began calling Kingscourt Junction to stop the express there. I must have called him for 'ï¬ve or seven minutes before a. reply was received. At the same time Gamon Was calling that station over the commercial wire. Be- fore I received a reply from that quarter the Wyoming agent announc- ed that he could not stop the freight. When Kingscourt did ans- wer my call it was to report the Fly- er approaching, and I called on him to stop her. He replied that he could not, and about the same time announced that No. 5'had passed. ’ Call in Vain. I then began calling the operator at ‘ Wanstead in the vain‘ixope that he might be there at that hour. Wanstead is not a. night ofï¬ce. I called to Chief Dispatcher Hayward and I knew the (“o'meCti m would be close, and I 'did not desire to hold the expreSS for the freight. At that mament I was contemplating holding the freight at Wyoming until~ the ex- press reaChed there, I then called Carson at Wadord and asked him about No. 5. She had not arrived, but was coming, he reported. Ithen called Wyoming again and started with the abbreviation 31, which is the signal to the operator that a train order is coming, and which re- quires him to immediately set his order board, which, showing a red light, prevents any train passing un- til given permission. Wyoming hesi- tated to mCeive the message. saying the freight had left the station. Attempt to Catch Train. 1 then told him to hold extra. and he rushed out into the yards to try and catch her. In the meantime I Was expecting Carson at Watfcrd to announce that the conductor of the Flyer had signed the order, which is the preliminary course to getting my 0. K. and making same operative. Not hearing anything, I asked Wat- ford where No. 5 was. He replied instantly that the express had gone. I instantly called that he hold No. 5, and asked him why he permitted her to pass without the order being perfected. He replied that I had busted the order. In the meantime I to Watfor'd and Wyoming to be deliv- ered to tho conductors of these taro trains requiring them to meet and pass at Wmtead. The Wyoming op- erator reported the signature of the freight conductor to his order ï¬rst, and I completed it and it was 0. K.'d. At the same time I win-ed the agent. there to wait a minute that I might cancel the order, using the phrase "may bust it." This was in responsa to the in ': rmation Wyom- ing had given n.» Lhut. the freight. Was net getting 0 t of the yards, ‘ The Paciï¬c m, or No. ‘5. u‘ the ill-{nod truin Wax and, he said, lett London down th Sarah btanoh one hour and ï¬fteen minutes into at 9.08, It would require One hour to much Wattovd. At the some timo an extra freight, carrying s consignmont of dread! bed, loft Bank {or the cot. These two trainshohudtogotoverthorodu fast as pouiblo. and he ï¬gured out a. meeting pluce gt Wmma. Ho 9::- pecwd No. 5 to men Watlord at 10, but she got there at 9.46. Just bo- (ore her arrival I had sent an oraer and told him I feared trouble at Wanstead, as No. 5 had gone past with no orders. Mr. Kerr was called upon for explanations of a mass of technical information. He said that an order when issued and completed could not be made imperative except by the transmission of another full order formally cancelling the ï¬rst or- der. He never cancelled an order by saying “Bust it.†01' that he was sure. Therefore it was not possible that he could be mistaken, and that Carson could be accurate in his statements that this order had been "cancelled in this manner. He assertâ€" ed that the cancelling of an order once given was even a more elaborate affair than the issuing of the origin- al order. The rules required Wat- fordtomahethreecopieeoftheorâ€" der touching the passing 0! the ex- tra and No. 5, two of which he gave to the conductor and the third being kept undeta'ched in his order book foracomplehreeordintheevento! the order being annulled. the entire three copies previously made out must be destrode Telling an ope- ator to. bust an order would be upmns nanny, W; u. u. Hartley, machine agent, and John Gibson. .11 ‘ of Wyoming _J. .W. Smith was and. tom Viewed 21m Mow Body. Th. jury viewed the body of Fine- lnan Rich“: of Sarnia. as a. prelimi- nm to tho investigation. The muti- lated corp-chad beanaenttoalocal Walter'- tor that pun-pom. and a. trainman was callod to identily thn remains as having been kilbd Friday night in the wrgck where the express gnd freight collided on: hundred 5â€"_,'._ ter at Wanstead together. They are: William Gilbert, constablq. Robert Rae, shoemaker; William Goghill, merchant; Rev. J. H. Gunn; Pierce Parker, blacksmith; Rev. .W. G. Richardson; 0. H. Smith, merchant; Rev. E. J. Haineo; J. W, Smith, to- tired merchant; Rev, W, G. Andrews; Simon Cassy, J ustioc of the fag; Wyoming, Ont... Doe. 304â€"4“. was 10 o’clock yesterday morning when Coroner A. E Haney called the jury to investigate the G.T.R.' disas- l“..- ,___- Jury at Wyoming Hearing Evlv dance Re. Railway Collision. m 003th Km d m Very Volt-thou Tend-on! c‘ THE DISASIER AI “WEBB Order-meeting nun-um w morwwordmraunn mâ€" In On. Importm Point my A.†Dlamotrlcany Apart- PAGE SIX and tho Yaht- ,, 30.râ€"It was 10 | - U UV “1-- :11; 4?}: me that the r Robert out. I then '- '11 ed 11 No.5 n,G°Pgih’ewé yea. I laid ' moaning than. , W. . _.-‘....~._....(5_ (let. I then em and Grand Trunk. I was on duty the night of Dec. 26. No. 5 Was due at 8.47 at Watford. She arrived at 9.4.5. I ï¬rst learned that 5 was late at 7.30 from despatcher asking where she was. He replied ‘hour late! I got an order relating to No. 5 at 9.48, and here is the original orâ€" der,†ashe pulled out his original copy. "Before I got this order I dis- played my signal board to stop No. 5 and then Copied the order in my book. That meant that the station had an order for a. train and none must pass Without an order or a. clearance. Next thing I hear Wyom- ing telling the dmpatcher 773 Can’t get out. Immediately the dmpatcher called my ofï¬ce. No. 5 Was getting close at that time. I called the des- patoher and he said 31, meaning ‘give me order,’ when he broke me and said bust it. I heard Mr. Kerr’s evidence. He did not use ‘may bust git,’ but simply 'bust lt.’ I Wrote i‘buated’ across the order. Then the :conductor of No. 5 came in and he asked ‘what have you got there?’ I replied I 'did have an order set out here for you, but the despatcher just busted it. The conductor Bald 'write me out a. clearance, the boss is on the rear.’ I repeated to conductor what despatcher had said to me. I then wrote a. clearanCe for No_._ 5. ‘Have no ordere for you.’ " Supposed Frieg'ht Wm Secured. I told conductor exactly what the de- spatcher said, merely a word from him to bust the ï¬rst order. I have had orders cancelled with the words “but it" Mom. but can’t give -lnstance when; can't say exactly. I have had some within a year. and have seen my operator get them in that form. They came from the London despatcher; can’t say how many orders I have had busted, A: to the number, in my own experience in a year, I should say three or four in that time. Yes, these orders to bust_ were acted upon. Kerr has been despatchmg at London a yen: or m but on this particular track only a few weeks. der as prescribed by the rules to mu! the order. There in no such word at ‘busted' in the rules, and it the order had been annulled according to the rules I should. to obey the rule. destroy all copies of the order which had been annulled. I did not give a copy of this order to ()onductor Me» Anna. I ve him a clearance cord. 11 there had any doubt In my mind I could have gated Athe despotgher ghout It. “Can't tell from the despflcher’s signa- ture who ls handling the trick. I didn't know that I was talking with Kerr that night. I gave Mr. Costello the top copy of this order, after the acddent. I under- stood the order was cancelled md sent No. Sonjustastrtheorderhaxinotboenre- celved. I supposed from what I heard that the despatcher had the extra might at Wyoming lécure. Yes, that order was annulled. I did not receive the faint! 