@prefix ns0: . @prefix edm: . @prefix dcterms: . @prefix dc: . @prefix skos: . @prefix geo: . ns0:identifierAIP "a17e542b-48c0-454b-a4bc-64fa79c123d1"@en ; edm:dataProvider "CONTENTdm"@en ; dcterms:isPartOf "BC Historical Newspapers"@en ; dcterms:issued "2013-01-23"@en, "1912-04-04"@en ; edm:aggregatedCHO "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/xenderby/items/1.0178826/source.json"@en ; dc:format "application/pdf"@en ; skos:note """ \\pY. & ^>- \\ii? I 9^ *v I ; r I i II t7 fl! 6 WHERE THERE ARE NO WINTER oWINDS, AND SNOW DRIFTS ARE UNKNOWN EXCEPT JN-> ^IQgY Enderby, B. C, April 4, 1912 AND WALKER'S we ekly Vol. 5; No. 5; Whole No.:214." News of the Town and District of Interest to Enderby Reader ' A. L. Matthews is ?isiting Enderby from Victoria. The" Wednesday half-holiday will be observed next week. Geo. Aylwin died at the New Denver hospital last week. Grindrod registered 15'" votes for Ellison and 2 for Sterling. The thoroughbred" horses of Jas. Bell arrived at Mara on Sunday. ��������������������������� Mr. and - Mrs. H. ' P. Jaquest re^ turned from their trip to England this ..week. . Tlie Enderby school board are calling for tenders on the .Tr,'),'���������������������������'���������������������������') school, house to be-erectcd this Miir.mer. Fred.-Breedon, of Vernon, spent a day or two^ with his brother Jack .at~the King;Edward, this,week.- '/ . Surveyor .Williams returned n:i Xtn- ' day from: a trip covering^three or four months in tlie Old ..Country. ._ - J. .S:.Johnstone unloaded a car'of -cement'knd lime-on'Friday, and=isin - position -to'fill orders for these materials OTTAWA PARLIAMENT Ottawa, April 1.���������������������������The Canadian Senate^ played what is looked upon April Wedding Bells Ring for One of Enderby's Esteemed Young Ladies- A bunch of mid-night rovers made by not a few parliamentarians as a A very pretty wedding was solem- an .assault upon the Ipera House on' rude April fool joke un the country nlzed at the home jf Mr. and Mrs. Tuesday night, pelting the building* to-day when by insisting on amend-, f. S. Stevens, on Tuesday, April 2nd lilies the predominating flowers. The bride wore Liberty crepe, trimmed with exquisite bridal * lace and with-" stones. The same night, or! naents which the government declined at high noon, when their daughter, I adorned with seed pearls. She car- early Wednesday morning, some miscreant threw a stone at the plate glass front of The Walker Press and knocked a hole in a hundred-dollar to accept it nullified the legislation 'Miss Lilian Louise, became'the bride ried a bouquet of white roses and of the session regarding a tariff com mission, a federal grant to highways and a grant of two million dollars to l- * \\7: -.���������������������������' y The,'T3udcrby'-'orchc'Jbi-aririirmcheAr.F"? .*^cria.^*r f-iz ��������������������������� ' '-I .��������������������������� ^* . i���������������������������-���������������������������i,_^i ���������������������������- :.:*.��������������������������� *i.n ^ '-'.* union.. -The-> plate. ' Window'rbr'eaking has become) the Ontario . government's railway epidemic in Enderby. A police court' running from Toronto north , into case or two would no doubt have a' New Ontario., Parliament adjourned salutary ^effect. The city" water supply was badly put out" of commission Tuesday and Wednesday mornings by the in-take at the _ head becoming jammed with drift from the stream. Perhaps nobody suffered, the ''inconvenience so much as the" staff of. printers in the office of "the .Walker Press. They, are ��������������������������� not water soaks, but the man who toggles the, toggle couldn't , toggle worth" "a tinker's toggle. : " A Toronto ��������������������������� dispatch says * that the Rev. Br. Gordon, of Queen's" University,, has been elected co:;ven"er'*6f*the of Mr. Geo. A. Keyes, Rev; Tiincan lilies of the valley, and was attended Campbell, of Stj Andrews c'.urch, officiating. , The home decorations-were delicate and subdued, the *Dannelling and archways being trimmed with Oregon grape, with carnations -and Easter *.t . thc young-l committee on -..church position .was - made, va*- music of' high-class' ... ��������������������������� ���������������������������_ _ _ _ ,,_.__._ Vmen's "dance in K. P. Hall la.it Wtd-;.Cant ^'the/death of ^Rev^Principal ' nesday,night. v- ."���������������������������--. -- j Patrick of Winnipeg. i������������������The,official; re- ���������������������������J:-B. PeeVer is : preparing to" move ports of the "clerks of the. presbyter his family-to Nova Scotia,-.-where he' ies show* a^ote'apprMimatelyvTO per '���������������������������will locate on"a small-farm and ever.-cent for u3*������������������ni and 30.."per*.-cent. 'after live on the .fat o'*tlie land. .^gainst. -This. -J_s regarded- by���������������������������.some church authorities as being' too ��������������������������� large ^ra percentage'-'.in-, opposition" for the General Assembly,to warrant.organic union. '/'"'- "''" ' Last- Saturday- night-between 12 , ,,, t, T -_,,'.._. , and .1 o'clock,'' the." sawmill of.A^ Mr. and Mrs.,F. *L. Buckley-visited ._ * ,. - _. ��������������������������� ���������������������������'- ��������������������������� , - -���������������������������_>_.-'.;* ,, - , ,, . . .. - *��������������������������� . Tomkinson, Deep Creek, was. totally Enderby this-.week trom the coast. , , . . . \\__ ������������������������������������������������������". , *,." - -' - ���������������������������_*��������������������������� ��������������������������� m, - , , _.__,- I destroyed by fire, including some 85,- They were pleased -to note the pro-1 ��������������������������������������������������������������������������������� . ,- . . -,- -, , y , .. - :-:���������������������������- - :~ ..,. ,A . , ,. ., 000 feet oMumber cut and-piled-near gress made by the town and predict big things for Enderby.' Bicycle riding "on the station platform has resulted in several narrow ~escapes-from~accidentHx)=pedestrians,'ilV"v . , , , , , , . 7 21-h.p. gasoline engines. They of late, and orders have been issued1 ' P. -Hassard is-preparing to eipend $1,500'or $2,000 on the renovation of his farm home. Hc will brbk ������������������������������������������������������ "in-er the walls and point- it witn cement blocks. - the mill. The doss is estimated between $5,000 and' $6,000,. with no insurance. The mill was 100x20 feet in size,____an_d .was equippedj_with to prosecute the law breakers the first time caught. Rev. A. E. Roberts will occupy the pulpit in the Methodist church next Sunday morning and evenin?. He will also be in attcniaiice at ti.e an niversary supper to foe l.uld in the --schlool-room-Monday cven'.ti?. A. P. Crossman returned from the coast on Monday. Mr. Crossman passed the provincial examination and is now commissioned to practice law. He has taken over the business of W. E. Banton, and will have his office of attorney in thc Bell block. At a meeting held by thc kindness of Capt. Edwards in his house, it was decided last week to form a branck at Mara of the "Over-Seas" Club. The following officers were elected: President, H. Gordon Davies Secretary, Leonard S. Hewer; executive, Major Langdon, S. D. Hine, Chas. J. Davidson, Ei A. Robertson and W. Kenyon. Easter services will be observed in St. George's church as follows: Good Friday,- 8 a. m., ante-communion; 10.30 afm., Morning prayer and Litany; 12 to 3, the three-hours service. (Collection for work among the Jews.) 7.30, Evening prayer and meditation. Easter Day, 8 a.m., Holy communion; 10.15 a.m., Morning prayer; 11 a.m., Holy communion (choral); 3 p.m., Children's service and holy baptism; 7.30 p.m., Evening prayer. - were just finishing up a very successful season, and were about to move the machinery to another site. The origin of the fire is unknown, but it is presumed to have caught from a spark left smouldering in some unseen corner. The gasoline tanks did not explode until thc.mill was nearly burned .to the'grbiind: "^ BUILDING PERMITS FOR MARCH H. Byrnes, for Miss E. M. Forster, cottage at corner Regent and Sicamous streets; $1,500. F. Vincent, stable on Baird's lane, for A. M. Baird; $10. Walter Robinson, house corner Mill and Sicamous, $2,500. J. N. Grant, removal of stable from back of lot in to Cliff street.for S. Poison, $25. MARCELLUS JR. by her sister, Miss Hazel,. who was - " -'- -" charmingly dressed in pink and white1 - \\ Jfz and bore pink roses." The' groom was .; " <-y accompanied, by Mr. Sam Beooks,"' 1/&-'.ii> of the^ Brooks-Scanlon corporation,' ,-. -J- of Kentwood.La. 7' ., t '".=<' 77' 'Mrs. Chester Pratt presided"at the"- ' .~yy piano, and rendered 'Mendelssohn's '/'\\ ~ ^ 'Z/Z wedding march and^- Spring ������������������, Song ' *:7 $y with ,a charm and expression seldom- -*'������������������������������������������������������'���������������������������*J'J- ..*-���������������������������." y hcard. _ - . . ~. */������������������������������������������������������*���������������������������> r y"\\ ���������������������������*.'��������������������������� When congratulations were /over;jtj"^i Mr. Geo. Schmidt sang^ in his'accusf 7_r^T./E*| tomed .splendid style, ���������������������������"Beloved7it,isC~'it,?���������������������������?l ,Mo"rn,'''��������������������������� following���������������������������which,- after a7brief 7%/z-$������������������i'h intermission���������������������������-��������������������������� of - merrymaking,"-,-thef,,%7l7Vi < -1 .j. , "^ ** .%. ��������������������������� -.- ~\\-iJ^--,. ~~r,Zr _ _������������������.-. , i>i^____.���������������������������5;5_;'^r'jL(ju -guests-,were-"seated . to a sumptuous,sc.y?y% bridal 'dinner." 7 -^ "7'': yz~yzy v*.^H3^*- 7The following 7 guests'; we're'in at-;-*4 r!"^frC% I tendance:.'Out ibt'town���������������������������Mr>and- Mrs.���������������������������'TV,"t7'*8$l -F. .L.1 Buckley,'^ Mrs.7^ Chester Pratt^;.p-/^Z^\\ ^Mi(ss^Helen Pratt and Master Donald &t tlts&r&l ^ Pratt; Miss -pFaith- Lewis, Miss '-Hazel-;, l/r'Z H%\\ iStevens; "Mr.' Sam-"Brooks and '���������������������������Mi**!*'*,'**���������������������������'"' ' John Keyes. Enderby���������������������������Mr." and; Mrs.'^f'~\\' A. C_. * Leigliton, Mr. and Mrs. -F." R. / ( . H, Prince, .Mrs. F.- Vy Moffet, ?Mr.' and/ --/r :Mrs.-H. M. AValker, Mr. F." M. Lewis,';*;,;'. Mr. W.' J. Lemke,I-Dr/H.^wT'KeithI','''\\*-jj; the Misses .Mabel Beattie, Gladys ."', j --' Greyell, Pearl'Murray,'Maud Murray,- 7-.7 Edna Laing, Margaret "George,- Mar-<: V jorie Mowat, Francis Mowat,;-Esther - Moffet, aiid"'Messrs."^-Dr.* Crawford,^ Geo.'Schmidt,-G/L.' Williams, G.'_G.'7 Campbell and Milton Stevens." - Mr. and Mrs. - Keyes left, on the \\ - afternoon train "on a, trip through- the middle and southern states. They - will reach their southern home, Kent- ' woo_d,_La.,_by_the 1st of May. 1^'= ��������������������������� Thursday, April 11th, then., put ,on| Prizes aWardcdi lst and 2nd ladies, your best clothes, gather your family and lst and 2nd genticmen. Playing around you and take them to K. P Hall. During the show try not to laugh, and it will give you so much trouble that you will forget your grouch. will commence at 8.30 sharp. Admission, 75c;'refreshments free. CARD OF THANKS Mrs. Offerhause, her mother and family wish to offer their sincere Just arrived. Line of Men's Felt thanks to friends in Armstrong, Ver- Hats at $1.25, $1.5-0 and $1.75. Let non and Enderby for sympathy and us show them to you. J. W. Evans great kindness in their terrible bc- & Son, reavement, The people of Grindrod are antici-. pating big developments there this summer. Word has been received that the Dominion Investment Co., the people who have taken over the Carlin orchard lands proposition, intend to spend $125,000 on the property, and the company expects to clear all the land in 24 months. Fifty houses are to be erected by thc company, also a hotel at that point. A general store is to be put in this ] summer. Representatives of the new i company are expected to arrive at , Grindrod by thc 15th to start the work. Mr. Crandlemire arrived at Grindrod this week with a carload of settler's effects. His family are following. C. S. Handcock received word this week of the death of his mother, Mrs. E. Stratford-Handcock, at Newton House, Athlobe, Ireland, aged 83, on March 17th. Men's working shoes, overalls and gloves at lowest prices. J. W. Evans & Son, Pi ENDERBY PRESS AND WALKER'S WEEKLY ONE WAY O UT Copyright, 1911' Bg WILLIAM CARLETON [By Small, Mnynnrd & Co., Inc. CHAPTER VIII. (Continued.) Sunday \\\\7 E brought up an old blanket and T spread it out beneath the.canopy and that, with a chair or two, made uur root' garden. A local branch of lhc Public Library was not far distant .so tbat wu bad all tbe reading matter wo wanted and hero we used lo sit all day Sunday whon wo didn't feel like doin.. anything else. Here, too, we used to sit evenings. On several hot nights Ruth, the boy and 1 brought iio our blankets and slept out. The boy liked it so woll that finally be came to sleep up hero most of the summer. It was fine for him. The harbor breeze swept the air clean of smoke so that it was as good for him as being at tbe sea-shore. To us the sights from this roof were marvellous. They appealed strongly because they were unlike anything we had ever seen or for that matter unlike anything our friends had ever seen. I think that a man's friends often take away the freshness from sights that otherwise might move him. I've never been to Europe, but what with magazine pictures and snapshots and Mrs. Grover, who never forgot that before she married Grover she had travelled for a whole year, I haven't any special desire to visit London or Paris. I -suppose it would be different if I ever went, but even then I don't think there would be tbe novelty to it we "found from our roof. And it was just that novelty and the ability to appreciate it that made our whole emigrant life possible. It was for us the Great Adventure again. I suppose there are men who will growl lhat it's all bosh to say there is any real ro- man-e in living in four rooms in a tenement district, eating what we ate, digging in a ditch and mooning over a view from the roof top. I want to say right here that for such men there wouldn't be any romance or beauty in such a life/ They'd be miserable. There are plenty of men living down there now and they never miss a chance to air their opinions. Some of them have big bodies but I " wouldn't give them fifty cents a day tf work for me. Luckily, however, " there, are not many of them in proportion to the others, even though they make more noise. ' But"when you stop to think about it , what else-is it but romance that leads men to spend" their lives "fishing off the "Banks when they could remain safely ashore and get "better pay driving a * team? Or. what drives them into the "army or to -work on railroads when they neither" expect nor hope, to'- be advanced? Thc men themselves can't - tell you. " They, take up the work unthinkingly, but there is something in the very hardships they suffer which lends a sting to the life and holds , them. The only thing 1 know of that will do this and turn the grind into an inspiration is romance. It's what the new-comers have, and it's what our ancestors had ancl it's what a lot of us who have stayed over here too long out of the current have lost. On the lazy summer mornings we could '���������������������������hear the church bells and now and then a set of chimes." Because wc were above the street and next to the sky they sounded as drowsily musical as in a country village. They made me a bit conscience-stricken to think that for the boy.'s sake I didn't make an effort and go to some church. But Cor a while it was church enough to devote the seventh day to what the Bible says it was niade_fr>r,__ R_uth used to read out louci to us sufu-w������������������r planned to make our book suit thc day after a fashion. .Sometimes it was Emerson, sometimes Tennyson���������������������������I was fond of the Idylls���������������������������and sometimes Later on we had minister who bad An old battle flag will attract twenty foreigners to one American. And'incidentally I wish to confess it was they who made me ashamed of my ignorance of the country's history. Beyond a memory of tlie Revolution, the Civil War and a few names of men and battles connected therewith, I'd forgotten all 1 ever learned at school on this subject. I'.ut here the many patriotic celebrations arranged by the local schools in the endeavor to instill patriotism and the frequent visits of the boys to the museums, kept the subject fresh. Not only Dick, but Itulh and myself soon turned to it as a- vital part of our education. Inspired by the old trophies that ought to stand for so much to us of today we took from the library the first volume of Fiske's fine series ancl in the course of time read them all. As we traced the fortunes of those early adventurers who dreamed and sailed towards an unknown continent, pictured to* ourselves thc "lives of the tribes who wandered about in the big tangle of forest growth between the Atlantic and the Pacific, as we landed on the bleak New England shores with the early Pilgrims, then fought with Washington, then studied the perilous internal struggle' culminating with Lincoln and the Civil War, then the dangerous period of reconstruction with the breathless progress following-���������������������������Why it left us all better Americans than we had ever been in our lives. It gave new meaning to my present surroundings and helped me better to understand tho new-comers. Somehow all those things of the past didn't seem to concern Grover and the rest of them in the trim? little houses. They had no history ancl they were a part of no history. Perhaps that's becauso they were making no history themselves. As for myself, I know that f. was just beginning to get acquainted with my ancestors���������������������������that for tlie first time in my life, I was really conscious of being a citizen of the United States of America. But I soon discovered that not only the historic but the beautiful attracted these people. They introduced me to the Art Museum. In the winter following our first summer here,, when the out of door attractions were con: sidcrably narrowed down, Ruth and 1 used to go there about every other Sunday with the boy. We came to feel as familiar with our favorite pictures as though" they hung in'our own house. -The Museum ceased to be a public building; it .was our own. We went in with a nod to'the old doorkeeper, who came to know us, and felt as unconstrained there as at home. We had our favorite nooks, our favorite seats and we lounged about in the soft lights of the rooms i'or hours at a time. . The more we looked at- the beautiful paintings, the old tapestries, the treasures of stone and china, the more we enjoyed" them. We were sure to mcet\\ some of our neighbors thore and a young artist who lived on the second floor of our house and whom later J came to know very well, pointed out to us new beauties i'i tho eld masters. He was selling plaster casts at that time and studying art in the night school. I.i the old life, an art museum had meant nothing to me more than that it seemed a necessary institution :n every city. It was a mark of good breeding in a town, like the library in a good many homes. But it had never occurred to me to visit it and I know it hadn't to any of my former as- gi-if in i f������������������������������������8 -Tim woman occasionally. very a book of sermons, a call from a youn, a little minion chapel not far from our j Hal and who looked in upon us at the j snip's lion of the .'-eere-mry of the sel- | , tlemi'iit house. We wont lo a ser- j vicc'~at--ttt?-s cnnpel- oil'- .S'liiiLtV-iLiul p^u-.j fore w<> o',ii>clvf!5 realized il we were ; attending regularly wilh a zest and: interest which wc had never felt in i oar .suburban church-going. Later; in ���������������������������' went to a special exhibition thai was likely to be discussed at thc little dinners, but a week later they couldn't have I did you what they livid scon. Perhaps our neighborhood was liie ex- (.���������������������������cptiuii and a bit more ignorant than lhe average about sueh things, but I'll venture to say there isn't a middle- elat'S community in this eounlr.. where Iho paintings play the part Ir. the lives of lho people that they do among the foreign-boi'iiT "A" class" heller than limy does thc work; a class lower enjoys H. Where the middle-class conies in. I don't know. After being gone all the afternoon si ill \\\\ adi of us found a share and came to have a l we'd bo glad to get home .'igain rind ind contentment In i mav .Mead of my ! and the work ciirs'Mvi'S great satisfaction It. But I ain runnin;. story. We'd have dinner this first summer at about half past one and then perhaps we'd go for a walk. There wasn't a street in the city that terest us. but as a rule visit one of the parks, there were so many of them or thai they were so different. We had choice of the ocean or a river or woods. If we had wished, to spend say, thirty cents in car fare have had a further beach, the mountains, or a taste of the countrv which in places had not changed In lhe last hundred years. This would have given us a two hours' ride. Occasionally we did at'present there was too much within walking distance. For one thing it suddenly occurred to me that though I had lived in this city over thirty years I had not yet seen such places of interest as always attracted visitors from out of town, attention was brought to this the need of limiting amusements that didn't but chiefly by didn't in- we'd plan to I didn't know thai our the end. we could choice of the this, but to see My ���������������������������first by ourselvs to cost anything, learning where the better element down here spent their Sundays. Vou have only to follow owd to find out where the ob- national pride are located. this cr jects of ic we'd have a lunch of .'old beans biscuits or some of the pudding* lhat was left over. Then during the .summer months we'd go bac; to the roof for a restful evening. At night ih>; view was as different from the day as you could imagine. Behind us the city proper was in a bluish haze made by tbe electric lights. Then wc could see the yellow lights of Lhe upper windows in aii the neighboring houses and beyond these, over the roof tops which seemed now to huddle closer together, wc saw the passing red rind green lights of moving vessels. Overhead were thc same clean stars which were at the same time shining clown upon thc woods and the mountain tops. There was something about it that made me feel, a man and a free man. There was twenty years of slavery back of me to make me appreciate this. And Ruth reading my thoughts in my eyes used to nestle closer to me and the boy with his chin in his hands would stare out at-sea and dream his own dreams. my whole life, my imagination became tired with new plans. 1 saw no reason why J myself should not become an employer. As in the next few weeks 1 enlarged my circle of -acquaintances and pushed my inquiries in evory possible direction 1 found this idea was in tlie air down here. The ambition of all these people was towards complete independence. Hither they hoped to .:ol up in business for themselves in this country or they looked forward lo saving enough to return to the land of thoir birth and live there as small land owners. 1 speak more especially of the Italians because just now 1 was thrown more in contact with them than the others. hx rny city they, with the Irish, seemed peculiarly of real emigrant stuff. The Jews were so clannish that they were a problem in themselves; the Germans assimilated a little, better and yet they too were like one large family. They did not get into the city life very much and tven -in their business stuck pretty closely to one line. For a good many years they remained essentially Germans. But the Irish were citizens from the time they landed ancl the Italians eventually became such if by a slower pro- CC1S, The former went into everything. They are troTiendously adaptable people. But whatever they tackled they locked forward to independence and general'y wor it. Even a man of so humble an ambition as Murp^iv had accomplished this. The Italians either went into the fruit business for which they seem to have a ,-nack or served as day laborers ancl saved. There was a man down here who was always ready to stake them to a can and a supply of fruit, at an ixorbirant price L> be sure, but they pushed their carts patiently mile upon mile until in-the end they saved enough to buy one of their own. The next step-was a small fiuit store. The laborers, once they had acquired a working capital, took up many things���������������������������a lot of them going into the country and buying deserted farms. It was wonderful what they did with this land upon which the old stock New Englander had not been-able to live. But of course in "part explanation of this, you must remember t'.nt these. New England villages have long been drained of their best. In many cases only the maim, the halt, and "the blind are left and these stand no - more chance against the modern pioneer than they would against one of their own sturdy forefathers.- Another' occupation which the Italians seemed to pre-empt was the boot- blacking business. It may -seem odd to dignify so-menial an employment as a business, but. there is many a head of such an establishment who could show a fatter bank account than two- thirds of -his clients. The next, time you go into a little nook containing, say, fifteen chairs, figure out for yourself how many nickels-are left there in a clay. The rent is often high���������������������������it is some proof of a business worth thought when you consider Lhat thoy are able to pay for positions on'-' the leading- business streets���������������������������but thc labor is cheap and the furnishings and cost of raw material slight. Pasqualc had set rne to thinking long before, when 1 learned that he was earning almost as much a week as I. It is no unusual thing for a man who owns his "emporium" to draw ten dollars a day in profits and not show himself until he empties the cash register at night. But the facL that impressed me in these people���������������������������and this holds peculiarly��������������������������� \\ riip-nf-l |ip_.1pws���������������������������was-that-thev��������������������������� all sobriety and. honesty. A salary- with an old, strongly established company seemed to them about as big a stroke of luck for a young man as a legacy. 