'H O DGETTS AGER mamaâ€"$3,003,692 SS highest prices r all k~nds of route 3 rated 1855 3001‘ “Est. of st cm 90 'uinlno OUZER "I 90"!!!" P 114?? 3!," mm Ham. 'Id fur tlr‘ haw. Pr? Ii. (ms. \\ hv m2 under "5 h hum mt- w‘ [own ste ngwmted I.) the Cent- .~ . “New" I-I 'l'oronto. : xnmx ::n-. n'mmm tor «ma. \Vhy nab get 3:: under "55» cialists" :hnm :ue- WC“ known f r‘mmm-r- In! text: haw at†c-an in at- nm Hnlh; .\ N) Van- †for [MT C mlugue mw, PH» ., X 0114:: I'l' S gSCEGOLS 1911, Being Lin. The] 'lk in the determi Wanted I'or fear of 'essinn to the police the Ln said that she put two pg 01’ oxalic acid into the Mk prepared for the a said she removed the Lbout inurtren and drop- in. T here were thirty ea l'I Tm onto [1's confession came after rumination during which rwn when told that they wr baby away from ha tr tell the truth. The m then tulll how the hu- said ShQ . atic sort of character, My aroused herself with naming: of the small r foods she said she re- ing to the fact that she her own baby the an. '0 her the same diet and l for as the other nut;- she compiained 0! dia- dropping poisoned ‘m‘ a police officer. Ankers is twenty~four She came to the hoapi. r with her infant am ' the baby in the m. ral she found work in. She had been regarded l as true, however, icially stated that cod under formal u i homicide tO-day. . l advisable to leave ta! last nirft m I} 1 “1 put two or u alic acid Into the " t not. do it with intent Les, but I wanted to the nurSes who warn rday night after the m prepared {or the- dice version of the Esoned IOUrs belieVe that the , demented. He ms of babies inf" .Ived the police m last night of , a kitchen woman? :itting she placed qu' abies milk bottles; "E ssion was obtained?" ;enant and detective. nrs examination at m, who had been uï¬ jnz-e autopsies dam En Woman med Eight Little Bali muy SON)“ Feb. 24.â€"Th feel i FEB. 29‘ i9 box and the acid in one coming. :lvtection. t bitter to- she was a 01' resent- t'nr months U get even he Auk. ! {er story day. It leaVe be: under End ’1'. P.‘ O’Connor is Qi‘xty-QWQ. W 0th have lived the ME: Itmybethntifï¬hemm’ih“ had is unduly protracted much 0! th. debuing. will devolve. calm men like Joseph Devlin, nature. It is said here that his physi- cs! condition is due less to the stress of political conflict with English (Jon‘- â€natives than to the attacks mid? upon him from the Irish side by WH- liam O’Brien and Tim Hash. , John Redmond is .sixgx. ypats old ._.‘I II! is Ann “‘ ' T. P. OC’onnor, is also far from the tower of strength he once was. ‘ ".l‘ay Pay†suffers from an organic com- Pleint that causes him at times to wmh he were free from the excite- ments of political strife. Yet such $3 the present crisis that he and he chief are akin every day on the claims of again from. one end of land to the other. 3w people realize that the ,reeerv. 2g. determined-looking leader of the Nationalists is, beneath the}?!- fae‘e_, a nym of an pxtrelpelxw MR. '1'. P. O’CONNOR, KP. pnohc platform his strength will not hand the strain of the prolonged and exgntmg debate as this would be no- thing less than a disaster to the Part . every eï¬ort is being put for- war to lessen his burden. To add to the anxiety, there is the gnarlegge that his ehief lieutenant, People, Are Giving Evidence ofâ€" the Strain Under Which Thw ï¬ve- Fears Are F‘elt for Redmond. Now that t' v Home Rule ctmpaign as in full swing, the friends of John Redmond fear that if he does not moderate his present pace be may break down before the introduction of the Home Rule bill in the Hansen! Commons. Redmond has shown traces at! weariness and stress for some time. and as a breakdown at this junctue The Big Sons of Erin, Who ‘Have Spen' a Lifetime In Ceï¬finq Their Pet Measure Passed by the English REDMOND AND TAY PAY ARE SHOWING THEâ€? AGE. ‘_. _.â€"â€"-.. â€"_â€"__._.__._ .