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Titre :
The daily witness
Ce quotidien montréalais est marqué par la personnalité de son fondateur, John Dougall, convaincu que les peuples anglo-saxons sont investis d'une mission divine.
Éditeur :
  • Montreal :John Dougall,1860-1913
Contenu spécifique :
mardi 1 novembre 1910
Genre spécifique :
  • Journaux
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autre
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    Successeur :
  • Daily telegraph and daily witness
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The daily witness, 1910-11-01, Collections de BAnQ.

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[" al t.n° -v el Toa Wit * TS: ol ing 1 Was awakened abeul © past six by a roaring sound, and open- ei the door leading into the hall from «here tite sound wos coming.The door seemed hard to epén, owing ! suppose to the draughi, and\u2019 when I did get it open I looked right, into a turnace.1 just had time to cateh hold of a few clothes and make for the door tefore my house Was alsa.in lames.\u2019 The Stadium covered an area of forty-four thousand scuare feet, ahd was a high barn-like structure composed of wood and tin, near the corner of St.Hubert street.and Duluth avenue.When the firemen arrived on ihe scene it presented the appearance of a solid mass of flaune, and they at mee directed.their attention to preventing it spreading to the buildings which are close to three sides of it.\u2018It was just a roaring inferno when | I arrived,\u2019 \u2018said Sub-Chief Hooper; who was in charge; \u2018there was no possible.chance of saving the building, \u2018for even when we got there the roof was collapsing in places, #o.wa directed.all our attention to preventing it spreading to the surrounding tenements.Say, I'm as pleased as if someone had given me a thousand dollars.that none.of: nose houses caught.The building was entirely of wood and how any- ° nody could be peWggitted to erect such a place I do not know.1 only hope \u2018hey never get permission to put up such a structure in the city again.\u201d - The sub-chief had what onlookers | describe as à narrow escape from log- ing his life, but which he makes light cf.He was standing in the lane by the side lof the building directing dp- erations for the saving of the Duluth avenue stores, when without any warning \u2018a wall collapsed.He was seen to disappear In a cloud of dust and smoke but when the firemen ran up the lane expecting to: have to dig | him out from beneath the debris, they aw him standing.iust where he had teen left.There were some windows woof docks on the St.Lawrence at Levi and at Montreal.- 86ine time.ago the Dominion Dry Docks Company filed plans for a dock\u2019 at Levis with the Public Works Department.These.plans were rejected by the \u2018 were rejected as the financial démands\u2019 were too high.The revised plans will | be submitted.Vickers Son & Maxim | submitted plans for a dry dock at - Montreal, and these are still under consideration, } a \u2014 A LINK WITH THE PAST.À Major.C: C.de Rudio, Who Attempted to Kill the Empress : Eugente, Dead.-Los Angeles.No v.1\u2014Major C.C.de \u2018Rudie, who in fhe early- sixties at- lempted to assassinate the Empress Lugenie by hurling a bomb under her \u2018arriage, is dying at his home in this city.He is 78 years old, Major de Rudio was sentenced to be fuillotined for his attemmt to assass- \u2018mate the Empress, bat Queen Victoria interceded in his behalf at the request °f his English wife, and the punish lient was reduced to exile.He came to the United States and participated in Lie civil war.He joined the regular Army, and attained the rank of major.et MR.BORDEN RETURNS, Leader of Opposition Has No Advice for By-election.Vitawa, Nov.1\u2014Mr: R.L.Borden, \u201cader of the Opposition, returned at on to-day from Hot Springs, Va.He \u201cooking the picture of health, and ex- ljresses bimself as looking.forward W.th keenness to the next session df burl lament.Asked ir the he had any message for Conservatives of Drummond- Arthabaska, Mr.Borden replied: \u2018Sims.F SaYÿ to them that they should-vote- \u2018rording to their conscientious con- Lions\u2019 » \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 pre : À CASE FOR DEPORTATION.Jumes Rg.Bowen, an \u2018American Youth, was found in a Craig street lool room this morning by Detectives ge «nn and-Beauchemin and taken © Police headquarters.He will prob- , x be deported.He was arrested.NY on a charge of stealing from King\u2019 & Company, but on NY Lo leave the country lie was his liberty, the theory.of the vrities being of the opinion that V'URtry would be better off if he - \u2018Ver the line than if he had to an good Canadian \u2018skilly\u2019 at or Vallee\u2019s hotel.; tier he preferred jail here to + air of his native land, or \u2018er the United States police are * to get hold of him, is not' but he delayed his going, and 7 Tecognized, the officers deemed : to take him in charge hefore pal commit any more \u2018crimes.Ta irpenter says it is a case for GAT lon, .pr \u201cRRESTED SELLING TOOLS.\u201crt Maisonneuve, thirty years of ond of no fixed abode, was ar- yesterday 4 a -charge of steal- © 0 Kit of Carpenter's tools, which \u2018à (0 sell to a second-hand deal- Ontario street \u2018east, © DVTOMOBILE CAUGHT FIRE.\u201chitomobile belonging to Mr.T.Line, 8)2 Dorchester street wns hadly damaged ÿesterdàäy Di by fire, caused by the gaso- \u201cali exploding.{men dut NONTREAL DRY DOCKS | in the situatiom regent.the.avy\u2019 | ok Sr fact the fire has not.got\u2018 ego Une walls in any case.The building was valued at $75, 000, and insured for $35,000, but inh addition t0 the main loss, several smaller losses have been incurred which will be more deeply felt.About a dozen bandsmen were employed at the rink, who were\u2019 in the habit of leaving their instruments and music behind.at the hall, amd all their proferty, including brass instruments, drums and music, valued in all at about three thousand dollars, has-been destroyed, while Mr.Dorrity, who rented the restaurant.\u2019 has lost fittings and refreshments to the value of about a.thousand dollars.i Asked if Tio had any ide: as to how the fire started, Mr.ie said he Supposed it.was from one of the Quebec heaters which were.left burning \u2018all night, and Sub-Chief Hooper also | thinks this may have been the cause, although there was a large amount of electric wiring there - Asked\u2019 if the Stadium would be.re- bulit -Mr\u201d Gauthier replied that it | would not.\u2018You can say, be sald, \u2018that there are thirteen lotsa: for-sale.We.shall.all osttainly not rebuild.place cost.much for ai to \u2018get Heopie* 16 come toit.meetings we have talked as to At our wiheth- he hiafl: enjoyed, he had of - his: peopl and\u201d co-operation: \u2018He Has been with: | the \u201cmany lessons,\u201d He hem 2.in.times .of joy\" sand \u201csorrow, at |.marriages.and deaths \u2018Spoke off ™ e.those: in his ministry \u201cpi.rafter a bright opening.promise, had fallen .be- hind 'in the fight of Christlanity, and |g of those difficult: to move, whose.religion seemed only forgiveness and God's.MANSLAUGHTER: vrtnicr | : % Against Italian\u2019 Who' Threw | 52\" Stone Which Kflled Boy, The Jury returned \u201cw verdict.\u2018ot manslaughter.at the coroner's: inquest, held & the morgue last.Saturday morning, Vincenzo Guirrani, the Italian Ww a stone at young Henry Rares the eleven-year-old son of | The - er.we would rebuild it anything happened to it, 30 I can.say certainly ° that we shall mot.02 course the valué of the property round \u2018here goes up now.Those lots - they wanted $1.15 a foot for, \u2018bur! could not | sell because a place of amusement depreciated the propérty.Now the place of amusement has dlsappeared.Tl bet they have gone up twenty- flve-cents à foot since aix orelock \u201cthis morning.\u201d ; .The Stadium is wotaily \\destroyed, | and - \u2018where -ornce \u2018there w a \u2018large building \u2018there\u2019 \u201cis now nothing but a black mass-of\u2019 smoking timers on the ground.LL no RS \u2018PALE\u2019 B EXTENDED % séctioni \u2018for the,\" res \" Hegstofore: legal rési a.tu has: Been «réstricted fo that section ofthe: Polish\u2019 provinces and the Ukraine delimited by the original Jewish segregation \u2018aw, and\u201d \u2018the pale.\u201d Æmpérial- an ~ consent: is now, given to.unrestricted - \u201cresidencé.\u2018of Jews in twelve: districts in the pro- | virices of - Vitebsk,\u2019 .Volliynia, \u201cMohilév,- Poltava and ; Kherson, and the town of Yekaterinodsr, the capital: of\u201d \u2018Kabat, rele cee rtm DR.BARCLAYS Y's FAREWELL Last Sermon to.to.His Gongrogs- tion i in St.Pal\u2019s Chareh, After a ministry < of 27 years, the Rev.Dr.: James.Barclay \u2018said\u2019 fare- -well.to his congregation at St.Pauls | Presbyterian Church on Sunday night.The.church scareely.accommodated the great crowd of friends which gathered to hear \u2018the prominent.predcher\u2019s last \u2018address as regular pastor.The.sérmon \u2018was, to a great extent, retrospective, a\u2019 resume of the growth, through trials and difficulties, of Pro- \u2018testataniem.He-dweit upon the un- THE REV.DR.BARCLAY.- E \u2018rest.caused by the discoveries .of science, which: to.many people.were \u2018not compatible with \u2018the Bible truths, \u2018and held that the interpretation had shown that there was no conflict between the proven discoveries of man 1 and the revelätions of .God.There is no need to fear for the future of Christianity, according to the speaker.The outlook is optimistic.A spirit of inquiry had arisen during the past generation, said; Dr.Barclay, and he referred to the \u2018new scepticism which, newspapers \u2018and magazibhes had put before the public.The faith of some had suffered shipwreck, but no-alarm- need be feft.Tha essential virtues of .the faith were unchanged, unshaken.It had been to | \u2018à certain extént a crisis in Protéstant- ism, but \u2018Christianity has through many crises, and -has always emerged with new strength.Dr.Bai- ' clay believed that Protestantism «had gained in the last struggle \u2018for .old interpretations, that were the cause of many controversies gave way to new.Turning towards the part the | preacher must play in these later days, Dr Barclay scored the\u2019 partizan .in.the \u2018pulpit.The preacher must to-day consider the attitude to be adopted tg- ward the relations of the church lo indyustrial problems, and the partizan \u2018passed | Wictogia- Hospital.ortly after.the grime Guirradid ap-, peared before .Judge.Lanctot on a charge of attempted under, bat was.\u2018released on -badl, .When tbe boy.\u2018succumbed to to his n- uirrani was arrested agde and up, with the result that péaréd before the coroser, above verdict- was retürned.The 1iwo companions; ofr \u2018Henry Rowles, George St.\u201d Guintin, .29 Bourgeois street, and Arthur Crane, 310 Bourgeols street, testifted tbat they had done nothing to vex the Italian, who was putting Wood intd a \u2018cellar at the \u2018time.Further examination\u2019 failed to bring out amy more evidence, so they were allowed to go, and Guirrant Was taken back to the cells.omens iasaninana MONTEEALS FIRE CHIEF \u201cot Montreal \" it Chiet Tremblay; without doubt a wonderful \u2018fire-.er, his principal method: of figh fires\u2019 being 0: prevent\u2019 \u201cthem.\u201d The\" as he.does this is\u2019 by having: Inspectors, consisting of.the captains -of egch brigade, visit each \u2018and every: large buflding in Montreal,\u2019 and make SUB, géstions'to the praprietars.This un-'| doubtedly.has beén\u201dthé \"mean creasing the number.G2 Pres-in.Montreal.Tt.18.to be shopéd that.5% | fire johief in \u2018every.town - -and: city Sonde \u201cwilll follow the\u2019 \u2018example, of -\u2018Ghief Tremblay of: Mop bot et us get to the ; à Chief \u2018Tremblay, \u2018 thers, the.\u2018loss change \u2018of the.fire spreading.* With \u201cthis \u201cend An-view, -he has: proposed \u2018to \u2018the Cl that the \u2018have automobile\u2019 hose waggons, and.as Montreal\u2019 now has.Board, of Control, tomposed of active | business men.who: will, certainly; an- .derstand the advantage of \u2018getting to the \u2018 fire quicker,\u201d the chances\" his way.THe City CouncH started the | ball rolling \u201cby purchasing gn : auto-.\u2018thébile for \u2018the use of\" the \u2018fire -chie Hé is nôw right on.the job, on e minute, ready to give orders to.his - men.\u2018First, however,\" Says Chief \u2019Tremblay, \u201ctook\u201d to the safety of people -in \u201cpuildings.\u201d So the captains first call on.manufacturers and suggest re- \u201cmoval of: clippings, .pails, ha¥ing \u201cnew fire escapes; and more of them, and.\u2018many other sound suggestions.Possibly the most complete or at least one of the most complete buildings in this respect.is an immense shirt factory, _ whose structure \"18 equipped throughout with extinguishers, spfinkler system, water bue- kets, fire escapes, and all the hest appliances, for the safety of \u2018its.hun+ dreds of employees.Thanks to Chief Trembiay, the Majority of \u2018the factories are folloging suit.We need a \u2018Chief Tremblay: in every town and city in Canada: to fight fires\u2014by \u2018preventing thein!-\u2014Cranbrook (B.C) \u2018Herald.To.~ rp ra rer ir MAN AND HORSES BURN.\u2018Brandon, Nov.1\u2014In \u2018the Canadian Northern Railway yards at 4 qe.x, this morning, John Regan and.\u2018thir-| o teen Hhorses 3vere lurned-1n-8 cars vue rhorses weré the property of the Hal- \u2018jury Manufacturing.Company, \u2018and were being shipped to the company\u2019s lumber camp\u2019 at Roblin, Man, in rte eee TO EREÉT \u20188100, 000 CHURCH.saskatoon, \u201cNov.1\u2014The Third ave.\u201cMethodists have decided to erect a $100,000 adifica : on.the.surface.| Jus a Wherg he had failed,\u2018 he asked for thar thon; vof de: are | Chief Tremblay will \u2018once more have.| putting «in fire | bogk& being Sefenic ators.answered Dr: Genune.27% Se showing fiow this; end the othe early \u2018books, ffirow a Hght \u2018on the minds of the anolents, shows their natural Sten dencies.-poetry .and.folk.stories, showing\u2019 the events and+in their possible meanings.© \u2018Some: wene.not at: all literary,\u201d s@ld the: speaker.\u201cBaul \u2018had no literary gifts farmer turned: king.\u2019 hall, \u2018and the proverbs he enjoyed \u2018more analogies than because they gave him the opportunity of teaching: great lés- sons.The Songs of Solamon -and the { Proverbs were not all Solomon\u2019s.\u2018They might rather be called Solomonic.They represented.the thought of the time: in Vo |æ style which Solomon had introduced.Dr.Genung \u2018thought this was clearly v1 evidenced by :a.change in the spirit if ¥ not the style of the Proverbs.\u2018Toward the end,\u2019 he sald, \u2018it seems as though the writer.were.thinking more how to say things than what to say.\u2019 Bass In reviewing the address of the pre- a remark of Pr.Genung's referring to éd literature.- It.is the word of God side if we would understand the right: worth of the Holy Scriptures.And we.| can\u2019t dô)that: until the passage comes to mean to us what it did to the-per- sons-who write it.We must feel what -them judge it as especially worthy of.being kept.\u2019 To-night the Rev.J.Patérson- on the Bible, to which all are: invited.This lecture, as All other sessions of- the conference, will be held in the Min- cesan Colege on University streeu DETECTIVES SUDDEN CALL.ter\u2019s Staff, Passed Away.on Saturday Night.| Chief e Carpenter has lost one his best men by the death, on Saturday night, of Detective John McCall.The officer may be said to have died on duty.His \u201clast assignment was.the case of the little lad\u2019 who was killed by a blow from a stone thrown by an Italian at .Point St.Charles last week.The boy \u2018died in.the.Royal Victoria Hospital on Friday night, and the detective.in the \u2018same institution the next night.: Mr.McCall wis one of the most stur- his death came as a shock to his com- ances.He was a son-of the late Mr.Philip MeCall, and was about forty years of dge, and unmarried.He had for abont-eighteen years, the first half of whieh had been spent on the beat, \u2018and.the last half as a detective.He -wës both efficient and popular.He was a staunch \u2018Liberal, ahd before joining the police force did good service.for \u201chis party.He was a \u2018member of the Canadian Order of Foresters, a Knight ¢ -Cglumnbus, and fer years a member o the hamrock ALAA, Thursday .evening .Detective McCall \u2018complained of feeling.ill \"swhile at tea, but the spell passed: off, \u2018and he went to Point St.Charles on the case of the boy referred to above.He returned home late and went to Jed, but about ihree o'clock .on Friday -morning called members of the family, who found him covered with blood, ge with: whom | he, resided at 12 al, | fontaine.\u2018he | to-mérrow morning at 8: \u201cthe family residence, to, St.Patrick\u2019s\u2019 \u201c| Church.Fifty policemen fn charge of 1'Capt.Bellefleur.of No.u station, will ; = ; oi Fight Police aad Stop mot a \u2018question | iz} | thie Bijou: Theatre.The Manitoba, Pres- \u2019 byterian College | en the.- stage of the\u201c theatre: ;before.a : crowded house, and took: possession of | the entextainmént.some\u201d Mpree-play - they \u2018started to de-:| of wété: \u2018dalled, and a fight.\u2018between.hel Ty Yeandle, the: juror, had beeh- ke x Careful: fn; his Jesture, : e Gen- = 7-29 xing - Liajwites from UNE ca tideréd.the Book \u2018of verbs; which the Bo died.last Friday.night j at dr Royal.\u201d :Im-these is t be found \u2018rie.People.took great Interest in passing\u2019 at all; hie .was Just a husky young kitied But David\u2019 and.Solomon changed this.-Solomon-made '& fresh, new literature: | -, His mind: \u2018Was unlike his father's st | wag not se much religious as secular.\u2019 | The Temple he regarded as.a judg, gment : because: \u2018they enabled\u201d him to draw fine - vious day, Rev.Prof.Patton.reiterated ' Biblical literature, \u2018That it is a winhow- selected from the best.We must study | this,\u2019 Dr.Pathon added, \u2018ffom \u2018the in- the man: felt.who wrote it, and what.1 tHose- of, ds time saw In it\" to .make Smyth will give mn IHustrated lecture-| a der the.Preshyterian.Church\u201d at Snow- | Mr.John McCäll, ef Chief Carpen- | dy men on the force, and the news-of \u2018rades and to a large circle of acquaint-\u2019 been connected with the police force -sion.+ oF , DETECTIVE\u2019 MeCALL.\u2026.Tw 2 Parc La- The \u2018funeral\u2019 will take place o*clock from- attend.the\u2019 funeral, , \u201c RIOT IN THEATRE: = Performance at Winnipeg Winnipeg, Nov.1 Hallowe\u2019 en pranks.caused \u2018big\u2019 disturbance \u201clast night at \u2018studenta marched \u201cAfter -indulging \u2018in .|stroy, - they\u2019 sceriery.- - Then, the police: # \u2018and the police ensued.nts-lised stenes, chairs; \u2018and 2, ; hahdy, while the- police used, is - ehibs, and as thé.charges grew\" more: |.flyrion SUE.ï.fired- shots \u2018over - the: \u2018head ntl \u201c0 8 io box ito.the judge's chamber.George.\u2018morning.and charged with havin demanded ane acceped a bribe.The arrest was\u2019 \u201cride bw«central office de- téétives after \u201c$500, it\u2019 was alleged; had been given io Yeamille by George A.Knobleck; one\u2019 of.Rosénheimer\u2019s: law- |.ÿers.\u2018Rosenheimeris -alleged \u201cto: have run dôwn- the buggy-in .which- Miss Hough was riding, \u2018and air fhe \u2018éol- \u2014Hou sh \u2018wag \u2018Mele Y; \u2018Lewis Teaves Verdun \u201cSoon for British: Columbia.Mr.Cc.Y.Lewis, last past president of the Verdun Social\u2019 and Literary Society, who, during .the past summer has been doing \u2018missionary.work un- MR, oY.LEWIS: PS flake, Manitoba, and who has been enjoying a brief .holiday among his Verdun friends, is in a short time going away again.Mr.Lewis has just had an offer of a mission in British Columbia.from Mr.G.B.Wilson, Kamloops, con- -véner of the British Columbia Home Mission, and has accepted.He expects to leave In about a fortnight for his new field of labor.WANT QUEBEC MINISTER.Saskatoon Extends Call to the Rev.Wylie Cook.- Saskatoon, Sak., Nov; I\u2014Knox Church has extended a call tasthe Rev.Wylie Cook, of Chalmers Church, Que- DR.CRIPPEN.CANNOT ATTEND.(Canadian Associated Press.) London\u2019 Nov.1.\u2014Sir Edward Rid- ley, the High Court, to-day refused the request -of counsel .for -Dr.Hawley \u2018Crippen.that the latter be allowed to be present at.the hearing of his appeal for a new trial, \u201cMr.Arthur New.\u2018ton has appealed against.this deci- (Associated Press.) London, Nov.1.\u2014Upon application of his counsel tke hearing to-day by the.Criminal Court of Appeals of the appeal of Dr.Hawley H.Crippen under sentence of death for the murder \u2018assis instantly \u2018the Provincial of the King's Bench division of| pkson low \u2018BY.: * Seasons crop, \u2018and B; O.Holden .and several cothers lost considerable quantities of: oats.In the Yorkton \u201cdistrict fires raged {a all directions.The losses will total $10,- The fires are still raging in Orkney, White and Wallace districts.At Theodore the wind was very high and grass fires threatened several farms./ At Fort \u2018 Qu\u2019Appelle fire .started from .the Indian reservation and burned swiftly- - through Springbank -to near the town: Several farmers lost granaries and stacks.; At Kamsack, Sask., fire swept the Fort Pelly district.- R.S.Duns lost forty tons of hay and 2,000 \u2018bushels of grain.Fire \u2018also\u2019 swept through Turtle Mountain, south of .Desford, Man., doing much damage, .W.Turner lost.his house, stables, hay, wood and .all his grain, his family -barely escaping with\u2019 their lives.| tn i is Rumored, Has Resigned London, Nov.1.\u2014Tt is stated that Viscount Morley has resigfied the office of secretary of state for India, ~ \u2018VISCOUNT MORLEY, and\u2019 \u2018the fact - that ne declines : information on-the-subject.is accepted as confirmation of the report of.his retirement.The Viscount Is in his 73rd some timé desired to vacate his post because.of his advanced - years and ill-health.The Earl of Crewe is men- tiohed as likely to succeed\u2019.Viscount Morley.STORM SWEPT, BRITAIN.Viclent Disturbande, it is Féared, Will, Cause: Much -Dama ir Washington, Nov.1, \u2014 The: British Isles and Northern Europe to- -day.are being Swept.by.a .storm of violent intensity, according to.cables \u2018received by the Weather Bureau.' The: disturbance covers a wide area, and it is believed \u2018much \"damage will be done to shipping.The low barometric pressure of 28.56 inches is: recorded as the centre of the disturbance.The exact location of the centre was not given: Unsettied- weather conditions continué: \u2018over the.Caribbean Sea and .the Weather Bureau reports that there are indications of ; disturbances south of Jamaica; the extent.of which cannot yet! Be ascertained.Co + STOPPED \u2018REBELLION.; \u2014_\u2014 Peruvian Government Disgovered Widespread Plot, AY Lima, Pery, : Nov.1\u2014-By the arrest\u2019 of: the .leadei\u2019s: tow day thé- government \u201cnipped \u2018in tihe- bud à Tebellious \u2018hove- ment that appeared.to have been planried \u201cquite thoroughly.