People or the Country. I For the stability nnd rigzhteousness I of our Government we nro LIUl`llSEO!Il9ll to think we must pin our faith on the oountrypeopio who live `near to No- ture'a heart, " writes Mrs. Lyman Ah- boti: in the Ladies` Home Journnl, the first oi.'u series of "Peaceful Volley" papers which picture life in an ideal rurul communit-y. But how many of them," she says. "scan to have learned anything noble from her? Her beauty does not rvne them, her honmty does not invite them to ti1or()1IginI)es.=\.imr free-hundetlzinns does not inspire them to genernsity-ihu-y hecomo nurrmv anti sordid in the midst of grnndeurnmi lihemlity. They lnmgine thvro ean he nothing in life hut work or play, toil or rest, end they feel 1: cent:-mph ior them: who play nd rest. They have new-r learned to mingle work nml plny, tell nnd rent in due proportion, and they cease to end uny plommre in life unless they nhundon work ulcogother. Like the ` tired woman who wrote her own opimph, they funny he-uvon is plane whom they` can `do nothing forever and ever. l`h|u vi.-w nf Hf: umlrnd lnnfn in jwlouj. II In on article on the Wonder: of the World's Waste," William George Jordon, in the Lmfles' Home Journal, details how science at the present day utilizes the ox. Not many years ago," he says. when nn 0: was slough tend forty per cent. of the animal was waited; at the uresenu time `nothing is iosthul its dy- imr breath. As but ouerehird 01 tho weight of the nninmi consists of prodhotl that can be eaten, tho question of utilis- ing the waste is a serious one. The blood is used in rc!ining,sugar and in sining paper, or nmnuhioturad into door-knobs and buttons. vfho hide goes to the tan- ner; horns and hoofs ure transformed into combs and imttuns; thigh-bones, worth eighty dollars per ton. are put into handles for oiotlias-brushes; lore-log hones sell for thirty dollars per (on for collar buttons, pnrusol imndles and jaw- elry; _tho water in which bones are boiled is reduced to glue: the dust: from sawing the bums is food for cattle and p.mli;ry; the smullost bones nre nmdo into bone- hinuk. linoh four yields a quarter of is pint of noun`: foot oil; the mil goes to tho `soup ; while tho brush of hair at the end of the toll is sold to tho nmttr(-ss- maker. The vhoicvr parts oi the Int makes the inn-ais of lumvrim`; tho intes- tines are used for r-znusugo continue or bouulm by gold lyentm-3. l.ho umligvruieti food in tho stomach. which formerly cosh tho puckvrn of Chlcu:1,n thii-t._v tiioxhiurul dollars it your to remove nnd (lcstroy, is now mndo into pupur. l'lwsu uro but ii tow of the prodm-Ls of uhuttuirs. All scraps unfit for my other uso iind wel- come in the glue-pot, or they do mission- ury work for formers by nation as fertil- izers." ml`? ilroloob at ova-_cnln-Bcoc3 nu`: TIADIESWITIFSE Proper Inc: for Children. Srlehnco Ulllllon All tlmox. |onno.""oxa9uo1ouu nnvor Ina Iupirwr quauuvy." rnguclnui uurullulwlll Canada recommend them In thohguooo In prohronou to otvhu brandy. `Inn uuI.o.an.vlB AND noun`. IBDALI sad Twelve Dlnlomu have bun Awarded this Ala and Stout At the rut World : llxgxibltlo vim M Phtuiolohls. U &A. 1818; Cnnadndl-Tu; . sdnoy. Austral! . 1371: rim. Fmnca.1878:Jnmn1on.Wub India. 1891; Chicago. U,s.A..1nna; and San Fran- oisoo. lifomin. lY.lI.A-. am. nrno ouhu Ilnlt Bevonnn on thin continent have rooolvod such unin- Oalltomin. " '~ lC`No Halt Bovu-nu on continent have` ont. M utlmonialn. Brewery at London. Canada. JAMES MCPARLAND. - KINGSTON. `Th 'd I from ohol 3:1 I It ch. use 1! int! pureSpr.i:x.;v7qA`!t::."'1?l::y::::o'bun nnnlygd in` clue: by ton`:- o.! our nbloob ohcmlntu. and have been pronounced ronnrhhly pound." "ru(n3~ sound." of delicious: avor and superior quu ty." Phnlelnnn throng their rooess HOLD. UILVIB Twelve Dllllollltl ALE'nfSTbuT. MEQN LABAT'r's I`jI EZFI`EI lac; nouhanaqchgn. Display of MILLINERY and MANTLE8 the are all of the name opinion--never saw I better. T1312 4 Millinery is beantitul. Mantle: in mngerlal, t" nish excellent. Styles the `very latent. Prices most reasonable. V A . Do ngt_pnmhue before Ieeieg tlxeiriutock at \ -11, IN REGARD TO The Art Amherst Hall and Parlor Cook Stoves are tted with the dup- lex Grate, Powerful Heaters, Ec- onomical on coal and handsome in design. of ,Stoves in the city. Examine them before purchasing. 