SN " . 2 fidence in himself, - IN THE EARLY LES OLD SGRIP® MAS SOME INTER. CSTING PAGES. -. Little « Canadizn Weekiy's Captobns Recall Bygone D¥ys in Canada's + ARairs--~Grast. znd the Making of Queen's Uiive sity -- A Page of Ah-8 is "William Van Horne - by reminded at a ust' possible s of human seven paris :. 10 'man on played, apd how wa and all the irtain, let Lim 1 old newspaper If one wish glanes dd with trouble ol the things; o. hos + the \ a public lib- little Canadian ased 10 be ring is twen- shed its read. «u_putertaiming hour, wway, and at the + light on many a the day. It is the year 1889. n the bound er of the irs the name 1." once one' D ih ams . eders at the Bp eh pi tregls ¢ Cid ss with a' full-page TRYIN neakith one hand ho breast of his- coat, Jasped by the other { young woman in tuque und A second glance and jeorge M JSrant, principal of Quedp's Univer «ity, being welcom- ed -how\ by Canada : : stands a lady with an fi her hand. This is King. hut the greetings from Canada thut Prineipal Grant does not belong to Kingston "alone. He was a contemporary of the late Bir William Dawsom, principal of Me- Gill; they were both born and edueat- ed in the same little town, and per- haps they reff@sent the bast that Can. adian univerdics have yet produced. On. the next page are a couple of columns of what may be called cur- roi comment, One paragraph is very interesting when read by the light of recent events, The, Libergl party at Ottawa had thin been in opposition eleven years, and 2 had already had three leaders --Mr.- Mackenzie, who had led it into Opposition in 1878, Mr. Blake, who succeeded Mr. Mackenzie, but weaty. | {ng of "the up-hill and suming 1 hopeless fight, had resigned, to be fo Jowsl by Mr. Wilfrid Laurier, who at the time ofthe writing of that com: ment had been in the saddle two years. His first lieu tenant was Bir Richard « Cartwright. This is. what "Grip" wrote of them fwenty years ago: "Rumor again whispers "change is te be made in the leadership of the Reform party at an early date. r. Laurier expresses himself very ling ta hand over -the reins to Sit Richard Cartwright at any time,' buf Bir Richard does not manifest much enxiety to take 'them. "It is this indifference in the com. manding offiter that is demoralizing thy Grit rank and file, | A leadsr odght to be full obyeon: and loaded 40 the very muzzle, with ambition. Laurier is a most admirable ifted gentleman, (admired by } iS and foe alike, but he is not a litical pug@ist. Ti Rusia ws 8 perfect Parlia: mentary John L., but he either has a want of faith in himself or the future of the Frye at robs him of his strength, ; "What seems to be needed is a combination, of the qualities of the two men Isn't there #sbme young iberal 1ooking for a job?' If the man who penned those lines 'is alive, he would be compelled to admit that in this case at least he did not read eight the signs of the times; that muéh less did he nnderstand the character of the man about whom he was writing. > \ : 'Mr. Tart, of Sif whitrid, adhe is known to-day, lacking in confidence in himeelf, or in ambition, er not _welighing a fight--what could be more "false? Let apyone ask the Op n to-day whit they think about it. there was' "ony young Liberal Tooking for a job" he did not get it, Laurier stuck- to his guns, and seven years later they battered down the citadel of power, held by his oppen- ents for eighteds. long years. A little SEH a 8 Willa" in whieh Mr Gris ng the figures. ney have been Aten! in coek- fight ® ro and each eh is bird in his hands. . Thomas signs of collapse. - 'also ¢ "that Mr, ithe face of Bir er and At , while that a face that re nds 'one of Hon. \Edward Blake. Near the scene of the fight is a rail. wach: ] Frank McCarron, 'wh | i £ ull i payment of his eX ment. The contraetoy, Mr. O. L. | Hohn, r, that o Asaoth ne, healing --_-- T NEW IDEA IN BRIGES. Tr ussed 'C 'Concrete Bridge on the Etobicoke. Wa With the opening recently of the 'new bridge across the Etobicoke {River connecting the counties of York and Weel at the Middle road, s | new era in bridge-building in Canada began. For many months bridge- builders and engineering - experts have .been waiting te see whether the theories of the two . young Canadian engineers, Frank Barber and Clarence R. Young, would stand the tests on the day of trial. Both men are well known in Toronto, Mr. Barber being