-e MONDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1908. -- -- BAT ORANGES {IF YOU WANT TO KEEP WELL | DATES ANDFIGS. CELEBRATED HOA, THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, THE MONEY QUESTION. |ESRLY DAVS ON THE FRASER: Thuy. | Goid Commissioner Tells of Life In Inquisitive Youngster and an In. 4 genious Father. { Mining Camps. | Frugal Fare of the DesertsW | of the East. A GREAT SHEEP RANCH journeying across the« Synopys of Canadian North rest HOMESTEAD REGULATIONS. | 4 Any Sim pumbered section of PDowln- v in Manitoba or the North-West! vices, excepting 8 and 26, pot re served, may be homesteaded by any phr- son the sole head of a family, or. male | 'over 18 years of age, Lo the extent of pae-quatter section, of 100 acres, more of i + Application for homestead entry must made i person Ly the applicant a 3 lands Agency or Sub-g y.§ Entry by proxy mey, however, he made Pency om certain conditions by | father, mother, son, daughter, broth-| sister of an intending hoesteader. | . An spphcation for eatry or cancella- | personally at any sul t's be wired to the Agent by the! oat the expense of the appli-| may cant, and 4 the land appiwed for is vacant | Modern Methods In the Wool . Raising Industry. DETAILS. OF THE BUSINESS. The Summer and Winter' Ranges, the | Lambing Period and the Work of the | Docking Crews--How the Flesce Is Shorn, Graded and Packed. A modern: sheep ranch today 'is most | interesting aud involves a great deal | of detail saknown to most people. | began to coin gold and silver money "Papa," began Gunston junier, "when | The best place in which' to hear a the government of the United States | it was necessary to buy the gold and silver, wasn't it?" "Yes, my son," reptied Gunston sen- for rather cautionsly. ~~ = "Ot course, papa," pesumed t youngster, "you'll be able to tell me where the government got the money to buy the gold and silver." "Why--er--of course," stammered | Gunston senior as he put down the pa- per and gazed thoughtfully at the boy. "Now, let me understand you. The | government wanted to coin money, and | | in order to do so it was necessary to | 1 spent some time on a big sheep ranch | 400 gold and silver. You want | the telegram such apphica-| ju Idaho a year 8go, Some secount of | 4, know where the government got of have priority and the land will} til the 1 ry. papers to) the Lrunssclion are received Ly cane of "'perscaation'" or fraud the applicant will forfeit all priority of claim An application for cancellation must be/ in person. The applicant must be; for bomestead entry, and only one! tion for cancellation will pe re from an individual uth that ap-| ' been d my observations may be of interest | Unlike cattle, which can, except In certain seasons, be left to themselves, | junior gleefully, and a great joy filled | { his being as be thought of his all im- | sort of shrunken town, with dozens ---------- has been graated it will Del round. The country is divided into | Portant sire struggling with the simple | sheep have to be herded the year several sections, a winter and summer range. The latter is generally in the | hills, mountains and in parts of the orest reserves, permits for which have | the money to buy the goid and silver?" | "That's right," chuckled Gunston "Why, sonny, the government simply fssued dollar bills and bought goid and silver with them. Anything else? "Yes," sald Gunston junior. . "Where isposed of. { ify is caucelled subsequent) oo bo had from Washiagton. Only 80 | did the government get money to buy bes on! uo of Cancellation proceedings, | licant for cancellation will be en to prior right of entry. for cancellation must state in particulars the homesteador is 3 r whose entry is not the Subject 'of cancellation proceedings may * to the approval of Depart Mens, relinquish it in levor of father, , son, daughter, brother or sister le, but to no one eise, on fling A settler is required to per- duties Under one of the follow- -- At least six months' residence up- cultivation of the land in each term of lhree years, ! J A bomestender may, il be so de i perform the required residence o Shring on fabs land owned m, not less eighty (80) atfey fn. extent, in the wicimity of b . Joint ownership io land will Meet this requirement. If the father (or mother, iI the is ) of & homesteader