1 i r------------------r te hie A SUBSTITUTE WHAT ANTHONY MALONE HAS TO SAY. About Artifigial Coal--It Could be Made as it is in France and Germany. Anthony Malone of the R. .& O. ser- vice, Toronto, and formerly of King- ston, gives the following statement, regarding a substitute for coal : "I think we have in our province sufficient material from which cheap fuel "can be formed, not only to tide us over the present emergency, but to keep us in the future independent of fuel supplies from the United States. Most housekeepers are familiar with the 'Blue Flame Coal 0il Stove," but as this requires refined oil for its fuel, it? can hardly be made to fill the bill. Crude petroleum, however, is cheap, CAPTAIN CHARTRAND. and can? with certain ingredients add- [ was in Europe and Africa, he was for and used as furnace and accomnlishing ed to it, be solidified, coal in any ordinary stove. One method for this is as follows: Take liter of petroleum, 10 per cent. of resin,' 150 grammes powdered soap, 333 grammes caustic soda. "Fhe mixture one 4 is heated and Stirred at the same time. Solidification be gins in about ten minutés, and the op eration is then carefully, watched. I there is a tendency to remain liquid a little more soda is added. The mix ture is stirred until it is poured into moulds, which are placed in a drying stove for ten to fifteen minutes, then cooled, and the 'artificial coal is ready for use, and will burn with very little smoKe or ashes. A cheaper fuel, and by some preferred, is made by adding to the above twentv per cent. of wood sawdust, and <wenty per ¢ent. of clay or sand. "Phis artificial coal, T understand, is. extensively used in Germany and France, and "in: trials gravbeat-Maisdél Jos, on several tug boats; these---'pe- troleum briquettas' (as they called them), burned in the ordinary boiler furnace without any special prepara- tion gave three times as much heat as coal of the same size. The petroleum could be brought in tanks, and the manufacture of the 'artificial coal,' be carried on within easy carting distance of the city. Who will take this matter up, and put this fuel on the market 7 Isn't It Odd? That the Berlin police have issued an order forbidding public houses to | sell 'cold drinks" below a certain tem perature ? That a man should want to pass all his, time standing his head "? The man-in qfiestion isan of a Vienna asylum and requires con stant watching lest he injure himseli | by the practice, . . That a clock which strikes thirteen should be used in the Bridgewater | Trustees' extensive collieries, Lan- | cashire, England ? The employees complained that they were late returning f Tunch be mmate from cause they did not hear the old clock strike one. { That a letter mailed from Yankton, | {.0., in 'the August of 15885 should ! just have been returned to its writer? | © The letter followed the man to whom it was addressed fo years: passed a few more in clerk's safe, and at last started other tour after the man who hal mailed it. That hundreds of horses and sands of cattle in the Hawaiian ands never take a drink of water? They live in the upper altitudes of the mountains, - where the cattbe ryn | wild from the time-thev_are--born un til they are sent to the slanghta house. Except possibly for two or three months in the rainy season there are no streams Qr pouls of water 4n any part where the catile roam, but everywhere there grows a recumbent, jointed grass known by the native name of maninia. This is both feod and drink. thon Isl $1. Excursion To Rochester. On Sundayy abel }2th, North King leaves at 5 p.m in. Rochester. Home Tuesday ing. Fare, 31 mi iopuiiiced $1. The Carnovsky company tikes up carpets, cleans. them and relays at such low prices that it does not pas for householders to do if thémselves. | Ontario street. 'Phone 74. | » | ceptea a. prof of His Very Interesting . 7° Career. Capt. Chartrand was born in St. A Shere Vincent de Paul, November 22nd, 1853. He went through a college course at Terrebonne Ce Masson. He started studying law in 1870, but soon gave it up to go to Red River with the second expedition, under fore that he had graduated at the Montreal Military school, then com- manded by Lieut.