Canadian Rational Sunday League was refused permission to give free sacred concerts in Toronto on Sunday. - V. ._ - . _ - - _ _ - J `Prilnce Fushimi landed at` Quebec, and was received with royal honors. -rr 1 wI_3er'1'j;_a.'r11i_r;vi-i;)i);o;-_i1a;s"'Bee;;Wap- pointed High Constable for Oxford county. , ` Fires (did serious damage in the business sections of _Elmvale, Ont., and Hampton, N.B. Mr. E. G. Senkler is gazetted legal adviser to the Yukon Council, and Mr. F. X. Gosselin Gold Commis- sioner, ~ A Two _Montrea-1 men stand 174-`... _I___--Z ng on I ____ _.. Montreal standing the railway near Vzfudreuil were struck by the International Limited and killed. "William Hama, farmer, of Crow- lzmd, was bitten` by a mad dog, and` will go to the Pasteur Institute, i-1 New York, for treatment. The Nova Scotia steamer Bridge- water struck a reef near Port Beck- erton and was wrecked. Passengers and crew got: safely ashore. ` V A `I I I _ __4_I` 'd.llU. CICW SUI aalcny aauvxw. August A. Langebahtg, a well- known sculptor, "formerly of London, Ont., is dead at Bualo. If Y ,__ f___A_____`__ us, no us. vuu .....--...-., Mrs. Arthur McLeon, /formerly Miss Memory of Toronto, was (31-owned in the Thames near Lon- donv.` [KIN \I\lllo The correspondence between -Sir Robert Bond and the ofcials of the Colonial Office on the Imperial Con- ference incident has been issued. A` _ ___. -v Wwi`, j fl 1 - .... -Fos' lioghone, Sweeney. ilaneaeu ind -Koil > uoequlf n 2 . ' -as; "1 have 53; .a 0'! and have-` and van npmhnlbn` {hhlabh V "I III`! U and have -' nijnun Q-an Japanese newspapers declare the San Francisco outrages to be worse than'the murder of a "missionary in China, which resulted in the-occupa- tion of Kiaochou. School report for May. I I IV. Class.-DeWitt Partridge, A - brey Bertram, Vernet Beardsall, Lulu Partridge, Mary McEachern, Alice Hart. Sr. III.--Albert Shelswell. Jr. III.-Arthur Wilde, Jesse Bid- well, Edna -Church, Albert Garrett, Richard Coward,_ Edna Bertram. 1':-...i l.\lCllalU \I\JVV(l|\.I,_ A-gs:-Ana .-v.._.._._ ` Sr.-II.-:Tommy Gravestone, Eva 1 Prentice, Laura` Thompson, Louis . Thompson, Alfred Shelswell. , Jr. II.-John Beardsall, Fyreddiel Bennett, Nellie Eddy, Reginald Ad- dison, Sarah Shelswell. Pt. II.-Victor Church, Melinda Eddy, Bert -Shellswell, Eliza Smith. Sr. I.--Maggie Gravestone, Wal- lace Beardsall, `Hazel Dicker. ' Jr. I,.- gie Shellswell, Milford |Bertram, m. `Smith, Edgar Smith, Olive Eddy, John Addison, Victor _Dicker, Lillian Weeks. - -- ...-u-r 11* 1'1`A1'\TT.`\f l1V`73P|'0Vedj `.'~'.-`D.-`Ba'&`I3iv-an Be - ' f he .'. .'i`:."`?.I!v.'.?;.a';--r""rcss-`.`T.'..a`.' E-lone " tree from dealers or L % neTl`.` Jr. IV.-Donald Cowan, Lizzie iP-atterson, Helen Corbett, Libbie Allen, Harvey Ness, Wilda Martin, John Martin. , III. Class'.--Ethel Rainey, T=immie Connell, Clark Martin- Sr. II.---I-Iazel, Rainey, `Robbie Ness, Vera Dobson, Leonard Martin, Ethyl Corbett, Clifford Lochart, George Summers, ` " " "`-----n .1\/ring.-ua Kalllcy. . Pt. II.--Frank Dobson, Jennie Lochart; Glennie Ness, .Mo`rris' Mar- tin ` ` . e`._l sg1 3.1.. -:__.__ School report for May:-- IV.--Tom Allan, Mary `At any rate, you seem to be getting rid of itony auction-sale principles : going, going, g-.o-n`-e ! Stop the auction with Ayer s Hair Vigor. it certainly cheeks Jaiiing hair; `no mistake ; about this; It acts. Ta regular medicine; makes- the scalp hea"lthy.h Then you must; have t healthy. hair, for *it -frmr=*= , ,, `, `. ., ,_ ___n_n u ' IV.-;Dona1d T1'._I..... Fnrknff S. S. No. 15, ORO. H. -is/Ilvi.-Iii RAINEY, Tnanh NO. 15, INNISFIL. 1'HE`NORTH_ERN ADVANCE Cowan, Minerva LVLJA. 9 Teacher- .izzie -'9 Is a German iriyasion possible? This is the question-th'at' some of the French newspapers are discussing. The discussion.