Ontario Community Newspapers

Northern Advance, 9 May 1901, p. 7

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

LATE OF ORO. Phone 55. . 5:.` CO. 'a'Ah'nF:1 ' we 0 18-W Are a sfsecualtv. and pa;-ties intending _to. have sales, will consult tlneur own nntcrests by placmg their gale: in his hands. M ' -n . - Jv.- -- -uuvc In and unuusu E.'0rders left at Tun Aoynncz oice on-"his red-' dnoe. Spruce Cottage, will be promptly uteuded to. up . .- R. B E` . THE mo RELIABLE AUOTIUNEEH G. R. FORDA {mxnnxcs Am. mrms orr AUCTION 1 _ 3 A L ES. `Will pay for Will Form and postage to any part of Canada.` ..... ll` - ` PW Y0? $100.00 with th'e`-O? 333231. and have it doubled in :2 years. beside receiving during the in- terval 6 /, per annum paid to you every six monthl? In other words, for your $zoo.oo you will receive ll interest $66 and a lump sum of $200. makint a. grand total of $266. V..__ _. 7---- Aninvestment safe as_gpvernni_ent securities and much more protable, realnzmg th_e mvegtor an equiva- lent to :5 per cent. per annum. simple Interest. For printed matter and further information call on TE NA NT--Why pay rent. when, omluch all month! payments, you can become your own - lord ? nu have the choice of rcpayin at a monthly rate of $1.20, $1.50, or $1.90 for eac $zoo.oo bot- rowed. I 816 UK YOU! 11 _ Blew}: WiIl`F0rms can be had at. V rnedvance ffice i wooosfocx, ONTARIO,` Calls attention to the Special Facilities obred to Investors and Borrowers. 95 Dunlop-St, Ross Block, Barrie. The onuarao Permanait % Buding and Loan Association Make Your Will. Telephone :5. SEIIt)c;: -Flower Seeds. Vegetable Seeds, Plants and Bulbs. WM. TAYLOR CUT FLO\VlRS-Roses. Carnations. Violets, etc, fresh every day, Bouquets--Button- hole. Hand or Corsage. Funeral Tokens in any designs. \VRGFTAR ,W_{`nInn.- (`Trina and "r...A..- ;{i;;'a;'i'sIT' ""'` } VEGIETAB ES-Cclery AM-nu- (`-.LL-. an Du FARM STOCK SALES Tana: MARKS Dzemus COPYRIGHTS to. Anyone sending a sketch and descrigtlon may quickly ascertain our opinion free w other an invention is prob ably atentable. Communica- tions strictly condent . Handbook on Patents sent free. Oldest a ency for securing atents. Patents taken` t rough Mnnn as . receive special notice. without c arge, in the -Af4gAA!.Qf HAAAAAAXAAAA ,v---_--_--- - -__---_-- A handsomely muatrated weekly. Largest cir- culation of any scientic ournal. Terms, 83 A year: four months. 81. 80 d by all newsdealers. Illlllll n n- ---_ . |I_--- u__c. "'i"Fi E PUBLIC--Why . noney? 6oc. a month nlan-.1 Zvjvjgjaq SEQTREAS. BARRIE L CAL BOARD. 1:-tl SEED STORE year : IOU! 1110113118. 51. 5010 Dy NI DBWIGOSIOPE. UNN & l}o.3m~=-M New jgtk Brunch Ofcb625 F St.. Washington. Evenings at residence, 67 Owen-St. PCCIGC `HOUICG, WIEHUUD cuarge, LII LLIU Scientific Hmerican. I I._-J_A-.-n-I- III.`-Au-41:4` 1n4.I-I- .7 an-.-as-A gul- any ucsi '11 `. :GETAB'i'.x:s-ce1ery, Crisp and Tendetf: Lettuce. Cabbage, Parsnips, Beets, Carrots, etc. E`. DONNEL," [`.'l"DDAe uAnnrn- r.-`as- ..--__ FLORIST AND SEEDSMAN, ' Ann I! use nInn`nn_Q5 GO TO THE NEW L.i1~.7nL ' annuozvnnn, 155 Dunlop-St., Barrie ' promvuy IKIODGCCI I0- I G. R FORD. .; un. u.u....- nu-.. .....--- .. .. _.__- The angel was looklnw at th-e canvas Spread upon the `easel. It was 8; jum- ble of huge forms. for the painter was to represent upon it a great allegory of humanity entitled The Triumph of Life. Why are you not at work?" the stranger asked. The_ painter stretched his armswvide with a de- spairing gesture. It was hopeless and helpless. It meant Want. desire. pov- erty. agony, supplicatlon. all blent into one. a moment. I have a master}! he said. inwhose gallery are the models of all the greatest works of the "World. Nothing is missing. I have come -to give you his invitation to paint in it. The painter