B# EC â€" "No, by beaven, you don‘t, Combe! ?g:l for lr.hkolt to“ decids. You are master here. "hat say, } . WIl you shame :-c’glx mt not Tight? Cambe_went for me.: The trouble is my fault.i can neâ€" er ‘hold up my head again if you ‘t let me go." ~ C â€" There was such a genzine ring of entreaty in the young fellow‘s voice that Rolt, looking at him, wavered, % was said so quietly, that no one ‘of ‘the circumstances," would f that the rough and old rider was offering his life, the ab:.csfluh the Boss‘s eyes "'l'l;:n :t"kes: mifig,: Al, . and 1 * 9m akes are / Al, . ani play them." â€" . [ / % is â€" ®Pardon, sir, T think you forget," saidâ€" Anstruther, courteously, "the #takes are not.all yours. Voluntcers for & forlorn: hope should ‘be unmar ried men. The captain‘s duty is to by his ship to the Jast. Al and her me have had their turn."You will et me go." ~*Nor couldn‘t Iind hif wayif he did get: through. See here,â€" Rolt. ,It‘s Al or me for this job, and AJ‘s vlgumlrd, #o iIt‘s me," and Combe turned. to leave the room. \ ‘But Apstruthcr carzht him by the arm, £ w one thing as we car do." ~@Bboot The ‘womes, and ‘te fehtine. ;%;ï¬ â€œ,‘g:,‘v’wnmm nge of . the ssue plainâ€" 1 3 one. PS %,jfl-‘flomr‘ y one . . The Indians E here now, lrg’mu could get scourse to Body 1";'.':“"‘ ;’w‘hw' in the uhu-.{t ‘“ P . iss we cain‘ i Euarded."~ ve Yhe place. ud une nt a"time tit we: do get throoso, Jut‘e tilt we doâ€" s ‘ no one gets CWL then, E?wo‘d -_:1 as well take s tuora at. pray ing." o C%e “.':.iomt m was ° silence, 2y it to be ty ‘deydight\or at »_{;.'-z. .guess it don‘t make no odds," Al. ~"We should have Da! a show last night, but the Tog has I gone. ‘They won‘t do much attavk in broad daylight, our . peop‘e too straight, and the "Injuns know It, but m{u do. mighty little at nigh mrf uuh:m to man as goes. K have that roan rode for a‘lirst M*OT-' _ ‘"Nongcnse, hoy, you couldn‘t sit & horse now." ; n > . â€"He understood that, to a man like Anstruther, there mightâ€" be worse things than death. | _ â€"_ â€" _ â€" "Couldn‘t we settle it by drawing lots? ..“‘"" what they always do in + "If 1 agree to Mr. Fairclough‘s sugâ€" Westion," said, Rolt, seeing that the of the méeting was with the last , "It will only be on the standing that â€"all draw. J will ' t to go firstif you â€"wi } ‘Uktee to that. â€" Otherwide i go." . It was Fairclough who spoke, and in the impasse to which they. bad come â€" the â€" suggestion ~met »with some favor. . % # few minutes ComWe apd Anâ€" ; to argue with bim, but tâ€"going man in Briâ€" Bla ss a rule," Roltâ€"coulg be sutficiently resolute upan oceasion, someth in#8 U t no use argufybig," said AJ, Â¥ % to me we bad ought the by nows*He‘s that nltrzr.y that t everyâ€"one se was keeping Christmas.â€"he‘d p t in the day hauling gravel May as wall cut for the deal if he says so0." m settled it, and Rolt, tuyning t> » , asked him to get a pack of cards from Mrs, Rolt. __ When Afistruther had gone to ‘pet the cards, Rolt turned to Combe: ~‘"Is it any m keeping this" from * might nt 118 the lot should to‘ him. | else will, and I don‘t believe in ah onl te ane yuo ~ "Don‘t you worry . about "that c5‘t esnmseleent. . 6 er nor you think. "Let him be . ' h "a.hu ‘Q';;fï¬'o to :'r“el i Ju"flt-' tell the Jadies. . Ihcy the sort to holler," â€" _ .« _ mmumm. 