Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Northern Advance, 6 Apr 1899, p. 6

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Allmen. who Bdve_rtise.are not sncy-+ oessful, bnt, With rare A exceptions, all successful men have been adverciaena. h The more a man spends for news- paper advertising the more positive he is in hiebelief in ohereaulta it brmgs. V Id Advertising is business medicine, and should be taken in sncli quantities and % as such times as it is- needed. J If ' one gi-owafa `great many `varieties; of any sort of frmt,`hia only chance to n1_ake_' any mioneyis` by having what. I will call a particular personal market Thejgrowet-can g0_dll'eo`b no the `home of the eater and meeshia needs. But, if a gnan has to put` his nproduota on the open general maike of this country oi{B:"it.a1n, then he muaonoe have a" whole promiscuous assortment of truit, . but he muss have a` few-suitable known variation that they like; Otherwise he cannot make it pay. In promiscuous growing he does not grow any` variety on a large enough scale to havehia ex penses low enough, and he does not. have enough quantity of any one kind, to atoraot attention in an open market.. The successful adverciauru must be always alurs and must never take his hand (rum the,udvert.ising rudder. _ Hints on Advertising. _ ; . Advertunng is the Insurance of but ` n eaa, but youy must. keep up the pro-. 1-miuma or the policy will lapse. V } J f ` fi. `E Sen-dnesI. =avor;.' 3n--i che'Aorde1".." f -Too ones mess says :;-s--`oh, tins `sn`ch___a.` king of -`fruit: aisgnzie moss de;:icious_.ahdn high-avor V ` for ihe'Apersona!, -particular markcof .3- keeping". 'qna_l_it_:ie`s,e appearagioe nd fruit`-grovivsi; sreverses V than order`, andi ed. ~. It may obe,.s_nd mu? pay no grow an man who` is going so pay as hzghe price for special intrinsic qnahiy ; "but the Brntish market. will pay `just. tire common price in the order or those qualities. 'I.want to repeat that over and over agam; it is the secret ot the` whole situation ,4 soundness and keep-` ing _qualit.iee after who fruits are there, then nice appearance, and when a avor as good` as you can gwe. In anothuplaoe the dame viriter ls.ay_s__; _ . ow many gppleo -Ad_an :, aid Thus from the tourdlon 1_.of W the nristo- ., _orat1c;dm1o'e, tra.n_stonned, by the people, 1 -was born the romaneaca, vwhlchbecamb -in . L France the gaillaui vqlhga,` and in Ger {- % WW mr8e.d!w - . ' ` T . |"| fzfwdw ` I band the best value possible is given with ` At all priced, from 5 to 25 dents are made by The Geo. E. Tuckett and Son Co. (Limited) every Cigar. . Then 'e:.e'n;.;...};;-.e} nhudlbeen listening `quietly, handed in. his contribution, ' ,"Evo 8124 566 `how it, cant- {ed,andI Adam 8,l24,2LU- .a9V``j`3 hnabW1"vaI he to any nlone, gqnlI.. `r I `hob as: .z.;..., equg1a..;~ 8,132 352." . There the` matter`:-eot_a for `the pre- ;.gpc, angwo; igrejery thaijkfnl it` does The `poet, yho dislikes being surpassed as, much as he hates barber-3, came up to the scratch again with, '_Eve_ 8142 see how` it-tech e_d,` un;lA_d:m 81,242 keep v!.:er'eompa'ny.. . . . . . . . -./ l But; his assistant bestthe pnblish9r, asserting that Funva "8142 see how it lxasted, and Adag. 8142 keeb her oompany..`.... ._ \`The`n the publisher tried `his hand, and". bib contribu- tion wga, Eve 8142 see how it; tasted, and Adam 812, equala.'