1 myself had hoped, to find a place for Dick with one. of: the big trust companies. Of course down here these people did not have the same opportunities. Most of the old firms preferred the "bright young American," and 1 guess they secured mos' of them. 1 pity the "bright young American," but I can't help congratulating the bright young Irishmen. They aro forced as a result to make business for themselves and they are given every opportunity in ilie world for doing il. And fhey aro doing it. Ancl J, breathing in this atmosphere, made up my mind that 1 would do it, too. With this in mind 1 outlined for myself a systematic course of procedure. Jt was evident that in this as in any othor business I must master thoroughly the details before taking up tlie larger problems. The details of this as of any other business lay at the bottom and so for these at least I was at present in the best possible position. The two most important factors to thc success of a contractor seemed to me to be, roughly speaking, the securing and handling of men ancl the purchase ancl use of materials. Of the two, tho former appeared to be the more important. Even in the few- weeks I had been at work here I had observed a big difference in the amount of labor accomplished by different men individually. I could have picked out a' half dozen that were worth more than all "-the others put together. Ana in the two foremen I had noticed another big difference in the varying capacity of a boss to get 'work out of the men collectively. In work where labor counted for so much in the final cost as hero, it appeared as though this involved almost tho whole question of profit and loss. With a hundred men employed at a dollar and a half a day, the saving of a single hour meant the saving of a- good many dollars. It may seem odd that so ,,obvious a fact was not taken advantage of by the present contractors. Doubtless it was realize'd, but my later experience showed me that tho obvious is very often neglected. _ In this business as in many others, Lhe details fall into a rut and often a newcomer with a fresh point of view will detect waste that has been going on unnoticed for years. I was. almost forty years old/ fairly him say a hundred such men- and by better treatment, possibly better pay7 possibly a guarantee of continuous work, make cf them a loyal, hard working machine with a capacity tor double the work of the ordinary gang? Such organization as this was going on in other lines of business, why not in this? With such a machine at his command, a man ought to make himself a formidable competitor with even the long established units. (To be continued.) CHAPTER IX. Plans for the Future As I said, with that first dollar in the ginger jar representing the first actual saving I had ever effected in shied away from the salaried jobs. In making such generalizations I may be running a risk because I'm only giving the results of my own limited observation and experience. But I want it understood that from the beginning to the end of these recollections I'm trying to do nothing more. Tin not a student. I'm not a sociologist. The conditions which I observed may not hold c-lsfwbere for all T know, From a diTi'orciit"iioinf of vYew,Jlhoy" might~"n ot Lo another .seem to hold even in my own city. I won't argue Willi anyone about it. I set down what I myself saw and let it go al that. Going back to thc small group among whom I lived when I was wilh the United Woollen, ft seems to me that evory malt clung to a salary na though it wero hi.s only possible hope. 1 know men among them who even refused lo work on a commission basis although they were practically s.ure of earning in this way double what they wero being paid by the year. They considered a salary as a form of insurance and once in tho grip of this idcii they had nothing Im look forward to except an increase. I was no better myself. I didn't really expect to be head of the firm. Nor did thc other men. We weren't working and holding on with any notion of winning independence along lhat line. The most we hoped for was a bigger salary. Some men didn't anticipate more thar twenty-five hundred like me, and others ���������������������������the younger men���������������������������talked about five thousand and even ten thousand. 1 didn't hear them discuss what they were going to do when they were general managers or vice-presidents,' but always what they could enjoy when thoy drew the larger annuity. And save those who saw in professional work a way out, this was the careei they wore choosing for their sons. They wanted to get them into banks and tin big companies where the assurance o' lazy routine advancement up to a cer tain point was the reward for industry, intelligent, and I had everything at stake. So I was distinctly more alert than those who retained thoir positions merely by letting things run along as well as they always had been going. But however you may explain it,-1 knew that the foreman didn't get as-much-work out of me,as he might have done. In spite of all the control 1 exorcised over myself I often quit work realizing that . half -my strength during the day had gone for nothing. And though "it may sound like boasting lo say it, I think I" worked both more conscientiously and" intelligently than most of the men. In the first place tlie* foreman was a bully. He' believed in driving his men. He swore at Ihem and goaded them as an ignorant countryman often tries to drive oxen. The result was a good deal the same as it is with oxen ���������������������������the men worked excitedly when under the sling and loafed the rest of the time. ' In a crisis, the boss was able to spur them on to their best��������������������������� though- even then they wasted strength in.frantic endeavor���������������������������but he. could not keep them up to a consistent level of steady work. And that's what counts. As in a Marathon race the men who maintain a steady plugging pace from start to finish aro the ones who accomplish. Thc question may bo asked how such a boss could keep his job. I myself did not understand that at first, but -lalG-p=a s=I���������������������������woi*ked=wi t-h=-d i ff oren t��������������������������� mciv and under different bosses 1 saw that it was because their methods, were much alike and that tho results were much alike. A certain standard had been established as to the amount of work that should be done by a hundred men and this was maintained. The boss had figured out loosely how much the men would work and thc men had figured out lo a minute how much they could loaf. Neither man nor boss Look any special interest In thc work itself. The men wero allowed to waste just so much time in getting water, in filling their pipes, in spitting on their hands, in resting on their shovels, in lazy chatter, and so long ns they did not exceed this nothing was said. The trouble was that lhe standard was low and this was because the men had nothing to gain by steady, conscientious work and also because Lhe boss did nol understand them nor distinguish between them. For instance the foreman ought to have got thc work of two men out of mo, but he wouldn't havo, if I hadn't chosen fo give it. That hold true also of Rafferty and one or two others. Now my idea was this: that if a man made a study of these men who, in this city at any rate, wero the key to the contractor's problem, and learned their little peculiarities, their standards of justice, their ambitions, their weakness and their strength, he ought to be able to increase their working capacity. Certainly an intelligent teamster does this with horses and it seemed as though it ought to be possible to accomplish still finer results with men. To go a little farther in my ambition, it also seemed possible to pick ���������������������������ind select the best of these men instead of taking them at random, For Instance In the present gang there were at least a half dozen who stood out as more intelligent and stronger ihvsically than all the others. Why couldn't a man in time gather about WHERE WIFE'S RELATIVES LEAD In England, where the quest ion of precedence is a vital one, even at family panics, there is a definite rule as to whose relatives shall go first, thoso of the wife or thoso of the husband. Thero are Severn I reasons for this being so. The wife's mother is taken in to dinner by her son-in-law, thc host, as he could not take his own mother or his own sister. Again, a wife could go in lo dinner with her brother-in- law, but not with hor own brother when other men guests were present. Concerning more distant relations thc case is different. A host couid take in his own married niece, ancl the hostess her nephew, but they would not do so if the wife's niece or Lho wife's nephew were present on lhe occasion. This because or Lhe preference usually accorded Lo Lhc relatives of thc wife over those of the husband. It is essentially at dinner parties that this question of precedence has to be considered, but in reality it comes to thc front throughout the day', not only at mewls, but on all those occasions where one or othor of the ladies must lake the lead. For instance, when a drive is proposed, either by carriage or by motor, the first to enter the vehicle is a relative of thc wife, mother or sister, followed by a relative of the husband, the hostess entering last. At luncheon the wife's mother often occupies the seat at the bottom of the table in Lhe absence of the host, and assists in doing the honors to the guests. At Lea she also assisLs her daughter in helping Lhe guesis to all they require in tho way of cakes ancl bread ancl butter, etc. At dinner sho is the first to be helped, as tho waiting commences from Lhe" host's right hand, and should the guests be helped in the order in which thoy are seated, and they happen to be numerous, unless thore are duplicate dishes,, Lhe relalives of Lhc husband have some little time'to wait in each course. The. signal for thc ladies Lo leave Lhe din-" ing-room is given by Lho hostess to the lady who is seated^at the host's right hand, hor. mother" in a family party, and she is the first to lead the", way from the dining-room to the drawing-room;- -followed -byv. the" "oilier- ladies, lhe hostess going last. The ad-, jo'urnmcht for the highij'is'made"iii a", like manner,-the proposal boing suggested by- the hostess to her moth'ciy iind carried out as aforesaid.7 Thus, it will be seen that throughout-the.- visit"- the honors of the situation arc bestowed upon the relations of the hos- -- toss, and this by general consent. THE SOWERS . Sowers went out to "sow, but diverse fortunes followed their sowing. The. first sower ' sowed the seed in fruitful ground which" his forefathers had cultivated from time immemorial. The seed ca me-forth and yielded the sower one hundredfold. The second sower "sowed thc seed in unfruitful ground which!workers had cultivated with their hands. - ~ The seed came forth and yielded the, sower ten fold. The third .sower sowed the seed' in stony ground, which lie had cultivated with his own hands and had covered with soil brought front afar. Thc seed came foi^th and yielded the sower twofold. =yA=nli=tii c poop itrWiTtirWfri aTT^i!^tl==n=tr him who reaped only the twoiol',1, and cried out: "Sec, thc poor man, what a pitiful crop he has raised! " '.But a wise man passed by, pressed tlio sweaty hand of the third sower, and said: "Brother, a blessing on you, pinl your harvest will bring you joy,'for your'crop Wiis raised on ground which never before was en If ivii f ed. The j'esljire. .Li v ing. "upon life"labor of'others. "Vou alone an. ii creator." CHILDHOOD IN JAPAN The great day In the Japanese child's life Is tho Mirayamalri, or the templo visit, which may be said lo correspond roughly with tho Western chrislening. The infant, if a boy, on Lhe thirty-first clay, ancl ir a girl, on the thirty-third, is carried to the templo and is placed under the guardianship of a special deity chosen by the parents. For this occasion the mosL beautiful crepe clothes Lhat the parents or grandparents can afford are used, consisting of a set of' three; the outer one being marked with the family crest and gay with silk linings. Except in dress, no difference is made in thc first yoar or two of a male, or female infant's life. White is the color of mourning, and is never used for children. Scarlet is the baby's color, but after Lhe first year the boy baby's clothes are of blue or brown and black striped materials, while the kimono of the little girl is much brighter, with large patterns of birds and flowers and leaves, with a profusion of crimson and pink, which, diminishes with age, Childhood in Japan is certainly a very happy time. It never has beon necessary to form a society for the prevention of cruelty of children, and proverbs such as this show how tenderly they are cared for and how fully their importance is recognized in the household: "Kodakara," or "Children are treasures." I' 1 w ���������������������������1 IX-A IV- KXDKRMY PRESS AND AV ACKER'S WEEKLY The Nailer lounged across to Pretty Agnes; Mollic S(|iiint, whose heart was kindly, followed hiin. "W'y don't yousc lap up your suds?" queried tlio Nailer, pointing to the beer. Then, without waiting for a return, he continued, "Where's Sammy?" "Oil, 1 don't know," burst from Pretty Agnes, whose manner was that of one half desperate. "Nailer, I'm .simply fretted bally." "Will's gone crooked, dear?" put In Mollio Squint, soothingly. "Youse ain't been puttin' on th' mills wll' Sammy?" "No," replied ProlLy Agnes, Lhe Lears beginning lo flow; "me an' Sammy's all right. On'y hc won't listen!" Then suddenly pointing with her finger, she exclaimed: "Tliere! It's him I'm wor- ,ryin' about!" The Nailer and Mollic Squint glanced in the direction indicated by Pretty Agnes. She was pointing at the Ghost. The Ghost had jusl come in, and had sidled i.nlo a chair. IL musL be admitted that there was much in his appearance Lo dislike. His lips wore loose, his eyes half closed and sleepy, while his chin was cat-like, relrcal- ing, unbased. In figure he was undersized, slope-shouldered, slouching. When hc spoke, his voice drawled, and Nearly all children are subject to worms, and many are born with them. Spare tliem suffering by using Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator, the best remedy of the kind that can^be had. CURED BY GIN PILLS "Bridgeville, N.S. "For twenty, years T have ' been troubled with Kidney and Bladder Trouble, and have been treated by many doctors, but found litlle relief. I had given up all hope of getting cured when I tried Gin" Pills. Now, I can say with a happy heart that I was cured. "DANIEL, F. FRASER." Write us for free sample of Gin Pills to try. Then get lho regular size boxes aL your dealers, or direcL from us���������������������������50c. a box, 6 for if2.50. Money refunded if Gin Pills fail to cure. National Drug - & Chemical Co. of Canada, Limited. Dept- R.P., Toronto. Well, Well! THIS J$ a HOME DYE lhat ANYONE can use ^ I dyed ALL *hese ���������������������������^XDIFFERENT KINDS of Goods 7=^���������������������������������������������������������������������������������- * with the SAME Dye- *' I usedf J0NEDYM\\I1KINK"^| NO clisincu of ti_lnc the WRONG Dye for the Goods oiH- lins to color. A'l color* from your Urugui'it or Dealer. IRUE Color Ciril nml STORY llooklct 10, Tlie Joliiison-lUclinriLsoii Co.. Limited, Montreal, ������������������M,=������������������,������������������jutt_,cae������������������i _n_*. *������������������ FGcSur,ile_Si(_nalure ol7 . NEWr VORK: 1 I'll i IM jl Willi!'.! has merit. Is.not its its continued use by mothers through all.these -:��������������������������� years," and the many attempts to-imitate it, sufficient, recommendation? "What can-a physician add?, Leave it'to tho mothers."- '"���������������������������. **'��������������������������� -*��������������������������� % * ':, * Dr. Edwin. F. Pardee, of Now York City, says: "For several years I havo' recommended your Castoria and shall always continue to do so, as'it" has; invariably produced beneHcial results." " ^ ~' "~ *��������������������������� -? ' _- f. J Dr. N. B. Sizer, of*Brooklyn, N. Y., says: "I object to what are called' patent medicines, "where" maker alone knows what ingredients are put Ja* them, but I know���������������������������the formula of your Castoria and advise its use."- i, 7_ 7 GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS - WJ-3. I /*���������������������������-. ������������������. .-^b- .- ��������������������������� ���������������������������. .A t b?j^ohth s old '.���������������������������"'" p.. EXACT COPV OF WRAPPER; to.. *aft V c"l*i''"T'"*LJL i _ - A\\ \\j '���������������������������"���������������������������-it; -,_ , j*-- -<������������������ .i-"i?rf L rT * '< *--i t^ - r1 -i -a-rr I Exact Copy of Wrapper. Why suffer from corns when they can be painlessly rooted out by using li i Holloway's Corn Cure. In Use For Over 30 Years, THE CENTAUR COMPANY. NEW YORK CITV heard the eager voice of a" woman saying: "Promise for'promise, and word for word! ; Take me!���������������������������havo me!���������������������������wear me! ' Whocwouldn't give soul and-body i'or th'-death of,a snitch?���������������������������for th' blood of th' Ghost?���������������������������for-a snake that will bite no-more?" LITERATURE AND MARRIAGE No one has put the case so pertinently as Do Quincey when ,he says that the wives and children of literary men create "for them thc deadliest of =theiiu=^anxietieSi=iU=is=pthej������������������=who=stuf������������������ the writing man's pillow with thorns nnd surround his daily life with snares, To a man of family who has no resources except what his pen may yield, what a maddening thought it is that some day he may be face to face with sudden failure of his resources, and to know that instant ruin atends his failure to exert so delicate an organ as the creative intellect. Do Quincey sufforpd tills forrihlp Anxiety: nnd so did ~13ur7is,~ pcrlKips~ovbri In orb- poignantly. Balzac says that the author, should have neither wife nor children, that ho should in common honesty to others tread his path alone, and Splelhagen, thc groat Gorman novelist, Flaubert, Byron, Waller Savage Landor, and others reinforce this opinion. Vet it tliere is a man in the world needs tlie love nnd sympathy of a wife it is the literary man. But in literature's annals the fact stands forth lhat, of nil men, authors have been the least happy in their domestic lives. Shakespeare, from his own bitter experience, announced that a young man married is a man that's marred. Milton sang of "Paradise Lost," and he experienced it with three successive wives. Addison escaped from his Countess to Wills Coffee-house ancl the geniality of Steele and fellow writers. Tlie modern author escapes through tho divorce court, whither Bulwer, Lytton, ana Byron would have found their release had they been of to-day. Dickens' domestic troubles have' never been satisfactorily explained, but he said it was "a case of incompatibility of'temper���������������������������whose he did not "state.v, And it is much,- 'this incompatibility of temper���������������������������temperament, too���������������������������from Xantip- pe downward���������������������������which, apart from the living wage question,'lies at the back of the question. - There have been wives "who were to their author-husbands both their comfort and their stay. Lamartine "and John Stuart Mill had life partners who were perfectly ' congenial. Beacons- field, in his dedication in "Sybil," terms his "a perfect wife." Dr. Johnstone's ^Letfy-��������������������������� mn dc���������������������������him���������������������������V-ery^iappy^and. hc never ceased to miss her and mourn her death. Guizot and his wife Avere as twin-souls, and so were that incomparable pair, Robert Browning and his helpmate. Wordsworth's wife Avas a "phantom of delight" to him, while Shelley's second von lure proved a fortunate choice, the strongest bond of sympathy and affection existing between tho married pair. If the liter- nry man >will marry, his wife���������������������������lo get down" r6"the-boiic.s"of lhe-nulllor^ should be either a plain-minded wo man, who can, occupy herself * exclu-7 sively with household'.matters' and shield her husband's peace, by" taxiing ' on herself more than the darning of his'socks, or else a-woman_ capable of* entering unaggressively "into his liter-- ary life. - - _.���������������������������'-... :-,,-. .- ^. yv When Your Eyes Need Care Try Murine Evo KiMncuy. No Siimrllna���������������������������Feels Fine���������������������������AcLh Quickly. Try It tor Ili-d, Weak, Watery 15yca find Granulated Eyelids. Illustrated Doolc in eaoli Paeli.'iRC. Murine Is compounded by our Ooulliis-iiol a'Tiuenp Mort- ielnu"���������������������������but, ii&eu In sucucsblul I'liyMcliiiis' J'rac- tico for many voais. Now dudlcuiud to tlio Public and sold bv'Drii.'Kisls at 25o nnd Mc jiorlloulo. Minim- Kyo Salvo In Asopllc Tubes, 2,k; and 60'.'. iVIurino Eyo Remedy Co., Chicago TITLE WOULDN'T SAVE HIM * A certain gentleman who had acquired riches rather quickly, purchased '- an-estate on the banks of the River - Clyde which adjoins those' of Lord, Blantyre and Sir Charles; Bine-Ren-,' shaw,=^Strolling^through=his=place_one=^ day he chanced to go-too far and was ������������������������������������������������������ accosted by a burly Scotch game-keeper, who in language more forcible than*- polite ordered him off. the grounds. Remonstrance only produced more "langwidge" from the burly ono. "Sir," said thc pompous one, "do you know who I am? I am the Faulds of Ardgeriff!" "I don't care if you are the Falls of Niagara,"- ani'd the same-keeper, -"ye're goon~oot "o* this?' Too many honest people make the" mistake of trying to beat a swindler at his own game, Mfs Cure Oni-ntjc HEALS THE I.UNGS UJU-yiS PRICE. 25 CiiNTS It Rubs Pain Away.���������������������������There is no liniment so efficacious in overcoming pain as Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil. The hand that rubs lt In rubs the pain away and on this account there is no preparation that stands so high in oublic esteem. There is no surer painkiller procurable, as thousands can attest who have used it successfully in treating many ailments. WMM Rifle and Pistol Cartridges. The proof of thc pudding is the eating ; the proof of the cartridge is its shooting. The great popularity attained by Winchester rifle and pistol cartridges during a period of over 30 years is the best proof of their shooting qualities. They always give satisfaction. Winchester .22 caliber cartridges loaded with Smokeless powder have the celebrated Winchester Greaseless Bullets, which make them cleaner to handle than any cartridges of this caliber made. ALL SUCCESSFUL SPORTSMEN USE THEM. 127 THE ENDERBY PRESS AND WALKER'S WEEKLY Thursday, April 4, 1912 /V '{J Beauties Come and see them A. REEVES Druggist & Stationer Cliff St. Knd.'1-by SECRET SOCIETIES A. SUTCLiFFE W. M. A.F.&A.M. Enderby Lodge No. 40 tejrular meetings first Thursday on vr :if{er th<- full moon at S p. ni. in 0$Td- fellows II at). Yieitinp brethren eordially invited. F. H. BARNES Secretary KI. 0.0. F. "^SHi^ Eureka Lodjrc No. i0 . Meets every Tuesday uveninjf at 8 o'clock, in I. 0. O. V. hall, Metcalf block. Visiting- brothers always welcome. J. C. MKTCA I,F. N. G. . It. rO. WHEELI3K. Secy. "J. B. GAYLORU, Treas. ^ ENDERBY LODGE No. 35, K. of P. ^-<7 'Ai v tv������������������������������������������������������ Meets every Monday evening Vc$&������������������i������������������3l in K- of P. Hall. Visitors cor- ' ^^ dially invited to attend. FRED. P. MOORE'.'CC. G. E.STKICKLAND. K.R.S. - -, -It. .7. COLT ART; M.F. Hall suitable fo Concerts. Dances and all puLlic entertainments. For rate.", etc.. address;1 ' JAS. MOWAT. Hell Bile. Enderby PROFESSIONAL p W. CHAPMAN "~ -^ ��������������������������� [Orsranist at St. Gcor������������������e's Church] Visits or receives pupils for Piano, Orfran, Violin, Siniini. and Theory of Musie, Etc. Address, P. P. Pox 81. Enderly. W ALTER ROBINSON NOTARY PUBLIC CONVEYANCER Agreements of Sale. Deeda & Mortgages. Docu- msnts WitnosBed. Loan* Negotiated Office: Polion & Robinson. next door Pulton's west, Enderby, li. C. E NDERBY COTTAGE HOSPITAL ' MISS WARWICK. Proprietrcas Maternity Fees. $20 per week Fees coverinR ordinary illnenn, 12 per day. Hospital Tickets, half yearly and yearly, tl per mon th. ENDER R Y. R. C. ���������������������������G, L. WILLIAMS Dominion and Provincial I/Jind Surveyor Bell Block Enderby, B.C. D R. H. W. KEITH, Office hours: Forenoon, 9 to 10:H0 Afternoon. 1 to 4 Evening. 0:30 to *7:H0 Sunday, by uppoiiitinent Offiro: C������������������r. PlifT nnd Coor/eSts. KNI������������������ERP,Y w. E. BANTON, Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public, Conveyancer, etc. Offices, Bell Block. Enderby,B.C. ���������������������������KH������������������. 1JI4-I111 i'.U EurraeftstnTarextMKM __P0LiTI_CAL_ "ENDERBY" CONSERVATIVE u ASSOCIATION .1. L. RUTTAN, A. F. CROSSMAN President. Secretary. ENDERBY PRESS Published every Thursday at' Enderby, B.C. at 52 per year, by the Walker Press. Advertising Rates: Transient, 50c an inch first insertion, 25c: each subsequent insertion. Contract iulvertisini.. Jl an inoli per month. Lei������������������il Notices: 12l, a line first insertion; 8e a line each subsequent insertion. Readinir Notices and Locals: )5c a line. able the electors of the provjn.'.e w\\\\ be in any hurry to waken it from the dead. .MAUNDY THURSDAY APRIL A. 1912 SORE, OH, SO SORE ! To-day is '���������������������������Maundy Thursday. The term is ugly, but it has a beautiful meaning. It is borrowed from Eng- ' land, and from a very early English j word, Alatind, meaning basket��������������������������� j maund and nrauudy having come to | signify articles given in charity or I from kindness. From very early Y ��������������������������� time thc day before 3ood Friday has ' j been marked by acts of humility and kindness to the lowly on the part of ��������������������������� those in high places, in memory of the Savior's act of washing the feet of his followers, and serving as a servant those who really were unworthy to unlatch his shoes, on the eve of his passion. Sovereigns, princes, ecclesiastics small and great, laymen of high degree, for hundreds of years thought it fitting to their religious profession to lay aside personal dignity on this occasion and condescend to the menial act of washing the feet of paupers, then sending them forth i with gifts of food, clothing and | money. ANNUAL FLOWER SHOW It is not surprising that George E. McCrossan, president of thc Liberals Association, Vancouver, should feel sore. After the strong light put up by his party in Vancouver, to be defeated and completely wiped out, is no laughing matter, and we could hardly expect Mr. Mc-| -rossan to waken up on "the morn-' uig after" with i'cz tce-hces. But we oel that we might reasonably expect' rfr. McCrossan to act the gentleman1 j.en if it is not in his make-up to bej jno. It is not much wonder that the liberal party should have met such crushing defeat when it is realized how far it has fallen. When a man like McCrossan can be raised to the high place of president of the parent organization of the Province, what may wc expect of the rank and file ?i . McCrossan, as wc eaid before, is: .preparations for thc Annual Flower president of the Liberal organization'Show are already well in hand. The of Vancouver. The morning after the following prizes will be given. Se- election thc following appeared in the iect what you are going to try for Vancouver Sun, from *> McCrossan's an(_ make every effort to produce the pen: j best: "It was impossible to put up a i, fight against loaded dice, with a vo- ties, ters' list loaded with dead men and 2. fictitious names of persons who never: 3. existed in the flesh; against thc com-! 