me 5+ t .&t goo bright. , _ "Put the st.ï¬lu nge to ; Might prociatmed ‘the wouk prociaimed the wouk ' § 1 nlhol:'v:w . up the window and the shor of the mounting men Bra . top where you_ are, Kitty, â€" Mr. ruther, for God‘s sake, don‘t try ? You can‘t help now," was irs. Rolt‘s only answer, and then she ren ,thmï¬.hor husband‘s bathâ€"room r ‘they rd her taking.â€"the stairs "Â¥hon, gn. Phon," they: «m ob, 7 Ddurd her call, "bar the kitchen window, quick! ml come cut your throat," and she spoke they heard her turnâ€" Ing the keys in the main doors and putting up the great bars. 1 *‘Wiun to her, Kitty, and help hber. _ "Whoot? Aye, shoot to carse _ Git, you devil," andâ€" er of told that the horse i f -hlthuum‘s\hn; =~\uwm-. %..:Iyou worth to the first that is lightâ€" ad, andâ€"* the Boss‘s voice disd out us he galloped away with his men, _ At the back of the ranch and on sides of it lay a great enclosed â€"of about a thousand acres in & parallelogram, and down the of it ranâ€"s chain of hay stacks, | fenced in, the feed upon which e the safety of Rolt‘s stock if i winter should <ome. > rt to the store laid up for‘a hard , wnd in consequence some men u 'h.‘hhc:'m keep little or no f ure years,. many of them, , in which these stacks need not ‘touched. â€" In an mwhter the enttle are carried wi having reâ€" â€"~These are the men who fail in the | © business. Sooner w‘aur: snow comes; so deep t the eanpot paw it away to get at « -‘ub:e.th.luth.lthoun ‘who have provided against such times lose every head of stock. + am ruin to .the improvident, Dick Rolt was not such a fool as to take any chances where the safety of his cattle was concerned. ‘Three years‘ hay was stacked in the thou .em.udltnpm-umuh the next year‘s crop be cut stacked just the same. __Over twenty stacks, beginning with one nearest to the ranch botlL, in flames, one here and there which had falled to ignite standing out black and exaggerated in size, in the flerce light made by its fellows, whilst the roar of the burning could B6 heard where the watchers stood, ‘The sight which met the eyes of those who watched at the : window would have been weirdly. beantiful if the meaning of it had not been so hideous. . The night cwas ~one: which not only precluded amy possibility of msocidental ignition, but made it diffiâ€" cult to understand the rapidity with which stack after stack burst© into _ The heavy Scotch mist with which the valley was filledâ€"a freezing mist, which was almost rainâ€"was crimson Down.in the middle of the valley ran a chain of red fire,â€" whilst the walls of it were still darkness made édarker by contrast, and in this, ims m could paint the twelve: or weapons in thdmm m'uud:?‘l: s mai Once or twice a figure was seen near the fmhleltol the stacks, thrown BetlL it Ruetecacs ana the Aaride took hold, but though Mary Rolt held her breath to listen, there came no pattle of fire arms.,. oo ho i fon ts 59 1 shall be all right." . â€" â€" %m swear â€" to keepâ€" still, $ ‘ #J ewear. . Run, dear." _: The obeyed him, and a,â€" few , Jater Mrs. Rolt, Kitty, and Ei4 “:aued Chinese * cook . reâ€" A room. m NPR K oc P infecs thow _ #*Twentyâ€"three, Mary, but it is ten mminutes since the last blazed up," _ -‘?5! can‘t get in now unless they w‘flu doors," sobbed Mrs. Rolt, ithless _ with _ her exertions. i that back door, Kitty, whilst & men," ahd she ran to her usbe room again for ‘the revol ith hung there. . : < away the (curta‘ns, "l‘ui the little window open, 8 id ‘out, but the light inside was joo Bhe could see pothing. "Put the lamp out, Kitty," she callâ€" as the light t out in obeâ€" to. her or‘tr.'go Raw . dimly moving in the shadew of a the stores were m‘- ‘shot, until "fl chamber was »y, It mattered little she , zl:‘e‘ The main | was to men, and alot she lere ev-m"m" arthis, and & e en o & ice halled RNer.: s **° 1 °~_â€"_ PC CCR iEsE : I â€" "That you wng._ Polily? Take o. _ Don‘t ahy more," and a moment there was bediam darknces u\-i:#mc n}.