@prefix ns0: . @prefix edm: . @prefix dcterms: . @prefix dc: . @prefix skos: . @prefix geo: . ns0:identifierAIP "7c074d2d-e16e-44ae-b5b1-1615bdc90180"@en ; edm:dataProvider "CONTENTdm"@en ; dcterms:isPartOf "BC Historical Newspapers"@en ; dcterms:issued "2013-01-23"@en, "1910-11-24"@en ; edm:aggregatedCHO "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/xenderby/items/1.0178808/source.json"@en ; dc:format "application/pdf"@en ; skos:note " Enderby, B. C, November -24, 1910 AND WALKER'S WEEKLY Vol. 3; No. 39; Whole'No. 143 Last Draft of Building By-Law Several Important Modifications of brickwork or other incombustible material; 13. That a fire limit shall be, and it is hereby, established in the City of Enderby, and the lines of such fire limit shall be as follows: Commencing The following is the full text of the I 9. That every chimney or flue built jat the southeast corner of Mill and Building By-law as amended by the I or sonstructed in the City of Bnderby ! George streets, along Mill street to City Council and is now placed 'before ' shall be built of brick, stone, con- j the river; thence along the river the public for consideration: All crete or terra cotta, and the walls ] south to a point 'opposite the east previous action by the Council has thereof shall be, not less than four lend of Russell street; thence to and been rescinded and the by-law was . inches in thickness, exclusive of the i along Russell street to the point of The Town and District and the Moving of the People read the first and second times at the meeting of Saturday, Nov. 19th. By-law No. 55: A by-law to regulate the erection, alteration, removal and structural repair of buildings in the city of Enderby. - The Corporation of the Citv of Enderby, in open Council assembled, hereby enact as follows: ��������������������������� 1. That from and after the date hereinafter provided for this by-law to come into force any person or corporation intending to erect or remove any building, or to make alterations or structural repairs in any building, shall, before commencing such erection, removal, alterations or structural repairs, make application to the City Clerk for a permit so to do; 2. That every such . application shall be made on a form supplied by the City, and every such application so made shall be delivered-to the City Clerk; ' . ��������������������������� 3.- That it shall be the duty of the .City Clerk to supply forms of appli- cation,. and to issue ��������������������������� permits which ���������������������������' have been applied for as hereinbefore provided, on demand, at any time during the - office hours set forth in Sec. 5 of By-Law No. 53 of the. Corporation of the City of Enderby; .,'��������������������������� 4. That the City Clerk shall keep a record of all permits so issued by him, and shall report to' the Chairman or acting \"��������������������������� Chairman of: the Board of Works, or to any inspector acting under the authority of such Board, immediately on the issue'of any such permit; 5. That every person or corporation who has obtained a permit for (the erection, alteration, removal or 'structural repair of any building, as hereinbefore provided, if called upon by the Board of Works or by any inspector acting under their authority so to do, shall submit to such Board or to such inspector plans and specifications of the building proposed to be erected, or of work proposed to be done; also, if called for, in the case of a new-' building, plan of site ancl levels of same; 6. That the .erection,_ alteration, rem oval or \" struct__al~fep\"Sir-iOf \"Tiny\" building shall ' in no case be commenced until a permit for same has been obtained, as hereinbefore provided; 7. That in every case the person who is in charge of the work of ere'e-' ting, altering, removing or structurally repairing any building, whether such person bc the owner or his agent or contractor, builder or . employee, shall, be. the person who shall be held responsible for applying for ancl obtaining a permit for such work, as hereinbefore provided; and any such person refusing or neglecting to apply for and obtain such permit before proceeding with such work shall be liable to the penalties hereinafter provided; r 8. That every person who desires to make use of any ' portion of a street in connection with building ap- erations shall, when applying for a permit, as hereinbefore provided, specify in his application how much of such street hc desires to use; and every such person who shall havc had the use of any portion of any street granted him for the purpose of erecting, altering, .removing or repairing any building, or for any other purpose, shall cause a red light to be placed in a ' conspicuous position in front of any obstruction on such portion of street, from sunset to sunrise on each and every day that such obstruction remains on such street; and if it shall be necessary, to enable any person who shall have been granted the use. of any portion of any street as herein provided, to remove any portion of any sidewalk, such portion of such sidewalk shallbe removed at the expense ,of such person, and shall be properly and without damage of any kind replaced at his plastering, and the top thereof shall ' be at least three feet from any woodwork of any building or adjoining building, ancl every such chimney or flue shall be not less i ' . uare inches in area, and all timber on which a chimney or flue rests shall be at- least eight inches below the base of said chimney or flue, and every such chimney or flue shall be so constructed .as to ':'��������������������������� 'nit of being scraped, brushed or cleaned; 10. That no person shall build or construct within the City limits any chimney or flue otherwise than in accordance with the provisions of the next preceding section of this By-law, and no person shall use within such City limits any chimney or 'flue constructed or built .'otherwise than in its intersection with George street; thence north along George street to the point of commencement 14. That within the said fire limit no new building shall, after the date hereinafter provided for this By-law to come into force, be built, constructed or placed, other than with the main walls'of brick, iron, stone, concrete or other incombustible material and with the roof-covering also of such material; provided always that any wooden building already existing within the said fire-limit may be removed to any other, site within the said fire-limit, provided such removal will not cause any general increase of fire risk within the said fire-limit; outbuildings or minor additions to buildings shall not be deemed to be accordance with such provisions ;.. contrary to the provisions of this stove-pipes projecting through roofs or outside walls shall not be allowed to be erected, and any such now existing must be forthwith removed; 11. That if any building, structure or erection of.any kind, or any portion thereof, shall, by reason of decay, . faulty construction or other section if built with studding only, without boarding, and covered with metallic roofing; J . - , 15.' That within the: said fire-limits all roofs of buildings, platforms or deck-roofs or other coverings of old or new-buildings shall be finished externally with tin, iron, zinc, copper, cause whatsoever, be, in the opinion i slate or tile,' or- witli. some \"other ma of'the Board of Works, dangerous to jterial of an. incombu'stible nature; the public safety, . the same shall be [ and no roof of . any building already deemed a dangerous nuisance, and it erected shall, after the date herein- shall be lawful for the said Board to ��������������������������� notify the owner,, agent, lessee, or other person having charge, of the said'building, structure or erection, to tear down, repair or otherwise put the same into a safe condition to guard against dangerous risk or accident; and in case the person so noti: fied shall fail to comply with such notification within thirty days (or less, if found necessary by the Board of Works) from date of receipt thereof, it shall be lawful for the Municipal Council, by, resolution, to,authorize any person in such resolution named to repair or pull down such building, structure or erection, or any portion thereof, or otherwise to put the same into a safe condition to after provided for this By-law to come into force, be re-laid or recovered except .with the materials hereinbefore mentioned; . 1G. That after the date hereinafter provided for this By-law to come into force,-no blacksmith's shop, livery barn or stable of any-kind, which*is not already existing, shall bc erected or permitted within the saicf fire- limits; and no foundry or other man ufactory or trade dangerous in caus Mud ! Yes, thank you. And it isn't good weather for whitewashing, either. We wonder where those long-winter prophets have disappeared to ? J. N.. Grant leaves on Saturday on a six-months' visit to Tilley, N. B. But don't complain, there are other streets worse than those of Enderby. Mr. J. L. Ruttan has greatly improved his home property by having it brick veneered. Wheeler & Evans are showing a very pretty window display of china- ware this week. The Epworth League will entertain the members of the basket ball clubs next Tuesday evening. R. T. Cooke, electrical engineer,, of Vernon, paid Enderby a visit last week, and contemplates opening for business in Enderby. P.' - Gre'ycll has erected .dressing rooms for Iiis open-air rink, and is in position to take advantage of the first cold snap to make ice. Mr: Millyer, who-has been engaged on a big' plumbing contract at the Bellevue Hotel, Sicamous, by Mr. A. Fulton, returned on Tuesday. Work \"on the ��������������������������� foundation for. the The Enderby Trading Co.'s grocery window is a beauty. Some room for display there ! Any members of St. George's church desirous of making a contribution to the church bazaar to be held afternoon and evening of Dec. 8th, either of plain sewing or fancywork, will kindly leave the same with Mrs. Keith, secretary of the Guild, before Thursday, Dec. 8th. The fence around the bank property is being built this week, and soon every vestige of the -tumble-down buildings which have occupied this corner for years will harve been removed. The opening of Spring will . see this' neglected corner transformed into something , compatible with the dignity and stability of the Bank of Montreal. The- ladies of the Presbyterian church desire us to ask the good people of Enderby to contribute any old clothing, they may have, for man, woman or' child. They are packing- a a box to be sent to a-colony of needy foreigners in the Northwest. All contributions will be thankfully received on or before the 3rd of December. Leave,in basement\"of the church. '���������������������������' - -The liyery, stable -.being erected /by - ' t._i + _ . ���������������������������_. - _. - ,, , _. , Mr/Mack, corner of Vernon Road and,- . SSS_ ^ store'.blf0(S{.4J0-^iRu8sell -streets,\" is' rapidly nearing . 'paSod ������������������n f ��������������������������� C������������������ri'er *������������������f ??y ai\\d completion,. As soon as Mr. Mack il '< George streets, is underway this week , lri - positioii ��������������������������� to ��������������������������� traasfer -his liWrf ��������������������������� -Mr. Burbidge - is ^'preparing the' stock from' the old stable on Cliff\"' ground for the foundation of a new bakery he is to erect between the Bradley block and Waiter Robinson's. The Presbyterian. Christmas Tree and entertainment will be held on the Friday evening before Christmas, for the pleasure of the children of that Sunday School. , Have you become a property owner since last March? If so you should have your name on the Voters' List. Make application of the City Clerk before the end of this month. Thc ladies of St. George's Guild are street, _Mr. Fulton will proceed with the business block he is to erect there - and whet this is completed the town will have dene away with a conspicuous if not altogether lovable . landmark, and will have gained instead a' block of very fine looking buildings. The next attraction in I _. P. Hall .wil, be the \"Joshua Simp kins\" company. They will-appear on Saturday evening, the 26th. This is a strong rural comedy-drama, opening with a realistic scene .'of rural home life, showing Skinner Tavern, with Uncle Josh's Briar Farm in the distance. Mr. Jas. Mowat put through a deal last week on the 174 acres owned by the A. R. Robers Company, situated between the Hancock and Folkard - farms, north of Enderby and'on the river bank. Mr. W. J. Donaldson -0jh.e.r__Per._gB--in ______.__ul_:������������������__knd to r.<__; factory or trade; cov-i. \"the\" expense-\"of suc_~p_lling ^^\"=^= ���������������������������.���������������������������-^--^ down, repairing or altering, -together with all costs, by action or distress; and 'in case of non-recovery by such means to recover payment 'in like manner as municipal taxes; Bic-iwirT^irarzri.^^ ing or promoting risk of fire, \"shall be carried on anywhere within..the.p^ of Enderby in any building which-is .presiclent Mrs. Brimacombe; Friday, not in theffi0pmion o the Board of Nov. 25fh, 3 p.m., instead of Parish Works sufficiently isolated, or .of- Ro0m. A full attendance is re- such lire-proof construction' as to quested render adjacent buildings' reasonably . AT ' guard against fire, risk or accident of i secure from any fire which might' Mrs; rilomPson and Miss Lawrence any kind, and to charge the cost or i arise in consequence of the carrying ^ave taken charge of the dressmaking expense thereof to the owner or j on of such ��������������������������� foundry or other manu- department of the Enderby Trading nthpr _r_- in ..ofeinif <__.. f_ ������������������__ f������������������������������������������������������4.���������������������������-. ��������������������������� +������������������������������������������������������_���������������������������. I Co. Both of these ladies are well 1S the purchaser. \"Mr. Donaldson has -beeri=_n-=-the���������������������������dist-ri ct���������������������������for^a^week^or^ two, and has gone thoroughly into the land question. He believes he has the choicest piece of land he went over, and is proceeding at once to get a portion of it into shape for planting. Mr.\" Donaldson has associated with him in the buy, Mr. Turner,who will come in from Vancouver this week. Both of these gentlemen were until recently owners of farms in Manitoba, and are thorodgh agriculturists���������������������������just the typc'bf settler need-' ed here. The Poison Mercantile Co. is putting on a clean-up sale this week. regular sections providing for the imposing of the penalty and the collection of fine, etc. Owing to limited space they are omitted here. A penalty not exceeding $100 is imposed, 12. That any timber laid within collectable in the regular way. The two feet of the inside of any oven, j By-law repeals By-law 35. It is also copper, still, boiler or furnace, shall provided that it shall come into be protected by at least twelve inches force on the 1st day of January, 1911. their finished work- with the needle is sure to please. Arc you getting your milk supply from the Glengerrack Dairy. It is the purest milk, and is delivered at the door in air-tight bottles every morning, rain or shine. Don't miss Poison Mercantile Co.'s ad this week. WALKER'S WEEKLY Published every Thursday at Enderby, the Gnte-Way of the famout Okanogan,' Land of the Bite Canadian Red Apple and the California of Canada Entered ii. tho Post Ofllce nt I-iulei.y, H. C, lis seconrl-clii s_ mutter. \"In order to be poor in the Okanagan, you have to waste an awful lot of Time and Money.\" CONSERVATIVE CONVENTION II. M. .V A. I, K K ^V ~ U ONE 'MAN'S POINT OF VIEW ^V^C hold opinions of his own and strong ever felt the disappointment that enough to express; and his magnnn- A NEWS item published last week stated that \"Rev. D. Campbell has handed in his resignation as paster of the Presbyterian church in Enderby and Armstrong,-'' and the reason given was that \"Mr. Campbell finds the work in the large and fast- growing field becoming too heavy for one man to look after.\" When we read this bit of news some interesting thoughts came to us. We are going to give a few of them. No doubt others have had the * same thoughts: In the years that Rev. Mr. Campbell has occupied this field, he has grown large and magnanimous, and in the measure that the people were prepared to grow with him, they, too, have grown large and mag nanimous. Mr. Campbell has been a expense, immediately on the conclu-1friend,to the best in every man; he sion of the work by reason of whicli has been a Presbyterian, but' more, such removal had become necessary; he has been a man���������������������������big enough to imity has enabled him to recognize the good in the men who may differ with him in opinion, and, perhaps, creed. Few men in the District'can number the friends that Mr. Campbell can; and this, not because he has played fast and loose with his creed and his calling, but because hc has stood firm for the right, and lived out his belief rather than express it. It is so easy to get men who can get up into a pulpit and talk���������������������������too j them, but is he reaching his highest easy. But you would have to comb and best? Perhaps must have been his at times, when he had prepared a message, that should be delivered to thousands, and there would be less than a hundred to hear it? The question has often come to my mind, whether a man large enough to give a message where thousands are At the close of thc Conservative convention held at Nelson last Friday, Premier McBride gave put the following statement: \"The convention of British Columbia Conservatives held at Nelson in 1910 will go down in thc history of the party as the most successful of the four conventions we have held. There was an enthusiasm noticeable which puts it beyond the shadow of a assembled is justified in spending his , days where only a few turn out, and j doubt 'that the principles\" of Conser then are rather indifferent. It's nice j vatism are pre-eminent in the heart; for the few to havc.such, a man with of the people of this province. ts the world carefully'to find a man who can say as much in a few words, and LIVE as much in so few. years, as Mr. Campbell has during his stay in this field. And yet���������������������������and yet��������������������������� Has Mr. Campbell been appreciated by the people who have gone to hear him, Sunday after Sunday? Have we recognized that we were listening to a man that few large cities 'can boast of an equal? Have we understood that we were getting from him sermons that would draw thousands in cities like Vancouver, Montreal, Winnipeg and Toronto? Have we The men of a town or district are The photo studio is open this week, its greatest asset. To lose a man of ^d. \\viU ren?aifn 0pen .for,two ^veeksi Mr. Campbell's type is a distinct loss 'Ghristmas Photos, are.in demand, and ���������������������������if not an irreparable one. We understand a meeting will be held in the Presbyterian church to consider the possibility of holding Mr. Oamp- bell in Enderby. The meeting will be held to-night (Thursday) ancl it is deemed that the question is of sufficient - public importance to request the attendance of anyone interested, whether a member of the congregation or priest\" or prophet of the great out-doors. 