hich 1 chum: ul'.~`(' enty men 1.1"h ted` 1): "515 I hen I he can Branches throughout Canada, and in the United States and 7| uch. menu: I had specm 'IUSi(n. xlis Kl t~ The ied ' you V : o_ oouopoooouooooouooood 3 l W "e" at E2??? kg, `It Pacl SDU nub "oamcxz. TORONTO A GENERAL BANKIR; BUSINESS TnANsAcrzn' ` cowyuzkcuu. AND FARMERS PAPER mscouurgol ' " SAVINGS BANK l)EPARTMENT` 91 BARBIE BRANCH gag... -. "be provided. One doesn't mind; `car-. _x-ying `up a few pails of water, but to - z Large porcelain-lined bath-tubs are! somewhat expensive, but a portable: tin tub will be found to do just as: well. If painted with white enamel} `frequently, both inside and out, the! tin cannot rust and the tub will last] indenitely. `A towel rack, chair, rug` and lamp shelf will complete the; furnishing, and a: small sink_ with a pipe to carry 01? the water should be expected to carry them out again, when one is, probably, all ready for ,uuu I, uuagme mat a, Darrel-headed, |ewe-'necked, slab-sided, ragged-hip- gped mare will produce a stylish colt Isimply because she is mated with a lgood looking horse. Try and have gaglittle quality on the dam s side as jwell as on that of the. sire.` Then Ion the principle that like begets like the breeder is`in a fair way to `raise a good paying, marketable pro- ,duct. Whatever class you are breed- ing, whether it be a driver, _a saddle horse, or a Clydesdale, aim to secure the_ best blood of their ` respective classes. Working on intelligentlines like these, there is no. such word as -fail.--Ca_nadian Sportsman. A noteworthy condition of the` horse market`even during the dull ' season has peen the,steady enquiry for good quality horses. The supply is altogether unequal to the demand. These are facts which oughtito bear lgreat weight with the farmers of` iOntario. Let them patronize well bred stallions, feed their colts gen- erously and aim to raise stock which !will command a high price when of- fered for sale. It is not alone speed `that realizes good prices. ' If your horse is a good looker and `possesses stylish action it does not, signify if four minutes,, he_ will sell for a g- ure that makes him the best. paying article on the farm. It requires no scientic knowledge tolbreed such horses. Common sense and ordinary` -intelligence are all that is necessary.. !Don t imagine that a, barrel-headed,i' g,.,,,_',,,.,.1_.,,,1 51.1. ..:.i..,: _-_-i-: -A . he is unable totrot a mile fasterthan I 3513-up capita!.s1o,ooo,ooo Rest: " " " `T 5! Total Assets, - H3, 00;000 Frequent bathing -is necessary `-for health, for comfort,` for the appear.- ance of the skin, for ordinary _de-. cency and _self-respect. One can, of -course, dispense with a 'bath-rdom by using one s bedroom, but the` comfort of an apartment` in which one may splash at will, without fear of spoiling carpet orcurtaxns, has to be known to be fully appreciated. If you haven't one now, try to get. ;it ready before the winter comes.- Farrner s Advocate. Quality -in Horses, bell, or has just emrged ,frorii a warm-water` plunge, would be rather too much for hurqan natureo bear I gracefully. ' TIFIIVYII ' ` I H J ` GRASETT. u....g., 1807 agr1qu1;ura1-<"purposes, `also oicials j9f:"."th? fmY,'..'trainF`1. Settlement; ' *&j>;t_l_,:; am to ?s7uper`v1.s`c2 the colony: F . .In most houses t11ere"w}ii\: ii;1t least one small bedroom, _or large clothes room," which may with little -trou_b`l'e g.be wnverted into a bath-room. "The -has a large enough pot hole in the first step is to make it absolutelyl tight, so that it may be heated: quickly. If necessary, building paperl should be put all overthe walls and on the floor; a varnished paper cov- ering for the former and linoleum! for the latter will give the necessary batl1-room nishing touch. Now for , the heating. A coal-oil heater will do very well, if the price of the coal oil is no `deterrent; otherwise, if one has fuel on the farm, a small flat- topped stove, which may be bought `e for a mere trie, will probably be most satisfactory. Besure that it top,_ and keep a. `covered kettle near for heating water as needed . The ._ above. methods, it will be understood, | apply to houses in which there is noi furnace. these`:-jg .3 Provided that the townships in