1892. _ l.1S'l`ABLIS$I3LD.;1867.~. oavmu. - - - %- -nooaooo. BARRIE amumcu. sum as -:%-BA NK An 8 Page. 48 Oolunn Nowup`cfpp,r.T Published born the "Oloo. Dunlop street Barrio. In the County or Simone. the Pro- Vince of Ontario. Oanada. every Thurs- . day mornlnit. by . SAMUEL WESLEY. PIIOPBIIITOB. .._n-_eE_IgoR1_'_H~E_\I=m :}_ovA_NcE, DEPARTM E1911` The Homestead Strike is to a certain extent unique, exceptional and suggestive. It is the only strike in the history of the contest between employers and employed or between capital and labor in which the actsof.the strikers has been called treason to the State. The militia was called out to quell the diiculty, life and property were destroyed and the business of a large capitaliat was interrupted. The cost to -the State .of Pennsylvania of restoring order was the third of a million dollars. What will be the result `pf the trial of the accused workmen will be of interest to n.illions -of the laboring classes. The unrest, however, is not over, the problem involved is not settled, but the case presents matter for the most serious thought. The rights of property and the social fabric itself are at stake and must be protected at all hazards. But there are other rights lhatstand quite as much in need of ;pr_otectl`on.' glf indivi- duals and corporations by-,:_tl,Ie'iIn'rnuse accumulation -def `wealth Venabled control governments, and l_e"g`isla-. tion in opposition -to A the rights` of labor there is a direct challenge to the masses to protect '_then'I,s elv_es. It is enticing organised in the `near future, not only~to*i?a'.I"hfone_` but to somothina -"stir Imre wipe-S ib- Ohief. Justice bf Pennsylviiiii in Zaddressi --w..*sm..: . 0rd9r.. cdsopod. zorarnm-amp? . the 0`6n99.,of_.t,h.o. non:-ieuai:'wtmh v u` L ,. in the : : ' l V -`ii>int:in`5`"`the _ 9! thett-hwhoto. era ; but i two roads-to pursue ; the one leads to 4 J I I1 .f?~.{ ,. f._ ".5; .',,:_O Mr. Smith then quotes a dismal passage from Mr. Blake's letter to his constitu- ents to show the failure of Confederation, and takes exception to the position as- sumed by Mr.` W. F. Fielding in a -letter of that gentleman : in the Times,` rho p is advocating Irish Home Rule aI_1.d.'O'ering the legislatures of the provinces as models. for an Irish Parliament. Mr. Smith shows that-these cases are utterly unlike. It would be a novel exhibition for the Professor and the Hon. Edward, to at- tempt to reconcile before the Canadian public the course each is taking on these important public questions. vvnnllww LIIUII LVUW J UI`-0 ' That I am in favour of granting inde- pendenoe to a country 3,000 mile o` and allowing it to follow its own desti i s only shows that in arguing against the conces- sion of Home Rule to Irelandil am not actuated by blind Imperialism, but study natural associations as the only safe basis for political arrangements. Perhaps the aid which Canadian politicians are lend- ing, for the sake of the `Irish vote, in the dismemberment of the United Kingdom may lead some good Englishmen to modi- fy their objections to colonial `emancipa- tion, and that dislike of its advocates to which my critic appeals. e e in A1 utvyeruuienlj -or ,u'!eaIi.bl.'1taln. ' ` r ' If I;am,,askfed by "A Canadian Pro- ; testant whether it is right in any case to concede Home Rule, [answer that it is not. because experience shows that -Home Rule is sure to lead only to a struggle for independence. If I am asked whether it is right in any case to concede independ- ence, I answer that it is right to concede ' independence to a country 3,000 miles nil`, but not to a country in your Vitals. If I am asked. what would be the consequence of conceding Home Rule to Ireland. I answer that it will be separation and ulti- mate reconquest. If I` am asked what will be the consequence of rmly refusing to Ireland any xevolutionary measure, and maintaining the integrity of the United Kingdom, I answer that it Will be the contentment and tranquility of the great mass of the Irish people, though not of the agitators-men mostly, it seems, of the same class as the leaders of Tam- many, to whose eyes has been opened a vista of political plunder, in the enjoy- ment of ` which they `would probably eclipse Irish New York; ' rm.