Upon than-In the-'0 was a mum look while 1m:-M eye MUM: 01M mu? rie. It was well sheltered from the Vnorth, east and west winds. A creek flowed feebly past, and there was a large com] and garden on either side. It was altogether a snug and beautiful little upot. Oneeonld appreciate such a haven when the blinds were raging, or when, in the deathly stillness of the thing winter nights, the thermometer metered tram 10 degrees to 30 degrees below zero, when the now obliterated was a eolidehannel of ice, and the intense coldness was a dead- hmthine-amthumgm mdtronitaeit isned u Marie, as has been said, was watchâ€" ing her father as he tied the ends of the lung willow wand together. The house wassitnatedjnstontheedgeofathick chunp of cottonwood trees, and just where the cache ran out into the prai- kysmuggling case, said: “I have known the accused for a. very long time now, and he is a very decent fellow. He is not responsible for what his servants do; therefore I dismiss the case,†or “words to that effect. Then there was an hijonrnment for refreshmentsâ€"of a pro- hibited natureâ€"in which all parties in- terested participated, the judge, the ac- cased and the mounted police them- selves. They were all jolly good fellows, especially the accused. But let us get back to an inï¬nitely more interesting snbjechâ€"the girl. 7 7 _ 'was to them their evident straight 'oonrse of duty. It was wonderful, how- ever, how elastic the interpretation of the law had becgmeâ€"gutta percha or india rubber Was nowhere compared to it. There is a case on record when the 'judge on the bench, when trying nwhis- disgrace in so doing. Indeed Gabriel was continually telling himself that what might be a crime need not neces- sarily be a sin. The antiprohibitionists said that the laws prohibiting liquor in the country were made for a time when there were ten Indians to every white man, but now that state of aflairs was reversed. Why, they said, should the white population be saddled with a law that wan meant for Indians, who were now in a minority? Gabriel did not -uggle liquor for Indians nor yet re- tail it. Neither did he introduce into her majesty’s dominion what was either felicitously termed “forty rod,†“coflin varnish†or “tanglefoot,†but sound, wholesome “rye†whisky. The country was crying out against the abuSes that the law engendered The mounted police and the very judges of the land found it diï¬cult to reconcile their real senti- ments regarding prohibition and what that country where n pictnrvmqflo punt in (Mt vuniuhinu. he was anything that would enable him to com o few dollars. And here perhaps lay the mischief. For. alas! these were the dayfl o! prohibi- tion (only in 1893 it ceased to exist) in the territories. and rumor had it that Gabriel St. Denis was not above run- ning a cargo of liquor from across the lines into Canada on an odd mansion. It was a paying it a wrong thing to do. Beddes there was an indisputable senti- ment among many that there was no ‘ He were u unplncked beam cap. a buckskin shirt flowmvd and fringed and A pair of high heeled cowboy boots of â€in attitude: pattern. Ho WM n tn» km] old timvr; ho WM humor. "upper and mnvhur. In (we. liku mm: mm in that country whcsrn n plutmvuqno punt She leaned against the doorway of the long, rambling log house, with its sod roof, ornamented by innumerable elk antlers, and watched her father as he converted a wand of willow into a hoop, on which he meant to stretch the skin of abeaver. But before we describe the daughterâ€"an excusable tendencyâ€" it would be as well to say a few words about the fatherâ€"age before beauty is only justice. He was a widower, mid- dle aged, of good physique, and with a {leasing expression on his face. His long air was perhaps prematurely gray, and his skin was tanned by the sun and wind until it was brown as a berry. Bis ï¬gure was not an nnpicturesque one, suggesting. as it did. that of the old French trapper or royager. is no mystery about these chinook winds; they come from sleeping south- ern seas where perpetua'l summer reigns. No wonder