5-ly J v satisfactorily is by using Wadsworth, Howland 6.: (30.9: ARE NEEDED EVERY DAY TEE TOWN/OF BARBIE. MONEY *1'o jLTOAI_`J. l.__j_ A. I._ , HA (Both late of J. Henderson.) ALSO.A FULL` LINE OF `MAY. 9. 1901. V`IIlI BARRHE. upv-Iv u--\- Say. I'm off to mammtrat once. And before he could declarewhat he was in earnest about she was running swirtl; up the pier, shouting back to him, You naughty boy, I'll bet you a box of chocolates I am first at the house, sir. ' V `I-_- Y'Y-_.A. 1-.. AL. __I-. S___.._I_J.__ `L 'dian service. t"1\E;.:y~'t1rt was the only daughter of the widow of Colonel Hart of the In- X? T KICIOVV bl-lilnll None but the brave deserve the fair, and you aren't brave. You know you are not. sir. V _,'s `-13- 'n-__...: 41_-... _.I_n_._..I_.. avast. scion vi 0Jh, if you put it thatway 1211 really `have to. retire, for I couldn't survive the punishment. How do you `know I'm not the brave man ? '7-11:3{v."'aE3} Dalton, stop right where you are. I've told you often -enough` that I like you. You have been -my -friend and playmate ever since I was a little girl. and I` shall always like you as a friend. No. sir; I won't listen to any lovemaking. 1- won't marry` you, slr,-and that's the end on t.' I wwill marry no one but a brave man`, and I don't love anybody. and- But. Mary. surely I- There you go again, sir. If you ever mention love to me again, I will never speak to you, as sure as my name is `Mary Hart. V - llI\I_ IA --__ .. ..A. II. LI-_L .__..'- '91! .___II.- ."Don t say that. Mary! -You kI`iow_l- love you, a;nd- ` C\_I1 _, ,1-,._ _,I_,I_L __,I,____ `BIJU llaunlnluoaulavo Great. isn't 1t?".sa!d Tom. Now what would you say to uvlobster chow- der for dinner? ' `own 0-V- u-o---vs ' - Tom. you 6-mam: You have been "plotting this spree with Cobb. You` know ! date on lobster chowder." unxvvv O Vocvuu van nvwu O n-V View-on Down there last nfeelr. `Told `em we'd be down. Tried to get mother to `come. but she wouldn't step her foot {in anything `smaller than a liner. llA..A _.' . . _ . _ -.. A.-I.I0 T ..g I.--31-. can Inn. wanna-I3 unngunnnvo an-5-no 3' ounce: And you never told? I can `hardly believe it. I never know when to _be- ` lleve you. sir." ' ' IIII|n..a.l En.-A A-u---L `Lin Along Inca?` The colonel had been both soldier and business man, and when he had been killed in a jungle ght, soon after Mary's birth, he had left ms widow a comfortable income. ' out I V J VIC` 85.! Fact! Sure enough this time, ian t_ 11:, Captain Doyle? ; n'm--a. ---..- n ....c.: n..- ..I..a........ u'\"t.. us, wvualavvunga navgu ' "Fact, sure." said the skipper. `Me A an Mr. Dalton had a bit or a run down .10 Elm last. Tuesday. Tight bit of :-`weather coming game, too. ` . uvn1.-...-- vx-u.-_. .1- _-.. ..._-_ VLI.-`L VVCEIJJCL` CULUIHE l.!Ul.l..I\=g I.UUo Thomas Dalton, do you mean that "you were down here in last Tuesday's` V ` sale and never told? And you let us ' you had been detainedfln B,oa- ` A business. ? T T - T qtggight trom,Doyle," iaoth - J hbider with dreams my tapeltr ' Here in a little lonely-';'0om ' -A jlam master of earth and set, Aqd the planets come to me. `hliibldr my jxitnuto the ti:ii;` J "I bxolder my life into. the frame; Ihrolder my love thread upomthretd. The world goes by with its glory and dune; Crowns are hgrteredmand blood is shed; * I hit" nnd btoider by dreams instead. V And the only world is the world of my dreunl. And my weaving the only happiness. For what is _the world but what it seems, And who knows but that God. beyond our cuem. Elite weaving words out of loneliness? _Au-blunt Qumnnn in Rahal-(`lav Rnvhlw. the Loom or DRE3.'MS.- BVll1g Wurua Uul. Ul Auucuucans V-Arthur Symon: in Saturday Review. nvnunv nun.-up so-up uovuuvu His heart t1Tu{n"eE wildly a he felt 9. mass of that sun gold hair come into ' , his grasp. and in aimoment more they rose to the surface. `Through his salt dimmed eyes Tom saw a bit of rope and grasped it. , They had come up un- der the stern of the dory, which had swung into the current with them, and he was now rmly gripping a bit of painter which hung over the stern. I'_ A Q-_. _..l..