ONE PIECE OF SHEET MUSIC EVERY MONTH TO SUBSURIBERS VOF BEE _ A (Both late of J. Henderson-) '1, 13003 EAST or BARBIE HOTEL-1 Nibttee, 6 p.m. to 6 mm. reduce expanse. T .REMEMBER` `that no charge is ~m'*d6 .9nleaa we can connect you :Wi 4'h: the party asked for. Iaook torjtlqlqe sign of the BLUE -_nn`t ..~ ..: WILL EE THE NEXT ISSUE or own Sunnlemem THE TOWN OF_ (BARBIE. or CANADA. -- vuyvuu as v 581- vs I-Izsb navuwo v -_'1-he-uvvild cattle, `brought there from Spanish Mexico. next to the bear were most to be feared. They had long, sharp horns and keen, sharp hoofs.. Na- ture had gradually helped them out in these weapons of defense. '.They had grown to be slim and trim of body and were as supple and swift as deer. They were the deadly enemies of all wild beasts, because. all wild beasts devoured their young. 1111...... J.-L ....,: _____.. 1-- r wouln't. be bothered -_v.- ~'--_-__..---vv People were very scarce in those days and beers were very plenty. We also had wolves, Wildcats, wild cattle. wild hogs and a good many long tailed Jud big headed yellow California lions, (BL- .-.lI.I -..J.A.I- I_._-__._I_A LI, ,,. VWhen my father settled down at the `foot of the Oregon slerras with his lit- tle family long. long years ago, `it was 40 miles from our place to the nearest ` ' eivllized settlement. jlilir in matution uugmer tin comm a bitfer Q-`nun: lneer, ` . . `And imitation pathos brings an i_;nitation.tear And certajn somber cynic: nometimes tell us that V `gnu gain ` lllu BTILIQIII IUKI-|UIl' cynic! IUIIICCIKIIEU Cell I _ they saw T ` In ilnitntion justice with an imitation law. Olttimes when you are gloomy and you look info . the star: ' ,T`{ |!'x;fVmitaLtiqn `dollar very oftjen paseb nne, A `bad they give us imitations in our foodstull ' In`-nan - uvn J?!-n:I ` ` I ` > IIIIIII-CDIUIID` I:|`I VIII IVVIIUFIIHI imitation beauty wins an imitation sigh; `Ion meet all kiuduexcept, perhaps, an imitation r- cut` ~- He had taken up a piece of land '. down In the pretty Camas valley, 7'where the grass grew long and strong `and waved In the wind, mobile and beautiful as the mobile sea. _ " u_NRsAu`*_rv, V -Washiugton Post, `..---u an use-av vv uvll IalJVJ- WUIU II`-It HUI in open? shop there was such a great demand for them that 9, code was-po.ss~ ed permitting their sale only on two` days in the year-the 1st and 2d; of January. Those `days the court Indie: the city dame: t!9cked_to the do- pota fOiP111'1!%';.themj:in.nuchl'Wl5`' Nettles are as a rural remedy highly calculated, I `should say, to make the patient onaisy. Whipping with net-' ` _ ties has -been used in case of lethargy, i numbness and palsy, with what effect I cannot say, but this I-"do know- handling nettles regardless of their sting produces a numbness which de -' stroys for a time further sensitiveness o,to' their poison. Culpepper enumerates no less than 42 diseases that are cured by_an application of nettles in one-form or another, among them leprosy, gout, sciatica, itch, wounds and sores or all sorts. He also informs us that the juice iseectual to settle the palate or the mouth in, its place." Has any one experience of the palate hitting elsewhere`? I have not heard of it. Curtis says that in Arran and other islands of Scotland :1 rennet is made of a strong decoction of nettles. A quart of salt is put to three pints of decoc.- ~, tion and boiled. A `spoonful will co-s! agulate a` large bowl of milks" A ` _ I { Oh. that this too too solid `esh would melt, H Use or Nettles. l i i E E i i 1 A Thaw and resolve itself into a dewi I Little did Hamlet think when he gave utterance to this desire that he 'had,only to go to the nearet ditch where grew nettles and` periwinkle to I bring it about, and yet Gerard, quoting from Dioscorides (first century); says that nettles boiled` with perrywinkles -maketh the body soluble. and dothit by sjkind -of cleansing quality. "Few who * believed it` so would care," to try-the ex - periment.