before their breath the snow melts like magic. No wonder the red man in this quarter of the great lone land regards them with a superstitions awe. But it is only because their influ- ence possibly kept Marie St. Denis’ complexionâ€"which was as pure and velvety as the skin of a peachâ€"from withering that these Chinook winds are mentioned at all. in Montana and toward the foothills of the Rockies, a litgle more immunity from such ravages is granted. For here,; on the inimitable stretches of conlee scarred prairie, the soft warm winds from the Paciï¬c ocean ï¬nd their way over and through the breaks and passes of the Rocky mountains, to temper the chill breath of the frozen north. There may and the keen tuning wands at win: 56? km? a madame: to magma. and 1:911 the tweet- and aafsest cheek at us bloom. But then. perhaps. on this the gouthWestern slope of the hills, just across from the Sweet rass hills, LINDSAYJRIDAY. OCTOBER 25. 15 gï¬Ã©tï¬â€˜ï¬ 2 She was a mine 89%! my, 31: 18994153 chm wag me was would have 681196 he; a ï¬fï¬ï¬ï¬ï¬Ã© Fe; me 91mm 9! me Gamma»; gamma m 2% 995mm; Wwve $9 Mala Wham; n9 Mama m :99 magi my awe. mustangs dry bags 9! m: @112 @auaaian gum. Wï¬ï¬h 1893; B? Ffédt‘fléi A; Shakes 96$ 1:15.014“st hymn?“ Itcurulndplant Cmpflmmd tho “Oommmm SINNERS TWAIN. ma in A. much-m. 1.!an 512110113 Cu re. 3: JOHN mom. As her name denoted, she . was ‘of French descent on her father’s side, but her -mother had been a Scotswoman Perhaps it waste this fact that the girl owed somewhat of her‘eomplex nature, that quick, sympathetic turn of mind1 the lively imagination and light heartâ€" MM the French aloggsideï¬he 51.6.31 And now there was a pleading,wzst ful lookinhereyesas shespoke; there was entreaty in every delicate feature of hex-face; therewasasuppressedpa- thee in her soft and modulated voice. “But it’s the law, †she persisted, “and I can’t bear to see you break it. I am sure we can manage to live without you doing this thing. My wants are not many, and they can be made fewer. You need not take me into Medicine Hat this winter, and I have lots of good clothes. You know I can make lots of money if you will let me. Look at all those moccasins I have made and sewed with silk and beadwork, and those bea- ver caps and‘mitts. There are shops in town would only be too glad to get them, and I oonldwork lots more. Iam snrethereienoneeessityforyoutornn any risks for my sake. †“There’s hardly a soul in the Hat, barring the parsons,†interrupted Ga- briel hotly, but somewhat shamefacedly, it must he confessed, and without lift- ing his head, “thinks any the worse of a man for bein in the whisky bizness. N 0 one thinks anything about it, and the jedges ain’t so very hard upon e man for smugan now. I believeif there was license in the country there’d be less hypocrisy and hard drinkin. It’s a foolish lawâ€"an injust Iain? “Dad, didn’t you tell me that you would not go across there any more? Cannot we live without your having to go there? Some day the mounted police will be running across you as you come back, and they will take your horses and wagons and will ï¬ne you besides ever so many hundreds of dollars, and then what will you have gained in the end? Oh, dadâ€â€"and there was aworld of entreaty and self deprecation in that soft voice of hersâ€"“it is not for me to preach to you, but if you only knew how miserable this thing makes me I don’t think you Would do it. Besides, how do you thinkâ€"though I don’t care so much about myself, after allâ€"I can go into Medicine Hat and hold up my head, knowing that everybody is point- ing to me and saying, ‘There goes Marie $2 Dani: tlm’ â€-.. IRnt :ha nnlv bit he. hps and left unï¬nished what she had It could be easily seen that she felt eshamed and humiliated by what she had to say to her father. There was a momentary twitching of her lips, then a droop about the corners of her mouth, but she recovered herself in another minute, with a visible eflort, and con- tinned : "Oh, by the way, little n, I was nigh forgettin to tell ye thet I’ll be gwin away for a Week or ten