| i N AD JR w---- én-nuin excep 5 years of age, Joss. entry must leant ats ul cy. be m4 . r person he 2 Lands Agéney ot } xy proxy may, wever, , mother, son a tar "of an intending homesteader, _Bpplication for cantellation must be in person. icant must be --(1) At) feast 'efx pon and cultivation year during the d A homesteader may, i he so de m the pequired residence du- > a id fare land owned i 0 eigh' #0 1 extent, in the vicin uf Sa Joint ownership gl wal : (or mother, 41 the ris caaarty of a homesteader had A residence on farming land by him, tent, months' of the tesm' - of Ah a Vv 0 : Sottoad nteres 18 OF CANADIAN~ NORTH 'MINING REGULATIONS, ODAL.~Conl mining rights may be for twenty-one years at an annual of $1.00 un acre. Not more than can be ity, five to one. appli per fon TZ.~A. person eof toon Joars of over having ma a discovery locate a claim 1,500 feet 1,500 At Jona $100.60 "nut i. a) each y or mining Coop When 'ax pended aid and nia complied Sith the 1 purchased at $1.00 ar PLACER MINING CLAIMS Linerelly 200 feet square. lintry fee, $5.00; GING, ~Two leases of five mile 4 river may be {isuéd to ome ap catit for a term of 20 years. Rental, 0.00 a mile per annum. Royalty, 24 ent after the output exceeds $10, W: W: CORY, Deputy of the Minister of the Interior, N,B.--Unauthorized publication of this advertisement will not be paid for. American Oils Coal Oil ' Lubricating Oils Gasoline We make a specialty of handling fabricating Oils. of all kinds. Prices on application. W. F. KELLY & CO., South Cor. Ontario and Clarence Sts. 'Phone, 486. both are importah 's Night Cure is the p's Restorative, the tutional. r--Dr.8hoop's Night Cure--i§a topleal membrane suppository remedy, while Dr 's Restorative is wholly sa intemal tread a Sing tha ToralY Of Al Derva 4 seeking repair nerve Rk and all blood ailments. Night Cure", as its name implies, does its while ypu sieep, It soothes sory and inflaro. mitcous surfaces, heals local weaknesses and while the Réstorative, eases nervous vi and ambition, up wasted tissuos, bringing about renewed vigor, and energy. Take Dr. Shoop's ve--Tablets cr Liquid=nss general tonie For positive local help, use as well Dr. Shoop's Night Cure "ALL DEALERS" Real Estate Bargains 6-roorn Frame House, on John St. 'and Double Frame souse, on Charles ®t., with barns and stable. Can be bought right for a good investment, both rented. C.Dobbs & Co St. t, gives renewed 109 'Bro © mm FRONTENAC LOAN AND INVESTMENT SOCIETY ESTABLISHED, 1863. President--Sir Richard Cartwright City and Farm Pro County mr store will close at ( o'cléek 'sharp every night, exept Saturday. . GLOVER. A HINT TO SHAVERS Waa now helling & Safety Razo JR'25 CENTS. Qetfone and try fa Ps "A. STRACHAN a & LITTLE'S FEMALE REGULATING PILLS Pest for Women's use, In irregularities or ong at all Druggists, or by mall, 19. DR¢ LITTLE MEDICINE CO. Toronto, Ome: x BR 3 nelimes happens that a. man who Bas the sand isn't able fo raise phe dust, - en . or | SCALING THE CASCADES CANADIAN. JALPINISTS ArioK Mountains Near Vancouver Are Be- coming Popular Resort For Ven: turesome Explorers -- Coast En- thusiasts Essay to Climb Mount Peaks of the Seaside Range. With the advent of summer, though the heavy snowfall of last winter still lies deep on the high peaks, plans are being made for ascending the more lofty ridges and summits of the Cas- cade mountains, only a few miles from Vancouver. The moving spirits .in the exploratidns are the Alpine Club of Canads. The Grouse Mountain climb, which is the nearest to Vancouver and the easiest for beginners, is a pleasant one-day's outing; the trip on foot to the summit over a good trail can be made comfortably in three or four hours from North Vancouver, while the return occupies about half that time. Mt. Crown, a mile in altitude above the ses, and also overlooking Van- couver, -s becoming a greater favor- jte every season, a number of the fair sex Loving made the ascent which involves some hard climbing and camping out one night on the sum- mit. It is a two-day or, better still, a three-days' trip. One of the routes taken is over Grouse Mountain and along the br ridges fragrant with heath and red false heather, there being only one deseent of tonsequence about a thousand or fifteen hundred feet, before the main climb of Crown 18 commenced. This route has the ad- vantége of being above the heat of the valleys, with new views at every