____ “*MM THE IRISH BHIEFTAINS ,5“Prism Brand’ ReaéM m Paint EMC Lennan Col Wruiam St. North I Next Post Building, Lindsay} JU] makes nf Guns repair-d, Smks [Bade fur Guns. Skates 8'12de and Hepuiucd, SawsGmumed Rind Sett. Harse Clippers Sharpen“! equal tn mnv. Lacks qued with heys. Ul'o‘aln Separators Repaired, General Mm-bine Repairs at with Slate, sandstone, brownstoxe and marble have all proved failures. ~ Granite is going the same way. No Stone can compare Durability, Attistic Eï¬ects of away Everlasting Memorials. E Geo. 'N. Shepherd’s GUN REPAIRING H Arthur Graham .1“ LEETWOOD P. 0. THURSDAY, 5:33. 239, 1912. White Bronz 3â€"?biaom’o over thirty years old and as nice end perfect as the “I ï¬nd a White anze' ‘ M o n u- ment in Simpson. EP‘gr Cgunty, Nzty, ï¬rst box did me more good than all the medicine I had tried up to that time, so I continoed the treatment. Emery box healed the sores more and more until, to make a. long story short, Zam-Buk healed all the sores Jcompletely Everybody in this place knows ofmycaseandthstitis the Zamâ€"Buk alone that cured me.†1 Minister corroboratesâ€"The Rev. W. B. M. Parker, of Caledonia, Misa Dol- liver’s minister, writes: "This isto oertify that the testimonial of Miss Dolliver is correct as is: its my knowledge goes. I have known her forsyearsndshalf, udher cure eaecwd by Zen-311k is remarkable†What-exem- there is ulceration. blood. “bne day a, friend asked lbs if I had tried Zamâ€"Buk. I said/I had not but I got a. box right away. That “My father then took me thirty miles to see a 'well known doctor. He photographed the arm and the hand This photograph was sent to a New York hospital to ‘the specialist, but they sent word they could do no- thing further for me, and I “in despair. “I had ï¬ve different doctï¬s, and faithfully carried out their instruc- tions. I drank pint after pint of blood medicines, tried salve after salve, and lotion after lotion, but it was of no avail. Miss Kate L. Dolliver, of Camden; ia, Queen's 00., N. B., says: “I must add my testimony to the value of Zamâ€" Buk. Ulcers and some broke out on my arm, and although I tried to heal them by using various pre- parations, nothing sewed to do me any good; ‘The sores spread un- til from ï¬ngers to elbow was one mass of uICeration. A REVEREND GENTLEMAN FULLY CORROBORATES ZAM-BUK WORKED A MIRACLE 0F HEALING. Sores from Elbow to Fing :rs WEDNESDAY, MARCH ‘27. â€" BY Thos. Onshore, auctioneer. Reducâ€" tion of farm stock and implements, the property of Alex. McGee, lot 16, con. 8, Feleon. Sale at one o‘clock and positively without re- serve. Everything -on the list will be disposed of to the highest bid- der. >N FRIDAY, MARCH 8, 1912.â€"1;y Elias Bowes, auctioneer, on lot 25, con. 5 and 6. Penelon, farm stock and implements, the property of George Webster. Sale at one o'clock. WAN TED To RENT -â€" AIDVERTIS~ er wants to rent a. good farm. Ad- dress Box 26, Warden, ’Lindsay, giving full particulars. ‘O'R SALE â€"- FARMS FROM 160 to 800 acres, best land in Canadian Northwest. Anyone interested call or write. Hetherington Realty 00., Lumsden, Saskatchewan. FOR RENT â€" A GOOD FARM house, near Cameron. Good spot for a. man who wishes to go out working by the day. Apply to Walter Hil,, Cameron. 2956). WEDNESDAY, FEB. ‘28, 1912.â€"By Thos. Cashore, auctioneer. Sale of farm stock and implements, the property of Hugh McKinnon, lot 22, con. 4, Fenelon. Sale at one o'clock sharp. FRIDAY. MARCH 1. - By Thos. Onshore, auctioneer. Mammoth clearing sale of farm. stock and im- plements on the Syndicate Farm. lot 24, con. 11, Fenelon. the prop erty of Mr. John Aldous. Sale_ at 12 o‘clock noon and without re- serve as Mr. Aldous has sold the WANTED -â€" STRONG WOMAN, years of age or over to work farm ï¬ve miles from City of gina, Sask. Must be good I lot 4, in the 6th con. 0! Town- TO RENT â€" THE EASKEgLF 0F ship of Ops. containing 1 acres. cook and rtidy housekepper. Wages $20 per month. Apply at once to Mrs. D. McEacher-n. Box 1021, Regina, Sask. THE UNDERSIGNED OFFERS FOR Land in good state of cultiv‘ation, Hon-d house with stone cellar, good barn with stone foundation and other outb uildings. Small orchâ€" ard. Plou’g‘hing almost ï¬nished. For