference ln\nthe value of books and would treat a\niSiiehnsdorf binding with tbe same\nscant courtesy that he exercised toward a penny pamphlet Covers appeared to him a useless weight and decidedly ln the way, and he often got\nrid of them by ripping them off. Sometimes tlie book was borrowed. It Is\nsaid that in the eud his friends used\nto give blm any book which he wished\nto borrow, for thoy knew that, If lt\nwere ever returned, its usefulness as a\nbook would be at jan end.\nIf your children moan and are restless during sleep, coupled, when awake,\nwith a loss of appetite, pale countenance, picking of the nose, etc., you\nmay depend upon it that the primary\ncause of the trouble is worms. Mnthe.\nUraves' Worm Exterminator effectually\nremoves these pests, at once relieving\nthe little sufferers.\nFood Value of Cheese.\nIt is said that ono pound of cheese\nis equal in food value to more than two\npounds of meat. It Is very rich in pro-\nteids aud fut. Considering this, lt Is\nlow in price wheu compared with nieut\nand ought to do good service to the\npoor man in replacing occasionally the\nregular diet of moat. Iu America choose\nis looked upou more as a side dish and\nluxury than In some parts of Europe.\nThe Swiss pcnsnnt depends on it as a\nstaple second only to bread, while tho\nuse of It in Euglund and Germany is\npxtenpive.\nBuy Hair\natAuciion?\nAt any rate, you seem to be\ngetting rid of it on auction-sale\nprinciples: \"going, going,\ng-o-n-e!\" Stop the auction\nwith Ayer's Hair Vigor. It\nchec-sfallinghair, and always\nrestores color to gray hair. A\nsplendid dressing also. Sold\nfor over sixty years.\n\" My hair cum* ont so badly I nearly lost It\nsll. I Iinil hear' so inuoli about Ayer's Hair\nVigor I thought I would give It a trial, I did\nio and It completely -topped the falling, and\nmado my hair grow very rapidly.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094 MAItr U.\nFIRLD, Northfleld, Masl.\nA\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094ado by J. Cl. -yer Co.. Lowell, _\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00C2\u00AB.\nAlso manu\u00E2\u0080\u0094oturara of\nJ_ SARSAPARILLA.\nPILLS.\nCHERRY PECTORAL.\niters\n-\u00E2\u0080\u0094r nonmnus rrvinq.\nThe Dean of the Bar of Ontario was\nKnighted In the King's Birthday. Sir\nAeinlllus ls an old man, but he carries\nhis eighty-three years remarkab well.\nFie has been a barrister of Upper Canada since 1S49, and as Treasurer of tho\nLaw Society has seen two generations\npass through Osgoode Hall. For many\nyoars Mr. Irving had a place among\nthe counsel ln all the big provincial\ncases, and his services ln the matter of\naccounts ln dispute between the Dominion and Ontario have been Invaluable.\nHe sat for Hamilton ln the Commons\nfrom 18T4 '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0> 1878 as a Liberal. His\nconnection with the Liberal party wai\nby birth as well as Inclination. His\nfather, the Hon. Jacob Aemtlius Irving,\nserved as an officer of dragoons during\nthe Napoleonic wars, and was present\nat Waterloo. He came to Canada ln\n1834, and after the union of 1840 sat In\nthe Legislative Council. He was a\nfriend and ally of Baldwin and Lafon-\ntaine, and lt was ln the atmosphere ol\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00C2\u00ABform that Aemlltus Irving grew um.\nA Political Pointer.\nBragley\u00E2\u0080\u0094Restaurant waiters would\nmake strong candidates if they were In\npolitics. Don't you think so? Wig-\nway \u00E2\u0080\u0094 I don't see how. Bragley \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nHaven't you noticed that they carry\neverything before them?\nNothing looks more ugly than to see\na person whose hands are covered over\nwith warts. Why have these disfigurements on your person when a sure remover of all warts, corns, etc., can be\nfound in Holloway's Corn Cure.\n*7iltiiipli. n Divers.\n\"Larry Donovan,\" said a professional swimmer, \"made the highest dive\non record. It was 210 feet\u00E2\u0080\u0094a dive from\nthe Brooklyn bridge. Donovan also\ntook a dive from Niagara bridge, a\ngood 200 feet There are no other divers ln tbe same class with Larry. Jack\nBurns made a dive of 150 feet from\nthe topmost yardnrm of the Three\nBrothers, the Inrgest Bulling ship of Its\ntime, and Jim O'Rourke and Julius\nGautler have doue some good diving,\ntoo\u00E2\u0080\u0094100 feet, 125 feet, and so on\u00E2\u0080\u0094but\nIt Is doubtful if Donovan's record will\never be broken.\"\nMinard's Liniment Cures Burns, etc.\nSlnck Ties.\nIf lt Is necessary fo stnek the hny In\nthe field it should bo protected in some\nwuy from tho rain and snow. A good\nmethod ls suggested by Kimball's\nDairy Farmer, ns follows: Take three\nsmnll wires and weave into them slats\nabout eight Inches wide and four feet\nlong. These ure plnced nbout two feet\nspurt. The length of the frame will\ndepend entirely upon tbe height of the\nstack. It should be large enough to\ncover the top of the stack well and\nkeep the hay from being blown off. If\nyou wish to Improve on this tuck tarred\nfelt roofing paper to the sluts. This\ngives you a practically tight roof over\nthe stack.\nA Camera Fiend.\n_. well known criminal lnwyer one\nday sauntered into a police court just\nas a case was cnlled. It nppenred that\n_,J defendant hnd no attorney, and the\nJudge glanced about the room to see\nwhom he might assign to the case.\n\"I'll take It, Judge,\" the late comer\nBald, wishing to pass sway the time.\n\"By the wny, what Is the man\nchnrged with?\" the attorney presently\nasked.\n\"He's a camera fiend of the worst\nsort, Mr. Brown,\" the judge said, with\nn slight smile. \"I expect to send him\nto the workhouse for nbout three\nmonths.\"\n\"What?\" the lnwyer shouted Indignantly. \"Your honor must be joking.\nSend n mnn to the rock pl.'e for three\nmonths for a little liar\u00E2\u0080\u0094ilc\u00E2\u0080\u0094i amusement like tnking pictures?\"\n\"Well,\" the Judge suid mildly, \"he\ndoesn't take pictures much\u00E2\u0080\u0094it's the\ncameras he takes.\"\nCatherine Unlit the Palace.\nThe Petrovsky palace Is a charming\nmonumeut to the more plctpresque side\nof Catherine the .Great's chnrncter. It\nwns her villa without the, walls of Moscow, where she could live at her ease,\nsurrounded by j her intimates, the\nApraxins, the Volkonskys, the Golltslns,\nthe Kazumovs. She would have no\nsoldiers to guard her. She preferred to\nrest under the protection of her own\npeople, and the people came crowding\nabout the palace, saying: \"Make no\nnoise! Do not disturb our lltt.e mother!\" She loved the fields and woods of\nPetrovsky, as well she might. It was\nin this nelibborhood that she herself\nawaited the approach of her coionatlon,\nstaying In Count ttazumov's wonderful\nvilla, which so astonished Lord Herbert\nand William Coi in 1778. She had\nthe palace built to commemorate tbe\nItusslan. victories over the Turks and\nIntrusted the task to a nntl /e nrchltect\nwho knew how to adapt Gothic lines to\nRusslnn tnste and to combine splendor\nwith comfort. The red walls, with\ntheir white stone facings and round\ntowers, seen nmong the trees, give a\ndelightful impression of elegant seclusion. Since Catherine's day nil the emperors of Russia have nwnlted the dny\nof the triumphal entry in the I'etrovsky\npalace.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Loudon Standard.\nTravelers tales which often add\ncharm to the conversation of an agreeable person, frequently render a bore\nmore tiresome than ever, a fact that\nwas amusingly illustrated b\" \u00C2\u00BBn noc\"--\nrance in a Baltimore club house not\nlong ago.\n\"There I stood, gentlemen,\" the\nlong-winded narrator was saving, after\ndroning on for an hour with reference\nto Ins trip to Switzerland\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"there I\nstood, with tlie abyss yawning in front\nof nie. '\n\"Pardon me,\" hastily interjected one\nof the unfortunate men who had been\nobliged to listen to the story, \"but was\nthat abyss yawning before you got\nthere?\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094Harper's Weekly.\nCucumbers mid melons nre forbid-\ndon fruit to many persons so constituted that the least indulgence is followed bv attacks of cholera, dysentery, griping, etc. These persons are\nnot aware that they can indulge to\ntheir heart's content if they have on\nhand a bottle of Dr. J. D. Kellogg's\nDysentery Cordial, a medicine that\nwill give immediate relief, and is a\nsure cure for all summer complaints.\nFarmer Foddershucks\u00E2\u0080\u0094What ye goin'\nter give our city cousin fer a weddin'\npresent?\nMa Foddershucks\u00E2\u0080\u0094Well, I was think-\nin' of a gold pie knife.\nFarmer Foddershucks\u00E2\u0080\u0094Don't ye do\nit. Why them city folks never eats\npie with a knife nowadays.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Cleveland \"Leader.\nCATARRH CANNOT BE CURED.\nwith LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as the*\ncanot reach the seat of the disease.\nCatarrh ls a blood or constitutional disease, and In order to cure lt you must\ntake internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh\nCure ls taken Internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces.\nHall's Catarrh Cure Is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the\nbest physicians ln the country for years\nand Is a regular prescription. It ls com.-\nSosed of the* beBt tonics known, com-\nIned with the best blood purifiers, act-\nins directly on the mucous surfaces.\nThe perfect combination of the two Ingredients ls what produces such wonderful results ln curing Catarrh. Send for\ntestimonials free. ..\nF. J. CHENEY & CO., Props.. Toledo, O.\nSold by Druggists, price 76c.\nTake Hall's Family Pills for constipation\nEmeralda\u00E2\u0080\u0094Have ynn heard what the\ndoctors are saying about motoring? It\ngives you what they call the automobile\nmouth\u00E2\u0080\u0094spoils the mouth for kissing.\nGladys\u00E2\u0080\u0094That isn't true, and I know\nit. Harold has been running an automobile for years I\nTlie Flagging Energies Revived.-\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nConstant application to business is a\ntax upon the onergies, nnd if there\nbe \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 not relaxation, lassitude uml depression are sure to intervene. Theoo\ncome from stomae_.:c ti-Hibles. Ihe\nwant of exerc'ies brings on nervous\nirregularities, and the stomach ceases\nto assimilate food properly. In this\ncondition Parmelee's Vegetable Pills\nwill be found a recuperative of rare\npower, restoring the organs to healthful action, dispelling depression, and\nreviving the flagging energies.\n\"You say you get 250 marks a\nmonth? I can't believe it; tell me\nhow.\"\n\"I get 110 marks salary. Then I\ndon't pay my rent, 40 marks, that's\n150 marks; I owe the milkman30marks\nthat's 180 marks; my butcher 40 marks,\n220 marks; and every month 1 raise 30\nmarks out of my friendB, makes un income of 250 marks a month I\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094i'liegen-\nie matter\nvindarvww\nKeeps your body\n, warm, yet lets\nyour skin breathe\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094knit, not\n' woven,\u00E2\u0080\u0094 A\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094it fits, i YGuaranteed\nfdoesPEN- i \Agai_ut\nANGLE/ a \Shrioksgo\n\"Underwear,!