\u2019 , At Cuzco, a city of thirty thousand, ih the Department.of Cuzco, 350 miles from the capital, \u2018government agents last night uncovered a.\u2014plot .~fhat provided .for simultaneous\u201d \u2018uprisings \u2018at \u201cdifferent places throughout the \"Republic, \"The organizers.\u201cWere _ soon \u2018\u2018incustody, - and the .government\u2019 adopted other méa- sures tô- ensure tranquility.\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 + DOMINION FIRE CONTROL.\u201cToronto, Nov.1.\u2014At the meeting of Association of\u2018 Fire rhiafs at the City Hall yesterday, it was intimated that at this afternoon\u2019s session a suggestion would be made that the Dominion- Government shonld be asked to appoint a commission for the.purpose of taking over the \u2018whole matter of fire protection from the municipalities and councils.The matter will be introduced by Chief W.A.Howard, of Peter-.borough.\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014r\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 BRITISH POLITICIAN HERE.Mr.Fred.Horn, who is a Liberal candidate for Parliamentary election fn Yorkshire, is at present in this city, en route to.Ottawa and Toronto, having arrived here.on Saturday on his way to a visit to the West to gather information on political issues.Mr.Horn will contribute.letters on \u201cthe Subjects investigated to the London \u2018Daily.Chronicle,\u201d and is especially interested in land reform.Mr.Horn is aware that, in cunse- quence of the season, he may not see as much of the country as otherwise, \u2018of.his actress wife.Relle Elmore, was.the\u2019 result of a hemorrhage due to the.\u2018postponed to Saturday.but he thinks it a good opportunity , to secure other views.VISCOUNT MORLEY'S PLA NS | Secretary\u2019 of State for India, it | take 4 Een dara cata\u2019 Hota: So year, and.it is known \u2018that he-has for.ly > is much _Sreouraged AN attended by serious consequences.Now that Mr.Fielding is back it is expected that there will de an early announcement in respect to the formal resumption of tariff negotiations.While no official statenient has been made it is understood tha.a preliminary conference is likely to be held in Ottawa before the end of next week.At this conference tentative proposals will be made by both sides, and then an adjournment will be taken.This course, it is said, will be because of the necessity of givinz consideration to the proposals made and also because Mr, Fielding will pe busy the following week in the work of preparing business for the consideration of parliament.The American representatives at the prelitninary conference, it is said, will be Mr.J.E.Faster, consul-general of the United States at Ottawa; Mr.Pepper, of the American Tariff Board, and possioly Mr.Emery, also of the \u2018Tariff Boara.In the tater stages of the negotiations Secretary Knox wHl no doubt participate.Canada will be represented by Mr.Fielding and Mr.Paterson, who conducted the successful .negotiations of last spring.- \"PREPARATIONS AT WASHINGTON, Washington, D.C., Nov.1.\u2014The possibilities for reciprocity with Canada has progressed to the point where the tariff board 1s about to take up some of the schedules of the present law which would be affected.The chemi- cal-schedule, upon which a start was made several weeks ago, will be allowed to wait tentatively atleast, and would be one of the principal factors in a reciprocity.arrangement, will its place.Experts who have been working on the pulp wood and { paper schedule in which the Canadian arrangements also would be concerned, are .\u2018making progress beyond the expectations of the board.Several of pan eue paper companies have.\u201cto: furhigh important \u201cned ry TROYPS 16°68 COME HERE King Edward's H s Horse of Lon- doh: Receive Support for Trip.(Canadian Assqciated Press.) London, Nov- L\u2014The \u2018Pall Mall Gazette\u2019 says preparations are being made \u2018to send King Edward's Horse, formerly the King's Colonials, to Can- ala in 1911.At present it is undecided as to, whether the tour will have financial help from the Home Government, but the undertaking is to be indepen- dént of snch help, since a band of rich bill.! ST.JAMES CENTENARY.Special Services Were Held in Montreal\u2019s Oldest Methodist Church.The second week of the St.James Methcdist Church centenary celebration began on Sunday morning and - Thanksgiving Day fitted appropriately in: the programme yesterday.On Sundaÿ morning the Rev.Dr.Young, of Douglas Church, and a \u2018formier :pastor of St.James, was the preacher, and in the evening the Rev.Hugh Johnston, D.D.\u2026, pastor of this congregation, when it worshipped in St.James street, occupied the pulpit.Both sermons were of unusual interest, and were listened to by large congregatiols.The music was appropriate to the occasion.and of ex- \u201ccellent mualitv.Yesterday morning a union Thanksgiving service was held, at which members from all the other Methodist churches in the city were nre- course and the music were very much enjoyed by a large congregation.In the evening the young people of the church held a social in the church, parlers.The topic was: Young people, past and present.\u2019 Excellent.addresses were given by the Rev.John Douglas, Mr.Penrose Anglin, Mr.Fred.Mathews, Mr.C.Boon and others.Refreshments were served at the close.The pastor, the Rev.Dr.Sparling, presided.STRIKE RIOTS CONTINUE.Expressmen in New York Clashed With Police Again To-day.New York, Nov.1.\u2014The first disorder to-day in the express employees\u2019 strike, occurred on Madison avenus, when a reserve squad of police started to disperse a mob of 300gnen who were attacking an American Express waggon.A pitched battle began.Broken bottles, stones and other handy missiles flew through the air aad the big night sticks of the blue coats came into play.The strike sympathizers in a few minutes took to their heels, leaving three of their comrades in the hands of the officers.The Interborough \u2018OK\u2019 Company, New York Transfer and Dodd's Express drivers and helpers joined the strikers at noon.; Fiftv delivery boys and helpers employed by a large uptown department store went out on strike to-day, while the drivers and helpers of a west side -rarehouse also quit work.~ mt \u2018specialists in rt 1 EEE CS 1171 VE a = ; o L A ?ir dé RE ; isdd that Eherets little na Lu a 3 that the attack of facial paralysis from which he has been sufiering will be it 1s sald to be not unlikely that a .1 revision of the lumber schedule, which\u2018 hat one time it ong.\u2026; Londoners are prepared to - foot the ' sent.The preacher was the Rev.A.A.Radley, pastor of Sherbrooke Street Methodist Church.The dis- So = FRE ITA \u201c+ i r NER x: 00 PE RASE RATER ie, Len maT > ade NE pese ras Fahey as es vas ess a gt és gr rally Higher\u2014Hr.ma | - on Steel Corp.Securities 7% RL + Ee After being two days closed, the 5 cal stock market opened this morn- TN active and quite\u201d strong.The Mkatures were Canadian Pacific, which Mibened at 200-and advanced to- 202 A close; «Sop,» which, opened at.88; Be hc need\u201d ja del Corporätio 2; and Québec Railway; which.ré-\"} Revered during the session\u201d to 49 1-2.b> \u2018There were scattered sales in\u201d some xteen other stock issues, and.bonds re in fair demand.Mr.Plummer, president of the: \u2018Do- Piended an issue of $1,500,000 five-Year ¥* percent debéntures.at $95.37 and\u2019 oll-secured and desirable investment What net earnings; applicable to \u201cdivt- 4 gdends on the common stock held by | #he Dominion Steel Corporation for #909, after deducting depreciation and \u2018wpayment of fixed charges and full gpreferred dividends, were $2,446,834, or je! Nn amount more than sufficient to re- i the.present \u2018issue of debentures: ; + \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 rei i New York; Nov.The opening.Was : on ana\u2019 nérrow, \u2018with Amalgamat Fopper- and Canadian Pacific \u2018the.only / .Pi ong features.- Amalgamated Copper was bought on the reduction of gnetal on hand, as shown in the Euro- mean report, Canadian Patific on the 2 obabili ty of an increase in the \u2018Soo.\u2019 pa ridend to 8 percent, and the possi- lity of greater disbursements ion Ca- idian Pacific itself.BL During the first hour the general list: d off fractionally, all of the actives pping off from half a point to a téint below last night's close.There Was very little commission business, nd trading was extremely dull., ÿ##Toward thè*efa of the second hour ®Bese losses were all rectvered and the dñarket is now selling at a _trifie above ist night's finals.Trading on the dance was as apathetic and listless s it was on 'the decline, and the mar- fu shows no real tendency in either- Airection.° #\"#Sales to noon, 167, 800, including .6,500 à P.R.\u2014\u2014\u2014- estate Son tonte tra ten tonton Sad tn-0te 030 : aa ef «3 e >, + + $ J \"s+ etre ee rte 007 .Rumors of an .impending Las $250,000,000 British naval loan, ££ the chief cause of the drop in Ms: consols, are apparently without, Zr foundatioh, and according to the London \u2018Telegraph\u2019 there is likely to be no immediate #4.necessity for an increased Eng- & lish shipbuilding programme.feefeadesieedeadosdontocloatoctoatectoodeatatondeidy Soudecdosts {pue - Wall St, Closed Strong É.New York, Nov.1°\u2014The New York Frock market closed fairly strong this WBfternoon, \u201crie a ong quoted at 202; 5 Gordon & Shorey, 84 £-.\u2018Francois avier street, réport the flowing Co- glt quotations :\u2014 à 4 MORNING SALES.$d Bia ick, 500 at 5.500 at 4%, 300 at di, i%, 500 at 176, 200, At, 436, gerer, 5000 ! at \u201d 3114,\u201d CL EE \u2018ériand, 1500 at-18%.EE Temiskaming, 3000 at 88.: .Temiskaming, 300 at 87.à Un.-Pacific, 300 at 1%.te ! ehan, 500 at: 2%, 580 at %.poem \\yandoh, 500° gg 1-72 ST .Gould, 499 ut +5 26 at 4.8.> WINNITEG WHEAT CLOSING: \u201cFluctuations In Winnipég \u2018wheat pricst on\u2018the Winnipes' grafr exchange to-day were as follows: Nov.\u2018May, Open .91 9455 High .91% 90 94-76 Low .89% 88} .93% Close 89% 88% 9315 pret ROCK ISLAND LINES.Rock Island lines: Sept gross \u2018increase $276,484; net decrease $210,9 Three months\u2019 gross increase $292,- 963; net decrease 34, 077, 207.Total Gross 3 \"Net Eargl pa Fas d.Myr, Stoker was decidedly optimistic ns to the future of the company and stat- things.that the cargous carried by the company\u2019s Canadian steamers during the past year aggregai- ed 440,000 tons, and on this basis 'ie increase which was anticinated of\u2019 {wo shillings per ton would add some 44,909 pounds sterling to {heir earnings, an lle said that he believed that this increase would be operative within the next few months.Titustrating the m- crease in the company's business, tae chairman said that at the very time whem the meeting was heing held, there was one of the compan*\"s Ships on her way home from (Canada with a caren which was worth £800 more than tnat whiel, she had carried on her last nre- vious voyage.At the- same time.he wished to point out that while Manchester merchants were-heginning to re- cognire that Manchester goods shoull many years be shipped by Manchester steamers.they had not as yet become so fully imhnad with this idea as they should have done, and prot: ably would do\u2019 in the near future.À PALACE OF FURS.Holt.' Renfrew & Co.established seventy-five years in Quebec as the leading retail providers of furs of every description.will to-morrow open a new branch business in St.Cath- between McGill College avenue and Mansfield street.Tor three-quarters of a century Holt, Renfrew & Company have reliably supplied fur coats, stoles, ties, muffs.capes.carriage robes and everything in the fur way of such quality and value that { has brought them not only the Canadian.but a vast amount of American trade, store at Quebec always being in June.July and \u2018August crowded by purchasers from the Uritel States.The new premises to be opened tomorrow occupy 6.600 square feet, and have been constructe:l exclusively for the purpose.The front is unique.The sidewalk under the massive ornamental permanent glass awnings is of Welsh tile; the lower windows show tastefully disposed and rich varieties of furs.On the windows \u2018above are grouped bears.big and lit- black, white, and grey; leopards Inside the premises the doors lead first to a magnificent large square, covered entirely in the finest quality green Axminster, made to special o der in England.The color scheme i in verdes antique: majestic columns support statuary of lLronze: big rages of crotched mahogany\u2014the oniy sort of its kind in Montreal\u2014hold furs in Jarge numbers additional to those which meet the eye on every side.In one of these vases Hudson's Bay subles running from $10 tu $50 a skin, -He was = |Moccasins ! Moccasins! Get your INDIAN MOCCASINS at \u201cTRE ; WIGWAM, \u201d | Will save fully 20 percent on your purchase.opporite Dominion Square.ing high prices.pairs.134 Peel street, and you Open evenings.134 Peel strect, Avold pay- We can show you 5,220 \u201cCA RBRAY \u2014 DIED.At Bergerville, Que.cn 28, 1910, Margaret Moran, \u2018eld.-st daughter of the late Patrick Moran, and beloved wife of Edward Carbiu-.DEIJSLE -\u2014 On Oct.2%, 1810, at St.John's suburbs, Quebec, Charles Tres- Delisle, druggist.aged 46 voars husband of- Dame Caro ine D: Aisle.and Russian sables, to $275 a skin, amount up alone in value of $50.000.here, however, the cream of the market, foxes from Canada, there arc furs to suit the most modest requirements and the less w ealthy pocket, The spread over three floors.served by an elevator.|-side looking down into the handsonic interior.fireproof vaults of built for the storage not only firm\u2019 s stock, handsome place is minated twenty-five \u2018candle power.Montreal.M.\\RING A NEW The Cinadian Edward, Quebec and Montreal Thursday, of Point and is expected to arrive at Quebec at their.costing from $13 not only fur beautiful silver the finest fur district in that of Lake St.John.but There is including extensive show rooms are each with galleries on one and on the other sixty-feot solid masonrt of the but also of the furs of The whole of this splendidly illu- with 350 electric lamps of Mr.G.We.managing - director in \u2018patrons.is the _- a RECORD.Northern liner Royal sailed from Bristo) vor at 6 pm.last was reported 100 tuiles enst Amour at 5.30 p.m.yesterday, which 30 to-morrow morning.This allows Yay a few hours\u2019 delay if she meets with any foggv weather.but in any case it seems as If she is going 10 establish an entirely westward two hours more than she is expected to new record for as the previous tin trip, best is The Royal Edward is making her ' ast trip, and carries a very list, there being 50 first, \u201c409 third class.xood passeng 118 second and A at The Pianola Piano Is Different Cniel among the exclusive superjo-}, - of the Pianola Plano are the devices that give one a control music\u2014the Metrostyle, anc many tions that enable the person with no musical training to pu: his own feel- into the music.: patents protect these various features \u2014sure lasting supremacy.It is these feat \u2014fo vd in no other Instrument\u2014that have won for the Pianola Plano the uctive endorsement of nearly all of the world's maste:s of musle, Ohtainable {n Montreal only at NORDHEIMERS\u2019 Limited vor.St.Catnerine and Mountain Sta, over th the Themodist other marvellous inven.More than 309 ;-oof of the Pianola Pia res \u2019 AO RESTÉS CT RS SEAT SC al o* - \u2014 Co RE PRE NN LE ; A, AVIATORS ATTEMPT FAILS \u201cdy, and this, in connection with a high Lawson Breaks Collarbone on First .ten, and.Iver Lawson, of Salt Lake SIT ES + ; + | = CaN A Pt NE .Taendsy) Nov.1st., 8 p.m., : 11 a.m., The Bible as a Histérical : THE RI JR.¥ \u2018 2.30 p.m., \u201cFhe Development dt Law in.1 : : - RABBI H Thursday, Nov.3rd., 10 x.n., : \u2018The Bible and the Culture of the Spiritu 4.00 p.m., \u201cThe Bible and Archeology,\u2019 SU BIELER, B.D\" THE PUBLIC CORDIALLY INVITED TO ALL THE SUSSIONS: = SY ekly.Cale a INTER-COLLEGIATE THÉOLOGIC A © iL In the DIGOBSAN 2 illustrated by lime-light views, THE REV DR.PATERSON-SI Wednésday, Nov.2nd, IC sam.\u2018The Authotity ST the Bible; - a .EV.W.S.LENNON, BA., B.D, Basis for Belief,\u2019 .; REV.DR.WELSH.| lgrael, |.os H.ABRAMOWITZ, PhD.\u2019 al Life, THE REV.PROF.BIEL \u2018ART ASSOCIATION GALLERIES OF PAINTING SCULPTURE, Et ¢pen 9am ta6pm Admission 256 | BRITISH AND POREIGN MAILS.:To be Closed at this Office During the Week Ending Nov.5, 1810,\" .Nov., : - 1 9.30 a.m.Oceanic, White Star.* 1 6.00 p.m.* Supplementary, 2 930 dm.La, Provence, - .© 7G.T.Atlantic * -2 6.00 p.m.\u201c Supplementary.° ** { 10.30 a.m.Empress of Ireland, , Can.Pacific 4 9.30 a.m, \u2018New York, .American + 4 6.00 pm.¢ Supplementary.$412.30 p.m.Canada, Dominion.*Letters may be posted up to: 6.00 :m.: other matter should be pusted be- ore 5 p.m.> J ©#Parcels are forwarded by these steamers; latest time of nailing ig 9.30 am.on Friday and 12.00 ncon.on: Saturday.: Letters for the above mails may be posted at Station \u2018B\u2019 up to within 15 minutes, and at Station °C\u2019 up to within 30 minutes of the above-mentioned hours of closing.®*Letters for Registration should La posted half an hour before closing of mai ; QUEBEC DEFEAT - GRAND'MERE Grand'Mere succumbed to Quebec in a sudden death gaine yesterday, which took place on the M.A.À.A.grounds, for the chamrirnship of section B of the Junior Quebec Rugby Foctball Union.In a morning game, in section À, between St.Lambert and the M.A.A.on the same field, Si: Lambert won.7 started from Paris yesterddy in an attempt to win>the Auterhobile Club prize of $20,000- for a- flight from the French capital to this city and return, and was compelled by darkness to des¢end at Bremelcomte, fifteen miles from there, started again at 7 o'dlock this morning.He reached Brussels at 7.20 -o'clock and attempted to-go up in the air at 1 o'clock.The valves of his machine, however, worked bad- Brussels, Nov.1L.\u2014l.ME who wind, compelled him to abondon his attempt to win the prize.SIX-DAY BICYCLE EVENT.| Night of Race.- PA \u2018 Boston, Mass, October 31.\u2014A bad spill late on the opening night of the six-day bicycle race\u2019 at the Boston Arena reduced the twelve teams to City, Utah, will be laid up for some time by a broken collarbone.At the end of the seventh hour, nine of the teams had covered 185 miles and two laps, while a new team, Mil- len and Walker, was one lap behind.As a result of the spill, in which- eight of the teams were mixed up, N.M.Anderson, of Denmark, pdrtner of Floyd Krebs, was so injured that he withdrew.Krebs was unable to get another partner,\u201d Fred West, of San Francisco, of the West-Millen team, was also obliged to retire, and Lawson had his collarbone broken.Gordon Walker, of Australti, - who had been paired with Lawson, and Worth Millen, of Davenport, Iowa, who was West's partner, made up a new team, and went into the race with a handicap of one lap against the field, which had not been made up in} the seventh hour at 8 o'clock to-night.A ; .ZBYSCO\u2018 ARRIVES IN NEW : YORK.\u2019 Zbysco arrived in New York, on Saturday, and is expected to arrive in Montreal to-night, for his match with Deriaz, to-morrow evening.Zhysco has undertaken to throw Deriaz three times in an hour.PUBLIC MEN AND CRITICS.The \u2018Presse\u2019 on the Public Utilities Commission.Referring to the remarks of Lieut.- Co.l] Hibbard.chairman of the Pub- lc Utilities Commission, on the press comments of which be complained, the \u2018Presse\u2019 says:\u2014\u2018If Mr.Hibbard and bis colleagues have really been aimed at as to their honesty, it is not only their right to protest, but it is also} their duty to prosecute their slanderers.However, that would merely constitute an individual case, and the pre- gldent of the Commission generalizes.He seems to deny the press the right to discuss his official acts.Has the.Public Utilities Cormimission been.consecrated a taboo by the Order-in- Council constituting it?Is it contempt of court to value its actions or omissions?There is in this evident exaggeration.We are among those whe deplore the ease.with which all kinds of bad intentions are nowadays attributed to our public men, but, on the other hand, public men must not forget that they are nevertheless open to criticism.One can discuss the acts of parliament, and why should the acts of the Public Utilities Commis-' sioners, who hold their powers from parliament itself, not bé discussed ?Newspapers exist precisely for that purpose, and that isi perhaps their greatest social usefulness, when they perform their mission with conscience and dignity.No one can escape criticism.The guard that kept watch of the gates of the Louvre did not pre- gerve the kings therefrom, and Mr.Hibbard will also have to put up with it.\u201d \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 PROTESTANT HOUSE OF REFUGE.The number of night lodgings given last week was 120.and the number of meals 210.he visiting governors this week are \u201cWorld Wide., .18 mes LEO \u2018Northern ;l:ssenger\u2019 12 mos.40 ] - Postage included for Uawada {Montreal and suburbs exéeptets, Newfoundland and the British Isles: also for Ba- himas, PBarbadoes, Bermuda.À | 'World der month, Great Britain and the Guited \"| strous as to bring upon the perpetra- .other prominent newspapers have been The Baily Wlitne < CORNER CHAI AND ST.PE 11 STREEfS | ; \u2019 \u201c4 a ; Le ; ADVERTISING AND SUBSCRIFTION DEPARTMENT, MAIN fs).- 1 EDITORIAL, MAIN 4091; \u2018SUBSCRIPTION RATES.Dally Witness'.; .12 mek.$3.00 Weekly Witness.\u2026 12 mé [1.80 Gulane, British Hondrras, Bi'tish North Borneo, Ceylon, Cyprus, Ialkleid Islands, Fiji, Gambia, Gibraltar, Beag- kong, Jamaica, Leeward isènés, Mal ta, Mauritius, New Zealand, Northern Nigeria, Sarawak, Seyscneiles.Sierra Leone, Southern Nigeria, Transvaal, Trinidad, Tobago, Turk's Island and Zanzibar.; Postage for United States, Alaska, Hawaiian and Philippine Islands; \u2018Weekly Witness,\u2019 26 cents extra; \u2018Northern Messenger,\u2019 10 cents per zopy No extra postage on the \u2018Daily Witness\u2019 to the United States and its depeadencies, Fore:gn postage extra to &l countries not named in the above lst as follows; Daily Witness, $2.50 extra: \u2018Weekly Witness,\" $1.00 extra; \u2018Norttern Messenger,\u2019 b0c extra.; .The last edition of the Dally Witness\u2019 is celivered in the city every evening of publication at $4.00 per annum, and Wide\u2019 at $2.90 per annum.All business communications -&hould be addressed John Dougall &.Son, \u201cWit: ness\u2019 Office, Montreal.All letters to : the Editor should be 1ddressed Editor of the \u2018Witness,\u201d Montreal.