. . . . ._ . . . . Frhen ski; ai}i$}a}'eo: sod along a slip of paper, _on which was wtfibten, Eve Si and Adam 81. making. -. But the poet, who isV`a man of imagination. capped this yvirh. Eve 81, and Adnn\A8l 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Eve oat? TWaa is one or_ was is mil- lions`! When thennbjeot was t-at mootgd, the editor very nntnrally;re- Why, one, of nonrpe. .`.`No, aaid'the assistant editdr, Eve nte one. and Adam ale one. too, that's. 2. AdLvertise`in ~"THE AnvAuc."l `iii VI-I\l l \I\I`_I`\7l In Provence it soon became the gaillsrd, and this name indicates the character of the transformation. n:_._ |_.'._..-:.__.: _____,_ u,. .. ` - V - .. s. ',' . . , `y4>` % %g;:%i;5Iu;u`s,'newest- % [ Pm?0i|:Acake flianauianca e~8pice. sap Buckets and Spi Ii.` MassevsarxisBepairs,# PloughsA%amI Points. Buimtsf ardware%and%Millfumishings. `.%llibricatin g0ilS. etc. at J-J'1ENDERS0N s [CIGARS At are (Limited), `and with ` . Best grocers sell it-any grocer gun get is for you. Tired of the some oldthing for the breakfast porridge 2 . Flake Bar- ley mokee a.- nice change in place of ` the on Meal 'rr;`+ it--it will do you good It nourishes without heating the blood; solu) BY THE POUND. 89 ,384~.n 16,284." 8,954. ? _..... \l' u-uuuwu y us auvluu, uuru-uuouw/t `A. D. 680, was intrusted by the council `Jot. Toledo with the mvislon of thevliturgy _ as it was then practiced in the Roman church, in-which there" was a tambourine dance. The council decided to adopt the Isidorian liturgy in all Spain," and it dlered but little from that used in` other countries at that time. This rite, cele- hnfnna than A` :o`\I>.`-n nnwnl-eeuduv --`-nu 5`-A D 8933: . 162. m...v..... ` i u\'rn' or oao. E the premues occupned bv Chi? " " joint of the vmog-In ' IID husinoal in all kmdsmbad, buy etc` All work W D-nuunhef oneqhoains. :11! an! olwu uv uuunwu In an ....... 5. etc we gum. Remembc ' ,VVe `Steam modem BQNI our vi um Law. I all at V3}! ces A B0 urchued and reopened the . no Dunlo or all c sacs of work- IEIC INlIlJS'l`llYo 3 `Oil! .'l`llE SAME DAY. street. with tht door. srlwml. OR '3. E. Hughes &Bro.| Vntlgnzanv Sunawn, Box :99. Telephone No. 7. -:- an-vans Azania uIDl.\l on: Ul\UI`l- ~ Hones bought and sold on commission. 0' 5! ed and tted for sale. `Terms {in application. Correspondence 805 STEAM LAUNDRY] wsvvv uuu vuw auUl.U l.l.VUl -' The people--a.nd at this time all "who were not of the clergy or royalty were the" peop1e-used the latter part, called the tourdion, which. lighter and more lively, appealed to them, and "little by little `it became changed. ,In~ Italy it was first separated from the rest under the name or ro_ma,n`eeca, and from there it passed to Provence and southern Germany, but in eachof these countries it was diversied * and developed according to the character of the people. Yr: Dnnwnnnn {In anon-. In-.4-....-.LL- __.III.-..-I Monthly Auction Sale of Horses, Vehicles, 5? ,|!1{::;l 900-: at the Stables, next door to Amend! [COMMfST6iWj either or both pizpers will kindly leave I them at. this otce. andJnlv I1. 1895. Parties_'hu:'ing "'e3'.:;'xa.:;.'5a's+.'g:o FACTORY AT mmoo. TOROMO ' ` 4..- VWANTED4-Copies of NQBTH-I EBN Anvnzcn datd July 4, 1.395." "*5.'l"I!"_|.l!-3".P|?.E.~ WE MAKEy----- Sewer and Culvert Pipes All Rina: fr-nus A In on 94 In. A l-Will pay for Will Form and [ postage to any part: of Canada jCU-DQ$ `fly rllflljo ._'1`he mm. like `many `other secular innings. wend am in the church, where in the midst of barbaric disorder it serves. 