Ontario Community Newspapers

Northern Advance, 4 Nov 1897, p. 6

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Teachers lsfalaries Elsewhere. . Mr. Wm. Grant, secretary Public School Board, Orillia, reported that he had written to twenty-four` towns for information as to number of teachers employed, number of scholars, salaries paid, etc. The replies received showed that Orillia was /paying moderate sal- aries for ecient service. The town of Perthehad 485 names on the roll,,'and 10 teachers, whose salaries ranged froni $1000 to. 8200. Lindsay had 900 on the roll, with 19 teachers; 1'5-e salary of. the principal was not stated,-but the salaries" of e the others ranged ff0_m`1'87o`of ' . to ssoo. p Woodstock} eeeyee;_ie1e,eoo and .1e,ao9 w-eeeedenee`;";30 teachers, vb 4 maxeduermnsteojqwe: Steam Works and Show '|?00m.vl'})(J i|Vi.eVr!`-`got. PAPER, muss, AND LOADED SHOT sgms Dlt\I'IICL I :1-\1\n Dln.un.L h-.'_L_, {VI _ Gffljlt IIICI `GGCKUIS Of all kinds in _s.t0c-k or made to order. Robes; brape and al_l Funeral Req11lS1t(3SfU.I'I1ished Orders by Telegraph or otherwlse promptly attended to, ` G. O. DOLMAGE, Manager, St/roml. sPORT|NG;.6%9b\! -HE!`EE|`..`EY- (suns ;.______ ECONOMY IN CHICKEN FEED- G. %s%1%\ U NnnDnnE`:rT=en,t$..E Ra J. HENDERSON ; opp} pos'r OFFICE. BARBIE -- Men Neuter Than ' urnarnnn ---*~~ mpnxsonnnwr onvonnr." V -In this enlightened? province, where just courts administer humane laws, in Oountyv Northuznhprlsnd, Col. Benson has just been yzorried to suicide under the auspices of that division court sys- tem which received` its benediction last session from the Hon A. S. Hardy; The fsctsss stated are that 001. Ben- ny... .. ....s.-_.-.1 am of the liquor disease is felt by nearly allfamiliea. THE ONLY ABSOLUTELY RELIABLE PREPARATIONS ON THE MARKET ?OflI8 ind GIkO:|'8 of all kinds `h.`_._ - `I13 1 urn Fowl: Eat the Oati Instead \ of Wasting Them. BARBIE `AND STROL-Jl:-I-_ I n` of him he was the home run--C tying hlcagc Plough Lines, Plough Points, Churns, Lam-` terns, Root Baskets, Rubber Knee Covers 'Coal Oil, Harness Oil, Paint Oil, Can-igmp . ' . ` D and House Paints, and Builders Hard Ware ..at.... PHRENULINE MEDICINES A Guns, Rieg, Gun and Rie Powder, Shot, A sure cure for Headache, Dzzziness, ` Constxpation. Indi- gestion, Biliousness, Rriahf n n:;nn no avousvll, uuluu-SUUBB, Bright's Disease. Diabetes, Paralysis, Convulsions, Heart Disease, etc., etc. Guaranteed to cure Rheumatism, Sciatica, Lu'mbago_. Gout and N euralgia. some watches are spoiled bv We-' t_h1`3 by poor watcbmakers. If Y" .i3 30 satisfactory, try our repair 619' fP".tment, It meahs satisfaction. Wm PIPE. PORTLAND crmm GOAL 15-tf ORDERS RESPECTFULLY somcmm. J.G.SCOTT . . . . . . .. 277 , . . . . . .. 184 K . . . . .. 217 . . . . . . .. 339 in... 703 _Islund. 2 51 \'Es1-RA. W 4} 24 in 6th Con. This mm-l wuu 1'9 rented on an improvement l-as. P: W 25 in 6th (_`nn., about 90 um-S. W 5 in 6th Con`. W 5 in 7H} COD. .611 tfI111>L*1't`L1. Lot 13 in llth Con. Park Lots 3, 4, 5 and 6 on Ii 522 in 6th Con , 21 acres vva.au|AV\1 n UUU. Lot 12, S S 7th Street Lots 41 and 42 in 6:11 Corn, }~'ot:mvasrga I.\'NI. Pt Lot 11 in 14th Con. This ;>rope:t_v in \ eludes Minet Point, and has on it :1 r.un:ler -2.: beautiful building sites. ANTHRACITE AND BIT['.\lII\'OUS Blake Stfeet: N S - Lots 48 aml 49. Blake Street, S S -I.ots 37 311.1 3.5`. Cndrington Street , S S-I.o1.< :23, and pt. 26 _ Amelia Street, IV and S S--I.ut.s 5, t Eugenia Street, S S - Lot 5. Theresa Street, N S--,Lots 4, 5, 6 7 J Water Limo. Plaster of Pai'hv.I5"" , with saw mill. BAI1RIE-wrzs'r WA 1:1 . Bradfcrd Street, W S- Parts l.'>t.