V S9'!3h5 ` ROUGH; *cAs1: HOUSE.` 7wi 11 :take..*f Ittim t I ' 9-V`ietp'ria"St.. 31000.1 ~ ;Mini_str`#` of. ~P;1BIi&: ~W pi`ks is, A, ` `HOUSE WITH TBEAUTI.-t ViI1ed,,.th9t `le .iftu.a"tio;1' ~`Whh* con?-' 4 `IUL LOT, mm s,mfo,dV 3 'and~..fronts Empire at.:,'- this [JfuI_1cture ._ victqrig. st, S319 mice 3 , ` . -is A g:rave_ ;a_n.clj even` eritica], put; thgt t TWO L FINE BRICK MHOUSES , h9.;1s_9an9t {%ndeVn;t 1,tn81stentt:=t1n ` McDonald St., heating, lightixfg l1]9~`3P:::l`l`)` thga nf d:39`9:`:-'~ 3:`;1d` `-. - '1. ' te*'g1v y- na.,....a n f 33. I`i1t`.`l`)ui?gc;n slgn Tayf?-`$3 gggggnfge gggtiglltiogi gggolifoprg BIIIHCK H01-USE PE.1 z'l; ;}_. -There i good...reas_on to belietre that L 356 E r:rm __ ' . "ca the latter View is_not sh'a_red by the, ' ' 3? ms .,,.- Prime Minister; who 1_)elieves~ that the _ , W, C, THOMPSON, w situgtion'dem'a11ds immediate,-and ef-- ; Box 462 " Phone 288 f"t' `"d' " ' ' E" HY -DR'O_"-EIV.EC1`RI_C DEC. 1st. TIPS TO) H-OUSEWIVES. V sa,15v,_ ryvur . wife `in your 1.3111-n; .w1...T .u...:. .f. SAFE ns. lg .1Ul"' ` _. "112; Chi, tickets. etc , tram noon some fdtpbgr 25, 26, 27, '28s Limit Oct. 30th 72 Charge 25c vv m gxvc nu enu-rmnmenv consisting .0! Son with Bell Accompaniment. solos. uelts. nart.ettes.~ Double unr- tetpes and . ees and Enterta her. There are 9 Accozapnahed VocoJ- :- istu andin tqlners. . ' Hgtvondus Unit on 9.3 Poo1 _>_!" % 171 B I . 5' Calf skins, green, per qkins . . ` BETWEEN IN CANADA w;';..;.:`;;0';.:;d.` Potatoes. new, per h H.ay..neW. per ton . Cured Hides, No. 1. Hide, N0. 1. `[J:,]..- Tr , fare -for Round TriP uxucxen, spnng, pail . Hens, per ib. . . . . . . . Eggs, per dozen . . . . . . . LllU%(j_ . . Turkeys .. .. Chicken, spring, pa 1' r "@115 V\l\iI x JTHTANKSGIVING +DAY 4/I o-stun, pct .lU., `YUM `Mutton .. jH_og~s, live, select Alive, heavy G`. A..........,1 Rye . . . . . D . . . . . . . . . . }Fl.0y-r .. .. ~ Beef, hind quarter . . . `fore quarter . .. Lamb, per 1b.; yearling` 2 M1`. H-.. 'Finst Urch`in-How muc-h have } you left ? _ n . , , , Second Urch1n--T,wo c-cuts," First Urchin---'-"Oh. dour! How quickly a nickel goes as snail as F011 break. it! The new steel ` bridge built by the Ontario -Government across the Mag- netawan River at Burk s Falls .Was. opened` . Thursday by Hon. Dr.` Reaume, J. Galna, M.P.P., and James Arthurs; M.P. It -is called Galna bridge`. ' -` ' `CLEMES-At 4;? .\'nntr-n .-\vm1ue, Rosedale, Toronto. on S:ntur-da_v. Oct. 19th, 1912. to Mr. and Mrs. Howard B. Clenms. a sun. CLARK--WTLSO.\ -- At the r.-i- dence of the bri1e';< m1rm1t-'. Alli-> v ton, Ont., on T111I1'.~`]: I_\', (5vr. If), ` .1912. by `ROW . .`\. \Vi]~`4'9l1 of Hamilton, brother of tho lurid.-, u~`- sisterl by Rm . W. 'l`. }Clli~rnn -If 1 Alliston. (Warenne P. (`lurk of -Little Rock, Ark., tn Um`!-i(at .\I.. daughter of Mr. mul .\[r-`. Juhn Wilson, Alliston. "Sole Agent for Barrie and District I P.0. BOX 178 PHONE 2593. I A. F. GARRETT THE LATEST MARKETS LMIJOII, 0111., on Saturday, Oct. 17th, 19,12, .\I.ar- garet, wife Of Mr. Dunn,-on .\I:l11- tosh, formerly of Pmrrir-. ASOMERS--In Pmrrin, F1-hlny, Oct 18, 1912, Sarah I...1..41;., wife 0; Geotrge Sonlcms, agml Tu _\-an-,_ MACWATT--At hm` hm.-1m1d`.~ mg. deuce, 326 Coll9g;c m'omu-. Snrxnia. Ont., on Th111'sda_v. On, 17th, 1912, Elizabeth Helen. bolnvwl wit}: of His Hon. Daniel Fr:l<<.-r .\[:u-Watt, Senior County Jlnlgo of l,;m,}.t;,n County, and _vm1n{:o9t (1:11x_.-'htm of fTh_Il) late Lie-lit.-(`01. Jnhn .