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The Montreal herald
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  • Montréal :The Herald Publishing Company,1899-1914
Contenu spécifique :
samedi 8 octobre 1904
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  • Journaux
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autre
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    Prédécesseur :
  • Herald (Montréal, Québec: 1896)
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  • Daily telegraph (Montréal, Québec) ,
  • Montreal herald and the daily telegraph
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The Montreal herald, 1904-10-08, Collections de BAnQ.

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[" POR LITTLE WANTS Use Herald Want Columns.= LANDN PRICELESS \u2019EGGING BE THE ESTABLISHED 1808._NO.237.0e WHICH WENT FORE LIBERAL ADVENT: Under Con: tive Rule Best Lots on St.Catherine Street Brought $10 a Foot and Now $27 is Refused \u2014 Upward Tendency of Real Estate Goou Evidence of Real Prosperity No more striking example of the great prosperity that hus prevailed in Montreal since 1896 can be given thun 18 to be found in the marked Increase tn value of property in the residential and business sections of the city and the suburbs, and the remurkabie n- crease in the value of the rentals of houses, offices, stores and warehouses.It is doubtful whether there ure any elght years in the history of the city in which the high prices that purchasers are willing to pay showed such & degree of prosperity.- A Herald representative in conversation with leading real estate men, Conservatives as well as Liberals, obtained information of how greut the increase in values has really been in the different classes of property.\u201cWhy,\u201d said one, \u2018eight years ngu residential lots were golng begging.and it was almost Impossible to sell lots \u2018on such comparalively central etreets as Bishop and Crescent, while now it is only a case of wailing for any price you like.At that tine there was no difficulty tn renting a nice home; now if you want one you have to build it for yourself.\u201cDown town in the business section of the city it is just the same.Property on St.James Street was in a Breat many cases not carning the t1xes that had to be pald on it, and yet it could not be sold.During the last few years property on the struet has sold up to $27 a foot and is now soaring higher.\u2018Then look at warchouses, At that time they were a drug on the market.Now with their rentals doubled, there are not enough to meet the demand und a number are now under construc- won.St.James Street west and Bt Antuine Street promise soon to be filled up with warehouses.\u201cIf in one thing more than another a change 1s noticeable it is in the demand fur factory sites.Eight years ugo sites were practically unknown Quantities on the market, while to-day a sufficient number cannot be found in.the desired sections.Sites with any-, thing of a railway attachment are practically priceless, | \u201cThen look ut St.Catherine Street.| Eight years ago $10 à fout was considered a good price anywhere on the street, while recently $27 a foot has been refused.! is shared in by all.! \u2018The property .| clusses and «ven the workingman finds \u2018that he is able to go out into the sub-! rurbs and own a house of his own.He! «does not want te spend his money pay- | Ing high rentals, \u201cAs evidence Urit the great increase, was due lo continged prosperity and not to any speculafion it was polnted out that there is very little speculation | in real estate in Montreal.When a: man wants a plece of property for his! own use he buys it, but it is almost impossible to get him to take it unless he does want it.! CWhat males the increase all the more remarkable is that 1t camne at a time when a number of the older re- had been reached for some time, ! Neaedlvss to add it was just elgæht! years ago that the Laurier Government! started in with its progressive policy.PRINTERS ARE OUT ON STRIKE The compositors of this city, both the French and English unions, acting in co-operation, have for some time past been presenting demands for an increased scale of wages.Last night the final statement of the organized compositors went into offect, and those houses which declined to entertain it are to-day without the services of their cnmpogitors.A number of the leading printers have met the demands of the unions, and It is that only about thirty men are unemployed.At Beémuchemin & Co.'s the largest number quit work, namely, fifteen.At the J.C.Wilson Co.'s six men are out, at the Plow Printing Works two.At the Morton- Phillips shep all thé men are out.except the foreman and two apprentices.At the Modern Printing Co.the printing establishment of Rolland Bros.ait; the men are out.At Guertin's the mai- me !agement claim to have offered higher \u201cwages than the union demanded, but tu have declined to negotiate with the union as such, and consequently their compositors are all on strike.Lovell & Sons and the D.Bentley shops declined tuo give any information about thetr men's attitude.At Benallack's it wag stated that a private agreement had been reached which was satisfactory to al parties.The demands of the unions are for a week of 54 hours and a wage of $14.The scale for some years pust has been $12.50.The news compositors of the clty presented a demand for an increase at the same time with the job men and In the main have secured what they desired.The demands of the compositors have been conceded by the newspaper managers, but with a return concession hy which the newspapers are allowed to distribute the | fifty-four hours through the week according to pressure of work, this abolishing the exact nine-hour day.The newspapers running job printing departments have all met the demands of the union.The union men say that recognition of the union has oily been {n- sisted on in those shops which employ the union label.St.Gabriel\u2019e Hopeful With Strong Candidate in Field | ® | ¢\u2014\u2014\u2014e MR.LOUIS A.Mr.Louls alfred Adhemer Rivet enjoys the distinction of being one of th youngest members of the Dominion Parliament, both in point of years und time of service.He had barely turnc.i thirty before the electors of Hoche- laga Instructed him to write M.P.after his name, and he will have little more than registered his thirty first milestone before they issue the second similar mandate on November 3rd.Naturally at so early an age Mr.Rivet has not a very extensive care-r to point to, hia achievements arc for the future.But his work so far has spelled success, which is an excellent augury for the years to come.Mr.Rivet was born at Joliette, whern his father was a prosperous farmer.He was educated at Joliette College, and etudied for the bar at Laval, whence he graduated with the degiee of B.C.Lin 1895.While a student his political tastes became apparent, and he took a prominent part in the Laval Club life, hold- fng for some time the portfolio of Minister of Justice In the Mock Parlla- ment, and also acting as mecretary of the National Club.He also studied law In the office of Mr.(now judge) J.A.C.Madore, the then member for Hochelaga., On leaving college Mr.Rivet was called to the Montrea) Bar, and for some time practiced alone, after which he formed n partnership with the late Cicophas Beausdleil in the firm of Beausoleil, Rivet & Mousseau, with which he remained two years, after v*hich he entered the present firm of Robitaille & Rivet.Since 1895 Mr.Rivet has resided in tit: Gabriel ward, where he han done : | He was one of the ten ardent reformers 9 \u2014_ TWENTY PAGES a A.RIVET, M.P.veoman service for the Liberal cause, who formulated the St.Gabriel's LIberal Club in 1896, which has since so changed this old-time Conservative district that at last election it gave a Liberal majority of 2300.For four years t Mr.Rivet was president of this club, | and took an active part in every cam:- paign: he showed conspicuous ability in organizing the ward for Mr.Madore.! His influence among the young men of Hochelaga rapidly grew, and when tho seat was vacated by the elevation of Mr.J.A.©.Madore to the bench he was unanimously chosen standard hearer and won the division by over 300 majority.During his single session at Ottawa Mr.Rivet proved himself an able representative.The Liberals of Hochelaga are etrongly united under his lead, and expect to re-elect him on Nov.3rd by a greatly increased majority.Mr.Rivat is a director of the Montreal Reform Club, and belongs to a number of political organizations {in the city.He is recognized as a rising advocate and was one of the founders of the Montreal Junior Bar Association, whirh haz proved so useful an ad- ! junct to the Montreal Bar.He is an exc-Wlent speaker, and {8 thoroughly posted In Canadian affairs, Mr.Rivet has taken an active part In! perfecting his organization for the campaign.His comumittees are already hard at work, and preparations for the usual meetings, etc., are well under way.Sir Wilfrid Laurier has promised 1f possible to visit the riding toward the end of the \u2018ampaign, when he will speak at St.Henry's town hall and at Appa.CANADA IS WITH LAURIER.sidents considered that the top mark MR, BORDEN\u2014\u201cMay | have the next?+ j et! MONTREAL, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1904.v a, à | Vo M188 CANADA\u2014\"\u201cSorry, but this is Leap year, you know, and | have asked Slr Wilfrid.\u201d = Dominion Bridge Co.Did Last Year Almost Three Times Business of 1896 And Entire Output of Canada\u2019s Structural Steel Industry Was Much Over Three Tîmes That of the Last Conservative Year\u2014Extraordinary Rise of Qne of Our Greatest Metal Industries.The history of the use of manufac-;fn the year 189 as about 15,000 tons! The consumption tured bridge and structural metal work in Canada during the iast fourteen years is one of the rnost extraordinary showings ever made by any Industry in any country.The following table practically speaks for {tself.It was prepared by Mr.Phelps Johnson, of the Dominion Bridge Co., and the figures given for the output of his own firm ac- | tual records.The importation figures are also records, and the figures for the total output and the Canadian industry, Including the Walkerville, Ham- {lton, Toronto and recently the Longue Pointe establishments, ave estimated by Mr.Johnson from his thorough expert knowledge of the steel bridge situation.Mr.Johnson estimates the total capacity of the Canadian bridge shops of bridge-work In per annum, while to-Bay the total ca- [that year rose to a figure far beyond pacity at single shifts is no less than the abllity of the Canadian Industry Of the latter figure the Aas left by the Conservatives to deal Dominion Bridge Ca.accounts for 36,000 | With it: and (mportations were neces- tans and the Longue Pointe estahlish- | fary for three years on a considerable ment for 12,000, giving Montreal altogether considerably over half the in- | tariff is shown by the fact that with- 90,000 dustry.tons.Five Years of Stagnation, Tt will be noticed that the structural that importation is practically nominal.steel industry underwent a perlod of complete stagnation during the last five years Nelther output -1893, 1894 or 1885 equalled the very modest records established in 1892: and in scale.That they were not due to the out any change of customs treatment the Canadian industry has now secured such a hold on the Canadian market It Means Prosperity.It would be absurd to claim that the of the rr ative regime.gtartiing increase In the Cacadian con- no T sumption 1896 figures biurely exceeded them.1597 there came an absolute chan in : In Liberal Government.Ke.l hrough The Herald's Sieve.The Campaign Alphabet.(From the Sieve of last October, with some Dew verses.) A Stands for Anxious, that's how The Con.braves are feeling just now, As the federal race Keeps coming apace, And the candidates make their kotow.B Is for Borden, the same Belpg.new in political game, We'll have to turn out And put him to rout, One so yvung, too-it's really a shame.Cc Is for Cons., as you know, A party of infinite blow, They discovered thu earth, When there was a dearth of enterprise, ages ago.D D's For Dundonald, you know; Great Scott! How the tempest did blow, But the wires got in motion, And under the ocean The Home Office cabled him: \u2018\u201cWhoa.\u201d\u201d E E's For Conservatives Fager, Fortified Libs.to beleaguer, They are making u din, And say they will win, It you ask us, they're chances are meagre F F Ir for Foster, ro lean, And to mention it's awfully mean, The timer we've rejected Dear George and connected Him onto oblivion's tureen.G G's For the, great G.T.P., A road from the sea to tbe sea, Denounced by editions Of lurid petitions, Signed by dead men and other \u2018\u2018squgce.\u2019\u201d\u2019 H Ia for 8am Hughes, the Colonel, The cause of discussion intoleonel; When the smoke clears away On the next ballot day, He'll find himself licked most infolonel.I Is for Issue we're facine, Government healthy and brao_ Versus a crowd, Which if it's allowed, Will put the land out of the racing.J Stands for the \u2018\u2018Joke\u2019 The Cons.keep on telling the folk, .How they constantly wonder Why the peopla live under The terrible Lib-e-ral yoke.In for Kiss, and that's what Mr.Porden Is handing each tot, Should he smack some bright lad Ry mistake, when his dad lias no vote\u2014O, please perish the thought.L L's For a man that you know, The head of thewholo bloomin\u2019 show, Honest and gonuine, And with such men you win.Something better than bluster and blow.M Ia for Mulock\u2014a beaut, But accused by the able Gazoot At various times N N's For the third of November, A date that the Cons.will remember, Keep your ear to the ground For a dull, sick'ning sound, Due on Thursday, the 3rd of November.O Is for Orator glowing, Fouutain of eloquence flowing, Spouts from a truck, And learns how to duck Eggs that are ancient and knowing, P P's For Prosperity, and We've had it all over the land.We'rd not telling fibs, It goes with the Libs., Four years more! Hey, hit up the band! Q :Q Te for Quandary Queer.The questions that quickly appear, Problems terrific, Grand Trunk Pacific, \u201cTariff needs raising\u2019'\u2014(Hear! Hear!) R In for Rumpus they raise, In the papers these bright, busy de\u2014 Grand leading article, Lacking à particle Of common scnse any could praises s In St.Lawrence division, Five candidates meet in collision, Libs., Labor and Con, Keep bringing 'em on, R.Bickerdike gets the decision.T T Is for Tariff, the ranter Hits it up with his amiable banter.If we ever should try one, 1 We'd U U Is for Union discreet, A tough proposition to beat: In Union strength, Without it\" at length, Tho best will go down to defeaf v V Is for Victory nice, We'll nall it again in a trice; In fact, as of yore (As we said before), We'll cut off another large slice.w W's For Wille Maclean, A talkative person, and vain; We think wg are onto His curves in Toronto\u2014 Dear Willie's a8 goner-that's plain, x X Is the term to describe The price of a vote getting bribe, When Cons.\u2018\u2019cough,\u2018\u2019 all right There are X spots in sight For a shockingly numerous tribe, Y mean a real high one, drop it like hot cakes\u2014instanter.Y Btands for nothing but Yearn, And the Cons.they havo yearnings to burn, In R.L.B.we descry A gigantic supply\u2014 \u2018 Very sorry\u2014it Jsn\u2019t his turn.z Z's The Ponservative Zoo, The great Borden, Bergeron crew, ourley, Hughes, The Ast DO a ows, _\u2014 sumption of bridge-work from 13,300 tons to 28,600 tons in a single year was the resuit merely of the election of a Directly, it was the result of the accession of Mr.Hays to the control of the Grand Trunk and the immediate execution of his vast plans of roadbed improvement, beginning with the re-building of the Victoria Bridge.But it is equally impossible to suppose that that daring policy of improvement would have been maintained as it was on the Grand Trunk, and adopted later by every other road In Canada, but for the marvellous prosperity that came upon the country at that time, and the enlightened governmental policy towards commerce that contributed so much to it.The large Importations for the Victoria and other bridges lasted for three years, and then there was a slight lull In rebuilding operations, entirely at the ex- , pense, however, of the foreign manu- \u2018facturer.When the boom next com- meliced In 19024the Canadian industry was ready for it.In that year the Dominion Bridge Co.put out over 40 per cent.mare than it had ever done before, and other Canadian shops did so well that while the total consumption Increased 17,300 tons, the importations were actually reduced by 1,500 ; tons.Output of Dominion Bridge Ço.Tons.4,000 1897.12,300 4,400 1898.vies.8,600 7,200 1809.eases 15,400 6,100 1900.15,700 6,700 1901.17,000 7.100 1962.+.24.600 9,300 1903.+.26,500 44,800 Total.120,100 Output of All Canadian Shops.Tons.Tons.8,500 1897.+.17,600 R900 1898.14,100 14,750 1899.eee 22,400 11,200 1900.caves 22,900 11,606 1901.26,700 11,600 1802.45,500 13,100 1903.\u2026.45,700 71,850 Total.194,900 , Total Consumption in Canada.Tons.Tons.1890.8,800 1897.28,600 1IR91.iuiee.9,350 1898.25,100 1892.wens 12,950 1899.83.4 1898.11,300 1900.27.4 1804.veers 11,700 1801.29,200 1895.11,900 1902.48,500 1896.13,300 1908.46,900 Total.72.300 Total.287,100 SOS RIRE * MR.HALLE'S SOLICITOR MAKES A DENIAL.Toronto.Oct.8.- (Special.) Mr.J.H.Burriit, Pembroke, solicitor for Mr, Lorne Hale, was in the city yesterday attending a Masonic meeting.Mr.Burritt, who, by the way, is a Conservative, emphatically denied that Mr.Hale, in his examination for discovery, had sald anything about the expenses .of Liberals in the North Renfrew bye-elec- tion amounting to $40,000.* % 8% ke ke ok ok oe ok ok ok ok of ok ok ok cK kok sek kdokk Rokk kk Fe RHR KWH NII IIH WIE 3 IEEE FAI FU JE IHN HSE HH HII IE Weather To-Morrow \u2019 Unsettled PENNER Jo 0 JO JS MI JAE FC IEEE TEE To-day and Sunday\u2014Unsettled and cool.Cold weather has been genera.throughout Canade, and showers have ocourred from Southern Alberta to Lake Superior.The outlook for the lakes region continues unsettled, The tempergtures recorded yesterday at various points were as follows: Port Simpson, 3, \u201c, 8; se; a, Kam- CHOSEN CANDIDATE Announced He Was the Same Man With Same Politics as Before.Dr.Bernard was last night formally tendered the nomination for Hoch- elaga division.There was a large attendance, and amongst those on the platfqrm were Hon.A.Desjardins, Messrs.P.E.Leblanc, George Lamb, Dr.Lachapelle, W.Blanchard, E.Judge, Alds.J.A.Mayn, Segouin, Senecal, and C.Fortier, Dr.H.Letour- neau, A.A.McLennan, of Cornwall, J.Lussier, and others.Ald.Villeneuve, of St.James Ward, St.Henri, presided, and opened the proceedings by reading the requisition asking Dr.Bernard to again become\u2019 the Conservative candidate.; Amidst considerable applause, Dr.Bernard accepted the charge.He considered it the duty of every good citi- m5 4e rol per Typ Ban tmp HAH \u2014 SATURDAY REVIE \u2018 7 or Gilbert Parker\u2019s Book and Drummond's Speech\u2014- Butter and Cheese.(Canadian Associated Press Cable.) London, Oct.8\u2014Nothing more wholehearted says the Saturday Review has of preferential trade than the conclusion of Mr.Drummond's speech to the Manufacturers\u2019 Association.The passa- reference to the best, safest and surest = way to effect the permanent consolida« tion of Imperial interests is for each section of the Empire to grant to products of the others a preference as > - against the products of foreign labor, A conviction says the Saturday Review #0 expressed demands the greater attention in England because the president took care to indicate that patrie - otic as his motives were if some pre~ .ferential arrangement was hot madd with the Empire it must eventually be made with the United States.DR.BERNARD.Conservative Candidate in Hochelaga.EE zen to interest himself ifn public af- falrs, and urged his hearers to make strong efforts to secure a more successful result than was achleved at the bye-election last year.He declared that he had not changed his views since then, and was still a warm supporter of Mr.Borden, and as convinced as ever that the workingmen of St.Henri needed high protection to make them happy and prosperous.- He also endoreed Mr.Borden's rall- way polley, and assured his hearers that many Liberals had promised him thein support Dr.Bernard closed with a few remarks in English, Mr.Edgar Judge strongly supported Dr.Bernard's candidature, and predicted\u201d that Westmount would largely Increase its Vote for him.Hon.- Alphonse Desjardins followed with a brief speech, and was succeeded by Mr.P.E.Leblanc, who dealt with Manitoba school matters.He compared Sir Wilfrid Laurler's settlement of that question to an Insolvent who compounded his debts at a few cents on the dollar, and declared that the Manitoba minority were not given ten cents on the dollar.The Government fiscal policy he considered was criminal and suicidal to the interests of Canadians, Speeches Messrs.A.A.MoLennan, C.A.Cor- noller, and A.P.McDonald.MAYOR GELINAS HAS RESIGNED Mayor Gelinas, of the town of St, Louls has sent in his resignation as chief magistrate of the town and gives as his reason that & number of the members of the Council persist In watching their own interests instead of ;considering the interests of the town.\u2018slon was final.He has been mayor of the town for a number of years past and under his regime the town gained the reputation of being one of the model towns of the province.rer ! > 00 p.52 ere > pe\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 WHAT IS GOING ON | His Majesty\u2019's\u2014' The Little Princess.\" Academy\u2014Joseph Murphy.Francais\u2014Trocadero Burlesquers.Nouveautes\u2014\"La Fille de Roland.\u201d POINTERS Trade From All Parts of J.A.MOONEY & ander Street, use The value.\u2018day spending not less annually with the paper.{ all the year round,\u201d said must go pretty well all will increase my space practically impossible to out advertising.\u201d Pr were also delivered by: ON PUBLICITY.shoe firm, 2143 St.Catherine Street, corner of Alex- | English \u2018field, and cannot speak, too highly of its Mr.Mooney shows from his books that since he commenced advertising in The Herald his { business has shown a steady increase.always a large advertiser, but so gratifying have his = results been from Herald advertising that he is to- orders from every section of the city, and too many directly refer to my announcements in The Herald to leave any doubt of its value.advantage 1 find from newspaper advertising is that\" it brings the most desirable class of trade.| (Canadian Associated Press Cable.) London, Oct, 8.\u2014Sir Acland Hood ad.\u2019 dressing his constituents said he hope a conference would settle the policy of a mutual fiscal union which would give them what they never had had, real free trade throughout the Empire, real free trade between us and foreign coun-« tries, {SATURDAY AND SIR G.PARKER.! (Canadian Associated Press Cable.) London, Oct.8\u2014Sir Gilbert Parker writing to the Saturday Review.says; \u201cYour review ofgthe book \u2018ladder of swords\u201d is little likely to inspire gratie tude or respect in the mind of its aus thor.The editor of the Saturday In a foot note rays: \u2018\u2018Our fault is we do not take Sir Gilbert Parker at his own estimate, we take him rather at the estie_ mate of his Canadian fellow country men, * i AN INSURANCE CRITICISM.! (Canadian Associated Press Cable.) London, Oct.8.\u2014Mr.Cheyne, mane ager of the Canada Life Insurance, tu a letter to the Saturday Review says: \u201cThe author of the article in the Saturday Review of the 24th September apparently displays some little prejudice.\u201d THE ROSEBERY PREFACE.(Canadian Associated Press Cable.) I.ondon, Oct.8\u2014The Mancheste?Courier wonders what Messrs.Mone.tarue and Herbert went to Canada to see.They do not tell us in the prefacd of their book.They left that to Lord Rosebery.We have obeyed the injunce tion of the sage of the lonely furrow and have read the book and we have risen from {ts perusal with a question on our lips: \u201cWhy is Mr.Borden, leader of the Opposition, stumping the coun try on the question of preferential trade with this country.\u201d The arguments one has to meet are so childish as to deserve no reply were they nok \u201cfathered\u201d by Lord Rosebery.KNOCKED DOWN IN FIGHT, DENS DED Joseph Jobin, bartender, residing at 153 St.Elizabeth Street, is held by the police on a charge of having been concerned in the death of Louis À.Denis, commercial traveller, of 259 St, Fllza- beth Street.From information in the hands of the police, it appears that the two were in a saloon on St.Catherine Street yesterday morning, and that a dispute ended in their leaving the place to settle the trouble, In the course of a bout at fisteuffs, Denis either fell, or was knocked down, and when gathered up was found to be suffering from a bad cut on the back.of his head, necessitating his removal to the General Hospital.; \u2018 Meanwhile Jobin was arrested on a charge of assault and drunkenness, but subsequently, after having his wound dressed, Denis proceeded to No.4 Police Station and intimated to Captain Millette that he wished no charge re assault made, and in the course of Tons.| The Mayor when seen stated his deci-|the day Jobin was allowed out on a bail bond of $10.! Denis then appears to have gone home to bed, and according to his mo= ther\u2019s statement, slept for three or four hours, About five o'clock he was seized with an epileptic attack, and despite all that could be done for him by two medical men, he died at half past eight last night.Information to this effect was at once conveyed to the police station and Lieut.Egan promptly sent out and had Jobin re-arrested.He was remanded by Judge Choquet this morning and the Inquest on Denis took place in the course of the day.tr as pp City CO., a prominent boot and Herald exclusively in the He was not pgp than five hundred dollars \u201cI use a good size space Mr.Mooney.\u201cYour paper over Montreal, since I get I think probably I later in the fall.= Anothér I find jt develop my business with= been gaid in the colonies on the valus .i.age referred to is the one which has fr cf : .A LY Shit BATA PAY, OU} vais > pd 4 À > è WTEC ONE MONE Time ba Pama a Ey me LEFLAOUE WEDNESDAY; {onder for sella in Capada gs it has been | yet an whist dates the male will Mavs |.- MOT BEEN SEEN SINCE \u201cFunable to ebtain asin cede spsur- > Pw CL ey 7 + \u2018 5 gerade 7 dn Ric » oly bi Dire sv, Jur sin dome Eumbleigh, \u201cwho came here from ug and Sh Avenue où Beery seen since HN \u2018[fand in 1829, is dead, aged 84, \u201cHe [the Mine ba way w owned opnsiderable property here, He knee pants, .light Le Sin cdp.He + Mr, John Chast Fi eres + After Thirty Y: Public Lie, Sl Ce wy Mr.John Charlton yesterday refused nominatiop at the:hands of the Liberals of the néw conbtituency .QF Norfolk county, owing to ill-health.is retirement fropy the reprepenñtation of the county, ich extends over thirty \u2018years, was received with keen regret, and an address of appreclation of his long services was presented to him.A resolution wus also passed by- the convention expressing the Qpinion that Mr.Charlton should be appointed to the Senate, Mr.Charlton was born ak, Garbutts- ville, N.Y., Feb.3, 1529.He was educated there and at Ellicottville and Springville, N.Y,, and removed to Canada with his parents in 1548, where he lived for some vears on his father's farm at Ayr.In 1853 Mr.Charlton moved to Lynedoch, Norfolk Co.and engaged in the lumber business.Since that time he has been -in business as Iumberman, timber dealer and farmer on a very extensive scale.In public affairs Mr.Chariton has taken a prom- $nent and enlightened part.He was gone of the founders of the Dominion Lord\u2019s Day Alllance, the author of the Charlton Act for securing protection to women and girls, and chairman of the Ontario Royal Mining Commission in 9888.At the general elections in 1872 MR.JOHN CARLTON.he was elected to the House of Commons for North Norfolk and has held the seat ever since.In the House he has on several occasions taken an independent stand, and has always advocated reciprocity in trade with the United States.In 1898, Mr.Charlton was appointed by the British Government as a member of the Joint High Commission which met at Quebec\u2019 in that year to settle the dispute between Canada and the Un'\u2018ed States and to y remove obstacles to enlarged trade between the two countries.During the session of 1903 on the bringing down of Sir Wilfrid I.aurler's Grand Trunk Pacific Bill, Mr.Charlton was chosen as the first expert in Parliament| to discuss the measure, owing\u2019 to his well-known experience in railway affairs.He made a notable int- pression on the House by his able prés- ehtation of the facts.Mr.Charlton's retirement will remove one of the most notable figures of the past generation fronv Parlla- ment.He was one of the ablest debaters in the House.While making no claims to oratory, he proved himself a clear and logical speaker, \u2018and his speeches always commanded the attention of Parliament, however much his views might be disputed.As a debater he was fearless and a hard hitter.In him the front Government benches will lose once of their ablest members.eet A GUARANTEED CURE FOR PILES.: Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles.Your druggist will refund money if AZO OINTMENT fails to cure you in 6 to 14 ys.50c.« , _\u2014 ° Boucher & Roffey, tailors, beg to pnnounce that their stock for the coming season is complete, and would thank you to call and inspect the game.Corner St.Peter and Notre Dame streets.\u2014Adv.- * Cowaneville\u2014Captains C.H.Baker ænd T.R.Pickel, of Squadrong E of the famous 13th \"Dragoons have gone to Toronto to attend the military) echool, to qualify themselves for positions in the military gervice of Canada.\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY.Make Laxative BDromn Quinine Tablets.All druggists refund the money if it falls to cure.B.W.Grove's signature is on each box.25c.BOUGHT NO RAILS AT SOO.An item appeared in an afternoon aper on Tuesday, Oct.4, under a lault Ste, Marie date line, ed that the Canadian Pacific Railway Company had placed an order with the Consolidated Lake Superior Company for 40,000 tons of steel ralls, and it was said that the Consolidated Come pany was willing to accept the contract, and would comply with all\u2019 the specifications made by the railway company.Enquiries at the head offices of the company at the Windsor Station, show that this item was not correct., = TOO LATE FOR CLASSIFICATION, VV ANTED \u2014 82.00 DAY, LADIES TO CAN- vags.Article light to carry.A nice proposition, When \u2014 $2.00 DAY, GENTLEMEN TO canvass.Article light to carry.A nice oposition.Also a man to manage a crew.A.Kceler, 24 Brunswick st.242 For SALE \u2014 VETERAN'S LAND SCRIP, for 160 jcres in Ontario.Cheap.K 410, Herald.; 2237 Dominion Iron and Steel Gompany, Limited The Annual General Meeting of the Share- Nelders.of the abôve Confÿäny will- be held at moon, ;ôn Wednesday, the nineteenth of October, 1904, in Room 38 of the Street Rall- way Obkmbors, Montreal, \u201c Réception of \u2018the report of the Directors, the _ Sransaction, ot the business of the Company generally, and the election of Directors.- By order of the Diréctors.W.B.ROSS, a * Secretary.which stat-| R.A.Keeler, 24 Brunswick st.|' 242 Canada, \u2018for the |.arrange- tou with the royal Northwest mognted police.to, ¢ & mail consist of Jetters à es cards only once & month from Dawson to fitew- art River pointe\u2014Mayo, McQuestion, Clear Creek aud Duncan Creek.The \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 2397 St.\u2018agent, and H, F.Bishop, Robinson, Mrs.W.D.\u2018Lissie, Annie and Flora.: 1s survived by three sons, John Bishop, :| barrister; Willlam Bishop, real estate da hte re: Sparks street, and five daughte .fob : ù D.Bliss ad Misses Amherst.\u2014Mr.A.J.Cates, téiner x Councillor Cates, of this city.¢ died\u2018 in Vancouver last week, aged SILVER = PHOTO = FRAMES We have -just received a very fine assortment of Photograph Frames in ail sises and shapes, the very newest designs, Oc to $4.50.GEO.CG.ROBINSON & CO.JEWELLER =, « Catherine St.What about getting your Watch put in order?fa oh about four feet in heignt with large brown eyes, dark hair; information from anyone, concerning his whereabouts would be gratefully received at the above address.; \u2014\u2014\u2014 PATENT HEPORT.* Below will be found a list of Canadian patents secured during last week through the agency of Messrs.Marion and Marion, patent attorneys, Montreal Can.and Washington, D.C, Information regurding any of these patents will be supplied free of charge by applying to the above named firm.No.89,804, \u2018Ernest C, Thorschmidt, Brooklyn, N.Y., machines for applying hoops to casks or barrels.No, 89 ,330, Messrs.Thielman & Melsenburg, Duisburg, Germany, frame work for mine heads with moveable base for waggons tically; 89,371, Andre Blondel, Paris, France, electrodes for arc lamps with multiple zones; 89,376,\" Wilber Gordon, Tweed, Ont., head for feed trough; 89,- 887, Churchill H.- Fox, Fralericton, N.B., insertible saw teeth; 89,482 Bern- hard A.O.Prollius, Copenhagen, Den- {SH TLR I mali Le rane.ED BIG WEST END ONE PRICE | - DAY GO0DS STORE, Cor.Notre Dame & Guy P.S\u2014For encouragemont we give Double Green Cash Receipts.pan es ms» notre - 4.- SE mark, centrifugal apparatus.THe Inventor's Adviser Is just published; any one interested in patents or inventious should order a copy: rer TWO VESSELS WRECKED.North Sydney, IN.S., Oct, 8.\u2014(Spec- fal.)\u2014The crew of the shipwrecked French schooner George Paul, Capt.Ribman, which was wrecked oft the Newfoundland coast, came up by the Bruce to-day, and were looked after by French Consul\u2019 Moseley, and will OUR OWN IMPORTATION\u2014La- dies\u2019 Fancy- Collar, Guipure or Pattenberg Lace.Belts, Kid Gloves.Attention for our special @9¢ tin or black, finest kid.Every pair guar- _unteed, or money back.ave 6pe WONDERFUL BLACK Satin Underskirts, with 3 rows of pleating, at the bottom.Cheap at- $1.00.3 days only, price .PP Gve « CUT PRICH BLOUSES\u2014 lanneletté Blouses, all sizes, newest esigna Not at 90c.This - week's Gs dear price .je usas eue senete THIS AD.WITH $1.00 PURCHASE IS WORTH 25 GREEN CASH RECEIPTS MONDAY & TUESDAY sue FURS! $5.00 for $2.49 This Is the Store For FURS.$23.40-WE LIKE TO DRAW your attention to the one one shown above.It is lined\u2019 with satin, first quality.A good shape as shown.Not dear for $5.00.Three days only P.5.\u2014Muffs to match , for $3.50.Whole set.85.79 SPECIAL FOR THIS WEEK\u2014IN stock, 3 doz.of Fur Boas, for neck.All sbadgs.Regular price, $1.50.pecial \u2018for 8 days .\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.ove 85.91\u2014SPECIAL OCCASION\u2014 A very pretty Jacket in navy or gray zibeline, half fitting, with cape trimmed with silk.Regular price.$8.00.3 days only .85.90 80¢ FOR MEN'S UNDER- wear\u2014A special line of Scotch * Wool Underwear, doubles front and back.Regular price, $1.10.Our price WE CARRY THE BEST LINER o! Sweaters in stock.We buy them direct from manufactur- .ers, 80 We are able to sell them - cheap.suodno9 p,p19H eBUPYIXF OM be sent to thelr Home in St.Pierre.The schooner went on the rocks and is a total 8, the crew escaping in their dories, The Dominlon Coal Co.'s tug Douglas H, Thomas leaves to-morrow with a wrecking crew and divers for the scene of the wreck of the steamer Vik- Ing at Shag Rock, near Battle Harbor, Labrador.ee WHAT \u201cSWISS FOOD\" DOES, SWISS FOOD (invigorates and develops mind and muscle.It is a scientific combination, in food form, of nature's best ingredients.Try it for breakfast.\u2014adv.qe \"145 ss AOveg, 7, rising, running and stopping automa- || x ne A.too ete, sm + hit 7, ke : \u2018 \\ a 1904.ss RIN S&F PE Ser i \u201cre 3.Shoes for Men, Women, Boys and Girls.Men's and Women\u2019s Boston Boots and Shoes, in box calf, Boys\u2019 and Girls\u2019 Boston Shoes, in box calf, viel BUSTON SHOE STOR D FOR ALL! .\u201cThe Highest \\ lues \u201c \u201cIN F ALL FOOTWE AR You'll tind nowhere else so.much style, fine finish, fit and wear in Our fall stock is the most complete to be found in.Montreal.vict kid, patent coltskin, patent kid, leather, quaker calf, kanguroo.calf, velour calf.Button, Luce and Blucher.All the popular styles of heel and toe.Goodyear welts made on Nature lasts.The only Shoe that fits perfectly and wears right .patent ers of the highest class.no gther shoe, kid, pa- quaker calf, Button and Lace, Goodyear tent coltskin, patent kid, patent leather, kangaroo calf, velour calf.Su] footwear bought of us is sure to be what you ought to wear.shoes, combined with very moderate price, as in Boston Shoes.\u2018This is why we claim to give buyers the highest value in footwear.\u2018Our styles are exclusively our\u2019 own, designed by shoe artists and mak- And our Nature lusts insure a fit found fn- welts, made on Nature lants\u2014u new feature in Boys\u2019 and Glrle\u2019 Shoes-\u2014the prettiest and best wearing shoe for the Mttle folks ever mMad@.\u2026.ssasassos0000n0000u0s + \u2014\u2014\u2014 We have experienced salespeople to tit your boots and shoes.It's an art, and our people know ft, and take pride {in practising it.All We are the largest retailers of shoes in the world, with factories and Boston, Baltimore, Washington, Lowell, Worcester, e Others now being arranged for.TRAHAN FRERES, Corner Notre Dame and Guy.- HENRY Literature and s current Price 5 cents.\u20ac il ) Fy SPECIAL OFFER ALL NEXT WEEK! 25 Stamps for Every 8's worth of Dry Geods Purchased.Special Lines in Ladies\u2019 Costumes, $3.00 upwards - EVERYTHING YOU WANT AT PRICES THAT WILL SURPRISE YOU.DALBY Late of the Montreal Star all matters of interest.180 St.James Street, Montreal.ERNEST LAMY 209 ST.LAWRENCE ST.mating, His latest and best.Library Binding, $1.50.( \"1 pliatreal, October a, 006, +4 LAMY & GELINAS 1558 ST.+ LAWRENCE STrates Te patte timer THE ARGUS First Issue to-day Publjshed by A High Class Paper devoted to Politics, Annual subscription in clty $2.50; elsewhere Jn Canada and the United States $2.98.; \u2018 sine GILBERT PARKER°S LADDER OF SWORDS Hangsome iy strated : ae; AT CHAPMAN'S &BOOKSTORE, a 2s 13439 > 25752 + \u201c0 2) ) 9 Ro 1 0 + 5 sa mr ; es Be li | A Li RL ei rr bk Bi d SR ' 8; (AT A FAT Eh ibn CR i [EA RUT i IN ri il oh i Wy ie if = i i fi K [han a When you think of the immense > number of people who - Visit our show-room every month\u2014there must, be some real attraction.THIS IS QUITE TRUE They take a keen interest in the magnificent presents that we give away at the rate of about 1,000 every week.half of the families in this city are now interested.beautiful articles and the system of \u201cCash Trading by which\u2018 they are obtained appeal to their good judgment and commonsense, - Every Day the Number of Ou This great success is the result of years of persistent effort, until to-day, the publie know that there is one concern in the city who live up to all they promise.: Do you save Green Cash Receipts ?If \u2018not, why not?You are missin not sure th dispel that thought newspapers and opponents talk all they wish, for We will Positively Continue Our Business which has Grown so Popular with the Public\u2014 Commence Now If your reason is that you are t our business will continue, Patrons is Increasing To keep pace with this enthusiasm we are increasing the value of the premiums given to All Who Save Green Cash Receipts Nearly one These tanneries at Boston, Brockton and Lynn, Mass.and stores at New York, Philadelphia, rence, Fall River, Springfield, Mass., Hartford, Conn.dence, Rhode Island, Buffalo, NY, Cleveland, Toledo, Ohlo, Montreal and Toronto, Canada.Law- Newark, N.J., Provi- 2325 St.Catherine St, Montreal, Canada TT\" THis way TO THE TRADERS ADVERTISING CO - zm it LE ~ Cys SMe sie.ML LU En i ed 4 ÿ i i] fii a \" Ri Hi {re iS es ji l nihil Ni fl 5 el ss Sa > He LYS il x7 UE i \\ i | | | Per Dr do not know what you from your mind.Let KR i TE i the Benefits ! 183$ Notre Dame Srreer SMONTR EAL EEE © - - à - LADIES I Buy The Famous \u201c E.T.\u201d CORSET.There i is $3.00 Worth of Green Cash Receipts in Each Box.- mn Thie Coupon is Werth One : Green Cash Receipt men.PRESENTED AT THE erMIes ev THE TRADERS .ABVERTISING 06, 1835 NOTRE DAME STREET THE TRADERS ADVERTISING co.© ARE ?\"at \u201cDunkeld, * the residence of Mr.and ad Society Notes Es: > a » oo was in .Georse- Mr.op Sine \u2018this week.Miss J.T.Molson, Montreal, was in Énowiton this week.~ Rev.J.J.Day, and.Mrs.Day, -of Wherbrooke, are in the city.Mrs.Turell, Montreal, is in Coaticook, que guest of Mra.J.McLean.Miss Laura Leonard, of Sweetsbursg, de visiting friends in Montreal.Miss Edith Ward, of Coaticook, is spending a few days in the city.\u2018Miss Cameron, Ottawa, is the guest ®f Mrs.A.E.Beckett, Durocher Bt.Mrs.Chaffee, Montreal, was the feet of Mrs.Philip at Knowlton late- Mr.C.G.Bugir, Montreal, 1s the guest of Mr.and Mrs.F.I\u2019 Buck at Sherbrooke.Mr.B.Tooke and family, McGregor Street, return home next week m Beaconsfield.\u201d Mrs.Braddish Billings and Miss - Humphries have returned to Ottawa from Montreal.Dr.J.A.Grant of Malone, New \u201cYork, is visiting the Misges Grant, 130 Peel street.Mr.B.J.Coghlin and Miss Mabel Coghlan are expected back from England next week.Mrs.Stenning, of Coaticook, is in Montreal the guest of Mr.and Mrs.Gordon Anderson.Rev.J.B.and Mrs.McLeod, of Kingsbury, are in Montreal, the guests of Mrs.McLeod\u2019s fatheh, Mr.Brodie.Miss Dunton, of Richmond, who has En the guest of her brother, Mr.R.nton, for some months, has returned home.; Mrs.Walkem, of Kingston, gave a musicale Thursday afternoon at \u201cQueenscote,\u201d for her daughter, Mrs.Henry Joseph., Mr.Edward Archibald and his son, Mr.Charles Archbald, have returned home from their coutnry residence at Pointe Claire.Mrs.Jas.F.Slesson will receive on Wednesday and Thursday afternoons Oct 12 and 13 at her residence, 4825 Western Ave, ~ The Chief Justice.of Prince Edward Island and Mrs.Sullivan are spending some time in town with their daughter, Mrs.W.L.Scott.Mr.and Mrs.George Napier and family, Prince Arthur Street, have returned from Pointe Claire, where they spent the summer.Miss Alice Bell has returned to Ottawa after spending the week end the guest of \u2018her sister, Mrs.Walter Douglas at \u201cLake Memphremagog.\u201d Mrs.B.F.Arnoldi and Miss Grace Arndldi, who have \u201d Mrs.G.Colborne Heine, St.Urbain St, return to Ottawa on Monday.-Mrs.F.J.Capon, of Toronto, and Mr.and Mrs.A.P.Murray, of Montreal, were in Georgeville lately, guests Ww.A.Murray.Miss Charlotte Bacon, who will be one of the bridesmaids at the Bacon.Childs wedding, leaves to-morrow for New York, where she will remain some time visiting friends.The visiting Governors to the Montreal General Hospital for the week eommencing Monday, the 10th October 1904, are James Coristine, C.E.Gault, J.A.Cantlie, John Murphy.Mrs.J.Gunn, Montreal, was among the guests at a reception at the Speakers\u2019 chambers at Toronto this week, given by Miss Ross to introduce her youngest sister, Miss Mabel Ross.\u2018Mr.and Mrs.Fred.Bacon, Prince Fark Street, leave next week for New.to attend the marriage of their| soû, »- M.H.Bacon, to Miss an \u201cwhich will takep lace Wednesday, Oct.12th, \u201cTheir Excellencies the Governor-Gen- 1 and the Countess of Minto will be \u2018resent at the formal opening of Mc- ai Conversatorium of Music in Montreal on October 14th.Sir Wilfrid tand Lady Laurier are also expected to be present.The marriage of Miss Emma Flora Ludwig, daughter of Mr.Carl Ludwig, sr., of this city, to Mr.Walter J.Boyd, of the Sovereign Bank, Ct.Cath- arines, will takep lace Monday even- tng at 7 o'clock at the residence of the ride elect\u2019's parents.Miss Elizabeth udwig will act ax bridesmaid and the best man will be Mr.Scott.The ceremony will be performed by Rev.Mr Justinsky, of the German Lutheran Church.» _ Doingein French Society \u201c Madarne de Ce elles he has returned to .Ot- lawa.Mr.town.- Dr.and Mrs.Chretien Zangg have teft Boucherville for the city and have ABSOLUTE ~~ SECURITY.George Carrier, Quebec, is in Carter\u2019 s Little Liver Pills.Must Bear Signature of een the guests of| = + ton.month a Miss vill Prodear bas returnoë to Marie-| part Frerps-Béliemare; Yémachiche, ta ame eam or ete Mr.J.A.Tache, St.Hyacinthe, \u2018is in Montreal.Mr.J.B Perrault, Arthabaska, is in the city.