THE COMMONS Had Review of Hodgins' an YEAR 75--NO. 160. Accusations. BRODEUR EXAMINED AS TO HIS EXPENSES TO EUROPE. - Government Proposal Regarding the Extension of the Bound- aries of Ontario, Quebec and Manitoba Will Take the Form of a Resolution, From Our Own Correspondent: ~ Ottawa, July, .9.--The Hodgins charges occupied the attention of the commons, yesterday, for some time, and afforded an opportunity for a re- view of the accusations which had been brought against the Transcon- tinental railway commissioners, and for a review of the disputes in regard to classification which have arisen in the construction of this line, Victor Geofirion, in moving concur- rence in the report, referred particu- larly to the course which Maj. Hod- gins had followed in withdrawing his personal charges, leaving it to the engineers to pronounce on the disput- ed question of classification. Houghton Lennox (Simcoe) present ed the conservative view of this mat- ter, And argued that the withdrawal of Maj. Hodgins' charges did not conclude the work of this enquiry and that the committee should go right on with its investigation of the im- portant disputes regarding fraudulent classification which were still open. The records produced before the com- mittee disclosed the existence of many questions apart altogether, from the Hodgins' charges and the terms of re- ference demanded that these should be looked into. In conclusion, Mr, Lem- nox moved a minority report on the work of the Hodgins' enquiry, embody- ing the views to which he had already given utterance. It understood that the govern- ment proposal in regard to the ex- tension of the boundaries «of Mani toba Will be in the form of a resolu- tion expressing the expediency of ex- tending the limits of Manitoba, On- tario and Quebec to Hudson Bay. In the public accounts committee, vesterday, Mr. Brodeur was examined as to his expenses in Fnglan?l = and France in connection with the imperial conference and the "Framch treaty ne gotiations. He said that the total amount was 28522 all for his legiti- mate personal expenses. All sums the expenses of members of hie part: had heen refunded. For a portion of the time abroad he had heen obliged to use his own money. The imperial government had paid only his ordin ary hotel expenses. He had had loci timate exnenses in excess of that pro His final settlement had delayed by reason of the fact that the touching the matter of treatyv-making,.. had been . Spassed through the trade. and commerce de partment. Under this head $8,500 had heen dine to him and he did ndt get it until two months ape. The mini ter complained of the fuss that had heen made ahout the matter since it was he himself who had been obliged te wait for his money 18 for vision been account nas A large assortment of Campbell's Stains and Floor Finishes: have just heen received by W. A. Mitchell Stains are unemalled for staining and varnishing furnityire and interior woodwork. The floor finich i suitable for all card cont Livingston's very durable and floors Ask for color Fwenty per Brand" snits off "Progres DAILY MEMORANDA. Board of Education, 8 p.m Band in Macdonald Park, 8 p.m Union Meeting, Labor Hall, 0 p.m Steamer America to a.m. Friday. oy 00 Amusement Column for the Moving Picture Shows and Park Va ville, Lacrosse oque; , ( 'pm, J Lacrosse Match, Kingston oque, Queen Athletie Grounds 4.30. Admission, 13c¢, to Toronto "by of Queen street to-morrow, 38 a.m. Ogdensburg, four ude- Match, Kingston vs Ganan Athletic Grounds 3 dieen's 4.30 raday ve, O 8 Friday cursion Auxiliary Church Ladjes' Methodist July 9, In Canadian History. 1847--Earl of Minto, Governor-General Canada. 1808-1904, born 1836--Goneral amnesty proclaimed for all persons implicated in the Northwest Ye ellion, except murderers. 1888--Hon. A. W. Lieutenant-Governor of Nova 1884 --Intercolonial conference wa ¢oncluded its sessions 1898--Sir Wilfrid dent of the Privy Councillors. ol Mclean appointed Scotia at Otta- SELF SEALERS We Carry in Stock ALL SIZES. ROBERTSON BROS. Theso | Anan- | Laurier chosen Presi JAPS GET SET BACK. Action of Government Again Makes Whites Supreme. Vancouver, July 8.