engineer for the County {of York, and Mr. Yeu a lecturer ion enghewiing at the University of Toronto. Bince entering into part | nership they have advocated building | bridges of reinforced conerete, the | ¥hole weight to be $arried on trusses built of reinforced concrete. They | claimed" that the cost would be no | greater than an all-steel construetion, {that it would carry a greater load, | present a more beautiful architeetural appearance, and outlast by many | $ppes the ordinary life of a steel | bridge. The theories were pladsible,g { but no council wished to be the first | to experiment, i Récently when the County Coun- | cils of York and Peel decided to build A steel bridge across the Etobicoke Mr, Barber renewed his efforts to try | out his theories, and the councils con- sented to jointly share the risk of af cks, agreed to #cept the contract | at the price of the lowest tender for steel bridge, and the work was be- | gun in May. | | Once a freshet came down the | | river, which at the bridge i eighty. | two feet wide, and swept away a lot |of staging and forms. Finally the! metal work in the shape of nineteen | tons of three-quarter inch steel rods | and steel trusses was put in place | and surrounded by wooden "forms." It took three montlia, to get it ready. "Then early in 'the gréy dawn of a Monday morning a gang of men started to work mixing the concrete { and filling the forms. They worked { continuously from daybreak till after sunset each might for six nights, At night they slept on the ground beside their 'work. is close to the hour of midnight on the Baturday night the | last shovelful of concrete was Hirown {in, and the men celebrated the ope- | | easion in their own way. Their ob- | ject in getting the wet mixture in quickly was to make the bridge one | solid piece of conerete. All of the usual tests have been | applied, and an extra novel and un- | rehearsed one. A drove of caltle, 167 {in all, eame to the river fo drink. i These were driven on to the bridge. | With the great strain of the huddled, struggling herd upon it the vibration of the bridge was scarcely percept- ible. The bridge has a span of over eighty | feet. In appearance it, is a piece of handsome and substantial masonry, | It is ornamented by a shapely balus- trade, which looks as perfect' rs cut! stone. The cost of the structui: was | lesg than $4,000. The New ¢ Vark A vetic ¢ rien, founded hy Pr, Cook and his strong supporters in the North Pol« controversy. fAWrouch its board of directors, has * dropped the name of the Rrookyn explorer fram tha ralle Yon dville, K has a "ant nf vmae Wise, envinecer on the New York Wu waa fotnlly infvred by -hoive triton the head he an mei! rans while irassine Vock Perlin, NY. The fire iman took charge of the passenger train, lib. ° Ame Stops a Cough In One Night: The Story of Sufferers from chitis, Asthma and Catarrh Proves the Value of Catarrhozone, Bron- A cough may be Catairhal with © af dry tekling in the thrbat, it may be] accompan.ed by partial stoppage of the mostris end she wtage of wreaty. Often thee. i i a gagging in the throat ¢ cough tears and hurts, have a hundred differont 28 \your's may be due to any yPhwing = Asthma Inflammed Throat | 4 Exposure Bronchitis. Enlarged Tonsils Padumonia. Inflammation. Croup. . Btoinech Disorders Pleurisy. The one remedy upon which physicians are re- lying to-day is Catareh- vous It removes the cause of the . cough, doesn't smother it. Ca- tarrhozons is a soothing healing, "direc cure" cand cures the conditions that causs the Fough. Catarrhozona is infin- itely superior to cough medicines tablets sprays and emulsions, which for the most part ure of no practical value exgept to ease the eaugh for the time be- ing. Often liguid cough remedies contain opium, morphine aud cooling, With Catarrhorone you take no drogs---you. em- ploy Nature's way--just inhale © 'atarrhozone's oi \ and relief and cure rompt/ r mpi. wonderful samic, vapo abny withé ta the in bronchia} tibes imbocsible for : Island's { let in light and givgfrondom of growth { boughs. | petition for air and light. | the | the 4 ¥ravely dad the magistrate view the NEWFOUNDLAND'S T= Pulp, Forests Have a Chain All Their Own. : Paper-making is one of those rare} trades which keep alive the romance of elemental , life and are curiously beneficent to the long chain of their workers, says W. Beach Thomas in The Montreal