° - Miss Hortense Dansèreau has left for, New York.Dr.and Madame Morin, of Barford, Pa., are in town.Mr.and Mrs.Ducharme have returned from Joliette.Mr.Henri Fontaine, Quebec, is spending a few days in the city.Madame Begdlleu, Berri Street, has returned from Ste.Agathe.Miss Alice Ducharme is at Quebec the guest of Mrs.(Dr.) Roy.Mr.and Mrs.J.H.Garlepy have returned to Edmonton, Alberta.Mr.and Mrs.N.Deslauriers have left for New Yopk and Philadelphia.Hon.M.T.Berthiaume and Miss Anna Berthiaume have left for New York.Madame O.O.Gelinas, of Fall Rlver, is in town, the guest of her father, Dr.Clerk.Mr.and Mrs.F.X.J.Beaudoin, Quebec, have left for New York, en route for Europe.- Mr.Cochery, ex-Minister of Finance in the Waldeck-Rousseau Cabinet, is visiting Montreal.Mr.and Mrs.G.W.Pacaud will reside at 152 Ste.Famille Street on their return from St.Louis Mr.E.R.Faribault, mining engineer of the Geological Commission, Ottawa, has returned from Nova Scotia.Dr.Adelstan de Martigny, who has been in Europe since May last, on professional business is expected home next week.Madame M.McDonald has returned from Pointe aux Trembles, and taken up her residence at St Union Avenue for.the winter.The Misses Marie-Ange de Martigny, Jeanne Dupuis, Euphrosine Rolland, and Berthe O'Leary have left for Bos-|, ton, whence they will sail for Naples.After the representation of \u2018\u2018Riche- tie\u201d by the Cazeneuve Company at the Auditorium \u2018at Quebec, on Tuesday night, Madame A.Turgeon: entertained Lady Laurier anil a number of intimate friends at supper at , the rheatro Cafe.Early Autumn Weddings HICKSON-ANDERSON.An interesting event took place at: the Methodist Church, Massena, Tues-| da, October 4th, when Miss M.A.Sef-) ton, daughter of the late Thos.G.Anderson, East Front, Cornwall, was married to Mr.Joseph Hickson, late of; Minneapolic, Minn., Rev.Mr.Cob the Methodist Church, officlated.Mr.and Mrs.Hickson will reside at Maiml, Fla., after a six weeks\u2019 honeymoon.MACDONALD-McPHAIL, 2, DF (85% Mon, D Mr.Jas.y.Rav.artin Calla shan, Rev.Father Milloren; the |] Lamb, Messrs, Rex and Frank Weth- erell, Mr.and Mre.J.P.Moran, Que- ; Mr.Jd H Cardéow, India, Mrs Mr.J.T.Btevens, Mr.Jaa., J.O'Nell Meehan, Misp L.Meehan, ss Nora O'Neill, Miss\" Riva; \u2018Mr.and Mrs, R.Power, Mrs.Capt.\u2018Lormian, Mr, and Mrs.Jas.McDonald, Mis Borden, Mrs \u2018Barry, Mr.Ed.Whelan; Mr.and Mrs.P.Jones, Miss Butler, Mise Min- -nie Jones, Mr.and Mrs, Jas.Downes, Mr.and Mrs, Bogue, Mr.and Mrs.P.Flannagan; Mrs.Shannghan, Quebec, Mrs.A.Practor,.Mies Blanche Meldrone.Capt.Tamblyn who returned to Canada in August last from South Africa, having éérved on the staff of Colonel Lord Kitchener, during the Boer war.Since the close of the war, .Capt.Tamblyn has 'practiced his profession, Veterinary Science, In Potchetstroon and Pretoria.He is a McGill graduate and expects to take up practice in Canada.° eo! ® MONTREAL'S WOMEN\" 8 CLUB.The first meeting of the Beason of the Montreal Women's Club will be held Monday afternoon in the parjors of the Y.M.C.A.at 3.30 o'clock.At the conclusion of the business meeting, which is open to members only, afternoon tea will be served.SUNSHINE SOCIETY.The first meeting of the International Sunshine Society, Montreal branch, was held this wek at the residence of the president, Mrs.George A.Robinson, 39 St.Luke Street.After the minutes of the last meeting were read and \u2018approved the election of officers for this year took place.Mrs.Robinson was tnanimosuly- re-elected president, Mrs.Barlow vice-president, Miss Graham, recording secretary, Miss C.M.Boyd, 31 St.Mark Street, correspond-! corresponding secretary, and Miss urer.Special | [ us - Ç UMA | were read for books, clothing and nd ote] on stance the saciety.ænt out e Several branches of work was But none decided upon defin- tel Much regret was expressed at the loss of two active members, Mrs.Beale, who has left to reside in King ston, and Miss McLeod Moore, who goon to New Tork.At the close of the Darrell.Mr.\u201cChas enn \u201cMr, Wm.usiness meet! refreshments\u2019 were}, Vm Btu, het fi | SESE Snr SL SA zines, @ Bt.Margaset Phelan, a Pn J- tp Mza.Boyd, dy Mark ve a Y.W.'C.A.The regular business meeting of thé Young Women\u2019s Christian Association was held Thursday morning.Mrs.Jas.Macfariane, the president, was in the chair.There were present Mesdames Crane, Fairman, Fairie, Ewing, Lear- month, Macdougall, Trenhoime, Grant and Porter, also Misses DeWitt, Sippell, Finley, Matthewson, Ames and others.The prayer meeting was conducted by Mrs.L.Cushing.The house committee reported 146 admission for the.month of September, 8,934 meals served, or an average of 99 persons per meal.The educational rally was held on Thursday, Sept.29, with a helpful address by Rec.Dr.Symonds and an interesting programme.The enrollment for classes i8 encouraging, and opportunities are offered students for English branches, dressmaking, millinery, plain sewing, art needlework, French, shorthand, bookkeeping, home, nursing, élocutioh, physical training, singing, ete.Seventy-eight associate members have been received within the past five days.The circulation of !lbrary books for the month was seventy-four.The classes of the school of cookery have opened in a most encouraging | manner.Two preliminary demonstrations were held during the last week of September and classes are now In progress.226 visits have been made by the missoanry, Miss Forester, and nineteen persons assisted.In addition to train work, the Travellers\u2019 Aid representative, Miss Currie, has met during the summer 55 ocean steamers and 443 \u2018cases receiving definite attention registered.In place of the business meeting on the first Thursday of every ing secretary; Miss- Misdale assistant! month, it has been decided to hold a weekly meeting on Thursdays, at 77 Alice Crumpton, 57 Bishop Street, treas-\u2019o'clok, rpeceded by ,a half-hour pray- letters of appreclation er service.a HERALD SERIALS ARE GOOD SERIALS.The Mystery of a Hansom Cab BY FERGUS HUME.CHAPTER XVL Another Richmond in the Fleld.° * There is an old adage that says \u201cLike draws to like.\u201d The antithesis of this b, of: {the other.is probably that \u2018Unlike repels unlike,\u201d But there are times when individualism does not enter into the matter, and Fate alone, by throwing two persons together, sets up a state, congenial or iuncongenial, as the case may be.i Fate chose to throw together Mr.Gorby and , Mr.Kilsip, and each was ; something more than uncongenial to Each was equally clever in their common profession; each was a universal favorite, yet each hated the other.\u2018They were as fire and water to one another, and when they came to- The Roman Catholic Church at St.! gether invariably there was trouble.Andrews was the wedding on Wednesday morning, when Mr.L.R.Macdonald of Watertown, N.Y., formerly of Kingston, was married to Miss Genevieve Beatrice Mc- Phail, dauhter of Mr.and Mrs.A.D.McPhail, of St.Andrews.Rev.Father Macdonell officiating.The bride was atended by Miss Cassie: McMillan and Mr.Will Barrie groomsman.PRATT-TAYLOR.A fashionable wedding took place.Wednesday afternoon at Corbyvllle, Ont.when Mr.J.P.Pratt of the G.T.R., Montreal, was married to Miss Bessie M.Taylor, daughter of Mr.W.R.Taylor, of Corbyville.The marriage took place at the family residence.which was beautifully decorated with flowers and autumn follage.Rev.R.8.Laidlaw, pastor of St.Andrew's Church performed the ceremony.Miss Mabel Taylor, sister of the bride, was maid of scene: of a pretty; Kilstp was tall and slender; Gorby was short and stout.Kilsip looked clever; Gorby wore a smile of self-sat- {sfaction, which alone was sufficient! to prevent his doing so.eYt.singuar- ly enough, it was this very smile that proved most useful to Gorby In the pursuit of his calling.It enabled him to come at information where hls of Kingston was sharp-looking colleague might try in vain.The hearts of all went foreh to Gorby's sweet smile and insinuating manner.But when Kilsip appeared peo- |.ple were wont to shut up, and to retire promptly, like alarmed snails, within their shells.Gorby gave the lie direct to those who hold that the face is ever the index to the mind.Kilship, on the other hand, with his awk-llke countenance, Is brilliant black eyes, hooked nose, and small, thin-lipped mouth, endorsed the theory.His complexion was quite colorless, and his hair was jet black.Altogether, he could not be called fair to look upon.His craft and cunning were of the snake-like order.honor, and Mr.Harry C.Mackay was Bo long as he conducted his Inquiries gtoomsman.The bride wore a EOWN fn secret he was generally successful: of ivory accordeon pleated chiffon, but once let him appear personally on mounted in cream taffeta, panelled with the scene, and failure was assured to some beatuiful old lace, a gift from an him.Then, while Kilsip passed as the aunt in Scotland; she wore a veil and: cleverer, Gorby was invariably the orange blossoms, and carried a showeri more successful\u2014at al events, ostensib- bouquet of white roses, and lilies of the ty, valley.The mald of honor was gown-| When, therefore, this hansom cab ed in pink etamine and chiffon over murder case was put into Gorby's pink taffeta, and carried a shower bou-! hands, the soul of\u2019 Kilsip was smitten quet of pluk roses.Mr.and Mrs.Pratt, with envy, and when Fitzgerald was have left for the east, the bride's going! arrested, and all the evidence collected away gown being of gray cloth, hat and.by Gorby seemed to point so conclualve- ostrich feather stole to match.The ly to his guilt, Kilsip writhed ih se- groom's present to the bride was a set.cret over the triumph of his enemy.of mink furs; to the maid of honor ai Though he would only have been too gold necklace, with pearl pendant, and glad to say that Gorby had got hold to the groomsman a pearl scarf pin.of the wrong man, yet the evidence was Among the out of town guests were Mr.and Mrs.Root, of Montreal.TAMBUYN\u2014CHERRY.The marriage took place on Tuesday morning, October +h at St.Patrick'e Church, of Miss K.Agnes (Dolly) Cherry, only daughter of the late Mr.Robert Cherry of Montreal, to Captain David 8.Tamblyn, D.V.8.} of Potchefstroon, S.A.The bride who was given away by her brother, Mr.Robt, J.Cherry, of Vancouver, B, C,, wore a gown of white ivory satin over white taffeta with trimmings of Maltese lace and chiffon, and carried a shower bouquet of roses and orange blossoms.Her hat was of white panne velvet and ostrict plumes, Mr.P.W.J.O'Farrell of Courtrai, Belgium, acted as groomsman.During the Mass solos were eung by Mr.Lamoureux, the blind tenor, and by Mr.J.O'Neill Bur- rell.Prof.J.A.Fowler officiated at the organ playing Mendelssohn's Wed ding march as the bridal party entered.The Altdr and Sanctuary were beautifully decorated with palms, flowers and electric lights.After the ceremony a reception was held at the residence of the brides -mother, 38 Union Avenue.The bride and groom also were rect- plents of many very handsome presents.They have left on thelr honeymoon trip travelling through the Eastern Btates, visiting Saratoga Springs, New B:| York, Boston, Philadelphia, Washing- BROCK'S BIRD SEED \u2018is known from the tie to the Pacific as the finest rd Food on tha market In each pees CAKE OF BIRD TREAT er \\Dr.aod and ton end Baltimore.Among the invited guests were Mr.and Mrs.Thomas Tamblyn, Wollington College, Berks, England; Mr.and Mrs.W, J, Cherry: Sir W.and Lady Codrington, Bart .of Potchefstroon, 8.A.,, Miss Mary O'- Rellly; Mra.M.McFirone of Saratoga, N.Y.; Mr.and Mrs, N.J.Grace; Boston; Mrs.M.Johnson; Mr.and Mrs.Henry O'Flaherty, Saratoga, N.Y; \u2018Mr.and Mrs.W.H.Aston, Liverpool, Eng.; Mrs.J.Elms, Fort Williams; Mrs.A.Dumesnil, Cedars, P.Q.: Lieut.J.J.and Mrs.Fitzpatrick, Quebec: Col.and Mre.Botomiey, C.N:G: South Africa; Mr.and Mrs.Aggett; Mr, and Mrs.Stanlake; Mr.and Mrs, Beavals, Berks, Eng.; Mr.F.Pantor, and T: Tamblyn, Cornwall Eng.; Miss I.So- boy and Mrs.L Soboy, Cornwall, Eng: Mrs.H.Moore,\u2018 Berk\u2019's Eng.; Mr.D.Soboy, : Plymouth; Mr.T.Dalo, V.8.; Mr.C.Holcroft; Mr.P.Patterson, Rev.Father McCarthy: Dr, and Mrs.Ramsay and Mr.an Mr.Carlewis, South Africa; The Misses A.B.and L.Tamblyn and Miss Della Boboy, Cornwall, Bng.; Dr.Kent, > flo, Mr.Ww.meingott r A.Tamblyn,; Mr.ya en el Lig un of be Im, \u2018rec, Cripple Creek, at OL à Mr.and Mrs.LL.Ireland, Mr.and Mrs, T.R.Cowen, Prof, D.B.A.Be gh SUILCE Sil so conclusive that such a thought never entered his head until he received T0 ENLIVEN THE LIVER AID DIGESTION AND REGULATE THE ACTION OF THE BOWELS YOU MUST USE - Dr.Chase\u2019s Kidney-Liver Pills THE GREAT SPECIFIC FOR LIVER AND KIDNEY DISEASES.It 1s the\u201dliver that is largely responsible for indigestion and constipation\u2014 derangements that are a constant source of trouble The bile, which, when left in the| ing biliousness, headache and muddy complexion, becomes of priceless value when passed into the intenstines to aid digestion and ensure regular action of the bowels.The healthy liver separates bile from the blood and sends it into the intestines.IF you find your liver sluggish and torpid in action Dr.Chase's Kidney- Liver Pills will bring relief and curo could find.By enlivening the action of the !i- ver they remove the cause of biliousness, headache, indigestion, con- Kidney Ldver-PHlls on ithe liver is what makes them of so great worth as 8 family medicine and ensures them a lasting place in the home.MR.ROGERS ' CLANCY, farmer, Chepstowe, Bruce, .County,.- Quit.writes: \u201cI have used Dr.Chase's Kid- ney-Liver Pills, and would say that there is no medicine that equals them as a cure for stomach troubles, biliousness, torpid liver and.headache.I waa troubled a great deal with these ailments before using pr Chase\u2019s Kidney-Liver Pills, and ney.have proven wonderfully pi: in my cage.\u2019 One pill & doge at bedtime and Dr.Chase's Xidney-Liver Pills will ene sure honithful regular action of kid- ith Bape.liver and bowels; 2% cents a box, all dealers, *.Bamanson, Bates & Co., nto.The Pp Yond and signature of Dr.À pox the fa- are oa LA oy a _ blood, is & poison to the system caus- more promptly than any treatment you .stipation and other accompanying symptoms.This specific a action of Dr.Chase\u2019s|.& note from Mr.Calton, asking him to call at his office that evening at eight o'clock, with reference to the murder.Kilsip knew that Calton was counsel for the prisoner.He guessed that.he was wanted to follow up a clue.And he determined to devote himself to whatever Calton might require of him, if only to prove Gorby to be wrong.Ho pleased was he at the more possibility of triumphing over his rival that, on casually meeting him, he stopped and Uivited him to drink.The primary effect of hie sudden and\u2019 unusual hospitality \u2018was to arouse ail Gorby's eusplclons; but on second éhoughts, deeming himselfg.quitq a match for Kilsip,\u201d both mentally and physically, Gorby accepted the invita- on.\u201cAh!\u201d said Kilsip, in his saft, low voice, rubbing his lean white hands together, as they sat over their drinks, \u201cyou are a lucky man to have laid your hands on that hansom cab murderer so quickly.\u201d \u201cYes; I flatter myself I did manage it pretty well\u2019 said Gorbg lighting his pipe.\u201cI had riot idea that it would be so simple\u2014though, mind you, It required a lot of thouglit before 1 got a proper start.\u201d \u201cI .suppose youd pretty sure he's the man you want?\" pureued Kiisip, softly, with a brilllant flash of his black eyes.\u2018Pretty sure, indeed!\u201d retorted Mr, Gorby, scornfully; \u201cthere ain't no pretty sure ahout it, I'd take my Bible oath he's the man.He and Whyte hated one another, He says to Whyte, \u2018I'l\u2019 kill you, if I've got to do it in thie open street.He meets Whyte drunk, a fact which he acknowledges himself; * he clears out.\u2018and the cabman swears he comes back; then he gets into the cab with a living man, and when he comes out leaves a dead one; he drives to East Melbourne and gets into the house at a time which: his landlady can prove\u2014 just the time that a cab would take to drive from the Grammar School on | the St.Kilda road.If ain't a fool, Kllsip, you'll see there\u2019s no doubt about it.\u201d \u201cit looks all square enough,\u201d sald Kilsip, who wondered what evidence Calton could have found to contradict euch a plain statement of fact.\u201cAnd what's his defence?\u201d \u201cMr.Calton\u2019s the only man as knows that,\u2019 anewered Gorby, finishing his drink; \u201cbut, clever and all as he is, he can't put \u2018anything in that can go against my evidence.\u201d \u201cDon't you be too sure Of that\u2019 sneered Kilsip, whose soul was devoured with envy.\u201cOh, but I.am,\u201d retorted Gorby, getting as red as a turkey-cock at the sneer.\u2018\u2018You're Jealous, you are, because you haven't got a finger in the ple.\u201cAh! but I may have yet.\u201d \u201cGoing a-hunting yourself, are yqu?\"\u201d said Gorby, with an indignant anort.\u201cA-hunting for what\u2014for a man as is already caught?\u2019 \u201cI don\u2019t believe you've got the right man,\u201d remarked Kiisip, deliberately.Mr.Gorby looked upon him with a sinile of pity.\u201cNo, of course you don\u2019t, just because I've caught him; perhaps when you see him hanged you'll believe it then!\u201d \u201cYou're a smart man, you are,\u201d .retorted Kilsip: \u2018but you ain\u2019't the Pope to be infallible.\u201d \u201cAnd what grounds have you for saying he\u2019s not the right man?\u201d de- nded Gorby.ilsip smiled,.and stole softly \u2018across | the room like a cat.(To be Continued.) \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 New mainspring in your watch for $1.00; guaranteed one year.R.Hems- ley, Watchmaker, 256 St.James Street.\u2014Adv.; |Point = Charles Mr.and Mrs.8.McKenzle, of La- chute, is spending a few days with Mr.T.Davis, of Forfar street, Mrs.O'Dofinell, of Glasgow, Scotland, is spending a few days with Anderson, Congregation street, before leaving for Nelson, B.C.A general meeting of the Point St.Charles Cricket Club will be held this evening at 8 o'clock at the house of Mr.J.Seddon, 10 Richmond street.All members are requested to attend; also all who are interested in cricket will be assured a hearty welcome.Mr.and Mrs.J.Lee left last night for Toronto, where they intend settling.Mr.Lee was a member of the Point 8t.Charles Cricket Club, and although his business prevented his regular attendance in the field, yet his work on the manegemen mem! \"made him a valuable membd se The classes in telegraph shorts hand, o ood in the R MCA have e à large num r of pupils.The her classes are not receiving ak ih aad sf oy nner YS.These 15] HISMAJEST = This Theatre does not advertige in the Gazette.Last 3 Performances To-day, Mat.and Night, | THE LITTLE PRINCESS \u2018Sar Crows,\u2019 *.Ni HE west |acaDEmY 12 Aut ve wag This Theatre dos MR.JOSEPH MORPHY Monter rendez me SHAUN RHUE Thurs, Fri.Sat.Thu.wre.\u2018aad KERRY 6ow Saturday Matineos .Prices\u201415¢, Zc, 50c and 7! Next Weok\u2014WAY or THE TRANSGRISSOR Every After- THEATRE FRANCAIS | neo ree THIS WEEK, OCTOBER 3 The Trocadero Extravaganza Two Funny Burlettos, and an Olio of sll \u2019 3c and Ge.Next Week\u2014THE JOLLY GRASS WIDOWS.\u2014 THEATRE DES NOUVEAUTES » Tel.Bell East 13%.LA FILLE DE ROLAND By Henrl de Bornler.~~ Matinee Saturday.Next Week\u2014LA CHATELAINE.LARGEST DANCING SCHOOL, PROF.A.IIACASSE.1611 Notre Dame St.Main 1254, HERE WE TEACH THE REAL GLIDE WALYZ Assembly every Wednesday, 8.30 p.m, BLASI'S ORCHESTRA., n 1, 1 Montreal's Leading School | Starter Ball 127 Boginners' Classes in Dancing and Deportment now forming.ADULTS, 8 P.M.JUVENILES, ¢« P.M.WESTMOUNT\u2014VICTORIA HALL Every Wednesday 4 p PROF.FRANK H \"NORMAN.Tel.Up 934.Circulars mailed.SEE Mount Royal Sanitarium Ddminion Square The recent improvements of Electric.Light or Radiant Heat Baths, Electric Water Baths and Special Steam and Vapor Rooms, are now completed.The Hydro-Therapeutic Department, ucder the direction of Dr.and Mrs.McBean, embracing Turkish or hot dry air, Russian or steam, and the various forms of Electric Baths, is probably the most perfect in Canada.Special rates are given on books of tickots.Details of hours, special appointments, on application, or by Telephone Up 448.: ACADEMY | Week Starting :.Matinee MONDAY, OCT.10th Masagère WAGENHALS Winn Prasad ° .BLANCHE.ouimnine \u2018The dramatio son- sation of the decade, 300 nights in Paris, 4 monthe in London, In Bataille & Morton\u2019s original ra- matization of Tolstoy\u2019s world famous .novel\u2014 Victoria New York.RESURRECTION \u201cOne of the great- performance.She did est dramas it wil work that was are- ever be m my fortune velation.\u201d to witness.-ALAN DALE IN N.Y.JOURNAL.\u2019 \u2014N.Y.HERALD.\u2018 \\ Elaborate Production Precisely as seen during its Long Run at the Victoria Theatre, N.Y.Seats now on sale\u2014Prices 25¢ to $1.50.Next Attraction\u2014Monday, October 17th, KLAW & ERLANGER PRESENT THOMAS Q.SEA BROOKE IN THE MUSICAL FARCE THE BILLIONA, IRE_ 100 PEOPLE, TWO CARLOADS OF SCENERY, AUGMENTED ORCHESTRA Seat Sule\u2014Thursday, ® a.m.\u2014 Wetnesty, Thursday Matinees and Saturday.THIS THEATRE DOES NOT ADVERTISE 18 THE GAZETTE Next Monday, OCT.10th ; The Stupendous Scenic Production, THE WA y OF THE The Up-to-date Acts.TRANSGRESSOR The Wonderful Acting Dogs, \u2018The Beautiful Scenery Equipment, The Only Show ef its Kind In America.Vaudeville SEE PRICES\u2014I5, 25, 50 and 75c\u2014No Higher.INTERCOLONIAL RAILWAY TENDER FOR BUILDINGS.(SEPARATE SEALED TENDERS, addressed\u2019 to the undersigned, and marked on the outside \u2018Tender for Station, Pictou,\u201d or \u201cTender for Station, Antigonish,\u2019 as the case may be, will be recetved up to and including WEDNESDAY, the in Day of OCTOBER, for the construction of a Brick and Stone Paasenger Station at Pictou, N.S., and for the construction of a Brick and Stone Passenger Station at Antigonish, N.S.Plans and specification for the bullding at Pictou may be seen at the Station Master's office, Pictou, N.S.Plans and specification for the building at Antigonish may be seen at the Station Master's office, Antigonish, N.8., and plans and specifications for both buildings may be seen at thé Chief Engineer's office, Moncton, N.B,, where forms of tender may be obtained.All the conditions of the specifications must be complied with.D.POTTINGER, © General Manager.Railway Office, Moncton, N.B., 27th September, 1904.MONTREAL ART PRINTERS\u2014 HERALD JOB DEPARTMENT THE BAND OF LA GARDE REPUBLICAINE (FRANCE) WIN Give a Concert in TUESDAY, October 11t£h at 8.15 p.m.THE AREN Benent L'UNION NATIONALE FRANCAISE PRICES\u2014$2.00, $1.50, $1.00, 50c.\u2018Tickets on sale Friday at Jules Pony, 1634 St.Catherine street: Edmond Hardy, 1688 Notre Dame, and at \u201cStar\u201d, Branch Office, corner Peel and St, Cather ine.MR.PETER LYALL, THE LIBERAL CANDIDATE FOR sT.ANTOINE DIVISION, Will open a Committee Room at 525 St.James Street, on, MONDAY, 10th inst, at.8 p.m, and another at 2653 Notre Dame Street on TUESDAY, the 11th inst., at 8 pm.Speeches by prominent gentlemen.Friends and supporters of Mr.Lyall are respectfully invited to attend.THE KING'S HALL | 2463 St.Catherine Street.2 - À New Hall in a New Building! Superior Accommodation for Concerts, Lectures, Banquets, and High-class Public and Private Balls, and Entertainments.Ventilation, Sanitation, Acoustics, Location _ THE BEST OF EVERYTHING.APPLY ON THE PREMISES.\u2014 = still room for and it is hoped more will ho The Engineers ternoon at 4.80 on.which\u2019 is held in the Trunk B hat quite a number dvantage of them.parade this af- for.practical work, field near the) Club.The go.sat- ground was surveyed by the renches, fortifications and wl These will be gun pits marked out Sug out on Saturday\u2019 that\u2019 an afternoon, sp it members turn out Is emential students in all classes, | and orders that all members| Last = \u2014 TE encourage the officers \u2018In thelr THB LATE FR.H.HACKETT.work of training the : men in practical Mr.Hackett, w who was route agent: _ x efficiency.the Canadian Express Company, Monte \u2018 real, and who was killed in recent C.P.R.FALL AND WINTER TIME.accident at Richmond, held a double TABLE Uabllity pocldent policy with the .The Fall and Winter time-table gees TOUT of, Shinde Compas.\"8 inte effect en Sunday ne ober papers were filed on Se vember 20, Sth There will be many Important a cheque for W $4,000 was handed over on LS changes In trains leaving and arriving September 2° BA puriquisrs ani ed time: MONTREAL ART PR ri ull particulars and © mer Fe tabla\u201d.aol .HERKLS.Jos, Sia Sia e.\u2026 ; ie. Rd Jy G3 +8 and prove that it will cure Catarrh and vor ib 2 §f jou want sn investment in a progressive ASE oy Ng an > x ed sa - £ sw Sos STi PE EE tai arto Battledore aud Shu cock 55 ; = the ag ju St.Agnes Pari ish ve Tied Abp bout v, Baptiste, Frieh Bavs Schools hh at , ; 2.\u2018the children malt the 3 bar So they need.That is: situatiph wo far as Ît Agnes\u2019.parish im.conoern- ed.The educati not what is re quired, and- after -& couple of years of the most dsscntars training the ma wl .Jority of the children are removed an sent to acheols in other parts of th city for their complete education.* Parents who can afford te pay a ites more for education would not allowing their children to remain the full term at, the schools.They prefer to incur \u20ac and send.them even as far as St 8 8ohool to be properly taught.Children who cannot afford to go outside the parish for their education must be content with the lttle they learn at ome, St.Agnes parish was formed in May last and is-asituated-in the north end of the city.It comprises, the English- and à ng foerle of es ones Baptats ice inpluded in St.Patrick's parts Phere are about 450 per Pa Perth.there, or about 1,800 \u2018There are probably 500 children belonging to the parish.Bt.Agnes\u2019 parish has a big future.There are no really poor people, the general population being in, what might be calléd, moderate circumstances.The rarishioners own property, whose agsessed \u2018value is in the nelghborhood of $600,000.About half of St.Agnes\u2019 parish ig ig the city of Montreal, while.the remainder lies within the boundaries; of the old municipality of St.Jean Baptiste.Accordingly the children who re- wide in the Montreal section of the par- {sh will not be admitted to the schools.of the other section without paying double fees, and the same holds true of St.Jean Baptiste children who might desire admission to Montreal schools.A similar barrier has been shown to exist in St.Michael's parish, where six distriets each with its own school board converge, and in St, Anthony's parish which includes a portion of the city of; Montreal and Ste.Cunegonde, So far as the boys of St.Agnes\u2019 Bae ish are concerned, we find them divided into two branches, those of the city: and those of St.Jean Baptiste.For the bbys of St.Agnes\u2019 parish whose parents pay taxes to the school board of St.Jean Baptiste, there is Lut one public school\u2014St.Jean Baptiste School, at Sanguinet and Marie Anne Streets.This school is under the direction of the French Christian Brothers and has about 1.100 boys in attendance.There are only about forty English-speaking boys in the school, and they are huddled together in one class without any regard to grading.This single class 1s for the exclusive use of English boys, and no French is taught in it at all.The class 1s under & French brother, and it is said.that the teaching has never been satisfactory.The chief aim of the class has been to prepare young boys for their first communion, and once this stage has been passed, the children look around for somewhere better to go.Practically no children remain in this class after the age of twelve years, as there is little.or nothing for them to learn.What they learn up to.that age has been described :as not -much of anything.Once the first communion has been passed, the children take their departure.Many are unable to bear the cost \u2018of seeking further education elsewhere, and they drop Into work at a small remuneration.Those who wish to progress with tneir studies go out of the parish te find the education they need.There are six or seven divisions in this one English class, so that the teacher Is unable to devote much attention to'any of the pupils.While he is demonstrating something to one of the i visions, the other six are probably e.It is sald to be a mere waste of time for any boy to remain in this cless af- tér he has reached the age of ten years.Ten years is not a very advanced age, and some provision should exist for the proper education af children who have attained that mark.GETTING WORSE.Conditions were not always the sama at the St.Jean Baptiste school.A few years ago Rev.Father Casey used \u2018to A Fortune For Small Investors Everybody knows of the fortunes that bave and are uow being made from Patent Medl- cines.Some of them pay as bigh as 50 to 100 per cent.dividends.We are offering investors the greatest opportunity of a lifetime to get in on the \u201cground floor!\u2019 and buy stock that = bound to double in value and earn from 9 to o0 per cent.dividend.THE ANGLO- AMERICAN CHEMICALSCORPORATION ot Toronto and New York own three of the most meritorious and fast selling medical preparations on the market, namely, \u201cDR.JENNER'S GERMICIDE INHALER, \u201d \u201cDR.JENNER'S BLOOD MIXTURE,\u201d and *\u201cVAPO- CURA.\u2019 These articles are now being introduced, and with sufficient capital will soon be on sale in every drug store in Canada and United States.An annual business of $500,000 yearly can be done, yielding immense dividends to the stockholders.This Corporsy | tion is now offering a limited number \"A shares, to increase its working capital, At only 30 cents per share.The par value of each share is $1.00.Those who buy now at 30 cents per share will soon tind their -stock deuble in value, besides receiving large dividends twice yearly.Do not neglect this golden opportunity -of sharing in the immense profits that are bound to be reaped by this Corporation.{0 shares and upwards can be procured at 30 cents per share.No more than 600 shares will be sold to any one person.$16.buys 50 shares, $30 buys 100 shares, $60 buys 200 8) shares, $150 buys 600 shares.Ten per cent.of the amount can be remitted with the order and the balance pald on receipt of the stock certificates.Write to-day.READ THIS ALSO: \u201c SPECIAL PRICE\u201d 10 cts eur s To Introduce DR.JENNER'S INHALER, _ Catarrhal Deafness, by oily vapor inhalation, ® have arranged with McGALB PHARMACY, NOTRE DAME STREET, MONTREAL, .to supply (within next 10 days) all sufferers * with Dr.Jenner's Inhaler, together with 2 bottles of medicine, FOR ONLY 1{) CENTS.We do this to make known the wonderful _Serits of this noble remedy.You breathe \u201cclouds of healing vapor.(just like 1llustra- tion) every, ait.| ©, dealing the > Caters ot pula Thi, Som re ne can bave Br.pe cppmet cal 's 1 at above Cl it 4 en o medicin mailed mtu EER Sth Stave, = that will pay big dividr 1e, and stock if bound to increase t oe fold > ete rité us without delay.Ac rons joue of he.Gitv ad \u20ac wir ve Get No Jostruetiod Worthy ef\u201d 5 the Name, wd Pay Double Fées for That.{ devite-ihree hours : a day with this Eng- -66/ achool pay from thirty-five to fiftyr .raîls the auto is held on the rounding » 14 rr St.Jews lish class, and then boys were glad to remain \u2018uptil were fifteen years old.t a deoree was Issued forbid- lish-speaking priests from the achool; Sad this scheme had to be dropped.class has now only a French teaches, and it is sald that the English pronunciation taught thére 1s by nd means commendable.Children who attend St.Jean Baptiste cents a month for tuition, in addition to the regular school taxes pald by their parents.For the boys of st.Agnes\u2019 parish Sh Who reside within the old Ym mits of the city of Montreal, there is but one frstitu- tion of learning, the \u2018Olter school, on: Roy \u2018Street.The Olier school ts unéler the control of the Montreal Board ot Roman Catholic School Commissioners, and has about 400-boys in attendance, fifty of whom come from English- speaking families.; There are ten classes, and the school is crowded to the doors this fall.Theve are\u2019 five English-speaking lay \u2018teuchers and five French ones.Mixed classes are the rule and accordingly we find in every class about seven French-speak- ing boys to one English boy.The dual system prevalls,and the half day method, similar to that in foree at Sarsfleld school in St.Gabriel's parish and at Belmont school in St.Anthony's parish.During half of the school day the subjegts are taught in English and the remainder of the time in French.On account of the large majority of French boys in the school, and the amount of time that must be devoted to them.the English-speaking children learn practically nothing.\u201cWhy are there so many English teachers in thc school when only one- Qe An rater i \u201cDid you.ever see such an anomaly | proved to meet the wants of the ma- Ceylon Tea is.the one.Pot draw.= brand that.is atways\u2019 reliable in Tea Black, Mixed er.Natural Green, saaied Packets.only\u201425e, 30c, 40c, 80c, 60c per Ib.- 6 .3 20 : .RF a Don't waste.time and maney Fr runsing| [after every new fabgled braid snd fad In| teas-Their name 8 legion.Sav pos ~ =: genuine and original situation - there remarked to Tue Herald: As this, thut the Brothers of St, Jean {Baptiste schoo] will'not under any consideration récefve a Woy in their school Jiving south of Duluth Avenue; ard tha ©Olier school will not \u2018receive our children north.of Duluth.Avenue unless they pay double tuition.It.is astonishing that such a .stute of affaire would exist in an enlightened.city lke Montreal.\u201cBut ig Is only for the English-speak- ing.Catholics that \u2018such \u2018an unfortunate vondjtion.exists.The St.Jean Bap- {iste Bourd take qur taxes, gnd have taken thern for years, but they never placed single English-äpeäkingæ Brother te teach our children, though we pay taxes enough for them.The Olier school.with its efficient staff of five English teachers and five French teachers while answering in a high degree the requirements of the Freuch- Cunadian boy does not meet the requirements of the English-gpeaking boy owing to the dual language system.The French boy absolutely needs French, the English boy not necessarily.\u2018ane school system of Montreal has been, it would seem, formed anda Îm- jority while ignoring the nceds of the seventh of the scholars are English?minority.Our children are scattered soon\u2019 be suepended owing to & scarcity of logs.\u2018Work ori the Petawaws' lim- \u2018its, which were bought last year from .A.Barnet, of Renfrew, for.$1,000,000, is being started this week.! CL WILL REBUILD THE DAM, Renfrew, Ont, Oct.8.-\u2014(Special.)\u2014 \u201cThe dam, which supplies power for A.A.Wright & Co.'s electric lighting plant, the Renfrew Milling \u20ac0, and Logan Bros.\u201d woollen.factory, is being rebuilt.For years the Milling Company have been troubled with a lack of water \u2018powef®and have, in dry sea- \u2018sons, had to resort to steam.The new structure will supply sufficient power for all seasons.This will make the second new dam on the Bonnechre at Renfrew.\u2018 ; gr ira Oculists\u2019 prescriptions.carefully\u2019 \u2018- ed.Moderate prices.R.Hemsley, Optician, 256 St.James Btreet.\u2014 CANADIAN ROUTE TO YUKON.Ottawa, Oct.8\u2014(Speclal.)\u2014In early spring the mounted police start from Peace River, near Edmoiiton, and congtruct a pack trait to Pelly River, whence navigation can be had with Dawson.This will be the first all- Canadian Yukon route.MLLE.DE TIER IN HER AUTO: BOLIDE.° Mlle.De Tilers is furnishing Paris with exciting moments, her auto-bolide feats being startling to a degree.She starts at the top of a steep slide, down which her auto-bolide is hurled.The slide curves in an S shape at the bottom, and by an arrangement of the surface and makes an upward turn, Mlle.De Tiers hurtling through the air head downward during this period.The slide ends abruptly and the auto- bolide is projected fifty feet to a second slide, self during the leap, and the venturesome lady completes her dangerous journey.It is something like looping the loop, with one section of the lat: the machine righting it- | ter missing.was the question put by The Herald to| & parishioner.\u201cOh,\u201d was the reply, \u201cbecause the English teachers are a great advantage to the French.While they teach the French boys how to speak English, the Irish boys are losing thelr time.\u201d None of the English boys remain at the Olier School very long.Whlie a large number break off and go to work, others de .à , homes hundreds of miles away with- escape have been exposed to the germ, |the agent who selis the separator.Why once or even twice a day on gro plexing hours, to turn our faces to-|that they are not real.\u2018How then is CENTRAL VERMONT.: Li : \u2019| oats and corn mixed with milk, This falling help.out stirring from his office.In one! but they are in'a bodily condition not! our farmers will allow this is à MYS\"! ghould pe given in addition to an ward Thee who are our fae lp, one.Lo distingulsh between he nsub- BOSTON ED NAN TORK-Lv.5.00 am.the shadows when we lose sight ofland the real experiences of the soul.| %% pm Ar.7.2 am.8.10 p.m., 10.15 p.m.| instance, that of a Mrs.L.A.Phillips, conducive to the entrance and prolif-| tery, as every pound of éream sent to h of Trawick, Tex., the witnesses 88Y eration of the disease germ.¢ Prot the creamery with less than thirty per abundance of avant and \u201cfast They sm.that he raised her from the dead.| \u201cCan it be denied that all of us occa-|cent, fat is a loss ta.tbe patron in ekiM|,hey can eat up clean with a relish.Thee.As we look upon the Cross|¥ajth must have a more solid resting- DELAWARE AND HUDSON.Whether.that is Hterally true or not, sionally drink water in which are the|milk, and when they get to understand Feed the grain mornings and evenings, the mists vanish and the way ls Clear.place than any of these, though they| ngw YORK\u20148.45 am., 11.10 am.7.40 p.me there is little doubt but that the wo-| germs of typhoid fever, eat fruit simi-|this, the agent who has to set his ma-l'and the mixture at noon or twice be- or ells us a Love that knowsj gl] lead to faith and corroborate it.Ar.1.15 a.m., 8.16 p.m, 7.35 p.m.they ' can eat.man would be in her grave to-day|iatly teinted, rup up against personsichine to-skini & twenty per cent.çream| mveen morning and evening es best no limits, and we know that He who were it not for this man's strange power over human life and his marvelous control over disease and death.Mrs, Phillips had been a hopleless invalid for many years, and for the last five had been bedfast, could lle on one side only, and was covered with bedsores.She was suffering from a severe complication of diseases, including stomach, kidney, and [female troubles, and had been under treatment of twelve different hospitals and various doctors, ail of whom fatled to help her and r ~nounced her case Incurable.Her agonies were so great that they threw her into convulsive spasms, while her body was wasted to skin and bones, Al] the \u201ctrineag glv- en her were \u2018without effect, and she was rapidly nearing her grave, wlien|p she heard of Prof.Adkin.Broken in body, pain-weary, and without faith but hoping against hope in this last desperate chance, she wrote to him, He replied at once, saying that he would take her case, assuring her that he could and would save her life and restore her to health.And notwithstanding what the doctors, had said, he did cure her completely so that today she fs up and about, & well wo- coming down !Wwith this or other diseases, vet éséape?Individuals contract typhoid fever and die; hundreds similarly exposed fall to contract the, disease.This individual offers a suitable germinating place for the disease germ: the other does not.\u201cArguing from this standpoint, it is our belief, founded upon experience and the facts, that hogs in an Ideal state of constitution, vigor and health are not prone to become afflicted with cholera and kindred disease.Man undermines the constitution of his swine by misguided management or falls to build up a strong constitution.He undermines by surrounding the animals with an un- |\u2019 healthy environment.He falls to build up a conbtitutiont in that he frequently reeds in-an-in, or too closely, and so feeds the sire, the pregnant sow and the » suckling and weaned pig that the re-; quirements of each for & complete ration are.hot provided,\u201d After proper attention has been given to.the matter of getting good vigorous blood into the herd, let the owner endeavor to so plan his system of feeding and management that this vitality may not only be maintained, but possibly increased.Men .cannot feed a corn to do spd work will have to stop busi- ress.The separator should \u2018be sèt to skim a cream testing 140.by the oil test.Then the patron will be getting all the skim milk at home which he \u2018ought to have.At one creamery two or three samples of cream tested forty by the oil tent.The patron sending such cream is giving away about twenty pounds more skim-milk in each 100-1b.of cream than is the patron who is sendine cream testing 140, and the credm testing forty is always of a poorer quality.Eastern Dairy School Calendar, The calendar of the Eastern Dairy School at Kingston, Ont., has been \\1s- sued.The school creanrery opens Monday, Nov.13, and the first course on Thursday, Dec.1, closing Dec.23.The second or long course opens Monday, June 2, and continues until March Canadian Apples in Great Britain.the sight shall transform our lives, Amen, red not His own Son but freely gave suits your convenienec.Bee that plenty y1ir up for us all, shall also.with Em of she it is always at hand for ; thelr use and provide a constant sup- Tn Cone ail things.te would { fresh.\u2018here they may : > ap Oe enter where | light that shines around the Cross and BHPARATION FROM MARKET BTOCK.for market.Entirely too many grow- Few growers separate their stock or Heaven.Where is heaven?that heaveri 1s not a place at all, but merely a state.breeding turkeys from those intended ers feed them all together, sell the most thrifty for market, and keep the least matured for producing stock, This 13 a great mistake; the very best should be.selected for producing stock and the rest fed for market.Those eelected for use in breeding, however, should be separated and fed by themselves If possible.The best food for stock turkeys is bolled oats drained of all mois- They tell us The true basls of faith is the word of God.Once convinced that the Scriptures are the word of God (which s subject to proof, as any other matter of fact) and we have a rule and guide of faith that satisfies every demand and corrects every idosyncrasy of testimony, observation or experience.The word of God is the true test, and whatever {8 not found therein, or cannot, bo roved thereby, may properly and safe- y be rejected as false, or, at least, unnecessary to galvation.\u2014Northwestern Christian Advocate, tion and quite full enough of flesh.ls a mistake to keep as producers fowls poor or thin In flesh.In good condition, plump, but not over- MARKETING, They must be ture, some wheat and a little corn.This After the turkeys are grown and will keep them In good healthy condl-| ready for market, quite as much care and attention should be given to the killing and shipping as to the proper growing.Where these things cannot be.done to good advantage, it ie better to sell them alive.Buyers who are prepared to kill, dress, pack and ship turkeys and to save the feathers, insensibility and a free flow of blood from the mouth.This is called sticking in te roof of the mouth.: The other plan 19 to break the neck by a quick twist or jerk backward.When the neck is completely disjointed the head is pulled away so as to form ar open space in the.neck in which the blood may settle, This plan has been but little used, though the claim !s made that when so kliled the fowls will keep longer, because there ls no-open- ing by which the air can get into the tody, as there is when they are stuck in the roof of the mouth, This method for turkeys, and to use it well requires RUTLAND RAILROAD.BOSTON AND NEW YORK\u2014Lv.8.50 a.me and 7.16 p.m.Ar.7.30 a.m., 3.40 p.m.MATTER 1 NAN 6 1MOOSE OPEN SEASON IN uebeo .Sept 1st, ew Brunswiok ) Sept.15th Nova Scotia.