turn, pretty lakes in the hollows of the hills and the changing panorama of mountains. The other route is up a water course that joins the Capilano river a short distance below the old waterworks dam. This course is favored by many, there being a hotel at the dam from which a start can be made; and also on aécount of all the climbing being pure gain, no descents having to be raade. The cold spring of this year had not made much impression on the ac- cumulated winter snows and even Grouse is still thickly covered. This means that not mueh climbing on Crown and the Lions was done till well into July. : Sisters Creek, up whose water course the climbers trave] to the Lions which stand guard over the harbor entrance, their heads 6,500 feet above the sea, is at present a torrent im- passible, and even at the best of times, uncertain; Hsing several feet in less than an hour from the heat of the sun on the snow fields or a heavy rain storm. The Lions call for steady nerves of the men who would reach their precipitous summits, but both the eastern and western heads have 'been scaled by a number of parties. They command 'a grand view over Howe Sound,-not to be obtained from Mt. Crown, while their tremen- dous precipices on that gide go down sheer for thousands of feet. Going further into the fastnesses of the Cascades, a lofty cloud-wrappéd summit raises its head above a sea of glaciers. It is Mount Garibaldi fifteen or twenty miles inland from the head of Howe nd until, Jast summer # virgin pel from whose dazzling ice. flelds parties who had previously gone unprepared to the attack returned blinded and with the exposed parts of their hands and faces blistéred and burned an ashy grey by the reflected rays of a mid- summer sun on the snow fields; while impassible crevases and perpendicu- lar walls of ice had barred the ascent of the last five or six hundred feet Dp In Auguost last year a party was formed eonsisting of Atwell King, J. J. Trorey, T. Pattison, A. T. Dal- Mr. King and Mr. Dalton had both participated in a previous unsuccess- ful attempt on the mountain and with the experience gained were confident »f success, while the rest of the party had served. their mountain climbing apprenticeship on Grouse; M-. Crown, the Lions and many a lonely peak far and wide through the mountain systems of British Columbia, and ful- ly realized 'what they would be up against, for the failure of former at- tempts' and the reports brought back showed it to be no soft snap. Blankets and provisions for five days were carried, though the trip stretched out to a week, The steam- or was taken to Squamish Landing at the head of Howe Sound, where a rig "was secured 'to drive the party ten miles to where the trail crosses the Cheeki river, where camp was made and the pirty started next morning up the when the northern wall was ascend- od, and the heavy tunibered ridge climbed to the five thousand-foot lev- el, where camp was pitched for that night. Next day camp was pitched at noon at timber line within easy reach of the peak, when storms coming up made the ascent impossilde, though several attempts were made in the next few days. Finally the mists tolled away, and starting at sunrise the party climbed an areté to the base of the western shoulder of the moun- tain, where they roped up, and, tra- versing the extensive glacier Ta the northward of the peak half circled the mountain and came out in view of Howe Sound once mare, before a, possilie aseent of the cliffs could be found. Here a steep glacier-covered slope offered a ehance, and scutting toot- holds in the ¢rust of the new snow up' a dangerous angle to an even worse footing on a crumbling arete, a razor-edge almost, re-entrant, a dizzy precipice, thousands of feet above the glacier on the northern side. This continued" summit, which was reached after seven hours of cBmb- ing. the aneroid registering 9,600 feet against 11,000 feet registered at the Sometimes a woman asks her lus- band's advice so sie'll be in a posi. tion to take the opposite course, This is a wide world, but'a lot of people init live on a narrow margin. The . admiration a Woman values is when you tell her so. Garibaldi, One 'of the Magnificent | ton, W. T. Dalton and G-. B. Warran. | early | creek, which was followed till canyons bmrred the way, | -- nighest point reached on the previous attempt. ad i wt A magnificent ice fiel with rugg ponks- little short of Garibaldi, and | "mmetous beautiful lakes were noted goross the Squamish to the west Bard, while northward tc the water- shed the Squamish and Cheaka- mus, the laciuty ond 3 Desks were squally pressive. ing eas Jind also unmelting snow fields with and there dry glaciers stretched for many miles on the dark; rocky peaks. 