Ontario Community Newspapers

Northern Advance, 31 Aug 1911, p. 3

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- -v..6-. ousands . `L A I should` be a good ' range, its, Flannel `and Duck Trousers, Outing Wash,Neckwear_ and Invisible Suspenders. ___1 n -- v. 7_j1`,-LDERSON, .'1_!;:e<%:aa1iLis'edre. namg, 4 sure, $18.00 to $23.00. ;Trousers in cream serge material, .belt loops-. All sizes, price $3.50. of a Million. Happ: aily use if: Canada BARBIE AGENTS s, two-piece, half-lined, mde to .19 L- an A- nge` May Abe 7.G`oVo:d`--'%-. Thought I_ J Good combines all the most mod- s and when the makers.i_n- .' Meaford .... .. Midland . . . . . . 3 Mt. Forest . . Newmarket . '. Orangeville I Oro . . . . . . , . . . Oshawa . . . . . . . Owen Sound. . . Parry Sound. . . Peterboro . I. . Queensville . . . Toronto (Can. 1` Renfrew . . . . . . Shelburne . . . . . Sundridge . A. . . . Sutton West Tara Wood'b.r.i<.io. I.` did not 5se_en'1 -to"`-tiefone present `whe favored` reciprocity. One man_ -pro-.. feussed to `be an independent Liberal, I but said -he did not think reciprocity. would make any ddtference -to him.` At the close of -the meeting, which" `was presided` over by Mm." {J8/mes `ton, one of the most prosperous and " ,,--__7 ----ya an-VIVI `best read farmers of the district, hearty cheers were given for Major Currie, who '_seems..to be losing none -of his great popularity with`rthe farnh1'-_ ems. V Limited, Brantford, Ont Happy Thoughta" u..-.`I_ range. It is the "hi-'nm!......._ t`\ .. U _- _. only unuclt nishi-ngs. On it de- {going to be a drudg- 'esn].ts_ perfectly relinable Qunlop St. o o c u no Big Fight in Liberal `Camp.- i'u`1 {G Run` l\::~- 1g-- :uves of -the c praise of use it and s, sizes .. .. wept. 28, 29 . . . . . Sept. 19-21 . . . . .Sept. 14, 15 . . . . . . . . .Sept. 19 ..Sept. 11, 12, 13 ..Sept. 12, 13, 14 ..Sept. 20, 21, 22 .Sept. 14, 15, 16 . . . . ..Oct. 11, 12 .Aug. 26-Sept. 11 .Sept. 20, 21, 22 ....'.Sept. 26, 27 Sept. 28, 29 Sept. 23, 29 . Sept. 28, 29 Q....L 1n rs- mo`s/t 'h,ne- 6`:-st gun in ithne I "'V"i 35 34' eampaign__`;yvas red. ,at; Oraighuys,t' %4 Thu-rsday A ven-in-g ' th` suede to fthe dqors to 'hgnr`Major` rie and his colleagues expound - the doctrine Q1 9. greater Ganad9. \, and -sn-act anglependnance of ithe United State-s._ The aud'ie!hce, amo1_1_g_'whi'ch _ were many women, was c_ompoed. p15` 1; most entirely of farmers, and` there I` An"? inn` .-......._ 4-`-1.- ".'$'-- . " ~ g ?'1~v"'35:t`"1`L1Ia.- nag,-o;'a;.,;{e;'a.;;?;;~1;?.`;:1"t;;*2' '.fv'wt';-`of,I.`:,t|he" onipetitibxp dfauthe %%Twe1V9%r -211a-yoreId=v` lvaci ~ this " ~-H'tt.1;V 1 r: 5-E`: .g.' From" -a. Kansas paper of ,Aug.4th, Mr, Currie read` the -curr`enrt~ market pnibes as fol'l-`o-ws:-E'gg.e. 1.1e..`l_ "du,cks_;-= 6c., hens 7c., Gz1'01l`l.v210."gBjl., ;. o9"m,,` 53c., . oats, 37c., and -1 `chickens j 2 o Ameritsmf, prices. 1o9kF 8096, to yiu ,`,`__..-....... `.\aua\IVI\J'\L .1'uU3U` Lullel vote for reciprocity will be this rat `to 're<.bel a.ga.i.nst it., if it is carried:.{ And 1 tell you farmers `here vto-mifghgta `that; you srtand to` l`orse~ almost fmm -t-'he_ -start. Ohamp'O1ark spoke as -a. greatt . he-ader whzen he said! -this was the Llft A -step towards an1uexati_on, `and the Lib.