\l;'1-Watt. ' an parts 0! Inc uomnmon. It is _a noble instrument with a beautiful, penetrating w varied tone and a touch m. that meets every dynamic : hccent. .'I'.'i=." \ To-day this parti 1 the -homes of Canafililaii ':>)fa'u:::lFra9 all parts of the Dominion. `" "` It 3. .. ....1.1.. 2-, Weaken; %. Possesses unique musical char- acteristics that give it a distinctive place among the great pianos of the world."--Burmez's/tr. - - - Ever admired--n 1 ("9I':G :t' `half 1.-:19.` :4 IT` Dmzs Ixnmzn. Barrie, Get. mun, volume of e mechanism shade or Bonk. DIED. Will give an eiitertalnment.oonisttn? " g)_t_8on_gs with Acoomnnnimann l---never disa is the ppointing 13;; ,- ,- _......-u cuuowe , Id 8. fnnnh n-...,.L . 10 on 100 1 {E m 19 Sn Fnfom The crustal Palace. London endowed Vnlnnn ._ :- '1'2"1/3 12 no nun ii 10 27 27 17 60 35 60 85 -1. F 4 If Joy riders who tempt young girls in Collingwood are under police sur- veillance. -The Saturday News say.s:_ Young gir1s'on the .street are again warned to be careful about convers- ing `.with` strangers. _ We have pre- viously ~ given out a note of caution on this point.. We are again prompt- ed to do so because some young grils were accosted one dav this week by two men of whom the police entertain doubts. - I one - that movix and of Hi ed Wi The 1 short] 1110211 We :' :1 HI) rctur over The `L\V7 ging likely both. Dism away wiix` ` Iiev. 0. J.` Nurse, B.A.'; Beeton imd vTotten'ham parish, will -leave there at- the and of October, _.to acept. the position` of assistant in -they parish of St. Michael s, Vancouver,` of which the rector is Rev. G. H. Wilson, a ` native of C01'1.il`lg'WO|0d. ` uuwu, years aches Vege Live publi 1 ENGLISH mo Bellfliingers B`oVxA4'6"2' W W-m"lA"`l;one 288* OFFICE---16 Owen St., Barrie and 21 Essa St., Allandale. * An Ottawa secial to The Mail and Empire, says :--The attitude of Hon. Monk in 1feggrd.tb The {nounooohoodooocooqq: knoooouobuuqoououg FROM NEAR AND nit News NOTES .03. __,_ ----..-- --B V; voav `Ill_llDC'n acyaruuuu uum "' V \ ,I1i}we solved % this difulty. by l Mail the" Manchester School is 9, `great. free The of schq-ol bent on carrying inqtruct_1on,to xfegardto the 1`)oor_est hearths. It is this great f If free snhnnl, 1'nu1-{nah kl... L.-....`I.1--A nding here to-day, he said,` '-thqtb Ji-"l`.1_`:;Ie gs}; tri_al- accidents maintained by the De ' partment of Labour, that for the - month of `September: shows thereto have been 89 .workmen;killed 419, injured, La total of 508.` .. `Computed with the record` for 1August,'this isyan. ino maee.of one fatal Valid 1,14 non-" fatal. ' __Th_e ti:adee [and -,`in_dujstries' -in `which ;_the greatest number of,__-aocie e dents. oqcmjx-ed V V runway service; in ,which ":>28':`.':fata} t3.nd_-.1: 23; firm-fathi:t ttads ` . ..ki1l rig, ` `L . . . ~ u \.IocIIO\-'1 U1 II! x: gutub pxumeer 110: ran-ia'n Edward `E ster Gazettg Oweli Sound s ,tax-irate is 27 `mills for'1913, an increase of 2 mills over this year. A move is on foot to have the town inorporated as a city. Owing to the increased valuation `for county assessment `purposes there is. . a growing` desire for separation fronjr the county. ` A . 4 0.I0`Vl'1'e'"i'1;;t.it1:_t~ion. opnd `With .0 .a stock of 20,000 volumes, and under- the control of the ~'great`pig31 eer ljb: --`*" -..u `.:vva_uBv AIUC-Ir! U113: .1`: IS free school, inviting the humblest workman to come 1n and be a stu- -dent, knowing no sect, no party; and `no distinction, nothing - but thq pub- "lie .want and the public good.