< 33 and 34, Bradford Street, E S - Lots 22, `.23, .31 am! Bradford Street, E S-(Tl1=,.v11)p. Blot},-, Lot 8'. Charles Street, W S-Pt Lot 49 Ehzabeth Street, (Boys Vul0<'l\') .~` [<--I,oz Q5, Sanford Street, E S-- l ;ll'tS l.0t.< 27.1 and 2'3, Oliver St, N S Park l.Ot~' lu';m1 17 I 1.` Oliver St, S S-Park Lats I3, 14. 15 l Bay Shore,-2 blocks of lmsl, about Tar-., 14Jy BARRAIE- :r:s'rr E w.u:m_ Dunlop Street, S S-L:1rg4: Ilriuk B known as The Moore Hlm.-k." Part of Lot 12, occupied as n 1i`v'<"rVst; Part of Lot 26. ' Dunlop Street, N S- Lots with .1 ing house) and 26. Collier Street, S S-L0tS 40 and 41. John Street, N S --Part Imrs 5 and 6 n - ~ - u >. I-I. LYON & SON; Ovmcm YARDS Rosa Block. Foot of Toronto 3" Telephone. Revenue per head. mu --In S1'.\'.\'II).-XLE. Pt E; 12 in mm, w s 1-:, VALU- Lot 5 in 1st Con, 0t 5 in 2nd Range. 1} Lot 20 in 10th Con. J.\Ill nan` Bradford St , S S--L0t ll rm: with comfortable frame dwelling . ; Cumberland St., 3-l t of! Jacobs Terrace, S S ~ Lots 7 21 Marcus St., E S-Pt Lot 23. "mm, TOWN AND urns V [:08 SALE Jeweller Barrie. At very Low Prices and on BARBIE, ONT. wsnn ma. STRATHY &_ THEE" HAD {BARRIE* E.-\.\"I` WA 1 . I i BARI{IE- SIXTH \\'A}':II_ IQ; mm - - -BUCCESBOR T0 COLLING\\'00I?. -Daaler in- ORO. N ovnuann *4, . _- . _. ., .\'oli'ilo1'.~`, 8:0 . Barrie. ESTEN, about 85 acrcs. Expenditure per head. mu n- ..u..o of Lot `26. = and 10. Q ;.'1 livery stable. Three Excellent Farms. }`:;1s\' Tel Terms (1 W811- `$3 '67 263 187 218 `\l\I\ `The two heautiful, high ert, colored supplements which are this year given free withjthe book, also carry out the idea; `One is entitled The Firat Her-. vest in Canada., and the other, `Can. ads, " Sixty. Years After. These are V beautiful pictures, painted by ;VJ._ l'D Kelly, of ..Toronto.: Theyi4rel.aid. to be the tines: e specimen; or; ligho. graphic- `art yet 1: 7 ' ' '1.`he_ GaelJf7f::<;;:5;n d>iovn_`_a,__V >_ :j`arfcl_6 .:de'qobi_n g; lpst f6.85,F`3.P1`5 :0f"f5i`!' .`-Win" 3550590113; _IHon.$ \AlQ;`ader:`.Mdckepzie and Hail" __--- -...-v nuarsvwlvql about the Canadian climate, to show that the Klondyke with its ice is a thousand miles north of agricultural Canada, and thatlthe St. Lairrence River should attract the pleasure seek -V IBIS of the world during summer. -IIIL- A I ~mDi'romAL NOTES. Exports of generdi merchandise from the port of New York for the week ending October 19th were valued at $8,630,510 against $6,474g588 in the preceding week, and $8,596,445 in the corresponding week of last year. Since Jan. 1 $316,086,136, against $287,- 944,537. ` for Canada. It has seen the great A Bold sui for Canada. This year has been an eventful one wealth of British Columbia acknow- ledged by mining experts from every country `in Europe ; the gold nds in the Klondyke region have also attract- ed the world s attention, and also the social and political occurrences incon- nection with the Jubilee year. "TORON- 'ro SATURDAY N1on'r s Camstrnas N UM-- BER. has bren_-prepared with a view: of gaining for Canada as much as possible from this favorable state of British feeling, and of correcting some palpable * misrepresentations of our climate and resources. Thousands of copies of the 1 Cmusmas N UMBER are sent to Great Britain, and this year the editor at- tempts to correct" false impressions _ -- v, ---u avyvrvvl A Dunda:-D"u_fi;- Council adjourned to meet at Stewart's hotel, Thornton, on the last Monday in November next, at t 10 o c1ook a.m. Irvin-Du'-The statement of Al- ` liston Council re loan` of road machine, amounting to $11.50, was accepted. V hnsnJn- h`--1 I` .` Du'- Ooxworth-C. `L. Dennison, Esq., who had to pay $14.83 to redeem a. lot of his in Cooketown, through some error of Co. Treasurer, was granted 1 freedom from all taxes for the next 4 years, provided the lot remain as it is as to ownership and improvements. ' "\_,1!' I ' ' Du`-Irvin:-Eln,-.