Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 22 Mar 1909, p. 5

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NEWS OF THE CAPT OF AN ESTATE. Seeking An Heir to a Great Cali fornian Fortune--Sent Obscene Letters Mails. Ottawa, March 1%, Carleton county man, police court charged 240.75, the money Sarah Lee, of which He pleaded manded. for Wi liam near Hull, John Boyd, & of the estate o he was executor not guilty and was re a week, O'Connor, sent obscene letters to ad drckses in Michigan and Colorado but | they found their way to the deac letter oflice at Washington and thence to. Ottawa. Upon being opened the con.ents were discovered to be vi in nature. Sheriff Wright, Hull, anc Detective G, Kennedy arrested 0'€Con nor and, to-day, he 'was remanded t Wednesday Owing. to the illness of two of the J dges the supreme court was to proceed with the Ontario All cases on that list, except mon school appeal fixed for and the Toronto fixe | May unable appeals Monday railway vs, for Tuesday, go over session. The Quebec tion case and two be held in May also, pdiowrned until the 20th. The lumber output of Canada creased in 1908. Mtawa put cut 503,000,000 feet 000,000 in 1907; 704,072,000 a year before, had early in until West appeals The the elec will oo Valley mills against 532. gainst 775,523 000 feet the British Columbia mills 1908, an 190,000,000 feet of sawn lumber and 190,000,000 feet of to which 100,000,000 were added in the year, (Webet's total shipment: in 1908 were 214,000,000 feet, compared {th 262,000,000 in 1907, railway commission will shortly an investigation into the tele and telegraph rates in force in The tarifl of all companies being examined St. Pierre, local judge of supreme court, for Beauharnois, wen appointed to Mathieu in Montreal. Montreal, succeeds Reaunharnois lors succeed Judge Wilfrid Mercier, Proposition Not Acceptable, Montreal, March The Dominion steal people were asked for a sthte ment, to-day, with a reference to the demand of the Dominion Coal pany, for a statement of particulars of the damages of the former com pany, and the offer to Pav on account 22,500,000, leaving the disputed item to a referee, Mr. Plummer being in To routo, nothing-official was fortheom- ing, but the opinion was expressed, by one in close touch with the mat ter, that the steel company would not accept the coal company's proposition com "Postage Prepaid" on the genuine Blaud's Iron 'I'onie pills to out-of town customers from Gibson's Red frora drug store. Send for them to day, Enormous fields of joe and are reported in the Atlantic officers - of 'the - steamer just arrived at Halifax. R. G. Elliot, of Dufferin was elected president Teachers' association, The Harmony Of Home Does Not Miwgle With or Emana tc From the Table of Dyspepsia. In the home weal time should awaken in all the inhabitants a pecu- line harmony of jow which will mak for the home the abiding place of int terest and happiness. If one member at tho dinner table is out. of sorts, his influence is fllt and the harmony is lacking. Conversation and mirth are absent. Dovouring icebergs the Evangeline by school, of the Toronto thoughts assail the diners ahd silence | prevails 1 American, "At The ous Quiet and Gloom Crowds Out Mirth." All physicians ¢ Joy at meal tie digestion Mirth Tee h and much toward tingles the whol nervous organism of man, the ols wherein are stortd valuable juiees) empty their contents under the nerve stimulation promote the highest degree of digestion If 'gloom and discomiont prevail at table the reverse action obtains and meals become necessities, not antici pated joys. Stuart' that mir digestive and Dyspepsia Tablets are little storchousus of which mix with the stomach digest foo, retingle- the mucous membrane and iis nerve centies, . give to the blood a great wealth of) digestive fluid pro mote digestion and stays hy the sto mach until all its duties are complote If dyspepsia 'sit tables it the diningrroom 4 place of awe: thes tableis should be taken after meals and dyspepsia of a consequence