-Col. D'Orsonnens, in 1871. He obtained his first and se- cond-class certificates. In February, 1876, he was appointea a captain and adjutant in the 65th Battalion. In the meantime, he had been connected with the press. At first with the Bien Pub- lic, with David & Beausoleil, in 1873, then with the National, of Hon. La- framboise. In fact Capt. Chartrand has almost always been connected withthe Montreal press. When he = L vears the correspondent of La Patrie, of M. Beaugrand, and I'Electeur, ol (uepee. ~ Even now he writes weekly in La Patrice and La: Presse. In' 1877 Capt. Chartrand went to France and enlisted as a private sol- dier in the Foreign Legion in Algeria. There he dbtained in IS7S and 1879, two years successively, the first prize at rifle shooting, over the whole Al- gerian army. In 1852 he was 'appoint- ed second lieutenant of the 3rd Zou- aves, at Constantine, Algeria. In 1886 he was made a professor of for- tification ana musketry at the Mili- tary school of St. Hippolyte du Fort Gard, where he stayed four years. In 1888 he was made a lieutenant in the 27th Battalion of Chasseurs Alpins, at Menton, and on the" 4th of May he was promoted to a captaincy in the 7th Chasseurs Alpins, at Nice. Capt. Chartrand served cighteen years in the French army, of which eight were colonial campaigns and two war eam? paiens-He Assisted at three fights. in Sud, Oranais, against Bon-Amema, chief of native rebels, on the frontiers of Morocco,» near. Figuig. He was twice slightly wounded, and then pro- moted to Chévalier de "la Legion d"Honour, for good services, bravery and efficiecney in campaign. Besides he has the colonial medal for his colonial campaigns. Capt. Chartrand retired from the I'rench army in 1305, returned to Can- ada, where he founded La 'Revue Na- tionale. In September, 1897, he ac- rship at the Royal Military Colleg Kipgston, and has heen connected with' it ever since. While in France, Capt. Chartrand wrote a great many military studies on different subjects--organization of military schools, musketry; cadres of infantry. ete. He also wrote literary works : "Expeditions Autour de Ma Tente," at Plon, Nourrit & Cie., Rue Garanciere, Paris. and 'Souvenirs de St. Maixent." - and "Au Pavs des at Charles Lavanzelle, 11 St. Andee des Arts, Paris and Lim- > He was '/made a member of Societe dey Gens de Lettres ue France®for these three last works, It < to he! remarked that Capt. Chart rand is the first and only French-Ca- nadian who ever attained th the rank of an officer in. the French army. Cant. Chartrand still continues to write for the press, as' Whig readers can attest with ple His "Say- ies and Comments." which gppear in Whig from time to o, furnish reading. The t points writer hri show an of oricinality. He gl so contributes regularly to La Patrie, where his articles meet with ecual sue- Etapes.™ Sure. acceptable hich the o rloawine fond ---------------- Florida Fancies. Florida, Oct. 10.--Last 1. Wallace and wife attended the wal of their cousin, Mrs. Sleath, ¢ Mrs. E. Clark, Kingston, < spending a week with her mother, Mrs. JJ. Martin. 'W. Parrét and wife, after spending part of the summer vis- Wednesday ing friends in Chicago, London and other parts. have returned home. Mrs W. Topping, Elgin, is spending a week r father's, JJ. Wallace. J. Clax \ UU coinpiissioner, éInverary) is at H i ® . Ar ial Blend" tea ? e with vom next orgder. We guarantee satisfaction I'he quality is awav up, but the price is low, 33 cents the pound. Jas. Red- den '& Co. command of Col. Oshorne-Smith. He {magistrate's desk and that the labor OTTAWA SAFE FROM ANY CHANCE OF A COAL.FAMINE. Petition to the Government for the Remission of Buty on Coal --Governor-General Has Power to Grant it. is Ottawa, Oct." 11.--A barge lo of soft coal reached the city this morn- ing and was quickly picked up.. Six more loads are on the way and due here early next week. There is now very little probability of a famine in Ottawa. The petition forwarded to -the gov- ernment by tha city of Ottawa re- views the coal situation, points . out that owing to the strike Ottawa householders have to obtain their sup- ply from other places at greater dis- tances, and that the remission of du- ties would 'have the effect of reducing the price. The petitioners, therefore, pray : That an order-in-council be passed under the powers conferred up- on your excellency in council by sec- tion 78, of chapter 29, of the revised statutes of Canada, entitled "An act respecting the public revenue, the rais- ing of loans authorized by parliament, and the auditing of the public ac- counts providing for the remission of all duties on 'bituminous coal to be imported into Canada from the Brit ish Isles ana foreign countries," during the existence of the present scarcity of the said commodity. The Golf Championships. In the ladies' tournament at Toron- to