has on farming land Sey toy on hia, not ri then acy eatent, in the vicini- the homestead, or upon a home- stead entered for bY him in the vicinity, She hamentantiet way lors his own hv with ih - or (or mother. ' ug i dah The terms "vicinity" in the two a Paragraphs is della as mean more than nive m in adi exclusive of the width of 2 Jiro uch | gy to keep them om their bed grounds, 3 making applications for patent # @ettler must give six months' notice I te an: wa, bis inten to do so. OF CANADIAN NORTH- MINING REGULATIONS, be oul mining rights ma a period of twenty-one Y years i annual rental of $1 ger acre. Not ¥ than 2,560 acres be leased to dividual or company. i royalty at v8 ¢emts per tom amll be : com laed | nm eighteen years 4 discovered mineral in ; ims ally are 100 foot square ; entry fee $5, renewable year- gel mplesnt may obtain two leases to of five miles each for a tye b 4 of the Minister of he. es the date for each five miles. Rental um for each mile of river ty at the rate of 2§ per collected om the output aft t ex- en Brae] outpu or it ex W. W. CORY, of the Minister of the Interior. ~Unauthorized publication of this t will mot be paid for, within lease » 24 Department of Railwa and Canals, Canada TT TRENT CANAL, Ontario-Rice Luke Division. : SECTION NO. § OTIOR TO CONTRACTORS. LED TENDERS ADINRESSOD the undersigned and end = 1 orwed ne et oe Trent Canal," will be RL 18 o'clock on Thursday 123th ; I for the « works connected i construction S Ontario. Mice Lake - Division of ; Section Noi of the and specifications of the work can on amd alter the ist Febro- , at the office of the Uhiel En Department of Ratlways pals, Ottawa, at er office. of the tr, Tremt Gwoal fo, Outs, and at the oMice of MF. Brophy, Division Engiover, MWh + Places forms of ten ys dg Order, a LL. K. JONES, : wi : Secretary. i Reparioent. of. Railways and Canals, tawa, ante 16th, 1908. ns this advertise ment tt authobity from the Je partigent w Hl not be paid for it. . \ ia] hea | shearing begin before they go to the "| of sixteen machines will have a gaso- | 4p mostly now, and pearly all modern | are paid by the sheep. 16 cents for Bg? i many sheep are allowed in it, and the goverhment charges about § cents a, d for the summer season, which opens in Idaho about June 15. The winter range Is in the valleys and plains or near the ranches, where hay | can be had when the snow becomes | too deep. | 'fhe hardest season Is perhaps the lambing period, which comes ia Idaho during May. A band of 1.500 to 2,500 ewes is taken out undér a lambing berders, a night herder, a night shoot- er and oe cook. As soon as any of the lambs are born they are gathered together in a small band and fAagged-- that fs, a pole with a red fag is placed | near, so they ean be easily banded to- | gether and that the mothers will suckle | their young. -When 500 or 600 ewes | have lambed they are all driven to-| gether in a band and taken on to a! pew section a mile or so away, where | they remain until all the band has lambed. Then they are divided again | into two bands, under a herder and | helper, and wait until docking and summer range. The ewes are herded each night by a herder, whose duty it while the night shooter, either afoot or horseback, rides around, shooting blank cartridges every little while to scare away coyotes or other animals. | He generally places two or three red | lanterns on prominent places as guides for his night's work. About the middle of May the dock- ing crew is made up, which generally consists of a boss, cook and five or sev- en mén. Starting at $omeé convenient point, "they put out with two wigons, one conthining the tents, provisions and beds, while the other holds the corral. The corrsl is made of laths and wire and can be put up in thirty minutes, The and lambs are driven into it, lambs cut out. and put into the 'triangle shaped (fence, where two or three men hold them by all four feet, while another cuts off their tails and slices the ears of the ewe lambs. They are branded with the outfit and flock brands, while ewes are also marked and counted. In this | way the percentage of the lambs is | taken. Sometimes three or four bands are treated that way fo a day, the cor- ral being taken up and put down wher- ever the next band is, but two bands are all that most crews ean do in a day