flees No need for diet fasting Mh dyspeptics who will use them religions ' the Lh digestion juices, 8 al makes or ly will find no sense of nausea in sight in odor of rich cooking : : It matters not what the condition of the stomach Stuart's Dyspepsia Tals lets only improve the juices and bring quiet to the whole digestive canal, of which the stomach is the dontre, "Forty thousand physician iablets in their practic and druggist. sells them. Price 50¢ vd us vour name and address and we will send you a trial package by mail free. Address FF. A. Stuart Co., 150 Stuart Building, Marshall, Mich. of generous . meals or use these evory Sen Very | Through the appeared in the with stealing Papineauville, e | | | | dhe com- | Paget, court | Georgian Bay district, ¢ (least changed 80 that | o the judgeship at | Dyspeptics Table Omin-| SAID TO BE ALIVE. 'Search For Ba 22. --Police Inspec tor MeCaflerty, according to an nouncement published here, has tailed detectives to se S. Baker, formerly cashier Northern National pids, Mich, 8 man who {legally dead for fifteen vears. {| The search, it is | made at the instance ering, of Big Rapids, sive lumber interests | Chickerigy says Baker | several months has been with a firm of Wall street brokers un | der the alias, Kabor La Toras, | real name, with the letters transposed | Chickering that Bake timber lands valued &t $3,000,000. After Baker's bank failed he to New 1] ter he had been here but a few | word was sent to his family that he | | had died in Bellevue Hospital, as the [result of injuries received in an en | counter with highwaymen, | A i has 1 in f 3 er by his wife and children. ti mmm mma------. CUT PROVISO OUT. men. Detroit, Mich., March 29. ion of the best informed in the Saginaw family think gressman Fopdney has put a "joker into the tariff schedule on lumber which will nullify the tion of the duty from, $2 to $1 thousand, Fordney's ostensible pose was to force Canada to removi | the embargo placed on the export logs vears ago in retaliation for that *2 'duty plated on them by millmen. Lumbermen, however, ave convinced that his reel purpose is to keep. the [maximum tarifi of { lumber, and they are, 4 e jparmg to descend on Washington when [discussion opens and work hard to | Fave the proviso stricken out, or at umber will not the log | | ~The opin per pry Ol ¥2 'on therefore, pre | depend on (Canada repealing | embargo, Budget From Brookside. Brookside, March 20.- James Shan- graw is improying nicely, School js favotirably under the of Miss Teressa Boyee, of Violet. The assessor is making his an nual calls and there are some long faces.' Mrs. M. V. Lake entertained a of her friends on Tuesday Thursday evenings, also on Monday evening of last week. Mrs, I". Wallace at home to some of her friends Thursday Mrs Charles Hicks; Harvowsmith, and Mrs. H. Sydenham, were visiting at M the 15th. Miss Annie | home again, A baby girl [rived at George Curl's. man and family have settled again. M. Lake hauls milk to rowsmith, and S. Hushand graw brothers, to Moscow, this com- ing season. The weather and roads progressing management and Lake's has an Stanley Free here Har- , and Shan- | | toden, nearly on the was a Miss Thaw To Wed Marquis. March Another marriage is about to enliven society, This time it an Miss Thaw, daughter of | Alexander Blair Thaw, of Pittsburg, | wha, with: his wife and daughter, has been pending the winter in Rome The happy man is the young Mar- quis Teodoli, of of tha {best known: and oldest Roman aristo- [cratic families 99 have been so favourable through. the winter months that farmers have nearly finished harvesting ice, hauling logs to mill and getting out wood. C. Freeman and H. Curran were shipping hogs on' Thursday. Archibald Hamil- ton expects to build a new house next summer, Miss J. L. Ludbrook is suc- ceeding well as teacher at Manitoba. Frank Martin has { recovered from a ' severe out head, caused by a falling tree. --------------r------ | Tragedy Born Of Adversity. New York, March 22.