Mrs. Dick, of Toronto, and Miss Thompson, of St. John. defeated Miss Bond, of Montreal, and Miss Harvey, of Hamilton, in the semi-finals. Mrs. Kay and Miss Butler, T'8ronto, won from Mrs. Musson, of Montreal, aod: Miss Whish, of Toronto, in the consolation semi-finals, . In the finals Miss Thompson won. Miss Thompson and Mrs. Dick won in the driving competition. Mrs. Fayette Brown, (Montreal) won the approaching and putting contest, Mrs. Meredith (Quebec), second. In the inter-provincial match Ontario ladies won: Result Of Trial. Philadelphia Record. That a trial of newspaper advertis- ing may make a regular and con- stant acvertiser of a business man is shown in the, experience of the proprie- tor of a Chicago laundry. When the Boxers had the foreigners shut up in Peking and public feeling was intense in this country, this white laundry- man thought it was a good time to take advantage of the anti-Chinese sentiment by advertising in the news- parers, The results were good that he has continued to advertise, and says it pays. gpart from any race feeling. [0 "5 Fined Ten Cents. Brockville Times. Police Magistrate Deacon tried a charge of wilful damage to property preferred by Thomas O"Brady against Michael Ivey, both residents of the township of Lansdowne. The offence complained of was chopping down a fence. The case was « stablished and Ivey was fined ten cents and ordeved to pay $12.05 costs, and 83.90 dam- ages to the plaintifi. Ha paid the fine and eosts and the damages were allowed to stand pending the defon- dant's promise to renew the fence. Being Finely Fitted Up. All the K. & P. passenger coaches, undergoing repairs in the C.P.R. shops at Montreal, will be in commission again on the road by November 1st. The cars are being fitted with West- inghouse air brakes, as are also the locomotives. The coaches, besides be- ing painted" after the pattern of C.P. R. coaches, will"bhe heated by "steam from "the locomotive. Buys Hotel At St. Agathe. - Montreal Ilcraid. I. H. Dunham, Savoy hotel for five Balmoral hotel for nearly ten years, has just. purchased the Castle des Monts at St. Agathe. Plans are to be preparea for the rebuilding of the ho tel, which it is proposed to make one of the finest of its class. who © managed the vears and the Almost Destroyed. Mexico City, Oct. 1l1.--Advices have been received of the almost complete destruction of the mining town of Marfil,.in the state of Guanajuato, hy a flood. The whole town was inun dated to a depth of more than" ten fet washing away the buildings and drowning more than twenty people. A Severe Frost. The first severe frost of the season was that of Thursday night. The gar deners report much damage done to tomato vines and squash. The frost this vear has heen. much later than usual in arriving, and, for this farm- ers and gardeners are glad. '" Bibby's."" Oak Hall. Bibby's. Overcoats, see the new Westminster, just the coat good dressers want, 8%, $10, 12.50, $15. The H.' D. Bibby Co: Mrs. T. R. Carnevsky, who has bgen attending the CC. E. convention in Ottawa; has returned. During her ub sence she visited at Rev. George Ed wards', Almonte, and while in Ottawa was the guest of Rev. J. Grenfell. Three candidates have announced themselves for the mayoralty. It is said that Ald. Walkem may try for people may also ngme a candidate. Rev. M. A. Mackinnon. M.A. a cent Queen's graduate, has been in- ducted into the pastorate of Park street Puesbyterian church, Halifax. The members of the Flower Mission, conducting a jumble sale in the = va- cant store recently occupied by Ug low & Co. took in over $20 this morning. * 5 "The distinguished "sisitine Congre- re- gatiohal ministers: and laymen, whe arf ed to-day, will be the guests | of. Mrs. George Robertson and J. A Hegdry. : Alds. White and Graham were on the wrket Square this morning proseent r their mayoralty canvas Vigorous © "For some unaccountable reason "Broadbrim's" letter has not reached "us, this week, for publication. " 4 HES LRU #s ARCTIC COAL. Mining Industry Amid .Spitzbergen Ice ahd Snow. . _The Norwegians are turning their attention to the large and promising coal fields on the southwest coast of Spitzbergen. For several years past their fishermen, while in these coastal waters, have observed the outcrops of coal. Their stories aroused interest at' home and the coal fields were ex- amined as a possible source, of profit. Several companies have béen formed to carry on coal mining in these new fields and there is much confidence in Norway that. the new Arctic enterprise