1 if you want to get some, make an ap. pointment Have you secured a pair,of Jaeger' pure wool slippers, at the Poison Mercantile Co.'s store. See gents Xmas Ties and Brace Sets at Poison Mercantile Co.'s It looks like we shall have to hire a short-hand reporter to take those warm Council meetings. Then what a bully paper we should have ! . anishing Smuggler Bg STEPHEN CHALMERS fOb&zifb. UMM, Uy _Behn__i J. CSocLt.)- __H-___B__WBB������������������M CIIAPTER Xii.���������������������������(coulinued) Grogblossom's Discovery ���������������������������'Pop goes the weasel!\" he cried, and burst into song: '���������������������������'With a hilly, hilly, holly: -\" lloather Bloom sprang to his i'eet .vifli au oath that wu. in strange contrast to his previous occupation. ���������������������������' .top that!'' lie shouted. SiuuggU'-eriL' 's song abruptly _uased, and he stared at the .skipper wilh wide- open eye . '' Vou rail yourself a man. ' sneered Grant. Snuiggle-erie turned pale .hock and blazing anger, forward and brought down general merchandise Iiis hand on smack. \" What d 'ye mean quic1, \" ' troin tne He sprang the tlat oi' the table with a decisive Take that back, or- i ne two men I'aced each other���������������������������the lion and the tiger. Grant was the first lo speak. ���������������������������'Vou would trade my daughter lo trap a man, would you?'' His words���������������������������the tone of hi.s voice��������������������������� would admit of but one charge and one answer. Smuggle-erie Had no answer. He knew that he was guilty. The honest cargo of and ballast? See what I mean?\"'concluded Smuggle-erie, raising a pair of mischievous blue-gray eyes to the captain's face. \"But Grizel���������������������������Grizel?\" said Heather Bloom impatiently. \"Safe as the'kirk,\" said Smuggle- erie. \"Aside from the fact that she'd never say a word agin her father, oven if the court asi.ed her lo, yon 'man, Ben Larkin, is no curmudgeon like old Scryme. 1 '11 wager two pounds of tobacco to a half-mutclikiii of whisky that he's biting hi.s nails ut this very minute, and wondering what to do will) the girl \"Got now that lie's echoed Her jot her. Grant, for all immediate intents and purposes. 'Aye,' aye, sir! \" he groaned. 'It turning Smuggle-erie gave it '; never He'd whole signiiiouncc ot hi:- conduct liashed nhrougli his mind. The uneasiness 7/hiuh\" had haunted him while he contemplated the act; the vague fear ���������������������������which had been with him ever since be had accomplished it and had heard Grizol's cry ring out by tlie castle gate, s.s they hurried away lhe inanimate form (if 1-Jon Larkin���������������������������all Revealed iis full meaning to him now. His tigerlike glare softened to shame, and quailed before the big .-ea-master's gaze, lie drew back from the table and with his eyes on the iloor, his hands hang- l:is sides and his body sir. thought of ing limp al drooping on long silence: \"I'm sorry it that way.\" \"And would you marry my lass, be a husbaud to her���������������������������-after that!\" The infinite scorn of .the skipper's tone must have stung the other like a lash. But he did not betray it. said Smuggle-erie, looking up one foot, he said after a 1' never and His face strange \"Xo,' slowly, \"I don't tliiuk so.' twitched, and all at once glistening, like that which heralds ��������������������������� a tear, shone in his eyes. \" I\". know I'm not fit for the lass. 1 say it to you aud, by God! I m man enough to say it to her. But, what d'ye expect? i ken nothing. I. am nothing! A charity lad th.'it even took the pity of a miserable old���������������������������Scrymegeour! .Nobody ever taught me anything, but you,- aud I know nothing but how to cheat Uie customs, defy the law, and fear neither God, King, man nor devil. Is it my fault? I'm not a man by your way of thinking. Tell ine, Heather Bloom, as a man to the lad you saved froirydrown- ing like mongrel spawn���������������������������is it my fault? ���������������������������is it my fault?\" \"I. thought better of you,\" was Grant's reply, for the thrust had gone straight home and the accuser weakened. His charge had had rebounded upon liimsel Smuggle-erie turned away and looked ut the partition. He waited for Grant to sav more, but that was all lie was to hear in that strain. Presently the big sea-master's hand fell upon the younger man's shoulder. \"L forgive you, lad, as I hope to be forgiven myself,\" said Grant. \"It's been a lesson to nie1, as J. hope it may be an example to you. Pray God that both of us win through this time and see an end of the cursed business. .Mavbe the lass might forgive you, too.\" \"Not her!\" cried Smuggle-erie. >gi!e-y..)i. :i/l-fnve.r-..hccls.-iii._lovc._wi adm'ral von the-two!\" he \" Fn a way, ������������������������������������������������������He's in a with a remedy rapped cheery thing, _mu< He's the better man o added savagely, maybe,\" Grant qualified, better business, but\"��������������������������� bit of relieved laugh���������������������������-\"we'll lhal, lad. Come!\"���������������������������and he his knuckles ou the table iu Ml remedy every- We'll begin again. I 'vc promised the lass.' \"Ve���������������������������what. ' gasped She kens?\" \"Aye,\" said Grant, 'She kens, .he and me. eves. .Se rymegeour Siiniggle-erie. averting his uwerheard us��������������������������� The lieutenant \\s the whole hang o t. \"Good heavens! \" said . eared v above a whisper. :i few' bars of \" I'oase Mither,\" then broke oil' \" I' wish I M known tliat. .ill in a pickle. If he c; as I witness ot' make noth- that.\" kens, loo. There ��������������������������� i \" -..;,i Smuggle-erie. lie hummed brose again, and said: Xow we're an prove you Heather Bloom, he can prove ^everything by rule o' thumb, almost.\" \"I didn't say he could prove it,\" ..till Grant desperately. \"A* I'\"'1 _ an see, Grizel's his one what he owerhfard. He'll ing o' her, if it comes to Smuggle-erie 'whistled again, sitting on the Table with his thumbs stuck iu his belt and his legs dangling. \"Is tliat all he. knows? \"-he interpolated. \"Ves, but it's enough when you consider that he was seemingly inveigled to a certain spot by Heather Bloom's lass and tliere knocked over the head, -.nd when he came to, the Thistle Down was gone. Ye'll admit that there's smugglers in Morag.\" \"That's just the point in our favor,\" said Smuggle-erie quickly, \"We'll admit that \"there's smugglers in Morag and that I lie man they would be likely to got rid of would bc this same lieutenant, and iu very much the way that von're describing. What's that to do with the Thistle Down and Captain John Grant, bound for Bristol with an pale and agitated. \"Well, ye ken what I. would mean .aid uneasily. \"J. a thought, but I see now. send for her and ask her, and \" There was a silence. Bach was pie- hiring tlie scene of the poor girl under the. rack of inquisition, divided between her loyalty, her love, and her strict truthfulness. \"One thing,\" said Smuggle-eric dubiously. \" Larkin ;s a man. 11'-it had been Horneycraft. now, I'd ha' been for putting right back into Morag.\" Again there was thought-laden silence. Grant was suffering thc pangs of remorse in full fury once more. To his first agony wa.s added the thought that Grizel was bearing the brunt or everything ashore. Smuggle-erie was having his share of wretchedness, too. although his more self-interested mind concerned itself a little with wondering why .Horneycraft had sprung no surprise throughout tho'whole business. He had been quite sure that the long-nosed collector would put iu an appearance before the Thistle .Down sailed. But no! Xot a sign of him. The schooner had taken aboard her honest cargo of merchandise day after 'day, without a single visit from the hawk-like Mr. 1 Forney era I't. l.t mattered nothing to Smuggle-erie now, but he coma not help wondering. As a matter of fact, Mr. Horneycraft, as if by an instinct that outlived the man himself, was at thc bottom of the trap which presently yawned round the smugglers. That night the. schooner made slow but steady headway down the channel and the tension aboard was relieved. Grant, however, fidgeted about, the vessel all night, his heart torn.between eagerness fo get forward, and done with it all, and a longing lo about ship and sail back to Grizel;s aid. When morning came the breeze sharpened, and the bright sunlight raised the man's spirits. Together Sinuggle-orie and Heather Bloom went to the cuddy to a breakfast of porridge, tea -and bacon. Grogblossom was cabin-boy, as well as cook, am.kept travelling from the galley to the cuddy aud back as fast as he could waddle, with the various dishes. It was while he was absent from the cabin, when breakfast; was all served, that Heather Bloom and Smuggle-erie were startled by a sudden horrible yell wliich echoed through the ship. 'Che yell was followed by a shuJlling of heavy feet, and presently Grogblossom ruslidsl, or rather rolled, flown tho companion. His face was livid wilh horror, and ho was holding his hands over his fat paunch, while he groaned and cried: \"Oh! O-o-o-h! Oh!' Oh I'm dead! I'm pizoned! And I've got sich. a was for my heart. Had it since I was a lad. Done everything for't. And so I tasted the stuff. Losh, man! Guess what it was? It was brine���������������������������salt, her- rin' brine. An' it had a taste that-���������������������������- Oh! O-o-ooh!\" groaned Grogblossom, rolling over on one side and writhing in an agony of horror. \"I canna tell ye. I canna put a name to'l\". I pulled out the spigot and���������������������������oh, cap'n, gang an' see for ycrseP. Gang an' see for yer- sel'.'' Heather Bloom turned and found Smuggle-erie's startled eyes full upon him. Together they read the thought 'in each other's mind. \"They turned and dashed from the cuddy, leaving Grogblossom alone with his misery. Along the deck they ran to thc spot where the half-puncheon stood, abaft the cook's galley. One glance at the littlo round hole whero Grogblossom had been operating was enough. Through it protruded the finger of a man, tho rest of whose body was inside the: barrel. . the deid! 1 seen if!' Quid forgie me! horror o; I seen jt! Heather Bloom jumped to his feet, grappled with the fat cook, and threw him to the floor. The big sea-master ���������������������������- .!!! y��������������������������� bn!ieved--t hat GroplilossoiU���������������������������liild developed a. form of delirium which had often been prophesied for hiin. Grogblossom, for all his solemnity and sanctity, was quite a tippler in his quiet way. He never drank- much, but hc was forever taking a nip, so that it he had fallen into tlie slough of drunkenness all at once none would have been surprised. His habit of tasting���������������������������a common trick with cooks���������������������������had often loci him into curious scrapes; but none, excelled his present experience, not even that when he tasted some; poison for rats whieh the skipper had brought aboard. It was some time before Heather Bloom and Smuggle-erio realized that the man was quite sane, although dre.-id- fully frightened. Then he told his I story, still with his hands upon his 'stomach, ami stopping every word or ' two to utter a groan. i It appeared that, feeling tired after his morning's work, and running up :uid down those stairs���������������������������\"and ho had a weak heart\"���������������������������he thought maybe, he would feel better if he had a little nip of spirits, brandy or some thing of that kind. He had none himself, nor hud any of the crew. He would have waited'until after the breakfast was cleared away, to ask the captain, but, as he explained to Heather Bloom, whose eyes suddenly began to twinkle, he was fooling so ill that he doubted if he would have the strength to get as far as the cuddy. His heart, etc. Tliere was one of the barrels wliich had been swung aboard the schooner from the Red Mole's boat. Tt was bigger than the others���������������������������a half-puncheon, iu fact���������������������������and if had not been stowed. Meaning to explain to the captain later on, Grogblosom said, he took the liberty of broaching thc barrel. When he tried to (ill a can with what he supposed was whisky, the barrel only yielded about half a pint, then the flow stopped short. Grogblossom was puzzled, but, as he explained quaintly to Heather 1 .ooiii, the quantity that he was able to draw from the barrel was enough CHAPTER XIV. Stand by to Go About! Heather Bloom and Smuggle-erie were too horror-stricken to do anything for a while but look at; the fingor, which protruded from thc barrel with a kind of devilish accusation. But the brains of both men wore working rapidly. Tn a flash of intuition each knew the name of the murdered man; made a shrewd guess at his murderers; saw thc trick which had been played upon them, and realized the terrible consequences that were likely to ensue. Yet it was.no time fo stand there and glare. The crew, alarmed by Grogblossom's hehavior. were crowding around the barrel. Heather Bloom's eyes suddenly shot into their midst, and. in a terrible, rasping, voice, he said: \"All'hands on deck! Where's the Red _._olc? Tomlinson, go forrurd and bring aft ihat. red-headed fiend. Saunders, you go bear a hand; and you, too, Black! Bring the young whelp, too. Never mind���������������������������he's here!\" Out of the comer of his eye, Heather Bloom had seen the surly Archibald leaning against the mainmast, regarding the proceedings with a cold, uninterested gaze. . He came forward ai the captain's command, and stood up before him. with his long arms dangling listlessly at his side. Not, oven when thc three sailors came back with the Red Mole, whose hair was stiff with fright-and fury, did thc sou move an eyelash. Heather Bloom asked no questions, but, in a voice shaking with dark emotions, hc ordered the carpenter, Black, to bring an axe. \"Open that .arrcl!\" he commanded. The schooner's crew stood around in a tense.-, cramming circle, as the axe crashed' upon the barrel-head. Once! twice! thrice! The barrel-head splintered aud cracked. The seawind hummed in tho rigging, and the ocean crowded and danced around, as if eager to hear' this new tale of the sea and bury it iu its bosom. A-fourth'time the axe descended, and with the handle of thc weapon the carpenter levered out the broken bits of the head. Silently the men had crept a step forward, all'except the Red Mole ancl his son, and every eye. fearing to look, looked. At first sight it was nothing but a white mass���������������������������coarse salt; but as they stared the fog cleared from their gaze, and the thing\"tooiv shape. All that was to be seen of it was thc thin-haired head, wet with half-dissolved salt, but the. face was the face of Horneycraft. A--groan--burst.-from���������������������������every,, breast. They were engaged in a nefarious trade, but,\" as si.ch things went, the smugglers of the Thistle Down were not bad men. And this thing was beyond human bearing. Heather Bloom was the lirst to recover. He turned a pair of great, blazing orbs upon the Red Mole, who suddenly dropped on his knees and wailed: \"1 never did! I never did! It's Scrymegeour's work, I tell ye���������������������������Scrymo- gcour's work!'' The big sea-master's arm flew out, and the lied Mole dropped to the deck, felled like an ox. As the man lay there, bleeding and unconscious, Heather Bloom raised his hand to the blue heavens and .staggered away, crying to Heaven for mercy! mercy! mercy! As his back was turned, the stoic Arehibahl suddenly awoke with a wild scream and whipped out a dirk. Out. went one of Smuggle-erie's legs, and the Red Mole's son plunged headlong upon his face on the white planks. In another moment half the crew was on top of him, beating him into insensibility. Smuggle-erie drew off and cast a glance about hiin. The schooner had come in the wind's eye, and the helmsman had abandoned the wheel, whicli was spinning idly in accord with the flapping, fluttering sails. The schooner's master and crew wore demoralized. The young smuggler saw the breach into which he must step. He flung himself upon the mass which was struggling over Archibald, and beat; the men with 'his lists, the while he shouted to them by name, commanding them to cease. Presently the muss broke, and the men stood up before Smuggle-erie. Archibald remained motionless upon the deck. Smuggle-erie glared at the crew for a moment; thon, rushing upon the man Tomlinson, he drove him back to the wheel. In a few minutes he held the deck under control, and the men, their terrors renewed, a.s tlicy calmly reviewed what had happened, were ready to obey an order that might save them. \"I'm going below for a minute,\" said Smuggle-eric sternly. \"If I hear a pin (Irop while I'm there, I'll come up, and stave in some more heads. Here, you���������������������������Black. As you're so lively wi' the axe, cooper up that barrel the way you found it. Leave these things,\" he added, indicating the Ked Mole and his son. With that Smuggle-erie' marched to the companion. The miiyite he was out of sight of the crew his nerve deserted him completely, and he dashod into the cuddy with a face the color of dirty snow. Heather Bloom was sitting on\" the settle,. leaning heavily upon one arm. The other was flung wide and aimlessly across the table, with the fist shut so tight that the knuckles gleamed white through the brown hair of it. His jaw was fallen, and he was for all the world like a man in a cataleptic trance. Smuggle-erie was muttering wildly and unintelligibly. The big sea-master awoke with a start, aud, at tho same time, he found his tongue in a burst of fury, which sounded like the raving of a wounded lion. He cursed until his breath gave out and his face turned purple; then he broke out in a hoarse peal of laughter, which ended in a wailing appeal for mercy. Smuggle-eric watched him. at first in astonishment, then in fear that the skipper's niiud had become overturned. Finally he went, up to him, struck the giant in the chest, and riped out: \"So you call yourself a man!\" The echo of another scene, if; struck Grant in a peculiar manner. He stopped short, stared at Smuggle-erie, then sank down by the table with his head in his hands. To Smuggle-erie's ears came his voice, muflied and hoarse: \"Murder! Murder on my ship! She told me! She told mc it would come to that! Poor little Jass! Ff it wasna for Grizel \" He suddenly looked up. dashed his hand across his eyes, and the steel trap shut, upon his face. \"What's to be done?