333 00 98c Ladies Sizgs. medium weight, regular Erices, {25cVto 400., to go on sale Fri.- `ay morning at . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .l5c< M}. { 59g. ll-losne `at 3c. I-lyglbne Vegts M so pErs'o'r' 117.-Ev? '<:'as?n2r.'1Yo;,' Ladies sizes, regular. value 50c., on sale at . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. l\P~__,8_J-4sHEIE1Tt`1luN.IG 379- . ,1` _._,II, - T-ujjrr--CT -HTI 95Ayards of unbleached Sheeting, `plain and twilled.full two yards wide. heavy weighz,22c. value. Sale price . . . . . . 575 yards Pink Shaker Flannel, fast color. 30 inches wide, special value at . 8c.,sa4le price..... ...,....v . . . . . . .'. Saleof L VVinte'r ~ The season has arrived when we clear `out all lines of heavy` Winter Goods, re- gardleee of price. We will positively carry ever 119 heavy goeds that can be -.moved_out by eut prices`--o`n such lines ` Ladief latest lWb' `ts, .lmpo_rted direct frpm Europe, at close prices. A repofnt ordoris jusoihand, and as the canon is getting late. we will clear th .. out at little above coa tof import. A mimmu. Norma. .In 1992 over two thirds of the total _BI'itieh impacts of cheese came from the-Dominion which masks: a record in `this trade. The position heebeen well earned by Canadian .oh_eeeemake:e, `end; all I re-ward Jar sending the genuine. 9 ertiole, the Dominion`. in 1902 supplied 6.7 per cent. of all the British-cononged ynheeee. `while the United States eup- plied :1 5_ per cent.` J _ nmvyrmxss SK'IRT8,at: $2.50, $3.00, Q40, $3.90, $455 and 3600 gthht crutch on: extra." special value. ' We A Flatlnels. Uaderelothing, Cloths, vTweeds, Dress gonods. Cloakings, Hose. Gloves. Knitted Goods. Shawls. % Wraps, -_l';advies Jackets, Coats, . Capes and 00000000 000000000000000000.` .- Land Fur Lined. : W6 mint clear .them out now. per cent. Disooont `on oilwonr Capes, `n Broadcloth, Frieze, Plush, Curl SAMPLES. `Wohave all the winter samples of a large wholesale house, and Hosiery and_.Knitted Goods manufacturer at 83 PER Icnm`. 1)iscou.\'1'. 1`11i5 mean}: tlia_t these Goods can be sold at less than regular cost price. Toques, Glow.-, `Hoods, Shawln . Stoclxihgd, Sof. Undervesta, Undei-shvirts. Neck Sends; Ca1`i1i8r sweaters,-V mm, Top shim, Foscinntnrs, etc . ' it 30 per cent. dilcoulit. .We heve the samples of Sequin. a I e .&' C().. `of St, Hvacinthe,cons1htinz of ne and medium grade Boots and 5110*`--" bleyv faetoty prices. I247 different styles and shapes, and I10 '0 sf``e';I V1V`3,:!i'1'e alw&Y.. the tines? 80ods.' There are Men's Women's Misses .P`#5`e9d"91i*1d"* *- e C; IRWIN Mgplo-Leaf,Ma.ltese Cross and Boston Rubbers. T Av_'Ct`lf(lAiglll8. ipall styles inade, at wholesale prices an (1 less. "Y :`l3_fn_bbers- pf spy. kinfl elqevlhr. will dear ogit all our Overcbats, Ulsters, Raglan: > }Vorking'_`{Iid Driving Cojsts. Heavy Suits, etc., at cuts of frum $1 to 5 1 ` This is the gheapast Store in Canada for Clothing. |R\/VlN $ In :';a......-. to Qua. Pouohor, his up- parent inoomiltonoy at the meeting of tho Council, in aeoondiag Ald. Ron motion thIt{Ald. Stephen: be a. member of. the , Bo|gl"of_;Works and then` voting for Ald. .~',I.`yI'o'i"..nhx\uld be cleared up. A; a. matter otfsot Ald, Poacher : name wuiuurtod, _!-l. _._L I_:__ OFTHE `Wu cgnshow you a clear mnn `of txom 10 to 25 per cent. Goods. Direct It%npo_!rters. '53?! Dravyars 38c 17 6c 300 ya rdsV hegvy Rtller Toweliing \v'i-t}.1` 3 striped border, to go on sale Friilav morning at... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ., ALL -___-_I_ -Q jl IIIUI IILIJF, LI. 600 yi~'c'I"':"f"I'-'i'n'a'""' :B!eached cotton till I I. 503 .-._ll8P|'_UII `If Pulli- Jgm Pom: .' `MN: . ` I88 mm. II. mm .*Atlantac & Pacxc Ex. .3.@ pan. Tho ovomng Egcprou loaves Toronto at 5.39 no A nil! llIJ\\' 36 inches wide. fre from dressing, goo-d valueat 10c.on sale at . . . . . . _0f ne-caTnrcTTwit}T Je; '13? .7511 and cluster of hemstitched tut-ks, "regular value 60c , sale price . . . . . . .. Towelllng at 4c. yard. Il|f\ ..__.. ._ Cheapest {in Barrie. ' R""_`" k\J@IIl\I`- gV11ol:ACau............. Ladies Drawer ; -tW_._.L.._'_ _A.L I -mum 29, 19053 p.-`J flldldnbvniapuu. us wannsuau u-vgovow. . BARRIB 1'0 ,. ALLANDALI; _ _ , 1.3: 3.111., 1.56 a.m.. 9,35 'a..m.. u.:5 a.m., xa.u_. ).., . 13.36 a..m., 5.23 52.31.. 8.9.o.p.m. - ~ . ALLANDALB 3'03A_lllt`lI.__ l _ A 1o50,I.m.. Iln`s a mu "Vl`_ba.5 _I.m'., 50- Quill, -15 P-9`-o 4:4! P-"0-' T Exprej A_ Loc_ The 12:4 *0` York loss Der Wljen plowe c Llf N e '-V otm! -El Iwvv an-w-g - vww-.-- .. __..,_ 5| Iooondor of the motion; iIivViVti1out oopumiuion. If there was anyone st fault t III the move: of the: resolution and not Md. ._Pouohor. wit _Kill Jn 'StH Tninllavo Bni-116,10";-. shd arrive {$331 the olhnluntionod phat gs follows: = ` - an ,.'r.onoN1`o uuoar "Inn. l:`.'..`..... 0111-5.- yuww '- A"\71:NnOns717'.; NORTH?-BRY. GR II. 3.3:. _.Mail. _ . 6.80 pan. 3. mm. `Atlanttck Pacxc Ex. 18.50 pm. - .10 mm. ~Sao Exnreu 1.21 a..uI. ' Litavunhurlt mixed (south only) 9.85 ts! I nnvtuiln-\r\I\ A. III! A l7t\I)I'\ .._,- - u-'No nnw.-was will be um". plus. sunfmipuon non!!! tho money l.pa.id.. " ' ` 5IbOfl.IOW.in .Il l'0ll'I for than months and` vol will In chuuod 8I.qo per nnnum ,_qv_.V_ What do we mean by Barrie `it A town site? A portion of the earth's surface? And is its,develo`prnent to mean the con- eentration-on this site of the latest results of science anal to show it oil` to the rest ` of the world as an upoto-date town? ,0: :0 we mean soinething deeper, more ninan than that. -In this eounpauyof `christian ministers`- Barrie shall mean the people of Barrie- but stillin such a sense that we` shall `still. break of Barrie as a unit. As soon as `a little cluster of housea comes together, a tavern, a blacksmith shop, a store, a few jnlllngs, ethane -begins a new unit of Idciai me. ' lnnunnerable inuenceswill focus there as nowhere else, and `combine to give it its special character. It will rtart with an individuality which no after expansion will make it, lose. 80 this ~te.wn`o! [Barrie has a sort of personality. a ':entinnit`y of social eunsciousnoas reach-. in back to its early beainning. It is not merely thv| Id ition of house to house and street to street `and improvement -to improvement that the oltiest inhabitant has witnessedand had part in-it is the growth of an organism ` `X74: ennqn eluns -Inns -A nun `ill.-.l.'._ `IUWVII VI CII UISCIIIUIC We menu than when we say `Barrio?- Wl dovolopmons in the development of 6 community every member of which his potontinliyieu for udvuucing or` depreuing the sum `total of its prosmm. ` tn -h-n I hnnu 6.; -an f Ann n:nn4' '6:-uv U? -III UVUCI VI I`. vI\I`II'UK In what I have to aay I am obliged to diaregard the paat and take the preaent for my ata:-ting point. I reognize that there ha been development. . muat have been iugood directiona perhapa; perhapa in evil. but devel vpment of character oer`- tainly in thia town. ~Wh|t it has brought III to ianot for me to aay. I have .too `little knowleue of the town aa it in and im too `entirely icnorant of in hiatory to Jtave any 0 inion. Allfl. can do -ia to attempt to a etch an ideal, a goal toward, whiohwe ahould aim to promote the pro ofvauy town, mentron` aome _ofthe * along which we. Ihould :work` and -, your agreement with one $19.71;;-,`-V the1; _eaa e`*o!; mufr ew`n:"toivn.,,- A ` 2 L- .I.