"+ | olds that Would do credit to the best {white on the Whole Iot to cover a| eulogy _ of the work of Mr. r Several sums fromr ( + "$300 to $10,000, have t me for immediate in- .| grass fi SoneoR. had its stables, on Friday {adrtired by al} wha saw thém on LE ration with the provincial Ors. --Springwater Farm, | govern Mr. Burrell hassevolv- 3d the effectiveness of the agricul tural work of both provincial and federal governments. The *"Cana- dian," a non-partisan weekly pub- lished in Toronto, has the following Burrell which is but typical of the commen- dition K& J receiving from all sides: NDORSED BY ALL. last, depleted of fourteen fat 2-year- stables in the land. They were a bunch of prime, ones; choice ani- tals, all reds, with not sufficient six inch space, and were much | their jougney to Port Perry railway depot, They were, of the right. stamp to put on flesh in their youth, being purple:bred Darhanis ; being A 'and combined, during their career, they have not consum- ed ten bushels of grain ; they out Mr. Burrell said th c e highly reminetativetol ifollars that has. bee inion Minister of Agriculture, has made a Speech #t a. country fair that ought ta be gndorsed by every "on 8d in Onta S| gale which accompan! _ | chants e | stor. ed a plan which has greatly increas- | yo cago ic ofiicials say all Oc! erity have been b "The Englishman who is Dom- | ological newspaper and publicist in Candda. N and there orning's Stal night nefeasin, fain: Ne Bcipart on wilder before ths wea s ething like a bligzard 8w tha northern sections of carly yesterday morning, played havoc with therailwags. North the conditions were pagtiularly bad. Tha heavy fall of enow {nd tho fed it delved all passenger traffic and com ply tie up. the movement of freight [or sone hours. - The Wioht; tral six hours late in atriving in to tevmivals, while all other the North were beliind tine gfe In the North the storm: was hs bad in the vicinity. of rang three inches of sndw: felljsand all trains ruoning ih that district were greatly behind time. From Coclifamp south to Parry Soiind and vicinity twoinches ef snow fell, .and trains Wie further de: layed thete. The trains [unning bn the main northern lines frg he Eas were also late, 48 "the stofn extented along the north inte Quebde: © * With her sides and deck foversd with jce the steamer Arcadian of the Mer- Mutual Line, arrjvetl & Fort William yesterday. Tha]ict wie LL thick on the sides that: ft was found impossible to open the dis to unload freight until it had beefthdwed with hot water. At Thunder fape she met a flest of . ton grain vessls 'that had stayed ih shelter during the LIFES SUNSHINE Gladdens 'Thies Whe Regain New Health and Strength Ih the When the #low' offtealfli comes back to sallow.cheeks jwhen languid weakness givesplace th yigor ; when you notice some palegekbiausted in- valid réstored to S | quire: More than like] © | twitching € | the new, rich ri and rhedfati figdring &fuptio of growing gle appear when the yell d Blood Dr. Wilili- Jy make. Here ng thousands : ams' Pink Pills a is oné instance Mr. F. Ashford, says: " Some ed a lengthyterm the last three the beautiful but t# 0 1 complet- service in India, ing. spent in eréus Posha- 0-day | are nonk Sood at | in the markets of t {"acconifodatiod of ; million and a hall bushels. A eybury, Ont.,. no world at thei true worth. Through the opera- lions of the Inspection and Sale Act the packing of Canadiait Fruit has been greatly improved and the ter, ar ,| development of trade attelerated. From time to time since its enact- tent, as experience has indicated, the Act has been improved in order d | to more completely encourage and protect the industry. The latest amendment to the Act; which was '| passed during the past session of Parliament, extends inspection to imported fruit thereby placing it on an cqual footing with that grown in Canada. The amendment provides that the Governor-in:Council by by regulation may prescribe the kinds of imported fruit packages contaibing which must be branded or marked ; the brands of marks to be used thereon, as tell as the methods and places where such branding shall be done. Other minor clianges were eflected in the Act, Grain Exports From Mont. teal Total Sizty Million Bushels. "°° Montreal, Oct. 17.--The export of grain front Montreal for the pre- sent season will be from sixty to sixty-five million bushels according 1g an estimate made at the office o the Harbor Commissioners. Thi output will be double or nore than double the quantity exported last season, Grain received in the harbor elevators this season to date 1is estimated. at $1,000,000 bushels, At the present moment there only 2,250,000 bushels in the Harbor Commissioners' elevators, and not 'more than abafit. a quarter -of a willion bushels in the Grand Trunk that there is spas for That the spare space will. be needed before the end of the season however, and will¢ probably = be overtaxed, is evident from cfficidl reportstreceived from inland ports: | There were 20,000,000 bushels in the elevators at Fort Williari on the gth inst., and the quality 14 now almost certainly greater, while the clevators Tiffin, Goderich; Depot Harbor, Midland, Owen. Sound, Point Edward, Port Colbotne and auothet,| i London, Oct. - 17.