lifted his head eagerly. There was a question upon his face. It is agwide gallery. the angel went on. with four wings. .In these wings have sat all the great artists of all times to do their labor. In it.they The angel regarded him pitifully for have received their rst `inspirations. from the great art ideal of which they were the interpreters. There Michael Angelo brought his rough stone to set. free its angelic forms; there came Bee- thoven, its harmonies of form and of color hymning themselves to him in 8Dlend.id music. Thither came Raphael t0 Lraze upon the glorious hues and in the peace and beauty of its aisles`. to_ Paint the delicate loveliness of the Christ child. In its alcoves sat Keats and Shelley, gazing till its . `various `mull rang from their souls into a full and fragile voice of song. There they framed those sweet harmonies which, unheard. were sweeter; All these men have learned in this great gallery. Today the masters sit in it" and striving to interpret and. in Wing their all to the world. to Show toothose to whom admittance" is forever denied. because they have not *9 Souls to appreciate this art. a little DOI'tlon of the enduring beauty or the collection." ' Y I Luuugu IV u.u -.n.a.......... Just then a gure:-rvvhite and shining, drifted down through the open sky- light and stood beside him. The paint-. er raised his head. He knew that the visitor -was an angel, for he had seen. angels in his dreams. He clasped his hands and knelt at the angel's feet. and the tears were still on his face. __, _L .LI__ -___`_~ Bug, u1;. J-A av 13....-~\.~, - `.1 -w~vv He bowed his head in his hands again, and his` shoulders -moved as though with sobbing. ` `I'_-..A. L`-`(so-\ n Rn-1-Inn 111h`fn I111!` "|`VIlI\lV agugu. o ..... .. my envy stnnngles the lovely which I try to point; and its features grow ghastly and hateful to me. "V 1.: 1 could only nish -this one picture! But I cannot without hours oflwork with costly models and many days of appli- cation which I must spend in earning my bread. And the lnsplration_wll_l_ notwait. It fades dimmer -While I I-lsiiihese years! he cried to the` 31- lence, Four of them, day after day, week after week. always striving. al-_ ways laboring to express the thought which is in my brain. always impotent because of poverty, always` toiling through three days that on the fourth 1 may have models and materials for my great work! I feel the power with- l...J- T nrn holrilnua nfhnnn LUJB ` " ' ' ' ' ' "" ' "" ""- in me, but I am helpless. Othevs around me succeed. I envy them. and __L_.......,..IA.~ LL.` I4.-oAI- J-I.I...'.. _-.u\.\.AUL|- ` `V ` n I have never heard Of th galley laid thepainter. V True, said the ungeh "Yi:b:;:eo been too busy with this great pal : He touched the easel as be 513 e` The painter hung his head. "I am` great artists. I would better work Ion- Ser here." . X1 - A " `V The painter sat in his square "studio with his head bowed` in hlsjbanda. The four walls of the room _had each_ 3 window, relieved by dingy curtains and the oor was bare. The man's face was drawn and gaunt, andiwhenf he raised his head his eyes were very. bright --- .v..-.4-ml ho nlvha tn +hn'a.l_ ,....cA 1 light '0! holneh u_- 3. tender in m ehininii: 39 unit it follows throui g .5135` our wearylrond do\;tiin'ing, '_ nough lone J! an or you: n _. _ Far from the one: who love us, ` ' 7. Tet ever shine: the light of. home," Like God : grace spread above ug, g light of home : I. wondrous nghg Through life it iollown, seeming, ' `. yet when with use the hair iliwhite, Clear in the front `tin glenmgng it shines from where our loved "one: no. oh, this is 1ove o divining! 5nd through the gates of heaven 33.