-. `r -... :.. 2 ____ _.. an The profeuor has 1 "letter in 3 late number of the London -Timon in which he mks 4 J".`ify hi! W993 0` Mb Gldltdn on an Ho_nioVR.ul_a ,:i1'i1ption, gndoroply to ' the ox"itio!Im% of "t_ho IProfouo`1-'5' position by "A Oshsdlon f'Protootant. In order tb-t 9"! 1"?! >*"! .M: W vs vs was IIIJPUI UIUUV EILIUU .I.ls7U. The course of events in the old Ameri- can colonies of England had been much the same as itwas in Canada. The his- tory of the Assembly of Massachusetts especially was a continual.e`'ort to throw o'-Imperial control. Such is the nature _of Parliaments. It would be doubly the nature of an Irish "Parliament, setting `out. as that Parliament would ,i in a spirit of jealous hostility to. England, and with the consciousness of havlngonce forced her to surrender. In framing these schemes you "have to consider not only the statutory regulations which you impose, but the moral forces which are in action. or which. your measure may call into play. - You have to consider also the power of resistance to Irish encroachment which may be left in the faction-stricken Government of ._Great Britain. ' I`: 1"-.. .'-1_--_s L_ r_. A n n in `--2`es...a."f"f am columns, says that afatal aw appears in my amumenta fr dossrndt undone 2 `what " I said: or tcawhati wan-eplyinggf Home Hula, al Plllondxforilreland, means a separate. Parliament under: Imperial con- trol. Mr. Blake and others allege that a imeasurepf this kind satiaed and tran- quilizad Canada, and thrt its effect in Ireland would be the same. .I reply that what satin-lied and tranquilizsd Canada was not Hul Rule, but practical inde- pendence. ' Hon e Rule. as I said. before, was given to the two Ganadashy Pitt in 1791, and there followed, not satisfaction or tranquility, _but a. long struggle to throw off Imperial control, which gave birth to a two-fold rebellion. and ceased only when the Imperial Government aur- rendered and granted Canada practical independence. These are the undeniable fact!-. With unfullled contingencies `I do not care to deal. But-I Iuppoaei"A . Canadian Protestant" does not apprehend that if Home Rule was withheld, Ire-. land will secede to the United States. There has been no political rising in Ire- land of any importance since 1798. Thu nnnnna II` A-nu-.4-. :'| IL. ..I.J l....-.. Smith. f<.,lvs;-X1-,'ih 12m9;.3n!tor In ,. .. G...nI. -.I..I- _~.SLI. 13.... 15.: 2. IS swniicma ransom 1 ~-~ ~~- ~~- --`--v -- ----vv-wanna " =!:'=999%&'wTl;-f{%/`?~3i:.ionI:-3 s!1i1*7*>fpi!oni 8. unit-::n('o;I::o!. ;Ms'__tildp lOlovor,;:ion_`qf 36;":-g v.vr, _ ,_-._- I . {.a,r> - .` -.., ` .-..`_H_ 1.` lg- I____..-.I ___.AI., Ant 1 -not " v`Y"?`."'.'. ,i'.",',"?*'o_` f"!`; %'."-.``."_: Vihovnged - on; the%8thL:of'; No-T 1 The nail `plea `of innniti in-r to That`l.1n_outTo1('Tknowx1_ l.V'_)r."Nill`:CresmV V whosejguuinou -mmuz: have -boon . to i>6oplo.",.b-.`R0 othra with thQ?m_irdpu for-Fthe purpose of extol-ting _..-_-_. I.-- L--- 8-..-) ....:n_ -1 _ -9, Mr. Mowat has Beonjeoeiving the cob- gratuldtiona 7' of his political `friends on *gwji_cy_ years preinierahipl of Ontario. Mg; bnld `hayo no" diic1:1lt_yA _in in vp_.w>orV ad; perpotusm-_ ;by k6'1)_iiig":ih wotvkiixg order the pbliticnl ~!n!911i!!9rzal14h-! 1 ' `T 1:nx}roIq1'u.'.11u:Ll:'rs. _ . The Canada Gazettegiven notice of` ten application:-fordivoroe. This will "furnish ibmething-.fo.0c0'|1PY.V`tlie attention of our grave and diimied Senators during` the oomingjeaaion.` '4 ` V U ' __r_-v- We hsve but little. faith in anything that Professor Smith any say or do. Bis tortuous course; ever since {his {visit to Amorios donionstrstos his Iunroliibity, sud not the losst singulsr phsoo in-his erratic -life is the. force with! ihiohzho opgosesths disintogrstionsnf-tho `st one point, vihile,doiug hisapowor to disrupt it in snoth'or. --_. I.