“‘S/t 1" “‘“‘%‘S‘â€â€˜â€' W‘m†{0 gQ‘s 51’s u- sssss‘$w su$s.s“â€â€œâ€œ og- Dag» 2mm: II0 patients in Laboratory for v 3.. 3r? W,“ «bmvwxg tar: 1a.... z . aim¢uk 7;; 1......5, Iii NEED NERVE ..f 2;. ’1'“ a ma You Havel Al ways Bought [wmï¬ â€In“ 3:13st 2:332?! Am 5‘le ¥€ARREH “MHMBE SURE TO SEE u vâ€"r-mngONG AND STYLISH ï¬ï¬MEMADE BUGGlES Second-hand Buggies For“ Sale Cheap Cor. flicnigan r‘. .L.*~l‘ I'J'Zix HJZXLC‘? .1, --:;cd to be one u! we -.; up 9. train at Win- ':.-., 2:1:er Erie, Pa., on . “1-: :5). was brought be- - ; x mgssioner Keating here a}: in d» fault of 35,0“) ..e;d fur the O’ctober term ted States Court at Fitter a? WARREN m“ VJ ‘c wens System 2:372:31? in Pianos and Organs 1' private address. : 31.1:th the very best HANDS that. monoy 'an buy to .. : rmsnnabie terms, if required. also handles the ' Eighrost running SEIING mamas. both American \_ mukvs. not!) In Rotary ank “hinting styles and for a Earn decided to eucuumge short date payments by ;:..:«,:‘.iht‘$ at, cash prices fur short date settlements. wwx-ythiuc' we sell in new goods and will exchange '. ’«Z'th'L-s hnught from us on new ones at same priCc as : \\ n ye-nt‘s. if properly cared for. No Fake Sulvs. but we =r You want both in New and Second Hand Goods. 1 .4 ..,, in Use For Over 30 Years. 10 our, Canadian Correspondence Depart- †ment m. Windsor, Ont. If you desire to ;.- can at our Medial Instxtute in Detroit as we see and treat :21: Windsor oxï¬ces which are for Correspondence and Canadian business only. Address all letters as follows: 5% I c E An letters irom Canada must be addressed KENNEDY KENNEDY: 7H2 C(NYAUI COMPANY. 77 MURRAY BTH‘ET. "1' YORK CITY. ,S.ve and Griswold St., Detroit, Mich. [.1 rated. The nerves control all actions of the body so that any- thing that debilitatcs Lhezn mill weaken all organs of the system. Early Xac'iscretions and Excuse: have ruined thousands of pruzzzising young men. Unnatural Drainssap their vigor and vimlity and they never develop to a. proper condition of nzarlzood. They remain weak- Hngzz, mentally. physicully and sexually. How you feel? Arc you nervous and veal; dcspondent and gloomy, specks before the eyes with dark circles qndpr fhem, wcal: back. kidnms irritasfe, aipitation of the heart,‘ bachful. debilitating dreams, swimi‘nc in urine, pimpleu‘ on the face, eyes sunken. hollow cheeks. careworn ex- pression, poor memory, XLfoless, durumful. lack energy and strength, tired mornings, rcrtlcss nights. change~ able moods, prezmturc decay, Lone pains. hail-loose, etc. Thisiszhc condiï¬oaozzr Rev: Method Treatment is CUARANTEED T0 CURE have treat I Disenwcs of Ken fur almost a. life- d do Lo; have to experimeub. Consuls us FREE OF CHARGE ‘x‘.’e time as. NERVOUS 'iizéiurv. VARxcoss vans. BLOOD AND sxm DISEASES, GLEET. BLADDE! URINARY AND KIDNEY COMPLAINTS EARLY INDISCRETIONS AND EXCESSES HAVE UNDER‘ MINES YCUR SYSTEM and we QUESTION us: i-ï¬Ã©i HOME mm Book. 'ct on Disease: of Men. If unable to «11 in lie for will tell you wlléihér you are curable ornot. Vie guarantee curable cues of i....___ _. A Large F-‘amvry.’ ’ ; Mrs. Ann German. whose death is announced from Lurgan County, Ar- , magh, Ireland, at the age of_lC*2 years, I had lived under six soverelgns. She .had never been more than twenty 1 miles from her home all her life. She . had no fewer than eighty-four descen- ‘ damsâ€"seven children, thirty-three grandchildren, iorty-cne great-grand. children, and three great-great-grand. ' children. ’, Windzot, Ont. Opposite St. Andrew’: Chu'ch, VVIlliam - st. Phone 131-1.. Box 217 lich. deressed : Depart- desire to and treat ence and follows : . -w- M-..