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I .::: . - .0 - . � I . t 0 � ..A.- f" __ , - � - . -_ .. _ � . .- . .1 .. � 1 1 ... � ..? ! . . .21 - '14 - _-,. - ,�_. -�i-' I �,-,_ ­. . .� ­­ -11 ____ I....I.. - L. . / , ­ . . I .- � , I � . . , . . I - I- :44- -�;_�� I _.- . -- ----------..;-- . . . a , , �. . __ "" -;Er -V " .";41 , , np A . 1. � - : - r .I ,, . . . , .r - . . A, - ... � .- . . I � I - .". I _.; . .,, � j I . %r .. . 1.., . . .-- . I A . - ..- - - : .- - 06. , I , . . * : I- , � , W"�-` V� F+�r . � I %��. , , . 4 *- ­� .... -;;,-�. , - . . . .I � ...1_11�� . - 11 *. � �, .'- ..!, ,J, - - - - V.. , �,_ . -1 _q, � I 11ki- � .*.I , . � 6 :.,.,:.- 1, . I 1�: I .t , � It It , .Z_: * -, �*';,;--,;-,.,.:-,::- - - 4-'.,:.. 1 %.-, - � .: � �::;: _. -,. � . - .4 . . - - _4� ,-4�* ,- .- .:: ...r. , . ' FRIDAY . OCTOBER 14.7- 18980 --- _­ -�- -_: - I ._,� NOG� 5 >-.- -1 X . . . _ "" ­" . � 0 :. V &I,- -�. * .-. , 4 : .t " : . . PICKERINGi ONZ - �,� � . . . � � - . ., . - . � � __,4��,0,X�1. , I . , .;�4 4 -'a I.- . . �* .-*,*- ..,. - � I .:_�;..- .. . ,.. :.. . ­ ­.�11. . r..A .- - 1 4 ,4 . ,."I I --.A- __ 0 M,�; A ffil.- - - .q. I., 4�n-____ I , .-7�4�' 1� I - - - . . I I I . ',.I, 0 I . . ,. ...A, . � I -1 �. - � I _ :P . . . - -_ . - ;1 .4 1 - . . , .. . I , , � , . ... . . �, - 1 .4, '-.+'� .. .: -� 4 1 * . I . - - - V ,`* , - 1,, -� , , ,*at b*.1.I V- , 1. - . . . . I : � I . __ .�- '%'.- 1 .�� 1p 00i - �-�. .I. : ,f_.� , ­. , , ;,.!,.�:� I _:_.", ` WEST HILL. - , � ­ ' .. I - i . 44� �A . - '. '. -- � �": `1_� . �. ::...... ­-�'., � 1-i ­.­.., �� *,:, I .. -� -1,��-, OFfOWN'S OORNERS. - . � , . - .- . . I ­::_. . , , , , '. , .- � � ­ . "!!,_� .., -, - OUT AROUND Us .- 1 . .1 - - .: _1.1 _ __ _,� :.. .:. . . . 41-1 ­ - . _-J,i,� -1, , , , .:�: .__. ,.. . . .1 - - ,:,� . . ; I � - . , . 4. . - �A_�1917-- - - - .' ' i'lo' ' - I ..t, . .1. . :_�, ". ; � : - :6. .1 . ­. ,^. ,4?t-- '- . � 4 ' 14 A,. . 0 1 ,;­­ . ' 1. ­ I � __ . � . I I -ever - !i i, . ..r . VI 11_ .�A . A., . .� 0 - , '.1,^`�--- , 'i�- .: I .- 1 � - , � :, i,.-- -; ,i .. �. , - . I . Af�f_. - , c 1. . . 1 8 &I from otir hamlet , . * .- - I , " ,V. I: : - �t lz... . . - - . � attended Mark- Miss Abbie Trwin, of Mong*lia,#;as hew-, .V,�7% , - .4 .1 .; .-1. - . 0 , ._�,� .�I , - � __i . ... LATXST LOCAL RAPPRXING2 ImcoimilD gy bam fair last week and had a good time. with her mother last week. I � 0 . " . .- . A � ­?' - - __e__.________1�_- _. . ,;-. -�,1�11,w I� 111it-1 �_ _' � � , e,.'*y 96.1_ � I . . . . ; ,� Al. *0.- .. F . THS PRZ85 AND JOTTXD DOWN I - . k!, ,� � �, - , .-A,t"i'. I I;, - . 11­�-.A. AK , , '4 C� ,-1)4. . By OUX 4 private basket party was held at the There will be two services at the K . IV-, .. � allow of , ,. _. I : '�' ' J i"k ego. -�. ,".. . - . . ., M 0 Nldv4l 11 , OORRZBPGNDRN?16. . rftidenoo of John Heron, Cedar Lawn, on vern church on Sonday next. - - - L,4- ,Prfnftl Toronto, mew- � I ­ "Mr, . - I e_�� * '-- '4 -.a of -QPIl ph tang an(] surgeons of � .1 . "._ � ­ it . . . - , - . � - .. . I Monday last. A goodly number Jas. Kennedy, of Agincourt. �was tho � .. - . - .. -*.: " - I .wre:Audre . .. . I �'.-11 . .- of merry .4- d t ' "'�`*,N,.-� QuoVid., . , = - - Va residenes,-Pick- � , '. I .�: CLAR11061411 . '.­'-,,: z' ' I , --' were present and dedi- guest of Thomas Weir, on Sunday. 1_��., , e : " - -, � . �-:i-,: . , .�!.'' . . � :_J:; Z:;:�- -'�_ � C � ., . il. ;_---. . ce 'hours; m . !,.:_1, .11�� I __ - I ., .- � e . - - � , . I A- - . . �, '18 Dew harp in modern Andrew r. of Dunbartou; �J-,- 1 eki" t."- orning 7 to 10: I . ,i ated Mr. Heron' � A . .... ' j :. P. I : . , -.1 ;;WvV1knd,Cresk,, Tuesday and � ' d" Allisor. and siste .- - - _`41- . ,_.�jivaininit -to 4.' . . ,Dr. Brodie 'bas a new and ityliall nv- style. It is a Well built structure from were visiting,frien' ds here last week, , t�­ i I - .." . %_ .-14 .,".1'... 44". _ a �,from 2 1 1 er. ' . foundation to pinnacle and is said %,o be Birtbs-The wife of Jas. Stewart, of a. * Z.-_. _,_ky' N�__ - � ­ I I I wasp proof. I .�. . . . = - .. '.- - --r� . -, __ -7- .. In A Rev. Findlay visited The city on Mon- - , daughter on the 4th inst. All are a4 "IL , �"' *. � . 1%W - __­;�"*U�:.­- i�_. , C_1- .� 1. 1, . we ..r . - .. .; . ��.. Legal..._. I �1.` ..'�' . . day. . I - I . . .. Z 3 -1 "" as can be expected. .. . .. , -_`�,�.�:�.�. :If- I ,_..., . � .1 I - - -, ' I ­ '..,,I . . , .:, _ :,.:. . - . -- . . - - . .-t�' �­ - ` ­- ��. I.` Mr. Neabit, our.famo-a contract ' - . -1.f . ____ t :1., . � Mrs. Robert Saffleir is somewhat .� .s. -1 i''.1 Locust H'll. , ,� ... I . . . - - . . im �:_ 4-1.I - I . . ,� u or, will' - i 1� I�- � :-, . . 11 . : �. 1:, ­� have � J � - - . I - ­_ :� 11 . . ­­ - I I .. . .: .- . - �, " - I . i -- :, .- � the bridge to our south finished an(? . z---.-- ..' ,." - ­� -D-ENTONI DODS. & FORD, BkR �':l." --._az. , j:t:' , . I � proved in health . _k ii I --J.. I . 11 . . ­_ , , - �­­ .I I . M N. El - Reeoor is im'proviiig in b ' all complete this week. . -t � :1. , �_I..;_�.- �. RIST , � M re. WhittlPton, of Gooiwood, is re ' ealth. I �.-. ­_­ bawand Richinoond streeso, To- .. . ' Wbck, ' t :�' ", S-1 re. C. Ree ERS. SOLICITORS, ETC., Temple For t ' be re. � , i . i I . �.__ - - Bit.Ilding,Cor. loan G�6 6 S' 6., a .-.,.. : , this week with friends. 8or, we are pleased tO state, The general talk here is the Markhain ,"i *- * ._-'� i I -� � I I �. I I - ­.,� ror-to, At Claremont Tuesday. Man*yto :� . .�1� . � . . . , .,. I - . . -1. I is improving nicely. . Fair. The most of our boys took th , . ­ . . . :, � . ., I . Joshua Bundv ir, fitting,np big `ttle eir ` .1� � .. ir.-I . I �!� ".I . cft .. I 1. : on Mort--m9e. .. ,� ­ -. j. ;. !: i I f la�8ie, and I don't blame them. . I_- � .... . _. :;11::�� �_ _��" I, -paying i .� :�,,_', , . I � 0 U the . 25th of September, Mrs. F. E. � , . 1, FRANK DENTON, ANDREW DODS , I We & e . ' 1i '' ,, ,; � .._. . .1 for the stile on the 25th inia. I . - . ul­t. . and PRANK FORD. ­.o..q. �- ...i-.., . I � - . -1 . Reesor gave birth to a daughter. The Armedale :Bicycle *' * - I I 4 ___ -.------ � I . '. . ____ . �I ..__ -1--- I � : . . __ I %:. I.- . I , I 1 'b ' s : .:. I � I '' .. Illy �.. 1., * , * ,Club paesecT' - '.� .1­ � .4.., . . � 1. I...�,-I...",.. ., . . Will Milne and w i fe. of Toronto, were , 11 .. Miss Ramoden, of Mount Albert, spent through our town on Sunday, looking-. ' '' . J . . 14 . I .% . - 111. . . . - 7-- . , : " - : per � b. here over Sunday, with friends. (inite gay. Don't you ' ant an ' ' -.' I . . � Y. � � _ . 60to U i . I . .. .11 � E. .4 ... ILC 9 Sunday with her friend, Miss Ida Reesor. other Melia- , ,., � ­ _.,­ 1. - 11 -.1 , . w .. 1* 1_� J. �AREWELL, 0. C., BARRIS- ". --':1, . I I I I . 1. � :,-,.� ey,and County ' ' -`� Mrs. A. Booker. of Stouffville, is with Markham fair had attraction for every. ber boys ? . ­­ . . - � tj s, THR.Co-antv Crown Attorn : . ... - : . . �.� ' � 3�0 w� *is the time for.the fortheys to. dispose Mrs. F.jk;Prm:er for a short visit. . . 'body last week. Our public school child- A large number of our y.oung folk . . .�.� �_.''. ` souilitor. bourt Aouser.Whitbv. - 10-y . I 8- at- ��;� ,`­1. i. . of their stock. Charles flugher, and wife, of Toronto, Yen, under Sir. Johnst-Wo sp-pervision, tended the grand party at the residence -or .. .*, .� - _ .;_ - . � . :�_ __,'I � .. - . . . .;, . . . . . ­ ­ . .I X . � I . ­ ..--I.;. . .. , , -1 . carried off first prize for marching. Mr. Heron, on .%Jonda' -. .. , 11.1 , . . . i I ­ .r... . , were here over ,Sundav, nith frilenis. , We y evening, and reporlL. � : . .1 - � I 5., '; --j... , -t,,, '' I , I �: '. .. . .._. . . ­ ­, . , . :, 1 . .,I .. . I - .. - ,� __ . . , �, : 1.�. ­, �. _�..1" . 1,-'-� .i`: , . a gran �. I I w, - I . ., ? 1 . ,-.1 I' `"!� I Miss Watson. of Stratford- is hei e, T ,s ; :., ; `W' '& -McGILLIVRAT, BARRIS. ,::,!- '� 1 , r' . -1 I ust vxtend our congratulations. d time. ;. o1re,&c. Office opposite Post I ' 'A .I I . � ­­ D ars,Solicit I � ' ' I � %�_ � : 4 , %. . . I eo. C oice Family Patent . __-_;.11. I . . �.._. ' '' ' ��, 1.-,� OM06 Whitby,Ont- J13O.B&llDow,B.A.; Tb C Floni$4 00'per'bbl. callinig upon her iDuumerable frien'da. -__-0-.019"b" ___ , " I ,il . .1 . ---,-........---.,,...,,.,,,,,Ib.�* -- "- - ". . I I , - ,., , .1 I I . ,.�-' . . . , - . . , ",.,- , 0 1 "�, � r- . -Y,LL.B. Monev to Loan. By ' 1 "I­:.,:�� * , . � . '��_._­.. ,�; I I.. I . I-, . - .. - - � . , I - , ,L I I . :, - � ' 1 *7 ' ' '- I A.cGillivra Mrs. Dunham and Miss Phillips Kre .- !, . Kinsale. .,�:- ,."i.I . ,.�',.,'! �; I I , .:,�_. . - Bran 19.00, Shorts 112.00 per ton. ! I -a'!j"';�,_ . ��i .3 t ! _., . .-. � !� - `­- � s_ :. - - , ­ - . - I., . �L . . . L. ' ­�,'�­�,. ."..F ., � .". _�,�; . I .. ,. Green 'L , . :. t - --__-_-____V I ,.- �' L` . - I ,4:1- I i ; . 1 I ;I ­­ Riverj � , ., �- ­_ I.., 'r I � .�." ; 1p, :.. :�--:.-- .. .. __ . . . . . , � i. :,.I ­ ;- :. _:::, I - 11 - I—, ::. a I , " � ; ��,��� , , L I . I ' - - m _ L!: . I .. visiting I � _ I.. _ -L', , " ,_ , " j . � � I .L -­­. ,:". ____7_1 . :,;* . I I tit Peter Dikinorids for a few,days LLt ' .- . � . __ ' �' - L' -.L .. . .. I , , � .� . L a I _ � �. 1. �I. . .�o- ..,.:.:.. I . 1�.. _ vetertlwry- . . .S ! Albert Mantle's nuction sale talies 96-cral "" tended At. Rrown's-sale on the : Miss' Wilb6r visited Mrs. 'R. C' .;*Do' ' " 'L--_ ., _ I L I i- - '' . . - . I I . I . .. - :,!� . - front on Wednesday. . %fod jqtol I - . I - - . . . . 1. - . .%O.�.,�-_Z -�w��--- �_ -- �_ 1'� - ,_-_-�,_��--;,��_�'! PINK MILLS. place on Tuesday next. Don't forget the , L few days last week. - - I - . . I - - I . .,- L _-­ . I . Tile committees -in the E' League have I � . L� I I . - .� . . I� i . - . . .� _., . ..H 11.0prilu,VETERINARY 9UR-. - ' 41. . 1. date. .. ' S1 rs, J. B. Wilson is-spending a (ew davrol- � :. - ., M=w,a, ,."',., ' '. -,- . . .-­ - - .rio Vel . ' . I i ji, been struck and we I ward to a sue- in t1le City thig week. - . . �.. ". . 'IL' I _ We ar,6 ��only'-'t o a -) is - . ,­. . :t ., '. =IC '. )ok for . .! 'i . of the Onta ".I;. 1CM 1�_ . 0 it u to receive I I . - ' ' .. .- ,, Q.90N, Graduate . �: .. . cesoful year. I . M rs. V. You ' . _..- .. -1 .. - - !,"I , Toronto, regi ___ --.--- P .. . I pc entertained friends frons _�-. -, -''I, : � . . - � eirinary College stered member �7.,-:_., ___ news items for tll"'- C0lUWD8 at ODY ' Too strong election talk is pro-ressing Uxbridge sundav last. . I . - I . . I � - � ., -1.,: - I .:; of the Ontario Veterinary Modica' Associatiof - . . I .. " 4 . time I . '. ' ­--.. I_. 0 �.;, in some quar . � . . . � . ,,�-- -quarter miles - tere and wou' ld it notle wise Mr. and Mrs.4m. Burton had frienda. �'.' �' � . . , " officeand residenceone and one 1.01� a . � . _,:,, � :.,., . ph addres', ohn G,replg Rn 3 *E' W. Erami'assisted for to think twice ,Ispaking�' ? - froin the front Sunday last. .. . , .. � 1. .. nortii of Groon River. Telej)ra, Pieckerihg . College ! .1 * .. . ­ . . . . I - , - ,�, . .:�.� .,.- Locu�t Hill,Olit,'; p,0. aldreB8, Green� Riyef, - Vnionville baild' at Markham - fair- larst Alfred Halliday refereed the Gr�en Misa Liddell, 6f To'ronto, 'has been pay- � � * - ,;�, . _", Out, . . - ..-__ �____--k- Ir I . . ,. I . we6k- -�'._ .­ *1 ' � .� - ___ - .i Itiver-Balsam football game at former ing her sister, Mrs. J. B. Wil oil, a vi it. I " , ' ­ - : . . I .1 .. �­�1; ­ �_,:___-* -- .. . � . . !� ,� � , 1 . � � ,. ., ... - - -1 -____t___'______ _-1 - . . s 8 . ,� . _... . :,: .ward nud Cbar'IeFi Clark- of Toronto, place bn Saturday last. ., _:1 "_` ,.1. �':I— H( I - . - I . .. -I'� . 1.-1: . � - .. �i .1 . I I . [..:: '. �,-*_ :, , ;d'- - ". I - I . Migs M. Doteu has 6ecur(d a situatio" , ... ,- * . . I . � . . , ., I. .� � ' here over CqulldbY. Cal]iDR 131)013 Thedecision to place a furua,�n in the i-) the city and left for that poi L Tuefiday-. ..,"' - . � .. , . I .1,L"�.. . - - were . - . .­.- .. - .� _ � .- I 1. . I .,;. le rislllu` esday, friends, � - . .. - .1 . incoa (ff,(%rb6-- z'i�, - . - .::­�_ : I-1�,�: 'Fla! T er:m­b i9i church was reached, and on Monday work Thos. Llliq i . I _"U ___ a _­ ., - - - - A - - � ­'­­, � I . I . . .. ` ' ' 1_:l,,;::.I , ..�J-�_.". 118 negotiatiniv for tho BArton . I . . I I - � . '� � '.: 1". .. I ! .. was begun in earnest aud already it i I ari a d purpoiies Con]mencing opera-:,- " __* .. _1.I . I I ., I � . I � . ...�.­I �� � . . .. Mr. I'llhey a'rid dri" RI'ter, of Syracurze, s :' -n r, I L-' - Xf AS DU'I�N, Conveyrtneer, Com- '. I_ 1-1, . . - b j . 1 "� *..*.-- H 0 ..''. I .��J�--��. Si6pit. 7th) 1898,.-1'.1_.,: .*:�, .were here during the past week, with nearing Completion. I . tions at once.1 . . � .,.- . �_" . I . , . .1 . ,. - ':!...,.,.. " T inissioner for to-king Affidavits, 'etc., .,, I - ; :,. : , � . � . ­ . . ..,. .), '. . ��! il, � I ,: .I..-­� �- - ­ .�­ WY f'.... -­[." .------ I �,, �'.'- 11 'friends. ., .� ! __ 9-1111-4b."-*- , . .,q Mr. Rodd,, of Utica, ,and Miss Gertie.­ �.I .I . - I * �,'r ,cl%pemonx,ont. - ­�.! 1, . r. . . j , t, . , -�_' �.! . ..�.-i: . . !,�.- ,�:- .- lif ,_ . .1 1.­ ­ .. . I . I.- I _=�­_ ______ I �I ­. .� ! . . .­` .�, ;'.,, .1 !., .__!� � _ . . 1- ___ I _.- ____ . I . I, � . � .4 1. . � , Robert Barry, of Mariposa, is'bere'tbis ' I ;. I- ,,� � .; � , POtch, Of Witchurch foregathered * , - . 7. __ . 1�� _1 - . Base Line East_, :,_- . 1 �`. j _ - I I I 4_ n -ee a .- :: - . , - - ` at Mr.- ; 1� . . .-I... . - - of 16 W , � ,.,� ' , ; , aTrIRR,- Tuitio' f6r Fall Terim � k -1 � ; r .. � : Issner of:-�M a �i .­ . 3 - 7. 'j, . �. - - ..._�, ,,� . , 0. P. Ferrier's, last week. . ­., . � , - , .. i. :_ . . : Z . . . _ - ... . R. HbOVER, webk calling Upon his brother, John, and � 13. B , ember of Base . 9 and B Daten took 'or -t ".I, I __ . . ,- _� - :.11 Mestird. C. Youll -1 - I ;­". --.1. P. Licenses. ofnce at mill in day tiTne ind . . . . . . . . .. . . . .4 8 00 other friends. I I ,ranton is now a m � .�--,,%_-�`: , . Green RiVeT.013t. 421 V 1.,� - ­ ­ . i I 1.� ,_�_�1` .I.., atregiderceeatnigbt� -------- . .1.. Line Cycle Club. trip north on their bikes. and ClareiAo&. � _ '_1 , . - .1,;, ___ __ . . - .1 � _. - . . . .-, Collepiate, or Commercial... .. . . 1 6 00 - Thos. Pattela', 'accompanied, by his , The bridize over Duffirl'o -creek is now in "turned" in on his way back. .. :_ , . -:'I- .. i% Shorthand and Type-writiog. . 12 80 mother an(] Miss Ward, were at Picker- � - . � '' � .:,�: �� ;_.., sner of Marriw I - � . - I BUNTING, Is � . a safe condition to mse. Wm..R. Barton, one of our villag ' . -" .: ,__.. Z� Boog-keeping, Shorthand aDd e black--- . . :­­ . .� f Ontario. iUR 013 snuday.- .. - . �a.,__ �'. B, Lioeuses forthe County o oi- .; l . .j . -Typewriting .. .. . . . . . . . . .. ... .0. B Hartrick shipped load of apples Ar"'ths, is quitting,farming and will SaM. i V j , - ­ � -- . .- I� .". 16 00 I it 6 . '. C . . _��T-_� �_ , floe at the store or at his residence,Fickertng ,�,: --Mrs. Tubias C ster his b6en ill for a io tho North West oil ' atn ay. all his attention to the trade, .. . � 1. - .__ 91-7 _1 I Musib-Vocal or Piano. . . . .. .. 12 80 8 rd - � . ;­­ �. village. . ­ ' few days but we are plesiesd to learn tbgt E. Baleden having sold a nui Miss Bgrtba Hoover has returned from * - ,:;� ­ - % ------- . - - . - Draw ing-.(('b&rest)) . . � ... . . . . . . 6 40 I mber of hie ­ � , , . , �..,,_1;I...I . a A'Wc. .. -Painting- OjIs, Watercolors, or she has again recovered. - sheep, delivered the @ame at Balsam on tier trip to Jordan. Is does us good to_ . *.�,L . - ,0 I 4.1 HER, License - . . � I;" .1 HOMAS POUC . - 00 The hockey boys will bold a weetin Wednesday. abake hands ,.: I . . I ­­-, valijitor,ste.,for 19ast Tor and I on Chip& .. .. . . .-. . . . L . 9 9 with old friends and aw !._-,7: . �� .,'��.": k z.. - . .-� . - . __'. T f"oneor, - ... . ­ ­ 00 in Rsw@OD'S shop on Tuesday 0'reninic The Hartrick farm is now open to rent, their usual smile. . ­_ . I , I I 1�1,�:�_� � - Ontario. Swet :".� . I Private .. .. . . . . 8 . . . - , _,:�� RM whole of North And south ., ,.. : . . . .! - I .�. .­� .. ' or . , The well tinown millwright, Mr. :.. ' ' :_,:� ; � :. 11 �-ail orders by mail . , Elocution.. nsit at 8 o'clock. A good attendance is " they are going to Manitoba in the � :. .­ ­ I asbonvion given to .-I (Claw ... . ... .. .. 8 20 00�"_ , - . I ..%� .� . 0 F_qP . ; ' 3 . . .�. oll Moderate- At *wa TROS. I . .iDg, G. Hartrick having taken up land ney, is at pre�ii .��.1:10'1. .�. . . . dairod. . - spr ent looking through Messrs. - t` - �_ I - i � � Hoover & Soli's flotirion mills and mend- - ,'.' - ., . ..., �I .I . L . - � __�- I lu"Is admitted at #my tims during I thore. _ I --i _­' OR 0.Brougham Out, *. , . . '. . .At last tho 6040ring on the ifou bridge . ; -�'. .: ­ -L - - tarm ioes bemgcW , �-1. !.,.�,. I.,1�� - ­ � - IV ,i:A1!9"_Z�*-"., W trO "10 from has b"a rie*red. We to wore out spots. f 1. ­ . . . -�:7-" _- _ --_____EDA i �. ,�,f,.!! th! , ' I It has been in the feAhion this season iog a few ... .. . I " � .-. , ',D BR M. 404"Ou"114- , -� ' . .. I" th - - .*-, tble date'of Entrau66.- , a' lb# do big thrashing. Chapman Bros. threshied We,'noticed 'Wm. HutohinRs hs,vifig . 1, ,;..- . __ .� I D&vW1,b..,solicits 18184trOm bi"ja*werou . i i;-- I. delay W" ace"10004 ,th" , . . . ­. I ­ !,:. ., ,� ! ­ . � *"'. I .. . -triends both far and near. Wes of 1147,8�t 1 ____7___, -- - . tLAb Want Ot two hundred bushels of pa" on Monday eye muffled 8 ndxy last. He met .wit 0110; .. . .- . .- I - I I h woo'. .. . _. . ",'­.." ill I . F material. - , . - . . - I . -.1.1" tock and everything that is too be,sol ­. . . .. - �, _ ,. . -- . � 8 . - for G. Hadrick. in one hour and fifty accident whic m,ght have resulted in the � .. .__. , ­ . . __ 7 � . .­�­. I I��,i . � 1 . I - ' .,; I � . � , . - " " '' , , . .;-:_,...' bandled by the subscriber with th*ut3most Car 1 .." . .1, .I . � . . ., J. D. Fe�iygf�vl Airted it tinebop for minutw. , lose O bu I at writing the eight is ";.:,.-�'_ .- � .. .-I.-­, . - i 1, � ­_­" '_ � . �, ,� , �, 14, 4 � - - . f the eye, I—— . , = ­ I . !_"�� I I . T _ s, . ..1. , tb,g very beat advantage. _ ' . �� �4 -, -t Ure of VWavors, ovw Ju. - �", said to be all righ 1. .. . ... . !W_ .. �F. .1 � *...f*-__ - - _'. ... I L, - I . 19 -I ... I i * ' ' 4 : --,l ­ - . I . .i . A football match bet*4an ths Balgam * � 1. - - I . . an ," . - i -­ � - � _. I . 1, � r SROUGHAIIA. .��-._. I. I . I I ,-for sb* no"�, . .i .. 1 . Z ,�_ . 1� - AZ08TILL, AUCTIONEER, e - ,,, ,.,. �' --_1:,-, I '1� I..- , ��� - el . 1 - _� , - . I .. � Aill ... .�.­'.:' _ . __ __ - -0 � I - , . . 0' . .. , air ­ '� . -I,:". a �: and sold to - - .34 1 I '0�1� . - ___ ---- _____ -A . , I , V , P.. e hts fteur*4 a m " t . . .. - -0 a V d Green RiVer teams wag pI&Ved .. � 1;� 9 over - ... . . I . .. . - '. ___ , .. �� Bmar .� - lm.'_...�.�__ � . . - `f "Ad ' ­ be -1 %./ Fj,ONOilL I -IV . -4 .. ,- -WAlow.,lftdke, 61W-,��*66.06i*16 W. C. Waltbews au�a W1 a--L 0 0- daY last, h . There was some . . . . *0"friends botil 10 d uear7saiesl a f -­_ 1�-11 .- .1; . . V.Z:po*� ,U - " 1 t - g that i a to be;��] Will ­ both sides, and wbe� -1�__ -I-- . - ", tmost . , , V.-. 1 . .. '. ,1� .01 a haudsome bt. Bawinard dog to shure - callr paying Oil N N fatw stock.a";ri. .�,,1�a with the t .. .­ � � I for a few d Is. . time W C n .1 be llspii[lodi erfber . " ..4. - as Alled they were even up, neither ;,. ..I . .. � - 2� �. , � 41; WatClfil�b 8 10 his �Dye and sorrows. ' The animal is a f_-*I L a - a is with TorOutio team scoring. I . ...I. - . I , - I . . eare U-d sold to I'd verl bqt advelats,90. #Sly . : .!. . .� . . its Maud Stayeaso � ,: .t. : . � � . . : . - I . . __ . � - ... . __ - - - I . . ��L�.- . . % noble speriman of 1�iii race. friends for a f*w days. A happy event--A pretty wedding took : ' -;. , . ir ­ 1T 6e Ald. Deriallsou and some other T James Hubbard is i tnewhAt riflovered see at the r wid nee of A . 1�1. - . ' - -- I" - . . 0 --i A-P'�- B.BZATON,TOWtsuix CLE RX J&M.08 . gold ;tlleld'�-Auiel 6 . orouto 0 . pl ndrew RiRbar, .1 ' ' , , I . �- �F_��-��;_ Conve egant Designs. rapitalit�ts were here one dav recently. ialthouRl, r .­.. ..-.. I 'i , 71 D'* _yahcer, 6mmisilonO-for taking Newee't gild most El . . ,till unwell. uncle of the br de, on the seventh line, just . . . : I .. -L'. ,:.�j�., 4msvjtp, paiountant_yAe. Afforley to -)oan - plegotiatiuR fur the purchase of a suitable RA. Price has so -far rec'overed as to north of her,,. The contracting partiew -.,.' .:�. �.�. � A`7-i, on.fill I'M aty� W Tble,014. 27-Y - lace upon which to construct fish ponds. be able go resume , - . . - _;1 "09W . 1, !P .; . . I I��.. � - � J% .. . �4* : work. were Miss N !lsori and Mr. Brown, of .�. ­ . ;� - I -1 , . :4 P ____ 4 --IV-- - -- , Ed Evans' stream seemed to catch this" . I .. 'O--.-- " _'%1, __1e_ . .1 ­ ,� I L . � tw­! , ! . �11 i ` , ' * 'I@d Stouffville. Tr ­;, : . , .", I . G6 nflo'm' all 9, Size,..""" P ir Harold and ,John Steve]31011 Vill e knbt was tied by the resi- .11: �� � _. � ;�,�, - n it of Etiqland. " I .-i - fivocy, yet nothin ' 'definitely' was &rraDg- Oakville friends last week. dent minister of Whitevale. Miss Nellie * . i I . . I - 4" I I .,at u A L r . - ' .* - . ­_ ... -� * ,, _ .� . , - . .. I 11 : . 1; �,�i; Varrunted to Wear for 20 y . R _. - - �.1. i .:� ir ears ad. , _._ 7;:. . - 4f ..-. .- __ 9 _. .; I I Bartoij acted 'as bridesmaid and Wealey :.. . � . . I . .1. ., I...V Mrs. W. Coakwell had a young son on � ' ' I ' I . . . : I - I 1. st. George's Church, Pickering.' "' . real Waltham or Elgin Move. The remains Pipher, co6sin of the bride, acted as I ; "I . :,- � - - of the late Mrs. Gral)Lm Friday and both are doiDR well. . . �4. 'L � il;��.:, .. !: '. I - . . -:. . 7 ' ..I ; .,L- . IBERVICEP, . - ,�­ ,:; ment, $12.00. .; . McDonald were brought here on Monday Mr. Wilbur ani son have moved to groomsman. The happy couple left for _& ; 1: ,-.,- , I I , . � . " , -. � ft-ND1Y Morning Prayer __; --.�: I 9..V am. !..,;,.,ti� . "I '. 1, ,". ��.1�.-1...:I � '. "I., - ' , - - , .1 , , . !_I ,-A,�,_: - �_ I �I _; ::1_:i;..,1�,_i, ,i�, and interred. De"ased was in her 79th Wkitevale, where they will teside. short trip north, %fter which they will re- .--.:? �..­., . ,- I - 1_1.*_ Sunday School . �. . 2.30 P m , - .� !,�7:..;;-_ � ,. ,.. �,. ­ 4.1. � i 11. �I 'VeDing PraYfly - . , il ,"... . , . ":. .� -1 I ..... . ,_, -.7 1. F. I - � � . . - .. � � 5-v - * L'adies' Size*,,V.,I x,I, - - . ilexr, and was.ji retid#ot of out village ' Mrs. Linton, or., is ill at present..at eldo in Stouff ville, on,Stouff ville.street. . ' . . ;-I - - � Fnmiy-service and Bible Class - 11.00 ­.. -1- . *--j_' ._ '� nDtil five years.&Ro, when 6ho re i , . -,- _. . - �:� -- .... I, , m0v1Pd to the hotno of her son, Goo. D. Linton. ,' :. I .. - so .- - .. � I - . : ­_ - . I � .. , � . :.�.-- . .- �, . . - - I I . �.] . . _._1!.- �._l 1:1.. 1.�. .. :. .1 .�, . 1 . :., .- . .; �, __ ------- _ " - _... ' . I L� � ­ " � ;- - .r,, 4 ," - � ---.--___ -____ the city. and died there on Haturday. ' - �_ s - �` � !_1�I,. __� . , -- ,_ . - , . � .�­.. - - :­�-� � .. .� I I ­�I:,� Wa"anted to weLr for 10 y�earo Her husband has Mitia Ou'llick. of Clartmont, bas boen . r., ��': EK a :-, 'i ­� �- . -"' ­­ , ; ., . .. I . - � _, , _. . �.I....T. - . . . . . .�, I , - Iz. - _." - .�i _. ....I � ,%!:,"�! I -.�,r-, HIGHLAND ORE i . . . ­ .� I­ 15,;;,.-. . 1- I : . 'r. 1. ­ T - L:'-I :�;". 1: I C ,_ 7 j -11 � !T.:.-._ �'. .. -been dead for many with liar' friend, Mise Ewnia.Phill:ps, for ,'-'It - '�' ­,' ., � . I . . 1. :­ % ., . - ­ . . refu Waltbam- or Egin move- :: . . _ _1 -, �:. _V .�', :..," � :; ._, , .1 . -i � _ , . -%1.1� YeRre. I . Pearce Bros. have started the bric-k'w' ., . _. . 1. . . �.� .: M ,,-..-r�­ ... . .. t I r . ,- _-, I- reenm - - d 1� ",�: , -%.' ,4 I I I it few days. � . , , 1_' - I". I" ,�! '.- . ­ , i�'.�� . rk, . . ,,, �' . . .- �. M . . 0 _.�;,I .. * .q_� . �1- �.�-;' �.. 1.� . . ent, $10.00. . - . . Since Car item Ifiet - oeak litils . :: � . 4 - " . . . . I '_�:. * �, , , Eth0f, Enaerson 11ollby 'returned on Firijay of the addition to Rokbie Dixon's house. , ;::, p. . :.�� I ��*. � -1 . ;,. ,;; ­_�%..� : , : .-_ 1. ::. .1 � �'. , � , ,_ . : �, ;�, � ,;-­ -�.-_:� , ­ .:-: .. --1 .. __,_� . _1 - I These.casee are not of eboap ind n ity I . I - . I . :.. � ­. ..- _�. . 1;�: - I-I ' , , ­­ j May. only daughter of Mrs, James Forgia. from Manitoba, and is uch ploassid *Ith M r. McGinty has .put the finishing toaah - I :".�, �', .:` _ __." � r. . V, -_�:ii_i- -, - . . -"'. i ,- '. ..� .. ..z'..,, 4 - - M*1 Sk on Mr. John Morrish's (8r.) new house, by;s: e'.�_.­F,- .. .­­. "', , " -� " ., .11 _ ,., ,� �. I construction .made to the order of the Iled at the keftidence of her aunt, Mrs. the ap trance of thin out there. ',_.� � - . ; I I �:�,,�:, ... - % , ;.;". *. �.; ,-,,��-.- � - --ix..;. . erecting a dandy chimney. ;'.t�_ _,:.,. . : . - :�, ., :: .­ . ­I f � J. , I , .. ...: -1 �,_., _ _ I Burnett, of Brooklin. The aid event . _. . I ...'.�;�; ­.-_­�: -,� ... '.1 11- I ­. .,� . order of the general store. but are tbor- W. tearieton's driver an, aw%y on IM . ­ :�-i.-;_ : .- - . - ;::,-,-:,,� ""..- i , . . . - - ..I 1. _ : � I 1 4--,,.,*.­'�t. , - . - . The after math of the Nferriton -cyclone...-. . - .. I 11. ...:,�.r,�,"- � . . i, ....:. . ',� . . , I �­ �I ,, . -I I ouehly reliable in qnallty and the style . :. 1 r ,.. . ._:­':��j�I.:,.,--ii.l . . transp red on Thursday of last Wltek. and d:y while returning froin Pic a . - � .. . r, I ; ; ­ _ . - kering, i� reached here on Tuesday 1%st and no pe)r- �:7: - _.­ " -- ' 1-1. . .. . - . . - 1. v rems.ine w - -- _ - , Fdinilv 61 . _ ill ere interred at St. John's - . - - . : .-, .- - Flour $4-00 per b] - I and workmamsbip will suit tile wo*t it a resuillf WilliAm had to walk home. ,.'..' . . , � . ", . . . I I � . - :, T. J- * . . �;­ � I - , ­ , I., .� . - - :.� .. .: �. , -1. on Saturday. The bereaved %, son mourned its departure. __:, . I I - -13 ran, b I 0 00 per ton. - " ... _'�,.,L-__.�,-i:!� , I e'lac Dan Fenton tnet with a peculiar ac6 ". - . -1. ,...,--. Lintz and critical buyer and our own rewe"ry . ; . '. - �,�, - d�I,-IL'. � .�..I '. "!-. ­., , I Wfilten i motlier lihii inuch syllipathy in her @or Tommy.Maxwell is sheeting Billy Doh- � ..-_.: i:� � ..., -- '. . ;:�.-, -�:.1, � I I . �I .­ � . . ...�:­:_`. : ,,- -� - � �.�, . i warrialls goes u-Itb them, -, e ty'a hou.se with patent drop sheetiniz SUCJ._�r] ' '. -�� � ... , dout at, the spring creek bridge on Thurs r , , n.1.-j". ...1-'i':'...�:- I .. - - . ,. 1. . z I � . ­ . . . ­� ­ : "I. b1lorte, $14.00 per to _. and truly Phe has knowm narrow. ,Jay ot last week. In some way lie f "- .-;.--� - ,. ­ ��.� ,�: 4-il.;.i . 1 -:, row. � ,.�,.,' - - �:.I _ . I ,.; . . ­ . . . - .1, ��--1 1. . .,,..! ,,,, '! -r- -1i . intends painting it with some loud color. :* I - -- __ - ... _� ' I The grape tiocial Monday evening in d brok�e three ribs, besides injuring . The fall wheat crops are so good here.�- ... ` .'�'..' ' . . . , .1 .._. ' � . .I .I I� '_.�..'_ - Wheat-, Oats ., .. 1 . ;_. an 1. ,. ��,­r Bul- ' '-And in i - - 1 :' _ h Rptist church was a huge success. rouscles of Ili,, &r, , -:, ... . . � - .. 0 Sm Barnard --- 7�:� �::�'. I �-� , �:-, t eB . that farmers are turning on their cattle to � . . ­ .'- -, 7 y G. 1; I � -. ! :� , . . . - m ' I ,1 ' � I.. - " . �Z� .�.I , - " . .. - ­ . . c .. I " . :. � . '. 1.­ ,I..., � , � �_ - 1v .1 _.�i.�; It:, I:— The fruit was delicious and tile prograin Mrs. Dunharn and Miss Phillips visij�ed pasture it off and keep it from growing ..::, - . - I..1. . � . .�:�, .,::., - ,.- - , x ! - _ . I . 1. I 1:A.. .. . :_ .� - ...'. - � . . I _ ._ I Jeweller, :' :, - I- r .1 too . . - _, I : . e- , .. . . . .: .."'i I" .... _ . . - - . . .�; - I ..!_ ROO . .. , ­ . .� . ��;',._;. , i ; , :-. '. J .'."_ Z . - .. �. L �: � . �. ­ - I! :: On friends near Claremont, last week, and ra idly.* � :'' ; ":­. - . I Peas Wanted d. We-mialit make a special trienji , " - . I. '. .. . �1 :1 :.- ...' . . I .-� ., �.� �. � 2 !. � , r'.".­�: - .. - . - I ­ . . I � ': ­; _: _1: . -1 r " � .. ;", '.I..r:V i ­... . - ` 9f the recitation of Effie Graham, while while there Urg. Durham was taken ill.' -e I'll, - ­ � - . I , ".. . .%. I �,. : ,;. :.,:.,. � I' '. '..�.,. , ,i ,: . 9 Williams, of Orillia High Sohool,i ' . - I� - 1..,_� . .i, . , I : W , . . : '. �. , , , .� I - : 1. -eta. �I: . -, ,. .�: 11 r. . L .­ . . 0 - Marl . . . ,. . , Mildred Forsythia efforts were appreciat. .. :�_ - . f3de brie twood , . ' ' � .. 5 f,;i_ _! t . _ _ I . bitby' _ ,: . I''. . .I . I .. - I , . 0 recently burned, in the guest of -- ' : - _: . - I :. !-::: , and there remains unable to rVach he which was -r - � : I :1 - ...,-:'. �. !, 1, z . ": ­ . ., .- . ej . . - 1. .. I ,. . � . :-- ..1. : . � � , . * - � .. ..I - L . _ - i . :'., 11, � . I _L�.: '�- . .. . I , - ".. _ ,,­ �r . -, I . , . � I - .I .. ., . e Sanders. She will '� ' -�"': . *� -1 ...- � I .. . , . � ­-, - ;-. __. � . . I I I—, !-. .., I - . . 1.1-".1, 0. 9 " , -,j -j.- , � . days. - ­ 1. � - . . ­ ., .. . . . I !� . .e.. I - .�. -, I- ­ I : ;, 7*i� . .... ...- 4:1'. - � _., 1 . I 11 � V ,. . 1 , ;-.�. . ... ,;,�.. iment for he father's cornet 8010, recovery. .. - " ­ � ��;�­- _. . '.," . �i-; : I. 1: . . compho r :�s .�. :_ �,�_ F ;; -Gre' en" 4�,�. , : 1 . I ' ed. Miiie Laura Evans played the sic. hotne here. We all wish for bar. speedy" her sister, Mrs. Claud * : I . . .�; � _� .. " � . _L, resume duty in a few- - - '1�'..­I ; -1�. . 111 i i. . , -,I , �L ..; . ,� ': j . . _ - - ,:,% .,- ­t. r" . - �_ _ __ .� ­, I" i. . � - lj�ll �1 . 1� , : . - . ! __ _.1 - � ­ South Ontario politics pervades --our, .' �� ;;­ - - ­ I . , .. I . -.111 ,� L, , - I . �­ ::.I,�. . � �,�: .,.��-, .­ . I. - .1 1. .; I .I . i '177. I �, � L while Florence Ward acted �n like C&pa. .­� I _1 ., I . - . _ - - . I - . . . ! , I . � ._ � . !� , '.. . - _:_dw- .,;, ­ .. .... , - ... -1 . . I :L , i-. _�I __ , � . . L_, -� .- . .. _. .1 . I . - . I I . - . . . I .. %1- - ­ .. . . . I -�.,. -..-,- _ . � � community to a certain extent. We trust '�- . ::t, - . _. -�_ �,- - � . . ; . 1! '.i ­ ;1 I.- city for A. Pugh. The others who took :1.;1.1 . j� . . . .. __�� . . .1 , �_, i., I �. - - - I , d 11 , ... I. .I .. , .. . - ..� - � :1' . / i ,.. � '�' . '­; � ; . - .,::%_.;-_1�:_�.�-, . . - I - - , - . .1 . �_ s.�J' East Toronto.- " ' :1 ' '" that the 27th will deoide honestly who will .. - . . .��_I � I , ::.: �-; �,,� :., i J.t_ -. .� :,1. . . I'':,��1�i!_ .r. -;. . . . . !�i . � .11 ;­ - - . . , � .- .; . -� . .. . , I .11 - - - .. . art are already known to (&me. The, : ':I-;.� .1 . _j . . . :-I 1, . . .. . 1. �'_ : .": a . Ifenry Savage�.-:* , I .., ; � : I ­ ?. . I .... p . , , , .,._��I, I_, � I !,- I . "I'.. !..; . k''i I 1'. �� .' I. L 1 I ".1i I . , : L_ s._.�` .1: ­ . . : :. :.,_�, .'��O. represent our neighbors in parliament. .. . r . I _. . - . . I � ­­ ! -, ., I . �10 ..� , �, "j. �. , ,� .... '-I ecelpto . . , . . .: I I : I. � F'. . - -1 - I ;i,%_.- . . � , ,-_�, . .1!.' � . , IL r of the evening were some #9. - I rl . . . . - L ', � ., ;.. I ­ %:�. " ­ . - ., - " . .. I., _1 - ; -.� .1 .. :, - .1.1 �1. -, - ­_!. . :"� _- - .- . q- - ,; 11­�-1: ' �*;I ,"., o . - � , t .t t. - jam*,q Ballie of 'the Norway'House w Miss Chapman was united .in the holy � - * ­ _j -­:, I I :, '_--­ 1 '. �. ... f, . . . ­ " ,. - , F � . ;'."I,!7 ;, - ::, . 1. I Ing 0 11pi a 1. � . I I i i., :i I ... ..: . ...,.- ont P. S. :,:I- :, . ..: �_ L * . . _� , i­j­ :.� ,�..''I.. . i I-.;1 -I axistrato Ormerod oil Monday for - , . I �:_­ I � w �Ud'8 ' o" -hand Bicycles for as e. I 1- I . . . a ., . . .. L ( UR *1 in Clarew I � :.-,��, L_..'Ne ec' in d I � , ;*,1'. . ; . . . ,X,1- . 1".- - .1 .. ..,:: S t a Ya d* f I before IN 060 bonds of matrimony last week to W. P. I I - I . ,�,. 1`__.: ;L`-1 ". .. ' !-:�. 1 �� ;L�-] f.)r A ust an 8eDtlember :- .' . , ,- " . I . :.-­.,. , �'L,'- . I .... '..-�.I ..- . I `L� ., !,_� '1� u ,�,I-,­ _.; . _1 ...": _�j�.. .1 . I I , L. ._, selling liquor d riug prohibited hours, and COwAu- W. P. was a lucky fellow to cap_� L. � ­ I .1� . 1, _. ! -1. --I. I I . �::,"!:� I I , i�__], `- I I � --1 ­ All kinds of repairs promptly at. !. ­ .j . .1'. �_,i I : "i ": Jr. 1, A-H Ilavward. G GibOon, C wes fined $30 and costs. . L::.; _-, , , , . :"..-: �.. e. .. "� ��_- L L:. ..;- ­..,.;� A.. " : ture such a prize and we wish them & .�"­' ­ . . � . ' 'L . ­ :s- _�;�' - �, L'..:. ­. - . . .1 . It . .. . . . 'L. - �­. ­ .. . A . . , �... ' _ . _,; I . "� .. ..I.. .I. 11 for 'Your ` - , , .. living happy future. �: . - , . . _. I . I . . �. . .2:_... , tended to. Shop and show- �. � - _ Fickling : - ;��. ` J-'. litisluell ; 13-13 McNab. R, Graham., A Robert McClure, ,a young man . ,_.­!" ­ .;. ". -.:�­ w.. ' , . . I .m w . - _., : :. _ L ", ' I I - '. - , � . I 1:: i- . . � � . . , - ,� ­ -King st., Pick,pring, .� . I . Leligott. Sr. 1, A-K Rustlell. Z Gibson, witil his paire Lyall-a'/eDu '.-*i .,; . .. �� L :1. . - , - - ",_ ,- - - o, -1 . L,:�!:i: 0 L'. ' - e, was Wm. 51orrish, our east end merchant, - . � � 10 : I L:" * I Oom -,....'I- . .I , Spices come t ilts on . �_:"� � . .. . . . . . ­ " _ .� . : I.. -1- , . I . ­.. - -i.-i. -.-­,� � . . :1,,;' A found. Part 2-M Forsythe. G Rus- vening whil b - - . - ;,` _,.:�, . - L e .'_ _. I.., �_', d 32-tf Ontario. - '1,.i%',.. ­ I.. P.4 t h e Pickeri ng I 1�j. �,�, I aeriously hurt on Saturday, c 0 Re made hia farm cottage look flue by th . . - _­ , - .i .. fl. . .I r- tiell, E. Tarr. J r. 2--.;hf Leggott. B Coop- returni from the city. -He was wheeling recent coat of paint. The main part or __ '�:, , _. -:-. I ­ I— �L"I 11* . ­ . .,� i�- �L�. I . * � I �__- ..''I 4. �z . I- "I � . , . , . L . . ..�.. I I ... ..�:-�j _ .__ .. , . ­�. ." � . , . ...�.'.-. :--I --- I - . I . . ___ � .:. ..­., _ -­­­ I L ,'.,.L Pharmacy. ,`�!L."' � T . . � .:11 . . � : : . . : . ­­ . ­ � . . I . - __:.:�__ .-, . or, E. Neal. Sr. 2-L Slack, J Farmer, up the wtogeton-road c'inder path, when he the house is parrot green and the 4 -, ,L:::I :..�;,.. - . . rim -. ,. I . I I . . I - . . .. ,-- ,."L I. .-'' �. I - . .... . i . - - . , ,.:I :i- ,��._.. , ,, itrene. '.� .1 �%­;,_L. I ,-" " .�, ­" ''i . . ' .L -. I ,� :: ': ��. into by.two scorchers going in in mings are ,D I . 1. I . I I I .­ : I ..t. .... . . . .1 . .I '. I 0 Coultis. Jr. 3-FEft8twood, LThom- was run " . I- L . , j a �i�.� I ,L �L� ' Dr. Frank L. Henu 1% - --��­ - ,--, � !_ . . _. ­­ *_ _. :,_� . We k: ' I A notice "To Let" adorns the front of . . .--. -: , '. . 9 .b.. �11 I..:rl :-- eep tb� best-c:�. U.� . son, T1. Gibson. Sr. 8-Lora Evans, opposite direction. and in fallinghurt his .--�- : , . � -L: I I . . . . 11 � - '_L� : .:�, - - ,, * I 1. . - - -�'..., I . � ­. .1 . I i __1 . L. , ; . L " - ,'�-,:.--.,.-,. .. .��J.' '.!-..L,. .�l-.-.,,.."",�';: , , ­,_.; :1 ..'� I_� and freshest In ' "I I .' , - Melville Gibson. Albert Banyard, Rate head ]Is was unconscious for some time, Archie Elliot's house, as Mr. Robert, L . . � 'L -1 ­ _ - . . I -. . . - L., �_ . . - ' - ; �� . .1 _ ,. .�. V li, h . ID6tist.­.' .! 1. ��..j',".,�­ . e - -�-; -, -", : : - ,1�*-_`­_­:: ,. '. I . �-; aged to get to his homie, and in Cowan intends removing to the farm ­ - , : , ­ . _. . . :.!� .%; :,.:..�: but man ­ .. �_, I .-'- ­_ .- .- ,, . . . . ­ : .. Ill town. .. Eastwood. Jr. 4-Sara Anderson, Eva - - .. .. . , . � � L .. . .1 - .. I . . .11 . -1 1� . ' ' . .� L :�L. ,� ,. I F '.� L I . , - , ­ : _4, __ -1 � . ' . I ��__ . . . I .. 1 .- :�," ; _ . _X �, I . , _ ,.�I . . . . ,:,;, .! purchased from A.'C. .1 �_ - , - - , �.�.; . . I L , - . ... . � .-:, . . �� ,�� ecently , '' , . I . - now under the care of Dr. Britton who which he r _ . ­ � . ,- tn ,.-.,-�L , . - - * ` . :,�_ .-,L,� �,�:�­­ - ...- I �._' � - . . `­ Gibb�us, Ruby Sharrard, Joe nicking* h . , . , � ­,� _ I ,�,� � - ,f i i., ." , �-J­ '. �, . ..* '.. . __ � _, , . _ : � .r . �;,-,-. . ,.�,. I- L�j, I - - .: 'L 6 to pull him through all right. Secor, at Bellamy. ­' ::� ,. - . . � .1. ' ; L'I 'ji";' ' :":� I r_ .1 : L'� L- 1, _ _ , .. . ., -_­ . , . 1- .-. I -services can procure �� . ,, . - "'!_ %... . " .1 11 I .. I -- oito#a- Sr. 4-Zella Evans,. Wesley Ofe' Thos. Law, our east and blacksmith, iig . .'- - : - .. . - ' ' �, . Those ,wishing my ... , _ '. , i _.I,� - -t. ii, b -_: , ,.- i, �i r,' " .. _ I ­_!:,�_." ,�­ � 1�, . " Dan Collins was up before G. W. Orme - . � . . -1. � .I..''...."._.. I , .,�� : .L_ , L _­ . _ ­ I , . . !I. . I.. t�. ­ `:j-1 � Gero*, John Caster . � ` _ ". " - , I � , ­ .I�,,`,, , '. I I i . . :.� ,1' , . ­ .1 � I , ,!:.,.,.�. . I 1. , �. � ­, ". 1%, y 5- rod, J. P., ort Monday afternoon, charged progressing favorably, yet he is still , '' _.-.­,�­ -- them at the Gordon House, Pickering, _ �� 1,114.[ ,�t': . �­ , - I " ,!:.-I : . , , �ar Graham. - -I . �­­-I . ..: ­�. , .:�.: - ­ , -- " .. ., _' . . .. I Mitchell, L.vina Sbarrard, Evi xioating. liquor upon the thought to be carrying a piece of cold steel� �' . I 11 . ;4 .�, L ' ':. il , - , 11; .. � . AgRie � '.. � -1 -1 h. I ,,�__ . . Vw, ''L�!, I.;I . ''.�'. . 1: I i a with sefliug into �:' - I - . . ;L". t . L . . 4 . .: i. the�first Tuesday in each mont .1 . 1:��I, '. 1 -(.1�, . Gregw, Frank Brodie. Average attend- in his stomach, although considerable pro : :-: - - - . , ,_ I , I ; , ,, I ! .. --1. , .:, � Z.� " 1:- �. . , � . ," . r . .1.1 , - , "1.�, 1, . , I I . L . :i - . -�� L I . I i .. :. .. . ,:ji�-_`,., , 11,","'; _; * '. . ,Markharn Fair grounds l"t we Con. . . � � .­ - '� ; . I - - -, - - . . I , . . - .- . . . - _..; 1 .- . ­ ' �­ �_. - ;. I- - - . . I:- ;I I 'I, , 1� . .. 1� * ;­''." &nee 95. I ._ . I . - .. i i* 4 1_ .;, , , .1j� * - _. . . . "" ", __ , ­ I - . I , . ..�_ � . 14 �, I " . L; .. 'i. . ,!i . -�� . L , ­ ­�� - I ., I .. i, � T� I V . 00 � . � �''.., .:- . . .. -­"601� -I . . L' .L - I ' S­ , -",_:`­ � ' 1!' ' " " siderable evidence was taken, and e case spec o� . ..,-'.L. -- �_:, �­' _ - I I . . I -, � ;;! . ' :.:, � . : N tiug and mining was done.to discover- ''.:�L : . ­ ,' I - -, L ___ ��i � . . . � . 1. . - ��_ I .. , �'­.�'..L - -1 I I . :,� .:,:1;:1.; was adjourned until next Thursday. The the precious metal. _. I - .. � .- . . . - ­ ­ - I I . . - t:_ *1_ -�: . � I.:. I . - .:��:, ;, '_L t.. . .., . _. ,. I . � . - %. . I- 11opki ts' %;: V. SO) . ,. __ _. _ �,� Fa.'rport. .,:L-. _- c arges -Albert Robson and C. mber of our villagers attended' . ­,� V . s V: W - .­ .1. 1: �, .. ._' ,L�,,, -_ �I . 1 L .I �',�-�_ h againist Quite a no _.� . . .. L� !, , ..� I . . -1. - . ." , I.. . i:1 i".1 -_ :;;. L�I".. !��1� .;;.�,­ . 11 N e, ' -, Williams' ! " ,,, ` ­ . , 1:.I will be tried at the same time.' Markham fair on Thursday and Friday of. .. - ,.t;, .. . I � . . ­% . . ­ . .1: . Wilkins ' %­�: '. . . -1 :, _ . ,-,- , . - ­. .. I .. - � I � 'It ... ., . - . ! . ;- . , 1. Ora, 0 CO last week, and all claim .L... . - ': � . � is: � :� -.1 :. � . �­ - _6 ... . . ­, �. i Mini? into it to have ha.d &7 � ,. _- , I . I -.I.- , . - . . � . . . . I - a elevator In The Public School Board met Monday ,.,.:, .­ ' - � . LL .. -�. .:. s__ , , . ,. . .�� , !� - I ­­. I .1�" - as L.,� ' : . - ,_ -- ._­ - . ". �, 1, .i, . larive quantities. night, and, after passing &'number of ac. Rrand time. Wm. Treadway, sr., w _. ­ " : ��. . , -F." � r I � I,— :_ * � - 1 '..", t !-� - 1 L * .. . I ! .�o;�:. - .-.. 1_� " ,:. :1 -' "' � . ''Ill', �1. - I � " er, - ;i� ". . ,: .r:_:�.. - , �j' .. � .. ­ �, I _ _. :j . : �: ... .!­ I. � -.1 . . . L , . %, I ,­ . _ __ . : . :1 . . . ... ­ , .1 I . , ­_ .. Who is going ,to be light-house kee r counts, the resignation of Miss McEacbren among the party-and acted in the capacity L _-A- � . . . I .1 , . - . . -:.�� � .., . ­ , . ; I "L. . 11 . - I .,�.­` . , . ..: . . .1 .:: il� pe - .; - ­­ , . ­ . . , , - -- - �__' . ' i� -11. .7. I . . �.. " A,..- here? That questi,)n remains sti un - _:.L. L ��, ,,�:_,, ­" .-,,1,�.i , ,".*," - ' ­ * ... . I%'� �, - � L j . :. _.�� , i ,-: ._L 1. L.. ,-.-": .. __ I ;!i_�L,_.-a - I .�, --/1 ", ;1. � v I �,:. . - .. .''. I .. . .-....-.-�... ....I - . . . . .. L . . I , . I - ' ­ , �.' 11 weareed andaccepted. The boardthen of judge in the sheep departinent - 1: ) , ,,; :. .:.�:L �..._ _ . - *,�­. ' . �.. - L. : � '. , .1 ".1 _ . . _ _1. . I I answered, .1 �, L I IL - .1. i _. . . . 1. ff';0S, ate losses of the Centennial ohuroh� . .. . . ­'.__,�; _ .. I . _�l decided to engage Miss Trebeloock for the Thel ­ '� . - - .. �, ­ .�%­I 1 . ! I . - I �: . , ..., I � - I. -1 . L �. ­ . . jj ..:. I— I . I - , 1- I _ - .. . ....:- . It A party of sports are camped here 'and balance cf this year. The principal re- choir will be seriously felt unless a replea- � I I -..-. - I .. � __ I. , . .�. I..­ . , . �. '. - . b ..1. ­ r . . ��. �. � _-:1.__,- I I a. . '. '. . .1 I .,-: ". - -f. .: -- �L-,.. - I \ � , FV`d:... are on the lookout for duck. They have ports 283 names on' the register, with soa ishing takes place pretty soon. The boys - �_..:.--_ � �Z-.::. . - .ei, .1 . '. I/ I . ..�. . . . . . :, .'. . I ....I . I � I . z1_.-.: I - .-I... captured a goodly number. � verage attendance for September of 234. will soon have, to stop running here and 1 .�_ �,__., � . - . - L; , oe, . .. - & I d.-I _� - .. . . I. � .-- _:"� _:'..'. , -r I ­;.­.I .�j';�, Oil Sept. 30tb, Mrs. Wm- O'Brien pre- ITne South York Teachers' Association taking off our girls. The next thing we ...- .- ­ . . . " ­_ ­,IL".1" I I .I" 1. � :t:, ._...!-� ' .�', ' :. __-:��,� '_ ,_ . ..."I. %3. . _; _.: ..L1 %:.L _. I I I - I L, . . � I 0 4_1 sented her husband with a daughter. will meet in convention in East Toronto know they will be taking our.organist .­-< '. . . � L , � _ �_. . I t ;j-:;: ­­�_'.., _ I .1 . I ­. I r L ... - _:_ Z I I . - . , , . - 11 , . - . , - * i�,,,r,L'-�",'�:. .... . .. .],: O'Brien is the name that should have ap. on Friday and Saturday of tlds week. ---------0.0 .� - . ­ I I I" HEAD L � 4_ . . : I I .. . . " 1. , - . I-.:: . . . , * �, I _;, ­ ' .- - :1� . . I . 1 . - - _ L, . 1. . _� ­ ' ' ­ . 1; :1 �.; . . � .,- , ,�. . ­: . L I .:iq... 1. .,(. peared in last week's birth notice 1-he meeting will be held in the Y.,M. C. ' L'I .. . - ­ ;- . .. 1, - . - .;� *__i 1, . I., . :'r��._ . - . ., . . - � . �, , ; ,7�. .. . - . . .. 1. I . - - : In the free-for-all trot or pace*at Ux. ­ . .­ I : . � � �_,-L,' ,, , _ ' .i" _'. . � ..;, ­� I. , . �: . . . I�. �; -�, Captain-Baird seems to have been born A Hall, and will commence at 11 o'clock �-� L' - 'L I . _ .". ' I " - - ­ 1. .. ,:1 . ��. ` ' - . - . . _ .�L­i .A tl.Dentislt, Pickerittg. L' L� ' - F I ­ b nor's "Deacon" ' -1 . � . 'j. _. , L C I �.­ L... -.,,-., ... .,"�.. " . ;:.".; � 7�,� , . , under RD unlucky star. ridge Fair, Nelson Con ­ . � '. 'L His schooner, each day. On Friday evening there will ., ...,,L ,,­, � - . I I L:�.� �q_'.-j- :,_..Z:- -.,. ­ . -i,I, , ;, .. , _ . I Emmorv, was diernasted during Tuesday's be a public meeting held, ,% F; . I . ­_ � -%.:�,� a . S, ��`...... 'I- -'- �i. . C Ila by day and night promptly attend- _!j' _ "" 'L , t which M r. captured first money quite easily. . - , . . L ­ w , !; , - I�.s.�. ad to. General blacksmitbing. Lame and 1 . 0 41 Ming Ma hine blow o# our harbor, and ft tug has been Yeigh will deliver a lecture, taking for his Abram Piper, of Ringwood. Was seri-_ �.�. ,.;:_�...-.I . - _ ' - I . ' ' " ­ - _ : .,. ". - I � : . I"S." ,ialty. Also agent for - L 1; �. I.,i . - Land% and Letters," ously injured by hio 'being n down by -_ �.�_,. .I di d feet IL Fps, � I sent to tow her to the city. He had much subject "Britain's ru .. L, - �L.;;'. . aws. Now -��'. I - -� .;;..: . . I I MclAugbfin Carriage Co., Osh .i . ,bad luck with the snow-bird a tow months illustrated by stereoptiolon view Igo a runaway hurse at Markham, driven by,-- * - , -, '. -, ..1. - , .,- � - 6 ; a - � . ..."-,- ,t. . -.�i , , , - , , "' , , I . �. . - , -,- r -, _�r_ , �F� ___ �.I� . - ` '' - I Nii 11 I ` 4-.. .1 I - K , I., -P-�10 �4�' 1 R N 9 - . ��.:­Ilw 'L. �� . 11 tock of cutters net to hajad. ; � .R. A. Fleinibg.- Markba"M. W. T"dings by M& 9dith Webb of Torvuto. two intoxicated meco ­ . .. � I I . . . __11.,-. . . I.. � - ..., ... �L.:, . ­ I . ,:..: .: ­. I ;. , .. .. 1 _;� :j:'' . .�L . !,f"L:, ­ L,:, . . . , -� ,:- . " 1; . ­ ;�, .�, - - ...I _ ­ - . I I � i� - . , -:.- -.-: , " . � I ...1; ­1 .1, -1 .I.- - ::.-1 1, 1. .L.:"' .1. ; ,;... ­ . - , '' I� '..". � . . I ; _- .,. -. 1\_:,�� I.. .1 , !_� _� .., . I �11 . ­ - 1. - _'Vj: :0 '. r_. ­­ . ."L'* ' . I . .I ..,-_' L, � .I - -:11 -- �;.: .� , ., , _ . , !, ., � , I - . - , .�_. . ­;� ; _, , ,.'_-: L'� I . 'J _,! _.­ I. . I. ; 1, .:I ­ . - - _ . �� � A , , - :1 L ,':�� ­:, "­ - . - ­ , _ . .,V ,- ,- ­­ -- 'Iii,� - _ - . ­L V_ . . e f., I I - .- -,.L- _ ,:L, _ . . . .:� �­­ , , ..,.. � . . - '- ' � .:�_':!'_ .- , �. ". - I.. I.: ,�! " 1, - . . . . I ....'. i 1.�,,�* �� � -, ­ � .. - 1 � __ , �.., ... � . . . L - . . L:.--I . :�!, ,� _. ­­" �-' ,.- . -:'f ., .- L I-,,,, ,�- . �- : ].�'L, �� ­� ." I �::;�; , "."'-�:"- _ ..- ..- . ., . . - ­� -;' . � . ,_-." ..__ .. ,�;, �-:.:.��_ , I - ��:'L,":k I � '. : , , ,-, ­. ;,. ��; .� ._�. ' . , !_, . _...," .� ::: .-1 . �, .1 . - ,. . ._ �­. .! � i:.- . - .1 - .I L ... . : - ,- - ; ,. � ., .: p- . '-­ 'L "- . , , . - ..''L.I - - L:� . I . %1 . _,..:,.'1 L:",j.- ,_ ­,_, J:L ,. ­ .; ,%�,�, : .. . - - L L ,.-,, , ,-: * - .L.1,11. .. t ,_.!.:�:� . 1 . ...j"Z .., ... . .�� ._t_ -i� - 'v ,-�: ' ',L. . '4- 1 _� I - - .. .:, , -. , , � ". ,, , I � ,� _�'i - .. ,�. _ - , ­ . I . ; -,�` -11 i '.. ..''- -;,��:!,�.,,' .;,,, , . . , I., ,, , - 1. , . 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L , - -:"-: r- ,:, . .- - .� . _ __ �� . - - �­ _�'.