__L-- _.-...- L. L`: IRL-S She had come to America and settled `in one or the quiet New England sea- -shore villages in a cozy cottage adjoin- ing the estate of Mrs. Dalton, who was -an old school friend. The young. peo- `ple had grown up together and had been friends ince childhood. `II-Quanluiun Vvv oaqyoa -an-5 v v 11. In a. few minutes more he hadlltted her over the side, clambered in after and was chang her hands briskly. Mrs. Hart : cries` from the beach had brought the Cobbs `to the scene, and Master Harry was running a. dory down 1 the beach to the rescue. -v-- -v- u v--- - Tom. dea-1:,` you reached the dory nrst. Kiss me, air! You wont," - A_ .LI. -_ `l_._A.__ TT-__.._I.. I.--L ..;._-L-S can \a\p-A V-ngtva av-nvv The cost varies. from 1 to 12 guineas. The former price purchases an ordi- nary article, while. thelatter is the sum paid for what is known as -a full bate tomed wig, which is usually worn by. the leading barristers on the occasion of a great `trial. It is also the kind which adorns the head or the speaker ` of the house or commons. _-,__A_-$ V -that used in the costll ta` w1gs.-Lon- VI. I'll? AJVUIIDIE VI. VVuuuJunIuo Most or the horsehal is imported. but the home product is be best and 1: don Standard. 1 on Churchyardl. a ' It would appear that certainly so \ early as about A; D. 750 spaces oti ground adjoining churches were lnclos- 3 ed and consecrated for burial, and by a 1 canon of the ninth century every grave was to be esteemed sacred, to be adorn- 3 edwith the sign of the cross and to be ` preserved from trespass and violation "` by dogs and cattle. Many churchyards have a history tar older` than the i churches which `stand in_ them, bein`g i originally places appropriated to reli- ` gious assemblies. divine service being performed there, until at length the church, was added for greater honor` and convenience. ' ` * _- .__;_.n __ - ---...I---.. 1.4. Gill` BULL V CLIIGI-AUDI ` It has been noted as a curious fact that in a large majority of cases the churchyards are on the north side` of y the church and on the north side of ; the road leading to them. There is a ; superstition among many old fash- \ ioned folk that the north side or the churchyard is less ' sacred than the rest or the consecrated ground. To be buried there..wrote Durandus, the great fourteenth century ecclesiastic. is, in the language of the eastern countries,` to be buried out of sanctu- ary. `Hence the position [was largely appropriated to the graves of suicides, unbaptized persons I and excommu- nicates.-`-Notes and Queries. P Once in the water, Mary's spirits seemed babbling `over and she was soon daring Dalton to. try a race. to a dor'y' moored a shprt distance from the beach. He seemed mluctant at first, and was sure it was too near the cur- rent.-ot the runway. but to take a dare from Mary and have her taunt him with a lack of `courage was too much for a young man of his temperament. EL- _..__ ._.- 11,313. L--.-...I LI..- I-.1;-ul- "ft"&' 11 'p}E&' in a very few minutes". Mary opened her eyes; smiled- and said. You needn't rub all the skin off my hands, sir." Il'I\I__._I_. I\'_SI (UL- I._ _II __I..I.A.'I _A.I` >v-- jg -- u u - w ~ ~ c -- Thank G'o'd! She is all right, said Tom fervently. lll'l1-..._ 5--.. ._.___ ___'.-I_-J AL- S-_._ "Aim R8; 34231;; a'a}y?s'6.t grated alongside. . . --`- ---'-_--~ -1--vv V---cu--pay-o\nu Tom Dalton. a happy go lucky young man, had inherited an independent in- come from his father and now. having passed his nals at the law school, was about to practice his profession in Bos- ton. He loved Mary Hart with -all his ' heart, but in spite of himself he could not be serious about his lovemaking,_ though bound to win her. A_S LI... IILLI- ..l_.- I__....- AI__-:- 3!` British `Barristers `Wigs. The wigs worn in English courts were formerly made. of human hair, and it ' is on record that the white hair of}: woman who lived to be 106 years old was sold for that purpose for 50. In 1827 the old form of powdered wig.