4. bincd campaign contributions of three 5. railroad corporations whose grafting 6. tentacles have a strangie-hold on the 7. public resources, the credit ami the s. treasury of the province; against a stocks, asters. loaded voters' list; a campaign barrel 9. Eight named sweet peas, 4 each, of huge proportions; the active co- 10. Four varieties of pansies, 3 ol operation and corrupt influences of each kind, thc railroad corporations increasing- 12. Best bunch wild flowers, ly working for the return of their, ll. -Best variety of dahlias, not railroad-owned, government; against, less-than-8:blooms': * tlie grinding activities of thousands 13. Collection of house plants, of. paid hirelings owned by as corrupt" 14.' Best grown fern, a machine as ever operated in an Children's Exhibit election anywhere;*" against the com- 15. Best collection of cut garden bined activities of an organized cor- flowers. ' '"''.- nipt airJ partisan service ; against 16. Best bunch of sweet peas, 6 of Bank of Montreal EstablishccriS17 CAPITAL all paid-up, $15,413,000: REST, $15,000,000.00 Hon. President, Rt. Hon. Lord Strathcona and Mount Royal G. U. M. G. President, R. B. Angus, Esq. Vice-President, Sir Edward Clouston, Bart. General Manager, H.V.Meredith BRANCHES IN LONDON, ENG., NEW YORK and CHICAGO. SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT Deposits received from $1 upwards, and interest nllowcd at current rates. Interest credited ,10th June and 31st December. A. E. Taylor, Manager ENDERBY BRANCH Where the Gourlay is Made Best collection of roses, 8 varie- 2 of each kind. Six named roses, 2 of each kind. Four varieties of carnations. Best group of lilies. Best collection of perennials. Best collection of annuals. Best 12 zinnias, assorted blooms Best collection of begonias, the organized and systematic electioneering activity of-.the hotel and the liquor vote with all its rotten in-, flucnces; against a lavishly subsidized and venal press. "It was not to be expected that the Liberal party, presenting as it did,! nothing but a campaign of education,! could hope to elect more than a cou-j pie of candidates at the most, any-j where in the province. But the fact: a kind. 17. Best kind. 18. bunch, of pansies, 2 of a 26. that the entire province has gone; unanimously Tory emphasizes this: fact : _ That the British Columbia' electorate stands, to its shame, for amateurs only branded as the most corrupt, servile and venal electorate on the American continent. ==^Gi*anting-^a!l==the-=odds--again8t=a Best pot plant. Vegetables 19. Six each ,of early potatoes. 20. Six each of carrots. 21. Six each of onions. 22. Four heads of sweet corn. 23. Three heads of celery. 24. Two heads of cabbage! 25. Best 12 pods of peas. Best 12 pods of beans. Best collection of vegetables, TO CRICKETERS ! free expression of public opinion, and making all allowances for the tremendous handicap the intelligent expression of electoral opinion was under, notwithstanding all that, it must be admitted that thc indifferent 1 electors who did not vote and thc purchasable electors who did vote, alike stand _ as having approved of colossal graft, spoliation of thc public domain and corruption of thc province. I "That being Lhc proper analysis of| the situation, Lhc conclusion follows! with cold but biting logic, that the! elcctoraLc approving such becomes' slumped with the same brand. The' A meeting_wll_b_e_hcld_,_in_the_City_ Hall on Saturday, April 6th, at 3.30 p. m., to decide upon the formation of an Enderby cricket club. All those interested are earnestly requested to attend. LEO VARLEY, Sec. p.t. NOTICE To whom it may concern": I will not longer be rcsponniblo for any debts-contracted" by"Mrs. Hcse- kiah Elliott in my name, HEZEKIAH ELLIOTT, (his fx) mark) Enderliy, II. C, Mch 21, 1912. A NEW* DISCOVERY Machela, Nature's Scalp Tonic, the Enderby Pool and Billiard Parlor THREE regular l'ool Tallies ONE > uII-Hizul Milliard Tab)? Opp.WalKer Press Oflice ���������������������������. BIGHAM. Vruv. British Columbia electorate have de- only remedy ever discovered that is clarcd themselves to thc world to be similar to the natural hair foods or spoliators and grafters. We need not liquids for the scalp. Has a record mention at Lhe same time that they for growing hair���������������������������95 cases out of 100 are common, ordinary fools." Price for complete home treatment, Just read McCrossan's "proper an- ?L00. Sold and guaranteed by A. alysis" over again. How generous he Reeves. is in his praise. Mow child-like and 1 ������������������������������������������������������ ^_j���������������������������:_ . ,_ ; bland in his conceit. How simply! killing in his grandiloquence. Mr.' BLANCHARD & ENGLISH Enderby, B. C. Kwong Chong NEW LAUNDRY ENDERBY, B. C. Family Washing collected weekly. First-class workmanship. Satisfaction guaranteed. Contractors & Builders McCrossan thinks the electors of B. C. arc "spoilators," "grafters" and "common fools." If McCross-an had the gift that tiie Poet Burns prayed for he would realize, perhaps, what a big-eared animal he has made of himself and his party. Liberalism in British Columbia IB slesping. If j Firil-eUw Cabinet Work ami PicLuruKramiDir. McCrossan is an example of the best Undertaking Parlors in connection. material that party can produce to ��������������������������� head its organization, it is not prob-' Next to City Hall. fo-^LEEMING PUNS f ASTOBY. The great factory where is produced Canada's sweetest toned and most popular piano. And into this piano is built the Angelus, the world's most effective piano-player ���������������������������the piano-player witlrthe- human touch. No.home is complete without one of.these instruments. For prices and term's see-1 J. E. CRANE, Aftent also fer Church and Parlor Organs Also l-'irc sind Life Insurance Odicein brick block opp. The Walker Press. Enderby A������������������cnt Finest in the Country "Enderby is a charming villiage with city airs. When Paddy-Murphy shook the snow of Sandon 777" , off his feet he 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, - Iii addition to''the"ex- "���������������������������- cellence of the meals, breakfast is served up to 10 o'clock, which is an added attraction for tourists." - " ' (Extract from Lowcry's Ledi;e.) King Edward Hotel, L^mmY Enderby When Home Building Has it ever occurred to you that in building a frame house, costing say $2,000, you are losing every" year $100, or 5 per cent, in depreciation, apart from the cost of repairs, as the life of a. frame house is about 20 years at the outside? Build brick and you will have a house that needs no repairs to the- walls and will be worth as much, or more, 50 years hence as it is to-flay, saving you quite a considerable sum in painting, insurance, ami fuel meanwhile. A large stock of first-class ��������������������������� brick now on hand. ' The Enderby Brick & Tile Co. Enderby- Deer Park Fruit Land E N D E R B Y No Irrigation Required ���������������������������.These'lands.are situated-on-the benches near Enderby and are especial-��������������������������� ly suited (or Fruit and Vegetables, and, having been in crop, are in splendid condition for planting. An experienced fruit grower is in charge and will give instruction to purchasers free of charge, or orchards will be planted and cared for at a modernto charge. 1G0 acres, sub-divided into 20-acre lots are now on the market at $150 per acre. Get in on the first block and make money on the advance, Apply to��������������������������� GEORGE PACKHAM, Deer Park Land Office, Enderby. Are YOU going to do any building this Spring ? AVE HAVE A PEW SPECIALTIES WHILE THEY LAST- Cull boards, $5.00 per thousand. No. 2 Dimension, $12.00 per thousand. Some cheap Flooring, Ceiling and Drop Siding, $10.00 thousand No. 3 Cedar Bevel Siding, $10.00 thousand. Also some short Moulding at a reduced price. Get in early on some of the above bargains. OKANAGAN SAW MILLS, Ltd. Enminimum wage. Another Fatal Fire. Prince Albert, Sask., March 27.��������������������������� (Special to tlie News.)���������������������������Two real estate men, Robt. Drysdale and Jas. Homestag, were burned to death last night in a fire which destroyed premises in which they and 26 other persons were sleeping. swept the business district yesterday did damage to property to the extent of at least $100,000. The Cosmopolitan Hotel, Royal Bank and several stores were destroyed. An unknown Italian lost his life. tional funds for the Verkshrstruppeii, which include the flying arm. It is believed that the lion's share of this increase is destined for the expansion of the aeroplane' fleet and for the creation of "flying garrisons" at strategic points on the frontiers.��������������������������� Montreal Standard. A Heavy Engagement. The King's Thanks. Victoria, March 27.��������������������������� (Special to tlie News.) Premier McBride has received a message from King George thanking the people of British Columbia for the address of congratulation .to His .Majesty on the occasion of the coronation. Fire at Ulaiiiiiore. Blairmore, B. C, March 27. ��������������������������� (Special to the News).���������������������������A fire which St. Petersburg, March 25.���������������������������A dispatch from Kulja, Chinese Turkestan, reports1 a, battle between government troops from Urumptsi and revolutionary forces near Shikho. The government troops, according to the dispatch, lost 1,500 killed, 80 prisoners and three guns. The rebels lost 200 killed. . Aid to Local Telephones. Ottawa, March 27.��������������������������� (Special to the News). ��������������������������� The supplementary estimates total $19,610,039, with the ��������������������������� main estimates, the, total appropriation for the year is $169,- 499,717. They include " $100,000,- 000 for a Dominion Government building in London. A subsidy of $7,000 was voted for the telephone line between Kelowna and Penticton. Richard Harding Davis, at a luncheon in New York, illustrated with a story.a literary critic's ignorance. "He is as ignorant of letters," he said, "as Aunt Tibitha was of betting. "A young New Yorker took his bucolic Tibitha to the races. At the end of the first race he said: " 'I think, aunt, I'll put a V on Po- dasokus at 10 to 1.' '"Oh, but you're too late, nephew,' said Aunt Tabitha, glancing at her old-fashioned watch. 'It's 10 to 2 now.' " Experience in Meat Buying It takes years of experience in handling to know* what "pretty" in meat means. Our Meat Market is perfectly equipped to serve meats in fine condition���������������������������ice- chests to keep the right temperature, sanitary surroundings, no poisonous odor. Quick delivery from our ice-chests to yours. Beef, Veal, Lamb, etc., at pleasing prices. A. E. Maundrell -: AT THE NEW STAND ODDS AND ENDS. Stanley Jordon, the .well known Episcopal minister, having cause, to be anxio'us about his" son's college examinations, told him to telegrapr the result. The boy sent the following message: "Hymn 342, fifth verse, last two lines." Looking it up, the father found the words: Sorrow vanquished, labour ended, Jordon passed.'' The teacher in the primary, department' of a Philadelphia school had been holding forth at some length with reference to .the three grand divisions of nature���������������������������th*e animal, the vegetable and the mineral. When she had finished she put this luestion: "Who can tell me,what the highest form of animal life-is?*!" Whereupon the pupil nearest her hastened to . supply , the answer, as follows:^' ��������������������������� ' "-.���������������������������'- '. r "The giraffe." '. /- >.''.-" An old Scotsman was so very optimistic that he had but one consolatory remark from any friend who was in trouble: "It micht hae been waur." -. A friend, who had suffered from this apparent lack of sympathy that he thought was his due, resolved to get even, and called one evening on the old Scotsman,, all prepared to do so. ."Geordie," he said, "I had an awful dream aboot you last nicht." "Aye, man Sandie, and what was that?" "Weel, Geordie, I dreamt ye were dead." "Man; man, Sandie, that was bad; but it micht hae been waur." "Aye, Geordie, but it wis waur. I dreamt ye were dead and had gone to the 'bad place.' " "Losh me, Sandie! Me an elder in the kirk, dead an' ��������������������������� gone to the 'bad place?' This was fearsome, that wis awfu'; but���������������������������-it micht hae been waur."- "Hoo," says Sandie, "could it he waur than that?" "weel, ye ken, it micht hae been true!" r. " -.. "More rational methods of orchard cultivation are absolutely essential to permanent' control of this disease. Its prevalence this year has aroused much needless apprehension in the minds of fruit growers. The disease can be avoided almost entirely by the proper methods. It is significant that good intentions rather than wanton negleot, have brought it on, to a very large degree. ��������������������������� ��������������������������� * In view of the possible injury which may be caused our Province by needless alarm, it is to be hoped that fruit growers will investigate the subject rationally, and, having formed their conclusions, work out the remedy best adapted to their own orchards. LOCAL OPTION CHANGES Mr. A. B. McNeill -jf Vancouver has been ""appointed president of the Provincial Local Option League, Mr. R. H. Cairns resigned. Dr. Ernest Hall has been appointed General Secretary without salary, to take the place of Rev. Dr. Spencer, - resigned. Miss Myrrhna MacPayden nas been made office secretary, Miss Maggie Camp bell resigned. , TENDERS "Tenders for Purchase of Buildings: Trinity Valley Bridge." Sealed tenders marked as above will be received by the undersigned up to the 13th day of April, 1912, for the purchase of the buildings used as a shelter and as a cook house during the construction ' of the Highway Bridge over the , Shuswap River at Baxter's Crossing'. The highest or. -.any tender not ne- cessarliy accepted.. HAMILTON LANG. - Government Road Superintendent."' Public W.orks' Department, Vernon, B. C, March 30th, 1912._ * ,; For Sale���������������������������Hupmobilc; guaranteed in good running order. Four cylinder, 20 h.p. Condition ��������������������������� equal to new.. Cheap for cash. Apply, R.", Waddell. 7 Harvey & Rodie , ���������������������������' j\\ i The German army - estimates for: 1912 provide for $623,750������������������ of "addi- BETTER METHODS URGED Commentihg on the prevalence of what is known -.a*s "brown rot", in apples, Provincial , Horticulturist Winslow."^ concludes -a recent'-paper with this suggestion and recommend-, atibn:- .' ,~ <" -r -' ��������������������������� ~ "��������������������������� >" 7 ���������������������������srsfflrswi Real Estate, Insurance, Etc. Poat Office Block, Enderby GOOD land in SMALL acreage, VERY close to town, on the MONTHLY' PAYMENT (without -nterest) plan, is a new thing." - ':7r ��������������������������� *��������������������������� WE ARE SELLING THIS RIGHT ALONG. '. 7..' See us for fair dealing. Big variety of propositions/and'no urging to buy i> - -, ,.. "���������������������������-''I ���������������������������Ml '/ Get Our List Fire, Life. Accident Insurance Ag encies REAL ESTATE -Fruit Land -"--" Hay.Land -' Town Lot* The Liverpool & London & Globe Ins. Co. 7, - The Phoenix Insurance Co.df London.- ',:. *-- Ln Ui-L.nentiir_ Fire Insurance Co��������������������������� 7 - - Royal Insurance Co..of Liverpool (Lifedept j The London ft Lancashire Guarantee\\'"-[ 'v-fT t '-Accident Co.,' of Canada. i\\ - ,s..- Z'/' ���������������������������.y,-'y \\-i7fy% r\\a\\.%0i : **' -ean -*>������������������ i~f "... -"Co* These need paint tovkeepthcni in good shape adam A synonym fod'.bfouflMy seasoned libber, skilled workmanship and neat finish" , o Says the Little Paint Man. We don't always realize what harm the wear and tear of thc weather does to our houses and barns and buggies and wagons that are not protected by good paint. Buildings that have not been painted or on which the paint has worn off, are exposed one .day to the wet and the rain, the next day to the hot sun and so on, until the unprotected wood twists and warps and cracks and the rot starts. So a building that should be in good repair at the end of 50 years, if it had been kept properly painted, goes to rack and ruin in J 5 or 20. And think how it looks. Why don't you paint this spring with Sherwin-Williams Paint, Prepared? Made of pure lead, pure zinc, pure linseed oil and the necessary coloring pigments and driers, all mixed and ground by special machinery. Come and see us, we want to talk paint to you. XY77S Our motto: "The best in every line, at the lowest possible price." THE WAGON THAT LASTS The Boxes are constructed of the best southern box boards, iron banded and securely braced; extra heavy bottoms reinforced over thc bolsters. - Heavier than any other bottoms made. Other special features are ri vetted, wheel.*, patent end Sate and patent truss skeins that add double thc carrying capacity without additional weight. Made in all sizes and handled by thc COCKSHUTT PLOW COMPANY, LTD. Also a complete lino of lorries, heavy teaming gcirtt, dump carta, stock racks and .low wheel trucks.__CataIoguc..atid .descriptive .matter .on application: __Gct_full par-__ ticulars from ^y-rVy.l We stock Wagons/Buggies, Plows, Disc Harrows, Seeders Cultivators, Churns, Milk Pails ancl Pans, Barb-wire,' Woven-wire Fencing���������������������������everything ftr the Farmer. Now is the time when you want Fencing. Poultry Netting, Garden Hoes and Rakes, Shovels & Spades, and dozens of other articles around your home or farm. Mail orders receive prompt attention. Hardware Enderby, B. C. waBSBCBBmwasas IWsaamaaVUSBs* ft IV ������������������>' ENDERBY PRESS AND WALKER'S WEEKLY Canal Worker's Experience Some time ago I came to this place to ���������work" on the canal and through incle- moat weather and exposure contracted the worst kind of. neuralgia. The pain Vould fill my forehead so that I could- a't s--; it was just awful. 1 went to a druggist in town and was advised to use a 50c. bottle of Nerviline. That was t.ho best advice and the be.-t medicine I ever got. I will always recommend Xorviline for any ache or pain. It is ���������*o strong and penetrating it is bound to cure. (Signed) A. II. RIOROI. Trenton, Out. Doctors will te!l you that nothing but tho purest and most healing antiseptic drugs aro used in Nerviline���������that's why it is so 6afo for general family use, for tbo baby as well aa the parent. If you haven't tried Nerviline, do m> now��������� vour neighbors are almost sure to know of its manifold merit? and uso;-. That-Reminds-Me COST OP LIVING IN JAP A3? livery item of our everyday life is as costly in Japan as iu Europe or Ameri- ���������n. A re.-.poiit.ildo tlnvo .-roiey hoi: to .an l)i! rented in Loudon at OO a year, while the same money .an only rent a ���������vietched cottage in Tokio. Bread, moat, milk, electricity, gus. perhaps with the ���������jxcoption of eggs, nothing \\a cheaper in Japan. It coats far moie to rnn-a house in Tokio than in London. Then Thy are the wage? and salaries lower in our country? Because of misuse of labor and over-abiiudanre of laborers. What tbe Europeans move with the derrick we let men and women carry on their shoulders; so necessarily a great .mniber of them must be paid for. Edward sSteicben, the New Vork artist, has just won signal distinction for himself and his country by his selection to execute a large part of the mural decorations of the new Luxembourg .���������fnseum, Paris, lie first became known for bis wonderful photographs, but his ambition was to be a painter, and the tuoiiey he made iu photography was de- ������"otnd to porfacting himsolf in painting. '���������Consistency 's a jewel." "That's. ill right; but you can't work it off on any girl instead of a diamond ring." S-j5& ',- / - .mam ;m.t y 7PWIM-^ Constipation - - Vanishes Forever prompt Relief-Pennaneat Cnjfe CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS never (ail. Purely vcgcl atilt���������act ������urcly bul gently on lhe liver. atop alter dinne: distftsj- eure indigestion���������improve tfts completion ��������� brighten 1U.-t.7cj. Small Pill, Small Doie, Smtll Prici. Genuine imutbeu Signature $$$$ UXIHEKT r MHIc %/{ ������ABSMBDIEJKSS I'-.'M T'nlrifnl,KutiKixl.Swollen V������;liis^ " Jf_������������r,HIj������ijii>iiHs, OUISnro'i, Oleor:*.., It, in lic.Uinc, .���������.o-WiIiik. sircni'tlicninw utxl in- vi.ruriit.'i j--hII.i������s |Min ami iiu..irismotion ni'iraui'r. <*: ������������������-t.iU'ii'.oi.nil untlsui'lie. r,:t������_ tt. '<. lu-iiii.i. it. i>. No. 1. IV1W..1, Kau., I..vl ������������������ii'mreixl voln.s Uuu Imaiy I'l-vit'J ( li> lo1-". ol Mn'ul. I::ni_AJl.������-rjlill)I.��������� I:. Jit. and ro.orwl ���������v. ii'ov. fi, I'/il'. veins uniiivjy lw-il'ad r.'i t.ro'it.lo villi thna frinro J'.iy I'.V.i. Allrtr/i:,:TI������n..l!t- '���������-��������� invr.lm%})loiis n. nonoral liouhij- tn ill ll:itfi<'iii, to/ihisonfrtand brrlsr-s that the otul- tn-n twU croup, Ctv'P-s'aJfrl oilJs, fllll-nock. fcor������- eitvrrt 'li'-novcs f.vtty tiunobrs Kuitiv. ��������� ���������nlarj.eil C'-vrols wei;!,! cyjiW, wv.-'pinj; sim.-v.-u, olf. fcl.OU and '111 pl'rl-otiloat.ilnuw'.M.JorilL'llvoio.l. Wook ������1: rnn. W. ?. V0U.NC. W).?,fl0 ?.y:nnnsBIdg., Montreal, Con. iUmitiifiilOxxltiyMirtln ltile* WjimeOo., Wlnnlivg ��������������������� Nitio'iJl l;ni;:aui! Uli'iniciil ���������.������> . \\".iuuil������v klM&*rt ������aid: "Johnnie. you're pretty dirty!;> "Ves," replied Johnnie, "i missed the train last year." + + a A Maine clergyman, living at the hotel in his town," ordered a typewriter and had it sent to his rooms, lt came wbeu the clergyman was out, and the proprietor took charge of it. When the minister returned the proprietor led him behind lho desk aud whispered: "That case of yours is ou the ice, par- soi. ! yucss, it will be all right by diMier-tiiii"." Some good luck had come to him in business that day and hc felt as if he wanted to share it with others. So when he reached her house and dismissed the station back with its two sorry horses he joyously handed tho drivor two dollars'. *Tho*driver looked at the money, then at tlie man, and then at his horses, and finally said. "All right, sir. which horse do you want?" A captain of the martinet stripe strode up to one of bid men and said with fearful frown: "\\vno's tho idiot tl) it'ordered yon Lo leave that mess of empty meat cans right here in front of headquarters?'' "tt was the colonel, sir?" the mau replied. "Very well, then," said the captaiu, sharply, "let it slay there. And your leave's stopped for a week, my man, for calling your colonel an idiot." *��������� * v A Maryland assemblyman says the boys up bis way begin to learn politics as soon as they leave the 'cradle. ''By ten," he states, "a boy knows thc game pretty welJ. For instance, one day in school the teacher was asking the pupils about South America. 'Explain the government, of ten of the countries down there/ sho said to one 01 the little fellows. 'They're republics,' he quickly replied. 'What are thc other three?' 'Democrats.' " _ * * Tn .Savannah. Georgia, some visitors chaitcrcd an old sea-going hack driven by a negro. The driver was a knowing old fellow' and pointed out. all tho places of interest along the route. As they were nearing .\\[rs. Bannon's place, which is four miles from Savannah, a squirrel appeared in" the road. "George," said one, after all had noticed the squirrel, "do you have any big game around hore?" " Yas, indeed, sah," replied the negro".-"We*has baseball.;' " ��������� , Skibo Castle has entertained many prominent politicians.' Among-these .is Lord llorley, with whom thc Laird of Skibo has enjoyed mauy a -verbal tussle, it is said that ono morning Lord Zvforley was asked by a fellow-guest at the castle how be had been spending hia time. "Oh," he replied with a smile, "just exposing some of Carnegie's sophisms." Half an hour later, some one asked Mr. Carnegie if he had seen Lord Morlcy. "1 guess he's laid up for lepaira," was the reply. "T've been arguing with him." An Englishman was recently invited by a .New Yorker to accompany him on a hunting trip on Long lsla'nd. "Large or small game/'-' laconically asked the Triton, who had hunted in every quarter of the globe. "Vou do nut expect to lind lions and tigers on Long Island, do you?" queried the New Yorker. "IL'iruiy," responded the othor, .with a laugh; "but I like a spice of vice.. The only thing I never saw a senator do was; to back ont of the door in the middle of his own speech." * * * ��������� He stepped from the stairs leading to the cells into the dock as though to the manner born. Did he want the gaoler to show him where to stand? .Not ho! Eo gazed up at tho familiar faee of the magistrate, and half smiled. But his worship's face wore a frown. "This is the seventeenth time I've seen you in the deck." said tho cadi sternly. This was not the sort of reception he had expected, lie was hurt. "Well, ver woiship." he said slowly. "I've seen you sittin' in that chair for eight years, of couiplainin'! " They were trying nn Jmhman, charged with a petty offense, in an Oklahoma town, when the judge asked: "Have you auy one in court who will vouch for your good character?" "Yis, Your Honor," quickly responded thc Celt, "there's the ' sheriff there." Whereupon the sheriff evinced signs of great amazement. "Wh}-, Your Honor," declared he. "'I don't even know the man." "Observe, Your Honor," said the Irishman, triumphantly, "observe that I've lived in the country for ovor twelve years and tho sheriff doesn't know me yit!"