�'. , _ - :� I - �'... . .. .� ­ - ; .i ­_ , ,!iL , � . _ , , I y .1 . ,� * ... :�, : L. �_/ ..��.i I : .... -,:" ��'. _4 .� L.., ­sL_ �., .: I i ; .,L ,, -. , L' . , - � ,� 4 ,� 'L -;� -.�:­. , ,. .: � _��� - L . .1: ­_ �I. ;.. '.. � ,��i,''L ;,'­.­Z,:,:.' ­!'� ,_:;.1 . ' ''L, ,, ., L., �� � � ,i�. , :, ,. . . .1..- 4*1.. � - - .�:, r .. __', .!,:, . ., , �-.-. . , :, - - i . -- ,_ , � . ­ ,7L : ­ : . � �..�� ''. . �.�'_ ,�," - it_, -1 , ; , ,.. - -. ,L .., :-..',---:'� _ _ , _ �.:�__!:,_?...��,.__ ,. . - I L. , � I- T�,: - ' '. .,, . ._ .- . .. '��,` . � . � ��. - I. - . ,t - _ , ..... 11- , I �:, , �I. - . . . . . I., I., - . , .1, . . � ­ �;L. :,. , . !:I�:­! ,.' . . ­; -��, , � .�'�� .:_,�i,;� 1: I: ."'. . . , . 'L .1:,.;,�?;" � -r � I . - .1 � . _�.L��, � .L. !_.. . I - ­ , " . :�j " , L . - - ---_� .: ... - .t:.,,�"',�,� '4:",..L �- . �.-1 I d� . I , . . �, ., . . 1.11 ,. , j.. I.. 1.- 11 1, . ��4 ,Z' . I '. " .. . '. ' L . .­ -L.: , '... - -. .1 . - __ '- ' - ` I ,. �. ..: .:. - I il -': L' - I . - !;. . , �:.1,1 :;.4.:, . , ... , . - � � , _,. -� . . 1. L . - ., � I � . �3�:- . I - . , ­ �. - ". � : � . 1. . !. .,.., v - - ' � - , ,. . . . - . .3" 1� --::�:: I.-; .. .. '!:' - _:'.!� , I - . `.. � : -� , .. ;, ,: :1.: e�� ", iii - ;:., . . .'7 L I .1.�'�,: .-1: I , I s ,11­� :1 - I -: ,* ,. i_1 �. � -, - L I :;.. I L_ , -t- - . L_t-,. ��' - 1. _�� -. *1. -;-:: . , . ;..' I . !'��.�,.'__;�. ''L" .".i, I �. ;:4: ,. ', I'i." ..�". I­�;1 ... . . - I I I � I L . I I. " .I . .. _ L - �� , : . I � -�' .:�, , , . . J : . L - �. ,1..� ._. �, .� 4. : �:;..1";.,Ll - i - . ,.., . .--�,�� - it . . ,'.- L,�, ,, . .. ,':. I 1; i I .4.t : _-.. 4�� . - , �, L.� , � '. . ��, � -. --A . � I .: I , . . I � I � �'�, � �" ,, � . ; . .. _ �: ,.:�,:!:� ,L, I _ , - . .I-., .. :-. ._,_ . �, ­ , . , I , � ,I , ," ,1 , . L.: I :,:, .i t_L! i. L.,�. . : !�.. -".� �L�"*. � , I I L; .1: ,7, �, . - .. . -. I .. i ..� . ,.w . rl I .. . � ; . .� : .. . , I ­ . I ' ­ L . . - _ : I - _ . � 'cultural TAKE GOOD CARF. OF FARM TOOLS. I have always considered money In- vested in tools as much of a man's ac- tual capital as that . in live stock or .real estate, and the care of one as es- sential eta the care of the other, writes J. 1I. Bowerman. Upon many farms plows, harrows, reapers, etc., are left sten g in the field where used or in a yard uncovered, save perhaps by he rather leaky roof of a tree. un - cared for, only as nature covered earth with rust or mold.. And still the cry goes up from these same farmers of hard times; and so they will be next year harder than ever, when these tools are called into use and found broken, 'or worse, rotted and rusted out, .entailing delays for repairs when work is' pressing, or the :expense of new ones. The owner. J one farm I visited is considered a -scientific farmer. And se he is as far as preparing the soil, grow- ing. his crops, and carina for live stock is conoerned, but there it ends. I never saw cows slicker or better fed ti,ild housed; horses whose glossy coats. a'nd•'_tossing heads told plainer. _than words of plenty of oats arid care. Just -out in the yard: not astone's -throw from the warm stables, I saw three plow& two cultivators, springtooth har- row, hay rake, and as -the auctioneers say, "other articles too numerous to mention," without cover save the snow which was fast drifting over them, No lack of -storage room here, for there are unused sheds and Darns on t he farm, .enough to store five times the amount . It seemed, to me -there wa.s no excuse forsuch }egligence, . when an hour's work it/10111d have housed t ham all. :During the time of use many tools have l'b be left in t field exposed to sun and I','�yi'n fordays at a time, hut. wh€n -not insure they should .he Shel- tered. And later fe the season or dur- ing the winter each.tail-should he ex- amined, end put. in .ostler' -for t he cool- ing sltTing,- 'My plan•.ls as soon. as the. hurry of work is over in 'the.- fall, to insIwet f'ach, i'ool and if a plow or cul- tivator, to -scour the points, tighten the nuts, put- in.nesw bolts if ntscesaary, -and then with warm linseed oii.1)resh over the entire- implement, castings and woodwork. When springy ime conies t here is no guesswork about t he tools. They are areiready every time. A faanier can do much repairing himself if he tries, and with but feel --tit irks of choice stock of bolts- and screws should I,oe kept on band, and a -few slicks of choice 1 timber for emergencies. The butt of that young hickory or oak cut last winL r, had it i,taen put in. _. (acme dry, bia. would ha"ve been the thing `for some of our repairs and better- timber than Is often found at the shops. You wanted a short 'whiffletree fait year when you cultivated cern. Make one ...now end get it ironed while work is reopressing. Take it to t'he smith w'hen you take the teeth from spike-t(i)thed harrow to be sharpened. and do not put it off until ,Spring- t_me. - 1 do not hold myselfas a paragon In t he farm line. I kt'aow that this theme has been talked and written up- on ever since agricultural papers were prineed, so -mine is no -new idea. And yet one-half of our farrnerl3 "and those. even tivho r-'a.d "the papers" go on in - the same old way, storing -the.ir triols out of doors and paying for repairing enough to hire a pian to care for the tools. To say not hing of vexations delays' caused by the breakage of rot- ten woodwork and rusted "eastings. 1-MPWATI\(, PASTT'1tr , • If there is any one part of the firnt that is neglected it is the past ure` fields. . While t here niay lie Sortie. 111 t le excuse for this on large grain farms, it can hardly be overlooked on a dairy farm, where grass and green pasture are.the chief dependencies for success. The improvement of pa.stare fields is a crying need on many old places. As a rule the roughest .and most sterile fields are given over to.liastures, and It Is not giving a cow a fair show to make her pick up a living on land that would not produce anything else.. This is often the case, however, and then we blame the cow for not giving more milk. _ 1lalf the fault against our dairy cows can be traced to improper feeding. Because a cow has a large field or meadow to graze in it does not follow that she ought to give a" large flow of milk.. A much( entailer piece of land would produce much better re- sults if the pasture was rich and well cared for. , • It is all right to give _the caws for pasture the roughest Arid rockiest part of the farm, for naturally_ one does not select that portion for plowing under .crops. But it is the part of wisdom to bestow a little care upon such fields to improve them each year.. A few days' labor devoted to the pasture fields every s^kaon will surprise the owner- in the results five years later. First there ere rocks :and stones that can belgradually carried off the field and piled up. Clearing the pasture field in this leisurely way Will yield its reward some day when it is found desirable to cultivate the meadows or hillside for orchard or field crops. Along with this work should go that of-olearing the land of wild berry bush- es, brash, roots and weeds. The roots once taken up will kill :the hushes and trees for good, and so with the weeds. See that they- are rooted up, and not simply cut off. Noxious weeda i prevent 'grana,. plants from growing, and generally they harbor parasites and rusts of grain which may spread to the cultivated fields any day, and do a great amount of damage. This work of clearing the pastures of foreign growths is very important at this sea- son of the year when weeds are about ready to produce their seeds. One plant destroyed, -root and branch, now may 'prevent the growth of 50 next summer. So it is wise to' begin at once, for every year that the work is postponed the pasture field degener- ates much more. While engaged in this, work of de- struction it might be egall to recon- struct, too. Plant a few shade trees in the : most convenient place of the field, and' if necessary for their pro- tection ;fence them in until they attain a good growth. Years later they will be appreciated by both' man. and beast. When -t(he weeds are pretty well root- ed out, it will pay to sow the field in the fall with grass seed, spreading it thinlly around to reinforoe the old grass. STABLE FLOORS. The atter of stable floors (#dies not always i receive the attention from farmer -that it • ought to, and yet it must be said to their credit that eoine farmers are perfect cranks on the sub .- ,ject.., Board fibers I have no faith in whatever, days .a writer, and when Possible I would never allow a- horse to stand $6,11- one.;...:, Our plan has been to allow. the home) to stand right on the Birt wilth a sand subsoil—having two stalls, one for the night 'and one for the day—though I ani, aware of the fact that the urine be('orlles a totals waste, but as we, have no use for it at present this is .really a benefit. • Ily the use of- these stalls I find that a sound horse..,. travelling Iir•incipally on maca- damized roads, never be.come;i footsore; never bias a corn, and .such a 1 hing as ae fever in the foot is unknown. , :For all unsound horse; I found- that I he re- sults were -just; as goo(I. -A knee- ` sprung .('Olt that 1 at one. Hine owned was kept, in one of these stalls._ When she first, came to t he place; Mee was very weak forward, and after driving, her legs would *shakes quite a goal dell. It was not Long before -t his colt showed our. improvement, and %vbt'►t 1 parted with her after a year or ete•os no one could discern any weakness at all. and. she was, in. every way just as good as a. Sound buss•. Tct'edit all this to titans ing the horse on dirt. Hut for those oh the farm 1 his would not do, its 1l1e are in need of every bit of fertilizing are. they can get -hold of. Some have fa11e11 hack on cement. bottoms --keeping plenty of straw ill tliese as an - al►sorbei►t-and it is said i)' those that have placed these remenl floorings in their stables that., 1 hey %t-ork like a' charm. Cement costs quite a good deal'in itselr, and placing a, 1)01 t oto for • il. is also rt great cost : not only in material, but in labor( and by reasjon of 1 his there are a great' many who do not figure out that the realent.fl(x)rs more than pay for them selves in a .little while nu matter whet• the cont, and: by rea`:►uil • of this t hey'>, (1(4 riot have one. For such as these, I` %wr,,uld like tti tell of a little arti- cle- 1 r.: ad in t he Practical: Farmer of it ni:tn who. 1 1 vlio:ve,_ has solved 'i he prol,ler ,. though l hu\ee newer yet • put his two years awl a half in the King'i- 1iis suggestions to an actual test. This l t(m penitentiary. - • 01111 suggests :clay, and_ c•-laitos.that if • illi~ Excellency 1. he G.n•i rnoi-f iiitral 1lte,claj' is of a sisal.- stiff consistency (•has eousented to. receive a (-I10%welI it its in)ptrMsihhk tu.figd anything t.h:lr 'add'r'ess from the.cit y of Ott:t%%- • :►1 will sees t' as -well as a floor fura St i1- . date. prat' Ih;y in the last. week of th'- 11'., though the addition of a lilt le ra-'to' i'r, will be fixed for ••1111' 1►resenta- 1her fine - gravel .isi. a. big help., Ills lion.. iiirevl'tivlis are to have the Initilllre ontrial. '''revenue ''offirers- se1ied thoroughly (nixed, and then wet it to 1 Leas pa(:k Ig••.s of emery, (n rigar'(tes, iht:-•consisterccy • of t his mortar It rid x110 pounds of tottac'co,10 bot Iles of ram it Bowe into the floor ; eight•inches. {,ever, and 200 boil lea of ins; at the is ',non.) too thick. • Leet it stand until I. Chi nese store iIf Quoit(' \\'ah °Long. 1t ':I(e•gins• to *show little: cracks.'in the ; surface and then ,wit 11 it rano-nes made I -The .tw- ill lit the late Itubet•t 11,lnti'l- of jute end'of a st.ic•k of had w.oi', 1 with !"'n of Quei$•c (11 1'I4'•st of an estate of a hole in the upper end and a handle !over tw•o nwilo11 (1°1 nine. Walter Cassels of 'Toronto. a daughter, is left ME NM IN R NUTSHELL. THE VERY LATEST FROM ALL THE WORLD OVER. wee nter stteg Items About Our Own Country, Greet Britain. the United States, enc. All Parts of the Globe, Condenseefl awl Assorted tor Easy Reading. CANADA. -. Typhoid fever is prevalent through- out Manitoba. Brantford's flood prevention works = vi11 cost $10,000. Train robbers "held up" a Missouri Pacific express seven miles from Kan- sas City on friday night, and stole everything in the express cars cafes. The yellow fever outbreaks in Ken- tucky are not yet under control. To date, the total number of cases re- ported is 866. Eighteen deaths are re - parted. ' ,"President McKinley has sent a'')er- emptory message to the Cuban Com- mission that the Spanish evacuation of the island mltst be begun by October 15, and completed by December 31. ,i Captain Sam Beets, who is journeying around the world in a cane, has ar- rived at Toledo, Ohio, having covered fully 1718 miles otl the Great Lakes. Ile will now make his way down the Mis- sissippi. Charles Heeling, is tinder arrest at Newark, N. J. Ile is wanted in New York for fraud. --Be is sixty years olds and has made a living by'swindling wer- utiett. Ile Hays his wives would 'fill a trolley car and some would have to stand up. - Several Maniere in Eastern Arkan- sas, who mortgaged their crops in ord- er to obtain supplies for this year, have notified the holders of the inurtgeges' that, they will not have the cotton g11- t hared on account of the low price. Governor Brady, of Alaska, has just. returned to Skagway from a visit. to the Prihvloff Islands and of her •point 8. Ile says the Aleut ian Islands are ((Pe- t 1ned to become t he 'h 'rrie of count les►( herds of eiit.t.le_ and sheep. Ile found the seal herds dying off .rapidly. GENE ltAL. Cont intredl - riotti het ween Cuhnns end Spaniards ,are reported. from havenis The population of 1 he .Island of Cuba .a.ccording to 1he latest estimate is :115ge(N)0, of which3':0,01)() are whites.The'Transvaal press law, requii articles of a pe.rsontl and political na- 1 are to 1►e signed by 1110 re;t1 writer', Itis been proclaimed.... An agreement between ('Bili "rind Argentina to tiut,mit 1 lsal ntl:try disputes 1.et•iween the t ('(,untried. to ,arbi1 ration has lawn signed. • • The It 01 hsch(1(islt.:Wi►I. 14511! Spain 0,- 001);11(10 or C5,000,000 on the teecurit.y, of i he Almaden quicksilver mines,. when t he ('slaty • of peace shall have been sighed. - Erten Home 'dist lie' it in Cube - cr►mf'y t hes report 1 h it 1li-. people have not turned their' attention to the Howl ng of 1 he crup;r and therefore they will The Earl of Ara, 'son of Lord. Duf- ferin is at Roseland. ' The population of Victoria, B. C. Is now estitnated to be 29,992. Brantford's population is'now 18,100. It increased more in the lest year t.ha-n in. any previous year. John MOCo mic'.k, foruie_Irly of Corn- wall, \vas schothered to, death in a mine at Greenwood, P'- C. . It is expected .that the :;(�uebec Leg- islature will 'meet for the despatch of business early in November. The. Cassiar Central Railway Com - 'pithy will build their. line from Glen - ora,. 11.0., to Dease Lake in the spring. The schooner Delphine was seized at Port Gilbert, N. S., with over $2,000 Worth of smuggled Liquor on board. Th.1 • resent order forbidding the wearing of foreign decoat.ions by sub- jects of he'tl' Majesty is highly unPopu- lar. in Montreal._ • Me. W. \V. Ogilvie is ale ut.to con- struct a two -million huslt-'l grain ele- vator on his property on Mill street, Mon Stratford city 20 -year: debentures, carrying only . 3 1-2 per cent., have been sold at LKir to Thompson & Com- pany, of Sherbrooke, Que. The 1)epart,►nent of Agriculture' 15 experimenting at 011 awe t.o determine the cause of what is 11:nown as • atift pork and soot haa)n. '1'he St.;. John, N.P., Common Ciunei1 has granted an annual subsidy of $2.- 500 for lit year's towards the mainten- ance of a dry- dock at the( port. it is reported that (.here are 3.001) ►nen on the "terrible" 1•Attiontnn trail het ween-F:dnlontonand .` ylvester Landing, en rotlte to the Klondike. . Two Chicago Presbyterian , cl)..urrhes are endeavoring to seethe this - yer-- ViCeS `of; Rev. W. J. Mr('augllati. of .At Andrew's ('htl r1•11, '1Monti). Plans have keen prt'plred far it fit's; - proof building -which it Is proposed In er•ert at 011awa for i 1131) of the (Geo- logical Survey of Canada. The, const reel ion• of t he llobson Md way Itailw' y in llritish Colunll,i:t is being pusb'•(i forward. Work will not be. suspended du1ing the winter: • The- 111111 ('ity ('onn'rl hili inftiuet- e(1 its 'soli(•i-ror to )w.gin Ault ngtinnt t tie Thrrrrrf 0 siestemesliatessepc.ny for (,5(i,- (K)0 for breach of contract to loc41 .1 in Ilett city. - • - Winnipeg's totrtl neate strirent fete .the 'year is slightly over $2,9 ttt►t),t,:$►- The exeenlpt ions artI nearly $5,000.000, t he atmount to be raised by tllsatiotl 7(il.•- Joh, Fra'nktin: a• pickpocket.:, %See was caught peeteg his ( radee tit the 'unto 1'. Ittl,tt►(en. has h.'ett'•;,y4'tl-terieed pu in, go over rautitlirlg 111 Glow•.. ► ha d as possible. lk► I his aft Often, as it ; $:,•g►0 0113). xn'I 011' Bishop of 'Niagara is sh Ws any indication of cracking until (luw i) for 8511.044 • - 11 s fully hardened, and yuu'wil1 have. Frank Klii,t . feOr=tnerly `it:cus+t`i►nts' -a flexr t11at is pleasant for. the horse to regent has no titee it to Victoria frurti Mt; nd on,, will mee break up or get •, 1.a-ke Bennet -1. Ile Niyl, there'' is no dusty., atilt if you - have plenty of bed- fuu,ndat ion for t he • charges preferred dir g, will never get-intuIdy. I should ; I►g tin'+t the officials- The biggest kick jut ge that such it fhx►r.as 1his would is agiinst the royalty. be the ideal for, the horse, but two put- •A ntatettient i'1 on foot in British C. tin it down the.worker ought to.bear lumbia to tranship the ('hinesie lepers in mired that it is needful' to slant it now on Darcy Island to the lazaretto a ittle, and there - should be some .Itle 1115 improvised, if on. the - farm, by -wh ch all the fertilizing elements} could •1)0 ved. - 1t JsSlAN AL.TI II.OItt'1'Y ON SLEEP. n extended study of the pht'no- me ia.-of insomnia by lye 1\lenaceine, (► Ru ssian ''authority in medicine, brings hi to the conclusion that it is char - act ,rist.ic of persons wliu blush, laugh, we: p readily, and whi►se pulse • is apt to quicken upon 'then 'slightest provo- caton. Loss of 'sleep, however, .he ad- n.its, most frequently results from ,overwork of either mind or body; ov- erstrain of either dilates the blood vessels of the brain and • eventually petaelyzes, them, extreme producing the carne results. Experiments also show that .exercise of the emotions, causes a rush of blood to the brain, and sleep- lessness, if occurring near bedtime. There is a cornmon theory that sleep is required in proportion to the scarc- ity of red corpuscles in the blood, and th s.all persons- do not correspond in th if need of sleep, and many authors -e tie agree- that the need of sleep de - pe ds upon -the -strength of con - set usness. he smallest eatery pa,id to the head civilized Government is $15 a year the President of the Reyublio of orra, in the PyreneeR. at 'I'racadie, N.S., on the ground- that they do not receive prober treatment at the former.place. . GREAT' • A• tlTioper with a lalrge draft of men for the regiment anti companies' in the garrison tti..Halifax, will leave Eng- ' land early next month. Sir Arthur Forwo(►d, the niited :ship- owner and former Parliamentary and Financial Secretary of the Admiralty, is dead at London. . The Common Connell 'of London has resolved to confer • 1 he f lreed(int of the city upon General Kitchener, and al- so to Present him with a sword of honour. The Londeti TiriteS shays that sooner or later the American shipbuilding trade will find itself independent of foreign aid, and warns British ship- owners and shipbuilders that the Am- erican navigation laws, which really act afi a protection - to British rather than native industry, will inevitably- be nevitablybe repealed ere long. •• ITNI'TED STATES. I'. Col. W. F. Cody, "Buffalo Bill," has been taken very ill in Kansas City. It is denied that any reduction of wages.is Contemplated on the Toronto, Hamilton and Buffalo_ Railway. About 200,000 men took part in the big - Oddfelluwe' parade at Boston, forming a procession five miles Icing. The railway -men upon the roads ens tering Pit tehurg, Pa.;- threaten to strike fora l0 -hour day and an increase in A. YEAR 9F WRECKS. • Noyd`s mrd of the Marine' 'liilehaps ott the Year 1897. ' The statistical summary of veaaela totally lost, condemned, eta., just pub-' fished by Lloyd's Register, shows that - during 1897 the gross reduction in the.. effective mercantile marine of the':; world amounted to 1,045 vessels of 726,- 800 26:800 tons, excluding all vessels of less than 100 tons. Of this total, 293 vee cels of 398,207 tons were steamers and. 752 of 328,539 tons *ere sailing vessels.•, As regards steamers, the . present re- turn exceeds the average of the pre- ceding six years by 31 vessels and 81,927 tons; as regards sailing vessels, it 18 below the average by 114 vessels and 67,016 tons. Similarly, the figures re-- lating to steam tonnage owned in the' United Kingdom are above the average, , while those relating to, sailing vessels - are below. The excess-inthe care of the former is largely due not to actual. wrecks, but to the increasing amount of (on•Irage annually brokenup, con damned, etc. Apart from such -cases the United Kingdom steam tonnage - lost during 1897 exceeds the aver'ige of.. the preceding six years by about. 25,-- ()0() toes, while tits tonnage owned ht►s..- Trncrea$c'd during fhat period by inose: than 2,000,0)0 tuus. Strandings and kindred casualtirsr3 whicare, c( 711117 5401 (111(1(3' t.ht' t t rill - „wrehck('.tlare rtaut•h the most pr 0. i I is cause of disaster. "lo suchcastt:tlt ies are attril,utahle 4.t3 Lae' cent. of the -` (Osten of ,sailing vessels. The . nt'-xt moss gtnter`r117nat1011 Of 11 %05 stet's career Is by ion. (11s- 11 31(1li)Igfrv,.el'nt('.; 22 Ls I' ('Frit: of tile. -Vass `i4'Jsi rentovyecl front the- tner(-lI:tnt ► lee( s of the tt'orlrl_ cis(, ,.1ccu,tutltsd fur ill t• h►s 11111111er. Of_ the 1(111air111ig t•atl-esi of loss, .collision is t h•• most general for • ste„ate'.'rs, 1:1 per cent. and al)3ndun . -: teeth at s4a fur smell g vessels. Itt {,«'r 4304(.((ercentages •,nit given a:e" Lrts;4 d 0(1 I he present 1`ct urn atone. the. order of t r (•,t(1ect('y (1 t 11 5r V111 c l llI;Lyspy of ('a ,u:t l t }' apLN'al y (1111:;1:11"7:::‘":.:11 II 1!e slur-.' • nit i1. Cases of abandoned.. (omelet -4.1:s.. •:111.1 missing sess4'lS May., perhaps (' reu;lriled :I:1 ft ' leant Iv inure 111- It+�►' stint la. r ill. the ci((ttm.r..taue,s he in %%aett. . - If these be 1 !t ken collect ivel'y t li •y : ems! King; I.ediliiiid, of Belgium, h�K Prebend.. 1ti per cert of t he lu ,se; t . lel ter: to i he steamers and 21 per cent _of i -he lo, s, o n Brus- sels +,t selling %•.'s','1 . Groat as the ai,Sn11110 mint11t1 vessels belonging,('.ro t:re:'it lytttain s{,- ire:4r's to be. it 1s.r;een t„ .1Ori►i ale pe►(rnl:(ie )f. the n,rrr:'a,(ile • marine of 11,e (omit r) . 'Sod pare i u p:(re favorably %vi1 h t he lo.aes - i,i «;)1- 041 by (rt her. leading ' Mari( irla•' ('((•itl1 tries. •'1he n:01(• 11)ut t14(11e %chi( it • The, (,Itt4.4ttt (tiegent of Spain tins sten- exceed n (i►t:,1 (,f 1.1(11)) 1)1 1) t i,1is ;ere t (0 .41 ('(1 the decree ),Wilen(1i►tg Adniir:►I of the 1 1111411 111118 (7)1 the While'. 1 \(onto jo. and granting par(1o•n to aim., ulonies the "1 1 nl vietrt w•ho fought It t volunte'e'rs. In the 4'I I,';l„ 'l stint's', {et r11l1lilV x11,1 \ o w (y - war with the ('nitre( "t at ea. An Imperial edict has been i YUnd t 1144 biz 44lle►bt percentage Df loris., a1 Pek►t1 exL►rRsa►t►F! 'asst'( at tet* 1':m 2.7 per cent of, l he vessel--; i(wned i lie La rur's3• increasing ill-htsalt h, ,and corn- coll,'Iies fell(,w!• w it li. '_.9 per- cent .. - and mauling th&1 (;tn'ernlirs of all the Prov - As is the highest.. %\ it h 7 per'e cut. enc;'rt to lif\[ld ,(lle:.ir best physicians to As reggards •steamers, .while t itt' ier- (:4•nt:►(~g.. fur Great. Ilritain• st-adds at 2.15. the avercge ons or�`;: lois fcir -( he ut her five r(-unt ri4' is 2.39. (ori.ailiilg Veas4'1:•i•the usher five cuun- t ries :+ho\%` alt average percentage* Of fi9;3, ate compared it it 4. ii L,er cent for Great Britain. 'l he (snip -it -thou "wous1 s Ire'. sot it l more favorable to ,(:h resit Br i 1 u lain if the p'rcent igen- exclu.led 'ca',es ►nd ores Ihr'111e'r►ina to t1►1(( the field, of �iisf thettit 11(1, breaking Illi, .et( against tits .\Itle'rlr7lns lnd wallfegUetll S(4"IInv s^ 1111%'*' a tun. li greater irn .: ovel'Itntent short (•f .• b. t.► w':(r-i;lt.s if any K -triunity from disaster than hate sail - of ih't44Ittt4' indt prntit 11 e iris' vessels. ste:cu►- (tlbli'(heei • (4:11111.):.L:11141' i8' tt(1. .'rs, aimolint-only to rather ni(,re than 2 -. • �l'e.rt. t he►tl`tr►nd til(:(til'l((1a resitting In per cent *of the number 1111(1 tOrttl:lge 1 h•' t`(1:111d of .'01 -In _ Rice have 1ef1Lv4'( uw'tl.'el: tl hi' losses of sailing yets.•ls•. tlIes,..a all au ttgi 1It ('X:►I ,tit�r,ing the demise ►L1 n f s'els ay t he Int•t't,I1g pliu'e of the l'e:100 ting t ess; 'Etre Iivss t►nd p! -�perty of American Init(sim►ri'(>+. in :"u (t.(11, China, are en- dant{,eie't and the, Attar 'can Consul at ('antr(11 has been requested 10 send item prute(•t lust• Pe'kin.. -'Ihe %anzil:e.'tr 'torree:;pondent of-' the ,Fr:,rikfurter 7,44(1 ung ret orris I he t►4- 1o'f .esistIn( thi're than England will •44 (1t' Zanzibar to Germany' itt ret urn f( o: 1;e ratany'a t'.oneesetiume legs riling 1►e► 1goa hays. '11 e• tut are .. still dissatisfied,. • ►t► lit.' in t he is.L1ltd tui ler the Ame1 t- ea.rl flag. anti base rleulanded (lett t hey iw' fel to ~(31(111 .at ter (1Y1)4)117141 Of I h4. 110wer1111101(1 . •ite'ports of Ile• relw1113n in 1i dnan (le •43 in(11(11(4' -t h.' tie w(•et success of .(he Tij itt `uciety. a hand of thiewes'and t't,ls•(4. Who ha 14 been inertiasett and siren's( hene(1 try • a hungry. horde of ei retee from 1(10 steel ,(',Oast . Se•.%er',►: I':utopts-tit Powers have- 410- leid4al 14) hold -in •1)vtol►4'r,.1,1,eot1fererict' for the pul L►e►s(b of considering and adopt ing tntsasureM. for the stt(►- prer(rsioils of =evilly. It is proposed to' -prevent not only t11.41 Corlitrtissiuu 1)f crimps, but- also the propagation of a►►archist doctrines: in• barracks - and workshops. Even when made of tiu(hogany or seine ,Frank. Y. $1'.'yers.tato►t and Instantly14)(till'11 rustly wood, d(u,rs have to be-, kilte4i John. hellhart. a constable, ant( - Michael Kerns. abystander, at (air-. vt'it''et'el._- 'I'lie tasty of the door iss. reit, Md., on \\'edtit31(L►y, while resirit- (l plain, . `straight -grained tnithogany,. ing eviction front a. house. w111C1t \%as w• hilts the surfaces are veneers Of file-... the nub jec t of a family dispute. \\'herr wwxtd. . . - . Ito was being taken to. gaol he. \vas 111 the finest doors the body is made shot -at and fell dead in the sheriff's of txelee ied white -pi lie, frac from sip arms. '(111(1- perfectly seasoned, which is cut .. At t he Feast of the Seven Celestial into narrow strips and- then glued to- Sisairs, 01' Genii, on the seventh day I get her. The outer edges; of this door- of t he st'vtlnt 11 I uwhatu►n) It, . it is the :ire faced wit 11 hat iscalled a veneer,.; cornu((( in. CnntOn. China, and else- hut which is really it st rip of t he fine where, for single girls to worship 1 %.vood 11a1f all inch or wore. in thickness. _••• Genii. On the ($ecrusion of the feast The inner edges of the frame, h'- the this year four girls made martyr of panels, are -covered in the sante_ tmatl- 1heuutelves. They. tied 1 ht'rselvtes I o•- per wit h .t hick. st rips, in which t he or - tet her by their haitr, jutnlx'd -into the nattteut:41 (mouldings: or carvings, are • river, and were d 'owned. - made, and which are grooved to re- -G.r►---- -. . . .ce.ive the panels. - .. ",!'Itis: hunt -up frame of white pine;.•. retell shout ti per (('rlt Of the mord .'r:,: anti 4.7 per cent of -,the tonnage own - 'tat. t 1f the 1.015 ve steels lost during 1 he ., ye:(r- n111y :31) e British ; hut. the (untl:4g' they retire.:4.1(10,1. ' rotes hlys speaking.- equaled (hit lost by :cid. the.,.. steam and saili'tig.vi'i1 -els of other coun- t ries combined. . t'rf. 114101-•., Not t:vets r18(• Harr ('onlay, Ui;td+`; or solid 11 nod.' Tlie+ (•cry finest of doors are Made_ notw:ul:►ys of veneer on a body of pines,: DOORS OF VENEER. TOYALTYS 'RIGHTS.with edges of the fine %%coil, is then The Prince of Wales has the right veneered wit h -the fine wood. In' softie to decorate himself with no 'fewer lighter doors the panels may he of will( than fifty foreign. "Orders," while be- mahogany, but in the finer, larger and • sides the Garter, the Thistle, and the heavier doors the panels also are made- - -St. Patrick the Prince possesses five of sheets of white pine wit h a veneer - other Britiah Orders of lesser note, ing of the fine wood, -so that the - entire: The Queen is not halt so well off in door is veneered. this respect as h r sort, for, besides It would be difficult, if not ,impos-. the British Order which were in ex- sihle, to procure at any cost inahog- ss istenoe when .311(1 began to reign, and any lumberin fine acid 1)eautiful e•co(!s those—such as thel Crown of India and of sufficient size for the large('. doors... Royal hied CT088-4thich she has herself The built-up and veneered door of pixie.-. established, she has but • ten others, wood, however, has every appearances of these including el . Catharine of -IRus- a solid door, and, made of selected. - sia, 8t. Isabel o Portugal, Marisa veneers, at mny be more beautiful than Lctuiaa of Spain, I, else of Prussia, the a solid. door would he. It is mors; ler Lion of the (thin, Prussia, Pedro T. vicable and -rentains. longer per'fect.. of .Brazil, and the White Elephant of Its cost is about half what a solid door• Siam. would cost. e. � � � I � ­ � ... .. ... 1. � . . . � . 1. ' " • Tile 'eyetem needs help in ` ade;pti•nJ to'n, "that I ought to be, and as a mat tC6ltie triord and more apparent to the users as time passes. 1F'or Tv►entyFiv6 linndrr� Yeattt Its lITt1 r .ltaelf to the changes in temperature. ter of fact I em, grateful that 'I hay Ask your grocer for it. It lnhabltants Have Indulged 1n Hood's Sa oil rilla is just the medicine Lead- 0ackages, z o o -and 6oG A -�:! Contlnuou* warfare. Ps j never lead wary much moue , - . 5, 4 , 5 , y. If I to {keep the blood rich and pure, oreatq tad - .i.�.,.�... -... _ • % Littlt3 Crete th most beauti ul an appetite, give good digestion, and bad plenty a1 .monc,y I should doubt- tone and istr then th less lon `$pot in natural scenery on the she es en8 great vita g ago have killed myself withtCAI Thistra�e��t atrsst,n� - organs. It wards off malaria, fever rich food• As it is, I am still living orl�lhaldsalgns. of the Mediterranean, . is again in t e and other forms illness which ad to en joy Hay corned beef and cabbage; ,� /J7 dit a.oripttoni of w Lw d� throes of internal strife.. - The history ry readily overcome a weak and debIli- saved from myself l,y circumstances iirllia., Tres acs, 1; IIJ of this little island has been Weill n fated system in the fall. It cures all that s0emed cruel, but that were reap OTRATy0R0, ONT. w a d ireeoora forms of blood disease, like scrofula, kindly, as I suppose may befall in the �� log�iR ir�eroial e,h t,l to c�,n Yrorinne • anterntsw, 004 � rk. almost ^in blood -for twenty -five h n- y f? �_ _ fir• J. LLto1 r, >3rinai al. salt r4eum, boils - and pimples, over- experience of any of us. E. LIMONr 7414 Vents �^.., 0 deed years its unfortunate inhabits is coulee dyspepsia, catarrh and rheuma- What we need most, indeed, is pro- •DENTS CAN MAKE Blci MONt~Y SELLINQ Allartsiawl dsdgas wriw tor.prioa, fsnn have been in such continuous warfa e, B y g our special book,a • t tram, stren t.hens the .nervous s stela tertian a ainst ourselves." ow prtao9 soil value that -it has come to be known a t e and gives refreshing sleep . and large oommi•elonR, Tho HO1' I,L Boob TELECtRAPNY. Ilhorthand, Typewriting., ■ ��'arts on the ngse, are con�i�iered by Lo„ Saturday Tligbt Building, Toronto. Bootkee t .ad wit co vii of discord." Its ancient history tmerow Sur eats sry pr��pperl taught ° �' Hood's, Sarsaparilla gloat people as very awkwardly placed. CENTRAL SY41t�1f14 OOLL 0!, is almost an unbroken chain of , c n- A wart anywhere is . nano in un_ 8O CHEAP You se it on JOrO b dre Qm�tta<i:f °�p�� �i�s� �i ht r °r �e "�� 11- Is Canada's Oreatest Uediolne. 111; six for $5I si ht l y g' old Rhin to root's or Nidea plandtd °s° sobw& : flirt, and its political .and •moral t- t r acteaRtfy, pro ptly and g Y and useless, Just a word to K eQuipmect, Wr1t� for aafa •gu.. mosphere has been -in such • deplore le HOOC! _ 11 3 V the wart painless, certain and of buildings. -Used 21 W. N. 4NA�r, PHnolpala efPeotivoly. cents. y A gcerR. ARk your dealer used of the proverbial thundersto m permanent cUl'0 may be found. in for it. THE k1*6 WOOD PRESERVATIVE & PAINT .l offic'ers' was appointed to re-organize Putnam's Corn Extractor, When sop COMPANY t 870 Queen West, Toronto. that the name of Crete has Dome to PP g have cured all your warts, use the re- mean most everything bad and u the gendarmerie. Detachments of sI mainder on your corns. It cures both. THE TRIUMPHI• desirable - diary. from the different countries �- it . I were lax ill aendin forces sufficient At)JUeTAOT.h sTUVJCPrr1 ?A. Cab t"Nt °tto" la p+q.ds for Cl,. F, g FUNNY BATHING CWTUME I= put up and taken down. Can Verses glass of s o1► datesc According i 0 some t0 preserve Order, and the consequent be c1 °an °d, nu,ted, Ana pl,t away;n �� bistoritns Cr to I ten Englishman ua ` hose rein afforded an opportunity to j t home from the a dialL11 ,`,ace. Ask your deator. for Is thought to have bt3en the`. cradle f she iturbulent elements on both 91flP,s �Ve t Coast of Africa says he saw a them• sautaccuredby 4'petttbrsks its., Tweet a' the ancient civilization that ,w s to rtes again. i The general •opinion, whole village swimming nut to the G• g• BARCLAY, brought to Europe by the Phoenicia s Particularly among those who do n��t, steamer .:yvearing as they. swam, r�no- 468 Atfelaidest. W.. Toronto. "` ■ ,; .�, _ ­ vated second -hand London „st.ove- starry -- or,o�Fd. 1''' Heat �n 1 .. J.. and Egyptians. Tradition says that have the say in the matter, is to un- pipes" in all the 1 - prior to the historical period, the is- 'ceremoniously and effectually oust glory of the white �,:. the Turk. The history of the Sultan's tissue paper in which they are chi OUR 8PiiC1 TY. !null was governed .'by, y out for sale. peed IiOminiOr� dine 8team8hl �, y- Iinusi a tale' TUIe in Crete is, written in hlcxxf And Aiuntrs•1 nail (IueAea to Llrptireol l0 4umcner, r Nv7 WATER - Oar nab qs brated legislator, In the time of �la.cerated with shame. 1 Each cha t.er ' °d ta"t, ;w'° eq�aw ota�xisl►tna Lttbrador' -it tA►n P couver, Dor6 nion ' 'Bootsta'an,' ` Yorijr•hir i with ate.! radtwtou� Homer the little island boasted a great is like the preceding one, and there - - t3uperior ercco ms!(atfoa ror fleet Cabin, Heo, WARM AIR --Cowl or wood _ will be no than e, no end to the story I and Cabin and. furnaces. We halve sotn� , number of flourishing cities, Anil it t ` t teeragv naa4en en. Rates o[ styles and sizes b s.1ee1 go long as he is allowed to guide the pasmaye- -First caUln, ;40,0,1; �eoand Cabin, ' frou,. -[ •wat3 densely' populated with people of ,pen: 85 ; toera a $22.60 nd upwards aaoordia to OOMBtNAT10N -Hot water etc mor end b @rib. �or all iAtorinatioa a�uply and warm air suited tss the - Hellenic race. It is recorded that Crete should be giv(�tt to its foster- to.00a! 1►Qents ar DAYID Toxlu eta /c C 3 the Apostle Paul at one timBw visited any requirements. pptt mother, Greece, but unt it the clou 1'of b. Sacrament #l;., �fotttrewl. mWrite u■ it yoahave PC c s►4o tQea'I At;ente, l7 strife that now enshrouds it - - -- • __ ___ y a 1 I �AU4AOE OA81NO4• —,New importattuas Onset English am thins to heat and we pe•ay�j Crete, and established a truer I there.:' liras abieto Suggest Dome tag t have disappeared, peed tct.ton (`FtD d0 r p nail American Ho` Ou°In s— ral[ahle goods at �' adrautaas _ IN. D�LEDIAEVAL TIMES. - YI little but stagger in the dark. �g Prices. paH� HLdt Kwlth� k Op•, Toronb.� Sg),118 �[ SENb fRdE OATALOOUE AND KSTIYATI[! Crete came into the possession ol'tlie T - Three Farms for Salo, on easy terms. oN APPLtoATtON. . ^ 'Fake O CURB A CO D 1!N ONE DAY 1�8RONT0 CUTTtNU 3CNOAL otier� special Property situated convenient t PR Venetians in 1204, and for man o C• p• CLARE BRCS. tBL CO. EsTON, ONT. , . _ , many years sat ♦e Bro�o t ,inlne Tablets. All DrniF tndaoetnsnb to oung men desirous of Railwa S eciall adapted for stock t d>rsf :, the islanders were under their t ran -t°uaC the rdaner it it fails to our.. gss �wking cep Ontt�ipg. li�ull parttcnlars on applt �a ;sin y For�furtheC a ciculars Branch win Y �. ton o 1`uM g IJ a• as a8 8T.. TORONTO. uical rules. At that time Canadia, .a -APPENDICITIS. ­ . to � . P apply -- S ale.' fortress built by the Saracens.. beca�rne Ililltie. Mitt• di fMialp tt•M• MONAl41ARA,8arrl :te North Bay,Ont. . 1, , .- :,:.- I_ _ - - Barristers, etc,., removed 1} the seat off government, and for Ghat TCzperteuee Tt•nrhes That tt Crtnitt,t Tie LAW tto We,+ler Aldus., Rloh reason Crete came to be called "fhe t Heed wlthi,nt ,tin Opernlleu. aloud err W., Toronto. - That there is really no medical (lure -- +-- — ;,, trx..•w islalzd of Candice.'; Frequent insurrec -+for appendicitis, even. thvugh same 1 t lions accompanied the arbitrary .'rule ca s recover without operation, is the + t 18. : 'Ns STURTAVANT . ..--. 1 ` of the Venetians, and in 1669 the- ie- I opinion of many eminent physicians. - • ­ -;, - - land was .wrest d from them by the ; £tail according to exlerience, though it I 111 11 &Iva 1 1 is s surgical disease, operat.iona tray -- - - - - BLOW FAN I ... - -- - -- Turks after a serge of twenty -four :nod ,' - , ` n�'ceasasy- in every cage, from IF you want to either buy or self Apples �`ha Agld 8ro ' .Mf 1Sanufacttrrers tn. Outlet 4x3 Pulled j / years. The pear subjects had became I the fact that thil, ailment is a stop- in car lots, writeus. >g' COs, of BILLIARD ` so di5hrartened because of Veneti n !ASLEHand B()WLI21(t A[,LeYS. Phnns t3UJ. flaad ('g �, P e of t:he drainage front the appen- The Daweaq Commisslo ` Co., LllT�ltedt. rUata- cos. 267 King fin W°°t, TORO TO. Good ass Ne ,Wa. vh�ap� .oppression that for. the moment they d[x•to fhb colon, a.nd preliminary treat- - - -- St`oaroatsba. meet is often worse th;tn useless. Thus ______ _ *_ , �L . I.. -were glad of the change. It did nt,t I the opium ,treatment, though relievin - -- S��iool DSkB ` g Newdaoh t ►nos -ache, t��e �1�50� + • t take long, however, for them to find. pain and discomfort, entire! masks N�ri�� j all severe muscular rr ubhsbi�O Y pain,, ', that they were worse off than before, ( tbe` OYmPtoms at -a most im ortant instantly relieved by Ores IDEAL --- AUTOMATIC. P ant Neun:gia th,r +. Pries 46o Raclaaa i a damps for for the histor of Turkish sovereignty nt. tip' for it is its the first 24 hours frolP Iri.l Package, 're• llutohinga 1t•di•!w• oa,Toroab. -The 0 ►tr101 4PlOtAITYMFG.00sI�D'' 3. y g Y, the beginning of the attack that pry (umttect) �� Adelaide St. Wt�p�„ mr has always been one of treachery «lid' artisan can decide net only as to the Toronto and Nswmarkat, Ont. ' . �. ... fil * * �.,-�.. ''. "I... oppression.. The land of the Fez h,id diagnosla, but ae to the probable course . WANTED,,,,...... .. TORONTO. not been long in possession of . the and result of the case. It it; found, • - -_ ___ - j for inatanae, that if there is no Increase Wtnnan In evert town, to do house tb house Cretans before revolt broke out. T4is . In" U y f{lNe POf PRIOI.LIST., 1. gpna in five or six .ho rs the par- a►nvaesing for a wall eetabilshed m�lcina j - "revolting idea" seems to have been a 1 , treat is not in immediate do�nger when I Easy seller. Llbersa oommtsslon. No seoarlty, particularly good plate land the popu kept at Perfect rest in bed and if in or loveatment required. Address, t - Iation much Riven to striking cif ne.w , 1l hours there le still .loncre+ltne in - �. al�t}Nt?. Natisnti I 0. prints at frequent intervals everrinre., the severlt of the a m,to a the. «ti- �. -,:;= - xO°• Oat, In 1t33U the adieu ewers stretched ' y Y 1 p ---- .-- -. - -_- - - 1 � : �, _ . --=- _.,.;,: P ant should I,eKIn to intpruv t)n the L• '`���� CO out the finger of interference and as. tyt�r hand, if the urg_enc y ©f the. caste i q ; ;b���'� ice' a result Crete was transferred to thej' has steadily increased in 1'? 1paurs from I. government of Mehemet Ali, viral o' ;the time when the diagnayia was made GRAIN AND COMMISSION Egypt. Ilut In 1840 it was taken flo an operation will probably be called MERCHANTS, ' S him `and given over to the Turks for. After two attackts a g ,f� I _ '' - ' patient it, SEAT OF GOVERNMENT . Oss�s tei-t! Board et Trade r t= atLPe to have a thi rd. I• + ereeoh Laaellpg Shot Ouns =4.00 upwarttls. Rte,rotret"s,;t.34, The resent seat of -- TORONTO. ONT,:_ po«t ay rbvolvers at this price, p government i Br„•aba a 8 ill3ast Auger its oat ,` Canes, -The population of this town i EF.D I NATION .FRO, �tI IN YtiEOIIUe FLYNN. Dons •L Oolre'�a 41.60— Dostpaid anywhere • about 14,WU, of whole 4,750 axe orth ITS OWN IIUR,DER.SfI' - -_-� _ -: r the Uc, inn or . _ :. tM so, . it dox Greeks, 9,500 Mohammedans, 20 , ` - - -- - - _- _ _ { -- a1LltiNi 0 0 4 d 104 K it. last, Torastts , 7"hr Canadian Produce - - - Roman Catholics and 160 Isrrtelit.es . r fore Corporattocf, - - - -_ - - - -- Gandia, the seat of the present strif Limtt.ed, is a Rrttiwh enterprise recent - CANADIAN-7 PRODUCE. I -� I .- ­­:. - . has a` population of 18,000 Turks t1n¢ 1}� incorporated in EnR land with a LIMITL. capital of £200,001 with head uarter., Incor 6,000 Greeks. Candice and tLhnea ark " NO i0UN0 %R8 porrteat unAer the c:o,tipany's Acts, t80s to 4893, in, London and Canadian branches in r. PKInNiNCE OR DEFERRED SNAItEB. NO UNDERWlttTlNC OF sea -port towns, the latter havitig t h� Toronto, ZvContrea.l, Halifax and -Win- SHARE. CAPITA 8NARE8 Hb$ BE>EN OR WILL BE PAID FOR. 1. larger harbor. The fortified hartwr of. ni 1•r �200t000, of which �b0 00 Suds is the seat of Turkey's Mediterg The Corporal Toni has made sr '.¢` Y�t1 6� r Ot IS re8erlred for SubsCriptlon in Canada, - ranean navy rd, and it is one of th Mn gemente to construct sad operate, saC110 IN$.A -3,3095 Q:r �6_Qd .M,& under skilful than sweat�TAB AS FOLLOWS s 81.00 pp , per t1hare of!t AllOtfnen and the Q ,. _ largest and feat harbvra in the Le' ag a large, per #harp on A lioation 81 00 t, Balance." and when vent. Can( r is a walled pity. It; number of wholesale and retail esta!>r froqulrt4d by Calls Of not more than 81,E6 per $bars at Intervals of not lane than a month. 1. mural fortifications reach t► her ht o lishments In the City of London, deal- - - -- _ g Dt�txtore :- Culi)ne) H 1RRI5 Fallow Royal Colonial .Institute, F:R G.S., Gtc•, 70 or 80 feet, and are stupendou tn= exc.luHively in Canadian produce, J' Y Chairman ; Dr. ROBERT FARQUHAR- sut`h ae. dale roduets SU'�'� AS�F ,Director of Bovril, Limited ; HENRY - HEAVEN, Esq., Director of the New Civil Service Coo oration relics of Venetian energy. It is a, plc Y P fruit meat Litnited R. S. GLADSTONE Es Director of the Belgravia Dairy Company, turesque old place and all day ion bacon, fish, canned goods, flour, eggs, Standard L1te Buildings, q•, Y p y. Limited • P tttc ;. Airrangements have alAo been K , R. W1L Montreal. , $ON- SMITH, ESA., ; 1' the lazy Turks lie idly about the par made on the Canadian side with lead_ AAvlaory Eiorlyd In Canada: -W. MANN Esq President of the Aontreal Union Abbatoir Co., spats of the walls, blowing imaginer an D. Ai, 17ACPItE:RSON. )a A Union Cold Storage Com - bubbles and stretching both ends u ins: Producers and manu fact urers y • q., Allan Grove Creameries, Lancaster, Ontario; O, M. GOULD, Esq., (IRA G(�ULD :.. g whereby the ('orporatio secures, at ( SUNS, Ut'areltourenirn, etc.), Montreal ; S. M. BROOKFIELD Es P a.n idle useless fife. P Halifax • 1V, ► q , res. Canada and Newfoundland `steamship Co. Though two- thirds of theinhabitant� first cost, a large and regular supply J B1G� %I -O W, E�►y„ President of the Nova Scotia Fruit Growers' Association • E. J. Vl'OOLVERTUN, ,: the of fresh products carefully selected E•q•, C''rimsby, errs, Niagara District Fruit Growers' Company. . `; of Candia, are Mohammedan, from the best and most reliable brands, . attReral Manager in Canada ; _Major WILLIAM CLARK, Halifax, N.S., Director of the Canadian Atla Greeks are in a way the stronger, fo Copy: of prospectus, names of the di_ Company, Atlantic Cold Storage j, they are more energetic, prosperous rectara, names of Canadian advisor denera) Agent itsr Ontario : - )A11iES McGREGOR Ea s Kin Street West Toronto: and are better educated. They posses'' osses ix)ar and other y Makers :- Lundun-- PARR'S BANK Limited, Bartholomew Lane, London E.C. a - in shish degree the intellectual keen d particulars may lie I h [TISH NORTH AM ERICA�Toronto slid Branches. nil Brandies; Canada -THE BANK OF;.. �: had 'on application ,to Aemilius Jarvis , uses of their race, and many of the brokers :- London - Messrs, R'IL1.lAM H. HART Ai Cp. s6 O1d,Broad St., London, ,and Stock Exchange; are graduates of universities -some a & Co., Stockholders, 23 ]King street, E.C, Canada - Messrs. Athens and others of the Europea Toro_tfito. . 