--Philip L. Ken [nedy, thirty-six, a machinist, of Phila- | delphia, was stabbed and probably {fatally wounded last night by 'hig brother, James 1, Kennedy. Adver- {sity led to the tragedy. Philip, whe {has a wife and child in Philadelphia, | camo here recently in search of em. {ployment, In desperation to supply the needs of his family, be turned Js rikiomahcr as teamsler with a con- jean, whose employees wore on strike. tis brother, James, it so happened, one of the strikers. When he {learned last night what Philip had done, a quarrel arose. Philip, it i Vaid: seized] wy club, and his brother iy [the struggle that followed stabbed him [twice near the heart. The seventy - year-old mother of the men was | spectator of the tragedy | Rome, | tional | Roman | interna- is together mam ber one { Counterfeit Street Car Tickets. | Mexico City, March 22. --Fifty em- {ployees of the street car system of [this city have been arrested as 'the [result of an investigation of the source of numerous counterfeit street car tie- | kets which have been presented re cently. Officials of the road estimate | that at feast $15,000 worth of coun | terfeit tickets have been used. Carrie Was Annoying. New York, March 22.--Ca¥rie Natian, who came across in the Baltio's Tse. cond made things very dis rreeable for a time, iL was said, to { day, for her fellow passengers. They reported the facts to Capt. Ransom and for the rest of the voyage th was trouble as the result" of ilk the captain had with her. cabin, lees Accidental Drowning. Windsor, Ont., March 22.--There will be no inquest into the death of John Coneoy, of Amherstburg, whose hod was found . in the Detroit river on i Saturday. The authorities have as- sured themselves that the case was one of accidental drowning' sed. oner I'oronto 17th Life Prisoner R, Ww eek a 1 fe pr gent down from ago, wax released, the being the given his liberty. Lakt Kew, Many a man's cowardie him from getting in bad. has kept nker Has Been Imsti- tuted. ACCUSED OF USING MONEY| ew York, March unn- de- arch for Latora' of the big Then Man Shot Bank of Big Ra- | been stated, has been! of Frank Chick- who has exten i J Michigan. dead Warren and Mr. is alive and for [tents of the associaterd his { Briggs told Inspector MeCafferty it was necessary for him to find Sustody rin order to clear up the title to, | ille, came York. In February, 1894, af. [8fternooun. days, A body [5 evident was sent to Big Rapids and this, it js coming out of the barn and she stated, was identified as that of Bak- This is Desire of Michigan Lumber- lumber men | a Con- proposed reduc- Canadian | Dawsles-, | Martin, | named years of March oppy day on which he was ASSAULTING THEIR BOY. ---------- Himself, Go Home For Witnesses. Franklin, Pa., March at his amvest for assaulting a .|Amos Wakon, fifty vears old, xh hoy, county, The tragedy occurred home and there were no itnesses, Walton was unde Forest _ | suici Iw { r arrest and was of the constable a until to-day, when he mitted to po home nesses for the was trial, to be Walton went {home without saying a word » 1 his intentions, took' his » (ceeded to the rig 'rom the as' iggs home, positions of the bods that Walton met dead, the ball his body. Passing into the evidently shot Mrs, Briggs on sight. Walton then sat down in a chair, rliced the muzzle of his rifle to forehead and pulle his: foot. The bodies | his were found hy Doley, who stopped at the bout an hour after the tragedy supposed to have occurred -- LEAPS FROM WINDOW. | ; May Die. | Buffalo, N.Y March 22. [liam For hs thirty-three lol Owen Sound, Ont., window on the ing house in Former Resident of Owen Sound Mrs. Wil years old, leaped from a | Washington sireet | vestordavy | She had heen enticed (& man who had promised | Mus. Ferguson had sc me words {the man and then rushed to (dow and threw herself to the jment, thirty fect below. Both f Ie were broken and her spine hurt. She may nol recover, Mrs. Ferguson deserted hor husban, jand two children a vear ago and has [heen livine in Encl stroet (Mrs. William Wright. Tier [John C', Wright, living near | Sound, is reported farmer. | Arthur Barker, | whose room she under arrest, { open charge, pave- Was here us father, Owen to be a well-tomdo fifty-two years old, eseaped by jumping Ho "is held on 18 | -------- | NEW COAL DEPOSITS. yman's Prospecting Rewarded By a "Find." Sydney, N.S. March 22.