75 8: 77 PRINCESS S1;l:ET- THOh S Reliable-Perlect-Economical ELLIOTT BROS.. J " &m`ll `.I b numnnnnmn aw geaqjng M llllnery Sole Kingston Agents. HAINES a: L0CKff,T .. nsh N, Hot , WAVE! We he the I (I; , _ I largest assortment '.`____,,!._ 'I"Ll(\I [CA !\ll'\ IKI IICI3 ;:si::'ii`;a & L ?C`B:1..B R_Ar|; ____4 / 4 ro3v' an - I`. . 9131' Una. VV ..J'.l.'- '9` llbun N Y R Phil (1 [- uau. hlilmoro. baul:zx'ut.::: u'nd ch: . ZSf\T'T'fI'I'II' "me!2!%!';!n&92$h"'E"v IOIIGO. lo: mum lnlonnnlon 31mm and (night. n|.:pl: to H. B. ` ICU? KLLAN % LINE] ~STR. "NORTH KING" Woolly Kingston and Boohutor NJ. Mr."Nonh KI " luwu Sudan :0. 5 p.lII BIIM to dunno mm wmnonl ..m:::.:':*.:x :3 .::;<'" 'M OI `rand: ....., .....,z:.*';:.::`*.::1'.;:::1'..* *'""" "* Duty um 'o'.'o..eE.'pToe:2Ju an '0! Qulnh. ._-_,_ n_n,, , _, -__.n__;_ __.___;__n . `c r uull VVIIU In Lu pan. rouu-n. 08.50. To- ll . MM :.:.:- ~ a".-..."a":.-.:; :`...:*"=' . ` '_ I an no u c In . Oolmoouonl no Inn: At. Montreal duly Io`:- Qloboo and the Bunonny. In |l'A\lI.lV jun RIIIIPDLIYI `U0 ! 1: npujiwu uulluly II ` Going Inn at 6 III. .4, Ohio] Wutst 1 am. nnnn_A-lIAnn It In nu AND :ioNfItBAL LINE. E . lloonvnwwn W 5' $13: I nloon-. of-Mylo lichmnvodoup 1'. v.uamy.- 1. p. ganeove. Auhkbzl. Ihn. ` V aaunhuut. 3-:2` VIIIXIII WIIII ITCIIII 90 Ill WIIIUI In In. um.-`ran STATES. Wqnu-Dulaoosloqluosnbotvun QAIII vnaman-r Ann Minn vnn % lnmlln I Oltlo llblaltiol Gonpuy. ma scams um: on AHBRICA. '::1'o'.`i`.`< ';.'e'.`. ........ ..... '.'.':'.'.'.`.'.'..'.."i'.` lb: Notch nd our: Information Apply to 1. D. nnumnw, A... Inner. lnnlontuol. honquboo. - I .- - u d ht amaou s . oi. at ""3 ` U9) _ggg'._9':.: m-o"u I. " low Anhndor... 1) " `*8. OAHLDA will all he Inudunu. mu Ouobu and um VI GU31] RIIJIUIQIII CU $UUHUCKI I`: I u M ."Nor|Kl "100 Bnndh O. -o'M many to mun 01:0. wlanlgnt n-an lnlonnnulon nnudlnn nuance Cd :3 Z . 'f V-'f*'-'1* 1'.L_`_..;-A;-:g*;~.~,"'vl {Royal Mai'tfems'hips T sanvxca , . - p..-u-u\-a-I\-Isn\I `Ti Ililll WIIU BIIIIIILIL ' 1`. HANLIY JAE. BWIPI` X. Puunqoy lieu. Fnigm. hank. l W I Iain Ilnnton Tuosdu und Frldny:- lining `nah an I n.IUI lat I1 (culling sh Iovlllo for and . ovcty Salinity Inn Man- Ipd. onllin so Quoboo. lion Konttnl. From Qnoboo mt- .... ..mh sopa...... . .... ..1Ith8wt .... .. o '5 CAHIA-Y. 2 I. .`..` `ml-.ou.nnnu.nnvI.A.u . - 4lOluonco hoot. TRAVELLING-BY RAIL. STR._!-lERO -11.; n_;_n__ - n.A_._-__...L In. ,1"P" "t"i:'"A \'\i":'rI .-ilrvicu-'~v'%6`z:i-it saw rm: TAII-I. IO. BU'I'l' V 7' Nil.` "177" """'"" (mu. IL .& 0. Ill. spun... xx. st??? ' U V Iu.o.unn.n. n. max. DIRECT SHORT LINE % N.lagaE:- Falls. (Hanan. Rvnonn. Bnohuhr. Wt:--emote in -I-a.1-.ui to.'on in `U `ilk! #35 W [ADA will all non 1530,0011`: hum Ouobuud uh ovum human to onion: 0:. 'v?i"s"E~'.' A I`unI\n U.- V.` III` 3100- lull EAST- " 0 Higgins In. C; 1 II`Z`C. - `gnu--9: we BF: Koch to Bu A10 |o3:l :x':d,Cin::n-t` am. 5:. Lou. mm on. TI'I`?'IIFI' i iguana)`: Ilooptod) ti : xzlnntll W. Eh. hllnnton.` 0' 5355.0:-E Nov. 0th. I pan " nth. D can .4-- Q4.-Ann `liblu mmsmn & PEMBROKE .ll|h lth I .. mu ..11mh WIN) IIIVO IIIIIIIIIKL IlunjoonI$uI_lnu rvwru wIu1|II- ounrhuohn night. Tho but onho nhunnoplohdlarohlpmout bynllto Ilonlnclwhno the calves no branded u:dtnmndloou1mhthoouttIoromnln- Ing. Nwu1stl'lkoln0nhot:rmun slnncetohonrthnnho rnnchon nkoa drv Innner and full. Rain ohomhoa thojluunndwlnntbo um consul) tbommmou alumna an taken out: hhtholrthoory and ltuppouuthqy w tthrrlnhlkingnbonl. Tho thin pun-at nttb-ol)onI Our If-lnounonlntptuonuymrmon Illa IdloHhnry,Ono|nIo,DoodaraIIn- Ilmwhohnvohnndrcin. Thmnulhl LalAn-LA.E-._-I In mammals` an IIIIU ET. Dll DUI] Wu! H ITIIUOY HI DUCT`- Firet.