| Readers of the \u2018Witness\u2019 leaving the city for a shorter or longer period, can hdve the \u2018Daily Witness\u2019 dich day of publication, by mail, \u2026 twenty-five cents Stätes included.While * ¢ the publishers of the \"Witness exclude from its coiumus all financial and other advertisements which: they consider calculated or intended to take | advantage cf or injure the reader, it must -be understood that they fn no way guarantee advertisements, and must leave their readers to exercise thelr own discretion in tive way of putting faith in them.It is, of course, impossible to know much about mining advertising.which offers probably the most speculative, and, therefore, the most risky of all Investments.The great chances of gain are balanced by thé great chances of loss, and no.one should :nvest in-à very speculative property more than he can afford to lose.: @N.M.1} @rF.M.16 \u20acF.Q.10 NOVEMBER IL.Q.23 s | M T\\WIT]F wa] 1] of af 6 718] 9 10] 13 14 15/16 17 20/21/22/23 24 28 29/30).27 » oo .eo ee .TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1910.| \u2014\u2014\u2014 It fs much to be hoped that the cause of the death of -littie Cecils Mi- chaud will be discovered.About: how she came to such a miserable fate we know \u2018Indirectly, and there ought to be some way of punishing the pursuers of young girls.and those who admit them into houses and serve them with liquor.\" We have the evidence of- the young boy, who! saw a little girl weeping in the automobile outside the hotel, and who said to his boy companion that it was a shame.That remark must have burned into the consciences of many people.Tn England Publicams and inn-keepers are not allowed to serve children of the age of Cecile Michaud, but in.Montreal it seems to be done with impunity.At the moment, it is the duty of the coroner and all the authorities concerned not to ye- lax in thelr efforts to discover how the body of the young girl came to be found where it was and whether there was deliberate murder committed.Afterwards, there ought to be \u2018sufficient public opinion aroused as to make the enticement of young girls to drink gnd ruin an offence sé mon- tors long terms of imprisonment if not the lash.There are offences so.'intolerable that pity cannot be invoked for the offenders.- rareté : If justice and the machinery of justice Were as much respected in North America as it is in England, and if the penalties for trying to Interfere with the course of justice\u2014deliberate-.ly lying about the accused, and barefacedly repeating the Hes when chal- lenged-\u2014were as severe here as in England, both in money fines and lowering of reputation, we should escape a good deal of that nauseating thing called yellow journalism.The conduct of the Crippen case on the part of the yellow journals of America\u2014 which includes Canada\u2014was disgraceful in the extreme, and could not have been possible in England.Nevertheless, led astray, as now confessed by its representatives on this side, one of the London newspapers -has been fined a thousand dollars for printing the fake that Crippen had confessed, and two fined a thousand dollars jeach for publishing other false reports of the case.Besides having to pay the fines, the three newspapers were severely denounced from the bench, and the other newspapers applaud the judges and the declaration that hereafter such offenders will not escape with a fing, but will be obliged to suffer a substantial term of imprisonment.Oh, for ia Messrs.Joseph Rielle and Wm.Massey Birks.1 tectta | patitnséf hepct and other pests.Fifty | day, in Buffolk, instead of the deauiy cs PB PE Blague of \u2018Blick Death\u2019\u2014to take a gy | Ages, the people of Suffolk are killitg \"| off \u201ctheir rodents and are organizing an efficient sanitary\u2019 campaign.Il\" | must fare: the land sooner or later, | ¢pébes flourt-nt in Pn AT CE aout Ai : into \u20ac te |-.The dingoss eyldently mean to create, \u201canothé® naval\u2019 s 0 odge in.discussing \u2018Fifty years of sclence;\u2019 Tecounts some of the._discovéries in\u201c meditine which are of | profound Importance.\u2018Such Is the de- sects followed by the energetic measures mow being taken for the extir: yeais 1s a.comparatively short period in the- bistory of the world, and yet fifty \u201cyears ago the nature.of disease Was \u2018unknown.\u201cFérmentätion and many other\u201d organic processes were treated \u201848 purely chemical instead of as \u2018mainly biologléal.Pasteur's discô -ery of the-nature of disease is in the act of.revolutionizing medicine, and to- ie plague being allowed to run.\u2018sn got.of Ged\u2019 as was the wiswilg \u2018nôtéible example\u2014during the where ignorance, superstition and mi-, \u201cWhy are athletes: so often comparatively short-lived?We have séen over and \u2018ever \u2018again the seemingly robust break down at fifty or thereabouts, | and have learned that they had been strerinous runners or players.in former years.Prof.Hugo Munsterburg, the Harvard psychologist, asks in connection with athletics and health, \u2018Must \u2018it really be kept a secret that the dog- wa of physical exercise is a fabric of \u2018the imagination?\u201d He goes on to say that millions of people are running wildly to catch a ball, lifting weights in fullest perspiration, trotting .with gasping breath, and doing a hundred .other useless stunts simply because 2 meaningless fashion has cruelly thrown them into such a habit.Prof.Munster- berg counsels that to wander through the country on \u2018a fine day, such as yesterday, is.e beautiful inspiration, and h@althful for éveryoné: to need the walk with mechanical regularity is the product of a bad training: and to become the slave of Swedish gymnastic\" apparatus is no better than slavery to «cigars.This is not to deny that it is desirable for certain purposes to develop thamuscular forces of the body,\" or that it is well for educational and other purposes to have sport and competitive athletics; thé point is that \u2018as \u2018mere exercise and restoration athletics \u2018are needless in moderation and harms \u2018ful.in strong doses, and the neces- \u2018sity only results from the long train- \u2018ing in them.This is very different from the old pedagogic view, and perhaps may be extreme on the other side.Its expression is however well worthy | of consideration.Experience teaches that the normal personality does just as good work and rema'-s just as well as does the personality which indulges in strained physical eff.- ; - WAR AND PEACE.6 in Greët-Britaut, so far as they can.If they succeéd, it will probably mean that England will have to borrow millions to build more \u2018Dreadnefights,\u2019 as the govern-.nmrent will hardly be able further to increase the present galling taxation for that purpose.So far as the Ger- \u2018man Emperor is responsible for exercising to the full his power to force Europe to ruinous expenditures in armaments le cannot escape heavy censure, and,:of course, the jingoes bfäme him as being directly responsible.Whether or no, Dr.E.J.Dillon, writing on \u2018Continental Diplomacy\u2019 in the \u2018Contemporary Review, asserts that whereas, in the past \u2018twenty years, naval expenditure has increased in France by 100 percent, in England by 150, and in \u2018the United ' States by 500, the German increase has been 740, and that of Japan 950 percent.The last figures, however, are not so formidable when it Is re- meinbered \u2018that the German and Japanese navies are recent creations.At the same time it js a deplorable fact that a large portion of the money and time of the European is wasted in preparing for wars which are decidedly not'inevitable, and which would be ruinous whichever side \u2018won.\u201d.The burden is growing every year, the life struggle under the severe .conditions created by.these.heavy \u2018 sacrifices tends to become even more ruthless, and there ls an obvious remedy for this public ill\u2014\u2018'the arma- \u2018ments may be diminished proportion- \u2018ately, or their growth may be stayed \u2018by a self-denying ordinance.\u201d Proposals to this effect have been circulated informally, and; as Dr.Dillon says, \u2018All Europe would welcome \u2018their realization with joy\u2019 In this connection Mr.Carnegie recently made the most Important statement at Bolton, England: \u2018I believe an inter- \u2018national -treaty of arbitration between \u2018England and the United States will \u2018be signed before you are much older.\u201cIf the English-speaking race were \u2018once united under one flag, standing \u2018together for the peace of the world, \u2018I am not fearing much who tries to \u2018break it\u201d Mr.Carnegie added that the greatest disgrace which stains the earth to-day is the killing of men by n as a mode of settling \\inter- hatibnal disputes, and he concludéd: \u2018I Would rather dle conscious that 1 \u2018had alded the cause of International \u2018named.Surely such an ambition .s better than the sordld cruel things which; keep nations apart.5 re SIR WILFRID LAURIER, We are \u201cbidden in strong language to regard the Bourassa movement as the fruit of Laurierist1 and tv deheve that \u2018the weapons of Mr.Bourassa \u2018and his agsociates were forged by thes \u2018friends of Sir Wilfrid Laurier\u2019 The challenge is one: that may be bravely accepted.If words have meaning, and if ideas have a history, it should be possible to show that where the political philosophy of Sir Wilfrid Laurler and that, of Mr.Bgurassa differ, and ne i.0f the curfying power of in-| fng or its danger.which :has for -its end thé complete \u2018peace than any other that could be |; +-a row of small lights, and those pre- \u201cMr.Bourassg and the brosd \u2018cise of political judgment becomes a | meaningiess phrase: ; The: weationaitsm should leave: Wo *doubs as:fo its mean- It is an appeal -segregition of ths Krench-Canadian race from the rest'of Canada; and the \u2018movement is in deliberate alllance | with the most reactionary forces which have evér worked for thé consumme- tion of this purbésé.With\u2019 the actual working of his propaganda before dur eyes, and the manifestations of race feeling which it has engendered, it is surely plain that the parent- to be sought in those of Sir Wilfrid.Laurier, but rather in those of thé il- \u2018who refused to accept thé\u2019 principle of adas accomplished in 1840,.and who became the bittér anâ uprelenting ep- ponent of Latontaine.and the Liberals in general when thèy endeavored to work In harmony with, the people of.the upper province.1 frid Laurier as an apostle or supporter of sectionalism if, to Mhisrepresent and to falsify his political record, and incidentally to impugn most seriously of Canada.Impatience with the spirit of sectionalism, as the great:enemy of our national development, is not a new thing in the Dominion; a sure instinct has kept public \u2018opinion steadily awake to its manifestations in any quarter.If Sir Wilfrid Laurier's attitude had been sectional in spirit, it is perfectly certain that he would never have been «chosen, as, he was.by the English members of the Liberal party as their leader, and would have been declared disqualified long before this for the-premiership of the country.As a French-Canadian, indeed, he has shared the best aspirations of his race, just as he has splendidly exemplified = their = noble qualities.But if any characteristic of his political career stands out more clearly than any other, it ig surely this, that from the beginning- onwards, he has deliberately followed, like\u2019 Lafontaine and.Cartier before him, the ideal of a united Canada, British in its political methods and -agpirations.Can any sane man, indeed, acquainted with the facts.deny that it ls just because he is not sectional that he is attacked in the province of Quebec to-day?What is the \u2018lesson\u2019 that the Nationalist leaders talk of teâthiñg him?Is it not this, that their narrow and reactionary provincialism is of moré account in their eyes than the development of the Dominion \u2018as a whole?History.will justify Str Wilfrid Laur- \u2018ler, and the broad spirit and direction of his statesmamship, but in the meantime true Canadians .of every nationality should\u201d uphold him, with redoubled energy, agdinst.the attacks of men _who would, above dll; overthrow his good\u2019 work in \u2018thé Pronmtion of good\u2019 will and mutual -understanding between the races.7\" 1 \u201c 3 OPERA SEASON OPENS.\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 \u2018The opening performance of the Grand Opera Company at His Majesty's Theatre last evening fulfilled the expectations of an audience which was prepared for artistic.excellence.Tue rehearsals have been thorough, under masterly divection, and the season commences under inost encouraging.conditions.Outstanding, however, from all other excellencies was the work of the orchestra under the direction of Mr.Jacchia It compared well with any orchestra we have Heard, except the very finest of picked \u2018pieces which have worked lrng together.Puccini, the composer of \u2018La Tosca,\u2019 which was given; last evening, has laid great stress on orchestral work in opera, as have the \u2018ôther neo-Italians, Mascagni, Leoncavallo, and others, and while Puccini is not of the greatest rank, in the orchestral supremacy attained by Wagner and Tchaikowsky, he \u2018is a.tone-colonigt of high merit, and his work abounds in considerable freedom of form.: i Mr.Jacchia has a great understanding of the.tohe weaving of the different instruments \u2018of his band; which has been the lode-star\u2019of.all great conduc- | tors since Mozart, and Montrealers will rejoice in the fact that a series of eight symphonic \u2018coñcerts.by the orchestra are to be given on Saturday aftrrnoons during the season.His Majesty's.Theatre will doubtless be packed to hear this.able body of instrumentalists under such exceptionally brilliant leadership.But the play, after all, will be considered by many as tli¢ chief thing, and here also may sincerely high praise be given.\"As La Tosca, Mme.Esther Ferrabini earned well-deserved encomiums botli as singer and histronic- ally, as did Signor Colambin) as Cavaradossi.Signor Pinazzoni did not seem \u2018too well acquainted with his lines, but he has a good baritone voice and a good stage presence.The reit of the characters were well filled, and the stage settings were adequate.The audience was a large and well- mannered one, and if the artistic sense is kept as faithfully during the season as it was last evening, especially on the part of the audience, then will the Season long be remembered for an\u2019 artistic atmosphere.which Montreal audiences too seldom seem to wish to create and enjoy.© To-night the opera, \u2018Lakme\u2019 will be\u2018 given in French.\u2018 \u2018 HYDRO-ELECTRIC POWER.Successfully Inaugurated at Guelph and Waterloo, - Guelph, Ont.,, Nov.1.\u2014Niagara current was turned on in this city for the first time last night about five o'clock.Its entrance into Guelph station was marked by the lighting of sent when it came besides the workmen were Commissioner 8.Carter, Commissioner George Sleeman, Manager Heeg, newspaper men and a few others, There was not a hitch to the receiving of the current here, it ran along steadily until shut off.Waterloo, Ont, «Nov.1.\u2014Hydro- \u2018Electro power was\u2019 turned on in Waterloo for the fir§t time yesterday afternoon.The thirtéen thousand two hundred volts came humming into the large transformers in the municipal power house at four o'clock, and immediate\u2019y Tngineer Gross put .the switches in place, which distributed Niagara power throughout the town.tie and the same thing, the exer-] \u2018to which Mr, Bourassa Is appealing: age of Mr.Bourassa\u2019 principles is not Justrious ancestor of Mr.Bourassa, the legislative union of the two Can.| Jans uf attaining those two énds is \u2019 Year, To represent or to 'sugéest Sir Wil- | atratits | tiem, when furthermore he is compelled the political \u2018intelligence of.the peaple not attract attention \u2018in case his finan-.YA ; Ri 2 Many Tricks Resorted to by | Thosa Who Lose Heart in the Fight of Life.(New.York Tribune.) Mot read in thé papers reports of a statement that the dead man has left his family well provided for, being heavily insured |in several companies.When misfortune, either present or Prospective, has renderéd the cares of life to heavy, suicide 1s sometimes the to escape personal responsibility in some Snanclal disagter and at ame time to make good provision for those dependent upon one for their .Bupport is often a potent motive for self-destruction.The most convenient 10 take out am.Insurance.policy before pressing the trigger or turning on the \u2018@as or jumping off the bridge.1 The truth of this is so widely recognized that insurance companies generally refuse to pay any \u2018claims on poli- cles taken out by suicides less than one \u2018fore death.When a man in desperate traits is compelled to.wait one or two years.before yielding to the tempta- to hustle in order to securé the money for paying his premiums, the chances are that he will let shme of his policies lapse and get on his feet again some- \u2018how, | ) ; - One large insurance company, anx- fous to provide its agents .with a to eliminate the suicide clause from its policies.The results of the first year's trial were enough to make the directors give up the experiment.Still a \u2018great many people try to defeat the dreaded clause and exhaust their ingenuity in finding, soon after becoming losured, some form of self-destruc- tion which will pass for a genuine accident.Be it said, for those who might be tempted to cheat the insurance companies, that the trick generally falls.Still, many are the exped- fents resorted to by suicides to accom- Plish - their double purpose.\u2018In fact, one of the earmarks which indicate fraud over the overwrought pains witch the principal actor in the tragedy takes to prepare and make easily explainable what might otherwise appear mysterious in his act.One man will exhibit a roll of large bills to too many of his friends and associates on the very morning of his taking off; another leaves a memorandum stating that he is on His way to Washington or Chicago to deposit large sums of money witli bankers; \u2018another writes to his wife that he is coming home with a good deal of money \u2018loaned to him by a mythical friend.: : However careful a suicide may have \u2018been to stage his last act so as to make it appear as.the result of an accident or foul play, the wound he inflicts on himself generally tells the tale.No \u2018wound can be called characteristic of suicide, but evén In cases where som?contrivance removed the weapon used, two details point to suicide:.the man who wants to simulate criminal ghoot- ing or stabbing uses his weapon mostly in the.vicinity of his heart; then he will place the muzzle of his gun too close to the wall of the chest, sometimes unbuttoning his upper garments.J : Would-be suicides.generally take out several small policies in various companies; a modest amount, say one thousand or two thousand dollars, does secondly, it hardly pays for a company to contest a small policy in the courts.However genuine the accident may appear, companies carefully = investie the dead man\u2019s financial position, lis family life, the state of his health, as many.conclusions may be arrived at froni those facts.- Finally, there are\u2019 statistical details which fufnish helpful indicatiens.People generally, commit suicide from May to October.They favor the first week of the month and the first days of the week.Certain cases, however, appear extremely \u201cbaffling, and it is only the fact that the dead man i8 known to have been in embarrassed circumstances which justifies the interested companies in suspecting a suicide.\u2018 Let us take as an example the death of Baron Bela Olnyi.The baron, who had been a familiar figure for many years in sporting circles as a horseman and hunter, died of consumption, leaving to his widow five policies of life insurance taken out eight months before and amounting to half a million dollars.) .The baron was a splendid athlete, in the full vigor of life when he passed the medical examination.His six children were in excellent health.and showed mo symptoms of any hereditary taint.It was therefore incredible that consumption could have in eight months gnawed the life out of an organism so capable of resistance to disease.,.= \u2014 .Careful inquiries\u201d revealed that soon after his marriage the baron had begun to speculate recklessly.His holdings in land and securities, which amounted then to at least two millions, had dwindled to almost nothing.Even \u201chis town house was heavily mortgag- \u2018ed.Many usurers held his notes.Still, these indications were not a strong enough basis on which to build a suicide theory.House sérvants confided to a detective that for the last eight months the baron\u2019s modé of life had taken a most unexpected turn.He, who had never missed a sporting meet and who attended pundétiliously all club functions, seemed to have abandoned all intercourse with his former associates: Nor did he spend his time at home.He left the house early in the morning and returned only for the evening meal.No one knew where he spent his days.His wife suspected a liaison, but for the sake of her children never voiced her suspitions open- iv.- The baron volunteered no explanations, but seémed to be as attentive and affectionate as in the past.The hange in \u2018his appearance, however, was more and more distressing to behold.He was losing flesh rapidly, \"his face was becoming haggard, his voice feeble and cracked.He refused stubbornly to consult medical adyisers.One day he took to his bed, and in less than a fortnight \u2018his sufferings were terminated by death.The questions for the detectives were: Where did he spend \u2018hig days and hadn't he been a victim of foul play?The fact that all the policies had been made in favor of his wife discountenanced the hypothesis, that some other woman might have poisoned him slowly.The flat was found in which he spent his days; it wag on a dirty street in a remote quarter of the city.The door was broken \u2018open.The walls and floors were bare.A table, a sofa and two chests of drawers constituted the entire furniture.One of the chests contained a man\u2019s dressing gown, a pair of slippers and a few tobaccu pipes.The other chest contained some: two -hundred strong cigars and half a pound of tobacco.In one of the drawers, however, the detectives found about thirty-five hundred cigar bands and wrappers, having contained a hundred pounds of tobacco.As thé neighbors testified that no man or woman had ever been seen entering the flat besides the mysterious individual whose identity was unknown to them, the mystery was cleared up.