Standard. I write with with the stnell of fir and pine in my nostrils, and through the trunks gleams a spacious river, gold with the sunlight of Newfoundland's sunny autumn. The great plains of Alberta and the Northwest of Canada loom spacious and ample in tite imagina- tion of Europe, Pat they lack. the supreme charm of Newfoundland, the wide rivers sweeping between woods to the fretted coast. In these woods the romance of pd- per-making begins, and the romanee appeals as nearly to thosé who desire | the woods for their own sake as to the others who find, their romance in the sound of "the iron axe that hammer- ed" the iron heart of the oak" or in the elemental lives of cheery wood- men. The: thing most abhorrént to the woodman and to his science is "denudation." He prunes the forest 3 the ¢iid of its better constitution, rust as a gardener prunes his fruit trees. Gardeners cut out boughs to to others branch The woodman, | whether he cuts for paper-making or | for shipbuilding, fells trees- with as good a motive and as great a pre- cision as the gardener clips twigs and i While he cuts for present use his | eye is on a distant future, and 1 must | believe that some of the 'charm of | | character in the Newfoundland wood- | man comes from this habit of regard | for the days to come. Let no one | deny the impressive marvel of an un- | touched fir forest, but it is melan-y choly as well as gplendid. It is prop- | ped by decaying pillars, and beams | of dead wood lie aslant or rot among + the mosses. "See such a wood before | and behind. the march of the wood- man, and you will never again think of him as a devastator. "He is com: pelled by his art and his contract to the negative duty of cutting the dead | away, ust as 'he is compelled, like © the fishérman, to take out only trees of the greater girth. In the primal | fir forest thin and weak trunks strive vainly, like a child in erowded slums, to achieve robust form in the com- The life of these. weaklings is saved by the for- | ester, and behind his advance growth begins' at a healthy rate new to the forest nursery in its primal days. The woodman's march, as seen from a distance, leaves patterns, sometimes roughly geometric, sometimes ha hazard and sinuous, which curiously enhance the interest of the landscape - | A piece of the wood, as you look af it from the river or one of the great | lakes, appears almost unbroken gold | with no more than points and dots of | green. This patch will be alongside | a wood of which the greenery is only broken by veins and pools of gold. But for the color, you would hard- ly have noticed ' that the denuders und "commercial dévastators" had finished with the one piece and left | the other. From the one the taller uce and pines--none less 'than eight inches (in diameter--have been cleared, and the birches--which hold their golden leaves till November-- have been' left. The woodland is clean of rotting timber, and the suns of a very sunny climate dapple the mossy floor. The birch, whieh abounds through- out Newfoundland, is the nurse of the cone-bearers The spruce, in three varieties, the balsam fir, the white pine, which we call in England Weymouth pine, all trees intoler- ant of light, sprout from seeds deep in the soil, under the cool canopy of biréhes, till they attain in thirty years or so a comhandiz wg height. At the moment. when the usefulness of the protection is over the nurse be- ing to surrender to the child, and the oreen gpires of fir and pine pas ter the spre ading birch. King-Hearted Polictmen. The members of the Tordnta police: forex>"ars nothing if not me gnanimons They are mostly big men from the noft h of Ireland, und their hearts are ind, even though they are obliged | alge in a little rough work ocea- ! Many a tipsy citizen has helped on his wey and guided | his ovn doorstep. by one of thes: g icllows, and for the most part are far more ready to pass n | civik word with the: passer-by than | to interfere with him. quality of magnanimity ecam~ out in a dfoll wey the other morning 4 the Police Court" A resident of The Word" and his wife had been efraitned by the morality department on a charge of an offence subversive oi «good opder in the cammunity. Ho { Hien | 38%, that the ovidenca being clear, ne gonvieted them, and instead of giving the option of a fine, sentenced them to sixty days each in jail. The woman took the