A jE a { in lieu thereof. ed or paid, the locator may, upon having a Synopsis of Canadian Northwest HOMESTEAD REGULATIONS. section of Dominion the North-W D ® ana 30; sox reserved, I - homesteaded by person the oie' head a family, or male 18 years of age, to the extent of on section, of 160 acres, were or I 2 "ey A on must be im peso by (thie t at the office of the local Agent Sub-Agent. Entry py may, however, "be igde on certain' con. e land on receipt. of the tele. is a 14 have priority and until' the necessary pa. transaction are received of e entry will be cancelled and fh applicant will priority 'of claim. lication for inspection must be made The applicant. must be eligibie d entry, and enly one application inspection will be received from an ind, that applicati on has been dis whose entry is in good stand » ine nd not late ¢a Cancellation, J sub- roval of epartment, relinquish m Savor of Sather 'mother, son, danger or eligible, t to mo .one dhe, on tung declaration of abandonment. an entry is summarily canceled or y abandoned, subsequent to institu. of cancellation roses the applicant inspection will entitled to prior right of entry. Applicants ;.inspedtion. must state in iculars the homesteader is in default, sul A the statement is found to material particulars, the apph- a will Jose any -prver right eof reent land become vacant, or if entry granted it may be summarily can- telled A settler is equ fired to perform the | conditions under one of the following plans: wd' bale least six months' cultivation of the land in each year dur- residence upon { ju e term of three years. [| %) If the father (or mother, if the father is deceased) of a homesteader resides upon a { farm in the vicinity of she land entered for wy. such homesteader the requirement as to | resi may be satisfied by such person re. siding with the father or mother. (8) If the settler has his permanent res: dence upon farming land owned by him in | the vicinity of his homestead, the requirement | may De satisfied by residence upon such land fore making application for patent the settler must «give six months' notice jn writ | ne to the Commissioner' of Dimingen Lands | [nt Ottawa, of bis intention to do so. SYNOPSIS OF CANADIAN NORTH-WEST MINING | REGULATIONS, Coal.--Coal mining rights may be leased for 8 period of twenty-ome -years at an annual rental of $1 per acre. Not more than 2.560 acres shall be leased to one individual or com pany. A royalty at the rate of five cents per ton sual be collected on the merchantalie coal mined. Quartz. -- A peruin eighteen years of age, or over, havin, overed mineral in place, may locate a lam, 1,506x1,500 feet. The fee for recording a claim is $5. At least $100 must be expended on the claim each year or paid to thé mining recorder When $500 has been expena survey made, and upon complying with other requirements, land at $1 we purchase the per The patent provides for the payment of a royalty Pot 212 cent. on the sales. lacer mining claims generally are 100 feet | square, entry fee $5, renewable yearly. n applicant may obtain two leases to dredge for gold of five miles each for a term of twent ars, renewable at the discretion of the Minister of the Interior. The lessee shall have a dredge in operation within one season from the date of the lease for each five miles. Rental, $10 per annum for each mile of river leased. Royalty at the rate of 2 1-2 per cent. c lected on the output 4h it exceeds $10,000. W. W. CORY. | ty of the Minister of the Interior i N.B.--Unauthorized publication of this ad- l vertisement will not be paid for. | ~ HERE'S [SOMETHING NEW IN | POST CARDS LotLbtarnrratashasran |Greetings from King- ston, "Life. Models" Kingston Views. Come in and have and a look. T. McAuley. Loses tstsensstssssstns When You Buy COAL From P. WALSH You get genuine Scranton, as he handles nothing else. PIPPI FIIIS IIIS P Ive hhh hidhidihbehidbibhiehd C. H. Powell, Carpenter and Jobber, 103 Raglan St. ee -- ' How to Get Off a Car | in. Want until the car comes to a compiéte stop. Have your LEFT arm and hand free Step squarely down onto the step or rumning board, holding 10 upright hand-hold immediately wo front ry fom with your LEFT hand and facing direction car is headed. Belore stepping off sce that au vehicle is passing, to collide *] of run mito you ¢tain your grasp upon the hand-liold to steady yourself and step down (forward) from the step or running Sard with your RIGHT foot first, releasing your hold as soon as your toot reaches the ground ASSIST US IN PREVENTING ACCIDENTS Omaha & Council Bluffs v - Street Railway : 4 y 0. ! » Arn AX At Cone : Fegble do Aeliect t # : out, which began with the insertion in each cof the daily papers of the city {the dollewing "ad." in display type | THE ART OF ALIGHTING FROM STREET CARS | TAUGHR FREE t Watch the' daily papers=Fully illus trated. > This was the forerupner Gi of illustrated lessops on th alighting drom®stf&t cars which appeared from time to time for the last seven months Tle Rugtrt ASy co leeve |, These displey "ads ate being LHe 22% xr JoY 70 ad cor | Street Railway company in its cam Zeave <r cua, How to pet. olf ctroat « tl Yan fo N | puign of education, with a view to' ry i doe BN bo teat