1 totreoe the_union between ancient civili- zation and that of the middle `ages. The ' sacred dance of thepagans is preserved .to {,3 certain point in Christian` rites. It is transformed ,to- a series `of eV0]'iltiO118.` ;;made to the sound oi the tambourine. St, ` Isidore, archbishop oi Seville,'born- about 1 'A, D. 590, um: `Inf-lniclancl v... 4.1.... ........-u !Th`eAdVaD8 Office! Blank `Will F orxs can be had at `E3... sate. `EVERY suunomr. Make Your wml _-- --- -- 7: All Bile: from 4 in. to 24 in. G180 Conaoctiona. IAl3l$ 13-; 1-`-gs-1! SALE ASTABLES. Succsssoas To 1:. s. LALLY. Near `Market Square. M c La rt) : A. MORREN wR|:rE""6'u'$ pmcas. --a--.9-av vs. vs: annuuau W503 ll 011110 50 V11 ancient sacred dance, so the waltz is an evolution of this religious dance. ` In the eleventh `century, when the Gre- ,ori.-un rite supplanted the Moorish rite. he dance disappeared` from the church. It appeared very quickly in society" under the name of oarole, a. word derived from the Latin earoler; afterward under that of bases dance, in which the grand prel-V ates, kings and dignitaries did not disdain ` to join, composed of three parts, two very slow and one more lively; t I`hA nannIn__u1-ul no-, 4-Ida 44...... -11 '._I.- BARRIE Ti||sn s Flake Barley. 6 cts. .'...AND.... ggnxn 1809 BARRIB, 3!-ls` On`- w WI This was known and employed in Pro- vence and Italy. The tambourine in use in this religious dance was called by . St. Isl-i done moitie de symphonic and evident- ly corresponded tuthe instrument which in the ancient dances` accompanied the ute. a sort of bagpipe invented two centuries B. 0. And thus, as the religious dance of the middle ages is allied to` the jlnnlnnt nnnho Annnn an I... ...-I;_ 1- -.. Va :-Ions. Transformations "l`:hro`I3h":"' -1-fflany centuries `Until It `Assumed `l . gt: Present, Characteristics, In Ger-g _f nnny In 1180. . _ . V Vf'1`he opinion must generally. _eonce`ded is i that France received the_ wa`ltz.froni.Ger-2. eanany toward the close of the eighteenth `century, and among man_y- beliefs this . Veontains the most truth, but the justice of attrlbutlngvto Germanic inuence the re- naissance of the waltz in_France does not sotrneeessity verify the statement that it, 'ehadits origin in Germany; ` 5-. Like everything else that touches hu- ' Jnanity, where nothing is born spontane- T-'ouslye. but everything is the product of a "series of successive evolutions, the waltz did not emanate in its present form from the brain of a dancing master. Long be- -fore 1780, the time when we nd it rst `jnentioned under this name, its graceful _`-curves and cadenees were displayed on the` village greens as well as in the golden `salons of palaces. ` ' A II... _.n._ 111.- `._. -_ K 4- - uuuuuncs Iw wan B11116. '.l"ll18 rite, 0616- lhrgated before the eighth century, when the Moors ret invaded Spain, was still cele- brated by "the Christians in the seven ohurches of Toledo. which the Moore abandoned after their oapue of theoity ad was after that time celled ' the Moor- rite. lnLn._:,, I - hr\QI~l I About 1730 mi; incident occurred` wm'oh nwuilnli `IA 09 lIAv\`O-1-it GKA --4-II-n -......__ fine omca AN EVOLIUTION m`om, g' ? % CHURCH CUSTOM: "reco gx"i,ized`in the noit Uuit6d~St1i'tGs sen- i T1!19 B`*`9~.V ---v---cw---vvcr-v - _`Wl_1en Lthe "gnmndI1 V 0hio ?'Q_~i: ate, about aAdoz99:o;,. m'm win 3'; Q vdvlnv no n|I'I.