Daily British Whig (1850), 7 Jun 1909, p. 5

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THE DAILY BRITISH WHIC, MONDAY JUNE 7, 1800. |WEALTHTEST ACTOR MANAGER ' Dour; ithe time preacher om the dr] n . n Y 0 3 -- : OMS CRADLE =" rie ** (CORPS MAY REFUSE! se ovene worms me we vm. RESEARCH IN. FARMING! sich nt Ih Thi 1 PITH OF THE NEWS. od Up a Handsome Fortune. | Leflmid. x VISITED FIRST MISSION 1, very Latest Gutted From "Au SERIOUS HITCH HAS ARISEN just prodocss pa who sol HOUSE BUILT IN CANADA. Over The World. IN OTTAWA DISTRICT. | ficent" at the New Theatre, Roy White's seven-year-old son, fell is reputed po] And every penny of Thrived ia Days When Internation. into the river at Welland and was | Allowances Insufficient--Rates Per Sapital he Sage al Organisation Was Embitter- {ome Man For Rations and Forage| "backers." Moreover, when he appointment of Sir R. C. Wil- . ed By War of 1812. (liams as governor of Newfoundland is Are Not Enough Considering Present Prices. Belleville, Sns., dune 5.~At every gazetted. convention ere is generally a day| Abram Young, a Delaware farmer, 3 1] V4 sori set aside for visiting rer noted Sy {dropped dead yA Land He was ak Jue 3. There lich SE coe tion «! scemery or some old historic seventy years of age, in this district ye ul en building. To-day nearly all the min-| Harvard University has awarded corps may not : ri any all The isters and laymen attending the Bay Hon. W. L. Mackenzio King the degree va r Fo RO amp at a io Bi of Quinte conference went on an ex-|of PhD., for which he qualified. Stare a 0 Sua 10s IE oun horags cursion to visit Conger church, near | Andrew Pattullo, who escaped from opi: gh oF i pnd, are oe Picton. It is the oldest Methodist! the Toronto asylum six weeks ago; | Ja Fi oy this thirty five conts 5 church in Ontario at present used as was recaptured at Niagara Falls. : yr a f orse, and twenty-five a place of worship, having been ercct-|. Judge Weller, county judge of Pe |p. a seach Wan in samp, ed in June, 1809, and: associated with | terboro, passed away 'on Sunday even- i oat 3 Fecoived a supply hay it are memories of the carly pioneer ing. He was eighty years of age and -- gals. ax ip Ply vations : for days of Methodism in Canada. had been in poor health for several: Ten are so high that it will bo othe curds yard are hurled many | months, imposxiblo to feed the men for twen- of Abe first English settlers of Princy| Justice Cassels. has joft for -thed 75° cents a day, or the horses for Edward county. maritime provinecs, accompanied by Phir ty five cents. The hay 1s $20. a The church was built sixteen years|Régistrar Audette, to hold a term of tom, an oats sixtydive mts, (and before the organization of the Meth | the exchequer court in St. John and staty-s¥en cons a bushel. Food, a8 udist church in Canada, and was used Halifax. is well knows, is very high just now, as one of the first mission stations! The Federation af Textile Worko and the commanding officers of tho along the border, missionaries having hes notifitd the labor department thet different, corps claim that they simply come across from the United States to|the conciliation award regarding tho Totton Tea the mien sud horses "ak preach the gospel to the few scattered [strike at Montreal has been acwpted | op anti settlers in the district. The firet mis-|by the Ibe Dragoons made application for : * y the men. ] * an trewith a nighor rate of pay for forage and stools, ing-room capitalists and the greatest producers Fourthly, he that taketh in this country. It is from the farm- | saith cannot leave it, yionary or Mailtister of the church was| Maurico Wolf, Sunnyside Park, To- rations, but it bas fused. Iti Rev, William Losee, who w rg Brom % hi : » but it has been refused. Itis| g teh irs--in fact Ine d am Lose © wag suceead- \rohto, arrested for putting spurious | Hops DUE EL AS Boch HE they will nd Nhe thaire in --_ 2ayihing ers' crops that the greater part of our | witch him. CANADA'S EXPER%- IN AGRICULTURE. . Wm. Saunders of Ottawa Is the 3 Dean of the Government's Expert Farmers---Progress of the Barr Colonists--Story of Station at Fort Vermilion Smacks of Early Days in Canada. ad | Whenever | practicable, farmers should visit the Government Experi- mental farms says The Montreal Standard. Of course the largest and most instructive is the Central Farm within sight of Parliament Hill, Ot tawa; but in the Maritime Provinces and in Western Canada there are smaller experimental farms and ex- tal stations where, a more imited scale, excellent on be- |. half of agriculture is being done, and | where agriculturaliste will see much that Y instryets