The daily witness, 10 septembre 1910, samedi 10 septembre 1910
[" for ra: ENT Lori.1d A ea kd, argo]- restar.Orpa-.Uppart \"hones shots be in Wie I wi, houid, ld ap- n't it 1 Mu.19 ONn- f them for on or an:- 1 par.tician, d un- 111 Le sevelt rimer n ths Can- at the .The * dass Tr and akey'a at the 8 own ndine éristin hearl- atten, Fair after With > and l cCon- peaker e has 13 er of as an- er.\u2019 said ie pres- would e TIlli- ndict- e was > out- mem- d re- on ar- Lori- let.place | Jus- erdar s ap- treal.deau.istics , and fiance f the tices el %i- ier:\u201d pro and new Ships hs of bnter Bible been ittec D.mise 0, to k in bv brian The hil- arly and are prge.onz an- pinter.est eet: brk- Des- ha- Jit- s to cdi- We dn RE à Saint \u2014T4H44 60440004 55 6 0 56 44 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 6 4 5 9 4 4 4 4 + ; 2444454545 F4444444 44444444 + + .Special Sale of Petticoats at 4 + À PMurphy's on Monday.+ + + See Page 7.> rrr betty emt rea \u201cVol.Li, No.212.+ +++ ite \\ FAIR AND COOL ++++ \u2019 10, 1910.PRICE ONE CENT.| | : : i { +4HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH (To the Ed'tor of the \u2018Witness.\") Sir\u2014AÂs an old employee of the \u2018Daily Witness\u2019 | desire to offer my congratulations.To read the \u2018Witness\u2019 becomes a habit, and a good one.This habit has so grown upon me that | cannot retire or sleep comfortably with: out first scanning its columns.The Hon.Sydney Fisher, in his letter refers to the principles of the \u2018Daily Witness, \u2018Firm and strong and do not change,\u2019\u2014this is true, and well do | know what the maintaining of these sound principles has cost the publishers.lt has meant a sacrifice of thousands of dollars yearly in the refusal to insert question- abie advertising matter.The influence of the paper has been splendid.| wouid strongly rec- ammend all who have not got the habit of reading the \u2018Daily Witness\u2019 to acquire it at once.Such a habit tends to make life twice as real and brings peace and comfort, as well as length of days.Long may you go on and prosper.The prosperity of the \u2018Daily Witness\u2019 means the uplift of the community as a le.whole W.DRYSDALE.638 Dorchester street west.DOMINION IS PROSPEROUS The Revenue for Five Months Shows Substantial Increase.DECREASE IN DEBT.Savings Deposits Show Increasing Confidence of Public in Banks, Ottawa, Sept.10.\u2014 During the five months ended 31st of August of the current fiscal year, the revenue of the Dominion increased $7,333,000 over the receipts for the corresponding period of 1909, being $45,830,370, as against $38,500,160.Expenditure on ordinary accounts wae $27,546,017, an increase of $1,190,838, and upon capital account, $9,161,450, a comparative decrease of $84,292.The debt statement shows an apparent decreasg of $1,270,135 for August.Canada owes to-day in London $260,240,237, which is seven milions less than on the same Axte in 1909, when the Government nad temporary loans afloat to the amount of'$7,300,000, which have since ben converted.The people's deposits in te Government and Post Nffice savings banks stood at the end nf August at $57,259,226, which is \u20183940 813 les than on the corespond- in gdate of last year.Reference to the chartered bank statement revegls, however, a larger increase in the sav- CATHOLICISM AND WOMEN Archbishop Bourne Says the Church Has Given Them Great Power.PRAISES THE NUNS.Thanks God Canada Does Not Know Poverty Like That in England.An address on the Roman Catholic systematization of efforts in work amongst, and for, women, was glven yesterday by Archbishop Bourne, of Westminster, at the Stanley Hall meet - ing for women in connection with the Eucharistic Congress.His remarks were.full of good \u2018pointers,\u2019 irrespective of creed or sect.The English Archbishop, after listening to the addresses of four other members of the church was introduced by Father Brophy, who stated that it was with very great pleasure that they heard that thé chief and leader of the English Catholics, Archbishop Bourne, of Westminster, was coming to the congress and had honored them, not only by attending at the session but by agreeing to address them.Archbishop Bourne is a practical yet cultured man, in appearance and in disposition.He has a pair of keen dark eyes, an ascetic faclal demeanor, but, behind it there is a fund of quiet humor which only appears at intervals, and it might be sald that it was a struggle to keep it back.He is an easy, fluent speaker.\u2018I feel that it is a great honor, and, at the same time, a consolation, to have been asked to address the ladies meeting at this congress, because I know perfectly well how very much the Catholic Church owe to Catholic ladies.I do not know how we are to get on without them.I am afraid that in many places, unfortunately\u2014 not so much in England as on the Continent\u2014churches would be found practically.empty but for the ladies.With the important parts women are called upon to do to-day, it means that there are certain portions of the work of the Catholic Church which cannot be carried on without their help\u2019 He had heard much in England about the privileges and powers of women.He was not going to discuss any political questions, but on the matters discussed before him it was the Catholic Church, and the Catholic Church alone; which had given to women power to work wihich they could not find anywhere else.The Catholic Church had invited women to take their place in the ranks of efficient helpers in its supernatural work.What, for instance, would they do without nuns?\u2019 No parish, however small, without a community of women vowed to the service of the Divine Lord.In coming to Canada he had discovered that his knowledge wag still very drcom- plete, because he.had found here from end to end of Canada\u2014and he had ings deposits, indicating that people are being gradually educated Anto an appreciation of the stahility of the hanks of ths country and are placing their savings in the latter rather than in the Government institutions.een FRACTIONS CLASHED.Followers of Tim Healy and John Redmond Met in Riot.Dublin, Sept.10.\u2014Tim Healy met with a hostile reception during a visit to Dundalk, County Louth, last night, and what was intended to be a fine ÿ demonstration in his honor was turned 3 \u2018nto a Donnybrook Fair.During the males many persons were cut and bruised, and when Mr.Healy left the hall afterward he had to be escorted 0 the hotel by a squadron of police.The followers of John Redmond stole a march on the Healyites and packed \u2018ne hall where the meeting was to bu wid, Mr.Healy's followers met the ater at the station and escorted him the hall.When they arrived there \u2018na rioting began.The Healyites were zreeted with hostile cries and terrific vells, Chairs and tables were thrown \u2018\u2019out and one man who called for ree cheers for Mr.Healy was prompt- knocked down with a chair.A vriest who interfered met the same \u2018aie.The Healyites thereupon abandoned the hall and their leader ad dressed them In a smaller room.Re- \u2018\u201crring to the disturbance created in \u2018ie hall by the Redmondites, Mr.Healy -aid there was one claim that he would rot make in connection with the Irish \u2018pnstabulary, and that was that they \u201c44 not have a majority of the black- \u201cards in the country.Healy then at- txed John Redmond\u2019s policy in par- -iment in connection with the home \u201cile, the budget and the Lords veto (ower.At the conclusion of the mest- nz Mr.Healy was followed by a hoot- 1% crowd ag far as the entrance to the heel where he was stopping.The po- \u201cYe were Obliged to draw their batons on make a charge on the mob in or- GT Lo protect him.Many persons Suffered miner injuries during the row.BLUEBONNETS TO-DAY.To be favored, apparently to-day \"fine weather, which the executive -mdly hope will endure during the irngress of the meeting, and so make no an extent for the very wet wea- ltr of the June meeting, the Blue ,.inets fall races open this after- ton, ; The track will hardly be fast to-day, ©.with fine weather, faster time ont be shown on Monday.Some of pest horses will be entered, and Colors of Mr.R.T.Wilson, the _ \u2018Atlon, will be seen for the first 1.Mr.August Belmont, president ~~ ine Jockey Club, will also be re- \u201c7sented for the first time in Canada.\u201cere will be eight races.The Mont- [eal Street Railway Company an- \"ance that owing to the \u2018increased y M3 he.Cn co ; A y DINE i ¢ Inside Submarine Cranberry Head 3 Lloyds Cove.8 Chapel Point .4 Sydney Main 3 Indian Cove.56 Collins or Stoney 5 Ft.In.Tons.5,600,000 29,100,000 16,100,000 3 9 Lloyds Cove.6 24,800,000 6 0 Chapel Point.Sydney Main Indian Cove 24,800,000 22,500,000 122,900,000 RECAPITULATION.te se se À Nova Scotla Steel & Coal Company, Limited\u2014Outside Submarine.LOW RECORD IN AUG.STOCKS New York, Sept.10.\u2014A new low record for the year Was established during August in stocks, bonds and notes marketed by railroad, industrial and miscellanescus corporations.The month's total reached only about $32,000,000, being some $20,000,000 less than output for July, and $37,700,000 less than the February output, which was the third smallest since Jan.1.The total] for the year to date is about $950,- 000,000, made up as follows:- January .J .\u2026 $120,260,000 February .++ or os 69,000,000 March ,, vv oo vo or eunn 214,000,000 April .2 0 + ++ res 92,000,600 May .+.40 00 08 ee een 259,500,090 June .42 24 40 64 La ue 120,270,00 July +.«.August te re se aw 52,000,000 32,000,000 Total.cr ee .$959,039,000 August is almost always characterized by apathy in investments markets.This year thé raflroads disposed of only between $9,000,000 and $10,000,000 bonds and equipment trust obligations.Aside from these, the most important financing was by Consolidated Gas Company, which renewed for one year a $5,090,000 loan, which matured on the 15th, and by the Texas Company, which borrowed $3,000,000 on 10 year notes.The balance of the month\u2019s offerings hag been made up for the most part of miseel- laneous issues of bonds and stick of public utility corporations.| .It is a practical certainty that the total of new financing for the calendar year will exceed that of 1909, which was about $1,400,000,000.The last quarter of 1909 showed a continued dulness In the bond market, as a consequeaze of which few efforts were made to interest invesors in the new issues.Moreover, the total for the year to Sept.1 last was considerably below the total for the corresponding period this year.PRESIDENT OF RIO GRAND RY.ON FINANCES New York, Sept.10,\u2014Sinze the annual report of Denver and Rio Grande has been issued, criticism has been directed at the management for the method of making up monthly income statements.These Included in \u2018other income\u2019 accru interest of Western Pacific recond mortgage bonds held in Denver's treasury.No interest has been paid on these bonds and- none can be until Western Pacific earnings warrant.During the year this interest aggregated $1,152,844, which if eliminated leaves surplus for the year about $400,000, whereas thé public has been led to believe from monthly state- ménts that it would approximate §$i,- 550,000.\u2019 President Jeffery, of Denver and Rio Grande, says: \u2018The blame rests on the interstate commerce commission.Denver's officials had no option in the matter.1 have protested against including this intérest in operating accounts, but réquirements of the commission made it necèssary.The five accountants employed by the company all agréed that it must be included.During the spring the commission had a force of 13 men at work for six weeks going over our accounts, and the fact that they had no criticism to make indicates that for this method of including the Western Pacific second bond interest in the income account, the responsibility rests with the commission.\u2019 In reply to the question why, as this method was against his best judgment, was not some explanation made in monthly statement, Mr.Jeffery said: \u2018I don\u2019t profess to be an expert accountant, but \u2018this method seemed clearly wrong.My arguments were, however, overruled by thé company's accountants and sometimes a superior officer must defer to the opinion of his subordinate officers.I, however, told them, as I told the company's directors, that in the annual report I would make \u2018the situation clear.This has been done fully.\u2018On the first page of the report the matter is explained In my remarks.Not content with this, the subject is further gone into on the sixth page, where it is still more thoroughly explained.Furthermore, in the duditor's statements of income account, and in the balance sheet the references there which show plainly the source of this \u2018other income\u201d were my own révision for the purpose of making 1t thoroughly understood that the company\u2019s surplus income for the year was about $400,000 instead of $1,- 562,000, as the public was led by the monthly statements to believe would be shown,\u2019 ntti REQUESTS FOR CLOTHES.The Rev.J.B, Pyke, M.A, missionary general, of 19 Hanover street, has occasional requests for clothes for those out of work, and would be glad of such secondhand garments, tm ree Total.SQUARE DEAL IN PORCUPINE IS THE DECISION In discussing the situation\u2019in Porcupine the \u2018Canadian Mining Journal says that three\u2019 errors, against which it 1s constäntly necessary to guard, are over-estimation of a prospect, assuming the presence of unproved ore, \u2018and dogmatizing' upon a mine's future with insufficient\u2019 data.All of us are prone to sin\u2019in any or all of these ways.And, ©n the other hand, we are equally prone to swing to the.other géxtreme' and to assume a guardedly nescient position.We have watched Porcupine with hope, and fear, and trembling.The latter two sensations have now pracs tically disappeared.We have abundant evidence to beleve that in certain spots bonanzas, such as we have never known in quartz mining before, have been encountered.At one young mine, for instance, spectacularly and uniformly rich ore has heen sunk in continuously to a depth of 120 feet.Within a short distance, and presumably \u2018n the same body of ore, two other shafts, slightly less deep, are in similarly rich ore.Fine gold is disseminated throughout the ore from shaft-collar to sump.Drifts are being run and still the ore maintains its character In fact, considering the amount of work done we doubt if there has ever beén any such showing on the continent.Mill returns, which, naturally, are neither full nor exact, indicate that much of the ore runs well over $100 per ton.Some of it greatly exceeds this figure.The oré body ranges from six to twelve feet in width.Its horizontal extent cannot be determined for some time yet.Some other prospects are almost - equally encouraging.It is inevitable that the great majority of claims stak- éd will prove worthless.But all se- curable evidence points to the fact that the clouds that for so long have hung over Ontario gold mining are at last to be dispelled.We cannot close, concludes the \u201cJournal\u201d without adding a word of congratulation.Porcupine has suffered no plague dof boomsters., The \u2018four-flusher\u2019 1s there, as he is always everywhere, But he is by no means the controlling element.The men who are making Porcupine are content to mind their own business.Bond Investments Yielding from 4% to 67 \u201cMunicipal Corporation Industrial Bonds The Bonds we offer have been sclectéd to meet the requirements of conservative investors.Each issue is well secured and has been thoroughly investigated by us.Our list of bond offerings will be sent on application.Royal Securities Corporation, Limited 164 $t James Street, Montreal Toronto Quebec Halifax .North of Sydney Harbor ; Outside Submarine Cranberry Head | Collins ar Stoney .Oûtside Ft.In.Tons.Submarine.Pt: In.69,700,000 176,600,000 109,800,090 147,800,000 147,800,000 134,400,000 Seam À.Carr.Barrasois .David Head Seam D .North Head 4 Lingan Main 8 Mullins.6 3 0 6 6 12 0 8 CT OV UU OO UD S 3 7 t 0 à ee.196,400,000 tons .122,900,000 tons 2,237,600,000 tons 2,556,900,000 tons CEMENT TRUST AND OPPOSITION \u2018Philadelphia, Sept.10.\u2014The coment \u2018trust\u2019 which was organized about a year and a half ago and known as the Atlas Portland Cement Company,seems to be in a fair way to encounter formidable opposition on Feb.1 next when the agreement of the Association of Licensed (Cement Manufacturers expires by limitation.The whole scheme of the Atlas Company rests on a license which they require.other cement manufacturers to procure from them to manufacture cement under the so-called Hurry & Seaman patents and which involves a royalty of 115 cent per barrel.Illinois courts have recently decided against \u2018the validity of these patents, and it is hinted that the Universal Portland Cement Company, a subsidiary of the Steel Corporation, and one of the most powerful of those ignoring the claims of the Atlas Company, would not be unwilling to acquire the latter company.It is also persistently talked here that J.\u2018Rogers Maxwell, president of the Atlas Company, and who recenily became involved in the stock market, will resign.Harriman Railways and Improvements .\u2014 Some Figures , New York, Sept.10.\u2014The Farriman line programme for improvements and extensions in force during the past year will be carried out exactly as undertaken.Plans for new work are being made on a less bountiful scale until there is brighter prospect that the investing public will stand back of the Jdemands it makes for expensive construction through new territory, but this has nothing to do with thé present dividend rates on Union and Southern Pacific stock.The regular declarations will be made in November.Instead of decreases in net in the fiscal year 1910, Union Pacific showed a net gain of $1,794,066, and Southern Pacific a net gain of $6,300,851, the former's surplus for stock amounting to 19.27 percent, against 18.87 percent last year, while Southern Pacific dividend surplus, aside from 1.68 percent, received as Wells-Fargo extra disburseraent, reached 11.32 percent versus 9.80 percent a year ago, hardly an unfavorable report.(mérite RAILWAY EARNINGS, Boston, Sept.10.\u2014The Chronicle\u2019 publishes earnings of 820 railroads with 235,462 miles of track for six months ending June 30, 1910, which show an increase in gross of $173,044,812, and a net increase of but $33,433,885, The expenses increased $139,610,927.\u2018Financial Bonds that Always Sell at a Premium Tha bonds of successful Canadian Milling Companies nearly always sell at a premium because there is always such a ready market for and such good security behind them, .In such a class of bond we can offer a limited amount of the 6% first mortgage bonds of a successful Canadian Milling Company at a .price that will return the full To on the investment.Special circular, givin full particulars about the Company and the bond issue forwarded on application.investment Trust Co.Limited oo MONTREAL.Ve eae Lingan Section 1 Bexoavaz Aor oo Prem an Com 8, Glace Bay Section.Outside Submarine, Ft.In.Tons.Tons.Hub.Harbour Back Pit Phalen Ross.Lorway 37,409,000 81,100,000 149,700,000 100,000,000 37,400,000 50,000,000 100,000,000 75,000,000 630,600,000 209,700,000 115,900,000 104,700,000 190,000,000 121,300,000 88,300,000 829,900,000 sp ST GO a OT CO S nov eoot LOCOMOTIVE CO.HAS ENJOYED ~ VERY BIG YEAR Boston, Sept.10.\u2014The annual report of American Locomotive Company for the year ended June 30 last, has èts favorable and its unfavorable features.Both gross and net showed a very subs stantial recovery from the depression which prevailed in the 1909 year, Boss recording a gain of nearly 70 percent, and net showing a gain close to 131 percent.Unfilled orders,moreover, which stood at $6,150,000 at the beginning of the year, had increased on June 20, to $17,550,000, a gain in 12 months of $11,- 400,000, or 185 percent.On the adverse side, however, is the fact that grees in spite of this recovery has in only three previous vears, been at so low a figure, and that the balance available for dividends is smaller than in any previous year except 1909, For the 1909-10 fiscal year American Locomotive earned gross of $32,202,562, as against $19,008,634 in 1949, a gain of $18.194,728, or 69.4 percent.Net for dividends increased from $987,139 to 2,048,758, a gain of $1,097.619, or 111.° percent, In 1907, with gross nf $18,- 515,486, or 54 percent greater than this year, net amounted to $6,358.207, or more than 300 percent greater.The small margin of profit the past vear.was in part due to increases in wages and expenses which were not anticipated in 4 making prices of finished products.Notwithstanding the poor years, 1909 and 1810, which combined were hy all odds the worst 24 months in the history of the company, it deserves to be called to mind that American Locomotive over a term of years has heen a tremendous earner.The year 1907 showed a margin for the preferred of ?5 percent, or a balance of 18 percent on the $25.000,- 000 common stock.Since organization American Locomotive has earned for dlvidends the huge total of $37,511,130, equal to the vearly 7 percent rate for the preferred stock, and a total balance of $21.861,130, or 87.4 percent for the common.This is a yearly average of 9.7 percent.} BIG GROSS TRAFFIC.New York, Sent.10.\u2014Western Maryland's gross traffic revenues in August were the heaviest in the company\u2019s history, at the rate of $8,400,000 per an- num.The increase over curresponding month last year was $114,000, or 19.65 percent.For fourth week of August the increase was $50,500, or 26.48 percent.For two months from July 1 to August 31, increase amounted to $200.- INVESTORS While looking for some, thing better than the ordinary investments, let us show you the Cartwright Securities which we have Underwritten.Our Ofering will save you this week 33 per cent.on your buying.Full information from UNDERWRITERS\u2019 SYNDICATE 505 Merchants Bank Bldg., Montreal.MAIN 3362.BANK STOCKS LISTED SECURITIES MINING SECURITIES UNLISTED SECURITIES INDUSTRIAL SECURITIES Stocks of all Classes Bought and Sold.EDWARD L.DOUCETTE, 1 St.Sacrament St.\u2018Phone Main 6529 + FETE BY | S.BANKER 14.1 OF EURCP.An OBSERVATIONS Boston, Sent.10\u2014G.Bo.member of Baker.Axling who has just returneq months\u2019 vacation abroad Le of which he talked Wôh bass, land and on the Continent, « \u2018In contrast with the pac.vailing in this country.F.r.Clers did not ta me sec perturbed over husiness op fi tres ditions in their countries course, are in the mij-: dulness, hut there äppeare interest among them ver United States than over ay - of the current outlook.] ever, a somewhat gener: political problems tere thrashed out ina manne; - soon to improve our hi.\u2018One thing that iniprecs.\u2026, larly, in Paris, was the pu $100 horids have aehi French common pennla course, the result nf Ven along such lines.tn tx y working persons p'aca =.wages in savings hanks.paratively small class 4 sand-dollar accounts, 1p, undoubtedly broken up ing reached any ei, J'rance, however, sao _.$100 or $200 are at yp ine, ly in these honds «of ent a pt and adiertisemen:: te not an infrequent i.of the branch banlh.vinces.\u2018English financiers .inteligent!y «bout ci - nancial centres as i Ciers about conditions: + 4 years ago Canadion js-.away the prime Ameri Englnd.They are sis! class, but securities nf panies have come ta he quite as mucl regard.! called bnoms in rubber ar.Le London have been of a ch.Le to the occasional furercs exchanges, but they hav- tended to divert funds fran tive investment.\u2018British manufacturers are oro concerned over the wav in» Vas.many is flooding their nr, duty-free goods, while they a, adequate means to rétnimnie ; the tariff wall that Las been y; the German government \u2018Except in a few invsianeec uo strong hanking connection = long established.there jv little foreign financing berne Germany, as the recent ining ee opment \u2018is makine heavy demie x available funds there, \u2018Europe is coming more arg mee recognize that class distineti ne or cient modes of business ting tion have interfered with Bras.and, consequently, respect and ndn.v For mother.This sort of rmusemen al persistently indulged in by many here, and the magistrate thought BLO wise to make examples of the first cnrs PU caught.Sa) ELI DEAD BESIDE TRACK.poy Cobourg, Ont.Sept.1%4\u2014 Coroner Pr: Elliot and a jury yesterday viewed @:a J.remains of a man found beside t'a G.T.R.track, near the station, here 1 last night, and adjourned untf} next Te) week.Mr.Harry Merrlefield came down from Port Hope and identified the body as that of Wm.Gnelen, nf that town.Prov Distr 15 Me TTODS THE BOY SCOUTS oy real, , demas Any boys wis\"- BEET ing to join = \u2018 Scouts should - in the blar- whieh wi a found below aul AN send it 19 iE secretary.vio will give him 21 particulars.11, 1.The secretary \u2018sc anxious 10 hear from gentlemen proces wha are willing tn | undertake the for- | KE mation af troops, E ar who will! aotk as assistant scoutmasters to troops a- ready formed.: Will scoutmasters kindly send =! | troop orders and reports tn the seers.M tary by Wednesday evening in order E ( that they may appear in the following Friday evening papers.Scoutmasters and others are invited to send in to the secretary articles « scouting subjects, photographs 1} scouts at work or any items of general i interest, when arrangements will lé made for thejr publication.A supply of tenderfoot badges 7 been obtained from England.These can only be obtained from the secr- tary on the requisition of regist=\": scoutmasters for the use of boys have passed their tests.The privé be 5 cents each.Patrol leaders\u2019 ° can also be obtaiged.Price là \u2018en each.Badges for first and second scouts will arrive in a week nr TW All boys should do their best 7 dus fy for these as soon as possihie, \u2018Scouting for Boys.3rd editinn.can now be obtained from Watkins Ethres booksellers, on Bleury strest and at ©?corner of St.Catherine anil Rea street, for 35 cents.All hove shou\u2019 endeavor to obtain a copy Of the fi cial handhook.Scouts shold =e they get the new edition wii 0 hés 15 been published.as it has heen revs: and considerably enlarged.Io he distinguished by its red COVE old edition has a brown cover piy of all scout publications = either of the above stores.\u2018The Scout price 3 cents.is the \u2018 cial weekly paper for the wire\u201d ment, and should be read by ai =\u201d.The \u2018Headquarters Gazetrn PI cents monthly, is the offiria.T° of communication between n°\" = ters in London and scoutmaz should therefore he read vv 2 masters if possible.Scoutmasters are asked to the secretary.each week, 1 °° of all boys who have joined 770 during that week, and «i 1\" have resigned or who have : moted in order that the rec be kept up-to-date.Any one desiring informat\u2019 no the movement should api: a secretary, Ar.Nigel Younus : 68.Montreal, from whom à\" tion can be obtained.= ¢ ASE TWO, tn pa Beg, Tatlo: UP 8¢ hI Depa: TEN ru ee LT Une Ss BE \u201crlai \u201cati | \\'räna tn be Fk Le (San) \u2014 A) \u2014 +++ et ST + + + BOY SCOUTS.; : ee À + Please send fuil part 7c\u201d | + about joining the Boy Scouts + Tiepar 3 - OT + Name.0.; LL ; : The + Address.,Ç the Ï © Br + \u2018The + Le \u201ccars + cour + Age.Date Len + - + Fill this out and rm\u201d ( Pied 4 to the Secretary, ar + MR.NIGÉL VOYNT.Lost + P.O.Be ¢ Le» + Ne tres Fesses dae + alls tha Yast hat lort ber fina an and QUE the nes Wn sed nee 5 of tha an- v-1 ard Cu.che aso thy LR hy ion Nia C.(iy the 118, nia se PT EE [ANDREW YOUNG M Department of Militia and Defence.\u2014\" Pm stmount Residence $10,500 A beautifully situated two-story pressed brick house on Lansdowne avenue.Rear overlooks Westmount park.Hardwood floors throughout, 5 nedrooms, 2 bathrooms, gallery at side and rear.Thoroughly up-to-date and ip gocd repair.Immediate occupation.For permit to view apply The Gradock Simpson COMPANY, 205 St.James Street Telephone Main 714 NELONS-MELONS MONTREAL MUSE MELONS, MONL&ALAL JS, the Finest Melon In Existence, Now is your time to ship to your Friend at the Seaside or in the States.Express charges, etc.pald to destination.No bother to you, Just hand your order to | WALTER PAUL 461 ST.CATHERINE STREET, AND HE WILL DO THE REST.i JACKSON & CO.4 CARPENTERS, BUILDERS i and CONTRACTORS Jobbing promptly A tions made.Bi Valua attended 129B to 385 HIBERNIA ROAD.POTTER THE PAINTER\u201d ESTIMATES GIVEN FOR ALL WORK IN OUR LINE.W.E.POTTER & CO, \u201846 BENOIT ST.Telephone M.1939.x ES £3 MARRIAGE LICENSES MONEY TO LEND.CUSHING & BARRON Notaries and Commissioners Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance Building 112 St.James Street.ASH\u2019S FOREST FRIEND Por Black Plies and Mosquitoes.Anyone ving to the country should have & bottle.Prige 250 and 500.SLOOD PURIFIER.\u2014HARTE'S BLOOD PURIFIER.It is better than any Barsaparilla, Price 506.ELIN®'S GREAT NERVE RESTORER.\u2014For the Relief and Cure of Epileptic Pits and other Nervous Disorders.Price $1.00 and $3.60 per bottle.J: A.HARTE, Druggist, 150 NOTRE DAME 8ST, WEST, Telophone MAIN 1190.Provinee of Quebec, SUPERIOR COURT District of Montreal.No.2428.Mathilda Lalonde, wifa common as to property of Edmond Sauvageau, Trader, of the City and District of Monti- real, has instituted on August 5th, 1910, demand of separation as to property against the said Edmond Sauvageau.CINQ-MAPS & CINQ-MARS, Attorneys for Plaintiff.Engineer and Machinist 11,18, 15 BUSBY LANE, Montreal \u2018Phone 2544 Main.Malone Moulding Company 48 BEAVER HALL HILL will frame the I \u201cWitness\u201d series of Pictures with beautiful three-inch moulding, dull artigtic finish, at the specially low price of ONE DOLLAR.rders are rushing in.\u2014 Bring yours.Telephone Up 1861.\u2014 We Lead In paying Highest Cash Prices for your Bags, Old Rubbers, Iron and Metals, Tailor Clippiigs, Factory Waste.Call UP 986, and we will attend promptly.d ELLISON & SON, Limited, 962 Bt.James Street.TENDERS FOR SALE OF OLD JUNK._i'nder the direction of the Honorable tie Minister of Militia and Defence, {értain lots of old canvas, old wood.old \u201caiher, metals, etc, now lying in the lrinance Depot, St.Helen's Island, are t be sold, and mav be viewed between t = hours of 9 am.and 5 p.m.daily '>nnday excepted), at the above-men- tinned place.Sealed tenders for the purchase of the Sanle or any of the lots, addressed to yajor A.H.Panet, 272 St.Paul street, slintreal, envelopes marked \u2018TEN- VERS will be received until 10 am .oa instant.,Ç ne Department does not bind itself \u2018Arcept any tender.Terms\u2014CASH.1e goods to be removed within 48 Eira EUGENE FISET, y Colonel, Deputy Minister.\u201c\u2018rartment of Militia & Defence, Ottawa, September 7th, 1910.The Vancouver \u2018Province\u2019 one of fading Conservatise newspapers British Columbia, says: lha Montreal \u2018Witness is fifty ; 7% old, having been founded as a .- newspaper on August 13, 1860.© weekly issue was begun in 1845.Province\u2019 congratulates this ably #1 paper on having attained to the rentury mark.It has ever been \u2018rng, clean, uncompromising pa- vith a spirit of optimism in all -5 Canadian, pe THE MONTREAL DAILY \u2018WITNESS.SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, T910.pi Lo to raie = _ Wi pasion a ces 8 Baby Carriages | Less 50 Per Cent.We Carts we're count.have 10 Sample Reed Go- and Baby Carriages which selling at 50 per cent.dis- ambulators which we're also offering at half price.These Baby-Carriages and Go- Carts are perfectly new and in excellent condition.It\u2019s a rare ohance to secure à really good Go-Cart or Baby Car, riage at a bargain.We still have a few 810.00 Collapsible Go,Carts left which we're selling at $5.95 each.RENAUD, KING & PATTERSON, Limited Cor.Bt, Catherine and Guy Streets.Then we have two English Per, .DON\u2019T FORGET Roberts = Saddler when in need of G00D HARNESS of any description We make the best to be had at any price.Come In and see cour WHIPS for the Horse Show.Stable Supplies of all kinds.3 J.W.ROBERTS 336 St.James Street Tel.Main 1966.-| would speedily become inspiring reali- THE BOYS FARM The regular monthly meeting of the Board of Directors of the Boys\u2019 Farm and Training School was held as usual In the office of the auditor, Mr.G\u2019 Durnford.The president, Mr.J.R.Dougall, occupied the chair, and all members of the Board not absent from town were present.The treasurer presented his monthly statement, showing careful and economical expenditure of the very modest revenues so far entrusted to the Board for administration of this most Important public work.As the work progresses, the belief of the Board in the self-sustaining capacity of the school farm grows stronger, nd the need of a capital AND TRAINING SCHOOL, Mr.William Perry, hydraulic engineer, who was present by invitation, kindly offered to go out to Shawbridge and look into thie best method of improving the water supply on the lines suggested in Mr.Mathew\u2019s report.There did not appear to be any sericr difficulties in the way, or any great expense involred, beyond the extra run of piping and the cement and tiling to wall in the spring, the labor being furnished by the boys and the staff of the institution, and Mr.Perry was warmly thanked for his kind interest.Boys\u2019 Farm and Training School, Shawbridge, Que., September 2, 1910.The President and Board of Directors: Gentlemen,\u2014There were 43 boys on structor Thomson can be seen.fund for the assumption of the heavy interest burden and providing for betterments becomes more urgently apparent.7 .e $50,000 asked for by the Board in this connection is still largely an asset of faith which the Board anxiously look forward to being shortly transformed into the \u2018substance of things hoped for.\u201d Could the public but see tor themselves\u2014as they are cordially and urgently invited to do on the cpot\u2014the splendid work being done, and realize their responsibility in connection therewith, the Baard feel that these vidions ties.The superintendent presented, as usual, a comprehensive and instructive report covering the field of operations for the month of August in detail, an abridgement of which is hereto appended.The accompanying photographs, taken by Superintendent Mathews, throw most interesting sidelights upon conditions there prevailing.ON THE BOYS FARM AT SHAW BRIDGE\u2014Resting after parade drill.Superintendent Mathews and Drill In- the books on July 3ist.Since then we have discharged one, who has gone to live with his people, and is employed in Montreal.We have admitted one boy on the 19th for four years for vagrancy.He comes from Lachine and is 14 years old.These constitute all the changes in August, leaving us with 42 committed boys and one voluntary case.The boy who had typhoid fever returned to school on the 23rd, and is regaining health every day.Our claim from the Government for August is $483.53.The boy whose discharge took place on the 21st of July, and who had been empicved by a farmer in the neigh- borhooi, went West to Winnipeg on the 23rd of August.He had letters of introduction to farmers in the West, and has every prospect of doing well.I would suggest that an expert be asked to go over the whole question of water supply.We have a pure spring bubbling out of the rock, and our object must be to tap this source { of supply direct, carrying the intake to the spring and draining the swamp, thus obviating the need of the dam and the reservoir.On the 27th of August the inspector of public offices, etc., visited the school by special instruction.The inspector expressed himself well pleased with the institution and the work done.He went everywhere and mixed freely with the boys and staff.The silo has given us a great deal of trouble.The plans to which we have faithfully adhered were set out in a booklet issued by the Cement Company and given to us by our architect to be our guide.These have been so unsatisfactory that I asked the cement people to send an expert out, and accordingly on the 29th of August their man paid us a visit.He gave us very helpful suggestions, and we are altering our method to his plans.This involves no extra expense of importance, but as time is short I have engaged a local carpenter to help in making the necessary structural alterations.We are not yet ready to test the new plan, but if it goes as well as we expect we ought to rise 3 ft.per day.Work on the farm has been interesting and useful.The oats have been cut and thrashed.We used Mr.Donaldson's gasoline engine and found it very useful.We have also cleaned up quite a large tract of the stump- land.This most useful work has been done with great delight by the boys, who had a great bon-fire to reward their labors.All crops look good.In the garden cuttings of the currant and gooseberry bushes have been taken.Garden crops look promising.The summer holiday from school room work closes on September 6, when classes will re-commence.I have no changes in staff to report \u2014Mr.Saunders is unfortunately not able to join us till November 1st.The whole respectfully submitted.GEO.W.O.MATHEWS, Superintendent, draw out as much as he liked.The original owner of the money trusted to each one's conscience and reason.All the colonists were too honest to collar much of it for themselves individually} but they were in such a funk that somebody euse would that they laid out the money hurriedly and recklessly.They built a huge barn, but the only thing it was really used for was to \u2018house a number of loafers, who, by the way, had smallpox, and came down heavily on the local rates.Then some of the money went in over-manuring the fields, and in buying ploughs and horses with which some rather fine pasture was cut up.As a matter of fact, everything went to pieces from the moment of the arrival of the three thousand pounds.People began to go off their heads, too, until eventually five of the people who had been resident at the colonv while I was there were put under medical restraint.One committed suicide.TOLSTOY'S BIRTHDAY And Some Experiments in Tolstoyism.To-day Tolstoy is 82, says the \u2018Dally Chronicle,\u201d London, and there will be published the second and most interesting volume of Mr.Aylmer Maude's intimate and authoritative biography, the manuscript of which has been read in part by Tolstoy himself, and as a whole by the Countess.To Mr.and of the finest translations we have of Tolstoy's books.When I was at their house at Great Baddow the other day it was natural that I should question them as to their personal attitude to the Tolstoyism of which they have been such students.I asked Mrs.Maude, who was born in Russia, if it Were not the case that she sympathised more with Tolstoy's views than the Countess did.\u2018Yes, that might be so,\u201d she sald.\u2018But had you been the Countess,\u201d I ventured to ask, \u2018would yoy, when he wanted to give up his property and so on, have gone the whole hog?\u2019 \u2018A little bit of trying to go his way; she replied, \u2018would have shown him that some of his ideas would not work.) There is no limit to what he thinks it right to do.\u2019 I turned to Mr.Maude and asked him if, In his big garden, he did his daily stint of the \u2018bread labor\u2019 that Tolstoy advocates.But he preferred tennis to gardening.\u2018I have no time for physical work, he said.\u2018I must take my exercise in a concentrated form.Also, when one has sat for hours in one's room writing, one wants to be in contact with human beings.At the Purleigh colony I found myself hoeing in a field without companion- ship\u2014but it did not suit my nature.\u2019 : THE TRUE TALE OF A TOLSTOY COLONY.! \u201cOh, how did you get on at that Tolstoy colony ?\u2018We lived half a mile off, and kept open house to the colonists, helping them as we could.I was doing Tolstoy translations, and living on the income I had after retiring from business in Russia.The colony showed me the mistake of trying to live one's life away from the common stream of civilization.I used to put in half a day at physical work.\u2019 \u2018It was rather hopeless,\u201d interjected Mrs.Maude; 'you never saw much result from it.\u2019 \u2018The ground was bad, and we had nobody in command, Mr.Maude explained.\u2018Then one of the men who was at the colony inherited three thousand pounds.Up to that time the colony had managed from hand to mouth, but it always cost much more to keep it going than if there had been no attempt to earn anything at-all.Still, the colonists were living frugally, and things were more or less possible till the three thousand pounds arrived.It went into the bank in the name of six of seven colonists, and any one could a ESA RASE games * b.PR hrs Mrs.Maude we owe, of course, some | \u2018What took you to the colony?