1 kn hight come in." . _ 1 dn fall tha n Rolt herself who spo® wome in qulietly while ths 1 c with Kitty ‘by her +10 . young .beauty â€" was _ woels By the strain of the last c c eay nch things then, he mi ï¬b the contract t on _women. _A face is ‘ M"' which â€"a I-M 1 white: had ‘M'km Â¥ pmumm».r(m f ry, the dimple become st a ‘ % M‘.mg";‘m wqrz _ wistful shadow spo‘) ‘ of the ranch; in the other woâ€" atrain bhad only e 1850 ( Ting in ber t face, T the curve of Wer sweet and given depth to her. fearless the best nd s ons organs harmless, vegetable, 'l:vnyl > eRWective famnily remedy The World Knows Ralt laonked «t har‘anf in his ava« hope not ene had had time to nci COLILNY EP Exchwivel Au re oi mc ate Survice, Limited whict : night a" mile. the the win wij BYâ€"â€" 0T°S 1 .. "Of course.: : could do =!I deals, ce * She â€" had _cast>,, 3 on the ns stevioremant t ho n a tall, to mm c.l‘ ‘-m’ of W: s +," repiled A). With a great maile to sa#," h # £ ; his deep wrinkles, m breath he muttered: * "Holy smoke, ain‘t she a peach?* "Ace high*" "Ace it 18." , "Then I cut for my husband. Who ever cuts the lowest card makes the first attempt." For & moment Ber omn-hlu ieoâ€"ines ane nige "ouly Pabh of ht y 1e : â€" & & face which no va‘al eocuolâ€"gut.l they did, it was so slightly that n: one in the room could have sworn i« it, ‘and~if ~shbe sat downâ€" somewhat suddenly when she had turned up th knave of diamonds, she had reason enough to be tired, and the roomt was hot. At once Jim, Al, and. Anstruthe went to the table ::rflur. but Mrs Rolt held up her.b < £ His rule was justified, The ca d he chose had only one w it, but for a moment his face d. Then he smiled again. 3 "Ace low, you sa‘d,. Mrs. Roit?" "I thought that Jim Combe was s square player,"â€"she said, but there was no:censure.in her tones. "You know the. tule, Jim. â€" Stand back Your turn, Al." < * "Give me & little ‘un, ma‘am." She hesitated. <It is not: pleasan‘ to send an old friend to his death and the cards which had been cu were all high. "You want. me to cut for you, Al!‘ "If the Boss don‘t mind, ma‘am." . Roit nodded to her to humor the old man, but her hand shook as she turned up a five of spades, : "OR, Al, I‘m so sorry." f "Then you ain‘t got no call to te. It‘s what I asked for, ain‘t it, and ] mostly asks for what I want," and he swung : gaily. round on his heels to leave the room.. k _ _"Hold on, Al!" said a quiet voice & Mzclhow, "there is one more to .cnt vet." > :s o * oo k ie was the pride without.which love i * To kn whik wa r-l "be “%umhn& am out ting with the rest?" . ; "Of course.:: You could do nothing "In â€" order of precedence, please, gentJemen." . And then with a~ lit 1. curl about her lips: "Our guest comes tirst," and young . Fairelough came trom his corner with somewhat 0.e; done noncha.ance and turned a ca.d quickly. E4x BC n . No luck," be ‘said, as he turned uy # nine. uTi m â€"_"You_ don‘t know â€" yet, Mr. Fair clough," she said sweetly. : "The fore man next." .. __â€" ; f Jim Combe u’bolfllw & ,na.;:t. hlld a. queer sm over e He ummundm; pack of cards Is shot over a smooth surface it i not impossible ‘to guees where. th. low cards will be, the least paintec uffering the least resistance, and h picked his card carefully, â€" _ 5 ~ "**Taip‘t no <use, Mr. Anstruther You ain‘t fit to go, and there ain‘t any thing there no lower than a five." â€"‘"There Are three lower, Al. If you please, .Mrs. Rolt."~ . > ;. _â€"42° Mrs. Rolt looked up into the qulet siniling face, and saw a light in it which. she bad never seen before. I wasâ€"as if ‘Anstruther knew what lay in store for him, and the knowledge made him hold his head more proudly. "He is right, Al.