\" he snapped. \"It's mostly done already,\" said Smuggle-eric coolly. \"If you'can find anything else to .do, you've more brains than me.\" \"Let's take this from the beginning,\" said Grant, becoming strangely calm. \"Horneycraft is found dead on my ship iu a barrel of coarse salt. That barrel ot coarse salt came from Cothouse, where Horneycraft had been prowling about for evidence. The .Red Mole owns that place, and is responsible for every barrel of contraband aboard���������������������������he and Scrymegeour. He��������������������������� Smuggle-erie!\" he cried, breaking oil' short. \"Vou remember in the. cave, Saturday night, now this man l?.ed Mole blurted out..that Horneycraft was dead, ami then swore he had never, seen him, and how Scrymegeour said Archibald would take care of Horneycraft. Oh, why talk! They killed him\" put him in a barrel, and shipped it along with the kegs. In fine, they knew that if; we landed that barrel without discovering its contents, and somebody else found the body,-it would be traced back to us, aud it would go hard and certain witli a poor devil ot a smuggler because it happened to be a revenue oflicer who was killed. Oh, the archfiend!\" Smuggle-erie began to whistle. \"Why land the barrel at all?\" he said after a bit. \"It's customary, isn't it, to give a man decent burial at sea, even if he happens to be a revenue officer?\" (To bc coutinued) A NEW EUROPEAN KINGDOM. THE BALKAN STATES have long been a volcanic region of political disturbance. The little principality of Montenegro has played no mean, part in the struggle with the Turk and'w'th the efforts of German and Austrian intrigue. Now at last Prince Nicholas is to be received into the sacred circle of European kings. He has already granted his people a constitution and a parliament and uow a further guaranty is to be given for peace in the Balkan Peninsula by his recognition in thc chancelleries as a constitutional monarch. His subjects number barely a quarter of a million- the. area of his mountain kingdom, rising at some points to a 'height of S,000 feet is only ..,600 square miles���������������������������but, like Homer's hero, Montenegro, \"small in stature, is yet a fighter,\" and, as Tennyson says in a fine sonnet of its people, never \"have breathed a race of mightier mountaineers.\" Commenting on the jubilee and tho coronation of the Prince The Evening Standard and St. .Tames's Gazetto .London) remarks: \"Sympathy will go out strongly to the warlike little stato of Montenegro as it celebrates the jubilee of Prince Nicholas's reign. There is a touch of the romantic, the Spartan, tho Homeric about this kingdom '\"of the limestone crags, which has drawn ont our hearts' affection in full measure. The magnificent warriors, with their handsome faces and picturesque attire, bristling with pistol and cartridges, struck the imagination of a race brought up on Penimore Cooper and Mr.' Caton Woodville filled the cup of our enthusiasm to the full with his graphic portrayal of these sons of Anak and Mars. Their struggle against the Turk, the epitome in those days of all that was hatefful,.completed the conquest of our hearts. SOML. men aro so shrewd that nobody can believe them honest. A fault, is never so-offensive as when if is somebody else's.' Many people are busy mortgaging the future in order to acquire a past. A woman can get more by her weakness than a man can by his strength. Some diseases are less fatal to the patient than to the people who havc to live with him. It is a wise man who wants only what he can get, and a lucky one who gets only wdiat he wants. A waitress in a Munich beer-garden recently tested the distance she walked each day while serving customers, by means of a pedometer. Sho found that working from ten o'clock in the morning till midnight she had taken 5S.000 steps of an average of 27y_> in. each, making a total of over twenty-five miles. Mexican ladies arc fond of chocolate. Even in church they have it brought to them, and-'drink it during the service. Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Eye.. Relieved By Murine Bye Remedy. T17 Murine For Your Eye Troubles. Too \"Will Like Murine. It Soothes. 50c At Your Druggists. Write For Bye Books. Free. Murine Bye Remedy Co.. Toronto. Capitol Cylinder Oil For Steam Traction Engines 7 and St^ Delivers more power, and makes the engine run better and longer with less wear and tear, because its friction - reducing properties are exactly fitted to the requirements of steam traction engines and steam plants. Mica Axle Grease Tnction Engines, Wagons, Etc Reapers, Threshers, Plows, Harrows Gasolene and Kerosene Engines makc3 the wheel as nearly frictionless as possible and reduces the wear on axle and box. It ends axle troubles, 6aves energy in the horse, and when used on axles of traction engines economizes fuel and power. Granite Harvester Oil insures better work from thc new machine and lengthens the life of the old. Where- evcr bearings arc loose or boxes worn it takes up the play and acts like a cushion. Changes of weather do not affect it. Standard Gas Engine Oil is the only oil you need. It provides perfect lubrication under high temperatures without appreciable carbon deposits on rings or cylinders, and is equally good for the externa, bearings. Every ieakr emy where. ' If not at yours, write tor descriptive circular, to The Imperial Oil Company, Limited .1 ���������������������������*___ m __ A-o. .m. J v #>l CURED SIX YEARS SCIATICA EXPECTED DEATH ANY DAY Another Case Where Life Was Saved and Health Restored by \"Nerviline\" We havo all read and heard of the agonies of Sciatica, but only those who bave been tortured by this dread malady can fully appreciate what it must mean to be cured after years of suffering- It is because ho feels it his solemn duty to tell to the world his, faith in Nerviline that Victor jl\\ Hires makes the following declaration: \"For three years [ was in the Jloyal Mail service, and in all kinds of weather had to meet the night trains. Dampness, cold and exposure brought ou sciatica that affected my left side. Sometimes au attack would come on that made me powerless to work. I was so nearly a complete cripple that [ had to give up my job. I was in despair, completely cast down because the money I spent on trying to get well was wasted. I was speaking to my chemist one day, and he recommended 'Nerviline.' 1 had this good liniment niubcd on several times a day, and got relief. In order - to build np my gen eral health and improve my blood .1 used Ferrozone, one tablet with each meal. I continued this treatment four ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ months and was cured. I have used all kinds of liniments, and can truthfully say that Nerviline is far stronger, more penetrating, and in-, finitely better than anything else for relieving pain. 1 urge everyone with lumbago, neuralgia, rheumatism or sciatica to use Nerviline. I know it will cure them.\" There isn't a more highly-esteemed citizen in Westchester than Mr. Hires. What he says can be relied upon: For six years since being cured he hasn't had a single relapse. Don't accept anything from your dealer but \"Nerviline.\" In two sizes, 50c, and-25c; sold everywhere, or The Catarrhozone Co., Kingston, Ont. A GATE TO STOP RUNAWAYS. ADBVJCE to check runaway horses has been devised and put in successful operation on the \\Vii- liamsbutg Bridge, New Fork, ' which on account of its wide roadways and laek of trolley-ears seems to havc acquired a\"n unusual record in the matter of runaways, far exceeding thc number ou the Brooklyn Bridge. Tn four years J'So runaways took place, 53 horses were killed and 47 injured, while at tho same time 0G persons were injured. Says Popular Electricity: \"On April 14, 1910,' a 'runaway gate/ thc idea of a laborer on the bridge, was put into operation. The device consists of two leaves built of plank as shown, 'JO feet long and 6 feet 9 inches high, mounted on wheels. The officer in charge needs only to close a switch which sets iu operation motors which cause racks and pinions to push 'the two ctids of the leaves toward each, other, forming a V with the opening facing thc dircctiou from which the traffic is coining, except that a space .. .. . through which a man may pass is left at the apex. In the one runaway which occurcd since its installation\" the horse started .150 feet distant, nnd by tho time it had reached the gale the leaves were nearly closed. The horse ���������������������������breaking away from the harness passed through the opening without injury, leaving tho wagon in the apex of I iie Ar. The loaves swing back parallel with thc sides of the bridge when not in service.'\"' FASHIONS AND FANCIES FAREWELL GIFTS C Oil PACT farewell gifts for the traveller who dislikes to be burdened wilh surplus baggage are in substantial cases of morocco, leather oi pigskin. There are dressing rolls which =h a ve=s pee 3 a l=-po o-!. ot-s���������������������������i'o .=cac. h���������������������������to i lot- necessily as well as complete manicure- sets, cases containing brushes with fold ing handles or for handkerchiefs, glove* ami veils and boxes holding all mannei of mending utensils. A uniqno contrivance to be strapped to the om^i'lo of a suit'case holds a skirt, wrap or steamer rug and may be used for x\\, bag, seat pad or umbrella caso. .Smaller _ sized _ contrivances _ which any to. n ist will bo glad to have are pelt- protected cases, holding a pocket sized alcohol stove, collapsible drinking cup. tiny sifters for pepper and salt, a fold ing knife, spoon and fork; two miniature packs of playing cards or a small correspondence pad equipped ��������������������������� with sheets, envelopes and ink pencil. Tn rubber lined leather envelopes nre face cloths, paperweight sandals and small sized hot water bottles. JOJTT1NV: \"Pa, when is the freedom oC the City given to a man?\" Pa: \"When his wife goes to ihe country i'or a few weeks' holiday.\" TIIE hat plays so important a part in the dress question of today that thc autumn aud winter styles in headgear are eagerly sought for weeks before it is time to make the change from the summer fashion. Thc leading milliners, with designers and workers, have been hard at work for a far longer period than the general public can conceive of, studying out what shall and what shall not be worn, while the buyers have been on the lookout for anything smart and original since long before the summer hats were first displayed. So much depends upon the hat that all this preparation, all this expenditure of time, thought and strength is absolutely essential, for thc effect of the smartest and most becoming of gowns can easily bc ruined by an ugly hat, while an ugly, ineffective,' shabby costume will look well if thc hat is up-to-date and becoming. And what are the new hats to be. large or small? This is the question most important of all. Both large and small will bc fashionable is the somewhat guarded answer, which may he taken to indicate that for certain occasions the small hat Hat of Black Velvet with Blue Ribbon and Silver Fringe and for others the -large must be worn. Never were theTe so manx. toques'and turbans as this autumn, but never were there so many large, exaggeratedly large, shapes exliibited aud in all the details, such as the size of the crown and thc width of the brim, is there the same diversity of choice, but there are many more small crowns to be seen than there were last year, small in the hcad size, that is, and 'the hats, while many turn down around the face, do not have the all-concoal- ing big crowned effects, and more of the hair, in consequence, is^shown. The smartest and most becoming toques are draped in\" folds of soft material or two or three different materials are combined, as well as different colors. After having admitted velvet and satin to the list of summer fabrics suitable tor hats, lace and tulle are permitted for winter and the tulle and velvet theatre'and restaurant hat now exhibited is most charmingly dainty: In the autumn the ont ire satin hat or thc satin trimmed with velvet is also immensely popular. # * * Flowers for some time to como will be fashionable as trimming and will undoubtedly ho fashionable all winter for what are known from thc business standpoint as dress, hats. The ilowers are velvet or satin and velvet combined, and aro most gracefully and cleverly put on to stand up, either straight or at a becoming angle, and'have long stems that are marvellously like the real stems, while, except as to texture, the flowers are also wonderfully true to nature. Calla lilies are fashionable, and black and white, with the yellow stamens, arc most charmingly'attractive on the black hats, whether of tulle or velvet. They are rather hard combined with satin and it is best to use instead on the satin hat a softer silk flower or a fantasy of feathers, as is called thc spray of strangely doctored ostrich or coquo feathers that bear no resemblance to any feathers growing ou any bird known to the naturalist. _^k1_I>_l_^lmpJJ-JJ_..Y__!tn d_be.au ty__ of, J_i_ne_char_actc_ri_ze. thc soft irregular brim is more becoming than the harder lines given by the stiffer, more conventional hats. At the same time they arc not so generally becoming and, strangely enough, do not look so smart as those that are more severe. The large Kussian toque is a happy compromise, for its brim ia softer and fuller around the face, whether it is of fur, velvet or even cloth, and cloth is to enter into the list of materials i'or millinery this season. It is too early to select the entire outfit of hats for the winter, so the hats made of fur or trim med with it need not be chosen ar. the moment, only, in planning out thc entire winter outfit it is advisable to provide for at least one fur hat if one wishes, to be in the height of fashion. While the large shapes'are considered correct style for thc theatre or restaurant, there arc seen .lie most attractive hats so small that they might reasonably be called headdresses, made for the more elaborate style of dress, A small,, close fitting'cap of fancy net or of open work jewelled bands covering the top of tho head, with a large white or black aigrette, is immensely smart and becoming for theatre or restaurant, and thc aigrette poised at just the right angle gives height and style in a most effective manner. Jt is on the theatrical order, but it is one of the few things that can be \"theatrical without the background of the stage. It is said thc same style of hat or bonnet in black velvet with a large, high aigrette will be worn with au elaborate street costume this winter, the aigrette wide enough to be branched out across' the hat. Ostrich feathers and aigrettes are still in fashion. Un the most elaborate and expensive hat trimmings the shaded ostrich feathers are.oxtreinely effective, the feathers long and drooping aud with tho shading of color most artistically arranged so that the deepest color shades at the ends into the very light, this being more generally ���������������������������becoming, Colored feathers on black hats are also in style, and not only ostrich plumes but all other kinds, including stiff wings. Black hats are most popular, both all black'and with the colored or white trimmings, and although the hat to match the costume is still to be seen, the all -black hat is permissible with any and every color of'gown. \" Thc taffeta hats are among the latest between season fashions and both the high toque aud mob cap shape are popu- .lar. The great danger of this fashion lies in its comparative cheapness, but it must be understood that a cheap taffeta silk hat is an impossibility for any Avell gowned woman, and these are almost luxuries, just to'be worn when straw hats are for the moment out of season and before the season has begun for velvet and felt and fur, velvet, in spite of its having been worn this summer, not being really a summer fabric, in America, at all events. ��������������������������� \" ' The fashion of the wide scarf continues popular, and there aro new designs being exhibited with tho latest styles in'hats; in fpet, often hat ad scarf are chosen together. One of thc most becoming designs is tho wide uulincd chiffon scarf trimmed with bands of slia'ded ostrich feathers. Tn mauve, with the black and white ostrich feather trimming, is a most charming scarf to be worn with a mauve hat of thc same 'shade trimmed with black and white ostrich plumes, ���������������������������while another rendering of the fashion has the feathers in different shades of purple. Then the unlincd chiffon cloaks and coats are also very smart, with deep yoke collar of lace or embroidery, the collar lined with satin,\" making \"a garment more practical as a wrap. Worn over a chiffon form of bright cerise or blue, one of these cloaks in black is extremely effective, and if worn over a gray gown then the cloak of the same color in chiffon is most attractive and becoming, while if the all gray is too trying a lining over the shoulders of pale, rose pink or deep cerise under the lace or embroidery will provide thc required note of color. Attention to all such details is what makes modern dress so finished and, incidentally, adds to the expense. / , - ��������������������������� When one considers that women and men of native ability and many years' training in the art of dressmaking are obliged to keep up their studies of new styles constantly if. they do not want their costumes to deteriorate and become commonplace \"thCy-amateur dressmaker need not condemn herself smartest hats, so simple arc they often, with no trimming but a bow of velvet, that it would seem as though they could be made by the most inexperienced of amateur milliners, and thc stupendous prices demanded appear extortionate to the last degree, as, in fact, they often are. But the lines havc been most carefully thought out by some artist in thc business and the merest too much or too little in crown'or brim will utterly change thc-effect. A hat of medium size, small crown, brim not more' than six or seven inches at its widest, and turned up slightly at the loft side is trimmed only wilh a bow of velvet at thc loft.side of the crown, lhe bow not standing high but rather lying flat���������������������������tha material satin.in tho cunvu, but bow and brim of velvet. Hut let no onc attempt to make it without being quite sure that tho shape is becoming and frames thc face picturesquely. Another favorite style is a large hat of fine all over lace, black or white, as desired; this has quite a high,\" not wide crown. Tho brim is bound with black velvet. There arc two or three folds around the crown and one or two on tho unlincd brim, A spray of velvet Ilowers, black or white, or a ''' fantasy\" at the \"left side of the crown is so arranged as lo give more height; tho brim is quite wide and does not turn up at tlie side, but at tho same time it is not a straight, Hat brim, as it rounds out back and front. * * * The woman who has a talent for tying bows will be especially fortunate this autumn and winter, for bows of all kinds are extremely fashionable\\is hat trimmings. The fashion has been so very popular all summer that there is no certainty of its being long lived, but for the moment it is with, us and is to be highly recommended. Satin, moire, velvet and, for mourning, crepe bows are in many different shapes and sizes, and can be so adjusted as to make thc most demure and severe hat look smart and coquettish, and also to make an ugly hat becoming. The velvet, satin, felt and even thc flower toque can be immensely improved by the bow put on at a becoming angle, but care must be taken that the angle is really and truly becoming, and thc profile no less than the full face must be carefully considered. A charming hat on tho old English walking hat order, so far as the dimensions and general style are concerned, but with the brim turned up only at ono side,-is made of black satin; around thc crown is a twist of satin on the bias, and then at the left, side is a most smartly tied bojv of satin cut on' the bias, and so placed that from the side as well as in front the hat is becoming. This to wear with a tailor street costume is oue of the latest styles and is bound to be popular. ���������������������������'.