- -Longman s. 5 ' A 2 f .. - when Pins Vero Few. _ A curlou fact in the early history of .: pins is that when they. were rit sold; {In Clnnnn nhnnli .LI.-..- _.._- --- -C- - ~ - V-V -v-_--vu- on-vv-.-. :4 In: Iavllcllo I The cattle stopped a few rods from the atockade. We let the coyotes `go, but we_kept the little bear and named him Bill Cross. Yet he was never 8 bit cross, despite his name. ' - The V1-rolves were the little chicken thieves known as coyotes, quite harm- less, as 8. rule, so far as man is concern- ed, but the cattle hated them. and they were terried nearly to death. FBI... ....A.I.. ..L-_.._.`I _ n__ .___1_ A,_-___' -_.' ---- -c n gnaw II But thini:-Br}-zhe coo`l;ess of the man as he turned to us children with his rst gasp of breath and said, ABo-b o--- boys, I've bro-bro--brought you a, `lit- tle bear! _ A._ _i A i ` `'.;%`Pshawl , squire, I wish I had as dollars as I aln t afeard of all the espanlsh cattle in Oregon. Why, i "th y.re* so blasted dangerous how` did 1'? . lsslonarles ever manage to -drive V` up here` from Mexico, anyhow? oraall that, the very next time . . the fold sa"llor_ setting out 1 , pace ,rfo_1_'_his ranch below. ;. :._.-- `U--vhr -u avian-n\J urn They all four "struggled in at the nar- -row little gate at about the same time. the great big , lazy sailor in a hurry tor the first time in his life. ` \o nubnl 1 "Illather. clambered up on buck horse" and looked out over the stock- ade, and then he shouted and shook his hat and laughed as I had never heard him laugh before. For there, breathless, coatless, hatless, came William Cross, , Esq., two -small wolves and a very, small black bear! They were all mak- ing good time. anywhere, any way to escape the frantic cattle. Father used. to say afterward that it was nip and g tuck between the four and hard to say i which was ahead." The cattle had made quite a round up. V n\A-r 15" `An--~_L..- _...I- 1.. -A_ AL, __.A. Xnd now here is something curious to relate. Our own cows, poor, weary,- _ immigrant cows of only a year before. tossed their tails in the air, pnwcd the gt-o1'1nd,bellowed and fairly went wild in the splendid excitement and tumult. One touch of nature made the whole cow world kin!_ . _.._ -vva C-Qaino Then up on the brown hills of the Or- egon slerras above us came the wild answer of the wild black cattle of the hill.` and afmoment later, right and left, the long black lines began to widen out; then down. they came, like a whirlwind, toward the .black and _surglng line In the grass below. We were now almost in the center of what would in a little time be a complete cir- cle and cyclone or furious Spanish cat- tle. - A ~ vs.-1;(,l hetird a yell, then .9. yell- lng, then a bellowing. This yelling was l heard in the high grass in the Camas valley below. and the bellowing of cat- tlekcume from the woody river banks, far beyond. fI"I..-__ '-__ __- AI I - --- - .- - 7 This stout log corral had become an absolute necessity. It was high and strong and made of poles `or small logs stood on end in a trench after the rash- ion of a primitive one in front of the cabin door. Here it was proposed to put up a gate. We also had talked about portholes in the corners of the corral, but neither gate nor portholes were yet made. In fact, as said before, the serene and indolent man of the sea always slowly walked away down through the gra toward his untracked .c1aim whenever there was anything said about portholes. posts or gates. '4`o{`l1nn nn nan J.1n...... I.!LLl- I_'._... I--3 ....-_ -.....vu\. lav. uuvnywg yvwuw VI. saucn. Father and we three little boys `had .only 'got_the last post set and solidly` tamped in the ground as the sun was going down. ' C`--.1.