LATE OF ORO. '3] ia'n:'r:'. ' W. 1VIelaAR'I`Y. SUPPER o I scour, ANG U~ `P. 0. Building and Loan Association Calls attention to the _Spem'.al Facilitte/s oerod to -Investors mdBarrowers. . _.`n.` . -vvuy yay nut, wncn, on IIICII Cl monthl pa cuts. you can become your own lord? nu vethcchoiceofrepa atanoathly rate of $1.20, $1.50, or $1.99 for $100.00 bot- rowed. -cw TH PUBLIC-Wh I I3 I11 OW money; 60. a month placzd 53 the . P. . Loan Association will yield you in about 8 yun PRESENT of $100.00, or a prot of $41.40 ova` your monthlv pavmonts. 'l'|.AE Inn:-a--._._ ---. i done my best to."_ said the post trader._ . V \ Iv... uu-rug-any ysvulwlllulu HE INVE T R-Wh t 1800 V $110.00 with the O?P.oB. & L. As:":I. End doubled in u yeats. bcsjdc 'ving during the in- tetval 62 perannum panel to you every six moadu? In other words. for vour Sunm vnu um .-...z.. .. i"n"'d'/o IN: auuum pan :9 youevery . intre:tr$`6'g:d;;l ?funy."I $`` YOU W31`:-naive J wttlofsaas. " ""`"'-"inxacnad v-..._ _- vuuvvu An investment safe as government secutitiee and much mote protable. realizing the investor an eqtivnp lent to :5 per cent. per annum. simple interest. For printed matter and further information call on 95 Dunlop-St, Ross Block, Barrie. Evenings at residence, 67 Owen-St. Blank Will Forms can be had at Inuedvance llffice Q.H.LYoN. Make Your Will. Will pay for Will Form and postage to any part of Canada. "3ff$':zjay belong to the Badtace band an have hair in his rtepee." continued the old huilwhacker in the -same grave . tone of reproot. but at the same time he's a human. an as a human it's your play to extend the right hand ot teiler- r "ship to him instid oi the sole of your number nine. Hain t they got no Sun- day school iiberries out on Bitter creek? Hain't you never read about the settler who found a poor. r-tarin redskin out in the snow plum exhaust- ed an took him inter his shack `anfed him up a whole lot an warmed him an then turned him loose with a grub stake. an when the Two Kettle outt exhoomed the tomnhawk an raised merry Cain scaipin an burnin through the paleface -settlements an the `good hearted gr-anger was raked in the In- jun that he had saved sashays-in an` rescoos him from a turr'bie' death? ._A-._l-_ II -git` `kn WOODSTOCK, ONTARIO, :._._q, SEC/IREAS. BARRIE LOCAL BOARD. fut mu nmmz Aucnumzm G. R. FORD nmnmcs ALL KINDS or AUCTION suns. A lvspecnll, d as 'tdi toha sale: W? eonsuIts;h:i:"owpx:`inte:.e`s':sel;' :llcm` ' 3` sales in his hands. __4. u i__,. A,_,,,,_A Q. :1 _o ' H'0:-ders. left ntVTn: Anwutcl oco or his resi- dency. VSprucc'Cottaze. will` be pnomotlynttondod to. :&3_5.: I G. R. FORD. cur FLOWERS--Roscs, Camations. Violou, eta, ftesh every day, Bouquets-Button- hole, Hand or Corsage. Funeral Taken: in QR`! nniann, 'a';',7 a e3a" VEGETAB I .55.... 4 any desi s. VEGETABEES-Ccl , Crisp and Tendon Lettuce. Cabbage, annipo. Beets. Carrots. etc. SEEDS-Flower Seeds, Vegetable seeds, Plants and Bulbs. WM. TAYLOR uuuuuuu uuu Hutu II tuna luv uvwv-v "I've read them stories." -said the post trader. ' nu--. ____ _u__.n_ L-u-_- 9.4.. if -nhl ORA SEED "ToRE I".I..UKl5'lf AND annuaxvuuv. . Telephone :5. V 155 Dunlop-St., Bu-no Tana: Mums Demons co!-vmoun dc. Anyone sending a sketch and dew:-Igtlon may qn1okl{ uoortaln our opinion tree 11 other an invent on is probably Rttentnble. Commnnlcso :2: .:':.',`., .1_`.`.`. ?..ti.c, :.`f`:'2,`....... "....." "`"`.. Patents taken t. rou 1: mum to receive special notice, without c urge. in the - -24..A.2Q2L VT-TIUVIIIV q ---vg -.vv---' A hnndsomely illustrated weekly.` Lament dr- onlatlon or my wlentmo `om-nan. Terms. 08 & ear: four months. 81. 80 d bynll new : lnnu 1| (I. ....._,_,u___ ||_._, v__[, Ilulnlolvll vs v _- T- _ : n?3x n`1'i'a'."i`1'." oia niiuiaiirs. imu & (:o.=m~-v- new Yg Bunch Omce. 625 F St.. Washington. D- FARM s'rocK SALES. E. DONNEI;i:,f CTDUAC Dliivlvvsvpxannu ---__ lAN'l'--wh t h r payments. v c ..`. ii.'..'2;..'.Z..'2,'..?.'1 '..".S .! .1`: yvou IJ IILII-`I o "But you don't believe 'em." Ii "-39 old bullwbaoker. 