| TRAINS FOR THE Maritime Provinces Ocean Limited ; alm ! ay : thé : Des gra are worth alive, and should be able to - Senackable ae \u201cthat EMT ogy ges et althe To e 3itton a Ad A t } Pr 2A Cadidian 1 med des to the smaller gealers handle them at -a profit better than can considerable practice.The method of 7.30 p.m.daily, Saturday excepted, i 2RFe = LA no er , Pe } - partment of Agrioulture.end costers.: the grower, who may not be prepared beheading with an axe or hatchet has ; Wallen, of Finey, Mo.who for four 0 : 0} .Late as paralyzed and was steadily than, that | the Hecessary, Slements a Thé apple crop .of the United King- MARKETING APPLES.to do the work to advantage.So much been employed for ages The Maritime Express 13 noon daily, Saturday excepted.p man, joyous, thankful, and enthu-{ration and get bone and fesh In a high|BY As W.Grindley.Chief Inspector gt shipments of different .vaiieties and|ahould be in pesition to pay what they'| has been more used for chickens than = sé growing snore.helpless in spite of ail'lacking, to & large degree.dom for 1904 will only be of fair quan-| The leading frult markets in Great| depends upon marketing them in the DRY PICKING.) a best condition that small growers the doctors who attended him.His| yt has been demonstrated by care-| tity: and will not affect the deinand| Britain are London, Liverpool, Glas- 1 their : cure Was so quick and marvelous that, ¢ylly conducted experiments that it is for the best clase of Canadian apples;| gow, Bristol, Manchester, Cardiff and ghoula eltret.pga \\ oe Le an IT Dry plcking is always to be preferred in a letter he says: \u201cIt was like bring- : but there will not be the keen demand| Fiull.These parts are the distribut- d when preparing the fowls for market.i ing the dead to life.Prof.Adkin impossible to qaise as Food Pigs upon for inferior grades which was met lust] ing Tases for the bulk of the fruit done at a fair price.sell alive to some When HF line condition, nicely picked, ENGLISH M AIL TRAIN cured Mrs.M.W.Nolen, of Covington, where other elements enter.into the |B¢ason owing to the total failure of the ghipments as well as other food pro- such stock.° and sent to market \u2018without\u2019 having Ga., of a malignant cancer without the feed, Not only has this been found to English crop of apples, together with) ducts sent to Great Britain from|\"\"! \\ KILLING been packed in ice, a turkey is at itS| Until the close of navigation a special ex- knife or probe; he stopped the Great be true in the case of ralsing pigs, but the scarcity of other fruits.Canada.Canadian Shippers, as 8a| * .best, and consequently commands the] White Plague, consumption, in thé.nigo in the feeding of hogs for market.| The outlook is that there will bë general rule, will do well to confine! Ki nothing but well fattened stock.highest price.As soon as the fowl is [press will leave Montreal at 7.45 p.m.on case of Miss H.L.Kelley, of Seal| Invariably when corn hes been place] sufficient English apples to supply tho| their shipments to one or more of these| 1.ge]dom pays to send lil-favored stock | stuck and the blood 1s still flowing, | FRIDAYS, for Rimouski and intermediate Cove, Mé, and hundreds of other|ig opposition with a mixed grain ration suffering men and women have llke- wise been rescued by this wonderful man who seems to control some mysterious force not known to ordinary mortals, : it has been badly worsted In the test.On the other hand, use a certain portion of corn and feed in connéction with other graine of a protein order, and there is probably no known combina- elder-makers and leave a surplus to) ports, for the business reason that it 15! 4nto market.Do not give any food to meet the Canadian shipments of early varieties.In shipping Canadian apples to Great Britain, the following directions should \u2018te followed: better to have the bulk of your goods the turkeys for twenty-four hours ptior at a good distributing basge.than at 8) ¢o killing.This allowe the crop and market which is confined to local de-| entrails to become empty and uvolds mands and.which may become glutted| much of the danger of spoiling.Full and demoralized under heavy supplies.\u2018crops and entralis count against value: pluck the feathers dry from its body, taking care In doing this not to break the skin or tear the flesh.Nothing detracts so much from dressed poultry as torn places upon the carcass or shank; picking must be clean and nice- points, connecting with the Allan Line Royal Mail Steamers at Father Point.Trains leave Bonaventure Station.When called upon for an inter-|fjon of feeds that will secure the re-| Cool all fruit thoroughly before pack-| Individual Canadian shippers may¥| they often taint the meat and prevent ly done, When the fowl is plucked view, Prof.Adkin, saïd\u2014, \u201cYes, I remember the cases you mentioned, but do not quite understand why they should cause any especial astonishment, since they are no more wonderful ffmn stores of other cures I have made since I announced my discovery to the world.1 firmly believe that there is no disease I may not cure, and:wkatever.othèr men may do or fail to dèp L mean to keep on healing the sick and \u2018afflicted of any ais- ease they may have just as long as I am able.I make no exceptions, rich or poor, east or west, wherever they live, it Is all the same to me.All who are sick from any cause may be cured in their own homes simply by writing and telling me the - name of thelr trouble or their principal: symptoms, age and sex, and I will give them of my services absolutely without charge.I feel that it is my duty to God and man to give freely, to help all who are afflicted and not to use my dls- covery merely to make money.\u201d \u201cDo you really mean that anyone who is sick can write to you to be cured, without paying you any money?\u201d ; \u201cExactly.I mean just that.I know it may seem an unusual thing to do, but if I choose to help the earth's physical unfortunates without pay, there's nothing to prevent my doing so, is there?I have my own reason for my course in this matter and I do not want anyone to feel that by taking advantage of my offer they are accepting charity.1 will have my reward in proving to the world the great value of my discovery, and the uselessness of wasting money on doctors, send medicines when it is not necessary.\u201d | \u2019 .\u201cWhat ig this discovery?\u2019 .\u201cI can show you better than I can explain.Have some one who is sick write to me and watch the results, If you do so I would prefer that you select a chronic case, some one whom physicians have said cannot be cured.Any doctor may cure a simple case with à few doses of medicines, but T want those where both doctors and medicines have failed.Tell anyone who wants to be cured to write to me addressing Professor Thomas F.Ad- kin, Office 1224 J., Rochester, N.Y.\u201cBut how can yeu cure those at a distance; those whom you.never ged?\u201d \u2018Just as easily and just as surely as though I went to them or they came to me.Distance makes no difference.Whether they live one or a thousand miles away is all the same, A letter is all that is necessary to enlist my aid.What other men may or may not be sults that will follow such feeding.Hog raisers must learn to get eut of the ruts .One of the worst of these Is corn feeding, that has been so productive of weakened constitutions and cholera devastated herds.We do not wish to assume that this is the most potent aid to the disease, but it is one that cannot be Ignored without risking heavy cost.; : Old Hay Best for Horses.This js the season of the year when most horse breeders are forced to bagin the use of new hay with thelr hc wes.As a rule-the change is assoctated with digestive troubles of more or less severity and therefore he is wise who makes it a point always to have enough ol@ hay to last his horses well into the cold season, perhaps as far along as the New Year.The hunting horses of England end the other fien-priced horseflesh of that country, leaving out of consideration the race horses, are never allowed to eat hay that is not at least one year old and much that is two years old, yet bright and sound 16 fed in preference even to that of a year's less age.One reason js that countless millions of insects iay their eggs on the stems of the grasses from which hay is made and these ogg» do not lose their vitality during \u2018the ordinary Lay-curing process, When takeh into the warm moist regions of the equine stomach :these eggh are hatched out and create disturbances, causing collec and other troubles in the digestive tract.Hence the best thing is to have old hay to feed until the.new shall have cured in stack or mow or at least to have enough of the old to mix with the -new, enlarging the proportion of the new until the horses have become thoroughly accustomed to the change and untll the bulk of the dejeterious agents have been dried out to the death.Many a man has been at a loss to know what was the matter with hid horees nt this time of year and thé sole cause of the.indisposition complained of has been the change from old to new hay.More especially true of horses that are being got ready for showing.A sudden change.from the old to the new hay often sets such horses to scouring, and founder not infrequently is a result.And not alone are the fn- sects\u2019 egas l# be feared but equally so the fermentation which is going on in new hay for a long time.On the saccharine character of the grass stems much of the féeding value of the hay depends, and the more sugar there is present the greater the amount of fermentation there will be during the pro- ing.Handle as little «8 so8mble Grade fruit according to \u201cFruit! Marks Act.\u201d Pack fruit tightly in package.Pack no inferior fruit for export.Pack a limited quantity of fancy apples of the best varieties in boxes, holding not less than one bushel or forty pounds nett of fruit, a suitable size being the Canadian standard (10 x.{17 x 20 inches, inside measurement).Little or no packing material should be used, but à sheet of cardboard at top and bottom of case will reduce the amount of injury from bruises.Only very fancy fruit for desert use, auch ap \u201cFameuse,\u201d \u201cKing,\u201d *\u2018\u201cWealthy\u201d\u2019 or other highly colored varieties, should be wrapped in paper.; ; The barrel is the most suitable package for the bulk of the apple trade with Great Britain.It is popular with the wholesale trade, and the retailers like It as the net weight of fruit holds out, which is an object where fruit is sold by the pound; the demand for apples in boxes will increase when the trade.find they get a good article combined with 40 lbs.net welght of fruit, Barrels.should be well made, strongly aniled and should have eight hoops, two each at top and bottom, with four quarter hoops, Place at each end of barrell a circle of heavy cardboard, in order to.prevent the fruit being bruis- \u2018ea and becoming unsightly when exposed for sale; these carboard circles should have semi-circular holes at each ride to allow of their being easily removed.Brand packages for export according to \u201cFruit Marks Act,\u201d Section ¢ Use only new barrels or boxes for the export trade.For making new barrels or boxes use a wood that will not taint the truit.- : = SHIPPING APPLES Ship only very cholce fruit of the early varieties, as early apples have to compete with home grown fruit on the British markets.Table varleties of choice quality.packed in cases, should be shipped (in cold storage at a temperature ranging from thirty-five to forty degrees.lowar temperature is nto required.A great and sudden change of temperature always causes damage to perishable food products, causing apples to become \u2018\u2018mlack,\u201d \u201cwet\u201d and \u2018\u2018wasty.\u201d Apples in barrels should be shipped in holds which are equipped with forced ventilation, (electric or steam fans).Ship regular supplies at regular periods and not too large quantities at \u2018a double elevator for raising and low- into the salesroom,so that even the auc- or \u201cslacks\u201d are told by sounding on \u2018examine a limited number of barrels or A (ages 50 examined are admitted into the salesroom as eamples.packages into large baskets before the buyers, s0 that there is nothing but a bad reputation to be gained by facing barrels with ehoice-appies.- make good business connections with firms at inland British towns, and realize very satisfactory returns for their goods, but as a general! rule it is not advisable to exploit new markets unless prepared to meet losses which are liable to be made in establishing new trade connections, \u2019 As the bulk of Canadian apples ship-| ped to Great Britain are sold at public auction !t may be of interest to Canadians to know how these sales are conducted at Liverpool and Manchester.Liverpool and Manchester have each a large salesroom where an association of fruit brokers conducts public sales on fixed market days with occasional special sales.: \"Regular: sales days in Liverpool are Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays.Regular sales days In Manchester are Tuesdays and Thursdays.The salesrooms in Liverpool and| Manchester are constructed with seats.facing a pit which is below, and in front of, the auctioneer and which has ering samples from or to basement below.Printed catalogues are furnished to buyers which give a description of the fruit to be sold, and also includes mark and name of shipper, number of barrels, etc., in lot, variety or varieties of apples, apparent condition, such as tight, slack, wet, slack and wet, etc.{OW THE SAMPLES OF LOTS FOR SALE ARE TAKEN.- Sample packages are taken from the dock (wharf) by the brokers, and no] sample is admitted into the salesroom which has been tampered with in any way.The packages (barrels or hoxes), are not opened until read to be raised tioneers have no idea of the quality of the fruit beyond what can be told before packages are opened; thus \u2018tights end of barrel, \u201cwets\u201d or \u201cslightly wet\" are told by outside appearance of package.Brokers and buyers are allowed to boxes of apples at the \u2018\u2018docks\u201d when the cargo {a discharged, and before sales take place, but none of the pack- In both Liverpool and Manchester it Is customary to empty the sample Liverpool, Eng.A.W.Grindley.ite being kept for any length of time.two .methods ot killing The most popular is to sispend the fowl by the shanks, head down, and cut or etick it in the roof of the mouth with a knife made especially This severg the arteries and cute into the brain, causing largely used.for this purpose.Accounts of Business Men Solicited.Facilities for.All Kinds of Banking.Interest Paid on Deposits.FF\" 40 BRANCHES IN CANADA.Letters of Credit, Money Orders and Drafts Issued, Exchanged, Bought and Sold.Cor.6T.JAMES and ST.PETER STS.West End Branch, Cor.Guy and St.Catherine Streets, Open Sat.Evening from 7 te 9 hang it head down in a cool place until all animal heat is gone from thg body, being careful not to hang it where it will be so exposed to cold air as to be likely to freeze.Do not remove the head, feet, or entrails, but have the whole carcass, including head and feet, perfectly clean, \u201coa EMPRESS OF TABLE WATERS RADNOR For sale at nil leading Grocers, Restaurants : and Ciuhe ; CITY TICKET OFFICE: 143 St.James St, and Bonaventure Station.7 Low I Rates Economy, Comfort and Scenic Grandeur.Toronto - - $6.50 Return - - $11.50 Hamilton - $7.00 Return - - $12.00 Including Meals and Berths.MONTREAL-TORONTO-HAMILTON LINE\u2014 Via 1000 Islands and Bay of Quinte \u2014 Stoumers leave on Mondays, Weduesdays and Fridays, at 7 p.m.QUEBEC LINE\u2014Steamers leave\u2019 daily, except Sundays, st 7 p.m.SAGUENAY LINE\u2014Steamers leave Quebec on Tuesdays and Saturdays at 8 a.m.CITY TICKET OFFICE.128 St.James Street, Opposite P.O.THE GREAT NORTHERN RY, OF CANADA Trains leave Corner Moreau and St Catherine Sts.For L'Assomption, L'Epinhanie, Joliette, Shawinigan Falls, Grand Mere and Quebec, 60 a.m.| .For Jollette, Shawinigan Falls, Grand Mere, New Glasgow, Lachute and Hawkesbury, 5.3% p.m.- ; For Montfort Division, close connections with C.P.trains leaving Montreal 5.30 p.m.Trains Arrive as follows: - From New Glasgow, Lachute, Jolletts, Shaws inigan Falls, Grand Mere, etc., 9.15 a.m.From Quebec and intermediate stations, et.am.Baturday afternoon and Sunday passenger trains on the Montfort Division of the Great Northern Railway of Canada have been dis continued, and passengers for 16 Island Lake, Arundel, etc., will leave Montreal: Week days, h.90 p.m., from Place Viger, re turning 9.50 a.m.MONTREAL PARK & ISLAND RAILWAY \u2014 LAURINE-From.Post Office-20 min.service, 8.40 am.to 11.50 p.m.Last car at 13 midnight.From Lachine\u2014X min.service, 6.50 a.m, to 11.50 pm, Last car 12.50 a.m.SAULT AU COLLKT \u2014 From.Cralg and Chenneville\u2014i6 min.service, 8.16 am, to: 30 s.m.; 30 min.service, ui sm.to ux p.m.Last car 13 midnight.From Sault au Recollet\u201445 min.service, 8.30 am.te 18,16 p.n.; 30 min.service, 13.16 p.m.te À - -%.\u2026 Déalert\u2019 prices for \u2018Radnor,\u201d 30 p.c.below thal of the Imported Table Waters, \u2018RADNOR WATER CO., Office, Canada Lite Bullding, Montreal.SE SPRINGS, Radnor, Que.able to do.how they fail or what they cess of perfect curing.New hay should'any one time.- charge makes no difference to me.Mÿ|never be uxed for show horses if it is] Do not force apples t£ season on 20 Y Hpower is supreme.\u201d 1 na.\" rce applès oug 0 Gars PO tigation proves that Professor posstble to obtain tHe nld.- the British markets; f example, do .; ; ., hip winter varittes when there is - : vg a | Adkin\u2019s claims are more than borne .not 8 2 .ta but by the facts, and that he fuifiiis , Fast Walking Merses.- A defhand for eafty: varioites.im] 4 - Vie tarrh hin promise of free service to the v Too little attention is given to the|etorage, ao Bold late varieties of appies| Wonderful Toutimony te the Curative ee AAR i 2 net ST At an (hey Abe sessinable and ner Poy of Or Ande Outarrhal\u2019 CADETS IN HARD LUCK, Ship as few varieties as possible in Powder.Kingston, Oct.8.\u2014 (Epecial.) \u2014 The nue MAN i HR Canads snipe too many verlets wetter Or of eit, Minn.: men -) = nada too many.varieties.: 1 85 boas 8 oer Military College cadets will not be .CORNS MAKE vou LIMP Export shipmenta should be confined br eg iP Te 3 rears.duri able to.go to Gananoque to play thelr| Make you jufrp with pain, too.You'll| as nearly as possible to the following my condition truly miperable.With 165, « game to-morrow in the junior series! quit- imping in twenty-four hours by|varietles:\u2014Baldwin, Greening, King] Peer Agno lial pain 11.45 p.m.OUNTAIN\u2014From Mt.Royal Ave.\u2014 Bice, 5.40 a.m.to 11.40 p.m.From min.toria Avenue, Westmoufit\u201430 min.service, 6.50 a.m.to a.m, CARTINRVILLE\u2014From Snowdon's Junetig \u201440 min.service, 6.00 a.m.te 18.00 midaiske - From Cartierville\u201440 min.service, 8.40 s.ia, to 11.40 Ps , ) MOUNTAI ELT LINE-\u2014Special Bel \u201cservice as required, via Bt.Catherine: rte Extra cars will be run on all nes a pee quired.For extra cars .for hine, take - Notre Dame cars to cobnnect at Cote St.Pag}, For extra cars for Sault au Recollet, take - | ) | | utéb after using Dr.A » w'u Catart - : \" owing to their sports being held on, using tñam's Corn Extractor.It! Russet, Spy, Ben Davis, - © der 1 obtained hella.Ares Dott \u201cal- R : .that day.Tt ls 8 Pity that th clash can't fal, becay » eranteed.FHIY| The best clase of tfade buy when and mest 1 net entres, cured man .Locke Cult.Linker eee ete Chaine, ; ddtes, eus ee .sat ue vit n swift and syre.= 5 bey can get large de ties o [ur Agnew's Ciuÿmens-«rulléves.PHos in- fully repaired.- Prices moderate.R.oz MUR = A on Hkvioy Putnam ch In Bride and Vhrloty leaving theietastly.| caf dt adios ln : | emaley, 365 BL Jomus Blreet\u2014adn® .\u2018 - a # - 1.£ ° à, ie os .{ Sa \u2018 je, ' » : T - i \u201ci \u2018 x.J FU \u2019 ; * Ï EN u ; A Le ! « : 7 f 5 : 1) i mere suc, 3 tarte de a A a ye pr SAAN, pt gr Tiaras gamma 6 PUA > eam tank + - TEE PWR, -B Ned ERA RMA ANAT © a Trani + Miss Harvey, Hamilt 4e \u201d = Miss McAnulty.Montreal, .Played Pluckily But ~ Was Nervous i Toronto, Oat.8.\u2014Miss Florence.Harvey, of Hamilton, is agaln champion coveted title yesterday afternoon, when she defeated Miss McAnulty, of Montreal, in the finals.Miss McAnulty in the early: part of the match played © strongly, but becaine nervous and her play fell off.Miss Harvey captured the first hole easily in 4 to 6.Miss Mec- Anulty made a poor drive, topping her ball, while Miss Harvey, who went about her work in business like fashion, was never in difficulty.The second went to Miss McAnulty in 5 to 6.The champion got à bad lie on her second and sliced.Miss Harvey won the third in 7 to 8 Miss McAnulty slicing with her brassie.In the McAnulty found the bunker with her third, the ball striking the top of the bank, and it took her three to reach the green, Miss Harvey wou in 7 to 8.The eastern representative showed better form in the next, her driving being much superior.the hole in 5 to 7, and was only one down.The sixth was halved, Miss Mc- Anulty missing a long putt.They were all equare in the seventh.Miss Mc- Anulty winning the hole in 6 to 7.Miss Harvey on the eighth was on the green in her second and holed out in two more, giving her the hole in 4 to 6.Miss Harvey got the ninth in 5 to 6 on better work on the green.The tenth was won by Miss McAnulty, a good approach and an excellent putt giving her the hole in 4 to 5.Miss Harvey\u2019 - ynade the eleventh in three, one better than the Montrealer, who got a bad lie.Miss Harvey two up.It was the beginning of the end.Miss .McAnuity on the twelfth, topped herijast year Miss McAnulty made lady golfér of Canada, winning the fourth hole Miss ~ Migs McAnulty won, LS / Ladies\u2019 Championship Again] Miss Bewel.\u2026\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.Mrs.vs.Mrs.Mussen.\u2026.\u2026\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.VE, _ , Miss Vs.Miss vs, Miss vs.Miss vs.Mrs.Stikeman.\u2026.Mis Montizambert.\u2026.\u2026.vs.Mrs.Pepler.\u2026\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.Miss Turner.csveseeeee.vs.Miss Wilkes.\u2026.Mrs.Ki v8.Miss vs.DAWEB.\u2026.000cuccsusss Miss Nesbitt.L Scott.Mrs.Woodruff.\u2026.\u2026.TOWNE.ccoeerersnannssanen ° 0 1 0 Miss Butler.ccceseese Kidd.eooovenecenesase Mrs.E.Smith.Mrs.Read.vs.Defries.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.0.Mrs.WoodS.vs.Miss Jones Miss Meredith.vs.Miss Hoodless.cansessce 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 MISS McANULTY'S CAREER AS A GOLFER.Miss Carrie McAnulty of Montreal the runner-up in this year\u2019s championship began to play goif perhaps seven lor eight years ago, but it is only with- (In the last four years that she has given the game any serious attention.: Her first efforts were on the Metropolitan links under the kindly eye of her father, the late \u2018Thomas McAnulty, who was one of the ploneers of the royal game in Canada, and at the same time one of the best players.; Miss McAnulty afterwards divided \u2018her attention between the Metropolitan links and the links of the Victoria Club at St.Lambert.Peter Hendrie the \u201cpro\u201d of the Victoria Club then became her occasional instructor and her 3 les © © 0 0» 00 mo Boal a.tesserae drive and then missed her ball alto-!debut in the championships with sig- gether, and Miss Harvey won in 6 to 8.The latter.despite the trying nature of her task, was not at all worried.She played all through like an old campaigner, the experience af former tournaments standing her in good stead.Miss ever anxiousness.The thirteenth hole was halved in 7.but Miss Harvey won the fourteenth in McAnulty, was visibly nervous, and frequently missed easy putts by; nal success.Her style of play was much admired and great things were predicted for her by the students of the game.Miss McAnulty\u2019s work through the green leaves little to be .desired.' She drives a long ball, handles her brassie well and her approach shots are exceedingly keen and true.The golfer doesn\u2019t live who hasn\u2019y some little weakness, however, and if Miss McAnulty has any at all it is in ber £ to 4.This left her dormie 4.Miss, play on the green.She is inclined to McAnulty won the fifteenth in 4 to 6.! putt for the hole a little too fast, that Miss Harvey bunkered and Miss Mc- D Anulty topped her drive, but got theiiiberation to study the lay Is to say without taking sufficient de- of the green on her second.The sixteenth, ground.was halved in 6.Both landed in the Hosts of her Montreal friends have bunker.Miss Harvey on her second and|taken warm Interest in her magnifi- Miss McAnulty on her drive.Miss Mc-| cent showing in Toronto and she will Anulty nearly won the hole with a longipe ghowered with congratulations upon putt.the ball stopping it the edge of the cun.The result of this hole gave Miss Harvey the match and championship by 3 up and 2 to play.As the her retusn to Montreal.She entered the tournament under somewhat adverse conditions as she was suffering from a bald cold and furthermore had ttores crunted in the champlonships|jjitle or no preliminary practice on the the remaining holes were played.Miss McAnulty winning the seventeenth in 4 10 5, and Miss Harvey #he last by a timilar score.An immensely large gallery followed | fhe match throughout, and it was found necessary in order to prevent over-enthusiastic spectators from interfering with the pla¥ers to rope off the greens, Cummings and his assistants handling the movable barrier.The majority of the onlookers were ladles, \u2018ard though the journey led up hill.down dale, over fences and many other hatural obstacles there were few in the contingent who did not persevere untit the end.Both of the plucky lady players were received enthusiastically when they finished up at the club-house.Miss Harvey has had a decidedly brilliant career.Two years ago, in her first tournament, she was the runner up.Last fall she won te championship snd yesterflay duplicated the performance.Miss McAnulty has only figured in one tournament before this year, and under the circumstances, is entitled ; to a great deal of clever playing.The card was as follows: Miss Harvey\u2014 pgaise for her really 8.17 7 SR 46777474551 TN LLe Lee ses n se 00 000 5367366545 Miss McAnulty\u2014 Qut .eee 65885466654 RSR 44874464546 INTERPROVINCIAL MATCH.\" ; The interprovincial match resulted In an overwhelming victory for Ontario, the score being 78 to 3.Miss Thomson, Mrs.Mussen and Miss Montizambert were the only Quebec representatives to secure victories.The score: \u2014 ; Que.Ont.Miss McAnulty.\u2026\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.0 vs, Miss Harvey.3.Miss Thomson.ovveveene 1 vs, Miss DicK.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026., 0 Miss Greene.cere 0 vs.Mrs.Dick.een 0 Mrs.Meredith.0 vs.Miss Davidson.6 Toronto links, new to her, OUTREMONT GOLF CLUB.The qualifying round far the Drum- which were entirely jmond Cup will be.played this afternoon, commencing at 2 p.m., the four best net scores to quality.Prizes will be given by the club for the best gross score and the best net score.MRS.MARCH WON AT KINGSTON.Kingston, Oct.8.\u2014(Speciäl.) \u2014 The first round for the grey trophy was played off Thursday, and the final rounds yesterday.Mrs.March won the trophy by a score of 109, having a handicap of ten over Miss Frances Hora, who scored 111.The prizes will be presented to-da.MAT AND RING.MAUPAS THREW HANSEN._ , At Sohmer Park last night, three thousand people saw Maupas throw Hansen, the Danish wrestler from Utica, twice within an hour, the first \u201ci fall being secured in 46.10 and the sec- und in 6.15.The Dane was very clever in mat and defensive work, but could {not take the aggressive on account of Maupas\u2019 long reach and strength, Mau- pas was very steady and went after the Dane until the latter was practically exhausted.Then Maupas went in and threw his antagonist.Maupas\u2019 work was not very showy, but It was effective.As long as he had his wind.Hansen was very clever in his defence and his agllity and science elicited frequent applause.It was a clean contest and the spectators enjoyed it thorough- y WN \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 The Chicago runners who won were x w.Sac, Fresentiment, Dr.Stephens, Edwar ale, Kate Eenson Caldwell, * Zit and Will Eastern Baseball League be Re-constructed for Next Year ?Story From Des Moines that \u201c Columbus and Toledo Will be Admitted.- Louisville, Ky., Oct.7.\u2014A wild-eyed story came out of the west to-night which, if true, will change entirely the complexion of the American Association, the Eastern League and the Western League.The story comes from Pea Moines, Iowa and it states that the American Assoclation will droy both Columbus and Toledo from the foster and will admit Omaha and Des Moineg to this circuit.If true, this means.that the Eastern League will be reconstructed, and Columbus and Toledo, two of the best paying clubs of the American Association, will be admitted to that body, of which Pat Powers is President.Here is the story &s sent out from Des Moines.Des Moines, Ia, Oct.7.\u2014Officers of the American Association have made & formal proposition to the Des Moines and Omaha clubs of the Western League, secking their admission {nto that league.The local directors are considering the offer, and it will be accepted.According to the intimation given, both Columbus and Toledo are to be dropped from the association to make way for Des Moines and Omaha, both of which are credited with being good baseball towns.Local officlals refuse to adinit that the offer has been -_ Made, but there Is nd doubt of its au- \u2014thenticity.CE \"American League, + Witnessed the first game of the ; series between New York and - Boston here\u2019 yesterday.Through the \u201cLee STILLWECL'3 \u201cPOPULAR 150 MEAL a CPRN-DAY AND NIGNT.5 0010 A BukANBER £78 >» 5 - és LE 8 mo \u2018: New York, Oct.7.\u2014Nearly 10.000 per- , batting of Dougherty, Willams And Anderson 4je locals won, and are now in the lead in the championship race, Chespro and Gibson both pitched excellent games.The two teams left last night for Boston, where they are scheduled to play two games to-day.Monday with another double header.Scorc: .; R.H.B.Boston .ee ve:e.001000010\u20143 4 2 N patteries Gi atter bson and Criger; Ches- bro \u2018and Kleinow.Umpires, Sheridan and Connolly.Attendance, 9,503, At Detroit-{First game\u2014 \u2019 Detroit .\u2026.\u2026.010006000\u2014 1 9 Cleveland .320020100\u2014 8 11 Batteries\u2014J.Stovall 0 2 and Drill; Joss and Beals, Second game\u2014 \u2018 Detroit .ec.ÂAv.000\u20140 4 § Cleveland .020601\u20149 10 0 hardt at eer and Beville; Bern- Attendance, 1,100, pire, Dyyet, At Chicago\u2014 Chicago .\u2026.,.110000000\u2014 2 9 4 St.Louis .012000011\u2014§ 13 1 end Kahoe.\u2026 Umpire OU ousaih Au tendance, 760.va ughlin.At At Washington\u2014Firat game\u2014 Washington .¢e.010100000\u20143 6 3 Philadelphia \u2026 .000000021\u20143 6 2 Batterles\u2014Hughes and Clarke; Wad- dell and Schreck, Second game-\u2014 Philadelphia ., \u2026.0020000\u2014% 6 8 Washingkon .:.0000008\u20143 4 1 Beatteriez\u2014Bender and Schreck; Pat- ten and Kittredge, Um 3 - tendance, 1,000, pire, Kling.At Natio League \u2019 At Plttabucss .R.Pittaburg .\u2026 occ.01112100 4 Chiesto etes esta and Phelps; and King.Umpire, rates Aosee VAC Phisdephias #11 Boston a see eu 0e «000000000 ' Philadelphie \u2026 oo ed à : 1 ttinger es \u2014 Caldwell and Doolin, stone, Attendance, 38, .».Foot.They will finish the season here next |_ s\u2026.\u2026.00101010\u20ac\u20143 5 32| 2 | great deal of \u2018nerve discomfort.\u2018 ER I 5 - - kt - ue , \u20ac ce - ' | SPORTING COMMENT A halk-back, to be valuable to the team for\\which he plays, must be able to punt, gud it is astonishing how few really good punters there are playing renior fobtball.They are so few that fhey cu be counted on one hand\u2014 Percy Molson, A M.Ross, of West- mount, and Joe Gleeson, of Ottawa College.The players who can punt strongly coon become distinguished in the fall sport.Take Harold Ieattie, who was 'Varsity's star last fall for instance.Beattie practically won tha championghip for his team through his wohderful kicking powers.A fcw years ago, Jack Counsell was the most prominent figure in football circles -in western Ontario.Not only did he pur:t well but once he kicked, he started, after the ball and he was usually under, it when it fell and, of course, he was; \u2018on side.\u2018\u2019.He and Eddie Gleeson had a famous duel one fall day In Toronto and their exhibition of football prowess will live in sporting history.Gleesoi was not a long distance kicker, but he could get rid of the ball in tight corners quicker than any fellow who ever played the game in Canada, and ne) used rare judgment In placing his: punts.Gleeson, when he was in his.prime, would catch the ball with one; hand and with a swoop bring it in! contact with his foot, and the ball, would soar fifty yards and drop Just, into touch.Any player who essays this: feat will speedily be made aware how difficult it is to.perform.Walter Boyd, who was the Rough! Riders\u2019 best half back two years ago, was another strong punter though his especial forte was bucking the line.Outside of the players mentioned there are few punters who will electrify spectators.The reason is that there Is too much haphazard punting Ip prac-! tice.There is as much science required! fn punting as in drop-kicking, but Canadian coaches do not recognize that fact and accordingly punters are not developed.At the American college, punting is given as much attention by the coaches as tackling or line bucking.Plavers practice until they can punt quickly and accurately with either Under the new Q.R.F.U.rule, whereby flve yards must be gained in three scrimmages, the half-backs must be able to punt, and it is up to the couches to glve their attention more to kicking.e It 18 doubtful whether the Quebec Rugby Football Union was ever stronger than it is this fall, and the season; should prove profitable to clubs and spectators.In Ottawa, the Rough Riders and Ottawa College will keep football enthusiasm at fever pitch, and in Montreal will fulfil & similar mission.The matches last Saturday showed that, the teams are well matched and that they will furnish the public with sufficient; substantial reasons for attending future contests.The Westmounts, as the newcomers, are looked upon as being weaker than the other teams, but their only weak point is their inexperience, and the remedy is being handed out to them, weekly.They are blg, husky chaps.even if they are young in years and do| not want any sympathy because uf thelr supposed lightness.The results of the early season matches cannot always be regarded as, being Indicative of the comparative merits of the clubs.Last year, Montreal won in Ottawa early in the sea- ron but later were beaten by Rough Riders on the M.A.A.A.grounds.Westmounts were beaten last Saturday by Ottawa College, but the chances are that they will trim King Clancy's aggregation, when the latter comes to! Montreal.° eo ° .This afternoon\u2019s ON\u201dT take medicine to make \u2018you feel better when you are not feeling just right.If it's your nervely the only safe and sure remedy is rest.The proper way to rest is lying down, but .you can rest your nerves while you stand or walk by wearing Dunlop \u201cComfort\u201d Rubber Heels There is many a still, dull headache caused by walking heavily on hard leather heels, ¢\u2018Comfort\u201d heels are made of good springy rubber.They save a : or RS JoMrgy KX vin AY NON.Thoto Jy IVI asazacick) ) TWO OF THE FAVORITES FOR THE VANDERBILT CUP RACE.Race for the The International Road \u2019 to-day on Lon \u2014\u2014 mounts and Montreal will be replete with interesting features.\u201d The West- mounts are making thelr debut and they are naturally eager to inake à good Impression.They will have many friends to cheer them on to victory, and the spectators\u2019 sympathy will do much to infuse ginger into thelr play.The Britannins were a plucky team hut they practiced and played under great Jisadvantages and did very.well under the circumstances.They were practically an offshoot of the M.ALA A.and fiiled to get much support for that reason.With the Westmounts, it is different.They are independent and are representative of a large and growing section of Montreal.Westmount- ers are pleased of them and may be relied on to back them loyally.The Westmounts have got away to a flying start and they have all the qualifica~ tions of a team that will keep everlastingly at it untll they win the champlonship.The New York Journal has hit upon a plan to expose the yellow streak in the New York Nationals.It has been publishing on its sporting page, a coupon petitioning John T.Brush to sanction a post season series between the N.Y.\u2018Nationals and the American League champions for the \u2018championship of the world.Those in favor of the games being held are requested to sign the coupun and mall it to the Journal.So far 10,000 fans have sent In coupons.To an impartial observer, it looks.as If Brush and Manager Mugsy McGraw had cold feet.~ .- .The sporting editor of the Buffalo Times, says: he game of football as played today is too gentle.Only touchdowns are ever counted.We would syggest the following supplementary points be added: One point for every six shins kicked on the opposing side.One point for every dislocation.One point for every broken collarbone.; Four points for a broken neck.Seven points for all 'disabllities Inflicted on the captain of the opposing ten.Let's get some life into the game.* ' If the Times man added that a point should -be scored for each verbal kick registered he would have rounded out his set of rules artistically.+ she did not win the Canadian golf championship.For such a young player, she did extremely well, and much may be expected of her in future.There.are experts who consider that Miss McAnulty is the best natural lady gcifer in Canada, and certainly the form she has displayed in the last two years entitles\u2019her to some sûch tri- buge.ast year Miss McAnulty was beaten by Miss Thomson, the champlon of 1902 and Miss Thomson was beaten by Miss Harvey this year.Miss McAnulty was in t¥e finals.It will be agcording- ly figured out that next year she will win the blue ribbon.FOOTBALL.ENTHUSIASM IN OTTAWA.: UE ES LE \" - rr Hooray for Miss McAnulty, even If $2,500 Vanderbilt Cup is taking place 9 Island roads.than ever.Sheriff and Phillips are almost impregnable and Pat Murphy is doing lightning work at quarter.Lafferty Lafleur is proving as tricky as of yore.Eddie Murphy's dodging is bound to be spectacular and Alf Smith will again thrill the spectators by his phenomenal - line bucking.At any rate to-day's struggle is bound to be a memorable one and.a great crowd will doubtless attend.The College admirers have resurrected their rooting paraphernalia and the enthusiastic followers of the champions have done ikewise, The sale of seats has been arge.' MONTREAL'S TEAM TO-DAY.The Montreal XIV.to meet the West- mounts \u2018at the M.A.A.A.gwounds this afternoon will be as follows?\u2019 Back, Bert Molson; halves, P, Molson, Christmas and Craig: quarter, H.Gor- \"don; scrimmage, Byrne, Ressard, Mc- Callum; wings, Murphy, O'Brien, W.Molson, Vittie; Ogilvie, Burton; spares, McDonald, McKeddis, Hanneford, apd Percy Christmas, ATHLETICS INSTRUCTOR 1ONG'S PROGRAMME.A reception was tendered to Mr, John Long, the new physical instructor at the M.A.A.A.last night, and many members were present to greet him.President Geo, Ayling was In the chair, Mr.Long, who was introduced by Mr, James Taylor, gave & pithy address in which he outlined his plans.It was his intention to introduce the military system of physical \u2018Ho is Strongly Opposed $0 Copfeders- | tion With Bi apd Gives .: Reasons.| Confederation with Canada.FOUNDLAND- PREMIER MISSUES A MANIFÉ St.John's, Nfld., October 8.\u2014Sir Robert Bond, the prime minister of Newfoundland, has issued a manifesto in connection with the election contest now going on in the colony.It makes the usuaj.claim that widespread prosperity has resulted from his admipistrgtion, says the customs taxstion has been reduced, gclalms credit for the thange in the agreement with the Reid New- foundiand Company in regard to the railway and telegraph zervice, etc., and promises to devote attention to the development of the fishing, the mineral and the forest resources of the island.\\ One paragraph of the manifestp indicates dissatisfaction with the situation in regard to the reciprocity treaty with thie United States.It reads as fo.ows: / \u201cAs you are aware in the year 1902 I sue- ceeded lu negotiating a treaty with the Government of the United States of America for a measure of reciprocal trade.Up to date, by reason of the opposition of the tishery interests of Gloucester, the ratification of that treaty has been held in abeyance, while the opponents of the measure have been enjoying the privileges that this colony was to coufer in exchange for free admission of the products of our mines and fisheries to the markets of the.United States.The Government hove permitted this, believing that at the recent session of the Senate the treaty would be confirmed.It is neither politic nor profitable that this condition of things shall continue indefinitely.Unless the present movement im the United States looking to \u2018the ratification of dur convention ls successful, I°shall at the next session of the Legislature adopt another course of procedure.\u2019 20\" Sir Robert Bond is empbatically against On this subject, he says: \u201c .\u201cAs the question of confederation has been brought prominently before the public by the action and attitude of my opponents, I consider it proper to emphasize the official declaration that the Government has already wade in regard to the question.\u2018The Government as a united body have declared that 80° far as they are aware there is no desire on the part of the people of this colony to | be included as a constituent part of the Dominion of Canada, but, on the contrary, the desire is evident that the colony should retain its autonomy and continud to mailn- tain an honorable and independent position a8 part of the British Empire.\u201cAfter giving careful consideration to the question as it has been presented to me, snd weighing the advantages and disadvantages that union with the Dominion of Canada would bring to the people of this country, after perusing the declarations of the Canadian press as to the methods that some of the Canadian advocates for union purpose to employ in this colony to brimg about that union, I am convinced that it would not be to the political, commercial .or moral advantage of this country to join in that movement.My watchword to my fallow-country- men ls, \u2018No confederation.* parer TEACHERS FOR EVENING CLASSES.At a meeting of the committee of the Council of Arts and Manufactures, the appointment of the teachers of the various classes to be opened on Oct.17 was made.The following will be present in the class rooms situated in the Monument National Building, to receive former puplls' and enroll those desirous of Joining the, classes: Freehand drawing, Messrs.E, Dyonnet, Jos.8t.Charles, J.C.Franchere and J.Paradis; architectural drawing, Messrs.H.J.Peters, G.A.Monette and A.Venne; lithography, Mr.J.A.Harris.Modeling, Mr.Alex.Carll.6ign Painting and lettering, Mr.Arthur Denis, Boot and shoe, pattern making, Mr.J.A.Patrie.Carpentry, Mr.Eugene Bertrand and G.Corriveau.Mechanical drawing, Monument National, Messrs.J.T.Gardham and J.F.Chevalier, Mechanical drawing class at No.183 Congregation Street, will be under the charge of Mr.W, A.Booth.Ladies dress cutting and sewing, AEs 'M.A.Gagnon Those desirous o1 attending these classes are requested to present themselves immediately at the office of the council, 2 Monument Na- session in order to take advantage of the first lessons given, The day course will open on October 18, at 2 o'clock, and lessons will be given on Tuesdays and Thursdays from two to four o'clock.The evening class will start on Oct.17.Miss M.A.Gagnon, has the direction of the course.Former pupils who do not intend to follow the classes are requested to call training used In the British public schools and army.He proposed to give a great deal of attention to fencing, ae this exercise tended to make the muscles more alert and respon- siv With regard to eating, he ad- visdh his hearers to diet themselves as what would be one man's meat would be another man's poison.A physical culturist had no business to lay down a fixed set of rules for: & body of men.In conclusion he satd that he would insist on punctuality and regular attendance at classes, which, will be held Monday and Thursday evenings.LAWN TENNIS TENNIS AT QUEEN'S, Kingston, Oct, 8.