-` '_' ex'a1=s are unlntenrtilo-nwa.l1l'y playing _in:tO.` the '11ands of the Amerticams. '1"he4yTaay; , you can abvogateu this pact_.When _ you`. like if it is no.t- satisfa-ctory, bu:t- who ` ever wxent into. a busi.n-em jpja..r.tnerl:`?' pwirthout -havi.-n.g d-iicultty and L. -ting out of it. From the _of August 2nd- Mr. letters from f~aa-mars, who opposed" .pact, and said she felt saviaerlg~:_..hg4o `the vimbeullligemt farmers bf N (woe would never endtorae-`thi:sL-`dye ` j`Umcle Sam. , V wvwill - them ' 5 average pr-mes "of horses, dairy cows, and othet eat-tle, aheep and` swim, to be` higherjn. Cja.-`nude than the" U. S.~ Well, how are` you-going to go; higher` prices under~Reciprocity}l,%V.` 4 1:1_____,' _ 'I')_~_, ._ ` ' Major Currie than pnoduood the- American White Book-the- blow that killed -fatnhuor-T--a_.nd,_ diemonsrtrartedo how lax the Otctawa, G-.ovea-n-menu was: in not having so similar book of compar- ative priees. This book `shows; ot_heo avenge p `cos =01 horses, da__iry.' cows,- and .nvnv'.'.'avnnA LA` They. .teLl you -of barley an'd .--"at-" tempt to make, you believe you Vwil-1 get' the run of the American nilar et for yomf b9.r'l`ey, but do -you knowt at the Americans last year shipped `into Canada 143,-000 -bushels of -.bar1ey:.u What will. they `no when -the`. duty of r 15c. per -bushel is take.n. 0!! 1 ` 7 ' Sif Wf1}'n{i":hu';{sa:{af 9, commigsion 1 would be appoinfpd to take eviduemce, But did he do so? N ' . v u- -uuv uuu[U|.|,5Ll LU` vtguc ` Does it not look 9. little shady 1` If you will look up your rhisltory `you will `nd thazt Geo. Brown messignte, because he did not favor this concu-rrent legis- lation-,, which the. Liberals are telling` you is the` saving clause of this pact. But we all know -how well the Yanks ees : keep any -agreements they make, and how" driioulvt it is .to break away lwi-thout -tr`-on-ble and loss` to ourselves. n9__ -rtv-'1 n o - --3--o_o-nu & Gllillo. ' I Major` Currie asked his _ audrfncri flwhiat .they thou?gh.b of a. deal` against which 90 per oe.n.t. -of the Liberals in meat`-h:a.s' been `publicly made by Mr. Lloyd `Harris, a former st,-a1'vv-art. of the Liberal: party, and has not yet been publicly contradicted. . This tre~aty, cocnt-in-ure-(1 Major Cur rie, was made -by the two oldest men in .t=he...Ca.-bin'eot,.. and` -they on] gave `Premier: _ Laurier two hours con- `sider _it. It was -thrown. `into the 'House:'wivt1ou;t '9, Liberal caucus, `an un;he-atrd: of" procediu-re . `Why . this haste? Were the .two old men of the i Cabinet undJea -`the, d-ominaitjon of 4 President Taft ? Why, it took, eight 1 years to put the Recipro.-crity .treaty of. ` 1854-66 "through, but they ask us? to p1lit~`thliS. -one through. in eight days ! Does it not 1001: .9, Iitnn ..1.v...1.`.ia - bra ---.. -. mu ucvlu-1' rvecexve rst price` `for -`barley, continyue-d` Mr; Ferguson, 1"` as it sweats after being bound in 't-he sehevaf. But if we convert this to tpork and` other live stock, we will i.c'omrtin-ue to prosper. If there ever was a. time when the farmer should stand. by his guns ands not be hood- winked` by- this reciprCvcrity farce it is `right now. Get- up early on t;hemorn- 3. ... -1! P` ` ` ` 'used [to years .ago. ` (You're right, th-ere, came from se ve1-a.1 farmers in [the and-ience-);j A man who uses a. 