--_Ci"..'Elliott 4 was * paid $24-.00, balance of keep of the late ` Mr. Griin. I Coxworth - Du`-The was adopted.; . . - -_ yvu-tauwvs, lllltlulll Ill new cu!` vert and 333 ft. cedar . . . . . . . . . . J. B. Smith, horses on road machine. H. Leadlay, expenses Uourb ot Appeal W. V. Miller, repairing road machine W. Dawson, repairing culvert . . . . . . John Eesens, repairing hill on side line 25 . . . . . . . . . . . W. Dawson, repairing Mc1\Iaul s hill. 1 A. G. Arnold, straightening course of Bear Creek ' o a u I n o n u o o Q o a o o O O O as An: - A __` on`-Oallllll `lg W011! 0!! 1V. townline ' John Ruth van, . . W. J. Smith. repairing road scra.per$ Frank Hayden, repairing hills . . . . . . W. A Dempster, putting in new cul- % .v Buylllulllcllll uouucy UPEDU 011 UOWIP line . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 James Campbell, plank for culvert. . . Thomas Donnelly, repairing road on side line 25 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Joseph A. McMa.ster. repa.iring.wa_ah- out and hauling cedar . . . . . . . . . . A. Hughson, 49,: days work on N. tnwnlinn Report N o. 1 of Finance Committee presented and read, recommending pay- ment of the following sums : ' i T ; To supplement County Grant town- \ l - dlnn AA line , , _ _v._- -__uv- can AVJI In The total educational expenditure per head in 1896 was $190, or 33. more than previously. The percentage of voters to the whole population in the different provinces is as follows :-On- tario, 30; Quebec-, 30 ;' Nova Scotia, 25 ; New Brunswick, 29 3 Prince Ed- ward Island, 24; Manitoba, 36; the Territories, 19 ; British Columbia, 32. The percentage in Canada is 27. The Reevehreeented the feliowing documents, which were read, relating` to the expenditure of moneys on Roads and Bridges; etc, A I , --v---vvIU rD\rKF\JH`O The minutes of last meetging were read and `conrmed, V ` -- vvwavnn QHDDID \J\J|LLI\5lIv The CouncTn1-et to-da`y, October 25, according to adjournment, at Thorpe s Hotel, Nicolston, The Reeve in {I193 chair. ` 11 members present. mL- -4 - -' ' * Minutes of Eighth session Essa Councu. H`! I I` r ' teachers, witlr`salaI'is, 5 4 $1000 to $250. Iiigersoli, iattendance - 750; 14 teachers (:1 of music); from $900 to: $240., Brockville, at- tendance 1,300 ; 25 teachers- one male `receiving-.-8850, 2 feI`nales,$'(00 each; minimum sale;-y$3oo,` L Sarnfia, attend- ance`l000 ; 19 teachers, `salaries from $950 to $300. , Goderich; 593 "on roll ;` I2 teachers, receiving from 0900 to 8250. Port -Hope, average attendance 5 850 ; 16 teachers, receivmgffrom $1000 to 3250. St. Maryl a, registered attend- ance'500 ; 9 teachers, receiving from $650 ce $225.. Chatham, 1,337 on register; 95 teachers and akindergar-' tener; salaries from 8800 to $250! . Galt,_1,405 attending; 23 teachers; salaries irom_$l000 to $240. Dnndas, vwvu '.I~J-ezllllllj -teachers ; salaries, $7 50 to $250. Oril-' lia, 959; salaries, $950 to $250.- Packet. V V 484 attending; )3 teachers; salaries, ; $7 50 to $250. Cobourg, 540 on regis- ter; 12 teachers; salaries $840 -to - $250. Napane-,. 543, attending; :0 ` ,,-_._ :-CDCIIIIIIIUU..II.....Il All of which is respectfully submitted. J. Uopwonm. Chairman. O v:re1 1" S:Jnn(l ..a;ttndMa.!:1g9_ 4.-- -1. -... .-2 - R. T. BA1\i'rmG,. Clerkri impressiqns In Ontario the average cost per pupil on total attendance is $8.67 or $2.41. more than in 1877; on average attend- ance $15.45, or $1.30 more than in 1877. The average cost per pupil on total attendance in Roman Catholic Separate Schools was $7 46, or an in- crease of $2.86 since 1877. The aver- age cost on average attendance was $12.31 in 1895. In High Schools the average on total attendance in that vear was $29.00, or $8.02 less than in 187 7. report read .4475 3 00 75 10 00 J `El 70 100` 350 . lance `to carry fo>r'wsr,dh of $15017; `after paying sllexpenses and prize list ' the csseffgsinst Mr.