91"- On cross-examination by m: m hm, ha said: “This has In pelted In lure:â€" pt-rienoe six or men an. The word ‘bvsted’ has come into use on the mad during the past two years. I In! gene‘s: duty at 7.30 o’clock (m morning. and I should :etocumatnkht. nava- ï¬espatcher don't like ions from op- erator very kindly. nvin heard the conversation between er and W- oming. I felt the matterm entirely tirelysafe. 1 had mt heard Wyoming my that the extra was unable to get out. followed In- mediately by order to ‘ï¬anst It." from the des'patcher, I would have van 5 the order. which would have â€No it Wan- stead. This closed the testimony of Ir. Kerr, after he had read extensively from the book of rules governing agents and operators at the suggesâ€" tion of the company’s legal repre- sentanvo. “I an agent and operator at W at- ford. For the last six weeks I have bean domg all the station work alone. Generally I have an assistant. I have been in the railway employ- ment 35 years, all with Great West- "It is then a. perfect order, and I don’t telnember having (long .0." Andrew Carson, operator at Wat.- ford, was thm called, and gave tesâ€" timony as follows: must. Itlwnaeked'Cu-eonwhyhe lot No. 5 go. He sold you told 33 to Iedd,oh!my,no.1tlen told Mr. Hayward my chief, -I expected trouble. A little later W called me and aeked it the dyerwae to meet a train there. I told him» yes, to atop her He replied that he had heard a noise and feared the was a wreck. Thu Assistant Super- intendent Coetello. who had been on the wrecked train, broke in at that station and laid there I“ a bad apfllthereandtormetegeteuttbe auxiliary. â€1! Kingston" Junction hat! re- plied when you called him the W time could the wreck have been pre- vented?" the coroner aeked. "It might. I don't know why he did not reply. He eaid he was in hie omceallthetlme, butdldnotheor me call. †Continuing, he laid that No. 510“. London on this orderâ€"No. 8 will run one .hour late from London to Wat- Iord and anyâ€. minutee late to “I have no knowledge of using the word bust to cancel orders." In reply to a. cross-maestion he said: "I meant by minute spoken to Watford that I might contemplate changing the order, but I wanted to see ï¬rst if Wyoming was hoIdi-n-g the extra. Then I wouid have sent a new order simultaneously to Watford and Wyoming.'-' "Do you new man] u! orda- titer it in o. K.’d,†inquired Hr. Buoke. mg, dull I stop it? I said no.“ I canad Watford and he laid extra, had sons. I then called King-court Junction More I goï¬ an M and toldhimtostopï¬. Honk! ho could not, and I "plied that ho Continuing he said:‘ "I expected “No. 5 to make Watford by in. She got there at 9.46. I sent the order at 9.48. One minute later Wyoming sent in the signature of the extra. conductor to this order, than I 0,K.'d acumen and it became comuleh. At same. and it became complain. ' At 9.50 nkht operator Watson wired me that the train was not gutting out. I then called Watford 1nd ask- odiINo.5wascoxning. Ho oaid yea. I oaid “m1nuta.†may Bust. it. meaning that I might cancel the or- der. I then called Wyoming max times belore I got an answer. Ho than answered and laid extra. 5 go- there had been a night operator at Wanstead the wreck would have been avoided,†asked the coroner. "Well. if there .had been an operator there, and I could have caught him at that time the wreck might have been avoided." Was the caution- reply of ot.ï¬naa16,u!aruthorehuonof these trains to each othu- was con- cerned they were angler W or- ‘1'- Watford Operator Exunined. tht Kerr 821.." i755" m7" He replied am he I und (curd than In Assistant Supt? . who had been on .broko in it that than was a bad motoattoutflu Junction had 3-0-- 1101! him the tint ack have bun pne- nor asked. ou't know why he V V mahowuinhh' , but did not hear wogï¬ noW. I ovu- tho In! ad ox has III chm!- . lit und st the 1. pool. MW It bristles vi vidgoon. blu dour} oghefl‘ roming meal annfl'. H. d extra. 