\u2014(Speclal) ~~ The annual tennie tournament for the college championship and prizes opened at Queen's yesterday afternoon, The entries this year are larger than ever before.Great interest is being taken in .the different matches.The four new courts in the centre of the University square: are in excellent condition.: MISCELLANOUES Kingston, Oct.8.\u2014 (Special) \u2014 The exhibition polo match to have taken place here between Toronto and Montreal will not come off.The Montreal ponles have been put away, and most of the -players are off hunting.Toronto could not send down two teams of eight men at this time, hence Ottawa, Oct.8\u2014What will likely, prove to be the most interesting football match of the current season is bill- sity oval, when the champion Rough\u2019 Riders go forth against thelr old rivals the Collegians.Both teams have been prasticing consistently for _this event and a red hot argument is confidently! expected.The College back division is.dirplaying great form, while the for-! wards are playing the game In good style, strengthened by XKilleen\u2019s préa-' ence.'Varsity\u2019's scrimmage is putting case of Greek meets Greek, when the old rivals collide.Boucher, Brennan and McCreadie comprise a formidable trio and the quarter back who success- tully penetrates this line for a gain will have to do some wonderfully swift playing.Stanley Filion is back in the game and may figure at outside wing.Filion had been lala up but he is as fast as ever and will bé a source of stréngth to the wearers of the garnet and gray.Who will fill the opening on the back division?There has been much speculation regarding Masson's successor, but O\u2019Brien will likely be wh DO rat and Fo the ray will cover.: or the othe\u2019 side Bawif and Heffernan are condl- ates.And what about the Rough Riders?\u201cWe expect to trim °the 'Varsity boys,\u201d said an officer of the latter clydb last evening.\u201cWe don't expect an easy victory, but we will win, and College ant! to its initial defeat.O BE ot bas table ane woe halves will be in good condition.Shillington, Moore and Fe on Dafoe a For Sale by ett .Shoe Déaivre rguson one side and Pulforé,Austin and Poapst de well protected.rge ed to take place this afternoon at 'Var- & up great ball and it will surely be ap the contest is aff until next season.when Colonel Buchan hopes that a club In Kingston will have been Or- pers The winners at the Morris Park running races yesterday were Sidney C.Love, Candida, Broadclotd.Rapid Water, Consuelo II.and Black Socks, : rete : At Kansas City the winners of the running races were Lalonde, Water, Hippocrates, Croix .D'Or, Mrs.Grannan and Tryon.\" \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 J Leman Redmond, while driving pacing race at York, Pa, died in ina the Slleht|- sulky from heart failure, +0 v Boyle XH the other, the champions* arter : edy, ia; holding arms cagére befter before the opening for the rnaterial left last year, as the council.will not be responsible for objects left in the school.\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 TRINITY HARVEST FESTIVAL, Trinity Church will hold its Harvest Festival to-morrow.The preacher at Matins will be the rector, and at evensong, the Rev, H.P.Plumptre, of St.George'a.: A\u201c special musical programme has been prepared and the large choir will be further augmented for the occasion.The offertory soloiat at the evening service will be Mr.C A.Mitchell, late sTo| tional, or on the first evening of the} The Four-Button .Sack, This suit is proper for.those who know good ° clothes and when to wear #5 them.It is tailored on conventional lines-\u2014somewhat like tlle three-button sack, yet, the skirt is longer and has a small vent in the back.Builded on a stalwart resistible base of shrunken canvas and hair-cloth\u2014 À; moulded by the hot irom and sewn into shape permanence by the needie\u2014 the suit retains its form almost longer than you inay care to wear it, Fabrics in Cheviots\u2014and Scotch T'weeds\u2014and quaint Athlone Homespuns, hand woven.Prices $18, $20, $25.Semi-ready™ .\u2018Tailoring MONTREAL 231 St James Street, .1551 St.Catherine Street.= ea - Rove 22B0F:.Oath nw rn eer Sportmen's Necessaries Joseph Rodgers & Sons\u2019 Celebrated Hunting Knife, with vulcanite deer foot handle, 4%: in.blade, $1.50; 5 in.blade, §1.50; 5% in.blade.$1.90.Each knifé complete with solid leatber sheath.Sent post paid to any address on receipt of price.COMPASSES Fine French Pocket Drinking Cups Rubber canoe or tumbler shape, 25c.Collapsing metal in nickel case, 40c.In leather case, 75c.Spirit Flasks In white metal, glass ard pure nickel, and covered x\" \u2018n morocco, alligator and other leathers.- SPECIAL \u2014 Traveller's line of English Samples, | me 25 ee cog cou r= of New York, who will render \u2018The Lord Is My Light)\u2019 by Frances Allit- son.The alms of the day will be devoted to the interest end repair fund, and it is hoped that all friends of old historic Trinity will attend and help to decrease the debt on the building.The following is the order of services, Mating \u2014Processional hymn, $81; responses, festal: venite and special psalms; Te Deum, Hopkins, in G.% Jubilate, Dr.Garrett, in E.: hymns, 882-383; recessional, $84, Evensong\u2014 Processional, Hymn, 381; magnificat, Nunc Dimittis (Woodward in D.Anthem, \u201cO Lord How Manifold,\u2019 Barn- by; offertory solo, \u201cThe Lord is My Light,\u201d Alliston; - 896; recessional, 20, \u2019 ni-fittin boota and shoes cause corns.olloway\u2019s Corn Cure is the article to use.Get a bottle at once and cure your corns.reese HARVEST THANKSGIVING Stylish Hats IMPORTFD DIRECT From England, United States, France and Italy.Fine Qualities.From SO to 500 Cents each.A.ARCH.WELSH, 2262 ST.Catherine Street Opposite Victoria.i Mr.Lamoureux, tallor, St.James St, three pairs of pants mdde for the boys; Mr.Scallons, McCord Street, blankets; \u2018Mrs.Gallacher, St.Etienne Street, large parcel clothing.etter: ST.DAVID'S SOCIETY.The St.David's Welsh Society wih hold its fall social at Ligget's Hall, 2479 St.Gatherine Street, Tuesday evening, Oct.11, when a first-class programme will be rendered.A very in- Harvest Thankagiving services will De held to-morrow at the Church of the Redeemer, Cote 8t, Paul, The rector Rev.H.Gomery, will be assisted in\u2019 the morning by Rev.W.W.Craig, ' rector of St.Luke's, The Rev, T.Osborne Troop will preach at the evening service.Appropriate music will be rendered by the choir.ST.JOSEPH'S HOME DONATIONS.The Rev.Iither Holland, C.S.S.R.begs to ackyfrwledge with grateful thanks the \u201cYollowing subecriptiona: Mrs.McCarthy, Drummond Street, $5; Mira Coftey, Linn, Mass, $5; Miss Rurt, Montreal, $5; Mr.Pegran, Chaboilles Street, supply of fresh fish every week; teresting item will be the unfurling of the Royal Welsh flag for the first time in- the history of Canada A cordial invitation is extended to all of Welsh descent to be present on this very aue spicious occasion.Show your patriote tsm_at_this_ meeting above all others, gare nee TT TTY - TO prove to yo° thas Da Chase's Ointment is a cortaig v and abaolute curs for cach and every form of itching, ; bicodingand protruding niles, the manufactu havo guaranteed ft.tem timoninla in tha dally press and ask your neinhe bore what they think oT it.You can use it and £44 Your munay hack if not cured.6M a box.ag ail dealers or EnMANSON,BATES & Co.Toronte, De» Chage\u2019s Ointment Is a necessity, not a luxury, at this season of the year.We have all the latest styles-of Derbys in fine fur felt, with good, sallthe newest colors and shapes in \u2018soft.Hats.You | susp, ta, Sind; somethidg 18 please you: be - Care > WA de SE LE silk, band and binding; and S PSS SE ON 4 & LA, DUP w.J $ A \u2018 Local Stocks oy $ t wF rae Professionals Have Had lL Stocks Have' Had Big Rise, .\u201cGambler\u201d $ Market\u201d in Wall Street Ë Ra.+ .on .; = F Things Pretty Much Their : THE JUMP IN MONTREAL STOCKS.| 3 + : & The recovery in many of the leading iecuripiez on the Montreal \u20184 | Own Way.*» Bas been proneunced.Canadien SPoho \u201cleads with ald \u2019 .1 # jump of over twenty-thres points from the lomvest, and Bell Tele- # | _.* phone and Dominion Steel Fe are only 2 Irhation find in int of x \u2018One «\u201c - .vanoe.wards the en e present w a fow 8» #& an Sper calls it a \u201cmachine-made] off a little, but the reaction was by no meaps pronounced.The fol- # oe N.Y.Post says it's \u2018a \u201cgambler\u2019s * Tong figures tell the interesting story of \u2018thé market's wholeéaie + Both mean practically the same x Canadian Pacific feeceneresnorcaniavene\u2019 sap yor H 234 : oe.able gentleman\u201d says the] * Twin City .0.eau anneau vu À 103 151 #.t, Foi familiarly known on the * Toronto Railway aeoseu see sssan cs 0000 sa c0000 ps 1084 15 * Béreét ea the Gamblers Gilat, started À Detroit Vntet aycrmmimenenne ue 8 Ki ek : 0 sell some of| Railway annecnac ces cers .their stocks 10 other people thas tare: x Toledo Bicoiric passenseeuc re veuvaues aucune 1 a oi * Belves.The result was mot encouraging * Ha fax .Y se snossressosa000s ac\u2026usse aan Sa 5 Tae + lo the continuance of such bona-fidel J Dominion Iron pret ie oe 20 a 23 * QLusiness, for St.Paul stock, promptly| J pOMDION Iron pref.ivcociere creer 69\" 82 124 * \u201cbroke 11-4 from the opening, U.S.Steel $ Nous Mrotie Mtenl CUITE La su 10% * ® 1-2, and Union Pacific 1.To save * Ball Telephone lili lage 54 > 4 their market, purchases were resumed.* acka.CP AONG .rovee:e Len a 30% 29 + t.Paul.was run up four points, and + Mackay prete Om eceeneeceeees ! ee a ; BR ex #- ttel pfd.1 7-8; while the \u201ckiting\u201d pro-| 3% Dominion Teon bands 11111: : EB 774 Zig + £ess was extended to other stocks, such on fran, bon cornes oe ' as Pennsylvania and New York Cen- * , a tral, \u2018which have for some time been left in a measure to themselves.Thera - did not appear to be any rumor.attach- æd to the buying of these other stocks, which need not have been so, because the Stock Exchange is in a mood to be- lave, and certain newspapers to pub- ish, all the details of a purchase of ennsylvania by New York Central, or of New York Central by Pennsylvania.Originality, however, is the last thing to be expected of the present rumor ake-up: \u2018There were signs to-day owever, that the St.Paul deal with Eric and Northern Pacific was passing put of the Stock Exchange's mind, precisely -a8 the \u201d\u201cHill-Harriman settlement\u201d story and the \u2018Steel conversion\u201d tory and the \u201cGould merger\u201d story ave passed.befora it.But how heavy time will hang on speculative Wail ftreet\u2019's hands when these stories have wuctually ended.\u201d } Recently we directed attention to the act that the Wall Street market had ad quite an advance in prices, this advance &veraging no less than 20 points from the lowest prices of 1904.We pointed out that this advance furnished a suggestiori that conservatism, so far &s speculation was concerned, would not be out of place for a' while.It is always impossible to tell how far & given swing\u201d will go in one direction.There 18 no certainty whatever that the market will not advance materially, even from the present level, without more than a temporary reaction, Experience.;teaches\u2026 however.at as a rule the aches hoy is like a \u2018river which progresses from one point to an- ather by a tortuous course.Between 1896\" and 1901 there was a net advance the market travelled over.a course represented by not very, far short of 300 points, reckoning only three points fluctuations.\u2018In other words, there were a great many, \u2018\u2018swings\u201d in a direction contrary to that of the main movement, which wag upwards in that period.The present advance has been notable for two things.The first is that it has been accomplished with \u2018\u201c\u2018professionall sentiment,\u201d as It is called, generally hostile, apd the second is that it has been accomplished without any great participation increin by what is called: the general public.Stocks have risen: partly as a result of the elimination of what now.evidently dppears to have been a huge short interest and partly as a result of buying by\u2019 very large capitalistic and banking interests.J There has been none of the general rush for stocks by the public that characterized the bull period of 1901.The re-! sult has been that at no time until: lately were there many stocks in Wall |[Woman's™ Truest Friend POC The Greatest Tonics : 7 à generally were concerned.Consequently at no time was there any special force making for reactions.\u201cSo far as indicutions ge the situation is now changed somewhat in this respect.There i8 no doubt that considerable stock has been sold out at a large profit by some of those large interests who were heavy buyers in the spring dedl of stock has, undoubtedly, come into \u201cthe street!\u2019 in the past few weeks as a result of profit taking by these interests.: \u2018Thene has: also taken place some increase in public interest, as the \u2018street\u2019 terms it;» that is.to say, there has heen an increase In speculation by customers of commission houses and the public generally.This has enabled distribution of stock to at least a moderate extent, leaving the market in a: condition where reactions, and pos-; eibly severe ones, would: be .a natural development.- \u201cIt is after an advance in prices, such as that which has occurred, and it is after distribution by the earlier buyers has taken place, te some extent, that people buy stocks on which they make losses, and the selling of which brings about a downward \u201cswing\u201d is likely to come, or how much further the market will go up, before it comes, but it is probably -safe to say that conditions at present are somewhat favofable to the making of losses on stocks speculatively purchased by people who would be driven to sell out by a sharp reaction in prices.\u201d - \u201cS00\u201d EARNINGS.Minneapolis, St.Paul and Sault Ste.rie.\u2014 1904.1903.1902.August \u2019 .gross .$ 609,677 $ 603,560 $ 579,969 Net .265371 302,931 \"268,980 Two months .To gross .1,251,067 1,193,201 1,17%,247 Net .569,439 569,565 589,786 The Twin City Rapid Transit Company\u2019s earnings for the last nine days of September amounted to $101,039, being an increase over the same period last year of $3,887, or 3.95 per cent.DOMINION STEEL.Senator Forget states that there is a probability of the Dominion Steel meeting being held this month, \u201cI have not heard a great deal of late,\u201d said the eSnator, \u201cexcept that the rod mill is doing finely.\u201d IRON AND STEEL PRICES.The comparative prices of iron and steel now and a.Year ago, 48 compiled by The Iron Age, says: \u2014 ) Oct, 7 .Now.1903.Edy.pig No.2 S.Cin.ton .ahah 20 ev0u0e 12.00 $13.75 Bessemer pig, Pittsburg, \u2019 ton .\u2026.\u2026 + Lacecnvose 16.10 Gray forge, Pittsburg, ton .\u2026 ++.1e seven 14.25 Lake Superior Char, Chie., ton .15.25 \"19.00 ! Billets, Pittsburg, \u2018ton.19.50 21.00 Wire rads, Pittsburg, ton .\u2026.ti eh eerie ee 34.00 Steel rails, Pittsburg, ton .\u2026.+.ersecess 28 28.00 , Iron bars, Pittsburg, 100.| 1b8.+.s.+4000000u.130 1.50 Steel bars, Pittsburg, = 100 Ibs.1.30 1.60 Tank plates, Pittsburg, 100 Ibs.1.40 1.60 Angles, Pittsburg, 100 IbB.LL Le Le 24 ensure 1.40 1.60 Barb wire, ob.Pitts., 100 Ibs.+.25 2.60 Wire nalls, f.o.b.,, Pitts.100 Ibs.\u2026.1 2.00 Tin plate, Dom.Bess, N.Y.100 Ibs.« 3.49 3.99 .THE C.P.R.Psychine Tones up the System However Run Down Miss Maggie Munn, 98 Wels lington street north, Hamilton, Ont, writes July 7th, 1804: Three years ago I was run down, thin, nervous, and unfit to meet the duties of lite, Was always catching cold.Psychine stopped the cough, the pains and aches, gave me new strength, a ravenous appetite, and restor- \u201c ed me to perfect health, I have riot been sick A dav since that time.Psychine is a wonderful tonic, strength, and flesh producer.\u201d .° \u2019 \u2018 \u2018\u2019The Happlest results are always ob- | ained with the use of Dr.Slocum\u2019s amous remedy Psychine.Psychine has direct action on the blood and nerves, The many {lis of the female organism e due to thin, watery blood, poor cir- ulation, or waste of nerve force.Loss pf appetite, weakness, feelings of ntness or depression, nervous pros- ation, anaemia, early decline, and the most varied female troubles disappear vith the use of Psychine, Thousands pf women \u2018and girls in Canada have ound hearty, bracing health in Psy- phine.Psychine relieves, soothes, and trengthens the entire system.No fired, overworked woman in the land hould be without Psychine.Psychine is pronounced §i.Keen | For sale by all druggists, For fure (her advice and information, write Dr.locum, Limited, 179 King street west, oronto, Canada.Through an enlarge .d laboratory, new iabor-savi fa- {lities, and recent ability to purchase w products in Canada.Prychine, gold or years at $1.50 per bottle, is ow Sold at $1.00 vo - In his address to the shareholders of the C.P.R.yesterday Sir Thos.Shaugh- nessy, the president, sald: Since June 80th, 1901, there has been no change in \u2018your mortgage debt, but the total | amout of debenture stock\u2019 and share capital has been increased by $43,788,- 468.During the same period 769 miles of railway have been added to your ; system, and two hundred miles more are practically completed ; the Atlantic and Pacific coast steamship lines .have been acquired and supplemented 'at a coist.of about $8,000,000; your rolling stock equipment has been increased by nearly 40 per cent., at a cost of over $12,000,000; extensive and most mod- ,ern shops and: machinery-have been \u2018 provided .at Montregl and other points on the system at a cost of neariy $4,- 000,000 : the yards and terminals at Montreal, North Bay, Fort.William, Ig- \u2018nace, Winnipeg, Brandoh, Broadview, Regina, Moose Jaw.and other points of lesser importance have bedéh enlarged.During the three vears your gross revenue from traffic had grow from $30,- 855,000 in 1901 to 846.469,000 in 1904.| or about §1 per cent.Your and grant bonds outstanding at the end of the fizcal year 1901 \u2018amounted to 817,831,- .000, while at the end of 1904 only $11,- 500,000 remained to be provided for, and in the intervening period the deferred payments on land sold increased from $3,652,869 to $18,252,308.U.8: STEEL.a .The following is from an official of the United States Steel Corporation : \u201cMany misleading statements have been made regarding the esrnings of the United States Steel Corporation for the third quarter.The company is now in a position to make very close estimates, statements having been received from actically afl the subsidiary companies.We are how in a po- rition to tell within $200,000 what the earnings for the third quarter will be, I can say that they will be nearer $19,000,000 that $18,600,000.I believe the last estimate from \u2018a so-called expert was $18,000,000.\u201d 1 = | \u2014 TRADE IN MONTREAL.At Montreal, according to Brad- istreet\u2019s advices, there ia a Eôod sort-' Ing trade being dope now in most departments, the retailers being anxious to have their stocks well assorted for the renewed activity which usually develops a little later on in the season in the demand throughout the country, particularly in the agtficultural districts.The demand for ocean freights is rather better, and large quantities of.freight urs.Sel sent forward e w mon dotiv one for In hi.Street so far as the commission houses\u2019 and summer.In other words, a gæood|' \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014y panies, not only in the case of water navigation, which is always rushed as the season draws to a close, but also | in that of the railroads, which have begun the crop movements and are also busy with shipments of winter goods.Values of staple manufactures are generally steady.Some departments of \u2018business show improvements.TRADE OUT WEST.Rcoording to Bradstreet\u2019's advices, business at thé Pacific coast trade centres is good, and the outlook is for a \u2018more setive demand for general staple goods dyring the next two months.Large shipments are being made to interior points.The provincial industries are generally active.: At Winnipég the demand from the, retail trade to sort stocks is fairly active.The country trade is expanding at many points, and the conditions of business dre highly satisfactory.Payments are now improving.BANK OF ENGLAND.The Bank of England's minimum discount rate was left unchanged to-day at 8 per cent, the rate established April 21.At this\u2019 date in 1903 the bank's rate was advanced 1 per cent.The bank\u2019s official rate now compares as follows with that of the corresponding date of previous years: Per cent.Per cent, 3 3 1898 .4 1897 3.s 24 4 1896 creases 8 3 1895 .2 4 1894 .2 .5 1893 .8 The most important items in the Bank of England statement at the same period in years I prior to 1902 compare as follows: .\u2019 Other Bullion.Reserves.securities.1901 .£38,167,624 £26,385,749 £27,168,440 1800 .34,971,302 22,218,582 29,617,307 1899 .82,692,932 20,651,217 83,736,562 1898 .31,746,942 20,386,637 29,083,904 Ratio of Bank of England\u2019s reserve to liabilities at this date In years prior to 1902 was as follows: .\u2026 Per cent, Per cent.1901 2.44% 1896 .5054 1900 .443% 1895 .595% 1899 \u2026.39% 1894 .eee 6834 1898 .44% 1892 .\u2026.46% s\u2026.\u2026.4% 1892 .43% INVESTMENT RETURNS.The investment returns on leading Montreal stocks at the closing prices Priday evening are furnished by Fairbanks Brothers, 17%¢ Notre Dame SL, Montreal: \u2014 , Close.Div'd, Pays, Canadian Pacific .133 Montreal Street.208 10 4.80 Toronto Ralls .104: 5 4.80 Twin City .102 5 4.90 Detroit United.« 7 4 5.63 Rich.& Ont.58 6 10.34 Heat & Power.81 4 4.93 N.8.Steel.67 6 8.95 Dom.Iron Bonds.\u20185 5 6.66 Mont.Telegraph, xd 1556 5 5.18 Bell Telephone, xd 151 8 5.29 Ogtivte Milling, pfd 10 7 v.k3 Ogilvie bonds .114 6 5.26 Street Ry.pds.104 4% 4.32 \u2018Mont.Steel pfd.85 7 8.28 Montreal.Cotton 103 9 8.78 Halifax Tram, xd.93 5.5.37 N.8.bonds.105 8 6.71 N.8.Steel pfd.100 8 8.00 BANKS.Bank of B.N.A.132 6 4.54 Can.Bank of Com.155 7 4.51 Dominion Bank .224 10 4.46 E.T.Bank .: 160 8 5.00 \u2018Banque d\u2019Hochelaga 134 7 5.23 Imperial Bank .216 10 4.65 Merchants Bank 189 7 4.40 Moisons Bank .210 9 4.28 Bank of Montreal .249 10 4.01 Banque Nationale .100 6 6.00 Bank of N.8.263 10 3.80 Ontario Bank .186 8 4.80 Bank of Ottawa .?08 .9 4.32 Quebec Bank .1-6 7 5.55 Royal Bank of Can.\"1% 8 3.90 Bank of Toronto .\u2026.227 10 4.40 Union Bank of Oan.135 7 5.18 MEN AS NOUSEMAIDS PROVE A SUCBESS 4 Chicago, Oct.8-\u2014Men for general housework is the latest development of the domestic service problem.In answer to the old, old complaint of inabll- lty to obtain servant girls who do not pretend to be specialists, the Women's Domestic Guild is replying: \u201cTry a man.They are willing, at least.\u201d Six men have actually been placed tn general housework positions by the guild within the last two weeks, and in every case the housekeeper has reported herself satisfied with the result of the experiment.Colored men prove to be the most adept in this assumption of servant girl dutles.DO GENERAL WORK.The men cook, wash dishes, set and rar === prg=me IF INTERESTED, CALI, OR WRITH FOR PARTICULARS OF THE - The Quabec Steam Whaling Co.LIMITED.Apply © The CORPORATIONS TRUST CO., Room 480, Temple Building, City.Extraordinary News Is Dound to follow\" thy completion of the present work of a .Marvellous Wizard Buch successful men as Edison and Carnegie have given the Invention their personal en- dorsation, thus giving the Company, whose securities I strongly recommend, the / Stamp of Reliabliity My literature contains full particulars.° 05 0 Pronevie Kavier 81, Moatroul [fer à cooking scheoel which |ide tm Cp tum, NORRIS P.BRYANT, Dénieg 18 Jyreimens | wait en the dows, ev that the general does, pt wash they are for heavier kinds of work around the house \u2018which a girl would not un such as snow off the w ané mowing lawns.It may be the sclution of the domestic problem at last.Who knows LT Plana are being matured by the guild ; probably ou be opened about Oct.15, 1f the Draject successful, The science sn art of préparing food for the table will parted in a well-chosen cyrnicy- Another item in the expansion of the guild, in preparation for the new season\u2019s activities, Is the addition of another.room to its offices in the Northwestern Univeraity Building Fine French needlework, of the most artistic nature, can be supplied to its subscribers by the purchasing depart- \u2018ment of the guild.A Frenchwoman, thoroughly skilled in the craft, has been faund who can mark table linen \u2018\u2019In addition, i \u2018| or handkerchiefs and embrolder white linen waists and akirts to perfection.\u2018 The quality of work equals that which can be obtained in any dry goods establishment in the city, so it is claimed by good judges.Another feature of this department | WHI be to provide customers with dell- cate gnd rare confections and candies, for parties, They will be made to order in the home of a woman who has made a study of the daintiest processes \u2018of candy manufacture, etree THE CITY OF GOLDA single unfurnisned room in Johannesburg costs, with electric light from 23 to £6 per month, while small houses of about four rooms are eagerly taken up at £15 per month.The cost of building brick houses fu & subatantial manner at the present time may be estimated at 11d.per cubic foot, or say £300 per room for meé@fum-sized houses, while stands 15 by 100 feet range from £75 éach in the less favored suburbs, say two miles south of the town, to £600 and mo in the nearer and more fashionable districts in the north.JOY SUCCEEDS DESPAIR IN THE HOME OF MR.JOSEPH HILTON, THOROLD, ONT.-Mis Daughter, Florence, Was Ail But Dead From Dropsy\u2014Mer Doctor Had Given Her Up\u2014Dr.Williams\u2019 Pink Pills Were Thon Used and To-day She is Well and Strong.- From the Post, Thorold, Ont.~~ Everybody believes in a dreamy sort of way of the efficacy of a well and wisely advertised medicine, when the recorded cases of restored health are at a distance; but when a case comes up in the home town, when the patient is known : to everyone, and when the cure is not only positive but marvellous, the efficacy of the medicine becomes a fact\u2014a decided thing.For many years the Post has advertised Dr.Willams\u2019 Pink Pills for Pale People; large quantities of them have been sold by the local drug et pd {many remarkahld cures have been effected.One of these attracted the attention of our reporter and he investigated.Miss Florence Hliiton, the eighteen year eld \u2018daughter of Joseph and Mrs.Hilton, living in the west part of the town, was taken ill early last summer with dropsy, coupled with heart trouble.She was compelied to give up one duty after another, and finally became unable to walk or to lie down.Her suffering was intense and medical skid did all that could be done.Florence, however, grew worse, sitting in her chair day and night for five long monthy to get her breath, and the parents desp ed.At last the doctor gave her up and said further visits were futile.The poor girl's limbs were pitifully swollen and.finally burst below the knees.She sat helpless and weak, gasping for breath and at times could breath at all only with the culty.One night the neighbors came in and sald she could not live till morning.But to-day she 1s alive and well, moving about among her young companions .a remarkable and miraculous contrast to what she then was.The reporter called one evening &t the Hilton home, but Miss Filo- rence was out visiting.The father and mother were in, however, and freely told him of the cure, which they attribute entirely to Dr.Williams\u2019 Pink Pills.The first box was brought to her by her grandmother, who urged their use.Then Mrs.Hllton herself remembered that she had the previous winter been cured by Dr.Wil- lame\u2019 Pink Pills of a slight attack of dropsy, and also remembered the many cures advertised in the Post.She bought two boxes and Florence took them.*-rm pills at a dose.In two weeks she felt na slight decrease In the pain in her limbs, and more pilla were procured.For five months\u2014five long pain-laden months\u2014the weary girl had sat day and night In her chair, but now she began to feel the pain leaving her and to see her limbs.resume thelr natural size.Fourteen boxes of tho pills were taken and at last her perseverance was rewarded.She rose from her chair: her former strength\u2019 gradually came back: one by one her household duties were taken up again, and when.The Post representative called he was met by beaming faces and thankful hearts and a grateful readiness to give to the wa-ld the facts that had saved a bright young life and had brought joy instead of grief to a Fhorold home.\u201d In thousands of other homes, scattered over the length and breadth of Canada, Dr.Willlams' Pink Pills have brought health and joy and gladness and in every home in the land where sickness and suffering enters new health and strength can be had through a \u2018fair use of this medicine.Remember that substitutes can't cure\u2014 they make the patient worse, gnd when you ask for this medicine see that the full.name \u201cDr.Willlams\u2019 Pink Pilla for\u2019 Pale People\u2019 ts printed on the »Wrapper around.the box\u2014then you are sure you have the genuine \u2018pills.Sold by all «medicine dealers or by maf st pald at 50 cents a box or aix oxes for $2.50 by writing The Dr.Jillams\u2019 Medicine Co., Brockville, n *o .Orders Solleited for + BONNIE DOON\" and * GLENFINNART SCOTCH WHISKIES Pickles, Sauces, Anchovies, Sardines, Jams, Marmalades, Tinned and Bottled Fruite, Herringe and Tinned Vegeta- ass Sago, Vermicilll, Macaroni (in ns).R.SULLIVAN DAVID, - Manufacturers\u2019 Agent, Room 8, 210 St.James Bt, Montreal.Long Distance Tel.Main 3898.(Wholesale Trade only.) THE BELL TELEPHONE 00'Y, OF CANADA, LIMITED, \u2018 - Natioe of Dividend A Divided of Two Per Cent.Mes declared, payable at the Compy in Montreal, on the 1th next, te ghéreholdors of record the 30th September, CHAS, P.SCLATER, ' Secretary Treasurer.Mantresl, 16th Bapteutber; 1906, greatest dimi- La training.Just what is needed to ARMOUR LIMITED, VOLE FAORERS à SHIPPERS von canapa, TORONTO \u201cand Vigor in Ny our\u2019's Extract of Beef It contains all the muscle-building, nerve-feeding virtues of prime roast beef in a form that is readily digested.It keeps the whole system in perfect physical coudition\u2014is an ideal stimulant for athletes in brace up tired muscles aud relieve fatigue.Brain workers find a cup of Armour\u2019s beef tea tones and stimulates.No trouble to make, just one quarter teaspoonful to cup of hot water.S0LD BY ALL GROCERS AND DRUGGISTS.ASPAROX \u2014Armour's Extract of Beef flavored with asparagus, Is a delightful seasoning for salad dressings, Interior Decorator Good Work at Least Prices.W.J.CHAPMAN - = 4216 St.Catherine Street +, i MOONEY'S $3.00 BOOTS à For MEN, For WOMEN, -t WB GIVE GREEN -CASH RECEIPTS.\u201c MOONEY, * The Shoeist,\u2019 Ger.Alexander and St.Catherine Sis.Phone Up 12 >, CAMPBELL CLAD, Your Personal Appearance Has a great deal to do with your success.You x are judged by the clothes you wear.Be ar = 267 St.James St.you to Investigate the status and investigate vest one dollar.forms.We are willing to rest our discretion.THE is destined to build large fortunes INVESTIGATE.Before you buy stocks or bonds of any corporation it \u2018will pay ~The Marcom Wireless Telegraph Co.of America.\u201d We invite you to call at our offices and witness the practiéal operation of the Marconi Wireless Telegraph System and to investigate the standing of the company and.its prospects.convince you by indisputable evidence that you stand no chance of loss in investing in the Marconi securities, and that you are certain _ to reap large profits therefrom, then we do not expect you to in- If you cannot conveniently call at one of our offices, then it vou write us we will submit the evidence to you in written and printed MARCONI SYSTEM prospectus of, the company offer- If we do not case on your judgment and your for those who join in the enter- prise, the same as the telephone, telegraph, electric light, and other commercialized sclentific discoveries have made fortunes for their backers.MUNROE & MUNROE, \u201cCANADA LIFE BLDG.MONTREAL.» = 4% .For full information \u2018address\u2014 BROAD EXCHANGE BLDG.NEW YORK.STATE MUTUAL BLDG, BOSTON.\u2014 - \u2014\u2014 The Best Investment ! \u2014=INTEREST=\u2014= 5% We Open Accounts From 25cts agg Upwards sa - INTEREST PAID IN CASH EVERY SIX MONTHS.Send for our Prospectus and Further Particulars.THE 1D EAL SAVINGS LOAN & LAND GO, 1835 Notre Dame Street.Tel.Main, 4548.\u201d E.MACKAY EDGAR & GO.STOCKBROKERS MEMBERS MONTREAL STOCK EXCHANGE Mexioan Light and Power Co.Securities .ought and Sold., BOARD OF TRASE BUILDING yoo > LC TL + + r \"+ .J.PERCY TAYLOR, - Stock Broker, .MEMBER MONTREAL STOCK EXCHANGE, IMPERIAL BA MONTREAL BRANCH-\u2014-South-vweet comer of St James And MoGiit General Banking Business, Peter Sterling Exchange.Lukis, Stewart & Co.INSURANCE, \u201cAR UY Mame Special Agente Liverpool & Landes & Gabe Ina.Co.General Ageata land Casualty Om (Employers 212 f io prk Steam Betlers) 18 ST.SACRAMENT STREET.@GEORUNO.Bl1AM.\u2018O © PANGMAS HIAM & PANGMAN, .General insurgnce Agents and Brokers.Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance 0o.\u2019s Building Montres The Underwood\u2014 The \u201c Writing In Sight\u201d TYPEWRITER UNITED TYPEWRITER CO.Ltd.110 St.Francis Xavier St \u201coh.MAIN 2065.-9 PE PE OPTIONS ON AMERICAN and CANADIAN RAILS for 30, 60 and 90 days.LONDON and PARIS EXCHANGE, Limited.84 VICTORIA STREET, TORONTO.Phone Main 981.\u2018THE PROVINCIAL Mutual Fire Insurance Company Room 57, Guardian Buliding Montreal.A General Fire Insurance Business .transacted at the Lowest Rates | AGENTS WANTED throuhout the Provinos Marine and Fira Underwriters, 30 St.Francois XaviarSt.MONTREAL, We Have For Sale Canadian Machine Telephone Co., Ltd.| G.J.ADAMS & CO., 205 St.James St, Main 606.Department of Railways and Canals, Canada ST.LAWRENCE CANALS.EALED TENDERS, addressed to the une stopping leak, South Bank Galops Canal '* will bs received at this office up till 19 o'clock on Tuesday, 11th October, 1904, fop stopping leak through the south bank of the | quois Section.forms ot tender obtalned after this date at the office of the Chief Engineer of the Dee partment.of Rallways and Canals, Ottawa, Ont., and at the office of the Superintendent: of Operation, Morrisburg, Ont.The department does not bind itself to accept the lowest or any tender.; By order.! L.K.JONES, ' Secre .Department of Railways and Canals.Ottawa, 27th September, 1904.Newspapers inserting this advertisement without authority from the Department wit?not be paid for it.Lachine Canal.- Notice to Contractors.SEALED TENDERS, addressed to the une dersigned, and endorsed \u2018\u2018Tonder fof Dry Dock,\u2019 will be received by the under- day of October, 1904.Plans can be seen at the Office of tbe Superintending Engineer of the Quebec Canais, day, the 4th October instant, wben specifications and forms of tender can he procured, The department does nqt bind itself to ace cept the lowest or any tender.: By order.L.- K.JONES, Secretary, Department of Railways and Canals, Ottawa, 4th October, 1904.07 Newspapers inserting this advertisement without authority from the Department will not be paid for it : \u2014 PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND RAILWAY \u2018 TENDER FOR BRANCH LINE.SEALED TENDERS, addressed to the une dersigned, and marked on the outside \u2018Tender for Branch Line to Montague Bridge,\u201d will be received up to and including MONDAY, THE 24TH DAY OF OCTOBER, - 1904, tor the Grading, Track-laying, Ballasting, Bulldings, etc.in the construction of a Branch.Line 6.33 miles long, to Montague Bridge, Prince Edward Island.Plans, Profile and Specifications may be seen at the Engineer's Office, Charlottetown, P.E.I5, and st the Office of the Chief Engineer, Moncton, N.BL, where forms of tender may be obtained.All the conditions Of the specifications muss be coimplied with.D.POTTINGER, ; Railway Office, .General Manager.\" Moncton, N.B., 3rd October, 1804.PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND RAILWAY Tender for Branch Line , SPALED TENDERS, addressed to the undersigned, and marked on the outside \u2018Tender for Branch Line to Vernon River Bridge,\u201d will be received up to and including FRIDAY, the Zlst Day of OCTOBER, 1004, for the Grading, Track-laying, Ballasti Bullding, etc., in the construction of a Branc River Bridge, Prince Edward Island.Plans, Profile und Specifications may be seen at the Engineet's oftice, Churlottetown, P.R.I,, and at the office of the Chief Rugin- eer, Moncton, N.B., where forms af tendes may ba obtained.Ln aa\" All the conditions of the specitioations musi be complied with, Se sa D.POT TINGER, Ral Office, - LL se oncton, N.B.,: So Lu\", 28th September, 1904.The Herald is publishea uw The HeraM 1740 Notre Dame Street.TEL MAIN 1066 +.\" , 3 et 608 Oral, Publishing Company, 8.Brierley, Montreal, James Director, .CF il \u20ac ; RICHARDSON.Managen : .- ~ dersigned, and endorsed, \u2018Tender for - Galops Canal, at the west end of the Iro- Plans andespecifications can be seen and signed until 16 o'clock on Thursday, the 13th ° 2 Place d'Armes, Montreal, on and after Tuess { Line of Railway, 4.59 miles long, to Vernon Ta pet ital Paid: Unis.di>ayuorare fo Accaunt Uh Eafe or ol HEAD OFFICE à» = TORONTO T.R.MERRITT seen anne aad ' b.% wham.(SEEMS « a, * > \\ |Dale: Co. \u201cae vr ' \u2019 Lt : a ; el 5 Pen a \u201c - os - \u2019 ._ a.ee - ° - ; La La SE.2» % .= ; .+ A .EE aye pas > A 4 ov 3 Ÿ a IE | A ] + .J + a; » 4 - - { DAILY HERALD, BA .We are cbrstindy anticipating Canada\u2019s.splendid, future| OI) + \u201cand Montreal's\" enterprising and artistic needs\" by imparting SIA .b «he very chaicest productions In Home Decorations, that the) .I ™ \u201c rn .a ,.éesiep al tie age prose | 1 A a AMERIOAE NEWSPAPERS.ma | \u201cwall Haneine Départment.|.\"19 \"VOIES ER en air Hanging Department « - _ Lo a =.il SL A .treai June, Ci pm Dlacgotioued be- Now on Viewin |?fee Etes me EE SERRE New Fall Goods \"7 FE : oy 20524 .: 5.20 p.m., A6.25 p.m.} .Pa up 7 EA BR an : Bte.Agathe, L9.00 a.m., 40.15 a.m., 5.20 pts.| Co Co we ei / Cverfierina With Now Arvivale te.Art.= rs A .Labelle, B5.00 a.m., §0.1 .20 p.We have had great it i .as: Soie a yma + to Study American Methods and Hear \u201c Big Nominingue.530 5.= \"2 PB, {hy when we offer such vaiues aa the following Tor ay Iiitle moneys re Quebec, 8.45 a.m., 2.00 p.m., $3.30 pm, *1L30 p.m.\u2018Three Rivers, 845 a.m., 3.00 p.m., 63.30 .5.00 pm, *11.30 pin, Lo $2.20 p.m.,60 PIECES ALL WOOL HOMESPUN FRENCH BOUCLES AND BASKET OLOTH, + ?tour 2 = EU \u2019 .4 : - Wall Hangings Weis hard-pressed two-tone silie effects, German \u2018Silk Flocks in most artistic.twbitone gre ens and cerise cologings, English New 43 and 4 in.wide, in gray, browns, greens, blues, navy, reseda, garnet, drab, OY fawn and Oxford.Very Special.Monday, at, per YALA eee .- Guns\u201d of National Campaign =; Art Colorings and Designs, gholcest Japanese Art Green Grass Cloths, Ashe Ce erin - co ee Gabriel, $15 a m., 5.0 pm.Sunday sar, 60 IN.ALL WOOL PLAIN AMAZONE, BOX AND LADIES\u2019 CLOTHS.beuntiful fin- 4 Ÿ i prie Leathers In: Spanish\u201d colorings and designs, French cloth effets wh ui George Newnes, Baronet, came) dacks.I have wished for & long time ows (place Viger).8.20 a.m., 5.15 p.m.PE YALE ee, erald, Drown, oval, navy, reseda, fawn and drab.Monday, \u2018 \u201c a .teh 70 5) 4 ew Yor t Thursday on the|to V at region.ve not | ally; A daily except Saturday and Sunday: LOT drab, reseds and so , TL ue 7 Baltic.He is-one of England's men| !* America in seventeen yearss {|D.Thursday only; (1), Saturdays only: Le 9 fawn.Monday: per.yard OTH.fn drab, blus, brown.green, navy, reeds and S5¢ » 9 .shall visit Boston, of course, and then, Thesdays and Thursday: §Sundays only.All fgg yy A11, WOOL HEAVY GRAY HOMESPUNS AND TWEED SUITINGS (best .; West of England finish), for Tailor Made Suits.Can be made without lining.CHEAP EXCURSION Worth $1.00 yard.Monday, per yard rarreusssencadhasssenennencen10nesc0cunmqecenes, ; 58 IN.IIBAVY BLACK CHEVIOT 48 IN.BLACK ZIBBLINE, the new .TO AND BASKET CLOTHS, rough 59e | and seasonable material for Suits 45e CAP-DE-LA-MADELEINE \u2018 of action and achievement.He is the Washington, Philadelphia, and Balti-|otber trains week days only.: creative mind behind the Strand Maga-|more.I do not intend to go into ths .zine, which is more familiar to Amer-| West.The Eastern States, /I think, @ [ica than his other publications, Tit-|are very much more like Enzland than Bits, the Wide, Wide World and his,the rest of-the country.\u2018There is so - The (.- on London dally, the Westminster Ga-| much interchange of travel between i .on style finish.Monday .\u2018and Skirts.MODAAY .iceoeesecese AY ; xette.the Eastern States and Europe.\u201d 5 2411-2413 St.Catherine Street.ir George looks like Sir Walter Be-| \u201cAre you interested in\u2019 American and return from Montreal, CE oy ) , sant, the novelist, says the World.A |politics?\u201d.October 11th .:.$2.10 ; flesh as a fend oft ed pcureres bible a ifs Between yous Politic October 12th .$L5O0 Of course you know it alwa: ki diff e if you CASH » : .r s makes a erenc 0 :) .: iness, dressed In a business-like blue|parties.To my mind both seem to| p08 et LEE VS SI leave Some people BUYING ON CREDIT NEVER PAY at all\u2014others, of course, have to 35 \u201cLADIES\u2019 COATS ON A CASH BASIS\u201d - steadily and even placidly out from under a good thatch of white hair, parted in the middle, as Walter Be- Sir George listened with polite attention te the sketch of the historical difference in the policies of the two We are always pleased to show them.They don\u2019t run so high either.Some are 87.50.Others up to $35.00.Mostly on the fitted order.serge of loose cut, 1s topped by a head|stand for the same thing, or meBrlY| Madeleine at 10.35 a.m.Returning will leave FAY FOR THEM.Don't you think it is worth THINKING OVER THE MATTER and The JOHN MURPHY CO.that the first glance tells is.packed|so.Democratic, Republican.The| Cap-de-la-Madelelne at 5.00 p.m.same day COMPARB?full of good brain.Blue eyes look|names represent about the game ldea.\u201d| for Montreal.NEW COATS have been put up to stock since we spoke to you last.Some are real swell.LIMITED.2341 and 2343 ST.CATHERINE STREET.sant's was when Americans first came parties.Then he said: - tc know and like him through =\u2014hta| \u201cI do not wish to say it with offense ization : J PE re R A © at 0 Colonization, EXCUISION | coe VALUES IN CHLORENS 40 GLOVES foi P ; to that style.The eyes look over well-| men have a great deal of admiration NIPISSINQ DISTRICT Our Buyer, while in France, on his last trip, found several Bargain opportunities in covered cheeks above a beard that/for Mr.Roosevelt.So robust and en- Saturday, Oct.8th \u2019O4 CHILDREN'S KID GLOVES, which he did not let escape.We have just received a line .jonce, was aw erge .rker is res- which we will put on Sale Monday.-They are : a tawny, but now ghows a getic, you see.Mr.Pa Low round trip, Second Class rates, from FINE CHILD'S KID GLOVES, in tans, mod es, grays, oxblood and browns, 2 dome 39¢ little more of white than of the first] pected, but there's no gainsaying we color.Fifty-one years old is 8ir George|like Mr.Roosevelt.Of the issue be- oi wa Ci gl te Wg and pr fasteners.Would sell easy at Toc.Special, Monday, per pair .\u2026\u2026\u2026\u2026.\u2026ecescses by the blographical reference book.|tween them I do not profess to know.broke.