-- which was somewhat of a nuisance be- . frequently required 'recurling--was su- ; cause the powder came of! and the hair perseded by the horsehair wig. \ : l\_I_ -I._-_L Ch!` `J Li...` I-..-I --: - "6i.i'31?5uE"ioB'I{{Iii;}s'iirai o . ments are made annually. A good ar- 1 n \ `ticle will last for a quarter or a cen- 1 tury, and, moreover, barristers do not i altogether appreciate new wigs, as they 3 suggest that the wearer isnew to the 1 business andeonsequently has not had much experience: ' nu.- --..;. _-..n_.. n_.;_. -I 1.- -In ...-a........ I Not Like Town Kitchens. The delicious odor of a big, roomy country kitchen only whets one s appe- _ tite instead or dulling it as town kitch-_ ens do. And as to there ;being any- thing disagreeable in dining. in the thinks of the old kitchen and its roar- ot every home_in the country. Every boy with country blood in his veins thinksuot the old kitchen and its roar- ing fire and shining pots and pans and rows or dazzling platters when he` thinks oi! home. that and the quaint lit-. tie `bedroom in the L. But the parlor, with its hundred and! one silent injunc- t tions totsnbdued convfrsjation. and p'rim :.pi'.o`pr_i_ety_.` that is; remembered .butf-as . the-gtorture chambers:-ot.s.youth. It, too. v its .:t;h8 3 my vv--$ -- v- ----- vw--rv----_- She was w-siding toward the bolt. and when but a few strokes from it, called back laughingly: Will you. swim for it, Tom? It you reach it rst, I'll-be your prize, sir." 7?- ___.. ._L._lI_!.-._ 4--L `EL-.. '44.` -n :g1 '"'sL"e' 1155' 5&1}; i-';'c1"1EIa f.'.'aory and, condent of winning the race, put her hand up to catch the gunwale, missed ` it and suddenly discovered she was out of depth and In the runway current. ~un1-...In ..|.- -..l...l .....l l...._ -1] fl`-.. In \J\oll|vII Ib&I\A ll-Q UL! .\IOl IV 1` b\Il-Oltlnllii ".l`omi she cried, and then all Tom saw was a pair of frightened upturned eyes and a terror stricken i.'9.ce-as she swepteunder the surface. A 4-- __-.Il-.-saga-`J. C... an In-an -up-`.1. wvv WU uaouvo `may Iv`-D -v-vv- . A ue predicament fora. lover who was not a brave man `and who had barely learned `to swim! Drawing a deep breath. blind to all danger and with no. thought but to` save her or die with her. Tom struck out into the cur- rent and under the surface. ' nnuu _,, a nu; oo . er for dinner`: etf;_l3 o'c1o; ;;NVou1eeothey try 3` up at? the short; `beech "by, the runway`: between , Elm` and Elm, _Jr.*? They-wou1d-tvho.t `is, the young people would, and Mrs. Hart would watch the sport fxjom the I___-I_ uncut. - up now av`-c `:-----, He was striking out aifi-e;'r her as soon as thewords had left her lips. _ ,1 __,-_-1_ ___._-I.-.1 AL. .I...._ __.1 MIDLAND--The work of erecting the building for the Steel Construction Co. is now on the way. A large quantity of machinery has arrived for the new works, and has been taken around to the site. . . .The tug Oriole was under the boat carpenters hands for a few days this week, having a new deck put `on her for the accommodation of her crew. Mr. Wm. Backer had the job in hand. ..~x.E1ghteen new members were added'to' the roll of the Presbyf tarisn church at the communion service on Sunday last-fteen, by certicate from other churches and three by pro- tession of faith. .It is understood, though, of course, no` oioial gures are obtainable, that the population of Mid- land will reach about 3,200 exclusive of Dollastown, which is, for business purposes. apart of Midland. Estimat- ing the population of Dollartown at 800. the town's `population is practically` 4,000. . . .'.rm; "City of -'1-`oronto made` her tlt trip on Monday, calling atthis port. Herrou to and time are supposed to be similar to last -year`. Capt. Alex. Cameron, her former. commander,` is 'ag_ain the`-,bridge,`of the Toronto. . . . A eet of grain laden" V-vessels arrived. 0-in .the1harbori last wok, being the amt oi the season. There fwers` ]. ryinsf239..62l them`-a--'l're .Pi-an 3 now: `my now- u And the little minx herself threw dit- cultles enough in the way by bringing him sharply to account whenever he at- tempted to ' broach the subject. She did_n't propose to love orb loved. and it she ever `could be so foolish it must. be a brave man. ' -,__#_ :I__,_-,4_ 41.