| value of the policies.Hardly a day passes In which we do: suicide, accompanied by the cheerful first remedy thought of.The desire the 4 had even insisted on reserving a chair sometimes three years, be-.1 nefits amounting to $195,000.strong talking point, tried for a while | cial embarrassment is known, an ton Was absolutely.beyond | endeavored to makt the world accept.through confederates, who \u2018saw them through drowning.self to death: The courts sustained \u2018the companies\u2019 refusal to pay the face - Mahy ars the cases on record where | man has caused his own death by \u2018overdrinking.Such cases are hard to contest, and the only arguments iu the favor of the companies are information as to the suïcide's embarrassments or hig well known sobriety in the past.Captaifl Colvocoresses, U.S.A.was found in a dying condition in un unfrequented street in the city of Bridgeport at a late hour of the night.A bullet had gone through his stomach and one of his lungs, come out at the back, and then pierced a wooden fence near by.His sword cane, whose sheath was splintered, had been bent and dented in the struggle with his assassin.Some.fifty feet away from the body the police picked up an antiquated percussion lock horse pistol, very rusty and patched up with glue and twine, CL The captain was of his own admission on his way to New York to deposit in a safe drawer some $125,000 worth of stocks and bonds, a lst of which he had left on his writing table.He carried those securities in a black travelling bag, with which he had nev- ér parted one minute in the varlous hotels where he stopped after leaving home.| In a crowded dining-room he next to the one which he occupied, on which to place the bag, so as never to det it out of his sight.The bag, slit open on the side with a very dull blade, was found a mile away on the wharf.A clear case of murder.His widow was to receive, frém some twenty different companies, death be- till, when sthe circumstances of his death .were known, nobody could satisfactorily explain his protracted stay in several Bridgeport hotels as he had no -business to transact in the town.What was he doing late at night on the de- sérted street where he had been killed?Then it was found that for several years He had been hounded by creditors.The list of stocks and bonds which \u2018the assassin had taken out of the black bag was chécked with the transfer boooks of the various companies.He had never owned any of those securities, which\"were found in the hands of parties above suspicion.A dull, dented knife was found in his pocket, and identified by \u2018his family.© Just the kind of a blade that would produce a ragged cut such as appeared on the side of the black bag.Particles of powder found in the bag were declared identical] with a few un- burnt grains adhering to his skin and underclothing.Finally, it seemed strange that a highwayman with murderous designs should go: about armed with a single barrel horse pistol, and take such true aim with it.Fibre from his sword cane's bamboo sheath were found between two heavy stones, and a dent corresponding to the bend in his sword blade was observed in a fence near By.: The companies which had insured him for large amounts: contested successfully the suit brought by his widow, as all evidence pointed to suicide, with Intent to defraud the insurance companies.* Charles Joseph Dumont, representative for a French wine corncern,: was found crushed to death on a railway track.He had left Paris the same morning, bound for a little suburban town, where he was planning to buy a house.He had visited several houses which were for sale, and had taken an option on one, making a deposit of some two hundred francs.He had a hundred francs in his pocket, besides holding a return ticket.| As he had taken out several large insurance policies a month beforé, this clear case of accidental death \u2018was probed carefully by the company's de- téctives.It was ascertained that on the day of the accident he had left at home his gold watch and chain, a diamond \u2018scarf -pin and other expensive pieces of jewellery.He had never before manifested the desire of owning.a house.in the suburbs, and .such armbj- | - \u2018his.mea A qe Finally, he had written to several Tot his relatives announcing.his visit for the coming month.: The money he pald out as a deposit on a house and the hundred francs found in his clothes had been loaned to him three days before the accident, and was ail the available cash he had on hand.The steps.taken by several creditors of his to ascertain when the amount of his policles would be turned over to his widow revealed a sorry condition of affairs.Monsieur Du- mont was burdened with debts.The very pains he had taken to make his death appear accidental defeated his purpose.He liad overdone the staging.Some suicides commit unpardonable blunders which immediately disprove the accident or murder theory \u2018they One man opened his clothes, stabbed himself three times in the abdomen, then buttoned up his clothing and Jumped from a bridge into a creek, where he was stunned and drowned.Some suicides tear up their coats, collars and ties and reduce their shirts to tatters in order to give the impression of fearful struggles, but forget that the consequences of such a struggle would have been scratches and bruises all over their face and necks.A farmer of Johnson County, Mo., tried to give the impression that he \u2018had been shot while riding his horse, and that his body had been dragged through the bushes.Unfortunately, the course of the bullet was such that logically it should have first come through his horse's body.Neither his shoulders mor his hands presented the bruises which a fall from the saddle would have inflicted; trousers and boots falled to exhibit the tear subsequent to a dragging of the dead body through the bushes: finally, the first thing that the farmer would have done in the course of t.e struggle, or when unhorsed, or while being pulled away from the road, would have been to lose his wide straw hat.When found dead in the thicket he had his hat on: : Amother class of individuals, gifted in a less degree with the spirit of self-sacrifice, are willing enough to let their familles reap the benefits accruing from their death provided;they are not absolutely\u201d obliged to die.Some shrewd ones attempt to cash the face amount of their own policies die.\u201d + One of the most picturesque cases of fake death was that of George Shepherd, of Alexandria.One evening he and his brother James Invited a neighbor, \u2018Bill\u2019 White, to go fishing on the Potomac.They boarded a curious craft, a transformed sailboat, the stern of which protruded several feet above the water.After catching a goodly quantity of fish they made for home.James and \u2018Bill were rowing and George was steering.Suddenly the two carsmen heard a terrifÿihg cry and a heavy splash.They looked around; George had disappeared.He was known.to be a good swimmer, but he must have sunk Mstantly, for although his brother and his friend rowed about for half an hour, they could not see his body rising to the surface.They finally decided to call to their help some of the farmers along the.a shore.\u2018Bill\u2019 jumped on land, gathered a party of volunteers, and part of the night was spent sounding the bottom with poles and.hooks.The search was given up as hopeless, and no one The company in which he was in- herd had really fallen into the river, his body was bound to come up some time, and therefore refused to settle until\u201d absolute proofs of his death were forthcoming.The Shepherd brot>rs had heen re- have differed.is at their very day of British justice, when deliberw Iverything worked without & hitch.The bardn had wilfully smoked him- miss in that oreurrence, for the only performed temperatures were: prig.Edmonton, 54, 28; Calgaryfi 44.- sured contended that if George Shep- and unsetiled weather with rain \"oo on Wednesday, lakes along is fine and ) ! J ; Maritime provinces ang nuage from Take Superier mountains.accident drowning ways provided suitable corpse, Was attributed to birds, ete.While the w over the contested the Alexandria Picious person fakers who ev trick suc whose rangle No definite charge was him; Vagrant, for h his possession.neither could he e Trad but the had been Spending days the marshes cast doubts sanity., He was taken in charge.answer questions, y inced that the m deavored to find photograph, puhlisheq Papers, ters: from frie Prospect of recove hepherd.When game was up he confesse], brother James.wha - While his in the secret, knew the river in his brought some twentv-rj- overjoyv: 4 is ring the Jos Vie nds, he « and \u2018Bil nothing about it.the night, clinging to the rudder Protected against cur the peculiar ov crept ashore the bushes, farmers were dragging mud: he had fed to the swamps, food and other where he and had accumulated provisio supplies.Taught by experiences ceding.the majority of fuse to pay 4d deceased man\u2019s are especially cases, for rive resorts lend eath body is p insects, fish 5 was insurance police captured 5 who wag Prowling in tlhe SWamps near fa, SOM THions- and the palisa an was insune À relatives.fous erhanging stor, the two men had mads | and hidden and while claims mnti] êr Plaveg + ccessfully jy thenrselves hag vit disfiguremes 8, Shore Tong oy Dalles dene, Vbzare 4 male Le HSE\" els wx fact ar ME ce \u2018Cat LS OU Upon reed A \u201con CRin the Nix.les, ia ra tint ens \"As Wh Sony.JAY TWh Worn ; Cienree - Of the ane 2g ERAN \u201cye Wien and.he pg himenir +, the sterplace the Patonae cache IN the his Trathes ns, lusbz nf like ta ny Companies re.tha rodnced, The Suspicious of Gran pip.rs, Jakeg .themselves placently to mysterious disappeurance- of.policyholders.Some years ago a Boston män, who had embarrassed hi by a long continued series of f and ceashore ton cam.Tsing s affair- endeavored to solve the difiente making a \u2018mysterious disappearanes He took passage on a Fall] River baat chatted and played cards late inta Se night with friends who happens ne be on board.was not to be boat; the door open, and there were hig clothes, at his dress suit \u201cir other belongings.fallen or jumped overboard shoes and night.Unfortunately, found hair trimming: the towels look been freshly blade.B.mustache.Following thi trailed him to der an assumed The nexit found anywhere sn I morning hie of his staternem wie He on ed as tho insurance Case, must with Have during (he detective: the flonr and ugh they hat used to wipe off a razor': wore a full beard un S clew, tho detectives San Francisco.name wher, and with clean shaven face, he was emploved in à department store.After retiring on the night of \u2018ha \u2018accident,\u2019 he had shaved off, ali qi facial growth, clipped his hair shor, put on a cloth dap, a cheap suit and a laborer's black shirt, he had brought in his grip.pletely changed in appearance, he shoddy which cCam- ha left *the boat unrecognized by any ane.One of the large companies in this city is puzzling out a somewhat sing- lar case which occurred recently.A young business man disappeared and his clothes were found house at one of the beaches ov in u Bat.\u2018 Vl one admitted the drowning theory une til it was noticed that the watch found in his clothing was his wifes watch.to him his own before the \u2018accident.\u2019 He wore a aeavy solitaire ring un his finger when he left his office; th only ring he h ad left i A watchmaker had returned gold watch the Jat no the Mati- house's \u2018wrapper for valuables wis a cheap gold filled affair: earry a large .amount of cash abaut \u201che ohly ehecked $2 and à few cents with the keeper.his perso; ot a few d rowned men\u2019 he used to Jis- are coyered thousands of miles away {rom their former homes, living with we- men for whom wives, they 4d thus doing away bother of divorce proceedings.eserted {heir with Lin A few dead men whose wives were constant ly watched hy the companies\u2018 sicut.s have been arrested when their widows went to live with them, or even married them again under a new name after a year or so had elapsed.A quarrel ov er the spoils brought to light an.interesting rase, when à woman who had gone through à #H-i- tious marriage ceremony with her oun brother, received a death claim.brother-husband had fa Her Men through an airhole in the ice in the presence of three witnesses.plices spoiled the otherwise successful The clergyman wio had marriage transaction.the Too manv acrom- ceremony recognized one of the \u2018hree witnesses as the very bridegroom whn was then testifying as to his own death.But for the greed of one of the «on- federates another fraud would \u2018been perpetrated.for every detail of the case had been so ingeniously «ul culated that, in spite of the fact that, the body had not been recovered.the testimony of the three witnesses hal never been questioned.have In a gre:t many cases when insur- may injure ance specialists scent fraudulent manipulation their position i cate, for contesting too many claims at court standings very dei a company's ANDRE TRIDON, HEAVY FIRE LOSS.Winnipeg Building Valued at $250,000 Destroyed.Winnipeg, Nov.building of the A.Macdonald Fran Wheel Grovery Company, Limited wi\u201d burned yesterday.000, with insurance of $I0r.000, 1.\u2014The The loss 1s $10 four starry i, \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 MR.LEMIEUX AT CAPE TOWN.(Canadian Associated Press Cape Town\u2014 The SHOWERY.Probs.\u2014Souther iv Yesterday's maximum a Washington, Nov.1.- i Eastern States and nortaern Noo» Partly central ns J warmer in interior 1o-u er in orthwest portion to-nizh nesdar: light, variable winds, © moderate, south.cloudy portions ay, Western New ever expressed any doubt as to George\u2019 dont: colder 3 Shepherd having met his death |40\" brisk, south 1ifting to north, .st ST Moderate fo brio tn VF Lower Lakes: southwest; to-night or A disturbance is the = mila were.with Yorl: Victo nipèg, 3$, 16: Port Arthur, J6, 2- Sound, 50.36: Toronin, iI.© 50, 28; Montreal, 44, 54; Quen - St.John, 44, 92; Halifax, #4, 2° vain i to-night Cas rn and soul shifting Wednesda aparane oo out vos: from wust Hon.T.emieux.postmaster-general af can ada, figured prominently at the\u201d ception to the Dyke and Duchess Connaught by thé city al Hall yesterday.\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014rr\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 winds, Tai mild; Wednesday.showery ar H:.5 lowed by northwest winds and @ ing colder by night.Tro toire the 7.nd mr ris.pa D Terc + nn or Urner! ther, with rain to-night or on Toy colder on Wednesda: .IMRT avo > { Ct a pu Ohta q Va T 4 - Car oma noes ce gy i wen] roy, fm >, ] Mas WT Un ES Pa sa ae de on eaten ES COS TRES er.+ dard 101 151 oni anno - Wri 6 s'atio held rarer Fo ind ED eme Ù An 0 AS for BI one £ A bot BLOOL PURI] Sarsa ELINE \u2014Fo: Fits Price J./ 15 Teiep té P ESTIN \\ Felephe Valuat 298 L.CHR Grav 1509 MAI M CUS , Liver, i 112 .Deputy Un ertisen had al With à surement es, shore oing on > Policy, & Sus- observ:g the city.- .ASainat ld as à 10Ney in that he Ughts in Pon his fused to 1Ce, con- ane, en- 8, ig e news.five let.-At the t George hat tha vho wil ite; hy Scourin:- se was \u20ac \u2018boat, nces br r.When he had msel£ ji: sleepless Potomac \u20ac in the brother cases - of the pyre.inies re- ntil the ed.Thev Irowninz seashore D com- earances business is affairs \u2018orgeriez culty by earance.ver boat, into the péned to \u2018ning he e ON the \"OM Wye hes, \u201cat.se.with st have ring.the etectives floor and they hal a razors rd and etectives » wher.nd with >mployed t of the f all ais ir short, > shoddy rt, which Com- >, he had any ones in this hat simi- ntix.A ared ani a bath- Every 1\u20acOTY Un- je wateh is wife's returned the dav ring on ffice: the batiu- s\u201d was a used tv sh.about 82 \u2018and à are dis- vay from with wn- ted their rith ho .A few sonstant- > sleuths F'widons \"en mar- bw Nnime bd.brougnt when a h a fioti- her own, im.Her throu£h presence y accom- pecessful wito had eremony Witnesses was then IR the con- id have Hetail nf sly cal- act that pred, the kses had n insur- ht mani- ry deli- claims mpany\u2019s IDON.odoiph® pf Can- he Te- hess vf e tit: ir and rst, ful beCulil- jaimun 0, 4S - ; Wir- i.Parry Qtrawd, 38, 275 .22 sast: 77 vo \\urs rt al Çadnc- t: oho vor ocom iT cl Vel | ion node\", Wine le soil brehaes\u2019 hormti=, jgat © 1 a FOR\u201d SALE * $15,000 6 4 | sil brick stone front house, - | mn Croscent street, in good loca- open.nedrooms, bathroom, #te.;;, pi \u2026rnoïn, Kitchen, \u2018and maid\u2019s .{som in basement, ¢Twb.Sitting- | sms and small conservatory on.; jens floor Large room on third §.£ au sat might be made into i par Jems.: .ais» qurden With fruit trees.| terms can be arranged.: TH, CRADOCK SIMPSON 05 James Siret Montreal - = special Drive in Journal ruled Blank Books, ° Made from good quality manilla pa- - strongly sewn, and bound in stiff Hard Covers.: LOL 100 pages, 25¢ each, $2.55 per doz.150 pages, 3bc each, $3.50 per doz: | only a limited number in stock, and: sannot be repeated at the price: .Write, call, or \u2018phone.KORTON, PHILLIPS & CO vatloners.Blank Book Makers, Printers.:15-117 Notre Dame Street W.Montreal For BREAKFAST TRY.BRODIE\u2019S ROLLED WHEAT.# uttie better than all othhrs.BRODIE & HARVIE 14 Bleury Street, Montreal.forHallowe\u2019en Festival .WALTER PAUL, the Grocer, has just- wired his fall importations of Nuts, nisins and: Figs, the BEST he ever nieins, in packages, 1, 2, 3, 5 1-2 and 22 pounds.Lo.\u2018 valnuts.Special .zilherin.English Cobnuts, * Almonds.English Walnuts.Brazils, Prench Chestnuts.Pecans.Canadian Chestnuts.(HOICE APFLES OF ALL KINDS.461 St.Catherine Street, 4d 80 University St, Corner Burnside.| sme pu\u2019 ver stocks, an! erack yer nits, An haud yer Hallowe'en.\u2014 ASH'S FOREST FRIEND for Black Flies and Mosquitoes.Anyone going to the country should have s bottle.Price 25c and 50e.- : $L00D PURIFIER\u2014HARTE'S BLOO PURIFIER.It is better than any Sarsaparilla.Price 500.[LINE'S GREAT NERVE RESTORER.\u2014For the Belief and Cure of Epileptis Fits and other Wervous Disorders.Price $1.00 and $2.00 per bottle, J.A, HARTE, Druggist 150 NOTRE DAME ST.West.Telephone MAIN 1180.- 5 ss ir .} 1 = ip a Ta in A \"POTTER THE PAINTER-% ESTIMATES GIVEN FOR ALL WORK IN OUR LINE.W.E.POTTER & CO., - 46 BENOIT ST.felephone M.1939.JACKSON.& CO.CARPENTERS, BUILDERS and CONTRACTORS Valuations made.Jobbing p empély attended to., 29B to 885 HIBERNIA- ROAD.tt LCHRISTIN dit ST-AMOUR CO.Gravel and Cement ROOFER 1509 St.Denis, Montreal.\u2014 .- MARRIAGE LICENSES MONEY TO LEND.CUSHING & BARRON Notaries and Commissioners : liverpool & London & Globe insurance Building 2 ne st.J ames Street.ee ; Paying Highest Cash Prices for vore 7s, 014 Rubbers, Iron and Metals, lor Clippiys, Pactory Waste.Cal 8.and we will attend promptly.\\ HLISON & SON, Limited 262 St.James Street.\u2014_\u2014 .ARONSON & AUTENGERG, - PAWNBROKERS, fo No, 115 Oralg Street W.R Money to lend on Diamonds Watches, Jewellery, Clothi and Dry Goods.Furs sto! summer-months 2 3 aud Dr ARONSON & RUTENBERG, Pawnbrokers and Jewellers.b wito is the sole head of.a 2 ¥ male over 13 years old, \u201cMu-'eaC a Quarter section of t'stuinion land in Manitoba, + or Alberta.The applicant Lo.¥en person at the Dominion Loins Tey LP Sub-Agency for the _ , tv by proxy may be made ; \u201c7: are by no means absolutely indispensable.Wood.is a.poor conductor of heat, and we want to maintain an even temperature of the nillk after setting, for two reasons.In the first place if the temperature of the milk falls much before lad!ing, the curd will not drain go well in the mould.And in the second place, cream always rises best on the milk in a falling temperature.If we let the temperature fall much during coagulation, we will have a thick layer of cream on \u201che top, of the curd.The consequence of this will be that \u2018some of the fat will pass off In the whey and be lost, while what remains in the curd will not be evenly distributed, but will.appear in streaky madsses- throughout the finished cheese.Oak is the best wood, as it is most desirable and, being hard, it is easily cleaned.If tubs are not convenient, pails of either tin or enamel may be used instead.The table on which the cheeses are set to drain should slope slightly and should have an outlet at the lower end for carrying off the whey.A pall should be placed under the outlet Lo receive the whey.Wooden tables are.often made with a ridge round the edge and covered with galvanized tii.This is the most suitable style for the early\u2019 stages of making where there is a .large amount of drainage.Moulds for holding the curd are round and made of.tin in two pieces t3 facilitate the turning of the cheese.Toy are five and a quarter inches in jameter and five inchés in height.The wer half is tw top half or collar is three inches high.Boards and straw mats are required to lay the che on.No pressure is given to the cheese.The straw mats are placed on the boards underneath the moulds, inte which the curd is ladled, and the whey drains off through the straw.Each board and mat holds two moulds, The boards are fourteen by -eight inches and a half an inch in thickness.These can inches high and the | be easily made at home.The straw \u2014 mats are the same size as the boards and can also be made at home in spare moments.They are usually made by the peasantry in the north of France of wheat or rye straw very neatly and evenly threaded togecker.They cost about five cents each.Whers, however, time 1§ too \u2018scarce to make them and there is difficulty in obtaining them ready made, 3 double fold uf coarse, open linen may be used instead.After using, the mats shouid be rinsed in cold water, then in waëm water and scalded or bélled, and placed, if possible, in the sun to dry.If washed carefully, they will last a long | time.A ladle is necessary for transferring the curd from the palls to the moulds.This ladle may be of tin or enamel.The edge should bé sharp, so that ir t Qu i | Will make as Toronto clean a cut as possible.If it is thick or rough, it will tear the curd and there will be loss of fat.A reliable floating dairy thermometer is a necessity.They can be got for twenty-five cents each.No uniformity can be obtained by rule of thumb, and a mistake of a few degrees in tem- perture may make a considerable difference in the character of the cheese.When rennet extract is used, it is well to invést in à small drachm glass for measuring the rennet.These glasses can be got from any chemist, \u2018graded to show the number of drops.They cost twenty-five cents égch.Grease proof parchment paper will be required to wrap the cheese in, if it is to be sent to market.It can be obtained from any dairy supply house.Cardboard boxes .can be had from any of the folding box manufacturers and cost from three to five dollars per thousand.Requirements for two cheese are: One gallon new milk, fifteen drôps rennet extract, one ounce of pure dairy salt.1.Strain the milk into a clean pail.or other syitable \u2018vessel.2.Get the milk to a temperature of 80 degrees F.3.Dilute the rennet with about ten times its bulk of water, in order to get it evenly mixed and more \u2018easily distributed.Add it to the milk and stir gently to bottom of the pail for three minutes.4.Cover the pail with a ¢léean cloth in order to retain heat.Four folds of butter muslin will do nicely.If the temperature of the room is low, it is advisable to set the vessel containing the milk in another containing water two degrees higher ir, temperature than the milk.If the temperature of the water falls below 80 degrees F.a little warm water may be added to it.Sixty to 65 degrees Fis the best room temperature.5.Stir the surface of the milk gently with the end of the thermometer to keep the cream from rising.Do this every ten minutes or so for the first half hour.Do not stir after the milk has begun to coagulate.6.Lay the board with the AEOISTERED Dress Coats It means much to a woman to know that her apparel is exactly suited to her individual type; and so all-embrac- ing is the variety of garments here, so exceptionally onginal and uncommon the styles that no matter how little time one has to spare, perfect satisfaction is assured.Full length garments with closes fitting skirts; Straight line Seams, ulster \u201cstyle collars or farge flat collars with contrasting trimmings; peasant and close-fit- ting sleeves; materials are silk velvet, velour de nord, silk plush, Bengaline silk, Duchess satin, broadcloth, etc 30.00 150.00 485-487 St.Catherine Stréèt West MONTREAL Winnipeg -\u2014 - - straw mat on it and the two moulds with collars, where they can drain undisturbed in as even a temperature and as free from draughts as possible.The time the éurd takes in draining will depend to a considerable extent on the~ temperature of the room and on the manner in which the curd is ladled.If the temperature.falls much below 60 degrees F.the curd will take too \u2018long to drain and may have a bitter flavor If kept at too high a temperature, or 1f-tadled roughly, there will he a.loss of fat and the result will be a hærsh, dry cheese.If ladled in thin slices, it will drain more quickly than if ladled in thick slices.When a nice soft coagulum has formed, which ought to be in from two to three hours, take out a large ladleful of curd and set it aside to form smooth tops for the cheese.Then gently ladle the restyof the curd into the moulds in thin &tes, putting on last of all the curd from the ladle- ful which was set aside.If the tins do not hold all the curd to begin with, the remainder may be added as soon as that in the tins has sunk suffeiently.