Ontario Community Newspapers

Northern Advance, 28 Jul 1910, p. 6

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` vs. vseuwl "lac yuu WUUIU. HHVC allowed ' me more freedom, instead of trying] _g_ `._to break my spirit and curb my - {earnings in the way you did. The _; `iittleness of the`mix'id"s of those. around me, the monotony of my home, were driving me nia"d. I want-` " ed to. see the world ,to liye, but vou _. ,_ seemed desirous oft1.i'r`ing me into _ a mere mechanical gure, whose life .- andactions were to be regulated and overned by the sheep.-like curate of he village. ,Gent1e and sweet your- self, you could not understand the` ery spirit whichl had` inherited `m3Z`.'datzn;fath`e:2t ;;+l3.ut .~_dthe;x_'e._..issa4 .. tethat guides us whether `we'~will' " r_;gno./ `,'l`l1e-,.time came, t-he-evil hour, :"S`T"*!`t in<'~Bi`ig*hton thvebrilliant 1* _.;v:l, Az1_mo,ol`d. the emissary of the .. __ etch2iN uagsahih; gin whose`,-inter_est. " `e at `hlilndglaud, ; Azirrroold : o I cnmpnshed. a i [the great pai- fnnn-uA .-.......-u: xhyseif, lnnn was pas- of " Com- m A Rogue in Ambush, by Headon Hill, is _the title of the new story whih will begin in the Advancenext The leading characters will he : 4 Lord Monksilver, A Kleptonianiac Peer; The Hon. and -Rev. Cha1oner_ ';Wenslade, His Brother; Dick W en- slade, Scapegrace and Hero; Carter Ravenscar, Lord Monksilver s Secre- tary; Elisha Crowe, A Human Fer- ret; Mrs. Wenslade, Dick's Mother; Yvonne VV*e'nslade, Dick's Sister; Phylvlis` Vaughan, -Governess at the Rectory. his country seat, Wlenslade Prior .~ His brother, the Hon. and Rev. Chg- loner Wfenslade, is rector of the vil- lage. The latter is married, and has .a family, the eldest of whom is Dick lwenslade, a young man of good, |. " . `_ ' { , j SYNOPSIS OF OUR NEW STORY ' NEXT WEEK. \ 1:4 uuguouus Model Hill tary Camp _'l`attoo every ni ht. . vegything new in a noun 1 _13am.iip (_3_a1it_#l.`8I0.0o00o0 Q Q g You'llNever Wear It Out Main 'frame is one solid and very heavy casting. Levers are special heavy and strong, so they won't spring under excessive. strains. Bearings align themselves, because pivot rests on hearing loop--tilt the scale and it will still weigh right. And the price is very small! `wares: ran 'zr`;_}gu infqxuzjtgdn wrl . IOU! U- cApAc] Ton scale . zooo POUNDS . Handy to move about as a wheelbarrow, yet accurately weighs up to a full 2,000 pounds. ` Swivelled pole and front wheels let you turn it short through doorways and around corners. Strong and staunch, too,like all scales we. build. _ ,,, V --t janhl Tis season We include our new Compound Beam with CHATHAM Pitless Scale withopt adding a cent to the vri r, it. You can nd no bigger bargain; yet the price is '\'.'av c low. In sections where we have agents we offer specizll 1 -v-c Bear in mind that you have no hard work to do in setting up 3 `CHATHAM. It is all solid steel, stands on its own feet abote ground,--no pit to dig, no fussy preparation needed before you `use 1t. Comes to you so yo1_11can be weighing on it in [1 few hours after you get 1t. I\o skxhed mechamc necessary at $1, Your CHATHAM Pitless_Scale Will be YOUR Scale that you can take W.lth ou when you moxfe. You can always get for 1t w at you pad for 1t. And you need no skilled help to set up tbe C'HA_THAM\ik comes to Eon complete, W1tl1 plam dlrectxons. Built wh/olly of eavy steel. Nothmg to rust, decay or go wfong; Government `guarantees Its absolute accuracy_ Tested before it leaves the factory. Vt arranted fully, In oved G-round: new Buildi 5:1: lxgbm by 111 at : Pgovincesfgnag _ V IVA I-I_nussuoN~ or n H jg J -- - You neecl riot club with your neighbors to equip farm with the scale you need--the CHATHAM Your . V ` Scale. . You can afford to buy Come; Ready T P llless , a - it yourself. It will save you Y0 Hay ' F U -more that} its cost_ in One N0 Bathe: season. Up to ve tons 1t W111 Welgh accurate] . . 