\u2018Before I was forty I had saved in Russia, enough money to live on in a quiet way, and Tolstoy's influence increased my dissatisfaction with business as the malin occupation of one's life., We got ideas of having fewer possessions, and I went to the group of Tolstoyans quite ready to fit in witr their ideas and methods if Tolstoyisn.would work.When it did not work | and Only resulted in a great deal more friction and quarrelling than the ordin- itself.That side of Tolstoyism had failed.So I went on with literary work, did some lecturing, and joined the Fabian Society.\u2019 \u2018 SOME OTHER sed HIATT gee VENTURES.od ! .i \u2018There have been some successful attempts to fou.! colonies of sorts?\u2019 \u2014 \u2018When they \u2018have had their own Moses with them, or when they were peasants carrying on a traditional method that had come down to them through generations.The essential of harmonious co-operation is to know definitely how you stand to one another.In an anarchist community there is no court of appeal.At the very root of Tol- stoyism lies the repudiation of authority.\u2019 \u2019 \u2018Really it is not very easy for the public to get a grip of what Tolstoy- ism is\u2019\u2014\u2018The clash of Tolstoy's own ideals, the English Tolstoyan's modification of his ideas and current English ideas make as complete a hash as the Purleigh colony was.Though there were quite a number of intelligent, able, and well-meaning people connected with the Purleigh colony, not one has ever tried to tell the story of it; it is untellable.In the case of a writer like Tolstoy, who is very voluminous, very forcible, and very persuasive, people get taken up with some side of him.and then ary way of life, the problem had solve: think they are in accord with Tol- À stoy.You have only to get them to live together to find as much divergence between them as between any other dozen people.\u2019 ; _ \u2018What number is thers of actual disciples of Tolstoy in Russia whom you would define as following out his ideas ?\u201d\u2014\u2018Lots of people have tried in different degrees, and probably a great many are still trying.But Tolstoy's real influence has not been in founding a sect or colony, but in setting people\u2019s minds to work.His good influence has been on people who think for themselves and stand on their own feet.His bad influence has been where he has hypnotised people to do things against which their common sense would have protested had they not been hynotised.\u2019 \u2018Does not Tolstoy rather regret that so few people have come forward to start de novo?\u2014'He says it is not given us to see the result of our work.\u2018What really interests him most of all is the state of his own mind and soul and the minds and souls of other people.He rather welcomes efforts to start these colonies.\u2018It shows that people are trying to reach something better, and self-sacrifice always appeals to him.But he is less interested In the success of the colonies than the aim, in the effort than the achieve- ment.As ts his own family, his youngest daughter is very much in accord with all his ideas, and so was his second daughter, who died in 1906.dies and their Fall Suits No wonder there\u2019s a doubt in your mind, as to who should make your fall suit, considering the following undisputed facts: QUALITY OF WORKMANSHIP is easily spoken of, but the proof is demanded daily by the ladies in Montreal.STYLES are easily procured locally or by mail, but a poor selection, particularly when they are not exclusive, might as well be placed aside.MATERIALS are manufactured by the carload, but once again experienced buyers are necessary.Now here is where I base my success as a ladies\u2019 tailor: 1st.\u2014] serve the elite of our city and have done so for Years.2nd.\u2014~\u2014I have no difficulty in holding my patronage.3rd.\u2014I know what a lady requires, hence I solicit your trial order, when my work will stand for itself.BELL TEL.UP.2709 5.ROSENVEESEN 5710 St.Catherine St.W.LADIES\" TAILOR AND HABIT MAKER » .\u2026 ; y - T 2 .a RR REI He HVA ANE SAR Sp an EER EE URE oo Ra PSE er CT PIE A Sea day qe A RP ER RE HG NE rc Has made a \u2018Superb Series of Records for .Including All Her Greatest Successes BERLINER \u2018HIS MASTER'S VOICE\" Bon't Fall to HEAR these RECORDS before the Concert WE WILL GLADLY PLAY THEM FOR YOU GRATIS.Melba Makes Victor Records Only GRAM-0-PHONE CO, 415 ST, CATHERINE ST.WEST NEAR MANSFIELD BE SURE TO HEAR THE VICTR REA te kt Bell Tel.Up.2947 room: 436-436a St.Catherine St.W.WE have succeeded in obtaining the confidence of the Montreal public, both in our delicatessen department and dining We intend to put forth our best effort to hold our present patronage by giving every attention to all details in each and every department of our establishment.If we haven't your custom we solicit your inspection at any time.The MISSES LOUTTIT, Prop.y ef supply anything required.B JOSEPH Phones Main 444 and 445.WE carry complete lines in all standard articles and GOUR facilities of five floors of up-to-date and superior workmanship, assures satisfaction.PRINTING, BOOK-BINDING, RULING, ETC, in all its ranches- FORTIER, Cor.NOTRE DAME and ST.PETER STS.! machinery More Complete Than Ever.PROWSE STEEL RANGE || Best possible results with them.Fitted with Side Dampers, Brick Top Ovens, Terra- Cotta Lined Flues, Tea Shelves.Made in 30 different styles and sizes, or made to your order, no matter how large or how small, for family, hotel or institution.Talk it over with us.Geo.R.Prowse Range Co.Ltd.| 22 McGill College Avenue, (near St.Catherine St.) roll grates, Front and So, also, is one of his daughters-in- law, and the whole family lives more simply than it would have done if it had not been for his influence.\u2019 \u2018What Tolstoy has not gripped\u2014 \u2014\u2018Is what the good business man grips \u2014the value of getting work efficiently done with the minimum of friction.But in what we have been saying it looks as though I were depreciating Tolstoy.In seeki.g to explain him to the English public I should always rather dwell on the good of his teaching.But I do not think one sees its full value unless one also realizes its limitations and its errors.THE GOOD TOLSTOY HAS DONE.\u2018What promises to be the most valuable feature of your book is the intelligent criticism of an informed and sympathetic student.\u2019 \u2018The strange thing is that few great men who have moved the world ever do get properly assessed.Reams are written about, say, Francis of Assisi.But how seldom do people ask, Why did not the Franciscan movement regenerate the world?or, Why are all the decent men and women of to-day not Franciscans?The truth is, of course, that Francis went up a blind alley, and diverted people from the ordinary work of the world.So much so that only about 150 years after Francis had founded his order Wick- 1if had to denounce the sin of giving to his friars.People always want a man and his teachings: to be a block of solid gold.They won't take the trouble to discriminate and analyse.If they extracted the good out of each of the great teachers without taking their mistakes for revelation the world would get along., \u2018I somtimes think,\u2019 Mr.Maude went on, \u2018that one of the great principles that Tolstoy has made valuable is that it is in all respects good for vou and everybody else not to be swayed by anger, not to have ill-will towards anybody.In comparing him with the Quakers I should be disposed to think that he had had perhaps more sympathy with the weaknesses and fail- iar ings of Luzmani\u2019y than the friends.- © as br KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS.The Knights of Columbus of Tos; ronto, who are takine part in the ceremonies here to-morrow, return to Toronto with their friends by special, train, leaving C.P.R.station at mid- might Sunday.For example, he is very strong on temperance, but I remember him telling me that there was something very attractive ahout a tipsy Russian peasant; his real nature came out, and You saw how kindly and affectionata he was.\u2018Tolstoy has come to attach great importance to being on good relations with those about vou.To that end some sacrifice may even be made.Then one of the great things that he has done is tn make a large number of people realize that life has no sanity unless you can get a religions view of life.In the case of many men and women, their lives, under his ine fluence, have ceased tn he a disconnected series of enjoyments and calamities, and have hecome something rationally connected with the whole system of things.\u2018As to non-resistance?\u201d\u2014To the matter to a sentence.if thai be possible, one might say that nat to wish to harm any one, not even iL criminal lunatic, is all right; but nonresistance is an external rule bidding the use of physical force between man and man, and condemning the employment of a policeman\u2014it ig untenable.\u2019 R.8, sell FINES FOR SHOOTING SONG BIRDS.The game wardens intend Punishing: to the fullest extent of the law persons who shoot song birds on the ls- land of Montreal.Several] arrests have been made recently .n the district of Ahuntsic and Bordeaux.Besides confiscation of the guns, heavy fines will also be imposed.reduce Tor re NOTES AND NOTICES.Pianos to Rent.\u2014Planos rented \u201cson $2 monthly.Six months rent allowed in event of purchase.[Laxton ros 550 St.Catherine St.W.(cor.Stanicy St.) ar .Rs mn « Let EST SE Ar rs hee: + 2, RH BAA EN Ernest a ea ET.- ADS IE RDA STE rar La >.= 2 = ANCOR TRL AR et Homer Sie BRU SR RS A Sp sms EE APR Sr arin 2 52 ra Tr rame RES » ps, Crete a cs Ô \u2014 ART THE MONIKEAL LAILY WIINESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1910.eva, Weekly Calendar NERVO The Sensational Diver DOMINION PARK Season Closes Tomorrow.THE BEGUES Singing with the Band.ADMISSION 10 CENTS FIREWORKS TO-NIGHT OHILDREN 8 OENTS.160-I71 EMMANUEL CHURCH Drummond Sit, REV.HUGH PEDLEY, B.A.(Pastor) * WILL PRBACH AT BOTH SERVICES.Evening Suhject\u2014*\" FREEDOM AND FAITH.\u201d EVERYBODY WELCOME._ \u2014\u2014 Lee - rm rt DOMINION SQUARE METHODIST CHURCH.Pastor, Rev, D .I.HART, B.A, THE PASTOR WILL PREACH AT BOTH SERVICES.Bubjects\u201411 AM.\u2014\u201cABOUNDING.\u201d 7 PM.\u2014\u201cTHE GREAT FUNDA MENTALS OF PROTESTANTISM.\u201d VISITORS ALWAYS WELCOME.memes ere ST.JAMES METHODIST CHURCH REV.WM.SPARLING, B.A.D.D., PASTOR.11 AM, Rev.J.8, DAWSON, M.A.OF LIFE.\u201d.7 P.M.The Pastor.Sunday School at 10 a.m.and 3 p.m.(of Chatham, N.B.), \u201cPAUL'S IDEAL Visitors to the City are Cordially Invited to, all.Services.Calvary Church GUY STREET (Above 8t.Antoine) SUNDAY, SEPT.11, 1910.\u2019 REV.PROF.CHARLES BIELER WILL PREACH AT > 11 A.M, : 7 P.M, On .\u201ces \u201cSTEPS UPWARD.\u201d | cern \u201cNO RELIGION WITHOUT SACRIFICE.\u2019 CRESCENT STREET PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Corner Dorchester and Crescent Sts.Rev.R.W.DICKIE, B.A, Pastor, EVENING will preach at 11 AM.and 7 P.M.SUBJECT \u201cA RELIGION WITHOUT SACRIF ICE; A Reply to Pather Vaughan.\u201d BVERYBODY WBLCOME.\u2018DOUGLAS METHODIST CHURCH Corner St.Catherine and Chomedy Streets.The REV.W.R.YOUNG, B.A,, D.D., Pastor.Morning Service at 11 am.The Pastor.SUNDAY SCHOOL AND BI BLE CLASS AT 3 O'CLOCK.Evening Service at 7 p.m.Subject.ECHOES OF THE GENERAL CON FERENCE, The Pastor.VISITORS HEAR TILY WELCOME.STANLEY STREET PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH FREE SEAT ALL ARE WELCOME REV.F.MACLENNAN, - = Evangelist.FROM GLASGOW, SCOTLAND, Will Preach at \u2018both Services.Congregational expenses met by the voluntary offerings of the people.A real church home and room for work érs: Olivet B Cor.Dorchester a aptist Church nd Guy Streets.SUNDAY, SEPT.llth.PASTOR SULLIVAN | WILL PREACH ON \u201cTHE REAL PERPETUAL PRESENCE,\u201d AT 7 P.M.A TESTIMONY THAT CONFUTES FA THER VAUGHAN'S CLAIM THAT THE PROTES TANT RELIGION IS A SOULLESS RELIGION AND IS FAST DYING OUT.An Experience of 35 vears, by the PASTOR - - in the AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN JOHN CURRIE CHAPEL, 75 Inspector Street, SUNDAY EVENING at 7.00¢ o\u2019clock.Come and hear the Blessed Truth\u2014 Father Vaughan especially invited.MET.BA ARENA, Monday Even\u2019 Sale of seats, now open, at Lindsay\u2019 s Peel streets.THE WORLD'S QUENE OF SONG.g Sept.12th at 8.15.Piano Warerooms, St.Catherine and Local Direction\u2014Ellen G.Lawrence, 577 Dorchester 8t.West.ARE YOU A CANUCK ?Well, see the CANADIAN EXHIBITION AND FAIR IN THE ARENA Thursday, Friday and Saturday, Oct.6th 7th and 8th, 2 to 10 P.M.EVERYTHING CANADIAN Admission 10 Cents.MENS OWN Calvary Congregatienal Church, GUY STREET, SUNDAY, SEPT.10TH, AT 3 P.M.Speaker, Mr.J.Clark Reilly, B.A.Soloist, Mr.Gordon Armour, ALL MEN WELCOME.Retu rn Engagement .of the.GRENADIER GUARDS BAND Wednesday Evening, Sept.14th At 8.15 PRICES\u201425c, 50c, 75c, and $1.00 Reserved Seats on sale at «\u2018 Arena\u2019 only, \u2018BUSTER\u2019 LEAVES McGILL.The M.A.A.A.Rugby team commences early morning practices on Tuesday next, and Teddy Savage believes that there is going to be some record turn-outs.More men are getting into the game every day, amongst the latest to join being \u2018Buster\u2019! Matheson of McGill.| S.O.E.B.S.Excelsior Lodge, No.36.Che brethren are requested to attend the funeral of our late Bro.F.D.Jones, #j from TS Champlain street, Monday, Sept.12th, at 2.30 p.m.By order.JAS.FIELD, Secretary.Veterans 1865-1866-1870 A Grand Reunion of the Veterans throughout the Dominion and United States will be held in Ottawa on September 14, Wednesday next.Captain J.H.Patterson, of Ottawa, has made arrangements with the directors of the Central Fair to have a Veterans\u2019 Day.Headquarters will be in a large tent in the centre of the Fair Grounds.Speeches will be made by members of Parliament and others advocating the Veterans\u2019 claims to land grants on equal terms with South African Soldiers, so as to strengthen the Special Committee\u2019s efforts, who are to meet the Minister of Militia and other members of the Cabinet in October previous to the meeting of Parliament.Fare, 32.50, both G.T.R.and C.P.R., from Montreal to Ottawa and return, good to 19th.Train leaves sharp at 8.35 a.m.Lieut.- Colonel L.R.Baker will meet Veterans and Friends at Windsor Station, where badges can be procured.: * JAMES PERRAULT, \u2018Secretary.% Irish Protestant $54 BENEVOLENT SOCIETY.The Regular Quarterly Meeting of the Irish Protestant Benevolent Soclety will be held in their Rooms, 43 Belmont Park, on MONDAY next, Sept.12th at 8 o'clock p.m.Your attendance is particularly requested.C.W.XING Fo Team Watches Struggle Be- Cleary, Late of Montreal, Goes to a FOR ROCHESTER tween Champions and the Aspiring Newark Team.McGINNITY IS HIT HARD.His Assistance and Does Finely.Rochester, Sept.9.\u2014To-day the Mont- \"A innings, but two players whom he pass- .\u20ac Score: Boston .New York .1 Brooklyn.Philadelphia 00 003 00 0x\u20143 5 0 gen; Ewing and \u2018Moran.BASES ON BALLS WIN real \u2018Royals occupied seats in the stand and watched Rochester and Newark struggle In.a game which will mean much in the championship race.Holly, the \u2018former Rochester short-stop, rooted vociferously for his old team.He was joined by the.other Royals, aithough being ball players, they appreciated more even than the fans, the good play on either side.The.spectacle of Joe Mc» Ginnity getting punishment seemed to amuse .the Royals, but their manager and captain, Joe Yeager, became thoughtful as they saw Cleary, once of their team, come to the \u2018Iron Man's\u2019 assistance and do splendid work.To-day Rochester and Montreal play a double-header in which Keefe and Wiggs will work, Savage and Lafitte will likely twirl for Providence, though Geo.McConnell, who was so wild yesterday, may be sent in again.Rochester, Sept.9.\u2014The Newark club came here to-day to play off a tie game.Joe McGinnity started to vitch against George McConnell, and in the first inning the \u2018Iron Man\u2019 was slammed for five hits, two of them doubles and one a triple.The locals also profited by a muff by Ganley, the total dcings counting for six runs.Rochester scored another run in the second, after which Mec- Ginnity chased himself, allowing Cleary to finish the game.Cleary pitched beautiful ball to the close.McConnell started for Rochester, but was wild, and Was .taken out in the secord.Ragon finished the-game.Score:\u2014 ROCHESTER.A.B.R.H.P.O.À, E.Moeller, r£.8 0 1 3 1 1 Batch, Lf.+» 8 2 1 5 0 0 Tooley, ss.3 1 1 1 8 1 Osborne, c.f.4 1 31 1 0 O0 Simmons, 3b.4 1 3° 0 1 0 Alperman, 25.3 1 1 0 4 0 Spencer, lb.4 1 1 14 0 1 Blair, c.8 0.0 3 0 0 McConnell p.1 0 0 0 2 0 Ragon,p.2 0 1 0 3 0 Totals.30 7 10 27 14 -3 NEWARK.; .A.B.R.H.P.O.À.E.Zimmerman, 3b, .3 0 0 2 0 0 Ganley, nf.3 0 1 1 0 1 Louden, s.8 .4 0 0 2 1 0 Kelly, Lf .5 1 0 2 1 1 Meyer, cf.& 2b.3 1 1°3 1 0 Brown, cf .2 0-2 1 0 0 Schañly, 2b .1 1 1-3 0 0 Agler, 1b.3 0 0 3 0 1 McAllister, ce, .4°1 1 8 2 0 McGinnity, p .0 0 0 0 2 0 Cleary, p.2 0 ¢ 0 1 0 xHearne.1 0 0 0.0 0 xxLee.1° 0° @ 0 0 0 Totals.32 4 6 24 8 3 xBatted for Agler in 8th.xxBatted for McGinnity in 4th.Score by innings: \u2014 Newark.;.: 01010001 1\u20144 Rochester .61002000 x\u20147 Summary.\u2014Two-base hits, Moeller, Simmons, 2; three-base hit, Tooley; sacrifice hits, Moeller, Batch, Ganley; double play, Meyer, unassisted; first on errors, Rochester, 2; Newark, 2; hit by pitched ball, Alperman, Zimmerman, Schafly; left on bases, Rcrhester, 5; Newark, 9; basgs-on-balls, McConnell, 3; agon, 1; Cleary, 1; struck out, Ragon, 3; \u201cMcGinnity, 1; Cleary, 6: wild pitch, McConnell; passed ball, McAllister, 1.Umpires, Stafford and Murray.Time, 1.40.Attendance, 8,145.\u2018 SMITH\u2019S ERRORS LOSE GAME.Buffalo, Sept.9.\u2014Toronto repeated today, shutting the Bisons out 3 to 0.It was all done in the first inning, when with two hits and a couple cf errors by Smith and Pattee, the Leufs were enabled to get three men over the plate.Thereafter it was a ball game, neither Cronin nor Newton being in much trouble.Score: \u2014 La BUFFALO.> od H4 © CD 05 if C3 sa pin 1e se DS 0 Henline, c.f.Pattee, s.s.© McCabe, L£f.Schirm, r.f.Smith, 2b.Sabrie, 1b.Williams, ce.Woods, 3b.Cronin, p.xMerritt.xxWhite.@.* ».» = + 9» Crs ee se anes cococooooocoel soromowo mom ; ke) POOHAOLMELWSE SowvtcHbOOOHO»> e |! SSOOOOOWOOHO! \u2014\u2014 se ts es se sm .vs oo = ot no 1 -\u201c vo oo Totals.xBatted for Woods in 8th, xxBatted for Cronin in 9th, TORONTO.> w He ed of pi fp TT OT OY McDonald, r.f.Delehanty, lf.O'Hara, c.f.Slattery, 1b.Mullen, 2b .Fitzpatrick, 3b Vaughn, 8.8.Tonneman, c.© Newton, p.Lt e @ ¢& © 9 9» = = S0o0S0HHOHOG IT MAS S 89 GS Ha ba 4 br NONSUSOOO» .\u2019 æ x «© Totals.2 Score by innings:\u2014 Toronto.300000000\u20143 Buffalo .000000000\u20140 Summary:\u2014Bases on balls, off Cronin, 2; off Newton, 4; struck out.by Cronin, 3; by Newton, 5; two-base hits, Dele- hanty, McDonald, Smith; sacrifice hit, Vaughn; first base on errors, Toronto, 2; left on bases, Buffalo, 9; Toronto, 8; stolen bases, Henline, 2;.S'attery, Mc- Donald, Fitzpatrick; double plays, Mullen, Vaughn to Slattery.Umpires, Boyle and Byron.Time, 1.55.Attendance, 1,026.MANSER PITCHES WELL.Jersey City, Sept, 9.\u2014Jersey City defeated Providence to-day ty a score of 3 to 2.Manser, although touched up freely by the Grays, was effective with men on bases.Score:\u2014 HE .R.Providence .000100001\u20142 9 4 Jersey City.01002000x\u20143 8 3 er, Caldwell, Vaughan and Sweeney.NATIONAL LEAGUE STANDING.Shamrocks at Shamrock grounds.at Blue Bonnets.handicaps at M.A A.A.grounds.of Scotland at Dominion Park; Rose and Tl.istle vs.Grand Trunk.Nautique; Trunk.Manufacturers\u2019 Baseball League games; Spalding League games.GOLF\u2014Match between Outremont and Beaconsfield; pro, match between Kenny of Buffalo, and \u2018Murray, at Royal Montreal links; Sherbrooke at Ranelagh.Mr.J.W.Moffat Resigns lgnation to Mr.Arthur Plow vester- day, ment as Manager of the International hotel at Sault Ste.Marie taking him out of the city.Mr.Moffat was one of the best known men on the cinder track holding the 880 yards championship for four years in succesion, and being mile champion for two years.Since he dropped out of active athletics he has taken a prominent part ganization of the M.A.A.A.being chairman of the outdoor sports department.the registration committee and chairman of the championships committee.be Steve Farrell, squad who is going to Columbus, Ohio to open his engagement with the University of Ohio.NOTES FROM ALL OVER.been called for Wednesday evening, to discuss plans for the next road race to be held during the fall.United States will be in Montreal the week after R.Grenfell, the Farl of Rocksavage, Mr.F.À.Gill and Lord Woolhouse.the English Marathon race.held at Westmount this afternoon.Grand Circuit races, Hartford, Uhlan \u2018came within 1-4 second of his own world\u2019s record - yesterday.\u2018Lake Erie circuit trotting races, scheduled to be: held Pa., next week, have been called off.terson; Manser and Crist.a ~~ Hon.Secretary.Batteries: \u20148Sline, Randolph and Pe- TO-DAYS GAMES.Montreal at Rochester, two games.Toronto at Buffalo, two games.Baltimore at Newark.Providence at.Jersey City.BOSTON BEATS NEW YORK IN SPITE OF FEW HITS.New York, Sept.9.\u2014Boston to-day defeated New York 3 to 1, winning her first game of the season here.Drucke held the visitors to three hits in ight BRITISH AND FOREIGW MAILS.To Be Closed at the Montreal Post Offico During the Week: Ending, Sept.10, 1910.Sept 9 900 a.m.New York, American.* 9 615 pm.\u201c Supplementary.** 9 6.00 p.m.Emp.of Ireland.Can.Pacific.*#10 12.30 p.m.Canada, .Dominion.*Letters may be posted up to 6,15 p.m.C Other matter should be posted before 00 p.m, **Parcels are forwarded by these steamers, latest time of mailing is 5.00 p.m.Friday and 12.00 noon Saturday.Letters for the above mails may be posted at Station °B\u2019 up to within 15 minutes, and at Station \u2018C\u2019 up to within t 80 minutes of the above mentioned hours of closing.Letters for Registration should be posted half an hour before closing of mail, .~~ months\u2019 skating rink, will have Morris Wood, world's chamcion skater, Norval Baptle, structors.ship of Stormont, Dundas and Glen- garry, at Cornwall, the Cornwall team wou for the third year, and now own the trophy.to 14 yesterday, at night.Victoria C.C.against McGill 'C.C., who play on the former's: grounds at St.Lambert to-day: tles, Jackson, Bogath, Rasper, Morrison, Campbell,\u2019 Wilkinson, Redfern, Humphries, Hicks, OTTAWA'S COACH SUGGESTION.club is still ity that attempts are to be made to induce Rev.Father .Stanton to act in that capacity.Rev.Father will be able to devote all his time to the work in consequence of his clerical duties, but it is hoped His speciality is trick play, and it is fbelieved that the open game will be more played this year than the scrimmage._ \u2018 d, scored.HHE 10010001 0\u20148 3 0 I 0006006060 0\u20141 7 2 Batteries \u2014 Ferguson and Smith; and Drucke, Crandall and Myers.Philadelphia, -Won to-day's game from Brooklyn gcoring three runs in the fifth inning on two hits, a base on balls, an error by Stark and a sacrifice fly.8.\u2014Philadelphia Sept.by Score: 00000002 Batteries \u2014 Rucker, Knetzer and Ber- GAME FOR DETROIT TEAM Batteries\u2014Gray and Ainsmith; Fish- RACING \u2014 Opening of Autumn meet FOOT RACES \u2014 M.A.A.A.Annual FOOTBALL \u2014 Royal Rovers vs.Sons REGATTAS \u2014.Annued meet of Club motor \u2018boat races at Grand BASBBALL \u2014Montreal at Rochester: A LOSS TO LOCAL SPORT.After Many Years Active Work.MATCH AT MILE END! \u2018Winged- Wheelers\u2019 and Shams Will Both be at Their Best will assist at the game.in all those places.F.Dryden, $4,000, and $150 in cash: get $100, and the District of Columbia, oll.M.A.A A to Assist Swimming The annual meeting of the M.A.A.A.swimmers was held last night at the club house, when the following committee was elected: \u2014Chairman, Dave Crutchlow; Norman Thomas, Dave Crutchlow, who was in the chair, had good news for them, announcing that, after the they had been making in the championships for several years, the direc- this Afternoon, JOE LALLY\u2019S MISSION.i the swimming section of the association, and one and all had assured him that they would do all they could to boost the sport in the M.A.A.A.This meant that if the men made a gond ;æhowing in the tank trials, a team , WOUld be sent to the American cham- i bionships this winter.The hath committee had also received invitations to play polo against the New York teams, and, if the English rules, which are being adopted in the United States are adopted here, the \u2018winged may be represented in the local league and later be pitted against the Americans.After the meeting, the newlr-ap- pointed committee met and decided wheel\u201d MURRAY Bray DAN KEN) Outremont Pro, Wa + Canadian Opey ;.1.Champion, Pre ie tm | i \u2014 COURSE WAS Pan: \u2014\u2014 : .that the first of the series of fall .crcvéretard, Sept.9.Detroit won, from C handicaps be held on Wednesday.\u2018 Some Great Work Seen .i 5 winning ead in the third, when, with van Boomer Goes West to September 21.The events will be a | Mont When the By: » wo out, Fanwell issued four passes 1 i | y rds (green) race; forty yards, | ay oe which, with Delehanty's single and r up Enthusiasm in Amateur and'one hundred yards (open): spring | Fell Dow.Crawford's double, netted four runs.Lacrosse.board diving (open), and a relay race.| ?core: : REE 1 The series will continue for twelve | Dan.Kenny, the apr | Give.9190988112 É 1 Thin attormoonrs game at nano na CCS the programme evcrs Wade.or ThA NN Ie : - 3 sist o wo open | title ant un AE ; Batteries \u2014 Fanwell, Demott and oetween Shamrocks and Montreals swimming and one open diving event, | aa T ame | J Land; Donovan and Casey.close ring the lacrosse season to 2 a green event, and a relav race | summer in the he 5 , save for one more league fix- | yesterday {ook 1h en Boston, Sept.9.\u2014Coombs shut out the ture to be played in the citv.; game, and hell oo) locals to-day and Philadelphia won its While to-dayre game means nothing MARITIME TENNIS, break bot pare | Grr stralght game from Boston, 2 to in the league running, it should not | vous Anan : R.HE pe devoid of interest, as Shamrocks Proposal to Divide Canada for | 1% priced mn lm Philadelphia 00 0 100 0 1 0\u20143 4 1 |having been gradually pulling them.Championshi van gap, TT Boston .0000000000 6 1 |selves up until they now approach the amplonship Purposes.|The golf was goad + and Magda, Coombs and Lapp; Hunt, class of Montreals.There is an old- | Lhe Ean para A , time rivalry between the teams to St.John.N.B., Sept.9\u2014 An open | Pe han rain af 14 Washington, Sept.9 \u2014 New York Make things more interesting.Then Maritime tennis meet will be held here more especially of og.souples à double and a single with two there will be the ohs and the ahs and netx year, in which American and | nothing to improve 1e ; pitch in the nin inn- e © A .+ : - - dition to this a ene ing and defaated Wiashigton, 3 to 1.h Where did the ball go, what did Canadian players will he asked to en | dav, monn ine oo Score: e do with it?\u201d of those who never ter.The tournament will probably | On the whois 8 was R.H.E.| cefore saw a lacrosse game.A num- take place at the end of August.A | golf, bus wood ano Washington 1 0 0 0 0 0 00 0\u20141 \u20188 | ber of the visitors, and pr suggestion was made at the meeting of gallery wax vor wo , probably some ; 5 i New York .0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3\u20143 6 0 of the athletical i iasticy the association last night that for ten- fortunate that more ly inclined ecclesiasticg sent to see the o iles nis purposes Canada should be divided' oul ce into two sections, eastern an: west- Played close vo ro ton Les Shamrocks will have the same team i Murray's cars St Louis, Sept.9.St.Louis and |that has beaten pretty nearly every.(Ln; that the provinces should decide | in 78, Kenny 01 Chicago split the third double header thing but Nationals Mecavn 1 fpelr sectional championships, and hut got it down 1.5, series to-day.Chicago won the first, probably repla Cli y wi that the two champions should then when the wind ci.; 8 to 1, and lost the second, 5 to 2.Nel- p'ace Clingen on the line- meet in Toronto to play finals.It is ing in th gale na.à + son, an Ohio and Pennsylvania League men Montreals will have all their old hoped to be able to send some players | He Was shorter than ok, gecruit, pitched good ball for the local.D are exception of Albert from the Maritime Provinces to Eng- | CN ne lag aimes .: 7 J ls morning.land next year.Dhamma pee ER 4 St.Louis .0 0 100 00 0 I TE paidie St.Pere and Billy Foran will Chas.Grant, of Halifax, in tne | Spesiaciar mt (5, Ohicago .003000 230\u20148 11 0 re officials.match this afternoon, won from Me- hole.Was the dames Batteries \u2014 R y and Killifer; Walsh .Donald, of New Glasgow, the scores Le holed out from a oo.and Block.me Mr.Joseph Lally, of Cornwall, js being 5\u20147, 6\u20143, 1-4 and 6\u20144 To- feet._ & \u2014 RHE going out to New Westminster to see MoOrrow afternoon, at 2.30 o\u2019clock, An- an SRI parted well St.Louis 02000102x\u20145 5 »|L hose games hetween Nationals and Sus Cassels, of Montreal, will play ond.Th four ans Chicago.100001600 0\u20142 9§ 3|the cup-holders.He will just happen Mr.Grant, and the match should champion wax two a ; Batterles\u2014Nelson and \u2018Stephens; and to be on the spot when the games are Prove interesting as both are clever The nexi two were ha.{ White and \u2018Sullivan.played.His real object in going is to players, and Mr.Cassels holds the Was won by Murrax, EASTERN LEAGUE STANDING boom lacrosse :n the West.After the CUP for the all-Canadian champion- Carre Quifalo mar * Bames he will go to Victor ship.Kenny \"steadied dow Won.Lost.P.C.he will organize ga Tacrosse.Teagan re Another interesting match which and though he her LE Rochester 0.81 53 -604 connection rlith the public school will be that between Miss Mabel could he seen that he wg.Toront PE 58 gH tem.Then he will come back Sÿ$- |Thomson and Miss Babbitt, :n the hang of the course.Baltimore.Proc 19 82 230 son, Rossland, Calgar ac by Nel- fingls of the All-Canadian ladies sin- ,_ Murray increased his land 1m 4.Buffalo Uo ie 69 \"481 Saskatoon, Resi gary, Edmonton, gles.The new officers of the Mari- TE OUL in the afternunn, 1e es ee 00 208 4S \u20ac on, Regina, Brandon and Win.; ; ; ; ; Coming home, the fret < jura - Montreal ., ., .d9 72 450 nipeg, endeavoring to sti 1N- time association are: President, Chas.jalved Kenny won th su 77 Providence .,.57 77 425 ment in favor £ he SUr up senti- Grant, Halifax; first vice-president, the 6th was halved nd TH ome à Jersey City .56 81 .409 of the national game Mr.Vedito, Halifax; second vice-pre- by the Outremont man.Tir Dee halved, and Kenny capture] ro.Cll making Murray 3 np, \u2019 Kenny's forte is his driving sident, Malcolm McAvity, St.John, and LE honorary secretary-treasurer, Louis Chicago ven Lost.BS AMERICAN SHOOTING.Gastonguay, Halifax, days ago at [he Buffain cup =a, QICABO ++ 1 00 ven S8 3 .230 yards with his puiter.Hr R'tisburg te ee +15 50 -809 ; EARL GREY TO TOUR.this club several times Philadelphia .°., !166 61 sso United States Infantry Team Cap- feats diving was 50 0 Cincinnati ., +.64 65 .496 ¢ ; ; sai i 4 This ie à St.Louis .°.\"12 \".1149 75 (896 tured Dryden Trophy Governor General Will Likely Visit) [hc morning round.Thic is a ooo Brooklyn feed i in West Indie's.feat that will not he equalled far rose re en 4 3 Seagirt, N.J., Sept.9\u2014 With an ag- time.cores | i.AMERI AN gregate score of 1,065 points out f a ; fe scores In Ne afternoon ra: Cc LEAGUE STANDING possible 1,200, the teams representing Ottawa, September 10.\u2014Earl Grey, Murray Oct\u20145 5 9 4 4 à ; Won.Lost.P.C.| the United States Infantry captured having concluded his trip to Hudson | y» Qet-5 2 ; sos aon New Voie ound 39 EY | he Dryden Trophy match here to- B@y, Is now contemplating a Visit to Kenny, oOut_b 445 5 ¢ 4 By i hee es eT 53 355 day.: the West Indies.Hs will likely go N In\u201455 4 4 4 3 4 4 + Detroit .-.=.73 56 !566 The teams stood at the finish:\u2014 in January.This afternoon Kenny will play C5 Washington J 1! 1159 7 [450 L\u2014U.S.Infantry.1,065 AN the.Dixie Source thr a paral Ie > 5 | © ee ee 1, Xie se fc purse of $40 Ca a rt 00 0DRO7L 481 | New York.Lo.00 [11D Togo |» LANGUAGE AND RELIGION, .iii again Da 86 noleane fie peu, a cago - .ee es +59 mn 395 3.\u2014District of Columbia.!\u2018 1,056 round will probably draw a big 2.\" \u2019 one nd 979 &\u2014New Jersey.\u2026.1052 .Kenny's play is well worthy being 1 ee United States Cavalry.1.051 French and Catholicism Go Hand in lowed by golfing enthusiasts.He THIS AFTERNOON.phe winners will get the handsome Hand is the \u2018Devior\u2019s\u2019 View, Dis ram endons Caria gs airariive LACROSSE \u2014 N.L.U., Montreal vs.Yoel trophy, the gift of Mr.John his play, as well as his general = round steadiness.His steadiness = well shown in the Canadian ape when, after a fine fart on the first his lead was endangered hy Gear Lyon\u2019s sudden recovery to phenomens! form or the second day.Newark, N.J., valued at New York will In an editorial, the Devoir\u2019 refers to ) the intimate connection between the \\ faith and language of French-Cana- ra dians, and holds that one is the guar- FALL SWIMMING.antee of the other.It says: \u2018\u201cWihe- On Monday a foursome will he Tan ther in the Maritime Provinces or in at Ranelagh, Albert and Charl the west, in New England or in On- rav against Kenny and Wood: tario, the French language remains for At the end of next week the : our people the great vehicle of Catho- foursomes will he played hy the lic thought, and it is both as believers 14 ; an, unit ura and patriots that we defend it\u2014and: will Mepalred against Cure M TE that we shall defend it agalnst all the first of which will probably ba pls - comers.No one, however exalted his ed this vear at Beaconsfield.In tur position may be, has the right to pro- the four will play over the links of 13s scribe the idiom of a people.Behind I'spective courses.the Blessed Sacrament will walg, on Sunday, fraternally united, the Aca- PONIES FROM ICELAND.dians, Franco-Americans, the Canadians from Omtario and the West, and the French-Canadians of Quebec.What more energetic and more eloquent contradiction could be offered those who dare pretend that our race is doomer)| to rapid and complete disappearance?\u2019 7 Ine] Club Attain \u2018High Efficiency.R.Logan, Arthur Walsh, and Billy Ross.derday, brought some fiftr Ivetin ponies, consigned to Mr.WW.W.Oy The animals were landed in the bes of condition, and as they coma from Iceland, there is no doubt of their ve fine showing which Mr.J.W.Moffat tendered his res- va in consequence of his appoint- Twenty years ago in the or- He was also a member of Another loss to the M.À.À.À.will coach of the track A meeting of the Harrler Union has The English polo team touring the next.Tt.consists of Mr.Mike Ryan will represent Canada in M.A.A.A.fall handicaps will be By trotting a .mile in 2.01 1-4 at the in Edinburgh, | Chicago Ice Palace, a new ten and ex-champion, as In- In a tug-of-war for the champion- British bowlers beat Sarnia by 18 and left for Windsor The following have been pleked for Gausden, Whit- Lashley, taser Ottawa, September 9\u2014The Rugby endeavoring to get a oach, and it is stated on good author- It Is doubtful if the o induce him to take a leading hand.tors had recognized the importance of ing able to stand a Canadian winter The men who uphold the standard of sport to-day are clean men\u2014clean of action and clean of face.Your baseball star takes thought of his personal appearance \u2014he starts the day with a clean shave\u2014and, like all self-reliant men, he shaves himself.Wagner, Jennings, Kling, Donovan, Chance\u2014each of the headliners\u2014 your local \u201cSouth Paw\u201d\u2014 your home-run hitter\u2014owns a Gillette Safety Razor AND USES IT.Albert Murrav and Wondwa ! I The Hurona which arrived here ves- | ~The Gillette wins the pennant in the Razor League every year and undoubtedly is the World\u2019s Champion.The Gillette is typical of the Canadian spirit.It is used by capitalists, professional men, business men\u2014 by men of action all over this country.Its use starts habits of energy\u2014of initiative.And men who DO for themselves, think for themselves.Be masterof your time.Buya GILLETTE.Pocket Editions, $5 to $6.everywhere.The new Gillette Sign is the thing to look It denotes the dealer who handles both Gillette Standard Set, for.Razors and Blades.GILLETTE SAFETY RAZOR CO.OF CANADA, LIMITED, $5.Look for the Sign.MONTREAL.BE a Te ge Sold ER Tr tea\u201d a.rn oe, Pres Lt TITRE A Outre.lan amis.1 das 0, 1H, Mor i ania : \u201code ha, 5 © ASP, CS - 3 3 >: + - PE < \u201cane Seng Visin Ab TNR prev A mil ~~ a) \u201caa - sd, = Pers Et ag] - .Se 5 = app wie, ESS 0 a Pipe gat SOI Cm s_.» rronr 4 ailry, : fois , An re oF all.4 Wwus À ma-: das.org?1enal ar ée ave Mur- I Pall local war rra.\u201chers ylayv- turn their 3° =.kt u, ~ iy - 4 , A , te a.Sy a, nr Na aay ape $6, We ave va, Sr Sas : SE SES ne ce CYR fd gene N Rei ) i j ; Bu ea : a ainaosn £0 NOP: hae ro = Es Ry pT Si FT A a apie FA 7 pas 0S TE Ca pT iy Soa, 1 J ble PR.Ph AE : mr ==> Ir mis An AS Pr 740 QE ren Aer EE Le $14 SE Lo, > pl CA DELLE =r ill x LAS | FH wi À GAIN Hal, M Ë La 4.À Yl Qi ge À \u2018 TEE .LS == Sas T2 Cerne] Ea tn CCS ME CL There Are Some Things We Want To Show You Before You Leave Our City.Will You Allow Us That Privilege on Monday ?hats that will win their way to any woman\u2019s Our Chamois Colored Cloth \u2014Is one of them.We want to show you particularly five of the different tints of this color so delightful.The Champagne tint in a beautiful cloth for \u2018evening dresses and capes, 32 inches, at, per yard 1.22 22 12 40 44 ee oe.$2.00 The Sahara tint in a cloth with permanent \" .$2.00 Sable de Combo is the newest tint, somewhat -déeper-in its tone, the cloth being suitable for- sults; price.+.$150 Light Snuff tint, a somewhat still deeper tone of the same family, in a handsome cloth, finishat.BE ct eh ee ee ee ee 00 aus + .$J50 Torson d'Or is the last of the five, rich and beautiful at .$1.50 And after that, if you have time, let us introduce you to the new pinkish brown shades.But they constitute another color family.Our Real Irish Lace Section \u2014Is another of them.For it is the one real Irish Lace section under the British Preferential Tariff which enjoys the additional advantage of being the representative for Canada of the Irish Home Industries\u2019 Association.Our Millinery \u2014is a third one of them.For there is in our Millinery department, at heart.Qur Dresses \u2014Is another of then.For here are the draped Empire styles in Messalines, Poplins and Crepe de Chines that Montreal at its best will wear this coming winter.But Don't Pass Our Scarf Department.\u2014 Without stopping, if only for an instant, to note the richness of the Parisian \u201cPaquinette,\u201d The wealth of Liberty\u2019s exclusive designs in Bugle, Beaded and Paisley chiffons, not to speak of all our Real Spanish Lace Scarfs and Mantillas.Our Position In Blouses.Ty \u2014TYou can partly judge of it when we say that the department occupies half an entire floor of our building\u2014that you can walk the full length of our building 4 times over in 4 different aisles and see a different blouse style on every stand and in every box on every fixture in the department.Simply everything in the way of American tailored waists; Paisley silk waists; Chiffon waists; Taffeta silk waists; Hand embroidered waists; Lace and net waists.As a criterion of our prices look at our tailored messaline silk blouse\u2014the quality and the style ofitat.$3.75 «a 8 4 0 6.6e © à 88 6% 6 à Look at the beauty of the shades, too\u2014hand- some amethyst, steel grey, navy, apple green, APRONS For Every Occasion.Monday is Apron Day.Our apron stock is a little too high and it must come down.You can save money on every one you buy and dollars on your supply for the season.If you can\u2019t come to the store, phone your order.MAIDS\u2019 APRONS White lawn, bib and bretelles, ties, deép hem; original price .25; Monday .; Fine white lawn; wide ties; deep hem; bib with embroidery frill; original price .35; Monday.25 PLAIN APRONS Fine, heavy white linen: two tucks and 6-inch hem; large pocket: original price .66: Monday.39 Fine, heavy white lawn; two rows of tucks down front; large pocket; wide ties; 4-inch hem; original price .65; Monday.49 MAIDS\u2019 APRONS Fine, heavy white lawn: bib and bretelles of fine embroidery; wide ties; lawn flounce at bottom; original price .65;: Monday.50 Strong, heavy white linen; bib and shoulder straps: large pocket; two tucks and 6-inch hem; original nrice .85; Monday.63 Fine white lawn: bib and bretelles of extra fine embroidery; déep flounce of lawn; original price .85;, Monday.