further particulars apply to S. E. Roddy, Reaboro, Ont. salontureasombleprioothelp- ported Clydwdale stallion. Atdinr' _e!'9ay Duke, (13279) rising 7 years old, guaranteed quiet, sound and \sure. Will take one or two Clyde ï¬llies in part pay For further information address Geo. E. John- son, Peterboro P. 0., rural mail‘ No. 3. l s is to way station was distinctly a blow g Miss “This quiet, half asleep village the as my gleam watering place of America. a hex- perhnpaotthewofldrlnldtomy- _ self. almost acct-anally. but when we - “I": had bowled lnto Bellevue avenue. “PM? when Mn. Eu Kay aid that her cottage was, I began to understand, I m’tmat 0mm: what! d3 think oft!» out spam: houses. With mane pochet handkerchief lawns I had heard so much that was dazzling about Newport, whlch I had imagined a great white city by the sea. that the part I saw ï¬rst after leavlng, the rail. way station was distinctly a blow “This quiet, halt asleep village the greatest watering place of America. perhaps of the world!†l sald to my- self. almost acornfully. but when we Now I saw Mrs. Ess Kay and Pot~ ter in their element. There was no suggestion that the people were no: good enough for them here. Mrs. Es: Kay radiated smiles. bowing cordially right and left. sometimes'even more cordially than her friends bowed in return. Potter was taking of! his straw hat and waving it. They were delighted to see everybody. for every» body was somebody, and some. but not all. of the everybodies were delighted to see them. , Sally alone remained un- moved, and I was glad to have her to keep me in countenance in this new act. where I knew none or the players or what “part I should be called upon to tab by and by. There was a crowd of gorgeous car- rlnges. and Jet black varnish. gold and sliver harness and horses' brown and chestnut backs all gllttered blindingly In the sun. But there were even more motors than carriages. it seemed. or else they were more conspicumxs. and many Were being: driven by beautiful glrls ln muslius such as we wont! Wear to a garden par‘y. win; nothing; on their pretty heads except their splendid hair, dressed everlastingly in the same way. Sometimes it is rather a pretty night atthe station where you have to get out for Battiemead or for the village. when one of the best trains from town comes in. especially if mother or any one at other big places In the neighbor- hood should be having :1 house party. There are several rather good tit-toting with nice sleek horses. a handsome broughnm or two. a motor car or txw. to say nothing oi’ dogmms and game- tons. But “is a poor mw compared to the Scene at Newport. i fell sud- deniy as if i were at the then or an“! w.. the curtain had just gone up on a bril- liant new act. Some of Mrs. Ess Kay’s servant: had gone on before us. and some were in our train. Exactly how It was man- aged, I don‘t know; but things that would worry us into gray haired graves don't seem to bother Americans at all. and there was the motor waiting when we arrived at the end of our Journey. with a private motor omnibus (or the servants and luggage. I have traveled abroad with\mother ; and Vic, where there were Americansin the dining car, and they have been cross because they didn't get served quickly. and they have said things. But in this car going to Newport you forgot what you had had last before the next course came. yet nobody seemed to mind. They were as patient as lambs. and simply took what wu given them when they could get it. ol- though they looked as if they were used to everything very nice at home. I suppose it must have been because they were all Americans together. eat- ing American things, with America waiters to wait upon them and no (or eigners who ought to know they ‘ wouldn t/stand that sort of nonsense. J hanged if they would. So we took his suggestion. and there was a crowd, but he had secured a ta- Me for four. and we squeezed ourselves Into the places. - I thought hard about the Morning Post and The Queen, hut couldn’t to 3 member anything extraordinary in the advertising line, and said so. ~ “Perhaps you, being English. don‘t see anything extraordinary about a ciergyman's wife oirering to exchange a canary bird for six months’ subscrip- tion to Punch, or the widow at n of- ï¬cer earnestly desiring an idiot lady to board with her. or a decao'ed gentle- woman inviting the public to give her ï¬ve‘ pounds, but we. being American. do.