days to Benton to git some necesa’ries I can’t git yere. I a’poae now ye won’t mind bein left alone for that time? Ye’ve got old Jeannette, ye know, and I’ll fetch ye a present from Bentonâ€"some of these yere books ye can’t sit on this side without givin ever so much forâ€â€" "Oh. and!" Itwm almost llketho oryof a wound- ed animal. but rtill she did not with- drew her eyes from the vague, blue line of the uneven horizon: only. all at once. the light had gone out of them and there was an npmuheuslve. plteouu leek there luutend. She had clasped her hands together in from of her involun- tarily. and then. as if exhumed at hav- ing been betrayed even into this mo- mentary expression of feeling, she caught at and plucked nervously the leaves of some creeping plant that olambered up the doorway of the house. And now Gabriel spoke, in a some- what embarrassed manner, it must be confessed. He did not look up at the pretty picture before him, but wound another piece of string round the joint of the hoopâ€"a quite unnecessary thing to doâ€"with an apparent concentration of purpose that was utterly wasted. From has small hands and teette he! dimmed. malaise 6th and law." broad forehead there was not one tame feature in her- faoa Reclaim lived in London or Paris or any other great city artists would have discovered her, have made her famous and worshiped her, and women would have paid her truer hom- age still, for they would have said all manner of false and spiteful things re- garding her and have heartily hated her. But she was only “old St. Denis’ daughter,†who lived like a recluse some 20 miles distant from his nearest neighbor on the prairie of the Canadian northwest. She was an anomalyâ€"like a golden roorn in a wooden house. She ought to have been without a heartache (how much, after all, does a man know about that complex thing, a woman’s heart?); but, as it was, the girl dreamed her dreams and wove the romances of a coming womanhood amid what seemed such uncongenial surroundings for a bright young life. Perhaps that subtle spirit of solitude which settles down over that great lone prairie land with the blood red sunsets had tinged her with something of that pensiveness which occasionally seemed to haunt her face. . She was a truly remarkable looking girl, this daughter of Gabriel’s, for there never were two people who could agree taste the oolorof her eyes or hair. Some said her eyes were hazel, some said blue, and some said chestnut. The truth was, they seemed to change color with every mood that showed on her mobile face. There was always a lim- pid depth in them, which, with the fresh color of her face and her red lips, indicated a healthful, buoyant nature. Her hair was, indeed, of that color which Georgiana and Titian gave to their Ye netian women:“bruwdin the shade. golden in the sum†Her 5 ' ' was 511eg molded; and perhaps t 6 dead plainn'ess' and ï¬oWlhï¬ lines of 11%? heat dress only shoWed it to a better dam: tags». ï¬e? shapely, grammes! was well pulsed {men {has gleefully mended geek whlell winters leave to ereate= for"; alas, lï¬ l§ ï¬e Seldom fauna: But like was deafness a girl as leg is is! she game 93 the mystic flares old of wamauheeglx glad there was that lasers: tahle leak 49 her eyes as e? 999 who lls: teenmxsflltaehgvmmg that loomed up from their Opaline set- ting like volcanic islands surrounded by a vapourous, shipless sea, and, ï¬gura- tively, in this wild region they were is. lands, for between Gabriel St. Denis’ house (onlya year or two ago) and them there was no human life, only perhaps a small band of wandering Blood, Sioux or Piegan Indians on the hunt and the animal life they hunted. zigmgged‘ " â€aï¬a' Evéid’éred Ewéy over' ‘tï¬e far stretching and sun dried prairie, un- tilitwas lostinthe mistyand paper- Perhaps Gabriel was troubled with a consciousness that he had not altogether done his duty by her. Anyhow, he had neverheardherexpressherseltsostrong- lyasshedidnow. ‘ “Wharâ€" Mm-ia.