|})a - '1`li6"Ton?ly ovuravtvhoiloug wiridgi-` ; 3068,01 the" aeiim. 18 eye:-y n ,_nuring uh; Phlliplplno '.'rebe lli.o n spam? oered $95,000 for Aguinaldds head. He 1 --p--u-n-ru.-- `$3.. an... ` , maybe expectgd nowu) claim that-much from the U nitd Status {or interfering and 'sq' -o_han_gdng cjind-lsiblzs phan he could not deliver A his head and get t.hef'8:21'>.0OO._-- ; ecouncu /Blugonparai. - , V an vuvvvwv helm is somgood .evf1 "iI.da_dlok. `It keeps legislatures? `from "dev.ot1g ail" [th`ei1` time, to making 1aws'..L--Norfblkv _v_ _..- -._ .-.-..u v. -cu-soc-ca-rurao navy-no * It is on-l';;-questmn of timeuntll Aul-I % naldo wm be starring this country with ` his lecture on g`.` How It; Feels `to Be Spank-_ ed by Uncle Saim. . --.P_lttsburg -News. `l)....4"........-. nn}1..-.. -.___ .: LL. _. -..-I.-___'-A -.. ., ...... ....._. . _ _.-....,..., -........ Profe__ssor Wialson, one of the memberdof the _Phillpp1noij.commi'ssion, is an `eminent ornithulogist. .*-As soon as the commission makes its report we"wil1 probably know what kind of a bird Aguinuldovireqlly `is.- Mipneapqlls. Jqumal.` .-;;.1_--_ 4.1.- 'l'n_nx-__|_- _-_'I_-I|:_-_-rs p (VI L: V1. Izlwvvl VA Illa In Rot, the romaneaca, transported`, no: we have said, to Provence and southern Germany. was developedin these countries T very dlenently- -in Provence into the gaillard and `Volta. while the Germans. more dreemy _a.ndr slow, .changed the romenesca into the gerxnen and waltz. ` 'l1`\n v1n`I-A niunnuncunlszul -uclulln -u..-.... A` , `oxje easpn v;`;1;':,hthe;.enaton1a1,-dead-* 1 looks continue is tlmt, no Ohio men have" any? ;app'eared~in airy ot.e1aem5`~.c1x1cago Agulizalglo `shc7>_1J(lV5{Ws_oit1;1e dowxi and be- gin to get his war reminiscences in shape for the magaz1nes.---Wash1ngton ,1 TA. 1... __I..- ._----Lx_._ ._n L1___--__~L1l A ,,_ n William M. Ghase,_V__tho`suooesaful artist, was at on'e time sopoo1-as tobeableto ~ eat only bread and `cheese. `fEven my ` oanvaiand colors, he says, wore sup- -plied by sc'udente."' ~ " Mark '1";;_v;i'owae so papum in.Vlenna." public exhibition in that city. _ that a young acu1pto1_-__'th'ere modeled ,3 I bust of him by~-stealthpand It is now on u......n.. tr....a._ 1.-.. _...u..-.. _-__-u_n.._ I ' Novelist I-Ienty has writteh` something like 20,000,000 words during his literary career. That means "mo;-e. than 8,000 words _a.day 800.daye_in the year for -80 TQQQB -vw- =---:_- -_ ----' ..uu_-- - v vu-an F W. s. Gilbert: the 11precu,"1s aa1a"$ have so little ear for music that he cannot distinguish harmony dipcoxd. till. I)... 13-.. 4.... 1.... __n_..__ ;- ---av-- --pu-u -_-u- nqynnn Innlwvvauo B . """`J Mlle. Rosa. Bonheur, the painter, so well known as a lover of animals, now and again hoids receptions of the pets or her friends. ~ v "~ ' - - .._. ` nnvnna D-IV: aavulw VIQIUIJ V_l-IV] `VII BLUE IJUIII5 aaham,ed'to be caught dead In that place. -_-Cleve`land Leadeg. Thomas n_aney Aldrich is said :6 be the` .. best grdomed literary man in the country. `I7 G l1I'iI.....L LL- IIL..-LLx.LL I- __.l.I L- Buffalo thinks she can engineer an ex- position in 1900 that will put Detroit com~ pletely in the shade, a posaible.consumma.- tion `which Cleveland `will regard with serene 1ndlerence..- Cleveland Plain 11-..! .... - nvuuwuvwvw IIGUVI Univ avbuluu (Ill!