��������������������������������������������������������������������������������� Tho newest hats display much more of thc hair, and there arc many more shapes that turn up sharply at tho side, but there are also a great numbor of the mob caps on the Charlotte Corday order, and these are worn not only by children and young girls but by older women, who contend that the .* \" _aJL ������������������ .^Jm\"SF&> ������������������_____; *j $p������������������r - *_v_ _**������������������������������������������������������ -^ '\\ ,_._...._-__ _,....*._&. .4. < Lace and Velvet Hat a.s stupid if her efforts are not always rewarded with success. The best way to assure one's self of a tiuimph sartorially is a faithful study of the styles Ms shown in lho best published photographs of the new fashions and in the shops of the fashionable modistes or upon the happy owners of elegant costumes who are to be seen in public on certain occasions. Often this will give the amateur a \\i\\vy distinct idea of what she should strive for in her finished product, and in dressmaking as in all other arts one should see tho end from the beginning. It is not often that tho paper, pattern, although it gives tin; necessary plan on which to work, supplies de tailed instruction for making a truly smart creation. Iu fact, such instruction can hardly be given in words. It is dependent so largely on line and on the perfection of details that it is necessary for the dressmaker to be fully conscious of what constitutes the style of thc particular model which she wishes to copy beforo .lie starts her work. There are usually also certain points to be observed in the making of any one of these models which are much more important than the choice of any particular design, and these points can bc best learned by the faithful study of the season's models which come from the best nouses. ' ���������������������������lust now the principal point to be borne in mind when one is about to make a frock i.s the necessity for a pliable and graceful waist effect. A stiff looking waist will utterly destroy all claim to. style, and somehow or other, whether a woman is stout or not, she must be made to look sinuous and graceful at the waist. The size of thc waist does not so much matter, although, of couise, the more, .slender the better, provided the suppleness of the figure is not destroyed. The drooping shoulder effect is only second to.the imperative need of a sinuous waist; in fact, the whole gown should appear to droop gracefully from the shoulders, being caught in only by'the soft folds of the draped girdle. All stiff, hard and sharp lines arc avoided in present day fashions. The idea of drapery is everywhere prevalent. The amateur dressmaker who bears these points in mind will bo apt to come much nearer to a triumph in her new gown than will she who proceeds on the simple theory of a faithful following of tho fashion, regardless of where, on some particular figure, it may lead.- ILL HEALTH, ITS CAUSE Sluggishness of Liver and Bowels It took me a long time to learn, and big doctors' bills'in the bargain, writes -Ylr. Ogilby, of Winnipeg, that the disturbance of my system was due simply to liver aud bowel inactivity. A sleepiness and languor extinguished my old- time ambition. I fear irritability of temper added little to the comfort of my family, yet the headaches, general misery aud \" melancholy forebodings that weighed me dowu ought to be con- -idered. Tonics, electric treatment and mineral waters in turn failing to cure inc. the advertising of Br. Hamilton's Pills and the testimonials' supporting the claim of great medicinal virtue induced me to try them. The result of even the first box made clear that my own body was making its own poison, that by driving it from thc system and removing the cause wliich undoubtedly resided in the liver and bowels, bj' Dr. Hamilton's Pills, my, health would be as good as ever. It seems certain to me that more than half the sickness we see about us is caused by carelessness in keeping the bowels qpen and the liver active. ' Dr. Hamilton's Pills J found do both, and do it better than other remedies. 25c per box, at all dealers, or The \"Catarrhozone Co., Kingston, Canada. QUARANTINE REGULATIONS \" THAT foot and mouth disease should break out iu England notwithstanding the stringent regulations maintained regarding the admittance of live slock from other countries shows the need of watchfulness ou tho part of those who have control of quarantine regulations. Not since the embargo was placed against Canadian cattle entering Great Britain, has any outbreak of disease among Canadian live stock of a serious nature occurred. At all events none of the diseases, given as an excuse for the placing on of the embargo have broken out. A few years ago when foot and mouth disease broke out in some of the Eastern States, Canadian quarantine regulations wero sufficient to -prevent that disease from getting across the boundary. So'far as freedom from, in-, jurious contagious diseases among live stock is concerned, Canada's record-is a very good onc and equal to that of any country the world over. The outbreak in Great Britain serves to emphasize this fact, as the one reason why the embargo is maintained against Cana-, dian cattle-is the danger of bringing contagion into the United Kingdom.- I WHILE I was engaged to her'she made me give up drinking, sniok: _ ing aud golf. Last of all, I gave up'something on my own account.\" \"What was that?\" \" ' \"The girl.\" - _' \\: HAJj-TtUME had invited his friend, llungerfo'rd, ' to dinner at Mrs., - Skantable's boarding house. \\ \"How's this for a chicken dinner, old man?\"'whispered Hallrutne, proudly. ' - - . \"Just about it,\" said Hungerford, meanly; \"but.I usually eat more than a chicken does.\" - . ��������������������������� # * ��������������������������� TENNANT was playing nurse to the twins on the front porch. The twins wero annoyed because each wanted exclusive possession of a solitary kitten .and they were yelling. . A neighbor paused at the gate. \"Well, Tennant,\" he asked, \"what would you'take for those children of yours?,\" Tennant shifted in his chair. \"All the - money in the world couldn't buy them,\" hc declared. \"But,\" he added, thoughtfully, \"J wouldn't give ten cents apiece for any more liko them,\" A THIEF BETRAYED A WOMAN was recently arrested out- __\\. side a Parisian shop and cha2rged by one of thc shop's private detectives with stealing some cheap jewelry. She denied the theft iuclig-_ -Ififfly^ OTTorffinl^ clock whicli she had stolen went off at this moment. She was searched, and three alarm clocks of small size, two watches, and eight broodies were found in a speciallv-made pocket inside hcr skirt. A Corrector of Pulomnary Troubles.��������������������������� Many testimonials could be presented showing tho great, efficacy of Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil, in \"curing dis-- orders of the respiratory processes, but the best lostimoiiial is experience and flie Oil is recommended to all who suffer from these disorders with the cor- r;tinlv that they will find relief. It will allay inflammation in the bronchial tubes as uo other preparation can. Dr.Marters Female Pills ������������������1____M__-__HHHBBNMaHMHannHiMMM_V SEVENTEEN YEARS THE STANDARD Prewrlbed and recommended (or women's ill __ent_, a scientifically prepared remedy of proven *orth. The result from their use Ib <\\\\\\\\cM nod psmmnerit. Vox sale nt nil time store.. Home DYEINQ la tlie way to _ Save Money mid Dress Well Try It I Simple as Washing with JUST THINK OF ITI Dye������������������ Wool, Cotton! Silk or Mixed Good- Perfectly wilh Ihe SAME Dye--No.chance o( mlMakea Fa������������������t and Deuuiilul Colon 10 cents, from your I . uekI������������������t or Dealer Send for Color Card and STOKY Booklrt. 74 The Johiiaon-Rivharil-on Co , Limited. Montreal. 56. THE ENDERBY PRESS AND WALKER'S WEEKLY Thursday, November 24, 1019 ENDERBY PRESS Published every Thursday at Enderby, B.C. S2 per year, by the Walker Press. Advertising Kates; Transient, 50c an inch first j insertion, 25c each subsequent.insertion. Contract advertising, St an inoh per month. Lejjiil Notices: 10c a line first insertion; 5c a line ; each subsequent insertion. Reading Notices and Locals: 10c a line, ! NOVEMBER 24, 1910 CHANGE IN POLICY i citor, and concluded to run the city \\ business without the aid of a soli-- ! citor, they did not seem to realise to : what extent their action would be : felt. It placed more work upon the City Clerk. It was the commence- I ment of the law suit that the city has since jumped into. | When the Council accepted the ten- jder of a coast auditor in preference | to that submitted by a local man��������������������������� '; competent in every way, a ratepayer land property owner, and one who has !had his fingers on the city's business That a change in the policy of con- i from the start, and therefore most ducting civic affairs is necessary, is:capable, the excuse was made that the conclusion that most of our rate, the coast auditor would do'the work payers are arriving at, and it would;at the end of each quarter, whereas not surprise us if the first thing that 'the home man could do it only at the new City Council will have to 'the end of the year. At a meeting of good of consider in the new year, will bc the separation of the office of City Clerk from that of city solicitor, police magistrate, tax collector and assessor's assistant ad infinitum. Mr. Graham Rosoman is an ideal city clerk, but he is not omnipotent, 'would have to be made at the end omnipresent, nor omniscient. Neither j the year as heretofore. .. has he the legs ancl hands of a centi- , These matters arehiot brought for- pede. He can do many things, but ! ward in a fault-finding spirit, but to not all things. As City Clerk he has show that something is radically few equals; as Police Magistrate he is j wrong with our system. We are try- equally good; as tax collector he is 'ing to run the town too economically proficient and as City Solicitor he We are throwing too much work upon fills the bill better than many of < the City Clerk. He has never com- them. But it is sheer folly to thrust'plained. He tries hard to accom- upon one man all of these offices and plish the work of his varied offices, their responsibilities and expect the I but finds it impossible. It is only best service. It is impossible. Our I too apparent that there should be a condition? How much less work does he do in a day? How much more time he has to put on his horse or team morning and evening, before and after a hard day's work? How much more oats, etc., does he have to feed to keep them up? How much more does he have to spend for horseshoeing? How much does he take out of that team of real horse, compared with driving on good roads and how much more abuse does he give his harness and outfit? Then what about himself: his clothes, with the abuse he has to give them in bad roads; his body itself, say nothing of the lack of comfort; and then how much less swearing and blaspheming would be done if our streets were gravelled and in good condition, as might easily be. And then the man with the team is not the only man to suffer. How much more does the <$m>������������������$>m<^^ the Council a few weeks ago Mr. Ruttan asked if these quarterly audits had been made. The City Clerk had to report that the books had not |scho01 '^y spend in shoes and other been in shape for the audit and were not now, and therefore the audit parsimony is little short of ridiculous. We are inviting disaster. Last week the City Clerk was lost for five days in giving three Peruvians their preliminary hearing and sending them up for trial. It was a case of necessity. The City Clerk as Police Magistrate could not do any better. He had to stay with the case and see it through. And all the while the city business was left to attend to itself. Every little while similar cases are to be tried before the police magistrate, and the city office is closed. It is something that cannot be helped so long as the present method is adhered to. Then there is the work of the City Solicitor which Mr. Rosoman has to attend to���������������������������drawing up these volumn- ous city By-laws, writing and rewriting them, and looking up legal questions, etc., etc. When the City Council turned down the application of Attorney Banton for tlie munificent sum of $100 a year as city soli- splitting up of the offices. Make the City Assessor do all the work he- longing to the office of City Assessor; appoint a City Solicitor, and place in his hands the work belonging to the office of City Solicitor���������������������������ancl pay them for the work. If we have to unmake some of our pet theories about civic economy, then let us unmake them, and build better. We are ���������������������������n need of a bigger and broader policy if we are to grow. A MUDDY QUESTION Editor The Enderby Press: Dear Sir: Our town council seem to think that, what they can call superficial low taxes are profitable, hut stop and think a little more. 'They say there are more ways of killing a dog than hanging him, and there are more ways, too, of being taxed than by the assessor and the town council. I wonder how much more do these awful roads cost the man who drives a horse or team than if the roads REAL ESTATE IN THE NORTHERN OKANAGAN Offers the best bargains to be had in the Province for all purposes of Agriculture. Irrigation unnecessary. Special Bargains this Week 2C0 Acres Land���������������������������4 miles from Enderby;' 35 acres have been seeded to al- ==Ta_aT \"~\"iJHc_7=?2r^i?^f^$27000^1_^nTba:lance=onHermsf clothing, when the roads are as they are? We cannot hope to have clean crossings and sidewalks while the main streets are in the condition now prevailing. And so our women have something to say in the matter. How much more does.it cost them to keep the houses clean? Every load of wood you buy now costs 50c or a dollar more, especially if you con-, sider the size of the load. And these are only a few of the things I might mention. I see by the Manitoba Free Press that the municipalities throughout Canada are aroused on the question of good roads. They find on investigation that .they are losing millions of dollars each year because of bad roads, and are going to revolutionize the roads in the Dominion. If the country places are willing to spend millions in order to have good roads, why shouldn't we as a city where a thousand people live on less land than one farmer occupies? Surely it is penny wise and pound foolish, and a very short-sighted policy. And it is a great mistake to think that we are not taxed much higher than if we had our roads in first-class condition, even though we had to borrow heavily to get what money we need. And just one argument more: Suppose we borrow ?10,000 this coming year to gravel our streets, etc. Every dollar of that would be spent in the town. That money would be made to circulate, and everybody would get some of it. The only good money is, is in its use or circulation. Yours for good roads, S. POLSON 1G0 Acres Land���������������������������With large finished house, good stables and outhouses; 13 acres cleared; 3 seeded in clover; 130 bearing trees, 84 coming on; two good streams of water. An excellent bargain for $ 6,500; half cash, balance with interest in one year. Ideal fruit land. 90 Acres Land���������������������������li- miles from Enderby; level land; excellent for general farm purposes. Will sell in 20-acre blocks. Price, $75 per acre; one third down, balance on terms. A good bargain. . Large river front. 50 Acres Land���������������������������25 acres bottom land, balance bench land; goocl 5-roomed house, stable and outhouses; 22 acres cleared and in hay. Price, 5.4,200; on terms. CARLIN ORCHARD LANDS���������������������������Map and plans, with prices, can bc seen at this office. These lands offer splendid inducements to parties desiring small acreage near station. 18 one- and two-acre blocks of City property in residential portion. On good terms. H. W. HARVEY '-.'.: Real Estate and Insurance Avcent Agent for Thc National Fire Insurance Co., of Hartford; The Nova Scotia Fire Insurance Co., The London Guarantee and Accident Co., ENDERBY Ltd. GRINDROD LOANS Applications received for Loans on improved Farming and City property. Apply to- CL A. HANKEY & CO., Ltd. VERNON, B.C. FOR COUGHS AND COLDS In regular doses it will relieve and cure the most obstinate cough. For Bronchitis ZIP should be taken without delay. In Whooping Cough the use of ZIP- lessens the severity of spasms and shortens the duration of the disease. For Sore Throat, ZIP is very valuable. It stimulates the glands and destroys unhealthy secretions. 50c the bottle. A REEVES Druggist & Stationer Cliff St. Enderby We can still show the Goods Some prime stall-fed beef cut at the present time on Our Sausage is still a Leader Fish and Poultry G. R. Sharpe, Come in and tell us how you like our new stores. We are getting into shape. Meanwhile we shall be pleased to serve you. Phone us. #���������������������������_-������������������.-���������������������������������������������_-������������������_ ���������������������������_\"������������������._.' Enderby Trading Co. Ltd. Leaders in General Merchandise and Supplies Enderby, B. C. *. Finest in the Country ' 'Enderby is a charming villiage with city airs. When Paddy Murphy shook the snow of Sandon , off his feetne came here, and now owns one of finest brick hotels in the country. Although Paddy is an Irishman from Michigan, he calls his hotel the.King.Edward. In additjon_to the ex- cellence of the meals, breakfast is served up to TO o'clock, which is an added attraction for tourists.