)BLOdM!lmLls-DUK!DP-Ab the Methodist nag-........u. f\_3II2.. -_ TIf-.l_-...'l-_. 11'- L McUU`LI.oUGH--On Sunday, Nov. 9th, after `a few hours illness.` Mrs. Charles McCul- lough, 6th line, Innistil, aged about 37 Y"F- ' ' - ~ , Wm'rns1`Dn-.-At West Essa, on Saturday, f Nov; ,lst, Elizabeth Whiteside, relics of the late John 'Whiteaide, age 74 years. Rqnlxsoxe-As_`Gravenh urn, on Nov. 4th. -T1902, ,_ 4.rmithAa.j- beloved ~ wxte of Charles 3ax;3bihIon;agedl 24. , V Friday, Nov. *a"a t'=t:*i-s*9M!-7W;?!`'4`vii?-e*= G= 1 Df cg Friijsy. '1\.Tov6mborl '1 The la-tter is ` indispensable to the .;,.former. No light or re can be .started with so little trouble as with gaan Eddy Parlor Match. fCoALAN9W00D EB; Eddy s Matches FOR SALE EVERYWHERE BA RRlE; AND A s1'nou D. IIUF 0 Amblngjhe heterogenous mass it! perhaps 60,000 `men of all nationwi- ties, and Vmany of the lowest grades of duaperados, the Women who came. to Dawson in '97 had to_ live.` '1'}- I\ ..4.4.. -1 L1... ..._ .__u_`.: ,__-_u; _, . -. It reaches Simcoer countylPeop|e, best Pnonuczs HEAT DIED. CREATE FIRE FOR ADVERTISING IN BARRIE THEY U88 vv aannvvnvll Ill VI IIGLI UU JIVU _ The state of the_so-called road and tra.il_s, even in Dawson. necessitated the wearing of. short skirts. and mas- culine looking boots; consequent.1y `the. women who come to Dawson to earn an outdoor living or whose occupation took them abroad on the streets or creeks were not drossed in 4. Innannnn nvI.inI.\ .AA4.I ....-- _..`4._2.I- ` m, 1902, Lydia Watts, relics of the m e George E; Went, aged 71. FnAsnB.-At Shanty Bay, on Nmrembef 4th. 1902, Christine, wife of George Maser; aged 40 years, 2 "months. eIhGAN-In Orillie, on Friday, NOV? 7th 1902, Walter Alphoncia, son of Judd Regen,` aged 5 months and 18. dav _mns-At his late residence, 16 SP street, Toronto, on November 5th, ]90? William-Henry Gibbs, ex-h1.P. for Iwrth Ontario,- in his 7901) year. `.o` Boxgg. F; Mr.. Hunter Kennedy and wife, of Barrie, ; took in the L.O.E. concert on the 5th. , -_n ,` Mr, VWebb, o Barrie, was noticed am_.3 [those who attended the concert on the nth- .Miaa Florenao Shields Slave :1 verY P'`;" mt par to y number of her young la V friendaf allow en night..- ..-. I -._J DAIV *3 I&'ia"ida`{1i{i, 1.: Toronto. is `I her sister, Mrs. Coulson. I'\ -__l': ' %M.'~ Redfern is having his P1?-l.30!'0d. Mr. Mitchell has the I A_...-. ` IQIUIIILU I-LDIIUJV VII Lllxlllh Dr. Baker; of Gore Bay, visited R6`? 3' AR. Sanderson at the parsonage a few deva- ` .Miaa Ella sum, of Toronto, is visiting at her home. ` _- ,_... oh: `V .idil".v;-VS-l-1ieldn and Alex. Hesson 8 lucky one: among the hunters at th {They have each shot a deer thus far- Il,,, II `II o 1 n1 . _ . _ 4 . In I IIWI EICUCU` CIIICI TVKITIIII Ml . W0 8. H`"'i., Of the Queen CRY, ` tho guest at the Queen's during his SW town; ; ,, l-_- , _ . - J.....l` 3411 71:3 guvvv navy In a few sho}'t years the tent and. barren cabin have given place to cosy `b'ui1'r1`ing's, comfortably and sometimes. richly furnished;. the man no longer cpoksj his own meals after a, hurt!" day's work. or complains or chronic ;' indigestion. but he goes to "h.i,B'_~W`B_1`1"-` ,prde1'ed"'hoine,' Welcomed` by` Iiibhvwiio ,and perhaps` little children who have? just `returned from the _pup1i,c_schopl W,hich l8- now a credit to_Da'.w$o'n,;f 3 .v:a:,nd' nds` Va`. `vast .dit,Tq1'9nco. % ix; ._thQ,__y_98r - g')7tj.190_2 tram 1898; - I1'i__....._ 1 __-_ -_...