= 6. Pan T r. R M l v ; . i . 29th merges m- 3 mm :flsumm r 8:555:32 , i to ou’lly‘th! and affo‘ £05900 : 77°". us oppo tumty or .m :2 Wunuoyoung‘ eople to St F ‘ l 3 M83; for 00¢ business and '7‘ “an-'- o r chool, The if.“ “wmusmess college of roll 3 i can mo :nvltes your 0031‘ l I}. s T?" m}... Catalogue man'- '88 We 0 '1 â€ï¬nance I. 8. SM ‘ Can, “1 gmiml- Yonge and Ger- VV' 5 (Q‘noilo (. ) (2 ( ( ( l ( ( in El L' l [3 l EB\\ 52 _ .' -‘l \“J I; S:- a: N O“ ~ gal subjects. .NK Send for particul.n r. } PElEllBflllfl lse': 000,000: 000,000 H II I| Il may courses in Senior Teach- era Matriculation 3m Commer- -n llSINESS COLLEGE . an. SPOTTON. - President 0 Branch. .1 :l Busi‘flESs l‘liu-‘uthfx is the D -t leg’l‘aPV YWU Call 163ve B greats: . r . - I “ommldien ll c get down to El vu- . - ._ " :lie Mk-b€d foundation of ln- D “533. ‘ in? business science and assist El i' r ydrthy graduates to the choice El .les, ' - B ' nos-mans. f . 80 Twenty-flvcy-t’ml‘r. high-grade ‘ch. ‘ work has made [his ill»? LARGEST m BEST Busizzc» Training . gchool in Eastern Ontario. 3% ;-: ‘ . a. Exist any day. It; ‘ IndividualInstruction. Home El 13 En land ‘. . - g , inmost. - Prmcxpali: rs and? ~II:W-.:;::::::u:zmmmamamam n of their llection. Oilat F. P. COAD’S OAKWOOD. En ~ 33 - ‘ Per pair. ll-Over Mitt-s, 25c and Horse- , e “1‘0 Pay highest prices f0? all Farm Produce :7 LOOK | bra “M: Bargains in Coal is .~.- our new stock of Boots ,96 and Shoes. minion. 9 l , B -. ’31“: Law Office f j eel Fulton, bar- ., Wee t Y. have opened a . ing .~';v.~..i‘.,. : l By a Resident of Ops. (Continued from last week) In a short time she was broadside on to us, and distant about5 miles and we made her out to be one of the Cunard liners, bound in from New York. She was a large 2 funnel- led boat and was crowded with pas- sengers, and borrowing a marine glass from a friend I could see them crowding the sides, and trying to make us out. She was a much faster boat than us. and ina short while she was far astern of us, and shortâ€" ly after nothing could be seen but the smoke from her funnels on the horiZOn. As we saw her disappear from view a sense of loneliness seemâ€" ed to take possession of most of us found ourselves once more a as we alone upon the waters. It seems very simple thing to the stay ashore person, but to the sailor on the see, no matter if he has been sailing it all his life, the sight of a friend- ly sail upon the ocean seems 'to give him NEW LIFE AND ACTIVITY It relieves the monotony of the voyage, and also forms the subject for conversation among the men. For instance when we had been five or six days upon our voyage and day by day we had seen nothing but the tossing waves, one of the stewards threw an empty wooden case over the side, and it was amusing to see numbers of the emigrants rush to the side of the ship and gaze at that case, as it floated far astern, and was finally lost to sight. I mention this incident just to show how mons otonous an ocean voyage usually is and with what intense eagerness the first glimpse of land is looked for After the liner passed out of sight we hung about the decks till the bell rang for tea when we immediately made our way below again. After tea I made my way to my berth and endeavOred to write a letter home but the motion of the ship made it almost impossible to do anything in that line. and finally I gave it up in dngust. It was too 'early to turn in so a new of as made our way to the stern of the ship where we found some slight shelter from the strong wind, and there we passed away an hour or so, singing, and telling yarns, until eight bells rang out, and descending the ladder to the saloon, we made our way to our ca- bin, and jumping into our bunks, were soon wrapped, in oblivion. So passed our second night at sea. The next morning broke bright and sunâ€" ny, and although the wind still blew strong, the sea was not (mite as rough as the previous day, only an occasional heavy swell breaking over the forecastle head and sprinkling the more daring of the passengers who, tempted by the fine appearaace of the weather, hung about the bows and every now and again peering DOWN AT THE MASS OF FOAM hissing about the sharp stern, as it clove the swells. We had a number of Salvation