« +.65 OVER-ALL APRONS Fine heavy gingham.small blue and white check; long sleeves; pocket and waist belt; flounce of self; original price .69; Mon- day.4.22 24 44 14 11 11 89 Fine striped gingham ; frill on shoulder and at bottom; no sleeves; original price .75; Monday.59 WORK APRONS this hour of wnting, golden brown and reseda.ang spoulier straps: large pocket ; deep hem; original price .65; Monday.43 Heavy dark blue linen; bib and shoulder straps; pocket and flounce of material ; original price .J75; Monday.a New $5.00 Silk Moirett lo Housekeepers z .b J, , = .©\u2019 Sh EW .1 olretie We extend a most pressing in- = 5 P sc b S | d vitation to come and examine the XK elticoats to De Do Inexpensive Jewellery Jet; coral ear-drops, turquoise ear\u201d drops.Any of these in styles for pierced or unpierced ears.Seventeen designs in all.Bright new stock and of excellent quality.On sale, at per pair, .69 Links at .20 per pair On Monday we offer solid silver cuft links, strong, heavy weight silver; split post design, suitable for ladies\u2019 or gentlemen's wear, Atper parr, .29 One initial engraved on each for, per pair, .10 extra.light tans.feet.and white.\u201cweights.\u2014MONDAY $ FEATURES Silk Lisles, 3 Pairs for $1.: Fine silk lisle stockings, in Le ij ) Ear-drops at .69 per pair black and tan, double feet, AA) ; Black ear-drops in bright or dull high spliced ankles, full os AUX fashioned leg, fast dye, very fine, even weave, black and Gauze Lisle at .29 per pair.Fine gauze lisle, in black and tan, also white; double Also lace ankles and allover lace in colors, black Silk lisles in fancy stripes, both heavy and All fast dyes, and reliable stockings.Al ZN CLT CP REY LER \u201cAEA x light \u2014 \u2014 \u2014\u2026\u2014 Monday at $2.95 Two hundred and ninety-eight of them direct from England.English material, English make, English finish.You know what that means- \u2014 The moirette is silk moirette and high class quality.The patterns are striped and checked.The color effects are full of life and beauty.The width is just as you want it.The selling starts at 8 a.m.The value is at least $5.00 in each case.The sale price is .Note\u2014 $2.95 We would respectfully remind our own customers to come early for these owing to the number of American ladies in town who will be eager to snatch these up.For you must remember that while YOU can buy these petticoats at any time for $5.00, they can\u2019t get them at home for fess than $7,50, $8.50 and $10.00.quality of sheets and pillow cases and the prices at which they are selling.\u201cAlso The excellent range of Comforters which we have \u2014 cotton- filled ones at, from, $1.50 to $7.50.And Down Comforters, most handsomely covered, at from $4.50 to $30.00.Our New Belt Department Is the finest in Canada, and you should not fail to visit it.Belts of black elastic trimmed with nice designs in steel points and heavy steel buckles are among the good things.These are very special value at, each.75 4 LUNCH ROOM SERVICE.cents).LUNCHEON, cial\u20143.00 to 5.30 A la Carte all day.yy à f y -, A = ; Sad es a an es os >a or ITI Kc hn CRETE TE GO AT Cee ends _ FRS PSS IE TE DE A MR AN A ra Sn FA AE I IA a ME el i M ES BREAKFAST from 7.45 to 9.30.(16 different menus, 25 cents to 50 from 12.00 to 2.00 p.m.(Full course 35 cents.) AFTERNOON TEA (Shoppers\u2019 Spe 3 p.m., 2bc tds ES il Lo rT EE RS in nest RT RIERA teri gaie EEE PE OT SESEES \"THE MONTREAL DAILY WITNESS, 10, 1910.All hin reese ndi \u2014\u2014e 2 \u2018LORD LOVELAND DISCOVERS sams] AMERICA |[zcvaay CHAPTER XXXVIIL BIDNEY CREMER'S CHAUFFEUR.) No letter was forwarded to the Hill Farm from the theatre at Bonners- town, for the very good reason that Miss Moon, having found one for Mr.P.Gordon, opened, read, and out of sheer spite, destroyed it with its several enclosures, ; The envelope was addressed in Bill Willing's inappropriately beautiful handwriting, and there was a short note from him, saying that he had great pleasure in enclosing two letters just arrived from England, also that he sent his \u2018undying love to Lillie de Lisle.\u2019 One of the English letters blazed to the actress\u2019s dazzled eyes with a gilded coronet, and began, \u2018My own darling Val, how can you ever forgive me for not answering your poor.dear cablegram, but of course I thought it was from that horrible wretch Fox- ham.It seems now, he sold your ticket for the \u2018Baltic,\u2019 and salled for Australia.All sorts of reports came In about him directly after you must have sailed, and I learn now that even before you left, James Harborough suspected him, because of some forged cheque he\u2019d heard of\u2014I'm really too confused and upset to remember how or when or what.But in any case it was most remiss of James not to have instantly warned you against the man, even on the slightest suspicion.\u2019 This was only the beginning of the coroneted letter, which had no paragraphs and very few punctuations.Jealous still, Miss Moon was relieved to see that the signature was \u2018Your adoring mother,\u201d but she was at a loss to understand allusions to duchesses and other persons of title.Indeed, it would have appeared to her like à \u2018property\u2019 letter to be read on the stage by an aristocratic hero of melodrama, had it not been for the post- office order for three hundred dollars, which it contained.It was a genuine order, as Miss Moon might have been inclined to prove for herself, if she had any hope of obtaining the money, which she had not; therefore the next best thing was to throw the document into the fire, that Gordon might not benefit by it.The other letter enclosed had no coronet, not even a crest; but the paper was very nice, smelled faintly of spring flowers, and had for an address 2 number in Park Lane, which Miss Moon had read of in English novels as a street mostly inhabited by elderly millionnaire villains who persecuted poor but beautous hervines.The writing was pretty, and the, letter was signed \u2018Tour affectionate cousin, Betty.\u2019 At the end was a postcript in a different hand, which seemed somehow to suit the rather dashing signature \u2018Jim This second letter was even more difficult than the first for an uninitiated person to understand, and it irrl- tated Miss Moon to a high pitch of nervousness.\u2018Cousin Betty\u2019 seemed to be explaining and justifying a thing that*-\u2018Jim\u2019 had done.- \u2018It was partiy a joke, and partly earnest but it had a good motive\u2019 wrote Betty.\u2018I guessed the morning your really very conceited letter about tue New York introductions came, that Jim had something quaint up his sleeve, to spring upon.you when you'd arrived in America, but I didn\u2019t know what.To tell the truth, Val, I was even more disgusted than Jim, by your cool way of assuming that you had only to show yourself on the other side, to pick and choose among all the nicest as well as richest girls.1 should have loved to box your ears, and I said \u201cOf course we won't give him any letters, and I'll tell him just what we think of him.Then maybe he won't go.\u201d But Jim said \u201cYes, we will give him.the letters, and he shall go.We may find another way of teaching him a lesson, a way that will do him good if he's worth being done good to.\u201d ; \u2018That was all, and as Jim didn\u2019t refer to the subject again after we posted the letters of introduction, the conversation slipped my mind, 1 didn\u2019t think any more about it untill weir.things began to be copied into London papers from New York ones, and your mother wired Jim to ask what, if anything, could be dome to punish Fox- ham.You see, she thought you were on the \u2018Baltic.\u2019 ; \u2018Jim soothed all her worries, so you needn\u2019t be anxious about her, as of course you would if you thought she\u2019d been alarmed.When I saw paragraphs in the papers I talked to Jim, and it was only then that he told me what he'd done; how it was all his fault really, and he was very sorry, because everything had turned out a lot worse for you than he'd ever dreamed of wanting it to be.\u2018Fate took a hand in the game, and played it for all it was worth,\u201d Jim sald.\u2018It seemed that Foxham, your man, asked Jim to cash a cheque signed by you, one night long ago (don\u2019t you remember when he and I were at Bat- tiemead, and you came down for Saturday to Monday?).Jim suspected something wrong, but wouldn\u2019t speak to you till he'd made sure, because that mrouldn\u2019t have been falr, and Foxham was such an invaluable valet.A few days later, when Jim was making inquiries about the men, he found out that the horrid creature had actually impersonated you at two or three hotels, and run up bills in your name.It was the very evening befors your letter about America came that Jim got the first part of this information, end day by day more kept coming in, up to the time when we heard Foxham had given you notice.All along Jim was thinking out the idea of that lesson for you\u2014the joke was to be half in earnest\u2014and then, when Mr.Van- derPot couldn't sail in the \u2018Mauretania,\u2019 thet whole plan was mapped out, without a word being said, even to me.\u2018Of course.I want to assure you agaln (and Jim will write a posteript) that he meant nathing worse to happen to you than a disappointment, and a blow to your conceit.He telegraphed to several of the people to whom, yon had letters, saying that if a person turned up calling himself by your name, before the \u2018Baltic\u2019 landed, they'd better wait and make sure before beiag nice to you, that you weren't your own absconding valet sailing under false colors.He didn't say it wouldn't be you, and he supposed that his friends would simply hang back for a few days making no sign, thus giving you to think that you werent as important Jn America as you'd fancied.He imagined, too, that the heiress business would not come off quite as easily as you ex- oected, and that altogether you might ve a little sobered down.As for your trouble swith the bank, we know now, that this is what happened: It turns out that Henry van Cotter has lately become a partner in the bank which corresponds with yours in London, and having got Jim's wire about the valet (probably at the same time when instructions arrived from the London and Southern), naturally he told his people to be prepared, and not to pay.How could Jim think of such a thing hap- pening\u2014or that Mr.van Cotter and the others would run about gossiping of what he told them as mere supposition ?It must have been +00 dreadful for for you at the hotel!\u2014and as for.that Mr.Milton, I'm sure he is a horror.\u2018Then that neither Jim nor I saw the news- and Wales, it was another contretemps.papers at first.We'd gone off on a motor trip, as the weather was lovely, and were darting all about Cornwall starting so early every morning, and not arriving at hotels till so late at night, that we didn\u2019t bother with the papers for nearly a week.Of course the minute Jim knew what had been going on, he wired everywhere, and write long letters of explanation, too (a little earlier than he\u2019d orizinally meant), to put an end to the misunderstanding bed set in motion.meanwhile you'd disappeared from New York.Poor dear, my heart quite bleeds for you! And yet\u2014and yet-\u2014I wonder if all that you've gone throug is entirely a matter for regret?It was here, after the Affectionate Cousin Betty\u2019 signature, that ths other handwriting began.\u2019 \u2018T wonder, tco?I want to know what you think about it.Now it's all explained, and you see just where and how much I'm to blame for what's past you may or may not be inclined to forgive me for trying to play Providence, that good might come of evil.But if there are any things which vou don\u2019t regret, perhaps.you'll partly un- derstand\u2014yourself and me.Anyhow, I apologize, having now done my best to atone, in case you want to go back to New York in a blaze of glory and be made a lion of.Meanwhile, I await your verdict, and am\u2014as the writers of anonymous letters are supposed to sign themselves\u2014 \"your friend and well- wisher,\u201d Jim.\u2019 : Again Fate had \u2018taken a hand in the game,\u201d and used Miss Moon as catspaw.Into the fire In her bedroom at Bon- But nerstown_ went all those elaborate explanations; and Loveland did not dream that he had only to communicate with the bank in New -York to receive apologies and a sum of money which, atter his vicissitudes, would have seemed a fortune.He had not even a prophetic \u2018pricking in his thumbs\u2019 while his mother\u2019s post office order for three hundred dollars\u2014sixty pounds\u2014 gaily hurned in a Ponnerstown stove.He had no suspicion that New York So- ciety\u2014or an important section of it\u2014 was wearing sackcloth and ashes on his account.No instinct told him that even while the letters and.monev order were being reduced to ashes, Tony Kidd wag concocting a glorious \u2018story\u2019 ahout the Marquis of Loveland, which would ring through the country; neither did he know that Lesley Dearmer, whether believing him a genuine article or not, had sent him an anonymous donation which lay, unclaimed at the Waldorf-Astoria.Of all these things was he ignorant, and Lesley (sure that he had never received her offering) would have seen Sidney Cremer's forty horse-power Gloria burnt before her eyes rather than confess what she had done.iNev- ertheless she was enjoying herself very much, and if Cremer\u2019s chauffeur went about with an unsmiling face it did not depress her spirits, unless for a minute at a time when she was particularly and foolishly soft-hearted.She knew that all the chauffeur's bodily wants were being well cared for at ths Hill Farm.He had a comfortable bedroom and a little sitting-room attached, in the far corner of the west wing, which was the newest part of the old red brick house.She did not suggest his wearing the costume of a chauffeur, but sent him by Uncle Wally a fur-lined overcoat and motoring cap which she said, Sidney Cremer had ordered for the future driver of his car.Mr.Gordon's meals were served in his own small sitting-room, and he had plenty of books to read.Had it net been that Miss Dearmer wished to drive Cremer\u2019s automobile, %al would have seen little of her; but she took two lessons a day.(To be continued.) 7 \u201cSOME BED-TIME STORIES\u201d | IES\u201d Nr.JIMMY'S TEMPTATION.\u2018There, there!\u2019 sald mother, \u2018it is no use crying about it, Jimmy.You should have been more careful\u2019 Just then the pan with the potatoes in it boiling for dinner began to bubble noisily, and mother hurried off to attend to it., Jimmy went out into the garden and took up his ball, But you can't play\u2019 ball happily with two pennies as big as a house rolling one on each side of you llke great wheels growling.\u2018We weren't your pennies, and you've told a story! We weren't your pennies, and you've cheated your mother!\u2019 In the street it was no better.Even the wheels of the big drays and the clatter of coal carts and the buzz of a passing motor car could mot drown the angry voices of those tremendeus pennies which followed Jimmy everywhere.When mother came to the back garden gate and called out that it was dinner time, and that father had come home, the pennies seemed to get bigger than ever.: It almost seemed as if Jimmy would not be able to get inside the back door with those two huge pennies.by his sidé; and- when father cried, \u2018Hello, sonny,\u201d \"In his cheery voice, Jimmy could scarcely believe that father could not see those two dreadful coins which stalked into the dining room with him.\u2018Anything the matter, sonny?asked father presently at dinner.; \u2018Yes,\u201d sald mother; \u2018Jimmy has lest: another twopence this morning.And\u2019 only three weeks ago he lost sixpence.\u2019.\u2018Oh, dear, dear!\u2019 said father, but; Jimmy saw that his eyes were twink-; ling as the glanced at mother.\u2018Oh, dear, dear!\u2019 he said again.\u201d \u2018But not eating your dinner won't find the pennies, Jimmy, he added as he saw that Jimmy's plate was nearly as full as at first.But Jimmy's lips trembled too much for him to eat any dinner.Evidently Father did not know that the two huge pennies stood behind Jimmy's chair, saying, \u2018You stole your Mother's pennies, and you let her think a story.You didn\u2019t lose the pennies, and you're cheating your Father.Not even a beautiful red currant pudding with lovely sweet sauce had power to tempt Jimmy to eat, for the dreadful pennies told him that he had had his share of good things for that day, and had shown himself quite greedy enough as it was without taking any of kind Mother's good pudding and sauce.As Jimmy was leaving the table Father put his hand into his pocket and brought out the Saturday penny.\u2018Here you are, sonny! But you don\u2019t deserve it, you know.\u2019 : : Jimmy knew that he didn't deserve much better than Father knew.He picked up the penny and took :t to his Mother.\u2018That is one of your pennies, Mother.he saïd, his eyes downcast.Mother hesitated.She wasn\u2019t going to take it.But father nodded quickl- so she did.\u2018It will teach the liutle chap to be more careful,\u2019 he said, when Jimmy had hurried from the room.Mother smiled, a tear trembling on her eyelashes.\u2018He ig such a good little fellow, and so sensitive,\u201d she pleaded, \u2018but I dare say you are right.\u2019 Jimmy had gone upstairs to his playroom.He did not feel quite so unhappy now that one of the terrible pennies had stopped taunting him.But tht other one kept saying: \u2018You've paid the penny back, but you're cheating them all the same.You're letting them think that you really did lose the pennies.\u2019 Picture books are no use at ali v-hen things like these are being said to you.Jimmy found that out very soon.And your toy cupboard is no better.All you can do is to go and stare hard out of the window without seeing anything and wondering if ever there was a little boy who felt quite as miserable and wicked as you do.But Jimmy had not been staring out of the window very long before the creaking of the front gate attracted his attention.Uncle John! Oh, how jolly! Une¢le John had come to spend the afternoon with mother and father.Jimmy raced downstairs.Even the mocking penny wag forgotten for a moment.\u2018Hullo, hulto, \u2018hulle! Here we are again! What! Been crying, Jimmy! So Uncle John greeted him, bringing back- in full force the memory of the stolen pennies.ae Again it was mother who explained.And again Jimmy saw a suppressed twinkle in the hearer\u2019s eyes as the tale of-the lost pennies was told.\u2018But Jimmy is a very honest little boy,\u2019 \u2018mother added, proudly.\u2018He has already paid back one of the pennies he lost\u201d And the fate of Jimmys Saturday penny was described.This was too much for Jimmy.It was bad enough to know one's self a cheat and a story-teller, but to have J that you stole mother making one out to be a hero was too shocking for anything.So there right in front of father and Uncle John, Jimmy told mother everything.T spent them! I didn't lose them! And I ate-all the cakes up, and then I thought I'd let you think a story, and, and\u2014I'm just as bad as ever I can be!\u2019 Jimmy blurted it all out, his cheeks flaming, and his Eyes flashing with the great scorn he felt for himself, \u2018T'll Bo stralght to bed now, if you like, mother, he added more quietly.Go- Ing to bed at the beginning of the afternoon, and when Uncle John was paying a visit was the worst punishment Jimmy could think of fer him- Mother was too grieved\u2014and tco sorry for her little son\u2014to say a werd.Father, too, kept silence, gazing gravely at the flushed little culprit.It was left to Uncle John to settle matters.I think, Jimmy, that although vou certainly did two very naughty things, Mother is going to forgive you this time, without sending you to bed.Now I happen to have brought a bright new penny with me, which I thought you and I could have gone and spent together at the sweet shop.But -f course that can't be now.Instead vou must give it to Mother, in place of the penny you took.Here it is.\u2019 Jimmy took it thankfully, and handed it to this Mother.Then Father said\u2014\u2018And to-night, when you say your prayers, Jimmy, do not forget to say 1 two of Mother's pennies and that you told us all an untruth, Then vou can say that you have paid the pennies back, and that you have owned up to the truth.all begin to feel quite happy again.\u2019 Jimmy's prayers were very softly spoken that night at Mother's knee, and J immy knew without looking at Mother's face what it was which fell on his forehead, and \u2018his lips trembled 50 that he could scarcely say the words.It hurts so dreadfully to have been wicked even when you have tried to make up for it, as well as ever you know how.everybody was going to be happy next morning, as Father said, you don't know how you would bear it at all.But when next morning comes, ani Father and Mother seem to have forgotten quite all about it, you tell yourself that you will try to forget.too, except when these wicked little imps come and try to put bad thoughts into your head.Then you will remember, and will never, never again by any chance be tempted to do wrong.\u2014Eagle, ee WHAT SAITH THE SCRIPTURE?September 10.I will give them one heart, and one way, that they may fear me for ever, for the good of them, and of their children after them.- À new heart .Will I give you and a new spirit will I put within you\u2014Good and upright is the Lord: therefore will he teach sinners in the way.The meek will he guide in judgment: way.All the paths of the Lord are mercy and truth 'unto such as keep his covenant and his testimonies.That they all may be one: as thou, Father, art in me, and I in thee, that they also may be one in us: that the world may believe that thou hast sent me.I.beseech you that ye walk worthy of the vocation wherewith ve are called, with all lowliness and meekness, .endeavoring to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace.There igs one body, and one Spirit, even as ye are called in one hope of your calling; one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of all, who is above all, and through all, and in you all.Jer.xxxil., 39.xxv., 8-10, Ezek.xxxvi., 26.John xvii, 21.Eph.Ps.iv, WAS ROBBED OF $2,500 Couple Have Been Arrested For Alleged Theft.Moncton, N.B.,,.September 10.\u2014K.Bezanson, jeweller, informed Chief of Police Rideout yesterday that he had heen robbed of $2,500.Bezanson stated \u2018that he had cashed a certified cheque on Thursday and put the money in his pocket.During the evening he went to the home of Mr.and Mrs.Fred.Newman, Main street, where he spent the night.In the morning when ap-Sa ; Then, to-morrow morning, my boy, we shall | r And if Mother did not\u2019 kiss you to sleep, and remind you that and the meek will he teach his ALLAN LINE.TO LIVERFOOL.; rom , Montreal.Quebec.Victorian .16 Sept., 9.00 am.10.00 p.m.Corsican .23 Sept.6.00 a.m.4.00 p.m.Virginian .29 Sept.9.00 am.(Fri, 30 | 12 noon Tunisian.7 Oct, 500 am.3.30 p.m.The Turbine 88.Victorian has made the fastest passag2 on record between Liverpool and Montreal 6 days 15 hours 6 minutes.Saloon,$77.50 and up; Turbiners,387.50 end up.Second Cabin, $47.50, $50.00 and nur- wards; London, $2.50 additional.Third Class, Liverpool, Glasgow, London, Belfast or Londonderry, $30.00, and $31.25, according to steamer.TO GLASGOW.Hesperian, Sept.17.Grampian, Oct.1.Tonjan, Sept.24.Pretorian, Oct.8.Hesperian and Grampfan: Saloon, $67.50 and up; second class.$47.50 and up.Other steamers, One-Class Cabin,called Second Cabin, $45.00, and upwards.Third-Class, $30.00.: TO HAVRE AND LONDON.Sicilian, Sept.12.Corinthian, Sept.24.Sardinian, Sept.17.Lake Erie, Oct.8.One-Class \u2014 Second Cabin.Rate\u2014 London, $42.50: Havre, $45.00, and up; Paris.$3.65 additional.Class\u2014London, $29.00.Havre, $32.00; Paris, $84.50.: Al the steamears on the above services, Liverpool, Glasgow, London and Havre, are fitted with cold storage.H.& A ALLAN, 55 COMMON STREET, Montreal.TLANTIC A RE ST TIA RIT RH OY Montreal-Quebeo-Liverpoo! Lake Manitoba .Sept.15 Oct.13 Emp.of Britain .Sept.23 Ooat.21 Lake Champlain.Sept.29.Oct.27 Empress of Ireland Oct.7 Nov.4 Rates\u2014Empressa steamers: First class, $90 and upwards; Second class, $51.25 and upwards.Lake Steamers\u2014Ona2 Class Cabin, second class rates, $47.50 and upwards.Tickets and information from any Steamship Agent or W.G&G.Annable, Wm, Webber, Gen.Pass.Agt Pass.Agt.3 and b Board of Trade Building.SUMMER RESORTS, LAURENTIDE HOUSE, OVERLOOK- Lake Maskinonge, in the Laurentian region; cool, airy rooms, verandahs: fine beach; safe bathing; beautiful scenery; exceptionally bracing air ; adults only.\u2019 Box 35, St.Gabriel de Brandon.Ce .be C.P.R.TORONTO SERVICE, The new Toronto service of the Canadian Pacific Railway is proving a decided advantage to the people living in or desirous of getting to the outskirts of the city.as well ag to those going to the residential districts of North and West Toronto, The tracks of the Radial Raflway run alongside those of the C.P.R.at North Toronto, and arrangements have been made with that company whereby direct connection will be made with the C.P.R.train, so that passengers going to the towns and villages north and west of the city, can get to their destination quicker by North Toronto than if they go to Union Station.The new service is, therefore, suiting the people living in the outskirts as well as those in the city.he awoke his money was missing, and Mr.and Mrs.Newman could not be found.He communicated his suspicions to Chief Rideout, who, upon inquiry, found that Newman and his wife had left on the early morning express for St.John, and he immediately wired to have them apprehended.After the arrest of the couple at St.John, Chief Rideout secured a warrant and left to bring them back.Newman, who is well-known, bears a good reputatioi, and his friends here are inclined to believe that the affair is capabl- of explanation.The couple were arrested in St.John.- BLESSED THE CHILDREN Legate\u2019s Benediction to 25,000 Boys and Girls, The first of the open-air pageants in connection with the Eucharistic Congress took place yesterday afternoon, when over twenty-five thousand boys and girls marched in procession, eight deep, from Notre Dame to St.James Cathedral, to receive the papal blessing.) Only those who were Catholics realized to the full what this proc-ssion meant fo the little ones.Jt wag the message of the Pope to \u2018he voung members of his great family; an occasion to be régiembered all their-lives, and théir bearing and solemn faces showed that they realized it to-the full.Silently, without music or singing, with hardly a whisper amongst them, they walked slowly through the streets instructed to fix.their minds on holy things, in order that the papal -bless- ing might fall-on hearts: prepared.Priests and sisters of religious institutions standing on the footpath blessed them as they went along, and many a tear of happiness could be seen rolling down the smiling faces of the devotees of the faith.The procession was a long one, and before it was over the boys at the end were beginning to show weariness.For nearly two hours they had been assembling, the boys.on the Champ de Mars and the girls in Notre Dame Church; then came the slow long walk through the crowded streets to the Cathedral, on the steps of which a special dias had been erected for the Cardinal l.egate and the other TABLETS WE MAIL A FREE SAMPLE WHEN REQUESTED signs of (ANA L ani) ROYA 7 Now Triple Sorew Turbine Steamships MODERN TO THE MINUTE.From From Bristol.Montreal.Sept.1.ROYAl, EDWARD.Sept.15 Sept.15.ROYAL GEORGE .Sept.29 Sept.29.ROYAL EDWARD.Oct.13 Oct.13.ROYAL GEORGE .Oct.27 and fortnightly on Thursdays thereafter THE FAST ROYAL MAIL ROUTE BETWEEN CANADA AND GREAT BRITAIN or rates and reservations apply to any Steamship Agent ; Y TOMBS.Acting General Passenger Agent: A.H.DAVIS, Passenger Imperial Bank Building, Montreal, Que, or WM PHILLIPS, Acting Traffic Manager, Toronto, Ont White-Star Dominion.Canadian Service Mail Sten:uers MONTREAL\u2014QUEBEC\u2014LIVERPOOT.Megantic Sept.16 Oct.15 Nov.12 Dominion Sept.24 Oct.22 Nov.13 Laurentic .Sept.30 Oct.29 Canada.Oct.8 Nov.5 Eaurentio and Megantio largest and most modern steamers sailing from the St.Lawrence.Superb accommofl=- tion for First, Second and Third Cle:s : assengers.Canada and Dominion, Ore Class Cz- bin (called 2- .Class).Rates very moderate, Third Class are also carried For ali information apply to Local Agents, or COMPANY'S OFFICE, 118 Notre Dame Street West REFORD AGENCIES, DONALDSON LINE T0 CLASCOW ONE CLASS CABIN SERVICE.FROM MONTREAL.SS.LAKONIA .Sept.15 (Cold Storage.) .Sept.22 SS.ATHENTA .: (Cold Storage.) Passage Rates\u2014Cabin (called Second), $45.00 and upwards; Third-Class, Eastbound, $29.00; Prepaid, Westbound, $30.00.1 THOMSON LINE TO LONDON LONDON SERVICE.SS.HURONA .Sept.17 (Cold Storage and Cool Air.) SS.DEVONA .Sept.24 (Cold Storage and Cool Air.) LEITH.88.FRBMONA, about .September 25 THE ROBERT REFORD CO, Limited, Mortreal, Toronto, Quebec, St.John, N.B.Portland, Me.Manchester Liners (LIMITED).Weekly Sailings from Montreal.MANCHESTER TRADER .Sept.10 MANOHESTER MARINER - Sept.17 MANCHESTER SHIPPER Sept.24 MANCHESTER IMPORTER .Oct.8 MANCHESTER SPINNER.Oct.15 Via Charlottetown.Limited number of passengers carried.FURNESS, WITHY & CO., Limited AGENTS, MONTREAL.Daily Passenger Steamers.(Except Sunday.) EUGHARISTIC EXCURSIONS From all Points to Montreal for one way first class fare.SIDE TRIP TO OTTAWA, $2.50 Going dates, Sept.5th to 10th, inc.Return limit, Sept.14th, 1910, DELIGHTFUL DAY TRIPS By Str.Empress and home by the ids.Ra Carillon, one hour at Carillon, park t landing.Fare $1.00.2 For above Trips take 8 am.G.T.R.for Lachine to connect with steamer.AFTERNOON TRIPS and RAPIDS .To Ste.Anne de Bellevue, G.T.R,, or C.P.R., 1.30 p.m.return by steamer.Round Trip, 800.To Lachine, G.T.R.5 p.m.Return by steamer.Round Trip, 500 Tickets at Grand Trunk Station, Windsor Hotel, 128, 130, 286 St.James, and 530 St.Catherine West.Telephone MAIN 1029.LAGHANE RAPIDS, CHANGE OF TIME.On and after THURSDAY, the 15th SEPTEMBER, passengers for 'Lachine, to connect with Steamer \u2018EMPRESS\u2019 for the Rapids, will leave Montreal by Grand Trunk train at 4.30 P.M.(instead of 5 Steamer will leave Lachine about 4.50 P.M, p.m.).\"har! cardinals and bishops attending him.Cardinal Logue sat on one side of the dias, while Archbishop Bruchesi sat on the other, and as the head of each detachment arrived the leader was presented by the Archbishop to Car- dina] Vannutelli, and kneeling, kissed the cardinal\u2019s ring, while the children at a sign turned and faced the dias, then lowly knelt and bent their heads, while the cardinal\u2019s hands were extended in blessing.It was exactly three o'clock when the Cardinal appeared, giving the signal for the procession to commence to move past, and it was not until nearly five o'clock that the end came Into view.The whole of the front of the Cathedral stretching away into Dominion squure was crowded with people, while many thousands had also lined the route.EXCURSIONS lands, Rochester, at Single Fare for round trip.p .See CANADA'S BEAUTY SPOTS on the finest steamers rp 01.Incomparable scenery.entire rest =und superb service.REDUCED RATES for going dates, EUCHARISTIC CON ONTREAL, The Popular Route Betwoen \u201c Niagara and the N.Y.; Beaupre.The Marvellous Saguenay, and a1 + GRESS 8ept.5th to 11th, ton, Rey SIDE TRIPS ea FROM MONTREATI, \u2018a T Torontn, Quaher Vo ai September 5th to 1415, turn limit to correspond with that of excursion tickets bv an- y real.Special Boat Service for Grand Tuo haristio Procession 11th\u2014From Contrecoeur at 6 a.m,, and from Berthier and points on the nnrin Steamers for Quebec and the sague nay dally at 7 12.30 noon, every week day.Souvenir Pamphlets and all Sins points on the south shore i.shore.™ pm, and f- - partic ulars at:\u2014 CITY TICKET OFFICE, 126.128 ST : JAMES STREET, opposite pos.TEs NI\\ SYSTEM \"CHEAP WEEK END TRIPS FROM MONTREAL Brockville $3.90 Cornwall $2.15 Ottawa 3.45 Quebec .5.00 Sherbrooke .3.30 St.Johns .1.00 St.Hyacinthe 1.30 Vallevfleld .1.15 For other points and full Information see Week-End Excursion Pamphlets, to be had at G.T.R.Offices.4 TRAINS DAILY TORONTO and WEST 9.00a.m.,9.45a.m., 7.30 p.m., 10.30 p.m.THE \u2018INTERNATIONAL LIMITED\u201d CANADA'S FINEST AND FASTIOST TRAIN from Montreal, 9.00 A.M.Is only T4 hours to Toronto, has splendid equipment of sleeping, parlor.dining- car coaches to Toronto, Detroit, Chicago, etc.Meals and refreshments en route.Pullman Sleeping Cars on night trains.EUCHARISTIC CONGRESS Montreal, until September 11.Excursion tickets to Montreal and return will be on sale at all ticket offices, Kingston, Renfrew and east, in Canada.also Rouses Point, Massena Sprinzs, N.Y., and intermediate stations until Sept.11.good to return until the 10th September, 1910, at one way first crass fare, plus twenty-five cents.From POINTS IN CANADA where the one way first class fare to Montreal \u2018res not exceed $2.50, tickets will be sold at single fare only.SIDE TRIPS from Montreal to all points on G.T.R.System in Canada at Lowest First class Single Fare.Going dates\u2014Until Sept.14 inclusive.Return Iimit to correspond with that of excursion ticket.Pamphlet on application at G.T.R.Ticket Offices.EXHIBITIONS OTTAWA AND RETURN.dejps, dates\u2014Sent 12: 14 82,50 13, 15 and 17 .3.35 Return limit\u2014Sept.19, 12810.ST.HYACINTHE AND RETURN.Going date, Sept.18 .$120 Return limit, Sept.14, 1910.OGDENSBURG, N.Y, Tickets to (PRESCOTT AND RETURN.) Going dates, Sept.19, 20, 21, 22, Going dates\u2014Sept.10, 11, 83.40 Return limit, Sept.24, 1910.WESTERN EXCURSIONS.September 15, 16, 17, Valid to return until October 3, 1910.RATES FROM MONTREAL: DETROIT, MICH, .$18.00 PORT HURON, Mich.$14.85 BAY CITY, Mich.+4 se ous.$17.25 SAGINAW, Mich.2.+.0.0.Haas GRAND RAPIDS, Mich.oe 18.95 CHICAGO I1 .$18.00 ST.PAUL or MINNBAPOLIS, Minn, all rail .,, .$34.00 ST.PAUL or MINNEAPOLIS, via Lake Route .$370.50 CLEVELAND, Ohio, via Buffalo and boat ,, .+.+2 ++ +000 3.85 CLEVBLAND, Ohio, via Detroit and boat ,.+.+.$18.00 REDUCED FARES.October 1 to 15, 1910.Second Class Colonist Fares to San Francisco, Los An.geles, San Diego .t $49.00 Mexico City, Mex .' Low rates to many other points.HOME SEEKERS\u2019 EXCURSION, ROUND TRIP EXCURSION TICKETS to Western Canada via Chicago on sale September 20, at very low fares.Good for 60 days.CITY TICKET OFFICES, 130 St, James St.\u2018Phones Main 6805, 6906, 6907, or Bonaventure Station, INTERCOLONIAL 71141742 BONAVENTURE UNION STATION.EUCHARISTIC CONGRESS Excursion tickets to Montreal and re turn, good going from the 6th to the 11th, returning until the 16th September, 1910, at one-way first ciass fare.BIDE TRIPS.from Montreal to all points on LCR Lowest First Class Single Fare.Going dates\u2014Sept.5th to 14th, incim- sive.Return limit to correspond vrith that of excursion ticket.SPECIAL TRAIN SERVICE BEPT.4th to 11th.THROUGH TRAIN, LITTLE METIS TO MONTREAL\u2014Little Metis 3.30 p.m., Levis, 11.05.Arr.Montreal at 6.45 a.m.Stopping at intermediate stations.Sleepers and Buffet Cars, Sept.3rd to 13th (4th excepted).11.45 p.m.to Levis (Quebec) with connections for Riv.du Loup, Little Metis, and intermediate stations.Special Sleeper on Saturdays to Levis only.OITY TICKET OFFICE: 130 St.James St Tel, Bell M.615.H A.PRICE, GEO.STRUBBEH, Asst.Gen.Pass.Agt.City Ticket Agt LX ABANDONS WORK \u2014 C.N.R.Fails to Secure Authority for Route of Western Line.Winnipeg, September 10.\u2014The Canadian Northern Railway is again balked in its efforts to find a line west from Edmonton towards Yellow Head Pass.Plans for a line from St.Albert west have been disapproved by the Railway Commission at Ottawa, on the ground that the route proposed lay too close to that of the Grand Trunk Pacific.The engineers first endeavored to run farther north, but could not do so on account of the hilly nature of the country.It was decided, therefore, to parallel the G.T.P.route from Lobstick to Yellow Head Pass.Unless \u2018he C.N.R.can DYSPEPSIA The only way to cure a bad case of Dyspepsia is to take one or two Pap-Sag Tablets in a little warm water, after each meal.Not to observe this simple and easy rule is to remain depressed with all kinds of stomach disorders, such as Heartburn, Fetid Breath, Gastritis, Flatulence and !ndigestion.For sale by all Druggists.Sent also by Mail on Receipt of Price.50c per Box, $2.50 for six Boxes ADDRESS: _- PAP-SAG COMPANY MONTREAL EUCHARISTIC CONSRESs LB Train Service cut of Montreal Sunday, September fith, i91 ' Windsor Street Station 7,25 PM \u2014 For i etec., Express.7.45 P.M.For Bostsn + land points, Express.8.15 P.M.-\u2014Feor Point Le b John ping at all intermedigte 8.25 P.M.170 Jenmnte at Farnham and staring.8.55 P.M.-\u2014I'nr Waieria- all intermediate station: 8.40 P.M.\u2014For Peri stopping at all interne.5.50 P.M.\u2014 For Oitzn- tion) without stop, 8.00 PM.\u2014For «vegas.tion), stopping at \\aue =.beyond.9.15 PM.\u2014Far Tr 8.50 PM.\u2014For Ba.Paul.Duluth, ete, Fyne 10.00 P.M.- For Tara, cago.etc.Express.10.30 P.M.\u2014Fny Wisris etc.Express.10.35 PM.\u2014 Far 84 tua \u2026- stations on Q.M.& K i 10.45 P.M.\u2014-For Moganti- Farnham and stations eas- 10.50 P.M.-\u2014For Ottawa ve tion), without stop.11.16 P.M.\u2014TFor Rigaud.cr; .all intermediate stations.11.30 PM \u2014For Vallerf- 2, at all intermediate stations, 12.00 PM.\u2014For Toronto From Place Viger 1.30 PM.\u2014For Threa River: etc., Express.8.00 P.M.-For Calumet, all intermediate stations.8.30 PM.\u2014For Quebher, stappmure Three Rivers and stations caer 8.40 PM.\u2014For Grand Mer, «© at Lanoraie and statians eagt 8.50 P/M.\u2014For Duhamel.es \u2026r-g oe Ste.Agathe and statinns north 9.00 P.M.\u2014For Ste.Agathe o - at all intermediate statinns.9.15 P.M.\u2014For St.Lin and < T- tache, stopping mt all intermaiii: oo, tions.9.30 tion), west.Er ny ne > [APE P.M.\u2014For stopping at 3.55 P'M.\u2014For £i Gahriel at all intermediate statinns.11.30 P/M.\u2014For Quebec, all intermediate stations.Ottawa dr Ste, Tue tanins = 5 i ftapi In view of the abnve train gervice the following trains will be cancelled: WESTBOUNT, From Montreal, Place Viger, 9: =z for Ste.Agathe.From Montreal, Place Viger, © 15 2, for Calumet.From Montreal, Place Viger, 4a for St.Lin.From Montreal Place Viger, :: 1: y +, for 'Lanoraie.From Montreal,Place Viger, it\" »m for St.Lin.From Montreal.Place Viger.10\" no for St.Jerome.From Montreal,Place Viger, 1175 pre for Calumet.EASTBOUNT From Ste.Agathe.or Viger, 8.25 p.m.From Calumet, à Viger, 8.50 p.m.From St.Lin d Viger, 7.00 a.m.rom St.Lin à Viger.8.30 p.m.From \u2018Lanoraie, dus Viger, 8.15 p.m.From Ste, Agathe, due Montres 7 or Viger, 8.55 p.m.From (Calumet, due Montreal.© ! p.m.WILL NOT RTN on Sar: September 10th.From Labelle, 5M pm.real, Windsor Street Statinn, will stop at Val Morin.Sie and Shawbridge on Sunday.1910.Aton ea, que N° ar; , Marg er © sent 111.BLUE BONNETS Commencing TO-DAY, Sept 1h cial trains will leave Windenr sire Station at 1.35 p.m.and 1.55 pm.Returning Immediately after +7» 15 1 event is over, Tickets one wav.17° Round trip.25c.Buy your tickets ea\u2019 \\ and avoid rush at the wickets, Tio e's on sale at 218 St James street, Vince sor Hotel and Windsor Statinn.EXCURSIONS September, 15, 16 and IT.es Valid to return until Octnher 875.< RATES FROM MONTREAL DETROIT, Mich.,, 1, SPA \u20ac BAY CITY, Mich .tT SAGINAW, Mich, , 20220 #T GRAND RAPIDS, Mich.20000557 CHICAGO, ILL.,, .oe ST.PAUL or MINNEAPOLIF.Minn.22 44 24 24 242460 via Muskoka route, via Sault Ste.- direct, via Detroit and Chiragë® ST.PAUL or MINNEAPOLIS zo- ing and returning via Nwen Sound and Sault Ste, Marie .CLEVBLAND, OHIO, via Buffaln and boat .i CLEVELAND, OHIO,via Detro!