- ¢ ,â€" .Aï¬ n‘â€lco sharp meâ€" a .lm:al ‘bod; of gal * a the m SEA Ing hoofs seemed to recede wvx but the Bass and old Al r:de 7 j’)&hdhfl’_l"- w4 R 1 "Open th Think, +xce éxce any mote | There was i volee," which heard re | m (bim. t m bo{ . stacks Is it shoot, Alt" they heard someâ€" «*DRUâ€"CO n tesiffeinge" thine) ied xclosively in ‘Clanada fiw. th* Hiritish & Oolouia h Hazel Cream Angredients soeth and soft Joor and give me a lanâ€" Th.y bave all gone, I iwo. ahd they won‘t do IVEPHILLIPS WOLLEY utFor of "Cold in Catriboo," Ete® R olt ~had ne':or e iM she _she bad nevï¬ the Hignt ‘of We in Witch â€"Masel laver 85008. R 88 # J TPFIC ver had was vet . w# ts .. i Nh BY man. lcz.y:u bit longer. have not hit any one, the: . Where did you think you saw them?" â€" "Over there by the: atoreâ€"house.". â€""Ah! But they could not get in.i1 the time. Lucky we tumbled to their game. Mpmuuglun. Al‘ touching his arm aud ring, "say nothing if the missus has sho: straight." * ‘The old man.nodded and went out: In a couple of minutes he was back again forâ€"the !antern.. When be reâ€" t&umd again he handed the Boss a ey. io ons 00 tu Cakk weo sevidle. Dick killed anyone, have 19 -Me'fh mr““ suddenly, and clinging to Bim. "Guess so. Women had ought t> do their own chorts. l ain‘t got no use Yor Injins round a ranch Th yy got all the rifes." "What ®" "All them spare.rifCes and thrce of tour dozen . box<s. of â€"car.ridg‘s. 1 should ‘say, thovgh some of them won‘t help cm much,. The r‘fles are fortyâ€"fives, and hbalf the cartâ€"idger were for yort fifty hundred and tem Guess we bust!sd ecm a bit Orâ€"they wouldn‘t hive maJe such a fool break as that." . ‘"Yes," drawled one of the b>yu. "I ain‘t â€"almighty ‘stuck on night huntin‘. Once you‘re over the hog‘s back it‘s darker nor the ways of a provincial politician. It‘s so blanked dark it fairly drowns you after that glare" and heâ€"looked towards the blazing stacks. ‘"The Injins kinder sunk out of sight in it." ». PR When she Frad gone master and man faced cach other for some min utes in siience. "Can‘t rave ic s‘acks, Al?" â€" ~‘That don‘t make no cdds. We‘ve plenty left." "I suppose #o, if we are lucky enoughto live to want it." _ _ "I thought as you allus kept that yourself, Boss." * "Where did you find it*" * "In the door of the store house.". . Rolt looked down at it for a mé& ment. _ "The old devil," he‘ muttered. "Jest so. .But how d‘d he come to get it?" (ee t _ "Old Mary must have stolen it from my room when she carme b gging this afternoon." %7; & __Ob, we skall. . We‘ll pull through_ all Yight, but I wish the women fclk were out of this, at Sody Créck or YVie toria." £W% K Whi‘st they Were spcaking ~Mary Rolt® bad rewaincd . unfioliced . with them. Now hor hrsband saw her and bade hor rumup stairs and tell th« other two that it was all.over and no harm done. "You think it is war, then?" "You bet it‘s war. "What did they want them rifles for. They on‘y burned the stacks to get a show at the store." There was no answer to this, but the two listening heard the beat of the returning hoofs, and before long about half of the men of the ranch relned> up their lathering ‘horses in front of the mess house. "Did you get any of ‘em?" asked Al "Devil a hoof." "You got sick of the hunt m‘ghts quick,"* . .. / sn m d ‘‘That‘s done, Boss. I sent Dan. He‘s up half wayâ€" to Grouse Creek by now if thé Injins haven‘t got him." «. ‘"‘Thapk you, Al. I think two of you had ter come in and sleep in the house\toâ€"night, just to reassure the Iadies.