Army people on board, ; and they held services during the day, which were unusually well tended People who would neVer listening tered around the little group, and joined heartily in the singing. One dream of at« ‘ by most of the passengers. l to them ashore now clus- I of the Salvationists was a commis- sioner, and having spent some time in Canada, was able to give some useful information to all of as who intended to make our home in the Dominion. I may just say that he was fully occupied during the re- mainder of the voyage in giving in- formation to ï¬rst one party and then another. The third day of our voyage pass- ed uneventfully, and the weather seemed so much improved that we had every hope of having a decent voyage, but our hopes were doomed to disappointment, for we were awakened the next morning by the violent motions of our craft, and the constant thump of the seas against the bows, 'followed by the roar of the waters as they rushed across the decks..For some time I lay aWake listening to the roar over- head, when I was suddenly aroused to action by a tremendous wave striking the ship and breaking over her in a perfect mountain of water tore the cabin doors off, and the next instant a body of water came rush- down the companion where it soon found its way into our bertha In our cabin alone the water was fully a foot deep. and I had the sa- tisfaction of seeing my boots float‘ ing about from side to side. I can assure you. we were soon up and out of that, and going up on deck a DISMAL SCENE MET OUR VIEW. It was barely daylight, and the sky which the day before gave,such pro- mise of fine weather, was now a complete mass of hurrying bladk clouds, scudding before the wind which was increasing in our ship about like a piece of wood and making the task of the,steers- man anything but an easy one. I caught a glimpse of the captain, as he hung on the bridge telegraph, ready to signal the engineers below. It seems the weather~had changed shortly after midnight, and had kept getting worse all the time. Needless to say, the decks were deserted ex- cept for they watch, who were busily engaged making the boat fastenings secure, putting extra lashings on the booms, etc., and otherwise get- ting the ship in some sort of trim to i withstand the weather. Breakfast that morning was some- thing of a farce, as only about a dozen of us felt in anything like shape for a meal. Even at the best, it was a comfortless affair, as the constant motion made it a matter of difï¬culty to work at the eatables at the table. 'A few.of the hardiest of the pas- sengers appeared on deck during the morning, and were rewarded about noon by the sight of abig sailing Vessel under full sail and wind partly upon her quarter, teal-4 ing made most Of 118 open our eyes, esâ€" pecially those who, having but a holy idea of nautical matters, con- pared a sailing’ vessel SO‘MEWHAT TO THE PROVERBIAL THE LINDSAY POST! VOYAGE IN EMIGRANT- SHIP strength hourly. It gave a person the shiVers to look at the sea which was tossing with the along at a rate of speed which Manor -House MAIN STREET, WINNIPEG E. McKENTY, Proprietor The Manor Hotel. situated direct- ly opposite the C.P R. Hotel and very close to the C. P R. station, offers the very best accommodation to travellers at the most moderate rate of $1.00 per day. The entire house has recently been renovated and returnisbed and new heating apparatus installed at great cost, and it is at all times the proprietor’s aim to make his guests thoroughly comfortable, in which aim he has always been eminently successful. The Manor is undoul t idly the best $1.00 per day hotel in the Canadian West. .â€"-â€"â€"-â€"-â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"_~â€"___ Three Bad Fires In Boston City Boston, Mass, March 26.â€"-Fanned by a strong March gale, three ï¬res caused much damage in north shore districts yesterday. Essex, Hamilton and Revere each suffered from flames. The loss is estimated at $100,000 in South Hamilton, $70,000 in Essex, and $25,000 in the Franklin Park dis trict of Revere. In the Franklin Park fire, seven dwelling houses were wholly or part- ly burned. Eight large ï¬lled ice houses were destroyed at Lake Che- baco, near Essex Centre, and the vil- lagers had tO turn out to ï¬ght the flames. The ï¬re spread through two miles of woodland and was barely checked at the edge of the village. In South Hamilton the flames swept over an area a quarter of a mile square, levelling 21 buildings, eight of them residences. $l00,000 Fire. Morganï¬eld, Ky., March 26.