†resiied Sally. “Why. I'd rather read the advertisements in some of your morning papers and ladies‘ week- lies than i would eat." “Talking of eating. it’s lunchtime." said Potter. “There’ll be a big me- nugerie feeding in the dining car. but there’s no good waiting for it to ï¬nish, as then there‘ll be no food left.†"szy’i-e a hundred times quainter'.†We hadajamnbgojuwoe mum Achss theï¬ 1 In: in It! people. have ever 1 have found that whey rive;- the area of a huge; nest material imaginable. it seems, tor the covering of a house, especially with a foundation of granite sparkling with mica. They are soft and shim- ‘meryintheirtintstheaenhingiesasa dove‘s breast; some are dark. some light. but all are feathery in _en‘ect. and altogether the Moorings, with its gable- md porches and bow windows and balconies nnd wide veranda; Her “cottage†looks as If it were built of gray satinwood. but It Is rally shingles, and shingle: can be the love- â€â€œWelcome to my little cottage, dear Betty," said Mrs. Ess Kay. If this is her idea of a cottage. i don't know what her conception of a castle must be! And yet. when you come to analyze it, there really is something about the place which sug- gests a kind or gloriï¬ed. Titanic cot- tage. rather too grand for a king, un- less he were a fairy king. but possi- bly suited to .an emperor. But i do believe rich Americans think that what is good enough for a king is only just 800d enough for them at a pinch-and ‘ l‘veheardeEssKaymllWindsor‘ dreadfully shabby. . her dark gray eyes, which grow fun. But just then our chauh'eur slow- ed down before a house which seemed to cover about a quarter of a mile of ground. flashed apart. I thought her splehéid: Iy handgome, and I liked the gleam In though, as I bowed to hlxn and found time to know exactly how Mrs. Pneu- ley looked and whet she wore, In the half second before our two motors “Here comes Com herself. now. In Tom Doremus’ Eiectra.†said Mn. Eu Kay “It manure-Wu, Van- den Wind: wild. his going so much with the Pltchley lot. as she can’t stand them and would keep Cora and Carolyn out of everything in Newport 11‘ she would." â€October's buds." l repented. “It sounds poeticalâ€"but unseasonable." Potter answered with a laugh. “Yes. we like things out of season in America, so we bring out most or our buds In October. Then they have the whole winter to bloom 1n. ‘you know, before they're grafted on another stalk.†i dem. wlth only that any groom it any- thlng should happen. She must be plucky. How old ls she?" “Eighteen. She was one of last 00- tober’s buds." “Thnt's Corn Pltchley's stepdaugh- tér. Carolyn," said Mrs. Ess Kay. “Du you 'mmmber Margaret Taylour tell~ Ing anecdotes of Com? She doesn't bother much with the girL People are taking about them both rather a lot this year. they say.†"Carolyn." I repeated. “What a pretty name and how A morican sound- ing. somehow. Fancy her driving tan- And somehow the young girls had ithe air of being a great deal more Important than we are. at home. You could tell tron: the very way they sat and held up their heads in the motor cars and dogcarts and other thlngs that they thought the world was thelrs and they weae the people to know In lt. One was driving a tandem. and she didn’t look more than seventeen. l was glad when she bowed to Mrs. Ess Kay, because she was pretty and I made up my mind that I should llke to know her. But here in Bellevne avenue every- body was smillng and chatting. and I noticed that the men weren't so pre- ternatnrally alert as the men ln New York. Some had actually taken tlme to get fat, whlch, so far I'd had rea- son to suppose. was a thing that never happened to American men. ln carrls'ges. They simply lean back on the cushions with an expression that seems to say. “This la the only thing 1 can think of to do. so I‘m doing lt just to klll tune.