Daily British Whig (1850), 19 Sep 1912, p. 10

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THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBEY 10, 1912 The right. white for white clothes can be had only when you use OMO cleanses thoroughly - without the least harm to the most delicate fabrics, OMO bleaches and puri- fies better than the sun -and country ajr. OMO makes not only a better wash but an easier wash, for mo rubbing or hard work is required. OMO removes stains from tea, coffee, cocoa, fruit, etc., like magic. To get' spotiessly white linens, dresses, blouses, ae ask your grocer for 10c. . Safe and sure but must aot be used for colored articles, woollens or flannels. Pugsley, Dingman @ Co. _ Limited, « Toronto ROB. PAYNTER bas takea #® business ¢* the avis at, the old stand, HP phan gee S00 AYS READY RELIEF "cuREs ASTHMA for thiv disease are the bi n br desetrt spoonful on Fetiring to rogt. Of teaspoonful of the Resdlvent i po ET etm eration by Taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Pa. -- "For three years Mahoningtown, 1 suffered untold misery every month, and had to stay in THE BISONS ASYLUM WAINRIGHT PARK 18 HOME OF | THE LAST BIG HERD. : The Majestic Animal Which Roamed | the Prairies In Countless Heads a | Generation Ago Is Now the Subject | of an Anxious Census on the Part | of Zoological Experts--Hay Kept for Emergencies, To s6e him in the cramped paddock of some cily "200," with his wicked | little ooking out sullenly from | under a vast mat of dingy hair in| woeful need of eurrycombing, the buf. falo hardly appears a subject for ro- mance. Who, seeing him alohe in ig- nominydus captivity, can imagine this dismal, slow-moving beast leading a herd--thousands strong--in mad ca- reer across his 'native plains? Yet, if such flerce joys have been denied him, it is only because he, like some of "his betters," has been born too late to fit a charged environment But if we go back a few years--a very few years--and tras®port our- selves to our own great plains, where the railway and the steam plows and multitudes of newcomers from west and east and south are turning the ancient sod and cutting the prairies int wheat fields, -we--shall find the buffalo a favorite with romance. Be- tween them, he and the Indian have lént to the "Great Lome Land" a- touch of vivid life that heightens all our interest in it. More than any- thing stationary, the sweep of the winds, the wanderings of the explor- ers and the redmen, the urrestricted roaming of the buffaloes teach us to realize the spaciousness of the plains. When eye and mind are disquieted by 'the ugliness of man's first at. tempts to make himself at home in a new region of the earth, it is well 1%0 have poets to remind us that { "things are not what they seem' that there may be poetry in the strug- | gle of the dweller in a miserable lit- 1 tle shack to subdue wild pature to his j will, and that, as Kipling gssérts, | romance, in this age of steam and i machinery, is still king, working his unconsidered miracles in our "'back- ward-gazing world." But if the rail- ways have not killed romance, they have almost succeeded in destroying the buffalo. Lipe after line, in cross- ing the prairies, divided the herds and made their feeding-grounds so acces. sible to the white hunters, armed | with the latest appliances of slaugh- ter, that the extinction of. the ani- mals was freely prophesied Happily, romance stepped in to avert the expected doom. In other worda, the "conservation" idea seized the imagination of the people, and the buffalo found protectors in "the Governments of the United Btates and Canada. For years the latter has owned a small herd in the Na- tional Park at Banff. More recently, in 1908 and 1909, the Dominion Gov- ernment has become possessed of a much larger herd, erstwhile the pro. rity of Michael Pablo, a Mexican fale breed, in Montana. The interest. ing story of the "rounding-up"' and shipping of these animals to Canada's new National Park in Alberta has al- ready been told in these columns. The park comprises about five town- ships, Pd rte nts from Hardisty, on the Edmonton and Saskatoon branch of the Canadian Pacific, . to Wain. wright, a divisional int