: complete assortment of ‘ last season from $1.75 to ml! wear for twenty yqrs but supply of wups before ners the beneï¬t and sell . en, at last years pxices. from. Everything .AGE LICENSES are Issued ndaay, either at. his ofï¬ce in 3. W. BEALL’S Jeweua'y have the silo tings expressly stared for constructing dos, {er for proper}? mixing the and cement. and see us for estimate of Cgrre't Expert from Toronto in this dvsn’ict for a Shoat whit 'repared to take contracts fa r sitos. . CARROLL’S aless Ielegm' .Jl. A SHARE-o- mm mm!!! "l" i Corporation. Iopxmmmd It W" Canada Permanent :1: Canada Mofll‘l‘ L B \K ER, ' mm 77, mu 7s. Attention ins RM ERS Rathbun Co. N TED sue-aim» Lindsay . 1903. late issued hjsoï¬icein h , r? the mamg ‘ 5" flgnded into his bones, . 1d“ wdï¬eeénsf of things m I t â€ones. ‘4‘ d aâ€"Edwin Markham. ‘ ass are usually as I} wlrduighw‘ed circumstances, he ' y well to do. He ar Peterb-oro, when and the Gra 7’18, Jvhqéker.†or LuLu-uv- i ? . "bushW t élasS are usually! Two boys were husband: at the ' “a a! thad circumstances, he I age of 15, and Wm girls we“ wid- 5 Mghmenally well to do. He} ows at 16. Ahoy of 20 had a. wife ’vuxceptl? Peterboro. when l of 65; a. girl 0! 15 had a. husband of W- earind that he Was go- | 60. There were 5.611.381 husbands, ’fldo up 1x133:e Grammar School, l 5,717,537 wives, 550,330 widoWers, ‘ :w .ttengnd study to be a Methâ€" ‘and 1,246,407 widows. The explan- hmnw. But his pocket was ation o! the disparity between the “Warm coming" of the realm ; number of husbands and wives is, o! o tho fact that there are “up†i: walk all the way. He 11 course, 0 ville and had . wives in England whose husbands an :mrough Bowman kind wife of are abroad md husbands who“ refusing to accept any i wives are absent. There were .mkeepel'h,In as he had told her ‘ 91 widows under the age of 20, and m ‘ bed to go i 25.112 over the age of so; and 3- on that he W1? . . _ . nd the condmon of h_ls g 625 \ery old malds had passed the â€mom a he had any. Later m { age of 85. â€whim“ remembered this" One of the most curious tables is 31159 1Eevavhen he went to 130me that which records the calling: of “18d? he Heart-d the Gilt/Skirts Of women††AS was very tired and deâ€"l Culling- of Women. nt and sat down on a stone to ‘ They havé assorted their ï¬ghts in wade eary limbs- A man came‘ some very masculine ï¬elds, as the . w . . (ï¬lm? “A mmstloned hurl asjzo l folloWing abstract Shows:â€" , A _ . 0. n1 0. Annf‘QfR â€very much surprised to see the of Egerton Ryerson, M.D. He ï¬shed to speak to the illustrious oter of edumtion then, but be H ridden away; but he remained u of the ï¬rmest friends of the ammo Methodist as long as ho The Pace That Kills. 'agraphs that up- from time to time in the pa.- ked up by more a less elaborate statistics, heart use and paralysis are increasing- human and fatal. It. is not to biondered at. This is a strenuous ago, no strenuous that men are hur- ddalong with its rapid current at . terriï¬c a. speed and with such unstant application to Work that ‘ - â€"â€"A kovnnd p, sometimes bar: lady and mind are taxeu new)â€. M POWel’S of endurance. Our pudlathers, nay, even our fathers M nothing of the stress of life as Iliael it, who are engaged in its In struggle toâ€"day. No wonder can u... _°°_- , - M often the rupture of an en- gorged bloodâ€"vessel in the brain, on: lbiailure o! a. sorely taxed valve in I‘. bheu‘t, suddenly puts stop to I :11, and the man who thought} M business must be attended to. 1 nutter at how great a cost 01 h"! and wear and tear, ï¬nds Bomb ‘i in that business has to go on: llï¬lout him. There are physical‘; ‘3 I! well as spiritual sins. and ‘ my men ruin their bodies, who? Mild not dream of doing damage! Ethel: souls. The plea. of