’clock in the 1m KNOWLSON, MILL turns out an zrequirc for How ding,1ndthcprices I: but workmen, of HEVISM F LINDSAY ’03 weryfln‘ng you rem: pg; you tc comm-e nkmg com Ir; m 1180““! ma MOTOR! November 10th lntend [yolm 1902 190a ~. 45- THE .. WATCH MAN'WARD ' . Its so Easy Canadian Portland Cement The Rathbun Co. an.u.nAm.Axe-t.ulhyo ‘you think very seriously Mt all sorts of hon-droid Mmeâ€"heat- whatevar particulu' article you mt, you will consult your on ï¬lm by purchasing of KEYS HORRI- SON, where you get low pfleea in Stoves, Beam, Tia tad Granite- Portland Cement KEYS 8 l0lllSON, Lindsay Nut In the Fall Days to take cold. Its cammon to no- glect. the cold. That is one rear born coughs. and so many more with lung trouble. The short, quick way to cure a. cough is to The quicker it is used the bet- ter, but even in long standing cases proves most beneï¬cial. This remedy must. not be clans- ed with the may cheap prepar- tions offered the public. inmadefromPnroOreunof’l‘u-c tar and Soda Bicarb. Contains no adultennu. Anny: froth because it is made every two.“ three days. An old and tned Bah ing Powder than give. at intaction. Once and, shiny: The tats made by experts on behalf of Corporations and Con- tractors who are large consumers of Portland Cement has proven thattheproductsofthe.... works are ahead of my manu- factured in Canada, and equal to any imported. The apacity of the works is 1,800Abl3k. a_day. 01' m ’1 bone. BREBDHY’S ' BAKING E. GREGORY, LINDSAY, THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 6th. I902. 30c. A POUND CorneDruSMUnd-Iy Drug Store W’s Grow. POWDER Callandséeus usnpby an egotiu was a striking personality, this Na- poleon oftmday.as-foranhomhe spoke of his armies. of his World- girdling plans, of his_work in Lord don. in Australia. in India. in the United States, and his plan for Cu- ads. General Booth declares that it is the labor unions here that have opâ€" posed his colonization schemes for Canada. He says they do so with- out r'easOn- He thinks that if 0m» ads had spent more money in aiding him in colonization, and less in rail- ways, the railways would have fol- loWed as the natural serpenoe of the influx of the settlers. Cetus! Bobth says tint if Camda would have a sturdy class of English settlers she must one: them inducements. His idea would be to approach the mun who could dig a bitor plow, and knew a roke from a hoe, and say. “See here, now. 1 have put up a place for you in the West. a shock, where you can have protection. I will help you, and if you are sick I will stay by you. But, when if an make it go, you must pay me A few of these men have been newsâ€" paper men." “You're a. busy man ?" “Yes, on the wing the most of the time. On the lookout for new ideas, you know : inspecting. counseling, encouraging. and receiving encourâ€" agement. a The young English farmer Won't. come here, so the General says. Why? Well, he has £200 or £300 to spend. and has been to college. and has vis- ited the city. His trousers are too tight for him, as it were. MAY START A PAPER General Booth may start a paper before he gets through with life. ' He says the power at the pm is rapid- ly increasing. The pulpit warring? He refused to say anything against the pulpit. “How far have you travelled ?" “I have covered 100,000 miles since I was here {our years ago; I We given'1,500 addm. and have seen 20,000 kneel at the penitent ton-m. Gene!!! Booth appears older than when be last visited Toronto. But it, is only in appearance. His hair is whiter, but his eye has just as much ï¬re as it ever had. and u the year's go on his ideals have enlarged. His “Our mathods in diner-cut countri- 039 Well. hearts are all the Same the world over. The hopes and fears of humanity are all the same. 'lhe Japanese has just about the same kind of a heart that we «1on ï¬nd in India, and the man from india is, after all, just. like you 9nd me." Arriving in the vicinity of Toronto 3 day before he was mood. Gen- eral Booth, his daughter. Commis- sioner Booth, .311 stat! quartered at Lorne Park, away from the noise of the city. A ï¬re was built in on open grate, and the General and the rest of the stud retired. leaving it burn- lng. Throw}: the night Miss Booth nmelled smoke. The house was found to be on are. but prompt. action Wed it. tron; deskuctiou. In the meantime General Booth mm driven to his private car two miles away. FULL OF FIRE YET “The man“ iho is dowryâ€"bow bat helped '1'" “Social reformers say. .