-'._' `.'L;!v.I_: -4 ' `An-` ghyjtegou-'.t6 hole In dralying gout thIlapp3!9105I Int: the runor V p:no;p;ga `I-V CXIIIIICD III!$E$ `CUUIII QIQI .cou.mGwoon & MnA'o'1i'5 11-15 mm. Mail. 5 I8 1 .m n In MiY9d' fltl I'LL`!!- ILIB mm. Accommodation. E28 pan. 7. pan. Accommodation. 7.50 mm.- ALLANDALE. & BARRIE sncnou, _ EARIIII Tn ALLLNDLLI . sfolfowinch most: .1naruct1ve paper was read on" Monday by Rev. 0. 8. Ped- joy at thejmeeuns of the Ministerial As- nouhon. . ' In: nVLurIara___naI or name 55.33 Z{.7i"cZf":':'e2I;".'.'riouy to am % Icripmro spawn! Detwoeli 0. *comn_1unity -judsn individual man. The town in. I body` Iilizhohirnctor, I tort pf bout, 39 i!.tlis;`%i0n| whim. s!9",h-;.intomt- un- in their ` 'l'IYIuBI'l Inousu lqcureausanu-avscuuuy uuuw Iain and Hand.Bok_-iIwed mswtlnlv. . 'Dcilv. All othqr trains Daily except Sunday. `.31 `oil. .03. P-mv A.-n ACID` `annals `RAILWAY GUIDE. % m-tr.aits% .. J .UNEXCELLED. I J. Frank Jackson, El;-ovation should u_;x-r;se.,Rand-Mcdy Rhilwaj n mad Hnnd.Bnnk--inumi monthlv. Maker of Portraits. F I-- IIQXVJ`-\'.v-I\\-u\Iu 1 V .".l`n.m' or Sunsclurwuon. A1 I `run'` '* `" muxnfo. Hanan.- V E: ten. PEN . 1`AN.G. A ;Aa|QI|Q'np\AQO:lI$ .\lIIS_\]L` 1 U ._Exp:ou . Mail. A`.-,*.l;l.-::.:. ail. _ -9.93 pin. 11.38 mm. _ runu - pan. 13-45 pm 70 `Imo fvslopment .5. tie m,;`nt.gsee.n sotlyeseriptnrsl , the town `his tri-penile. It in body. soul end spirit, end the gas!" of 4 our e`oI:t;Iii its development along these three lines with constant regard to the christian order. ' _ _ . 4- ' e What, would satisfy, us then in Chris- 1 tian ministers would be that, jrst of. all, 1 and chiey, this whole townshould he as , _` -no devout christipn` man in . its religious T life- `This means`, of course,` `something on farmore than that ~tll0 ministers of the _ churches should fhe on friendly terms; We cannot restuutll theiwhole commun- ity shall be dominated by a deep religious temper, and `that. whatever d_i`erent ` forms on the f surface it may take. at heartthe same tember. recognized by all as one, and binding sell in one family of faith--so that the towneshall have a com- . non religious interest. as distinctly as it has today, acommoneaports interest, `or a common interest in streets and lights and sewers , This may seem chimerjcal as `I haveput it. but really it is the m'ost`prsc- tical thing I can say. _ In 'f?aot`.that is `what we are all working for. If not,` we have no business to be here. We are ministers of our own churches of course; but` we are ministers of these churches for the town of Barrie. ,\nd_ when `we ask ourselves` a `what we want -religiously for the town of -_ Barrie, what less canwe say but that we . `desire to see it~au exposition in litile of j the body of Christ? I speak of the goal, ' not of immediate possibilities.. We -are laying foundations still; but thevremem- ' bravvce of the goal invests with grandeur ` the least _n'o=ti_c`e;l-`work we do ani keeps 3 use-atjour -.hest; h community, every addition to the wealth , being` in a healthy state. One is. the .-T The spiri_tlis.at one end of the scale and the -body at the other-the soul in the middle--`what of the body-o--"Bsrrie s body _,-.