â€"Fire, wluch started in the River Depart- mental store early yesterday, and spread to surrounding buildings in' the business centre, caused a loss of: more than $100,000; partially covered; by insurance. _______'+______ Gives Long Hat SNAIL . . I may as‘well point out right Pl“ 3 8008‘ away that we have at “ the present day, large steel sailing ships, with a registered tonnage of frOm 4000 to 6000 tons, carrying capacity, and carrying. a spread of canvas which enables them to hold their own in the matter of speed, equal to many a modern steamship. Many of these large ships are engaged in the nit- rate trade. carrying coal from the northeast . coast ports to the west ? coast of America, generally, Valpara‘l aiso, the capital of Chili,. and load- ing nitrate from thence home. ‘ Such a vessel was the one we saw that stormy morning, and although night, have used hat-pins with telling she had a ,heavy wind behind her, nearly every stitch of sail was spread and being deeply laden, she plunged into the seas up to the cat heads. From stem to stern she appeared to be in a smother of foam, and were I intended} by nature for an artist, I could have painted that picture which was spread before us that wild morning. â€"â€"â€"â€"+â€"': ~â€" The Wolf Skin Crooks Jailed, -â€" l . washington, D.c., 'March 26.â€" Washington women can jab hold-up men and ’mashers with long hat-pins, all they want and no one in Congress will rise up to cry “outrage,†accord- ing to Major Sylvester, superintendent of police of the District of Columbia. "We have in Washington 16,000 more women than men,†said Major Sylvester yesterday, in discussing the agitation against long hatpins. “Such predominance of the gentler sex can have but one result. Numbers of wo- men are obli d to go about the streets at nig t without escorts, and numerous instanceS‘have come to the attention of this department where women, assailed by marauders at f effect. I Does C.P.R. Plan Coup? Milwaukee, March 26.â€"The Canaâ€" dian Paciï¬c Railroad Co. has acquir- ed a block of property on the east side of Milwaukee, near Lake Michi- gan, for what is said to be a terminal, according to a story in an afternoon paper yesterday. . . Options on the property are said to. have been quietly obtained. The story cannot be conï¬rmed here. With the Milwaukee acquismon the Canadian P ifie would hats. 3.3:; the head of t e lakes a Chicago line, with which Milwaukee would be di-,-' rectly connected. Surveys have ale," ready been made for a new route which was ï¬gured on as the outlet. Fort Francis, Ont., March 26.â€"7For l West Shore Railway Wage Scale. having purchased wolf skins andI palmed them Off as fresh captures in New Ontario woods so as to secure the Government bounty, nine men were sentenced yesterday by Judge Fitch as follows: George Westcott, two years Kingston Peenitentiary; M. T. Cath- cart, two and a half years in pen; Thomas Godin, Joseph Maxim, Robt. Horrocks and Thomas Kirkpatrick, three months each in the district jail. and a ï¬ne of $150, or a further term of nine months. Three Indians were let Off more easily, McGinnis and Blackbird getting three months each ad Baptiste four months. Previous to the passing of sentence. Westcott gave evidence in charges brought against Moses Finkelstein and Benjamin Levison, fur dealers, of Winnipeg, charged with complicity. According to Westcott he visited the accused fur dealers, and seeing a pile of wolf skins, was told. that he could make easy money in this dis- trict under certain conditions. West- cott, said he therefore arranged to take a number of wolk skins, those with good ears only, on the under- standing that he got his money back. less $1 for rental. He took 19 skins the ï¬rst time from Finkelstein, and paid $98 for them. Later, after he had used them to secure a bounty of $15 each, be returned them, less four skins, and got back $64. Finkelstein declares he sold West- cott the skins, and did not rent them, but both men were committed for trial on June 7, under personal cash bail of $24100. ' Cleveland, Ohio, March 26.