| 7.When the curd has sunk to the low- \u201cer edge of the collar, which should be in from twenty to thirty hours, remove the oollars gently, place a clean mat and hoard on the top of the moulds and turn them over.Care must be exercised in removing the first mat, as the curd is apt to adhere to it.It is best te Ton it backwards gently, like a roll pa \u20188.Sprinkle the top of the cris with good salt, about a quarter of an ounce between two cheese.9.Wash the draining table, replace the cheese on it and let the cheese drain for another twenty-four hours.10.At the end of that time, turn as before and sprinkle the other side with a similar amount of salt.In twenty-four hours after this the cheese should be ready for eating, if they are used fresh, but if not disposed of, the moulds may be removed and the cheese turied daily.11.Wrap neatly in grease- proof parchment papér, pack in cardboard boxes and send to market.MADAM ! - USE ONLY REMYS \u201c RIGE STARCH ECONOMT 29 percent of Starch economy over all other kinds of starch.PACILITY -\u2014 Remy's Rice Starch can be -pre- pared wlth cola water.boiling required.WEITENES No heating or 8 \u2014 Starch made from rice produces \u2018a much superior white than starch made from wheat or corn.SUPPLENESS \u2014 Collars and shirts can be ironed supple and glazed only bv the use of Remv's Rice Starch General Distributors\u2014LAPORTE, MARTIN & GO., LIMITED, Montreal.HOME DYEING Is the way to - Save Money and Dress Well \u2014_\u2014\u2014 te Try it! Simple as Washing WITH ' d ONE ove on ALL KINDS or sos JUST THINK.OF.ITY Dyes either Wool, Cotton, Silk or Mixed Good Perfectly with the SAME Dye-No 10 cents, from your Druggist or Dealer.Send Ÿ for Color Card and Stoty Booklet.chance of mistakes.Fast and Beautiful Calors |.LEADING SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES._ pere SAR a AL.G.Lecturer.RTHAND, , {Isaac Pitman System).Ww a.BOOKXEEPING.LANGUAGES.BUSINESS MITHO : Coaching for Civil Service Hzams.ROBINSON'S BUSINESS COLLEGE.745 St.Catherine Strcee: West, MONTREAL.A THE BUSINESS UNIVERSITY OF CANADA.CIP.ROBINSON, over 29 years\" mercial Pe urational Spécialist, Shorthand Teacher, | | | NOTE.\u2014We do not insult the intelligence of the Public by nrofess- ing to make students \u2018efficient in ANY subject in 30 Days.Write for prospectus or phone UPTOWN 4782, experience as Com.Court Reporter and Individual instruction by Experts, under the direction of the \u2018Principal, who supervises all work.The Johnson-Richardson Co., Limited, Montreal to Li EA Se da I AN LR TS AER TN EAE i EME ts aT oe LP BINT, COREA a Tut - a » bor rrp pa tt BE i Dp Ÿ - CL Lar 2 .2 BIRTHS, MARRIAGES AND DEATHS Notices of births, marriagss and deaths, must invariably be endorsed with the name and address of the sender, or be taken of otherwise no- notice can , inserted for them.Birth notices are 25c; marriage noticea for .c; death | prepaii.The an- notices for 2bc, nouncement of funeral appended to death notice, 26c extra; other extensions to obituary, such as short sketch of ilfe, two cents per word extra, except poetry, which is 50c per line ex- _ træ prepaid.Annual aubscribers may have announce- «- Ments of birth, marriages and deaths (without extended obituary or verses) occurring in their immediate families iree of charge, in which case na and address of subscribers should b \"BIRTHS.HOLLAND\u2014 On Oct.24, 1910, a dangh- ter to Mr.and Mrs.Geo.A.Holland, 2195 Waverley street.} : MATTHEWS \u2014 At Montreal® South, Victoria avenue, on Oct.27, 1910, the wife of Mr.J, K, Matthews, of a daughter (Daisy: Honor Matthews) ' McGILLIVRAY \u2014 At McCrimmén Ont.on Oct.20, 1910, a daughter to Mr.and Mrs.M.E.McGillivray.MUIR \u2014 At Beaurepaire, Que.on Oct.23, 1910, à son to Mr.and Mrs.D.S.Muir.Co ; MARRIEC.FERGUSON \u2014 FERGUSON \u2014 On Get | 26, 1510, at the Church of the Ascension, Park avenue, Montreal, by the Rev.James Flanagan, Amy Georgina, only daughter of Mr.George Fergu- - son, of Outremont.to James C.' \"er: guson, of the Royal Scots, Montreal, only son of Mr: J.Ferguson, of Ver- un.PILGRIM \u2014 MOORE \u2014 At St Math- thias Church, Westmount, on Thursday, Oct.27, 1910, by the Rev.E.Bushell, Eleanor Grace Moore, daughter of Mr.and Mrs.Alex.B.J.Moore, 343 Grosvenor ayenue, to Harry A.Pilgrim, elder son of Mr.and Mrs.F.M.Pilgrim, Brockville.Ont.BTACKHOUSE \u2014 CURRIE \u2014 At the residence of the bride's.uncle,: Mr.Wm.Orr, \u2018Maplewood,\u201d Riverfield, on Oct.27, 1910, by the Rev.R.L.Pal- lantyne, Janet, daughter of the late John Currie.of English River, to Charles Wellington Stackhouss, B.Sc, of Montreal.DIED.CAMPEELL\u2014At 317 Peél street, on the 31st October, Adelaide Lennox Campbell! second daughter of the late George W.Campbell, Esq., M.D.Funeral private.CROSS \u2014 At Virden, Man.,, on Oct.10.1910, Julia Elizabeth, beloved \u2018daughter of Edmund L.and Hélene Crass, aged 2 vears and 11 months.EGAN \u2014 At Ashland, Wis, on Oct.\u201d 30.1910, Joseph \u2018James, eldest son cf John Egan, of St.bec.- OSWALD \u2014 0a Oct.29, 1910.at his late residence, \u2018Hill Farm\u201d Puiit _ Rrolg, Que., Archihaid Oswald, in his S6th year.; ; PITON \u2014 At Levis, Que, on\u2019 Oct.30, 1910.S.A.Piton, aged 53.ROSS \u2014 Lulu Hilda, infant davghter of Dr.Herbert Ross, 4178 St, Catherine street, Oct.28th, 1910.= SHEPPARD \u2014 At Quebec, on \u2018Oct.30; |- 1910.after a lone and painful illness, borne with Christian fortitude to the | will, of her heavenly.Father.Ruth Dempstér, beloved wife of Willihm Sheppard.aged 47 years.\u2019 SHEPHERD-\u2014OnN October 331, 1910.Captain Henry William Shepherd, fn his 86th year.) * \u2019 Funeral on Wednesday.2nd Novem- her, at 2 p.m.from his late residence, | 723 Dorchester street west, to St.George's Church, thence to Mount .Royal Cemetery.WARNER \u2014 On Monday, Oct.31, 1910, Harriet KE.Warner, eldest daughter of Mrs.S.A.Warner.\u2019 3 Funeral ffom her mother's rasi- -dence.639 St.Antoine street, on Wed- nesiday, Nov.2nd, at 2.30 p.m.Tise ecending notices for the abave column may send with them a list of names of interested Iriends, \u2018together | vith a one-cent stamp for each dress, and marked coples of the \u201cWitness\u2019 containing the notice will be promptly 1aailed.For sddresses in foreign countries three cent: will be required.EES & CO., Funeral Directors 912 ST.CATHERINE W.Phone Up 1653.(Note change of Address).UNDERTAKERS «200 MOUNTAIN ST EASTEND 297 S'DOMINIQUE ST = EALE & SON Funeral Directors 312 Dorohester St.West.Phone Up 969.Residenos, Up 2671 Fortunes are made in Montreal FREE land.Write Geo.Marcil & UNIES Co.Dopt.W.Montreal, Que HOBBIES! The Long Evenings are with us.Has your Boy a Hobby?We can supply RETWORK TOOLS, i CARVING TOOLS, Ê LATHES, Etc, Ete.Instruction and Amusement combined.D.DRYSDALE'S, / MAIN 169.159 CRAIG STREET.+; \u201c MARCIL'S \u2018MAGAZINE * for 6 mos.Illustrated.Shows HOW Province of Quebec, District of Montreal.IN RE: : Dame Janot C.White, et vir, (John A.Ford & Co.), Insolvents.NOTICE OF SALE OF ASSETS.PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given that the undersigned has received Instructions from the Curator of said Insolvent Estate to sell by public auction at the office of said Curator, Room No.703 Eastern Townships Bank Building, Montreal, on the 16th of November next, 1810, at 3 o'clock p.m.the assets of the said Insolvents en bloc, as a going con- \u2018cern, consisting of good-will of business as milkman and dairyman, equipment of horses, waggon, sleigh, harness, \u2018cans, separator, etc., -and book d.bts.: The Inventory of said.assets, : with 11st of customers, book debts, etc.can be examined at the office of said Curator every business day.when permission for examination of the said assets can be had, together with the conditions of sale.* : Sealed tenders if accompanied by an accepted check for 20 percent of the ~ amount of the tender, will be accepted by the Curator up to moon of the day of * sale as equivalent to bona fide.bids made at auction.: Montreal, November 1st., 1810, : WALTER M.KEARNS, Auctioneer.A.K.FISK, Curator.: THOUGHT TO BE A SERVANT.The \u2018woman who attempted to end her life in a room at 412 St.Lawrence Boulevard, last Friday night, by turning on the gas, and was brought to the General Mospital on Saturday morning in an unconscious condition, is thought to be a domestic named Myra Hope Lee, 45, in the umploy of Mrs.G.C.V.Buchanan, 436 Argrle avenue, Westmount.: , Louls\u2019 Road, \u201cQue- | Speedy | ~~, Sure _ À - _-Genitle M \u2018Quickly Relieves CONSTIPATI - ON A SESSION OF THE COURT OF KING'S.BENCH (Crown Side) holding criminal jurisdiction in and for the DISTRICT OF MONTREAL, will be :heid iL the COURT HOUSE, in the CITY OF MONTREAL, on WEDNESDAY, \u2018the SECOND DAY \u2018OF NOVEMBER NEXT, at TEN o'clock in the forenoon, - ; In consequen-e, I give PUBLIC NOTICE to all who, intend to proceed against any prisoners.now in.the Common Gaol of the \u2018said District, and all others, that \u2018they must be present then and there; and I also give notice to all Justices of the Peace, Coroners, and Peace Officers, in and for the said: District, that they must be present then and there, with their.Records, Rolls, Indictments, and other | Documents, in order todo - those \u2018 things Which belong to them In \u2018their respective capacities.: En \" L.J.LEMIEUX, à Sheriff's Office, Sherif.Montreal, 13th October, 1910.PUBLIC NOTICE ds hereby given that the \u2018Montreal Park & Island Railway Company\u2019 will apply to the Parliament of Canada at its next Session for an Act to amend the Act 57-58 Victoria, Chapter 84, entitled - an Act respecting the \u2018Montreal Parx & Island Railway Company,\u2019 as amended by the Act 59 Victoria, Châpter 28, and by the Act VI, Edward VII, Chapter 129, for the purpose of obtaining, an \u2018ax- tension of the time for the construction and completion of its undertaking; and \u2018of changing-the date of thé annual sen- eral meeting, and generally, for all \u2018he necessary powers for the above purposes.wo Co Montreal, .October 24th, 1910.Perron, Tascherean, Rinfret & \u2018Genest, Solicitors for The Montreal Park & Island_ Railway Company, Quebec Bank Building, Montreal, ; 4 LIBERTY FOR ALL \u201c The \u201cPays \u2018on the Dismissal of Freemason Teachers.After quoting the words of La-.cordaire, telling Catholics that if they want liberty for themselves they must be willing to have all men in every - clime .enjoy the same privilege, and.\u2018those of Montalembert saying that, of: all liberties, liberty of conscience was, in his eyes, the most precious, most sacred, most legitimate and most necessary, the \u2018Pays,\u2019 dealing with the recent dismissal of some of the tech- \u201cnical teachers in the schools under the coatrol of the Montreal Catholic School Commissioners, -declares as follows: \u201cIt is in the\u2018name of that liberty proclaimed by Lacordaire and Montalembert that the \u2018Pays\u2019 now protests against the regime .of repression and iniquity re-established in the Montreal Catholic School Board.It is in the name.of that libertÿ that we thank Judge Lafontaine and Dr.to remain within the bounds of le- | gality and justice when their lay col- | loagues capitulated before the au- tnoritative \u2018movement and absolute movement of Canon Roy, for in these days.when liberty of thought and opinion Is 80 unceasingly restrained in our midst, and when intolerance forces sy mahy good men to live in hypocrisy, it requires courage, mueh courage, even to defend a just cause.We have found again In Judge La- \u201cfontaine an old Liberal mind, a man of proud independence, caring for the rights of others, true to the! broad principles that govern all honest and conscientious men, .and incapable of faltering in the face of a duty to be done: Further on the article declares that the \u2018Pays\u2019 is entirely in favor of protecting faith and morals in the schools, but it can find nothing in the conduct of- these teachers to justify their dismissal, and it then concludes as follows: \u2018When.we see such a spectacle as the one furnished by the School Board on Tuesday last, one is moved with pity at the narrowness of certain minds, and one involuntarily asks how it is.that, in certain sections, no account is taken of the teachings of history and of the great events of.the last twenty years.Injustices, abuses of power, iniquities against conscience and right are the \u2018things which have brought on in France, in Spain, in Portugal and in other - Catholic countries, the violent and often destructive reactions over which those who practice here -ostra- cism against free thought and reason, lament, powerlasss and demoralized.\u2019 \u2019 - \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 ; It is stated that the surplus df Edinburgh Exhibition of- 1908 amounts to hetween eleven and twelve thousand pounds.CL THE POSTMASTER SIC FOR YEAR Relief in Dodd\u2019s Kidney = Tr Pls.°° 16 Mr.John Nolan Had Backache, Nervouspess, and Rheumatism but cured them so they didn't como\u201d back.: 0 : Point La Nim, Restigouche Co., N.B,,.Oct.24 (Special),\u2014That as a renewer of youth Dodd's Kidney Pills has no equal is the experience of John Nolan, the veteran postmaster of this place.Sixty years of age, but still strong and healthy, Mr.Nolan declares he owes his health to the great Canadian Kidney Remedy, Dodd's Kidney Pills.: \u201cI'br ten years I was a sufferer.with Backache, Nervousness, vand Rheumatism,\u201d says the Postmaster.\u2018I \u2018was so bad at times that I was confined to.my bed.I felt: heavy and sleepy after meals, had flashes of light before my eyes and had difficulty in collecting my thoughts.After using several medicines without benefit I began to take Dodd\u2019s Kidney Pills, taking in all fifteen boxes.That was four years ago, and though I stopped taking the ipills two years ago I have had no return of my trouble.\u201d Backache, Nervousness and Rheumatism are all caused by diseased Kid neys.To cure them to stay cured: yoy must cure the Kidneys with Dodd's \u2018 # Lo Kidney Pills, : ka) Decatié \u2018for having had thé \u2018Courage | .\u201cQUICK CHANGES.=.\"he trouble came so unexpectedly that the Talbots were left breathless.They had faced reverses before.Grace, the eldest girl, could remember a time of dire poverty, when there had éver® been \u2018à shortage .of good.But .that was long ago; and for the last five years that is ever since they had been living in Buenos Ayres, they had been very prosperous, if not actually rich.J SE It was evening when the blow fell.Grace, Phyllis, and May, with their two brothers, Horace and Fred, had been to a pichic at Belgrano, returning just in time to dress for dinner.When the carriage stopped with a lurching bump at the entrance to their home in \u2018the Calle Bolivia, their mother met them in the patio, and flinging up her hands with a \u2018tragic gesture.cried In excited tones: \u2018My children, my children, we are ruined, absolutely beggared!\u201d .; i .\u201cSince when?demanded , Horace, staring at his mother, under the impression that she must have had sunstroke or something of the kind.\u201cThe wire came just after you had gone,\u2019 she panted.1 wanted your father to send for you, but he would not hear of it, and said you should be happy while you could.\u2019 The girls \u2018had drawn together.in.a group, looking as frightened as they felt, but when Mrs.Talbot began to cry with hysterical .violence, Grace came forward, putting her arms round her mother, whom she kissed \u2018and petted into - something like composure again.\u2018There, there.don\u2019t-cry 80 bad- lv, Mumsey dear.then you can teil us.all about it.I have had a feeling in my bones this long time past that -we \u2018were too flourishing to last.How much has father lost?101 \u2018Every dollar we possess.He raïsed money on this house and furniture, and my jewels, evéry security in fact that we could lay hands on, and it has all gone!\u2019 she replied.The group of young people gasped as if a bucket of cold water had bem suddenly poured out upon them, aad then stood looking at each other with dismayed faces.4 But Grace drew her mother with gentle force in through the glass doors to the drawing-room, saying, in.a coaxine tone, \u2018Come in, dear, and tell us quietly; no need to let the servants hear all \u2018about our \u2018worries, you know.\u2019 .\" \u201cThey are all gone.Your father paid them, and \u2018sent \u2018them away within an hour of getting the news, Mrs.Taibot explained, as she suffered herself to be led away by her eldest daughter, the others trooping on behind, except Phyllis, the middle girl, who had paused, with ready forethought, to close and fasten the great entrance door, to keep out any chance visitor that might happen along.Phyllis was, not handsome like Grace, \u2018nor pretty as May, but there was a \u2018winsome charm in her manner and a brisk decision in her movements which were really refreshing, because of the contrast they presented to the haughty languor affected by the other two girls.By the time she reached the draw- ing-room ,Mrs.Talbot had lapsed into hysterics, and Grace called her to come and help in thé work of restoration.\u2018Let her cry a little, it will do\u2019 her good.Pooor mother! How she must have dreaded having to tell us! Phyllis murmured, as she picked up a fan, and began to swing it to give her mother more air.201 20 1 \u2018I dont mind so much when we know.® But this wuspense ishorrible burst out.Horace, who had been biting his lips in impatient discomfort.\u20181 ant better now, gasped Mrs.Talbot, reaching out a hand to push away Phyllis and the fan.Then she began to tell them the story of the trouble.\u2018Things have been getting queer for months past; in fact, ever since those South Californian shares went wrong.The slump in steel rails was another blow, and last week came the failure of that Trans-Andean Tramway scheme, which might have made us million- -naires if only it could have been car- tied_ through.Your father told me double him up; and now it has come.\u2019 \u2018But what is it?\" asked Grace, s \u2018ing for the others.\u2018It was a Cillian venture,\u201d replied Mrs.Talbot with a sob.\u2018Your father scraped together every available dollar and :put all on, writing to his agent in Santiago to sell on Monday.But Senor Escalado never received the letter, and \"has wired to-day that the shares are now only at waste-paper prices.\u2019 \u2018Oh, why does father speculate so rashly ?sighed Grace in a weary tone.\u2018My dear,\u2019 her mother\u2019s gentle dig- \u2018nity struck more deeply than many words of passionate reproof.\u2018Whatever will become of us if we have no money at all?\u201d May asked helplessly.She was not elghteen yet, and preferred being ornamental -rather than useful.- \u2018We shall work like other people, of course,\u201d Phyllis answered brusquely.It \u2018It seemed to her rather horrid to be thinking of themselves at that moment, when their sole concern should have been to.lighten the blow as much as possible for thelr father and mother., \u2018I shall not work, said Grace with a meaning-laugh, while a wave of color stole over her handsome face.Phyllis looked at her in quick terror.Were other changes than mere money troubles impending, she woondered; but - it.was not the time for \u201casking questions, and the others did not seem to have heard the remark, or noted the heightened color in the elder sister's cheeks.Just then there was a loud clang at the bell, which hung inside the.door of the.patio, and Fred, going to open it, returned a minute later, accompanied by his father.| Mr.Talbot was a large, stout man, with a bald head and a benevolent face.- .\u2018 T3 the surprise of everyone he came in literally beaming with delight, which for.a man who had.just .been ruined was surely rather remarkable.\u2018My dear Sophia, I.have such ngws for you!\" he -exclaimed, co straight to- his wife, and taking h two hands in -his own.; © \u2018On, Anthony.what is it?Aren't we Fui red.after all?