'bind'em will never receive first price for continzue-d` Mr: Fermmm t-axbly , under pnesemt conditions. W-by, said: Mr. Ferguson, the On- ltaurio farmer can not produce No. 1 [barley -and. %-bind it -with. his self-bind Am n---3' -A " ings very p quotations on mrutoton, egram quoting `.` N othim my rive] the W0l'd : do much bet Australia. 'pped"-hogs to P. Burns- found -the do: rotable. Thy wired f `but in reply prices, I receiw g doing. . We ca ter in f _._,, ...a.... gal a.u.utu.a1 uvauup.` This is the rs;t, b.i.g line of cleavage thwt `has. -occurred in the. Liberal` namke. -since Laurier came in, said Mr._ A. B. Thompson, M.P.P. Many prominent- men in; the party `have desertxedf the ranks of the Liberal party and are out agaimst rec_ip'T0ci~ty. Mr. Thmnpv . son. made a. very convznczlng speech, and scored rbh-e Governmemm for _wanton2l5f wasvting the public funds in such vote-A catching schve-mes! as `the Newmarket Canal , on` which $2,000,000 of 17h_eipe0- ples m-o-ney -hvasvbeen-sunk,a.nd- on whiehj $2,000,000 more will be Waismd before it is completed. When nth-ixs gig'an'ic ` ` `ditc11 is nrizshed it will not be worth. a. snap of the ngers. ` `Is there one. man here in. favor: `of reciprocity? asked` Mr Th-ompson, !but- not. one ans; 0 weredl in the affirmative, and hearty` _appla.~use followed` Those fannem W119. ` reciprocity be .r_8t' . --...-.. u.uu- u-vw balan h&V'6I our sheep indusfry, what won Twelve Favored.-j N atioms do to T w`v-5--`*1 V` ` and [that 1_s. what mtenests us,_. ghe'y tell _ Take hogs, and the right class of j bacon hogs have been `j worth V more i`n'Cana.d'a.'.thaz_1~' in the `U.S..fo_r' ten; years, `and-` the American ' "trus-t packers would the producer and the consumer. I Toke U Tombs, my brother had` two cars` om the 1 This is-` what the -head o`. `an workman, Amie:-.iAt in.jn;aaiufaAtories in- Gan- ada, : paym-g annually Foarmadx who buy our stu_-if. Americans want to `$50,000,000 `to ` ;me:r. , 'and' `his words can-i'od ' a short .timjo v?v e*an.a -inore for our mhaot, `will mi-x our No. 1 their own: and' _ the_results.tha.t ti'ty `anti . in the `. mu-c!hr Liberals are` :1 sex]! it 77` will y lmceve 11;. or 293, _.-bu-t`theAn1eri:cans _ hard when-t wit-h ours will loge idem"- _end. we will not get. now do. I` believe the` yghit whenv -they- tell us -y less for his pro- 1: see `how we can then V puvvlvuls " 9|? : 03953.91`-,,fN."_' He spoke as a `farmer to farmers?- Iconviction.` in Bri-t~ai1`z,' with U ,-- O---a .u-uur wuu [)6 H000" kead` by rt Get? the morn- af Sept. 21st and Aplump your bal- Ln for Major Cultrie and: get rid` of Governnren-t which wou1d._sell you he U. s._ % 9 % I Per Cent. of Liberal Members` I Against Pact. ,_v_,,. r: to addrem. the 1 tuna-n. 'I`'- ---~ 7` `-7--. .-av cyvnc ii-8 rv td [f-armems and proved con- that the farmers of this could not `raise b_ar1b'r_y pm-! n TI-l\+ Irnuuisnlcn A A `Y ` L Ievve-r continued` Mr-~ 13 n---~- ._.