-_ .4`. II\__.;..-.'.' =5:_`? WW1` h_0ld'in Qhat place.` _ `,I40|1ii.`_H.-Tirbunh in in Toronto t-rvl ;9*?15Mi0n.tor the Civil service. d .h "1 i /M`Ke,e of Barrie, has resume 9 with h er pupils in town. -- VJ-- -.-A-n uAI`V fLIl1nV' his ' A 1.rge' nujugtmjrgom this town as; tho fowl supper and concert at UM ! _-dgv eveniniz. They report 8 8P`ed ver that place, '|hd:'a7'latga. cxfoivd in attendance-4] 9 I. Co Inc" u u I f'l'\_....~ubn f.l`Il '3i' \:,i{J;3L' Siihk. were very 335:; `T .9 Qilgijieople certainly had 820 ~ 0' ' ,_A_ OUR BRANDS King EdWa.rd10Us Headlight in 5008 Eag1e.,%in 2003 and k , 1008 L A Victoria. I Little Unmet ANGUS. Iliving dwelling III has the contract. this town attended A xcert Utopia. Mon- nort. a splendid time, .ttendance-the best vugqu |~wv \InDOI\/ gnaw-.-was.-coon: - ' Social. gatherings were rafe, as few ; possessed the means of ent;ert.uiningV tlreir rfr.iends;, the roads were in such _dcplo1wa`blee qpndition that *d,1'vin was out of the question even if the had been conveyances and backs in the town-but the dog then held an- T-preme sway, and was sold at a. price which one would hesitate to pay_for "a. food horse elsewhere. I_--__ ___.._,_ n_,_ _._ J._ L- ._A____ visiting `the muddy roads. I.` ,uuw cave nu .......v n;;\.o\4o `here were few women to be seen; ue streets were choked with men sib- 'ting along on the sifdewalks, amok- ing and lounging about, so that wo- men were almost compelled to either` stuy indoors or Walk in the middle oi` vrm... --l....A.` -0 .......-.1-:-...H '..n.: ..-+ ...-. I"l\) J-Il|`I-ILI`y I \J`l\`t I The "lords of creation? 7did.notap- _. preciatc a goad woman," but la.v.ish- ed their time and money on the m6s't lawless and vacillating of. the weaker sex; ma,nyA good and virtumls girls who came to Dawso-n to seek honest. work in order to improve their im-% povierisghed condition from the ~Hlav18h~ p'os1tio'n"' they held "elsewhere, brnved' 4.. land. n....n,.m. +1.- 1........+_........u......I uva V oil I uo I vs \I soy. you-van. --_.-, ` nteamers and a. good railroad have `brought -`them rapidly , to their "desti-g , `nnton.< which their sisters oily 1 i.roa'. o,!ter...n10nth`s .o1 __.wea.ry am? 9}? 0 ' b `?`;.lr;~ ~chi1dt9ng;4:x 1?-`tha V p1_0fddins'~ >; i.'.I?hex%'* he fiairr An'rI cL:" oi~i7 msua y no~ av ALICE RAWLINS caausr` T '1`:-an va\lO sauna`, g.n.oLn vauu-vv 0 little purpose - the . `dangers which they nobly conq-ue1*ed_ along the trails. for, unable to. 012-: tain employment, they. drifted` - into- one of the too numerous dance Falls, A and thence to ru`in-and disgrace. 'I')nd- .....`.1`..'...-...u...o- -14 .... ..".: .......A:+:L.-.. New ruquqnt the IQ!iOOI"0'\'ti|:i:" . .Yi|kn Oapltoi aindln V IouuAot lldrodtlon for Ladl9o-l!ow Lucy spend Their rape in soda: 1.!