‘ You pledged your selves that all should cut. Take your card, Frank," ow . As sho enoke Kitty Clifferd moved from her iriend‘s side uncertainly toâ€" wards Aunstruther, and then stood hesitatipg, her lips trembjing and her sweet eyes full of unshcd temrs, Bhe tricd to &nswer, but no sound eame from her parted lips, "Shall sheâ€"cut for you, Frank?" "WIll you, Miss Cilffordâ€"Kitty?" and he held out his hand to her, ~For a moment the boy and girl stood there hand ip band before that altar of chance, forgetful of the world and reckless of the betrayal of their seâ€" cret. . ‘"What is it, Kitty?.. Do you want to out for him?" It was a strange betrothal, but such it seemed to all who saw them. In: a silence which could be felt, the girl‘s white ha~d.bâ€"gan to move -«lï¬ ly over thc pack, touching a card and anotuer there, ts iL. afraid« to But the sight which met him there : Jim Combe, so that he strod ing with his boots stlll in h‘s thes, as Jim had pever dréa n<d pell mell in g â€"great h ep, 1 as he said ards, the f "boots enough ni ,‘ ‘alon, angd conats like blanketg at g potlatch." B he looked ‘he heard the horses ping in the kitchen, * m is he? 1 blanked if he !" he muttered, and without stop _ to think, he ranâ€"down into the en. iputher had gone, the 100 8 u{:'b.-ull ‘oleem'.bm tioor of it was covered with morntaing Ees quariers" Combe «aw Anstruthor Et cA § T O raaey "ap+ W roken Heythrop by reared and popped RJ ) WUU © «¥the & * Ho quietly wad Anst T m Qam t t € no one bad. any ides until they saw him from the windows, trotting quiet This may have been the idea which kept the Indians though that euldnrdlf‘hn Al‘s reading of the riddle, or the wan‘s thin nostrils would not have been working so nervously, and though such an atâ€" tire as Anstruther‘s would. have been in keeping with the traditions of old time Hudson Bay factors when golog to a solemn meeting, he carried no white flag or other wilfully â€" misleadâ€" ing emblem. i4 meares is a trifle pun Perhaps . he meant At I urubrmuutond*&- parade their good intentions. But he rode Ilrlllofl- Except for x:‘horl-h.lfl::‘ mem. he carâ€" Wg thig. fashion,â€" reâ€" straining ‘his ‘horse to the steadiest trot, he advancedâ€"with theâ€" utmost unâ€" concern to within fifty yards of the wondering Chilcotens,. without a shot fired. or a word spoken, whilst his friends watched him with their hearts in their mouths. "Give ‘em hell!: Oh, give ‘em hell!" screamed old Ai at the window, Josâ€" Ing all control of . himself, his face working with excitement.â€" "Didn‘t 1 say the colt was clar grit? â€" He‘s through .‘em,‘I tell you.â€" Missâ€" Kitty, look. Don‘t shut your eyes, lassie, Your man‘s clear through ‘em," And he vnzh. A beast co at you is the hardâ€" nt-ub:)hlt. A man in deadly earnest even -oet.nl when you :’tmo:m and s lating u; â€"â€" timing cedity bad Fidden right orer the oead est group of Chilcotens, khocking one Rholowne‘s head vice Ais riiingicrop Khelowna‘s head with his "ullchh.tty irhdl:.“ i pr bA‘l ":'nkl t " as it,onth.hl’lfl';‘m m.!'r lines, whilst they scrambled to their horses instead ofâ€"stopping to shoot. looked, and at any und st any «nd more merciful teartul leave taking hand to them, ho turned in B ‘e, and at a quiet trot rode t0« -smtholuiuhhllu:“t:o great horse reaching at showing plainly how good the turf felt under his feet after so many days on a boarded floor. 4 "Best let hhï¬vlflom hand now, Boss," Al, whose ~eyes were beginning to glitter with excite mentâ€"and understanding. . "He knows his long sult. ~None: of us do. . Maybe he‘s going to play‘ pesceâ€"maker," At fifty yardsâ€"from the Indian lines, m dozen voices challenged: him, but he rode on as if he had been dea!, withput haste as without pause. Then there was lclsls‘o: Winchesâ€" ter pumps, and a rifle went up to a rédskin‘s shoulder. â€" Before the butt touched flesh, in the last second of grace,. Anstruther spoke to his horse and touched him with : his