-- _ I,.n 0 n . Even` ifthey,-`;admit that? 6 rates l co,nscience_, may industry and economy ing for a legal eight-hour .day. not matter whether our condition compares favorably or unfavorably with that of the workingmen of a century or half a century ago. Times have changed and the workman has changed with them. He is no longer going to be content with the condition in _life of his predecessors, Why should he? Is he alone, whose daily toil is one of the chief factors in the production of the new conditions,` under which every other class in . the community lives in the enjoyment of comforts and luxuries unknown to their forefathers, to derive no benefit from the discoveries and inventions of the age? Who has a better right than he to profit by-the labour-saving inventions which have driven him from one form of occupation after an- other, often compelling him in middle life, or perhaps even on the verge of old age, to see his life-long occupation. gone and to be- take himself to some new form of industry, or suffer from want? The old `order, he will declare, is changing and must give place to the new. The schoolmaster is , abroad and is teaching the workingman to do his own thinking.- The franchise and the ballot are also enabling him to do a part of the legislation which has in the past been done for him by those whose views and in- terests were very different from his. His very eiiigencies and the example of his em- ployers have taught him- to utilize the strength which comes from union. The editor and the professor and the judge cry out that it is wrong and anarchic for the unions to do.all in their power to prevent others from stepping in to take their places when they have entered upon a struggle, at great_cost and risk, toseoure what they re- gard as-_b_ut_simple justice or less than jus- tice from the capitalist But these theoriz- ers forget that the non-"union labourer who, steps into the vacant place of a union striker steps into a place whichhas been made what it is by the struggles and sufferings of the unionists. They forget that were the unions tobe broken up and each workman to do the best he can for himself on the principle of these non-unionist labourers, wages would speedily be brought down to starvation point, and the last state of the workingman e worse than the rst. He goes further and declares "not only that the workingman will henceforth demand a much larger per- centage of the products of hisitoil than hitherto, but that the old law of competition must no longer determine the question. In pinciple, he avers, it is asunjust and un- ethical as the criterion of brute force to which the nations have so long "appealed for the settlement of their quarrels In prac- tice it can no longer `be tolerated, for the contest between the capitalist with his tens of millions and the man with on! his day s wage between him and want has become too unequal, In short, society is even now in the midst of a which may at any moment become a~revolu- tion. though the unions are doing what` they can. to effect it by peaceful methods. How much of truth and force there is in these views we `need not now attempt to decide. But when discussion is rife it is better to look the whole facts iairly in the face. No one, we] conceive. does that,-who fails to recognize that the unions maintain as an ar- ticle of their creed , that` -the `old political economy is `obsolete `and that a new system | must be foi1nd.,'- M `A _ before is an a;.emoniw'hiE-- than of their} WQl1,1dI..WB , believe, ..em hatlca ly A1911) - . M e "are higher In proportion to the costof living in the old style,` they remind us that work- ingmen were never before at ,the mercy of a ,few `capitalists and combines` as now, when one man, and he perhaps a mere sub- ordinate manager, without much heart or at. his own will or vwhim throw hundreds or thousands of men out of employment. They say, too,` that the prizes or chances of rising are vastly fewer under present conditions than in the former times, when every workman might hope by dint of to have one day a little establishment of his -own,` thus be- coming his own master, instead of working` all his life at -the bidding of another- Still further, ,we are assured that; under the new conditions_employment is more precarious than ever before, and that nowadayslthe lucky few who aresure of employment the whole year round are the exception rather than the rule. In fact, this lack of sufcient and sure employment for all who must live by the labour of their handsfurnishes the strongest argument of . those who are agitat- But, the workman who is a bit of a_ thinker and agitator will be pretty sure to add, it does great industrial` `evolution Tile "We;k, ? Hi dgialing. with the Hume- etead t_rVoubJ-a Aauu the princiules therein `invol_ved' has some very j adicioua and com- mon A-ems remarks than we wjllingly give [the readers of THE AVANcE the bemt. of penning. [Our 'I`m-onto Cotemporary in referring to the writings of the persons of `whom wehave I-puke!) above, who try by tglkiug of oveyages and such like to show tl_l|t'the`Work`il1,al.1f0f:ts`lI present .