- * 'men, ALLEN "THE HIGHEST BIDDER" CLEAR MISTS So That Conlirenss May Be eld to Settle Irish Problem. London, July 15 Prime Minis- ter Lloyd George and Eamonn d« Valera, Irish republican leader sumed this morning thy conversation they began yesterday, in which they made an 'effort to clear away d1fii- culties attending the hblding of 'a conference which might bring a' settlement of the Irish At the close of yesterday's conver tion, which lasted almost three hour Lloyd George and Mr. De gave evidence that some progress had been made, and that today's discus £ion would be resumed under fay ordble circumstances. At the conclusion of the éonfer ence Art O'Brien, président of the re- about problem Valera ! Gaelic League in London, stated that it had terminated "amicably." One of the men who accompanied Mr. de Valera to the conference with the.premier said" "We are satisfied with the results of the initial confer- ence." that a free exchange of place between Mr, Lloyd once, stated views too relative positions were defined, Sir James Craig, the Ulster pre- mier, has been summoned to London to confer with the prime minister, | Mr. Lloyd George, on the Irish situa- tion, The meeting between Eamonn de Valera and Premier Lloyd George to-day, to discuss the preliminaries of the hoped-for peace settlement, lasted about an hour and a half At its concluston, it was announced that the conversation would be resumed later, probably Monday. * ny Save Children § From Blindness | [ S-- - . Fifty per font of all blindness that most dreadful or an afflictions =--is preventable! A nation-wide organizdtion ed from the Canadian stitute for.the Blind is now operating «iB Canada thy endeavor to eliminate al Preventable blindness. form- Natjonal In- They are laying particular stress on f the need for Proper care and atten- | tion of the eyes of Helpt to make those sible care, In Toronto, for instance, a special class has been formed of children With poor vision and defectives eye- sight. - These little people use spec- ially printed books, Their class room is arranged to give their eyes com ® plete rest. Their sight is being. con served: they =~ will retain throughout lite: The Canadian Nationa) Institute for the Blind provides glasses and treatment for those tfow-sighted women and children who are unable to pay. The expenses in this branch of the work are heavy, and We turn to you for assistance. Send a cheque in today. tos Phe Whig Fund for Blind Canadians ee eee MOVE TO FORM NEW CANADIAN PROVINCE infants at birth. who ara respon- see the great need for better vision Port Agthur, July 15.--The Port | Arthur News-Chronicle states that a | meeting is to be hela in this shortly to organize ga 'Which shall work to the Ranizing a new province Ontario. 'city committee Thé paper says op:fon previously | was divided as to wheter to form a! join Manitoka but | néw province ar that opinion pow favors a distinct Province, * N Body Caught in Fish Brockville, Ont, July body of Wiltér R. Maiby, beth, N.J., drowned in the rence last Saturday night, covered by Alfred Corrice, a sturgeon line near Chimney Island on Thursday. Corrice, Will receive a reward of $500, ~The Eli was dis- Mail advices from Manchuria stata that the wheat Crop in that country is expected to be poor. 'Sir George Foster is awarded an LL.D. by Wdinburgh University, HUSBAND AND WIFE. on the street.--Dan J. What Does Your Wite Do 2 end of or- | in northern | SHOCKED BY PLANS | wpe TO-DESTROY-HORSES™ No Other Reach Government. London throughout shocked ston Church by by Alternative Within | of British 15 Horse country Colonial ill's announce July lovers the Secr use of commons that 20 €s in Mesopotamia are t ed, bring that because them they | horses for use ib sible the difficult ation thence are said to be tive Shipping 1 £50 to brig to Englan wageas The war | better for t humanely a be left 'in 1 | would net and no {them adrift SMITH'S FALLS BOY are mainly and that they- had to be imported. fodder l marketg are BA it is too home: It expensi expla heavy there is no was which local d on The pos- India or Egypt, hit ies and cc st of transport- nearest prohibi- | | men gav it, co 3 { | horse 's | that it is killed | than who properly t turni: office