>he gave out that Charles Nolin had been made something or other in the Indian Department. Nolin war not a label in 985 but waa coneerned in the troublee of 1870. Then he announced that Maximo Leplne had got an`ofiice in the Land Department. Lexilno died the other day. There wae not award of truth in the story about these men. Everybody in the West knew it was untrue, but Tho Mail jumped at it no conclusive proof of Mr. Siiton'e villainy and of the turnitude of the Grll party at large. and day after day runs the change: on an unqualied falsehood. No one identied nearly or remotely with Riel whether in I870 or in M85 has received any onioe or preforlnent of any kind from Mr. Sitton. Some of the ex~rebele are engaged In teaming in the Saskatchewan country and were em- played by the Conservative Government to cart Government euppiiee. It in quite possible they may have done teaming for the Interior Department since Mr. Sitton took hold. but. if so. that is the only bnldation for the rather elaborate struc- ture of lien reared by the active-minded Journalist on The .\'or'Weeter. Of late he haa abandoned thia particular iletioh became the Tory leader: discovered that hll attache on Mr. Sifton for. u alleged, appointlng French half-hreeda of that map to qmoo"wqn turning the hall'- Mtd you round about Batoche to the .1-Ihml-m (in tin Running. vu --v nun`:- Thoiunround-Iyhgolngon at the nachos and cowapnnohu-I no ying our lho plains. Tho: student!) in thomorm Ing and bring a batch in sinus noon. tho onplnnndulurnwlun - ..u.=.T...a.....;.n 11.. 1.-nnr::. .....v_ .v. .. .1-av`-Iv vasuuvn The romancer in Winnipeg began by saying that the second cousin had been _appointed to a Federal olco. when as a matter of fact the second cousin is not in the service either of the Federal or of the Manitoba Government and has no desire to leave his present calling, which is that of farmer and lumberfnan. Then he had it that Mr. John W. Slfton was to be appointed Lieutenant-uovernor of Manitoba or else oi the Territories, and when this was contradicted he declared that anyhow his present oilloe wasa Fed- eral omoe into which he had been hoisted by the Minister oi` the Interior. When this lie was nailed. he allowed that it was a Provincial office. but insisted that Ciiord Slfton had given it to his father whilst Cllirord was a Manitoba Minister, and he sticks to this assertion knowinn that it is untrue. His next night into the realms of fancy made it appear that Arthur Sifton had been appointed to a valuable Dominion otiiee at Calgary`, though as 1 have said he has not an oice at all. being paid by the case. and was deputed to act for the Crown months before Cliord became a member of Mr. Laurie:- s Government. ' The so-ealled ltebel Appointments. These yarns suited Eastern papers like The Ottawa Citisen and The Toronto Mali; indeed they took so well with the Torv press in Ontario that The Nor`- i Wcster found itself famous. and its young man was encouraged to print other fabri- cations. This time it occurred to him to concoct reports of the appointment of prominent ex-rebels, as he called them, to omoe in the Interior Department and thus demonstrate to the Orange element that Mr. Bit ton was a traitor at heart. Fluent kn ---a. nut o|.-s- lVL__I-- KY.-din _....- -...- ..