} At last we see it shining! ` ; ` . _Ripley D. Saunders in St. Louis Repubigg -ms HOME 1 up -noon. -`50- v `B-When he 1oo5"I3'p, the angel was gone. He started to his feet. The tears were wet upon his face. "A f beautiful; dream. he _said. ;A beau-_ tiful dream. He looked_ at the can-- g vas spread upon the easel fora mo- : ment. smiling at it. but not bitterly. ; Then he wentto thewindow and look- 1 ed out upon the spring. The climbing f rose was still there. a little redder. a T little more sweetly perfumed. a little ihigher and stronger upon its stalk. 3 He reached out a nger and drew it `into the embrasure of` the window. It was a beautiful dream. he said. 1144;. A. ___-. _.s_ A ,1, A To Overcome Nausea`. A well known physician advances the theory that the distressing sensa- } tion of nausea has its seat in the braih i and not in the stomach and that relief may he obtained by cooling the base or the brain. He claims to have tested this often and thoroughly in the case` or sick headache. bilious colic. cholera morbus and other ills in which nausea is a distressing symptom without a single failure; also that he once` re- lieved the nausea resulting from can- ` cer of the stomach by the application or ice to the back or-the `neck and ; ...occipitai bone. ' The ice is to he hroken j and the bits placed between the folds of aftowel.-` Relief may _pbe"~obtained A by holding the 'hea}d'o rer a sink or tub) ' e e mi or watea: hjj-eth`em-a The Great Deserts. There was once a gentleman who spent a day in Verona, and it rained all that day. ' Five years afterward the gentleman spent another day in that fair city. and it rained all that day. And the gentleman afterward wrote a book and on the ground of his experi- ences asserted that lt alwaysralned in Verona. As with Verona so it has been with the deserts of the globe. The great Australian desert shrinks every year it is bettetgknown. On the pre.- sumed desert land of a lifetime ago the nest sheep in the worldare -now rais- ; ed.` The desert was mapped on `hasty ? generalizatlonson insuicient samples. l at. u. .....- ...u|. I-Inn Anvinsvlnnn donor!-n'_ tzucsauaauuuu vu nu-.wu...s......- ....._...--._. So it was with the American deserts . So, it is with the Asiatic deserts. so it is with the African` deserts. Fifty years ago. the map of the Sahara show- ed an unbroken stretch of sand. _ The map of today showsga tract of country with patches of sand. bnt diversied with hills and water courses. and even in places consisting of light. airy park land. with widespread grassy tracts in; tersperse -with V _torest.-Exchange. , _ a1Iery. said -the angel, -`_`are_ nothing V out oils. is -is where Rosa Bonheur painted. Look-across to the.road_ and i 8031 Will see the -charging, white maned heroes oi . the `Horse Fair and hear [ their neighing. Playing there one the D081: roadhgare the, gamins '-of Marie _ Bashkirtsem. Here are. all the land? scapes that were ever spread on can- vas. `Today there are scenes of calm and quiet; tomorrow my Master will cloud his sky, bend his trees and.whip his hedges with a great wind in order i that those pupils who wish may have for model the `gloom and the storm. With a gesture the angel bade the painter close his eyes a" second time i and led him to the east window. When I -he opened them there h d come another subtle change on the world without. The rich tints had `disappeared; a sub- dued brown had rusted the hedgerows, and wisps `of vagrant, motley leaves danced along the paths; The great. trees were bare. and in the network which itheir stripped, complaining branches -laced the wind made a somber singing. * g In `Vina: 7 gn' I-Inn l\U\nnAI 41-..- ` -vv--o wv ~-u------u- v--yo.-1 --V -.4..