11 v buy or sell. You can erect 1t ready to use 1n 3 ma 3 - 1 _ j__ __ _ _ anmn G-n%-rattan-at .Tl_1isFIs The A Complete Scale silver is an elderjy peer, a bachelor, resading at seat, Priohgy. an be C ie_ is rosin- -J A|-- ~ , - .. --- -I2GUIIIIH sn-cum US AND ASK FOR DETAILS \The limit for automobiles by GOV- ernment act is set at 10 miles an hour "1 Cities. towns and incorporated vile 13865. and elsewhere 15 miles an hour. Councils may set apart streets (mid D858 by-laws relating to them) 1 on which .a greater' speed may be 31; *IWd "for the purpose of testing such motor vehicles. Motorists W5` 310W up to 4 miles an hour passing 3 at-Ann. -..._. ! u-vw up Lu 4 mucs 2 `standing street car. ..... LcIu.uud.l.lUIl 01 ms un1vers1t)j C3" eer he comes to stay for a wh11e_at the rectory, and there under the 111- Tuence of Phyllis Vaughan. the 20"` .erness of his sisters, he detcrmm3 to take life more seriou;`1)', 3d* though after his father, her to bl! unc`le s peerage, to work hard 213 zsome prbfession. inlxaitirnntional Live Stock showy. ` cent Art Loan Exhibit- mn uduzstv heart and honourable principles, but who has been something of a scape- erace ang spendthrift at Oxford. At the termmation of his university car- ear I-IA nnvnga .. ...L.__ r._ - _.r_:r.. ..o AUTO RULES. pound Beam each g :1 price of `way down ; we offer special long- time eredit terms to those who would rat}: try the Scale before they pay for it. Write us and ask for full details. I-Inrgnmsns I penonaliy vouch for every statement this advertisement makes, and I further guaran- tee that my Chathazn Pitleu Scaie is the biggent scale value you; can buy for money in this or any other country. VVrite me about it and I will see thnt this is proved to your complete satis- faction. Write now. MANSON CAMPBELL . Ieuident .. I p"`W6 . `Au':hor of `- For God `and the Czar," From the '\ ' 13050111 or the Deep," etc.. etc. v I, JULY % Educatio A ret Imurela the hi0 and Fae pne th0L \.|-'1 ' adequa% thc nus lC;un.J whlch w year, c.\j ;-mm. ( istencc when, i tendanc before. there Ivinces. the CC cates ` 3 .\Iini. _\'0vr g * ment : `N %_ By DICK DONOVAN F -A. .: '01 the I already [the rqs {ht} XL) tvhich \ pf July, one xvi Third M tisenlcn my the one- a teach the NIH thg up mzomn (1) T1 Class c any (ions the I temp ary cc ed by under specto the rct V J. > I~acult tramin F1," , - l\C_,V Ond C years. certifx TRAVEL ER:_ig.uI1E_QuEs not `Tu-`un--g` l`l........ _..._AI_- prh Ilf\'|'l' wneu Irlvelnng. `may no issqea.in $137739 .~m12 aura II L_L ___A ; BARRIE BRANCH ' H. J. GRASETT. Manager. T/ze Story of :2 Womcz'n s Lbve torn when he read this pitiable hu- All'port s feelings were racked and man document. It was a'sad story, . the story of a woman's heart, a wrecked life. The a small box. con- tained a magnicent black pearl of great value,`and a` perfect brilliant. as large as a marble. He would have preferred to have -handed these to some member of her family; but she had solemnly charged him to respect her wishes. and in the event of her mother being dead he _was to retain them. 0 hie has them gilaced It`);-`E ve vet ,. .u'nv_ er ,,a_,.;' A . which stood` in `his 7- Kfld whenever he looked- at ` them this s "`tlt 6t'1gh't`` L turned - t6-`the _-l6i'1f.y .jtii't tl`` 1 grave far-off -India. fwhere Daixia `~ "the tW1tch slept the dreamless sleep; She had come into. hi_s.. li-f;e_ `for 5a very ` 2-.b"fA ..sp3..; " 81! :tra`iz}Ic. V ed` had; A caused. him, a,:. yrench.` .{But3~`wl1en _he_; ,` ~.rlookedernto::fthe2yes:%lof `hisjaqauful-r =1` is`.>ii-=?ihrit11fl"Xl#i!*Ied r Xrsmet. " ._ q;;;xaaxcs.ox.t1tIe 11a_d' folloyyedjxim " ?,L<..