a hat - ti font and Pil -- | ducing the numberless accidents that; the following table will give some idea 1 with the almost invariable result that question. does it ¥ : k elect: Fire Shag t . ive always been considered unavoid of what may be expecied by human- she i« thrown to the pavement. : : Aud vet not' fifty. pe vat Dice Sr a ie able in the natural course of the ity as the result of this advertising in Women sites 6 - excited am men--outside: of Omaha: Neb anually 'he thie. traction i iin " trensportation the next tem years: 2 attempt to mlight w RHO the a i a how to leave a car } } v ¥ to ad The Lives saved - . M0 | der a lively headway os pe n h surance that they p the . design ¥ Aceidents resuliing in fatal coun I stances they Z usually fa oe their There are other thi - tat largely plications . 30 | backs, often striking their heads on in a trolley which they dont Kacy ny ff | dents in Omaha Loss of arm or leg 100 the pavement and receiving injuries the seemingly simple. operation: cor ig « but has pally threat Broken arms and legs 200 which prove fatal t stitutes quite a science in -itself : . the claim ariment of the traction: Nervous shook, serious 200 "Injuries received as the result 0 On account of the dearth of trolley le of wm orporation out of business . Minor injuries . 1450 wrecks and collisions are comparative: etiquette thousands up the he he ! SIX months ending lune 30th 1 " ly few. because the car is under Son oe ~5{" accidents, a great percent - i considerati | the number of accidents was reduced | Total ac idents avoided 2000 | trol of the motorman, who is able to them fatal. oCCuUr to W t bi wlds that this from 312 for the same period a year "Your leit foot on step.' is the | avoid collisions with other cars or Gnited States santaily. growing larger. ago to | while for the mouths of | jy struction to the women Grasp the str et vehicles. \ ; : tion companies, either oblem of how to re May and June the, casualties were only | hand-hold with the ieft hand face the We are not Sonfiuing t hig enmpair courts or voluntarily lous cost of its claim | SISty per cent. oF the record lor the! direction in which the car moving | to the task of e cating Fhe jeale, datioh, pay millions of experiment was start- | corresponding month of last vear step off, right foot first We have recently employed - ten youd year to adjust: clai y by the Omaha | The company, for business reasons, de Periodically reading notices are used, offers to tin pa pergitaty ca But. as intim i Jluf's Street Re way | clines to make public the amount | containing suggestions ve women | pacity and int ligently instruc J doesn't ppl at . which is already bearing | saved in the claim departme nt, but about the manner in which they trhinmen on their conduct toward the any more. In her feminin 2 xy In this educational age | such Staustics he ore avaliable ands should grasp their skits Wilke the lie. fence | ved that the Was on @a plane with fomi wrica |} field would be incomplete without cate that this saving is not less than right hand. Conductors ar instructed ig as i ooh o he Mo iB Sonral in Temard ic i a scho r the prevention of avoid- | #15000, to care for packages, and to hand public, as a general rule, ea eo . in ge oo yu t ar : ta . Claim Agent Gross save he believes the platf s the Te actor and motorman of a street Braise Wp ol : odin This. at least. was the thought | that it will save his company hall a car as part of the sechaticalviaakeuh A vl > : which came one day into the mind of | million dollars in the next ten years "With all respect for th +l of the company eventy-five per cen shrewd trolley magnate conceived the Raters as R Loussier s he pon The loss of life and limb must neces-| of the public, says Mr of the persons who ride on street cars notion of printing ig : et Oh mort ich on sarily be correspondingly reduced, and "the task of educating address gonductors in a manner that in the Omaha papers 0 X } : : : he | to ride-on street cars would stamp them as being without trated instructions on 4 be mode 34 I Kiividers of the | ee St the Sompar y Sex : he on > Bot , cu a } ia hin n the knowledge of the first rules of from getting hurt on street < company it their annual meeting. | loser by each casualty on an average « t hr het a courtesy were they to so speak in a the deduction that will be avoided in the di- | of S60 leaves 2.000 casualties next ten years. wenededd itseli to the » was told to study it read, and learoed. i The idea eo jn six months the Omaha plied. and car casualties in Omaha have been re nu ap street rectors, ind present a workable plan. SPO msible for thousands of persons, pa gentler sex, THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, FR FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1 HowAwvernsivg Prevents CARACCIDENTS. of stepping off street cars will « | drawing-room or even in a good ho- tel. Human weakness is bound to al- most invariably bring a reply in kind. > Special Children's FallCoats 318 New Fall Coats Made of High Class Imported Tweed and Cloths, in Dark and Light Designs, perfectly tailored and finished. Regular values $3.50 to 10.00 each. To be sold in two lots. To fit ages 