matter mly; but her husband broke down altogether. He sobbed in the dock as though his heart would break. An officer led him out, and he wept copiously as he crossed the esurt toom. As he resch- od the door he broke down physice'- ly, ud leaned groaning against the, lintel of the doorway. The officer waited until he stopped for breath, and thes plated his hand kindly up= on his \shou "Come aides ; now," * he said com- passionately; "and if ye like ye can ciy a8 ye go the hallway." The Wheat. Outlook. It is estimated that this year the combined ont } Stops of Ca Canada, the United 8 France, ' partments gre : gong: \ {different waterways | {inerangs p= "HOUSES ON -- . Novel Enterprise Proposes to Go to Hudson Bay' by "Mater. One 'of the most intéfesting enter- prises 'of modern times is that of the udson Bay Motor and Access Asso- ciation, which has-for its object the opening up of a virgin, forest and waste tb the prospector, the tourist; the sporteman and to commerce. The company has now under construction 8 motor line from Jack Fish on the C.P.R. to Hudson Bay. Smith Bros., Duke and Parliament streets, Toronto, have just shipped six portable houses, which will be used in the construction of this road. The house are on wheels, and pan also be put on sleighs. Two of the houses aré fitted up to contain beds, One house is used. for a kitch- en, with a small compartment in which are two bads. This fits on to a dining-room with accommodation for 12 men. There is also a reading- room, and, mow under construction a house for storing the trunks of the men, and another for bathroom and wash-house. All these different com- on wheels and can be readily put up end taken down. As each half mile-of the road is built the houses will bs drawn on; 80 Shia the employes will always bo close » their work. "All the houses are Es | with galvanized iron and thers are two thicknessss of paper between the fron and the woodwork 80 that warmth in the coldest weather is assured. A huge scow for taking the houses across lakes slso. zccom- panies the outfit, The route wil! ba by motor car ahd mator boat from Jac *k Fish to Long Lake, which is forty miles in length, thence fo Devil I'ish Lake and Eski- Lake. and thes Albany River, which is neviglhie for large steamers and war ve = : This rond 1 for bringing dewn the: large cr of salmon to Ontario ind American points, which now goes vie Hudson Bay and Labra- dor to eastern points. Soveral motor Boats will be shipped for use on the Nineteen hun. and nineteen hun 3 xd and eley re the tefcentenary ars of the avery of the bays yo the death of the explorer, Henry Hodgpn, swhich it is proposed to celebrate." It expected that the line will bx in operation next year, Charles Thompson Hervey, CE, is in charge of the work. Fite of Andre. An interestitig story connected with the long lost Andre, the explorer who twelve years ago left Bpitzbergen in ot balloon in search of the, north pole, nd never returned, has Been told by | Bishop Pascal of Prince Albert, who has been the guest of - the Oblate Mathers in Ottawa. Bishop Pascel has charge of an im. mpnse territory cxtending even so far north #s the. pole. His story had to ro: with the. country in 'the eastern rortion of his diocese between Sas- etchewan "and Hudson Bay. There 1, a young priest, Father Turquotille, r member of the Oblate Order, who resides at Reindeer Lake, who had veled oxtensively among the Eski- Io i in the northern part of the region {n order to learn their language. On one cecgsion. he went with a nomadic party about six duys' jour- ey to the northeast of Reindeer Lake, ind there met another party of Eski- mos. Noticing a revolver which the rricst carried the Eskimos told him that -sofhe years before a "white house" descended from the sky and contained white meén who had killed many caribod to supply themselves with food! They intimated that the white men were in ® half starving condition. None uf the men were now living, they stated,. but the "white iouse" was still in existence and was used by members of the tribe as- a sort of 'supply house for rope with which it was ¢overed. It is thought that this may .ex- plein the disappearance of Andre and his cothpanions, a% Andre may have lan the place indicated and Father Turquotille, 'said p Pascal, will make another ray shortly ad will eavor to get all the facts. Mergers Are Costly. Whether cogl and iron