The daily witness, 21 septembre 1907, samedi 21 septembre 1907
[" 50 \u2014- $0 BT V of \u2018the Roman Cath- olies of Montreal is that known as the \u2018Fete des Morts) which is to be observed toymorrow in the cemetery at Cote des Neiges.The central idea of this ceremony is to offer up special prayers in behalf of the souls of all the faithful dead, and until this year the observance has taken place on All Souls Day, in the first week in November.The change to an earlier date has been made because the weather at that time of the year in Canada is often far too wet or cold to allow of such a eervice in the open without considerable discomfort to the,participants, to say the least.- .This \u2018fete des morts\u2019 is by no means peculiar to Montreal, or even to Canada, but is observed among all ° Catholics throughout the world.It is, however, only within comparatively recent years that it has taken on in Montreal the character of a united demonstration by all the parishes in the diocese.According to an old legend, the ceremony was first instituted in the monas tery of Clugny, in the year 993 and the following is the account given of the circumstance in which it originated.A pilgrim returning from the Holy Land was THE LOCAL \u2018CALVARY\u2019 Showing people gathering round the space enclosed for th of @ouls were audible.The hermit had imprecations of the devils, at the number of souls kept from them by the prayers and alms of the pious; they were especially enraged, hq said, against the abbot and monks of Clugny.The pilgrim on his arrival aquainted Odilo, abbot of Clugny, with what had come to his knowledge, and the abbot thereupon appointed the day after All Saints Day, to be kept in his monastery as the annual festival for \u2018All Souls\u2019 The observance was quickly adopted by the whole Catholic world.In another acdourt the scene is transferrerd to Sicily, and the institution to the year Whether or not the present obgerv- ance in the Roman Catholic Church had its origin in this legendary story, it is certain that the Roman Catholic Church has observed \u2018the \u2018fete des morts\u2019 for centuries, and the doctrine upon which the \u2018observance is founded is that while = \u2018Fete des Morts.\u2019 So htm comzelled by a storm to land on a rocky isiand somewhere between Sieily .and Thessalonica.Here he found a hermit, who told him that among the cliffs of the island was situated an opening into the under world, through which huge flames ascended, and the groans and cries the souls utterly condemned after death must suffer eternally, those sent to purgatory for cleansing and purification can.be relieved by the prayers, alms and other pious deeds of the church militant on Thus the preachers \u2018at the annual observance usually press home to earth.also frequently heard the complinte and tives \u201cean only be paid by fervent end ing on them : the.\u2018thought that they should same solicitude for | the of the will be shown for them when they, too, pass to .the great beyond.The custom: gradually | from special prayers for the dead in church to visiting the graves of the departed, and there offering up prayers, and now in Mont- .real the \u2018gathering in the cemetery on the occasion of the \u201cfete des morts\u2019 is \u2018ing ffty) fheusapd } perved.in Roman \u2018Catholic.Canada, e priests at .the - \u201cand in particular fai the country dis- triets.It\u2018 is a very touching scene in the churches on All Saints Day, the People the \u2018claims have upon the living, telling the that the del they owe to their frequent prayer for \u2018Ji the welfare of their - souls, and impress- - show the \u2019 \u201cdead \u2018as they hope extended \"people atthe ger- : orrow\u2019 ;.corem on , an addremm © Church of Notre Moto by Gordes, Montreal.) Dame was found- Whe wil} b = after the solemn -vespers appropriate fo big bell of the chur that day have been chanted, to see.fle | every evening during the whole month of people joining in the chanting of the fit November gs a signal for the offering of 2 e BE .; Bl vespers for All Souls Day, and after that visiting the graves of \u2018their dear ones in the cerpètery.Wholé families go to their ; , \u2018tespective lots, Lb : and, kneeling by A | the Httle mounds, | offer up prayers for | the souls of their dead, Thereaft the evening as a-rule is religiously kept in silence, Young men abstain from paying their usual Sunday visits to their sweethearts, .it being the custom \"for all to remain at .home and offer up further prayers at the knell of the bell - at eight o'clock.| © Of course, such Bl: an observance has M had its effect en, \"the imaginations of .those who live sim- ; ple lives in cour ® dit: has .contributed ° 3 ghosts who have Bl .evine back into the 9 ÿ world on that par- \"Xcular night to im- \u201csplore the prayers of the living.In Mogtreal i ed \u2014 to toll the SEPTEMBER 21, 1907, § try\u2018 districts, and ° rch at eight o\u2019clock prayers for the dead, and as a rule in all Roman Catholic families at that moment, the bell being heard throughout the whole city, all the occupations in which the people are engaged are at once dropped, while the families go on their knees and recite a \u2018De profundis\u2019 for their dead.The united manifestation in the cemetery is a later development, and while every Roman Catholic who can possibly manage it makes it a point to obey the call of the archbishop to that service, nearly every parish and every religious society make it a point also to have its own private pilgrimage to the cemetery at Cote des Neiges, usually some time during November.Beyond that, during the same montH numerous offerings are made by families for masses to be said for the repose of their departed mem- ] bers, and communions for the same object are very numerous in every church during the whole month.It will thus Prrcx, Oux CxyT the united manifestation in the cemetery, and has this year caused the following official communication to be sent to all the priests of the diocese:\u2014 \u2018The curés of the city are asked to recall to their faithful the invitation which Monseigneur addresses to all Catholics without distinction.Above all, it is the desire of His Grace that this pious and beneficial movement for solemn prayer for the departed should be general in the diocese.What force and effect there will be in this touching appeal to the di vine mercy if, on the same day, all the parishes of the diocese unite in a grand manifestation! As much as possible, then, on the afternoon of Sunday next, m place of vespers, the \u2018fete des morts\u2019 will be held.The \u2018De profundis\u2019 will be chanted in the cemefery.A sermon will be preached to the people.And lastly, the \u2018Libera\u2019 will be chanted.In all parishes where it will be difficult, because of the distance, for a large number of the faithful to come in the afternoon, the ceremony should take place immediately after Grand Mass.\u2019 ; ; Archbishop Bruchesi will himself preside at to-morrow\u2019s ceremony, and deliver an address at the close.He will, according to custom, be supported by an impos- ing array of the local dignitaries of hie church.The service will be of the usual character.A large band will be present to play funereal music and to lead the choir.Two of the most eloquent local preachers will deliver sermons to the people.The sermon in French will be preached by Father Rondot.of the Dominican Order, who was formerly In charge of the parish.of Notre Dame at St.Hyacinthe,and who has been a preacher during retreats at several churches in Montreal for many years past.The sermon in English will be delivered by Father Ethelbert, of the Franciscan Order.A feature of the proceedings will be \" FACING THE HUGE CROWD SHOWN BELOW the chanting of the \u2018De profundis,\u2019 and Archbishop Bruchesi presiding at the \u2018Fete des Morts\u2019 He is shown on the right of the picture, while on the left is Bishop Racicot, who is described as one of the most bumble-minded and lovable of the Roman Catholic clergy.be seen that devotion towards the dead is one of the most religiously kept insti- | tutions among the Roman Catholics in the province of Quebec, Archbishop Bruchesi, since he was elevated to his present high office, has always manifested the greatest interest in \u2018and to destroy the earth by fire.at the close, of that solemn funeral anthem, \u2018Libera me Domine de Morte Aeterna,\u2019 the words of which may be translated, \u2018Deliver me, O Lord, from eternal death, in that dreadful day when both heaven and earth are shaken et thy coming, to judge the whole world, LA « Ÿ .7 rs or ; \\ .N - - \u2019 - \u201c Pi + \u2018HILL FROM THE FOOT OF \u201cCALVARY.\u201d THE SCENE LOOKING DOWN -OVER Fi of thé \u201cTete des.Morts\u2019 in the cemetery at ois des Neiges \u2018last your TT This.ig &- section of the Encrnjoup crowd that gathered for the ob \u2014 RY v 0 a.Bini CF EB IRR tae i Sc] Fd ve 05e = mat po eee UI pV I À LS w 1 2 a dE vr yf RE SPT MRR i, a Com LTS THE Be Nav Co.I _ oy es J) DS ni wr ab SHY) 20 he King of Italy has conferred the and other books into Talis, for which Commander's Cross of the Italian Crown] he was decorated by the Emperor of Order on Professor Austria.on In an address on the Zionist Russia at the \u2018conference o -{ Zionists at The ' Hague, Dr.J.Launa, editor of \u2018Das Judieche Volk,\u201d the cffi- | cial organ of the Zionist Central Committee of Russia, contended that the development of Hebrew in the lands of the exile must be artificial.He is, therefore, opposed to to the establishment of Hebrew periodicals in Russia, but advocated instead the improvement of \u2018Hash- kafah\u2019 of Palestine, where alone Hebrew, | the national language of the future, can jhave a normal development, and the establishment of a great Yiddish daily in.Russia, radish being the national lan- present.\u2026 Te ere is annoumced of Dr.8.R.Mell, Chief Rabbi of Trieste.Born at Ferrara in 8125, he was appointed Assistant Rabbi at Trieste in 1855, attaining to the higher post some years later.He was esteemed for his warm heart, charitable spirit and great learning.W.A.Graham Clarke, American Con- \u2018sul-General at Cabul, Afghanistan, says \u2018in his report that, fabulous as may appear the legends \u2018that the country de- \u2018rives its name from a grandson of King Tess of ussian Dr.Heari de Rothschild, of Paris, has himself in commmnieation with the eut naval and military rg haan the se orga at his own.expense medical pe for the F reach troops at Casablanca, a military hospi has already left for Tangier with yon essistants.two hospital nurses.and twenty tons of material.Mulai Hafid, who is reigning as Sultan of Marakesh, has received a deputation of Jews of that town and assured them of their abeolute security.He told them boi the Moors and the Jews ere, qua necessary for each other\u2019s welfare, end wished them prosperity and peace.This has created a calming effect in the southern capital, and the Jews no longer complain of any: ill-treatment, while the panic amonget them nas entirely subsid- * we and is growing worse from day to day.Coneequently, it has not been found possible to euspend the relief operations.noses, black, fiery eyes, and a proud, majestic bearing.: + Ye - ROYAL MAIL STEAMSHIPS.Southwark fe ee Canada .crccnmiers sall fran Montreal from Quebec at 7.00 pa.The - \u2018CANADA is tue 2É most comfortable sieaidurs is trade The \u201cOTTAWA\u201d Holds.fastest passags betw erpant, Firat-Class rate, 380.00; Second- Class, 340.asd upwards, according to steamer MONTREAL, quésec, ro Lvirroor, Ottawa .se Seco Dentinion~., Kensington .0 sie 5 + Nov.1 ce ee .\u2026 Oct 19: à fuotaot and e Ontadias { for the rmand Kaminka, secretary of the | Saul, who escaped there from Palestine, To $2.00 alt pie Atrio Torsclite Alliance, has Just re-jor that Nebuchadnezzar sent the ablest Te London, $2.50 «dd turned from a y Journey through Rou- [Judean warriors to Afghanistsn, it must ton doy oe to Livers ha Lon- mamia, whither he had proceeded for the |be admitted that they contain masy » Belfast, TOL CAN purpose of concluding the relief work on [elements of truth.According to him, MONTREAL TO SRiS LAYONMOUTY) \u2018behalf of the vietims of the late disturb- [most of the Afghans have Old Testa Hasymea cies ve eres ease suse -Bept.38 ances.He states that the situation is à ment names, and their physiognomy is l Enpliehman re eres an ee oes OU 2 sad one for the Roumanian Jews, typically Jewish\u2014black beards, large Mavxman .ee TL No.\u2019 For all information apply to\" isoal agents or to DOMINION Ling, The Roumanian Government is practical- | The \u2018Jewish Chronicle\u201d of London A1 8t.Sagramont Birééé, Honour.conducting a extermi publishes a new transiati Morris i hE, Ar Ered TRU TE ORIENT grades.poet is j now ceiving \u2014_\u2014 by ing % = Bloodless massacre, much attention in the'continental press.Acid 3.8, \"Ambo wl Hie conducted in ache of the Rata | \u201cBear, O Israel! \u201d a R à by FRANK C.CLARK, Times Bulldog New York of the io as the only el Ossip Disoff, which has been presented ee = fon a number of the Jews ol at several theatres in Russia, Northern Moldavia.At the lust sitting elt been translated into Yiddish by .A.\u2019 It depicts the moral as well owing {as the physical effects of the pogroms\u2014 d confidence ond oh Saree come up to expec the fund exhausted.very soul of the Jew.| he I od as sent a further] « \u2026 fifty thousand franes to the Je Dis-} Bavaria has of all Gérman wiates the Bo sov in military affaits which the triet, ninety thousand francs to toshani Distriet, and has made a grant of ten thousand francs for expelled ami- Bes.«op other sates at the formation of the em- SYNOPSIS OF CANADIAN NORTH-WEST HOMESTEAD rasu LATION.minion Lands West Provinces, exc ANY BVEN NUMBBRED in Quarter section, ol 160 M I ELE Tim oes of WS Joost Ki ET ge over 18 years of age, to tho rer of ene- mors or less, lagpection the : at\u2019 the percent pl toe the mene of the : ey, mr LITT on : \u2018An sopliontion fot ed three a the however, declining }?mar be Jirea to the lodél to sit with members of the Black Hun.Sun-dgent, nde 96 dred.receipt of the telegrani atëh- re \u20181th kave priority, and the uatff the necessar f the Russian Social De- The refusal o erats to allow the Zionist to in the International Con- nD gress at Stuttgart has cevmed consider be able indignation among certain classes of ire Jewish workmen.À petition protesting against the decision of the Central Committee has been prepared.The executive of the party as decided to participate in the next elections, in spite of the strong desire on the pert \"of their followers to boycott the By the will of A.A.Housman, the New York banker, $20,000 were left to various New York charities.\u2018Temple Adath Israel of Boston, which may was recently dedicated, is described as ® in fa oth daughter, brother \"dé.ed dus a, ses ets = pe eA ax ve got\u2019 ea.Soli vy been Sn le of, ; sng and not eh geaselifion.er, In a number of Es in Bessatabia [tbe most beautiful temple - America.{in but to no ons wise oun flag th sants expelled the anti-Jewish Its cost is said to be $500,000.aa F.t abandon eat.> suid vod, agitators sent by\u2019 the League of True Troe | Ward Everett Hale made an address at.oct Bere 4 Jus gly ry 5 Russians.à the dedication.Satis tanly, TPP tie Because Rabbi Ben Zion Mitovsky of | Lebedowe, Wilna Province, Russia, refused to permit the holding of political meetings in the synagogue he was as- Six and forty-five hundredth percent | of .the pupils in the higher schools of Prussia In the year, 1905-6 were Jews.Rabbi Melk, chief rabbi of Trieste for the past fifty-two years, is dead.He translated appeal has been issued in behalf of his ot a number of Jewish religious widow and seven children.current week, after an absence of nine sassinated by Jewish anarchists.An lars, eummartly DUTIDE\u2014 A seh ete: from the conditions 0 a ted eix mon EET Ren BOYS\u2019 HOME CONCERT.The first of the winter concerts at the | that period the the learned and cutttvatien = FH 1h each Year Boys\u2019 Home was held last night and{ megiirae hes devoted his time exelu-fgaring the term of Te êtes was a great success, the boys providing | sive ly fo ihe pusiness of the district of OLE the father (or y # the father , e rs - deceased) their own éntertamment- à There excel] real Bor are leased bo.see that he can & pin su he vie vicinity of the pr Satered lent recitations by the Williams broth- once more help to his city colleagues ea to residence may 2 hie 1d ers.Refreshments were served during{% ed with work.[person Be « father or odor the evening.Ltd = iad la in - the 0 of i, Lhe requir CAUSE OF FIRE.ment bs satisfied reaidencé upon With regard to a fire which occurred Co h na à yard on St.Luke street, and which À Ind a y avplieation tue patent the to have been caused by 8 {wri to the Commis net of Doutnios cordon rl Tat number SYNOPSIS OF LN NORTÉ-WEST \u201cBONAVISTA\u201d Is expected $0 sail as follows: - of a cigar, it is s were seen playing around a wood er before the outbreak, and it is mow lieved that playing with matches was the cause of the fire out- 10 P.M, SEPT.20th, -For CHARLOTTETOWN, P.1.1.break.the SYDNEYS, C.8.rate of five cents per, ton : \u2014 .JON \u2018ins.ershantable coal miided, AFTER NINE YEARS\u2019 ABSENCE.(J end ons ?ire, ur QUARTZ oA free mines sactifionts 1a It has been a pleasant sürprise for the '3.K.COOKSON, G.P.A., grant Plagne yr ol 0\" members of the bar of this district to see.Mr.Justice Delorimier, sitting once more in the Montreal courts during the Special Low Rates Wos1 Through the beautiful THOUSAND ISLANDS ~~ and BAY OF QUINTE by daylight Montreal Toronto-Hamiléon Line steamers sail on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, st 5 p.m.Every convehience for passangers.Fares :\u2014 Main 451 113 St.James street To Toronto, return 614.00 To Hamilton, 50, return $16.00 Meals end berth included.ndingly low rates to intermediate ports Ticket Office, 128 SY.JAMES STREET, (Sasa) Jo F.DOLAN, City Paseenger Agent.© |?i F1 Lu 15 A\u2018 cubes prada .Zora iS Aa ty of the ne frteriée\u2026 .B.\u2014Unautborised able eT ad- vartisement will 208 - fon, Spt es Der Ansum for & company acedrding Er 2 nm he Teo tor | record east 1 Fas the |ALLAN LINE.DOMINION LINE | the\u2019 Canadian route.Absolute Garten; : Pio aoû GE 93.75, and Liv.ROYAL MAIL SERVICE, i MONTREAL TO LIVERPOOL, VIRGINIAN .Sept.21 5.00 a.m.Oct.& Tons esse Oot.4 9am.Nov.1 fTOTORIAN °° Oct.11 5 a.m.Nov.7 Corsican .Oct.18 8 a.m.Nov.15 VICTORIAN and VIRGINIAN,each 13 ,000 tods, are Lhe only Turbine grenmers oa fo vibra tion.Record passage 5 days, 14 hours.\u201c_ Mtdship aio qns Cabine du) luxe, spacious promenade FIRST-CLASS, $55 and u acoording to steamer and date of sailing.pe 5 .BECOND-CLASS Liverpool, Londond 3.and up- Return tickets at reduced rate or 4 se Liverpool, London oc Belfas; according to steamer.; MONTREAL To GLABGOW.Corinthian, Sept.26.Grampian, Oct.10 |.Pretorian, Oct.3.Sicilian, Oct.17 PIA OT Twin-Screw Fteamer \u2018\u201cGRAM- will safl from Montreal, Oct.10.Rates\u2014First Claas, and up.Becond Glass, 30.Third Class, $26.50.MONTREAL TO HAVRE AND LONDON \"Pomeranian, Oct.5 Sardinian, Oct.19 : Maloen, \u2018called,\u2019 \u2018Second Cabin\u2019 Rate, $00 sat up; Third Class, $27.50 \u2018Apply ts H.& A.ALLAN, Montreal, Reford Agenoies SAILINGS FROM MONTREAL, DONALDSON LINE.\u2018Montreal-Clasgow WooklyServios -88.-ATHENIA (cold storage) .Sept.26 88, MARINA {cold storage).Oct.3 \u20181 88, CASSANDRA (cold storage) .Oct, 10 88.LAKONIA (cold storage).Oct.17 Passenger rates\u2014One-class Cabin, $40 to $60; steerage, $26.60 to to $80.00.THOMSON LINE, Montreal-London Weekly Service ss.HURONA (cold storage and ooo} air) .Sept.28 88.IONA (cold storage and cool air) Oct.5 88.KILDONA \u201ccou storage \u2018and cool air) Oct.12 2.Lora .FREMONA .ABERDEEN SERVICE.SS.ESCALONA .«coo v0 40 ans Tolophones-\u2014Office, Main, 5650 and 5651.Donaldson Wharf, Main 56858 Thomcon Wharf, Main b£66.TRE ROBERT REFORD:CO.Limited, \u201cTORONTO, QUEBEC, ST.JOHN.N.B.SERVICE.ee ue .Oct.13 Oat.31 ATLANTIC a A SITES To LIVERPOOL.Sept.14.LARD MANITOBA ug.3 EMPRESS OF OBA At\" ept.à Se veo \"LAKE SHA TRBLAND .Bept.11 Oct 4.\u201cEMPRESS 0} ¥ IRELAND Sept 2% Oct.18.LAKE ER ept.Oct.18.EMPRESS Tor\u201d BRITAIN.Oct.: Oot.26-LAKE MANITOR - From se ee 0 Nov.$ \u201cWINTER RATES NOW IN FORCE.Winter Rates (First Cabin) from Canada, $80.00 upwards, a to steamer\u2014are how In force.© GIO.Mol.BROWN, ; ; Gen.Pass.Agent Rooms $%.4 and 5.Board of Trade.RIVER 01 TU have To OTTAWA, $2.50.EXCURSION TO CARILLON, 81.00 Laching, GTR, 4.21 p.m.; return Take 8 a.m.train fer Lachine, Ste.Annea < G.T.R.1.9 p.m.; return 2 { Bost, #06 Boat, LASY i an Line Steamers will be withdrawn for season after Wed- nocday; 28th September.Office, 165 Common street.Tel.Main 1029.Fat at Bonaventure sud St, Henri Stations.| Cement, Drain Pipes, &o.DRAIN PI PES, \"PORTLAND CEMENTS, W, & F, P, CURRIE & Va, me | | 5 a Sense Swen, dE] ig OLE > pu ae RT AR I i SYSTEM CHEAP WEEK END TRIPS.COING- Saturtay or Sunday by any trata RET'G.untill Menday by any train, às follows: \u2014 ADERAKIA Springs.$3.30 Belœil.\u2026.\u2026.00000 Les ase cn 30 Bing ein (Cliff Haven) N.Y.2.80 RBurlingten, Vermont.3.05 Cornwall.cioivnvreennonnnnnss 2.18 Highgate Sprimgs, V¢.1.85 Hemmingford .1.20 Mowtek .2000ese secs nana canne 1.10 Huntingdon .vecu 1.50 Laprafrie .c.coviuin.Ll 50 Massena Sprimgs.nes Otterburn Park, including one admission te Park.95 Ormstowm 1.33 QUAWA.iiiiiiiriinninnas *3.60 Ottawa .ve .secu00s 193.43 quettsbureh, NY re ssos ua sec une des0vons 2.63 Chet eee e gestern arenas enna nrrnns 4 Ronse's Foint.\"Hours te00t 0000000 n0u000 1.70 River Beandette.Fevesenenees 1.45 bherbreeke .PP 3.30 Ste.Anne de Bellevue .vo.T5 st.Myacihthe -.robe [EER EN] 1.30 Bt.Jehnms.Wrreesnreraesrecanee 1.00 Ble Rem .0oiinninvnnnnnnninn «15 Vawdreutt., LT) 60.8e Alse many other points.*Going Saturday by G.T.R.to Lachine, thence O.R.N.Co.steamer to Ottawa, re- turnine all rail.tGoing al! rail Saturday or Sunday.Returning until Monday morning train oaly.NEW YORK EXCURSION SEPTEMBER 28, 1907 From Montreal $11.30 Round Trip Fare Going date, September 26, 1907.Return limit, October 7, 1907.Trains leave at 7.21 am.and 10.16 a.m, week days, and § p.m.pm.daily.- WESTERN EXCURSIONS.Going Sept.21.Return limit, Oot.7.1907.CHICAGO, iLL.++.$18.00 PORT HURON, MICH.Pres ded ave 14.88 DETROIT, MICH : \u201c1600 ant a0ce 15.00 Bay City, Mich.s + ve ss ae ess q7.3 Saginaw, Mich, .ce.ve ss vec.17.18 Grand Rapids, Mich.ol 18.95 Cleveland, Ohio.via Buffalo and boat 13.8 Cleveland, Ohlo, via Detroit and boat 17.60 St.at, or Minneapolis, Minn, ail 34.00 st.Paul, \u201cor Minneapolls, via Upper Lakes and Bault Ste Ste.Marie .37.30 EXHIBITION OTTAWA.Sept.21 - - - - 83.35 Montreal 8.30 a.m., Return limit, Sept.28.7.30 %.m.Arrive Train Bervice Leave 9.85 a.m.3.40 p.m.and Ottawa, 11.80 a.mu., 12.83 pi, 660 Pp.m,anû 10.30 p.m, REDUCED FARES.Until OCTOBER 31st, 1907 Second Class Colonist Fares from Montreal te a $48.00 COLORADS SPRINGS, VER, PUERLO \"rastecu sance eee n0 ss tenu GOU 00 Low ais te many ethane Points, Tourist Sleeping Cars Leave Montreal Mondays and Wednesdays at 10.30 p.m., for the accommodation of passengers holding first or second-class tickets to CHICAGO AND WEST thereot as far as the PACIFIC COAST-\u2014nominal oharge is made for berths, which may be téserved in advance.MONTREAL BOSTON and points in New England Staies.Two trains each way daily.Leave Montreal 9.01 am, 8.40 p.m.Arrive Boston 7.06 p.m., 8.03 a.m, Café Parlor Cars and through Coaches on day trains.Sleeping Cars and through Coaches on night trains.MONTREAL\u2014NEW YORK Leave Montreal 17.21 a.m., 110.15 am, *8.01 p.m.Arr.New York, 18.15 p.m., 19.08 p.m.and 7.20 a.m JAMESTOWN | EXPOSITION.Norfolk, Va., offers the following distimctive attractions: The greatest naval rendezvous in history, The first international submarine races.The largest motor boat re atta ever held, Monitor and Merrimac fight, The highest tower ever erected in America, if not in the world.The largest parade ground on earth.Cheap rates still in effect.For full information and advertising matter apply to CITY TICKET OFrrioRs, 187 St, Jaunes street, Telophone Nala 450 and 48), or Benaventure Station.Grooeries, Provisions, &e Fruit for Preserving, GREENGAGES, CRAB LES.! CHOICE NIAGARA PRACHES (next week).CALIFORNIA PBACHES.CALIFORNIA PEARS.Lror table RNIA PLUMS.| CALIFO MONTREAL MUSK MELONS rec'd daily.WALTER PAUL, Family Grocer, | Cor, Metcalfe and St.Catherine sts.CANADIAN PACI Fle: EXCURSIONS, Sept.20 and 21st.Cheap Excursin-: -, Detroit, Chicago, Bay City, Saginaw Ce, ni Rapids, St.Paul and Cleveiana.Cheap One Way to Montana, Idaho until October 31st, important Changes of Time, Trains leave Windsor Station a- p.m.Saturdays only for Nominine.as Sundays only at 10.00 a.m, for St.Agar and returning leaving Nomining ai 4.3, p.m.and St, Agathe at 7.30 p.m.Sunday: only, and train op Place V: gr Satu- days only at 1.10 p.m.have beey wg; drawn for the season, On Saturdays only train SECOND CLass Rates and the Pacific Ua + ieaving lac Viger at 1.40 p.m.will run through © Nomining, etopping at all int.: mediate siations.The Brome Lake Saturday train .es \u201cny Montreal 1.25 p.m.for Sherbrooke, 2e returning, leaving Sherbrooke Mondax £.00 a.m., and arriving Windsor Staton a 9.15 a.m., has been withdrawn for ::.season.OTTAWA EXHIBITION, 2 Cheap Excursion Rates on Sept.N'h an4 \u201cst, DESIRABLE WEEK END TRIPS Good going Saturday and Sundays, re.turnicg untii Monday following to various points.City Ticket @Mce, 129 St.James Street, Next Post Office.INTERCOLONIAL RAILWAY - Bonaventure Unien Depot TRAIN SERVICE.4 TRAINS DAILY, 1.25 BAY EXPRESS Por Ste.Mya.* cinthe, Drummondville, AM, Levis, Quebes, Leaves 7.25 a.m.dally except Sunday.Buffet Parlor Car Montreal to Levis.\u201c MARITIME EXPRESS\" -Por §t.1 Myacint hs, Orummondville, Levis, Quebec, Riviere du Leup, nn, Moneton, St.John, Halifax and the 8ydneys.Dining Car Leaves at 12.00 noon dally (except Saturday to Riviere du Loup, only).Through Bieeping Cars to St.John and Halifaz, 3.50 LOCAL EXPRESS - Dally except Sunday, for st Hyaocinthe, Drummondville, Nicolet ans Am.intermediate stations, il 45 NIGHT EXPRESS for QUE- ' BEC and Intermediate 8ta.P N tions.6 11 Sunday, at 11.45 pm.A oars ras attached to this train, wlich passengers can occupy after 9 p.m.All trains of the Intercolonial Raliway arrive and depart from the Bonaventure Uston Depot.CITY TICKET OFFICE, st Lawrence Hall\u2014141 St.James street or Bonaventure Union Depot.Tel.Main 615 J.J.McCONNIFF, City Pass.& Ticket Agent, H.A.PRICE, Asst.General Passenger Agent.rt HAVE YOU REMARKED the large number of aooidents hap- \"pening every day.You would be greatly surprised if your turn was next, but it might be possible.An Accident Polioy in THE CANADIAN RAILWAY ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY covers | everything, and the cost does not exoeed a few oents per day.Policies issued oovering all diseases.ERNEST PITT, Prov.Manager, 222 8t.James Street, Phene Main 1886.of all makes eleaned and put in thorough FURNACE working order.à DRAINS carefully aestod and re clients, and pir) be pleased to count You one, Betterletme attend to these matters early.JVOHN DATE 152 ORAIQ ST., WEST.MOSQUITOES! MOSQUITOES ! BLACK FLIES! BLACK FLIES! AGN°S FOREST FRIEND is the most effective remedy for how iusect posts.Price, 3c and 50s.NARTE'S BLOOD PURIFIER ~ Potter than any Sareapariiis for lating the system.Price, Be.J.A.HARTE,Druggls! 150 Notre Dame St.West.Tel one Main 1180.ved \u2014 Pages | \u2018if the Dominion Coal Company directors had remained true to their contract with the Steel Corporation for the supply of coal, the Dominion Iron & steel Company would to-day be peying a dividend on its preferred stock, but, now, all depends on what the outcome of our differences with the Coal Com- pony will be.Our ambition à to give tr our eharebolders all that is coming w them.\u2019 This statement was made by Mr.J.H Plunmer, president of the Dominion Iron and Steel Company, in discussing the affairs of the latter corporation with a \u2018Witness\u2019 representative at the Windsor Hotel this morning.\u2018I do not think,\u201d said Mr.Plummer, \u2018that it would be proper for me to predict an immediate payment of dividends, but.I will say thet xf the plant at Sydney continues to do the same business for the next year that it bas done during the past six months there will be returns that will prove gratefys to those financially interested in the 1 Company \u2018The management of the Coal Company declare that they will the decision re by Judge I cerry it to the Nova Scotia Supreme Court.In the face of this what à the attitude of the Steel directors?Mr.DE a a sosition.to epeak f \u2018| am not In a on or the Steel Company until the appeal has actually been taken, but I assure you that the directors are of one opinion, to the effect that we must defend our selves and maintain our rights no matter in what court they are .The judgment rendered by Judge Longley during the past week is in every sense of the word a fair and sound one, and we do not fear an appeal, as we believe the decision will be maintained.\u2019 \u2018After the judgment was renderxd steel stock went up a few points during the first day, and Coal was dep .How is it if there is no manipulation going on, that Steel has not made the advance anticimated ?\u2018Well, as far as } can j , the market was played by certain parties with a special object in view.\u2018What progress have you to report as the plant, and what has the company in view regarding improvements, if any?\u201d MR.PLUMMER ON THE Longley and tained, \u201cWe are.running dey and night, eo ee he dane, dey and TIEN: me buve on hand to-day eufficient orders to keep the works yung for the next fifteen months.We have been ily improving, and the report which the directors hope to place in the hands of the shareholders early next week will show great progress as well as the most eatis- actory earnings for the first \u2018three months of the year.We now have more stearmers under charter than ever before, end we are our supply of coal from the Derren Sad and the Nova Scotia Coal Compenies.We are at the present time paying the former concern a higher price for their al than they are entitled to, but under the judgment recently rendered by the court we are to get back all this money.We are having good col supplied us, the same quality as that purchased fi the Dominion Coal Company previous to.November, 1906.\u2019 \u2018Various estimates have been made as to the quantity of the company\u2019s «re ts.What is your estimate \u2019 \u2018I hardly think that an accurate\u2019 estimate of our ore deposits has been made, but so far, the quality has been main- i and it improves as it goes down\u2019 \u2018Has the Steel Company made any offers from outside interests for the purchase of quantities of this ore?\u2019 - \u2018Yes, we have been requested do eell some of the ore, which it is quite likely we shall do.We have already disposed of over one hundred thousand tons, and we feel justified in doing this as we have more ore than we will ever re Quire.\u2018The \u2018street\u2019 would Hke to know what the directors are prepared to do, to bring about a compromise with the Ccel tion.\u2019 \u2018I do not consider that it is the plane of the Steel management to make the first advence in such a move.ever, I can assure the public that the Steel Company is not at all unwilling to consider-any arrangement that will tend to remove the difficulties over the coal supply.It does on the face of it seem à pity that two industries should be forced into a prolonged etruggle, when the situation might be saved and the advancement of both companies better served by dn homest adjustment of their differences.\u2019 AN UP-TO-DATE HARBOR.British Engineer Preparing Comprehensive Plan.COMMISSIONERS BXPRCY- \u2018FO RE CFIVE REPORT IN A FEW WEEKS.Mr.W.Davidson, the British engineering expert, who was invited to come to Montreal by the Harbor Commissioners, has returned to England after completing an exhaustive study of the re quirements of the port.Mr.Davidson arrived in this city about three months ago, and during his inspection of the harbor he was in constant communication with the harbor officials regarding the |- contemplated improvements.There is considerable speculation in business circles as to Mr.Davidson's visit, as he is an engineer of the highest reputation.It was stated by one of the commissioners this morning that the report of Mr.Davidson will not reach Montreal for several weeks, ag he will require some time after his arrival in England to arrange the details of his observations.It is understood, however, that the report will deal principally with an extensive plan for elevated tracks, while strong recommendations will be made for the improvement of the east end of the harbor as well as à number of suggestions regarding the new steel sheds, \u2018to gether with the purchase of certain material and machinery to assist in the handling of heavy cargo and for the protection of the harbor._ The commissioners are anxiously awaiting the report, as they are convinced that It will contain a complete plan of improvements for the port, which, when carried out, will make this harbor one of the most modern on the continent.I.0.0, F.SOVERBIGN GRAND LODGE (OM- PLETES BIGHTY-THIRD ANNUAL MEETING.\u2014 St.Paul, Minn., Sept.21.\u2014The Sovereign Grand Lodge of the Independent Urder of Oddfellows last night completed its eighty-third annual meeting.Re- horts submitted to-day show that dur \u2018ng the year just closed the membership 't the order increased 84,000 and that \u2018\u20ac members of the Daughters of Re- svkah increased\u2019 24,000.: pese IRON MOULDERS STRIKE \u2014 Toronto, Sept.21.\u2014About fourteen fen moulders employed in the ship of she Canada Foundry Company, at the Ang street subway, went on strike yes rday, because the company refused to accede to the demands of the union that :1° men be granted a minimum wage of *-90 per day of nine hours.The men \u201civ that some of the moulders were \u201cworking for $2.50 to $2.75 a day, and Lrat others received as high as $3 a day.\u201cfe union cnjoys the nine-hour day in Some sixteen shops in the city, and the Men have orders to cease work in any ?ace where these conditions are not in ! (Zw es \u2014\u2014 ALL-RED ROUTE.Lord Brassey Makes an Appeal Before Association of Cham- .bers,of Commerce.AVIS a : æ - ef .(Canadian Associated Press.) Liverpool, Sept.21\u2014At the dinner of the Association of Chambers of Commerce last night, Lord Brassey made an appeal for the All Red Route.No link, he eaid, is more binding than quick com- raunication.\u2018CANADA GAZETTE\u2019 A New Bank Has Its Origin In Montreal.\u2014\u2014 Ottawa, Sept.20.\u2014Notice appears in today\u2019s \u2018Canada Gazeite\u2019 that application will be made to parliament next session for the incorporation of the Bank of Canada, London and Paris, and \u2014 .