--......5 uVl1so' W9 C811!` frozen. mu-tt'on- from Wed] if reciprocity coms .wil1l~ have a hard job to hon a.t. al'l. v.-n.. 4u.1ul'ClD- LU VUUC .[U\1' rec-1pl`_0=cl'1'y .11-e did not think it was -righvt? ~ T'hat'~s ta. poser, said Dr. Palling, and the -audiencev s'hIoute4-d and howled with dezrision. Sir Wi-lfrid said, farmers vote for me, -and I wilvlsw-esep protection o th-e books, but has he -done so? was the Doctor s closing] _ _ I ` remark. meem M blvothoxffaa-l- rn an n fang.-- 1.; 4-...--. - v'uU wont wired for n to received 117 1 .nvovvv;v`v'-5 ~11? : -1 W81-VJ lwntilone .3gQ;O00,000_ pA_eop1e. `I ;_ ,To-day the farmer is the__ manufacturr of all. He feeds a, great dye-ad of. hitgraisn and sellsfthe-I "nishetll. product, such as. horraeo, calt-g tie, sheep, swine, etc., `and 116- ndadbg V;/Hlfo ,~tna'nge-fied. A stock of the Western ` 317*5It6. .Whf1`.! ` 13.19 Prm are . -1.1'0W1' f A1341 '1: am .. % mi pm P9*fha:j%%wmiars .0`: . Siimcoe 4?i0*'" -Y are r.h"0t 7 :thr,W~%;.9Waxi;:: . Vendeavonet to have the proposed new ,4 Mr; Currie mad-e ref-ebentce te hi-9' lin-eof the C. N. Ry. from` Orillia via Caighuns-t,- Barrie and Colhingwood. to ,th_a.t way. As the people were aware, . Izake Huron, __and the bill` now `reads! he (Major, Currie) `had' stood; for a` pure food law, which is now before! :the.pa1~1i:ameut; he had exposed" frauds invrtherea-la" of cattlefoodss, and a. bin been;._pl-aeedfon the statutes. to prevent -this"', kind '01 thing` `hnppen.ing 3 . nmniis. V ~. ` farmers. -.179 said thafo in Ar.gentin:a, ,,pr0<:itr" dea1:7` "* > discussed: phase of the reciprocity ` question in a new light before the, where labor is cheap, there were 10 cattle: to 1 in Canada, and V showed- that they can produce `beef much cheaper than weecan. He produced a tin of `A`Fmy Bentos, a tinned. beecf can-ned in Argent.i'n'a. and sold in East- ern Canada; and even right in Barrie today. This beef is` driving out: the Oamadian product _-and paying the! duty-A--wha~t Awil-1 thy he .when- they are allowed in free under this reci- A ha.rr.o.wing tale is told by Capt. De-an.' We left Pemetan-g on Sunday morning bound for French: River, to! take 011 lumber for Mr. .Pod'man of Mid'l and,- hve say.s. Reaching Point au Baril we tied up for "a time, 'and then proceeded, but put about, for 9. storm `was on and looked -too da:n- I g-erous .to' run -into it. At midzn-ight, however, ` we again cleared, although we were advised not to go out in the teeth of the _ere_e gale -then bl=ow_img. For many hours we encountered the -A at A I .:`I couldnot get the tug to n:oti-cevl` ourdsignals, `the c.-a.p't~9.1n; says,other- : wise. sh-e'mightv have 'aItened, her course I and pulled us out of the trough, in which our timbers were being pounded in`. She did not. know, I fear, the: sindking-state of. the barge in time to cut ad-rift and` save Pherself. A. `III-AUJ "VIC (I-`U10 ' mf;e-"1322" in an exhausltedl` cond-itiom, and at whose `bands they vreceived all possible care. They had not had a bite to eat` for tlrrty-six .h0u=ro3-. The thirteen-foot yawls in which ;thy had been buffefed about in a raging sea were more .tha.n- half full of'water,- and the condition of the party was most pitiable. . -The story of the -shipwreck in brief is that the barge sprang. aleak and was fast sinking when all on board managed- to pile into the small yawl before `the vessel sank. She- was in `tow of the tug `as she settled, and this` ci.rcum.svta.nces.. leads Capt. Dean to be- lieve tihat in fon`ndering -she drew the `tug down with her. T - l The shipwrecked party include Capt. Dean, his wife, his niece, Mrs. -A-1ex., Bu-ch-anan of Moose`J aw, her two ehuilldt } -ren, a two-year-oI'd1 girl and a two- mxonthsaold . baby boy; Miss ~CI'ementine Label-le, another niece of Ottawa, and: one sailor named ' Joseph St. Peter. They were brought up the river `by Capt. Louis Lamondie, 1ighhouse- keeper, whose wharf they were able tn n1n.l:n-loaf {n`1 :... ..... ..-`I.........L...: ___..._.-, vu-rug vvuv, vvulvlll ll-'K.l' `rug ;lbarg'e'in tow,:h-as gone to the bottom ` also. The tug carried, besides the cap- tain and" his wife, a crew of eight. What gives ground for. the appro- hension. -that the Martin. has be- come: a prey to the waves, is the story brought by those on .-board the barge, who reached Byng Inlet safe this morn ing ater enduring the ,'hard.ships of a night andja day adrift on the-bay in small boats during one of the worst gales that ever blew. > Byng Inlet, Aug. 23.-`-The barge ~Alba.tmss of .iMid&and, Capt. Dean, foundered in the Georgian Bay, oif French River, on Monday night, and it is feared `the `tug C. C. Martin of }Mid-laandi, Capt. Vent, which `hadl the "lsni-an-n.'{n lung: 1...... ....._- L- AL, I L beli`eVved1 to hdvo been_1osc w1'1t.h an hand`: in" the "Georgian Bay whdn` the % barge Albatngss went `down, had mine r I .Midla'-nd,"' A'uhgV..24..--'-'.1`9he tug Martin, T orhten persons on board. These i.nc1u&- ed Casptaim George_ `Vent and Mrs. `hVen:t. `They havefour children. Rich- 1 and Malia, -single; `.R-dbert Hook, Br- 1 Book is also a. married man. Otheus _ on rthe tugwene: W; Martin, F. Mc- Quinn, F. Bnsqnme. `V It is thought` 4` there was another man on board. 1... People `Believcd `Tc. A ngownea off 1..., but cm of `sage, After Night Speilt in Open Boats, Arrived at Byng Inlet-- A Boats_B_elon tb Midland Owners. ' % [BARGE Aumkoss surix` M ' e_1iormou"_ ptpducic to Q19 Ifreei -ind _a-n ; mi r_e_iproo'a1 advantagig mm; Lw i'lI-T`-nott be ex ' '1_';we1_ve Nstiome, who will then =,em r {. f ' `I Tfomty "farmeis" are:-V" "A-ng_en~tinAe, .7Ve_rx`1e j:Denmav;-k, '-:S'w`eade-n, Austria-Hnn ."ga'ry, QT: Tbpagn and swiezerlana. "."l`HIS.'IS FAc1f'14HA'r CAN"! BE A gentleman by the name of JohnM Parr, who ~SI'1t in_:ther audience`, said: Do you think that Sir Wilfrid woud asvk the farmers to vote f0\1' reciprocity `if did not. f.xhi`n.1( -31- 117029 ..:...1..LonI I mead 11atf(,iI;;pe1er't`i1i:`f;f0t\11` aa}t~ s3.:`P.7. 4*D..." 191'1*, 3 - ' 3... if `i. . j -. ; `' ` %3%3`:*%+`'T 9` W."-_'T 1330 Wk .3 M, Q IQ h`3iQ `*1 . mt: tn`? i !g`hl:% Q: }`:`Q&\ bgugiklly gout? Nb Q . `asg Ttiih $513` ;QQ`, `N Vthi `hing i N K ihrghy $11 qt: tn t . .]`hl 1~ Ea `Q `(ghg ha `t};`1:l %~\ tilt. gut M .:`t%:;iQut\. `illihsq IQ `xx *i\i:* kit "(F 111 15:5` &:~ ts % 1t\:\.:;r:bQtf:t.