an shew . These farms are a on for the people on the land who, after all our talk about manufactur | ties of the ing and commerce, are the greatest | therewith 5 ed by Rev. Darius Dunham. Rev. Mr. ! Dunham remained in Canada and dicd coins in the Bell Telephone vompany's 'box for calls, in place of genuine many years aftér at Napanee. Among money. the other divines who preached in the! old Conger church were the Ryersons, | the late Bishop Richardson and the! late Rev. William Case, the father of | Canadian 'missions. | In the early days there were only | two mission districts in Outario, one! on the Bay of Quinte, and the other | at the Niagara frontier, and these! were afliliated with the New York con- | ference, In 1824 Bishops Hedding and George came over from New York state and organized the first Canadian conference at Hallowell, now known as Picton. A fow years later this don- forenco became independent of the American church, the separation hav- ing been brought about in 1830 as a result. of ill-feeling over the war oi 1812. The English Methodists had worked up: from Quebec, and friction between them and the Americans cau- cd the latter to withdraw. When the first conferonce was formed it" was known as the Canadian Methodist church, but when the Canadian and English Methodists united wader a different form of government it was known as the Wesleyan Methodist church. Another soparation occurred a few years later hor the Methodist Episcopal church was organized with Bishop Richardson at its head and later Dr, Carman and the new con- nection, which bad broken away from the American church in 1828, joined the Wesleyan Methodists in 1875. In 1883 the Episcopal Methodists joined the Wesleyans again. The party, to-day, loft Belleville by boat and first took a run by Hay Bay to visit the first mission house built in Canada. It is now used by a farmer as an implement shed, In this bay ninety years ago a number of Christians were croscing the water Lo atlend a meeting when their boat up- set and they were all drowned. From Hay Bay they landed at the golf grounds out of Picton, where they were received by the town and county councillors. Dinner was served at the church and at 1:45 p.m. a very im-! pressive service was he Id. The land for this old historic church and cemetery was given to the wongre gation by the late Stephen Conger and tho farm on which it was built is still held by the Conger family. The build: ing is cottageshaped and entirely a framo structure Rev. Mr. Greatrix, of Belleville, pre- sident of the conference, presided at the anniversary cxercises. John L Lake, a prominent Toronto layman, who was stationed , at the White Cha- pel in 1856, gave a short address of a reminiscent nature. The day also marked the fiftieth anniversary of his ordination. Rev. Dr. Shorey, of Co- Newark Man's Collapse Caused By Dizziness, Biliousness and Pains in the Back. DROPPED IN THE STREET. Warm weather and acute indigestion were the chief causes of a physical collapse that overcame Mr. J. V Donaghue near the entrance of the Pennsylvania railroad depot last Thursday. A policeman lifted him into a cab and he was hurried to his home. In an interview next day Mr Donaghue stated : "I was practically unconscious when I arived home. | knew | was in bad shape, because for weeks I had been fighting against pains in my back as severe as i I had been shot at. Indigestion and biliousness were the cause of my col lapse, and no doubt had been keeping up the headache and dizziness from which 1 suffered. Fortunately, my wife knew just what I needed. . She gave me three of Dr. Hamilton's Pilis of Mandrake and Butternut and put me to bed, In the morning I was as fresh as a daisy, my system was cleared. of its load of poisonous waste and I felt like a new man. From now on, in order to keep my system pro- perly regulated, I will use Dr. Ham- ilton's Pills regularly. I know many who do so and they never have a day's illness." Why not be healthy, hearty and well. You owe it to yourself, to your fam- ily, to your friends. You cannot work properly; you cannot be happy vourself if you are tortured by in- digestion, and all the nagging pains and unpleasantness which accompany it--if you are weakened by anaemia-- if your blood is being poisoned and _vour system upset hy constipation. _M you are suflaing from any of At Montreal the trial of John Dil- lon, alias James Smith, the book agont, for the murder of Policeman Shea, over a year ago, seems likely to be further delayed. . The little town of St. Francis, Que., was almost completely wiped out by fire, late on Friday. Out of twenty- four dwellings only one remains. Much suffering is likely to result. Col. Alexander K. McClure died, at Philadelphia, on Sunday afternoon, of a complication of diseases. He was editor-in-chief of the Times from 1873 to 1901. He was born in 1828, The first application under the amended law act of last session. re- quiring judgment to be given within ¢ix months of its trial will be made to the divisional. court on Tuesday. The case is a damage action, Miller ve. G.T.R., tried at Brockville on April . 