‘ The rest of you had better sleep with your horses, and there wi ! have to be a couple on the look out all night. They, might try to tush ts." "We shall have to send some one to warn the Faircloughs." "Not whilst them illuminations 4: turned on," said Al. I guess you <a~> sleep solid toâ€"night. When it‘s dark it will be different. But I‘ll see to the lookâ€"outs, Boss, when we‘ve put them two out of sight," and he print ¢d to where something luy in the sha gow of the stables. "It was a pity as it was Kineeshaw,‘ e ndded. "There‘ll be no let up now ntil they wipe us out or some on‘ ets daylight into old Khelowna. Ho hought a heap of Kineeshaw." * 7’11;1 night the watchers watched in rn. The three and twenty stack good hay which should have beer urped into beet at thirty omgrty. dol &n’ hegd, flared up and then died wn infg clear red hearts of fire, and C N ught were. notbing t grey spots an the home x“" ‘They had been tlnb‘ up ..7 n #p the mist was by the u‘h.- hgomm more trace than the In who had ng:od them. * ese had vanished utterly, Two spots of ‘fresh turned earth, outside the corrals, might suggest the recent presenceâ€"of the Chileotens to those who knew what lay below, but these and the charred railings wherc the stacks had stood were‘ all the traces they had left, _ â€" _ 0. _ _ _ Â¥From the hog‘s back to the black timber of the enclosing hills there was no sign of a camp fire, no hint of a man‘s presence, and one by ore the scouts sent out fromthe ran h e‘.ohuivmuomm. Th Indians had been a score in number, and were not now to be seen, neither had they left any trail to say which way they had gone. The most experienced among the tracker that they had scattered, and was impossible to say where they reunite, : But Jimâ€" would te said the men, and then they & make up their minds what" td ©â€"*Sut Jim did not come. . Though watched for him from hour to omm aaiinnt Te ms m hefore the nao::.s%t tel}, 'l'l $ came again, and t go Jim is wam .d‘-“-lil haï¬lm'nm iy before the Kitty, whose . impatience was d vouring b: ea w abo:'. come, . Jim 'l: inss o oounn‘‘ s Rlong wiluont a id you, see anyume Whou . you $ WOONG haste, without a shout to tall CHAPTER XViHI Intoe afternoon ate affe on 1h° W wl:‘ men W« ol:“ soon as she had "I‘m afraid that it has got to be, It. _ ‘There n&mn Indians out than the boys k, andit‘s a vast deal more serious than J like, I saw two bands eoulu‘ this way â€"on my ride to Soda Creek. 1 met Khclowna and I‘m afraid be has rais¢d the who|s country side." 2 OEC _ Coe . haste o‘l-:_lkh\ity were nc ds Fores sergh sent in diose tuiet slances wi resented so much. whica‘ h the driver o "Two of tho-lmm"vm’ wrï¬hed." i & “ . sc * in : "Didn‘t tnwnflmwm ‘Broke the storeâ€"house and got guns while we were at the stacks." "Might bave known that they would try that.â€"â€"What did you all want: to go to the stacks for? Didn‘t ca‘culate to blow them out, did you?" £ Al hung his ‘head. nhlhï¬l:z] when you have a great story to to have it undermd sentence pronounced before ve had time to m your lips. |, *~ * * many Injuns were there?". "About fiftecn, 1 guess:" "More than that," said the man who had not becn there; but he did not stop to argue or hrâ€"ar any mgre. deâ€" tails. He remembered the "'m which he had sâ€"en on his way Creek, and he knew all that it was vital to know, so he followed‘ Proâ€" theroe quictly to the house: â€" . Theâ€"dactor‘s rcport was reod ‘one and soon mad*. When sober he was a capable man, and Anstruther‘s inâ€" juries,. however pminful, were suf.f clently simple. *T "A bundle of nerves, Aine bwed and high strung," was Pwtmd( comâ€" ment. "A sicer who had the same smash up would have gone on facdâ€" ing. Three ribs broken, tldl‘;‘g:akng up, and bruised a bit, of co ; but the ribs have knit already. ~You did the rig‘‘ thing, Mrs. Rolt. These are your bandag s?" * ‘"No, they age Jim‘s." t "Of courre.. 