1CMIL►US JARV[S bt CO., Stock Exchange, Toronto ; Canada - Messrs. R. WILSON- SMITH, MELDRUM & CO, schcwls. phis class Corms the money ; - Stock Exchange, Montreal. I , H$AT FRO'_�i ELECTRIC LA;,,P8,1 In�itora:- Messrs. ".icPHERSON, CLARK, CAMPBELL dt JARVIS, Toronto; Messrs• SCOTT, SCOTT & U L ed and the professional portion of th Ottawa; Messrs. E., F., tt H LANDON, 53 New Broad Street, London, E.C. � R E, town ; they constitute the society o In c: °na�quence of some .experiments Auditors.- Alessrs, 'SELLARS DICK8E1 CO., the place, and their influence predom made �u .I %ngla.nd, shopkeepers are Accountants. 48 Copthall Avenue, London; E.C., Glasgow, and Toronto, Chartered .1 I Inates In most questions of moment- warned of the danger of allowing in- 5&retary and Offices (pro tam )- HERBERT SIMPSON, Esq., 8 Union Court, Old Broad Street Lo But it will ever be an impossibility flamnuible gcibdtt to get into contact O , radon, E.C. Central Offices to Canada (pro tem.):-TORONTO and MONTREAL. for the defenders of. the two religions with the bulbs of incandescent elee- , 1. to mingle in harmony. In fact their• la'i1�4�p� felt lam The wide-spread notion �.t (�■� Tt► is 1 1 principles : are so inherently opposed that such lamps are practically free ,o io Qorpora"On ha�beea formed for thapnrposeot des►ling as Merchants and - H rt ultnral, Fishery and Dairy pr�rdnoe. is open entablishmenta in suitable ln�tions ffor° heej hgol©sale and for Canadian AgrioalturaT. that it is almost impossible for them from heat is erroneous. A sixteen can- 11•h depot• in- Canada where rodube tali Salo thrroof• and to eetab. to min la at all. The. Turk maintains; ale -power . elect.rio lamp immersed in expert• will represen0 the Corp oar° be bought or wdvsnoes made on direct consignments. For the !alter purpose relish's produce gg Corporation as the lea n,I reoei.MIRM points In Canada- where Cold Store, faoilitfes eafe�, These •�z -rtR will his Ih:►bem, whose wing - clipped prison -1 half -a pint of writer will cause the wa- attend the principal produce markets and be in constant touch by telegraph with fire manasrementla Ca Y� ter to boil. within an hour. [f buried Corporation will make arrasQemont•, to eonstruot and operate under skilful man ands and the IGxecutive in London. era are not even to -be mentioned b The ., eatabl[shments in London and deal exelueivol la Oanadlan food, ouch as dwfry p�i•odue atlement a large nnmbcr of wholesale and retail the Christian. A Turk may Came to. in cotton -wool i t will •set the lat ter eta. These entabliMbmentr will bs divided into departmeab for the different olaises oft est nartu it. in at, bacon. Gah, canned goods, flour, your house, may see your wife and aflame. .Celluloid placed in contact nical refrigera•ion and all other modern f d' gb t equipped with mecha- y and tiavy contractoro hob,k and other large onsurne s, C•oughoua are pending to meet the requirements of co- operative associations, army family. His wife you may not even with an electric lamp bulb was set, large oonsumars tbrou�hvub Orewt Britain, and provision will be made for periodical auction ea1oU tllude to, and while slie is wil:hin on fire in leas than five minutes, at the central whelonale warehouses of the Corporation. Arrwngemeptw will be mania wltft landing Canadfao producers whereby the Corporation will secure at fleet cost aeuffiaiont and ret;nlact ►ou cannot step across his threshold pypply of fresh products of the most reliable brands.; Your Sunday is on the day of { = LOCOMOTIVEi9 DrxscTOt+s .--In order that all inwre +te may be fairly represented on the regular Board of I)ireotore. rrovision has been :he .week, his _ is old the sixth. ' I One h : d Canadian represents lees, resident in the Uomlpion. One bas ahead bests a t made for two ti� red algid nine thout3€fnd I(fti.. holders when the full smoant of stock hwe been subvoribed. Tho Cwaadlan Adiirgr�yd�an(i the second will be nominated by Canadian Rhrtre- and responsible men, who have had wide experienoa in produ ' refrigerating and shi caged; as alroadt orge►nlssad, is composed of pr «ctinal . _ a 11IANY INSURRECTI S. motives are at present running in vari- In London and rte tnburba• with it„ six millions of inhabi�wnte, a Geld exists for 4pwhgbusale se. ouFl countries. Enro hoe 63,000 and retail Canwdizp produce trade of trre1►t The insurrection of 18G6 -69 Coat the erica 40,000, Agla 3,900Aur�tralia �2 000- r �sy aao pneracion�nThsi iii ia� Sixteen meobani0�1 ratrigerating warohouROe, dl8tribnted fn suitable localities around London, arc Lurks nearly thirty millions of dollars and Africa ?00. b porn ion reserve supplies will be carried in these Cord 8torago Warehouses. and there will be telephone tom tmnnloation etwean them and the Corporation establishments. and was the bloodiest Cretan revolt 111 The anaoesrtul introduotioa of mechasnioal refrigeration has opened cep a new ra in food supplies. Perishable this century. However, the disease is `! opsefullt carried 111 Cold Storage Warehouses, pre,ervod without deterioration aacfurnlsbed to consumers in excellent condition are now anc- '1'Itry lttm Catsr #h in, Seri an of ttbe round at reasonable rttsas oorporation has sefootel the newea4 and mo80 cep roved system of refrigeration for Ile t toraQe requirements constitutional, and it has continued to country otter diseases put to et er, p r }� and has scoured the servic of A t olass men who are thoron�ghl tlxperlenoed in t a produce and refrigerating busibese. 4 nts break out at irregular intervals. and unt a laKt few Ceara was suppdsm to The ggreat interest be i cable, 11'or a cut many tears doctorr bringing the producer a d consumer closer toQetber caanbearslatdilt undo Food b n cha ke fn the development o! this products trade, and in 1. During the insurrection of 1896 the roltoanced it a )colt! disease, antL presorlbad It sapervluion In refrigeration, trnnsportatian and other taailitles. H Governmental which are being made under their friend I L' six great powers - England, Austria- �oaal rsmedies, and by constantly tal)lapc to tween Canada and Great Britwin are ants! aseistaaae twenty -.three stoantehfpe now !yin be- - Hue, aP ,France, Germany, Italy and 'Dora wish local trsatmspt, prononnood it to fund on the lsadin (;aaadian rohroadi *quipped products can tbora°eboabe t sine Orion, and a re ulcer rem p g y g p p g gerator car service has been organ- J p led and preserved 111 Cold Storage Russia- proposed a scheme of reforms curable. Bofeaee hat proven oatatrb bo be a dnotitm In Canada t� l+bts leading seaports in Great Britain. ge from Cho source of pea a.nd succeeded in obtainin its ado O0°etitntfoaa disease gild t sea ore ra arras tbioveramental assistance and g P- I'eonetlbntteaa� t mat. Sai�1's rare ore, guarantees have also been promised for t>!e eetablisbmea6 of cold r'o real 1 o ports and distributing centres, rage warehouses at leading shipping , "_ tioi's. The reform was based of the teiaanfdotured b H', ,. Chsaar �Nto oleda • This Corporation with its large available capital unl1w4 sources of get ply A d demand, eat tacilitles sad appliances, trailing upon d ^wands of the Christian deputies of Ohio, V the calf ooI}slttneion *i care eta the fgnitgb a terms in special hates of first also food, shoafd be enabled to the Cretan Assembly, ,and was for the imarlteb. It is taken intrzn 1 is doses from bnsiaet W►7 trod dlviends upon wha0 no doubt will be a sotto qad increasing y ;10 drops to a o1 sots directly on A ot►refnl afmputation of the relative values of such Canadian prodnata as t e t?o ration i "` purpose of curbing the power, of the ;the blood and yqt nso�ouo mifli►ces of the s sbs sal sve dltrerenae •q y n} rte+ betweap the Grst oust tC.F I.X-1 and retail prices to the Oiy of I,00ndon Innemflo�mli� ate �hapole, shows that the 4611• t Sultan and giving more rein to Chris- They offer one bond ed dollars for nay oas6 !b T1►e proAts of the Carporatioll ,i►!!t b6 darivtid from its rsfiuhturr whol6eals and retail trade. per cent` ., titan sway. A oommiasion of Eutope.aD !fails to tsars, Send br, oirealwre and tall• eommiwdons and general 'moulma a. ddr s h enaies, bts> adv 44 b upon antws, aut�en ealvasbotn, lawyers was arranged for the purpose i9old b 8' J. CH�1!�1tY DO T °k szo cage lietment will be apnlittd Cos In Lopdan, Toronto and Montraa ' . of reforming the administration of { fi �j� , t6o. •+ olsdw O. of applioatton toe shares Osy ba obtained irosp the Oozptuvttioa'e brt>tkt . } `` , justice, and a comlmlaaion of Europt3au $at1 Z 1,Ii!_lt� a best - s • . k . _ 1 :f 4EMILIUS JARVIS & CO., TORONTO. a; � t � .. _ ,. , j 1 . -.,y,. .... _ .. .�. F - vi „ a v ..: ... ., ,... .... .. rc, m; .`: < ,, , t. . -. _. -. - . ... _r -. ,...... . -. .. -a .., -. , . , , -y ,. l _,. "f' •' i ..: ♦ .. r .. .. ........: . .. ... a -. e..« -:- -'.: -. ., 'i .. .: : :.' -: .. .... :+�.- 8- S �tM •fin ,.: -. -_ .. - .P. -. .:...._ .: .... _. . -. ., 1. ..- ...u;. -�.. i, ,. .- .. -..1. ,. _ - .t 1,. .'A�va 'I . . v ... .v,d•.. : <,sew ..5 [s_ s 1v, ht Nickering /too a pubi:ehed every Friday morning at its aloe Piokering, Ont. TERMS S t.>ib per year; (m0o ilpaid in advent**. RATES OF ADVERTISING :,-.,.,.: 'fret ineertion, per line - - 10 bents) -' sch snbeequent insertion, per line - 5 " This rate does not include Legal or Foreign ad- )rtieements. 14peoial terms given to parties making con- tracts for 3 or 6 months or by the year. Half ;early or yearly contracts payable quarterly. Business cards, ten lines or under, 'with paper, was year, $5 00, payable in. advance. [3 -Notice in local columns ten cents per line, _'ve Dente per line each subsequent insertion. Special contract rates made known on applica- tion. No free advertitaing . - Advertieemente without written+ netructione will be inserted until forbidden and charged ac- cordingly. Orders for, discontinuing advertise- ments must be In writing and sect to the pub„ - tsh,r• - Job Work promptly attended to. W. J. CLARK PROPRIETOR, Our Politics—Strict Independence Our Alm—A Firet-class Local Paper. Our Expectations — The hearty eapport of the people of Pickering and vicinity. ways been in sympathy with Town• ship fairs, even- preferring them to county fairs, and we think the Prc- vincial Government should in every why encourage them., They are, 'by far, more beneficial to the agricuttur- ialist than even the great Industrial, which, we th-ink, has devolved into a circus of many -parts. STOUFFVILLE. The briok for the fire hall has armed. James. James O'Brien, who l has been laid up with lung fever, we are .pleased to say is some better We are sorry to have to report the ill- ness of David Barclay, and trust his re- covery will be speedy. Mrs. Thomas Tinkler was taken sick in the Methodist Church. Sunday evening and is still confined to her bed. We are pleased to hear that Rev. Mr. -Lawrence, who has been dangerously ill with typhoid fever, is recoverini nicely. The funeral of the late Rol -t Clarkson wasone of the largest ever seen in th's locality, about eighty vehicles being in the procession. His many friends hereabontd will le pained to hear that Fred Eckardt, an old -Stouffville boy, is ',lying in a precarious condition in Toronto hospital. —Sent. New Advertisements. QTRAYED.--From the farm of Joe. N. kJ Rgrtop ou or about the 117th. of August a two year old -brown filly—Roadster. Any infor- mation as to the whereabouts will be thankfully received. JOS. N. HOUTOP, Kinsale P. 0. 47-tf 1.VARM TO RENT—One hundred and forty sores, good buildings, stone stables, convenient to school, church, creamery, half - mile from Poet Office, Dairy farmer preferred: Apply to A. C. Iteesor, Lot 14, Coo. 10, Mark- ham, 49-61 TO RENT : -One hundred'acre farm, being east halt of lot 98, con. 1, Pickering. On the premises aro good barn, stables, pig pen, etc. Twenty-one sures of new seeds, ten acres old. 0eds, and eight acres fall wheat. Large and garden. Apply for particulars to T. J. Laskey, Port Union, Ont' TOST. -Two Ewes anti& Ewe\ lambs a One of the old awes has a long tall'. Tbey strayed from lot 90. con 6, Pickering, on or about Monday, At}guet 1 . Information as to their whereabouts will b� gladly received by Wesley Harvey, Brougham P. 0. 60x51 TO RENT.—A farm containing 200 aures, being lots 14, and 15,con. 9 Pickering one mile east of Claremont. On the premises are a good frame house, commodious barna with atone stabling beneath, well watered by creeks, and well with pumping windmill attached. The farts ip well fenced and in good etateof cultiva- tion. Two orchards. Possession given April let next, with plowing privileges this fall. Apply to E. W.'EVANB, at Lump Factory, Claremont, or address Claremont. 1'. 0. 46-tt. Buggies, CGarts. and Cutters easonable FRIDAY, OCT. 14, 1998 NOTES AND COMMENTS.... From latest returns it would appear that prohibition was .defeated by over 20,000 of a majority by the plebiscite. It was at first reported that the ma- jority was the other way but stair was --!lot the case. • At -eleven o'clock today a special -brmmittee, appointed by York County Council, will meet the Ontario Cabi- net and try and have the Rouge bridge forced upon Pickering township. �V(' have repeatedly said that the people of this township will not agree to said arrangement, and will consider the :came a hardship if compelled to witl1 out some G ll:tideration from either the counties' interested or the Provin- -ial Government. Through the death of John Craig, I.P.P., East Wellington has been left. without a representative in the Local legislature: In order to fill that Vacancy a writ has been issued calling for an election -on Thursday, Oct. 27th, with nomination on the Thursday previous. J. M. Gibson, r commissioner of Crown Lands, bas been nominated by- the Reformers while Dr. Coughlin - h,as. been put -for- ward by the .Liberal Conservatives. Since the above- was in type the writs have been withdrawn and new ones riot yet issued. Poor Whitby.. '''1-16v often world UT'ANTED,-=Twenty barrels of good winter apples, oleo 100 bushels of pota- toes. Apply at 1 ioker1ng college. 51 �j R SALE—Two stacks of clover hay L' also a quantity of feed and cob corn For particulars enquire at lot 7. Don 1, Pickering Tp, or address Pickering. Out . 591h PUBLIC NOTICE —As my lease of the Gee Mill expires on November 1st, and as I am then going out of business, and leaving rremiaes, all outstanding accounts must be set- tled by that date. W H ELV188, Pickering pest -office - 5E1 CIDER, CIDER t -=-The undersigned is prepared to grind cider apples) every day in the week at bier cider mill in Broughsm. until further notice. -Those coming from a die- tance can have cider home with them. Per - foe'. ,satisfaction guaranteed, W. COWIE. Brougham- P 0 • 51-59 ew'and` Second hand. buggies, carts and cutters, always on hand. .-Repairing neatly done. Give tis a Call. H. JACKSON, Brock Rd. Shaker Flannel all ° prices. Hygenic Underwear, for ladies: Blk winter hosier --=all sizes, Blankets :white and grey Oilcloths—Floor and Stair Shirts a'd Drawers _ Men and Boys Cottonades-Flannels, etc, TRAY PONY. -Clime to the premie-. k--7 es of the undersigned, lot 15, con 3, Picker- ing, on Monday October 3rd, a bay pony, with brand on left hip. Owner can have same by proving property, paying expenses and taking - animal away. Address (leo. Hick, Brock Road, P,0.' ' 51-63 • ii OR SALE 6 TO RENT -A firm containing 100 acres. being south halt of lot 3, con 2, -Pickering Ou the premises tare a com- fortable lionso, a good hip•roofed barn, with 'stone stabling underneath, and other outbuild ing.; good orchard of various fruits •The'place is well tented and watered by well and never - failing spring. Ten acre. in fall grain. and bal- ance either plowed or seeded Possession may be had on April let, next For particulars apply to ALEXANDER PALMER, Port Perry 8311 `we have gathered you ander our wing,: but pan would not." The. ::cunty' town has .been gran`ing tnnuzes to. various -industries- for the past tw-ntv years, anal -to-day ..ve would not indu-stries -with thein. 1;etween eighty and one -hundred th(tusllld dollars were granted to- the • (irate Trunk for the ecu:-truetiou. of -a track to Liia(lsay and ether 1)1-l,('s, lilttl tl,e understanding was 'Ana would ,be established within 'tire town limits, .Every vest -age of a shop )ia been removed and now the train ser- vice to Lindsay -has been reduced And- the +lndthe train crews ordered to remove .to Lindsay. Of course the town author- ities are kicking, but the Grand Trunk will do as they. please, and Whitby will have to ab:de by it. The :writs for elections in' East Wellington and South Ontario were issued Monday. naming Thursday, October 27th, as the date of the elect -- ion, with nominations a week earlier. Since Monday the point has' been 1 ais,x1 that no government could issue -writs while; the government was en- joying intermission, and that the House would have to prorogue before' issuing said Writs. Premier Hardy -and his colleagues considered the matter and decided that while said contention might be correct they did hot think so, yet for fear that the said writs were not legal, .the formal pro- rogation took place, -arid new writs will now have to be .issued. The election will- not likely take place un- til about the first week in next month. _The new lists in Pickering township, at least, will be used, the delay in date removing- all doubt. upon that score. x During the past week a rumor has ben circulated that Scarboro Agricul- tural Society would cease to be, and that, this year would be•ita last: Such is not the case, however, and the genial secretary, Alex. McCowan, in - farms us that the membership roll is -double that required by.. tike Govern- rnent, in order to obtain a grant. The fair on the 30th ult. was one of the rrWst successful ever Veldt, and why should the fair cease. No, the report that Donnybrooke -was a thing of the past is a base slander, that. will serve as a boomerang on the party or society that started it. We ),lave al- Ex ecut::".r'es Notice - to -- Credito) 1 Of Mrs. Jessie Maver, deceased. IU RSUANT to the Revised Statntei of Ontario. 1897. captor 129, nonce is hereby given that al: creditors and other persons hav- i•.ng claims against the estate of .Jessie Maver late of Pickering Tp, County of Ontario, widow deceased, who died on or about the ;8th day t f September, A. D., pigs, are required E.i send by registered letter to John Gordon, of the sari Township of Pickeriug :Pick"nng poet-odice. apple dealer, executor of .the will and ctxitcilK raver. deec.tatted, DIA or before :the 19th day of �Noveimber, A. D.. Ik9o. their .of the said Jessie t auies and al.iresst's with full particulars of sheir claims aud• 1c4f the et urittce)tf any tet.; by theca. 1 And •nuti'ce is further given that after the •sni 1 1 st rl)entione.l dais the Kai,! 1' x••cutor will I t,t- • tied to distnbta.'the ae.eti, of Lho axle acct ,t , i u_otg the harass eutitie.l thereto,�ha.tt,$ re. and only to the , iaiuis •,t wht 'i 1101),_4, �..al` hove 1$1.4i.$11 t;:ven as r.•,lu.re i a1• i e . lt'rl tl:,• tiaid'-Ex.C.ut(,r w 11 not be itauliot•'I,r tiie f;,i•1 ,!.•s(-ts or any part thereof to tiny pe Son or per- sons of whose ti Iii a or'rlairu, uoti,-b shall. not -lrive.i,et-; re. rivet by him tit tits t:tilt.'- afore mild. I)atel at \.'hitby this 4th day .ef 0 -totier .1.:. i;) , 15i3. . DOW ct MciiILLIVRAS', Brock et.. Whit., golieitors EHy , Executor. i, 51.1 s Waned. 1The : nlidersi ned are prepared to pay' be highest uta ket price for any quantity f No. 1 winter fruit, also• a quantity of first-classfall a plea and pears.. GORDON A GEE, Pickering.- • COAL. COAL FRIDAY and SATURDAY, . $b'Per Mit. e tindetaigned will be at the COAL S»DS, LOCUST BILL, on from 9.89 a. m. to 8.89 Iv m.of each week during the fall and early- pail of the winter to weigh out coal to all who may favor me with their patronage. ' Terms Cash F SPOFFOR,D, A'giant. South):, Ontario' Election Public nneetinge in the - interests of Mr. Charles Calder, h iberal. Conservative Candidate), will be Id in the Township of Pickering as foi- 1 ws Kinsale, Oct. " 13, 198. Claremont, Oct. 15, 1898. Whitevale, net. 17, 1898..; Mount Zion, Oct. 21, 1898. -Pickering, Oct,) 21st, 1898. All meetings will commence at 7 30 p. m. These meetings will be addressed by two or more of the following spiakers A. F. Campbell, Ex=M, P. P. ; J. J. Foy, Q. C , M. P. P, ; Lieut. -Cot. Mat- theweon, M. • P. P. ; J. B. Dow, Dr. Kaiser, Arthur Johnston, W. H. Boyle, M. P. P. Seats will be reserved for landies. Every one invited. - God Says the Queen 1 t J LSMITH, Pres • JNO BUlihp, Boo Notice to Ctcthtozs I In -Ilii Fatale of William Clark, 'deceased. NOTICE is hereby Riven,'pnrsnant to 1 K. B.O. 1897. chapter 140. seetion 38. that all arsons having claims against the estate of - Wtliiam Clark, late of the Township of Picker- ing, in the County of Ontario, ferer. who died on or about the 16th day of may, hale, are re- quired on or before the 15Th DAY of OCTOBER A. D., IHSH, to deliver to the undersigued exe- cutors, William John Clark and William Gorm- ley. at Pickering post office, Ontario. their chrietian names and surnames addresses ani • descriptions and a stateulent of their respective claims, and particulars and proofs thereof, and the nature of tiie suretteb (if any) held by them. 'And notice is -hereby further given that atter .the said Fifteenth Day of October. A. D , 159e.. the said executors will proceed to dttitributo the estate of the said deceased among the persona entitled thereto having regard only to those claims of which they shall then have notice and the said. executors will/not be liable for the said estate or any part thereof to any person -or ler'sot;,s of whose claim or claims they shall not then bats notice and the Maid executors intend to avail themselves of Rection 3{b of the said above mentioned Statute. Dated the loth day of 'Sepptember, A. D., 1 WILLIAM JOHN CLARK. VIILLIAEd (}ORMLEY, Executors, JOHNF. FARWWELL. • Solicitor for Executors _ 49441 evuttr'e ess,le onsehnld Goads, and Residence OF easona IN PICFiEItINtu VILLAGE, --The niidersignon Au..tioneer hes received In- sttUetiuns from John-(lbrdon. l?aq , Executor of the w,ll :,f ttie late Mre. tlaorge i, Maver to of-. ter for sale by 1.11!.!4" auction tic pursu,anne of 'he ,ltrecttone ufsat., will) at the lite rest loner of .iueeaetai, church street, eoytu. Pictterva.; \ iltage, ou ' 1 Friday, October 2lst, '98, Tie tjlloici all the furtittur.• lo'' iris u.'rks .,f art. $111 ,,r., Lind orforts in or Ur .11 M..ul pit tuiseeun.1 e•'1111po$e.1ot-: t'aa lUr an bedruoi„ suite htdurui,uetera11-1 other carpets ani rugs . China d:rhes and glassware f.,r tat,it• use . p.cr!':,rchairs . L:trgo llureit:.t and sideboards lied:ling-et tt.ory .ieecri ,two Win- dow and a her rut -tins, Stoves and fuct.,shings. Oil - paintings and trained i' -'tures . -Flower etyr„-!e, p..ts and plants. Cutlery of all kinds . Orgat: and stool . Fancy and kitchen tables I)iutug-room. kiteht4u an -1 garden cl„ttrs: Gar- den too:s, and other articles too numerous to Wentiou.. Mao the following Read Estate. Pancer. 1. --$ .That han.iaome two storey - fan.) attic, white brick, slate roofed residence, called "Kin nwrd' erected by the late George L. Maver situate on the west side of Church, st. south in the Village of Pickering. and comprising about 3 acres. part of lot 16 to the lit concession. Township of Pickeritta,•iiiore particularly de .suribed in deeds registered in the Registry t)ni 0o for the Couuty of Ontario, as nunpeers 3`hl6 and.8210, from Elisabeth Gordon and others to the said George L. Maver, This propertyis :finely situated witbiri i taw minutes walof Pickering station, G. T. R'y, to substantially built and well finished and equipped Ihlough- out as a =gentleman's residence, The grounds are beautifully laid out and planted with trait and ornamental trees. There are also a neat' stable and poultry nous* on the promisee. A rare opportunity is presented by this sale of ob- taining a handsome and conveniently situated - residence suited bo a parson of means. . Psacx). 9—Cote 8 and 9, block "A" south of Henderson street, according to Logan4 regist- ered plan of building lobe ooutatniug hall an acre more or less, TERMS OF THH BALK The real eetate will be sold subject Otis reserve bid. No reserve on chattels. For chattels,Caeb. For real estate. ten per oent ot'parobssa mon- ey, -to be paid down and the balance in thirty days. The Vendor will not be bound to pro- duce any ebatraote, title deeds or . evidences of title, incept such as are in We possession. Pos- session will be given on completion of parahase Intending purchasers' may yiew premises or examine contents before day of sale. Sale of Chattels at 1 p. in. Real Rotate will be offered at 3 p. m, precisely. -- Further particulars and conditions will be made known on the day of sale, or may be had on application to the vendor, John Gordon, Esq Pickering P. O., the vendor's solicitors, or .the undersigned auctioneer, L. FAIRBANKS, Dated Sept 281b; 'SO : Anotion r. Dow & MoOilllvray, Brook at;, • Whitby, Vendor's Solicitors. . • Insure in the -- New Suitinge., . New Pautings. New Prints.: New Towel gs. Latest flats and Caps. A few elicits Print ,ewnants below cost. s Quenstou Cement For Building COnerete Walls, Silos, Stable Floors, Hog Troughs, Sidewalks and Cisterns. Wt ice for partioUlara and price of C.ernent, J To Municipal Councils tent Concrete Culvert and Sewer Wipe made on order. I Bridge Abutments, Piers. WingjWells, Arched Bridges, Arched Culverts, etc. Estimates given. : Send for price list. J. DEV.TTT Greenwood, Ontario. iia 'are pvepared to tiilrchafe WRFAT, BARLEY, all kinds of PEAS,, OATS, RYE and BUCKWHEAT. ate, Rye -and Buckwheat delivered; on cars at Spink Mills, Pickering. Wheat, Barley and Peas to be delivered at Elevator, Frenchman's Bey. Farmers' Mutual Fire Insurance Co`) ,., of Colnmbas, Oht., formed especially for Farmers. The business is flourishing with results be- yond expectations, having already issued nearly 1,500 policies. The oust of insuring in this Co, is growing less. You pay only for the actual losses and the small expenses incurred in run- ning a local company. For particular, apply to -the agent, • JOHN A. O'CONNOR, Kingston Road or Whitby P. 0. Aleo agout for the Norwioh Uuiou Fire Ins. l Co., and the Dominlun Life. Liverpool Market, Sept 10th; 1898. TamTAL*-- ' ng Station o.T.$ TRAINS GOING EAST D on AS VOLLOWs:---. No. 6 MAIL 7:52 A. M. " 14 LocAL . 2:58 P. M. " 8 LocAL, 6:10:P. M. TRAINS 00ING Wier OUR AS FOLLows: No. 9 LOCAL - . , . 9:00 A.M. "18 LOCAL , `, . 2:16 P. M. • " 7 MALL .' . � 8:16 P. M. T Ci,f[E TAHLH.—Dnnbarton Station TAIL TRAWS GONG EAST DUE AS FOLLOWS:--= No. 6 MAIL . . ' 7:47 A.M. No. 14 MIXED , 2:51 1 .M _ . 8: LOCAL . TRAINS GOING WEST DUE AS P31.1.•Ws;i No. 9 LcCA.L . . 3:05 A.M, " 18 M rxitn .. 2:20 P.M.. Mail .. 8:21 P. M. Osharwa.,. A judicial -'error is responsible for a m1k4understeinding which has caused aonie embarrassment to one of the -leadipg citl . zfna of Oshawa, W.;J. Luke. M r. Luke is a furniture dealer and by DO meaus an active party man, yet wb6n the blacklist of sevenoeen meu who were declared dis.- qualified as a result of the South Ontario election trial was published his name was included. The name should have been Louis Luke, instead. of W J. Luke. A motion to have. it rectified was made be 4ore Mr. Justice Osler Wednesday -after- I noon by C. J. Holman, solicitor for the petitioner, and was granted by his Lord ship. Louis Luke is a Conservative who Was shown to -have offered money to one D f the electors of the riding. North Toronto. York own-sbip connoil,will hold a epee fowl yneeting on - Friday afternoon n(.xt, when the Humberstone and other agree. merits, laid over from the regular meeting, will be ttLken up. The town School Board met Wednesday night. The passage of a few �bcounta was the lb only buviness transacted.- Slierwood ' Lodge, S.O.E., met Tuesday night and hi, tiated another member into their fraternity. The CODgref, atioh of Deer Park Pr6sby terian church spent a pleasant time Tues day night at the School. Addresses were delivered by Revs. Patterson, Wright and Neil and Dr. Parkin, and musical gelec- tions were enjoyably rendered b• the choir The ill-ventilation and aocumulation of Coal gas at the Tow ' n hall, Monday, com- pefled the township,, clerk to retire to the hotel to carry on his work with comfort. Newmarket.,. Fine weathor prevailed for the s&.6nd day of the Quadrennial Convention Q1 the Christian Cburcb, being held here Wed. e6day. This morning's session openh:l at 0 clock. Thb convention sermon preached by Rev. A. J. Samuels, of Ohio, during w i hob the Committee on Credentials got to work, and at the conclusion of the ser- moo the roll was called and the meetim-, adjourL01 till afternoon. The afternoon session was largely attended, -Rev. Isaac Cole presiding. The issues of the Session were presented by the cha irman, after Which the presidt-nt of the Conventior, Rev. Alva Morrill, presented his report, which was unanimously adopted. A vote of tharika to the president -. for his credit- able report followed., At the evening ses 010 n XJr. Whitney D. D., of Franklin, Ohio, lectured oil -The Christian move- ment," the men and was followed by reports of mmmiBEtonere of the Christian Union. MARKMAM ;, W . D. Crosby is Very ill at bib resitienoe Just South of the Village. Fred Rolph lots on Friday to resume bib stuffise as Trinity University. Mice Carrie Re"or, of Ms. Joy, return- ed lass Suarday from a, week's visit so ki4nds in Seerboro. Mrs. Alexander Opmrs, wha�'w bielo @pending the pals two months with ber father, S. L- Beebe, returned to her home last Friday. re We regret to announce the severe ill- ness of F. A. Clarry, mautigor of the wool 40 mill, who is confined to his bad with svmpLome-of typhoid fever. It is a well eLutablished principle of law that in crossing streets or highways if e p erson on -foot has the right of way. Drivers and bicycle riders should alwa.vt bear this fact 10 LnUld. It is law atAlt it you injure a pedestrian by careless driv- frig jog you are for it. or riding reap risible' 1 a % to rue , A person is not realm ell 1) across the street to keep out of the way of vehicles and bicycles. . The drivers and -"ders are the ones to look out for it clear track. — Economist. UXBRIDGE. W. S. Ori7niaton, of Toroni' Pnr• ebased Mr. Cbapple'9 extensive law prac- { tics and took possession on Nveduef- day. C. H. Nix ;msjndge on light TiOr03-4 At BnD derland as Whitby fairs. He anti his ' da nobler spent Sunday in Bowmau%l 110 Trains now arose here as 9 53 a. U3 i The evening express arrives as 6 5f `and the mail from the north at -Tr-.: The Mixed is ebansted to 8.20. On Tuesday night a 0;Umb4r of the friends of His Honor Judge Chapple. mostly citizens of the town, banquet" that ilzeirksleman as the Mauston Hone* and premnsed him with a hADd80M6 Al Jummmed, address. I. J, Gould- 01 M F. P presided as chairman, and Pessi ., Christie ox-Warden, of Reach, as TiOO oh airman. A Very pleasant 6YOUID9 WAS &bogs pir,"sojul were Rev. E. 1011pelas. 11:111101119 Coeburn. m Orm bu. of Paris. and W. S. is- ♦on, Mr. ChApPSI'll successor. Mr. (,haF- pie leaves at ones for his field of judies- ta re, the Rainy River District. followkd L she bass WIShes of all his frion,38- Ire. Chapple, and Son Till remain in Ux- ridge for the winter. ARl/�C T R u B.* anew &Tipe recently Vaunted in U. S. and Canada by CHAS. C LUT14 K rAAPLJSMNP 1:J 'RUPTUREJ, CAN- SECURED, 411110001011111� WITH No INCONVENIENCE ITHOUT A TRUSS CHEAP BY MAIL fort toydue.,; Your aiiiiine to us Dwane c" A post Card will do it. CNASs CLUTNE Age of person or KING 8T. WEST 10 caw irnmaterialA Aga of m3o; TORONTO - - -- - 134 case immaterial CANADA I Most Ec000micai Red Fall Wheat ..........:...........r. Spring Wheat ............................ Goose Wheat ........ 1.0v .................. .55 Oats...... .....:.............. V Barley .................. r ............ .42. DOMINION BANK I ray Surplus, Most Ec000micai Sale Rpgister.:__.-. Tuirsiniy, OcTonxu 18:—Credit Sale of farm stock, implements, hay, grain and rogto, at lot 13. con. 4, Uxbridge; the property of Albert Mantle. Sale at one o'clock sharp. Bee bills for list Thpo. Toucher, auctioneer. TURSMY OcToplilt"1801': Credit sale of horses, implements, 40 cattle, 65 Sheep and lambs, and 75 pigs, all sizes, 80 tons of hay, at lot 10, con. 1, Pickering, the property of J. J Fotbergill. See bills. L. Fairbanks, auctioneer. FRIDAY, OcTo Bits. 21 : Auction sale of household furniture, also that handsome residence, "Kinnaird," the property of. the late Goo. L. Mover, on the premises,, Pickering village. Sale of goods at one o'clock, while property will be offered at 3 p. m. See bills for complete list. L. IP C6 ; h 43 Ir 0.; r L U q, auctioneer. The Kelsey" Corrugated TUESDAY, OCT081111, 25 ;•--Credit Sale' of 25 Warm Air Generator. stars and heifers, hay, sto , at lot 2. ary Hot Air Furnace will produce con. 5, Uxbridge, the property of Joshns Any ordin heat If You will only supply -enough fuel, The Buody. Sale at one o'clock. See bills "Kelsey" has several special and valuable for full particulars. Thomas -Poucher, features but most important is that it will auctioneer. give more heat with less fuel and is the most durable heater made. The"' Kelsey" fire pot being constructed Of several .upright, tubular, corrugated, cast iron sections (see cut) around which the fire passes and up through which the cold air passes while being heated, and this entire section being wrapped with a heavy steel casing which becomes heated by the fire striking it when passing down outside of upright sections towards smoke pipe, it In cum warms the air that passes up between this steel casing and the to the public it good supply of_­'­- galvanised iron casing, tills explains wh y the "Kelsey" has three times more radiating surface and warm air capacity than an or-di• SCHOOL: Boo S, '4 nary Furnace. • The " Kelsey. " beat# every room evenly, whoresilever located witim nice, mild, healthful warm air that will not injare A variety of Note Paper from So a 7"Tth!n - �'Klsr w1a keat_ r"Gui so � feet quireup. Fancy - Lamp- Bhadae- White distast• and Varigated Crochet Cotton.' Berlins, The Kelsey does not hem your cellar. Embroidery Bilks and a nice stock of Rag The Kelsey to abiolately gas mW dust r I Patterns. V1_ I Send for heocriptivii cawavle. THE JAMES SMART MAL CO, BROCKVILLE9 Out. 211161"Ve, nalmrs for PICKERINO POST OFFICE. arrive A.M Vithe fL* '­ _,,ord T01012to 4b Arrive GT 0_30 am - CloseG� lt7 30a in GTEf Wpm '• Toronto 7 5-Opm Mai Is for a.m. west close at 10 o'clock night before Money orders issued on all parts of the worl& 8AV7XNG6ZAN7ZBU8XNM38-,.. Deposits received and interest allowed i6t 3 per cant per annum. Security indisputable It. A. IBuntinsc rofiThfisma F". J� has. 8, 10 and 12 quart Fruit Ba8kets, the very best q uality, at 28c, 30c and 86e per dozen, sup. , plied at his factory, one milt -north of Green River. Orders so- lioited and satipfaction guaranteed Address all orders to W. BARNES, GREEN RIVER, P. 0. O'BRIEN & RARE PROTOMIR"llnQ AJL*lS?B. We e e I ndeavor to plasm each customer of ours. To do this. nothing but Migh—clano Portrait- tur* is permitted to loaye our Studio, and sat- taf&ctiyn in guarantood. Outdoor calls prompt- ly titteuded to. Whitby Gallery 'oven every very Tues- day, Friday and Saturday.,,- iilill 41UAWA, A*- W111 Wylv. GREENWOOD MARKETS. White Fall Wheat ................ Red Fall Wheat ..........:...........r. Spring Wheat ............................ Goose Wheat ........ 1.0v .................. .55 Oats...... .....:.............. Peas.......................................... Barley .................. r ............ .42. DOMINION BANK I ray Surplus, $1,5001000 Sale Rpgister.:__.-. Tuirsiniy, OcTonxu 18:—Credit Sale of farm stock, implements, hay, grain and rogto, at lot 13. con. 4, Uxbridge; the property of Albert Mantle. Sale at one o'clock sharp. Bee bills for list Thpo. Toucher, auctioneer. TURSMY OcToplilt"1801': Credit sale of horses, implements, 40 cattle, 65 Sheep and lambs, and 75 pigs, all sizes, 80 tons of hay, at lot 10, con. 1, Pickering, the property of J. J Fotbergill. See bills. L. Fairbanks, auctioneer. FRIDAY, OcTo Bits. 21 : Auction sale of household furniture, also that handsome residence, "Kinnaird," the property of. the late Goo. L. Mover, on the premises,, Pickering village. Sale of goods at one o'clock, while property will be offered at 3 p. m. See bills for complete list. L. IP C6 ; h 43 Ir 0.; r L U q, auctioneer. The Kelsey" Corrugated TUESDAY, OCT081111, 25 ;•--Credit Sale' of 25 Warm Air Generator. stars and heifers, hay, sto , at lot 2. ary Hot Air Furnace will produce con. 5, Uxbridge, the property of Joshns Any ordin heat If You will only supply -enough fuel, The Buody. Sale at one o'clock. See bills "Kelsey" has several special and valuable for full particulars. Thomas -Poucher, features but most important is that it will auctioneer. give more heat with less fuel and is the most durable heater made. The"' Kelsey" fire pot being constructed Of several .upright, tubular, corrugated, cast iron sections (see cut) around which the fire passes and up through which the cold air passes while being heated, and this entire section being wrapped with a heavy steel casing which becomes heated by the fire striking it when passing down outside of upright sections towards smoke pipe, it In cum warms the air that passes up between this steel casing and the to the public it good supply of_­'­- galvanised iron casing, tills explains wh y the "Kelsey" has three times more radiating surface and warm air capacity than an or-di• SCHOOL: Boo S, '4 nary Furnace. • The " Kelsey. " beat# every room evenly, whoresilever located witim nice, mild, healthful warm air that will not injare A variety of Note Paper from So a 7"Tth!n - �'Klsr w1a keat_ r"Gui so � feet quireup. Fancy - Lamp- Bhadae- White distast• and Varigated Crochet Cotton.' Berlins, The Kelsey does not hem your cellar. Embroidery Bilks and a nice stock of Rag The Kelsey to abiolately gas mW dust r I Patterns. V1_ I Send for heocriptivii cawavle. THE JAMES SMART MAL CO, BROCKVILLE9 Out. 211161"Ve, nalmrs for PICKERINO POST OFFICE. arrive A.M Vithe fL* '­ _,,ord T01012to 4b Arrive GT 0_30 am - CloseG� lt7 30a in GTEf Wpm '• Toronto 7 5-Opm Mai Is for a.m. west close at 10 o'clock night before Money orders issued on all parts of the worl& 8AV7XNG6ZAN7ZBU8XNM38-,.. Deposits received and interest allowed i6t 3 per cant per annum. Security indisputable It. A. IBuntinsc rofiThfisma F". J� has. 8, 10 and 12 quart Fruit Ba8kets, the very best q uality, at 28c, 30c and 86e per dozen, sup. , plied at his factory, one milt -north of Green River. Orders so- lioited and satipfaction guaranteed Address all orders to W. BARNES, GREEN RIVER, P. 0. O'BRIEN & RARE PROTOMIR"llnQ AJL*lS?B. We e e I ndeavor to plasm each customer of ours. To do this. nothing but Migh—clano Portrait- tur* is permitted to loaye our Studio, and sat- taf&ctiyn in guarantood. Outdoor calls prompt- ly titteuded to. Whitby Gallery 'oven every very Tues- day, Friday and Saturday.,,- iilill 41UAWA, A*- W111 Wylv. GREENWOOD MARKETS. White Fall Wheat ................ T0 RENT --A farm containing 140 acres - being lot 9. 00m. 1, Pickering L town- ship. on i6o promises sro a ttorufortable frame house, a large barn with stone stabling, suM- cient to accommodate 35 head of G&tU*, shod Smineries and other outbuildings. Tile drain- ed with plenty of water. Twenty-four acres of 61a seed and 15 socrof seeded this spring. None but Ars•Is" farmers witb means nood R Lp , 'M Address for full psirtionlan to W- J. UK A hardware werch"t, Pickering. ad. �. re3 h,.'.' eats Of all Kinds I POULTRY and SAUSAGE On Hand in Season- Sbe&k, 12a per lb. Ross and 10o lb. Boiling--U to 70 per lb., KINCR QO o0a %deg *of (lot As 04 -,gdV as s O n11 1 n 0 qo• s Q ( cwt 0 a 0 Pr a a� Ila tli� mH tip rig " A 0 0, a c a X 065 2% i10 09 r6 IN D P4 OR Ir T61AD9 MARKS DESIGN$ Ac send mar Anyon sending a sketch and desert e 'in Our opinion free !!=r an 4111okly asoom table. (0MmUnio&- invention to Probably Uons stnotly oongidontVILAndbook OD patent$ sent fro& Oldoot VMey for socur"" Patents Milton `117011 h Nunn a speew Wtk4. without Zwo. In. the Aft &I,& Z4XNfifiC 1111trKa� t1hurt -, -,I V"b rwoot o1r. oulbuou or any adonUde journs! "*ruW 03 & 7116r; four months. I chid by all U*W"01AW& lima LC40 so I wommy. New Ytrk MA ir W_ waijbixistagi. D, C . ANCER CURED Red Fall Wheat ..........:...........r. Spring Wheat ............................ Goose Wheat ........ 1.0v .................. .55 Oats...... .....:.............. Peas.......................................... Barley .................. r ............ .42. DOMINION BANK CAP-1tal Paid up,-.L._ $195009000- Surplus, $1,5001000 T0 RENT --A farm containing 140 acres - being lot 9. 00m. 1, Pickering L town- ship. on i6o promises sro a ttorufortable frame house, a large barn with stone stabling, suM- cient to accommodate 35 head of G&tU*, shod Smineries and other outbuildings. Tile drain- ed with plenty of water. Twenty-four acres of 61a seed and 15 socrof seeded this spring. None but Ars•Is" farmers witb means nood R Lp , 'M Address for full psirtionlan to W- J. UK A hardware werch"t, Pickering. ad. �. re3 h,.'.' eats Of all Kinds I POULTRY and SAUSAGE On Hand in Season- Sbe&k, 12a per lb. Ross and 10o lb. Boiling--U to 70 per lb., KINCR QO o0a %deg *of (lot As 04 -,gdV as s O n11 1 n 0 qo• s Q ( cwt 0 a 0 Pr a a� Ila tli� mH tip rig " A 0 0, a c a X 065 2% i10 09 r6 IN D P4 OR Ir T61AD9 MARKS DESIGN$ Ac send mar Anyon sending a sketch and desert e 'in Our opinion free !!=r an 4111okly asoom table. (0MmUnio&- invention to Probably Uons stnotly oongidontVILAndbook OD patent$ sent fro& Oldoot VMey for socur"" Patents Milton `117011 h Nunn a speew Wtk4. without Zwo. In. the Aft &I,& Z4XNfifiC 1111trKa� t1hurt -, -,I V"b rwoot o1r. oulbuou or any adonUde journs! "*ruW 03 & 7116r; four months. I chid by all U*W"01AW& lima LC40 so I wommy. New Ytrk MA ir W_ waijbixistagi. D, C . ANCER CURED MAIC OF A MASTENI (Continued.), Pan oIfo's looks as well 'as his words told . is deep andheartfelt thankful- ness. He was' thankful that he had seen t e picture, and he was more thank iul .for the kindly information that .ad been vouchsafed. ay passed. -Zanoni had covered work and laid aside his ipnple- His supper had been brougght en, -and the lieutenant - The up his ments. and ea come. t ., Sig for yo "Not cept in nese," If i you, sig gin th long lif man 1e +t the cell, closing and. secur- ing the door behind -him. The prisoner remembered afterward that ho had heard the strong bar swing into place but tiara the key had not been turn- ed in the lock. For • a time - after he had been left alone he thought of the parting words of Pandolfo and of the peculiar manner in which they had been spoken, but the man was strongly sympathetic and he had spokpen on the impulse of the moment. That was all. Then as, was his wont, in that calm und tra qud hour o losing day, the gave h• thou htv the darling of his hear -his )sabel. Where was she at that moment ? He felt cure that she was thinking of him. Oh I what must she endure of sus- pense I For him death promised re- lease fro agony! but she must live on; and be knew she would live to suf- fer. He was thinking thus, with the .twilight fast deepening toward even- ing whe he was aroused from his re- verir-y the sound of the bar outside his c .,r. It was being moved. Aye, and presently - the door was slowly, noiselessly opened, and a human fig- ure emerged from the .gloom without into his cell, cane in, closing the way carefully ; a-nd then advanced a few paces, and stopped. A -• i3etiedictine' monk! the capacious robe, black as night, sweeping the stone. floor ; the rosary and the ivory cross; the hem - )en girdle, -with the, deep hood -like :owl. completely enveloping the bead ind the upper part of the face: and yen ,the lower 'past was in such ut- er shadow as to be entirely hidden. " How now, good father," said the )ripener, always kindly disposed toward hose wham he believed to be humble followers of the lowly Nazarene, •"hast come t o shrive me ?" A few seconds longer the dark -robed figure stood, 'and then, with a low, wailing cry, sprang forward, and in .n m( neat .more two white soft arrns were are and hie neck, and the cowled head pillowed on his bosom. " Juan! My love! My own 1 Qle i I have found you• at length 1" Zanoni knew not what he said -knew scarcely, for the time, what he did. In warm, passionate embrace be held' her. -his own beloved -his Isabel -and cov- ered her "beautiful face' with kisses each kiss a prayer and a blessing,' holy and pure. And then, when the first wild paroxysm of emotion had passed, he held her sweet face away -the cowl thrown, beck, and gazed upon it in hie turf;`, which I atn now painting, I mean shall be my masterpiece, and there shall come_ to it a redeeming power. As I gaze upon it in my day dreams, from the canvas the face of an angel -of a saint in deedis well as in name --looks forth and blesses me. Oh, my love 1 - my. darling 1 Do not ask me to for- sake it! As true as heaven the magic of my master -piece is real!" The princess gazed at him with a carry away the tray. ' dtrestd mingling of love, of wonder and or Zanoni what more can Ido of strange alarm in her. looks. ?" "Oh, my darling!" ahe cried, seizin ing, except to -receive and ,ao- hie wrists, and looking up with a world gratitude for all your kihd- of prayerful entreaty in her earnest, .eloquent eyes, " think I think 1 Oh 1 a pleasure for -me to scrim think what must be your fate -what .r. I. pray to the Blessed Vir- m fate -.