\nTrad* qjril\n-fTrade-iarkedinred. Ina\\nfvariety ot styles, fabrics and ,\n/prices, for women, men and\n^Children, a n d guaranteed.\nNO ADULTERATION\nIs used in the preparation of\niiciiv mil!\nCEYLON GREEN TEA\nThe tea that outclasses all Japans.\nREFUSE SUBSTITUTES.\nLead Packets Only. 40c. 60c. and 60c. per Tb. At all Grocers.\nLook for this tag\non the cloth of every\nSuit and Overcoat\nyou buy. M\nIt guarantees wear\nand service because\nit goes only on cloth\nthat is pure wool.\nThe Doctor\n\"Are your bowels regular?\" He\nknows that daily action of tbe\nbowels is absolutely essential to\nhealth. Then keep your liver active\nA /\u00C2\u00BB.<***'*. \u00C2\u00BBc 4picMdy\u00C2\u00B0\"r boweis reEui\"by t*king\nWitmnw\u00E2\u0080\u0094il WtM-klUk j.o.ArerO*.\ntat l\u00C2\u00ABm\u00C2\u00BBl_ ol sll exn -tjkliti. Lows-. Meet\nGambling a Religious Dnty.\n\"Speaking of gambling,\" a missionary said, \"I kuow of a sect that regards lt as a religious duty, like fasting or prayer. This sect is the Hindoos.\nThey one day ln each year gamble like\nmad from sunrise till sunset The\nday Is the festival of the lamps, a\nday sacred to Lakshun, the goddess of\nwealth. A tremendous lot of money\nchanges hands lu Lakshun's honor. All\nthis gambling is done to test tbe financial success tbat will attend on each\nperson throughout the year. If a gambler loses he knows a year of har\"_\nluck Is ahead of him. If he wins he\nknows he may expect a twelvemonth\nof prosperity. Strange to say, a good\ndeal of cheating accompanies this religious gambling.\"\nMinard's Liniment Co., Limited.\nGents,\u00E2\u0080\u0094A customer of our's cured a\nvery bad case of distemper in a valuable horse by the use of MINAUD'S\nLINIMENT.\nTours truly\nVILAND1E FRERES.\nKOSSUTH IN LONDON.\nHis Receptions Were Conducted With\nPrincely Formality.\nWhen he arrived ln London the enthusiasm of the English people seemed\nto know no bounds. His entry was like\nthat of a national hero returning from\na victorious campaign\u00E2\u0080\u0094the multitudes\ncrowding the streets were Immense. He\nappeared In his picturesque Hungarian\ngarb, standing upright in his carriage,\nwith his saber at his side and surrounded by an equally picturesque retinue.\nBut when he began to speak, and his\nvoice with Its resonant and at the same\ntime mellow sound poured forth Its harmony over the heads of the throngs ln\nclassic English, deriving a peculiar\ncharm Irom the soft tinge of foreign\naccent, then the enthusiasm of the listeners mocked all description.\nKossuth had been offered the hospitality of the house of a private citizen of London who took an especial\nInterest ln the Hungarian cause, and\nthere during his sojourn In the British\ncapital he received his hdmlrers and\nfriends. A kind of court surrounded\nhim; his companions, always ln their\nHungarian national dress, maintained\nln a ceremonious way his pretension of\nhis still being the rightful governor of\nHungary. He granted audiences llko a\nprince, and when he entered the room\nhe was announced by an aide-de-camp\nas the \"governor.\" All persons rose and\nKossuth saluted them with grave solemnity.\nAmong the exiles of other nations\nthese undemocratic formalities created\nno llttle displeasure. But lt was Kossuth's Intention to produce certain effects upon public opinion, not in his\nown, but In his people's behalf, and as\nto that end lt may have seemed to him\nnecessary to Impress upon the Imagination of the Englishmen the picture of\nHungary under her own governor, and\nalso to Illustrate to them the firm faith\nof the Hungarians themselves In the\nJustice of their cause, It was not Improper that he should have used such\npicturesque displays as means for the\naccomplishment of his purpose.\u00E2\u0080\u0094-Carl\nSchurz ln McClure's,\nTools of Trade.\nIn tbo City of London Court Deputy\nJudge Horton Smith decided that a\ntypewriting machine used by an advertising agent was a \"tool of trade,\" and\ntherefore exempt from distress. It was\nmontloned that lawyer's books were also privileged as tools of trade.\nTlie Crawfish's Tall.\nThe tail of a crawfish serves that animal as an oar. By a peculiar jerk of\nthe tail tbe animal cau retire from a\ndangerous object with almost Incredible swiftness. The tail Is much more\neffective in moving the animal backward than forward, a singular instance\nof adaptation to Its situation, for by\nmeans of its tall It can withdraw Into\nIts 'hole with such swiftness as In an\nInstant to place It out of danger.\nExcltou No Comment.\nTess\u00E2\u0080\u0094Of course, I knew that May\nand Bess were bitter enemies, but do\nyou mean to tell me they actually engaged in a fist fight? Jess\u00E2\u0080\u0094Yes. Tess\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Why, what a scandal! I declare I\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nJess\u00E2\u0080\u0094Oh, nobody noticed It. They\nwent to a bargain store to do lt \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nThe Opinion She Sought.\n\"Well, wbat do you think of my new\nhat?\" she. asked.\n\"Do you want a candid opinion?\" ha\nquestioned.\n\"Heavens, no!\" she replied. \"Say\nsomething nice.\"\nMETALLIC ROOFING!?\nitEM-flB\nHOLDUP!\nand consider\nrVSk POMMEL\nf 'H.n!i_. - V^.-TWlty\nWATERFROOf\nCLOTHING.\nIs made of the best\nwM*\ti%attyt\i<\u00C2\u00BBt\nMhjiM-rtitltMsoM^\nrrlWs- ittkK mr/sAut\n4U mCKTOTN-*\n-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 .V ^ 3IQN 0TTHEI1SH\nta ***** wt\u00C2\u00BB mm ggnjgiM\nFEELS GOOD\nto feet and fingers. There's\na silky softness fo\n\"Dominion Brand\"Hos6\nthat means foot comfort\u00E2\u0080\u0094as\nwell as wear and warmth.\nInsist on seeing\n\"Dominion Brand\"\nHose\u00E2\u0080\u0094and look for\n\"The Tag That\nTells\" on every\npair.\nTto\nTu llnl W*.-\nDOMINION\nMOCK Mil\u00E2\u0080\u0094.\nABuir-ACa\nW N D No. 605 _\ni '\nr fit. PLEASANT ADVOCATE.\n(Established April 8,1899.)\n' office 12 4 4 4 Westminster avenue.\n*-!\u00C2\u00AB_--_ Omcs-80 Fleet street,\nUmdon, E. 0., England Where a\nfile of \"The Advooate\" is kopt for\nvisitors.\nMrs. R W_rrn_Y, Publisher.\n1- 'Jul-cription $1 a yoar payable\nAdvance.\nB cents a Oony.\nTel. B1405.\nin\nVanoouvkb, B. C.,Nov., 24,1906.\nI ocal Items.\nToday every Mt. Pleasant property\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 owner should cast a vote for thn by-law\n1 authorizing a loan of \"J60.000 to erect a\n: Market building. The location was\n\ voted on last January, \"and the Mt.\n3 feasant side of False Creek on West-\n1 minster avenue, was selected as a site.\n' There are very many who have tried\n1 aud are still endeavoring to have the\n) location of the Market changed, and\n.. hope to defeat the passing of the by-law\n. today to secure the Market site for\n. down-town. The very best site has\n1 been chosen by a plebiscite, who must\ni turn out today and vote again for the\n: Market\u00E2\u0080\u0094Ward V. at the Fire Hall,\n; Ninth avenue.\nThat the Incinerator By-law he passed\ni isLalso of paromout interest to onr\n1 citizens.\nMt. PliEASANT CHURCHES.\nBa.pti6t.\nJunction o( Westminster rond and Westmin-\n1 \u00C2\u00ABte\u00C2\u00BB avenue. SERVICES at 11 a. ni.,\n1 md 7:30p.m.; Sunday School at 2:30 p.m.\nMbtmooist.\nOorner ol Mint and Westminster avenues.\n1 .-H-RVICKS at lla.m., and 7 p. m.; Sunday\nI -titionland bible Clam 2.30 p.m. Rev. A. \u00C2\u00A3.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 hetherlngton, B.A., B. D., Pastor.\n-\"areonage 123 Eleventh avenue, went. Tele-\n- bono 81349.\nPRESBYTEEIAN,\nOornor Niuth avenue and Quobeo stroet\n1 .4KKVICKB at 11 a.m.,and7:80p.m.; Sunday\ni'rchool al 2:30 p.m. Rev.3eo.A.Wilnon, B.A.\nI ^ii\u00E2\u0080\u0094or. Manse oornor oi Kighth avenue and\n1 Ontario street. Toi. 10C6.\nSt Michael s, (Anglican).\nHorner Ninth avenuo and Prinze Edward\n, streei. SERVICES at lla.m., and7:80 p.m.,\n1 Holy Communion lstand 3d Sundays In oach\n1 month alwr _o\u00E2\u0080\u009Edng\"prayor, 2d kuiI UU Sun\n: iiiyrnitsa. in. Sunday School at 2:80 p.m.\n1 ttov. O. Ii. Wilson, Reclor.\nlU'iaory 372 Thirteenth avenue, east. Tele-\n1 .ilionc B1799.\nADVENTISTS.\nAdvent Ohrlstian Church (not 7th day Ad,\n. bo. tills), Seventh avonue, near Westminster\n1 avenne. Services U a.m., and 7:30 p.m.,\n1 ''undiiy School at 10 a.m. Young peoples'\n.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2I'uolotyof Loyal Workers o( Christian Endea-\n. vnrineeta every Sunday evening at 6:46 S'olock.\n, I'tiiyi'i'-inoeliug Wednesday nlghtsatSo'cloek.\nj Ukoboahized Ohusoh of Jesus Cubist\no.l_attor Day8alnl\u00C2\u00AB, \"S1& Westminster ave-\n1 imo. Services at B o'ctook evory Sunday eve-\n, 11 ing Iii' Elder J. 8. Raincy: Sunday School at\n','.' o'clock. Prayor.meeting every Wednesday\n, .n.'niug at 8 o'clock.\nEveryone knoy^s |hat for anything\nuo become known, it must he talked\n..bout, For an article ta become\n.popular its virtue must be made the\niubject af s public announcement.\nFhat is advertising! Consequently\n-.f the survival of the Attest applies\n\".<> business principles as well as it\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 does to other walks of life, the bet-\n'er the advertising\u00E2\u0080\u0094the better the\n(publicity\u00E2\u0080\u0094the better the results.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 linn] results mean good business,\nmd good business is what every\n-merchant advertises for. Jf he did\n.mt wish to excel in his particular\nline, he would not take the trouble\niU> .write an advertisement, much\n.more pay for Ibe costly newspaper\n.m,d 'imagazine space\u00E2\u0080\u0094British Advertiser.\nThe Ladies' Aid of Mt. Pleasant\nPresbyteitan Ohuroh were \"At Home\"\nto the congregation and friends on\nThursday eveniug of last week. The\nimpromptu program was very ploaslng\nand bright and enjoyed by\nall present. A piano solo by little Miss\nRae was well executed. Readings by\nMrs. Hioks aud Miss Luke wero very\nwell rendered. Miss Maud Burns, Mrs\nHicks, Mrs. Chas. Mowat and Mr. Lister\ngave vocal selections. Miss Maggie\nBoss, a popular Mt. Pleasant vocalist,\ngave the closing solo with fine effect.\nDainty refreshments and conversation\nfollowed the program.\nThe Silver Anniversary of Ihe\nWoman's Foreign Missionary Society\nwas celebrated by die Missionary\nMessengers of Mt. Pleasant Methodist\nChurch by a splendid entertainment on\nTuesday evening, whioh was well-\nattended. Rev. A. E. Hethorington\npresided and the following program\nwas given: Chorus, by the Messengers;\naddress, bv Mrs. W. E. Pesoott; recitation, by Miss Grace Zimmermann; solo,\nby Miss McQuillan; address, by Rev.\nW. E. Pescott; chorns, by the Messengers ; reading of the Messengers yearly\nreport, by Miss Alberta Balf onr; solo,\nby Miss McQuillan; chorus, by the\nMessenger.