`l-._I_ *7, I -l ` " " Two. things may be here written down. He wouldn't_ ride a horse, be- cause he couldn't. and for the same reason he _wouldn t use a gun.` - Again, let it be writtendown also that the rea- sonehe was going away that warm au- tumn afternoon was that there was some work to do. These ' facts were clear to my_kind and indulgent father. but of course we boys never thought of it and `laid our little shoulders to the hard work of helping father lift up the L long, heavy poles that were to complete the corral around our pioneer log cabin, and we really hopedand half believed that he might bring home a little pet bear. ' ` ' 1"11i a*E 7'iTt}1e `n'gI: E3i. over his`ri`ght eye and thrusting his big ` hands Into his ideeplpbckets almost to ` the elbows, he slo_wly_and lazily whis- tled himself `down the` -gradual slope of the foothills, waist deep in the waving grass and delicious` wild owers; and soon was lost to sightrln the great wav- ing sea. ' - II'I___.- LI..I_ __ _.__ 1. _ n , _ 4__.QLL__ . with a Vn 6x-Js ;;'u` "say; rm 36113 to "Wills 5'00!` boys in pet bear some day. .A -..-`I .-... -.....l-I.... |-1.. HILLIA 1;-` .1-..;_ Probably the new type of commercial city has lost in nothing so much, to the sight and the imagination, as `in the suppression of those multitudinous water-jets, falling into shallow basins, which were common in the towns of the seventeenth and eighteenth eentnries. 'Eon`ntains against palace win`: in the centre of ` market places; in the const- yards of houses of the more important "`'?".n1!5d:l,ii9 be onto`. nj 10-31 wind bf idimt ality. W9 4 VP".d It is much to be wished" that some such benecent societies as those which occupy themselves with the planting and preservation of trees and the im- `iprovement of villages, would take up iseriously the subject of fountains in our cities. It seems a propagandavespeciah ly- adapted" to feminine activities. So much enthusiasm is expended bv wo_- man, here and there, on civic matters; whv not some of" it on this vital ques- tion of beautifying the town 2 FOUNTAINS FOR BEAUTY. In Barrie there is not one public fountain in which anv beauty on be found. Perhaps some day Queen's Park will xed up and a beautiful fountain erected there. On the subject of fountains in cities we notice the fol- lowing from The Point of View, in the August Scribner e : The chief source of human tubercul- osis, said Mr. Koch, was the diffusion sputum, and the natural preventive measures were the removal of the patients from small, overcrowded dwell- ings, to established special hospitals for them, compulsory notication to health authorities of cases of tuberolar disease, svstematic `disinfection of sick rooms, and the founding of sanitariums where cures could be effected. - Mr. Koch took a hopeful view of both preventive and curative measures, explained how much good, work" had been done by con- sumptive hospitals in England, and highly praised Dr. Bigs' system and organization in New York as worthy of study and imitation by all municipal and sanitary authorities. ' g tuberculosis could not be tranferred to V factory. , Mr. Koch had also satised experts from the continent threshed out Mr. Kcch s main theme was the best method of` ghting tuberculosis in the light of experience gained in combating bubonic plague, cholera, hydrophobia, ' and especially leprosy, which he de- scribed as caused by aparasite closely resembling the tubercle bacillus. He ` pronounced hereditary consumption to be extremely rare, 5 and considered the sputum of a consumptive patient the chief source of infection. He gave an account of recent experiments in Berlin, which served to prove that human animals. Lord Lister subsequently admitted that the evidence seemed satis- himself that the converse proposition was also true, and that human beings" were not susceptible to bovine tubercul osis communicated trough milk, butter andmeat. This conclusion Lord Lis- ter was unwilling to accept on the evi- deuce cited by Mr. Koch, and several i the matter with `various results; Mr- 1 Koch himself declared that infectionby ' `milk and the esh of tubercular cattle ` was hardly greater than by hereditary transmission, and that measures against it were inadvisable. ' -Ju sadism -yesterday in St.