-'Ain't that a character for ye?" but i 've never thought Tt was a great day in the Pirwell family. Littlo Freddie had reached the mature uge of three, and was to discard races discloses but three events in which record for two-year-old trotters on a half-mile track. At Columbia and Nashville, Tenn., he won also in straight heats, stepping in 2:51, 2:20 3-1 at the first track, and 2:31 1-2, 2:20 at the latter. During the Nashville meeting, in an effort against time, he took a record of-2:15 1-2. His last start of tho year wras at Lexington in tho Futurity, when he finished 0-0 to Czarevna in 2:12 1-2, 2:13' 1-2. Nine starts was his portion as a three- year-old. At Logansport, Ind., August 3, hia campaign began, and ho won in two heats, time 2:24 l--i, 2:27 1-2. At Lebanon, ind.. August 11, he encountered Baroness Virginia, the Futurity winner of that year. The Baroness took the first heat in 2:1-1 3-4, but gave way to A3 Stanley in the second and third heats in 2:2i l-l, 2:21 1-4. At Frankfort, ind., tho following week he 'won in straight heats in 2:10 1-2 each mile, and he accomplished straight heat victories at both Orawfordaville and Lafayette in 2:18. At Louisville, Ky., ho won a three-in-five event in 2:23, 2:1G 1-2 and 2:15. At Nashville ho took two straight heats in 2:28 1-4 and 2:14 1-2. In the big Kentucky Futurity hc met his first and only defeat of tne year, aud was unplaced in the summary of that historic race, in which Baroness Virginia Czarevna, Ber!ha O and Soprano waged so thrilling a battle. Iiis last start of the year wa.-* at Birmingham, Ala., where he won in three straight heats'in 2:11 3-4, 2:12 3-4 and 2:11 1-4. Last year ho did not start at all. aud a resume of this year's petticoats for more manly raiment in the form of knickerbockers. Lirtlo Freddie's mother determined upon making the occasion a memorable one. The breakfast table was laden with good fare as the ncwly-brecchcd, infant was led into the room. "Ah," cried the proud mother, "now you are a little man!" Tbe fledgling' was in ocataHies. Displaying his garments to their full advantage, he edged tloser fo bis maternal parent. "Mummie," he whispered, "now cau r Will pa 'Bill?' " * * * The minister had just finished a littb? opening talk to the children, preparatory to the morning service, when Mrs. Berkeley suddenly realized, with all tho agony of a careful housewife, tbat. sho had forgotten to turn the gas off from the oven in which she had left a nicely-cooked joint, all ready for the final re-heating. Visions of a ruined dinner and a smoky kitchen roused her to immediate effort, and borrowing a pencil from the young man in front she scribbled a note. o Just then hoc husband, an usher of the church", passod her pow.'" With a murmured -"Hurry!" she" thrust the note ihto'.hie hand, and he," with an understanding nod, turned/ passed np the aisle, aud handed the note to the minister. Mrs. Berkeley saw tbe act in speechless horror,.and shuddered as she saw the 'minister''smilingly open the note and begin to read. Biit her expression of dismay was fully equalled by ,tho look of amazement and wrath on -.the good man's face as ho read the words: "Go home and turn off the gas! " ('.anger in my hunting," "If that's the fir cn'-e,*" answered the American with a_ Basiaess College Collogoopon throughout the whole ;e������r. Studontrt may join at any time. "The.Practical College" Write for free catalogue. irin. "I'm your man all right. The" last time 1 went out 1 shot my brother- in-law in the leg!" 4 V * The late Syhanus Miller, civil engineer, who was engaged in railroad enterprise.'*, iu Central America, was seeking local support for a road, and attempted to give the matter point. He askod a native: "How long does it take you to carry your goods to market bv'muleback ?' '"'��������� ��������� Thrce'dav?,"'' was' 1 he reply. "There's the point," said Miller. "With our road in operation yon could take your goods to market and be back home in oue day." "Very good. -i>!ior, ' answered the native. "But what would wt> do with the other two uaybV" Mr. Ilcybuni. of fd'.ho. sometimes has trtnble in getting a large audience of hi* fell when he speaks on the lloor rtf the Senate. One day last July. Im ro.-.c to make a speech, and, seeing that there were only three men besides himself in their places he. moved to adjourn. This wan prevented by the tn-- Humbling of a quorum of senators who had been sitting in the cloakrooms, lu beginning his delayed speech, he-said: "I do not understand the conduct of s'Miat rs. I have seen thom under all phases. I have seen a senator leave this chamber when he should stay here to receive good advieo. 1 havo seen him "leavo this chamber when, by re- maining.he could have given good'ad- one -isked! would recoil It. was a real old-fashioned gun. but its owner was proud of it. According to him, it had killed more wondrous beasts than any gun ever made before or after. Still, it wasn't modern, and some of his friends couldn't refiain from criticism. "Doesn't it kick?" '; Looks to me as if it pretty badly! " "Rafherf Tts grvt a tremendous way of kicking. But that, makes me more fond of it���������it's one of its special features. Tell you what happened once .A _grea_t__grizzly bear was chargjng mo; I "shot, "and "misf-ed bun! ATnrit" "it hadn't been for tbe tact, that this gun kicked me so far back that I. had time tn reload���������well. I shouldn't have been here to tell vou tho story!" he took part. All of those were straight-heat winning events. At Nashville.' Tenn., he had ouly to step in TBY iDRIIIE BE BEMEB' i?I GRANULATED EYELIDS Srf.uria s Doesn't Smart-Soothsa Ey������ ?&!.* OnevMi S-iP fail'!** Ey������ Hmmtr, iinW. 23*. ������*H JLO Miirtna Ejf. X*ir*. laAiapttcTuftn^aS.:. ������t Xir ��������� ETH ,B00,'-C3 AliO ADVJCS FS.KJ5 3Y LL'r.S ���������Muvh'ii* Ey������ ���������������������&������-��������� c?dy C->.,.Chf cys"'* DO NOT USB THE KNIFB ��������� That ia a barbarous'way of treating corns���������dangerous, too. Any corn, bunion or callous can be removed quickly and painlessly by Puteain-'a Painless Corn Extractor. Putnam's Corn Extractor, mark the uanie. Safe, prompt, painless. Sold by druggists. Price 25c. 2:20 1-2, tho fattest heat to win. AA .Memphis his time was 2:15 1-2, 2-14 and 2:1-1, while at Birmingham hc was cut, loose in the final heat for a record reduction, which he successful)v negotiated in 2:08 3-4. A recapitulation of the roan stil- lion's remarkable racing history ahowj that of sixteen events in which he has competed, he has won fourteen, thirteen of them without losing a heat. In ono of the two appearances in which he failed to win he took third money and was but once behind the money in his whole career, that being in the Kentucky Futurity of 1������00, mentioned above. y\\me. Smah Bernhardt possesses a fine gold chain to which are attached about, thirty charms,'ranging from a crucifix to a skull carved out of a ruby. The Kaiser's second son, Prince L.fel Fritz, has adopted a new plan for reducing weight. ITe goes overy morning to the ferry across the River 1 level, at Sakow, near Potsdam. .' There he relieves the old ferryman, and for about two hours works on a heavy float, which Asthma No Longer Dreaded.���������The dread of renewed attacks from asthma has ' no hold npon thoso who have learned to rely upon Dr. J. D. Kellogg'fi Asthma Remedy. So safe do they feel that complete reliance is placed on this true specific with the cortainty that it will always do all that its makers claim. If you have not yet learned how saft> you are with- this'preparation at hand .'*ct it to-dav and know for vourself. The Lamp That Saves The Eyes Children naturally never think of ' possible strain on their eyesight when poring over a fascinating book. It is up to you to see they do not ruin - their young eyes these long evenings. by reading under a poor light. , - , ��������� The Rayo Lamp is an insurance against eye 'troubles, alike for young ; and old. ' -y The Rayo is a low-priced lamp, but it.is constructed on the soundest scientific pi inciples, and there is not a belter" lamp made at any. price. ' ' Il is easy on the eye because its light is so soft and'white and . widely diffused. And a Rayo Lamp never- flickers. Easily lighted without removing stiadc or chimney; easy to clean and rewick. Solid brass throughout, wilh handsome nickel finish; also in many other styles and finishes. Ask your deeler lo jW you bis line of Rayo lamps or wrke for '>c mid $1 ������ bottle. $5 and $10 the dozen. Sold by nil' dni','5isi.s':uHt horse goods houses. Distributors: All Wholesale Drug Houses. SPOHH MDIML CO.,*' Chemists ind Baettrloiigists, 60SHEK, 1KB., 0. S. ������. jumtr rwtowt*M*������M������.w *mit������f-r.i'wM.fUSMii.<.'iKii <������������������*������ H_.e tkntal and lusuU ��������� 23 oeato. GRAIN COMMISSION MERCHANTS We \\i*i> our twontv yours' oxporionce in- the gniin buninesR in Wosli-rn Canaila when iiarkutini! till .-.rain i-i>ii.si_-iini..'iiis to host udvniitiiici- fm Bhippor. )\\������ h.iii'l.e wliuMt. ijiik. Imrli-y and flux Rlii|>|i������-d in car lots, i_ivi.it; sjiocml attention lu tho -r.-idiiiK of oai'li Bhii-iuont, and luul; aflor it Kiuil finully unloadiM m tho terminal olovalnr. Good odv.im-.uK ninth- on hills of hiding, and after kaI.i is mado prompt returns sent to shipper. Our commission oliurgu is the lowest allowed by tlio UuIch of tlio Winnipeg Grain KxaIihiiro, of whioh we ar������memburH. . . As soon its vour oar ih billed forward, soud thc shipping lull to us with 111- -���������ructions about 'holdiiu; or soiling, and wo will attend to tho tmlance or tlio iiUBiiu'SH for vou. Ship ono oar to us and you will coiitiiiTie to ship for years. Wo UN OKI; STAND this HUSJN'KSS .TlIOKOUGinA", and that. COUNTS. _ We aro LICKNHKD ������ad JiON'DKU. Uefereuco: Hank of Hamilton, Winnipeg, ' ' "ff vou havo not fihippod a car of strain yet, write ns for full phippins instruc tions. Shipping- pram fi) a commission merchant to handle if very .iuipk'. McBEAN BRCS. GBA1S EXCHANGE - ��������� - WIKKIPEG, VIAX. WALL PL AST . '-. PlaaW Board takes the":piaoe ot Lath, and is fireproof. .. Tho "Emipre" brands of Woodfiber and Hflrdwall - Plaster for Rood construction. SHALL WE SEND YOU PLASTEE UTEBATUBE? The Manitoba Gypsum Co., Ltd. WINNIPEG, MAN. il H s m :J I lit \\\\yy' v.- te ��������������������������� iff,!-. |iV __ lv-* IT- -' Jf'7 If-."1 ft'- Thursday, April 4, 1912 THE ENDERBY PRESS AND WALKER'S WEEKLY (o- WOlItppe :"7^ >7 vSuit l~ f , Modern methods-,- of ready-to-wear clothe^ production have removed man's greatest clothes problem. In die days of custom tailoring you had to imagine how the chosen material would look on $ou(:'when" made up in the style you selected. To-day, you can go into a good - shop and try on suits until you find the cloth and style that suit you best. WhenTeveryoneadmits this great advantage, why not go just a step further and be careful to purchase in a shop where there is endless variety to choose from? We can show you���������������������������in the "Fit-rite" line of high grade'clothes���������������������������every type of suit and overcoat sanctioned by the prevailing mode. J. W. EVANS & SON Enderby, B. C. The Near East Danger���������������������������War Cloud $ Hovering Over Balkans this Spring (From the Montreal Star.) It is becoming more apparent every day���������������������������in spite of tlie bother of the coal strike���������������������������that the capitals of Europe are awaiting the coming of spring in the Balkans with the gravest anxiety. The position of the Young Turks has become precarious ���������������������������it may, indeed, be really desperate.. Though Italy is having.a hard time of it to turn her proclamation of the annexation of Tripoli into reality, the failure of the Turkish Government to win any signal military successes in the defence of that ravished province, has .tremendously reduced its prestige at home. It must be remembered^that the Young Turks are a military party. They won and have maintained their position with' the' sword. They were theoretically.a Liberal party, broadening the basis of Turkish rule from that of narrow Moslem fanaticism to a working union of all Turkish subjects; but this theory has, as practised, failed to attract the non- Moslem sects, while it has aroused the disquiet of the stricter Moslems. So that the Revolution has nothing left to save it except the sword; and ,the impotence of the sword is leaving the Revolution defenceless. The fear is that the spring may see this impotence put to the test. Macedonia is already in a state bordering on anarchy. Albania .ie in permanent rebellion. For the present/all is in abeyance; for neither the marauding tribes nor the punitive Turks can move because of the snows. But the snows will soon melt; and ti.en what? Several oin- ister . facts emerge. , Bulgaria , and Greece seem to, have come to ' an agreement. Now, if this does not mean - the partition of Macedonia, Wuat does it mean? But' partition ^ouid" only be arrived at with' the consent of Austria;.and Austria will not permit any obstacle to he placed acioss the path to Salonika. It is 0-j.sj Lo sit down with a map and cut this country up,"giving each of the powerful nations that border on it a sate; but- we, havci race - character- jstics. :tp ^consider,-::"irreconcilable" national'ambitions to reconcile���������������������������and the"fighting'power'of"the Turk, i.with his back'.to .the:wall/, to deal with. ���������������������������_.. It is a common practice to assume that Austria might create a great South'1 Slav Kingdom and turn itself into;.a~Triple^ Monarchy;"*' 'One; diffi: culty, in the way of this would be to peisuade. both' Austria',and Hungary to-give, up'their Slav .Provinces" to the new partner; and yet it does hot seem as if this difficulty should be serious. " The ruling/races .in both Austria and Hungary, have had'their power challenged recently " by "the press on its "rapprochment" with Germany and so re-establish the concert of Europe, which "steamroller" will flatten things out in fine style. The "Spectator" reaches the opinion that ft need not concern it 165 qualified airwomon. Nobody knows just how many air pilots and aeroplanes the army possesses. It is a War Office secret. They are believed to number nearly 100. By the end of 1912, at the present rate of activity, there will be 200. Add the 200 odd civilian fliers who will be licensed before the year is over, and one arrives at the imposing total of self about the matter at all but canl 40������������������- This ,B the host which win be let the nearer nations do the worry- readv t0 sallv forth t0 meet M- Mil" leraud's mighty "squadrillas" if the ing. It is a poor choice between these two policies. Poor old Britain must either hasten to make friends, with the difficult Germans; or must announce that she has no interests in a section of the world where she fought the Crimean War, where she subsequently barred Russia out of Constantinople, where she took Cyprus, where she raved over the Bulgarian massacres, where she backed plucky little Greece, and near which she now has Egypt and the Suez. Then, if Austria threatens to seriously worst Russia, has Britain no interest? If the German- Austrian alliance looks like the heir of Turkey, does it not matter to Britain or France? In the present delicately-poised state ot- tlie international ' situation, it is impossible for Britain to pretend that i;he can be indifferent towards any important shifting of the balance of power. -Germany's Aerial Fleet. Franco-German frontier should once again resound to the diapason of battle. Rivalry With Prance. Itis admittedly France's stupendous progress in the air that has ' given the impetus for flying in GeY- , many. ��������������������������� The Germans are not disheartened by the long lead of the - ancient rival across the Rhine. - They remember that France was once in the van in dirigibles, only to be overtaken and decisively outstripped by^ Germany. "What we have done in r. dirigibles," says the Germans, "we_7 may be able to repeat in thecase-of aeroplanes." They are'���������������������������- unquestion- . ably making for that goal with' seven-;: league boots. * There are seventy-five aero clubs in'the Fatherland, with>7 (Continued on last page.) 7-'". '���������������������������31 SHUSWAP & OKANAGAN BRANCH. Cured to a large extent of the Zep pelin monomania which absorbed the:South* country in 1908," Germany is now de-j bound voting herself heart and soul' to the read down creation of a fleet of flying machines. I 9.45 (Lv) Enthusiasm over "the fourth arm" 10.I8 " has become universal. The Kaiser,..io'.33".' ' for long a-sceptic on,"the subject, has jn 43 set himself at the head of'the move-,-. ' _. ,- merit .by offering a -$������������������2,500 prize for"11'*0v" ~ the* best'> aeroplane motor ".invented Daily trains both ways from Sicamous Junction to Okanagan Landing: North ,; STATIONS . ' between now and his next birthday. 12.00 Sicamous Jet y ";M������������������ra - . Grindrod . ..Enderby * :;ArmBtrong." a :''" Lttkin^.7 & Vernon7'7' bound ' read up (Ar) 47.55' it.ob j-"-715.44. 7 yZUM _.^.ti6:6o: z7yiiM': 'ilii'i&m \\ South German champagne firm has ,1215- (Ar)v-'������������������k- Landing,,, (Lv), 15.00-. placed $25,000 -at tlie Supreme War-H: W.-BRODIE -'- v JNO:BURNHAM" uord's disposal-for the" proniotion-of-Gen^Pas. Agt.77"' --..'ii^'Agent^y-' military, airmanship". ; A do'zen^ great'i- 7" Vancouver''*' ... ���������������������������/��������������������������� - Enderby^' " flying .weeks; and "cross-country cir- --<<-. cuits-will be, held'during, the year. Schools.-.of .airmanship are , flourishing-everywhere. ."'In the,army flying m-i -jyy\\ v /.7'Zff. "^.."-rr "' -*_���������������������������-_ If you want";/absolutely pure milk1,;!? tell the! Glengerrack ,, Dairyman. --Mr.-/*-, v^ j .,_,.������������������������������������������������������ MacQuarrie^-states;; that-he has inow'^y/y^ promises' to faecom-Tth^ his .milk house; and-dairyistockr. kept g}|>i of arms.--. The War Office not-long!^^^ ^^^V^^y^^if 0 mh,���������������������������wnBh^WoIlo'joB^ ������������������,anty of;run^ir--,S^ ago/called for half a hundred* volun teers ��������������������������� fm*-_ tlie7air--service7-_Over_7a thousaricU officers' responded. J .,,77 ,_ _ Althbughjit' is sixteen- years since the German ' Lilientlial,7 the* world?s first; martyr-airman,*- 'paid ^the,,toll since extorted * from so'many,-.bird- men, flying in,Germany,has a"history of..hardly two, years.-"'Th'e dirigible airship:craze,', the' feats -of the?Zeppelin, Gross '- and- 'Parseyal ��������������������������� vessels,- blinded Germans, including the War Office; .to the,superior, possibilities of aeroplanes,r7 The Wrights were look ed upon,-as . half, imposters, 'fhalf other races included in their respect-1 "cranks.";- ; The" German .. experts ive kingdoms;, and they might both agreed that the $50,000,. Lon don-to Is YOUR subscription to The Press Paid Up ? Thinkitover conceivably be glad to get rid of a part of this "foreign matter." A greater difficulty,- it _'seems'to us, would be to get the necessary. con: sent of Bulgaria arid Russia. They aie both Slav Powers, and would not relish the permanent loss of a part of their possible territory to a rival, while Bulgaria especially would object to being so entirely overshadowed in its own neighborhood.* For a =Triple=Monarchy,=owing=allegiance to the Hapsburgs, would, in time become the most powerful nation in Eastern Europe���������������������������if not on the Continent, s Yet. if Russia, Bulgaria" and Turkey joined forces against such a project, to which we can add the armies of Roumania and Servia, it could hardly be accomplished. The _fact is: that, just as the jriyal.j^m- bitions of the great powers for so long kept a tottering Turkish Empire on its decrepit feet, so the rival hopes of the nearer nations today may serve the same purpose. The danger will be that Turkey herself will see another revolution, through the decayed prestige of the "Young Turks; and that the consequent temporary liberation of Albania or Macedonia may be regarded by one of the neighbors as but a disguised removal of these countries to the care of some" one else. Then the game of "grab" will be precipitated. Nor is it safe to assume that Italy will be content to get Tripoli alone. Italy will be very much engrossed, indeed, if it permits Austria to secure the other shore of the Adriatic without a protest; and it should be remembered that the collapse of Turkish power would render it unnecessary for Italy to hurry on with the occupation of Tripoli. Britain did not hurry with the occupation of Egypt and'the Soudan where there was no outside opposition. The British Government is being variously counselled in this matter. The Radical "Nation" urges it to Manchester^ prize, was safe-in The Daily-Mail's strong-box'for years1 to', "come." It was not until February, 1910, that ..Germany's first'vairman", Herr August Euler.-was.licensed. Today exclusive of-the Army ,~4 there are nirigAwater;^ri^maike^it..p^ _____ ���������������������������.���������������������������_.,.,.���������������������������. ,, . ; j ^ ���������������������������, :���������������������������_ -j.-p^,^,'-. Ff fcr*l *-. -_ ^pp ,t .M it. >. -4 I u."*^ _ ^_ ^_ ' r- - _ <_.*. .. . , .. _.C ��������������������������� " . i.a- .. ��������������������������� ;^ii*bf:MAnR*������������������^^,?^f ���������������������������Z.\\ OctlQNV 7 7--.-V- -.������������������"��������������������������� "*���������������������������.'! Copyrights *e> _ ��������������������������� Anyone teniTlng ��������������������������� Mcetrh and description may inn bo qnlcklf Mcertuin oiir oi>iiiioa free_wbotlior aa ���������������������������ietly couth . _e. Oldest mat ... Patents taken through Munn tt Invention la probably patentable. Commimloii.i ..r, lionaHtrictlycoiifljJoutlul. HANOOOOK on Patent* ���������������������������ent free. Oldest w_ie������������������cy foraecuruig fpttt(ce,-wtfhout charge, inthv ,teiita.^/^>7f Scientific Jftnericati* A handaonMly Ulmttated-weekly, tanteat elr-- oulation of any scientific journal. 'Terms'tor- Canada. 93.1s m year,-portage prepaid. -Sold,by aU newtdtialcrs. ..-:-���������������������������-������������������������������������������������������. y. nice, 625 F St; Washington, ���������������������������-J * I Ji\\ r- , ^ yyij ZfA If VOU WANT TO OWN Pocket Knife" BUY A CARBO MAGNETIC KNIFE For Sale oy THE ENDERBY TRADING CO Orchardists: The Fra Valley Ms, Ltd. ALDERGROVE, B. C. Have the Fineit Home-Grown Nursery Stock Including��������������������������� APPLES, PEARS, PLUMS, CHERRIES, SMALL FRUITS AND ORNA: MENTAL SHRUBBHRY, LIVE DISTRICT AGENT WANTED. For full particulars, write��������������������������� RICHARD McCOMB, General Manager, ' Aldcrgrove, B.C ENDERBY PRESS AND WALKER'S WEEKLY * .-���������������������������'���������������������������������������������������������������������������������.������������������������������������������������������ ' ���������������������������*! < ���������������������������' ' V.. ������������������������������������������������������ ll Twelve of His Peers (By Kuby Baughmau) The few witnesses in the case had been examined and*cross-examined. The evidence, pitifully scant pro and overwhelmingly strong eon, bad been vigilantly sifted by tlie attorneys aud measured out to tlie jury, all iu the shifty- eyed presence of the crumpled bit of humanity in the prisoner's box. As the judge rose, pompous and paunchy, to make iiis charge to tho jury, the foreman of that insignificant body leaned back iu his arm chair, complacent in the prospect of the case with which a verdict muse be arrived at. Thc performance of his duty, however, was no trivial matter to the <'on- ���������������������������scientious deacon. His solemn sense, of its importance he had expressed by don- niug his Jong, funereal frock coat. That his function was nol exactly religious, only somberly and seriously secular, liko acting as pallbeaicr at a week-day funeral, he had indicated by wearing his gray flannel shirt: and second-best brownish gray trousers. He was unpleasantly conscious, too, that in the worldly anxiety connected with this disagreeable business, he had disturbed with his fidgetty fingers the Sabbatar- ' ian sleekness of his insufficient gray hair. Protesting, shocked, irritated digits they were, for the details of the trial had been most unpleasant oven* though tho facts had not seemed-elusive. For generations in five counties round about, no such calamity as a murder and its consequent catastrophes had blighted ���������������������������vthe public good name. Human wickedness in the abstract was a favorite subject of invective for the deacon in prayer-meeting; human sin in practise he found not only offensive but dis- c-oncorting. "fou must bear iii' mind, however, gentleman of tho jury, that not one word of this remarkably clear chain of evidence is direct and positive." At the_,words of the judgo, the foreman moved a bit uneasily in his chair and settled his stiff Sabbath-coat collar more amicably over its unaccustomed neighbor, the easy-going flannel shirt- band, The attorney for thc defonse had already harped sufficiently on the dangers lying in decisions based on circumstaucial evidence. These easy .acquittals on the ground of insufficient evidence only put a premium on criminality. " In such an instance it becomes your duty to.determine whether the evidence as educed^ from the "attendant circumstances, "proves beyond all-possible human doubt, the guilt of the prisoner, at < the,bar,", instructed tho judge. '"' The deacon resented tho implication that any such - reasonable doubt could ���������������������������exist about this case. For his part, his mind .was mado up once for all time. The whole thing was too obvious, too simple to admit of uncretainty. This strange, man, the. prisoner, and a woman, going no one.knew whither from no one cared " whence/ in a" "mover- .wagon," had camped for the night under" the-maples along the roadside just below tho old Quinn place, more rtfoentty owned and farmed by a comparative neweomor from Illinois, John Nfatthows by name. Early evening passers-by saw them make camp there; later travellers heard their voices in angry altercation'in the wagon and beside the fire. John Matthews*' hired man, putting his horso away on his return' from town about eleven o'clock, heard a "shot in the direction of tho wagon. Matthews, thc nearest house-dweller, had slept, solitary bachelor that ho was, till roused by the neighbors with the.news of the adjacent tragedy. Investigation���������������������������for what corn-growing i.ftmmumty-startlod-l>V_a_.