- .-l.. schools, has been ill for some days and unable to attend to his duties. . . .Dr- Segfhen met with a nasty accident at she shipyard on Friday morning last. While [coming from the pattern room he tripped on the stairway, near the uottom, and was thrown to the ground. A deep gash was out in. his forehead, and he was" otherwise badly shaken up . . Miss Rebecca Oonnell died on Tuesday afternoon, after a two months lll088B from oancer.. The deceased was one of the oldest residents of Coiling- wood, lmving came here with the `family `nearly 50 years ago. [She was uni- versally esteemed by the citizens. Two. sisters, Miss Connell, of town, and Mrs. Tndhunvter, of _Toronto_, survive her.-- Enterprise. M.-. B. M. Arnold,` of .West Gv:i1lim- burY1 io recover `commission of $100` on sale of a farm. The case was heard in Newmarket on Friday, before Judge. Morgan, who dismissed the action with costs. Mr. H. Lennox, of Aurora, for plainti, Mr. T. W'.'W. Evans for de- fendant. . . .`Whst might have proved a serious accident was experienced by Mr. A. W. Yager, on Thursday last. Mr. Ysger was shooting an old cartridge out of a rie which he was testing, and on pulling the trigger, the cartridge ew back and struck him in the right eye. His eye was somewhat burnt and was quite ears for several days, but hate now almost completely recovered.- Witness. 'CoI.LI_1vGwoon-'-Mr. W. Swain left for Butt'alo_ on Tuesday, to take charge if` his vessel, the striking engineers having secured their demands. . . . Mr. E. Ward, -principul of the public ' fntory. .CREim0nE-4At the meeting of the Ween Sirncoe License Commissioners,` held in Collingwond on `Friday last,` all the l-cense holders for "the last yeargwere granted renewals, except W. H. Throop of N '.co'lscon, who _was given three months, to dispose of the stock on hand. The application of J. Foster for s `new license at Angus was retused . .- . .Chief Census Commissioner Bell, of Toronto, was here one day last week. looking over the work of some of the enumera tsrs, which/he pronounced very estis' BRAl5FonD--Mr. A. Love, of Aurora entered suit: in Newmutket court against `II I'\ In A 11 nu-no _.-.- ' BBETON--M!'. H. Leadley, of Cooke- town, secured first prize at the Beeton spring fair last week for his famous draught stallion-, Louie Gordon. Some good horses oompetedinv this close. . Meters. Robert McConnell and Herb. Strsnuvevg Wh9rh students at the 1 hiludelphi..Deutol,.;0oliee for the .iPa%;thr9'i r'-we `, 34.19-'.1"'Il sinners for the District `Garilwell Inet at Tottenhem on ~m..a.y of last week. There "were no. contra pt.itione_ or. objec- tione `pieced `before ; the borrd, and all the `applicants. were granted their .lir-eneee. H i i ` Oooxsrown--Mr. Robert. Ross and- AM-e. Wm. Rose were in Toronto on Mondaly of last. week where Mrs. Rona underwent an operation for cancer in the face... .Mre. Thea. Burns and family left last week for Alma, Aee., were they will make their home in future. We heveloat a family of "good citizeneand we trust they may have ev_ery.sncceea in their western home. CUIHITY NilTEs.% -`-c.-- --_. `-v-- up w... V-up v-- V] 131?. well! `It a woman wiil-, she will. and if she won't she Won't, and there's the end on t,', quoted Tom gay- `ly. Every dog has his day, Mary. What do you say to a sail down the bay? Let s have that mother of yours and take 8. run down to Elm Island for dinner at Cobb's farm and a bath at. the `short beach. It's a ne morning for a sail, and I'll be bound I 1l learn to swim this time. T The method of federation will be placed in this- form :-The head oce will always remain in London, and be called the Imperial Grand Chapter, and will control the entire federation. Then, in each of the branches of the Empire a dational branch will beformod ; these will be subdivided into provincial chapters, and these again subdivided with auxiliary chapters in the principal