\u2019 h He would look older if it were not| \u201cWe were glad to see Mr.Bryan ; TO © LADIES?SAMPLE BOAS .{for the humor-lines about the eyes|defeated, on accofint of the currency Sturgeon Falls, Verner, Warren, Mark- LADIES\u2019 SAMPLE BOAS\u2014Aboyit % Samples, not two alike, in Swansdown, Cock and alertness that shows a bain question.Because of his reputation as stay, Massey, Blind River and| - Feathers und Chiffons.Some amongst them worth up to $10.00.Monday, $3 50 RC\".I a ] ] £ 5 In Wool! That's why it\u2019s on the Sheep\u2019s back ! There's, also, genuine warmth and comfort in the Blankets we .sell because .they are manufactured from the best .of Wool! 1 We have just placed in stock a very large working overtime on Îts receptive side.jan orator I shoul1 like to hear him, Chelmsford your choice at .cane messpetroncsecereecnenen carence n0- 000000000000 ancnusecvece \u201c \u201cI do not know,\u201d bégan Sir George,| Will he speak in New York soon : PAYAN'S PERFUMES, in sample bottles, 500 in all, to sell Mohday at, per 1 examining his just lighted cigar, \u2018\u2019what| wish to hear your best political ora- Return limit, November Sth, 1904.\u2018bottle .MES, In sample A, verres nrauns eB en.2C I can say that will be of use to you.\u201d |tors.\u201d And then Sir George asked 6 \u201d The speech is deliberate and the voice! who they were.IMPERIAL LIMITED full of inflactions and kindliness., \"| Sir George is an ardent -sportsman.| petween Montreal and Vancouver, leaving \u201cOf course,\u201d he continued, \u201cI am not| He Is devoted to automobiling and windsor St.at 9.40 p.m.daily, has been dis- a stranger to American newspapers.makes long tours in his motor through continued.The thing by which your newspapers| Europe.He ,used to be famous as a | \u2014 differ most from ours ia in the read-|lover of the bicycle until he had an| MONTREAL AND PORTLAND Hines.It always seems to me that ugly accident.He now has building Sleeping and Parlor Cai Service will be dis- American readers put up with a great|a turbine yacht, the Albion.He gave cont for the season after Friday.Oct.LADIES\u2019 NEW FALL TRIMMED HATS We are now showing an assortment of TRIMMED HATS, Imported Models and Coples from our own workrooms, ranging in prices from » BW\" $5.00 to $25.00 \u201cPg MONDAY BARGAINS IN GROCERIES 1 1b.Square Blue, for .\" GOOD SIZE CLOTHES BASKET.N THIS CA PAIGN Pullman Sleeping Cars on 9.00 a.m.Regular 30c value.Monday .18¢ 121; Ibs.Washing Soda, for 1 .pm.ins.FIRST QUALITY STOVE PIPE.The -{and 1030 \u2018p.m.trains quality.sold everywhere 10c length.§ bars Laundry Soap, for .5 » MONDAY BARGAINS IN BASEMENT | tendency\u2014a vast amount of space tak-| was characteristic of him to add to the Espe 15 ST.JAMES STREET justice to the beauty of our Hals.AS en ap by \u201cthe lines that lapel the| value and beauty of the trophy after TICKETOF® ICE (Next Post Office.) Come Monday.Come every day next week, and you'll certainly agree that we can be FRAN Come Monday, while the assortment is complete.\u2019 .; \u201cBut, in othef respects,\u201d continued|taken up by others to whom he ylelded BLACK CASHMERE HOSE\u20143 Special Lines, in Plain and Twill, double and single soles, Sir George, * the newspapers here and precedence.He plays golf and tennis s \u201c|them.to Westminster in half an hour.He ; bear the closest scrutiny by the keenest buyers ! Sir George was asked about his plaps collects good pictures, and studies agri-| am.week days, and 7.40 p.m.daily.Two Special Lines For Monday We invite comparison ! as Cable Net, Irish Point Effect.Bought under market value: All prices, $1 50 8 LIMIT from BD6 pair to B&-OU pair.See our Bpecial value Monday, at, per pair « i soars $24.00 .ce, THROUGH SERVICE TWICE DAILY \u201cTHE DOMINION\u201d WHITE WOOL BLANKETS, size 50 in.x 76 {n., made \u2018expressly for this firm.Price $2.69.Unexcelled value! \u2019 : { ., MONDGEY L.u.c.scs0 cases rence screen ane nes e 4 bags Windsor Sait, for .First-class Vestibuled Coach through gaol \u201cSTRONG ASH SIPTERS.with\u2019 DC 4 Ine, Snanish Oncons, for .long handle.Worth 15c.Monday.1(¢ 1 pkg.Grape Nuts, for .THE HAMILTON COMPANY, news.But to my thinking the head|it had been lost by the English play- proud of our Trimmed Hat display.AVE N E Ww YOR spliced heels and toes, full fashioned.Bought directly.from the makers.They will at home are much alike.They endeav-| with both zeal and skill.His country \"; culture for the benefit of his less suc- THE CELEBRATED \u201cSKELDON\u201d BLANKETS, made in Ayrshire, Scot- deal in that direction, We have in|years ago an international chess tro- th.That for taste, style, materials and value, are certainly ahead of any other display in this ; OSTRICH FEATHERS\u2014Just received, from London, England, & big consignment of Black i should give an idea of the nature of;ers.t Lord D Ostrich Feathers.They are from the best makers, and we can surely say that our i .the news and no more.Leave the! He proposed, just after r un- prices are fully 25 per cent.less than tbe prevailing wholesale prices in this city.Al $ À .reader to find out by reading in the|raven's defeat, to challenge for the consignment o NEW BLANKETS received ¢ direct from the Leading English, Scotch, and EXCURSION bo sold Monday as follows: Pro \u2018 : or to give the most interesting news|place, Wild Croft, on Putney Heath, {3 d Be patr, or 3 pairs for .\u2026.eee TC BSe pair, or 3 pairs for 51-00 Canadian Makers! The Prices, considering , the |£rom ail over the world.I intend in/an ideal home for a lover of \u201call-out- From Montreal ROULD $10 65 SO pair, or 3 pairs for.$1.39 the few weeks I shall spend in Amer: doors.\u201d There are dogs and fine hoises.6 FARE À 3 fca to make \u2018a closer study of the: 11¢ does not go in for racing but his Going date, Oct.12.Return limit, Oct.24.- in America.@ .A ai Le NAIRN'S PRINTED AND INLAID LINOLEUMS, in the very latest designs and \u2018 I shafl spend a little fwhile lim| cessful nelghbors.He ls also a fine} WORLD'S FAI pretty colorings, which makes a clean, noiseless and sanitary floor covering.\u2018 Canada and a weck in the Adiron-lbilliard player.; Very much in use ja churches, convents and public bulldings.Ask to see ow 45c \u2014 - : special line, 4 yards wide.onday at, per square yard .\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.- 87.LOUIS, MO.pee land; unrivalled for softness and warmth, from $4.78 a pair.SCARLET ALL-WOOL BLANKETS, fast dye, from $4.50 a pair.WHITE WOOL BLANKETS, from $2.00 a pair.some of our papers in London the same| phy which the Americans won.It city.No matter how elaborate a descriptiqn we would write up, it would fail in doing hs, all dths.P .solid type just what the news is.\u201d America's Cup, but that task was lonsthe 81) ay ibe rices from $1.50 up to $15.00 each high-grade and reliable quality of the goods, will | TI ¥ gh=g q y 8 \u2019 newspapers, to get a closer look at{mounts will carry you from the Heath Trai CURTAINS AND OILGLOTHS ARE 600DS YOU CAN T DO WITHOUT rains leave at B.45 a.m.and 11.10 \u2018 A .LACE CURTAINS\u2014650 Pairs Nottingham La ce Curtains, all new designs, such Tickets on sale daily.NEW BLANKETS WANT PROTECTION (NOISE IS PROMISED \u2018 © » GREY WOOL BLANKETS, from $1.50 a pair.- without change on 10.30 p.m.train.Tourist Sleeping Car every Thursday through without change, Husband Moving for Lugit- Not So Much \u201cby Spell- lation Regarding binders as by a Diabolical MAIL ORDERS CAREFULLY FILLED, The JOH $t.Catharine 8t.MURPHY CO.\u2018LIMITED.Metoaife St; We have all the things they ~ need for the kitthen and many other useful articles for the bal- \u2014 | ance of the house, $10.00 will buy a whole Iot of thiseclass of goods, and the best of It is you get the best \u2018that's made.L.J.A.SURVEYER 6 St.Lawrence Main 8t.Two doors from Cralg St.DURE OF NORFOLK DNPRETENTIO The Duke of Norfolk, the premier éuke of England, is noted for his unpretentious manners and characteristic kindnesses to those happy eitough to ba about him.A correspondent who has {hat her home lay In a different direc- ; American resident ot London sald: been alert and graceful, and when the King been \u2018staying near the duke's Sussex home states that he heard many in- stunces of these traits.When he arrives by himself at Arundel rallway station from town the duke rarely troubles his coachman to meet\u2019 him with the carriage, but prefers to walk to the castle.His unassuming manners often mislead strangers regarding his ducal rank.On one occasion he was passing through Arundel when a butcher's boy, who had a puncture of his bicycle tire, demanded the duke's assistance, \u201cHi! mister,\u201d the lad said, give us \u2018a land with this bicycle,\u201d Without demurring the earl-marshal went to the boy's assistance and held the machine while the latter rèpalred the puncture.At another time the duke was driving to an appointment- at Littlehampton, when he overtook an elderly woman laden with a pundle.Stopping his carriage, he invited her to ride.Glad of a lift, and unaware of his identity, she entered the carriage.\u201cWhich way are you going?\u201d the duke asked, and found tion.from his own after they had cov- fred a considerable distance.Therefore.getting down at the nearest point to his own destination, \u2018he walked the remainder of the way and sent the cnachman and the carriage to take.the nid woman to her home.- , .\u2014\u2014\u2014 ) ASTOR FLATTERS THE KING, In discussing William Waldorf Astor's restoration to favor with.King Edward, an \u201cMr.Astor in conversation has always visited htm recently, he said & number zood things.hor of \u201cOpe of Mr.Astor's stairways is steep nd small.The King, in ascending It,.janted: .\u201cWhy do you have s0 small a staircase Mr.Astor?\u2019 | helping the newspapers through the | practical scheme bearing on this tm- \u201cand Rrings dut the colors.Besides carpets it Credit 2 London, Oct.8.\u2014Amid the din of abstract controversy on the question of marriage being a handicap, which Is sllly eeason, there has arisen a really portant subject.It lacks poetry, but It may prove, however, of some benefit.The poor husband is to be protected\u2019 from an extravagant wife and possibly extortionate dressmaker and milliner.It is announced that a epecial asso- clation is to be formed with this: object and that a special bill for the fîn- troduction into Parliament is to be drawn up with a view of putting the husband\u2019s credit on a more secure ba-| sis, especially from the inroads of a: wife of presumably excellent but expensive tastes, \u2019 Some few months ago there was heated discussion on this same Bub- ject.Dressmakers and milllners in all directions, especially in the West End, were complaining that husbands .repudiated wives\u2019 debts, and a husband was bitterly lamenting the fact that tradesmen,\u201d as well as the wife, were the culpable parties to the running up ot bills far out of proportion to the husband's income, Thirdly, magistrates who had to administer the law frequently found calisé for regretting that under the present act a husband was often made the innocent victim of a thoughtless extravagance which the dressmaker and milliner were not over eager to restrain until the customer\u2018s apouse arose in wrath, and, In geveral.instances, successfully resisted the claim: .WANT LAW AMENDED.On their side, the millinerd and dressmakers .are alive to the necessity of safeguarding thelr Interests.They, too, want the law amended, and a protective association has been formed and a solicitor empowered to draw up a bill to amend the \u2018law relating.to married women.It is the view of the organizers of the association that the present law affords many loopholes for the evasion of debt and assumes that tradesmen, when dealing with a married woman, should know whether she is-an agent for her husband or whether she proposes to pay out of her separate estate.| It 1s imposeible when a lady visits an establishment to ask whether she is dealing on her own account Or pledging the credit of her husband.It so questioned she would leave the place.It is proposed; that for all sums of money owing In respect of con- tructs arising out.of the supply of wearing apparel for married women, both husband and wife should be deemed lable.Ite effect would bey that judgment Is obtained against both and may be executed against elther.Between the upper and nether mill- \u2018stone, sad indeed will be the lot of an extravagant wife without money of her own.= \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014y\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 e .4 Special Notice, .AVE YOUR HOUSE CLEANED BY THH NEW VACUUM CLEANER.\u2014 The aleaning agent is air\u2014neither chemicals nor washes used\u2014operated by & powerful vacuum m, which cleanses and renovates Carpets) giving them new life, raising the pile ciean® upholstered furniture, curtains, tapestries, Wedding, etc.Everything 1s thoroughly cleaned without removal or covering any article in'ygbe house.Efficient, Sanitary, Per-.nexpensive.For particulars, send d or telephone Main 1400, Carpet he 8, Carsley Co., Limited.fect an us & pont | ing ene.of these campaign drums thus 547 .Automatic Drum.7 © - The din of the coming campalgn will be deafening, says a writer in the New Orleans Times-Democrat.The orlgin- ators of campaign sovelties have apparently concluded that noise is the most important)factor in a political demonstration.With thls idea uppermost in their minds they have produced from! the profoundity of their genius the campaign drum, a diabolical contriv-; ance that will probably be responsible for the swelling of the number of in-, mates in our lunatic asylums this fall.The campaign drum requires no beating, it beats itself by automatic means whenever the campaign enthusiast pulls: a string.The sound produced by the! pulling of a string Is exactly that of; the rolling reverberation of the sheep-| skin instrument beaten by an energetic stick wielder, without the rhythm of! the roll directed by intelligent drum-! imitation of drumming, and after hear- sounded the mind begins \u2018to totter at the thought of a thousand or so at one time, without any concerted attempt on the part of the operators to keep time.It is not intended by the originators of the campaign drum that any time should be kept.Noise is tht only object sought for.Just pu e string and roll the drum.The more drums the more strings to pull and the more deafening the din.It is a safe prediction that the campalgn drum will be heard this fall.In 1908 there may be a law against it.As a noise-producer the campaign megaphone will run the automobile drum a close second, The imegaphones are being prepared with appropriate mottoes inscribed on their outward surface, suitable to the opinion of members of'both parties.From a megaphone inscribed \u201cFour years more of Roosevelt\u201d the campaign rooter will proclaim his views to the world as he marches in line for his party; the opposing forces will distribute to the faithful megaphones bearing such legends as \u201cParker is the man for the people,\u201d and \u2018Parker for President means prosperity.\u201d Through these voice trumpets the marching men will shout tlLeir rallying cries as they parade the tho volume of sound tenfold when the streets; with their ald they will swell the volume of sound tenfold when the campaign songs are sung and make the efforts of previous political rooters look but feeble mutterings by comparison.Thousands of these megaphones have been ordered by the campaign clubs.They are to be distributed broadcast tô the men who will be in line In the great parades.Din, racket and a bedlamitic confusion of sounds will be|.the result of this thoughtfulness on the part of the manufacturers of campalgn novelties.- .An interesting novelty that will bring immense profits to the makers of such articles is the political fob, These are being made of the familiar baggage check fastened to a strap.The adherents of the Republican party will wear a fob, the brass chdck of which is stamped: \u2018\u2018Roosevelt, 1904; Fairbanks Washington\u201d The Dpmocrats will sport fohs inscribed: Parker, 1804; Davis, Washington.\u201d This fob is one of the cleverest of the many novelties originated by the makers of campaign badges.\\A more elaborate fob is made of gun metal.A medal, on one side of which is the face of Roosevelt, and on the other that of Fairbanks, is supported by a chain, on the flat slabs of which are stamped: \u201cTrade follows the flag.Protection, prosperity and Pariama.At- larnitite-Pacific.®\u201d \\ Buttons for the lapel of the coat are ee Manifoba grows the wheat that MONTREAL-OTTAWA TRAIN SERVICE.Lv.Montreal 8.40 a.m.week days, 4.10 p.m.dally.Arrive Ottawa 11.40 a.m.and 7.10 p.m.CITY TICKET OFFICES: 137 ST.JAMES STRBET.Telephone Main 460 and 461, or Bonaventure Station.|æ picture of Rooséveit.On the cards | pansion, protection und being made by the million.Some of the\u2019 designs are attractively original.Orne\u2019 shows a hand supporing four aces and are the slogans: \u201cSound money.ex- prosperity.\u201d \u2018of the age in which-they live for the COR.ST.CATHERINE AND PEEL STREETS AND DOMINION SQUARE.juvenated patient to become eix years old.She thought she was taking care of her little sister in the garden of her home, and she was entirely happy while playing with a doll.At De Rochas\u2019 s commarid she retrogressed \u2018still further; to her babyhood.' Then she cried pitifully when he! pinched her arm, and she took much pleasure In playing with her toee.| At each stage the mor nature of De Rochas's subjects.is exactly that! moment.So that, thanks to hypnotism, a widow of forty can, without hypocrisy, assume the naivete and innocence of à girl of sixteen, \u201cSORROWFUL TREE\u201d OF GOA.A unique tree on the Island of Gos, near Bombay, is the \u2018\u2018sorrowful tree,\u2019 as the natives term it.That name \u2018is given to Ib because the tree bas a drooping, sad ap pearance during.\u2019 the day time, but its %- aspect changes as the sun goes down; theà its leaves open and.no longer droop, and a fragrant blossoms come into bleom upon } it.\u201cThe moment the sun shows itself in i the east the blooms close, the leaves begin § to droop and the petals of the recent sweet § \u2018blossoms fall to the ground.This tree # blooms thus all the year round.Below is the campalgn cry, \u201cStand pat.\u201d A Democratic button shows, between the portraits of Parker and Davis the figure of a rooster dressed in the garb made familjar to us by the cartoonists as the only costume in Uncle mers.It is merely a rolling nolse in| Sam's wardrobe.The rooster is crow- Ing.The burden of his song is that famous chorus of the supremely con- \u2018fident, \u201cShure, Mike,\u201d A campaign .\"button: that promises to be popular with the Republicans is a.gilt Rough Rider's~hat, stamped with the name of the present President.Another novelty \u2018is an artificial rose that remains closed until somo one approaches the wearer and-attempis examine it, when, presto! the lcaves open out and there appears a portrait of the presidential choice of the man who sports the flow- T.\u201cTeddy's teeth\u201d will be à popular\u2019 campaign novelty.The teeth are worn by adherents of Roosevelt.They are painted on tin and can be held in the mouth by means of a support at the back.They give the wearer the ap-\u2019 pearance of possessing an enormous mouth, in which are two rows of mag-' nificently even teeth.The appeararice' of a thousand or so of men marching.with \u201cTeddy's teeth\u201d as their most] prominent feature, cannot fail to be ini- pressive.HYPHOTISM KEEPS A WOMAN YOUNC If She Please She Can Retrogress to the Happy Days of Her Babyhood.Paris, Oct.8.\u2014~\u201cA woman is never older than she feels,\u201d which ie to say, \u201colder than she thinks she is.\u201d Col.A.de Rochas has discovered how to make a woman believe she has lived ten, twenty, thirty years fewer than those which have, In reality, silvered her hatr and stolen her teeth.Not by decking hereelf with furbelows nor daubing kerself with rouge.Simply by submitting to being hypnotized.Col.de Rochas, who has been long a reputable authority on occultism ana psychological phenamena, has been investigating what he calla \u2018\u2018the phenomena of the regression of mem fr existence, even to Inf y.And she will exhiblt the characteristics of the age at which she imagines ehe is liv- ng.: He hypnotized a woman thirty-five years of age, whose mother died twenty-six years ago.He told his subject she was nine years old.She la- \u2014 £ Cet Some Life Into You! DR, McLAUGHLIN'S ELECTRIG BELT RESTORES - 1087 STRENGTH What's the use of dragging your legs about like a wooden man?Feel Hke a man of spirit.ihis Wretched feeling as if the grave.a man ought to feel.Come and | me give you a new sup Away with the pains and aches; off with you were 70 years old and had Zone, Joot in ! Feel young and full of glee.at's e way Ginger up à et me put life into your nerves; let ply of youthful energy.Let me make you feel ' ur chest out and your head up and saying to yourself: M DEAN ye Let me give you back that old feeling of youthful fire, vim and courage.I can do it, so that in two months you will wonder that you ever felt us slow and poky as you do now.Act to-day.Life.° is sweet, So enjoy every minute.Show me the man who would no matters not how the rocks and shoa the spirit of joyous the nerves less vigo the mind less forcefu ought to bé at wur age; you want .Hard work wears, excesses and cares of life drain away the vim and tricity applied my way restores them.It renews the fire of youth, the spice t be a better man than he is.It .ls of life have worn the edge off ness, have dulled the enthusiasm of youth, and left rous, the eveiless.bright, the step less springy, .1.and the general vitallty less powerful thay hey to be strong.worry, disappointment and other snap of perféct manhood.RElec- j es them feel young; it fe.Co OR.McLAUGHUN'S ELECTRIC BELT Does this naturally.I know that th de EleetficIty, an \u201chave applied it fo weak men in of many grate 1 of medical treatment, had failed.e foundation of all manly strength à thet Tientricity alone will renew the vigor of youth.r over twenty years, and have cured thousands of that time.Every town knows my cures, My bodk tells ful men who were cured by my Belt after every kind ess, Paina in Back and Limbs, N Weakn MY BELT CURES Rheumatism, Kidney and Stomach Troubles, Varl.socels, Loss of Strength, and \u2018ail the effects of T0 STAY CURED Sion force in -men and womer.! - HIS GRATITUDE AFTER WEARING MY BELT IN 1001.| 1 Dr.McLaughlin:\u2014 Arnprior, Ont, September 183, 1904.Sir: I am very grateful to he able to state that your Belt has Permanently cured me.Very gratefully yours, T, Hobbs, 4 ' : mented that her beloved parent had n are troubled with feeds the people; expired the day before, and that her If your chil \\ ° | Mother Graves\u2019 Aird makes the bread that Sat- father was about to send her to Bugene Tremblay has been matched] worms, give ame BR _ \u201c''Sir,\u2019 Mr.Abtor answered, \u2018I never ex- Department.| : STANDARD ts oro Titi» E BOOK 2255 5500 Macon vi etsy - 222 : great ed all to all who call or write.It full ASS OFT RE FRE information abd plenty of proof.: s _ fi o- * \u2018to meet Wm.F.Ladue, of .\u201csafe sur .| : 14 ST, JAMES &T., Montreal, Que.Not sold in drug stores.* \u2018WO h.D ./Mass., in a wrestling match at Bones erdebua ry I, mack tbe im-| isfies the people, : snd cook.she might learn to sew, Of, M, F.MOLAUGHLIN, Sire sicurs, § a.m: te 530 p.m.Wed.and sat.ald pa.ro ., \u2018Wark on Friday, Oct.1b ~~ \\provement in your cI :.,; 5, - Main 102% | À Then the\u2019 pypnotist ordered.his re-, vas - i A - \u2018 .0 ew oh Co Cl 1,6 | K : 5 \"ger | TROUBLES OF THE STAEET CAR MAN All Kinds of People Help to Bring on the Grey Hairs.LIFE NOT \u2018ALL SWEET CORN The Fare-dodger and the Home- Hustler Keep the Rear-end Man Alive All the Weary Day.HOSE of the public who are prepared to admit the Glibert and Sullivan assertion that a pollce~ man\u2019s life is not a happy one, will surely be also rcady to acknowledge that the time of the street car conductor is not altogether devoted to beer and skittles.Hc may not be quite the most unhappy of mnor- tals; may even feel contented enough with his existence,both on and off duty.to smile on pay days; but all the same he bas many experlences that make for woe, and are apt to breed within Him something approaching a dislike to his fellow-men.The company may treat him all right\u2014and there is no indication of a kick in that direction meantime\u2014but the many little principles of the careless, the thoughtless, .end the dishonest, among Montreal's citizens, are not calculated to make for 808 NO.8 Eni dim To > y reach Si HE phrase cremation of the dead is becoming more and more familiar to the public ear.and no oy unconfined.To find out just why he does not go on every trip bearing: with him thegladsome whoop, was the| writer's business the other day.Reud, on! Woman, Babies, Bundles.| Not the least of the troubles against | which the conductor finds himselŸ isi that of the woman who has heen doing, an afternoon's shopping, and Is getting: back home accompanied hy several Ju- | venile branches of the household and! many packages of freight.Unfortun-; ately, too, from the Street Railway, man\u2019s point of view, she is of more | than a daily occurrence.That is to say.there be many of them, and they strike him on many runs.But the favorite }tery, and was b trip of this type is round about the busv | evening hours, when the fathers, the boys and the girls are hustling on the; home trek, .each more anxious than the other to range up alongside the supper] table.It is then the bargain-hunter; gets in her best work on the cars.True, they're not supposed to he cheap wales; on board the street car, but after hav- | ing had a splendid afternoon -of it! among the stores, picking up for a| quarter goods that would be cheap at a dollar, it seemp natural enough.too,| perhaps.that she should look for her-! self, her four blessed babies.and her: various assortments of parcels, being! hauled along for five or six miles for one yellow ticket, which cost three and one-eighth cents.She expects it, and she usually gets it; for by the time the conductor has held out his fare-box for three and a half minutes, wihle the lady has been settling her party and Îts out- fil, and returns after a brief attention to other passengers to find she has redeposited her purse In the depths .of what serves a woman for a pocket, his! patience has got Into such\" a shattered) condition that he is gald to get away| with even one-fare, and retires to his perch on the rear to make his dally oath of celibacy, or of a happy widow- er-hood if the time should ever come.The Oid Transfer Dodge.The nickel-catcher on this trip a mitted to a more than usually wide ex-! perience of the troubles that loiter| round the.transfer system, and inci-; dentally butt into the conductor.In: his estimation five out of ten holders of transfers are out to do up the company every chance that presents.Re-, spectably-dressed gents, probably hon-! est in all other departments of life,\u2019 were encountered by the hushel daily.) clearly and undeniably trying to get! the best of the company.whom they} evidently looked upon as fair game.trip from down town, a visit of half an; hour or more to a friend's house, or; with some of the Boys at the lot \u2018on: the corner.\u201d then the home car cast or| west.\u201cTransfer out of time! Why.what nonsense! Only Just got i.\" \u201cYes,\u201d concluded this man as he, threatened off a small boy who was! \u201cbeating\u201d his way.\u201cIT am on the suspi- | cion all the time when dealing with the traveliing public-If-a-man\u2014dont-try! | à living at home, longer arouses either a protest as being barbaric or a shudder of disgust.The former antagonism ls dying qulck- ly away as les advantages hecome better known.The general use of cremation is many years distant.and this generation or the next may not live to see it, but a strong movement has set in that direction.} Montreal was the first, city in Dominion to estabiish a crematorium, and that very recently, although they were used in England ang elsewhere in Europe many years ago.The Crematorium stands on i ¢ommand- Ing postion in Mount Royal Ceme- uiit in complete uniformity witn Its surrounding.1ts quiet colors offers no jarring note to the place and harmony of the sleeping city.Jt was completed on April 18th, 1802, From that time until July of the present summer eighteen bodies weve cremated.Nosse.wife of the Japanese ronsul- general in Carada.The building was the.The last being that of Mra, v i.+ : #0 .- Can SECOND section ne 1 \u2018i paws, PAGES SN Le a ! THE CONSERVATORY LEADING TO:THE: HALL.== \u2018The Cremation Idea |erected hy the Mount Royal tery Company, but on Ma present A) { Crematorium, Limited.| The building is of the Evglish-Cro- \u2018thie style of architecture, with Mosaic oak doors, is built of Montreal limestone and of 1 i throughout.Av imposing : porch leads to a large conservatory, With large plate glass windows and glass roof supported by ornamental (iron trusses.The floor is richly de- {signed ,on different colored marbles, .Along both sides of the central passage way are banxs of plants-and flowers, many bcing of equatorial growth.There is no one unsensible and the appeal of Howers, and entrance presence, Ceme- | taste , y 1st, of the like that of the conservatory .yeär it was taken over by the in rich valored marbles in a decura- is the opportunity its use offers for With} leaded glass In fire-proof construction \u2018 , bevond experiencing an uplifi in sentiment in their | THE HALL SHOWING as Carried Out in Montreal apparent here.The floor mature burial, The principal\u201d objec- is laid Jection to the practice of cremation in tive pattern, and the walls are lined the concealment of crime.To meet! with panoneggo marble (or a consider- this the company has adopted the] able height.The windows are filled ' provisions of the English law which: ornamental and have, an actual practice, been found, varied problems, It is in this hall to meet all the requirements of the, that thé last religious ceremouy when situation.The by-laws provide \u2018among: otic iy desired takes place.AdJoining'others the following duties for the me- is the incinerator room, the tioor of dteal referee, who must be a regis-! which is paved with white tiles, Space tered medical practitioner of not legs! has been provided for faur incloneru- than five years standing.tors, but only two have.vet been: fle shall not (except where an in- placed in posttion, They are made of \"quest has been held and a certificate spécial tire brick with steel CARNES, given by the Coroner, which shall be! The fuel used lis Kerosene oil, thé iu the form I), authorize any crema-| incineration\u201d of a body requires au tion to take place unless he is satis-| average time of about two hours.fied that the death of the.deceased: The principal advantage claimed for haw been duly established by-the pro- It may have becu for this cremation over ordinary burial is that duction of the forms required in case stances whatsoever.whether revealed reason that they were placed to give its general use will remove the ceme- of burial, | the incomr the first greeting, and help teriès which are à constant source of | vf re-! danger to the a higher.cal writer purpose .to suggest that human life is thelr to remove any longing feeling pulsion.Or it may be for lke that of a flower.born to flourish for an hour.and then disappear, .- Opening off \u201cthe conservatory leading to the crematorivm hall small -ante-room.' Brita Some of Best Blood in the Land Government Officjals Tell a Newspaper Man That There Has Been a Mighty Improvement of Late in the Type of Immigränt MEMBER of the staff of the Rir- A mingham Daily Post is touring - Canada.Culled from his first let- eer to England is the following: \u201cStout heart!\u201d - I got to know that phrase as I sat in the steerage quarter of the Tunisian, and talked and smoked my pipe with the emigrants.Eight hundred of them, and all with stout hearts! -They weren't the wasters of England going to Canada hecause they could not make I saw some of that type In the second cabin\u2014men with tender fingers and dirty cuffs, city men.who had done badly at home and will do badly anywhere.They, of course, would resent being catled emigrants.But the 800 steerage \u2018folk were of a: class that filled me with much.hope and a little sorrow, men and maldens, workmen and servant girls, golng out blithe in spirit, and ready to take the rough with the! smooth.Chiefly there were mothers and fathers \u201cwith their broods, five, and _slx_children-in arms.tod- to have the better of me this trip, thei\u2014qters, boysund girts\u2014of\u2014from twelve to chances are he may when next he comes along.\u201d .Causes Dead Conductors.But let us hark back to the evening home-run.Every man and boy just let loose from business promptly garbs him with the ane hurry of the day, a hurry that brings tears and anguish to the sorrowing employer who has the grtev- ous {li-luck to witness it.It has beeh calculated by street railway experts that no car that could be built, even by glants, would suffice for this traffic.It 1s useless to assure the madding crowd that more cars are following at close interval.That one vehicle 18 \u201cthe one for me,\u201d to everybody on the cross- | ing, and the effort to load up a gul- lon of beer In a pint pot is a mere detail in comparison with the job that confronts gm»: conductor on such occasion.After he has packed the interior, there are still hanging on to projections by fingers, toes and eyebrows as\u2019 many passengers as would\u2019 suffice to load another car, and the effort to gather a reasonable proportion of the fares the officials expect to find in his box, is the reason given by | fifteen.1 heard of one family with a thousand pounds (sterling).But, be- rides steamboat and rallway tickets, moat families had botween £5 and £10.Nearly all were going to friends, The mothers and fathers were hetween the ages of twenty-five and forLy.were no old people.: Large hopes in the future smothered the regrets at breaking with the country.These emigrants were of the better class qf artisan, simple, sober, kindly.among them.They weren't llke the pictures of emigrants in the Ilusirated , papers.They were dressed in the in8n- There were Young | four, : There | Most days I forsook the po-| lite chatter of the aaloon deck and went, own farm witiin the first three years ; rope we are taking of Its worat.Gond wine is running from the cask; a muddy mixture ie being poured in.Getting the Right Kind.\u2018This is a good class of Inunigrant,\u201d I sald.with a sweep of the hand.while talking to a Government offi- clal.\u201cYer,\u201d was the quick reply, \u2018we're getting the kind we want.There hbs been a mighty improvement tu the type o/ immigrant.we now have, The change has been marked, these List three or four years.\u2018The grown-ups are of the righ! ages\u2014between twenty and thirty years, Up to the end of June last 130,000 settlers landed in the year.England gives us most; then comes Scotland, then Ireland, or course, we have Germans, Galicians, good farmers; and we have a good ; many Itallans, who work on the railways.Quite 76 per cent.of the imml- grants are of the farming class.Thats al.right; why, in the Northwest Ter- ; ritory we have room for five million | people.We give 160 acres free to any three sons over eighteen years of age.they get 160 acres each also.If man has growing lads not yet eighteen.he can have neighboring tracts reserved till they are elghteen.They get their i land allotted at Winnipeg.Na; we ! don't carry any Immigrants free.But \u201cwe have spectal- rates for them, and they can get: from -here to Winnipez, 1,200 miles, for about £2 108, What, if a farm hand has little money?Well.right away.| on- neighboring farins, but he must put fn a certain amount of work on - or the grant lupses.© \u201cHow much to start farming right | away?Well, if a man and hig wife and | disposing of the bodies of the is aw without endangering the health of the any enquiry with regard to the appli-, tion to take place until the inquest The same chaste living, also removes danger of rar sr in is Again Giving Canada ! (Jeorge's, y - -riek'& Societies.Yf you are a \u2018waster, man: and if a man has one, two, or! j'raïlway ner of people you meet in third class with, say, three or four children, land carriages in manufacturing! in the Northwest with £200, that's a districts.They made one big family.thousand dollars, it is the best invest- With no mock pride, they talked about ment in the world\u2014if they don\u2019t mind thelr prospects, and wondered how far: roughing it the first couple of years.£3 would go in a strange land, The' What?Oh, you're a newspaper man, interchange.of kindness wag a heart; are you?Well you write home to the .trait and not a courtesy.: .old country and tell them that though I met one stout matron, whose great we want farm hands in the West, the joy was a scorn of sea sickness, |ook- | tewns want mechanics\u2014not men who ing after her own four children ands: are little good at home, and who think also the elx children of two othe \u2018rocked in the cradle of the deep.\u201d i + i old' we don't ask a man to start farming enormous He can always get work simple | \u2018first .doller cleaning somebody else's 'ahoes.If you refuse the, work offered i He shall, before authorizing the cre-; mation, examine the application of certificates and ascertain that they are such as are required by these re Cremation gulations, and that the enquiry made! problem of by the persons giving the vertificutes! dead have been adequate, He may make As one medi- dead lie in good, but living.lias said.\u201cThe powerless for evil\u201d the graves they are strong for offers a solution to pre- | cation and certificates that he may ried them to the commercial capital.Montreal was ready for them.Canada.IT say: gives warm greeting to the strong and to the wiling, But\u2019 if you've driven a cart at home, jou mustn't object to carry.cheese on the! wharves.You may be excellent painter, but you mustn't mind ff Your \"TWENTY PAGES.INCINERATOR DOORS TO RIGHT.\u20ac.Lu t \u2014 ° think necessary.He shall not authorize the cremation unless he is satisfied that the fact and causé of death have been definitely ascertained: and In particular, If the cause of death assigned in the medical certificates be such as, regard being had to all the circumstances, might be du.to polson, to violence, to any illegal operation, or \u2018to privation or neglect he shall require a post-mortem examination to be held.and if that fails to reveal the cause of death shall decline to allow the cremation unless an inquest be held and a certificate be given by the Coroner.If it appears that death was due to poison, to violence, to any illegal operation or Lo privation or neglect, or if there are any suspjicious circum- in the certificates or otherwise coming to his knowledge, he shall decline to allow the cremation unless an inquest has been held and a certificate glven bo the Coroner.If a Coroner has given notice that he intends to hold an inquest on the body, he shall not authorize the crema- has been held.On United States Railroads There Are a Hundred Deaths Per Month firsi :0b ia to lift boxes in one of th?hotels, Likalyv enough you are a good shoemaker; hut that is no reason in Canada why you shouldn't carn your ;\u2014 vou on landing, or lang.you'll notices a | chilllness on the part\u2019 of the Si St.Andrew's, and St.Pat-, In England There Were Only Thirty-Four Deaths Last Year Though More Passengers Travel, But the System is Much Superior.and show vou are a \u2018waster\u2019 within the first year, you will be taken on board a sleamer some morting and sent.back to England.: Canada has no use for you.OLDEST LIVING THINC ON EARTH ; .; ECENT railroad accidents in\u2019 the United States have attracted no litfle comment in England.The | ' current Pall Mall azette says: | \u201cThey are far.too vomimon in Amer- jeu, especially of late.The fact that il is à lerge -country with plenty of room for them to bappen is not suffl-| dient to explain then, Probably the - fundamental cause ix the hasty and imperfect construction of the lines, the make-shift arrangements for saving time and the general rush of strenuous, national life.\u201d In England deaths in traju accldents Care now so few as to be unusual.Inj \u201cthe United States the death-roll reach | \u201cThe statement recently nade that es nearly one hundred victims a month! {herve were yews in England which ave: and the number seems to Le increasing; | the oldest living things on this earth vuther than diminishing.î Iu the twelve months just ended the | said a traveller the other day, is not! number of people killed in train aceid-) correct, cnis in the United States was 1,122 : \u201cThese vews are old.very.very old: and those seriously injured 5.280.The! LES \u2019 tho \u201c| number \u2018of wrecks in that period was, therg is uo doubt about that: some of mare than 600, counting only those in them were stalwart trees even before.which life or a considerable amount of, Cesar landed on those shores.There 1 voperty jus destroyed: and Lhe total * at: hureheara | Property loss ran into-the anlillonsg, ts one now standing In the chure hyavd ! Phe follow ing figures have been çoimn-, pt Fartingal, in Perthshire, which Der | piled from the record kept by the Rajl-\u2019 candole, nearly a century ago, proved ; roud.Gazette, a révord acknowledged to to (he satisfaction, of botanists to ba: be the most co mplete pra Asner.; \u2018ent eee oi ; ; Ive in existencé and the Dasis o over twenty-five centuries old, and un- Interatate\u201d * Commerce Comniissions other at Hrdgor, lu Bnelas, which is | quarterly bulletin, ; : 8.240 years old.How Decandolr arrived I The figures include only persons kill- at an apparently correct estimate of the! ed or injured in actual accidents, not age of these living trees is on | the enormously larger number who are a or 515%; killed or injured each year getting on thing, aud tha principle is and off trains or working about them doubtless well known to-day to all.The funder the normal conditions: | t ' Killed.Injured.yew, Wke most other frees, adds onely at quarter of 1903.446 8,178 line, about the,tenth of an inch, to ts | January.1904 6 43 circumfersace each year.He proved ; February .+.2 209 this after un investigation extending Mareh .\u2026.00.> âl 98: over several yeurs, and We know now Apri.OR 169 100 years later, that his .deduttions' May.c00 oo.FO 20 140 were correct.The old yew at-Hedsor June .# s.i\u20260\u2026.cee 187 has n trunk twenty-seven feet in di-f july .«we eee 100 \u2018413 amater, proving its great age, and It is{ August.2e NT 273 in a flourishing, healthy condition now, Sept.(approximated) .120 360, ilke its brother at Fortingul.\u2014_ \u2014! \u201cTheir vzars are few, though, com- Total \u2026 2220 1,12; 6.2601 artér of 1903 was the most mind when [ made my first assertion.prolific of disaster in the annals © Dr with those of the trees | had in| The last qu that the statement printed about.them: railroading, and the number of passen- Canada will put up witih the second-| in a scientific journal was Incorrect.| gers killed was three times as great as women who were not comfortable while rate article; but real good workmen | In one chapeer of his writings Hum-,i{n any similar period previously.Rail- who will get real good dollars in return.those who - u-\"t to know for 99 per cent.Théy were thrifty, industrious wiyes, and plenty of them.And tell young of the gray hairs to be seen lurking round the edges of a conductor's cap.Jt is also alleged by certain of the: employes as the cause for many dead conductors.' Fishing for Free Trips.: \u2018Troubles in connection with the giving of change,\u201d remarked the rear-end man of a west-going Windsor and St.Lawrence car, \u201care more numerous than you would imagine, bearing in mind the class of people we carry to and from the Westmount district.Once | y upon a time a good-natured conductor was weak enough to allow a free ride to a passenger\\vhose only ready cash ! was a ten-dollar bill.That man seems\u2019 to have gone round and communicated the good tidings to his friends, judring by the number who have since tried to work the game.Just the othe day a gent.from whose trourers pock I felt certain there came the jingle of loose coin as he jumped aboard, calmly but smilingly tendered me a $10 bill for .a five-cent fare.I glared at him sav- .agely, but held grip of the bill yntil ft was about time for the passenger to get down, after which I guess he was sorry about it, for he walked off with more loose silver about him than it is: customary to carry in the best so- clety.So that sometimes we are in a position to get one back on this sample of the troublesome ones.