and Evenings. - Tulsphons con {ndopendent lines, -- he ARRISTER, &c., 168 , 8 "of th Phe the ih Fl i Yarnold 4 | \Pard P4fES, © - Ont. : EY TO LOAN. avai edd dv 4 per cent. 1901. Jno. W. Qrozier } CdnvEY ANOS B nig Wg ta oh Cofi: Ruhl (oie "imile "west: of Pork. Perrgi)--| Monsx 20 LoAN, i. FAREWELL, 1.0; LL.B., County --), Orown Attornsy, , County Sol- igor, &ol, Notargh lic and Conveyanoer, Jffice--Seuth. wing Court House, Whitby, »ilde ov r the Rot) & Co's. PORT PERLY. All branches of Devtistry, including Crown and Bridge Work: successfully practiced. Sbeifos) Teeth on Opld; Silver, Aluminum or Ruhber Plates, Fillings of Gold, Silver or Cement Painlels extraction when regyired: Prices to suit the times® mily Netépaper 18 PUBLISHED AT PORT PERRY, 0 AVERY THURSDAY MORNING g t H. PARSONS eT i be o} discontinued until arrears are PERS containing money, when addressed to thin prepaid and registered wil Le at var risk. NTS moasured Ni I, snd ADVERTISEMENTS a capariel 4 . the Abymnrises Nontcians, wil be nerd unl ment. 5 taken out anil paid for: f to Merchants and oth A ee a or Bart So "* THESE terms will in all cases be, strictly adhered to a (2 ARTMENT. Fuispittots od Bills, . Posters Pioerash, Dodgeii BulHseds, Checks fi 3. BuRNHAM, Office. in Psot Office "6.3 MORRISH SUER OF MARRIAGE SES Lt Thied | RB. 0. OHUROK REV MM, J. ONEILL PP. hind Sanday at 10 30a ra, . ok Lgl Dillon Hirigé-StayFecne Manufactured by the Owen Sound Wire Fenoe Uo: Litd., and am prepared to supply this whole community with the very BEST WIRE FENCE produced on this Continent and at prices thar can not fail to satisfy purchasers. The DiLron Fence is withéut a peer It.is the: BEST becausé it 1s flexible; it is & square mesh ; 1s a perfect hiiige-stay fence, thefefore it 'is impossible to bend the stays in fact it is the best fence made in this or any other country. efdre purchasing a Wire Fence don't fai] to idspect the Ditron Fence. J. H. Brown, Deater IN. AGRICULTURAL, JMPLE- MENTS AND MACHINERY. ; x SEAGRAVE April 6, 190s. a 03 Fourteen Different Bémedies Without Effect. CUR! ricdLY * NERVILINE 'Ne ~~ '=ngoer proof of the wonderful merf. Nerviline could be produced thar the letter of Miss Lucy Mosher, whe for years has been a well-known resident of Windsor, N.S. - "I want {0 add my unsolicited fed! monial to the efficacy of your wo dertul liniment, 'Nerviline.' I consider a it the best rem- edy. for & cold, 80rd wheezing, tenet ness in the chest, otc, and can state never. bagfi with out Nerviline, - I had a dréadful attack of cold, that settled on iy 'chest, that fourteen different remedies couldn't break up. 'I rubbed on Nerviline three timés a day, uséd Nerviline as a' - gle. and was completely resto: I have. induced dozens of my friends to use Negviline, and they are ith its wonderful pow na sickness, © You Ae aL to publish' this signed letter., hope will show 'th ay to he maiy t need to use Nerviline, - AIL sorts of aches, pans. snd utter *ts of aches, ns, an or- ings--internal = andr.exte yield to Nerviiin Accept no substitute; 35¢ per battle. or five for $1.00. | REPHESENTAVES Telephone Directory be prepared, and additions and changes be reported to our Local Manager Have pou « SolepHiié ? Those who E. A. ADAMS, Bell Phone No.4r ¢ that 16 is the most proeious of onvonithoss. : - = H.C. HUTCHESON, Bell Phone UffieNo. Residence No. ADAMS & HUTGHESON SUCCESSORS TO DAVID J. & DOUGLAS ADAMS FIRE LIFE Real Estate INSURANCE MARINE ACCIDENT | Mortgage Loans Steamship Ticketls | TIME TABLE Port GOING SOUTH. 6.40 a m. I.§5 a.m. 1.40 p.0i. PERRY. GOING NOR! 9.07 a.m. 5.55 p.m. 733 p.m. 0. 2. R. Time Table. Going East 10 17 a.m, 6.27 pn. 11.08 pam 1pm. | A. J. DAVIS, Town Agnet. Wiss Hanson, iss Harrison, _ Dress and Mantle Maker ISHES to inform the ladies that "slfe hes moved (6 (he rooms formerly occupied by her over 'Mr. Flint's Drug Store where she is prepared to execute all or ders for Dress and Mantle Making in a manner unsurpassed for Correctness of Style , and Charming Effect. Our charges are ¢onsistent with the value givefi, t Port Perry, April 1, 1909. WANTED AT 0 - p-- Sy Kercmeon Is the Latest Orchard Dig , trict in British Columbia. £ O10 of the promising fruit-grows ing districts of British Columbis, the very existence of which was une kno