|ristol_Bliot Jn. the brooding peace of tho night" hour From its duty depths showing ebon- blaciv in the yellow sheen of the afternoon sun glint, a ily was buzzing a futile and stupid attempt lo escape. What there could bo in thc frantic humming of a foolish fly thus to ensnare any sane man's attention the deacon eould not. understand. If the insect had one atom of sense, u would see that the avenue of flight lay just above its purposeless circling. With an uncomfortable senso of impact, the deacon's eyes met lho eyes of Matthews. A slow strange ghost of a smile shadowed the thin" brown face of tho juror. Wifeless, childless, ho had lived too much alone, decided the gregarious deacon. ���������������������������T repeat, gentlemen of the jury, the circumstances must prove beyond all possible refutation, the guilt of the accused," cautioned'the judge's voice. Back lo a sense of his responsibility in tho burden of the lifo or death of this whimpering culprit, shuddered the deacon. "The wages of sin/" he whispered to himself to "fortify his spirit as the judge concluded his instructions. A perturbation of mind too general' to be called doubt, born of what parent thought he knew not, ruffled tho stern, unrelenting quality of his earlier decision. "Thou shalt not kill/' might* be as stringently laid on the foreman "of the jury as ou the criminal in the dock. Absentmindedly, even to inattontive- ness,.he watched thp closing formalities. An awesome sense of the inevitability* of the 'thing, of the finality of the ovent, seized upon' him with the sharp click of the latch of the jury-room door. For two heartbeats, he permitted himself to heresy of condemning any gov- ermental system and social order that had power thus to mavo .i dozen men their brolloi '���������������������������> keeper. Reassurance lay in the familiar'faces of his colleagues.^. The hibtt of i'*ader- sh:p w������������������<*. strong in the deacon. Right is right. Wrong is wrong. Their, duty as mon and citizens, disagreeable as it might be, lay straight ahead. This man whose feverish lifo-breath was theirs to strangle or set at peace," had'-sat-ifi the seat of the scornful." The wages of sin mtiBt not be denied. for justification. The deacon dodgod. "You don't mean to say that a man has a right to shoot his wife?" spoke up a new voice, oily, gently conciliating as to a madman. "It'e a quicker wav than slaving her to death," .7 '.' Then flaring a blaze of contempt at the speaker,.. the' deacon'$���������������������������������������������������������������������������������- own cousin, who sat at his right hand, Matthews turned to thei. deaeou again as the seat Oi authority. "That miserable whelp theio, your own kin, has five hired men on' his place. Iiis wife has had ten children, and ain't never once had a hired girl even in harvestin' aud tlij-nshin'. She don't even got enough to eat. All thc stingy cuss raises he sells; all he can't soil hc feeds to thc hogs; what the hogs don't want the family gets. And yot he sets there, a steward of tlie mysteries, passin' judgment on a stranger, when he's the one himself thai; needs hangin'." Tho deacon laid a hand of precaution on the fat, purple anger-spluttering man beside him. Tho tenseness of tragedy threatened to fall into the bathos of (ho comedy of a cheap brawl, when the gray eyes burned his and the rasping voice stung again his startled ears. "When did you ever kiss your wife? When did you ever get her a "new dress? When did you over praise hor bread? She had pretty clothes, plenty enough, when you and Doc Ashton was sparkin' her. And she'd had thom now if she'd took Doc instead of you. .D'you think anybody'd be to blame but you if she'd last chapter of the tragedy had detained the twelfth juror in tho -'jury-room:' Jarred loose from his traditions, bewildered by the whirl of unaccustomed events and. ideas, the deacon turned toward the jury-room door. "L>'ye suppose he told the truth*? Or did he just say it to save his cousin'. D'ye reckon he'd be saved, or would his soul be lost?" queried his cousin at his..elbow, bound in pachyderm. . The deacon looked at that individual with new eyos. An unrighteous desire to smash with his fist the smug primness of'that piggish face pulled the diaconal features into nn ungodlv scowl. "That's none of our business," tho deacon replied sharply'. "All we've "*ot lo do is to bury tho body.'-' Her Skin Was Yellow _"I had only to try Dr. Hamilton's Pills to appreciate their merit,'' writes Miss Annie S. Bryce, of Woodstock. "My system was ont of order. My blood waH weak and thin. I had a nasty, murky complexion. My skin was hard and dry. The iitsr box of Dr. Hamilton's Pills mado a complete ch-ange. I felt better at once. Healthy color, came into,.my face. In about three weeks T was cured.". Dr. JI-i mil- ton's Pills effect am easy cure: Try these good-pills, 2oc per'box, or five boxes for $1.00, at all dealers. go off with him and leave vou? ���������������������������,ould refuse investigation!���������������������������-had'found the man, hysterical, even half-delirious, trying to stop the flow of blood from ti great wound in the woman's breast. That lie should deny all knowledge of the f-ourco of her injury, that ho should declare that she died from a mysterious shot fired from out the darkness, was only human, perhaps, but dismally ineffective. Two cmpLy-cartridges in .his gun. he explained by showing thc remnants of two quail loft from their supper, a iiAtural defense but silly in the face of the facts. A gambling outfit had been dipcovered in the search nf the wagon. This man had walked in thc counsel of the ungodly; therefore he must not stand in the judffnoiit. Ho had refused consistently lo give anv information about himself or his wife; even his name was unknown. He had called upon no friends for help. To the deacon, n highly influential member of a numerous :iud wealthy farmer clan, this hopeless alonencss was in it- HOlf n most incriminating feature of the trial. Furthermore, the a-'cused had declined persistently the comforts of religion and thc inquisitively proffered ���������������������������Morviees of both pastor and people. For confirmation in this judgment tlie deacon looked down the line of eleven farmers' faces turned toward the judge's instructions. Ten jurors were earnest but unruffled, well-fed,, narrow- ly ���������������������������'shrewd.'honest, not widely varying typos of tillers of tho-. soil.,. Sincerely searching for tbe truth;:this decade of the deacon's old frionds and neighbors listened with a realization of the grim- ness of their duty. - Thc twelfth man, John .Matthews, thc outlandov, chosen at the last moment aa 'talesman.to complete thc panel, watched with strained widely oponcd eyes not the judge's exposition of .their function but some point in space-which the deacon could not at-first locate. Following lhc line of tho man's steady gaze, the deacon finally discovered that the obiect of tbo unwavering scrutiny was Jn empty ink-bottle left from the last term of court on the walnut table be- low lhc .judge's bench. Aware at length of the lapse of a long tense silence, the foreman raised his tired eyes to the double row of-solemn faces along the black walnut table-top. Opposite him at tho other end.of'the justice-scarred table-top, wit John Matte ews. From the black-ringed, steel- gray agony in that juror's eyes"the dea-" con ..could with difficulty move his gaze as he called -for the first vote. -This was grim business, this deciding the right of a sinner to live on in his sin; but a man's duty must be done and there was small avail in such vicarious suffering as that which stiffened John Matthews' pallid face. The ballot stood eleven 'to one for conviction and sentence of death. On the gray miserable faces along the table and the torment-twisted,features at the ond, tho deacon read the explanation of tuc divided vote.' He braced himself for the struggle to bring those defiant, forbidding oyes to reason. One ballot should have decided it. Sorely this grisly task nooded no additional burden of difficulty.. Clayton County must not shirk before the eyes of her neighbors thc duty of administration of justice to hor evil-doers. "' 'Let a man ho account of us of stewards of the mysteries of God. Moreover, it is required in steward's that they be found faithful.' " A. strength for tbe load came as hc dimly heard his own voice tremble through the familiar, heartrending mes- ���������������������������ago. In__hiH_gr_ea_t_ ..ne.ed the___vqr_ds_ brought firm assurance; but no yielding snowed in thc mocking eyes opposite. Thoy promised to bo troublesome " 'Moreover, it is required in stewards that a man bo found faithful,' '���������������������������' repeated tne foreman, with his eyeB persistently melting at the rigor of .Matthews ���������������������������' own. "The man ain't been proved guilty," tlio deacon watched thc bloodless lips affirm. " "Bnyond ~- all reasonable "human douut." he hoard his own rnsping voice nnswor. .\\ laugh that sent the deacon's fingers clutching his palms, distorted tho set anguish of the talesman's face. A doubt of the man's sanity chocked the dencon 's roply. " Beyond all possible human doubt," he fouud himself repeating inanoly. The fire of physical pain and mental distress burned in the juror's deathlike pallor, giving an instant's color. "The man ain't proved guilty," and some inner flame glowed in his dogged persistence. "Beyond all reasonable doubt," repeated the deacon against his own volition. "The judge said not to convict on circumstantial evidence," and the deacon wondered if his own perturbed fancy had tricked him into hoaring a wistful tone in the words. "Except, when-it proves '. boyond all possible human doubt the guilt of. the prisoner at the bar," quoted the deacon, impelled by some motive force outside himself. "A lot you know about the prisoner at thc bar! A lot you know about anything or anybody outside your own cornfields and pig-pens and church and grocery store!" And the high-pitched tones slipped down into thc deeper note of scornful indignation. "Stewards of tho mysteries! And you can't read the meaning of any human oxperionce beyond the end of your own nose! Maybe thc man had a right to shoot the woman." The doneon felt rather than saw tho ten spines stiffen in startled amazement. Ten pairs of oyes looked at the deacon It's only because she's too good to even think of such a thing that she don't do it. Jt's none of your good doin'a that sho hasn't." Aiid the voice shrilled off into a half-hysterical sob. Tho man was crazy. But a cold clutch gripped, the deacon's breath at thc effrontery of the man's suggestion. Framed in its crinkly, gray hair, the placid, inscrutable face of his middlc- agod mate trembled before his misty eyes, A chill shook him at the thought of a possibility of her loss. - Tho chill burned, into a white heat at the thought of hia old-time rival. hated, perhaps feared, even after all these yoars of possession. The dea������������������on had come by way of this man's wild words to a new bit of knowledge, and quite against his will his eyes acknowledged their debt to the ones across the table. The man was mad. _ "Oh, no, fm not crazy. 1 wafc once, years ggo,.-biit.,l;m sane enough now. T had a wife once, too, like "you,* before I moved here���������������������������back in Illinois." His voico dropped into the drone'of a schoolboy reciting a hatod .lesson. "She was pretty; she had always lived in town, and had a good-time, und I married her and moved onto the farm und-wont'to work, and I forgot she was a woman and my wife. She was young and liked company .and =fun and nice clothes like women do, but-T wanted to pay for the farm. ~'My cousin had want- od her before T got her, and hc kept on wanting her. Jt's the same old story of two h'ien and one woman1-common enough���������������������������common enough. Lightning's common, too. but it seems peculiarly uncommon and important to the man it hits. He was a yellow cur. You saw him out thero���������������������������what he is. But .she left me for him because he was kind to her and 1' wasn't���������������������������oh, 1 know now that I wasn't." The bitterness of'tlie memory drew the tense eyelids tight for an. instant. - ' , - ���������������������������*��������������������������� "And she wont." The deacon's universe, of self-satisfaction had crumbled into bits at the man's arraignment of his domestic procedure; it was ground into atoms forever by the forco of a blinding, choking fellow-feeling of rage, jealousy, wild longing for revenge, a desire to kill, roused by the maundorings of this sane- eyed lunatic. "And she wont," ropeated the voico dnll)r. "T moved out here. They didn't get on very well. Ho's a failure. You needn't set yourself up to judge men for their sins'; the sins'11 do that. They -was=movini=to==Kansft8.=3!hay=������������������iidni.t- know they stopped at my place. I know them. "I heard thom quarreling, aud I went too close, nnd she saw me. They were quarreling, and hc started to hit her, and I raised my gun and shot him, but she rushed in front of him and got the charge. I had my gun, and I think ! meant to shoot hini, but she saved him ��������������������������� even though ho beat her, sho saved him from me���������������������������her husband. Oh, Molly, Mollv! -"---* ��������������������������� The deacon and his colleagues sat paralyzed before this black chasm of human experience which.their nice philosophy of life could not bridge. " Vou sec, folks got in sometimes, too, and can't get out, like that poor little devil of a fly in lhe ink-bottle, even when tho bottle's open. And now"-- he spoke in a whisper and staggered to his feet, his eyes glazing, and his breath coming iu gasps���������������������������"don't you think we'd better lake another vote on the verdict!" He fell face forward with a shivering thud of his limp weight. Following thc deacon's eye, lhc men rose from the table in unison like a machine. Like men in a dream, they filed from the jury-room. In a daze the foreman heard the verdict, "Not guilty." The murmur of surprise in thc courtroom barely touched his ears. He was consciously adjusting himself to a wider horizon lino. A chiHcold,.a9 the wind over a summer hail-storm, shivorod through him; he knew well; that the THE EVOLUTION OF SHOES The earlier shoe was a sandal, most frequently of hide or loathcr, but sometimes of wood. When one encounters lhc word "shoo" iu the Bible, ho may be sure that it is the sandal that is commonly meant. In Kgypt thc sandal was woven1'of palm leaves and papyrus. As a symbol of tho subjection of thoir enemies the Egyptians often painted the figures of their opponents ou the lining, of thoir sandals. If ��������������������������� utility ' was the, first' motive iu wearing shoes, art and decoration aoon crept in. Ladies permitted themselves great luxury in the attire of their feet. Thc sandal became closely - identified with symbolism, very much in the same way that the glove did later. To throw a sandal or shoe over a tract of land was a symbol of possession. This is fho meaning of the Biblical .phrase, "Over Edom will I cast my shoe." In timo the .sandal camo to have many forms. Two varieties .developed in Greece for use in dramatic performances: the sock for comedy, the buskin for trngedjv The "buskin reached to the knee, wa9 something like a high Wellington boot, aud showed very thiok Boles,.intended to increase the-stature. The sock reached only to the ankle, and appears t������������������ have.been worn when quick movement was desired. It was in Rome that tbe sandal bo- gan to take a shape something like bur modern shoe. There are in Eaatern Europe peoples, whose civilisation-'are derived from Borne, who still oling to the unroformed sandal, but the Rome of Augustus was more luxurious. The footgear of patricians was decorated with golden clasps and embroideries, and shoe-making* became, an elaborate trade'."* "- * - - ' :-\\. ....��������������������������� Ordinary walking-Shoes frequently had a wooden sole like some of the sandals'of .Egypt, aud it is probably from those that the French peasant of today derivos his sabots. The wealthier classes indulged in dainty slippers, aud laced boots,.while the emperors wore purple buckskins.- Red_ was permitted to-the nobility; the commons had to content themselves with more sober coloring. - In England under, the Norman influence some extraordinary developments took'place. During thc time of the Plantagencts thc - toes, of shoes were turned up like rams' horns or- wore, drawn out to such a length.that tho points had to be laced to. the kneoa. These were of bright colors,-sometimes different for each,foot, and jewels and precious stones were. stitched upon them.. Later large rosettes of colored ribbon were attached." -., " /. It has been pointed out that' the sturdy sandals of the Teutonic tribes enabled them to march aaross Europe to the walls of Rome. The footgear of an army is one of the most important parts of its equipment. PRIMITIVE SURVBYING . According lo a legend of Smith town, Long Island, the township was originally measured off by a primitive method. The first settler was one Smith, who bought from.the Indians as much land as a bull could go around iu a day. Now Smith had a smart bull, trained to carry him and to half-trot and half- lope SICILIAN SULPHUR N'ino-tenths of the native sulphur used in lOiirope comos from Sicily, and about oue hundred thousand persons, are dependent upoir it for their livctli-; hood. ��������������������������� 1 Aftor the position and depth of the 1 sulphur deposit have been ascertained ' by boring, a shaft is sunk, which is subsequently divided longitudinally in-; to three sections. Two of these, are ��������������������������� occupied by the hoisting-cages, while the third is devoted gear. to the pumping- Great danger arises from the generation nf gases within the rocks, and these gases are of threo kinds: first, tho -poisonous gas, hydogon sulphide; next, an asphyxiating one, carbon dioxide; and, thirdly, marsh gas, the dreaded'"fire-damp," which is explosive. - Tho hard sulphur is extracted with pickaxes, and is separated from its gan- gue by heat, steam being now generally employed. ��������������������������� It is thon molded into -bricks, and is ready for the market. SiolUn Varicose Vete'Er^i Tortuous, Ulcerated, Kuutnrod* i:������������������htu_tta8j8. It tiMcQsout tba lnt/;uiiinaikm, sorwtoa and OlSeoior*- tion; relieves tba patn and tiredness; COdoccH iho swelHik.amdually restoring part tu nor/nw fiironckb and ��������������������������������������������������������������� pc&raiico. AlSSQBBINK,JJt..ia������������������ mild, safe, pleasant.anftseptlo IfnJ- ment, healing and hootlilha. Severo cases where reins -havo, ulcerated and broken Juvo been cora- pletoly and'nciuiancntlr enrrd. First few apnli- r . J*i*[miJIWE, JK., will give roli������������������C cations of r_ ��������������������������� and prove ifFineriu fliX) and (fi.OO per bottto at drugglsta ojf delhCwl. Detailed directions, reports - nn recent eases find Book 6 G free cm request* W. F. YMWG. rj>,t.J210 LynunsBId4,lrlonlreal.Can. - Alnorur.>l������������������li*ltyM������������������r.iq Bote A Wynne Co.. Wfnnljef: M������������������ NutJoruil Urjii; anil VM-miial .IV. V.nulp^ A Ciilgw/ ��������������������������� -ii-l Hpukrau BNa. Oa, Ud., Vsatutnta - -��������������������������� -"' MAA Constipation Vanishes Forever Prompt Relief" CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS rail.. Purely veget ���������������������������bis���������������������������act turd/ but gendj ob the liver. Stop after dinner dittrett��������������������������� cureiadu gertion��������������������������� iaprov* Am cwoploiM���������������������������brkjow thecjw. S���������������������������H KB, S���������������������������P Din, fciiBfilm Genuine ������������������wu*������������������Bignature UT It is a Liver Pill.���������������������������Many of the ailments that man has to contend with have their origin in a disordered liver, which is a delicate organ, peculiarly susceptible to tho disturbances that como "from irregular habits or lack of care in eating and drinking. This accounts for'tho great many livor regulators now pressed on the attention of sufferers. Of these there ia. none superior to Parmoloo's Vegetable Pills. Their operation though gentle is effective, and the most delicate can use them, ! rapid pace. TRat day tlie bull was lip to the mark, By right ho had inclosed so much ..land that thc amazod Indians nicknamed its rider "Boll Smith." This tradition has it.) counterpart among the Boers of South -Africa. Their '"runs," as the farms of thoso Dutchmen are called, contain, gonerally speaking, from four to six thousand acros, of which only a few acres are undo: cultivation. __ .Small _momimonts_ of ..stones piled up at certain points mark tho boundary linos. Thc first settlers, knowing nothing of surveying, measured olf their "runs" by horse-power. Having piled up a lot of stones, the Boers would start from them an'd ride in a straight line for half an hour, as fa8t as thoir horses could carry Uiem. Halting, each rider would build another beacon, and again ride for half an hour at right angles to his first line. Then hc would pile, up another stone beacon. Two more turns and an hour more of riding brought him back to his starting point. The square tract inclosed within the two hours' ride and the four beacons became his farm. Of course, the- B01.1 who owned the fleetest horse obtained the la ���������������������������&���������������������������?.:. tract of land. Well, Well! JHISi*a HOME DYE ANYONE use MEANS TO DIE POOE Dv, Daniel K. Parsons, the Hinsdale, Illinois, philanthropist, after giving away his fortune of $7,000,000, has just entcrod the Hinsdale sanitarium, almost penniless; to spend the remainder of-his days. vile.has turned his ninoty-second year, and is in failing health. His last gift was his. residence and five acres of land, valued at $35,000, the residenoe to be maintained as a public library and art gallery. It,has long been his wish to distribute his wealth for the benefit of humanity; and in its disposal he has given largely to schools and colleges in twenty different staten. Ho was born in Vermont, and practiced medicine until he moved to Illinois, whero he bo- oaino immensely wealthy through real estate speculations. WI dyed ALL these 7\\DIFFERENT KINDS - of Goods- -- -" with fhe SAME Dye. I cased CLEAN and SIMPLE to Use. NO chance of usinK the WRONG Dye for thc SoniM one has lo color. All colore from vour DruRulit or Denier. FREE Color Cord ft ml STONY Booklet Id. Tho Johiikon-Richnrilson Co., Limited, Montreul, Success Business College C������������������r. Portife Avi. ind Ednontw St, WINNIPEG. MAN. Courses ��������������������������� Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Typewriting & English Fall term now open. ICnter any time. assist our Btudents in ������������������euurin|{ g-ood poiitioiu. Wd WrlM to-dny for !������������������._.������������������ tret c������������������t*logti������������������ F. G. GARBUTT, PrtiUUnt G. E. WIGGINS, Principal -H -, ENDERBY PRESS AND WALKER'S WEEKLY (ob Ir. I i _. ������������������ raa QBE FOR HOUSEHOLD ACCIDENTS Zam-Buk Is so Very Useful Bead how beneficial it proved in this case. Mrs. II. Sawyer, of Kecne, Ont., writes:���������������������������"My husband is engaged on a form, and one day, whilo chopping wood, the top of the axe broke and fell upon his foot, cutting a nasty gash. Tho wound was so bad that wc ���������������������������first thought wo would havo to get a doctor, but we finally decided to dross the cut with Zam-Buk. "Well, tho Zam-Buk treatment proved a groat success. It uot only eased the pain, but it prevented any inflammation; and right from first applying Zam-Buk, the cut began to heal. It is now completely healod, und my husband says he will nover be without a box of Zam-Buk in tho house, for wc are sure it saved us a great deal of cxponse." Over and over again Zam-Buk has been proved to bo tho worker's best romedy. As soon as applied to a cut, a burn, a scald, or any skin injury, it relieves the pain and it sots up healing. It also prevents blood-poisoning or inflammation. It is a sure cure too for " eczema, piles, ulcers, old wounds, bad leg, ringworm, scalp sores, festering, ruuuing sores, eruptions, cold bores, chapped hands, etc. Its absolute purity, also, makes it the ideal balm for babies. Zam-Buk Soap should be used along with the balm for washing all soro places. This soap will be found "excellent for 'baby's baili, even where the balm is not being used. All .druggists and stores sell Zam- Buk at 50c. box, aud Zam-Buk Soap at 25c tablet, or post free from Zam-Bn.v Co., Toronto, upon receipt of price. Refuse harmful substitutes. DrJlarters Female Pills MTEEN years; the standard , Prescribed and recommended for women's ailments, a scifintlftcally prepared rowedy - of proven worth., Tlie reaiUt from their rise li ' HASVHl. accept u.j ,< ^\\ _>.v '���������������������������'���������������������������r-'Si/.X , '������������������'��������������������������� .. ��������������������������� .���������������������������', ..... -.'���������������������������.".,.'.. 5 . ��������������������������� ������������������������������������������������������ I.-., ��������������������������� ?������������������������������������������������������"'������������������.'���������������������������..��������������������������� TV'* -"WO ���������������������������,- ' '���������������������������.- '���������������������������'/ McHttMHrfiUR & W001������������������(,; ��������������������������� ^r-'RUPEB-p STBECT :' *��������������������������� . yyjNNlPEG r MANITOBA .;'. 'win ite PofJC* ir <; c i. a ft fRAj-l'lRk C.I.W- f������������������ft!t04plOSf. Willi While the adventures of the average naval officer occur at sea, the most exciting of any in the life of Captain Prank Helm took place several year- ago, whon he thought himself quite safely ashore. But then Helm is anything but an average naval oflicer. To his friends the Captain is best known as the "Admiral of the Philippine Navce," the propriety of which title is somewhat in doubt, for there is no Philippine "Navce'.' in the first place, and secondly, Helm maintains that wero thero any such thing iu existence, he would have none of it. What Helm roally docs iB to take complete charge of navigation in the Philippine Islands, and ho does it very well indeed. His' lighthouses alone save hundreds of ships each year, and he is worthy of any insignia Iiis friends decree. But to return to what Helm avers is the moat thrilling incident of his eventful career. It happened, he tells us, in Pershing's famous campaign in Mindanao, and that, says the Captain, was in 1903., At that time Pershing was operating about twenty-three miles from the coast. 