--Samuet North, recently appointed overseer of pro- vincial fpheries, assumed his duties yesterdag In .the initial cruise in the goverpshent launch, Mr. North receiy- ed confirmation of results that it was anticipated would" follow the refusal of the provincial government to issue boat-pullers' licenses to aliens. The new regulations will tend to exclude hundreds of Japanese from the privi- lege of participating in the season's fishing operations. On a trip from Steveston to New Westminster, Mr. North called at var- [lous points, including the canneries, and issued an hundred licenses. The applicants were all white nfen, with the exception of three Japs, who qualified by producing naturalization papers. Not one Indian asked for a license. The white men expressed themselves pleased at the action of the provincial government, predi¢ting that the regu- lations will restore them - to their former supremacy on the Fraser, lost some years ago, owing to the getive competition of Asiatics. large number of yesterday's ap- plicants represented individuals who bad not fished on the river for three or four.seasons. Nearly all 'of them also provided themselves with domin- ion fishing .licenses. INDIANS UP IN ARMS. Oklahoma Red Men Want Rights or They Will Fight. Weletka. Oklas July 8.«Three wag gon loads of rifles were taken into the camp of the Snake Indians, vester- day, and several hundred of the 2,000 Indians congregated there are heavily armed. The mand, according tinctly different tofore broached Indians are making a new de- to reports, from anything The demand is that the Snakes given their allotment of certificates, which they have here- tofore steadfastly refused a It is said that Crazy Snake issued an ultimatum, yesterday, in which he said that unless the certificates were delivered togdav the Indians would make a charge upon the whites in their initial step, driving all the white people from the former Indian na tion one dis- here- be To Wed A Dago Duke. Wash., July 8.--Dr. Spokane, editor of La received a letter from that the marriage Elkins, daughter of B. the Spokane, B DeRosa, of Patria, has Italy, announcing of Miss Katherine United States Senator Stephen Elkins, of West Virginia, and Duke of Abruzzi, will take place at the castle Raeconigi, Oct. 30th, in the presence of the royal family and the president of the ministry. All Day On The Water. ly taking the steamer America Gananoque, Brookville and burg, Friday, 8 am leaves Ogdensburg 3:20 50c. WCE IN THE LAKE THRILLING ADVENTURES IN A BALLOON. |° for Ogdens- Returning pam. Only Man and Boy in.Canadian Balloon | Almost Lost Their Livés--De- cided Not to Attempt to Cross 1 Lake Huron, as Ballast Was | Gone. "More wind yesterday thrilling the July 8 with the Chicago, | adventures and | water added | the the | loonists in their race flight from Chi | cago to establish a new long-distance The Canadian balloon. King with John Bennett as pilat, Gregory, fifteen vears old, were stories of international bal | record, | Edward, | and Gerald as the other dropped into Lake Michigan twice | Like the Ville de Dieppe, the French | balloon, which nearly cost the lives of | Captain A. E. Mueller and {| Schoenech, when ten miles from | the Nlinois shore . the King Edward into the water ahd submerged member of the crew, George out 1 sank {the two *oceupants to their shoulders. | when | {They were nearly in mid-lake the balloon took) its first dip. | "We had just lost sight of the rockets and Fourth of July display in Chicago when we suddenly felt our selves sinking into the lake with [fearful drop,' said Gregory, who {turned yesterday. '"The balloon | ally landed near Port Huron, Mich. [ "We immediately tossed over near- {Iv all gur hatlast, but we could not {stop the carfrom striking the water. [This caused'a great splash and we were {in the lake up to our waists. | sky n re- fin- | being in the water about five or ten | minutes. Then we ascended to a | height of about 1,000 feet and went {along at a fast pace, but suddenly we {felt ourselves dropping again. {time the descent was more rapid, and {as we had thrown all except two bags 'of the ballast overboard we were at la loss what to do. We shot down |into the lakg as if we were diving