` James Hall Q`-' .E?.4" Ald-espaltch therewdate 1 ,,__ _- --w--vuvII `y _24th,`said:-Mr. Robert Koch's before the Congress on Tuberculosis ewsvah event of world wide importance, sings he was the recognized leader in the ? campaign _ against_ consumption.` The.,hall was crowded withimedical men, and there was a group of scientic experts around Lord Lister on the platform. Mr. Koch` was introduced by Lord Lister with a simplicity becom- ingeto each great man of science, a/nd was, welcomed with British heartiness. H s address occupied, about eighty minutes, and was followed with intense interest. Mr`. Koch read it in English with a deliberate, painstaking effort to repress his marked German accent, and with no lack of emphasis when con-I troversial passages were reached. Tall, full-`habited, with high forehead, large spectacles and stooping shoulders, he was the embodiment of German scholar- ship and thoroughness in scientic in- vesnigation. . 1 THE GREAT spmcmx.-4 ' IsTs IMPORTANT msoovmmn Dr; Robt. Koeh. the eminent bao teriolbgisc, made a most important, deliverance on the subject of consump- tion at the great Cohgress on Tuber- cuipsis, being held this week in Londdn , nn\J%,(gcn's uw"monv.. 7..---.va- was man) .- Bill, said in; `Ether one day, "those black Spanish cattle will get after that t died `sash and sailor Jacket of `yours `someday when you go down in-the val- jley to your claim. and they won't leave Srease spot. Better go horseback or at.il`east' take a gun when you go down next time. . 3` . a'ab'\`-. 0 n .. - - _` AwmN-In Toronto`, on Wadnosdav, July. 17,` 1901, Mrs. Robert Atkinn, formerly of Bradford, agod 52 years. ' Mwronnr-=At the _.Hol_lowq," Went Gwii. limbury, on Wedneudagy, Joly ,17, -Miss. H. May, daj`:ghter_`ofllr.Thoa. Metcalfo, -tutu` OH CDAAII Q Innnlaiun .0 Jpn.` . ~ -. RESIG-NED VESPRA. Mr. A. M. Murdav, who has been teach- ing in S. S-. No. 7 Vespra, resigned a'few weeks ago. `He has oers from several schools and will likelyaccept that of Crown- hill. The Board is advertising for a succes- sor to Mr. Mnrday, but they state that they prefer a lady. A s 'e And still the Globe would makeit appear that "`e cry for purity in elec- tions, is. utterly without reason. oWhen one of the chief orgene of public opinion-even though it be the party journe1-ia so ready to ignore its re- sponsibilities to the people, it is time` tor themen of all parties ~ who value their franchise to unite ind drive the present party from power. R1DD1i:I,I.-A-In Bradford, on Suhdai, July 14,. to Mnand Mu. Joaephflddell, a daugh- t0I.`.` - I ' ' WA_n1unN-BAcxm-r-At Fernie, B.G., on Saturday, Jul 6th, 1901, Mr. E. A. War- ren to Miss a Ha.okett,`formerly of Tottenham. ' . - ` ' . Two weeks ago there wxaaj 9. trial in North Weterloo,where seventeen defaced ballots were discovered by the court. Tne evidence necessary to convict was obtainable in the defaced ballots,-but no attempt was made to secure it. Why 3 Did the Government want to protect the accused? Were they `obliged to protect him 'l I ~ And when was there greater need to enforce the lesson upon politicians than now ! Let the Globe recall the West Elgin revelations,` the West Huron in- iquities, the `North Waterloo ballot` switching, and say whether there is not srying need for the punishment of the men in whose behalf the villainies were perpetrated, and who have shielded the perpetrators from the just penalty of their crimes. ' What is more important than pmfe elections ! Itia upon the purity of elections that the whole fabric of our political system rests. V opinion but his own. . ' ..v...._-... ..