~The great landlords continue to. Show every symptom of being extrentely willing to get rid of their éstatés because of the alleged burdens of taxation under Chancellor Lloyd George's famous budget, Among others cold this week wasthe Ear] of Porte- mouth's seat at Eggesford, in Dev- onshire, of 3,277 acres. «This sold for $450,000: It is ohi& of the most beautiful properties il the south of England, and includes the Eliza bethan Eggesford House in the Village of Eggesford, salmon and trout fishing, and some of the best farms in the county. Another estate sold this week was Litton Hall, near Dereham, cone of Lord Cranworth's properties, which inciudes three fine (atts: el fee Stallion Inspsction for 1914 ~ After the inspection of stallions had been completed last fall it was found that there was quite a puin- ber of stallion owners who, through not appreciating the value of the Act, or through latk of information did not have their stallions present- ed for inspectith when the ifspect- ors were on their routes in the fall. A supplementa spection was held 1 April t :t stallions owned by such meu. This made the inspection very thorough, but, besidfes costing extra expense, it in conie cases, caused considerable de- lay in having the enrolment certi- ficate issued. To overcome the necessity of a second inspection for the season of 1914 it was decided at a meeting of the stallion enrolls ment board, held in the secretary's office Build Toron- a ! ther would be only one inspection of statlions during the year ended July 31st, 1914, which inspection {will commence about Februaty 17th, igr4. The inspectors Will visit each stallion at his stable, provided that he makes appli€ation for in- spection to the gfectitsyy, R. W. Wade, on or before February 1st, 1914. . Now comes Mr. D. Darragh of 2nd Pool h orl B lumpy and tlean; rare' thing to get 2nd Pool Cdal. Al L. and W. Scrantort, Coal. Coal 1 have handled for about tiventy-two years and it gives best satisfaction. The Lakefield Cement. i3 conceded by all the best in the market, have handled it fof eleven years without a failure ; Whén you build Silos; Walls or Sidewalks with 'if you ca rest assured they will not fall dow! or peel. Spend your mongy jh thé best, it pays:--C. L. VICKERY: Aged Warriors Would Tight Duel ~ Paris, Oct. 29.--A challenge to a duel was sent to-day 'by one French septhagenanan warrior, General Bose, aged 72. to another still older, 'General George Florentine, aged 77, the Grand Chancelfor of the Legon of Honor. The cause, the quarrél was that legal proceedings had becn started Ly General Florentin fo prevent the niembets otf a military society, the Society of National Merit fennd- ed by Genétal Bose, from wearing a button among its insigna, and thus infringing the privilege of members of the Legion of Honor. The seconds, of the two aged offi- cers met this afternoon to deliberate | co as to whether a combat wolld be In further tion tne fracas has been itvdefin | ly postpofted, QUITE emt fle eee U. 8. Rai'ways Have to Face A Qomplex Fublic Opinion Some of the Difficulties Kew York, Oct. 18 --The plea of the railways for higher rates bes calise.of decrease C i eotly does Not sto "popular mind with the same force as the suggestion that the public safety and convenience require large capital outlays for automatis signals aud steel equipment, better and stations, and that to raisé that capital the rdilways must show a good margin over their fixed cliarges and fair dividends. There is another side tion on which the railways to this a, duis well ts po : out, howe at the thick, fat, lar does not bold full sway in the pict n market 48 it" once did. During res yedrs there has been a growing d there fot the bacon type as e Have it in' Canada, though pers haps a little heavier. The question, However, is whether the thick, fat hog is still ip the ascendanty suffi- ciently to influence the typé produc. ed here. If there is 'a growing demand in the United Statés for the bacon typé if night be in the inter" gis ot Canadians to catr especi= ally to that demand. In that case there Wwolild be no need to change fypé; The producer woul have {wo "strings to his how." Hd would have the established export trade with Great Britain and thi specially select tradé in the Unite tdtes to cater to. ft wiil, however; tdke some tinie to get our bearings; and in the meantime it might bd lie wél] to hold our present level in' regard to producing the bdcon hogs. ~-Canadian Farm. J 7 rien peak Kingston, Oat, Oc convict, through the friendly cond nivance of another inmate of the Penitentiary had aficfed his escape Itis cell in March, 1912, was d to day to the Royal Com? 1 by 1 Jatchimand vion of the inv io to Dr. Ww, Edwards' charges against certain