on the * Grand Trunk Pacific Railway. At present this little town, which is not much more than three years old, de pends for its prosperity almost wholly oe the railway, but some day, told, it will be a good "(armers' town," for the land in the neighbor. hood is well adapted for mixed farm. De. Already, mogeover, its proximity to the Buffalo Park induces many a passing traveler to stop there on his way eastward or westward, and the townsfolk joyously anticipate that this }{ unique attraction will in the years to come 'draw visitors by the thousand from all quarters of the globe." The park was prepared for the re- ception of the buffaloes by enclosing it with a fence of strong steel wire ten feet high and 75 miles long, cod. ing a thousand dollars a mile. Strong as it is, many people doubted -whe- ther it would serve its purpose, but the animals have taken kindly to their new home and jshow no wish to pir on At present the park is prac- tically in a stale of nature, but is witimately to be improved by the planting of additional trees and the making of roads. In its present con- dition, however, it seems an almost ideal home for the ancient "monarchs of the plains." The land is rolling, and the Battle River flows across a corner of the park, whilst smaller streams and lit ie lakes, hillocks and sandy "wallows," ar bluffs and sloughs give variety, both in contour and coloring, to the scenery. Within the vast enclosure pasture is always abundant, but, lest at any tinke a great snowfall should bury it too deep, there is always on hand a ene supply of hay for the whele herd, which (counting the 850 animals brought from Montana, an additional 80 collected from other places and a number of young animals 'born in the park) now pumbers considerably over a thousand, and is said to be the largest herd in the world. -- that no visitor may go awsy isappointed, a space of twb ur three square miles has .been enclosed with: in the park near Wainwright, and here live 80 or 90 of the buffaloes. Visitors are forbidden to enter the park on foot, and the animals, from some heréditary instinet, will not al. low a man on horseback to approach them. but they show no fear of per sons in a carriage:~Toronto Globe. eyes All On the Water Wagon? City Engineer Macallam of Hamil ton, Ont, has just made a startling [sristocrats discovery. He finds that the Ambi- tious City is using more water head than soy other city in Amenca. Hamilton has 90 . does it even appear to I was | 'with the probiem of safeguarding the (Fao hi ae od ei Th ~ GOLF TWO Mil MILES UP. Thibet Has the Highest Course In the . World. The! chief claim to fame that Gyan. polisesads is the part it played in hibetan mission of 1904; in time, perhaps, this fame fupy be scligaed by the fact that it boasts the hig olf course in 'he world. -The next lighest is the course of Gul erg, in the Himalayas, which is only 8,500 feet above the sea level, but Gyantse, standing at a height of 13,100, feet, easily bears off the palm for golf &% a high altitude. Gyantse does not, to the casual observer, suggest golf, nor | + nish room for golf courses; but where | Beotchmen congregate, though their total number be only three, a course had to be made, and .it has been. Provided the caddies are willing, golf is possible all the year round, the unsuitable months being January, February and March, these being the months of .the famous, or rather in. famous, dust storms. The course is ore of nine hales,' situated on the right bank of the Niang Chu River; the average length of the holes is 280 yards, the longest being over 500 yards and the shortest, 120 yards. There is no grass on the course, the whole surface being a hard baked clay, over which, es ooially in winter, a film of sand is blown; where this sand drifts a "bunker" is formed. The chief haz- 3 dz are collections of stones, pits, withered trees, wild irises and sand out of the two last named not even.a Braid could play, and it is here that the advantage of the local rules is seen. Some of these may be of in. terest: No ball can be lost in Gyantse; if not found within a reasonable time another is put down where the first one is thought to havelbeen lost, with- out penalty. The lie, of