†he vantmd1t to think, with many in the northwest, that thus to contravene the law was nei- ther a sin nor a crime. Then, later on, it became not so much a matter of conscience with him as his daughter’s peace of mind, for, of course, he could not expect to keep such a traf- 1 do concealed from her, but up till now she had not seemed to take it so very se- riously. He had acquired what to many in that country was wealth, but he wanted just another $500 or $600, and then he would quit the trade and “strike the trail, †as he termed it. There was no other wom 11 within 20 miles of them save the old French hall breed, Jeannette, who assisted in the household duties, and truly she was a never failing source of entertainment. For in the long winter nights, when King Ffost held everything in his dead- ly grip outside and the stove bummed with a cheery sound, many were the won- derful legends and tales toldof the days when the old French voyagers penetrat- ed far into the heart of the great un- .m, known with their canoes; of the hattles of the immense herds of buffalo that stretched from horizon to horizon, and a hundred picturesque features ct! the great lone land new test passing away. Indeed, Marie was an exemplary daughter and never once complained oi dullness. The height of her dissipation was occasionally accompanying her fa- ther into Medicine Hat,or “the Hat, †as this remarkable example in nomen-‘ clature was. termed, and to skate with the little crowd on the Saskatchewan otanafternoon, ortohs‘venglimpseet these wonderful cars, which stopped there for half anhour, on that great world’s highway, the Canadian Paciï¬c railway, with theirwonde'rlulhasscrt- ed loads of humanhdngs. Her m. .werefew and simple: shown ememt‘ whm- shemher Mile nttmdingte' his race W duflesnnd loam minim , 1W. “Oh, dad!†bert, on the Saskatchewan, to be edu- cated, he had doubtless seen too little of her. He was agoodhearted man, and, considering the nomadic, frontier life he had led as trapper and buï¬â€˜alo hunter in the far west since he had left his old home in Ontario, and since the death of his wife, was doubtless an exemplary man as compared with most of his kind. When he had taken his daughter from the convent of Prince Albert he had honestly intended to do his duty by his child. and so he had. according to his own lights. He had taken her some 40 miles south of the Canadian Pacific rail- way. to the southwestern slaps of the Cypress hills. into this lonely but henn- tii‘ul cuuntry. and started a much. But his progress in acquiring what his heart Wm: set upon. a sudlvioat sun: of money to take up u Rand improved farm in one of the soured and sunny southern states. was slow, and than the temptation in make easily and quickly presented it- self. It was by running cargoes of liquor into Canada from across the linesâ€"in other words, by smuggling. For a long time he resisted the temptationl but when he fduiid how public sentiment ran and that the law prohibiting liquor was looked upon by many as an iniqui- tous one, he regarded the project with : less disfavor. “He who doubts is doomed, †may apply to various phases of moral philosophy. “It is all for Ma- rie.†he said to himself, rather illogic- auy, it must be comessea, and to con- ciliate his by no means dormant moral sense. And surely the girl was too young to associate any very serious breach of morality with such proceed- ings. His ï¬rst few ventures were suc- cessful and paid him well. He began Poor men. it had hardly dawned upâ€" on him that she was now no longer a “young gal. " He loved her with all the silent and conserved force of an un- demoustrative nature, and perhaps love is slow to observe change. And then. her mother having died when she was but a child, and Gabriel having wisely sent her to the convent at Prince Al~ " ‘Oughl Ongh!’ as the Niche says, and what nonsense is it talkin ’bont now, ’bout workin moccasins, fur caps and mitts, just as if it were a squat? or a breed, and havin. to sell them too. Now, look ‘9 yere, Marie; Idon’t ’xaets 1y" know what he bin dam to put sieh nations in your head: I’m sure you’d 51: he had 3311 the money ' ’p‘ imwaheed m. In fact, the a ‘_%V1VeÂ¥ gisyete get any; Why, my @1111 , instead 0’ be: was r, at; seem ï¬ethmk ’vea mam 119,0 0 me by, and efliy wens tamed: a mag mere ee's ï¬e hem 139‘}?th this layed eats (mam-£99! $896 me baï¬a 9’s 3939 I've ye were use fer 1§= and ghee we‘ll stake take em and 36 ’way dawn Beam Me. ï¬neie Sam‘s 993mg. am! to}: same we tam where ye‘ll hev Ma 9‘ mp'ny and won‘t be Requiem aa- ‘ve now. he pm 8324319, late ; 'a hardly the same: km a' late for a m8 8%)." 