%(tf:i: Q`i Q \ that N at `I. 9 `B1,, W; h `is; ` ~t;??;aZt \ JJLLLKU`-"J I O O |A1Iiston . . . . Aylmer. . . . _. Beaverton . . Belleville . . . Bobcaygeon. Boltoh . . . . . . Bowmanville Brampton -. . . Brockville. . . . Caledon . -. . . ._ Chatswor-th" . lChesleyA . '. . .. v- ccolnl &63&l~o I Issueddbgr the Agncultural Societies; Branch of the Ontario Department of` Agriculture, J. Lockie Wilson, Supt. BARRIE .. . . . . . . . . .Sept. 25, 26, 27 g Alliston .......... . . , ..... . . Oc-t. 5, 6 i _Aylmer. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Oct. 4, 5, 6 . .. . . .. .Oct'._ 3, 4 . . . . . . `. . '. . . T. Sept. 12, 13 Bobca.ygeon'.. A. . ._, . . . . . .Sept. 12, 13 . . . . . . .~ . . . . . . . . .Oct. 2, 3 . . ; . . . . . .Sept. 19, 20 . . . . . . . . . . .1. . .Sept. 19, 20 .` . . . . . . . . . '. .Sept 5, 8 . . . . . .,...Oct. 5,6 . . V. . _. .Sgp`t. 14,"15 - Chesleyh . . . . Sept. 19, 20 ;' Ir YOU vrsrr TORONTO, vtsitons to Toronto at Exhibi- tion time ought not -to fail to take a trip to Searboro Beach Park, the _ great amusemenxt re ort at the East end ' of.t11e_ cityg ` - _ Scarboro Beach has had the mosrt ,; prosperousv sea-.son in _its, history this ' summer, and visi`vtors who have seen` it before will be struck by the many improvememfs. The Scarboro Inn is genena.I'ly considered to be one of the very `best 1~es.taura.n.te in the oity, and durirng exhibi-tion time will specially cater to ou-t-of-town guesrts. The vau-. dteville enterfain.ment. is of the same class as that put on atotheu Exhibition; the pemm-anemt houses) of amusement 'surpass any1;hi.ng else in Canada,, the Park itself is one of the prettiest on 7 tube Cont'inen.t. " . _ - o t I A visit to Toronto would not be oom- pete Wit`hout a ride down to the Beach* [which is in about the same relative Ir position. to the East of the city as Ex-' thibition. -Park is to the West end. [Going from one Park to another, you `see -praetieatlly al~1-there? is- to see of the South part of the Queen City. l $7? ____ .,..w, nu vvutu. uas oeen~ received [of the tug, which hardly could be `sup- posed to` immediatel-y put out to nd her tow, if she had: Weathered` the storm -and made a port. ' -_The tug C. C. Martin was new and insured. What -adds to the fear of her founder-in.g is -that, although 36 hours have elapsed since the barge was ab2mdone.d, no word has been- received of the tuna whinh L.....n.. -..--n -- vvuvi. She was unuinsu-red. r Not one of those aboard saved. anything but the clothes they wore. Miss Labelle had AtwoAhun- dred dollars in, cash in her trunk. She was coming to Toronto to pursue a course of study. She and her married` sister were sailingas a matter of holi- day recreation. " -....... ......, 4...