the ball in sand can be improved by scraping round it with hand or ¢lub. (Even then the diffichl- ty of the shot has to be experienced to be appreciated.) > Al thorns may- be removed from the all, Bath Day In Agra Jail. One of the humorous sights of In. dia, says a contributor to ithe August Wide World Magazine, is the daily bathing parade in a native prison. In the ond we witnessed were youthful habitual criminals, varyi in age from 9 to 15 years, taking their daily dip at Agra jail. While the governor watches proceedings from the shade of a tree, the prisoners, eadh man fet. tered and carrying a bowl of beaten brass or steel, are led out:in double file to a stone pavement, on each side of which runs a shallow trough of water. At the command of a native warder, bowls are filled and waist cloths are washed. At a second or- der the prisoners scoop water over themselves and then sink smartly to their haunches, one behind another, in parallel lines. Again , comes... A snappy order from the warder, and each man begins vigorously to rub the back of the fellow in front of him, When the warder judges the "mas. sage" is complete his voice Wrings the two lines to a smart right-sbbut- face, still on. their haunches, ard the vigorous rubbing begins again, each man doing for his fellow what his fellow did for him. The process, 'while comical, is 8 genuine illustration of the saying, "You scratch my back and I'll scratch yours,' except, .of course, to the prisoners whose fate brings them fo the head or tail of the line, where they receive only hall the "'treatment" of their fellows. Wandering Youth. Budden disappearances of men and women unhappily are a pro {feature in the life of all great cities, but London has been the -first of the world's maelstroms to attempt & tabu- lation and -classification. Last year 2,676 women over 18 years of age were swallowsyl up in the insatiate vortex of that metropolis without immediate trace. More startling and pregnant with thought to all who are concerned young is that, during the same year, 1,118 girls between the 'ages of 10 and 16 weré reported to the metropolitan' plice as missing. The ultimate trac- boy of these victims of the dangers of city to adolescent womanhood resulted in sad revelations to ts and friends. Some of the missing are, still missing and will be. The moral is olear. eo .who runs may read. Watch, guide and help the youths, gitls a boys, who have reached or, passed the critical time of maturity. "The ite of youth are long, long, thoughts." } Breaking the Bank at Monte Carlo. | A distinguished steward of the Joo- key Club is Lord Villiers, the son and heir of Earl Jersey. The family has long been in a promi- pent manner with the turf, for the Jersey Solors were registered so long! ago as Lord Villiers first registered his oxat lors in< 1004, since which date he as gained many popular successes. ible for a Jetintion at Monte Canto, for playing stem he converted a capital of Fig into $175,000. yet an | arge was a sister of| -Dowager of Lord Villiers is an ont! folo player, a and is often fourid in the | Blue Blood. An Irish chauffeur, when near the: House of Lords, had the misfortune | to run his: car over an old man who, Jumping from his car, = fluid fluid sapidly sai the old an, rg i ron ways talking about Himself. > i sili nel Ke ntathomab Ear Dae Maoded George is al- able to fur 13 minute | even if the title sounds so strange." SWIFT AND THE BRODMSTICK, Joke Played by Famous Wit 2nd Sa tirizt Upen Lady o- Keley. Jonathan Patrick's | ch, he often rch-pateon, This lady always re re he went away, to} + from her favor- | mn, Meditatic ns, a task en ft's indestructible Nt quested Swit : ite. bio J Boyle is Was compatible with Sw humor. He was determined to take re- venge on Boy whom he disliked very much on account of the tiresome it took to read from his book. This he did by writing a parody Boyie's treatment of a popular s ect [he title sof this parody was Devoti a Broomstick, a he had on exactly the same kind of paper, with the same type, and the same | size as Boyle's book. These he past- | ed, when his patroness had left the hom, very skillfully between the pages of the book. When the time for his departure came, the lady, as usual, requested | Swift to read to her a chapter from Boyle. Swift opened the book at the correct page, and read with the great. est seriousness and a solemn face, the title, Devotional Meditations on a Broomstick. The lady interrupted him. "Please, Mr. Ewift," she said, "no bad jokes with me." - "Jokes? 