-Hence+ forth, ladies and: `gent_l'emen, A-this` , building sh-all represent for me th Manchester SohoOl.? - j ` i . ENGLAND _S . FIRST PUBLIC " n LIBRARY. in Sixty" years ago was opened the Manchester Public Library, the rst` institution of"its kind in England. The library movement in the pros gressive Midland city owed its incep- tion to Sir John_ Potter, and such was the support received that the free librariesacts were adopted by 3,962. votes to _40. Thackeray, Dickens and Lytton were among those present .at the opening, and _all made speeches. Dickens perhaps was the happiest. He: spokexhumorously of his past per- plexity regarding? the ,``_Manchester School, and declared that at least he knew the meaning of the phrase. pr Ln__~__. ___1____1 ' ,1 o. sonnx ---.. --- .4 guano wv. Vavuovvv I .In tllisizneccion `it might .be' we1l; tp note, tool,` that Switzerland is the one country on the globe where it costs nothing to die, as in certain cantons-rich and -poor are busied at the expense of the countrfrt -. DRAWS -SMALL SALARY -AND PAYS ALL PRIVATE" Exrsusns. ` The President of Switzerland is so hedged about by the `constitution that, except` for oicial purposes `and to facilitate the exchange of cour- tesies and of amicable understand-V iugs with -foreign nations, he has no more standing ,than the other six, members of the council of. which he forms a part. He is elected for one year, has no ofiicial residence, and his chief businessj is`"to sign the v documents of the Bundesrat or Coun- t oil of Seven. His salary is in our money equal `to about $3,600, I and _there isnos provision for private ex- penses, such as travelling or enter- taining. He is expected to live in " the capital of the countrv during the year he `holds office. His associate members in the Bundesrat get $3,000 a year and they are elected for three force as that of the president. As at-rule the President of Swit-I zerland is before election. a member of `this Council and is elected` to the higher office without opposition; but in 1883 he had a rival, and though he won in the election he was unable to support What in his c6u_ntry is_l`ook- ed upon as affront a-nd committed . suicide before his inauguration. . ' T, :1 years, their votes having the same 3 INDUSTRIAI; ACCIDENTS PR_-ESIDENT OF SWITZERLAND -A Hunmn Bird, h Divinely hum ed, is the Way th_;e.Pe'terb_oI1'o Exam~ iner. expressed itsrvalued opinion, of `the alto,*Mr. Charlesfworth.. No otfhef ma{1`e"a1t'Jo has been heard in Canada since the tourho-f _the original West"-_ minster Abbey Choir, twelve years ago.` Musical` statistics `prove that only Jone voice in every .v_e thousand among` male Vvoealists remains alto in quality. At `the concert 0fIthe W;A.' of the R-. V. Hospital in the Onera _H0us"e, Thursday, Nov. 5th. BELL % RINGERS, ALT(5S,QLc;)1ST.. v-{vs-IL I-iullr of _ t.he,i"Domi,nio_n in` was.13,683,.?Z70, `a!If;__iilcr8a34. pf; ;1;`469,8_08,_ ox`-..`,f48.S% _p4e:-L {all day, and reached its highest at .vvinter e supply of lumber, all 01" I .which went up. in smoke. -This was On the 12th inst re broke out in the planing mill of Alphonse Tessier at Penetanguishene, and in a very short time the whole factory was in flames. The ,wind blew .a regular gale the-time the fire caught, so there was no: chance to" save "anything; . Mr. Teesienhimself , was slightly burned about the face-and `nearly overcome by smoke while saving the books .in the ofce. He had Just got in his the second time this `summer Mr. Tessier has suffered by re, -andthe fourth `or fth time on the same premises. Hi_ loss, ~acc.o1\di`n`g to the Herald, is about $10,000 over and above the insurance he `held. He will run; rebuild. 1 Owen .Qn11nJ ~al fnv` {...