necesâ€"l It! b not a. valid one either: 101" Inn is compelled to sin against “or his body or his soul. And N. as We Sal-d just now, in this Il-Muous ago it is no wonder that hurt disease and paralysis are on lbincrease. Men rushâ€"and drop. on“? men rush past them a little “herâ€"and drop in their turn. it 'ould be better to slacken the M, and hold out. longer. We should “more done and do it better. -' Wan Guardian. Tho Hun-Who Succoods. ‘ pretty 0V8 3. was making all haste to reach boys and 1. hues, and hated to stop over night chndrcn 1‘ huontroal. The palatial steamer 01‘ gizls 31'. ‘ ï¬n Richelieu Navigation Companfl chSonS- bu “that wharf at 7 o'clock p.m-. th9‘ dust?! or "'7 hour at which his train from 0t- the return. lawn reached Montreal. How coum AI 9. ml h 903$ny make the connection? At mot. serio‘ Pfucott he sent a. telegram to the than the 1 “Main of the steamerâ€"“Hold boat stance. 1‘ mo ten minutes. No fail." Upon men," 5 ' â€hing the rzu'lroad station he ï¬lmed into a cab and drove like Md into a cab and drove like ‘9‘ to the wharf, reaching it 11130 hunts: after 7. The steamer W“ M138. The captain seeing a. 111“ um}! up the gang-plank, ordered “11008 cast off and advanCed to‘ “' tide of the vessel with out- “Mthed hand to greet him. “In M “In, sir," he said, defefanflll‘ MI. the bout sailed away. "A1119“! “Q you.“ The best stateroom was “N to the stranger. «be “M .3 he owned the line; Without ‘ M be Went ashurd in Quebec as!“ â€fl;- Tba captain has 9111901qu :tiVO flange 3'; wrvwi .. is may ihgfaud a! a in: game} e -‘v I w Pi - e “I .m Y .. .N ' [Zip/aha 3%5‘; b“ igéadézm V‘igsugi 91 h I In Fiï¬? ""9 mm 999% I M he didn't call an“, E Mul'himpo Mt hill in m 9 new ï¬rmgh Gal 3 mm“ Wag barn at. ï¬kshmud .I I“ 15:531.“ m was 96:66?!†':. 0 836 me) in mu m. 3a; In 1391 In M “Bf minâ€! 691mb“. If. “F N" held a common in W h. Rifle: “during, thy M l“- lea." hm â€an 4mm. DEWART. atal. It is not to l‘his is a strenuous that men are hur- 5 rapid current at ed and with such ion to work that are taxed beyqnd ,, brave and I'. Dewart, is says The To- Dr_ DeWaJ'tn vas little less "n or lumber- 53 are usually “Mcfances. he > the Stone; rib, as m gathemdv . of “f. inCO- Our those who langxuxsu w r.-- -7 our fathers ty-ï¬ve “barristers and solicitors," as of life as sixteen doctors, and twenty “auth- aged in its ors, ' journalists, reporters No wonder : and shorthand writers." of an enâ€" million people in Wales, 280,905 8 brain, on.I speak Welsh only. he century the population (ed valve in. g During t. i a. stop to, multiplied four foldâ€"from 6,260,852 ’hO thought i. to 82,527,843. 0n the night of the attended to, 3 census 1,645 perso a cost of 2 sleeping! in W or shade, ', ï¬nds some? caravans. tents, or the open air. In 3 *0 8° On' the latter 0 Hampshire topâ€"‘ are physical ; pod the list with 895. Of the 4,536,541 persons enumerat- sins, and ‘ Jodies, who‘ ed in )ing damagel donâ€"born. lea 01 39095-2 London and ‘ either, for' placgg number ‘ sin 388511515 balance, therefore, ‘ 30‘11- Andi born in 0113 who left 1t, 0W: in thisi and people born elsewhere who came ained about 400,000 wonder that! to it, London 3 ‘lvsis are O‘B‘; souh_ . 7 n - g 1â€" nun-hag... ntegory ' u botWeen people Deter- .WARDER, JULY 9th.. 1908. 1 -â€"v__ 7 l l ! Again, who would think that the 31 centenurians thrived best in u big _ 3 city? Apparently he does. for of the 1 total number 102 lived in towns and a l 44 in the country. CENSUS REVEALINGS HUSBANDS IN ENGLAND AND wALEs AT EARLY AGE OF 15. A book 01 summary tables relating to the 1901 census of England and Wales has in“ been published. It is full, from the ï¬rst. page to the last. of interesting and curious informa- tion. Who, for instance, imagined that them were more than 100' centenar- ians in England and Wales? There are 146. Or, rather, as contcnm'ians are perishable beings. it would be more correct to say that there Were 146 in April. 