~*S_peers, ef Spears myadunenely disposing} ef_, semigx. bi-T v----vvu -nnv *-ICGIILH ll Ul.l.I the showl year will `ban cash be.- in full. The -receipts from all sources were 82142.7 2. 7 The expenses amount- ed to 8938, sndthe prize list to`$l043; .Ab. the Bsijrje on Monday as 00., -~hi>yole mhnujfsethren, A was thresyn fentf byt`l:_s_ Bpeersii was '6hsfsi1 by Dr. Orriqn ,, -_-_- .- -.... ....u_u luuwnymu 01 (711688. [ Connmawoon-The [position of- the Exhibition from a nancial standpoint, is now rat class. The _:re`au1ts`-from 1.1.- ..I.--- -1 ' County Notes. Om1.Lm'--Mr. S. Reeve has a curi- osity in ten heads of cabbage, which grew from one plant, without any -man- ipulation. It looked like the other plants `when set out last spring. . . . The reports asto Mr. Robert Vick's condition continue to be very favorable and he is expectcd home in a couple of weeks`. . . .The first of the lectures to beginners was given in the chess rooms - on Tuesday evening. ~ Mr. A; M, Snell~ grove was the lecturer, and be present- `II II tug.`-nv -:...-`A ` I` ..-_-... _-.. vuaunll vs uuu U011!!!` IIISIIF Will cut into the `prots of the business under the new system. The shorter trains may not cost any more in the and than the long ones and'will/ have the decided advantage of being` safer.- J\I'nI\:n'1: Revenue Province. Ontario. . . . . . . . . . . . . $1 57 $1 67 Quebec . . . . . . . 2 77 2 63 Nova Scotia. . . . l 84 1 87 New Brunswick -. . . 2 17 2 18 Manitoba . . . . . . 3 39 3 90 British Columbia... 7 03 ll 47 Prince Edward 2 84 The total receipts in Ontario for 1896 were $3,490,672, and expeiiditures $3,. 703, 380, or a decit of $202,708.for the year. wuv-uvu IIIAVCI-IUD 0 Whitby Chronic e. --.---. .n.uwsu was It mlgnty Smash. The car that left the track went over the enbankment,' one end down the steep embankment, the other end up near the track. Two other cars were badly smashed. A crew of wreckers came down from York and all-day Sat- urday were atwork getting the wreck. ed cars in shape to take to their-epair shop. The wrecked car was loaded with empty- kegs. It was a through train bonded from one point in the United States to another. The -incident shows` that with such heavy trains the frequent grades are likely to cause serious damage, and a few such acci- dents .as that of "the other night will , . . , I cut into thin nrnou at` al... 1..------- The Danger of Long Freight Trains. _ The _Grand. Trunk is hauling some l veryheavy trains over its line just now and it is not an unusual thing to see two engines at the head of a train near- ly half a mile long. This of course means less trains for the same business and therefore less train hands; The object is economy, but it is doubtful if the method will prove successful until the road is straightened and levelled up. `About half a mile east of Oshawa on Friday night, a train of 64 cars had two breaks. ' The rst break left the van And a number of. cars {standing in the hollow at the culvert east of the overhead bridge at the east end of the ` yard. There is an up grade from that point to_ the depot, and in making it 1 the train again broke and the cars run- ` ning back" struck those standing on the ` track. There _was a mighty smash. ` 6-If subscribers pay in advance they ere _bound to give notice at the end of their time if they do not wish to continue taking it, otherwise the publisher is obliged to send it, and the subscriber will be responsible until a notice with payment of all arreaprages lie due to the publisher. - vuanolnlbiva A5--'.llhe courts 5}}; decided that re- . fusing to take periodicals from the'.of- ce or removing and leaving them un- called for in evidence of intention to defraud. 