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 years For $1.98 Each . « To fit ages, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14 years For $2.98 Each See Window , : - a, Ftd meh we cuidiniiSome Woy | Figuring --_ ap fataliljos Da Oftentimes an ing Ie i= only fair to expect that patrons F i , he lic di- | which is considered small, twenty lives down on to the step or running l¢ ) Polio uals ely, Laitey _ found to reach th past ol . will have ben save board of the grasp the hand-hold | of, the corporations will make their ® panies in various « wi | give free rect st as nL Xp riment 3 ie} ah According to railway statis u their « d swing off backward wishes known to employees in a civil E : ds in the science of street ro 5 w spa pet - ist was tr ; ; oi piAR 10 Ey aE oth tor een. stop ber, | aml courteous manner ogy. systematic . eampalgn was mappe lowing DEATH AT ARDEN; COA 1 The Late Mrs. Lucinda Fralick, THE SHOE OF ALL SHOES } Récognize d from Atlantic to Pacific as thejbest shoe made. Wear them once, and vou will never wear another kind. Fall Styles Now Open The -- Foss Packard Two Prices -$5 and $6 a Pair. Shoe for Men | reiasChanics, 111 Princess St. successors (o D. J. McDermott. eye to general comfort. straight to the line, an exacting cara. WILL BE OPEN TO THE PUBLIC 'ORCHESTRA WILL BE IN Ladics Bc. Admission. nv -- -- ee -- -- -- ---------------- make dress- ing easy, and are designed with an Strongly made and well shaped, they do not "pull" over the shouldersor under the arms, but fit the body comfortably. The stitching urothiont is every detail is finished with the most TOOKE BROTHERS "LIMITED MONTREAL-CANADA NEW PRINCESS THEATRE SATURDAY: Sept. 28th, at 7 P.M. ATTENDANCE AND GEO. HAMMOND WILL SING s' and Children are Especially Invited to Attend. Admission, 5¢ Street, Near Sydenham. Aged Ninety-Four Years. Arden, Sept. 26.--The light rains of late have benefited the pastures and « country looks green and spring- {like. The yield of milk from cows | 1s amproving, and more milk semt to Ihe patrons of Arden were paid last week rate of ninety- y factories. | cheese factory for August milk at the seven oents per hundred pounds, Har factory at ene «dollar and four per hundred. F. L. Wormworth to the Ringston General Hospi- howe cents went tal lust week suffering from rhewma- | tis, and reports he ds improt ing. | Ou Monday morning last at one lod ck, Mrs. Lucinda Fralick, widow lof the late Reuben N. Fralick, of | Mocven, farmer, died at the home of { her somyin-law, Thomas Andrew. De wed das born near Utica, N.Y., on the 20th February, 1813, and com sequently was in the ninety-fifth year of her age at the time of her death. part of her married life The greate: husband near Mor she lived with her ven, in the townsuip of Ergestiown, where her children were both. She two sons and. two daughters, who lives near the old homestead, Horatio N., in North Da- Mrs. Thomas Andrew, of Ken- at whose home she died, and Mrs. Clarrisa Franklin, of Olden, De- ceased spent tho last twenty-five years of her life with her daughter, Mrs. An- and always enjoyed good health leaves Elphanan, kota, nebee, drow, 1ill March last, since when she was confined to her room. She Jid not appear to suffer any pain Her life gradually ebbed away, and she died without a struggle or groan. "The weary wheels of life at last were 1." The funeral took place on {Tue wdny, at thes Methodist church, land the remains were interred in the after an impressive Methodist minister. {Harvey 1. Green has been home on a lyicit, and has left again, Minor Wil Hiame i« back for a few days from North Bay. . IA din cemetety, {sermon by the Silling His Farm. Parricfield, Sept. 24.--~Arthur Hora {has rented his farm and residence to Capt. Castwright. The farm will be | enlarge d and many improvements {made, Mr. Hora will Sell his stock {and household effects, among which is | a collection of rare sea shells, pather- ed by bis father during his life on the otean, and for which he refused $1,000 Mr. and Mrs. Saunders and baby girl were visiting at her father's home. Sunday. Mr. Purdy, Belleville, is visiting at Mrs. Byrnes: Mrs. J. Pedy, of New York, aad Mrs. "Emil Wordien leaves, Thursday, for their home in Rochester, after a month's visit with her mother, Mrs. M. Byrnes. Mrs. and Miss MecArthy, Rochester, at Mrs. M. Byrnes'. Mr. 'and Mrs. Young and Mrs. Bajus, city, visiting her daughter, Mra. Mel 'ormick. Mrs. W. Hunter, Pittsburg, spending 'a week at home with her mother, Mrs. Nor Mr. and Mrs. W. Brewster, Mise R. WALDRON. & First Fall Showing OF THE ewest Shoe Styles. Ss -- All the Swellest American lines from the best factories are now here. We will be pleased to show them to you. J. H. Sutherland & Bro., The House of Good Shoemaking. Canada Life Assurance Company yo «oo «non sss: $118,00000000. F Bt Profits ii olicyholders 1905-6, (over) » Another poi is wanted in Kingston district by this Com-~ pany a liberal contract to the riz ht man. Apply at the office--18 Market street. J. R. URQUHART, J. 0. Special Agent. -- Solder & Babbitt ALL GRADES, WRITE THE METAL. MAN. Tutus Jn Jores, Cover) Assets, ( man. Brewster and W. J. Brewster, Cal unty, ami Jiss Mildred MeCaughort?, Steeetarilln, at Mrs. W, Hutton's,