1901â€"93 being woâ€" men . mun lav. W M Bight. 3. Eater Soul. Very lacuna. Culling.â€" ‘rho ’1':th Concerning the "Afliotdn 4mm.- éx rm†tom lung“! in Very Axdnou Work-Ion. Tiny Pawnbrokers. anlngl of Won-on. They havé assorted their rights in somï¬ very masculine ï¬elds. as the following abstract shows:â€" uy-.m... _. Doctors. 212; dentists, J udgi’ng f occupations those of th man. 6033 11am. PO“ and Roman land“ and Wales is as {($110va 25317;, deal and dumb, 15,245 18.507; lunatiCI', 83,772; imb 48,852. In another afflicted classâ€"â€" those who languish in gaolâ€"ar ty-ï¬vo “barristers and solicz‘ ‘ ‘--~ and twenty v The tabhi of wâ€, rotty evenly dtvmcu â€"â€" -,_, d 1,339,279 girls. 01 .oys an hildrcn 138,130 boys and {i113 are all gt Workâ€"not at cssons, but at every conceiva lustry or occupation dealt wi the return. . tho girls scam h A: a. rula, snore seriously to the business than the boys. There are, stance, 142 ten-year-old "c men," 05 employed in law the tobacco Husbands at Fifteen. The Afllcted- >10 of the amictcd in Eng- Wales is as followsâ€"Blind, .3211 and dumb, 15,245; deaf, lunatics’, 83,772; imbecilca, chry conceiVable in- V-Hon dealt with in n to takC loss 0! life ,, for in- "char'o’ laundrios. {hose . thir- D183 is children mientmc pursuits." tour are "sumâ€" 0": editors, journalists, reporters. or shorthand writers," and four 0}!»- era are deszribcd with tantalizmg vagueness as :‘connected with literaâ€" ture? In addition, there are thir- tY-four actors, and 233 invidiously descrlged as "performers." - AL- ' Finally. thee. tabks reveal the fact that, While England and Wales contain six and a quarter million in- habited houses, there an dose 0“ half the houses altogether uninhab- lth. While at the same time. the houses building are increns‘ing at the rate of near 15 per cent. per unnum- while the population is only increas- ing at a. little over 12 per cent. A. Gret Involer and 03. of tho Automobllhu. The Tablet says that Captain Deasy, the ï¬rst to make the ï¬ne motorcar run, without stopping. be- tWeen London and Glasgow (in 21 hours and 20 minutes), is the son of an Irish Judge and the â€min-law of Colonel Hickey. Catholics are by ne- tm'o cosmopolitans; and Captain D9118? in one. not by precept only. but by practice. He has been a great traveler, and not always under the comfortable conditions 0'! even a twenty-hours’ spin in a Rochet-Sneiâ€"s der car. He left the 16th Lancers.‘ after nine years’ service, in 1897. 50 that he might go to western Tibet to do some actions exploring where already he had had glimpses as a 1 traveler. Two expeditions of his into Central Asia occupied three years and covered forty thousand square miles of territory. Probably no other man alive has determined the height m‘.:-A of three hunFred’ mountains. Twice. Rm“ “,0, "g; ,1; my.“ unmoving heirzhts at 16.000 To an. to gave. The. Society of Arts Albert neon: presented annually since 1854 ior disâ€"- tinguished merit, has, actor-ding. to English papers, been aWardod for the 1 present year to Sir Charles Augus- tus Hartley, K.C.M.G., in recogni- tion of his services, extending over ‘ forty-four yearshns engineer to the International Commission of the Danube, which have resulted in the opening up ' river to ships 0! all nations, and of his similar services extending over twenty years as British Commission- er on the International Technical. Commission of the Suez Canal. Sir' Charles, who was born in 1825. has} a most distinguished record in Works of this kind. He served in the Crimea as a captain in