1 did not get to his camp in time to join him; in fact, I was a whole day behind, and it looked as if 1 wouldn't get to see anything at all. But Captain Fitzpat- ricli of thc Fifteeth Cavalry, who had beon left in command of the camp", was about to send food across tho lake tbat lay between us and the force in the field, and f decided I would take a chance and go along with the natives who were to, work the boat. There were six of them in the craft, friendly Moros, and when we got the supplies aboard it was iate in the afternoon. Dusk came on as we Beared Ma- en., on the opposite bank. I could bear Pe'-Hhmg's guns going about four or iv8 miles away, and that was somo satis- l.������������������tion,,although coinciiently witn my gathering in the sound came a di.M-ov- ery of a lot of Moros, all armed, running down to the beach ahead. I was the only white man in the b%>at, of course, uad my,companions told mo to lie down fiat in the bottom, and wheu L had adjusted myself as best I could so as to imitate bags of food they covered me with a ,6arong, a doth'.the natives use as a garment." :' As soon' as we grounded .the armed men"swarmed about the boat. Some of them-eat on th^ gunwale',, and-1 eouM have, grabbed a dusky .leg or two, but I had no such mind. 1* knew enough of their,' lingo to gather- what- they were talking about, arid it was by no-means inspiriting to hear them-brag "about the, number of Americans they- had killed that" morning... In my position I was a good-deal cramped, but'I.hardlyn'dared to breathe,.for I.realized that if somebody-lifted one-corner of-that sarong thatjwouldbe about all for me'y In the morning l_had written a note to Per- shino asking him. to send a troop of cavalry, and I wondered whether my messenger had got through. lt seemed I had been lying there an hour whon shouts were heard-and more men came running down'to the beach. J was couvinee'd 'that they were coming after'my head, and began to wish 1 had not been so enthusiastic about wishing to see a fight. There was a lot-of jabbering, and as it proceeded my ears pricked up and then I"threw the sarong off and got up and stretched myself.'! decided-il they had to have me I might get a better chance standing,up to take a Moro or two along with me. T had learned from the conversation that the late arrivals were messengers from the Dato of Macin, whom Pershing had whipped that morning, though as yet I did not know_it, and they kuew 1 was iu^thiir'bWtT^They^b^ irom their master to como ashore and call upon him. To me that looked very much like an invitation to come on and be chopped up. There was no choice, so I followed thc messengers. Tho Dato told me that Pershing had got the better of him that morning, and that he had submitted and was now anxious to show Pershing that he was as good ae his word.,He proposed to'send - me _on to-tho -American -commander, giving me safe conduct and an escort. Well, I wasn't altogether so i?uro of his intentions, but I palavered away and expressed my appreciation of hi.s royal consideration, and prepared to ���������������������������say "ready." At a sign from the Dato five of the most villainous-looking Moros Helm had over seen came forward with drawn krisses. What a kriss is the Standard Dictionary does not say, bnt we presume tbat it was a weapon sharp enough and long enough to make trouble enough. Anyhow, wo read that (still with drawn krisses) three of the Moros placed themselves at the head of the despairing Captain, while the other two stationed themselves at the rear. He goes on: 1 had no weapon but an old navy revolver that would not cock', but I thanked the chief for his courtesy while other emotions than gratitude fought for the mastery. Our route lay through a country dotted with cottas or small groups of native huts. W^ nad Dot g������������������ne far w*ien. one of tho fellows in front suddenly disappeared in one of these cottas and I guessed that some trick was up. A little farther on, another disappeared, and Boon after the last of the vanguard was gone. The two in the rear still remained, aud I can tell you it was far from comfortable marching along there in the gloom with two savage-looking Moros just a few feet behind me. When we reached a canal aud the roar-guard tald me to cross it, I felt euro 1 was just about to get a blow ou thc back of the head. This impression received some- i~.ng liko confirmation as 1 stopped into tho ditch. I had had an idea that tho water was only about two foot deep, for it was dark and there was no way of guessing, i went in ovor my head. The water, I found'when 1 got on my feet again, was really only four feet deep, but, owing to my miscalculation, I had fallen, which had almost -the effect of being struck. When 1 got to the other bank 1 started ahead ais fast as 1 could go, for 1 saw the light of camp-fires. I did not look back to sec if my rear-guard -was following, but whistled as loud as I could. There was no answer, and fearing to attraet a shot from a native 1 dropped behind a dike. . Then" I crept forward about 100 'yards and dropped again. I'heard_firing, and then I lit for the camp as* fast ae I'could go, yelling in English as I ran. The call ������������������f an ontpost for me to stop yelling'and come on in was grateful music. It just happened that I had struck the side of-the camp from which they were not firing, THE BOY WHO EEOKE THE LIBERTY BELL Every patriotic ^American has learned of Liberty Bell which from the belfry of the State House at Philadelphia proclaimed proudly the Declaration "of Independence,, and which -seven years later made known the joyous news that peace between the United States"-,and the mother eonntry had been at last restored. " For more than a century the old beU, srtill preserved in Liberty Hail, has been a shrine for countless pilgrims from every eorner of the civilized world who have seen the large crack running the entire length of the bell, and unfitting it for duty. This break was always thought to have occurred while liberty Bell was tolling at the funeral of Chief Justice John Marshall, on July"8, 1835, but other stories,at odd.intervals have gone the rounds,- and .this one ie the latest.1- - * - -'��������������������������� ���������������������������>���������������������������' ���������������������������- * Now, more .'than three-quarters of a century after-the; old bell was silenced, comes a man who declares that none of the-'more or lees" accepted-versions "of how it eame to be cracked-is, correct; that hie - version '"alone is' the true o.3> planation of the - incident. - For more than fifty years, he'declares, 'he has been reading-in newspapers and elsewhere'all the various conflicting stories off the 'accident, but; "inasmuch" as- his has been an extremely busy life,,he has never bothered his ��������������������������� head' ��������������������������� overmact about them until.quite recently."'" Being now-old, and.'retired. from act-, ive work he has more, leisure on' his hands; his mind dwells more-and more on the past, his-tenacious memory, of, which.he is extremely proud, is prone to take him back to early youth and review the.happenings that still stand out from the haze of yesterday. , So, when a few days ago this man saw yet another story "of how the Liberty Bell was. cracked, and realized vet again that his memory'branded it as incorrect, he hastened to protest. - "1 was one of those who wero present and assisted in 'the cracking of that bell���������������������������perhaps 1 am the:only person now living who was present," hc stated. Those words took a Times reporter at once to his house with the request for f nll^details.- ��������������������������������������������������������������������������������� --��������������������������� . - ���������������������������= The man who, he says, helped erack the oid Liberty Bell, is Mr. Emmanuel .Joseph Rauch, of 380 West 116'th Street. lie is eighty-six years old, but doesn't look it. In fact, so straight is he still, so square and robust, that he seems scarcely older than his won, a man who has turned fifty. And Mr. Rauch's manner of speech is such as to justify the pride he takes in _his__memqry. His talk _gocg; right ahead, without hesitation or confusion. He never adds anything concerning which he feels the slightest uncertainty. Hc was born at Cluster, Pa., of Pennsylvania Dutch stock, on November (5, lS'J.'i, and removed with his parents to Philadelphia when ho was .������������������evon years old. It was three years later���������������������������in lS3fi ���������������������������that, according to him, tho cracking of thc Liberty Bell occurred. That is the year usually given as the one in which the mishap occurred, but Mr. Rauch iH emphatic in his statement that the bell was not cracked on the occasion of Chief Justice Marshall's funeral. Here is his own version of tho occurrence: "The Liberty Boll was cracked, as 1 remember, on Washington's birthday, 1S35, and this is the way it was dono: '*! was then ten years old. On that day 1 had been sent by ,my mother on an errand to a shop not far from our home. On my return from it, 1 was walking through State House Square when I noticed that the janitor, or steeplckeeper, of the old State Houso building was beckoning to mc, . His name was Downing���������������������������'Major Jaek,' we U6cd to call hini���������������������������and he was a well- known character in Philadelphia at that time. " 'Come here!' he ealled to me and to several boys whom he spied in the square. After he had corralled six or eight of ne���������������������������I don't remember exactly how many���������������������������he told us that he wanted ns to ring the Liberty Bell in honor of Washington's birthday. Tho idea pleased us very mueh���������������������������we boys were uot in the habit of ringing the old bell ���������������������������and we agreed to do it. "Then Downing climbed into the steeple of tho State House and tied a rope to the clapper of the bell. Coming, down again, he put the end of this rope into our hands and instructed us to pull with all our might, which we did. '' Wo were working away, and the bell had struek, so far a8 I ean recall, about ten or a dozen times, when we noticed a change in thc tone. We kept ringing, though, but, after a while, the Bteeplekcoper noticed tiie difference, too. Surmising that something might be wTong, hc told us to stop pulling tbe rope. Then he climbed back into the steeple, we boys following behind. "On the side of the bell that hung toward Walnut Street we found that there was a big crack, a foot'or fifteen .inchee long. Downing then told us to run along home. We obeyed. : "What happened, after that I forget --boy-like' I didn't do "any worrying, and beard'no more about the cracking of the bell until some years'later. Then, however, and many**times since,'! have read of bow the bell came to be cracked, but never have T seen the version which I have just given. - I honestly believe it is the eorreet one.-" . =' . Investigation of what is known- regarding the cracking of the'Liberty Bell gives considerable plausibility to Mr. Ranch's narrative. First, there is, as has been already mentioned, confusion as to just how the bell was,cracked. . It was thc custom to ring it on im portant occasions, -notably on each re- eurrin? Fourth of _ Jnly, but, .according to one authority, it was not rung on that day after 1831.' This would- explain how, if thc bell waa indeed era'ek- ed, as Mil Ranch maintains, on February 22, 3836, the erack was not dis^ covered on the following Fourth' 7of July. "., ' y ' ( '. '" Coining to, the theory, that, the, bell "wan cracked while tolling* for the funeral of Chief Justiee Mar-shall, we. are reminded that: ��������������������������� ,. . *":"While-tolling-" is an- ambiguous phrase. .Is it not * possible, - probable even, that, as stroke after stroke,of tbe clapper smote the side of the bell, thoee who "heard detected .something wrong in the sound, exactly as did -^Downing and hie youthful helpers in Mr. Rauch .s narrative, and.-promptly arrived - at -_the conclusion that the damage had-.been done'on.that very7day,."being unaware that"_the' hell' had-bMn' cracked before? Iu-.view of the-unhesitating nature-, of- Mr. Ranch's statements, this view seems distinctly plausible! ' ". ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������- --."i V- ' There is something'else'whieh" l������������������nr. Hamilton's Pills, -ij only -thought,of. *j*ullsi*as,.a..physic;-v.Ii:.ut.'?'-. now I know that ~Dr. Hamilton '3 .PjBh " are more, for- thfsy guiekened - iuj . /z stomach, liver #nA bowels���������������������������ma'de^W." stouter and strongirr, gave me sueh .���������������������������������������������!-,: or in my cheeks as 1 nover had beffJr*. They do-^good to-parts in ways I'neeJ' not mention in thin letter, but-1 Hi������������������: cerely believj. 3)r. Hamilton'5 Jiirh." should be used at" regular intervalsTbj * every woman���������������������������that's whv I write J35������������������ * letter." " .,'.-,. ' Nd medicfaii. invigorates a w"oina������������������ like Dr. Hamilton's PiUs. , 25c. per Wk, - _ >' all - dealers or the Catarrhozone .(3^ Kingston, Canada. ',.'./' .oiil "A- (Krand Medieine,;-is the-encomi1 urn often passed on Uiekle's Anti-Consumptive Syrup,'and _whcn the results from its use are considered, as; borne out'by ruany persons who have employed it iu stopping coughs and eradicating colds,' it is more than grand. Kept in the house it-is always at hand and it haf. no equal as a ready remedy. If you hnve not tried it, do so at once." decided, pgrchance, to "say - not about it*? ThV'harn had been' there was nothing io fee .gained .-by"^-^,; ing it from the honsetope. ;/ * v- y/\\ ��������������������������� So, perhaps, ".Majsr Jack" bade. tJw]7-' little boys run "home, supposing thailrnov'1'; "- thing would ever come of the*incident,^7; even if* they told .their- elder8r:w,ha���������������������������yia>���������������������������- or.i3 and engineers in,-the construc*Jio������������������"7- ~J of improved flying machines. * . '��������������������������� r_>.77 Wise mothers irfac know the virtue*' of Mother Graves* 'Worm 'Exterminator^ always have-it at hand, ".because...it. proveB its ,vahn. /. V W.. . ^l,.J-J*Ui. *n=7^ 'Ms Gun illicitly ���������������������������loiis cout ' .' . , ~" BEAUTY~PINS. 4 pins to set; 1 large, 3 small; dull gold, ri vetted points; not soldered; former price 25c; Sale Price, 10c. "* HAIR NETS SILK~"ROYAL"���������������������������ex- 7tra large; correct shape; each one'in -envelope; formerly- lOc; Sale-Price, .3.for. 10c. '- ... '.. " > z ' ' ��������������������������� ��������������������������� ., - ��������������������������� ��������������������������� ���������������������������..._��������������������������� --������������������������������������������������������.,. ��������������������������� , ��������������������������� - ��������������������������� i ���������������������������Mi������������������������������������������������������- m ; '"HAIR-NETS, SILK RED CROSS���������������������������: - -large size each-one in sanitary cellu- - loid "cylinder all over; witlfhair pins- and draw string; .-sold at-10c;��������������������������� Sale .^Price 5c. , ' , . 7 , . - , ' v CHILDREN'S~SILK EMBLEM SET '_. -s ,���������������������������2 large stars'; 1" lirge" anchor and ,17 _ bar; colors, ,red, white, navy sky and ..black.- Sale.Price,-15c set. -' --* *- STAY BINDING;7half-inch; black or , . "���������������������������"white; regular 5c .per-roll: Sale Price, '--' 3 for 10c. -' -' /- ' , . , TAPE���������������������������Best India Blocked���������������������������Long lengths; any .size; black or .white; registered brand,- non-twist; regular, ".5c: Sale" Price, 3 for 30c. ' ."_-__ TOOTH BRUSHES���������������������������No72 special^ * Best value ever offered: regular, 20c;, ." Sale Price, 10c. ,r yZ. , ; ^.. .',/' TOOTH BRUSHES, No. '4 special;. assorted handles; extra*.- good Rvalue; - -regular 25c; Sale Price, 15c. L - , -'7; ������������������ . J. . . * - - Jf , - ��������������������������� _ ' {��������������������������� ��������������������������� .r ^~_ . -HAIR BRUSHES, No. 12<)^Pure all 7; '��������������������������� black bristles; good value; Sale Price.; 7 ' 15c * ,;'. -r _;:'" ; ; - * 7-"' - v': ��������������������������� ������������������������������������������������������ "��������������������������� - *������������������ " - HAIR BRUSHES, No. 210;:extra . _ ���������������������������*" long bristles;'- - ebony "and fox-finished \\ / handles. Special Sale Price,* 25c.-'' T;; . HAIR BRUSHES���������������������������Solid Back; pure77 ...white .bristles;.assorted twelve-novel7"' '��������������������������� , . ty handles;- formerly "sold "at _75c and - *', ' $1-00; 'SaleVPrice, 50c.;. 'J;;7.,-.x7\\fi/7u i *��������������������������� ��������������������������� ��������������������������� - - ��������������������������� ��������������������������� f- / (CLOTH BRUSHES^' Nor 12^Recl;or;rfi '- -black backs; Sale" Price,-d5c.'.7"*-;--7--'-:-----'-- -7 CLOTH' BRUSHES,' No. -180;';extra ;":' *���������������������������- long-black bristles: Red _or_. black ��������������������������� zi -7*bristies;;Sale Price, 25c/t'*Ji> /// ,"77-. 1 ORKNEY SKINE. -of-.ont folders with needle. Sale Price, 5c.������������������ =WO0H=MENDING ^est^dualityrall colors- Efich card with needle. Sale Rri-^e. 4 floras 5c. HALF-OUNCE~^ALL~MENDING��������������������������� Black; only; Sale Price, 3 for 10c. 7 SIDE, COMBS, ,. No.',;,i B21;. extra/ Z heavy,. ".hand-polished; - formerly 25c;-" . Sale Price, 15c - '-.'.- ���������������������������* ''-��������������������������� BACK COMBS to*Match....:..!.. '..Sale Price, 25c.��������������������������� y ** ���������������������������- '��������������������������� ..- .--r"- "��������������������������� BARRETTES No.' Bl, shell;' Sale' Price, 10c." ' * ��������������������������� "'- ���������������������������'-'- ' >'��������������������������� ' TAPE���������������������������India Average; long'length..; - black or white;- fornierly, 3 for 5cr NOW, 12 for 10c. '"���������������������������'-" :" " ..' 7^.'z 7 . THIMBLES���������������������������Gold and ��������������������������� Silver:- Two *" thimbles put ���������������������������up in individual-boxes. .; Sale Price, one box of two Thimbles . . , for 5c. ;/'"'-- ' ��������������������������� BOOT LACES; lot 1; '36-in; Sale '- Price7=5c^dozen.^"r ^���������������������������^-^������������������������������������������������������: ~ ������������������������������������������������������?^ir;a~~~ THIS SALE IS FOR CASH AND CA SH ONLY, ASK TO SEE OUR VALUES IN ALL OTHER LINES. WE HAVE THE BE8T IN TOWN. ��������������������������� BOOT LACES, lot"two, 36-in; Sale Price, 10c dozen. BOOT LACES; lot three; 45-in; Sale Price, 15c dozen. j-i ���������������������������^o-s -^ri.~ . ^ J,, fir I .i x//\\ .-/. /��������������������������� - -rc-,*-' i tiy>3M] r j"*./, *zrif *i'f: '/;&z(iki}\\ ijy?&?3 s,. ���������������������������?--��������������������������� "*/ ���������������������������*���������������������������', a- y\\J .p^....-vji* ] V*-'* '.���������������������������" X-It ���������������������������I J *- v*. r A .-���������������������������/<��������������������������� J %���������������������������'%! zy>. -A--.V-.I ���������������������������":/���������������������������'i T'T-ftjvl 'z'i'z. 'J'Zfi ��������������������������� y.'i- ��������������������������� ***&$*%%%%*%*< V- E.-J. Mack J Livery, Feed & Sale Stables ENDERBY, B. C. Good Rigs; Careful Drivers; Dray ing of all kinds. Comfortable and Commodious Stabling for teams. Prompt attention to all customers Land-seekers and Tourists invited to give us a trial. HAS RECORD FOR GROWING HAIR Machela, Nature's Scalp Tonic, will do it in 95 cases out of 100. It is the only remedy ever discovered that is similar to the natural hair foods or liquids of the scalp. Removes dandruff, prevents falling of the hair and all other diseases of the scalp. Each package contains a packet of Machela Dry Shampoo Powder. Price for complete home treatment, $1.00. Sold and guaranteed by A. Reeves. Provincial Elections Result in Completes Conservative Victory In the elections last Thursday, tha Province voted a solid Conservative House. The Liberals did not elect a1 man. The Socialists elected two: Mr. Parker Williams of Newcastle, and Mr. Place of Nanaimo. It will be some days before the complete returns are received, but it is evident the total vote polled was comparatively light. The explanation of this, of course, was that the result was a foregone conclusion, and consequent ly there was a certain amount of in difference among the electors. It i- believed, however, that the Conser vative percentage of the total vote polled will be found to be the larges | ever received for any political party at a general election in Canada. It was reported when the early returns were received that Parker Wil Hams was defeated in Newcastle, but later returns would indicate that he! succeeded in squeezing in by a close shave, his majority being 13 instead' of 150 which he confidently expected In the Okanagan, tho Hon. Price Ellison polled/ about one thousand1 votes, "against 1500 three years ago. He virtually had no opposition, only the Sosialist candidate being in the field against him, and there was a general indifference shown by the electors about voting. He polled C2 at Enderby against 25 for the Socialist. At Mara the vote was 19 to 15. Speaking of the result of theelec tion the Victoria Colonist says: "Such a victory as has been achieved by the government, such an expression of confidence in its administration, such an endorsement of its progressive policy carry with thera important lessons, which Mr. Mc Bride and his colleagues and indeed all the Concervative members of th House must be prompt to understan and sincere in obeying. It has seemed fit to the people of British Columbia to entrust Mr. McBride and his fellow members with the administration of the affairs of this great province! all its great problems. This is no, with all its enormous resources and1 light responsibility, and in the hour of unprecedented success it is fitting that words of soberness should be spoken. . Vigilance . that the public "morieys~shalF"bc faithfuily~cxpcnded7 care that thc sense of responsibility which the members of thc government must feel, shall permeate the ranks of their supporters, a sense of duty to the whole province as well as to their own constituencies on thc part of all thc members of the Legislature should characterise the government and the whole Conservative party. At the same time it is to be borne in mind that one thing stands out conspicuously as thc result of this election, namely that the province heartily endorses a policy ,of progress. The electors have given to Mr. McBride a commission to go forward with his plans for die advancement of their material prosperity. The verdict was not only one of confidence in him as the man responsible for the immediate future of British Columbia, but also one of confidence by British Columbians in themselves and iu their matchless province. "With an overflowing treasury, with expansion observable on every hand, with the fullest trust of thc most energetic, enterprising and progressive people in Canada, McBride has before him an opportunity such as has been given, to few% public men in Canada, an "opportunity"which~"we~are per-^ suaded he will employ to the lasting welfare of those who have extended to him such testimony of their reliance upon his integrity and confidence in his ability." Marriage Prohibited Witfcoat ��������������������������� proper license If yon Immc Marriage Licenses, tell the young folks about it In our Classified Ads They afl know a license is necessary, but they don't all know where to get one. This paper is popular with the young people. raa> ��������������������������� ������������������ ������������������������������������i������������������. ENDERBY PRESS ;WTD WALKER'S7 WEEKLY Women's-Ailments ������������������* eased-by'Neglect Are Quickly Cured and Robust, Sound Health Restored By Dr. Hamilton's Pills ��������������������������� Women arc on Lhc whole more sickly than men. One reason is that their system is more complicated; another and more important reason is Ihey put. orf measures of relief too long*. At the beginning, constipation is lhe cause of nine-tenths of. women's ailments. The blood becomes weakened ancl polluted ���������������������������the nerves suffer and a run-down condition (.alecs root. Because of their mildness of action as a system regulator, because of their undoubted power to remove constipation, irregularities, no medicine for women can compare with Dr. Hamilton's Pills. The kidneys quicklky respond to the remedial action of Dr. Hamilton's Pills and the result is as you would expect, pain in the back and side, shortness of breath, and bad color disappear���������������������������the functions of the body then operate naturally, congestion and pain are prevented and perfect health returns. Thousands of happy women say Dr. Hamilton's Pills are the greatest and best blood-purifier, the finest complexion re-newer, the most certain regulating medicine known. All dealers, in 25c. boxes, or the Catarrhozone Co., Kingston, Canada. Husband: How was the woman's club season? ��������������������������� Wife: Best time I ever had. I was the best-dressed woman present. * * * ���������������������������;��������������������������� "I would like," said a.book agent to a busy editor, "to call your attention to a little work that 1 have here." "Yes?" replied the editor. "Well, let ine call your attention to a whole lot of work Lhat I have here." * + * ���������������������������'Uncle Gabriel, are you in favor of voles for womon'." "Does you-all mean, suh, dat me an' Liza could bof vote?" i es. ���������������������������'Ah suah does favah it, den. Dat would bo four dollars." liriggs���������������������������"I have made a will leaving my brain to the hospital, ancl have just got an acknowledgment from thc authorities." Lofty���������������������������"Were they pleased?" "Briggs���������������������������"They wrote that every little helped." * * * Swift Cure for Croup "Last year two of my children were taken with croup. They coughed something dreadfully, and were too sick to cat anything. I applied Nerviline to the throat and chest ancl gave it internally, also. I also got thc children to inhale 'Catarrhozone.' No remedy could have worked more satisfactorily. I can recommend mothers to use Nerviline; it's a fine liniment. (Signed) "Mrs. F. B. Knechler, "l-Iarriston P.O." She was wearing'her new hal for tho first time. * * * "Thought you'd made a Now Year's resolve to cut out the cigars, uld man." "Kr-no! But 1 tossed up a coin on it." ,, "Heads 1 smoke and tails [ don't, eh?" "Not exactly���������������������������on tho llat I smoke, on the edge I quiL. The coin lay on its flat." with a the law mc A Scotch gamekeeper who had been left in charge of an estate was being questioned by an English visitor. "Are there many deer on the place?" "Hundreds, sir."