'The enfhusigstic body of alpinists is } s Pass there being virgin peak glaciers and mountain lakes innum- erable on hand. CARADA'S FRUIT LANDS, Has Immense Area Available For Set. ting Out' Im Orchards. The tion of over-prodaction is one which is 'not infrequently refer- red to by the active and Rrospee- tice fruit-growers of British Columbia. The experience of most other fruit growing countries naturally suggests is subject. to the minds of looking to the future of this great industry in 'Canada's most westerly province. A In nearly all horticultural countries there has n an over-production of certain elasses of fruit, but a careful anaylsis of the situation will reveal the fact that there has never been an overproduction of certain standard commercial varieties, The market has always demanded. and absorbed the high class article, especially when put up in an atrac- tive form. It is true that in the old- er districts where so many varieties of inferior quality were originally planted™and the cultivation and care of the orchards carried on in an ins different manner, much inferior stock has been offered, at any old price, which has the effect of demoralizing ptices and minimizing the cost of production. But the fruit-grower in British Col- uinbia has the advantage of knowing something of the mistakes and exper- jences of other countries besides be- ing adjacent to one of the best mar- kets in the world. Let the fruit growers of British Columbia confine thuir planting chiefly to a few well- khown commercial varieties of ap- ples which have been proven to be a success in this country, bearing in mind that the market of to-day de- mands an apple with color, flavor and keeping qualities, practice clean cultivation, systematic spraying, the nse of the most approved up-to-date packages, and grade apd pack the fruit with the utmost care mo matter what market it is going. to. The idea in the east seems to be that only | apples 308 yERDOFS should be han wi i and put up in active ery packages, but it is equally important to have the fruit grown in this country and appearing on our own markets first class in every icular, as Maxwell Smith says, "that which is not good enough for the British and foreign consumer is mot enough for the Canadian people. : As soon as i+ Columbia ean supply a oe share of the fruit consumed in the four western provinces of the: Dominion, the mar- kets of New Zeal Australia, Ja- pan and China will be calling for more; but it must be the best. The, statement was recently made from a public platform that "if but one-sixth of the arable lands between the Great Lakes and the Rocky Moun- tains were in cultivation it would take a train of forty cars passing every fifteen minutes, twenty-four hours in the day, and 865 days in the year to carry out the wheat." Even this calculation only includes the beginning of our prairie develop- ment and why> worry about over- | prodnetion® of clean commercial fruit in British Columbia, whose geo- | graphical position gives her the ad- | vantage in the contest for this splen- | did home market. ---------------- Warning to Miscreants. | As a warning to others who may be | similarly tempted, the Postoffice De- | partment is spreading broadcast the story of a man who was brought tq | justice seven years after commiting a fraud on the postal savings bank. The offender was Andre Kasak of | Fort William, a Hungarian, who in | November, 1900, stole a savings bank | pass _book of John Martan, a fellow- | countryman, and ing to Sud- | | bury, fraudulently deck himself [to be the depositor. By forging the | name of a depositor he succeeded in | obtaining a check for $500, i | persuading the postmaster to certify {to the endorsement forged upon the | check, so that he was able to cash it. He then fled to Europe via. Sault Ste. | Marie and New York, and had made | good his escape before the Postoffice | Dapartment learned of the theft. The amount.thus fraudulently "ob- asBk was made good to | tained by | the depositor. { In May last the Department was notified that Kasak had returned to Fort William. He was 8 ily ar rested, and sentenced to five years in the penitentiary. Do Not Fear tnvasion. In an interview a few days ago, Hon. Frank Oliver, Minister of Interior, said Toronto need have no jears of another Bulgarian invasion this fall. If the present condition of business continued, the Government, he said, would make a regulation that all immigrants who come in before February must have $50 in cash, and from February to the spring $25. This would give the Government a chance to refuse undesirable people.