` was started by the recent publicatiqn in Germany over the signature of offi- cers of rank and credit of, a state ment that thirty-six hours after he Kaiser expressed his desire to s ttle with Eng1and"London would fall into the hands of a imperial army. . 'nn .I ' I___-j ' :-. -.-J . AThe affirmative case is based on the assumption that .Germany would not wait for a declaration of --;war, but would take England 'by- surprise, making a `dash at some unguarded spot on the English coast somewhat .. AA....:....1 'l.-mm hm.-an hi: nm-.1-a- spun U11 Luc .L.u5I_.1au Luau; as.-uu.n...... as Admiral Togo began his opera- tions` at. L. Port Atithur. The dash would b`eVmad'e from Wilhelmshdfen ~~ AL- `.......LI. l\` A-Ina Erna A F9! ENGLAND OPEN TO mus- ION? A % WO1.1l(l Detnaue Irulu vv l|uCl.ul.aua.:.\.u or the `mouth of the Ems. A few hours s'ai,l at a time `judiciously chos- -_ .... ..1`.a`....a:.... 4-.` land an armv he- l10l1!'S' at a uxI1c \.uua' en would sufce to land an army be- fore the British ships could -rally to stop it. s ' ""` "- ' P - W. _..I;_ _.......L...... Li` CUIIBLRIIIL uausci U1. Annvuv-vu. -..y.- is nothing, he believes, to preven the landing-of hostile troops at sev- eral points on the English coast sim- ultaneouslyf ` ' But M. Fontin thinks at present France is the only power that could carry out this enterprise f with any prospect of success. Germany is for the present totally debarred from undertaking it alone by the abso- lute and irrernediable impotency of her eet. She has gone altogetlier on h wrong tack, he thinks, in build- ing battleships and cruisers, in which she cannot hope to rival England in years, if ever- H2 hnmmrnr Cm-mnnv had a hun- u ever. If, however, Germany had a hun- dred submarmes, he says, and she "could secure them at the cost of two battleships, England wouldbe on the verge of ruin. The submarine will make the blockade of the future effective, and England cannot pos- Siy stand a three months block- a e. - - n . n__ _`_3_c `1 'dU.C. M. Laubeuf, engineer-in-chief of the French navy, who is credited with the creation of the efficient sub- marine service of France, said in answer to a question : ' Cu- _ . . . ...a GIIBVVVI yu u \1---.-. "If you had asked me five yearsl ago whether England could be suc- cessfully invaded by Germany, I should have said `Yes. But now that England has submarines I do not hesitate to declare that it is im- possible. German threats are abso- lutely vain. England is well guarded to-day. I 1- , 1-..--- _--L,. ...ou- Fm.- Lu-uay. Edouard_Lockroy, who was _for- merly Mimster of Marine, constders the German proposition a wild dream. l` - - ago. - 1 g _ gf____` lul Call]. Invade England! said he. Easy ' I to say, but hard to do. The German` navy is certainly not of the build to do it. As for surprise, the English coast is too great to make such a thing possible. Long before the in- vading ships could arrive the Chan- nel eet would beafter them. The invasion of England, it will be admitted, could not be undertaken with less than 100,000 men. It would take 150 ships to transport ' them, along withthe munitions of ` war. Where would Germany get the ships'--of a sudden--to take Eng- tlland by surprise. ,1; _-- -..... ......... L- xauu U DLIL.kIlI~J\ya And what would 100,000 men be doing on English soil without a re- gular system of supplies? Modern war is a war of provisions. The sur- prise over, the English iiec: could `certainly cut o all aid from the Continent. ` ` ' 4 4- ,,1J L- \.Uu.LIu.\.1.u.. The army of invasion would be an `army of prisoners. As for the rising of the 150,000 German waiters in London to assist their compatriots --well, if Germany counts on the: mobilization of the cafe help to c0n-l quer England she is certainly trad- ing in chimeras. ` 7" -3---A 4.