†Probably they don’t really feel like that, but they look lt.‘ And as for the people who sit and watch or stand and wait. they‘re usually a stralned expression In their eyes as 1! they were ntrald of mlsslng somebody or somethlug or lmportance. dons. but not one or the charming women driving up and down Benevne avenue that afternoon lacked bored and hardly my were painted. 1 never saw people appear to be so delighted with life no so thoroughly alive. as it the glorious sea alt were frothlng in their xelna. like champagne. - In the park you‘don't see people laughing and talking to each other} .ww-~_ heightotthewon. People don’t look happy day!" in the part. not ovenï¬the pretty 9909.3- ! have found that whenever I have been. And, though that Isn’t so very often yet. Vic says it is really and truly always the same. The great beauties look bored. and some of them have their faces painted m the III of Mg transform- 8mm gay. Butthorewuonothlnglwu sax-eat. mavenneitaeltm iné a tremendous 1111an of com mutated wank, This Deane“ pace when everybody was rich. where W lloquereatndlsconntmx thought â€"whntaever else I did think-that‘lt would be a place t_o stop away from you were MDPyâ€"hapï¬y “a at Mr. DoremE .“It doesn't.†said » .n- shortly. "and nobody but a um: um": hove thought It would. It make, we feel all the more that 1 (1011‘: n .31 to be mixed up with her. forâ€"ton “ultra also.“ Page: whittled. win. one think: In 3 breast pocket. “Fu- the che-Hd‘l sake.†he “marked 1...:maucwy. and Mn. Eu Kay looked ....m. “I shut 1mm th. Amway: to my' “Why shouldn‘t she have dared. when you~come to think of It 2'" “Well. anyhowâ€"she don‘t dare uow." "N . naturally, she won't dare now. You're as smart as may make ‘em. Kath." Then, tor some reason, they both turned and gazed at lm- with a “thank- goodneu-here‘s-a-flom Aug-spar" son or look, while Sally examined the grounds ‘ in he: teacnp with I...†fancy Mule three cornered smlle -.. hers. “Wu that the tlv: : you thought would change me to\....d Con Pitch-l Icy?" asked Hrs. lbs Lu. “Yea. I thought it \.....ld give you ll tort of fellow feeling." , Mrs. Ess Kay: race wC-em a‘ dull. ugly red, and she laughed u loud laugh which sounded as if lt would be the same color. “As rqr Com. 1 can quite understand, but I don't bellow the woman would hare dared to try lu ex- clude me." she said to u qulvery volt-e. "She knows for a tact that she Isn't to be asked to the pink ball on the 23d and that Mrs. Van der Wind: her- self scratched your name on' {be 11.51 before she sailed for Europe." “Now. see here. Potter Parker,†'vroke in Mrs. Ens Kay. “1 don't wish rou to. set up as another of Con Pitvhiey'n champions. it's all very well for Margaret Taylour to be for- ever quoting her, and she is run. but she goes around being original in the wrong way. that nobody adiulies- . mat is. she does what she wants and not what other people want her to do uni-caret spends her summer: at Blue Bay. and i spend mine at Newport. and i'm not going to have Mrs. \an die: Windt down on me or on W‘ brother either it i can help it.†“Thanks for your good advice.“ re- plied Potter uiriiy “But may be. when you hear what Mrs. Pitchlcy had to say to me you ‘ii change your tuue.’ Mrs. Ea: Kay raised her eyebrows; but her eyes would look curious. "What could Cora Pitchiey say that would have any particular en'ect on me?" she asked. “I didn’t get to the Casino after all." said he. “I met Mrs. l’itchley :nlng out to make a can (she was on her way home It seems when we met her). and she altered to turn back If m go with her. so I did." f Nevertheless when he came back (which he did after we had dn’ssed and were having tea behind the min of glittering glass) 1 had to thank him nrettlly. He was pleased. but was evidently thinking about something else. It vy‘as hard hearted of me. but all my pleasure In the gleaming: white beauties went out llke a bursllug bub- ble. It gets on my nerves to be grate- ful to Potter three or four times a day! U things when he cares to pix-amu- And he does care to please you. Betty But you know that without my tvmux yo_u. dpn't you. my Lady Witch?" now he wanted them arrauxvdf l must say he does think of rather pl‘vt- Each bedroom 18 done In a color. And mine Is the “white room." It was “most too heavy sweet with some powerful flower fragrance when we “'ent\ in. For an Instant I could no! think what it was. 12m in ::::u1.m- moment I had seen "on tables and cub- ;nem and window shelves great bowl: 9! water lilies. rising out of their dark leaves like moons out of cloud hanks. “From Potter " said Mrs. Piss Kay. "He telegraphed for them to be here and sent word to the semants just Mrs. 12188 Kay and Sally took me up :0 show me my room and them. an.) Potter said that [w Would go around and look In at Hu- Cusinu. but lw would come back and 1mg. .19.} gill: 1:: as soon as no 5:4 mvu "what were was doing." 'l'h'vy all laughed. "You jist wait And ï¬nd out." answered Potter. "And we'll work you pretty hard doing it." "Why. isn‘t that partly -what mum to Newport for?" I asked. I spoke this thought out aloud. but Putter said 1 would soon Warn that :bvre wasn't much time in Newport lor looking at the Sea and sky. . m or altos-u to live in it. . of 3 _ Theft: II a his uqnnre hall. not to be 4.1m l’ unwind to om at Battlemead. o. net: ' . . u mllarly chormlng. It looks :. nil l MWMGQ for slicing out dame. ton wlth man you like. and evldeuuy i. Slit Laows Its value as a wrung put. that wd llres up to it. for were are lat there orlght colored silk and satlu (‘Ualllohfl eat:- nwlnx lnvltlnzly against the wall ox. I re: .ench one of the shallow slew. Mus: eald 2 it the rooms are enormous and masts: 5 ml! of quaint leaded windows with All: underneath.» But holler than ‘nythln: else is the veranda. whilh -' . ans all round the house and ls um ' l 5 My as wide as a good sized l‘oolu. ; at is ï¬tted up like a succession o1 ~-â€": 00:12:. The delicate bead curtains that litter like a ram 0! green and whitt- ad rose colored jewels give you a eellug of privacy. for you can see urough them \"llhnlll being wen. The l .utluy gray floor In lmlf covered with ~xqulslte rugs, and everywhere their are oriental tables and clmlm and 'l . ushlony some and green hammocks '1“ 3' with frilly pink pillows and screens l',‘_“'._sl iud homers of palms and brlght 32:: $2111“: zeas. 1 should like to live on that u.- ‘ :nnda swinging slowly in a hillumm'l. f2! :11} Ind looking through the casrnde of ‘10] Sliuering heads at the sea and sky _ . °‘_’ 'Misa Dorothy Rogen, of 600 Corry- don-eve. Her {other is» a. well-known civil engineer, and did not suspect his daughter was ,the girl whose cur- ioue wedding has ï¬lled the local po- m (or the pest week. The girl chimnehedidituejoke, con-ee- monding with Watson u the result or e matrimonial advertisement. She Ht him in a. department etore on route from the minus». house. A: thesirlienndcmeneflortwm lye-1nd.“ lave the we aunt. I Winnipeg, Feb. 26.â€"â€"It developed to-day that the 17-year-old girl who, under the name of his Belle Russell, married George E. Watson. 3. well- to-do bachelor of Winnipeg last week and left him within an hour, was Wedded and Parted Within an Hour } W 6. Blair 55 Son “X reckon u would have been stupid of us if we hadn't remembered." said Sauy. Then she went on. irrelevanUy. It seemed at ï¬rst. "What day of the mouth is tomorrow?" l luokéd at Sally. and she laughed, so I kuvw Um! I “as to go. '01:. but “h: u about bathing cluthes!‘ J vxclainwd on sudden thuugm. “no“ annual or me not no have u- membeu-d that 1 would want them before I left home or In New York!" Invest Your Money in Guaranteed 6 per cent. V' . RS. E88 KA Y had a lu-ad ‘ ache uvxl umrmug and stoppvd in no.1 Shu- couldn'l spvnk at he ~ spoken in, and so We uuidll't possibly ask ln-I' nduu- uhmu ,uiug to Bailey's [mun IM‘ :1 «m. m 100 sen. Potter. wlwse prupuszu u was, said that this was perhaps prow- dculial. as she Was almost rel-mm u: want me to stay in an 1 «mid be taken out oflicially. "But you uou'l need to know that." he added. N goguormrsmm «t can noun mu was: non m be â€loom to have you a. m opmnoar. ‘ " ti , .