19th, 1908. Cambridge university will hold its last competition for the senior wran- glership this year, and it is within the bounds of possimlity that the last senior whl will be a grand- son of Chatles Darwin, whose ocen- tenary will be celebrated at the uri versity this month. George Seager, Toronto, runuing an automobile om the night of May 27th, crashed into a street car, two wo- men being injured, one, Fanny White, having a leg broken and being other- wise bruised. In the police oourt pleaded guilty to colliding with the street car but not guilty to the 'lcharge of doing grevious bodily harm to Fanny White. The Presbyterian assembly dispoeed of considerabie business on Monday morning. The committee op--western missions asked for $195,000 for mis- pionary work next year and the report was adopted. To commemorate the name of Rev. Dr. James Robertson, who started the Presbyterian missions in the Canadian west, a lectureship will be established in one of the col- leges. Toronto Street Market. Toronto, June 7.--Wheat, fall, per bush., $1.37 to $1.40; wheat, goose, per bush, $1.25; oats, per bush.,63c. to ,6lc; barley, per bush. 64c. to 65¢.; rye; per bush., 5c. peas, per bush., 95¢. to 97c.; hay, per ton, 516 to $15.500;@ hay, No. 2, $9 to S11; straw, per ton, $13.50 to $14; dressed hogs, $10.75 to 411; butter, dairy, 20c. to 24c.; butter, inferior, 17¢. to. 1Yc.; eggs, dozen, 2lc. to 23¢.; chickens, {Uc.; chickens, yearlings, per lb., 17c. to 18e.f fowl, per lb., l4e. to 16¢.; celery, per dozen, 40c.; potatoes, bag, 81 to ¥1.10, onions, per bag, 31.65 to $1.75; apples, per barrel, $3 to $5; Leef, hindquarters, $9.50 to 811; beef, forequarters, $6.50 to $7.60; beef, choice, carcase, $9.25 to $10; hem)f, medium, rcase, ¥7 to $8; mutton, per cwt., $10 to $12; veal, prime, per ewt., $8 to $10.5(5 lamb, per cwt,, 31550 to $16.50. Darwin's Theory In Verse. Among those who whetted their wit upon the 'Origin of Species," perhaps the happiest was Lord Neaves, whose famous poem appeared in the same year, 1861 : Some creatures grew bulky while others were small, a As nature sent food for the few or for all, And the weakest, we know, ucver go to the wall, Which nobody cuu deny. An Ape, with a pliable thumb and big brain, When the gift of the gab he had man: aged to gain, As the Lord of Creation established his reign, Which nobody cen deny. Lord Neaves was a judge of the court of session, and frequently amus ed himsolf and his friends by produc- tions of this kind. Was In Hard Luck. Did you ever strike a town in which you were a total stranger, without a cent in your pocket? "Well, if you have, you will realize the position a middle- aged man found himself in, after his arrival in the cit from Belleville, on Monday. ' The man came here to get work on thé subway the * outer junction, but was unsuccessful. Wher he arrived there, he found that the contractor had all the men required for the work. He had no money te pay his way, and was thus left jo rather. unfortunate circumstances. A prominent citizen who heard the man's story, helped him out, and afterwards 3. to, 2.9 oz; 0, 50¢. per 18c. It ie claimed that 56th and 59th Regiments will not go into camp, at all, partly because of the price awarded for rations, but chiefly i reduction of the regi- go to camp. owing {0 the ments {oghel strength. BASEBALL RECORD. The Games Played on Saturday Eastern treal, more, National league--Boston, 1; 6; Washington, ; Philadelphia, 0. Cin- 421; Washington, burg, 3. land, .436; Chicago, 316, Sunday Games. Eastern league--Montreal, 1-11; Baltimore, National league--New York, 12. St. 1; Philadelphia, -4; Brooklyn, 3-3. Louis, League Standings. league--Rochester, cent.; Toronto, .571; Montreal, Newark, more, 457; Jersey City, idence, 424, National Kasten league--Pittsbury Chicago, .636; New York, .5 cinnati, Brooklyn, 410; St. Louis, 405; ton, American Philadelphia, Boston, land, league--Detroit, 590; New York, .583; 525; St. Louis, 447; Cleve- 436; Washington, .316. SHE ATE THE PILLS. Were N.Y., June 7.