1 ought to bave known Jim‘s packing; cffective, but avtrifle severe. Here, let me loosen them a little," and his deft fingers, . which were as delicate as a woman‘s and as strong as a man‘s, playcd about An struther with astonishing rapidity, "That‘s better. isn‘t 1t?"" Anstruther sighed. ~"Yes, 1 can move now, I think, without faldting." "But you must not; at. Jeast,. not much, Jim was on the right {track, but he certainly d‘d not give you much ph.‘“ You don‘t drink nm:uch, do you?" o; not much," "And you‘re not tw n"‘-nve. Lcrd} Lord! â€" What could hurf a man who rant drink and isn‘t . twentyâ€"five? ‘our case was not worth the Tide, but ps we may have oth<rs," h> add. cheerfully,â€""now that old Khelowna broken out." ; As soon asâ€"the doctor‘s inspection was over, a council of war was held the diningâ€"room, whilst Jim and the r cut themselves vast . chunks 3 ‘ouly walzed slowly and limp:d i %w . oue "of the . Then MA pirg to w§mflhd $s Sn vigk. e y" words to A}, leï¬nmu‘:nfl time to open his mouth. . 7 k:n them their medicing right thepe, we‘ve got to take it to them," "Â¥You think that we oan‘t afford to h‘? things as they Are," asked Roit, 4 don‘t think about it, .s lu'm knowed Jnjuns since | grgwed & high for nothing. When lu{:; start on & rrlbt of this ki they‘ve got to be wiped out or they‘ll come back like chickens to a doughnut, Ain‘t that so, Jim?" * _ But at last even his appetite was appeased, shd.he turned from the men to the .Boss. / "Pity that the boys did; not over haul some of them," said Jim, "Yes, it would have saved. a hull }: t of trouble," agreed Al, "we could have _ But Jim was busy cating and lis‘en ing. He was not much of a gas bag any way, the men said. _. _ . & ‘That‘s so," put in Al. "There ain‘t so much as an old klooch left at the rancherie since the burfiing."> "How do you know, Al!" "I sent one of the breeds to pros pect." Noh "Where is he?" "He never came back. I didn‘t elk culate as he would, butâ€" 1 t!uht he‘ be better with them than ‘with us, if that was the kind of .# he was. Then 1 sent Dan here he erys they‘ve ‘all â€" vamoosed. â€" : Don‘t you, "Eyery last hoof of them." aeFd" shaite nomep Foims tw P thel im ream, the me puffing L-I-uv at t»eu" pipes onz staring â€"Into the log. . _ After so many of undisturked pcace, it mml.l.m“ro-ubln to b:}eve‘ in & ral rising amoungst B, C. lnd'm lt was almost as if the cattle turned on the cowboys, . . "What are we to do, Jimt" . "Well, Rolt, if theso Indians were not Chilcotens, 1 shouldâ€"say that. we had seen the worst of it and it might all blow over, but they are Chilcotens, and Chilcotcns are not like other B.C, Indiabs," "Oh, them Comst . # is like a rk of wet hens," zt Al. "Thee Hlows are mean ves. ~Th:y wiped out that survey part yon Bglla Coolas protty clean." e _‘That was a long time ago, and mll the ringâ€"leaders ‘were hanged." _ °~~ "That‘s all you know, Boss. Kh#}â€" owna was one of rs, and hbe wasn‘t bung, + of the ~ringâ€"leaders e thace ail" miere weed\ a t‘s * & it, but couldn‘t do nothing." â€" _A ents, e "Do you remember that 1 thought 1 e# #yening?" asked Jim ber, but ty JB hsP re they us and cut us off." have. been scared.that m! would break baok m the ho nds in "the . timber the bolled â€"saited beef on the 2 taie of baste in | . _ * fail sh jaunting" gar? lowards . Grouse ay are ie »pferang higk ¢t "Yes, 1 mcan to,"*said the DBozs, waking up ‘and â€" taog . com1 and. "Pick yqur.m;n tos ay (ombe." "How would it b? if the dolt.r, old Toma, two of the bre:ds, and the Fa râ€" clough boys stayed with you and Anâ€" struthcr. .I‘m afraid about the Fa r cloughs. â€" I Coubt if they will ever g.t here." j them. ‘whe first biow 4# worth a dozes later on ard it. won‘t do t> let them think weâ€" are scared, but: we must ::::o m strong guarnd with you end the es." a+ + "They‘re in the corral now. W_on"‘ believe. a word about the rising, a ‘t’l:,Ink as we‘re s:ared at our own sha» we." , 4 $ "Go and bring them in, Al.