-L vvavuw. he volte succumbed while young to oblivion in the sixteenth century by very reason of its excess, but the german lived long and produced the wnltz which Vreigine tnlhur . V St. Louis is boasting about .her low death rate. 0! course Chio_agoclaims that this is due to the fact: that people go away from St. _Louis-when they get sick, being nnhnrnn P1: In: nnuoht Hand In bland-_ nlnnn na ovuvvo "'{1'Jc 1e'1;L.` o'v?'Jomes to the front with a Svengall, but he is not necessarily` a premier hypnotist. It s `easy to throw Philadelphlans intoa trance.-'-St. Louil -Reputiyo. T - T . _ -nun--1- -u.n_i__ _u__ -__, -_ ,- nent sta.tesm`en.-New `York Preas.` `v.1;-ots-t;n - house needs Ivnew roof. So do a. few of Boaton aVeml- -v.-- uwvuwv-u-pawn-9 oivvv Au`: .5 A We infer from the court pvrzzeeding-5 that playwrjting and pork packing are about neck and - neck out in Chi Washington Post. "IL ,, I, 1 _L _ ,,A _L____ . chem--I . The highest structure` yet in New York is the latest estimated tax. rate." It fairly looks down on tall towers and sky- scraping piles.`-Boston Globe. 1\L:I_-J-I_I.l_` _-__ 4__.,7-- L- Al I A teacloth said; to be highly prized by Lady Curzon has the namesot all her ti- tled London acquaintances embroidered upon it. It is, of course, of the nest lin- en, but is perfectly plain, with a deep hemstitched `border. Her friends have. written` their names diagonally across the border, and `these she has had embroider- ed in white cotton. ' - Miss Reel, daughter of the speaker, is dn~ring~her~fnequentwisits-to thejoapitol a constant visitor at the sessions of _ the j house over which her father presides. She always sits in the front row of the mem- bers private gallery, and when adjourn- ment time arrives is joined by Mr. Reed, who accompanies herto the family apart- ments in the Shoreham. _ ' J net be soon Canada is annexed Buf- t_alo will `be put down en the maps as East Detroit.-Detroit J ournal. n An..- -----,,-, ....- _-.. ....... ,..... `Mrs. Mccumber, wife of the senator I elect, was formerly a res1d_ent"of `Fargo, where she was employed as assistant man- ager of the Western Union telegraph omo. While still Miss-J_ennie_`Sehorni!,18. she was transferred from -Fargo to the Wahpeton office, where Attorney Mdcumber wooed and won her, and -she is now the mother : of two children. ' __-v.- -----.-vv- -- cw vvuv uv Dyan:-VI-Q - Mrs.._Wh_ite, wife of the American em- bassador at Berlin, temporarily laid aside her mourning, according to custom, the other day to attend a court reception by the emperor and empress of. Germany. Mrs. White isin mourning for her mother, wife of President McGili of .Swarthmore_ college, who died last year. } 1:..- \:-n.-.._|.-.. __nA_ _. 4., "z.'aT1$ 'iza'o"1;i."?.7uJniiiI ;h:u;.vas `Miss Jerome of New `York, is about to start _a quarterly magazine in London, which will be something like thefyellow. ~ book, enlarged and amplied with par"- ? ticulurly. ne illustrations; and, binding.-~ Eachnumber 1s`to cost a. guinea. `ll..- 1"nL.u.- ...ll_ -1 LL-` l_.,-,,l__-, nnwvuv nivv IIIVLIIVIIU UUVMLIUIL Wllllill tended to x denitely the waltz among German customs in its present form and name, placing it in highfeociety and mak- ing it known to foreigners. This was its introduction in an opera by Vincent Ma:-4 tin, Una Oosa Vera," - which in 1787 de- -throned at~V.ienne the `fifigarof. _-or Mo- zart. Four characters in-__ this` opera, Lubia, Vita, Ohita end'Li1la,'."d1:esa'ed*ini black and roseoolor, danced on the V the 1irsii waitz. * 1' fl... On-on-nu`..