* *���������������������������** "Many hares?" "Thousands, sir." "Well, now, are there many gorillas?" asked the Englishman, satirically. For a moment the gamekeeper hesitated, then, he replied: ��������������������������� "Weel, sir, 'they���������������������������they come like yer- sel, just noo and-then.'! ,' _ ."USE ffiSOlBOC FOB 11* ,,-��������������������������� /. (;oi-ii!-.,I)ui_io:).s,t'::noii!;15iii7Che3, A.'jL^fircU.-Acbiiiij:, fcj.wib'-"' Jtect., It. allays v^in aiiJ i.U.i ���������������������������* 'ii.t _,_>:��������������������������� ::csa mil inC.im:r._ilii>;i pr(.!:.;;lly, _T-,:l!ri(j ,'Ui'lf>ooll:loi_-cuisps a biUmrc.!i ..ula- tinn of tins blood U-.:u::,':lu'.:<. v.*.rt.as> i,i';'l?iK jiaturoln bi:'!.:;:-.;.'ncv:,l:c::Uliy (ivjuct and olliuin.iti::.: i:un.lJ. Alex Alii, Tubins.jort, I ml., v.-rit s Nov. IJ, l'J.'i: "Z������������������'o(!r any swelling or painful nflliction. t'.oU.-o, r-.l:i_��������������������������� cd Ckinds, V:irJ<-f/ ������������������ Vi'itu, will; !.,<'.., ,'j(:';:i::,i, ."'.grains, _Jo_il.s C'ut'i, r.ruhJi-s, I_,i'.ri:r:Ulou.i. L'Ucft .1.00 amUJ.C'iati-.lldrtiiii.'l'f'L-ioriiuUvcrKil. i!������������������ok -1 u i>co. W.F.VOU1\\'G.r.D.rr.,2I0Lyn.'.nsl;;[lg.,Ko-n!rc3*l,Can. Isaacs (who has been hit golf ball)���������������������������"J vill have you in courts for dis. I vill sue you impounds damages!" Golfer���������������������������"But surely you heard shout 'fore'?" Isaacs���������������������������"Bight! I will take it! Columbus deftly stood the egg on end, thon waited for thc applause. "That's all right enough," said tho audience, "but show us how to buy a really fresh egg." Frowning grimly, Columbus replaced thc egg in his coat pocket and sailed for America. * * !- "So you think the author of this play .will live, do you?" remarked the tourist. "Yes," replied the manager of the Frozen Dog Opera House. "He's got a five-mile start and I don't think tht' boys kin ketch him." x +- * "Thc railroad business is pretty complicated." "Yes," replied the travelling man. "I don't suppose I ever will be able to understand why two towns that look so close together on a railway map get so far apart when thoy come to measure up thc distance with a mileage book." t. * ir Guest���������������������������"Got any good roast beef?" Waiter���������������������������"Yes, sir." Guest���������������������������"Bring me one of your best cuts. I want it fender, juicy, not too well done, not too raw, and with very little gravy. Have thc fat and lean about equally divided, and be particular not fo cut the slice thick. And don't forget the horse-radish. Can you remember all that?" Waiter���������������������������"Ves, sir. (Loudly): Roast beef, one." * * * Small and independent Mamie was exploring a toy-shop with her mother and two older brothers. To sec what she would do in an emergency, fhey hid behind a counter and watched her. After looking around and finding herself yuile alone, she serenely resumed her trudge, gazing complacently at thc array of dolls and toys. Presently a floor-walker, who had taken in the bit of fun, approached hor and said: "Why, hello! Aren't you lost?" " "Oh, no," she smiled, patronizingly, 'T isn't; dem is." * * * A man came into a dog show leading a most disreputable clog by a length of rope. "Where's thc judge?" he demanded. "What do you want the judge for?" asked_an__a_ttcndant. ___ . Doc (Charles) Tanner1 has the .same record. Mike McDcvitt, M. J. Andrews, Hav- is,.J anies and Thomas Murphy are equally iionsusceptible to the iuilueucc. J n the same class with those above named are Pat Shank, Bert Shank, Ed Benyon, Bob Grady, ''Roy Miller, Charles Baldwin, DickcMcMahon, Joe McGuire, Will Durfey, Ed Bither, Bob Proctor, Myron Iving, ' Harry Ilersey, Charles Valentine ami many others." _. "I'll tell you how it is,"��������������������������� said ��������������������������� an official at North Randall.' '"These 'men arc out of doors all the time, these men that-never ������������������������������������������������������drink. They do not J'ccl the call of the still and the vat. They get a touch of nature out under the trees with the trotters ami the pacers. "Why should they go wrong?" Ed Goers, it will be remembered, almost always has a cigar between his upper and lower jaws. But Pop does not smoke. Iiis cigar is only a four- flush. Stops Pain of Burns and Cuts Really Wonderful How Zam-Buk Gives Ease Knight On ward o, 2:11:1, money-winner over the tracks the past season, lhc ice. He came to the largest half mile was raced on Nat Ray, of Toronto, last winter with little racing experience, and was campaigned down fhe. ice circuit. When spring came on, hc was hard and fit, and was ready to race on May 24, from which day he raced through to late fall nnd came home heavier than he went away. Tho brown pacing gelding Ritchie, 2:09.7 recently purchased by J. C. Ward, of Toronto, is another grand example. He made his debut on the ice last winter when in Art Bedford's string, ancl was almost invincible over the frozen footing. He was staked liberally over the half mile tracks and during the summer made over twenty starts, of which he won over twelve and was never behind thc money. There are many others which made successful campaigns over the dirt after first gaining racing experience at the ice races. Furioso, 2:C2_j, ,and Lew Joan, 2:113, raced the past season by Jimmy Powell, are-.graduates of the ice tracks. Game Maid, 2:07.'., raced by, Billy Snow down the Grand Circuit the past season also received her first lessons over thc ice at Ottawa, and there saw'many, other trotters and pacers which "might" be named. - .*���������������������������... Thc old opinion that.. racing over ice is hurtful to horses, is now an opinion of thc past, ancl the time is not far distant when Canada will have an ice circuit of as great importance as many of the largest American half mile track circuits. One of tlie best-trotters which has crossed the border into Ontario to race in recent years came to the Dufferin Tec Mectingin the name of Nata Prime 2.193, owned by Prime Wright, of New Preston, Conn. Nata Prime is a tidy made, rather common looking, little, low-headed brown mare, with a perfect way of going and the best of manners. She is one of the wiry, tough sort that will race all day; and has a wonderful flight of speed, Last spring her duties varied from hauling milk and logs to doing numerous other farm labors. However, it was soon discovered that she was a fast trotter, and before fall came around she was fit and away to the races. She was started six times and WHEN BISMARCK WAS GENTLE The French surgeon Czernicke in his reminiscences of the Franco-Prussian war tells a story that seems to place Bismarck in a new and more gentle liyht. He says: "Seated on some straw and propped up against a pillar of the church of Rezonvillc was one of our poor, soldiers, >a quite young- man named Rossignol. A shell, striking him like thc lash of a whip, had carried away both his eyes and thc bridge of Tiis nose, leaving the front of thc skull bare. This fearful wound was covered with a dressing. - He lay there calm, silent, and motionless, in quiet resignation. Bismarck stopped in front of him and asked mo what was his case. He seemed really touched. 'There is war for you, messieurs the senators and deputies!' Then, turning to one of his suite, hc said: 'Please bring mc some wine and a glass.' Hc filled the glass to the brim, look a sip, -and then, gently tapping the shoulder of the poor martyr, hc said: 'My friend,-will you not drink- something-?' Rousing himself from thc deathlike stupor that was creeping over him the man assented.- Wc then saw Bismarck stoop and very softly and slowly give the wounded soldier the wine. Rising again, hc drank what was left in the glass, and said: 'What is your name, my boy, and where do you como from?' 'Rossignol, from Brittany.' Thc count then took his hand, and said: 'I am Bismarck, my comrade, and T am very proud to have drunk out of thc same glass as a brave man like you,' and stretching his hand over the horribly mutilated head, he seemed to give him a' mute benediction." - To discern and deal immediately with causes and overcome them, rather than to battle with'effects after the disease has secured a lodgment, .is the chief aim of the medical man, and Bickle's Anti-Consumptive Syrup* is the result of patient study along this particular line. At the first appearance of a cold" the Syrup will be found-a most efficient remedy, arresting development and speedily healing the affected parts, so that the ailment disappears. This is the verdict of all who have tried Zam-Buk. The woman in the home knows best its value. A burn from the''stove, from a llat iron, or a hot pan, is instantly soothed by Zam- Buk. When the little ones fall and cut or scratch themselves, Zam-Buk stops the pain and, incidentally, their crying. The best proof of this is ^the fact that children who have once had Zam-Buk applied come for if again. For more serious burns, too, it- is unequalled. Mr. John Johnston, of 7,'M South Marks Street, Fort William, a moulder in Copp's Foundry, says: "Some timo ago I burned tho top of my foot severely by dropping some molten iron from a ladle 1 was carrying. A large hole was burned through my shoe ancl into the top of my foot. I was taken home, and Zam-Buk was applied to thc burn directly. If was surprising what relief this balm afforded. The burn was so deep and so serious that if required careful attention but Zam-Buk prevented other complications arising, and as it was daily applied, soothed fho pains and allayed Ihe inflammation. In the course of two weeks tho hole burned in my foot had been well healed." Mr. W. B. Gibson, of ' Belleville, writes:* "We have tried Zam-Buk often on cuts and sores, and I think there- is nothing that can equal it." Zam-Buk will also be found a sure cure for cold sores, chapped hands, frost bite, ulcers, blood-poison, varicose sores, piles, scalp sores, ringworm, inflamed patches, babies' eruptions and chapped places, and skin injuries generally. All druggists and stores sell at 50c. box, or, post free from Zam-Buk Co., Toronto!'for price. j LADIES WANTED Ladies to do plain and light sewing at home, whole or spare time; good pay; work sent any distance; chtfrges paid; send stamp for particulars. NA- ��������������������������� TIONAL, MANUFACTURING CO., Montreal. THE NA-DRU-CO. ALMANAC FOR 1912 A good almanac is ever welcome. The annual number of the Na-Dru-Co Almanac, the 1912 Edition, now out, is if anything more interesting and more useful than its two ".predecessors. Besides the usual solar and lunar tables and dates of eclipses, the. Na- Dru-Co Almanac gives much informa-* tion which it would be difficult to find, elsewhere. Examples of this" are ;tiie" Map of Altitudes, Time Tables of the World, Figures, on Area, -Population, Exports and'Im'porls, Records of Canadian Premiers, Governors-General, etc. Nearly all loading druggists,, have copies of the Na-Dru-Co Almanac for their customers,-or it may be had by writing the National Drug & Chemical Co. of Canada, Limited, Montreal. won them all, three of which were trot- tcd in three days; the little marc winning nino straight heats and defeating a field of eighteen horses in ono of these races. Fourth money was the best Nata Prime landed at Dufferin, but lack of condition was all that prevented her from showing her true class. She will be ready before the Ottawa meeting is over and when right it will take a very fast-tri.tfer tu diifuat.her. . Nala Prime is by Jno. Bascomb 2,25',, hc hy Wilkie Collins 3901, by Geo. Wilkes, 2.22; first dam by Oxford Chief r,2S2, by Chester Chief 52S2, ho by Hambletonian 10; second clam by a son of Dcxlor Bradford 112; third dam by a son of Volunteer n.r>; fourth dam by Set-ley's American Star M. j Not long ago as :i lot of railbirds wore hanging over the palings separating tlie race track from lho watchful crowd out in front .somebody remarked: ".I say, don't those trainers and drivers ever indulge in a little nip?" Then it. was that one of the race track officials gave voice to his observations. "No, sir," he said. "The per cent, of the trainers and drivers on thc turf who drink or smoke is very small." Now there 'is Lon McDonald. lie neither-smokes'lior drinks. Neither does Walter Cox. Neither does Gus Macey. Vance Nuckols never touched a drop in his life; never smoked a cigar, pipe or a cigarette. It Is Wise to Prevent Disorder.��������������������������� Many causes lead to disorders of thc stomach and few are free from them. At the first manifestation that the stomach and liver are not performing their functions, a course of Parmelee's Vegetable Pills should be tried, and it will be found that tho digestive organs will speedily resume healthy action. Laxatives and sedatives are so blended in these pills that no other preparation could bo so effective as they. LEY TS. FLAX Owing to so much unfavorable weather, many farmers over Western Canada have gathered at least part of" their crop touched by frost or otherwise water damaged. However, through the large shortage in corn, oats, barley, fodder, potatoes and vegetables, by thc unusual heat and drought of last summer in the United States, Eastern Canada and Western Europe, there is going to be a steady demand at good prices for all the grain Western Canada has raised, no matter what its quality _may_be ._ _ Also funiifilicfl hy M.'ii'lin, Ilolo & Wynne Co., Winnijiff.; tell Nuliuiuil Uruj; S Clii'iniciil Co., WiiiniprK and C.'iljtiiry, mill Jb-mli-i-sun Hi-(i-), (In., bid,, Vuni'imvur. - f SHIP YOUR DAtAT FURS and Bf Hides it. us .ur! get 20 per cent. nisiru i'or lliein than ut homo. Writi: to its for our new ])>/]<'������������������ list S find we will mail you ono free Watch this ;!(]. WlHikly. Wo solicit your shipments i'or Beef Hides. Raw Furs. Wool. Tallow. Seneca "Root. Horst* Flair, Sheep Polls, etc. North-West Hide & Fur Oo. 278 Rupert St. Winnipeg, Man. "Want lo show rny dorg," said the man. "Show that?" grinned the other. "Why, you surely don't think that weird object is going to fake a prize?" "Why nol?" demanded the offended owner. "Oh, well," said the attendant, "his h'gs arc enough, without anything else. Why, man, they're miles too short!" "Too short!" retorted thc dog's owner -fiercely,- "Too" short?" What" more du you want? They touch the ground, I'on't they?" i * * liven lho grealesL actor-managers clo imt know all there i.s to bo known about KliiL'ccrafl, lo judge from a curi- ��������������������������� iii.s .slory concerning Sir Herbert Uocr- bolun Tree. It. appear.; that af Iho rehearsal of a certain play at His Majesty's Theatre a wonderful climax had been reached, which was to bo heightened by the effective uf-'o of tho usual thunder and lightning. Thc stage carpenter was f-'ivn Ihe oi*d"i*. The words were spoken, and instantly a noise which resembled a succession of pistol shots was hoard off the wings. "What on earth are you doing, man?" shouted Sir Herbert, rushing behind lho scenes. "Do you call that thunder? It's not a bit like it." "Awfully sorry, sir," responded the carpenter; "but the. fact is, sir, I couldn't hear you because of the storm. That was real thunder, sir." ������������������ * ������������������ ��������������������������� Pastor���������������������������1 was so sorry for your wife during the sermon this morning, Doctor. She had such a dreadful fit of coughing that thc eyes of the whole congregation were fixed upon her. Doctor���������������������������Don't be unduly alarmed. titohb Cure nnimuc heals the lungs OUVUnd PRICE. 25 CiiNTS So much variety in quality makes it impossible for those less experienced to judge the full value that should be obtained for such grain, ihevcturo the farmer never s-toud more in need of the services of the experienced and reliable grain commission man to act for him, in the looking after selling of his grain, than he doos thi sseason. Farmers, you will therefore do well for yourselves not to accept street or track prices, but to ship your grain by carload direct to Fort William or Port Arthur, to bo handled by us in a way that will get for you all there is in it. We make liberal advances when desired, on receipt of shipping bills for cars shipped. We never buy your grain on our own account, but act a.s your agents in selling it lo the best advantage "for "your" ac'cou'ntrand"we do "so"ori" "a'fixod"commission"of "lc"."pe"r" bushel. We have mado a specialty of this work for many years, and are well known ovor Western Canada for our experience iu the grain Irade, reliability, careful attention to our customers' interests, and promptness in makng settlements. Wo invite farmers wbo have not yet employed us to write lo us for shipping instructions and market information, and in regard to our standing in the Winnipeg Grain Trade, ancl our (Innnclal position, wc beg to refer you lo the Union Bank of Canada, and any of Ils branches, also lo the commercial agencies of Bradslreets and K. G. Dun & Co. GRAIN COMMISSION MERCHANTS 703 Y Gram Exchange , WfnnS Plaster Board'takes the place of Lath, and is fireproof The "Empire" brands of Woodfiber and Hardwall Plaster for good construction SHALL WE SEND YOU PLASTER LITERATURE The Manitoba Gypsum Co., Ltd. WINNIPEG, MAN. 127 ENDERBY PRESS AND WALKER'S WEEKLY ���������������������������������������������* The Outlaw (By Owen Oliver) Mary Travers was a trifle flushed with dancing, and she looked very pretty and pleased when her cousin, the young colonial secretary, escorted her to a seal, after the second waltz at the governor's ball. He smiled at her with big brotherly approval, and inspected hor programme. "Two dances'to fix up," hc remark-' ed. "Whom shall I introduce, Cinderella?" lier eyes wandered round the room till Ihey fell upon a very tall, dark man, who had not danced yet. He was thc finest figure in a room of fine men. "Who is that big fellow?" she asked. Her cousin followed her eyes. His smile nickered, and went out. He drew " a deep breath, looked harder at the tall man, and drew another. "Good heavens!" he ejaculated. "A prince in masquerade?" Mary inquired. "in masquerade," her cousin agreed grimly, "but not exactly a prince! The nerve of the scoundrel to come here! I may 'be mistaken, but���������������������������upon my soul, it is Kenny!" / ��������������������������� "Who is Kenny?" the girl asked. She was new to the colony. "Dick Kenny, the bushranger. There's five hundred pounds on his head!" Mary took another look at the big stranger, immaculately clad in evening dress. The stranger looked for a moment at her. His cold eyes seemed to catch lire suddenly. "Introduce him!" she lold her cousin. The colonial secretary's well-trained face almost betrayed surprise. "Well," he observed, "you women are curious ^creatures! Do you want to say that you've danced with a man who's been hanged?" "A hanged lion is better than a live donkey," said Mary, "and he isn't liiino"ccl yet!"- "He will be within a month," her cousin asserted, "if I'm not mistaken in him. I must go and find the chief of police, and see what he thinks. If he agrees 'with me, I shall get a warrant for the man's arrest from H. E."' The staff always spoke of his excellency thc governor in initials. "If you see H. E. go out suddenly, you'll know " ,' that you won't get a dance with your friend. He looks as cool as a cucumber!" .- "He .looks belter to dance with than to hang," Mary protested, with a toss - of her wilful head. ��������������������������� ..*, --- : "."Well,-you aren't going to dance with him, Miss: Featherbrain! Here's .Mor- - "ris. it's his business, .as "A. D. C, to know everybody. -He'll find' you the -'necessary partners, while I go and see to this affair. I say, Morris, this,young :" person doesn't know more than a quar- ��������������������������� ter of the people here, and she has two dances left.' introduce some nice fellows, will you? , I've something to do - for H. E." " ' ' - - ��������������������������� , - ' He departed, leaving Mary with the jovial young A. D. C, who took her card and glanced at it. "Considering that you only arrived last mail," hc remarked, "you seem to know most of the best! I wish I could have asked you for half a dozen dances instead of"6ne; but a poor wretch of an A. D. C. has to look after the "wallflowers, not thc roses, you know. Who is -the first- lucky man 1 may introduce?" Mary laughed. "1 am so small," she said. "It would " be amusing to dance with that big man!" She indicated the tall stranger. "Who is hc?" "Hanged if I 'know!" the A. D. C. confessed. "Some up-country colonial. ==^Anyhow,^^hc*d.s^a^gao_d__.lo_3kirig--ChaiK "It is a small world here," she apologized, "and small worlds arc curious ���������������������������or at least I think so. I only came last week." "No doubt people were curious about you," he said. "I was thinking rather of you," she retorted. "1 have heard two guesses about you already." There was a trace of emphasis in her tone; and the stranger raised his eyebrows a trifle. "Tou mean lo tell me the guesses, I fancy?" he said. "Don't you?" She nodded. "Prince; and���������������������������bushranger!" she said. Thc stranger started slightly. "As bad as that?" he protested. "As bad as lhat," she declared. "You mustn't be surprised if you are called upon to account for yourself." She laughed, but her eyes were keen. The stranger answered her eyes, instead of her laugh. "Shall I glean wisdom from that remark?" he asked quietly. "There is wisdom in it," she told him. "But���������������������������" She glanced over her shoulder into the ballroom. The govr ernor was still dancing, she observed. "But no doubt you' are ready to account for yourself?" The stranger looked steadily at her. "To be frank with you," he owned, "I am not." Mary drew a deep breath. "Then," she said, "if I were you, 1 think���������������������������I think I should watch-the governor. If a servant comes to him, and ho goes out quickly���������������������������I think, if I were you, I should go quickly too!" The stranger stretched himself. "There is a fatal objection to that," he said. "I should lose my second dance with you." "You might lose that anyhow," she remarked, with a touch of seriousness. "If you cannot account for yourself, you can hardly expect me to dance with you." "I am prepared to account for myself to you," he told her gravely, "and I desire to do so. I do not propose to account for myself to these other people, whatever thc consequences of my refusal." "I gather that you anticipate consequences that may be awkward?" " * "Awkward, perhaps,". he agreed. "Yes;-but if you force me to encounter them, I must do so." . "I.cannot help your staying, if you arc so foolish." ., * . "Pardon me! You can help my stay- ingby .giving me another opportunity to explain." If I might hope to meet you���������������������������Within the town, of, course?", - ��������������������������� "Certainly/ not," she answered.'. . "Then I shall stay to clairn'my dance, and the consequences." . " She' looked over her shoulder* into the ballroom again "A servant has" just-come to. the governor," she said breathlessly. "He is reading a note���������������������������he is going out���������������������������oh, go! Do go!" "By. the second fort," he begged. "To-morrow afternoon, at four. I-.en- treat you," little lady!" "No," she protested.' "No, no!" "Then I will stay," he asserted. "No," she entreated.' "No! Please don't. I should feel responsible for��������������������������� for the awkward .consequences. Do you think you ought to ask me to meet a���������������������������a man who .cannot account for himself?" "I throw myself upon- your generosity, little lady," he said. "We are people who do not go by reason, you and I. Will you meet me?" "I cannot," she began. "I���������������������������" There was a rustle. Her cousin approached I'll .find out his name from a steward, and do him a service!" Hc returned shortly with the big stranger, whom hc introduced as Mr. Graham. Mr. Graham promptly asked for a dance; and when he saw Mary's card ancl found' two vacancies, he asked for both���������������������������the next dance, and one toward the end. Sho gave them. "Rut il is almost too hot to dance," she protested. "Shall Yvo~sirthis"ono"bul," he proposed, "if it isn't loo hoi lo lalk?" "1 don't talk much," she said���������������������������with obvious mendacity���������������������������"but 1 listen nicely. It Is thc way I cultivate a reputation for Intelligence; the only way possible to me. My cousin has just called me a featherbrain. I'm not so featherbrained as people think. Uemembcr that, if 1 do lalk. There's wisdom to bo gleaned from my conversation," "1 will endeavor to glean," the tall stranger promised. They went out upon the balcony together, and sat facing the sea. There was a great spangle of stars in the sky; and afar in the harbor was a spangle of ship's lights. "11 is good to be out in the open air," he remarked. "A room always seems to me like a prison." "I have never tried a prison," said Mary. "Have you?" "*��������������������������� She looked up at him artlessly. "Not at present," he told her. "I dare say you've deserved it?" she suggested. "I dare say," he agreed; "but you guess it quickly." No Rest With Asthma.