†l The brothers were only two {at Mount Julian, when the deceased itook ill, His brother, Dr. John An- derson, pronounced him suffering from a severe attack of appendicitis. lie was removed to Nicholls Hospital‘ Peterboro, and Dr. Roberts, special- ist, of Toronto, was summoned. An operation was: performed, but the dread disease had already done its ;work and the deceased'passed to the t i great beyond last night. The late Mr. Anderson, who was a ' son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Alex. Anderson, oi Mariposa, was in his f ï¬fty~sixth year. He was a prominent business man in Torontoyhaving con- ducted a flour and feed store at the corner of College ' and Bathurst lstreets. He wms a man of splend- ‘ id character, a devoted husbacd and consecration father, and prominent in Presbyterian. Spratt takes place at church work, He was a resident Mariposa until twenty-seven years days ' Hodem Rest Room In connection with the improve- ments under way at the store of J. Sutclifte and Sons, it might be mentioned that the rooms now used as a millinery department is to be partitioned oï¬, ' enlarging Miss Holmes’ dressmaking rooms. The other half is rented'by the firm to. the Women’s Institute of the county and will be furnished with easy chairs couches and writing table. An up- to-date lavatory and toilet-room will also be one of the features. Consecratlon in October Kingston, Aug. 9.â€"â€"(Special~).â€"The of Archbishop-elect St. _Mary’s of Cathedral, Oct. 18. It was on this date in 1898 that Bishop Gauthier ago, and was well-known throughout was consecrated“ the district. He is survived by a 301-- rowing wife (who was Miss Corbett, 01' Toronto), and six children. are Mrs. Ritchie, Toronto, Misses Lindsay's Central Fair is only a few They weeks off-and the indications are that it will be the best ever. All that is reâ€" Kate, Woodstock; Bella, Toronto and quired is good weather. Two weeks ago a party of tourists consisting of Messrs Peter and Don- ald Anderson, of Maripoea, Jas. An- derson, of Toronto, and Dr. John and Duncan Anderson, of Cleve- land, all brothers, went to Mount Julian, Stoney Lake, for the purpose of holding a. re-union. Their pleasur- able anticipations, however, were Sadly marred by the untimely demise of one of the number, James Ander- son, of Toronto, who passed away in Nicholls Hospital Peterboro, last night. SAD TERMINATION T0 FAMILY REUNION FORMER MARIPOSA CITIZEN PASSED AWAY pariscns of distances will be helpful. Lindsay is, in round ï¬gures, two hun- dred miles from North Bay. taking the G.T.ï¬â€˜.‘via Blackwater and Orillia Cobalt is one hundred and three miles from North Bay. and Cochrane is one hundred and ï¬fty miles from Cobalt, and am hundred and forty- six miles from Haileybury. The great Clay Belt begins at Haileybury and extends North beyond Cochrane, and is all adapted to Agriculture with the exception of a twenty-mile strip which begins a few miles north of Englehart. In this strip are located the Swastika and harder Lake Gold camps. Sesekinka is one hundred and seventy miles from Nurth Bay and just beyond this station is the height of land north of which the water flows north to James Bay. J Arriving in North Bay on Tuesday} August 1st at 9 o’clock, we were tak- ’ en in charge by Messrs. C. W. Lee and A. L. Parr, two ofï¬cials of the T. N. 0. Railway. and left immed- iately for Liskeard, where on our ar- rival rigs were waiting, and we were driven some twelve or fourteen miles through excellent farming country. We lunched at a farmhouse at Mil- berta and then drove six miles to Thornlce, where we took the train to Englehart. Wednesday; we took train from Englehart to Iroquois Falls. eighty-six miles north, where a. }branch line runs to Porcupine gold ; camp. We had ’ dinner at a construc- 1tion camp, and returned in the alter- noon, stopping at the experimental farm at Montieth. The crops on the! experimental farm' wzre disappointing, Indeed the Manager told us that at! one time he thought they would be a total failure owing; to the dry wea- I ther, but'lat-er rains helped some- what. We could see that where the, land was low and the moisture had been suï¬icient, the land was very productive. At Kelso, just north of Montieth, we saw some evidences of the big ï¬re of a few weeks ago. ; Coming south again we passed Math-| eSon, when-e the land is of- the best, Just south 0 the town we called at . a German farmer's place, where we‘ saw heaVy crops of oats and