{ for the incorporation of zhe Pacific Coast Fire Insurance Company.\u2018Lhe former application S, GARSLEY 0%.™\"S.CARSLEY 0%.$84 6064 SL James 30, Montreal, 184 to 194 St.James SL, Monitretl, Davenport Sofas In order to dispose of some of few at special reduced prices.These Davenports are made of Crash Towels borders; very good value at 17e.Flannel Shirtings 200 dozens Good, Heavy Damask of patterns.To Clear the lot, per dozen.143 te 161 Notre Dame St.Wost, 148 to 151 Notre Dame St.West, | Some Bargains in these just now we're offering a solid mahogany on perfectly plain lines.They're covered with green denim.Each one is beautifully upholstered with the best quality oil tpmpered steel springs.The prices at which we're offering these just now may never occur again.Please give number of sofa when ordering.Here's a design made on Colonial lines which we're selling at $51,\u2014No, 9128-19.Another Davenport, No.8319- 3, has a massive hand carved head on arms, with large claw feet, \u2014special price $59.Neo.1681-17 is made on large massive square lines, price $64, Our last offering has a stuffed over-back, with rounded columns,\u2014price $48, No.5317-22 Some of these prices are unusually low.: With our complete and up-to date plant we are prepared to manufacture all classes of GRANITE or MARBLE MONUMENTS, and MEMORIALS.Fetimutes on application.THE SMITH MARBLE & CONSTRUCTION GO., Ltd.290 Bleury strest, .Montreal.\u2018Factory and Warghous:, Van Horne Avenue, Mile End .RENAUD, KING & PATTERSON, LIMITED, Cor.St.Catherine & Guy Sts.\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 |.ANOTHER WOMAN LAWYER.Toronto, Sept.20.\u2014The unusual spectacle of a woman being admitted to the bar was witnessed at Osgoode Hal this morning, when Miss Geraldine B.Robinson, daughter of the late J.A.Robinson, of St.Thomas, was sworn in as a barrister by Mr.Justice Magee.There are only two other women barristers in the province, Miss E.M.Powley, of Port ' Stanley, admitted five years ago, and Miss Clara Brett Martin, of Toronto, admitted ten years ago.MRS, TURNER COMMITTED Toronto, Sept.20.\u2014Mrs.Minnie Turner was this morning committed for trial cn the charge of the murder of Rose Winter, who died in her house, of blood ER NOTES AND NOTICES.Homeseekers\u2019 Excursion to the beautiful Lake St.John Region, Sept.24, 1907, by Canadian Northern Quebec Railway.Special low colonist fares from all stations.Montreal to Roberval and return, first class, $6.65.second class, $4.30, Return limit, 30 days.Train leaves St.CatLerine street east station, 8.30 a.m.The Governor-General displayed special interest in only one Piano at the Toronto Exhibition, and tbat was the Karn.The richness in d and beau: he specially remarked on its attractive appearance, A full selection of these beautiful instruments always in stock at Laytons Bros., 144 Peel street (opposite Dominion\u201cSquarg).N.B.\u2014Oner svenings until end of month, \u2026.ta -.THE MONTREAL, BAILY WITNESS \"5 _CARSLEY Comm { of Aug.1 of about $2,000,000.tiful veneer so arrested his attention that.[JOHN D.ROCKEFELLER'S HOLDINGS IN OIL.Owns 256,854 4 Shares Worth $109,000,000.GAVE AWAY IN BENBFACTIONS A TOTAL OF $102,000,000.New York, Sept, 20.\u2014Records of the stockholders of the Stanlaxd Oil Company of New Jersey, submitted here to-day at the hearing of the govern- isk - {ments suit for the dissolution of the {.alleged oil combine, disclosed the fact that Mr.John 1.Rockefeller owns 250,854 shares, or nearly five times as much stock as any other individual shareholder.and that the and his asso- tciates who signed the trust agreement in 1882 still control a majority of the Standard Oil stock.Measured Ly the present market price of $440 a share, the holdings of \u2018Mr.Rockefeller in the Standard Oil Company have a value of \u2018$109,000,000.The gtockholders\u2019 record 17, 1907, showed that the University of Chicago is the owner vi 5,000 shares of Standard Oil stock.\u2018The \u2018depreciation in the price of Standard Oil stock within the past ten years, about the time the agitation against the company began, has been more than $00 a share.Since the legal proceedings against the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey were instituted the stock \u2018has speadily declined, until it is now around $140.This represents a Joss of over $100,000,000 on the holdings of John D.Rockefeller.\u2018The shrinkage in the market value of the stock also affects the University of Chicago to th: extent The respective holdings of the largest stockholders of the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey are as follows :\u2014John D.Hocke- feller, 247,602 shares; Chas.H.Pratt estate, 52, 582; D.M, Harkness estate, 42,000; O.H.\"Payne, 40,000; H.M.Flag- ler, 30,500; O.B.Jennings estate, 17,060; H.H, Rogers, 10,020; J.A.Bostwick, 5,000; Wm.Rockefeller, 11,700; C.M.Brewster, 10,000; Charles Lockhart estate, Pittsburg, 8,500; L.C.Ledyard and Payne Whitney, 8.000; Wm.C.Whitney estate, 8,000; W.II.\u2018Lilford, 6,000; John D.Archbold, 6,000; W.G.{| Warden estate, 5,858; University ot Chicago, 5,000; C.M.Pratt, 5,000; Daniel O'Day.2,665.AN AGREEMENT.Through Mr.Wesley H.Tilford, the treasurer of the Standard Oil Company, the government\u2019s attorney, Mr.Frank B.Kellogg, was able to obtain evidence of an understanding or verbal agreement that had been made hetween Standard and independent refiners doing business near Cleveland and Pittsburg.This agreement, which was entered into in the latter part of 1902, provided that these independent companies should sell /their entire output of oil refined for export to the Standard Oil Company of New York, the export department of the allied companies, for which Standard was to sell the companies a certain amount of crude oil each day.Mr.Til- ford said that previous to the making of the agreement the supply of crude oil to these companies had been reduced.Mr.Kellogg then developed out of the witness that the export business was \u2018certainly handled by the Standard Oil Company of New York, and that in buying oil for export purposes it paid the market price to the independent refineries.Mr.Kefogg asked if the Standard Oil did mot determine the market price, and Mr.Tilford replied | that it did.Some interesting facts concerning the conduct of marketing of the Standard's Troduct was developed to-day, \u201cvhen it was testified bv Mr.Tilord that a committee controlled the domestic trade.Mr.Tilford stated that the United States was apportioned in distrizts, and that the companies assigned jo, these districts confined their operations to the territory assigned t> them.The accountants for the government now at work preparing data will be ready to report next week.\u2018Ine report, it ig declared, will enable the government to show that since the incorporation of the Standard trust in 1882 up lo the present time the total \u2018profits of the oil combine have bem between $800,000,000 and $900,000,000.WHAT MR.ROCKEFELLER GAVE AWAY.General Education Board .$42,000,000 University of Chicago .21,400,000 Rush Medical College .6,000,000 Churches (unknown) .«¢ ov.3,100,000 Missions (known) .2,310,000 Baptist Foreign Mission Fund .2,005,000 Rockefeller Institute for Medical .Research .2,000,009 Parnard College .+ 0.1,375,000 Southern Education Fund se eens 1,125,090 Tnion Theclogical Seminary .1,100,000 Harvard University .wees 1,000,000 Baptist Educational Society .1,000,000 Yale Uciversity .1,000,000 Juvenile reformatories .1,009,000 Cleveland city parks .1,000,000 | Nine Y.M.C.A\u2019s .,.«eve eens 845,000 Teachers\u2019 College .+.se .\u2026 .\u2026.500,000 Johns Hopkins .+.+.+.500,000 Vagear College .\u2026.+.vo .\u2026 .\u2026\u2026.409,000 Brown University .\u2026.+ oc cove 525.900 Sever small colleges .«320,060 MeMaster\u2019s College .27 Rochester Theological Seminary.Cornell University .ze nN BE x > £88 Biyn Mawr College .\u2026.250,090 Case School of Science, Cleve- A land .ee «ov 200,000 Oberlin College oe sees 200,009) Spelman Seminary, Atlanta .180,000 Newton Theological Seminary .«150,000 Adelphi College .ress 125,000 University of Wooster, \u201cOhio \u2026\u2026\u2026.12E.500 Children\u2019s Seaside Home 125,000 Presbyterian work in Egypt and the Soudan .100,000 Cleveland Social Settlement 16C,000 Syracuse Upivercity .ce a 100,900 Smith College .ce en» 100,000 Wellesley College .100,000 Columbia University .: ., .dd > E22 Dennison College ., 100,000 Curry Memoria! .100,500 Furman University .109,000 Lincoln Memorial Fund.seen 100,000 University of Virginia .100,000 .Cleveland Y.M.C.A.100,000 University of Nebraska 5 5 ; 101,000 drradia Universitv a, een 100,000 1899 John D.\u2018Rockefeller\u2019 s share, \u20181899- 190 MO bl Fri EE eg LE - SATURDAY, SEPTFMBRER 21.170+ and A es Phones\u2014 Main, 3644-3645, Malin, 8447, Main, 2813, Your every requirement from a laundry point of View will be satisfactorily attended to by the TROY.Phone your address quickly done for you.FACTORY ANDOFFICES : VERDUN the rest will be Indiana University .\u2026.0.59,090 Mount Holyoke College .50,000 Shurtlef£ College .\u2026.sees 35,900 School of Applied Design tor Women .ee se eves 25.000 Bucknell University er ov ss serw 23,900 William Jewell Institute .25,800 Howard Coliege .25,000 Miscellaneous gifts prior to 1592.7,000,500 Grand total .cc oe se s.$102,055,000 HOLDINGS AND INCOME.Mr.Rockefeller\u2019s holdings and income from Standard Oil: Standard Oil capital, Owned by John D.feller .1899.Rocke- - 972,854 shares 256.854 shares Mr.Rockefeller's \u201choldings, 26.3 percent of total, Standard Oil capital, tou par value .$97,448,923 28.3 percent of total 25,629,065 Market value at TE of 842 .215,796,735 Standard oil \u201ccapital, 1908, par value «eae 98,338,382 2.3 percent.of total, par value.25, \"862.994 Market value at low price of 417.107,848 484 Surinkage, 1901-1907 .107,948,251 Standard Oil dividends, \"1882- 1899 (H.K.Smith report) .243,563,501 Standard Oil dividends, 1899-1906 (present evidence) .308,358 493 John D.Rockefeller's share (on basig of 26.3 percent) 1882- .83,326,510 ce ee +0 se se ve ve +.80,173,444 Total .$143,499,954 Average yearly return, \"1882.1906.5,979,164 Average yearly return, 1809-1906.10,021,680 Average per mcrLth, 1999-1906.835,140 Average per day, 1899-1906.27,838 Average per minute, 1899-1906.19 ee FORTY YEARS IN CHINA .ee AN INTERESTING, VISITOR WILL PREACH IN AMERICAN PES BYTERIAN CHURCH TOMORROW.\u2014 The pulpit at the Ameriean Presbyterian Chûrch will be oecupieds both morning and evening to-morrow by an interesting visitor in the person of the Rev.H.V.Noyes, D.D., who ever since the year 1866 has represented the general American Presbyterian Church in the Chinese mission field.For the first fifteen years he was engaged in itinerary work, and sinoe then his time has been mainly devoted to educational work in Canton, and to literary work connected with the missions, notably in assisting in the translation of the Bible into Cantonese, and in helping to compile a union commentary for the use of Chinese students of all Christian denominations.This latter work bas already proved its value, and is expected to assist the spread of Christianity in very gret degree.Dr.Noyes, who is in this country on furlough, and who will go to Toronto for next Sunday, left China in May last, juet after attending the centennial convention of Christian missions at Shanghai.This convention, he says, was remarkable not only because it was in celebration of the one hundredth anniversary of the arrival of the first re missionary in China, but because the\u2019 first business was the passing of a resolution by which all Christian denominations in China agreed for the future to work in unison \u2018in spreading the Gospel, this being the first practical step, Dr.Noyes thinks, towards the ultimate union of all Christian denominations ip that country into one great Chinese church.Already the Presbyterian churches of the several provinces in China have become united into the Presbyterian Church of China, with over 40,000 members.The prospects of missionary work in China were never more inspiring than at the present time, says Dr.Noyes.When he first went to China there were only 5,000 converts in the whole empire.Now there are 7.000 in Canton alone.The great hope for the future lies to a large extent, he thinks, through the medium of education.The ancestral system of education, namely, the committing of the Chinese classics to memory, has been abolished, and the western system of vdu- cation adopted, with the result that many thousands of government and private schools have been established all through the empire.The great cry is for teachers, aud the educational colleges in connection with the missions have been called on for all they car.supply.Thus a widened sphere of influence opens up to such colleges as the Presbyterian Theological College at Canton, of which Dr.Noves has for many years been the president, because if the schools are sup: plied with Christian teachers trained in these colleges, they will be a great influence in spreading Christianity among the neonle.The law recently passed for the suppression of the opium business is hailed with joy by Dr.Noyes.According to this, opium growers have to cultivate one-tenth less every year, so that in ten Known Everywhere, Has character behind its reputation.The above cut is only one of the many new Fall styles.Becoming shapes for all ages.Every Hat guaranteed.Headquarters: pre CLEA 5H ATI i 223 st.Catherine West, One door West of Bleury.MARRY In September.Order your Bridal Bouquets and Floral Decorations from the Leading Florist.Everything up-to-date.Ar tistic Decorator.I am the larges! grower of Flowers and Plants in Montreal ; therefore, the cheapest and best place to get anything you want.Country and City Orders re- ceivethesame Careful Attention The S.S.BAIN, =e 463 St.Catherine St.West, MONTREAL.years the production of opium will cess \u2018altogether.Meanwhile, active meas: are being taken to shut up ali opinm dens.That the Chinese are destined for à great future among the leading natic\u201d of the world Dr.Noyes has not the slightest doubt, tm CANADIANS WIN BEAT AMERICANS IN RIFLE SHONT AT ROCHESTER.\u2014 Rochester, N.Y., Sept.20.\u2014The Can - dian riflemen who came to Rochester *\u2019 .shoot with a team from the Eighth Se] rate Company, on the Bushnells bar.range, this morning won the first cv shooting over a 200 yards range.Te geore was: Canadians, 234: Eighth Sco: rate Company.224.The Canadians 4 won the second, or 30 vards range.boa score of 218 to 188.\u2014\u2014\u2014 ONTARIO W.C.T.U.Cornwall.Sept.20.\u2014The Provn W.C.T.U.executive.as well a= the !n- cal union, are making thorough prepaid tions for the provincial convention te held here on Nov.5 to & rer MR.HYMAN'S HEALTH Ottawa.Sept.20.-Statemonts reached Ottawa that the Hon.(has os Hyman's health is no lettin lu ex minister is suffering from the pen vere nervous breakdown Jo am qe 1 if he ever will return \u2018« London, or ever, manage his business, it he dues tas LAN f ~t rd is nd ng est in nd RSP pes inl he \\ oT TTT SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1907 Cash price 7c per loaf.\u2018Phone E 108 - - pL >> + CAES FES > nA ES MR À Let Stuart and Herbert be your baker, and then you will have Bread that is made from the best-buy the best-and for the best.STUART & HERBERT THE BAKERS OF MONTREAL The better the name the greater the tame.For years the name of Stuart and Herbert has been famous .as standin for TOP NOTC QUALITY in Bread.There is nothing like good Bread to coax the appetite.No other Bread has such general excellence as Stuart and Herbert's.dn - BJ9-637 Rivard St.pa J FILING CABINETS, Mod - SECTIONAL BOOK CASES, Yo SCHOOL SEATS, |\u201d ; DESKS and CHAIRS.\u201c Everything in Office Furniture _ 225 NOTRE DAME CABINET CO.Li, WEST, MONTREAL, We under We cerdially invite you have fitted up a suite of Showrooms calculated to display our magnificent stock of ELECTRIC FIXTURES in such a manner as to make - selection early.Daylight is excluded, fixlures being shown their own light under conditions as nearly as possible those of actual use, to call and see them.Yeu will find many beautiful and original ideas in lighting fx- tures and at unusually attractive prices.McDONALD &WILLSON 588 8t.Catherine street, Montreal.MR.MARCONIS PLANS.St John, N.B., Sept.20.\u2014It is learned that Mr.Marconi, who arrived at Ri- mouski yesterday on the \u2018Virginian,\u2019 proposed going to Father Point, in connection with his work, and then to Glace Bay.It is reported that Mr.Marconi lias mastered the transatlantic telegraph to an extent which warrants him In es- rablshing the service for commercial purposes, and that that is his present mission, ._.- COLORED METHODISTS.The B M.E.Church (colored) 1s holding services regularly in the Des- rivieres Street Mission, near St.James and Windsor streets, under the pastorate of the Rev.B.Brown.The services include the Wednesday night prayer meeting, preaching and cong\" service on Sunday evenings at 8 o'clock and Sunday-school at three o'clock.The pastor extends a hearty invitation to all friends, of color, or others who may be able to attend.W.C.T.U.Dominion Biennial Convention Concludes Labors : at \u201cWinnipeg.(From our Correspondent.) .Winnipeg, Sept.17.\u2014lt 18 like July in Winnipeg to-day, mosquitoes and aii, and so lovely was the late afterngon that some, in spite of \u2018ars and automobiles, walked fron Government House, where Lady McMillan held a reception for the delegates.Last evening a lacge audience listéned with the closest attention to a address by Mrs, Katherine Lente Stevenson, of Boston, on the text, * Shall the throne of iniquity rave fellowship | with thee, which frame iniquity by a law.\u2019 The throne of iniquity was the hquor traffic, and by the License law was the iniquity framed.For the traffic always desired a law, no matter bow restrictive.But it was instruction to ook at some of the places where 3b could not hide under the cloak of -the law.Look at Cambridge, Mass, which had had prohibition for thirty yeats.There property had donbled in value.Brocton had no dicanse for ten years; then, by lack of vigilance on the part of the temperance people a license law had again crept in, but so disgusted were the people with the results of ther own law that before the year was two- thirds over the license was revoked.ln Boston, where there were twice the number of licenses in proportion to the population than there were in any other town in the state, and was supposed to be so wealthy a city, when it was proposed to charge upon the wowns which licensed the saloon e greater percentage of the cost of the criminals it manufactured, Mayor Collins went before the Legislature and declared that such a but bankruptcy.Caroll D.Wright, the \u2018i official statistician of the Uaited States, had recently declar:d zhat for every dollar Massachusetts received from the liquor traffic she peat from nineteen to twenty im paying for its results.Some said prohibition could .rot be enforced, but strip any license law of its prohibitory features and she had never met a decent man who would vote for what was left, .An argument used in favor of high license was that the license-holders heip- ed to close up the unlicenced places, but far from that they were wholly interested in and worked for the keeping of them open.Far worse than the violation of a good law was the tance of a bad one, In Maine, which has boasted prohibivion for fifty years, there were more homes and bigger bank laccounta per head than in any other state in the Union.A certain British M.P.had come over with the delegates to the Worid's W.C: T.Convention in on, & year ago, to, he said, \u2018Study the workings of the Maine Law.\u2019 the president of the National Union, after a hard day in convention, when her secretary had gone to bed, wrote prominent men in Maine who would have given him all vhe information in favor of the prohihitory law that he wanted.He never used one of the letters.He want \u2018nstead to anti-pro- hibition men, to the nullification sheritf who was working his best to over throw the Jaw, and other men of the same stripe, and then pithlished to the world that he had dis?overad that prohibition did not prohibit.But Mrs.Stevens later discovered that he himself had deep financial \u2018ntarests in the liquor t c.The widely advertised patant medicines which contain 50 large a percentage of alcohol, came in for strong condemnation at the Tussday moizing session, and Mies Richardson, the superintendent of the department of medical temperance, was asked to prepare a Jeat- let for publication.Mrs.McKee reported increasing interest in the curfew bell.British Columbia already had a law, Quebec had no law but an alderman in Montreal had promised to push the subject in that city and a Winni delegate said that the men in the C.P.R.workshops whose | families made up so large a settlement in one part of Winnipeg, had begged the W.GC.T.U.for God\u2019s sake to do something to help them keep their children off the streets at night.\u2019 The convention pronounced iteelf against the wearing of birds and wings on women\u2019s hats and were recommended to write to the Audubon Society, of New York, for their leaflets on the bird life of the country.: DECLARATION OF PRINCIPLES.The resolutions of the convention, which are ever the declaration of the principles of the Union, are always a prominent feature of the convention.Among these was one declaring motherhood to be the crowning glory of a woman\u2019s life, and urging mothers to never rest until this was planted deep in the heart of every daughter in the land.Another was a strong protest against the advertising of patent medicines in our daily papers and magazines, and urging members to take into their homes only those which refrain from it.Another was a protest against indecent post-cards.And another was a warning against the principles of Mormonism being at the present time so widely propagated in Canada, especially in our North-West.Another was urging that in the absence of a Dominion prohibitory law provincial and local unions work might and main to secure, local probibitory laws in every municipality.| OFFICERS.The following were among the officers nd delegates present:\u2014 * Officers Mrs.Gordon Wright, London.president; Mrs.O.C.Whitman, N.S., vice-president; Mrs.(Dr.Toronto, corresponding secretary; Mrs.R.W.McLachlan, Montreal, recording secretary; Mrs.W.Odell, Ottawa, treasurer; Mrs.F.Jd.Waycolt, Montreal, Y secretary.- iV course would mean to the city nothing 6 Mrs, Stevens, for him six letters of introduction to | Witness said he Hp A Di SN Cash Bargains UPRIGHT PIANOS - DOMINION Upright 6125 HEINTZMAN \u201c 8135 KARN - - \u201c 8145 MORRIS .\u201c $185 To cash or short-date purchasers we are now offering New Upright Pianos at special inducements.so NEW PIANOS NOW IN STOCK, 71e Leach Piano Co, Ifmited, N 560 St.Catherine St, West NEAR DRUMMOND.OPEN RVENINGS.Sole Representatives for Mason & Risch, Beli, Leach Chickering Bros.and Chopin Provincial presidents\u2014Mrs.S.J.E.McKee, Barrie, Ont.; Mrs.Senderson, Danville, Que.; Mrs.O.C.Whitman, Canso, N.S.; Mrs.Chisholm, Winnipeg, Man.; Mrs.Spofford, Victoria, B.C.; Mrs.Fraser, St.Stephen, N.B., representing the president, Mrs.Superintendents\u2014Mrs.Asa Gordon, Ottawa; Mrs.Waters, Hamilton; Mrs.S.A.Jones, Sherbrooke; Mrs.(Rev.) Me- Clung, Winnipez; Miss C.Richardson, Montreal; Miss E.E.Smith, Windsor, S.|.DELEGATES.Nova Scotia\u2014Miss Bessie McLatchely.British Columbia\u2014Mrs.Geddes, Fernie.Quebec\u2014Mrs.J.Finley, Lachine; Miss Campbell, Quebec; Mrs.Hyslop, Dan- ville.Manitobe-Mre.Harvey, Winnipeg; Miss Turnbull, Brandon; Mts.Daniels, Bra ; Fowler, Killarney; Mrs.W.zy t, Winnipeg; Mrs.Ferguson, Piet Mound.ip M TA, our, Paisley; Mrs.Bight, ston; Mrs.Blanche Reed ohnston, Barrie; Mrs.Williams, Belle- Ville; Mrs.McFaul, Toronto; Mrs.C.Scott, Ottawa; Mrs.Dent, Mitchell; Miss Axworth, Toronto.WORK FOR THE COMING YEAR.Among the special items of work planned for the coming year ars:\u2014 A memorial to the federal government asking for a bill to empower the proviæ cial legislatures to enact laws to prohibit the manufacture, importation and sale of cigarettes.; .An appeal to Judge Dugas.to abolish the saloons and dance halls in the Yukon, the demoralizing effects of which have been Eo Fophically described by the Rev.Mr.ngle.CL An appeal to the Dominion Government to appoint a woman inspector of prigons where women are confined.On Tuesaday afternoon, after a vigorous discussion, a board of publication for the \u2018Dominion Bulletin,\u2019 the official or- n, was appointed, consisti of the minion and Provincial Unions and Mrs.F.H.Waycott, Montreal, was reappointed editor.or DP acaday évening was the usual \u2018XY night, presided over by Mrs.Wayoott, the Dominion Y secretary, of which the closing incident was the presentation of a beautiful little amethyst and fod brooch to Mrs.Whitman, of Canso, 8.the retiring vice-president, as a small 8 finowledgment of her faithful service since her election._ THE ROBERTSON INQUEST HEARING COMMENCED AND ADJOURNED TO SEPT.25.Coroner McMahon opened the uest esterday into the cause of the death of illiam \u201cRobertson, who was killed in a collision at Vaudreuil on Wednesday night, at 9.30 o\u2019clock.ohn Robertson said that his brother bad been employed by the G.T.R.for about four weeks.; George Bramley, of Brockville, engineer of train No.883, which ran into train No.1363, was not aware that any train was ahead of him.The signal he had at Vaudreuil was to go ahead.When he came round the curve he put sand \u2018on the rails and applied the brakes.Seeing the train would not stop in time he shouted \u2018jump\u2019 to his fireman and jumped himself.The fireman\u2019 did not jump.He ran out over the top of the train.The brakeman might have done the same, had been twenty-two years with the G.T.Railway, and ten years ag an engineer.Hector Giroux, telegraph operator at Coteau station, said that train 1363 passed him at 8.06 p.m.and No.898 at 8.50 m.The information he received for Ro.1363 was that it would run from Coteau to Turcot.No.1363 was a special train.All operators from Cornwall to Montreal would have orders that train No.1363 was to go through.uestioned by Mr.Wills, representing x Grand Trunk, witnéss said that the ™ ny 2 A SESE, TE ath af pak JOE SIREN Sgr at dnt Hy AD TREY EES Pa RAT PT ads Ace de A Colonial - House, Phillips Square.In Kitchenware and $1.17.~ KITCHEN UTENSILS, no secoad s, 83 1-3 percent, with opal globes, end stairways, in case of sickness, Regular, 35c to 65¢c, for 25c¢.Regular, 2c to 40¢, for 10c.Teacups and Saucers, tions.from 830.00 to $150.00.th Br An es th + reas 3 4 50 @ Ame oad 58 SPEGIALS for MONDAY GRANITEWARE TEAKETTL ES, best quality snow white lined, all guaranteed.Regular, $1.35, $1.60, $1.75, for 80c, $1 A Table of an assortment of Pest Quality Imported GRANITEWARPE NICKEL PLATED BRASS NIGHT LAMPS, will hang or stand, fitted give mellow ight, most economical.JOHNSON'S PREPARED FLO OR WAX.polish; does not blister nor crack off.4 pound tins at SQc per pound.BASKET DEPARTMENT.SPECIAL TABLE of Lupo Baskets, Work and Handkerchief Baskets.SPECIAL TABLE OF HANDKERCHIEF Balance of summer stock of RECLINING AND FOLDING GO-CARTS, at $15.00 to $30.00.less 20 péreent.CUT GLASS DEPARTMENT.Complete Collection of AMERICAN AND CANADIAN CUT GLASS, in the latest shapes and designs, in (duding Beautiful and Baccarat Rock Crysal, Vases, Bowls, Napples, etc., etc.CHINA DEPARTMENT.* « Just received, Exquisite Line DOULTON CHINA, Gold Décoration, in Bouillon Cups and Saucers, Cream Jugs, Ramekin and Plates, ete.DINNER SETS.COMPLETE LINE OF DINN ER SETS; LATEST MNOVELTIER IN LI MOGES CHINA DINNER SETS, ranging Dept., 2nd Floor.imported, no seconds, snow white lined, all guaranteed, at For extra door etc.To introduce, price, 40c.Gives a high, rich, lasting BASKETS and CATCHALLS.Apecimens of English Teapots, Sugars and Newest Shapes and Deczôra- LARGE COLLECTION OF BRA Statuettes, etc.] Vases, etc, ete, ARTISTIC BRASS AND COPPER NOW ON EXHIBITION WARE.Direct importation from Vicnna, Jardinieres, Trays, Inkstdands, Gongs, Orpenments, Smoker Sets, Placques, Steins, Umbrella Stands, Pedestals, Busts, Candlesticks, ete, SPECIAL.COMPLETE LINE OF BANA RES BRASS, such as Jardinieres, Trays, 88, COPPER and BRONZE ART Berlin and Paris, consisting on Le | FALL and WINTER OATALOQUE now ready, and wili be \" Malileé Free to any address on application.HENRY MORGAN & CO, Lrd., Montreal rule was to hold the semaphere up at Vaudreuil for five minutes after a train had left.He had been operator there for seven months.William Davidson, conductor of train No.893, said he knew there was a train ahead of him coming from Ottawa, but by the time the train witness was on er- rived at Vaudreuil it should have been thirty miles ahead.Questioned by the coroner, witness said he did not think his engineer was aware of the train ahead.William Howell, brakeman of No.1363 said that his train arrived at Vau i at 9.03 pm.It remained about eeven minutes.He dropped a fuzee, but he was not aware of a train following.The coroner asked why rule 218, which directe the brakemen to eight hundred yards back was not carried out.Howell explained that the fuzée burned for ten minutes and that during that time the safety of the train was assured.E.Jarvis, operator at Ste.Anne\u2019s, and Harry Gower, enginser of train No.891, also gave evidence, : = ; S.Sheets, operator at Vaudreuil, said that he waited three and e half minutes after the first train left before raising the semaphore.He was cautioned by the coroner for trying to throw the blame on the operator at St.Dominique.\u201c William Cameron, conductor of No.1363, was unavoidably absent owing to his injuries, and as the coroner considered him a necessary witness he adjourned the court until Sept.25.ad CARRIB NATION GOES TO PRISON RATHER THAN PROMISE TO KEEP SILENCE.\\ ington, Sept.19.\u2014In the Police oN to-day Mrs Carrie Nation refus to promise not to talk to crowds On = street in the future and was sent to the workhouse for seventy-five days in default of the payment of a fine of twenty-five dollars.She was arrested yesterday for disorderly conduct.She was addressing 4 crowd in front of the Post-Office Depa E ment on the evil effects of cigarette smoking, and when she refused to stop was arrested.Ay SHOOTS AND KILLS LANDLADY RED 8 COTE JHE HAD ORDE LOU x Se HO COMMITS SUICIDE, TO LEAVE HER HOUSE, \u2019ranklin, N.H., Sept.: qu'arrel at the xfast table, Louis Coté to-day shot and killed Mrs.Nell Clark Pennock, with whom he boarded, at her home on Pomigewasset street.He then cut his throat with a razor and i 1 terward.| died enon.who was the divorced 19\u2014 After à re +; nth Le \u2018 - yi wife of Fred A.Pennock a pawnbroker, bad been living in this city only about six weeks, having come here from Bath.t Coté, it 18 gaid, was angry with Mrs.Pennock because she ordered him to Jeave her house on account of his drinking habits.re FORTY PERISHED \u2014\u2014 IN WRECK ON MEXICAN CENTRAL \u2014FREIGHT TRAIN CREW DISAPPEAR.Mexico City, Sept.20 \u2014Forty persons were killed and thirty-four others were wounded, about seventeen of the latter receiving fatal injuries in the railway wreck yesterday, at Encarnacion, near Aguas Callientes, on the Mexican Central Railroad, between the El Paso express and a freight train.The crew of the freight train has disappeared and is understood to be endeavoring to leave Mexico, knowing that they will be held responsible for the disaster, which occurred on a down grade curve and was due to the freight train trying to make an extra siding.JAMAICA INSURANCE ISLANDERS TO DECLARE A BOYCOTT AGAINST CERTAIN COM- ! PANIES.Kingston, Ja., Sept.20.\u2014The Chamber of Commerce will hold a meeting on Thur&lay for the purpose of declaring a boycott against the English insurance companies, which carried risks on the property destroyed in the fire here following the earthquake, which now set up as a defence in suits against them that they are not liable owing to the non-endorsement of co-insurances.The feeling against the companies is increasing daily.mr There will always be a Pianist in your home if you own a PIANOLA or PIANOLA PIANO The success of the Pianola is Jogi cal\u2014natural\u2014imevitable.it transforms the piano from a silent pieces of fur niture into as Musioal Instrument for it instantly gives every one the ability to play any of the 20,000 selections of the Pianola\u2019s repertory artistically.Pianos of all makes taken in exchange.869 St.Catherine St, West | .+ Ret ig NORDHEIMER'S, Limited, 4/7 PERNA.4) foal .on TRS Pacs afb 20 à Ets arm roe Weekly Calendar LS BN FIRST BAPTIST CHURGH Sherbrooke Street and McGill College ave.PUBLIC WORSHIP AT The Pastor, Rev.Dr.a WILL PREACH AT Morning Subject.Evening Subject.eue 11 A.M.AND 7 P.M.GORDON, BOTH SERVICES, \u201cA CURE FOR CARE.\u201d .\"PECULIAR PEOPLE.\u201d A CORDIAL INVITATION TO ALL.ERE CHURCH| Corner, of Mance and Milton streets.SERVICES AT 11 A.M.AND 7 P.M, Preacher,\u2014Rev.FRANK J.DAY, M.A., B.D.Morning Subject.\u2014 \u201cPR Evening Subject, \u2014' THE MEN IN DEMAND.\u201d AYER.\u201d 4 WELCOME TO ALL./ RALLY SUN DAY in the OONGREGATIONAL © HUROH, Pdint St.Oharles, 11 A.M.\u2014SERMON BY PASTOR, Rev.A.W.MAIN, $ P.M.\u2014SPECIAL MUSIC BY THE\" CHILDREN.Address by Rev.J.W.DAVEY.P.M.\u2014SPECIAL MUSIC, BY CHOIR AND CHILDREN, assisted by the ORCHESTRA of the Methrdist Church.\u2014 bv Rev, Prof.WARRINER, D.J, All velo OLIVET BAPT IST CHURCH, Cor.Dorchester and Cuy $ts.The Rev.DAVI D BOVINGTON, _ of Rochester, N.Y.s .Will Preach at Morning, 11 o'clock.both Services Evening at 7 o'clock.> \u2018 \"THANGERS WEILCOMB:.C\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 ee DOMINION SQUARE METHODIST CHURCH.SUNDAY, September 22nd, 1907.11 a.m\u2014s A Double Portien of raie spirit.\u201d 7 mm.\u2014\u201cOovering Sin.\u201d : , Strangers Welcomed.ST.GABRIEL PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH.288 ST.CATHERINE Services at 11 A.M.end 7 P.M, STREET WEST.Preacher at both services, The Rev.J.W.WOODSIDE, M.A.Sunday School, p.m.Mr.Wood side's Ad It Bible Class, 3.16 p.m.STRANGERS AND VISITORS CORDIALLY INVITED.CALVARY CHURCH, -(Congregational) The Pastor, Rev.E.H.Tippett, will preach.Evening Subject, \u201cTHE THEOLOGICAL EART HQUAKE,\u201d AU Welcome.; rm ST.JAMES METHODIST CHURCH .CATHERINE J \u2018Madigan, : SPORTING NEWS|E WON A DOUBLE HEADER, Royals Sprung \u201cOne of the sur prises of the Season on \u201cNewark Yesterday.Newark, Sept.20-Montreq) sprung one: of the surprises of the season on the New- | \"ark baseball re \u2018to-day when they.defeated : the Sallors \u2018in both games of & double-header, the -score in the frai game being 4\u20142, and in the.second 4-1, Montreal had a new pitcoer in the box in the finst game, and it was largely due to his | fine work that the Royals Won.The new man was Ray Tift, formerly of the Brown + University team and the Philadelphia Am: | -}.ericans.In the first Montreal had a barvest of hits in the fifth inning, \u2018=coring -three runs, while in the succeeding period one L more tally was counted.