view is he nd scientifically ie hands of nati for t} em would in the horses to be to | SER desert JOINS THE CIRCUS 5 3 : Sad ¢ at | BUL His Dad Qets Wise and The ue, issued almos pytique He Is on His-Way { Home Now. George and Mr. de Valera, and their ! Toronto Smith's Falls is not tamer goin Only had visions of himself decked in gor- geous costur ed with the wild roaring creatures s | Albert Foley, | fourteen years of age, g to wild animal a few ago Albert | July 15. be a days ne, entering the cage fill- { lions rnd quieting | with one" glance from his master trainer's eye. V'hen the circus hit Smith's Falls | Albert appli not as a in the cook 18 week wired he is on Falls today, "There is | do when I get the er." revenge. However, reached Tor tothe local police and took the boy from the cook his kid that told on me to my fath- said Albert, who 1 ow ed for a job and got one | trainer to be sure, but | ing tent with wages $4 | when the circus onto AlMerts father had they "tent. So way back to Smith's | { thing I am going to | Jack, and that is 'get' | one | lives for | Greeks Occupy Town Constantinople, July 15. troops have occupied the Afiun-Karas station. on the Bagdad here, Turks witho | [the district of Quebec nas N | was condemned to pay 200' franes | > : | | set into a play, whi s b ye MEETING KNOCKED |: cor for libeling a couple named : pay Ch 1s being play -- Le Mir. The latter own a cafe dan-| oc company | sant near Father Soubigou's church, [the first time that a tragedy of the | A y ihiers 8 : | and, he contended, seriously inter {kind has been 56 {rupted divine service with unseem- [ principals are sti | ly music. Moreover, there was a good | | deal of drinking on their preniises, so le : ound guilty [that the father finally warned his |) or ey parishioners he would decline to con- th. : | tess those who frequented the dance : ir be | serving a life term at hall or marry people who intended penitentiary, Washington Does Not Want One With Regard to London, July cussion of tt conference by the testifigd to sustained interest in the | The question of a prelim- | subject, The town was given up by Without Opposition | os Greek | town of | isgar,, 'an important [ the southern railway, it is announced the | ut fighting, 1t is saidh | | | | | isarmament. 15.--Continued dis- 1€ proposed disarmament newspapers ;, hera inary conference to be held in Lon- don was given Prominence by a num- | ber of newspapers here to-day, which [ printed long despatches from Wash- | lin some question hac yond the st ington 'indicating that such a prelim- inary meeting would not be favored]! in the United States quarters should, therefore, be abandoned was made clea moreover that the engagement of the miers would make it difficult, It was argued that the idea. | It | the | 1 not advanced as yet be- age of discussion, while Dominion pre- SERVANT SUPERANNUATED. | Entire Star 1 Sos to See Donald Me. | i Cri on Depart, - | * Brockville, | pleasing function St. Law-| Ontario Hospital = medical caught in | behalf of the staff, presented Donald » Who has a fisherman, | nuated, with | ing stick, and | vaiced the esteem and affection { Ross, | McCrimmon | which | held by Mr. the whole staff July 15 A very | took place at the | when' Dr. Ww, K. | superintendent, op | been superan- | a gold-headed walk- | dn address which | in| McCrimmon has been Mr. Me- | Crimmon was taken by surprise, but dress. , Three Men "P New York ic acid" ofie known, introd uced the liner Mi ing-rats, oa three other and a boatswain gieq heroically, the plunging thirty feet into boatswajn the hold wh ione of his 3 | gallant Strength My 'wife makes mo carry bundles | was being drawn to the deck with SECO 1 a Seqc nd un -- jarms, fittingly assured the donors appreciated {the kind words expressed in the ad- | : WhRE | used the death- of three, men and the serious poisoning of Ss. that he the gift and TRAPPED BY GAS, | Perighed, Including Two rave Rescuers , July 15th --Hydrocyan- of the deadliest poisons into the hold of neio to kill plague-carry- An ordinary seaman en, after having rescued hipmates, tne last of his gave out just as he conscious man in his | ble developed early { district | Asquith, ---- eT STILL FIGHT IN BELFAST veo