\u2019 asked the poor woman.eagerly.: > ( \u2018Yos, -of course, nothing can \u2018alter that,\u2019 he.answered impatiently, as if already tired.of the subject.\u2018But it ma only be a temporary embarrass- men: after all, for I have just had a capital post offered me as manager \u2018of a sugar plantation in Jamaica, so it wll be only a matter.of a few months, perhaps, before we are on-our | financial legs again.He broke into a loud, cheerful laugh as \u2018be spoke,\u2019 ard dropping his hold of her nands rubbed his own together as if he were Wushing them.\u2018T3ut- the children?began Mrs, Tal- bat.with\u2019 a helpless look \u2018at the five youug People who stood grouped about \u2018her : , \u2018Oh, they will find something to do) he.replied with an easy wave of his hands.\u201cTh: hoys can go into camp, and iry their hands at farming for a whiss and the girls can stay round with friends, until we are in smooth waters again.\u2019 4 \u201cI'ne others-can do as they like, but I .nall work,\u201d said Phyllis with an aggressive tilt of her chin.\u2018My dear, you won't like it, I'm sure, broke in Mrs.Talbot plaintive- x .ly.Work is so fatiguing if one keeps \u2026 Jon 8: the tine.\u201cLS A la.ghing, then that another reverse would about |\u201d - Ï don't mir teing tired, but I just coul-in\u2019t' bear to stay round on \u2018my | ff.ends,\u2019 Phyllis answered, catching he breath in a sob, ag she remembe:- ed with a sudden pang that she had never had so many friends as Grace and May, .pearle objecting to her base.: 207 \u2018Wren 'will.you go\u2019 to Jàmaica?asked Grace oi ner father, in the same cau, tone in which -she might have questioned him concerning an excursion to La Plata or Baraccas.Naxt week.\u2019 It will be quick chanzes-for all of us, but better that fortuses,\u2019 he answered briskly.\u2018In that\u2019 cage we.\u2018might \u2018as well go ace with a yawn.which he turned his lewd to hide.\u2018Bowen, is in town, I know.and hs may be .aple to help us to something.1 \u2018Lut you can't go ner, ther ; \u201ca : \u2018W.l tuere be any dinner?Didn't you say the \u2018sè:vants\"were aH gone.he asked.a \u2026 ; \u2018Oh.of course, I had forgotten, but we must have semethinig to eat, Mfs.Telbot répliey vaguely.\u201d .\u2018There will be.dinner of a sort in an.hous tims.\u201d Phyllis announced without your din- my dear tcy,\u2019 objected his mo- in her ton: that the others fairly Jiznped.Then she bounced out of the roor.in a great hurry, and rushed Away to lier own chamber to change her picnic frock for something more Suitable for kitchen wear.\u2014 dis bedrourns were; in a condition of wild Tisorder consequent Sudden dism'isal of the household staff, and it occurred to Phyllis as she \u2018would not have hurt.anyone if the servants had been allowed to stay until the's work fc; the day was done.Yhe had only.a very.hazy notion of how a dinner should be cepked, but suprosed it must \u2018be.a fairly easy task and \u2018fait quite sure in her own mind that «hat an ordinary average servant -could \u2018do she herself would be certainly abie to perform.à The Talbot girls had not been in the much; there nud been so many other anc pleasanter things to do.\u2019 The kitchen.when she reached it, she founa in a state of wilder confu- sin han the hedrÿoms.\u2018Every cook- Inz utensil\u2019 appeared to \u2018be scattered; clean, : tention to tue larder, which, to her dismay, was fn thi dame condition as tha cupbeara of ol of nmrsery fan.o.\u2018A pretty scrt-of to resist a laugh, 88.phe realized that the departing, got no rélief until-a friend told [eg 30 poy Jeans Montreal *831~am, Canadian Service Mail Steamers.8 WANTED.A MS RONG SOUNG MAN © LC ottles 0: dime her than a conscious plan| They were no more than a bare two ot your Heart and Nerve Pills.I {11.27 am.= 99 Df >.\u2014 lL : aol In engine room and drive a round.0 I uggested it.His mind did not hundred feet above the ice.With a took two boxes, and.they effected a Via D+ & H., Leave Montreal #8.45 a.m.,, MONTRELL\u2014QUEBEC\u2014TIVERPOOL.| TO LIVERPOOL.pply.\u2018Witness\u2019 Office.] La Cy mt draw even the most grimly Supreme effort, an effort: whose: sud- gomplete cure.I can recommend them [110:55 a.m., *7.40 p.m.Arrive New Yor : j IR ro © 7 Montreal, Queber\u2026 WANTID\u2014SMART BCY» #5 MESSEN- 1 iT entire puse 2, ference from the fact that! denness availed {it better than its Shly.to.411 nervous and run-down |7.48 ©.m.10.10 pi, 7.20 a.m.Laurentic, Oct.29 Megantic, Nov.12 Tunisian.Nov.4 6.00 am.6.00 p.m.ger.Apply Witness\u2019 Office.oye À Drepara pi oes hand which held the | strength, he wrenched himself & free wothen.FREE \"Daily.a a ap panEaY: Canada, Nov.6 Domimon, Nov, 19 Metortan Nov.11 3-00 a.m.3.00 p.m oo ; ; 1 v steel here : in the ilot- and the great wei ht.dro dl off vii se a y y xy So \u2018 IT 4 y \u2018 7 can .Nov.19 9.a.m.pan.yo 2° i {4 b fix an PROM Another effort, the instantaneous exer.them, anû They ave all been oured of 130 St.James Bt.tron, Main 6305, or , Canada.Nov.& CHRISTMAS SAILING.School B Wanted à i BL based A UG ow that the next thing to do tion of every ounce of force he pou: the sama froubie.\u201d RSS RES Bonaventure Siation CHRISTMAS SAILINGS.St.John.Halifax.0 0yS danie b.E à uy , kill him;:and he fully expected : sessed, correcte\u2018 1e, sudden changé Cc CC CC © Sr \u201c1 pa a .Pont lin ; : Victori .\u201c Dec.1 cl j it knot vf + \u2018hough almost equally to be , of balance and prevented him from The proper action of the ndrves, ®o | hh Portland-Halifax-Liverpool.The Purine SS.Vieerian has Trade Who can Interest other scholars In 9 ; i ?sänds o: 0 db nimself in the process.: \u2026 falling, like the great, inert mass le important to the well-being of the M8 Laurentic Dec.8 Canada Dec.10 the fastest passage on record between .1.Stralght honorable business pro- gt # : : filed ling Jeanne's name the sec- { had just cast off., (0010 © heart depends entirely upon.the gene- Laurentio à Megantio large a Liverpool and Montreal 6 days 15 hours | POSition, in which parents and teach- $ if i .HE me.telling her to wait and that| Trembling, exhausted, he managed fal condition of the nervous system.Bie 4 most modern steamers Sail rom galoon $77.50 and up; Turbiners 887.50 P.O.Box 2234 A ro The Manager.gd eee 0 would make the light for her,|to blunder around in à Half-circle, Af there be: nerve.derdngement of any .Co | the St.Lawrence.Superb accommoda- and up, = ups eT .O.Box 2234, Montreal.er J woud enable him, probably, to get slanted down inland and stumbled to kind, It (a pound te produce heart de- | ; ° Lon Jor First, Second and Third Class Secona Cabin, $47.80.250.00 and Tr- a Li striking distance of Roscoe, be: a landing on the beach, not fifty yards pment.LS oo N W - Ra ri u wards: Londcn.$2.5¢ additionsl ë ka, | ose Attacked him.The re 1 A ES ed TS Cf tie fut.In Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills is 1' e \\ VICE y Vansdé and Dominion.One Class Ca- , Third Class.Tiverpool Glaseow Ton, ___ TEACHERS WANTED.2 bre think he had him at his mercy.As He did so: the thought .was in .combined a treatment that will cure all .s : alled 2nd Class).Rates very mod- , ast or Londonderry.330.00.WANTED AT ONCE A TEACHER LE ont would th : Wi ; 2 eatment.i, will cure al \u2018 \u2018 .erate.\u201cThird Class are also carried.$31.25, according to steamer.to pailip sprang clear of his planes, his mind that during bis struggle in forms of nervous disorders, as well as | TO 4 ; = TO GLASGOW ; holding a first-class elementayv diplo- y fn bottle pit them as they were at the tunnel- the ajr, with Roscoe, he had heard a act on the heart itself, dnd in this is | ® | PEAS information ap to Local Pretorian, Nov.5.Hesperian, Nov.12 823 for Black River school.Salery, 5 + en) at mouth, and walked steadily up toward cry, which neither he nor his antag- the \u2018secret of their guocess in curing | - * .Ionian, Nov.19.ences To W.H RICK set \"Sec.4 pan ge plot Ouse GOOF Lis Voice thol be perception came to Mm as à trouble o> Of heart and nerve wn.û | \u2018Une Motes Dame Serer west, He a9 £0 Toh and ups Se | Tucks, Rirkdae, Pidue, 0 : w leliver Roscoe, on hearing his voic the e perception ca ¢ Lim as a,trouble \u2014 = ve Lo \u201cI Leave Montreal (Wi A \u2018otre Dame ee on Other atenrmers, Ohe-Class Cabin.call- : | \u2018 - Py - i Sb Milburn\u2019s Heart and Nerve Pills are ; q + on res £ Vindsor St.Station) a _ OT \u2018 + .ed \u2018Second Cabin .$45.00; and upwards rm i \u2018 mr \u2018 = mp _ |.50c.per box, or 8 for $1.25, at all dealers, | PAILT AT 8.48 AM.AND 10.00 FM 77 Third-Class.$30.00.WANTED TO PURCHASE.4 vers 1 SEER \u2018or mailed direct on receipt of price by FOR UNION NTATION, TORONTO.- c TO HAVRE AND LONDON.ä The.Mibura Ca Limited, Toronto, | Western Onterig Baflaic, Detroit and [m - ee a Xen l0 WASTER To PURCHASE ALL CAST: ; sv.: nt.Cago.: - =& \u2014 Secon: abin.-lothing, urniture, Silverware 3 : \u2019 \u2018DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY AT 10.45 - London; $42.50; Havre, $52.50, and up: Plated Ware, Old Gold, Pawn Ticka's.& voue Ë ST te quan memes PM.FOR NORTH TORONTO.à © Paris, $3.65 additional.Third-Class\u2014 Above everybody else's prices paid by 5 \" ; AND WEST TORONTO A À, Ed ag.$29.00; Havre, $32.00; Paris, MAX FRANK, 15 East Craig street ; : Ce eed .LOU : ik } 4.50, : Tel.East 3067.* - Geen.handled freely by their -visitors, but Splendid Equipment, Convenient Sta-.rires All the steamars on the above services.: * the boys and sirls were content- to |tions.Smooth Rogdbed: Attentive- Por- D V2 4 ATLA Liverpool, Glasgow.London and Havresacs 1 ee he pretty creatures all except |ters.: 2 , ee pa bonds * are fitted with cold.storage.MISCELLANEOUS.bottle mischievous Polly.She crept softly .\u2014 ; REA Ss S57Eams H.& A.ALLAN.-\u2014 - \u2014 uggist : behind the largest one and caught at | a A ; 55 COMMON STREET.Montreal.TYPEWRITERS \u2014INVESTIGATE RE- a Ne i emits | Hunters\u2019 Fxcursions Montreat-quebeo-tivernoo ee Bh ; ed quite o - ad) Le £ i ; ; writers repaired, rented, exchanged.or bo jshment.and, EDS a amazemment, : _ FROM MONTREAL TO__- Lake Mann ane 1 1 Nov.4 REFORD AGENCIES.Highest grade.Ribbons, \u2018Carbon, Pa.ou ; began to grow until he was almost as Mattawa to Temiskaming and Kipawa.f Empress of Britain.Nov.181 DONALDSON\u2014GLASGOW pers, etc.CHAS.B.WALSH & CO, pon large as the Tin Tipper.TT ones to Maniwakl, Que.\"|| Lake Champlain.©.| \u2018Nov.24 SAILINGS FROM MONTREAL 30 St.John street, Montreal.i * mer, , i 1 \u2018 .; : i , - : \u2014 He turned on Polly, and said: Bi Adele ans Go paitham, Que.XMAS SAILINGS.ST.JOEN [SS PARTHENIA (Cold Storage) Nov, 3 ANY ONE NOT BEING ABLE TO GET : Shame on you, Polly! Come with me Riviere à Pierre Jet to Chicoutimi Empress of Ireland.Dec.2 T.SS.CASSANDRA (ColcBtorage.) Nov.10 a \u2018Witness\u2019 at his pewsdealers will and I will show you a place where Que.including La T d Roberval Lake Manitoba .Dec.10 J| T.55.SATURNIA (Cold Storage) Nov.17 |.gbuge (he publishers by notifying the i) a this oo children are punished for their naugh- branchés via Quebec.mane and Tobey Eropress 21 Sriaun mshi Dec.16 CHRISTMAS SAILINGS FROM ST.ete ain sde ment by ele\u201d pt in fa.ty deeds.\u2019 : i \"Morin Flats to Huberdeau, Que =.890.\"Oss mleamenips: Firs , ! HN, NB.- OHN DOUGALL & SON.\u2018Wi : atments But the Tin Dipper came up just AT FIRST-CLASS SINGLE FARE AND | aay econ dass.Sor08 one SANDRA Teg » Dec, 3.T.88.SAS Building, Montreat \u2019 tness compare.then and said: \u2018Not yet, dear Rabbit; ONE-THIRD upwards.Lake Steamships on \u201c Passage Rates:\u2014Cabin (called Sec- \u2014 dence, Li Please give Polly another chance\u2019 - = morerSo ng until November 9th.| Class Cabin second class rates.ond).$5.00.Third Class, EB.$29 : a nats Jabbit at oe returned to.his CITY TICKET OFFICE.$47.50 and upwards.WE MON LINE\u2014LONDON ___ BUSINESS CHANCES.| a .atural size an all ; : , - .t d i \u2014 = he Wes: - Porly poze and walked away, Again \"7 318 St James Street.Steamship Asent or mation from any Sailings from Montreal.|WE WILL STOCK A BUSINESS FOR ' oc Messrs.any living thio \"ever to be cruel to Telephones.Main 3733-37323, or FPlaes 7.@, Annabis, Wm.Webber, SS DEVONA .,.,,Nov.5| you in Montreal of any part of Cin- : senshielus » Si Soe win went to visi ; ger and Windsor Strest Stations den Pass.Agt * Ast.(Cold Storage and Cool Air.) ada, with any class of merchandise j + cen .He felt the pressure of her body as she knelt over him.ary, where thousands of Bright, pretty | [ AR SU 3 and © Board of Trade Building.55.Ciesla Storage and\u2019 Cool Shiny 12 how.ID.Box $31, Montreal.Order ; \u2014 ve ; birds were hoppi: g « ound in their j n 3 ) vu T.SS.CAIRNRONA : .Nov.19 ' \u2014, i tt time, had dropped the arti\u2019 memory, and In memory it seemed to ne trees Singing in fhe branches of INT = RCOL ON IAL qu PEGA qe: : Passage Siorage.and Cots Bor Tatra FOR TT à >, which encumbered his hands and | be Jeanne\u2019s voice.; ; w tne \u201c| Fa yy nTT TYR AVI NYY ATS Class, $25.00.PET?SALE.à 2s ; rer : dren * came flockin h # \u201cRAILW.D XW fri 4 5 0 3 rope) the table for the revolver.{ - 0 g around them 5 i ; Ré à PE 2 fare he could put his hand on Jt ing.ho heard it again and it called IID\u201d upon.the shoulders, looking IL ré RRL lp tA LAR LRA A THOMSON PERDUE Cu AND TOR SALE \u2014 $100 CERTIFICATE, { Grley spoke the second time.3 |his name.He was half incredulous; ; s which the children found BONAVENTURE- UNION STATION.SE CRE LLONA ri cpree \u2018ann Out 27 offers?Address PL, EEN Witness\u2019 Ë ave At that, wanting no weapon, conff- of its reality, even as he answered it.parched pocket One little wren es Eu : |.THOMBON LINE, LEITE AND HULL Office.' , T5, 1 i én that he needed none, his great; But the next moment, before he could | Polly thought wet one\u2019 and before HARVESTERS\u2019 EXCURSIONS | : THE ROBERT REFORD CO.Limind n .g be anus aching for the feel of the sky- | extricate himself from his planes, or: gag ought what she was doing she reduced fares to points in Quebec.New | U Montreal, Toronto.Quebec, St.John and FOR SALE\u2014! 75 KW.GFNERATOR 2 san flesh within their grasp, he mov- even attempt to get to his feet, he felt re un ® ols ae , open To oe Brynswich and Nova Scotia.2 Lo Portiand, Me.: pth es ire aginect doupled, ate: i ¢ 2 step nearer the door and waited.th s e son\u201d \u201com.e lit- ood_golng October 10th to Novémbe \u2018 .: sure.Oe \u2019 IN \"fs sav Philip cross the threshold, ee of her body, as she knelt te bird Degan to grow and grow awd 13th.Returning up to Dec.15th, 1810.roth Bornes et Basin, at foot of Naza- | - direct coupled with compound engine, ; seeing -\u2014 suspecting, apparently, b : ow.un © quite overtopped ~.llys ° TRAIN SERVICE.: A ; .kw 115 volt generator coupled dir 5 \u201cthing: saw him, at.last, within (To be continued.) head.os = oC ee Co : dlc esier INers ou generator coupled direct f sthing: § , ., i In cffe .- with compound engine, vertical type, 3 tds\u2019 reach.: : .\u2018Shame on you, Polly!\u2019 he sald, \u2018cor CRtoct Qotohét 4324 Eve TUESDAY and FRIDAY 110 lbs.pressure.Apply SECRE- { Just as he touched him he uttered p burtine à little bird that trusted you.7.40 a.m.For Sep dvacinthe, Dram-.J TER : hH (LIMITED).| TARY\u2019S OFFICE, McGill University.: ; cing oath, ana pie great hands {0 =) Some vithme snd twiitake voutos \u201cgycept bit, wid, inisimedlate At 7 pm.| PASS BARGANN \u2014 MIGH GRADE: Prat, clean to the hilt: and just be- BED-=TI for your cruelty.\u2019 \u201c Sunday Se ons.Tour PC inters oo Weekly Sallings from Montreal American planes only used about nine : \u2018x the heart.: .: À He put his wing over Polly and \u2018 mediate.: stations.with Freight and Passengers, for MANCHESTER MARINER .Oct.29 pom, 13% Irwin avenue.Westmount, ret VIEN a peil of rage he ' Ir Rae Dipper, Who \"had been sadly.watching \u2018a, MARITIME, EXPRESS, Isle Perrot North, St.Anne de Belle.MANCHESTER SHIPPER .Nov.BI MISSES SQUIRREL MUFF AND momextary.ji a yell of rag S ORIEÉS th h vs | ! k - Te .\u2019 an \u2019 2 Vaud il, Pt.Cavs oO MANCHESTER PORT Nov.12 \u201d MUIT AN : ; vite Da | ; : er, again begged \u2018fo \"TT , 12:00 La vue, Vaudreuil, Pt.Cavagnol, Oka,Como, = { .- a Stole; almost new; Ladies\u2019 Eleeciric ; TE ADS ne IL \u201ctore at Bim \u2018Oh, dear Dipper, oried Polly, when NGon.BO re ile, ques Hudson, Pt.Auc Anglals, Grahams, St.IANCUESTER IMPORTER .Nov.19 Seal Coat and Muff; also Gentlemen's ; \u201cadir, Hke à wild beast, and finally CRIT the wren had dropped her nd resum- DAILY Ste, Flavie.* Placide, Carillon and Point Fortune.MA CHESTER (SPINNER .Nov.23 Tr ie.Perse, Laure atimumet sting Philip's ri -ar i 5 ural size, \u2018thank y r 4 ra have.ç .: DE Ee anappes POLLY AND THE TIN DIFFER.| Saving mg again, Il try to be good; 12:00 | For the above-named stg.HEAD OFFICE, 166 Common Street, Limited nümber of passengers carried ACHING TOOLS FOR SALE.Owing i: ihe Eo shar \u2019 ; D Polly ,did not mean to be cruel to indeed I willl\u2019 ) 4 noon tons; alta.foncton, SL foot Nazareth Street.FURNESS WITHY & co Limit to changes in our plant we have the Lone = sound be.Her pets, but she.did not alwayg re- \u2018I .cannot save y th t ti ST dae, vas ke .Te ry : 3 od following machines for sale:\u20141 Au- In a moment Cayley got round:be wr SEE OLS wa fun.for: net : Cannot | s you the next time |.Except ney.Cènteétions for Telephone MAIN 310239.; | tomatic screw machine, takin Lo tind him and with the crook bf his MeMDer-sthat wv hat wag, fun.for! net you offend,\u201d -answered the, Dipper.ses.Saturday Irisse Bawazd Island end | \"1 24 ame cole i ; | AGENTS.MONTREAL © 3°8%inch stock, with collets and cams: - od arin.Cpe SERRE ORF deakor lie | FHENR 0 Shoo Cua SA aa tue ip,for fie njetrese, 4he Tecket-\" rday rNévtéusdtand- \"7-7!\" désmmemememens sm mines : 1 three spindle, drill, 24 inch table, & icceeded in forcing hhm torelcase - his (Hem.*$he \u2018vas fond of rer.© tle, ;would hear of it and would quite 4 p.m.EXPRESS \"for St.Hye- T - Inch centres; 1 two spindle drill, 1 itp and in throwing him.heavily.dog Bisco, but one day sie caught boil over in her rage.She .will not let 3 Labia.COTE : PROFESSIONAL \u2018CARDS TO LET.inch table, 6 inch centres: 2 Garvin A: he lav his body projected him hy the nape of the neck and put me keep $ou from punishment more Except .einthe, Nicoset-and inter- i .; .Millers, 30 inch tables, 1 Garvin Mill- \u201cwmugh the doorway, out into.the lim into a pail of cold wcter, just tO than three times\u2019 Polly promised to sunday mediate stations.: 7 \"FACTORY FLOOR SPACE FOR LIGHT {is mon tan whos Phese sma: Mae, - see how he would get out.The poor be mood forever afterward.CITY TICKET.QFPICE: .ADVOCATES, BARRISTERS, dc.manufacturing, about 4,500 square feet chines ave all in first class condition, Philip left him huddled there.and | little fellow was dreadfully frighten- Having seen the birds the children 130 St.James 8s \u201cTel, Bell M, 010.7 \u2014 in floors of 1,600 square feet or sub- and may be seen at any time.Ad- k to the table.= He found ®d.and struggled all he could: and | then wanted to see the snails.So .A.PRICE, GEO.STRUBBE, x : divided.Excellent light With or dress, THE MANAGER,P.O.Box 2234, fosoe's flint and steel beneath his begged Polly to lift him out, but she they ail went to thé corner of wie | Asst: Gen.Pass.Agt.; City Ticket Agt | ELLIOTT & DAVID without POV _ cé d0ress THE MAN- Montreal.0 \u201cid; hut it was a full minute before PP Rico 4 pod his garden: hero many snalls were, sit- = : _ Ç \u2014\u2014 | advocates, ®arristors and Solicitors ee DIE FOR SALE TWO PLATE GLASS te vould summon his courage to strike znt.Pre ing under the lettuce leaves.ven tA a A EAN : 11 à BUILDING TO RENT, No.50 BISHOP R ._ .\u2019 ight, for the inferences from Ros- the er by Something behind hen they seemed to be glad to see- the \u2018CANADIAN NORTHERN Co for the States of no Breet.Area #0 ft.x 80 gt Also, Mirrors aire § ft 8 In A Se ni Ge; presence i - se , \u2019 TAG + sma eople, wa ¢ : 1 \u2019 assa ; No.692 St rine stree 051, ne of r presence here In the pilot-bous Dipper standing over her.; : Por ; ved Bb velcome Massachusetts and New York.corner Bishop.Area 27 ft.x ib ft shop.Apply, ;Witness\u2019 Office.\u2018an to crowd upon him now, grim wi horrible.But he struck a spark at last, light- \u201c11g candle and looked about.\u2019 The reaction of relief turned him, r » mgment, giddy, as the glance man: the room convinced him that +t he feared worst had not hap- ned.But another thought occur- ri te bim, almost at once, when he av that the cover had been removed Fam the top of the ice chimney.In his mind, of course, that repre- #nted the way Roscoe had come.\u201chat if Jeanne, unable for some rea- mm to defend herself, had chosen as fe lesser evil, to fling herself over the Gif from the tunnel-mouth ?: The moment he thought of that he tunnel, stepping: He.\u201cent to the edge and looked over, but \u201cat ont ihto the \u201c\u2019ross Roscoe's body to do sol was too dark to see.The light of 3 aurora which still blazed in the fv.dazzled his eyes, without light- iif the surface of the world below.He must go down there, in order to * sure.\u2018al wedged themselves sideways into he tunnel.still extended and so ready \u201cr flight in an emergency.Hertghted them and slipped his arms [rough the loops that awaited them.stood for a moment, testing the There was a Fiahtwing tentatively.May about it that he did not under- land.So far as he could see, nothing 3: broken, The fat that it was his arm did not occur to him.He was just turning to dive off the \u201cfi-head when, suddenly.he saw the feat form of the man he had sup- et to be dead, rise and rush upon Im, Philip's %uife nad, indeed, inflicted! fF mortal wound, but a man of Ros- ; ing i ; He had not stopped to furl ts planes when\u2019 he alighted, and they! \u2018Shame on you, Polly,\u2019 he said, \u2018for trying to harm poor Bisco.\u2019 \u2018Lhén he reached over and dipped the puppy out of his watery prison.\u2018Then the Dipper began to grow till he became as high as Polly's father.\u2018Come with me, he said in a tiny voice that really cut, \u2018and I will take you to a place where children : play kindiy with pets.Loi» So saying, the Tin Dipper put its ring around Polly's waist and carried her swiftly, with queer, long hobs, the most beautiful garden she had ever seen.about.; ; \u2018Oh, here iz dear Tin Dipper!\u2019 all the children shouted, and they came running forward to meet their iriena, who was evidently a great favorite - with them.Some crawled up till * they reached the cup of the dipper, where they sat high up, with their \u2018arms around him.They all went on till they came to a pond, on which two red and white But the Tin Dipper disdained the use of the boats.He just waded out into the water and then lay down, his cup keeping him afloat.The children walked up nis legs till they got to the cup, and there they all sat down.When they were, all Seated and ready for the trip the \u201cTin Dipper gave a big push and out they sailed over the waves.They visited all the coves and little harbors and w~ ' under all the bridges which they wished | to see, and then they all cried out: »\u2018Call Gold Flash, dear Dipper!