See the Latest in Fall andWinter SUITS and OVERCOATS {in alf Styles and Colorings We make a specialty of a fast dye blue serge suit at $15.00. Also a Black Overcoat at $15. We do a great variety of FUR WORK Lining shells, dyeing, cleaning and repairing furs, lining fur "overcoats, Fur procured for you on approval Cleaning and Pressing and Repairing of Suits and Overcoats done promptly, and at reasonable fngures. BUTTONS made to order. All summer goods greatly reduced W. H. Doubt Tailor death ot Current, Perry, ont Subscription $1.00'a year in advance | Advertising rates on application, SAMUEL FARMER, | Publisher. and Propriator 1 WORLD Is calling you, why not prepare now! The leading . mercantile houses of Canada and United States recognize our efficiency. olleges Have given thousadds of "young people a good start in life. We can assist you. ' Our Home Study Courses Offer _unexcelled advantages to those who cannot attend college. Full particulars upon inquiry. Peterborough Business College G40. SPOTTON, --- The Business 11 Ko | states that the farmer who keep$ his Spotton Business Principal PRINCE ALBERT Miss Myrtle Oldfield has returned to her home in Lindsay after visit- ing friends here and in Port Perry. Mr. John Hoskin and his mother paid a visit to Mr, Hartry on Monday the Mrs. Williamson of Port Perry. We extend to Mr. Williamson and family our deepest sympathy in their sorrow. Mr. William McBriap is laid up but is doing well and we hope he will soon be around again. We are very sorry to hear of We ae very sorry to report "the death of Mrs. A, J. Long, ot Swift daughter Susk. Oldest Makes more bread and Better of R. .J. Hartry, after a severeattack of typhoid fever. in ber 28th year. 8he leaves husband four small child- ren, three Brothers, two sisters, and her father to mourn heriloss, . Much sympathy is felt for Mr. Hartry and family in their bereavement. Mr. Hartry bad news of the deaih of his Stepmother in Waskada, Manitoba, just a week before the death of hig daughter, She was the wife of | Morris Hartry who is in his eighty 'nineth year and is still a very smart Mrs. J. dialogues for Christmas, poultry for shipment. 'number of fine hogs this week "+The threshing season oe ; wo re has gone to, wor 30. gO Oshawa, and his wife is preparin 'to muve there with her. family, . He | has laiely returned from 'the west}: where he worked on a farm .con- | trolled by "a company 'employing ninety men. Ie rodé oii 'a binder which was one of six ron by. a e stedm engine. "Bowmanville Statesnian" | eye on the agricultural eXperts | is the man who gets all that is to 'be got.out of his farm;, Yes that sounds alright, and now. to be prastical who are those experts? . Aad 'how are ay wir Tosation. i neighbor Jonesrand 1 to: get" our "peepers" on them? We appeal "to the Star Editor {Being a Farmer| , himself he'll know). -"1f he could] spare space weekly for short articles containing their opinions 'on upto-} date scientific farming, this would faruish food for thought for some «fo "those Winter eyBaipgs". After the drought one would like to know more about dry farming', Every- one looks forward each week to the STAR'S capital Editorals. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon. of Green- bank, who bought out Mr. J. Jackson visited the Island last week. Mr. Robt, McKinley drove to Oshawa with a load of _his son's household goods. } Another failure reported! Luckily Scugog farmers do not rajse sugar beets extensively since only 20 per- ceat of Ontario's crop escaped the frosts. Messrs Whimset, Cherry and Brown saved theirs and' will get a big price for them. Mr. and Mrs. Wanamaker are occupied in selecting a suitable farm to rent, as they have to vacate the Nesbett farm. On Friday the Centre young Lpeaple spent pleasant evening with Hope. They practised Mr. Orval Stone has been buying He killed a On Wednesday Nov, 22nd the ladies of Maple Grove and Centre met at Mrs. quilt for the Deaconess Home, quilts to be sent as in forfier 'years, Hiram Fralick's to the "here were thirty present. The Maple Grove ep had a bee BULBS Ayacinths, Tulips, Daff odil Narcisus, and Easter Lillies. Choice varieties at special prices. T. C. Forman & Son Sittings of the Division Courts unTY pest oN TARIC WHITBY --Clerk. Mies E. L. Macdonnell, Whit- oy, Jan. (6th, Feb. 3rd, Mar. and, April ged, May June 7th! uly sed, Sept. 13th, and, Nov , 1013. OSHAWA Clerk, Mins EE. Macdonel, Wit by Jan. 17th; Feb, 6th, Mar. Ld Apel th, 8 May une 8th, July 4th, "dh lan ith oh man for his age, Mr. Robert Hunter has erected a new windmill on his barn. The