cities and towns. _In addition to these primary chapters will be formed. All these will be governed from the head oice with literature submitted from country to country. Mrs. Murray, in speaking of what had been accomplish- ed, said that such an association` could not have been formed at a more oppor- tune tims. The great national upheaval, and-the South African war, with its re- pulses_ and hard-earned triumphshave upon all women as wcllfas men the necess_ityj- `for .dee'pening patri- otic feeling andspuuitingstrength in._Em- pir'ebuilding.. g. u 13' ..._` a .Fu-st General Meeting held at Govern- ment House Yesterday. ` The Daughters of the Empire are now in a position to congratulate them- selves on the success of and the interest displayed in their first general meeting says the Toronto News. The society has been fortunate in being blessed with such an` energetic founder and Dominion President as Mrs. Clarke Murray is, intensely interested about her chosen work. It will probably be a drawback to the far-reaching qualities of the Daughters [of the Empire that its members will practically be conned to one grade of British women, the women most highly placed socially and nancially. It should never be for- gotten that though the sons of such families as these women represent are- to become the brain of `the. aqmy, the brawn and the backbone is drawn from the middle classes, and the best part or a pie is neither the upper nor the under crust, but the lling. Nevertheless, there is no doubt a large work betore these women who appear to be entering into it with great earnestness. At the first general meeting held at the Gov- ernment. House yesterday afternoon, about 250 members listened with keen interest to.Mrs. Murray's address. Mrs. Murray divided her address- under three heads. First, What we need to do as a federation ; second, How are we to do this work ;" mud, How much has already been accom- plished. In the ret place, education of the young people along the line of their privileges and responsibilities in Empire building. Another denite point of work will be the getting in touch with women, all over the Empire, India, `Austria, New Zealand, even China; tbiasociety must be a bond of union, binding together the interests 02 all these women in the one great com. mon interest. To endeavor to do this- will be a vast undertaking, when India with its many distinct races is Ollldr ered, for-instance. Two native Indian chapters. have been formed in Montreal! r-_ - - -..-_-_-a- ` Following Mrs. Clarke Murray, Mr. ' Perkin spoke on the important part women must. of necessity take in _auch work`, in rhefrenring and educating of young manhood, who will"one day be the moving forces of` the Emdire. ` .13-- A.........|...-_.. 'I3|_-1_ :_ - 4-_'__ ,_~_n 2-c v -1 -TI 73$ $5 CIT`. --. Rev. Arznatrong Bl::l':, in a :3} well- ohosen words, oxprepuod his sympathy with tho_ of tl;;e Empire. I about -May. 10th, and_`exp.ected't.o return . next October, .Mr. Joe. Monaghan will have a busy spring trade, having already contracted for. the erection of four barns forthe following gentlemen in Tecumseth :-JohIl Campbell. on con; 14 ; Harry Carter, con. 9 ; Thos. Abernethy, con. 4; Mr. Wray, near Penville. . . . Au enthusiastic `meeting of citizens was held in the World, of ce on Saturday night, when the fol- lowing programme was agreed upon for the grand celebration to be held in Beeton on May 24th, 1901:-Three. minute trot or pace, purse $40 ; 2540 trot or pace, purse $50 ;' open to all, purse 875; open run. purse $75, A lacrosse match is being arranged be- tween two league clubs for a cup valued at $25. A baseball` tournament will commence at 9 a.m., open to Newton Robinson, Thornton, Bradford, Bond Head, Loretta, Palgrave and Beeton, for which the prizes are, let $25 ; 2nd, 310. There will also be` foot. racing and a variety of other athletic sporte- and a grand concert in the town hall in the evening.--World. DAUGETER8 or 'rm._mMPm.n 'THE 'AD`\lANCE."` ..l_.