-the--materialside oi the town's growth `it [think I will hit the- mark if [I say-that our concern with the material growth of the. town is not that it be bulky and im-: w,v denition of health will be a well-being in which all the members share. For my- self I am disposed to give a broadly com- munistic constructive to that. the time when the present tendency will increase the list of goods that are held in `road-scrapers, parks, light, eto., shall have gone very far forward. I look for a day to come when the town will own _or perhaps exercise the functions of owner- the hands of the `general government--V the land, most of the houses_--all centres for the distribution of at least the staple goods. the laundries, eating houses, music" halls, theatres, and places of, recreation. ` I look for the time when every member of the community vsnced that many of this things we now enjoy as being our own will give us a ner kind of enjoyment because they are our,own no longer but enter into the com- mon stock. But whether by private or corporate ownership, the goal is that every increase in the general resources of the` of any partol it shall be directly an addi- tion' of every part. This is, _it is plain, after i the analogy of a healthy body. And "me that suggest that Barrie is far from. amount of Barrie money which has to. be sent out of the town for investment; the other is the number of Barrie people who are constantly going away from -the town to look for work. I can conceive of a ,di'erent situation. I can conceive of a town like this using all its surplus wealth in iust two ways; one in contributions to benevolent work in less advanced com- munities, and the other in providing op- portunities for the largest number of per- sons possible to put_ their talents at the service of the town. The town would doubtless thus be made so attractive a place of residence that workers would other hand, the conditions of life here would be such that only workers would . come. - - posing; but that it be healthy, and our . I look for, common, roads, `bridges, re-engines,` ship with the .eminent_ domain lodged in` will be so. socially ad-A there are two indications which occur to` flock to it from every `region, but on the. CIEUCC Ull IIII IIIVIIIQW WIIII 13$ CIZVI complete the architectural _ldea-of th e town; In all the home: there would be comfort, varying degreemof elegance and "luxury, but the elegance and -luxury would be of the kind furthest removed from grouneea. and much that in now celled luxury would then count among the ueceuar: . equipment of every hum- ble life. Books, picturea. muaio. statu- ary. rlchcarvingu and architectural eeota would nd a place in every home aa nat- urally ae now. the grocer-`u calendar in the -h suaea of the poor, and the `stag : .antler_e_ in the halla of the rich. = " .A ` ` _,/ _ But such s devoloolnent as in here slwched, in which the hiahest forms of msterisl good would be free to sll the citizens snd lesd in subordinstion to s spiritusl life which should be everywhere recognized as the ower sud besuty of I-110 ox-zsnistn. implies s high devolopmsnt of the` middle member of the tri-oartile constitution, the soul. By the soul of an individusl ss distinguished from his spirit I suppose we no to undststsnd the intel- lectusl` sud Inorsl powers, the sensibility, the-'underst`snding,_ the emotions sud the will. `Let it be` enough to ssy theti-s ms_n's soulis his conscious force in whst'-- "ever wsy he shows it. and the soul of Bsrrio is its "conscious force. '-jAWh_ie_t we wsnt to not st is suclrs .devsl_opn`ient` `cf the hccnscious `force; of Bs'u"-in, cure thjuight orderinuol ugjz__j ' u " - .