™ Silica Discovered. A report comes from Wainfleet | township that a deposit of silica has | been found on Charles Réeb's farm, {and that J. H. Smith and T. I. White are at work developing it, having purchased an option on the property. A force of men have been at work testing the vein, which is said to be quite heavy. A number of outside capitalists have examined the prop- erty. : N Some men Ard' not satisfied with courting trouble; they go ahead and marry. . 4+ Don't overstep, yourself in at- tempt to put your best foot forward. an MARRIAGE AS A MERE LEASE. Advocacy of Motherhood. 3 Father Bernard i is Jonting- i ES ror ine Test Mb oy was discharged be- sO a eongregatior at tally 1,000 persons S000 inthe aisles of the church. In fhis sermon he condefim- ed what he termed' "leasehold mar- ri Yd here are those said Father life should. continge to bind till some danger zong 'in it is reached, while others want to' make it a sort of part- nership which; ought to be as easil broken as-.it is started. They are a vocates fof I Id marriage, or, in othér words, for free love." From some false philosophy some people, the preacher observed, regarding marti as a mere soeial contract, which ought by a mutual ar- rangement to be.easily dissolved. If marriage were nothing more than a so- cial or civil contract he saw no res- son why it should not 'be dissolved. But was it? W not marriage some- thing much higher, more intimate, a natural contract by the law of Christ? The terms upon which the parties pl thenselves at the altar prov- ed beyond question that matrimony was something divine which God had set up for His own divine purposes. 'So clear is this," Father Vaughan averred, "that if any bride and bride- groom were to gubstitute for the terms 'till "death us part' some such phrase as 'till we Ynak4 other arrange- ments," or 'till we e to grow tired of each otheér,* or 'till we wish for some new alliance,' a marriage would be regarded by every Christian man as no real marriage at all. It would be a sort of blasphemous concubinage, and they. would know it." been recently put to him as to whe- ther there were any circumstances un- der which it an be permissible for a man and wife who wese Christians to break off their marriage and enter into a fresh alliance, the preacher said thére were well-defined eircum- stances which made it perfectly right for a man and wife to seek legal sépar- ation, but the marriage tie still heid them. They could not enter into an- other marriage. "It cannot be," he said, 'because Christ cannot blow hot and cold and contradict himself in the same breath." "There is. no greater plague upon thé earth to-day," Father Vaughan de- ciated, "than the way in which peo- ple are changing matrimony. God made it a holy alliance in which men and women should come together and supply each other's deficiengies, so that they might develup patience and the exercise of virtue and of a noble lite. But they whu live for the riot of sense and for the pleasure of the hour, and gratify their passions, of course will net listen to God. "When we hear of wives to-day say- ing that they refuse altogether the privileges of motherhood beeause for- sooth hn Jtetferes with their hunting or their London season, or fbecause they cannot be bored with the nurs- ery, because their flat is too small, or because they are not strong enough to bear what they don't like; when wives speak thus, and speak thus openly and boastingly in their boudoirs, in theif drawing-tooms, and in the pal: lic parks, it is time to read the riot act. For they are boastingly profan- ing the laws of God and desecrating their sacred state of life." eam ---- Britisher Raps Germans. "In international competition Ger- many has always been held up to us as a grest bogey," Bir Margin Con- way, the famous explorer, declared in a speech at Liverpool recently. "Germany is far too scientific