Ontario Community Newspapers

The Chronicle Telegraph (190101), 6 Feb 1908, p. 7

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TseS "* he said shyly, and thereupon | d taken the mdg instrument and Whe old negro‘s eyes stretch ~amazement, while < Dan rolled 6 gra ; with delight, and every xd e : njo. into ‘house and made the porch, to the _ deâ€" ‘of them all. And there, too, :,3:; gathered, and even old t was observed slyly shaking â€"â€"s50 that Margatet â€" clapped Iaughed the old woman a =hl~ .. Aiter that . no f came that Chad did â€" not Be night at the Deans‘, _ or ind Dan did not stay at Major y And not a Saturday passâ€" it the three boys did not | go ling with the darkies, or foxâ€" withâ€"the Major and the Genâ€" ‘:a ‘neve forgot that. first might when he was awakenâ€" e near: winding ol .a. horn | the Major jump from bed. |. too, and wikcll the J:l»iOt ‘barn, a dark litt e i on Tads. . ~â€" *_ k k o RO‘s NT > h \greatly pleased, . for | ther tell them that they | e ‘be chival ' Fegh han larr ~fl | vell, he. iewed his old | : Harry laug! ‘at him and | | “ E ~'w ‘ ub, suggested that _ they ‘;W_ uP F on enE s .t and they . would have "a p â€"â€" sure enough."‘ â€" But recei “' plan with _ disâ€" \PDan, at Chad‘s suggestion ‘@eneral to read them the &\ scene â€" in u“';'fl‘o‘-" bited "the little m great when Chad said that sho the C en of Love and she plushed _prettily _ and â€" after 1,â€" that it: would be}. P e ‘ r m _ ,.»‘_ .;;:‘ ‘m;“et would R ‘w s for: them. Indeed, , and the tournament would | .1'3::. "the next â€" Saturday. 'fi‘",fi lay, one of the : sheeu i aver ‘to Maior . B uio (hs other was turned loose in the ‘ pastul and the ‘!Ql‘ to be postboned. . | on the night of the reading kannoe" that _ Harry ~@&nd “}7"'. Chad could play B Passing . old Mammy‘s at night before supper, _ the s Had stopped to listen © to play, and aiter a few tunes, juld stand it no longer. er pickin‘ the banjer & A Sarprise in Biscults in3 a new delight E m”fihlr ‘;: e were the General ‘* sitting silently _: on their -’n-;:.cvd'fl ="4 pr â€" lalighed _ too, : . and ir. ‘Old Roc:"u‘ ahead," know, as. _ everyâ€" wâ€"â€" ahcad for an : hour," \Get my _ bay horse: "yours is too slow." big bay horse. Chad can stick on fuud come," he sein, too?" â€" Chad â€"asked ol his hat when Mooney‘s later, he saw Cl Fox, said the General with quiot satisfac ....,«..uwy-'umwl:‘; Just ‘then a dark object swopt pas q.....nmmrflfi a Yow ory hied on his favorite Bound. _ â€" _ ‘‘*Not now, 1 reckon, . NGQ #2°0, . Rim the General laughed again. Dan and Harry pressed their. horses close to Chad, and all talked in low "He‘s for : the o aaid the Major, Tharply,. sn ho touch :mb'h:m How they racâ€" they thundered over the "turf . and slattered across the road _ and oat For a few moments the Major kept cl«-tocar’.yum;mm ly, but the stuck to the big bay like a jockey, and he left Dan _ and Huryo-thdrmhllum All night they rode under the starlit sky, and ten miles away they caught poor Reynard. Chad was stil in the kill; with the Major and the General, and the General gave Chad the brush with his own hand. i ‘"‘Where did â€" you iearn to _ ride, .‘"Ajn‘t 16 _ dun?" whispered . Daxâ€" Thad answered with a shiver of pure m?” ; @I never learned," said Chad, simâ€" ply, whereat the Major. winked at his friend and patted Chad on the W' y 1 +°> % & i ta lad. "I‘ve got toâ€"let my ‘boys ride better horses, I suppose," ‘said . the: General; "I‘can‘t have a boy who does not know how to ride beating them this way." * Day was breaking when the Major and Chad rode into the stableâ€"yard. ‘The boy‘s face was pale, ~his arms and legs ached, and he was so sleepy that he could hardly â€" keep his eyes The following morning, CUhad ToSe carly and took his old rifle out into the woods, and when the Major came out on the porch before breakfast the { boy was coming up the walk with six squirrels in his hand. The Major‘s eyes opened and he looked â€" at the on the porch.