will be ave, cheaper is another matter. There is ah object lesson in the cement mer- get. It represents an.enormons trust, {#hd the immediate cffect has been an in the cost of cement. There will be a saving in the operations or the expenses of the coal and iron com- dred and ten is { pany, bat will inure to the advantage {of the stockholders, and i will be a ® the" petple, the consumers, do not have t6 pay tribute to some one. Tn every direction there is the tendency to trusts--in groceries, in fuel, in leather, in Sete tit, in plumb. ers' supplies, in paper, in everything in which men or money can command or control. It would be ail right if i the people did not suffer, but usualy they are ground Between the u and the nether millstone. -- oh mere; BWhic, Kingston. The Troubles of a ¥ 'The New York Herald discovers a danger in the creation of a Canadian navy. is no fear that the in- ternational good-will which now exists between Canada and the Baiied States will be in Canada proposes to. 'and pew tain a navy. We may pared to fight. But The for fear in. the a ay ikely 40 ensue in the aot "DOUBLES" IN REAL LIFE. | King and Lord Knollys," His Sire --tary, Have Exact Replicas. The King might presumably claim, if he. thought it werth ay. his "Court Circular," sieing that>he in- spires, by his acts or by his words, almost the whole of the matter con- tained therein. But it would be quite conceivable that, if an uninitiated per- son happened to call upon the real editor of that high-class newspaper, he might come sway with the idea that it was actually and edited by the King of England. * Mr." David Tolle 'mache 1s the editor of the "Court Circular," a map well known in press citeles, but it is a strange coincidence, considering the appointment he holds, that he is so like King that he. las beén mis taken for him times without number. Onee when he was dining at 8 res. taurant 'in Boulogne, a posse of gen darmes 'iad hastily to be gent for keep in order the huge crowd which had assembled to do honor to and 40 welcome the King of England, who they thought was paying a sort of surprise visit to the famous old sea. rt. Quite a romance could be imagined with respect to two men who hold very different positions in the world, for if Lord Knollys, the urbane, tact. ful, kindly, polished private. secretary to His Majesty the King, were to wish "it to be understood that he was quiet. ly engaged with his duties in his of. fice at Buckingham Palace or Wind. sor Castle, as the case migh{ b=, where he was oceupied upon some strictly private business for his royal master, he could not do better than to install in his chair, pro tem, Mr. Os- car Parker, the editor of The English Illustrated Magazine. "It does not fol low that the Journalist would be able to do the 'secretary's work, but he would serve as his substitute so far as appearance is concerned, for the two men are strikingly alike both in feature and: figure There are two men in public life who could not be more alike if, in- stead of being absolutely unrelated, they, had been twins, and--a most ex: traordinary coincidence -- these two gentlemen actually opposed one an- other in South Hackney in the Gen- eral Election of 1895. 'Lord Justice Moulton- -then Mr. Fletcher Moulton Senior Wrangler -and, famous advo- cate, is & Liberal, and Mr. H. Robertson, who is also a barrister, {8 a Conservative, and, it goes withoyt saying, they .did not appear upon he same platform. But, had they done ! so, it would have been difficult to tell | the one fromthe 'other, and when they appeared in their respective carriages | on election day the people had to look, npt-at the candidate, but at the color of the ribbon upon the horses' heads and driver's whip before they could make up their minds as to whether it was their duty to cheer or to "boa." Clarke, the famous advoeate, are very familiar to the English public by rea. son of his Parliamentary eminence and the fact that he has been-promi- nent in sonie of the greatest law casos of modern times. His side-whiskers and his strong, benevolent face would make him recognizable anywhere: but he has a double too, who, probably quite unconsciously, but nevertheless with extraordinary fidelity, reprodug 5 Sir Edward's appearance. In face, fie- ure, general build--even te the dn. tail of side-whiskers--Mr. Pritchard, one of the* best known of Parliament. ary nsgents, is Sir Edward larke's double, : ' The closest resemblance batween two present members of the Hous» of Commons is that which exists bstween Sir James H. Yoxall, the urbane sce retary of the National Union. of Teach- ers and one of our foremost art eon- noisseurs, end Mr. Russell Rea, th member for Gloucester. Many a depu- tation, waiting upon Sir James Yox-. all on some educational n made a mild rush for Mr Russel a3 he strolled in' the lobby, wholls unconscious of what awaited him The two gontlemen are co "mixed." but it is a remar that the member for Glouc more often mistaken for the me hor for Nottingham West than vie versa A Convict's Humor. !