\nMrs. Pescott gave a historical review\nof Woman's Foreign Missionary Society\nwhich was started in 1881, and told of\nthe early struggles and its triumph, and\nof the work beiug carried on by the\nSociety, over $911,000 having been raisod\nfor all purposes during the past year for\nita work. Rev. W. E. Pescott gave an\ninspiring address on Missionary Work,\nshowing how the Christian Religion\nis spreading throughout the world. Tne\ngain in India was SO per cent during\nthe past deoade, thore being at the present time 3,000,000 Christians in India.\nIn Japan there are 66,000 Protestant\nChristians, combined with the Roman\nCatholics there are 158,000 Christians in\nJapan, a gain of 400 per cent within\ntwenty years. The spread of the\nGospel was equally gratifying in China,\nAfrica aud among the Indians of B. O.\nThe largest church in the world was at\nHelio. Hawaii, forty years ago all the\nnatives of Hawaii were cannibals. All\nthe islauds in the Southern Pacific were\nChristianized. What was needed was\nmore Missionaries, especially young men\nand women to go forth and help win\nthe world for Christ. Miss Alberta\nBalfour's report showed that the Mt\nPleasaut Missionary Messeneers had\ncontributed over $100 for Missionary\nwork, being the largest amount in B.C.,\nthey had won the Bauner for this\nyear\u00E2\u0080\u0094the Banner was on exhibition.\nAt the beginning ef the year there were\n1? members, at present there are 47,\nMrs. E. Burritt is Superintendent of\nthe Messengers which is au auxiliary\nof the 1 ical Wo.nan-ForeignMissionary\nSooiety.\n :\u00C2\u00A9:\t\nAdvertize id the \"Advocate.\"\nTHE ADVOCATE, VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA.\nMt. jPleasant\nlodges,\nt. O. O. V.\nMt. Pleasant Lodge No. 19 meots evory\nTuesday at 8 p. m , in Oddfellows Hall\nWestminster avenue, Mt. Pleasant.\nSojourning brethren cordially invited\nto attend.\nNoivlk Grand\u00E2\u0080\u0094Frank Trimble.\nUecordino Secretary\u00E2\u0080\u0094H. Patterson, 180 Tenth avenue, east.\nLADIES OF THE MACCABEES.\nAlexandra Hive No. 7, holds regular\nReview 2d ana lth Mondays of each\nmonth ha Knights of Pythias Hall\nWestminster avenue.\nVisiting Ladies always weloome.\nLady Commander\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mrs. N. Pettipieoe,\n35 Tenth avenue, east.\nLady Record Keeper\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Mia. J. Martin,\nNinth avenne.\nL. O. L.\nMt. Pleasant L. O. L\u00E2\u0080\u009E\nNo. 1843, meets the 1st and\n3d Thursday of each month,\nat 8 p. m , in the K. of P.\nHall.\nAll visiting Brethren\ncordially weloome.\nH/ W. Howes, W. M\u00E2\u0080\u009E\n893 Tenth avenue, east.\nG. H. Darke, Rec. Seo'y.,,\n381 Seventh avonue, west.\nI. O. F.\nCourt Vancouver 1828, Independent\nOrder of Foresters meets 2d and 4th\nMondays of each month at 8 p. m., in\nOddfellows' Hall,\nVisiting brethren always weloome.\nChiri- Ranger\u00E2\u0080\u0094A. Pengelly.\nRecording Secretary\u00E2\u0080\u0094M. J. Crehan,\n387 Princess street, City.\nFinancial SkcRrtaby\u00E2\u0080\u0094Ralph S. Cum-\nmings, \"Advooate\" Office, Mt. Pleasant\nCANADIAN ORDER OF CHOSEN\nFRIENDS.\nVanconver Council, No. 311a, meets\nevery 2d and 4th Thursdays of each\nmonth, in I. O, O. F\u00E2\u0080\u009E Hall, Westminster avenne.\nSojourning Friends always welcome\nH. W. Howes, Chief Councillor.\n893 Tenth ave., east.\nMiss A. Chambers, Recorder,\n2228 Wcstmlimtcravomic. Tel. 760.\nCASCADE\nTHE BEER Without a Peer.\nBrewed right here in Vancouver by men of years\nand years and years experience, and a brewery whose\nplant is the most perfect known to the Art of\nBrewing. Is it any wonder that it has taken a place\nin the hearts of the people which no other beer can\nsupplant ? Doz., quarts $2. Doz., pints $ I.\nVancouver Breweries, Ltd.\nVancouver, B. C. Tel. 4a9\nFor Sale at all first-class Saloons, Liquor Stores and Hotels or\ndelivered to your honse.\nt*r*1*ismaya1*f*1af*^\nyt*1*^mWm*\My*f*T**a^\nThe Advocate\n$i per Year.\nWA*T*mAf*r*r^*rm^^\nt*f*i*^*yim^fAf0jtf^\nThe Badge of Honesty\n?*0004t**;*4f4Uf40*7*00m*:004!0\nt >\u00C2\u00BBM#>t>ftW6Wwe-*^\u00C2\u00BBM#i\u00C2\u00BB>!IWil\u00C2\u00BB)\nAdvertize\nJ.W ..Jem ***a*mm*m*am**A*m*m**mm*mmm*Mm\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094IN-\n**\"Ftie Advocate\na\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 P*m0rm*A0*r*00000m*I000m4r4V0*0*\n,.,'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0.\u00C2\u00AB.?\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 a/--pwr^swj^j^^\nIs on every wrapper of Doctor Pierce's\nGolden Medioal Discovery beoause a fall\nlist of the Ingredients composing it Is\nprinted these la plain English. Forty\ntears of exporienoe has proven Its superior\nworth as a blood purifier and Invigorating tonto (or the core of stomach disorders\ntad all Itver Ills. Ii builds up the rundown system as no other tonic ea* Iu\nwhleh alcohol Is used. The active avsdte-\ntaal principles of native roots snot as\nOvldeo Seal and Quosn's root, Stoaa and\nMandrake root, JHoodreot and Black\nChanybark are extracted and preserved\nhf' the uu of ohemlcally pure, triple-\nrefined glycerine. Bend to Dr. R. V. Pierce\nat Buffalo, M. T., (or frtt booklet which\nquotot extracts from well-reoognltod med-\nUal authorities such as Drs. Bartholow,\nKfaig, Souddw, Cos, BlltBgirood and &\nhost of others, showing thst these root*\ncan he depended upou tor their cnrattvai\naction In all weak states of the stomaoh,\naccompanied by indigestion er dyspepsia\nee well as In all bilious or liver complaints\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2nd la all \"wasting diseases\" where there\nIs loss at flesh and gradual running down\nof tho strength and syitom.\nThu nGolden Medical Discovery\" main*\nrich, pore blood and so Invigorates and\nregulates the stomaoh, liver and bowels,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2nd, through them, the whole system.\nThus all skin affections,Notches, pimple*\n. \u00C2\u00BBnd eruption! as well a* scrofulous swellings and old open running sores er ulcers\nj.-an eured and healed. In treating old\nmnn Ing sores, ot ulcers, It Is well te In-\n.. sure tbelr healing to, apply to them Dr.\nPlerco's Al)-H*allng Salve, lf your drug-\n!:.g.st doa't happen' to have this Salve In\n: stock, send fifty-four cents tn postage\nstamp* to Dr. B. V. Pierce, Invalids' Hotel\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2nd Surgical Institute, Buffalo. N. Y., and\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 targe Wot tke -All-Heeling Salve*\n.will reach vou by return post\nYoa can't afford to accept a seoiet nostrum ni a substitute tor thl* nOu-\u00C2\u00BBleoho._e,\nmedicine or known coMi-oemou, not\neven tlmiiL-h the tirsTont dealer may\n, thumbi- iniiltn a little oiswft [>r\u00C2\u00ABHt.\nUr. Pierco.'- Pleasant Pellets rntjmnte\n:.ii.i iiiviK\u00E2\u0080\u0094-ate 'tomai'li. !l7'\"*.\u00C2\u00BB!ir! J>owiilS,\n!t'i;.iir-i:n.ite4,UuY ijia.iiuUi, \u00C2\u00AB;isv kl \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0i'I*.\n*mfmP\n*%>04>\u00C2\u00BB00**m04>0*aA\u00C2\u00BB00*4^^\nREAL ESTATE!\nWhen the tide of population pours into Vancouver this\nfall and winter, lots on Mt. Pleasant will command the price\nthat lots in the City now command.\nRead this list and come and see us about them.\nOne 50-f t. lot on Tenth avenue, $1,050;\nterms.\nOne acre practioally cleared, on Westminster avenue; easy tsrms.\n88-ft. lot, 9-roomed Honse, orchard\nsmaU fruit... .$9,900\nBeautiful 9-room House, gas and\nelectrio light, convenient to car,\nThirteenth avenue.\nA good lot on Grandview, $200.\nLoune street\u00E2\u0080\u00946-room house, $1,600.\nNinth avenue\u00E2\u0080\u00944 lots, $830 per lot.\nNinth avonno\u00E2\u0080\u0094Double oorner, $1,800.\nLassdownb avenue\u00E2\u0080\u00947-room house,\n$3,000\nEighth avenue\u00E2\u0080\u00947-room house, $1,600\n$660 cash, takes 4-room cottage on\nSevent< en h avenue, 2 lots, fruit\ntrees, good well; prioe $1,200.\n9-room house Tenth avenne, near Westmiuster avenue; prioe $d 000, terms.\n8-room Cottage, 8 lots fenced and graded,\nSixteenth avenue; prioe $1,200\nterms.\nOn Sixteenth avenue, i^-aore, fine viow\noverlooking the city; price $600,\nhalf cash. Splendid buy.\n6-room House on Westminster avenue,\n$800 cash, balanoe toarrange\nOne lot, 26x120, no stumps, on Westminster avonno; price $826, $125\ndown, balance on easy terms.\nHouse of 6-rooms, Eighth avenue;\nelectric light, bath; lot 88x120.\nPrice $2,000.\nAoroage at Collingwood, also on\nWilson road; good investments.\nEigthth avenue, 2 lots, on corner.\n$760.\n6 acres at Eburne, black soil, $200.00 per\nacre; beautiful view. Terms.\n8 lots (corner) Columbia street, cleared\nand graded; $9,800, half cash.\n2 Lots, each 88x120, all kiudB of ft-it,\nlarge burn; O-rOamoil house; prioe\n$2.800; terms\n5-room House, rented nt $16 per month,\nsouth half of lot, in 200a; $1,600,\n$400 cash, balanoe to arrange.\n8 LotB (corner) Westmiustor avenne,\n80x182; price $8,200. terms.\n2-storey Residence on Sixth avenne,\nlarge house, beantifnl lawn, fruit.\nTerms. Price $8,750.\nStore on 25-ft. lot, on Westminster avenue ; building rented; fine location,\nnear Ninth avenue. Price $6,500.\nTerms.\nLot 26x182 on Westminster avenua-\ntwo-storey building, in fine condition; leased for 2 years; title perfect. Prioe $8,500.\n7-roomed House, lot 49)^x120, Eighth\navenue; price $1,850.\nDouble corner on Tenth avenue, cleared,\nfine location, prioe $1,260.\nCottage of 5 rooms, elect?- light, and\nafl conveniences; situated on Eighth\navenne, east. Prioe $1,950; $700\ndowu and terms.\n6 room Cottage, rented at $14 per month,\nsouth half of lot, in 200a; price\n$1,400, $800 down, easy terms.\nTwo lots, oleared and graded, $1,601,\ninside lot for $725. Will build to\nsuit purchnBer on easy terms.\n*tt. \u00C2\u00A3c, SOc, 96c a yd.\nColored Quilts worth $1 tor 76c each\nGrey Flannels, 13%o, 15o, SOc, 26c, 35c, 40o a yard\nUnbleached Turkish Towels IOo, 13%o, 16c, 20c, 25c each and up\nWhite Turkish Towels, IOo, 12}^o, 16c, SOc, 36o each and up\nBed Comforters, all good useful sizes, for 76c each\nLadies'Winter Vests worth 60o for 40o each\nBoys' Heavy Wool Ribbed Stockings all sixes Soo pair\nJ. Horner,\n143 Hastings street east.\nBetween Westminster and Columbia avenues.\n'phone 877.\nIt is hut natural that the influence of\nthe popularity ot elaborate trimmings\nshould be strongly felt in the button\nfield. This is surely a button year, it\nono can judge from the quantities of\nthem to be seen in the city Btores and\non the most up-to-date of new gowns.\nBut do uot get the impression that we\naro to fasten our waists with buttons in\nthe same old-fashoned way as in nine\ncases out of ten, the buttons used are for\nornamentation only. They are put on\nstrappings and revers.\nThe cost of some these buttons is surprising. Last-week I was quite dum-\nf bunded wheu pricing some buttons to\nfind they were $18 and $20 a dozen-\nThey were truly beautiful and it wonld\nonly take oue or two of them to put the\nneeded finish to a wrap or dress.\nGold seems to be as evicent in the\nnew buttons as it every othoo kind of\ntrimming. Very many of these gold\nand jeweled buttons are nearly as huge\nas a silver dollar, and one. or two of\nthem aro vory popular for fur coats.