spurs, so that the gallant beast .unused to sych treatment, sprang madly‘ forward on the instant, whilst its riderâ€"bent over its shoulder and rode it headlong into the volley which beiched out to mect they : "Great heavens! ‘The boy gone m;:cmdm "Oulo:m As. the othori'ab&oï¬':h went 0;3 his knees and laid & with more mmuu.mwmh Perhaps half a dozen Indians followâ€" g‘flnefly in Anstruther‘s foolste}s a pack of hnldg‘nnm" in view, m"tho main body of them, rnuul? quarry‘s mistaké, akirted, mak: ing for the mhn the road went through, to th they imagined ho must eventually come, if, he wacld gross the canyon. M glance his friends realized that his t ‘effort had. been wasted. : wot turning to his left and ..'& "Now get back, snd <don‘t pull mumé':aun;mf' P Another man might have struck match after matchâ€"and . trusted. to chance, but even m-“g was methâ€" odical, breaking the twigs +nd laying them. tn W bundirs, so th:':dvi::- the star :f‘ ".?1; appe grew 'lodï¬; y# the watchers could see fecding his fire and making .suré ~that the {ames had made good their ho‘ld. .'I" m 4 in‘ Jim looked at the old man / and "Me. can‘t do. it. No horse could." "He can. A buck couldn‘t. .A horse couldn‘t, â€" but he‘s a goin‘ to. Gr.gt Boott! . See that!" whuid have bad ‘a ciear, cnordy: a two hun::: yards‘ stirt, he was for Boda Creek as the en,;:E:z aae oi ons T oi Seliet dong wo such thing. can .. PFor halt a mile the going wu #oâ€":(. firm, grassâ€"covered cattle land, an qver this the red coat sailed, gof two lengths for cwmm-n‘ is pursuers... But T tor eral hmw the land was , and when. apoke, Anstry: {"»‘c“h‘ of the saddle and ran ie mo naderievat d mote ts a e pe dleen “:{tm and their horses â€" Onep through the Hitts hog, h# wans in u.? :.L‘“ u& unurghouny unti, . to those mn: Iy he seemed on the very brin the can yon, with the broken pine c cn bis ‘Then hbe shook his crammed <his hat on went at his death bia When it vrn:'_ov".il i hang in io o Shan T ih The hunger right one secon was more letly Bo far he had done well, but in a To fi icted death !o*url‘ in ‘thelir pi an a day e hunger of seeing; her rt‘â€.fl her 4 ed nd when Al, «h n ~churieb, w t 9 o‘ Nlee ow foxhunting," st into hysterioal lasghâ€" *‘That‘s what be‘s & sports ma is M Arl lid l > fl'gg It is not generally known that the ; Duke of Connaught _ displayed very , :T‘mldcnhl': p:}o‘wcu as & l!:"t l:: game ganda, After resigned the High â€"Commissionershi of the Mediterranean in 1909. He went to Mombasea in East Africs to Usands, â€" in a Auhting . wore onpler gan. n a hun tour, w :mlrgnh‘"u reeg "‘he.ilmv{ w o tra n over four hmm His Royal Highness made the biggest individual} \bag of the party . His bag consisted ; ; of one â€" elephant,â€"seven lions,â€" fAifteen | #hinoceroses,â€"four buffaloes, one cheeâ€".‘ tah, and. three hippopotami, bes‘des , thirtyâ€"three different species of ante lope. He can, therefore,. claim to !nyo been the first of his Royal line to have met the king of beasts fa:e to face and slain him. King luwltl.‘ it is tru>, when in India, nn“::tul tigers from a howdah on the af‘| !an elephant, and King George, whep ]ho was in India, shot, in the same‘ manner, as .a guest of one.of the In | {Ihn rajahs, ons . of . the nnrm- which are preserved with such care . in India by the rajahs for the.. apart | of lhgnlvol and â€" their . especially honored guests. But very different is the advancing on foot the lHionâ€"in fact, literally him in his den‘"â€"which is exactly what | the Duke did in Afrion, _ _ | Does the s:ory! want f‘n‘shing? Beâ€" fore AmtrnE'(r h% for a cou ple of hours, a large pors> of men came over a‘rise ‘m;tln'ed by the vision: Of â€"aâ€" mad m an riding acrors the n country in the uniform; of the N Hunt; mo:eâ€" over, the zrfnun‘t‘u‘ u-nd“’.gh: :: could barely. spea xéum.u: appeared % g from pain, ‘h“‘g. on was â€"no . trace of a woun §5 5 They brought him back with them to the ranch: from which, at tlulrm. proscn ‘tne â€" wniicotens . vanisheq | iÂ¥ the mists of morning, and. it‘ was Horseley, the leader of the posse, who, aâ€"monthâ€"later, taking to Jim 6omb3 over aâ€"pipe, said;â€" > "Like will to like, Jim. She‘d naver g-vo wade.