\u2018Newark scored.their runs in the seventh.First same-Score: NEWARK.° ; AB.R.BH.Engle, r.f.+, .Mahling, 8.8.+ oo oe Cockman, \u20183b.Mullen, \u201c3D.se 00 as Sharpe, 1b.oo \u2026.Seacher, - \u20ac,2, ve e + Jones, 1.1.sm We eo Stanage, c.= ae oe oe Frill, Pe ca 0.ve a Totals or oe BGO 00 on oh in 03 0 03° Sesswoseeo, oeSHoHooHrt covulroond soocoHmRæo> .Pe \u2018.e 3e - MONTREAL.~ AB, -R.BH.PO :Nesdham, 1.1.{ Snowden, c.f.Brown, 1b.[es » 68 >» 6 \u2014 T.f.\u201ces \u2018oo eo Morgan, 3b.s Co ae ve eo ++ 0.Titt, D.0 4 Totals ss es se se on 34 \u201cTift gut pas \u2018Anterference.wv.ion Score by ngs R.H.E.0000001001 4 1 20 ee seve Sabb lt OrHHMHOOHSS HéHOSOWSO AHAOHRSOSO! e ; = 2osseses se co 0 ue ._ a 8 - - publishes the following article:\u2014\u2018 At the Trades and Labor Congress banquet in innipe esterday evening, me he guests refused to drink to the health of the King.Does not that seem most unlikely?What country in the world can boast of enjoying broader liberties than ours?A dependency of England, whose powerful protection 1s the only safe-guard of our security, we govern ourselves as we think proper, under the protection of our gracious Sovereign.We are the happiest nation on earth.The name of Edward VII is respected and honored the world over, not only beeause it designates the head of a powerful nation and of an Empire \u2018over which the sun never sets,\u2019 but also and more especially because our Sovereign is a protector of peace and liberty.History will tell the \u2018beneficial part played in the universe by His British Majesty, the father of the \u2018 entente cordiale,\u2019 the apostle of universal peace.It will add that Edward VII was one of the great benefactors of humanity.And we, the sons of.the most important, the freest and richest colony in the empire, should refuse to drink to the health of the King.\u2019 That is not possible.Let ys raise our cups and cry out:\u2014\u2018 God save Edward VIL\u2019 œw.+ small wicker basket, which takes DAILY WITNESS hn FOOTBALL IN CHINA, Ted The first game of football 1 witness- upon my arrival in China,\u201d one ot our conular representatives, at home for \u2018a Visit, remarked recently, \u2018I mistook for a very gerious riot, and you wouidn\u2019t have blamed me, either.\u2019 \u2018In the first place I was not aware that the Chinese had any such .game, but later found that it is very popular in North China.It is not played as is the American game, and instead ot eleven players to the side there are fifty.These northern Chinese arg almost giants, and every man on the team | Will be six feet or over in height and weigh on the average 200 pounds.\u2018l'here are no goals, side lines, or halves.The game lasts until one side is the winner, and frequently this is not accomplished before two or three days.*The idea of the ga.ne \u2018s to force a the place of our ball, into the territory of the other side\u2014this territory being one half of the town, and up and down the streets the fight rages.Each man is equipped with a whistle with which to summon agsistance when too hard press- * Stealth, .as well as main force, may be used in getting the \u2018ball\u2019 into the enemy's country, and 1 know of one clever player who did so by passing over the roofs of the houses.\u201d As you mav imagine, one hundred giants yelling and fighting in the streets create some excitement.\u2019 \u2014New York \u2018Globe.\u2019 OBITUARY \u20ac A CENTENARIAN.ornwall, Sept.20.\u2014Mrs.Mary La- rake, of Westville, Franklin county, Y\u2026, died recently at the advanced age of 109 years.She was born in Quebec in 1768, and was of French descent.She a son liv i i has a sor ving in Malone, who is 70 Brrr THE MINISTRY SOME TELLING REMARKS AT A SCOTTISH ORDINATION.Some interesting proceedings took Place recently at the ordination of the Rev, John Gordon, M.A., at Hobkirk near Hawick, Roxburgh, who has just been selected as minister for that Place.After the usual religious exercises tle charge to minister and people was sivea by the Rev.D.Cathels; M.A.of ia- wick, who after congratulating the new pastor on his call to service said: \u2014* Ie- cause you are of those to whom much is given, need I remind you that you are also of those from whom much will be required?It is as easy in the ministry as it is elsewhere to be forgetful of this.To buy in the cheapest market and to sell in the deatest is a legitimate maxim of trade.To seek the maximum and to give the minimum is the same maxim, though not legitimate, in operation in other spheres of life.It is not unknown in the ministry of all the churches.If it 18 base anywhere it is basest there.As you are an honest man you will hold it in contempt.In return for what is given you this day you will give the best which is at your command, which is within your power.You will give your- sclf\u2014body, mind, and heart\u2014to the duty that is laid upon you here.The routine work which must be done will leave you ample leisure, more, indeed, than is good for any man to have, unless with steadfast mind and resolute will he determines to employ it wisely.That such leisure is often so employed the ministry of our Scottish Churches gives many noble examples.Men of wide culture, and profound scholarship, and strenous activity in social and public life, have always been conspicuous amongst us.The Manse, in may an obscure and lonely parish, has been a centre of brilliant intellectual life, and of beneficent human activities.But the contrary has at times been painfully evident.After warning the pastor against ill- using time, and being content to shuffle through life, the speaker continued.\u2014 \u2018With all my heart I would warn you against a ministry so debased .as this.And, taking only the very lowest ground, I trust you will always remember that a man should at least do the work for which he is paid.Perhaps I may be permitted to remind you of three sources of your influence amongst this people, and by which the worth of your ministry will be tried.I remind you of the value of honest, simple, earnest teaching in the pulpit.What is called eloquent preaching is within the scope of very few men, and it is our wisdom to recognize this and accept the fact.Those of us who are not eloquent only make our- A HA = Rd : ee dee 2 masse ML el Ges TVA ey 2 aX 54 a TURKISH R G We beg to announce that our Annual Consignment of Genuine Hand-Made Turkish, Persian and Indian Rugs, Carpets and Palace Strips has arrived, and is the largest and best assorted collection ever brought to Canada.AUCTION at an early date.The entire collection is being catalogued, and will be SOLD BY Full particulars later.99 and 101 Metcalfe St.M.HICKS & CO, Auctioneers, Last week over 20.000 Collars were laundried at the TOILET LAUNDRY, \u201cThe Laundry that knows how,\u201d Why ?Well, ask any one wearing them and he will tell you.425 Richmond street.Phone Uptown 3480.a selves ridiculous when we attempt to be that.And any man of even modest equipment may, if his heart is in bis work, and he grudges no labor given to it, be a strong man in the pulpit in as far as honesty and simplicity and earnestness constitute strength.If he have convictions that have seized his own mind he will not fail to convey them to\u2019 the minds of others.If they are helpful to his life he can make them helpful to other lives also.If he is content with this result he will have his reward, and he need have no regrets if the somewhat meretricious .gifts of pulpit eloquence have been denied to him.\u2019 The speaker then referred to the influence of visitation and of personal character and continued: \u2014\u2018 There is a stan: dard of conduct you must meet, and, if you fail, your failure is absolute.You may retain the fleshpots of your office; you will retain nothing else.You will be bankrupt in respect, in obedience, 1n honor, and in friends.Our Scottish people are ever kindly disposed to the minis- \u2018try; in our day just as much as in other days this is so.But if they are ready to respond to any man who honestly does his work, they are also quick to estimate a character; and even men of outwardly correct life may present features which sadly mar their.influence.In your pulpit work you will be little more to those who hear you than sounding brass or a tinkling cymbal, and in your visitation your words of counsel, or com- |.fort, or warning, will be robbed of much of their effect, if you yourself are known to be a man of churlish temper, of bitter tongue, of unforgiving spirit, of slothful habit, or penurious disposition, eager to take and as eager not to give, an inconsiderate master and a hard man in a bargain.They may fall short themselves, these parishioners of yours, but they know the Christian ideal of character, and it is that ideal you are here to represent to them.On the extent to which you do this the deepest and most permanent and most fruitful influence of your ministry will depend.\u2019 In his charge to the people he appealed for the regular worship of God\u2019s people.\u2018My own experience is that Christian life\u2014the life of faith and hope, of earnest.patient effort to do well, the life that is not absorbed in time, or at the mercy of the things of time, inevitably withers or suffers by the neglect of this.Life for all of us is too serious a thing.too hard to live aright, too much beset by temptations, too full of cares and anxieties, too near to sorrow and bereavement and the awful facts of death\u2014 ever shadowing us and ours\u2014too near to judgment and eternity, that we can wisely separate ourselves from any means of grace which God has given us, and from the kindly fellowship of our neighbors in common worship, and from the inspira- EER } 3 FLOUR \u2014 FOR BREAD AND FOR PASTRY.Whele Wheat Flour and Grabam for Brewn Bread.BREAKFAST CEREALS of all kinds.BRODIE '& HARVIE 10 and 12 Bleury street, CANADIAN CUSTOMS TARIFF 1907 Revised to Date, Price 50 cents.MORTON,PHILLIPS & CO.Stationers, Blank Book Makers and Printers 115-117 Notre Dame Street West, MONTREAL, Flour \u201cMARRIAGE LICENSES MONEY TO LEND CUSHING & BARRON Notaries end Commissioners.Liverpool & London & Qlobe Insurance Building, 112 St: James Screet.PC tion and the hope and the help which are associated with the Sanctuary.There may be times before us\u2014there have been such times in the past\u2014when our people will become increasingly indifferent to this.Many causes may explain it, and the Church itself is not alwavs blameless.People come seeking bread and only a stone may be given them.The man in the pulpit fails when his own life ceases to express the truths which be commends to others, or when his message is no longer vital to the needs of those who hear him.Or the people themselves may cease to be responsive to any message however earnest and true, because the things of the world are too much with them, and, for the time being, they are dead to the realities of the spiritual life.But for all of us the fashion of this world passes away, and the realities of the spiritual life, and the needs of our spiritual nature, are permanent and indestructible.In as far as yoy know this I am sure you will love this House of God.so rich in memories for many of you, that you will pray for its prosperity and peace; and do all that in; you lies to make the ministry which begins here to-day a ministry of helpfulness and power.\u2014 O'R complete stock now includes the latest fall styles in Ladies\u2019 and{Men's Shoes at $4, $5, $6 and $7.A STEWART SHOE Fits well, : Looks well, and Weare well.W.H STEWART 517 St.Catherine Steet West \u201cae Ry La he tre PE A a FU a I.FUN EE ot na RS 10 SOCIAL AND PERSONAL The marriage of Miss Elsie Femwick to Mr.Dakers Cameron is arranged to take place on Nov.9.The annual breakfast of the Montreal Hunt Club, which was to have taken place to-day, was postponed.The Rev.J.L.and Mrs.Gilmour have arrived in Toronto, and taken up their residence at 86 Major etreet.The marriage of .Miss Katherine Sheriff to Mr.R.D.L.Denne, is arranged to take place on Nov: 6.Mrs.R.W.Shepherd and family will not return from their summer residence at Como, until the end of October.Mise Evelyn Clay will be the guest of Mrs.J.A.D.Holbrook.while in Ottawa next week, for the golf tournament.| Prof.Henry T.Armstrong, of McGill University, has returned from England.Mrs.Armstrong and children are remaining in England for the winter.\u2019 The Rev.W.J.Clark, of St.Andrew's Presbyterian Church, Westmount, has arrived in town with his family, and will take up his new residence on Roslyn avenue.The marriage of Miss Gertrude Darling- ton, of Montreal, to Mr.William I.Sampson, of Belleville, Ont., is to take place on Wednesday.Sept.25, at Grace Church, Point.St.Charles.\u2018Mrs.Collingwood Schreiber will entertain at a large tea\u2019 on Friday next in honor of the visiting golfers from Montreal, Toronto and other points, who will play in the championship tournament in Ottawa next week.The engagement is announced of Miss Margaret L.M.Walker, younger daughter of the Rev.and Mrs.W.P.Walker, of Westmount, to Dr.Frederick W.Bry- done-Jack, son of Dr.W.D.Brydone- Jack, Vancouver, B.C.: Mrs.Harvard Turnbull, of Colling- wood, who has been visiting her aunt, Mrs.Fred White, in Ottawa, arrives in town shortly to remain until after the wedding of her sister, Miss Maud Baker, and Mr.Ernest F.Slocum, which takes place on Oct.2.\u2018 .The marriage of Miss Clementine Varney, daughter of Mr.Oliver F.Var- ney, to Mr.Hermann G.Huber, of Karlsruhe, Germany, took place recently at Portland, Me.\u2018The Rev.Edwin Hovey was the officiating clergyman., The marriage of Mr.Bertram Valentine Gomery, manager of the Royal Bank of Canada, Hanover, to Miss Edith Florence Hendery, eldest daughter of Mr.Alex.Hendery, took place on Thursday after- poon, at St.Martin\u2019s Church.The ceremony was performed by the Rev.Henry Gomery, father of the groom, assisted by the Rev.G.Osborne Troop, rector.The bride wore a gown of white Duchess satin trimmed with Venetian point lace, a wreath of orange blosoms and tulle veil, and earried a bouquet of white roses and lilies of the valley: The bridesmaids were the Misses Beatrice Hendery, Olive Church, and: Efie Williamson, who were dressed in cream silk eolienne, and carried bouquets of white asters.Mr.Percy Gomery, of Richmond, acted as best man for his brother, and the ushers were Messrs.Reginald Hendery and Roland Gomery.The marriage of Miss Angelina Be?- thiaume, daughter of the Hon.Trettié Berthiaume, to Mr.Pamphile R.Du Tremblay, advocate, was solemnized this morning in the Sacred Heart Chapel of Notre Dame.The altar was decorated with a profusion of flowers.The marriage service was conducted by the Rev.P.R.Gauthier in the presence 6f many friends of bride and groom.The bride wore a travelling costume of plum-color- ed cloth with hat to match.The bride was given away by her father, and Mr.; son.Congratulations were received from Sir Wilfrid Laurier and the Hen.Mr.Gouin.A benediction had also been received from Cardinal Merry del Val.A rumber of the friends of Mr.du Tremblay, assembled at the Place Viger Hotel\" yesterday and presented him with a splendid casket of cutlery on the occa- gion of his marriage.At the home of the bride\u2019s parents, \u2018Forest View,\u201d St.Louis de \u20ac, ! took place the marriage of Miss Jessie Tait, daughter of Mr.Charles Tait, to Mr.Donald McCaig, of Allan\u2019s Corners, the Rev.George Whillans officiating.The bride was gowned in white mousseline de soie, and carried a bouquet of white roses and lilies of the valley.She wore orange blossoms in her hair.Miss Phemia Tait was bridesmaid, attired in white chiffon silk, and her bouquet was of pink roses.The groom\u2019s cousin, Mr.Robert Howden, acted as best man.The ceremony was performed beneath a large floral bell.After the ceremony a wedding supper was served, the guests numbering about one hundred and thirty.Among them were Mrs.Peter Tait, of (iiasgow, Seotland; Mr.and Mrs.William Tait, Mr.James Tait, and Miss Isabel Tait, Mr.and Mrs.«Robert Tait, Mr.and Miss Munro, of Montreal; Mr.and Mrs.David Tait, Bainville; Mr.William Elliot, Rockland.The wedding gift were numerous and .handsome, including a beautiful case of cutlery from the bride's cousins, Mr.and Mrs.Peter Tait, of Glasgow.The wedding of Miss Florence Kennedy, youngest daughter of Mr.Robert Kennedy, to Mr.Henry P.Young, of Lachine, was celebrated on Wednesday, at the home of the bride\u2019s father, in North Wakefield.The ceremony was performed at noon by the Rev.Henry A.Young, father of the groom, assisted by the Rev.R.Eagleson.The bride wore her travelling suit of navy blue Venetian cloth with white silk trimmings, and hat to match, and carried a: bouquet of white roses.She was attended by her sister, Miss Eva Kennedy, who wore a grey suit with black picture hat, and carried pink carnations.Mr.A.W.Young was his brother\u2019s groomsman.The groom\u2019s gift to the bride was a pearl brooch, to the bridesmaid, gold locket and chain, to the groomsman a gold stick-pin set with pearls.ding breakfast, many kindly wishes were expressed for the future health and prosperity of the bride and groom.The presents were many and valuable, including an antique, solid silver, hand- engraved tea-pot from friends in England, a silver card.receiver.from.Dr.and Mrs.Pritchard, a pearl brooch from Mr.and Mrs.Lake Marler, etc.Mr.and Mrs.Young will reside at Blue Bonnets, Montreal.; : Canadian visitors who registered at the Canadian High Commissioner's office, 17 Victoria Street, London, were:\u2014Prof.E.W.and Mrs.MacBride and.Master Desmond , MacBride, Miss J.H.and Miss E.B.H.Williams, Mrs.-D.Hat ton, Mrs.Charles McLean, Miss Gertrude and Miss Cathella McLean, Mrs.G.Padmore Jones, Miss Florine Phaneuf, Miss A.Adam, Arthur W.Wilks, Henry Smith, J.: Ambroise Lamaire, Frank R.Findlay, Montreal; Major and Mrs.John Rogers, Westmount; Miss ME.Bacon, Sherbrooke; Robert and Mrs.Mulvey, H.H.O'Reilly, F.Blackmore, Mrs.J.R.and Jessie M.Grant, Miss Elizabeth Macdonald, Miss Jessie Neil- say, Charles F.and Mrs.F.C.Ward, Mss.Fred.Morse, P.E.Beauchamp, Winnipeg; the Rev W.A.and Mrs.MacTaggart, J.Gordon Jones, H.G.Casey, H.Maxwell, Mrs.Harton Walker, Miss -Madeleine Walker, Frank D.L.Smith, Dugald Ross, as.R.| Gould, J.C.Morrow, Toronto; Mr.and Mrs.Baird and Miss Mabel Baird, To- P.V.du Tremblay wag witnes for his \u201cConfessions By Elis Parker Butler.Well illustrated and bound.From CHAPMAN'S EVERYONE IS READING SPECIAL 5OC Free 513 St.Catherine Street West, of a Daddy\u201d Author of Pigs is Pigs.BOOKSTORE, At the conclusion of the wed- | ronto Junction; Henry M.Afni,\" James D.Gemmill, Ottawa; Miss Gladys Dale, Barnston; Col.Walker, J.Young Byers, Calgary: .J.B.and Mrs.Currie, Capt.0.B.R.Dickey, Halifax; Miss M.B.Jarvis, Stratford; Thomas F.and, Mrs.|.Langlois, Vancouver; Geo.A.and Mrs.Clare, Preston, Ont.; the Hon.Wm.and Mrs.Gibson, Miss and Miss Evelyn Gibson, Beamsville, Ont.; Miss May I: Hillborn, Berlin, Ont.; Miss McBride, Indian Head, Sask.; J.R.Guidin, Mus- koka; J.E.Edgett, W.G.Smith, C.J.and \u2018Mrs.Milligan, St.John; E.W.P, Jones, Brantford; James J.Morrow, Arthur, Ont.; Mrs.and Miss Pember- ton, Victoria, B.C.meer NEW CONTRACTING COMPANY.The Canadian General Development Company, Limited, has been organized to promote and develop commercial industrial enterprises, to undertake the construction of all kinds of public, municipal and private works, and especially railways, tramways, waberwo: hydraulic and electrical The company is supported by several of the leading banks and financial firms in Burope, enabling it to carry through the largest undertakings and to financial ly take an interest in Canadian enter prises.The management has engaged a staff of competent engineers, and invites correspondence from mumicipal and private corporations.Mr.Beaudry Le man has been appointed general manager of the company, with.offices at No.3 Beaver Hall -equare.: .The company was incorporated in July, and has obtained the support and backing of the following banks and financial institutions in Évrope:\u2014Banc D'Outremer, of Brussels; Bank of Paris and Pays-Bas Compagnie Generale, Des Cheminsdefer Secondaires Ladenburgh, Thalmann & Co., New York: F.M.Philipson & Co., Credit General de Bel- gigue Balser & Co., bankers, Brussels; Banque de l\u2019Union .Parisienne, Paris; Bank Nagelmackers & Sons.The Canadian interested parties were chosen amongst some of the best known business men of this city.The group of banks above mentioned have contributed very largely to the development and construction of railways, tramways, gas and light plante in Chine, South America, the Congo, and are interested in some of the largest industrial enterprises \u2018in Europe.A AN AUTO ACCIDENT.Mrs.Montgomery, of 218 Greene avenue, was taken to the General Hospital yesterday afternoon suffering from having several ribs broken and being badly shaken up as a result of having been knocked down by an automobile at the corner of St.Catherine street and Me- Gill College avenue.Mrs.Montgomery, who gave her age as twenty-five years, was passing in front of an eastbound St.Catherine street car, which had stopped at the corner, and so did not see the automobile approaching.She was struck by one of the mud guards.\u2018The chauffeur was able to pull up his car at once and thus avoid running over ber.The automobile, which occasioned the: âeci- dert, belongs to Mr.C.M.Holt.\u201d Inquiry at the General Hospital this morning elicited the fact that Mrs.Montgomery is progressing favorably.ALLEGED BRUTALITY \u2014 FATHER CLAIMS DAMAGES FROM A TEACHER, Acting through his attorneys, Messrs.Robillard & Tétrean, Mr.Chas.Paquette, of St.Denis Boulevard, has entered an action for a thousand dollars damages against Brother Autel, director of the St.Paul Academy, and the Brothers of the \u2018Instruction Chrétience.\u201d The plaintiff alleges that Brother Autel brutally punish his eleven-year-old son, \u201cbeating him on the bare skin with a razor strop having a metal ring atached thereto, and inflicting such injuries that the boy can neither git nor lie on his back.SMALL EXPORTERS COMPLAIN.Complaints are being made by some of the smaller exporters that the policy of the railway companies to have larger freight cars injures their business, as they claim transportation is made less rapid, and they cannot get accommodation in small cars that would suffice for their trade.Canadian General Development Ca LIMITED.(SOCIETE CANADIENNE D\u2019ENTERPRISES GENERALES Limitee.) A Canadian Company orranized to promote and develop for itself or other persons all commercial and industrial enterprises ; to undertake the construction of all kinds of public, municipal and private works, and especially railways, tramways.water works, sewers, hydraulic and eleotri- cal installation.The Company is supported and baoked In Europe by nine of the strongest Banks, enabling it to oarry through the largest undertakings, and to financially take an interest in Canadian enterprises.The Company has a staff of competent and experienced engineers, and invites oorrespondence from municipal and private corporations, and from business men who require technical or financial assistanoe to plan, exeoute or construct any private, municipal or publio work | { Address all communications to * Mr.BEAUDRY LEMAN, General! Manager, Tel.Up 4515.m0 = - 3 Beaver Mall Square, Montreal.AL DAILY WITNES® E \u201cMISSION WORK IN INDIA\" rks, seweré ec WW.A.Wilson.FAREWELL GIVEN IN CRESCENT STREET CHURCH TO MISSIONARIES RETURNING TO WORK.Last evening a farewell was given, at an impressive meeting held in Crescent Street Church, to several Presbyteman missionaries who are returning to work in Central India.The Rev, John Mac- kay presided, and there was a fairly large congregation in the church.The Rev.Dr.Scott read the Scriptures, and the Rev.Dr.Mowatt led the meeting in prayer, The chairman spoke briefly of the importance of missionary work, after and which addresses were delivered by Miss Nairn, who is going out to India as a missionary for the first time; by the Rev.T.P.Taylor, who spoke of the needs of ndia for mission wark, and by the Ret.Mr.Wilson has already spent about twenty-five years in missionary work in India, and is returning again.His address last night was of a very encouraging character, dealing with the good results that have already been accomplished through mission work in India, The necessity for its continuance, he said, was ever existing, and he urged the church at home to continue its support.SMART BOSTON YOUTHS LAID TRAP FOR MONTREALERS, AND GOT THEMSELVES CAUGHT.Tempting advertisements appearing about a couple of weeks ago in the local prese to the ct that young men anx lous to make a name for themselves on the stage might apply at a certain house in Lagauchetiere street west, resulted in many Montreal youths applying.They met two young Bostonians, who represented themselves as agents for a theatrical syndicate.Anybody wanting employment behind the footlights had only to give five dollars in advance to these two gentlemen, and the engagement would follow.More than a dozen young Mont- realers accepted this proposition.The engagements did not follow, and this caused one of the youths to report the matter to Chief Detective Carpenter.This led to the arrest last evening of John Miller and Charles Brooks, on a charge of obtaining money under false Dretences.\u2014_\u2014\u2014 WILL NOT MEET BOURASSA.Mr.Jos.Demers, M.P.P.for St.Johns, writes to the \u2018Canada, denying the statement that it is his intention to meet Mr.Bourassa at the meeting which the latter will hold at Iberville to-morrow.eel MR.JAMES ROSS HOME.Mr.James Ross, president of the Dominion Coal Company, arrived in Montreal last night on the Mantime Express.Mr.Ross stated he would remain here for a week or two.QUEBEC MEETING.There will be a meeting of the Provincial Cabinet at Quebec on Tuesday next.REMOVAL OF THE GOOLDS TRANSFERRED UNDER CLOSE GUARD TO MONTE CARLO.(\u2018 Express,\u2019 London, Sept.9.) Paris, Sept.8\u2014Mr.and Mrs.Goold Quitted their respective prisons for Monte Carlo yesterday morning.\u2018They were placed, each guarded by tbree warders, in separate cells of the prison van, which was hitched on to the 7.45 a.m.slow train from Marse'lles.Mr.Goold, who wore a black jacket, light colored trousers, and grey, soft felt hat, looked extremely dejected, and his gait was that of a drunken .nan.Mrs.Goold showed maca more self- possession, and looked boldly in front with a half-smile on her face.The police had taken great precautions to avoid any hostile demonstration, but in spite of the early hour the prisoaers were recognized, a a crowd collected near the van.Three great boxes vere placed on board with the prisoners.In the first was the famous bloodstained trunk; in the second was the rtmanteau in which the victim's head and legs were discovered; and in the third were the thousand and one objects found on the Goolds or in their luggage at the moment of their arrast.These are the so-called pidces de conviction.The Jewels that Mrs.Levin wore at the time of her murder were already in the possession of the juge d\u2019instructim of Monaco.Mr.and Hrs.Goold were, of course, handcuffed.During whe journey to Monte Carlo Mrs, Goold amused herself with illustratad papers and ap- veared to pay no attention to what took place around her excent to take à plate of soup, which the varders prepared on the way and hauded through the grating.When the train reached Nice the crowd thronged the station and tried to peer into the carriage, but the blinds were promptly lowered by the warders.Many people even joined \u2018the train hoping to catch a glimpse of the prisoners on their arrival at Mon- 2Co- Here some thousands of folk had gathered around the stasion.Mr.Goold was the first to leave the carriage.It was noticed that he wore no tie, and hung his head ss he walked.Mrs.Goold had lost all Mer assurance when she stepped on to the platform and saw the crowd of hostile faces, She wore a grey tailor-made dress, with a white straw hat wnd a blue veil.She was weeping.An imposing judicial contingent superintended the extradition formalities, and then, amid .ries of \u2018A i real, where extensive dredging operations mort !\u2019 the two prisoners were rapidly driven to the jail J THE PAGNUELO CASR JURORS, FAILING TO AGREE, WERE DISCHARGED THIS MORNING.It was expected that the case of Wil- brod Pagnuelo, charged with threatening to kill his father, Mr.Justice Pagnuelo, would have been concluded yesterday.At 2.15 o'clock, however, the jury in the Court of King\u2019s Bench announced that they were unable to agree.Mr.Justice Trenholme ordered them to retire to see if they could come to an agreement, At 4.15 the judge again ascended the bench, but the jurors claimed they were unable to arrive at a verdict.His Lordship, with the concurrence of Messrs.Hibbard and Lafortune, Crown prosecutors, decided to lock them up for the night.This morning the jurors again reported failure to agree and they were dis charged by the court.NBW TRAFFIC TTANAGER MR.J.W.LOUD, OF GRAND TRUNK, APPOINTED TO THE OFFICE.A ciccular from the office of Mr.Frank Morse to-day announces the appointment of Mr.John W.Loud as freight traffic manager, effective on Sept.20, 1807, with hordquerters at Montreal.Mr.Loud olds a similar office for the G and the Central Vermont.rand Trunk GRACE DART HOME.Mr.Henry J.Dart tefull - ledges the following: \u2014 Sally seknow Duncan Gordon (account).$20.00 Thos.Robertson & Co.unt) Mrs.Geo.Crawford., (account) PE 00 Cr ee .\u2026 5.00 George Higgins.\u2026 .Mrs.Sterry Hunt.>.5.00 Messrs.Gault Brothers, three dozen sheets, three dozen illowships.Mrs.Height, invalid.chair and clock.Mre.James .Drummond, Petite Cote, flowering plants.VESSELS REPORTED.Vessels, At.When.Mentauk ., .Montreal .Friday Hungarian .Montreal + + » .Saturday Kildona ., ., .London .e » .Friday Indrand \u2026 \u2026 St John ., .Friday Arabic ., .,.New York .+ .Friday Cretic.+ .New York ,.,.Friday Sylvania ., ,, .Boston .« + + Friday Numidian ,., Glasgow .Friday Cymric.o,, , Liverpool .Friday Bleucher .,, Flymouth , , .Friday Monmouth ., , Bristol ., .Friday Adriatic ve +e o Southampton .Friday Sardinian ,, ,., London.Friday Korea .,, .Libau .Friday Smolensk + ees Libau , ., , Friday Romanic .\u2026.St.Michael's Friday Pervgia .Naples .Friday Konig Albert .Naples Friday HEIGHT OF QUEBEC BRIDGE.The question as to whether the Quebec bridge will be high enough to permit of the navigation of the St.Lawrence by vessels of the largest type is creating a certain amount of interest in shipping and commercial circles.Yesterday afternoon there was a special meeting of the Shipping Federation at which the matter was brought up.It is expected that an effort #11 be made to obtain the views of the British Admiralty, which body is naturally interested in the matter, and expressions of opinion from shipping and engineering experts may be solicited on the other side of the water.PASSENGER VESSELS.The R.M.S.Virginian, of the Allan line, arrived in Montreal at noon to-day.She reached Rimouski at 1.50 a.m.yesterday, and, after landing her mails, left for Quebec and Montreal at 3.35 am.The R.M.S.Dominjon, of the Dominion line, was delayed outside Belle Isle, and ls not due in Quebec until some time on Sunday, and Montreal on Monday.ANOTHER MARINE TELEPHONE.Another marine telephone station was opened yesterday afternoon at Cap la Roche, one of the most important points on the river between Quebec and .Mont- are now proceeding, DREDGING INSPECTION.Mr.F.° W.Cowie, the engineer of the ship channel, is down the river on a tour of Inspection of the dredging operations.He is accompanied by Colonel Gourdeau, deputy minister of marine and fisheries.The fleet of dredges is reported to be doing excellent work this season, and the new dredge, Beaujeu, which will be put to work on the St.Thomas flats, below Quebec, is expected to be ready for her trial trip shortly, CONVERTS TO MORMONISM.A party of eighty women from Norway, Sweden and Denmark will arrive in Montreal on Monday next on the R.M.S.Do- minjon, of the Dominion lime, They are said to be converts to the Mormon Church and are on their way to Idaho and Utah.Mr, N.J.Grace, travelling passenzer agent of the White Star line, and the other limes incorporated in the Mercantile Marine, left last night \u201cor Quebec,, on the Ofawa, and will there meet the Mormonese, and convey them safely to Montreal, whence they will be sent over the Grand Trunk to their destinations.Mr.Grace AUGUST BANK STATEMENT The following is a brief anaiver of statement of the chartered banks of | ada for the month of August, show no increases and decreases in loans, and note circulation, compared + Ln : corresponding month of 150: rue Current loans in Canada, 1807, y AL- Current loans in Canada, 1906.ot ve ms Increase .=] be.à 3 Call loans in Canada, 1507.$47.Call loans in Canada, :i906.i Call loans outside Canada, 1977.Call loans outside Canada, 1905 \"| \u2014\u2014 Increase Deposits on notice, 1907 ., ,, $4_.- Deposits on notice, 190 .! Increase .ee 00 se aa ss.Deposits on demand, 1907.Deppsits on demand, .190$ Increase .Decrease .oe, Notes in circulation, 1907.FORTE Notes in circulation, 1906.7014511 \u2014 0 ee [2 Led se .rer TORONTO MARKE]x Toronto, Sept.21.\u2014Noticeaby + .- prices prevailed to-day in the whea tre Xet at Chicago, and dealers sail : \u2026 w there was no great change in the \"1.5: from yesterday the rise was caused by \u2018tee sudden realization of that cond::own.uz» explanation given was that Canadian co:- ditions accompanied by good buying o United States wheat, both domestic #1 export, had been the cause of liquida om for several days, the selling power b now about exhausted.Heavy rosie ve predicted for to-night in Manitoba 1Ir- cember wheat was 1053; or 2¢ over yeser.day's close, and $1.08 was the price of Mav wheat.Local prices were: Whea \u2014:- tario No.2 white, %0c to 91c; No.2m\" 89c to 90c: Manitoba wheat very firm - view of western reports, No.1 northern $1.1016 to $1.11; No.2 northern, $l.t» $1.0814.Corn\u2014There is little coming :5 from Chicago, No.3 yellow quoted 74 \u20187 The, Toronto freight; No.3 mixed, 73 \u20185 73%c.Barley, No.2, 57c to 60c; No.1 extra, 55c to 56c; No.2, 52c to 53c.0.No.2 white, 5414c to 55c; No.3 white, 4 lake ports.Peas, 80c for No.2.Rye.Xo 2 nominal, 7c to Tic.Flour\u2014Ontario very strong; 90 percent patents, $3.55; Man - toba first patents, $5.60 to $5.65, eecond-.$5 to $5.50; etrong bakers, $4.95.Bran, $0 to $25; shorts, $26 to $27 outside.ess CHEESR BOARDS The following table shows the offerings and eales of butter and cheese on the Ca- nadian boards for the week ending Sept.21: CHEESE BOARDS.Date.Place.Offerings.Sales.Price.Sept.20\u2014Ottawa « ee 1,434 654 12% 20\u2014Napanee «.1,100 1,100 123$\u20144 26\u2014Lindsay ee ee.B68 307 123\u20147-16 20\u2014Perth .\u2018.1,050 1,00 * 20-\u2014Listowel ., .2,360 2,360 12% \u2014%A 20\u2014Huntingdon .684 599 1244-16 *Equal to Brockville prices.rl NOTES AND NOTICES.The Grand Trunk Railway system wil run an excursion to New York via De.aware & Hudson Co.