`.-in :11:-L oi `gm: 1 Admiral Bienaime adds just a word to the controversy. ` I I , `5LI,_ `VVUIKL I-U bl! vun-u-V-v-_J. 7 ` To invade England. said he, the invader should be sure of the com- mand of the sea. _I don t see how, in view of the present naval strength of England, Germany could gure on s-ugh eommand, even in a fog. ; _ Hi-.3 Dial `._ette:'3. A Wall street l)|.`.li1eS{-`l man showe-J. a visitor a` bundle of old letters that he was taking home from his office to burn in his furnace. "I wasn't always so particular about these useless busi- ness letters." he said, until I learned that the women cleaners were sortinz them out of the wastebuskets and sell: ing them to certain firms which make 1 a business 0: furnishing lists of names . for various purposes. mostly to specu- lative concerns. Then I concluded that I owed it to my clients to protect them from the nuisance that follows i getting one s name out). mailing list." I III! l'l]U'I]vn A very strange animal. related to the` lemurs and peculiar to Madagascar. ` is the aye-aye. It feeds on wood bor- ing grabs that tunnel into the bark of trees. The beast cuts away the outer bark with its chisel-like teeth. and as the worm retreats to theend of its hole pokes after it with ajnger. This n- ger is a remarkable organ; evidently i provided by nature for this purpose. being abpormally long and armed with `a hook shaped claw for dragging on`: us. ..___ E1; "gm 1:. . The lnapoctou-'0 Life. _ Caller-I'd think -that your father : duties as building inspector would he ; awfully dangerous going ` round unsafe % buildings. Small Son 012 the 5H_ouuo- *0h.n,q:i.ho dop't go neuron i!I:ouf=ui9Wid ~ 4 L - - r, ' ,,,,,v,~- _ `J . ` ' .'=......a....a-mm m A The other tallowfe g!!! , % I } j*P' % " n rough I lications 4 , and_ by : acquires . ess of 8 ' - other tenets: W9` ~.-- .' ma" ' .' 'fIiIn it-was Noticed and commented Upon .7. by the Ancient Egyptians. - appearance of a green light at Tsniifset was noticed and commented upon by the ancient Egyptians and more particularly so because in the clear air of Egypt the tints of sunset are peculiarly distinct. As the sun there descends nearer and nearer to the horizon and is im- mensely enlarged and` naming. it sud- A denlyy becomes for an instant a. bril-. -liantly n color, and immediately a serieso green rays snlfnses the shy in many directions. well nigh to--the ze- _u.. on... ......... nhgnnmamln nnnnni-A at WTECEIUUB. WCIJ Inll ur unv av- nlth. The same phenomenadn appetite at V sunrise." but to a_ smaller extent; sonic- times. just as~tl1e last part of the sun's dlsk vanishes." its `cold: changes front green tnfblue, and so also after it has disappeared the sky near the horizon ` often ls g1_-een. while toward the zenith it is blue. - v This was alluded to in Egyptian wrltlngs. Day was the emblem. ac llts -...n '...:..I_L LI...4. -0 Ann!-In nnr` {Ig nap. VVl{.|_|Jl.l5D- 1.16] way us no. -. -- ___ ancfnight that of death: the noe: turnal sun. being identied with 031113, thus rendered Osiris -king of the;d'ead. The setting: sun was green; "therefore; Osirisyas the nocturnal deity of the dead, was painted green. The splenmd cotns of the high priests of Ammon frequently depict the green sun. and LL- n.`.........I .a..:u... on-n all nnlnn-ed ----`....._ -- the funeral deities are all colored . green. "' i There are innumerable instances in the Egyptian relics of representations relative to death being colored green. The practice undoubtedly arose from the green tints of sunrise and sunset. 'l_.