listened to the praises oi the North Country. Continuing our journey southward we stopped at Swastika, were shown a mining claim, and saw for ourselves the shining metal. I Getting back to E'nglehart about six o'clock we were met by the ome- ers of the Englehart Agricultural So- ciety, and were shown some further evidences of the lertility of the land in that locality. Thursday moming we draw from Englehart to Charlton, a'd‘l-staDOe of about sixteen miles, and saw every- The Agricultural representatives of .the Ontario Department of Agriculâ€" gture were treated to a three-days’ 7trip through New Ontario, and they gspent most of that time studying ' farm‘ng conditions in the Great Clay lbelt In order to get some idea. of the vastnex of New Ontgrio, a few com- MR. 1;. A. MACKENZIES TRIP TO ‘ 'NEW ONTARIO AND THE CLAY- am The funeral will take place from the family residence, Toronto, to Mount Pleasant cemetery on Friday afternoon. Howardp Murray, and Rachael An- derson, of the same city. Besides the tour brothers mentioned above, an- other brother, Alex., of Toronto sur- vives the deceased. flodem Rest Room In connection with the improve- ments under way at the store of J. Sutclifte and Sons, it might be mentioned that the room now used as a mï¬linery department is to be partitioned ofl,‘ enlarging Miss Holmes’ dressmaking rooms. The other half is rented‘by the ï¬rm to. the Women's Institute of the county and will be furnished with easy chairs couches and writing table. An up- to-date lavatory and toilet-room will also be one of the features. The settler in New Ontario has many advantages. The timber on his land is a sour-ca of revenue While he is clearing it, the mines and lumber woods provide work in the winter for both the man and his team. The progress of the country maybe s-low butvit will be permanent, for mixed farming will be the rule. The rail- way it ahead of the settler, and there will be no dimculty in getting in or out with supplies or produce. The fact which struck everyone in the party was the way clover flour- ished. Red clover was sown with timâ€" othy, and in recently cut ï¬elds it was coming into bloom a second time. Alsike grows everywhere like a weed and on examination it was found to contain good plump seed, of excellent color. The deceased Was aï¬em'berof the‘ Om-emee, Aug. 10-â€"A 1111139 Wï¬â€˜g‘h' Independent Order of Foresters, and [ing about seventeen pounds, in trying was honored and respected by a, wide‘ to swallow a three pound bass, found circle of friends and acquaintances, ,it had undertaken too great apropo- who will extend sympathy to the ber-f sition. and so was strangled in the eaved relatives. lpond. Mr. Jack Murray easily captur- The funeral will take place from led the ï¬sh and soon found he had a the family residence, Toronto, to .IUCky catch by having alive bass for Mount Pleasant cemetery on Friday dessert. The local ï¬shing sports are afternoon. g having ï¬ne success this year. Consecranon in October Kingston, Aug. 9,â€"(Special').â€"T'he consecration of Archbishop-elect. Spratt takes place at St. _Mary’s Cathedral, Oct. 18. It was on this date in 1898 that Bishop Gauthier was consecrated. The winters are said to be severe, but this country is in the same lati- tude as Southern Manitoba, so that the climate will prove no hindrance to Agriculture. Indeed, we saw fall wheat ready to cut, ,and some in shock. This in itself is evidence that the winters are not too severe. There is a splendid home market in that country. Hay sells at from $12 to $20 per ton, and oats at 50 to 60 cents abushel. These two crops at grown largely at present, owing to the demand for them in the lumber and mining camps. These conditions obtained over practically the whole areaccovered by our trip, where settlement was far enough advanced to admit of crop- ping. The country is level in parts, and in other parts rolling but every where it has good natural drainage. The soil is Largely a white day with varying amounts or humus on top. It is timbered with spruce of perhaps ï¬fteen