\u2019 Then Tin Dipper puffe! out his cheeks till the children were not at all crowded, and gave i tremendous tin whistle.Almost immediately a large gold fish came swimming up to the side of the Dipper and waved a welcome to the children with his An.Many chillren were play- boats were floating, with theif-\"orns.One snail was very fascinating, for such was his pleasure at seeing his friends that he crept to: the very cutermost edge of a leaf and balanced himself on his uncertain footing.And Polly forgot again! Sue stretched forth her hand and snapped him with her finger quite off the leaf, so tha* he fell to the ground miserably.earth, however, than he became as b.3 as a huge horse, threw Polly on his hard shell back and started off at lightning speed.He went faster than the .fastest horse.No one ever saw a snail travel so rapidly before.\u201cTin Dipper! Tin Dipper!\u2019 screamed Polly, but no Dipper answered, for they were far from the garden now.The Snail held Polly with one horn while with the other \u2018he seemed to point out the way to go.Suddenly they struck something, the Snail loosened hls grasp, and Polly felt herself falling, falling\u201d falling! She opened her eyes and found herself sitting in the little chair by the window, while the Dipper was hanging by its ring on the wall\u2014'Tribune.\u201d « WE/T SAITE THE SCRIPTURE November 1.Blessed fs the man that heareth me, watching dally at my gates, waiting at the posls of my doors.~ Behold, as the eyes of servants look unto the hand of their masters, and as the eyes of a maiden unto the hand of her mistress; so our eyes wait upon the Lord .our God, until that he have mercy upon us.A continual burnt offering throughout your generations at the door of the tabernmcle of the congregation before No sooner had he touched the\u2019 Railway System\u2018 Makes Excellent Progress During Recent Months, That the Canadian Northern Railway has been eminently sutcessful, in its career of expansion, and chat each addition of mileage to the system has been wisely ordered, is the inevitable deduction made after a perçent cf the statement of earnings for the three months ended September 30, just issued.= Although in the three months above mentioned, the mileage in operation was only -182 miles more than what it was during the same period of last year; the company is able to show a .large increase, both in gross and net earnings, as follows: \u2014 From -From \u201d * Juiy 1 July 1\u2019 Aggre- to to gate Sept.30, Sept.30, Increase.: .1910.1909.5 \"Gross Earnings, : ; : $3,598,000 $2,727,400 $370,600 Expenses, | : : 2,605,600 1,981,900 623,700 Net Earnings, 2° .892.400 745,500 246,900 The flgures for September are equally satisfactory, as follows:\u2014 1910.1809.Increase.\u2018Gross Earnings, .$1,279,900 $1,076,800 $203,100 Expenses, 0 898,700 765,300 133,400 Net Earnings, : 381,200 311,500 69,700 Mileage in Operation, ; - 3,297 8158 Avg.139 FAILS IN LONG FLIGHT.Mathieu, French Airman, Flew 150 Canada Life Building,189 St.James St Henry J.Elliott, K.C.L A.David, SMITH, MARKEY, SKINNER, - Lo PUCSLEY & HYDE, ADVOCATES, BARRISTERS, etc, METROPOLITAN BUILDING, .: 170- ST.JAMES STREET.ROBT, C.SMITH, K.C, FRED.H.MARKEY.K.C.WALDO W.SKINNE R, - WILLIAM G, PUGSLEY, G.GORDON HYDE, F.S.MACLENNAN, K.C.Advocate, Barrister and Solicitor Quebec Bank Building, Montreal Tel.Main 4706 £ à Tel.Main 3960 PATTERSON & JENKINS, Advocates, Barristers & Solicitors, City & District Bank Bullding, 180 St James Street, Montreal.W.PATTERSON.- J.JENKINS, MARRIAGE LICENSES ISSUED BY JOHN M.M.DUFF 107 SË James Street.49 Crescent Street Commission's monthly reports of income returns of the railways of the United States, for the year ending June 30, 1910.Compared with the previous banner year, 1907, the earnings show an increase of $190,141 290, and the expenses an increase of $92,609,953, leaving $97,531,337 increase in net in- Apply on premises.SHOP TO LE\u201d ON ST.PETER ST.next door to \u2018Witnéss.\u2019 Apply at \u2018Witness\u2019 Office, \u2019 ROOMS TO LET.HOUSE TO LET, AT ST.LAMBERT, on\u2019 river front; rent $4.00 a month for winter months.Apply, Isaac Collins, 207 Ash avenue.Main 1518.ST.DENIS, 1175,0NE BRIGHT FRONT\" Room; breakfast and late dinner if desired; private family; terms - moderate.: \u2019 VETERAN LAND GRANTS.VETERAN LAND GRANTS WANTED.Ontario or Dominion, located or un- locate - MULHOLLAND & CO.To- Tonto: FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE.FIRST-CLASS FLORIDA FINEAPPLE Plantation, charmingly situated, adjoining the town of Fort Pierce, on the {Indian River, where there is abundance of fine fishing and excellent boating, having packing-house and siding for shipping .on the East- Coast Florida Railway.The crop realizes about 3,000 boxes of pineapples yearly, which sells in U.& and Montreal at $2.60 and $3.00 par.box.Requires|no cuitivation or planting for at least 12 years, being all young growth.Price, only $12,600.For particulars apply to J.C.BERTRAND, 50 Notre Dame streec wa2st.PATENT ATTORNEYS, HOIST FOR SALE, CHEAP \u2014 One Double belted floor type freight holst,with cage and wheels.in good condition; platform} 5' x -b-feet; fully 1500 lbs.capacity.Counter shaft, pulley and splendid H.P.motor;110 D.C.\u2018included, if desired.Apply to 142 St.Peter street.- : \u2018 MACHINE TOOLS FOR SALE.Owing to changes in our plant we have the following machines for sale: 1 Automatic sorew machine, taking up to 3-8 inch stock, with collets and cams.1 Three Spindle Drill, 24 inch table, 4 inch centres.\u2019 1 Two Spindle Drill, 18 inch tdble, 8 inch centres.2 Garvin Millers, 30 inch tatles.1 Garvin Miller, 18 inch table, 1 4-Foot Speed Lathe, 1 18 inch Lap Wheel : These machines are all In first class condition, and may be seen at any time.Address, THE MANAGER, P.O.Box 2234, Montreal.FOR Motors saLe 2 10 hp.115 volts D.C, 1 8 h.p.110 volts.D.C.All in Al condition, and can £s physique lets go of life 8loWlY.mhen Polly tried to catch Gold Flash.rd: s Tw.iles.\u2018 si ° .bie en Polly tried te ca the Lord: where I \u2018will meet you, to .; \u20ac me he blerding to death internally- But the Dipper compressed his chee.s speak there unto thee.~In all\u201d placés .Miles.; .come from operation i tps nnd the be seen any time.Will sell by al was, probably, retard- ij) ne squeezed Polly hard, and a.u: whére I record my name I will come = interest on at least $2,000,000,000 new h Aopl Ce 'S Fuddled position, as he laÿ \u2018Stop, Polly; do you -vant to be sent unto thee, and I will bless thee: Brussels, Oct.29\u2014Mathieu, the capital invested in the railways since cheap.\u2014 APPLY, Ç 1 the tunnel.home at once?5 | : Co French.aviator, who started with a |4907, \u2018The total operating revenyes for : 3 \u2018WITNESS\u2019 F So he had lain still and awaited his| \u2018Then the indignant gold fish began Where two.r three are gathered to- passenger yesterday in 2 fllght to Brus- We solleit the business of Manufac- Ww OFFICE the fiscal year 1909-10 were $2,779,246,- #ace.Cuvley was standing qulte to grow very large indeed, ahd, gether in my name, there am I In the sels in an aeroplane, but who was 868 turers, Engineers and others who realize some pige of the cliff, and the mans reaching Dis fin over the edge of the midst of.them.| : >.forced te sage 2 landing at Drains le \u2019 the advisability of having heir.Patent , héntum carrie im over.\u2018cup put his head over, too, and sald: omte, Belgium, ab town - ; \u2019 Mini derate Miching hands _ a |., + .The hour cometh, and now is, when .oy nd À \\ .liminary advice, free.Charges mo 1 holders mands grasped Cayley's Shame on you, Polly! Come with me he true sworshippers shall worship the about a hundred and Bfty miles, ar MAY CAUSE TARIFF WAR one inventor's Adviser sent upon re- WANT ADS.Joiders, ey went down toge- and I will take you to a place Where Father in spirit and in truth: rived here: this morning.uest.Marion & Marion, Quebec Bank for the For Mathteu left Paris on his flight of a \u201c1, OVer six hundred feet of empty naughty girls are punished for such uilding, a Montreal, and Washington, Father seeketh such to worship him.Mee .; ; à î 9 ve.things!\u201d He seized her with his fin irit: ; hundred amd seventy miles at 12.31 | .A -C., \u2019 for Cayley the space was all too! and was dragging her into the water god Isa 8 Prorship | Là {hey a EEE o'elock yesterday afterñoon.He land- German Attitude on Potash Op- \u2014 : ° The \u201cWITNESS ed at La Fere, about: seventy miles .ni j from Paris, to replenish his gasoline.posed by the United States.The only other stop was Over night at - Braine-le-Comte.Washington, Nov.1.\u2014The negotiations now in progress in Berlin be- | tween the German foreign office and Dr.David J.Hill, American ambassador to Germany, and representatives of American potash interests may have an important bearing on future commercial relations between the United States and Germany.If an agreement cannot be reached, the State Department may, it is said, take the view that the attitude of the German Government on the potash question is an undue discrimination against American trade and the maximum - tariff may be placed on German im- when the Tin Dipper sald: \u2018Not vet, dear Gold ' Flash.Polly another chance.\u2019 .: The gold fish resumed his natural size and went swimming away.Polly was.very much frighteaed and asham- bed, and she promised not to offend again.Soon after this they landed and walked up the hank to a rabbit hutch, [NH Neither his strength nor the where several fine rabbits were play- \u201c0 0\" his planes was sufficient to | ing together.Polly went into their rt them both in the air.But! enclosure with the other children.\"position into which he had | The rabbits Lac been so kindly treai- 172 As they went over he thought - M hé and his gigantic enemy were \u2019 DE down to death together.In- tivels, avd much quicker thdn a 0 tan think, he swept his great Jd forward and flung himself TK in an attempt to correct the bal- 25 destroved by the great weight Was vliuging to his shoulders.(> were, of course, bound to gO MAY BE LEFT WITE A.T.Chapman, Bookseller, 513 St.Catherine st.West, or with Kk.Turner, Grocer, Point St.Charles, 51 Wellington street, West of Subway.CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS.CASE TARIFF.Situation Vacant, Situation Wanted, Puy- pils Wanted, Rooms To .el Articles Found, Second-hand Articls Wanted or For Sale.20 Words for de.yc for each additional erou.Six in.gertions for the price of four.: truth.Give \u2018 \u2026 ; | | Praying always with all prayer and supplication in the Spirit.Pro.viii.34.Ps, cxxiff.,, 2.EX.xxix., 42.Ex.xx, 24.Mat.xviii., 20.John iv, 23, 24.Eph.vi, 18.\u2014}yremnn DR.F.H.WIGGIN DEAD.Atlantic City, N.J.Oct.29.\u2014 Dr.Frederick Holme Wiggin, a prominent physician of New York, died here last night, at his apartments in one of the beach front hotels.M.BRIAND SUSTAINED.By Vote \u2018in French Chamber of Deputies.- PATENTS THAT PROTECT FETHERSTONHAUGH & C0.\u2014~ 3 .W.Taylor, B.Sc, late Kxaminer Chas Canadian Patent \u2018Office.Paris, Nov.1\u2014After.five days\u2019 de- CANADA LIFE BUILDING, - MONTREAL bate M.Briand obtained substantial majorities in the Chamber of Deputies Saturday evening in the votes on the \u2018\u201cinterpellations on the \u2018railway strike.This had been generally anticipated.as French Premiers do not I i fall in pitched battles, but in unex-| ports into the country, which would pected skrimishes.t \u2018the close of| mean a tariff war between the coun- the sitting, M.Briand @fnounéed that tkes.Qfficers of the State Depart- the ministers wou'd mot accept a vote ment, however, are hopeful of an ad- of the order of the daÿ; pure and sim- justment of the question.ple, and such a vote Was rejected by \u2019 a majority of 214.\u2014 | CANADIAN RAILWAY CLUB.\u201cTE himself they would go down | ed that they were tame enough, to bo re ! Property For Sale or To Let .Other Articles For Sale.25 Words: for 250, L 2 AMERICA'S SCENIC LINE Staterooms Heated INVENTIONS PATENTED IN ALL COUNTRIES OWEN N.EVANS Merchants Bank Building, Montreal.w, P.MGFEAT.Associate Atty.me Frederick Holme Wiggin was born at Kingston-on-Thames, England, in 1853.He was formerly president .f the New York State Medical Associ- atin and secretary of the judicial council of \u2018the American Medical Association.Sp \u2014\u2014\u2014 : - GENERAL HOSPITAL.The visiting governors to the Mont- | le for each additional word.Six in- gertions for the price of four, 25 Words for soc.NOTICE PARTICULARLY, Fostage Stamps Will Bs Accepted.\"ONTRZAL TOR \u2018 CAL - ONTO - HAMILTON I (via Thousand Islands and Bay of Quinte)\u2014Steamer Belleville leaves every Priday at 7 pau.Special low ; _ ne l8% On this steamer, die S9TPSAT - QUEREC LINE Steame rs leave at 7 p.m.daliy, except Sundays.A ved LE J The above rates are Cash with order, When not prepaid numerous entries have to be made, and the rcte is, in tel this evening.À paper on Recent developments in signalling,\u2019 will be presented by Mr.A.H.Rudd, signal en- U.S.RAILWAYS.- SA Be eave Quebec at 8 a.m.on Tuesdays _ : .- os ¢ consequence, much higher.acd Satardagee MA rues exoarsi Le from Montreal.519, iiciuding meats real General Hospital this week are: : , | The monthly meeting of the Cana- gineer of the Pennsvivania Railroad.No charge made in our nook.fo\u201c any 3 2-4 G.ateroom./ .Messrs.R.P.McLea, John Millen, Record earnings and record expenses dian Railway Club will be held in the| A full attendance of members and advertisement of less than fv.agate \"3 CITY TICEET OFFICE, 126-128 ST.JAMES ST.opposite Post Office.israel] Blumenthal, Samuel Hart, are shown by the Interstate Cemmerce Ladies\u2019 Ordinary of the Windsor Ho- | friends is requested.lines zpace.LE \u2019 : , i Co 2H wAl | 4 .\u201c1a 5 i a CR RG EL ps 300 Drers EER RÉCIT Sg x Dy a (Mint AVegetable Préparation for As- .similating theFood and Regtula- ting the Stomachs Bowes of 4 pos any pragma regia || Promotes Digestion,Cheerful- \u201cness and Rest.Contalns neithe m, Morphing nor oT NARCOTIC.tion, Sour Stomach, ness and LOSS OF Ihe Kind, You Have § Aways Bought BERRI TE a Aperfect Remedy for Constips- ik Worms Convulsions, Feverish- | 24 1 Thirty Years CAST Por Infants and Children.Boars the BC 25 toh For Over THE GENTAUR COMPANT, NOW YORK SITY.I delighted.sou profit?outside Montreal and suburbs.\" John Dougall & Son, Agents Bldg.Montreak Co .Montevideo, Uruguay, Nov.1, via Buenos + Ayres.\u2014The revolutionary movement is taking on a serious aspect.There are now ten thousand armed révolutiohists, whe are gradually being concentrated.Several sKir-/ mishes-have taken place, but the casualties have been suppressed.Dr.A.Bachini, the foreign.minister.recently issued a manifesto, declaring that the Government was unable to prevent the revolution from spreading, because outside cf .the capital the sympathies of the people were entirely with the revolutionists.It was partly because of the issuance of this manifesto that the president requested Bachini\u2019's resignation.\u2018The Government is keeping the true situation from becoming.public generally by aid of the censorship.ANARCHISTS CAUSE RIOT.At meeting in Paris to Honor Memory of Ferrer.- Paris, Nov.1.\u2014A meeting called ty M.Pelletan and other members of the Chamber of Deputies to pay honor to the memory of Francisco Ferrer, the Spanish Republican lead- \u2018er, who was executed at Barcelona last year, broke \u2018up in a riot.M.: Pelletan had put a motion before the meeting asking that Spain free herself from the yoke of the Church, revise her methods of criminal procedure and rehabilitate the honor of Ferrer, when a group of Anarchists armed with chairs and sticks stormed the platform and attacked and forced\u2019 upon it M.Pelletan and the other speakers.The fight then became general, * and men and women knocked down and injured.The janitor of the building switched off the electric lights, which ended the melee.: Afterwards the disturbers issued a statement saying that \u2018they were Anarchists and broke up the meeting because they were opposed on general principles to parliamentarians, who probably would have voted to shoot Ferrer had they \u2018been Spanish, taking part in it.\\ = NEW TRACKS IN USE.Last Train Left Old Place Viger Tracks on Saturday Night.Over a square mile of buildings have been torn down to make way for the improvements which the C.P.Rare inaugurating at the Place Viger railway station, and the work is now taking definite shape.The last train to leave the old tracks of the Place Viger station was the express for Quebec, at 1.30 p.m, on Sunday, and all the evening trains came in on tne new tracks, which are now twelve in number, but which will number twenfy before the work is finished and the new station completed.wanted to sell! the \u2018Canadian Pictorial,\u2019 Canada\u2019s lesa.Ine illustrated magazine.Splendid premiums ér goa erous cash commission.Hundreds of boys busy and Room for hundreds more A postcard will .secure premium list and a& package to start on, if you live in and see what we have io offer you.for the \u2018Canadian Pictorial\u2019 \u2018Witness ! neighbors were isolated and benches were \u2018torn up- Spanish | Why shouldn't full particulars 1f inside the city.phone us or drop Address, Boys\u2019 Sales Dep: REVOLUTION SPREADS ° | Uruguay Government Announces its Inability to Control Situation.« \u201c PNEUMONIC PLAGUE Deadly Disease Has Béen Discovered.in Suffolk, England.arty London, Nov.1.\u2014England is startled by the discovery that « penumonic plague, even deadlier than the bubonic plague, is established in Suffolk.A .FREEMASONRY | \u2018 \u2018Two further arrests were made || on \u2014 p \u201cSaturday; in \u2018connection with the West- \u2018I mount.tragedy, the police deciding to hold Derome the chaffeur, who drove It ; several other lodges had been establish- -ed, some -of them.With.hundreds of Some \u2018of these members: their | -manner possible, We vote for the navy?and \u2018Shall we vote: against Laurier?112 Sunday's meeting at St.Eugene was Mass, and the speakers spoke from 8 .big hay cart adjusted as a platform for the occasion.F'ully 1,500 -peo- ble kept there listening for more than three \u2018hourg,, despite the cold weather and\u2019 the \u201cmud.\u201d \"Phe last part of the | mesting- was \u2018stormy.A special train \u201cLavergne and -Märsil,.the Nationalist speakers.At ore \u2018time.it looked as \u2018If there would be a fight, for the St.| - | Gérmain peopls did not like the interruptions and -wanted fair play.Archbishop Bruchesi Avproves Action of Catholic School - ! © TL Board.Speaking at the: Cathedral on.Sun-|- day, Archbishop: Bruchesi approved of the action of the Catholic Board of School Commissioners in discharging five school \u2018teachers believed to be: \u2018free-masons.ree ~.He denounced free- Mmagonry, and said, that although the Emancipation lodge.had been exposed, members, he said, had obtained positions as teachers in the schools.Acting upon information which they had possesséd the school commission, by the majority of its members and exercising its right in a most lenient had deprived these teachers of their positions, giving them, however, one year\u2019s salary.The School Commission did what was right.It took upon itself the safeguarding of the spiritual and intellectual îinter- est of the children and.it interpreted out fear @ :wishe Catholic parents.- 5 of al truly \u2018There are those who find this action a.severe .one* concluded His Grace, \u2018and even Bo so far as to qualify .it as unjust, threatening to invoke the law.\u201d It seems to me that these people forget that there is one law which dominates al others, and that is the law of nature.Therefore, thé natural law provides to the father of the family the ' education Of\u2018 his child.When that father of a family is a Catholic that natural law confers upon him the undeniable right to provide teachers whom he knows to principles and to be picion.\u2019 \u2018 possess religious beyond all sus- \u2018for his children | \u201c byj Fathers \u2018Offesh and Attab, while M.The, church site was gaily decorated Montreal, will have seating capacity | \"food, Capetown, Nov.1.\u2014 The Duke of | et PRESIDENT ELIOT.Expresses His Opinion Regarding High Cost of Living.Boston, Nov, £\u2014In a letter sent to A.T.Sampson, of Lynn, Dr.Charles W.Eliot, President Emeritus of Harvard, says that = large proportion.of\u2019 the Increased cost of living is due to the \u2018combination effected by unions.and jobbers and unions and employers A PRESIDENT ELIOT.of labor\u2019 and that the combination \u2018is able to rob the consumer.\u2019 The letter was made public by Mr.Sampson.\u2018\u2019Fhis is Mr: Eliot\u2019s letter: ,; \u2018I have read with much satisfaction what A.T.Sampson, of your firm, Published on the subject of unions and the effects of raising the prices of clothes and shelters for .the mass of the people.In my opinion a large proportion of the increase in the cost of living which has taken place during the last seven or eight years is due to the combination effected by unions and jobbers, and unions and employers of labor.Mr.Sampson has made a plain statement on the subject of these combinations, and he has also shown that the ordinary union rules increase unnecessarily the cost of every piece of work in which more than one union has to\u2019 be employed through the strict: limitation of the kind of work which each union will do.The combination.is able to rob the consumer, because it practically \u2018secures à legal monopoly.- The union rules rob the consumer, because they cause great waste of time.PROCESSION STARTS RIOT.Spanish \u2018Anti-Clericals and Clericals Fight in Streets.Madrid, Nov.1.\u2014A religious procession held at Calatayud, Saragossa province, Sunday, resulted in a collision between clerical and anti-cleri- cal partisans.Shots were enxhanged and several persons were wounded, | REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS.Joseph Ad.Descarries has sold to the Automatic Railway Signal Company, Ltd., part of lot No.254-262, Town of Lachine, for $18,000.William H.Creed has sold to Charles \"C.Prowse -the south-east part of lot No.217-6 and 217-5, Parish of Montreal, with houses civic No.560, on Victoria avenue, for $8,200.Isabella Cartwright has sold to Wm.H.