`he green sun disk is referred to 5.00!) a years` ago in Egypt. This is the earli- est known human record of an as- tronomical phenomenon. ` It Is to Northern Europe What the : Wheat Crop is to America. : n Today the herring is hardly regarded ' as a luxury. Indeed. it is chiey eaten l by those who can afford nothing else. and yet 3.000.000.000 of these fish are needed to supply the annual demand. How this inexhaustible, limitless yield or the ocean has swayed the destinies of nations is strikingly set forth in an article by Hamid Bolce in Ocean. 1 Despite the unremitting harvest by I predatory man and gull and cannibal- istic cod and shark, the unconquered armies of herring still continue to pop ........u.. mun mnlfinlving I.Ann.---v- .. ulate the Atlantic with multiplying hosts. The Atlantic has been aptly called the herring pond." Indeiihly associat- ed in the past with the economic and political history of occidental man-I kind, the herring seems destined to survive as one of the greatest factors in the welfare of western nations. To- day what the wheat crop is to America | the herring catch is to northern Eu- Few persons. even among the masses that consume this fish. realize its ` economic importance. More than 3.000.- 000.000 herrings are captured annually. ` according to the latest estimate. #_2_.n.4. .0 that onnrlsl Pth is e brightest ck, now 11:: mar su 3` ~es for R13. (2 following accoruxng w I.ue luucat. w.......... The weight of that annual catch over 750.000 tons. It would require "".000 -freight curs. ; each wlth a capacity or thirty tons. to 1 haul the herring harvest luland from i the Atlantic. I A UOCIOFI naauasqu--. A doctor whose large practice has made an assistant necessary was tnld that the man be selected was bardiy 7- _n.__; \IV\l. A--w w---_ stltutes the t C I.-._ Unfortunate Roxalty. Horse accidents caused the death of William I. and William III.. William ` II. and Richard I. were killed by ar- rows. Richard III. was slain in battle. - - - ---- I_..I.....AmI tarlwnrd Il__ POWB. ILL. Vvua Dluau nu .....----, Charles I. was beheaded. Edward 11.. Richard II. and Edward V. were mur- ered, a surteit of lampreys cost Henry ; I. his life,` poison or a snrfeit of peaches killed John. poison is suspected to ha ve been administered to` Edward VI.. and ` the death of Henry V1. is by some his- torians lald to the charge of Richard. duke of Gloucestei-.-London Standard. UUULIJ uI:|1u;|. LLIC bsvvu ea... .._.... colored THE _ Biblicgal Reparteo. Justice Jeremiah Black of Pennsyl- vania.` in reviewing a case that came `up from the court otf his old friend "--`-- Ilmsna unmnfnn, `~ remag-ked_ p the L'UUl'b VI. ulw v-u ---.. Judge Moses Hampton. remat-ke-d`. Surely Moses must have been wan- ,1-...|__. 1.. oh. nynl-non when he "surely M0883 Luum. uuvw ........ ....._ dering in the wilderness when he! made his decision." and sent the case - back to the lower court. Judge Hamp- ; n... ..---_.I 6-In` nnrnnl-Ital` that Dacll `D II? IUVVCI uuusu uu-`.5- ..._.-._,. ton on its second trial remarked that W although he would have to submit to higher tauthorlty. he still thought he was right in splte of the lamentatlons i of Jeremlah." 4 - Changed Opinion. You think it a want of judgment that one changes his opinion. Is it a proof ; 1 that your scales are bad because they vibrate with every nddltlonal weight n .. ;_s.1-.I A... Lm-V .t`QL."`n 1:HE GREEN SUN. W-I-I CVULJ lbllltnlnlvnnunn vv v--v that is added to dither side?-Marl Edzeworth. ' . f \` Wining to Accept an.Apo_logx. 1 Priscilla (Just arrived) -Are there ` vany-menhere? Phyllis -0h, there are It `tow upolozies for men! Priscilla-, Twell. _'it an a_po_logy is (mated to me _;__1_`slull lt.7'-I,om;1on"r1mes; A Doctor : Assistant. I ~-. I__..u. y\pnn{ HERRING CATCH. lCl.'l'1u5 nun Lvtlulunuv .. mump1'{n'g A Bog__t_mnn'a Story-~ of th.~-Antluvo-~ :-"'.AI.