--Sixteen year-old Leita Hamilton, the prettiest i the village «! Degrasse, Cran- berry Lake, lies dead in her home, to- day, the victim of a poison plot which the police declare will prove to be one sensational "murder cases Gouverneur, girl in of the most ever recorded state. = The young woman, the police say, died from taking arsenic pills re- ceived through the mails. The motive murderer of the young woman to send her the poison is similar to that in the Chester Gil lette case, it is declared. that Canadian, Named Blacklock. Watertown, N.Y., June bretlers, per Ib., 30c. to [taken two weeks ago, identified and buried as Joseph Kellar, who has now turned up alive, has been positively identified as that of Thomas vears of age, a carriage painter ployed with Pearl sireet until April 10th, when ho suddenly lock, a brother, who is in the under- taking business at Grafton, Ont., has been notified. Blacolock has been depondent latter part of the of little work. had finished reading ithe Power's suicide, winter on account One evening after he made the remark that some time he might do the same but little was thought of it at time. Crushed To Death. Oswego, N.Y., Junc 7.--James Kirk, twenty-two years old, a deck-hand on the tow Matthew was barge Haven on Sunday. The Sherman, in tow of the steamer Hall, put to the Lchigh Valley astern, slipped and went between the barge and the dock. He has a sister, a school teacher, at Ottawa, Ont., and a brother at Ant- warp, N.Y Good Crops In Sight. Belleville, June 7.--The market week was quite brisk. Quo- Live hogs, 87.50. dressed 89 to $9.50; loose hay plentiful at $14 to $14.50 per . ton, baled same; oats, to 75¢c. and scarce; potatoes, bag: butter, 25¢. to ;. 20¢.; hides, 9¢. to 9c veéals, 12c. per Ib.: No. spring lambs, 25¢.; horse- the past tations were : kins, $1.10 pelts, $1. coulda't understand it until T was in. formed that it was the rule of the theatre that everybody who purchas. ed a seat 'should provide his own. The place 'at night was packed--the ap- proaches to the theatre being crowded with contingents of families enter. ing the place, followed by negro ser vants carrying hali-a-dozen chairs on their shoulders." Maoris Unmoved. "When the United States flees steamed into New Zealand waters," writes an Auckland correspondent w The Standard of Empire, "the magui- ficient array of warships left one' section of the community wholly un- moved. No Maori could be brought to see anything wonderful about it. They have traditions of their own about navigation, and when they re- call the fact that their ancestors ex plored the Antaretic in their big deck- ed canoes, discovered Ameriea, popu- lated Japan, and sailed the Pacifie from end to end, you cannot persuade them that there is anything remark- able about the visip" of the United States battleships. Adl the way from the Siam Peninsula to New Zealand, and up to the northward beyond Sag- halien, the Muoris, according to their own legends, have left their traces; and it is certainly a curious fact that there are hundreds of words in Maluy- sian dialects which are still part of | the Maori vernacular of to-day." "Practice and Be Sure." Viscount Wolverhampton better re. | membered, perhaps, as Sir Henry Fowler--who has recently been ap- pointed Lord President of the Coun- cil, has declared that®when he made his first speech in the House, he felt that it was the ofisis of bis life. He does not write out his speeches; his plan is to saturate his mind with the facts, and then to make a few notes of the order in which he proposes to deal with them in his speech, these notes being. confined to the facts and their verification. He is strangely free from mannerisms and affectations, and there are very few men who ap- proach him in lucidity. "If you would become a great speech-maker," | says Lord Wolverhampton, "practice, practice, practice, and always' be sure of your facts!" Origin of Durban. Durban, the scene of the great con- vention now pondering the possibility of a united South Africa, figures, says The London Daily Chronicle, in early gazateers as D'Urban, a form of spelling which links it visibly with the British commander who took Port | Natal from the Dutch and gave it his | own name. Sir Benjamin D'Urban, born in 1777, had practically compiat- ed his brilliant military career before he became governor of the Cape, and his conversion of Natal from a Boer to a British colony waa his last great accomplishment. Tn "1842, when the thing happened, there was but a handful of farmers at the port; now the population is over 60,000, and the | harbor, which was then a place to keep clear of, is safe enough for even a British warship. Vegetables In England. Until the end of the reign of Henry VIII, according to the