--Rev. M. A. McPherson, of Little Bras d'Or, who for some time past has had a gang of men prospecting for coal at Leitche's Creek, has been rewarded by a find of about: an eight-foot seam of anthra- cite coal of very finest quality. There is every indication of unlimited quar tity. The prospecting was done on the farm of James Benton, {wo miles from Leitehe's Creek and the cost of run- ning a line of railroad to deep water for shipping purposes will be slight, ACCIDENTALLY SHOT. | Little Girl Perhaps Fatally Wound- | ed By Brother. Tilsonburg, March 22.-- Effie Ryan, a twelve-year-old girl," who lives at Courtland, near here, is in a dying condition as the result of a shooting accident on Friday. The child and her brother, Roy, who is ten years of age, found a gun lying on a table in their home, The boy pulled the trigger in fun and the loaded weapon was dis- charged, a ballet entering the girl's side. | | Clerg ------------ Made A World's Record. Berlin, March 22. --Soaring like mighty bird Count Zeppelin s ble air-ship, the largest in yesterday, created a world's record | for weight carried in cruising the | sky. The huge dirigible ascended from [its quarters, at Lake Constance, bear- ing Count Zeppelin, ten aeronauts of the German army, and fifteen diors. Never before in the brief his tory of aeronautics has an airship made a successful flight with a crew of twenty-six persons. The flight covered 150 miles and the dirigible was in the air for four hours. To Find New Passage. Seattle, Wash.,, March --Rever- sing the course of Raold Amundsen, discoverer of a north-west passage. Capt. Charles Madson will attempt to cate a north-east route by which a vessel can sail from the Pacific around the North American con- tinent into the North Atlanta. He will undertake the feat in a fifty-two foot schooner, the Sea Wolf, launched { to-day, from the ship yards of Ward i& Sons. Capt. Madson is a Dane. a dirigi the world, sol 99 When The Teacher Got Mad. Wilkesbarre, March --~--When Prof. Clayton Kellar, principal of the La- veyville High school, sat down in a pond qf watef which had been poured into his chair, was he Justified in us- | ing a ruler on Miss Ruth Russell, 4 | nineteen-vear-old pupil, when he found that' she had constructed the lake, | Prof. Kellar © was arrested charged with assault and battery hy Judson Russell, the girl's father. Had To Draw Revolvers. Orange, Ni.J., March 22 200 men, led by iwenty-ive women, |atwacke] force of "trike breakers, guarded by local police, as they wero proceeding to the hat factory, to-day, to go to work. Pricke, stones and clubs were , thrown and finally had {o draw their disperse the moh --A mob of | | | | | | a the police reve Wy ors to Negress Sues. | Frankfort, Ky., March | sing to have been humiliate forced to ride in the ment on a street car with white men, Carrie Conley. a negress, sued the Central Kentucky Co. for $3,000. 22. --Profes- 1 by being ------------------ Make comfort in the thought resurrection from es it Briggs >t him going clean through James house Too-- Murderer Had Been Allowed to | --Angered | boy, | Amalgamated. shot | Beaver. - Briggs, the pa- Chambe near Marienville, | und then committed { Cobalt ( house. he | Watts... ed the trigger with Dom. third floor of a room. | hee x | to a room hy |Struction her liquor, [line would add with | tural land to the win. |Vibee. of her | | worthy | bands of William Macke 1p, | from | struction an | NLLED TH PEN. aa HAD HIM_ARRESTED FOR STOCK QUOTATIONS, i > os, | Stocks Listed. The following quotations {plied by the City Dobbs), 80 A ! Hutton J. RC. {au oh Telephose i -- Cobalt Stocks. March 22nd. lers. Buyers SY. { 41 Ferland serve, , 'entral | Crown k at | Cobalt Lake... . eve: | Foster... + | Green