& Central Vermont Railway, on Thursday, Sept.26.Tickets good returning Oct.7th.Round trip $11.30.MARRIED.BISHOP\u2014HAY \u2014 On Sept.18, 1907, at the home of the bride\u2019s parents, by the Rer.D.Findlay, B.A., Syduey H.Rishop, Bell's Corrers, Ont., to Jeannie Hay, youngest daughter of Mr.and Mrs.Hugh Hay, of Greenbank, Ont, HUBER \u2014 VARNEY \u2014 At Portland, Me, on Aug.26, 197, by the Rev.Edwin Horey, Hermann G.Huber, of Karl.ruhe, Germany, to Clementine, daughter of Oliver F.Varney.TROWBRIDGE \u2014 BOYD \u2014 At the Pree- byterian Church, Stittsville, oa Sept.4 1907, by the Rev.D.Findlay, B.A., John H.Trowbridge, of Ottawa, to Ida Teresa Boyd, dauvghter of Mr.and Mrs.James Boyd, of \u2018Maple Plain,\u2019 Huntly.DIED.SINGER \u2014 In Poston, of diphtheria.on Aug.22, 1907, Addie Maud Evans.only beloved daughter of Mrs.David McRae, aged 14 years and 3 months.\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 BOOK BARGAINS Send for H.J.Claisher's Ca:alngu® (over 100 pp.) of PUBLISHERS\u2019 REMAINDERS.Books in new condiiioa as published, but at BARGAIN PRICES, in all Branches of Literature.H.J.CLAISHER.Remainder and Discount Bookselier, 57 Wigmore street, London, England.THE AMBROSE CALENDAR, 1808.for Literary Men and Women, 1s 2d net, post free.WANTED, AN INTELLIGENT BOY,about 14 years of age, for a real estate ofuce.Must write a good hand and be well recommended.Apply (stating school where educated) to P.O.Box 1093, Montreal.TO LET, AT AHUNTSIC, A COMFORTable suburban house, with grounds,shade and fruit trees, conservatory attached to house, heated with furnace, and wi all modern improvements; house hac been renovated and nut in Zood order; stated last night that none of the newcomers were destined for Canada.about two minutes\u2019 walk from elec:7i0 Cars.Telephone Uptown 4144.SS.CORSICAN SS.EMPRESS OF BRITAIN Sailed from Quebec yesterday.Telegrams are accepted at any C.P.R.Telegraph Office for delivery to the:a steamers up to Sunday Night, via MARCONI MARINE STATION, CAPE RAY, Nfd.SS.PHILADELPHIA SS.GRAF WALDERSEE Ss.MINNETONKA S SS.EUROPA SS.COLUMBIA SS.LUSITANIA FINLAND Sailed from New York te-day.Telegrams are accepted at any Telsgraph Office in Canada for immediate delivery to any of the above steamers via MARCONI FAX, N.S.MARINE STATION, HALL Marconi Wireless Telegraph Co.of Canada, limited PELICAN & BRITISH BUILDING, 86 Notre Dame Street West.: ford roo\u201d so\u2018 bi.\" ee: Pr I XL vo 8 Twi \u201cer j'etroi R hd NS] 1070.100 iron Mack ockhs TIXER tent \u20ac Viren 114 he y T.Nos.> erontd FNAL fioyai.J'amtni In:per ptanda crane Luebec.1 rio.NX Sue comm.revere }exrs Conkhe tectis | M.+.R.Col, Cot Lke \u201c TRIFF Fcotia \u2026 Iron.Col.Ogilvie.twitch.M.S.plus incré 9.91 divid Sept The Pass.Misc.Total operat Net City p Int on Cont.Rent 1 Total Surpl Exjens ear *Decr \u2014_\u2014\u2014 T Montr to hold wholesa and the \u2018nues | of dam.treated krown done, b néss wi tent, 7] factor ¢ \u2018lon is There | money.brisk.tailers\u2019 ng to during continu tone.Teport a year done in cutput winter rings Ca- nding \u2014-% \u20147-16 +1 wii] Deia- ont iets trip the Rev.10D, Hay, ngh win ri I would release every nun and every; MONTREAL EPWORTH 1F4.\"R Christian minister working in the city.! A meeting of the executive «++ + I believe there are some very rich men |of the Montreal District Epwer > 1, 2.living among us who do not help religious work at all, and th~ only way there 1s to reach their pockets 1s by granting these exemptions.They and everybody else would have poor rates to pay if it was not for the Christian workers in the \u2018city.I have been thirty years in the city and I have never been called on to !the missionary department.ap iro» pay taxes until this, year.a granting {of about twenty-five percent hav-n- \u2014 our requ ou wi oing justice, ous veus gun and acting within the spirit of the law\u201d, recorded over the Pr ge Jess or The Rev.Dr.Young seid he was in! being completed for the must 5 4 hearty sympathy with the position ot |be held in Douglas Hall Ap 14090 Dr.Hill.As to the exemption of church ¢ held m Lougias Hall on Mindy.Ae property as a whole, that was an acade- Ha.Some items pi special inte ame mie question, and was not yet being rou AE vil (is exTrs \u2018ed hat the treatod, but the removal of what they of oy Py fare ool an vik rummy considered an unjust discrimination was | 4 Mrs TE a farewell to IN.L'ndsas a matter very pressing.and Mrs.indsay (née Tavi:.who are Ald.Payette\u2014As a committee, we are leaving for the Methodist Mssion Hos : > na.Ts aw hy not prepared to state what will be done That the Rev.W.Ww Pru.2, ved in this matter, but I am sure we shall 'Fome on furlough from Jai.n ww be happy to remové any discrimination.present.It was due very \u2018avze -n3( if any exists, in this matter.We will Prudham\u2019s efforts when hers.sie look into the question and in the near {ihe Weslevan College that tra Tr future let you know what will be done.| people\u2019s societies of Montres\u2018 un torah was held in Sherbrookd Sire: Church on Thursday evenine.+.ae presided over by the presses ou, Frank Peden.Reports «of ti.work showed satisfactory progres Methodist young people's society district.This was especially m.r,,.1 4 \"at ae i\u201c the Lhe The delegation then withdrew.'the supoprt of Dr.Ewan in Chery ly Ald.Leclaire, representing St.Jean, rec is also Deing arranr ! od {et Baptiste Ward, lodged a complaint on jt is expected that all the soviet.« te I age behalf of his constituents of shortage of city will attend tie vail water at, different jimes during the past \u2014 - men two or three months.He asked wheth- a oo .\u201cee er it would not be possible to grant a TH?\"WITNESS DAILY MOD}, kee) certain reduction in the water rates to \u2014 the section of the community concerned?FALL AND WINTER FASHIONS.FIR Ald.Payette replied that he did not|{ Those who purchased our catalogue of Al spring and summer patterns found :t very handy addition to the home workroom.We can now supply an at\u2018ra- tive catalogue of the latest styles for fa) and winter, 1907-8.Same price as helore only ten cents, and well worth that sma sum.Illustrated supplement on Home Dressmaking, Fancy Work, Household and Beauty Hints, and the latest Embroidery Designs.see how they could do this because the basis of the water tax lay not on the quantity of water supplied, but on house rental.It was, however, resolved to submit the question raised by Ald.Leclaire to the law department for a legal opinion.About forty thousand dollars have recently been paid into the city treasurer ces.T \u2018 ropor- dom of It was.voted to the sominitices| Send name and address on pattern cor as follows: Fifteen thousand dollars for POD given below, with ten cents in repairing permanent pavements, $10,000; stamps, and the catalogue will be sent for wooden sidewalks, and $1,000 for! YOU by mail.Allow one week margn street crossings.The Incineration Com- Peyond time necessary for return of mai, mittee was given an appropriation of $3.- 38 orders are handled in rotation, 000 for the incination plant.Thé Health Committee asked for $125 to purchase waterproof coats for the muk inspectors, but the committee rejected the application, Ald.Payette remarking The Rev.Canon Dixon said: \u2018I beg leave to differ from the Rev.Dr.Gordon.that the inspectors should clothe themselves out of their salaries.JUNENILE CRIMINOLOGY PREVENTION DECLARED TO BE BETTER THAN CURE IN THE SPHERE OF MORALS.\u2014 _ Mr.W.P.Archibald, parole officer for the Dominion (Government, in an interview gives his opinions on the causes of juvenile degeneracy and its cure, as fol- OWS: \u2014 \u2018Many of the penological questions re- ating to childhood are only questions of pedagogy.No solution theretore can be given as absolute in dealing with juvenile criminality.When the question of the treatment of vicious children is un-: gp.der consideration, I am convinced that the system of placing a vicious youth out: in some well known and respectable fa-: sor Evans.This evening the Medical! students will be initiated into collège: life at McGill.\u2014 McOILL CONSERVATORIUM NEW PROFESSOR APPOINTED FOR PIANOFORTE.| Mr.Hagen Hohlenberg was yesterday appointed by the MeGill bo of gov- \u2018ernors to the pianoforte department of the staff of the McGill Conservatorium of Music.Mr.Hohlenberg has studied under the most distinguished teachers in Dresden, where he holds a certificate for conducting from the Dresden Copserva- toire, and has had coneiderable experience of teaching.He has made a special study also of the theory of music (har- \u2018mony, counterpoint, composition an scoring), and has already given several concerts which have been favorably noticed by the press of Germany and Co* penhagen.\u2018 In connection with the changes which are being carried into effect at the Con- servatorium, the board yesterday expressed their appreciation of the services which had been gratuitously rendered | Dr.Harriss as director of the Con- servatorium of the three years during which he had been good enough to act in that capacity.: ef : ALLEGED BURGLARS CAUGHT.Romeo Larue, 19 years old, a roofer by trade, residing in Notre Dame street east, was arrested last night by Detectives Giguere and Laberge, of Chief Carpenter\u2019s staff, who had been looking fer him for a couple of days.He is wanted on-a charge of having broken into the hardware store of Francis Martineau, 721 St.Catherine street east, a few nights ago, when a quantity of cutlery and a half-dozen of the best revolvers in the were carried off.Larue admitted his guilt when taken to police head- uarters.is lefe.hand was bandaged a.and when the detectives asked him: what was the matter witk-it, the prisoner replied that while trying ome of the revolvers he had stolen he had -acciden- tally put a bullet through his hand.He: TN told the detectives that some of the plunder was still in his room.- .\u2018\\dvubt that many children are considered di who has used his epare time to educate gzeral education in the moral code.| sthle people for some time after eir {ciety farther up the stream, at the! mily without institutional treatment: first, is inadequate, and a source of dan-; ger to the wellbeing af the community receiving the delinquent.When the ques: toon of placing children in foster homes, ! \u2018under normal conditions, is applied, mo | sane person could doubt the great ad-! vantage of this method, and I have no\u2019 vicious at times who are only normal ceses, and should have the benefit of this system rather than the commitment to a reformatory or juvenile institution for epecial treatment.A y vicious boy or girl needs a lesson in discipline and self-control, which cannot be taught in a foster home; beside this, the placing of a vicious lad in a good family endangers, inati other chi of the family, whole neighborhood has experienced the baneful influence of a lad thus placed, the usticated children in criminal a Te himself a ring-leader of youthful degenerates, and eventually finding his way to one of our penitentiaries.Special establishments- including re formatories are essential for the suocess- ful treatment of this class of criminals.Our reformatories should begin to deal with the whole boy as well as with the vicious or evil tendency.Up-to-date in- \u2018dustrial plants arc needed, as well as a hysiology, - psyc and psycho-pe- thology should have a place in every branch of child-saving work, and the reformatory education should be supple mented by a guardianship with on- release.0 .The high-tide of criminal life is from 18 to 26 years of age We must go after the boy before the tide carries him out into the help ess of the criminal sca, The man of thirty enjoying life and liberty Fill seldom ange in the general trend of thoughts, or in the complex- son of hie convictions.On the other band, the man of thirty years and in prison (much of his time from boy: bood) more rarely changes in thought or purpose.Not three nt of our criminel ulation have had proper or efficient me training, in their starting out in life.Our very despair at times of ping successfully the recidivist clases of criminals, emphasises the need of beginning the work of purifying so- fountains of youth.This is where we trace the germs of confirmed oriminality.There is mo more profound truth apoken than that the impressions received and the habits formed in childhood, domi- noite and survive those formed in later years.It is of first importance that parents should realize that the most potent factor in the destiny of their children à the lesson of self-control and obedience; .without this factor, is sure to follow.\u2018From as thorough a research as I posaibly can make, after f tha ed in >reaga been ordi.8 are ly to t are t the unity ndsay oO are Hos roped ho is 1 be o Mr.nding rounz rtook Spe.and of the NS que ot 1 it a work- 1ttrac- or fail pefore ; smal! Home sehold L Em- N cou- its in e sent margin negli- prac- finisk- bo de- erred, par- attern jhable r de- bust ds ot hired.nches 4 THE COUNTERFEITER.Continual War of Wits.With the \u2018 Artists.\u201d pi CRIMINALS DEALT WITH SINCE THE UNITED STATES SECRET SERVICE BUREAU WAS STARTED._ « (New York \u2018Evening Post.) The Treasury Department of every civ- jized government maintains a body of contidential agents\u2014experts, all of them\u2014 cnarged with the detection of counterfeit notes and bills, and the arrest of.the skiltul \u2018artists\u2019 who made them.Now this country ls perhaps more plagued in this respect than any other, so that if one had access to the Washington records of the Lreasury\u2019s Secret Service, material for a whole library of sensational stories would be found.Uur nation 1s an enormous one geographically, and we make more use of paper money than any other people.Then, too, we unquestionably receive a large proportion of other countries\u2019 \u2018black sheep,\u201d who are apt to think that the United States affords an unlimited field for their operations.And lastly, we are all very busy and working at high pressure, so that few of us examine too close- \\y the bille received in the day\u2019s routine.for these reasons are the Secret Service agents kept busy\u2014a permanent and most valuable branch of the Treasury Department, and one whose sole duty it is to! keep our money free from spurious specimens.FIRST EFFORT At SUPPRESSION.For more than a century and a half counterfeit mopey had been found in this country, yet the practice grew steadily until the climax came in 1860.Then it was that Congress for the first time appropriated a modest $10,000 to commence m a very small and tentative way an organized warfare against the artistic coun- terigiters whose labors were embarrassing the country.doled out in the form of rewards to private detectives, municipal officers, and others who had exerted themselves to bring to justice people who were making a fortune out of bogus money.And thus loosely the work went on for several years.Meanwhile the government found itself compelled to e immense.quanti- \u2018ies of paper money: to meet the expenses of the civil war.Ome surprising result of the issues.was that the notes were imitated to such an extent that it was seen that drastic measures were im | yerative.And so, in the summer oi | 1864, the first serious ropriation of | £100,000 wag, dad over bi}: the solicitor © e Treasury, who was: charged with the supervision and direction of the work.Nor was he long in gathering about him a body of men with vast experience.in dealing with criminals of this type, ane the work of detecting and suppress Ing spurious currency was at omce put in hand.So successful were the govern-4 ment operations from the beginning that à permanent bureau was decided upon, to be known as the \u2018Secret Service.\u201d It \u2018+ easily the most interesting and mys- terous of the government\u2019s sub-depart- ments: and little or nothing is known of the personnel and operations of the azents until they have made a more or ~~: sensational haul.The entire country is divided into rentv-seven \u2018Secret Service Districts,\u2019 «uch in charge of an official of exceptional tact and ability.This officer has under him as many assistants as may be neces- wiry, having regard to the counterfeiting activity of his section.Every man prepares a daily report covering his opera- tons for the past twenty-four hours, and these records are kept on file at Washington\u2014a veritable mine for the writer of sensational fiction.eco \u2018ARTISTS?bEALT WITH._ Oil course, human nature being what it 1 it were idle to guppose that the en- craving of spurious bills will ever be en- \u201cirely suppressed; but our government \u201cnks to the Secret Service to reduce the trafic to a minimum.Nor has it look- j 1 in vain, for during the forty years of \u201c> existence this bureau has dealt with rarly 30.000 makers and distributors of \u2018Furious currency.Tie \u2018artist®\u2014men of race technical \u2018ill for the most part\u2014have moved with \u2018he times.Indeed, the development of Mhoto-lithography, photogravure, and \u201ching has quite revolutionized the crimi.\"industry of counterfeiting notes.In \u201cie old daye the plates were engraved by hand.and it might take the patient labor \u201c tiftren months to complete a likely \u201ct.{mn the other hand, this part of \u2018he work will only take a few hours now- avs, thanks to the scientific processes va able, This change of method on the part of the criminals caused the Secret Service \u2018» abandon the old lines on which it had \u2018hHrestigated, and lay down new ones to Meet the changed conditions.But the Marly average of arrests did not seem th diminish.As these are not numerous, owever, the government's attitude is that we should be thankful the activity oi the counterfeiter is kept \u2018within riundy, Counterfeiting is particularly difficult of detection, and the losses frequently \"all en those least able to bear them.Ner is the \u2018planting\u2019 of spurious b:lls \u201crnfinel to any particular locality; Sec- 1° Service agents in country districts Are quite as busily employed as their PMlleimues in the great cities.Qu reason why detection is so diffi- ol = because among the ranks of coun- \u201c1 ler are found men of every race ita condition.One\u2019 mav return home PM à dav'® business only to find that \\& Peir neigabor\u2014almost a friend, with This appropriation was, | whom.one had epent many .pleasant hours, and: who was considered \"inv every way worthy of confidence and esteem\u2014 had for years been conducting a private mmt or engraving establishment.and is now under arrest, with every prospect of a long in the State\u2019s prison.For example, Charles H.Smith, one of the most expert and prolific engravers of plates for .i money, had for years been looked X reputable citizen of Brooklyn.His handsome residenqe adjoined that of a prominent city official, a\u201dd the two men hed dor years engaged in ériendly games of croquet on the lawn.REMARKABLE QASE.OF THE JOHNSONS.But perhaps the extraordinary case of the Johnsons will give the best idea of beth sides at work\u2014counterfeiter and Secret Service agent.David Johnson, the head of the family, lived in Detroit, Mach, where he was looked upon as à model of citizenship and propriety.He and his family were very prominent in work, and when a musical evening or other social function was to the fore, the Johnsons weré among the most guests.You may ÿ therefore, of the amazement and shock to the community when one suminer\u2019s morning David and Edmond Johnson were arrested, charged with making counterfeit money.As usual with the Secret Service Bureau, the blow fell without warning.The homes of both men when searched yielded evidence that they were responsible for the isue of many most gerous counterfeit notes, which had baffled the ablest of government officials for more n eight years.The case is most in- sting, revealing as it does the de- ils of an incessant war of wars between \u2018jurists\u2019 engaged in the most profitable of crimes and officers of the law, likewèse skilled in every trick of a highly intricate trade.\u201c Tt wae in September, 189C, that one of the currency experts of the Treasury pulled a counterfeit $2 silver certificate out of a remittance from a Missouri bank.It resembled the genuine bill eo clesely as almost to defy detection, even by experts.i The secret service people at once recognized that they had a master hand tp deal with.Every suspect, Who vas thought to possess enough a y the al A was \u2018located and his, career at length i ta Te gemuxg issue and replace them notes of quite a different design The À uniter co enter, bowetg was not The government agents wove on their mettle all over the United, States; and them éelt certain they were near to a solution of the problem.But time after their suspect was found to be merely one of the numerous victims of the reel oul- prit, quite innocently assisting in\u2019 eir- culating the counterfeits.Just euch a case in Toledo, O.Here a secret service agent was one day called to the telephone and informed that a stranger had just passed a $2 counterfeit note on a city tobacconist.A few minutes later the agent arrived at the store, and was told of a tall, blonde, thick-set, and well-dressed man, somewhat be; , who had paid for twenty-five cents\u2019 worth of cigars with a § which he took from a big roll of notes.The secret service man recognized the bill as one of the troublesome silver certificates, and at once pursued the man who had it.He visited sereml business i t success; and was about to take a car down to the station to look through en east-bound train ing ten minutes later, when he saw his man come out of a store on the next block.Here in a store the agent came upon him, and asked one of the shopmen to change for him a twenty-dollar bill.This could not be done, and\u2014as the agent had boped\u2014the stranger volunteered to make the change.Forthwith he drew from his ket a large roll of money, and care- ully counted out three fives, two twos, and a one.Thereupon the agent, greatly excited, stepped outside to examine the change\u2014and to his astonishment found all the bills genuine! i He returned, however, and asked his man to go back with him to the tobacco store and there explain the possession of a counterfeit note.The man readily agreed to return, and acknowledged in the store that he had given the bill in question.He calmly made it good by substituting genuine money, and then handed the officer aJl the money in his pockets, requesting that it be examined for other counterfeits.\u2018What man,\u2019 he asked, innocently enough, \u2018scrutinizes the bills in his pocket, or can tell which is a skilful counterfeit and which is lawful currency?\u201d The upshot of it all was that the zealous officer\u2019s vision of glory and promotion faded quickly,.and he returned, defeated, to his office.Some months later Charles Johnson, of the redoubtable family mentioned\u2014him- self an old and expert counterfeiter, who had just completed a term of twelve vears in a Canadian prison for imitating the two and four-dollar notes of the Do- minion\u2014arrived at the home of his sister, Mrs.Baylis, with whom his brother Edmond was living on McGraw street, Detroit.27 Then it was that for the first time the friends and neighbors learned that this notorious criminal was related to the much esteemed brother and sister.As usual in these cases, the secret service Charles Johnson's release and destination.go that when it was reported that n as a highly re- T4 ernment_promptl mn, MoGräw street, went up to a bedroom on ¢ B \"the Ptime they found they were deceived, for | j does the entrance to the people in Washington were advised of} him had passed ollar in a he mas resemblin | counterfeit half on secured and the house in MeGr suddenly raided.- hey e officers, \u201cwhile.Jooking through a closet on the \u201csecond floor,\u201d discovered a -piece of wood which bore unmistakable evi - process of \u2018aging\u2019 notes.This was a fin indeed, and Ted >, | inspection of the premises than would ôtherwise have been\u2019 made, .One of the officers got down on &H.Nothin, happened for ten minutes or so but suddenly he seéms to have pressed from the wainscotting.darted in at once-and fished out spuri- amount of two thousand dollars.Edmond and Charles Johnson their sister, Mrs.Baylis, were immediately arrested, and a second warrant taken out for a thorough search of Da-, vid\u2019s residence.Here, too, a secret panel was found, cancealing the plates feits was printed, together with a bun-| die of three thousand dollars in bogus\u2019 notes, David and his wife were at the time visiting relatives in Canada, and an officer was sent to arrest and bring them back.CRIMINALS WITH SENTIMENT.And so, with much patience and labor, the mysterious source of these notable; counterfeits had been found.One thing remained, however, and that was to secure the plates from which the second issue was printed.The two houses were.most thoroughly searched from cellar to garret, but without success.Ang the hiding place of these plates might have been a mystery until this day had it not been for the desire of the Johnson brothers to get their womenfolk freed from.the affair., After consultation, they declared that if Mrs.Baylis and Mrs.David Johnson were released, they would surrender the plates.This offer was by no means of a like sentiment.In this Detrait case, while the evidence against the women was not conclusive, it warranted.\u2018their.detention temporarily.The gav- A accepted the sugges-] tion \u2018of the brothers, however; the women Were released, and Edmond \u2018Johnson\u2019 Ua over to the Secret ce = bu bs guide to the officers.e way first to the house in \"second floor, and theré rolled out an withdrew a cotple of screws that held) the ornaments! back piece in position.Then, raising the loose end of this seed tion, he cut away some oak-gtained putty and removed a little square of wood, which disclosed a mortised space.And from this slot Edmond drew out, attached by a string, the back and eeal plates of the counterfeits, neatly wrapped in oiled linen.| For the face plate of the notes, he said, it was necessary to go to David\u2019s house.Here, Mrs.Johnson's sewing machine was used as a hiding place.Edmond.[lay on his back under the machine, unscrewed a little cabinet of drawers, and produced the plate from a narrow space hollowed out of the top board of the cabinet.In this way ended one of the most difficult cases the Secret Service Bureau has ever handled.2.As to the Johnson family, their history might be advanced as an argument In favor of criminal instinet being hereditary.Certain it is there were three generations of counterfeiters among them.\u2014 W.G.Fitz-Gerald.ven ORIGIN OF THE WORD \u2018HUMBUG.Among the many issues of base coin Ireland, there was none to be compared in worthlessness to that made by James IL.at the Dublin mint.It was composed of anything on which he could lay his hands, such as lead, pewter, copper and brass; and so low was its intrinsic value that 20 shillings of it was worth only twopence eterling.William III., a few days after the battle of the Boyne, ordered that the crown piece and half- crown should be taken as one penny and one halfpenny, respectively.The soft, mixed metal of which that worthless coin was composed was known among the.Irish as Uim bog, pronounced Oom bog, that is, soft copper, or worthless money; and in the course of their dealings, the.modern use of the word humbug took ite rise, \u2018as in the phrases, \u2018That\u2019s a piece of uimbog,\u201d \u2018Don\u2019t think to pass off your uimbog on me.\u2019 Hence the word humbug came to be applied to anything that had a specious appearance, but which was in reality spurious.It is curious to note that the very opposite of humbug, that is, false metal, is the word sterling, which is taken from a term applied to the true coinage -of Great Britain, as sterling coin, sterling worth, etc.This word came from the coinage of the Ester.lings\u2014German traders, who came from the \u2018east\u2019 of England, and in the reign of John first stamped pure coin in England.| And thenceforward the name \u2018sterling\u2019 was applied to standard coin in England.\u2014Springfield \u2018Republican.\u2019 rrr WOMAN A LIGHTHOUSE KEEPER.(London \u2018Woman.\u2019) ~ Most people are unaware that there ie a woman in charge of the Leasowe Lighthouse, which stands on the Cheshire side \u2018of the entrance to the Mersey\u2014a most important lighthouse, commanding as it port of Liver- Mrs.Williams, who is the light- Bouse keeper, is assisted in ber duties by Woodward avenue, search warrants were | iw street { Lhey cted, of course, to find a} _|.\u2018coin mill; but to their astonishment .the| \u2018dence of having been used in the curious} to.a far more thorough |.fours and plied his knife on\u2019 the filcor.| -against an ingeniously contrived -Jever,) FM which forced a section of the board out | © An eager hand}! ous two-dollar silver certificates to \u201cthe | -| atthe Ashio \u2018copper mine, which resulted a surprise to the government dfficials4:# who have had many similar exhibitions | which, from time to time, were made in | \u2018ance of the campaign, r Tokio correspondent, writing on 20, says: The increased cost oi liv- nsequent upon the low wages, com- d with excessive taxation, is causing eady growth of social and industrial est throughout Japan, frequently re- Making in violent expressions of protest, -eépecially.among the laboring classes, who fes] the stress most.\u201c-Becently a sérious strike among the \u2018workmen of-the Government navy yard Yokosuka, and a similar occurrence in ihe Mitsu Bishi yard at Nagasaki, have been adjusted only with the greatest dif- @lty, and not without days of extreme aution.and tncertainty.In each e the attitude of the men towards RIT superiors was of a menacing charac- téf, and.quite new in the industrial his- toky of the country.Close upon the riots Is serious casualties and a wanton des- \u2018t#dction of property, a still more deplorable strike broke out among the Besshi ngghers at Niibama, in northern Japan.-=The dispnte an this case arose over a démand by the men for an increase of from which thre first issue of counter-|'ag -S-percent in wages.The request being psremptorily rejected, the men at once preceeded to blow up the official and dflier buildings with dymamite.The regiment of police dispatched to the scene of the rioting was met by a mob of 300 pRmers, upon whom the officers fired, with the result that the offenders re treated, but only to the village of Ku- yoge, near by, which they quickly set in flames.Upon the appearance of a re- \u2018inforced police detachment the mob mar- stalled itself and charged the guardians «of \u2018the law with explosives until the latter were compelled to retire.Many were wounded on both sides.[© One of the most remarkable features of the Besshi riots was the systematic military organization adopted by the mob in its attacks on the police.The ridters marched like soldiers, and fought uwgder commanders as in battle.Evi dently these men had not gone through thé Manchurian campaign without learn- \u2018ig the art of united self-defence.They éhuwed regular signals during action, and éy deployed and manoeuvred like a ing column.They appeared to re- lea hospitals and echools as neutral .praperty.\u201cbut all the buildings of the mining\u2019 company were reduced to ashes and: the machinery destroyed.The au- [ah ties-were at the mercy of the rioters \u2018ant the arrival of men from a Japanese rujser, which resulted in an effective state of siege, mnd the rioters were eventually suppr saved.-Fer the fitet time since the freedom of Akiz freedom.aright.It does not appear that the spirit of Bushido has any very marked effect upon the laboring classes of Japan.Yet the tendency to despise authority is not wholly confined to these classes; it seems to bave invaded even the educational life of the country.There are frequent complaints of difficulty experienced by the authorities in enforcing the discipline of the schools, and of the captious spirit in which reasonable regulations are received.In one of the largest cities of the empire, an important school, with an attendance of some ban- dreds of students, was recently closed by order of the Government, because the masters in charge were unable to manage the riotous pupils.In Nagasaki, some time ago, a fight arose between two students, in which one of them was killed by the blade of his opponent.In a similar dispute at a school in Saga, last week, the result of the affray was that one student was stabbed to death and others wounded.At one of the larger colleges of the empire the regulation prohibiting students from smoking had to be withdrawn because it had practically become inoperative through disobedience, .In Japan, secondary authority does not appear to receive proper support from the authority immediately above it.Masters in schools and managers of rn- dustries are expected to keep their constituents contented and quiet, and, if they fail, the responsibility rests on them, mot on their rebellious subjects.This is the old Confucian theory of government, from which the Japanese have never been able to escape, but it is ruinous to-discipline and the proper management of men by their superiors.The \u2018students knew that if they like to rebel they can turn any master they please out of the school, so that the masters are vir- \u2018tually in the hands of the students.When this insubordinaticn obtains in schools, what must things be like in industrial circles?I Nave known the head engineer Lin a leading dockyard to be obliged to conceal himself for days in order to save his life from angry workmen, until the matter under dispute was adjusted.It must be borne in mind that in Japan modern civilization is not yet very far- reaching, and that\u2019 among the laboring classes, at least, contentment and obedi- énce depend on keeping the mouth full.In the old days the feudal lord saw to it that this effective means of restraint was always ready.Now that serfdom is abolished, and every individual ig his own \u2018master, when need arises the peoble cannot resist the hereditary custom of going back to the master and holding him -pesponsible for whatever oppression they suffer.Nor can he let them loose upon & weaker neighbor as of old; he must satisfy their demands himsaif, or they will proceed to take things into their own ands.: \u201cDuring the preparation for the war with Russia, and all through the continu- ; the immense amount of money expended among the her daughter.people for labor and supplies maintained an air of prosperous contentment throtigh the lowels{ brders of Japanese society from\u2019 thifstern discipline of the old feur L- Fla evs efi \u201cthey are being put to.the Di whether they are capable of ming \u2018out the empire, but now that-this exceptional shower is again finding its level in banks and investments, the country 1s beginning to feel a drought that presses with especial severity on the masses which are very poor.