���������������������������Asthma usually attacks at night, the one time whon rest is needed most. Hence the loss of strength, tho nervous debility, the loss of flesh and other evils which must bo expected unless relief Is secured. Fortunately relief is possible. Dr. J. D. Kellogg's Asthma Remedy has proved its merit through years of service. A trial will surely convince yoa. between some palms. She suppressed a scream. "Yes, then," sho agreed. She rose, fluttering. "Go now!" "At four to-morrow afternoon, then?" he persisted. "At four," she whispered, just" as her cousin stood in front of them. "I have been looking for you, Mary," ho said coldly. The stranger rose and bowed. The colonial secretary bowed stiflly, and led -thc-glrl-away, - -* "You Utile fool!" hc reproached her. "You headstrong little fool! The governor is signing the warrant now. It is Kenny. He'll be arrested in five minutes. It would havo been done now, if I hadn't had lo gel you away first. You tiresome Utile thing! The governor Is going lo speak lo you tomorrow morning. You'll havo a bad ten minutes with him." Mary laughed scornfully. "I've had a good ten minutes with a man," she said; "and I know he doesn't deserve hanging.",.. "Well," her cousin retorted, "he'll hang. There go the men with the warrant." He whispered to them as they passed. "Out on the balcony." Then he hurried his cousin away. They did not find the stranger on the balcony, or anywhere. He had disappeared. Mary saw thom come back alone. She was dancing then, and her partner asked why she laughed. "It must be my happy disposition," she answered gaily. "I often laugh at nothing!" "A jolly little creature, lhat Miss Travers," he told a friend afterwards, "but nothing inside her pretty little head, I should think." Her cousin was of much the same opinion. In fact, he said so lo his excellency the governor, by way of apology. "She doesn't mean any harm," he declared, "but she's utterly reckless and thoughtless. She gets it from her Irish mother, and the national sympathy for outlaws with It! He's humbugged her into thinking that he's an. ill-used person, and she's promised to meet him at four to-morrow afternoon. I only heard the time, not the place. Wilh your permission, 1 propose to watch her and follow, with the chief of police and one or two fellows who'll hold their tongue. We'll take him quietly; and it will be a lesson to her." "Very well," his excellency agreed; "but we shall find her a handful here! You'd better tell her people to send for her to come home. The lillie minx!" "She doesn't think," her cousin said apologetically. That was where he made a mistake. Mary thought a 'good deal, and her smiling eyes wero observant, lt occurred to her, soon after lunch, that she was being watched. She guessed at once that hor cousin had heard the hour of appointment, and intended to capture tlie outlaw through her. She thought the matter over carefully, with much biting of her pretty lips, and finally she told her faithful Irish maid the whole story. "He's too fine a figure of a man to hang, Biddy, my dear," she said; "and I'm sure he isn't really bad. I'll go riding out on the sands the other side of the town and draw them off. You must go out to the second fort and meet 'him. You'll know him by the bigness of the creature. You can just go up and ask him if he's 'come to claim a dance. Then you can tell him lhat I'm giving the dance to-those who are after him, arid that he must go away' as fast he can. If he likes, he may write his explanation and send it to you, and you'll give it to me. You must say that he owes his life to me, and that what he does with it will go clown to my account; ancl I expect a good ^balance from him. 'She leaves it to your honor." Tell him that, Biddy, my dear." "Sure, Miss Molly," Biddy protested, "you leave it to a broken reed! If anyone had told me but yourself, I'd be after getting the dirty reward; but you need have no fear, Missie darlin', since he's'a friend of yours. -vAnd, from what I hear, he only shot a rent-collector and a customs officer, and that's no great sin!" . Biddy started off soon after half past three. A quarter of an hour later Mary went out on one of her cousin's horses. It was the one he had told her not to take when he placed his stables at her disposal���������������������������a huge, black creature named Nick. The groom was" out, and she easily prevailed over the .stable-boy;. She prevailed over Nick, too, apparently, for he gave no signs of the dislike which he was reputed to feel for "strange riders. Mary patted his neck "as he trotted easily through the town. - . ' ' 7' . \\ ���������������������������.'"You-beauty!" she-said.. "You dealing, fellow! _ .Won't we Mead them .a dance, Nick? They* are frightened" of you just because -you.- are ' big and strong .and handsome���������������������������like someone else,' Nick, dear." " -- , , - She and Nick certainly did lead their pursuers a-dance. The colonial secretary, who was a good horseman, and who was mounted on his wonderful little bay mare, looks back upon the ride, with a certain amount of-pride. -. "Even old Nick, with a featherweight on him, couldn't tail us right off,", he says. - - ' - ' " But he was - thankful when Mary turned Nick-and rode homeward. The little bay mare,was nearly done; and he. was content to keep his cousin in sight and follow her back to the town. The rest of the pursuers were long since out of the. hunt. The chief of police had tumbled off at the third fence. . Two of his assistants had declined to try it. The third went into the brook just after his chief's downfall. Only-Mary and her cousin finished the course; ancl he was a long way behind. , ' The colonial secretary found Mary waiting for him at his stables. He expected her to wait for him there. Sho ^vrf^irof^ilfe^^Bl^^^ trouble. He was not in a rage, as she expected, but very grave. She liked his gravity less than his anger. "^'ou havo done a very foolish thing, Mary," he said. "I say nothing of risking your life on an untried horse, over a wild country that you didn't know��������������������������� though some of your leaps wore madness. No other horse could "have done them; and Nick wouldn't havo done them'for anyone-elde.���������������������������You- have-deliberately led us off the scent to' give a robber and murderer the chance to escape from Justice!" "Tie isn't a murderer." Mary denied, "If .he's killed anybody, he's done il In fair fight. I'll stake my life on that!" "That is for the law to judge," said her cousin sternly. "It ought to judge you. ' 1 suppose J can persuade tho governor to keep you out of if, If he can; but you'll have to leave by the next mail. He lold me, even before this, thai you would have to bo sent home. You must come with me and see him now." "Must?" Mary tossed her head with an attempt at defiance; but hor. cousin took her arm quietly. "You've been several sorts of fool over this," hc told her. "Don't bo another sort���������������������������for the sake of the old people at home who trusted you to Kathleen and me." Kathleen was his wife. "Very woll," said Mary, "I'll come. But I don't care. I've saved a man worth saving, if I'm not mistaken." The old governor looked hard at her, and shook his gray head. STRUCK BY LIGHTNING Neatly describes the celerity of Putnam's Painless Corn and Wart Extractor. Removes a wart, takes off a callous, roots out a corn without pain, in twenty-four hours. When you use Putnam's Painless Corn and Wart Extractor, there is no scar, no burn, no loss .of- time. Satisfaction guaranteed with every 25c. bottle of Putnam's Painless Corn and Wart Extractor. "You needn't tell me the story," he said. "I know. I hear that you were on that great black horse of your cousin's. He has killed one man, and damaged three or four." "He would never hurt 'me," said Mary, "and���������������������������and I don't think you will! I only���������������������������only went for a little ride!"- She smiled bewitchingly. "A little ride," said the governor, "with big consequences. The���������������������������the person whom you know as Mr. Graham has been to sec me. You need not look alarmed. I have not arrested him. He has gone away from here in a gunboat which I put al his disposal. Hc is nol���������������������������" Thc governor paused. "Not an outlaw!" Mary cried. "I was going to say not a bushranger," the governor corrected. "He is an outlaw. Not from our law. 1 cannot tell you his story; only this. His father was a prince in���������������������������in a continental country. I-Ie married an American girl. The son favors his mother, and���������������������������well, there is political trouble. His ideas do not suit the country to which hc belongs, as his father's son. I once rendered-a service to his ���������������������������his sovereign. It is possible that I may' have assisted Prince���������������������������Mr. Graham���������������������������to set the trouble right. Anyhow, he has taken my advice, and has gone back to his���������������������������his sovereign.' It is lucky, perhaps, that you acted as you did. .It forced him to come to mc." "I suppose," Mary suggested, "he came because he thought I should get into trouble?" "You deserve to,"-the governor told her. "You will, I expect. If his master takes the matter as I hope, and Mr. ���������������������������Graham behaves as I advised him, I can foresee your punishment." "My punishment!" Mary gasped. His excellency nodded several times. "A life sentence," he said with a slow smile, "to the dignities of a princess!" "But," Mary protested, "his���������������������������his sovereign can't make me marry him!" "No," said the governor; "but I think he can!" "Oh!" said Mary. "Oh-h-h! Popr, unfortunate man!" She said the-same thing when the prince came there again, six weeks later, and proposed to her within five minutes of .their 'meeting. "You poor unfortunate man!" she answered. ' - "Do you mean .that you won't?" he' asked. ��������������������������� - ��������������������������� "No-o," she explained. "1 mean that I will! I'm not going to treat you as a prince, but just-as a husband!" "Thank you," said the prince; "but I shall treat you as a princess!" " I-Ie took her hand and raised it to "his lips. "My, emperor,"-he said, "forgives me on condition that I take my place as a rirince, with all its cares .and dignities. You; must share them*: Mary."' "..Mary.Travers drew, her little self up.' She looked .almost big-for a moment". .', "We will be a great prince"1 and .'a great princess," she7said,"tb other", people. To each'other we will be more!'.' THE..NECESSARY WORM The discovery -of a nevy species of earth-worm may awakebut a languid interest in the layman's , mind, yet those'mihute studies- of the humbler works of.nature that result in bringing to light- previously unrecognized inhabitants of the soil .really possess a very high' degree of interest,-since they often -indicate unsuspected processes whereby the earth is kept in a condition to be the home and nourisher of man. Darwin surprised the general reading-public - by his revelations" of thc indispensable role played by the humble earth-worm in cultivating the soil. He, showed how the strength of a pigmy was changed ' into that of a giant by the virtue of numbers and of industry, so that the richest soil was turned over and over again by the labors of earth-worms and thus kept in a fertile condition When Nostrils are Plugged Your Catarrh is Bad BY ACTING TO-DAY YOU CAN QUICKLY CURE CATARRH AND AVOID BRONCHITIS, PERHAPS CONSUMPTION Most Agreeable and Surest Cure is Catarrhozone, Which Cures Every Curable Case Catarrhozone proves especially good in those chronic cases where mucous drops down the throat, sickens the stomach, and pollutes the breath. When the nostrils are stuffed, only a few breaths through tho inhaler are needed to clear the passages, and where there is coughing and sore bronchial tubes the soothing, healing properties of Catarrhozono act almost as magic. Once you stop taking medicine into the stomach and get the healing oils and pure balsams of Catarrhozone at work you can be sure of quick and lasting cure for nose colds, catarrh,, weak lungs, bronchitis, and speaker's sore throat. 13 YEARS OF CATARRH CURED. "As Catarrhozone has cured me of a Catarrhal Cough, and Asthma that . lasted thirteen years, I feel I can hon-_ estly recommend it. I really used all kinds of medicine, .but Catarrhozone was the only one that did any -real - good. I. am entirely cured���������������������������have no. cough, no bad breathing, spells, not a sign of a cold or catarrh about me. ' But I will always -occasionally use ' 'Catarrhozone,' I prize it so highly." ' "Mrs.' E. L'. Osgood, "Johnson P.O., Ont." The complete $1.00 Outfit of Catarrhozone is sufficient for 2 months'. treatment, and is guaranteed. -Smaller - size, 50c, at all dealers, or The" Ca-' tarrhozone Co., Buffalo, N.Y.,* and* Kingston, Ont. _* - ��������������������������� * ,.' __. <��������������������������� ���������������������������When'f^irdweWiv^ the importance of the work done by worms, he was not aware of the existence of more than eight or ten species in Great Britain. Now, owing to thc labors of students who have devoted their lime to the study of earth-worms in that country, at least twenty different species aro known, and a vast amount of interesting information has been gathered concerning their character- and- habits ---" II might bo thought that there i.s not much difference among worms, bul, as a matter of fuel, there Is fur more difference than exists among many more pretentious forms of animal life. Short worms and long worms; worms that climb trees, and others that never leave the ground; worms whose color Is green, brown, rose-red, and Iridescent, and some that are described by the enthusiastic nnd admiring naturalists as "neat and pretty," figure among the various species that havo been classified. starting and .halting, together with'all'*' the more-notable incidents of the day's *,*-' '< march. ' ���������������������������- "-���������������������������,-' :7 '*' 7; - -77," -' / ( , -r . . -v,; , r In - a little note-book, ruled for the'7 ".- purpose, * the exact . time of starting was put.down," and thereafter, ."at the', end of every five minutes, the directionLf,-- in which, he was. proceeding-wast de-.- - termined bya glance; of -the/compass'--7 ' and carefully noted, while'occasionally *7" the.-readings of, the aneroid * and ��������������������������� the V-7 thermometer were "taken.*- '���������������������������'/ t '/' "~ / ':' A. brook .crosses the path.' Willf.the; blue pencil it' is instantly designated,,'.- as "well as .the direction-of 'its'."current*"'' and-ils' estimated .breadth "and���������������������������.depth.'"''.1 Every" change, in'.'lhe character-of Hlie'-V) country is^entered," as* from-wooded'to_ grass - lands, -or -"from'desert "to~fertilef" soil. .The;prominent- objects'."encquni-V" ered, on" "the way, with-: their ."apparent1 j height and distance,,, are" all indicated.'?'. So also^ are the'names.'of^the ,tribes7 and -any'-local7informa"tion.\\',that ,may7 have",beenf obtained.-.7=7 '- ;7r -,-"7,-"7 - The time and:duration,of every halt ,- .is carefully kept, as., it. is' necessary'. to7 know the/actual, marching Ume',in.,or-7. der to'calculate the distance gone." Dr.7 Junker's' uniform rate ,was a.little bverl- three miles an'hour. : ;��������������������������� ���������������������������/���������������������������'-' '[ ���������������������������'";" " I. \\,, - - / ' - .--*-*- ��������������������������� When..the night camp.jwas:reached,. . the, first' duty7of."the explorer," after \\- supper, wasto copy all-tlie notestmadeV during the day into a large "bookj/onejr page generally, though "sometimes" two, - being used1 to record1 a day's march. If the night were*clear,-th'e";travellers-": work wo'uld.end with an" observation 7 for determining -thea position' of. the",' camp.." This-done, he felt that he had :; earned, his right to rest. - > < . ���������������������������< In this manner Junker travelled" onv- foot four thousand miles through as; country a large.part of which had never before been visited by a white man.- . - -,.a \\ , w, ~/V^* .<���������������������������*, 7/irM .%. ' A I ,_,r ___-., I ���������������������������������������������������������������!������������������? I -ir-'-ftl vf-1"-"? I *, y Ellen Hume of Philadelphia, nearly ninety years of age, has been in the employ of one, family for sixty-one years, establishing a record for faithful service. .,She entered the employ of thc family of Isaac II. Morris as a servant in 1S50. and is now with a daughter of that pioneer. She accompanies thc family on its travels. THIY HAVE YET TO SCORE A FAILURE DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS EMERGE. TRIUMPHANT FROM EVERY TEST AN INGENIOUS EXPLORER To make an accurate description of the route taken through an unknown country requires an amount of hard and incessant labor of which few people have any conception. An instance in point may be taken from the explorations of William Junker in central Africa. This man, a Russian by birth, spent five years endeavoring to trace thc course of the River Welle, which lies between the head-waters of the Nile and the Congo, with a view lo determining the position of the watershed between the two rivers. When actually on the march he wore a coat designed by himself, having, numerous large and small pockets especially arranged for the handy use of his watch, compass, aneroid, thermometer, and notebooks. Fro*xi one of its buttons hung three pencils; one red for marking his route, another blue for noting the rivers and streams, the third black for recording the times of Ernest St. Pierre tells how they rescued him from the tortures of Backache and Bright's Disease Le Petit Bois Franc, Tcmiscouta Co., Que.���������������������������(Special)���������������������������-Ernest St. Pierre, a well-known farmer of this place, is telling his neighbors of his almost miraculous cure, from Bright's Disease, and he always.winds up with: "I advise all persons suffering* from Backache or Bright's Disease to use Dodd's Kidney Pills." For like thousands of other sufferers in Canada Mr. St. Pierre found his cure in the good old Canadian Kidney remedy. And his indeed was a particularly bad case. His eyes were puffed and swollen, his appetite was fitful and he was always tired and nervous, while the pains in his back made any form of work something to be avoided. Today he is strong ancl well. Six boxes of Dodd's Kidney Pills worked the transformation. More and more in this neighborhood is it becoming a motto, "If the disease is of the kidneys or from the kidneys, Dodd's Kidney Pills will cure it." They have been tried in many cases of backache, rheumatism, lumbago and Bright's disease, ancl in no case whero they have been given a fair trial have they failed to cure. 1 if THE ENDERBY PRESS AND WALKER'S WEEKLY Thursday, April 4, 1912 Sure ana prompt Delivery on date promised You can order Clothes by mail through us��������������������������� REAL genuine Semi-ready Clothes made to your own special order and exact physique type measurements. And you can have the assurance that the measures are right���������������������������with the added assurance that a perfect fit is guaranteed. The Semi-ready Company stands behind our guarantee. 300 patterns to choose from���������������������������the - finest English weavesin Worsteds,. '"' " Chuiois, Serges and Tweeds, ranging in value from $18 to $35 when made to Special Order. Semi-ready Tailoring is sold at absolutely the same label prices everywhere in Canada. Wc send the order by mail���������������������������and the Suit is hand-tailored in four days at the shops. Enderby TradingCo Enderby, B. C. o For your Seeds, Ornamentals and Fruits Go to the Seedhouse .& HElNRY Nurseries Vacowr, B. C. We have the finest Btock on the Coast bast year being my first year irTblTsi~ ness, I was badly handicapped for want of stock, hut not 60 this year. Send us your order and wo shall give you satisfaction. See our new catalogue (FREE.) A. It. MACDOUGALL, Prop. Cooking Stoves Coal and Wood Heaters Ranges, Etc. I have added a standard line of these goods and am prepared to quote you prices. Wm. H. Hutchison ENDERBY We have on cut at all times, and our aim is to give good service. G. R. Sharpe, Enderby, B. C. THE NEAR EAST DANGER (Continued from pafre 7) membership of over 70,000. That is said lo be a world's record. Fifteen works of the first magnitude and a hundred smaller firms are manufacturing (lying-machines of every conceivable pattern and system. Five world's Hying records, it is claimed, are in German hands���������������������������the longest (light with one passenger (Suvclak, A hi*. 3-1 min.); with two and three passengers (Grulich, 2 hr. 2 min. 4 5 sec. and 1 hr. 35 min. respectively) ; wtnle Fraulein Melli Besse, airwoman, holds the woman's height record of a fraction over half a mile. England and France are challenged to show a programme of "meets" and "circuits" comparing with the events already planned in Germany for 1012, to wit: April 28 to May 8.���������������������������Leipzig Aviation week. May IS to 2G.���������������������������South-western Germany circuit. May 24 to 31.���������������������������Johannisthal Berlin flying week. June 2 to 14.���������������������������North-western Germany circuit. June 9 to 12.���������������������������Berlin-Vienna race. June 16 to 3 0.���������������������������Schleswig-Holstein (Kiel) circuit. July 2S to August 11.���������������������������Southern Germany circuit. August 15.���������������������������Thuringian circuit. August 20.���������������������������Around Berlin race. September 15.���������������������������Berlin-Copenhagen race. September 20.���������������������������East Prussian cir cuit. = OF CANADA Paid-up Capital. Rest CO f Of Q7A and Undivided Profits v09M.OM.$0IV Total Assets (Over) $58,0Q0������������������000 A Growing Balance in a Sayings Bank Account is one" of the strongest incentives to further saving. It is a source of genuine satisfaction, and gives a comfortable feeling of security from financial troubles. If you haven't a Savings Bank Account already, now is the time to start one. Come in and do it. fnderby Branch, S. w. h������������������kuv, Onager LONDON, ENG., BRAN*^, 51 Threadneedle St., E.C. F.W.ASHE, - - Manager. G. M. C HART SMITH, Assistant Mgr. September 29 to October 6.���������������������������Second Johannisthai-Berlin flying week. Many of these competitions will be open only to German and Austrian airmen, the central idea being to develop flying for the exclusive benefit of the two" great allied armies. The World's Best Flying'Camps". In Johnnisthal-Berlin and in Doberitz, the German' Aidershot, the Fatherland has a pair of "flying- camps" challenging comparison with the best in the world. At Johannisthal, an enclosed field of SOO acres, there ars now 102 pupils at work, including a German baroness and a Russian princess, and seventy machines are in service. Thirty pupils are military officers. At Doberitz exclusively army airmen are trained. Instruction includes long practice observation cruises across country. Brilliant flights ��������������������������� Berlin-Hamburg and return -without intermediate landing, Berlin-Stettin and back, and kindred feats���������������������������are of frequent occurrence. German army airmen are trained to travel in pairs���������������������������one for steering, the other for observation. Both must be pilots. A German firm has just placed an "armored aeroplane" at the War' Office's disposal. It is said to demonstrate that flying craft can be successfully protected against rifle ancl light shell Ore. Doberitz airmen are also practicing zealously with the carrying and dropping of explosives, but the results of their perpendicular target- practice are hermetically sealed. A Great Aeroplane Fleet. Many more young officers are volunteering for the new arm than the War Oflice can possibly use. Army orders for aeroplanes are rapidly putting the construction industry on a sound commercial basis. If the Reichstag were suddenly to pass a inige 'aerial programme,' it would find that the plant exists capable of carrying it out. There is talk in ofli- 2ial" circles of a scheme of government subsidies for privately owned aeroplanes, such as now exists with regard to motor-cars. If this project sl.ould materialize, Germany will become possessed of an air "fleet which need not fear a brush.with the "most powerful rival."* -' ~ " PUT A RING AROUND IT If you to sell List it with me in - "time "for"my new booklet, soon to be issued. If you want to buy land see me. Chas. W. Little Eldernell Orchard,Mara,B.C. Fred. H. Barnes BUILDER & CONTRACTOR Plans and estimates furnished Dealer in Windows, Doors, Turnings and all factory work. Rubber oid Roofiing, Screen Doors and Windows. Glass cut to any size. We represent S.C.Smith Co,, of Vernon. Enderby. Before going to bed to-night, draw a ring around Thursday, "April 11th on your calendar and make a note reminding you to get a ticket or tickets for the entertainment given-by J. W. Bengough, the cartoonist, singer and raconteur, in K. of P. Hall, under the auspices of the Enderby Boy Scouts. Come and have a-good laugh. Bring your wife and give her a s:ood laug'h. If you haven't got a wife brine: someone w*>o may subsequently occupy that desirable position. In the realm of caricature, mimicry and entertainment none sup- Tin ss and few equal J. W. Bengough, the funny man with the' funny program. The use of a Dry Farming Congress cancellation stanrp upon all OTtfoln_^-In1d=in^mlii^]etteri=:in=itK?: Lethbridge postofflce, has been sanctioned hy the Dominion Postal authorities. This is the first time the Postofflce Department has permitted the use of a cancellation stamp of this nature. The stamp announces the fact that thc Seventh International Dry-Farming Congress will be held-in Lethhridge', Oct. 21-26,-1912. - on what constitutes a well-regulated On April 6th, in the window of W. Scott's shoe emporium, the ladies of the Hospital Auxiliary vill sell home ma'dc candy, A meeting of the ladies of the Hospital Auxiliary will do held in thc City Flail next Thursday afternoon, April 4th, at 3 o'clofik. Something will be sold at a bargain. For Sale���������������������������35 acres, one mile from Enderby, on Mara road; river front, good house, stable and chicken house. Also brick house in town. Apply Robt. P. Bradley, Chase, B. C. ft) ffop: 14 u 28 6 15 ll 29 16 23 30 PfP 10 17 24 31 25 Fl 12 19 26 SK 6 13 20 n Listen! Our shoes wearwell ojxd make the foot look ne&t aoid trihi. They are comfort shoes too. It is not a "toss-up" when you buy our shoes, but a certainty that you will get shoes which possess style, which wear well and which will keep you away from the corn doctor. The makers of the shoes we handle tell us to stand behind every pair we sell. So we can be sure ihat your feet will be pleased to have our shoes. Ve shall be pleased to have your shoe business. Empress Shoes for Ladies. Slater's Shoes for Men. Enderby Trading Cov Ltd. MOFFET'S BEST COLUMBIA FLOURING MILLS CO. Limited ������������������������������������������������������MMBMBMHBMHHHBHnBMHHaBnBHanMaaMHBaH__aB____^^ LOANS Applications received, for ��������������������������� Loans on improved Farming and* City property. Apply to��������������������������� G. A. HANKEY & CO., Ltd. VERNON, B.C. J. GARDNER LANDSCAPE AND JOBBING GARDENER Box 40 Enderby, B. O. Work done by the hour or season. Book your orders now for spring Work Seeds and plants for sale during season. B. BRUNDISH Enderby, B. C. I have purchased the old Farmers' Exchange building, on the railway, and am placing in stock a full line of Bricks, Lime, Hard Wall Plaster and Cement Estimates furnished on all kinds of Cement, Brick and Plaster Work. i 4 ������������������������������������������������������'
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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