Meecha in | Gifford Marien- per- and subpoena wit- held this directly | Otisse... to | Peterson Lake rifle and pro. La Rose. Little Nip McKin. Dar. Nipissing | 59 1075 45 25} ed Savage. { Rochester...... Nova Scotia S Silver Queen . Temiskaming Trethewey Baillie Cobalt CANADIAN STOCKS. Steel, Com. Twin City a ---- "Almost Valueless." Toronto Telegram. "Almost valueless" | kenzie's comment |acre land grant Whitney put in his stocking, IF 2,000000 acres of land clay belt is unworthy of Mr, zie s acceptance what theory section Mac- 2,000,000 Claus is William on the that Santa in the Macken- becomes of the that the Sudbury-Port Arthur is worth building merely means of opening up the ° helt, | Ontario has heen as clay . told that the con- of the Sudbury-Port Arthur an empire of agricul the domain of this pro Now Ontario is told 1 that a 2,000 .- 000 acre slice of this clay belt is un- of being picked ip by the nzie, If the land between Sudbury ort Arthur is good for a right of way for a through line east to wert, . then the con- of that line becomes exclus- a dominion responsibility, from which the province of Ontario has nothing to hope for, and with which the province of Ontario has nothing to do. and nothing but ively -- How To Grow Fine Sweet Peas. A rich sandy loam, grown seed, enthusigsm, a well-drained situation, will produce fine sweet peas. Excavate trenches the width of a shovel to tho depth of a foot. Fill in a cotiple of inches with broken stone, on which put the soil, which should be of the richest pos- sible sandy loam. Use no manure un- oes it is well rotted--a soil that has heen heavily manured the year before iv an ideal offic. Plant the seed in a double row, four © inches apart - and thee inches apart in the row. Morel. press the sced heneaih the surface and when the plants have caught on the wire netting between the rows pull the soil up around them, but. kee p it loose. Cultivate with the hoe often, and after the buds appear, if weather is dry, water frecly and spray the vines with & hard stream to keep lown the red spider if it appears. Sure About The Funeral. Philadelphia Ledger. n a southern town a lady was ap- proached by her colored maid. "Well, Jenny," she asked, seeing that some- thing was in the air. "Please, Mis' Mary, might a have the aft'noon off three weeks from Wednesday 7" Then, noticing an undecided look in her mistress' face, she added, hastily : "1 want to go to my fiance's fun' ral." "Goodness me !"' good Oregon good culture, answered the lady, "Your fiance's fancral ? Why, you don't know that hé's even going to die, let alone the date of his funeral. Fhat ig something we can't any of us be sure about--when we are going to die," . "Yes'm," said the girl doubtfully; then, with a triumphant note in her voice, "I'se sure ebout him, mis', ' he's goin' to be hung !"' +. COB The Reconciliation. Atlanta Constitution, i The doctor was soon at thé child's bedside. Remedies were administered: then the agonized pair watohid the fight for life--skill and vitality on one side, fievco discase on the other. When at last the struggle ceased, the gray dawn of day was looking in at the window. Life had won. The child slept. "She is all right now," said the doctor, shaking the man's hand, which had gripped his, and feeling his heart grow warm under the look of mute gratitude the woman turned upon him. When he hadigone the two stood side by side at the baby's crib, listen ing to her regular breathing. Then, with one ageoed, they turned and kiss- ed cach other. And in that kiss the icy barrier betwoen them meliod away. Truth Or Fiction ? New York Times. a "Ah, what a difierence there is," re- marked the cynic wearily, "between courtship and marriage ! Courtship is made up. of soft nothings--marriage of {hard facts." . ; And he broke the world's record for a sigh. | Smte------ William Riley, BufialoN.Y., a for mer Chinese inspector in the em- ployment of government, admitted in the United States district court that he was guilty of smuggling Chinese, jand was sentenced to one