- .;-;~ - f Ir. Hclntyre.-flholam.lol' at», ":3.- W â€'00“ M "1Ԡwhovmuken to theBoee Memo-w lob her or her dearest triumph. Lady . Hospital to he 0961‘“ upon hat Dnhy.Yoot-ethehlxgemrortho ... msddle 01’ the setting. You‘re the M?’ M' 30" m" â€Mama" ‘3 unhhoor.†‘ unprovmg nicely. His many {ï¬ends "Potter! You ought to be ashamed will be plotted to receive this good at yooraett. talking; to her like that!†new: as the young man has many ‘ mid Mrs. Eu 8 . “But!" 1'9 means. ‘wtum (rind: imam! around Lindsay. Betty. [stint-l: n he very glad â€an. Thornton has been in Manitoba do anything I can to make your visit â€an and It will be no trouble at {for some time and came back to all for me to give an entertainment. ’Lmomyy t°_b° opereted'upon “ the Hm may be quite sure." .adee at hts phyetcum m the west. She held this as the queen mtght 3.1: that It didn‘t manor to her whether there were seventy-live people or sev- MEETING WITH SUCCESS. ants-II: asked to a garden party. and The My friends at Mr. Wilfred I realized that l was snubbed: so I M, pepper will be pleased to beau- eald no more. . . . . -â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"______, gadpter 9‘ daily will will remain a customer us to the test. the payment of principal and which: intact. We collect and remit the explains National Finance Co., Limited Follow the enmple of the lead- ing Loan and Insurance Companies. and invest in ï¬rst mortgages on improved Saskatchewan farms. Get 6 per cent. interest. Buy the mort- gages from us. We are ï¬nam Ifyou once .try our tailoring you would give you counterfeit money (“no u- can't-unto “‘50" "most. please not put 9a! (or me.‘,' I .exclalmed. “I 1913'» for nutty} 26 WELLINGTON STREET EAST, "and 050.: Vacuum. 3.0. (“liloringr any more than wouldn’t sell you poor non, “Ville, who at ï¬rst denied all knowledge of the robbery, but on be- ing shown the jewelry found in his dran- admitted his guilt and show- ed the chief when all the missing u- Ville, was notiï¬ed, and went down to Orono yesterday. After making some enquiries. he searched the house 0! John Hoyle, found acre o! be- uncing articles, and arrested his seph Henry, Orono, was burglar-med, entrance being obtained by forcing the back door. Some two hundred YOUTH ARRESTED A'I‘ ORONO ON BURGLARY CHARGE. Bowmanville, Ont. Feb. 25. -- On Friday night last. the store of Joâ€" and Peach. run, You: ADMITTED HIS GUILT booklet "A Sale Investment." which gives list of director- and vestwithusanysmnfrom $500.00 to 810.000.00 or mate. Send for ï¬rst mortgages in Saskatchewan -â€"an excellent and legal investment for “Trust" funds. You can in- yourchoiceofthebstclassof There are 47 " liters " in the‘King- ston penitentiary, including Jeann- mine, the Toronto murderer, who arrived on Saturday afternoon. This is said to be the largest number in the record of the institution. Among the “.liiers" are two women. one of whom was sent down for murdering her husband, gnd the other for par- ticipating in the murder of her in- (ant. 47 “ LIFERS." Kr. :Pepper arrived Saturday night to spend Sunday with his mother before going to Winnipeg to resume his duties there. â€than†for the post three years and resigned a. line position there to accent this new ï¬eld of work. Mr. Pepper‘s territory will be in Mani- toba and Saskatchewan, with head- quarters in Winnipeg. where he will doubtless meet many of his old Lind- any friends. MEETING WITH SUCCESS. The my friends 0! Mr. Wilfred 1!. Pepper will be pleased to heu- Iot his admit to the position of travelling dancnstrator of The Canadian Kodak 00.. Toronto. Hr. Popper has been prominent in the photographic business in Duluth, Ladies and Gentlemens Tail 0 m I '1 me waist the ndvantages of ut