>.!I.don-,`_ax1d .fh1s;~hTl!man. ' tiger. s":skm.,wasA 4`-f eastg? '7-,'a _t%tVti_e,_x ff wuu1u.udVc IL ICIIIGIII BU IUY CVCIo If this ,shouId bedelivered, it will- be accompanied by a gem, which you are free to keep as a -souvenir of me, or dispose 'of as yqu think t. Fare- well! We shall meet no more this side*of the"Beyor;d. *I(`ilmet 1." ' VVIII '~J\lIV\-I lL`lU|I-K J`-JKII !lGII\II {`II.\I }I charge you `solemnly, `mother, 1f ; ever you shou'ld read these lines, not `A In` noun: A|4l- 4-.` LL); `sumo \:V\v| JR! Il\IIull\I IDGII I.II\i3V IlII\? II\IIn 3 to let any other `member of the fam- ily know my story. To you my fate has been a _mystery. To them I ewolai have xt remain so for ever.` T! ALE- -L--_I'_I I.-- .I_I2__-._-.I -II -In IIGBVU GNU IUGLIICU LVGIICI QCIIIU, Uul I _was their limd slave. Often I was tempted to ill them _both. Alas, why did I not do so! Before I came here, I dreamed of greatness. I have lived in a palace; I have been surrounded with wealth and splend- our; I have seen the gorgeousness of the East; but now, ifll possessed all the wealth of this marvellous land, I. would give it to the utter- most piecefor the love of a good man. My heart aches; it is empty," `it is cold. .You know what a woman means when she says that I have er- red. I have sinned ; but oh, I -have paid a terrile penalty. Is therepno hope for me Do not_ shed tears for me, -mot_her. Do not curse me, .for I am already cursed. Do not pray for me, for your prayers on m behalf will not be heard. I "write t is, hop- - Ting to be able to` send it to you through some trusted person who will deliver it.into your hands. "And T n1-nu-an vnn unlnnanlure-nnlaar :5 v--v I--JushAJ_,,Vl Iyuv IJVJVIIUA I . ,Azimoold. read me, for I was eas- 1ly'read. by such a crafty devil, and so asfthe subtle serpents of India dazzle and lure birds, so he dazzled and lured me, and when he left Eng- land I went with him. I dare not tell you. I knew it would break your heart. What you must have suffered when you discovered I had fled, God knows; may God forgiveme for hav- ingycaused you to suer. -But it. was to be. I will not harrow your feel- ings by detailing all I have gone through, In the palace of Nana Sahib I did_ think for a brief period` that - my dreams were near'ly realised, but brief indeed. it was. Instead of be- ing waited on by slaves, I myself was a slave, a degraded, despised slave. `I hated and loathed Azimoold, and I hated and loathed Nana Sahib, but 1 nine 04113:- `Inna ! e`nurn (`:0-A-n TA -pno ` acauy l.U`.b|?.l1 l.Cll' 501.115 I0!` 1115 SHIIIF; I was a_girl, inexperienced, romantic t -a'girl dreaming dreams, and when- I this man, whom I believed was a I prince in disguise, deigned to notice r me, my head was turned. ,H'e..t,alked ' to me of India. -India !--to me the - land of all that was wonderful; the land of gold and jewels, the land of 7 lotus-eaters; the land of yisionaries, .\of troubadors, of colour and light. ` He told me of his ,wonderful.mas_`ter, and the wonderful palace `in which [he lived. He told me if I would -journey to India with him he would `make me a queen; that I should have gold stools to sit upon, and slaves to fan me, that my. life should be one of unalloyed joy and happi- ness. Ah, mother of mine! can you bcsurprised that I listened to him with open-mouthed wonder? I did not see` his black heart. `I did not isee his cloven feet. I knew `nothing of human nature; my world had been a very, little one up to then; but oh, how I had. yearned to go out into the great world! I used to gaze across the sea to where sea and sky met, and wonder what there was be- yond. Now, as a broken-hearted, de- spised woman, I wonder if there is any hope for me when I have solved the mysteryrof the Beyond. (CA_2...-_I,I _.-_I - z I. ed, fawned upon _by women who were. ready toxsell thexr souls fo}; his smil_e; mac 5 nrh-1 inn...-.-...'