the great clay belt in Nipissing and Al- goma afe found to be suitable for ` co1oni2ati_on_ purposes, Hon. Senator Cox is prepared to adyance to_th_e `Salvation Army authorities asum of about $5o,ooo,"for the prosecution of- ua scheme of colonies in `Ontario, at a reasonable rate of interest on the sccur1ty._of the land. _The'report of acommission which recently sur- veyed the land is now beingperused by Senator Cox, andeupon his esti- .mate. of "its contHent's- depen_d_s the .success` of the present proposition. This =.great coloni~zation ~ scheme, drawn up` byktheheads of the Sal- vation Army, "has just beengapptoved a `.111-=prin_ciple by. Gen.'p Booth and gov-. rer_nment~_oicia`l.s, and: it awaits the *sanctionJof a joint comm'ission7-L of the` army and 'th_e~,,go'vern`ment ,to"be - carried_'.` into. -eeet` Its. features are |`LAND SCHEME FOR` SALVA- xTION. ARMY. , F For `myself I. `always like to see every hunter get his quota of deer, .,but'Ie `like to`see him also stop `at that;---Rod- and._Gun, ' . `Supposing a small army {of set- Vtlers from this `part of _.the country `should go down to the southern part of the Province and start shoot- ing `quail a week before the season opened -and remained doing the same thing a few days after it clos- ed. How long would they be al- lowed to go scot free? Why even if they shot only in season they would soon be stopped. It is a poor rule` that won t work both ways. - _ a During the past winter the settlers in this district have discussed" amongst themselves the advisability of shutting out the h.unters alto- gether and allowing no hunting at all except on lands not yet. taken up. What a howl there will be next fall when these hunters come in if this decisipn is carried out! ' .;-an \.r --J .... --5 nnv yuan ow. _These same `hunters who are blaming the settlers for the dec`rease in the game have no objection to hunting on the settlers land with- out any permission asked or` ob- tained. They seem to think that because they "have spent $2 for a license they own the whole country and all that is in it. Not at all is it an uncommon thing for .a settler to be orderedyout of his own woods by .some of these hunters who will tell him that he is on their hunting [ grounds. i Now, I do not mean to say that every Ontario hunter goes in for that kind of thing. I do mean to say, however, that the average hunt- er is a game hog of the worst type, |and'is ready to kill at any time or iplace everything he can see. I nu, , Two years ago a so-called sports- man from Southern Ontario shot and shipped out four hundred ruffed grouse,_ and the year before the same man shot three hundred. How is it we never hear the sportsmen telling these things instead of blam- _ing the poor settler? V Several hunting parties I could name bring nets withethem, and ship out enough sh to last them all win- 'ter. Others bring traps and clean up what little fur we have left in the country. -_-_ -..---v ......95._ `I remember foiir years ago` seeing a full wagon, load. of deer shipped from Ahmic `Harbon at noon on the. first day of the season. Now these deer all belonged to the same hunt.- ing party and had: been brought in by wagon some twenty-six miles that morning.. Wi_ll anyone tell" me that they werekilled in` `the open season? The same party remained in carp for two days after the sea- son was closed. Will some one tell us how vmany deer they left in the woods when they came out? A few years ago I_ saw .four deer left in one camp and in the follow- ing year there were three deer left in the same camp, In both years. there_wa's` abundant evidence to show that others had been killed and partly eaten. . The new houses in the country have, of course, provision for this. \Vith a. tank in the attic, and hot- water xtures by the kitchen stove. the problem is solved just as in town? houses where there are waterworks `to be brought into `use. But where such arrangements _do not ei;is`t.'and cannot well be put into exi A ence, the question of the best sunhstptute be- comes pertinent. I. ..i>\g\. . ... ,, , ,_.-_ ..--., _.