‘" j Al went out and return<d pm.ntq with two â€" fairâ€"headed young English men, beefâ€"fed glants, with g@iters a other relics of: the Old Conna[ sti1 clinging to them. Until now they been looked vpon with a câ€"rtai amount â€" of Eisfavor at the Risky not belonging to quitethe same clas as most of the English importation andâ€" as intreders whose â€"small â€" meadow bardly justified theirâ€"exisâ€" tence and the presence. of their herd. upon the ?nce.‘ but jn ie straits to. which the Rolts had b{en r:duced, the, Faircloughs . were agcorded a very, gearty welcome, although their ob.t ous scepticism and too loudly proâ€" claimed Indmerencs toâ€" n;tmnfdthn* "a pack of mangy Indiang" could do, was a little trying to the old bands, _ "I hope so, indeed, Mr. Faisclough, and I dareray that we exaggera‘e the (@anger having ladies and an invalid t» take care of. ~Would you mind staying with us for a day or two? ~Half of us are going out to try to round up Khelâ€" owna and his band, and your pr.s.n° and your brother‘s would relieve the tedium of our absence for the ladies, nnl_ give them a greater sense of safeâ€" iy £ ® "Why, certainly. ~Delighted, 1 am sure, unless you would like to have us along with you and leave two of your men behind. , Jack is a capit ;tq.:._ you know, uscd to shoot at Wim toh:. and I can beat him a bit most times." 5 3 tâ€"0C â€"‘No, sirrec! 1 guess they know b:t ter," replicd Bob Fairclough; hard ing a new Winchester with meanng, Rolt smiled at the ingentious stateâ€" ment, but heé wanted men who could hit something more difficult than a target at a measured two hbundred yards from a rest.. That style of shooting would. do grï¬n the : rangk 1 do:‘|. but .if it came tq shooting }‘f\u from the saddle, he preâ€" etred to trust some of ‘his boys who had never heard of Wimb!ledan. 7 thige on most ne feafent wimn Ing ‘The Chilcoters have not be n ncar your place yct, Al tells ms," 2§ with Â¥ . a54 Catarrh of t tried many o B doctors but Finally, 1 read an ‘ot ‘Fruitaâ€"tives‘. . T. > to "rive cure ‘for . Cgusti ~and dm Trouble, because it i8 only medicing in the world that ; of Inl. Iuleu and _ valuable tosics...< Fu of i vicle by tfiking‘ c;;?& tlives Pihe miracle, At ~a~ r famous (ruihned‘?:lich ® 5oc. a box}6 for $4%60,trial 2 Adealets of pent an repaipe of prlea b9 ns WHOOPING *COUGH VAPO CRFSOLENE CO Loemingâ€"Miles Bldg. ALL DRUGGISTS MONTREAL VER es YLARS ï¬!nm'.“ Marns tee Ch her, Jim.". % k 3 "Not whilst I‘m alive," and if "her" meant Polly to one man and flm another it -aa.n difference mm were ther, ‘zlc mu‘&mmm.: the corrals rode w men through . the llhm that he had spared his wife the pain pf part:â€" ing and hidden from her the . risk which he~was running, not knowing, kindly fool thatâ€"he was, that she had read him like a book; that her heart had yearned to him.as be stood silent mx “:ug h‘r,“narhnx but not cause . paleners and that she, not he, <w-.g-,‘ou who had spared the other the pain of that which they knew could not beâ€"avoided. ‘That‘s so, but if they spot us beâ€" fore we get the drop, it‘s only three to one. They‘ll run, sure." . That is the spirit of the West. Thrée to one is about a fair match in the eyes of the Western man, if the one is white, with rather heavy odds on the one, and history has proved @at the handicap is not too heayy in most â€" cases, although some "fool white," as Al wouldâ€"have put it; may sometimes "get left." s ba M Sil d *o Back of n goin A rancher‘s wife, Hike a soldier‘s, is obliged sometimes to take: chances even with the lifé of her‘ best beâ€" mod. If