- I-`4;.- _A.l.._ -l "KI. _` '-- .;"',___- ier:-37:.` 'Xxfi";1orA `of Phddelphuj, who has just died at theagq-or 101yeara, was I the dau hter of Jacob Ludwlck who fought ; under gvashington in` the Revolutionary ; war. Her husband was/one of the de- fenders or Baltimore in the war of 1819. I -- vv--v--v- -. V J\aQlDI ' K uliirvs;-J. `H. R.'B;;1(.1<`)?ah!i'oago was (me i of the first nu:-ses. sent out by the British - government on active duty, and has many medals" given to her for heroic" se_1-vice. on the pld of .battj.1e. T V- v- ---' vw -- Benja'mi.x.1-`-1.1-;;';l:a:6n accompany her liusband when" the ex-president goes abroad thisspring in the intieret of V thr Venezuelan commission; aanusvwu JIIJLUUIJI Lllblalll, ILI-,U 1_ the Shaker communitynear Gonoord, N. H.,"who died rec`e_nt;ly, had, been.the heal of t-he-settlement for` nearly _50`years.- ` .13.. 1 tn` 1:: n.....- _n nLs__-4- ___-'-~- _ Mrs. Leonard`Wood. wife of the military goverporof Santgugog is organizing than 1 mbranqh not `the Society For the Prevention 1 of Cruelty to Animals. ' ' ` ` A II..- l1-._:A.._x_ .I'I',___.1,._'_. #2`! . - A Mrs. Ade! a.1de' 'l'oon'er ts pridelit of the-Sorosisclubv o_f_ Springeld. Mo " The club .wizs.founded in 1896 and has now 100 . .._`...l.___ WRITERS. AND PAINTERS. 771IJr' 15Jr'E?57'i>"girgm, the ;ne..m' hn tIn1`r|`lI1`lII\*iI.1! nnnu flrnrnu-nu` K - POL!T?|`CAAL .Q'UjPs. M'AT`R ON A":\ 'V,'7Q; M=i%u cuv vvunvuvu uvvvaaucu CIUUVU At the court of Valois the volte was a favorite dance, especially with Catherine. do Mediol, while Henry II was charmed with the pealm which Clement Marat set to an air of the volte, thinking perhaps that what came from the church should go back to the church. The volte, as did_ later the waitae, turned the heads of this court. The queen, Marguerite de _N_a- varrc, wife of Henry IV, was `an admira- ble volteuse. ` V AL-_ LL- _._...__A_ _._,.J A O0 C - I - SlS_TERLY (CITIES; AGUINALDO. In `Pocket Biblegand. Teachers Edition we have exymordinary /yaluesat 50c.,;7'5,o.,i $51.00, $1.50, uplto $.0U. A The cheapest `and best books at-fthe price 5ev.eri~8,h0W;1. .j-Full lines.ef Preby1:e1iar;.Boqk and Methodist Hymns atid:without' ;Mn s_ie., Pxfayers and-'Hym1_x, A. and M._, at 350., 50c.; 60c., er-759:,?Gf;25;`:i;:ggzxjgiaiouri Steel: before;[purcha.si`pg'. _`f ~ ` - " .- = ` - ~. i 1 .-he .,.. ' ,v V _ , > . , ; v Boks ixjeatly lanid vrichIy:bo1n.1d. will, be ':'nore_-po;.mla'r thgnfever for predenta phis year. We havg secured immense, quantity for~tl}e holiday" season. `iiiret of all the person who under- taken the shipping articles of produce to Britain "must know the conditions that the British conumef and importer impoge on him in regard to'fruit.' I have learned by two years" experience, that the British ooneumer and importer do not care a snap of their ngers for . the ia'ncy names of the specially esteem- ed kindaof fruit.', They do not care a brown baw-bee, whether it haebeen cracked up by .every...spee`ialiat in the ..ouut_ry. `Soondneee is -the -rat con eideration, then keeping qualities, then nice_ appearance (in. r'eg'ard_ to colour, pigs and shape ; and lastly the importer look`: for eenioe avor a_e _-you can`.g.ive` scows <>ok%storeT. `T Qualities `Which Determine Value. J ah. W. Robertson, Qomgnisaioner of 1 Agriculture and Dairying, says ; -Anandale .. .8l-26"5b` s 54"2Z'0'o `Amazon . _. . . . 