......... ..-4-- Re_sen?e Fncif-' 116661666 : Arsettlement of the diffexfences be- 1 -`tween the ,Canadian. Pacic Railway u and it; 'trai men and yardmen has` I been reachcd t,_M_lontrgal, both` sides_ . swiping. tqvbe: satxsfe_d_. _ ` ` H Mackciiti` King =has =:w. ' ` You know how as child I had vis- `ions, and fancies, and romantic dreams/"she wrote, "and how they `strengthened with my years. I hat-y ed the dull and common--place coun- ,try life -I w'as."_l iving,`_ and _I resented the restrictions" you -imposed "upon '.m_e. You tdidx-'1. not understargd, .my nature.a"nc_1 temperament, dear moth-3 er. otherwase you would have allowed- HID Inns-4: `IAf'I\o91 :c-at.-n....I Al L-M3 --' gifts. Frank. Hewartson will at- empt"to cross the English Channel _m a biplane either to-day or to-mor- ail? ` I y.vu.n_;_uuucu nut [T181 1!! .I.OI'0I1tO. V Dr. Sheard will begin a new pro- secution of bakers in Toronto who do not sell bread according ~-to law. It is 'believed that Ethel C. Leneve, Dr. Cnppen s companion, committed suicide` at Bourges, France, a week 310. I Tine scheme ifor_ra terminal railway station was submitted to the Toron- to Board of Control. ` 0nV`a char :3 of. throwing acid in a man s face fS_.4,LOu1Sa." Pearce was` committed for trial in Toronto. `ng cI.-__: a--- - ..-.v-arr-no I \Illl_I\ul I Mr. `Balfour. raised the question of preference in the British House "of Commons rlaste night; "mm ...I...-- re - v... v. uuuv.III|lIl\IIu Two women werburned to death and `a baby_ fatally burned in a re at Grand Rapxds, Mich. IITLSA. `I1, , _-_. --u-In-now, ovoayllo V.-\;Vh.itt` Bynum was` sent to peniten- tiarv for three years for assault and `attempted robbery. ` 1;-_ . -13-11--,. - - A- -van:---uovbvu U The body Miss Gei-trude Luke, drowned at Oshawa, drifted ashore cast of the.harbor.. ` . ' {George Lawrence (Sf -%'SAarnia ,was drowne_ log-diving in the St. Clair R1ve_r. . I OF COMM ERCE nun oirrxcn. vonozrro ` _ ' _nsunusu:n 1807 - -- u-w-vv-u ` Reports" to the_Imperia1.Bank on th_ ct-.op`outTlook in the west are -fair- ly satzsfactory. ' 'l`l.r_ l._1 a spa ...` - _ .vaoov aunt. 151511! ' -Mayor Miner of Granby, Que., has presented a park to the town. The strike - on the `Northeastern Railway in England has been settled. V Foot_ and mouth disease has `ap- peared on a farm in Yorkshire, Eng: land. ' -- `Forest res are `still cising much damage and suenng in B`ritishjCo- lumbia. - T . . A sharp olectrical storm passed `over Toronto last night. _ II'...._` 11:. - , I A _ George H'anley, said to have a wife in Toronto, was drowned at Temag- ami. Guy. Cecile was drowned in a canoe accident at Pembroke, and Joseph Holler and Ed. Cunnighanm lost their lives-in Colpoys Bay when the"r launch struck a log. Harry Sealey of Hamilton, aged seven,[ was drowned while bathing. i f .. . V VI ---an Superintendent Cunningham of the Grand Trunk at Niagara Falls was mobbed and pelted with stones` and eggs. The mob was largely made up o_d roughs from the United States s: e.` V V It is stated that the Lords may seek to gain prestige in Britain by rejecting the accession deglarationn bill if they nd the agitation against it growing. -.... -. -v.u-vvunou5v uu Jul] ltll. Mr. Justice Sutherland quashed the by-law passed by the townships of Sherborne, McClintock, Livingstone, Lawrence an_d V Nightingale, limiting the licenses to one. 3-. n 1:: vya l\rb\JI . `Stike conditions on the -Grand Trunk show little change except that passenger trains are all running and keepmggood time. ` A Sweeping prison` reforms to be adopted in Britain were outlined by Mr. Winston Churchill `in the House of Comxnons last night. Mr. Eudo Saunders, chief license inspector, made a statement respect- ing the alleged violation of the liquor law at Bracebridge on July 12th. If. T...A.1..