in- {to it. 1 "I'he water came into the basket land we were forced to climb into the | the netting above. We tossed out everything we had. including provi- | sions, and'rose again. When we final ily did go up we went fast. We went up 6.000 feet in six minutes. We had ino sand when we came in sight} of | Lake Huron early in the morning and jwe decided not to risk crossing it, jas the distance was 150 miles. Ro we {landed." Saturday, July.11th. Steamer America tours the land Islands, 2:30 pm. "Oly i m™ i hous 50c, "We managed to go up again after | This | BRITISH NAVY Under Discussion in the Commons. HAG NO KNOWLEDGE DISSENSIONS, SAYS PREMIER ASQUITH. OF If the Government Finds Reason to Believe Rumors, it ill Take Prompt and Effective Action, the Premier Declared. London, July 9.--The condition of affairs' in the navy, of which the seri: ous friction existing between Admiral | Lord Charles Beresford 'and Rear-Ad- | miral Sir Percy Scott is mérely an incident, and the continued and ap-| parent concerted movenient.to secure Beresford's downfall continues to at- tract the greditest attention in parlia- mentary circles, and the general subject of discussion everywhere. The. matter was brought directly he- fore the House of Commons, yester- day afternoon, when Carlvon Wilfey Bellairs, liberal membér from Kings, Lynn, and the only naval officer 'now having a seat in the house, asked Prime Minister Asquith Shether the government intended to take anv steps looking to the alleviation of the dissensions amoung the senior naval officers, or would he endeavor to arrive at a complete knowledge' of the orjgin and merits of the antagon- ism. Mr. Asquith replied that the govern- ment at present had no knowledge of the apart from unverified rumors. If the government found any reason to believe that a state of things that was anyway detrimental to the discipline or smooth working of the fleet, he said that prompt and effective action would be taken. The alan Fraser is sending by "their chief, Lord Lovat, who will be pres- ent atthe ter-centenarv at Quebee, a greeting to their brother clansmen of Canada in the shape of an illuminat- ed address, The following local trade correspon- dents have been appainted to Can- ada : W. G, Davidson, Vancouver; J, J. Shalleross, Victoria; J. Appleton, Winnipeg; W. E. Anderson, St. John, N.B.: G. B. Ramsay, Quebec; A, T. Weldon, Halifax, Further appoint- ments are possible. H. W. Lemesur- jer was appointed to Newfoundland. : { 18 i dissensions OPPOSES PROHIBITION. Catholic Priest Says It's Contrary to Natural Law: Spokane, Wash.;" "July' 8.--Rev. Father Herman J. Goller, S.J., pre- sident of Gonzaga College, Spokane, the foremost Catholic educational in- stitution - in - the Pacific North-West, declared in a public statement that prohibition, - as proposed by the de- mooratic party in Washinbton is con- trary to the natural law. He tavors a model licenge law, cutting off the minor, the drunkard, the dance hall and the vicious element, and urges the dealers to refuse. to sell liquors to the intemperate. le says in his state- ment : "While we believe in teaching people self-réspect and horror for drunken- ness, we do not preach radical prohi- On the contrarv. we are op- to radical prohibition, which anti-Biblical, anti- constitutional and contrary te the natural law, which allows every 'itizen personal freedom with regard to eating and drinking. 'Moderarton bition. posed consider we as good PRAISES SIR WILFRID, La Patrie -Appreciates' thé Premier and His Work, July 8--La Pattie has ith a highly ealogistic ar- ticle on Rir Wilfrid Laurier and his work. Speaking of the relations be- tween Sir Wilfrid Laurier and Mr. Bourassa, La Patrie "says: "In ocer- tain circles, especially those other than our own, it has been thought that the success of Henri Bourassa on | the 8th of June was a sigh of loss of prestige by the federal premier in this province. We cannot admit this view, for we have direct knowledge that numbers of electors put faith in Mr. Bourassa's declarations, nfade-in several speeches, that he had no quar- rel with Sir Wilfrid? Laurier," and in the inscription 'at the head of his pro- gramme that he was determined to keep federal and provincial matters sopintated » ov ¥ n conclusion, La Patrie asserts, its belief that Mr. Bourassa will take ne part in the coming federal elections, although it is open to suppose that the federal arena will eventually have an irresistible fascination for him. FHSISIISIISISICICIIEASICIIIINNE OFFICERS BEHEADED. Saigon, Cochin, China, July 9.