\u2014(London \u2018 Standard) ee » RAILROADS IN AFRICA WHERE GIRAFFES PULL DOWN .THE TELEGRAPH WIRES.(W.G.FitzGerald, in New York \u2018Tribune.\u2019) In a general way we all know the huge continent of Africa is being criss-crossed with railways built by private enterprise or by the powers interested in Africa generally\u2014Great Britain, France, Germany, Portugal and Belgium.But few of us can realize the appalling difficulties in the way\u2014the scarcity of labor and transport and the hostility of savage tribes.Embarrassment lurks in a hundred unlooked for quarters, besides such obvious sources of trouble as climate and wild beasts, fever and lack of water.The greatest scheme of all is, of course, the Cape-to-Cairo system\u2014Cecil Rhodes's dream, with its attendant telegraph wire, a shining aerial snake 5,700 miles in length.Long ago trains de luxe ran across the tremendous gorge of the Zam- besi on a bridge that represents the last word in daring engineering.And that practically marked the halfway house.Another thousand miles of track to the north is surveyed, and construction goes on steadily at this moment.Already Broken Hill is reached, 2,016 miles from Capetown.In Portuguese West Africa the Ben- guela-Katanga line is to act as a 1,200 system.And the wire always follows the track.True, it halts at Ujiji, on Lake Tanganyika, but from this poin® connection with the southern extremity of the northern wire at Port Victoria, on that vast inland sea the Victoria Ny- anza, is to be effected by the wireless system\u2014its initial instalment in the Dark Continent.The distance is 450 miles.The country round about is almost entirely unexplored, and so broken and rugged that to establish and maintain an overhead wire presents enormous difficulties.Five thousand laborers and some 0 white officers are now at work on this -great transééntinental railway.bat.five.and thrge-quarter miles have besa \u2018put in on a long September day.Seven.bridges of aver fifty feet span have been\u2019 fieently sent out, besides $he Fuge \u2018steel Wwèrk for the Kafué riyer bridge; over 1500 feet long.ol Railways.are, projected: or in ual oohstry ota: fo\u2019; Kin > Letnéldfs gomin- ion.\u2018Without railwdys thé CongS State éan never be of much valde,\u201d Stanléy used to.declare.And then came the line from Matadi to Leopoldville, 260 miles of jungle, inhabited only by cannibals, elephants, hippopotami, crocodiles and monkeys, Of course, the trouble was, as usual, to get labor.The natives have a deep- seated objection to all work, and such as is necessary to maintain life is done by the women.Worse still, the white man can never live long in these regions without going home to rest and recuperate, and the result is that railways even in Central Africa will cost in places $50,- 000 a mile.Still they must be persevered with for political or mining reasons.Some of the drawbacks are entirely unlooked for, however.Thus, not far from the Victoria Falls a herd of giraffes, stampeded by a troop of lions, fled madly against the telegraph wires at Intundhula, 125 miles from Buluwayo.dragged down two miles of copper wire and many of the iron poles, besides strangling several of their own number.Fortunately the telegraph staff were not far off, and communication was interrupted for only a few hours.This is the sixth time since the opening of the Falls line that similar interruptions have occurred.In two cases elephants were responsible.This reminds me of the romance of the Uganda railway, which has opened up the enormous empire of British East Africa.It seems only the other day this great country was a mere slave-raiding ground for the coast Arabe, but after the Imperial Government took over control a survey party was sent through \u201crom Mombasa to Lake Victoria, and a tavor- able report was made to parliament.In those days it took five months to traverse the country, whereas by the rail: way it can be done in two days.Along its track many millions of slaves have marched under the lash of their captors, to be huddled into filthy dhows= and sold at Zanzibar or in She Persian Gulf.' The construction was fairly easy until Mile 133 was reached at Tsavo.This station will always have a sinister memory for the engineers, for the gangs of coolies were terrorized for four months by a pair of man-eating lions.No fewer than thirty-nine Hindu workmen fell victims to these fierce brutes, which betrayed amazing cunning in waylaying their victims or audaciously picking them out of their tents.When the male lion got so bold as to pick a Masai tribesman off an open freight car as the train slowed down into Tsavo the authorities thought it was time something shouid be done.All further work was stopped and\u2019the engineers set forth with express rifles to Lill the marauders.- This was not accomplished without a tragedy, however.Two of the engineers sat up all night in an open passenger coach, and toward three o\u2019clock in the morning one of them dropped off to sleep with his .303 across his knees.Along came the stealthy lioness and ac: tually dragged the man out of the window and made off with him into the jungle.His bones were not found untu three weeks later.and on that very dav both lions were shot.Al 2 geht 00 an de Me FUME ie 2] qi.mile feeder of the main north and south mile: a day is thé average rate of laying, advent of the iron horse has not altered the aspect of a natural zoological park.Enormous herds of Zebra graze close tu the train, and not less numerous are the hartebeeste, most awkward and ungainly of antelopes.Ostriches, singly und 31 pairs, or in groups of five or six, stand and stare at the train and then scuttle off with long, loping strides, often breal.- Ing into a run after a gredt futtering oi plumes.The summit of the line is reached at Nairobi, 5,450 feet above sca level, the summit\u2019 of the East African Mighlands.which bid fuir to become u sanatoriuni for the whole of that part of Africa.Enormous difficulties were encounters ¢d by the engineers at Lumbwa (mile 518).Here we find ourselves mm the midst of thick elephant forest, and the tribes are a shy, troublesome people, who have caused enormous inconvenience to the administration of the railway with their thieving propeusities, which extended lo extracting the fishplates and bolts rom the line; stealing the rails to make spears from and fashioning miscel- luncous 1tronwork into siitelds.Some of these natives were convinced that the power of a locomotive lay in the labor of an indefinite number ot oxen, which they assumed were shut up inside.Hence, when the engine stopped they would gather in curious crowds waiting to see some door open and the familiar horns and heads peer forth.Altogether this road cost rifteen million dollars, and its lake terminus is close to the German frontier, on the eastern shore of Victoria Nyanza.The present railways projected in the upper Cengo have suffered much from the mysterious sleeping sickness that attacks their workers, and in one section wiped out nearly four thousand of them.As to the white workers, one may truth- tully say that each Atrican railway 1s marked throughout its entire length with the graves of men who have sacrificed their lives in the accomplishment of this pioneer work.~ Sometimes a stray explorer will come across a small party of surveyors\u2019 assistants and native porterz actually three hundred miles ip advance of the construction party.Such men are utterly cut off from civilization and exposed to grave perils from fever, hostile natives, arid deserts and wild beasts.Their baggage must contain nothing made of wood owing to the astonishing ravages of the white ants.The iron telegraph poles must be in sections, so as to be borne on the heads of negroes, who are the only means of transport in many parts of Africa, where the tse-tse fly has des- oyed every mule, bullock, camel and onkey.In many cases wide roads have to be cut through the jungle so as to prevent the tall, rank avergrowth engulfing both tracks and telegraph wires, and also to facilitate repairs.The telegraph poles, by the Way; have been partieulariy troublesome, largely because the herds ot wild elephants havk looked upon them as institutions specially put up that they might rub their giant bodies against them\u2014with dire results.And when ali things appear to be going well with a construction party smallpox will appear among the black laborers, who are forthwith stricken with consternation and throw down their loads, so'that the jungle track for a score of miles will be ht tered with valuable property, which in many cases the white officers cannot recover.m\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 PLAGUE OF EARWIGS.(From the London \u2018Daily Mail\u201d) For the second year in succession We are enduring a plague of earwigs, which have invaded even the upper rooms of country houses.Always a pest in the garden, they only become a general nuisance in the house atout this season, when they set forth on marriage tlights and uncurl the most neatly folded wings known in the animal kingdom.One mark of the earwig is its 71tality.Few creatures are more difficult to kul, even by violence, and they are almost proof against the ordirary poisons.Happily, nothing is casier to trap.An (x: nert informs us that he bas found much the best way in the l.ouse is to presrve the seed heads of the b.gger poppies.Ly down or erect a number of these on the floor of the room, and if earwigs are about the heads will be freely tenanted in the morning.An earwigs must have darkness, and the orifices round the edge of the poppy seed make an attractive doorway to the gloom of the interior.In the garden nothing is better than the cottager\u2019e usual device, a flower pot inverted on the top of an upright stick, with a little moss or hay at the bottom.a VACCINATION FACTS, (New York \u2018Independent.The statistics of the nurses in small pox hospitals are very interesting.In the evidemi¢ of 1871 .here were 110 persons engaged In actual attendance on the smallpox sick in the Homerton Fkev- er Hospital in England.All these, with two exceptions, were revaccinated before being allowed vo begin their work, and a!l but these two, who had evaded the regulation in the matter, escaped smallpox.In the same \u2018hospi tal five years later, a!l the revaccinatea attendant escaped smallpox, while the only one who had not been revaccinat- ed took smallpox and died from it.A committee was appointed to report on this question of the occurrence of small pox among nurses in England.Of tit teen hundred persons in practical at tendance on cases of smallpox forty-three contracted smallpox, \u2018and not one of these forty-three had been revaccinated.\u2019 Of 734 nurses and attendants in the Metropolitan Aeylums Board hospitals, in London.seventy-nine had had small pox and did not take the disease.Six hundred and fifty-five were revaccinated on entrance, and all of them escaped infection.Ten were not revaccinated, and every one of the ten took am At Kiu Station (mile 267) aven the \\=e=- _ Tt | cid - parte .BE LL ihn.RCN aR IN NE oe Lay Ci \" Ena amped meer - 1 À, \u2014 This department Is ty Mma Choma Lo Jack.Chats yoni: Que, whom = ; cent AN De ES A through - the : Witness at \u2018Why should we ever turn our longing sight Upon the buried years, When on the present veets the golden Mght that comferts us, and cheers! Why «.pocder on the past with tingering sighs Ti\" .\u2018When now, its storms have oeasod, .And God's forgiveness brightens on the skies\u2014 A rainbow in the east.\u201d The passing of September brings with it & pang of regret as its days go swiltly by.Already, we see tle touch of decay on leaf and flower, though it is often called the golden month, for the sheen of many yellow tints.The leaves of the birch glow golden in the sunlight, and the yellow felds after the barvest, add their coloring.while the corn and gourds are of the seme tint, and the garden aflame with yellow flowers.No one can biame poor human nature for a pang of regret in: retrospect, even as we dook back upon the sunmsit days of life that are ours no \u201cmore.How easily we let them slip past, witk but little accomplished, though our hearts were full of good intenticne.\u2018The réfrain of many a weary soul given jo, reflection is, that we have left urdone the things we ought to have dome, and thls fact gives a note of discouragement -to-mañy lives.But why look back?\u2018The moving firger writes-and having writ | Moves an; not all yopt.piety and wit 8hall lure it back to cancel hw!f a\u2019 line.\u2019 So it is worse than useiess to pass our time in looking Back over trials and sor- The past belcngs to God, and from its lessons we can learn how to improve the present, and to make the future dur own.Strength will be given us to bear each day\u2019s burdens, and to fulfll.the duties of lite which lie before us.: THE SCHOOL GROUNDS.L.McD.\u2014In answer to your inquiry as to what can be done with school grounds dn a limited space it may be as.well to quote Profersor-BaHey, of \u201c Connell University, on the subject.e writes: \u2014If there is only six feet between a .schoolhouse and the fence there Is stil\u2019 room for a border of shrubs.This border should be between the wall and-the-fence\u2014 cn the very boundary\u2014not between the walk and the building, - for .in the latter case, the planting divides the premises, and weakens the effect.\u2018A space two feet wide will allow: of an irregular wall of bushes; and if the area is ome hurdred feet long, thirty to fifty kinds of shrubs amd flowers can be grown to .perfection, and the school grounds will be practically mo.smaller for the planta- tio.One week's well directed work in each year by one man, .coupled with donations of plants from: private yards, would make every sckool yard in the land a little\u201d paradise.\u2019 CT ; In most country sehoois there are boys large erovgh to manage the work of the grounds without the expevse of cme man a week each year, -and the interest is greater with the children if they are allowed to Kelp, 2 Nothing will develop a taste for the bexutiful in Nature more than the sight of growing things on AL everyday playground, and the:.planting and ea~c of such adds a very .pleasing feature to the lande.L0\u2014 THREE PLANTS NAMED.LGR.Algoma.\u2014The plants \u2018you sent are well khown, No.1 being Clemvatis,proh- bly Virginiani: No.2, Ampelopsis Quin- quefoliz, and No.3, Clematis Orientalis.AH: ave useful and ornamental as elimbers and perfectly hardy.PCLYGONUM.E.AD.\u2014The plant received from you ie of the Poiygonums, probably Steboldi (De Vriese).It is a stout, handsome bush, and a native of Japan.A very \u2018effective plant, for bold masses, and perfectly hardy, producing a cloud of bicom in September.\u2019 \u2019 .Some: of the Polygonums are natives of Mexico, and growing on the hillsides, have ecquired the name of Mountain Fleece.SOME INGECT ENEMIES.H.K.\u2014The mischievous grub that eats the leaves of the caulifiower could have been destroyed in its early stages by the use of powdered white hellebore, but when full grown the grubs penetrate the inner eections of the caulifiower, and are hard to reach.As for the ants, vou can scatter sulphur in their baunts, and set down a vessel! of sweetened water into which they can be entrapped.Cultivation will disturb them, but it is better to dectroy them.: TWO SHRUBS.S.A.P.\u2014The two shrubs sent for name are Pyrus Arbutifolia, distantly related la the apple family, and eousin to the pear, but you would not think &0 from the insipid taste of the small berries.The other plant is doubtiess Viburnum (Cantancides) Alnifollum, the American Wayfaring Tree, or Hobble Bush, A very good book for your purpose {is \u2018Nature's Garden,\u2019 by Neltie Blanchan.; REMOVING A TREE.E.L.S.\u2014It bas been proved by experience that shrubs and trees of the deciduous clees may be transplanted with sue- cess earlier in autumn than is generally supposed.It iz not wise to disturb your tree before growth has ceased, but before the leaves fall transplanting can be done if managed carefully.If a part of the foliage remains it is of benefit, and will aid in maxiag Toot growth, which does not occur after they are removed by frost.But keep from sunshine during tke process of removal.FLOWER FOR NAME.Ellis.\u2014There is no doubt your flower is the real Cardinal flower, - though much bruised in trarsit.It is a plant of the éwamp: and brooksides, and one of the most striking of the wild flowers.Though naturally found in moist, boggz z0jl, it ta¥es kindly to cultivation, and mav be grown with success in any good garden sofl.Its elorgated spikes of deep scarlet flowers always attract at\u2018ention and admiration.Give it plenty 0?room and partial shade, if possible.\u2018HERB OF GRACE.\u2019 Mabel.\u2014The reason that \u2018Rue\u2019 vas called \u2018Herb of Grace\u2019 was that it was considered the herb of sorrow, and the namo: ie & corruption of the old English word for \u2018ruth,\u2019 and sorrow of heart often becomes t% means of grace.A large number of flowers had a .reputation for averting infection if worn about the person, and in the time nf Queen Elizabeth were ured in \u2018the: preparation of household medicine, hair washes, perfumery and confections, \u2018In those days the ari of pickling and preserving flowers, as well as \u2018fruits, tilling them for scents, was regarded as an elegant accomplishment for a .gentlewn- man, and mast.have, rendered her guite ar 1 VII., has taken the Directorship of Eur- in sugar or vinegar, and dis- familiar with a Iarge number of the Zow- | ere which grew properly instructed in the knowledge of herbs by those who had studied them.Shakespeare Used this 3e in Bis descriptions, such.as \u2018Gloves as ewaet- as dantazk roses,\u2019 and as the Queea In Cymbeline says to the doctor: \u2018Have: Frnot beun | Thy pupil log?Hast thou not learned | me how © To make perfumes, distil, preserve?\\ And so the fragrant growth of many \u2018Herb of Grace.\u2019 \u2019 MCRNING GLORIES.tor as the Morning Glory.At the first rays of the sunrise the delicate cups begin to untwine, and as the light increases they open, like sleepy chikiren only half awake at first.Dainty tints of blue and white, daiaty pink and various other shades, they como every mort:ing, like a new day, co- fair, ard full of refreshment to the senses.What a pretty adornment they make to a cottage, where the Jong strings are cov- whien 4 ~ b VON CC > à ] c per O.Ltd.MONTREAL MURDERERS THEIR OWN EXECUTIONERS,.An extraordinary incident occurred recently in the Mashakulumbwi country, writes a correspondent of the \u2018Central News\u2019 at Buluwayo.A white man, who had several \u2018boys\u2019 working for him, found one morning, to his profound astonishment, that his cook-boy had been cruelly murdered by four of his other boys.Ha immediately investigated the matter, and was about to send the criminals to the nearest police station, which was Mumb- wa, when the boys promptly replied that J such a proceeding was quite unnecessary.They immediately repaired to the nearest tree, and, before anything could be dune, had placed ropes around their necks and had committed suicide \u2014 Westminster Gazette.- Cnet ANCIENT SARCOPHAGI.Among the most recent finds which have been made at Carthage by the Rev.P.Delattre are a number of sarcophagi which present a great interest.In many of these the top cover is sculptured in relief, with a figure of life size, carved out of marble, and beautifully tinted in Various colors.Ome very fine specimen was found in the Necropolis, at a depth of twenty-five feet.On the cover is a figure of a woman executed in the Greek style, with a long garment reaching to the ankles and a veil covering the head.Great technical skill is shown in treating the different tissues.The flesh parts are well polished, and the eyes are painted, giving a lifelike aspect.The hair ie ilded.Inside the sarcophagus wer: ound the remains of the person and some bronze objects.A second sarcophagus was that of a person supposed to have been a priest.The sculptured figure has abundant hair and a curling beard.It wears a long robe with short sleeves.Here also the eyes are painted and are extremely expressive.' READING FOR LUMBER CAMPS.Mrs.F.W.C.Meyers, 27 St.Mark street, superintendent of Lumber Camp work, in connection with the Central W.C.T.U,, writes: The autumn is once more approaching.reminding one that the \u2018Winter King\u2019 will soon arrive, and with these thoughts also come good wishes for the welfare of the lumbermen, and the desire to do all that can be done to benefit those who are shut out from church privileges, and the kindly influences of home.While thanking our many friends for their kindness in the past, we would this vear bespeak for these \u2018men of the forest\u2019 in the Gatineau district larger contributions than ever of comfort bags and literature.French reading matter, especially.is asked for.a very lage proportion of the men being of that nationality.French Bibles.Gospels, tracts.also magazines, both French \"and English, that contain good, health- i ful reading.We are anxious to send the above to lumber camps earlier than usual this year, and would therefore urgently request contributions at once.from now until the middle of November, when shipment will be made.Donations to be sent to 48 St.Matthew street.Contributions of money to carry on this missionary work are also solicited.re 5,000 CURED OF HAY FEVER Instead of sending patients to the mountains, doctors are now preseribing \u2018Catarrhozone.\u2019 It relieves quickly and permanently cures Hay Fever.22 0 Wren ret GY Wh em = 8 All druggists sell Catarrhozone.Plenty to cure Hay Fever for $1.00.Fd EE RE 24 ot er GA RÉ Ni NN +2 rene LE i plata TIR = 7 et i atu AAC ont SE PES OE \u201d pars Irs.ri + add, © 841 = er + = > ; 4 .pe - pl ee 994 TA ra gst et WY TV rar == mire ~ - sonnette ets ditimadiiptigetd ER J 4 \u2014.ace anima SPANO CE XLarge = NS.25 ) ; $e » ._ » 4 1 \\ .à Rx yf d a RR ei 5 Li ! D am I Te ©.+ I H 4 EAN p SHY yl [3 3 81 Ÿ 6, is a th 4 : pon Pe ~~ ERE EPA San ES pe pre a Tet A m0 Prec Esl es se Si FE ia Fe te ve ve i a > 3 : ~ CHURCH NOTICES.Methodist Churches.(Church notices, received.too late for these columns will be.found classified under heading \u2018Late Church Notices,\u2019 on the sixth page.The special rate tor such is Bic per insertion of five linea.) DOMINION SQUARE METHODIST CHURCH\u2014The Rev.E.E.Scott, pastor.Sunday, Sept.32, 11 a.m.\u2014'A Double Portion of Elijah\u2019's Spirit.\u201d 7 p.m.\u2014'Cover- dng Sin.\u2019 EBENEZER METHODIST CHURCH, St Henry, corner St.Antoine street and Convent street.The Rev.B.B.Brown, pes- tor will preach both morning \u2018and evening at 11 am.and at 7.p.m.Sunday -school at 3 p.m.The League will visit Montreal South C.E.Society Monday at 8 p.m.J.C.E.Wednesday at 415 pm.Prayer meeting Wednesday at 8 p.m.Visitors and strangers welcome.DOUGLAS METHODIST CHURCH, cop- ner of St.Catherine and Chomedy atreets.The Rev.C.T.Scott, B.A., pastor.Services at 11 am.and 7 p.m.Sunday school Bad Bible classes at 3 p.m.Visiters made welcome at all services.MOUNTAIN STREET METHODIST \u2018CHURCH, corner of Mountain and Torrance streets.The Rev.H.S.Osborne, B.A, B.D., pastor.Services at 11 a.m.and 7 p.m, 3 p.m., Sunday school.10 am.\u201c .York via D.&H *8.00 a.m.\u2014 Richmond, Bherbrooke, Por lan except Runday.to Quebec, 8.06 a.m.(Bunday only) for Hemmingford, H in\", and iotermediate stations.*8.30 a.m.\u2014 Ottawa, Valieyfield and points ont» Division, 8.85 a.m.- Chambly, Marievilie, Waterloo, Sorel, Pierreville.*9.00a.m.\u2014 Toronto, Buffalo, Detroit, Chiragon.*3.01 a.m.\u2014St.Johns, Boston, New York vac V 9.35 a.1n.Ottawa, Valleyfield and puints on « Division.*9.45 a.m.\u2014 Brockville, Vallevfield.Daily \u20141); +.oept Sunday, Kingston, Toronto.10,13 a.m, \u20148t.Johns, Rouges Point, New York, via D.& H.1.35 p.m.\u2014(Saturday only) St.Johns, Sc A Burlington.White River Jet.Farnham, 5- Ailes \" 1.45 p.m.\u2014(Saturday only) St.Hyacinthie mediate atationa.1.36 pfm.-{Sat.only) Cornwall and ner \u2018stations.p.m.- (except Faturday) St.Jnhns, s- A Burlington, White River Junction 3.40p.m.\u2014 Ottawa, Valleytield And poin's cn ww, Division.4.16p.m.- St.Hyacinthe, Richmond, she b° + Quebec.4.20 p.m.\u2014Hemmingtorl, Huntingdon Fr - ington.4.21 p.m.\u2014Brockvilla and intermediate points 4.50 p.m.\u2014 At.Johns, Ronse's Point 5,01 p.m.\u2014Marieville, Farnham, Granby, Wator os 5.16 p.m.\u2014(except Saturday and Sunday* WHAT SAITH THE SCRIPTURE ?SATURDAY, SEPT.21.MISTAKES ABOUT SANCTIFICA- ve For want of careful, constant, prayerful study of the words of the Bible there is much ignorance about its teaching.Of this sanctification is an example.Men ness.It really means to be set dpart for a special purpose.What are some of the mistakes about sanctification?First.We are not perfectly sanctified when we first trust in Jesus, whereas it really means, that we are perfectly set apart to Christ and belong to Him for His service.The next mistake is that sanctification is the progressive work of the Holy Spirit, in order to the growth of believers in purity.It is not progressive at all, but a completed act.Sane- tified in Christ Jesus, and thus ready for every good work (II.Tim.ii., 21).The believer is to live in separation that he may be a vessel always ready for the Master's use.He is a saint.A third mistake is that sanctification means cleansing and purifying.Whereas it means that I am set apart for service and am to be always ready for it.The servant who waits at table must always be prepared by dress for that service.So with the believer.Like Aaron and his sons, himself and all he has is sanctified, belongs to God, only to be used in His service.Be ye clean that bear the vessels of the Lord, but the bearers, like Aaron\u2019s eons.may not have kept themselves separate, and so become unfitted for service.(Lev.x.).amt DAILY TEXT.September 21.Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall \u2018I mings.| sort of book\u2014one of those Sherlock Holmes | stories, likes Cor&n Doyle, or Jack Hark- will teach that it means purity, sinless- | A COLORED EXHORTATION.A negro preacher, whose supply of bacon was rupning low, decided to take radical steps to impress upon his flock the necessity for contributing liberally to the church exchequer.Accordingly, at the close of the sermon, he made an impressive pause, and then proceeded as follows: \u2018I bab found it necessary, on account ob de astringency ob de hard times an\u2019 de ginerel doficiency ob de circulatin\u2019 mejum in conncction wid dis chu'ch, t\u2019 interduce ma new cottermatie c'lection box.It ie 80 arranged dat a half-dollah or quahtah falls on a red plush cushion widout noise; a nickel will ring a small bell distinctial- ly heard by de cougregation, an\u2019 a sus- pendah-button, ma fellow mawtels, will fiah off a pistol; eo you will gov'n yo - #elves accoréirgly.Let de c'lection now p'oceed w'ile I takes off ma hat an\u2019 gibe out a hymn.'\u2014\u2018London Opinion.\u2019 HIS AMBITION.\u2018What busicess is papa in, mamma?\u2019 \u2018Why, he's a tea sampler; ke samples the different kind of teas.\u2019 \u2018Mamma?\u2019 \u2018Yes; my boy.\u2019 .\u2018Do you kzow what I want to be when J grow up?\u2018No, what, my boy?\u2018A pie samyler!\"\u2014'Yonkers Statesman.\u2019 EXPECTED FINISH.\u2018Yes,\u2019 said the\u2019 prospective purchaser, \u2018J always select an automobile by its motors.\u2019 \u2018But don\u2019t you pay any attention to îte finish?\u2019 arked the saiesman, who bad been showing the upholstering and brass trim- \u2018Oh, no.All my automobiles gencrally finish up in a tree or in a haystack.\u201d \u2014 \u2018London Opirvion.\u2019 AN TUNMENTIONED ANCESTOR.Mr.B.is very proud of Lis aucient Îlne- age and never lets slip an opportunity to boast of it.At a dinner where he had been unusually rampant on this sul.ject a fellow guesi quieted him by remarking: \u2018If you climb much further up your fam- fly tree you will come face to face with the monkey.'\u2014'Lippincott\u2019s.\u2019 IAN MACLAREN AND HIS SON.(\u2018Pitmrar\u2019s Shorthand Weekly.\"?A good story told by the late lan Mac- larep is related in the \u2018Reader,\u2019 illustrating what he called the estimation in which a Scotch writer\u2019s work is held in the bosom of his family.\u2018My youngest and schoolboy son,\u2019 he said, \u2018had vainly been trying to read come of my books, and in a confidential mood observed to me, \u201cI say, father, why don\u2019t you write a proper away, or something of that sort, and not so much Scotch rot?\u201d Phil May, who was fond of variety in his attire, was standing waiting fo his horse one morning, dressed in a mustard.colored riding suit, scarlet waistcoat, and blug tie.A man who had lurched cut of a public house, crossed the road and stared at Phil May for a minute.Then he touched his cap and asked in a tone of commiseration, \u2018Beg pardon, guv\u2019nor; but was you in mourning for anyone?\u2019 The artist was the first to appreciate the joke.Look out for Baby.Remember that a few applications ôf poor soap may cause serious skin trout!e to a delicate skin.Don\u2019t take chances, don\u2019t acteptany \u201cjustas good\u201d Soaps for the baby, but buy Baby\u2019s Own Soap Specially recommended for nursery use by the National Council of Women in Montreal.Albert Soaps Ltd.Mirs.- Meatreal A.HODINA, Rractical hoe Maker, Repairs Boots, Shoes and Rubbers.Main 5061, 4 BEAVER HALL MILL.CRAWFORD & SON, BEDDING SPECIALISTS.Mattresses Remade Feather Beds and Piliows Purified Tel.Main 3844, 555 William St, Horse-shoeing ana : Blacksmithing, ALEXANDER LINDSAY, HORSESHOER AND BLACKSMITH, 57 8t.Henry.Pe | he also reap.\u2014Gal.vi., 7.| 4 ae 7 > > - died er -\u2014\u2014 rama UY ww We ing rons QuickService.Good Work and Low Prise a al © Ed : \u2018 oil Wanderlied.18 é f | (\u2018Scrtbner\u2019s Magazine.\u2019) Dh, when shall I come home egain\u2014 My darling, tell me true?TE ate + thing to do! - See summer burn the changing leaves Beneath the homeland sky, \"White winter fold .the familiar eaves\u2014 Oh, when shall I?AS REISER RT mue \"ge 000 ste A Wl iN | - Me Thc rose -shall tinge the coverts, And the field bird leave her nest, ï To wander esst,to wander west\u2019s a dreary\" x .The Word shall find the snow-bauned, And the wanderer back: shall fiy, And aliens seek-thetr-Bative land\u2014 - Ob, when shall i?a Tre axes strike the yielding pine, The bcams swing \u2018up: 0! yew; To build a house for love and rest\u2019s happy thing to do! A feathered pair have swung their \u201cnest, All secret, safe and: high, And every one finds home and rest\u2014 Oh, when shall I?(By Eiesnor H.Porter, in the \u2018Congregstionalist and Christian World.\" The orisp October days found Molly Adams cozily eettled in a tiny room up two flights in a quiet house on .a side New, well-fitting and suitable dresses made quite a different creature of | Molly, and &he \u201cgrew younger and .fairer every day.Unconsciously she adopted i i And the autumn gather golden grain ; i againet' her giowir- breast; ZH i Cell The Rebellion of Molly.FR + ol toil + \u2014_\u2014 VS PE ik .Concluded.) - BA \u2018J dont mean anything, dear.I fancy \"ETS > I am a litle crasy.Perhaps the wedding 14 Bas upset me.Never mind, I'H feel bet- | street.4 ter te-morrow ;\u2019 and she began a very \u20ac animated account of the -wedding, which «© effectually prevented any\u2018 further questions from Jennie; but she left a puzzled sister behind her when she started \u201cor home ten minutes later.Molly did not sleep much that night.To be sure, she prepared herself for bed, blew out her light, and composed herseil to rest ; but all through the long hours spent by the most of the world in slumber.she was staring into the dark, thinking; and she was thinking of that eome- thing\u2014that delighttul something\u2014with à recklessness born of desperation.Yes, there were drawbacke\u2014clothes, for ne TRE determi tpae = fant ioe :.EE ar SE VE instance, Molly had never known what a really new dress was.Being both younger and smaller than her sisters, it had followed as a natural consequence that she should fall heir to all their half- worn dresses.That Mabel was tall and Molly short\u2014that Nell was dark and Molly fair\u2014that Jennie was all angles and Molly all curves\u2014mattered not.A costume that made its original wearer a thing of beauty proved anything but & joy forever to poor Molly, whose style and complexion might be Zar different.Yea, clothes were a drawback.Then there was money.Molly heaved & sigh of relief over money.Her expenses all these years had been light, and her litle inheritance from her mother bad grown.Just how much it hod grown she wes tbankfu!l her : relatives did not | know.Then it suddenly occurred to her that money could remedy clothes: and it was with a sigh of relief that she finally turned over and elept just as the dawn was breaking.It must have been a week later that Ma- Del received a letter which left that placidly self-satinfied woman.quite hejpless i with surprise and consterpation.It was from Molly.\u2018Dear Sister Mabel: Thank you for your kind invitation, but I could bot possibly think of accepting your generous offer a8.I have made other plans for the winter.I am going to close the house for the | present and go to Boston.I have long wanted to make this change, and I expect to enjoy it very much.I hope the children are well.Give my love to them, and to Charlie, and accept a share for yourself.Your loving eister, \u2018MOLLY.\u2019 Molly going to Boston.Mabel would as soon have expected Nellie's pet kitten to assert sudden authority as that Molly chould venture to disregard the advice of her family.Mabel sat down at once and wrote to Tom\u2014perbaps a man could do something! But Tom was already rendered equally kelpless by a duplicate of Molly\u2019s d:fquieting letter.Nor were the twinge found to be less incapacitated.in fact, the entire family were thrown into helpless confusicn by the unaccountable rebellion of one quiet little woman; and in after years they always referred to it ue rer many of the little fads and fancies she saw about her and fast became attached to her surroundings.Her days were one long delight.Picture galleries, libraries, museums and historical rooms offered untold bliss to the amuse- ment-hungry woman; and she developed a .wonderfyl faculty for ferreting out all the free concerts and lectures.Soon after Christmas Molly had a letter \u2018rom Jennie.Her sisters had all written atiff little notes at regular intervals, but somehow this was different.At the bottom of the sheet she found these words: You don\u2019t krow bow I miss your dear visits and your cheery ways.The children cried for you every time they Baw your picture, so I have had to put it out of sight.Someway \u201ceverything has gone wrong since I do not have you to run to: with all my perplexities.But I do not mind if you are enjoying yourself\u2014and of ccuree you are.Molly did not read this letter twice, but hid it quickly in its envelope and went at once for a long walk.That might she enthusiastically applauded every number On the concert programme; but she cried ber- ! sel! to sleep afterwards and wake in the morning with red eyes and a bad headache, It was during the heliday excursion *@ 1 the city that - Molty\u2019s mext-door neighbor calBed.