'You ain't sanguine concernln the good that there is in Y0? teller man. It you git a bad deal. 3. decline to chip In an 185 down 7" hand instid of callln fer cards an draw- in to fhe ace." ~ III S , _, , A_.__ ___.L It. `then . FLORIST AND SEEDSMAN. .....- - . v as l'\nn`nn.QL. 6 cts. GO TO THE NEW In the old home alone at twilight ,`- gs night (did: her robe: o'er '!`heikI!vlII_y',"- 1 un dreaming egein by the tlreligh glow - - 'rhe beeutilul dreams of the long-eo- _ \ ~ Long ago. when my ye-y'w`ud"aet _ wandered Into lowers wild and meet, When heart: were golden and Ikiel were blue A ` And lite reflected each glorious hue. When the dearest joy of the ch me earth ' ~ Wu the blush of arbutue. the olet e birth. And the deepest of all my chi dleh woes was watching the bright petals tell {tom the ' -us-A Ah, 1 know run well. for my thoughti will umy, Al I sit alone in the shadow: guy, . . , Though the nrbutun blossoms and Iweetbriet IIFAIIII Pale in the blossom"! blushing knew ' And its lea! overowing with team of dew. The violet aobs as she droopl her head, You loved me not as you loved the defd." cu LU ' IIC IlL'I3n I don't draw to no two spot. Inth' hope of completln a ush." uny..n __ 4.|.-I... 1- n...a gluing nlnr I Rambling o'er mossy ruin: my _ V Is the eglnntine of the years, and today Its bright thorn: gleam in the autumn Inn. But its blossoms have fallen one by one. Eros, ' - . . That every petal is gone from the rose. -3030 VmB. Speece in.8crantonV'1`r_ibune. '`"'`'I*\` [ll UUIUPICEIIJ Q IIIIBIJI ` Well. my the ry is that there ain't 00 galoot so low down but it you treat him with kindness an keep him close _ herded he will show the good that : in him. Did I ever tell you aboutold i man Haines an Gus Minnick? Wen. 5 " toes to prove what I wuz a-saying Old man Halnes lived out on Blue, creek apiece above wherelt etnptleu . IID tough" Ash Hollow. wherei~-_ip{`oey,3el`1" _ the Sioux. He wusiJeIt[tbo_ tithe; benevwent old `duck Vthint.-.-.et 1 into the Platte. oppoelte tljie HOW ow MM um Pan kt fwuiniir. N. HHINES |[N(}[. ~ A , 193: mm` ` mm; uIi"hII"Tole woman '. `wu: . worse : he wus._ V eqd` o::erou,a.iman=e . ;Hiinea* poniI'~ eniwur hikin-- `em `when - they met `up with ja crowds or inquirin ~ strangers who were driftin back down Praiifie Dog into after an on- successtui pursoot of some north bound boss thieves. The boys had too many brands in their bunch. an `one or the strangiers reckernized Blakey. so they tied their feet under their horses bellies -an `headed ter the nearest" tim- ber. They give Biakey the iirst swing- in an wuz adjustin the grass rope to Gus neck when old man Huines comes up with his biggest boy. Arch. They had been hot an close on the trail all the time. " - Vivllvn \o up many :1 v ocv o-:-u ` `h-y. says J15 iniui. 'youhain t V goin to hang that poor boy. air you? `I reckon I` am. says the boss stran- gler. cheertui an gay. e `I don t believe it he! s. a man to hang him. says Haines. on jest give him up to me, an I'll take him back to the ranch with me an surround him with moral inuences an keep him out of bad company. He's got good in him. an I'll bring it out of him an make a g useful citerzen of him. Q 14 __,.,__ As soon as they explained who they wuz an Identered their ponies. the boss strangler allowed that there wuzn t no reason why the ceremonies shouldn't perceed. an be throwed the other end or the` rope over the limb. n n-vn__ 9 ___'.. 4.1.- -I.: ...__ c...`.. I...x..M. nsoo vcwvuuq f-":Well, `then!-on.g-an. short of it wuz that he begged so loud that they let Minnick go. an old man Haines started back with him. On the way he talked to Gus like a father an told him how wrong it wuz to rustle cayuses when he could get em himself by workin honust fer em. He made Gus a pres- ent of the ten that `he had stole as a starter an oered him good wages to -work on the ranch. (tf!___. ,_4_n; 1.---.- A-.. L_.- _.