-should >w yoqr mystic hope t ahe will- give you joy and fail you 1 There is safety in flight. Oh, with it•:" And with this the will yon not save yourself ?" "Isabel? Can there be safety in dis honor t Ask your own ,heart, cast your thoughts forward into the future, to the time when this present agony shall have become srtnctified to you, and ask yourself, would you not rather remem- ber me with honor, be able to bless my memory In your heart, than that I should bear your life-long companion- ship, with the remembrance of a brok- en faith clouding every hour, which it certainly would t h, my love 1 You will -not, you can not sk• me tb perjure myself before 'God an 1 man 1" He paused at thilt point, standing firm and strong, thou h in earnest sup- plication, • while his companio shook like an a9pen. Presently )k her to his bosom; drew her clo. and im- printed a loving kiss upon her pure white brow.- "Isabel! Wait. If you- have come now, oan you not Dome again when my picture is finished -that will he -I w-jjUI call i -t, on the ,sixth day from this?" "Oh.1 Juan 1" throwing her hands u1+) - on his shoulders, and gazing up into his ,face with startling eagerness and hop©. '! And will you then fleet If I come at that time will you do as I shall ask ?" He 'erased' a moment, thought ught fu lly; and -then with it clear, bight light in his, eyes' and in his handsome face, he answered : ' Yes, my own, I Drbmiae 1 Rernerfrt- ber, on the six, h day • from this. if You tome, and you shrill then open the Way, for my eseltpe and ask me to flee, I will do so," " The sixth day from S'ea." "f'ounting to -morrow' as the first?" •• Yes."_ I" And then-then-yi,u will fire from your prleon, and seek with ale. a happy, blessed union in some friendly clime where the laws of Parma Girl not reach us You promise I" " My darling 1 I have perfect faith in you -eta your love and in your judg- ment -and I give you my promise t hat whatever you stall ask me to do, when next we meet, i will do• - " Enough 1 Oli, ,,less you, my love bless you 1" And ngain her head was pillowed on hie hosoni ; his strong arms encircled her ; -and the little 1 iine they. be a sin before Godl It must not bel Ont. the duke will never allow It, nev- er: Ile can not accept this divine masterpiece of art and beauty, and with the hand that takes it sign the death -warrant of him who created HI" 9 And then, as though fearing that he Might have said too much, he asked the prisoner to pardon him for his im- pulsive expression of feeling, and hav- ing wiped the moisture from hie eyes, he gave one more glance at the pic- ture; then took up the tray and left the cell. During the forenoon Zanoni looked at his picture from every point, of view, but could find nothing to im- prove. He would not have put the point of a pencil upon a feature of the face could it have saved his life. It was perfect. More than once the im- pulao had been upon him to fall. down before it on his knees and worship it -not the picture his hand had creat- ed; no, no, not that, but the true saint in heaven, the memory of whom had served him as a model. This was the day can which he had expected the coming of the duke, and he had looked for him at an early hour, but t he forenoon was almost gone and he had not come. What did it mean 1 Had he forgotten? Noon came, and the dinner- was brought. The painter asked Pandolfo, who had taken his chief's place, if he could imagine why his grace had not come. The keeper shook his head, and Was upon the point of returning a nega- tive answer, when he changed to call to mind that it was the day appointed for the parade and review of the troops, at which, of course, the duke must he present, being: by virtue of his civil office, commander. -in -chief. 80 if he came at all, it could not bo until later in the day. As the minutes erepf '' ttivay• - Into hours after this, the ..painter became painfully nervous and anxious. Sup- pose it should happen that thft duke's corningshould interfere with t he com- ing of Isabel. Or, worse still, suppose the. two should, by any possibility, chance to meet at the prison I He would not think of such a filing, circled his ankles, and in the right Pandolfo, if he was in the secret, lured he earriftis a spear at.d a bow, )could prevent it. Ile t hought of it. t h" -strings of which, when - t ruck give never, heless. and_ it •cunt inued to wor- out a dull, booming mute, s hile in his ry him. ' Further, he would not, • an p►in any account. ctl her hand, is a sickle.-sh l )ed satcri- !lave thin c'ess collie ificial knife, with curious e►:lblerus en - Another hour tressed, and enol her, graved on the, blade. The dancer be- am! 1 lr.' sun was near to its set ting, gala singing. i n a *low voice. Suddenly Basting its hl:entitle,rays, like brise of he atarte to his feet as the tltusic of bright told. into t le. Jolson cell, w hen the door was opened and the- duke the tc•n► tpms becotuey wildet,and Wit eatered. a yell and a shriek of tau Jiver; with Signor, 1 airs Is►t.e. I have been • Ou18t rpt rhed army and kept by a review of our .troupe, but 1 mtlarlr,s h, proclaims blains think the light at - the -settle time cuttin a picture a light 1" good. Is tae' K t4 still at htu,et'1f will the knle se "It iy finished my lord," tits saint- ! blood mingles with that of er replied, his voice deep and sclerae. ricers which' are offered to his face a trifle pale, "hut you will ing • ( l('n and the 'w wait a ' few minutes. As i he earl- itr+k. yurrlt,t,ns and receive alt bra nis now fall t hey would chat a t, e- d Ir - rt plif>et. hfate lint P ig 1t." the- dancer inflicts fatal w -then gazed again. A length, with wonder and almost ale m In his pal- ing face, he turned to he artist. e er see that face !rebs as ed ou ev- eddin t� bush - "Signor 1 W quivering tone. "Why, do you ask, ai a faoe familiar to you f' "Yes! Yes! Oh. fort heaven! tell lie -where it? You must havekno painted it so truly." "Duke!" answered Zan earnest tone, "you beho pictured face of the mother who gave me hi lard, 1: have given to y the form and the featur blessed mother, as I hol. red, loving memory. Ar with the picture? you?" "Pleased I Does it sat peated the astounded p one struggling out from dream. He gazed upon gazed with his very searching,- eager look. To Be Confirm SAW THE DEVIL CarIOns and Revolting fiu Fhlllppine lain. • The Devil Dance of the has, it is said,' been wine one white man, an An speaks the local tongue.1 and was disguised as a tr neighbouring tribe so as cess to the orgy. The clan is dressed in a curious cos ing a high, conical, white red ta.isel on ;his head, a robe from neck to ankle, einbroillered representatio goddesses .of smallpox, m cholera. Massive 'bllver bangles en - lord i Is it the hove of id you know n it to ' have ni in solemn d there the now sainted th 1 Yes, my ur St. Cecilia s of my own them in sac - you pleased e it satisfy sfy met" re- tentate like a wonderful hh painter- oul in the Ionia 011 the 5. Philippines sed by only erican who ke a native, ,der from a to gain ac- 'er; a priest, unlfe, wear - cap. with long white and' on. it s, of the rder and fall light.". l,au can move the easel; signor." - himself. A Wu more awful p "Wait a moment' longer, my lord, ever, ,ie the sands}g of tht, and you shalt behold it." the I arlietaA, the sorcerer: At this noen,•nt, while] the duke Sieve that their mission is to waited a str.wige thing happened. As!lens. The followers of theme teen are it afterwardprgvird. the- keeper to calltrd Juramentados, rind in their leaving the door, atter the entrrine° of • fr.nry (.hey become atbtiu'lutely_ like the. augui,t vi litcir, tied simply 'cw•unK ' dPIllortY. the bar without iisitig the key: •anel'� thin WWI the reit uation as the prinr,nst:ONE OF WELLINGTON'S SOLDIERS. pact exiiec.ted • to' find it. • She had ; ...Azle in With Pandulfo's t, wife, a1s she', !led donon the occasion of the for- ; Jean`tterotasealtl Drank titstsiker itudiell 1 left them was given to the whim -tiler visit, the lents and Ltred to be 104. Pc ring of the deep enduring p ar;•sicn 1 Ili.. corridor l hE�y hid (asap at entre to c c �,it1t part and talon 1 -John .t11r11ougail whet ..died p lr(�t)I of R seen k I quivering f a deity, d !reclaim, ►:that hie t he sucri- 1m. I1ur- ershippers re or leas indeed, etincls on ase, how - Order of who' he - ill t`hris- that -- t- h'; e)r o t fat section tsithout ` e •n the keeper, anti art only o ..( ,e( recently - 1 their lives the t'ar wrtx found in plan. to t)trurel on his steal! farm four milts out of What e•xplanatlen', if any, the •ptin- the d�►c,r the!• h'id t tk f h rifts to ,t he person or the K nt 1' iwnton til I i believed fu h ttr herr► rd t hat !t had 6 y0U'r y . , ell tt ' Ur ear - 1 tt rte. A unutterable rapture. personal -chu. hard aided her in bar r I he ) been left t tele jou the ; 1 he oldest . elan in Maine, and possibly )rineette'e acsetetnrstat ion. They had Juan ! Did you [bink I had forgot- and devoted effort. in his behalf our lcte,l utcorrlirl ly. } I the oldest person in New England. :� ten you i'" 1 hero 00" Id not know.' Ile only, knew ihr last wt = „ e 1 h a ropy- of a church rrc.,ro mad t, Isabel 1 My Ioie }' My life 1 I care that on the following morning, when h u) a,r,trra•1 . ! sl► k 1 y: lrtnrni i e' his not realize it. I can not unrierstand i andolfo came with .1 he hreak,faat, he_ y 1"ft his lips; )lieu ter) daughter ways- that he water hat tined in liiw�• of Iii i el!' Is ;[gain opened, ibis the Yreisbytrrian Church of U rufri it. It _is yourself !-but-heti4. ? Oh, my "f� 1(1(1 red to sealed hien with anew . Kil irh dar•ling1.tell me what it means. Ilow•-iriterea't, , t 4t)tr`;an'e tu.the larks. oil t u treat him with anew t►, titin. Ileac- I Scot Linl..otl :atilt �ti, 1?i)•1, whit, h wou!,i did you come 1 For what-for'wh:tt-"- r('sl)ec•t and esteem, 11u! •,no wit,l-1 s 1'('r a`neenent' the'. pain er; -In his' Juan, I carne as .1 could. 1 Elland 'Token ; tie slur! wit e terror E itttEEto% 1)13 age 104 y'calrs at the tinge of myself Irl" i {{i n. frost, whu ll 1r1 .th et1{{ht ur ...K• ttu t. •.u, tutorig [n•> ,:1 ,er halt , p, l un Id , two se :new t could be suspected that he w 114 cog-.t,u�ctl}nK, i,tn►P • of>'►i loyiutt himself ; In hint piper ) I forces. First, the love and esteem you ni�ant of any occurrence in his de- r) natural .,teen tL :e , ave :won from those on dutyhere. 01, nlent out of the usual course: IuKt'1h• r t runic ire (4 II hunurul t(> d Oct.1 e ' will, K n t fat t.c of r trout i he !{t it telt Army dated ih�t. 1'�. Text, I had gold. Those who. have help- !''roes! this time/,unu01 worked with (►f self con(.rol, sav elhbitrinl,!,in puweris ed me will serve no longer here. The3q a zeal -a • elf. {kto, lei (hied four months , ter the K yl, new ardor. Ile had t,rought I{'' »aw a Moment later. (Wo tttitlgs- overt hro,v of Napoleon Duna( will have- nc, neer}. I haus pruvidrd fo{ the,, fate,, of his saint to erfec•tiee. say I'trst the that. , dear lose, you will wron t, duke who stood before t e waterloo- ! rte' at g fila only he,t i►nd' there, at breed rano.►,, whi(h wire between. hutiti nobody ;you will�du harm tr.)-none. r,inor sell and flit dtx.r, h.ttl [lot not eve t „ \a n ilrlur �.igall vieant to Fast un f`ronl r point s, .whc'rE. a` nPtY tnU(`1t " And now," she added, stepping back r,f light. or - .n( shade might 4'ntr:tn:•cs of '110_01 her person. 11 tie r k to live with a uai'ri le pace, "you must h, ,xp,rlitiuus.'You 'bee -needed -rind before h,! rt,( t1. Ile tune. +ughtrr n►'out t.rn y',ar, rig, 1Ir ci)uld do forth i', th it ills I,rineE+nE51, in hos s(►u,- used to rel tie that he Serve, will put un: this robe -this cowl -:which this he. must put. the final touches a{)- l,er ru►•, herd cowl. if i.ht• bac will - pass you by th, }*cards out side o. \t'rllin iirde►' on ft the rest of the picture; every 1.1,e• I'airlter of Pastas 1 hfte that, - two ,itgetherd etta•�te►n and Iiig p•u't ill without .quest lone 1 shra11 be pf rtnilted , light and every shadow must h as it he had a visitor, supposed twound In.(1144»4•(011(1 tngayrt►R ' ke�er14 to (lens rt as soon as. you ars' gone. Once was toremain for all time, keeper it ` b he 1 he. I am outside this cell, no one will truu- I This done, , or, at any e merle tine lout. hila Up in a hcispital forr)�u t.erat1 1 out You know cell, whore the' dwell and, with patient �n�lha(kthosoul-R«�nt, connected with the e b U,'541t•at:on n, from' whom,.bilk Id 1 oil tltle.of tit, was nbt prt,csa(' at the ing of -Cola Pandolfo is ?" !)r'ilyerflll ParlhE'stne faH, he. put upon It 11••I, .y1nc, ht ► rf'IAE>!e w'UUId blhlc t,•tl tit• (►f \\atertoU. :N)nrl at., r_ quit- " " the final touches off p char, U,•• ur, yen::r of a sun oL thft, ting ills t niy Ir. ,'1IcIk)ugal ]14(1) 1 't "Go there uirlil his britaah. h. n ,,u u 1 i,b•Ice anti tit tiucll a ` ' q y; and there Iwill •And so, with his picture finished,. 1,Inlf• rni anti tcx,k his wife to \1,E,nrton, N. 1;. meet you." ill:• morning of the mixt h dray dawned, Khhrl�prI1114,as expected.. where .he lived rtl t,ut hove As fol I h ►u lily-fi 1 • year y " 1k) .you menn-to--eseape ?" The .six•'fh,- count ing from the visit cif were ht•r tlteliugs when P h t`se.lf )fiat c KG .he raised a large famil must •• -Oh, yes 1 yes ! The way • i9 ansa. ' the princess to -the prison cell. ed file voir•e i 1 n ,she rec•►gniz- ►f !lin child re 11 moved ttw a _ dr Flee'! flee, skeet love, while there is better f her guardian can' he all early adye, SO that they ted at time and opportunity. 1 am corning toi itn.lgtnrcl ,1h:•n dere it)ed', iiols hrl{, fo him, After Y wet- of nu C'I1A'P'IER XVIII, seer; it Wes t'10 later th. d,alh of his you; S then to secant,. w ,' he c (ales to 1'Iaine and leer dot. his .For a time -=hp knew not how long n the keeper,. liar cl ,r''. •ing tlrail eighter. As h ^7amini gazer) 1ntU the eatger, Rivett' brought 'to .the''' prieoneC his brc.akf� t� 1 h''r (IlsgUl�te rvotlld not'' r)t t1P le'.l1t1 Wath 111 tytralte'r1Pll. Clrt face before him like -one in a .horrible �t 1i*7(rated 1)y t'hr du(,tl; gttz�', tl►f• old oltiie'r we.rk,(1 on. thutat h, au111 uiiic,ri, )fill regret., that be '�,(,w, til , • dream. 'Then 11* bowed his head upon hat:d been again called away. (r1Kl1( 1• do -not t ,Zanoni,_ the light,, t$ in the 1tik -s until he was past t bis hands and grtirled_ aloud, while "But.," said he, . ",tiig.nor PatadolfO tear. \fill think it- could be bets-. fury mark. Ile took large ix every Sim}, and at every joint he will talk, my (,lace,; yu you will want It mal You uncover the picture?, K dile of Scotch whir+ e At.e)ek like a wide riven oak. And • soY- seetrj Tr y „h('uevr.r 1 for nothing." possible- fit that range -perhaps pK :ire-' Ode to buy it until heti 1 () U yea tri• stood until the. patroxwsrn1was pays- Zanoni saw the hand of the ripe. s thlt in that mum,nt the srttoke.i plat{ cur ic,t�trt'o u}, to ed. Then he took a turn across the in. the removal ! atrtist. ! p i could have f ( P died. During 1 sense, itn , y n his I', cP • alid.whi'n he r;lrtle.back he reached Sh:' would not tempt to a breach of Never, fest 11 n r Duet of th, k 11 1anxi. t forgotten:. ll days h d i 1 I1 Ih re n.i took her h.ancire His face duty, but . she had' found means to yy I%:ts pale as depth; hut in his 'esteems IrtVe hini called away. He understood eyes glowed. a light that was sublime. but he made no sign.. • "Isabel 1 My angel of goodness and 11'h: n the officer came to :s carry mercy ! 1Iy own ! 11 love! I can not -sway the tray he asked permission to- do this thing! ITtish 1 Hear me to the look ()nee more upon the "wonderful end. I- asked the duke to exercise his picture than. had grown to .beauty and authority- and grant Me' the time of life! under n er his own eye. life I am now possessing -and, I may "Who knows," he- added,_ "if I i say -enjoying. He granted It.1 Tn .re,- have another opportunity, as -I turn I gave, of my own - accord, a iso!- , not be sure -w e Tan I shall return. •emn promise, and T called God for a 1 The painter, without rernttrk, witness to my faith. - Further,- I prom- � away -the cover froth the.canvas ised him -promised him r t$eatedly- ! stepped beck. • . The keeper gaine that he should have the picture finish- favorable positign and looked apo ed. Oh 1 1 can no't break hall can 00k and (1- a it my wordlooked long and earnestly, his }soul can not 1"He paused at this 'point, I in .his eyes and every faculty of atd- I%'hile a new light came into his eyes ; rniration. and pleasurable exciterrient •and 'a new.estranere 'emotion worked on ! alert, At length he burst forth th his features. Presently he added: Isabel t I have another reason. Do not think me superstitious, do' not shake your bead in doubt. This ni words coming from the very depth of his being: - t "Just heaven 1 '' Shall Parma lose the master who painted this? It would . 4 t' hus- t at n005 •rm ur' le.t'err- nth ler; e w•a1S rs (dd. t lure (/ $ IUVP(► OtiH'.$ account. rrlat8 hoIida 'g t t 1t1R t 1P 'hl'lst- ►lt'lE•, J of 1RJ7 e ' ,eatf+d ., c 1 1s the fact. In a' the Psalms of -David. and the t;o )ks of and greater anxit'ty he forgot t he lesser, I Proverbs from, n1. tnter•y• rued offered to when he came to realize how ! recite the hook of Joh;. but his ft lends. great it must have been we shall krl(►wtng his feeble Condition. ,e• •s not wonder. I tilaid- "Here 0(1 bird not to Make' the attteru}.t., : th re ! • is your --position, my. lord-- .- ..._.-_`. New, Antonio barn(•<se, lhrelt say if I have kept m you' �I'1tAM\v,kY T1I1tOttGi1 Cse I",:l'TI"II: )RAI. AA.n(1• with thhis the painter took t he silken curtain b A tramway rune through -the t'uthe- silk end y the two lower ,cor- drat of L,''tr1'rht, which was k,u It. in threw it over behind the. the thirtieth century upon the its of canvas, thus gi�'ing to ,.the light the whole painted surface, And, as the an older one founded h (lupe had 'said,Y St. Wil el,ru- 'it Gould not have been (1 us. After a sea.ere storm in 161 l the a better light. 'I'tse effect of the nave fell, leaving a large spat(.. be - slanting, golden •ra the scene golden •rayar fallingl lighting up tweet) the tower and the chancel. •The the is. was a glow. and directly up- tower is 950 feet high sand very i Yet e. softness, tiful. ,' new nau- ave was built; I,ut be - that rendered it 9ubliitte. The duke ed - i• HeUI gaze(! for -g• ,ween' it end .the tower u meet and held his breath. In another erwie! ontieerated ge street runs. round, and ?der telly to - Moment will cc eels- hip leart seemed 'to have ilitari,tn municipality has shucke( 'the hua;hPd its- nestle h � ut- step.hus d g' Ile took a short faithful by the noisy innovation of• a' - Y -•moved ' a trifle to the. left tramway. An AfFlioted Mothe NURSING HER DYING' CHILD 11 HEALTH GAVE WAY. Annenittt, FoHOW:ed by 'Neursllgie Pa Backed Her $ystent-)der Friends Fen ed Tlbat she Could Not Recover. From the Enterprise, Bridgewater N. S. Mr. and Mrs. James A. Diehl; w live about one and a half miles from Bridgewater, are highly esteemed by 41 large circle of friends. Mrs. Diehl has passed through a trying illness, the particulars of whic1i ij recently gave a reporter of the, Pit prise,- as fol- lows: -"In the spring of 1898 my health gave way. sin addition to my ordi- nary household duties I had the con- stant care day and night of a sick child. In 'the hope of "saving my, little one, it did not occur to me that over- work, loss of sleep and anxiety were exhausting my strength. Finally my child passed away, and -then I (realized my physical condition, Shortly after I was attacked with neuralgia pains in the shoulder which shifted to my right side after there weeks .and settled there. The pain in my side grew worse and after a few days 1 became unable to leave my bed. 'In addition to my bodily trouble I became melancholy and was very much reduced in flesh. My friends regarded my condition as -dan- gerous. I remained in bed several weeks; to me it seemed aged. It is im- poesihle to describe the agonies Isuf-. fere(' during that time.. A skilful phy- sieian was in constant attendance up- on Inc. Ile said mine was the worst case of anaemia and general neural- . girt he had ever seen. After some week he succeeded in getting me out of bed and after a fewmore weeks I was able to do some light household work. But I was only a shadow of my • former self; my appetite was very poor and that maddening pain still clung to my side and also spread to the re- gion of the heart and lungs, darting through and about -them like lances .-eas cutting the flesh. Every few days 1 had to apply Croton oil and fly bliss- - tees to my cheat., and- had a had cough. M1y friend gave up, think- ing 1 .had ce,nsumption. 1, too, really lab eight my erect was. rear, fearing enoyl ly 1 hat t he pains about my heart might take ale off any day. Dur- ing all tnv illness i had. never thought of any medicine other than what my doc- tor pres-raked. It happened. however,:' that in glancing over the Enterprise' one clay my eye tell upon t lie staternept of a dire made by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. The, case-resetnbled aline in some rex},t,(ts. 1 read and re -read the art icle, It. haunted are for several days not withstanding I t ries to dismiss It frorn. -ray mind. At last I asked the doctor whether he thought these pills would loop cru'. Ile lrs,ked at me a. rnnulent - tnd 1 hen remit! keel "well perhaps you. - had. tetter - try them. I believe they 'do work wonders ir1_some cases and if they 11 a► nut ruse you they -' I1 certainly do no harm." That ren�nrtc opened to me t h( door of life. far h +d he maid "no" 1 should_. not hrfve used t he pills. 11 hen -1 hid used tw•o loxes 1l,cgen to feel het ter,. my appetite lin-- proved anti there ,were less of these p:1in)t shout the.heart-and chest. The rough too was less severe. I kept on till six 1,oxe,s more were taken and to ntakea long story' ~brat. I watt myself eget!). appetite gteel, spirits buoyant, pains -g,►rte <en,l I could do my- own %a-urk with comfort. I have been well. -,•ver sine•e and ti:cvc_ no doubt t hat lir. \\ 1!lianee Pink fills saved my life and•_ rectoed the to ray' family. I am ever.. ready to ..peak t heir praises and in ray:. heart :cru ever 1 iu okil►g God's hlessi ng upon' their -,tiscove rer. Jttleuntat ism se' et -lea, ne=utatgiaq p•lr 1 ia►I paralysis loony/toter, eta:eat. nerve otts headache, nerve,us prostration and di•ar•at<,e•s depending Upon humors in t blood. such as sert.ful:t, chronic ei'y sip all disappear 14•fore a fair 'reatutent with 1)r. \Villi:etns' Pink. fill+. They givee a lie>rzllt by glow. re. ,,ale and mellow-•omplexior►i and build end renew 1114 entire system. SON, + y :ell 'd(-;)b•rs or ...ere pest pails at 54h_ a lase ler six but.••; for $''.5(► 1}y' addrem -- r:;. the I)i . \1 it l tams' 'Le'iirine. Co., _ Et•'ee kv, l'. Ont:. Ih, not, he' persuaded to take �C,ti►e 'ut stitute. , WHAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN. 1 Trivial .lei afvnr ell A-'epntry'•s 11111,.r, r. and the !luriit's t.i•ographp :1 r► .1•:1}..Iish writer says that the roust tri ; ia1 act t haat c'h:t aged t he his- , tory is - tory of a count ry %vans the neglect of the proposals of Christopher Colutll- - l,tts by Henry \'ll., of England.: The ,1'rlti't' SUttis 11}) t r'e5ults as fol (owe) .' Il:u1 - Henry given Col•umhue an rEudient•e, 1ti.it(':td or treat 'lig! hint ifs :t mere 6:I ha e;, out of his lull](!, ,it as 411 most itnpos-sil,Ie to believe that I.i natural acus eiess•and fox esi� h;. ri'oui,l not have res salsa to hitn t lie t t etuend- •uua disc rep.* icy between the ritik- in- volved:and 4 Lea, possible.. results. Spatia, in support in,. hi►ne became the •most powerful, t I, • rte hest, and the. neeet e+nvi(td count 'y in Europe. lied Coltiin- btis sailed under the auspices e)f Eire- -land instead ef- these of Spain, 1 he '._ whole hisl`e ry of. the New 1\'ot td would h;t.ve - even different, the c.i)los- asl-tragttdie. in. .North and South Atnc•rica %you lit never.- have happened, and some (If the Nivea( and most fer- tile count ries in t he world would have been spared Illiat blighting curse tinder" which they stilt languish. The elock of the world s progress. • would .h.v e. been put on t least. a hun:lred years,•: and Spain, la .king the treasures ' Which enabled her t ). do such an infinity of':, harm in Europe and the Americas, Would .not. halve beet! able .10 earn for herself the legacy . of hatred and shamti which has proved til. be- t he - only lasting. reward of her ins: tamer: able national crimes, ' 1 dled it testified to her Anglo-Saxon o[-' 'MO1111. Of: it- Ofi'l rigin. . 1 he ,food -nattered captain ee me otit f his little wheel -house anti• shook his List at the reckless canoeist as she bobbed wildly r Alice wanted a trip`.o Europe, Bess -swvell fro up and • down on ' the m our boat. But she laugh- i.d•sh`e could not be• happy unless we -ed triumphantly, waved her paddle at ,. epent our summer in Muskoka,' it was llinl, and shot awaytowards the shot©. ep fashionable. Bob declared be would •"here's l3ig Bay Point, mother," said Alic;a; pointing to the to ! peninsula iter, contented in the Back yard. vv%th'its n+g by q� pretty cottages tarried in the with a baruinock and a book. Fete Woods. "Pe haps ('h:trlie wants to the Was sure that a tiger -hunting exptdi • us up_ "in the summer hotel there for a Month." tion to_ Central Africa, was tht' oaly "Not likely there's-' a, i, ainc:h larger- tnitef that would, restore) his hatt er- buildin the shores of this lake e,l Leaves,. after the hard work of the j she.z'e ' can Leave you," said Pete•, ut \Winter..-2ltother said -the children (lid lune forAlidiots aotten l►Ie hadt rend <tlao Pt the a joke need a holiday, poor things! . And t.ur fell tennoteeee. . y ',eternal e relatives told us to . stop ,PI'elsay4.soon we found -ourselves out • quarreling and be_tliink£ul lliat•vve had in tlih oti*h lake, where the breeze was fresher tend, where the blue waters rip - any ' \station at all; when he was Pled away to the south and east. as far vie,ung people didn't: think holidays as the eye could see. We kept close .were siecessary.• It. sus at this point in the western shore from which the land stretched up and up away to the dint horizon, every acre of it well culti- vated, except the dense fringe of trees filet adorned the shore. . 'hhe •-wil- lows hung clown over the water's edge, and were reflected in its • cool green depths, except when the swell .of our boat distill bed its clear surface.' - ?'he • bus r little- bay had its shores \val. line( with summer residences, ,with here and there a merry campers' party. or t g -roup of hilarious bathers. 11ut when we came out into the lake the shores became less thickly populat- ed until at last only the quiet farm- houses -appeared set. here- and t.h_ere on the wide- sloping plain, and no sounds broke the stillness save the ptiffing of .our little ,,vessel • or the cry of sotue w11i1.ce gullitz that were"sporti:ng far. out on- the blue water. ,Sail boats flitted,. like gf eat '%white birds Over • 1 he rippling .expanse; once we met a steamer and there were mu- tual flutterings of handkerchiefs as our whistles politely saluted -in ear - piercing shrieks. f We. stiled un in the stillness':Once more,- passing farms and still more fa ones monotonous- in their abundant be.iut.y. a • . Bub and Alice' "Protnonade(1 What little deck Space there was, .while the rest of us lounged round on ratlrer- uncoinfort.able scats, aiid -watched everything. A wildly joyous group of Loys and girls played cards on the top of the life boat, and a pair of lovers intele, entert-ainment for • the general -public in a corner. Ytet.e, pretended to be overcome by the tout`h.ing scene, grid fell off:his"stool with a thud. But even sentiment and scenery' will not providk fur all 1he.wants of nature, arid Boon there were anxious enquiries re= gaa,rding a lunch. And wog found that here. again, the 131ahop heti showed his thoughtfulness. •t,andwviches, salad, cake. and, in faot, everything good cutiue out of u basket packed at Berrie. and behold, a bright-eyed little' boy, who apparently regarded everyone .acs his special friend, carne smiling round with cups and .t& Iiccrs anti delicious hot, steaming tea 'for every• ono on board. - , ('harlies.Confessed. that be wail'not the author of this generosity;. and we were aluneet too amazed to thank the boy when he informed _us ,that "they 'always did this,'' even Pete Was speech- less. . "It's the millennium," he said at last, when the second' cup came round. 1"The Mayor and Council will be at the dock in Orillia lia wit.h ice, -cream and lieu- onade whee we arrive, there isn't a doubt." - - "Orillia," said' Bob.:• "So that's where we're going, is it. (" ` "Next time I confide in you l" 'said the Bishop, gazing as reproachfully as 'his benevolent countenance would al- low at the stricken sinner. who i.nt- rnectiat.ely sunk into his collar, like a snapping turtle. ''Well, we've discovered where we are going," we all laughed triumphantly. "No, you haven't," protested Charlie, "I only intend to stop there long enough to put Pete in the asylum. "Joke! Everybody laugh' please," said the delinquent, emerging from his collar to attack the eatables with 're- newed vigor. Everybody obeyed, even the joker himself. "We are on historic ground here, Mother," the Bishop said, pointing to the shore, and ignoring Pete's ex- planation that it was historic water he meant. "It "wets here and in the surrounding district that the Hurons lived in the .early days." We all sat attentive while the Bishop rehearsed in his best clerical, style some stirring trues of the Dave Barons and their devoted mis- sionaries and their extermination 'by the Iroquois. t . . We ga,zed out over the peacful coun- try lying so quiet and prosperous in the surneyner sunshine; and it. seemed inr- possilbsle that- not so many years ago those 'fields were covered. with dense forests and overrun by savages. But. Pete had had all the luncheon he could possifil`y eat, so there was no. more. peace. He broke the silence by ask- ing in an awestruck whisper if the Bishop ordered the Huron massacre be- fore hand to give our trip a proper romantic coloring. Alice explained that if Charlie had the power to de- stroy it was very likely he would have `rid us of the obnoxious member of our party long ere this. The breeze was dying 'away, and the afternoon sun beginning to wane as we approached a scattered group. of islands. Charlie named them, Garden, Grape and Strawberry, away out there with its white cliffs and its summer hotels; We seemed to be running right up to the land. The green banks ap- proached, and Pete was explaining that the Bishop had ordered the novelty of asteamboat ride over land to Toronto, when, suddenly, the shores parted, and we glided genly up a delightful little channel, -pre ty summer cottages, with gay b ting -trimmed verandas and boat -houses, smiling down upon us from either side. ' A couple of bridges blocked our way mead, one - carrying a'• railway, the other used as a • foot bridge; but they turned aside like magic in response to our whistle. Charlie's .work again, Pete explained, and we slipped through the . narrow passage, keeping a snorting train wait - that ('horlie carne tortur-rescue. Chair- lie- is our div.inityl student, and besides hiving inbre: money t.hause the rest of tlit(ffateily—a most extraordinary state 'of affairs for a prospective clergy- ni1I1—bels ' many nick names, hula is principally Lirown as the. Bishop. Ile came_ forward with the handsome offer of. ct wvhole .(ley's trip, 'entirely at his expense,.to sortie far away point. where he . i:id spent. -several of his summers of s'uden.( life. Ile .Wini to 011003e the dt- -;in(tinn and -neone was to ask ques- ti'tr �.,-. After that eteo°ry' one was to �c :iis own way, provided. his money w,;. 11 take. him. .result , was that vie found our- selves at a. reas(enalrly early hour the next morning, Comfortably seated, and ste,trui;iig out of [nein Station, in a northern Ix,-uutl train. • W e tht,u rh.i. of t;ravenhtirstor Brace- bri•tge., or sure*: point in Muskoka, is a p„ ,iblir. . destinatiot1, and Pete, even euggeatecl I)aweon E-it"y, as the limit of Cllai'lie'S gencru-ity, hut_ the liis-- tee, ktlpt his own -council, 'so we flew ho.' !l aptll were content. ` ' I rt�av quite c'oiu eite(1 when we be- gan to admire tlie landscape about us, tttia pointed out each new adornment a th,Julgh -he had provided it -in the treat; anti he- c*t'rtaiuly had reason to be 1 nerd of - the exhibition.'- Miles , ut riev.'.•1--clanging, farm lands, all heavy ti,ith the burden -of the coming harvest, cool green, woods,.., little stream, Wandering aimlessly -through braid v.tlleys.where the cloud shadows chased each .other . over green -and brown 'and golden fields, all flew. past a- we c atter ed along. At intervals we stopped at a -pretty 'little town,l or •ruartai through -a less important one with nii-sy indifference. - Pete sat in a seat. all by himself' with his hat on one side of his head, whietl- - li;b the "Limited Express" in perfect tone to the clattererf the train. I3ess end Alice sat.opposite, and were treat- ed to his explanations of .any point of -Interest pa! sed. ,. It &twirl d a very Short time indeed until our guide told us our first stop- piug place was -in sight._ The conduc- . for was shouting "AllandaltjJ"hand Chai lie -pointed out of the windows. to • our right. A coul breeze was blowing off a lung •blue stretch' of water and '.cross it we could see a pretty town rising up froru the water's eage, anis co, ()ying the steep hills arutild. -Hirrie; 1:s that the end of our pil-. grinr:tge, JLr. (;reatlicart C' asked Pete, , 'if su. this land of Iluelath is a., decided- ly noisy and dusty spot." em not guirig to tell our destinrl- tiun at present," said the Bishop, "But you aty mcollect the. baggage at arrie." • We slowly rounded the bay, through It very busy maze of railway tracks and freight- t rains, and when the conduc- tor -had shouted "Berry 1" and Pete had .&tuppo d in leis operation of gatherting up wraps and -parasols to ask; "What kind of berries?" Char/te put en end itis 011 u-ur doubts by (,rderiiig us to. ali;rltt. - :-.-13.arriel looked quite a busy little, in- teresting place, but Pete was begin- ning to complain of internal. weakness, so we adjourned to an hotel for dinner before examining our surroundings. Arid when we had- all eaten .a very hearty peal, what. -shquld our dear Biihop do but order a carriage, and we all bundled in to drive round the town. Driving ;in Barrie is delightfktl if one goes east end west, but the streets run- ning from the bay go straight into the lieevever, we were rewarded for our hard cliuib by the beautif-il scene, below. IWe had scarcely time to give the pretty -place its due when the carriage turned down a street leading to the wharf, and following our guide in blind obeelience we were soon upon the deck of a little steamer, ready to sail "whithersoever the governor listed." .People soon begin to collect upon .the boat in. response to .some Very shrill whistling. Mothers with baby car- riage's and flocks of small attendants; young ladies with their .gallants; groups of boys and girls with bicycles, all very jolly and noisy. But we were not • crowded, and when we. were com- fortably seated upon the deck and be- gan to skim away down the placid lit- tle bay with just enough of breeze to blow away the dust of our .drive,, it was delightful indeed.. Kenipenfeldt Bay," announced Bob, "look, Bess, there's where the Algon- quin maiden lived, in the woods along this shore, and out yonder in Lake Sim- coe is where she was drowned." "There she is now 1" cried Pete as a light canoe darted daringly across our bows, but the curls that peeped from - under the cap of the :maiden who pad - ing on one road, and a team of 'thine - jug horses, held by a stalwart young farmer, on the other. The swell from our boat rolled away, deluging thew:}ter-lilies - and reedit that bobbed up again, only to away over under. the next .lilllow. - A group of stta.rt.led water fowl flew up . and away with noisy expostulations, and a frisky hell -diver stared at us bold- ly for a. moment, and then dived -to the bottom of the -lake in derision. "The young duffer must be longer winded than a preacher, Charlie 1;" cried Bob, looking admiringly •at: the little fellow as lie appeared again af- ter e, wonderfully Hong interval. '"Charlie'e occcupation shouldn't be mentioned in the _same clay with a bird that has such a wicked name as that," t*aicl Pete. "Our 13ishot 'a the op- positeextreme. He's - but moth- er silenced..hire. • We *had suddenly discovered t.ha_t We were in lake Couchiching, and such a lake! A perfect little beauty, long and winding a river, With dense- ly wooded shores, and fairy-like islands rising out of the still water, like great bouquets set upon a mirror. Straight across the water lay -the town of Orillia, buried in Maple- trees and all aglow with the. -setting sun. Only one street could be, distinguished in the soft mass of green, the main- street that climbed the hill straight up from the wharf. Far away to the right the little lake stretched away among the, green is lands.• "Our day will 'soon be 'over, Charlie, dear, ;'., said mother, nodding - towards the tiet.ting sun. - `-'Ye.s, we must take" the train here for Toronto, as soon as we land; hut sew are •going.,(o have a grand finale to our holiday, mot her, look!" . And certainly we were to have -t1 fit ting end to this day's Panorama of. beautiful Scenes. The sun was 'sinking behind the wooded hills; its glaring re- flection burning in the water before us, .and sending a dazzling pathway tlown the: water, along which our boat. was +ite'iming. The great purple svt•ells that. ►'oiled away from our bows were tipped with nn►ls'r and pink and mauve while all around us the water gleam- , Add The Story of. A Day (MI in a. thousand rainbow t.inta, -ever changing. moving and flashing, It. !seemed almost. tau riligioug for•- our ►;oat. 1.o cross this wonderful glory, but the Motion 'only made the colored wa- ter take -fire and change and glow :(gain like a sea of opals met. in motion.. i ha& seen many ac beatit i•fu1 sunset, hitt haut never tactually been in one be- fore, nor hid I ever heard of itnythang like the glory of this one that stin- i ounded us on Lake Cuuc.hiching. - \We all voted ourselves perfectly sat- isfiett with "Charlie's lhty." am we.set- 1 led. ourselves comfortably in the train for our homeward voyage and father voiced the sentiments of the .whole family when he lo(.lc.ead proudly at our dear Bishop and said: "Theta -Wry' of a day, is like the tat( of a life, and. this Lwaatifu1 holiday e- minds me of .your life. my boy. It 1 as grown more beautiful each hour, a ad I anticipates for you just such a g1t i- uus een.l;ng to Our day as we have peerien('cd in that magnificent sunset, and just such a peaceful journey homes." Iv'O MORE LEP YEARS.. In time leap year will go :out of ex - let ewe entirely, hut as this vi1.11 wt'oc- cur for over eight hundsted years We haven' Much personal interest. in the event. In - the- ordinary course of events 1900 would be a leap year, but it will not count in the calculation. In tither. words, 1t+acidly .explains the Washington Star. while it does occur it does not occur, simply because it is not in the agreement :that it shall occur. The story is along one, -hut it can be briefly told so thaat the average 'person c:c.n' understand it without Much 'dif- ficulty. In 1582, in the arrarg' hent of the Julian calendar, ten days were drop- ped so as to get. things running on the then now but the present basis of cal- culating time. So as to keep things running right it was determined that a year ending to century should not be bissext i1e, except every fourth century. Thus there was no leap year in 1700, lk(N1, or 1900. It is, or at least' 'was, rather hard on the ladies, who have speciel advantages do leap year, for it is the only year that it is .proper for then to propose themselves in mar- riage, but as it has alwi'rtys been so in• matters affecting womankind, mon always find reasons for restricting their privileges. The ladies lose their privilege in 19(K), hurt though.there will not be many of those who see 1O who will see 2900 the latter year; ending a fourth cen- tury, will be a leap *ear. In this way three days ace retrenched in Pour cen- turies, and the remaining seven days will be made up in a little over eight hundred 'years. After that calendar years will be like solar years, and er-, rors in the calculation of time will ace ur 110 more. The loss of leap years 'ewtll id thou- sands of years -affect the seasons, but I believe the mathematicians of the centuries hence will be .ao expert in handling figures and making calcula- tion_sthat they will have no,diffioulty in keeping thiugs going .correctly. - • HAWAIIAN GIRLS.,-_; Ttie' half caste Kanakas are the meat attractive women ' to be found in the Hawaiian Iolanda. , They have clear, brovro ooniplexitone; small, plump fig- ures, black hair, dreamy, dark eyes and beautiful white, strong teeth. They almost live in the water, con- sequently are scrupulously olean. Their dispositions are gentle, and they have the soft, langurous ways so charming. and so oharaoteristio of the women of trop(eal olimes. The soft, loose, brightly colored gowns and the wreaths of flowers about the head or waist make 'a pktteresque costume. The feet are always bare. • -1IVIV41111t *WW1* TI -11-i; LINEN CLOSET.. c '*'''''(;11' oillen, by nature, adore linen' and 'upon the quality and gnantity, as well as the condition in which this import- ant adjunct, to every. well -ordered household is kept, is - the housewife lauded or condetnued in foreign lands. A' bountiful supply of exquisite -finish may not be within the reach of all, but to have what you own hemmed and -well kepi is surely within the simplest pro- vince, ro- vince. In heniniing cloths and', napkins by hired do not make an ordinary hem, but rather what is called in France an outlet surjet. Turn down thedam- ask a quarter of an inch, as if for.;tn ordinary,bern, and fold it back on the .cloth. Take it altogether. and,. keep- ing the single Side of the. -slot 4 toward you, hold il• anti hem with the left thumb and, forefinger -anti Oversew it ,as if you were doing - what children call " top sewing." This is done on the wrong Nide of the cloth, is lasting, and snakes a very sight ly finish. - Drawvn-line insertions and hems ares done by,. machinery on all damask weaves, as it iia itnt•►ussihle to draw the. threads and week it: by hind. The mailing of- tablecloths anti napkins" is ,40111etirnees One in delicate, ('olor•, but is never .18 elegant as plain white. This is, however, a `matt ('r of (ate. if col- ons art' used, be careful to use flax or cotton that washes well. Let t he. ern- bruide=ring bes careful and the letters dee r.. 1 "1'o • t•krrk its Sat in St iteh, first out - litie and their pad the heavy parts of the • design, ..Where t hie, monogram is l trge, •probably all the letters can be padded.. This should be done very care- fully, as. if, unevenly 'execute((, the, ‘work will never look well, and went of precision in the finieheit design is of - /ten due mainly to careless, outlining. For this portion of the work a coarser cotton ?demi(' lie used then for the embroidery itself. hasten the threr►(i ~ with a few -running stitches, never with a knot, --a rule to be observer( el- swirl embroidering, except in very 1 E6 instane.es. Finian off the thread by drawing down the tracing stitches, or sme 1u►rt of the pet tern that is al- roeady finisht'd. 1" 111 in the spaddiaceMng be- t wei'n the lines with a pof loosely run (breads, so (hitt they lie thickly and Rulidly in the enter,. end ehade off on both sides. The round- ness and fullness of the embroidery de- iwtid, upon 1 he firmness .,f 'this sub- stratum of threads. A Rupply•of_ small tray cloths should et all times he found in the linen press. Theme. can be bought in linen, .ready stamped ter embroidering. wit 1 fringe or drawn, t bread already made t n them. Very good tray cloths can b, made from an old •tableclot h. Cut out the blest port ions and edge them %‘.1 h Tor- chun lace. Scalloped borders f tr tray cloths are novel and pretty, net are scarcely worth while doing, ('.X -ej)t on neW material:' For sideboard clot tis a border of Virginia creeper looks ex- tremely well if , done in Turkey twill. Iron off the pattern on the twill, tack it down very straight on the line and htit1onhol() the edges of the loaves and stalks with 'red embroidery a rot ton. When completed cut away the firouncl- w.ork of the twijl close to the edges of the buttonhole work and thin place 8(1(01106 ali' ut ones -quarter of an inch long .from the buttonhole pattern to t he+ linen. I)o not hermit table or bed Risen to lie from year to year without] being need. It will last longer for ain oe e- Rional washing. If it is already very yellow cut up a pound of White .soap int four quarts of milk, put it over the nt owe inn wash . kettle and when the scup has dissolves put in the Been and boil fifteen minut ss;.then wash in soap muds *and rinse n two , clean waters, bluing last wet(r slightly. The P° - sessor olf a gram plat can whiten ber choice linen by rtimply rinsing $n soap Rude and laying it on the grass for two or throe days. Rinse in clear water' and OF on the line, and it *ill be sweet and fresh and white. Fine nap- ery should never be wrung m111.11 the hand, as it is apt thus to be stained. It should be straightened out and run as smoothly as possible through the wringer. Of course no - starch easietry,` and the cloth should timely sprinkled over _night, the ed quickly with hot irons, unt fectly dry before being folded. TED ItECIPt'.S. is ne- ve pro - n iron- il per - nits and .Chicken Pie.