\" if (Extract from Lowery's Ledge.) King Edward Hotel, ������������������ H. MURPHY Proprietor Enderby JAMES MOWAT Fire, Life, Accident Insurance Agencies A Life Insurance policy in the Royal Insurance Co. of Liverpool, Eng,, i.s a valuable asset. A plain, straightforward contract, leaving: no room for doubt us to its value. Tho Liverpool & London & Globe Ins. Co. The Phoenix Insurance Co. of London. British America Assurance Co. Royal InsuranceCoof Liverpool (Life dept) Thc London & Lancashire Guarantee & Accident Co., of Canada. BELL BLOCK. ENDERBY Bank of Montreal Established 1817 Capital, $14,400,000 Rest, $12,000,000 Undivided Profits, $699,969.88 Honorary President, Rt. Hon. LORD STRATHCONA, MOUNT ROYAL. G. C. M. G. President, Hon. SIR GEORGE DRUMMOND, K. C. M. G. Vice-President and General Manager. SIR EDWARD CLOUSTON, Bart. Head Office, Montreal. London Office, 46-47 Threadneedle St. E.C. A General Banking Business Transacted SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT ^?.M__ S^nS* Branches in Okanagan District: Enderby, Armstrong, Vernon, Kelowna and Summerland G. A. HENDERSON, Esq,, Manager, Vernon A. E. TAYLOR, Manager. Enderby TENDERS WANTED To cut 500 cords of 4-foot wood on our ranch south of Enderby. Also a total of 100 cords of 16, 24 and 32- inch wood. COLUMBIA FLOURING MILLS CO. STILL IN BUSINESS Headquarters for Bulbs. , Two tons just received. Also a full line of seeds, ornamental Stock, Fertilizers, Bee Supplies, Spray Pumps and Implements, and all garden- requisites. M. J. HENRY, 'm v_ 0 Hi i ���������������������������S .j ���������������������������J d> f Thursday, November 24, i019 THE ENDERBY PRESS AND WALKER'S WEEKLY i , A carload.of Adam's Sleighs $46 to $50 Liberal Terms and Grey Campbell's Cutters and Delivery Sleighs $38 to $60, on liberal terms Come in and see them. Have one and pay for it on easy terms. Get our Prices and Terms, and make your selection now. 6+o+c4<_H>4-o+_-fo^o4-o4^ ._i__<' fa*\"* . City Council .Rescind Building By-law and Grant Three Building Permits PROFESSIONAL ;; Hazelmere Poultry Ranch 0J White Holland Turkeys , Toulouse Geese White and Partridge Wyandottes Send for. my mating list giving all the information of my winnings. My Partridge Wyandottes are the best on the Pacific Coast. N. B.���������������������������A few S. C. White Leghorns and White Wyandotte Jj2. j Perhaps not one of the least reasons for the great, success with the Traders Bank of Canada during thc last three years has been the progressive, energetic management of this well-established Bank. Progressive methods alive with conservative, sound Banking principals that have done much to develop this country ' his side, evidently an old member of tho congregation, he whispered: \"How long has he been preach- in _ 1\" \"Thirty or forty years, I think,\" the old man answered. \"I don't know exactly.\" ���������������������������.\"'I'll stay then,\" decided the stranger. \"He must be nearly done.\" ; NAMELY. \"I seo you advertise your house and lot for sale cheap,\" said the caller, \"and state that you havo ''good reasons for selling.' Will you kindly tell me what the reasons are \"V \"Yes, sir.\" responded the owner; \"my reasons are seven in number���������������������������two cats in the house on thc right and live dogs in ihe house on the left.\" STICK TO THE GOOD OLD HOUSE REMEDY. It is a wise plan for all horse owners to keep some well known, tried remedy on the stable shelf. Kendall's Spavin Cure is oue of the best all round horse remedies that was ever compounded. The fact that it is so old a remedy is greatly in its favor. Ib is proof positive of its efficiency. All. old timo horse owners know Kendall's Spavin Cure andmost of them use it. They would not have continued to use it for upwards of forty years if it had not proven to its legion of users that it docs cure the things for which it is recommended, namely: spavins, ringbones,'��������������������������� curbs splints, wire cuts, swellings sprains, lameness, etc., tho ailments that aro always and everywhere common to horses. Ask your druggist for Kendall's \"'Treatise on the Horse,\" or write to Dr. B. J. Kendall. Enosburg Falls, Vt. * i . The Emu and Its Eggs. Tlie emu is the largest-bird-of the Australian buah and, n.xt to the ostrich, the largest of existing birds, the cassowary, also a native of Queensland, coming next. Tho emu scrapes a shallow pit in tho ground f,or its nest and lays from nin.7 to thirteen eggs. The eggs__ are five inches'in length. These are hatched by the cock bird, the period of incubation \"lasting from seventy to eighty days. The young at birth are striped longitudinally with dark markings on a. light ground. They can run with great speed very shortly after being hatched. The eggs of'the emu are very rich iii flavor, too rich to be eaten alone. Tlie flesh is dark colored ami oily and is only eaten by the aboriginals. ADVANCED. 'She's a very advanced woman.\" \"Yes, indeed. She's doing her Christmas shopping already.\" NATURALLY. Green���������������������������\"I saw you and Jones standing on the corner this morning, and Jones was laughing\"heartily. Had you been telling a funny story?\" Brown���������������������������\"No; Jones had just told one.\" _��������������������������� ,. . ���������������������������f,t- 'roHCr>'i. Levis, July 14, 1903. Minards Liniment Co., Limited. J. sar .Sirs,���������������������������While in tin; country ]n_ t bu miner I was badly bitten by i uoriquitr. _ so badly that I thought, 1 would bu _'.' j__'_'_.. gl_ij_<_U'._n_ a r q_ I ro u b 1 cd _w i t h: wormsT givo ihem Mother Graves' Worm _xteni.inii.or; safe, sure and effectual. Try it, and mark the improvement in your child. Walking is said to bc the best exercise for brain workers���������������������������and a lot of brain workers can't afford to do anything else. ��������������������������� ������������������������������������������������������������������������ *m t Trial Proves its Excellence���������������������������The best testimonial onc can havo of the virtue of Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil m the treatment of bodily pains, coughs, colds and affections of thc respiratory organs, is a trial of it. If not found the sovereign remedy it is reputed to be, then it may be j rejected as useless, and all that has ' been said in its praise denounced as untruthful. Mlnarri's LI.nln.ont ror sale cve.yv.hcro. TnETHIi.D . J.GIM.K. Censn;. t.fau���������������������������\"Now your .i\"c,\" madam. Ilow old arc you .'\"' Mrs. Giddy���������������������������\"It's none of vour business, and I'll never tell you in ihis vorld.\" Census . f .n--\"A)|'n������������������.,|,madam ; I'll put ynu down as iv.riv liircc.\" Mrs. Giddy���������������������������\"Why. you hnm'd tiling!' I'm only ��������������������������� thirty-eight!\" No one is fallible. Even the weather man may get caught in the rain without nn umbrella. L'j-lJ'i. :i0. oS-fO. ALL SWANK! Terence O'Grady had been married only a. week, but his bride was already making things lively in the Utile house, i/i I .illyhunion. He had been working for three hours in his liflc garden when Bridget came to the door and called out in strident tones: \"Tcrrence, me blioy, come in to iLay/ioasb, and live eggs.\" Terr en co dropped his spado in as- loui.shment and ran into the kitchen. \"Shuro, Bridget, allanah, ye're only coddin' me,\" be said. \"Hedad, Tcrrence, me ��������������������������� bho.v,\" said Bridget, \"it's nofc ye���������������������������it's the naybors Oi'm coddin'!\" USEFUL INFORMATION. How to avoid tipping the waiter at a restaurant: .When the bill comes, pay it exactly. A certain involuntary expression of astonishment will be visible in tlie waiter's face, well-trained though it may be. You should then rise, saying to him: \"i have made an excellent dinner; you manage the establishment much bettor than Lie preceding proprietor did.\" During hi.s rapture at being mis- taker, for tlio owner of the restau- 1.:':!. you <;; cano. POLITICS ____.A__y.QU-_oing..to-meet _h_- arguments of your opponents?\" J/Easily,\" replied thc statesman. _ Ihey can't hold a \"successful meeting. ��������������������������� I've made exclusive contracts with all the brass bands in my district.\" ' \"* Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills are made according to a formula in use_nearly n century ago among lhe Indians, and learned from lliem by Dr. Morse,- Though -repeated al*- tempts have been iinicfo, bv phvsi- cians and chemists, it has been found impossible to improve the fori mil., ol* the pilla... Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills are a household remedy throughout tho world for Constipation and -all Kidney and Liver Troubles. They act-promptly and effectively, and��������������������������� Cleanse the System CLEANING-LADIES' WALKING.-OR OUTING' SUITS-. Can lit- iloim i .._L'-ly by our Krennh |in..c;.-_ Try it. Drit/s!? American Dyoit.g Go. Monuval, Toronto, O.tawa ancl Quebec. I Scutl us your name nnil we will _iul you Vrr-?, oil clir.r^'M p.iid Ui:������������������ l.nu(tsuinu LUCKY ti_A. T PICTURE DnCCCH��������������������������� wliirli is tli _ lute St. (iaiutirst, aiul jir .tii-_ Jowe ry miv.Jty, all Die rd^y everj;where. Aa80'.UTELY FHEE tn tntiwlucn our uoods. .lust Bfint uuiiifi ii ml mlili-oi_ :m.| wi-will st-mf it. tu you al owe. AmliT. . _ Ara_8n_Kfg. C_0..63R0y S1_.Pr0ViCl3flG6_R.I_.U_S.A. Friendship's Tribute. Gladya���������������������������Did y������������������u s_o what the society t-luuiu of the Daily Bread said about Niii Gillard tlio other morning? \"She moves with ease iind grace in our most exclusive circles.\" Mny- I ..Ilo��������������������������� Yes, I rend it. It's dead certain that the editor who wroie that Itiyl never soon her ou roller skates.-- Chicago Tri .uno. LINES TO KATE. Comniuni-Kate's iutelligoafc, Intri-Kato's obscure: Trevari-Kato is stubborn, And Equivo-lCatu unsure.. ������������������ DisIo-Kal-o is painful, Ailcr-Katc's a pesfc; Rusti-Kal,e is charraitig��������������������������� Bub Jidu-Katc's the \"beat. A man is apt- to bc cither his own best friend or his own worst enemy. Thero is so much room for improvement iu some people that Ihey will never be ablo to use it all up. Avoid those who are always wanting to borrow money���������������������������and thoso' wiio have none to lend. The difference between fame and notoriety is that notoriety commonly lasts longer. One of the Int.si prominent ������������������-.. t!e_en to speak highly tin Znm auk*������������������ favour in Mr. C. E. Snnford of Weston, King's Cc. U.S. Mr. Sanford is a.-justice of tha Ponce for tho County, and _ mesifjcr of tho Board of School Co;._.i_stoners. Ho ia also Dc&con of tha bapV iai Ciiurch in Berwick. Iudeod it would be diliieult to find a man moro widely known nnd moro highly reepected. Here is his opinion of Z_m-Bi.k. He Bays' ������������������������������������������������������ \"I never n������������������ed anything fchttk ������������������_.- me oaoli satisfaction as Zi.m-Buk.'-1 hiul * pi toll of Kozerua on my atiklo \\rhicli bad boon thero for ovor..2Q.year!t. ..Sometime*) ulso the dieeaso wo������������������!d break out on my shouldor . I had - applied - rar.oui oint- menta aud tried .11 sorts of things to obtain a euro, but In vain. Z.im Iiulc, na- liko everything elsa I had-tried,'proved highly satisl'jictory and curod t,be afliucnt. \"I have'also-u������������������ed-._am-Buk'for itoliing pile . and it rims cured tberu oumplotoly al������������������o. 1 Uko comfort in hoLping my brother men, and if tho publication of niy opinion of t.bo beivling value of _am-!_tilc will lend! other autforei _ to try It, I tliotild -b������������������- glad. I.'or tli* relief bf sii._rit!g eaiiMd by PIleMOr |8kln Dlacii.oa I kuoiv of notl__off toeoaul 5 Zivm-Ruk.\" ;_:.\".;-, Z*m-Duk cures ulcers, ftb'cfsiw, bWd-poleen, ris.p-worm, (est.nny or runtiiiiK norii.i, bid If ff, vnriuoiia ulcers, sale rUeuia, prairie UtAt, cut . burns. liruis.*: bAby.V oort*. ok. V\\xielv herbal, fiOo box, drujirisU oudjtoros. ItefiiMimltatioui. C.ANCnn, Tumors, Lumps, etc. Internal .' and external, curod without pain by our home treatment. Write us before too Into. T>r. Rollman Medical Co., Limited, Colling wood. Ont. _$_ ,.,_��������������������������� FISH WILL BITE '__f*_3__ff f������������������i������������������iS^^ Il*co hungry wolrej at aU ������������������������������������__i>ii.i if vuu n.19 .' IS 11 L1JKB. lC������������������������������������ps vuu busy pul- 1������������������\" . thon. out. Writ _ tn-day and Cot a box to h������������������lp introduce. Agents Wanted. Michigan Beit Co.. Dept. 20, Port Huron, Mloh. .rxMm*mMB*mw* ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������in_i.-������������������w _..___. Extr .ordinary Opportunity for SmaSI power U������������������@v$ To purchase a High-Grade Gas Engine at wholesale prices. 400 Fairbanks-Morse I.ng_r.es to be sold at once. T__iP K!������������������/!_Q_fl_M Wc havc ll:lfl ���������������������������������������������nuraclurc _ and have ready for I ilKa lfifa_6_V������������������. BV delivery in anticipation of tills year's Grain -levator bu si ness in tiie West IOO��������������������������� 5 Horse Power Enrrir.es I SO��������������������������� 3 IOO���������������������������IO \" \" \" SO���������������������������(2 \" '��������������������������� ��������������������������������������������� Owing lo the drought there will be little elevator liuililiny, and' rather than carry them over another year wc will sell them at a jfi _ at. reduction as lony as they last as we haven't Ibe room to carry lhem. Trices and Full information on request. Fairbnnk.-rv.ui_e Standard Horizontal Gasoline .113-itie. Fairban! .-.Morse Gns EiiRines arc usod all over the world,. KIGHTV THOUSAND 'KN'GINEJ. having- been sold up to date. The engines are the result of years of experience on all problems connected with Qas HmginjJS Prae- tice. No Company in the world has spent as much money a.. Pairbanks- Morse & Co. on experimental ancl development work in connection witn every type of Gas Engines. Tlie many thousand in use to-day stand as a guarantee of tbe absolute correctness ol* the principles involved, tlie high class of workmanship., careful selection of materials, and the reliable and efficient service rei.deretl by th _ finished machine. A record like this is based solely upon recognized merit. YOUR OPPORTUNITY. T������������������JR HgJSfc, The Canadian Fairbanks Co. w.p.co. Send mc complete information and prices for your Special Offer of 400 Fairbanks-Morse G__jiine Engines. (Stale siz. required). . ��������������������������� w*Jsjy_jc__nju_-__������������������xa____!������������������ Tlie GanadSan Fairbanks 0o., Lm_sted Fairbanks Scales ���������������������������Fairbanks-iMorse Gas Engines-Safes and Vaults. Rlonlraal, Toronto, St. John, H.B., Winnipeg, Calgary, Vancouver. C_iiaCM__Xlt___:r_____i-_._rn _-__������������������������������������������������������������������������> ���������������������������>��������������������������� ������������������^������������������..-. ._!..���������������������������������������������������������������������������������. _u,rr������������������_1-1i. ^ -i^.,^ p __-������������������_.__���������������������������._������������������������������������������������������_., ������������������Ki*iXj_i_r*-ui___uc. =__; 1 yl Thursday, November 17, 1019 THE ENDERBY PRESS AND WALKER'S WEEKLY _' ' 'No Good Sensible Working Bee Listens to the Advice of-a Bed-Bug' We believe it is toIngoldsby's Legends that.we are indebted for this clioice bit of irony: \"When the d'evil was sick, the devil a monk would be; when, thc devil was well, the devil a monk was he.\" We wish to call particular attention to thc report of the special committee appointed by the Council to draft a resolution taking' this paper to task for having reported thc interesting council meeting of Saturday evening, November 5th. Ancl we do now humbly how our neck across the block of justice ancl ask Policeman Bailey to cut it ofl. We have no desire to subdue, or defeat, tame or conquer, sink, flood or inundate the dignity and power of tlie committee report, and but for the honor in which we hold the fellow citizens, three in number, who were in attendance at the Council meeting, and reported the doings to this paper we should say no more. But in justice to them, for they were our informants, we wish to ask a question or two with reference to the committee's resolution- and the matters reported upon. In' the first place, we find by the committee's report that we were not entirely right when we stated in the report of thc meeting that Aldermen Ruttan and Blanchard pointed out to the Mayor that \"the new by-law-will not come into force until it is regularly sealed ancl has been duly registered.\" We apologize for having so stated, by inference at least. We also apologize on behalf of the Aldermen referred to and the Aldermen in general for the fact not having been so pointed out. We apologize for whatever was objectionable in-this paragraph, though from the committee's report we do not know where to begin. We ask our readers to place this paragraph side by side with the report, and whatever they consider we should apologize for to accept our apology for that thing:��������������������������� \"Alderman Ruttan politely hut If you want to Buy, Sell or Trade A FARM A ��������������������������� FRUIT LOT A HOUSE ��������������������������� A BUSINESS LOT or A BUSINESS - I havc them at Mara, Enderby, Vernon, Victoria, Vancouver, . Winnipeg, or elsewhere. Write \"to me. My new list is ready., Chas. W. Little f firmly objected to the Mayor's remarks, and stated that the Aldermen were not to be taken for babies and treated as children when questions of this nature were being considered. They were there to dispose of public business, each application on its merits, ancl not to use their positions to further private ends.\" The committee reports that we also misquoted Mr. Mack. We did not quote Mr. Mack at all. Here is the objectionable paragraph: \"Mr.Mack accused .the Mayor of endeavoring to block the building up of the south side of Cliil street because of personal reasons.\" These are Mr. Mack's words, addressing the Mayor: \"It 1 looks to me as if you arc fighting my application to block the building here for personal'reasons.