\u2018Have you seen \u2018my lately\u201d Molly asked \u201cabruptly, preliminary greetings.\u2018Yes; an\u2019 she looks poorly, too.ain\u2019t long for this werld, Molly.\u2019 \u20180! Jennie isn\u2019t sick,\u2019 interposed Molly, sister Jennie after the She \u2014 quickly.\u2018You know she always was frail looking.Mrs.Jores soiffed her contempt.\u2018Ump.-ae says it's only \u2018cause sf is worried over Dell since she had that sethaca., * \u2018Setback!\u2019 \u2019 repeated Molly, mystified.\u2018Yes; didn't you know?Well, mebbe they didn\u2019t mean you should.Mabel drove over from Bescoreville last week, an\u2019 she told me they wan't goin\u2019 to tell you if anylhin* ailed any of \u2018em this winter.She said they were ashamed now, you'd done so much for \u2018em\u2019; after which discomforting sentimerts Mrs.Jones suddenly developed a oconsclence-stricken ig- iorance of the whole matter, much to Molly's distress.Molly stayed a* home that night.Music had lost its harmony, and pictures their color for her.It was nearly nine o'clock when a dazzling smile drove the wisttul- ness from her eyes; in a moment snc was sn her feet wheeling her trunk into the middle of the fioor.The \u2018next afterroon a joyous little figure \"rushed through Jepnie\u2019s kitchen door.\u2018Why, Molly!\u2019 \u2018Yes, I've come home\u2014I'm tired of play- as \u2018Molly's Declaration of Independence.\u2019 ing!\u2019 and she kireed the baby rapturously.Home Thoughts.THE JOY OF HOME-COMING.Every home-coming sheuld be a joy.Whether it be the coming home at night after the day's werk, or the return of a traveller from a holiday, whether the nome-comer be child or parent, the words \u2018home again\u2019 should be full of inspiration and gladness.When a member of the 4 i family has been absent on a visit 1n° which there has Leen \u201cmuch variety and large provision for entertainment there is often a litle flatness and loss of savor on settling down into the home routine.This may be prevented if those at\u2019 home will make à little preparation against dulness, and show their eatisfaction in having the loved one back, by putting the hose into gala a feast.In theory we exalt duty above pleasure, while in practice most of us prefer to have our daily duties-alternate with pleasant \u2018dntervals of diversion.No exception should be taken to- this, for there is manifest truth in-the bomely distich, \u2018All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.All play and no work makes Jack a mere toy.\u2019 Tbose who attain the highest devslopenent of character always find pleasure in every trim and giving the first meal the air of | cuir, Bowever stern its aspect, This da) scartely to be expected of the young, and it is their right and privilege to have a margin left in their days and weeks for simple enjoym-ent.Fathers and mothers who are careful to make each bume-coming of the children a festival wil! not regret their pains .in the end.Children often need a reminder that parents have had fheir ghare of bearing burdens, \u2018that young shoulder: should lift tkemr, and that young people should aid in giving rest and refreshment to those who are older.\u2014\u2018Christian Herald.\u2019 HEART COMMUNION.The joy that comes from a true communion of heart with another is perhaps one of the purest and greatest in the ; world, but its function is not exhausted by merely giving pleasure.Though: we may not be conscious of it there is a deeper purpose in It, \"an education in the t highest arts of living.We may be enticed by the pleasure it affords, but its greatest good is got by the way.Even intellectually it means the opening of a door into thc mystery of life.Only love understands after all.It gives insight.We cannct truly koow anythiag without sympathy, witbout getting out of self and -entering into theirs.true naturalist, and observe the ways of beds and insects Accurately, Home Department.| awkward position.A man cannot be a SATeRDAY, SEPTEMBER 2], 190% unless: he san ratch long and \u201clovingly.fever.know children unless we love them.any\u201d of the chambers of the hoüse of lite are forever locked to ue, until\u2019 loves gives us the key.\u2014Hugh Black.THE AGREEABLE RELATION-IN-LAW.My admiration goes out veluatarily to the man or woman who lives on a basis \u2018Of sound friendship , with those relatives who \u2018have beeu acquired by marriage.If is not alvays the easiest matter in - the world, .though one of the primest importance, to command the good will and the \u2018hearty likirg of your wife's péaple or your \u2018| husband\u2019s family, -but when yom can and do command it, you prove thereby the possession of some very geod qualities of heart, and scme very good methods of manner, and you also show that you.know more than a little corcerning the arts that maze for popularity.; You prove this most potently when you have married injo à family between which: and yourself! no life-long associations exist, or between which and yourself no prompt affinity le excited.Many 'a young woman especially finds herself in just this She weds a charming man, whose nearest relatives are \u2018Unsympathetic, almost unfriendly, and guite un- Hke her Lusbend.Then the opportunity is brought conspicuously .forward whea she can and she should show the quality of her breedirg, and demonstrate just how much she-knows of that most precious and delightful and irreisistible science, the makir7 onc\u2019e self agreeable in the face nf genuine difficulties.If the situation is such a one as I have outlined abose\u2014and with lameatable frequency I find that it does prevail\u2014the wife in the case, with her own self-esteem: and her marital bappiness to maintain, can wield one, and only one, set of weapors in order to win her way.She must take care to be tectful, not retaliatory, and she must pursue the never-failing profitable policy of the sweetest politeness.\u2018They don\u2019t like me, and I shall not put myself out to make them change their opinion,\u2019 I heard one bride angrily declare on her return from her first visit to her husband's family, which visit, I judged from her statement, had bardly been a success.' She came over and sat down beside me, - and it was not long before I heard ail | æbout it.It was a very familiar story.but she looked greatly discomfited, and rot\u2019 a little puzzled too, whem I smiled over its ccaclusion.\u2018But don\u2019t you think they were perfec:ly horrid?\u2019 she asked, aggrievedly.; \u2018Well, tbey were not very kind or pleasant, surely,\u2019 I admitted.\u2018But,\u2019 I went on, \u2018I think you bungled your side of .the con- .test, too.You made ever mo -many btun- dera that hurt their feelings quite\u2019 86 \u2018sorely as their behaviour hirt yours,.and then a8 you are gay and young, end in socfety.| and popular, you ought to have uged more tact; you should have been more patient and a great deal more polite and adaptable than you were.You are apparently not aware that it is more blessed to be agreeable in the face of a little \u2018rudemess than tv be revengetul.\u2019 I saw the sly retort that was on the tip of her tongue, and I forestalled her by saying, \u2018I know,my dear,whereof .I speak because I have had éxperience.\u2019\u2014Adelaide Gordon.\u2014Selected.With the Children.\u2014 \u2018ENTER IN.\u2019 I saw the stars of the morning wait On thelr lofty towers to watch the land; As a little child stole up to the gate, And knocked with a tiny, trembling hand.\u2018J am only a little child, dear Lord! And my feet are stained already with sin: But they said, you had sent the children word, To come to the gate and enter in.\u2019 The man at the gate looked up and smiled, A heavenly smile and fair to see; And he opened, and bent to the pleading child, \u2018l am willing with all my heart,\u2019 said he.\u2014\u201cWaîit.\u2019 ON THE MOUNTAIN TOP.Over the mountains and through the 1-those homes, {fen ghildren.» |olafMdren, ing \u2018beauty, with the progress of the sea- {som8; and even now, with the coming of \u2018véiater, painting the forest with the eplen- dor of God\u2019s love of beautiful things.\u201cAid then it was a prayer for the homes iu sight from the mountain-top\u2014for those lying in plain view in the valleys near at \u2018hand, and those more distant, discerned Yy-.ihe litle clearings or the ascending \u2018smoke of their hearth-stones.He -prayed for the men and women in burdened with cares, and ¥afning a scanty living from their hillside them growing up without education; for the future of that hidden but hopeful Te- gion into which he had come that he might give.his life in service for these people.The father lived till his head was white, then died, honored and beloved, having wrought mightily for the people of the -Southern highlands.\"The son made his way into the world, and- won success as an inventor, but year ' j by year he goes back again into the hills, \"where his father wrought, to stand beside his father\u2019s grave, and to perform an an- \u2018nual git of love for the people of that region \u2018through an institution which ig answering the father\u2019s prayer.If ever in the passing years the problems have brought to him discouragements, or the world's temptations of wealth and power -have inclined him to forget, the vision of that mountain top has returned to him, and he has seen again, and for the thou- \u2019sandth time, the kneeling figure of his \u2018father, and has heard agajp his prayer for all the homes in sight, and the boys and girls within them; and his heart has found a new baptism for service spirit of his father\u2019s prayer.\u2014\u2018Youth\u2019s Companion.\u2019 A PLEA FOR OATMEAL.- Dr.Chalmers Watson, the author of numerous studies of dietetic problems, writes in \u201cThe Hospital: \u2018Nowadays, what is termed in Scotland \u2018\u2018use and wont\u2019 is apt *o be looked upon as an insufficient defence even for a well established and generally recognized food habit.Justification must be provided by the chemical and physiological laboratory.Upon evidence so obtained Dr.Watson founds a suggestion that a large measure of the food value of oatmeal is due to ite capacity to stimulate the activity of the thyroid gland.After fesding à number of young rats for four to eight weeks on a diet of uncooked oatmeal and water, an autopsy revealed in each instance considerable enlargement of the thyroid, together with evidences of increased glandular activity.The observa- tior\u2018 was made all the more striking by the absence of any such changes in a control series of rats who had been fed on 8_bréad-and-milk diet.The suggestion QOW 4s that it is by stimulation of the thyroid that porridge produces the excel- Jieyt results which it can claim as a food Turning to the practical side 15e.Watson makes one or two-detailed pro for the use of oatmeal.He ap- prôves.of 4ts use at breakfast in the form of porridge.and milk, and advises that \u2018the meal shall be completed by a glass of milk and some bread and butter, and shall not include bacon or any other form of meat.If meat is introducea it tends to induee a distaste for the less eppetizing porridge, which sooner or later, therefore, is negleoted.Rats, equally with it.seems, display this eame dietetic perversity; they will not eat oatmeal or bread when meat is available.As rorridge does not encourage the use of the nfuscles of mastication, children should also receive a supply of crusted bread, rusks, etc., and these should be taken \u201cdry\u201d and not washed down with fluid.Lastly, it is necessary to recognize that some adults\u2014can not digest oatmeal.Food value and digestibility are not one and the same thing, and the public ignorance of this\u2018 fact is responsible for many misconceptions,\u2019 Health Hints.SELFISH CARELESSNESS.The.recklessness of young peopie in the matter of heallth\u2014distressing as it is to those who love them\u2014is less inexousable than the imprudence of those at the other end of .iife.To be sure, it is sometimes a pathetic clinging to youth that makes the grandmother shiver in summer cloth- tag prematurely put on, the grandfather ventare out on ice that tries the footiag Ta streams rode the itinerant preacher, behind him, on the horse, rode his little father and the horse.On the top .of the; hill they paused for rest before re-mount- ing for the long ridge ride.the blue-grass region, and range after range of the Cumberland hills, \u2014the kag Mountains, the Pine Mountains, Lills of Tennessee, too far to be discerned through the baze, but surely there, beyond the last dim and crooked line that !i\u201dtea itself, half-hjll, bhalf-cloud, against the autumn sky.The lad found a chestnut-tree, and was busy at its root.But the father this way and that way, with ever-increas- jug elevation of spirit; and when the laa\u2019 returned from his search for nuts, the father was on his knees and praying ajoud, the boy, and the boy did not tell of it un- ti years afterward, and then could recall ne word.But the spirit of the prayer be- .camie to him a .life inspiration.First 0?all, it was a prayer .of rejoicing in the glpry which God had displayed on sarth\u2014a glory filling the world with chang- -and of his sturdy son.\u2018to\u2019 add to tteir burdens t hich they must the Blue Ridge,\u2014amd beyond Kentueky the, chance whic y looked | No one heard that prayer save God andi But, whatever\u2019 the motive, the act is inconsiderate and selfish, toy.On a long climb the father dismount- | and its consequences cften fall heavily on ei and on the steep quarter-mile before others beside the transgressor.the top the boy, too, trudged beside nis | Every observer can cite, within his own little circle, exasperating irstances of illness or accident directly traceable to carelessaess { against which the sufferer had been cau- The view from the top was inspiring.| ones with all the energy tbat \u2018filial re- Behind lay the foot-hills that receded nto « allowed.ahead Tose To defer easily to the ad- in such matters, and not by riskirg mis.help remedy, is always slow to vice of others à lesson that youth is learn, but mature years should bring a sweeter reasonableress.Said a charming woman, long in delicate health, to one who commented on the grace with which she yielded to th: solicitude of her family as to.\u2018details of diet and exercise, \u2018My dear, it is the -very least I can do for them, to spare .\u2018them dnxiety.\u2019\u2014'Congregationali:t and Christian World.\u2019 For severe headache and neuralgia, the application of a cloth wruaz out iu hot water ia \u2018good,, but one wet in very cold witer will prove still more immediate in its good \u2018effects.The chill deadens the nerves and the pain -is soothed.For in- -somuis, a towsl, folded in four, wrung out lu very cold water, ice, if possible, and farms; for the boys and girls, many oI, | in the; applied to the spine, will usually put the wakeful one to sleep.{ one towel does not effect the desired result try a second, and even a third one, at fifteen mirute intervals, placing a heavy bath towel between the bed and the we: application.The spine is closely united with the brain,and the soothing effect is said ®tc travei from nerve to nerve.-Newv York \u2018Post.\u2019 Travellers \u201cwill \"ind a small package of i borax useful on their jourzeys.On \u2018rains, as often in hotels, the water sunplied for washing is hard and drying to the skin, | and a teaspoonful of borax added to a | basinful of water will make a wonderful difference.\u2014 For ths Housekeeper.A MODEL KITCHEN.One of the fine points is what we call the double-faced cupboard.Instead of a little slide, wkere a few dishes at a time may be put througb, there are full sized doors on the kitchen as well as the din- ing-room side.The china can all be put away without going into the dining-room, or, in fact, taking more than six steps from the: shelf where they are placed after drying.We used to go through a passageway and into the dining-room to place all of the china.The distance from the shelf where they were washed, and the little slide into the cupboard to the door of the cupboard leading from the dining-room was twenty-eight feet, and, as not more than ore quarter of the dishes could be put through at one time, there was four times 28 feet to be gone over three times every day for this purpose alone\u2014three ' hundred and thirty-six feet of travel! daily, where now I ecarcely move from my tracke.The shelves are twenty-four inches wide, eight feet long, and the cupboard is full length from door to ceiling, with all the doors in two sections My arrangements for sink and dish washing | boards in the sbelf are all water-proofed, so there is no danger of their becoming eoaked and spggy.This gives ample space for clearing up dishes, and also for draining.My dish-pan stands so that all of | the drip of the dishes runs to the sink, and, consequently the place .where the dried dishes sland is never wet, nor do I have to stop and wipe up the water lest they become wet underneath.They literally move on from right to left, and are always out of the way.All of the plumbing is open, and 1 have what I never saw used until I ordered it\u2014an \u2018indepzndent pipe from the sink, with a shut-off just be- house.When this is closed I fill the sink with potash water, and leave it and the pipe full for several hours, then open it and turn ou the hot water.This gives a grand clearing out, and there is no danger of obstructed pipes and plumber's bills.My range is large, but has a contractable fire-pot and every improvement.My old dining-room extension table, with one leaf in, and a good oilcloth cover, occupies one side of the room, and an enclosed closet holds all of the kitchen utensils and con- venienoes.Really, all I lack is electricity and its fabulous advantages, and that will probably come in due time.\u2014New York \u2018Ledger.\u2019 HOW TO WASH GLASS.There is nothing that adds so much to the appearance of the table as shining glass, and nothing that makes a room « on - / ow ; pros SH Nm oY Tora arte CA a a IR dhe - 2 e.rm wre G2 rar cr ar npr ms == de a RS hi asl ° pers age 4 FAT Re 1 fau EE a SEC + LETTERS FROM READERS.[The correspendence department is valued by some as the most interesting part of the paper.The bane of it, however, is the length to which letters are \u2018liable to grow.There is not only the fact thai readers avoid what is long, but the great difficulty of finding the space necessary.We do not like to refuse a good lstter on the ground ol lergth, but 1t-oftea bas té be done.Some newspapers \u2018puf a \u2018limit on correspônden of a hundred or two\u2019 haindged words.We recognize that.there arfe subjects occasionally that cannot be well handled in so brief a manner, but we must keep before our readers the fact that brevity is always a primary- reeccmmendation.] : THE ELECTION AND THE LIQUOR TRAFFIC.(To the Editor of the \u2018Witness.\u2019) Sir,\u2014It is more than pleasing to me to see this question being publicly discussed.Public discussion leads to enlightenment, enlightenment to action, and action to results.There is a feeling of suppressed excitement about that is the presage of the coming storm.From the different detachments of the temperance army come reports of renewed activity and revived.interest.It is important if the approaching battle is to be a success \u2018that our plan of action should be considered, and the proper steps taken to fight, overcome, and forever vanquish the most cruel, crafty, and\" powerful enemy that ever afflicted a nation.\u2019 The wrong keynote to the song makes discord rather than music, a mistaken order in battle means disaster rather than victory (witness Magersfontein).1 am proud, then, to take my stand alongside that grand old fighter, the Rev.G.G.Huxtable, and your other correspondent, Mr.W.Davis, and from personal acquaintance with both I know their chief purpose is to fight to the death in the coming conflict.But let ue be careful mn choosing a commanding position in the fight, The last three paragraphs especially of Mr.Davig\u2019s letter deserve consideration.There is a call to the church to take the matter up, and surely more is to be expected in that direction when every pulpit rings out denunciations of this evil thing which more than any other bars the way of Christian pro gress.Let the churches now eombine to take action on the lines laid down in their pulpit utterances, namely, no compromise with: the evil thing.We have seen the consecrated saloon \u2018started off with the bishop\u2019s blessing, carry on the same blasting, blighting, soul-destroy- ing business as the common saloon; we have seen the ministers of God lead m a movement to promote trust public- houses which so increased the crime in the district that the criminal authorities said the little town would soon require a sheriff for itself, and most important of all, we find the ministers of God advocating and supporting local option of an evil which they themwelves declare is the mother of all evils, as if majorities made an evil wrong in one place and right in another.What would Jesus do?When he cleared the temple, can we 1m- agine_him dividing the temple courts and saying, \u2018A.majority in this corner seem to want this thing, we\u2019ll let them have it for a consideration.\u2019 No, s&ir, that scourge of whipcords was a noncompro- miser, and cut right and left, knowing neither party nor.patron; the trafficking was wrong, and there was only one method of dealing with wrong in Chriet\u2019s method\u2014prohibition.T6o often our temperance votérs have failed just at the time and place when a firm stand would have been effective.For 364 days they have been prohibitionist in speech and action, but on the all- important day their beloved party, Liberal or Conservative, must not suffer, and so again the old game is played and prohibition relegated to a back seat.Is this to go on?Will prohibition ever come through the Liberal party?m- phatically no; through the Conservative party; no.Then are not prohibitionists who vote Liberal or Conservative not voting to perpetuate the traffic rather than to abolish it?Better be unrepresented than misrepresented, better far preserve our franchise by abstaining from voting than cast a vote which shall mean our consent to legalize in whatever measure the accursed traffic, which destroys wholesale the best and fairest of our land.' Then there is a call to force the temperance question on politicians to secure better legislation for the handling of the traffic.Now, what have we as prohibitionists to do with the handling of the traffic.Certainly, so far as the lL- cense system is a succesg in restricting so far the evil influences of the traffic, temperance people have to be thanked.If the law were left to license advocates to enforce, I am afraid the results would be disastrous.Has the time not come when they should frankly say, \u2018We have tried to regulate this business,-and it refuses to be regulated; we have hedged it around and tried to control it; to-day it is as uncontrollable as ever; we give it up; our plans have failed, now you can try yours.If it cannot be mended it must be ended.\u201d In the political field is the arena where the battle for prohibition is te be fought and won.In the SICK HEADACHE Positively cured these Little Pills, CARTERS - Parliament House at Ottawa are the keys which shall lock forever the doors on the accursed traffic, and at the same time unlock the fetters of the drink- bound slave.It is important, then, that we enter this arena with the full pur pose of -fighting the traffic, in the spirit of those gladiators of old, no quarter asked mor given, no fawning, cringing, compromising attitude, but a fight to the death.Let all who take the -stand of reformers give the people a straight lead, and they will follow, and if in the coming election politicians refuse to represent our views, let them understand they cannot have our support.In no other way will they brought up to our standard.ing you for.opening your columns for a free discussion of this question, W.D.MUNRO.Montreal, Sept.18, 1907.- THE CONVERSION OF THE JEW.(To the Editor of the \u2018Witness.\u2019) Sir,\u2014I read with considerable interest in to-day\u2019s \u2018Witness\u2019 of the meeting of a number of local clergymen, met together fer tlie purpose of discussing the carrying on of evangelical work amongst the local Hebrews.I shall not question the motive that moves these gentlemen to discuss this question, but I must confess that I regret to find a number of presumably enlight- that activity in the direction mentioned will bring about the conversion of the theologically tenacious Jew.While the Ven.Archdeacon Norton makes a plea for generous treatment of the Jew, he at the same time remarks that the Jews are the people of God.The majority of orthodox Jews individually and collectively cherish this traditional dogma every bit as much as the Ven.Archdeacon himself, end I ask whether, in view of this circumstance, it is possible to convert any considerable number of them by the means that are being followed?Practically all those who carry on evangelical work among the Hebrews are the converts of that race who are paid \u2018for their labors.\u2018These ren e Jews, knowing that their arguments from a theological standpoint can be easily combated by the average Jewish believer, devote a considerable portion of their time to helping their former coreligionists materially rather than spiritually.In the that the Jew does not look upon and regard Jesus Christ with the same reverence as the Gentile.To the former he 18 simply an individual descended from Jewish stock, te whom Gentiles in all counfries pray and revere as their Saviour.To him it appears incomprehensible that his Christian neighhjors can worship a human being.Being intensely monotheistic, he cannot clothe with divine attributes one who lived and died ag all men do.There is also no gainsaying the fact that the Jews are more thorough Biblical scholars than their Christian friends.Though but few of them are conversant with the books of the New Testament, they have a profound knowledge of the major part of the Bible commonly called the Old Testament.They are also aware that rigid adherence to its teachings and the conclusions of its commentators has coet them hundrede of years of bitter persecution in every country where Christianity was the dominant religion.Even to-day, so-called Christians are busily employed in massacring the hated Jew for the sole reason that he conforms to the customs and rites of his forefathers.Yet, in spite of these well-known and palpable facts, a number of otherwise well-intentioned Christians still persist in carrying on a totally ineffective propaganda for the conversion of the Jews o the religion of the\u2019 Nazarene.Considerable sums of money are annually spent in supporting Gentile and converted Jewish evangelists engaged in the hopeless task of proselytizing the children of Israel.Where a Jew is converted to Christianity it is mainly owing to some cash consideration rather than an intel- lyte is not wholly Christianized.The influence of early teaching and environment cannot be wholly eradicated, and there still remains truces of the old faith, Those who have lived in ghettoes know that the ordinary Jewish missionary is with contempt and amusement, although he may in some cases do considerable good in the way of helping distressed persons.As Archdeacon Norton remarked, what distinguished the Jews above all other nationalities is the tenacity with which they cling to the ancient ceremonialism of their faith; but that does not demonstrate that they are as religious as were their ancestors.Though the Jew is exttemely conservative in discarding ancient beliefs and customs, there is a noticeable tendency towards reform.This has been brought about not through the mediation or work of evangelists, but the spread of education and the greater and more - liberal diffusion of ideas.The modern Jew is affected by the scientific spirit of the age, and seeks the why and wherefore of things.He is not content to.accept as of old the conclusions and answers of his elders, but goes in for original research, with results that are not always pleasing to his orthodox friends.Those whose inquiries are extensive and continued become out and out freethinkers, while others become reformed Jews.Practically every city of any importance in the United States and Canada has its Reform temple.The congregations are generally composed of the most enlightened and wealthiest section of the Jewish community of the particular city.In matters of ritual 2they approximate to the Protestant mode of worship.The orthodox Jews say their prayers while wearing their hats, and no music of any kind is permitted.The Reform Jew, on the other hand, doffs his hat when entering the house of worship, and permits his pastor to conduct the service with the aid of appropriate music.11 these changes have even brought about by the agitation carried on by enlightened Jews themselves.From an Orthodox standpoint the Reformed Jew is a heretic.The Jew, in spite of his religious conservatism, is not immune to the march of progress and the (dissemination of ideas.His views of men and things broaden as his coneep- ened clergymen still cherishing the belief.first place, it should not be forgotten lectnal change; and even then the prose- tion of the solidarity of the human race becomes clearer.itness the unselfish and noble martyrdom of the thou- \u2018sands of \u2018Russian Jewish youths and maidens who have shed their blood in the battle for liberty.These heroes and heroines were not religiqus in the; orthodox sense; they paid little or no attention to racial religious injunctions, \u2018but adopted as their ideal the brotherhood i man; and to further its progress they gave their lives.eir blood was shed, not in defence of.a traditional religion but to free the Russian proletariat from the oppression of | an effete and reactionary autocracy.They became converts to the religion of bumanity and discarded vague tradition and precept for the carrying on a cam- | paign of body and soul emancipation.They needed no incentive, no promise of a reward in the hereafter; all the wished fo accomplish was to help in reeing their oppressed fellow subjects of all creeds from the tyranny of Czar- dom.My reference to the Russian Jewish revolutionists brings me back to the question of the utility of carrying on evangelization amongst the Jews.The gentlemen who hold the opinion shared by those who participated in the meeting, are evidently under the impression that unless they become more active, the work will suffer and the conversion of the Jew prolonged indefinitely.As I have already pointed out, the converting of the Jew to Christianity is a slow and eostly process.But us they believe that the salvation of Christendom depends upon the Jews becoming Christian communicants, let me assure these worthy followers of the Master that the Jew as such will never be converted to their religion, but that there is every likelihood that as he secures greater concessions of liberty in the lands in which he dwells, that as persecution becomes less and less possible, that as he profits by the educational advantages that his adopted country offers, that as he becomes more and more convinced that it is his bounden duty to share in all the various activities that constitute the nation\u2019s vitality, he willqthrow off one by one the -garments of tradition and racial egoism and bear his share of the \u2018burden of helping humarntty to promote the welfare of its units.Though the opponents of assimilation may deplore the tendency of their nation to merge with the predominäting human elements, evolution and environment, unless interfered with, will do its work in a manner to produce the best results.But I must, in passing, make this qualification that there is no pogéibility of the conversion of the Jew to the Religion of Humanity based upon the extinction of credal differences \u2018unless the development of the average Gentile\u2019s ethical consciousness becomes sufficiently characteristic to discard profession for prac- tine.The Rev.Allan Shatford, at the meet- j ing referred to, gave a number of reasons for supporting Jewish missions.The third and last was, that the conversion of the Jew would be a factor for the attainment of a universal Christendom.The reverend gentleman has evidently great faith in the ethical po-.téntialities of the Jewish race.Let me\u2019 however, assure him that such a desir able millennium will\u2019 not be brought about through the work of evangelists who appeal to the senses rather than the intellect.What he, and others of his kind, should do is to mingle more freely with their fellow-Jewish citizens, not with a view to making converts, but with a desire to make themselves loved and respected.The Jew appreciates kindness, not only in' the form of material gifts, but in that of brotherly feeling as well.It can hardly be expected that the Jew, while strictly orthodox, can have much sympathy with the aims and ideas of his Gentile well- wishers when a number of them professedly working in the Lord\u2019s service labored so hard to deprive him of the privilege of keeping the Sabbath holy.Such action is hardly calculated to make him an admirer.of the clerical workers for Christ.The Jew will only be converted when those who seek to spiritually regenerate him will \u2018Do as they would be done by.BERNARD ROSE.Montreal, Sept.17, 1907.HIGH PRESSURE WATBR AND UNDERGROUND WIRES.(To the Editor of the \u201cWitneus.