> Every one of them squirrels when Chad dropped them was shot through the head. "Well, I‘m damned!... How many times did you shoot, Chad?" llm" . *"Whatâ€"missed only once?" "I took a knot for a squirrel "How‘d you like it, Chad*" "#I never knowed nothing like it in my life," saif Chad. "I‘m ‘0“. to teach yh to shoot." "Yes, sir," said Chad. As they approached the house, & -qdilirel barked from the woods. "Hear that, Chad?" said the Major. "We‘l get him." k ~nce,"> said Chad. & The Major roared aloud. "Did I say I was going to teach you to shoot, Chad?" f "*Yes, sit." _ The Major chuckled and that day he told about those squirrels . and that knot to gverybody he saw. With every day the Major grew _ fonder and prouder of the boy and more conâ€" vinced than ever that the lad was of his own blood. â€" _ _ â€"_~ .. 3@ _ ‘‘There‘s nothing that I Jike that that boy don‘t take to like a duck to water."â€" And when he saw the boy take off his hat to Margatet and observed his manner with t little girt, he said to himself that if Chad wasn‘t a gentleman born, he ought to have been, and the Major believed that he must be. Everywhere, at school, â€" at the Deans‘, with the darkiesâ€"with everyâ€" lw but Conners, the overseerâ€"Chad became a favorite, but, as to Napoâ€" became a favorite, but, as to Napoâ€" leon, so to Chad, came Waterloo with the long deferred tournament came Waterloo to Chad. â€" And it came after a certainâ€" mirâ€" acle on Mayâ€"day. The llNo_t had ta!: en Chad to the festival where the dance was on â€" sawdust in a woodâ€" landâ€"in the bottom of a little holâ€" low, around which the seats ran â€"as in an amphitheatre. Ready to fiddle for them stood_none other thanâ€" John Morgan himself, his gray eyes© dancâ€" ing “u‘u“mm smile a.lm. handâ€" some 4 , ta a place the dancers, were Rugml Hn:n:g â€"Margaret. . ‘The poised . bow tell, a merty tune tang out, ~and Richard Hunt bowed low to his little partner, who, smiling and blushing, dropped: him the daintiest of graceful> courte ‘lkl. "Then the miracle came to pass. Rage straightway u!lookA 9&(’- u:l! Illll a ©Hneneg M85,. t 22 c ready to strike. Something else that was strange hippened then to Chad. He felt a vory firm and a very gen tle hand on his shoulder, : his :a'r: eyes dropped before the piercing and ):n':lg'. m‘l:o above him, and, a momen was makâ€" his way with M% toâ€" AMfakgnrét, > . c s) 200.X :008 C oR minamals ns L on oie ces â€"shook it as a terrier shakes a ratâ€" and the look on his lace and in his eyes went back a thousand . yealrs. And Richard Hunt, looking up, saw the strange spectacle, understood, and did not even smile. On the contrary, ho went at once after the dance to speak to the boy and got for hi# answer ferce, white, staring : silence and a clinched fist, that was almost 1t was on Thurshay of the followâ€" ing week that Dan told tiim the two rams were once more tied in : his tather‘s stable."On Saturday, . then, they would have the tournament. To get Mammy‘s help, Margaret had _ to Aiian meaint the mtle firlâ€" tor Weted To to whay stent and en se sietls 1 reckon,"‘ he said, and | . Bt. Mojse, Quebee. | P have much plessure‘iu testifying to sufferer for many years with serious livef discase and severe constipation. I had wmhhm“u‘h the back and these were severe and distressing. â€" My digestion was very bad,, with frequent headaches, and I became greatly rus down in health. I took many kinds of liver pills and liver medicine without any benefit, and I was treated by several doctors but nothing “-uym-w':!.mfined. As soon as I began to ‘‘Fruitâ€"as lives" I began to feel better, the