\" If there is any apology necessary in this connection, /^please accept it, everybody. We do not know what to do about the other paragraph in the committee's report, but presume it is safe to offer an apology. The points dealt with in paragraph 4, aro matters of in- ��������������������������� dividual opinion, and the citizens of Enderby are the best judges as to what they are privileged to think ancl when and how to think it. But we should like to know by what mode of reasoning the committee were able to arrive at the conclusion that Mayor Bell was but following out the policy he has adopted the past six months in his determined effort to defeat Mr. Mack's application? Mr. Mack asked permission to move his stable away from adjoining property, and build a brick veneer and galvanized addition clear, of all surrounding buildings. This is better than the building bylaw demands.\" To this Mayor Bell objected strenuously. Three months ago, when the'-Kenney building owned by Mr. Bell, was moved up against the Bradley'\" block, ancl. an addition built thereto, did the Mayor make any such strenuous objections? Did he even demand that the builder get a building permit as is required by law? This may be the sort of consistency the committee' points out, but it looks odd to one not familiar with that brand of the article. The remarks referred to in paragraph 5, are the quoted remarks of a private citizen, made three months ago. If they were not justified by fact, the citizen was wrong. It would seem to be a matter of opinion as to what constitutes juggling. We think the committee, in paragraph 5, dipped the brush too deep. The Press, after quoting the conversation about juggling, plainly added: \"While we are disposed to take a more charitable view of it than this, and aro prepared to admit Hint the Councilmen have earnestly endeavored to push theby-law through in absolute fairness to all, still it will not do for tha May or or anyone el.e to say there' it not ground for suspicion when a by-law that ia up for piiSB.if.ci can be jockeyed alow,' for six months and then brought forth for amendment at the opportune moment.\" Eldernell Orchard Mara, B. C Enderby Representative��������������������������� ������������������ ANOR L. MATTHEWS. IN THE CHURCHES CHURCH OF ENGLAND. St. George's Church, fiiulerbv���������������������������Service every Sunday 8a.m., 11 a.m. and 7.30 p.m. LATE celebration of Holy Communion 1st Sunday in month at tl a.m. Sunday School at 10 a.m. N. Enderby Service at 3.15 p. in., 2nd Sunday in month. Hullcai���������������������������Service at 3 p.m. -lib Sunday in month. __Mimi___ Service at 3 p. in. 1st and Urd Sundays in month. Regular meet- in., of St. George's Guild last Friday in month at I. p.m. in St: George's Hall. Rev. John Loech- rorter, Vicar. METHODIST QHURCH-~Service, Sunday 7:30 p. m. .Junior Epworth League, Tuesday 8 p. m. I.ayer Meeting, Thursday S p. m. Sunday School, 2:30 p. in. ��������������������������� C. F. CONNOR, Pastor. But enough. The report of the special committee will make the Mayor feel better, and we are glad. Straw For Sale���������������������������$3 per load. Terms cash. Will deliver if desired. Apply Stepney rancln THOS. SKYRME. Pltl-SHYTERIAN CHURCH-Sunday J- 2:30 p.m.; Church service, 11 a. m People's meeting, Wednesday, 8 p.m. D. CAMPBELL, Pastor, School, Young IN THE SUPREME COURT OF '. BRITISH COLUMBIA IN PROBATE In the matter of the Estate of Peter Burnett, Deceased. NOTICE is hereby given that all persons haying claims against the estate of tlie said Peter Burnet, late of Enderby, deceased, are required to send in same forthwith, duly verified, to W. E. Banton, Box 177, Enderby, ���������������������������B. C, solicitor for Catherine Burnet, administratrix of the said estate. After the 10th of December next, the administratrix will proceed to distribute the estate, having regard only to the claims of which she has then had notice. Dated this 9th day of November, 1910. W. E. BANTON, Solicitor for the Administratrix. Prepare for the cold weather by buying Mattress A complete line in stock. Also a nice line of Furniture to make the home more cosy. W. T. HOLTBY Furniture Dealer and Undertaker BRADLEY BLK. ENDERBY l\\/f-\\fl.__ f?<_ \"Rnc? f *s ^ie very highest standard of quality, made of choicest hard iVlOllt^l o JDcbl wheat thoroughly cleaned it is even washed and made by )ughly competent careful millers. MOFFET'S BEST flour can be made by the housewife into the most delicious bread and the tastiest kind of pastry. For Sale and recommended by all representative grocers. THE COLUMBIA FLOURING MILLS CO. LTD. Fred. H. Barnes ������������������\" BUILDER & CONTRACTOR Plans and estimates furnished Dealer in Windows, Doors, Turnings and all factory work. Rubberoid Roofiing, Screen Doors and Windows. Glass cut to any size. I represent S. C. Smith Co,, of Vernon. Enderby. E. J. Mack I Livery, Feed & Sale Stables ENDERBY, B..C: Good Rigs; Careful Drivers; Dray ing of all kinds. Comfortable and Commo-i dious Stabling for teams. Prompt attention to all customers Land-seekers and Tourists invited to give us a trial. Adams' Double Bunk Sleighs in stock. Pulton's Hardware. School. Shoes for boys and girls must be made of solid leather- sham won't do where strength is\" essential. Then, too, they must be comfortable, foot-conforming, wear-resisting, weather-defying shoes, for the healthy, hearty school boy ������������������ or girl steps on something besides carpet floors, and therefore needs not the finest, but the best fitting and the best, ancl year in and year out you will find this in the Ames-Holden School Shoes���������������������������Shoes built for hard service. ASK YOUR DEALER FOI - AMES-HOLDEN SHOES w 0 ������������������ ,'j oo! Mi. Pessimi ALL RIGHT ! That Reminds Me 0 you with with see that man going along his nose in the air, sniffing his nose?\" Yes, I know kim.: taking suppose lie believes in the goocl, pure ozone?\" ������������������������������������������������������\"No; lie's hunting i'or a motor ago, I believe.\" in a/TRS. IN-IOW JIT CH: \"Suzanne, tell JL Robert, the, butler, that.-if he must smoke in the kitchen he should uso bettor tobacco.\" _u'/.aiiiie;: \".I. did tell him, but he sez thev 're the best cigars.muster has.\" herself manner One of the Juteit prominent gentlemen to ipeak highly in Zam Buk'������������������ favour is Mr. C. E. Sanford of V/eiton, KingV Co., N.S. Mr. Sauford is c. Justice of the Peace lot the County, and a member of the Board of School Commissioner*. He Ib also Deaoon of the Baptist Church in Berwick. 'Indted it would bo difficult to find a m.n mora widely known ami more highly rospeoted. Here ia hia opinion of Zam-Buk. He saya :������������������������������������������������������ \"I neror used anything, thai) gave mo ������������������n ch-8AtU/actIon ao Zam-Buk. I had r pitch of Eczaina on niy ankle which had been there for OTer 20 yoars. Sometimes also the dlaeaao would break: out on mr nhoulcier. I had applio. variO-8 olnfc- ruonta and tried all sort* of things to obtain a cure, bufc In vain. Zacn-Bulc, unlike everything; else 3 had tried, proved hlghlTd&llsfaotorjrand cured the ailment. \"I.havo.also need Zam-Buk-fozvltohing pflea, and it has oured them oompletely also. I take comfort in helping my brother men, and if the publication'of my opinion of tho healing value of Zam-Buk will lead othor ������������������ufferers to trr It. I should be plad. For the relief of Buflerinfi. caused by Piles or Skin Disease. I know of nothing to equal Zam-Buk.\" _k_-B_k our en oloers, tbsce.se*, biood-pol-Cn, rinif-worm. leitoring or running-������������������cre. bad leg, rarioo.o ulctrt. wJt rheum, prairie .itch..cuti, i>_m>, braise*, bab.i lore*, ������������������t_. Purely herbal, tOo boi, drug_Uta and (tores. __o_u_e Imitations. I'LL wager _.ell will not giv awiiv this summer in tin sire did lust!\" '���������������������������'.Ilow-ivas that?\" \"She and Dick had their heads \"���������������������������together, so'much that Nell got freckled iiv one side of her faee.\" W'A IT IOR,\" grumbled a customer, \"I should like to know tho meaning of this. Yesterday J. was served with a portion of pudding twice this size.\" \"Indeed, sir!\" rejoined the waiter. \"Where did you sit?'\" \"By tiie window.\" \"Oh, that accounts for it. Wo always give people by the window large portions. It's an advertisement.\" you about it, for it's kind of cruel und you mightn't let me go again.\" However, the desire to tell it pre vailed, and iu an awful voice she whis pered \"What makes -ou think so?\" spoke one of the young women present.\" \"Because so many of your sex don't care for public sentiment,\" retorted the bachelor. \"That is quite natural,\" replied the young woman. \"But what gentleman would make love to a woman in public, can yofl tell me?\" . Silence followed. WnL each recovering \"Thev use their cook!\" own grandmother for MR. HEAVYWEIGHT,\" said the minister, \"is willing to subscribe ..10.000 for a church, provided we can get oilier subscriptions making up tlie same amount.\" \"Vet you seem disappointed.\" \"Ves: t was in hopes hc would contribute .100 iu cash.\" How Horse Thieves are Treated���������������������������sixteen horse thieves have been lynched by peasants in the village of .niiruovi.. Russia. They were thrashed and beaten by the owners of the horses,'-'.'three of 1 beiii \\killed, arid';-thirteen -severely in'ui.ilat<1d.^; f'������������������. sacks; arrived ������������������������������������������������������'.the;- da \\ after the;: lynching .and; arrested . forty- tlire.::.(.f tho. villagers;:' a\".II 1:3 .Major (inspecting Territorials): . \"[ want to compliment you, sir, on the faultless manner in which your blanket and overcoat arc rolled, 'it is perfection.\" Private Bimley: \".Four years' practice in i'Vd aiul Gaylor's flannel department orter. do something for a man.\" 1110 only thing I find to say againt you is that your washing bill is far too extravagant. Last week you had six blouses in the wash. \"Why, ilane. my own daughter, never sends more t nan two! \" \"Ah. that may bc, mum,\" replied Jane, ''but I. 'ave to! Your daughter's sweetheart is a bank clerk, while my young man is a chimney sweep. It makes a difference, mum.\" T is one mark of a quack, whatever school he may belong to, that he never admits his own ignorance. A. \"hedge doctor,\" a kind of quack iu Ireland, was being examined at an inquest on his treatment of a'patient who died. \"[ gave him ipecacuanha,\" he said. \"You might as well have'given hini the aurora borcalis,\" said'tlie coroner. \"Indadc, yer honor, and that's just what I shouid have given him next, if lie hadn't died.\" F \\TIII0I. S was remarkable for his ready wit. On one occasion, . while traveling ou a steamboat. a well known sharper, who wished to get iv.ii) the priest's good graces, said: \"Father. L should like very, much to hear one of your sermons.-\" ���������������������������said the clergyman, \"you heard nie last .Sunday if you leeii wlie-'e vou should have been.'' \"Well, flllliil luiv i t: i< A Cure for Fever: and Ague,���������������������������Dis-1 turbauce -of ������������������������������������������������������tin. stomach; and liver ai ! ways precede attacks of-!'evci^ambngiic ! '\"Where was thai, pr showing diM'aiigetiloi.f of tile digest ivo ! ''fn (lie county ,jail,': organs and deterioration in the;-qtinliu J bluff priest as he walked of 1 lie J.diiiid. 7I11 ;.jhes'e ailments i'afiie- | . i - lee \"s '.Vegetable'.'\".;I.ills.Mia\\ _, been, found m(.':-; ell-Cl i v(f. :al)aiiVg,: t lie fever ai.'i subduing tin, agile.-in a. fen-days..Then are m.'ii'y��������������������������� w!i'������������������: are -subject. !<> these di^ I re-~i ng'di. :tri,l).'iii('i.'.s..a iid lo. these' tlwi-. is rn better', preparation procurable '.a- :\\'u.rZ' iv answered awav. the KI.I. was once :t playwright _it iu lln? front row at the ni;.lit of a new piece of his piece failed. It failed drum\" he playwright .-at, pale and hisses, a wnman behind \" ' rir. who lirst own. 'ullv. season of up the old, old chorus of incompetency 'in the occupants of the judge's stand. This complaint'i.s not confined to the minor or half mile tracks, but has been loud and deep at some of the. big meetings. A common sentence iaa report with regard to a horse not being driven to win a certain heat is \"Every one saw it but the judges,\" and it is a generally accepted fact that the judges have looked wilh a blind eye on many leading horsemen who notoriously evade or rather deliberately ignore the rule against, laying up heats, We have for many years been opposed to tlie old tlirce-in-fivc system with an unlimited number of heats and have had thc pleasure during the last decade of seeing a variety of systems tried, all witli tlie same end in view, of shortening the race, and though it lias its drawbacks, probably the best practical condition is that all races should end with the fifth heat, yet even then if two horses have each two heats there is thc sporting desire of. the crowd to sec a final heat between thc two. But if wc must havc the three-in-fivc system and as long as we do have it, drivers will lay up heats and take chances of beating the judges. As for'the public, that docs not enter into the calculations at all. Nor must it bc supposed that only thc unscrupulous driver who is willing to make a deal or be a helper or pull a heat for a little sure money is the only offender. A well known driver of high reputation who always drives to win a race, once boldly made this public declaration: \"If f am compelled to win three heats in five to win the race and find J. cannot do it in straight heats, f consider I have a perfect right to pick thc three heats I can win.\" Nov/ thai, sounds logical and honest. He possibly wins the first heat in a hard finish, is doubtftil if he can keep up th'c clip and decides to lay up the next. His reputation is so good that the innocent betters back him .for..tho record, the public in tlie grandstand are all watching him, he drives an easy mile, possibly indulges in a little break on tlie top turn and comes home in ,thc field. He possibly repeats this performance in the next heat and then comes out and wins the race. The few horsemen in .the'inside could read thc race from start to finish,-but the great crowd of spectators are not satisfied. Yet it must be borne in mind that the trainer has got to think of his and his owner's interest, and that ihe paramount object is to win the race and if lie thinks he cannot win in straight heats hc must drop one or two. It is the law which is in fault, whieii at times compels the best men to evade it, while i*-. enables the dishonest driver io do a great deal of crooked work. General Grant once said the best way Tour VrwzzlHt Will Tell To* Murine Uye Remedy Relieves Sore Eyea, Strengthens Weak Eyes. Doesn't Smart, Soothes ISye Pain, and Sella for oOc. Try Murine in Your tfyes and in Baby _ Eyea for Scaly Eyelids and Granulation. to get rid of a bad law was to strictly enforce it and if the judges would apply the rules strictly with regard to laying up heats, the rule would be quickly repealed, or old three-in-fivc would go out of existence. The difficulty is in enforcing tlie rule. The judges, as a rule, do not do it. After ,a score of flagrant cases have pa.sed under the. eyes of the judges sonic bold offender gets reckless and pulls so openly that even the programme boys notice it, and the driver is fined. The amateur judge or the judge who only goes into the stand two or three times during the season rarely sees intelligently that a driver is laying tip a heat and even if lie thinks, seldom has the backbone, to apply the rule. It requires more genuine ability, clear eyesight, nerve ���������������������������and knowledge of the rules to be a pro- siding judge than to be the umpire at baseball games. In all other sports and pastimes known experts are employed at good salaries and the rules are enforced, A judge should be licensed by the parent associations and bo responsible to them fora faithful application of^the rules. He should be known and respected by horsemen, of high reputation, of keen eye and absolutely just and fearless.' That he should-'understand the rules and their practice Ts understood. But in order to do good work he should bo employed from the beginning to the end of the season and should go through entire circuits. No matter how keen and clever hc may be. tlie first meeting -will be experimental with liim, but he will get some idea of the horses and a little later down the line he will have a very clear idea of the position of affairs and will be able to piciv out the men who do not want records and thc clever knights of the sulky who like to manipulate tbe market. Then the axe will fall and after a few examples the balance of the drivers will fall into line and hc will have no P/EN UP BY HIS PHTSIOiii \"FRUIT-A-TIVES\". THE FAMOUS FRUIT MEDICINE, SAVED HIS LIFE. Warts are disfigurements that disappear when treated witli Molloway's Corn Cure. JAMES DINGWALL, Cna. WilHamstown, Out., July, 27th, .908. \"I suffered all my life from Chro ni_ Constipation and no doctor, or remedy, I ever tried helped tne \"Fnik-a-ti. or\" fromptly cured mc. Also, last nprinx had a bad attack of BLADDER an3 KIDNEY TROUBLE and the doctor; jnv������������������ me up but .MFrnit-a-dves\" ������������������a���������������������������__ 7 life, I am now over eighty yean. a^e and I strongly recommend! ������������������������������������������������������Prmt-a-tives\" for Constipation a__ Kidney Trouble\". (Signed) JAMBS DINGWAIX. 50c a box, 6 for $3.50���������������������������or trial box, 25. ���������������������������������������������t dealers or from Fntifc-a-t-MO United, Ottawa. trouble through the other meetings of the circuit. As to thc question of expense, that flag was madly waved when a paid professional starting judge was first proposed. The small associations declared that they could not afford it. Now they all have th.ni aiul would not. bc without thcin. When they get thc competent paid presiding judge and have tried him they will wonder how they managed without him. ACHE Stop it ia 30 minutes, without any harm to any part of your system, by taking \"NA-DRU-CO\" Headache Wafers 25srfe_1'n . ATIONAL DPUG AND CHEMICAL CO. OF CANADA LIMITED, MONTREAL. 2? ������������������������������������������������������_��������������������������� ���������������������������ii HIGHER ACCOUNTING and CHARTERED ACCOUNTANCY BY CORRESPONDENCE < Write for full'particulars to��������������������������� Dominion School of Accountancy and Finance \\V[NNIPKO, MAN. D. A.Pender,CA. D. Cooper, CA. .'I.E. Young,CA.-. S..R.Flanders,LL.B. ��������������������������� _.& The Empire Brands of Wall Board Piaster MANUKAOTUllKD OXI.Y BY The Manitoba Gypsum Co. Limi w WIMNIP2G. KAK. i_SRS-S5--SS?asajffl^^ I ._.������������������_!&-_'. ^WJiWW _J3HS_SSfiiW..SW.KW������������������_WiW.:V *_ '������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ ���������������������������-������������������������������������������������������' -'\" \". ���������������������������- -���������������������������- - -!