---.v... Irv-U -nu-vu-van; nun uv, were,-in truth, manufactured. out of whole cloth, `am not strike this enterpris- ing journalist as a matter of moment; they would liven up things" and give the boys something to talk about," and that was all he cared for. A `Dutch at Roorbncks. Fiction No. i was about the nepotism. Mrfsliton has three male relatives-in the Northwest, his father, his brother and a second on lhird cousin who lives somewhere in the Dauphin country. His father, Mr. John W. Sifton, is a man greatly respected in Manitoba. He was in the Provincial Legislature for years, was Speaker and an ac- tive Liberal generally. Some years ago, long before Cliilord Slfton entered the Manitoba Cabinet. John W. Sifton was appointed to an oice under it, which he still holds. Clli'ford s brother. Arthur, is a lawyer at Calgary, a very clever and estimable young man, and before Cllilord joined the Dominion Government he was made Crown Solici- tor in Alberta; that is to say. when the Dominion has law business out there he acts for it and is paid Just as it he had noted for a private client. ML- _-_______ s__ nn____s-,a u , u [From Our Own Correspondent] Moo|e Jew. Oct. 1.-People in Westiue nniling over certain charges made at eeoond end against the Minin- br 0! the Interior by the Tory` prose in Ontario. The foot: are these A` low weehfoko one of the able editor: oi The Nor'AWeat`ex-, the Tory paper in Winnipeg, nding things political nether dull, eon- ceived the idem of levying war upon Mr. Siiton_by publishing is bogus indictment in iwhiohlheins accused `of appointing relatives to omce end of giving tot berths to half-breeds on the rebel Iide in 1885. That the stories were nbeolutoly untrue, um... 1'!-. A-LL _._.._.n__;..__.1 -... 4 man of Ioorbnoko-`rho io-c-nu A imnn Appolptnoulnu-On an Bauhau- A llcndjnnnonc ot Boundau--'l'ho wum. at an won---rho rumm oiiuoox. The Direct Fast Linc, ~ nu Ann Inst. OUR NOR -WEST LE'l'1`EI{] cinis AGAINST THE Min- qsfrea or `rm: mrsmon. I. on the Ranches. u.`.lllll'U I0!` "III. A good many settlers are drifting in hum the United States. The Seen-tug of the lnioriot nt Wnnhingtun gives the Arm of moons land rt-mnining an 560.- 000.000 not-en, exclusive of the 370.00,- ooo in Alaska. but this name onnbroce-' thonrid plains and mountains of Ari; Ionn. Wyoming. New Iiexioo sad so on. The portion," in up in I his report, "cnitintnhio without cicaring 0| irriga- tion is comparatively nmnil." It in not mount; to hiievo that the United Shh: will II)! he our-papulolnd; that In. Hilton vary much plohobility in thotlzrthntgoolliond wiii nonin- WK" IIHIHIIPIY IP38 (llll'UIlllUl'(a. It used to be said that tho country between Swift Current and Calgary was the northern projection of the Great American Desert and would never amount to anything. To-day, however, it con- tains some of the best ranches on the continent. The settler who can irrigate gets immense crops. Mr. Hull, of Cl nary. cut 1.860 tons of prime hay off 820 acres of irrigated land this summer. His farm is ten miles from the town and is well worth seeing. But, putting irriga- tion aside, the tract from Calgary east to Swift Current, calling: it 300 miles wide. has turned out almost innitely better than any one could have hoped for an a ranching country. and has devel- oped grain-growing capabilities that were never as much as suspected tlfteon years ago. Theexpanse between the railway and the Cypress Hills with its rich gurass and groves of timber in said by experts to be as good a stock-raising region as any in America. The Onllnnk far the Future. There is a hopeful feeling among the people. The hard times through which we have all passed of late have taught them the virtue of thrift. of sending less than they make and laying by some- thing; whilst they have acq'uir-d experi- ence in the hard mill of trial and failure and are better able tlian they were to turn the vast natural resources of the country to account and escape disappoint- ment. With reasonable incl: the North- west is certain to go ahead rapidly dur~ ing the next few years. All it_ requires LI intelligent government and it looks with oonfldence to Mr. Sifton and Mr. Smart for that. ' - A -auul nu-nu -gliln-A nun tllnn In uru snowing up no nunusuuu.-Ay. The Edmonton country wlll have its innings in the Iprlng, when the rush begin: to the Peace River and the lane- merable gold-bearlng creeks that now Into It. It ponaeuee about all the advant- ages It could ask l`or-coal. tlmher, water. mines, good wheat and mllllons of acres of grazing land, wlth free Inst!