when they are very near together. This goes on for ten days or two weeks until all the sheep under whose foretnan they dre have been treated. About May 25 or June 1 shearing begins, A large outfit will have per- haps two or three shearing plants situ- ated conveniently in different parts of the country, A large plant will have thirty or' forty shearing machines with steanr for power, while a smaller one line engine. Blades have been given outfits use the clippers. The shearers rams and 8 cents for all other sheep and a dollar per day board. A "high roller" will shear 200 sheep in ten hours, but these men are far and few. The average is a little below a hun- dred sheep per day. Each foreman knows beforehand just about what time to have his sheep on hand, and it is remarkable how thousands of sheep can be handled and timed sé that none will mix up. A band of ewes and lambs will come in by sunset and are corralled and the lambs cut out and counted, while the ewes are put through a chute into an alleyway and five or eight put in each shearer's pen. i 85 Isis 7h iEeiids i 8 » : | i t : i : SEE. h i g: i" 8 i { ii i : i i i i g F - i ji a fy Hh paper for the dollar bills?" THE 'HORSE WON. Beat the First Locomotive on the B. and O. Road. The first locomotive on the Baltimore and Ohio had sails attached. So did the cars. These safls were hoisted when the wind was in the right direc- tion so as to help the locomotive. The rivalry between the railroads | boss, who has with him two or three | using locomotives and those using horses was very bitter. In August, 1830, an actual trial of speed was held between a horse and one of the pioneer locomotives, which did not result in favor of the locomotive. The race was on the Baltimore and Ohio, the Jo 0 five being one built by Peter Cooper, whe also acted as engineer. The horse, a gallant gray, was in the habit of pulling a car on a track par allel to that used by the locomotive. At first the gray had the better of the race, but when he was a quarter of a | mile ahead Mr. Cooper succeeded iy getting up enough steam to pass the horse amid terrific applause. At that moment a band slipped from a pulley, and, "though Mr. Cooper lacer- ated his hands trying to replace it, the engine stopped and the horse passed it and came in the winner." They Don't Like Funerals. "If you want to know just how sensitive some Washidfgton folks are, listen to the reasons some of our ten- ants give for canceling their leases," said a renting agent. "Here are the complaints from five families who want to move because they live on 'fu- neral streets" A lot ofé people, it seems, are sensitive about that. There are certain streets in town---those near churches where many funerals are held and those leading to the various ceme- teries--which are usually traveled by funeral parties. Houses in those streets are becoming a poor investment. There is more moving from those houses than from any others we have anything to do with, and generally the movers give as the reason for their dis- satisfaction the fact that the sight of so many hearses gets on their nerves." The Saragossans. It is sald that the queer, composite race 'of people that dwell upom the waterlogged hulks of the Saragossa sea, in the mid-Atlantic, have a pretty theory aout death. They believe that those to whom the messenger comes when the sun is shining brightly are transported straight away to a heaven of warm fresh water only four feet in depth, in which they may wade and disport themselves to all eternity. On the other hand, those who receive the call of death In hours of darkness must needs endure a probationary pe- before they can enter into the future life. The Saragossans are in addition firm believers In premonk tions, omens and foreordinations. Instincts of a Woman. A little girl who bad for some time wanted a dog was taken very ill. One day when much better she told her mother of her desire and begged her to ask her grandpa to buy her one. The mother answered that grandpa did not like dogs and probably would not be willing to buy one. Then, see: mistake, but an. economic crime weil. It is, In fact, a survival of Ashel Nancary: a Belgian smploved by the Rat kitted Pp ¢ Lumber compan', spending micro { man laugh who really knows how to laugh is out on the trail. that wings m and out of mountain