¥¥he town hall tower at Perth ern Australia, started in 1878 and fin. ished in 1879, was built by conviet labor, the architect also be ing con- viet, The latter was evidently possess. ed of a very keen sgmse of the hu. morous, for some tige after the buill- ing was finished (so runs + tary which is generdlly acerpted as tru- the authorities duddeny discovered thatzin the small .corner windows he had _introdweed the broad arrow in. verted, and over one of the retions the hangman's rope. Yet, although these are so plain when pointed out, very few of the thousands who gaze at this elock day by day are nware. of ese facts. To add interest in local s to this subje®, it may be add. od that 'this building is soon to be pulled down and a new building erect. ad on the site, --8trand. . » West. Suffragette and Sufieagist. Mrs. Emmeline Pankhurst, 'leader England, in the course of. speech defined the difference suffragist and suff AE os in con id 3 is ramen' bad turned. 1 EEF: ¥ If E g while, to being editor-in-chief of the | reonally The face and figure of Sir Edward + of the woman suffrage movement i] © PSGE; SEVEN. [DEPARTING FOR ORIENT. De WU TING 7 IEE GREANDION BOARD al I'll be as 1 do, | pire air and aave pure will be New York, in 1939, food, Jan = here and if you live , On pure here words Chinese "mini of the Cun ard | to Liv l { thoughts, you to greet} | me," | Wu ter, line were the parting Tinglang, retiving as the Luatania, left her pier on the of way right, now, if you' must have x o | ture. What, x They would be afraid: They wo ) 1 rot pose. Well ask them yourself. What new ow | erpool The retiring minister said "All the Jadies ¥ r get Frhey're willing ¥ Theit's a Hurry up!" The Wu himself, garments women, like Dr wore deessed in CHimes None scemedt to mind the camera | { they click-elick clicked, except the o puby back theld in the Il Fy iow SATaR TER IN-LAW AND if SS ILUSUIANIA ceo arms of a maid eral snapshots had been taken Dr waved - his Wa arms good maluredly and guid : 2 : "That's for an ounge, Now inter. the |} You I'm tired intor- enough Let's go to Hperview fr Well ot br. there dict will be is to cut off their queues," 'Ah, not vet. 1 don't want to talk about that. Wall ¥" he are vou coming hack ¥"' n 16D." he answered, promptly ho old will you be then ¥' "That's my wt I'l} w younger then than I am now. I'm get ting younger. People fiery don't know how to keep young and healthy. You soem to live to eat only." must vie rng me is a report that'an sued soon allowing Chi. nese secret ( WEDDING AT CANNIFTON. Exemption By-laws Passed Council by Acclamation. . 3 Cann fton, Jan. 5.--Bchool re-opened on Monday with Miss Hazel bawson; of Brighton, as assistant. Canuifton | Sunday school sastained its old time! reputation for having 'the best enter tamment on the circuit and this year it was fully up to the mark. A quiet we 1 Pe took place ut the Lome of Mis, iousolus, on Wednesday, when her grand: dung hier, - Miss' Hl Burnside, was united in Hat tinge to Charles Maguire, L'Amable. The bride taught school near Bancroft for the past four vedrs, where she is - highly esteemed. The vouny couple left fn Toronto and thenes-to St. Joseph's Island to visit he jurtite, On their return they will reside at 1"Amable. Miss Elda Haighty fencer at Flin ton spent the hol day here with her parents. Miss Eve'vn Rorke leit op Tues lay oy fake charge of a school at Eldorado. . and Mrs. Thomas Fox of Sasks oe mn, Sask., are here to spend the winter with hér parents, Mr. und Mis. Thomas Smith, Hrd. Martin a-d daughter, of Picton, and Mrs. Me Cutcheon and Miss Evelyn, of Stirl-s ing, spent New Year's Day at CG. W Kerc's. Master Cecrge Rorke, critical ly ill of scarlet fever, is out of dang er. PP. 