--The three Anna- mite officers, condemned to death for complicity in a plot to poison the memlbers of the garrison have been beheaded at Hanoi. Two hundred members of . the garrison were taken ill re- cently, and an examination of their drinking - water showed the presence of poison. Montreal Aad Wy i * ' oR Bil #1 Wn ¥ #1 M1 HCHISKGKHSIHHSIBISIBIBIRISINK THEY MUST ORGANIZE. Congregationalists Must Unite With Themselves or Others. London, July 9.--Rev. Hugh Ped- ley, of Montreal, speaking at the In- ternational Congregational council, said there were two courses open to the denomination in Canada, to join the union with 'the Methodists and Preshyterians or to move towards an organization representing some ade- quate measure ofbilance between or- ganization and that freedom which is one of the glovies of the Anglo Saxon race. BAND OF FANATIC ISSUE DEFIANCE TO THE POLICE. ' ' ----e Allow Only One Redcoat at a Time Inside Their Camp---They Are Too Crazy to Reason With, Antler, Sask., July 83.-0ld James Sharpe, and his band of religious fol- lowers are camped nine miles south- east of here. Inspector Tucker, with a force of fifty police, arrived, to-day. I'here appears to bg a delay in. going after them, owing to the fact that they are in Manitoba. Constables King and Turner, of the NW.M.P,, are keeping track of their movements, | but remain at a distance from the | camp, for the seven men in the party threaten all who approach with their loaded rifles, and will allow only one policeman at a time to enter. the camp. The mounted police declare they must be deported forthwith, The camp is twenty-five miles from the North Dakota border. The band is said to have come from | the Turtle mountains, which are di- directly south on the North Dakota EESEETREBSEY SEF » > 8 #4 ISTIC WEDDING. | Two of the Atten 3 Tran \ Spokane, Wash., July 8.--Miss Ma- thilda Schiichting, Blue Earth, Minm., apd flervert Hh. Busby of Arcadia, |Wis., were parties to the first spiritu- alist wedding in the Pacific Nosth- West in Spokane a few days ago, Fhe by Mrs: Distant Places. £8 (abo % : TE WORLDS TOG GIVEN IN TAE BRIEFEST POS- Ceremony was Cora hincacmon Smith 'of Spokane, a minister by the Washing: ton Union Spiritualist Association, and was witnessed by a large ering of mediums and Nrs. South was attired lation ceremonial robe, a of shimmering silk with SIBLE FORM train and wore a large red rose. No : ring was used, nor were. the words : . "love, honor and obey" in Matters That Interest Everybody |the teremeny, The chief questions Notes From All Oyer--Little it : ! : es 'of. Bw Easil "Do you promis to tenderly care ie wT rp re ve 8 ni 1 0 endeavor to make pathway Thirteen firms on Sheppard street | pleasant 1 i sufiored from fire in the Jones block, fove +" sud full of the . o Toronto. y "Do you promise to be true to him J. P. Graves, i it; versi o try lost $150,000 in oY Sud al oy aud 10 try "lou aon an enormous a Winnipeg broker, trying to corner "re- A memorial window to -those fell at Ridgeway will bo erected in University Hall. It is said British capitalists otiating for the, purchase of Tilbury oil fields. Richard Depew, in the Kent county House 'of Refuge, is reported to be the heir to $9,000,000, Rev. Crawford Tate, of Delhi, has been called to Harnes Presbyterian church, St, Catharines. Between one hundred and ope hun- dred 'and fifty persons were killed in the Paraguayan revolution. James Hayes, a Westinghouse em- ployee, at Stamford, Conn., is alive af- ter a shock of 11,000 volts. The ®wiss referendum to prohibit the manufacture and - sale of absinthe carried by 50,000 majority. The Lusitania on her first day out from Queenstown sailed 634 miles, breaking all previous records. ' Frederick Johnson, .of Guelph, aged eleven, sayed a girl companion from drowning in a heroic manner, The body of Frank