\u201d No, sirs, the car conductor's life Is mot\u2019 all sweet corn a baked beans.Be good to him, and mayhap he'll kedp on being Uke that all the time most of them.There was no obliga-' tion, but many borrowed buckets and brushes and scrubbed out their cabins.Scme.of them regarded It as tion after meals to go Into the ship's scullery and help in washing and wiping the dishes.They found pleasure in work.An Honest Worthy Crowd.Am honest, worthy crowd in all truth were (hose 800.They were of the stuff of which the old country should e proud.broken with old ties, pulled up stakes.sold their furniture to pay: dteerage passage and have a pound or two on \"the other side to give father, mother, children, a new start in a new çoun- try, was proof of pluck.As we talked, I felt a sorrow that these, and other hundreds of yen on other ships, swell.irig into bt thousands each year, #hould for _éver be leaving home\u2014old England.\u201cThey are the men and women to whom Canada on*na her arms and gives greetings.They are \u2018the strong.And.my thoughts skipped té other seekers for bau, folk of dirty and loathsome habits, wasters in thelr own lands who land in England, not with stout hearts t» make big battles in life's conflict, but to huddle in crowded Past End sweat-shops, and gain scant food by working for wages below the living Jine.We are giving America of our twat.asd from the Coninent of Eu- distine- The fact.that they had.new homes.passengers.from Antwerp and Hawburg and Li-, women to come out.We want women.We want them as wives for our farms ers, Tell lots of them to rome .outright away.Domestic aervants will \"get work the first day they land, and more than twice as much money they are earning at home.Want Lots.of Girls.\u201cWhat?Oh, Lord, yes; they're always getting married.That's all right.But let lots of others come.We don\u2019t want your anaemic wench, who's wants to play the lady.We want &irls who know how to cook and to wash.Jf you've got any of them to spare, tell\u2019 them to come right along.and come quick.\u201d | © The immigrants\u2019 train wag ready.\u2018The huge engine of the Canadian Pa- I eific Rallway was belching emoke, and i the new-comers were clambering into the great coaches, twice the size of English coaches, and roomy and comfortable.There wae crowding at the windows, wavinz of hands, much \u2018laughter and some tears, The bell ON the hump of the engine swing and began to clang.Slowly, gruntinzlv , the train crawled away with ita load ;of hope.; ; ; Goëd luck to them all! \" But there wera others who had no friends in the West, who knew nothing about farming, who had families and little money after got as far as Montreal.Were strong and willing to work?Well, don\u2019t worry! The sallroad cars car- frightened of dirtving her fingers and ar large they i live on for century after century, still a they robust, still flourishing, sheltering with.The Ashtabula disaster, in Ohlo, In 1876.ktoldt refers to a gigantic boabab tres: |road men say that the number of ac: in Central Africa as the oldest arganle cidents grows smaller as the spring and monument in the world.This tree hus summer months advance; but it will he a trunk twenty-nine feet in diameter, noticed that with the arrival of July and Adamson, by a, series of caréful this year the deaths jumped up to 101 measurements, demonstrated conclu- and in August to the almost unprece- sively that it had lived .for not less dented number of 127.September, with than 5,160 years.\u2018the dreadful wreck at Newmarket, will \u201cStill it is not the oldest organic.prove to have added at least 120 to the monument in the world, as Humboldt- }jst of the dead.\u2019 declared, for now Mexican sclentists\u2019 And by no means the least alarming have proved that an huge cypress tree.feature is that the last year has shown standing in Chepultepec, with a trunk gailrond disasters of the most startling 118 feet and ten inches in circumference, proportions.In all the United Kingdom is older than it-older, too, by mor+ during the year 1903, only thirty-four\u2019 than 1,000 years\u2014for it has been shown, ' persons were killed\u2014yet in the United as conclusively as these Lhings can be States within the year there have heen shown, that Îts age is about 6,260 years.(hree aceldents in ench of which newrjy To becême impressed with wonder over Ae that number were: killed; white 10 this, one has only to dwell on that du- three others more than a score of pèr- ration for u Httie while In thought.sons lost their lives.iS \u201cYet it Is not so remurkable when one! (nie of the most fearful rallroad dis- ops for a moment to remember that, asters of modern days was at Edn given favorable conditions for its Col, on August 7, 1904, and cost nins£v- growth and sustenance, the average four lives.The great Laurel Run de- tree will never dle of old age\u2014its death raiilment in Penn®ylvania, on Dec.23 is merely an accident.Other younger 1903, caused the death of sixty-five peo- and more vigorous trees may spring ap ple.And scarcely a fortnight has paas- near 1t.and perhaps rob its roots of ed since the wreck at Newmarket, thelr proper nourishment; insects may where sixty-three persone wer either kill it, floods or winds may sweep It killed ontrizht or fataily injursd.There awny, or {ts roots may come in contact have been only four other tril» .ccid- with rock and become so gnarled and ents in the history of the country in twisted, because they have not room which as many as sixty-five deaths tn expand in their growth, that they have occurred.Tn 188%, at Mud Run {iterally throttle the avenues of its sus- Pa, sixty-six people lost thelr lives, In tenance; but \u2018these nre accidents.If the year préceding, Chatsworth, Ill.such things do not happen a tree may nearly equalled: the record wf Eden by rack which.cost eighty-five lives.its widespreading branches the men! resulted In the death of eighty people, and women of age after age.\u201d and as far back as 1856, Camp Hill, Pa, = \\ produced a wreck lu which sixty-six people perished.; It will be seen, therefore.that out of the -seven wrecks in which sisty or more people have been killed,\u201d three have \u2018occurred in the Just twelve months.The greater number of tle wrecks have been collisions or derailments due to the failure of signal systems, both of the human and the mechanical varli- ety.An astonishinig number of bad wrecks have been solely:due to the failure of the flagman to warn an oncoming train when his own train was RIRE M RME * .+ # THE SEVEN GREAT * pe WRECKS OF AMER- | * te ICAN HISTORY.x x 3 T,ocality.\u2018Killed.# * Camp Hill, Pa.66 # * .Ashtabula, O., 80 x.LEE Le awo Jyania, En0 gos Ama: Glan, 4 +1: .a en Nok \u201ci 2 pubs us BS Fr .Generals\u2014The Terrible Story of His First Marriage\u2014 + ¥ His Second Wife: Was Educated in the United L Ted .Cp , States\u2014He is a Soldier of Fate.- .Iwawo Oyama was born in: 1841, a samurai or noble of the Kagoshima clan.From his earliest: \"infancy he was brought up as .a sqldier.At four years of age - o , > - A.\u2026\u2026 due se James ot Catherine .= & GO.1888 Notre Dame 20809 Netre Dame kinds of catarrh.| | shipments of new goods and Come in and inspect them, We have some Uphol- You can + BREWERS, PALE ALES AND PORTER.Moatreal Office: Tel.M.165-164.821 Bt.James INDIVIDUAL INSTRUCTION Gives bes! AMM quickest results.English Course, specially adapted for those of neglected education, Includes Grammar, Composition, Literature.; \u2018 : W.W.HARRIES, Commercial Tutor and University Coach, 2749 St.Catherine Street.A \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 ET \u2019 z EUGEN SCHNEIDER, TEACHER OF THB VIOLIN, STUDIO\u2014105 DRUMMOND STREET.Tel.Up 8380.MONTREAL ART PRINTERS\u2014 HERALD JOB DEPARTMENT Individual Evening Instruction On Mondays.Wednesdays and Fridays, io Commercial Subjects, Typewriting, and Shorthand, in both languages begins ou Monday, Sept.28th, at \u201c [ Fu ILI ET Ne 46 University St., cer.of St.Catherine, Call, write, or telephone Uptown 151, for prospectus.J.D.DAVIS, Prineipal.Q .Vi APA 'ONSERVATORY oF Muse 1 by C.B.Geifer:, the Directes, Pounded ins Co 978 And 4s Dorchester St., near Mountain, HRRANCHES : Veice, Piana, \\lotin, 0, 3 Music.&c.&c.Send vee Praia Theory * 5 SHAW\u2019S SCHOOL \u2014 THE ~~ Ce.B.¢C.OF TORONTO Solicits the chance to send a copy et ts, prospectus to every young man and woman who would like a larger place in life Your name and address un postal.Do it NOW and send it to W.H.SHAW, PRINCIPAL, .Young and Gerrard 8ts., Toronto.> rte W.RAPHAELS ART CLASSES FOR DRAWING AND PAINTING, lars, apply at his studio, 2204 ST.CATHERINE STREET.Another letter is {rom Mr.Ws Payne, of Claremoat road, Sparkbill, Birmingham.He says: s OX Co éme yours ago at @ Londen botel a gentleman accosted me as a friend of his.I \u2018knew dim: not, dut De persigied In .say- {og that I must be a relation of his friend {n Newcastie-on:Tyne, as !:was cxactiy bis counterpart in appearance, speech and man- ord, It was only the fact that he knew his triedd could net possibly be in London at .t that time which made bim realise that I could not be tbe some man.When we re-\u2019 tired for the night he said, \u201cWell, when I got home I\"shall tell my friend Payne I bave et his double.\" You may imagine my astonishment when he made this remark, our names being evan spelt alike.I may -mention, too, that we then compared family notes, and each of us was a father of four Will open on the ith of October\u2019 For particu.| Full line af models for 1906 just to hand Sen dfor special bargain list No i¢ 1266 Notre Dame street.PREMO CAMERAS RP.mdr DR.J.COLLIS BROWNE'S CHLORODYNE original and Only Genuine Each bottle of this well known Remedy for COUGHS, COLDS, ASTHMA, BRONCHITIS, NEURALGIA, TOOTHACHE, DIARRHEA, SPASMS, Etc.bears on the Government Stamp the same of the Inventor, Dr.J.Collis Browne Numerous Testimonials fron \u2018minent Pbysiclans accompany each Bottle, Sold in Bottles 1s 14d, 259 4s 6d By all Chemists.Sole Manufacturers: J.T.DAVENPORT, Limited, LONDON, \u2018KING OF PAINS 3 STE a Dear Sirs\u2014This ls to certify that I have been troubled with a lame back for fifteen years.1 have used three bottles of your MIN- ARD'S LINIMENT.and am completely cured.It gives me great pleasure to recommend it, and you are nt liberty to use this in any way to further the use of your valuable medicine, Two Rivers.ROBERT ROSS.PATENTS THAT PROTECT FEATHERSTONMAUGH & CO, Fred B.Featherstonhaugh, B.L.M.Æ.Albert F.Nathan, LL.B., S.B., M.P.L.Late Examiner U.8.Patent Office.CANADA LIFE BLDG.MONTREAL ' Also Toromto.Ottewa and Washington.ATENTS ano TRADE MARKS OWEN N.EVANS, Perapie Bulldine.Maontrasy, ATENTS ALL COUNTRIES XYNOINRERING, ELRCTRICAL and SCIENTIFIC CASES a SPECIALTY ence in such cases mak \u2018 SF wriTE POR SHIDULE OF CHARGES AND NOW, =.atari to PROCEED, ; e particular.y fnvite inventors tn make use of PATENT IIBRARY anu of our SPECIAL SRARCA FilEN containing thousands of patents properly \u2018aus ed.- MARION & MARION Cradaste Engirears 8 Registered Patant Attorneys Offices: | eels Lite By , Montreal, \u2018 {latine \u2018inal 00% 0 § roof, Washington, D.O.rr meme ney mw EK] | This Paper is printed with The Queen Oity Printing Ink Co'y's Philadelphia, Chioage, Cinolnnath Boston ou ae = little girls, the eldest in each casa being the same axe.Sl \\ - \u201c = : pas > pape MONTREAL ART PRINTER HERALD JOR DEPARTMENT .i \u201d 4 4 A ATE ar rete te tr rate #5 no \u2018Most t Prized Variety in the x, # .ae Vu a.E Only the Very Pik of th : Crop is Used for Export P : Whatever discrepaney may exist bee tween Ontario and Quebec with regard to the quantity of apples ppo- duced, there is no doubt that Quebec, and the Island of Montreal in particular, holds the palin for the great- est production of\u2019 the finest apples grown, not alone in\u2019 Canada, but as far as can be learned, in the whole civilized world.Large, luscious, and 0° delicious flavor, the famuese Apple is gradually working its way to the front, and the time cannot be far distant when it will be the most highly prized dessert apple extant, Originally introduced from seed brought into the country \u2018by the early Franciscan Friars, some 230 years ago, the fam- uese hae evolved into an apple of surpassing succulence, The one vegretful feature of the whole thing is that the area of apple growing country in the provinces is not large enough to supply the demand.The region covers the Island of Montreal, the county south of Montreal to the U.S.line, the Ottawa Valley east as far as Sherbrooke, and a few counties on the St.Lawrence contiguous to the Province of Quebec.This country ji peculiarly adanted to the successful cultivation of the fameuse, and to this country the cultivation ie rigldly confined.The fameuse is an exceedingly dell- eate apnle and great care has to be exercised in its packing.Exporting trem In barrels was tried in the first I:stances, but the apples were bruised to such an extent in transit that the {dea was to a large extent abandoned.Only the very best are sent ta Ens- tand, and these ave carefully and individually packed in separate cardboard compartments in order to protect them from contact with each other.This method has been found most successful, and advices jnvar- tably speak highly of the excellent tondition in* which the apples arrive, ENGLAND HAS \u201cCAUGHT ON.\u201d There is a gro ing demand for fameuse in England, and every Season families.There is no doubt that Sir Francis âe Winton.when secretary to the Marquis of Lorie in Canada, ily instrumental In introducing the famuese into the old country.He it was who brought them under the notice of his Majesty the King when Prince of Wales, and to his championship is due the favor which they hoid to-day in the minds of the English eristocracy.The King and the Prince of Wales, have a great preference for them.and last year when the King and Queen of Italy were being entertained at Windsor, Mr R.W.Sheperd.pf Montreal.who perhaps leads the cultivation of the fameuse, received a cablegram couched as follows: Oct.27th, 1903.Windsor\u2014 Shepherd, Montreal, Canada: Send four vases dessert apples use November.MACKELLAR, Windsor.These cases arrived at Windsor on the very morning of the banquet, and tn acknowledging them.Mr.A.Mae- Kellar, who is euperintendent of the Royal gardens.Windsor, said they arrived in capital condition.The King, when \u2018Prince of Wales, had fifty of the fameuse trees planted in the Sandringham orchard,\u201d and.spe.king of these.Mr.MacKellar says: Sandringham tive years ago Have was primar- \u2018The apple trres you sent tu done wt \u201c> VECTOR \"PRE Fimeuse are Packed each in tissue paper as carefully as eggs.~~ there was a nice lot of ap- but Lhe color very well; ples on them, that they only reach perfection in a Canadian \u2018climate.The Duke of Argyll, cona.Mr.Chambgrlain, Stephen, Albani\u2014these are some of the prominent names to which tameuse } apples ure exported every season, and -this list could be augmented by many more.ONLY ONE-FIFTH OF PORTED.The selection of thr fameuse for export is very fine, and it seems incredible that perhaps it will take 3.000.trees lo yield four or five hundred! | aon.The residue, or four-fifths of\u2019 ; the actual crop, is consumed in Quebec.i In the CROP EX- annually consumed, and this, together\u2019 with \u2018the English demand, accounts for one-fifth of the crop, The expor-, tations\u2019 this season will thing like as large as.last, owing- to the abundance of fruit that is to be found elsewhere, Out of a total of 50¢,000 barrels produced in Quebec last season, the Island of Montreal was responsible for about 250,000, or one- half.There are many seedlings © the fanieuse, one of which\u2014the Me- Intosh red, in point of flavor and sue- culence, runs a very close second to the present fruit itself.Originally planted from fameuse seed in Dundas County.some forty years ago, the McIntosh red is now an anple of lus- clous quality, and beautiful appearance, and is alréady vieing in popularity with the fameuse.Another apple that has attained a high standard of excellence is the St.Lawrence.which is of very high flavor and a native of the .island.In the months of September and October there Is.nothing to touch-it.Writing to Mr.Shepherd from the Royal gardens, Windsor.Mr.MacKellar says: \u201cWith regard to the new variety, winter St.: Lawrence, I! think \u2018it grand Ir color: and quality-enual to fameuse though! 1 canhot say as a dessert apple that | prefer it to the latter.A HISTORIC TREE.The original St.Lawrence tree was grown from seed in -Mr.John Mol- son's gardens, Belmont Hall, and has was poor | compared to yours.proving, of course, ! Lord Strath-! Lord Mount! Eastern.States of America, many cases are shipped direct to titled \u2018 large quantities of the \u2018first quality are! about ten years ago.not he any- | + s } MONTREAL DAILE EBALD, SATURDAY, ouroBLE 8 1908,\" Quebec\u2019 s Fimeoie Apple Wil Sosa: a.3 Cote + | \"A bunch of Fameuse from Como, gix- | téen beautiful apples on a branch ! one foot long.| - Daal \u2018been about eighty years'in existence.The .McIntosh has been thriving for .the last tliirty-five or forty y=ars, and | the original tree was burnt down, to- ether with Mr.Molntosh's house, Of the other seedlings there are \u2018the : Canada Baldwin, the Shea wassa Beauty, the Decarie, and numerous others which are locally known, It is} | generally conceded \u2018that Quebec.ap- les have the finest color and best quality for dessert of any in the world.For eating purposes none can compare with the; fimeuse and Mcintosh, and | the English demand Is steadily in- ; creasing year by year.The great dif- | ficulty is that the majority of growers won't go to the trouble that thelr exportation entails, and the work devolves largely upon Mr.R.W.Shepherd, who in addition to those grown in hig own orchard, buys up large «quantities to satisfy the English market.In connection with the Canadian fruit exhibit at the last Paris .Exhibl- tion, rather an Interesting story 18 told.Mr.McD.Allen, who.Was, in j of Public Opinion, charge of the (\u2018anadian exhibit, was one day approached by two ladies and two British officers, one of the ladies of the party asking for some Montreal .apples.Some 8t.Lawrence were handed to her, and after tasting their quality she said they were exceieil : indeed, but \u201cnot to be compared with the fameuse we get from.Mr.Shepherd, of Montreal.\u201d \u201cDo you know who that 162\u201d said an English commissioner.coming up as the lady walked away with her\u2019 party.\u201cNo,\u201d said Mr.Allen, \u201cT don't.\u201d \u201cThat.\u201d \u201cis England.said the commissioner, i BOOKS AND AUTHORS CARLYLE'S \u201cLATEST\u201d LETTERS REVEAL HIS SOFTER SIDE.\u201cNew - Letters of Thomae Carlyle,\u201d just issued under the editorship of Alexander Carlyle, as a sequel to the \u201cLetters,\u201d previously brought out under the supervision of Prof.Charles Eliot Norton throw some new light on the Sage of Chelsea.In a Jetter written in 1852 he made the following comment on Disraell's prospects of becoming Home Secretary; \u201cI must say.here is a Stump-Orator who has not gone to the wrong market with his beggarly \u2018oid clo\u2019 dyed new.\u201d In a letter written to Robert Brown- - Ing dated Chelsea June 21, 1841, is revealed Carlyle's critical faculty as well as his kindliness of interest, He said in part: \u2018\u2019Many months ago you weré kind enough to send me your \u2018Sordello,: and now been looking into your 'Pippa Passes\u2019, for which I am your debtor.If 1 have made no answer hitherto, it \u2018was surely not for want of interest in you, for want of esteem of You.Unless I very greatly mistake, judging from: these two works, you seem to poésess a rare spiritual gift, poetical, pictorial, intellectual, by whatever name .we may prefer calling it: to unfold which Is to 'articulate clearness Is naturally the problem of problems for you.A\u2019 long battle, I could guess lles before you, full of toll and .ain and all sorts of real fighting.\u201d To Leigh Hunt he wrote out of the fulness of his heart, apropos of.the | Autoblozraphy Hunt \u2018published in 1850: \u201cWell, I call this an excellent good Book; by far the best of the auto- | biographic kind T remember to have SPARC M PIE rrr ul ETT YEE] \u201ceid ERAN BIN Free Silver with This Cereal Coupons In every 150.package .are radeemed In handseme : heavy plated silverware.{0 The food ie prepared from { beet Canadian whoat mixed by \u2018A special process with a special this day I have.| Europe.| In Turkish \u2018read in: the English language; and indeed, except it be Boswell's of John- have gon.I do not know where we \u201csuch a Picture drawn of a human Life as in these three volumes,\" and In another letter he recommends Bret\u2019 Harte in- the following terms.\u2018Bret Harte is a notable kind of object, a man altogether modeled upon Dickens, like Dickens seeking his heroes in the region of blackguardism and the gutters; and delineating them, like him, by ell-deep mimery, instead of penetration lo the real root of them and their- affalrs\u2014which indeed lies much farther down.Like Dickens however, he does the feat generally rather well: and 1 suppose will continue at the, same moderate workmanship, though: a man of more weight of metal than Dickens was.\u201d AN INSTRUCTIVE BROCHURE PT ON TRUST COMPANIES.Mr.Ernest Heaton, M.A.has rendered a real service to all those in-* terested in financial or social questions by his little brochure on \u2018The Trust Company idea and Its Development.\u2019 He has handled the subject clearly and comprehensalvely within fifty pages.The little work is a.pioneer.The Trust Company is a comparatively new financial development In i Canada, and its claims have never been presented with authority.Mr.Heaton doeg not hesitate to claim advantages for it, hut these he indicates rather than discusses, for a migid progress of elimination of all: words not absolutely necessary is maintained throughout.He traces the ori- | In of the trust company idea in (an- | ada, in the United States, Great Bri- | tain, Australia and other countries, \u2018 and from the general results summar- An instructive izes the advantages.comparation is made between thé functions of trast companies in thé United States and in Canada; references are vverywhere glven for elther -confirmation of further research.The firat trust company organized in Canada.was the Toronto General Trusts Corporation in .1882.Since then other companies followed in quick succession and have now become permanently established.The Ontario Legislature.has the distinction of being the first in the world to provide against excessive competition, but no general principles have yet heen enunciated to gover: legislation in this regard.For this, reason Mr.Heaton's brochure is eos- pecially timely.Trust companies are.here to stay.They have proven their usefulness, and all that remains is to nrovide legislation sufficiently intelligent and.elastic to confine them within safe territory.The exnerience of other countries js, as Aristotle pointed oat long aro, a safe guide, and this the writer has indicated, As far as the subject treated of ls concerned the brochure will become proh- ably a text hook to the law makers, (Toronto; The Hunter-Rose Com- any A STORY OF ADVENTURE BY JOHN OXENHAM.There is plenty of action and an abundance ôf stirring scenes in \u201cA Weaver of Webs\u201d by John Oxenham but it will not bear comparison with the \u2018same author's \u201cBarbe of Grand Bayou.\u201d The graceful charm of vhe earller story is missing in \u201cA Weaver,\u2019 of Webs,\u201d which at best :e a well \u201ctold story \u201cof adventure in Souther The principal scenes are lair territory, and the plot revolves around the villainy of a noted bandit who issues various Blsguises, | _and |e at times figuring as a no%le count, then as a powerful official and again as a blood-thirsty and unscrupulous robber.His disguises are finally pelie- trated and unmasked by the keenness of a young Englishman in the diplo- i matic service, who is In love wlth a | young princess who aappens to be re- lated by marriage to the \u201cnoble Icount.° The struggle between the two men, for they instinctively recognize each other as an enemy from the outset, constitute the main thread lof the story.\u201cA .Weaver of Webs\" l has no other claim to recognition than ras a well told story of adventure.| : London; Methuen & Company.) THE BEST KNOWN BIRDS OF THE AMERICAN CONTINENT | For all those interested in birda whether young or old, Margaret Walk- jer's \"Our Birds and Their Neatlinge | will prove an enjoyable volume.Short essays, With colored illustrations are, given of twenty of the best known, birds on the North American continent.| Their characteristics, nesting habits, | care of young, thelr songs are outlined | in a simple and interesting style.There are included a number of poems or brief legends in connection with each of the birds described, thus lending variety and interest to the sketch.Technical details avoided in the text are suplied in \u2018an appendix.These sup- { ply all necessary data for identification.An attractive feature of the book is the \"illustrations.Besides fourteen colored full-page plates, there are fifty-six black and white half-tones from photographs.Among the writers drawn upon is Ernest Thompson-Seton, the Canadian writer of animals and birds.(New York: The American Book Company).: ' LITERARY NOTES OF INTEREST.Canon Law, of Christ Church Cathedral, Ottawa.has made a collection of his essays, to be known as \u201cA Par-! son's Ponderings,\u201d which will be published shertly by Mr.Willlam Briggs, Toronto.\u201cShining Eerry\u201d is the \u201csite chosen by Mr.Quillér-Couch: for fils new story to be published this autumn.\u201cTha l Shining Ferry\u201d Is to be published \u2018n Canada by The Copp, Clark Company.The same firm are also to issue a new story by Mr.W.W.Jacobs, \u2018Dialstone Lane,\u201d a new book of verse by Dr.Van Dyke, \u201cMusic and Other Poems,\u201d and a holiday edition of Eugene Field's \u201cPoems of Childhood.\u201d The publishing house of William Briggs, Toronto, will soon issue a Canadian edition of \"The House of Fulfil- I ment, \u201d by George Madden Martin, which ran as a serial in McClure's, and attracted widespread attention.The ' same house will also issu an important \u201cCanadian Bibliography, of which Professor Horning, of Victoria.Univer- elty, and Mr.Lawrence -Burpee, of Ot- ltawa, are joint éditors.and a book of \u2018fairy tales by Miss Elizabeth Sanders son.Many persons who know the delightful \u201cRuthless Rhymes for Heartless Homes,\u201d by that humgrous English-{ man, Col.D.Streamer, e unaware of the fact that in private life he is Captain Harry Graham, aide-de-camp of {our own Lord Minto.\u2018The latest nubli- \u2018cation of \u201cCol.Streamer\u201d is a plece of mere l \u2018Clothes-Preserver life of clothes, Fas-Kopue |, -Fels-Naptha soaks the dirt ot, ; Takes little rubbing.Doubles ay an ; prise of 24 articles dea) with tw aif nt pre es w em çent pros NE ?Canada aince gies on, * during glial reference to or th e census 1891-1901, tay vof the returnis ha previous- iy been published.B = oola, the Norwegian colony in Columbia, ls taken as 3 cal of the Western settlements and MOSS will be found most interesting.not Progress Higher Education for Women,\u201d by ie da D.Oakley tu 3 splendid feature.Mr.Archibald Blue pom made by farmers itn those made by the manufacturers, while À L.Mc- Credie contrasts the earn:$; power of the farmer with that of the \u201cfisherman.Mr.Henry Newbolt, who lately gave an interview to a writer on the ataff has resigned his editorship of Mr.John Murray's Monthly Review, where he will be succeeded am editor by Mr.Charles Han- bury-Willlams.As it is announced that Mr.Newbolt's other relations with the house of Murray will remain unchanged, he will probably devote himself to the writing of original work.His lack of time for other work was the one fault he found with editorial occupation, ee MISSIONARY CONVENTION AT BROCKVILLE CLOSED Annual Meeting of Women's Methodist Society of Montreal Conference.Brockville, Ont., Oct.8.\u2014(8pecial.)\u2014 The The meeting of the Women's Methodist | | hfissionary Society of the Montreal conference, which begun here on Tuesday, closed yesterday.The reports presented were encouraging.The report of the treasurer, Mr.Knox, showed that the total receipts for the year were $7,305.35, an increase of $376.53 over lust.year.Of the auxiliariex Sydenham Street.- Kingston, contributed the most, and of the circles, Winchester, For the coming year M, S.of Canada, which means that the Montreal branch should increase its givings by $4,000.$86,000 is asked from the W.1 } At thls morning's session the following officers were elected: President\u2014Mrs.(Dr.) T.G.Williams.Hon.vice-president\u2014Mrs.Lett.First vice-president\u2014Mrs.McRossie.Second vice-president\u2014Mra.Biglow, Third vice-président\u2014Mrs.(Rev.), Hughes.Recording secretary \u2014 Mrs.Sparks.Corresponding sccretary Mrs.(Rev.) \u2018F.A.Read.Treasurer\u2014Mrs.Knox.| i (Dr | | Mission band secretary\u2014Mrs.Balîley.| Superintendent systematic giving \u2014| Mrs.Kines.Dirtrict organizers\u2014Montreal, Mrs.W.J.Shaw: Kingston.Mrs.Mulir-' head; Brockville, Mrs.\u2018Reynolds: Matlida, Mrs.Palmer; Perth, Mrs.J.R.Lavell: Pembroke, Mrs.Smith and\u2019 Mrs, Dunlop, Ottawa.Mrs! Perkins and, Mrs.Henderson; Quebec and Stanstead, Mrs.Cleveland; Waterloo, Miss Howard, Huntingdon, Mrs.Boshart, OBITUARY Ottawa.\u2014Willlam Watson, who dled! Montreal on Tues.\u2019 fn the Hote! Dien, day, had kept a confectionery store here | for years.He was burfed at Beeth- wood.; Columbus, Ohlo \u2014 Peter Sells, the showman, dled here of aponlexy, ne | KI 65 vears.He.with his brothers.estah- lished the Sells Brothers\u2019 show in 1872.\u2018and _he has been in the show business: continually since.Rome, N.Y.\u2014Mrs.Emma Ewine Pal- \u2018ters, died at Shemhume, aged 60.Owing ! to a disease of a rheumatic nature.which has baffied the skill of many prominent physicians throu~hout the: country, Mrs.Palmer had lain mation- less upon her back, totally blind, and i I i with everv muscle rigid, for \u2018the past .twenty-seven years, Sault Ste.Marie, Ont.\u2014John ards, à ploneer resident of the district: of Algoma, died at Richards Landing after an extended I!Iness.The deceused Rich- was 75 years of age, and has lived in.this district the gre~ter part of hia lIfe.He first came to the Soo and conducted a general store here for some time.By the construction of à wood dock on St.Joseph's Island he laid the foundation of the town whfch now bears his name, ; Richards Landing.Winnipeg.\u2014Mrs.Agnes B.Culver.widow of Mr.H.Culver, Q.CC., is dead.aged forty-seven.She was a Miss Winks, of Montreal.She had been secs | retary of the Children's Home ever since the otganiantion of that institution; vice-president of the Art Association, vice-president of the Home Missionary society of Grace Church, vice- \u2018president of the Women's Council and \u2018was also prominently connected with the Aberdeen Society and the Domes-; tic Sclence Club.| Brockville, Ont.\u2014Word has been re-' ceived here of the death at Keene, N.Y, of 8.B.Williams, until recently a resident of Athens, fifteen miles from here, Mr.Williams was one of the pioneers of the dairy industry In Canada.When cheese factories were first inaugurated in Ontario, Mr.Williams actively engaged In the business.He afterwards became right-of-way agent for the purchase of lands necessary to bulld the Brockville, Westport and Sault Ste.Marie Railway, and when the road was built accepted the position of station agent at Athens.- Cornwall \u2014An old resident of Cornwall, Thomas Sauve, passed away at his home on East Water street, aged 79 years.Vankleek Hill, but lived in Cornwall for half a century.Had he lived un- tl next January he and his wife would have celebrated their golden wedding.Of thelr family of eighteen children fourteen are «till llving, seven sons and seven daughters, Joseph Sauve, Henry Sauve.Willlam Sauve, Mrs, A.Thom, and Mrs, Phil Brunelle, live In Montreal.Always Eat the Best JAMES STRACHAN, Bakers to Royalty PICTURE FRAMING If you want GOOD work at post REASONABLE prices go \u201cEASLEY, The Picture Frahw, 2087 St.Catherine \u2018strest, : 7 f* Green Cash Recelipts,\u2019\u2019 CALEDONIAN - \\nsuranos Company of Edindai 2), The Oldest Scottiah Fire OMos Funds Over - $11,000,000 ha Dttice for Canada, rientraët | \u2018Latiare LBW, \u2018Munger The deceased was born at! el ty used soap that cleaned au afrorvrards that It had destroyed th Se Soap 1.penrantood to be absolntely pure, containing no ap that wil = injure the daintiest fabric, hard rubbing.It washes equally well in hard or soft water without boiling or.- Follow the directions on the package and you will have à more successful wash with less labor.Your dealer is authorized to refund the purchase money to \u201canyone finding cause for complaint, .the profits | | LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED, TORONTO ' The Sunngaë Maids admire the results after washing the Sunlight way and Sausage Weohipery GASOLINE Get Special Terms Today ENGINES @ WILSON &ASONS 43 Ksplanade se Fest Toronte, Ont Punde & Boehm 2365 St.Catherine St.The most up-to-date Fair Stere in the cy.Ladies and Gentlemen choulé call on us before giving their orders else where, Our Wigs and Toupess are perfection im fit apd finish, Satisfaction guaranteed.; EE Lake of the Woods Milling Co, Limited, Flour in the The best Hard Wheat KESW World Is at ATi», 3,300 brie.rh rgest mill in the Brideb Empires PORTAGE LA PRAIRIE, 1,006 bris.per day.Our tlour has been exported to warm snd cold countries and is far famed for its keep iug qualities.All grades of hard wbeat fleur sold im barrels and bags.Quotstioss and other information on application Offices, \u201cis Fioor, C.P.R.Telegraph Bidg., Montreal.tmer, the last of the two \u2018\u2018Ossified\u2019\u2019 sis-i BR Smokers who have tried | Royal (Egyptian) CIGARETTES know they are good.They may not know that their exquisite flavor is due not only to the high class of pure TURKISH TOBACCOS which they are made of \u2014exclusively\u2014 but to the blending of these various grades.Over 16 varieties of highest class Turkish Tobaccos: combine to produce the flavor of OYAL EGYPTIAN Cigarettes You may pay more for other kinds but you cannot improve on the quality of Royal cigarettes.15c Per Package J.M.FORTIER, Limited, reve RS IN 1982 Notre Dame Street, Montreal BEEFENE , °° FOR SPORTSMEN Manufactured by the American Fluid Beef Company, Montreal.Oifice Supplies.No house in Montreal ts better equip- pes with Office Supplies of all kinda tationery, ete.Printing, ing.eheaply executed.' JOSEPH FORTIER, 4 \u2014\u2014\u2014 - GARDNER'S QUICK LUNCHES are fresh and sweet, served.That is why they are so popular.a bc, 10e or 15c Lunc night.SL UNIVERSITY STREBT.Try Bookbdinding, Ruli Ew.Relie\u2019s, ot2., quickly 4 ST.JAMES STREET.and nothing but the dest Open day and\u2019 to, T: Tayler & aud A), RER Agent: French bos Aone EE we A ah 2 PRICES FR: \u2018| Qualtty contiéered, than any other Needles, Oll, Repairs \u201cSinger Stores.9 .8307, \"ir 2437 az 5 No - p Modes Street.| tee LOWER POR ALL MAKES AT ~ OLDSMOBILE + In Goop RunNING ORDER LOTO FOR SAL At Half - \u2018Original Cost.APPLY WILLIAMS & WILSON 320-326 St.James St, Montreal.Builders, Plumbers, Painters, Contractors and Mill eme Strack.t.Catherine .Btrost., as {rumen Street.\u2018 PAS 00\" 0005 a Ps ÉTÉ EE - trance of the galleries.ESTABLISHED 1808.* eu Le Soar a 207 Leb | Weekly Talks to Herald Readers The woman who lives a great deal out-of-doors is a wise woman, for such a life brings to her not only strength and health, but a more even temper, à more contented mind, and a more intl- mate acquaintance with nature, which acquaintance amply repays the seeker of it.; There is a great exhilaration in the fresh air, the shining sun, the cool breezes of our fall months before the cold raing of November come in their pengtrating storms to make us shiver for the warm fire.The mountain walks are beautiful.the scarlet leaves are waitinz to be picked off the branch-|- es and ground, and taken home to ve pregeed.the scenery becomes most beautiful.The other parks are inviting and the city streets are attractive.for| walking, and exploring, tours in the cool days of fall before the sidewalks are wet and sloppy.Perhaps no city can offer a more interesting exploring ground than Montreal, full ag it is of places of historical interest.The little streets by the harbor, the cross streets of the eastern section, and the smaller streets towards St.Henri, are full of places, or human kind, interesting and typical of the many unique types which Montreal can show.To take a good guide of Montreal and vicinity and take walks to as many places of interest as are not too far distant, taking the car te others, would amply repay any one who had sufficient time to spend Ît thus, and would leave a certain amount of knowledge of the city obtaihabla in no other Way.; - here is no more interesting way of epending an afternoon than to go into A street, strange, to you, and follow It! to its\u2019 end, striking off to new streets If they anpear to be worthy of a walk through, If you go much to the eastern portion you will ind how the other Falf Mves far more to your personal eatisfaction than from reading of it.The nimless walker may well stay at hame, but the man or woman, girl og bos\u2019 who sees \u201csermons in trees\u201d and lessons in the pictures of a city's hu- maifity can find no better nor more In- rtédirtive way of spending leisure time thaï in walking.\u201cIf T were keeping house,\u201d said the girl who was not, \u201cI would do all my work on .rainy days and play on sun-| shiny ones.\u201d The housekeeper who had had many years of experience in'the work necessary to the cleanliness and comfort of & home, looked at the girl and smilsd pleasantly.\u201cBaby must be washed on sunshiny days as well as rainy ones,\u201d sald she.\u201cDinner must be cooked and dishes cleaned away.Floors must be swept.\u2018When you keep your house you will have tg work on both rainy and sunshiny days, for work cannot wait.\u201d \u201cStill\u201d said the girl, \u2018some housekeepers, if they plan to clean house on a certain day, will not put off cleaning \u2018their house no matter what \u2018may happen.A beautiful day, a prospective.pienie, a pleasant- journey will not, A SWEETLY SIMPLE GOWN FOR EVENING WEAR.The \u201csheerest of white organdie fashions this frock, in which the long.shoulder seam in cleverly defined with a band of Irish point applique embroidery, applied to a yoke of hand-run tucks which extends well down over the curve of the arm.The blouse shows very deen tucks and rows of net lace, these dropping intq the girdle of white louisine, stiffened with featherbone.The all-over net lace furnishes the puff sleave, and a lace frill makes a simple finish.There is a hip yoke to the skirt to which the full widths are shirred, twn deep tnoks or nun\u2019s folds, appearing ahove the hem.A little band of boned crinolette is run in the drop skirt to assist change thelr minds, and one would] in holding out the sheer fabric to advantage.think the housecleaning was, of all things, the most important in the world.\u201d © The young housekeeper smiled again as she lifted the baby in the air with a bounce and a catch, while the baby gurgled in delight.\u201cThey make a hardship of what is merely daily work to be arranged as they pleusc.If a woman is a slave to Her work, there is no proving to her that her duty is not to work until strength fails her.The sensible housekeeper keeps her work in order, and arranges i in the way that will give her the most pleasure possible without being a careless worker.\u201d : \u201cThat is what I think,\u201d said the.girl,.emphatically.; .\"= ° + As Constancy Grey walked down Notre Dame Street, she asked herpelf Again and again why she had stopped off at Montreal.way to New York, and, almost against her will, hed she delayed in the city for Sunday.She knew the places of interest well, had been here often anil here she was again without any definite explanation to give in regard to the reason for her action, , The air was warm with just enough ef the fresh cool breeze to tell of coming fall, and, as Constance turned the corner hy Notre Dame Church she felt the force of the breeze as it came up \u201cSt, Sulpice Street\u201d She stopped, not knowing whether to continue her way uptown or take another look at the tourist's shrine, Notre Dame.She followed the last inclination and crossed the street, entering the church by the dgor leading to the outside en- She followed the stairs up one by one, stopping once fn awhile to look .down on the street below.She had often gone up the rtairs before and felt her familtariy with the place thankfully as a kind of companionship to her in her loneliness.She way s'raady thinking\u2019 of the, trip back to New York the next diy, and enticipated, with a Wapat-ot pleasure, the hom cuming.n'TNôte: was also a little of relf2f gs sliq thought of Carl Maynard.~ Bhe had \u2018persistently - tun seay frock Me ever since he had, as EE a di oo\" She shqauld be on her|.persistently impressed upon her mind twa years\u2019 previously that he loved her and only her, and would love no other.; \u201cI had to come North, you know.\u201d \u201cIrom the: north he had come,\u201d -he he was very quiet, \u2018business matters, would say, and when he returned.to the that is all.T am going back to New north, she should go with him.How-, York, however, unless you.stay in the ever, she had received word at last that: North\u2014now.\" he had returned quite suddenly vwith-| There wam a determination in the set out lier, and as she repeated to hersel!, jue and the.eter that made a again and again she was very glad.queer little feeling creep over Con- The windows in the first gallery were! c\u2018onstance\u2014Conatance, the reserved, the open and Constance stood at one of.;Inapproachable.\u201d.them lacking down at the street.She; Her voice shook as she turned away was in a somewhat thoughtful mood as from him.: she turned away and walked toward : ?one of the pews and sat down, resting He spoke slowly, with a slight English accent.i \u201cI wil lnever, never, never marry you, \"+ \"IQ Ea TT a Bas A REN fd > ; 0061j00b0a00080008009030000900000089093090000Y ç St) 2 von MONTREAL, SATURDAY, OCTOBER Constance drew herself up and spok angrily.i \u2018 Car] Maynard, I hate you, I hate yeu.\u201d .Then her eyes flashed and she took a step back trem him, but not soon enough, for-her hands were caught and she heard that quiet voice.\u2019 \u201cNo, you love me.\u201d : Constance ewayed a little, and the next minute she was crying on his shoulder.\u201cIt was a hard fight, dear, but I knew you loved me, and now you will come North, to me,\u201d sald the man\u2019s voice again.What was said afterward matters not., Canadian trees are quiet concerning such conversations, but.when the text car came along a very quiet litttle girl got on, and a big fellow with a satisfied look in his eyes got on with her.: \u201d When Conatance took the New York train home, a Lelegram preceded her.\u201cArrive 7,60 to-night.Cari Maynard comes with me.\u201d - .* Longfellow, not So many years ago, wrote those lines, now so familiar to the English-speaking world, \u201cShip's \u2018that pass in the night and speak each | other in passing.