- tljn-No lordship: Now. T '- ` .QrIlI.I UlIV5l\`ri` UL! twill} $-lull`-I \-OJr-'L-IIU\'\-Io :` _ But. under what altered conditipns do We now live! ` ` V 'I _ _ 5-: ...`l.__-A. .... .-.. AI... J....J. -'__.I Ill Luvca llaxrxll &I-l|JSJu ' Women: have come to Dawson `ill ='la`.rge_" num_1m1'S-1ateIy; t_l1eir` i_0\lrne'y rek `involved no h_.a.rdBhip.s: ..`. nd) teamera "anti a. good ra.ilrt$ad' ' ham: *b:".p_1ight {them tb,eir"'dati-3; `blows -` ' Inhink 4-knhv i:nniti: n~iiIiIlU ; Government Will have Exhibits In Japan. and St. Louis. 1 Exhibition Commissioner 'Hutchison.. ; has sent out a, communication from} Ottawa giving information regarding ; foreign exhibitions. No decisions ha ; been reached as yet` as to whether , - the Dominionwill take oicial part in the two South African exhibitions to he held next year and in 1904,; but Lor'd Strathcona has been com- I municated H with and asked: to send; intorma.tion. . 5 ; IIVL- (VI ___- ,____-;_L ._jII - _,-_____ _`.A__A pus \allKUK_v'\l IUD DUVVC I The `exports of grain have gradual-, ly increased since the date mention-} ed. `Ten years later they totalled` 4,000,000 bushels, and the year fol- lowing the crop was "a remarl able one,` and 10,5000,000 bushels "of ` grain was _ exported. In 0 1888 the , crop was a poor one. and only 4,,-j 000,000 was exported. There was 82 ' ; similar` quantity sent out in 1889, '* but in 1890 the figures rose to 11.-I 500,000 bushel`, and then the in-. crease was gradual, with_.one or two. exceptions, until .1ast year," when the. - E export, was 50,000,000. | 0 ` -` HIV: The critical years of _ha;rdships,. trials, and stormy scenes which tend- ed to cripple the morals` and dwarf the aspirations are happily past, and Dawson women can now step _ out and take their places without a. A blush. They can look back on their ' checkered `days as one remembers a..j bad `dream, and they can appreciate ' themselves, no doubt, more than oth- ers can appreciate them.` knowing . what they have borne. _ . _ T I nu- __-_..-- 4.1.--- u_u..:.-.. -_-_-_._--__-__ 1 vv -ovvv nanny`; IJIN v _v UV: 159; I To many these bitter experiences ; have brought out in their lives all: that is 113651; ,and noblest in women; let us ho. thatiihe same may be} said of our men in',I)_a.wson. _} IIIIIII anlilvovlon 1 The Goyernment, will be represent-1' ed at Osaka, Japan`, exhibition in: 1908, and, will have its own building. I Suggestions are asked as to exhibits which will be most. useful in helping: trade with that country. ' A6 `I... COL T.-...:- ..-.I.I..6pu.. `L- VJJU V V ullpvlvl {ll JUB I claim that thewomenhhnve been vv voobval 0 `greatly instrumental in helping to ada. purify the immoral atmosphere which for 9. time hung over" the town; "by. their inuence they have. elevated the ; tone 0! the men.. e.n gradually winning "tor the place a. name "which will no longer be synonymous` with everything which a, woman should de- -'test,' but one which shall be on. a. par with that of any: city. in Can- \ rnI__ ..'. 