will be profitable. ' Consul Nelson writes from Bergen that the coal of Spitzbergen, is finely adapted for the manufacture of gas. The fuel burns with a high flame and is extremely combustible. Although Spitzbergen is in the Arctic regions, coal may be mined there to consider- able advantage. In the first place it has been found that no large capital is required to start the work, as is the case in civilized countries. There is no costly ground to buy, no difficult foundations to build in the way of shafts, and as the land is not inhab- ited there are no property considera- tions to interfere. Transportation from the mines to the ships will be inex- pensive, the situation of the mines favoring the towage by rope of rail- road cars loaded at the mines, Considerable work has already been done. The mining engineers on the ground give their opinion that the cost of the coal will not exceed $2.40 per ton. They say that with a force of sixty workmen, 25,000 tons may be taken out annually. The coal can be transported only in the summer, but the works may be kept going the year round. In Sweden some of the best steel- making iron ores are being mined in large quantities, many miles north of the Arctic circle. The only railroad now existing in the Arctic regions, carries the ore from these far north- ern mines to the Baltic; another Scan- dinavian Arctic enterprise that = will give a busy aspect to the southern shores of the Spitzbergen Archipelago is likely soon to be well developed and as prosperous as iron mining. in Arctic Sweden, > \ CAPE TO CARIO RAILROAD. Rapidly Pushed Through Rhodesia to the Zambesi. Since the Boer war the road builders on the Cape to Cairo railroad have been pushing it rapidly toward the north. The road has been surveved as far as Victoria Falls, the largest falls in the world, on the Zambesi river. The roadbed has been graded for ab- out a third of the distance between Bulawayo and the Zambesi, the rails are being laid and it is expected that late next year trains will be running to Victoria Falls all the way from Cape Town, 1,700 miles." Meanwhile a force of surveyors is laying out the route far north of the Zambesi. The route has been changed from that originally contemplated by Mr. Rhodes. His intention was to extend the road to the northleast of Bula- wavo, carrying to Lake Tanganyika; but before the survey was made ex- plorers began to give definite inform- ation about the coal mines which Liv- ingston discovered on the banks of the Zambesi many years ago. It has been ascertained that the coal strata in this region carry an enormous amount of the fuel and it is proposed to be- ein mining it as soon as the railroad reaches Victoria Falls. As the line has thus heen deflected far to the west, it has been decided not to extend it for the present through German East Africa near Lake Tanganyika, but to Lake Kasali 700 miles north of Victoria Falls, in the Congo Free State. From this point the tracks will be carried down the Congo river to Stanley Falls. Here the line of road projected by King Leo- pold of Belgium, is to be built to Al- bert Nyanza, where the Nile has its outlet. This stretch of road, theréfore, between. Stanley Falls and Albert Ny- anza is to be a link in the Cape to Cairo railroad. The: most astonishing things are done in Africa nowadays, and the world will not be very much surprised when it finds in a few vears more that this long railroad, extending from the extreme south of Africa to the mouth of the Nile, is a full-fledged reality. New Railway In Northwest. Wash., Oct. 11.--Though the terminal objective points of the proposed Felt Electric railway have been kept | something of ca secret,..it has developed that one of its lines from Tatoma. at least, will be ex- tended to Steilacoom, via American Lake. From this terminal connection will be made by hoat with Olvmpia, giving a quick and direct service be- tween Tacoma and the capital city. Tacoma, Inspector Of Headstones. Washington, D. C. (Oct. 11.