-_..u__ `._ ion 'oi f nitely'_7 i nous," uses of Iv v--1 v- v--w ------- Gus staid_ there fer two months. an then he got inter a argyment with the biggest boy about breakin a colt an slot him up an lit out. Old man-Haines wuz real provoked about it. but he. "jumped on a horse an put out- after_ Minnick an overtook him at Box El- der. As soon as Gus seen him he throwed down on him with a Winches- ter. but the old man told h_im to behave himself an quit monkeyin with reo arms. ' ' `I sh d_ think you'd seen the evil of- them sort of actions after klllln Hen- ry, he said. V ' `Did I kill him? -says -Gus. `Yes. you did." says the old man as severe as he knowed how. `An I-sh d think you'd be ashamed of yourself. I -don't `wonder you felt as it you dldn t want to look me in the face after sech a_ctlons. All the same. 4 I don't want you stragglln of! where you'll get lnter bad comp ny, so you jest come right back home with me. We've got to have j them colts broke. an we re short hand- s edlnow. ' _ ' Well. Gus knowed how torgivin the old man wuz. an he went back. an they all avoided the subjec of Henry. 80's not to hurt his feelln s. He staid on a month longerg `an then because the old woman burned his cakes fer him he hrained her with the skillet. The other boy told him that that _wuzn_ .t no way to do. an Gus got mad /an mas- sacreed him with the butcher knife an then set tire to the housean lit out. ULIMAJ uvla tutu UV Inslv an an noun --w vv--an When old man Haines_ got back and found out what had happened. he said that it wuz enough to make a man lose patience. but he wuz sot in his ways, an be aid that he would make a good citizen of_Gus_ in spite of hill an high water. So he went out after him again an coaxed him bhck. an everybody saldthat Guswas a changed man from that time forward,` as meekas Moss` an honust as the day. 11:... AI. -_ In__l.. LI.__- A.-_-A.I.-_ ..-0l| `"71;-e they uvm Eere together yet? inquired the post trader. with some In- terest. " ' V nu n,Il I,_,I 4! A,.I, _ I_,,-._ ""5563 old builwhaeker took a large chew of tobacco before replying. Then _he said: "I wuz hopin you wouldn't. ast me that question.` becuz _it might .seem to mllertate against my the ry.. The truth is that the old man sent Gus to town one day. an Gus come back `with a jug of whisky` fer himself. but he forgot the old man's esmokin ter- backer. The old man said that it show-T ed selshness an ingratitude on `Gus 1 part. an be allowed that he must be poor material anyway. an be had done the best that he could with him. but that settled it. They wuz standin by the woodpile at the time, an `the old. man had the ax. I come along.;)estin:_ time to assist at the funeral. . .14-1.-an n _ H ___._ "'-M ";".;;:;. '2;..ra;;"o1a view. I reckon that Gus Jest forgot." -0hlcago Record. ; - ~ A Good Advice; and to Follow. A Extreme worry comes from trying to bear all the cares oi a lifetime at once -instead or letting each '_day s evil be sulcient unto` itself.` It we could live our whole life in a few hours. it might be `consistent to think it all over in one night. There is no past. there is no` future. for doing or accomplihing. The present. time alone is for action. and theorder isand always will -be one thing at a "time. This one thing must" he done on the instant in whatever cir- cumstances ewe nd ourselves. T ,_4 ._- -n.`___Iu.n 1.- a-...._aI..I -0 lilllllllll-lL`I=lI WV Ill-IVA Vlususinvu Not that we should be to ;-getful of the past or careleos of the `future. The `former has been our faithful school- master;_the- latter holds for us the is- sues of life. That `we may act` intelli- gently in the present It is es_sent!al.for us to lookforward leoalur as the future can reasonably be wredlcted. but notvto worry. " ; ' A x A .1-...'..