+;. L. my .;.:11. . - _ .. "coo-uUIll.yq . `;S_iVr1ee 1910 cm .*timber.-tiegtipg v1antsj.have%%%been -ostab1ish 2,. treat ing,` in 191;l;`.`208,209 gtis, _or; 1`._5 per ,`_g, '_ - .. 4 SAVED CANADIAN RAILWAYS: BY Cano- so-rma Gauss-Tms.` The annual replacement of `cross-` ties in Canadian railway lines is 3 about 10,000,000, according" to statis- :- tics cb\n1pi-led` by the Forestry Branch _- of the; Department. of thevlnterior. - Theaverage life of a tie, i.e., seven A years, could be prolbn`g-ed V to seven-. teen years if. proper preservation treatment were adopted, {and an tan-. niial saving `of 850 -mill-ion'.0 feet, board mea'eu r'e, !.of Atimberg` cold be `effected. '_ 0 This is, equivalent , to three - _,_veaf'ns"\'c1'1t ,of_:__one` `of the .'vj`ery "largest "lls I in:,-,t1ieA;9w1m*- V .-ti, -.- voci-I -asuqav -usvuasuu, Utlllg 80313101191 both at- London and `Stratfoyrd. The Eastern Division is the -same size in mileage as the Middle Division. Mr. Gillan` has been iii ch-arge;of the Middle` Division for. six `years. His successor hasalso had experience in the same division, being stationel both ht. Tnnnn n-5.1` .Q&....1..l.';__.I mi W. H. l`arrell, no,w terminal s'uper- Jintendent at Toronto, will be assist- ant superintendent of the Eastern Division, with offices in -Montreal. This is a promotion for Mr. Farrell to one of the most important sta- tions on the road.` He will be suc- ceeded at Toronto by Assistant Ter-` minal -Superintendent Robert Muir- ihead-, who in turn will! -have ' as his successor Mr. Grant` Gordon, also stationed at Toronto. By these moves two of the most important Toronto ` oricials of the Grand Trunk will be moved to Montreal; These" moves, like that of the superintendent, .will take. eect im_media.tely.- " -|:__ . nu -n I I Therst steptoward the rearrang- ing of the Grand Trunk oicia-ls, : whiph was predicted. some weeks ago, went into effect" Monday, when Super- intendent U. E. Gillen announced that he was leaving Toronto for Mon- ` treal, and that Superintendent H. E. Whittenherg will come to Toronto from Montreal, The `plan stated, as announced was that three general .superintendents- - ,`W01l.1d be appointed, one in Montreal, one in Toronto, and one in`Detroit. The three `slated for the positions by Vice-President How- ard _Kelly are Messrs. Gillen, Whit- .ten:bu.rg.- and Cunningham, and this cha-nging round is to make them familiar .with the different districts. `The title of general superintendent will not be given until January, 1913. Each of these general! superin- tendents will have full charge of their districts,` and report to Vice \ President Kelly. have many other changes under con- : sideration. ; t ` ` The management i __ 4-v The news of. the rising created great excitement here, although there was no street demonstration. Ac- cording to the reports, -General Diaz found `many adherents when he en.- tered the `city, including some of the troops, but the Government has been informed that the 19th Infantry re- ma.ins loyal,eas- well as therartillery. Col'onel'Gfutierrez, commanding the loyal troops, notifies the Government that he will resist. \o\~OOV.`-'5 gIs1:au._;v, nun 1'u1uu1'_ one .DaIlne1' {of rebellion at Vera Cruz. He en- tered the'city,` with 1,500 men and sized the garrison. .Col1ou'nel Diaz was in command of. the garrison, which .cbmpri'sed 500 of the 21st In- fantry and one six-gun battery. T`\-_ LL _-- ` _ ,,, -.