--In- spector of headstones" is the govern- ment position to be filled at a civil service examination to-day. The va cant berth is in the quartermaster's departipent at Boston. The salary is 81,000 a year. ie 34 Scarcity of coal and the high prices of fuel mean cold homes and much sickness. "s "While T don't mean to recommend the use of '77° instead of' firewood, I do know that its use prevents----and breaks up colds; prevalent even now, and promise to be more so as the sea son advances.' ; Your office or shop may be cold, vour home poorly heated, but if you vou will be freer from sick- sooner. than your take "777 ness, and neichbor. The use of Dr. Humphreys' stores the checked circulation, starts the blogd. conrsing. through the veins, and breaks up a cold. recover Td re- Dru ts, 23 *s Book M recvipt of price. - Dox fled Fre Humphreys' Homeopathic Midicine Co., Cor William and John Surcets, New York. G. SATURDAY. OCTOBER #1 Holds Public Reading in Schools preme court has handed down a deci- sion forbidding the reading in. the pu- blic schools of the Bible or the sing- ing of such songs as 'Nearer, My God to The 4 school in a school building, in school hours, and iu the presence of the pu- pils, consisting of the reading of pas- sages from the Bible and in the sing- ing of songs and hymns and offering prayer to the Deity in accordance with the doctrines, beliefs, customs or us: ages of sectarian churches or religious organizations, is forbidden bv the con- stitution of the state." jel Freeman. an atheist, who holds the honor of being the in the United States. James Bible was not a correct trans- lation of the Scriptures, but was a version "#specially made for the Church of England; that was unfit to be read aloud, and, being part of the Christian religion, was therefore sectarian. nent persons numbered among the pas- sengers sailine for 'the United States to~dav i= Hall Caine, the Manx auth- or, who is to pay his second visit to America. The primary purpose of the present trip is to see Viola Allen in "The Eternal Citv," improbable that he: will be heard in public readings in some of the large citi gs, £10, £12, $12.30, 814, $15. The H. D. Bibby Co. : 1 THE LARGEST FLOUR MILLS i» sA¢ BRITISH EMPIRE AND THE PALACE FLOUR MILLS OF THE WORLD \ be the Etontest flour milling concern in the British . Empire is certainly a distinction for any ia ug: To have this industry in Canada is a matter of pride and congratulation to Canada and Canadians. This is the centenary year of 'the vie Flour Mill a Papaya the hoes pecan ant Hos grow! e wheat ucing consu bn of Canada. ent as its past has heen, its magnitude to-day, and its Pretiion for the future are so great that a skel of this Company will prove of more than passing interest to our readers, Nearly One Hundred Elevators. NEw elevators scattered over the vast wheat areas of Western Canada receive the great bulk of the finest wheat grown in the world. The buyers are men who have been identified with the Ogilvie Company for man They are thoroughly trained in their du and know both uirements of the Com) and the quality and ¢haracter of the grain. The most friend] Telasiony have always existed beiwetn the Company and the farmers of the: No complaints have ever been made that advantage was taken of local conditions to compel farmers to accept.an uureason- ably low price for gain, How much the development of the N West 1s due to this great pioneer Company wuold be hard to estimate. The production of a crop, no matter how great, is of small moment, unless there are purch: , receiving, and shipping depots. This wheat in turn is ground in the different mills of the Company, which Sate a daily output of 7,500 barrels of flour, It is dificuls to realise the immensity of this amount. Great as it is, the management are prepar- ing to add still another great mill, increasing the capacity to the astonishing quantity of over 10,000 barrels daily. Three Great Mills. TERE are now three mills in gperation, The Royal Mills at Montreal, the Glenora Mills at Montreal and the Winnipeg Mills. A visit to any one of these mills is a a asitre and an education. Thewriter visited the Royal Mills at Montreal and his preconceived ideas of a great flour mill were « destroyed. . : The first thing su, ted is immense capacity, the next, perfect system, and last, absolute cleanliness. The Royal Mills and the Glenora Mills are both situated on the Lachine Canal where enormous water power privi- leges belong to the Company, and day and night, except Sunday, without break or cessation the work on, Almost noiseless in its operation the giant id carried and crushed and ground and sifted until the trans- forming process was completed, and from the choicest wheat , 2 he market the finest flour in the world is made. The wheat is received in a®steady stream from the elevators and the flour is shipped in waiting cars and vessels to the markets of the world. Nething but a visit to any one of the mills conveys any adequate idea of how Ogilyle's Flour is made. Even figures convey a very imperfect idea of the