- vtrur .-v -..-vuvaay The good natured and self compla- cent old sailor liked to watch the wav- `ins gras. It reminded him of the sea, I reckon. He would sometimes sit on our little" porch as the sun went down and tell us boys strange, wild sea sto- ties. He had traveled far, and seen much. as mu'ch`as any man can see on water.`a_nd maybe was not .a very big liar, for a sailor, after all. The only. thing about him that we did not like `outside of his chronic idleness was his exalted opinion of himself and his un- is .-concealed contempt for everybody : -v `CITE!!! II .__:_1 _-, For lack of aibetter case against the Ontario Government, Mt. Whitney {and his lieutenants have shown a tendency to embark all their political hopes in the cry for `purity in eleotions."-'1`he Globe. ` PURITY OF ELECTIONS. The Orange Sentinel comments on the question of purity in -elections thus}- hey; pm :2 i #6,: `among- the m.t..;a.,.svi..;1;,.a,.:a 1'-; cant .poase_ss_icns;1 oigthe` town of "the. , mqa1- Ae .ns,,1.:er,v for nothing has thedaily procession of women carrying '.l`_h'e jogs lled, "there was 3. loitering ; groups of idlers and gossips `formed na turally at that spot; it was a place for , sorcery. ;For there is strange hypno tizing. power in the sight of water purling up and out amidst paving-stones _and masonry. Of the thousands who in _the course of adayi pass the base of a statue, perhaps less than a hundred glance above the level of their heads wete.rjugs' to. their sparkling. rivers..: usefulness, but it wasalso a place for . ~ and receive an impression of beauty . . from the marble. They are the fraction . who are prepared for such impressions, and are` looking for them. All the rest V ~ barelylrnow that the statue is there. But a fountain is _not thus passed by. r Not everyone is conscious that fonn . tains can stir and stimulate him"; but 1 to watch a circle of heavy-visaged park- loungers staring absurdly into one -by" the hour is to gain a strong ideal of the way in which they. may unconsci- ouslyaffact the most dormant," or the most embryonic. beauty-sense. Foun- tains are, altogether, to the public life of cities,~what the open hearth is to the private life of homes. An open re draws the gaze continually, brings all the room about it as if` it were a magnet; and this not half so much . because of the physical reason of the warmth it gives as because of the escape that it provides for the imagina- tion. To pause and watch the silver spray a moment is to feel the lure of watching it indenitely. The play of the changeiul water speaks of spon- taneity, of spiritual freedom; it 18 ecstatic: it is neither to hold nor to bind; it is pure, soaring inspiration. It is everything, precisely, that the life of the busy man or the plodder of either sex is not and can t be. wuauvws Us Ans. .LI-IUIQ J.` 55 y;arI. 2-jnontha, [2 days. , BORN. ' __,-...-..... urn: uwuea m 01-} .t_m,e'tor.` and ot the nolt color, in of` ....---- nu-us J. IIIQVIIUFI _Wel1, that's enough to try the patience of- Job, exclaimed the vi1- 1 lage minister, as he threw aside the local paper. ' "Why, what's the matter., dear? asked his wife. . . Last Sunday I preached from the text, `Be ye therefore steadfast, " answered the good -man, but the printer makes it read, `Bey ye there for breakfast. "-Glasgow Evening m:mnn- By His Doorlm-spar ; Noto. ' I ' I The late Sir Frederick Gore-Ouse-*3 ley, professor of music at Oxfor'd,.