\" .and boat ,.,.44 2 11 850 EXHIBITIONS OTTA\\JA AND RETURN.September 12, 14, 16.September 10, 11, 13, 15,17.Return limit, September 19, 1810.ALTERATION IN SUBURBAN TRAIN SERVICE: Train leaving Rigaud at 8.80 nor urdays only, arriving Montreal! p.m., will continue to run unt: notice.Train leaving Rigaud 41 p.m.Saturdays only, arriving Msn 6.25 p.m., will be cancelled afer -: day, Sept.10th.Mure $06\" sai Pd CITY TICKET OFFICH 218 St.James Street Telephones: Main 3732-8733, or rlsce Viger and Windsor Street Stations convince the Railway Cnmmiss 7 the necessity for running pas the G.T.P, a material ~hano plans will be required.It is Pr that the C.N.R.mary find \u2018! sary to run south of the Gran\u201d The Canadian Northern wns once before to abandon th of Edmonton, even after > « of construction work hai ne\" ane On that occasion the z+ T F.r them out in the matter of filing = securing approval of the roi © Interesting and vigorous tions are to be made tn Commission on behalf of In the meantime work on | west of St.Albert is abandor< through the company Is unir\" tract with the Alberta Govern\u201d\u201c\u201d build a certain distance this vo tr NOTES AND NOTICES Roi Music for Player Pian\u201cz-\" ton Bros.are offering over 2.0\" » New Standard 65 and AS nor\u201d \u201d Piano Music.The best class popular selections.BAC disc\u201d this week only.Enquire a\u201d new Purchase-Exchange-L'Pra- best extant.550 St.Catherine = (cor.Stanley St).Te reprss the Ra the C0 +1 vie pi 24 8d Educ fes Uni cati Ten Sep Ehort Office ces ) \u2014 ESS 1e Seq,» sand Ta Anna 7) = on Tira d Waray sive.ne to Mop: opt rar at6 nm.West î RESS 5 pntreai, h, 1910, : Halifax, ven Fnz na, xt ns STHPppinz on Dpinz a» Presentt, atinne trail sea.Ta! Si.Stating: arie, =: \u2018oit.C6, P£nuver, Jet.an4 DPITE nt ral Sta.Ding at stopping Quehan, pinz aping à: stonpinz ping at Stopping ft Eins Ate sta.m Sta.28e\u20ac an topping ping a\u2019 service elled: 30am, 40 am.09 am.1.Plare = 1, 913 urda-, Mon:- ickets & $17.25 $17.17 $13.95 $:5.u0 À £34.00 Marie D.vu os N | sat- 9.50 rthe\u201d Éceal alur- t lace non ] tn in able sen nnk.3113, west deal one.beat and ansi ES i jax- plis ayer and for our the We.THE M.E.KELLY SCHOOL OF SHORTHAND à YOUNG MEN\u2019S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION THE MONTREAL DAILY WITNESS.SATURDAY.SEPTEMBER 10, 1910.\u2014_\u2014 \u2014 a = = = - creed , = LEADING SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES.© 306 i | A S| scams am onsaams | woonse ssmuany | GONING EVENTS For Adults SEY ELOCUTION UNDER i PROF.J.P.STEPHEN a (22 years\u2019 experience as a Specialist) | « A valuable and delightful accomplishment ?More.The \u201cfinding\u201d of one\u2019s own powers for Business and Social use.Arrange for a few lessons only and judge for yourself.REDUCED RATES TO EARLY APPLICANTS (ALL 7 | : Co See our premises .MONTREAL Sencol OF ELOEUTION : ; McGill College Avenue Get full information Telephone: Up.474 y > Established 46 University, 1864.Cor.St.Cathoriss.ht.The Oldest College, the Newest Courses, the atest Systems, and Best Maths All graduates in positions.Write, call, or tél.Up 151 for prosp ectus.i ods.J.D.DAVIS, Principal (Late of Goltman\u2019s) 892 ST.CATHERINE WEST.°° NE Day and Evening classes, Absolutely individual instruction in Shorthand (Isaac Pitman's system), Typewriting, Spelling, Punctuation, ete.Dictation and outlines by the Principal.Pupils may enter at any time.Call or rite for Prospectus.\u2018 ; MISS KELLY, Principal.\u2014 EVENING SCHOOL Re-Opens Monday, September 26th 80 SUBJECTS TAUGHT.INDIVIDUAL INSTRUCTION.Write for Prospectus.Educational Director, Young Men's Christian Association, Dominion Squars, Montreal GLEN MAWR .1 651 Spnadina Avenue, Tororto.Co RESIDENTIAL AND DAY SCHOOL FOR GIRLS _ Large Staff of Highly Qualified and Experienced Teachers and Pro- féssors.Native French and German Teachers, Pupils prepared for the Universities and for Examindtions in Music of Toronto University, the Conservatory of Music, and the Toronto College of Music, Modern Egu- cational Methods, Refining Influences, and well-regulated Home.Lawn \u2018 Tennis and other games.Rink.The School.will re-open on Tuesday, September 13th.For Prospectus.apply to KISS VEAYLS, Principal MISS GRACE MccLAREN Will re-open Her class es under the name of WESTMOUNT FLETCHER MUSIC METHOD On Monday, Sept.12th, 1910 ' Sivdio: Room A, Victoria Hall.Studio hours (after Sept.1st) 3 to § Residence: 421 Mount Pleasant Ave.p.m.daily except Saturday, for demon- '\u2018Pione Westmount 1866.stration of Fletcher Method and envol- ment of puplls a \u2014 tree A me Prime EINE ay 3 M \u201c'IRY COLLEGE /ÆCLIFFE PARK, OTTAWA.Co : Rady a cn .aa JT Tt RESIDENT SCHOOL FOR BOYS.Large, new fireproof buildings.Perfect sanitation.Beautiful and very healthy situation on high ground outside city.Ten acres of playing fields.Large up-to-date Gymnasium.Junior Department for Little Boys._ SPECIAL PREPARATION FOR R.M.C.Ir 1910 Entrancs Examination for R.M.C.the school obtained FIRST PLACE on the list.ALL CANDIDATES SENT IN PASSED.chool will re-open Sept.13th, 1910.For Calendar, \u2018apply to REV, GEO, P.WOOLLCOMBE, M.A.(Oxon), Headmaster.SHORTHAND INSTITUTE ; Co AND BUSINESS COLLEGE MRS.BULLOCK, Principal.MOLSONS BANK CHAMBERS, 127 Stanley Street, Cor.St.Catherine St.; RE_OPENS TUESDAY, SEPT.&th.Offers Exceptional and Special Trai ning for Business.Sir Isaac Pitman's Shorthand, Typewriting, English Comp osition, Correspondence and Practical Office Work.Individual Tuition.Day and Evening Instruction, Phone 2844 UPTOWN.Miss Graham's Business College 109 METCALFE STREET (A few doors above St.Catherine.) Now Open.Pupils may enter at any time : Day Classes, Ladies only; Evening Classes, both sexes.A thorough, practical business training on modern lines.Isaac and Ben Ftman's Up-to-date Systems.Also Bookkeeping.Qualified and experienced eachers.A Spectal class for those deficient in the English Branches, and French bupils desiring to learn the English lan guage.0?Practical business training afforded students at Mlss Graham's copying offices, 517 ST.JAMES STREET.Write or call for Prospectus.publie Phone Up 2938.or Main 1714.ART ASSOCIATION.The SCHOOLS of ART, under the direction of Willlam Brymner, P.R.C.A., Will open for the Session 1510-11 as follows:\u2014Ælementary, October 4th; Life and Antique, October 17th; Fainting, November 2nd.Apply without delay to the Secretary, 23 Phillips Square.- J.B.ABBOTT, Secretary.LOWER CANADA COLLEGE Notre Dame de Grace : Use of Westmount Healthy situa*fon.Athietic grounds.2 tennis courts.MONTREAL.rinks.Gymnasium.Sloyd .(Manual Training) room.; Excellent system of heating, ventilating an um ying For Boarders and Day Boys class rooms and dormitories.Among successes for 1810 are the 1st, HEAD MASTER gnd, 4th and 10th places McGill Science Matriculatioh.Also entrance to the R.-M.C.G.5.FOSBERY, M.A.i Late Head Mastor, 8t.John's 8chool Term Commences 9.15 a.m., Sept.14, \u2014 THE MISSES GAIRDNER, MRS.EUNICE LATIMER, F.R.C.0.Fellow of the Royal College of Organists, LONDON, ENGLAND.Piano, Organ, Singing nd Harmony.For terms apply: .: Care of WM.CLARKSON, 4.89 St.Catherine street west.Tel.Uptown 4872.The CAICHTON SCHOOL 790, DORCHESTER ST.WEST.Réôtor : J.WILLIAMSON, M.A.(Oxon).Ectondary Sohoo! for Boye of 11.18 Preparatory Department \u2018\u201c ** ¢' gueti TEACHING STAFF.Classies and English: The Reator, and Mr.D.H.Christie, M.A., (Edin.).Mathématiés: Mr.G.Mackay, M.A (Aberdeen).French and German: Mr.W.8.Montgomerie, B.A.(Cantab.).Drawing: Mr.W.M, Barnes.With assistant tutors for English, French, etc.Special preparation for all the Faculties of the leading Universities in Can: ada and the United States.REOPENS MONDAY, SEPT.12 Mr.Willlamson may \u201cbe seen Jaily from 10 to 12 noon, and from 2 to 4 THE LADIES COLLEGE DUNHAM, P.Q.(President, the Bishop of Moitreal) is In a better position than ever in ita history to provide a \u201csound and NL=ral education to its pupnily, The property lias been greatly Imocoved, the severbl departments of iustrustion have beén in¢reased and & highly qualifed and accomplished staff nas been engaged.Every care and attention ia given to the improvement and wäll-béing of each pupil.Full particulars and calendar on application to the Lady Principal.ST.MARGARET'S COLLEGE TORONTO ne ; EE ckson, .oa A High-Class Residential and Day Scheol for Girls .Under the mavagement of MRS, GEORGE DICKSON, President MIBK J, £.MACDONALD, B.A.Principal Write for Booklet ALBERT COLLEGE BELLEVILLE, ONT, OVER 300 STUDENTS enrolled an.pually, one-half of whorl are young la.: Highest facilities In all departments.Fin reopen Sept.6th, 1810.\u2018or illustrated calendar, address, 277.PRINCIPAL DYER, DD.Laval University In Montreal, LAW FACULTY.Lectures will begin on the 12th of September, dat 9 a.m.EUG.LAPONTAINY, Secretary.COMMERCIAL HIGH SCHOOL OF MONTREAL The openin: of the courdes will take place on October 4th.Matriculation examinations will begin on Beptember 15th.Desraëd' of certificates or diplornas are exempt for the whole or for part of such examination.NUMEROUS SCHOLARSHIPS WILL BE ALLOTTED.\u2018Preparation for the higner Branches in Côr:mercè.Industry, Finance, etc, Special inscription fot certnin courses: Commercial Bureau, Commer cial and Industrial Chemistry, etc.: For programmes of the studies and information, call oh the Principal at the school, Viger .venue, from 10 to 12 a.m.and 2 tc 4 nom.- Westmount Private Commercial Classes 4267 DORCHESTER STREYET.(Three Months\u2019 Course.) Shorthand, Bookkeeping, French, German, Typewriting, and all Commercial subjects.Day and Evening Classes.Apply to Miss IRWIN, Principal.WYKEHAM HOUSE SCHOOL 837 Clarke Avenue, Westmount.A Séjëct Private School for Boys.Sch60! re-opens MONDAY, Sent.13th.The Headmaster, Mr.T.HOLMES-ORR, can be.seen at the school, or telephone Westmount 268.74 McGill Jollsgo Avenue.: Wil.re-open their classes for young ladies and children on Thursday, Sép- tember 16th.Pupils whé desire it are prepared for the University Matriculation Examinations.Boys under eight are \u2018admitted to the Preparatory Class.After September 8th, the Memes Gaird- ner will be at home to receive visitors on echcôl business.OTTAWA LADIES\u2019 First Class residential school for Girls and Young Ladies.> REOPENS GEPTEMBER 7th, WRITE FOR GAL.COLLEG = ENDAR and Pull % Information, Rev.W.D.Armstrong, M.A, D.D,, } © Prest.roslyn Ladies\u2019 College 125 MOUNT PLEASANT AVENUE, WESTMOUNT, BY MONTREAL, \u201csis school for Junior ind Senior pu- - will be reopened on TUBSDAY, 13th = :temker, / : rospectus on application.\u201crcommodation for one or two resi + pupils.Principal, J.PORTEOUS \u201cOLD, F.E.J.S.\u2019 = \u2014 *'LLCREST SCHOOL, 831 Lorne Crescent >> PALMER will resume her -classes EÉFDAY.Sept.15th.Pupils pre- MeGILL UNIVERSITY.Opening of Session, 1910-1 911 The Session will open for Students of the Second and Third Years in the Faculty of Jaw on MONDAY, September 13th, .: For ali other Students the Séssion will open on October 1st.J.A.NICHOLSON, M.A,,.\u201cre Sept.13th,address Miss Palmer, THE MACKAY INSTITUTION FOR PROTESTANT DEAF-MUTES AND THE BLIND NOTRE DAME DE GRACE, MONTREAL # School re.opens où WEDNESDAY Beptember 14 i \u2018 : _ The Blind taught the ordinary English bradches, Music and Chatr-Caning.The Deaf educated and taught to speak and read the lips.Instruction in Carpentry and Shoemaking.HARRIET E.ASHCROFT, Superintendent.| TECHNICAL CLASSES | Subjects conducted in the Commercial 471 Argyle Avenue, Westmount, This School for Girls will re-open on Wednesday, Sept.14.Boye under nine réceived in the Preparatory Class, Pupils prepared for McGill Matriculation, If desired.Vacanciew for young girls ss resident upiis.; : P Trier September 1st visitors on school business will be received daily from 2 to 6 p.m.% MISS LOUISE DERICKS PRIMARY SCHOOL AND KINDERGARTEN 83 CRYBOENT STREET, This School for Boys and Girls, from four to nine years of age, will reopen on MONDAY, Septémber 16th, After September 1ith, Miss Derick will recéive visitors on school business.198 Bt.Catherine W., Montreal.ÉESTABLISHED IN 1896 DAY AND EVENING CLASSES, Individual instruction.Positions se- 1 ¢ured.Tel.Main 309 ANGUS CAZA, Prin.115 SHUTER ST, The Misses Bryson\u2019s School and KINDERGARTE™ THURSDAY, Sept.15th.Special classes in Drawing and Sew.MUSIC AND ARTS.MISS HELEN COLLARD, Teacher of Music.Pupils Prepared for Examinations, .Vocal, Instrumental or Theoretical.Btudio and Residence, 40A St.Matthew.PA, SIGNE 10 TUEUR Canadian Becretary London Collëzé of usic, Telephone Fast 839.Residence, 69 Fark Ave.Moatraal, EVENING The Evening classes In Technical & Technical High School, 53 Sherbrooke Street, West, under the joint management of the Montreal Technical Institute and the Protestant Board of School Commissioners, will re-opén on MONDAY EVENING, September 18th, at 7.30 p.m.COURSES.I.PREPARATORY COURSE IN HNG- LISH AND ARITHMETIC.1 II.PRACTICAL MATHEMATICS, AS REQUIRED IN INDUSTRIAL WORK.111.GEOMETRICAL DRAWING, IV.MECHANICAL DRAWING.V.ARCHITECTURAL DRAWING VI.FREEHAND DRAWING VIL INDUSTRIAL DESIGNING.VIII, APPLIED MECHANICS, \u2018IX.THEORY OF STRUCTURES.X.MACHINE: DESIGN.XI.BUILDING CONSTRUCTION, XII.METALWORK.XIII.ELECTROTEOHNICS, - XIV.CHEMISTRY (with - individual LABORATORY WORK).Elementary and Advanced.XV.HOUSE CARPENTRY.XVI.ÉOOKERY.XVII.SEWING AND DRESSMAKING.XVIII.MILLINERY.The class-rooms of the school have been specially fitted with MACHINES, TOOLS and APPLIANCES in order to make the work PARTICULARLY USE- TUL to APPRENTICES and ME: CHANICS.The EQUIPMENT of last year has been considerably zdded to,and the time allotted to most subjects hax \u2018been doubled.- : The Principal of the School, Mr, I.Gammell, will be in attendance from September 12th to 18th inclusive, from 8 Fo 9 p.m.to give information and enrol pupils.- : - ; Prospectus may now be had on application to to H.J.SILVER, Saecretary-Superiniendent, 197 Peel Street, Montreal.TRAFALGAR INSTITUTE.(Affiliated to McGill University), 83 Simpson St., Montreai.For the Highèr Education of Young Women, with Preparatory Department for Girls under 1% years of age.President\u2014Rev.James Barclay, D.D, Vice-President\u2014Ven, .Norton, D.D.,, Archdeacon of Montreal, Prineipal-Miss Grace Fairley, M.A, Edinburgh._ - - The Institute will reopen TUESDAY, 13th September, at NOON.; Entrance examinations for néw scholars will ba held at the school on Saturday, 10th September, at 10 o'clock a.m.~ For prospectus, etc, apply to the Principal, or to A.F, RIDDELL, Secretary, North British Mercantile Building, 80 St.Francois Xavier street, Montreal.PA For evenings, driving, walking or travelling.They present a most attractive, stylish appearance, Made in four distinct es \u2014 all proofed.Ask your dealer.Ifhe does not sell them, write for style book and sam.rain.AIRMAN INJURED \u2014\u2014 Chas.K.Hamilton Crashed to Ground With Biplane.Sacramento, Cal., Sept.10.\u2014Chas.K.Hamilton was seriously injured last night, when his bi-plane crashed to the grouiid during a race with an automobile around the Fair Grounds track.Hamilton was taken to a local hotel and several physicians were called in.It is will reopen on\u2019 CLOSING OF DOMINION PARK.With this week-end Dominion Park finishes its season.Business has been badly hampered during the past few but ~notwithstanding this drawback a great many visitors have made their way to the park.For the closing day the special Attractions will be the same as during the week, Nervo, the Sensational diver, and Mr.and Mrs.Begue, of the Metropolitan Opera Company of New York, singing with thé band.To-night there will be à special lllumiifiation as well as a display of fireworks.The Caledonian So- clety will also hold the entertainments that had to be postponed last Saturday on account of the rain.Their festivities will open up in the afternoon with an Association football matéh, between the Royal Rovers and the Sons of Scotland.- THE GRENADIER GUARDS BAND.The \u2018programme to be rendéred by the band of His Majesty's Grenadier Guards on their return to the Arana on Wednesday evening next, prior to their departure on the following morn- Ing for home, is full of those numbers that appeal to all classes.It is as follows: March\u2014The Jefferson Guards\u2019.; Dr.A.Williams Selection from Sir H.R.Bishop's Songs.Arr.Hartmann L\u2019Invitation a la Valse.Weber- Weingartner Descriptive March\u2014\"The Canadian atrol\u2019.Dr.A.Williams Scherzo and Finale from Fourth Symphony .'Tschaikowsky Grand Overture Solonelle \u20181812\u2019.- Tschailkowsky Cornet Solo\u2014\u2018The Last Chord\u2019.\u2019 Sullivan Soloist, Corp.R.Gay.Zweite Ungarische Rhapsodie.F.Liszt Selection from \u2018A Midsummer Night's Dream\u2019.Mendelssohn FIRST WHEAT OF NEW CROP EXHIBITED.-The first wheat, representative of thé 1910 western crop, to be exhibited anywhere in the éast, will be seen in Montreal.The C.P.R.who yearly make interesting collections of the western crop for exhibit throughout the empire and world, will show à specially collected exhibit, at the Canadian Exhibition and Fair, to be held in the Arena, on October 6th, 7th and 8th, under the direction of the Boys\u2019 Sunshine Club of Westmount.The C.P.R.now have their experts in the prairie provinces picking out the finest examples of wheat, oats and other grains; these wlll be gathered to form one magnificent exhibit at the coming fair.The exhibition will be tntirely Canadian in character, illustrative of the life, history, resources and industries of the Dominion.\u2018Both the C.P.Rand G.T.P.have deolded to undertake exhibits showing the agricultural, the mineral and the animal products of Canada.Movin» pictures of Canadian scenery and various phases of Canadian manufacturing and Industrial life will be an interesting fea- ure.| The.Canadian Handicrafts Association; the Canadian Natura] History Soc\u2019 ty, and a number of associations of a similar nature will give displays thoroughly Canadlan.Fifteen booths have already been taken by prominent women\u2019s socleties of the city, Booths have also been reserved for a nume- ber of leading manufacturers.The Canadian exhibition and fair is being promoted in an effort to tstab- a & Club House for the newsboys of fontreal, : In addition to the three competitions annqunced last week, a fourth essay competition for $26 in prizes is offered | for the one who will.suggest the best plans along the line :How to permanently improve Westmount as a city of homes.\" The prize money is put up by Ald.J.H.Bherrard, of Westmount.Mayor .Trenholme and Mr.F.W.Evans, ex-Mayor of Westmount, will be the judges.The essays must not be more than 2,500 words in length, and | be sent in to the offices of the West- mount \u2018News,\u2019 before October 6th.FROM THR \u2018OLD COUNTRY) { The world-famous Glasgow Select Choir has been so well known in the \u2018Old Country\u2019 for the last thirty years, that it needs no word of recommendation.The following is an extract from the Dundee \u2018Advertiser\u2019: \u2018Under the leadership of the conduce tor, the members showed the perfection of tralning and proved to demonstration the exceptional power of unaccompanied part-singing to move the feelings of a mixed assemblage, Every shade of meaning in the successive songs was brought out with vigor or tenderness, with humor or pathos, as the sentiment required; and the audience was moved to tears or laughter, at the will ~f the poet and of the vo- câlists.The Glasgow Select Choir has become alost a national institution.\u2019 This celebrated cholt's grand concert will be given in the Arena, on Wednesday evening, September 21st, at 8 o'clock, \u201c : 600 ENTRIES, te For Montreal Horse Show at - the Arena Some six hundred entries have been received by the management of the Montreal Horse Show for the coming show to be held in the Aréna from the 27th instant until the 1st of October.Already classification.of the various horses, events and classes 1s under way, but on account of this number ft will be néxt week before the programme will assume any sort of shape.Judges will also be apnointed next week, and it is expected that before long everything will be in ship shape.Decorating of the interior of the Arena will soon be begun, and the bark sod on which the horses will be shown, i$ being put down.Up to to-day the managément has not been able to get very far in the classification of the entries, but among some of the most prominent horse men that | have been noticed as having entered animals, was seen the name of Mr.George Pepper, of Toronto.He has entered a large number of high jumpers, and other horses.Mr.Pepper is a noted horseman, ahd last fall won many prizes with his horses in New York.Mr.J.T.R Lauréndeau, who has a farm at Boucherville, has entered a big and brilliant string of horses.He is going in most extensively in the harness classes, and is one of the largest entrants in these classes.Mr.C Ed.Gudewill, who won many prizes at the Toronto spring show, is also one of wwe foremost on the list.In the class of harness horses Mrs.H.V.Meredith has also entered many horses.Hunt teams are noticed to be entered in\u2019 large numbers by the Montreal Hunt Club and other clubs.Summonses have edn issued against eight persons in consequence of \u2018the firidings of the judges in connection with the East Kerry parliamentary élection petition.The charge of undue Influence is alleged against four men and personation against others.prete NOTES AND NOTICES, Layton Bros.invite you to inspect a Sherlock-Manning Player-Organ.Ordinary Player-Plano rolls are used, on this instrument.Price very reasonable.Layton Bros.550 St.Cathe- i tor matriculation if desired.| Agathe des Monts, P.Q.Registrar.[ESSE GEORGE DURNFORD, _ ; Becretary._ 7 ee .& believed he is internally injured.tT ROE SE IE a AS rine St.W.(cor.Stanley St.).a days because of the wretched weather,\" ORIENTALRUGS Our new collection of Turkish.Persian and Indian Carpets and Ruga have arrived and are the finest collection that have ever come to Canada, Comprising :\u2014 TABRIZ, BOUK HARA KAZACK, DAGHESTAN, PERSIAN STRIPS, AMRITZAS, BORLAN.SPARTA, AFGHAN, SHERVAN, AGRA, BEDGAR, ETC.ETC.Are Now on View at Our Rooms.101 Metcalfe Street M.HICKS & CO.Old Mahogany, Sheraton & Chippendale Furniture, Sheffield Plate, etc, etc.We have just received the Finest collection of Old Mahogany Furniture, comprising :\u2014 Mahogany Sideboards, Bookcases.Writing Desks, Dining Room Chairs, Dining Table, Arm and other Chairs, Wine Cabinets, Tea Caddies, Etc.Etec.Metcalfe Street M.HICKS & CO.101 ET CPE CAE NE \u2018REGAL\u2019 Kitchen Ranges Modern in design; simple, durable and elegant in construction.Somewhat different to others; fres from troublesome features; built on the high-grade basis In our own factory, and absolutely guaranteed by us.OR COMBINATION We are \u2018booking orders now for October dellveries.Exchanges Made Accommodating Terma R.&W.KERR, Limited | 826 ST, CATHERINE STW.a | Lente NE 1 il GE RT EEN [RRC ETATS a spa + SCHOOL Get them where they are neat, comfortable, good fii- ting, strong \u2018yet supple,\u201d and at reasonable prices.RONAYNE BROS, 485 Notre Street West.Dame A Weekly reprint of Articles and Cartoons from the leading journals and reviews reflecting the current thought of both hemispheres.Among many Interesting Articles in this week's issue are: Why Should Gingerbread Be Gilt ?\u2014 By Canon Scott Holland.A Modern Solomon.Education Offered by School and College Merely an Opportunity.Troubles of the Labor Party.Turkey and the Triple Alliance.Anti-Partition Campaign in Bengal.Tariff Reform in Canada.Long Studies on Great Subjects.A Painter Naturalist and His Son.5 CENTS A COPY.AT ALL NEWSDEALERS $1.50 A YEAR.Montreal and Suburbs, $2.00 aus fie | \u201cWorld Hele jie A TR SE RR EN ROA to \u20ac - SR ER ed ah Ra?er nT EER YG A MA unre XO oi FE SERA ET ST SES ere MONTREAL DAILY WITNESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1910.Pan LI RES Rn Lath wefan HEE +4444 00 8 FATHER VAUGHAN'S SERMON.(To the Editor of the \u2018Witness.\u2019) Sir \u2014 Was Father Vaughan brôught out to Canada to set race against race, and to bring about civil war?Whether or not, he tries hard by falsehood and an impassioned appeal to tost the patience of all English-speaking people.There was never a period when the Church of England was without a \u2018priest, and the Church of England priests have ever \u2018been an honor to that most honored of all lands, England, and to their influence to-day Father Vaughan has the liberty to insult both England and Canada from a Montreal pulpit.Every child knows the Church of England has ever stood for the \u2018Holy Eucharist, and has for well-nigh 2,000 years offered it upon her altars, but she has never, so far,.degraded herself as to say\u2014 the Eucharist is my God.She makes a difference, and rightly so, between things, knowing that to be \u2018carnally minded is death, but, to be spiritually minded is life and peace\u2019 She does not press with her teeth the human remains of one nature only of her Deity, but she spiritually partakes of both natures in her sacrament.The Roman church is like the Turanian, she ig ever after the earthly, and making of it a \u2018fetich,\u2019 while the Anglican with the moble Aryan love of truth, takes the heavenly and earthly being one in Christ Jesus, and offers them\u2014 under the forms of bread and wine, according to her Lord\u2019s command\u2014unto her children.teachings of Jésus and the Holy Apostles and have no Eucharists\u2014 while others have \u2018the mass\u2019 and the mass only as their real way of salvation.(REV.) C.A.FRENCH.Cardinal, Ont.* Dear Sir,\u2014After reading In the press that the Rev.Father Vaughan stated \u2018Protestanism was rapidly passing away, reminded me of the words of the great Cardinal Guilbert, who, as far back as 1870, wrote thus of his church in France: \u2018The Christlans form a society, a people apart which, no longer being in communion of ideas with the immense society which surrounds us, is becoming disintegrated, and is, In fact, in full process of dissolution.It is a world nearing its end.No comment is necessary.(REV.) W.G.BRADFORD.Huntley street, Sept.6, 1910.(To the .Editor of The Witness).Sir,\u2014I desire to express my gratification at the opportunity your representative gave the Rev.B: Vaughan, Jesuit, of communicating to the Protestant citizens of Montreal end the members of the Anglican church in particular, the Church of [Rome's honest opinion of them and their religion.In Montreal, we have bzcome so used to hearing pleasant nothings concerning us and of having Protestant moneys graciously received by Roman Catholic charities and oun taxes taken to add eclat to Roman Catholic fetes, forgotten Rome\u201ds real opinion eof ue end our religion; hence, personally, I am delighted at the honest utterances of an.honest Englishman or rathen Welsfrman, calling us again to remember that from the Roman stand point our church is \u2018A Ghastly: Corpse.\u201d It is not my purpose to refute here the baseless assertions of the Jesuit preacher, thanks to your interview reported in Saturday's Witness, my own congregation was prepared for the attack.I would only remark in- conclusion that no church or nation having once escaped from the intolerant domination and corruption of the Romish dhurch has ever yet returned to communion with her and the British church is British.I sincerely trust that the Rev.B.Vaughan will, while he remains in Canada, continue to declare the Church of Rome's candid opinion of us.pg ; JAS.L.FLANAGAN, Rector, Church of the Ascension.pt THE WELCOME TO THE LEGATE.Sir \u2014Will you please find space in your valuable columns for a few remarks re this Eucharistic Congress.Sir Frederick Borden has stood manfully by his guns in forbidding a military escort to the Papal Legate; had he complied with the demands of the promoters it would have been tantamount to an admission that the Papacy is a temporal power.If it is not correct for one part of the Government to escort him through Montreal, is \u2018it a proper thing to convey him in one Government steamer and convoyed by another up the river to Montreal?A statement has been issued by the Marine Department to the effect that similar privileges had been offered the \u2018various congresses in Halifax this summer.Presuming this to be correct, is {t a proper thing to do to make grants of any description by the Government whereby an encroachment is made on the public funds.When the great General Booth visited Montreal was the government of our country, or the Council of our city, breaking their necks to do him and his grand organization homage?1 venture to say, Mr.Editor, that the precedent set in Halifax this summer had the Eucharistic Congress in view, and with no other end but to make this Italian's arrival in Montreal harbor more impressive.His Worship Mayor Guerin welcomed the Cardinal in the name of the citizens of Montreal, and likewise your contemporary the \u2018Herald\u2019 makes a glowing welcome on its front page \u2018From the Citizens of Montreal.1 think that every man, woman and child professing to be Protestants will protest these two statements.1st.Why should the Protestants of Montreal welcome the representative of the Pope to the King's Dominions?2nd.The Protestants of Canada do not forget what their forefathers suffered when they were fighting for religious liberty in the tight little island across the sea.srd.By welcoming this Prelate of Rome we should be condoning the offences, indignities and cruelty committed by the Roman Church during the Pope's temporal power in England.The Protestants of Montreal will no doubt tolerate this priest of Rome, but welcome him, never.Speaking of toleration, why is it the Roman Church is always willing to receive and acknowledge toleration, but never makes any concession on her part?(only when through force of circumstances It is necessary for the welfare of the church).Take, for instance, Spain and Portugal, who are now kicking over the traces for religious liberty which Rome is not disposed to grant.In America and England we find her tolerant\u2014why is this?Because if she was not, in a few years Rome would not have a leg to stand upon in these two countries.Consistency is out of the question altogether.The work of Rome is carried on according to the circumstances that they may have to contend with.In countries where education is rapidly advancing the Church has to change her tactics, and wherever the temporal power thas been cut off those countries advance by leaps and bounds, as in the case of Germany, England, Jtaly, Holland, Sweden and Norway, leaving Spain, Portugal and Austria to the tender mercies of the Pope.The Jesuit Father Vaughan has made es rare + AE LETTERS FROM READERS.SEP SEE We choose to follow the | that we had almost unti pe several assertions which can be construed as attacks on Protestantism, as being without soul, and without sacrifice, and that it is only a matter of time when Protestantism will die out.Father Vaughan would not dare make these statements in a public hall In England; since coming to the \u2018Rome of the New World\u2019 he appears to be a little too fresh in his remarks.The Protestants and Catholics of Montreal have learnt to respect each other's religious views and are working hand in hand for the advancement .of social and municipal life, and the remarks by Father Vaughan are very untimely and unwarranted.If Father Vaughan will take the trouble to inquire he will find that Protestantism is decidedly on the increase, especially in the province of Quebec education is doing a lot.We are told also by Father Vaughan that in England the High Church clergymen of the Church of England are returning to the Holy Mass, and that prayers should be offered for those who are struggling for the light.If these men cannot find the light, the sooner they turn over to Romanism the better for the Church of England and all Protestant denominations.Thank God, we have thousands of faithful Low Churchmen and Nonconformists who will work and fight and stand firm in the = faith of their forefathers who fought and bled for the \u2018light.PROTEST.rv \u2018A REPLY TO FATHER VAUGHAN.(To the Editor of the *Witness.\u2019) Sir,\u2014The sermon by Father Bernard Vaughan, delivered to an overflowing congregation in St.Patricks Church on Sunday morning, was a painful surprise-to thousands of citizens, both Catholic and Protestant alike, in this great city of Montreal; it is simply amazing he could have so far forgotten himself to have chosen such an inopportune moment for the delivery of remarks which under the most charitable construction could only tend to stir up strife and bitterness of feeling at a moment when all classes of the community were evincing a warm desire to emulate the song of the angels, \u2018Peace on earth and good-will toward men,\u201d forgetting the courtesy and consideration incumbent upon every guest of this city as a gentleman, ever though a priest, and utterly ignoring the very creditable fact that for some weeks past all sections of the community have joined hands and opened their purse, even the finances of the city have been utilized.Never has the door of hospitality opened wider in the history of this city; miles of street have been colonnaded, the thousand flags unfurled on the gentle breeze, with silent whisperings of joy and peace, the very heart of the city has throbbed with excitement; above the rattle and rush of business there has been one aim, one 1dea, one noble desire to give Father Bernard Vaughan and his fellow guests a right royal welcome to this our æreat city.We cannot for a moment suppose Father Bernard Vaughan ignorant of the fact that in this city there are tens of thousands of thoughtful, earnest, God-fearing people outside the pale of his church, to whom his remarks will appear painfully deflciep: in Christian charity and good-will.Even from h's own standpoint, his remarks were totally uncalled for and: ely, and \u2018altogether clit of här- | mony with the traditions of this city, exhijbiting:a:lack: of tact ang.diplomacy calcufated- £0\" iefeaf \u2018tha Vary ehd Hé had in view and till widen the breach between: his.church and the rest of Christendom.It.was most regrettable that at the very opening of a grand religious festival and ceremony the spirit of intolerance and bigotry should have shown its cloven foot, and we should be sorry to think such an unwise and unwarrantable course as adopted by Father Vaughan will meet with much appreciation from our other guests.The sermon In itself was not marked by unusual ability or scholarly attainment.True, the delivery was passionate and even eloquent, but the matter appeared to have been simplified for the occasion.Many of the statements made by Father Vaughan would not stand the test of history.much less that of common sense\u2014\u2018but I am forgetting Father Vaughan would scout the bare idea of introducing common sense into religious life\u2019; others were evasive and veiled the actual facts of the case\u2019; but all through the discourse there was evinced ever and anon a spirit of subtle, cynical, suggestion.The congregation was deeply moved \u2014no doubt to pity, as the oracle of God declared in ali seriousness that the religion of their enemies, the great Protestant religion, was nothing more than a dead corpse, without life and without a soul.That such a statement is utterly misleading and untrue no one knows better than Father Vaughan himself; he knows also that it is the very life and activity of the Protestant Church manifesting itself and unfolding Its potency In every quarter of the habitable glohe that is giving birth to so much anxiety to the Holy See at Rome.It is not my intention at this juncture to enter upon a public refutation of such ridiculous statements; they carry with them their own refutation, and if our Catholic friends would read for themselves, think for themselves and observe the trend of thought and progress of the nations they too would soon condemn such reckless declamation.If as Father Vaughan would have us believe the soul of religion consists in sacrificial mass with all its attendant mysterious ritual, in numberless bowings and crossings, genu- flexions and sprinklings, in priestly ahsolution, in transubstantiation, in the worship of relics, the burning of candles, the adoration of saints, the sale of indulgences, the sale of prayers for the dead, the sale of the very mass itself, if this constitutes the spiritual life or soul of r-ligion, then I agree most emphatically with Father Vaughan that the would-be reformers of the sixteenth century thought they could establish a religion without these things, and time and experience have proved their judgment correct.If Father Vaughan deems all these things essential to vital religion, for you must take them altogether, how comes lt about the very countries dominated by such teaching are in the background of nations, why are they steeped in poverty and ignorance?What is the matter with poor old Ireland, with Spain, and with Italy\u2014why are these countries so far behind in the world\u2019s progress, or on the other hand will Father Vaughan explain the curlous fact that the nations which have severed their alle- glance with his church, \u2018the only living church,\u2019 are the foremost nations on the face of the earth?We must judge a tree by its fruits In all conscience, and there must be something wrong with a church which does not elevate and ennoble a people under its fostering care.In face of these incontrovertible facts I am fully persuaded the Monk that shook the world knew what he was about when he burnt the Bull and nailed his ninety- five Theses on the old castle door at Wittenburg, and that after all the genius of these would-be reformers was too brilliant for the Church, and finding there was no hope of reform from within they came out,\u2019 bringing the soul of the church with them into a clearer and freer atmosphere.Did not Jesus say, a good tree cannot pring forth evil fruit.Neither can a corrupt tree bring forth good fruit; ye shall know them by thelr fruits.\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 DR.VAUGHAN ON \u2018CHARACTER.\u2019 (To the Editor of the \u2018Witness.\u2019) Sir,\u2014I quite agree with the sentiments expressed in your editorial of Tuesday on Father Vaughan s utterances.Every Protéstant will heartily accord to Father Vaughan the right of free speech.His lecture on \u2018Character\u2019 hag been fully advertised and everybody knew just where and when it was to De dolivered, \u2018and no doubt many Protestants went to hear him.He told them some wholesome truths.which I hope they will take to heart ofit by.I would and treasure and pr y Father like, \u2018however, to remind Vaughan of what he and his.co religionists of the congress Very well know, that if 1 were to gc to the City of Madrid, in Spain, and try to play in behalf of my religious faith the role which he and his confreres are so free to act under the British flag, I should be prohibited from doing so until very recently: We oe all glad to hear what Fatner Vaughan has to say, but if he hopes to make converts of Protestants he must expect Lo he asked questions.and his success will depend altogether on how he will answer those questions.On Monday night he delivered a lecture on \u2018Character, sald some good things about it.But I would like to ask Father Vaughan what kind of character he expects a church which authorizes the works of Gury and St.Liguori to build up.The Rev.Dr.Littledale, in his \u2018Plain Reasons Against Joining the Church of Rome, (Richard Fredercik Littledale, LL.D, D.C.L., Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, London) at page 19 quotes St.Liguori.Now, he says, for example, (1) that the actual assassins of a man are not equally | guilty with their Instigator, whom he admits to incur excommunication.(Theol Moral\u2019 IV.364); (2) that if A murder B, in order that C may be suspected of the murder and thereby suffer loss of any kind, A is not bound to make C any compensation (IV.583, 636): (3) that If a clerical adulterer be attacked by the husband, he may lawfully kill the husband, and does not incur \u2018irregularity\u2019 thereby, pI0- vided his visit was secret, so that he had a reasonable expectation of escaping detection, though, if he have openly braved the.danger, he does incur irregularity (IV.398); (4) that an adul.tress may deny her sin on oath, either by saying that she has not broken the marriage tle (since adultery does not void it); or, if she have gone to confession, that she is innocent of the sin, because it has been washed away in confession; or, again, that she has not committed it, i.\u20ac, so as to be bound to acknowledge it (IV.162); (5) that a man may swear aloud to any false statement, provided he add some true circumstance in an undertone, unheard by the bystanders (V.168); (8) that it is lawful to swear to a quibble or to perjure oneself before a judge, if any great loss or inconvenience would follow to a witness from speaking the truth (IV.151-6); (7) that it is lawful to procure the giving of perjured evidence, \u2018if you have a great interest in employing perjury to expose the fraud of another person.in order to obtain your own rights\u2019 (IIL iii., 77); (8) that La.nopleman, ashamed to beg or work, F¥nay Steal to & Len his ni if he \u2018be poor.(IV, 520).Further, Liguori republished as a text-book, and dedicat-.od bd Pope Benedict XIV.the, Marmom: of Moral Theology,\u2019 by Busembgum, the\u2019 Jesuit, from which the following max-: {ms are taken: (1) À man in great need may steal what is necessary for the Te- lief of his own want; and what a man, may steal for himself he may also steal: for any other very destitute person; (2) any one trying to prevent such a theft may be lawfully killed by: the thief (Tom.II.Tib iii, par.1, tract 5, c 1).Escobar, another famous casu- eq for a short time, in order to commit some sin undetected, does not.sin heinously, nor jinour excommunication.