'D. Shorey and family, of New burgh, s®nt the holidays with friends. h re The township coune'l was jel ac:lamation, but tors was taken to portially exempt rom taxation the improvements of the Burril Rock Drill company, also th improvements on the Point Ann Qudr res Lid, for a period of ten veurs. Both by-laws passed with very littles opposition. Mirs Mary! Csliery and Muster Ross and Mi ins Anna, spent New Yoar's with friends in (! amphelford Miss Bessie Peterson, of Toronto, visited her aunt, Mrs. KneesUlast week. Mr. Un derdown, of Humbo!it, Sask. shipped a earload of horess from. hers, Tuesday. HH. Brentnall and son of Kingston, were guests ob.-H, Dunning las: week. Mr. Elks, of William Ellis, arrived here Sas'tatchewsn, yesterday. J. L. mer left for Detroit. on Monday. Charlie Knees is still confined room, suffering from 8 severe attach of rheamat sm. Mrs Bailey, of Queens: | cled hy a vote of the eles fee, n father from Pal Mrs, to her Ag wn Bey hosk how the name 'hore, pending a few days with G. W.! L attended | Reeve, On {from the Bouvia home. attends the in Belleville. Keir, while Mr. Bailey Dairyman's - association Alfred Thrasher is seriously ill of pleuro-pneumonia. A meeting of 'the W, SH. was held at the homie of Mrs, Chas. © Callery, on Wednesday Mrs. Frank Ray, of Peterboro, visited friends here during the holidays. Mrs, 1. Q. Fairman. returved yesterday from an extended visit with relatives in Stirling. i ! Flinton News Budget. Flinton, Jan. 6.-The entagiainment Methodist church: was Amount raised 8506 Hazel Airhenrt, a tt the The singing of little {girl of four years old was excellent. was elected 1 Campbell; councillors, Brydén,: W. 6G: Hornick, Michael Crogan and P. A. Wickware. B, D. Pagrott, Camden East, is here, going to take charge of the mill. Rev, nD. Williams, of Bethany, was in our village this week Mise Wilma Beatty left. on Monday for Napanee Collegiate to resume Bhes studies. Miss Hannah of Myers' Cave, is tea hing in school section No. 11. Mr and Mrs. William and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Demore, of North Bav: are si ww in and around Flin « Mis A. Banford left here for Eagle Hill Tuesday. She is engag- od to teach in Ferguson school thers Master Willard and Miss Jennie. Dafoe the holidays with their grand. parents, . Mr and Mrs. Coutler, Ae Mr. and Mrs. Frank Con- City, Mich., spent Christmas brother, William Conger. Master Clayton Maurisett was a visi- tor at his uncle's, Richard" Clarke, Napanee. Misses lena and Mary spent Chroistrias with their Master Yitteid Léssard is in Mendall Miss Lottie spent Christmas R. W. Kimmaorly. of Kingston, is visit. Mes. A. M. Wiliama. Sl cee he The following couneil RJ Joh A Critehley, Conte on spent tinplite Ray gor; with, a Champagne parents, Montreal Kimmerly and "his niece Keach, of Napande, with his hrother, Leonard Rolufs ing his mister visit friends John Kinney is under arrest on suse picion of having murdered Adolvhus Houvia at Altoona, N.Y., Thursday lagt. Tt is said Kinney is trying implicate others. Over 3100 was taken The Rev, W. D. N.Y, aged eighty, und Mrs. | Alexander, aged seventy-one, married on T bursday, Fox; of ~ were Kidneys Regulated And» Backache © Vankehes: A Ushally sufferers * from bar Kackhe, 'bladder trouble or out-of-order kid keys, fool policed alter several dgees of Pape' Diuretic. Misery «in the back, sides or faint. sick headache, inflamed or ewollin eyelids, neTvoushoas, rhemgndtivm and darting pains, beast palpitations, dis zines, slooplemsness, fistless, worn out feeling, and other symptomi of inactive, sluggish kidneys simply van. ish. Uneontrofiable' urination {especially : ); smarting, discolored water MD MARE THE ier 5K FE eure belare. you realize it. The moe ment you suspert any kidney or urine ary derangement, or feel Yhiimatic pains," begin taking this harmless - me- divine, with the knowledgs that thers is mg other remedy," WFny : ™ anywhere else in the which" will efit so thorough and prompt a cure ad a SOc. Sreatment of Pape's Phuretis, "which any druggist can supply. Your physician. pharmacist, banfer or. any merenntile agency will tell you that Pape, Thompson & Pape,. of Cia. cionaty is a large ang responsible me icine concern, thoroughly worthy of your confide, } Only Saratiys resalis cam come from taking Diuretic; "god a" few days atm will make any one Yoel ' 3 After sev-\ well © to 3 Preble, «. MN ~F