- tutlons and n healthful ollmnte. A Ro- man Cnthellc mlesionary, who has been up here many years, told me the other day that to Me certain knowledge the rlvera and omoke north of Edmonton contained an abundance of gold. For that matter gold is found ln the Sas- katchewan ln n-mlllclent quantltlea tn yluid falr wages even wlth the prlmltlre nppllanoes whloh the crmller employs. It In far cheaper, or course. to work on the Person lllver than ln tho Klondike, that is to say. your expense: are less by at a least 50 per cent., so that if you strike lt half as rich there is as much money ` with innitely less dlemmfnrt. It none` in In nnhl that Ikn nnnnh-v U1 Illiglilu Calgary has euoredfrom the rush to the Kootenay mines but in recovering. It is an exceedingly smart town with five atone -b`uildi`ngs, telephone and elecrtie light. `The stone is a soft sandstone found on the Bow River; it is easily worked and hardens on exposure, Bran- don station is built of it. The Bow and Elbow furnish the net of water. Logs are iloated down the Bow from the mountains and sawn in a bigmiil owned by the Eau Cliare derupany of Wiaooneln. Coal from Canmoro costs $6 per ton. There are deposits nearer at hand which will be opened some day. Calgary is bound to go ahead when miners begin to develop the Peace River country. It is the headquarters of an excellent ranch- ing region. has several good hotois-the Alberta is a first-class onc-and does a large supply business. Its pretty situa- tion also recommends it. It is the proper place for the new capital. 'l'IIo Wealth of the West. It is surprising what a lot of stuff goes from Calgary, Medicine Hat. Macleod, Maple Creek and Moose Jaw. Just now thousands of cattle and sheep are being shipped East, while trains to British Columbia are loaded with beef, butter, scrub cattle and hay for the mines The railway men are as busy as ` nallers night and day. It is easy to un- derstand why Canadian Pacific earnings are showing up so handsomely. Tina Enlmnnfnn nnnntrv will have: M: IIF UBDIIWII. I.-HUN! I5 (I IUCIIKIS Ill llI\Ul' of extending the boundaries uf Manitoba to Reglxm and making nnother province out of all the region west to the mount- ains with Calgary as the capital. This region, being a mnohlng and mining country, would he the batter of a local cover-nment sepnrute nnd distinct from that of the wheat and dairy country east of Regina. (`.nlam-v hm: nnm-ndfrnm the I-nah tn goidi ' ` men gh from 1.000` to 13,150 * usually 16 one in a 5!. ` V ' The Kootenay mines furnish a capital market forgcattle not as enough for ex- port to`Englnnd. Butter and eggs, pd`ni- try, hay and potatoes are also sent there. Cushing's factory at Calgary is kept busy making egg boxes. The price of ranch horses has gone up in consequence of the demand -for pack horses for the mines. Poultry is worth 19}; cents peripouad "ll-'91 w IUIIUII IIU-I llulle ' "at Calgary, eggs 16 to 20, deep can set: ting butter 18,- cheese l2}{. A lleadjuslment of Boundaries. Regine is under the weather. _l6 isfthe only place between Fort William and the Rockies that is losing, its bolt. The inhabitants are enterprising enough and deserve to prosper, but there is no deny- ing that the town` labors under natural disadvantages. It was planted there by Mr. Dewdney against the judgment of men far better informed. Mr. puvln has landed its virtues for fifteen long years, but somehow or other it refuses to grow; in fact, the Moose Jaw people, who are rival boomsteers, swear that the popula- tion is declining and before long there will be no one there but Mr. Davin him- self. which is probably untrue. 'I`Im 'l'nrv-Ifnrlnl fnl-In nf a-nvm-nmnnf. Canada Pacific Railway: " 1 . rill!!! LIAVI INIHNI. L n-n'_I...`nn._. II....c...