\nA very novel button is of black velvet\nset in silver and striped in silver bands,\nstudded with rhinestones.\nThese brilliant stones are used more\nthan Ivor and are combined witb oxidised silver, gilt, mother-of-pearl, in\nwaving stripes, squares, scroll and circles.\nSteel point buttons are iu marked\nfavor but there is alno a demand tor the\ntieted metal buttons in old tapestjy\noolors.\nOne of the deportment stores is showing somthing quite original in the way\nof plaid buttons in glass and enamel\nUndoubtedly, they will be very popular\nas the seasou progresses. These buttons\nare decidedly gay, with alt 'mate wida\nand narrow stripe in deep blues, dork\nreds, combined in all sorts of widths.\nAll of these buttons arc wrand.with\n_p\nQ4}Jm* m\%AjA*i Double corner looxxaoft., 9-roomed\n*%***%%>%*<%<%*. house, orchard and garden $5,000. ,\n_\u00E2\u0080\u00A2_\Y\ 2-Ev.P *^ew 5\"rooIue^ house, concrete founjja-\n<%*%%%%*%*%*% tion, 36-ft. lot; price $1,550. .\nHalf-acre, Sixteenth avenne, beautiful view; price\nIt.iSO.\nfXtai* Rs Whttoev, _444 Westminster ave\n**00a*mt0mA>m0**m**m**m0*m00^\nMen's Underwear\nBARGAINS\nWe will sell Men's Regnlar $2 per suit Knotted\nWoolen Underwear at $1.60 per suit. .\nI j Richardson & Chambers i\nCLOTHIERS & MEN'S FURNISHINGS. J\n400 Westminster' ave.\nI \*0000*0*00**f**00*000****r*00*0*00***r00*0*00*400000*0\nmetal backs, and most of them are quit-\nlarge although they can be purchased\nin any size. Pluid buttons in enamel\nare more effective than those of glass,\nfor each stripe is edged with a fine\nthread-like piece of gilt, which adds a\nbrightness that is particularly attractive\nGet yonr work done at the\nGlasgow Barber Shop\n3 doors trom Hotel\nFrank Underwood, Proprietor.\nBRTHS\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Bath room fitted with Porcelain Bath Tdb and all modern\nconveniences.\nE. & J. HARDY & CO. ~\nCompany, Financial, Press and\nAdvertisers' Agents.\n80 Fleet St., London, E. 0., England\nColonial Business u Specialty.\nBO YEARS'\nEXPERIENCE\nTrade Marks\nDesigns\nCopyrights Ac\nAuyono sending a -ketch and description mats\nqui\u00E2\u0080\u0094ly M\u00E2\u0080\u0094 r\u00E2\u0080\u0094In our opinion free whether ao _\nInvention Is probably patentable. Commvmlca- .\ntfonsstrlc-lyooi\u00E2\u0080\u0094dentl-il. Handbook on Patt\u00E2\u0080\u0094t-. >\nsent free. Oldest agency for securing patentii,\nPaten\u00E2\u0080\u0094 taken throHuh Muur. 4 Co. reoolv*,\n\u00C2\u00BBpeci_ notir.r., nttbont charge, in the\nScientific American.\nAhrtnrtHomoli' tllnntr-to- Weekly* I-iirjrwt dr-\ndilution ot auy nnientlUc journal. Torms. |3 ft t\nyesw; four months, *>t* Bold by all newgrtealert,\n8llJNN&Co.3C'E^\"Hewlfort\nBranoh OfBae. 625 F Bt., Waah\u00E2\u0080\u0094(ton. _. C.\nT-R Advocatk is tlie best advertising,\nmedium where it circulates. Tel. B140S;\n*\u00C2\u00A3>\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nTHE ADVOCATE\n1 4^* ft **********\nIs lssued\u00C2\u00BB^*e'>?'*s,\u00C2\u00AB\nMieJ i-VJkJ 1JI.-VM a- South Vancouver.\n\"The Advocate\" gives all tho Local News of Mt. Pleasant from\nweek to week tor $1 00 per year; si- months 60c. An interesting\nSerial Story is always kept running; the selections in Woman's\nRealm will always bo touud full interost to up-to-date women i the\nmiscellaneous items are always bright, entertaining and inspiring.\nNew arriV a_..on Mt. Pleasant will become raedily iuformod of tbe\ncommunity and more quickly iu-rested In local happenings if\ntheysupscribe to \"The Advocate.\"\nThe Function of nn\nAdvertisement\nis first to draw attention arid to leave a favorable\nand as far as possible s lasting impression.\nThe first and principal object o* ft very great donl of advertising\nis not directly that ot selling goods, but of establishing a worthy\nfame\u00E2\u0080\u0094a recognised reputiitieu\u00E2\u0080\u0094to mako the goods and the bouse\nknown. Customers must eome with some Sdrai of the goodtftnoy\nseek, the more knowledge the better. With ooufidonce inspired\nby effocfevo advertising, it is then up to the salesman to do tho\nrest\u00E2\u0080\u0094to make good by courtesy and a skillful jpreeentation of the\nwares which should be up to. all that has -_en advertised.\nTHE ADVOCATE is the best advertising\nmedium for reaching Mt. Pleasant People\u00E2\u0080\u0094to\ngain their favorable attention to your goods and\nstore. Advertising rates reasonable\u00E2\u0080\u0094not in the\nPublishers* Association high rate combine. THE ADVOCATEv VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA.\nCOMPARISONS.\nARCTIC EXPLORATION.\nAs Soon aa We lii'irln to Hake Tbem\nWe It.-_.i.i to Softer.\nWe would not have to strive so for\ncourage if what we vaguely call\n\"things\" were more evenly distributed\neinoug us, for no one's lot would then\n-seem to him an evil one. If we were\n-all humpbacked or lame or blind;\nIf every husband wore unfaithful a ,d\nevery child a cross; if we were all pr.jr\nand no man hud any more than another; If nobody's son died in his early\nstrength and uobody was loved while\nwe sat neglected, theu who of us\nwould know what sorrows and afflictions were? We would take each of\nthem for granted, ns a Chinaman takes\nhis yellow sklu and an Indian his red\none.\nIt Is because we see our estate differing from that of our follows that wc\nare tempted to comparisons, and It Is\nIn the making of these comparisons\nthat a sense of our sorrows, like the\n'knowledge of our afflictions, is flrst\n_orn. How would we havo known tbat\nWe were poor unless we had seen some\none else who was richer or that our\neon was unsuccessful unless the son of\nsomebody else were making a great\nmark In the world? Would our little\nchildren be unhappy with only one\ndress had they not seen other children with two?\nIt comes to this, then: When we begin to make comparisons, we begin to\nsuffer. This may seem to be a hard\nsaying; but it is a true one.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Lillle\nHamilton French In Harper's Bazar.\nSleeplessness.\u00E2\u0080\u0094When the nerves aro\nunstrung and the whole body given\nup to wretchedness, when the mind\n.is filled with gloom and 'isnial forebodings, the result,of derangement of\nthe digestive organs, sleeplessness\ncome, to add to the distress. If only\nthb subject could sleep, there would)\nbe oblivion for a while and temporary relief. Parmelee's Vegetable\nl'ills will not only induce sleep, but\n-will act so beneficially that tiie suo-\nject will awake refreshed and restored\n'to happiness.\nllnvc a Definite Aim.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0No life amounts to much until It\n_as a programme\u00E2\u0080\u0094something definite,\n' something particular. Nothing else can\n' take the place of it. Education cannot, talent cannot, genius cannot, hard\nwork cannot Until there is a definite\n' aim the energies will run to waste, the\nability be squandered. The faculties\ndeteriorate when working without a\n'definite aim.\nMinard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia.\nDan_;\u00C2\u00ABro\u00E2\u0080\u0094.\nMrs. Hornbeak (in the midst of her\nreading)\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mercy sakes alive! Here is\nan Item about a surgeon over at Big-\nigervilie removln' an epithelioma from\na man's lip.\nFarmer Hornbeak \u00E2\u0080\u0094 \"Well, I sh'u'd\njudge lt was about time for people to\nquit using such long words when It requires a doctor to git 'em out \u00E2\u0080\u0094Puck.\nSunlight Soap is better than other\neoaps, but is Best when used in the\nSunlight way. Biiy Sunlight Soap\nand follow directions.\nAud Inflight.\n\"What happens when people fall ln\nHove at first sight?\"\n\"'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Usually marriage i.nu second sight\"\nThere Is nothing either good or bad\nbut thinking makes it so.-\n'Minard's Liniment Cures Dandruff.\nAncient Locks.\nLocks were used in the time of th*\npharaohs. At Karnak the visitor ls\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2shown the sculptured representation of\na lock which is almost exactly like one\nkind of lock used in Egypt at the present day. Homer says that Tenelope\nused a brass key to open her wardrobe.\nHo adds that it was very crooked and\nhad an ivory handle. A Greek writer\nwho lived lu the last half of the twelfth\ncentury explains that such keys were\nundoubtedly very ancient, although\nstill to be seen in Constantinople and\nelsewhere. Unman locks, like the Egyptian, required a partial sliding of the\nkey. They were, however, more lntrl-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2eate.\nFor Family Colds\nA reliable rouuh and cold cure \u00E2\u0080\u0094mild\nbe 'ways in ihc hou* ready (or uo the\nmoment.the urst symptoms appear.\nhis always easier, cheaper anrl hettet\nio check a cold in tho very begmnrag.\nIt ii taler, loo.\nShiloh'i Consumption Cure, die Long\nTonic, has been tested for thiity-thiae\nyears, and tens ol thousands q( hornet in\n\"Canada and the Uniled States to-day ara\n' never without it.\n. A dealer writes: \" Shiloli'sGmnimp\u00E2\u0080\u0094oCare\ni| without doubt the bast remedy (or Cousin snd\nColds on tbe \u00E2\u0080\u0094sikst. Onco used, iny eml\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mr*\nwill buy no other. 1.. Elsley, N-jsagaweya.Ont.\"\nIf it were anything but the best would\n' this be so > Try it ia your own family.\nII il docs not cure, vou get back all it cost\nyou. We take all the chances. Neither\nyou nor your dealer can lose. Isn't that\nfair ? 2sc is the price. All dealers in\nmedicine sell y>i\nsmison\nThe Advancing C-cpcdltlona to the\ni .Voi'tli Pole.\n\"With the expedition headed by Walter Wellnian from Spitsbergen, that of\nMylius Erlchsen from Greenland aud\nUnit of Mil-kelson from Alaska, all advancing upon tlie polo this .summer, interest in Peary who went north last\nsummer and thus has a year's start of\nthein, is becoming greater,\" writes P.\nT. McGrath lu the Chicago News from\nSt. John's, N. F. \"Peary went north\nfrom Newfoundland in July, 1905, In\n, his splendid new stenmer Roosevelt\nI and hoped to be able to work his way\nup into the polar basin west of Green-\ni lnnd before navigation closed, n feat\nj almost accomplished by Cnptnln Hnll\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 In the Polaris iu 1S71. An open seasou\nj in the seaway there, whicll occurs occasionally, enables on extreme north-\ni lug to be made, and If Peary wero so\nfavored he would be nblo to shorten by\nsome hundreds of miles the distance ho\nwould have to cover on foot ln advnnc-\n' Ing toward the pole Itself. Peary's intentions were to send Eskimos south\nfrom his ship to Cape Sabine this summer with news of his progress. The\nScotch whalers whicll left Dundee In\nI May for Davis strait took letters for\nhim in case their cruise carried them\nso far north. They were also author '\nized to take aboard and convey south\nany dispatches which might be lodged\nthere from him.