dreadful pduillherl(h!ddcwdblck e edet;ud'hcllhldnkuthmm 1 was practically well, 15¢ Snowball was to be Dan‘s squire and black â€" Rufus, _ Harry‘s bodyâ€"servant, would be nua- to Chad. _ Harry was King John, and othér pickanninâ€"‘ nies would be varlets and . vassais, and outraged Uncie Tom, so +Dan told him, would, ‘"by the â€" beard of Abraham,‘‘ have to beâ€"a "Dog of an Unbeliever."" Margaret was undecidâ€" cd whether she would play Rebecca, or the ‘‘Queen of Love and Beauty,"‘ l\ntil Chad told her she ought to be toth, so bothk she decided to be. So all was doneâ€"the spears Aashioned of ‘ul, the helmets battered from tin ! buckets, colors knotted for the spears, ‘and shie‘ds made of sheepskins. _ On. ‘the stiles sat Harry and Margaret in royal state undérâ€"a . canopy. :‘ of ! calico, with indignant Mammy behind them. At each end of the stablr lot was a tent of cotton, and belore sne *‘stood Snowball and before the other ‘black Rufus, each with ns master‘s ‘ spear and shield.. Near Harry stood ;s-.m. the trumpeter, with a foxâ€"horn to sound the cHarge, and four black vassals stood at the stableâ€"door .. to lead the chargers forth. : Near the stiles were the neighbors‘ | children, and around the barn was gathered every darky on the place, ‘whfle behind the hedge and . peeping ‘through it were the Major and â€" the | General, the one chuckling, the other _ ((Sgd) Mapax® Joskrer R1oux., " Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives ‘*â€" or ** Fruit Liver A ian pags nos whi ho mept on recolnt of price. m-fiqu-M Ottawa. | The stableâ€"doors â€"opened, the four vassals disappeared and came forth, each pair leading a ram, â€"one. covâ€" ‘end with red calico, the other â€" with ‘blue cotton, and each with a . banâ€" danna handkerchiel around his neck. Each knight stepped forth from his "tent, as his charger was dragged â€". baâ€"aâ€"ing and buttingâ€"toward it, and, grasping his spear and shield and setâ€" t‘nz his helmet on more firmly, got astride gravelyâ€"each squire and. vasâ€" sal solemn, for the King had given commard that no varlet must show unseemly mirth. Behind the . hedge, the Major was holding his hands to his sides and the General was~ getâ€" | ting grave. It had just occurred â€" to him that those rams would make . for | each other like tornadoes, and he said smiling indulgently. The King waved his ~ hand . just Then and his black trumpeter tooted the charge. ‘"Leggo!‘" said Chad. ‘"Leggo!" said Dan. Salt Lake City. Major. <Don‘t you suppose . they know thatt That‘s what they‘re‘ doâ€" ing it for. Bless my soul!" _ â€" *‘And Snowball and Rufus let go, and each ram ran‘a few paces and stopped with his head close to the ground, while sach knight brandished his spear and dug with his "spurred heels. Oneâ€"charger gave a baâ€"a‘ The other heard, raised his head, saw his énemy, and baâ€"aâ€"ed> an answering challenge. Then they stgrted for each other with a rush that brought a sgudden fearsome silence, quickly : folâ€" lowed by a babel of. excited â€" cries, inâ€"which Mammy‘s was loudest and most indignant. Dan, -uflantâ€" vd, had dropped his Jlance catch hold of his charger‘s wook, and Chad LEARN DRESSMAKING BY MAIL Ia YTour Spare Time at Home, Or Take a Personal Course at Scnool. o anable all to learn, we teach on cash or instalâ€" n::uu.»\. v‘v‘numnqm&muat:l ones a monthâ€"class eommâ€"m"'.u To Goonn sn eotmom bos ie ages Paist Sull to the m%tw \flfllflflhflmfi .hn T9 10 anfons wits cannot ino‘n betreen the ages of 14 an1 40. You cannot learn dressmaking as there ::mfm“'w.mnnmwl:mz wire ‘ Beware of imitations, as we employ no one nc o in coole in comon anl moolled io jone in ahy other country. Write at chcs for parâ€" 1%:.’m hâ€"ve "«t out rate oneâ€"third for a short time. . Address # ® SANDERS LFTSS CUTTING SCHOOL "Of course they will,‘"‘ chuckled the 31 Eris Street. Stratferd Ont., Canada. y â€""I did It, father, I did ‘it," ‘he| @Bovril" o ae on o 1e sE ; .0 |eot ty jour : *No," said Chad, sturdily, "I done | Sold by y our it myselt." S dt t 1. Margaret hbeard and ram from the m hallway down : the steps, brushinb 2 wv her tears with both hands. in bot "Yes, you didâ€" you did,‘"" she cried.