The Buifalu All-staal Disc Ha.rrow.A This is the onlv Disc Han-nw made or sold in -Canada. having independent,` adjustable sprin pres- sure upon` tht inncr ends of the gang discs. :51! uwmg any amount ot pre-nure to be thrown upon the inner ends of the gangs. by the foot nf the operator By this_ means a. ertectly exible action is secur- ed and the groun can be worked to a. uniform depth. Examine this Machine carefully and compare with - others. 0 EPP8 S COCOA! IS A MARVEL OF SUVCESS. The only Cul- tivator made that both lines of teeth will cut an even depth in the Irround_ Examine it and you will see why. The only cultnvatur with a. moveable tuoth stt so that the angle of the teeth can be regulated to T suit any condition of soil. Pnssure can be rage at- ed to act differently on ev_erv section: requiring it. The teeth are carried between the wheels instead or trailing behind, as in other machines. thus securing- Ii hter draft. The machine s furnished with gra n and rass seed box when required. It has revers- able iamond steel points for the teeth; also `extra. wide thistle-cutting points can hefurnished. ` xa.m- ine it.a_nd you will buy no other. ' - THE BEST DRILL MADE FUTCIHHD only (HO 0%! INS} you WI! .133 uauuneu. We also Ilganufacture Binders. eapere, Mowers, Rakes Cultivators and Pulpera, as good as the best. Send for illustrated catalogue. . '- I Noxuusnus. me. on. ' Inger-oll. om.. Chanda. Sold atvSca.ner's' Drug Store. The No`. 12 Cultivator T. N. HOBLEY t"t\I8l.WI.`l.` A I I'\ I`l'\f`l\L IlI'.`I'!l"I'_ I Ludlcrous. Revelations `of an Editor" Brought to '1`:-inl for-Libel. Some curious facts have been brought to light in the course otan action for libel brought against the editor of The Neunkirobener Zoilznng, 3 -provincial weekly paper with a large `circulation in Naunkirohen and district.` Neunkirohen is a ourishing town aboun 60 miles: from Vienna. V V nn._ _;u...._ )1...` 1 .'.-Il .._....a 1. -_a.-.. .40-I3 00 M FORTING SUPPER "0. H. LYON an soN, }nnAm PIPE. PDHTLANIJCEMENT J. G. SCOTT 330 T0 $|5(l When making a cash purchase ask 1| pug:-now pup-s-rvu-..snq.-u -IIUIKJ V IUIJIISIO The editor, Carl Kult, urged in exten- uation of his misdemeanor that he was so occupied with his duties as a [shoe- maker that he had no time to properly discharge` his editorial work. Which he only undertook as a supplementary occu- pation. His salary as editor was 5 per annum. 1___q#_ -tr-.. .1- ..-L ---... 4.- ..-.....- ..- .1. (JUL VER`W ELL S Hanrcu_tting /and Shaving` ` . Partor- % oiprosnm BARBIE norm 1 ;* BARBIE-` L aetoulhom ORDERS RES?EO_Tl_|'ULLY SOLIOITED. ANTHRACITE` AND BITUMINOUS Water Lune. Platter of Parlu.|&c. Thou. N. llobley-. Groceries. R. Powell. Bun-her. '8 M. I.u.wrem-.e.. Boots and Shoes. ll:-rt H. F-lelnlllg, Bqboku, Etc. Oaulnmanr an Perry. (nothing. George cmkman, prugglut. l.. is o-phony, Fancy Goods. Don all` Bron , Furniture. II. I. Frquer an 'o.. Dry Goods- R. A. Button. Groe rleu. John lllnglun. Butcher. a. Hindu. Groceries. ll VII. n.rd \v`I'Qe J.` M1-Fnndleu. Ila:-um-I. u Avllomlae Jeweler. naw Bron . mtogcaphers. Jun. nous. llakenf. .. I andf0 VERSHOES thin, light, comfortable. Extra thick at ball and heel. % GRANBY RUBBERS WEAR LIKE IRON. Orr-ton Ymns Ross Block. Foot of Toronto Stroe Telonhone. - I want to see' Granbg; on the `bottom then I know w I. I.m_ zeninm - SAVED EACH Yam. xv COLLECTING CIIILIIILI-II Judge-You do not seem to posseias the training andeduoanion necessary to an edimr. - 1rv-.._ vr._1A lI1I._L 1.. ..-4. ....