7 Gabriel surreptiticusly unloosed the double string that converted the willow into a hoop and made a show of being annoyed as the ends few asunder. That he was uneasy and ï¬ghting out a battle within himself there could be little doubt. He nerved him self, however, and laughed in a hard, brusque way, very unlike his real self, as he replied: .i-oooed religions, We: and stable. thoughtfulnatureoflhe Scotch. Though Gabriel could talk Frenchâ€"and Marie, too,>for the matter of thatâ€"therewas nothing in their speech thatwonld have led a stranger to suppose no.1 Gabriel’s father, when the farmer was a mere child, had left the French mttlements and pushed out west, and circumstances having thrown theeon nearly all his life among the English spealn‘ng popu- lation he had contracted that nonde- ecript form of speech peculiar to the western man and the frontiersman. Marie,†he mutual“! (WWW) ‘ CANADIAN POST, LINDSAY, ONT., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1893 .. (Wreck-lulu sud Immun- Johnson 19!: on the 1 .mtnlnthll nota- had mic theoom flag the gamers, and ltlaallondutyot their. tax-ate m m such udone. In uc- 25'th: by electricity“ them ï¬rst 95.9“- ingtchlnguton. here. Agustin†oompldnuhsve been sent in flat the light. HeatndPower Compsny m not living upw Mouth trlculn supplying ammo t. For t 16 candle paw lump onlyl volu In new to be cmbdbythoeom y, anathema-17116101 ndltwu y prom cmghtthn o amt halt lay m the consumm' hmpo bougoldud thus humming dim, andwhon thug» 11h an: i; by†wpulg! mum hmpa‘thg‘wogd â€"â€"â€"â€" _- . v__.- --'_ -_v_ The thme county meters utter 3 mm test, were found to be running 1 per cent. slow, and a meter or another consumer In town was 11 per cent. slow. The gem n1 opinion regarding an end electric mete“ In theta they register more thnn In used, one the inepeome Inform no mo Ina b not the case. In ï¬fteen you: of gas meters Mr. Johnsonhutonnd t over90pereent. otthemhndbeenreghbero Ins too slow. Theeetwo tented some 15 meters In :11 _nrln¢_thelr_m in this division Lindsay hubeen con- sidered one at the pieces where an omce should be ï¬tted up; the gas plant hhving bean removed, and the consequent exten- si an cf the electric light system; made this place unique, and then the request or the county council called for immediste action, so that lsst night we witnessed the ï¬rst cflicinl test cf electric light meters in the division. the first three that were tested bein the ones used in the county buildings. he testing ct these meters will be oilowed up by other visits of the divisional inspect: r. Mr. Wm. Johnson, of Beiieville, until all are tested. Arepres- _entstive of Tax Posr wee present in the inspector's onice inst night and witnessed the operation ot testing with greet interest. The set, its. provisions end the methods of testing the light and meters, were incidly explnined by Mr. 0. Eight», of Ottswe. the chiet electricisn cf the inl_snd revenue department.__ , , The province has been divided into the inspectors' divisions, Believilie being the name and the headquarters at one; its geographical boundaries are iron the county of Durham in the west to that of Prescott in the out. A chief electrician was appointed some time ego. and vince the act was called into force ne hes been from 1mm: to Windsor instructing the divisionsl omen-s in their dutiesend nt- ting up the testing instruments at impart- en_tpoints.