1 assure you, my lady, 1 am not joking; I read as it is printed here. You can see for yoursell." He handed her the book and she read, Devotional Meditations on a Broom. stick. "Bure enough," said the lady, "there it is. But I can't understand it. 1 have never seen that chapter. A remarkable subject. I must say. But- read it to me. Boyle is so full of deep thoughts, that I think Fie can make that subject very devotional, le Pt it printed | And Swift read with great serious- ness his original comparison of man with a broomstick. With great elo- quence the words came from his lips: "And this broomstick, that stands so despised in the corner, was once a beautiful green blooming decoraticn of the forest. Do you recognize the conformify with your own fate?" "Oh, my great incomparable Boyle!" efied the listener. "How ad- mirably he carries out his point! How he makes, from an insignificant ob- ject like a broomstick, such sublime truths! But by this I know my Boyle, whatever he touches he transforms in- to gold. "Oh, he is a great man!" Swift, with the most serious face possible, acknowledged his approval and went home. On the following evening, Lord and Lady Berkeley had company. As soon 8s the guests were all 'assembled, Lady Berkeley related her experience with the wonderful treatise of Boyle's Meditatighs on a Broomstick. Some of th: guests could not suppress skepti- cal laughter. "How can you laugh about such a i ! i { | expend : chapter | © 1a! Meditations on | ¢ { all that can be desired," YT NEATER AND MORE OBEDIENT. Girl Messengers In London Ars Leave ing Their Brothers In the Shade. In London little rosy-cheeked. mg tated English girls are threatenis oust from their time-honored field erdeavor the messenger boys whose good-natured slackness has be tradition and pYoved their undoin last. No longer are telegraph agen 2 their energy in seeking to instil into the sanguine and uv settled minds of youths anywhere from 16 the precepts of success Rather, hey are basking in the contentms which comes of hiring piacidly obedi- ut lity girl--demsels who have r sire to wander fiom the path rand to who, yn craps and mar and top-spinning offer not the sl est temptation "Cur girl s ef ers are certainly said a Lon- agency manager, not long ago as he gazed complagently at a row of grave eyed lassies waiting for orders. "The boys aren't im it Street -aceidents and road mending operations have no fascination for them but our girls may be trusted 'to almly and quickly by such in- to loafing. Leapfrog helps messengers to banish the monotony of delivering messages and sometimes a good thrilling "penny dreadful, perused while sanntering along Fleet street, stimulates a boy messenger's brain, but does not quick- en: lis footsteps. "But the girls--they have none of 'these pernicious habits. They go straight about their business without talking jor idling. They even refuse t linger it the heautiful hat shops in St. Paul's churchyard, they are conscientipus, We have three dozen girl messengers at work during the day. Of course, we employ boy mes- sengers for night work. "The gir)s wear neat blue uniforms and plain straw hats with black bands and at their waists they carry tele- gram pouches. "The girls a more ¢bedient than the boys why 1 prefer them," the said. mess dep telegraph » neater, quicker and That is manager A Master of Fiction. Thomas Hardy is terature. ""fhough he to do much creative work he maintains a very keen inter- in current problems, and is alive to the literary tendencies of the age He is undoubtedly our greatest novelist, and at st one of hi is likely to end as Engli language. Originally intended | tect, he devoted his attention to liter. and soon created a great'im- ; his woriderful ations ch books as "Tess s,"" "Far From the Mad ling Crowd and "The Return of the Native," are treasured by lov- ers of literature throughout the eivi- lized world, and Thomas Hardy en- joys an international reputation. King Georges is a very g adfni of Mr. Hardy's works, ir it was Mr the old man of no longer able grand is est 1 ong for an archi- «4 life » D'U re brv rer sublime subject," said Lady Berkeley somewhat offended. "I am surprised that you don't know more about your Boyle. His Meditations on a Broom- stick are absolutely worthy of such a great moralist as Boyle." 