&â€"wife for you, old chap. ou‘ll bare to plug aong same ss we all do ‘vntil you findâ€" another Mrs, Roitâ€"it ‘the world holds one." ws CNB Cf The Duke cf Connaught Has Bagged Some lluuflm Carter‘s Little Liver Pills, ABSOLUTE â€" . ie sdec tm CE "s .‘_‘.:u ':‘.' wofite 44â€" -1" > 7 1 5 Â¥ ds f & .{ U _ en was s ï¬'-‘ /4 m 4 . 4‘3;! ve "A p or in F a%_ Wes ‘can you ny good. " He sleo bdviged mee to weer rutter gloves and se frove wut lhre regbese P aet beackt _A s tin heipait Thei ie hafaed Trop: '.I.Iebot.h triblate ‘oti health to " yruitâ€"#â€"tiv :3. P rultâ€"a M0es (M . ; Rczema or Sdit “"“ ' Indigestion and Constipation, and tones up th ervous $3 xB . < "Pruitâ€"aâ€"timest" tonly medici in: the worl tuf&’:g::’sw- en valuable tomics,\and is the greatest of all bloodâ€"pufifying rem k i. â€" At ait degitiiied ho Padre: tives Limdied Oftema.. | Pn TE OURE S10K HEADACHE. A OGREAT HUNTER Must Bear Signature of See Pacâ€"Simile Wrapper Below. tl1es fOF SOCAR Creek Qenuine The End E.T‘“Ufll. ron constiPaTI0® on suoy se _ En REMAIRCE® ‘ivg muaa vam When people taik of the Peace River country they !deflt,pt- mous territory quite 16,000~ â€" sqitare miles. ~If you divided *A# "into mmnï¬om.flmrï¬-y is the _ Northwestern block. _ fancy were you to. view this country . froms a balloon 1t . would:â€"look something like a checker board, stretches _ of areas. . The woods ate â€" mostly . of aspen with some spruce and. indéed io einatm fon bat Siuies into * . the Péace River 1800 {set wide, is 600 feet to 700 feet below the general level of the country the : valley is 1} to 3â€"miles in â€" . The d:z tion of the country whidh is 2000 in â€" the mwwusruu falls Te fln uty mreee! farmd ate is _by no rd.. winters are colder than at Edmon and Calgary, but as spring ‘advances the temperature difflerence ~becomes less and from the tst of June to the end of September the avérage â€"tem; perature ‘is ~about the " same throughout the Province of Alberta and perhaps with the longer period of daily sunlight in the North, it is possible that the Peace River â€" may have the advantage over â€"southern districts as far as tho ripening _ of crops is concerned. ‘The whole region is likely to become ons of groat imâ€" portance as it will support a ‘large population. If instead of~ going to the ‘. Peace River from Athabasca %ln. we go down tu!"’ we be > en route to Canada‘s farthest _ Northâ€" land. The journey: from Athabasca ~Landâ€" ing to the Great McKenzie is not alâ€" together simple. ‘The first % is at present, by scow to Fort ur> ray, there being a series of rapids which will not allow of steamer naviâ€" gation, the scows drift most of ~ M way but the return journey 4s ouly ;owmplilhad by laborious â€" trackihg. % Fort McMurray m:- a . long stretch of river mavi by stean» to Lake Athabasca and thense < on: ward to Ford Smith :al.way; B# : tween Athabasta and Slave â€" Lakes, where rapids necessitate â€" a m and thï¬:nderb-nï¬c % s Slave Pikiâ€"ant dowe the Mekeinl io . e Arctic |Sea without change, > a ‘digtâ€" ance of 1300 â€" x ; from Regina to Liverpoot Â¥ia Hudâ€" ton: Sisit." aloie h is ht Aiter. touching: : on > the sical ehlmwhuc-udmz the unexplored portions of Eastern: Can« ada and the praities the speaker proâ€" cesded:â€" 4 d Arrived at. Athabaca Landing, â€" up the river is the way to. the ilt.t Peate River coukyé down the river is the routa 40 the. Great MacKenzie. We first take the Peace River route. «tudigd tation the sho maikets importa to Huds dist htke: band on Pieftnanty rapil. gï¬u‘it#_ Ms‘:& mm'u'&m. byh_xho‘m This same counâ€" try is toâ€"day the home ol tens of thousands of thriving ({armers> and wili without . douht become the chiet granary for the British L: Inâ€" so short â€"a period occurred this amazing change from the days of the Red River settiement to the preâ€" sent time that T can myself rememâ€" ber. at has been Ti in at Fg&m.u Fort. Simpâ€" m,mu-_-a;t-mv:n the Macâ€" Kenzie River country ever be . an agricultural mtry'h the _ boat To the east and morth of. . Slave 1 ase ho t shiket Eanase ie hos 3. momnt ha Tonaee xn "pe :::.:@:::z,xmmu- mm...,u..&.fl: will But what lies to the;.northward of the north branch of the Saskatcheâ€" wan? Since 1885 Edimonton has‘ been the chief gateway to the: north and the first lap ‘of the © journey â€" â€" was, until this year, by teamilg nitiety miles to : A thabasca~Landingâ€"now | a railway is: being built, «perhapsâ€" comâ€" pleted. #57 the Northwost â€" passago â€" impossible Only oncé haw a ship passed <~fron the Atlantic‘to the Pucific by | thi route. This wias the . Goa unde Capt. Amundson about six yearts ago @ nNOP CR Sflm, a m morien t mride ie m o mer onl it ‘nas coptoctt. * mt ie o on im on arviqultifel arsminoint â€"\ . teTR 16 C.~P. BR. ; pract Northets boundary t low vor hoa hed JOUt six years A§O. ict which _ includes t Seckatog of ‘ the â€" ‘Manitoba wo& & 6 but i Gecological Burâ€" is only 4125 miles To Liverpool â€" Â¥ia [: avi soll you looked . But the navigation ‘‘of** Mudson‘s fevk biom mifignted pieity tomotee a m.uflgd y | oee Taine toes en miteres d whose name ‘they entered in June 1610, but on account u tce did not get through. them the end of July. He then sailed gaily southward,‘ thinking be was ~ in the Pacific and â€" on the high road to China. . Of course, he was simply. sailing down into Jamesâ€" Bay .. and soon discovered his error. His : ship wintered at Chariton Island~ and he and his men spent a very uncomfortâ€" able winter, short of provisions. . In the spring they gailed north again, but ‘the villainous crew mutinied and sent Hudson and those loyal to him: adrift in a boat and he was never Heard of again~. The ship got safely back to England. ‘ .. Urged by the people:of our Wuiuu Provinces, the Dominion . Government., about 20 and 10 years ago sent exâ€"â€" peditions to the Straits and . Bay to . investigate conditions and report on _flaeh?thm the period of navigaâ€" | tion. The first expedition was quite " elaborate. A good Newfoundland sailâ€" ing vessel was secured and provision was made for establishing six _ staâ€"| tions along the shores of the Straits ) with observers to watch the ice, the : tides, the weather conditions, â€" and j anything else which might have _ a : bearing on the subject.. It was : my} good ‘fortune to be a member ar_' this expedition and â€"to spend a; ycar on the shores of the Straits umon,;’ the native Eskimo. ‘The ship visites the Straits in each of three qonsecuâ€" tive years ahd the observifg‘ stations | were maintained during two years. One of Mr. Stupart‘s> parties® who explored the North were greeted ~by the Eskimo‘s who informed their inâ€" terproter they were the. first. white men they had ever seen. Now because Hudson‘s Bay _ ships have rcarcely ever missed a season in ‘lï¬'::hx the Bay for nearly . 