-day is `better u-` than :the ivorliman of a- century ago naye v:-_-- The comm'on defect of all these d1ssert;a- tions is`,-A gs eiQ;ap_p`eo'.rse`to `us. that they fail to look upon the subject from the workmau s point of view. Tha.t=.thfe~a;v`era ' ` working- man is on tho` who19fb6t91"1`f o?`than ever is ass<'artion"`vhich"m8n;" fhem .......I.`I ._.. L- 2 ,,. .l-1-1-- AA Auu ruuun IQV: :p:wg'-vluou- W `_", vi. "1P_.,_, V of economy, the bsisaiigg isgg. ?bo'n-eating power of the law iyfi1nbpVy `and demand, but full to rec-again`; fh chtngd relstionu fof vveryghihg the last century. Thooriea ate set forth but present condi- tioligl factt igiinred, which must be reonginz-.d' before tbf solution of the great. `labor and soeial quenti-\:un which are pressing for so-l_ur.inn are salvo-d. . politioil ` A- AL. ....___...___.37.` I.-_.. _ `_..*A___....'-._ . ._ r `W -"*'-"-.3 :'-'-'_f: on the anpramnoygfof IQ : , . ` Ts-A . ~ , D ' Hallow6 en'i:'ooming, whax a.the_bo s will have gome inIioent fun. Thou __ ed to minchiefwill bqion'y":tha.t the lighlvof the full moon will render their doing: visible.` ' ..--- , ..-.-vun-vnvu .Luv vsu ' llllill 30. 50 chool, Jae R. Day;`Vocal Solo; Miss Sanderson; Recitation, "The Lord our Guide,M1ss' A. Muir; Recitation, The Heroes of Colon Bay, Wm. Campbell; Reading, `fBe kind at home, Mrs. R, Robertson; Duet, Miss Youngand Miss Sanderson ;; Reading, The auld stockin Fit, Robt.`Robertson; Address on Dis- covery of Amerioa,"A.nnder the headings, `Columbus as a Hero, `A Hero of fortitoudefi `~'.l heH.`ero ~s good and useful. W0rl{8,'~R6V.5:Mi'. Hunter; Readin , The Lord; of..Bur1eigh`-. Wm.= T-:B`rooks ;. eading, "The Drunkard : March, - Thos. Shaw; The p::gr.amme..:throemhout was ; admirably rende . ex ent- programme is grovided for the evening of~/the` V 7th prox. 4omand.h9%!:..it..; r um uuuu uussvnpuuuvv Gurnmn M._ ANDL. Soonmr.--A meeting` or the above society was held on the even- ing of the 24th inst. After the general routine of business the following interesting grogramme was rendered :--`Reading, The rst view of the Heavens, Norman Camp- bell; Recitation, The oldvman goes to school, , Sanderson; "The Colon Reading, kind at Robertson; _ Reading, `f'1`_hn_:_auld `um. 33 15.1.; in` s.-': The Rev. Mr. Franks has organized a Christian Endeavor Society for the bone- t of the young people, which promises to be of unusual interest to all who have become members. We hope all in our neighborhood will join us. ` T It seems to be the prerogative of emin- ent men to be eccentric. This is clearly illustrated in the course taken -by the _Qxford Professor and the Hon. Edward Blake. Professor Smith opposes Irish Home Rule, but favors the independ- ence of Canada and its ultimate absorp- tion by the neighboring Republic. Mr. Blake, on -the other hand. heartily odio- cates Irish Home Rule, but opposes the unrestricted reciprocity policy of his party because it would lead to `political `union. and the disruption of the Empire{ Mrs. H'urx-; Gl-ey, lviuiting at her father: of . Oakland Hill. of Burk : Falls, is , Mr. W. Robinson, ___ _vuv ---an-www- - Mrs. -S . Chappel is visiting at Wire. Pearson's, Barrie. ~ _____ I _-__ _--- --vr-.. Min; F;1oren_oe Darby is reovering from her recent illpeu. V crown mu. ` Correspondence to The Advance. Fall plowing is nearly nished, and av number of our farmers are beginningeto harvest their root crops. `IE1..