—Parti it the chicken which has been cut inlpiecest then take it out of the kettle and boil one quart of rice in the same water; salt while boiling. When the rioe is done pttt it into a large bowl alnd stir into it a large tablespoonful 41 but- ter, a pint of milk, throe well beaten eggs and more• salt if necessary. Sea- son the chicken with salt and pepper' and lay the pieces nicely upona bed ' f rice and cover over with he re- mainder of the rice; drop a few lumps of butter on the top, and bake until the crust is brown. To Roast Lamb: —A leg should be plaoed some distance from the fife in the first Instance, and needs at all time* to be well and frequently. bast- ed. As it becomes done through draw nearer to the tire, to. acquire a fine brown exterior. Sprinkle el little fine salt over the joint when done, pour round some well -made gravy, and serve with any fancied Vegetables. The ap- proximate time is hall an hour for every pound of lamb. • Sweetbreads of.Lamb.-These -make a, nice entree dish:. Take six lamb sweet- breads, wash and trim these, and set to soak iti cola water, for quite two hours: Then n scald them in salted boil- 'ing water for three minutes and put t hem aside to get cool. Fry them in an, ounce of butter till colored, and eet in a .stew pan with half a pint of clear • chicken • broth ; add a small quantity: _ eaeh uantity- ca(h of pepper, salt and chopped pars- ley, a pinch of sugar and about six to eight mushrooms. Stew for 20 min utes nn' serve- in their own sauce. Preparing Salmon.—Place two pounds of fresh salmon in a fish fettle, cover with .water, season with a handful of..;• salt, add one medium -sized -onion,• half a wine glassful of white vinegaar,:. eight whole peppers, two cloves and two parsley roots. Place "the .kettle on a -brisk fire and cover for five min -e Utes after it comes to a hoil. Re:mowe: the (sauce from the ket Ile, drain 1hor (mi;hly; dress on. a hot -dish with A folded napkin, nicely decttirate wvit b' parsley greens all around t ho salmor t • and serve with -a pint of hot oyst-.,s- sauce. •- Oyeler * Satice.-Open 18 medium-size ed fine Shrewsbury oysters and place_: thein in_n saucepan with one ounce of but ter. Cctok for four minutes; re ; move. half the liquid from the pan and,-.. add a pint of hot allemande sauce. Broiled ?Mushrooms.—Sufficient flap,,, mueh,roonis for a (fish, ix'ppe.r and. salt, ay piece of butter wind eight.minttteest in which to co:►k t hem are necessary. Wipe the -mushrooms very clean with a piece of fl nnel and sat t 'them. Peel the tops . and cut the stalks pertly off and place them over a very clear fire to broil Tightly on both sides. When done ar range them on a dish, dust with a lit - tie pepper and salt and place a piece of butter on each. Plaoe them before' the fire to melt the butter and serve \while hot. An Attractive Solaid.-ln the centeis , of the dish •arrange a_mound. of let- tuce. Peel .Ioma Ioev, divide them in- to (sections end arrange around the 'let- tuce.. Shell colla well -cooked eggs, cut in halves and remove the yolks. Pound the :yolks to a paste with an equal amount. of the flevh of.lobster, shrimp, anc.hoeitis or salmon. With this paste,': well, seasoned, fill t he cups fashioned - frorn, the white:'( of the eggs, and ar-. range them around* the tomatoes. Strew Moine chopped- shallot and .sweet pep- per'over the endive. Mix equal por- tions of oil and vinegar, -season with':;, salt and pepper and pour oeer.the sal- ad: Serve at once., - - • Ginger Cak.s.-.-Beat the yolks and: whites of two eggs without-sepvarat ing. To this add one cupful of New-- Orleans ew -Orleans baking molasses, one Cupful of: sour cream. two and one-third cupfuls; of Sifted flour, a pinoh. of salt, one tar ble•spoonful of ginger, a pinch each of Heves, cinnamon and grated nutmeg 'One tablespoonful of soda dissolved in •.•. o lit.tlu boiling ivtter Should he. srW_ er ed last ; heart the chain re for a few minutes and hake in patty pans, This amount will snake_ about 20 cakes. Watermelon Sirup.—Several tirntva lately we have noted brief reference'se:- to xperinients at sirup -making from: wat 'rmelon juice, and have wondered::.: wwb souse systematic efforts have not* beet made to utilize this produces in t ha + -way. The elder generation of. petit le can doubtless call to mind sir up r ade by the slaves—on a small-scale and in a rude way, it is true, but ,it was nut at all a bad sustitute for the gen line article. The watermelon juice.. contains a larger percentage of water that dotal the juice of the cane, but - wre are. informed that one gallon of siru tan .be made from twelve to fourteen gallons of juice,- and are- of the opinion that an _acre of land would pro( uce more sirup if planted in mel- ons than if planted in cane. They are tui .sy crop to raise, are very pro - due ives easy to handle, and no. ma - chit cry would he required to express the juice, as is the case with sugar. can . The watermelon makes a beau- tiful sirup, mild and pleasant, and if t he leffort was made in a scientific way there Is little doubt that it would prove a success. It is certainly worth tryllng. .._• THE . CLFMATTS . The e clematis. stands in the front rank among flowering vines. It begins to bloom early and stays late. A few be- Iated buds will sometimes open, in a favored situation, the last of October or first of November. Many fail to quo- need with the clematis through not hav- ing an intelligent perception of Its re- qtlirements. The vine requires a good soil, preferring clay—not a heavy clay, but a, soil into which it enters largely. The unthoughtful grower plants his vine 'where he wants it to 'take root -- by the sidle of a building, of course,:. where the subsoil is shavings, brick - bate, mortar, etc., thathold no water, but absorb heat: To make a clematis thrive dig a hole three feet deep, fill it with turf and some manure, put al pipe at the end, so that when the trench I:. is filled your can pour water in at the base. Keep the subsoil moist and the surface dry. In this way they will root deep and be leas influenced by droutb. The largeeflowered varieties are the most showy, but they are a little chary of foliage and do_ not make as good 0. shade as variettiea that are less pro, fuse bloomers. TJARP-RST IN THE 'WORLD.: The Sultan of Turkey has just built at Mecca the biggest house in the. world. It Is intended .for the accom- modation of pilgrims, and is capable old sheltering 6,000 persons. • TO OUR SUBSCRIBERS :By eferring to the address label on your paper you oan always ascertain the date towhiioh your sub,onption to Ttii Nicwsispaid. Remittances are acknowledged. by a Wangs of date on label on the first paper fol- lowing receipt pf money at this oIDoe . Always beep the date Maid ahead if The following- particulars regarding the weather are kindly furnished us weekly by Prof. Firth, of Pickering College : Dux ¥IN. , Repos. ci. 6th62 • 88.5 • 23.5 7th. . 58. , 150 8 8th .. 63` - ' 40 28 9th.. 66 43 28 10th. 58 : 46 13 llth 67 58 9 12th. 66 40 26 Rte io-fait-11th, .85. Total for week .85 • She ficketing gtWL. • PICKETING, ONT., OCT. 14, 1198 LOCALISMS..': —Fred. Logan was here with his people over Sunday. --Bey: and Mrs._Cooper visited the city on Phurfrday. ; --Mrs. Hector, of Church st.,:sonth, indisposed this week. —Fred Bunting, of Toronto, Snndayed here with his parents. —Wm. Allaway and Miss. Minnie were at Green River on Sunday. . --St. Andrew's Ladies Aid Met at the residence of Mrs. W. T. Dunbar on Wed- nesday afternoon. — Mrs. John Doble,- of Sunderland, is few days with Enos Remmer and wife, idtst north of .the.v.iilage. -We have a good stag of scribes,yet there -are a•nuwber of places in the town- ships of Scarboro and Pickering that are not represented. — Mrs. Carrot, of Toronto, returned home on Wednesday after spending a fortnight, with her cousin, Mrs. John Gillman, of the Brock Road, —Mien Madill, of Caledon East;' and Miss Kitchen, of 'Manitoba. are spending a vacation with Miss' Maggie_ Gormley, and other friends hereabouts. — Hon. Dryden was here Tuesday, seeking the suffrages of the people bere. His interests are being looked after by Messrs. Tytus and Thompson, assisted by local lights of the Reform ranks. —We mentioned our abundant crop. of life insurance men a few weeks ago, but eines -that time we have bad a regular tornado in that line: They were almost as -thick as the gnats were last week. All doing a rushing business. —Robert Birmingham, the Conserva- tive organizer has been in this village during the past few days, looking up bus - issue in bis Mine. He was in secret con- clave witl}f many of the faithful during easy *ere. - number of our people attended Whitby fair Last week and were -nuch pleased with the same. The stook and other exhibits were good, and the attend- ance was such as, to enconrage 4the di rectors to still greater effort. As usual the grounds were full of fakirs and their devices for abstracting money from the pockets of the unwary. -—Elst3wbere we publish a liet.-of meet. Ings tbat'are to be held in this township in the interest of Mr. Charles Calder. As these meetings are called for the purpose of discussing t ublic questions of the day, and as the tie rim party are asked to'eend represents 'vee a good gathering is expected on eat occasion Read ad- vertisment for full particulars. — An effort is to be made to improve the drainage at the east end, of the village Triose who are interested are requested to meet at Dunbar's corner on Tuesday at 2.30 p.m. The law requires owners to try and settle the matter, among than - selves before the township engineer can be called' in. Those whose lots are drau,- ed to that corner are warned to govern themselves accordingly. —Little Mise Nina, daughter of W. H. Banks, left with ns on Saturday a large bunch of wild raspberry branches n -poo which were at least a pint of entirely ripe berries. How r4markable the growth has been during the put six weeks. Pres ant. indications are that before another century rolls away, and' if this old earth doee not meet with some aooident through fire or water before that time. our Can- adian climate will much resemble that of southern California as pictured . to us now. —Do animalee, other than human, be- -come melancholy at times, and while ID each moods attempt and sometimes sue. geed in committing suicide ? From caees we have known and others we have been 'nformed of, 'we should answer the gees• tion in the affirmative. Sunday after- noon Henry Gordons valued collie dog acoompaniel its master to the station and for a time seemed to enjoy watching the through freight trains glide past. Just as one of these massive locomotives ap proached the animal threw itself on the track and : was killed icstantly. No rea- son can be ascribed for the rash act. — Robert George Bedson, aged 33 yrs, died suddenly at the . general hospital, Toronto, on Tnesday. Deoeaeed was a son -in law of Joseph Doyle, of this local- ity, and an employed of the Massey - Harris Co , being .one of tbe business office staff.Ft+riday be was taken iii while on duty, and, his physician told him that he had appendecitis, and per. Bladed him to go to the hospital. wbicb he did. On Sunday an operation was perfurrned, but the weakened constitution fax Yi1 to rally, and death- clime. as above. Ae ::!e deceased was of a robust look, his sa �, r).aih is a source of mach am - ori - . h' funeral took place on Thurs- da. �„ •v n, - nhen the recuains were int . :l H . Friends' ceinetery here. ,'vii ..► r ,. t airy le hIt for the young and" twi w w ipg widow and her only child, —D. Banks, of Toronto, was here with his brothers on Tuesday. —Seneca Haight, of Torobto, is here with friends for a few days. , — Mrs. N. Dingman is able to be out again, after some seven weeks' illness. —Christopher Dale and wife, of Toron- to, were here over Sunday with friends. — Mrs. Allin and son, of Bowmanvill'e, Were hare this week with W. E. and Mre. Vaastone. : —James Morrissey, of Chttreh .street, for the pass week, but is now has been it some better. —David try ag Hall, 0 awa. —Mrs Bolton Banks, of Whitby, is with her son, E. D. Banks in New York for a short visit. —Miss Maggie Gordon has fettitixed this week fro.n Oshawa, where she. has scent a month with friends. — John A. -White, of IirouRbam, ship. ped a carload of hogs from this station on Wednesday to the city market. - -Thomas Patterson and mother, of Ca-emont, were here on Sunday. They were accompanied by Miss Ward. —Many of our villagers attended the ldilton Brown sale' on Wednesday after- noon. The sale was a good one it is said. — Insurance agent Moore, while riding his wheel the other day collided with a lumber wagon, but was no seriously in- jured. —G„B. Smith, ex -M. 15. .., of Toronto, was bere on Wednesday palling upon Robert and Mrs. Deyerell and other friends. - —Mr. and Mre. Poet were bere • on Wednesday. He wishin to visit the haunts of his childhood, caled on Robert Deverel1. —Pickering Township co in general session on Mon 17th. at 10 a. in., in th Brougham. --Don't forget the corker hall, Greenwood, on T under the auspices of the gregation there. —Stephen Cronk has al on band for the erection o dence .close to the one no be and his family. --- W . Peak still favors h' daring the past week has From it. An improvement ion is noticed, however. —Mies Etta Head seen prizes at Markham Fair work. This is indeed oredi ing the keen compitition there. —It has been denied tba going to be moved on to property but we still stay meat, and the. socner our pare for the change the be for the village. —Timothy O'Leary; of road, returned from the Ge an left for the Old Conn. Monday for William & it will meet y next, Oct. town ball, at the orange ursday next. Anglican con. the material a new real. occupied by left eye; and offered much in its condi& ed six first. n her . fancy able consider. hat abounded the station is obn Annan'. ith our state - villagers pre- ier it will be s Greenwood eral hospital, Toronto, last week having •overed from his recent attack of typhoid fever. His brother, George, is still in that institution suffering from the same :disease. —James T. Richardson • has been re• moved from Lindsay to Barrie and wi:l there act as general agent for the Noxon implement firm. His faintly expect to join him in a few days. . He made bis Pickering friends a hurried call Thursday. —Their many friends herf abouts ex• tend most sincere sympathy, to Andrew Mason and 'wife, of Oshawa, over the death of their five-year-old boy, Willie. The little fellow bas not been well for considerable time, but on Wednesday was taken soddenly ill and succumbed almost immediately. —A considerable number of their freinds assisted W. J. and re. Dale in oelebrating'their silver wed ing on Sat- urday evening. The usual; formalities of luncheon and the like were one through and a very sociable even' g spent in a general way. There were went friends from the city and other dig nt points and all wished the happy bride d groom of twenty-five years standing; much heppi• ness. We, who cannot called rola- gyros desire to extend our congratulations. —Up to the time of penning this item cot a Single cent has been un 'scribed to- wards the bell -ringing fun9. There are only a few days more left in which to receive subscriptions as on Monday next the bell ceases unless fonds are forth- coming. If a few dollars were ahbecrib- ed just now it would tide -over the diffi- culty until the winter monijhe when the Firf Hien purpose having a concert from the receipts of which fundal will be forth- coming. The residents of i3kering have supported the fire company nobly and we believe they are still loyal to them. To test that belief we will propose that each household subscribe twenty-five cents towards the bell -ringing fn d during the next_few day—say before uesday night next, R. A. Bunting is the treasurer and funds may be paid to him. Money raised in this way will be used for no other pur pose by the company than for the bell - ringing. What say you, eople ? -We stsrt the fund with a quarter, to show that we are in earnest. . GREENWOOD.” W. S. Green is bustling' things at the lower mill. - F. L. Greegn has not been in good health for the past"few due, yet he is around at- tending to business. Don't forget the concert i ' tbe Orange Hall, on Thursday evening n xt. A splen- did program has been prepay d. Balsam. The football boys are thin$ing of a`con• cert Boon. J. H. Madill helped in an ndley social on Wednesday evening. Our merchant, Mr. Dale,' has become settled -comfortably bere. - Our team journeyed to Green River_ on Saturday and played a friendly game there. The score was 0-0. We were most hospitably treated and hope again. - Mae1i Hill peel otiioe wits first of Oct4ber." e may meet lased cit tits Bowmsnville.i. Idles Attie Cawker has been visiting in Pickering, guest of Mies Minnie Rogers. Horice Wright, a former bank clerk here, was in town recently renewing old acquaintances. Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Mitchel, Conces- sion st., are enjoying a holiday trip in Uncle Sam's Dominions. The annual C. E. convention for the Presbytery of Whitby will be held in Oshawa on Monday, Oct. 171b. Thos. F. James was brought home frotn, hla from hie father's .two weeks ago and has been well enough to take short drives almost daily sinoe. Miss Lithe McLean, Pontypool, attended the Teacher's convention et Port Hope, Friday and Saturday and spent Sunday with her parents on Silver st. Geo. Alun, who is attending C. School of Infantry at Stanley Barracks, Toronto, spent Sunday week at home. George a fine looking soldier. Died—At Bowmanville, Oct. 8, Elizabeth Murdooh, wife of Wm. Reid, late of Glas- gow. On October 6, accidentally killed; at Port Hope, Dr. R. T. Corbett, eldest son of Dr. R. A. Corbett. On Friday evening last; Oct. 7th, at Lorne Villa, Bowmauville, was celebrated the 35th anniversary of the marriage of Mr. and Mre. William Werry, Solipa, and the 25th anniversary of the marriage of Mr, and Mrs. M. A. amen, the wedding days of the two si4ters being exactly ten years apart. AUDLEY. • . T. Smith has recovered. Cleo. Walters is recovering 'niciely,. Rev. A. McAuley visited here on Mon- day last. Mrs. Willis and sister, Miss A. Weather- ill, attended service bere on Sunday. The school had its photo taken on Monday last. We look a happy group. Buckwheat harvesting i& a slow opera• tion this fail as frequent wet spells pre- vent housing, The large stones on the Madill hill have been blasted and removed Ito build Mr. Fowlie's barn foundat on. . Timothy o['Leary has arrived home after his illness in St. Michael's Toronto. He looks quite well and reports his brother do• ing well. I We note from. list week's Greenwood correspondent that Mre. Weod and family have moved to that place. May their res- idence there be peaceful. Master Frank Elliott thinks be should don long panas be all alone drove to see Mr. Bray in Claremont on Monday. Be careful of old Prince, Frank. John McM•ilan has rented the McCann farm and , h s been operating thereon. James Pl1141 et has aectired the G. Y. Smith place or a term of years. Berry' bush in bloom and with berries in all stages of development are seen in some garden . Potatoes are re -growing while beans, after ripening once, grew again, blossgmed and are pc.dding as if summer was to repeat itself. Fall wheat has a great growth which will render some fields rather uncertain if much snow covers them. No real heavy frosts yet reported. A social was held it the residence of Geo. Lash :cod Wednesday , evening last. Rev. J. Thom was present and as chairman aided 'greatly in making all en- joy themselves. A program. by the choir, the Madill family, Miss" Gee and some others was well received. Many thanks are due to Mr and Mrs. Lawrence in their kindness. Ptfooeeds for the League fond were about Fall A Large assort sit of Sui -. tinge in Tweed, and Worstedg. Everything new and up to date 01 quality and styles. Try a Gents' Furnishings - We h ave -a glood chole'e of five cent shakes. i Our 10c heavy fleeced flan. nellettes are,. a marvelof cheapness. We have in stock another }lot of those fancy plaid goods which sold so well at l0c ._ . New floor oilcloths to hand 1, 11 and 2 yds wide. Cut in squares, or any length wished, New ;stock of four -in. an and bow ties.. The Tates out Stacks of underclothing aid sox. Any price and lay. New; fleece lined kid.g oyes 50c. Best value we ever saw. Bay a pair before they all go. Our stock is complete in all leading lines, prices right. We invite all to i -come and examine our stook.:.. For Men and Bays. Wehave jut opened OLIt a fine new stock direct from makers. The latest style and shape. Mens blue beaver. cap. Full shape leather peake. Men's rough black tweed with storm Lands. Men's_. fancy_ tweet?.: caps full shape, storm bands, only 25 cents. Boys' fancy tweed caps in the latest shapes at 10, 13 and 15c. Best stock of caps: we ever offered. Come and d - see them. Deckle , Bed CrOitsW " Brand ..�,.. .a•ma� s .'� u -•fie best in the marketfor quality and price, Only 50c per roll at Whitby. 1 Jas. Waltei{t is back from the Klondike looking well. The South ntario plowing' match will be held wee of Manchester on Tuesday, October 25th The annuli oonvention of the Young People's Soc' ties in the Presbytery of Whitby will be held in the Presbyterian. church, Oshawa, on the afternoon and evening of Monday, Oct. 171b. Mrs. Franklin Walker, of Brooklin, has begun an action against the Ottawa, Arn- prior and Parry Sound Railway for 110,- 000 damages for the loss of her late hus- band in a collision in May last. A. J. Ashby, telegraph operator of the Canadian AtlIntio R R. at Moose Creek, is home it Ipreseot. having been called bere on account of the very low condition Of his mother, of Port Whitby. Last Tb raday, Oct. 6th, it the home of the bride's' parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Tasker, a very pretty wedding took place, wheu their daughter, Annie, wss united In matrimony with Mr. P. F. Lawrence, bead of Messrs. Ross Bros' tailoring department of Whitby. Ralph Johnston, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. K. Johnston, was killed Saturday night in a bicycle collision. He was .riding along to bis ome at Hemer's corners at half past nin , and when nearly opposite Postmaster oWden's residence on the Kingston roa ran into Messrs. Walter Shaw and Jpbn Watson, jr., who, with Ben. Fraser, Were returning from.Oshawa. Fraser carried a lantern on his wheel, but 'his two. companions were ahead of hitt, so that Johuetun, if he saw the light, was hot aware of thea others between himself and Fraser. The Jcraah came at the foot of the hill, and wain load and clear. Johnston received a blow over the left temple, the counter effect .of which, the physicians say, broke bis skui at the base of the opposite side. The bl od poured from his month, ears and note, though there was not a scratch upon him, which leads to the belief that his head struck upon the ground as a result of the collision. He was found lying on top of his *heel, and after being remov- ed to his home died early on Sunday morn- ing without regaining consciousness. Shaw was knocked insensible, and had his face cut, knee hurt and five teeth broken. Wat- son, who was close behind Shaw, was dazed by the shook. His wheel against which Johnston crashed was badly wreck- ed. The other- two wheels were but slightly injured. Johnston was a stout youth in his j eighteenth year and a fast rider. He won first prize in the bicycle race at the Ontario and Durham fair here a week ago. j A student at the Whitby Collegiate Institute, be bid fair to become an able mac. He is a nephew of Wm. Till. His father, who is an architect in Chicago, J arrived Monday. The mother and sister, who was about to enter hospital work, are almost heart broken, and gentrel sympathy is t It for the bereaved family. and:: Vgrnis Forks, Rakes R EAZIN Our f41 24.113.1.3:161 "7 5th, when the best 11 be shown. Would b tourers and as r MR 8n1n1g' will take place on Oct. 4th an es yet introduced by us will pleased to see all our old cus- any new ones as possible. WISE, PI.='KERIN reenwoo -'.Oatmeal I have taken these mills and solicit farmers' patronage. I am. prepared to give the best values In EXCHANGING OATMEAL FOR 'OATS, and with improved facilities can turn out a superior article. tin MONDAYS, WEDNESIAYS and SATURDAYS. is Rolled Oats, Graham Flour, Roiled Wheat, Pot Barley, Chop, Feed of an kinds, etc. Give us a nail.' reen FOR SALE—A first-class farm contain - Mg 100 acres, beim situated In 3rd con., lot 14. about two miles north of Pickering village There is on the promisee a comfortable frame house; a good barn. long shed with stabling, good horse stable and driving house. abouttwo acres of go.n3 orchard, one well and a neve fail- ing spring of water, The farm is under good cultivation and well fenced. Soil good. rms Baby. Reason for selling --proprietor is goi g to Manitoba. "Por further partieflars apppy to Owner on the premises. Address MRM. DOUGHTY, Pickering, or T.1'OUGH HR. B3oug- him , Qat, 116-11311 IiTOUNG CATTLE FOR SALE AT' the Brougham Stock Yards. I have at ' my yards 50 cattle for sale from i to 3 years old. Also some new miloh cows, brooding ewes feeding lambs, brood sows and shoats, which. - will sell by the lb. live weight or any way to suit purchaser. Come and see for yourself be- fore purchasing elsewhere and get prices, Fat hogs wanted: Highest cash price paid. Wilib home Monday and Saturday. Apply to TO A. WHITE, lot 35, con, 0. Pickering, or I riu kalnv p.o. Id ' h, • • • • •I• eve . ' VitaCt":11,•Z, = • Metrit,cal. ()UNG. M D., C.M., Fellow of `ertnity Medieed College, Toronte, meal - tee at Oolleee of Physicians and Sergeobs of Oiattrio. °o*, Mrs, Andrew's residence, Pick- eirsaft, Ont. Office hours: morning 7 to 10; evesittg 6 to 8. ighland Creek, Tuesday and Friday afternuonetvom 2 to 4. • DENTON. DODS: & FORTY, BAR-, • RISTRRS. SOLICITORS, ETC.. Temple Rttyldittg, 0or.,Bav and Richmond streets, To- robbo. At Claremont Tuesday, Money to loan on ftiortge.ge, FRANK DENTON, ANDREW DODS llly •. and F:tANK FO tc. FAREWELL, Q. C.,..BARitl13- • TER. County Crown Attorney, and Cotinty Solicitor. Ocnrt House. Whitt,T. 10-y _ • OW & MCGILLTIAT, B ARMS' ars, Solicitors, Arc. Office °pensive Post. offlef, Whitby. Ont. Jno. Ball Dow.B,A.; Theo: A. odillivrav•,LIA.B. Moues! to Lean. Ry fmalair Feteruul':'Y. • - e • HOPIelINS;VETERINABY . EtR- u-a-' • tlltON. Graduate •ot the Ontari Vet. Arinary 0o;ege., ToroLto, rt -red i1nber Ot the Ontano Veterinary Ilediettl Association. Office ajc1 reeideuee one and one-quarter miles uortal of Glees River. T.1cprai.n i.ddress, 1,ocu4t Hill. Out P0.ad di t Biyer, Ont, Imompoomi. • -,••••••4•4 .• Fall Term-- - COMMOVE. .Mre.BB R. P. Hop this week. Miss Mary city ou Tn€sJ W. W. Rai weeli OD • •Mr. Black this week pur Ira Powell it the -better care Don't forge y,uting cattle ot. ;:W. E. Van,' hogu frons Core W. . G fair on -i.(vir capacity Bev, W.,13.1 Tuesday atter, Whitby Preeh, Rev, Faslu„ • For oose -Vheat We a 1ftying . ' • • ., • ; • , 67e per 1)11.51), Now is elle time for.t thei xeee Choice railing Paten Bran #9.00,.Shor SPINK ie farmers to dispose stock. • Fionr $40eper bbl. 8 $12.00 per ton. • •, ILLS ! PICIC MI.,1>TC:11% • , FieR.ering Colle ge . . ttesday iJ.ifiL13) .L ROM AS 1)1INN, tenVeyancer, Coto- , •Sept. 7th, 189t3 •••• missioner for tak,ing Affidavits, etc., 4107 Claremont, Ont. . • _ f Tuition fOr 'Fan Trm of 16 -woelis BOUVET:, TOtier oMarriage 1 J - 4 Licensee: Office at n.i1D day time and at resiciecee at right. Green River. Ont. 42ly • Preparatory 11 A 00 ...: Collegiate, or Co imereial It; (X) Shorthand and ype-writing12 80 .': Book keeping, F3borthaud Typewriting .4. N TI G, 1 sener of Marriage I. • Lioeopet forthe County of Ontario. Of, .• See at the etore or at 9 Village 21-y Musio-- Vocal 12 gO LPOITOTI, ERLice, nsed Ane- Peietieg- eeie, Watereeiere, �r 13 0MAS bis r sidenoe- Piokering and If; 00. , Drawine- ;(har ex!) .. 6 40 Tcoueer, Valuator, etc•, tor Siert 'York and tite whole cf North and South Ontario. Strict atlienticu given to all orders by mail or telegraph. Onarges Moxlerate Address THOS. POUCBRIC *le 47. Brougham •Ont anctiopeer; ere., wt r., urn, oelicIte salei from hie nnwerons triecals both fax and near-. . Solos of.tarma, haw stock ar.d everything that ie tobtjsold will -be haridlu,.; ty the subscriber with the utrnoet and ao'd tt. the very beat sayantage. 4 y 1'0 e7Tic.:EEIt ETC.: • ort,ep h.t T.£C liCit.1Salta from ilia rem• proof, frit I•dt both fax and nea.r. . Salts of fai-irs.- fe.rni *.tx",cei - FA (-1 4. verythwg that le to he acid will liau;Y:e•,•; Cr the' Pubscriber with the ntEnoet oare ai1 a(...3 to the Very beet advantage. R.TeFeeTOS,TOWNS1111" •. cormineeice...er fur takii.g siliday•te. - A0:-.Ltart. Etc. gecey to OEM on Cern. erty. ‘Veitevale.00, it7 •v ' • • ••••••••- • (7111'41 Of Prig feerief. St. (14iorge'e hog, , --.11rnit-.4.• l'raytr , 10 :IN a to rt.bday• Prayer -C.30 ..- Fai-nk7-1-;ert:te 11n0 10.P.eClaas t..00 1 r;01 -#01;i6()(1..,;-_. AI; ' • • • Anil§ !;**1•••••4. • • I , • , • ..• • •• • • 1;11 ▪ Axel Flor.r 441,'PiC) 4„, /1.1.k iri.00 per torti: SI,01 tt, 411 'J:uC), et' ton. , heat, Barley ai:td. Peas Wanted. • See (3reenWood liarisete. F. L.: Green. • -•••• (.x, C. Live P tiocutioe. • , C • . Stmlents eamitte the term, toes Wetly (10 v ate , • , . e i et any •time daring !barged pro rah) fi oru she dere of Ectrttnee. ecial a Ti Tatolts- • Tern' iseeeee MI a.aeS Of tb Neweil aed-tirose, Elevient • - • e• 11P§ Si fLe'•(-'.. ..Werrve.ed to weer for e0 veere 'real Move- ment, . „ • -;( Ladies' Size. W a rile rkted 1 to wear for n.icar., real -Wal.tharp or Erin .inove- „ merit. $10.0C. 'Thee,. caber, are net of cheite and neutt tonetrUelion made to the order of she order of the Reneral stare, but are teor ()uglily reliaLie 10 ail& the style sod workmanship elet the re et execting and critical tint ei kt.l (oar ;venter) warrant get* eith Cs re. 1141.'11 fir • J.1.0 , • '74-:a, • • !1 • • je -:- Henry Savage. New end Second-hand Bicycles' for tile. • M1 kinds of repairs promptly at- te:Aed vo. - Shop peel ;show- r °ones, Kieg st., Pickering, , ••••• 12 tf , ()uteri°. • 1 For 3'o r 'ickline Spice co k°- t b e Pickenc ri,i--:•, . . Pharmacy.. - • ••• .., . . ,.. , - • . ' , . • •. , -• •.• •• • e kee the beet, • : - . • . Those wi bine my services dib isrocure . _ • . ,,•,. _, ,, - - - them at the Gordon Hoose, Pickering', - 1,'• ' -• ' : the tries 'Tuesday in each month....:, Hopkins, V. a) • , -and f into to . • ••••• ••.- • esLest „., • ,• ee e4; 4)&4 Dentit, Pickering. Carle by clsy and -night piapptly attend- ed to. Genotal Llackernithing. LaTne,and ed. fetea ipeiety.-Also Itgent for ib. e On., Othasti. were here Men; Findlay and Et. Paul Jon; .4 Ses Urania, have heel. Alexander Wilson a Ralph , Even, accompanie%i hy, hie. Mother awl Pieter visited with Mrs DIck insereGoodwood, on Sunday. • . The Albert Nfautle wile on Tuesday Was not very well atended, owing, no loubt, to the.reey inclement weather.. • - _hales Pattersoe, of Manvers, is here wthhis mother for a few days.We are sorry 40 say that James 18 not inlood• health. . . .• . Mrs. Arthur Luke; of Lvemore, Iowa. Will oe- the coneug Sabbath fill her old- time- position as organist of Erskiue ehereh here. , Another wddng- is Sopp-oed lo have taken place Wednesday,' but we have not yet received • particulars. Such news as this ell! keep for a week,: . - - • Remember the NEN% Ii• manis in dart - Mont crud] and every Tuesday, regard less of the wather, a4d is always plees- ed to receive iteine of new. Dr.. liutchieen, wife and darighter. of Iichuietid Bile, werte here this week wth F. Huichisori rod wife. The doctor re- turned keying the r thertwo here. John -Scott, :if Center), calla] at iseee. bank: thir week on Lis way from Manilbe. lit tied Deectio eleeueb IL eent.ye fest ft-endie litrt sumps:el. while PpOD(IlOg a few days.at hreston epringe togethere , George Cierew- Las rented &cm James 1711•Irliol two lots s' th of Mrlloppt r** - *.tore, which he will ntateas a lutaber yerd l. -i t9:-1.1 le' v.-1;: rtor* the pi; teceetly pi;chteei by 14:in ip Uxbridge to Al - INfiv,-.J Tier, of lev•evilie; ne t wo ; le 1t% ere aeviient wlite is ii:ing the o' her :day. , 'rho ropft i4.'ike -and she held ou with; cre.-Inin-1 and ithved berself fi,:tn i. --re serious aeCid•-i.t.land pro•bably ileaft.: As a re-inie the Ale -sill_ w its ruileiyet en Iron; l.f-r hen le heti melicel aid .svii; . ... summou• d., ' • ••. ..,, The C-ssiernut lio1.key Cliih ie -orgiiii ized OD Tuisday even -rig with the fo, e, ing etlietre : lieu, 1Pre14 , 1100. .1 hn Dryden : lik, Vieee, Chris: Cellr; Prete, Du neeu ei amide ; V lee • Ps te-W- J. (it hew repten, hob'. llerrele SeceTree'. :4 E Torrie ; .Managiue Committee, .1, C. McNale Johu Wrow. We Weltawson. Itee. Pattersote of Cok's ebureh, '1 or onto, tireeered ii. op puaiit lomat, here Tleestitiy . eeeine et late Week upon the elle. zi : "lit leo! and the . Iriele". The afteeeerice et -lied lecture was good- end ell eeeeeet Were , eiehle delighted with the r* V. writtitinatt;* limos• Elie lresii heeie e and fmany eturies were the fentore .ef IE: retnat l.•,,,,. • 1 • . . ..._ • An entliipisbtie ineeting in the-- ,ii4tel.. este of Mi. Chs. Calder viae held Here en. Seturdriy-evebingethe hall being ceinforee ably tilled. .1, 1). Mevoy - occittned the cher in hill wield happy manner. - The epeakere of the eveniug wore A. F. Camp . be,I, t x M.1'1'.. and li.O.r. Calder fns -de The Reform siee sees riot repreiwnted. n.i ne 14.1ta1 f`!icers c.,netled the meeting. ' The reeieenee ut teeorge Cooper, Eerie •tv.eri the €C( t» of inueh- tikerriment ou Weenesdav I:fill-noon, when elise LiIIIRD trr ;led Y ixC/1-111 (.4 th wen e united in inarriege by Bev. '1'. W. Leggott. .A large - uumber of frii•nde• witueseed the ceteinene fellowing which the bridal feriae wee partakeu of. They were re cipiente of Many handsome nresents and gaatt itlies ealore. Thehappy couple will reiside at .North'Clarernont we under. ttind. -hest before thaishing our remarks op thsimportant topic allow us to elike, Malcaline and and wish you much joy and many cougratulatons. • . , • - ,, ''''''i. l' '''. . i'",' , I--• . aebine Mark t am 11 ie t from IWIl vieiting hie mother for a The -Durabarton church it porne new improverrinte.. are held in the basement of There ie to he a chile.e. servic bath which no doubt will be v ing for the young. . J1t Wa fw-days undergoing be services the chutTh. -next Sab- ry interoat- 1'1-. • part uf thu Ix( Mr. iand M r. day with friends Miss Maggie spent Sunday Walter W de..8 here Miss .N; spent Sim . W. Ch ,day with : Mr. and -spet Sun . Mies el, home here v. John Grahan Mrs. John L Jew days here Mackey, whom covering nicely trot Mr. Phoebe John living in Thoe. Ryari. three years rezno6 week. Her many •frien hope she may have -a ha' ham. Many of the fartners in hood are at their root crop very good: :W. J. Devitt bac: ane of having one of hie ,- smashed some time iv cement pipea in tle cul --,:.•- \\ hill. We are plesed to . - about all right again. • Centennial Corne s. • , • The Mime Robertson, and r.o,r,d Mrs. Dammert, of loronto, have visiting Mrs. John Chapman for a few days. A very pretty wedding wa solemnized at John Chapman', on Oct. 5t 188, when his daughter Lizzie, wee mar ied to Wm. P. Cowan, a popular young farener of Pickerin. The ceremony wa Aefortried by Rev. Vicory, aseisted by 1 v. Cierca- den. A large number of r latives and friends were present, many from a dis tance. -After the ceremony sum tuous dinner was partaken of. The ibride 1ooked sweet in blue lady's cloth, strapped with black satin and tucked white satin vest with trimming of tucked cloth, carrying white carnations and maiden hair ferna tied with long bows and ends of white satin ribbon. Miss Hearne Roberta re of Toron- o. acted as bridesmaid and lo in g 'in green cloth, white s trimmiug of satin, while Rob brother of the bride assist groom The bride received s) ard UhCrUI prei-nts. ..The ft on the 14 o'clock p m. trai to and western placee amid t latioes of ell (escaping the turimig 'nuking their home in -North Toronto, Bev. T. W. -Powell,- of Eglit!ton, left for Weks holiday Thuiedity, wit K in( erdine . The membereof Ycirk M asisernbled Wednesday at2 p. the funeral of their lett broth Certer; The Greind Master, E. T. Malone wasin atten Betted in the Malionio rites. • A. breakdown in the Metr The eighth annual plowirig match of the East York Plowman's Atm:striation will be held at Malvern, on Tuesday, Nov. 8th. David Terry, of Kettleby, is °weaned to the house with three brokeu rib, the result of %fall from a tree whilst plating apples. King Plowman's AsSooiation heee °Wed to hold their annual plowing match on the fern) of T. H. Legg. near Temper-. anceyille, on Nov. 8. Mies E. E. Hayoraft, for eight yettra one of the leading writers on the Bow. manville Statesman, is visiting her cousin A. Torrance. near Thistleton. Rev. Mr, Goodell°, of Horning'Mills, *d Miss Emma Hnd, of Lloydtowni wore untd in marriage on Oet. Int the chords of Bs, hitiry Magclalenn. town. , • • '!4 4 : t ked charm tin vet ane rt dChapmangen ial me beentiful Lipp), couple IledfochoorTongtor)ra,n triteii. Pickering. • , .Cle ootrS1e of friends softie 'Mho n. to attend r John Mc M. W. Bro. ance and as- politan line Paused considerable =onion mace to the travelling public Tuesday nig it, and more so on account of the extreme y inaleinent night. Ilia nonor Judge Morgan 1 eld court of ret icon at - the Town hall uesday and dealt with 178 names sub itted for his (Incison, Robert Hazelton represented the Coneeryatives at Eatit ork, but the Reformere, either consider' • g the.nselves to.) strongly eutrenched te worried, or neglectful of the interests olf their patty, failed to be repreeeneed at the court. The list' of names wets rapidly disposed of. The • . coon4 fc.r the western portion of York Township took place TuesdaY and caused much fighting between the tee) parties. l•.•••• 40•=1.11110.0••• ' . BROUGHAM. Walter Wilson, of Otto. Suedity. Mrs. Abbate of Toronto, with her mother, Mrs U. Yo a, wee here nt last week ung. John M..Gerow le havieg the Bylow place repaired and intuit" improved, • Lien, John -Dryden was } ere swppmg alialies with his hien& on 5 ouday. R. -S. Phillipa eft indisposed this week, although not thought to be seriously ao. • w: C. Matthews ia in the city thus tion pending week, he having some htig there. Mrs. Dunbar was able to return home the other' day, .from Clarem ut, although not in eery good health yet. Walter Wilson, formerly of this placie, but now of Oakwood, Maripcisa, is here for fewdeeis Calling upon friends. • John Townsend shouldered his turkey on Tuesday and left for the West so that we will have to do Without his company liereafter. Harold Stevenion ka.e goneto Iowa with a carload of thoroughbred c ttle, for ',John Miller re Sone. The -said nimals were e capital lot, indeed. T. B. Willis wee awake ied the other night by a terrific and a rr noise in the store underneath. At 4noe Theodore tho.ghteof hie roll of cash in the site, ertil etenoluded that. Immo daritig burglar heel: biotin the ele. He armed himeelf .with a revolver -and 0. black -thorn and deseended, aud for fte time stood in the doorway, awaiking the' tnarander • to administer to hirierolentless death. The man Weide did n'et appear and the- prerniseri were entered, but as the &hop Wars so filled with smoke and duet thst it was with difficulty that it was disenvered that one of the plaster centre pieces Inid fallen from the ceiling. In this way waa thelife of another burglar • VS l'AVm.- 7,.4._'4 1:o,, 7r,.i' ' '- , .g , • ,f. t;-tat•i • * . - ,•.s •6 ,,-.,- -.4......,.,.4•, --.4e‘,„ ?, • r-- i i 4. ' ..f'''',v• .. 1'. ,-*-'',' C,7, -,,,, !r. ' 4:: ', : . „,.„, .. 01 :'1' 4,,ii ,444 , O -;e - ,,.41 _, - • • -----, :-•,,.r‘, , ,-{,iic,2\-. '-c., ,-•:: , f --•,,,f-' ,,,,!--fd. , .,,,,, - .6411.-• . . There is areport abeoad in thi; concerning some rf the Epworth hig-"e of the Centennial etnirch, not being eible to .-• attend the League meetings cn account ot laving to pay tell at the Rouge Hill toll ate. 1 wih, just here, togive the pebliee •, to En:dertani that there is no toll collect- cd at the aewe mentioned gate, from per- • BODri goiat.:to and frou their usual planee of werslep on the Loes :Da, and I • •• lenge ay one .0).-.;corne forward and 83y, that they, have tottift paid it.f Now, thie reminds n e of the time. when our Saviour spoke to t ie Pharierees by parable, record- - ed in 'Lek. 14, le, and they all with one censeneb goal to make excuse." If there is a lack ( f zeal on the part of the these would-be, ailed christian workere, ale not . e. • a .,ery chrietin-like spirit to try ane put ., it off on paying toll. If these meetings were held during the week -Persons attend- - ing them would be compelled to pay their . • ...eee Little 5c, each time of passing. As they are.... held on Sunday evening, wewish to l.ave• „ it distinctly understood that there is no . toll collected: I much regret beiug corn- palled to make thie statement through the pres. Any peison wishing further infor- illation will kindly call at the toll gate, or at the treasurer's ofli,-!e, Toronto.' Thank-. -• ing you for this apace , I am yours re-apict•.- --- fully. . _ Wallace Luke. •••••••••••• Greer River. J. B. Wurte has- a Lra,nch cooperage here and doing a good hoiress. Prof. Howard, of N York, was the - guest of O. P. Ferrier, last week -and part of thee • Mr; ATOEvyan; of Toronto, preached att- elvgatit sermon to a largo congregation, Sunday evening. 3. B. Wilson ia rushing business in' the - stock line. What think you of four hund• red and fifty dollars for four calves. Mangold, turnip and carrot pulling is. the order of the day. The apples are. pretty well to the roots of the trees, - Died -Mrs. .Tohn Windsor, sen.,- aged about 67 years. • Funeral took place from the family residence to the Brunswick Hill -• , cemetery, le miles east of here. On Saturday night -last Mrs. Alf; er was suddenly called to Whitevale, as her mother, Mrs. F. P. was taken very Fears- are entertained of her recovery. I am officially informed that the Baptist friends here will have their pulpit supplied regularly by students from McMaster Hall, Toronto, Sunday •evenings, at the usual hour, 7 p. m. Our general merchant, Chas. Callender, has wit his fall stock pretty neerly com- pleted.. If you are in need of an overcoat or sorne footwear look in when yon are round the oorners. •.. W. Be Baa;ton's sale of farm stock and; implements was largely attended Tueday, last.. Our .young auctioneer, F. Postill, . does 'wonderful, and he is climbing the, -rounds of the ladderrapielly. Crowded out lost vek for want of, apace -Wm. kig, of thie place, and Miss ., Minnie Leaver, at Weston, were uniteceie marriage by the Rev. P. C. Cameron,. Stouffyille.' All join in wishing Will and.. his bride long life and hapeese, and trustee that their troubles will only be meth ones. t (14 '746. . 1 . : ,•.• • of nervous n mingled there - the Oa rtil of hi:, father tinct h brig'fnd with hint. I saw both father And eon in the coital at. Madrid. They nu need the artist, bad been captured by a detachment. of +fein his eyes and royal troops, and together with ten ,,'• emotion in his 'others, were on trial. The father was he brief. Should convicted, and afterward escaped. The enough, I can. son proved an alibi, and went clear. t u re time. I "Two years after that the same bri- o 1 first sus- gands—Rinaldo Bojario's band -attack- cuing of the ed and robbed the castle of the Duke of rne. I first Talavera,, where my mother was living. sour fair ward I was at the time in the studio of itny your unfort- tutor, Velasquez, - at Madrid, he, hav- espected more ing removed from Seville. My mother 1niost "knew— possessed a *diver casket, which she alio was seeking lsre�ught wit't leer .from Italy. In it tte tt he feared were her jew rias together with a packet .,nderful •likeness ofepriceless papers, some of which were here to my mother. family records, brought with the cas- eelf had told me that ket ; some she had written herself, for stein on your mother's _te ley story. .. -first of my mother was at Car- x �Spain but I knew we bad it place from a distant land, knew not where. When I was +osh to ask for the information i her told me that she had beento flee from her home in Italy. ►'�° let tell me in what part, but ,s1 ins to understand it to have elf. of the Italian dependencies; 11 she .never said so, I finally set - lad down in the belief that Sicily had ►een the place of my birth." "One moment 1" pleaded the duke, putting forth his hand. "What was - your mother's flamer. "She took the nae of Zanoni in Spain, Joan Zanoni, • and called me e duan.. Shortly before her death .I learned that she had another Chris- tian name. I found it on an old letter. It was Beatrice." The duke started, -and stats upon the my information and guidance; others being letters, some of the olden time, and some from !Father Paul. This packet she had once shown to me, tell- ing me that it should be given into my hands when I was one -and -twenty years, of age; or at her death, if it should occur before that period. "This casket fell into the hands o the brigeuds; and,, of course, the paper into the hands of the chief; Rinaldo Who, later gave- them to his son. "And now, Ant nio, we come to the final plot. • Th.