or twenty years' growth, and is not hard to clear. Where the spruce has not been bur 1', the pulp-wood will more than pay for clearing the land. ' To the average resident of older Ontario, who has always thought of New Ontario as a rough, rocliy counâ€" try, it comes as a sort of shock to see ï¬ne farms and good crops, and yet that is just what we saw. On Tuesday, driving from L-iskeard to Thomloe we passed through three townships and saw heavy crops of oats, peas and spring wheat, and some small patches of fall . wheat and barley. Timothy and clover grow luxuriant-1y, and yielded at least two and one half tons per acre this year. 'Roots and potatoes looked well and gave promise of a big yield. where heavy crops ot‘oats and numa erous stacks of hay, giving evidence evidences of the fertility of the land tion. Roots and garden truck looked well, and on the whole this section struck us very favorably. From Charl- ton we returned to Englehart and left immediately for Cobalt, where we were shown over La Rose, Right of Way and Tret-hewey mining prop- erties. At seven o'clock we left for North Bay 'and arrived there at 10.40 l The Conservatives talked blue ruin? when the Liberals came to power, and‘ they talked it when the Fielding tarifl was introduced, and again at the time the British preference was an- .nounced, yet Canada has never been i. so prosperous. Don’t listen to Con? servative talk of ruination now, beâ€" V cause the Liberals are advocating more markets for our products. It doesn’t mean anything. On Wednesday, August 23rd, Civic Holiday will he obszrved at Little Britain and the citizens of that enter prising burg intend celebrating it in right royal manner. One of the fea- tures of the day will be a grand has:- ball tournament in which the clubs of the district will participate. A purse of $55.00 Willbe set aside for this purpose, to be divided as follows:â€" lst prize $25.00 2nd prize $15.00, 3rd. prize $10.00, 4th prize $5.00 LUNGE TRIED TO SWALLOW BASS Keep this in your mind and visit Little Britain on that date. Supper and concert in the evening. Tuesday a stranger went into Mr. Dave Porter's blacksmith shop at Taylor’s Corners, and commenced act- ing in a strange manner. He was laboring under the halucination that a man was going to shoot him. Mr. Porter realized that the man was demented and gave «him every atten- tion until evening, when he notiï¬ed High County Constable Cochrane that he would bring him to Lindsay. About nine o’clock Mr. Porter arriv- ed with the unfortunate man and Mr. Thornbury had him placed in ‘ the county goal for the present. Little Britain’s Civic Holiday STRANGE MAN . WAS DEMENTED ~Mci‘s. $5.1.ch S-nmamsi, K. 1". 3. Ho. 3, Box 31, Waurxka, Ida. Another Grateful Woman London, Ont.--I feel as if I could not tell others enough about the 00d Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable om- pound has done for me. I was so weak and tired that I could not rest nights. A friend recommended your Compound and I soon gained health and strength and could not wish to sleep better. I know other women who have taken it for the same purpose and they join me in praisin i t.. â€"â€"MRS. WM. A. BUFFY, 905 we St, London, Qntt _ _ Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound has surely cured many cases of female ills, such as inflammation, ulcer- ation, displacements, ï¬broid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, back- ache, that toesringadown feeling, and nervous prostration. Waurika, Okla. â€"“I had female trou- bles for seven years, was all run down, . and so nervous I could not do any- thing. The doctors treated me for dif- ferent things but did me no ood. I got so ba that I could not sleep day or night. While in . this condition Iread of Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound, and beg an if} use and wrote to Mrs. Pinkham fo advice. In a short time I had gained n _7 ax erage Weight 5m am ’now strong: :n. 33:231.