magnitude -of the work, of the ground area, and the floor a the millions of bushels of grain bought and the millions of barrels of flour sold. There is an army of em- ployees including the office staff in the head office Montreal, the managers and workmen in the mills and elevators, the experts and the buyers, the carters and men in other capacities, and there is a feeling of intense loyalty to the interests of the Company amongst these employees, most of whom havé been identified with the Company for many BATS. y The great rooms are sp Elessly white and clean, not a _ mark on the floors or walls; and most surprising. not a particle of flour or dust floated in the air. So attractive are the mills as show places that no less than 3,000 ladies have visited the Winnipeg Mills of this Company during the past 18 months. - 2 Appreciated by Royalty. HE most distinguished of these visitors was H. R. H. The Duchess of York--now Princess of Wales. So charmed was she with the sarroutidiuge that the Ogilvie Flour Mills Co. have been appoin by Royal Warrant, Millers to the Prince of Wales, and bakers in -. the Royal Household are commanded to use no other flour 'than the product of this Company's mills, _ There is a Yrigle compliment in this appointment, to the country, to the Company, and to the product. . The attention that is naturally directed to Canada mw such unique distinctions as this does not affect simply the one line but kindred lines and generally speak! a the agricultural products of Canada. Practically the whole of the Dominion gains by the position occupied by the Ogilvie Flour Mifls Co., apart from the great sums of money spent by them in Canada. FORCES BIBLE OUT. Unconstitutional. Lincoln, Neb., Oct. 11.--The state su- cessful of Panmure > The decision is : "Exercises by a teacher in a public | ev 0 ents, selves, figured often in been steadily out The action was one brought bv Dan- | coups. first homesteader | the brokering in There was, of | King Freeman maintained that the don, dressed to Sir Thomas that it contained much "Give me The point. Hall Caine Coming. London, Oct. 11.--Among the promi- | share premium," reply. and McLeod's Rum though it is not the Cleanges Shrewd Broker Who Floated Lip- ton's Shares. One of the shrewdest and most suc- London's stockbrokers was Gordon, He was known as one of the best of good~fellows," as most dandically lavish of brokers who 4 made a shrewd bargain for cli- or a shrewder bargain for them- In the early glamor of Panmure Gordon's flotation of Lipton's was still over the city, he his horses, his chariots and his neck- ties. But of later years the great firm of Panmure Gordon, Hill & Co., has amassing wealth achieving any An illustration of his methods is given in an account of how he did course, tion for the work. fection, as he ever was, dropped in on Lipton, and hailea with the following : the job and quarter. of 4 million in your, pocket." offer was terse and to the "How ?"' queried Sir Thomas. "By charging 'em the deal was and then. So, too, was the promised £250,000 of sheer profit." E------ Tonic. head prevents the hair from falling off, pro- == / The Prince of Wales' three feathers on each bag is a distin, J : sonsunierns t Canada and the flour E two brands sold Fru counties tts world 'ae Hos Clest ora Patent and Ogilvie's Hungarian Patent. thas science and mechani bined eould do for the of floul maki led to the manufacture of Ogilvie's Flour and as they have led in the past; #0 have they the advantage -evolution of flour The wy oF r mak ny .. grain SRR ms oa ol¢ Present condition as indicated 2 aces thesé two brands which are th of the hie of'véreals." © is To { e , J amo! the most ex) ncn {ith the o 8 Ol e the mo ofisl ade OE or passe see that fts y is Vi for this work alone an is maintained. OF Freaed ib Garin, SE Rh Glol go uti other papers base f their quo Ivie's s. MRRRRS U5 aN 8 ATT te : Ogiivics buns whether large or Small Shiokild: understand that, it is to their ihterest to use this flour in to inferior qualities, and in getting Ogflvie's they may rest satis ed Ihat they have the best. * 1 It is a deduefion simply made from the facts, that it would be impossible to produce a better flour than o's The conditions and sircumstinces are 80 th favor that it would hardly be reasonable that any other Manufacturing concern should cl an equality of pro- uct. . The bakers of Canada are the best iy amongst Canadians of the properties of flour and they the advantage of using the very best flour accept Ogilvie's as giving