the Angloâ€" Turkish contingent, but soon after- Wards settled down to civil engineer ing, and 9’ long ago as 1867 re- IA In n most distln-guisucu “WV... 0! this kind. He served Crimea as a captain in tin Turkish contingent, but 8! Wards settled down to civil ing. and 93 long ago as I ported to the Foreign Oflic: portant questions of engine neated with the River Soho] Sumo year he rccoived the of Russia’s grand competit of 8,000 siIVer roubles for for the Enlargement of the Odessa. In 1875 he Was a consultation by the Unit: “-A-W n' the on the inn-“'0“ pi, and he he developmcut 1 Hughu River, Don o! Dnieper; m the u below Cairo, in the harm tcndjio, Bourgas, and V English nibble, ' African harbor of Durban. Chapldn-Genoral or the Forces. Bishop Taylor-Smith, the Chaplain-‘ General to the Forces, reCeived his ï¬rst promotio chance circumstance, don Chronicle. He we mti Expedition in 1895, umn to which he was a ed to arrive at the chaplain happen place where Prince Henry of Batten- ‘ with fever. The Prince was nbout to embark for home, and t he would having a. presentiment the. he sent for the (He on the voyage, lorâ€"Smith, and en- chaplain, Mr. Tay trusted him with his private papers, , _ ,__-.,m.q to be given to his and with messages w .,- a wife and to Queen Victoria in case he did not live to see them. When tidings cane of his death at sea Cizniez. Taylor-Smith set out for where the Queen and Princess Henry 01 Battenberg Were then staying, and '51 charges. When he took should visit her at ‘ The following your Her‘ )1 . CAPTAIN DEASY. SI:- llonry Irving's Wu. ï¬enry In'ing b I 1;, KW?! umm‘ , -nn-fl‘flfl “Wing‘s .601 Arts {ï¬mrovemcnt o! tn l he has had a. hand uncut for navigation ;y of Arts Albert Hedal mually since 1854 !or disâ€"- (cars,_as engineer to the 11 Commission of the liCh have resulted in the of the navigation of that ips 0! all nations, and of r services extending over rs as British Commission- DUI: UV vâ€"7, 3. presentiment that he Waum :he voyage, he sent for the I, Mr. Taylorâ€"Smith, him with his private papers‘ ‘11 messages to be given to his (1 to Queen Victoria in case not live to see them. Who! cane of his Albert Hedi}. 1903. mpetition prize Les for hi8 plans 0: the Port 0‘ was called into . United StateS‘ of the Mississipâ€" a hand in the vigation 0’ the ,n of Trieste. the £33 Nil. barrage harbors of Kusâ€" Id Var-“a. in the Earliest V' " been al 73 under I even I. net-Snaiâ€" Lancers L897. 30 [1 Tith ; where I as I forces. “It. cd incessantly. I was almost in de- spair, but since giving him the tab- lets he has been well and is growing splendidly.†Such is the testimony of Mrs. B. Craig, 329 Batlirst-st" ' plaints can be guarded against and i prevented by the use of Baby’s Own , 'Ifablets. Keep a box in the househ- ~__- -..._... unnl‘ little one’s life. Her him after 9| Pairs "men’s livery-Day-Wearilg Laced Boots, sizes Mo 8, made on easy-to-wear common sense lasts, all solid leather, worth easily $1.25 Now 01 Sale at 89c per pair. 60 Pairs Warren’s l‘iae Pmnella liaiters anrl Slippers, a very cool and com- iorlable shoe for hot weather, size; 3 to 8, Now On Sale at 50¢ a pair. 74 Pair his ï¬ne White Canvas Oxford Shoes, a tip-top working or holiday shoe, sizes 6 to 10, Now (In Sale at 750 per pair. F AAâ€" ‘11 61“; gnpcf June 15th to Sept. 5th or nu uuuw Bobcaygeon Ive 7.00 mm arr 7.46 .m 0 Chemong Park 30 . “ ll 30 mm lve 243%p.m jgwt his food and scream tly. I was almost in do- since giving him the tab- becn well and is growing ' such is the testimony N u u THE N. nothing has been slightedâ€"eaeh ar- ticle is made of extra good stock and stitched by the but of ‘okaen, and the Moun‘jngs are of super or grade. We make goc ds of Fine 'LMaterial at Moderate Prices.