Armored Cars Patrol Streets) ~A Conference Held: At City Hall. 15 of lelfa® July resumed "control The north street area and armored cars patrolled siTeets was held; attended by offic lice andgmilitary and leading People to discuss the situation h in ¥iew of the curred during the wee on York stre et and north Quean several civil in the ng, in 18 wounded police and tervene When from last rioting were made publie ing, it developed that two fight reports PLEASED OF UNITED STATES ("un0t feed them. Ex-Premier Asquith Speaks | of U.S. at the Interna- tional Council. London, July 15 Former ter H miers of the overseas dominions, skig that the always be associated in what he the world than happened during the conferenge anything that it has been and is back our brethren of the United themselves with think, to welcome pleasure the initiative which th. sident has now taken. So the United States finds her it. way PRIEST IS PRIVILEGED, branch or | Has Right to Make Attack From Pulpit, Says Court, Paris, July 15,---A priest's right to | attack from the pulpit anything he considers injurious to the moral wel- | fare of his parishioners has 'been up- | {held in the Quimper Appeals Court, | A PRELIMINARY | tribunal-by which a Father Soubigou to hold wedding parties there. Mir sued him for defamaticn of char- suc- acter and loss of frade with cess in the local tribunal. The higher court reversing the [the za:vivir Wn baby leged and he was responsible, there- the saiviving t baby, fore, to ¥ his ecclesiastic superiors only, EXTRADITION OF FRANK DAVIS. Witnesses Examined at Parliament " Buildings Behind Closed Doors, Toronto, July 15.--The ¢ffites of Joseph Rogers, superintendent of the | Ontario police force, were filled with witnesses yesterday afternoon in con- nection with the extraeition proceed- ings being held fo get Frank Daws, who is wanted as a suspect in the Goldberg murder case, and is at pres- ent serving a sentence in Austin peni- tentiary, Besides Mrs. Goldberg, the mother of the MeCall street boy, who was found dead near Sunnycide, there were five men, three women, one baby, three boys and two girls. The examination of the witnesses was held behind closed doors. * Protest Filed Against Cut. y Watertown, N,Y., July 15.--Resi- + CONTRIBUTIONS FOR [ dents of Cape Vincent testified be- | v # fore Public Service Vanneman at a hearing upon the pro- { tests of the village against curtail | ment of passenger service on the Cape Vincent branch, The railroad proposes to'Wiscontinue the 11.39 o'clock train to this city and 1.10 o'clock train to Cape Vincent and la being which the! military were forced to nu- Asquith, spedaking of the pre- military [the gravest Queen |uUpwards of 3 in Belfast this mornings Bay crop wij] the | than it was last year, At the city hall a conference | they will give rs of po- towns- ro disorders that had oc-|ers are ATute trou- | this is what must pe prevented. There evening in [fe ups a street | night's at ridiculous prices this morn- | which will greatly, persons*|ing industr: ; were killed during the disorders and | be dearer; {ny between thirty and forty others were | wounded Prem- Imperial asses woul | selling*out their herds at low prices." , himself Toga req ag 2h 'evant [circulars distribu of happier augury for the future. of had the last two years, broposed by President Harding on the question of the Pa- cific and the limitation of &rmaments. " "I have not myself lost faith in {the League of Nations," | "but who can doubt that | a serious draw- | to its practical es Sat farmers should keep their pota- | agreenient has beek have not seen their way to associate y | cattle, We ought, I said Mr, | tation rates reduced with all the more | pre- i long as | to | the international council tanle-it mat- | ters little by what door she enters: | r tragedy, which | reversing the judgment of a lower I, : iest's | 20d 'their childre { Judgment, pointed out that a priest's ile bec Words from the pulpit were frivi-|™iles from Quebec in a home, " Commissioner |* {%* A Friend } | & } | i 810 o'clock Sunday train to Water- | town. Insufficient patronage result ing from omnibus given by the railroaa the cancellation. \ -- Thirteen millions were gambled races at four Toronto meetings, Lord Curzon denies to foe press. -* Sir Sam Hughes suffers a relapse |g + at Lindsay, competition was |g a8 the cause of |g {# C. at l$ A Friond . cabinet news ey ' ALLEN NOW PLAYING "THE HIGHEST BIDDER" LAST EDITION ACCEPT (UTS NRAILWAYS FRIDAY, Jury 13, 1921, -- -- DE WORST ~ NOW OVER Resumption of Work in Bri- tish Coal Pits.