J. Farley, drowned in Humber Bay on Sunday, was recovered yesterday forendon. Miss Ivy Cull, a Winnipeg teacher, was drowned in Lake Melisson, in plain sighé of several of her friends. J. M. Poole, under arrest in New York for fraud, will return te To- ronto without waiting for extradition Papers. ¢ 'Habeas corpus proceedings : have of Har y- sentenced to six maenthy for non-support. Lindsay's rate of taxation for the ensuing year was struck at twenty- eight mills, a reduction of one sid one-quarter mills. The new C.P.R. steamer Assiniboia and the Huronic raced from Port Ars thur to the Soo and made a very even thing of it. Fire swept a quarter of a mile of harbor front in East Boston, causing a property loss of nearly a million and a Nali dollars. Senator G. W. Ross wants the law to 'compel boys with tobacco to dis: close where they purchased it in order to prosecute the seller. Robert 7. Shillington, the new legis- lative member for Temiskaming, ' is seriously ill with ptomaine poisoning, in the Ottawa hospital. Prof. George Cross, Ph.D., of the Department of Church History in McMaster University, has declined a tempting offer from Chicago Univer- sity. After being on to make his li jected" oats. pier?' fe brighter am] du. Nicaragua is recruiting an army to| After affirmative answers had been aid Honduras in her light against [given to the foregoing, the officiating revolutionists. minister said : "J ore, by who | power vested in me by the laws of the State, pronounce you husbatl wife, Thag which love has joined ' to- are gether let not' diseotd 'put asunder." the | - Following the ceremeny twe 'of the clgirvoyants in the party went into tragces and discovered favorable au- guriés for the newly married couple. Bands of spirit children were seen to enter and heap flowers over the couple and g golden chain was drawn around them. Afterward the couple left on a trip to their former homies in Wiscon- sn and Minnesota. They will return fo Spokane 'in August to make their home in this' ¢ity. FOURTEEN YEARS IN BED. ------ Indiana Woman, Though in Good Health, Refuses to Get Up. Warsaw, Ind, July §.~Her head concealed with a sheet and seldom wt- tering a sound, Mary Grim, aged six- ty-six years, has lain for fowrteen years on, a wot in the Kosciusko coun: ty infirmary, near Wawsaw, with nos thing whatever the matter with her so far as her physical condition is con- cerned, ' Time and again different county phy- sicians have examined her in sear { some defect, but without result. '"Phis is 'the strangest case that has ever come to my attention," said Dr. 1% J. Shacll ford, the pres nt county physician after visiting Mrs. Grim, For the first time in two years she allowed her head to be uncovered and for the first timp in the same period consented to talk. . The physicians whoshave had charge of 'the sick at the county farm &re surprised over the fact that she has for many years neglected to exercise her body. During the fourteem years she has reclined on the sot she has had medicine only onee, and that was a headache tables. CONDITIONS CHANGED CANADA . NOW TURNING BACK U. S. LABORERS. Lack of Work. Across the Line .is Driving Many to Seek Employ- ,meent in This Country--All Ports of Entry Guarded. Ottawa, July Y.--Inquiries at the animigration department elicits the m- wrmstion that the changed condition of the labor market in vanada and the neighboring republic had necessi- strike for nearly three months, the moulders of Lon- gueuil returned, yesterday, to their border. They were heard of three weeks ago, just north of Botineau, | in all things." That is our teaching. I say this as a charcman and as a citizen who loves his state and has the best interests of city at heart and is profoundly impressed with its temporal and moral welfare, both of which wil] destroyed should we resort "to radical prohibi- tion." Father Goller is one of the represen- tative Catholic churchmen the North-West «and ranks high in the councils of the Jesuit order fee. JUST ONCE TQO OFTEN. our be of "Mlle Novi' Meets With Fatal Accident at Pittsburg, Pa. Pittsburg, Pa., July 8.