-..... -.._u.n._ 1-5u|.i . During` the last twenty years I have been engaged as" a guide and in that time I have met somehundreds "of deer hunters. I_ have never yet met one from the older parts of On- _tario who-was notquite willing to kill more deer than the law -allows him if he could only get the chance. -I have met-two Americans who had such` a chance but" declined to avail themselves of it.` Now these same good sportsmen, as they call them- selves,'will come in a week or ten days before the seasonlopens, and run dogs` and kill deer right along. They will also remain two or three days after the season `is closed and do` the same thing. 1 _-_._;,_ I ,.,----...._`- V..." V. |._l1\p a\.u.u;L. '.There is `no doubt many of the settlers do ktllf deer out of season, and some of them more than they _need.; '_I am,`, however, `wellacquaint- _ed wxth `a good many settlers who have lived in this district as long as I have and have never killed a single| deer. If _a settler has no right to killsa deer when he needs` one y I wonder who has that, right? T\u..:._... 1.1-- 1-,` - (A esetas .Vie_,w.H) it it eDuri-`ng" the-'icou`rse "of the discus-_ sion. on the subject of Our Vanish- ing Dee_r I` notice that most of the writers .agree in laying a consider-, able_ portion of the blame for our deer becoming more scarce `year by year upon the shoulders of the set- tler. As I have lived in the Parry Sound district for nearly forty years it may be conceded that I know something` of the subject -from the point of. view of the settler. frag" - LTHENORTHERN ADV on A useful.-thing for wives to know when they are packing up forrthe summer holiday is how to fold_ a man s coat. .Th'ere--is a knack in it, ,that -it will aid domestic happiness foreherto master.` Lay the coat out perfectly at, right side up. `Spread the sleeves out smoothly, then fold them back" to the elbow until the bottoms of the cuff are even with the collar. Fold the revers `back and double the coat over, folding it "on the centre seam. Smooth out ' all wrinlglcs, and lay it` on alevel sur- face. in the frnnl: e .,..a.uc.cu saucepan Kept on the re. Now make a plate very hot. On this place a hot cloth. On the cloth spread the linseed paste. If `you mean to put the paste against the skin you must adopt some `precau- tion or the poultice will not readily come away. iThe simplest and best way is to take a common iron spoon, dip into hot water and fll it over the_ `surface of the paste. This will . glaze it. - ' -.._- .. uIA|-v\.l Lxuuugll. I To make `a linseed-meal poultice mix a handful of linseed meal with as much hot water as will make al ,thicl< paste. It is well to put ,the water in rst, and to mix it in an enameled saucepan kept on the 3 l'\`9l'A `PC0119, LA` I` Ashes sifted through .a"ne sieve is better than any other preparation for cleaning and polishing hot at- irons. Sprinkle ashes on several sheets of newspaper, then rub the irons on. They will keep perfectly clean and. smooth. The ashes are excellent for cleaning kitchen sinks, pots, pans and kettles, l Keep the. ashes in a baking-powder~can. Per- forate the cover so that the con` . V . _ .. nu, \.UVCl au mat tents can be sifted through. l Tn rvun`p4. .- `3-+-- ` ` y Bath-Rooms in Farmhouses. 3' ` `Everyone has heardof the old wo- man who said she took a bath once in every two weeks, whether she needed it or not.. How she `has been laughed at!--and yet are there not people here and there all `over the country who do not do_as well even as she? And is not the chief reason of this defection the Jack of proper conveniences for bathing? "'I"L - __ _ I -_.. - ....--- uuyu L\Jl 11311. The best way to dry an umbrella, and to preserve it, is to leave it open. on the oor. Where there is not sufficient room to allow that reverse the usual method and stand the um- brella with the handle down. i The water drops. quicker `off the points. The ordinary way collects all the water at one place, where the cloth dries slowly, and therefore rots the ;' quicker. r . ..--- V. saw 5} Lnzuaatxba. if} knife that has been used to peel onions is put at once into cold `water and allowed to soak a while, later being thoroughly washed in hot water and soap, a housekeeper runs no risk of being mortied by` having someone complain at the next meal: I smell onions! This rule holds good for utensils also that have been-used for sh. 