and doetrinaire to be a dangerous com- petitor to a praetical people like the British. "The chief danger of Germany is that we should try to adopt her theories and apply them to different human material. If, in imitation of Germany, we try to make the mass of our people ill-édmeated men of science, we shall produce a nation of inefficients. Better a nation gf work- men with a few Kelvins in the minor- ity than a nation such as Germany is scientifically producing." The history of all great human ac- complishments, Sir Martin declared, was the history of the "crowd spirit." tional factor and was well develop- ed in our unrivaled public schools and universities. It appeared mot to exist in the council school. A royal commission to discover how to intro- duee it there, and to investigate its causes elsewhere, would be a valuable step towards real education. Ivory. To the man in she street ivory means elephant tusks. He forgets or is ignorant of the supply of hippopot- amus teeth, walrus tusks, narwhal horns, whales' teeth and boars' tusks. The best ivory comes Mammoth tusks are found in extra- ordinary abundance in Siberia prin- eipally, but they are mot very highly esteemed, though they run to an en- ormous size and indeed hold the re- cord, being sometimes twelve feet long and weighing 200 pounds. The na- tives of 'Africa regard ivory as the standard of wealth and store it up in their villages for hundreds of years, constantly adding to their stock, and thus the supply continues and will continue for many, many years. Somewhat Rejuvenated. Jane Addams, the talented head of the Hull House, said bitterly, apropos of woman sufigage, at a recent dinner in Chicago: "There are women who will laugh hat us for our interest in the ballot in the privacy of their rooms to great electrical massage machines, face steaming engines, curious masks and huge flesh reducing mechanisms. "An elderly woman of this type af- ter an afternoon's struggle with all sorts of beautifying devices dyed her hair a bright gold. " 'Do you think it makes me look younger?" she asked me. "+Yes' guid 1. 'About three weeks." " arn : , 1,000 Islands--Rochester. Steamers North King and Caspian Jeave daily, except Monday, at 10:15 a.m., for Thousand Island ports, and at 5.00 p.m. for Bay of Quinte ports The natural fool deserves pity and ' protection--the educated one, censure. . Yor and Rochester. g ps a Father Vaughan Continues Talks In were Referring to a Question which had' That spirit was the greatest educa- from Africa. ) and who will then give absorbed hours Viaughin,. 'who contend that married | ic) Eff iH § £§ : ; ; g § a art after his death has had. the Co As no: the an 1nscri n was garvid lis, Sabive Jollowers, but as the showed signs. of decay it was cut down by the Royal Geo- graphical Society, and is now one of the, Jon cherishied possessions of that society. 5 "His diaries, of which we haye sev- enteen, come ir for an equal share of interest. Dr. Livingstone was always careful in regard to his daily records. As you will see, he used to "mike notes of his geographical soundings, and, in fact, ori of interest, such as curious peoplds, animals, plants, and fishes, was noted in his diaries and frequently accompanied by sketches. Tho last entry in his diary was made on April 27th, 1878, two or three days before he died. Under the circumstances, marking, as it does, 'the close of. a gloriots career, it 18 of pathetio interést: 'Knocked up quite, and reémain--re- dover, sent to buy milch goats.' "When the natives found their master in the morning on his knees, dead, they embalmed his body as best they could, and carried it amidst the reatest perils to the shore, where it was placed in a "trude coffin and brought to this country on a British battleship. On arrival at these shores the coffin was substituted for a more elaborate offe, and the body buried in Westminster Abbey, whilst his heart still lies in the centre of Africa. THe shell in which he was brought home is still preserved b the Royal Geogramiical Society, and, draped by a Union Jack, is in the Relics Court at the Orient in London. "Am the other relits of interest are the boxes which wére brought home by Stanley, one «of which. still hears se spots Jrom he candies made by vingstone ; m of the 'hat _by the natives forthe doctor to die in, and a piece of Hark in which his body was wrapped; a mip of Central Africa designed by