not there would be no ranchâ€" "What is. your prog Alt" whispered the. Boss, ':: 't.ho'nuh lights had died out behind the hog‘s back "Iâ€" was calculating to niake for that gulch as leads lnl':%m . Orgelc. We could leave our horses there,; and do a sneak down it to Khelowna‘s camp." | _"How do you know he isâ€"camped there?" es "It‘s the nearest water to * :l.:: where Jim saw theâ€"amoke, t not be there, of course, but it‘s worth trying. We might rt the drop on the whole outfit if we did a good sneak at night." % 1 "We might, as they won‘t dream of our assuming the offensive, but it isn‘t likely. They aren‘t white men and the woods talk." The Boss, at any rate, seemed satisâ€" {led, and the five went on in the darkness, which was of the 1 which : absolutely â€" obliterates â€" thing. . A chinook wind was blowing, one of â€"those curiously soft ~warm winds which occur in British lrnn- bia, cutting the snow off the biHlis in a tew hoursâ€"like a red hot knife. By their cars they could tell when they were riding over <prairie,~ for* then there was only the whisper of: the {nu at thcir feet, of through timber, or then the soughing of the trees made weird music for them, but in that solfd damp blackness you might have. burst your eyeballs in trying to discover the outline of a‘ping¢,. or the edge of the timber aghinst the sky, and your efforts would have been in vain. $3 _ And yet with the instinct of # Hom: ing pigeon, old Al led them stemdily o never c:wr"‘-:;:;c of the dark: r hes or ho oo h Â¥haf Sick after nim, mzmm o ms guldance and to the ‘instinct : of tbheir horses. € . "Better r( oft here, lna; Al eald at last. "It‘s bad gol: id on to our stirrup Ienmur -;;):‘t {fl;m along after me, m:.lm“d in l,:llc udc:l‘x s to more m. Iorhvade an uid conbar 1y fopln® ‘* ti and Cuhlï¬.“lll.l‘. Feb. 16. ~â€"Ewald â€" and Frank w wlkd, PNIIL Somerland and ‘Thomas Schuitz, four men who waylaid~ and murdered â€" Fred Gultz, a market gordner, were hangâ€" «d this morning m the county. . jail. rllwfl. ‘ M‘Tmm_ ngs, alâ€" under sentence to die toâ€"day, arguâ€" ad betore Judge Landis that in com victing ':tll by fingerprints h‘ was C Pn cgnn roveuge" "witl ve heiigee: . ths enn W afternoon. p "ay, n K entvoky who Arod »rnot Gor i A DMFT HELI "W".l;.-:l‘dfl."hma Ruml m':mu my acks.. Even that was heroic MURDERERS PAY PENALTY Tmse in ï¬â€œw in the dark and If‘y was . toc «ENA, Atk.â€"Fataily wounded =~| with / a hmaL‘m\o- i Gilbert, who came from 1900 of Nanne!l dampened â€" with Ellh'n Linkment :l b:u( m._fl_ â€" troubled . « with moof d, so tor ratl oo white, he. thought, an« deous vision came to him 0 tace. might .be when he nex (To beContinued) @ectared he was the shot that ki bel, of <Kentueky . Gilbert â€" sa em ber CHAPTER XIX. MURDER OF GORBBE! looking down at white andâ€"calum w in Kantucky foud et arranged ir long after any harm happen to fgas the will t Gar d Ir th wicat ake ‘my | mhat in jathe tds A¢ Whiio hn t :=|__ SIgK __ :;‘“‘:.: m-ï¬"’i?f" l'.‘!:-:"-tm» Sedentary: habits, lack of outdoor exercise, insufficient mastication â€" of food, constipation, .a torpid liver, worry and anxiety are the most comâ€" mon causes of stomach troubles. Corâ€" rect your habits and: take Chamberâ€" lain‘s Stomach : and Liver â€" Tablets and you will soon be well again. For sale by all dealers. J STRIKES DURING JANUARY According to the record maintained in the Department of Labor January was a â€"; {avorable month from _ the standpoint of industrial unrest, There were nine (@isputes in existence . but none of them were of serious .. conâ€" sequence. â€"About 1,100 employses and twenty firms aitogether were involved in these disputes. The loss in time was reckoned at about 13,000 â€" workâ€" ing days; this being less than _ halt the number ol working days lost from a like cause in January, 1911, and less than a third of the number â€" of days lost in the preceding _ month. The most important dispute was a cockout of plasterers at . Winnipeg, Man." Seven of the nine disputes. had heen settled, leaving only two â€" in oxistence at the end of the month, mamely, a strike of pulpmill * hands }at St. George, N. B., and ‘the lockâ€" out of plasterers at Winnipeg, Man., above mentioned The latter, howâ€" tqver. has since terminated. OTTAWA.