5 go- [sald no.th¢n he said extra. ed Kins-court w W and H0 sud h 0d tint ho The Manitoba Experimental Farm is working hand in hand with the forestry department. In 1902 one million soft maples Were distributed. There are orders for twice as many next year. Manitoba is going to have a garment o! verdure that will vie with old Ontario. The countrySids is to be garnished with soft maple, elm, RuSSian poplar, ash, and bal- sam, all of which do well under these skies; the river willow, the whim poplar, and the scrub oak. hardy en- dogens that they are. have approvâ€" ed their right to live on. The quick- 881: body will commute“. old Engb land. The Asiatic maple makes 3 And yet you must not imagine that Manitoba, can ever grow trees like British Columbia, or like East- i. g. E ii: 8 i z; ed by the Chicago Health Departâ€" ment after careful experiments ex- tending ovcr the last three days. One thpoonful of the juice to half a. glassful of water is known to has. good . combination, and repeated trials-have invariably produced the same resultâ€"every germ was killed. Trees Flourish In the Experimental Farm at Brandonâ€"u hat the Farmers Are Doing in "this Direction. Superintendent BedIord of the Brandon. Manitoba, Experimental Farm, has made his six hundred and ï¬fty acres like a. city park, so many andso flourishing are the am. He has gone into hedges, too. and has accomplished wonders along that line. He has a. small plot devoted to fruit treeS, and he is quite conï¬dent that some day Manitoba apples will gradeup alongside Manitoba No. 1 hard. He sew no reason why some of the ï¬rm-fleshed apple, crossed with the crab, should not do well in the north countxy. " Injured Are Recovering, At the London hospital the wounded are progressing favorably- Howard: 3. number are threatened with pneumonia, and the physicians express some alarm. It is inconceivable that some of these unfortunateo do not expire Miï¬bicauae since many of them wemexpoeedmratleastanhmrto zero weather while practically naked- An Authoritative Announcement From the Chicago Board of Honlth. Chicago, Dec. 30.-â€"-That lemon juice will destroy the typhoid germs in water is authoritatively announcâ€" had used the word “bust" to his despatCher. He did not hear dee- patcher tell Watfoni to “bust" anyâ€" thing that night, but he was out. of the ofï¬ce some. Horace Haxkness. mm of 773, rear man; Conductor Graham of 773, and Conductor McAulifI of No. 5 told their stories, the latter swear- ing' amt Agent Carson of Wauord said he had an order for him but that it had been "bustoa." “I will give you a clearance." said ho, which he did. The inquest was thcn adjourned till to4day. EQHEB assumption, but It Indicated that Dr. Hmey wan In sympathy with Canon‘s contention, and closed his examination. Other “fluxes-es. G. Watson, night operator at Wyoming, told the story of how he attempted to stop 71:3, and said he Nu; "-‘- W â€"â€"---_ __ , an mum. At one time the station had a force of (our um: The duties huve not fallen at any ï¬ne then." 'llxe coroner aid in explanation of a lawyer- remrk at this junam: “Mt wand ‘bueted’ destroyed um order end left Cur-Ion without any order for No. 5.†This was his mnmpflon, but It Indicated that m- unnv m In m with Car-‘(m's “Hnu on ever made known ho. and that you ad noted on 'bust' orders?†“lewnldtebyoumlhve, aetoutfotNo. newnlthutomrd “I can't; the compeny and“: came Int. myoflicenndmbbdnpdlwbooum records. I don't know “I they hue done with than." -Atthupolntduboohmmdedlu III evidence by 8:0 mm nyeflntendenh A M In Point. A wordy m toner-n meet tbs law; yers en to the when being tweed. an“ continued : “I an 3:0" It shout m4 'buet' order; Only yedenlay And-ant 8:37de m and 11 mum!- W'ILUUUI. (can. 1. â€UV“ agoâ€"‘- vâ€"â€" â€"â€" that the despatcher insisted that he said ‘may but lt,’ meaning the order or ad- mittedusin thewordbut. “mum he denied 1 †, , ‘Thecrown attornei"n1d: â€men you gave an excuse for not yin: given order 93 to No. 5, that you had acted on ln'ltrue mm: to but 0111;: in men] cage-1' - ALL“ .I mu" unn- uâ€"â€"-â€"d; .' W I 5 I heard dapatcher It}. ‘Go nhen I kepeated '5 ha gone: After he told me to bust it he we: told by manning that it had gone, Then the despatcher called me. and said 31, meaning complete my or- der. I said No. 5 has gone. He then told me to stop No, 5, and I ran to throw the semaphore, but it w a mile past there. I did not tell him I could not stag 1‘05. but began calling mnpcourt June on on the commercial wire. Home.