| BUllp WIIIUII IH pl'Ul)l.lUl] lllJlJl'l[U. The Ten-ltnrlul form of government does not suit the went. The Territorial Auembly is forbidden to legislate on matters that fall within the sphere of the Federal Parliament. This would be all right if the Assembly only knew the llyiile of Fedierni jurisdiction, but it does not: consequently all sorts of entangle- ments arise and no one can tell whether the local Acts will be "allowed" or not nt Ottawa. There is n feeling In favor nf Avhinlnn fhn hnnnni-Ina nf Klnnlfnhn ain.u..aV` mas ;.sor~ ea. `mp n_n nvarsp 0! 1.885 pounds each. They came from lie Ooohrnnn much near Mnolaod. rhlunb-Ala -Annha jdhuk C-nun `I nnn On ;i6ahoui &a*or-can man n! LRRIK nnnnd: mnh, Thaw mums nXan;1r"'wI&3i,* WEDNESDAY.` buronmn 13. 1a97. IOICIIQG. = Bolgolnnd will continue In in tho Oni- In Green of Germany till 1918, when tho fpecial privilege of tho illlnd expires Pu- Ior schrodcr. the mimic. . quires oatulatn at man, at tho count chin puvntoi! Ihopu-tiuuonndcuo. niqllidam that niche is dandy nar- rlcdnordivonod mg! n uhlununod tbs noon:-for their tuning to hr In pt nur- I-iod. Tbnlnclurjunhnot us his coalioninognmrrhi hcnnnyut Ion cs-drything in in patent!) lcllul tide! Ihntoocouplcnbncpuur to nab an jcurney to Hcl(0hII.- ha} Jrgonont. _____j_ . gun. wno lnppaneu so no yrcuus "Yet." he am. "he lo evhomly ironed up to meet the Punch artists. Be In the pink of fashion and nutmeg now. but last night. when I met him at dinner, his shirt was ayed as the edges and MI collar was pinned down buhlnddmt thopln can vny during me evening `and the noun neatly onto over bu head."-Harry lamb In Century. ` . ITS. When Mr. Gladnono upon one oocanlon mat the mm of `Punch at dinner, I won ohuarhwd to nd. when he walked Into the dining room. that he 11 d discarded hln mun} largo collar for one o the "macho!" type. 1 Jan that my raputhtion for ac- curacy wu bghted and sought consola- tion from the editor of a Gladnonlun 02- V who happened to be mesons "van " hn um. "ha I: adnnllv drained Jnu all-uuvvnwn nu -nu up.-u-vwuv v-..--.. I believe I am gonornlly supposed to have lnvonted Mr. Gladstone : oollnrs, but no matter of {not I merely dlsooverod them. Mnnynu-n wear oollm-I qulto no large an. and even larger than, hla. but they no not no promlnont ln appearance for the simple ronnon that when Mr. Glad- utone not down It won hln custom to all well forward. Bl: body collnpued. no to spank. and MI head sank lnto MI cont. Theluevlmble result was tbnt bl: collar row, and. owlng tn thln circumstance. I have frequently seen It looking qulto no -conspicuous as It In depleted In my culm- In!-A1 ~~-----p---v-- --- -- -..--v_V.._...__ ._...... -; VBQA-vieo.-a;mznonoing Mon- day. October 4th. lmlumns oosarozm AND mum. ' TON. auto ton Hunllf-on". Toronto moo and. RAM og ha 5%.. Invnnoo no Ion- qulclily 00Olllpllti0U. This saves the hull of the vessel and less- ons the damage considerably, for the own- ers one have her pumped out afterward, ` and, the hull remaining intact, there is nothing but the burned intoriorbo repair. I! she were scuttled in midltremn, the hull would interfere with navigation. and iu would cost a lnrge amount to raise the vessel, so it can be seen that these boats can render other services than that of ex- tinguishing tires. . In rnl nn vi-mnln lnmlnd with nntbon uuuulsnmg UFUU. In tires on vessels loaded with cotton (they make ugly lire: to handle) a lighter is usually brought nlqngsido, and nttrr the worst of tho the hue been subdued the bnlvs are hoisted out one hy one and extin- guished as they nro brought out. By thin means part of the cargo is Invod, for only the surfaces of the bnloc are on iim. and they can be picked over and rebnlod and mid ugnin. while to 2111 the vessel full of water uud drown out the the would du- utroy the whole onrgo. and n ootton the might burn for months it (ought in any other way. The Discoverer o! the Gladstone Oollnn _,,_ u , _ _ , _ _ _ . --_n _ Il'll'0B DTDDODDH. 