1 g . ` Inn V VVIVII VLILLU \tV\-IIIUI `Yo In uu At, the St. Louis exhibition the] Government will make exhibits in ag- riculture, hbrticulture, forestry . and. mineralogy. Manufacturers and oth-_-. ers will show separately. A C. J. Brown the Winnipeg city clerk, has in his oice in the, City Hall hanging on the wall in a.T!ra.m,e a. certified copy_ of the invoice wlgich accompanied the first wheat ever ex- ported from Manitoba... - ' -V 10 1'4. .1. `.a.....I` n..4. 10:71! .... ....-.. Q5 Q`!-OOWIIIU _I IJUW\Ib2I It is said that "experience in _ the most eectiv teacher of the race," and it has played `no unimportant part in` the history of Dawson . and thoevolution of its women , I -I-:_. L1__L A_!__ _..__._-__ I- ___ m-_,. vvvvv I wvslllt VJ vlaog Qclllawc v Women are now in evidence at our many churches, lfbxfaries, socia1-ga.th- erings, concerts, and balls. and can- also venture to a theatre 9.1;. `times. 1\-_;-.... __ _..-II _..____.!.I_.I _._IAI, I-.__ U|.Q|J\.l V \alOUVIb In! II`! ` \'.'\`UUVl V &U KOClC\l3| Dawson, is we) provided with liv--. ery stables. and women are often seen comfortably riding to .and_ Irqm the creeks in well-appointed lstagbs, which travel wi1;h ea.se and compara- tive comfort over the newly`;-made Government roads ' . . '_-_ __.I ;I, ; 4a___._ __1_____ 1... t-I\I yvulr :5 \IL&L uayuaoauv It is "dated Oct. 12,. 1876, or over 26 years ago. The invoice is from Higgins & Young to Steele Bros , the seedsmen, of Toronto. i rn1_- -__.'...:......-....._4. ...._... curry 1 a |_.....I. -`'-9 W ".""""..'_ lv.V"-.. - . - `If there` has`, been a, revolution in" `woman's dress; how much emorefhase her presence been the means oi mod- `ifying the .dre'as of. the male. sex! The man who would now` appear: `at, a. ; party dresed in a.` yell`ow Mackinaw. ; suit or other `equally __ugly costume ` would "be 9. rare. curls, and the W0- man who in -'98 could be seen elabor- iously plodding over the heavy" trails A -on her Way to `the creeks, looking like a, dilapidated rag doll, would be a. much rarer sight,.~ Neither does one see women shoveling into the sluice boxes alongside ohdmen, nor working rockers inorder to add _to their scanty earnings. - ` ` `I l\I\n.InIA nun Away 1.. nui.h....... `L _-.- U13`; QCGQQIIIVJI, `II -5 \l0 \lllUI-I 0 E -The consignment was 857 1-6 bush- els, ut 85c. per bushel, and 26c. for veachof the sacks. The wheat. was purchased -for seed. ' * VI... .-annual-n n6 our-nin In.-.114-. an-..'rhu-:1- $9 a. 1- T "fin ;&S8ihx .n.!f. {.down..is:. .. :4 . . . ~',iioIl_ ` rdarcd -sldxv ` lllis" tlia;riks_", o`th_o"` ; degervedly popular Northwest Mount- ` Bd,,_l"0uO.O.'-70110` will` not .9 gee; _a. . poorly or peculiarly gire_ssed.`wo;na._|;= in tact, women in Dawson` dress with * as much style and richno`ss as the w men-otjmy "outside" town. * . ' -~T 1-Imam` has Hang; on mnvpAIn'u6`n in- kneaded. 3 I? - "s"w... ; ~.~,.. .2: in . . . m`<:~1oens-r%~xse-t-.}~.:st%%` ungtosdats st_ore'a,,;._` ed w1t.l:,'o -from whichsit _ia _jei.sy;.ft`; chaotic, any; ~ajr,ticIe, 15!: _ food.` dgbd or Vfurnltufo _ ___1_- A. , ,, -_'.I. `_I '__,,, AI, _ __..