Instead of an air-rail road th of the Liberals was to use the «snatches. Just think of this. But the counuv wasnt 0:. the other hand material was being made on every sh all rail Cam Indian Paciï¬c Rail comp set-9d in 1885, and “h. Hank's it doesn’ t " pay for th on the car wheels? †xx :15 m a state of dept‘e: the liacii-enzie Adminst tlxe elecrors wmild scan that Sir Leonard Tiliey’s policy.wovld come into e Conservatives were recur \‘.’¢z’e returned and Protec ed, to the surprise of t} who admitted the Conser' kept their Word, but they tue country- \\ \Y 12 u) uav we re seems no reasm regard them as disloval subj There we :1 few. no doubt, whc .101: in snxma: hy with 1312 min, on the \\ .101.) the cy may be lega as :1. contented amt loyal people. Again it would be unfair to look upon Mr. Turte as typical of French Canadian loyalty. On more than one occasion since the Conquest of Cana- da. in 17:33) the French Canadians fought side by side with the British in upholding British interests, and today there 5 ems no reason to “A _._., -_ J AI I‘vv em. and not one dollar of Canad money should be Spent on behalf the war. Uh, nu, Tarts isn’t. to bla. for Canadian loyalty. At the last session of parliament a â€i‘xansvaal resolution was introduced by Mr. Laurier and seconded by Mr. Fosttr. On this occasion the pre- mier made an eloquent speech, a patriotic speech, a master product of his siiver-tongued oratory. But Mr. Ta. te was on the scene when the time came to give eï¬'ect to the resolu- ti.:i‘.. He taiked against the cont-in- gfllt. Spoke of it as needless, and Wondered anyway " what we had to no with British intereSts in South A'rica.†and when the Master did‘ yield he had to be fortiï¬ed with a document to Show that: He nnf:l\“ was no: to be ne And who is to blame for this loyalty? Certainly not Mr. Tarte, who .mrries the document to Show that the consent he gave “should not be. regarded as a precedent.†50, Tune wasn’t to blame. Neither was Mr. Laurier. Of course n0t. He couldn’t act without the consent of the Master of the Administration. But the " Master †wasn’t ready and had no intention of getting ready till he felt the unconquerable impulse of. nonalar indignation rolling like a. desuuctive avalnnth upon the heads‘ of the tardy ministers. Then and not. till then did Tat'te yield, and the contingent. was decided on. "3‘ Air. Tarte, has'cert-ainly met with apprm'al in the country if the char- acter of the send off is to be taken as a'criterion. Such, indeed, has been the enthusiasm that a second contin- gent is freely Spoken of, and will be rapidly despatched ifneeded by the Mother Country. This may be re- garded as Canada’s ï¬rst demonstra- tion of practical loyalty to Great Britain and it will do more than any- thing hitherto attempted to cement the bond of unity between the two countries. ' he The sending out of a Canadian Contingent to the Transvaal, thongh it met with Strong opposition from E. J. FHEEL M. D., C. M. ONOR GRADUATE 0F TRINITY Cullege Toronto; Member of the Col- lege of Physician.» and Surgeons, Ontario ; Member of the Detroit Medical and Library Association. Six years hospital experience. RESIDENCEâ€"Old Bank Building. up msite C‘ McKinnun‘s Ixnp't Shop, L'ppcr Town, 1) BEAM- \\' DURHAM, Nov’r. 9th, 1899. DR. BUSH, M. C. M S. U. Successor to Dr. PARK, MILL STREET, - â€"-â€" DURHAM. NOTEâ€"At Durhamâ€"Mondays, 10 a. m to 4 p. m.. and Court Days, and at Priceville on Mondays, 6 p. m. to 8 p. m. (Commercial Hotel.) - .mmsrims. SOLICITORS, NOTARIBS ;CO.\'VEYANCERS, 1-:th Etc. OFFICSS! OWEN Souxo, MARKDALE DURHAM. I LUCA. {in a major mservativc majority o THE CHRONICLE. lUCAS, WRIGHT BATsou, : talked against the contin- >i<e of it as needless, and i anyway " what we had to British intereSLS in South and when the Master did had to be fortiï¬ed with a to Show that his action 0 be regarded as a preced- all-rail road_the plan 1 every side. The aciï¬c Railway was i, and who to-day ' pay for the grease l3! w. H. wanT matenal PFOgI‘ess ’ the “‘ater this, and if of Canadian on behalf of subjects. . Who are Etaiu, but rmned C. A. BATSON. a 1118 Three men mlssmg, the a s;x_storey week. Vigor and life imc organ of the body )‘ou need it. Eve 50 cents. Soid hv ,_- A- -.v-s-J\:u DCV of his head. 0:: usi America’s greatest B all pain soon left him spends ms winters at Aikex me: \ es had caused seven: m M rs. mg her very 111. D. Blair. of Proton Station mother, Mrs. J. H. 1:184er Mrs. John Bentham, 1 week to V1511: her snster : Creek and Forestvxlle l‘ Miss Hannah Bellamy. 