himself, and his sextant and rulérs, watch, * boat com , fleld-glasses, surgiéal instruments; two spears that were thrown at him by warlike tribes, and two. four-bérrelled revolvers which he used for procuring food and protection. It is surbly a remarkable testimony to Li tone's influence among the natives when we realize that, in the face of many tempta- tions throughout their nine months' journey, they gactely brought the body to the coast, and handed all hia be- longings over to his friends." Romance of a Diamond King. The well-known South African mine-owner and millionaire, Mr, Jos- eph Benjamin Robinson, who is in- cluded in list of new baronets, owes his wealth partly to chance and partly to his capacity for seizing op- portunities. Forty years ago he was a sharp youth of nineteen, engaged in rearing horses, cattle, and sheep. Then came the discovery of diamond diggings on the Vaal river, and he was quick to try his 'prentice hand in diamond dealing at the fields. When the Kimberley mines were dis- covered three years later he was al- ready looked upon as a capitalist. Then Transvaal gold began to be talk- ed about, the first ore being brought down from Witwatersrand and pan- ned at Kimberley in 1 The next day--a Sunday--Mr. Robinson was oft by coach. So, too, were others, but they went on to Barberton--or "De Kaap"-- which. was then boom- ing. Fortune Sejhped Mr. Robinson to alight at P troom, and pro- ceed by cart tor Witwatersrand, where three days later Be bought the Lang- lnagte estate, the mine which is how the largest gold producer in the world. For the last ten years Mr. Robinson has resided mostly in Eng- lend, his residence in Park Dudley House--beimgone of the most magnificent in London. Chinese In Jamaica. During the last three years 1,100 €hinamen have col to Jamaica. When, three years this immigra- tion first comm ced, the Chinese came in batches of twenty and thirty, whereas they are now coming in batches of ninety and one Hundred. In other words, the number of the immigrants has been rapjdly and steadily increasing; the first lot came to spy out. the fatness wf the land, and the others have followed to reap #.--Daily Gleaner, Jamaica. ° + King Edwarg's Lucky Number. * The King's lucky numbér is nine. foth his parents were born in 1819, he was born on a 9th, his"marriage took place in the year '63, which num- bers added the one to the other faake nine; his reign commenced in 1904, he was to have been crowned on the 27th, which figures added together make nine, and he was crowned on the Sth of August, = The progressive man doesn't wait for things to move, but moves thems. You and I may unintentibnally bor- Jow trouble when we borrow money. The mayor has proclaimed Aug. 17th & tie holiday for Place. Carbston pastr Hour wu g frmont Ontario flour strength of Manitoba wheat flout. . 74 Ask your grocer for "Beaver" Sadi. FAKE HAIR PREPARATIONS, Do Hair No Good, Cause It to Fall Oug. Many hair preparations are "fake" bepanse they are merely séalp irvi- tants. They often cause a dryadss, making the hair brittle, and; finally lifeless, Dandruff the of all trouble with hair. It is'a germ dis ease. 'The germ makes citjeld scales as it digs the root of the hair, where it destroys the hair's vitality, causing it' to fall omt. To eure dan- draff; the germ -must be killed. *'De- gtroy the cause, you remove the of: fect." Newhro's Herpicide 8 the only hair preparation that kills the dan- deufi germ, thereby leaving the hai to grow luxuriantly. Sold hy leading druggists. Send 10. in stamps fon sample to. The Herpic ide Co, Detroit, Mich. boc. and $I. G. W. Mahood, special agent. TAKE NOTICE. That the King Edward Cigar Store, King St., has a full line of Cigars, Cigarettes and Tobaec- cos, Imported and Domestic ; Pipes of all descriptions; in case and out of case, at reasonable prices, suitable to the Pocket. Also a large stock of Fishing Tackle, Sporting Goods Swagger Sticks, Walking Canes, Souwenir Cards and Hammocks, at re duced prices. Have a look at our assortment; then compare it with others. 