* papers told them -- father and son—n t only the sad story of my mother's iisfortune, and her husband's,cruel rongs-for I am very sure it was all th re—[out they told rosy own . story. The; attack on the cast let of•Talave'ra, the killing of manysof the armed servants and 'the robbery made a stir in Madrid, and troops were Sent in every direction to find the brigands. A few months later they were over- taken and a sharp engagement result- ed. Rinaldo was 'shot dead but his son o Juan t id you know cote tt-t.t •I would to rti.aain here, II thought, was id you think I y risk -any dan No ! Nol But, of another word, will not punish :tth of others the ended me' in this. in sympathy for his love and es - hero. Will you 1. and the princess just pix days—I + cell. It was my arranged for my t pe. The way was ; and I told, him F ,ni. What, think r'9' id how Zanoni had ow he declared he ti,tn break his `word 1 and patron—the elle said in conclu- t hat if I could come y from that, and iiui to flee, he would -And h":r,: 1 atfl," she -added bright- ly. And she told how she had come in, shortly after himself, and how she remained through all their talk an unseen s ctator ; but she wduld not_ attempt tto tell the .variety 'of Ciao - tions that had whelmed upon her while she had listened. " She had scarcely spoken her last word when the assistant keeper, cola Pandolfo, entered the cell. It had grown to be quit dark, and be had come with a light, never dreaniing, that the princess was there. • Ile had not. seen his wife since she 'had con- ducted her thither. His nstoni.ehment and fright c'rin easily be imagined. But the duke did not allow hits long to suffer. "Signor Pandolfo, not a word; -rny ward has told me ell, and I will for- give you on condition that you hold your peace henceforth. Remember, the princess carne hither with me. You understand, Has Marac'.ini " re- turned t" "Yes, your excellency. He came un- expectedly. At Rossena he met the Senor Philip Galejo, colonel in the Spanish army, who was on his way to visit our prison, and with him -he rr tri rued," "Oho!" cried• our hero, with a ti'on- derful surge of feeling. "He is not ' in the Spanish. artny, ,signor, Philip Galejo, when I knew him was c'uptain of t he mount ed police of Segovia. c1h• ' 'richly deserved to be a cc+:onel. -An- tonio." turning to the duke., "he It 'iwass whe captured Rinaldo tlojatiu and his son previous to t he t i-bd of which I have told you." "Ah ! tiwn be ' recognize l.tldgvico "Depend upon it point of an exclamation when the , trs°aped. painter stoped him. "Still later,. after the death of thy "Let me finish, my lord; 1 will not mother, I saw Ludovico 'Bojario in tire you. Froin Carthagena we went Madrid. I was s re it was he . Time \ to Toledo, forced to leave behind the went on, and 1 atiw him again and best friend we had in the world -•a a8atin. At lengt priest, Father Paul." with the belief th Again the duke would have inter- We. Finally sora - rupted, but the other went ori: a dark, sts�rniy eve "Yet we did not lose his friendship. For years he corresponded with my mother, a friendly courier bearing the lettes to and fro. Corsiglia was the courier's name. We had gone to To- ledo, and thence to Madrid, where my mother found safe and welcome -repose with a dear named Olympia, the powerful an avera. The 4t grand . old castle twenty miles from huh . trouble B h I was impressed at he was watching ething happened. On 1 was on my way from the studiogtosmy cham Ler 1 was attacked by a noted bravo, whom I recognized, and whom 1 remembered to have seen with young lionaria. His name was Pietro Pedrosa. He had then a famous matador at cine time in the Plaza de Toros, but had been dis- iend—an own cousin, c'httrged for drunkenness and quarrel- who had married with soeneness: Fortnately, 1 had ,ray wealthy Duke of Tal- rapier with me, rind 1' sent hire off it must have given Madrid, in the wild and t he wounded me rcture p' sque severely—eo severely that I : was con - Sierra Guadarama. And there—" fined to my room! fur two weleks ke s hove was in a with a wounq th At this point the duke sprang to his feet, his' agony of suspense at its utmost limit. "Stop! stop ! ... For the love of heav- en ! 'tell me how have I been so juggled —so betrayed—so cruelly outraged and deceived. 'Tell me all the rest at some other time. Yoe—you—are the true Juan Steffano Farnese ! My brother My brother 1 Is it not so? Tell me— is it not sof" "Antonio—in my heart—my deeper heart—I belies*, it is. In fact I ma say, by. -no possible torture of the trut can it be otherwise." • "My brother 1 My brother ! ;; Oh now I know why I loved you from th first, why my heart went out to you full of deepest affection, even whe I knew you bad stolen from me th love of my beautiful ward." "No, no, my lord," interrupted th painter, earnestly. "Do not `say that She never loved you more truly tha she loved you while loving me." "Well, well," pursued the other, with a kindling light in his eye—alrnost- a -smile. "I may say this at least, in tha hour when I knew she loved you, wished Ih my heart that you were n ble4 that you might bless her with your hand. Oh ! Jaun 1 Juan! I can not -call ,you by :our other Christian name. I l . inever will! . Juan—my brother! . I !know it 1 Thank heaven 1 I know it now 1" • And he threw his arise araekt stbe eartist'st.. neck, and wept tears of joy upon his bosom. But a great anxiety was still giving him unrest. "Now, tell me," he said when ht, had a E arisen from the warn embra?e, And wiped the tears from his eyes, ',how did the villain, who has, for so long a time .—for years --personated your st 1t, gain the information that .enabled him to "When I once more got out and able to look around, )otb the bravo and Ludovico Bojario were missing. The former I never sate again, 'Ibe letter I saw no more until I met hits here in Parma, passing for a Farnese and brother of the duke. In all probabil- ity the ex-nzat ! ed him that I was ` dead, as he has doubtless paid a goodly sum to have me killed. 2 t "Now, mylord, y impostor you know. how the gained the information that h enabled him t - le. would." Shortly after this the duke end his ward departed,_ leaving the prisoner in care of Pondolfu, wi li the request that. he should he treate •with all kindness and respect. Below Antonio to the prison, and It Philip Galejo of tions 1t)llowed, after questions and anew"e Spaniard was the ' had supposed hien tt ing cluea,tioned, be siesuld know lkud w here rind under, si "11 1 could hear bit "rind look into his '80. no disguise that would hide hire Prot nd the keeper of -him was Colonel govia. lnt toque- which a very few -a proved that the + an the prisoner be, and upon it- leclared that .he vies llojario any.; ny circumstances. Mpeak," be :mid, eyes while he did be could asinine tae, cl but. one question. the ofitcer Was act Galejoegal atttho it,,yy #u:;. Parma. duke ba displayed .the d leu ent the Never d given him;, ; Mind- the cursing, the impre- oations upon the . duke, at upon. all concerned. We wilt not prolong the scene. Ludovico Bo jt,,rio • was arrested on charge of robbery and Murder at tbo castle of Talavera, in .Spain, and ere long thereeft.eC Corel Galejo left Italy .with him in teustody. On the .way across- the , however, he made his escape. ! Ile secretly lowered a botfrom r m the vessel's stern at night' were prisoner disappeared, and never heard of more. What more need we 1; tell t The old chronicles of the time in the archives of La Pilotte' have it !all off► record. After •telling the touching story of Giovanni Farness and his family, to- gether with the wicked imposture of Ludovico Bojario, and the wonderful manner in which the true prince had been staatched from the jaws of an ignominious death ant- restored to his rightful rank and station through the magic of his .m'asterpiece, they go on to make record of the joy and sat- isfaction that filled eve*, loyal heart, sa old and young, male nd female, when the facts had been pullshed. The chronicle from wiiob we have copied closes with an a count of the marriage. of: the Prince uan Farnese, younger .brother of the )eloved Duke Antonio,to the beau .iful Princess e Isabl di "Verona ; and, if we are to believe the chronicler, i t was onof the grandest. events an oris ofc�the most extensively celebra ed that eiser transpired in that $nci nt city.. The people: he assures us, ere literally wild with deliifht, and: f r many days the welkin r'c•hoed back t Mir gladsome notes, while the joy bel a rang right merrily. THE END.I i..' BIG BIRDS OF Tit SEA. t he A!hatrnSA the Finest, liboush it Feeds on rgtrld Meat. The. alhntros3 is the bi gest bird of ie sea. Itis home is outh of the ,equator. His flight is described as marvellously rapid, su passing the eegle's or. the condor's, Nevertheless the albat oss is a foul feeder._ He lives or offal, not fish, and on the body of i.0% hale • ill gorge so full that he can hardly f y. Beautiful as he -looks in air, on It nd he is an awkward bird,- wit h , a bit , too big for the rept of him and mit it web feet. Sailors call t he ulbatroe, tribe ''goon- eys." One species,' cumun, y known as the '°niol lynieke," . is sous times found, north of the equut_or; , Cape hens and ('ape )igeons are smaller birds 'of the alb' Cross kind— the latter, like a fat dove with a black head. t A stages spceutw i 'et the al bat rose) tribe, known as the "Nell " or "stink- er." iii • noted for its voracity • when whale carcasses are left toy the whal- ing crews. lienee old whalers derive the terrible threat: ''111 light on ye like a 'stinker' on a whale " The stormy petrel, Mo her C'arey's chicken. is beloved of all .ailors. He's a tiny bird, with delicate glossy back and brown plumage just ecked with, white on the operee ings, ar cl tong slen- der legs reaching out first oe one side end t lien on the other• as i to feel the ties as it nest les under the curl of the billows or skins the side: like a lark over a plush meadow. A fon. difference s from the her queer of to shheores used In his Ant - he says its Zwick stuck or a long Islet hough guins have sopa ra tee, the t rut. sea toi rc penguins unci 0 haunt the rock The penguin i 'IlorriiHgrvvink explorations h+�ug sly that a tam[ would burn trot fit. Ifilda's r thee the pe flash. of puffins, -- birds that �` sea islands. for food by ,l went y --every wet tier—wa» sesetn blvd in its own chat nber of audlenc .The duke was there , Luigi Mar -arch WAS there, and with him wise Sent Galejo, colon 1 of the tuounte police of Segovia. re chedly ive you. • You also know how he came ein_ 1 to possession of the papers and the e few keepsakes of my mot her,, vt•hich he , so .boldly exhibited, One or two of n the ^9 ••� �� however :•.-- especially one e purporting to be from a good priest— he- must have forged, or had thetins e forged for hitn. Your fair ward told • me about them." n. "Poor isabel," said the duke, with' ring of deep sympathy in bis voice. "What' will she say when she knows t all this? Ab ! I can fancy the joy_ the gladness, that will fill her heart. I What may _ she" be suffering even °" now f" • "Brother,`'yi u will `not refuse me When all w`Is.lin''bed the duke aro land told the a underful story he h that evening heard 'in t1be1, painter' cell, and -be aMked at the clime that th prisoner might be brought before them. Strangely. or asst urallys be it is it. 'tmight. n•,t a man p sent doubted a single word of the nitrvelous revcla - tiort. Siad the eon)teq was speedy and unanimous ' thea the duke's . request should be granted. While Maraccini ti a8 gone for' the- iniprisoned painter t e duke sat down In conference with C ilonel Galejo. and after a brief collot1 he took lien and parr..and on u slip if fine parchment ,he wrote a few_line . The document was' simply t► Perini to the Siaanish officer of the police, hating for his Ici°g. that he mitrht rrest, within the confines' of Parrna, a certain Ludovico 'Ilojario, who he'd b en for pears a fugitive from justice in Madrid. The painter at len' th entered the as e man. if their' faces did note belie othem, the members of the augu t tribunal deeid- d, in their .heart:, that he was worthy of all honor : nd renown. The ld chief --Baron Dod ; ro—set a brave zample. He advsan .d and grasped be hand of the late 'risoner, publicly hailing hire, "Prince, ' He whom we have known. as the Zt►rquis Steffan° was spared the- pain and chagrin of a public arrest. Colonel Galejo went with Signor Maracoini and found him in a gaming -room of the Correggio Club. He was called side by the keeper into a private a d arct re explot flesh isso0 in its body 3e s '1 he puffin 'a much ssmalle e an equally oily council chamber, an "Hush! Say no more. Oh, the joy- b bells shall ring! Before another day you shall he set free from this place, the wonderful story shall be publish- o ed. You shall be proclaimed to the e principality my father held -..nn honor t we would not give to the other—and joy shall rule the hour. I know the people wi 11 rejoice!" „And' Isabel f What of her, . my dear Antonii-, . •- "If you can win her; . now that you painter, she shall oertatal beym" ..__,. YYours." are .a prince instead of a h POINTED PARAGRAPHS Learnfng 'and wisdom d n't rilwnys t ravel hand in hand. A man of wealth is nes, r crnnky— he's merely, eccentric: Some people should take ore pains to conceal what they know The only kind of fruit Nab had in the ark was preserved pas s. Brains itt the lawyer's stock in trade, and he sells them by the e. se. Many of the words that bu n are tak- en from the editorial waste basket. About two-thirds of a man s so-called friends would fall to titan the test. The only material differen :e between a cold and the grip is in t + e doctor's bill. t When if -Man jun- et .onclusions he doesn't always light where he ex- pected to • The 'trouble with the oh rity that begins at home is ;that it seldom gets any farther. • Some hats make it woman's long, but not kelt as long as baud's when ho gets the bil There is a period lu every prior to which he can't be p at night, and after' which it' to get him up in the morns, The Advertiser has c another instance of t s ' £/Zr ourative powers of the f dian remedy, Dr. Williams' for Pale People. Mr. William of Lower Brighton, a prominent lum- berman and farmer, came very near being a cripple from rheumatism, t he dread disease so prevalent along 1 he St. John .River. Mr. Tedlie is now 65, years of .age. Five years ago he was taken with the first symptoms of rheu- matism—over exposure, the stream drives and the general hard life of the lumberman, payed the way for the lodgment of the excruciating disease. The symptoms first manifest were pains through the legs, arms and hands. Gradually conditions grew worse. At intervals there would ha an abatement of the malady, but for months each year he was very nearly, helpless. , The pain was so agonizing that sleep, was out of the • question, and to work was impossible. The afflicted man had so often read of the wonderful efficacy of Dr. Williams' 'Pink Pills in cases similar -to his own, tt. that he resolved to try them. He mays, - however, that he was. not hopeful of receiving much benefit, as he had tried many medicines without any good - result following. He began the use of the kills and by -the bine a couple of boxes- were used he •found they were .helping him. .Thus encouraged he ceu- linued the use of the medicine _and • gradually the ;pains and :soreness left him, he was able to sleep soundly, and - enjoyed an excellent appetite. In fact• after using Dr. Williams' Pink Pi I is for less than two: Months Mr. Ted i ie says he found himself in the hest of health. He is now a warm friend of this great medicine and urges sinal lar sufferers not to experiment with- - otlaer ith- otlier medicines, but at once begin the use• of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Rheumatism, sciatica, nen algia, partial paralysis, locomotor ataxia, -. nervous headache, nervous prost ration, and disease depending upon humors in - the blood, such as scrofula, chr•nnic erysipelas, etc., all di appear before a fair treatment with Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. They give a -healthy glnw .. to pale and sallow complexions. cold by all dealers and post paid at 50c: a • box or six boxes for $2.50 by addrss- = ing the Dr. Williams' Medioine Brockville, Ont; Do not be persuaded to take some substitute. DOGS' LIKES AND DISLIKES. Here Are Borne Curio -vs I anti Amu. ..' Ca es in Point. `Animals, like human beings; have been known to exhibit strange anti- pathies toward certain persons ands things, dogs perhaps, more so than any other of our four -footed friends. That famous canine, Oriel Bill, of (ix - ford, was for a times such a violent hate er of postmen that it was not safe for :any uniformed letter carrier to :)p proach the Mitre, where Oriel Bill held undisputed sway. Accordingly arrange- tnents had to be made for all missiN ens, to be left at an adjoining house be the postmen in order to save their feelings,, —physical as well as mental—and the dog from venting his curious aversions upon them. The same precaution had to be taken in the case of another -but lees famous _ canine. Until a postman was fuotteh enough to throw a stone at this ent- reat without the least provocation. it wee on good terms with all the letter. eirriers who called at the house. af- ter that, however a furious hatred of her; majesty's postal service took pos- session of this previously amiable cur, and when it had severely bitten one of the postmen they all refused with ono accord to deliver letters at the house. - 'the owner of the dog complained tb the British postoffice authorities, seys - Tit -Bits, but the latter supported their': subordinates in the attitude they had • taken up, and in the end -the complain-- ant arranged for his letters to be de -e, livered at a place where there was no canine that delighted to hark and bire. - At'a hotel in a west of England town there is a dog which exhibits an in- tens.e dislike for soldiers. What are t he why and wherefore of this feeling t o- w.trd our gallant redcoats it is iutl,os- sible to say, but the -sight. of one h:td the same effect on this eccentric c 'n- ine :as a red rag has on _a bull. The. is that the dog ha5, to he kept severely under restraint, so that soldiers can come anti go without running the* risk of - losing a port son of their anatomy in the process. What . makes his antipathy toward theta all the more remarkable is the fact that the animal shows a decided partiality •• for policeinen, A terrier belonging to 'a friend of. the writer will run a mile at the sight of a siphon. When it was consider- .' ably younger than it is now its own- er deluged the dog with a siphon of soda water, and ever since it has ex• - hibited a mortal dread of a i iphen, - full or empty. The remembrance- of :. that unexpected bath is evidently re sponsible for this extraordinary aver- , sion. , 'A BAD MOVE. • Don't you speak to Miss Sharply any more, Miss Elderly? Indeed I do not, and what's more, - .1 never will again. She 'had the impu- dence to send me thirty-six roses ore my thirty-fifth birthday. 1 f h,+l h()x will he used rely fur storing the bet - ,f a ivies for late keeping. race should be made of No. 1 vis, heads and hoops, the face and head lined, top and quarter hoops.nail- . _ed with three-quarter int -'1 nails. be- fave going to'the orchard; never use a wire nail. Our experience has been that apples hand-picked from, the tree and carefully placed in the barrel; phew best results. Apples -thus packed s11t;'_w -their bloom better and show a life of freshness that apples which are run over a table or laid on the ground for a time before going into the bar- rel do not have. When- you please a I)uyer's eye the sale is half made. We believe in- double facing, using apples as nearly one size and color as pos- sible-, ;Ind to have the free apples rep- r:•sent the remainder of the barrel -ill siza as near as practicable. Shake the b irrel gently after each.basket is empe t i•.•d until the barrel is filled... Some v:a riot ies will stand filling • three in- ches above the chime, others not so much; right at this point is where great -care is needed. .Apples proper- ly- filled in the- barrel, and an caper-. fenced man witn a press, can add very 1nuch to the keeping and selling qual( it y of the apples. We °neat find from eil,litto twenty or more -apples badly bruised at the bottom, caused by too aloe h pressing,; simply a waste and lo:;s and . frequently a -barrel will lriko, and the dealer must use a like qu:antil y tq plug or fill' the barrel be - fere Sending it out to a customer. With proper care in barreling and heading, :til this extra work and waste of ap- pts•.s would be avoided. Shake well and level off the, false before putting in 111.• hetd,-then nail and head line cora- fulls,-. it- taker a iittle-.tjwe, but. one tr rrel buts! ing in a car will cause more lu.: than the' extra labor spent .in sey- cr:r.•ly nailing. the bot torn. A careful p k• r_ will put a- private or disci❑a gni sling nutrk on : an extra fine•eo1- oral barrel that will frequently bring hi. employer an additional -50 cents ')r $1 from -stand buyers who want (11111ity, and the sante plan followed by _marking an off - barrel will assist the salesman materially in satisfying a customer who wants a lower-priced apple-. - 1 t is preferaable to load apples cro the Car the same day as picked, and tipples placed in storage as ton as lo,t�si!)le-:.fter packing keep Better than when Icing on the gro..unil or Stacked • up in p1le.s• under the trees 018 long - sat. the station and,.c'xposec,1 to rain aisl -sun. The- guest•in on what day to begin barreling for slorage las fre- ctaa:nt ly asked ; our rule as when the s••tds etre black, apples pull fairly free tr•,ni th•. 1imh,- with the shortstem r.•m-)itting in the apples,' even if the pr,ip,--r ruler is lacking. Above all, use o;,,Y -a standard sized barrel, the park- -Ewe rpeonunended. by telly association; !id make' tfirer 'grades- of apples, first, ,40•;• ),tri; and dre)ps. , The ;apples' tit:+ - dr,11_wilt le picking are oft en the'far tird best colored. hilt should s n h u t(ie, t be put -in vvit h the fruit for storage, e4,.•u if they fat) un soft ground or .gr ass , the fall injures thein, even if 111-• skin is unbroken ; they will show d• •id ra)Ior in :t few weelcs and injure, the silt '1'ht, header should use•care err m•irkin.g.plainly thee-vatriety and the bac., ' n•.1 • of each h:)rrel . to save the; n11e•srnanannoy:,ace :and labor." 1LT. RbOTr'';G OP 13o: h h= currant and gooseberry hush °caul niui•h more -easily he rooted. iA fall "-th an at. in u, her ti)),a. In --fact, un - le -s the etit+ing.s ars separated frorn ties bush t,e.fr,re'sprini2; the greater pro - Pala i'o of t hem will ..fail. Then the greu:) I cold, and.- as .the sap is f r.e:h ur1 the new cut' surface, it: takes .it ,i .1t;ng time to fere' the callus re - to e -to put forth new roots. The -air is w--) rui i than- .the soil-, and enceur- og-..; the starting of leaves before there <, r• ;a ny-.roots to supply there with need- ed ;t p '1 ht) way -to .cut c.uttiiigs. of 111,'- currant or gooseberry- is to wait Until t leaf- naturally, ripens, which way,. be kuoiwn hy, its .p;irting .easily fret), tht~ stent. Take a shoot of this year s giowth, airid )•ifter the -leaves aro off. cu it so as t1e Y. 1.1; lo' leave an inch jor .,f 1-)st cur'; wood on, its !owlet Thier have- the_ bottomi sharply, and evenly- shaven,. and remove the buds as f.1r down as you intend, to put be;ow' ,lie yurl:ree. Some leave t he buts; taivnd nuke as tua)riy-plants fruin tie cul a ni; ;is there are buds below gratify'. I-.:ach.uni. of these will •send uta a ainf,ta with a clump of .roots where, tats-.- burl .was.:, BBut.;•c,oncentrat- an„ all t 1 Vroots to support one. -shoot. nl:;k1 ••s a lunch st-ronger p.!-ant'.If. the'. :cut.tings':ii- platted v_,ery early in the:` f:a I r it. is Si)teet hues necessary to shade the part buve ground, so as to pre-' vent at atrote .starting buds for next year's gir. vth. If_ this happens, as it may .v. -6,A.1. the hot- weather- keeps tap la-te, tire pla i i . will be nearly ruined, as these buds are. needed - to begin - growth r.•xt- spring The first few day's after the cutting is in thea -ground its base is getting ready to send forth routs. -What is. needed is as much root k or killed outright by vie. is never really safe to trust a u over a year old to be i'ed without a ring in his nose and a staff. In most cases. where they have become danger- ous the fit haitt come ripen them sud- denly, and after an attack the remark is commonly heard that the bull nev- er 'showed any disposition to be ugly before.; It is -often the quiet fellow. which 'suddenly develops into a fiend, so- it is well never to. take the risk of an attack. If a bull has once shown an inclination to be vicious in the way 1 of attacking a man, says Fawners' Ad- vocate, it is not safej to lead him even with a staff, fon' he may quickly snap the -staff with his horn or jerk it from the hand of -the attendant. Dehorning while it mitigates the danger to some extent, is not a sure cure, as many nulls are Just as vicious after the wounds; heal, and .the. operation dis- figures a handsome bull. It' is not ne- oessary to 'put him away for this fault, however, if he is a-.vtiluable animal and a good breeder, and it is generally the lively fellows that get good` stock and - transmit force and energy to their prci- geny,' as he may be easily controlled by being blindfolded by the use of a leather helmet formed to - cover the fo ehead and eyes, , secured firmly ar and the horns and by a strong throat latch made td buckle under the. eh'eks. Tho eyes may be protected by co ical sloped leather goggles, which a firmly fastened in the helmet. The helmet is a complete blinder, and the bull wearing it is subjeot to his mas- ter's hand, and may be led quietly wher- ever desired. - The same appliance may 1)5 used with eompret.e success in the c,.a,se of a eow'•he;oming excited and 'hard to manage when being Jed .or shipped. We have seen the' worst cases' made tractable by the mean of blind- folding. • . BURR KNAI P'S ' FARM rt ROWS. The money /ender has no friends. Near" neighbours should be a trifle blind. - The horse is no's riii,nd Wader. r. Il in',t pound him folr not knowing more than hes owner. • A certain' "temp`eranee advocate,, a farmer, keeps hard cider in his cellar. He kindles the flame and tries "fire." Don't expe.et -fanrsy crops from cheap stone seed. ,::vin u goose never ex- pects her eggs to shell out young tur- keys. - A - wink lb `often 'Ss good • is 'a kick and much safer to administer. Have neither ail idle dollar nor -an idle aerie. BIG STEAMSHIP custard Cmritgas1y MiIlle'Mind 'Chis Large. 1 Boat in rite florid. The Cunard Comi9.any has lately giten ,au order for a new steamship, which will be' the 1a'tge:;;t ever constructed. Shea is not to be a passenger -boat, and is not ,to .be built for spelt, and ac- cordingly.. she will attract leas. gen- eral interest than Iher smaller sisters, the Lucaiiia and Ca Mpania J. which re- gister oraly thirteen thousand tont; apiece. ..1 • The biggest vessel now afiloat is the Kaiser Wilhelm de Grosse, -o the North •Germau Lloyd..„ She its siIx hundred sand fifty; feat long, and regdsters more .thau fourteen • thousand toile. 1She ;will not .long .be the leviathan -of {-he Atlantic Buena for lit u short time the White ;Star .Culnp:tuy will have tete Oceanic. on the water, , and she, with her seven hundred feet length, will Le twenty feet longer than the Great Eastern; the wonder of .the last gen- eration. It. is expected that the Oceanic will make the passage between Liverpool and New York, in less than Speed ouch as this is obtaine urinous- ext:end ittire of f Oc eani.;c wilt burn more t hundred tops of coal a day. Alrn'ost every ,one is curios what .an • ocean greyhound costs. tithe expense is vastly greater pet- ton f ,r a fast passenger -boat dean- for a freigh- ter., It i)t supposed that a tramp 8terirnOr can be built in Great Britain .for soniething leas than fifty dollars " cost •al - dollars a eanic will it dollars. eight -boat Lha. five days. I at a~n etl- uet. The ban seven is to know a tori; The great "'liners most ..or quite two hundred teat. , At that rate 'the Oe cost More than three milli( Of coarse the huge Cunard fr will be less expensive than A LITTLE CRD:EN, :The girl who expressed So much sympathy for the poor farmer because of ;his cold job h rvesting bis'' winter i 'agricultural know-• wheat is equal ledg4k•,to the one who expressed a de- sire to see a fiel of tobacca> when 'it was just- pluggin out. But the dam - 'set who asked which cow gave the trotter ilk is entitled to the whole bakery. nd a girl en her return from 4a visit to the country was, asked if she ever saw any yea, indeed milk )aacow, re - It plied. "Oh, y tickles me to death to see uncle jerk two of that _ o)w's faucets at the same One; in Iron ore quette, Mich., Al scheme is tablislzment of Chicoutimi. Fort. ViTiltiam Man will adopt with customers Centenary Chu. Hamilton has d -dividual commun .An order -in -Co appoint ing Thurs last• Thursday in giving Day. h BureMr.auAofrcMibaldines, undunt deposits i frew Counties are W. A. Parks, B.A ter returned to 1 from 8 trip to Mot Bay. They t ravelle. a fifteen foot can, Mr. A. E. Forge sioner at Winnipeg, Lieutenant -Govern) Territories. Mr. F seeded as Indian Co lanvid Laird of Prat Kingston's popu'at iota has increased 208, according to the assessors' returns.. Mr. W. M. -Davis, Town Engineer of Woodstock, has been appointed to a similar position in Berlin. Nothing haat yet been heard of 'the wherea►bouts .of Rev. John, .Smith, of Hatifait;, who left • for Petnbroke a .month, ego. lefts. Itoozne�h, ' the lady -nnenaber of 1 he .London School board, has succeed- ed in ..having 'a -resolution • passed en- dorsing the proposal to tench domes= tic selene“ in 1 he Public Schools, !1 Tr. f'. Ity a rt, of ,N ew York, has been in .Ott awn inst runt ing I he • Tammany Protective Society 1.f that city in the goy'ernment and rivet hods of the fainowe organizat it)n that cunt cols New Y rk. Mr. Il. Morke;' of- Blenheim, liCeaa examin ng an acetylene gas .generator Wit h•u ightett -match when. an explos- ion too .place. Ile was terribly burn- eda and it is fe tred may lose itis eye- sight, o even his life. School ct'tnrnismiur►ers cif Outrernont, dear bi0ntreal, have caused the ar- rest' of Dominion Veterinary Inspector Dr. 11fr I;achran, al tagi,ng t hat the doc- tor's establishment for treating ani- matls fol' tuberculosis is a menace to the health, of the school. GREAT BB ITA A' ruffian under.- arrest stabbed a pt,ilr-eu;-in to death in London Eng., 'yystardaY. • 'I'titr.,ti•.tniship Milwaukee which ran nn the rocks near Lit -espied., has been cul in two and one half of the vessel lowed to t hat port. UNITED t-Adrie.n, Mich., Mary Service, a widow, 87 years old, committed suicide tiaturdaey rather than die of cancer. Gigantie‘ frauds. it is said, have been 'alias's►ve+tett in New Fork's asps:alt pat?, ing cont rants. '1'he•rr' will be allot her civic ticantal ci)ruutit are.. `atUlucel (;rein Wood, prarsident of.the ('oatsvill.>,, I',t., Natia,tiatl (tank, was rob- bed -of a valise on Sunday tat Philadel- phia which cotitained.$10,(HX) in bonds. Snow and rain have checked the pro- gress of the forest. fines in Colorado, .and it ire nowthought ihat further de- struction of elle t-inl),er•will beprevent- ed ('aptain Brady, `i►f the t'nited'States Signal Service. has been ordered to be- gin' the construction of stn overland telegraph latae frorn Quant amine), Yuba, to `antiago and Manzanillo.. ;St+u;ttt'r Hanna, bi'liev.etl by many to tw Pres dent Mi•Kinle-y'm chief adviit- •'r, (tech); e'. for the 1.:ablest States hold- ing the I'1►ilil�)+antis. ile is decidedly °ple send to any prupesilion to pay. Spain $ /),000,000 for them. , John lollingworl h and his friencara fired on a party of five .siren who went to his pl act. ill Catnnun County. Kansas, on Satu day .to execute a judgment. 11'our Of the', men averts killed outright and the ifth cannot recover; Four a iuers were burned to death ail the 111i Iv le slope of the Lehigh Val- ley Coal 'otupany at. Midvale,". Pa., on. S.aturday.j A firs broke out in the slope about n0011. At the. tunes there were 150 amen in the mine. All wore gotten out but four.. A great deal -of duntago has' been done in the -State of \V'iscon4iu by for- est. fires. In the city of Cutniberlund the loss amounts to $1-25,010, •The fires in the northern/rpart of the State have been quenched by a heavy downfall of rain. 'Several deaths are reported. On Saturday at Pittsburg Bertha Beilstein killed her mother and put four bullets into her body, front • the effects of which she cannot. recover. Frederick 1Ieilst 1,in, the father of the family, was one of t he best known re- sidents of Allegheny tie died sud- denly in December last. from apoplexy, and since then the daughter has_ been despondent. !Hugh Beldon, of Tacoma, Wash:, bas brought snit against. the Grand Court of Washington, Ancient Order of For- esters, for $15,00t) damages for injuries alleged to . have been received while being initiated into the order. Hefldon alleges that he was compel- led -to ride an electric goat, resulting . 1 1 11rm by he r1dthe Cis eovesr masala, which resulted in dt to his squadron at Santiago. The British Royal Commission pointed to investigate . .the Fre treaty rights is Nevar undland, b completed its tour oft treaty con and will return to St. John's to co ple e the evidence concerning the djif- fietilt les between- ,French and Brit subjects over the lobster, cod and It ring fisheries by studying the colon archives. This as expected to occup a couple of weeks, after which t e Commissioners will negotiate with the Colonial Ministry for a balsas of s t- tloment with France. SOME 'HOSPITAL STORIES. m- er c P- 8 t, sh r- aI y Told by a Norte to ©ne of London s to . Hospitals. Rxt remelt' friendly and pleasing - the resat ionto of one couple. ' Th were gypsies, and had been trampi thea country, sleeping anywhere they could, many a night beneath the . open sky;. The wife had broken her leg a hut been Uro a liC al. wiry little body she was, resit iof enerl e y g and, brown an a ,ferry. Hese dr watts of the usual tramp order. gadfr4' ed from many a source and: presenting a somewhat travel -stained ,appearan e. On visiting day her husband came o i*e her. 1 told him which wait her he , and tient hint over to her and paid t o more attention to, hist. Af minute- e r so afterwards ho was back at clay elbo '. "Well,. what do yoµ - wants W y aren't you trying to comfort yo r wife 1" ''She ain't here, titirse; leastways, can't see her." i poi ot:ed to her be , but. he shook his head'and looked round for. her. I gazed at, the man' in blan - umurerneut,. and - then suddenly t all dawned- upon ate, and 1 bad much ado not to laugh aloud. The gyp: y tramp did not recognize his tanned a ct weather-beaten feilo %-wayfarer in t tri bonnie clean woman with neatly brusl ed hair who looked tali ,bright an cheery in her scarlet bed -jacket; an his face watts a perfect, picture when led .him up to her bed. She recognize 1 haw. how•eveitt, and, appreciating t t ransfurrnation ',ve had mace in her appearance, entered heartily into the joke. The daily daily care and - good food ha. wrought a change in the woman 1% -We wea seeing her constantly, had n t marked, but which seemed 'to diaguis het to her -husband. Another episode, I remember, woul I have been amusing if the humor hada' been so olot}e to tragedy. One of ou patients, a woman, was about tote di. ch.tu gc•d as recovered.. She Wali au act resa, and htad been "made up" a goo deal_ when she was first admitted t the hospital. Fier hair was dyed, an the bluah on her t;leeks was net du to youth and health. Of Bourse durin her stay with us, she had been withou any such artificial aids to youthful ap pea►railce. She had been handsome, bu Time had long been -her enemy, an there were inevitable wrinkles abou the eyes and mouth. Just before limit ing us -she seethed very depressed, an one day she confided in me. .She woul have. too .seek an ... engagement, imm_e diately she left the hospital. "But 1oolt at mate." she said. ''My face i?t, an old wortnatn're no one would engage me as I am'" And than her trouble came out. "I must 'make. up,' 11,4 adii tet get on at. all, and I have no money to get the preparations." I couldn't feel it in nay- heart to scoff at the poor wo- man. • 'Few of us can face the on- slaughts of old age unmoved, and some of us cannot afford to eater the ra- vages of time to betray themselves.* 'The hemselves.- The woman's story got .to the ears of some of the medical • students, and it caught their sympathies, With char- acteristie kindliness -they took the mat- ter up, and the result of at. "whip round". .among doctoral 'and - students enabled the woman to leave the hos- pital with enough money, not only to procure her desired youth, but • to equip her fn a more substantial Man- ner for renewing life's battle; 1[n fact, Rho' did make up before' leaving our hos- pital care, and not a few of us have since. hid the :delight elf- seeing heron the_11oarda, as bright end' vivacious as if she knew only -half her:.tale of years. 1d A y, se 1 feren place—a. small handle or a rollt orates; but care mho neither bat nor broo painter,--txttnt—thta.t t ht never been used, duce bad results. Pressing should" always be dune on four thicknesses of woolen stuff—soft cloth or a blanket covered with a strong muslin cloth. The iron should be Well cleaned and not too large or, heavy. • Tailors use a narrow. iron. which runs along the seams; and wo- men who make their own dresses would be wise -in having so helpful a commo- dity. All fabrics may he ironed in the same way as woolens, unless they have a pile, -when every care 'should- be taken not to flatten it; crepons tome under the same head as pile fabrics, and should be pressed in • the same way. Silk glazes and scorches very quickly, 'and should therefore be pressed in the. same way, and with an iron that is light in weight and rather cool, and, indeed; it is a mistake to use ,hut irons„ in pressing. Fugitive colors which change to to 111,q11.. brown when heat Vplieit are very terrifyina{her the garment hag item spoiled, but '-`r the lining has -not been scorched, it,,, will generally be founts that the or corn is tack wh•an the dress is :quite cold. early, all, light . slum --grays atone cc lor, lilac, pale hetiotrepe . aanti� the like are fugitive; it takes t ln:ee 1t four houra before the color comes hack -. to them. A safe test is to try a pre ae . of the goods-undarthe iron 1 he day • before and you can then • judge haw much heat it will stand. - It is not advisable for Marne dri'ss- makerlto use the clamp cloth toolartTe- ly in .pressing.' With tailors, wh.,e work is largely upon :urges, tweedsr.u:t I -- firm woolen cloths,;. • wet t r•eatmen' ay -best ..adapted to the t re'quire'ments of the amaterial:_land is made nn'e ()f -the special features of their' work, .hot h in. tete exquisite finish of 'all seams and--: ettiges, and in the skillful manithilat ion:.. 1►y which they. impart form.1.0 at gar- ment ; while the large.ma jority of dress: materiels are so comparatively light and thin that • wet treatment would in jure color, finish and texture, causing - them to draw up end look rough and cackled, and entirely destroying thea delicate appearance of the fale-ie. The skirt seams are pressed and _the band put on and /hooked securely be- fore the loner -edge is examined ,rule the exact length in all places detern)in e.d. This done, the best means of fin- ishing it is to baste a narrow bean all around and press it firmly -alt around. The binding braid - or .velvet if put on then entirely by h:tnal and 1 ht,n fin Il- ly pressed once more, will he much.: more easily removed after it has be- come worn out than if stitch ed on and, sewed In a hem. You will he surprised at the smart tailor -effect :of a skirt so., finished whorl compared. with me done by the usual time -saving drr ssmakser method and true work of repairing is lessened by more than -half. '.1! GRAINSFO GOLD.- There is not a moment Without SEime duty. -Cicero. Whatever 'is worth doing -at all is worth doing welt.—Chesterfield: Observe your enemies, for they first find out your faults.—Antisthenes. • The superior man is slow in his words` and earnest in his conduct.—Confucius. A docile disposition vi11,. with ap- plication, surmount every difficulty.-= Manila us. Never do anything 'concerning the rectitude of which you have a douht .— Pliny. There is no genius in life like the-. -. genius of energy and activity.—D.. G..; Mitchell. Attempt to the end and' never stand to doubt ; nothing so hard but• sea rc:h will find it out. -=Herrick. The. lie lie indirect is often Its bad and. aiways meaner and more cowardly than the lie direct. ---Belton. . • Occupetion is one great source of en' joyment. No mail, properly occupied, was ever miserable. -L. E. Landon. l ti N, Y g ,W- t at d� ga`j i paid a -ne there as { ion In the ."he Pat:. _l,3t the election of M'. J. Hill, of «'ust York, was filed Wednesday at Osgoode hall, and con- tains some one hundred and ten L Th rd of Thanks To Officers an Members of the Indepene- ens Order of Oddfellows at Pickering. Permit we oxpiceem my deep gratitude W the m e of ybur Order, who took an inter t' in tWfuneml of my dear haaband. May the noble Order grow and prooper, and be blessed by our Heayenly Father, as you so faithfully carry out the principles of f iendahtp, love and truth. H)ZNRIETTA BBDSON. 130 Crawford St:, Toronto, Oct. 17, 1898. ' U urges.. ey are of the usual cigar- i aster. - I New Advertisementa. . The spra`cino of fruit. trees has nev or paid the Canadian farmer better OR BAI. . -NPW mile! cow, young than it has this. year and the practice F and sp n id milker. Maybe seen at. lot ehauld be followed by every fruit. ;ld. con, s, Pia@ ng. James L.° Palmer, Pleker- grower in Ontario: Our apple trade 1ng' P•�� 1.9 with Great Britain cannot be adv&n- OB SALE—TWO 6tack8 Of dlovAr bap Ceti ID an Other way t0 the same ad-, ��' O� a quantity Af feed and cob oorn' For y y articulan enq ire at tot 7, oon 1. Pickering vantage. and unless spruyi g is adapt= �p. or addrea iss rail, Pickering. one 69th ed soon then fruit - f,*rowing bells Imp AV %.-;, k I con 2, wrest the said patronage from � �.' , ores lanjtalMse hog-with pedi• a lamb!. bred; also two Lord and Lady AberdeiO be1i � to a i � k, r paaicalate 1-9 larewelled by _many towns and cities r - - down east, and upo each s+rg�q lrfBLIC NUT1.CE --As my lease of — ahr,aeft Via eotbim on Nov�ambar let. and n regret is exprt 'i$e1t' AS I am then going out of business, and leaving departure. This worth apu 1Q- .have. remises, all outstanding "Counts must be set - y p , that date. W H R VIES, Pickering seen many changes since coming to petit -ofnee sal Canada to reside, and we believe they T La SALE OF CAT LE.- -(140 heal will return to England. rattier favor -. B feeders, stookers. and few cows comIn` ably impressed with Canada and her n), belonging to Jos: warn, will be bald at lot Ii, con i1, Reach, on mile north of Oreenbank. peopl ©. If Lcrd Aberdeen renders as un Tuesday, Oct. 95th, at 1 o'clock. Lunch rro- much good service for Car:ada as Lord vt.!ea at 4reenbanit, 1 Landsdowne has and is daily render `�+TRAY PbNY =-Como to lli pr®auie ing, we cannot but ever remember k_J es of the ndert'igned lot l¢, con 3, Picker - ;ng, on Monde October 9r�, a bap cony, with kiln kindly. brand on left lisp. Owner can gave same by proving prope ttyy paying ezpenses anti taking aulmal away. dross Goo-,iRi lk, Brock Road :Goose Rhefit has.been speedI y rail- P, 6. 51-53 . ing in price during the past few days an d. even yet file figures offered are Fur SAL CI EAP-�1 aanit sow. �.. thorouAhh ed Yorkshire Wh to ; 1 Fleury advancing. From a reliable source cutting box, with power attachment, near new ; we learn that the increase'ia else to > new barrel burn,' Daisy No.8; s Bedroom Suites. oak an elm; 9 heating stoves; 1 Active a heavy order tLat Canadian dealers range, with coal and wood grating•; general bare received from Italy where this hougshold fa itare, Terms to suit purebas. ere: Apply to so. W OONNERS, Brougliani 3 particular kind of grain is used in -- - making macaroni. This order will be filled In a fortnight, or sooner, X Oti Ce Creditors 1 when the price will drop again to its t maUing .value:-. Goose wbeat.is not Of Mrs Jessi6 Mavcr, &",utd. , worth within -four or six cents as much *— as •othelr varieties for making bread PIIRSUA T'io the Revised Btu- iufes`of T --A farm uth half of lot tjes &.re a 0902- ,,j barn, with t11er outbuild- .it# The place ell and never - greln, and bal- t".saraeijn may ,rticulare apply t 8 Parry att is arid'; Brock lid. Sale House © gad Residence IN PrcKERING VILLAGE. Tile undersigned Auctioneer has receivedtn- etructions from John Gordon, Req., Executor of the will of the late Mrs. George L Waver. to of- fer for sale by public auction an pursuance of the directions of @aid w lit at the late residence of deceased, church - street, south, Pickanng Village. on Friday, October. 21st, '88,.,: The following valuable property, namely: All the valuable household furniture. pictures worsts t)f art, china, g :aseware, and other effects in or upon staid premises and rGmoosed of: Par for and bedroom suits. Kiderminsterand other carpets and rugs: China dishes and glassware for table use, parlor chairs : Large But*& s and sideboards. h dding of every description - Win- dow and o her curtins, t�itoves and furnishings: Oil paintings and tramei pictures; Flower stands, pots and plants; Cutlery of all kinds; Orgat. and stool . Fancy and kitchen tables : Dining -room, kitchen and garden chaise. Gar. den tools, and other articles too numerous to mention. Also the following (teal Reigns. PAncst. 