-- -4 An-anon-mob I\n fnnnn uuy. _ N ` A degree or anxletyfmay be founded 3 upon facts that point almost inevitably ` to future dlmcultles. _but a. large part of the forecast of trouble is groundless, as 13` proved where things do not turn out gnu expected. Overauxlety ls _.u'l- -wayy crosslufbrldgee before they are ` will stay awake -all trouble from the: to-` I had been` in Paris for a couple or months, living at a family hotel and knocking about at my leisure, when I made the acquaintance of Felix Duchene, as he called himself. He was a man of about 30. and-. though a Frenchman from head to heel. he spoke English fairly well. He was not a. man whom I should have select- ed asra friend, and `yet there was a something about him which interested me. He had traveled extensively. met with many adventuresand was a good talker. I came to know him as a man of nerve. and courage. and,` though I feared he would turn out to be a para- site, nothing of the sort happened. He seemed to have plenty of money of his own and never asked for the loan of a tranc. V `ms rnuow srnueemn rumonsm AND 7 OUT MY ABM. yet _met. ~We found a rough crowd indeed, and the evening was` not half over when a burly big fellow deliber- ately pickedaquarrel with me.` I was giving him the worst or it when he drew a knife and rushed upon me. Duchene. who was standing quietly by. knocked the scoundrel senseless. and, to my surprise. we were not molested by the half dozen friends of the vic- tim who had been urging him to n- ish me. I came to know later on that the-whole thing was a put up job, but I looked upon it then as a brave action on the part of my acquaintance and gave him my gratitude and friendship. I had never questioned him as to why he was in Paris. where or how he lived or what" aim he had in life. and he had never dropped .a hint. I had a secret belief that he was a gambler and a sharper. but to me he was as straightforwz-.rd_ as `could be hoped for. About two '-weeks after the event at the dance hall Duchene told me his story. or apart of it. He was a pro- fessional gambler. or had been up to a few months before he met me. Then . his eyesight had gone back on him and -he had been obliged to. `abandon the business: ' I had observed that -he` was nearsighted and had been obliged` `to, . favor his eyes. V ' A` again `(t\'AIIl\ Iu\1\A`.I|g rung 'l\....I...-... up uwuuvu I . had known Duchene for three or four weeks when we vlslteda dance hall on one of the outer boulevards one night-. The place was a resgort for tough men and bad women and prom- ised a phase of Parisian life I had not Qt v V. uacw van A year before meeting me Duchene and a partner had roped" a rich young. fellow into a game and skinned him out of what would be about $50.000 in American money. They were then oc- cupying rooms in a certain house he in-, dicated, and, fearing trouble from the victim. who had declared himself de- frauded. the money had been hidden under the door. Trouble came. Both men were arrested. and.lwhile Duchene got a -year, in prison. the other man died of pneumonia while waiting his trial. On leaving prison Duchene at once took steps to secure his money. but found the door in possession of an ar- tipclai flower maker who -held a lease. _L__I ___.I " to go halves I think i. should have look: `_of rcas1ir;etf.:::n"a.b3!!91rers.. ani.jto.q Iluwlua pavvvvo \rn\- up swung- T1] 15"" "g" E madeiof sea shells or rinds of fruit "cut 4 e place can not 9 entered and in halves. Later appeared cups of, searched. and the $50.000 still rested . beneath the door of the front room. It met?! . lacquer and chum would take 31.500 to buy the lease and `*9 the P '1 be mad? *9 `P" . oust the ower maker and another $500 31 f 3" and 1x'y' and me. "mat to put in a stock of something to throw p"`'.?' mt`5' mb`d Wm? the 3` tisan s most consummate skill. are now the police on` the scent. Ducpne could , _ _ not raise the money. no, bad be. yet commonly employed in their manufac- ture..-Baltimore`-Sun. met a man he dared trust. His propo-_ sition to me was that I furnish the $2,- 000 and receive, $l0.000 of the hidden money as my. rward. ` Had he offered The Number. 4. There are four cardinal points. four winds. four quarters of the moon. tour -eaiupon ,3 3 "plaht'_ and thrown 11; seasons, tour gures in the quadrilie, over. but [n oeng me 3 gjgth pox-tjon ' 011!` Of arithmetic. four SUNS Of he seemed to show good business tact! 03753 f011!`.ii1.N"`-el`8 10 the 50"? '0? It was a big return on the investment---! 