=:~uvf5-.~ih`:'a. ,-*` V x ` 1 . V I How beautiful might the town he made! Beautiful by aituation already. what scope there in here for the art and ekill of man! The railway driven. back from the shore, and the chore turned into a pieaeant resort for the citizeiia, -tasteful combination of civilizedtconveniencee. and woodland ` eolitudea. ~ All the -rough-cant abominations and nnaizhtly brick house consigned to Tophet and real home: well- bnilt and pleaeing to the eye", lining `broad bonlevarded atreetl, and backed by: `gardena. Few Vatoree. all run by the town and oh connected. with every citizen old enough to carrygone. by a Marconi phone. aplendid echoole, public haile. gymneainm. needing-roome. parka, lniey-grounds, `etc, all` owned by the citizen in common. '1`lIe.chnrcheunch ll eurvlved the` gener- al `broadening and getting down to the fundamentel religious eentimenticommon -to all chrietiane, would have their own buildings auited to their waata and ac de- feigned ac to harmonize with and anitabiy Anita-a'n5n 6"; QA.`LQ`Xd `an: A` 6':-. proceed ". m. ~n.aa. .5: ea. with Jesus. "Lordwe know` not whither" thon goon, 'g'n;d how can we know the way. _ G m - A n g : A - A m -an -nuns n`L an AA. lug , velopment; hsvs`'sE_s'tch.e'd_ tor Barrie..- and mud is onright lines, it is plainthatj. '_e cannot` go far = along thatroad alone. It; cannot ;go. faster than `the country goes, for the town just to have `entrusted- to it` municipal powers wide enough tocover thepprograiii, means a great advance in the ideas of men gen- erallvl If the town wanted to he the New Jerusalem it couldn't, -Parliament and the Wicked `world outside wouldn't let it. But the trouble ts, Barrie does not want to be New Jerusalem, (this is my assumption;.) and it doesn t want it partly because it doesn't know what it is, and - its general intellectual culture is so low that it cannot at present he made to un- derstand what it is; and partly that its ` social feeling is still a long way from be- in ohri-stianiled. It is still largely pa- gan, and these two things, although not precisely the same, still in a large view, go together--low , intellectual, culture and a pagan -feebleness of social. sympa- thy. `Hence. the most pressing need for ~ the future of our town,` it is clear to me, is that those who are able to do it best, should take in -hand with unanimity ~ of aim and deniteness of plan, the educa- tion of thecitizens, `aegeneral broedeniu of the -intellectual life so- that they shall be `capable of receiving the christian ideal of social life. that is intellectually and also of coming into moral sympathy with _, i `Suppose de- .ClUV V. Ilvllnlll OIIVV I-Ivnn W uzr-uv--I v---- Those who are able to do it best. Who should they be` if not the A leaders of the churches 2 -The pity is that even they can- not meet as a body, one- in aim and spirit. and` recognizingvthevalue of all tceach. partedotf from the rest by what seem now- permanently impassable barriers.