- But it was not a-dream after all. for ; an hour later the door_ behind him i opened very softly and the angel came } in. He did not speak. but went close [ behind where the painter worked and ;looked `over his shoulder. The great 1 design of the The Triumph. of Life I was blotted out. and low down in the i corner of the hugecanvas a little spot of color -was growing and taking shape. . . ` He was painting the climbing rose. Then the angel smiled to himself,` passed out through the door noiselessiy and was gone.-Atlanta Constitution. -__v i Againthe angel `bade him close this ; eyes and ung the north window open. 5 This time a further change. the great- ; est of all. . `appeared. The painter ; could scarce repress a cry of delight. for he was looking out upon a world `of sculpture. Soft snow had marbled .the dlmpling_ surface of street and eld and smoothed the harsh outlines 5 into grace. stilling the sparkles or the idistunt river. It had turned the con- gtours. or the taraway hills in the i curves of mountain maidens and giant iwarriors. It was as though, some great white vision had come while the . ; "earth slept to touch all that was -bare, : all that was ugly, all that was without !charm. and dream it into loveliness; i The painter drew a long. deep breath , and threw back hishead with a pecul- [iar gesture. There was a new light ; upon! his -face. at which the angel f smiled. He seated himself and dropped 3 his face into his hands. It was - so 1 great and marvelous! . "'YI_-__ I__ I7,` " Iuwcu use wauu wane a somber Singing. In this wing," said .the angel. are my Master setchlngs'. Here are silhou- ettes of forests against `a s_tee1 sky. Here are stretches of barren seacoast with lonely dunes. Here are desolate country houses by bleak ways. Here are all the sad and sober shadows of the pencil. _ - A._-);_ JI I - - ts 3 I waited ten minutes . and. hearing 3 nothing more. I picked up the our and ~sculied in to the landing. There I i found the. three Chinamen waiting for me;,and they.were in a state or great excitement, They had heard the laugh- ter. and theyheiieved with the boy; that a witch of the, sea was hanging i about and meant to do usduu-m. .Chi;w u_ . neee life _ is:\m_a_de np; of_;riegepda_ and; ' " = it i8"`u,=ehiesa tD"':9;l_ii`-,.'5'; v n--us _vv ---a.a`r-`nu "Master. for Gob : sake let us get Aashore at oncel, Thefe Is a witch of the seaclose by. andyahe will drag us down! . V . T , 1 D "____I I. . _ _ n __ - ..---w cw ---- up-4 sauna.- It was noon when 1 got back to my own_ island, and after dinner I set out to search the other." Asthis one had more vegetation 1 took with me the boy. who was about 15 years of age and named Whang. As the wind was light and a current against us we were two -hours ingaining the island. I was strong in the` belief that some woman had been cast away and was shifting for herself. and that she had not made herself `known to us simply proved that she had lost `her reason under the strain of the hardships or took us for natives who would molest her. It was near sunset whengwe put-on` after a vain search, and when we reached the reef surrounding our island and half a mile out from the beach the evening breeze died out to a at calm, `and we lay like a log. `Before taking to the oar to scull us in to the shore I sat quiet for a minute listening to the whispers of'the sea. Whang 'leaned over the rail `of theboat and watched the sharks darting to. and fro and leav- vv Invvnv ing trails of re behind `them. and: things. wereaso still that I could bear the ticking._ei` my watch. when there came a strange interruption. V it was -the voice or?-a woman in iaughtenand it sounded close, by: We both sprang up attbe sound.; wionderingfit. our ears had de_ce'i_ved._ us. and` as weistood lis- tening the sounds came again; When they had died` away. therboy me and.-_whisperedp: - A-.. r1-.nr_` _-|__ 5'.` ;.._ _.-A III I '_ -5..