1988 for furniture. most animals soon ',_i~tour"le gs, the dead are placed between I big enough to satisfy auy'~one-and I A b A gave him a. favorable `answerat once.- 2 9011!` P1811138. the Drisoervbelween 9001" . 3., had Q;-_gdy__ gounded the newer? ?`walls._ Wehave four incisor and four maker as to the lease. audit-myvvmon-Vs! 0333119 tetlh and our forks have four .93. was raised theipapers could be=sig'nj.. ilironzs all. animals. Wheh butchered .ed threeidayssiagter. s-l: had-favv.80l1 silt: Into -1-'9|1'l`..;qnaIteI`83` the violin. e 0 s1reateI;t~*ot"ail?v`string instruments. has . .s.nuenenie_'4 K 0 0 tent vofeykind j1I'~_I " = s poker i For centu- ; how do the 5; when it : than to co! nan nan lnnu Gull -than N How do they know v Ere the north wlndIblow,- - Bringing the chill and the ice and now; .. Why do they never foolishly wait, Flirting with chance and telnptinxhtct `Ah. the robin: no ` `nun some men are! They take no chance: nor fool around, Thinking, because today in hit, ` That tomorrow good cheer will ltill abound, HO-In mama. a nun Inn! nnl-n_. MCI! vvluuuavw _.vv$`1p|nIn\au yr... 3.... -.,v_.._. With new a woe not cue- _ ` Thinking because things come their way In clusters today` . . Good luck has settled with them to stay! The robin proceeds to,et out of the wet ` While the Inn 1|" hithfully shining yet! --Chicago Times-Herald. The red gentleman with the feathers in his hat and the telegraph wire. bracelets became too. importuuate in his demands for cigarettes. and as he had been detected in the act of appro- priating a wooden handled- skinning knife, valued $1.50. ve -minutes be-. fore the post trader walked around the counter and kicked him energetically out of the store and halfway around the hay corral. It spoke volumes for the post trader's activity that he was able to do this, for it is no easy matter to keep within kicking range of a prop- erly scared Crow Indian for-the di- tance that he covered. to say nothing ' of performing the act itself. There- fore the post trader was breathless when he returned and had to lie on the counter with his head on a bolt of pink stripedlcalico to recover himself. The old bullwhacker. who had been watch- ing the race from his seat on a nail keg. with a grin on his wrinkled ma- hogany visage. -7 complimented the ad- vauce agent of` commerce on his achievement. ' n n . , 1 A vuwu I uIuI.w `In How cunthoytell when tludullct To Inna; lrlnnlo nnnn and In kahuna Viiahsus _ME N. v`ere-"to li:di`g`hed.7nd i v'eeIx l:'1ht>- i or the" oor wonld'"b'e`tn our possession; 1L_L ..n..|_.. 4.1.- 4...- -; __ _.A.__n'__1 ' down for a look, and my eyes rested upon a man lying on the broad of his 1 I had him out in a second. It ` `seemed to me as if I had five times ` back. hesd:;s_ee g_ied_% H l)ig-`.=asj-a`=-. 1 'could`=- wa. to thebhotel. I"-had so behelped room, and I fell upon the-bed. dressed as l. was; and was instantly. asleep.~ I had been asleep two hours when I awoke as keen "as a fox. The ei!ects-.of"the drug had vanished, and- as I got out of bed to. undress I found my legs all right again. I was fully undressed and ready to get between the sheets when my ear caught a_ sound from under the bed. I at once stooped my ordinary strength. and, though the , fellow struggled furiously and cut my arm with a knife. I grasped his throat sand choked him till he lay like one - dead. It was only when ! had struck '-a light that I found the intruder to ' be Duchene. He had come in through `the window which opened on a ve- g randa. He had been working at the -lock of my trunk when I made some V I noise on awakening, and he had rolled himself under the bed. He had come for that bag of gold. and he had meant to do for me if necessary. 7 _I-_:.-_.I LI__ I_.__.. A... _._II._ _.