- 1111;, "\ - An Island Paradise and Reminicenees of Travel is the title of a new book by H. Spencer Howell, of Stonyhurst, Galt, Ontario. The author gives a description of a trip to the Sandwich Islands, and what he saw there, and also a tri to Tristan ct Achuua. There are rem nia- 'eenoes'of travel in Australia, Belgium, Malta and Gibraltar. In these days of universal travel there is not much that is new which can be presented to the pub- lic, and a writer must possess unusual descriptive powers and a happy way of putting things to attract attention. Mr. Howell possesses these gifts in an emin- ent degree, and his book is therefore a very interesting and readable one. Be- sides this the book is beautifully printed on tine paper and contains a number of good photogravuresi to illustrate the text. I It is published by Messrs. Hart and Rid- dell, Toronto, and is a credit to writer and publishers. V The dainty msthetic volnmn nnahr. tn ham. . _a.a.. --1- uuu yuuuouulu. Jul! ulllly volume ought to have 3 wide sale. ..,............_,. V The thorough groundingof ,the pupils in the rudiments of an English education ought to be the first care of the Public school. The preparation of children for the Collegiate Institute is a secondary con- cern. The tendency to gauge the effici- ency of a teacher by. the number of his pupils who are able to pass an entrance examination makes the Public school little more than a porch to the Collegiate In- stitute.-Te'egram. N 0 child anxious to learn need go through the Public school without gaining the beginnings of 9. good education. The child who is indifferent can slide through all the classes and come out unable to write a. simple business letter or to `spell accurately. Thu 5|. .... -..L ---------13' ' " _ The Public school ii the school of this country.` Too much attention cannot be given toite improvement. So far as can be seen from the outside, its weakness is that it does not supply the average child with the learning most needed in the ght oflife. J. -.r -,,n.n_a,w .n.vwI yin .I.o Um Llnullllln ;-_ ; _ ,,_Tne body will not be in state. ? After fth sei-viceehere the funeral party .w_i1l ;lea`v_e,Waal1jngton. Thursday, an noon,` or hoons ihereafter for Indianapolis, where . qeryicea`yof- 3 more public character will 'ta.l;_e place. _ The body will be taken to Cro wnAHill Cemetery and interred,` after zwbich the President will return to Wash- ington. ADVERTISING AGENTS. We have often had occasion to speak of the army of advertising agents who manage to live on the earnings of printers [and publishers. This ever increasing army of parasites will soon be -large enough to swallow all that it is possible for the printer to make. We have _just received from New York the announce- ment of another agency asking us to quote rates and the commission allowed to these middlemen. At the rate of increase of these candidates for the prots of the printers and publishers labor, -which the last few years have witnessed, ' there will soon be an advertising agent for every newspaper published. This state of things will continue as long as printers and publishers permit themselves to be victimized and are willing to accept the terms offered by these middlemen. If the printers and publishers of Ontario were to unite for their own interests like other bodies of men, they could effectu- ally stamp out this whole unnecessary force that is living on the money that should go into their own pockets. We trust the Press Association of Ontario will place this matter on its next meet- ing s programme as one of the first de- manding consideration and action. . Mr! Hiu'_rison's fqne ral`will`b_6 $,;pri*v- 'a.tc'land not-a public one. A: fvgr,-,u-{the bfciil pcition of th cPrccide`nIz`will poa- -sibiy permit the services will bc}thje'au'x;'ne ru~thmo~ouuomary in the cuecf I in`e|_n- _b'e;5 of 3' priv_a"te*family.i flnvitctionu fwill `be atricly'lii;1itei in numbers cndno per- 80!); will'be"Tall'ow'ed' to be present. with- 'c.qt*th cni.` ;'_`l`hefu'ner"a.l service; will be conducted according to `the Presbyterian faring, by Rev Dr. T. 8.. Hamlin. ` mhn .\4\l:;o 2:" Quad. L- 3.` .LAL. ' lA_, .1'\_-`r."`A`,'. -`Y ;` . .O;t9b?' .9 F`): r I I > . 1. V: t 9331-. __`7_, 5!} ~r..'. , ` `H ` - I J2?` u`. -_ , _ ..`?"_'_A3%_l'I'1_lon I]'un` `--A. The Wrong Sou. F j SIB.