4-_~If snbsc-tllh-ors move to other places without informing the publisher oand the papers are sent to_the_former address, they-are held responsible. .K 7|-- ------ - " -__: -u-uvvuvllauuu 3-If subscribers neglect to take` the periodicals from the oice to which they are directed they are responsible "until they have settled their bill and ordered . them discontinued. 2-If subscribers -order a'discontinu- ance of their periodicals from the oioe to which they are directed they are re- sponsihle until they have settled their bill and ordered them discontinued. 0 1-1. n 1-`Subec:il_2ers'.who do nt give ex- press orders to the contrary are consid- ered as wishing to continue their sub- scription. ' .L.a.w Governing Newspapers. .Th_e`fol_lowing are points in the law governing newspapers that are frequent- ly epqnired about and that are worth remembering :- - ' ' - Q `(N I -- u ---onus" The contents oi`/_thia'i~:ts:tistical Year Book are reliable, and indicate that Governments are showing the people a very bad example, viz., living beyond their means. In 1896 the revenue in Canada was $7.14 per head, while the expenditure was $7.21. Looking at the separate provinces we nd the fol- lowing lamentable state of affairs :- souvenir tei send to your friends, It Vvivill be for sale in this_ townhy the anationers and newedeafera. The pub- lishere address is `Tonomo SATURDAY N renew,` Sarunnu NIGHT Building, '._lj`o|-onto. - .---v_ `Iv: IQDII1 ` iki iii-e-t;clese~*ariinal stories by Canadian yzriters and illustrated ._by Canadian artists, and a record of the leading eporting 'events~- of the year, with portraits of Canadians, make up` the buikof the book. , viei v;_and"half-.ton9-poi-traits. `- ` u-_-..-a 4-, - - Btowh, wili pvhoqtogt-aphi ivonramnn A.nvANc1r' One reason why Scott s.\ Emulsion cures weak throats, Weak lungs, makes rich blood, and strengthens puny and delicate children is be- `cause all its parts are mixed in so sciengic a manner that ` the. feeblesti digestion` qan' deal with. it. `This experie ence has only come by doing 5 _one.t_b1'ng for nearly 2 5 yegrsn gredents, I most evenly_ J and ` delicately mixed, best adapted those Whse.~strngth a All 3 \JlBII,UI'llo Charles King and Robert Lowes made a. strange nd while cleaning out the cistern at the residence of Mr. `C. Moore, Brant street, Urillia, the other day. At the bot- tom of the cistern they uncovered rst a rake, then a poker. a`nd.la'stly two bundles of cloth. The cloth they -divided between them and took home. When it was washed, dried and the first few folds were cut away, the material was discovered to be two bun- dles of the finest quality of black and shot silk. Mr. Moore s family of course cannot explain the find, and it is supposed the silk is the proceeds of somebody s theft, the thieves, to escape detection, `having chosen the cistern for a hiding-place for their plun- der. The rake and poker indicates that an ~ ebrt had been made to recover the `silk un- successfullv--N n'w- Tam- uuvsu unu UGUII uusue to l'e0( lsuccesafully.V--Ndwa Letter. lescapesfrom death. once by choking and Drowned in a Rain Barrel. 