`."l 24.51`. BA-u-Ian.-' . H $U`:I'[ l_!II. witty I' -..-- -........_ _,_ _i #5: '*-f-i?;:- . >_Littl'o .Poopkw `Here -15; mjdern-=.rairy':-.atory tron lre1gnd:.40ue'day about twenty you-I a'go._ ta cohespondent, "I WID shing from a boat on Lough Detg. I. inquired of my boatmen if they had" ever seen fairies. Ab rst. fearing to he laughed at, they scouted the idea. but one of them told the following: ,,A x._ L- __-... ...A...--.1-an. n` Ulll VII`, VI UIIVQAI IA: `fon a Sunday he 'v?aL"Fe3FiZim mass and stood with a friend named` Sullivan `on the bridge of Killaloe. Looking toward a potato field on the slope of the rising ground to the east of the town, a iield which he was able to point" out from the boat. he saw issuing from the lies a troop of `little people: one beinggdistinctly taller than the 7 -At" rs} they seemed rather _bl_urge|i,. that took distinct shapes and began to- play the national game of hurley among the bare potato rig. He called Suilivaxrs attention to them. but for some time his friend could not see them, then said he could. and they watched the game together for a time. Then the sun went in, and the fairies. moving toward the iiss, as it return- ing to it. vanished. Lisses are rough -1---- ........5Inuun la-fnnlza unmnfimnn I115 DU {$9 Tuuauu-wu-c -a-any-u --v ....a ` places; -sometimes biltocks. sometime; depressions`... often bushy. but never cultivated. I. have been told they are left as doocway for the fairies when `visiting the` earth's surface." ,It Takes an Experienced Woodsman to Locate the Trees. Mahogany trees do not grow in clus- ters. but are sczrttered throughout the %forest and hidden in a dense growth "of underbrush. vines and creepers and `require :1 smlrlful and experienced ;woodsman to nd them. He seeks the ihighest ground in a forest. climbs to `:the top of the tallest tree and surveys the surrounding country. The mahog- any has as peculiar foliage. and his `practiced eye soon detects the trees within sight. The axmen fohow the hunter. and then come the sawyers and hewers. a large mahogany taking two men a full day to tell it. The tree has large spurs which project from the trunk at its - base. and scaffolds must be erected so that the tree can be cut o above the spurs. This leaves a stump ten to (it- teen feet high, which is sheer waste. 7 4 ._..||_ .....`4-ntnp. Ohm I-xnn It may nu IAUUIILCUVIJ as the stump really co lumber. `Gut --l---- L-.. _.-.&I. ntaius the; :-nu On [In tw'Q'Y| The hunter has nothing to do with the work of cutting or removing the ;u'ee, his duty being simply to locate it. If he is clever and energetic. his remuneration may amount to $500 or $1,000 a month. but he may travel weeks at It time without detecting a tree, and as he is generally paid by results his earnings are rather precark Not sop I Day. West Point's aim is to teach men to meet any situation with the best there is in them. When General Custer was ; a cadet. he ventured Into the French. R section room without having so much | us looked at the day's lesson. The sec- - ____-..-.a c.. 4-I... 4:-canola- an luuneu an. uuc uu; 9 u..~v.... ..._- _-- tlon had been engaged in the transla- tion of As`.sop'3 tables from French to English, but on this particular day the A---I_ --_...l-4...-I A0 a neon nf hhifnfi F to use th e th utsid they for an 01! dog: chm IIIIKHHII, uuu. Uu Luho pun u.u.u...- ....., -__- task consisted of a page of history written in French. Cadet Custer was given the book and very bravely dashed into the translation of this sentence: Leopold. duc d'Autriche. so mettit snr lea plaines de Silesie." But the Duke of Austria did not seem to appeal to him, for without hesitation L- _...I. FAIBIES IN U ["7113 Thu leopard. the duck and the on- trich met upon the plains of Silesia. Some Very Old Tnu. Brazilian cocoanut palms live for aX)to700years. andthe Ambouaert that the date palm frequently reaches theageotmotomoyears. W& I 11) D8 0781' IUU yuua vlu, auu ....