200 ygars, it does not necessarily. { that the istraits will bu a M*:: metcinl route. . The Hudson ‘~ Bay ships ouly ‘require six weeks whereas swch a short period of open . water would beâ€"uséless for commerce: . is Ahat there is not at theâ€" outside more than 8& months navigation, the middle of July to the end of October. Notwithstanding tne shortness of the poriod, I amâ€" a believer in the Kudâ€" won‘s Bay, now that the ~West is filing up so fast. The difficulties perâ€" haps are great, Hflyux can best appreciaté the tides, the storms and cold. T Upon the conciusion of his addtess, Messts. Herbert Johnston and W.J. Motz movedâ€"a hbearty vote ol thanks to the speaker. y sidered, namely, York Factory â€" and Churchillâ€"the former in Jatitute ~68, almost ‘the Arctic cu&..w Areâ€" tic Baffin Land on the north _ side and the barren lands ol â€" Northern Ungavya on the south. » With . Fox Channel bringing a. stream of Arctic mmomhumuunhm The substance of the reports â€" conâ€" taingd in. the Government blue books have hackaohe don‘t negiect it. "To ce c ~ Write ‘to Mrs. Pinkbham, at A Jcontinual backache hich â€" was «impt ‘ btan ,ï¬?,“,":i < 1 al‘s ‘3% omifie ) hy ie 2t 6 \ U Ti fcas® en mplete} Th ind puctne ns on ’S' 0¢ hï¬u lltll “'t n abmnes thiol dnng h d dheine n m o7 ; PF v‘“ M "" 9 DOTR †Cured by Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound THAT _ AWFUL BACKACHE t Te dine 249 Geuteak is wita every breath, makes VGGISTE M e <BLiomep 17e with â€" Areâ€" orth .. side Northern With â€" Fox Dr. William ‘Geiger, _ Stiassen‘s flu“'m.-" PHox® 143. K180 §r., wm_ Honor Graduite of Loconto Univer. sity,. Late of th: Rideau St. I lzvihl& ghtu:g, ugwï¬ 9 ydc‘.n. | m-’u‘- No'r::-mglnm Sintario, â€" Not: from the office, t, Arrigde" oc se e hldflorn{‘h&m::;d,m All +W veyancer, . Ki Sinafan h pril 1st will visit Ki -‘:&'5 ï¬nd fourth Friday month, 1:to 6 p.m, â€" ooBpap Toh ies Aibebutics c â€" ) Royal College of Dental Surgeons of Dontal OMedstr.PifES3C: "Borr, . W ‘ Visite St, Jacobe every ist and 3rd â€" Fr , the month: ‘Dentistry‘ practicod in â€" . nc crikccd" y‘ ircopat noacke For the uounties of W ATRRLOG and. OXFORD. â€" Satisfaction teed _ Address wmmnnm Pxisteee Daily Telegraph at Berlin to {h. daiias. s new Marzet, S B Chiceso Doleas avon is o oraduate EXPERIENCED vE~8RIN. ‘‘. ‘ ARY SURGron _ _ ~â€" Dr. Lederman, D. D. 8, ‘Licentints of the Royal (% & Dental &3â€â€˜ Ho ‘ go:.ie Websr Ch b.".*..uï¬â€™â€œ,.,"‘a..g + am k Berlin. _ Telephone 202, T (1LA YÂ¥Tox w. waer. [ 63 C L.0.8..D,D0.8., 1»'5%-:. Waterloo Honnfltof. Fridays 0 to 12. . C Jur classes are now larger than ever before but we have enlarged our quarters and we have room fer afew more students. You may em ter any time. . We have a staf of nine experienced instructors and our courses are the best. â€" Our graduâ€" ates succeed. â€"This week three ‘reâ€" cent graduates informed us that they have positions paying $64.875, râ€"a. Hvonks. ;: Specialty= = / _ â€" * Diseases of the Har Robt. Bricknel!l 'flo‘. No. ;"C. *ring 4..Freeport, Ont WI OBM : L, WIDEMAN Ba A. HILLIARD + Contral Business College Licensed _ Auctioneer Tister, Solici Maney to loan," CGore â€"â€"Pequegnat‘1 Block (SBuccssser to ( Professional . Reab® x S OM 6r or. lWing & Heoum DR. J. E. RATFIORD, 0 #: U a. to 5 m Gm-'-pot:. Tssuer of Marriage Licensee Ory m ri*:-‘: Se & Restorer for BITZER, B, A D ‘votary ~Public u:‘:;:' GG::Q. ‘â€" m is rederick 86., ntly. W ‘onrad Blizbr,j AT SE . Wesy /_D.8. Royal visit Elmira‘the og a. chimo idan. have thre: al, â€" Short W VveF J; Sinto Waterlo alcrion Uny 844 > 3 Berlin stt CS tex