n to most people ia the goast titie up to a short time ago, is thé Kercmeos, situated at the junction of Keremeos Creek gnd the Similky: fneenr river fh ,S6Uthéfn British. Cok; umb'a. In the past, the Okanaga and Kooteney wvalleyd; blessed wit} better transportation facilities, hav received the lion's share of publ ¢ity ae shoy have also capital fat fovestment and gettlers from prairie and from ovérseas. Now he Great Northern Rafiroad, bring! g relief to Keremeos in the form of direct communication with Vans eouver, introduces a factor , which tends to equalize matters, Kere- meos is getting ready to claim the Vancouver market fdr fruits as a Yéry own: Thiz year #11 the frult grew went to. the coast city. * "In 1914," said J, F: Armstrong, one of the largest growers of Kere- meos, "we shipped out about 365 car Ipads af fruit, of which abou, 15 went to the prairies and the bilance to Vancouver. In 1916 we "estab lished a 'house in Vancouver te handle our products, and in conse quence of the improvement which re- sulted, we have cut out the prairie trade altogether! This season our tire output went _thirty cars. is in a bettér position to supply. mafket than any other fruitegro district in the provipce, and we oing. after the trade sid &¥pect to cilifies Keremeos will bs: _ bet 50 and 60 miles nearer Vancouver |. than the Okanagan. We will be to pick fruit in the afternoon have it on' the fables of Vi families at breakfast th t6 VanconVer, | al shipments amounting to aboul | The Keremeos district |: Tt fC. Shiai pats {With the now transpedfation fas | & Chas. E Dowding . M. Irwin as. Moore Wm, A. Sangster Fred. Marlow * Dr. Russell Parr S Howard Keslick Clarence A. Vickery ster-- Morgan Carry M, R.Fydell Frank Spence Neil McLean W. H. Watson Hurry Carnegie Arthur Doubt De. D. Evans larence Putdy ert Nott ordon Hood oward Stewart . McTaggart onald Graham i 3 , aliey Lester Leask loy Harris Me Tass . Howard Vilbour Raymes ussell McGill Rex Hood "BE. Wilson } Wm. A. Alesander an Bowerman Muiray Watson 'Randolph Swit2er Cyordon Brown eorge Howsam 08 Ston, rank Sn} C. Bruce E. Hagerman Smith Ferguson Wm. Mclrien Murray Clardson, . De Edwin C. McArthur Lee Honey Pcter Truss Arch. McMillan Harold Thompson e will be pleased to 4d& to 1 d request out readers to sup with additional names. rafiking may not be stric'ly but will be amended on information in that regard et Fer in France and Belgium, be- tho British lines, there are great of stretcher bearers, Red 8 'workers, nurses," and doctors hg day and night over the nded Soldiers tha are Sonstantly key of e firing line. The akoyf We aid in the dressing 3 that are distributed among nches, From these they are ito the hospitals back of the puch as No, # Ganadigp. Gen- jand there the men aré carefull: d until they are fit to return ity or are able to go to England pital ships,. where hundreds of als and homes are ready to re- hem. In thes the men are pd and are either invalided r returned to the firing ling ¢ fit. Canad hospitals dt the "hate D2 coon of in the terms by all who have seen d every soldier who bas heen th "th is impressed with the h zeal of the nursing sisters fort of the patients. in Canada women are the Red Cross, and thou- how of Dales | on in. *Enzinnd, tu} provision for the am regular every HAMILTON, 822 South 15th St. ~ ¥tien, a remedy has lived for forty ! years, steiidily growing in popularity and influence, add thousands upon thousands of women declare théy.owé their health to it, is it not reasonsa- ble to believe that it is an article of great merit? If you want special fo Lydia E. Pinkh Medicine | © (¢drifidential), Lynn, Mass. | ur letter will ba open ¢ and answered a Wa held in strict confidence. vice write | Domestic grain stored 6t DUNK now amounts to 14,700,000 bushels |of wheat, and 3,100,000 bushels of | coarse grain. Canadian and domes- | H¢ grains arq srriving at the rate of 130 to 160 cars a day; while the rajf movement to the sea coast averaged 12 ears a day. The bonded capacity 111 perafit 7,000,000 .to 8,000,000 ushels more, but at the present rate of shipment from Duluth the capa- city will be reached . i Germaus in Canada. According to the Canadian censtis 51 1911, there were in Canada at thst | | time $93,320 pémsons of German | origin, forming 