-..........._ -4} us for 6AsH ooI3PoN$. BAR:E:E. ONT- CL.EAN;" WHITE, PURE. Tilsun; sF Roller Process Buckwheat Flour --sUconsaon_ 'rq--*- 243' Granb_y_ Rubbers :q-.....--4_` ` ---Daaler in- It nev'er`varirs in its qualify-you oau depend upon getting itjust the sa__nIe evty singemime. CLEAN, WHITE, PURE.-and with that- natuial. hucI:whu;t avor which you recognise at once in the light,- cakes it makes. Thzat-is way ,f... 3.. '!illson s Rode:-Process Buckwheat Flouf d_when;yu u-buy itbythe pound, of you:-`grocer. And, too. you get ;e`xaVctly, what you` pay for-'--the hes; ywr money will buy You get the our of hea1_thf_ulness_ always in all \-IIIIVIIQ Evert` Kuvlf-That is not necessary at all. 1---_1_- `n..L -.. ...`In..... .......A.'..A. I-..-l- I.- retty Foot Goes a Long Way` THE f_|LLsoN co'v, L'r~o., Tisonburg,Ontario. `But what is the use of a pretty L foot, inthis country in the.winter time, if you do not have a perfect ' tting Rubber or Overshoe. - Now, this may be news to you, but you. will nd. it to be a fact; 2 there is only one make of Rub- fl` bers and Overshoes, in this coun- 5 try, that are right up-to-date in t, nish, quality and durability . and they are the Blank Will Forms can be had at . V lrneAdvance Office Will 'pay for VVill Form and postage to any part. of Canada. ` Has purchased the premnscsbccupned bv Chas. Mc- _ Guire, just east of the Victoria. Hotel. I and has ed up business in all kinds of Black- Smilhmr. ' orseshoein . etc All work will be dom- pmmptly at the lowest gure. Remember the place. THE ow nmume AIIBTIDNEERA ll A` n Inn A `rrixrna nun A 1vnm1n\! Judge-But an edlbor mustats least be able to write an article. ` 71-..- 17-11 t\I. ..- `I -..4. -Il ..._ __LI Make Your Will. Neat` Market Square. .|V|cLa rty, n.xN1Lns,'AI.L KINDS `or AUCTION Are a. peanut nd parti ' te axing to haxe sales, willscaonsultuakr own int:-egg 1?) placing then Ialeainhilhands. - . _ &Orden left at Tn: Anrwmcn oico will bc m...'a.au..J_ ' 35.. G. R. roan. . 'i.'Fuoe*.:Bi?'us"e&7.{ocLTy,}%.m Omolaadios. Sate, effectual. Ladies ask mom . cook W1 duo on . . oa.'P3damnn:55x mnedodrh xupoulblt ii In Guada- ourdru not can Cotton loot Col` ml. `le no 0 emu all Mixtures, pills and mag` `flsngorotgga-. P:-loo, No. blo. :1 gr 1 or 5. mufod 0190,30! at ot'g3`:n9dwo uent f `No; rook at Saws FARM STOCK SALES ,oook'o Cotton Boot Compound . '1- ;_-.....o..1 1.. .......a _......n.`I.. `In. our 6 cts. LATE OF OR0, CU! UV Vvsluv an uluuuvo A Hen-.Kult-0h, no. I out all my arti- cles out of other papers. 1'...I.u. ' II-A not-A.` nu all-an In unis- A.mm .19 1399 _w. meunwy. INC! V! VI UIIIUL yurvnniu Judge- -Who -acted as editor in your nbsenco? - V 11 -__ l1..I1 A I...LL..- I.I_-.l .._-L J--- 4.- .IJn`II7IlDI1I , Herr Kulf--A hahtar lived next door to the oioe, and ha used to reoelve the cor- respondence and hand it over to the` printers. The printers published `what interested them. 'I_.j..- flII.-_- ._... --4..--"-.nII---- 4--.-'I `Ll UUIUBUUIJ IIUUIIIO Judge--'1`hos|'aro extraordinary condi- tions for town so near the capital of` Austria. n-__ 17...: ~n.1- ..-s -_1.. 1-" 111---- JUUUIJICO Herr Knlt-Itis not only in Vienna V that proper ideals of the mission of the press are in vogue. I always praise the townspeople who deal with me and pay their bills regularly, and pltohinto" those who buy their shoes eisewhereend do not settle their debts.` The Noun- kirohener Zeitung is a paper with prin- ciples. It receives a subvention from the local authorities. ` T__j,,_ fT-__ jlj 4--4 -LL-I- ---I. IIJIIKI `I. UIIVIC IUIUUC Judge-How did you obtain the inb- nntiou? ' `I"`-.... 