\u2019) Sir,\u2014The determined action now being taken by leading business men to ensure adequate water p re for the con gcsted district or districts of the centre part of the city for fire purposes commends itself to all citizens, and cannot legally be refused, if asked for in accordance with the city charter.I am informed that it is the intention in one district to expend (if necessary) con- sderably over a half million dollars, to put in a sufficient amount of large water mains to give this fire protection, as it will save in insurance rates enough in a few years to pay back the cost of put- ing in the pipes.Being taken up by s prominent men, no doubt \u2018this, as well as the other scheme for giving the whole city a better water bervice (for ich a committee of business men was appointed) will be eccomplidhed facts within a reasonable time, and will prove what could be done for the city if those now moving in the water question were to take as active a part in municipal government all the time, particularly around election times.There would EVERY MAN HATES HIMSELF If he wakes up with headache and bad taste in the mouth.Semething to settle the stomach is needed.That dull, heavy feeling must be lifted, an appetite must be created.Get a tumbler of water, some sugar, and then pour in a stiff dose of Nerviline.You'll feel tip top in a few minutes.Nerviline invigorates, braces, tones, puts vim and snap into our movements.You'll be fitted for a ard day\u2019s work by taking Nerviline\u2014 nothing better.Tarze hottle, 25¢, every- | where.0 .THE MONTREAL DAILY WITNESS not then be so much room for grumbling about the condition of the streets, or the inadequate water supply.Truly, out of evil cometh good.If the insurance companies not come to the rescue by rubbing it in in increased insurance rates, a lot of this municipal administration activity would have remained dormant.Yet it is neither right nor just to expect a few to sacrifice themselves while so many others with as much value at stake, and as much time to spare, remain indifferent.What is needed just now is a general overhanl- ing and reconstruction of our present system of civic admimistration, and this can only be accomplished by a sacrifice being made by some of our citizens with the \u2018hi t ideals, and enough energy and abality to put their ideas into prac- ice.However, referring to the water for fire protection, whether it be in one or many districts, wherever the pipes are laid, it will entail the digging of large trenches to lay said pipes in.And the placing of wires underground is of as much importance in fighting fires as a water supply, which often cannot be because of the wires being in the way.Why not economize, and let the one digging do for the two purposes?Cemmencing that in the centre of the city, the underground wire system could then be gradually extended to the outlying districts, and not only would this eave part of the cost of laying conduits, but would make it cheaper to lay water mains.In connection with laying water mains where the proprietors would be called upon to pay the whole of the first cost.I consider that they should have a very large say as to how their money should b> spent, and how the work should he done, providing it were in compliance with the laws of the city, and more or less under the supervision of the city surveyor, 80 as not to interfere with or inure any other public property.With what little wisdom the world is governed.\u2014Oxenstiern.We are ofttimes governed not only by those weaker than ourselves, but even bv those whom we think eo.\u2014Lord Grenville.WwW.DA RLINGTON.\u2014 PROPHECY.(To the Editor of the \u2018Witness.\u201d) Sir, \u2014It is difficult for me to believe that a \u2018Witness\u2019 Reader\u2019 is not sincure, and as positive as he is sincere, wuen, according to his corrected translation of a statement made by him in a former issue of the \u2018Witness,\u2019 he says: \u2018What I did mean, was that no prophetic event according to Scripture intervenes (1.c.) as he pute it, before the coming of our Adorable Lord to call away the church.In this corrected statement, which wus not at all necessary, we have a fine illustration of what the childish prejudices referred to by him will cause the brethren of \u2018the any moment theory\u2019 to do in the way of trying to prove from Scripture what exists in their own minds only.A prophetic event, forsooth! Not withstanding their groundless and anti- scriptural assertions, I take it that they have some knowledge of dispensational truth, for, apart irom thet, they could not have written so well as they have: done.But they err, nevertheless, I am Sorry to say, not knowing the Scriptures.And | shall be glad, Mr.Editor, if they find in the columns of your valuable paper, what they have not yet discovered in the Word of God\u2014nam-ly, that certain prophetic events must be fulfilled before the coming of the Lord, and that the church will go through the tribulation.Is Psalm cx., 1, a prophetic event, or is it not?\u201cThe Lord said unto wy Lord, sit thou on my right hand until I make thine enemies thy footstool\u201d Will a \u2018Witness\u2019 Reader\u2019 aver that this is not a prophecy in process of tulfilment?Peter on the day of Pentecost, after the coming of the Holy Spirit, and the consequent formation of the church, quotes this very passage of Scripture; and instead of giving them any hope of the Lord\u2019s immediate .return, was care- fu! to intimate by the utterance of another prophecy, yet unfulfilled, when he should be expected to arrive.And he shall send Jesus Christ whom the heaven must receive until the times of restitution of all things, which God hae spoken by the mouth of all the Holy Prophets since the world began.\u2019 Acts #i.20, 21.In the one case it is the subjection of his foes; in the other it is the restitution of all things spoken by the Prophets.It follows, therefore, as clear as noou- day.that the Lord Jesus- must remain until seven years before his comimg, but until the time his Father acts on his behalf, and makes his enemies his footstool.This is in perfect harmony with the teaching of Paul in I.Thess.i.5, 8.He puts the church out of tribulation at the time the Lord comes to take vengeance on them that know not God.nor obey the Gospel of his Son.Rest to the troubled, and wrath to the troublers occur at the same time.In other words, the Lord does not come for his saints before he comes to destroy his foes: for he remains in heaven until that an- pointed hour.Is not Lnke xix.12 another pronhacy vet unfulfilled?\u2018A certain nobleman went into a far country to receive for himself a kingdom and to return.\u2019 Has he vet returned?No.Why?Because he has not vet received the investiture of the kinedom.Matt.xxiv., 14 is surely another.\u2018And then shall the end come\u201d When?When the Gospel of the kingdom shall have been preached in all the world for a witness imto all nations.\u201d That is not yet done, therefore the end is not yet.To be in error in regard to the time of the Lord's adveat is bad enough, but to wrest Scrinture to prove it, is appalling.A \u2018Witness Reader\u2019 says :\u2014 \u2018The peonle addressed in Matt.xxiv.are Jewish bélievers, and not the Christians of this dispensation.\u201d 1f the Jewish bdlievers, the disciples of Christ, the \u2018ve\u2019 of the livet discourse are not the same cornorate \u2018ye\u2019 whom Christ commissioned when he said: \u2018Go ve and make disciples of all the nations.baptizing them into the name of the Father, and the Son, TEE aku aE LL A THI Pa ARRET TR SE M TYR at the right hand of the Father\u2014not| Lo SATURDAY.SEPTERRER 21 | (- and the \u2018ye\u2019 to whom he said: * Ye shall be witnesses unto me both in Jerusalem, and in all Judea, and in Samaria, and unto the uttermost part of uhe earth.\u2019 Lhen vhe Church of vhe living God, the pular and ground of the vruun has been doing a work tor over eighteen centur- les for which it bad no divine authority.In that case the line of prophecy is broken, and we are at sed in a sup that has neither captain nor compass, nor anything else to guide us.Lhis is serious.Missionaries are needed abroad, and some are willing to go.But there is no command from the Master; no \u2018go ye,\u201d for \u2018 À \u2018Witness\u2019 Read- « will have it that the \u2018ye\u2019 are Jewish believers, and not Christians of this dispensation.\u2018Dhan this, | do not know that absurdity could be more absurd.The fact that the \u2018ye\u2019 addressed by the Lord would be his witnesses unto the uttermost part of the earth, proves that the corporate \u2018ye\u2019 would continue without a break, until the uttermost part of the earth should hear the word of the Gospel.! I shall not class my brethren with the higher critics.Still, let us hear what the latter have said.Jesus taught that he would come soon; indeed, at the same.lt is now over eighteen centuries since, and he is still absent.Therefore, Jesus Cnrist and his Apostles were mistaken.But Jesus Christ never taught that he would come soon, nor at any moment.On the other hand, both the and his Apostles taught the very opposite; for they could not teach à fa.sehood.In Matt.xxv., 10, Christ Savä: \u201c After a long time the Lord ot those servants cometh and reckoneth with them.\u2019 Paul says: \u2018For that day shall not come except .here come a falling away first, and that man of sin be revealed, the son of perdition.\u2019 Are my brethren aware that when Christ said, (Matt.xxiv., 42), \u2018 Watch, therefore; for ye know not what howr your Lord doth come\u2019 that he was still on earth.How could he come from heaven when he had not yet gone from earth ?Or how could the Jewish believers expect his return ere his departure had taken place ?Had ne not told them that he would suffer many things of the elders, be killed, and be raised again on the third day Again.If the Scripture referred to be a Jewish Scripture, as they say, why do they apply it to those who are not such, to prove their \u2018any moment\u2019 theory \u201d O consistency, thou art a virtue ! \u201cA Reader\u2019 gives us five reasons why the Church.will not be in the tribulation.It is easy to give reasons and wake assertions.I demand Scriptural proof.Why was it not given ?Se \u201ccause no Scripture could be quoted to prove what is anti-Scriptural.Tribu- ation is promised to the Church.In the world ye shall have tribulation\u2019 (John =xvi., 33.) \u2018We must, througn 1 Holy Ghost,\u201d and the same SZ mm Hood\u2019s is Uunquestiona bly the greatest blood and liver medicine known.It positively and permanently cures every humor, frop Pimples to Scrofula.it, Best, the Blood Medicine, and salvation of Jews.\\ according to the election among the Jews.and \u20ac _.out from among the Gor ne Church of God.and in Cu.on one.In conclusion.allow m.-.4 hearty wish, that wha | any moment; and his Apostles taught theories they advocat: ay.may be the means ot po friends, the primitive \u2018ae knowl to the Scriptur =.om known to \u2018the Church 0° 11 4 for centuries after the ~ Le closed.Nigns of the co,\" multiplying.The fig nr.y.forth leaves.Faise pros work, deceiving manv.1.whom the Master savs, i+ « ble to deceive, give more I sure word of prophecy.dawn and the dav stur \u2026 Liearts, \u2019 R.W.oy Lanark, Sent.12, 1897.ENCOUNTERING A Tivrp How he met a tiger in an loa one gle is told by a hunter: \u2018I wus.- \u201c ing with a very light rifle.AC an 1 by two native shikaris, who had \u2014 uw.pon at all.We were passing roa some rather thick jungle.who, | Bea sounds as if à tiger were a.\" an.glancing at my men, saw that thés wee looking rather queer.All of .sidger with a rush and a roar.a ver Larze tiger sprang out of the jungle about in: ty yards off and made straight for us.He passed close along our front.went à 0 yards, then turned round and sat grow.Ing and watching us.After tm ne charged almost up to us.but dui n- come quite home, and then passed ba» ward and forward in front of us two o three times.My men behaved excre- ingly well, standing quite steady ia the tiger, shouting and throwing stone and bits of stick at him.Had either them tried to turn and run, or get up a tree, the tiger would have been on te us for a dead certainty, \u2018I reserved my tire for the last em r much tribulation, enter into the Kingdom of God.(Acts xiv., 22.) The ed by the finger of divine truth, \u2018Every Scripture Mr.Kelly quotes,\u2019 the air.\u2019 Exactly eo.very good reason, it is the teaching of the Holy Spirit.do not confuse, as he does, the words which refer to different aspects of the same event.Paul says, (I.Thess.iv., 15), \u2018For this we gay unto you by the word of the Lord, that we which are alive, and remain unto the\u2014\u2018\u201cdescent\u2019\u2019\u2014no; but \u2018\u2018unto the coming\u201d\u2014Parousia\u2014not the act of approaching, but the state of being present.In Tim.vi, 14, Paul charges Timothy to keep a commandment until the manifestation of the Lord Jesus,\u2014! not until seven years before it.Hence, the charge is binding until the Epi- pheny or manifestation of our Lord esus Christ.In the discharge of our responsible trust there is to be no cessation until the manifestation of the Son of God.Now, as it is by the \u2019ipiphany, or manifestation, of the Lord that the Antichrist is destroved, and Antichrist is present during the tribulation, and, indeed the chief caus: of it, and the Church is said (Titus :i., 13) to look for the appearing or manifestation, it is clear to any unprejudiced mind that the Church will be in the tribulation.What the Church will be saved from is not tribulation, but ~he wrath and judgment to be poured >ut upon the tribulators.- But he that shall endure unto the end\u2014the end of the tribulation\u2014 the same shall be saved : 13.) As it was in the days of Noah, \u2018 the self-same day\u2019 he enta2c:d into the ark, the judgment fell upon the ungodly.And as it was in the days of t.The same day\u2014note, the same day\u2014 that Lot went nus of Sodom it\u2019 rained fire and brimstone from heaven, and destroved them ull\u2019 Even thus shall it be in ¢he day when the Son of Man is revealed.(Luke xvii., 26, 30.According to \u2018any moment.ism.\u2019 these passag:s should read, \u2018So shall it not be in the day when the Son of Man is revealed; for seven vears before that the saints are with the Lord.The deliverance of the saints from judgment, and the destruction of the wick: ed at the same time is the teaching of the Scriptures, both Old and New.It is the \u2018teaching which establishes our hope on a sure Scriptural basis, and puts the events in the Apocalypse in their proper ord:r and sequence; for, according to Revelation i., 7, the Lord\u2019s coming for his saints is not secret, but open and manifest, \u2018Behold, he cometh with clouds, and every eye shall see him.\u201d And according to chapter xxi., the only coming of the saints with the Lord, is after the millennial reign of a thousand years, and the inauguration of the new heaven and (the new earth.Hence, the coming of the Lord is both pre-millennial and post-tribulational.Mr.Rankin\u2019s error arises by supposing that the present age is exclusively Gentile.It is the times of the Gentiles, and was so for centuries before the\u2018 birth of Christ.The serentieth week of Gentile rule, dominion, and power is no more the times of the Gentiles than the sixty-nine that preceded it.Partial blindness\u2014mot :otal\u2014has happened unto Israel until the fulness of the Gentiles come in.There is nothing in the national rejection of ls- (Matt.xxiv., |.rael to prevent the individual election gency, not caring, unless absolutely dr- ven to it, with s light rifle.to risk 4 five reasons are like \u2018the any moment! shot which would most probably fai! :.theory,\u2019 they fall to pieces when touch-| stop the tiger.: growl and play round us like a big «a gving us an uncommonly had time © says your correspondent, \u2018has to do with about ten minutes.his manifestation.not his descent into; Managed to back slowly over the top - And for the|some rising ground behind us, and, or.we were out of sight 1 am not ashame The tiger continued © After a while wr to confess that we went for all we w= worth, halting occasionally to make sui.we were not being followed.until, to our great relief, we got out into the open \u2018The above ix, luckily.a somewhat un usual experience, for a tiger æenera avoids the presence of man if he cn Had it been a tigress.with voung cin suddenly disturbed by one uf us.or could have understood her hehavinz n this exceptional manner, but this wi à male tiger.and there is no way or oa plaining his conduct.\u201d\u2014Chicago \u2018News\u2019 = [REWKERR i | REGAL COAL RANGE.| | The REGAL oven will satisfy the most exacting chef.and 8 ! | quick and satisfactory.Proper.y | MR WKERR | rame 10 IMITED proportioned fire box ensures Lhis, 9 Le THE CREMATORIUM, LTO.§ MOUNT ROVAL CEMETERY.For Information apply to W.ORMISTON ROY, Mgr.: P.O.Box, 1027.Telephone, E.2678 MONTREAL._ | Mechanics, Farmers, Sportsme\u201d ' To heal and soften the skin 1nd I | grease, oil and rust stains, paint and eartt < use The \u201c Master Mechanic's\u2019 Taf Seal albert Toilet Soap Co.Mira , stiona.dang m.It, nentiy from It is Ine, ees ren gy ce.:: su le Ciel Orin Lie bot.are Dress \u201812 Wren tou, for Le only un- were un 15 Cnr4 b Canon Avo.pu ny TN He +.Oo.unto § © the day lt tner Toon, 2LLY.DOL, ani, hey wre sudden.ery large out thn - Tr us.Île nt a tow at growl- this he did noe sed ba.k- 1s two or 1 exceed- dy facing ng stones either of get up 4 on to us ast emrr- itely dr:- to risk a ly fail to tinued to » big cat.time for while we he top of and, on ashame! we were 1ake aure il, to our 2 open.what un- general 'y he can ing cubs.us, ON aving .n 13 was a y of ex News: mens L isty rly his, gr.E.3676 men { » remove arth, etc or Seam» SATURDAY, SEPTENBER 21, 1907 'S WELFARE.\u2014\u2014 \u2014_\u2014 THE WOR [HE SWADESHI MOVEMENT IN INDIA.© - Rev.Herbert Anderson, in the Baptist \u2018Missionary Herald.) \\- missionaries we are bound to ob- ve an absolute aloofness from al} poli- teal movements in the land.To resolve tn keep outside the arena of political jie Joes not, however, imply adepting an prb policy\u2014burying our heéads in the wns of our own activities, and shutting our ves and ears to the stirring events at happen around us.Nay, rather, no man needs to keep in closer touch with te, the life of the passing hour, than- be whose aim it is to establish the Kingdom o (lod among men.The prophet\u2019s mantle best suits the missionarÿ who is ne among the people.acquainted with -néir sins, conscloug of their hopes, in mue with the throb of their strenuous je, with the keenest interest in their afairs both public and private.Half a dozen opinions from leading {hndu, Christian and Mahommedan gentlemen suggest that a patriotic impulse » the ocean bed of the Swadeshi movement, its tides manifesting themselves in political, social, economic, and religious directions.And now I desire that we frst realize clearly that behind the move- ment\u2014whatever form, desirable or unde- arable, it has taken\u2014there is a Spirit, a spirit in which all Europeans can sympathize, and which they helped to create, Among the forces that have helped to create the Swadeshi spirit I place in the joremost rank the beneficent rule of the past century.A second force that 1s perhaps more directly responsible for the spirit behind the movement has been the government system of, secular education, which has created the educated classes of the Empire.A third force, as viewless in its origin as the wind, has doubtless been the subtle spirit that for the last quarter of a century has been hovering around the large cities of the whole Asiatic Continent, leading to a pan-Asiatic renaissance.There is no cause for surprise that India has felt the awakening.Some one has said that the impulse that brought success to Japan has given India all her new aspirations; and I think it may be recognized that among the pri ipal forces that have evoked the Swa- deshi spirit into life is the healthy impact of foreign influences potins toc upon all the educated classes of Asiatic Continent.: In what I have said so far, I have been speaking of the country generally.But the outstanding feature of the spirit in Bengal as it has developed in Tecent months cannot claim, nor does it deserve, our sympathy or support.It is a revolt, a child of discontent, an attempt to influence the populace against constituted authority, a scheme to create what has been called \u2018an emotional hatred to foreigners and to foreign articles.\u2019 There is a very serious side to this un- iirtunate excrescence of the Swadesh movement\u2014that seed-sowing of ill-feelinig against anything and everything British.A fortnight ago I stood for am hour in the midst of youthful politicians in Col- lezc square; and what eame as a painful surprise was the venomous feeling to which expression was freely given ægainat the foreigner and all-things foreign.1 pleaded and argued, expostulated and explained, but the end df an hours talk was the opinion that the breach between governing and governed was widening daily.and was not to be bridged.Matters have gone too far.Doubtless thousands of schoolboys are hearing and saying the same thing every day, and the only consolation is that they are young and may grow out of it; but great is the responsibility of those, whoever they may be.who by word or act have cast this hitter apple of discord before the young life of Bengal., Not nearly eo much, I believe, as we cty dwellers are inclined to suppose.Seventy-five percent of mission activities have gone forward untouched by the movement, Twenty-five percent have been affeclld more or less markedly, but in many places only for a time.The antagonism that has manifested itself In certain centres has taken different forms.Outdoor services have been rudely broken up and preaching bas had to be discontinued, as in Beadon square, where a stctessful boycott has been carried on for eighteen months.ln à few stations zenana work has been af- ieted, houses closed to visitation.and schools thinned: in \u2018attendance.Bible classes and Sunday-schools have suffered somewhat, and from almost all the districts of the affected area reports come of fewer attendances at bazaar preaching stands, lectures, and religious services generally.From some places ln- EE What Hany Men Need tion that \u201cSets\u201d You Right Up.(The When a man has lost ambition to \u2018dig IN and stay at things\u2014when he com- Mains of headache, fullness in the right \u201cfe.pains in the shoulder blade\u2014it\u2019e surely a case of \u2018Liver.These symptoms invariably indicate a \u201clozzed, inactive liver.The body can\u2019t 20 ruil of its wastes, and the whole ays- \u201cmos half paralyzed.hr Hamilton's Pills stimulate the liver D} activity in one night.Being a + vegetable laxative, they produce re- 1N « few hours.The bilious head- 4nd constipation are cured, spirits tomplexion clears, animation re- Nothing in the calendar so effi- \u2018or that tired.lazy feeling as Dr.\u201cous Pills.Very mild, don\u2019t in- ° with work, invariably do lots | Lrv a 25¢, box, all dealers.A TY dian Christian \u2018agents report contempt and rudeness shown to them far more than in past years.Certain schools and colleges were also affected for a time, and sales of Christian literature have gone below the average.Looking broad- | ; however, at what we might have expected from the feeling evinced in Calcutta itself, I have been agreeably.sur- priged to.find how little antagonism that signifies anything deep or lasting has been manifested toward Christian effort.There are elements in the moventent to approve, and some of which to disapprove.We may regard as a hopeful sign the sensible spirit of patriotism fostering high ideals and noble efforts for the welfare of the millions in India.It may be a dream, but in the misty ages of the far-away I can discern an ire having a corporate life as (to use the nomenclature of Sir Henry Cotton) the United States of Hindustan.But whether that be so or not, I firmly believe in an Indian Empire nominally Christian, and 1 regard this movement towards a unity of life as one of the gigns foretelling that happy day.Another element we may approve is the growing sympathy that is springing up between the uneducated millions of Indian\u2019 village life and the educated thousands.No movement that I can recall has gone so deeply into the village life of the land, and this unifying impulse appears to me like one more long nail im that coffin of the social system that has hindered all too long the progress of the Hindu nation.When rich and poor see they have a common need, despite,-the caste name they bear, the \u201cspirit of brotherhood begins.It must also be a matter for congratulation to us that the movement has so far been divorced from any religious.reformation in either Hindu or Mohammedan circles.In so far as it has touched.any of the aboriginal tribes, it has seemed to urge them forward towards the acceptance of the religion of Christ, and in certain parts of Benggl where Mahom- medans are numerous the tidings come of the expression of quite a new spirit towards the foreign missionary and his evangelistic activities.Among elements that call for disapproval, and must at least be regarded with great regret, are attempts that appear to have been made to incite racial or religious feuds between European and Indian, or between Hindu and Mahomme- dan.Such a poltey is wicked, and from wbatsoever source it .originates the hand of the law should fall swiftly and heavily\u2019 wherever guilt can be proved.__ lt is to be regretted .that the political aspect of Swadeshïm should have become so prominent among the student class of the community.here must be tens of thousands of the rising generation of young men whose minds have been diverted from the ordinary .channel of student life, and who must now suffer in many ways from the effects of the Swadeshi fe- vez of 1906 and 1907.~~ .Our first responsibility js to recognize the need and opportunity of being peace: makers.All admit that the peed of the present hour is to brimg.about a better state of feeling between the ruling -and the ruled communities by every means in the power of both.The missionaries might do more socially if they.would.The Indian will not and cannot take the first move in this direction; but we missionaries ,both Indian and European, might do more to bring into social contact, if only for two or three hours, men who would be glad if the opportunity were given them to meet in this way.Indians will gladly accept an invitation if they know it is the sincere effort on; your part to cultivate for yourself and others a friendship between East and West.i 1 do not regard the Swadeshi movement as having shown the need of any alterations in our present methods of work, but I would urge the advisability of strengthening and rendering more efficient our work among the educated men oi India.With them largely lies the destiny of the people.The intellectual forces of the Empire are one of our principal citadels of attack.The new situation urges that greater attention be given to it.\u2018The responsibility of our brethren and sisters who are feeling the brunt of the antagonism in lonely mission stations is great.1 have only made a passing reference to the sufferings of the Indian Christians.Let us not forget it.The feeling of dislike to them has in certain quarters perceptibly grown, and they have had, and may still have in future, to put up with disrespect in speech and act.Putting myself in their difficult situation, I should remember the advice given by John Morley in the last words of his famous speech: \u2018We ought to face our difficulties and dangers with sympathy, with kindness, with frankness, with firmness, with a love of justice, and, whether the weather be fair or foul, in a valiant end hopeful spirit.\u201d Fiery trials make golden saints.; ; .Further, the present situation is sug; gestive of a new attitude that missionary societies should take up towards the Christian churches and communities they have gathered about them.So far as it manifests itself in aspirations after a larger life, more independent of foreign funds and foreign control, give it the keenest sympathy and the fullest scope.Encourage thrift in temporal: matters.Experiment in self-government in church policy, even at the risk of failure.In the ranks of mission service let us look out carefully for the signs of that consecrated zeal and growing capability that suggest preferment, and be not quite so slow as in past days to reward the faithful servant of his Lord.And in so far as the movement of nationalism prophesies that Indian Church which in diversity of operations shall be guided and controlled by one Spirit, let us do nothing to hinder Dut everything to help so glorious a consummation of the evangelical efforts of past cemturies, Surely, the missionary societies of the country mav also take a lesson from the movement regarding their relationship to one another.We need, and should plan to obtain, a far greater spirit of co-opera- tion in our work throughout India.1 trust our society will be leading the way Yhave wped away.{lowship and communion, and the recog- preaching, in educational and higher theological training; and in Christian fel- nition of our common y and eer- vice, would be as productive of blessing to ourselves as they would be a sign to make the wored believe.Lu à : Finally, the newest responsibility is the oldest.Chrisf is the etërnal answer to the individual and nationdl unrest.There are two ideals of mission work which largely affect our individual effort: one, the attempt to secure a general and na- ticnal profession of the Christian religion; the other, to secure the conversion of individual souls to God.Advocates of nationalism in mission work will see greater hopes in the Swadeshi movement than advocates of individualism.If that movement is to have a part in the destruction of caste, the suppression of religious rites, the creation of a national conscience, the formation of public opinion in all causes of righteousness, the elevation of the moral standard and the vindication of the right of man to exer- cre, with conuderation, of course, for the righte of other men, his God-given faculties, then one and all of us may truly thank God and take co .But as missionaries of the Cross of Christ let us each keep steadily before us that more excellent way of founding the kingdom of God, by preaching to the lonely soul, oppressed with sin, the unspeakable peace of God, through faith in the Lord esus Christ.GIPSY SMITH AND THE ARISTO- CRATS\u2014RELATED BY HIMSELF.\u2018During my visit to New York a Christian woman, who bears an honored name, and does great work for God, said, \u201cBrother Smith, I wish we could do something for the rich women of our city.Some have been to your meetings, but the majority are afraid to - go.1 have an idea.f you give a few meetings especially for them privately, in some drawing-room, I think if they were invited by letter they would come.\u201d And we arranged half a dozen meetings in one of the.mansions in New York city.I went to the first meeting with a good deal of fear and trembling, but my fear soon vanished when I saw waiting for me 175 women, mothers, wives, sisters, and daughters of the wealthiest- men in America.I know no difference between millionnaiges and paupers when I am preaching my ster's message.\u2018I took for my text \u201cRepent ye,\u201d land at the close of the service a bright young mother came to me and asked to speak with me.We withdrew into one of the bay windows.Her tears fell like rain ,and she said, \u201cIf.what you have been preaching is ihe Gospel, if that is religion, then I am a heathen.It is true I am a Churen member, but I have no knowledge of righteousness and joy and peace in the Holy Ghost.I haye no Holy Ghost within.I live as these women live.I am one of the \u201cswim,\u201d and we are living for the gratification we can get out of our money à \u2014the theatre, the race-course, the ball- robm, the \u2018swell dinner, the euchre party.What have you to say ?> I said, \u2018 \u201cGod has spoken to you; obey him; and we parted.Co \u2018 She attended every meeting, and | when the last one came, after the benediction, a lady got up and said, \u201c Mr.Smith, out men folk want to meet you.Will you give us an afternoon ?They have heard us\u2019 talk about you, and have expressed a desire to meet you\u201d I replied, \u201cYou can have my 1est day\u2014 Saturday,\u201d and I arranged to have a meeting with the men and women.They came as if to some brilliant social fune- tion, decked out in their jewellery, to see this gipsy boy, and I took them where they never expaciad to be taken \u2014to a gipsy tent\u2014and I showed them a father and five little motherless children, without hone, without God, or a Bible, web, nobody to love of care for em.y an old gi tent, a gi father and five little Pehildrer,.Sind then I tried to show them how Jesus came down into that smoky tent, and cast it into loveliness until it shone like an old cathedral, and how out from that tent has gone all round the globe a etream of blessing, that has enriched the world, and made it a little more like what it ought to be; for all these children are trying to preach the Gos pel.| \u201cI saw there men move like a field of corn, and just as I was about to draw to a close, the gentle lady af the house rose, and said, \u201cMay I speak ?\u201d I said, \u201cYou are in your own house; speak\u2019; and she said, \u201cYou know me.| I am no stranger.I was born with you, and grew up with yon.TI have been with you to the theatre and the race-course, but you will never see me there any more, or Jesus has come to me, and he satisfies me.You may keep my company.but if you don\u2019t I know it will be hard to bear.My choice is made.Christ for me, Christ for me.\u201d\u201d\u201d \u2014London \u2018Christian Herald.\u2019 tort THE LEAVEN OF THE WORD.\u201cOh, the Book, the Book! It is eur nation\u2019s only hope.\u201d These are the words of a Chinese scholar recently converted.He is now employed as a teacher of composition in a Christian college, and has uvrcught about a revolution in subjects of \u20acssays.\u201c For centuries the students of our country have taken their theme from the classics, and thus have learned their liidden meaming.Henceforth you Christian boys must learn the Book of books as the acholars of the ages past never learned the Masters, for it contains the secret of the new China\u2019 He gave for a theme \u2018The difference betwean the tonntifui love of Christ and the love explained by Mo-Tzu.\u201d The says come in.To the sénior boys he said, \u2018 Ab, you muet do better than this You have not begun to touch upon the love of Christ.Have you not studied your Bibles ?Have you not read history ?Have you not seen how the love of Christ has transformed the world ?Search until you know its fulness, and let your country know what you have found.Read in Bengal before anothet twelve months Co-operation in bazaar | - \u2018A LABRADOR LETTER + TERS, Gale of North East Wind, .North Labeedor, SS, \u2018Strathcona.