__f'__^^_S!3__f'3E_?'S?i Chauf! that Uwplnc, tis.!cs9 borw: In'., c sj'uuti, healthy hor. . willing mk'i ca;cr to i!o a tottl day'- wort. Du.'t . j_t tt Spavin, Ciith, Splint, . pri.i;t, liin_;>oce or any oilier I������������������arac- u:.s V;cc;j youx horse lu the itable. Cure it with Kendall -'..������������������|>aviB.:Cm������������������c ., It cures without lrnTlng ft ���������������������������car, bls.i.h or white U������������������.lr������������������~ became ltdocs uot blister. r. n K_������������������t_, B.C., Jviiie Htll 1009 \"V .ve L_������������������i usluuyour I-inimeot for yearu ancl Suil It ������������������1I that yon rcpi_i_ tit. Haire not I������������������_������������������ without It for 10 yeans.\" ceortGJ. GORDON. ?L a botll_���������������������������_ far $5. Excellent for h.n_.J������������������otii u. Sold by ill dealer*. Ask for ir������������������_ boote \"A Ti-*tt__ On Th* Horse\" or-sirril- wi focrcopy. 55 _������������������B_.X. X_8MB_XCB. Eas_bia_ Tills. Vt tn;nr.;iinrT Hi. rliristemng cere- iimny lho lialiy smiled up lieauti- tally into tin- clergyman V face. ' ��������������������������� Weil.' mad a in,'' .slid In* to tin- young tv'n'i'. ''I must congratulate you ou your iittlo one'> biduiviour. I have _ In .stcn- odmore lhan two thousand babies, lint I never b.fore christened-one that behaved so well as yours. \" The young'mother smiled demurely, and said, \"iiis father and I, with a pail of water, have been practising on him for tlie last ten days.\" NO amount, of argument will make me believe that women will over 'become sweossl'ul politicians/' remarked the bachelor boarder. VARICOSE VEINS, Varicosities, etc. promptly relieved and eventually cured, by; A mild, fiftfe, nnUs.iitu: itmiri _ nt. 'lukoa ont K0r__., allays nam, stops fiimrin-t. Mr. Lukft Kivvunauuli, 227 f.riKI .UN IIIIOH. CO.. l.(il.. Vuniuunr. It Is a Liver Pill.���������������������������Many of the ailments that mail hits to contend with have their origin in a disordered liver, which is a delicate organ, peculiarly susceptible to the disturbances that come from irregular habits or lack of care iu eating or drinking. This accounts for the groat many liver regulators now pressed on the attention of sufferers. Of these there is none superior to I'armeliH' 's Vegetable Pills. Their operation though gentle is effective, and the most delicate can use them. The first bands used were of plain Manila paper, which the woman smoker removed from the cigar and placed upon her finger, i'or use in (licking the ash from the cigar without soiling or burning the lingers. Manufacturers later sought to improve thc appearance of their cigars by substituting handsomely colored :uid embossed bands for the plain rings of Manila paper, and the use of these finely lithographed bauds, for many years confined to the higher-priced goods, has gradually extended, until at the present time it is almost universal. In fact, to such an extent has the cigar ring been adopted by enterprising manufacturers that its absence from a cigar is in some circles regarded as more indicative of quality than otherwise. The BUCK-EYE does not need any artificial enhancement of this nature. The'manufacturers of thc BUGK-EYE decided that, as their customers did not smoke the band, it was bad business to take good money that should go towards improving the quality of the cigar to put into ornamental bauds. That is one reason why the BUCK-EYE makes rings around all other cigars. P.S.���������������������������The BUCK-EYE needs no band to make st saleable. Smokers know it as the best Ten-Cent cigar sold. m Wil ��������������������������� V ��������������������������� _ <__ v _ ?_ 56 ' >f)u u j u- ONE time I was staying down at the llaciendo del Torreon, in the State of Durango. It belonged to my friend and my family's frieud, Mariano Condc. ��������������������������� Ilo and I had been out after \"ber- endas\"���������������������������lots of antelope and deer still around there���������������������������and we got back late ���������������������������Saturday afternoon, just as the \"ma- yordomo\" was calling the \"raya.\" That means what wo Americans would .say by \"giving them their time.\" .He takes the list from the bookkeeper's figures, and compares it with thc accounts kept for themselves by tho people. As they can not read nor write, ihey use a system of linos and circles to denote a day, half-day, quarter-day, vl \"real\" (twelve and a half cents), a \"medio\" (dollars), etc. If thc two accounts tally, aud they generally do, for those raiicho folk arc mighty honest, then they are paid, sometimes in money, but more generally���������������������������thc most part, anyway, of their wages���������������������������in orders on the \"tienda.\" These \"hacienda\" stores makc ��������������������������� lots of money for the \"haeendados,\" and keep the pcople in debt just about as hopeless as the old scheme of peonage. But the tienda at Torreon was very fairly managed, and the people always\"1 could have money if they preferred it to credits. That,time, after the.raya was over, and most of the people had gone louug- iuf away for their one rest of the week���������������������������for it is a great mistake to think tliat the \"peones\" aro loafers��������������������������� tfeey really work like beavers���������������������������well, as 1\". was saying, one girl walked up to the mayordomo and������������������said something in a low tone. v \"Ey? what's that?\" said' Don Enrique, \"thou, Ysmacla, asking i'or thc .ashing! Are the clouds readying to rain honey? Since when art thou tired of resting?\" We could not hear what she said, but she appeared to bc insisting. .Don Eurico looked a question at Mariano. Of course the mayordomo nad'tho right to distribute thc'work as he thought proper, but when the \"amo\" was actually ou thc spot, it was \"compromiso\"���������������������������that _s to say, '_ Lexican etiquette���������������������������that the employee should consult the master. Mariano was a 'good fellow, and he never, did or said anything to hurt the feelings of those around him. Thc \"administrador\" and the mayordomo were/ both of good \"families���������������������������lots of \"gente fina,\" men-who had spent all their money, arc now glad enough to take positions that are considered inferior in Mexico���������������������������and Mariano was so o-obd-natured that -he let them run about as they pleased. You might have easily'mistaken cither one of them for the master. Not that he was careless 'about his\" affairs, for he was a sharp, shrewd, business fellow. But he had, as the Mexicans say,,so much delicacy ' for them that when he disapproved of their doings, or wanted to make suggestions, he always told them about ft. privately, aud before folks, evcu before -The .peones, he treated them very respectfully, and appeared to take their advice* about everything. Ot course that sort of thing is only skin deep, and you .can call it insincere, it tou want to, but. all. the same it is mighty pleasant to be treated that way. Well, so that was why, when Don Enrique \"Vargas looked that way at Mariano, the \"patron\" shrugged his left shoulder and threw out his left hand with a gesture that meant, Oh, f leave it all to you, my dear fellow! But the little minx had seen the mayordomo 's look, and she twirled around, as cheeky as you please, aud began to discourse him. \"Yes, yes, chula! But this is an atfair for Don Enrique. Ho will scud thee to the accquia, if it seems to him well. But why wishest thou the wash, What spider has bitten thee?\" ==~A=rtlfarl;lio=Birl*gavo-a=quioMump,- as if something had bitten hev sure enough, and slie turned about the color of Manila paper, as shc faced around to tho door and made off in no little harry. The last wc saw of her face the color had not come back to it. We could not help talking about her and her whim, and-the queer caper of her leaving like that when Mariano spoke to her. I gathered from what thoy Raid that sho hud known the \"administrador rather better than was rrood for licr, and that her freak about the washing was iu order to get away from tlie house, so she would not l.ave ta see and worry over tlio way that rruy blade was now dangling around Simeona, a pretty daughter ol J)a- masa, thc tortilla-maker. That's one thing 1. nevor can get used to in these Albican fellows. L'll turn to look after a woman as quick as any other man, and J don't say that 1 care for them too high-toned or learned, either But these servant-woman I��������������������������� strapping, greasy hussies, with every pore in their skins marked out in black like the lines of \"crackle\" pottery! They are supposed to have a bath every San _uan (St. John's Day), but I. really think with many of them it is only \"cada corpus y San Juan' (every Corpus Christi and St. John's Day), and thc calendar makers say that these two feasts fall on the same day only once in three centuries. Anyway, Simcona was worse than thc ordinary servant woman, but she had a good figure, though' she was very slender. Sho was pretty, too, all but for a wicked look in her black bristles through the heart.' But I don't know, I am sure, what I can do. I wish Cosme were way from here��������������������������� he is a greater care than all the rest of the hacienda. But he will not resign, and I cannot dismiss him���������������������������por compromiso���������������������������from that conventional obligation that 'so fetters and hampers us Mexicans. You Americans would sever it as with a sword-stroke. His father and mine were compadres���������������������������co-sponsirs ���������������������������and so I must bear with his excesses atmyvery life's risk. The only good thing is that the girl seems to want to keep away from aim and out of mischief. Of course Enrique will let her go with the lavenderas���������������������������thinkest not that he should, Carlitos?\" Now I want to say, right here, though it has nothing to do with my story, that my name is not Carlitos, nor Carlos, nor Charles in any shape whatever. My true name is odd and uncommon, even in English, and the Mexicans are determined I shall hav. \"a Christian (i.e., saint's) .name,\" so they have saddled several on me. I am generally Ysac, or the diminutive or nickname of it���������������������������'Chac, and from that has become my being called 'Jack\" by Americans. Mariano dislikes Isaac in Spanish as much as I do in English, and so to him I am \"Carlos'.\" A day or two after, wc rode around by the \"accquia.\" By Jove! it was a pretty., sight tliere���������������������������I wished I was a painter. Thc wide, deep ditch, with its wliite sand bottom, was full of rippling water, humming to itself a little song, and the poplars along the edge keeping time to it, with all their glossy leaves a-clapping like tiny hands. Along the bank, in the fringe of ferns and water-sedges, was a string of women kneeling, some in a sort of scoop made of a goods-box, but mostly iu holes hollowed in the saud, for boards arc boards in Mexico. Sloping into thc water before them, each one had a board or a big flat stone, and on it she'scraped, and thumped, and pounded, and paddled the soiled clothes, rinsed by sousing in the watcr, or by pouring over watcr with an \"olla,\" or a painted \"jicara\"���������������������������a calabash. Some used the long, inch-square bars of Mexican soap, others used pounded or grated \"amole\" (soap-root), but this' was mostly for woollens. The women looked well, moving in free, vigorous swings, with their long, black braids swaying, their blue, \"rebozos\" catching the sun, and their bright skirts. Their brown arms and necks showed like bronze above the white chemises, for these rancho workwomen do not wear waists or jackets. .'\"When we ,got to Ysmaela, , we saw that she was. washing'her stent'with sonic herb���������������������������a lot of green leaves, pounded. \"Hola! here is something new!\" said Mariano. \"What hast thou there, my. daughter? -Is it a weed common enough to save me a lot of soap?\" The . girl mumbled something about it being scarce���������������������������a rare herb. \"Rare! yes, I warrant, your worship,\" said Ysmaela's right-hand neighbor, looking up. with an impudent, leering grin; \"too rare to be wasted on common ropa. Please, your mercy, it is a philter, a love-potion���������������������������those are Don Cosine's clothes that she is washing, to coax him away from Simeona.\" Ysmaela lifted the linen shirt on her board, sodden heavy with wot, and swung it with a sweeping backhander that knocked her smart friend headfirst into thc acequia. Ysmaela looked minded to hold her under water, but returned to her task, while her mates pulled out the other, caterwauling. \"I don't like that,\" said Mariano, as we rode on; \"the girl is too quiet by half. If shc would rage and storm ���������������������������but you sec she strikes and does not speak.. __Slie___Avas___b'r_ought_ tip___hcre, _a baby, by a family from Sonora, and my father always believed she had blood of the Yaqtiis. They are like that, thc iTaquis���������������������������silent, sullen, but swiftly, savngely dangerous.\" To tell the truth, I did not like it, either. Mariano liked it so little that when we went hunting again, he made Cosine de la Guerra come with us, to keep hirn out of mischief, lie did not want to conic. -Ho disliked any-work harder than giving orders or hanging about the women. We rode in buckskin, with flannel shirts. He was in \"charro,\" it is true; but his riding-suit was ole- gant black cloth, with all the regulation silver braid and buttons, and he took pains to show off his white shirt and thc wristlets of his silk undershirt. Well, wc pushed liim hard that day, to pay for his foppery���������������������������Mariano dis- GOOD HEALTH FOE BABY AT \\_RY LITTLE COST eves. I've seen thc same look often in bolting horses, when they cock their ears and roll their eyes back to sec ff you're-off your guard or ready for them. I said something like that to Nfariano. \"Oh/ycs.\" he said���������������������������\"you're right. I know it. Tho girl is dangerous, I am sure���������������������������the sort that the Spaniards describe as having 'three black boar's Baby's Own Tablets only cost 25 cents a box. A box bought now may save baby's life. Summer complaints come suddenly, and carry away thousands of little ones evcry year. If the stomach and bowels arc kept in order thero is little danger from these troubles. Baby's Own Tablets is the best medicine in the world for preventing and curing stomach and bowel troubles. They can be given with perfect safety to the new-born baby or the well grown child. An occasional dose of thc Tablets will regulate the stomach and bowels and prevent summer complaints. The mother who keeps these Tablets ou hand may feel assured her little ones are safe. If you havo not got a box of the Tablets get ono without delay. Do not wait until trouble comes; it may then be too late. Sold by medicine dealers or by mail nt 2f> cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ | BAKING POWDER I : Doe. .(contain Alum I t\" : likes such nonsense. We killed three antelope, and, over a spur of the foot hills, we struck a fresh bcar-traii that led us up to a stony \"mesa,\" where tlie trail and the light failed us together. One of tho \"mozos\" with us was Juan Largo, and he was thc worst fellow after bear you ever did sec. No wonder, cither. If a bear had done to one side of my face what a big silver-tip had done to Juan Largo's, I would go hot-foot after every one of the trbie that made mc a sight of horror to frighten children. \"With the will of your mercy, we will camp hero to-night and follow on The oso is going in the speed of his can go in the morning, home���������������������������I see that footprints. With the light we straight to his house.\" Of course we agreed. Juan Largo knew his business, and he- always did as he pleased with us on a hunt. Bufc Cosme did not like it. He made all kinds of objections, and Juan upset them onc by one with good, common, sensible; answers. \"Come, come, Cosme, be reasonable,\"* said Mariano; \"it is too dark to travel ���������������������������we would go farther to fare worse. Like we others, thou art hungry. Thou wilt better appreciate Juan Largo's care for us after supper.\" Cosme growled something W/m Pi������������������%W La Lb Lb Jt\\ about grin- face \"rocky ground for eascabelcs.\" Juan Largo came over to him, ning���������������������������a -smile made that awful of Juan's more hideous than ever. \"Oh,\" he said, \"your mercy Don Cosme will pardon, me. If I had understood that your mercy was so little a countryman, I would have set your fears at rest by lessons of the camp. 1\" will clear the stones from a space for your honor's bed; as for the other gentlemen, and then lay this rope around it. Within its ring you may sleep as in the arms of���������������������������your mother. No snake will cross a cabricsto. and with reason���������������������������but drag your hand across it, and say if you would bear its rasp on your own bellyr.\" . Jt was true enough that Cosme had not known the safeguard of this expedient that every plainsman and mountaineer uses nightly. The ventral sensibility of the serpent race shrinks from the prickling bristles that stand out thickly all over the excellent \"la- zos\" that the rancheros weave of horsehair. Well, we had supper, then we smoked and yarned for a while, then rolled out in our \"zorapes.\" And as for mc, J. knew no more until Juan Largo shook me awake in the morning. When I sat up, Mariano \"and I blinked sleepily at eash other, while Juan went on to awaken Cosme. - -\"His fear of the rattlesnakes did not make his sleep light,\" said the old mozo grimly; then, as he touched Cosmo's hand in turning down the blanket, \"Santo Dios! Come hither, quick, your honor!\" We hurried to him. No man ever was deader than Cosme dc la Gueira. His light moustache showed bright yellow against his gray face. When the first shock \"was over���������������������������\"it must havc been a rattlesnake, after all,\" said Mariano. \"Not so, by your mercy's leave,,\" said Juan Largo; \"the reata is tight to the ground, as I pegged it down l a_ tf^riigIft7====\"Novr^that tlie^l ig _ f^i?\" strong���������������������������I have been waiting���������������������������we will look���������������������������I smelled nim when I bent above the difunto.\" \"Smelled what?\" \"But Juan Largo, slowly, cautiously, was opening the clothing of Cosme. Inside the neck of the shirt, far down, was nestled a big and devilish spider that is very rare in Mexico, but whose bite or sting is as deadly as a stroke of lightning. \"They are great travellers,\" said Juan Largo, gravely, after hc had taken measures to keep the beast from future devilment. \"There is,\" he went on, more slowly, \"a strange thing about these spiders. There is a weed Ihey love better than a babe loves the milk of its mother. Xo, your worship, I. know not the weed by sight. I know only its smell, and that it is called thc net, and that the Indians on tho Yaqui River strive to rub it; on the dress of' an enemy���������������������������and onc of the spiders will find him. Your honor, bend and smell.