†I Was Cured by Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound in summer. Now Scott’s Emulsion is as much a sum- mer as a Winter remedy. Scait’s Emulsion Science did it. A11 01:31:25“ BLUE RUIN SPOUTERS pagt. a 1 - A, A; Some years ago, when replying to the toast of his health at a dinner of the Authors’ Club, Dr. Gore said there had been in reality but one event, in his literary career. He had once been accused of wrongly using a verb, and, on turning up the word in the New English Dictionary he found himself confronted by the very quotation in uestion from one of his own booksâ€" t :9 only known instance of that par- ticular use of the word. Apropos of the Bishop of Birming- ham’s rngrgy aswan rauthor, there. is DH, uzu -vrl‘v" v5 â€Lauuulus. He is a frequent visitor to London. and two years ago he took the chair at a great meeting of Indians held at Westminster to express abhorrence of the assassmation of Sir Curzon Wyllie. Mmy who own allegiance to His Highness .as the head of Islam de- VOutly behave that :he holds the keys QMMLMW “W -. - Sir George White, M. P., confesses mat he gained experience as a com- merc ial traveler which has been of in- estimable value to him, while Sir Robert Ropner, when M.P. for Stock- ton. owed much of the great success of his business career to the training he went through as “an ambassador of commerce.†The late Lord Beaconsï¬eld was not the only individual who endeavored to make his ï¬rst “splarge†in the world of men by means of a fancy waistcoat. Theopile Gautier was like- wise a lover of eccentric costume. His crimson waistcoat. of the ï¬rst performance of Victor Hugo’s “Her- noni,†when as a young man he was one of the leaders of the band 0! students who had turned up in force to ensure by the tumultuous ap- plause the success of the play. “You became celebrated when very young,†said Muxime du Camp to him in Inter years. _“Yes, when very young," Holds Keys of Heaven. His Highness the Aga. Khan, who is now in London for the season, is head of the Ismailiah sects of all the Moshms, by right, of his descent from Ali, the ngphew of Mahcmet. he answered, “bécause of my waist- coat}! “Knights of the Road." Sir James P. Gibson, M. P. who has been uz‘ animously elec ed pres dent of the Un1t‘:d Kingdom Commercial Travelers’ Association adds one more to the long roll of legislators who, prior to entering Parliament, were “knights of the road,†in a trading sense. The ï¬rst great step in life' that Richard Cobden obtained was when he was promoted from clerk to c0mmer~ cial traveler, and Mr. Joseph Nolan, M.P., has been a commercial traveler. - “Every child deserved study and care, as though there were no other child in_the world. If you go to Stratford-on-Avon and see the records of Shakespeare’s baptism, and the cuttage m which he sat with Ann Hathaway, you will realize that gen- ius is sometning which God has kept in his own hands, and you and I must aiways b;- on the look out for genius.†"I remember,†said Dean Welldon, “writing to the father of a pupil of mineâ€"a peer of the realmâ€"to tell him that his son had opened an ac- count of transactions with a betting agent. He wrote back thanking me i0: the information, but addinw, ‘I think I ought to tell you that f am much Worse myself.’ I believe that statemem was strictly true. Addressing a conference of the Na- ional Association of Head Teachers, at Manchester, recently on “The School and the Home," Bishop Weil- don, Dean of Manchester, said it sometimes happened that the home militated against school because of the illexample set by the parent-3. 