8he went out and brought the book. "Are you now oonvinced, ladies and gentlemen?" she said Arinmphanty, opening the book at the Meditations on a Broomstick. "I see you are still surprised and can't comprehend it. But I will admit 1 was at free equally as skeptical. I too had never séen this wonderful chapter, until our dear Swift read it to me." "What, Swif* had discovered it?" cried the guests, laughing heartily. "That explains everything. He has played one of his roguish tricks on you, Lady Berkeley. "We only need to compare this book with another one of the same kind," said one of the guests, a neighbor. "1 will go and bring mine." Soon he returned with the book, and when it was examined, the Devotional Meditations on a Broomstick eduld not be found. The company went wild with laughter. Lady Berkeley was the only -one- that -did pet -jein in the laughter. She never forgave Swift the joke he played on her. She did not say this to him, but.she never again requested him to read her a chapter from Boyle. And that was just the thing Swift wanted. Ready To. Take Up the Role. Mr. F. R. Benson, the well-known English Shakesperean actor; has al- ways been passionately addicted to outdoor sports. In his Varsity days he achieved fame as a runper, and when | touring 'with his companies he | of organizing ath- | makes a practice letic contests. The actor's fondness once led to a humorous misunder- standing. Mr. Benson desired {0 as- certain if a certain young actor could take up a part in "The Merry Wives of Windsor" at Rugby, so he wired, "Cay you play Rugby? 1 £0 come at once." Hack came the reply: "Ar rive at 4 p.m. Played hall-back for Stratford." War Experiments. Near Okehampton the other day a dummy village Fh had beerpespecial- ly built for the purpose was blown to pieces by shell fire from a batlery of heavy guns placed some distance away, the object of the curipus and costly experiment being, of course, to find out exactly what would happen ijto a real village in similar circum Bays Pearsons Weekly: The idea, which is not exactly a new one, was horn originally from Germany, where some very ela- borate experiments on similar lines have been conducted. First Steam Trawler. death fork place recently at South Shields of or David Allan, whe. was "Val two years of age. ive of Leith, was cred- the designer, builder, he first successful steam fishing vessel ever put into the water. Alter much experimenting he launch- "at Leith, on la, a vessel! which is claimed as Stances, for athletics | { ed 8 legislative programme | aighty-eight years, 'broke bis peck by { largely owing to Rie influence, when Prince of Wales, that the novelist was | enabled to obtain the crown - lands | near Dorset, upon which he erected | his house. Every spot of the sur- rounding country has been rendered famous by his novelsrand enthusias tic admirers come from all parts of the globe to view the original" sites which are depicted with such masterly skill in the novels. Stock Exchange Strike. There are just 18000 seconds in a dey's work on the London Stock Ex- change, during every one of which thcusands of pounids change hands. Th» Stock DA is always fever- ish ly irepatient to hear news of itself, and is, therefore, connected. by thou- sat ids of private teléphone wires with all parts of the kingdom. In addi tion it has a wonderful little news. paper issued t-.1 times an hour. This, of course, contains the most recent financial quotations. About fifty spe- cial newsboys are employed to dash with lightning speed with copies im- meodiatey they leave. the machine to various financiers, stockbrokers, ete. On one oceasion a we {organized strike of these lads 'completely phra- lyzed the working of the Exchange for an hour. As a delay of seconds Hin distributing news bearing upon