year in the | Erie count penitentiary. Riley has Leen war 'but six months and his voung aisiod tun when she heard the séntence. same compart- | Venezuela, deft Dresdisn, wo- {Cologne has Traction [on the steamer Guadelope, for of a jing Reuben F. the "Potter's field." ages Cipriano Castro, former president of ) to-day, to Bordeaux, March 26th, his way embark, on where he will | Carribbean port. ea | James Bigford, Smith's Falls, for assaulting bis daughter. Cobalt and Leading Canadian are sup- 0, Clar- for [for 25c. at Gibson's Red Cross is su- | Hogan for $3,000, dam- | Kingston nt G ~ kb THE EMBARGO 15 OF WAS VERY RIGIDLY EN- FORCED FOR A TIME. While the Foot and Mouth Disease Was Prevalent in the United States--Cost the Railways Considerable Money. Windsor, Ont., March 2. Collector of Customs Smith has been notified that the embargo, placed on Novem- ber 22nd, wpon all shipments of cat- tle, sheep, svine, horses, fresh meat and straw reaching this port from Michigan, whether originating in that state or passing through it. has been remowed. he embargo had heen modified from time to tme, since last January, but for a time it was so rigia that animal trafic of all kinds between Windsor and Detroit, was en- tirely suspended, as well as that of automobiles and motor vehicles fo all kinds. The stringent enforcement of the quarantine by the Canadian gov- ernment cost the railways which cross into Canada from Michigan, sums aggregating probably one mil- lon of dollars, and it was reported during the time it was most rigidly enforced, that one railway in Ontario nad laid off twenty-eight train crews. ! ---- WAS FOND OF ANIMALS, A Story Concerning Lincoln's Tenderness of Heart. Gen. Horace Porter, in Leslie's Weekly. His sympathies went forth to ané- mals as well as to his fellow men. Upon one of his visits to 'General Grant's headquarfers in front of Pe- tersburg, just before the Appomattox campaign began, he stepped into the telegraph operator's tent in company with Col. Bowers; our adjutant-gener- al. 1 was in the tent at the time, and my attention was attracted to three funy kittens crawling about the floor. | The mother had died, and | wanderers in their {piteously. Mr. [up tenderly, sat chair, took them grief were mewing Lincoln picked them down on on his lap, Stroked | their soft fur, and murmured, "Poor little creatures ! Don't cry! You'll be taken good care of." Then, turn- ing to lowers, he said, "Colonel, 1 hope vou will gee that these poor lit tle motherless waifs are given plenty of good milk and treated kindly," 1) will see that they are taken in charge by the cook of our mess and well car- ed for, Mr. President," replied Bowers. Three times I saw the president go to | | that tent during his short visit, and! IPick up those little kittens, fondle | | them, and take out his handkerchief | | and wipe their eyes as they lay on his | liap, purring their gratitude. It seemed] fu strange sight, on the eve of battle, | {When everyone was thinking only of | the science of destruction, to see the | hand that by a stroke of the pen had | the shackles of four millions of | bondsmen, and had signed the com-! misston of every officer of that gallant | i loosed army, from the general-in-chief to the humblest lieutenant, tenderly caressing three stray kittens. Jt was a trivial circumstances, but it spoke more elo. | quently than words of the kindness of his heart, Help For A Wife. M. A. P, A certain bishop was famous as be ing the plainest man of England. One day, as this homely parson sat in an omnibus, he was amazed by. the! persistent staring of a fellow-passen who finally said : Look 'ere, parson, would you mind tomin' 'ome with me to see my wife?" | Imagining the wife was sick and | needed 'assistance, the clergyman, at great inconvenience to himself, went. ! On arriving at the house, the 'map! pointed to the astonished parson, and | said, with a grin of delight : "Look 'e¢ ere, Sairry. mornin' as 1 chap | in England. Now, just look at this | bloke !"' { | | Yer said this | | . | was the hugliest Tricked Of The Time. A Philadelphia lawyer who spends most of his time at his country estate employs a sturdy Irish garden- er whose 'one dosire in life is to live | until the banner of freedom is unfurl- | ed over Ireland. ! One evening the lawyer strolled through the grounds of his place and stopped to have a chat with the gar- dener. : "Michgel, do you know that while we are here. enjoying the beautiful twilight it is dark midnight in Ire- land ?"" "he asked. "Faith, an' 0i'm not surprised," re- plied the gardener. 