-u:nu;a~u>:v BU.1u' US $I'),UUU,UU,U w-onth ,mor-e of 'th'e.ir goods rbhan we sold ` them. Our home markeot certainly-was not h-el-ped -any .by. this treaty, but too day und-our the National Policy you have the greatest. home market in the` world--a ma:r-ket where you sell 80 per cent. of all: your produucts. But this ~c'ompac.tv will not only enafblle the 90,- 000,000 of the U. S., but also the 320, "000,000 producers of the Tweilve Favor- ed I\'za,tions, will then! be. able to 4com~ pete wilth you for you.11 home trade. U. S. to-day 1'~a.ise~s enough-` whe.a,t to `feed 120,000,000 people, and` not h-at-lf ' their farm Lands `are in use. Tlhray are one of then greateszt exporting nations in the world , and if recipnocity goes- into fort-ve you will be. S-ubjectled to 0; the er(=e..1t com.vpeti.~tion of a-my co-untry , in the world. 4 tsas$"\I 4.` Vania out e x ,`o 1;he game 'c6nipetition. these? , the. will the" ;jcqme7 coun'p_etition; with- L-:'gfoin~i;in_e,'.~.Vene'guela, Columbia, Bolivia," z-Hnn'._ga'ry, Japan, .No1-`wgy, Rtissia, AND we MARTIN Losr I Fi)i1r times have I been `shipwreck- ed. This is my w.ons:t- experience. I don't know -how the women and child.- ren ever survived the terrible exper-l Iience. . ` The barge was 165 fgf over allnand 37 feed: beam, carrying a cargo of three hundred and m +1m......`..,: a--L .. uuuc, uuu 1UllI](1 that W6 W616 ` yng In-let lighthouse, which finally 9 made. f ' - ,_ ..-..-....,... u-ow "O xuuatr take t-othe yawl, for I knew the barge 9 was doomed. We men .helped- the wo- , men -and children into the yawlg then 9 jumped for it ourselves, to find it half _ .'full of water and the seas breaking __ overtit, so that we expected every ' moment to be swamped. It was pitch black, -and the .wind' howled fright- , fully. Miss Labelle was the only-one who could bail. I had to raw, and my man sat in the bow and directed! me how to steer mv course so as to avoid the combers. We were "tossed about for a long time. Sudden-ly an empty yawl hove in sight. It was a God- send. We `managed to lay hold of it, and so ease our `boat of some of its tug Martin, and h.ad'-part of `her dav-' its attached. All that night and next day we drifted helplessly-. I took an observation when the sun appeared for :1 while, and found that we off 1 Bvng In-let no1.nm....... ...:..-_L A, -- "".'-`-- L - u uccrult take to the yawl, 2 was Ann-......1 n-r- ...- [worst bldw ever eiperieneed 1'1 an I my sail-ing life of forty-three years. I ga-ve'up `hope of ever weathering it. Hearing some noiseyfrom ~a spaniel and her litter that I had` aboard I wen be- low, and was horried to nd- foun feet of w'a-tear in -the hold` and the vessel leaking fast. Our pumps were of no lavail`. I then decided that we must Hg. 4.. n... .......a L. r oggrogat- [1_6"Vpopilhtioy."of`fhAre y prpduction of-"a:g`rie_nl tura1 and ani- $416 free Caiiadiain " 'rkot. ,Can'ada .._..=._.;.._-. > - - o-.o~4onu-nut-not )n_."..-. . IOOOIICQOIVIIDIOI ,lle _'oo-no-ouooomuuo C... .`I...I.I.I into-can-nnuooog They say look at !the -prosperity of` Canada during the reciprocity treIat.y- of 1854-66, but do .t-hey rteld: the truth aboutt this matter. No they 0l1'1y.t6!] l , half the truth. They do not mention the fact tha the inamed prices of 1854- 1856 were war prices `and hxatf nuthihlg to do with Rec.i-pl-ocity. There fol'lJow- ec} in 1857 one -of the gveatzeast pandas `in our history. Then followed A the, American Civil Wan in 1862 aund more war prices up until 1866, when that .Americ`ans:, who never stick '.to their . bargains-, abrogated the treaty. Th-ere 5; is a very pecu~li.ar thing a.bou't these I --eleven years of reciprocity, and that is .. NOTICE ` Clarksburg l - ` Colborne . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I Cookstown . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . - Collsingwood . . . . . . . . . . . . . ' Dundalk . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 [ Elmvale . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .C Fenelon Falls . . . . . . . . . . . . Gale . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5 Georgetown . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Gravenhurst . . . . . . . . . . . . .5 Guelph . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8 Hamilton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Huntsville . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8 Ingersoll . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8 Lindsay . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sept London (Western Fair Max-kda e marxaaxe . . . . . . . . . Markham .' . . . . . . . ` Sseners, orn under the.gyer shirt and ove :J_th_.under-shirt, twp and four points, 50. per pair. Summer Apparel is Here in ' Full Profusion `duck, Vunished. with cud _and belt loops, 14" to 17, price 75. to $1.25. . ,_ v... in good quality of heavy Brown $2.00, ' ' Ducnk Outing . Trousers Whit` 31,-75? - Oung Shirts in plain and fanc y stripu patterns, V .Belts,' colors. Grey, Tan and Black, 25c. and 50c. j ';Wgsh" Neckwearv in plain andfancy colors at 10c.. 15. Tweed Suits, Flannel and Shirts. Belts, Wash Neckwear a _ Grey Tweed Suits, two-pie your - special measure, ix x Flannel Outing Trousers -made with cu and belt A The More than a quarter " V "J l."""""""" ."""'ll`s GLZUUU B11659 V9 Years -0? reclpvoczty, that that the Amerlcans sold-0 `us $43,000,000 .m-mm nf' :f.h'ni1- crnnzla. shim... ..._ `.....1:.'1 I [Another Range`. May _be -iGoodi-4 . the product, the `9Happy When a range combines ern conveniences makers.in- sist that only the best materials should be used, and that every range that leaves their a factory should be perfectin ' -workmanship--why, it - .FiyE, V Poxxfs VC%x_.onm\'G STORE range. Semi-rrahg% Eailnriitg Grey, Neckwear in andfancy 10c., 15c. -rnnn-IAJULJU IIJJDL` 1'5 I. OTFON & SON On Frid`a.y nigh-t meetings were held ! r-a.t, Da1srton and Edgar,- when the same speakers ad-dneesed good, sized landi- ~ences', and the same enthusiasm" and`- feeng a.ga,inst reciprocity ' prevai-led"; The Parting of the Ways. There: have `been: three great epozcfhs in the .~hi*st'ory -of Can-adra, said -Dr. Falling. The rst was _Confede the beginning of our .nsati.on~h_ood-; the second came in 1878, and to-d='ay we. are, facing the third one, which 'Preu_s\idewt' Taft has been `pleased to term the `panting -of the ways. This? reciproc- it compact has been interje-cated V by a tit: Laurier ad'minis`tration-`rho cover, up_~ 4 the scamdals, the mention of -which `should make rtheir Jtewadrers -blush with and t-hose scandalis have got in upon 1 1 sh-amen. Sir Wil-fri-d haazs l~os-t his grip 1 1 him on all sides, i

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