~Wage Cuts ~~ Accepted. : London, July 15. '- The most | threatening clouds in the industrial | sky have been cleared away, and for the time being there is nothing to prevent progress towards an indus- trial revival Thé last 'hig difficulty was disposed of by. the engineers' ! ballot which by a majority of 66.000 accepts the /, proposed | wage cuts, provide for ia duction of shillings on week time rates and half per cent gn rates, to become effs further cuts' of take place o rence w > | THE-QUEBEO FARMERS rive i ARE DISCOURAGED TH 1£ -- ' Drought Leads Some to « Sell . Milch Cows For as Littie as i a Hea. {ARE REAPING CROPS IN THE MOONLIGHT Heat 'in Midwest Makes Day- time Work Impossible-- Scorching Corn. Chicago July 15 The Midwest Mississippi Valley States are. in the grip of a heat wave that no. only is taking lives and daily establishing new temperature records, but that threatens to seriously blight the Crops Reports from Iowa, Illinois Missouri, Nehraska and Quebec, July, 15 ~That the agri: cultural" situation, owin~ to the ex- tended period of drought, has become | most alarming, 'was stated here by tthe Hon, J. E, Caron, minister of agriculture, Mr, Caron said "The situation ig very grave; it is that we have faced for twenty-five years The be "fifty per cent, less As to<cereals, No straw and there a minimum quantity of grain, { "But what is most alarming," con- tinued Mr. Caron, "jg that the farm- becoming discouraged, ang vinced There Is No Other Way Out. Ottawa, July 15° ~Employees of Canadian railroads. are willing to {consider wage reddctions if it can be | shown to them that there is no other that point javenue of escape from the present In Wisconsin ang towa, and other | financial condition which is seriously scattered rura¥commuamities, daytime | ggroo ti, the operation of the na- | work-on farms has been susperded, [tionally owned roads, according to and fields are being tilled and crop | the Canadian Brother . | officials of harvested by moonlight Opinion Vas | hood of Railway Employes who ad. unanimous that the torrid wave was . {dressed a largely attended meeting of hastening the maturity of the corn | railroad workers, crop and that production, unless re- lief comes immediately, will fall far | The Reductions, below expectations Montreal, July 15 The reductions "Temperatures in lowa have been | which employees of the principle divi. steadily ascending for the past four | giong of railway labor may have been days, reachine their climax Tuesday | notifiag are now in effect are ap- and Wednesday. In Clinton tie mer- proximately as follows: ' cury passed the 100-degree mark Laborers, 8 1-2 cents per hour; early Wednesday. Burlin: ton estab- track foremen, 10 cents per hour; lished a new heat record at 101 de- signal department, 8 cents per hour; grees. Other cities reported the mer- shop crafts, 8 cents per hour; tale. cury around the 100-degree mark. passen- Minnesota | showed tempera.ures ranging around the 100 mark and in number of instances the mercury has passed will be empldyers' These three re- | the | seven and a! the pie work tive this week; the same kind ! Augus 15th A lield in September the and meu, at which will 'd whether not previous bonuses of twelve and a of this depression half on time work and "There are farmers" . Mr Caron seven and a half cent. on piece said, "who are at present offering to work shall be taken off sell milk cows fo; $10, A general resumption of work in the coal pits has taken place, but the miners are already complaining | that some coal owners are not pay- | ing the minimum wage. Official fig- fires show that 179,000 tons of coal | were during the thirteen weeks the miners were on strike. Politically the laborites are show- ing great activity in preparation for a general election, when the Labor {party expects to run, 500 candidates, including women Mass propagan- da conferences are being