\u2019 An even fewer number of years ago Beatrice Harreden wrote the book,now so little read, and spoken of, \u201cShip's sue I GE UE: 6.bot, 4 ! UE > 8, 1904.LS infinitely painstaking and seem the hook itself was proving the CaFeful work, the craftsmen will be- force of the quotation.The quotation; o0me fewer and the work more last- appeals to us, therefore the baok was In: .read \u2018by UK, and was worth thé reading.Like the ships in the night, how-!and \u2018 wholesome as that Pass in the Night,\u201d and it would! demands .e The world has nothing so cheering friendship, the friendship based on.mutua) respect and| good-will, When the hands hang heavy and the ever, it has passed.It has gore the way of thousande of lterary efforts] which surprise, claim attention and are then forgotten.Mary Johnaton, Win-leyes see the world awry and trouble- Mol Cure live Behrelner.an some, the friend's cheer, cheers the aclgren, S.R.Crockett are types of heart.The neighbor who puts out a the hest style of writers we have LO; helping hand to neighbor, and cares for, amuse us at present.We admire thelr| op gympathizes with the one who 9; style, read their pots and put them) stricken by sorrow or sickness,ls mak-| away to clamor for new ones, or Slt ing a new link in the chain of earthly een jen ton Y to pee Scott and friendishp, by binding it to gentle com- ackeray, and - rea em a over.passion.again, \u2019 When the babe\u2019 lies in the The writer of to-day writes for to-!color in its carket; when the day.The hooks he writes, we read to-' walks the street looking for work; diy.To-morrow we forget them,while when the mother les ill unto death; ickens is In a class with Shakespeare, then comes the friend's helping hand and Hugo.He draws humanity in a, to cheer and blcas, to pass humanity's minuter way, touches-it gently and compassion on to humanity.There is.dramatically, sometimes tragically, as an old hymn which ends so beautifully in his Tale of Two Cities.Him work is in its plea for human kindness: careful, and studied, and lasting.We' \u201cWhen you sleep In solemn silence, read, and re-read and fall in love with; \u2018Neath the moon and evening dew, | his Little Dorrit, and his foolish little, Strange hands that you bave strength- waxen father : and out.Dora and quiet Mary, until they seem like true friends to us.\u2018The difference! ls in the work, and, the genius.The) age calls for the genius of the hour,\u2019 and the age obtains {t, + [ | The Woman Who Thinks ; The Woman Who Does aa | | THE NEW TEACHER.I (By E.5.Furlong.| So often, at the beginning of the school season, 1 hear the question; \u201cHow do you like your new teacher; is she pleasant?\u2019.But I never hear that any one asks the teacher how she likes «the \u2018new people.\u201d No one asks If the people are pleasant to her, If she has a comfortable school and | sleeping room, if ehe has time lo walk or visit.or any other question to show that the teacher is anything more than a mere biped.1 am truly sorry for the young girl who goes.for the first time, into a strange home to commence her wage- earning as à teucher.She arrives with her trunks, perhaps only one or maybe two, and « box containing her.treasured books and probably a little keepsakes and piétures from her own home room, ta brighten and give.comfort to the new and strange walls: which she expects to call her own for the months which seem to stretch 20, far into the future and so far &wAy from the loving home hearts.If her trunk is large she will hear hints and grunts of disapproval as it is carried to her rom.If she has two small trunka\u2014\" Wonder what she wants with all this truck\u201d Must be\u2018 going to stay forever\"\u2014and -many more Te- marks not always as kind as .these.Talk about heroism! It requires the bravest, stoutest heart to face nl those eyes at her first meal.She knows abe is being \u201cpicked to pleces.™.Everything she says.and does, every- | thing about her dress to the tie of her | smallest bit of ribbon, Is being scanned: for comment when her back {e turned.: Yet she is expected to appear at her, best.on all occasions.If she doesn't have a cry and wish for home when ; she gains the safety of her own room.she {4 no true girlie.: , She has never taught before; Her, standing in her class was high and\u2019 her place in the hearts of her school- | mates wga secure and warm.Her, modest, timid, refined - senaitiveness asks for a little of the love and sym-, pathy she had always received at: school.Her pupils think her cowardly! and show a little of the \u201cbully\u201d that| Is In all young animals.She ls re-; ported in the family as being, sllly, | valn \u2019and conceited.She 1s neither) blind nor deaf, and quickly understands the undercurrent which is too often helped along instead of checked ! by the older members.It ie \u2018grand tun\u2019 to make the teacher \u201cmad,\u201d All, these keen stabs must be endured, Not: even the home letters must breathe of them for the sake of the paltry sum ; coming at the end of the term to help; ' | \u2018the home fund.: .| Nomen the schgol hours have tolled | out thelr limit and ashe is free for a any one ask her! ttle while, docs Hy like to walk, | pleasantly if she would pleasant roads or paths where she can teel that rudeness and fll-manners are; not everywhere?Does any one ask \u201cmoma of the nelghbors to visit her, or her head In her hands.Carl aynard.Why do you mot 80 grrange the Sabliath programme 5 \u2018hile a | away?\" that she can attend church regular meant hile a man with a quick deter The voice broke and the girl wasnear-| I am referring to the girl who ac- med step, was making his way ly cryin - cepts a situation In à country home, through the first gallery.His eyes fel: 'Y CrYing.referring a few .puplls as her first! - Pp 8 upon the figure seated In the pew, He|- The slow English voice was speaking: experience.Too often she is treated.started d little, then drew back.; again .a a mere hireling, her tastes and, \u201cI do not go away until you go with me.You love me.You do not know that you love me.I know.\u201cImpossible!\u201d he sald to.himself and went on towards the door.He looked back as he opened it and stood in the light.The girl's face was Wait.\u201d - \u2018 raised.There was a quick movement, The gray eyes looked down into hers and the door swung to quietly, but the: from above that firm mouth and those man was on the inside.i folded arms.She turned petulantly.Constance gtood up.The regular features and hardly knew what she wanted, only to clear skin made her profile strangely: Set away, and so she walked across the distinot in the dim light.She gathered square with so deflant æ look in her up her skirts and turned up the staps, eves that passers-by watched her smil- stopping to look agaln from the opened Ingly, as they noted the man walking window, as she passed it.quietly behind her.,A ray of sunlight fell upon her as She stopped the first car shé saw and she stood and a man waiting at tho got on hoping that those gray eyes were doorway set his lips tightly.came towards the entrance the strong steps.But at the next corner a young light was still in her eyes and she did: man swung on and came up to sit be- not sce his figure until \u2018she had put: side her.: out her hand to push back the door.| She did not know where she Then the hand fell limp and the face: going qnd he did not Ask her.At last went white.| hs voice hroice the silence.Conatance was angry.angry at her-| \u201cWere you going to get off here?\u201d pelf, at everybody.She turned with: -She did not know where she was and sudden self-control without a word and: was too proud to say se.She got oft stepped- out on the landing.Carli the car blindly.Maynard followed and they went down.Then the car went on.She knew he the stairs together.When they stood was laughing at Wer as she looked up.outside she turned.; | There.waa not a house in\u2019 sight.The \u201cWhy,\u201d she said sugrily, biting her trees werd swaying in the bdréese and lips to keep back the tears, \u201cwhy are there he stood like a Irom fence before .* ; | > .; .\u2018 mer rats secs Men re I can.ulled her gloves on and She wanted to cry, or something, she: As she staring at.vacancy over qn Notre Dame wae: trod upon, if they are con-; sidered at all, and at the close of\u201dthe term she returns to the home fold .with a loss of much of the refined \u2018 femininity so dear in every girl and.woman, and a hard, bitter feeling ngeinst employers which leaves an ineffaceable scar in her heart-and an \u2018 Ineffacenble.pitiful tone on her face.WOMBDN ROWERS, {At all the larger popular sumnier re-, ! porte, boating for women {a coming In! | vogue, and women's elght-oared crews, \u2018are by no means a varity.The winter.will soon come during which the or- \"ganization of s hosting club may be talked over and effected, The first step in the organisation of a woman's boat club is, of course] to enlist the support of those likely to be | interested in aquatic sports, When thelr co-operation haa been eecured, | there must be the Inevitaule assens- ment to cover tting up or renting s suitable boathouse and buying or renting à œuitxble boat, Then comes i the problem of How to instruct the members in the rudiments of the art of rowing.In most cases the servicss | ot a brother or friend of one of the.clip members can be enlisted for coaching, and in cvery city of any konsiderable population situated nn the water soms old boatman can be engaged for this purhose, where ather coaches are not available.It ia Important to learn the first steps correctly in the beginning, for a poor siyle of rowing once aaquired js often hard to unies.\u2019 ht aerswomien and a coxawain » éha li of & boat's capatity, wo pleasures few .Î - + when more than that number wish to join the club, pair-oared gigs and! four-oared barges are secured untü \u2018 all are accommodated.Then races and regattas may be added to the sports of the club; and tt js likely to: become so popular that in\u2019 winter, when the freezing weather makes rowing out of the question, dances and card parties are arranged in the name of the club to keep the crews from forgetting their allegiance, A boating club may be made to combine piearantly social and recrea- tive advantages, in a way perhaps not equaled by any other kind of organization.Even a yacht club.whose activities are perennlal, is less excellent In this respect, for the physical exercise required of its members ls not nearly so great.\u2019 = \u201cTHE UNEMPLOYED.In the experience of the majority, adversity means simply having less than everything we want.We cannot have a new winter gown; we must - get along without new decorations in the drawing room; we must keep the children in the public school another year Instead of sending them to a fashionable academy; In extreme instances we have to let thie servante 80 and do the housework ourselves : with the assistance of a laundress.Happily, few of us know the fearful void constantly deepening tn the nome as the father enters day after day with always the same dreadful message to deliver\u2014\"ne work.\u201d The man's experience in this situation is a bitter one-how bitter, perhaps the man only knows.\"As a class, women too little realize .the burden which the husband carries in the office of bread-winner.We see the man at work at his trade or in his profession; his hours are shorter than the, n.other's hours are: he works often in the sunshine among cheerful compan-; fons while the woman toils In the | darkened, silenced home, her sole com- | panfon.it \u2018may be, a palin-stricken child; sometimes, to the woman, the burden seems unequally divided between the man and wife.But the.man bears the weight of the knowledge that If his industry flags, his family suffers want, If his work ceases, his children cry for bread, beg.or-worst luck of all to the right sort of man\u2014his wife must go to work to buy the bread he cannot earn, Still, cruel as is the adversity afilicting in.\u2018particular the man out of work, it i8 | the wife who measures by Inches the pall of darkness that In one plece set- | t'es upon the man.It is the wife who! each day apportions the diminishing supply of bread in the house; lt is her hand which cuts the.thinner and smaller pieces, while to her heart, calling her name, the children sp erying for more; it is her eyes, des- | or does any one offer to show her' perate as those of a hunted animal ithat arises from the ashes will cling ; \u2018to the cloths, that see elbows and toes poking out for the want of something with which to patch tattered garments and worn\u2019 rhoes; and nnally It is her eyes which watch filth accumulating in the home for want of money with which to buy 8080.i.; \u2018More hopeless than sonpless poverty\u2019 \u2018in George Eliot's characterization of the most intense despair she Knew.The comparison la well made.Can we who tub and change our linen every day fancy the misery of not havin the, price of a cake of soap¥% In every town and vil- FOUR WOMANS shrdlu 8 yta mm lage, for women of clubbing propensities, would it not be very practical enterprise to establish a local labor bureau-\u2014an organization designed \u2018to help men to get work?The endeavor might prove more beneficial than the study of the early English poets or the making of red flannels for the uplifting of tropical heathen souls.\u2014Har- pers, THE WORKINK GIRL.IDEAL BUSINESS PRINCIPLES.For the Regulation of Conduct in an Office, : \"1, Observe with exactitude the hour.set for arrival.2.Determine to devote yourwelf entirely to the perfect accomplishment! of your daily routine of work.De satisited with nothing less than per-! tection in every detail.3.Avoid as far an possible all con- veraation -during business hours.4 In your daily necessary contact with others In the office determine to avold atrioctly any personal communications.Never repeat the most trivial, word of occurrence which takes place; in your presence.Never criticise any, one or anything.Ba &bzolutely non-, + committal, yet be gracious in manner, ; word and deed, and as far as lleg In u' power seek to render little daily Ainan es and services aa ophortuni- ty offers.- .ONE CENT.door and windows, and hang up in this steamed room the mussed and wrinkled clothes, leaving them there for several hours: then open the windows, and door and take the garments and dry them in the fresh air and sun.A soft silk dress that ls mussed can be treated in this same way.It a shiny place comes on woollen goods when pressing .cover with \u20183 damp cloth and hold a hot {ron over it untll sufficient steam is produced to raise the nap.Housekeepers are often troubled by mildew in damp closets.By putting a |bowl or deep plate full of quicklime in the closet, and renewing it when the lime becomes slack, clothes hung there will be preserved from spots of mildew or mould.RECIPES.BAKED GOOSHE, Select a young goose; singe and draw ft, and wipe it carefully Inside Boil three good-sized potatoes; when done mash them; add to.them an equal quantity of soft breadcrumbs, half a can of mushrooms chopped fine, a.teaspoonful of onior Juice, a saltspoonful of celery seed, or half a cupful of chopped celery, and a rounding teaspoonful of salt; mix these together, stuff them.into the goose; sew up the vent, put the goose in shape, stand it in a baking- pan, and pour in the botom of the pan A pint of strained tomatoes; add 8 teaspoonful of salt and a tablespoons ened, .Lo .ny tr | ful of chopped onion; bake in a quick May strew lilles over you.\u2018oven until] the goose Is thoroughly \u2018 The lilies and violets of human thank- browned.Cool the oven, and baka.fulness may be ours indeed, if we will slowly for one hour and a half, bast- jing frequently.When done there -She bad dwelt.in college settlements |amohg other remed 0 When the age but sow the secds of human friendli- \u2014Christie Carew.VE II MIE IRIS MARIE | ~The Home.i ness.a HUM MINE EI IIEE \u2018 side.dbaking-pan.THE ETERNAL FEMININE.| By Tudor Jenks.i Ani could write herself A.B.\u2019 She had studied a profession, Which had added an M.D.And had clear, decided views Qu political developments As she read the dally news.° .{ But she stil! remained all feminine \u2018Despite acquired lore fhe could never meet a woman Without Doticing all she wore., i CLOTHESPINS.1 What housekeeper has not some time | put out a wklhing that looked white enough to pleasa any 1\u20ac, and found later that the tôp of the prop had slid along the clothesline and let the clothes get solled by sweeping on the ground?Such trouble may be avoided by having a suitable prop.Make the prop T-shaped and stand the top of the T on the ground.The top maybe about four feet long and should be set to run in the same direction the line does.- A satisfactory way of managing clotheapins is to suspend on the clothesline the basket holding them.This is best done by having attached to -the basket a cord long enough to allow: the basket to swing ahout waist high: the cord to have at one end a hook that may be dropped over the line.In hanging out clothes one can back up against the basket, pushing it along the line.The hands are not full of pins, making the hanging of clothes difficult, yet plenty of pins.are always near, so the wind does not have a chance to blow the clothes down before they have beén pinned on.By leaving the basket on the line until the clothes are removed the pins will not be scattered, time will not be wasted, and vexation, will be avoided.: ; FOR THE LINEN-CLOSET.For each shelf and drawer of the bed-linen closet make pads to fit, consisting of two thicknesses of cotton batting covered with cheesecloth and sewed together around the edges.Before doing this spread thickly between the layers of batting lavender flowers with which a little orrls powder lus been scattered.A delightfully delicate odor of lavender and violets will permeate the contents of the closet, and the bedrooms will always be taintly suggestive of those flowers.WHEN SHAKING THE FURNACE FIRB.' One of the greatest annoyances to the housekeeper is the accumulation of dust from furnace fires.Many persons make the mistake of closing the registers before shaking the furnace fire.Instead, leave them open, place wet clothes over them, and the dust If the registers are closed the dust will settle underneath, and when they are afterwayd opened puffs of dust will arise and spread over the contents of.the rooms, \u2014 NECESSARIES FOR THE MEND- ING-BASKET.A pair of shears; a pair scissors, a yard tape-messure; & small pincushion filled with pins; a needlebook contain! Ing assorted darning-needies, assort- | ed sewing needles, a tape-needle and a bodkin; rolls of tape of different widths in gray, white and black; three sniall boxes -containing different sorts of buttons; a card each of white and black hooks and eyes; darning cotton of different colors for hose and gloves: a hose and a glove darner; a thimble, and à box of common.starch for per-! spiring fingers\u2014all these are of .uso {tn the mending-basket.SALT BATHS.- A woman undergong treatment for that most distressing of all aliments, nervous prostration, has found \u201chelp, fs tried, In the use £ sait water in her daily cold bath.; She soaks à rough wash-cloth in a\u2019 strong solution of sea-salt, dries it.: and rubs vigorously with it, every morning, till the flesh Is in a glow, ! AFTER THE BUMMER.Remeniber, when putting away your.white surminer dresses and coats, to use blue tissue paper, or, better still, blue stlesia or muslin.Ppecially should this be done with a dress or waist of satin or one that Is trimmed with white ribbon., 1t ta so disappointh g, to take out a white dress that has! been Jald away and find it has turned yellow.It is also Alsappointing to take out a winter cloth skirt or suit and find it wrinkled from pack- The best way to restore strain it in a gravy-pot.should be sufficient sauce in the bottom of the pan to measure half a pint; \u2018 BAKED TURKEY.Three days after the turkey has been hung wipe it on the outside with a damp cloth and carefully wipe the in- Trust it in shape; put it In a Add two teaspoonfuls of salt to half a pint of water or stock; turn this into the pan.Rub the breas | She had been through school and college ee the turkey with either the turkey fat or butter; put in a very hot oven where it will brown quickly.When 1t 1s thoroughiy browned cool the oven and roast slowly for fifteen \u2018 minutes to each pound of turkey, basting every twenty minutes.If the stock or wae ter in the pan evaporates tilt the turkey, you will find the body of the turkey containing a large quantity of melted fat; baste with this instead of stock or water.\u2018 Turkey roasted in this way is much sweeter than when stuffed.CHICKEN CROQUETTES.Chop sufficient cold boiled chicken to make one quart; add to it two lével teagpoonfuls of salt, two tablespoonfuls of chopped parsley, a quarter of a grated rutmeg, a tablespoonful of grated onion and a saltspoonful \u2018of red pepper; mix thoroughly, Put over the fire a pint of milk; add toit.rubbed to a smooth paste, two tablespoonfuls of butter and four of flour; stir until smooth and thick: add the chicken: mix well, and turn out to cool; when cold form into croquettes, dip in egg, roll in breadcrumbs, and fry in hot fat.Serve plain or, with peas, FRIED PINEAPPLE.Cut a smallish pineapple into haif- inch slices, paring the skin, of course, and split in half three or four ordinary sponge-cakes.Fry these latter in the .chafing-dish in a tablespoonful .of butter til] they are light brown op both sides.Take them out and Reep them hot.Fry the pineapple slices \u2018in a like amount of butter and their own Juice, Pour cream over them, and serve on the browned.sponge-cake.Correspondence.(All communications should be addressed te Christie Carew, The Herald, Montreal.) Madge E.\u2014I am asking my correspondents if they can supply the recipe for ask for.disposition, generous, little erratic, Fleld Daisy.\u2014You are straightforward to a degree, just, ambitious and self-opinionated.; Pp Marguerite.\u2014Your writing, perhaps, is not your strong point; but cheer up, you may improve, or be consoled with but perhaps a the thought that \u2018\u2018good writing is the dunces\u2019 art,\u201d You are sympathetic, kind and generous, but I am sorry to say a little careless, ; Pankey Poo.\u2014You are painstaking and precise in all you do; thoughtful, honorable and your judgment is excellent, especlally in liking The Herald so much.Sister E.\u2014Your writing is hardly formed yet, and it is consequently difficult to determine your chief characteristics, but you are neat, careful as to details, warm-hearted, and generous.I am afraid I do not know what that famoue \u2018mole\u2019 means, no doubt, though, something nice.Your brother stems a manly young fellow, with his heart in.the right place, but I am afraid is easily légd.He is generous almost to a fault, and thinks well of the world in general.(Caesar.\u2014 Impulsive,\u201d good-hearted, intelligent and judging from your photo, good to look at, but your weak point is your lack of firmuess.Form an opinion carefully and then stick to Wilt-one of my readers send me a good recipe for apple marmalade?- eae.mt ° UNINTERESTING PEOPLE.They live in a quiet sort of à way In a quiet sort of street, They don't meet a great many people, nor Impress the people they mect.The newspapers never mention their names, The world doesn\u2019t care what they do.\u2018 They never go in for anything much, And their intimate friends are few.He never has had a favorite c'ub, Though somèbody said he might, For a flat little nose on the window pane A site him every nigbt; n Undo all the work of the cemb, : As be sits In the quietest rort of a way To his quictrat sort «ft a home.fhe Qdoran\u2019t belong to n woman's club, She hasn't: a singly fad, Sh« fanends her time vith a htire-cyed lasn And a mischievous little lad.fhe never unraveled » problem of life, She doesn't know lots of things, She plays with the \u2018kids\u2019 and works all day And most of the time ohe sings, .4 Hé tent like inost other burdbands at She isn't like most other wives, i And they never attemnt to make a chi .In the course of their quiet Hven; J But once in a while thay dress tbe \u201clide,\u201d ing.thelr \u201cAna ga to spend the day + fresh appearance is to turn on the In |a mine little quiet country spot iy hot water in the bathroom.shut the| 1 a nics little auiet way.9 ox You are of a kindly.eight littl» fingers and two little thumbs - à .My SU ES 53231 A Sein ov ME 7 TARA Cr en TRE ee NES va rien \\ Week is Ressonably © Interesting./ « FANTANA\u201d A CHICAGO HIT Mrs.Brown-Potter\u2019s Season Collapses in London\u2014Many Musical Attractions Coming to This City\u2014Plenty of Amuse- \u2018 ment Projects.The announcement of Joseph Jefferson's retirement was emphatically the | event of the past week.He made the statement :n New York.\u201cbut 1 shal Mr.Jefferson, used to that, and 1 shall begin to en-, 0! long holi-! joy what I have looked forward these many years\u2014my long, ! Fer uninterrupt- jay.in which I shall edi life, my painting, edly nature in ou: io0 my books and pleasan begin my holiday at last.\u201d An immense public will regret that Mr.Jefferson will be seen no more ol: the stage: but among the younger gel- eration, whose memory of him does not æo back further than twelve years, regret is tempered by the fact that during ail that time he was content to sound but one note of the magnificent, gzmut of his powers Probably nv, actor has ever been so completely sentified with one part as has Jeffer- eon with \u201cRip Van Winkle.\u201d and It is: impossible not to remember that Amer- tcan dramatic art was the poorer by his refesei 0 crate new characteriza-' .© Mrs Brown Potter as\u2019 2 Dressmak-\u2019 ers Modal\" is ihe beading which the Daïür Mai! put over its notice of the those who hold that Calve's is going production of \u201cThe Golden LiÆht\" at the Sevor Theaire a week ago.The cabled announcement of the withdrawal M The pièce and the termination of * Nes Poner'e Season\u201d \u2018in London reach- .And a discovery.+ here before \u2018he London papers cou- taining the criticisma thet killed It ; , - - » - ase Della Fox apparently achieved al her oif-time personal effectiveness or tem occasion of her returr 1041he sms ser a lang absence las: Satur- dx night A: jeas: 1 hope she gid: bu even Thet fac: is obscured beneath ihe chorus of critical condemuation the: hes ariser around The West: Poi: Cadet\u201d musica] comedy.+ - - The onlr evem ir New Tork re week vas Nime .Achmanr-Heink'e appeur- an ir brig operz.Mme.Schomann- Teint is known 10 bave been making 471.000 \u20ac yeu iT grand opera.sp there! nous: Br consiéerable money in the p her thing.\u2018Love's Lotiery\u201d was tbe Lite of the piece.book dr Strange.nse nv Julicr Bdearas.The Ne York Heruid caliet 11 \u201che bes: light oper: since \u2018Robin Booed.\u201d Jt was a rompieils sucress.arlisuc.popular and \u201cnancial.and toe mos: extraondinaTy.thmg abou: i: is that the critics coto- pia tha the compust Dar T0: given th Ata-\"enough 10 do.Ahogether it iF apeily tur most encouraging sign of 1iTIDE Kool taste tha! many months have giver ut.The book: is described as far below the music.bu: of tbe lai-.ler there a+ pO: a dull pumber in the\u2019 operetiz.and only \u2018one that 8 nt.mausicaliv good .- - e .\u201cThe Schumann Henk comic opera company iucluder Waliace Brow niow: a yeung Canadiaii.who has sho: suéden- + initio vocai prominence in the cliief baritone rois: Gevrgr L.Tatimann, the spieudid tenor, who accompanied | Grace Van Sipddiford in \u201cReg TFea- ther.\u201d and Leoiuse Gunning.once so- rate to Frank Daniele and De Wolf clientélle in New York: Dre.Pat Caanp-' Masiovæ in \u201cResurrection,\u201d \u201cin which Bopper.: æ .The movement of grad opera stare nig.light opera isgret confined to Mme.Rchumanr-Heink d Fritz seheff.Liza Lehmann, the © poser of \u2018In a Persian Garder.\u201d and of the inusie tu' \u201cSergean: Brus,\u201d is about to write 8 gre of the best hinportations from Kug- morality gives a magnificent.opportun- tighter romantic opera on the subject of Goldemitivs \u201cVicar of , Wakefield\u201d \u2018for avid Bispham.the baritone, Mr.Bis- pham will play the Victor when Ma- daine Lehman's opera is performed iu London next scason.i » .\u2018.| \u201cFantana.\u201d ir which Jefferson d'An-, gelis opened in Chicago.is said to have | very dull book, which 1s absolutely .ost to sight in the magnificent gyra-' toner of gorgeous girls, gorgeous 0 ¢ .® The very es terprising press, agent.of the Judependent.Booking Office, or vhatever it now calls fiself, continues to supply me with an -irmunehse amount of reading matter concerning tie doings * a EH | ss) A y (A 40% UY ! 4 1 | YVETTE GUILBERT, - Mile.Yvette Guilbert has been signed by Klaw & Erlanger for a tour of America next autumn in a comedy with music to bo called \u201cIn the Gay City.\u201d Mile.Guilbert will act in English but sing -in French, of Mrs.Fiske.Tt ig pil very Interesting und, Mra.Fiske is undoubtedly a great.actress, though her \u201cMary of Magdalen\u201d which 1 saw in Toronto an year ago, WAs uj acute disappointment, But the sad fiat.remuina Lhat Montreal\u2019s adequate theatres are all in.the hands of the theatrical trust, and th there is no possibility of our seeing Mrs.Fiske in this city unless it.were at the Arena.And the ides of Mra.-Fiske's mitroscopic voice let loose \u2018to wander and lose itac'f in the vastness of the Arena is too trugle for words, Ho Montreal cannot he expected to take an interest In anything more thun Lhe bare fact that Mra.Fiske\u2019 \u201cBecky \u2018Sharpe\u201d revival at the Manhattan le proving a marked success.In an emphatic \u201croast\u201d of Zangwill\u2019s \u201cBerlo-Comic Governess' in the current number of \u201cThe Theatre,\u201d I note the statement that only one of the cast \u201cmay be sald to stand out in anything like individual characterization, and that is Eva Vincent as Mrs.Naper, of Holly Hall, a bedizened_lady who has {nfermittent spells of cockney dialect.\u201d MUNDAY KNIGHT.HIS MAJESTY'S THEATRE.\u201cResurrection,\u201d and by that {s meant the original dramatization by Bataille and Morton, which has been, in turn, the.dramatic sensation of the world's three WNggest capitals, will have its first appearance: in Montréal on Monday vening at Jils Musestv's Theatre.with CFhat this actress, %letates Government for the hand \u2018 Blanche.Walsh fn the character of Masiovïä.Her supporting company includes most of the orlginul cast as seen during the jong yun of the.play in\u201d New York, and the scenic production, it ts promised pariculisi.Blunclie Widsh has played severai engugements ins this ¢ity, aud her popu- uurity Was increased with every visit.; noted: for her rate beauty, should choose ua role Hke neither her youth, or her physical charm would Le of any material aaslst- anes, wus à surprise to mont people, und that she should achieve the persona} triumph which she did, was à greut- cr surprise still, ; Fhaf Tolstof's extranrdinary study of ity to the uctress fortunate to be cast for Muslova, is.evidenced by the fact that §t hug established the fame of three actresses who have essayed the role respectively in Paris, London and New York.Mise Walsh's success hus Wnidoubtedly Lern the greatest of the fÂirez, for 1m America Lhe play hus enjoyed a far longer and more Prosperous career than it did abroad, and has firmly established her as one of the most igs VICTIRIA WL) ERS, ' In \u201cThe\"Way of The Transgressor,\u201d at the Academy of Music Next Week., Will be us eluborate in-every| Pa that an English 'reglmental band has been ou tour In the United States.«\u20ac THAT HAPPY ENDING MANIA.\"A most.regrettable concession to popular taste has just been mide tu the case of the German military play, \u201cTaps,\u201d pr sented ,by the Kelceyv- Shannon company.The original story is morbid, but absolutely, logical and 4 correct presentation of German feeling.The daughter of a sergeant-ma- jor, a8 veteran of the service and honored, 1s discovered hy her .flance, & corporal whos also has earned distine- tion, in a young lleutenant's chamber at night.The lover calls the seducer to account and {s \u2018promptly cyt down by the.officer's sword.He ja then placed under arrest for assault, In the- military trial which follows the fucts of the case are gradually brought the contempt of even his commsjon- ed.comrades.\u201d He presnts himself before the lleutenunt and -begs him to maké the reparation which will his fumilly's name.Trained too the service of the army, his attitude to- wurd the man who has ruined his the hard and fast requirements fasnous\u201d dramalle actresses of tho Ainerican stage.Therc\u2018are forty-two speaking parts fu the play, the more fmportunt of wideh will be nsmpmed by Mr.Alexist- der Von Mitzel, Foster Lardner, Wis Jian Wadsworth, Creorge Meech, Mink Helen.Wire, Isis, Maynard, Jenga Ralph and Mre.Henry Vinderhoff.on .° ° : THILATIRIS FRANCAIS, Wil the officer marry his discipline, No; because soclul* ell- danghter?quette forbids a commigsioned man to wed ito tal us\u2014 WH the-efficer_ afford him the n family of inferior social satisfaction which every mat of hon- jor has the right to demand?No; be cause svela) etiquette forblds a.come missldned man to wed into a family of inferior suclaïf status.WH the of- .; a ficer afford him the: satisfaction which | \u201cThe Jolly Grass Widows™ are the il-levery mau of honor has the right to traction av the burlesque house next omg?No; becuuss the vegulu- SA¥URDAY, OCTOBER to light and the offendhig officer earns save homé is respectful, and in accord with ot ;Ç f.2° i Tt 8; 180\u20ac AÙ prapes 2 qr twa = a » J al the Garden by the way, will view week the start of My, Con- | rled'4 German perforimance, \u2018The cule I pany at the Metropolitan will be in y lnrge part made up of old fuvoriiez; i Nordica wil share the chief dramuite | I with Mme, Baeuger ; ; Beltaque, -à stranger biere, but with La due German reputation, Melba vill | Fig ww few times, and Newbrich and I I paris in German Eanes throughout the season, \u2018There will he uw new German tenor, Helurldh Knnte, to divide the Wagner parte with Pfppel and Byrgstoller, and the old favorite Saleza will return tu wing in IteHan and French, AJ the chiéf coutraltos are American, Olive Frem- etad, lédyth Walker and louise Homer.Srotif and Van Rooy will head \u201cthe baritones, with Bisphem and C'am- Spain out of I, and the rhief tasses \u201cwill he Planecon and Blass, .° + .- FUTURE BILLS.\u201cThe Billjonuire,\u201d with \u201cFhoma: @ fcalirooke as the star, will follow Blativie Walsh at His Majesty's, » + + THE SHORTEST THEATRE LÉKASIS Henry W.Savage last Saturday eigued one of (ae shortest theatre leares on record by accepting from the \u201cGoclét estate à two weeks\u2019 lease of ihe Murray Hill Theatre, New York.Mr.Savage's company began the ext Monday morning at seven o clock ; when he prepared for the coming to Pthe playhouse of his English grand \u201cOpera company, which gave in tts #n- ;direty Othello\u201d Monday © evening.There was to audience in the theutre, \"and the doors were locked, yet every Clute detafl of the performance wus \u201cgiven, with Mr.Savage sitting In the | third orchestra row.On Tuesday \u2019évening the company gave \u201cCarmen\u201d \u201cIH Mravatore\u201d was | sung at the Wednesday matinee, while fn the eveiing \u201cLohengrin\u201d was heard.\u201cLa Boheme wus sung on Thursday evening: \u201cTannhauser\u201d ¥riday nigi:t.! aud Saturday night \u201cMN Pagliacci\u201d and \u2018\u201cCavelleria Tlusticano.* © very night next week the\u2018 company j to present | Rive full performances of the music ; drama, With Mr.Savage as the ni- ! Alence.Mr.Savage was to have taken both of his opera companies to Rna- ton,, where he \u2018had planned to give them final private performances, Lut he found that it wou'd be more practical for all his singers to appear for him in.New York, : | ° LS ° .A MINISTER ON .\u201cRESURRE:- .TION.\u201d : .Cminlons of the clergy regarding Blanche Walsh'a realistic performauvr in \u201cResurrection\u201d which Is to be pre- rented at Ais Majesty's next week have been divided, That it presents AN éloquent object legson which the J ¥euth of-the land might study with profit they admit unanimously enough.but they disagree as to whether.the theater ls lis proper\u201d arena, \u201cThat divines of all creeds are intensely Interested In the philosophies of the great Tolstoy.was effectuanlly proved by Miss Walsh herself, when she gave a apeclal invitation performance, during Ner New York engagement, for ministers only.The invitation wae accepted hy preachers of every denomination, mbt probably, never before, or since, have so many of the cloth been brought together by a si- wmilar | motive.Subsequently, Miva .Walsh \u201creceived hundreds of from her guests, and in the great majority of cases they showed that the church aml elsge are more In \u2018sympathy than is popularly supposed.The Rev 4 LL Morell, a well known MinnbupoMs clergyman, who Was nt thirst intensely opposed ta the staging of Tolstol's tervrible story, Wrote to Mes, Walsh's representative, | Mra Bradley: \u201cI have Just come from a church, which was the Metropolitan Opera House, a sevinol, \u201cResurrection\u201d and a preacher, Miss Blanche Walsh, \u201cThe tears ate still in my cross, and the sche tn my heart for the sing of week.The compuny 18, an usual, \u201cDel=l fon\u201d of thé German army forbid the 2oclety.\u201cand the double standard of ter than ever, It will display more pa cer of the Kmperor's commission Morality for a man and not the wo- pretty women, more clever jesters, unt go fight « duel with an enlisted sol- Indu.The way of the transgressor le un array of specialties such us vrand.[tn two .burlescues, .Widow's Wedding Night,\u201d book by Ro- {bert Fulton and muste hy Harey Von Tilzer, and \u201cDown the Line\u2019 will make hits.- They will be repiete with ortaghiil humor and the catehiest of Among the stars who will entertain will be Snitz Moore, the (lerman wander; Charies Buikhurdt, su Jew from Vaudeville; Carleton and \u2018Terve, grand vacil comedians; Cruel and \u2018iruet, black.faced josters: Mullen and Corelll, burlesque acrobuls; Garden and Homers, swell musidinng; Jeuniette Guichard, : beuutiful.burleaquer, and the guy sou- \u2018brette duo, Tile Btorke and ay Yulr.GRENADIBR GUARDS\u2019 BAND, \u201cAn event of Mternattonal musical tmportance is the vist, of Hie Majesty's famous Grenadier (luards\u2019 Band to this continent.hey, have heen cho- seir, to represent cngland at the World's Fair In St.Louis, leave have ing been granted by King lidward VLL, at the\u2018 request of the Vinited oO proceed to ghis country.The band on itd visit to America will number aix- ty-one pleces, and it is considered to be the greatest willtury band in the world tu-day.In responses to à gen- eraf requent, Jeuve of absence han been granted for the band to visit à few of the principal citieg of - the -contineut at the ehd of theirl engagement at the Sat, Louls Exposition, which concludes on October fth.They will be hoard here on November D at the Arena, The bhandmaster in - Lieut, Wiilian, who is also a Mus, Bau, of Oxford University and & musician of high standing.The Colanel \u2018of .tho regiment Is the King himself.The band Iwill be accompanied hy an officer, Capt.Joftries.This in the first time Blair's Pills - Great Baglish Remedy for Gout &.Rheumatism Q =~ _ Safe, Bure.Lfective.Al: Drupgirta, étrand 91.00 Ÿ LYMAN, SONG à OO ; GOUT FA : ie.1 ! ; ; MO dior, Here, ln the original, the (ather \u2018\u201cetrulght vaudeville house\u2019 can cou takes the only.possible \u2018means of sav- The fug his daughter from shame and his He can- + without being u crime agaînst the military art of musle lu very ehnracter;- and, therefore, he (family name from dishonor.inot kill the soldier, guilty of dinctpline, who has become n kills hin child.5 The \u201cplere wad played thus for pang ion to the seducer ent ald utterly unsolved\u2014broken ly one of the mout flagrant METROPOLITAN OPRILA.Th New \u2018will open on November ël.nnd Caruso in the coast, familiar lines, except that spe operan, Carusa, t of theen performancés, sed ave Among those promi f hn \u201cNorma\u201d Rorglu,\u201d Favorite,\u201d \u2018Purltana.\u201d Curuno An the lighter and a dramatic soprang, \u2018Macchi, from italy, will others.given, upon & revival of \u201cDie with epecial scenery and caste, will he five performances of Maria but special emphasly is a week In New York, and then the re- volver-shot was transferred (rom the and the play is left incomplete, MHogleal, Mcanatete a al the very entry Inte the new and untouched trugedy of tho subsequent lite of the daughter.It ty undoubted- leces.of adaptation dove in Amortca n years.$ opers aéaaou of filtean wasks at York's Metropolitan Operu House The apen- ing opers wii} he \u201cAlda,\u201d wih liumes The \u2018veper- tory (or the season will be on the old, clal em- pra will ha thrawn upon the allan 8 eo tenor who made: suoh à hit luat winter, \u2018will be the étar 0 and several works will he ravived to display him, \u2018T,uoresia and gembrioh will sing with Italian opergs DI [Ave receipts are doubtless sure enough.ang in the The tull Wagner list phos c\\ntersinger,\u201d are \u201cParsifal\u201d dard, as the world Knows\u2014but yaur play comes in the spirit of Hin who Guild to the woman, \u2018Go lu peace aud sin no more.\u2019 ; ; \u2026 .+ \u201cSa far from condemning, the Church would de well to.\u2018coutrlhute towards suvh .a lessou for the poor rich and the rich poor who need to leurn it, Permit tué to thank vou for the Kindness of you and yours to me on this ocvaslon.L enclose my Sunday programme, also my little sermon from ta-night's Journal for Misa Walsh, whom I'll not soon forget.\u201d e [A ® ; LEMARE'S RESIGNATION, Edwin M.Lemare, the great Kny- Hsh orguntst, who visited New York lust winter, and dertek Archer, ux organist in Carne- gle Libcary, Pittsburg, in March, 1902, has vexigned this important post, to the geueral surprise of Americans mu» aletany, ~und will return to England permanently in January, when his rve- wignation takes pffect, His mole reason for relinquishing the position was the condition of his.wife's health, which does not permit her residence in this country, He will henceforth devote himualf to recital.Work in ling land and.to domposition, .® e THI PUFF BOX._ Hull\" Caine's newW\"play wil prove a frost in one sense, though the box of- \u201cThe Prodigal Son,\u2019 which Arthur Colllna will produce at Drury Lune, Theatre, Lonton, this autumn, includes a realistic snowstorm.Four of \u2018the five nots pass in Iceland In the dead of winter, the remaining act \u2018on the Parsual\u201d 1h English will good.le agants Canads and United States FREE On request we will \u2014\u2014\u2014 ee ers = BolviA, Wfison & Ce.Montreal.so fer .French tonic wine, and se soon vour meals begin to taste \u2019 + \u201cpw send you the Vin St.Michel \u201c Album containing 100 illustrations & testimonials.PE a EVERYONE WHO maniere ea] of all beverages.COWAN\u2019S rarrecnon COCOA | Prefers It te all others.it iz absolutely pure, very fine tiavor, and the most hesithful The COWAN CO.Léd., Torente.Rheumatism ans Chest, Troubles.J \u201cUnderwear Materials.\u201cJAEGER PROTECTION FROM CHILL \u2014_PREVÉNTS- Ny Le \u2018 es N Pure Wool is the oniy safe wear.seger .Call or write for free catalogue, No.\u2014, containing samples of the Jaeger Pure Wool DR, JAEGER SANITARY.SYSTEM CO., Lié., 2206 St, Catherine St, Montreal sume leading \u2018roles in New York and elsewhere in a series of the Yeats plays.co : : Viotor Herbert has announced his intention of establishing a permanent orchestra in New York, as a first step toward which he will give a serles of Sunday night concerts at the Majestic Theatre.Mr.Herbert's new orga- \u2018nization is largely recruited from the Pittsburg Orchestra, of which he was conductor for six years.Heriry Burck, who is to be the cancertmeister, and about twenty-five others of the Pittsburg players have cast in .their lot «with Mr.Herbert.