~~~ v--v ----- aw-O >vIII4V\-1.70 Diaz then placed men in charge of `the two ` g'unboat:s `Tampico and ,`Bravo lying in_the harbor." ` \ '-rrn - - I A GENERALDIAZ ENTERS VERA Clivz ms . TAKES CONTROL -or CITY. ` Mexico City _ deespatch esa;ys:--:- General .eFelix- Diaz, nephew of Gen- era1`.Porri,o Diaz, the deposed presi- dexitof Mexico, has raisecl- the'.`1r)anner nf ...a1m]I:m.. -4. `T4..- \.~ anowtki IIVJJJIJ I suggestio. - m.~;iMeemnytt_a;:or;eah new-a _G_ladstone,;`wh,o was then jin London. The latter took certain steps a;nd~ told Mr. Mi3C.arthy the next day that he had reason to believe thgt; -the man-A had lft G`annes,_ - . Mr. McCarthy expressed the ho1)e.t that nthing would ever be: told to Mr." Gladstone himself, . and Herbert Gladstone seemed to assent to the I 1--.-;.....u-.L-..... V-A51 `Iris he member of Pa_rlisu_nent 1t01d,.Mr.. McCarthy that he received ;i'n-formation through a _ reliable Fen- Fian source that :1 well-known` desper- ado Cuplnin, ~hadV' arrived `at -.Can_ne,s' from ;_the United States `with the object of killing Premier. -- Chn-thy,j_fi1on'g _. qf Irish ' `ix; .l_ParIigmn't,. . tog his lite_ra,_ry; ,eblkj__liorator,A~ . Can_1pbelI Pned just Apub1ish"ed,.giv.e-details_ of a plot to assassinatp Mr.` f`Glad`stone at Cannes just after "the arrest of James Carey, the leader of "the Phoenix Park murderers in 1882. - .. A MELION DOLLARS BANNER % 0E REBELLIQN G.T.R. CHANGES- sunpuuanulv I01` HHS Increase; `V Eighteen kinds of wood Awere.uscd.' 3 Jack pine,~w?ith 40`pe1_' cent; tam- : arac`k,.with 19 percent; Dbuglas r * (used to a very greab_t,exte.nt in new. ' ~e Iectric_.- lines ,_i_`n _Bri1;ish Cbluyxbia) i with 14.'per_. cent; anclr-.VVhegnA1iocl;,;- gwith { 12 " `cent, Tfvverb re}-V ' Finarkablg Jck net? 791 1;d&r;.r am - A A serious re occurred in the plant of the ..(ol1ing"wood Packing Company on the 13th inst., but the damage was conned by the fire brig- ade to tlie drying room and "storage room, which were damaged to tfie exg _ tent of about $10,000. Toronto has the following number got `educational institutes: Public schools, 74; high schools, 9; technical, 1; separate schools, 22; ; Pxjotestarit T industrial schools, 2; Roman, Catho- lioindustrial schools, 1; 40 colleges, seminaries and pay schools; I` tlhjee ` cathedrals, . about` 245- churchen,` 10 synag9oguea,; 48.` _ .mi_sion,s; \?Q misg : sionnry` ` and ,. n,i1_1e4_ fconvents,.: -. l. V ~ . face with it. I go over every spot of V my face and neck with it until the e the ice is melted I rub my face brisk~ `apple, then that fades away into the uaudlllll \JllC . zcaauu wuy SO many OI us have no color `in.our face is be- cause our circulation is bad. In spite of what the critics say of, us women we seldom do. anything to bring the color to. our cheeks, so I have studied out the following plan. Every morning after I have taken my morning exercise to .wake me up. I take a piece of .ice and wash my ice is `entirely gone. As I begin with a piecehalf the size of my st you can see I get a nice chilling. When ly with a Turkish towel until it'i.< quite dry. My dear, you feel ne and quite .wide awake. It is awfully ` cooling in the first place and makes { youfeel_very lively. For a minute ` or two you are red like a. frost'bitten nicest color. You see the ice not on-ly helps the circulation " with the exencise, but it acts likela tonic on the muscles and takes away that dis- .tressing_ sagging of the muscles, that so many of --us have who stay in the `E city during the hot weather. ? ` i l('I'l 1'_11~u` - Ice? You mean `ice-water ? says the envious one who has a close. in- spection of Miss Lloyd's own pink and whiteness. No, I mean Ice and I .will tell you how to do it, and you do not need a. single. testimonial` to convince you if you ` will stop and think. One reason why so many of ` - L- hv fiilun -can- -- This actress dew not advocate making up. the face except behihd the footlights where the action of thc strong lights demands it. A work of art complexion never fools any- one she rises to ` explain. Just as fruitless as trying to put a pair 01 spectacles on a mule and trying tr.