£reed lot No.26a and 27, St.Law- - rence ward, for $13,000.Lazarus Millman has sold to Samuel Rosenheck the north-west half of lot No.7, St.Lawrence ward, with houses Nos.614 to 624 St.Urbain street, and 966 to 976 St.Urbain street, for $1 and other considerations, Mrs.Collins Simpson Garland has sold to Bartlett McLennan \u2018lot No.1729, part 1,.St.Antoine ward.C.F.G.Laviolette has sold to J.G.Laviolette lots 36-134, 135, 136 and 137, 138, in the Parish.of Montreal, fronting on Stuart.street, in Outre- mont, for $3,317.\u2018 PILE piles Bee testimonials {in the press and as .Chase\u2019s Ointment is a certain and toed Dr A curefor each and every form of itching, bleeding your neighbors abont it.You can use it and get pour money back if not satisfied._6c, at all or EDMANSON.Bates & Co.Toronto.| DR.CHASE'S OINTMENT.» ._ Peltin, Nov.the throne demand of the Senate and the provincial delegates for the early convocation of a popular varliainent.granted, and protruding: NY | CHINA'S PARLIAMENT, | Throne Will Likely Accede to Popular Request for Representation: wear etoile CAR wly 1\u2014It is Delieved that 3 decided to accede to the Senate yesterday, and in the presence of the leading grand councillors, Prince Yu Lang, a member of the Grand Council, .stated that the entire nation from the \u2018highest to the lowest was agreed upon the necessity of the early establishment of a.general parliament.The senators, who unilerstood this to mean \u2018that their memorial would be received the declaration of the prince with loud and prolonged cheering.The importance of this concession on the part of the government can he scarcely overestimated in view of its recent refusal +0 entertain a similar request made by a delegation from the provincial assemblies last June.The programme fixed by the late Dowager Empress provided for the constitution of a general representative legislative body, to be known as the Imperial Parlaracnt, in 1915, at the end of a nine-vear period of preparation.No sooner nad this plan been made known in a decree than a popular agitation wal.begun to influence the throne to advance the date when China might have a representative government.: OBITUARY.\u2018THE DUKE OF VERAGUA.- e Madrid, Nov.1.\u2014The, Duke of Veragua, descendant of Christopher Columbus, and formerly minister of marine, died Sunday.He was born in 1837.He visited America in 1892 on the occasion of the Columbus celebration, and was received with high honors as the representative of the family.WELL-KNOWN SCULPTOR.London, Nov.L\u2014John Adams Acton, the sculptor, died to-day.He was born at Acton, Middlesex, and married Marion Hamilton, the authoress, whose pen name was Jeanie Hering.\" \u2018His works included : many \u2018busts and statues for this country and the provinces, as well as several for America.: RED CROSS FOUNDER.Geneva, Switzerland, Nov.1.\u2014Henri Dunant, founder of the international Red Cross Society, died Sunday night at Heiden.Henri Dunant was of Swiss birth, and lived in Geneva.He was @ philanthropist.At the battle of Solfero, Italy, June 24, 1859, he witnessed a needless suffering and loss of life resulting from days of neglect to care the wounded.Realizing that such conditions need not exist, ne such Col the idea of prevailing on the nations Of the earth to regard and protect as neutral the wounded and giving them all possible care.He elaborated on his idea, and through the Swiss consul brought about an international conference at Geneva in 1863.Sixteen governments were represented.This was followed by the Geneva conference of August 8, 1864, which adopted nine articles of agree- ment\u2014\u2018for the amelioration of the condition of the wounded of annies in the field.\u2019 These articles were signed by twelve governments and the signatory powers have since reached forty.cross oh a white ground, was adopt- éd as a compliment to the Swiss confederation, .who national flag is the reverse.: SIR WILLIAM AGNEW.London, Nov.1\u2014Sir William Agnew, chairman of Bradbury, Ag- new & Company, publishers of \u2018Punch, died yesterday.He was born in 1825, and was for many years TR LY) LA 9 9 C7 RSC El A Lane VE 7 Cog ~ BERLINER GRAM- My, | : J | In the | a OE 5 NE Gram-o-Phone Offer For $9.50 in cash and Weekly Payments of .75 each, you can buy a high-class Victor or Berliner Gram-o-phone, complete with 12 selected (6 double-sided) Victor Records.\u2018 Would you be without a Gram-o-phone\u2014that prince of enter- tainers\u2014when you \u2018can secure one as easily as this?and examine\u2014 listen to\u2014the instrument for yourself.With the approach of the long winter evenings the GRAM- O-PHONE becomes an absolute Home Necessity, .it brings the world\u2019s greatest Singers and Players to your parlor.Come in and let us play your favorite selections for you.Over 3,000 to choose from, and be sure to hear the VICTROLA.0-PHONE COMPANY, LIMITED, TWO STORES: 415 St, Catherine Street West 488 St.Catherine Street East Near wr PI w TE es MG ii 0 Mansfieid Near St, Andre - vs Siar ME.gunn Just come in (Registered.) | Sanitary Chemical Closet # : NO WATER.NO-SEWER.NO PLUMBING.High-Class Chemicals and Disinfectants Write us about it and we will look after you.Telephone, Main 7934.+: Winnipeg, Montreal, Calgary, Vancouver, Saskatcon.PARKYTE | - PARKER & WHYTE, Limited So\u2019e Inventors and Manufacturers.PMR A WALENTA ! N CT TT LVF HH Room 21, 132 St.James Street.head of the firm of Thomas Agnew & Sons, publishers and art dealers.He Was interested in several philanthropic institutions.\u2018 PROF.A.G.MacDONALD.Poughkeepsie, N.Y., Nov.1.\u2014Alex- ander G.MacDonald, for twenty-eight years a member of the faculty of the Eastman Business College, and who is known to thousands of Eastman graduates all over the country.died here yesterday.Professor MacDonald came here from Almonte, Canada, and was a son of Dr.Alexander Mac- Donald, of Dunferline, Scotland.He.was 55 years old, and a prominent Mason, MRS.HENRY LABOUCHERE.Florence, Italy, Nov.1.\u2014Mrs.Henry Labouchere, wife of the, editor of London \u2018Truth, died here yesterday.Before her marriage to Mr.Labouchere she was Miss Henrietta Hodson, of Dublin, Ireland.FORMER PREMIER FRANCO, Jeered by Portuguese Crowd on Leaving Court Room.Lisbon.Nov.1.\u2014A crowd jeered Former Premier Franco as he left the court yesterday, having been admitted to hail in the sum of $200,000.Senor Madhado protested against the admission to bail of the former premier, but exhorted uls enemies to be calm.s Franco is charged among other things with having issued during his tenure of office seventy illegal decrecs and with having liquidated the debts of King Carlos, amounting to $500,000 with Crown funds, on the pretext to augmenting the civil list.ele.NATIVES KILL CHRISTIANS.Washington, Nov.1.-Eight Christians.one of them an American, and two Chinese, have been killed an much property belonging to foreigners has heen destroved by the rebellious Manohos tribesmen in the Philippines, according to a report from Brigadier- General Pershing to the War Department to-day.> A uniform flag, made of a red to constipation.parations, by expert chemists.Er The Old Folks find advancing years bring an increasing tendency The corrective they need is .\u201cNA-DRU-CO\u201d Laxativ: Entirely different from common laxatives.Pleasant to take, mild arc © À tablet (or'less) at bed-time regulates the bowels perfectly.| doses never needed.Compounded, like all the 125 NA-DF.Money back if not satisiactory 25c.a box, If your druggist has not yet stocked them.send 25c.and we will mail them.NATIONAL DRUG & CHEMICAL COMPANY OF SANADA, LIMITED, MONTREAL.TEN THOUSAND STRIKERS Police Quickly Quell Disturl ance in New York.New York, Nov.1.-The striki.- expressmen gained adherents yet day, when between 1.500 and IM workers of Monahan's Express 1 Boston Despatch.and the Mankhats\" Delivery Company joined them.Ihe platform men of the American Fa press Company at the Grand Vent, station.and the company's Vdd clerks went out in sympathy.It loi previously been reported that Boston Despatch and the Manmhater Delivery Company were involved, it the walk out did not occur ant.terday.More than 10000 men #5 a.on strike, demanding inereazcd i and shorter hours.; ; There were many small distir in the city < ces in various paris of a fe wags 5 day.when strikers attacl i» manned by strike-breakers.Sums 50 other missiles were thrown and «7 eral drivers and their helpers badly hurt.Wm, Hoyt.@ he por an American Express Waggon.had skull crushed by a brickhat, ant\u201d probably die.AN the distri were quickly quelled by the | a who dealt in no gentl> manne the strikers.Many arrests wor and heavy fines imposed.2 ren HIS WORDS MISREPRESENT\"' on Chicago, Jil.Nov.Too Alber Isreitler, third vice-president ue International Printing Press ; nim facturers and Assistants ; partie North America yesterday ko.fvullowine statement in rofersses despatch sent recently fron re - \u201c\u2018Phrough the Associated! wish to correct a staten \"OUT heen given wide circulation spatches»have quoted me ; in a talk before the Trades oo hor assembly that, The Hnilding would blow up \"6 tlenrent would de wl Pressmen's Union, * loadt Ts, pre = dr \u2018to believe ] had Advecais petration of such a dastir \u201cA local publisher mare ment to me that he Tae building blow up before °° settle with the Proszmen in my tabs.1 simpiv quete + \u201caisher to show nis adits © the Pressmen\u2019s Union.22 ce the \u2018total C water) of: 56,214;163- acres, there were \"32,144,005, acres\u2019 under crops and grash, 4 decrease of 38,- 48 Gemipared with 1909, - \u201c978.acres _ The crew of a.Scarborough fishing trawler have hauled up in their, nets bundles of cheques for thousands of \u2018pounds, belonging to.a Newcastié-on-.Tyne bank.\" \u2018They \u2018weré in.a gbod state of presefvation,.and had been\u201d passed \u2018through: the bank three years-ago.:; oR 5, EA Crd _ PONE wo At\u2019 the, autumnal assembly.of the \u2018Congregational \u2018Union: in London, -it was reported that'a.joint committee of the Congregational and Baptist\u2019 unions had been appointed.to deal.with: overlapping, and the .question of 'co-opera- tion in other matters.was: under consideration.eA oF so + large tree In ¢on- h' road-widening.operations, the Liverpool .Corporation:men.-found a large-quan.:ty\" of: Jewellery wrapped In paper \u2018cohcealéd - in\u2019 the Toots \u201cof \u2018the tree.From the date éngraved on ore of the rings: the jewellery had probably been concealed at least twenty years.- Te - : .21 i While gathering blackberries a \u2018six- \u2018in the leg\u2019 by.an:adder, - His: nurse, \u2018| whose attention was\u2018 attracted by his shriek, promptly: sucked the \u201cpoison from the wound: ,Aldoctor, who was summoned, declared.that if she\" had not done this it.\u2018wag unlikely that the boy's life could.haye \u2018been saved.Children .of the Booker, High- Wy- combe, School -refufed- to attend because: two other,#scholars - had edme from \u2018the \u2018isolation.hospital,.and-.the parents feared \u2018infection., The father and mother of the\u2019 boycotted childien withdrew them from the school; and the other scholars: thereupon: returned to: school.The strike was systematically carried: out.A Plaistow (London) woman, of a very eccentric \u2018nature, has \u2018died of starvation, while \u201cpossessing - a \u201c*Hundred -and forty pounds in money and a ad cg considerable amount of house, proper- rance: ful in Ireland, Las been inaugurated | 8 \u2018and driving off.a bull- which \u2018threat-\" 1.Sykes, now in his eighty- | ÿ fifth year, who\u2019 has \u2018spent môre:than-| \u2018| one \u201cmillion : five .: hundred thousand-j #'|pounds \u2018 in - building and restoring | ehürches, is: now paying for the ren-| for Sher- \u2018deenshire, at a year-old Carmathaen.boy was bitten | doctor: deseribed: the \u201cwou | dirtiest;he had.ever seen GS # \u201ctent of three million pounds was paid \u201cin 43,341 cases of death and in.332,- \u201cWorkmen's Compensation Act of 1906.:Mining stands easily first at the head of the dangerous trades; the burden on only eight-tenths of a penny per ton.\u2018Practically all the claims were settled out.of court.- Teachers in England are complain- it was.pointed out that there has been dis of the Board of Educa- a .LET ce Teo SE) tion\u2019s regulation that classes of chil- \u2018+- The.Lord Mayor of:Birmingham has\u2019 dren must not exceed sixty pupils.The council has decided to comply with this regulation and ~~ employ addi- | tional teachers.It was stated that unless this were done the board would deduct over fifty thousand pounds from the grants to the council.SCOTLAND.The Edgecote Shorthorn Company \u2018bought a bull-calf, eight months old, tor £1,102 10s.at Uppermill, Aber- sale of shorthorns.1 - The King proposes tp erect in Cra- thie; Parish Church a.memorial to Kin Edward in the form of a new come munion table larger than the present one, of Iona:Mmarble, behind which.will an screen, richly.carved and canopied.\u2019 On his jubilee the secretary of the National Bible Society of Scotland, Mr.William J.Slowan was presented with a cheque for, five hundred guineas, along with an address giving expression to the feelings of love and esteem In which he is held by a very large circle of friend.Tullybelton Mansion House, situated on one of the most picturesque of Perthshire\u2019's smaller estates, was destroyed by.fire on Tuesday Tullybel- ton was a national Crown property.In 1664 it enjoyed the distinction of affording à- place.of concealment for the Marquis of Montrose.Lord Low, who recently resigned his position as a Lord of Session of Scotland, on account of the state of his health, died at his residence in Berwickshire.He only survived his resignation a few days.Lord Low is succeeded as a judge by Mr.George L.Macfarlane, K.C., sheriff of .e and Kinross.Speaking at St.George's.Edinburgh, the Primus of Scotland mentioned that the.Episcopal Church of Scotland, which at the\u2019 end of last century had only forty congregations and the same number of churches, had now 350 congregations \u2018and a church membership of 150,000.The more friendly spirit now prevailing would, he thought, pave the way to unity.Eighteen months\u2019 imprisonment was the.sentence imposed at \u2018Ayr on a man calling himself the Rev.T.H.Clifford, B.A.For years he has led an adventurous life, and by his representations became minister of a Wesleyan church, and in that capacity married six people.Investigations showed that he been \u2018ordained as a minister, and in that way obtained various sums for religious purposes which he: appropriated to his own use.He was also charged with bigamy.Last year compensation to the ex- \u201c612 cases of disablement, undef\u2018\u201cthe -the industry, however, comes out at in~ of lack of work, and at a recent \u201cmeeting of the London County Council had forged a document that he had One of the ac- ; cused\u2019s first convictions was in Lon- ve] \u2018don \u2018for.frhud, and the circumstances were very extraordinary.At that he.| time accused was living with his lawful, wife in a sumptuously furnished house in London, and was passing as \u2018a.decrepit, miserable man and as a paralyzed beggar and by that policy accused was drawing from the charitable public a very considerable sum of money.Accused\u2019s next conviction was at Cambridge where he got three sentences of three months each for representing himself to three tradesmen that he was an undergraduate and a nephew of Dr.Clifford, the Nonconformist minister.It was after this he went to Scotland and represented himself as a Wesleyan minister.When Joseph Rowley, of Glasgow.was preparing in the early morning to leave home, he was shot at by his father-in-law, Robert Stewart.Row- ley, who was not seriously injured, went for the police.The latter found Stewart at the house of another daughter, and when the inspector went into the room Stewart committed suicide by firing a revolver.The bullet entered the head, and death was almost instantaneous.There appeared to have been a family quarrel.ternal IRELAND.The Midland Great Western Railway Company has been asked to guarantee £5,000 in connection with a scheme for improving the port of Galway, with a view to transatlantic trade.£15,000 has already been guaranteed.Mrs.McWilllams, a remarkable Irish centenarian, residing near.Toomel ridge,, county Antrim, who has just celebrated her hundred and eighth birthday, has received a cheque for £5 from King George, accompanied by His Majesty's congratulations.While \u2018Sir Walter Raleigh\u2019 was being played in Dublin, a young man rose in the dress circle and protested against \u2018this insult to the Catholic faith.\u201d This was the signal for a great outery in the gallery, and for some time a storm of hissing and booing interrupted the- progress of the play.The demonstration ended with the singing of the Roman vatholic hymn, \u2018Faith of our fathers.\u201d The play had, it is said, been specially reconstructed and \u2018sterilized\u2019 for Irish audiences.At the Irish Church Congress, Belfast, a historical and industrial exhibition.was opened by thé Dowager- Marchioness of Dufferin and Ava.The historical section included the Bel] of Bangor, the seal of the Abbot of Bangor, Top Knot of St.Columba\u2019s crozier, crucifix of about the ninth century, and an old candlestick from Connor Cathedral, as well as many cther exhibits of more local interest.,In the industrial section only goods of Irish manufacture were shown, and they \u2018make an excellent display, prominent \u2018among them being specimens of various classes of stonework, embroidery, and stained glass, etc._ The extravagance of_ a farmer's daughter was discussed \u2018in a county court case at Athlone.A draper sued for the cost of various articles supplied.The farmer owns only 20 acres, and he refused to pay, on the ground that the goods were not necessaries.One item was £2 25.for an umbrella; another, a marabout stole at the same price.The judge said such things were not neces- 4 sary for a small farmer's daughter; \u2018if he had many daughters it would utterly smash him.He evidently has a most extravagant daughter.I would absolutely refuse to pay for such things for my daughters.\u2019 \u2014\u2014\u2014 mr HALIFAX PLAYFR HURT Not Expected to Recover Frog Terrible Injuries The game between Duh.football team and na ve PE \u2018 marred by a terrible ACria was aclellan, one of the sd EM backs.the Weed, hais, The second half of is only been in progress a tea when Forbes, of the par tackled the unfortunate hire Wag stooping to pick the his i.the result that he was throm © lv to the ground, stririne ve | his head with such force 2\" cate the back bone : neck, and the spinal Upon his removal to Vos nu an operation was performei y; 0+ the pressure on the &pin:| ry Poor Maclellan, from the na.\u201c\u20ac dislocation .downward, is .1 paralyzed, except for 5 arms, and the doctors ho hopes of his TECOVerY.The unfortunate Fong no.1, of Mr, E.Maclellan, post-sis tor for Nova Scotia, ani hot pn admitted to the har.Co -n an, PA s ds: = ' at the Lu 40 cord wi, .hy ls : Id vo.\u2014\u2014 tse.THE KING AND THE SAILORS The - King, who had given -, © British and Foreign Sailor ox since he became its yur, Tow sev 1 donations, hus Stn i on ce annual subscriber.he a At a meeting held on «.PIS Can mander Robinson (late Crip.om the Union Castle line) + in yy, 5 the hearty thanks of the pein His Majesty for his proc: 0) thy and gracious help, soit we best thank him, and show Sur ae ciation of the King's kindue.{7 keen interest in the best: x LL ve our seamen, by securing hf on.day and the memorable 1j oon Majesty's coronation in Jy, pie mum of not less than a thousand que Subscribers.As the men of tie Na.Navy, merchant and fishing fleers Le the great asset of the nation the growth and extension Où clety, in home, colonial an.Crate ports, have been so remurkahi 217 the King first became its Par to necessitate a greatly incre.L.come, it is resolved to asl, the press and pulpit, platforn oil parie as well as by individual Evening.q - The reopening of All Saints Church at the corner of St.lenis and .Marle Anne streets, will be celebrated this evening at 8 o'clock by a special service at which the preacher will be the Rev.R, W.Norwood, M.A Te During the summer the church has been transformed in cutward appearance, and in internal appointments.It has been built out to the St.Denis street line and two commodious vestibules have been built on either side, while a handsome belfry, cut in heavy oak timbers replaced the old.cupola, and a heavy-timbered gable, with fifteen-foot Gothic lended glags.windows gives a particularly chunchly appearance to the front \u201cHeavy oak doors with handsomie härdware \u2018trimmings give an atmosphere of thoroughness and churchly dignity to the entrances.Within the¢ nave is finished in keeping with the test of A very notable gift has been made by three members of the building committee, Messrs.McGillivray, Hoerner and Blackshaw, in the form of a splendid_ quartered-oak pulpit, * and Messrs.Randall & Jo, the well-known woodworkers, , have presented | the ahurch with new oak choir stalls, quartered oak lectern, and a particulary handsome plece of w~rk in the form of quantered-oak panelling and open Gothic work arount fae choir stalls.The architects are Messrs.Cox! and Amos, of this city.A large congregation is expected this evening, and all the Anglican clergy in the city have been invited to attend.The Bishop of Montreal will preach in All Saints Church on Sunday evening next.| HE \u2018DAILY WITNESS\u2019 is printed ani published at No.140 St.Peter street in the City of Montreal, by John Red- ath Dougall ,and Frederick Eugene ougall, both of Montreal.All business communications should be addregised John Dougall & Son, \u201cWit- ness\u2019 Office, Montreal, and all letters to the Editor, should be addressed \u2018Rai tor of {the \u2018Witness.{ oe | | 4 UR \u2018The Largest Exclusive Fur House in the British Empire.\u201d Limited The Highest Grade Quality \u2018Furs Moderately Priced Every wearer of Fur wants that Fur to be of high grade quality, the only quality that really gives that luxurious effect so desirable.Our stock affords you an opportunity to buy the highest grade quality of Fur \u2018without paying exorbitant prices.You will find our our customers the benefit.The claim of one who boasts is always discounted but we do wish to impress upon your mind that you values especially great this season, as we bought all our ~ Furs before the big increase in price and we are giving cannot afford to buy Furs until you have seen our stock.until you have had an opportunity to become acquainted with our values and styles.We have probably the greatest retail stock of Furs ever shown in Canada and we know we have just what you want and we know our price and our style and our quality is right.ers-Gough Fur Co., Limites The Largest Exclusive Fur House in the British Empire .- - 280 St Catherine Street West - - - TORGN { TTC à 5 T y i F JT I 1 14 \u2014 PP + as \"a = 4 0 A TN = "]
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