historian, Hume, no carrots, turnips, or other edible roots were produced in Eng- land. The few that were used were imported, and the state papers con- tain numerous references to. the dis- to the continent tables and salads to grace, the table at important roysl anquets.,. Cucumbers also were un- | known until the 16th century, and celery owes its introduction in Eng- land to the French Marshal Taillard, who was imprisoned in England after his defeat by Marlborough. Broccoli and cauliflower came from Cyprus in the 17th century, and the potato, brought to England by Sir Walter Raleigh about 1584; was "not | in general use until 1663, when the | Royal Society directed attention to it and recommended its cultivation. What Telepahy Is. Telepathy is the transference of emotions and sensations between | souls, while thought transference is the transmission of words, ideas or images from mind to mind. Thus telepathic communication is possible only between persons of a certain de- gree of soul devel ent and between whom there is a degree of emotional hides, 2c, done. and prospects splendid crops. to $2.75: tallow, rough, | ing any degree of sympathetic vibra-| sympathy, while in transference of thought one dominant, positive mind may affect ef without there be | prosperity flows. At the head of these farms is 'a genial and simple gentie- man of wide experience and decp knowledge--Dr. Wm. Saunders, who perhaps as much as any public ser. vant in Canada to-day, deserves well of the people of this country. In the #nnual report of the Ex- | perimental Farms is set forth the re- sults of the year's experiments made in almost every branch of work by means of which wealth is produce] from the soil--in agriculture in all its departments, in stock-raising, in horticulture, in the keeping of poul- try and bees, etc. It is an ordinary looking book in the usual depart- mental blue cover, but it is net se dull as it looks, even to a man who never held a plough or drove.a har- vester; and to one interested in farm- ing according to modern methods it is filled with valuable information. Here - and there throughout the book, scattered among the results of experiments respecting the = growing of wheat and the fattening of cattle, are agreeable and sometimes surpris- ing reminders of the extent of our country, and the rapid progress it haa made in recent years, Time flies, but the development of Canada keéps pace with it. It does not require 'a long memory to recall the arrival, only a few springs ago, of a band of English im- migrants known as the Barr colen- | ists. They went to a distant part of Saskatchewan, then remote from rail | ways and almost wholly "without habitants. © Many of the colonists | were city folk to whom country life, and especially country life on the frontier, was a thing unknown. At first they lived in tents, and most of them had a hard struggle, But British pluck was there, stout. hearts, and willing hands, and the ecoloniats got on their feet. The land began to grow wheat and a town sprung up. They gave it the name of Lloyd- minster. And here_comes in the report of the Experimental Farms. [In this section devoted to the work of that learned entomologist and botanist, Dr. James Fletcher, who died but.a few weeks ago, there is ,a condensed account of his last lecturing tour in the Canadian west. One of the places visited was Lloydminster where, wrote Dr. Fletcher, "a large meeting was held in the afternoon." What a change a few vears had brought about on that bit of western prairie. The little handful of colonists--all-British colonists they loved tg eall them- selves--of whom it had been predict- ed that their success was impossible, had developed into a thriving com- munity, sufficiently large and pro- gressive to make it worth while for a scientist to go there and talk 'to those farmers about 'the best varieties of grass to grow on their prairie farms and how to fight the farmers' foes in the forms of weeds and insects. Little has been heard of late of the Barr colonists at Lloydminster, . sim- ply because they have formed a part, and after all a small one too, of the current of development and prosper- ity that has been flowing through the Canadian west. This 'station is at Fort Vermilion, 'on the Lower Peace river, and, as the crow flies, 350 miles north of Ed- monton. During the past few years farming hdd been carried on there by the Lawrence family, the pioneers of the Peace river country. Mr. F. 8. Lawrence asked the Government to establish an experimental station there, and so prove to the world the agricultural worth of the country in which he had absolute faith. The