organized throughout the country nd downs in agriculture as commerce, and we must rather than discouraged "Our farmers, foreseemg the scar of 'hay and straw, a their cows, which they are in hope be city selling offering land to It is a disaste affect our dairy- | by butter and cheese will Jit brief, everythin; will the 1COL Le masters be decided or | feel the effects per cent per because they This should not They should be prepared to make some sacrifices now least to con- serve the herds of milk cows, which (are difficujt toereplace, and their dis- | appearance win entail a large | of money during many years. "Our farmers must CRHserve their | milk cows a | costs, even though they must rifice gome money tt) do s That would be better than be at loss raise that he would have ted this week urg- farmers to have confidence | {WILL ACCEPT CUTS | EFFECTIVE IN U.S. Men in Locomotive and Car | { Departments Reach Agree- ment With Railways. Mr. Caron sai: The Finest "Grapes in the World to Be Picked at' ing the Niagara. and to costs. ) Besides, steps have already been | taken by the Provincial Department |of Agriculture to have the transpor- for cereals now required to feed cattle. Mr. Caron also remarked that the | potato crop will be limited and holds hold their lve stock at all -- Hamilton, July 15 --Grapes that are expected to even excel the ultra- fine product of vineyards of south- ern Italy will be_picked in the Niag- ara district about the last week of | | August, stated Thomas J. Mahoney, general manager of the Nia--ira Pen- LIQUOR BEING RUSHED insula Growers, Ltd; y INTO WINDSOR ONT ' . While the extremely warm wea- ther had played havoc with the berry | and other early fruit crops, Mr Ma- | 8raphers, 6 cents per hour; II'inois was gétting tne same dose, | ger engineers and firemen, 6 cents with a high humidity pressing down | per hour: freight engineérs and fire- as the temperature rose. At Dixon a | men, 8 cents per hour; yard engin. new mark was established at 104. At |eers and firemen; 8 cents per hour; Rocliford the temperati re ha reach- | hagseanger conductors and brakemen, ed 104 degrees, two _consecutiva | 7 1-2 cents per hour; freight conduc. days, with the minimum above 90. [tors and brakemen, 8 cents per hour; | -------------- | vard conductors and brakemen, 8 PEACHES AND GRAPES i cents per.hour; stationary engineers, WILL YIELD LARGELY firemen and oilers, 8 centg per hour, | In the case of clerical staffs, ate., re- | ductions are being arranged by de- [Rartmental heads to distribute them | as equally as possible. News of ace | ceptance of formal or informal char {acter is expected from other organi- [zations this week, although in al] |'cases the men are likely to reserve | to.themselves the retroactive benefits | which may arise from subseqiient ap- | peals or negotiations, July 15 A tentative reached by the | | Railway Association of Canada and | the committee Fespresenting railway | employes in (he locomotive and car | honey said that the strong sun, departments, providing for the ap- | coupled with 'the generous rain of | | plication of the same reductions in |last week, was most propitious for Montreal: S to use with cereals to feed their f Delivery Works + Overtime -at the Border--8tooking Up Houses. | Queb wc, July: 15..The Gagnon recalls one of the trials ever held in now been | most sensational t in play while the 11 altve, woman, who was Of causing the death of ear-old stepdaughter by © most horrible form of torture, is | the Portsmouth her sentence of death !having been commuted te imprison- | ment for life. Her husband is also | serving time in | Paul The, Gagnon {way the St. Vincent De penitentiary as an accomplice Il are. living a few while who was jail is living wita which" 2a%opted the infant. Shon! an attempt be made to play | 'Le Mertyre D'Aurore 18Nda™. in [ the province, it is understo.d that [the authorities would refuse the ne- permission." Iborn in tpa Queb: a. fami; WILL POPULATE J ARCTIC CIRCLE Stefarnson 'Organizing onizing Expedition to Sail in August. jLessary | . Musicians Refuse Wage Cut. Brantford, July 15 -- The Musi- HASTINGS-RANEY SUI, Likely at -------- er ---- OUEBEG_T GEDY. > "The | vanced at present thau they hac been days left "before Ontariogoecs bones IS D | reduction will "take 'effect immed- | for many years. of the stuff has come in here within | benefit. of such modification from an | YAiae at-eloseto two mitlion dollars, t* wage. of the.r employes- will po The closing days have brought a | meet the association next week, prac- smoking rooms for women are soon | on ing after the province becomes dry, express Inquily |.cally elicited | the | construction. Each has a large wo- ( 24 hours a day, with four shifts of railway brotherhoods will | travelling long distances, owing io | ness {extra advantages. which men enjoy | bullt away out on spiles In the river, | ments expire in. September, Fics new. expedition: to the Are {rons and the new car has a well! ; 212) amiton, Ory July 15.--J Xa { : : | 00 drawing room may come in and } Who intimated recently that he de- |€0lonists into the Arctie circle, Ste- He urges confidence, hope and per- | the rates of pay for such employes | peaches and grapes. These two | {in Canada as were 'recently Mr, Mahoney esti- { dry thers is g figod. of liquor pourin TIZED | rea {mated that toth peaches and grapes | into this city, . . { It Is understood that itn the fina { would be picked from three to four | Estimates of stocks on hand are ---- | coe 1 - settlement any modification of the | Weeks earlier this season as a direct | necessarily inexapet. Probably theonly Played in New England States | tentative reduction in rates j agreed | result of weather conditions. ~Mrs.-Gagnon in Ports a 3 I h the past few weeks 18 License: In- mouth Prison Dec : i . 'the date on which the tentative res spector M N. Mousseau, but he de- ductions are made effective | cllnes to give out even an approxi i Virtual notice has boen given hv Mate estimate. A summary of the Canadian railway companies that an 1 - > {and this estimate is ga conservative Feet: Tol ling to. Are. 800n to: Be Introduced on! X i . a y a |efective from July 1st, ac-ordi 1g i > *4 in the Now Tasisag aah | officials bf railroad bretherhoods whe | ~ Oanadian Pacific Railway With prohibition tess than a. week 18 18 | 10 - ivi 8 D {have been in consultation with the Lines. | off the activity -along the river front [railway executives here ry | rush of orders, such a rash that in tically all conferences will be com- tg phe introducéd on the Canadian the Mist few days breweries and 1f- [ pleted. | Pacific Railway lines. The Canadian | 9U°r houses have been refusing or News was received this morning of | company ' will be the first in the | ders and returning cheques. a cut of six cents per hour in wages | world to provide for the needs of wo- f4me scale that men's comfort_is ar. | bait not for Ontario. Likewise the | the information that no reduction in { ranged for. Walker distillery will continue to | wages is at present under considera- A new standard sleeping car hus | SOBvert grain into red liquor, but not tion by Canadian express. companies, been designed and fifty-six of suck (for Ontario. At the conclusion of the confer- | report to | men's dressing room, about equal in | PTSpiring men in aelivery depart- their various organizations. What | size to the space allotted to the men's | ments. Several months ago Wind- their recommendations will be they | smoking room. | Sor postoffice 'was forced to put om: decline to ray For a long time women have ex. | Several extra men to take care of {the extremely limited accommoda-| Hundreds of cottages nave sprung tion afforded them in the ordinary | UP, Up afd down, the river, on the dressing room.. Since the ranks ft] Canadian shore. These all compli- { Vomen cigarette smokers have grown | cate things for the Inspectors. Down a Col- | cians' Union here has refused to ac- | lin travellling have swelled in volumé | flourish merrily, housing Americans | cept a cut in wages during the sum- | and many rebellious women have | seeking the cool of the Canadian mer slump in' theatre business. The w I Walls We = ington, July 315 15Moked in their berths | shore--and incidentally .Canadiam | movie operators are reported to have | ~Ya.a Walla, Washingtoyp, July 15 The C. P. R. has now undertaken | beer. ¢ |'which wi ve Seattle about - q ---- tt at atte abet Aug (05s sod smoking room, where w)- ras , a ' C 812 ant | , (tes e : The members of West Presbyter } nade privately Tuesday This ex- | en can enjoy their cigarettes Th | To Be Tried in October and {lan church, Toronto, voted by a small | ioe i | Gressing room fis fitted with a big . {majority to. accept the resignation | Pedition will be for commercial pur- } | | Counsell counsel for David Hastings, [rest. It may also prove a boon to | » ! : . : ii) - 3 lic istrate, s sired to retire. There has been dis- | on matsy. she vos North yo | mothers travelling with children. In | well Knows Jolie mag te a sension in the chugch for some time. ! . 