- (`ALL--~`|- ' Count de Lesseps famous mono-' planes, La Scarabee and Blerio; No. 9, were sold to a Montreal amuse- ment park proprietor. aCL:I_- , - ` ` ` Miss 'Un'win~\and two_ other ladies who started ou\t~ from Ban on a mountain-climbing expedition are ` missing. ' .,!'i.Ild`. 3 _ p ad -ma e to -the dying? -v v - - ~ a nu; uuvaug yaaackr LIIIUUEIL ll. Two men in whom we are interested received the V.C. A third was madei a baronet; a _fourth` was rewarded with, for him, the large sum of one `Rhousavnd pounds for services render- ed. This last person was the humble `Goorka, Singh, and proud in posses- sion of such a fortune, he retired to his native hills and settled down- to farming. Surgeon-Major Alward was to be known hence as Sir Victor Alward. He succeeded to an estate `near Southampton, where he settled down to end his days as an English country gentleman. His left sleeve . was pinned to his breast, for he had ~left his arm in India. He himself had amputated it in the besieged fort near Cawnpore. It wasa deed worthy of being immortalised in "song. Close to him resided Lieuten- ant Allport, brevet rank, V.C., also a landowner, with__his beautiful wife, nee -Clara Go-ldschmidt. -. Both "of them showed traces of the horrors they had witnessed. the suffering they had endured. _ =Clara had return- ed to England six months after that affecting parting in the hospital at i Cawnpore, and when Jasper took possession of the property he inherit- ed from his uncle, they became neighbours of Sir Victor Alward. The second V.C. man was the hero Jim Bradeld, the Lancashire lad, of whom Lancashire was proud. He married a Cheshire farmer s daugh- ter, and with his wife accepted ser- vice. with his friend and chum, Lieut- enant Allport. to manage a farm on the estate. The one-armed baronet and the lieutenant were staunch _ pals, and both were fond of talking the splendid heroism` of their mi. The rormse Allport Daina, he faithfully fullled. In the Indian bag were a letter and a packet. The let- ter was addressed to a lady i-n a vil- lage near Brighton, but she had been dead some time, and so Jasper, in accordance with the expresesd wish or the unhappy Pearl .Farnell, open- ed the letter and learnt the poor girl s story. The lady for whom it was in- tended was Pearl s mother. Pearl was the only dtghter. and she spoke: of her = own waywardness and self- `w1ll.J` ; -l of I ---.._.-.,....-..v-_y yavswwouu LIUHI INC. Trade returns for June show a._ to- tal `of $66, ,ooo, an inc`rease of over ten millions compared with June, ' uwvwvvvvaa .L\rf_|.I GLILI \JUlUlUU1a. rFiro'Chief Graham reports that the Parliament buildings ;at Ottawa are very inadequately pxfotected from re. 'l`....-J_ ..-A.-u~- " -.,-v _vvIlJ\J cg; 115111!-5. - I The Fritish Ministex-`to Brazil wi_ll be asked to arbitrate a boundary dis- pute between Peru and Colombia. `D1..--r~I_:-p A u !-----.----v uavnasvll UL JAIVCIPUUI. _ ~ An aeroplanc at ` Barcelona `v struck by ljghtning and thrown the ground In ames. V - U'I`I_, if`-' nounced Vttliitj it 75:-t.:'Id 1`1` ";t te11:1';>'t. to handle. freaght traic just yet. Thousands of coal miners are idle in England as as result of the strike on the Northeastern Railway. TL- 1'*r..:....:-. --_-I-I - -.. ..- o1Vl|vll\v$ls7|-VIII .L\GuWG_) . The Unionist candidate was lcessful in the `bye-election in :Kirkdale' division of Liverpool. A0` non-A-K1`--- -4 - - _7___-_ _J. v,wvv rlvvynvo The Gra _.nd Trunk Railway that wouid not atte just rnL,._ -----. ----g.-u; uuanvaano. _North York Conservativp Associa- tnqn picinc at Jackson s Pomt was at- jtended by. 6,000 people. `FL- I`_-., ,1 nu - -\ -- V`---- --- Controller Foster in Toronto mov- .edfo1j the appointment of milk and `meat Inspectors. ` ` ' VBL- r\_,_, u l'\. n... ... --wruvvvo Us !m.'fl:1e- Quen s Own Ries, Toronto, at peared at their drill "last night in t eir khaki uniform. CHAPTER XXXVII; A Human Document. 