'I`I__ L, . .,---v Try to take` a little exercise in the morning before the sun is too hot or in the evening when it is cool. The system requires a cer- tain amount of exercise, even in hot weather, although it `may seem very hot to walk or do gymnastics. 1': ,_ 1__.::. .u,, 4 u BVALVIGII VJ\\vl BIJQQ When ready to sew on la rbw of. hooks and eyes pface the twoeedges of lining to wln-h they are to be` sewed evenly together, one on `top of the other, than take the tracing wheel and mark places on both edges at once. ` l The ankles may. be made strong and slender. by lifting the body up on thetoes fty times night `and morning-., This will not only be good for your ankles, but prqve to be an excellent general exerclse. 'IIfL_., I I: "` "'7'" ` v ` The undertakmg may, ._moreover, be _considered a sound business pro- posntion. I! the present scheme is successful no one can say how far` similar efforts may go. P Senator Cox declined to give fur- ther details of the matter, reservingh further information until a denite; decision had been reached as to_ the`- suitability of the land under consid-` eration. 7 ` V ' $++++ -M-z-+-z-4~4-:5:--:~~:-at-:~+-1--z-:-.:~v.-z-L` Of course,` the ultimate idea `is that the j settlers may e_ acquire the land they have cultivated. It is one of` the many meritorious things about the `Salvation Army, this principle of theirs, to give every` man a chance of doing something for himself in the new land of his adoption. It is the essence of this colonization scheme ,and its main object. urn: 3+-:-#1-'-:-:-+4--:-:----z-s--2-1-:--so-z--z-z-I-' . I-1:-,2-:1 J ` ROUND THE FARM, . _ . . . . . . _ _ . . _ . . _ . _ . _ . _ , _ . . . . . . . . . . . . . _ . _ _ _ . ,, Al **No1;:i,;l?:i;`lf`yeti st{1d,l*"!said sen: ator Cox. If the land ' and othel; matters, such as zclignatic conditions, are satisfactory, the scheme will "in all probability succeed. If the _re- port, which I have not yet consider.- ed, is of an unsatisfactory nature, the army will have to cast about for more suitable land. - , ', _ The; -gffihis 'sc11`1-`tie \;vetje submitted to Geri`. Booth during hxs recent tour in Canada.` - T -- u_mrs nun nsmmntns 0..../., ,:/o:;ooo , O. 00"" 0. gsame llndertaking Estab|ishmV?1i. $7 war not Crack, Peel nor Chalk ifP1`Perly applied. "They are made in 60 different tints, andare absolutely the best.` mixed paints on the market V Island City/Pure. Prepered Paif1tS 3 are best.Vfor every purpose. Island City Floor Paints (117 in.8 hours. . Eon `SALE BY :ooooooo9ooo9ooooo`6ooo_o9o o L have all the npplisncell for the care of funerals in transit throuqhm, `surrounding country: Hearses and Wagzons; Morgue and torment: in all cemeteries. or shipment: tonll parts of the world nndercnkeranprc-mpnlv and properlv cared for. PHQN E 32_ n and Burial Parlors. In. . work of owner for.$1;000.00{ sp$.g'jn.;.fgA$100.`i He- cured gvery sign of lamen Spavin Cure- -won ve races mt}: the horse-then sold th ' 1`l7uI-vvnvn-u-an 17-: .-- w` `V; of .1eiva`rk, N.]'.,_ Sought a hox-se..1am(;d with . a fr Cut 01: Strain;--or an old S - A cure your horse with PQVIII. .z'7zte//@671? 5 z'na eArs. :1` "T !`hdeg"Ca2t,1_e9. oimrk: N-J. boelzht 9 h1`3e--lamed utl. _ ` `Peftbzevzl Comment on /zome ajaz : T6/.1_ quzjged _ C rresponaffmce Dc /9;! "5"." l' " Ex:/zzzizge` ezvs, _U)q-Ltio-(zi'zZ gr2'cu/tz{7'a/ ./Votes. 5720?! 510?? . for Essa, lmzzsyf/, l"c_v/6:71.! LG. SMITH 8 C0. Deposifs o! $1 `and upwards received; intlei-est nllovied, current rates and paidjquarterly. The depositofis subjegt to-no dlaywhatever in theWi'thdraw_a1 at the whole or any portion 6! the deposit; _` ;_ 1- - - . | J COUNTY PAPER THAT EM%os*r PEOPLE READ . . . . . . T. TYRER C6llir.and Clapperton Streets _ __,_.---....v.u, a.v.u., LVOV - ' ' Cure a very n. "};avfel;`;`:!;ie`y`o;1;:1?op:s'e|snand I am never x . IQ . , ' .< V-. 1` -Ge": Kendhnvslsspgvin Cure--the remedy used bytwo 02: -wil save you man d . carefully read and a Y a 028 `I 0Write today for a ' ALWAYS OPEN. gs`. 1:. iwuxnn, n n ALEX. man, General manger _A; n. mnuxm, Superintendent of- Rrnnn-hag ESTABLISHED 1a-ro LAMENESS Island City P a i /2 ts , Wsnnxnvorox, N,z,_ -mm ..... e....-:.. n....- - , .. i:5IURsDAY, Hogan u many dolly 51 and acted upon, free copy, '. 2nd or % c MMERCE