\n\"Cape Sabine Is. so to speak, the\nlast accessible outpost in the north. In\naddition to the Scotch whalers, tbe\nNewfoundland sealer Adventure, which\nhas been chartered by tho dominion\ngovernmeut for patrol service in Hudson bay and will proceed thore In July,\nwill also' go to Cape Sabine aud should\nrenqji thero about Ihe middle of Augusts! ,Pcary's friends have requested\nthat the Adventure mako a Special\nsearch there .\"or records from him,\nand as -these are always deposited beneath a cairn In Lifeboat cave, the\nscene of the Greely tragedy In 1884, it\nIs certain that auy papers which may\nbo sent south by him will be recovered and the fact probably communicated to the world from the Marconi\nstation on Labrador. It is thus highly probable that toward the ond of tbat\nmonth some news of him will be learned by the world.\n\"It Is barely possible that with extreme good fortune he may have forced\nhis ship so far up that he has achieved\nhis aim nnd got, If not to the pole Itself, at any rate beyond the farthest\npoint\u00E2\u0080\u009486 degrees 33 minutes\u00E2\u0080\u0094reached\nby any previous explorer\u00E2\u0080\u0094the Duke of\nAbruzzl, who advanced that far ln\n1900. On the other hand, the prospect Is that he may have to spend a\nsecond year there, working Into tho\npolar basin tbls summer and pushing\npoleward next winter and spring over\nthe mighty floes which stretch to the\napex )f the globe. Peary's most formidable opponent will be Wellnian, with\nhis airship.\"\nMfahnps of an Antomobillst.\nAn English automobilist, C. S. Rolls,\nteUs of the things that have happened\nto him: \"I have burnt my boiler out\nthree times on a steam car, I was once\nstuck in a deep flood and had to hail a\npunt, once had to be practically dug\nout of a bog, was once stuck for want\nof a match for over three hours with\nmy burners out, the longest distance I\nhave had to walk for petrol was ln\nFrance\u00E2\u0080\u0094twelve miles; have three times\nbad a passenger fall off a racing car\nmoving at a fair speed without being\nkilled, once bad a horse and cart on\ntop of me, in the Paris-Vienna race ran\ninto a tree at seventy miles an hour,\ntwice been overturned, once had my\nhead mashed In by a starting handle,\nhave twice run away completely down\nhill forward and two or three times\nbackward, once upset an apple cart In\nthe Strand, and twice had my car burnt\nup.\"\nPeaaal Trade Secrets.\nSome peanuts that are bought ready\nroasted are of a light yellow color.\nOthers, however, are pronounced brunettes. There is a reason for this.\nThe great American peanut will remain crisp only a dny or two after\nroasting and in damp weather only a\nfew hours. It absorbs moisture rap-\nIdly, so that two days after roasting\nthe finest uuts lose their crlspness and\nare io all intents and purposes as\nthough they hud never been cooked.\nThe Italian and Greek peanut men\nfreshen up their stocks by roasting\nagain and reroastlug. When the process has been repeated three or four\ntimes, though, the peanut begins to\ntake on a tawny hue, which is considered objectionable by those who have\nstands ln the better pares of town.\nThese much roasted goobers are therefore sold at n discount to Greeks nnd\nItalians who have stands near railroad\nstations and the cheaper resorts, who\ncan roast; reroast and re-reroast them\nIndefinitely uutil they nro finally sold.\nA Corporation as Shopkeeper.\nTarmouth Corporation, ln carrying\nout its policy of municipal trading, has\nopened a shnp |n Kins street, to push\nthe sale of electric lamps and fittings,\nfans, motors, etc., In connection with\nIts electricity department. Thla department Is making- a handsome profit\neach year, to the great advantage of\nthe ratepayers.\nA TORONTO MAN TRIES\nSomething New and is Delighted.\nFeels Like a Boy.\nMr. M.N. Dafoe,\n29 Colborne St.,\nToronto, says:\n\"I have been a\nsufferer from dyspepsia for years. I\nhave been treated\nby doctors and have\ntaken many medicines with only\ntemporary relief.\nSince using Dr.\nLeonhardt's Antl-\nPill I can eat anything the same as\nMr. M. N. Dafoe when a boy. I find\nthey regulate both\nstomach and bowels. My old time\nvigor lias returned, so that my spirits\nare buoyant and temper normal. I give\nall credit to this wonderful remedy\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nDr. Leonhardt's Anti-Pill.\"\nAll dealers or The Wilson-Fyle Co.\nLimited, Niagara Falls, Ont. 601\nThe Ship's Concert.\nThe Captaiu (of the Hilaria)-This Is\nmy five hundredth trip across the Atlantic.\nThe Theatrical Manager (absently)\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nDot's a pretty fair run. Vot are you\ngoing to gif away free for soufenirs?\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nPuck.\nTIisi Vacation. r\nWiggles\u00E2\u0080\u0094Wheu Uo you take your vacation this year?\nWaggles\u00E2\u0080\u0094I don't know exactly. My\nwife hasn't decided, yet just when she\nwill go away.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Somcrvillc Journal.\nBLOOD TROUBLES.\nCured Tlirough the Rich, Red Blood\nDr. William's l'ink Tills Actually\nMake.\nThousands of women suffer from\nheadaches, dizziness, langour and\nnervousness. Few realize that their\nmisery all comes from the bad state of\ntheir blood. They take one thing fur\ntheir hend, and another for their stomach, a third for their nerves. And yet\nall the while it is simply their blond\nthat is the cause of all their trouble.\nDr. William's Pink Pills cure all these\nand other blood troubles because they\nactually make new, rich, red blood.\nMrs. J. H. MclAi'thur, St. Thomas, Ont.,\nsays: \"Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have\ndone me a world of good. For about\neighteen months I was a constant sufferer. I was terribly run down and the\nleast exertion left ine fagged out. I\nslept badly at night and this further\nweakened me, and finally I had to give\nup housekeeping and go boarding as 1\nwas quite unable to do any housework.\nI took doctor's medicine but it was of\nlittle or no benefit. One day a neighbor\ntold me how much benefit she had derived from Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and\nadvised me to try them. I sent and got\nthree boxes, and by the time I had\nused them I could feel a change for\nthe better. Then I got four boxes more\nand before they were all gone my health\nwas fully restored. To see me now one\nwould not think II had ever been sick\nfor a day, and I can honestly say I\nowe my renewed health to Dr. Williams\nPink Pills.\"\nDr. Williams' Pink Pills are the\ngreatest cure there is for the weakness and backaches and sideaehes of\nanaemia, all the distress of indigestion,\nall the pains and aches of rheumatism,\nsciatica and neuralgia, and the weakness and ill health that follows any disturbance of regularity in the blood supply. Sold by all medicine dealers or\nby mail at 50c a box or six boxes for\n$2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine\nCo., Brockville, Ont.\nHis Sharp Kctort.\nOne day ns Pat halted at the top of\nthe river bauk a man famous for his\niuqulsltiveuess stopped and asked,\n\"How long have you hauled water for\nthe village, my good man?\" \"Tin\nyears, sor.\" \"Ah, how many loads do\nyou tako ln a day?\" \"From tin to fifteen, sor.\" \"Ah, yes; uow I have the\nproblem for you. How much water at\nthis rate have you hauled in all, sir?\"\nThe driver of the watering cart jerked\nhis thumb backward toward the river\nand replied, \"All the water you don't\nsee there now, sor.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094Philadelphia\nLodger.\nPORTABLE VILLAGE8.\nMinard's Liniment for sale everywhere.\nFloalianda.\nA woman who shall be nameless furnishes the following essay on husbands:\n\"There aro three kinds of husbands\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nthe young husbands who make us unhappy because we are so Jealous of\nthem, the middle aged husbands wbo\nbreak our hearts because tbey would\nrather make noncy or play golf than\ndevote any attention to us and tho\nold husbands who sickeu us with tbelr\nsilly objectlous whenever we turn to\nlook at younger meu.\"\nS* DODOS '.\nJKIDNEY?\n% PILLS A.\nYnrcoimin* More Their Hoasei fran.\nPlace to Place.\nThe Turcomans, who live on the east\neru shore of the Caspian sea, carrj\ntheir villages about with tbem whei\nthey travel. As a tribe sets out on a\nJournoy every mun packs his wooden\nhouse upon a camel, which the animal\ncan easily carry, and when a spot is\nreached where be and his friends in\ntend to remain for any great length ol\ntime the camels are unloaded and s\nvillage started which It takes about an\nhour or so to build.\nIt ts to bo remembered that the\nhouses are real houses and not tents\nand that the settlement ls not a camp,\nbut a village. The traveling bouse of\nthe Turcoman ls a murvel of skill and\nIngenuity and Is really much lighter,\nmore portable and can be packed into\na much smaller compass tban any of\nthe so called portable houses that are\nmanufactured and sold in some parts\nof our country.\nThe frame ls made of strong, light\nwood laths about an inch broad by\nthree-quarters of an Inch thick, crossing each otber when set up In position\nat rlgbt angles about a foot apart aud\nfastened at each crossing by the thongs\nef rawhide so as to be movable, and\nthe wholo framework may be opened\nor shut ln the same manner as those\ntoys for children that consist of a\nsquad of wooden soldiers and will expand or close at will so as to form\nopen or close columns.\nOne part or moro made ln tills way\nand all Inclosing a circle fifteen or\ntwenty feet across form the skeleton\nof the walls and are firmly secured In\nplace by bands of ropes made of hair\nor wool fastened round the end of each\nrod. From the upper ends of these\nrods similar rods bent near the wall\nand Into something less than a right\nangle are so disposed that the longer\nportions slope to the center and, beinf\ntied with rope, form tbe roof.\nOver this ls thrown a covering of\nblack felt, having ln the center n large\nhole which answers both for a window\nand a chimney. Large pieces of the\nsame coarse black felt are wrapped\nround the walls, aud outside these, to\nkeep all tight, is bound another frame\nof split reeds or canes or of some very\nlight, tough wood bound closely together with strong cords.\nSunlight-\nSoap\nis better than other Soaps\nbut is best when used in\nthe Sunlight way. Follow\ndirections.\nPOINTED PARAGRAPHS.\ngood\nToo much publicity spoils\ndeed.\nSigning your name to a friend's not*\nls a bad sign.\nWhen riches come la at the window\nfriends flock to tbe door.\nHe who has no faith In himself Is\ndestined to become a successful failure.\nThe brave and fearless man manages\nto get there early and thus avoids the\nrush.\nA wise man doesn't attempt to pull\nhimself out of trouble with a corkscrew.\nIf a man Is unable to stand prosperity he should sit down aud give hit\nwife a chance.\nSUNLIGHT\nWAY OF WASHING\nFIRST.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Dip the article\nto be washed in a tub of\nlukewarm water, driwlt\nout on a washhotrg. and rub\ntbe soap lightly over it.\nBe particular not to miss\nsoaping all over. THEN\nroll it in a tight roll, lay\nin the tub under the water,\nand go on the same way\nuntil all the pieces have the\nsoap rubbed on, and are\ntolled up.