(\u2018Theol.Mor.\u201d I., xXliv.,, 213).Dr.Lit- tledale has a footnote (page 20) explaining the meaning of the term \u2018irregularity\u201d It means disability\u2019 for clerical office.Thus the clerical adulterer who to save the Church from scandal has murdered the husband of the woman whom he has debauched, is not debarred from saying mass, making the body of his Lord and administering the same the next day.Again I ask Father Vaughan what sort of character does he .expect to build up from this teaching of that eminent doctor and saint of the Church, Liguori.Now, from such moral teaching one might reasonably expect to ind the percentage of Roman Catholle criminals to be higher than that of Protestant criminals.On pages 203, 204 and 205 Dr.Littledale gives some statistics.Tt would be too much for me to ask you to print these three pages, Those of your readers who are interested \u2018in the question can get Dr.Lit- tledal'e book and read for themselves They will find a careful perusal of the whole book well worth while.The book was published in the seventies, and a later edition, in 1886.He gives the Roman Catholic population in Engs land as less \u2018than five percent of the whole, but they contribute, wherever they are collected, from sixteen to six- ty-seven percent of the criminals, that is to say, from three to thirteen times their fair share of crime.He gives the figures for Scotland, Ireland, the Dominion of Canada, Prussia and the Netherlands, but invariably to the discredit of Roman Catheliclsm.In the Province of Ontario he compares the Roman Catholics and Anglicans, as they were very nearly equal, In 1881 there were 320,839 Roman Catholics to 366,539 Anglicans, but the criminal record for 1880 was 4,152 Roman Catho- Hes to 1,944 Anglicans, which was more than double the natural ratio for Roman Catholics.AN INQUIRING PROTESTANT.THE \u2018DEVOIR\u2019 AND THE MAYOR.(To the Editor of the \u2018Witness.\u2019) Sir \u2014I note that your erratic contemporary, the \u2018Devoir,\u2019 takes His Worship Mayor Guerin to task for the offence committed in being present at the laying of the corner stone of the First Presbyterian Church.The editorial staff of this paper evidentiy believes that it was divinely ordained for the purpose of seeing that those of the Catholic falth shall not associate to any considerable extent with others, who are as Christian as themselves, but may differ as to the method of worshipping the Saviour, It is evident that the \u2018Devoir\u2019 came into existence for the purpose of doing its \u2018duty, on whose behalf it is hard to fathom.To criticise the chief magistrate for being present at the ceremony in honor of Christ is surely bad taste, inasmuch as the management of the paper in question is so Christian.the newspaper can find nothing else to give space to than comments on the public conduct of one whose duty it js to promote the good relations that should exist amonz the several elements of the population in every large city.While it is true that Montreal is essentially a Catholic city, it should not be forgotten that the population has ist, lays down that a member of a re- | ligtous order who lays aside his habit ; It is greatly to be regretted that: increased, and is now made up of very many elements that differ in the mau ter of religion and ceremonial forms of \u2018worship.The ardent champion of the faith in the \u2018Devoir\u2019 should also remember that at the time of the last election, Protestants, and others broad- er-minded than himself, thought that in view of the Eucharistic Congress it would bea graceful tribute to the majority in this city that on this occasion the mayor of the city be a Roman Catholic.It seems that such magnanimity does not appeal to the mayor\u2019s critic.Of course if the function of the \u2018Devoir\u2019 1s \u2018to protect the church at all hazards, \u2018and thereby call to account those who, they think, have done something in contravention of certain est: blished rules, there is little to be said; but inasmuch as it is a newspaper assuming to speak on behalf of a large section of the population, and in a sense speaks authoritatively, it therefore must be subject to criticism.When the \u2018Devoir\u2019 criticises Sir Wilfrid Laurier and Mr.Borden in connection with the naval bill, and it does so on behalf, I presume, of a number of those who share its views, that 18 jan instañce in which there is a difference of opinion, and no one's feelings are hurt.When, however, it seeks to stir up strife and ill-feeling on account of a courteous act on the part of the mayor towards his fellow- citizens, it goes beyond the limits of a newspaper.Mayor Guerin, in his official capacity, does not represent the Roman Catho- lies of Montreal alone.He is the spokesman for the whole population, and one of his first duties is to Promote good-feeling among all classes of the community.This is incumbent upon him not only as chief magistrate, but also as a good Christian.The writer refers to Daniel O'Connell refusing \u2018to enter the Protestant Church at the funeral of his friend, Cobbet.\u2018That \u2018does not say much for the intelligence of ©\u2019Connell nor his broad- mindedness.The warm defender of the faith who writes in the \u2018Devoir\u2019 quotes from Cardinal Vaughan to the effect that no Catholic can take part at the.ceremonies of a -false religion.A \u201cstatement of this kind is a direct insult to every other denomination in this city.How dare a member of one denomina- ton publicly state that another religion is false! But It seems that hurling insults at other churches and religions is a special forte of the writer in the \u2018Devoir.\u2019 I am not so much concerned at his sayin~ that Catholics must not be present at the ceremonies of a false religion as I am at the potential possibilities that may come from a continuance and repetition of such nar- row-minded and mediaeval criticism of men\u2019s conduct.Another point that should not be overlooked is that other than the writer in the \u2018Devoir\u2019 are made to suffer the consequences of his too liberal use of printer's ink and display of ignorance and Intolerance.When those of other nationalities read the translations they may naturally conclude that all French-Cana- dians are as intolerant as the writer.This is .dn injustice to them and places them in a false position.Those who have had the privilege to associate professionally, commercially or otherwise with the French population of this province know they are generous, broadminded and lovers of \u2018equity, and it Is unfair that as a result of a silly remark, made by the writer referred to, that the whole race -should be libelled.Fortunately, men of the type who write articles simi- \u2018lar to that which appeared in the \u2018Devoir\u201d are few and far between.They are an anachronism and entirely use- \u2018less to\u2019 society.The most unfortunate feature Is that as a result of the privilege they possess In writing in organs of public opinion, those who- do not know the facts may get erroneous impressions, \u2018ind third parties\u2019 entirely innocent \u2018suffer.The mayor is deserving of great pralse for having been present ee fat the ceremony, from which the writ- \u2018èr would have him stay away.He was :there, firstly, fn his official capacity, and secondly, to do honor to the founder of Christianity, whom we, all know was much more charitable and broad- \u201cminded than the writer of the \u2018Devoir\u2019 article.| - ; BERNARD ROSE.! \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014p\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 THE ATTITUDE OF ROMAN CATH- * OLICS TOWARD PROTESTANTS.(To the Editor of the Witness.) Sir, \u2014Wihilst Protestants are exhorted to manifest a concillatory spirit toward the Roman Catholics, especially during these days in which they are giving prominence to a dogma which shocks the evangelical Protestant mind, lit would seem as if there were concerted action to attack Protestantisin and those who dare to show respect for its adherents and admiration for the neligious and patriotic work they are doing in our.country.A few days ago Sir Wilfrid Laurier was vilified, his name was dragged In the mud by a tity paper, which has the sanction of the hierarchy, because he was manly, independent and Christian enough to accept an invitation from the Methodist Conference at Vancouver, and speak in kindly terms of the great work which the Methodist Church is doing for the upbuilding of the Canadian nation.Right-thinking men cannot but admire and honor Sir Wilfrid ahd congratulate him on his Christian common sense.But it was not enough to abuse the Canadian Premier, - another broadminded man had to come in for his share of abuse.Mayor Guerin is also taken to task for having taken part in the laying of the corner stone of a Presbyterian church.The paper that does it is purported to expound Roman Catholic doctrine, which is to the offect that whilst Catholics pray for all, they do not pray with all.The Protestants have such \u2018an heterodox and false religion\u2019 that it becomes a reprehensible act to have communication in divine things with them.To pray to God, to participate in any way fin the same religious ceremony with Protestants is illicit.Father Vaughan 18 quoted in ¢onfirmation of such Christian (?) ching.No Attention is here called to the fact that we are mot discussing any special doctrine to which Roman Catholics hight object, we are dealing here with the general spirit\u2019 of\u2018 the respective churches.Whilst Protestants are bearing patiently demonstrations and ceremonies which to their mind are futile and even.idolatrous, whilst they are allowing thelr taxes to be used lavish ly to help in the upbuilding of à system they do not believe in: whilst some \u2018of them are contributing to the tune of five thousand dollars for the strengthening of Romanism in Canada, the representatives of that church are insulting Protestants, and represent thelr fqith as heterodox and false.It should not be our intention to return evil for evil, but we must not become blinded by a false charity, which leads so many to think that the teachings of Romanlsm are quite Christian enough, and that no efforts should be put forth to put In strong relief the principles of the gospel which Christ taught and exemplified In his life.+ C.E.AMARON.Joliette, Que.\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014r TROOPS AT THE CONGRESS PROCESSION.(To the Editor of the \u201cWitness.\u201d) Sir \u2014Being an old volunteer officer, I am interested in the so-called hitch as to the presence of an organized body of troops taking part as escort in the procession of Sunday next.As I gather from to-day\u2019s paper, the Minister of Militia says that such a proceeding is contrary to the King\u2019s regulations, but he leaves the matter pr | \u2018sent \u2018armed party without = to the discretion of the office* com* manding the district.This is an ime proper act.The Minister has no right to dally with the King\u2019s Regulations, nor has the C.O.of No.5 military district.The Lieutenant- Colonel of the 65th, the paper says, means to order out his regiment for a voluntary church parade.This would probably be but a cloak for the original avowed intention of having a military escort for the Host itself, or for those carrying it.Soldiers, before this, have unfortunately been allowed to turn out in this role, an with arms.But it is never too late to remedy « wrong.If they\u2014if any regiment parades without leaye from the district C.O.with arms, a breach of discipline will be committed.If the C.O.permits it, because of the discretionary honor given him, the military crime cf contravening the King's Regulations will be committed by the Minister of Militia.A church parade means a turn out in full uniform without arms to attend Divine service, and is entirely distinct from an escort, and it is fair to presume that the intention is to adhere to former practice, that is to parade with arms and be de facto, an escort.I write simply from the point of military discipline.If an escort was sought for the Archbishop of the Anglican Church, or for the Moderator of the General Assembly, I would deprecate the request or the granting of it even more strongly.VOLUNTEER.S - .Sir\u2014There are one or two points in connection with the militia being pre- at religious ceremonies that should be cleared up.First.On what grounds was an order issued by the (C.S.0.Q.permitting officers appearing at the civic recep- \u2018tion to the Papal Legate in full dress, or in any uniform?\u2018The writer claims that the Canadian militia had no place in the proceedings at all, and if any of the militia -officers had not the necessary civilian clothes to go in they had no adequate reason to appear in uniforin.Second.Your paper states that the 65th intends to turn out on ,Sunday, the same as a church parade.If they do this and carry side arms, peraaps their C.O.has the right to order out the regiment, but, if the writer remembers correctly when the regiment .has previously turned out to \u2018escort the Host,\u2019 the men have carried rifles.This is not church parade equipmen:, but simply that of an armed party, and there is nothing laid down in the regulations to permit it.The C.O.of any regiment cannot order out an instructi ns from a higher authority.If à wrong has been done in the past it is now time to correct that wrong, otherwise the militia will suffer In consequence, as it would appear that some are inclined to put it to a use that it is not intended for.The attention of the Militia Department is drawn to the above.REGULATION.in DOCTRINAL ~TTITUDE OF THE GENERAL CONFERENCE.(To the Editor of the \u2018Witness.\u201d) Sir,\u2014I have been asked by several what is the doctrinal significance of the action of the General Conference in Victoria.Let me briefly and impartially reply.There were 23 memorials or resolutions on the subject, but all from Toronto, Hamilton and London Conferences.Most of these were very Dbelligerent.Theological strife of three years ago in Montreal was.never once méntioned, and, of course, was not subject to any legal review.The storm centre was entirely in Victoria College, Toronto, and the memorials referred to \u2018loudly called for cessation of erroneous teaching, especially in our Divinity schools.All of these were referred to the Educational Commission, of which the Hon.Justice Maclaren was chairman, and \"Dr.Bland, of \\.innipeg, secretary, and which included 15 professors in our colleges and three not in our colleges.The large committee of 66 members opened their proccedings with an evident sensitiveness as to opposing convictions, but there was soon a disappearance of any partisan spirit.Nearly all admitted that current conditions were so deplorable as to call for sane action, and after more than three days of consultation, Liberals and Conservatives put their heads and hearts together with the following result, which afterward was almost unanimously adopted In the General Conference on the motion of Justice Maclaren, seconded by Dr.Burwash: \u2018No teaching or preaching shall be allowed in any college, school or other connexional education institution, nor shall any person teach or be permitted to teach therein, any doctrine contrary to or inconsistent with the standards of doctrine and articles of religion of the Methodist Church, and it shall be the duty of the governing persons, boards, presidents and other chief officers of such colleges, schools and institutions to see that this provision is strictly observed.\u2019 Then came the following provisions: 1st, any 5 ministers or members of the church may make complaint of teachings in our colleges contrary to our standards.This shall at once be submitted to the president and board of the college concerned, who shall then consider such corplaint.2nd, If deemed by them to be sufficiently serious for action they shall forward the matter to the board of education.If pronounced by them not sufficiently gerious the complainants, if dissatis- fled, may appeal on this question to the Court of Appeal.3rd, the board of education shall, upon receiving any complaint from any college board under the provision of this paragraph select five persons, being ministers of good repute for their Knowledge of questions of doctrine who shali constitute the committee of trial in the case, and name the presiding officer who shall be one of the general superintendents and who shall have all the powers and duties belonging to said officer.4th, if the person -against whom the complaint is made is a minister or probationer for the ministry of the Methodist Church, either the complainants or the person complained against may appeal from the decision given in respect of such complaint Fe the proxt ensuing annual con- erence to which the m - bationer belongs.Mister or pro This was amicably conservatives and liberals ag a wise compromise.It, of cou , retroactive effect.ree: has no When this was all disposed of there came on the principal debate of the conference and the most exciting.Dr.Cleaver, of Toronto, sustained by Dr.Hincks, president of the Toronto Conference, submitted a motion strongly deploring the growth of erroneous teaching in our colleges and pulpits of a Unitarian type, and condemning views of which samples were glven from the writings of Prof.George Jackson, which presented such a Kenotist view of our Lord as denied his Deity.A sample of this recently appeared in a liberal quarter, but not produced in the debate, viz, that a scholarly modern critic knows more about the Old Testament than did our Lord.The result on this point as between the Kenotist and Kryptist as was stated by Dr.Burwash, we do not know, This strong motion of intended by \u2018sélf-evidencing way -book of God with a Kiss.Dr.Cleaver was not voted on, as it was superseded by an amendment by A.L.Watson, M.D, of Toronto, following Dr.Cleaver In general condemnation of the doctrinal laxity about us and reaffirming our faith In Jesus Christ as Lord and God.This was carried by a large majority.The simple need of evangelical dac- trine Is recognized by all, especially when accompanied by what my worthy colleague, Prof.Bland, of Montreal, has so emphasized, viz, evangelism.WILLIAM 1.SHAW, Victoria, B.C.rt) METHODISTS, BEWARE.(To the Editor of The Witness).Sir,\u2014Please allow me to give your many thousand readers a few extracts from the teaching of the Rev.Geo.Jackson, teacher of English Bible in Victoria University, Toronto.I quote from his latest book, \u2018Studies in the Old Testament.\u2019 On page 133, speaking.of the haok of Jonah, he says, \u2018Brief as it is, it Is probably \"no exaggeration to say that it touches the high water mark of revelation.\u201d Continuing on the same page, he says, \u2018The Book of Jonah says Dr.Dale is one of the most wonderful books of the Old Testament.Quoting Professor C.H.Cornill of Konigsberg, he says, \u2018This apparently trivial book is one of the deepest and grandest that was ever written.\u2019 Speaking of the Book of Jonah on page 156, Professor Jackson says, \u2018For indeed it is the truth that no book comes nearer to the spirit of the New Testament than the Book of Jonah «v.it is the Old Testament counterpart to \u2018God so loved the world.So far so good, but will my reader please note very carefully what the professor has to say further on about this wonderful Book of Jonah, which \u2018touches the high water mark of revelation,\u2019 \u2018etc., etc.On page 138, Professor Jackson says, \u2018And in the same the Book of Jonah declares itself to he not history but parable; its author is mot a recorder, he is a romancer; he is not writing history, he is telling a tale.Now, my reader knows that a romancer is one who forges and writes fictitious stories created wholly out of his own imagination.Our learned professor does not hesitate to tell us on page 139 that \u2018The Book of Jonah \u2018belongs plainly to the realm of imagination, not of actual historical fact ose n the story of the great fish suggests that it is the imaginative discourse of a prophet with which we have to do rather than the narrative of an historian.\u2019 .Our very learned professor scouts the idea of a city like Nineveh repenting so suddenly.On page 139 he speaks of \u2018the extreme improbability.of such a city as Nineveh renouncing its idols with such suddenness and completeness.\u201d Yet the Lord Jesus Christ in referring to this self same narrative in the Book of Jonah, says, \u2018The men of Nineveh shall rise up in judgment with this generation and shall condemn it; for they repented at the preaching of Jonah,\u2019 Luke 11-32, How lightly these modern self styled intellectual emancipators from the learned arena, these \u2018men of force,\u201d as Prof.Bowles, of Victoria University, styles them, brush aside and deny and degrade the authority of Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ (all hail to his peerless name).This same professor, this \u2018man of force,\u201d tells us on page 140, \u2018that the Book of Jonah Is not historically true, it was never meant to be.\u201d Again, on page 141, he adds, \u2018Truth in the sense of literal historical fact it does not contain\u2019 Professor Jackson believes that the Book of Jonah is a romance, a fictitious tale, yet he told us that \u2018this book touches the high water mark of revelation.\u201d Verily, oun learned critic has betrayed the old Romance above revelation.: He tells us that the Book of Jonah is \u2018the Old Testament counterpart to \u2018God so loved the world\u2019 and almost with the same stroke of his pen he tells us its author is a romancer, and there is no historical truth in the whole book, but that it belongs plain ly to the realm of imagination.How strange.In ondlusion, I would add that these wise professors are well described in Rom.1, 22, 25.Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools.who changed the truth of God into a lie.JOHN CARLISLE.| Peterboro, Ont., Sept.5, 1910.re THE SUFFERING ARMENIANS.(To the Editor of the \"Witness.\u201d) Sir,\u2014The letter by \u2018An Old Subscriber,\u2019 appearing in your issue of July \u20185, concerning \u2018The Armenian Sufferers,\u2019 raises an old question that does honor to the sympathetic good will of those proposing it.However It is en impossible question for more reasons than the one which you mention in the note which you editorially attach to the letter.It is a pity the Canadian authorl- tiles have raised the bars so high against immigration.That obstacle in itself makes wholesale emigration of any community an absolute impossibility.On the other hand the question is an impracticable one.If considered it should include the whole community, the old and young, the weak and strong with all the suffering ones, the blind, the lame, the diseased, ete.The transfer of even ten thousand persons at a minimum «cost of fifty dollars would mean five hundred thousand dollars.A glance at this small fraction of the question will] at once show the magnitude of it if considered in its entirety.But suppose millions of money were ready for the enterprise there are two other difficulties that are insurmountable: Under the new regime in Turkey there ig the greatest freedom of travel for individuals.The old intolerable restrictions of the Hamidian regime have been removed.Christian and Moslem alike are free to travel.Bnt such wholesale exodus of a community would not be allowed by the government.Oppression punctuated by cruel massacre \u2018was characteristic of Abdul Hamid\u2019s rule.The present regime has secured to the country release from the horrid spy system.Christian and Moslem may now breathe and converse fully.It secures also freedom of the press, freedom of travel, à more equable administration of justice (fifty Moslems were hanged for killing Christians \u2014a previously unheard of thing in Turkish history).For the first time in history Christians have been drafted into the army and are now in barracks.Other things might be mentioned.These are enough to show the revolution in the Turkish Government.That government would never consent to a wholesale exodus.Then again, in spite of oppression and massacre the Armenians love their habitat\u2014their fatherland.The great majority of those who took refuge in Cyprus and Egypt after the Adana massacres of 1909 were glad to return, Some have returned from America even.I think the Armenians ought to remain where they are.Hamid and his orgy of blood have passed into history.I think we may discount tae probahilities of a return to such horrid conditions by at least seventy-five percent.Many would say ninety-five percent.The forces that work for progress and civilization should sound no retreat even in the presence of the din- bolical massacres of Adana of 1909.Benevolence did a great deal in the amelioration of the sufferings of those who survived the massacres.Under another cover 1 have sent you a printed report of the work lief Commission call special report at the jouer oo © ticularly to tha andurs- © Major Praneht WyHhe + sul, who dig se TN a the maszacre tam best service 10 the ans\u2019 and io the np fonnd in the essatisi- manent institue , the physic), moral rare the people of creed, Thi- i ' care of the Aerio, | We find onrs-]ves challenge unique oo lavgn possibilities po.pital has not as vag A few werk.goo With the governor outcome nf that cou lenge tn me.He \u2026 not apple For a pes in the present Loi Temponary permis.oo vhase à site aui Quebec Bank Building, Montreal Tel.Main 4703 Tel.Main 3980 PATTERSON & JENKINS, Acvocates, Barristers & Solicitors.City & District Bank Building, 180 8t.James Street, Montreai.W, PATTERSON.J.JENKINS, MARRIAGE LICENSES ISSUED BY JOHN M.M.DUFF 107 St Jamos Strech 40 Creseent Streot McMaster & Papineau Advocates and Solicitors Andrew R.McMaster Talbot M.Papinean Canada Life Buliding, 189 8t Jaimes St Tolephones Main 1740; 7853 Mentrea: CPE CNE Ce je sr wii cou, ad ar dn AS oe SEE NEP EAVES DO iri eb arme es se ERE 12 - THE MONTREAL: DAILY WITNESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1910.THE BOY'S PAGE.More Than a Hundred Years Ago.(By the Hon.Sylvia Brett, In the \u2018Westminster Gazette.) 05 was the 14th of September, 1805, Te as people it seemed just like any other morning, and was passed unthinkingly.But in Portsmouth it was different.This day was to be one oO count-\u2014one forgotten, perhaps, by t ® outside world, but never by the inhabitants of Portsmouth.It was to pass in a whirl of gaiety and ent 1u- siasm which in time would die don only to be rekindled when the \u20ac ve dren\u2019s children of those who took part in it should come to read of it In a page of history.Amongst the many A curtain of day ascend was a little, ondering, blue-ey girl.not in the stir and bustle of it all\u2014\u2014she only watched it from her bed, her little bare feet peeping out from under the sheets and her face set towards the harbor.It was cold, but she heeded it not; she just sat and sat in a kind of waking dream, her lips parted and her eyes wide.Now and again she shook herself like a little wild ani- mal\u2014shook herself from sheer joie de vivre.\u2018He is coming!\u2019 she kept crying to herself; \u2018he is coming, he is com- ming, he is coming! .Presently she slipped out of bed and started dressing.To-day she was to be in all her finery\u2014her best dress, the dress she went to church in on a Sunday and sometimes wore to.go and visit her Auntie Susan, who lived quite close.She went to the window and ung out.She saw In her childish magination all that would happen: ow he would pass, how he would up to the door over which the ame \u2018George Inn\u2019 was so plainly paint- .She saw how he would look\u2014how he would be in the doorway, curtsey- g as she had been taught\u2014aye, curt- ng because he was a \u2018lord.y With a happy laugh she took the d-and-white spotted tle that she was wear round her neck and fastened t to the window-latch.\u2018To show that m glad,\u2019 she whispered; and she ughed.again as she watched it flutter vely dn the breeze.It Is needless describe how the tims passed before He\u2019 arrived.Her father did not walt her just inside the doorway; he out in the street among a thous- nd others, waiting for the rumble of eols and the clatter of galloping es that would signal the arrival f Nelson from Merton.And so when door of the George Inn was flung pen a little girl, silent, flushed, and {th her apron crushed between her ichubby fingers, stood alone, dropping scurtsey upon curtsey before the shout- dng mob.She was swept aside by the jad entry of so many.And there she waited, her heart beating and a mist [before her eves.When the noise had somewhat lessened she began io look about her.The room was full.She saw her father bowing Dbe- \"fore someone, a glad look In nis eyes.With a little cry she started forward to try to see this man's face, because ishe thought from the look in her fath- \u2018er\u2019s that it must be He\u2019 But she was \u2018stopped, a rough arm pushed her back, and a rough voice bade her \u2018Keep \u201cclear.The tears Tushed to ther eyes.\u2018How dare they tell her to keep out of the way; it was her home, not theirs! \u201cShe was just about to cover her head with her apron and howl, when another voice, far kinder than the first, made her stop to listen.\u2018What is the matter, little lass?it sald.She ralsed her eyes, and saw a large, red-faced sailor regarding her.He looked kind because of the smile that played about his lips, and so she spoke up bravely, tugging at his sleeve with her small hands.\u2018Oh, please,\u2019 she sald; \u2018please may I see the ; coe The sailor slapped his thigh, and burst into a roar of noisy laughter.\u2018Well, I'm blessed!\u2019 he cried.\u2018What a question! \u201cPlease, may I see the Lord\u201d, he added, imitating her shrill voice.\u2018Why, lass, what a question to task Joe Jenkins!\u2019 .She did not laugh; it was too grave, too serious a moment of her life.I don\u2019t think you understand,\u2019 she sald; \u201cit's the Lord Nelson I want to see.\u2019 : In a moment the man's manner jchanged, and, stooping, he Mfted her [booag o in this arms, and on to his \\ broad shoulder.\u2018I beg your pardon,\u2019 he answered as \\grave as she.\u2018It's our Nel you wished ito see, and small blame to you.Look \"well, you queer little scrap of a thing; lour Neil is used to being looked at.\u2019 She clung to his rough hair, a little In Models The boy who has an understanding of just about what shape and propor- ; tions to aim at in the making of a model aeroplane, has still a few problems to face before making a real success of his model, that is making a model that will fly, no matter how graceful and well executed the model may appear.He may know fairly well the desirable aspect ratio, the only workable shape for his planes in order to avoid head resistance and the region of dead air that is bound to follow any but the shape known ag the \u2018Phillips\u2019 form described in last weea 8 article.He may have the constructive skill to turn out a neat job, and sufficient knowledge of the forces with and against which he will have to work, but much, after all, of his knowledge can be his only after experiment end failure.; One of the principal points on which experiment |s \u2018inevitable, on which forewarning only is possible, is the fixing of the centre of pressure and the determining of its right relation to the centre of gravity.Some of the less experienced model builders may find even | understand, and it is the purpose of this week\u2019s article to offer as simply as possible the explanation of these terms and to give the forewarning as to what direction fn which to look for rocks ahead on reaching this point in your model bullding.It is impossible to include In one such article as this the full details of what is after all one of the most trying of problems for the amateur aviator, but some extracts may be made and adapt~d from the fuller explanation given by W.G.Aston in his book on \u2018Model Flying Machines; their design and construction,\u2019 published by the \u2018Aero, London, 28 20 A .A A A A Fig.1.Taking up the argument as put by Mr.Aston almost exactly where last week's article left the subject of the forces of wind to be overcome and harnessed by the would-be aviator, tue kite is the familiar illustration in use.\u2018The wind has,\u2019 says Mr.Aston, \u2018besides its tendency to lif* the kite, a strong tendency also to carry the kite bodily along with it.The string which is held by the kite-flyver performs the double purpose of preventing the kite being carried away with the wind (in which case it would lose its motion relative to the wind and frightened at first at being so high up.But afterwards she became too absorbed to notice.She saw many gorgeous uniforms, and heard merry talk.But she was all eyes for one, figure, the most brilliant figure among all that brilliant lot.All ears for the one voice that turned rogues into £entle- men, and cowards into heroes.There he sat just as she had pictured him, except that there was something about-his face that she had failed to imagine.Some magnetic power that even she, young as she was, felt.and trembled at.When she luoked full at him she shook with exoitemert and something more.And when she looked away for one moment this something about him dragged her eyes again to his face.The sailor forgot that she was on his shoulder, and she forgot that there were any in the rcom besides herself and the man that she had made her hero.As far back as she gould remember in her life\u2014which was not very far\u2014 this man had been the talk in Portsmouth.From her father she heard naught else.It was Nelson this and | Nelson that.* In the evenings he would draw her to him, and, with his rough hand stroking her hair, tell her wondrous tales about the Admiral.And she, with her eyes on the fire, would plc- ture him among the glowing coals.Had she not been called Nell, little Nell, after him ?Had she not been taught to add in her evening prayers, \u2018God save our Admiral\u2019?And later, when she was a little older, did she not pray longer for him; a prayer that he might one day come to the George Inn, and that she might see him.And now that prayer had come true.He was there, and she was seeing him, and the whole thing seemed but a moving, golden dream.She watched him talk, the way he waved his hand now and again towards the sea, and his face lit up.\u2018When she looked at his other arm, she felt inclined to cry.To her it was so pitiful, this poor empty sleeve fastened flat against his coat, Outside, the people were still shouting, and now and again a cannon boomed.It was thrilling, and she liked the: peuple to cheer; but when she heard the cannon she could not help looking at tne central figure In the drama with tae empty sleeve and wondering if he too minded cannons.Nobody noticed her, a child crouch- Ing on the shoulder of a tall sallor, watching with wide blue eyes between her tangled hair, her little hands grasping the man's rough head.She saw, and yet was unseen, and her cup.of happiness was full.Then the Admiral gazed full at her, and she felt as if a knife had been run through her.\u2018Jenkins'\u2014his voice broke clear turough the general clatter\u2014'Jenkins, bring that child here.\u2019 The sallor started forward with such a jerk that she nearly fell from her perch.Before she could realizs what was happening, she stood alone before the great man.He put out his \u2018and and drew her between his knees.\u201cWhat is your name, little lass?he asked.With a gasp she looked right up Into his face.This was too good to be true; surely, surely it was all a dream.\u2018Nell, she answered tremblingly: then, with the whole of her soul in her voice, she touched the hand that held her.\u2018Oh,\u2019 she cried, \u2018are you really and truly the Lord?\u2019 Some of the men round the Admiral laughed, and Nelson, turning, looked up at one of them who stood the closest to him.\u2018Who does she tuke me for, think you, Hardy?he asked.But the child interrupted.\u2018I know,\u2019 she said proudly; \u2018you and I have the same name: .Again the men laughed; but Nelson himself was dreamy, and looked at her with mistfui eye.\u2018You and 1 are named the same,\u2019 he repeated, and then a great silence fell upon the room, and even the child dared not move, because she saw that he was in a dream.Her father, who was watching the interview nervously from afar, advanced to take her away.But before she went Nelson presssed a coin into her chubby hand and told her to keep it for luck and as a gift from the \u2018Lord.\u2019 Then she was dragged away, and he rose to take his leave.When he stepped from the inn to go on his way to Southsea Beach, where just outside the lines he was to embark, a roar of applause greeted him.It was then that he turned to Hardy and made the fam- | the sense of these terms difficult to, ous remark that to this day is treasured in Portsmouth: \u2018I have had their quence its lifting power) and also its rising indefinitely.\u2018In fig.I, which is purely diagrammatic, the kite string is represented as being tied to the centre of the kite.Experiment shows that such a Kite, with the string attached to its centre.\u201cwill not fly\"\u2014that is to say, it will not rise in the air, but is simply carried along with the wind as far as its string will allow.\u2019 The explanation of the reason for this introduces the important subject of the centre of pressure and gravity, ; _ A Fig.2.\u2018AB in the accompanying diagram (Fig 2) represents the section of a thin stiff square sheet of any suitable material secured on pivots about which it is free-to rotate.The pivots.are supe posed to be frictionless and so placed that the square sheet is in perfect equilibrium, \u2018 Now, if a steady wind current (indl- cated by the parallel lines) moving in { à direction at right angles te AB strine the plane it will still be in equilibrium, since the pressure is obviously equal on each side of the pivots, and no change of position will result.\u2018If the plane AB be m~ved from the position it occupies in fig.2 to assume that represented in fig.3 the current of wind striking the plane will immediately force it back to its first position.From this it is evident that the total prèssure on the half of the plane nearer the wind is greater than the total pressure on the half more remote.For the plate AB to remain in equilibrium in the position shown in fig.3, when the wind current is acting & Ne NS, LE ~B Fig.3.upon it, It is necessary to move the pivots \u2018towards the wind,\u2019 to such a point as P.\u2018Ag the angle formed by the plate AB with the horizontal becomes less and less, the pivots must be moved further and further towards A.From this it is clear that for a certain añ- gle of the plane\u2019 AB and with the pivots in a certain position the total pressure on the plane on each side of an imaginary line joining the pivots is equal.The centre of the line joining these pivots is called, therefore, the \u201ccentre of pressure,\u201d and it should be in conse- noted that a stralght line drawn in any direction through this centrz of pres- huzzas before,\u2019 he #ald, and ail .w that he was deeply affected; 'I have thelr hearts now.\u201d .The little girl who played so r .all a part in this great day sat alone in the empty silent inn and woadered whether after all it had not heén a dream.She sat in the chair that he had eat in, and with puckered brow tried to remember how he had looked when he had waved hls hand out to the sea.She gazed down ani tried to fancy how she had looked standing against his knee.Then she stretched out her arms and thought how terrible it must be, this great man with his poor lonely, empty sleeve.She went early to bed that night, tired out with her day's excitement.As she was undressing she suddenly thought of the flag that she had hung out to welcome him.She untied it from the window, and, taking *ke coin that he had given her, she wrapped it up carefully in the tie with reverent little fingers, and placed it beneath her pillow.That night, after she had said \u2018God save our Ad .mir .al, she shook hersel?as she had in the morning from sheér delight and added, \u2018God bless father, and .end the \u201cTord\u201d.- * LJ * + « \u2018When she was a woman, and her children were playing around her, she was the mistress of thé George Inn, made so at the death of her father.Bometimes, when the children had gone to school, she would drag a wooden chair from a dark corner, and, placing it carefully in a certain position, she would sit, and, with dream- eyes fixed before \u2018her, she would wave one hand towards the sea, whilst in the other she would hold, tightly clasped, a red-and-white spotted necktie.But this she would only do when she was alone, and she would look guiltily round at the slightest sound.The coin she wore round \u2018her meck,tied with a pale blue ribbon, and many a time she would take it off and show it to her husband.