-..- ...- eight olive trees on the Mount ot Olives. near Jerusalem. which no known to have been ourishing in 1%. A --L rn-....L..l.. -hhnv Ynfkc UIOWII ID we LRSIILI uvuslnunua nu. -v'v. The yews at Fountain abbey, Yotko sun-e,wemoldtreeswhen,1n1132. the abbey was built. and n redwood in Mariposa gmve, California, is a man!- told centenarlnn. Baobab trees of At- tica have been computed to be over 5,000 years old, and the deciduous er ~_ _A. n|.......I4-nnan in nnnnidefed f W Ulll, HIM] I.-I117 Iain!-a\n\-vu- press at Chapultepec is considered}! be of a still greater age. The Fallen Mighty. A It isn't necessary to go to the Walt dort to see the nobility," said the man about town. Go down on Second aw LL _ .-.........a..n nnafnnrnntn Illlllllp EIIVV u. uv uv vv _ mm to the Hungarian restaurants there. The proprietor of one is an exiled baron. the pianist is a prince. the violinist is a duke. the waiter with the mustachlos was a titled landown-r er in his own country. and each and ` every one of the patrons. myself ex- cepted. is a scion of Russian, German or Hungarian nobility, banished to! aome reason or other to the wilds of j__I_ DD HUNTING MAHOGANY. A Striking Monument. Nowhere in the world can be taunt I. more striking monument than that erected on the shores of Lake Inq- Kul, incentral Asiminhonoretthlt Russian General Prjevalskl, a. tamonn explorer of that region. The tomb h hollowed out in the summit of 3 jut- A ting "ell! on the enstnrn margin of the ` lake, and the monument oonelluiot an enormous rough hemr bfuck-eot grur granllze, twenty-live feet -high, over . g u 1.. AI__.44-.- - . . , JVII $39". uocav .-stew, - -- g,11n,yahadahorror.ot pnmatugghnh \ ._'__'--_n Alf.` AI. nnnnnnxll Knopf! Percy-`Do you was Alice. _. 1...! - I...-uu- AI nnnnnnintn `I1. QNIA. Ii-4--3:--1--a-I ncipal 1 %1tron- Etion. rst. nd lea, . nn base 8 1 Drape;-2: etc" '_t9u 33: A , J une 20th. July 20th Aug. 20th Sept.90th Oct. 20th :33 mT. Barrie. 5 lfric_es., the; :1adtord \ hi; e\ distant fix)-I ' mile ~ his r.t yea 5 rs 190- Bcll and Mr. Hugh " Currie `the rst elders of the P.resby- Church in the townshlp of and when his father gus succeeded him as office he retained of his death, though of to take any active nving to his advanced age RA'I'l9`-3 The funeral. took place from the` xegidenee of lns`son, Mr- M. L. Bell, n Dummoii, on llmrsday, May 3oth..y Service was conducted by Rev. `Mr. h Tough :11 the lmuse, where a very n nnnber of people assembled. wk place at the Dun- n ;on cemetery. `The pall-bearers old friends of the deceased, Messrs. W. Cznnpbell, Dr. McAllis- ter,];1.~'. Szunpsnn. D. Smith,. Chas. Livingston and Wm. McBeth. Mr, Bell is survived by one broth- er. .\lr. Gen. K. Bell, postmaster at Bellview. ()nt.. and three sons, Mol- colm at Duntroon. John A. _and (}e._.rge, grain and prOV1S!01`l dealers at .\'e\\` l.nwell.~-Stayner Sun, MIDLAND.--The operators at the 1 new elevator are having considerable ` trouble in connection with the foun- - dzrriml \\'nI`l\' at the mouth of the ` Wye River. In some places quick sand ll2t.'~` been encountered while in other p2rr't.~` rock appears in such l2rge quantity that dynamite will lrare tn he used in order to break it up.-.\rgns. BRACEBRIDGE. -- As passenger train ;\'(._ 51 was approaching town on Saturday morning, shortly after four o'clock. it was discovered that the contents of a sealed express car were on fire. Constable Stunden n a t t \ t ( s 1 1 I 1 ll ' < semcc W1 1 ...,. 