\nThen so away for\nthirty minutes to one\nhour ond let the ' Sun*\nlight\" Soap do its work.\nNEXT.\u00E2\u0080\u0094After soaking\nthe full time rub the clothes\nlightly out on a wash board,\nand the dirt will drop\noutl lmn -*1C garment inside out to get at the seams,\nbut don't use any more\nsoap; don't scald or boil a\ns.ngle piece, and don't\nwash through two suds, lf\nthe water gets too dirty,\npour a little out and add\nfresh. If a streak Is hard\nto wash, rub some more\nsoap on it* and throw\nthe piece back Into the\nsuds for a few minutes.\nLASTLY COMES THE\nRINSING, which is to be\ndone in lukewarm water,\ntaking special care to get\nall the dirty luds awav.\nthen wring out and hang\nup to dry.\nTor Woolens and Tlan-\nrtels proceed as follows: \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nShake the articles free from\ndust. Cut a tablet of\nSUNLIGHT SOAP into\nshaving\"., pour into a gallon\nof boiling water and whisk\ninto a lather. When just\nlukewarm, work articles in\nthe lather without rubbing. Squeeze out dirty\nwater without twisting\nand rinse thoroughly in two\nrelays of lukewarm water.\nSqueeie out water without\ntwisting and hang in the\nopen air.\nRKTTfie most delicate\ncolors may be MW\nwashed In the Sunlight \" way.\n*\*K (\(\(\ REWARD will be paid\n*l'Jivuu to any person who\nproves that Sunlight Boap contains any Injurious chemicals\nor any form of adulteration.\nYoar Money Refunded by tba\ndealer from whom you buy\nSunlight Soap if you find any\ncausa for complaint.\nLEVER BROTHERS LIMITED, TORONTO\nMlnliiformed.\nKind Lady (visiting the Jail)\u00E2\u0080\u0094I un-\nThe suspicious man keeps one eye on derstaud it was your love for liquor\na tiaI-vViViimi l.nt tlm _n_e_\u00E2\u0080\u0094 mnn 1_- _i __r_ - '..._. . .\nhis neighbor, but the wise man keeps\nboth eyes ou himself.\nUnless a man ls willing to take\nchanres he never takes anything else\nthat happens to be lying around loose.\nChnrch I'illars.\nThe Joke of the vicar of Witbyoombe,\nDevon, at the Easter vestry as to his\nlaggard churchwarden being not a\n\"pillar\" but a \"buttress\" of the church\nbecause he supported it outside reminds one, says a correspondent, of\nanother Joke of the same kind delivered from a Loudon pulpit by the Rev.\nJohn McNeil. John wus minister of the\n\"Scotch church,\" Regent square, at the\ntime and ln his own homely way was\ndriving his points home with telling effect He suddenly paused, after exhorting his congregation to be workers, aud then, with a twinkle in bis\neye, said, \"You know, I always think\nof church members being divided into\ntwo classes\u00E2\u0080\u0094pillars aud caterpillars.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nLondon Chronicle.\nthat brought you here.\nJlmjam Jake\u00E2\u0080\u0094Dou't youse believe It,\nma'am. Dis is de las' place on eart' I'd\ncomo to cf I wuz lookln' fer a drink.\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nChicago News.\nVersatile Vonth.\n\"That new clerk of yours ls rather\nversatile, Isn't he?\" said the drummer.\n\"That's what,\" replied the village\nmerchant. \"lie makes three or four\ndifferent kinds of n fool of himself\nevery day.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094Detroit Tribune.\nWhen Sla-lnir Fait (lie I'Inn llalynrd.\n\"Many a slender flagpole has been\nruined,\" said a rigger, \"by drawing the\nhalyards dowu too snugly when milking them fast after hauling down tne\nflag. If this Is doue ln dry weatber\nand lt comes on wet, the shrinking of\nthe halyards thus drawn taut to start\nwltb may be enough to bend the pole,\nand If lt should be left ln that way\nlong enough the pole would be permanently bent Flag halyards wben no\nflag ls flying should be made fast witb\n* llttle slack.\"\nWhat It' Lout liim.\nMrs. Watts\u00E2\u0080\u0094There! We have cleared\noff the last of thut church debt, and\nIt never cost you men a cent. See wbat\nwomen can do. -Mr.. Watts\u00E2\u0080\u0094I don't\nknow about the other follows, but I\nknow you have ninde me spend more\nthnn $100 for extra meals downtown\nwhile you were out monkeying around.\nThe _''!r\u00C2\u00BBt Slnht.\nKlhel\u00E2\u0080\u0094I understand It wns a case of\nlove nt CTrit sight between Jack uud\nMiss P.dglrl. Maud\u00E2\u0080\u0094Yea, dear. But\nt>\"\u00C2\u00BB irat s___l\t *\u00C2\u00BB*'\" -t hor bunk book.\nThe Original Vet- of Crxnee.\nSomebody has been looking up the\nhistory of the original use of canes im\nthiB country and duds that they were\nformerly n part of tbe repertory of the\nleaders of the church, being at one\ntime the principal badge of tbe deacon.\nThe deacon's cane was about five feet\nloug, one end being embellished wltb\na big knob, the other with feathers.\nWhen tbe small boy got too noisy or\nrebelled against the powers that were,\nbe was given a rap on the head with\ntho uncharitable end of tho stick. If\nthe bead of the finnlly forgot himself\nwhile listening to the morning sermon anil lapsed Into a blissful drenm\nOf old times ln merry England, tbe turkey plumes nr, the deacon's cane feathered him into life again.\nThe im! at Fcaite In the rant.\nIn 1038 the opening of Inlgo Jones'\nnew theater was celebrated by anelab.\nOrate bouquet attended by tho lords of\nthe council, and the bill amounted to\n\u00C2\u00A384 5s. 4d.. exclusive of wine. Glass\nand plate were hired, and some of the\nformer wns broken nnd had to be paid\nfor. Wo have the details of three dinners ln 1G7C. A leg of mutton costs 3s.\n-Id., a sirloin of beef 9 shillings, three\nchickens nnd three rabbits Bs. Od.,\neight artichokes 1- shilling nnd four\ncauliflowers Is. 3d. Por buttered ale,\nthe 'Ingredients of which were a hum\ndred eggs, eight pillions of nie, two\npounds of butter, eight pounds of sugar and one ounce ot nutmegs, the\ncharge was 10s. lid.\nW N U No. 605 THE ADVOCATE, VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA.\nOF QUONKVILLE\non -tie Duii-iin Doaro. tivr-r tiiu onug-\nacross the street from Dr. Jeremiah\nQuonk's drug store.\nAnd,in due course the last Dog Day\npassed and the day of the steeplechase\ndawned bright, clear and not uncomfortably warm,\nIt'seemed as If half the population\nof Menagerie Borough Vurned out to\nwitness the event, but bost of nil was\nUie turnout from '-tat Township and\nQuonkvllle', each of which engaged\nfront places for its best rooters.\nBenny Quonk and Larry Quonk wero\nthe favorites of the one \u00E2\u0096\u00BAido* and Bar-\nny Rat and Orlbby Rat were the picked winners of the other side.\nSquire Rat stood out In front of the\nstarting line and scolded Benny Quonk\nroundly for taking tho Inside track,\nso Benny said:\n\"All right, you can have all tho advantage on your side, for all I care.\"\nAnd he turned his hopper over to\nthe outside track.\nAt last the four jockeys had their\nhoppers on the line, the bell rang, the\nstarter cried, \"Ready! One, two, three,\ngo!\" ond hoppety-hop-hop, away flew\nthe four hoppers down the course.\n\"Go' it, Benny!\" yelled hundreds of\nRats.\nim i i o-ii, yuu._ ... _-* \u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BBMj J*' vxr.ii\"-^-\na multitude of Quonks.\n\"Good for Larry!\" sang another multitude of Quonks.\n\"Crlbby's getting ;here, all right!'\nshouted a crowd of Ratb.\nHoppety-hop-hop went the hoppers\nalmost neck and neck, !*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*lf way round\nthe coarse, when, alas! fo** 1'atr*.\nRat, he took a horrible header au .\nwas put out of the race.\nNext came a hurdle, and here Larry\nQuonk fell' headforemost into a pooli\nand his hopper came down on top oj\nhim, and after the hopper came Crib-\nby Rat and his hopper, pell-mell, Iter*\nbplash!\nThat left Benny Quonk an easy victor, to amble In to the STOal and smilingly receive the bouquets and triumphant shouts of his delighted Cd-?\nlow-Quonks.\nHe was highly pleased to win tiu'\nGrand Prize, which he generously an\nnounced that he would divide with th-:\nfellows in an extempore banquet to bi\ngiven In Quonkvllle Inn.\n\"Yes, It was a Jolly race\" said he\n\"but the best thing abom it wan that\nit has shown those impertinent'Rat-'\ntheir place, and hereafter they'll le-iv*:\noff their airs.\"\nTI-Il-RE was wild excitement in\nQuonkvllle one bright morning.\nOn the bulletin board over the\nbridge across the street from\nDr. Jeremiah Quonk's drug store, thu\npassing Quonks had their attention arrested by the following potter announcement:\nAttention, Quonk-. Biff\nnnd llttle 1\nOn the day following the last\nDog Day, to wit, viz: The 13th\nof August, there will be conducted a Grand Steeplechase In the\nfair grounds.\nOnly grasshoppers between four\nand eight weeks old will he allowed to enter the race, und the\nJockeys must he young fellows\nunder twelve months old.\nGRAND PRIZK of TEN\nTHOUSAND EXTRA FINE\nBLUE BOTTLE FLIES for the\nowner of the winning hopper.\nAll Intending competitors\nshould give their names to the\ngeneral manager, JERRY\nQUONK, Esq., No. 16 FrogViUe\nRow, not later than August 1_.\nNo wonder the Quonks became wildly\nexcited! For nut in the memory of\nthe oldest inhabitant had there been\na steeplechase held on the Fair\nGrounds (or any other grounds, for\nthat matter).\n'There was a tradition that about five\ngenerations back a ningniflcent stee-\nTeaching Elephants\nTHOUGH the elephant is not carnivorous he is dangerous enough\nat times. If you want to teach\nan elephant to stand on his head, you\nhave to be very careful Chains are\nplaced around his hind quarters, and\nhe Is then hoisted by pulleys into the\nair often enough for him to understand what is required oi liim.\nTo teach these bulk/ creatures to\npose is very difficult. One well-known\nposition is one elephant standing with\nhis forepaws on the hindquarters ot*\nanother, while he flourishes his trunk\nIn a theatrical attitude. To teaeh him\nto do this you have to pass a chain\nround his neck and another round his\ntrunk.\nThe assistants haul a .vay on the\nneck chain until the ar.i.mil begins to\nchoke. Naturally, he rises on his hind\nlegs in order to be able to breathe.\nThen the trunk cable is UttUled on, and\nthe elephant on whose back he Is to\nplace his forepaws it. backed under\nthem. Curiously enough, elephants\ndislike this treatment and often, after\na severe lesson, will attack their\nteacher,\nIf you want a waltzing elephant, you\nwill have to engage a number of\nstrong assistants, who will push the\nelephant round, some at either end of\nthe great beast. You then fchout\n\"Waltz!\" and all begin pushing. Soon\nthe elephant learns to vhirl, on the\nsound of the word, of h'4* own accord.\nSuch tricks as ringing a bell, grinding an organ, are simple and effective,\ni You simply put the ohlect In the elephant's trunk and shake it for him.\nWhen he dances witli tinkling bells\nround his feet, one foot at a time is\nlifted and shaken by the assistants,\nWhiney and Smiley Boy\nLITTLE Mr. Whineyboy came to town\none duy.\nRiding on a Growlygrub, screaming all\nthe way,\nHowlyberries in his hat,\nScreecher leaves atop o' that,\nRound his neck a ring o' squeals,\nWhineywhlners on his heels.