| was once going to call on a. friend in I London, and asked a. fellow-musvician j the number at which he lived in a.` ` certain street. "I don't know his` ,number, answered the other, "but ithe note 01 his doorscrapor is C ` sharp. Sir Frederick went on, con- `tentedly kicked the doorscrapers all i downthe street until he on `e to the right one, when he rang t e bell and went in. III 90 Bill Cross was 5; tenderfoot at the time of which I write; anda sailor at that. Now, the old pilgrims who had dared the plains in those days of 49, when cowards did not venture and the `weak died on the way, had not the greatest respect for the courage or en- durance of those who hadreached Ore- gon by ship. But here was this man, a sailor -by trade, settling down in the interior of Oregon and, strangely `enough, pretending to know more about everything in -general and bears in par- ticular than either my father or any of his boys. `IT- l__.'l ._u ,, V I ` ` ` ..---.,.... _ uuau uuc xuucl nave Just. the .size and shape of the_ side of your boots. Nothing is left of them ex-' cept the nails, eyelets, and ma.ybe' .pa.rt of the hee1s.-Rev. A. Leboeut,l in Zambesi Mission Record. As. for the ravages of white ants `in Rhodesia, it is no uncommon ; thing for; the colonist, on returning ` from his days labor, `to nd the coat he left hanging on 7a. nail of his cot- tage wall and the books on the to.- ble absolutely destroyed by_ these tiny marauders. Nor is this all. On awaking next morning you are as- tonished to see in_the dim light cone-shaped object rising from the brick oor a. short dista.nce:.` from your bed, with two holes on the top like the crater of a. minia.ture 101. came.` 1}}? n clover 'oxa.mina.t'ion you discover at the hofen have just the 13:; -_.I ..I._._,- D .~....... u; my Luann .I...I.U square Illlles. The first lord of the admiralty is said to` have approved the proposal to christen British. battlships in fu- ture. with colonial wine. Heretofore foreign brands have been used. Ci? trnnv-cs 4-l..\'lT-_. 0-)_,1 I ..,-v.... u.u.uua nave uccn useq. vWith_in six years the 'New aland Government` has ;bought bac f the , Forigin-al settlers 324,167 acres of ` land used for sheep" runs, and 1,630 familes have found homes on them. -u-na aavvv aauvu. ov `l,l\IU,\l\JU. The Columbian ice fields in the Canadian Rocky mountains covet an area. of at least 110 square miles. Thu ruf In:-rl At 4-1... ....`l..._'_-1A-.- convin- Austra.lia, s first measured wool _clip was 20,000Vtons, in 1821. This has now` risen to 2,700,000. a min (V..1........L:-.. :-- A13 -7i`1; national debt of the United Kingdom is [ve percent. of its } wealth. ""`l""` VV *5 VLLL a-'lu5La.uu anuuauy. Liverpool, with 99 people to tho` ;acre, is the most crowdedcity in England. - rhlnns-.. ..-A L-.. `|__LA._1_-_, - .1 -5 . pauanuunnu - There are ten batfalions in the Bri- tish army that wear the old Scotch kilts. _ ' ` ___.. __:.r-_ -- \ About 25,666 rogin redbreasts exported from England annually. T.1'vnrnnn'l man. no ..........1- ;._ _.`.`.-v.-`.- on: any svvbullauo If the unfortunate victim were a man or boy on -foot. he generally made escape up one of the small ash trees that dotted the valley in groves here and there, and the cattle would `then soon give up the chase. But if it were` a wolf or any other wild beastthat could not get up a tree the case was different. Far away on the other side of the valley, where dense woods lined the banks of the winding Willamette river, the wild, bellowing herd would be answered. Out from the edge of the wood would stream right and left two long,-corresponding, surging lines, bel- lowing and plunging forward now and then. their heads to the ground, their tails always in the air and their eyes aame, as if they would_set fire to the long gray gras. With the precision and discipline of a well ordered army `they would close in upon the wild- be'ast, too terried now to either fight `or y, and, leaping upon him` one after `another with their long hoofs, he would in a little time be crushed into an un- recognizable mass. Not a bone would be -left unbroken. 