| 1 oz,, 2 cz4, 4 "I bate you." "‘Why , Margaret," â€"said ~General | ====â€"=â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" Chad, startied and stung, _ turned without a word and, unnoticed â€"by the rest, made his way slowly aeross the fields. * It was the tournament that, Qtl last, loosed Mammy‘s tongue. _ She was savage in herâ€" denunciation ~of: Chad to Mrs. Deanâ€"â€" so savage < and in such plain langdage that her misâ€" tress checked her sharply, . but . not before Margaret had heard, â€" though the little gitl, with an awed face, slipped quietly out of the reom into the yard, while Harry stood in the doorway, troubled and silent. _ “Don'ilvlhehn!ng:iu way again, Mammy," said Mrs. Dean, so sternly that the old woman swept out of the tooth in high dudgeon. And yet she told ber husband of Mammy‘s charge. "I am rather surprised : at Major Buford." j 4 8 Perhaps he doesn‘t. know," _ said tho â€" General. â€" ‘‘Perhaps â€" it ~â€"isn‘t "u-l. & M;h{?body knows anything about the: ‘"‘That‘s true." ‘‘Well, I cannot have my : children associating with a wail." ‘"He seems like a nice boy." > ‘"He uses extraordinary>" language. F cannot have him teaching my. chilâ€" dren mischief. Why I believe â€" Marâ€" garet is really fond of him. 1 know Harry and Danâ€"are.‘" ~ The ~General looked thoughtful. .. <=> 4k "I will, speak â€" to Major _ Bulord about :him,"‘ he said; and he ‘didâ€" no little to that gentieman‘s ‘comfusionâ€" though he defended Chad stanchly â€" and the two friends parted with some Thereafter, the world changed for Ciad, for is there any : older . and truer story than that Evil has wings, while Good goes a plodding: way? Chad felt the change, in the negroes, in the sneering overseer, and could uot understand. The rumor reached Miss Lucy‘s ears and she . and . the Major had a spirited discussion â€"that rather staggered Chad‘s kindâ€"hearted compan‘on.. It reached the school, and a black haired youngster, named. Georgie Forbes, who had long been cne of Margaret‘s abject slaves, and who hated Chad, brought out the terâ€" rible charge in the presence of a dozen schoolâ€"children at. noonâ€"recess _ one day.. It had been no insult in. the i motintains, but Chad, dazed though he bt o atnntdhuan} Atvnfrntatiint ce nds Bc an in hvc t t stt hate: was, knew it was meant for an inâ€" sult, and ‘his hard . fist shot . out promptly, landing in his enemy‘s chin. and bringing him bawling . to the earth. Others gave out the ery then, and. the boy fought right ‘and left like a~ demon. .. Dan * stood . sullenly near, taking no part, â€" and â€" Harry, while he stopped the unequal â€"/ight, turned away from Chad coldly, callâ€" ing Margaret, who had run upâ€" toâ€" ward them, away at ihe same time, and Chad‘s three friends turned from him then and there, while the boy, dorgetting all eise, stood watching them with dumb .wonder andâ€" â€" pain. ‘The school.bell clanged,â€" but Chad stocd stillâ€" with his heart: welinigh breaking. In a few minutes the last pupil had disappearcd throush . the schoolâ€"room door, and Chad .. stood under a great eimâ€"alone. But only you ‘sick?" "Nothinâ€"no, »sit." R f But the Major was uncasy, and when he rose to go to bed, he went over and put his hand on the boy‘s people saying mean things about you, you mustn‘s pay any attention . to (le';." a." t °' "' You‘re a good boy, and 1 want you to (liva hete with me. Goodâ€"night, Chad," he