~While *'loop- ing-the-loop'" in an automobile at Luna Park, "Mile. Novi," who. in pri- vate lifer is Stella Parker, aged nine- teen yeifrs, of Dorchester, Mass., was so badly injured that she will prob- {ably die. Hef skull is crushed, and she is suffering from concussion of the | brain. "Mlle. Novi" is advertised to {three complete somersaults in automobile before it strikes the earth: Soniething went wrong with one qf {the rear wheels. It got off the track [conring down the almost perpendjeular {stretch before the gap is reached. | When the machine struck the gap it | whirled over and over, Instead of {making three complete revolutions it | made three and a half, and thea {brought up on its side with tremen- {doug force. The young woman Was. {thrown 'against an iron bar, striking {with her forehead and crushing ber skull. Several thousand persons, most {them women and childfen, witnessed the accident, and great excitement | prevailed. turn ------ ees « The Halifax Board of Trade has de- |cided to communicate with the 'minis- {tor of customs, urging that the duty on repairs made in the United States jon Canadian vessels be fifty per cent. jinstead of twenty-live, as suggestod. The United States charges fifty per cent, on repairs madg jn Canada. . ie i her | of | N.D., travelling towards the Cana- dian line, along the south branch of | the Antler river. They have been along the border between Manitoba | and Saskatchewan, for two weeks, | Pierson is the last station on the | {| Estevan line in Manitoba. The next | | town west is Gainsbhoro. The camp of | the fanatics is south and east twelve miles between these two lines in a fine farming country, though there are {few Settlers near the valley where the | people are camped. They have two {w aggons and several horses and ap- | pear to be well providéd with provis- {iong. They guard their camp and | { maintain military discipline, ! It is 'feared here there will he fight| when the police attempt {drive the people south, as the old Iman in command seems to be wery determined and talks of dying before he will move, - Thet story" of their last incursion in- to Canada, in view of their latest oh session,.is an interesting one. Yast June James Sharpe and his son, Lee, enteredl Canada, with their party and got as far as Lethbridge, where they endeafored to found a Canadian branch. of the Adamites sect. ey speedily' made themselves obnoxious there. It is claimed that the people are a Branch of the "Dreamers," whe raised such a row around Medicine Hat. The domigion immigration authori: ties were appealed to to rid Leth- bridge of these, undesirables. After some negotiations between Ottawa and Washington everything was set- tled. Officer Weir conducted the partly {across the horder into Montama at Coates, B.C. They made no attempt iat ' physieal resistance them, but {threatened to return within a . vear and make their wav forcibly to York- ton, where Sharpe hoved to start an- other pilerimage south and east, like that which occurred 'Jagt July. Sharp i= an autoeratic, obnoxious fanatic who has previously come into conflict with the American authorities and who had the "idea fixed In 'his head that if. he conld-get to Yorkton | a to { | committee at Ottawa showed that half | a million {pleted the Quebec bridge had the dis- tated an alteration in the system of examination '¢f unmigrants arriving m this country "irom the United States. Heretofore, the department had officers placed only at a few of the most important ports of emtry along the boundary, and the duties of stich ofticers were largely conhned to giving advice and direction to the new-comers, and secuwing such infor- mation as 3 ngcessary for statisti: cal purposes. Noiv that the m ber of unemployed im the States has reathed such immense proportiaus, ang the labor market being fully supplied in Canada, it has been considered ad- visable to establish a system of boundary inspection very similar to that carried on by the Americans. for some years. Already all the principal places of entry from the States have been: covered by offibers of the depart- ment, and as rapidly as possible ar- work. The scale of wages to be paid is 42.75 a day. New England manufacturers have protested against the usé of khaki cloth of British manufacture for