__"` __`_.v_ _ The apple iszeiich 5: common fruit with its yreniarkably efcacioue me_di-- Acinal properties. - Everybody ought to know that the very best thing` he-' can do is to eat apples just before`: retiring for the night. Persons `un- initiated in the mysteries of the fruit are liable to throw up their hands in horror at~the.visions of dyspepsia which such` a suggestion' may summon up. but no harm: can. i come even to ,a dcIicate*E.sMysteIr1_ by? . the eating `of `ripe and ,1u`i`cy- apples` that very few persons are famlliar` before going to bed. 'The.;V Can`adi_ap_ apple`-is excellent brajgn` _foo?q:beba11se- `itihas more phospho1'iacid "in easily; dfgested Shape than any other fruit.` "It excites the action" of the liver., prey-lg ggoroughly. *d`isinfe_:ts_ ,_-the ..m_outh.j._ I V, {is is bt ':a11--%t1.1,e- fubmo fp_reYent9"' .1 Kiigestiqni end. 1 throat . diq6q?`~_ rtiiites sound and hea1th,v4slecpsan,d` Sdi_ence;`?;Nwg;;; v.;~,.. A . l):uylig`ht and Dim. V "". ybun 1a'dy.:of Torontb made us puzzle our"'b_r_uins "over. the; '1o1l9wing- `the oth ef;m ornin8=`; .3 V /nun.-." `_-'..~'.` 'II.....~-*'.v...'4I n.......... _'4.:}...A&-3' MLLVI `III-I` W'|5"5' , v 7 '57v\?'ny are King "arid Queen aereegs, .1l_`~ e day" ahd rilght " -ll'I""' npuiluau Inn '. `Inn *1. ll` III\ o"` - 0 `Jay `DICE IICECC V O O! coure we had to give t up; than we were infoxfmed that 1 -kw... `jbecause they come together at b9.th- enaa ans! mat, at V _,`..9*"!3. First Wheat Sent Out of Manitoba. CANADA AT EXHlB|T|_'ON8. `Apples for sieoplossnosl. V When the g1"ey`lake-wafer mshej P t th dd 1 Id ' aAsnd tehpv lgnglgfgnla n::~'-it-)-Pugh?-sI'-A rust tne unppmg alder `bushes. And the bqdeful autumn - wind In the r-tree weep: and bushes- when the m 1s~`s1m-ply damp Round the solitary camp, And that lnnnan hunch In M... .n...|..A wv- Va... V. V: vv-u vv yaw uuu us cuuqu ;5| manner which` added a.ny`ou`t.sido `'0 Min to_!cma.le at.tire.. Labor was jlndseivoly dear,` and women had to either pay ex3.raVagan"t~ prices to car- penters, paper-ha.ng'ers.' and dressmak- ors, or be content to live in a very rough cabin, rudely furnished, with no more pretence to "show than the plain, Igsefu-1 dresses they donned. TI..- 0.--v I..'.Iu n`Innl-n & .... rnudtnun Round the solitary ` . And the moose bush In the `thick Glimmer: l_I_ke"a.: scarlet lamp- When the mrches--twmkne yellow And the come]: bunches mellow, Arid tho nwl nnrnnn fhn hunlaho nuu use L'Ul'l.lI`.'I\ UUUUIICB IIIEUUW, And the owl across the twilight `Trumpets to his'downy fellow- When the nut-red chipmunks romp `Through the-maples crimson pomp And the slim vviburnum tiushes In the darkness of the swamp- When the biue-berries. are dead, When the rowan clusters red. ` And the shy near, summer-osieekened, .In the bracken mawkes his bed- on a day there `comes once more To the latched and lonely door, . Down the wood-road, strlding`siIent, One who` hair been here before. . Green Ipruce dbrlbnches for his heed, ;' Here he makes his simple bed, (`I-nnnhlnn urlfh fhn curl and I-llln '4 _'_ Llhe-"1-OV`3-iy:'?Spi..l:i4.t of. "his. `eyes, kllepa-.r."