1111111 3 -:-+++-:--:-++++++~;~-:---+4-++-1-s--M--t-z-+ ~:--e---:--::--2--:-++-z--I-+-:9:-+~:-s--1-2-gt-+-s-+-I-3 The revcrme of the Province . for the five mr.nth_< ending May was $3,` 641.000. The Guvcrnnient is to build as waggun mud from Boston, on the Temi.~k:mnn:..r Railway, to Larder Lake. I. \ +.~:.+-++-:-++++++++++++++++++-u-+-1--s~++-1-3--;-s-x-+4-+++-1:-s--z-xv-2-+-s-2-er! 5 Bec;n1.~:- HM: presence of two j1'Y` 50 `Hf 1"|I`H1'.U) (`XCUSed the jury .\"hich\\';x.~n1 .-:LEing with the B3) men \\'21\ ..bje-gtcd to, Coroner John-1 S_trect cru--~.11;; fatality. The Obie`? Wm \'.':Ls v-:r;- by counsel for the Grand 'l`r'u.n1~: Railway. .\lr.<. fl;-.x-1', uf Pctrolea, was Stmck by 21 mm :1;u1 killed. MP J<'H'1 V. Norris has been 8?` 9`{11w1 I x:}`.i~: Librarian at St. Cath- n"Ir\:. ` received \P3)'- .\lr. JUN pointed I'M 2u'inc~`. ky. and: oments knaea [1}`1yg1%xna.ug. J Tht` I\\u'\'('H'-()1d son Of Mr-` H1rst'l':w.'1m:. uf Garden Hill, fell 111-` ` `1 D`-ml rxnl was drowned. ` VL8im-cr,- and remeq on the .\I.C.R.. `f.'madian divislon, 113\f Tecc-wed :1 substantial increase in- T . . .. blyh(fp:`__1>"{y_tcnan General Assem-\ W cm n}(J.1.L Montreal. Rev. Rob-1 1 `~1 was elected =Moderator;| Tl . . 3 \,`&,imI]{i~"1`:\r'=1' Commnssxon vxfll" e go I. shortly, and the mquary `No 11 . .V V pom, (Dress rates may be post- II IIHH into the poned. Four th people have 13.6911` Frushcfl In death in an earthquake` Pete ;\_l:Lrquctte stock_1191ders-h3\ _ G\n._, .\I1 T` . . q _p9re .\l.'lI`([l1Ctte stockholders Vhavel Dressed themselves. willing .A to`. Sub 30....QOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCI . _ 7\/f.. Ann-nc` Rpllprana H19 alzrrm mri 1-ha `\ranr`A u>1n `The Pros: Xv , .. ,, . THURSDAY, JUNE 6th. a[]t ITOII1 WHCIU H13 Auollwf first shanty, seventy-three wu.so~-sA 3,) , Argyleshire, .Scot- ` n, 1818, Mr. Bell came A ;h his parents Malcolm A Bell in the fall of ml at Durltroon, which me a perfect wilder :d`s father: was the 1 that vicimty and built Ly about .where Mr. 11's store_r10w stands, 1: time has son Angus ;d three~quarters of `a where his father ` ~--4--- cowl-II1f\I_f`11'FP JUNE V3.th .' -Mr. Angus` Bell, ly the oldest settler Duntroon and vici- ed by the hand of y, May 28th, at the `f 85 years . nd 5 _\' s;)n of A pf Cushendall, W35 4 4 rang the alarm and the brigade was soonbusy, but `too late to save "much. of _the' goods, which .had probably been burning\ some time.` The goods were of a "miscellaneous . charact_er, there being dress fabrics, fruit, type- writers, eggs, gold lling for teeth, thermometers, millinery, bread, ice- cream, and other stuff. The damage is estimated at from. $700 to $1,000. It is not known how the blaze ori- ginated. There was no 0-re or light [in the car.--Herald. ' r, Still : the gure is not a prohibitive one.- WXXQO " if & ICE I-\-anally; " ance folk are determined folk any- ` way. Their latest meeting, held in the Baptist` Church last Thursday, adopted a resolution to. petition the 1 Council to bring in a by-law placing J the license fee in Collingwood `at $2,500. A considerable took place before the motion ` was `discussion " carried. The Rev. H. Irvine reckons i that four hotels would be the only licensed premises. at-this figure, but it is doubtful -if even one would care to risk so large a sum. Certainly the 1 smaller men, and the liquor stores would be put- out of business and it appears questionable whether Enterprise. ORILLIA.--On Thursday a youth a named John Taylor, aged fteen 1` `years, oated into town from Brace- bridge. He spent the night in Tait s millyard, making friends with the nightwatchman, who shared his mid- night meal with him. The lad told a pitiful tale of having lost his father three years ago, and his mother three weeks ago. On `Friday, he walked out into the country, and ob- tained employment with Robert Gowanlock. He was lying on the sofa, apparently asleep, when Mrs. Gowanlock went out to the barn. ' When she returned he was gone. Shortly afterwards a gold watch and ,$4 in cash was missed. `Mr. vGowan- j 5 locks brother followed the `lad to i 5 Uhthoff, where he found him with a ' ticket to Midland in his possession. 