â€"Immigrant settlers to the number 300,705 arrived in Canâ€" ada during the first ten months of the current fiscal year, April 1st _ to Februaryâ€" 1st. .Of this number,â€" 188,â€" 999 arrived at ocean ports and 111,â€" 706 from the United States. _ These figures show an increase of 15 per sent. as pared with those for the conesponm months of last. fiscal year. 6 y ‘LONDON.â€"George Austin, aged 40, for many years a resident of Detroit, was found frozen to death at his home at Shersbury Village, near Blenâ€" m. . He had lived alone since the death of his wife, some â€" months .and it is supposed he was takon * and was unable to help himsell. 300,705 IMMIGRANTS TO CANADA % IN A YEAR.: EGG FAMINE IN KINGSTON chree usounie oo.. uBWw toas. bul l ind )ms inl hes 1s the bane of so Ives 5@%@%3‘%&: uâ€"youre-nhld!flultom, ::hmr:uo {o mllorâ€:i†% fln i ront Ts oo â€"A trial, (It cured wany enses of female fis, such as inâ€" ue ind a -J.Ya- , It 'v, > Migav {< 7 nufferine e _ HEAD_ netmrm ty Em ithetes etgrrind byila Â¥ Piocham‘s mt and : it ~= me, â€"â€" Mns, Inhcirs, "Hexst Cuage, Olenford Added to the Long List due 4o This Famous Remedy. MORE . , PINKHAM â€"â€"~â€" CURES FROZXEN TO BEATH ACHE RE cured Uvaiafte tef gu.e-;ï¬"".' 14 Cliement & Telephone 581 m.% w;* Notary ney i7 PXdtOgnat‘s : Blook, . n Dr. William Geiger, > . s-r:u.n’nbwcx, #5=s Proxn® 143, Kina Sr., WaTERLOO, Honor G te of T. to Univerâ€" sity, 3“':?3:. Rideau 8t. Gonerel Soteay o diririces nan ie ol n 0 Ontario, N. :â€" Ni t calls answered 1e x tiounties of WATKRLOQ D. Satisfaction .l:o‘d oï¬.mls:: mhznlzlul-,-::‘:t: “’%l:::h at Wm. % legraph at Berlinwill 16 calve prompt attention Paone No. 134, ‘ting 4. Freanort frar YOur classes.ace‘now larger than ever before but ‘we have enlarged our quarters and we have room for a few more students. You may . anâ€" :r any time, .‘Wo have a -.t::‘ of rienced instructors Mth ‘best. _ Our .J: m-m.m week three : rg= cent â€" gP + informed â€" us that and avee Senoond Pet S 67e #8115 poramonth. ve hand i ?'ann:: Write tor our free catalogue no .. s <â€" BXA MeTachingy . , and fassil. ® s 03 *TA the second and toufl.h‘i,u., in Â¥ach month, 1 to 6 p.m, j Janzen‘s Hinck nasueey iuad . )8 ahuee Bothren, ittin over Knss en onl AYTON W, WELLS, ~| < . 0_ LD.8., D,D.8., Dentist, WaterlGo Hours 9 to 5. Fridays 0 to 18. > ~ |â€" After April lst will visit Kimir® the second and> fauccar® m t 9. RQGEL L D. s D. D. s, .o . D. 5.. _ Graduate N :14 Chicago College of Donial Surgaryome® Royal College of Dental Surgeons of Torr ate Juntal: OMs) in Flachae‘s Blook, Waterioo vuu....ueiuomlnud 3rd Friday in tha uid L figre 9 AMorekâ€" aoo Licentiate of the Royal Coj Megereain, o m Chambers, "King .B:‘unx 9 a, :.‘to 5 p. m. s German spoken. F G. HUGHES,. Dentist 0; EXPERIENCED VETERIN. ARY SURGRON Robt. Brickne!l PRIVATE FUNDs OrFIGE, murcar and Foundry »cmm.xu. Diseases ol the Ear, : :_Nose and Throat. King St. East. Central: Business Colloge Barrister, McBRI OK Dr. Lederman, D .-‘Dl_l. L, WIDEMAR ...m.i?'i.".",'""'ul- STRATPNRND oXT 1AIG B DR. J e _ Soheitor, ih“:' St. W« P rofnt on â€" 0 BLO0k, BITZER,. B. A Uddfellow‘s Blogk, ring 4..Â¥reeport, Ont Aucotionser Jacobe, : Ob Bt. ~West ick 8t., Berlin. Clement ilte Germen apggae wW. CLExu»y for . D. 8 #a Barlin aterloo Unt JGat y uate