311'. Hill Bllyl: These boats serve a double purpose. for they are not only eeotive water throwing engines, but powerful tugs as well. When I tire is discovered on a ship lying among other vessels, a line is fastened to her, and she is towed out into midstreum. where` she cannot spread destruction about her. A few dashes from the powerful monitor n"oz:|e soon put out any fire in the rigging and upper works. If the re has spread to the hold or has eaten in among the csrgo, she is towed down tothe mud ats near Liberty island or to the sand bars south" of Governors island and benched. Then the Mg lengths of hose are passed aboard, large metal connections are fastened to the ends, and these are thrust into the hold or into any compartment where there is re. ~ and she is soon pumped full of water and the tire drowned out. If s boat like the New Yorker has charge of this work, it is quickly accomplished. Thin lnin the hull nf tlm vs-ssel nnd lass- I11-obonu and Burning Vcuoll. Mr. Charles '1`. Hill contributes an art!- clo on Floating Biro Engines" to St. Nicholas. '1`haa1-tloledoauribes New York`: throe robonbs. Mr. Hill says: `Fhnnn Iunnt am-tn n nnhln mu-nman. for now:-1-mg plums. At the present time the very lovest esti- mate of authentic species of cryptognmia cannot be less than 500,000, and they prob- ably exceed that number. Here, then, we have an npproxiumtc idea of what may be regarded as a very low estimate of the number of species of plants scattered over the face of tho cnrth. If we feel confidence in nsserting that there are not less than 600,000 distinct and different species of vegetable organisms, including land and water, it is because it has been proved that the number is even in excess 0! that.- Phiisdcipbia Times. 1 D1000 OI KIN) Ullll. ' In 1845 R. B. Hinds estimated the phe- ` nogumio and cryptognunlo plants at 134,- 000 specios. The next estimate we moon with is In Henfroy In 1857, 918,000, but in 1855 Do Cundollo had by nnothor process of 1-manning come to the conclusion that the total could not be less than 375,000 for UWl'I`h)g plnnts. A r. Hm nu-mannt Mmn Mm cm-v lnivnnt natl. lnlg 5 U0 IHUIIIUUU Ill ULIIIII l.llllllUUl.'. ` H nboldt entered upon a series of enl- j oniat us about this time to show that all i \ these estimates fell short of the number I that might be supposed to exist. Such considerations. he writes, seem to verify the ancient myth of the Zoud~Avestn, that the creating of primoval force called lorth 180,000 vogetnblo forms from the sacred blood of tho bull. ` `In 1QAI{ D II "Ind: gal-.I-nnntn }\n I-aha- nowenng, [W u.uuu. - Progressing still further in 1880 De Candoiie estimated that at least 56,000 we:-e known. It was found that the num- ber of species preserved in the herburium at the Jurdin den Plantes was estimated, at the same figure. and that the collection of M. Deieuert contained 86.000 species in .1847, nithough Dr. Lindioy had estimated in 1886 that all the plants in the world mig t be included in that number. N mhnldt. ant:-red nnnn :1 union nf an]. namea Dy lnuupnruaull. V In the beginning of the seventeenth oeu- tury the number had increased to 6,000. i.'I'b,e eeoond edition or Linnaeus` great: book included no more than 8,800. Wiiidenow. up to 1807, had detected 17.457 epeciee of owering plants. From this period the increase in the number ot- known species . in very rapid, an a. result of the eeimnine given to botany bfhinnaue and his euo- ` censors, so that, no the beginning of the present century Robert Brown had esti- V muted the owering plants at 87.000 and Humboldt all pinnts, flowering and non- owering, at 44.000. Du-nm-nnina still further In 1820 De -EIXTE Tll TABLE: Btoumu for CAPE VINCENT VIII loan Kl7KB'I'lll duly (Sumhy oloogtaod) I AJ1. 