5 Taylor was brought to Orillia and 5 searched, when the watch was found 1 in his sock. `The inner lining with 1 Mrs. Gowanlock s name on it had 1 been torn out, but was found in the t other boot, together with $2.62 of the cash. Police "Magistrate McCosh sent the boy to the county gaol for thirty days. He is'a bright looking lad, and it will be a pity if some ef- fort is not made to redeem him `be- fvoreihe becomes hardened in crime. -Packet. COLLINGWO-OD.--The - temper- ...... :..n. ...... ,a...........:.....: :..n. ....'.. 'uTrunkr cars. r A ` A. Desjardines,` a brakeman, and A. Doyer, reman, were killed in a_ railway collisiqnrat `Shawinigan Junc- A tion, Quebec; 1 7 ` . ,| North _,B'rant Liberals nominatgd Mr. William Dewar: for the\Legisla- . ture, and N.ort_1___x- Ontario Cons'efv- ves `renaming _d_.*Mr. W. H. Hoyle. `A.~'I__'u,rki's}1;~ i cc. .of ._six'-_.ba,ttaliq':is` Vb`}?Vf`hV Ara scribe $5.00o,ooo.cash_for; new stock `to end the rece1versh1p of the road. ---A1----. -5 .. ILU Cuu. |.||\. .....-..-..,-__`_ , Sir Robert Bond, speaking at a dinner at London, declared that the -union of Canada and Newfoundland `was at present neither desirable nor -_ ._- _L:..a.`-"4; VVGB GI. VA. practxcab e. Captain Donald McKa_y., of_ Toron- t. attempted to commxt suxczde bv ;u'nping into the bay. . Three explarnng parties _are bemg sent by the Bttreau of Mmes into __A.-....` ' J biaiHg parties are being j sent the Bureau nc-.-thern Ontario. | Five thousand dollars was granted by the Government to a technical school at`Sault Ste. Marie. - ' The Toronto Board of License Commissioners will ask the city po- llice officers to report as. to the en- forcement of the law in Toronto. l The fth report of the Hydro- Electric Power Commission deals` with `the Algoma, Thunder Bay and Rainy River Districts. It is understood that the. Govern- ment ._has decided. to dismiss Gover- nor VanZant of the Toronto Jail and appoint Rev. A. B. Chambers as Governor. _ _ . "` "-- `--4n-- n? Chnsen Governor. ' The Canadian Order of Chosen iFriends' decided that the insurance of any` member who commits suicide within one year after joiningthe or- *der will be forfeited. . The new Convocation Hall of the University of Toronto was opened, and a portrait of Chief Justicg Charles_ Moss, formerly Vice~Chan cellor, was unveiled. , __ AMiss Mary Mackenzie xdtopped. 'd<-ad at Watford. _ J` ` Jenkins" l'ivery stable at Belleville ` was burned, with mostof the con- , tents- The horses were` all "out, Murray` `Stephens, VWabash engi-. neer, was committed for -trial at St. Thomas on the charge of man- slaughter. _- . Archbishop Bruchesi has consent`ed .` to act" on the` Board. of Conciliation '_ to settle the Montreal longshorei: men's diiculties; _ _- ' - e- W~--..-.4 12.1.-ta-we're`ai-Q l I ,ra1gned In - the Six brothers A named ' ' Be] ,,-.1:..,.,." ,, 1, I .Lxuun_ y...... collision at ` ' ' "' ""~---A. 1' 21-. -l\r\)I s Belch` w`re' at.- *the Belleville ' . Police` barge of robbing `Gratid "A Gugteimdalan Acqurt has decided that twelve of the nmeteentm-.:x_1 con demned todeath by court-marnal for the` attempt on the life of the Presi- dent must be executed. Degrees were conferred at com-V mencement exercnses of the Umver- s:ty of Toronto. ' 'iA.e'g_is1;1:vi_o't1"'t-(V) limit the sale of carbolic acid was recommended by the -Council of the `College of Phar- macy. rm 1` co ` u-. .0 a 1-; b. 6M,[':