valleys, the | word "trail" never means any other | setting. The Gold Commissioner | knows how to laugh, He does not __| chuckle, nor chortle, nor, on the other hand, does he gufiaw. But on that $day in July when we "hit the trail" | together for a few hours, his laugh in keepiog with the cloundiess, deep turquoise of the sky, the great fool | hills of the "Gold Ran that lay | browning in the sun, and the mighty current of the great Thompson River sweeping grandly along beside the trai. 1 "When you passed through Yale" said the Gold Commissioner, "wha kind of a place did you find?' | "A magnificent, roaring riyer, with {a picturesque' sandbar, mountains steeped in glorious blue haze and a | of empty housés and block upon block { of empty stores." | The Gold Commissioner laughed { "When I first saw the town, 'way | back in the early sixties," he said, "there were between five and six thou- there, housed almost éntirely in tents and shacks. Every race and every color and both sexes were represented | in the population, all bent on winning { gold from the sands of the Fraser | River, Do you know anything about | a frontier mining camp?" | "Nothing except what I have learned from Bret Harte, Jack Lon: don and half a dozen mining-camp plays." The Gold Commissioner snorted "Bret Harte is all right," he said, "but I should feel mighty sorry for any mining camp in British Columbia that couldn't show more thorough- breds, in both better and worse speci- mens of humanity, than there are in most stories and plays. "In the very early days of the set tlement at Yale, it was a pretty warm propositipy. bling oulfit, and the places were al- ways full to suffocation. The good ele- ment was numerically large, but it was dominated by those whose trade it was to bully, beat, rob and slay. But much of that had passed by the time I arrived on the scene. Guns were in evidence, of course, in hip pockets and holsters, and hold-ups | and highway robberies were pulled off { { the alert. "All of which leads up to Johnson. Johnson " isn't his name, but that doesn't matter. It was twenty years or more before the railroad was byilt, and everything had to come in and go out by pony express that could not gc | down the river by canoe, for it wa | before the days of the stage coach even. Johnson was the pony express for Yale. "Nearly every mas intown carried a gun somewhere in his clothes, and was not at all baekward about letting people understand he knew how to use' it. But Johnson tried just the opposite tack. He not only did not earry a gun, but he boasted that he did n now how tg use one More. over, hé always told when he was go- ing to start out with an especially val- uable léad, and when he had a lot of nuggets he would, like as not, men- tion tHe amount. "Johnson laughed at the idea that he might ever be held up. He said, 'by the great horn spoon.' he wasn't afraid of anybody. He really didnt say 'by the great horn spoon,' but that is as near hie lancusge as | can use to a lady." the (old Commissioner apologetieally explained. "Oh. I have had a little experience with" that kind of "hern spoons.'™ 1 said where they had to 'horn spoon' the mules." } "Well, Johmson kent brasging so that the boys wonldn't have been hn- man if they hadn't determined to call his bluff. Somehow or other. while the man had never appeared to be a coward, thev suspected there was a wasn't gold. "Johnson #tarts4 out the same as usual, and evervthing went all right until] he was about three miles from camp. [I don't know how Johnson felt about it, for he never talked about it afterward, but if T had been earrv- ing the big pile of noggets and gold dnst htat he was, I should have had both trigger fingers ready for action on the quickest firing pair of guns I could get in the territory stretch, just three miles from camp, waa about as 'boogerish' as vou could find anywhere within ten miles. But I'll do Johnson the justice to say that 1 don't believe he was afraid, prob- ably because he never had had any cause to be. "He was going along whistling-- whistling, just think of that!