added, afftectionately. Chad nearly broke down, but ho â€" steadied himself. "Goodâ€"by. Major,‘‘ he said, brokenâ€" 1y Chad The Major stood within his . own door, listening . to the boy‘s »#Aslow tteps up the rsecond flight. "I‘m gotâ€" tin‘ to love that boy," he said, wonâ€" 1d br Back to Kingdom Come when 1 y house “M." he said, ‘if you hear Goodâ€"night, 1 noichhafind w die en se ie iiiat "o "I‘m obleeged to yo8." Good by?" maJ". the CHAPTERâ€"XII wuck him in the him uncosscious. ts were thrown ‘"An‘ I‘m dammed it people :" ‘“"“-l 22 h' l ' I P did,‘"" she cried. | 1 oz., 2 cz4, 4 0z4., 8 ozs. and 1602s. hictan,"" stammered the : Major ::|m§|st at CGrocer heat. the boy moving around in the room above him, and while he was wondering why the lad did not go to bed,. he fell asigep. > s Chad was moving around. _ First, by the light of: a cardi¢, he laborâ€"| , iously dug out a short letter to the Buford about â€" Chad next . morning, Majorâ€" scalding it with tears. Then | he took of his clothes and got his old mountainâ€"suit out of the â€" closet â€"moceasins and allâ€"and put them| on. Very carefully he folded â€". the pretty clothes he had taken offâ€" just as Miss Lucy had taught himâ€"â€" and laid them an the bed. â€"‘Then he pick« ed up his old rile in one hand and his old coonskin cap in the other, blew out the candle, slipped . noiseâ€" lessly down the stairs in his moccas in¢d feet, out the unbolted door â€"and into the starlit nigÂ¥$.° â€" From . <th pike fence he turned once to look back to the dark, silent house amid the dark trees. Then he sprang down and started Igougl the fieldsâ€" his tace set to‘ . the mountains. _‘ It so happened that mischance led: Generalâ€"Dean to go over to see Major The Major listened patientlyâ€"or tried ineffectively to listenâ€"and when the General was through, ho burst _ out with a yehemence that shocked _ and amazed his old friend. ~‘"Damn those niggers!"‘ he cried, in | bomuses. § a tone that seemed to include the| (12) Theeexclusion of Hindo labor. General in his condemnation, ‘"that | . The deputation expressed the willâ€" ho{‘i‘l"m best boy 1 ever â€" knew.} ingness : of organized lator to judge I e he is my own blood,~ he by ~practical results the â€" measures ing to the old portraitâ€"‘ and if~ be spreed on between the Canadian Minâ€" â€"u10d~,,dd04}, oungordâ€" 4243 OX 8400( jsters and the . authorities in Tokio >l:° ::: tlii:d"' I:‘il» 1'1" T hs ‘::: Tor ‘the resiriction of Japansse imâ€" i farm @ll > migrants to this country. â€" ‘ Do you tnderstand that?" 8 Â¥ , ~~‘He‘s gone, by â€"â€". A hint was enough for him. . If he isn‘t the son of a gentlieman, then I‘m not, â€" nor .*He didâ€"but I don‘t believe . he knows, and, anyhow, whatever he is, he shall have a home under this roof as Jlong as he lives."‘ h The General rose suddenlyâ€"stiffly. Do you really mean, Cal, that you are going to let a little brat that you picked up in the roadâ€" only yesâ€" terday stand between you and me?" The Major softemed. â€" "Look here,"" he said, whisking â€" a sheet of paper from his coatâ€"pocket. While the General réad Chad‘s scrawl the Major watched his face. ~"Cal," said the General, holding out his hand, we‘ll tallk this over The bees buzzed around the honeyâ€" suckles that clambered _ over the porch. <A crow. fleéd overhead.. â€"The sound of a crying child ‘came around ‘the corner of the house . from . the qguarters, and the General‘s footsteps died on the gravelâ€"walk, <‘but the Major heard them not..