1mm: her brother, Mr. W. other relauves here. Mrs. Jos. Smith is Vi: Thornbury. V. QCK§ £15515 [lag IDCBLIUWS pmiunged visit with l mew-awn 111 Toronto fr I J rue executive of the branch of the B Bible Society 11 re met on Friday ev last and appointed collectors for the v and surrounding country who will fort seek contributions to aid the work 0: grand old aociety Rev. and Mn n.,....,-.AL . ‘ ‘ 511'. J. L' W00 8 until a few we: ated on for appe condition of need the birth for sou tees of X0. 8 ha Holmes tor the b as fur 125(1)- _. a- -- yl\(b-?J.l Eugenia Wednesday evemug. ( when at the home a): the briues ll. Meldrmu. pustumsten B youngest daughter of Mr. am drum was united in mzu‘iage Madill; eldest son of Mr. and AI near Eugenia. Mr. B. Our gmmnsmzm and the bride’s Bella Meldrum. discharged t; bridesmaid. A large numbe guests were present and after 1 supperjtjoyous evening- Was snc‘ r'ostmaster Sproule and Russell Smith (Jos, Smith’s son) both met with painful accidents a few days ago. Mr. Sproule’s horse had thrown himself and while en- deavoring to free him, he received a blow from his hoof on the shin fortunately not breaking but severely bruising the member. Smith and a young companion llopps were choppin,, in the woods and standing too close together llopps’ axe struck Smith on the elbow inakiuga bad wound and :ever- ing the bone. ilallowe’en passed over pleasantly and crderly here. Mrs. Loueks entertained a large company of young people at a fowl supper and a very enjoyable evening was spent together. The boys in town are too} gentlemanly to stOop to the old silly custom l of playing pranks on their neighbors and: their good behaviour is noted and appreciat- 5 ed by the citizens. l Sacramental services were held in the? Methodist and Baptists churches on Sab-' bath last. Rev. Mr. Thom. of this place, was called upon to discharge a pleasing duty atj Eugenia Wednesday evening, of last week ' -‘gAi- » I ., ' _ ____ _ -..-..vu.; uuuaauuuus l and highly esteemed as a friend and neigh- l bur in the community where he has so long :lived. A widow and grown up family of sons and daughters survive him. one son and two daughters being: still at home. Mr. Allan was bJrn in Philadelnhia and: was one Ufa family of eleven children who i with their parents experienced the trials|I met with by the earliest settlers here. lie: with his brother John, who died a year ago ' this month, were the only members whol remained in thetownship. Those snrviv-l ing now live at Owen Sound, Bulfalo andi' New Yurli. ' {Durham Road corners. A funeral service was held at the house on Sunday afternoon when shnrt addresses were given by the deceased’s pastor, iev. J. Ward and Dr. Cl-ristoe, after which a large corteze followed the remains to the Fleshezton cemetry. Deceased was in politics a Refor- mer and in religion a Methodist having been for many years, a consistent member 0:' that church in this place. He was a man of Integrity in all his business transactions 1 v null: lu:.â€"n.l-- ALLA.-. . .. .u Lust» uu r11dz1y evening 1 and apnointed collectms for the village 1 .3111 1o11mli11g con-m y u lzo \\ ill turtlmith k cu1:trib:.£iu11s to aid tl: 6 work of this .1111 uld >uciety. 0" “'d .lea‘. Darmch1etu1ned121stwee.< 11(liiU‘He \ll', . \\:1\ 'lhx'nnf LA"--- Another Artemesia pioneer, Mr. James Allan, who has been a resident of the town- ship almost half a century, passed away after several mnuths illness, on Friday last, at his comfortable hume lst «on. east of '\.__-l , II ‘ ‘ “ Postmap‘t‘qr Spruple and At the time of the general election Hon., (now Sir) \Vilfrid Laurier said he was as much in favor of preferen- tial trade as Sir Chas. Tupper was, and if he were returned he would that same day send a commission to England to negotiate preferential trade. but the tune of the jubilee he said when the chance was offered to him: â€"- We “ould not see England come under the ban of p1otection, which has been a curse to Canala and will he a cmse to them.†Did,j Laur'ie1 keep his pledge on the Pre feiential trade question. Mr. Lam-- delkin says he kept; evexy pledge except the Ge1ry1nande1, but the: people don t sav so. i The “ruinous policy†continued, and for eighteen years the Liberals never lost an opportunity of telling the people it was bad, and if they were returned to power they would destroy the thing root and branch and banish it from the land. Thev were returned in 1896 and the ex- tent to which the promise has beeni fulï¬led is known to every reader, as; a broken pledge. § possible think of the predicament the people of Manitoba would be in this year with nearlv sixty milhon bush- els of wheat and no market. .yous evening was s; ' “000, who taught 2w weeks ago when all Be _ __ _-â€".. u. ‘1. uldUltl liZL. Mr. B. Carruthers was and the bride’s Sister, Miss rum. discharged the duties of A large number of invited present and after the wedding: ‘.‘_I A [’1‘ FLESHERTON . son has U. was absent. sever. brethren m evangehst g u as spent tug, viet lex Visiting- back line. left 35111 $0115 at S l‘IIE DURHAM CHRONICLE, Nov’r. 9th, 1899. g Mr. Thos. Cook purchased the west 'half of lot; 14, con. 7, ï¬fty acres, from Mr. Patrick Darcy, hut week. Tom is quickly amassing- Wealth. He sold $140 worth of stock a. few days ago. Mr. John McNally of the 7th has his new stables all complete and a ï¬ne job too; all the walls are pIaSLer- ed, ready for the whitewash brush- "I‘is a good idea. . Mrs. Goodfellow and her mother re- cently spent; a few days with Mrs. JohqDelaney. bushels of grain. He celebrated the event by buying himse a dandy, black fur coat. There are many ï¬ne gangs of threshers in.our township, but for doing, good work and hustling too, we ’a put Messrs. Jim Baltlcy, Arch Ector and V\ 111 Bell against any 3112\V1n. Greenwood has over 1400 Miss Sax-ah Jack is in Durham gaming the dressmakex’s art. Mr. Charles Robson arrived home from Concord N. H. last week, not being well; out a few weeks at the old table and ï¬reside will make him as robust and aspiring as ever. Miss Allie Grant, the bright, win:- some schoolmiss of Irish Lake, spent Sunday at Mr. A. Robson’s. Very few of our boys are handier with the axe, than Will Jack. Every winter ï¬nds him a-tnmberinrr. This season he is engaged with Mr. Charlie Ryan. “ November chill blaws loud wi’ angry sugh,†and the bloomingtun Digs are yet, aï¬eld. TRAVERSTOI“ . I! 0,, I." I. at. I ,4 £- 6.751 .3? FOR SALE ONLY Farmers E As 3. Sheep Dip it stands alone~THE BEST. in promoting the growth of the wool quality and appearance is simply and completely cures scab without risk or faiiuye Lice and all insects are destroyed insmmly wit shghtest danger to man or animal. {Kid in: z)“ wonderful. T N OW is the time to attend to Use Morton’s Celebrated, N01171: Sheep Dip and Cattle We?! - arg'e Bottles 490 . PARKER, 9b: ated N011 1301.301 £11?th “/3 Sh I: waxw, I .\‘° 37“ 2%?399- Syd Guess never made any .se gens-r. I there, though they all“ ay i'U 1:;11Nj Table Bay, the Cape Toun harrtr: 101* Prepare for the dangerous 1r. p 1x 11 i + the Cape Of Good HOpe \\ hen 11:15; putch began to double the (:1pe,i11 guâ€" ,- ing t0 and returning from their Eas :! Indian Possessions, they est :1} lishei a Supply “Pd: there, but finding Ihuti the mt?! back of the town “as Ier- tile and easy 01? conquest,1hey began the ï¬lm Of- a new. Dutch c0 Many mu†port on! Table Bay as its en- ‘ zit.†.and Chief town. Such was the century, it the hat of the first slope nountain. which, rising .at raE GREAT COLONIAL CAPITAL 0F scum AFRICA. TOW has outgrown its name, you get a city of 100,000 inl_1:1!..ai'u When 'the commercial and poliiivzal mtg HS and capital of a. vast com? meugws to be suburban. [I i> 11m- tam A “013011 said Of Cape Town 111:}: 't is not only metropolitan, but 0051;“. .- 1 . __ d O t - A â€A, n (oxl' A c I "l ‘ I r" politan. cities said at Cape Town 111:2: -t is not only metropolitan. but comm There are a few Asimic Which may surpass it in the var- M?! of national and racial types :u he met in their at and are b roots, but they are. few there are none where 11185., rought 50 clearly ouL or spL 3‘31 such Sham and striking C(_.*Il'.r;i5'.. This was not so true a quarter of z; n Y century ago. When Cape Town mi lessthanwflm people. Since the Hub to the South African gold and diiinmnâ€˜ï¬ fields this condition has grown Hzni‘v to the South African gold :_1nd diruxmn‘g fields this condition has grown 111411.. marked. Cape Town has become of the gay capitals .of the 110111. A score of years ago it was 1.1111111 :1 prosy place. with not a few of he evi- dences of civilization and culture, bu: with small inducement LO Lhe Loux‘is: to linger. after seeing 1he 1115111: “11.; the government house (and 11111 {inn park, With “18 stately oaks of 111:1:‘1y centuriea’ growth, between the govern- ment house and the bomnic gardens. All this IOOked like a corner of My. rope dropped down near the 1-1111 :1: the African continent, bu: if 1.11111 .1. - jected to traveling so far 10 {111.1 1.51:1;- self in Europe still, there was 11*211? ~ . console him for the disappointmay To be sure. there were 1116. 31':i7i}'>. picturesque addition 10 the Engli' and Dutch population. And the} M lays had brought into the {Luigiu life of the place what was QVtQ m) picturesque than themselves, THE TOURIST OF THE DAY, if he was lucky enough to be in :T’m neighborhood of the .Mohunmmgw mosque. could see what any we :‘is'. equally lucky can see new. Aim: 1:.» noonday clangor of what the mew Moslem calls the “infidel Leis" of Cape Town, the Muezzin would 'i}:p(“il‘ at the top of the mosque. Through the brilliant sunshine oi that inter- tropical clime the hundreds of eyes of the faithful would be Strained up fu- ward him. Down on the docks. “v the Malay ’longshorernen watch». :7 the uplifted hands, and the Lac sailors. aboard ship or on shore lca'x‘tr, cast their eyes aloft with more of wu- eration than they ever con 8mm * : topgallant sail, there Came so ninth mi 3. hush in the roar of watersiJe 1.1“:li.c that. as the mosque stood on the (in: Of the two great terraces on which Cape Town is built, the faithful can; at times hear the chant calling them to 9133013. And as the traveler was liable to meet the Malays everywhere -in the open booths of the commel‘vi :1 part of the town, or as caterers anti itinerants of all sorts in the rEsitienct- 30‘th. higher up and further Lash, there was a comfortable sense 01 N‘- curity in the thought that, \\'l1l.«_;2_; L getting ï¬ar enough from Euz‘upt‘ :2) run any risk, one was enabled 1;; MW: the heathen at his deVoliuns Evin? Town was then, and is name n m. one 2f those spots on the imp --.1.~:;‘v. Through the shadow of the giuut- e Sweep into the younger d 1). A8 one of these spots. of which 'j'wtc are not many, Cape Town has an innar- es: Peculiarly its own. As the. c gdfw 0f tge British Colony, which iron-1s L hosule Boer frontier, and the port «- Ward Which many British {rump .~1;';rs are l10W moving. Cape Town has it- come We read of a. Premier who at; the government policy 111 gm L men: at Cape Town, and 15 211?»: r" ‘\ ed by the opposition just as :th 1" let at London is. The other .1113: read of the landing of British 1:0,; Cape Town on their way 10 112v . and the Wild cheering of zho the ;:.< Who lined the streets through xx they. marched. and many '11.: What sort of city it is so far tromcs, and so near 11172.; t' .7 Storm the dread 0i thch \\‘;:.~‘ :: of the inspiration of Columbm‘ _ age. to discover a shorter ::!:,; Perilous route to India. Tm: °'V°red a new world, and n t a r03? to an Old one, accounzs for beginning 0f Cape Town. T he ‘1" sum never made any sense: Ehere, thonQ'h than aflwnvx hm. A GREAT NEWS ChNIrJii at a new V0 Ho! .‘V G tC