___._ thy-ere: kindest: ms-ensues new fit;. put me `a `cab: "and j the. driver I should `never havefound I alarmgi the house, police were `sent for, and _the fellow was taken 0 away. but it was a good hour before ; he recovered his senses. His story was entirely false, and he had put up a job to rob me. It was my testimony i that gave him five years in prison. but after it was all over and he had been 1 sent away I was a bit sorry for him. % He could tell a good story. had a laugh ' which made you laugh with him. and - few men or his class in Paris or else- _ where could order a better dinner; He . was not a grasping man. withal. He had planned to rob me of $2.000 where ` another would have raised the figure A _ Q? IIIIA ---v-..v. :- The Gentle Art at Letter Writing.` _; The classic age of letter writing. like i that of chivalry. is gone, although no ` Burke has been found yet to utter its : splendid funeral oration. Correspond-n ence on business. h_urried notes contain- ; lug invi*ations to dinner or acceptances thereof-these are the missives which fill the bag of the letter carrier. The , love letter. we presume. still holds its ` sway. and, if we are to judge from the , revelations of breach of promise cases, ' E it is full of sugary sentlmentallsm as i in the days of Lydia Languish. But I the letter as it has passed into litera- i ture. the letter whose highest claim to ;_ he treated as art is that it conceals art._ 3 the letter as written by William Cow- I Fper. or Oliver Goldsmith. or Horace ' Walpole. or Miss Burney-that charm- ; ing eplstle intended only for the alIec- * Ftionate perusal of friends and yet `of 1 1 such value to the historian of life and manners-shall we say that it has dis- appeared trom the busy modern world. killed by the railway and the steam- ship and the thoughts that shake man- kind? As least. it is now buta rare product, a fragile ower scarcely able p to maintain itself in our altered social I soil. ,_ 1 A ,, 1, ,L_ ,, - -L -..1..I. V150 ` ; Correspondence from being a cherish- \ ' ed art and solace has in our day tend- 1 ed to become what is called in slang a * "grind. It is "snippety. like the 3 cheap newspapers, a sort oi` bits" or ! cuts. giving hints which require to be lled out. only that the receiver has hardly time for that mental process. Truth to tell. a great deal of our letter I writing is boredom. the source of lrrita. !tion and weariness to those whoare , called on to undertake it.-`London "i Spectator. `From Fingers to Forks. In olden times ngers served well .enough to convey food to .the mouth. an_d a divided gourd was an acceptable drinking vesel. but when fashionable aspirations seized our ancestors they `scorned these implements of nature. and even the _Pacic islanders pulled; their hair. of which they had a.gener- i ous abundance. in their anxiety to `de- visemore seemly methods. They final- ly manufactured forks that looked like skewers. and -out of the bamboo they manufactured `knives. ' The` Indians. proverblally slow in adopting modern `ways. still eat without knives or forks. although they have permitted the use of spoons. These were first made of` shells "and the rinds of gourds. Later . handles were inserted. and. having. passed numerous stages. knives. forks and spoons have reached the present elaborately ornamented kinds now in general use. V I wuz suthen of a foot racer myself when I wuz younger an Iimberer than what I am now. he said. but I dunno thatl `ever seen -the time that I could have done better than that. I'm re- gardin it purely as a physical feat. however. I'm not sayln that you showed. a strikin amount of jedgment. When Young Man Afraid 6! His Breechclout has got you knotted up with green rawhide an the squaws are xing the re fer the grand barbecue. mebbe you will regret your pernishus activity an cuss the day that you hum- bled the proud spirit of the noble In- jun warrior. Is this shebang insured?" (A17--- ___..... ..---..._ I-.L.._.I--...