` Yet even here it` is along lane that has no turning. and the turn may not be so far c` as we sometimeuthink. Anyway it is for those who recognize the path to take `it whoever holds back. We want this `whole town ' under the inuence of a steady pressure brought to bear by the ministers of`the . churches, and acting through those of their members who are in "sympathy with ther'n their most cultured and Christian men and women. We want these to work, not in .separate detachments without co-operation, but as one solid body of intelligence and ` devotion. And we want the aim'to be the broadening of the culture, the quiekening of the intelligence, the rening -of the taste, skn `-nnnlininn II` 6-Ln alvnnoanlilntv of tin: Inna: its > \ i Two large sections of our population are ` speom `aubmipciua... . . ...a Memb_mh1p.. . . . . . . . . . -Advertisements. . . . . . Gavgt-nmVanc_gran. ; .' .V . . . . . Eolrtioultntal. . . ._ . ... . 5 . . ._ Vespra.......,._... 'Intereit .......'............ \'.l`o;iIvvng1-ant. . . . . . 'Pr'ivitbgea. ,7 , . ; .` . ; . .*.- G4to. `r3ii>t2b.". 7. ; . . . . , .__. . ; -'._ .; .?~. %;=oo % ` U Iubvulguuuu. uuu suusuug us out: us-uvv, thesocializing of the eympath of the mass of the citizens, and we want the outcome to be that Barrie shall be conscious of . itself at an organism, shall have clear `insight into what is necessary for its perfect health and jnlleet entrance into its social possibilities, and shall bemoving forward to attain per.- fection as taet as outside conditionja become favorable. and the fact that the co-operation of all who might is not to be expected. does not make any less the desirability, new the imperative necessity that 79. union be formed for theseenda among all Vithose who are willing. manna hsnnn Jnuninnsnnsa II` `Iinsvs-in .11: . While drilling for water, Robert Mor- phot, 3 farmer near -Limo V Current. Manitoulin, nu-uok a, vein of thick black Elubriciting oil- which (yields a bu-roll As :7. _ V - In: wuuug. * , - , . _Every true development of Barrie waits on the development of its intellectual life, and that waits upon the association for the express purpose of promoting": it of the greatest number possible of those who teel the need. The organization of; these `into one instrument, so It seems to me, must he the work of the leading men`in1'er churches. headed by their ministers, and.` the out- come one visible manifestation of the un- dizided church. ` _..lL __-_.___- L- -_-`__.I -I_S... _-_-_ L; . While tolling an elm tree at Morowood, Heart Lisoomb had one of his leg: broken for the third time. The tree got tunglod initl` fall cud uught LiIoomb | log. KIIYIIJUII UIIIIIUIID * * I don't propose to extend this paner to the length it would require If I were to make detailed application of these ideas so the Town of Barrie, and I don't know enough of the town, as I have said. to he in a posi- tion to do such a thing without en wisdom. uni than`; noun bhmnnn -nInnnn'6:4\n- `gal Shunt- ' Co I.Il-$' WU VIUIQ PC OI UV Illllln line" In the right thihzrng people of"t.h`e town in a workable union on the liquor question. Something in going: to be done` "shout itydoubtleee whether weegree or not. But surely think one of the thing: iii which all who wish well to society ought to reach eome oox'umon beeie no on so epeek with -uni eective voice. , = CI A... I `-_L|__ ~LL__- !-- AI_._. If__I____!__I VEUUUIV U V UIUUI 3. And lutlg "there in` clue lleclisnloe Institute. There it en engine ready at our hend. all it` went: in for uni uovteke holdof it. `We on develop shes, end the development of our Mechehioe lnetitnte end lLibn.ry, in the_ full reach of the poelibilltiee this phreee imv plies, would elmoeft of iteelf carry ithe de- velopment of Bertie wrapped up in is. I (`Tho Societies Asaocioted with Its.suo- coed Ho1d,'1'ho1r Annual Meetings. . The on_nugl.t meetipg. ot_ the West Riding of Simooo Electors! District Agricultural Society woo held last wgeli when the following statement of re ooipta and expendltui-og_ was` submitted: A. $359 lIl-BV s 1. That we take for more frequent op- portunities of demonstrdtlng our eseentisl oneness ea Christlsns by united religious meetings It would be more then s de- monstration in the show sense of your reli- gious strength. It would surely lead to demonstrations in the N, -1`. sense, demon- strstions of the spirit and of power. The church would not only show its strength but it would be stronger for such s policy. 