--as if rose up behind the boulders on one gide of the road and began to shoot at him. They did not even order him to throw up his hands. They just got down to business without any waste ol words. "Johnson let out a yell, oh, such a ell' and the Gold Commissioner's ig, bass laugh boomed out over the upon his horse's neck, clasped' Fis arms around it, and digging his sputy into the beast's side, started back to. wards eamp, yelling all the way. That of the money in the world goes. for eating and dressing. A inter for the woman who would he ~ boomed out, big and musical. entirely | | sand miners, traders and gamblers | Every saloon had its gam- | occasionally, just to keep travelers on | "1 visited once at an army posts yellow streak in him all right that | for that! Dull Care were the other side of the | mountains, when suddeniv three men | sage-brush valley. "He threw himself | | Story of the Fortsas Catalogue and Its Author. ---------- (CLEVER AND BRAZEN FRAUD. ------ | This Ingenious Pubjjcation Completely | Fooled the Savants and Bibliophiles | of Europe and Was the Literaryéfen- | sation of Its Day. ! When P. T. Barnum cynicaily re- | marked that the American people {loved to be fooled he 'might just as { well have left out the adjective, for | that Americans are much more gull {ble than natives of other lands can | very readily be called into question by' {anybody at all familiar with the his- | | tory of hoaxdom. I suppose that for | | pure effrontery and ingenious brazem- | ness the Fortsas Catalogue stands fn | the front rank of deception. Yet thls | pamphlet was foisted not upom the | | American publie, but upon the savants { and bibliophiles of Europe--men skill- | ed In the art of books and in the detec- | tion of forgery. So cleverly was this | frana conceived and executed that It | | deserves to stand in the front rank of | {any consideration, however brief, of | | clever deceptions. { The Fortsas Catalogue was publish- | ed in 1840--a small book purporting to | be the catalogue of the private library | of a certain Count J. N, A. de Fortsas of Binche, in Belgium. Although the | book consisted of but fourteen pages | and listed only fifty-two titles, It | | stirred up a veritable teapot tempest | {among the wise heads. The reason | | vas pot far to seek--not one of the | { books mentioned In the catalogue was | | to be found in any other library or | publisher's list! They were all abso- | lutely "sole surviving" copies of In- tensely interesting works, In the words of the catalogue itself, "the count pitilessly expelled from his shelves books for which he had paid | their weight in gold--as soon las he learned that a work up to that time unknown had been mentioned in any ecatalogne." Each new research of learned Investigators into the book Jore of antiquity, it was claimed, "had thinned still further the already dec- fmated ranks of the count's sacred | battalion." Weary of his tremendous | and self imposed task of collecting | only unique Specimens, the count was stated to have died on Sept: 1, 1839, | and his library was now offered for sale. Apparently the fraudulent char- acter of such master foolery was quite | patent. Yet the high brows "bit" en- | | thusiastically, and there resulted one | { of the most amusing incidents of the decade. For instantly the learned book lovers were up in arms, each trying to outdo | his rival and secure for himself the | most precious of the treasures at the | sale which was advertised. Orders | poured in from all over Europe on the behalf of scholarly societies, libraries, royal families and literary epicures. { One bookseller came all the way from { Rmsterdam just to see No, 75, the | "Corpus Juris Civilis," The Princess de Ligne "for the honor of ber fami Iy" ordered No. 48 at any price to sup- press it on account'of certain discred- table family episodes it was supposed to contain. Many other prominent per- sons and institutions clamored for a | chance at the collection. "Men re- | membered having séen books that nev- | er existed," says William Shepard. ! "The foreman in Casteman's printing i + office at Tourney had distinct recoliee- | tions of a bogus volume credited to his | press." Unfortunately the advertised sale | never came off. On the 9th of Au- | gust, the day before it was to have be- | guns the Brussels papers announced | that the town of Binche had determin- i ed to keep the collection intact by pur- | | chasing it with public funds. The { amusing part of this statement was | that Binche was a most insignificant | village, quite unable to purchase much | of anything, let alone a universally de- | sired library. Still, even that state | ment was believed. : | The truth eventually transpired that | the Count de Fortsas, his miraculous | library and the catalogue were all the | creations of ap Ingenious fellow named Rene Chalons, living in Belgiom. His catalogue begot a rather extensive lit- | erature of its own, which bas since been collected and published noder the title "Documents et Particularites His. toriques sur le Comte de Fortsas" A copy of the original catalogue now rests in the Congressional library at Washington. 