‘th the shirt. and change the environment ' We say, 'Wash the soul, and you change the ma. ' " When the general said this be be- came much in W. . THE MAN IN PRISON The m in prison ? Genus! Booth pictumd the know In jail. He paint- edhisuu with‘wordm, and “1 arm nervous to-duy." he explfln' ed to the press representatives than him. "I had a very narrow escape on Wednesday night." The scene was in the private mn- menu of General William Booth at. the Temple this morning; and tho Galen! was the speoker. Jail-Birds and all Sort: of out cuts are Reclaimed by the Army SOUL-SWIM A SCIENCE The Veteran Leader, Gen. Booth Tells of His Methods WORK OF SALVATION ARMY x TALKED OF BY ITS FOUNDER xi have corps in every village," ho id. but it was not the remark of Mi 18 'and we miss _him." HOW RESCUE WORK IS DONE The work 0! a, rescue home in Lon. .don was outlined. In cool calculaâ€" . tion. General Booth took a miserable bum and set him on one scale. He 'put ., sovereign on the other side. For this sovereign the bum was transformed. washed. scrrbbed, and scraped in soul and body. He was taught to support himself. He was i . . sent out a man. Fare dollars? \es. the 85 represented the cost of keepâ€" .ing him in position to help himself {or one whole year. . “He he pad 250 men in this plane, and the total cost Was not more than 1812. 50 for the entire year. In 7 thg Gene!!! Booth has got the thing down ï¬ne. He says that the sum of people is a science not to be taken up by any brokendccwn shopkeeper or w some fellow who can't make a liv- ing and becomes a missionary. The science of saving, he thinks. is rapid. ly approaching perfection. Seventy per cent 01 girls are saved by the Army, and General Booth cannot un- derstand why it is the Governments tnd municipalities do not coâ€"cporate more in his work. London workhouse thé cost is $175 per mm." FAVORS PRISON LABOR General Booth is in favor of prison labor. He doesn't see why a mu: should not work in jail the some as out. The Maor societies don't agree with him- but he doesn't abuse them. He is silent when speaking of them}? "Our proï¬ts on the stuff we make and sell go to the poor." was his un- IWGI‘ . The interview closed with a descri- ption of the Army's farm near Lon- don. where the general has spent “whey take great pains now-apday's to saw their waste products. and I use they are anxious about the waste [tom the gold mines, but what about. the waste products of manhood!" Hm the general said that the Army could save 50 per cent. of the drum. and 250 per cent. of the criminals with whom they came in touch. “Does Canals. help " ' “Yes, Canada aids some, and I now have ward that New York will give as 85,000 a year for our work among the city's unlortunates. Cecil Rhod- a was a great friend of the Army, $750,000. , It is 3.000 acres in ex- tent, aid has helped many a chap to the level. The city of London has Just offered to take its.a1tire supply a! kick. "No one will hove him. They say, 'Why, you are a. criminal.’ It is here that the Army steps in, and in Tor- onto last year the prison gate ree- cue work gem no. less than 400 cri- minnll help. dding them to position Mlockingermswiththemtopre vent them from falling. They are under our wing today. Teddy the business man takes our word when we. other a year's trial and help, get a man who was a crimin-J a posit- ion. He often goes back to his old employer. Today if we had 300,000 we could get them all positions." he sold. “The people trust us now, and it we give the employer 3 certiâ€" ï¬edtae of character it is accepted." ‘ mascumo GIRLS 1 The army has at present 3, 400 girl“ in North-East London that have been neeeued. and hove either got posi- tion or married and settled down. “How about the Wide: ?" “Oh. ya: but 70 per cent. oh girls min true. The cost~is more than 810 a head! 1 stuck the crimind in it. He trooed the desire of the ma to do better. Then the general followed him as he heed the world. “The world turns its back on that m." The sacral turned his back and looked in the grate. EPPS’S 8080A EPPS’S 0000A An admirable food. with u! it: natural qualities intact. ï¬tted to build up and maintain robust. health. and to resist mun-'5 extreme- cold. Sold In $31!). tins. labelled JAMES E? a 00. UL, Homeopathic alumina. â€London, mm (â€WHO 3mm VIOOUR. THE MOST NUTRITIOUS. 