___‘ ___ _ . . The Inspector of Iteetno Lint Hetero- Ieveral in Lindsay found to no Route term New. Amongst the many acts of parliament which attest the wisdom of the Mackensie administration. none is better known than the one which made one standard of weights and measures for the whole Do- minion. Afterowr twenty years experi- ence we question it any honest man would say “Do away with the inc tion of scales and measures." or wou d have the country revert to that which was in vogue before the government of Mr. Mackenzie. namelyâ€"municipal inspection. So well has the coun been satisfied with the enforcement of t e weights and measures law, resulting as it has in the discovery of much fraud. and enahlin the honest mer- chant always to knowâ€"w at he most de- sires to knowâ€"that his scales and we his are correct, that an extension of the den ‘ in other branches of business has louowed, ‘ and so we have the inspection of food. gas and gas meters, and last year‘s parliament decided to have electric light and electric light meters tested. This act only came into fox co lately. its value was at once recognized by our wide-awake county council, who. as soon as the inspectors were appointed, rt quested the testing of the meters in use in the anal, court house, etc. Gilda-um. Guam-n... Trunk: ..... norm... . . D.““Iu-nu Elllou...†.. Haikuâ€...- II: a Budd-stood than. two clubs will lay one practice 0 «oh mt. E'ouowlng were the £3“ :â€" Towx. Conuoun. gmgfluoootouoo-3-.o-‘w'ctc‘o00.00. o. Withâ€... 3093'......... When the tail was kicked a! in the second half the town players had the down hill run and this mode it much herder tor the Collegiate ho ye, who nevertheless stuck to their op gonents “llkegiue at last made a me on the town ya '59: The adFoal keeper caught the bell and when the crowd rushed upon him and tried to gush him through the noel with the bell, t w ithout success. because Hamilton was playing book for the town. and he, with others. mnneged to farce the whole crowd out and the bellweeouce more on sale ground. The game looked as though it would end :5 tie, hut Colder caught the bell and took it down the ï¬eld. when he passed to Morgen, who scored for the town team just one minute before time wee celled. making the score 1 to 0 for the town SKRJ faiths min 'mnde two or'thne pretty attempts on goal. but they failed to I'll. It!“ Gill. 0! "I. IOU-OI Me On Setnrdey afternoon et 4.30 the ï¬rst game of toothell at the eeeeon wee pleyed between the Oolleghte Inetltnte teem end e plcked teem from the town. The play wee to be for 50 mlnntee. end the Collegi- ete boys were to kick out In the em halt-time. The bell wee klokedofl‘. end for the ï¬rst 25 mlnntee no goal wee eoorca glthpnghpoth eldge pleyed_e herd genie. W. The M a mum; a mum Mum w chum. Benn. WSMM. mama. Pa. 801d binmmnndaï¬w. mm ll. Isuzu-30 m m Ion. yuanâ€"no an“ my 0: m um For my you. my grub.» mm In: been mic hem disease. From In an- easiness than the hurt. ï¬lth wpluuon mm a! loo: bum. It M developed Mo abnormal was», thumping. fluttering and casting mileage. mu pm with n pecans! m £90an wage we! was near the ham. “me mad may abut: class and aha sunbeam remain with «gunmen», Seals! I». m“ Om to! the mm “W In an Khulna. 140.. BOSCH; {purchased a bemused bean m use. reaching almost man mm. 1 bus new m «an! home"! the ma: ad; and on ma: mo! blah» in m (am. Thu elicit". abnormal basin. minimal and Wang; hum {lumps on“!!! em. “WWI-III." at mwum Nelson (W) Oct. 28-11:. m prupeeuhrnexbgurlnthhmty m exeeflenhudgmmfluxotm launched. umersendothenoomlncb heveheenln the mm It Bringing lame gamutmctnoadsmdnemesn-mod! whlohtheyell amby.endwhoeevlrtnu theyheveextonedto mchenextent thet the draggiste throughout the section hen become alive to the necessity ctleylng In large snvpuu to meet the greatly lam» lug (lemma. The remedy In gnu-elk r:- gn'ded In en mdupenublepert o! e miner’s ontm both for w. mum, Ind e value In preserving hunk which eennct be unmanned. LET THERE BE 5108 T. WORD FROM KOOMAY. REV. L. W. QHOWBRB 1'00 TB‘LL NA 705. anu~0. Bunnrlud :: WM hut-huh J 01;... oo- .KIINII Iomrdl ......... huh"! we... ......MII --.IoCuulcy ....... ....Ouflon u... .. ...lmno ’O.....l ....Buck um lnvln no..-......