° ° THE GARDE REBPUBLICAINE.The band of the Garde Republicaine, the greatest military band of France, \u2018which is now at St.Louis, wag organized in 1838 under Paulus, and forged ahead so rapidly that ft won letters |.vine saccended Fre-| h the first prize at the Exposition of \"1867, à feat which it repeated at the \"Beaton Festival of \u201c73.In 1876 the band played in London, under Selle nick, who was present by the present King with a superb Indian ring | In acknowledgement of a march Jded- icated to His then Royal Highness | Gabriel Pares, the present conductor.secured the post in open competition with all the bandmasters -of France, in 1898.He is especially dlating- uished by the euccess tasies on all the important Freuch he\u201d waste band, most of whom are execu- tanta in on or the other of the great Paris theatres ar orchestras eo JOSRF HOPMANNS .CAREER.Josef Hohmann comtes to Montreal at the begluning of December out of a period of quivtude that lasted for almost eleven years and bas only very recently been broke.About Him ia the glamor of conquests made à decade and a halt ago.which linger In musical records ad those of that ever touched a plane or auy other instrument.With the exception of Jean , Mr.Hal Davis and Miss Ines \u2018McCauley have the leading roles.THEATRE DES NOUVEAUTES.\u201cLa Fille de Roland\u201d comes next week at the Nouveautes a charming and interesting society play, \u201cLa Chatelaine, by Alfred Capus, the most popular of dis fan- STRANGE.the must extraordinary Juvenile prodigy |.After the heroic verses and pathos of|' +e em am bree try mt ebm, missed by her numerous admirers.Mr.Jefrancais plays the part created by Guitry, for which character he is admirably fitted.The excellent company of the Nouveautes eupport them in the most artistic way.; + ® e THE MENDELSSOHN TRIO.The programme is issued for the Mendelssohn Trio concert of Oct.24, the most interesting event of the local chamber music season.The drtiate \u2018are Miss Eva Plouffe, pianiste: Mr Emile Tarunto.violinist: Mr.Ruosarie Bcurdon, \u2018cellist: assiated by Mr Joseph Saucier.baritone, and Madame J.Saucler -laniste.: The prog.amme includes the PBee:h- loven D major tria and the Avexsky trio in D minor.op.32.The ingtre mental solos are Lalas \u201cSpanish NN.7- | phony.\u201d on 21.given dy Mr.Trærezte and Moskowski's valse in EL où M br Miss Plouffe.The concert 5 at Narr Hall, and seats are We amd Ia : .: NINA DAVID'S MONTREAL i .- VERT ; The management of \u2018h>.Ana Yes |terday received from Mauger \u2018Frau notification of the details 1» 0paectiott with the forthouoming appearance af Nina David, te much discussed ana aura Soprane ad the Arena on Wednes j day evening October Nth This will ibe Mme.David's quiy concert M CM ada, and in order tv nm ilipate sudértar.and, out-of-lown patrouxsge the caquert will begin at SH ami finish uw NM pm The programme will smdowce twelve nwunbers, aad sx lisa of .international repute will be Heard, while Mme.David herseif will sing tires tine on the programme.render she aria from \u201cMagic Fue, the ta Song from \u201cRenee amd Jude\u2019 au Frlicien Davids favous QlUraActPA piece, \u201cLe Rael e Breail,\u201d while ee CON GACOTES Adie\u201d Amderw Laughing Song and Comin\u2019 Thre: ide Rye\u201d will de given.The sale of prices will range from 50 to SLA and vetere for seats will be filhal a the wrder af priority.| ©.e ® THE MEISTER GLEE IN IRR) The fineet quartette that has ever appeared tn this city will de the famous Glee lingers of Lundon England.who are recoguized as the best quar tette in England, and who stand unique dy themselves.They appear here on Friday, Cutadber £1 at the Arena.The members of the party are all of them admimble soloists, amd their part songs include many of the finest gleee of a classical character down to \u201cplantation sketches, with banjo accompaniment.They will be assiated by Miss Ethel Henry, clocu- .tjoniat, âne of the most beaut: ful women \u2018on the stage, and Mr.Roland Henry in humorous musical sketches, Mr.Henry in the successor of George Grossmith dn this line.SCOTT'S EMULSION makes pale, thin children fat and chubby.Overcomes wasting tezdencies and brings\u2019 back rosy cheeks and bright eyes.It\u2019s surprising how quickly childten.respond.to.Scott's Emulsion, It contains just the element of- nourisjiment their little bodies need.They thirvé on it.sco Faune \u2018Even \u2018ufo drops * baby's .bottle\u2019 have: able effect tor.good.- on Thuredays - heginning on Thanks- [Riviera in the height of the season.tié writer in Parts.The) better | Scott's wiving ey.~The firat act will bel 5 © ¢ mode oF every play written by MPR.WGA than ; tts Ÿ : [van ai 8 o'olnok, followed by an in-| Montrealers who have become 1y-|Cupus has béen phenomona) and every tap Growing childrens.: armisalon for dinner, as last Year, and [terested in the Irish dramas, may have theatrical manager looks \u20ac ly toi \\ N = ee SRT TT matinees wre promised for.Christmaa a good sopportunity this autumn tof gue in getting a prem the] Woll vend Jet à nbIN tren upiy rent) * ahd New Yoars days, The cast of indulge their Interest.It is announced |¢avorite author to write & aww Pay à 30 Pear] Street, Hew \u201cParalfal\u201d will be notable for the pre- that Miss Margaret Wyocherly has gor him; SF ee.Teo y ponderance of Americsn singers, The planned to come to Americh and as-| «La Chatelaine\u2019 bas crested ih .NOTION TO CONSIONELS : Bn A em Paie Dr SU ANS PRE Ne Te Pen ordica ° ad.pu ; [ adin FOIRE LE eu.\u2019 Robert Blass, who will sing}: We deliver bread to Any |hite of ther Jremetie earven At the as Ae Line 88 Eee Th Men Urnemans, vas à 2 retraits * gs ouveauten, the ord ing.oti art age Yager ha went to Germany, while Josephine address.James: Strachan wil be by Mie Jane Bah.CARR.| ery TET sali si A] Facoby, who will wing the Voice, is = Sakers-te Rovaitih aa te see not been been on the stage for) Stan AS Wed AMLAN, ,» Jtookiynite.[Qelonsl Savages CNE.(PISE SE RSR des ire lwetlty WE TROL R0S DOOR prends ie a Agente .* #4 paie re hye \u201cKr nth ory ; Ce, vo vot > ge du CN RE Cr TE ak 3 a .; AW me i ; 24 FEI Ta Ce .2° { TS : =, > SON Ty LT V1 4 aS i A ; 2 .;, - Vo .v 20 vo.(es, \u201c ! \" v yo \u201c RS THE - A% DAILY 3 &u he - Public Co NP London County Council during the x 4K |: PE re FTX Avy Rr rr SIRE NAIR SR Tn TISH EMPIRE WEEK BY WEEK| ee rosé AE 2008 20 pe Stet TE A ARR a aaa > GRR : : ; ca LE poi IN wh Sah UE pr \u2014 pe SEA ER | ?mg Ke | a lier : DQN COUNTY COUNCIL ful, for, carefully noting the designs, With &4Hhtrgofed \"shanty: as.Lone °° = \u201cRiad HW © PROTEQTING CITIZENS, [™hich were mostly affected by the na- dar! and i, \u201cLittle BUI\" ts ' M - goign est material within the four.corners off .year has exercised its authority ingthe following cases:\u2014 .Weights and imeqagures sent for Yerification 2; WE oo * \u20262,084,582 Infpections of coal vehicles .\u201c46,689 Gas meters ingpêcteg:.,604 Pétsons und - 18 employed in \u2018 ops .ope gy Lee en ces 3,608 Shpps wher eats ire neces- .ary oo 32,661 Srfoke nuisanceés 3 A 666 view of rceept prosecutions for W@ghing paperéwith goods, the report nts out that in some of these pro- segutions it haq heen shown that cert large firma bénefit yearly to the exgent of thousands of pounds by the practice.\u2019 welve thousand two hundred and fafty-nine inspections at bakers\u2019 and other promises were made by the inspectors during the year, 59 persons were cautioned in writiug by the coun- cit, and 166 prosecutions for infringe- \u2018ments of the act, by selling light bread, etc.In, connection with the administration of-\"the Shep \u201cHours Act, 1892-3, which regulates the employment shops of persons under the age of \u201818 years, and limits the period of \u2018such employment to 74 hours a week, in- \u2018Cluding meal hours, it is noted that the number of cases of over-employment, in excess of 80 hours a week has again declined, and last year only reached Department oflrégigtered tha mative patterns, in\u2019 he is now 130, and the oldest British ties fu th Lown: weaving-sheds, he soon secured a large trade in chester goods bearing the designs.Mr.Blaixe was several times offered a \u2018seat on the Legislative Council, but declined owing to an unfortunate fm- pediment in-bis speech, which he thought would prevent him taking part in the debates.He was oné\u201caf the best supporters of the School of.Medicines.and it Is understood that the bulk of his money.goes to a scheme for the benefit of his fellow -countrymen.AGED NATIVE CHAPLAIN .OF AN INDIAN REGIMENT.Perhaps the most remarkable old man in the world, and certainly the oldest in the service of the British : Government is at present stationed ut ; ! Fort St.George, Calcutta, in the person of Salkh- Imamudda, maulvi, or regimental.chaplain, to the 18th Native : Bengal Infantry.This veteran enlisted as chaplain.elght Vedrs ago.and was then entered In the regimental 1 book as.being 122.years.of-age, so that i soldier living.A small, spare mar, | five feet in height, and bent with age, he still reads without the ald of 8pectacles, is active, and intelligent, and is respected by every man in the i regiment.He has been twice married, and has had two sons, one of whom Mine | t he map.favorite ge a' white face was a passport to ! gift 8f \u2018Bir Langdon Bonython, M,P., for done fine work on\u2019 seme of the rough He has tyavetled on duty the hereafter, faced fire and blood, and fggers and pestilence, and proved himself as good a man as ever trod shoe- leather ard as tough as wire.- \u2014- too, despite hia smallness.There Is à, tale of a çoach-driver who\u2019 Wouldn't take his team through a flooded drift) when \"tht Bishop wan in a hurry.\u201cIf you wasn\u2019t a Bishop,\u201d he roared, \u201cI'd climb down out of this and hammer you,\u2019 \u201cWell, I'm not a Bishop just Low,\u201d was.the reply, as the little man skinned off his coat, \u2018so come down and hummer.\u201d The big man.climbel down and the six brawny Rhodeslana who rod ecstatically as Little Bill swiftly and neatly qualified his man for hospital.AN AUSTRALIAN BARONET HONORS HIS ANCESTORS, Last ;week at -Cury Parish Church, Cornwall,Sir Vyell Vyoyan,Bäirt,unveiled a stained glass memorlal window,the Adelaide, the capital of Southern Australia.10° The window represents the Lord In Glory, with the Blessed Virgin and ft.John with a chalice, and the inscription: .To the Glory of God and in memory of past generations of the Bonythons this parish, the east window of this church was erected by 112, as against 167 in 1902.212 in- 1901 was \u2018 : b 1902, 212 .past.\u2018middle: a, when the first|of Bonython in 249 in 1900, and 454 in 1899.The num! | Sikh war toon) pling.Trhamudda, was y PALACE OF THE FUGITIVE \u2018DALAL LAWA OF THIBET.> * guine expectations.Jt a landmark for miles around.the barren table lands t, visit the Sacred \u201cétty.\" aparements in this\u2019 buildi:ig on Septe mBer 7.- _ _\u2014__ ber of premises at which young\u2019 persons are employed is 28,640, and thé total number employed is 36,606\u201411,217 indoor and 25,389 \u2018outdoor.The Employment of Children Act , came inte.operation.at the -be- \u2026Binning \u2018of the your.It empowers \u2018Tock aisthoritics to make by-laws for .regulating employment: of children SEE efily and for \u2018regulating street ; tad ng_ by persons under the age o : THé report states that probably the 2 number of london children engaged in THE EDUCATION GRIEVANCE IN ENGLAND AND WALES.The strength of the opposition to the payment of rates asked:for by the new education bills is shown by the following figures compiled up to September 25:\u2014 paid employment, and ufter school hours, is over 50,000.Many of these, it ls stated, ave employ à in occupations prejudicial to young -children.One of the most important \u2018objects of the by-laws of the council will be to prohibit employment in such occupations.\u2026 Bummonses .++ ++ ve.\u2026.31,493 : Bummonseés London .\u2026.\u2026 eee.494 Total .32,486 ar Baies Lo 22 24402 Le 0e ae 1,115 .Sales London .0.2 © Total .Le eet ee eee 1.127 Leagues.42 vase v+0me .584 Leagues London.24 04 Vsoses ess 38 Total .2e 0e 2e 00 0000 632 Imprisquments .+6 (oe.35 \u2018 ment at Lagos, in which he rose to be - aSemple Package ME 4 EERE A _ ; London is now vying with the provinces in its opposition to the education rate.Au interesting episode in the campaign took place, when Dr.Clifford's silver trowls, \u2018together with the goods of other Paddington Resisters, were sold by auction.| Afterwards a protest meeting was held.At Manchester, on the same day, Mr.Jodwyn Holt, one of the Icading men in the city was committed \u2018\u2018for conscience.\u201d \u2018 RESCUED FROM SLAVERY, _HE DIED A MILLIONAIRE.Years ago a Briush cruiser swooped down on a .slaver off the West Coast of \u2018Africa, the human cargo was set ashore, and among the \u201cpiccaninnies\u201d saved was a, little boy whom the missionaries christened Richard Blaize.He has just died at Lagos, a mil- llonaire, a great philanthropist, and an honored citizen of the Empire.It -was to Sierra Leone that the released slave child was taken, and a misslonary society adopting him, he was educated in the Christian faith, - and later entered the printing depart- t .head.printer.His knowledge of SMITHS - BUCHU- LITHIA 1 c PILLS.- SICK KIDNEYS, The Bladder, Rhen- lem and \u2018ths.Blood\u2014all these dis.printing was use- Nothing Else - so Good, Putnam, Conn.« 51 want to write and Foon Jone Bana Ge \u2018kool your Smith's Bue chu Lithia Pills have \u2018done.I have suffered with kidnoy trouble for over two years and have pont a good many dollars for medi- Mn of every descrip.are quickly and fully tion, but nothing cured.rice, a» to hel > opnts à box.er til hogan to take y our Kk CURE tthe\u201d « Amis Buchu Lithia a 8 Pills.1 bave taken Ps li : Priv \u2018Afeatiy two boxes and op! $ | 8°] I can'safe Loar that I \u2018My Kldnoy book shi ave not Toit \u2018so wal} jn ten years as I do I'shall continne Pe your pills until entirely cured.OHN D.MAIN.\" ny addres: - RIAMTHO f ames St, Mon THE GOLDEN DOMED POTALA.The Potala is built on a bluff, north of.the-l'itv-of Lhassu, and is described as surpassing the most san- \u201cIts golden domes,\u201d writes a correspondent.\u201cshone in the sun like tongues of fire.making It must strike with awe and veneration the hearts of the pilgrims arriving from © The British treaty with Thibet was signed in the Dalai Lama's : ro | born fri \u2018the Panjaub, and, in addition.to his native tongue,\u201d speaks Urda, persian and\u201d Arabic.Great objection Was made to his Appointment as chap- Vain fit 1896 &A \u2018account of his age, but Lthe regiment \u201cwoaid hive no other \u2018maulvf, afd the authorities gave \u2018their consent.A ! \u2014\u2014 1 TAXATION OF LAND VALUES |.TRIED IN AUSTRALASIA.| - Some interesting statements with re- Bard-to the.taxation of Jand values, now (60 rapidly being .extended to all the | Austradias colonies, have been reuvelvedÿ the Hon.Sir John Langdon Bonython.\u201d Sir John Cockburn; formerly Prime Minister for South Australia, was present.« A STATESMAN'S WRITING.Lord Carzon's writing was so bad at Oxford that when he wrote to a relative \u2018and to a friend with whom he was He !s \u2018\u2018a.proper man with his hands, *r on.the coach roof shouted |.aq TI > LR \u201c wrong envelopes no harm resulted, His kinsman couldn't read the letter, but surmised It must be 8 request for money and sent a check at once, LATE OSCAR WILD'S ESTATE.The Gazette announces the payment of a supplemental dividend of 4s.0%d in the pound out of the estate of the late Mr.Oscar Wilde, who is described as ;'lately of 166 Lite Street, Chelsea, wont to be candid about that, relatives \u2018shortcomings and put the letters in the London, S.W,, and His Majesty's prison at Pentonville.\u201d : \u2014\u2014 \u2014 > by thé town.clerk, of Finchley, .Lon- |don, trem -the tow.clerks of Brisbane | Australia, \u2018 und \u201cWellington, New | Zealand, - In Wellington the capital value (this! | includes lands and buildings) is £9.868,- 962, the unimproved land value being | cstimated at, £4,026,998.\u2018 tmproved vajue,\u201d.the town clerk says.| \u2018ave have struck-a ruté this year of 1%d| | In.the 4, avhich.produces.as much as.! \u201c but.#ot-.more than, waûld be produced under-the previous system adopted here VE.taxation ;on annual or rental values, the difference being that, whereas.vieant, lands hitherto were! rated on infinitesimal.annual value] now such lands pay on.exactly the same basis us.-lands having, buildings erected, thereon, that is to -say, the land value, Is a basis of taxation, there being no percentage \u2018deduction therefrom what-! ever.In Wellington we have, besides the general rate {which is the one above quoted), interest on loans, and.library: struck on the same valuation, these, of course, being struck to produce as nearly as possible the exact sum required in each case.\u201d : | The total rate in the *.at Wellington is 2 385-576d the cost of valuation, assessment, and collection being about tiie same as by the old method.Mr.W.H.E.Marsham, town clerk \u2018of Brisbane, writes: : \u201cIn regard to the prineiple.of taxing land values, 1 hive no hesitdtion in stating\u2019 that it Has met with the en-; tire approval of the total authorities of\u2019 the State of Queensland,and we believe It to be à distinct advance upon the system of rating upon an annual or, rental value as obtained prior to 1890.\u201d The assessable\u2019 capital value of Bris-| bane for 1903 is stated to \u2018be £6.538,050.In five wards the rates are 13d, and in two wards 234d inthe £, the whole.bélng assesed on the unimproved selling value of the land, disregarding improvements.te .ASHES OF SIR EDWIN ARNOLD PLACED IN URN AT OXFORD.Last week the urn containing the ashes of Sir Edwin Arnold was conveyed to Oxford by his-son, and placed fn the chapel of University College, : \u2018An arched niche of alabaster had been.prepared in the wall, in which the urn, a replica of an Etruscan urn now \"in the Britsh Museum, was half sunk.Beneath is a tablet of black -marble edged with alabaster, upon which is the following inscription: In memory of Sir Edwin Arnold, M.A., K.C.I1.E,C.8.1, sometime member of this College, and Principal of the Deccan Céllege, Poonah:: .Born June 10th, 1832, Died March 24th, 1904.Whose ashes.are here deposited.New- Gigate Prizeman in 1853, he found in his sympathy with Eastern religions - thought inspiration for his great poetical gifts.: : LITTLE BILL THE BISHOP\u2014 + A MASHONALAND CLERIC.Of all the clergy\u2019 who have undertaken thé plckrand-shovel work of the Chutich -in the colonies (says the Central: Africari \u2018Times, published at Blantyre), ho figure is hinbued with greater interest than that \u2018of the Right Rev Bishop Gaul, of Mashonaland, who A8\" popularly known to Mashohalanders as \u201cLittle BilL\"r = ¢ Muth alittle man as he is\u2014fiye feet ; four Ththes fn: his gaiters, meagre in | figure, with \u2018a keen; clean-shaven face\u2014 hé is ine last \u2018man one would fix on to take Charge of such a wilderness of [\u2014 \u2018+ savagery end \u2018sin\u2019 a# Mashonaland, and Jet the best man tn'ébe world zor it, {5,841,964.\" The value of improvements isi ¢ \u201cUpon the un-| | Weekly Budget of News Notes From the Lands Over the Sea.ENGLAND.Four tons of refuse are removed from each mile of J.ondon streets dally.Tt cost Manchester over {46.000 clean the public streets last year.Liverpool is infested with ship-borne rats carrving plague propagating fleas.One person in every thirty-five in Leicester at the present time is in receipt of poor law relief.: At Westminster the L.B.and 8,C.B.Co.were fine £25 for permitting smoke nuisances from locomotives at Victoria.; Damage to the extent of £10,000 was done to the premises of Messrs.Lang- ton, timber merchants ,of Maidstone, by a fire.Rev.Father Miller, a former rector of the Roman Catholic hurch, Tower Hill, has been appointed Bishop of Johannesburg.As Mr.Crisford, of Welling, Kent, was aiming at a rabbit hls ten-year- Qld son ran in front of the! gun\u2019 and was shot dead.: An enormous increase in vagrants is reported from Clitherne, and the greatest difficulty is experienced in making them work, _- The death is reported of Mr.Richard Calvert, of Walton-le-Dale, Preston, cotton spinner, one of the foremost employers in that industry.Leeds Corporation have decided to lay out a bo to | house Moor, In order to provide work |.for some of the unemployed.It is computed that.the privately- owned servants\u2019 registry offices throughout the country receive in fees upwards of £1,000,000 a year.Mr.Alec.Goodman, whose death at the age of 82 is announced, was one of the greatest amateur riders of his day.He, twice won the Grand National.7 .4 The east coast herring fishing has been so successful that on one occasion recently several boatloads had to be taken out from Hartlepool ang thrown overboard.Bulit two hundred years ago, the Unitarian - Church at Bury St.Ed- munds, where Daniel Defoe worshipped for many years, has just been reopened after renovation.In 1854 the total quantity of fish sent away from Grimsby was only 453 tons, while last year 162,000 tons of fish were consigned by rall to various parts of the country.A quantity of red pepper placed by a practical joker in the organ pipes of a_ village church near Birmingham \u2018met the whole congregation sneezing to such an extent that thé service had to be closed.: Burnley guardians have decidéd to send a girl aged 17 to the Royal Nor- \u2018mal College and Academy of Music for the Blind.The guardians- have lately been assisting the girl in her education, and her proficiency in music resulted in - .FromFlour to your kitchen and nevor touches a hand Purity Bread.James Strachan, Bakers to Royalty wling green at Wood- |.her gaining a scholarship of £40 per an- num for five yoars.The autumnal conference of the United Kingdom Band of Hope Union, representing.28,000 organizations and 3.- 338.000 members In Great Britain and Ireland.was held at Nottingham a fortnight ago.\u201c A remarkable clopement is reported from Lutterworth, Leicestershire.A married man of 28 has gune off with a woman many years his senior, who ls already a grandmother and has borne her husband ten children.Major Fred Stanley Maude, of the old Coldstreams, who, since he came out of South Africa with six clasps on his medal and the D.S.0.ahd C.M.G., has been serving Lord Minto as military secretary in Canada, is returning to his regiment on special promotion, having just been \u2018\u2018named\u2019\u201d for second In com- land of one of Coldstream battal- ons.A memorial stone has been erected at Rolvenden, Kent, to Barbara Moon, one of the last surviving witnesses of the battle of Waterlon.Mrs.Moon, who was' born at Gibraltar {in 18i1 .was the daughter of a soldier who fought at Waterloo.She followed the troops in a \u2018baggage waggon to the field of battle, She died at Rolvenden last year at the age of 92, and the stone has been erected to her memory by public subscription.\u2019 \u2019 SCOTLAND.Sir Donald Currie has just celebrated his 80th birthday.° The late ex-Provost Sturrock of Kil- marnétk, left £2125,550.\u2018The eurplus from Glasgow's 1901 éx- hibition is now expected to total £37,000.Jedburgh Town Council will confer the freedom of the burgh on Lord Minto.Fire at Seedhill Finishing Co.'s works at Paisley caused dainage to the extent of £4,600.: The Black Watch transferred from Edinburgh to Fort George at the end 1 of September.: Shotts, which is Lanarkshire way, la \u2018setting up a new Roman Catholic Church at a cost of £6,000.Norwegian squatters on Shetland captured 412° whales.The whale-hunters have gone home to winter.There has been some fairly decent weather lately: and gooseberry bushes are blooming a second time.oo Renfrew & Palsley are now connected by street car service, thus forming a pleasant circular tour from Glasgow.Largs flshermen have started after .gharks, and for a start hauled sn eight foot speciinen opposite Knock Castle.£teamer Columbia, has been set up at Tarbert.; \u2018 = \u2018When Clydebank started out to bulld municipal bulldings the cost waa estl- mated at £17,800.The actual.price runs to £57,388.The death is reported of Rev.William Serymgeour senior pastor of Bridge- gate United Church, Glasgow, at the ags of eighty-two.! An earthquake is reported from Argyleshire.In many parts the shocks Was mon inctly felt, Dishes rate \u2018 2 \u2018their little ones.A cairn to the memory of the late Capt.Campbell of the well known Clyde.London, Toronto, Montreal, Winnipeg.Vancouver, St.John, N.B.\u2014\u2014 Acetylene Apparatus tied, doors were opened, bells were set ringing, and ornaments were broken, while the Cloch Lighthouse shook more than once.After meeting all demands Mother- \u2018well had £1,366 of a surplus from Its war fund subscriptions.It has just been voted out in various directions.\u201cMuch indignation has been caused In Rothesay over the proposed disbandment of the local volunteer company on account of its being so far isolated from headquarters at Greenock.\u2018 Chief Constable McHardy, of Dun- bartonshire, had a long chat with the King at the Braemer gathering.The chief's.father was a keeper on the Mar estate and the son promptly caught the eye of His Majesty, who has evidently a keen memory for faces.- It is reported that Dr.John Hunter may not after all return to Trinity Congregational Church; Glasgow.While he has been holidaying in Switzerland, A party of London friends have guaranteed a large sum for several years if Dr.Hunter would consent to remain in the Metropolis and take charge of un entirely unsectarian Free Ghurch.Mr.Richard B.Hagart, a native of Port Glasgow, and well known in the West of Scotland, has died at the age of seventy-two years.For the past forty-five years Mr.Hagart conducted in Port Glasgow the business of mea- surer and timber merchant, and for seventeen years he at different periods was a member of Port Glasgow Town Council.: Mr.Edward Simpson, the senior partner of Edward Simpson & Co., spindle- makersmakers and engineers, died somewhat suddenly at Rutherglen.Mr.Simpson, who was seventy-five years of age, was one of the oldest spindlc- makers in Scotland, and his firm enjoyed a large patronage throughout Scotland and England, as well as in foreign markets.: ; Falkirk has decided to restorc and rennvate its historic \u2018\u2018Gireenhorn\u2019s Well.\u201d The first heard of this well was in 1628, when it was recorded that certain parties had been arraigned before].the Kirk Session for wicked and idolatrous practice, they having gone sand drank at the well jn the bellef that the water possessed qualities thdat would cave thelr souls as well as heal their bodies.The death {3s announced of Mr.Trau- gott Heinrich Weisse, who had been engaged ih educational work in Edinburgh for about fifty years.Mr.Wels», who was born blind, was educated in Berlin University, where he displayed a philosophic mind and poetical talents of no mean order.Owing to the political troubles in his native land he migrated to Edinburgh in 1848, where there passed through his hands many pupils, one of the most distinguished being Hobert Louis Stevenson.rar A REMARKABLE RECORD.Baby's Own Tablets have a remarkable record.All over the land you will find mothers who wlll tell you this medicine has saved the lives of When you give Baby's Own Tablets to your children you have a guarantee that you are {not stupefying them with poisonous soothing gtuffs.No other medicine for children givés this guarantee, and no other medicine safely cures all such ills as colic, indigestion, constipation, diarrhoea and teething troubles.The Tablets not only cure these troubles, but an occasional dose given to a well child prevents them.Mrs.G.A.Sawyer, Clarenceville, Que., says: \"I have used Baby's Own Tablets for my little girl and find that they are the very best medicine I can give her.\u201d Try the TableÏs for your chil- dren\u2014they will not Sold by medicine dealers or sent by mail at 26 cents a box by writing the pr, Willlams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.: .; \u2018 ARONSON à RUTENBERG, Pawnbrokers & Jewellera, eg Craig St.Money to Lend og Diamonds, Watches, Jowallery, Clothing, and Dry Goods, - Furs atored âuring summer I ; MONTREAL ART PRINTERS\u2014 MERALD JOB DEPARTMENT rer SAVES FUEL AND HELPS TO PAY FOR ITSELF.It is not the price you pay for a range which makes it | cheap or expensive, but the fuel it consumes after you get it.If you buy a range which costs $5 to $7 less thana © Pandora\u201d \u2018and it burns a ton, or only half a ton of coal more in a year, what : do you gain?Nothing, but you actually lose money besides .putting up with all the inconveniences, troubles and extra work ; which are a certainty with a poor range.The \u201cPandora\u201d is equipped with many fuel-saving.features which are \u2018not found on any other range\u2014hot-air flues are constructed so that every atom of heat is used and only the smoke goes up the chimney, all the heat from the fire-box travels.directly under every pot hole, and the fire-box is scientifically proportioned to the size of the oven.- Sold by all enterprising dealers.Booklet free.- McClarys e 2.Calcium Carbide Eclipse Generators If you use Carbide it will pay you to buy from us.If your present light is poor* we have the remedy.= CALL AND The Continental Heat & Light Co., » * SEE US, = 17-19 BUSBY LANE, MONTREAL.We are the Sole Selling Agents of the Shawinigan Carbide Co.Limited.SEE aie es TAA Our Credit Plan It {s the \u2018most satisfactory plan in + existence.-N ox strict re- .quirements\u2014as\u2014contained-in other Credit.Systeins: no red tape and no annoying features whatever.You make your own terms, Thousands in Montreal owe their .comfortable hemes liberal plan, and the same opportunity 18 open.to you.to this We are doing THE Furniture business of Montreal - this Fall.The little prices are doing Metropolitan House Furnishing Co., 1678 and 1680 Notre Dame Street.giant work.Complete House.Furnishers, 2 disappoint you.ASK ANY DOCTOR If milk coming from cows attended to by veterinary surgeons, sterilized, tested and protected from dust, etc., by air-tight, dust4froof bottles is not more healthy than milk improperly kept and exposed THE GUARANTEED PURE MILK coy.2685 ST.CATHERINE STREET.\u2018Tel.Uptown GBH.\u2014 ~ © W.P.S Deseraten Wall Pager, ote COTT MONTREAL, _ \u201ca «pum CL Catherine od, |: \u2019 Be ; La 2 pi iE STORE vey For Business Promptly at 8 a.m.wan a LRN 1° | SASF - st Catherme and nvr Streets.GROWING IN EVERY WAY ' Four years ago 2 vans constituted the strength of this\u2014Montreal\u2019s youngest departmental store's delivery service.: To-day 8 regular vans, supplemented at the end of the week by several special ones, .are kept continually on the go, getting the parcels to the homes of our customers at the promised time.ALTE Ladies\u2019 Gloves-Continually Adding TO THE STOCKS Fall importation of Dent's Kid G loves just opencd out dies\u2019 2 dome pique sewn heavy Eng lish Walking Gloves, t's own La make, in tans and English craven tans; sizes 5 1-2 to 7.Per pair.20sées caen ee ren aa 0 ace em ee 0 0 tee 000000000000 a Chea pac Yadies\u2019 2 dome extra fine quality Dog skin Gloves, Dent's own make.Colors and sizes similar to above.Per pair s.\u2026\u2026.\u2026\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.sse00sssu0s 35 Ladies\u2019 Blouses-New, Noteworthy Styles for Fall\u2014Right in Weight and Rightly Priced A fine quality Jyustre Blouse, made with invert- } \u2018ed pleats front and back, trimmed with narrow gilt braid, full bishop sleeves with pleats to * match front, neat tab collar.In color of Another neat Lustre Blouse, in color of pagne, made with cluster: \u2018of pin tucks and large pleats, trimmed with fagotting braid, large sleeved with pin tucks, finished with .~ cuffs, neat tab collar; blouses .are lined; sizes 32 10 42 .acc 0oasee es evene cac 0000 9 Stylish Lustre Blouses, in striped effects, made with large pleats front and back, trimmed with silk applique, large plain sleeves, very pretty.tab oollar.lined throughout, in black only; sizes 3% 10 42 0.000000 1o nec on sos» 82.50 $1.98 Underskirts for $1.50 Changes in prices here are never accompanied with.changes in quali- Fes.These Underskirts sell regularly for $1.98; $1.50 is the price for Monday only.Ladies Sateen Underskirts, in colors of seal brown and champagne, made with a graduated accordion pleated flounce and several - Regular $1.98.\u2018Special a.venrsetesms 0200000002 T 2106 venmu ca ca Cm 0000000 small frills.finished with under dust frill.price \u2018Monday Ladies\u2019 Flannelette Wear .Women who examine the quality, as well as look at the price, will confirm the value-giving leadership of t+'< atore.Ladies\u2019 Flannelette Night Gowns, stripeu, turn-down collar, trimmed - around collar, down front and around sleeves with frills .\u2026.pc Ladies\u2019 Flannelette Drawers, striped.with trills an& elastic .25e Ladies\u2019 Flannelette Underskirts, in col or of pink only, with.tucks and deep hem .000000emceee nee ien cena tas 00 sesada sens eee vec s 39e Ladies\u2019 Flannelette Underskirts, gray only, with tucked flounce.Gpe Children\u2019s Flannelette and Whitewear Satisfying Stocks ! Satisfying Values ! Children's Cashmere Dresses, waist trimmed with silk embroidery, trimmed around neck and sleeves with.Valenciennes lace, fn colors Flannel Section Plenty of the Two Lines Advertised Cotton Eiderdown.for kimonas or house gowns:- colors are pale blue.navy.red, blue and gray, pink, green and pink, fawn\u2018 and blue, ete.Special sale price, per yard .19e Fine White and Cream Saxony All- wool Flannel, for best underwear.Value 55c yard.Special at, .nd \u20ac per yard .0000000 of cardinal, sky and white\u2014- SIZE 1 Loneuseossencenasssce02 0 pse ° Size 2 c.ssvocccos ses sassense.s $1.23 Lace Curtains ea nt .Children 5 Flannelette Dresses, Mo.er ubbar style, rimme and Curtaining around yoke with frills, around neck and sleeves with braid.Col- A Representative Stock \"All the best makes; all, the newest styles.Some\u2019 specials worth while | planning to secure.Fine White Nottinghäm Luce Cur-7 \u201ctains, 50 fn.wide x 3 1-2 yurds finished with ors: navy and white, red and white; sizes 1, 2 and 3 Years .ceecesees GD Children\u2019s Pinafores, Mother Hubbard style, yoke with embroidery, trimmed around neck with embroidery, over \u2018shoulder with hem- \u2018stitched frills; sizes 1 to 12 years nc .long, cable \u2018fibre, pretty borders._ Sale price, .per pair .1.Pr TOc Fine Ecru Nottingham Lace Curtains, 54 in.x 3 1-2 \u2018yards\u2019 long, neat floral patterns, finished with handsome borders.Special price, per pair .$1.50 80 in.fine quality Muslin Sash Curtaining, finished with fluted edge, \u2014 Pillow Cases-We Know Te Quality.4 in.deep.Bale price, per ; ¥Fard 2.222200 00 ces 0000 000 12¢ » : ; BO.Mm.Curtain Madras\u2014two and| Because they're made in the store.three-toned.effects: a most beau- 1 tiful combination of artistic .patterns, in -all the new shades., Bale price, per yard., .BOC any dressing, finished with good i Co wide hem and mgde in all widths Lo gem from 40 to 44 inches.Value Linens-Such Qualities|\u2014 : Not Within Reach of Invest in a \"These Prices Elsewhere | Good Broom - 88 dozen Hemstitched Huckaback Bedroom Towels, size 24 x 50 in, \u201d* the largest size.Value 60c =1e |\u2019 On sale to-morrow for, each.ge To-morrow, each 12¢ pair.To-morrow, each., 22c Buys 30c and 35¢ ly 5 pieces of good he Un- PO aches All-linen Dumask, assôrt- Ones Monday { ed patterns, 60 and 66 inches , wide.Worth 60c yard.To- , morrow 45c ,R:1-4 yards long Table Cloths, all .white, new patterns.Each.98c BO dozen Sees csmancrasennanes - we Table Napkins, pure ë eached, assorted patterns; \u201c = size 20 x 20 in.Per doz.8De Extra gdod heavy Corn\u2019 - Carnet Broom.Regular 30c to 35e.- Roller Linen, Scoteh make-heavy-and-|\u2014 , durable.17 inches wide.De * Value 12 1-2c yard.Special (BASEMENT.) The Music Store Secures - AU the Newest Music on the Day of Issue 50e MUSIC FOR 2c.Mr.Blackman\u2014Two step.Polly Prim\u2014Two- - Laughing- Water Two-step, Yankee Girl\u2014Two-step.~| Symphia\u2014Waultz.! A Garden of Memories\u2014Two-step, Roul of the Rose\u2014Two-step.and Thorns-\u2014Fwo-step.tres arn a Made of fine white cotton, free from Special on Monday for.2L2c¢ \u2018 vx As More Children\u2019s Sample Coats! fi \u2018Send.along your Sample Coats, Messrs.Manufacturers, if they're up to this store\u2019s standard.In fact, you can send along all your underpriced over-plus of every desirable line of merchandise within the scope of this \u201cstore.our invitation and sent along his sample line of and the price he accepted for his sample line.\"$2.00 Coats, for.Ju $3.50 Coats, for.\u2018| $5.00 Coats, for.eens i $6.50 Coats, for.But a bare hint to indicate what to expect: Our public\u2019 s an appreciative one\u2014keen discerners of the good\u2014the worthy ; prompt to take advantage of everything i in seasonable fabrics or wearing apparel offered at money-saving prices.One recently accepted CHILDREN\u2019 S COATS FOR FALL WEAR There's a material difference between what he charged us for Coats for our regular stocks, The difference enables us to sell: $1.29.Fit 2 to 6 years.$1.85.Fit 3 to 5 years.$2.98.Fit 3 to 7 years.$3.75.Fit 4 to 10 years.Sample lines mean few of a kind\u2014too few to render detailed descriptions feasible or advisable.» Children's Light and Dark Blue Cheviot Coats, \u2018nicely trimmed with fancy braid.Children\u2019s Brown Melton Box Coats.fancy strap back, shoulder cape, white piping, silver buttons.Children\u2019s navy blue Serge Coats.loose back with belt.red piping, etc., etc.Remember these are Fall weizht Coats, and the opportunity to buy them at these prices is most unusual.TWO 8 TO 10 A.M.SPECIALS In The Shoe Department Ladies\u2019.Rubbers for 25¢ Ladies\u2019 best quality Storm Shape Rubbers\u2014the ** Maltese Cross\u2019 Boys\u2019 $1.50 Boots for 50c Boys\u2019 heavy lace Boots, suitable for school wear: sizes are limited to 3 and 5 \u2018only.Regular price, $1.50; aur price Monday, 8 to 10 a.m., only.- Men\u2019 S Overcoats For $10.50 +.A Style\u2014A Value That Will Command Attention Make the Clothing as good as you can and decide the question of price after the Clothing\u2019s completed and ready-to-wear.Pursuing this principle has enabled the manufacturer of the Men's Clothing we sell to achieve the highest position\u2014to become the recognized maker of the BEST ready-to-wear Clothing that money will buy.If more of this kind of Clothing was sold there\u2019d be a big tumble in the prices of ready-to-wear Clothing.Other stores would be enabled to advertise values the equal of this, Men's Fall and Winter Overcoats, of all wool Tweed, | in a fine black and white mixture, made up in a new Raglanctte style, with wide turn- back cuffs, velvet collar and fly front, lined with superior quality farmer's satin, These coats are not merely put together and pressed always hang well and look stylish, These coats are all made with the new concave shoulder and loose back.Our special price.axenos canon ve Thinking of An Overcoat For The Boy ?A bountiful supply of Overcoats worth thinking about in this store\u2019s assortment.Coats that he'll soon want to commence to wear and can continue to wear throughout the winter.Overcoat wearing days just around the corner adds to the attraction of a special such as this : $6.00 TO $8.00 OVERCOATS ON SALE MONDAY AT $4.95 These Coats are made in the new Raglanette style, of all wool Tweeds, striped and mixed tweed effects, velvet collar, fly fronts, turn back c cuffs, farmer\u2019s * $4.95 05 satin lining.150 only to be sold Monday for, each Ladies\u2019 Costumes-Successfal Styles! © What constitutes a successful style?A style that has merited the approval of Madame la Mode\u2014that has received the sanction of usage, This store\u2019s stocks boast a plentiful supply of successful styles.In quality\u2014in value, too, there's nothing better \u2014nothing finer.The principle that rules the selections is what won\u2019t-add tothe reputation-of the store isn't good enough for the store's public.- Fine Black Broadcloth Costuines, hip length coat, with fitted back, stole collar of taffeta sitk and several rows of stitching ; skirt with deep side pleats Costumes, made of\u2019 fine - Black Cheviot, coat with fitted military braid Ladies\u2019 back, stole collar, new slecves, and velvet trimmings ; braid trimming.Ladies\u2019 Costumes, made of fine \u201cBlack Cloth, cot with fitted \u201cback, doubie-breasted, deen.side pleats, military fancy braid pleats Dress Goods.The Opening BEN sveesse The Sales\u2014the accurate indicator of \u2018public sentiment\u2014have maintained a remarkably high average throughout the week, Naw our problem i is to maintain the department's prestige\u2014to equal the values in the week to come that we've educated | you to expect in the past.© These specials for; Monday :\u2014 ALL-WOOL VENETIAN CLOTH, 43 in, wid ° qu yards ALL- WOCL.BASKET CLOTH, one of rich, lustrous finish, in perfect shaded of .\"the leading fabrics that come in all colors, \u2018brown, green, navy, tawn, gray and black.oc / © and jn 43 inches wide.Special sale price.49e¢ Special sale price .od0000r000ne Vencitérasce pers a 4 INCHES WIDE, \u201cTHE.CORRECT HOP: = tn Hae Eh i ream, pale bine: BACK CLOTH.for Fell Codtum hotel LAE sedh, light na = = ure sien: io) heavy weight, woven of selected wool.eu + ; ES are brown, green, castor, fawn.navy nd, \" 4 tmo oa! Spedia \"pet \u201cire phe gos dot Jerr .black, Value $1.86.Special sa price.o 0.FINE VOILE DE PA \u2018ter rectpifon dresnes, RAH in dainty, del Actu ve ote.> All polars * 4 in wide: Mpeclel.sale! Specie) sale prion, wr Im el wit 4 us, price.a + brent FET IATA a Tu.- + RS + Tas ; .A brand : made by the Gutta Percha Rubber Co.Wholesale list price, 75c pair ; our price Monday 8 to e 2 5 102,M., ONlY.92202000 0000000000 cerenaa C up to look well at first, but are tailored into shape and thus will | $10.50 $15.00 DISPLAY WEEK HAS Coal Hods\u2014The 30c | Ladies\u2019 Box Coats for $7.39 The prominent features\u2014the features to emphasize about these coats are the qualities\u2014the values, .They are made of best quality permanent black Beaver Cloth, well \u2018made, well finished, to the thorough satisfaction of those who appreciate\u2019 and prefer.the style.In sizes 32 to 42.The value is much greater - than the price; for, Monday\u2019 s selling i is only.$7.36 .And 3% Kind for 23c The \u201cDorothy Dodd\u201d is the new departure shoe.It uses X-Ray pho- '} tographs as its guide to '| the shape of the feet.It | fits the shoe to the foot, at a Heavy tin Japanned.and galvanized \u2018| not the foot to the shoe, 306 Speen Mondexens.~.23¢'| Try a pair! (BASEMENT) : BOOTS .8%.TS azd $4.00 3 OXFORDS .$3.00 and $3.73 Tableware PAST COLOR EYELET Odd Cups, LL | Saucers and Plates \u2018 Gas Heaters Heat - A Room Satisfactority - In the Fail! : Spectal size Gls Heuters.Tan On moved from rouin La TVOD: JUUF- anteed to Beat à roum t5 x La in Special price 9139 one bour.Monday, THIRD FLOOR.each Semli-porcelain Blue and White Tea.Dinner and Soup Plates, excellent quality ware, Regular value from! T5e to $1.10 dosen.To be cleared Monday at one price.each es cssn cou qe nc Guen au us ee Cups and Saucers to match for (BASEMENT) = $3 .00 Carpet Sweepers + for $2.19 © Cyco Ball-bearing Risse) Swreper: 33.00.* 2 More Blankets and Comforters Received Into the Stocks._ Solid rubber roller Wash Wringers, cannot.usually be bought for less than 3$3.00.Monday's selling price Carpet usually sold for- Our prtve Monday.42.19 , THIRD FLOOR.More were needed\u2014we never previously experienced.such a y demand for Bed Coverings in the first month of a stason.Flannelette Blankets.in gray or white, \u2018 \u2018with handsome pink 0 pe hore ders\u2014 i 10-4, \u2018or single bed size, per pair.from.ciesaessisssasenanitas Be \u20181n- i, or double bed size, \u2018extra quality, per pair \u2026\u2026.sais hosmanes Bt.18 18-4, or extra large size, best quality, per pair.cauvispasass vesesens +.$1.80 Gray Wool Blankets, 60 x 80 Inches, welght 7 (oa aot $78 pa \u2018Bcroggle\u2019s.price cesdeenes sn >.cu © sou * SN PATA iam } Wool Blankets, welght \u20186 nés, fanior Te White Wool Worth $2.70 \u2018pair.mes ce serie .ssouenègess 1.2, Padded, Wadded and Down \u2018ea \u201cGomi ~ n tou | range of 100d and Wa.all coverings \u201cdouble ooh ero ae Las .Capa 4 mas bm T - + + wots ON {nn \u2018best quale - ; memes vag bach Sb mie Du ter le agro 48.25 a ns ba Boal +.+ ; a.a+ éiememmes Su 4 \u201cLangman 1 =, comes 0 à ¥y ! a» i ; - i Wringers for $345 $5.00 Ones À \u2014 "]
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