the market often causes seriogs fluctua- tions in prices, the lads' terms were accepted Members have, however, provided very effectually against a se. cond strike taking place, by keeping | 8 dotible relay of lads, neither of the | shifts ever being allowed to know the {other. So if une struck, the other {eould be immediately requisitioned. over A Lawsuit In Cricket. Kentish keters once to a mateh by a lawsuit. The is-told ina newspaper of 1726. Monday is to_be determined a suit at law on Dartford Heath by a ericket -match between the men of Chingford and Mr. Steed's men; they had a hearing about two years ago before Lord Chief Justice Pratt, when the merits of the case appeared to be that at a mailech between the above- said players the Chingford men re- fused to play on the game at a time the others had thé advantage. The judge referred the said case back to Dartiord Heath to be played o on where they left off." eri sought niiven story "On Quebec's Minerals. The report of the Mines Branch of the Province of Quebec, showing that "last year the value of the production of the Québec mines amounted to $8. 679,786. This is'an increase of §1,350,. 805 as ~~wmpared with the preceding year. .Frqm about Jaco po in 1800, tle value of minerals climbed to over $8,600,000 an increase of more than 300 per cent. In 1911 the mines of the province produce asbestos, cop. per are, iron ores, mica, graphite, magnetite, and all inds of articles for structural materials What Was the Clue? - of Zurich reache] him, although it bore no name. P described his ap. pearavce, stated that he had traveled in Russia, « Col. Roceevcit ide defined his policy as a "homan welfare" plank, and outhin "aged Xa ! falling from a ladder. A letter intended for an inhahitant had married an English. , wma and never touched beér. 3 12 10 | torse { seniplion [the {And 1 ! patient we {like the hi | similarly | | Sikh | the { many | pected extent, of ill t unintelligence | cessarily lie w | | | { | { movement -- TURPIN'S PISTOL {Finding cf Relic Recalls Story of High- ¥ wayman Hero. A despatch from London the i informat had been found with which the ot his friend highwayman, s a double' flinticek snd it bears the in- Dick Turpin at the "Prasented t Febru Bear Inn, Drury Lane, 1735." ummon with many atiother rob- r Turpin was samething of a heroin day The highwaymen of the appealed to the popular imagin- ion 4 Among the accounts of Turpin's ac- | tivities none is better known than that found in Harrison Ainsworth's "Rook. wood." It is partly true and partly legendary: It mentions many of the famous gentry of the road by bame, and one can imagine Dick Turpin and Tom King roaring out alternate verses at the Whate Bear Inn or that hostal- ry-in Kilburn which'the gang affected singing it, perhaps, on the very night on which Turpin killed King and started 'oft on his wild gallop of a hundred miles from London to York "High toby" is the pame by which game df stand and deliver was familiarly known to its steady prac titioners, and here are a few -stanzas of the "Chapter of Highwaymen" 1Of every rascal of every kind The most notorious to my mind Was the cavalier captain, gay Jemmy Hind Which nobody can deny James Hindp=kndwn as tle 'prince of pgies," was a royalist captain of some' distinction who was hanged, drawn and quartered in 1652. It'was said that Oliver Cromweh was among the many whom he had robbed But the pleasantest coxcomb among them all For lute, corranto and madrigal Wag the galliard Frenchman Claude Du" Val! Which Du Val was a gentleman highway- man who made Life misers able for trav- elers going to and from Londo: bygloak nobody can deny pever a coach could wket a * a x or empty hand than Old Mob, deny nas dunpson seruptions Diverse. Types In India. people of India' who iT mmense plains of Ga Caleutia to Peshawar, but dis mat fue 3 to inl ' nges ai Indus, from Orig. heir re acute resembles Pu spirited Rajput of tral India Differences "in various tribes may Equa! battle, thé short ountains of 4 the stature the > A our of minted for eous and sturdy of Nepal talwart fierce Wn { Goorka from the m lacks many inches of the pi Last -vear En great task of tak 300,000,000. inhabitants « 1,250.00 0 