\" We bowed above the body of Cosme, and a strange, enticing perfume penetrated to our sense, through and beyond the essences he always wore like a woman. \"Your honor, thc cucumber smell of the cascabel gives warning that the rattler is nigh, and the net tejls the approach of the Death Spider���������������������������to those that know its power.\" thc thirs_t for blood being still unslaked, they fell to beheading each other. The \"Reign of Terror\" set in. First the Revolutionists who believed in higher ideals and gentler methods were slain. Then the more rabid revolutionists divided into several paritcs or factions. And, whichever faction chanced at the moment to be uppermost, it executed members of the.other. One leader after another arose to outdo his predecessors in deeds of violence, only to lose his own life and power to some still more murderous deniogague. And the heart and Soul of thc Reign oi 'Terror was Marat. He'was a Swiss by birth, and had at various times,bcen a scientist, a literary man, a physician and���������������������������so says Carlyle���������������������������a horse doctor. When thc Revolution began he started a paper called \"Thc Friend of the People.\". It was probably the most scurrilous bloodthirsty sheet ever published, in one of its early issues hc suggested that SOO prominent French statesmen be put to death and denounced many more aS traitors and scoundrels. Thc Revolution at that time had not wholly thrown sanity aside. Marat's arrest, was ordered. lie escaped and lied to the lowest' slums. There, hiding in thc sewers and cellars, he spent his time making friends with' the vile outcasts of the Paris underworld and in preaching to them.his doctrine of wholesale murder. From time to time, as the revolution waxed more fierce, he would emerge from hiding with new plans for deeds of violence. Each time the saner leaders 'denounced him. But, soon or late, they followed his advices. And thus the Revolution grew daily into the Reign of Terror. At last it became safe for Marat to come wholly out .of seclusion and to proclaim aloud, by voice and by his newspaper, his. ideas for the death: of his follow mou. The Revolutionary leaders feared and hated him.'- They held him in contempt for his squalid filth and his shrieking clamor for blood. But they could no longer send him into hiding. For thc worst element of thc mob now ruled Paris. And the mob adored Marat. He grew in power and his most terrible orders were obeyed. He framed' .a law by which 400,000 persons were arrested on suspicion of being false to the Revolution. Hundreds more were guillotined at his command. He even gravely expressed a wish to behead an entire French army of 270,- 000 officers and men. Everybody dreaded his terrible newspaper. For a denunciation in that sheet meant instant death, lie wiped out a _whole__faction-_of__his._political _cnemies. In the causes of infant mortality cholera morbus figures frequently, and it may be said that complaints of the bowels are great destroyers of child life. If all mothers would' avail themselves of so effective a remedy as Dr. J. D. Kellogg's Dysentery Cordial many a little one could oo saved. This Cordial can be given with safety to the smallest child, as there is no injurious substance in it. made millions of dollars. He died with just twenty-one cents. , ' . Nature at last did what, man would not to shorten the career of this \"star villain\" of France's Scarlejt Tragedy. Marat's health gave out. He suffered iutolerablc pains. Tlie only relief he could get was to lie for hours in a tub- of hot water. The Great Unwashed was . actually forced to bathe! ��������������������������� '��������������������������� Itwas while he'was draped in a sheet in his steaming bathtub on tbe evening of July 13, 1793, that a young girl from the provinces called to see him. . She said she,had with her a list of traitors' names and began to read them to him. Marat listened greedily. At thc end he . croaked: . .' \"They shall .die! Every one of them!\" - As he spoke, the girl���������������������������Charlotte Cor- day���������������������������stabbed him to the- heart. She ' had hoped to free France from a tyrant. - But she did more harm than good. In ' the first place,\" Marat had already been' dying from disease, and at most -could . have had but a few weeks to live. In the second, she made thc people regard., a monster as a martyr. And for months' ���������������������������\" the most atrocious cruelties were carried on, under the pretext that Marat would have wished them. , Instead of ending the Reign.of Ter- -. ror, Charlotte Corday had but increased its horrors. Hers was a wasted crime. THE MYSTERY (the Girondists) and branded as a traitor any one wlio did not beiicve in constant executions. With Robespierre and Danton (both of whom later fell victim to the guillotine) ho formed a triumvirate to govern -the French people. For a time he was the ruling spirit in this combination. All feared him���������������������������except possibly tne gallant, big-sculcd Danton, who laughed at Fate and feared nothing. Once,-when- Marat- asked -Danton - for advice, Danton replied dryiy: \"Wash and put on a clean shirt!\" But sneers were lost on Marat, in vain did his opponents call him \"sewer rat,\" and evon less complimentary names. In vain did they plot for his downfall. By sheer force of evil he crushed all opposition. And tho crazy mob slavishly followed his evcry word and wish. Honesty���������������������������of a sort���������������������������was his one virtue. My grafting, as did other Revolutionary chiefs, he might have 11 Tain . me,\" says the farmer, Who's getting the stuff.\" mc,\" says the packer, \" Tain't r < I get just enough To pay a small profit, -As far as can be.\" And all of them chorus Together. \" 'Tain't me!\" f ( ;r] (l Tain't me,\" says the tanner, Who gets the high price For high shoes and low ones, For slippers and ties.\" -'-'-'Tain__t_=mof_^says=_t-hc_dealer7__ \"My profits are small.\" \" 'Tain't me,\" says the canner, \"My margin's the same.\" \" 'Tain't me,\" says the huckster, \"Who's bracing the game.\" \" 'Tain't me,\" says the gardener, \"I'm poor all the time.\" \" 'Tain't mc,' says the grocer, \"1. ain 't seen a dime.\" It's surely a puzzle To knowwhere it goes; ' ~ ��������������������������� i>,'o maker or seller Or any of those Partake of high prices. So they all agree; And I'm a consumer, I'm certain \" Tain't me!\" Thousands of mothers can testify to the virtue of Mother Graves' Worm ]_.xtnriiiiiiiitor, because they know from experience how useful it is. MARAT���������������������������\"STAR VILLAIN OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION A SLOVENLY, unkempt - dwarf��������������������������� scarcely five feet tall���������������������������with bleared eyes peering forth from a blotched and pallid face. Such was Jean Paul Marat, ruler of France's destinies at a day when France was one huge slaughter-house. The French Revolution was at its height. After throwing oil' the cruol bondage of royalty under which they had groaned for centuries the French pcople beheaded their old tyrants. Then, No better cigarette the world over than THE ENDERBY PRESS AND WALKER'S WEEKLY Thursday, November 24, i019 IP 0 L SON M ER CAN TIL E COMPANY, E n d e r by f I This is an Advertisement to help you | Ladies', Misses and Children's Wear ,^fc> ^^ Specials in Men's and Boys' Wear j; LADIES' FLEECED DRAWERS, regular, 50c; to clear, 25c ^^^-(^sS^^^^ MEN'S PURE WOOL UNDERWEAR, all sizes, heavy rib. Wc have ��������������������������� * INFANTS' WOOL OVERALLS, regular, 55c to 90c, to clear 35c (f^M^&ff t0������������������ maQy ������������������f thiS linC' regular' ?4f50 per suit; to clear $3.00 J INFANTS' WOOL GARTERS, regular, 45c, to clear 25c ^^^9f DON'T MISS OUR SALE OF TIBS���������������������������regular 50c-line for 25c *1; INFANTS' WOOL HOODS, regular,35c and 45c, to clear 25c gEHBfflffiW _* INFANTS' WOOL JACKETS, regular, 85c, to clear 40c jBPy&8M In B0YS' CLOTHING we are giving special values. Now is the time J INFANTS' BLACK TIGHTS, regular, GOc, to clear 25c flffljBk to fit *our *<* u*> for the winter\" J INFANTS* WOOL BOOTEES, regular, 25c; to clear .... 15c, 2 for 25c fflPBp^ f>l ��������������������������� Tyj |.������������������ ������������������ 2 only, INFANTS FANCY WOOL COATS, with bearskin collar, B_W ^^_SSJ__ V-liriStlliaS INOVeltieS J regular, $4.00 and .4.50, to clear, $2.00 ^^^^^B A SPLENDID SHOWING OF LADIES' COLLARS, TIES, BELTS T CHILDREN'S DRESSES, Fancy Tweed, were $3.50 to $4.50, to cl $1.50 ������������������PiPiHfia^ V * ^_g_M___ FANCY EMBROIDERED GOODS. HAND-PAINTED CHINA and ������������������ 12 only, CHILDREN'S aud MISSES' COATS, navy, scarlet & wine Wlfffffl J to clear $1.50 89B ��������������������������� CUT-GLASS WARE ON DISPLAY IN OUR WINDOW. ������������������ 5 only, LADIES' COATS, black, beaver and fancy Tweed, to clear $2.00 ]^Pw l~. . Boots and Shoe Specials ���������������������������__-. Agents to Jaeger Pure J CHILDREN'S TAN and BLACK OXFORDS, sizes 3 to 7_, vj^' WOOl CiOLTIIIIQ-. v regular, $1.25 and $1.40, to clear 75c M* T LADIES' PATENT PUMPS, one-strap, regular, $3.50; now $2.50 V 3_ XTT^./\"^ A MT'TW IT* _/\"^ LEADERS IN MEN'S clothing tKCAlN 1 ILL \\_X). At the Old Stand $ - o ENDERBY .������������������^^.^.r-^.!^.!.<..:-^.^^^_-^__������������������_>���������������������������I������������������������������������������������������^���������������������������^���������������������������^w-w-'Www������������������k������������������^h������������������!'.' t T IV- ���������������������������!��������������������������� t 1^*1 T *f- ������������������ . :.1 yd * ��������������������������� ��������������������������� _- .?. :'(���������������������������'] ..: m ? m T '��������������������������� ��������������������������� ������������������ ii _> .?. ���������������������������\\ i i < fl Y '1 .}. <������������������S V .1 Y T i _ --'��������������������������� '_ T I.1 1 ���������������������������_ 1 1 * ' 1 ������������������ ������������������������������������ r< ___ l . _ * ���������������������������^-___l t '*___H Y 1 f-_H ��������������������������� i:^__i t <<____ _. ��������������������������� Y ���������������������������_��������������������������� Y * ��������������������������� 7^ T _(___ ��������������������������������������������������������������������������������� * ��������������������������� * T m V .-_��������������������������� ? . <____ ��������������������������� vfl ���������������������������.��������������������������� v_H Y '___ V ��������������������������� j. il t . J___H ���������������������������c f__H ���������������������������> A'__H -������������������____��������������������������� ������������������ _._____��������������������������� ���������������������������_��������������������������� }__H ��������������������������� '____ .?. _________ 4 i^H I c'^^^^l V ������������������ ;_____ * . *T^_____H I 1 v . ______ V ���������������������������;��������������������������� ____ !______��������������������������� .% (^^H J V ���������������������������> ' <^^H * _____________��������������������������� CITY COUNCIL MEETING Minutes ot the City Council meeting of Saturday, Nov. 19th: The full board present. It was decided to rescind all previous actions of the Council in connection with the Building By-law, and the By-law was re-introduced in revised form. (The full text of the by-law appears on the first page of this paper.) The By-law passed its first and second readings. The matter of T. Robinson, asking for limit of the Lawes' hill road, was referred to the Mayor. Mr. Fulton's application for a building permit was reported upon favorably by Aid. Ruttan, and the application was granted. The same action was taken on the applications for building permits from Mr. Holtby and Air. Greyell. The report of the formation of the Enderby Fire Brigade (published in these columns two weeks ago,) was =Fcad^and=-the=appointments^of-=-officei-s^ confirmed. It was decided to ask Chief English to obtain prices on the following supplies, asked for by the : Fire Brigade, and to report to the ! Council: 4 lanterns, 100 feet 3-8-inch i rope, 3 roof ladders, 1 extension ' ladder. Tenders for the post of Assessor wore received from, N. H. Kenny, ?75; H. H. Worthington, $50. The tender of Mr. Worthington was accepted and thc appointment made. Aldermen Blanchard and Hancock were appointed with the Mayor a court of revision, to sit to revise the Voter's List on Dec. 10th, 7:30 p.m. The .Mayor and Aid. Ruttan made an oral report of the proceedings at the Convention of B. C. Municipalities, Nov. 10th, at Salmon Arm. The following report was received from the Special Committee appointed by the Council at their meeting of Nov. Kith: \"The Committee appointed to bring in a resolution regarding the report in the Enderby Press of Council meeting held Nov. 5th, beg to report as follows: I. The following statement made in the Press is untrue: 'That Aid. Ruttan and Aid. Blanchard pointed out to the Mayor that Mr. Mack's application for a building permit was made within the scope ol the old by-law, and that the new building by-law would not come into force until it was sealed and registered.\" The above statement was not made or any words conveying the same thought were not spoken by any one of the Aldermen at said meeting. II. The statement made in the Press that Aid. Ruttan said, \"That members of Council should not use their positions to further private ends\" is wholly untrue. III. The statement in the Press quoting what Mr. Mack (re accusing the Mayor of self-interest) is incorrectly reported. IV. We consider the several references made by thc editor regarding the Mayor acting from self-interest point of view and trying to obstruct the progress of tbe town are entirely unfounded, as his words and actions at the meeting of Nov. 5th were consistent with his attitude during the past, six months regarding the advisability of erecting fire-proof buildings within the fire-limit. V. The remarks ,jn the Press reflecting on the Council as juggling with the building by-law to the advantage of one and the disadvantage of another, are not justified by thc facts on record, and we regret very much the attitude of the Press in this matter. Dated Nov. 19th, 1910. J. L. RUTTAN, J. W. EVANS. The report was adopted as read. The completion of the cell in the basemen t^of--t-he-Gity���������������������������HaL-was-left--in= the hands of the Board of Works. ENDERBY PUBLIC SCHOOL Our new Is Here We are more than satisfied with the quality. You will be when you try it 3 lbs. for $1 IN SEALED TINS Walter Robinson CASH GROCER Following is the report of Division I. for the week ending Friday, Nov. ISth: Those who were neither late nor absent during the week, and who received \"Good\" for conduct: Edith Teece, Hulda Carlson, Alice Marwood Rena Dunwoodie, Agnes Carlson, Campbell, Jean Duncan. Classes I. and II. had the same Spelling examination on Friday. Those making 80 per cent, and over are: Beatrice Campbell, 99; Thomas McKay, 99; Edith Teece, 90; Frank Pearson, 89; Patrick Mowat, _8; Florence Ronald, 88; Rena Dunwoodie, S5; Amy Bogart, 84; Ida Robinson, 84; Oliver Ruttan, 80. Class III.���������������������������Clifford Marwood, 96; Hilda- Hazleton, 94; Dorothy Dunwoodie, 87; Jean Poison, 87; Reggie Ruttan, 85; Nora Spear, 83. In Grammar, the best in the Senior Class were: Thomas McKay, 76; Oliver Ruttan, 73; Patrick Mowat, 03; Florence Ronald, 59;_ Frank Pearson, -S^EclitirTeece,\" 5\"4f~A=nTy~B.ogart7i>27 In the Junior Class: Dorothy Dunwoodie, 90; Clifford Marwood, 90; Hugh Mowat, 88; Herbert Blanchard, 87; Hilda Hazleton, 87; Victor Bogart, S3; Nora Spear, 72; Bessie Jones, 72; Reggie Ruttan, 66; Jean Duncan, 63. Next week's subject for examination will be Composition. D. M. BROWN. Uniform Grades AND GOOD MILL WORK in lumber will Reduce the Cost of Building your Home more than BAD lumber at cheaper prices. First Cost is by no means the final cost. Figure it out and you will buy your lumber of��������������������������� A.R.Rogers Lumber Company, Ltd. British Columbia Fruit Lands Offer an Opportunity for Profitable Industry under most Enjoyable Conditions Why not come to Sunny Okanagan? Here one lives in a mild arid healthful climate amid most beautiful surroundings. Fruit growing in this district gives a magnificent return foi\" money and labor invested. Families are becoming independent ��������������������������� from a few acres properly tilled. CARLIN ORCHARDS In Upper Okanagan, is the choicest tract in Southern British Columbia. It is right on a railroad, and right at a depot. No irrigation is needed, fertile. =stone7^no^waste^land7=no=high=-winds7== It is CLASS \"A\" in every respect, property the prices are extremely low in British Columbia. $145 per acre. Part of the property very light clearing, payment cau be made for the land. It fronts on a navigable river. The soil is deep, mellow and very ^It^has-good-^roadsr^good^waterT^no1 and no fruit pests. To insure early settlement of the ���������������������������in fact, they will never be equalled In 10 to 20 acre blocks, at $110 to is ready for planting, and the rest Small cash payment, and deferred Write for illustrated pamphlet P. ROGERS, BLACK & McALPINE, Local representative, H. W. HARVEY, Postmaster, Enderby, B. C. Selling Aftents 52-1 Pender.St., W...Vancouver. Private Livery Rubber-tired Single and Double rigs; stylish drivers; new harness; everything up-to-date and well-kept. When you wish a rig for a Sunday drive, speak i'or it early, as my finest turn-outs are usually spoken for in advance.' A. L. Matthews Enderby A Full Line of Cliff Street \"TWelfth Night\" was a rare treat last Friday evening in K. P. Hall. A large audience witnessed the performance, and all enjoyed an evening of rich clean fun. It is said to have taken the immortal bard Shakespear, just twleve days to write \"Twelfth Night.\" It must have been when he was feeling in a very happy mood, for he has put into it more real fun, without overdrawing, than in any of his comedies. Wm. Yule and Miss Eddy carried their parts well, and they were given good support by a well-balanced company. Coats, Mitts, Gloves, Underwear, Caps, Rubbers, Etc., Women's & Children's Cashmere and Wool Hose. Call and see our lines of samples of Fall and Winter Overcoats Fresh Fruits and Vegetables now in stock. Wheeler & Evans John S. Johnstone Contractor and Builder, Enderby 1 VI ,."@en, "Titled Walker’s Weekly from 1908-04-023 to 1909-02-25.

Titled Enderby Press and Walker’s Weekly from 1909-03-04 to 1918-03-28.

Titled Okanagan Commoner from 1918-04-04 to 1921-12-29.

Print Run: 1908-1921

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