- turned. to _ Iv----vy, w- _~--- -\l\nn\Q --v ..a_y\ItIovI Whoever had visited our island in the darkness had come up out of the depths of the sea. - No "boat or raft had landed on the shore. The footprints were as plain as a plaster cast. and we were immediately interested and more or less "excited. After thinking the matter over I decided that the woman must have come from one of the is- lands in some way and determined to give both a close search. I set off to the north and in the course of an hour `made to. landing. This island had an area of not more than five acres. Here and there a patch of soil covered the rocks, and young cocoanut trees were struggling for life, but the ground was easy of search. I went over it care- fully and made the circuit of the island lnmy` boat. but not a living thing did 1 see aside from the -birds. There were no wild fruits to sustain life. not was I able to find any fresh water. 11. ._..._ ...-_.. :1.-- I .._A 1.--`- .L_ ___ o--o-v--= v.--- Nothing of special interest occurred until ,1 had been on the island. three months. Then one mornig as 1 went down to the boat to put out on a shing trip I was amazed to nd tracks of a woman's bare feet on the wet sands. The tide was out, and shehad wander- ed along the beach for half a mile, probably just before daylight. It need- -..--c unnv - away:-Ia ` ed only a glance to tell me that the ` person who had left the tracks was a whitewoman, but to make sure of it I called to the Chinamen. They at once agreed with` me. There was a trail leading out of the water at one spot and another trail leading back at another spot. but none to show that the strange visitor. -to the island -had scout- ed` inland at all. We were on one of the outer, or seaward. islands, with nothing between `us and V the Cochin China coast. There was a small and almost barren island three miles to the north and a similar one about the same distance to the south. but I had visited both and found no people. I1'7I.-....__ |-...'I _.'1._u._.1 _-_._ :_|__.1 2.. O / 0 c" Copyright, 1901. by O. B. Lewis. O 800 oooo oooo oooooooo oooo oog The Palawan islands, in `the China sea. are to the north of Borneo and. form a part of the Philippine group. They stretch out for a distance of 700 miles and number nearly a thousand. In the yea.r`1882`l wasslanded on one of the Palawans from a Singapore . trader to get up and run a. copra plant. I had with me four Chinese, and the trader landed provisions for a year. After I hadthe shed up and the work going I had plenty of time for shing, hunting and visiting the other islands. \T-J.Ll_.. Al ~-gAA.InI .I-J.-.......L ______._._.s Ah, well-sh, well, `tie the my oi the world! Children stay but a. little while And then into other scenes sre whirled, Where other homes beguile; But it matters not how far they roam Their hearts are fond sud true, - T And there's never 3- home like` the dear old home, Where the table is set for two. -Mrs. Frank A. Break in` Youth : Companion. And the` ubnnm for two these days} The children went one by one ' _ Away trom home on their aeparate way! When the childhood` day: were done. . How healthily hum;-ry they used to be! - What romping they used to do! And mother-for weeplng-can hardly act `lb let the table for two. hey tuned to gather-around the are . While some one would read aloud, But whether at study or work or play l "Twas a loving and merry crowd, And now they are two that gather there At evening to read or new, . And it aeems almost too much to bear whnn than `Link .1 AL. I.