75 Cent: 1 Year in Adana-1.00 if Not so Paid GENERAL BOOTH. The other night the Italian compo- ser and opera leader was in Toronto. As an example of what an expert can say about the facial expressions of a musician. the following by Mr. H. F. Gadsby in the Toronto Star is re- produced : The right hand mm the baton. and gives the tempo, the left hand helps with‘the shading. Masp cagni has beautiful hands, strong hands and shapely. The ï¬ngers (ap- er. There is a Signet ring on his left little ï¬nger. In the tender pas- sages that lett hand steals out over the orchestra like a bishop's blos- sing. No phase of the music escapes that left hand. It pleads, it cares- ses. it grievss and when the ï¬erce cmsccndoes arise it clenches and beâ€" comes a mailed ï¬st. And all the while the left hand knows what the right is doing. " ' But you must train your opera glasss careâ€" fully to discover that laseagni does most of his directing with his face. Now the klascagni face is not hand- some, but it is strong; The brow is noble, the eyes; deep and inscrutable. but the nose is shortened, the mouth somewhat large the jowl heavy and the complexion pallid. Mascagni looks older than his photographs His face showed turbulent emotions sternly depicted. hard study and exhausting laiaor. It is a lowering face, what the Scotch call “."dour It reflects every chord of music. It mirrors every strain. When Mascagni conducts his own op- eras, the ï¬rst violin uses his heart strings. Sunshine, storm, shadow, chase over his features in bewildering confusion. Some of these grimaces are fearful, but to the prima donna they are better than the stage man- egg-jg book. From them she knows just what quality of sorrow or love or hate or madness to put into her voice. A biograph of the Mascagni (ace at work would be a study in mores. ~ It " would save more sin- ners than the fear of eternal punish- meat. To watch this face as it manages a «ascends. for instance, is to diagnose a hurricane, from the ï¬ntcloudnobï¬erthanamau’s hand..to the black roaring pull, riv- al with lightning, and blotting out the armament. As'themusic swells, Wi’s was blaze, the‘raven lock over his low tosses about like the mane of an angry lipn, th head twitches. the jaws click together and the lips mutter. At the uni height of the frenzy. the baton comes down littlestâ€: of a arching rod, and James» tuneful glue on bass drum His face is a m 5' hate. an organ cl Jinan-rod in: m no main to hurl our-u “All-fled Begum-damnation Where At the same lair there about twen- ty other fak‘ire. Some operated wheels of fortune. or similar instru- ments. all of which seemed prejudiced 1min“ the puuic. Others had dfl. ‘lerent devices. One 0! the loudly advertised sideshow: was in a tent where a, woman would edify the people by her "great snake-eating est." All the performers and fakirs seemed to have perfect immunity from the eonstabulary. Another correspondent writes that he knows of one farmer who was done out of 830 during one afternoon at a. fair. “Hr. Creelmen thinks that the time is about the for e. dedfliuow to all {akin-s and sideshow entwtainments at the country shows. The ‘Model Fair†at Whitby was carried through to illustrate what might, be done m the» undesirable element sup- puueed. and it is hoped a large umber ol-farfloerds’ wilt’Yollcw the example next year. One feature of the “h? by fair, the experimental plots. showing gasses, coma, mil- ets, etc. will be- plueed within the reach of every fair. The Depart- ment of Agricultural will supply the varieties of seeds and the cost of sowing and caring for the plants is small. Many of the other features will also be amiable. “(or most of an hour. Outside of two men in the crowd, who always withdrew. and “whom I spotted in five minutes as pole of the fakir, there wu not a. draw made by anyone. which called for more than a thin!)- I: The two pale were able to get watches. and all the good prizes, which they aold backlor cash, 8] to 85. and to the crowd it. seemed as though they were making lots of money. I would judge that the trio got away with about 820 of the crowd's money in the hour. and if business was as good all, afternoon, they would have about $100." Report. received by Ur. George 04 Creolmnn «madam 0! Iain, indicate tint the‘1ukir" has been a; prominent tenure gt. 0. number 0! the provincul him this fall. Some of Rho operators have has: most shrine in their brazenenn. They were not more gunning games where the nib- bler has a chance {or his money. but in many cuts the victim, once snar- ed. had not the slightest chance to make nnytflim. let alone get his money back. A favorite game was n sort of ., lottery, where the public was naked to pay 25 cents a man, and draw an envelope containing a card from um fail. On end: cm‘d v.9 n letter of the alphabet. and for etch letter there Was a prize, Vary- ing from a tum to a gold watch. "I watched one of these men," says one of Mr. Creelman's informants, Thaw 'ml pooplo who trad»: ad money {or W numero- cent (all Iain h thi- county, who will read tho following from the To- route Stu with some interest : AN OPERA HEADERS PACE In. Am 113‘ mu 001%..â€â€" W‘ rcnmg rod, and Iain! glare on tee is a Mctm