\u2019 Dear Editor,\u2014For nearly a month we bave had easterly winds and an unmovable wet blanket in actual fact.We bave, however, been able to muddle along Down North,\u2019 though we had a squeak one day which afforded a new sensation to our American friende on board.We were running along at full apeed in very fog, framing a course to just clear some nasty shoals on our port hand be- re we could change our course round a certain cape.There was nothing outside of us: and we had seen no ice of late, being just merged from the Gulf.So we went below to dinner, telling our reliable man Bill to report land as sopn as he saw anything, and instructed he man at the wheel if he heard a shout, to \u2018port\u2019 his helm hard.The soup was still on the table when a loud shouting above meade us leap on deck to see the ship going full tilt into an enormous iceberg which seemed right at the end of the boweprit.This unexpected monster was on our starboard Dow, and the order left to avoid the sical was putting us head first into it.only chance was full speed and a starboard helm, and as we grazed along the side of it we felt we didn\u2019t know everything about nevigation down here yet.The business we had in hand next wes such an absolute antithesis to this experience.It seemed almost ludicrous a few hours later to pick up a large island and run into a harbor with grassy sloping sides, out of which the fog bank was shut like a wall, and then to go ashore and bargain over the buying of a couple of cows, which were being sold as the settler was moving to the main- Cows are poor shipmates in emall row boats such as we only had to row them off in, and even though we made belly-bands out of canvas and tried to haul them over the rail by the main threat heulyard, we found them the fwrkwardeet things imagineble, and all ds stood from underneath till each poor cow was far enough up to fall inboard, if any of the improvieed tackle gave way.There was the usual sick to see, a question of how to go about getting a school to settle, and them our cows began to enjoy a sensation new to them of rolling along under the same old dark, blanket.: \u2018hile we were taking wharf sticks aboard at our next port of call, a large iceberg which had drifted into the cove, collapsed with the roar of a cannon scattering the ice into morsels all around our ship.There are only three families Hving here, all unmistakably Irish, in name, vivâcity and hospitality.One had nine children and ope six, A steamer had called in this place early in the season and had dropped a family for the fishing, who were carrying the infection of\u2019 ecarlet fever, The result had been disastrous, and we had a peck of trouble before leaving.Moreover, I had to carry off the father of the nine with commene- ing :8plpal curvature and inability to walk: \u2018J noticed on the end of a spare cruteh he had been using, a large flat board, which puzzled me at first.\u2018Be- that's its snow ehoe, Dochter,\u2019 it eeps herself from einking in.How on earth have you fed that lot, Pat, in- OF ICEBERGS AND OTHER MAT.winter.\u2018Well, it's been hard work indeed, the spring to etand up with often enough.ly flour and a drop of water inside, and sure we wouldn't \u2019a had that but for Doctor\u2014from t\u2019hospital.\u2019Tis the hunger what's the worst.\u2019 As my eyes ranged over the blue-eyed, curly-h children\u2014a melee of true little Celts, apparently absolutely happy, and certainly supremely naked, sentiment swayed in my mind eno to impel me to venture on a \u2018few old clothes.\u201d Though of course some would say that was pau- ng them.Perhape it was.I should, owever, plead not guilty.I now moved down to the next honse, } : Were only six little ones, and having finished swabbing out throats and dressing swollen necks, and lecturing on future disinfection, I offered the sugges- tion\u2014Would you like me to help you out of this to America?\u2018Why,\u201d replied the father at once: *\u2019Tis only two years we've come here, and we like it better than Boston anyhow\u2019 He added: \u2018Please God we shall be well off in a year or two.\u201d Support to this contention was afforded us yesterday at another group of islands 150 miles north of the Straits of Belle Isle, Well out in the Polar Atlantic.We had been holding evening service in a settler\u2019s house, He wus the father of twelve children, ten alive and well\u2014eight big boys.Some years ago he moved to Nova Scotia and tried all sorts of work, but could make no hezd- way, and having a little money left, after 18 months he came back to Labrador.He bas mow a fine winter house in the Bay, a good schooner, two iarge fieh traps end two fine American-built fich- ing boats.He \u201ctails,\u201d with his son.over 400 traps in the winter, and at his summer house his grandchildren sit on his knee.His eversmiling, well tauned face, his broad, deep chest; and his powerful build speaking volumes for what Labrador can do when taken right- Pr AT FORTY: Some of the signs that life has passed its genith appear.Exertion is followed by fatigues that are not quite worn off next morning, and the beginning of that slow decline is commenced which culminates at seventy., At forty, men and women should be careful.Nature needs a little help, and no remedy equals Ferrozone as a strengthening system-builder.It renews health by producing, new blood, by supplying food elements to rebuild the nervous system.In this way the decline which sets in at forty is postponed by Ferrozone.The vital fluid is renewed, surplus vigor is created, the nervous system is invigorated.With increased appetite, sound sleep, and strong nerves, you are bound to feel better; you will surely feel the enormoyg push Ferrozone has given your health; try it.Thousands use it every day, just your Bibles, boys !\u2019\u2014\u2018Advocate.\u2019 , one tablet before meals.Fifty cents per box at all dealers, ___.- : .-.+ ben d'age Ng dal bMS ef NEL a SE RENE hd ly.This man\u2019s brother, with wn girls and two sons, is a bor\u2019 in these \u2018lonely\u2019 paciz.already heavy sea bounding \u2018nel up before we out our next baadland, and suddenly the heavy fog shut down and nothi was visible.We wight have \u2018heaved to\u2019 alright and waited, but as the least objectionable alternative, we decided to haul in and try to make out the land\u2014never too easy to recognize for want of land marks.It is no easiur when only the mere bass of the clilïe are visible, and even thit when there 18 but one \u2018sea\u2019 left between you and these bases.We made it, however, safely, and were running placidly along, when an unexpected cape rose on uur weather bow.It proved to bc a large berg aground, with only just room it to pass between it and the shore.A stranger would have felt uncomf\u201dttabla, but the huge mass above water meant plenty of depth all round, and being agreund it ldn\u2019t reach us against the chfi wm- less \u2018it broke up at the exact moment we passed between them.So our tight little ship shot safely through between these chained hlack and white lions.WILFRID I.GRENFELL, ¢.D.\u2018WITNESS\u2019 LABRADOR FUND.Received for the maintenance of the launch, A Friend, Roselaine Belvidere.§ 1.00 Adolphus Andrews, Lambeth, Ont.«.3.00 Received for the cots :\u2014 Friends, Watford, Ont., per Miss Sarah Kerry.7.16 The Marais Y.P.S.C.E., Otter- burn, Ont.2.10 A Friend, West New Annan .4.00 A Friend, Roselaine Belvidere.1.00 Mrs.A.McMillan, Gould Station, Que.+.hoch ee ee eae a 2.00 Adolphus Andrews, Lambeth, Ont.5.00 Previously acknowledged for the launeh.565.84 Previously acknowledged for the cots., .\u2026 .160.33 Total received up to Sept.17 .$753.43 Address all subscriptions for Dr.Gren.fell\u2019's work to \u2018Witness\u2019 Labrador Fung, John Dougall & Son, \u2018Witness\u2019 office, Montreal, indicating with the gift whether it is for launch or cots.tet SPELLING REFORM IN SOUTH AFRICA.(Rev.George A.Wilder, D.D.,, of Chi- kore, Southern Rhodesia, in the \u2018Missionary Herald.\u201d) A noteworthy conference was held on May 13 to 18 at Umtali in Mashonaland.There met a committee, appointed by the different missionary bodies working in Southern Rhodesia, to decide upon à uniform system of spelling and a uniform set of terms for matters theological and ecclesiastical, to be used in writing the various dialects spoken by the different tribes of that country.Three delegates, including the government expert, were absent, but those who came re missions using four distinct native dialects and nominally covering territo over three hundred miles square.hese dialects present real differences, and they are used in an increasingly large amount of printing, including portions nf both Testaments and prayer books and hymn books.Hitherto each publication has appeared in the orthography and vocabulary peculiar to its author.As these authors represent various nationalities and were trained in as many institutions much disagreement was manifest in their work, so that though some preparatory and independent labor had delegates before they met, those who doubted if any unity could come out of this conference had good reason for their doubts./ But from the first there was evident a fine cordiality towards the views of others.All seemed determined to put scholarship first, national and denominational preferences second.Before many hours had passed it was evident that the committee could unite upon a system which it would recommend to cach society for use; and although the time was limited about half the list of words was actually adopted.Perhaps the Rev, A.Lowe, nephew of Andrew Murray, was called upon to make the greatest concession, and he did it with the Christian grace of a true Murray.If the various societies adopt the recommendations of their committee an important step will have been taken towards a speedy understanding of the Scriptures, not only by the tribes of Southern Rhodesia but also throughout a large portion of the Portuguese Mozambique territory.for the dialects represented at the conference ave used much further than the work of the missions has yet gone.The conference also took steps look- parative grammar of these languages or dialects.To attend this conference I was coms pelled to walk over two hundred miles at the rate of thirty-three miles a day; but it was worth going thus far to see so brotherly a spirit as was shown toward each other by men representing widely different ecclesiastical organizations and creeds.And when I consider the importance of the work done I am glad it was my privilege to be present as a delegate of our mission.pres A NOVEL ASSEMBLY IN THE PUN: Twice a year a meeting is held near Amritsar, called the \u2018Prem-Sangat, it brings together the Sikha and Christians in a friendly way to allow preachers of each religion to give public addresses.A writer in the \u2018Church Missionary Society Gazette\u2019 describes one of these addresses : \u2014 \u2018At ten o'clock on the morning of the mela, those present sat.under a huge shamiane (tent), the Christians at one end to the number of twenty, the Sikhs, numbering eome 300, on one side, near them the various branches of the neo-Hindu community, and at one end 150 Mohammedans.DECO ate Es ed | \u2018When we had been sitting on our crossed Jegs about an hour and a half, ATI RA seven] \u2018great against the cliffs, increased unpleasantly,| A 23 A Splendid Sermon on health, is the label on every bottle of Abbeys vescont SAH Just follow the directions \u2014take a morning glass\u2014 and you will find yourself growing stronger and feeling better every day.49 been done by the! also ing towards the preparation of a com-|I which means literally, \u2018Love Assembly\u201d.28 PLATING Buffing, Coloring Japanning.Greatest Capacity in City for Structural Iron Work.Prompt delivery and best of work assured by introduction of greatly increased apparatus.Canadian Oliver TypewriterCo.Head Office, 140 St.Peter St.Works, 275 St.Martin St.Tel Main 3832 Tel.Uptown 188 GOLDEN WREAT AND WHITE MOUNTAIN BREAD: PHONE US FOR à TRIAL Loa® R.8.AULD, 557 St.Antoine, Cor Atwater Ave, TEL.MOUNT 13 JACKSON & CO.CARPENTERS, BUILDERS And CONTRACTORS.Varations made, Jobbing preety 0808 to S385 HIBERNIA ROAD Fol Malin #188, \u2014 a there was a shght excitement in the camp.Asking what it was, I was told that Kesar had arrived.Almost immediately all gave the greatest respect and reverence to an old man\u2014gray- headed, wearing a fakir\u2019s garb, with hair standing straight out all over his head, who stepped mto the assembly.Iie stood a moment with outstretched bands, with his followers behind him, and then began in Punjabi this striking utterance\u2014striking because coming from a nominal heathen, a Sikh fakir, and because of the contents of the mos- sage and the almost apostolic boldnese with which it was delivered: \u2014 \u2018 \u201cThere is one Prophet.\u2018 \u201cThere is one living Prophet.\u2018 \u201cThere is one Guru (teacher.) \u2018 \u201cThere is one living Guru.\u201cThe Guru ie not Guru Nanak (the founder of the Sikh religion.) The Prophet s not Mohammed.Garu Nanak is dead.Mohammed is dead.The Hviuz Prophet is Jesus Christ.The living Guru is Jesus Christ.\u2019 \u2018This man Kesar is one of the leadin Sikh teachers in that district.He hear of Jesus some four years and has since been reading the New Testament.The result is that he à going about the country still as a Sikh (though at heart a Christian), and is being received by the people as such, and yet I am told that he has made Jesus the subject of his teaching.That night at 10.30 when I was in my tent and had just prayed.\u201cO Lord, if there is a Nicodemus in this camp tonight.send him here and give him a knowledge of Christ,\u201d the flap of my tent was opened and in walked the chief dieciple of Kesar, a man by name Sohan Singh, who before leaving definitely and intelligently accepted Jesus Christ as word and Saviour, and the following morning and day confessed Jesus openly before the whole body of Sikhs and Mohammedans present.\u2018On the first evening.at the close of a meeting on the hospital verandah.af ter an address given on \u201cThe true nature of the love demanded bv God.\u201d the high priest of the Sikhs in that district got up.and after a striking testimony to the lives of a deceased missionary and an Indian padre, as those who reflected the life and love of Jesus, said: \u201cI have a request to make of all present (some sixtv to eeventy Sikh teachers.) All pray from this night forward that the kingdom of Jesus may make speedy advance in this whole district and In all India.\u201d This man had treated Christians very scornfully as recently as a year \u2014 0.\u2018There were manv other points of great interest and encouragement at this mela, I interviewed night visitors until 12.30 am.All of them were inquirers about Christianity, and many very near.\u2019 THE \u2018DAILY WITNESS\u2019 is printed and published at the \u2018Witness\u2019 Building, at the corner of Craig and St.Peter streets, in the city of Montreal, by John Redpath Dougall and Frederick Eugene Dougall both of Montreal.- All business communications should be addressed John Dougall & Son, \u2018Witness\u2019 Office, Montreal, and all letters to the Editor, should be addressed, Editor of the \u2018Witness,\u2019 - CT Tu wees ni EW.YA ee 0.rs Tr 20 v= rT oe _ IN .> .ar EEE Seg ep Ee re QG ; 11 4 gre 41 LA \"EE qu 31 yr £ ir >> sien : pe de pe Pa B 3 co SR FURY 0 > aaa a RE Cop BI INSETS es mis - Cn be Cor.of Centre, Grand Trunk and Notre D street, ame = .BRANCHES 12 See Den street, cor.of Rachel.21 St Catherine street, West, OOT- cor ESS Sollegs ave.ots.962 St.Lawrence st., cor.Pins ve Financial.BANKS.BANK OF BRITISH NORTH AMERICA, 40 St J strest.ames BANK OF MONTREAL,Head Office 109 St.James street.M.S07L .BANK OF NOVA SCOTIA.London & Lanc.Bldg BANK OF OTTAWA, 2% St.James sti.BANK OF TORONTO.ror.St James and McGill.DOMINION BANK, 162 St James street.EASTERN TOWNSHIPS BANK,179 St.James st.MERCHANTS BK.OF CANADA, 26 St.James st ROYAL BANK OF CANADA, Bell Tel.Building.SOVEREIGN BANK, Soversizn Bank Building.THB MOLSONS BANK, 200 St.James street.BANKS FOR BAVINGS.CITY AND DISTRICT: HBAD RSATURrAY.SEITERRER 21, 1707 \u2018L saw it in the \u201cWitness,\u201d and I believe it\u2019\u2014That\u2019s what they all say.MAGLENNAN, F.S., K.C., New York Life Build ing, Montreal.Tel.Main 4703._ McCormick & Lebourveau, 107 St.James.M.2497.McGOUN, ARCH., K.C.,157 St.James st.M.1973 MORRISON & HATCHETT.Banque du Peuple Cham 97 St James st.M.2114 MOUNT, WM.E., 13 Bt James st.M.608 OGDEN, C.G., Montreal 2n2 Three Rivers.M.1685.PATTERSON & BROWN.180 8t.James st.M.3860.PELISSIER & WILSON, 15 James st.M.2173.RIELLE & BOND.N.Y.Life Bldg.M.77.RIVET, HANDFIELD & FIELD, N.Y.Life BANKERS.PICKEN, J.B.& OO., 134 St.James.M.1661.CUSTOMS BROKERS.BLAIKLOCK, GRO.H., 228 Board of Trade.M.2565.BOYD & 00.41-43 Youville square.M.1006.EGAN, C.& SON, 43Common st.M.24117.,Y, DANIEL CO.,1 St.Peter st.M.5.MONSELL, H.W.& CO.B 28, Board of Trade.M.FINANCIERS.GAY, E.H.& -CO., 157 St.James st Main 1907.HANSON BROS.Can.Life Bldg.M.1239.FINANCIAL AGENT.WILSON-SMITH.R.160 St.James st.M.950.FIRE INSURANCE COMPANIES.CALEDONIAN FIRE INS.CO., 112 St.James st.M.670 and M.286.COM.UNION -ASS.CO.91 Notre Dame W.M.748.INSURANCE CO.OF NORTE AMERICA, St Sacrament st.M.3730 an .LAW, UNION & CROWN INS.CO.112 St James.street.M.3212.| - .LONDON MUTUAL FIRE BS H.BLACH- FORD, 180 St.James st.M.NORTHERN ASSURANCE CO., §8 Notre Dame st.West.M.1539.PHENIX INSURANCE GO.OF BROOKLYN, Bt.Sacrement street.M.X780-L.FIRE.INSURANCE BROKERS.COLE, F.MINDEN, 20 St.John st.M.2568.HAMPSON, R & SON, St.Sacrament.M.3780-1.MUDGE, N.R.& SON, 227 Board of Trade Bldg.M.2048.TAYLOR, E.T.& SON, 4 Hospital st.M.2306.WILLIS.FABER & CO.Ld., Brd.of Trade Bldg.IFE ASSURANCE COMPANIES.CONFEDERATION LIFE ASSOCIATION, 207 St James st.M.251.EXCELSIOR LIFE, 107 St.James.Tel M.2886.LONDON & LANCASHIRE LIFE, 164 St.James st.Tel.M.1328.Sun Life Assur.Co.Sun Life Bldg.M.396.The Standard Life Assurance Co.157 St.James st.M.MN.MARINE INSURANCE BROKERS.HAMPSON, R.& SON, St.Sacrament street.M.8730 and 8731.WILLIS, FABER & CO.Ld.Brd of Trade Bldg.MARINE UNDERWRITERS.MALE & CO.Coristine Building.Main 4811.RILEY & CO., Riley Building, St.John street.M.1187.PAWNBROKERS.ARONSON & RUTENBERG, 115 Craig street West.M.4374.D.LAZARUS, 222 Notre Dame st.Bast.Main 2032 REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE.N, ALFRED, Alliance Bldg, 107 St.James BE Room 2.Main 2860 and Mount 100.DONOVAN, FRANK E., 42 Alliance Building.MITCHELL, JAS.M.214 St.James st.M.56.2074.OGILVIE, w.D.& CD., Inc, 11 St.Sacrament street.M.5118.PUTNAM '& MeCRORY, 208 Merch.Bank Bldg.M.23%.SIMPSON, THE CRADOCK CO.205 St.James st.Main 714.£IMPSON., H.M., 40 Renouf Blég.Tel.Up 23868.THW ROSS REALTY CO.Sun Life Bldg.M, 5261.WESTMOUNT PLATEAU BUILDING LOTS MARCIL, GEO.& 00.180 St.James st.M.$465.STOCK BROKERS.: {Members of Méôntreal Stock Exchange.) Barlow & Co., 82 St.Francois Xavier st.M.3849.BURNETT & CO.12 St Sacrament st.M.2282 L.LOME, EDGAR & CO., B.oT.Bldg.M.5120.FAIRBANK BROS., 61 8t.Fran.Xav.M.340.GAUDET, J.E.& CO., 82 8t.Fran.Xav.M.5145.MACDOUGALL BROS.9 Bt.Sacrament.M.1364.McCUAIG BROS & CO.157 St.James.M.928.McCURDY, F.B.& CO., ¢ Hospital, M.T5.McDOUGALL &.COWAN\u201dS, 95 Not Dame W.M.1738.DAT, R.& CO., 40 Hospital street.Tel.M.8 & 4.TURPIN,W.J.& CO., 6 St.Sacrament st.M.960, WILSON-SMITH.R.& CO., 160 St.James.M.3029.TRUST AND DEPOSIT VAULTS.MCNTREAL TRUST & DEP.CO.,Royal Ins.Bldg.Tel, Office M.i872; Vaults, M.4468.NATIONAL TRUST CO.,National Trust bidg.M.4498.Professional.ADVOCATES.ARMSTRONG,EDGAR N., Bk Ottawa Bldg.M.11%.ATWATER & DUCLOS, 160 St.James at.* $380.2 BAKER, W.A, 6 Noire Dame E.(Ferrier Block), M.481 : BEAUCHAMP, EMILE.72 Notre Dame East, M.BEAUCHESNE & DESJARDINS, 60 Not East.M.1363.re Dame BEIQUE, TURGEON & BEIQUE, 17 \u2018Arm Hill.M.1019.7 Place d\u2019Armes FLAIR & LAVERTY, Canada Life Building.BRODEUR & GARAND, 8) St.Gabriel street.M.2228.BROSSEAU, CHOLETTE & TANSEY.James at.M.1400-1.7.10 8 BROWN.MONTGOMERY & McMICHAEL, 16¢ St James st.M.42.BUSTEED & LANE, N.Y.Life.M.1497.CAMPBELL, MERHDITH, MacPHERSON, HAGUE & HOLDEN, Merchants Bank Bldg.M, 27.GHAVVILLRAICER.nol Time Cie COOK, , al In Bulidins.M.615-178 y surance DANDURAND, UR & BOYE .Lon & Globe Bldg, St.James nt.Ra DAVIDSON & WAINWRIGHT, Advocates, Lon.& Lan.Bldg.M.2039.ELLIOT, HENRY J, 37 Can.Life Bldg.M.2771.FERGUSON, J.M., K.C.,,Room 410-411 New York Life Bldg.M.3054.GEOFFRION, GEOFFRINN & CUSSON, Banque du Peupie Chambers, 97 St.James st.M.19, GULMAN & BOYD, Merchants Bk Blidg.M.2396, GOUIN, LEMIEUX, MURPHY & BERARD, N.yY.Life Bldg.M.3178-9.: 3H -KENSIIELDS, GREENSHINLDS & LANGUE- DOC, 86 Notre Name West.Main 2596.HIRRARD & GOSSELIN, 151 St.James street.M.1 HOLT.CHARLES M., K.C.Guardian Buflding.M.HUTCHINS, MARGOLESE, 151 St.James st.M.2118 ILES.CHARLES.204 St James st.M.2400.JULIEN & BERARD.15 8t James st.M.4360.KAVANAGH, LAJOIE & LACOSTE (Hon, S§'R ALEX.LACOSTE, O11.) 7 Place d\u2019Armes.M.4800-1.LIGHTHALL & HARWO OD, Nev York Life Bldg LAVALLEE \u2018& DELFAUSSE, 97 St.James street.| CMASTER, HIOKBON & CAMPBELL, Canada Life Building, M.1221 Building.M.2053.! SMITH, MARKEY & SKINNER, Metropolitan Bldg.179 St.James street.M.4944.JULIEN & THEBEKGE, ® Notre Dame Bast, .Law Courts.TRIHDY, BERCOVITOH & KEARNEY, 151 St.\u2018ames street.5100.VIPOND 5 VIPOND, 118 Notre Dame Street West.WALSH & WALSH, 8 St.Gabriel st.M.218.WEIR, MACALISTER & COTTON, Royal Insurance Bldg.M.4989.NOTARIES AND MARRIAGE LICEN ISSUERS.CHARBONNEAU, C.J.B, ® St James street.N ! .2 i DICKSON, NORVAL, 107 St James st.M.1207.DUFF, J.M.M., 107 St.James st.M.2508.FRY & CLERK, 157 St.James street.M.3945.WILKS &§ MICHAUD.Merchts Bank Bldg.M.4125.PATENT ATTORNEYS.BUDDEN, H.A.N.Y.Jute, M.194 M.282.EVANS, OWEN N., .Bank .M.fetherstonha: Blackmore & Dennison, Liv., Lon.& Globe Bldg.M.£30.ANALYSTS AND ASSAYISTS.DONALD, DR.J.T., 112 St.Fran.Xav.M.2264.HERSEY, MILTON L., M.Sc.171 St James.M.262.ACCOUNTANTS.CHARTRAND & TURGEON, 55 St.Francois- Xavier street.M.514L CANADIAN APPRAISAL .00., Ltd, 4 Hospital st Main 160.! PARE, GEORGE, 99St.James st.M.2819.DURNFORD, GRO.C.A., F.C.A.Can., Canadas Life M.AU ONEERS.FRASER BROTHERS, 453-5 St.James st.M.790 HICKS, M.& CO., 9% and 101 Meteal\u2019s sh Tel KEARNS, W.M., 32 University street.Up 3808.RAE & DONNELLY, %1 St.James street.M.2017.AVERAGE ADJUSTORS.BOYD, PHILLIPS & CO.30 St.Francois Xavier st.Main 2200.BUSINESS COLLEGES.INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS COLLEGE, 198 St Catherine W.M.209 MISS GRAHAM, BUSINESS COLLEGE 109 Met- calfe street.Phone Main 1714.MONTREAL BU COLLEGE, 46 University .(oor.St, Cath.) Up 15:, MOUNT ROYAL BUSINESS COLLEGE, Y.M.C.A.Building.Up 4287.BUSINESS METHODIZER.VIAU.HENRI, No.14 \u2018La Presse\" Bldg.Main 4834.ELOCUTION.STEPHEN, J.P., 9 University.Up 2474 + ENGINEERS.CANADIAN APPRAISAL ©0.Ltd, 4 Hospital street.Main 160.LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT.FREDERICK G.TODD, Renouf Bldg.Up 2851 : VALUATORS.CANADIAN APPRAISAL CO., Ltd, 4 Hospital Main 100.Retail.ARTISTS\u2019 AND ENGINEERS SUPPLIES.THE HUGHES, OWENS CO, Lté, 27 West Notre Dame.NM.1392 ARTISTS\u2019 MATERIALS AND PAINTERS SUPPLIES.P., 68 St.Catherine st.west.Up 4412.Os THR, 357 St.Cath.st.W.Up 1440.STOS MATERIALS.CUNNINGHAM, JAMES, 320 Craig st.East.M.3940 SCAT WM.& CO, LTD., 8 McGill street.BILL POSTERS AND DISTRIBUTORS.THE WARE CO'Y, Ltd.5 Sit.Genevieve st.Up 116.BIRD DEALERS.MONTREAL BIRD CO.(Hy.& H.J.Hammond) 245A Bleury.Up 1445.BLACKSMITHS AND MACHINISTS.MACDONALD, J.K.818Craig st.West.M.3591.CROWE, J.& SONS, 11 St.George st.M.804.BLANK BOOK MAKERS.H.J.BORRIE, 91 Lagauchetiere st.West.M.1812.BOOKSELLERS AND STATIONERS.ASHFORD, C., 340 Dorcnester st.W.Up 1342 CADIEUX & DEROME (French Books), 18 and 20 Notre Dame W.» 4289.MAN, A.T., 518 St Catherine st.W.Up.927.GRAFTON, F.E.& SONS, 240 St James.M.2456, RENOUF, E.M., 478 St.Catherine West.Up 433.BOOTS AND SHOES\u2014 (Retail).ERNIER, OCTAVE, #3 Notre Dame st.east.ENTRAL SHOE STORE, near Guy st., 78 St.Ca- + therine street West.Up 2604.RONAYNE BROS., 485 Notre Dame West.M.472.ROSTON.J., 235 St.Catherine st.West.Up 3087.SLOAN BROS.633 St.Catherine st., West.Up 917 BEN SLATER.256 Notre Dame West.M.3127.BUILDERS AND CONTRACTORS.JACKSON & CO.829-335 Hibernia st.M.4183, BUILDERS\u2019 SUPPLIES.MORRISON, T.A.& CO., Mechanics\u2019 Inst.M.4532 CARPENTERS AND JOINKRS.JACKSON & CO., 320-335 Hibernia st.M.4153.CARPET CLEANERS.CANADA CARPET CLBANING CO.(Murray, Las: & Co.), 530 St.Antoine st.Phone Up 2529.Hammond Carpet Beating Co., 24a Bleury st Up 1445.Montreal Carpet Beating Co., 13% Lagauchetiere street West.Up 716._ CHEMISTS AND DRUGGISTS.BERNARD, L.A., \u20ac@ St Cetbrn st.E.Bast 1518.un UNETTE, A.M., 1048 >.James, cor.Seignours, Up 5188.GRAY, HENRY R., 122 St.Lawrence Main.M.96.HUOT'S PHARMACY (Alfred Monat, suca.), oor.St.Cath.Main 2450.FERRIS, ART BM St.Chas.Brom.and McGALE'S PHARMACY (Leo.G.Ryan, successor) 84 Notre Dame SL W.M.187.SCARFF, C.E., 358 Bt.Cath.st.W.Up 1881.also corner Sherbrooke and Victoria.Westmount 29 CUNBGONDE PHARMACY, cor.Stand Vinet.Up 2541.TANSSY, O.H., 278 Fherbrooke West, cor.City .Councillor st.Up 942 TREMBLE.J.E.St Catherine, Mountain.Up 901-3 WEINFELD, J.J., 131 Bieury street.M.1877.COAL.OHEN, L.& SON, 38 Prince street.M.881.TAMARRE, W., & CO, 32 Atwater avenue.West 609.McDIARMID, J.C., cor.Guy and Willlam.M.452 ROBERTSON, F., 206 St.James street.M.4611.+ 4 CONFECTIONERS.CHAS.M.ALEXANDER, 219 St.James st.M.908.| CRULY, H.& OO., 4129 St.Catherine.Wesun'nt.Mount 1874.LOGAN, W.J., 214 Sherbrooke West, cor Bleury.Up 1794 DEPARTMENT STORES.CARSLEY CO., Ltd.(The S.), near G.P.O.M.5665.ILAMY, ARSENE, St.Denis and Duluth ave.E.2552 MORGAN, HENRY & CO.,Ltd., Phillips sq.Up 2051.THE JOHN MURPHY CO.Ltd,St.Cath.W.Up 2020 DRY GOODS\u2014 (Retail).ARCAND FRERES, 181 St.Lewrence Main.E.2625.OGILVY, JAMES & SON, St.Catherine street.DYERS AND CLEANERS.British American Dyeing Co.,215 McGill st.M.774 DECHAUX DYB WORKS, 62 St.Catbrn East.E.251.ROYAL DYE WORKS, 803 St Cathrn.W.Up 644.ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS.O'LEARY, W.J., 298 Craig st.W.M.4 589 THE H.R.RICHBY CO:, Ltd , 101 Bleury.M.3887.ELECTRIC AND GAS FIXTURES.MITCHELL, THE ROBERT CO., 2468 St Cath.st.¥ Up 3089.THEH.R.RICHEY OO.Ltd, 101 Blevry.M.3887.ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES.DAWSON, J.A.& CO., 291-3 Craig W.M.4406.FORMAN, JOHN, 708-710 Craig street.M.280.THE H.R.RICHEY CO., Ltda, 101 Pleury.M.3887.FISH DEALERS.O'CONNOR, J.T., St.Antoine Market.Up 2572 FLORISTS AND DECORATOR.BAIN, S.S., 463 St.Ostherine st.W.Up 2486.HALL & ROBINSON, 855 St.Cath.st.W.Up 8878.HARRIS : & HOPTON, 700 St Catherine st.W.Up 1364.McKENNA, P.& SONS, St.Cath., cor Guy.Up 119; THE DERY & SON CO., 11 St.Lambert Hill FOREIGN STAMPS.KETC.CENTURY STAMP CO.150 Peel st.Up 4142.FURNIYURE AND CARPETS.| LABELLE, H.P.& 00, 5 Notre Dame W.M.1021 LAPOINTE, F., 625 St.Catherine East.METROPOLITAN HOUSE FURNISHING (CO.% Notre Dame W.M.1781.PRINCE, THE J.8.CO., 23 to 39 St.Lawrence st.Phone East 209.Renaud,King & Patterson,cor.Guy & Bt.Cath.Un 681 Valiquette, N.G., Ltd., 1547-55 St.Cathrn.E.4182-3-4 WENER, A.& CO., 1 Bleury street.M.4860.GLO\\ES AND CORSETS.PARIS KID GLOVE STORE, 462 St.Catherine ot.West.Up 1068.GRANITE AND MARBLE MERCHANLS.HAWKINS, F.18-14 Bluery street.\u2018 SMITH MARBLE & QOONSTRUCTION CO., No.290 Bleury st.Up 2756.GHUCERS\u2014 (Retail)./ BAKER & CO., St.Catherine W.Up 8152.BEAULIEU, 63 borne street.Tel.Up 3296.BRAUVAIS, LALONDE ET CIB., 482 St.James near Inspeotor.M.605.BERTHIAUME, J.B., 112 Park ave.Up 3216.wX, G.E., 4846 Sherbrooke st., Westm\u2019t.Mount 1113 and 1114.; BROWN, W.J., 888 St.Cath.at.W.Up 2900.CHAPUT, L.W., 94*8t, Catherine W.Up 83967.DESAULNIERS, J: Li, 4X2 and 44 St.Lawrence Boul.B.98.2 ° - ELLIOTT, P., 487Berthelet street.Up 4350.ELLIOTT, WM.,\" Greene avenur, Westmount.Mount 302.ENGLISH PROVISION CO., 681 St.Cath.W.Up 2416.HODGSON, T.L., 718 8t.Urbain street.E.658.MALONEY, D., cor.Sherbrooke and Mance.1.2483 MUNRO, D.D.& CO., 2667 St.Catherine.MUNRO BROS.208 St.Antoine street.Up 2670.PAUL, WALTER, - 461 St.Cath.st.W.Up 1287.ECANLON.JOHN.239 Bleury street, Up 1307.STRONG & STRONG, 4%0 Lagauchetiere W.M.6337.TRUDEAU, A., 344 St.Catherine st.E.E.3833.VANIER FRERES.1029 St James st.Up 2576.HARDWARE\u2014 (Retail).CAVANAGH, THE E.CO Ltd.935-945 Notre Dams W., cor.Seigneurs.M.34(7-8-9.DRYSDALE.D., 645 Craig strect.M.167.DURAND HARDWARE CO., 879 St.James street.M.KRASEL, PAUL R., 881 Et Cath.st.West.Up 1452.SEVIGNY.R.N., 514 St.James street.M.1624.SURVEYER, L.J.A.,52St.Lawrence Boulevard.WILSON, T.& CO., 371 St.Lawrence Boul.(cor.Dorchester), E.1855.¢ HATTERS AND FURRIERS.ARMAND DOIN, 7¢ Noire Dame East.M.1148.BEAULIEU, ARTHUR J., corner St.Martin and Notre Dame gts.M.3085.BOIVIN, ERNEST, oorner Stand Notre Dame.M.4097.GRACE.GEO.A., 279 Bleury street.PELLETIER, F.B., 552 St.Cath.st.W.Up 4234.ROBERTSON & GO.23 St.James st.M.2207.TRUDEL & GRAHAM,107 Bleury st.M.1892.HOTELS.CORONA, Uptown.Up 3840.G.Phlillips, Mg.Dir.GRAND UNION (F.J.Murray, Prop.), 348 Notre Dame West.M.6141.Horan ViRSLAKE, 57, St James st.M.6133.P BE » Craig sl.(opp.Viger Square).M 3134 QUEEN'S, opposite G.T.R., M.4785.Sa ) WINDSOR, Dominion square.Up 2880.ICE MERCHANTS.THE CITY ICE CO., Ltd., 295 Craig stre West.Tel.3957, 8968.ei, LADIES\u2019 COSTUMES.LAFRANCE, P., 270 and 272 St.Lawrence Boulevard, M, 542, and 269 Bt.Cath.West.Up 217.LADIES\u2019 HAIRDRESERS AND WIG MAKERS.ASSELIN, MADAME, 260 St.Cath.St.W.Up 4152.TARRANTE, SAMUEL, 578 St.Cath.W.Up 5342.J.PALMER & BON, Ltd, 103-5-7 Notre Dame West.M.391.MUSER & VETTER, Moisons Bank Bldg., cor.Stanley and St.Cath.Up 2508.PONTON, JOS., 83 Notre Dame Bast.M.2361.PROF.LAVOIE, 8 Notre Dame street west.PUNDE & BOEHM, 47] St.Cath.at.W.Up 3161 ROSS, W.J., 4219 St.Cath.st, Westmount, Tel Mount 704.LADIES\u2019 AND GENTS\u2019 TAILORS.HERL, ANTON, 631 St.Catherine st.west.Up 2687 SAGAN, MORRIS, 821 Bt.Cath.weet.Up 218.LITHOGRAPHERS.BENALLACK (THE) CO., 8, 10, 12 Latour.M.3396-7 LOCKS AND KEYS FITTED, OHLING, JOHN, 818 St.James strest LUMBER MERCHANTS.RUTHERFORD, WM.& SONS CO., Ltd, 88 to 9% Atwater avenue.M.8457.MACHINERY.CANADA MACHINERY AGENCY, 298 St.James street.M.2196.MILLEN, W.L.& CO., 32-44 Bt.George st.M.5423.YOUNG, ANDKEW, 11 Busby Lane.A.2544 \"MEAT MARKETS.LE CAVALIER & RIBL, 12 and 14 Chaboillez Square.M.1836.STANFORD MARKET, 438 St.Cath.et.West.Up 4004 and 296.WESTGATE & LEWIS, 438A MoGitl College, and 128 Park ave.Up 2690 aad 4068.Lawrence Boul.Le Seen Lo Rd po el rede 8 Ed > pu MERCHANT TAILORS.AMERICAN TAILORS,332 St.Catherine W.Up 2283 GALLERY, DAN, 490 Notre Dame West.M.2230.MOQUIN, ALBERT, 87 Bleury street.M.4138.SENECAL, T., 4226 St.Cath.street, Westmount.Mouat 784.TUDDENHAM & ANDERSON, 344 St.James st.(W.of Victoria #9.) M.2979.NURSERIES.THE CANADIAN NURSERY CO.Renouf Bldg.OLD BEDDING RENOVA1 EL.TOWNSHEND, G.E., 380 St.James st.M.3014.OPTICAL AND ENGINEERING INSTRUMENTS.HEARN & HARRISON, 10 Notre East.M.2904.OPTICIANS.CARRIERE, ROD., 263 St.Catherine East.E.2257.GRANT, DR., B.O.A.0.I'H.D., 294 St.Catherine street west.Up 1232.NCURY, J.C., (Specialist), 30-32 St Cath.E.E.3402 PAINTERS AND PAPERHANGERS.POTTER.W.E.& Co., 2¢ St.Philip st.M.1939.PHOTO ENGRAVERS, DOUGALL., JOHN & SON, \u2018Witness\u2019 Bldg.M.4090 SMEATON BROS., 236 Craig st.West.M.737.PHOTOGRAPHERS.ARLESS PHOTO STUDIO, cor, St.Catherine and Mackay streets.UB 4245 BARNS, W.M., 630 St Catherine W.Up 3203.DAGENAIS, HENRY, 14 Notre Dame W.M.4822.DUMAS, ALBERT, 251 SL.Catherine st.East (near Sanguinet).E.Sbôt.GORDON, P.J., 409 St Catherine West.M.1424.LAPRES & LAVERGNE, 366 St.Denis st.EE.1zx3 LEBUS & GRENIER, 1355 Notre Dame W.M.6095 PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES.ART EMPORIUM, THE, 357 St, Cath.st.W.Up 1440.HOGG, THE D.H.CG., uve Craig street.M.1953.LEE & SARGENT, 675 St.Catherine st.W.Up 3817 SMITH, R.F., 116 Notre Dame street west M.1467.Up 1006.Dame street United Photographic Stores, Ltd., 140 Peel.Up 964.PIANOS, PIANOLAS, ORGANS AND MUSIC.THE NORDHEIMBR PLANO & MUSIC CO.Ltd.589 St.Catherine sL W.Up 2664.PIANOS AND MUSIC.SHAW, J.W.& CO, 30 St.Catherine st., West.Up 1414 PIANOS AND ORGANS.ARCHAMBAULT, ED., 312 St.Cath.E.E.1542.LAYTON BROS., 144 Peel street.Up 1491.LEACH PIANO CO, 560 St.Cath.st.W.Up 938.LINDSAY, C.W.Ltd., St.Catberine st.- tr 2638.McNEE, C.A.,550 St.Cath erine West.Up 3884 WILLIS & CO., Ltd., 600 St.Cath.st.W.Up 2686.PICTURES AND PICTURE FRAMERS.ART EMPORIUM, THRE, 357 St.Cath.st.W.Up 1440.EDLINGTON, CHAS., 413 St.Cath st.W.Up 1080.JOHNSON & COPPING, 63s St.Catherine west.Up 2896.MALONE MOULDING & FRAMING CO'Y, 48 Beaver Hall.Up 1861.RHEAUME, NAP.& CO.(Whol.St.Lawrence Boulevard, East PLUMBERS, GAS AND STEAM FITTERS.GORDON & EGAN.120 Mansfeld st.Up 1115.SMALL, ARTHUR, 183-185 Elgin st.E.2180.PRINTERS AND STATIONERS.FORTIER, J., cor.St.Peter & Notre Dame.M.444-5 DOUGALL, JOHN & BON, \u2018Witness\u2019 Bldg.M.4090.McALLJSTER A.& CO.93 St.Fra.Xav.M.2157.ROY, J.E., 188 St.Cath.et.W.(bet.St.George and St.Philip).M.730.RANGES AND STOVES.Galarneau, A.& Co., 322 Mt.Royal.Mer.2134.PROWSE, GEO.R.288 McGill st.M., 264.ROOFERS, CAMPBELL & GILDAY, 309 St.James st.REED, GBO.W.& CO.Ltd, 337 Craig West.M.98.RUBBER STAMPS, SIENCILS, ETC.LEGALLEE BROS., 3 Bleury st.M.2458.Walker & Campbell, cor.N.Dame & McGill.M.77% SADDLERS AND HARNESS MAKERS.BISSONNETTE, ERIC & CO., 450 St.James.M.6379 LAMONTAGNE, LIMITED, No.338 Notre Dame West, Balmoral Block.MURPHY, D.& CO., 402St.James st.M.1966.ROBERTS, J.W., 33 81.James street.M.1968.SCRAP IRON, METALS, RUBBERS, RAGS, PAPER.: BLOCK, M., 773 St.James, Cor.Versailles.Up 147.ELLISON, A.& SON, 92 St.James, bet.Rich- Mond and St.Martin.Up 986.PICKLEMAN, H., 127 Dalhousie st.M.701.WALKER, J.R., & CO., 35 Common st.M.1338-9, SEED MERCHANTS.EWING, WM.& CO.146 McGill street.M.134 WM.RENNIE CO., Ltd, 19¢ McGill st.M.2392.SOUVENIR NOVELTIES AND PST CARDS.AUX VARIBTES (B.Lsbelle), 361 St.Cath.Bast, between Sarruinet and St.Denis.E 5919 CADIEUX & DEROME, 13 and 20 Notre Dame West.M.4289.DUBIN, C.W., 93 Notre Dame W.Notre Dame Church, M.go2¢ HIS MAJESTY'S POSTAL CARD PARLOR,739 St.Cath.W., near His Majesty\u2019s Theatre.SPORTING GOODS, ETC.COSTELLO, G.MORGAN (Cycles), 15 Bleury st.COSTEN, T.& CO.43 Notre Dame st.W.M.2856 SEVIGNY, R.N., 610 St.James street.M.1634.SMYTH.JAMES M.828 Dorchester st.Up 1249.SUEVEYER, L: J.A.,52St.Lawrence Boulevard SPORTING GOODS FOR HIKE, SMYTH, JAMES M.828 Dorchester st.Up 1249.STEAM LAUNDRIES.CANADA STEAM LAUNDRY & DYE WORKS.62 St.Catherine East.E.51.MONTREAL STEAM LAUNDRY, 853-356 Craig st.West.M.3600-01.\u2019 TONLE so tN DRY CO.Ltd.425 Richmond st.p .TROY LAUNDRY, Verdun.Plone 3844.TRUNKS AND TRAVELLING BAGS.LAMONTAGNE, LIMITED, Phone Main 413.Notre Dame, Balmoral Block.TRUSSES.LINDMAN, B., 16 McGill College ave.Up 1593.TYPEWRITER AND OFFICE SUPPLIES.CANADIAN OLIVER TYPEWRITER CO., 140 St.Peter st.M.3832.TYPEWRITING BUREAU.VIROLLE & CO., Room 6} Guardian Bldg.M.194s.UNDERTAKERS.ARMSTRONG, G., 72 and 74 Victoria sq.M.219, Seale & Son, cor.Beaver Hall and Dorchester.Up 969 and 2671.TEES & CO., 300 St.James street.M.827.WRAY, WM., 113 University st.Up 2067.WALL PAPER.and Ret.), 185 1348.M.1172 street (near Wholesale.ASBESTOS AND ASBESTOS MATEKIaA:< CANADIAN ASBESTOS CO.42, 44, 40, 4 Ye.ville 8q., (cor.St.Peter).Main 611 and 32a BANANAS.BROWN.JOSEPH & SONS, 29 Youville sq.M 4 BOOTS AND SHOFES\u2014(Wkhclesaic\" AMES-HOLDEN LIMITED, 45 Victoria square Main 427-8.ROBINSON, JAMES, 184 McGill st.M.34i BUTTER AND CHEESE MERCHAN I».FORTIER & MONETTE, 604 St.Faul.M.4323.Olive, Dorion & Stroud, 55 William st.M.444 DRY GOODS\u2014(Wholesale).HODGSON, SUMNER & OC, LTD., 34 St.Pau street.M.5610.RACINE, A.& CO., 340 St.Paul st.EGGS.\u2014 (Wholesale) FORTIER & MONETTE, 604 St.Paul st M.4323 FANCY GOGDS\u2014 (Whoiesale).M.4986.HODGSON, SUMNER & CO., LTD., 86 St.Pau street.M.5610.FISH AND OYSTERS\u2014(\\Wholesale.) LEONARD BROS., 20 Youville square.M.4446.FURRIERS\u2014 (Wholesale).PIERCE, A.& E.CO., 507 St.Paul street.M sci | GENERAL PRODUCE.WARD, JOSEPH & CO.,115D Youvilie sq.M.4088 M.4088.GROCERS\u2014 (Wholesale).Birks.Corner & Co.39 Place d'Youv.lle.M.1482 CARTER, S.J.& CO.i» McGll street, GALBRAITH, WM.&
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