1 Last Wednesday evening between four and ve o clock, Eva, the two-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Newsham. corner of Coldworne and Andrew streets, Orillia, was drowned in a rain barrel in her father's yard. The little one was missed by her mother shortly after four o'clock. She had been playingjvith a pet kitten on the verandah. The mother went out to look for her in the yard, and was horror-stricken on passing the window of the dining room to discover Eva's two little kid boots stick-A ing out from the rain barrel. The barrel was sunk in the ground and was full of water. The child, it is supposed, was chas- iag the kitten and stumbled head-rst into the barrel. With her own hands Mrs. New- sham drew out the little lifeless form. The ' child was dead, the doctors say, two min- utes after falling into the barrel. On two former occasions little Eva had narrow another time by being run over.-News Letter. ` The real fact, then is that the loan. in- stead of going' to the public, went to the Canadian banks, who never expected to get it, and who have now to get rid of it on the investing public as best they can. -To- ronto World. .to take up the bonds with -the deposits now Mr. F1eld1ng"s Loan. -From information now at hand it is ap- parent that the Dominion loan of $10,000,- 000, recently oated on the London market. was not the success claimed for it by the Ottawa Government and its friends. The loan was a failure to the extent that the in- vesting public of London took little or none of it, and no loan can be considered a suc- cess at any gure unless the public come in ` freely and take it. Over three fourths ot the loan will have to be taken up by the Canadian banks, who bid for it on the un derstanding that none of it would be allot- ted them, that the public would take itall at a gure higher than their bids. Mr. Courtney, the Deputy Minister of Finance, came up to Toronto, got the bank and loan company managers together and told them how well it would look if the Canadian nancial institutions put in .for the loan. The managers got it into their heads that ' the public would outbid them. But this was not the case, and our banks will have in their vaults. Later on, they may beable to work the bonds off on the public, but that will take time. Lt People aingid be careful not to start ` also reports.` 7 ,.__-_ - _---...._,. Miss Maud Drury is spending a. short time st New Lowell with her sister, Mrs. Williams. Mr. L. Leighg Hawkstone, called on Mr. D. Bunker on Tuesday. 11:-.. in - ,, , .Mrs. and Miss Toiylof; >Stayner, spent Saturday and Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Sprott. A -___ _ :.-.- -----vs- us: is able to `out driving again. *`..'I' 'I'_SI 11-1- mu RoadNews. ` . Advance Correspondence. Mr-. Anderson, of Grassland, and his friend were visiting at Mr. R, Sprott s last week. _ Miss E. Garrett spent a few days with friends in Gilford. ' Miss Lillie Orinsby, and Miss Sarali Manning, of Hawkstone, paid a ying visit to Mrs. Ellis on Tuesday. ][___ __J `ll ! nu ant. end 4).: e6mn3ma,r9; lmlids} Police magistrate Frame. Hsd he poe- ptophetiol vision,` end known what action was to _be taken} Mr. Spears .might still be a citizen of Col`- lingwoodw As it is, . he" lefhns some time last jveek, `for the'United States ptobably.-Enterpriee. `V010 parts, the `propel-by of wmi>lin- :L -_.I _\_ 0.: Glad to 8.66 Mind Mildred Brown The imprisonment of an old gentle- man, Mr. John Bettes, in Barrie, on Tuesday, 26th ult., seems so far `an exact counterpart of the" foregoing. He is serving 10 days for not explain- ing his nancial circumstances to the county judge, with the` di`eren_ce , how- ever, that Bettes says he was "not sum- moned to appear. 'What- the course adopted will be after Bet'.s s release remains to be seen. i Silk iii a cistern. ' (Too late for last week's issue.) are men Neuter Women? 