Misses Cash leit here last week for their new home in Califor- nia. Mrs. A. Bongard has gone south for the winter again. The Christian Culture Club held its usual meeting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. R. Balfour with the attend- ance of about thirty, Many new members were added to the member- Good papers were given by S Burnett, JessieWhite and others The next meeting will be held at the home of Mr. and Mrs, Hartry on Friday evening next, Program--An | evening with Tennyson, cordially invited. Mrs. Coomb has gone to Manvers, ship Roll, {or a month or so, Mr. Forman is still improving slowly. John Jeffrey is talking of a trip to the west next week, All are ® mRbuelag icy Wai oS hiro 18th, Mar, 6t " Pony A ly § t ra Jan. 1 3 Fa PE! RV CiolyW Jan, og Mar. Nov. 1 k, R. " , Mar. 28th, May CARRINGTEN Ned ETE coh Je Yom Jan. sxth, Mar. 3 VPIEN ROVE ly rey Con Sant woth: Nov: Mie, sim. May roth, _ Byorder, I. E. FAREWELL, Clerk of the Peace. sted Whithy Nov aist 1qt10 Burnham, Ee omen Send the Star to. My serves) Absent Friends that day in order to repafy' the church sheds. The Scugog friends and" patrors of Mr. Wm. Ross were very pleased to read of the recognition paid him by the Port Perry people. It was a pleasure to kvew him. The 'in- fluence of a character and disposition of Mr. Ross cannot be estimated. Many are finding the "Quick Lunches" served at all hours by G. Davey very handy when shopping in town, Mr. C. Russ, of the Gerhard Heintzman Co., Toronto, visited several homes on the I-land last. week, " Money Well Spent We understand that the county of Ontario gave a grant of two hundred dollars to the Oshawa Fruit Growers: Association to make an exhibit of' their fruit at the Fruit Flower and Honey Show held recently in To- ronto, They deserve much credit for the grand display of fruit they made, as well. as being successfal in taking their share ofthe prizes nabering between forty aud fifty, We notice in, looking over the prize list in the Farmers - Advocate the pame of Mr John Watson; of Seagrave, who secured two 'prizes on the one variety of apples he exhib.ted People need not be 'afraid to plant apple orchards in 'this district as apples can be grown here Shag will plete. -- 'the best. "Why don't you tell him 7 "I've 'done 80," Trafford: answered wouldn't take it." "Then what" would sou expect me fo. do?" FREER "Do? 'De -anytlilng. soidong 'as th take the-inoney.. 1 don'ticare a jot 'about 'thelr knowing it's from me, 1° give! you: a. million dellars--£200,000= to. juggle into their pockets by ani tale you can Invent. * Gad, . when | think how easy it's been to mitke moi <y it seems like thie irony of the ver) Lord above to find it so difficult t throw it away!" There were "several jortinent re marks in Wiltshire's mind," but h withheld them. As a 'matter of faci he was slightly appalled by the liftin: of this cornér of the veit on the ric' man's conscience. Irom the begin ning of their acquaintunee he had hee: interested in Trafford as the type o American success, while he had lee drawn to him by a certain bigness an generosity in Trafford's 'character, bu he shrank from contact with the fails of his husiness career with th distaste of the hereditary grand seig for. It was a relief to him when Trafford rose and, assuming another voice, affected to take the matter light ly. He himself tried to do the same. "Winship is as pigheaded a chap a: was ever driven to market," he said as "they went toward the drawing room, but I know him pretty well and if it's any service to you T'll try to influence him for his good." CHAPTER XIX. HE appearance In the New York - Magazine of the famous series of articles in which the history and 'methods of the Vermont Mining company were exposed had a clarifying effect on Paula's * chaotic thought. * Till 'then she bad fiot been 'without the persistent hope that some way -of reconciliation. mjght 'be found between Winship and her father "Roger loves me," she argued to ber self in the first days of the separation. "He'll come back and take the money for my sake." But when she had read to a close the first of the articles that fell under her notice she had, none of that hope lefts "He'll not take It." she said to herself then, ' "No man who knew this could." That was in July. She had picked up the current number of the New York Magazine quite casually at a news stand, not suspecting that it could contain anything of special Interest to herself. She learned from it that the 'articles had been appearing since the previous March and ordered all the 'numbers to be sent to her. 