1. —That handsome two storey (aad attic) white buck, *late roofed residence, called - Kinaaird ".rented by the late George L. Waver aitnats on the west side of Church as south to the Village of Pickering, and oomprising about 3 acres, part of lot 16 In the gat eonoeasion, Township of Pickiiriaa, more particularly de- scribed in deeds registered in the Registry Om- ce for the County of Ontario, as num lore SM and Mo. from Elizabeth Gordon and others to the said George L Waver. This propert7 is finely situated within a few minutes walk of Pickering station, d. T. B'y, is substantial!/ built at d well finished anti equipped thtough- out as a gentlen►sn's resitieace. The grounds are beautifully lard out and planW with fruit and ornamental trees. There are a1s•3 a neat stable and poultry noum on the premtsea. A rure ot+portul•ttc is presented by this sale of ob- taiuin.- a han ioome aa,l conveniently situated residence suited to a person of means. 1'AttceL S --LOLS H and o, block "A' south of nendersou street, a(.curdiu;; to Logan 's regist- ered plan of building I -As containing hall as ecru wore or less. TKltMB OF THY SALE. The meal estate will he sot 1 sul.lect to a rci trve 11id No reserve on chattels. For chatters. Cash. Ir or real estate. ten per rant. of purch -kse •mon- ey tj be paid duwa and the balance 10 thirty lays. The Vendor will not be bound to pro - duve any abstracts, title deeds or evidences of title, ezeeut aueb as are in We possession. Pos- session will be given on completion of purchase Intending. purchasers may view promises or examine contents before day of sale. [sale of Chattels at 1 p. m. Real Estate will be offered at 9 p. m, precisely. Further particulars and conditions will be made known on the day of sale, or may be had on appileasion to the vendor. John Gordon. Esq Pickering P. O., the vendor's solicitors, or too undersigned auctioneer, L. FAIRBANKS, Dated Sept 98th, 'a6 . Auctioneer, Dow A McGillivray, Brook Whitby, Vendor's solicitors flour. Many Ontario - millers have re- oattarM 1 .. espter LW, codes is he»by — ven shat ail tots and other hav- Insigne is fhe fused to buy this wheat until said con. claims esainst the estate of Jade Waver. la of i'iak T>s, Cpaaty of Ontario, widow •a14��M+ • tract be filled, while others are buy - "missed. Who or about the 9th des of 1ng for speculation alone. Thin large September, A. n» tUYf�, are required to s.a� b Farmers' lt�ttaal Fire Iasaraaoa acegi"Wed lean to John tiordon.of the said export .order she>zld serve in some Township of Pickering tPiaksrtng pea -omoal Co's., of Columbus, Oat., [armed ap ppls dealer, executor of the will and oodicile measure to improve the price of other of the said Jessie slaver, deceased on or before especially for Farmers. but it Would seefn the 18� day of November A. by 180. their The bnainees is dourish with results be. Canadian wheat, names .ad addresses with fall particulate of yood 44 "o". bad[ already issn it nearly just now that those Who hold unto their claims and of the esanrttles ( gay) had 16011 poUaiss. The sea of insuring in this Oo. their 003e T11"t Will ]Hiss it. by them. u u grow goes, You p%y only for the aot utd g And abuse is farther given that after the said losses tW the small expenses inour"d to rna- ' Ilso mentioned data thi said Rxeeator will pro- aping a local eompaoy. Fot! ;seed to distribute the assets of the said deceased to. the tycat, particulars apply LAst Week Tu NsAS wfs serentebn !among the papa.e entitled tbtrsts, haying r.- JOHN A. O'CONNOR, years of age. There have been many only flu iv olas u rbiob notice .hall ye bass . given as raRttitvd .bon ; and the eIf es In this old township Ot Pick -, said, dizeoutor will not be liable for the said Kh4pson Road or Whitby P. 0. jassets or any pars to wsof to any Person or per Also t�wt for the N h Union lire Ica " @ring in .tbat time, and likewise many ans of whose claim or claims notice shall not CO., end We Dominion 1 changes in the mf }nagement of this �� been received by him at the time afore ` paper. It has : been our endeavor to Dated at vwitby tugs stn day of October. South Vn slto '' furnish a live local paper since Assum- A•D'1ets. Dow $ � Vii*. bollciters, . lug the editorial chair, and while we" 1 JOF�i GORDON. >dsy., :ecatatr. 61.1 E 1 @C�lUrl wine feel that our efforts are but ; s* e feeble, We are, however, being encour- i • by the continuation r ,.: Apple �� 1],��;C�...: aged to. persevere, ! of patronage of the people of Pickers a Pnblis mrNinas in inswests of. . ;} 1pg and acaxboro townships in par- ''Gs nndelianed are p>ltrsd to ply '; ocular, and many other localities ae ;thfilkhes* alerfru price far tap quantity HON. JOHN DRYDEN, JL% Wen, We heartily, thank our man of No. 1 winter frail, also a quantity of y first - clause fall''apples and pears. r' scribes who have so faithfully record- E (The Refo m Caudidaie) will be held in ' rein s in the various lo- GORDON tit ORE, Piaketrirrg- the Township of Pickering u faUow+t ed the hpppe g D d 4 calities during the past year, and shall r �-t� a gale, Opt. 21st, '98 " ask for a continuation of the same. We also thank our many patrons, and ''9tThitevale, Oat. 24th, 198. desire fora continuation of our pre- ��� 1r fr : , . .: '. `Per • D unbarton, Oat. 25th , ' 98. sent happy relations. ' _.r This week - we not. p Tlietlat$relgned will be a the aoa.� Brougham, 27th, 98, r + X11 d1�J41ldfi<, &00U11 St' HILL, oil start on a new volume, and will make To new subse'ribers our annual offer. � tT��,v and SATURDAY, ¢il fneetinple'will tioindt a9idlSe'�t 7:g0 p;lm. We will send to any addrese in Canada ; from III a- m• to 0o m., of each The" matte s Weak during the tali a d ser y part o[ •the rp the States this journal the balance �- �' the following speakers:-Ron. l addressed, . W. Rose, this year and all of neat, o l one winter'to weigh out coat to all who ttial savor Minister of Isducatian G P Graham. >ii,P.P.; J t� M6 with their patronage. R Stratton, M.P.P.; L �► MoBrsdy, N W Rowell, Ilan. As postage on. newspapers t+f w T It Preston. ]i come into force again. in' d� few . fi� -�-: Terms Va � - . Op sition- aendidate and triages are invited to attend. r =: Wee! {9. those who care to take advent- _ , , 0 ' ;l e»it. W9. GORMLEY# Bearet . ould do so at once. age of this offer sh r° - v 5 k- 4 - 4 - - .k ' �� a -.,. '4 .. . t�, k -: - r u ,`f, 4�i c •Yi r, i> F .°.!t _ _ , ✓ ,..c.- r �; :•td`• -xY zl rW: �i_i3r n'' t. t !� �, �3'+d Kam_ i +•- _ ( f rt �' -S y S� K P -fit � ;t } d�''•s� .$�. a.'d..:� , �' di ,' r � x Y! - -`3'• 9 Fy,. #--kirt _ ! 6' Y. _. P' S �i l art T -�J •� ..�- ) -'FS ',�. ry{ g.,�.4— F�.S �. -i.� - f'.1 {e' F u"(ryn. h.'�. .f•,ay ,� -°_ f .�... a #: :�i .'��,� �.�. �_ mow ar.._Q{ ii ,,• �C a �4 x`•F � '�• � �-1�" •� r > �., - , Don, trout ...our... .'rfilr[E ibLisrDtiMbartoo •tstiesa• =s- � TRSCxs Gomm EAST DUN All FOLLOwf{. ; No. 6 UA' m 7:47 AM - No. 14 MUND Y 2 :51 1.M , 8 LOCAL - .6:07 P.Me TRAINS GOING WiZST DUZ AS F8TjAWB; --6 -No. 9 " LooAL : : 9:05 A.M, 18 Unto 2:20 P.M. t' r F • J Mall . 8.21 P. M. k 1. L. 2 3+ Pf7tic. :1 1 • i i5 4t, r ai • rn• • t • t:- 4. Pru tie lowin; , : F�. i it under tingeneies:-James Hub u¢i 3•Uo, W J Clark, for cont • A nks and notices of council j,; the Reeve. for selecting a, 05.00; the Assessors, selecting X10• ur- ors, $5.00; the Clerk, selecting jurors, Mr. Underhill, as chairman, secured .the passage of the following a000unts tinder the head of indigents: --U E Bateson,41 attendance on John Irvine, $50.o; M le son, goods supplied to Phoebe Johnstob for 24 weeks at 750 per week, she having mov- ed 10 Brougham, $18.00 ; 8 Pennock, for burial of Jessie Simon, do 6 $2. 0; T W areaux, g g q g We would recommend that Edward Mantle's grant be increased 250 per week from Nov let to Jan let. We would reoommend that R Phillips be appointed corn for Phoebe Johnston on and after Oct 17th. Mr Beare, as chairman, secured tho pas- sage of the following accounts, under the head of -Road and gravel Bridge committee: - Henry Henry Boyer, g p $23.56; W Carleton, gravel ptiton Ajtona d; 4 436.60; John Tool sr.. 50 ruffle of gravel at 70,-13.50; David E nigh, filling mahout, potting in onlvert on Brock in 2nd con, also 70 yds gravel at 8o, $ 2.60; T W Lamoreaul, 801rds gray One off 4th con, opp 23, 54.80, W Carleton,. rep Clark'. hollow bridge and for drawing esira .joics, $2.00; Jae L Palmer, 2253 yds of envoi to pe4hmesters, 515.78; W Petty, rep .. n west town line, Soarboro to pay iiks a c=ount, 51.00; Thoe Bales, tilling waibont het S and 9, 5th connd 3 8 11 h ougb,, rep bridge bet lots 22 19, drawing lumber. from Claremont,=1.60, rep washout on 5th con, 51.00; C W Disney, gray bet lots 6 and 7, 7th con, 115.30; W H Jones, for gravel for several contracts in 7th and 8th cons, 515.12; D Forsyth for nail_, .98c; James Lidgett, gray bet 4 and ;i, con 7, $7.65, also rep two culverts, 01.50; F Soden, rep hili on 9th con, near mill also .for rep hill cin 9th coo. 118.00; W Max well, rep hill at lot 35, con 1, and guard rails for same, 118.00; A Burrell, putting os gravel on Kingston road, $20.00. 1440 49 yds on Kingston road opp lot 22. 512.00, also.. fixing- breakwater bet lots 5 and 6, in B I' con, $11.25; W Carleton, building oul bet 14 and 15, in f th'con, 14 ; Hay King, grading and gravelling* on western towu .line. north of 6th con, 19.20; Asa Hubbard, work on 3rd and 4th oons, 16.50; J H Con - war, rep bridge on eideroai bet lots 16 and 17, 5440, alio grading brd eon opp lot 17, $6.00; W J Devitt, ooncrete pipe pat in at various places in the township, $73,121 ; J S Connor, putting in cul, 5th con at lot 18, $3 ; W 8 Gold, grsv supplied div 67,16 00; John O'Connor, right of way .rto gravel pit, $2.00; W Jones, gray bet lot 4 and 5, in :3 �h oou, 52:4.04; 0 P Ferrier, 249 loads of gray to div 76, 511.92; W J .Reszin, nails &i d bolts, 52 6.3; C Forsyth, putting on 25 yards of gravel on Claremont road to sts- tio:, at 40c, $10; C Forsyth, rep hill! on'n t Line. Pickerin4 to pay halt arnounti 57.50 Geo Gates, cleaning out ditch in lark's. ll.;il w. 59•60;• Chas Hodgson. cal in 4th son, .5',.60; S A. Lapp, putting in culvert bei 3.1 and 35 in. 5th con, also pipes and on 5th con, 52.50; Simon'Degeer elin tree fur Caps for Whitevale Lri!ige, 51.00; A. Davis, drawing gra r.crii, town line, Uxbridge to pay ha 1),o-.1.2); Brian. Linton, rep hill in at 1-.t 12 and 13, 34.50; John V Kay King's Whitevale . bridge c 411).25: Chas Petty, 26 yds gravel 47. Si 8.3; Geo Davidoon, diggin drawing material and building new bet ;; ,' and 31, con 3, 55; R Moore, bolts for base line bridge, 32; J H Conner, con. tira.ct on .base line bridge, 525.7 F G Carthy, rep cul in 4th con, 5 W Sadler, grading on 6th con, opp lot 10, 53.20; Ge., Philip, building temporary bridge ors 6ti, can 53.50; Newrick Wilson, bonus on 80 - rods wire fence at lot 23, in 7th cob, 58; L Forsyth, timber •applied as per account rendered, 5307.10; Mre Linton on Ha) ng'r account, 52.00; John Graham per order of Hay King on account of White - 'ale bridge, 535.00; Daniel Feaiou, per order of Hay Sing on account of White vole bridge, 512.00; John Graham, per or• der of" Hay King on Whitevale bridge. $18.4,7. i- Mr. Underhill, seconded by Mr Cowan. moves that the reeve grant his rder on the treasurer in favor of the parties rations - wended in the reports of the vatiotie stand- :aj committees as presented this dr. On motion of Mean Cowan aid -Under- hill the council adjourned 10 meet iligein on Monday, November 14th at 10 sem!. for the transaction nsaction of general business Markham Fair Notes - ,The innsie from Heintzman & Co. plane* eye old firm" was a constant sonroe of pleasure.: The transposing piano was critically examined by Very many and ad- - mired by all. - The•New Williams sewing machine was - on hand as nsnal, and R. A. Fleming, the exhibitor, did a rattling business, and he has been busy night and day a er since filling his orders. The remark was frequently m e that the exhibit of organs by Wm. leming, Markham, was the best ever mad at the fair. and was superior to any display at the Industrial, Toronto. -Markham Bpn. MARKHAM • and wife, 'atid 0. J, Brodie f Claremont, were visiting re the latter end of the week. Reath. High Sehooi inspea. his annual visit to our High s week, and appears to be well the progress made. ... 4' A. Lawrence, incumbent of ch. is slowly improving from ess, and hopes are entertained I be able to be out again soon et to state that . Cdr. W. D. .,y, r , &i►-Attu-.serioasly ill for some weeks with oongestion of tis store., at the base of the brain, dues not improve very materially. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Fleming had just 101 guests at their home on the third day of the Fair. Spaoe is too limited and life too short for as to try to enumerate theta. Jacob LUDO, a fabler of Whiteharoh Township, was awarded $211 damages by Chancellor Boyd, Monday, against Thomas McQuillan, who had unlawfully distrained goods. from him. Principal Jones, of the Publics School, was at Cedar Grove some days ago. and took a snap -shot of Mrs. Anthony (relict of the late Edward Anthony) who is over 98 years of age. It is very life -like, and a superb photo in every respect. That prince of good fellowit, John Lawrie, took just. 28 prizes at the Fair, mostly on stook -and he deserved them all. He sold hie spring colt that took first prize as the Soarboro and Markham Fairs to Graham Bros., of Claremont, who are certainly good judges of horse t1etth.--Bun. r, le RelleSteri yr• FalOe t, 1 Garoiiap , 21 :' Ano tlon- t a 'of hqusehold furniture; also that; handwrote reeidepoe, "Kinnaird," the 'propertyof the late Goo. L. Mauer, on the premises, Pjoketting village. Bile of goods at one o'olr ok, while property will be offered at 9 P. m.. See bill® for complete list. L. Fairbanks, auationeer. MONDAY, Oar. 24, '98.-=4ttotion sale ` of farm produoe, tl}e property of W. V. Richardson, at lots 7 and 8, oon. 2, Pick. ering. Bale at 1 o'clock sharp. Timms cash. Thos. Poacher, auctioneer. Vinson, Output‘ 25 :--Oredit Bale of 25 • :von. sub h hay, etc , at jot 2. con. 5, Uxbrtda the property of Joshua Bundy. . sale a one o'olook. See bills for fill particulars. Thomas Poacher, auctioneer. Tu*sDat. Ocr. lbws. I898. real auction sale of heavy draft horses, ' grade °tittle and implements, the pro rty of Samuel Manning & Bons, at the prem- ises, lots 30 and 31, oon. 8, Whitby. Sale at 10 o'clock, lunch at eleven. See bills for partioulars. b. Fairbanks, auctioneer. Thomas Emerson, a farmer of Whit• church, bas entered action against W. W. Pecs. a farmerf East Gwillimbury, for 5500} damage& for alleged slander The blander is said to have oonsieted of Pegg Bailing Emerson alar and throwing out the infer nos thus he set fire so his own baro. • PICKERiN© POST OFFICE.. mals arrive from T arrive GT■630am OloseGTB730am GTpIn Toronto 750pm Mails for 8 a.m. wet olose at 10 o'clock night baton,. limey orders issued on .,11 parts of the world. oionto 1.10 sauna' vel for If los;, th oou ens, re ntract, for div ditch, onlvert *Amman smart svexsnasn. Oepoeite received and interest allowed at '3 per Dent per annum. Security indisputable iter to the public a good supply of .SCHOOL BOOKS. A. variety of Note Paper from 8e a quire up. Fanny Lamp Shadier White and Vangased Crochet Cotton. Berlina, Embroidery Silks and a nice *tock of Patterns. PICKERING. 0'B IEN & HARE, Paorooraermrc Atwirels. We e • deavor to please each customer of ours. To do t • is. nothing but 8lih-.lass Vornrat- our Studio, and sat- s,cim niegttttfectiypermitted guaranteed. Outdoor oohs prompt- ly ropt- ly sateded to. Whitby Galley oven every Tues- day, Friday and Saturday. R. A. Bunting', 1' roentaeTaa LI A. do WHIT 3Y. John Gowdy appeared before Squires Woodcock and Jackson on Saturday at Newmarket, charged with stealing a pair of home, the property of G. Hanlon of Kit;. A pretty Wedding took place sit Maple kat week, when.Ada, the eldest daughter of Mr. r. and Mrs. Prest. was married to itaert Duffy. They will live atj Pontiac. lftz. ! . . %itliain Orr, Government Inspector, who Las inspet the orchards sprayed in Aurora vicinity /during the ummer, 'states that there is 45 per scent. f perfect fruit on the sprayed ;retie, an 1,* per cont. on those partially ergo , t hat ATri' ft le Mouse' ,newsy p se' Trap on an entirely new principal We war rant it more effective than any other trap or your looney re- funded. Price 10 cents. r I iA new style Vegetable Fork. ."Sarpas. our la, • lies any other " Which we eelon approval. ,( rocshi •havethe. best 10C. whip irn t'1e 'market , ranger, 'r0 BENT --A farm containing 140 hi sores,betagmts1, om`okorlait town- tortable frame house s large hp am On the es are a with stone stabling. sum- oett ed blest to a•oommodate 36 head of Tilly drain.paineries and other outbuilding+ pd with plentyof water. Twenty-four acres of old seed sad 16 antes seeded this spring. apply e but first-class farmers with means n y Address for full particulars to W. J. BRAZIN, hardware merchant. Pickering resh Meats ` Of all Kinds'1 POULTRY and SAUSAGE Y3 Steak Piekeri We Capt • An`o at Pick by the busin allows bought lection pointe. T. H• , On Hand is Season. 12e per lb. Roast -8U and 10o Ib. Boiling -4e to 7o per lb C. I. KING( .Ontario. tel eieile0f Canada. $1000,000 ease, $125,000. r X, Doti M 'deg mo,eap frig ilk =bi-;dT �E'MirR 00 i..--, 01 4 - tie! •' M fJi Ulf Loa' st:. 1f s fi !.Ib 1t11 + I ca. _0.6 ca $I '+ .i v ;k gilAZk c, H EJ' g a. • a •-. 0 el i t;' • g i as i1 111 j�li i a • to, d•8 . i M d i a D' lutaI3.04 0. t,cacsa to 1 H oil .0001 as a ace i.,•. :a+ 0 0.00 .; la lie"oi tie above Boni -hoe- basis' opened ring in t:ie premises formerly occupied ntario 'Rani, where a general Banking will bo done. Highest rates of interest on deposits. DtNew Yk nd soul. Speolsatention to: the sale notes. Collections wade s1 all McMILLd.N, '` GEO. 4i1:RR, pahier, ' Man. a a a 81' it age lid Hf . 10 ttll+ r, l ul� � Fruit Baskets, the verve qU ty, at 28c, 80c and 300 pr� d(1zen, sup-: plied at his factory, one mile north of Green- River. Ordcreso • lioitod and satisfaction guaranteed Address. all orders.: to t� IL BARN GREEN RIVER, P. Clare 0 tF. fas ©he& hands and a bright new. stock of Tin- ware and ..; Granite- ware ranaite-ware has beenopened. Coal Oil always on: hand. p airing promptly to while you wait., t Eavetrobgl nded Pring Suits ! -r---'= Ana �-- Fie Work specialty. _.as CALL FOR PRICES. *enne4,„ Bundy's Block. pe ra„� Vis, `urnxp V l y t Straw utt• herrywood,, 'op. Age io Vit.. 'POYNT °,� Pros. • PICKERING First -elms vehicles fid by day or night. 'Bus. in Doan ' n 0164 - bog all G. T. R. in • Freight... and express delivered ` to all parts of She village, :.:♦'my Peak,. Proprietor. FIRMER'S' MARKET. TosoxTo, • Oot. 20th, 1808 .•.... 1_ 0 88 to , 0 00 Wheat,spring 0-70 to 00 00 wheat, goose ............ 00 78 to 00 00 .... 00 46 to 00 51 )tits, bash..... . 00 29 to 00 00 Ptaa, bush .. ......:....... 00 55 to 00 67 Hsy,11. 011..•.......1. 08 00 to . 00 00 Straw,700 :Z. 800 hogs........: -.` 5'i0 0 00 - Bcefforequarters.... 6 f0 hindquart rs... 8 0000 -;r-a O 0 ''I.iS. G Done Immediately, All kinds of 1 �. Rough & Die8sed Lumber ....,.In Steak ! Drop Siding matched -,$14 Pine Sheeting Matched :. $1414 Bass 1 Hard. Floor 1 f in., matched 16 Gates, Eavetroughs and Mouldings Do you want a nobby snit of olothes;? If so we can make them. aving just returned from a course in the New York Cutting School, we feel bet- ter able than ever to guarantee a perfect fit, All garments made under ouf- own per- sonal observation CALL AND BEE LATEST FASHION PLATES Rawson,:. Fine Art Tailoring.. Hillside Saw and :1 Plainifg !Mills. M. S. MILNE. Browu's Corriere. CLAliEMONT,; Otit. • Y d 6 50 YEARS' EXPERIENCE PATENTS TEMA Wows Dastaaa ' 1 COPYRIGHTS AC. . Anyone a certain ao r Dpi on free whether acres quietly ascertain oar optatAs► free iaventlien �e probably op Patents aridly aoeadw C. p Pat aswat flotits takes ts�redart agea�b for w. °- spatial antics. withoutichtt- in the remove • ScknhIfk A lui4soesel1'emirate weekly. ',antes. a Balance et any b all sews - . foto � , lich0 WitOneatMy. iks 1 R. Weeittia i 0 serest Butter, ib... Eggs, dog - Potatoes, pe CANCER CURED ATYoea OWN ROMs.; For particulars send two° S Ott stamps 10 S. C. IMMIX CANCER CURE, UXBRIDGE, ONT.' _ ©AN DA• ... ... •.. GREEN WOO t '80 White Fall Wheat.. Bed Fall Wheat ... .65 Spring Wheat B3 Oats . .24 Peas 43 Barley .45 DOMINION BANS Capital Paid up, S1,500,000 Surplus,_ $1,500,000 WHITBY AGENCY. flviailai Banking lwatsee•s SAVINGS DIPLB,TKINT. tamest at highest *affect ratty, IN; i•1le• •f withdrawal required. special attention va to the ooliee%eeo of tamer's sal. and other Notes. , f. J. THORTON, mfr � ns>xsctr� 0 LL 11►HTFo1 A e• Will 'weekly newspapers wining to LANA above advertisement(with this nodes) at their professional card rates can de so. Send a000uel also weekly oopv of paper to r 1, C. 25 cents for pthe for tae Pickering News f r0 110 . of Reoeniber.1898. C6A4. *.it� r( lir TH ENLW AY • Lair y A CJ • e umpo A kinds of� Lift, Force, AND Suction Pumps put in on shortest notioe... Orders left with D. F. Every, Pian ing, will revolve oar prompt and very careful attention. Wind -mills of all kinds sold whist, wanted GEO. GEROW, .-. CLAREMONT, carr MONEY TO LOAN ON- S. MORTGAGE SECURITY mLFA•S•A FaZ'ATE bought and sold on commission Agent for Fire, Life Accident, Plat. Glass and Steam Boiler Insurance Conveyan0ing oarefallyjdone• Private and other funds on hand. iihiproporty On streets, beingsouth pert 9 of the D nar of Lew /. Church etr cheap. ens Estate, for sale very W, Vs RICHARDSON tibiae in Dgte's bloat Ptcker(az. Wanted --fin Idea thing tt Protect_ your ideas • they may bring Mil°' aWrite ayk_WasashiiuRN Z gp 1). CB for h theft' gi.8UO prise oPatent • sad list of two huudre3 iuvenrlans W PAWL, - !Ai • • A-1, • la se • • - , "AV • 4,1; • , , "411614111046/14~060 .1P .THE WEE Y WASHING. e When I•learnet to do h usewoA, • e: was taught that . the props way to wash was to rub the whit clothes through two waters, boil them, rub • , .• • •again, then rinset starch and dry. 1. • foilowed this tedious, back -breaking method until a year. or two ago, when etee e I found ane.easier way, which I will describe for It - .• have neither ee waste on the Youi will fi • • e benefit of those who lyre nor. strinigth to d.one. da. goqWashing •'machine and wringer great labor sav- ers. All machines are not good ones, e but it Is not a difficule 'matter after examiniing' the various kinds offered for sale at any firsteolass hardware store t,o find one that will 'prove sat- _ • isfactory. 144 evereininr• eady ;4 - fore the washing is to be done, • and put the white clothes to tioakerubbing soap on the most wiled places. Rub theme places a little. next morning,. • . • pass them thee-tigh. the wringer, and pu.ti them in the boiler cones -deem; tie borax his been, water in which a li dissolved, with eno e good suds. The a 'needed varies with the ki • .you have to use; it n the finest fabric, an( is a gr • in removinvehe dirt. 'Wash through o is boi • ou rse white '.01.0 ✓ while thejlist, hen they are let lot in the" bei ieitsb should Ai- inse thor- thine boil-. ady for the !,liouid be dried ,oe colored clothes he eleade.—E. J. C. r —4- • . sh ()oil RECIPES. , .• • Fruit Jumbles—One cup butter, two Cups sugar, three cups flour, one half CU p milk, three eggs, one half nutmeg, (me cup currants, three teaspoonfuls baking powder, Tomato Catteerp—One half ',bushel tomatoes,' one half gallon vinegar, one pound salt, teem rounds brown sugar one quarter pound hie& pepper, one °unmet rd seed. hours,' half ounce red pepper, t each allspice, °logien and must six email contents. Boil thre strain end bottle. Pepper Sauce—Fon-1T gelleins ent cab- bage. one gallon- green peppers cut fine one. half pound each mustard, INNINt atazd, brown sugar, one " ptairalt, iiiielirtsexter pound turine one gallon vinegar. Boil Vinegar and spices tegethere pour cold toter vegetables, r" rotten Osike—One-- cup elieh rong °often, suigar and molasses, one ' a CLIP buttkit, tzt eggs, three cups -.flour, one metal . one- teaspoonful ad, and bar kitchen destroyed by bar- barians. The consecutive incursions of hordete barbarous tribes and na- tions had put out st once the light e of .cookery. , the -world was -'be monks— the muchabused and much mistaken monks—fanned-the emb.ers of a nascent literature, and cherished the flame of The free metes of Italy; isa, Florence, the com- poetry, painting, gouty- ture,.and architecture,. contemporane- ouslyerevived the gastronome" taste. The Mediterranean and the• Adriatic* offered their dish, and the taste for :table' luxuries extended itself to the maritime towns and other °Rise of the Peninsula. to CReliz, Barcelona,. St. Se- bastian, and Seville. Spain had the high honor of having furnished the first cookery book in any Modern ton- gue... It is" entitled "Libro de Cozino, comPttesto por Ruberth de Nola." This woik is exceedingly rare. The cookery professed at this 'Pooh was no longer an imitation of the Greek or Roman kitchen, or of the insipid dishes an thick sauoes of the •Byzantine cookie It was a new and improved and extend - &t eicience.e It recognized the palate, stora,ach, and digestion of man. The opulent nobles of Italy, ,the rich mer- chant princes, charged; with t he af- fairs am commissions a Etiieepe and Aeia,. thfl heads of the church—bishops; oare414 and .4epee-nowepultivat and erioateraged the ouhnory art. While Italy had maike this proeress, PreMeeeettiteernreekeeettelRiiiiiitteoks, was in 0, state of- barbarism, from which she was rained by the. Italian wars un- der Charles VIII. and Louis X1I. The Gauls learned a more refined cook- ery at the Beige of Naples, as the Cos - seeks did, some hundreds of years lat- er, in the Champs Elysees of Paris. It was under Henry III., about 1580, that the delicaoies of the Italian table were introduced at Paris. The sister arts of design and drawing were now called into requisition. to clecorateedishes and dinner -tables. How great was the progress in the short space of 150 years may brinferred !item an edict of Char- les VIe whish forbade 'to bis liege sub- . jeots a dinner consistiieg of more than two eliehes with the soup; "Nemo aud- eat dare praetor doo.Lroula cum pot - ago." At this' period, the dinner .I.• hour lime ten o'clock in the morning, while the sapper was served at four. The first regular cookery book pub- lished in France was, we believe, print- ed at Rouen in 1692. It was the pro - &lotion of the Sieur de la. Varranner, esquire of the !cachou of M. d'Uxelles. It is dedicated to MM.. Louis Chalon du Bled, Marquis d'Uxelles and of Oormar- tea. He expatiates on the thousand- andetme. vegetables . and other "vie - of eoienoe and the ft But the darkness of not of long duxatioii. a new coo Genoa, V mon mother eteele cinatunion. cloves, allspice, ono, tual" which people know not how to hall pound seeded end chopped raisins dress with honor and contentment ; • one quarter pound citron sliced, two and he.then exclaims that, as France . • teaspoonfuls baking powder. has berm off the bell from all other •Cenneunon Rolla ,-One cup "Entree, nations in courtesy and bienseance, It , lukevre.rm, one cup eugar. one is only right and proper that she should be no less esteemed for her po- . • . yeast cake. dissolve in one cup water, lite and delicate manner of living. The -• et.- one scant oup butter and lard mixed, fix' st edition of that remarkable cook- , three eggs, little salt, flout sufficient ery book, the "Dons de Coruna," appear- , - to roll. Let rise over night in win- ed about 1740, and is in every reapeot ter, knead down, roll out about oue serperior work to the droll production inch thick, spread with butter, just mentioned. It was composed by sprinkle.. with cinnamon and sugar. M. Marin, cook of the Duchease de 'Make in a roll, out down in slices, pub Chaulnee. ' The cookery of France at in a, pan and when light bake. • this epoch, and indeed from the time of Louie, X.Pir., was distinguished by luxury and sumptuousness, but ac- cording to Careme, wait wanting In de- licate sensualism. They ate well in- deed, at the court, says the professor Of the culinary at; but the rich citi- zens, the men of letters, the artists, "were(nnly thooriu.rse,of learning to dine,. drink, and laugh" WW1 0044Vfn- awe." ee• • . The sigenorand reign of Louis V. were omangethe grand epochs of 'en cookery. ek. book called "The g•ttiOn Closet Opened," published in 1662, is the first English cookery book. Some of ,the dishes in this book maintain their popularity to the present day, --as, for 'instance, chicken and pigeon pie, boiled- rump of beef and potted veni- son; but others .thave ;wholly ,passed away—as, • for example, a baked red deer, a. capon larded with lemons, a steak pie with 0. French pudding in it, a- slant of smeitte•flounders. or pleice) - - Curried Egge—ileeel and wee t • - good-sized onions. • and eirown them slowly in two ta.blespoonfuls of but- ter a Add .one teaspoonful of curry powder and heaping tablespoonful of flour, and stir until smooth and thiek, Simmer for 1O minutes; add six hard- boiled t gs. cut in equareees or thick slices a. d stand over bot water for 10 minutes; then. serve. e Rice Custard—Boil, one teacupful of rice; when soft. drain off the water add one tiablespoonful of cold butter. ;When cool mix in one and one half cupfuls of sugar, 4 beaspoon- ful each of grated nutmeg- and cinna- mon. Add four eggs,, the whites•and yollre beaten separately; stir in gradu- ally one quart of sweet milk and pour in slowly, stirring all the whilee add half -a teaspoonful of •lemon ,or vanilla extra,ct, Bake AO a buttered pudding with garlic and mustard, an olive pie, . • - • . - dish for one Weir. e• and deemed sweets.. Some n- . • Fruit Cake — One cup egeh totttler, to the cookery of 1154 may be obtained from the pages of the "Coanoisseur." • sugar and molasees. two eggs; four In eLen d on, at, "'Dales" acid e" Ho rs- cups flour, one tablespoonful each man's" beefsteaks were eaten with gill nanion and :Sinter, tpue.tfiricspeeo- ale;4 and behind the eChange, a man worth a plum used to order a twopenny Is AtrandY, one halt nutthegeey oreee ) M448 of broth,With a boiled chop in It. teal:spoonful soda dissokel ia tine Placing the, chop between the two t e. tablespoonfuls milk, one cup each our- musts of a half -penny. roll, he would e • •*-- '- rants, raisins, ginger, preserved, cut weep it up in his check handherchief, ee e . fine. and mixed together. Put a lay- and Wry it away for the morrow's re - • of cake batter hes othe pan to the dinner.- er • depth of two ;nches, then a, sprinkling of fruit, again cake hatter and -fruit •,•-• spANI,S$ WORMS until all used; cake batter for top ;tease -eel • layer. 'Bake two hours in a moderate - Many' English worla are taken die ..e"--. e _ .. oveu A • • rectly from the Spanish. When you • 2•.04-'----±-,,t 'C'doitkitvg,44.1' " r • A,,,‘ ..,. ,.. speak of a Piccadilly collar you are not j- • elOookery is eminently an expert lar, Which at one time %vas worn by all e . men o position in pa n. Rye bread . • L'',•- while it adds to our eiperience in- without caraway seeds wouldn't be rye -.*,' creases also our knowledge; and as we bread at all. Caraway is a purely • HISTOR OF • • using. slang. The "picoadallo" is a col - eel and a practical art. Each day, f* S Spanish word, derived from Al"cara , have come long after the Greeks.and e Romans. and have had the benefit of anda got 'its name from the Spanish tt,•, • th esperleoce,• it is no marvel that "hamaca," although that is not purely Hueya." The hammock on your ver- hould have greatly surpassed them. a Spanish word. Columbus got it front we 8 • 4`,‘';‘"• ieeared. The Eternal City was ineest-• all directly from the Spanish. e . • 1,4 •Indians 400 years ago. There are many • . the fifth centu.ry, all trace of the other examples: "Banana," "apricot " e P. Boman cookery had already disap. "Canada," "duel." and "palaver" ar. • ---ae 4 • e • •-• - -Is, . - . ' • „ • . eeeekeeee- • e• • 'ee•-• ,-•e • e • • elre ,ree eees fee.: e • •••tii. , • In E]diFEILOIL OF (Eallit PhAdtICALLY A PRISOkER IN THE PURPLE FORBIDDEN CITY. ,•••••••••• ,,i- ittee Wail) Km Never Been* Ills '4110tris Country Nor Itertewed Ms Own Trooph —Wrecked Ututocif *Mk Pleasure. The Emperor of China has been the Most 'secluded monarch in the world. He is surrounded by officials whose chief duty seems to be to keep him from coming into touch with the out- hatenecr. the is life feeleamiee has made a phYsi- side world. ,,eore 0a1 evredir of him. It is doubtful who-- . the building in which he is paotlO&llY con- ther he underetanude his real situation. feelings only, but seve fined one has to pass hrough three It is said that he bas never reviewed- rethen made to meas gees of wails, each set f,eiug guarded Iii_idernnalry and that he knows abso- of the Tartar 014, then the walls of his own country. Ilia eunuchs are said to (ltislivoe.(irtic2 mare influence with him Re doesn't evengknow gertaeen:esf. beat tsteoar e nig spirits of wine, dcoolid tbhkatufirat and a, by a small army of eunuchs. First " TheY Ex°npernogr Iluouwtsmuoiltihtiaory ottactiocs. in length, and then .he Imperial city, whicb are six milesoil and o there ere the great 60-feet-thiek walls ern civilization. cornfidential adviser& • ' the head eunuch, Pi Tslau Li, thet' hisscalezero a name derived from. e iat.eis allleriishalvite an -d metal naturally fluid. Be selected for ally i , as . en ed Mercury or quicksilver, which is a of ehese, Fahrenheit in 1714 substitut- e third set, in- htt 01081 closing what is known as the leurple Forbidden City. Inside of the latter of the Empress Dowager, is one Cfehis eventh brother! h inter of 1709, which he Feng, andsue-, I the, a Arabic word as "cipher," and etaff or royal servents. i . . melt. deed tothe ()throne by proclamation,' 1, titeeos of snow and sal -am- • t 1 signifying "nothing," the lowest tem. - livei the Emperor sue hie familY. the son of Prinoe Chun, s Emperor was horn in 1871 is thel d by him at Dantzig ladies of the royal haeern antl the thou - of the Emperor Hien le Chins, of the ninth Emperor of ' ' perature observe 1 during t e w sande of eunuchs who make up the and the Empress Dowager has a palace which overthrew the native dynasty of north-western part, of the inclosuro, ' equa quan i found vvas that produced by mixing the e In the t The Emperor hinnielf ...OS18711.1 death E 'or Tengechi., in; chu dynasty of Tsing, near by. In another part of the i Ming in 1044. There exists in China' no law of hereditary succession to the "' monies:), or common salt, and the space closure is the hall of literary aby throne. It Is left to each sovereign1 11 -- between this point and that to wh c the members of hie family of a oun • ' year 1720 into the hmetre ual to that oe boiling water - e. hoill cc water, he divided about the. ' 21.2 parts. Doubtless the thermometer into (led by - • ur the Imperial library, and in th s to appoint his successor from amen tolr plunging ury rose when expan poror is re Witted by, law. II portal phya dans who wat health.' The law even prov what he shall eat. Accordin old Chineae books, there must 'daily before him thirty pound in to, basin and seven pounds bo to soup. He has a daily allowa about a pound of bog's fat and and he has the right to orde sheep, two fowls, and two du his drink for the day is rest. the milk of eighty cows and the Mg! of seventy-five panels of The Emperor is lean and unh He sleeps most of the day an wwork he has at Bfi ee• h the Cabinet officers hold their session g the'selection of the freezing point of the royal treaaury. No one outsi i ow, appointed the present Em -e water as zero, which was made about • and it contains also a department generation. The late Emperor cited; ;/30 y ger io nto the foreign legations ever g alaces of the Emperor pesrawr. till ,Oet. 27, 1757, was simpler, Reaumure who lived feoni Feb. 1683. Rene' Antoine Ferchault de readier, sbuiddendly, and the Empress Dowager,' t STRONG CHARACTER.' nor is permitt Chint, and eee....fereig%44 to see him. Even th lame of Peki do not know how the Emperor—too • be a most reirafEaTni There are not 5,000 men outside of h a 'eunuchs who have ever set eyes o hielit He know& ABSOLUTELY NOtHING . , The, Empress Dowager will be 64! xeseeenetQlict month. She is said to about the actual con ition of his peopl more . familar, and natural. The sys- temwas adopted 4i80 in 1742 by An- . ders, Celsius, the Swedish astronomer and physicist. who lived from 1701 till 1756, and whose thermometer is divid- mart. and she d to 100 degrees between the has been practically thlesiStey for the Past generation. Sh secondary wife ur the first of the Emperor Hien Fling, along about the time of the of our civil war, and she has e wa81126 freezing point and boiling point of concebine -at e beginning who ;died water, as Reaumur's is divided into been rac- a "hundred steps," and 18 the one e _ eighty. It is therefore generally dis- tinguished as the "centigrade" or of . • th arts of the European • oientinetit. and for international pur- tloally the boas of the harem an the played in o er p When he goes out into the city ma empire fence then. a ting is hung up in front of all to She was at the head of the empire! houses, and strips of cloth are stretch I • poses. during a greater part of the Kaiping' during its war with France, and she . acroas the alleys and side atree rebellieu. She managed its affairs' DANGEROUS HEADACHE POWDERS through which tbe imperial processi ti bad a little taste of Russian diplomacy,. ti is *.. .. warned not -to go out at, their per and f She • _ 1 ry to Handle Them Witb Great care. Upon these 6001431one Europeans a ago. She is said to have a mind of! . 41=001•10 must pass. e a in her fuss with the Czar of some years, her own, and all the Chinese respect A few weeks ago Dri J. A. Hard& ear her. laset808, by soldiers. mad tbe man who pee shall be done through the young Em•-! I the Medical Officer of Chorley, Eng • land, had the police of that city pro - for the Entperior is always accompani form, and idle insistsisgast alt or has his eye fas around the corner re ia to do. ed to a hole in. the matting is liab e "headache pee/dere!' from different en She is very vain, and she had con- chemtas in that city, and had them, . cure some two ozen ror, though y Axe realldirecta what dsamples of to be blinded with a bullet or arrow- sented to the spending of about twenty • The str driyen away. and the roa.de are covered her birthday, and this money was he The results of • the analysis. publish.: ing collected for the purpose when b1 ed ed in the last number of the British submitted to a ehorough analysis. beta are fixed up for the occa- million dollars on the celebration •o Mons. Alt the booths and squatters are ak character, and doesn't even caae the quantity of the active ingred- he young Empercre Ite tricidedly t mete:, than the Emperor, and when 0 ishe lees tier officials she tilts 1 ient waa largely in excess of the maxi - inters itet down on their knees and tal with bright yellow clay. Yellow is ttei werrhewihtopJrapan brwoketgleorute. even mono .Medical Journal. show that in every iru rial colour. lit bins a screen, and the Cabinet Mi mum dose of the drug pernaitted by . the British Pharmaeopoeis. hill own thinking. Empress Doev- throug It at -her: tiger t er him. It lin These remedies belong to the °las attends toe said that he occasionally goes into fite • -0•• c't the eheigeat°4 the members of ths group in .common use for the purpose of rage when he lacrosse& but it is the ENGLISH DOCTOR'S EXERIENCE. being acetanilid or phenylacetanides rage of a chid, and is over as soon es 4•1111PM he hair exhausted amuse& Ile has 1)064 tkarer _ an hi me media,' Line are me phena zone and phe nacetine or para.. ' . . cet-phenetidin. The headache pow- ,. • •' dere” sold in this country are exactly under the thumb of the Empress Dow- Mtn Anson* t Mese. ager since he wa.s a baby. Me shper- • wiree for him. She has him so hemmed • nyon. t he famous medical mission similar to those sold in England. • neoessa.ry to handle with grerat °are: A - Now, all these' are drugs th-at it is viaed hie education, tad picked out. hie We TO an /interview with Dr. Charles in with officials and wives. who are nen ary in China, we are told that tnedica slight error of judgment with regard sworn adios, that there has never bern science in China. Is not as advaneed ati to dosage on the part pf the clerk who . condition. even if he wanted to, whi mc"alld d mixes them or the consumption of too a chance -for the young Emperor to e it was in Rome 2,000 re ago. The he apparently doent. actors cannot tie an arter large a quantity of the "powders" by tricata himself from his subservie open an abscess, or reduce a dislocaYti the person 'With a headache is sure to ' . .. timoe of his marriage, ten year, Every Chiniitnan has gat something result in disastrous consequenc,es. the heart and hi a tendency to dim- athardeethewivEmee ptoreliste;:owwr ga:ipieeh l . 1 inish the force of respiraton. The per - Lion wan curioult. All the pretey T r- him, and there was great -curiosity to the injury the drug causes him, for in - • real or imaginary the matter with son will likely fail to detect himself ' e. rueby thousande, were gathered ci- therefore when Dr. Wenyon arrive leers getting rid of his headache he is apt tar girls ot the empire, number' s see the methodii of the foreig gether and sorted, and the best ol to overlook the fatigue which is sure . them were sent sto to Fakir). • Th -00-• there was no lack of patients. 'The to come upon him after taking the powder. ' This he may attribute to .-- The Emperor was i7 years old at t ed limb. • These substances depress t he act joie of . , Lection was first made by the Gotierin- wni 'daily- by 40 handred from ! . "the last kick of the headache" when , porricimeoof ("eh; uprloovi"n.uscooso, vaenrdilinoaorgirul :oil 7, near—from an orea three or four it is really the greater injury of his The choice lots were dressed In the mem that ef England. n seventeen system by the deadly poison. Legislation le necessary to put tin - 12 years of ae. finest of clothe, and were carted from years they numbered many thousand end to this practice of selling poisons . alt perts of the empire tooand some of them, as Dr. WonYole saY to the public under fanciful names. If They were here aubmitted Ito tPh:kiliaelt beestne tbe centre of an influence mor nothing else oan be done about it at • • apection of the old Empress Dowag le or ess avoupresent, a regulation should be made .• . being brought Into her preeence•in 1 ta lfrable to western thoegh ;lad weotern men. Dr. Wenyon . has sell "headache powders" unless he has . that no druggist should he 'allowed to.. oat iheidd wededu ive.00Suhe apnassed:p0Oothtthe emae f at many curious stories totell in connec- previously labelled them "poison," jut' wee° takeu out for thts time a ,tion with the medieel work. I • as carbolic .acid. is labelled. este and dullest. Those who remai The literati, who are the great .brought in in new lots, and so the so stigators of riot artynarder in Chin*, Ing went on, until the thousands drede to score. and the scores at 1 down to fifteen. staff -of nieleve '.oeceorsit was foun - These fifteen girls were ppt I and the building was called "The Ha training. Their. pades were tested a of Ten Thousandt Virtues" It was sone month* the old Empress pie splendid. building; but somehow that &Wants of experinients were made to :their tempers end teats. Af out the three girlie shre.liked, god did not assiat the cures. 'Two afflicted eldest of these, who Was 113 yeties friends came to Fietsha,n„and they de- ou Empres. The two ethers oided one to go to Dr. Wenyon's boa-. came what are calhod secondary wi petal and the other to the rival plac. or chief oonoubines, and these two I In three weeks Dr. Wenyon's patient ter were sisters, one of whom W48 was well, and on going for his friend and the other 15 years old. The m to the other hospital found that hie riage of the Emperor was celebrate was dead. The doctor tried to console elaborate style, and the magnifica him by saying that they had buried ef the oceasion may be iniagined fr him in &splendid coffin. the fact that it cost the Gove - "In fct. coffin, were a great nece- went $10.000,000. fifty at that hospitol," says Dr. Weer - Every three yea's" new batches you. "When rwent there' foumks6thta,te wives are picked out for the Empe they had; laid in a good stook. h The prettiest girle in the empire people came to us. It was &question °boson end the Eniperor doesn't al a coming to our hospital for a cure affairs of state to interfere with or going to the "Hall of Ten Thousand in 'his amusement. He is a sort o Virtues" for a coffin. One day there holy figurehead, and. his offioials k came a stately gentleman a learned making him more sacred every day, intim belonging to the upper classes, having a painful disorder needing deolared that. their eught to Ppen dw ndled to the hundred& the h rival hospitals and they did open on. n t er eds 1 13 11100 of or. re ow ID 0. 