5.46 per cent. of the | tal population. MALAMUTES FOR THE ALLIES Big Shipment of Alaskan Dogs Taken to Fran tpl x n some of the best racing dogs in Alaska to the fighting front in Prance, the dog races in Adaska will £0 on just the same, for Shers Are dogs where those that I. too! Sot as AQ&nti€ egme. fropi,'". So spoke Scotty Allan, proba! the most fa. .ous racing driver in the world and one of its best known sportsmen, on account of the many wonderful victories he has sco with his teams of Alaskan. Malds mutes in the fe than four hun: dred mile Fices over the frozen trails of the north which each year have startled the sporting world. | He has just returned tG Montreal and is on his way back to Alaska from France. J ,."I pold only twenty-seven of my own dogs to the ; French . Govern-. ment," he said, "and bought the remainder, making a hundred and eight dogs in all, from the Eskimos." These were loaded on special cars and guarded by soldiers all the way till we came to Quebec. Here our pack was increased to four hundred and forty by a consignment of other | Eskimo dogs from the Lake St: Joh region and from Clark €ity, Labr dor, till we sailed on the sfeame Pomeranian with four hundred afd forty of them. On the way from Nome to Quebed I fed the Alaskan dogs on salmon,| their natural food, but afterwards we cooked food for all of them and had four apd a half tons of dog-biscuits. made up specially for them to keep' them from getting hungry on thelf WAY across. 1 had five men with me ih ad to Kenneth Mart to fake care of them, and although the weather was bad at times, when the waves rolled jvef fhe deck and broke some of the, ennels we did not lose a single ome, | | The French were delighted with the dogs, and I was entertained by all the big people in Paris, while the Comte Leon Tinseau, one of the gre: literate in France and a member of the Legion of Honor, | wrote, a long drtigle about theni for the paper The Flai¥beau, le for the dogs | snow-clad 5 unas Tort hoary balls, the direction of the take a German t "Just: fun of the thing, even if they couldn't hold it--and they didn't care how many lves it cost. 0, .. "They're a little more tethdetrate in their actions now, but they haven't | lost any of the fighting spirit, and wherever they are put they can be give a good me- count of themselves. * "Mount St: Robert!" Now, The Geographic Board of Cenads has perpetuated the 'mame and fame Gf Sir Robert Borden for as long &8 the . tépegrapby of. the Dominion lasts. In. tHe, oficial records of new | decisions by the board the nafse "Sir Robert" is given to a mountain in thé British Columbia coast range, nine i miles southeast from Doreen statien. At the foot of the mountain there is a glacier, and this glacier has been cdlled "Borden." The official record alse describes the new mountain, "Cavell," named after the martyred heroine of Brus- sels, as 'a. prominent, isolated, k, 11,038 feet abdve sea level, distinctly visible from Jas- per, in the Ji r Park of the Rocky Mountains, along the Grand Trunk Pacific." 2,834 Contrelled Works. . By an order jtst issued declaring 116 additional factories as controlled establishments under the Munitions Act, the total controlled establish ments is brought to 3,824, A LITERARY RIDDLE. Why Deés a Wéman Write Differently From a Man? Why is it that you can always tell a story written by a man from one writ- ten by a Woman? Lgaw the thing put to a rather severp fest. within tbe. last , With. results that wers star. considerable novel reading, bad Lad dinmer together. One of the men asked .the question I put at the top of these paragraphs. He was in his own homes and went to some trouble to prove that thin sex of guthors i8 an easy thing to " determine. Giving to each of the nine others a pencil and plece of paper, the host pro ceeded to read extracts from twenty different books and magazines, select- ing parts in which proper names would not identify the story. As he read each | person wrote down his guess as to , whether the suthor was a man or a woman. } Of the 180 answers made by the nine persons to the twenty tests all but eight were correct. As he kept the books from which he read concealed it was lmpossible to get aid with the eye. But, although everybody guessed right | almost every