17_.Il T -_-`Jan-ggk LA '-- -----L `UH UIUII Herr Kult-I undertook to fully report In the mayor : speeches, chronicle his email doings and shower praise on MI administration. T rr___ l"__In _._.. n._-n._ _-_4.-.._-.n L- - BIIIIJIII IBUIGIIIUIIO . Herr Knit was finally sentenced to a line for not exercising that supervision. over his paper` which an editor `in in Austria legally compelled no do.-Loudon Nail V Three Famous Statues. The three most famous statues V in his- tory are the Colossus of, Rhodes, the Sphinx and the vocalstatne of, Memnon 1 et Thebes, and of these '. the last is the most remarkable, in oonsequenoe or its 1 property of emitting sounds when its lips were touched by the reysof thsrlslng , sun so that it-`seemedtopgreet the oom-. lug day. It was originally `a portrait .Inode_l of Kim: -Amenophis III., and was one ot_ e pair of statues between K 60 and 70"teet high, oerved out of single blocks ' etsendstone and transported from the querriesto Thebee,f,wbereas' the Sphinx `WEI oerved from the llVlll8__!'00 mum. f\I-V '-e..'e-I... AI-`unn.L-- 1553- I-Inn ;....-..A. - nun Uulvuu LI-will Inlv |lVlIl>Iv|4IUQ Ill llllln ` \ Of statues otherehan stone the most: remarkable in that of Buddha at Nara, l nee:-Kloto. in Japan, which was erected . A. D. 1100. It is made of bronze and in 50 feet 6 inches high and more than 98 feet ht-ead'a'o1-on the shoulders. L On its head are 966 out-ls, pm! the-image is sur- rounded by e pgloxvy of min 73 (eat in ,Im0tIl_.', on wh1eh;1~Hmegu, eeehhelghtk he-V loam`-'0 A'l?;7l'9*!i'*8l1=.,1maso-. $9 1tee;ihl3h.`.;ItI' 5!-.._I_.lg ;!ront"e_!.' `btho -'~=M-,ej; ' ' ;. he i T. i..*."`:.' lI~ IIDUUU 900 U \.'.'.' --.--, -W" . .. . *wudc_oonnlIu - qt ,ql. lu luuu H3311` INK E')'lTB' 1'5 111 Lunu Hug:-My rstint bodies and tired little feet-- . us is the business of Slumber Streets- TRAINING CANARIESV TO sme. JCDURNALISM IN AUSTRIA. %sw e`n sLuMae_a. ' `"31 :-in; eeveral `years there.` was -npnbk llahed in Laneingbnrg, :N.Y.,' a "Imell magazine called '1`heAntiquezinn. In in issue at December; 184?, it published. this poem, stating that is "was copied from the New York Rover, engi `also `_ with the following comments: II A l.-..n. I.'l.. -I-......I..o -n_4uInntInn n VVIWX UIIV III$"IIl` UVUKIIIIUXUSO About -this ling lat production 3 word or two seem: neooss-try. Whether It be really as genuine anniqua-or.a more modern imitation}: a qnoaulontor outlet to discuss. We can only throw, Inch light" upon It as we happen to ponoss and `Inch niche uoonmons boarsoupon the taoeot - ".In order to ascertain whctherothe. ballad was founded in truth we have turned to some New England chronicieI,- and nd that the whole story `is true to the letter. Captain Miles Standish did come over in the` Mayower, and his wile : name v'v_ae Rose. John Alden and William Muliine were among the `num- ber that came over. in the "same veuei. William Muilinehad `a daughter when name was Priscilla, and the main inci- dent, according to the chronicles, occurred precisely as related in -the poem. _ A 7| RI: la Q!|\n>I-unllone ' IE.` rsvvauvni Inn vIunvvw non _-u-v law---v Clhia is the ballau: Miles` Standish In the Mayower came Across the stormy wave, ~ And in than little band was none More generous ovr brgwe. . 4 Midst cold Decembe1"s sleet and snow on Plymouth rock they land; . ` . Weak were their hands -but strong their.