“ at â€instant. “I was then greatly excited. 'I'he de- spatcher asked why I let No. 5 go. I to!!! him because he busted the order, He said No. oh, no. I don‘t remember well what happened after that; I was in such n state of mind. I- continued to work right along. in tad was on duty two days and nights without reiiei'. _ I neyer henrd until today ,9 L-‘ AL-‘ h. .‘It‘ v ho six : to\ lose my year-old boy instead to do the work. Ell After I maul the . to 7. WILL KILL TYPBOID GEBHS. LIKE A CITY PARK. WWW... St. Thomas. Dec. 80.-â€"Tha “not stufï¬ng cases an More Judgo Ball at the Court Home hero yam-J morning. H. ‘A. Danton VII tho only one otthothmaccusodtoput tn an appearanoa. D. J. Donahue for the Crown, Mr. Cameron. a Map- sistant, and J. A. Robinson forth. delendants, were the counsel. AM argument. the hearing wu W till Ju.19, 1903 a. tributary to the Souris, which is on the Dakota. side of the Turtle Mountains, and ii the laws could be strictly enforced there is no reason why they should not incnease and again occupy some of the favorable positions which abound throughout the wilder districts of Manitoba. Canadian Cartoonlsts. ___ The ï¬rst of the famous Canadian cartoonists was, of course, Mr. Ben- gough. Fun formed a large ingredâ€" ient, especially in his earlier and much-prized plates. Sam Hunter in a happy successor. Mr. Hunter grows more felicitous the more he draws. Some 01 his most recent of- forts havo been partiCularly well con- ceived, and when it is remembered that the modern cartoonist is called upon for three or {our cartoons (or every one that Nut drew it mouth. admitted that he of to-day must lit. at higher pressure than the draught. man or a quartz notary ago.â€"Tolb onto Globe. smoky River ran . Kym Mr. Armstrong. the C. N. R. survey- or, has returned to Edmonton from an exploration trip on the Smoky Rixer and Yellowhead Pass, which has occupied him since October lst. The result 0! his explorations proves that the soâ€"called Smoky River pass on the map is a mth o! the map- makers. The Smoky River hes. in the same glacier as the Grand orks of the Fraser at the western end of the Yellowhead Pass. There is a small river called the Porcupine. which comes out of the mountains about where the Smoky River pass is shown. Mr. Armstrong did not explore it, but by reports from the Indians, who say it is too diflicult to have horses in, he believes the dim- culties of railroad construction through it would be even greater than those encountered by the C. P. R. in the Kicking Horse Pass. There is another stream called the Sheep Creek. which joins the Smoky about 15 miles up stream from the mouth of the Porcupine. The pass through which it runs is easy on this side. but very difï¬cult on the western slope. and their habits of building dams and becoming what is known as bank beavers. A halfbrec'd recently informed us that a beaver had been killed last {all on the Willow Creek, animals occupy on tho banks of the Souris, near the town of Hartney. and along the Asslniboine and Sour- is Rivers those who are ugteresteq can ï¬nd in many places evidences of their presence, although the exigenc- Ics of the situation have compelled them to abandon the smaller Streams Boggy Creek. which, we believe, is on the northeast slope of the Riding Mountains, states. any: The Boisse- vain Recorder. that few outsiders morwm ï¬nd time to pot . few 0! than. toothsomo little robbers. And 110.111â€: is keen onthochoot than is dwaya the busy little gopher to stimulate markmnshlp. 356 aware of the {act that there are still beaver, in Manitoba. The posi- tion which some of 3.1mm interstipg The “snitch; 1m out! hi! 07" .vctholnndmmm- ‘0’†5" lat. contente'd cattle broming on pr‘m. m on known ‘1'“. N0 Owl. “ .3 m such juicy ï¬re. P084159. chm!