-â€"-Nego« tiations looking towards a new wage scale for members of the Brotherhood. of Railway Trainmen and the Order of Railway Conductors on the Lake' Double Drowning enemas, Tvl'a'rch'26.-4Dro“wnedâ€"$ï¬ ing Wednesday night, the bodies “of' John Cartwright, aged 16, and his unw cle, Hugh Allen, aged 40, were found. yesterday on the shore of Mitchell’s. Bay. They were ï¬shermen, and just how. is not, they came to be drowned known. Declines to Form Cabinet. Rome, March 26.â€"Signor Marcora, president Of the Chamber of Deputies, has decline the invitation of King Victor Emmanual to form a new Cabi- net, and Prof. Luigi Luzzatti, fer-mere Minister of the Treasury has been in:- trusted with the task. Near Chathnm ’â€" Counterfeiter Frees Brother. Boston, March 26.â€"Michael Kura- nowski, the Brockton counterfeiter, made a clean breast of his work as a manufacturer and dispenser of spur- ious half dollars whui brought before U. S. Commissioner Hayes yesterday. He claimed that he made the coins and completely exonerated his brother John, who was also at- ’ “for fun,’ rested. New llithod bf Floating Steamer St.» JOhn’s, Nfld., March 26.4-The sealer Viking, with a catch of 24,000 seals, ashore off the Island of St. Clinicians Are 1 1 Piere, was released yesterday. Captain Bartlett floated his steamer by a method that was unique. Mass- ing his crew of 190 men on one side of the ship he ordered them to rush in a body to the other side, then back again and so on. This manoeuvre caused the steamer to roll violently, she ï¬nally worked off the sand bank, and is. proceeding to St. John’s apparently uninjured. A Lynching. Pine Bluff, Ark., March 26.â€"â€"Resent- ing alleged improper conduct on the part of “Judge†Jones, a negro, and a young white woman, a mob of 40 men gathered at the county jail here, late last night, overpowered the jailer! and his deputies and secured and banged the negro. The mob then dig. 997m: '. V. I ~~~..Hâ€" Burglar’s in Princess Theatre “, ,~ . r, â€v. -, early hours of yesterday morning, when 3 number of burglars forced an entry to the stage, broke into the carpenter’s room And secured a num- ber of his tools. With these they forced the door of the box oï¬ce. and broke Open the till and Manager Leslie’s desk, but did not secure any money. The door of the adjoining room, where the safe stands, was also brok- en. The safe is about three feet square, and very heavy, so the bur- glars did not attempt to blow it, but instead carried it bodily out into the inside lobby. At this juncture they were frightened by Mrs. MacNab, Wife of the janitor, who heard them at work and started down stairs. The burglars fled leaving safe and tools. .3...__... F ‘0 H Coming Home, l ‘1 r3 â€â€˜9' "“ f ' ‘ - renort a farm .. .....1.t cum 0 agree. } Forâ€"$50,000 l l :’ Toronto, March ESQâ€"Melodrama re- . turned to the Majestic Theatre in the ! ! l ! g ! i Shore system were uncompleted last in' l PAGE II fiend all‘s Spawn Cure ‘1‘ h c c u r c t h a t saves horsemen and farmers millions of dollars every year. It is known the world over as the one certain, reliable remedy for Spavin, Curb, Splint, Ring- bone,BonyGrowths and any Lameness. Cases just devel- oping and old, stub- born sores and . . swellings readily yield to the wonderful curative powers of this famous remedy. ,Orangevillc, Ont, Dec. 2f, ’08 “We had a horse which was getting very lame on account of a. Spavm. I was anxious about him as we could not work the beast when we most needed him. Our teamster saw Kendall‘s Spavin Cure in the store and tried it. I am pleased to say he had success as the horse has sto ped limp‘ing and is doing his (fay’ wor .†W W. A. NICHOLSON. Don't worry about Spavins, Growths, Swellings or Lameness, but use Kendall’s Spavin Cure. It cures every time. The world’s best linimcnt hit man and beast. 3!. a bottleâ€"6 for $5. Get our book “A Treatise On The Horse, †free at dealers or from us. Dr. B. J. KENDALL C0. WWVI. 52 Woman Sues Kansas City, 310., March Sidâ€"Mrs. Hattie Dunwoodie Cole, divorced wife of Howard G. Cole, a Chicago mil- lionaire, yesterday ï¬led a suit'in the Circuit Court ll?