354 King St. Clifton A. Reed, Manager. with the late John cause to Twe sizes, Formerly Routley. CABS! The Old Stand and The Old Num- Phone 490 All orders promptly attended to night or day. is woods The Great Roplish Rewmed) i 3 Tones ana Ee nat ho whol neous system, kes w 3 v'n SR Sn acres Nery uy Debility, Mx 4 and Irain Worry, ondency, Sexwc. ¢¥ eakuess Emiswions, Sper satorrhea, a~d Kects of Abuse or Ereesses 'rice $1 per box, xix for $6. One will pl six ili cure. Soid by all droggists ou malied ln plain pkg. on receipt of price, New pam ed nail! free. The ood Med cine Oo. formeriv Windy rt Toronto. Ont ALLAN zs" LINE Montreal to Liverpool Corsican! sails '..... Aung. 21. Sept. 18. Virginian sajls .... Aug. 28. Sept, 250 Tunisian sails ..... Sept. 4. Oct. 2. Victorian sails ... Sept. 11. Oct. 9, Rates of passage and full informas tion mity be obtained from J, P. Aut G.T.R.,, o» Jd, os. KIRKPATRICK, Local Agents, STEAMER WOLFE ISLANDER LEAVES WOLFE ISLAND :-- MON. 7.30--9.15 aah, 1.00--4.00 p.m. TUES, 7.80-9.15 a.m 1.00--4.00 p.m RED. | 730-0.15 am, 1004.00 pm. p.m, 5.00 oN LEAVES KINGSTON = , . 8.80--11.30 a.m. 3.00--5.30 p. UBS, 8.30--11.30 am. 3.00-5.30 p.m. WED. 830--11.80 a.m. 3. J THURS. 8.830--1.00 p.m. 3.00 pan. .Brsakey's Bay, 8 p.m. FRI. 8.30--11.30 a.m. '| vaNCOUVER -----. VICTORIA But Often. Good Returning Unt October 31st, : ! : w nm. ------- 580 § FARM LARBORERS' RXCURSIONS to tes gist bh, and Sept. 2nd, "1th and Going dates. 18th, Sep 15th and 29th, Tickets good 3 ' Full particuldrs at K: & P. and C. Pq R. Ticket Office, Ontario St. 'Phone, 503 F. CONWAY, Gen. Pass. Agents . i ier 3 hay OF QUINTE RAILWAY Train leaves wnion station, Ontaria street, 4 pum. daily" (Sunday exoapted, for 1 , Sydenl Nap Xd bi y nL north. Bannockburn 3 '27th, vn t. 3 for 08 ts ur ipwents vie Bay ay. For turther parties R, W, DICKSON, Agents River & Gulf of 81. Lawrence ] Cruises in Cool Latitudes Ine. Iron S88, "Campana,'t | Twin "Screw wih electric lights, electric beMs ands Ia--, NEW YORK FROM QUEBEC Calling at Charldttetown and Halls x, 8.8. Trinidad, © 2,600 tons, sails from Berenuda Summer Excursions, $40 end upwards, y the asin Serew SS, "Beraludian. ,500 ns. Sailing fortnigh from New York, from Sond dune ® dh Temperature cooled by sea Lreeses seldoma rises above SO degrees The finest trips of the season tealth and comfort. ARTHUR AHERN, Secretary, Cuvebec: For tickets and staterooms, a oH to J.P, HANLEY, or C. S, KI PAT RICK, Ticket Agents, Kingston, Ont. INTERCOLONIAL ] RAILWAY Special Excursion Fares to the Seaside Maritime Express leaves Montreal 12.00 'noon: daily except day. Ocean ldwited leaves treal 7.90 poms dally 'excépt Saturday.' FROM MONTREAL Rivere du. Loup .$ 7.50 Murray Bay 7.50 Cap, a L'Aigle . 7.50 St. Irene .,.. 7.50 Cacouna 7.50 Rie 9.00 Little 1 9.00 Rimouski 9.00 Campbellton Loon Dalhousie .. ve 10.00 Moncton « 11.50 St. John, « 11.00 Shediac we 12.00 we 13.50 «o HL50 ws 14.50 we 13.60 we 15.50 ww 17.00 . 18.00 18.00 fos Charlottetown, PEI. . Parrshoro, N.S. ... Halifax .. Pictou .... Mulgrave Sydney North Bydney . St. Johns, Nfld. .. wes' sanese E00 Going August 10, 11, 12, 13 ' , 11, 12, 13, 1908, tutning August 31a, 1908. 3 908, 101 - excursion fares from 'Toronto add $12 to the above. Propor low lated from Baints in prabgttionally ow ur illustra booklet, "Tours to 8 mer Haunts," télls of the Pn Mons Hasled above. Write for free coples to Baroato Ticket Oflice, 61 King street General Passenger Dept., Moncton, N. 9, MLR SSS ' - $10 Farm Laborers' Excursion yrom Kingston to MANITOBA BERTA, SASKATCHE Shiehdz tnd St Tal, HEWAN. via Chicago August 20, 27, of R, 19.00 is to ickets will be amsack, § Swan River, Sonny and © igtecineamts points on Canadian Northern: Ry. One cent per mile beyond those points to Fiidmonton, inclusive. The Grand Trupk is the only double track rou to the west, through 'St. Clair 'unbel by electricity. No Smoke. No dust. Tickefs will be Ssued for the return from Swan River, Kamsack and Jntermediat - fons for $18.00. Tiekets will i he aod iC. and C.P.R. or North P.K., on Ww t 22nd September 11th. iba Souls ay Canadian National Exhibition, Toronto, Ont. Aug. 29 to Sept. 14, Minneapolis or Return tickets will be sold Good going Tussday, pt, $9.35, Monday, Sept. 7 * Good ing on Aug. 29, 30, 31, Sept. 2 n , 5,6, 8 9 10, 11 and 12. 'Tickets will fot be accepted on trains 1, and 4, all tickets valid returning Toronto on or before Tuesday, 15, 1908. Por full particulars, apply to" J. MANLEY, Agent, Cor. ohnson Ontario streets, / from Sept P an Lake Ontario & Bay of Quinte 7" Steamboat Co, : LIMITED. : KINGSTON, ROCHESTER, 1,000 ISLANDS. : 1 Ei [7 Strs. NORTH KING. won fog Thana ana Poise G8 Fs Reba Sr Rd WT ALTA Lar, Moyne of information from JAMES » a x