__ --- AFIND ON THE BEACH uau an ocean ILILIUIB W0 Inucu I0 Del When they think at the long ago. Do 0000 qooo oooo oooo ooob oc 5- By M- QUAD-` ` N Anvmfon. And a man, having the` biggest and deepest and widest drawer assign- ed him. will throw into it three socks. a collar box. an old necktie, two hand- I kerchiets. a pipe and a pair of braces, and to_ save` his life he can't shut that drawer without leaving more ends sticking out than there `are things in it, and it always looks as though it had been packed with a hydraulic press._ ` ' -v.. ----V vv my--v-- vv-vs`. -v--- -u When he. landed on his back in the middle of a brush heap, he found he ; had killed 40 rabbits. It,took- a two e ; horse team to cart the game home.- \ ; Exchange. . + 1 sizes. dainty fragments of ribbons, Running 3 Drawer. ' A woman will take the smallest drawer in a dressing table for her_ own private use and will pack away in it bright bits of boxes of all shades and : scraps of lace, jfoamy ruffles, velvet things ' for the neck, bundles of old love letters, pieces of jewelry, hand- '- kerchiefs. . fans, things that no man knows the name of, all sorts of "fresh, bright looking` knickknacks that you couldn't catalogue in a column, and she can go to that `drawer any hour or the day or night and .pick out any arti- cle she mayhappen to want without disturbing anythlngelse`. . ...._._ |._..n.__. 1.1..` w I_l..._.`..1. : The Inn and this Lion. When 1 was once in danger from. a ` lion," said an old African explorer. I tried sitting down and staring at him, as I had no weapons, ' E . an.-1.`... .12.: (A. __-_I..nn _..n__.: :1. --_. ' `V "-`I I-lawn ..I`t;tF8n8e., How do you account tor '""'Well. sometimes I've though't`1t was because _I sat down on a. branch. out yery all_,Lree."-{-I!earson 8 Weekly. V `~_H3;v` '1't`;;<`>`1:.l;"I" asked his `com- panion. L % l`l'I_..--4I__ IIIL, n_._ .n3__IA. _.... -1 .'v----v-- _ __Perfectly. The lion didn't even of- fer to touch me." ` - - au;u........._ 1-n-__ .1- '_-_- _--_...._4. A__ V-Q IV IIVIIIIO VEIJIFI _ISIZII\J0 . We..wer`e down ` on the beach when daylight. came. and ` there" were fresh, |`{1`8_k8 again. The woman had circled. about the heap of provisions. but had touched` I nothing. There was a trail elea__ding_ out ofthe seaand another "lead- lng back, and there were 200 imprints of feetto look at. `The Chinese were absolutely knocked- out with consterna- tion, and only my promise to watch the beach that night. and capture or shoot the witch calmed them "down. I re- mained with them all that day to pre- vent them from plotting. and it was not until midnight that I took up my watch on the shore. I had two re- volvers as weapons, but I had no idea of shooting. Iproposed to capture the thing, witch or woman. if it lay in my , power. It was low tide at 2 o'clock. I ' wasconcealed behind a heap of brush. and it was a starlight night. iAt that [hour a gure which looked like a hu- [man being came out of the gentle surf and began to walk up and down the 3 beach. As it walked away from me I irose up and went .forward on tiptoe {and was within 30 feet of it when it 1 caught the alarm and ed back to the 3 water like a shadow. I heard an ex- ; clamation of alarm and splashes in the [water and-saw the wake as the it ' syvam away`. I had meant to keep cool. but the sight of the gure excited me. and its escape when I gured on cap- ture added to it, and so, hardly know- ing what I did. I drew one of my re- volvers and began ring as the swim- mer moved away. I red six shots, but I heard no cry of pain or other sound. u . no -n.o -- ~ . A Wonder!`iil Shot. V I remember, s:.,.'s Uncle Zekiel, - when a boy that Uncle Josie Johnson, while out gunning one day, got tired and sat down by a large pine tree in the Big Cove and fell asleep, but was awakened by a. noise and on looking down at his feet saw a large rattle- snake. Putting up his gun, he was about to shoot when he saw a fine deer about eightfeet in front of him. He then took aim at the deer, when sud- denly he heard a great uttering over- head, and, looking up, he saw a large % ock of wild turkeys. He no sooner ; saw them than he heard another noise 3 in the bushes at his right. and. looking round. he saw a big bear gazing at him. ` Fearing that he was about to be de- 1 voured, h_e.shot_at the deer, when the I gun busted. a 1 I'l!I._ I__..I`I-.L I_lI1_.I LL- J-__ 1.1.