\u2018 Later her children\u2019s children would ask what the faded necktié meant, and why a very ugly wooden chalr was so carefully preserved.And they would be told of that little girl and the man who was her hero, and the wav that = man came one day®to the George Inn.They would be taken to a glass case and allowed to peep at a coin that lay in it with a small piece of faded blue ribbon tied to it.And even now.when she has long been laid to rest, new generations still read in history, ! tfl the page 1s creased and soiled, of the coming of Admiral Lord Nelson to Portsmouth, and of his visit to the inn, THE PLOT.The twins sat at the edge of the tennis-court and mopped discouraged brows.\u201cThis weather's fearfu), \u2018sald Babs.\u2018I wish my racket was an electric fan.\u2018Oh, the weather's bad ennugh\u2019 answered Bobs, gloomily.\u2018but Polly Neale is worse.I never played with a more exasperating girl in All my life, and he threw an indignant glance across the lawn to wrere a tail, emphatic figure in white was laying down the law to a smaller one in-blue, .\u2018Yes, isn't she?agreed the girl twin.\u2018And its not any comfort to know that elther you © I can heat her out of her boots, She just gays, \u201cOh, the lucky twins!\u201d or, Of Course you'vé \u2018played much longer than I have\u201d\u2014and me only a month oldér! I tell you what.she makes ine feel my age.But don\u2019t you care!\u2019 Bobs still refused to be diverted.\u2018She's taking all the sand out of Nan Elton, he complained.Just as we were getting her into shape too.If Nan is Polly's partner, she scoldg her for every lost point; if she's playing on the other side, why.Polly's so everlasting superior.What's the use, anyhow, of trying to get up a tennis club in Kingston?Babs giggled convulsively; she usually.did when one of her brilliant ideas came to her.; \u2018Yes, there Is, too, Bobs,\u201d she replied, \u2018You just help me take a fall out of Polly's conceit, and everything.will go swimmingly.We'll play doubles with Polly and Nan.She paused a moment.\u2019 \u2018I don\u2019t see,\u2019 said unimaginative Bobs.\u2018Of course you.don't, retorted Babs.\u2018Well, listen.You'll be Pollys partner one set and I the next, and when we play with her we'll just, fay over ourselves to get the Dballs\u2014only we NEW RECRUITS FOR THE BOY SCOUTS.Richmond, Ont.Editor of the Boys\u2019 Page: Dear Sir,\u2014We are very sorry to troublé you, but as we are thinking of forming a patrol of Boy Scouts in our village, we want to know the address of men wb can give us particulars and rules for forming one, of these patrols.* Yours truly, COLIN D.SINCLAIR.No trouble at all.That is the kind of request we are more than glad to have.Richm.nd is to be congratulated in rising to its opportunities among the first in Canada, for, while the Boy Scouts have made a name for themselves from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and thousands have already enrolled themselves, these are but the first among the thousands more that Canada will be proud to reckon.We shall be glal to give a helping hand to any who may want to get into line.First thing to do is to make application to the nearest local patrol leader.Failing knowledge of any one near at hand, write to Capt.Birdwhistle, Dominion Secretary of Boy Scouts, Ottawa, and he will show you the lines.No boy can become a Scout until he has taken the oath, and that can only be administered to him by one already in office.For this is a big thing, a union of the boys of the Empire not only for their own amusement and training, but as citizens of the Empire, and brot! :rs all.The oath is this: .\u2018On my hono.I pron.:se that: : \u20181.I will do my duty to God and the.King.\u2018 .\u20182.I will do my best to help others, whatever jt costs me.\u20183.I know the scout law and il obey it.\u201d For the purposes of organization the following appointments, as described In \u2018Scouting for Boys,\u201d are nee cessary: Officers\u2014The head officer of all the boy scouts in the world is called the chief scout.A scout master Is an officer who has charge of a troop.À troop consists of not less than three patrois.Scouts address the scout master as \u2018Sir.\u2019 A patrol leader is a scout appointed to command a patrol.A patrol con- sigts of six acouts.Any lad or young man who learns scouting from this book can make himself a patrol leader and collect and train five or seven boys to be scouts.A corporal is a scout selected by the patrol leader to be \u2018his assistant, and and Model-making.sure divides the plane Into two equal pressure areas.\u2018In the above explanation of the centre of pressure it has been supposed that the weight of the plane AB was infinitely small, and therefore negligible; in practice, however, the weight of the plane cannot so be neglected.\u2018In the following diagram (Fig.4) AB is à plane acted upon by a wind which supports it at the point P (centre of pregsure) exactly as if a string PQ were tled to that point.The pressure distribution is now in equilibrium since that on the side AP exactly balances that on the side PB.The \u201cweight\u201d of the side AP is not, however, equal to the \u201cweight\u201d of the side PB, hence, although the pressures balance, the weights do not.and it is clear that the side PB will outweigh the side AP, and will consequently fall.Q A Oo P Fig.4.> \u2018For the plane AB to be in equilibrium its \u2018\u2018centre of pressure must accordingly coincide with the centre of gravity,\u201d when the weight of PB and the total pressure on PB will exacuy balance the weight of AP and the total pressure on AP.\u2019 That is the reduction of the problem most direct of terms, and it is only intended to let the model builder understand what he is aiming at, as recentres of gravity and pressure.Not only must the weight of the machine power used, but =o into right relation.Of course there is far more to it than this, but enough has been suggested to give the model builder a start which can be .followed up not only by experimentation with his machine, but by further study in the various books that are now being published on all sides, both for amateurs and the more experlenced aviators.prenne know What mark to alm at, how to bend the bow.Then draw it to the head, and let go.\u2014Henry Van Dyke.it go \u2014\u2014 Le ==\u201d and its explanation to the simplest and\u2019 gards this point of determining the.be considered in regard to the motive adjusted as to bring centres of pressure and gravity- Life is an arrôw.Therefore you must to take command of the patrol when he himself is away.A scout is of two kinds\u2014first-class and second-class.First-class scout is show that he is able to scout.Second- class scout is one who has passed certain easy tests in scouting.A tenderfoot is a boy who is not yet a scout.: A court of honor ls formed of the scout master and two patrol leaders, or in the case of a single patrol by the patrol leader and the corporal.It decides rewards, punishments and other questions.: .All boys over ten and under eighteen who are ready to take this oath and abide by it are eligible as members of the Boy Scouts.There is no qualification for membership other than this and a willingness to learn.True, to be a first or second-class scout, steps higher than.mere enrollment, one must \u2018qualify\u2019 by passing certain tests, but any British boy who wants to make a good citizen has the only qualification necessary to admit him to the Boy Scouts for training.This is, however, an organization, not a helter-skelter affair to be carried on every which vy, and while there is no mere red tape rule or mechanical regulation there is order and a regularly accepted form of procedure.The boys are formed-inte patrols of from six to eight members, and these patrols unite into the local troop.Each patrol has its own leader, and its line of work, \"bit \"all' are part of the one big whole, with the Dominion executive at Ottawa, and headquarters for all the Empire in London, with General Sir R.S.S.Baden-Powell as chief scout.Patrols follow a regular course, of instruction in wood-craft, observation, life saving on land and in water, making the best use of materials to hand, whatever be the situation they may be called upon to face: in fact in anything that will make them self-reliant, competent men, and their motto is \u2018Be prepared.\u2019 An underlying motto may be roughly stated as \u2018obey orders,\u2019 for the hoy who does not know how to obey will never make a scout.Any group of boys making application for membership either to the nearest patr.l leader or .to the Dominion Secretary, will have full information given them as to the forming and carrying on of a patrol, but every such group of boys will want to have that guide and director, General Baden-P-wells own book, \u2018Scouting for Boys,\u2019 at hand for ready reference, won't get them.And we'll really play to beat the band with Nan! She's just scared, anyhow.Glve her a little courage and she'll do.\u2019 Bobs grinned appreclatively.\u2018I see, he said.\u2018We'll do our ttle hest, but Nan will wear the laurels.That afternoon saw a double tennis game playing on thea shaded courts, Polly Superfor in white.Nan still timid in blue, and the twins in neuiral khaki.The game moved easily along.No one not in the plot ever would have suspected that the twins were bluffing, so earnestly did they seem to play.At the end of the first set Polly \u2018turned a withering look on unruffled Babs.They had lost, six to four.: \u2018Hard luck!\u2019 said the young person.\u2018Nan\u2019s in fine form this afternoon.Perhaps you'll get on better with Bobs next set.\u2019 Unwonted praise cheered Nan on.She really played brilliantly, and the second set ended six to three in ner favor.- \u2018I'm awfully glad,\u2019 she said, naively, when the twins congratulated her.1 didn't know I could play so well.Why this morning, when Polly was talking to me, I felt sure T ought to tell you I couldn't join the tennis-club after all.and I'm not such a butter-fingers.am When the twins were again alone, Bobs winked at Babs.\u2018It worked,\u201d he said, triumphantly.\u2018It did,\u2019 answered Babs, \u2018and the club\u2019s all right.Why, I'm beginning to believe in proverbs.Didn't Polly's pride get a dandy fall that time ?\u2014 \u2018Youth's Companion.\u2019 THE HERO.He said he wasn't going to get out of the road for any old motor-car.And he didn\u2019t!\u2014\u2018Australasian.rt A GOOD STORY.All of our readers, but particularly our young aviators, will be interested in the new story whieh TL 3\" in the \u2018Witness\u2019 \u2018The Sky- man\u2019 is a thrilling story of adventure, and that adventure as modern as aeroplanes and North Polar expeditions can make it.Don\u2019s miss reading \"rhe Skyman.\u2019 oe _- 4 and pleading.ane who has passed certain tests to\u2019 own call, in some cases, its own special Indoor and Outdoor Department > \u2014 The Intelligence of Ikey\u2014A Parrot of Conversational Power Ikey was a large green bird Wild red markings, and during a long life his extrémely active brain had gathered up an immense store of Knowledge.His sixty-five years had Lcen passed entirely in polite society, and this had made of him superficially a rather tame and conventional type, in distinction to the lurid and rowdy character of the traditional sailor trained parrot.Ikey may have known and used bad language at an early period of his existence, but for sixty- five years he had been a ladies\u2019 parrot, and conducted himself as such.At times he would have fits of shrieking loudly, and the only way to quiet him was to throw the cover over his cage.This always filled.the bird with immeasurable disgust.He yelled because he felt good, and ne cdhsidered it a low trick to cover him up in the daytime so that he could not enjoy himself.oo It was his fitting of his remarks to the circumstances which made lkey $0 unusual, He thought, and spoke his thoughts.- After the cloth was thrown over his cage, for example, he would sulk in silence for a while.\u2018tnen, In subdued and plaintive tones would be heard from under the cover, \u2018Ikey be good.Ikey be good now He was an adept at i.odifyine his voice to suit conditions, When he wanted anything it was always soft As night came on he would be heard calling, with a rising inflection and a lingering cadence on the last syllable, \u2018Mo-ther! Mo-ther: And then, in drowsy tone , \u2018Ikey tired.Ikey seepy.He wanted his cage covered, as he desired to retire for the night.If mother did not come, however, his voice would grow more raucous until it became a vicious screech.The bird knew hig rights, and if they were neglected made the whole house uncomfortable.He knew perfectly what punishment was for, and would wheedle and promise anything to escape :h- consequences of his villainy.His most solemn promises, however, were utterly worthless.He was treacherous, and concealed a bad character behind his polished exterior.He loved to have his head scratched.When any member of the family came near his cage he would insinuatingly suggest this pleasing operation.\u2018Scratch head.Scratch head,\u201d he would say, ducing his green poll to suit the action.\u2018lkey got headache\u2019 The family learned to use a pencil instead of a finger for this task, for good reasons.When he.got enough Ikey would strike a blow lke lightning, and either break the pencil or bury his beak in a finger if it were not withdrawn quickly enough.The way in which Ikey would pick up phrases used by the humans and apply them properly to his own case would have caused him to be retaineu had he pecked a hundred fingers, The thing he loathed most was a bath.This was given him by placing his cage on the ground in the back yard and drenching him well from a common garden sprinkling pot.One day he sat, the picture of misery, huddled into the smallest possible compass, so a8 to escape as much as possible the detested fluid, when a friend whom he knew appeared.Instantly Ikey rose up and yelled at the top of his voice, \u2018Bring a \u2019brella! Bring a brella! Doubtless he had heard members of the family pause at the door at sight of cloudy skies and call back to some one within, \u2018Bring an umbrella!\u2019 Several of Ikey's later years Were passed in New Haven, in a house \u201cwe rectly opposite the medical college © Yale University.Here he became ono of the most vicious of Yale rooters.When the little blue flag of Yale was placed in his cage, he would wave It aloft and strut about with it proudly: but when the crimson banner of Harvard was introduced he would tear it viciously and gloat over its destruction.When company came to the house and it was highly desirable to entertain them wth Ikey's accomplish ments the bird would remain as dumb as a clam, cocking a wicked eye à those who tried to wheedle him into talking.But in summer, when 1-8 w'ndow was open.Ikey could frequently be heard exchanging vizorous personal remarks with the college boys in the street.AH the ~ollege yells IkeY had at his beak's end.On great athletic days he was in his 'ement.for he loved the noise and clamor.When the students came down the street singing 'Boola\u2019 he would catch | \u201cI have been using Cascarere -.somuia, with which I bave be: .E for twenty years, and I can suv carets have given me more rel fy other remedy I have cver trie: 1 S - certainly recommend them to oo \u2018 | as being all that they are repr.Thos.Gillard, 17.Pleasant.Palatable.Potent Tr.Do Good.Never ~tcken, Weave 10e.25c.50c Never soulin bu.nine tablet stampad CC rer cure or vour moudcy baux.au ; the first distant refrain before anyone else, and become positively hysterical with excitement.He always joined in with the song, yelling al through the open window, anc as he always sang about two notes behind the rest and made more noise than anybody elsc.the effect was enlivening, \" His owners were pet-loving, and, besides Ikey, cherished two cats, Buttons and Gipsey, and a fox terrier Charca, All these animals regarded Ikey with extreme respect.They never solved the mystery of him, and kept their distance.When the humans were in the room Ikey hehaved, But when he and the rest of the menagerie were alone the bird would actually drive the other creatures from the room with his hectorin~ and abuse.The terrier, being the most nervous and intelligent, would weaken first and slink out, head and tail down, with every evidence of disgrace.ley would continue, calling each animal by name s.that there could be no mistake.The cats, with the usual cat dignity and indifference.would lie still.feigning not to hear.But at a certaln point Buttons, the more nervous of the two, would dash out, and finally Gip- sey would rise with dignity and stroll leisurely away, as if she had an appointment elsewhere, Then Ikey would laugh sardonically.The bird always laughed at his own villainy.and could often be heard chuckling to himself for hours after some escapade.He laughed as he talked, at the right place and with good sense, if not with good intent.On one occasion Chasca, the terrier, turned the tables on the parrot in a manner delightful to the family.Chasca had had a bath and, running in the room where the bird's cage sat on the floor, he went up to\u2019it and shook himself thoroughly, so that drops of water spattered on the parrot.Ikey retreated to the limits of his cage and in the most natural tone of astonishment exclaimed, \u2018For the land\u2019s sake!\u2019 How the dog could transform him- \u2018self into the watering pot and spatter the hated liquid about was evidently a poser for Ikey.and he kept a wary eye on Chasca for some time after that.The intelligence of Ikey\u2019s conversation was something disconcerting.A charming young woman named Edith had been paying a long visit at the house, during which she had received pointed attentions from a certain captain.One day the captain called while Ikey was out in the kitchen \u2018jollying\u2019 the cook.Nobody mentioned to Ikey that the captain wa.there, but the bird came waddling into the parlor,which was full of people, walked straight up to Edith anl in a loud, clear voice inquired \u2018How\u2019s the captain?\u2019 Ikey did not die of old age.His strength and intelligence remained normal until within a few days of his death, although his beak had become so hard and dangerous a ck on the evening .of the 10th of November, Randolph Caldercott was to make his maiden political speech.The \u2018Machine\u2019 had selected him as a suitable candidate for the Mayor of Graftown, and he\u2019 was expected at that time to present the ideas embodied in the Republican platform so eloquently that his nomination would be popular and his election sure.In appreciation of his brilliant prospects, some of his personal friends and admirers had arranged a dinner at the Country Club.Caldercott's mosi intimate friend, Ernest Maltravers, a painter of exceptional promise, had superintended the affair.The decorations were superb, the service perfect; the guests intimately acquainted and each distinguished for some inherited possession or for some personal attainment.Arthur Symondson was heir of a great fortune, Andrew Eversham a poet of national fame, Francis Dymond the most brilliant attorney in the city, and Edward Kenneth its most famous wit.There was but outsider, Miss Fanny Moffatt, a college friend of Agnes Mahew, a resident of a neighboring city; a frequent guest at the functions given by this group and the object of Randolph Caldercott's assiduous attentions.He was seated next her at table.\u201cThis is th: most perfect affair yet,\u2019 she said, as they surveyed the scene.\u201cYes: Maltravers is an artist\u2019 he replied.\u2018In more senses than one! Hls aesthetical perceptions seem to cover the whole range of earthly harmonies \u2014color, form, odor, motion and human sympathies.There does not seem to be a discc-lant note.He has brought even r feelings into tune.\u2018In a word\u2014we have a social symphony.\u2019 \u2018Exactly, and you must feel complacent, if not actually proud to be the key to which it is a\u201d chorded° \u2018A man would be insensible, indeed, if he did not f-l it, and feel is deeply.\u2019 \u2018But somehow .yourself seem a little distraught.I suppose it is anxiety about your speech.They tell me that a speec in the head is as irritating as dust in the eye\u201d \u2018Yes, a torture until it is out.\u2019 Caldercott shivered when Miss Mof- fatt alluded to his being absorbed and uneasy, for he had worked so hard to conceal his emotions that it seemed to him he ought to have succeeded.But all the .\u2019ternoon he had been at war himself, and a dustless, noiseless, bloodless battle was still going on in the arena of his spirit.That very \u201corning he had had his final interview .:.h the political Boss, and from those cold, thin lips had heard the tern.s upon which he was to receive the backing of the \u2018Gang,\u2019 terms which had been carefully concealed up to that dramatic moment, in a veil of glittering generalities.He had expectel, of course, to be asl# ed to give some general assurances of loyalty; bu: to his astonishment and horror it was suddenly demanded of him that he pledge himself unhesitatingly to the support of two of the most obnoxious bills which had ever been presented to the City.Council.~ This meant that he must become the slave of this coterie of unscrupulous politicians.He would no longer be a man because he would no longer be his own master! Nothing could have added to the chagrin and torture of this discovery.Caldercott was ambitious; he was selfish, and politics had seemed a 1.eans of preferment rather than a calling.A child of wealth; a graduate of an Eastern college where a spirit of criticism was fast deteriorating into cynicism; un- stung by the spur of necessity; doing what he di?nore as a dilettante than a serious acte on the stage of life, he had taken up politic: as a pastime rather than a vocation.He knew that t° Republican party was under the domination of a Boss, but he did not realize that Boss's power.He knew that there was a machine, but he flattered himself that, if it became necessary, he\u2019 was strong enough to break it.It is the strength and the weakness of youth to underestimate the power of anclent custom or established institutions, and the formula for many of the world\u2019s most highly applauded acts of heroism really is\u2014nine-tenths ignorance and one- tenth temerity.The Boss had est drumming with his fingers on the arms of an easy- chair, with his black, piercing, soulless eyes fixed upon his victim.Caldercott's fine features flushed, then turned white.Boiling inwardly, he had preserved an outward calm, while with the rapidity of lightning the arguments for and against this disgraceful and humiliating surrender had flashed across his mind.Many another man had sat where he was sitting and fought this same battle.Few had left this bull-necked Boss's presence master of themselves, and, like so many others, Ralph Cal- dercott went out with a chaln riveted around his neck.It was with the consciousness of that shame torturing his spirit tht he had met this gay party, and even when laughing loudest, or talking the most brilliantly, he had been writhing in pain.the skilfully concealed symptoms of this fierce conflict except Miss Moffatt.An occasional biting epigram; a frown quickly pursued by a smile; a scornful turn of the corners of the lips; a dejected expression of the eye; a half-suppress- ed sigh had attracted her attention again and again.No one had noticed \u2018Is he nervous?Is he unhappy?Is he insincere?\u2019 she had asked herself anxiously, for everything in life seemed to be at stake, for her, upon the character of this man.When the conversation turned at last upon the issues of the campaign, and Calder- cott began to take a leading part, she felt that he was acting on the defensive and that his words did not ring true.\u2018What the reason was she could not understand; but it was a painful discovery, for she had certainly been learning to love him.The talk was principally among the men, and became not only Animated but personal.A remark of Eversham, the poet, who had begun to show signs of a decadent pessimism, gave it this turn.; : process of devolution has set in.We have no more -patriotg-and: no more statesman is the needle -of the compass upon the ship of ¢.ate.A poli- ticlan is that needle demagnetized.\u2019 \u2018You go too far; but the symptoms are not ausplcious, I confess.\u2019 It is true, however, that politics, which was formerly a science, is now only a trade,\u201d said Maltravers.\u2018It is worse than a trade; it is a gambler\u2019s game, with the dice loaded,\u2019 Eversham replied.\u2018But its not so bad in the national as in the civic realm.Our present administration is as unselfish, broad and sincere as any in the history of the government, observed Dymond, the attorney.\u2018By the way, said Maltravers, \u2018I have \u2018Our institutions are declining.A statesmen, but ouly Jpoliticians.A.coming impossible for an honest man to go into politics with any hope of Success (unless he is a genius like Caldercott) without selling himself to the Boss, body and soul.Isn't that so, Caldercott?You are close enough to him to know! Let us into the inside of the business and tell us how you escaped committing yourself to him.Nobody believes you did, but when Sam Matthewson went down to ask Culverson to let him run for the vacant seat in the Probate Court, they say he actually put a ring in his nose! But I never half bélieved these tales! And, for one.if they are untrue, I would like to know it.\u2019 \u2018Yes, let us hear! Ve know he couldn\u2019t buy you; but did he try?Maltravers asked.Caldercott smiled, ard that was a diplomatic triumph.\u2018Go on! We want to know! make any demands of you?smile Did he Did he require any stipulation?\u201d Kenneth insisted.\u2018Undoubtedly!\u2019 Maltravers interrupted.\u2018But what?\u2019 Caldercott still continued to smile, and when every one leaned forward in utmost eagerness to hear his reply, waited a moment longer and then said with the utmost gravity, \u2018He compelled me to sign a bond with blood drawn from my left arm that I would come down to his office every morning at nine o\u2019clock and lick his boots.\u2019 This reply was So utterly unexpected and absurd as to disarm every suspicion and to produce that general outburst of laughter which the poor candidate had been compelled to count on for turning the conversation and relieving him from a torture that was becoming unendurable.\u2018Well,\u2019 dec ared Mrs.Bashford, \u2018it's an evidence that things are not as had as they seem when this ro-called Boss, out of deference to public opinion, is compelled to put up a man like Mr.Caldercott for mayor.I hail it as a happy omen for the future.We muut elect him and hold up his hands.\u2019 \u2018I reckon his speech will elect him.I am backing him against Patrick Henry,\u201d Eversham replied.\u2018IT am no orator,\u201d said Maltravers, \u2018but as you know me all, \u201ca plain, blunt man, that loves his friends!\u201d So here's my toast to Randolph Cal- dercott.\u201cBut for your words\u2014may they rob the Hybla bees and leave them honeyless!\u201d \u2019 This gracious sentiment produced great enthusiasm and the toast wus drunk standing.After Caldercott had made a fitung response, the company resumed their seats, and still trembling with the nervous strain the unhappy candidate said to Miss Moffatt: \u2018It ls unfortunate to be a woman and not to have to take part in polities, or even to be interested in them.\u2019 \u2018Oh, but I am interested in nothing more! My father is an inveterate student of politics, and I hear it day and night.\u2019 \u2018Do you believe that politicians are as corrupt as these men say?\u2018I am afraid those in our cities are getting Into a bad way.I have often thought I should like to be a man and have a hand in the fight for righteousness in municipal government.I envy you your opportunity\u2019\u2014words which were like an acid on open wounds to Caldercott.\u2018It would not be so easy as you think,\u201d he said to her, and to himself, \u2018My God, if she should ever know!\u2019 \u2018Few things great and good are easy,\u2019 she replied.\u2018Tt seemed to Caldercott, ag he heard these words and looked into that pure face, as if nothing could be added to his torment.\u2018Purity\u2019 was the word which every one who attempted to describe the face of Fanny Moffatt invariably fell back upon.Some countenances are opaque; but light seemed to pass through hers, as through atmosphere.But it wag not only the face\u2014her soul was pure! To talk with her was to feel that reassuring consciousness.Poor Caldercott ! He felt like night contemplating day! At times he trembled for fear that those clear, blue eyes had read the hidden secrets of his heart! How white her brow was\u2014like the whiteness of a lily! How white was her throat, exposed but a trifle below the rounded chin\u2014like the whiteness of a snowdrift! He would have given every dollar he possessed, and he had many, to recall the words that had made him unworthy of this girl! As he looked, listened and replied abstractedly and unhappily, he halt determined to take her into his confidence, she seemed so strong and kind as well as pure and just.The occasion was so delightful that 13 A Warning to the Public Dishonorable, and disreputable pharmaceutical concerns are flooding the market with cheap and worthless preparations designed to be imitations of Dr.Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry.Some of these are even labelled \u201c\u201c Extract of Wild Strawberry,\u201d ¢¢ Wild Strawberry Compound,\u201d etc., in the hope that the public may be deceived and led to purchase them, thinking they are getting the genuine \u2018\u2018 Dr.Fowler's.\u201d For over sixty-five years \u2018\u2018 Dr.Fow.LER'8 Extract ofr WiLp STRAWBERRY\u201d has been used in thousands of families faa Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Colic, Cramps, Pain in the Stomach, Summer Complaint, Cholera Morbus, Cholera Infantum, Seasick ness, and all Looseness of the Bowels, Ask for ¢ Dr.Fowler's\u201d and insisi on getting what you ask for.Price 3bc.Manufactared only by The T.Milburs Co .Limited, Toronto, Ont.There are no dead flies lying about WILSON'S Fly Pads are used as directed.AIL Druggists, Grocers and General Dealers them.Samaritan Hospital FOR WOMEN, 854 Dorchester street west, Montreal The only hospital in Canada exclusively devoted to Diseases of Women ao ought.Every one had forgotten the time, when suddenly a clock struck elght, and Caldercott sprang to his feet.(To be Continued.) HOOK AND EYE HINTS.When sewing the hooks and eyes on the placket of a skirt, sew one pair at the very bottom, fasten them and crush them flat, This will keep the placket from ever tearing or ripping at the end.On a wash dress, the eves should be sewed on the upper flap and the hooks on the lower, instead of the usual fashion.The top flap can then bh» ironed flat, without the little lumps left by ironing over hooks.In working on heavy materials, alternate the hooks and eyes; first an eve and then a hook on ore flap, with first a hook and then an eye on the other.This method will held the dress shut and save vou from much discomfort and embarrassment.\u2014 Se- the dinerg lingered longer than theylectied.fruits.A Dainty, Delicious Delight for the summer days when the appetite craves light and wholesome foods SHREDDED WHEAT BISCUIT THE CANADIAN SHREDDED WHEAT COMPANY, LIMITED - - with berries, peaches, sliced bananas and other Heat the biscuit in the oven to restore crispness, then cover with fruit and serve with milk or cream, adding sugar to suit the taste.Shredded Wheat is made in Canada of choicest, selected Ontario wheat.Contains all the muscle-making, brain- building elements in the whole wheat, made digestible by food for Canadians.right with Shredded TORONTO OFFICE\u201449 WELLINGTON STREET EAST 2 [rane SNR J uf SERV shredding and baking.served with milk or cream.Then you will like it for any meal with fruits.MAKE YOUR \u201cMEAT\u201d SHREDDED WHEAT NIAGARA FALLS, ONTARIO æ steam -cooking, A Canadian Start the day Wheat Biscuit NT EE APE FIST MD RSH a 5 Eat TUE A, \u201cier USE ORE.| ati as wre WET THAR 2 Tl ar «wri RT: .A.AR enc Lu 5 +, 3 & Ji = 4 3 ; 3 > 3 ë i oY + hi ERE A 14 BS a Bis te THE MONTREAL DAILY WITNESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1916.THE S Y-MAN By.HENRY KITCHELL WEBSTER Author (with Samuel Merwin) of Calumet \u201cK\u201d Copyright, 1810, by The Century Co.Copyright, 1909, 1910, by The Success Company.CHAPTER I.THE MAN WITH WINGS.For many hours\u2014Cayley was too much of a god to-day to bother with the exact number of them-\u2014he had been flving slowly northward down a mild southernly breeze.Hundreds of fret below him was the dazzling, terrible expanse of the polar ice pack which shrouds the northern limits of the Arctic Ocean in its impenetrable teil of mystery.Cayley was alone, as no man before ever had been alone, for the planet which gpun beneath him seemed to him aloft there in the empyrean, as remote as Mars or as the Pleiades.Its mountains.its crevassed valleys and its seas, the little huddled clumps of houses called towns, the small laborious ships ploughing their futile furrows,\u2014all amused him with a whimsical sense of pity.And most of all, those human dot-like grubs, to whose family he had belonged until he found his wings! A compass, a sextant, a bottle of milk and a revolver comprised, with the clothes he wore, and with the shimmering silken wings of his aeroplane, his whn'e aquipment.His nesvest hase of supplies, if you could call it that, was a twenty pound tin of pemmican, hidden under a stone on _the northeast extremity of Herald Island, three hundred miles away.The United States Rescue Station at Point Parrow, the extreme northerly point of Alaska.the place which he had called home for the past three months, was, possibly, half as far again away, somewhere off to the southeast.But to Cayley, in his present mood, these distances were matters of small importance.Never again, perhaps, would the mastery of the air bring him a sense of happiness so godlike in its serenity, so ecstatic In its exhalara- tion.For the thing was perfect, and vet it was new.Only with his arrival at Point Barrow at the beginning of this summer had his flight been free from the thrill of momentary peril.Some sudden buffet of wind would tax his skill and nerve to the utmost.A flight before the wind, even with a constant, steady breeze, had been a precarious business.But for these past weeks of unbroken Arctic sunshine, he had fairly lived a-wing.The earth had no obhstruc- tions and the air no perils.To-day, with his great broad fan-tail drawn up arc-wise beneath him, his planes pitched slightly forward at the precise and perilous angle that only just did not send him plunging, headfirst, down upon the sullen masses of ice below, he lay there, prone, upon the sheepskin sleeping bag which padded the frame-work supporting his two wings.as secure as the great fulmar petrel which drew curiously near, and then, with a wheel and a plunge, fled away, squawking.Cayley would not say that he had learned to fly; he would still insist that he was learning.And, in a gense, this was true.Almost every day eider., gull, cormorant or albatross taught him some new trick of technique in steering, soaring or wheeling, perhaps, in a tricky cross-current of air.Even that fulmar, which had fled in such ungainly haste, had given him a new idea in aerostatics to amuse himself with.But for all practical purposes Cayley had learned to fly.The great fan- driven airship, 100 feet from tip to tip, which had long lain idle on his ranch at Sandoval, would probably never leave its house again.It hal done yeoman service.Without its 'powerful propellers, for a last resource, Cayley would never have been able to try the experiments and get the practice which had given him the air for his natural element.He had outgrown it.Fe bad no more need of motors or whirling fans.The force of gravity, the force of the breeze and the perfect- lv co-ordinated muscles of his own body gave him all the power he needed now.And what a marvellous power it was! He had never believed before the statement of men of science, that the grey northern geese can sail the air at eighty miles an hour.He knew it now.He had overtaken them.Perhaps the succeeding generations of humankind may develop an eye which can see ahead when the hody is lying prone, as a bird lies in its flight.(Cayley had remedied this deficiency with a little silver mirror, slightly concave, screwed fast to the cross-brace which supported his shoulders.Instead of bending back his head, or trying tn see out through his eyebrows, he simply cast a hackward glance into this mirror whenever he wanted to look on ahead.Tt had heen a little perplexing at first but he could see better in it now than with his unaided eves.And now, a minute or two, perhaps, after that fulmar had gone squawking away, he glanced down into his mirror, and his Olympian calm was shaken with the shock of surprise.For what he saw, clearly reflected in his little reducing glass, was land.There was a mountain, and a long dark line that must be a clifflike coast.And it was land that never had been marked on any chart.In absolute degrees of latitude he was not, from the Arctic explorer\u2019s view, very far north.Over on the other side of the world thev run excursion steamers every summer nearer to the Pole than he was at this moment.Spitzbergen, which has had a permanent population of fifteen thousand souls, lies three hundred miles farther north than this uncharted coas which Philip Cayley saw before him.But the great ice cap which covers the ton of the world is irregujar in shape, and just here, northward from Alaska, it juts its Impenetrable barrier far down into the Arctic Sta.Rogers, Collinson and the ill- fated DeLong,\u2014they all had tried to penetrate this barrier, and had been turned back.Cayley wheeled sharply up into the wind, and soared aloft to a height of, perhaps, a quarter of a mile.'I'nen, with a Jong, ilashing, shimmering sweep, he descended, in the arc of a great circle, and hung, poised, ovar the lan] itself and botind the jutting shoulder of the mountain.The land was a narrow-necked peninsula.Mountain and clifé prevented him from seeing the immediate coart on the other side of it; but out a little way to sea he was amazed to discover open water, and the smoke-like vapor that he saw rising over the cliff- head made it évident that the opening extended nearly, if not quite, to the very land's edge.It was utterly unexpected, for the side of the peninsula which he had approached was ice-lock- ed for miles.He would have towered again above the rocky ridge which shut off his view, and gone to investigate this phenomenon at closer range, had he not, just then, got the shock of another surprise, greater than the discovery of land itself.The little valley which he hung poised above was sheltered by a second ridge of rocky, ice-capped hills to the north, and.except for streaks, denoting crevices, here and there.was quits free from ice and snow.There were bright patches of green upon it, evidently some bit of flowering northern grass, and it was flecked here and there with bright bits of color, yellow poppy, he judged it to be, and =saxifrage.Hugging the base of the mountain on the opposite side of the valley, then notching the cliff and grinding down to sea at the other side of it was a great white glacier, all the whiter, and colder, and more dazzling for its contrast with the brown mountain-side and the green-clad valley.Up above the glacier, on the farther side, were great broad yellow putches, which he would have thought were poppy fields, but for the impossibliity of their growing in such a place.No vegetable growth was possible, he would have thought, against that clean-cut, almost vertical, rocky face.And yet, what else could have given it that blazing yellow color?Some day he was to learn the answer to that question.But the thing that caught his eye now, that made him start and draw in a little involuntary gasp of wonder, was the sight of a little clump of black Gots moving slowly, almost imperceptibly from this distance, across the face of the glacier.He blinked his eves, as if he suspected them of plav- ing him false.Unless they had played him false, these tiny dots were men.Instinctively, he shifted his balance a little to the left, lowering his left wing and elevating his right, and began reaching along, thwartwise to the wind, in their direction.Presently he checked himself in mid- flight, wheeled and hung, soaring, while he restrained that rebellious instinct of his, an instinet which would have led him to sail down into the midst of them and hold out his hand for a welcome.What were mankind to him?Why should the sight of them make his heart beat a little quicker?They must be white.He felt sure Of that, for this land could hardly have any permanent inhabitants.And, of course, he meant to go for a nearer lcok.Probably he would descend among them; find out who they were, where their ship was, and if they were in distress, he would then set sail through the air to carry news of their plight to those who might effect a rescue.But not upon that first instinct of his for companionship with his fellow men; and not until his heart was beating with its normal rhythm again.He wheeled once more, and then sailed slowly in their direction.Their laborious progress down the glacier led them away from him, so that he came up from behind; and without attracting their attention.The Arctic sun was too low to cast his shadow across them.and he hung, at last, unrémark- ed, directly over their heads.There was gmall likelihood that they would look up, until some sound from him should attract their attention, for, among the crevices, the chutes and treacherous ice bridges of the glacier top, they had small leisure to give heed to anything but their footing.All of the party, but one man, were dressed exactly alike, in hooded bearskin shirts and breeches, and boots of what he guessed was walrus hide.They moved along with the peculiar wary shuffle of men accustomed, by long habit, to the footing and to thse heavy confining garb they wore.So far as he could see they were unarmed.The other man was strikingly different.