- make the .World regard him {sis a col-' lege professor. ` - 3- _v_-_...<-.v Th}; latest fad says Miss Lloyd, i;~ ` to .wash the fa'ce wiph ice. , Alicf Lloyd, star of Lit/c`1'e Miss Fix-It, "does noct. worry about little things. She: only fumes and frets about. the big things, and `they have to be hard to x and . "very, big at that`. And therein fiesmiss L1oyd s beauty secret in part; that is Why her fac_. is creaseless. IALIGE LLOYD, THE {ENGLISH } SINGER, OFFERS A CHEAP- ; BEAUTY REMEDY. , A tremendous task is presented. calling for 11 Bishop of exweptiona] ability in executive power and `ad~ ministrat-ive talent, and it was felt that in the Reg. Mr. Hamiltonvhn has worked` for =20`years in Japan, they had such a man. He is native of Simcoe County, having resided in Collingwood a. number` of years ago. Beginning its mission in` Japan in 1888; the Canadian Church ' /is "new bringing V to its clima_xAtheT'we1-k- it had` `undertaken in L that `eld by the `conse'cr'a.tion bf a bishop to preside over_. -the , new diocese. of 'Mid;Japan. This diocese is sit'ua.tedu_ in -the mid- dle.of_ the main island.` It embraces- nearly all the staff of Canadian mis- sionaries there. It has within its bounds" six million people, and to minister among these there were" at present eight Canadian clergymen, ve J apan/ese. clergyman, twenty-one J apaneseevangelists, eight Canadian. ladies,~ and six Bible .Women. Two deaths occurred '-at` the: House -of Refuge, Beetou, Vdurng` the" past. two weeks, they being Richard Thornton, aged 71, who ,was "commit ted from Oros about three years ago, and Robert Henry, also aged 71. who was committed from Orillia about ten years ago. ' T` on` the .i)te'vious flay -`there wjasta` procession "of ecolesitmtical . dignita-' 1`-iest qiown; the cathedral` grounds. to the` front ventraxioegof . the cathedral, with the choir leadix1g_the .way up through the-_~cntral< aiolef ;si1`1ging;-tho hymri,.`The `Church's One Founda- tion. . , OACJIIWIOX ' `I " VII V II-IIII.lU`-/I W0 `A11 thej:7.iis:inguishe;1~%{oempany;o bishbps and clergy gatherd for. Provincial Synod of -Canada attended `the Oerniony, and many bf the `laity were also present; .. ' ' ' Cathedral flast. F;-ida'y,_ the vv; .H- bet. J. Hamilton'* was co31secwmted' a bishop, and`had 1ziid' _u~poi1`~. him the responsibi1it;,?.o directing .thChris- % 'tian'mission} in Mid-__.Iapa`n, with six. millions of 1 `people -to minister to. A'I I LL..`~.13-1....__2_1.-J. -_...._-.._. _.B -.5,]3IS"H_()'P or{J%MI1:.;m-;.AI1~: ?SE0R.ATEDA% ~ _ ,-- __ .It s awfully g`oodrvof you to-stay` so long`this evening`,. Mr. Spoonea, snering as you `must: be from those tight. shoesf ."MU1v1-`LED KN6oKs. Verena, bring Uncl other napkin ;he_ ~h-a one under his 'ch1n, _ you him" I c_u re, M T. 5&9 vow When `a pipe from M a bath bm93 18ged mth soap, mix a. handful of soda and (if on-mmrm aaM`+.\....41..... _._ % when boiling ace add g_ little lemon juice to the water. This .will give it -a nice `white appearance and make it dry and grainy. ` cyan Stale crumbs of bread _ for pud- dings should be soaked in cold .Wa.ber or milk. If soaked in hot it will be heavy and mushy. \ Flux. .Bo_i.1. Seven -pvouqnds `of frtiit, three and one-half of sugar and a pint of vinegar is: the standard. proportion fnr rnnnncno AI -.......4 ...