1 The storm _of' re which had swept over the fair land of India, had died down, leaving a track of ashes and death, and an aftermath of] sorrow and desolation that would be -felt for long, _long years`. There were wid- ows and orphans weeping, and grey- haired mothers "and fathers moaning for their sons, whose bones bleached ~ under Indian skies. But down the ringing grooves of time would go` the story of heroism and devotion; it` would tell to generations yet unborn. of the suffering of heroic women,_ of the splendid valour of brave men who `gave their lives for their coun- `try and their Queen. Reputations were made and unmade, and man-y came out of.the ordeal brighter and ' better for having passed through it. wn man in mhnrn urn mi-A Lg`.-_..-n-a....1 Event; dof the Week Condensed for I Buy Advance Readers. "I'E;;';;ident. Taft in a spe_eh. t/Ea_st- port, Me., advocated recxprocxty wxth Canada. U \ T The Masonic Gr;1n-d- Lodgoopened at Belleville. _ V . IA revolution has broken out .in Hondufs.- A r . DAILY mews FRIDAY, JULY ma. .1`!-IURASDAY, JULY. 2_xst. }*r%HE NORTHERN AD.vANcE' sue- the V W35 Quebec, July 21.--EarI and Count.- -,ess Grey arrived at _4 pm; on the Empress of Britain." ,. . Amongst -' the-' passengers who as-r r5vf_ejdA-ron `the_`En1prVess_w; r,e Six; ;.R-ainsa " EARL GREY BACK IN CANADA. ,__,,_- - ..-u_y uc CUIISJO thing of a radical_ there ?as a conservative CF80 SOITIC-' ---,, -v. uuuuu IHUIICY. After listening to the gre ticians of England 41 found although I may be considerec thing of radical here, 1': conservative becaus not agree with them. in; b! that a government should un tl3e'_t_ask __of producing L cc Y 9 I . Martin W`. Littleton has just re-I turned to New York after transact-1 ing some legal business in London for an American client, Like most Americans, a trip to England has set him talking. He was thrown in con- tact with many leading lights of the old country and his impressions are interesting. 5 . _. The members of the present Lib- eral Cabinet, `said Mr. -Littleton, re- mind me of no men so much as mod- ern Americans, even in'their appear- ance. If they were to walk down Broadway nobody, probably, would spot them for Englishmen. _The. thing that impressed me most con-| t cerning politics in England was the: strange union of the one classical monarchy of. the world with what amounts almost to _a_4Socialistic Cab- met. eir tradi- ucation and their social _ To nd__ the . Prime Asquith,gtalking radi- calism startles one as much as" if one found Col, Raos`ev`elt" makiln'g" a' speech for peace or Coll? Bryan "talk- ing for sound money. - . ` ' AF+.a.. -I2-A--3- - -` tion_s, their ed environments. Minister, Mr. . It seems incredible that these . eCabinet"-members can be asradical as they are `considering th "E6 v..- wvvusvwyu] ||, IIICGIIS ICVCIIUC. I A skillful beekeeper may keep a large number of colonies of bees and make a handsome prot annually. They do not require a larger capital expenditure, they need comparatively little attention, and in a good year they pay well. The whole success of beekeeping as a business is con- ditional on the skill of the beekeeper. If he does not understand his busi- ness he will keep the bees if he can, but if he does understand his.busi- ness the bees willkeep him. The beekeeping industry is one of the most attractive branches" of agri- culture, but it is not as generally fol- lowed as it ought to be either in Can- ada`or on the continent of North America. One reason for the lack of enthusiasm is the `absence of knowledge.