4 | the dressing room are three corner | Sa : - * Pi ' ) ins pois ERR ; Joan: ng ual the development | = basins with swinging mirrors, | action of Mr. Hastings against Hon, CEP EI PPS 000 +4449 4 |¥ould be rapid. {and an electric heater for curling | + | }8everance, 3 I -- made | fruits, he continued, were farther ad- Windsor, July 15 With {elective in the United States. ' individua] who knows just how much upon, the employes will receive tha eRe + | bist opinions, however, places the javerage cut f{ twelve per cert. * | has increased greatly. When maintenance of way men Montreal, July 15.--Sleepers with The breweries will keep on brew. | paid employes of the American rail- | men travelling .on sleepers n the | | [sleepers are now in the course of At present brewerles are running | ence next week, the officials of jperienced much inconvenience iy | rapidly increasing money vrder busi the murmurs of complaint at the | the river hundreds of such cottages, I = Vil nar ta |son i rani l | taken the same stand. Both: agree- | = Vilbjalmar § iynsson is Srganiy he meet the needs of its women paz-| oa o : {poses, and it is supposed will take |CheSterfeld, where those who Cayuga |of their pastor, Rev. W. R. MacKay, | Poses, Suppose E. Raney, atforney-general, had | Allan Crawford, Toronto and E. L. irons been prepared and that the e innovations have beey | WOuld come to trial in October, nt One of ihe might be heard in this city, but Mr. + | Knight, McMinnisville, Oregon, mem- |. Many other 4 | buts of former expeditions, are in | introduced in the car. > J + | Walla Walla in conference with Bte- Lost important of these are lighis| COnnsell states 8 4 |fansson, and if is thought that 1aced under the seats to light tne! able it will be tried in Cayuga. ¢ | Knight will head the new expedition, | §, 2°" at night, so that .jt will no The suit, follows charges - made Oh ee {longer be unavoidable to stumble |bY Hon. Mr. Raney on fhe polic +] Memoirs Parodieq by Barrie, - | «| London July 15.--In literary eir- | # cles the story is being told that Sir "| James Barrie has written a parody | - BLIND ~+.. $10.00 <.af 10.00 5.00 5.00 5.00 2.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 -50 35 4.53 # Capt, Donnelly * Plumbers' Union Mrs. J. 'M. Machar + MR G bne's way through the aisle. | tion of justice, especially the Ont : 1 | ario Temperance Ace, Fire Losses in Canada, {2 SR 10f Mrs. Asquith's memoirs, which, | Toronto, July 16.--Fire losses in | Northern Police Courts. & | though very slight and short, is very | Canada duriiig June amounted to $2-| Cobalt, % | deft, and deals the deadliest. blows 303,400, compared with $3.811,350 + | with disarming bonhomie. One re- |in the preceding month and $1,424. % [port is that the title of Barrie's skit [319 for the corresponding month * jis "Knees I Have Sat Upon." | last year. Fire losses in Canada dur- _----r------ | ing the week ended July 6th are es- Two Years for Bigamy, timated 'at $673,750, compared with Yoo. -- Wilfrid Ea- | $452,500 the previous week, A Friend A Friend Minnie Davis A Friend |. Mrs. A. Harold Prof. R. K. Hitks . B.C. + > * Swastika, Mathe3on and New eard. Haileybury .and Cobalt will hereafter have only twd courts a | Week. No expensive, court quarte {for the new points are being i. | plated and cases wii] be heard wher is ever Magistrate Atkinson can make arrangements for them, ii ¥ > # Sundry amounts .s * * $48.38 . Lieat.-Governor Lionel Clarke C2000 PRP 000s | Feported ill at Toronto, -< But Employees Must Be Con- = three 3 is artogether pro- over boots and shoes while making | Magistrate regarding his Administrasi