30l9 47 Angus .... . . . . 622.18 Aveuizig. . . . . 312 54 `Barrieu. . . . . 9740 -15 `Beeton... . . . . 1633 08 `Bond Head.L. . 395. 88 . `Bradford . . . . .. 15993 :5 '0-.ldwater . .;';. 1319 82 "`Cullingwood...... 7526 35 `C-xoksbown. . . 1173 767 _ -omighu;-e . . . .. , 159 10% Cre-emore, . . . . . . 1408 46 'Duntro0n.'. . . . . 501 I4 'Elmvale . . . . . . . 1481 32 `Everett '. .72. . . . V "474, 02 'Hawkeecone. '306 36 'Hullsdale .... .. 476 22 "Lt.-fray . . . .._~ 4-50 77 - -Li-le . . . . . . . .' "488 91 A _*LEhand...{... 3216 62 Mineaing-.59. . . . . A386 51 New Lowell_.... 545 16 Numw'a . 377 63 *0rilIia. . . . . _. . . 9771 75 H Penetanguishene. ., 2489 44- Phelpeton . . . . . . 298 43 Rnaemont. . . . . . . 536 7] 'Singhemp'on`..... 365 25. `Sbayner. . . . . 2034- 61 Strand .;..~ . . . . ._ 357 27 ?Th0rnt0n...`... . 471 0275 *T0tpenham...,. 1232 20 Viotea` "Harbor. 693 03 Weubauahene. .. ~ 951` 28 . _'_Wuret--ley._.` 259 _92 ` 4Wyebridge......" 335 67 30o 00 .220 00 150 00 257o 16 460 00 7150 00 5s0_00 380 00 `I850 00 350500 68.00 480 00 190 00 5450 00 . 140 00 100 00 190 00 160 00 184 00 830 00 136 00 *212 00 170 00 2485 so 750 00 120 00 54 200 00 -I60 00 600700 132~o0 1so`00 420 00 7 260. O0 356 00 9o 00 .012s00o - Those` marked "' show an increase in reveime over the previous year. . Angua.... ' Bond Head. .. 3 . *CulliDgWO0d.` way V vs. After the corrupt court of Valois had been dispersed by the league, and Henry III, the last of"the.great volteurs, had fal- len under the knife of Jacques Clement, ` this dance disappeared forever fromTeou1`t, city and people. Though ~ It greatly _A re- ` Iembled the waltz, theelatter` did not de- scend from it directly. but was rather the younger sister of it. - - - Tn `uni I-`van nnvnnmnnnn 4-use-.-_-.A.-.I __ A Postal Business for` The Postmaster Geuern.l u report for l898. `shows _the g.-oav.al~ revenue and salaries ~in~ the dibrent oices In Sung ooe oohuty to have been as follows :-- ' `Revenue, Salary. .A||.,._`.I_1_ a.1`nnn an` A .1111 nn ` none-. I .% She told us to do what a_he never had done (And never'int.euded to cry). ' V And it isn't to toilband it `isn't go upon m|...... I....:...- -|.- -.-_ -2 :2 V % That s;i.;.; .1;;';;;;;'.;;.;;.;;I It : to follow a. woman who didn t know `man -1- ' A womerzavviv ho never bed cooked any beans). . But wr5te and was paid to ll space. `-Boston Congregationaliet. To hhmmer and saw ahdwhack, . In mgkitfg 8' chair in which no oha w_oul sin, A chair in which no onecould possibly sit, { m:LL-:.m - .`_2-L 1.. I_:`.. L, I cg uuuu. ul vvuu._:u nu uuuvuoulu p0BllDIY Ill Witboiat 3 crick in his back. A Vlvgvomn then? was, and She __hud her fan lII,4. .. ___' _._... --v -.-u- ucwn pin: (etterytihcrrxiyou or I) ; ' I . She wrote out receipts, and never tried Que ; She `wrote -about chil`dren_--jof course ghe had ;..i;;** '"`" 'Twould adorn any parlor, and give it anair (And wgrthoughs the pale mu true). 0 the days we worked sn.d_the ways we. worked ' ` H I A gwomamthere was, and she wrote. right mt, . ` _ V. (A: you"or I might do). ' _ ~ -How:-`out or a. barrel to make; chair, To be covered with chinibzhnd stuffed `with . L(_-As {rba at hnigh"do). 7_. she and now solgut aafqe_u' dicks,` And,-how. izoaateiiv _mmy`s qavory mesa; _ Bus ahdnever had done it henVelf,"I_gueu,vT lI'IYI.2-I. _-..