-t`- ' ed. It would explain. the fascination "served; it it could-.,look_. out Tupon the old and ;new'_vreaders_of;.his `poems ;ch:~1rn1edf and a,tt'rl'e.ctedein life. Al- '.l.h"oughr.l1i's face .a.ndv its expresllion .--y- ---- - v -uuwv ..-u- ---u--v_-, of his personality it that deep, btight. lucid e g`la.nce- could beI_31'ei- with the, shadowed .l sweetness, that I ! `were in= harmony,;the_ indexoi " cha_1'a.cter` `was written'- on his bray, I candid and .ser"ene; and in `eyes, , sincere and? a.ectio'na,te.i His brow} was nely moulde'd,"an`d- over it tell ; the masses of his brown hair, thuti glowed with warm chestnut, when the light touched it, His eyes wens brown, clear and vivid." p 7 Can one imagine in. more charming; bit of personal description than thisg paragraph, culleclfrom the memoir of the_poet whose verse is quoted above. _ written `by_ his dus Acha.tes,* Dim--f can Campbell Scott? `Not many years ago, when speaking tosnother of our Canadian poets, Pauline John- son, on the subject of La.mpma,n's verses, she said, *`We called him `the*' little brown bird that sings, " andi, for some mysterious reason brown` 0c-to-her days all-. speak with clarion notes of the personality and poetry of the little brown bird that sang sort `of his earthly life. sweetly "through the fewshort years. . I DEV [IE IIIIISEB Ill! lllplli Dell, Crpuchlng with the sun. and rising When the dawn}: frosty red. All day long he-wanders wide. With the grey moss for his guide, And his lonely ax-stroke atartlea. The expectant forest side. 9.;-52.: p ; 1LIe`tl'Il, alwlm priests --go M T ;.. r:`1R?`.d..x'b51 . 1:: 9:`-w 1 - '1'h,elli`ow=.~ Tong itglp '01.` .dolorou_I` Ted that " nes ` V `- ,` The fu,nt3er'wes wh,eret wet wind: man ,5?! uv `` , `V x, L! T` , '. `. , -T119` elda ueuall brown, and brown - .. the meadow: 4 7 . ' With the brown leaves, wind-heaped tracerles. V _ , . And the brown thistle stems that can no shadows, ' :And beat no bfoom for be'eo. W o *3 . . Towand the quiet close, 61 day Back to camp he takes his way. And nhnnf his nnhnr fnntnfonl. uacx to camp 11!: uusca um way. And about h!s.sober tootstepl, Unatraid, the squirrels play. on his roof the fed leaf tans Athls door the bluejay calls, And h hears the wood-mice hurry `Up and, down his tough log wane; nears the laughter at the loon Thrill the dying afternoon-V Donna flux nnnln of the IITOORQ "', ``V_."" V` "_""'""3" 7 ' "' f7 , 7. | "Archiiba,1d. Lampman-w_a.s of mid- 1 die` height.` and of-Ia, ight .,._1orm. -In the `city -he-_ wa}kedihabitu_a,;1ly wigh downvast g1ance,.'.with hlisfeyes xed on the grouzfd; _in: the` elds and _wood_s hewas alg.-rt.` hpdviobservaht. ` His manner was [$111634 undegnon-r 1 strative. ~ His voic. waesyfmsellowv and distinct. . .` . Before thae'ca;m1;a. _'.h`o lines of"`his face hardened, and the lovgly spirit of his eyes depart- It would explain fascihation l nl kin nnnannulifir 1" fhuf Anni: '.l.'l1l'lll we uylug ulu-1.'uuuu+ " _Hears the calling of the moose Echo to the early moon. b And he hears the partrldge drummln_g,_f The belated hornet humming- an n... fnfnf nrnnhnn smmds am. hi... ...e.