\;l 4.. .....II eh lull use 0 Thecup is probably the most ancient 1 of all domestic utensils. Its earliest form `was simply the half closed hand i or the folded leaf. Then followed cups , sea shells rinds of fruit `cut . ~ in halves. Later of i metal, and china. centu-'; rlesfthe cup has been made the expres- ; sion of and and the most metals. combined with the - skill. are now commonly employed manufac- A EN ENDORSE rr It in not a matter of everyday occurrence that clergymen talk ' about or permit their names tobe used in connection with a prepara- E tlon. ' It but goesto show that they deem their * obligationvlndeed heavy to have their endorse- tion published. Powley s Llquied Ozone is not a patent medicine and that why so many of the Canadian pastors give it their recommenda- tions. Then it is marvellous in its power to cure disease. Rev. Dr. Parker, formerly presi- dent of the Conference of the Methodist Church in Canada says, I have tested your Ozone and have pleasure in bearing testimony to its excel- lent curative properties. Signed. Rev. w. R.1>ARKER, 13.1). ls Eulogized by Members of the Fe Methodist Conference ' in Canada Pow1ey S Liqied Ozone is $x.oo a large bottle, 1 soc. small size. All druggists, or from the lab- : omtofies of the Ozone Co., of Toronto, Limited. ` .1! l\_II__...__ QL 'l-..-..A._ i Z`"c'3ig33} EC, E-335:3.` Lumps of Gold are not found in every coal bucket, but every ton of coal contains grains of saving which canin time be accumulated into a snug sum. Pnoreoal burns out quicker and leaves more dust and cmders; If we save you 10 per cent. on your coal bi=l. isn't it worth your whnle? We think we can do it. 3'. G-. SCOTT, 151-- an -h__I__ an` ---__..n_ EPPS S60GOAl EPPs s`"cocoA| as-nu n..-.-u.- ---- -.4--p .4-.-a-w.~-a .._~--. \.-v V You was never introduced to me, rejoined the post trader. I ve got a half inch of callous o_n the soles of my. feet. an I comeinto this country from the headwaters. of Bittercreek along or J .* W. Hancher an Ed Pheizietton an the rest of them desperadoes. `I've got relatives by marriage among the Crows. and Ogallalas. an I've drunk more al- kali water an eat more dog an bufalo berry than any white. man this side of` the big Mizzoura. I didn't bring my ` outt in here in the spring of '99. What_ did you expect me to do-give that greasy. tin tagged coyote my stock of. cigarettes to keep him good tempered? u A .. In ____ I_-.1 __-__ ___--I_i_lA. I...--.. Has purchased the preuuses occupxed bv Chas. Mc- Guire, `just out of the Victoria Hotel, and has ed up business in all kinds of Black- emithing. oneehoein , etc. All work will bedone pmmptlv at the lowest gure. Remember the place. A Near Market Square. `Vs/rn- McLarty, |Mter six o c|ockTo-night] Tl-`IE BELL TELEPHONE vnwtws LIIIUIFIED ozone jco`MI=ANv's I vALu.A'roa AND APPRAISER. H NDLES `ALL KINDS or AUCTXON | A SALES. . .; .." * .....,- . .., ....., ulesin his hands. ' H'Ordon left at "Tm: Anvaxca office will -be agcqoaeam L. 1': B0, A X11111; in n An msnvarn p pr an i In no =-wnder sdicin farmers "eel like thirty canes, when they h.-do to guvthar. mounr, "par hutidred, on z-at`l~wVav freiehctu Putt `land. ivhll `ha Ame-riom farmer at Port..H.o,nroo[can get thaanme service e me Old Rename Auctioneer | I-`Anni stock sALE_S Wllzit Rev. Dr. Parker says GRATEFTUL ' j00Ln."c>R'I'I%1~:G BEITJXKFAST TRY THE NIGHT SERVICE. Ohog l;nnVlop-Sb. 'Barrle. 4;-ly Distinguished everywhere for Delicacy of Flavour Superior Quality. and highl Nutritive Properties. Spec y Rratetul and comforting to the nervous and dye; eptic. Sold onl in `l.4.l`h- tins. lnhnllnd .TA `R29. \l\lI.l.lL\Ia llll-Ia UV 01.10 IJOL VVIAD 1-4-lb. tins, labelled J A Es EPPB & 00., Ltd, Homoeo- tgic Chemists, London. Eng- an . and every night. until six a.m. EL"."'rs:Bo CLEANLINESS. 5 'rAui(."' - and Repairs, gg to BEDSPRINGS. % LMATRESSES. PUMPS, W. H._Bjl_NKER, 6:. CO. Wholesale and Retail Manufacturers . Long Distance Ratesiare approxi- mately One-Half the Day Rates. No charge for making appoint- menu to talk" at a specied" time BRADFORD STREET. --a.~...-vv- cu -v-r ---- cvww ----._.v---V. An If you had you; wouldn't hav `torfuted his friendship. returned the- old bullwhacker. As if is I've. got an idea his heart is bad. an he won't come up see you no more. An lnjun has got his teelin s the same as a white man has. an I reckon you would git hostile if any hombre booted you from blazes to breakfast because you ast him fer the means of soothlu your nerves. _You- injered that Grow in a sensitive spot. Ike." ` '