- 3 little as in the prairie. and“ the foot 0‘ it. ‘ hadâ€"locked ’00" MW With â€8‘ â€a mean. 1. Wu“ with an“. mall“, m1: mu, blue b111, spoon bill, an! n dam othon. The prairie chicken make-m- courxtnthoedze-ofth' what floldn uni! swam on W Mv rod grain .B_°. gut? the busm far- '71â€"‘13 tint u that much. a rich in than. sentlmntal ndjuncts which men meet to despise. but secretly long Ion-H. F. 9., in Toronto Star, J vâ€"' _o nose, ond tiï¬le the heart with thdr prom-inc of plenty.- If his eye is not ï¬lled with thot, he looks at the black band of W allow. or tur- ther on to an unbroken prdrio nod, apangld with the gentle and an name-like nowers that the poet flap about. Evan the broken I03, with the murdered flavors thrusting their head- above the tux-rows. con'iol sen- timent with it; Poor flowers. your day in over! Happy. bushing son, you: plenum: is done! You must ul'do! Ami still the hull hasn’t boon told. Ono of our “chases. noting the {act that colonies of beaver mstlll to be found in llanltobo, a quantity of new dams being in evlglenco {n willsing in them, and lovers will walkin lanes of them. The experi- mental mrm pays for itself when it accomplishes this tree mission. It is gratifying to know that the rough- and-ready Wat will spend some 0! its opulence on appearances. The Manitoba farmer may well laugh at the Easter-nex- who conceiv- es that a Western landscape is fee- tureless. I! the-landhappeno to be flat, look at his inimitable horinons, the burnished sun, the blue dome of the sky. the hou‘y majesty o! the moon, and the brilliancy o! the stars. Picture the oceans of grain surging green in the spring, end_ golden in groen in the spring, and golden in summer. And when the harvest rip- enl, wint can be more beautiful than the tourist yellow 0! the barley, tho gold of the wheat, and the white of the outs. great Chequers of color which please the eye with their tints, satisfy the mind With their order!!- 7 â€"-A ._1‘I. OLA- mmu mm. m C; not. tower, Theydonotapintobu lofty or noble. 'Iheir duty is to bloom, be sturdy, and look pleasant. They are little use: to the m eye, and ‘9. hedge of Asiatic maple can easily 011th the tallest. Still, Duvet In mun. â€"A jury investigated the death 0! Thomas Quinney at Corp, and found that it was the mult of accident, and not suicide as ï¬rst reported. --The store of G. R; Anderson and Bro. at Brahmpto’n"was hem'fly dam- aged by ï¬re on Wednesday night. 'lhe stock was vulned at $40,000 amt was fully insured. â€"Judge Doctor: of Pembroke has been appointed to investigate charge. of impersonation ï¬n connection with the relerendum vote at. Ottawa. â€"'l‘he London Trades and Labor Council have decided that they will not place any candidates lo the ï¬eld in the coming municipal contest. â€"It is reported that. the Interns.- tional Harvester cdmpnny have pur- chased 35 acres of land adjoining their present holding in Hamilton. will double their works. and employ nine thousand hands. --While George Nelson cl Melville was standing at the hem of the C. P. R. at Orangeville he fell and expired almost instantly. â€"Hn.rry Simona was arrested in Hamilton on a charge of lorging the name of the wife of Rev. Samuel Daw to a promissorg note for §5(_). -â€"Robt Forster, a. St. Thomas be:- tender has begun suit. to collect 810,000 damages from Rev. W. Hart- ley and other active temperance workers, who caused his arr-wt on a charge of ballot-boxâ€"stufling. â€"It has been discovered that Hon- treal coal dealers have 27,000 tons of coal stoned on the docks, which they are holding out of the market while people ore sullering {or it. The City Council will try to force the dealers to sell. 7 _ _ â€"While the Sisters of Providmee et manned“. Montreal. were atr- tending midnight mm in their Chap- el last hight some miscreanu ut- tempted to set ï¬re to the convent. â€"Fire did $5,000 damage muonâ€" trea! on Friday night. to the build- ing on St. Lawrence street occupied by N. Rudolph and Comm. un- ors. and J. N. Brule. photognpher. â€"T'he barge Stevenson. which ran on a. rock at Stony Point. has been released, and sheathed in ice, and lashed between two other boats, has been taken to Brockville with its cargoofcoal. _, â€"'I‘he two little sons of Mr. Cotâ€" trell of Severn