7 0 'l`l..s. n :1-nelv nntfnntin On inn-an Snbn won 50 00 INCH 8 Iillil Wll}ll0ll_C Ill WIIUUIIL But th_er`e are} three suggestion: feel that I darvmuke : I Ilu__- _4,'4,|_- p,._r,-_.,__ 2.._.,,_...; ._ Fdi'li:"uvi$:iiii "Ioe'iroiaEo'r` fdi-'ii:ci{3 1;')ii_<:-y`:f 2., That we work patiently to bung into in cl` I-Rn Iuhllhin I-I\:nLIn1p rung:-do cm` 0'11: mam BARBIE mun. bacriptiona... . . .8 IODIB. 5. ...... Itludtogovcto of`: `-0 conooo-0 ......... |t...`.f .'.`.... .'. .-.g_ ' nncngrra. mnnxomm % xwwvmm `...$ 4-06' 85 ' \ 54 00 33 00 `cu... *_8185*8: 3:1 Don't foerge1j that next Saturday is the 31st q the 1i1oi1thjand the1a.Vstda.y.e Some of the best ba,r_% gains of theeentiifesale are placed on `the tables this Don t MissThi$ Oportunity of e Purchasing _ Your` Year's Supply of Household Linens and White Underwear. 480' yards of White Cotton. gbod `weight. free from sizing. 35/in.~widAeA, Sale price 59 2 dozen Frieze Walkhig Sicirts, unlined, strapped seams," colors, Grey, Black ` and _. Navy Blue, regular `value $4. _ Saleprice....; . . . . . . . . . . L: 11 A ' _ . :1 `L 8 Peace .48 column Newepaperl. A ' T Published from the Oce, :33 .Dnlop Stteet Bettie. in the Countv of Simone. the Pro- vince of Ontario. -Canada. evety " Thursday Morning, by LVXJAIIIUEL WESLEY. PROPRIETOB `We wat Liseue "some of our Vgreat; bargains. As quantities-` of some lines are` limited, dQn t. delay. Shop early. Terms_Ca.sh, . . 4 ` .1l'OQ J u - Oibers were el_ect_ed as follow; . ` President--Da nie| , Quinldn. L l_a.t'ViWce-Pres -Simon Dytijent.` 2nd Vice-`PrLeI.--Geo. Blika. Secrelm-y-R. "J. Flbhohet; Treuuror-3-Simon 'Dym'_aot, A Directors-_.-E. Li` Li_ttl_e, M_-.P.P , -Noah G:-one, Dopsld `AA. 3. Wmm, J. w.1I'em1L ago. c..:o.a,.~ `Ju. Viir, J, 0." Irwin D1'f.:_Mr6g- Ladies? Gowns,',ne-cotton,~ `with yoke.` of insertion and .hem_-stitched tucks, and trimmed" with mbroidy. reg. $1.25. Sale price . . . . . . . . .'.i. . ` rho Voapn Agrionlt.n;al Sooiet; elected me following ooors President--Alf:-ed Armstrong. Vice. P1-eaident-J amen Oqum. _ ' Soo y-Treuloorer -Geo. Sneatla. Director:--Geo_. Urawford, Capt. F.l Snenth, Robert Ruueu, Jpn. Chnpp'e}_l, Thoo. Livingstone, Daniel Wood, QM. Hickling, Wm. Orok, Alex; Finloy, ` [N `J -In-iii. In mu _ posting . .; ., . A. Electric Light. . . . . R. E. Fletcher. 00 0 u Postage. . . : ..... . . .Del. to Fair `Ana . . Blld . - . . . ..-o 1'! in Auditora_--C. Hickling` Caps. F. South. ` . ' Q _ ' The Bu-rid. Hqrticulturol Focieti has eieotpd oioeru an uppohded : ' President-`-W. J. Hollecg _ Vioe-Pi-enidont--D. o;c.'mpbe11. Sec ?-1-R. `J. Flocher. ` ` ` 'l.`reuuror-S. Dyment; ~ Di'r6cto;I-- J. H. Bhett. L. Vii:-, D. '1~uok,- J. nnggxuoo, '1'. Ng.h,; F. out `Is 1- A Q`. .-- ` Brown, B. J;yuerg'F. M`; M'onc' Iuuvnv l'lI\l`JlOlr'_' I-I-""""""` "1' " $I.25 Gcwns at 98c. SARJENT & SMITH LT:-u: .'>N.R1-HEa$N Abvnuca ?`u;u;;. nkpnzfnlwnng. J A N u A R Y ...s- 36 10 V . 49 05 925 80 .`.. 9 50 - - _ A .i`i7[$ 76 A `Q19 vv out-no-It \ri -av-.- per Afnxnwm , .