` hearts. ` ' ' U 1`hat pious pilgrim band. _ _ oh. sad was it in. their poo:-huts, To hear the storm wind `blow. And ti:-rrlb.Ie at imdnaght hour, When yelled the savage toe. . And when the sav-age grim and dire. V Hus bioody work began, Fo~1' a ehuuipib-n brave. I- haye been toold. _ Miles Standish was the man. ' ' But,*oh. his heart was made toebow \l}'I+h nnlnf and nuln fmll Inn: But,*oh. his heart was made to now With grief Qnd pain full low, , . T For sickness an the pilgrim hand Now dealt a dreadful blow, ' "In arms of death so fast they ren_ ` They scarce were burned; " And his dear` wife. whose name was Roan. W a_s laid among the dead. * M L _ mllee e-ndlmllee. .0! beds in; row. ,.. ot.`eovne1~lets '-wlllte as snow. . . . lows and ulllowe. and sheets galore, ~, ankects and qnllts by the hundred score-- thesevare ' ureest ' - _ `le chlldm-en who go to Slumber street. .ush-a-bys, hush-a-bys. solt and low'-- -. V-llwsthmlcul nnmmurs. both fast and slam- fnlttles and hymn tunes, bnlude rare, t-lodles gay and with plalntlve nlr, . .-Lulluble-sn tender and soft and sIweet- . ~.'1`hls is the muslc 01 Slumber Street. Nlslons rlelllghtful. happy and gay, 01' wonderous toys and merry play, -Fan-ctl.ful p-l.ctln`es out rare dell-ght, .0! verdzmt elds and snkles that awe brlght-- Oh! these are the dreams the children meet .Who travel each night to Slumlber Street,` the sights that each `night T o{moiu Beonghc to\L-`!`hV by" 1 _n Brooklyn School Pflnhlpdl. A. `A . Aehmnn, ptlnolpel oLPnbllo Sohool No.67. furnishes the Brooklyn Oltlzen with qhe.tollowlngllIe_`1-ary -_onrl-' - oeley: ; A, ' . _ , - . Dnrlng several years there. _.-pnh`v ln '1`heAntlq.uez1en. In its of December; 184?, it -. stating was - Rover, ` wleh ' singular annique-or a lmltatlonle queeulonfor o1_-ltlee H'ls sorrow was not loud. but deep, For her he did bemoan, And such keen angmsh wrung his heart He could` not lie alone. The-n'to John Alden he am speak- John A-.don was his" friend- `|Ax'1d said. Fnlend John, unto my wish 'nn.~nv than nnny of-tnn ` London casters have a language of their own. Not that which is` commonly designated Blllingegate, but a lang- uage of a harmless nature. There in nothing'very remarkable about it, its chief characterietic being a palpable kind at back-spelling. In many matter: `a costar will speak of a half` penny aaa ilatch, -while gen in aahilli!.l8: but tetich guy is eight shilling: Coutcr meanea sovereign. halt a crown oeing given the somewhat nnprononnceable term, atch-ynork. I .--nu`:-snug -`-6-Inn`! A. ACRCQJHVIIC IV\I1`_ rnscluu WIIH tuxu uuU|xuu:1'Is Ll lllt.' Comegly and fair was she; And mud or heart. she was wlthal. Am. nnv mold nnnl ha John Aidan. _to oblige his friend, Stralglmvay to Mullins? went, And told his emund `like a man. And asked for his consent. My -heart L5 and. `tie very sad, My 9001` wife hose has gone. [And in this wild and savage land I cannot live alone. Y To Mr. wuuam Mumns, then, I wish you,t=.0Lrepa.r, T ma mm H` ha twill urivp mp l(l:`l\` Priscilla was this daughteis name; ("nu-unlu and fnhv tuna aha` % Now. Mr. Mullins` was -a sire } Quite rat-tonal and kind, _ i Amu `such consent would never give. |'_ Against his da-u::hter s mind. He tom John `Alden if ms chdld ` ` Should be inclined "that way, ' A `And Captain Standish was her choice. _ He had no more to say. He `then cull'd in 11's daughter dear, And stralghtwavy (Ed retire, ' . That she might with more freedom speak I~n absence of her B`-.1re. wl III IJl.UIIlI" IIYI 20 A curious method of expressing mul- tiples ie shown by erth-ewit-gene, meaning` 15 shillings; A doogheno means a good market; debheno, A bad one. A regular troeseno stands for-.e regular bad one." Yes and "no" are represented by on and eay." Tumble to your _- barrikin ex- presses understand. you. push it" signies show it." "Crone chap" means I thief. Showtule in an equivalent for bad money. ` -i ' IlI"|- ah- Ail.