â€" Mechanically he ~watched the General mount _ his black horse and canter â€" toward . the pike gate. The overseer; called _ _to him from the stable, but the Major ,drqfi his eyes to the ~scrawl im his hand, and when Miss Lucy â€" came out he silently handed it to hetr. "I reckon you know what folks is aâ€"sayin‘ about me. I tol‘ you myâ€" self. But I didn‘t know hit was any harm, and anyways bit ain‘t . my fault, I reckon, an‘ 1 don‘t see how folks can blame me. But I don‘ want nobody who don‘ want me.. An‘ I‘m leavin‘ ‘cause I don‘t wantâ€"to bother {u. I never bring nothing but trouâ€" le nobow an‘ I‘m goin‘ back to the mountains. Tell Miss Lucy goodâ€"by. ’shmln‘?ltypcd to me, but 1 know <she didn‘t like me. â€"I joft the hos Jor you. If you don‘t have no ‘"Iâ€"believe he told you what. h« use for the saddle, 1 wish you‘d grvo hit to Harry, ‘cause he tuk .. up me at school when I was fightin‘,. though he wouldn‘t speak to me no more. I‘m mighty sorry ~toâ€" leave you. I‘m obleeged to you ‘cause you wus so good to mie an‘<I‘m â€" goin‘ to see you agin some day, if I can. Goodâ€"by." & + "Left that damned old â€"mare. to pay for his clothes and his . board and his schooling,‘" ~ muttered . the Major. ‘‘By the gods"‘â€" he rose sudâ€" “li and strode awayâ€""L beg. yout + m’ . wnel es o s "He Dawn that morning ~found . Chad: springing from a bed in a ha tackâ€" tin miles from Lexington. ;; dusk thddl!.l"uouthed@ol the Bluegrass and that night he stayed at a farmâ€"house, philn boidly, for he hid learned now that the . waylarer was as welcome in a Bluegrass farmâ€" house as in a logâ€"cabin in the mounâ€" tains. Higher and highot. grew the green swelling slopés, until, climbing one about noon next day, he saw the blue . foothiMs â€" of the Cumbetland M\h\“fl-‘n‘fl“ â€"A tear was running down each : of Miss Lucy‘s faded cheeks.. _ _ . _ trom pure sostasy, ‘The " is.all boet: nutrition like to ‘stay the : dy than a cen! never my e discussion of mattets afteciing FA. A Dootion, N. hk dode gc,ln-nm ol Canada. : ‘The depuâ€" | Momey is ban. Ullcs: Uenel + in V tation was made up‘as follows:; ] ericus k. Baaliths : . S 000. . A&s; Vmflb.dli?., President. it R impsca, ‘or Vice f F Pleadacn. es Clement & Clement JP‘-,mak M. Draper, Secretary, ;-d BJ RRISTERS, sOLICITORS, ET Â¥ & ’W. W of the WarTtcaLr®k BL00K > '. minion â€"â€" Trades and Labor c.,.‘w: Cor, ‘King and Foundry #t.. Bort Amongs the requests which they proâ€"| @ . CLEMKNT, K C. K. W, OL fexred were the following: Sebner ds deitattin.ccaaliinsen ce atenameiteaivnitii _ 42) The passage ol a~ workmen‘s compensation act for the Dominion to apply to companies boiding szecial charters, « | â€"(8)° An increase in letter cartiet‘s ~(1) ufihuu based on Mr. ‘Macâ€" ketizie King‘s report on the conditions of the employment in the Bell Tel» phone: Co.‘s service in Toconto. (3) An increase in letter cariiet‘s tates of pay.. _ j (4) An official inspection ol runâ€" ning gear on vessels for . the protecâ€" tion of longshoremen. f 2. (6) â€" That the Governaisut skould endorse â€" and catry through Mr. Verâ€" rile"s bill, ~now before Parliament, providing for an eightâ€"hour day on all Government works; (6). The appointment of 1 commis sion on {eClaical educarion. 5 â€" (8). Thatâ€"Mr. Monk‘s bill to asini the or;anization of ° coâ€"operative socieâ€" "hn should be carried through < Parâ€" Hamcnt, and ‘that it should apply to coâ€"operative banking as well as to coâ€"operative ‘trad ng ard manuiacturâ€" ».8. â€" ; =(T) That:â€"the public lands of" the Dominiâ€"n should be reserved for bong fide settlers: (0) .Old age pensions, _ â€"(10y The amcadments, of. the TLemiâ€" gux : Act of: last sessicn to preseut the â€" importation of~â€" strikebreakers while investigations under this . law are going on. s The izl.l'.lfiOI' was assured by <the Prime: ister _ that _ when a rearâ€" rangemcnt was being made ol the Caâ€" binet portfolio, it was his own . view that a separate (minister should â€"be appointcd to take charge of the Deâ€" partment â€" of. Lator. Af the same time under Mr. Lemieux‘s