1 It is a mistake to suppose that they "ever use their long, sharp horns in attack- These were used ionlyin defense, the same as elk -or deer, falling on the knees and re- ceiving the enemy on their horns, much as the Old Guard received the enemy in the last terrible struggle at Water- loo. Appointed to Retain lie root as Lerd Lieutenant of Ireland. Earl Cadogan,. Lord Lieutenant of 4 Ireland, whom the new Salisbury Ministry has decided to retain in his present position, was appointed to 3, the place when the Conservatives :1 went into power in 1895. The earl M 1561 years old, and has been promi- nent in British politics since he sue ceeded to the title on the death of , his father in 1873. He has been Par. , liamentary Under Secretary of State 3 1 and for the Colonies, and in 1878 he ; . was made Chief Secretary for Ire-5 1 land. When . the Conservatives se- curedg the Government in 1886 the? earl was appointed Lord Privy Seal, 5- without a seat in the Cabinet. In the year of his accession to the earl- 2 dom he married Beatrix, the daught- ` er of the second earl of Cravenr As 3 wife of the Lord Lieutenant her en- tertainments in Dublin have been notable, and her social sway the , `most brilliant of any vicereine 015:; Ireland. Lord Cadog'an's salary is ` 1. `$100,000 per year. la `rho me EARL OFT-`T `gu%;;;f ' ' '| Bithlt `Emerald. - mil... .1: 1x-,_ _ , Printdr and Preschor. The British Empire. f\nu AAA - . Ants in Rhodesia`. _ , Uuv IIILU `Be -Gla.sgow Evening -'_"_:`?w-\'Dl J "69 n -Id.` -8 -- _ vnmuucu vvucu vu an: unuu uuu Uu IUUB uuu , I I, I the stars A. And hear the ones hinting that there may be A` men in Mars You wonder where the planet in, of simple. honest worth, ' T 7 Ifhnt iurnheo. the pattern for this imitation nnvflu Talk In Yomiome wanting the following in Harvest Tools, Scyt/sea, Rakes (G F 02/:5 . Binder Twine, Pure; Paris Green, C'0ntfmcto'rs and Builders Hqzzdvwars Paims, Oils and Glass, .2 Fishng Tqclcl, Cagfapers Supplies, AT Lowesr PRICES. WILL 150 WELL TO CALL -`AT _ FREE FARM Er AND OTHERS NORTHERN Anvnuce." , .,.,----_. ....--~ .~-----. nanny, mere is prompt postal collection and delivery throughout the town. There are eight schools (one Separate). em ploying thirty-one teachers; twelve churches, three weekly newspapers, one commercial college, every day is market day. machine shops. planing mills. grist ," mills, saw mills,.marble cutters. bicycle works. boat ` builders, tannery, breweries. ten butcher shops, sever. al rst-class hotels with reasonable rates. threeliveries, three laundries. one creamery and.all other modern conveniences. Stores are numerous and carry ful 5 lines of all kinds of first-class goods . competition s keen and'prices are as low as in a city. Telegraph and day and night telephone systems connect the town with all places near and distant. Barrie Ls fast becoming a favorite resort with summer tourists. Balelaiphone compaf 51:11. SEPTEMBER Musical --_'.~ Va-"0- Jvvloaag When fat and saucy, in warm sum- mer weather, these cattle would hover along the foothills in bands. hiding in the hollows. and would begin to bellow whenever they saw a bear or wolf or even a man or boy, if on foot, crossingthe wide valley of grass and blue `camas. blosoms. Then there would be music! They would start up, with head and tails in the air, and broadening out left and right they would draw a long. bent line, complete- \ ly shutting off their victim from al \ approach to the foothills. s ' `V { `IA 1.1.- __..n