\nWhat do you think\u00E2\u0080\u0094that awful day\nEverybody ran away!\nLittle Mr. Smileyboy came to town one\nday,\nRiding on a Grlnnergrif, laughing all\nthe way;\nChuckteherrles in his hat,\nJolly lenves atop o' that,\nRound his neck a ring o' smiles\nAll of the \"very latest styles.\"\nWhat do you think\u00E2\u0080\u0094that happy day\nNot a body ran away!\n-St. Nicholas.\nThe Toothbrush Plant.\nWe have heard of sermons In stones,\nbut certainly not till recently of toothbrushes in .trpes. The genus gouania\nembraces upwnWI of twenty species of\nclimbing shrubs, most of which inhabit\nthe forest of tropical America. The\nmost interesting of these is the G. Dom-\ningensis, a common creeper in the West\nIndies and Brazil. In Jamaica It is\ncalled chaw-stlck, on account of its\nthin, flexible stems being chewed as an\nagreeable stomachic. Toothbrushes are\nalso made by cutting pieces of chaw\nstick to a convenient length and fraying out the ends, and a tooth powder to\naccompany the use of the brush is prepared by pulverizing ti.d dried stems.\nHow Old Is That EggP\nA simple method of finding out the\nage of an egg Is by means of the\nair space, which is situated toward the\nbroad end of the shell If the egg is\nheld up between the hands before a\nlight in a dark room, tho air space can\nbo easily discerned. Tn a perfectly\nfresh egg the air space is very small,\nbut as age increases It extends, until,\nwhen tho egg is4threo weeks old, the\nair space is about a sixth of the entire\negg space- With pract'ee, the age can\nbe told to within twenty-four hours.\nBiting Babbits.\nIf you care for the health of your\nrabhits do not omit to clean their\nhutches thoroughly at least once a day.\nLook out, however, to see that you do\nnot get bitten. A surly old buck or a\ndoe with a litter of young may make a\ns'tvage attack on the back of your hand.\nIt Is as well to put on a pair of gloves\nand use a small hoe with a long handle\nto scrape the floors of the hutches.\nplechase had been held, with the Rats\nas competitors against the Quonks for\na grand prize of one thousand blue\nbottle flies, and that the Quonks had\ncome out victorious.\nAt any rate, the Quonks had ever considered themselves vastly superior to\nthe Rats, much to the secret indignation of the latter fellows. Of late, indeed, the Rats had become openly\nabusive and dlsagreeatle They had\ngot Into the way of flocking over\nto the Quonks' Saturday ball games,\nfor instance, and calling out nasty\nthings to the Quonks on the diamond.\n\"Just look at Popeyes!\" one yelled\nderisively.\n\"Goodness, what a swell he Is under\nhis chin!\" another added\n\"Grinny mouth!\" criec** Tnother.\n\"Banty legs!\" yelled another. And\nnumerous other Insulting epithets\nthey hurled nt the Quonks, till the\nQuonks were thoroughly exasperated.\n\"What are you, anyhow, hut u^ly,\nlowdown Rats?\" croaked they. \"The\nonly time you ever stood up in fair\ncompetition with us we licked you.\"\n\"When was that \" _hri< ked tiu Rats.\n\"In that steeplechase long, long\nago.\"\n\"Steeplechase, fiddlesticks!\" returned\nthe Rats, \"the idea of vour believing\nthat granny's yam Gi 'e us n chance\nand we'll show you what we can do in\na steeplechase \"\n\"Very well, we challenge yoa to vln\na steeplechase off us.\" croake the\nQuonks.\nSo the steeplechase v-' p a_\" '' red\nff V/ Mr & ->\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 * ^-.\"IL?^ i\nSimple Questions\nT nsked ny papa whv the world\n1 la round Instead of square.\nAnd why the piggies' tails are curled,\nAnd why don't fish breathe air,\nAnd why the moon don't hit a star.\nAnd why the dark ir clack.\nAnd jest how many birds there are,\nAnd will the wind come back.\nAnd why a horse can't learn to moo,\nAnd why a cow can't neigh,\nAnd do the fairies live on dew,\nAnd what makes hair grow gray.\nAnd then my pa got w_ an', oh,\nThe offul words he said!\nI hadn't done a tiling, -Jut ho\nJest sen' mo off to hed!\nAffectionate Cats\nCATS are very affectionate by nature,.\nand If puss shows no attachment to\nher owner or any member of the famiiy\nit is a sure sign that she has Buttered\nIll-treatment, or. at least, neglect. That\nold Idea that cats love places better\nthan persons would soon be exploded it\"\nQueens Taller Than. Kings.\nThe queens of the world arc taller\nthan the kings. King Edward is\nsome Inches shorter than Queen\nAlexandra. The Czar is a head below\nthe Czarina. Kaiser Wilhelm is of the\nmedium height, but the German Em-,\npress is tall, anil that ls why the\nproud Kaiser will never consent to be\nphotographed beside his wne, unless sho\njsits while he stands.\nThe King or Pui'lugal, though stouter, is less tall than his Queen. Even\nthe Prince of Wales is a good four\ninches shorter than tlie Princess, and\nthe young King nf Spain Is rather below the height of Queen Victoria.\nSmallest Thing With Backbone.\nThe smallest thing with a backbone\nIs llie slnarapan. a llttle fish recently\ndiscovered by scientists in the Philippine Islands, lt measures about half\nnn iinii In length.\nLittle Grace Misunderstood.\nLittle Grace had been brought up In\na Presbyterian family, so that the\nwhite-robed minister- 1 the Church\nof England were qui tt unknown to\nher.\nWhen she was a lit-1. npre than 4\nyears old she wa_. taken by a guest\nto the parish ohurch\nImagine the o_i;:r iitrh-'r horror\nwhon c- co suddenly stood up on the\ncushioned seat of the p\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB\", an.:, POlr.t-\nIiir an i_i:cu ...,; Jllgti, -i-iod loudlv:\n\"S'nme! Same! Big man dot.en on\nhis nightie!\"\nStudy in Fractions.\nMr. Brown met an old woman on\nthe way home from market.\n\"Been buying things, mother?\"\n\"No, sir; been sellln' eggs.\"\n\"How many, mother?\"\n\"Well, sir, I had such a number of\neggs that after I sold half of them\nand half an egg, half of what were\nleft and half an egg. and finally half\nof what were left and half an egg,\nthey were all sold and not a single\negg had been even cracked, much less\nbroken.\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 i\ Brown said: \"Oh. yes.\" and\nwent on his way, having comprehended at once how many eggs the old\nwoman had sold.\nCan you also tell?\n1\ncats were generally as well treated ns\ndogs, with whom they^are nearly always compared to their disadvantage.\nChoir Needed Best.\nHarry nnd Nellie are twins, aged 6,\nand one Sunday they were discussing\nthe services at the church they attend.\n\"I don't see why they have sermons\nfor,\" snld Harry.\n\"Why.\" replied Nellie, \"it Is to givo\nthe poor sinners n chance to rest.\"\nFish as Pets.\nMany boys and girls who ennno.\nkeep pets hnve been able to maku\npets 'Of wild birds und animals. Even'\nfish in a pond will come to know you\nif you feed them regularly, and the.!\nwill follow you round the edge of th I\npond nnd nt Inst grow so tame, as t i\nlake food out of the hand. They will\neven come Into the shallows and ulloW\nthemselves to be patted. YoU will lin I\nlt easiest to make friends, of fish of tin.\ncarp family.\nLittle Girl's Explanation.\nA little girl Claimed th.it slie had got\na new heart. On DetfiK nsked to ex'\nplain, she said, \"Once 1 ran after sin;\nnow I run from lt.\"\nMake a Wigwam\nA WIGWAM Is a delightful thin?\nIn September when It is noltlai\ntoo hot to play In such a thins\nnor too cold tu spend a night In It.\nThe flrst things you need arc poll s.\nGet them from the woods or from th\nlumber yard, thirteen of them, ench\ntwo Inches square (If from the lumber yard, in that ease make Ihe sticks\nround b.v whittling' them).\nMake each pole- ten feet long and\nParnums Cardboard Circus.\nLITTLE Ladles and Gentlemen:\n1 have the honor of presenting\nto you a picture of a wonderful\ntroupe of cardboard anlmnls,\nwith thoir trainer, tho celebrated Monsieur Gulllori (pronounco Mus-seer\nZheo-lay-ree).\nThe live nnlmnlH and also Monsieur\nGuillerl himself have been so put to-\neother that they can go through almost\nnny contortion and acrobatic feat that\nyou can Imagine.\nThey belong to mv great circus of\nCardboardvllle, of which I think you\nhave occasionally henrd before.\nNow, there Is no reason why you cannot have a tiptop troupe of performing\nanimals similar to these, If you follow\nmy Instruct Inns carefully:\n). Take a sheet of good, stiff cardboard.\n2. Get ix good drawer to sketch tho\noutlines of your anlmnls for you. In\nseparate parts\u00E2\u0080\u0094head. >mdv lenn *_ul\ntall\u00E2\u0080\u0094each part provided with a hole.\n3. Then sketch your truine like Mon\nslcur Guillerl.\n4. Cut all the llgurcs out carefullj\n. and pnlnt them up wilh ears, eyes\nspots, etc., to make them look as lifelike as possible.\n6. Then put them together wilh llttl..\nbrass paper clips that will allow fraction of the limbs, etc. Good-bye.\nTruly yours. I'ETER PARNUM.\npointed at one end so as to stick Into\ntho ground. Tie three of tin,in together a foot and a half from the top to\nmake a tripod.\nSet the tripod up so as to give yourself a 6.4-foot circle base room. Place\nall the remaining poles around tho\ntripod, lashing them together.\nUse twill or unbleached muslin to\ncover the wigwam. Spread vour material flat and cut It according to the\npattern shown here. Mark a hnlf circle 16 feet in diameter, tiionsun \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\naround the edge of this circle Iii foot\n(which is enough for vour purpose)'\ndraw linos from the edge tu the centre to show where rones are to bo\nstretched later to bind the canvas\nfirmly to the wigwam.\nFrom each front edge of the canvas cut out a small portion ur allow\nfor a low entrance. Prom the top\ncentre cut out n half circle 18 Inches\nIn diameter lo allow the tops of the\npoles to protrude through.\n\ou will And this covering will bo \"\nample for the wigwam. Pnlnt It up to\nsuit your taste with Indian llgurcs,\nbut If you do any painting do It he-\nfore you strctcfc >he canvas, on Uu\u00C2\u00BB-\nwlgwara. ?__*__ ADVOCATE, VAtf COtTVfctt, fiftif tSfi eOLWf ftU\nilffl.-11'nTn*.-\n-Noy. M; lttoe\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nLocal Items*\n3 For looal news stttMN-ib. tbt THE\n- ADVOCATE only tl for 13 months.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0fl:-. _\nThojnpsdh'a Cream bt Witoh Hazel\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\"' best foi chappett hand*. Ai Mt. Fleas-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ant It. A. W. Drug Store;\ni -*-,-\u00C2\u00AB-iot'r\u00C2\u00BB.r.-\"~\nMr. aiid Mrs. J. McKt.n_.ie have sold\n1 their home on Bridge street, and will\n1 move to Powell street.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094-_-__-_.<\u00C2\u00BB;______\n' * The Presbyterian Ijadies' Aid et Mt\nl Pleasant held their regnlar mooting at\ni the home ot -Irs. W. Johnson, Fifth\ni. avonuo, on Wednesday afternoon.\n*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 '\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 *\u00C2\u00BB f.'\"\"'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-.\nFor yonr Soft Drltiks, Candies,\n' Cigars and Tobacco go to the Mt,\n3 Pleasant Oo-fehtionary Store, (Ohas.\n1 Homewood. proprietor).\nS-tisot Lodge No. 69, t O. G. T.,\n? Epworth, held its usual iheeting on\n3 Friday evening last, N. Vospor presid\n} ing. There was a good attendance of\ni the members. Quite a number of visitors\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 from the two oitjr lodges were also\n.present. It.was decided' to attend\n' chnrch in a body on Snnday morning\nNov.'25th, when Mr. H. H. Stevens Of\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 the Moral Reform Association; pill\n1 preach a Temperance Sermon. After\n1 the business was concluded a most en-\ni joyable program was rendered. One of\n' the features Of the program waa a Mook\n' Trial of a member charged with carry-\n5 ing on a business without the necessary\n1 license retinired by UmV. Brd. O. T\n3 Baxter argued for the prosecntidh while\n'Bro. J. R. Matthews acted for the\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 defence. Some strong arguments were\n'/put np oh both Bides. A jury, composed\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 of the sisters of the different lodges,\n1 brought ih a verdict of \"not guilty.\"\nm*t0000*t*m+m^^\nChildren you can get at Hyndman's\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 cor. Ninth * Westminster aves.: 6\ni Scribblers or Exercise Books of the best\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 qnalityj-l box Paragon Drawing Orayons\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0i'or 28c. School Books of all kinds. Oan-\n< dies, cigars, tobaogo, eto.\nOne 44-ft. lot on Westminster ave-\ni hue, (6.600; thin property will yield a\n. ifjjood interest.\nFonr lots on Scott street for $1,700.\nli-rodm Cottagoi godd basement; )\u00C2\u00BB\n1 block froin Westminster nvenue; 49-ft.\ni lot; price $1,700.\n7'room House; modern, good baso-\ni ment, 88-ft. lot, Sixth avenne; price\n- $3,200, easy terms.\nTwo 88-f t. lots Eleventh avenne, fine\n' location; price $850-\n*Mrs. R. Whitney, 9444 Westminster\n_, i avenne.\nTea Pots\n280 HIM tor\n\u00C2\u00A75o* To-tlay\nBuchanan & Edwards\nBrown\nCrockery\nI\n-\u00C2\u00AB32 604 Graftville St.\n'Phone 2021.\n4M4'*0-*i*f*A*04y00***m*r*j^^\nOUR\nRAINCOATS and\nUmbrellas\nare goihg very fast, tent we nre\noontiiiu-iry adding hew stock to flli in,\nAsk for o_: American\nUnion Made HATS. The\nlatest styles to select from.\nCaps; Btyrtai Collars; Ties; Trunks,\nand Bag-\nmPhersM & Son\nMerchant Tailors and\nFurnishers.\n3$ Ha_.tli.gs strtet, west*\nFIRST-OLASS\nkUtPt aHd SHoomaMng\nand rteuairlleg done at\nPeters' Boot & Shoe Store\n2464 Westminster avenue.\nUse\nRoyal Crown\nSOAP\n*a_ Best in the World. Drop\nus a post card asking for a\nCatalogue of Premih_- to be\n-had free for Royal CSiown\nSoap Wrappers.\nROYAL CROWN SOAP CO*\nVANCOllVCR. oX.\nRecreation is intended for the mind\na* whetting for the scythe. He, therefore, thai: spends his whole time in\nrecreation is ever whetting, never mowing; and he .that Always toils and never\nrecreates is alwaj- mowing, never\nwhetting.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Bishop Hall.\ni \u00C2\u00BB\". > m\T\"\"e\". X.'*~*~*\"et u'lftmrn\nTelephone 687.\nEstablished 1804.\nTO OUR FRIENDS ON\nTHE HILL\nWe -want you to partioijiake in the \"*x*-raordii_-y values We Ure\ngiving at the Palaoe. We lmve made great pireparations for a\nlarge business for the next 80 days.\nConsidering quality and prioe we oan hot bo beat anywhere. %\nMore clerks have been added tor tins extra tush, and we guarantee\nto wait on you promptly aad well.\nWe have added a TOY DEPARTMENT. It ta itt tiie basement.\nYou will find in the Toy Room sow.thing that will gladdeh the\nhearts of old and yduhg.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Jammmm*a*M*am*mmm\ \"'- ..rn-a-\nNew Arrivals\ntadifes' jackets-i Waists, Suitsj Furs, Fancy\nNeckwear, Stock Canal's, Scarfs, Tits, Ribbons,\nKid Glovers, Silk Gloves\u00E2\u0080\u0094short, fflfedium ashing; also Kid Gloves in full length, evfery color,\nCome and see th. riish of business in the Palace\nJ\u00C2\u00BB So McLeod* MacBeth & Co.\nTHE STdRi TitAftS ALWAYS BUSY;\nme PAi-jtce store op thb east fsNBt\nEvery person has two educationb\u00E2\u0080\u0094one\nwhioh he receives from others, aud fine,\nmore impolftaiit; which he gives him-\nSelf.-Gib-bori.\nBriiig your Job Work\nAdvocato\" Offices.\nto \"The\nThe individual cah attain self-co_trol\nih great things only through self-control\nih little things. He muststndy himself\nto\"disctiver what is the weak pOint ih hit\narmour, what is the element within him\nthat keeps him from his fullest Success.\nThis is the characteristic upon which\nha should begin hia exercise ih self-\ncontrol.\nSix-roomed houso, Tenth avenue,\neast; fine buy; easy terms; Mrs. R.\nWhitney, 3444 Westminster avenue.\n4\nChoice tots oh Ninth avehue;\n$850 eaoh.\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n3444 WcBtmiufltor avouue.\nAdvertise in \"The Advocate.\"\nIt is character that obunts in a nation\nas in a man. It is a good thing to have\na dean, fine, intellectual development\nin a nation, to produce orators, artists,\nsuccessful business men; but it is an\ninfinitely greater thing to have those\nsolid qualities which we group together\nunder the name of character\u00E2\u0080\u0094sobriety,\nsteadfastness; the sense o'f obligation\ntowards one's neighbors and one's Ood,\nhard common Sense, Hnd combined with\nit, the gift Of generous enthusiasm\ntowards whatever is right. These are\nthe qualities which go to make up true\nnational groatuoss,\u00E2\u0080\u0094President Roosevelt\nThe men who have the capacity to\nworkand are content to work are in no\ndanger of making failures.\nSuccess ndver comes to tho man wfad\nis watching the clock fpr fear that he\nmight work overtime. The man who\nsucceodfi is the' man who is not merely\nsatisfied to do the work laid out for him,\nbut willing and glad to do' more.\nHow to produce' wealth is another\nquestion. One answer is thorough\norganization. Better/methods of conducting business ore coming into rapid\nadoption, and the man who works with\na system has common Sense and the\nright material in him, cah make his\nway to the top, no matter how humble\nhis start Or how poor his circumstances.\nNo cheat.-'? nor bargaining will evoi\nget a single' thing out of nature's\n\"establishment\" at half-price; Do we\nwant to be stroBg?\u00E2\u0080\u0094we must work. To\nbs happy?\u00E2\u0080\u0094wo must be kind. To be\nwise?\u00E2\u0080\u0094we must look and. think.\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nRuskin.\n-ftdtidB.-\nPersot-Bl notices of visitors oa\nt\t. Pleasantt or ol Mt. Pleaaaat\npeople who visit other cities, also all\nlocal aoelal affair, are gladly received\nby -'The Advocate.1'\nI like to read advertisements. They\nire in themselves literature; and I\ncan gauge thi* prBjperity of the country by their very appearance,\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094William Ei $U-Stdnei\nAdvocate $1\nfor 12 Months\n'a*H**m**j**y*n\i*L*^^\n1\nGdo- -dotting Apples frdtn $1 to #1.35 iior bo*.\nFirst OlaWi -table Apples $1.00 to $3.05\nft \"fltti are bard to pleaSe in tiie Apple line, we want yiin to Visit\nti_F l*Jre today.\nW- gJM*ahit.e Satisfaction tb the most fastidious taste;\nPhillips & Locklin\n(Successors to Foster &PhiUips)\ni\s%4\Ami\m% Ninih ave., easts 'Phong _ IL\nWwwi^^*wiwwrt^tfww^*wrii<<\ni\n.\n'\n'\ni\ni\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\ni\nBiST BREAD\n*?0**T0?4e*0r*0*f*y**0**r**?**\nTHAT MONEY BUYS\n&mm^*mW*4m%m000i\nIt'fc Delicititts-^nce.\ntried always used;\nOuk PASTRIES\nUtt the Fl-BST p_o;\nctitabk;\nWbddiho mid\nBhiTniiAY C__J_ ooi\n> _-*ta_t.y.\nri-inbtiry^ Evan^\nk Co.\n(Sncoessors tb'.W; D; Muir;)\n'Phonfe 448.\nThere never did and nbvor will exist\nanything permanently noble and excellent ih the character which is a Stranger\nto the eieroise of resolute self-denial.\nWork is a test of character; drudgery\nin work is a greater test; but the\nsupreme tost is patience and perserver-\nunco in the task on whibh yon have\nentered.\n-11 trite wbr_ is sacred; in all true\nwork, were it but, trie hand-labor,\nthere is Something of dlviue'ness. _abor,\nwide as the earth; has its summit in\nheaven.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Garlyle.\nWb were born with certain oapaoities\nand opportunities i they _tay bo great or\nsmall; we ban hot greatly change them;\nthey constitute the limits within whioh\nour work mnSt be dbhe; but the interest\nwe take, the zeal'wb Bhow the use we\nmake of thoso powers\u00E2\u0080\u0094all this is left. iu\ntixix own ha-ds.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Samuel V. dole.\nThe work that ie (porfoi-med only for\nwhat it will bring, not for what it wilt\ncarry forth, is like shoddy cloth,- which1\nmay please the eye bnt wiU hot wear.\nIt is cheap, flimsy stdt> woven with no\ncither purpose than to hold together long\ntfftragh to be bought and paid for.\nYoung Peoples StiCifeties.\nSUNDAY.\nLoyal Workers of Christian Sndeavof\nmeet at 15 mihutes to 7, evory Snnday\nevening in Advent Christian Ohnroh)\nSeventh avenue, near Wostul'r ave.\nMONDAY.\nEpwdrth Iiedgue of Mt. Pleamni\nMethodist Ohurch meets at 8 jl: m.\nB. Y. P. U, toeets in Mt. Plctisr-\nBaptist Ohurch at 8 p. m.\nTU_SDAY.\nTho Y. P; S. C; E., moots at 8 p. m\nin Mt. Pleasabant Presbyterian Ohnroh\nLife is a business wo are all apt td\nmiBmanago, either living recklessly from\nday to diiy or suffering Ourselves to be'\ngulled Out of bur moments by the\ninanities of custom. We should despise\na man whb gave as little activity and\nforethought to tlie conduct of any other\nbusiness.\u00E2\u0080\u0094R. L. Stevenson.\n1609\n\"The Advocate\"\nlooe\nYOUR LOOAL PAPER-\n$1 a year; 50c for 6o_6_thS\nCORRECT ENGLISH,\nHOW TO ttSt IT.\nA Monthly Magazino devoted to the\nUse of English. Josephine Torek\nBaker, Editor.\n$1 a year; 10e for Sample Copy. Agents\nWanted. Evan**t6n, UL, U. S. A.\nPartial Contents for this Month.\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCourse in English for the Begtn_er;;\ncourse in English for the Advanced*\npupil; How to Increase One's- Y-cabu--\nlary. The Art of Conversation; Shot_di\nand Would: how to.nsettteni. Pronnn.\noiation. OorrecitBnghBh' in the Homo:'\nCorrect English' in the Sohool. 6*asi'-\nness English, tor the Business Man.\nStudies iu ^English Literature.\n(^^Subscribers who fail to^\nget \"-The Advocate\" on Satur;\nday ni-rning plea_e notify\nthi* office. Telephone B1405^\niAwai\nA Fine Buy!\nLot on WESTMINSTER:\n$. dBA Balance ta\nleO^U Arrange.\nMrs. R. Whitney\n3-44 Wbstmihsteravennsi\nMb Pleasant..\nCHEAP FUEL\n<%*%*%%\nCOKE\n*ir*arm*r*e***r**s\nftoke is tth exoellflht fuel for prates, hall stoves, f -maces\nand cooking stoves, making a clear bright fire withoot\nsmoke or dirti\nPrice $4 Per ton.\nVancouver Gas Company-\nOrrttt i comer of Carrall and Hastings streets.\n*0xmmmm\n1... n ****** **m*mr*m*rm*\"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "Mt_Pleasant_Advocate_1906-11-24"@en . "10.14288/1.0311622"@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 .