11v ‘1 x Stx artillery horses, driven by non- commissioned â€"- ofï¬cers in uniform, formed a bridal team at 3 Brighton wedding and a very smart turnout it was. It was not so commodious, however, as the gayly decorated tram car, with white-gloved driver and conductor, which was the chasm vehicle at another lady's wedding in a Midland town. The bride, the bridegroom, their respective fathers and mothers, and all relatives and guests rode in their best attire both inside and upon the outside of the car, and the Whole made a very brave show indeed. A ï¬re engine makes a. very smart turnout at a wedding. There [is nothing dull or commonplace about a ï¬re engine. It is always bright and up to the mark, and ready for action. Evidently this line of thought occurred to a happy couple in Devon- shire some time ago, for the ï¬ve bridesmaids who were to support the bride at her nuptials rode to the church on the local ï¬re engine, and it was one of the best attended wed- dings in the annals of the parish. A circus equestrienne had a very unique wedding in a continental town ~omc time ago. The man who (lrixrvs the team of 40 horses was the hrjdgmmn. and he drove his own bride to church behind his 40 steeds. the bride, herself being seated, dross.- cd in all her splendid robes. on the top of the triumphal car. Whether their married life has been as tri- umphal as their wedding procession history does not relate, but we may hope so. English Couples Take Special Care to Be Unique. Americans have not shown much desire for uniqueness as regard to equipages in which they ride to get married. Most everybody who has a thought of getting married never thinks of departing from the usual cab or taxi and as a result all wed- dings in this country are noted for a certain sameness. The people of “Merry England" have different tastes in the matter and when it comes to getting married they spend a great deal of time devising some novel way in which to be carried to the church. Speaking on the sub- ject an English writer says: Children Cry ron FLETGHER’S C A S T O F? I A "NOVEL MARHIIBESQ’ A Betting Transaction. A Standing Rebuke. Dress and the Man. â€"4i. Examinerfâ€"The City Council of Petcrboro and the County Council of Peterboro are, perhaps, not appreci- atfng‘tgieless th'xt the city cf Peterâ€" _boro is sustain’ng by the long c1;sing fthe Pigeon Cnek bridge, thus pre- renting the pcopla of Verulam and Emily coming to Peter'coro and trad Eng our city. Th'sa p:op1e are accus tomed to thing all in it business in Peterboro, where the maE‘set is much aetter, and the farmers of Emily and Verulam and the north. as well as the merchants of Peterboro are complain- ‘ng loudly at the state of aï¬a'rs. The City and County C0u=1C ls ar: certainly neglecting their duty 21- lowing this bridge to be in the con- dition it is. It is c:.rtain that the County of Victoria do:s not care if it is ever re-cpenzd; and it is up to the County of Peterboro to take the initiative in the interests they are elecued to promote and protect. Th'é tr;dge has been cZosed to traf- Rachael of the same city. Besides the tie for three weeks and it was also The three gentleman proceeded to :he mound and Dr. Orr and Mr. James, r;co;nizin: the liken 55 to the rounds opened in M-ichiéan, at once ieterminrd whtre work shsuld begin, Btund'ng on the msund atout six feet ‘rcm- the head, when the sun was at nerldian. and with h’s arms extended .he shadow of Mr. James fell on a :ertain spot. “There is the place t3 11g," he said. After a few minutes a;- :aVation. results Le:an to c;m=. Four :omplate skeletons w;re 1177C )Vérid in a. shcrt time. They Ly, app r.nt1y in acircle, the heads inward. the ineer zircle being about three feet in dam- ?tt-r. It is the inVariable rifle to find :hat bodLes so interred, are so p1;c:d is time was limited cnly sufï¬cient was done to identify the character of ;he remains, and further explanazion was left in the hands of Mr. Wetster. Scattered over the province aid in :he bordering states of the union are found many similar mounds. Nearly all are identified with the same ch31 xcteriatics. And so well (Sta';l;sh2d xre the fgcts, th‘at it is now known al most to acettainty, by‘those famzl ‘ar with such mattgrs, ex:c.1y where to excavate. Reviewâ€"Yesterday, Mr. 0.8. James Secretary of the Department of Eduâ€" cation and Dr. R. B. Orr, curator of the Toronto. came to the city and went out to Lakefield, where they were met by T. Webster, of Smith and taken out to his farm above Laveffeld. 