[He appeared to be clad much as Cayley was himself, in leather, N°10.THE.PROPRIE TAR Each tablet of food.quickly recover.FOR DYSPEP HEARTBURN, GAS on STOMACH, SOURNESS AND ALL FORMS OF STOMACH TROUBLES.DIRECTIONS.TAXE ONE TABLET AFTER EACH MEAL IN SEVERE CASES TAKE ONE AT BEDTIME AL5OTHE FATHER MORRISCY MEDICINE C0, vuiseo CHATHAM, N.B, of Father \u201cNo.11\u2019 Prescription will digest 13 pounds This means that though you are a martyr to Indigestion or Dyspepsia, you can eat a good meal and digest it, too, if you take a \u201cNo.11\u201d taulet afterward.With the aid of Father Morriscy\u2019s \u201cNo.11\u201d sick, sour, dyspeptic stomachs soc.a box at your dealer\u2019s or from Father Morriscy Medicine Co.Ltd, Chatham, N.B.Sia, INDIGESTION, Morriscy\u2019s rather than in untanned hide.He seemed slighter, sprightlier, and in every way to convey the impression of having come more recently from the civilized, habitable portion of the world than his companions.He carried a rifle slung by a strap over his shoulder, evidently forseeing no immediate use for it, and a flask.Cayley was too far aloft for their conversation to be audible to him, but he could hear that they were talking.The leather-clad man appeared to be doing the most of it, and, from the inflection of his voice, he seemed to be speaking in English.From moment to moment Cayley kept meaning to hail them, but, from moment to moment, he kept deferring the action.It amused him a little tn think how much, in one way or another, that hail might mean to those ploddine figures down below, Now, or five minutes from now; it could not matter to them.And meanwhile he could guard that hard-won aloofness from human endeavor, human fears and suffering and limitations, a little longer.Presently he noticed that the leather- clad man had forged a little ahead of his companions, or, rather\u2014like a fiash, this idea occurred to Cayley\u2014that the others were purposely lagging a little behind.And then, before that sinister idea could formulate itself into a definite suspicion, his eyes widened with amazement, and the cry hé would have uttered died in his throat; for this man, who had so innocently allowed the others to fall behind him, suddenly staggered, clutched at something\u2014 it looked like a thin ivory dart\u2014that had transfixed his throat, tugged it out in a sudden flood of crimson, reeled a little and then went backwards over the glassy edge of a fissure in the ice, which lay just to the left of the path where he had been walking.From the instant when Cayley had noticed the othérs dropping behind, to the last glimpse he had of the body of the murdered man could hardly have been five seconds.The instant the murdered man disappeared, another, who had not previously been with the party, it seemed, appeared from behind a hummock of ice.There could be no doubt either that he was the assassin, or that he was the commander of the little group of skin-clad figures that remained.The ambush appeared to have been perfectly deliberate.\"There had been no outcry, not even a gesture of surprise cr of remonstrance.Cayley looked at the assassin curiously.He was dressed exactly like the others, but seemed very much bigger; seemed to walk with less of a slouch, and had, even to Cayley\u2019's limited view of him, an air of authority.Cayley was surprised at his not being armed with a bow, for he knew of no other way in which a dart could have been propelled with power enough.even at close range, to have transfixed a man's throat.The assassin's only weapon, except for a quiverful of extra darts, seemed to be a short blunt stick, rudely whittled, perhaps ten inches long.Obedient, apparently, to the order of the new arrival, the party changed its direction, leaving what was evidently a well-known path to them, for a seemingly more direct but rougher route, And they moved now with an appearance of haste.Presently they scrambled oveér a precipitous ledge of ice and, in a moment, were lost to Cavley's view.The world was suddenly empty again, as if no living foot had ever trodden it; and Cayley, hovering there, a little above the level of the ice.rubbed his eyes and wondered whether the singular, silent tragedy he had Just witnessed were real, or a trick the mysterious Arctic light had played upon his tired eyes.But there remained upon that vacant scene two mater!- al reminders of the tragedy to which it had afforded a setting.One was a smudge of crimson on the snow; the other, a little distance off.just this slde the icy ridge over which the -last of the party had gone scrambling a moment before, was the strange looking blunt stick which he had seen In the assassin\u2019s hand.Cayley flew a little lower, his wings almost skimming the ice.Finally, reaching the spot where the thing had fallen, he alighted and picked it up.\u2018Whether its possessor had valued it, or not, whether or not he might be \u2018expected to return for it, Cayley did not know, and did not much care.He stood for some time turning the thing over in his hands, puzzling over it, trying to make out how it could have been used as the Instrument of propulsion to that deadly ivory dart.There was a groove on one side of it, with a small ivory plug at the end.The other end was curiously shaped, misshapen, rather, for, though it was obviously the end one held, Cayley could not make it fit his hand, whatever position he held it in, Giving up the problem at last, hé tucked the stick into his belt, slipped his arm through the strap in the frame-work of his aeroplane and prepared for flight.He had a little difficulty getting up, owing to the absence of a breeze at this point.Finally he was obliged to climb, with a good deal of labor, the icy ridge up which he had watched the little party of murderers scrambling.At the crest he cast a glance around, {ooking for them, but saw no signs of them.Then, getting a favorable slant of the wind, he mounted again into the element he now called his own.A heavy fog was filling up the cup- shaped valley, liké a lake, and when he had towered through it and into the clear, sparkling.unvexed air above it, hé found, rolled out beneath him, as far as he could see in every direction.what looked, under the slanting rae of the sun, like a warm, fleecy, rose- colored blanket.But, somehow, the return to the up- ber air, even the drawing of that great cloud-curtain acress the earth, failed to give back to Cayley that mood of serene happiness which he had en- joved an hour before.He tried hard to recover it, and his failure to do so irritated him.In vain, he asked himself what those little figures on the ice could mean to him, or he to them.In vain, he told himself that the thing he had seen was nothing but a picture \u2014a puppet show.He began wheeling a great spiral in the upper air, higher and higher until the intensity of the cold and the drumming of the blood in his temples warned him to déscend again.But high or low, some invisible magnet held him over the spot where he had witnessed that unexplained tragedy; an intense curiosity that would not let him go until he had.in some way.accounted for the flying fat jeather-clad man down there on the ce Five years before Philip Cayley would have passed for & good example of that minded, likable voung men which the best of our civilization seems to be flowering into.Physically, have been hard to suggest an improvement In him.he approached so near the ideal standards.He was fine grained.supple, slender.small-jointed, thorough-bred from head to heel Intellectually, he had been good enough to go through the Academy at it would Wert Point with credit, and to graduate high enough in his class to be assigned to service in the cavalry.His standards of conduct, his ideas of honor and morality had been about the same as those of the best third of his classmates.If his fellow officers in the Philippines, during the year or two he had spent in the service, had been asked to pick a flaw in him, which they would have been reluctant to do, they would have said that he seemed' to them a bit too thin-skin- ned and rather fastidious; that was what his chum and only intimate friend, Perry Hunter, said about him at any rate.But he could afford to be fastidious, for he had about all a man could want, one would think.For three generations they had taken wealth for granted in the Cayley family, and with it had come breeding, security of social position, simplicity and ease in making friends, both among men and women.In short, there could be no .doubt at all that up to his twenty-ninth year Fate had been ironically kind to Philip Cayley.She had given him, no hint.no preparation for the stunning blow that was to fall non him, suddenly, out of so clear a sky! When it did fall, it cut hig life clean across; so that when he thought back to that time now, it seemed to him that the Lieutenant Cayley of the United States Army had died over there in the Philippines, and that he, the man who was now soaring in those great circles through the Arctic sky, was a chance inheritor of his name and of his memory.He had set out one day at the head of a small scouting party, the best- liked man in the regiment, secure in the respect, In the almost fatherly regard, of his colonel, proudly conscious of the almost idolatrous admiration of his men and of the younger officers.He had gone out believing that no one ever had a truer friend than he possessed in Perry Hunter, his classmate at West Point, his fellow- officer in the regiment, the confidant of all his hopes and ideals.He had come back, after a fortnight's absence, to find his name smeared with disgrace, himself judged and condemned, unheard, in the opinion of the mess.And that was not the worst of it.The same blow which had deprived him of the regard of the only people in the world who mattered to him, destroyed, also, root and branch, his affection for the one man of whom he had made an intimate.The only feeling that it would be possible for him to entertain for Perry Hunter again must be a half-pitying, half-incredulous contempt.And if that was his feeling for the man he had trusted most and loved the most deeply, what must it be for the rest of humankind?What did it matter what they thought of him or what they did to him?All he wanted of human society was to escape from it.He fell to wondering, as he hung, suspended, over that rosy expanse of fleecy fog, whether, were the thing to do over again, he would act as he had acted five years ago; whether he would content himself with a single disdainful denial of the monstrous thing they charged him with; whether he would \u2018resign again, under tire, and go away, leaving his tarnished name for the daws to peck at.Heretofore he had always answered that question with a fierce affirmative.To-day it left him wondering, Had he stayed, had he paid the price that would have been \u2018necessary to clear himself, he would never have found his wings, so much was clear.He would never have spent those four years in the wilderness, working, experimenting, taking his life in his hands, days after day, while he mastered\u201d the art that no man had ever mastered before, He had set himself this task because it was the only one he knew that did not involve contact with his fellow- beings.He must have something that he could work at alone.Work and solitude were two things that he had felt an overmastering craving for.And the possibility he had faced with a light heart every morning\u2014the possibility of a sudden and violent death before night, had been no more to him than an - % Fes Eas A Eg Me GL Pee Got a) à pe A É * ; ; a gaie _ a : 5 .~ > ve , = 8 = a a wi S rae Sr.So \u201ca CRE # a oC \u201d AE 3 » A, es Kay hms TY SI Pr = ay sepdas Ad 5 w 7 prisé NER TF APTE 16 : THE MONTREAL DAILY WITNESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER IC, EEL ae travelling with her husband in Scot- : ace Stee TERENAS a Pg A EE Bm deed BE ON eT a 1 TE 24 § Ee an ws Lg em ar LÉ + LITERARY ++.ris KIPLINGS MEMORIAL POEM.The fine tribute paid by Kipling at the time of the death of our late King, Edward VII, is now published in book form under the title, \u2018The Dead King,\u201d by Rudyard Kipling (The Musson Book Company).The poem \u2018has a handsome setting with heavy raper, broad margins and clear letterpress.The sentiment of each page is anpropriately illu-trated hy marginal decnrations, which are reproductions pf pen and ink nrk by W.Heath TNobinsnn.Extracts from the poem were sn largely quoted in the press ft the time of the King's death that they have a familiar ring to most readers.Tt is a gond example of Kipling's work In his nobler vein.The metre is rugged and irregular, but with the ring of strong and deep feellng.The sincere admiration of the pnet goes out to the King.who held the first place in the world, yet used its powers and privileges only to serve his people, content w:th their love and loyalty as his reward.\u2018The peculiar treasure of Kings was his for the taking, All that men come to in dreams he Inherited waking, His marvel of world-gathered armies\u2014 one heart and all races, His seas 'neath his keels when his war- castles ficamed to their places.And God poured him an exquisite wine, that was daily renewed to him, In the clear welling love of his peoples that dally accrued to him.Honor and service we gave him, rejoic- ingly fearless: Falth absolute, trust bevond speech and a friendship as peerless.And since he was Master and Servant of all that we asked him, We leaned hard on his wisdom in all things, k-owing not how we tasked m.We accepted lis toil as our right\u2014none spared, none excused him, When he was bowed by his burden, hig rest was refused him.As he received so he gave\u2014nothing grudged, naught denying.Not even the last gasp of his breath when he strove for us, dying.All that Kings covet was his and he flung it aside for us, \u2019 Simply as any that die in his service he died for us.Our King asks nothing of any man more than our King himself has done! THE GREAT LAKES AS A POET SEES THEM.A glorified guide-book of the great lakes, which gives descriptions of these - fresh-water seas in all seasons of moods.as well as a resumé of the history and tradition that centres ahout \u2018ifferent localities on their shores is published by the Musson Firok Company.It is a most beauti- fn] hronk in its get-up, every page is s pleasure from its form as well as \u2018+3 matter \u2018The Canadian Lake Toesion Y fred W.Campbell (° 2) is partly in prose form, partly by \u2018in verse.ut in either form it is \"oot : Younie, Allan's Corners, Que.; 52, Har- little catalogue scrap ¥ yards of material 27 inches wide, with @ue.: 16, Jean M.Hawthorne, West- riet Moss, Montreal, Que.; 53, Agnes pattern cuts.These will be found 53 vard of 36-inch net, 3 1-2 yards Mount, Que.: 17.Edna Hayes, Shigaw- Muldrew, Macdonald College, Que.; 54, very useful tc refer to from time to fancy band; or of one material 2 3-8 ake, Que.; 18, Ethel Hodgson, Joliette, Grace O.Dell, Montreal, Que.; 55, Lil- I had | MERE) LE ta e yards 36 inches wide.Que.: 19, Annie Hume, Hill Head, lian Smith; 56, Muri on; 57, Anna tim BEE Que.; 20, Hazel C.Keddy, Hemming- En 1; 56, Murlel Upton; 57, Ann Marchand\u2019s garments.Marchand\u2019s garments cannot be duplicated in style quality and appearance, at any price.e\u2026sc\u20260n00v000 008020000000 000 Gun Your Hands ROLLED WHEAT.A littie better than all others.BRODIE & HARVIE 14 Bleury Street, Montreal.escovon000 0000050000 000 0000 Qc 8 Ps a s 5 A > = TTT TT coven sR 1 Styles in Ladies\u2019 Apparel G2 290 MOUNTAIN ST p PATTES À ESTEND 297 STDOMINIQUE ST - 3 ; a ven, À HAVE BECOME KNOWN AS CLASSIC x given below.# Yo ur = * EALE & SON 3 No.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.- ; , New, exclusive, refined in their good taste and absolute- ; Funeral Directors % = Hair ly correct, Marchand\u2019s Ready-to-Wear Ladies\u2019 Garments ; x Sizer reresisnesiisi cane & are shown in the leading cities of the world and are consid: \u2018 312 Dorohester St.West.J * Y ered by fashion critics as corféet in Paris, London and New \u2018 Phone Up 969.Residence, Op 2671 * Address in full : x our York.¥ x Face Discriminating ladies may indulge their taste for the For BREAKFAST Enero, exquisite, and at the same time practice commendable eco AT : 3 nomy in the maintenance of their wardrobe by obtainne % ve 2 % #* = N.B.\u2014Be sure to cut out the illustration and send with the coupon, carefully filled out.The pattern cannot reach you in less than a week, r = , , , r : cof Peu LEE Hom oft peta athlon Hd th era a parts of the body.these delicate van, pays colflurers that know thelr profession down to the utmost de tion in Hairdressing, Massage, Manicure, Hair Goods, Combs, etc.ete.ROOKS AND CHOLERA.you chun Tn ant ithe \"IH bo Please to give su any pointère that (London \u2018Chronicle.\u2019 > MADAME ASSELIN | 260 St.Catherine Street West, | ; BELL TEL.UP 4152.Just West of Bleury Street, South Side.- PIS EI TEMPORARY CHANGE IN TRAIN LADIES\u2019 WAIST.SERVICE, Paris Patterh No.5121.note, or stamps.Address, \u2018Witness\u2019 Pattern Department.\u2018Witness\u2019 Bleck, Montreal.Price 10 cents each, in cash, postal MARALAN Jacob's Building Cor.St.Alexander and St.Catherine St.West.New York Office\u201431 Union Square.CANADIAN NORTHERN QUEBEC RAILWAY.When the time comes for us to make our new fall costumes the first thing we think of is the stvle of the waist.On Sunday, September 11th, trains \u2018Something pretty and simple\u2019 is the running beiween Montreal and Shaw- usual demand, and this is the part ut inigan Falls will not be operated, also | wisdom, for it is sure to remain in The present day security of this train leaving Huberdeau on the Mont- gtyle much longer than the elaborate |country against all danger of a chol- fort Branch a* 6.20 p.m.This service novelties, which are more likely to be |era epidemic is matter for thankful- will, however, be resumed the follow- 59s than fashions.The model Dic- ness not only in human circles but in ing Sunday Sept.18th, until the end tured is cut with a little square yoke, {the rookerles too.When the cholera of September.below which the material is arranged |slew nearly sixty thousand people in in a box pleat in the front, the edges the Insaniters United Kingdom of 1831- \u2014 se stitched down from top to ottom.e rooks appear to have suffered - SMUGGLED PIG.Two small tucks at the-shoulders vro- with them.This was stated at any WHO DOES YOUR FAM/ Ÿ [NG \u2019 ° Hamilton, Ont., September 10.\u2014J.S.vide a little additional fulness.In |rate, to have occurred on the estate of .| L WASH 7 Van C.mp was fined $20 at the Police the back there\u2019s the Gibson effect from [the Marquis of Sligo, which boasted Court this morning for smuggling a the shoulders, while the centre of the one of the largest rookerles In the west ELECTRICAL REDUCTIONS WHY NOT, THIS CO MING WEEK.TRY THF pig into Canada.Van Camp is ap- back is provided with a reversed box |of Ireland.earing at L.c Temple Vaudeville The- pleat in which the closing is con- On the first or second day of the epl- he w i i Pire this week with a trained pig, cealed.The sleeves have caps to the Pdemic\u2019s appearance an observer noted = of Canada space fixtures to pip Pay ) à ! ; LC ; elbow and from this point down a |ithat all the rooks had vanished.Dur- ; i whose principal stunt is loud squeal.& 02% BRS CTO or net.Taffetas wi [ing the three weeks through which it cannot help but appreciate the values \u201cTHE LAUNDRY THAT KNOWS HOW.\" ing and sucking milk from a bottle, i | : i which we offer.\" : make up well in this style and also |raged there was no sign of them about Phones : oer oT van Camp wdmitted he smuggled the any of the plain color weaves.A shep- their \u2018home, but the revenue police EAST 3705 WE CARRY A FULL LINE OF ored cen\u201d thom aang them te © lothes clean and sweet.ov ° vr herd'\u2019s check would be pretty and may found immense numbers of them dead - ET \u2019 SEND US ' eee on the Shore ten miles away.When and [I ° ° 425 RICHMOND mene NEXT PARCEL.EOE TT 1 - ; © epldemic aba he ropks reiurn- : _ : NEUE \u2018 BIG ELEVATOR OPENS.ed, but some were too weak to reach EAST 1164 dS dil RI IXiures Fort Willia.Ont.September 10.\u2014 6 WwW \u201d their nests and five-sixths of them had Le > The first carload of grain went into Th n cars ess gone.and will be -leased to show y = | the new Gran: Trunk Pacific elevator ese two wor \u2014 i ou our ; ER ; at Fort William yesterday.More will the reason why so many AMERICANS SPOIL BARGAIN Ë soc tt Par, CART A AE Bane: 3 follow to-day, and the big elevator, people prefer the HUNTING.7 N FO.DINING ROOMS.MES the largest in the world, with a capacity of nearly four million bushels, is now open for business.It is expected that a large quantity of grain will be handled here this fall.tr NOTES AND NOTICES.Layton Bros.are showing a varied selection of superb Mason & Risch Pianos.Terms arranged to suit purchasers.550 St.Catherine St.W, Écor.Staniey St.).\u2014-\u2014 (Yorkshire \u2018Observer.\u2019) Cumberland is not nearly as good a place as it formerly was for picking up fine old pieces of furniture at a price considerably below their value.Fell cottagers now are thoroughly alive to grade of plate.the worth of an old Chippendale chair, Bes! tea seis; dishes, walters, : a Sheraton sideboard, a corner cun- efc., are stamped : board or a grandfather\u2019s clock, and are MERIDEN BRITA CO.not going to part with them for a mere SOLD BY LEADING DEALERS wSilper Plate that Vine» bm \u201c847 ROGERSTBROS.\\ \u201cA Cine brand of silver plate.This The Peerless Gas i 5 S Ë T 55 trade mark is a positive as- SA surance of the heaviest BIS A AT (MH GUARANTEED REDUCE Aid 319 St.LAWRENCE BLVD.Near St.Catherine Street.song.The number of American tourists who have visited the Fell distri\" have, it seems, helped to edusade them.FIFI le LE: è 2 A ENTER WC IWC: NE ERECT IE EVA SEER EAN SEN ç 7a ga - PSP E > ES ER SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1910.Er dei cE 1 TT \u2014 ™ 39544 A LOT or about 3£e a foot A LOT or about 33¢ a foot The R= By becoming the owner of one or more of 00 Building Lots 1 am offering at the unprecedentediy low rate of IN BEAUTIFUL 95 DOLLARS EACIHE = Situated in the western part of Montreal, immediately adjoining the City of Montreal and New Westmount.Splendidly located, fertile soil, no taxes, near trolley cars and railroad.Terms==$r0.00 cash down.Balance in four monthly payments.The lots adjoining \u201cKINGSDALE PARK\" are now selling from $350.00 to $700.00 each.~ \u201cKINGSDALE PARK\u201d LOTS should easily sell in 1911 from $400.00 and upwards.| Remember, there were only 500 of these lots.When they are sold this opportunity will be past.First come first choice.Rents are advancing.The price of these Lots will be advanced very shortly without notice to $125.00 Subscriptions by mail propérly allotted as received.Re- mittancés may be made by Express orders, Bank drafts or cheques.An automobile will meet street cars at corner of King Edward and Sherbrooke Boulevard to meet cars coming out.will be: will be given you.time to spare.Fill out and return enclosed Coupon.All information But get it at once.Already over one hundred have been sold.You have often wanted a house of your own.Get it now.You will have to buy and build some time.This is the golden opportunity.Take advantage of it.There is no A.6.FOWLER ROSS, 66 Ottawa Bank Building, Montreal.investment Broker, per Ty t A.G.FOWLER ROSS, Investment Broker.66 Ottawa Bank Building, Tel.Main 2297.Montreal.Please send me full information as to location, size, etc., of the lots in Kingsdale Park.In the meantime, hold at my option shereasesraseases lots.NAME ve .ee as eo: Address ., .ve as se.08 4a Naoki: 7476\"; LivisaR7a .¥ DESIGN NO.203, .Here we have a pleasant one and one-half story k ¥:3c of pleasing design.Size, 26 feet by 30 feet over all, including bays, but not front porch.foundation and seven-foot ceilar under entire house.for first, and 8 feet 6 inches for second.Ger portion and gables shingled.and pine for the balance.eral convenience of the floor plans.$2,850.that readers course, according to locality.bs supplied by the \u2018Witness.\u2019 Rooms are to be finished Note the fine arrangement of the rooms and aen- Estimated cost of this house complete, Se, \u201cPrice of working plans and specifications, $25.this design, without change, $15.33.Bill of materials, $6.Sighs can be reversed to suit location.print plan as it is an exact sony ov the design, but it can be reversed.The \u2018Witness\u2019 has secured a series of plans of country huses and bungalows costing from $500 to $4,000, and will publish them weekly, believing who contemplate building will find them of great value.sach case the cost is estimated as closely as possible, but will vary, of Working plans, specifications and details can SECOND TLooR Stone Story height, 9 feet.First story is clapboarded at up- in oak upstairs Blue pdint plans of Any of these de- No- change can be made in a blue In OFFICIALS IGNORED Zoilermakero Vote Against Honoring Agreements\u2014 50,000 in Lockout, London, Sept.10.\u2014The vote of the \u2018jerymakers\u2019 societv on the question © living up to the agreement with *« federation of shiphuilding employ- C8 and giving guarantees that there \u201could be no future strikes without revise to the provisions of that in- rament, is adverse to the executive of the.union.- These officers \u2018Tongiv recommend that the required -\u2018rantees be given.Some 59,000 men =o heen locked out pending a de- ; JAN 0?this question, and many more © now be afacted, \u2018oe inen voted on two proposals.The first was that they should sustain the position of the executive of the \u2018union, who supported the Position of the masters and favored the giving of the required zuarantees.There was a majority against this proposition.The second proposal, empowering the executive to call a representative meeting of theunion, was adopted.rte ! Reports received by the \u2018Times\u2019 from every part of the country show that this year\u2019s crop will be better than was anticipated.The general British averages percent for August 1, 1910, are: Wheat, 93; barley, 93; oats, 92.96; beans, 95.2; potatoes, 96; and roots, 95.18\u2014figures which in each case exceed the ten years\u2019 averages for 1900- 1909.In Kent the wheat crop hag béen described as \u2018the worst on record,\u2019 and hops have deteriorated seriously through the varied weather and its attendant blights.Lot 50 x 110.sold at a very moderate price.Parthenais Street.square feet.Very cheap.ber or sooner, if necessary.A.W.D.HOWELL, FOR SALE Crescent Street, self-contained, stone front dwelling, 9 living rooms, Dorchester Street West, corner Factory site, light on™ four sides; area 11,480 TO LET .; Eim_ Avenue, Westmount, 5 Bedrooms, very nics homs; well ven- __tilated and lighted, everything in good order, possession {st Novem- Middle flat, Durccher, near Sherbrooke Street, direct entrance, four bedrooms; can be had for 21-2 years; rent $65.00, possession at once.property, 14 living rooms, will be Toe - 212 8t.James Street.KING'S BENCH TRIALS Mr.Justice St.Pierre's Address at the Opening To-day.The September session of the Court of King's Bench openéd this morning with Mr.Justice St.Pierre on the Bench.There is an unusually long list for this term of the court, including one murd-r, several attempted murder, several manslaughter, and the care against A.J.Lemieux for alleged assault on and theft from the person of Ludger Larose, past secretary of Emancipation Lodge.It had been announced that Mr.Justice Trenholme would sit for this term, but this statement was later contradicted.Mr.Justice St.Pierre is known as one of the leading criminal jurists in the Dominion.Before he went to the Bench hé was a leading criminal lawyer.On him will devolve the duty of trying Timothy Candy.'The opening of the term, which will last from two to three weeks, or perhaps longer, was attended with all the usual solemnity and ceremonial.In his address to.the Grand Jury, His Honor said as follows: \u2018Gentlemen of the Grand Jury: \u2018You have been summoned and sworn as the Grand Jury for this term of the Court of King\u2019s Bench.All the casés that will come before you, among which are several invelving the grave charge of murder and attempts to commit murder, are cases in which experienced magistrates have come mitted the prisoners for trial before this court, after a careful inquiry.\u2018I am satisfied that you will seldom or never find it necessary \u2018to arrive at a different conclusion from that arrived at by the committing magistrate, although it is your right to do so, if you find the circumstances call for it.\u2018You, of course, do not try the question of the guilt or innocence of the accused.That is the onerous and responsible duty of the trial jurors.Your duty is simply to say whether there is a sufficient \u2018prima facie\u2019 case against the accused to put him on his trial to answer the charge against him.\u2018Any seven of you, but no fewer, are competent, under our present law, to find a true bill or a no hill, and, whichever you find, it is endorsed in writing on the back of the indictment, by the words \u2018True \u2018Bill\u2019 or \u2018No Bill\u2019 as the case may be, over the signature of your foreman.\u2018You will not, unless by leave of the court, examine any witnesses whose names are not on the back of the in- dictmrent, but it is not necessary, unless you find - No Bill\u2019 that you should examine all of these witnesses.Your foreman, or a juryman acting for him in examining the witnesses, will swear the witnesses and place his initials opposite the name of each witness examined.\u2018In the discharge of your duties, you will receive the assistance, so far as need be, of the crown officers and of the court.But your should be secret, and your determinations your own, and free from all extraneous interference or the presence of any person otheé* than the grand jurors sworn in open court.With these observations, you will now retire to your room for the performance of your duiies.\u2019 deliberations BUSINESS CARDS.BEDROOM FURNITURE, OF THR very latest styles, such as Dressing Bureaus, Washstands, Dressing Tables, Chiffoniers, Cheval Mirrors, Tables, Chairs, ete, at 25 percent cheaper than ordinary prices, at the manufacturers.Show Rooms, 350 St, Paul street.GEO.H.LABBE & CO.ALL COUNTRY MERCHANTS.\u2014If vou are contemplating a trip to the City of Montreal, and have-on your list to purchase new furniture for your house or your store, or for your son or daughter who are soon to be married, be sure that you come to see us.It does not matter whether you sell furniture or not.We make and carry in stock the most complete lines of Bedroom, Dining-Room, Sitting-Room, Parlor, Library and Kitchen Furniture in Canada, ir.fact, thz best up-to- date goods to be found anywhere.We guarantee to give you the benefit of our lowest wholesale prices and very prompt delivery.1f you can save on your purchases from 25 percent to 33 percent, you owe it to your family to do so, and it is certainly worth your while to make the trip to Montreal.If we have been able to suit such concerns as the Canadian Pacific Railway in the furnishing of their several hotels, We surely ought to be able to serve you.We make 20 charge for packing, and give very liberal terms to responsible traders, and the usual discount for spot cash or 30 days.We will pack your goods so that the freight charges will amount to a very small percentage.GEO.H.LABBE & CO., Wholesale Furniture Manufacturers.Show-Ropms, 35( St.Paul street.Established 28 years, CARPENTER \u2014 ALL KINDS OF Carpentry work, alterations and repairs; stores, offices, factories, houses, etc., by day or job.end card or phone Uptown 4785, O'CONNOR, rear, 167 Mansfield street.-WARDROBES, CHEST OF DRAWERS, Chiffoniers; a very large range at lowest wholesale prices, at 350 St.Paul street.GEO.H, LABBE & CO.Manufacturers.PARLOR FURNITURE\u2014PRETTY AND neatly upholstered Parlar Sets, latest designs and shades.Also, Comfortable and Pretty Lounges, Davenports.Easy Chairs, Centre Tables (very large variety), Jardiniere Stands, ail 25 percent \u2018to 33 percent lower than market price, at Show Rooms, 350 St.Paul street.GEO.H.LABBE & CO.Wholesale Manufacturers.! REAL GOLDEN OAK DINING Chairs, with genuine leather sea\u2018s, at as low a price as cane or wood seat, at the Manufacturers, 350 St.Paul street.GEO.H.LABBE & CO., Manufactur- OTTAWA SLEEPING CAR.For the convenience of the Ottawa people who are visiting Montreal during the Congress, the Canadian Pacific will put a sleeping car on their night train, leaving at 9.50 p.mon September 10th and 1ith, Passengers can secure berths therein, and do not require to leave the car until 8.00 o'clock the following morning, A widow named Hatter, of London, hag - deliberately starved herself to death.Owing to grief and worry she refused to take food for five weeks.The woman lost her husband about a year ago, and later was haunted by a fear of blindness.Notwithstanding all that the family could do, she declined to eat, and also refused medicine.Every artifice was used in order to get her to take nourishment, but she declared she did not want to be bothered.on PROPERTY.DRESSMAKING, ETC.SITUATIONS VACANT.OUTREMONT - PROPER For Sale.6 Pressed Brick Flats, Laurler Avenue .318,000 8 Stone Front Flats, Park Avenue .\u2026.$24,000 4 8tone Front Flats, Durocher Street ., .$9,000 4 Brick Flats, Edouard Charles Street .$18,000 Pressed Brick Cottage, Waverly Street .v .$6,500 Stone Front Cottage, Hutchinson Street .ce as 85,250 House and Lot corner Fairmount and Durocher Street .85,500 & First Class Flats, Laurier Avenue .\u2026.+.325000 8 Apartment \u2018House, Selby St.$19,000 This pays 13 percent, Building Lots Boulevard St Joseph, near Bt.Catherine Road, 75c foot.IAurier Avenue, $1.00 foot.cation.MoDougall Avenue, 45e foot, near the Park.: Durocher, corner Fairmount, $1.00 foot.(The above are all good locations.) DOMINION REAL ESTATE CO, 18 McGill College Avenue.Phone Uptown 3700.; HOUSES FOR SALE Tara Hall avenue, a bright 7 room house, near Sherbrooke street; extension kitchen, h.w, heat.§3 300 Burnside Place, splendid 8 room house,near Guy and Sherbrooke street; extension kitchen; h.wheat .85100 Irvine Avenue, Westmount, 7 room ouse .+4 .+.-.$3,600 Argyle Avenue, Westmount,a unique splendidly bullt house, - eight rooms .813,500 Wood Avenue, Westmount, between Sherbrooke and Western Ave, a new splendidly built house, 28 ft.wide.Fit for a king.815,000 INVESTMENTS \u2018 \u2018 If you want good investment pro- portiés wé can give them at all prices and the Best returns.No Tnflations, 180 St.James Street.OUSES for SALE IN WESTMOUNT.Prices, $4,500, $6,000, $8,500, and upward.' LOTS FOR SALE in Westmount, Prices according to locality.-FLATS FOR SALE, different parts of City, Westmount and Annex.LARGE CORNER BUILDING FOR BALE.Splendid for factory; also, Two Large Houses adjoining.Only $40,000 for the whole.Apply at once.BASY TERMS.LARGE HOUSE on Bishop Street, For Sale.Price $11,000.Might take some good stocks at right prices;-on à account.Also, Many Other Properties For Sale.- Apply te LFRED BENN, 107 ST.JAMES ST.HUNTLEY STREET.-\u2014588-890 A, four flats, stone front, built 1909, will sell cheap.Apply, R.NEVILLE, Jr, 233 St, James street.Phone Main 2930.- SIDING FOR FACTORY OR CONtractor, 20 cents per foot.Piece of land having an area of 31,000 square feet on C.P,R.track.with drains, water.light, on Hutchison street, near Park avenue.Five minutes\u2019 walk from street cars.Building on lot suitable for office.Apply, 1816 Esplanade avenue.TO LET.\u2014 \u2014 TO RENT \u2014 HEATED APARTMENT, 5 rooms and bath.Rent $25.00 per month, Apply at Apartment C., 13 Overdale avenue.HEATED APARTMENTS ON SHUTER street, near Prince Arthur; 8 large rooms.For information apply Room 12, 22 St.John street.CO LET, IN ST.LAMBERT, A DWELLING that would accommodate two small families, nicely situated near the road.Rent moderate.Apply to MR, H.TUCKER, St.Lambert, or at office.204 Ot.James street, Montreal real, SHOP TO LET ON ST.PETER ST.next door to \u2018Witness.Apply at \u2018Witness\u2019 Office, FLATS TO LET.TO LET Hoated Flat, 166 Mansfield Street near Sherbrooke street; 6 rooms.Rent, $82.50.Possession now.Apply to -Janitor, or 309 St.James street.ROOMS WANTED.McGILL UNIVERSITY.BOARDING HOUSE LIST.Persons wishing to recelve students as boarders or lodgers during the come.ing \u201csession, commencing October [st, are requested to communicate with the undersigned before September 15th, giving particulars as to terms, etc.Every application must be accompanied by a certificate from the Health Department as to the sanitary condition of the house, and (if the applicant be new), by written testimonials as to character.Address all communications to REGISTRAR, McGill University.THE VETERAN LAND GRANTS.VETERAN LAND GRANTS WANTED.Ontario or Dominion, located or un- located.MULHOLLAND & CO, Toronto.WANTED.WANTED TO PURCHASE ALL CASToff Clothing, Turniture, Silverware, Plated Ware, Old Gold, Pawn Tickets.Above everybody else's prices paid by MAX FRANK, 15 East Craig street.Tel.East 3067.BUSINESS CHANCES.RESPONSIBLE PARTY WANTED to handle charcoal in carload quantities in Montreal.Continuous supply guaranteed.Address, W.X.100, \u2018Witness\u2019 Office.r.orge-shoeing and Blacksmithing ALEXANDER LINDSAY, HORSESHOER AND BLACKSMITH, 67 St.Henry.Park Avenue, above Mount Royal, 800 | oot.