`-L`L'-~A --.. ~v.--s-yuo\.u 11:. vyul I/lull for ' vrianner of sweet pickling. T-hespicing ma. be` varied to suitgthe taste.` V 2 5` Pears stewied with ever so -little water, and molasses instead of sugar used foxzseasoning, are delicious, if you like the `flavor. Dates and g-s cut in small. pieces and served with plenty of suga-r make `a good; accompaniment to a dish of rice boilgd in milk.. C1- - uuu ncv Au auauu 21 ` $.71-lvi.I.e.' th:;1v enables you:-1.0 clean it up without the slightest. srtain be- ing" left; V _ When soot or ink, falls on .a car- ; get or rug never attempt to sweep _.t _up atonce, but -cover it thickly vith dry salt? and let it stand a while.` It then Without 5.. _" 1-11. ' `ier: appear nder nuspicu of WOMKN" AU_X"-JIRY OI? ' noun, VICTORIA TuoaI%*1'_I{Au_ In Illa" .. I ;na\x;u 3 A`7;i{$T~.oncen of the W.A. of R V. Hospital in Grand Opera, Tues- `day, November 5th. A . ` BELL RINGERS ARE ALL A0-I OOMPLISHED VOCALISTS The duet tenor and baritone as I `sung by Messrs. Jessop "and Wain is one of the features of the prgoramme of the Royal English Hand Bell Ringers.` As soloists or in quartette .work the Canadian profession cannot produce another to equal Messrs. Charlesworth, Wain. Hewit and Jes- sop. They are a whole concert in 1 themselves. II. -Ll'\./|I`|'.\lI CUB! { _ V Work on._ the Coll1ngwood.sub- stat.i'on was_ohe1d up for a couple of :days, waiting for a,-visit from the H. engineer, Mr. J-aims-, as it was discovered that the ' foundations of the building would haveto rest on] sand, and it was feared that when the 1 weight ..of the three t_ransformers (eaehof which weighs 3-tons)-rested on them, they might sink. It has now been decided to put in- extra` "columns, which .will he sunk down to hard: pan, and also the regular foun- dations will hefootd. `V9. shall get power by December 1st, at the latest. whioh will be earlier than "Barrie WW retrive it. `\ If`, `If 0 O` 1 . 1 I\}\14lV\.-' IUD 5 Perhaps The` Messenger is right. `but, from information, received in Barrie, it is ex-veered ,we will h turning on the Hydro juioe about tho same time as the Shinbuildera. The _esrectionf of the main `line to` Collingwood of the hydro-electric. ex- tension isbeing rushed, `and has al- ready been .. built to -Fergusonvale, says The -Collingwood ' Messenger.` Sixty men_-are employed on the work, and the Tine will be" completed to Collingzwood by November 1st: uu'7-_-1_ -.. `L- n-n:...,..._-.....1 ...-L| %"About78; 3*6.11r< ago there was a ru- ,'m6r`of`s uch_`a fagztorw Vbeing estab-I shed in '-`Bawrrie, `but the promoter,` afte1-,`obtaining options` on various. properties and making` verbal` promis-L` es to return in a few Weeks, vanish- ed as if swallbwed up by E yawning abyss a_t1d.has been heard of. no more. J40 Vlljw \J 9031:, .5911: ';&":C(j;"-?:Of3`:'B+1`;`;t I'(;:fV;ilI fhortly co":-"i sttizctfa in i'll ion t_his~`side of the: line. It is that factory will be 3 located. at, most 1')`:-'oba,bl3r Bri_dgeburg,' so `that `the Bi_1alo.'works and: than new Canadian"fact.o1ry may be under the same_ management. Practically . all the raw `material _from which -the Qil is made--ax-"seed--'coines from N orth-west by` bqat. 1 A .;. reporcm`rent} mgong To rdnto~ `oil dealers ' that, one of the l`arg,estV m'ahufacturers of linseed oil. in7th,e United: States," Spence, Kellbg 0.. "'11- -.l_1),_'_1- ___2I! ...L....A.1_. --_. 1 %:mw%;o:n L;un1ssmY%m CANZ} ADA. 4 ,