111 op ed ts eee i n - t� em return for which they get unlimi opportunities to carry on their p and peculations. The whole Chi court is made up of intrigues and triguers, and the nobles are glad get their daughters in the royal ha for the political prestige it gives. PLENTY OF LWS. Everything connected with the • surgical treatment. He hired, a p vete rootn and 1 worsted on him, a in *fortnight he wait well. h not told me who he was, but befo he went away be said, You might li to kuow who Tam, and I want to t you. because I am so ipateful ter ng cured of this terrible disease. am the head doctor of the .Hall of T Thousan.d Virtue: • 4 • •t '" • -•, • • • 2 '1 'tk GOI4D DUST 1 We' are not In this world Merely C' do the pieces of work, large or small,e that are set over egaioat our hand. We are here to grow in strength and • . • beauty °Pahaeeter. And it is not herd to see how this growth may go on continually amid life's daily 0t�il and • cares.. If we are diligent, , oarefue. faithful, prompt, accurate, energetic in.,. the doing of a thousand little things, of common life, we are building these qualities meanwhile into our soul's fa- arebyevdeorinlgea. al -There inegby. as unseen spiritual building rising Thus growing we brio. a an within us continually as we plod on in " nithfulness in ail work builds beauty our unending tasks. Negligence in oommon duties mars our character: into the soul. A (WEER VERDICP.es, Upon the Isle of Man, where sheiip- stealing is evidently a serious Wens°, John Dixon was recently sentenced to three years' imprisonment for it, The exact words of the jury were: "Not having satisfactorily accounted to the minds of the jury for the possession of` the sheep, we find the prisoner guil- tyV4' hat puzzles the lawyers is this': r • r Can amati be legally jailed on such vrdict • .1.41-q'l • .• ' oiled in one. + just said that I have a u' y „i t ion, and that that mo- ray having so many little one of t v- `.�, is ,v i (h Dick," protested one young matrons," "and I know I'm not all of those things." -_ - _ -- - ,._.- "And you hinted that -I hash ocosis- ional fits of sulks," remarked the oth- er newly married, girl in an objecting toner "True entitigli," answered the woman of the. world with a knowing laugh. lh. "I did say and hint those things and I meant them. We've been here togeth- er, in this hotel for six weeks now, and I do not make my charges with- out good reasons. How I'vle pitied your husbands and do 'pity them and shall continue to pity them unless you rid yourself of the sulking habit." "But _everybody says that -'Dick a e d 1 are the most devoted couple here," in- terrupted one of the matrons.. "No, they say that Ned and I are" •insisted: the other. • "Of , course, you are both' 1eveted couples," .event on the elderly woman hastily, "but aft the same you two women sulk, and so do nine -tenths _of the women in this hotel, and the world_ over, , for that matter. If I were a man, engaged to a youyng woman, and discovered that she had a sulky dis- position, I should first try to break her .of the tendency, and if I couldn't do- that I'd break the eigagement.• Men aren't justified in.breaking a betrothal (neither are women, mind'you), but they'd 1>,e in that cafe. Sulky women cause more friction in home We than any other kind of disagreeable wives!. Sulkiness -grows on one. It's such an insidious trait, or, as I believe, dis- ?.ase. It takes possession of the mind eleefore one is aware of its presence and ;an Only. be cured by the -exercise of itrong will power and reason," "What makes you think. that I sulk," asked Dick's wife. "Why, I've. seen you have forty fits of sulks since I've been here. You never sulk with anyone hut you'fe bus- . band, and how you can sulk with him is beyond me. But that••is a peculiar- -ity of one afflicted with sulkiness. The ,patient often makes the one she loves - best,the victim of her attacks. Perhaps it is because the suls render one a bit cruel, and she -enj�a seeking him Buffet!' "moon afteryau married Dick yo" m.lde up yriur mind not to like his family. He had always been a de- voted son, and had almost 'taken a husband'.,e and father's place in !his fa- therless house. Instead 'of your en- couraging, him to keep on in the same way you conceived an intense imagin- ary dislike for his family, and every time he goes to see them, does any thing for them,_ even mentions them, you have a fit of sulks. You shut up like a clam; you frown; you will not speak, -smile, or in -ariywtly show any interest in what. your husband says or 'dues for hours. I`ve- watched it all over and over,- He is always,- 80 gentle and patient, but I warn you that one of these sulky fits of yours wears him out, :'frazzles" hirn completely, and if you keep there up they will drive him from you. How would you feel if Dick acted towards your family as you do toward his? -Put the skne on the oth- er foot and see if it. doesn't. pinch. ,How would you feel if he went apart from you,. set his facie in a stony stare, and showed about as -much sympathy and interest as a Chinese goal. when you mentioned your family. ? "Now, Dorothy, here," turning, to the • other 'young matron,' "Bulks in a dif- i ferent way, and makes Ned miser- able no leges than is ix times a day. '`Wo- -mien should remember that men- have moods as.well as women, and we should inrl.ulge them. Unconsciously' man de- pends on woman's love to forgive his w himsicalitiesj, and' 'she should never withold it.. Every time Ned comes doteei from business a bit moody, in- stead of .yon loving him and Peetting him and telling: him a lot of 'funny things in your own bright way. Doro- thy, to make him forget, you get sulky and won't have anything to do with him,. If- he doesn't pet you just as much as you ,think he _should, you sulk; if he hakes some 'remark, you don't quite understand, you sulk; if ou want to go sailing and h"ehinks it looks a bit squally, off you gg into a fit of sulks. "I jus;. know Ned Onmte- times wishes a squall would catch him. A squall, you, know, is soon over. It isn't like these heavy black clouds that hang about for hours and_ ketep>d one from -doing anything that one wants to do for_ fear of an outburst. A woman: who .lets her temper loose is bad en- otfgh, but she isn't a ehthmstanoe to the one who bottles her's up, and -threatens to let it go every minute." "You say that sulkiness grows on one?" asked Ned's wife in a subdued voices." "It meet assuredly does," =answered the woman of the world.. "gun over your acquaintances of middle-aged and elderly women and think how many of them indulge in sulks. Oyler half? -Yes I thought you'd find it so. -.I, used to f"y • yt, • '•, Health Should be Ctlit'efuliy rded.--Keep the Blood Pure. fevers is danger 'of !malaria. , (Ada and *pneumonia Make :a8"ntld:rimssfliPei°rh and pure by taking rilla,andyouneedpaiit s a4 ,,. a ;8. Hood'8Sar-gthen tify the tO.st�en•- e. unequalled for purifgitig, enriching and, vitalizing the blood. It gently tones the stomach, creates a good ap- petite and invigorates every organ. It is just whatis needed at this season. oodSaraa- pari 11a is Canada's Greatest Medicine. $1; nix for sty Pre ared only by C. I. Hood dc Co ,Lo wen, Maes, Hood's pills do not purge pain of gripe.. Druggists. 250 noippletelt7 ourea by my husband dur- ing the first. year of our married life. At first when I had a fit of Bulkshe'd pet and coddle and humor and bee for forgiveness when he hadn't, done anye thing, and all this only made me more eulky,n4ade me love to exhibit my pow- er over,him more vigorously. Suddenly he tried a new plan. If he left me sulky in the morning he came home to luncheon in estate of sulkiness that out -matched mine. If I sulked in the afternoon lrie sulked all evening, and the result was that there wasn't a minute when one or the other of us wtian't sullenly silent, sour or obstin- ate. At this end of a week I'd Dried myself sick, thought' of getting a divorce, of returning home, even of sui- bide, Whienit suddenly flashed over me that half of the trouble was- my fault, and I went to him and told him so, tile folded • mee in his arms and said that it - had nearly killed him to be sulky, but that he had to do it to bring me to my senses. The plan worked. I have nev=er sulked a minute from that day to this." • "For h'eaven's sake, don't ever tell Dick that story," pleaded Dick's wife "P11 stop of my own accord." "And so will I," decl rted Mrs. Ned. "Came to think of it, huikineess is they hardest of all etaties to put uet with, and -my only wonder is that men stand sulky women as well as they do." • TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY, Take Laxative Broke. QnlPine Tablets. All Drigt Cots refund the metre:. 11 It fails to Gare. Vs. • "DON'T WORRY" RULES ••,( 'Children," said a good man to tie. family gatl}ere►d around his de}lbt,t.d, "during my long life I have h!td a great many - t mubles, most of which never happened." In the spirit of this wlee remark are thea. "Be�watrd Don't Worry". rules: 1. Consider whatmust be involved in) t he truth that. God is infinite, and that you are a part of His plan. 2. Memorize some of the Scripture promises and recall them when the taeinptation to worry returns. 3. Cultivate a spirit of gratitude for daily. mercies. 4. Realize worry as an enemy which destroys your :happiness. 5. Realize that it can be cured by persistent effort. . , 19.'Attack it definitely els something to be -overoome. 7. Realize that. it . never bas done and never can do the least good. It wastes vitality and impairs the mental faculties. BOOK OF _ A RBL E. -At the Strozzi Pala , in Ramie, there is a hock made of marble, the leaves be- ing of marvelous thinness. The chief ingredients in the composi- tion of diose qualities that gain.es- teem and praise are good nature, truth, good dense and good breeding. -Addi- son, - li A BAD'MOVE Don't you speak to Miss Sharply any more, Miss Elderly? Indeed I do not, and what'llmore, I never wil •again. She had the, impu- dence to send me thirty-six • roses on my thirty-fifth birthday, • .e CANDOR. What is your opiuion of the popu- lar songs, of the present time? asked, the young 'woman. Oh, - replied Willie Wishingtotl, I guess I'm like Most people on that point. - Ie an oy 'em, but 1 -don't like to own up. to the fact in the presence of my musical friends. HELPING . THEM OUT.., . The Thomlrsons can't deoide what to name their. twins. Well, if the twins resemble their other cbildren .they should call one Vesuvius and be other Terror. A MATTF R OF ECONOMY.'::,;; Business. Man, , furiously -What _ do you mean/by kissing my daughter ? Underpaid Cleric, meekly -1 desired to show my.appreciatidn of your daugh- ter's loveliness, and kisses are the only things : I could afford to give her: A RIG BOTLICI) DINNER. 'Cooks in large hotels and boarding- houses may think they get up meals on a .big scale, but when it comes to wholesale coo. ry the little village. EM2rs. Rudyard ipling is spoken of generally es a rice,lquiet little woman, justthe one to make such an ener- getic odd sort of a Alan as the novelist ham". i , ?rte.` s- , - r 7• .,,. -TACT. ze.„ N spans -I hope the minister didn't refer to the creditors the deceased left. (Bennet --He merely said that his oss would bb felt wherever he was known. 1 e aperleat sulker myself, bet' I was • d a li rA 9 l': ;' .tom= -`a. e2 r. k �r. THE NEW GIBRALTAR.., 1 The Strohglbts1d hi British 1:oletable fit a Been Called This Name. titin 'town of l quimaul , B. O., is to be razed and wiped out of existence, says the San Francisco . all. So the British government has rdered. 'Up- on its site will arise one i the. great- est fortresseii of the worl . This point is of partiou r interest to'tCallforn- ,'-- -tai tee tlitenagnifieently design- ed stronghold ` be net door to us, in British Colu a, rig t above the Washington state ins. Some idea of its, proposed strength in y be gained when it is known that t e British en- gineers have already d bed it "The New Gibraltar." The plan contemplate the equip- ment of a store, r•epai , and supply station second to none i the empire; the building and mannin of forts cap- able of defending this epot against any force that could be brought against it by - sea or land; the providing of docks large enough to re eive the best and biggestexamples of arine archi- tectural skill, and the stablishment of, barracks, a service prison, and other necessary buildings for the arse and benefit of the' numerous-aoldiere and sailors who will be required to hold thio. and man the ships of the et,a- tion. NOT A NEW DISCOVERY. - A member of the French Academy says that the growth of hair opo ba stimulated by music, remarked Mrs. Dailey. Well, he, needn't think that is anew discovery,' replied Mr. Darley, I've heard many a hair-raisi song my- self. WARTS ! . 1. WARTS I t, WARTS ! t 1 The woods are full o people, who haveits and who foo ishly believe that remedy cannot be found which r will paiplessly .remove them. Buell people do not know • w +at they are talking about. .Our renders may be sure that three applications of Put- nam's Corn Extractor, will knock them higher than a kite. We have teated it and know what we eretalk- ing about, , FRIENDLY COMiti ENT. Ile -Yes, he called me a blooming idiot- flim-As diot flim -As if any one co Id not see thatyou had gone to see 1. �HOMASDNOSPNATfPOWDER AN- ATTRAt'1'\ -v• WOMAN. Ml's. &limdiet--I Mullion wanted to -ma, - widow for, anyhow. She isn't young and soh and elle-- New Boarder -Neu just how thick she makes her p 7Tiare Is more Catarrh in th1F country than all (tiler di:teases •Ind until the laws few yearn w he incurable. Fors great plan) pronounced it r local diseare. • e,rca' remedies and by constan eure•with local t-eatusent. pro curable. Setenee has proven oa ooustitut-onal disease an -1 thor conetltutional treatment. H411'11 manufactured by. F. J. Cheney Ohio, is - the onli oonstltutionai market. It fir taken internally 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It ac t e b;txxfand .mucous HUItaces They offer one hundred dollars f fails to euro. Bend f sr Dir. ul monial.. Addrers FJ,(HM.tiRYtz.0 Raid hy Drugg_lete, Hall'. Fnjntly ,Pills are e be W e what Mr. that shabby t}n't pretty es, )h t to Nee Lipkin pies. etton of the ut together, eta noosed to year.) dootore id pre-ct'bed• ly ratline to. ouncud it In- -r h to be a fore requires 'at,trrh yore, Co., Toledo, cure on the do•r r from s directly on f the uy tem )r any cabs it re and testi• Toledo. O. t. PC 941 I 1 EA1.TH RE XI'Oltt.:1) WIT, • CINE -1)1t t1t Ei'h ' -;E to'h Ulti►h;+th:ls 8l'UMAt'H, LUNO 1.1VEIt, 111)'11), 1il.ADD11:tt, ;t31tAIN and filth: 1TH by %Rltl'13 ItEVALICNZ j POOU, which HAVES IN t'tt 11.[)LCkN, rod also 1tea-e 1'u .tants wlty.se Ailments and .Deb 1,1-t id all other tie. 'rnente. It OUTIaMED►I- M11 ;1' U-Ir3- �: NM( VES, i1D\ E 8. A l! A RICA 'A1.Il)s and ,, a sfully 1n- ltty have • re- iMerrty W pen 1.dl other Mood is rejected, ,+averts 50 times its keel In medicine. - r YEAitS' INVARIABI.IC SUCCE8t3, •J11 100,AGU ANNUAL CU1tit$ of Con-'slp. un, Flatulency Dyr+pepda. Ind geatioo, 0 in- eulnption. I)iubeter+, I3n,nchitiw, Intlueuza (onghs,. Aerhma, C ttarrh, Phleg n, Diarrhoea' Nervous Debility, Sleeplessness, Despondency, 1U BARRY and Co. (Limited). 77 Regent- ) street. London, W., also to Parts 14 Rite e Castiglione, and at ell Grocers, Chomiht8, and Stores everywhere, in tins 2s., 3s., 6d., de, plb. 144. Sent earringu free Also HARRY'S RICVAL,ENTA BISCUITS, in taus. 3o. dd. and del. ' - RUPTURE Drier Thisites made br 1)orenwend E. B. $, T. Co., 275 (lueon 8t. W., ,oto. hook on Rupture and Deformitytree. bltONITO CUTTING SCHOOL offers epeotalj taduoementss to_young men desirous o taking up ()sitting. Full particular* on appli nation. 113 YONa8 ST.. TORONTO. GENTS CAN MAKE BIO MONEY SELLING • our epooiral book,+; low pricer+• good value and targe oommi4dons, The,H04�'ELL BODE .; Saturday Night l3uilding, Toronto. Headache, Paee-aelw, • e u r , ' all severe muscular pains, • instantly relieved by'Ores- gent Neuralgias re. Price 280. Etrelose 31s. stamps for but package. '. Hutohlngs Medicine Co., Toronto, kF you want to either buy or sell Apples in car lots,= writeus. - ',The Dawsoq Commission Co., Limited, %Noniroa:abste. ELEORAPNYshorthand, Typewrite •: Bookkeepingand all Oo ng. teuerosal"8ublegts ars prowl, taught in e 0 NTRAL 8ifa1N188 o0LLEos, Tonga and Gerrard Etta Fall Terns nsrwbene admid et time. Eight regular amebas. !peter, dld squlp:neat. Write few catalogue. W:111. GNAW, Principal. TAMMERERS. • sA . •00#r2b. t,= a • Lon ou are missing a greet pleasure if you are not one of the many rlr ` LEAD. PACKAGES 25, 40, 5o and t> :a44,1" njoy this Tea, .•:, e t it11.,FOR P11101 till'. •f • Sroeoh Leading shot dune 04.00 upwirde. Revehretn, 01.26, 01.50 to *2.00. We post-pae''p'vers at this price. Erase and Six hest Anger ilite only $1. postpaid anywhere to the Dominion for$ JO. WILKINS h OO., - 100 and 161 Kinkft.luta Threat!%. A A+.A 4 4 < ty l, tr4 P,00.P,00.. . A� A$!4,$ 4 ,..'1 rwtn� 7,t1tg1J.e+,r,�:A AI PIA AL A to toPA F. 4 P..,,; n I�,�E� ti.. 4 4 IAM !*.w.4 l,..t'AO 3. k �l a� �I toe l --•i-" v ve ► �i 1t�''-i ►�'vj v v<:i" Y•t'T`!�l �:��-f'Y 41✓ -.4•F ►'�Yi s� �t ►` 4 f. e)4 t)� {la wet ,4r iiI r1 �, A4 I rid R4 IA rl i, ): ell Ddi-t Is pre-emine,rtly the Maga- zine of Fasiion, Culture, Woman's Work and RecreationtheC di edition being identical ith that published by the . Butterick (Limited), New York a 4 London. It contains upwards o MONTH including a number of Colored and Li Of all Fa ply Magazines itisthe Great Caterer to be recom nded for Its ch fapness, usefulness, be SUBSCRIPTION $10 Yoa-r SI PRlct Oa e it her IS 0 8 • >• 4. •i c Sei :t and comprises a variety of matter of unsurpassed freshness an pective Fashions are exhausttt'ely described, and the Literary a usual high degree of merit ads on Earth, a story by Corner that women cherish for a h0 to they can call their own. The t, McClelland, the scenes of wh oh are laid at Vassar, reveal mwwh spirit and etudet!t tied. In a series on The Common Ills of 1.1 e, appears a paper en O esity that will prove of general ad well as pa article n the popular series n Amateur Photography, by Sharlot M. I with Toning. Eleanor George contributes another scholarly chapter of pre Cultivation of the Voice. A oral Hunting Party, by Katherine E. Maxwell, indoor entertainment. The V omen's Press Associat!ons of the country turns regular article on Club Wom .n and Club Life, by Helen M. Winslow. In r:irl, Occupations, by Lafayette Mc lent group of Household Subj Mngic Ault, and Waste in the lit by Mre. Cadwaladrr Jc T Save 10 Cents Soria of the Patterns wAkIs retail regularly for IiOc. each, can be had for lQ cents apiece hi cwtomie, presenting at any Agency for thl sole of Btu'teriek. Patterns in Canada a Pat- tern Chock from the September. October or November , DELINEATOR • al,e vs, will be found a number of attractive surgery ions. `,:. �el- is is embodied In Rolla and Fancy !tread, A Thanksgiving Menu hen: and the regular departments: Social Observances conducted u Tea -Table by !lira Witherspoon, -Fancy stitches and Embroidery hy Emma Hayyvetod, The Dressmaker, Millinery, Lace -Making, Crocheting, Knitting,Tatting, The Latest C„4, etc., are as Complete and varie=,k as the most tdatidious could desire. T1!<s Detre arcs may be ordered through the. Newsdealer or the local Butteriok Pattern Agency, or may be obtained direct by addreedeg THE DELINEATOR PUDLISHINC CO. OF TORONTO (Litauited), . 33 Riohmend St. West, TORONTO, ONT. 4.14 'iv )..Iwt.i, .< 4►A 4.44 400 '''.r.. I ►," ? .S P t 1) { ! ) 1; •l aoI‘l ► a(': V•4V4 'Pit Ori Not i i4./ l,vA"i s• v. CNI't' i, ►'d', x''4`I .c 4. )< v': 4). . ). #• 4. vett 4: 4 Pits.4Vag '..S• 4% '4 t •'t .14*i k.v1 k rt tl'hri kilo a• M1tls. MI Harriet* to Wattle mond St. to £ Halos ,eto.. rentov.J B10ga_, Rioh• „.. Toronto, Central I HT1 ATPORn, ON?. Hest Ooznmerolat &hire in the Prurt catalogue tree. • W. J. EI.LIl WANTE Wonsan in eery tow% to do sanvitsiing for a well enablis Easy seller. Liberal commission or invoetnsent required.! Addre E. A. 8PItONG, Ha • • // ee • enter now/ . 1lSrincipal. 1 ease to hones ed medicine` No security Ilton, Ont. IHS C. HARRI$,T Pays the Best Pride to SCRAP, 11C .!M rohto LEAD. Superior Twat! others. fr' Ger*n•proof cloth Four Dollars Complete. • To bo had 'only from Pl. it+NEkTS, 31 Queen Sty E., Toronto, Bend steno for circular and sample of cloth before buying elja+pwhere. DI3SKS Rvorybody Noede Them. We Everybody. The ' °MOS SPEOIALYY MIrO. TORONTO AND NEWMARK ve them for 0 . (Limned) ONT. rH+uti} .. ,,,.,► Thtotra ♦ - ,• 0r111 Ali deaori .,'.�• ;!y ttl;,i ti:... driller, �' �,• • Moe an Wood 1 E. LIMON, toe v ♦Il Original designs. Write fur Le COFFEE & CRAIN AND COMMIS ION. MERCHANTS, 410.10 loam, of Prado tilidttig, TORONTO, ONT. Fitlp>it. bons °mono el my designs. tions of Wood moues, Lati i Decorative ark. - ge9.., toes. TorontI Wished 18 • L.Oo1i>t * • A L ILL. ib, 0 OoMssarst. ToRiia4tTcl, Ont. & T�i�A11T Elf EAR, NODE RUST Dominion - Lino Stolln Montreal mad Quebeo to Liverpool ip and feat twin sore. st,. hsps 'Lab/. oouve .' ' Dominics� ' sotsnlLIL' Superior acoomodattoe for Met and Calabin and Steerag pageengore pia First Cabins (10 ; iM; Seorage 022.50 p�nn upwards steatnor and berth. For a71 i� form vett en Ago17 t. Sacram t to Lerma .. Oen"' er..D AvLD 1St A Imeips later. >�ty et' a orkehire. Jabin, 8804 RattiOf n9dor Caabin, tton a08l ar • 1R 0 0 F I' ahut t chert ICs - worts. ROOFIN 8LAU ►}o Dlaat, y and 136 r C ?�fi As pelt, P11011 eta e • `t ea e Oily Bufld- oSi, Pisratete 4orie otardrzee . Mot;at 0 Il}gs, >14l* files aishod ter werk co Leto or for 1111 Wi II eran� OA0$A011 OAIINCa-Ne. Importations finest English . Sheep and A.sericau HogCasings-reliable goods ai ee. highs prioPARK, BLACCW F,LL t 00., Toronto_ ► t THE TRIUMPH kr CST CD Af)Jt7STABLR STOVIC PIPF.fi. Easyput up and taken down. Can be ceaned, nested, and put away in a small spade. Ask your dealers for them. Manufactured by C. B. BARCLAY, 168 Adelaide St. W.. 1 oronto. Cl.u. ED. The Reid Biros. Mfg. Co., H 'r'Liinn j'D t.(1.BI.ES and ROWI.ING ALLxYR. Phone 1303. Scud . kr Cata.ogua 257 King et. West, TORONTO. Do You Wahti to Save FueI ? If so, Use. Jubilee Shaking Crates' TORONTO,. January 8th, 1888' .• tURILEB GRATE BAR CO., LIMITED,, TORONTO. • 'Dear Sirs -Answering your enquiry as to our opinion of the Jubilee Grates.; would say that we have had them in use for over a month and have found . them very .satisfactory. We are sav- ing over $2.00 in our coal bill per day. for ten hours' work. With the old grates. we could. not get steam, without , using screened lump soft coal; now we use soft coal screenings and we are developing about 24 H. P. more than ...:, we could with the old grates.. You have already taken a memorandum of the tests that were made of • the old .and new grates, we have checked over the figures to -day and find them quite cot - pact. Yours truly, - `.. THE TORONTO RADIATOR MFG. CO., LIMITED. "w 1 JNO. J. TAYLOR, Sec'y-Mgr. ., Also Sole Manufaoturers of EIIla' Patent. Automatic Smoke Consumer,and all kinds . of furnace and holler supplies. ,�u6➢BB Gta1efl C, Lithit, fu. , _ 't 1:. , icy r 7 F°' t. its 7 #• '.'3 iwr �f�, . J -- 1. -4 y� i� `i-,, Spina "`. `. kra' u•�'+fJ'yi . 0 . " I PP R 111.. .'• .:�',z t v. z - �.`+ -� . -!,'.: `•� y. r r-r,.y �.', :fS��?` `S 1D-ar± +ml ice`° n a 4e.`i '�- L isr - u " fSi fy' 3 "it-saTi a {�W ;}3?r Ya Lit _ +4 4 �� � � l 3o- ? 1 i fF' r �. �' p{ h ,l !., -t P ,•C. i .. Y'� P `1 �: -'x:4.'^:.R, s-° ''� ,c:`'§-.R• a1 . 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V.. ,5 ?.a •'is*. r -_ V. �' -. t3 ... r .,_. r ,�{a . r.... - r4, C i; •t: c . • r rep �a p,..it r`'. .,»..- - i'., •. G,• :.. -. ...,, ,..:• ( �-r ;.41% ;M.N. ° ! Yr (.r• 'ti a!"e' _ ., `_, .wt - 4 t.,. y .. - - < <I• i% ..' -: . .i i., ^:(y' - .iJ, y i�2. . 4 ',Y. - s l•� X+.; - i - -7- - x , . - - -: ... q :::. :a-1L '.. h6. -....b ,.. ..:.. -i't., m?' �, t,. : yi `,u 1 9 y l.:" )IPf ..r•. \.. I "' - • 1. ,,..: ..fi ,.Y -"t a� � rt 1 '' si` . - 5 r- , 3 •'j.. k i F . r:k'.'f . •S4. ` I' 5 . • a ". r * .,1 -:T i 14. r �."Q`i..• .. s!• x• Fa• 9' L,F. is - 3.'.1:- . t' F - ii d- ! - _- kr :�• ^�'-°� r+ R ... _ b r t .: �',,,y :. m :c.•. - ...i - .:.,_ * - $! : ; pJ• -. - . o - - . -;<. '� - 1- . �`A . - r- - @ t1 c... �1 i"Ic 1� r i•` r.: ..:k.v�•r." .iE-°" 7 ;'•' n�. `t �l r t -r - �* • t 4 +c. i - *_ .1` ..r �! . u r• e-- d I .{ i �f. - -n.n, t 6 +� �. .-b -.i -:: ', ,•4t. r �{ - -• �.b'`; ,. + .. Ft�`c '� _ :,� . -;i ,k+- , 'saes �` ., • - +c'C . - �). a . ..4. { ,: , + T + - 11 .. .: , `._� -;:tea , - w 1 TO OiJ1i 8iT8 ©RIBPJRB : B , eietrin By, --- •Misses Be tb and Ida Bunting visit.- ,. •�j•Mrs. John Cogelsndf: of W odharp; .hex * �� ,.. 7 , : � - .,.to the addrese label on your paper you .. 1 ,� �y can a;Ways as8ertain the date to which ed in Toronto t lis week. is ith her sister, Mrs. Willie (31ark'° . t �'"A . 1 b • 4 °Y I ? your subscription to T"Nawsispaid. --J. Qreenla rows poiatoee the► re- of hurob street south. � j T • , . Bemittaneas ara acknowledged by a 1. r.a ' a e o! $ate on label. on the first paper fol- semble mud -t r6 ea. 13e8 sample left A handsom monntnent' wa placed �, , u( #- _ - � � ''� �xeaeitpt of money at this'offioe. AtWaye with us. ' on bur ®day, over the prove of the late a..f P. ,, ; > eaa epaid s�hea$ tt -Re airs are Bing made to the base• Ro art Boyce, at the Whiw char h oeme- ;� x, ' I 11 +� t'f ;'; ment of the M th diet church, partionlar- to by hie parents, John a d Mre.','.� L��,' '� .. ly the windows y urnieb• `' I asso �. �; . b T1ie fdlotring partionlars regarding the $o ee. The Whitby Granite Co. Oo. �' � ' L . ` ! weather :are ki+tdly furnished ass v$ee>tly -b. C. + ' of idimioo, i bore sd be same. , .Y { with his son • Ono , of St• (t • There will be a tilt iri the int4r•` Worn by Prof. Firth, of Yiakering College : + l?w' °0r'8ro .. k , ' ' ' �, , " ,''►z, moo=. rectory for a s o visit. of fir: Ca13er beta s►t IIroagham on V da - rUoarboro sZup oottnoil meets on Itondsy s�entng oez1. r.+sers wit) �.•. ^•- =°--�'�` w l�.dct ir�r -- -Dolt. 18tL`�, T. .` .... 58 8. <` 20 Dlonda next t the 0' i�sli W"o- dsliiersd b J P. Whey+ Q• v + a - -` T °: 1 ,.. t tug - '? heats ressr ed ' l a of .our note. leas 'sae, oQt arriv ­Iz 1 14th..: .. " ° b2 � 86; `i 7 8 y Leary T ><' y a y barn, for the lion of general bassi• Obarles Calder and o • 86th.... 68 1l18 20 ibe market r,t 25o d 40p per Ib. . � '� �. 7 Hess. r the ladies. M ovmrn Dee � a ,t Ieth. , •. • �, ,* q $2 80 11 9,'-,:5 _ s`C`*. V r .., �. W. 117th • f•..f'• f5t3 ::•`. - -'. Z�V. f* . Nt ' __ • ;f. .:a 'e `� .:»�a,r t._. ,Y. -W ' .- .. --- alter has leased the low �• ..: ,.:; },' Zf �. oredilabt formed , , .: a ,^ ` 1. .1 , ­­­ c a .. 18th ., , 6- 86 01 er milt s CF and will eonduot We have baste F .� r ifltIs ►. . 57 40!7 �, 17 in `the future. his adri in another the/ Matitbew 0 Brim. of F rt, bee E, , ' i „ ,� ,�� BUNTING ' .a� ,. :�` aolomta bee appointed light bones k per at y {, L. y -fall -let :St3 >l7bb 1.E,2- f3lh n , . �. ^ .I -The polio have- thus fat .been Fresohman a Bay. Since the oath of » .49 ; 19th, .Ol. tai for week 2.41 inch. Plug M$ w th their meetings in this ilbram Stoner, his sons have bee attend• . L. . � � .. . township. . W at, is the matter with hav• inR to the light. .Tbe now o$'i took xy,, . , a� , , • a L ` . 1. �w�. . - . . . I - - 11 ,: ,_�;,. _ in a couple of 'o t meetinQB 7 ossoseion this vreok , , �. N.& f r F : ,�. „� g P J p rev , ,'. '- - . vA _ -Henry az , of Linden Valley, - =� ` l a,`, ,��I Ne' �' ''. �'• rte± a P r , ti t- J - Y��� r; Y• t Pn2t' •af: '1' ­ . ' T.: I- . ,. A V -1 public school s for for North Victor- 'r3 . - .� b e We eeda on bas e a d "" 1. ­ I !... _ ... . 18, was er in a an . ' �: t L. y f �: e e n k, t Mr and ]vice. H. Prlk y w ro i Pic er �y t called u op b ror�er W, J. and other.P E r� l r „{ v ­­ t :- �`L" y P1flRl{_TT, OOx'. 23y �$ p 10; sanday. .. • ` �'j • - ahawa friends called or+ Thom Puok- r o V tf; , -- - � . --i. -�. - =:--- --M18s Anni aoksbn and N. J. Brown k ,,, �lr,° w - - rin on Monday ` - - quietly n ited in marr�e at ' .0th . were ' .. ' - - . .. W by not get up an oyster ate- - for the I ,- •: . .- a: LISMS j the residenoe of:John Percy, north of Ge' nt F ' nlshl s . . - "novas domne boys ? here one even ng last week. The happy W g• Bra delivered lea at icli L. _ he - . couple are no niosly settled in the rea- lset week. 4c Weis ' paid. {. f `r- " ... k " . -"_ L , • . 1. bridge ins -l1a�e )dente) .part f the Leaven's block on 'sties Minnie Pardon has ret urned to : I e 1Tave a Food Ch01 8 of �� e ° ' � :� ,� Bing st.• W wish t em pgnch happy Blaokwater tq take charge of a m sic class five `` � _'�; . . i ­- -,- '' -'L,- - ­� Cent Sl]akl3rB. �, atten t e Hess. there: \ n ;' , . ­11. -He 'r H, s. Bro n it , 'barv> st The teef -ring has again close and our Our 10 heavy fleeced flans + -..' .. '), �., was !in members here eve been well plea ed again I'`' F P`� ame - 'festival rev :n Abe uellettes are a, mare 1, . Of .11 ! \ � aped on. with the most Pave butchering. - - - 0th iss - rb�!. gown tl►e - �- k y a chef Hasa. ',or i1Ie ra.: rrn Bros. are base fen in the p g v ' t..t_ Brtlwil rv`i n a+I1Ci �Oy. � .. .. eve S% a ' owner . Cochrane place. A new wire fen a is on paste of our birt h# •.,and .the ople of we Nave ill Stock - I ther = f the side line and a pretty crab fe ae as a = ey this vi tags sh nld a � e a - special % ` a� acooaiat. Bast she Dross fence.. IOt •Of those fancy plaidOOdb1 p Mr. Linton and de►aghters, E1 iga and z< �e have just O 6II8d OIIt 86 , 40me I . vitli as $cod re6t�m xrAndati pe ae Etta, of Evaneville, attended t e social which Bold so well at lOQ - fine- ne* - stock direct from,.. ' . _ 1 s Lueeting of ; eobtitioni t utd ',.dead: last week, Mies Etia is visiting er reie- New floor oilcloth$ t0 lald 1"n *° , . The latest Style and ,n Tuesday, at , „�,.Iari An nlhj 11is' horse, astaehed tives'here for a time. _. makers. rr;u+ine business o ((�� The nurse has left Mr. Lynde's: owing Go 1, is and 2 yds wide.: alt 1D ne . ll�+le• t #rQ91 V# . �m E �%ee P 4 h_ 1h 1r V i `za Y ji? A - _ e Saturday ®caning and weal into the sickness at home. We are glad o report Squares or any length W Fled! • " _ t root McIIf 3lrte b8av8r . CSC ion has' a3vertisea s hou" to transact some business. While that all the sick are improving g g r, . sale o cast hay and grain, for inside some pe,eon driving a wagon, col Dare must be taken or the recove y will be New StOC 'Of four- lIIyhaIId Full fh'elpe le»lther _ pe>akB:- . , Mon ay. . th, at lots 7 and 8, -con. tided with the rig and upset borne and Blow• cud bow ties.:- The latef�t OUt l�jen'e rOitg}L black tweet Pickering. Bee bills. 111 to the ditch' and moved on. When Our Sunday school 'should b ve r�rbre , �' , • books in it that have a more d ided up. Stackg of underclothin aIId 1 With Storm bands.. - 'Regular meeting of Roypl Tetmplar Hr, nnan capes out be found things in g p g,pg An r1Ce 8IId tl �lt e, in Dale's hall 1Pickesm , on Ikon• lifting tone.. Too often there rea into - �' ` B , B that ition,'bu has no idea who the our Sunday schools trwhy stag 1y fit for y p q �` _ �en. 8; fancy tWBe� Ca ,, day evening next, at 8 p. m. All mom- rprstor was. Not much damage was immature minds and such old •d Here' as �1 ew fleece lined kicl loves f s a, storm bands, only -j_ -, bets requested to be resent. ppee _. illy 11 �} 4 P donef those who care only for some illy love -Alex Smith, the Reforms gonbral. - number of our residents have fol- story with no actual bearing in I'fa. There 500. Best value We ever saw. 25 Cents. ., , .•' ,, . organiser, was here this week on official )owe nor enggssion acd hays ooatribnt are plenty of good books to be vbtailaed BD a air before the 11 O. -. ' y - boaineas. He will apsnd most of hie time �; $be bat) rig fond, but the ma cheaply if funds were on. hen to do so. y p y �'• Boys, tWeef CBpB in in South Ontario until after the election. v et rea tided. Twenty- Let our Sunday school raise the sum and �tlr stOCli Is COYri lete;ln all the. jt3test shapes at 1Q, 13 lorl bays not po y p - -As we go to press a large number of five nis from each bousehold would not educate the people in more ways hen one. IeBding ]lIIes, prices 'ighf~. aDd 160. Befit f3tOCk Of OapB' : • our Anglican bretbren are preparing to be issed, yet would be so» to provide go to the concert as Glrednwood. We taaa for said p for a considerable ,i I wHIT[VALL ... We invite all to cow and we- ever offered, C011ne an(3P tress that the event will be a huge son- leash of time. hen we say village we eaatn. a Oily stock. Bee thBlII. , inol de as ergo ae G►r s too bell eaa be 1ltiss Eva Annie, at tJobaws;, is the gae4t eesls• } 1. A. P b. -Maur retnrttiod ho4oh the R. A Bun treaostrer, ♦ill w of her sister, Mrs. J. ao 11. Harir}ck ' F _.- - � r '" North West, on Tuesday, utters he has oeiv all sabsoribsd. )!r. d. H•wkey, of -T rose, spell plc - . - -�' .1 .. . t a -ooa ' �a a.. Dicke c ��• Tyrone, , } been since spring He is -not overly -e e tag roesntly of ai days reoeotiy with friends here. A A -_� I W e ors pleased to learn that Ji1 n. Thos. r', ,- pdi'�Ni apd.�r311 not rely h , witbo t a driver, ran up El�aboth ' ai a gad Harlan i reoov from her recent ear• f the R - N,. -had Iietbo r one rain tbo bnb ions iUoess. � V , Ghraae a irthday sa ed in damatpnq _ . too dtoa- -- � t•• -' -" , - 8at11rda diet and fans. b brut' a lot Chris. Reeser bar seo4trrd a gtlsod CeIV , ' ' I I ­' t:.", X. 4 ! -y, wbett e e lertsioed gr� y y mg tree in Rochester. i't. Y. We wish him `` • of bar jt►vezute The little of pickets. The earrtaku altums that it eery success. r - 1..� I "L ... . ., ; { ; ,_ t -af y handsome wag J. H. Oannor's learn that did the Mrs. H. A. Wetherell and ehil�raa bang ` .-- '-:'- . .. �11 4i �1 Prom• miiaaahief. Tbe pt►aer informed oa the rturned tram • unit to the fora par• !ref -Jeba A. Wbits,;.cf Brougham. ship• -other day that when is is proven $bat it onto, Mr. and Mrs. Law, of Nswoastls, ��n b� paj ail : •. v. �rload of s from the station. was his horses ' he -will make the Cdr. and Kra: Israel Wilbur, law of < ' hs►re, on W ednesday morning. Thdy d Tbe npaNes has not et been sronn�ham, have takaa asp residarios in B. Which we wit sell at a reduction. were supplied by various farmers. most seat ! y • A. Ellieon's house opposite the old . P. 0. Amer. ,2(k gal.; Can If3c gat. , ; - . from the north of the township. Ham o toots in Wrestled, is the stand. y , ... " � . - Thomas Connors bas leased the Las sew�e that Sing sues$ at the We regret to loss that Mrs. A!e =. Arm• L �AN Sa . i key farm, near Dnnbarsoa, and ie now in Chnreb elves i olion met oa Tnesda strong is qu�b ill at Markham. She 'was .' 1. y returning from a visit to Mends at Mid• -' possession. William Thom, the recens afternoon, w ileI a number of those note- - _-- - - - - -- - -- . tenant hoe loaned his mother's pace near teed and was taken sick at lbarkhses. - - ---- -- p Sedldid not ni{in an ^a pearanae, Tbe Wm. Meyers, of Belford, is moving i�oto I ' , by and is now doing the fall ploughing towasbi w re ted by Reeve Mow• the premises oocapied by the late James - ` -, a I t : - ' in s, thereon. bray. The of the flooding of the gat Our new citizen. are very welcome. 8 - � r, �,L.. ", � -;. . --J. J. Foy, Q. C.,- M. P. P:, and others cellars was I tied. and the party at fault Vacant houses are now a coarse article - will - address the electors in the interests will be noti If the defect is not at Mrs. T. P White arrived home on Fri- /� I ' arnis % lY . r. . ".. -. Z: ­ -1 - .. La -of Mr: Calder, in the Purie,t hall this once'rem • t e ' ear will be called day evening from a trip to Manitoba, sand _ n�a ••... sfa���a •'s•a.a.aa�a�aasaaaaaaaaaaaa. (Friday) evening. Tile meeting will be in to" make ward, vvhioh coarse will bee been very ><!1 suer since. we hope `�� commenced as 7.80. Sesis will be re• only ssrrra to ad soda: that h -Ar condition may improve from tits ; -- e3 for ibe ladies. --The fun awl of the kte Reber$ Gear a quiet and rest of home. . I .'' - . - � r 11. sery $ On Qatardav eve a 1 ntimbeir at - - -Miss Martha ARaes Clark 'hind Ed. $edson took on Thursday of last "h'g a BalBamne, Whitewsait and �erub B1=usl�a. 3 Oantslon, of Clinton, were married at the week, aiod,.ib wrtnent was made al the the mends of. Mr. and Mrs. John flleiutb assembled at their residence to bid them • residence of Ogle and Mrs. Coo , on Friends ,oast end. Tbs burial :: i �. Butta>r Bowl® and_ Ladle . t'er cod •b }'e on the eve of removal to Toronto. Wednesday of this week. Tbe buds bas secures as noted by members of $be �„ oA* eaa and pair of easy chairs were a a . , . friends in this village who all join' in I, O, , F. ds , of Toronto. assisted by leasing restore of s very enjoyable cocas y - [� wishing 'the happy couple much bappi- mom ering. The floral decor• ion. Forks Rakes L' �c . ,r , _':.:�­ I ' ness and long life. ationa oat oo were simply beano• While working at the B ring Creek BlntL er Tw�l�'e� r t ., � , ,,.-, ,r a : - -- L, vl� p I:_ .�: t: ';. 1. -It is too bad that $be apple evaporat- &I, and wh placed' on the grave after bridge, has$ of Brougham, about a west ' ` 1 =Chureb street is not rmaang foie rho f11nersi pktsly covered i$. Tbefe since Daniel Fenton mat with a tall that $ '/` . 1:. I . . as the wdstorm of Monday andbatss of peat wets 'from his em toy• shattered a couple of ribs and ball bruised ',.s �. 1 s 1. ss. , y Tuesday ilea canoed hundreds of busheli era, hie b ' sm eomrades sod from employ an arm. Daniel says that bi good faKei. s of a plea to blow from the trees and so one soeieties to which deceased belonged the voting part of his anatomy was not iw - , braid that the paekern will. ,not take and was a r led sod honored mom- Paired, and will be in good trim on the 1st Thera will be m6re 01111 apples s is �. November to o ar lbs. bas . them. of No register e i l i L. townshi this ear than for the . i Pickering D v •-Tlse ' angaal ttsa'ribst hie tteiviees m The new steel bridge has been oomplOol J•- past (went area eider will be a drag is of the �[etbodist: ehuroh will be held an ' . �- Y+ and is a very Sue otrnotnre indeed a cred- the martcet• osl Sunday and Tuesday. October 28rd and it to the lIamilba Bridge Co., wh�ah built �' ""J� -- Walter Cesnsll has b� asaRero T 25th. On Hsbbfatbf T. W. Leggottf !t, and to the sownall council which bad ask ill with inflammation for the pas / w of Claremont, wlU deliver two appropriate it- placed there, u well ao to the ratapt►yora '- ., and tot s time biselife was des ed af. sermons. •Y•+ ?1,X3. wi=ll take plane bas Oct. 4th east . pair - On Tueedsy evening the festi- who will pay for it and have the pleasure Our fall 14`.I "noT�' � but we are yleased to say. he is recovering val will be held. Tea in the basement oil using it. In this connection it may not bth, when the best es yet introduced by us will nicely and in a abort time- will be himself writ oammefbee at 6 p.m. u►d $bat done a be amiss' to suggest so the council, Doan be shown. Woul be pleased to see all our old en$ Is would seem that G Gary" Cor- program will be rendered in the body of missionere and contractor for approaches _,_.masers and many new ones as possible. R e. ne�ll'� household ie especially unfortunate the'ohuroh. _ �tw Maggie Brown, 11.E.,' that the ratepayer am in a des to hur ry fora abapoe w use the bas get �s the - ;: this year, as every cinember of his family of Bradford, a young lady Who bee cap- water in the avast has got per doe and M.• I'` YY S� f` has been ender medical treatment at tared soores of Orin audienees all over P 3 1 I icy cold. So Contractor Ki is earn I various and short intervals. Bast iio every the Dominion, of w etas tbs art asdrur• estly regnestcd to get his per has$ hustle r ;se the tient has reoovaod. al ress speak_ in cry ­ favorable terms c Today (Friday) is the date of the p q y on gad move himself as lie b not d� _ _ I. will i e a n her of seleatione in •loon- " Uburob street, tfoe• Rev. fI. R. Clare, of Greenwood, since the days when he was you L' - �:`. � ,:.. L � f `great Bale at `•Hianaira, Died -At the Glensral Hospital, oronto• - . when the household effects of the late will delive o e of hie abort spicy ad- on the 14th ins$., Agnes, beloved wife of a '" �` �� 4ltre. Mayer will be sold by motion, each dresses the s ! use oo well. The music Dr. J. C. Hutchison, of Whitevs,le. De- ME ,� _ . ­ ­'... . ­ The r. he oco i n will be Mi idder fo t furnished ceased ba ri usl ill for about a �t - srgole scruff to the highest bidder. by d been seriously y Green � _ R7 g- premises will also be sold, or, at )east, too Whit ernao a choir. Admix- month, and as a Iasi abanae of saving bar ;• ; gored• Tlue property has been well ad- aeon 2� can , and only 16 pants for child- liie.the doctors decided upon sa operation, k o i which, b did got rove eooaessinl. ag • ' pp P x lisps lsken these 'mil! and eohoil farmers'ta�roa a "t, sm prapate� ' p vertised, both, by bills and advertismeots, ten. owever, Although her condition was known to be 9` t aho11ld be a hogs gathet•iiog A pobli 8eting if► tea idisreeta of 's` and serious the Howe of her death acme as a to Rive the beet values in E CHAN(lIN(I OAT EAL FOIi OATS and with t f the day proves fine. ' The the Hon• Jo n�ryden was held in Pirie a improved facilities can ►urn oat a superior article pr n shook t0 this aommaai$ � . . old of %ore are all of the flies order' bell Weds da a 0ning, whet the place y, where. he was I I. ti ' � . 'n b be sold cheap. was filled $h eo le. Nut a few women aairer. ally $Down and beloved. he was _ �. t . - -, '. _; �. , '. � �. ilDd ' 1. of s, osrWnty, a noble woman, the beet of wives and �1 o ] la a o -trial �y•. • �.:. ,,*, * 4 oar loa3s of ties and rails air- graced tyro all wit their presence. W. mother, a .1 1 and : -. s sou • �1 , -g I . eral ad much sympathy is e t week for the a ae of 0aon- V. Richard on I get d as ohsirman. The 7 y. y ri t p �° expressed for Dr. Hutchison and b>ts two. the; switch on the site�ot the s aker$ w re L. V. Brad , J. i� 4 y R, little boys s in their sad and irre airabl0 � 1 - F et c inR M. P y p 4 afsONDA WEDiFBDA�g aged BATURLAY3: tt`� _ �' < r new is on John Aswan s farm.- Said Stratton, • ,slid ti. k..Grsham, M. lose. The' intermens was on Monday at -, - _ 4' I ;. ' ir 11 maserial has been unloaded on- the P. P. .. Wh a essrs• Stratton and Grit• Fordwich where deceased formerly resided p Chop, Feed of aIi . , ands. still some people will argue ham 'tutu p o speakers, more interest Boiled Outs, Orail/a�tzi Flora , RoIled Wheat, Pot Burls , } ' Gave as a • �l ti grounds- and is not to be moves. centered in r IkloBrad . as be is o11a tirade► etc. 1 \.; :� . a y y K }. , r , that the statios>r y "Mrs.Elisha. Miller, of Gllaagow, died °, q } k y ­WL I.. r= ' r= , p There be• `oa B �� Now that there can be fro doubt on the and a nativ of the townehi . aittrda ,Oct. 8th, is Toronto Hoe i- � �, - � , -- a villa •ins no op osi ion on the latform rho y p •.. , . ° �' . �� • ' "' ree metier would it not be troll for th R §: f .� ° , - , Jr ' with the towashsp council in statewents a e by the various speakers tat.Y.:: - ,: ,4 ors sa unite w - - k y- the 4. T. R. to construct a proper remained u challenged, and'the gathering W• $- P. Claffibal '' of Richmond Sill, ' - gf: aeiinR . wba has been appointed Crown Crowe Protfeca- ' j ,8+ road Pram Bpink's mill eoath. By the acs dislpers d eft +Bleyeai u'eloo)t by giving for for rho Yukon Die$riot ! `" totOONGF CATTLE FOR SA I,E g� A, flret•olaes far contain• rt moval of the station the road nrohaeed the usual ch oar for the Queen and eandi• ,oft 7as$ !weak FORK yea, born situatl�d in coo , the Brougham S'tmk Yards. I have at `� �,E , > ears age, has been rendered nee• date. 'her v ere a few interruptions, for Dawson cite to. aaau>nie his du tae.. villas ®. w e e Were n 1- .� 11, about t*o moil aof ogle frame °ip yes g0 cattle for tale from 1 to 8 yeas a old a few y Allso eonTe new mUeh •owe breedin ewes ,.,. lea ae well all worthless. and it ie only bat the spa k a or ar1>poyed lost ® - VVedneeday afternoon at four o aleck Th+ is air th P wi stabling, brood sows area .boat., which f Nauss, a good barn. tova aired,. feeding laoabs, �� : �` that .th4 railway company .should by. Ae is eul in, sfioh geese, the plat- Stine 3dary, older daughter of Jampa &Io rood horse etablii gad dYtvibouse about two will sett ay the tb.live weight or any way to �� rlh cod our •lone. Thep, at )east. form calks ttri�ed the interruptions to Phail, sg,, was wedded at the family acres of Igaal ombard, one well and never fait- soft purohaeert Qome and see for yopreetf be- M` rnake p to good aaoon t; The Laurier Quartette did reeiden Alai* Street. to !dr• Henry ins spring of watery, The term is cedar good f g .�eee, Fkt ,�. f sitate, is our opipion.er,rn 4w ere .there and . et we'n'd Out b g i oultivaticrr and welt .� 4 Going to how wanted: 8lghest each price paid. -. , ,'nn ribnt9 liberally to. each coat . But not material" ize there betas ba e' ool0 13initb, f Jzbridge Township. Rev. Mr. sags. Reason to r4 will re Hire to he active in the Rived. As fu4ope meetings the oys at Fraser oisted in the regeme of oily t4aniwb,. -'�° `y"`, pgPaiy a� /• home onai►y area s�tny ds 'a p deF`fi 5 : , - n -1.0. l4. �.,'re.. -4' f :.wf'.+a3fi* i r i'ef`pl`� thF desire to have a ' yhe rear of lie, hall ehenlii be vom fled Clio imm rate friends of thentra0sin owp- s :isro g _:' r. x , � Pe 3 :.:l. pit r 8t cage it i y• 4either Jae p ulet�or go o4astsifle. parties, `� �',.. A i - ;.�`�' ---° __ 1 ,� _:_ w the slat o:l ti,: , `� ft �' r W. ,�:: f err ,- .:. ..q read 1 -!E?. y,.: ",: �' ' - ..e� : s, d - 1_ _ t•. $1. 'f �: -!. i L_ "M „ s I .rea .:.w.: ,.1. _ - -, I, <:. .- -zf'. •5:. _ .:cYs - - ".'''_ _e +... .. ..: .. a -. :'.. -;- _ ♦e 1. _ -5 .3. ,1. -: . - -. 1 y , . _. 1 -. 1. 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