\u2019 0 Fine lo-{ \u2018FOR SALE\u2014WEBER NEW YORK DRESSMAKER HAVING INCREASED facilities for work, will take same at her residence, 143 Lusignan street.D.SEALY.MISCELLANEOUS.EXTENSION DINING TABLES IN 60 different patterns, make ana finish; the very latest designs, in Mission, ete, at about one-half their actual value; our stock consists of a very large quantity, finished, and a large lot unfinished.Call and see them without delay.GEO.H.LABBE & CO, \u2018Wholesale Manufacturers.Store, 350 St.Paul street.DAINTY BUFFETS, FINISHED EARLY English, also, Leather Diners, Extension Dining Tables, China Closets and Dinner Waggons to match; just the articles wanted for Apartment Houses and Flats; a big range to select from, and at 25 percent to 33 percent cheaper than ordinary prices, at the Manufacturers\u2019 Showrooms, 350 St.Paul st.GEO.H.LABBE & CO.TYPEWRITERS \u2014INVESTIGATE RE- | manufactured Typewriters.Typewriters repaired, rented, exchanged.Highest grade.Ribbons, Carbon,Papers, étc.CHAS.B.WALSH & CO.30 St.John street, Montreal.TABLES \u2014 OUR STOCK OF TABLES of every description and for every: purpose is certainly the largest in this city, and the prices away below the current prices.Call early while our stock is very complete.GEO.H.LABBE & CU., 350 St.Paul street.WEATHERED OAK, FUMED OAK, and Early English finished furniture, of the latest designs at lowest wholesale prices.GEO.H.LABBE & CO, Wholesale Manufacturers.Show- Rooms, 350 St.Paul street.ANY ONE NOT BEING ABLE TO GET a \u2018Witness\u2019 at his newsdealers will oblige the publishers by notifying the Subscription Department by tele- hone, Main 4090, or by postcard.OHN DOUGALL & SON, \u2018Witness\u2019 Building, Montreal.WANTED \u2014 BOYS AND Beautiful Watches, Gold Neck AGENTS Girls.Chains, Bracelets, Fountain Pens, Camera and Outfit: many others.Free for selling only 2 doz.packets Washing Blue at 10¢ each.Household necessity; easy sale.NOVEL- TIRES.P.O.Box 943.WANTED \u2014 EXPERIENCED DRESSmaking teacher, for day and evening classes.Address \u2018WITNESS Office, Box Y, No.6.WANTED, FIRST CLASS WAIST hands and apprentices for dressmaking.Apply, 23 Mayor street.WANTED -MAN\u2014MUST Bi WILLING to learn and capable of acting as our representative; no canvassing or soliciting: good income assured.Address NATIONAL CO-OPERATIVE REALTY COMPANY, 1264 Marden Bldg, Washington, D.C.CARETAKER WANTED FOR KEN- sington School, Notre Dame de Grace ard.Man and wife only.Free fuel, light and water: salary, $20.00 per month, Apply, in writing only, giving full particulars, to G.F.PAT- ERSON, Montreal West, AGENTS WANTED FOR PRIVATE Christmas Cards.Anvone.Samples Free.Postage 30c.Ungton, England.CHIPOHASE,Dar- AGENTS \u2014 BOTH SEXES, GET Busy, gas jet heater; great demand: low retail price; big profit: sample outfit supplied; postals unanswered.H.Q.STOCKING, 93 Reade, New York.WANTED, TABLEMAID: MUST BE competent, and bring satisfactery references.Apply 245 Drummond st.WANTED, COMPETENT LAUNDRESS for first three days of every week ; must bring references.Apply, 245 Drummond street.THIS MAY MEAN YOU -PERMANENT - position to experienced salesman for hardy nursery stock.drown in Quebec.Best outfit free.Investigate.CANADIAN NURSERY COMPANY, LIMITED, Montreal.SIDEBOARDS \u2014 35 DIFFERENT Patterns and finish, of the latest produc-° tion to select from; extension dining tables and genuine leather seats, solid oak dining chairs to match; china closets, ete., all 25 perceat to 33 percent cheaper than ordinary price, at the manufacturers, GEO.H.LABBE & CO., Showrooms, 350 St.Paul street.OFFICE DESKS, HOUSE DESKS, OFfice Tables, Library Tables, Rotary and Tilting Chairs, at 25 percent to 331% percent lower than their actual value; big variety of well finished goods.GEO.H.LABBE & CO., Wholesale Manufacturers.Store, 350 St Paul street.; FOR SALE.FOR SALE\u2014WILLIAMS UPRIGHT Piano, overstrung metal frame.Really good tone, in first class order.An opportunity $175.Payable $10 cash and $6 monthly.LAYTON BROS.550 St.Catherine street west (corner Stanley street.) FOR SALE\u2014LAYTON BROS.CABINET Grand Piano, walnut case, 7 1-3 octaves, overstrung full metal plate, ivory keys, delightful tone, a snap $245.Payable $15 cash and $7 monthly.LAYTON BROS., 550 St.Catherine street west (corner Stanley street.) FOR SALE\u2014KARN UPRIGHT CABInet Grand Piano, mahogany case, practically new.Latest improvements, 7 1-3 octaves, etc.A real bargain $285, Payable $15 cush and $8 monthly.LAYTON BROS.b50 St.Catherine street west (corner Stanley street.) FOR SALE\u2014MARSHALL & WENDELL Square Piano, rosewood case, overstrung, very fine tone, in excellent order.Only $110.Payable $b cash and $4 monthly.LAYTON BEOS.550 St.Catherine street west (corner Stanley street.) WANTED, JUNIOR CLERK, SINTEEN to eighteen years of age.Must write well and figure accurately, and hase some office experience.Apply by letter.giving references, to THOMAS ROBERTSON & C0O., Limited, 134 Craig street West.WANTED, RESPECTABLE MIDDLE- aged woman to do light housework.Good home for the right person.References required.R.R., 'Witiess' ce.WANTED, A WELL EDUCATED ROY, about fifteen years of age.as Office Boy.\u201d Apply in own handwriting to © The Cradock Simpson Company, P.O.Box 1093.WANTED, GENERAL SERVANT FOR emall house (two servants kept).Apply at 4444 Sherbrooke street, West- mount.Junior Clerk.Witness\u2019 Office.WANTED\u2014SMART BOY 45 MESSENger.Apply Witness\u2019 Office.WANTED\u2014MIDDLE AGED MAN janitor.One who can drive Apply at \u2018Witness\u2019 Offices.WANTED, MECHANICS, CONTRACtors, Clerks and others tn «re what The Men's Own is like.Good music and a thort address.Come to Calvary Church, Guy street.ghove St.Antalue, Sunday.8 p.m., sharp.Address Box TF, 25, AS horse.BOY WANTED.MITOHELL & WILSON, Printers, 7 Notre Dame West.GHOGOLATE DIPPERS \u201cSquare Piano, rosewood case, carved legs, full compass, steel frame.A splendid opportunity.Rich deep tone.Exceptional value, $135.Payable $10 cash and $5 monthly.LAYTON BROS, 550 St.Catherine street west (corner Stanley street.) WHITE ENAMELLED FURNITURE is sanitary looking, pleasing to the eye; refined people prefer it to the ordinary furniture for their children's rooms at their city house, or country house, A great assortment to select from, and at extremely low prices &* the Manufacturers\u2019 Show Rooms, £0 St.Paul street.GEO.H.LABBE & CO.FOR SALE, PIANO FOR PRACTICE, in neat case; good tone and touch.May be exchanged within three years for new piano; $66.Fasy terms of payment.LAYTON BROS.550 St.Catherine street W.(cor.Stanley st.).YOU GET SWELL FURNITURE FOR very little money at the Manufacturers\u2019 Store, 850 St.Paul street.GEO.H.LABBE & CO.FOR SALE \u2014 BEAUTIFUL SKYE Terrier Dog,11 months, very small,weighs four pounds, Call between 9 and 12 a.m.26 Third avenue, Viauville.FOR SALE \u2014 TWO PLATE GLASS Mirrors.Size 8 ft, 8 in.x 3 °t 2 in, Just the thing for Barber or other shop.Apply, \u2018Witness\u2019 Office.MISSION STYLE FURNITURE\u2014WHY lose your valuable time at auction sales, bidding on old style furniture and often in very bad condition, when you can buy the real thing of the highest class about one-half the price at GEO.H, LABBE & CO0.'S, 350 St.Paul street.Established 1883.TOR SALE \u2014 McCALLUM UPRIGHT Piano,rosewood case.Louis style,good tone; $125, Payable on easy terms.LAYTON BROS.550 St.Catherine street W.(cor.Stanley st.).HOIST FOR SALE, CHEAP \u2014 One Double belted floor type freight hoist,with cage and wheels, in good condition: platform, 5 x 5 feet; fullv 1500 lbs.capacity.Counter shaft, pulley and splendid H.P, motor;110 D.C, included, it desired, Apply to 142 St.Peter street.EDUCATIONAL ESTABLISHMENTS, Hospitals, and other large institutions can save considerable time and money by purchasing their chairs, wardrobes, cupboards.writing tables, etc, from the manufacturers, GEO.H.LABBE & CO., new showrooms, 350 St.Paul street.NEW TYPEWRITERS FOR SALE, CHEAP.Some New Canadian Standard Qliver Typewriters, of Number 2,3 and 4 Models, fully guaranteed, worth $97.50, to be sold at $35 while they last, to make room for new models.Splendid opportunity.Call or write, at once.f Canadian Oliver Typewriter Co St.Martin Street.NOÏOIS sALE 2 10 h.p.115 volts D.C, 1 8 h.p.110 volts.D.C.All in Al condition, and can be seen any time.Will sell cheap.\u2014Apply, \u2018WITNESS\u2019 OFFICE \u2014\u2014 ENGINEERS.Tel .Main 7021.The DUCKWORTH-BOYER Engineering & Inspection Co.Limited inspecting and Consulting Engineers ot ITER ye pr RAT ETS ES per os ny.ARE A NSP EEO Sami Quick Service.Good Work and Low Prices 50 wanted, must be experienced.Can make big wages.Apply Ramsay's 29-31 Vitre street West.EMPLOYMENT WANTED.WANTED, WORK BY THE DAY, BY respectable woman, house cleaning nr washing; good laundress, good references.33 Dowd street.PUPILS WANTED.PRIVATE TUITION IN ALL SCHOOL and academy subjects; youths specially and individually prepared for any university, or for commercial iifa.Terms moderate.TRAILL OMAN, M.A.5050 Western avenue.PRIVATE TUTOR AND CONSULTING Engineer.Preparation for Matrleu- lation and University Examinations.M.DAY BALDWIN, M.A.Address, 194 Park avenue.Tel.Uptown 1619.TEACHERS WANTED.\u2014\u2014 220 TEACHER WANTED, PROTESTANT holding elementary diploma, for school No.IV.Arundel.Term of § months.Oot.1, 1810.Salary $24.00 per month, Apply to C.J.STANIFORTH, Sec.- Treasurer, Arundel, Que.WANTED \u2014 FEMALE TEACHEÆR for Cabano Protestant School.Must have at least Elementary certificate.Apply, stating salary, to W.MATIIE- aus\" Secretary to Trustees, Caba10, ue.WANTED, ONE QUALIFIED Teacher, for Perkin's Protestant School, salary $25; board.$7.Apply to the Rev.© F.CRUCHON, Angers, Labelle Co.ue.DISSENTIENT SCHOOL MISTRESS Wanted for Rural School! at St.Hilaire, P.Q.Must have diploma for Elementary School.Write with references to B.F.CAMPBELL, St James's Club, Montreal.WANTED, FOR A RURAL SCHOOL, Protestant, Elementary, a Teacher for a term of eight months.Apply to C.F.KAINS, Cushing, Que.ROOMS AND BOARD.AT LACHINE\u2014ROOM AND EOARD with single bed in private family.Apply 66 Eleventh Avenis.Lachine.ROOMS TO LET.AN HLDERLY COUPLE, NOW ALONE.are desirous of renting their two spare rooms to a respectable young lady or quiet elderly gentleman.Telephone in house.Apply R.L., \u2018Witness\u2019 Office.UNFURNISHED, 3 ROOMS, BATH, with English couple; reasonable.122 Plymouth Grove, Canning, St.Antoine.150 DUROCHER STREET.FIRST class double and single rooms.WANT ADS.For The \u201cWITNESS MAY BE LEFT WITH A T.Chapman, Bookseller, 5,3 St.C therine st.West, or with R, Tur a- Grocer, Point St.Charles, 601 Wellina! 3 ton street, West of Subway.CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMEN TS : CASH TARIFF, ' Situation Vacant, Situation Want pills Wanted, Rooms To Let, od Found, Second-hand Articles Wanted es For Sale.20 Words for 10c.go for each additional worg, sertions for the price of four Six in.Property For Sale or To Let Other Articles For Sale.25 Words for 250 1c for each additional word, Six in.gertions for the price of four.25 Words for 500.NOTICE PARTICULARLY.Postage Stamps Will Be Accepted.The above rates are Cash with order When not prepaid numerous entries have to be mude, and the rate is, in consequence, much higher.No charge made in our books for any Main Office: 1718t.JamesSt,, Montrea advertisement of less than tive agate Unes space WANTED, FOR INSURANCE OFFICE, .mtn EE PE Ses niet ds A mes SES nié act POSER me No PRET TEN BT DER EW R EK TT Let rt gi qe A PCT RITES en a.oe CR rae LYLE CEA ar - dan REX ; SPAT pg TRAE Bey a pa = TN \" > Vi co A ge M 7 cu - we a - \u2019 oe.ES Vga op Le om ; Tmo EGE wip le > cf a A Re SRE cin Riel lS Sans = Sat cheer RM] xs > FÉERIES « DAILY WITNESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1910.I Tooke\u2019s Re Empress : 154 Inches Deep Made in quarter sizes | 121c each a.LES comfort of which their price.$1.25.R.J.Tooke Limited poy Good Service The success of this great shirt bnsiness is based on nothing else but good service.ing the right shirts when you want them.Carefully tailored, perfect fitting shirts, the is worth much more than - New Colored Shirts, .85, $1.00, Hav- 177 St.James Street | 493 St.Catherine St.W.FOOLED THE CZAR HIMSELF.Exploits of the Late \u2018Count\u2019 Leon- tlew, Confidence Man.rrespondent says: A.A London co p large ambition, fidence man arge Some Nikolaus Leontiew.has dled in \"While Voight, the cobbler of Ro ononiek fame, only imposed upon the Mayor of a small town, Leontiew succeeded in hoodwinking the Russian Government and even the Emperor Alexander III.himself.The so-called Count after a long residence in Abyssinia, returned in 1896 to his Russian home.He was accompanied by a black bodyguard of natives, who were aupposed to represent a mission from the Emperor of Abyssinia of which Leontlew was the head.On bis seeking an audience with the Czar he was received by the Russian Government with open arms.Honors were paid to the special mission, whose members were loaded with presents end with of Merit.bestowed _on Russians as a toksn of the Em- -tiew.had accomplished the objects of the Russian Order | many Place de la Bastille, Paris, and charged tenced th > 111i ; ; 8 pyssinia\u2019s graitude an order , , g en © accused to two months\u2019 trustees for the Hirsch millions, reveal garded as a doubtful friend of the |revolt against Spain but against the ; ; _ led A ar of Abyssinia.It was by one of, the shop\u2019s private detectives rigorous imprisonment and to pay a |a very satisfactory state of affalrs Sows, and the latter has lost lis popu- |'vice-regal government of Mexico and mess ance Montreal ant 5 eB only after the departure of the Count with stealing some cheap Jewellery.fine of Rs, 50.throughout all their colonies.There !larity owing to his recent change of (against the Bonaparte nsurpers of the tor of the \u2018Witness.and his misslon and thelr arrival back in Abyssinia that it was discovered the whole thing was a hoax.The Emperor Menelik had sent no such mission, and the Star of \u2018Abyssinia was a bogus order.But Leon- his journey.During his stay in Russia he interviewed many of the leading merchants convinced them of the excellent trade prospects in Menellk's country ang induced them to entrust him with large quantities of goods for sale.He sold the goods in Abyssinia, but the money he received for them went into his own pocket.In 1898 Leontiew appeared in Belgium as the 'Governor of Ethiopoia, and induced many financiers to form companies for the financing of worthless concessions In Abyssiania.In the course of time these came to grief and many people were ruined.The Belgian police making it too hot for him, he fled to Paris, whera he died.pe CLOCKS BETRAYED SHOPLIFTER (London \u2018Evening Standard.) A woman named Charlotte Berdulli was arrested outside a shop on the She denied the theft indignantly, and refused even more indignantly to allow herself to be searched.\u2018I am the wife of a magistrate,\u2019 she declared, \u2018and will have you punished for the indignity to which I am being subjected.\u201d Unfortunately for her, an alarm clock which she had stolen went off at this moment.Mme.Berulli was searched and three alarm clocks of small size, two watches and eight brooches: of small value were found in a Speclally made pocket inside her skirt.rm HIS BAD DREAM.(From tke Bombay \u2018Gazette.\u2019) Truly Oriental is the defence put forward by a prisoner at Allpore.Charged with stealing a Hindu idol with its ornaments, he' stated that the goddess told him in a dream the night before that, as she was not properly worshipped by the Hindu priest, ske would be better taken care of by him, a Mohammedan, and that unless he took charge of her worship she would in her wrath destroy his whole family.The magistrate, however, was not satisfied with the story, and sen- 5 NEWS OF JEWISH WORLD.In addition to the frequent destruc- \u2018tive fires in several towns and town- lets, the number of which has just been augmented by a great conflagration at Radoschkovitzi, Jewish communal life in the Pale seems to suffer greatly from the extensive emigration movement in many districts.From some townlets no less than a third of the Jewish population has emigrated to America.During the last three or four months about 6,000 Jews of Podo- Ha alone have left Russia, whilst the emigration from the provinces of Kieft (scene of the expulsions), Poltava and Minsk is no less striking.The semiofficial \u2018Rossia\u2019 advises the government to encourage Jewish emigration to Turkey, and seems to regret the difficulties which have arisen in connection with the Galveston parties.x Mr.Abe.Bailey, speaking at Kru- gersdorp, sald that the late Free State Ministers, who are now Gen.Botha\u2019s colleagues, had prepared a bill containing certain political disabilities for poorer Jewish immigrants, but that, \u2018under pressure, they withdrew it.The statement has create da profound sensation in South Africa.t « & @® An\u2019 important announcement hus Just been made by the Turkish Minister of Public Works.The minister has decided on the construction of several harbors, the preliminary measures have already been taken at a number of ports, including Jaffa, the port of Southern Palestine, and the landing place for passengers for Jerusalem, Hebron and Southern Judea.It is probable, therefore, that at no distant \u2018period the difficulties\u2019 attending em- \u2018barkation and debarkation at Jafta will be removed, greatly to the convenience of travellers by sea and to the immeasurable benefit of the commerce of Palestine.The building of & modern harbor at Jaffa, combined with the building of a railway through to the Egyptian frontier to - connect with the Anglo-Egyptian railways, will open up the whole of the rich plaing of Southern Phoenicia, and the El Arisch district.It is reported that large.tracts of land in this portion of Palestine have been purchased by Jewish land development compan- iles, and the proposed improvements Will lead to the speedy settlement of this territory by Jewish colonists.The annual report of the Ica (Jewish colonization society of Paris).The = has been a large increase in the Jewish population of both the Argentine Colonies, and also those in Brazil and Canada.The Palestinian colonieg are in a most flourishing position.From one Palestinian colony alone, Petach Tikvah, there was shipped 139,976 cases of oranges, as against 52,233 cases in the previous year.: .The long expected circular of M.Schwartz on the status of the specifically Jewish schools has appeared.With one stroke of the pen the ministers have deprived these institutions of.their privileges, and in the future their certificates will not be recognized anywhere.The Jews can only have a certain percentage of their children educated in the regular Russian schools, and now they are not even permitted to spend their own money on educating thelr own children, so as to be able to earn a decent Hving, even the Jewish cattle have a percentage law against them.The latest piece of regulation in this -regard is the decision of the mayor of Poltava to tu- mit only \u2018ten percent\u2019 of the cattle owned by Jews to the municipal pasture grounds.This, too, after the fact that the cattle of both Jew and non- Jew have fed on the same fields fof years, and neither hatred nor economic strife have demonstrated themselves among the four-legged animals.: ! * * * A novel institution has just been established in Jerusalem in the shape of an Institute for Hebrew music and chazanuth.The aims of the institute are to revive ancient Hebrew music, to train cantors to collect the songs and traditions of the Jewish race, to form a collection of Jewish musical Instruments and a library of Jewish music and poetry.The promoters appeal to lovers of Zion for assistance in thejr undertaking.* * + Professor Dr.Musil has returned to Vienna from his travels in .Arabia, which he undertook at the request of the Turkish Government.He has collected valuable material concerning the hygienic situation of the inhabitants of the Arabjan wilderness, and has fixed the location of the Biblical Mount Sinal.e The Odessa Jews are still searching for a suitable candidate for the coming parliamentary by-election.The Cadets have opened negotiations with them with regard to the candidature of Dr.Tchausansky, or of Advocate Grosfeld.The former is, however, re- religlon.It is possible that the Jews will recommend the banker, M.Wein- stein, to the Cadet Committee.M.Weinstein is a good Jew, and he is well known to the local voters.The negotiations are conducted in secret for fear of General Tolmatcheff's intervention.Spanish throne when Napate brother Joseph ai Spanish kingdom.TH cru in 1815.It was not uni] 18°0 , ond revolt hroke ont, Bey oy gustin de Iturbidas ami zuerrern.In this revelr \u2026.TROVE x = = Mexico was united, Trygr,: os.A typical Russo-Jewish tragedy has |leading figure thraywi just occurred at St.Petersburg.The with the Church, 1 +, local police station was recently en- [late in 1821 that the mn.riched by a Jewish convert, who did some clerical work in the evenings and attended the university in the day.He changed his religion because he was unable to find any employment or to proceed with his course of study.His mother was kept by a daughter.who worked at night and attended a school in the day time.A short time ago he came across, amongst the documents he was revising, an entry to the effect that his sister had registered herself as a prostitute in the capital.The broken-hearted convert commiit- ted suicide.Meanwhile, his sister discovered her brother's whereabouts and hurried to him to explain that she only obtained the \u2018yellow ticket\u2019 in order to procure the privilege of staying at St.Petersburg and of attending courses there.On hearing of her brother\u2019s death, she, too, ended her life by throwing herself into the river.MEXICO'S LOST DOCUMENT.The Country\u2019s Declaration of Independence Cannot be Found.(Mexican correspondence St.Louls \u2018Globe-Democrat.\u2019) In connection with the so-called first centennial of Mexican independence, which is to be celebrated all over the hepublie on September 16, the curious fact has developed that what is kncwn as the original Declaration of indepen- derce has been lost and all efforts to find it have failed.It is probable that the document has been stored away elther in this country or Europe and its hiding place forgotten.Unlike the United States of North America, Mexico does not have a formal Declaration of Independence.Th» only thing that approaches it was the decree issued Sept.31, 1821; signed by Augustin de Iturbide, who afterward became the first Emperor.Tt is curious that Mexico Is this year celebrating what It calls its centennial of independence, when as a matter of fact the revolution started by the patriot priest Hidalgo on Sept.15, 1810, was not a revolutionists were pri like definite form.Irvin.the real liberator ni Mies nation has rea\u2019lv ange | Ç eighty-nine veurs.| an empire, with ead hari ge the ty \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 THE LAW AND Lov (From the \u2018Law doi Certain it is thai ir a striking record of +: the law hy men Who + what is regarded ax the of man\u2019s life.In tu Campbell did not hein lorship till he was 54 Year, and Vice-Chancijt,, tinued to administer cu 89.And in the Ppreser- bury.despite his &3 vu.Fitzjames Stephen wig on Pollock, \u2018a tine Ti.Straight as a ramrod er domitahle vivacitv * Jen ten, who has been a Lo for twenty-three vears of the acutest minds © and Lord James of Her.appointed Queen's ry.| forty years ago, «iii Li assistance to the hivhe MEMORIAL TO A Dp] (From the Lors «- The town hall or | .: ji over, contains a tou: ~ , a pig who breathed 1.dred years ago.Ti handsome glass case oon In excellent presérvatin - neath a black marble 10.following inscription, i Dirge And - \u2018 Passersby, here von lel.tal remains of the pig w: for itself the imperishai.the discovery of the wi! Liineburg.\u2019 THE \u2018DAILY WITNESS fe p+r-,- published at No, 140 &t pas, Jr ! in the City of Montreal t- path Dougall and Dougall, both of Mantras: All business commnmiunicatine-« addressed John Dougall §& « No Fred ric, Ve Financial, - | BANKS.- ANQ \"HOCHELAGA, 95 St.James.M.121.BANQUE A MONTREAL, Head Office, 109 St.James street.M.3 .071.BANK OF NOVA SCOTIA, London and Lanc.BldE.BANK OF OTTAWA, 224 St.James, n.BANK OF TORONTO, cor.St.James and McG , 205 St.James st.PROVINCIAL BANK OF CANADA, 7 and 9 Place d\u2019Armes.M._ OYAL BANK OF CANADA, 147 St.James st.STERLING Bank of Canada, 157 St.James street, M, 3340.THE MOLSONS BANK, 200 St.James street.BANKS FOR SAVINGS.MONTREAL CITY & DISTRICT SAVINGS BANK HEAD OFFICE, 176 St.James street.(7150 Notre Dame street, West.504 St.Catherine street, Past.Cor.of Centre, Grand Trunk Conde streets, 1298 Notrs Dame street, East.946 St.Denië street, cor, of Rachel.881 St.Catherine street, West, cor.McGill College ave.Cor.Ontario and Maisonneuve sis.052 St.Lawrence st, cor.Pine ave.BANKERS.~ICKEN, J.B.& CO., 124 St.James.BOND DEALERS.investment Trust Co.,Ltd, 84 Notre Dame W.Main 2115-8.CUSTOMS BROKERS.MONSELL, H.W.& CO.B 28, Board of Trade.M.688.FINANOIAL AGENTS.WILSON-SMITH.R, 160 St.James st.M.950.; INVESTMENT BROKERS.HANSON BROS., 164 $t James.M.1239.Oliver E.Hurd, Merchants Bk.Bldg.M.130.- SHELDON, C.D., Investment Broker.Indus- trials, Railroad, Stocks and Bonds, Direct conn.with all exchanges, Stocks bought and scld on margine.Room 101, 180 St.James street.Phone Main 3700.| emma] Insurance ACCIDENT AND EMPLOYERS\u2019 LIABILITY GRIER, J.W., & CO., 58 St, Fran.-Xavier.M.240L BURGLARY AND PLATE GLASS.BURGLARY AND PLATE GLASS INS, CO., N.Y.L.Building, M.2367.GRIER, J.W.& CO., 58 St.Fran.-Xavier.M.240L Boller Inspection.& Ins.Co.of Canada, 227 \u201cBeard of Trade Bldg.Office Main 2046.Residence, Westmount, 1994.CALEDONIAN FIRE INS.CO.11% St.James st M.670 and M.226 COMMERCIAL UNION ASSURANCE (COMPANY, 232-236 St.James st.Main 748.FIDELITY-PHENIX INS.CO.OF NEW YORK, 1-6 St.John street.Malin 3630.INSURANCE CO.OF NORTH AMERICA, St.John st., M.3630._ Law,Union &'Rock Ins.Co.112 St.Jas.M.3213.LONDON MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO., H.- Blachford, 180 St.James st.M.868.New York Underwriters\u2019 Agency, 151 St.Jas.street.Main 1105.FIRE INS.AND PLATE GLASS.Mount Royal Ins.Co.M.3929.M.6599.FIRE INSURANCE BROKERS.COLE, F.MINDEN, 234 St.James, M.3182, GRIER.J.W.& CO.53 St.Fran.-Xavier.M.2401.Hampson, R & Son,Limited, 1-6 St.John.M.3630, TAYLOR, E.T.& SON, 40 Hospital st.M.2205.LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANIES, Sun Life Assur.Co., Sun Life Bldg.M.396.LIFE AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE.McCaw, Wm., Royal Trust Bldg.107 St.Jas.M.3383, LIFE INSURANCE.Mutual Life Ins.Co.of New York, Royal Trust Bldg.M.1311, MARINE AVERAGE ADJUSTERS.Boyd, Phillips & Co, 24 Coristine Bldg.Main 3200.MARINE INSURANCE BROKERS.HAMPSON, R.& SON, Limited, 1-5 St.John \u201c street.M.3630.REAL, ESTATE AND INSURANCE, Benn, Alfred, 107 St.James.M.2360; West 2846 Howell,A.W.D.,212 St.James.M.3497; Mt.188 MITCHELL, JAS.M., 214 St.James.M.549.Up 2974 ROSS, H.J., 180 St.James street.Maln 1180, ROSS REALTY CO., 30 St.John street.M.5261, SIMPSON, THE CRADOCK CO., 205 St.James st.Main 714.Main 2525.SIMPSON,H.M.,40 Renouf Bldg.Tel.Up 2363-4068.PAWNBROKERS.ARONSON & RUTENBERG.115 Craig w.M.4274, D.LAZARUS,, 222 Notre Dame st.East.Main 2932.STOCK BROKERS.(Member: of ths Montreal Stock Exchange.) BARLOW & CO., 82 St.Fran.Xav.M.3849.BURNETT & CO.,12 St.Sucrament st M.730n, Carsley,S.& Co., 117 St.Fran.Xavier.M.6548.McCUAIG BROS & CO.,157 St.James.M.923-4 McCuaig.Colin M.& Co., 67 St.Fran.-Xavier.Main 7270.McCURDY, F.B.& CO.4 Hospital.M.739.McDOUGALL & COWANS, 95 N.Dame W.M.1733.MOAT, R.& CO., 40 Hospital street.Te).M, 3 & 4.TURPIN, W.J.& Co., 87 St.Fran.-Xav.st, M WILSON-SMITH, R & CO., 160 St.James.M.and BRANCHES.M.1561.- 340 3029.* \u2018The \u201c Witness\u2019 stands in the front rank of Canadian Newspapers\u2019\u2014Toronto News.sors \u201cI saw it in the \u201c Witness,\u201d and 1 believe 1 9 0 it>\u2014That\u2019s what they all say.GUASSIFIED THE MONTREALWI INESs\u201d BUSINESS!\" (TELEPHONE DIRECTORY TRUST ' COMPANIES, Crown Trust Co., The, 86 N, Dame.W.M.7010.Investment.Trust Co.,Ltd,, 84 Notre Dame W.Montreal Trust Co, 2 Flace d'Armes.M.8704.The Royal Trust Co.M.3660-3663.TRUST AND DEPOSIT VAULTS.NATIONAL TRUST CO.Ltd, Nat.Trust Bldg.M.4698 .Professional ADVOCATES.ARMSTRONG, EDGAR N., Bk Ottawa Bldg.M, 1120.Atwater,Duclos & Bond, 160 St.James.M.338 BAKER, W.A., 58 Bt.James st.Main 3540.BLAIR & LAVERTY, Can, Life Bldg.M.1413.BRODEUR & GARAND, 80 St.Gabriel.M.2223, BROSSEAU, BROSSEAU & TANSEY, 160 St.James street.M.1490-1, BROWN, MONTGOMERY & McMICHAEL, 164 St.James st.M.42-43 BUSTEED & LANE, New York Lite Bid.M.1 CAHAN, C.H.K.C., Royal Ins.Bldg.M.4186.Chauvin, Baker & Walker,179 St.Jas.Cruikshank, W.G., X.C.,107 St.James.M.2380.DANDURAND, HIBBARD, BOYER & GOSSELIN, Liv., Lond & Globe Bldg.M.1453 and 2635.Decarie & Decarie, 413-16 Que.Bk Bldg.M.1269.ELLIOT, HENRY J., 37 Can.Life Bldg.M.2771.FERGUSON,J.M., K.C., 179 St.James.M.2054, GEOFFRION, GEOFFRION & CUSSON, Banque du Peuple Chambers, 97 St.James st.M.10.GOUIN, LEMI MURPHY & BERARD, 806-811 Quebec Bank Building.M.3093-4-5.GREENSHIELDS, GREENSHIELDS & LANGUE- DOC.86 Notre Dame West.Main 8596.Hickson, Campbell & Couture, Can, Life Bldg.HOLT, CHARLES M., K.C., Guardian Bldg.M.14.Hutchins, Horace A., K.C., 1561 St.James.M.2118.JACOBS, HALL & GARNEAU, Power Bldg.Craig st.M.174.LAVALLEEB & DELFAUSSE, 97 St.James.M.1212.Lighthall & Harwood,Quebec Bk Bldg.M.2382.MACALISTER & COTTON, Royal Insurance Bldg.M.4989.McCormick & Lebourveau, 107 St.James.M.2497.McGoun & Pelletier, 157 St.James.M.1978.MATHIBU, \u2018A.PAPINEATU, 180 St.James st.McMaster&Papineau,Can.Life Bldg M1749-7332 MEREDITH,MACPHERSON, HAGUE & HOLDEN.205 St.James st.Main 27-28.PATTERSON & JENKINS.180 St.Jas.M.3960, SMITH, MARKEY, SKINNER, PUGSLEY & HYDE, Metropolitan Bldg., 179 St.James street, M.4944, TRIHEY, BERCOVITCH & KEARNEY, 151 St.James street.M.5100.VIPOND & VIPOND, Bell Tel.Building.M.3513.ACCOUNTANTS.DURNFORD, GEO., C.A., F.C.A.Can, Canada Life Building.M.450.ROSS, H.J., 180 St.James.M.1180.ANALYSTS AND ASSAYERS.DONALD, DR.J.T., 112 St.Fran.Xav.M.2264.HERSEY, DR.MILTON L.171 St James.M.252.AUCTIONEERS.Fraser Bros.,453 St.Jas & 131 Inspector.M.790.M.& CO., 99 and 101 Metcalfe.Up 2546.KHARNS, W.M., 82 University street.Up \"3809.RAE & DONNELLY, 241-243 St.James.M.2017 BUSINESS COLLEGES.DAVIS, J.D., Mont, Bus.Coll.Up 151.MISS GRAHAM, 109 Metcalfe.Up 2938.MONTRBAL BUS.COLL.46 University Up 151.MOUNT ROYAL BUS.COLL.Y.M.C.A.Bldg.Up 4297 ELOCUTION.McCLAUGHLIN, R., 22 Burton ave.Tel.W.1560.NOTARIES AND MARRIAGE LICENSE ISSUERS.DICKSON, NORV 107 St.James st.M.1207.DUFF, J.M., 107 St.James st.M.2502.WILKS & BURNETT, Merchts.Bank Bldg.M.5500.PATENT ATTORNEYS.BUDDEN, H.A.,601 Que, Bk Bldg.M.1207.EVANS, OWEN N., Mchts, Bank Bldg.M, 192, Fetherstonhaugh, Dennison & Co., Liv, Lon.& Globe Bldg.M.830.REAL, ESTATE MANAGERS.TYLEE, CHAS.D., 107 St.James.M.6799.Retail ANTIQUE FURNITURE.JENKINS, B.M.& T., Phillips Square.Up 1076.ANTIQUE MAHOGANY.FURNITURE, ETC, McANDREW, D., 262 Dorchester west.Main 4414.ANTIQUES, OLD CHINA, SHEFFIELD PLATE.WATSON, R., 165 Peel street.ARTISTS\u2019 MATERIALS AND PAINTERS SUPPLIES.FERRIS.P., 665 St Catherine st.west.Up 4412, WATSON, R.156 Pel street, \u2014\u2014 BAND AND ORCHESTRAL INSTRUMENTS, MUSIC AND REPAIRS.> Herdy,Edmond, 38 Notre Dame West.M.246\u20ac LAVALLEE, CHAS., 35 St.Lawrence Boul, M.554.BIRD DEALER AND FANCIER.WILLS, R.C., 177 -Bleury street, Montreal, BLACKSMITHS AND MACHINISTS.CROWE, J, & SONS, 17 St.Georgest.M.804.Estate J.K.Macdonald, 318 Craig w.M.2591.BLANK BOOK MAKERS.BORRIEH.J., 81 Lagauchetiere st, west.M.1812.BOOKBINDERS AND PRINTERÉ.John Loveli & Son, Limited, '33 St.Nicholas strest.-M.BOOKS, STATIONERY AND POSTALS.ASHFORD, C., 840 Dorchester-st.&.Up.1342.CHAPMAN, A.'T., 513 St.Catherine st.w.Up 927 PHELAN, F.E,, 437 St.Cath.W.Up 1490.BOOTS AND SHOES\u2014(Retail).BERNIER, OCTAVE, 62 Notre Dame st.east.- Central Shoe Store, 785 St.Cath.W.-Up 2604 - .RONAYNE BROS., 485 Notre Dame west.M.47 .BLOAN BROS.638 St.Cat erine st.west.Up 917.BUILDERS AND CONTRACTORS, Byers & Anglin, 18 St.Alexis st.Malin 5326.\" JACKSON & CO., 329-335 Hibernia et.M.4183.\" LOU.+, wil BUILDERS\u2019 BRICK AND STONE.Morrison, T.A.& Co, Mechanics\u2019 Inst.M,3300, CARPET CLEANERS.DOMINION CARPET BEATING CO., 262 Dorchester street west.Main 4414.2 CARPENTERN AND JOINERS.EVELY, WM, 449 Bleury street.Up 3618.JACKSON & co., 829-336 Hibernia at, M.4153.CHEMISTS AND DRUGGISTS.TANSEY, O.H., 218 Sherbrooke West, cor.City Councillor st.Up 942 and 5189.TREMBLE, J.E., 644 St.Cath.W.Up 901.Open all night and every day.COAL.COHEN, L.& SON, 36 Prince street.M.881., ROBERTSON F., 206 St.James street.Main 4610.CONFECTIONERS.LOGAN, W.J., 214 Sherbrooke west, cor.Bleury.Up 1793.COUNTER CHECK BOOKS.COLE, E.A.& CO., 311 St.Paul.Main 2024.DEPARTMENT STORES.LTMIRE, O, & CO., 204 St.Denis st.E.2624.MORGAN, HENRY & CO., Ltd., Philips sq.Up 2651.The John Murphy Co, Ltd, St.Cath.W.Up 8010 VALLIERES, 605 St.Cath, st, E.Tel.E! 832, Viau, Eugene, 1321-1329 St.Cath.E.ERE.DRY GOODS\u2014 (Retail).Hamilton Co., The, St.Cath., het.D ; » GE \" mm.& Mount'n VY, JAS.A.SONS, cot.St.Mountain.Up 3305.: St Cath, & DYERS AND CLEANERS.British American Dyeing Co., 215 McGill st.M, 774.DECHAUX DYE WORKS, 62 St.Cath.East.E.1 Royal Dye Works, 445 Guy st.Tel.Up 644.ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES.INTERNATIONAL ELECTRIC CO., 59 Bleury st.FENCES\u2014(Retail.) JEFFREY, M., 137 Youville square.M.2773, FLORISTS AND DECORATORS.BAIN, S.S., 468 St.Catherine st.w.Up 2486, HALL & ROBINSON, 855 St.Cath.st.w.Up 3378.FOREIGN STAMPS, ETC.CENTURY STAMP CO., 150 Peel st.Up 4142, FURNITURE AND CARPETS.PRINCE, THE 1.8.CO., 85 St.Lawrence Boul.E.209 RENAUD, KING & PATTERSON, LIMITED, 740 West St.Catherine st.Tel.Up 681.GLASS (PLATE, SHEET AND FANCY).RAMSAY, A.FRANK & CO., 748 St.Paul.M.578 GLOVES AND CORSETS.PARIS KID GLOVE STORE, 140 Peel® St, : Up 1068.L.GROCERS\u2014 (Retail).BEAULIEU, 63 Osborne St.Tel, Up 5172.BROWN, W.J., 888 St.Cath.st.W.Up 2900 and 2001 DESAULNIERS, J.L., 494 St.Lawrence.E.958.Dionne, A., Son & Co., 581 St.Cath.W.Up 2200-1.ENGLISH PROVISION CO., \u20ac81 St.Cath, W.Up 2416 Geddes, 8.J., 706 St.Cath.W.Up 934 & 985.GRAHAM GEO.572 St.Cath, W.Up 1347-48, U p 34886.STRONG & STRONG, 430 Lagauchetiere W.M.6337.TRUDEAL, A., 844 St.Catherine st.E.E 3332, .messe - \u2018THE CITY ICE CO., Ltd, \u2018The Wm.Rutherford Sons Co., 2818 - .SMEATON BROS, GRANITE AND MARBLE MERCHANTS.HAWKINS, F.108-15 Bleury street.M.3571.HARDWARE (Retail).DRYSDALE, D,, 159 Craig West.Maln 169.SURVEYER, L.J.A., 52 St.Lawrence, M.1914.BATTERS AND FURRIERS.GRACE, GEO.A., 467 Bleury st.Up 71.37 : HOTELS.CORONA, Uptown.Up.3840.John Healy Mgr.GRAND UNION (F.J.Murray, Prop.).348 Notre Dame West.M.6141.HOTEL CARSLAKE, 571-577 St.James st, M.6133.PLACE VIGER, Cralg st.(opp.Viger Square).M.3134 ST.JAMES HOTEL, 540 St.James st.M.6134.VICTORIA HOTEL, Windsor & St.James streets, Main \u20ac147.\u2018Wilhelmina Private House, 30 Fort.Up 3322.HOUSE FURNISHINGS.City House Fur.Co., 1332 St.Law.Boulv.E.8298 ICE MERCHANTS.Archambault, Nap.80 6 Colonial avenue.St.Louis 843; Westm\u2019t 95.295 Craig st, West, Tel.3957, 3958.: LADIES\u2019 AND GENT\u2019S HAIRDRESSING PARLOR.PALMER, J.&SON,Ltd.,103-5-7 Notre Dame W.M.391 LADIES\u2019 HAIRDRESSERS AND WIG MAKERS.ASSELIN, MADAME, 260 St.Cath.St.W.Up 4152, PALMER, J.& Son, Ltd., 441 St.Cath, W.Up 4307.LADIES\u2019 TAILORING.N.Y.Ladies\u2019 Tailoring Co., 867 St.Cath.West.Up 3819.\u2018 LITHOGRAPHERS.THE BENALLACK LITHO, LETS CO., Ltd, 80-84 Victoria square.M.3398.Yale Litho & Print Co., 222-6 St.Paul.M.763 LUMBER MERCHANTS.425 Atwater avenue, Main 3457.The Laurentlan Lumber Co., 207-8 Board of Trade Bldg.Main 163.OFFICE FURNITURE.Canada Office Furn.Co., 231 St.James.M.1691 OPTICIANS, FOX, F.C., 32 McGill Coll.Ave.Up 1185.NOURY, J.C.(Specialist), 30-32 St.Cath.B.B.3403 OUTDOOR ADVERTISERS, THE WARE CO\u2019Y., Ltd, 95 St.Genevieve.Up 116.PAINTERS AND DECORATORS, BACON, J., 75 Hallowell ave.Phone Westmount 1538 BLACKWOOD, P.M., 70 Delisle.M.5073.BOPP, A., 176 St.George straet.M.4759.| BOON, HEDLEY W., 30 Quesnel street.Up 3200.CHAPMAN, WM.J., 215 Elm ave.Mount 886.DANIELS, H., 133 Fulford street.Up 3118.MURPHY & SON, 80 Drummond st.Up 1337.SONNE, CHRIS, Jr., 73 Aylmer street.Up 2699.STEWART, WM., 167 Rielle ave., Verdun.M.3190, TAYLOR, F.N.2325 St.Lawrence.E.6913.\u2019 PHUTO ENGRAVERS.DOUGALL, JOHN & SON, \u2018Witness\u2019 Bldg.M.T.10 Cote st.M.73 4090.PHOTOGRAPHERS.DUMAS, ALBERT, 251 St.Catherine street (near Sanguinet), B.556.East, PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES, HOGG, THE D.H.CO., 160 Craig West.M.1953.HOUGHTON, F.L., 128 Peel street.Up 3634.SMITH, R.F., 116 Notre Dame West, M.1467.UNITED PHOTOGRAPHIC STORES, Ltd., 189 St Peter.M.453.PIANOS, PLAYER PIANOS AND ORGANS.DIES, GEO.E.589 St.Catherine W.Up 4871.PICTURES AND PICTURE FRAMERS.EDLINGTON, CHAS, 418 Sc.Cath.st T7\" - 1080.HEASLEY, G.R., 315 Bleury.Up 1815, PLASTERER.CROSS, H.R., Plastering, etc., 931 St.Urbain street, Tel.E.1149.PLUMBERS, GAS AND STEAM FITTERS.GORDON & EGAN, 87A Mansfleld.PRINTERS AND STATIONERS.ATLAS ENG.& P'T\u2019G CO., 376 Cralg W.M.2928.Fortier, Jos., cor.St.Peter & Notre Dame.M.444-5 DOUGALL, JOBN & SON, \u2018Witness\u2019 Bldg.M.4090.MCALLISTER, A.& C.,14 Hospital st.M.2157.PROVISION MERCHANTS.The Stentora Market, 438 St.Cath.West.Up ROOFERS.REED, GEO.W.& CO., Ltd.,337 Craig.M.937.RUBBER STAMPS, STENCILS, ETC.LEGALLEE BROS., 45 Bleury street.M.2458.Montreal Stencil Works.221 .cG11l.Main 1434.Walker & Campbell, cor.N.Dame & McGill.M.775.SADDLERS AND HARNESS MAKERS.Bissonnette, Eric & Co., 91 Inspector.M.6379.LAMONTAGNE, LIMITED, No.338 Notre Dame West, Balmoral Block.M.413.ROBERTS, J.W., 336 St.James st.M.1966.SCRAP IRON, METALS, RAGS, PAPER.Dominion Waste Paper Co.563 Craig E.East 2075.WALKER, J.R.& CO.35 Common st.M.1338-9.SEED MERCHANTS.EWING, WM.& CO., 146 McGill st.M.184, WM.RENNIE CO., Ltd., 190 McGill st.M.2392.SIGNS AND SHOW CARDS.MORGAN, FRED., Crescent&St.Cath.Up 2703.SPORTING GOODS, ETC.COSTEN, T.& CO., 48 Notre Dame st W.M.2856.SMYTH, JAS.M., 370 Dorchester W.Up 1249 & 5153.SURVEYER, L.J.A, 52 St.Lawrence.M.1914.STEAM LAUNDRIES.Crown Laundry Co.4218 St.Catherine West.Westmount 1059.HOUSEHOLD WASHING CO., 75 William.M.8559.New York Steam Laundry, 10 Ontario st.W.East 1372.The Globe Laundry Co.,33 Laurier ave East.St.Louis 469.TOILET LAUNDRY CO., Ltd, Up 3480.TROY LAUNDRY, Verdun.Maïn 3644.TRUNKS AND TRAVELLING BAGS, LAMONTAGNE, LIMITED.Phone Main 413.Notre Dame, Balmoral Block.TYPEWRITER AND OFFICE SUPPLIES.CANADIAN OLIVER TYPEWRITER Co, 275 St.Martin street.Uptown 1878.' UNDERTAKERS.La Compagnie \u2018H.Bougie, Limited.179 Craig E.Tel.E 3175; 1460 St.Catherine E.Tel.1702; 1929 St.Lawrence Blvd.Tel.Saint : Louis 250.Seale & Son, cor.Beaver Hall and Dorchester.Up 969.Residence Tel.Up 2671.TEES & CO.912 St.Cath, W, Up 1653.WRAY, WM, 113 University st.Up 2667.UPHOLSTERING.McANDREW, D., 262 Dorchester W.M.VALET SERVICES.OWNES, A.110 Inspector street.MY VALET (Melntyre & Co.), 411 Bleury street Uptown 4213.WOOD AND COAL.69 McGill st.Main 4622.244 St.James st.M.5364.425 Richmond st.4414, AILE, ANDREW, Bone Bros, Ltd.Westmount 19.Wholesale ASBESTOS AND ASBESTOS MATERIALS.CANADIAN ASBESTOS CO., 42, 44.46, 48 Youville sq., (cor.St.Peter).Main 611 and 332, CUNNINGHAM,JAMES, 320 Craig st.East.M.3940.BANANAS.BANANAS all the year round at JOS.BROWN & SONS,29 & 30 Youville sq, Main 4095-4096 BALATA BELTING.J.R.Baxter,102 St.Ant\u2019e, M.847.Balata Belting BOOTS AND SHOES\u2014 (Wholesale).AMES & HOLDEN, Limited, 183-207 Inspector st, Main 5440.DAOUST, LALONDH & CO., 49 Victoria sq.M.4742 ROBINSON, JAMES, 184 McGill st.M.344, CHINA AYDP CROCKERY.CASSIDY.THE JOHN L.CO.Ltd.339-343 st.Paul.M.1242.DRUGGISTS\u2019 SUNDRIES AND MANUFACTURERS\u2019 AGENTS.PALMER, J.& SON, Ltd., 5.7 Debresoles st.M.126$ EGGS AND BUTTER.HISLOP & HUNTER, 117 King etree!, 3m =u FENCES\u2014 (Wholesale) Pittsburg Perfect Fence Co.127 YT.M.2773.FISH AND OYSTERS\u2014(Who!esaiet.Leonard Bros., 20-26 Youville sq.M GENERAL PRODUCE, WARD, JOSEPH & CO., 115D Youvilla « 2 GROCERSZ\u2014 (Wholesale), LAPORTE, MARTIN & SORTE, CO, Ltd.BAEZ.EAC 2 MATHEWSON'S SONS, 202 MeGill stv «rr LEATHEL BELTING.4406-748, SCOVER EF es AT.McLAREN, D.K., Ltd, 30.11 Cralg W.M mn LUMBER MERCHANTS.CREAM.D.& CO., Canada Te Bldg FEDFERN, J.H.920 Charlevoix More PAPER DEALERS.COLE, E.A.& CO, 311 St.Pau! 3.» © BDWIN CRABTREE & SONS, 8 Lemoine 8 Mju LITTLE, T.B.& CO., 130 Crag W Main \u201cIE NORTHERN MILLS CO., 278 st Pant M PORTLAND CEMENT AND BUILDERS SUPPLIES.HYDE & WEBSTER, 257 St.Cath.W Uno 4 RECEIN TRS OF FISH\u2014(Wholesals) HATTON, D.& CO.Established 1874.M.IMK TEAS\u2014(Wholesale).BROWN, R.H., 14 Hospital st.Tel.M.104 TRUNKS AND BRAGS Whalesale) Eveleigh, J.& Co.Ltd, 245 St.Jas M Manufacturers AERATED WATERS (GINGER Al ALLAN, ROBT.GURD & CO.,CHAS., Ltd.76 Main 731, and Merchants 52.BAG MANUFACTURERS.THE CANADIAN BAG CO.Ltd, 402 wii-=m M.3289.£6 Tlorchester W.M 1764 Bleury sire SENT AND ART GLASS.GRIMSON, G.J.E, 76 and 78 St.Antoine < BISCUIT MANUFACTURFRS MONTREAL BISCUIT CO.(THE).bf ave., Mount 108 and 107.BOOT AND SHOF MANUFACTURETS ROBINSON, JAMES, yo BOX MANUFACTUEYFTS ESPLIN, G.& J.12 Duke st.M 387 MARTIN FRERES & CO., i» Shears st THE WM.RUTHERFORTYSUN5S C\"- Atwater ave, M.345%.184 MeGill st BREAD MANUFACTURER= AIRD.JAMES M.159-167 St, Urbain.Mc GRAHAM BROS.201 St.Antoine.Tel.T° SMITH, GEORGE, 456 «uv 5° V9 loon HARRISON.DENT.317-327 Pr.Albers = _ STUARTS, LTD., 609 Rivard st.St Tnt > WYLIE, W.& J.S.,, 344 Bleury CANDY MFRS.\u2014 (Whales MONTREAL BISCUIT CO, (THE.1° ave.Mount 106 and 107.ELECTRIC FIXTURES Canada Electric Co.,230 Dorchester < EXTRACTS.HENRI JONAS & CO.391 St.Pau = FURNITURE MANUFACTURE LABBE.GEO.H.& CO., 350 St, In.MACHINES AND METAL tv THE CANADIAN OLIVER TYPHY 275 St.Martin.Uptown IS7*.METAL AND GLASS MF LangwellG.& Son,1094Dorcheste\u201d SAFES AND VAULT Doe Ahern Safe Co.Limiled.Sunwvre James.M.S15.Factory, 10-07 st.St.Henry.SASH AND DOOR MANUFAC MACFARLANE, R.& CO., Ltd.no 5 Richmond streets.Up 2288 and °° RUTHERFORD, WM, & SONS 1 Aiwater avenue.Main 3857.RANGES.+ St.Fs-! STOVER, McClary Manf.Co., 334 WIRE GOODS, ETU [ LL | NATIONAL WIRE WORKS, 51 Craig © © oat FT & pa ° 1 hg "]
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