2:30 P.M.. oonnoothu at [:0 Vincent. in train to all point: In tho lllui-31-u manna`:-Q Wlt the Nnttlslleh `[511 III About Ila venue: at Caucus The number of dlqrent kinda of pinto that are to be ionnd on the eurfeeeef the globe her long been ndlnputed question. The history of the effort: to determine it In u om-Ioue:nne.. Those eorte` begun In 890 B. O. with Theophrutnl. who enu- merated 500 kinda of plentl. This may be .1-eeunmd to represent all that were then 'nown. The bohnloal knowledge of King Solomon had. then, comparatively narrow limits, even though he dleoonned on all the plants from the cedar of Lebenun to the hyesopon the well. Pliny--A. D. 79 .-lnoreneed the number to. double that neined by Theophreetue. In tlm hm-rlnnlmr of the emnmhnnth mn- _ . . - 9- HOW MANY PLANTS Ct Twat: Yuan lxporlonoo `Boll: What 3 meals; lnllnn Yuan`: lm In lag to -0! Ian) Pl. _ "0111 I This In to certify that I luv! boa: 0 Indian` "f. ."..Iu.'. `.23 5:.` rf.`.".'n`. ....H"i.'.',`..`.. =unl-or of my nations Mn and Indian WI)- nnwhl-undho vdupildnnrun lncnrn-an. hn-dd tnoounnodn loullladhulurhvuu. . um: w2.onuT;ovln..on. I w Hill. A echoolgirl of ten years," wrim Mrs. S. T. Rorer in the Ladies` Home Journal. should have good-, easily-' digeauxl. nutritious food: Wu-ll-cookod. steel-out once for brenkfuat; Illb-{mid train and eofo-boiled emu. If elm cm-rloe her lunch a cup custnld. fruit and chop- ped mam sandwiches made from either ` beef. mutton or chicken will newer. So l pork not no! no sweet: nor fried footie should be given. children. Apples. either baked or raw, between ' meals are good. For the evening meal give I nutrition: cream eoup, than n rod meet. either boo! or mutton, roasted, boiled or bmilod: o lettuce eeled. cnntninlng a light French dreeellg mode with oil and a few drops lemon juice; eomeeimple dauort, each -rice pudding. cup cueterd. tapioca or baked applet." Ulll I!l`lIUu| lnr Buull pulnulln. nu In u urur one. It. la n :1-hool of experience. its loan- \ sons are onforcml by hlluhted hopea, l ruined health. broken hearts; but. it. ls l the only school In which or-rtnln persons can be taught. Foolishness is bound up In their hearts. and only nllllotlon. disap- ` polntment and sorrow pun drive It from them. Punting Talk. All ,hnmnn beings nc-ml instruction. connsul. mnidnnou in n. m-outer or 10594 dogrvo. .\'n mm put-son known or cam know nvaryihiruz. Home through cute. exnnrinnvc` and whzdum are (|ll`Il|(`ll tn hn munm-lors nmi mivlsnrs. Others will not. (in this. They am imlivrenr. tn thu- wolfnro ni tylmsu urmmd them. and ulluw them no go their way and take tho ann- soqnnnoes. (nha-rs, mom careful und sympathetic. seek to sum the young from the evils and troubles which th:-ir nxpurionoo might hrlng upon them. Um-n, howsvor. they labor in min; lhvir ndvioa in unwlonme and their words um wasted. It is nsviesa to try to pour water into at oorkml hottlemr to give ndvit-e to numn cnncr,-itod youth who knows it. ul- mmiy, and who mrm up It pretty nxmu, und goes on rt-nnrdlvu of the oounsul of friends. pnmntn or any one else. There is one school for such pornona. It. la n dnnr Ann 79 in n no-hnnl nf nvnurinnnn It: Inc. Ullrllvlly IJU IN` l'HU|lr`.'lI Illy IIVUIIIIHIY ll` cannot he at will lnld down: It lwvmnou a luxury run well an a hen-snity. Individ- uuls mmhlno, not for V-lmlr own mI\'nnt- ngu-. but to mnlly hnnofnctlnns, and us stre-ngzth HN`l'('||M` hy in rhzht um, thu ntmlvmwnt of mm worthy um! um- bmous mlvnnmnzn is only tho smzgestlnn ` nnd nohh-vvnwnt of nnnrhu-r." ULIII llll IIULHIIIK lUl'\'\l'l' llllll UVUX`. This View of mu nmkes lnnfnrn In tho vlllngzu as it nmkns them In thoolt-lea. When as different spirit has found room to grow. at new unlm` of living provnllc. Life In-cnmm amnothlng morn thnn n slow grinding of tho mill. mom than .-n hunlon, tnlw-1-ndured only lwcnnan It mnnnnr Im nr \(-I" lhhl rlnmnu Ir. lmmnnnu -nu n.I-vv .urIQvvuu.vII "ouuI(!I8Q"cu;Ouuh.(`oIb. jjgjxntn-L-In Kw `II-III 33%|: `CI ! UIIUUCI QLPI VINCENT AND NEW YORK. rorlowonl nun. tuna tabla sad nuablo lnfonnuuon apply to Illn A llnln op $.54 A_.. n In