-` -2 L-.. __,, 1,, The favorable reception of . the fopcra W naturally drew the at-tent.ion'"o,f to % {the duinoe. and under the nut'1e`o_f eosgt ; 1.vu,-a`-It immediately became. the -efashjoge {and shortly arse:-ward assumed the; name H1 } of wadlmvby which it has been known ever } nlnnn ' . _ (Which none" Sf her zteadenknew). f v- -__V _._ __ ._ ..v-.- -- --w-----, - $----, 0 thedjiour we spent and -thedonr we egjent. An. the. auger we wanted like and, At the .'heet of a. _ woman who never had "cooked V (Ahod' now we know. that she never could. cook`). _ And did not understand. au.;..s M A wman then `wgnxjngadv AnIhe v>rrote for the `ELEGLAKNT. FLOWERED "CLOTH _BINDIN(_}_,. 29c. EACH. % -'I'5EATIIER_.~~PADDED PoErs AT $1.25 to $3.00. HE`1~I TY s `STQRLES: ronznoys, 50; I'D I O Ia nlCIOOOC tonic-0000 got!!!-II Hoad.L.`. :ter..;'. ;wood...... own..`... uric... re,...... >on.'. le....... s. Mone..'... Lle. . . . . . raccoons |d.A. . . . 3.9.. .; owell_.... um-qv-t2`.:_rv=y.~rI*,1:~nr-;'9` $'424 00 '800 00 *0257o 5so_oo 3so oo 2oo`oo A 260 2 356 00 090 = I gvoonusv vans: uvvn UL HUI UGYIIIIULH As can be seen lat once, this dance re- sembled the mm in three ways-1t was danced in thneetlme; itrwcs the first dance in which a. turn was made and the rst in which the dancer embraced his partner. The latter, in tact, did not touch the ground. The cavalier held her suspended` with his left arm as. he executed the four movementa described above. AL. LI... -...-_A. -1 T1_I-1- LL- ~,IA_ ,,- 'o_ult_y_. - ' / Whylubbleeare Scarce. . V _ Probably our green ancestor, Adam,` little thought of the trouble he would_ cause posterity by eating an apple. ! Blupthow-the queetioo as to how many I apples lhe, did is. a: new idii-. . The .-rae'a_dvertiai_ ng that is done is merely preparatory. . It mtroducespthe advertiser to his public ; in gain: ao- quaihtanoevfpr him.-Bat.es. ' Don't think one paper high priced because the rate is`: doller an inch, and and another lew priced because it In ten `cents aninoh. ' ` I . Usually the things `thutcoettlle leaet are the moatexpensive. Advertising that costs very little usually amounts to yery little. ~ ' People tend advertisements more than they did 3 fewvyeete ago. The reason is to be foend_ in the advereieemente themselves. Advertisements are beeoming mere. truthful every day. Business men know thst't hsir`news must` true or The beetpaper in which to advertise in the one which the centi- dence of the community in the highest degree. ' ' ' I A pbculiar thing about ths road to [ business aucoees is that inane uphill- {nf you amp pushing your it wnll j roll down. f 1 The newspaperie sometimes blamed fozthe ill success of an edverciaement,` v3hen the real fault is right in the store. ' A man who advertises. a little bit` ` and then quite is sutje to lose his money, ` and is sure to. gen erroneous ideas into his hesd. ' ` ' A Five hundred years later they danced the volte, which was in turn` a trans- formation of the gaillard. The measure was ternary like the, latter and might be designated technically thus: Two steps, is skip, `feet together, pause. The man iirst faced the opposite couple, -then skipped on the left foot, turning the `left. shoulder toward them. Repeating this ' four times, he again faced the other dancers. As for the lady, her movements were reduced to embracing as tightly as` possible the neck or her cavalier. An nan Iunnnnn Lb A-4- `LI. .1 _ _ . _ . A-

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