enumerates interesting - parti this remarkehle people significant of which was the iteracy Ihe shown do not give an impressie and the fault must ne ithethe ational sys t time not mors of the total notw we ok the the and dase and. anderts g A oe f India, di culars not th pes no rod uc tem@ At the than two per cent | latio n are under instructior | standing that over 26 per cent. are fe. tween the ages of 5 and 15. A general is afoot, however, for the establishment of a system of free pri mary education throughout this vast preset { empire. { The Missing Brogue. In his book of reminiscences George Chirgwin, the English comedian, tell a story that illustrates two of his | strong points on the stage--his quick | ness. of repartee and his trick of en A | his audience. i i | ye | audience tering into coffiden tial relations wish in as He was singi rg an Irish song Irish town once, but he or difficulty with the brogue A typical Pat in the sudien up and called out indignant! y, spalpe er, an' int oire ty gwin grinned cheerfully u've got it," he said, SCTE amed themsely shit. » stood | "Oech, and the +3 hoarse with d The_ Proud Duke. told a story importer the pride of the late An English illustrative of Duke of Fife "A very rich Square," he aid duke to dinner i " 'Mrs desired to invite dinner on the 7th "To his invitation came answer * 'The Duke ed to olorm secretary that elines her invitati -------------------- The Cattle Plague. The first recorded instance of cattle plague invading England occurred so ong ago as the year #0, when =» "black mursain' "probably 'anthrax killed nirodenths of the cattle then living in Great Britain. womat in Grosvenor "once anked the terms like these the Duke nf Fite to instant at 8 o'clogk back the of Fife's ud is doair. Mrs. Parven' the Duke © n > Bees In New Zealand. Subject to Government inapection, 16000 New Zealand lermens bees, A fund of $2,500,000 is bing raised | in Fagland. to advance the wnperisl reference probacands Sir Wilfrid Laurier secured a) great reception at Sturgeon Falls, Ont. oo Parvenu's social secretary ia | 3 | «4 | weakness averted '| make | | OMe | where's yer brogus | { [did cookerandbake: also a time saver. TEA! TEA! the Finest Tea Gardenr of uncolored hnd of the finest Green and Black at Jc per At ANDREW MACLRANS™ Quincio Street. From Ceylon, flavor, pound, Electric Restorer for Men onl restores every nerve in the body Phosphonul ) 118 proper tension | restores vim and vitality, Premsture decay and all sexual t yo a -l jou & Dew man. Price as or two for ailed to any address. The Scobell Catharines, 0) ag S. os, For sale a8 Mahood's drug stove. QUEEN'S CAFE Lunches served om the shortest notice. REGULAR DINNER, SSe. Wo. PAFPAS 'a 00 18d Princess Street Thomas Copley, Telephone 987 ® on given on all kinds w work: also Floors of all Kinds All 5 receive prompt atteation. 0 Queen Birest MOTOR CARS For Weddings 2 Néw Cats in Use This Week Bibby 's Garage DAILY ARRIVALS Best Crawford Peaches at A. J. REES 166 Princess St, Phone 08 GAS FOR FUEL convenient Provides the most al with and of cog none its scomiorts drawhacks Requires a minlmum labor and fipor Gives a steady intense heat that can be lated to a nicely Involves no fuel in getting Invo time waste of time or ready | waste of when hes fs not wanted CHEAP, « LE AN, CONVENIENT, (OOK WITH GAS, in at the Office of the Queen Street, or 'phone we will be pleased to all necessary info: Light, Hea, Power, Water, Degls, C. C. FOLGER, GENERAL MANAGER. REAL ESTATE SNAPS Houses from $250 to $12,000. or us no fuel Call Worl , and Brick Vehéor House, wedt ond of city, 150 feet frontage, barns. poultry house. et $1,675, or to rent from Oct, 1st Double Cement Block House, close to Princess Street. with furnaces, electric light and t $408 per annum, for Eight-room { hoard. near Bagot large Btone House ing), Earl Street. $3. 660 Frame House Btreet, with lot. $1 bouhle Frame, Street. $2,250 Horses and Cattle Ins against death by accident disease at reasonable rates .Norman& Webb Real Estate. Life. Fire, Jive Stack, and General Insuratee, General lnserance, 171 12 Wellington Street. 'Phone 730. - on James 2 Montieal ured or

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