administraâ€" tionm oi iuat .oranch ofâ€" the public serâ€" vice, "the interests of the working classes were alnzady being well lookâ€" edâ€"after. * f Theâ€" control of telephones was beâ€" inz invested in the Railway Commisâ€" sicn, : the â€" Premier observed, which would enable that body to protect the interests â€"of all ‘telephone operators. Mr. Lemieux observed that the civil service commission was dealing effecâ€" Tively : with the claim of the. letter carrtiers to ‘increased wages and . that (12),. The eexclusion . of Hindo labor. The deputation expressed the will ngness ‘ of organized lator to judge he was prepared. to follow ‘their reâ€" commendation. . As regards the control of Dominion Isnds, it was the policy of the Govâ€" einment. already to reserveâ€"all land for bone fide setticrs; (11) â€"The~abolition of : immigration Regailingâ€" the â€"establishment of coâ€" operative banks, the Govennmient oad to . be most careful to do enything which would take from the security of Canadian banking institutions. ~The Premier saw no necessity _ for the establishmentâ€"of a system of old ge pensions in Canida at the preâ€" sent time. ‘The Japanese immigration question declared Mr. Lemisux, is naw settled and measures had becn taken â€" which would result in preventing any rco>â€" surrence of the Hindo invasion of last ‘ Consideration was promised to the otherâ€" nequests presented by the depuâ€" tation: AU i year The Lemieux Act might not beâ€"perâ€" iect, but it was better to thoroughly test all its provisions before introâ€" lucing amendments. Sir Wiltrid‘s Reply Use w- Extract of !fll lb -flhlo‘-mm g,â€".é::.mngg many N-vt;'lx:l-:d-iâ€"; Grippe altkost hourly service in the Stop it kitchen. s !'“ de W:g}.h% colds | wi al cap lg-g Cure T meur‘® Extract of &"A’r:' o u ® Old Age Pensions pamktoreer Tegtves the trus beef fiavor to poast and baked meats and fowle â€"smahlos the cook to create many dainty dishes â€"and is of alttest hourly service in the Orsiaire ‘Reoosmusei ‘Blocks wine m Wess w .A nuaor B.a. * Barrister, Soliciter _ Notacy coory pavion oi iegecma ie Beriin, Telephone , YÂ¥ : â€" Barrister, solicitor, conreyazcer @0 â€"â€" 1 ns :x opposite Court tiouse, former & DR, J, F G. HUGBES. ne secoud Thursday and Friday e Mmmd.‘-:'m ‘p.u.wnu.inndn. QDUNTU '-.!..; vhice wili be closed mtfitfl‘ W. R.Wilkinson, L. D. $., 0.0.8 For â€" mutual convenience . patient trom & distance are particularly â€"re« quesied to make appointments. Â¥ uimet: Over bank ol baniwo,Beriin «2 : Chinago OOMadn aF Treatal > Ensatens Rorel Coiegs of Demal Surmates of uis uental_office above Mr J. Uffemann‘s â€"store Tisi® BL, Jaobbs svreiy iss ano d Piany of w ~*#4 & 4 EXPERIENCED VETERINâ€" ABY ° SURGEON â€" w} "~, ma 5s? ‘:'ii' Vikecns 1 Polint, s ofge ns remamat . Offl.eâ€"Post Ofids, ‘ St. Jacobs, Ont, Shorthand and Teélegrachic Departments are Msm nc h a have become of en oi ernapaan m we ldlt Com “'a cipiiines ndies, onmier on ied eaige pemest Porlleare: gafe. ~Preventics c n6 laxative, nothin ing. â€" Proamonia > Patents soliciting for Canada and the United States. S Mechanical â€"drawings made for all claases of machisery & ote. â€"â€" Blue printing at short notide. . _ Phone 494. Office 28 King W. _ Boom 3, Berlin, Ont. _ M. ORAM, u“fl;m successful train es ue W ratan Onietio. Onr Corathare ntario, Onr Cor Chas. Knechtel Architect RLLIOTT & MoLAGHLAN.. . BENTIST.. : L W lglflg T pe â€"is SwWeeping U 1t â€" with â€" Preventic deoply stated. To with these little ! Tablets is surely Preventics contain ative. nothing hars INVESTIGATE g & Ksb Bs., Waterion, MEDIOAL L. D. 8. D. D. S. . Graduste o jnto the merics of the STRATFORD, ONT Oc ifellow‘s Block, :"? Waterloo. WELLS, D. D _ S., Dentity AND 3URGEON,

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