the greatest satisfaction. The success of a business can be made or marred ac: cording to the good or bad quaiiey of a material used, and Bh obtadned it in a Si when the best can be ¢hows only reasonable commercial instinct to select the best in Preference even to second best. > : "Ogilvie's Royal Breakfast Food" and "Ogilvie Oats" T the nt time we are deluged with a multitude A App foods, and many of uncertain. ot still more uncertain value, A great many of these are imported so that the item of duty is added to original cost and consumers in Canada pay fancy for them. The basis of a breakfast food is the giz of its sungivnant par ivio's 2s Dplenchiad jue process t unde vie 8 y produced from the best selected wheat and scientifically prepared to retain its nutriment and present Al it in & most big and digestivle tora. rere Royal ne 1 the good qual ities claimed for the best of them aul e fact that it is Ogilvie's is the best guarantee of y, its value ahd its excellence. Am t breakfast this one has & value on a par with the value of Ogilvie's flour amongst 'other flours. "OGILVIE OATS" is an old-time favorite for the breakfast table and is known throu t Canadas. It is simply a preparation in which the best qualities of the grain are preserved and which has stood the test of years. The Management and Its Aims, HE guiding spirit in this vast concern is the Vice- 'T Proaldent or Managing Director, Mr. ¥. W. Thomp- son, who has been wssisialéd Yith ia abiocens joe the past twenty years, and who now in the me life gibi plans for improvement and evelopment, that the marvellous growth of the country justifies. The objective point of Mr. Thompson and those associated with him, to make the' Ogilvie Flour | ie Co. not only the 1 t.in-the Bri but one of the "largest in the 1d is likely to be ized at no distant date. e pride with which all classes of Canadlans view the progress of this great representative concern should be some return for the untiring energy and commercial nius of the man on whose shoulders rests the success of e industry. . ---- Foot. and grain recently deceased. foot. the he. was one of assuring remark days when the such as the newspapers, with worth of the copper with. | pounds' such sensational | | 5 18 necessary the Lipton flotation. fierce competi One day Mr. Gor a point beyond per- ides the copper about sixty-seven making change. / him y a bargain rit put ing until "the fastening penny" been paid by you the shillings a significant made there five the was him be loss. i and Quinine Hair in his tailoring department. from. dandruff, aishing mark. Very few are unao- senate lB at Fad SN ar. which is the common: currency, so to take a servant to carry ené's purse. The sycee of silver is the only other form of money tael. As it weighs ounces, a hammer and cold chisel are indispensable for Fall Importation Of 1902. Prevost, of the New York clothing store, Brock street, has received a!! bis fall importations for oraer work His ready-made departmént is well assort- ed and a large assortment to choose HOW HE MADE HIS FORTUNE. | queER CUSTOMS OF CHINESE. Liquids Sold by Pound and Cloth by In (China liquids are sold by weight by measure. John buys soup by the pound and cloth by the A Chinaman never puts name outside of his shop, but paints inside a motto, ora list of his goods on his vertical signboard. Some is frequently added, "One word hall," "A child two feet high would not be cheated." Every single article has to be bar- gained for, and it 'is usual for the cus- tomes to take his own measure and scales with him. A strong man has difficulty in carrying on his back two cash his re- it be- When you engage a servant or make it is mot considered bind- has been paid. Although. his bad faith is notorious in some matters, yet, to do * him justice, when once this coin has Chinaman, coolie or shopman, will generally stick to his bargain even if the result to motes the growth of new hair, not a | from. For low price and durability dve. 50c, a bottle, at McLeod's drug | he defies competition. Bibby's. Tak Hall. Bibby's. |store. { Tot Hotihes f= Stale: in over -- | 81. Rochester And Return. $1. Experiments in Dublin recently de monstrated to the safisfaction of the experimenters that bacteria could be Thanksgiving Day. good going Wednesday, Oct. Tickets, $1.25, 16th, 2.30 p.m., or Thursday, at 5 a.m., and Don't cough. Teylor sells Mitchell's | carried a great distance by the wind | returning until 6.40 p.m. train, Thurs- magic cough cure. : | despite a heavy rainfall. dar : yl +