request was granted, and many varie- ties of * grainy fodder-plants, vege- tables and fruit trees and shrubs were carefully packed and forwarded to Edmonton in time to go north by the first boat leaving in the spring. But navigation opened late, and fear- ing that the seed and plants would not reach Fort Vermilion for use that season Mr. lawrence hauled them by team acrosa country to Petice River Landing. The season was not favor- able, for spring came late and the frost came early, and the grasshop- pers destroyed many of the vege'ahles and grasses. In order to give certain information the experiments must be carried on for more than one year. . Passenger Traffic to Halifax. The spring rush of the passenger trains to Halifax (N.R) has now set in in real earnest. Although the num- ber of passengers to rrrive this vear -has not-go far been as large as. in the past few vears, this is explained by the fact that the Salvation Army is them; and further, besides all this, it is like hell in the very substance of it, for it is a stinking, loathsome thing, and so is hell." It is amusing to know that in the latter years of his life King James himself succumbed to the allurements of tobacco, and, though he 'pighead- edly continued to denounce it, smok- ed habitually in secret. » Their crusade against tobacco has been. continued ever since. Uncon- sciously, and with the very best of intentions, this army of zealots has disseminated a great mass of misin- formation which had no basis of fact and which was conceived in the fer- tile and imaginative brains of a trio of Park Row space writers. Take, for instance, the sacred fiction that the dark colored oil which lodges in the bowls of pipes and stains the fingers of cigarette smokers is the deadly . poison - nicotine. Chemical scientists know, of course, that this substance is' not nicotine, but simply tar, tobacco tar, distilled from the tobacco just as coal tar is distilled fram coal and pine tar from pine wood. Maids of Honor and Their Work. InEngland the maids of honor are chosen hy. the Queen herself from among the daughters of peers, who, if not themselves connected with the royal household, are nal friends of Her Majesty. A letter is always sent to the parents of the young lady fequesting that, as a personal favor to the Queen, she may be permitted to attend at court. As the position is undeniable, and the salary is about $1,500" a %par, the request is invar- iably a:cepiud, and then the newly- chosen maid receives from the - Lord Chamberlain the command for her first "wait." " The first thing brought to the maid of honor is her badge, which is a miniature picture of the Queen, set in brilliants, and suspended to a rib- bon." Just before' the dinner hour, the maid of honor in waiting has to stand in the corridor outside the Queen's private apartments. She car- ries a bouquet which, on entering the dinifig-room, she lays at the right hand of.the Queen's plate. The maid of honor sits at dinner next to the gentleman on the Queen's tight. This rule is relaxed when royal 'guests are present. After din- ner, unless otherwise commanded, the maid of honor retires to her owm room, when, however, she is frequent ly fetched to read, sing, play the piano, or take a hand at cards, Stromboli"s Flames. Stromboli rarely pours out streams of lava, for this Aeolian crater vom- its flume reistently and cinders ea The "lighthouse of the Méditerranean" has been known to stick to its function of torchbearer for. the space of 2,000 years. When- ever the tiny, regular eruption" takes place the stone drop back again into the crater. While the ancients re- garded Stromboli variously as the smithy of Vulcan and the headquar- ters of Aeolus, the men of the middle ages looked upon it as the main high- way fo purgatory. + The Gargoyle. The word "gargoyle" is closely akin to "gargle," for "gargoyle" is simply the French "gargouille'" (throat). It was 8 good name for the architectur- al monster through whose mouth the rain-water was carried off. But all idea of the throat had disappeared ih the terrible Gargonille de Rouen, the dragon which wasted a French district until St. Romanus threw it into the Seine. In after generations a huge sham gargouille used to be carried around the city once a year in memory. of this deliverance. Press-Gang Up-to-Date. It Great Briain, should, be invaded. come Dus Tig. Sbjct wonid be 10. Seize moi men, army anmual bill ations Eg ih soar a To motives may be The line for the electric railway be- tween Cobourg and Peterboro hae been survdyed from Cobourg to Rice Lake anid will be completed to Peterboro in a few weeks. ipit E Hi if Bg