-Linen--9', ,- --nun gs-use-A-nI-`n Oh. scores updn scores of weary heads a. L`Pemcefnlly resting in miles out beds: Band) mm` of eyelids is closed up 18111`. " g each pair .01! e-_ves"ls bid from sight. ' Hnrr Iunlnm and film` Hf-Ho fllllf-- John Alden had a bright blue eye, l And was a handsome man. ' ' And when he spokea pleasant look 0 er all his features ran. |J(I\I IIIVIIUJO . Do the tightuer"-s. very expressive yterm, the derivation of which is not dlnner._ Nommus stands for be left," and nol" is a share. _' Suehlterms Is round the * ouses (trousers), besno (spree), ("pen-lies (buttons), Old Dutch (wife) or. old women), "dooks ( (nets), splash (money), and the lil:e,[wi`.l be familiar to most people. Idiloult to mYderstaud_-means "go to` (`. l.'US!:`. ~Iunu In u L'UUl'|.UUuB_ Wu: 1 ms errand did declare. V And said, Fair-maid. what shall I To Captain Standish bear ? ` Warm blushes glowed upon the cheek! 01 that talr madden them: . [At rst she turned awayeher eyes`. Then looked at John again. - He rose. ~an'd In a courteous, way `I .YIu ownnnrl (H11 nnlnrn And then, w:lth`(1orwncaa9t. modest meln; She Said. with trembling tone, Now. prlthee, John, why that thou not` _ Speak for thyself alone '1 " ` Deep red then grew John Alden'_s face; He bade thelmaldgoodv-b,ve. . But well she read before he went The language of his eye. No, matter what the language said. ' Which in that eye was rlf.- In one short momth Priscilla wan `lnhn Alnrn lnvrlma Iulfo Denitions. . u Church bazaar-A moral uair gotten lp by `woman man object lesion to show I man how easy It in for him to `got his lag pulled. " I T ' ' Gun!-,n l`.Innu_.'l`InA nation nnlndu pal lm` IS. puuuuo Santa laul--The patron saint at up .Ito1`ekoopar'I. - ` . ' \1n-| Lnllnn annnnIn_V_I-nn"L IACL ' 55-A- IU JVIIVW 5 . "iievr !;ofl'da7 good:--Shook-lovft put from last year. ` ` . ` ' 131-`;-Iii nng A` QLA `-1 t LI-I-. -- Ill ICU` .` VIII Baiuin-0n: of tho` thing: that cum: from Spain. -. - V Q4-Aunhlung `__ L an--mutant `In-I-\ In 34;.` .II-J '-U VIIIIIT `LUZ KIIIKIQIO 8dt;ook1n,_-`-A garment that}: boil: Quad "lt'y;our.psrantn are won 01!. Did aInnI._A oinnannl, OK.` n-n-all In... -A Six Months of Ineesnmt` Care Is Required" for the Work.- The musical academy of the cenary breeder has its professors, the stamp of whose style is left on the pupils as dis- tinctly as that_ot the vocal export" inuo ` encee the students of the conservatory. ' Every breeder makes it his business to constantly be "on the lookout tor old cock birds of repute as songsters. These are never used for breeding, but are. usually kept in small; darkened `cages. They are the masters on which the musi- cal education of the youngtbirds depends: 1111.-.. 0-Inn ouauuill-anus queen nknoub also xnnbn II JFK` -`In nouaxeci-'-"I 3aSL7'u'{"sma11 boy n. calves the winter there}: no snow. n_..A.. A I.x;.j `-1: I-_1.. _n_-__ _V_.n-1 VVI'V- UK? VVIIIUCI UXCITIC X `"3"! A nnt-A kind old dy whose exub- nnoo we remember about this) timq ejory 1 nun lllstlbtbo`-A pxantjiut an at In men n % _:i!:_o lrl yon and` um: 1_t d an I `\ VMlLES.STA_N.l)|SH"s c'c>`ua1'si-{:91 |.IlU_ $111. '1` 1118110 auuu, um I pray thee `now attend. 1 WlS`u )'UU,'LU` l't`|)l.l.l`, Do see if he will give meleave `Do wed. luls daughter }1'alr." Ill auuu U1 lll`ll1'l. H116 As. any maid could be. LII one snort mpultu rnscul.