2 A Surprise For St. Kilda. The inhabitants of the lonely isle of St. Kilda were astonished one Winter some years ago at the appearance of a great blood red. conical object floating on the wild Atiagtic billows to the westward of the isle. With much difi- | culty the derelict was brought to shore, | and as the St. Kiidans had pever be- fore seen such a queer looking thing | and could make no guess as to its pur | pose or place in the scale of created things they indulged in wild visions | of its valusble nature. But when the | factor came mcross on his yearly \visit | from (the neighboring but distant Is acd of Great Britaln he identified it quently appeared, had 'broken away | from its moorings tn New York harbor | and drifted io the gulf stream across in the passage. Oceasions do not wake a man either strong or weak, but they show what a ln.--~Thomas a Kempis. { Arithmetic {or the fortunedounder : { Give the ratio of the squaadered dime | to the saved dolinr, A bank #rconot 4 a perve tosis 2 * | jam, with white bread, brought from { Jerusalem. We ates our dainties with | | some sense of guilt zs the neweomer i produced his lunch-of dates and figs. | that he had ridden sixty hours without | | sound and wholesome when necessity | for twenty-one days? | finished his frugal luncheon. | He tapped a-policeman's elbow. { cor? he inquired. { policeman. | made { While | Mrs. A. Goodrich-Freer avthor~of "In a Syrian Saddle" met a lonely travel- | the carvan was. bound for-the.same. { piace he asked permission to join | them. Incidentally he furnished - an | Mastration of the difference. between Dates and figs, her informed us, were | the patural'food of desert wanderers, | to the body, stimmisting to frrelevancies. it not diet such as+this--and he | a pair of sensitive hands over | ascefic larder--which bad enabled to reply to 'the inquiry of a per as to how many hours a day could ride in the desert, "Twenty- r, your majesty, since.a: day does contain twenty-five?' Was it not an a diet of figseand dates 2 g Rie: dismounting? Was it your meat eater, obliged him to refrain from ablation At this pdint he carefully -counted his date stones, observed that two! more were yet due to his appetite and | ONLY A TRAMP. Raising the Curtain For a Moment on | One of Life's Tragedies. | XX pecent incident which holds in fts | simple outlines the possibility of past | tragedy is described in the New York | Times. It is another illustration of | how careless the world is of the indi- | vidual and how thick is the cloak which one may wrap about his per- | sonality. Not long ago a laborer em- | | ployed by the Erie railroad In Jersey | City was run over by a train and had | his leg cut off. { A policeman telephoned for an am- bulance. The injured man lay on a | ghiss patch, apparently bleeding to | death, Just then a typical railroad | tramp in dirty rags sauntered along. | "May I ask what's the matter, on | | if I looked at | "I might be "Man bleeding to death," replied the "Would you mind him?" asked the tramp, of service." "(30 ahead," responded the officer. Bending low over the wounded la- | borer, the tramp asked for water to wash his hands and then begged the crowd for clean handkerchiefs. With a halt dozen deft, rapid twists he a tourniquet and stopped the flow of blood, "Are you a doctor?' some one asked as the man slipped away through the crowd. "1 used to be," he replied as he hur whould af¥ David Mil fered the Lambton to PIMPLES 'TROUBLESOME AND UN- SIGHTLY AFFLICTION . .. They are caused by either poverty or im- parity of the blood sad require the prompt wee of a good blood medicine such as Bur- dock Blood Bitters, for their eradication, which it speedily accomplishes, at the same time