` The successful beekeep- er is usually an enthusiast, and well may he be. His bees afford him no end of interest `and pleasure. They` do him good by helping to fertilize his crops. They do the crops of the U whole neighborhood good by assist- ing the process of cross-fertilization. [They - do no damage whatsoever. What they gather is the -sweet nectar from the ower, ' which would be otherwise lost to mankind. The honey the bees manufacture from the nectar` is benecial to those who use it.. It is food and it is medicine. To the ebeekeeper it means revenue. A .-l..'n:..1 1_--1----, {KEEPING VBEES Eon pnorrr. _ J _v vu-q`. av u|nI\J I-\J IlrIIJl:|vIl\-v \.(1lll\-lo Five employees of the Internation- al Harvester Company, charged with violating the Lord s Day act at Lon- don, pleaded that they were helping fthe farmers out-_ with the harvest rush. The Magistrate accepted th/ plea. \ _ -._-_.. -. v. u.....-.--.; yuasulqlag Mr. Elford, near Carman, Man., has cut 28 ac:-es_of. Hungarian red wheat that yieldedeighteen bushels to the acre, The new wheat stands the d'ry weatherbetterq than the red Fyfe and is said to mature earlier. -...\.v-_, u ' Fire at Owen Sound destroyed Da- vis, Smith &* Malone s coal yards, the Dominion Transportation Com pany s warehouse, and Godfrey & Sibbald s grain storehouse, besides a` number of smaller buildings. ' 1\A"'_. 171:... ,1 .gr , _ ,.-7__-- - . v u \. \._ vvvvv all BU I.ll\-v lGVVn C A score of men employed by the Consumers Gas Company in _'[oron- to wereovercome by gas whxle at work on. Sherbourne street. Five of them suffered severely. All will re- cover. - The steambarge Phoenix rammed two gates in lock -18 of the Cornwall ~('an'al, carrying the gates away and -is hoped to have closmg the canal to`navigation. If _repairs completed- by Sunday. In - . A - STATES NOT so RADICAL. ` -_ v_--v-- 9- Iain I\.Il-CDC-l V` lJ\.lIQ\JLI. 1 Informations were laid against ,twn city bakers, returnable at the` Police Courtron Monday. The charges are for selling bread contrary to the law. A ..--_- , The (_Io'roner s jury. in Toafcnto in- vcstxgatmg the death of James Boyle rrccommended- the registration of the purchase of all forms of poison. T..-'___---4f-,. - ` " ' r ,_ ..,,. go.-wvV\I GVJ LIV Ill .lJG&\a\rl\JlIGu The police have orders _to watch all bridges and level crossmg; c.-.-er `the Grand Trunk lines within 'l`oz-any to. _- _.__.._.. - _._ .4. onO\lA| Aanuoulvnlal Abo IDr. Crippen, who i_s_ accused of havi ng mugdered his wife in London, is now beheved to be in LBarcelonAa. A -, - .\ - . ._y--------- v-Y.V. /and the exact amount payable in Ahitrln. Belgium. Deniiark, Ftan Germany, Great Britain, Holland, Italy, Korway, Russia, Sweden and Switzerland isstatedontheface at each while in other countries uaeyarepeyaueetcurrent rates. * " _ ` -.. -_ r--.---....uoJ av: bvvv JVGIJ. ` The Prussian Minister of the. In- terior has ordered the ex;_>u,lsio_n of a number of Mormon massxonarxes. .1` , ' ` /q u 4 `David Smith of Fingal, caught rob-` bmg Cattgnaclfs store," was sentenc- ed to pemtentiary for two years. I TL- `n_-_-_: , --- v.-p- J C->-vh Vila] 0 Over a mile of nets wen-E seized Vnear Gananoque by the Government steamer N avarch. . e_ A diamond weighing over 1o1"c:_ar- `ats has been found in_the Premner mine in South Africa. ugvu ;vsunuuu- Lg \Jl-LGVVG. King "Georg_: v civil 1i st s'ed in the Brmsh House mons yesterday. I'\__. `I 1' I ---------7 a'-- -a"' The+G. T. R. moved some through freight yesterday. ' Earl and Countess -Grey. and [suite have returned to Ottawa. the -strike leaders, proposingan ar- bitration of their diferences, the Government to starid the expense. Mr, Murdock s-reply` proposes the I tofthel c;ya.,.e.1 'Tr un"k-I .1:xut*;a,eye and American committee which settled` the railway. cases over there. Mr. Hays reply. -has been sent, but not yet recexved. SATURDAY, -JULY 23:4. f'\T\ .I. IUUIIU I considered A1-A -A-----" '

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