'Ireland niver got Justice yit." : Not Caused By'The Hat. Chicago Post. "How do you like my hat?" asked, "Why, to tell the truth," replied her dearest friend frankly, "I don't like the effect very well. It seems to me it gives you a rather cross look." | "Oh, that isn't the hat," she ves| sponded' cheerfully, *No ?" . "Oh, not at all. That comes entire- lv irom the fact that 1 have just seen my husband and he had just seen the bill." she Money Getters. # Do you think it pays to send our sons to college ? Do they obtain the practical experience in money g Uing { that is so necessary in these days ? } "Well, judging from the experience I | | have had with my son, 1 should say | | they did. His practical experience i, money getting letter that I receive from him." | i | I | | | | Wordsworth's Joke. "I never made a joke but once in my | | life," confessed Wordsworth, and the | irest of the storm leaves one in doubt whether he knew a joke when he saw | i { | { | | | f : | jit. "Meeting a peasant neighbor = one | day, he asked the little | | | 1 | a camp, | | | { | } increases with every {- me, 'Ha' ye seen my | we RUBBERIZED MOTOR e-- ---------------- ART Ee -------------- | | | POSED BY MISS MITCHELL OF THE BHOYO bY JOLY FEDER - ELOIE JANIS C& Motoring in the month of showers calls for ample protection against changeable April weather. This comfortable cape, amply full to: gliow free movement of the arms and sufficiently warm for showery spring days, is made of rubberized silk and will keep its wearer dry matter how the rain pelts. The cape has a hood which may be drawn very bad storms, but the headgear shown in the photograph is one of quaint new motor bonnets. This pretiy little model faced and trimmed with chiffon and, of course, with the a long veil matching the chiffon 1 no snugly over the coiffure in tha cream straw, bonnet one wears 18" oh lor. oe m-- There is one floor, finish that endures -- withstands hard usage -- coats floors with a creviceless, glossy, wear - proof surface --is easily applied -- dries hard overnight -- repels dust -- can be washed like glass -- good for outdoor floors also. Send for color-card and free booklet. trimming in co # Ten beautiful colors in this floor enamel. A gallon coats 8500 square fect. Ask at the dealer's. Made by Imperial Varnish &; Color Co., Limited, of Toronto OOrglaze m------ a -------- _- ET ---- & REID & CHARLES We now have oa sale some $4.00, 4.50 and 5.00 Tan Winter Calf, Box Calf, Patent Colt Skin and Vici Kid Blucher Boots = NOW $2.95. See our windows for both M Bargains. en's and Women's { wife, Meester Wordsworth *° 'My good | i fellow," said .I, 'T didn't so much as {know that-you had a wife.' " ills ug 100 genuine Blaud's Iron Tonic Take no other. height of folly to attempt store. | It's the { . os nt 97 some | the dangerous for tho sole purpose of | present ? ibeing pointed out. as brave. ol : 'Stearns' Headache Cure," sold) in ibson's Red Cross drug store, { Just So. ! London Argonaut. . | The hgnquet 1able was spread and | [the guests about simmons. Not Tired. New York Sun. v ¥ A kind old gentleman, secing wu very small boy earrving a lot of Buna under bis arm, 'was moved to pity. "Don't all those papers make. you ured, my boy *7 ! "Nope," the mite "1 can't read." : to be "Are you sure there arc no reporters anxiously gsked the host of he butler. : 3 "I've made cordain of it, ! "Then hustle out and get rejoined the host. sir." a few," cheerfully replied, Lh

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