strengthening the entire system. Pimples also eften arise from dyspepsia and constipation, and in these casei Bur dock Blood Bitters has the double effect of removing the pimples together with their cause Mr. D. P. 8zmmon, Osceola, Ont. , writes: "1 was troubled with pimples all over my face and hands. I paid out mooey to doctors but they conld do me no good. A friend eonvinced me to try Burdock Blood Bitters, snd after using two bottles the pimples vanished, and I have not been troubled with thetp since." Bardock Blood Bitters may be procured | ot all Druggists and Dealers | COCOA POOH as a great iron buoy which; it subse | 2p | er bound for Medeba. On hedring that | .. have proved beyond Ange al virtues are juice has clears Those com- i the {orange { morning: fu { box--6 for $2.50 200000000000 00000000 igestion- "that after. eats for breakfast no palpitation, iy a tendency tos the cating of or- boweis, who began an orange ards constipation ated les, the those ning meal with noticeably however nproved a quicker way to This Is to take were in There is, get better results one or two "Frult-a-tives" tablets al Bedtime in addition to the juice of an pefore breakfast the next «ppuit-a~tive" are the oranges, apples; figs and prunes, in which the medicinal attion is many times intensified by the spe. clal way of .eombining them. Valu- able tonics are then added. rake the juice of an orange before breakiast--take "Fruit-a-tives" at night--andwyou will. quickly be rid of Indigestion, Stomach Troubles, Con- and Biflonsness. *"Fruit-a- ald by all dealers at 5c a Sent on receipt of "Fpuit-a-tives," Limited, ces stipation tives" are s price by Otimwa. Wek Maadache and reliove all the troubles ined mt to a Lillous state of the system, such ae rxiness, Nsuses, Drowsiness, Distrees eating, Pain ln the Bide, &a. While their nosh 10 success has boen shown a sh in cusiog Headache, yet Carter's Little Liver Pifie are aqually valuable in Constipation, curing and prev Aeuting thisnnnoying compistnt, while they alee gorrect ali disorders of thestomaeh, stimulate the Jver and regulate tho bowels. Even if they only ~ HEAD fhe they would haalmost priceless to those whe Suffer from tis distresstiug complaint: butfottne pately their good ness doos notend here, and those Who once try them will find these little pills vali. le in so many ways that they will not be wil 1060 without them. But after allah head ACHE $2 the bane of #0 many lives that here ia where we makes our great boast, Our pillscure it while prs do not, . Carter's Little Liver Pilla are very small and ry eany io One or two pila makes dose. They ara striotly vegetable phd do not gripe on purge, but by their gantloaction pleases i Soe Bme them. In vislant 23 cents ; five for $l by draggists everywhere, or sent by CARTER MEDICINE CO., Now York' nl FL fl Ds fal in GRAND UNION HOTEL Oppeaite Grand Central Station - NEW YORK CITY Throry mourialencs at medorate pune. Rooms $1.00 « day and upward Send Scent stamp fw Bow Tah Ey Purdedook and Map. a EDUCATIONAL. ° I! you wish to be successful mt tend The Kingston Business College Amited, head of Quega slreet, S CANADA'S HIGHEST GRADE school, Bookkeeping, typowriting, tele. commercial taught hy experienced teachers. ght classes, Enter at Hates yery moderate. # business ® shorthand ® R|raphy, subjects @ competent ° Day and nl any Lime. ® 'phone, 440 : JI. FP. METCALFE, President. J. BB, CUNNINGHAM, Secretary. arn all thoroughly 0000 OROGOOIOIRROOIPIROIOIN] ~ AAA A A AA AA Aan ALAR EWEEEN a .y a ad ar SEALE 2 2 aaa » 3 \MPROVE YOUR ED UCATION y + Aan y INCREASE YOUR EARNING » : POWER % Vv Day and Fvening Classes af the X Frontenac Business College, Barrie and Clergy Sta n or » Vy oy » | » v » T. N. STOCKDALE, . 4 'Phone, 680, Principal, ' ryrIvven rom 2a oy TT ITTTIVITTYY TEA DOLLARS FINE FOR PROV. ING THIS IS A FRAUD. The Canadian and American Shoe ile palritig Shop, 201 Priscegs St, will ix leather soles and rubber hetls on your The. Hall soles and heonis, ludies wr, Bc. m pair. 1 am able to do this, fing in stock a luge consignment of the Lest leather and robber heels Give me a trial end 1 gearsstes satisfaction. 1 lead, others follow, J. Green. Are you looking for something that will give both pleasure and com- fort? She will appre- ciate a load of Fe COAL FROM WALSA'S YARD, Barrack Street. '