Bridge were playing with a, gun when one shot. the other and killed him instantly. â€"Wm. Kirwin. machinist, of Albion Him. was instantly killed by I train heu- New quow. 31.8. -â€"Stephen Way of Haunt-m was robbed of $60 and u gold-{mod watch by highnymen. who anion molm. â€"Holden. one of the men oonvicui of bank robbery at Home, was reâ€" leased from penetenthry, having completed his term. â€"â€"'I‘he Kingston Council will upon! the lay-law authorizing the use 0! voting machines, as they have been found imperfect. ï¬lm Bell 01 Kent has been-p- pointod to WW tho Mot-hox-ctuflnt cue- d: St. â€"Tixnothy Hanan: I“ found «but in d ditch non: Sin-nonvmo Station {mun into the loo. Ha had been drinking. --F. H. 01m is said to have of- fered 82,000,000 {Or iron ore depos- its in the Sudbury district. .JI‘be m Assyrian. tron: Han- burg, is in museum at Minx, withacaseofamallpoxonbocrd â€"The mercury dropped 80 m below zero at Winnipeg for Christ- mas. and all the trains were daisy. ‘ " MIAMI-HWY. JAHUABY m. 1% Suits and flvercuats See Our Handsome Stock at the Papular Jewelry Store You will ï¬nd beautiful goods at W. F. McCarty’s in Watches, Clocks, Jewel- We are selling at special low prices for the holiday 883.500. ry, Silverware, Novelties in Silver, Bronze, China, Electric Novelties, Travel- ing Cases, Pocket Purses, Ebony Brushes, Hand Mir- rors, beautiful Engagement and Wedding Rings and. Wedding Goods in endless Variety. Ends†Dec. 17!! 1901 .Noï¬ce Bmwutflr flnddzhm ofivcpetcutpa “mummï¬cpfl- upopihlstockforthehflymb- day We 3min; Payable atIIc Campany's oï¬c: on. and tfla In 113.190} - Transfcrboobwmbedosedfm Dwzmmgtstindusivc. Byorderoftheboard mumâ€. The Vietoria Loan and Savings Co. 1 HOLIDAY mnsl W. F. McARTY, THE NOBBY TAILOR .E BRITAIN. ‘ " DIVIDEND NGNCE '. J. RICH Ordzr your Winter Su't or Overcoat now. I have an up- to-date stockdof Tweeds, Over coatings an Trouscrings to choose from.Pnccs _ - PnccsRIght. See my stock before ordEring III! JIIILEII. mud". Private "It to Pay of Ban and Appoint . Nu were discuss-3d =ï¬ng of credizms dl chambers Wedxg 1:310]: with the And? M 50 were p "mum anim J. A: “Donald my I. 8. D‘vis secretary m thoBunk of Han taking over all sol fling the main of UM Wt (but they COL mm service, an at vaeland. For 1 tfln Andrews recoiv u follows: Kingston m, 1873; Two 1 tutor, 1881; Roy tidy.1881.with cl 1!!- .mow lit ‘ “In! In the coll‘ than the bank. TM; 11-. laid, the bank an. to ‘ recent inter WMJ. A. Mad] mid ; committee of Hamilton, 10: ï¬e. held against. (3. ‘ Son. secure other. new ad report at the ne flu creditors. hauler meeting wi «In: Won the one cum. died at. St. 1‘ pi“! about 10 o'clocl night. from apoplel lit-caval- was born i lay 19, 1853, and i: w on the wal M but 16 years a town has not been 1 been dishonest ; in 1 In: been no public dii M or emplogo; MI: and stamina And there has not I much failure as critiq nothing serious has of the newspapers, d OM whispered on 1 In: charges against at. I have t"acod u] Cinders and ï¬nd thq man man. There is I ht. prominence by an droning in u m be joined tht for him. Do I as: with the impud lune reply to his coll Ion! voice abuses his ufl makes copy for Strong men are need1 it there has been any “so would sacriï¬ce Meal schemes. W and visiona a body like the ] mt. but the town m see represent .113 of Lindsay th Protmtants : and I can!!! rather be repn mutants than by‘ on: faith. In electi‘ â€aeration shoul .1 all except the ï¬t dilate. Do not vot wsc he belongs u We, or is your pet . Keep clear of the dual. the rcvolutiol tau! and write at s on fault that. they all since. ‘Bepresentative m1 m character sh tune former may be by picking men "from I)†community, or I I! can represent all whining these mel mt not be suppm also they belong u nae are Catholic: town council. If it. a, should not run I Inuit that they were MUSunday evoni In at the year's d lactic-let, PM A .- Ivoâ€"lfll Life â€Wherefore 13ch out among you 89‘ at report. full of * and wisdom, who: point over this bus guy ignorant men, POR HOME MAN m 'A' A RECORD LIF W. 3). Andrew". L‘ amel