` John Alden s lovdmz wife. London Custard Lanu;ge. III UIIUVQIIICJII VI. lulu young `llllll uvyuuu-e When the nest-llnge are about six weeke old the cooks are taken away, eay the Detroit Free Press, and put In a large one until they -have developed properly. After two months they are put slngly into smaller cages, and placed in a room with the meter bird, yet so that they cannot see each other. Now comes the testing or the young - voices, and ' the breeder llstene carefully to judge their quality and progress the birds are making. Winn I-snub` Q`-mouthing lain` nlnbnai nest nun` .,`-.3 I 1)" tot Orilna. met` in the._Ul'8ng`eTHal} hereon : .Tuesdey_. - The reports to] haudof' the primary` lodges irere rend tmd disposed `of. ,` `It. -is hoped thpt those lodges which have not tent in. their annual return mll do so gt once" and thus enable the -Dastrnot been-etarv to, report fully to the C mnty Lodge, which meets hext month. 'l.:he u eers for O_ri,1he D strict are: Wt }J. n'...;.r,w;` Mr ov L. 0. L.LNo. 904 ' Uisuict. Mueter 3 W. A. Tumble,` W M.` 414. Deryuny Mm-ter shn Bntlund, 667, Chaplain; Wm. Tom-y, 296.- Hromdiug S-ore_+arv 3 Lennard Shaw, 904,VFnnanoial Seeretary ; W. J. Flet- cher, T296, Tueaaurer; Walter Burr, 837. Duect.or_ of Ceremouueu; George McMulun, 904, Lee In-er. These were duly metnlle-d _by_ Past Mmier Mo Burnt-y. and entered upon their du lee tor the fear. The people of Ozillla will be pleased to learn that indications 4 pmnt to a monster celebrutnone here on the coming 12-h of July. '_ Motto "Urill_ia ongthe Glorious 'I1we|fr.h. The 1 Image Ledges In thexr order are prim- ary, disu.rict.,, countv, 'provineiel, and groknd, and they arewkllfizlly united ogeoher.-Packet.. q ` ; Essa District Lodge met in Everett. on Tuesday "lust tor the installutlop ot. oicurs. The following ofcera we're elrcw-.d fof this veur : T ` . Innisl Drst;rict_ met at Angus on Tuesday, Jan; 10, '99, when ab'out; 75 "delegates were present and `a most. eu- Lhuaiuhcic `meeting held. The Order was reponcd In a ourishing coudmuu. As the cm of me D. M, the semi- annual meeting wxll be held at Baxter in June; The old" oiuera were all re elected as found mluw: _ D M -J A. S ewurls. -D DM.- Jae. Black. See.-R McCnukev .TimIre1- J. Leonard. `Chaplain-A Eden.` b 7 Du`. Ceremenies-- W. Armstrong. Lecrurer-M. =Mm-hers. A Books neatly and richly bound _will be more popular tha ever for presents I this year. We have secured an immense quantity for the holiday season. ELEGANT FLOWERED CLOTH BINDING, 29c. EACH. A s LEATHER PADDED POETS `AT $1.25 to $3.00. IiENTY S STORIES FOR BOYS, 500. InaPocket -Bibles and Teachers Ed-tion we have extraordinary values at 500., 7 5c., $1.00, $1.50, up to $5 00. The cheapest and best hooks at the price ever sh Wn. Full lines of Presbyterian Book of Praise and M ethodisti Hvmns with and without Music. Prayers and Hymns. A. and M.,_ at 35c., 50c., 60c., 75c., $1.25. Ex-amine our Stock before purchasing. $c`ott s Pocket, Table and carver 8ets,%Hnckey Skates, Hockey Sticks, - . Mitts, Sleigh Bells and Horse Blankets, ' Steel Snnwshovels, cow Ties, Stable Brooms, lanterns, 1 Axes and X Cut Saws, etc., etc.. at 1 J. HENDERs0N s. Fik TI l-IKFIVII I13 from whatever muse cured I1 half an hour hv HOFFM A N 8 HEADAPH I-I POVVDEBS 10 cents and 25 cents at. all dnzggtste. from whntaver mm as cm-ecl 1'1 h qlllv CIIl\I ll-IUHLUHD IIIJU IJILIIII Ill`? Jllltl-Elli`! The best` singer: are picked out and. pubintso what are called single boxes. small wire, darkened cages, placed inside a tin box. At one side is as our- tain, which is withdrawn when the bird is to sing. The greatest; care is taken that the centuries never hear an interior bird, or, in fact, anv other sure of bird, as they are apt: quickly to learn wrong noteeand so spoil their 0112. " Thu Idnoln J-an ` nun `vnn nuns nnnln W. D.M.