_BW Saturday, November 9th, VALUABLE FARM PROPERTY. THE LINDSAY GREEN HOUSE. cur nouns. mux. omau on: U York-oz. Linda-y. maven. Ind xoodhmoahlnurucuflom omen. Telephone 102. Ho. 23, North William Street. Bantu anything tron. 010d to imam urn m uhu'pnod ind W. WWMhlm-dmdsh. Pncticnl melanin. Tool-Nor. Look ma Gunnnith. a man's lemw mama, NEW BICYCLE â€"uu>â€" Genera] REPAIR SHOP FOR TWENTY-F V8 Y} A38. W. WEBSTER, cannula-awn A Choice Selection of Plants. EDWARD MAXSOM. Town nation will me with III who In a, that it?!) o wade: uhubova hillto yin oduy. You. boy-cu ouowod iotm about tho moon until :0 sad oicoo ll o'cirok n nililt. sod bola. quick so [an evil. tho conuqoommdo- plmblo. Upon «mm ooosuono we have oliudod both: prams loan-co med b some of our school honâ€"both public on updateâ€"and hsvo bend eplzhetn uncut a: vile proceeding from the Up. at you loan on the my homo from Sunday taboo . It in time {)2- pwntsw cone thinking that "other boy." are the attendantâ€"the cm must begin at home. ORTGA‘J E SALE ï¬gu‘l“#fl“és.Â¥ï¬3§‘*§f*£=i=éf Wm H New Advertuomen ts. boy: as out loom and Ion-ah bu! hr. tn down nines. none the nut. We :1! know com. o! sh. dlupoaluon oh boy. The mum ulna onetfm of the young boy- ot thlo towin‘lwem. visage! lu- ng! ulna an on . a In. angina» Iboflou 3.8â€" .9 yr: K guardian I tobacco In some om. hum-lug , by gamma-runny! not: g “'6!th thanâ€) tobomeo um I «Q m. whole avll could 83331535331333.3333 LARGEST SAI‘ IN CANADP "833m? ‘ “MWWAM m oelhaeuhe’ofloea: WM aid: I was within m dieteoee the other awoken. â€whom“ their my â€Mmetmmhiioeehooh. no midwttichiini. Theyeueod eeehother with eicqoeoc praheiiy. end mm: on he ea to out Mu epontheirmothen. Idenotremenbetto henmheud hon use such homage baton. Bay: ere mowed wmnch iree- l l dom.1'heyeeldomheve en yihing to do. nodmnilowedtoepende “nu-tot iheireveniocedowneown. enthey eon- m‘ together end pmtiee eventing. end chewing tobacco. lighting. end each othervieee n. in their minde. no no nuke them men baton their mejority. Thoee who try to bring naup their boy. rig [she have no chenoe. Good boys ted the herd- ehin of being kept from no extended night; mammam; Men thol Plu tor. IV. Webster. 518121;]st Orders neatly mgpfl‘iï¬pfly executed. Estimates - â€mm†Mil when so required. TIIE P067 J08 ’ 05PM TME/IT- Fetch on your Beads and get your lam Stock Insured at Iharough-bred and Farm Staci: Insured at very Low Hates. CLOVER SEED. Clover Sud wanted, for which the HI GEES? PRICE will be Paid. JAS. KEITH’S. WILLIAM STREET. Family Grocers, East of the Benson House. LindsaY- Of course you do, and we are not going to dispute the assertion. Imagine you know a good thing when you see it. . . . WW: WWW: HULREY 81 BRABY, “uh“lutum" ul“vfll â€0-92;ij omd’u mullahs. on. mu. n will an ï¬ning-Lg.†309932 flflm___.___kh “-01-“ built-conchâ€; lei-warning“ DO YOU Children Cry for Pltcher's Gaston-Ia. a: M [2. [gt 25mph; mNMMfludCuta-hvifl: the Mdmfl-hfldflvflhï¬t “out“ Rb it...“ hwunacmg... EMA-43221 Em DON’T YOU Every week we are gain- ing new customers. Think the matter over and make up your mind to try us. think that where the maâ€" jority of your neighbors deal would be a good place for you? There must be good reason for their satis- faction, or they would go elsewhere. ONTARIO MUTUAL LIVE STOCK Insurance Company. “oh-dull. for Infants and Ghlldren. Ibo Pout. Jane: 881th. Ever consider that we are in a position to sell you Groceries and Provisions perhaps a trifle cheaper than you have been paying elsewhere. . . We have the experi- ence, and our stock is is one of the largest outside the cities and is kept constantly assorted. ALI!) Aam 1‘08 m am and â€wk-.2: '1 â€kmtmh‘ulk 1-9-qu chum ship M reeves. Gmoxl flon tor tin notch ward the death of on Sept. 30:h flouâ€" ideas: The farmer a Man, and Mention. From Ms. B: Company, re-exl Mag 0! hydn men he more nos: ex TIM. The min than and a Fm R. J. lam: on certain W. From Thos. m of has Won Peel-st mm with pa From Thos. I ht ova-costs Would leaders w From D. disposedot' was t “unaccec From 11:5 poor of the madam “(shunt ANorthw It“ W should :90 who “I“. I In: In ODE an