66 Are women neater than men?" was 0 was the reply: Women are endowed with strange vagaries, and while ex- tremely rastidious in many ways, are very neglevctrtul in others. `Even the swellest society girl is not as particulixr -as to the freshness of her collar ant} suggss is the plain. everv-dnv m... . The 'Tla;=}`t siren. their feet for th 1`imes-Herald.) , pa %~xq th-run out! your crowm , Sal, ms your on .. 1`_he last seen t` _l1_e1r for `tho I-mm: --- L eat- your old head- I guess ':\["ou ain t any alone at o-morrrorw I'll fetch `in .2 P811` I 201* rnna-u-I 41- -~---- `- ____ .... ...,, v...uu;l\CJ.1S rur market l at the same time. Hi there, Sal. you'll on`: D` in, Nell; I vou pickin' oags! To-morrrorw another V 11` till I_ get round the poultry yard. es, 811'; It's -my idea, an the patent a~iq t -run Stop crowin Sal, an 1}_1h y_o-ur oat`s! . _._-_...- - nnunal. An old tamer who comes joggim - into town two or three times a week a ways brings with him a couple or fullgrown i hens, which are deposited in the bottom of the farm wagon with their feet tied together. `How much for the chickens?" house.- wives ask as he sells vegetwbles at their doors. Them chickens ain't for, sale, he as- swers, and bobs a';long with his load. When all his vegetables are disposed of the mystery of the poultry deal is explained. Driving to a convenient lawce the farmer slips the -bridles off .18 team and hangs a nosebag full of : oats in their place. Then he unties the spill over or leave em` for them nasty L `feet of the two chickens, which are too cramped to y, and pitches them out on the ground at the horses heads. . ow, you jest watch how my little scheme works, he says to the curious. I. used to lose all them oats the horses H chicken racket, and now I saves every one and fatten my chickens fur market time. Flt um... um -Au '1 . 632 mu. .1 I-at His Own I . failing to appear` was committed to jail, pearance before the county judge, Col. son, a retired 'oicer' of the" `British army, wasin debt to a local hreditor, who used all the machinery of the law to collectthe account. The old soldier was summoned to explain hisnancial `circumstances to the c untvjudge, and being releasediand ordered to-'ap-,`ear again. Between the date of his release` and the time xed for his second ap Benson seems to have chosen suicide as his only way of escape from the tender mercies of the Ontario law. This in- cident is a sad commentary upon the Hon. A. S. Hardy s boasts last session that there is no such thing as imprison- ment for debt in Ontario. The law` which Mr. Hardy praised and justied and strengthened by his amendment to the Division Oourts Act may be cruel . and inhuman in its workings. The judgment summons system never drives t the habitual dead heat to suicide. It i does enable creditors to work upon the . feelings of poor and sensitive men. ' This law which the Hon. A. S. Hardy praised last session is the keystone of a system which called upon a county judge to imprison a poor old man for debt, and the dread ofbeiug againtent to jail because he could not meet his nancial obligations drove `this man to ' suicide.--Packet. ADDRESS. THE KEELEY INSTITUTE 582 Sherbourne-81., W f'I'\t'\I:\t'\ 135-` Is 9 -- 7 -..w;u.u;n uu. UI." UN'1'Al:U.U, Limited, for the cure of all narcotic drug addictions, is the only one in this Province. ,, _-: I &\III& Has restored to society over three hundred thousand helpless drinkers. Ninety-ve per cent of these are now active in the cause of Temperance. THE KEELEY INSTITUTE C0. OF ONTARIO, Limited, th cure nf all nan-nntin 2...... -.I.1:_-.- THE CURSE --v v II J`-"'1 ToRo'N-"i9'om, ONT. pumolm g`i?;a}?32`' Paralysis, I . Manufactured on Honor and Sold on Merit only at .PHENDllNE Rheumatic Specific PLEASANT, PURE.AND HEALTHFUL WHAT THE YEAR B0O_1;i}VEALS.

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