-_-H. Mum... D.D.M.A J.J. D. Banting. _ ChaplAnin---Rev. `McKee M.-Lenuan. D.R.S.-A. MucKu, M.D. ' D.F-.S.-J`. S. Wullnughby. D. Tn-as.-T. TW. Duun. D D.C -W. Jeukma. -D. L.-J. H. Corrigan. V D.D.L --J. Dunh--m. McDonald; u - - -~-_-.w~- NOXON NIW IUFMLD PATENT ALL STIILOISC `mm "no. -2 ucuomt. mum` mm cum-:m_on j T `Age`n't; Ea rrie. WALTER scan , Barrio. ~ - At rf';"chel B. of `Midland held. .recex__z_t_ly7,` the `proper- ition of oonetructingg, `loop line railway- trum e point between ghgllengdalej end Oollingwood on the Northern reilway `to Bradford; on: the same` line, was unanimously endorsed, and ereeolution ._; that and w... paused, to be-Sent to the Board or '._l`~rade of.;Toronto.' `The view favorable was. to commence at Celwell, where the Penetangliahene brunchxjoine` the . Northern ; thin, with he construction of lean than four miles of railway from Midland to a point on the Penetanguiehene branch, would give Midland direct. communication with T--ro_n'to, with a mileage of about eighty miles; The interests of Midland and Collingwnod. would thus be mut uelly benetted in securing at short height tranepurt from Both of these lake `ports to Toronto. aavvuu Illlhl BU Byvll llllulc lawn`: The birds, too, `are kept very quiet, and allowed to sing only under pleasant conditions, as it is considered that any kind of disturbance or fright is likely to create a broken, jerky kind of melody. The excellence of the sons: consists not so much in its` loudness. or I even in its tone, as in_ varied repetitions of certain strains. Each` melody has its special name and the birds are classed according to the tunes they sing. 'I`L_.c.n alumna` D0 Jl.xs.Av\l- alnnlna -II` ' Subscribe for Tim ADVANCE, the best weeklv paper in the County of Simcue. )soME . NEW . THlNGS.I CANNED SHRIMPS CANNED OHABS CANNED PILCHARDS _ SHREDDED-WHEAT s FLAK-ED HARLEY C - PACKAGE MINCE MEAT (3 Pies ful`_ 10 cents.) .\..--- , up I---- van.` run-u-rvtunn-v-1`-Iv BENGAL` (`LUB CHUTNEY _ MANGO uHU:NIJY' THE MOST DEL1CI -Us JELLIES IN THE woau) ITjjjU TEA. E0-FFEEE 'A.\'D COCOA MERCI-IAN';`._ GRAT FULV I COMFORT Disuinguished "everywhere for Delicacy oi Ila.vor, T Su"erior Quality. and Nutri- tive Properties. Specially rateful and comforting to t e N rvous and dyspe tic. Sold 0111 in 14 ound ins. T labelled AMES PPS&Co.,~ Li;d.,- Homoeo anhic Chem- ists London, ngland. The Hoosier" Needs no Introduotton. Over` 4o.ooo Drills and Seeders of aurtma.nu- future in use in Canada The only Drillmade with lever fvr instant and pertecgregulation of depth of `shoe in all kinda-of soil, while team is in motion. Sow: absolutely correct to scale; saves seed. as "every kern- l is de ited at a pgaser death to grow. Purclnae only the t dndyou ' be satised; `Nu nlnn lnnnnfnnhu-J R3:-Illnrn, angina:-n Mnunoa j BREAKFAST` EPPS SGOGOA lI\l uuv Illlllk UIIVJ Dluo There are 22 dierent strains, and some birds have a compass of four octaves. '1he eduoatbn of the canary in- volves six months of incessant watchful- nests and activity on the part or the breeder. When the bird has reached seven months he is supposed to have acquired A his musical education. although a talent- ed pupil is often left with the master somewhat longer, in order to gain spec- ial finish. , T