officials of Kingston penitentiary held indide the peniteafiary. This escape acdordi witness was only * ®erbally" reports ed to thie Minister of Jnsice, Mr: Smith described in detail Ins visit to the cell of the escaped { prisoner, one Baptiste Chart in ith th den ane ed oft 'on 0 had sawed Ihrough fhe bars of hs wiifow and descended, to the groind by means of rope made om his rug. os : Thefeafter the fijgitive had sec reted himself in ihe chimney of a nearby huilding in which pesition he was losated two days later. The wi charged that the Depmy Warden's neglect was largely res Ss} to the ®lwar Valley. : fever were rife, ! | fortunate enoug attack of either, it soon became enervating clim | left their ravagese In short the reac inexorable natu severe toll for labor. My first pending br i in the" eral anaemic €0 finable nervou its * zest, wor really seemed passing to t ousness ends e { ment of Dr. confess 1 was ing what doc! but concluded small, and their favor, 3 : and dengue ough I was pe a severe 1 ty return home Parent that the onditions "had constitution. had set in, and exacting a jo of strenuous ng of the im- were 'severe the head and ability, 2 gen in and an inde- iLife had lost fle impossible' htolerable. ' | along the corridors, ng visitors before it into their ropmis. ? Pink Pills, 1 of thent.do- fo i Noljeity Port McNicol are packed], Grain is| Pine Grove Gardens with a cauli- being sent down to ontreal as |flower which quite eclipses those as speedily as possible. sent to this office by Mr. Stephens = and Mr, Haywood, or anything else Leipsic, Germa Oct. 20.--|in its line we have ever séen or Five lions belonging 10 an Ameri-| heard of It measures 18 inches can circus obtained their freedom |across, add weighs 11 pounds. We in the stre¢ts of Leipsic 'lately|should like to hear from other grow- owing to a collision between a|ers, far or near, who can show any- street car and their cage while it|thing equal fo this,--Orillia Packet. was on the way to the railroad 3 ; fe) station after a performance. The| Prizesfor babies were given at cage was torn open by the ;shock, | the Huntsville fall show, and the and the appearance of the wild| Forester says they "were awarded animals in the centre of the city [by Mf. Russel Hern, of the Hern créafed a panic among the tens of| Hardware, Limited." If thig means thousands of persons here to attend | thet, Mr. Hern was the judge, we the centennial of the "Battle of|congratulate hith on his courage the Nations." land address. . One of the lions entered a- hotel rushed upstairs aod oceeded hg the She Didn't Dispute the dri ] # aged woman, ¥ It was some time before * police! tucked up about her bi {men arrived and shot the 'animal. }ine potatoes in a fie The other fous were also shot and |. .auitpmobile broke illéd in various parts of the city. | painesyiile way. was attacked by the li machine noticed folk to "fix" t ¥ face was furrowed bac | amply secired by present and : | ure property and resturces. | company Ha $ | mortgage bond under clearly draft- ep and |' the skin a parchment Saow, Her pds ques] must be alert. They must offer | chonsible for the prisoner's escape. new capital issues with the best o The fact that a convict in an ad- security at their disposal, Shor joining cell was given the privilege term notes, convertible bonds, fr playing a violin according to the equipment issues, all at high rales | yifess was helpful in' affecting the ol interest avd requiring re-fioanc:| egaape, S ing and duplication of bankers'! wPhe other man could saw commissions, lawyers' and other | hrauph the bars," he said, while fees and expenses, have for a long | he violin was "being played to time been liberally, supplied in the drown the noise," : attempt to effect a' slight saving in = withess had # suspended the interest raté, The money 'i$ for this incident oe that' obtained at hight rates, but! respon<ipg gad in no way responsible, He sibility for réally financing the|decfaded that the Depity Warden's companies is only deferred, aod hoslécy in not inspecting the bars of later long ter' issucs must bee the fell sccordion to the regulations gotiated. - HE was (Iié main contributory factor in Still another experience ow | the edéape being affected so being faced By many roads which | easily. x have exhansted their priof lien = ? bond issues and have beer forced : i : to dther binds of secondary secured | A; ¢isoN--In Port Pefry, on Tues.' issues, instead of creating a blanket| gu October 2f, 1913, Mary mortgage sufficiently cobipiehen- 3 i sive to provide for the eetire gjstem ut- a Has any credit suth a 'ed meastiies as to the ses for|of which distin whick they can be tanh ona oS {ds better pricés-than any 1o use miscellaneous for issues which have not! comment them but tl gErégate amount of the of - indenture covering + | econtlims of mankind for bravery | hour of danger. Bhe from her childfiood, evinced ax unusual deg that gentleness and forethought o va able to all but particular to the fem