'Fhe first Installment dealt, among other things, with the origid of the '| Trafford family and contained man: 'details of which Paula herself had: lit- +f tle knowledge. * It Jnformed her that in 'the ~early eighteen bundreds Wik liam Trafford had been a laborer at Cannock. Chase, in Staffordshire: He married a girl.named Sarah Paul. by whom he bad a farge family, several of their descendants being miners at Cannock Chase today. John Trafford, their second son, emigrated to Amer} ca about the year 1833. He settled as 4 farmer near Cumberland, Vt, where 'he married Jennie O'Mara, a pretty Irish girl, servant in the house of Ju- lins Murray, a. coal merchant in: the neighboring town, Jobn and Jennie Trafford Were 'thrifty, industrious people, with. that instinct to rise In the world which dis. § tinguished the earlier emigrants, 'the British Isles; Unable themselves to read or write, they were eage| give their children the best 'ddvantages the oigbbost Wat These the history h 8 win, Yoram by. wwe, "ifight=a great, In which reputations homes v , Hves - whole country's commercial, legal, C litical 'and moral honor brought pain- fully into question, Paula fead with no mote than: a vague comprehension. . There were so. many questions involved--legal, legls- lative, geological: and economical--that ther simple intelligence reeled in the effort to understand. + 'Where there were dramatic personal events she grasped the subject more fully. She could follow the story of the ruin of the Winships from begin- ning to end. She could do the same with those of the Marshalls of Turton.' ville, of the Brewers of Albany and of poor Jackson of Ohio. But whether details were clear to her or- not one great fact surged up dut of this wel- tering mass of testimony--4hat the fa- ther she adored had fought his way to success by means which made her shudder. Nothing she had guessed at, nothing she had" feared, could equal this heaping up of testimony from -levery corner of the land. Nothing she bad ever imagined of Russian tyranny. or Turkish misrule' could be more mer- | ciless than the despotism with which her. father and his associates in a icountry considered free had been able to. club and crush and gag and grind into helplessness whatever lifted itself against them. And he was her father! She was his child! She was bone of | his bone and flesh of his flesh! She could no more dissociate herself from him and his work than she could from ihe line of laborers and servants from whom she sprang. However confused she niight be about facts, she had no doubt as to her duty here. It was to stand by the man who depended upon her, to stand by hiin all the more now when In his old age the storm of popu- lar wrath was gathering and breaking about him. All through July, - August and Sep- tember she had Yeon reading these ar- ticles secretly. That her' father was reading them, too, she knew from see- ing in New York pédpers an occasional statement from. his. legal representa- tives tn which this or that accusation was denied. How deeply he resented this history of himself she could see from his Increased depression as each new number of the series appeared. Now, on one of the' last days of Sep- tember, the October issue was in her, ] hands. She bad just finished reading, it 1 ef favorite corner. of the English gar den. It had been especially pitiless 0. hier father in the piling np of cha against hin. She close] the. volume ard with hands clasped apon It gazed Patisian S age; 18 Col most id, & compu on nothing on the marker: "Ao-day 'c pare with it. Tt accomplis | more than the ordinary ton itso quickly that 'users a - Parisian Sage kills the dandruff g and eradicates dan aud itching of the seal in two weeks or we wil ropa Parisian Sage gives a to women's haif and' mi 3 It makes the hair grow Juxdrian thé daintiest and most refreshin, dressing that science has 'prod on has'not a particle'of grease or stick init. Parisian Sage costs. Soc at y druggist's or | tpasd ° 'from proprietors, The Giroux Mig - Cow Erie, Ont, The girl with the Auburn h is on every package. Sold and by Edward B. Flint," vaguely across the lawn, indifferent to ' A its sunlit spaces as well as to' the masses, of dahlia and Ging gorgeous < with aitumn bloom. "No, no," she kept saying to her Roger eouldn't take that money. . It's blood movey. And 1 'must: keep it. There's no' way by. which 1 could: | give It up. If I did Tt-would. kill pupa. I must go on all my life clothed in' the ruin of red men and of hui : Amomen aud. it My -- 8. quite 4 their tears, and my re ae weat of them