Hi LJ il IN ALL WALKS OF LIFE. Herpicide is Used to Cure Dan- i druff, ' E. H. Ixon, New York, N.Y. says: "1 am very fond of Herpicide and enjoy using it. (It is refreshing." Dr. J. H. Bush, Toledo, Ohio, writes: "Newbro's Herpivide has given hotter satisfaction than anything I have ever used." Mrs. Borkey, of Chadron, Neb.. says of Herpicide : "It cleaned my head of dandruff aid stopped my hair from falling ont. Ii ia the best romedy for dandrufl 1 ever used, and I have Gsed a great many.' R. 8, Coleman, Ann Arbor, Miek,, savs . "1 have used two bottles of Herp cide and ¢ ed benefit therefrom.' Sold by leading druggists. Send 10¢, - in stamps for sample to the Herpicide Co., Detroit: Mich. Ome dollar bot- tles guaranteed. G. W. Mahood spec- ial agent. 17 Albani Were a Man, The famous prima donna, who is announced to appear on the variety stage at a of $2500 a week, unlike Mme. Melba--who has latel been expressing approval of the Sul fragette movement--has a great opin- jon of the superiority of the sterner sex. "I am old-fashioned enough she confessed a short time ago, ™ still revere 'man' as of the superior sex. But how odd they are too! 'I suppose if I were a man I should be' odd too; but how funny are some men, what real children, how lovable with all their bigsheartedness, with all their experience of the world how trustful still, and--whén a woman is concerned--how often too easily taken) in!' And after thus qualifying. her! statement as to the superiority of man, Mme. Albani further confesses that if she were a man she wonld strive to see the world, and profit by all the good there is in every other country, in order to help to improve her own. Bhe is devo to England and to the English, as well as to her own native Canadian land. And "if I were a boy," to again quote her own words, "I am sure I should long to do something for and be something in my own country." People Must Like It. New Zealand's tal money order, savings a telegraph iness 1s increasing ffst; 6,750,000 more lets ters in 1907 than in 1906: parcels post increased by: 1,250,000; $13,040,000 des posits in postal savings banks in thred months; money orders increased $510,000; 1,736,000 telegrams sent in three months, an increase of 15,000. Razor as an Heirloom. David Carter of Durham, nglandg by. She Jeath of his heather, , has into the possession of a rasor, which has been in the family for ore than ois Taboo: somes iM ah rom father to son, and is . condition A | not sending out immigrants in ship 4 loads as formerly, and also that the Government agents are more particu- lar an to the class of people they send out. The class of immigrants these derangements of the systewn--| was able to get him a place with 3 either temporary or chronic -vou| farmer should go at goes Jo the nearesy vii ; eT = = Sid Oia he The setitic mist and ask him for a box of Ir. : ifte ingston J 4 hy Lu 4 2 Bae titio Hamilton's Pills. This perfect tonic: [Toronto News. against the election of G. E. Hodgine One of the most laxative will cure your indigestion: Miss May IP. Hinckley, one of the M.P., for Pontiac, Que, on the purify and enrich your blood; banish|most successful pupils of the gifted grounds of bribéy and corruption, : constipation by safe and natural|teacher, Herry Lautz, who is a mem- |[Wa¥ dismissed, by Judge Champagne, to. R. I. Stevenson's letters means; improve your appetite; quiet [ber of the Conservatory staff, leaves|in the Bryson superior court on Satur- 3 y Colvin writes: "1 have oil HA : your nerves, and help vou to sleep [within the next ten days for her home |day. Motion and counter-motion kept Shi dey. self "boand to face all ; soundly. Dr. Hamilton's Pills willlin Kingston, Ont., to veside with her | the case bofore the court for several the auf s minor eccentricities of | Gazetted Judge Of High Court. give vou wtrength and vigor. They |parents, Miss Hinckley made a very|months and there was a petition en- + the like. A will help you to work better; 25c.|decided impression at the Conserva-|teved against Me. Brabazon who con per box, or five boxes for #1, at all|tory concert on Thursday . evening, | tested the seal in the consirvative ine | or the Catarrhozone ¢'vm- {demonstrating in a charming way the | terests. Judge Champagne also dis sound methods of Mr. Lautz. misscd his. | tion between them--"Svastika." et ------ lc The Election Trial Over. - Stevenson Bad "Speller. polished and Fallnessand Bloating After Eating? | \ this - > el season has been exceptionally gdod, bo S - being mostly from the British Isles. . na } dealers, pany, Kingston, Ont. pes

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