†against Mrs. Louisa Colman Cole, former wife of Jarvzs hunt, the Chicago architect. but now wife of Howard G. Cole. The suit asks damages amounting to $250,- 000 for alienating the affections of Mr. Cole. Fund Complete New York, March 26.3â€"The $50003!) fund which the American Bible So- ciety has for more than a year past been seeking to raise to secure an equal amount, the gift of Mrs. Rus- sell Sage, has been completed and an- nouncement of the completion of this fund, the securing of which will place a round million dollars in the hands of the society for its uses, was maï¬a yesterday. ' ‘ C The $500,000 is in tne xm'l as of flu: society in the shape of goof; an! r»- liable subscriptions llf‘O‘l c.2313}: “for? than $280,000 has already iii-câ€. paid in. Thousands of pcrso 2s :11! parts of the world and in every Auto (-f tl-c United States have contributed to the fund in amounts ranging from ten cents up to $.5,000. There were two subscriptions oi the latter amount and upwsv" to 10,030 of from $1 to 9“: each Miners Unable to Agree. Cincinnati, 0., March 26.-â€"With all tentative propositions for compromse rejected, the joint scale committee of miners and operators of Ohio, In- diana and Western Pennsylvania, ad- journed yesterday after deciding tot The~ report will be made to the joint conference of the central competitive Boston, 'March’ 26.~Af.honside?§ble' field to-day. . . - :- movement of French-Canadians em‘,‘ ployed 1n New England industrialj centres to Canada during the next' few months is indicated by the re- night after a long conference between ports of transportation agencies and- a committee representing the two orâ€"' ganizations and the railway manage- - ment. 1 “of heading any exped . South Pole while Capt. Scott 18 try- ing to reach it.†Discoverer of Maripost Grove, Dead. The men are asking an equalization of the wage rate on all eastern roads. â€"â€"____.~+ Shackleton Sure 0f Capt. Scott New York,"lllarch"'26:‘gféliave al- most no doubt that Capt. Scott’s ex: pendition will reach the South Pole, declared Sir Ernest Shackleton, the Antarctic explorer, when he stepped ashore yesterday. “I have no intention,†he added, ition to the San Francisco, March 26.â€"Galen Clarke, the discoverer of the Maripést Grove of big trees and for 20 years guardian ' aged 96. He will be buried lay in a tomb which he cut out for blame! in a huge granite rock mtlnn a stone's throw .of the Yosemte Falls. of Yosemite Valley. is dead. in the val- 1);] despatches from Ottawa and Monto- r . . The Canadian Government oï¬cials .who have colonization agents at work among former Canadians in New Eng- land state that the bulk Of the re- patriation movement is directed to- ward the new provinces in the North- west, where free lands and other spe-_ cial inducements are offered to re- sponsible settlers. A despatch from Montreal states that nearly six hundred families will leave New England for the Northwest within a month. l d I T"l~ ' ed for Edwar s 2::"332‘ Ed- llflS‘Ifallce Winnipeg, March wards, editor of The Eye-Opener, was l arrested yesterday on a charge of pub- l He was i fishing obscene literature. released on $1,000 bail, to appear to- day. Warm in New York. New- "York, March 26.â€"Yesterdny was the hottest March day that New York has had for at least forty year. the weather bureau records go back no further. The mercury rose to 77 degrees at two o’clock yesterday :if’iCr- noon. Sir Edward’s Latest. Montreal, March 26.â€"Sir Edward Clouston, vice-president of the Bank of Montreal, has been appointed vice- president of the Royal Trust 00., re- placing the late Sir George Drum- mond. fâ€"W Man Was Exonerated Atlanta, Ga, ' March Ziaâ€"AL Ht; Stockdell, former general agent of the. C As I éPhoenix Fire Insurance Co. of Brook-_ ‘ lyn, with headquarters at Atlanta; rorInfutsandchfldren. MK“ YWMAMJSW th Wot i and who. I following the revelations; concerning the affairs of the come pany’s home ofï¬ce, was removed from- oï¬ice because of an allegcd_;shortage, was yesterday completely" exonerated by the Phoenix. oï¬cials of any, charges of wrong-30in!- 4-5? N. sags; ;. < . .. ....-..n-W».~. ‘M‘wnmw if mm s... . g... '.....k......._ a. 4,... a .- .. WC ‘ â€was.†even. , ' ‘ so»: ‘1': . 9 4 Vimâ€"aiso,-.- mm .