- I--I.. The bullet killed the deer, the lock fell down the rattler s throat and chok- ed him to death. the barrels shot up in- to the air and killed the wild turkeys, 1 the stock killed the bear by striking ; him between the eyes, and the concus- 1 sion threw Uncle Josie backward. I I UV unnuo I went back to the" Chinamen and found them chattering in terror. and if they had not been afraid of the witch they would have made a rush for the boat and left me alone on the island. I sat watching them till daylight came. and then we all `went down to the beach. -The tide was coming in, but we found tracks, as before. While we were hurrying about, arguing and discuss- mg`, the tide brought in the naked limb and foot of a woman, a white woman. It had been torn from the body by the sharks, and it was the foot which had made the tracks in the sand. One of my shots had struck and killed, her as she swam away, and the blood had brought theisavage sharks to the at- tack. There lay the limb before us. with the esh hard and rm, though showing a bruise here and there, but no other partof the body came ashore. To whom the limb had belonged, how she was cast away there, where she was hiding, why she did not seek our protection-none of these questions can I answer. 4We buried the limb in the sands and heard no more of the nymph of the sea. ` i \ _._vj. .. - -..-_v - -up--an-`us--~ v-v--av 5`; castaway" about; _ and they `conlcl not dispute the fact of the tracks insthe sand.1I`cou_ld\not explain uwiylthe laughter. . I simply contented myself with. saying that we `would leave some `provisions on the beach that night and see if they were missing in the morning and with sleeping with one eye open to see that the. frightened te1lows_did not steal the boat and make on to some other island. bat `them. while : a`r'gu"e-d tlV:at times -I--. - _.-....-_ --...;.-.____ -\_-_.A _.._s Has pun-chased tpe premtsea occupned bv Chas. Me. `Guire, jun emu or the Victoria Hotel, and has 0 ed up bxisiness in all kinds of Blacks amithing. orseshoein . etc. All work will be done promptly at the lowest gure. Remember the place. |jrHE "AD`VANCE.'% ,McQarty; 5`."E+'l'"sE5'c_>';'_';:',_ 31-- (If H``.._. _ Cool Days--.Coal forcool days is now` in demand and, `owing to exceedingcy happy purchasing ar- rangements, we have it in several varieties at a. low price. Thiswill interest our patrons, and so we are glad to convey theinformation. The coal is of the best- The six` ply is big and the price lower than- can be made e sewhere. _- Ln `g- - `_ j__._ Work received from the Country receives the` same attention as Work `received from the Town. Parcels brought Monday will be i ready Thursday. I Parcels brought on Thursday will be ' , ready on Saturday. 1 ' ~ : We solicit a trial parcel. nueusnnos., Prop. BARRIE snznm LAUNDRY. GOING IN DEEP {Liven BROTHERS, limited, KGB`-v rm of 1 three Agents vvanted; A IF NOT TR[IE`.| $5,000 Sunght SJoap Oillceg 9;! liunmlop-Sn. 'Bin'1-le. 4:-ly An advertisement may induce peo- pie to try SUNLIGHT SOAP ha a sale larger than the corbined sales of any other_ tlfree soaps. But it is quality and qnallly alone. that makes people use SUNLIGHT SOAP continuously and always. An advertisement may induce a per- son to try an article a FIRST A time. JN.ear Mqrkgt Square. Soap Man ufaclurers, TANks,' and Repairs, go to Whelesale and Retail Manufacturers. I ` BRADFORD s'rm-::'r. | szospmncs. MATRESSE$.' pumps, TIIIIIQ REWARD w_ H._nli_NKER, :8-1.: ADVERTISE m TORONTO

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy