iooooooooooooooooooooooooo O cumcsv IN TORONTO. SARJEANT 5 SMITH Sarjeant& sum 4 PRICES O OBJECT. COME AND GET A BARGAIN WEEK AT .... .. 5A%V:'vG._; aA'A,1`1ABan'kin. .D;~:7_W; LeRoy.i 0;; H. Lyon. '_' .;;. Brcwnle. `.5: ._.1;'9,, - an-U V .....Direct Importers"... jHOBLEY BROS. , _ TEAAND COFFEE MER CCCC Te -7`---wvcu-nf $39 P`. I - Let us have your order. We will give I you satisfaction. IIIIC II. (I I u3y Ian: But Iook .' We have them for you. New Nuts, New Layer Raisins, New Figs, New Dates, Seed- less 0ranges,Spanish Grapes. A fine line of Chocolates at 20c, 25c,.40c and 50 per 1!). TAO: nu Inn... ----A ~ -- ysuitable for meetings and convex `Ii located over the reading roc t e Mechanics Institute; ma [hired at reasonable rates. App `the LIBRARIAN of the Inst. --w `an-n L 11-10 \ J . MoP1-xee. - A. McTaggart. 3. "G. Scott. A. B. Pratt. . ;',A. E. Stapleton. J. Wilson. Geo. `Hogg, sk..16 W.E.Vernon,sk...2.5 ii-'J'.j C.'Irwin. 0 D. G. Cooper; 2 F. fPetter.son. I G. Hammell. 5. Jp'ry.` F. F. Telfer. ".`I. `M. Stevenson. W. T. Allan. %" _s:kip . . . . . . . . . . ..]9 skzp .......... ..18 5:'oM._ Hay. H. D. Arnold. VD. ,Carley. ' G. A. Maodonald: );:,I:McCai:thy. . `N. -_A. Rule. - PP. Love. sk.......11 H.G. Wyn"es. sk. 36 `J._'I-I. Bennett. R. D 0'Br1en . 3.; H. Webb. A J. D McFadden. (W. A Boys I` A. Campbell I (J?..Beecroft. ek..16 W. T Toner, 31:. 20 | TEA AND MERCHANTS. SHURTHAND and MHRITING I --AT THE-- Tirne Effort Money ,,-_ _-..... Jun. 4, 1904. William Brooks ASSOCIATE PRINCIPA L J. W. Westervelt , -_ 5, an `In \lll|\ We have the exclusive right to teach famous Gregg shorthand in Toronto. _VVe also teach well all commercial sub- JCCKS. Better investigate. Information free. VVinter Term. Jan. 4, 1904. 1219110 - I CHARTERED ACCOUNTA NT Principal 1 As the -result of the first match in the-_ McCarthy Cup series betwen Barrie and -Collingwood Curlers. the .`1a.tter club is lading by .33 points. fhe scores made were as follows :- 4 Barrie. Collingwqod. : _ . Dawn-3` .--:a. wall. 1. urmsned I'OOU.1 convenient- JVBI` he rose! Inn u-A.-..... 1-31." f,1'1itt`unr~ 7, 1904 ,u GLIU UUIJ Velllei room tfifnfno mn- I Ill y if. I_'00zn nn-A... . Eff The lhookey match. on New Year's` `lfteroon. -was -rather a fizzle, as the . arrie lwhirlwinds--ran up a score of ;_B0 goals to 2 against the Newmarket Ieven and even then didn t have to ; play fast enough to keep themselves _ (warm. The visitors had a team which is considered -fast down Newmar(ke.t` way. but they were not in. the same bless as the Barrie bunch.whioh play- Bd the prettie-st combination "game Smaginable on the forwarduline. with Bohafer or'Williams going up the ice. `nhnn `in n m1~.:l.. 4... 4:..--.--7 2 7 _- -wv-v `vv an LI. LU U Ill] `U16 `and. in the last` half Barrie got 9 to _Newmarket s ' 2. The goals were joorod as follows for the-locals For- rester 5. Lewis 7 ,-Riddell 1. Caldwell B. Sohafer 3. Williams 1. ______-_. _- .. ....uum 5unu5 up (.118 108v pace `in a while to figure in some at the fast passing that was done. Ehe score was 11 to 0 in the first half and in Hm I..+.1...u *n_._..-K T Barri_es s `tankard rinks Drillialmis week. " `Collingwood s _ast hoky [tgamu .v{ill be here on Friday evening for (the first championship match of the Beason. The game should be a bum- zner. ` ' -....... .-__.__j_...- _._-i:. %La%%ie Swptfning News . .. . .. ;.uI--IU.lg SK-' 3" At Collingwood. A . u. _ Rev. A. J. C1*anston.1 Roy. 0; T. Stpphens. . _ unv. ' W. A. ']:Iamilton'.` . lee. W.-A. Copeland`. - .% o_ 00.0 ., _._ogo_ -_ __ _.....vuvA1a.1lJo'. ..A'. Rule. Wyn'es. D. 0 B,rien. . D. Campbell. "?' I 12.. _-> 1:. Toner, sku.-I go 1$lay.ed `in 1 . as rrllturf lullllelo 1 Paris "newspaper .on one occasion made a blunder which excited no small amount of merrlment at the expense of Wu man of talent. The following ,pcraranbI. Intended to have printed Ieparutely, were by some errog; co that they read. d Iecutlvogy: ` Dr; X. has `been head .nh:d18n_t0V. the, l1'D1ta1 ddsli- E .' .' s ._' " ....."..~.`; 1.1;: P ;Mi~ss'Massacer is Spending th hli- days 'at- her homefin Waterlno.` ' ....- vnvv-3 vvgxu an o p.m,I .1'ne pas- tors to preside in their owniChurch- es. The ordinary hymn books `ofztheb churches will be used. A Mass Meet- ing will be held on the following Sun- day in Christ Church R. E.. at 8-15 p.n`i. The `Christian public are enr- ydially invited to attend all the ser- vices. , -A - -' L cununa ley. !"'iday-'Co11ier Street Church. by Rev. lav eAdd,ress by Revs. `Red:d_i1_:t .._, vu ass vo Lldlllo Wednesday-Presbyterian Church. Address" by Rev. E. B. Chestnut. Thursday-Congregational Church. and Wit- ten.w - A - <. I f'l`T1_:as;ci;a.y-Ba`ptist Church. Address %by Rev. 1`. C. Keam. ' V \lT-_1_.-_J,- _Monday-Elizabeth Street Metho- dist'_Churoh_. _Address by Rev; _-Dr. `,"I\Il'nI'aa...1 V V Week of Prayer Programl .._._....--..... In`: any uuuuu. 30.1105 UL L116 0. H. A. with the 'fol1owingschedule of 'games:-- 3 . n 1: In ' . ...., ._ Barrie won out from` Beaverton curlers by 7 points in the Ontario ,Tankard series on Tuesday-. r . ~ 'I.`he BaV1;rie CIub."has lieen admitted 'to -the senior series of the n `Cl A --..:4.1_ 4.1.--g,n - 1 v up-ga-avnli Cline. . J. Hallett. A. Habbick. Skip . Jan. Jan. "Services begin at 8 p.1 Q fn wxu-nn:Jn in `-`---'~` Total. it P1-lute:-':n_ Bluhl-r} uh:-on 9-Malboros at St . George's. 13-9-Ma-rlboros` at Barrie. 16--St. George's at Marlboros. 20-St. George's at Barrie. 23-Barrie at Marlboros. ~ B0- -Barrie ' at St. George s. T2? VTotajl. . Methodist v. C. S.-Pud- rya 1 _,.... ....,...g.m us uvury species Of hu- man ill, thronglng the steps leading up to the main entrance of the church where? the sovereign happens to be ' worshiping awaiting his de- parture in the hope` that when pass- ing he may lay his-royal hand upon them and thereby heal them. In Ger- ' many, Scandinavia," Russia, and Aus- ; tri'a the popular belief in this virtue ; of the sovereign has come to an end. The same may be said of Italy, the . last king to ..put forward any pre- tensions to miraculous curative pow- ers_having been the late.I_{iz1g. Fran- . cis II.` of Naples, who lost his throne 5 in 1862,jand who will` be remember- 'ed by the readers of Alphonse Dand- ' fe1_;. _s novels as "'1`he Kihg of Illyria," in-.:the;_ King *in Exile," `In Great 132-itai'rLn' theh.1at"est insttgixice` =._pn- - record for .,.,_i_rIipo'sit'ioIfL 2 . `M `V -.,if.l;e;. " `j$`overeig'n{'v_s "h9; t'!$13 1-'th!T:c108!:0f * see .~ \ .-35 t s that, being unable to cure himself, it was improbable that his touch would cure others, but. on the contrary,_ be more likely to 'do harm than good. _ `rho Powor ot looting. _ , In Spain and Portugal the touch .0! the monarch : hand is still credit- ed to this day by the masses of the people with possessing the power .01 healing sickness. and nothing is more a strange at Liobon than to watch the `appalling looking crowd of cripples 1. and victims of every species of hu- .,...... :11 4.1-..- ceremony of coronation and annoint- ment with the sacred oils, which u seems to have ben considered as indispensable to th posseswion of ' healing virtues. King Louis XVIII. himlell suered terr_ibl_v from various maladies. and had In ven- turw no-3-vIn-. :4 __--,...... .... .3... marcoui, where he extended his royal hand to 126 pat- ients suffering from scrofula and other kindred maladies. Every year afterward until his abdication in 1830 he went through a, similar per- formance on the day of St. `Louis. Neither Napoleon I. nor Napoleon ` III. ventured to put forth any claim to this peculiarly royal` prerogative; ---- -uuu gt.`-as UL H13 1119, 8 Xew months before his ` death, after he :- A ` had nallyretired from politics, and was- making a vain attempt to re- cover health and strength in the south of France, where his sovereign Iect in view. . In-Icy of love:-elgnfs Handshake. construe this remark of the great Lib`eral statesman as a _manifesta- tion by `her late Majesty of the un- friendly feelings which she is general- ly believed to have entertained` to- wards one of the oldest and most tried of her public servants-a dis- taste, which, according to Lord. Beaconseld, originated with the fact that whereas he, Bewconseld, invari- ably treated her Majesty like a wo- man, Gladstone always treated her as if she were a public meeting. If she refrained from shaking `hands with him-it was because the mem- bers of_ the reigning houses of the old world, and in particular those-E who wield the sceptre, are exceeding- ' 'ly- chary in offering their hands by way ofgreeting. Superstition of "loyal Touch. . The chariness which Royal person- ages manifest in giving their hand ' and the importance which they seem to` attach to the honor which they consider that they confer thereby is attributable. in a great measure to the fact that their touch was even _' down to the middle of the last cen- tury believed to have been endowed with those miraculous V powers of healing the sick which we read of in the. Bible `as having belonged to the Founder of Christianity and to his apostolic contemporaries. King Char- les.X., who ascended the throne of France in 1825, was the last mon- arch topclaim `these powers in that country. On the day of his corona- tion in the ancient cathedral of Rheims he paid a State visit to the hospital of St. Marcoul, where he extended his rnvnl In-n-31> -on - A was then staying with the same ob- , It would beg, great mistake to` '!'A:-and to .. Ind n ouo't'- frho ct..u-sneak anAsP bl SOVER,E| GN S. 'HNGsns AN. EXTRAORDINARY `HONOR. AKING S HANpsHAKE ! --M7 . doubt thn Year: the Queen Victoria On} `one . snob: Hands Wm. ouumono. 5: stators col xxua and mu}. Iron" Faith :1: -- nan: `renew--1n `rm; "Late only l'I--- nu.---. - -- .._ V. V-ayyaca wvexif 'I'|aII `Ln -L--- ` _.__ ........ uuw xa;.I.p1Un_D OI many 11011- tors from various learned bodies and ` . :educa.t`iona.1 institutions, _ - ; J. {George Hodgins, LL.D;. in ;toriog'~_rapher. of" the _O_nta,r`io ` gmentjofo Edizgatioxg; ' which WP !-rtmg_x.1t antl'el_, ho- __ .....v.-- - uuavvsaeuy. nu WES X11901` I cal ollicer, naturalist and geologist in the Government expeditions to Hudson Bay in 1884, 1885 and 1897. Morgan says of him that dur- ' his connection with the Geologi- ,' 1 Survey of Canada he has had op. I portunities of making more exten- Iive surveys and explorations 5 throughout the Dominion than has ` fallen to the lot of any other man. These include the Mackenzie ,River \ region, the shores and country around Hudson Bay, the Labrador regioxr of good soil and timber, and isurveyed "a great river all the way from the-_ height`-[of land `to J amen `.3113 . how known aa`Be1lIRiv'e_r. Ho Ha`: -been"thI`.reipieI1_t_ of men! hon-. Vnj'ini`| `Ivan:-in...A. -|.-.1.-;_ -n g. i _......_-. ugunvcsusog. _J.ll L004 _ne ]Oln" ed the Canadian Geological Survey. From 1863 for live sessions he was professor" o1 chemistry and sciences _ In Queen : University. `He was medi- c ZQ`IllIQnL _---` -;-A` ~ ' V --.uv\. .-.I(\J\lg Dr. Robort Bell, Director of the Geological Survey of Canada, was born in the township of Toronto in 1841. He was educated at the Gram- mar School, L 0rigna.l,` Q.ue., and McGi_ll University. In 1857 he join- the. Canadian (14-n1n-a...1 g....-.-.. 135150115 uaa wuusu aZ.zI4emt.!-1ews1::;t`:-1:9`; `of De Salaberry at Ghambly, Sir George E. Cartier and Sir John Macdonald at Ottawa,` Maisorineuve and Chenier in Man- treal. an-d Champlain at Quebec. He has been a. member of the R.C.A. Iihn `IRQR - -up-a Uvvll Q since 1886. 11.. 1);]. ._ V- --. -v--v-ecu. uaulplauf 8.110 P811111` er. and. "after working there for iivo years, studied for 3 year` in Paris. On his return he entered on his pro- fession until 1886, when he removed -,to Paris, where he has since main- tained a. studio. . Among his works are the ntntnnc n? `n. .Q..I..v......... -4. Louis Felix Pinault was born at Rimouski November 6, 1852. His father, a farmer, realized the value of a good education, and made many sacrices to secure it for his chil- dren. Col. Pinault. after a course at the seminary of Rimouski, graduated B.A., and won the Prince of. Wales prize. Having studied law at Laval, he secured the degree of LL.B., End was called to the Bar in 1879, and Joan" built up a lucrative practice. He joined the 9th Battalion, and had risen to the position of Major, when appointed to the present posi- tion, Deputy Minister of Militia and Defence. He was also M.P.P. ' for Matane from 1890. He was created Colonel on November _1, 1900. Louis Philippe Hebert waszborn at Ste. county, Quebec, January 27,1850. Educated at the local schools. he be-' came at fourteen clerk in a county store, and in 1871 went _to Massa- ~ chusetts, where howorked on a farm. an inclination for wood-carving, and,` having gone to Montreal, obtained a prize at the Provincial Exhibition of 1873 for a small bust in wood. Soon after- wards !ho was taken into the studio of N. Boura..ssa.a sculptor and"paint- er. and. 'n!tm- mm-I.-am. um..- He had always I..`.. 4:-.- Sophie d Halifax, Megantic , I W 539-30 i.ai'oorer`s Haiuia The sovereign _most democratic of all in this respect was the late King Humbert of Italy, who, while he would readily gz-esp the grimy hand-. of any laboring man or peasant, only manifested reserve in this re- ` spect whendcaling with the patriciun houses ox Italy. Til (`U-`an:-.64.! --_.--L--S - -- 4 `- Canadian ' :1 510990 pun two one `LIE u . w31.:.1'y one sovereign in. Europe--and` ljs Empire is of a spiritual charac- ter--has retained the old ' Roman form of homage in extending not his hand but his foot to_be kissed. That is the Pope, who continues to ac- cept the same species of s-alutation an that exacted `by the Caesars. -.._ -- -mu vvuuaunnn, uunuuly Ucllllllll/5 '1`, kiss the hem of the frock coat or stambuline of the sq,ua.t, fat,` and_ vulgar looking little Khedive ls- mail. In Japan the Mikado never oers his hand. ' - (`_'__ ____ ____f____a . -- ..._.-u.: u; guns]. In Oriental countries the touch oi the Sovereign is regarded as so great an honor that none of` the natives would dream of seizing the Royal hand even when extended to them, and when` in Egypt 1 used often to watch with mingled amusement and disgust old Nubar Pasha, the most imposing and niajestic looking Orien- tal statesman, humbly bending to kiss the ham nf Hm fvnnlr nnn` -- zumdaau Who Ward Bonn-ad with Do- corationl on King : Birthday. Nov. 9. 1903-:Skotohu of Their Ca:-oars.` __ -,. -..`---- nsysu nun; bu.l.U1'lU I115- hand to the late Prince Bismarck as a mark of special regard. The old_ prince, who had known the Kaiser- from his babyhood; immediately bent` down -and raised his young `master : hands to- *-his lips, as did also. old -Field Marshall Moltko. Emperor Franz Josef, although the kindliest of monarchs, rarely extends his hand, save to the members of his ` iamily_._ I { V 1 N- ..--- o-w--u vv vuc U1 (US HUD` jects as av token of _ marked. favors, _- the person Ltliuss honored bows low :to kiss it. .Empei'or William, on the occasion of the rst speech from the` . throne after` his accession to- the" crown in 1888-a. ceremony at which `most of the minor sovereigns of the Empire were present, extended .as he. stepped down from the throne. his-~ to the late Bismarck as 1 wuuinuwu to ` 1, the -1 reserIof`1`|:l:icl`;;none;rchs. mani- V test nownilays o.ho_ut shaking heads , ' The `two European sovereigns who _ , display the greatest - freedom and" . ilibel`a.1,it'.y.in this respect are the Ger- ` obeisances man Kaiser and KingfEdwa'.rd,` prob- ably because they are so thoroughly up to date, And yet at State, func- tions and ceremonious occasions they for the most part respond to the of _ those presented to ' them, or who pass before them, by a ` slight inclination of the head. In cases where King Edward does hon- or .some stranger with a. handshake, the latter, if` he be an Englishman, is Wont t0 11110]! nnnn 4-Inn --4 -* ; doubt .-thafthe tact or the amt`; 1 having`! been formerly endowed with `sacred attributes `has contributed to - the reeh which mnnntmhn v-hon`- ,-_- _....-Va.-1 as 119 UV Coll mllgllsnlnall, Wont to look. back upon the act as one -of the notable events` of his life, while, if ` it be the Kaiser who extends his hand to one of his sub- 8. tokgn hqf_ marked favors, `LA .._-____ WHO THEY ARE. tassgp ..,. H. Wyneg, f great variety. - Lumber Rub- or T ;'941 _ , V including the best of _ies` and Gentlemen Moccasins for old Oil _ Moccasins-_in peat soles. -. umber Rub- -IUU` l In a. two lat ul1 n1obi1e.-'I`oronto News. jj vvgg----ug nay:-A as P y&II.lCuII BU`-3 ` "W V cot, it is, perhaps, his duty to aid medical science by becoming an ob- ject` lesson in clinics. If so, he should also get reasonably decent treatment by ehe nurses. After all, that is a shade better than the dissecting room.` _It also illustrates .quite as aptly the curious brotherhood of the race. A poor man compelled to take the public ward is subject to the same ailments as the man `down- stairs, who has a suite of rooms and , a special nurse. The pauper whose cold remains go from the morgue to the second year in medicine has pre- cisely the same nerves and muscles as 3 the magnate who rides past the dis- 1 secting room in a two thousand do}. f lllfllnohn,--'|"nrrm+n `TA-- The hospital doctors complain of a lgck of "clinical material" in Toron- to. This is one of the scientic phrases that sound innocent. Some of us have been clinical material. 'We "bar" not to be so any more. ` Teachers are quite content to use ` pictures a for illustrations. Some preachers get along very nicely with limelight views. Why cannot the doc- tors experiment with a few wax- works? Still, if a patient gets a free f. `I hnrhnna LI- J-.1... A- ,,-e' Ono of the lolonlmc Phruu That loan` Innooonto us;_. run Ln uurunwest xcenemon 1885, `and was appointed to his pnesent 01-: O .- nag. -Q; counc- ----ou, van. 4;, 1.074- Lieut.-Col. Acheson Gosford Irvine, warden. of Manitoba. Penitentiary, was born in Quebec, Dec. 7, 1837; gazetted lieutenant in the 3rd Batta- lion for service -at La Prairie under Field Marshall Wolseley, 1864; ma; 101' 2nd Battalion Quebec Ries in the Red River expedition 1870; com- . mend of Manitoba. Provincial Bat-1 canon 1371, and retired from the, lorvico with the rank of lieutenant- colonel, J une, 1875. Assistant Com- missioner of Northwest Mounted Police 1875, and Commissioner 1880. Served in Northwest Rebellion 1885, and um; nnnnini-AA a. La. ....-_--4 -- ocvu ALI. ---vwc 6 Do ' Lieut.-Col. Henry -Robert Smith, Sergeant-at.Arms of the House of Commons, was born at Kingston, Dec. 80, 1833. Educated at the Kingston Grammar School, he en-; tered the public service May, 1859, 1 and became `Deputy Sergeant-at` Arms in 1872, and Sergeant-at Arms, Jan. 11, 1892. _ I T5nn+ _rV..1 A ..L--- I" - ` ` 3 thus been torsixty yedrs, prominent- ly connected with Ontario education. He was one of the pioneers in schoolbook literature in Canada, and i is still engaged in important work 1 ' on the historical side of education in this Province. He was also chief I -editor of the lit? of Dr. Ryerson, a ` ii-duate of Victoria University, ` an _' `.D. of Toronto (1870), a Fellow I. l of the Royal Geographical Society ` (1861). Dr. Hodgins has also the French decoration of the Palm (Lea! (1879). He also holds a. confedera- tion medal in acknowledgement of his services as a public officer and 'man of letters. Dr. Hodgins was born in Dublin, August, 12, 1821. lie is an elder brother of Judge T.Inn _lV.sl ' T`l ------- `"`V' ' "' "`