-;__It was the Sons "of Eu'gla'nd,Aa1_xd `no: sh6~'Sons~ of Temperance, who were Jmgpunoed _~t9~ hold 3 Imoking ;concgr_t_in O.~illin.Ton. Tniepday evening; Suo_hs'an en- -tertainment would not be oonament wigh che` aim; or principle"! of the latte;-_:; pgdgr. '_'1`_ao mistake was dcmbtldls jg -`vlapue pf ..hyp.3,"? as the Po'c_kot' gm` t:l`I'{a'.-\`:1z |Vii:1e ig_f,!I,919rd9_r correct. Xd..# I iQgr i`lifo. It i t't6'-h6~l1'6p'df 1t` wi.l1 n'il n` thhg__ , _ , ,, A - . Y The Admission of correspondence Does Not Necessarily nnply that We Hold it` ll-.l-l-- 4.8 53. II?-J5-- qvwu ovwv -qg --ro' vjuuv vv v zvuuu The Onlnlon of the Writer. The following letters addressed to the editor of THE NORTHERN ADVANCE have been received for publication : -the outs, and the ins alsay in. Laal Saturday slip '9l'9c'tipna `for N 017 BI-nnuviokv were,hel``l.i Blair was dofeaued. but hia patty won .1,bo day. '1 here In no particular principle involved. It was "simply `a tug between the inn and mums nannnssnn 1-0 mm: nnrrqn -1-ms wux. . ` mm THE PEBPLI HAVE To an. THE TEAM? QUESTION. . The shooting of Detective Harry Phair in London by the tramp Wil- son, calls attention to the tramp nuisance to which this country is`, subjected. It is prettysafe to assume that a large proportion of tramps are criminals. B,othvBurke and Wilson have been living by stealing for the last eight years. As the cold weather approaches these oating thieves and useless dead- beats of the lowest stratum of humanity will leave the country over which they have been roving during the summer and crowd into the towns and cities. Much more drastic measures are required than have yet been adopted tu protect society from the depredations of these,` too often, dangerous and desperate characters. Every tramp who cannot give evidence of travelling for legitimate purposes, I should be arrested and sentenced to a term of imprisonment at hard labor so that he may be made to pay for his food instead ` of having an easy life and good board in . our gaols during the winter when. cold 7 and inclement weather renders thieving through the country uncomfortable. fl VI Advane Correspondence n. It .`.-_ -r n- ._, . _A`.l)lVANCE More a. Pol-oh. Editor : table. 0100 Au on; soy. ; SHORT sssnosms Questions s Answers Fraser, Clark & Co. I)0n t fail to see our bargain table. C No new name will be added to the Sub- scription List until the money is paid. Subscribers now in arrears for three monthe and over will be churned 81.50. Der ennnm. [Ladies] Tools underwear. Lame [A Hy7geia.nWoo1`underWear. The , ce1ebrated,Hea1th Brand underwear for ladies and children, all sizes. Saturday Night Ladies _Wbol H0se,_ > Ladies Cashmere Hose. The Best & Cheapest in the market lwtuavesoucur mun WILL sm A"1a1,ge1+a.nge of Choice Pattern}, and; colors 1n Flanneletts. It will payyou to. see them. GREY % FLANNELS. ZE3Z(DSI]'-_7'.]_={`SZ'! GOLD wm sun: Mann nnwutn E beg to announce the arrival of a choice a lot of the very latest novelties in Dress Materials direct from London, also another lot of new Mantle: at very low prices. Our :.. A- 1-____ -v- v- -- vv pvuuuiuiwc cu: VOL] LUW 1111565`. uur D1_'ess-M aking Department is as busy as a. Bee _HA1Ve.% Mantles gnd Dresses.m2_a.c_1_e aI_1 n;ishc_* as -_-..__ ____-- in a V1 charge vant honest footweag, '-Q'.j-_.`._'__ WFJLT. .::____j-r-I15 DRESS GOODS 8'l'REHE`l',.;ARRl%E. 39.53. The P( miJV'anted at once a rstA-class waist band, - ,- -__._ v. y$n.l&'JJX\.|\J OIIIIJA ILLLIIJLIL \|- Very superior manner. Miss Gilchrist in mans or SUBSCRIPTION. 31 Per Annum in Advance. $1. j `T. _._j -__.A *1!` L- -53- L- LL- &_I_ oun SPEGIAL LINE FOR DIRECT IMPORTER. DEPARTMENT. 'opular Cash Store, -WILL BE- SHOES. 1\1'OW;%, MYERS. BARBIE. lllissas 11001 11030, Boys Ribbed Jfosc. October _ Depositsof $1 and upwards received and Interest ' allowed. Interest added to the principal` twice in each year. _ ' Current. accounts opened. Farmers and Commercial. paper dis-J `counted. - ' Farmers Sales Notes collected. V Advances made on Farmers" Sales Notes. N ate forms free on application. DRAFT8 ISSUED payable in all parts of Canada, Great Bntaiu, the United States of America, and elsewhere. 1-3:. H. 1\dZOR..`E-IIS. g, T - . MANAGER.