time, no one could still | give a good definition of the conun- drum, Why does a woman write dif- ferently from a man? INFLAMMABLE BOMBS. | Substances Used In the Making ef These Deadly Explosives. The incendiary bomb used by the Zeppelin aircraft, as a rule, is conical, of tex inch diameter at the base, wrap- ped round with tarred rope and having | & metal handle at the apex. The base is a Sut cup, into, which a pierced metal funnel is Gtted, Saving the ignition de- vice and handle fitted at the top. The funnel Is geherdlly filed with thermit. The latter, apo ignition, gen- erates intense heat and by the fime of F. The molten metal 18 spread by thy Outside the funnel is a padding of a highly inflammable) or resinous mate rial, bound on: with an inGsmmable Cran? oat Dm ba A ot | hr Oltee fon apd CAFETERIA IN SUHOOIs Novel Experiment is Being Carried .. Quin Torotito, } The Faculty of Edusation of (he University of Toronto 1s 'to be eons gratulated on an enterprise which is novel in Toronto, and which is being' successfully carried out at the Unis versity School in Bloor street weste | The headmaster, progressive and fare sighted, bas solved the difficulty of' having his pupils provided with, a &o0d, nourishing hot mesl in .the' middle of the day, and has opened | cafeteria in the basement, Ww meals can be had at prices ran i upwards from the nimble fiw Ne piece. He secured the provision of funds for the equipment of the lunch' room and placed in charge Miss Frances Blliot, who then faced the' problem of how to give attractive: home-made food at low rates, , yet such as in these days of high cost, of living should yield a profit for hers self. This result she has ®c } and the pjoneer example might wel) be followed by other educational ss" tablishments in the city and else © where. » Miss Elliot is a Canadian by birth and ay enthusiast in women's work. She gained her first e: lence of such cafeterias at the Horace school in connection with the ig ers' College at Columbia University, of which she is a graduate in domes tic science. Six hundred students were served daily in tbe lunch room," © That the cafeteria which was ope ed at the Faculty of Education about' a month before Christmas is appres clated by the pupils and their par. ents, and also by the professors, th is ample testimony. A mother, 10.60 aWaY With an easy 'three > or novi; is getting a good dinner eve school. A professor is alle to secure a substantial meal in the middie the day and 50 save the trouble of an' evening dinner in tho absence of his wife from home. It saves all the dis- Somfort of a cold and cheerless-poc- ket lunch, or from a' 'conside: ¥ walk in search of a hot one when time is short. ) Although, as I have mentioned, thd cafeteria is in the basement, thers is. no lack of light and air, and a com~ fortable warmth prevails, Everythi: necessary for the equipment of th modern kitchen has been supplied; . and the well-kept' appearance - of everything and the shining crockery' and kitchen utensils are a joy to the. housewifely mind. A homelike fea~ ture of the place is the light-hearted Maltese kitten, whose serious busi ness in life is to attend to the miee, which function she is fulfilling' very: satisfactorily. The arrangement of the room is for convenience in serv-' ing. A long serying table stands near the gas range, and at right angles to the table, like the prongs of a fork, are four long tables for the boys, so that it looks rather like & gridiron without the bottom bar. The boys file in singly so that therd is wo "disorder. = 3 For the small price of five cenfs 8 favorite dish can be obtained, nam 1y, hot baked beans between good' slices of breal, and with a Xioh to mato sauce poured over. Even this Ie cents is subject to 2 modification, or 22 tickets can be bought for a dollaf; Many other tagty dishes are to be had, both savory and sweet, and there is always a large joint, so that 'for 15 cents one may have a plateful of meat and potatoes gravy. . + . Prince: Rupert is Progressive, Prince Rupert, the jumpin T place of Canada, the city that sprung into existence on the fo coast of the Dominion, the gros road terminal and port of British € lumbia is, withal, an amazingly u ern and up-to-date place. % 'While it has a popula here were loss th