- tanurn-n--gnaw `nu `r-an--, v- --'-- -0, V--'- Cashman, infant: son of Mr. and Mrs. Cash- man, aged` 1-_x-months and 4-day; ' WRIGI-I'l`-At Orillia, April :9, Elmira. wife of John E. Wright, aged 46 years. RITCHIE-At Orillia. April 29,William Ritchie, Sr., ` aged 80 years. ` THOMPSON--In Cookstown, on Sundav. April 28th, Mr. David Thompson, aged64 years. POOLE-At Bradford. on Sunday April 28th, Fred Poole, aged 27 years. CONNELL-At Collingwood, April 30th, Rebecca I\_AA_II CASHMAN-At Orillfa, on April 25. George Payne 0 1`, _A._._ ,tIJ4 ___jll_- I I I`-_I_ GIG LIUIQ all n Fl_ood- ' tide found them skimming down the bay on the natty little schoon- er Willie in a spanking breeze, `jumping at the sea like a mettlesome horse,- while Captain Doyle stood at the wheel extolling her virtues to Mrs. Hart. The young people were camped comfortably -on the deck at therwindward side of the mainmast. zll ,mon lII,_., An`O_.; _-- - -v`a--v- - -Vell, on my birthday he sent that lovely bunch of violets--peri.'ect beau- ua-.`-mna ovno ties they were--wlth a dear little note . to the eect that he had to go out of ` town, but would he represented by p these little purple clad messengers, so ` like my eyes and whose fragrance al- ways reminded him of me. I thought `the note rather nlce, she concluded penslvely, and put the owers in the ; parlor on the center table, writing back }that I had done so. Why in the world 1 was I so prompt?" she walled. . It was no more than polite." Oh, much more! My dear, it is al- { ways idiotic to go into details like that. Well, he did not go out of town, but iwas `fortunately detained and came 3 around after all to tell me so. And ` those wretched violets- _ l Surely they were all right? i "I .had loaned them to Annie to wear gto the_ Blanks dinner. Of course I ; had. to tell him that the heat of the iroom was too great. and I had put them in the lcebox. Just as he was going and I was congratulating myself onmy escapein sailed that miserable Kiri, J violets and-3 all! If he had only as` he aid he would. it would ;=ha've- been all right. Men. are so unre- r 1tb1I" .-' s n`. Story of; the Vivucionn Maid who Received the Flowers. Yes.- it was a lovely bunch of vio- lets, sighed the girl who received them, but I wish they hadnever come to me./ You see, it was this way: The man who sent them is one of those aw- fully nice. fellows who bore you to death--the kind you-feel soglad to see talking to some one else, don't you know, she ended appealingly. `CW7...-n `I ! - A _ . -_ AL. A._;.. ll ._________AI_ -1 L The only industry is codshlng, and `cod is the sole medium ofexchange. 2 The people rarely see money, and bar- ? ter is the system of trading, a quintal rot cod being the unit of value. The 3 needs of the sher folk are only" sup- rplied by the itinerant , trader, his. schooner being laden with provisions, - clothing and shing appliances. Thus have these people` lived for generations. : They are ignorant, for the means of education are nonexistent, the children being content with what satised their , fathers. The common objects of every- ;day life are unknown to them. They , have neither horses nor cattle. Only a_ few of the older folk who have ven- ; tured south have any knowledge of : these things. - l'I'!I.-._- _..- __ __._.l.._ ._..1 ;_I_.___A____ _, . There are no roads and therefore no , vehicles. Travel is by boat during ~ the summer and over the ice oes dur- ' ing the rest of the year. The few let -ters for the clergy and others who can read are conveyed to the settlements by dog teams during the winter, and, save for the fortnightly visit of the mailboat during the period of open navigation, 3, steamer is never seen by the residents. TITILI. _.__-I. .._____I__ A., ,!--n,I, A I, -__v - v--~_`._....-uu With such - marvels as electric tele- graphs. telephones and electric light they are of course unfamiliar, and their standard of Intelligence is best indicated by stating that it is not uni usual to nd a justice of the peace who- cannot write his own name.