uni- forms for United States soldiers. students who failed to pass. The king, as sovereign of the Order of Mercy, has sanctioned the award of the order to fifty-one ladies and gentlemen-- presidents, vice-presidents and members of the League of Mercy. S. T. Bastedo for Canada and David Starr Jordon for the States, are at Eastport, Me., beginning their investi- gation, of conditions on boundary food fisheries. Evidence given before the special more would have com- aster nof taken place. SAFE-BLOWERS MAKE HAUL. important points. The system is rapidly being "put in good working ordér, and already 'several 'hundred persons have been refused admission. The bordey inspectors have wer to debar all considered phesically, mentally or morally unfit; afl likely to become public charges; any who have not' in their posdesdion at leass #25, in addition - ta a tisket to their destindtibn, and all who come fom a country other than that of their birth or naturalization. Drill Their Way Through Twenty Inch Brick Wall, Now York, July 4.--Loot, vatred at 23,000, was seeured by sale-blowers who, early yesterday, drilled their way through a twenty-ineh brick wall into the oitices of the Diamond Poiut Pea company, in Beekman erect, and then shattered two safes with dyna- mife. 'The burglars had obtained access to the offices of the company by cutting a hole from a hallway in an adjoin- ing building :through a brick wall. The wall separating the office from = the work room was then torn down and the two safes were dragged into the rear room, where they were blown open, probably while the sound was deadened by the passing of an elevat- ed train, the States, coming to engage in rail-- road work, were turned back, and the places thusesfeit vacant will provide situations for some of our country's unemployed. The transportasion companies, real- izing the chances they are taking ' in carrying passengersiwho do not come up to the departmental requirements, are refusing to ticket the greater pro~ portion of those not eligible. As an profer_ a. standard brand like 'Salas instance the superintendent of immi-' da,' which has a reputation for be gration -inentioned the ease of the ing good. The latter get more enjoy-|wteamship "service between Dwhith and ment. out of life. In buying tea for Port Arthur, whieh since the ecom- the satisfaction you . expect to get|mencoment of border mspection has from its use, it will pay you to pur-irefuséd fo carry hutidgeds wishing to chase "Salada." Avoid anything "just|go to the lattér! point, Where 'every as good." Imitations are invariably available situation is filled and there It is sullicient for some people that they drink anything called tea. Others his' magic eloquence could soon cause tho deposition of Peer Vereging : &f poog quality, eee \nze gtill numbers without works nts Went Into | ces. rangements are being made at the less | gath regu | gown Ba Made of good Lusire, in colors, " Navy and 1 irtmmed, at $8 and $3.50 isa 8 corron xwrT TWO.PIECE Wool, ab $2.25 and. $250." G DRESSES, ack, and tily pret AL evened 85 Ny SUITS, At $1.25 and $1.50, A COMBINATION SUITS, At 60c. BOYS' SWIMMING RIGHTS, "From 5s; te 25e, --A EERE RR RE RE 2 BORN, McKRGNEY To Mr. McKegney, 488 and Mrs.. John hing Bt, a daughyer. t MARRIED. nil, 6th, 1908, at berymother's residence, LODGE--~RBRIDEN In Kingston, 178 Bargie Si ing, B.A. F f: + Wy He Spari- DY gues Brien, Rey rence A to Willian Lloyd Lodge, 8A. B.S¢,, of Lansing, Mich. PIED. LEWERS.)~In Kin 1908, James A thirtyfour . late Robert Fusaral ears; el notices later. gston. on July Sth lexanden, Lowers, age son of Loo wears, 19 Eillee St. ROBERT J. REID. The Leading 22 "Phone, 577. Undertaker ¥ Princess street. At Camp Nothing is so m cup of good Tea. yeh apprecisted as & Try Our Qwn "Special Blead" It's pare, pungent flavor combined with it's extra strength suitable for campers. Price Last week numbers of Ttaliana from | makes {t particularly. i Se fod Sn Fie SWIFT'S REAL ESTATE and IN. SURANCE AGENEY, 2 LADIES' BICYCLES Tn goéd running 'order: A" Bdrgath for cash, AT TURK'S SecondsHaad, Store, 'Phone, 705 "Extract of Wid. 8 sold at" Gibson's Stérey ' Strawberry" iw Red Cross Drug ; oid dri baal