0n the farm is a mound, and of this mound, Mr. Wetster has long had suspicious and 'mpressicns. He has piid some atten- tion to such matters and eventually wrote and asked the assistance of Dr. )rr, who accompan‘ed by Mr James, 0 hold a brief inVestigation. Provincial Museum, 011 the farm, not far tram the bank )i the river, it is situated, and its dimensions, roughly given, are a‘aou.‘ 30 feet-long by 2:â€! feat across and from 1.8 to 36 inches high. The elements iave dine a work ..01 demonition in the :enturies since it was enctzd, and the .dges are sloped out by attritions md ercs‘on of snow, rain and frost.' It is evident th‘2t dexch had come to one of these inrrred, by violence, Firmly imbedded in the scull Wasa small stone 21-. drinn w;th such force as to spit the s'.uli. traversely or almost from ear to ear. 'l'iiough pitted by the action cf th: earth. the contour of the axe w. 5 mean: :1 and the place where the handle had been afï¬xed was apparent. Dr. Orr Said that the finest set of teeth both upper and lower that he h;s eJer s-en are in this skull, as perfect te-day as when ;he body was interred. Dr. Orr expressed the opinion that he remains were of psrsms at some note and csvnseiuezce, pgssi-ly chiefs ;nd followers, sla'n ‘11 Latin The form of burial indicat:d th's. Aiur- :hrr erid'nce would he t‘e finding of the remains of the funeral ï¬re and inferring where this would 1e placed, scme hasty excaVeticn .wcs made and the remains or the ï¬re d'sclosed. He crought with him a fragment of wood PETERBORO PRflTEST AGREES? ETEE CLOSING 0F PEGEON CEEEK BREESE INDIAN BURIAL MOUND WAS 32% NEAR THE VINLNCE an m that Wash day is like child’s play. There is nothing in it but pure Soap ,'.\ It cannot injure the clothes and gives ‘5\ the Sweetest cleanest resuhs. Tc wash ,â€" the Surprise way cleanses-so easily / Surpriee Soap for such work. Instead, when a burial was atom: to be made of aryI import- ance, the bodies were ranged in a circle and til-:11 covered with earth. stones and debris, generally procured from the shorss of bins and banks of streams and rchrs, where the mater- ial would be soft and eas 1:; handled in buckets or some other rude uten- sils. This acccunts fur the preserxce at the shells of clams and other shell ï¬sh in this as well as in othzr mounds WAS REPRESEKTATEVE A? {GRONYE’ION J. A. Padgett, Wellingtan-st. Mr. Hunter expects to‘ spend a few days in this vicinity, and during the next two wee-ks intends shooting at the rifle matches at Toronto and Ottawa. for a place on the Bisley Team next year. W. B. Hunter, of Vancouver, B.C., one of the V-anccuver represent:.tives at the Coronation. arrived in town last night withMrs. Hunter, who has been visiting her mother at Belle- viue, and is visiting his sister, Mrs. The gentlemen xrcposgd toxeturn in a short time and prosecute the segrch thcraughly, Mr. Wetstcr go- ing cn with the work of uncot ering other p: rts of the mound. There is a high conical mound on the Smith side of the river, approach- ing Young’s Point, that has attract- ed attention for many years. Atten- tion will be given to this mound and developments may ensua. closed for a period in the string. There may be vxy few members of the Council awére of the importance of keeping this bridge open. It is up ~to the merchents to start some thing, as the trade which comcs over that bridge is of great impcr’cance ts the city. 'IhLS moundh‘s he]: consvructed in conformity with the lf-gezds cf and well-known methods of the Very early. Indian trites. Tney did n31: exc avate as they did not' have tools suitable Dr. Orr expressed the opinion that he remains were of perszns of some note and censeguence, p:ssii-1y chiefs ;nd followers, 513'!) '11 table. T312 form of buri-al indicatd th's. Afur- :hcr e:id:noe would Le t‘:e findzng of the remains of the funeral ï¬re and inferring where this would te piaced, scme hasty excaVaticn .was made and the remains or me fire d‘sclosed. He crought with him a fragment of wood partly Lurnsd and ch;rred, and other pizczs are stll among the ashes. Read the directions on the wrapper. You can use Surprize i: any and every way. mm: j