-Cham- hers Journal. i7e'e]I tl:'erE;I:;.:.;}mpathet- ically replied her auditor. llTI"l-II -_ ._-_ C. Where Misery, squalor, Hunger and Cold Rule In Newfoundland. Misery, squalor and wretichedness, accentuated by an almost ceaseless t struggle with hunger and cold, are the portion of the inhabitants of the * North Shore, in Newfoundland. l Their little hamlets are perched in the ; rifts in the almost unbroken hills, and the erce storms sweep the surface almost to their doorsteps, while` for a seven months of the year their coast 1 is blockaded with ice and they are cut on: from all communication with the outside world. A MAN AND HIS Vi0LETS. % Aenxrs, M - - - BARRIE. The GFIRNEY FOUNDRY /CO., Limif;ec},' Toronto, Winnipeg, Vancouver, : CCC CCUCCCCCCCCCU`. "'c}.}}'1T. -: --vv -.__ ---..- ._--_- And I've known 5'01; all these years, and--but I won't have it brought up again, and there's an end on t, s1r."' IITTYAII .....III IT` _ _..-_.___.. :11! ;.I.- "THE FRENCH" SHORE." wilI melee dollars worth of difference in your fuel bills--is Veasigl. and quicker to regulate -and o'ers'comfort, conveniences and Cooking cer. tainlyunot found `in any other range. Its improvements are patented features exclusively its own.- Sold by ' ADVERTISE m & CO., Why burn more fuel than nee 3 la}: Sup with the (lisadxvan `f 811 style ran e i - =Th_8 new g n your 1th*>n3 _IMPERIAL FOXFORD| Barrie is beautifully situated on a picturesque `lP- Overlooking Kempenfeldt Bay. an arm Of Lake Simcoe, nine miles long and from one to three miles broad, and one of the prettiest bays in Canada- in summer boats ply daily to and from neighboring summer resorts and parks, The population of Ba?` "50 i8 7.009. Streets and sidewalks are rst class and handsome residences are numerous. Streets, public buildings and dwellings are lighted with gas or e169` The waterworks and sewerage systems are very ecient and provide spring water. good dfa-5"" age and reliable fire protection in every part of the Coin. Barrieiis a railwav centre for Central and Northern Ontario. Thirteen passenger trains arri" and depart daily`. The postal service is all that be desired 3 "thirteen mails arrive daily; the! " prompt collection and delivery thx Jughout th town. A There are eifht schools (one Separate) em ployin] thirty-one teachers; twelve churches. ' weekly newspapers, one commercial college. eV_`Y day il market day; machine shops. planing mills, 8"" 1 nIille.savr mills, marble cutters, bicycle works. b3` builders. tannery, breweries._ten butcher shops. !'_" reasonable rates, threeliverlu ' hundries; onecresmery and all other mod? Stones are numerous and carry f_ goods. eomP*55 " a " ' in acity. Telo8P" lIl%l`EI I\I &RI`o Private funds to loan at 5 per cent. on farm PP" pertv. -Terms to suit borrowers. No connoctmn with any loan company. Apply personally or W letter to HARRY MARR .,I.. n A notfa` jfarmers .A.1:t_ention. BUGHANANXPENSIUNE Tom Dalton, If there ever `was-' well,'I knowiv there wasn t. And I feally began to think you were serious, sir. But mother never would venture out in that crazy knockabout of" yours; Wouldn't it be jolly? I'd love to go. H11. .1- -11 _.I_.l-L _I.___;_ LL- I___-_I__I_-__L Spring. Beautiful Spring. READY MIXED PAINTS Garden Tools, Lawn Mowers, Lawn Rakes, Rubber Hose, Etc VANn.t.~A. for ice cream. for instance; Baum: Powmm, for cakes. One is a drug. of course ; the other a chemical": and there are still othcrs-SPICES of all kinds. cream of tartar, etc. The best. lace to get drugs is at a_ DRUG STOR . The drugg-ist knows more about them than other people. We keep.a good drug store. Come and ask us about Kitchen Drugs. MDN-K~MAN 8 DRUG STORE oz DUNLOP-ST. BARRIE. I `Drugs and Chemicals In the Kitchen. Now is th time for house cleaning, and the only. way you ean do is .Ip I the only Pure Paint on the market. Sold only by Itvis all right about theknockabout. She is `high and dry for a new coat of copper paint. Captain `Dpyle has his _new schooner Willie and told me this morning he should run down to Elma come ood tide. What do you say, Mary? And-you know I was in ear} nest and-- u__ _Aa ;, , -,,, , *_. an