`..;i.....xa about the average woman oi"`Da,'-`wson. A` am} it is `just about these same *.wO,-} men tha.t_.I am g oing.to. writ'e..a`_lit-9 1.10; more,` and as -it is my" fortune to "be "among the rst arrivals in this newly settled town..and to have re-_ "sided here during the past four years `of./its ' growth from a few .wnetched ncabins and tent s`er_ected on a feyer- stricken stretch of undrained swamp` toe Well-drained, well_-l,2uilt town of "handsome buildings, containing most oi the .comforts] to be met-with on tho_0utside. it will be my` en- ileavor to write what observation hale taught me concerning thechanges `\'_vhicl1.' have gradually been brought about in most things` pertaining to V I In the days of 1896 and 1897 there were, of 'qourse. no female population in Dawson -to 1)i.'ak`of. for only pros- pectors were here in those early days and a, few who had managed tohear T of the extraordinary richness of El-` dorado and Bonanza, and who had rushed headlong to` the Klondike, hardly daring to believe `a half of what they heard. `Such men did not -dream of bringingywives or other fe- male relatives `with? them on that l_1a.r'd and ha7.a1'dous journey, and Dawson was essentially at that time a bachelor camp. s ' n..4 Amanda 41... ......I .0 I09 .11 au.. The belnteu hornet uumuuug- All the faint, pgophetlc sounds That foretell the winters coming.-;_ "Ana the wind about his->eav'es - . Through the chllly night-Wt grleves; And the earth's `dumb patience llls hint Fellow tn-the falling leaves. Gee um, Dobbin! Don -tzyer-see Y` .;1 YeYr a-plowln . long 0 me? ' ,-` <:-- 'I`urnln' up the wlllln' soll, '-= As we a many times have done. Haw," old comrade! '1`har,'Jue 50, y 5;` Keep the rum-er straight, Van go: V Now then. easy, .g1t along,- f Supper'a,call'ln, workfal nigh `done. - . Thar`: a many year gone past, Dobbin, _e1nce we hitched up tust, ' Since we plowed that you long turrem, You an I, ole friend, `together. . Many a day `of toll an sweat, Id`- Wlnte- r'e storm and summers hett,, Have we plowed an planted, mowedl. . Reapln or the seedwe sowed, _ ' Now we're sewn` old. an played, ` ~'.l`hln-ot bloodlan spavln, kneed, An .the collar calls us: eore, - Al. It never youst atore, _. Makln worlea so:-er drag ` 111....` l\`@ lanrnmv an nla nae: NICK!!! W0l'S- ll aurcr usug For` ole tanner an ole nag; But that's. no luck. we've had: on day, Healthy labor, happy play, Glvin God the praise for, wont You an I have never shlrked. tum -m.-n~+.1m Hm. collar 0!`; 7 `lg an You I [nave never unuflscu. Now we'll` take the collar 0!, Bela : haw. "we're nigh past work, Layiaisldoth-e'yoke an plow, - LBIG` thew/orld 8 lasit-go`od~bye, " `Gee up. Dobbin! Nlghtohas come; - Tune we, both Lye:-e Vgltten home. .Npw, children,_"` said the teacher` to the class in advanced arithmetic,` "`you may recite in unison the table. o!va.1ues;" W . -~ ` #1 And athe children repeatd in, _ch9rus; :.~ " ' , ' ` "Ten tum: mum a. trust. `_ V "Tu~tU_St make a. cqmbine.` - V. "gran combines ~make` .a. mrger. :4 '.'fre;:rx;erz1ers makea,:masr1ate- .: `?04e:.msn39n meeksw mn9v~*' ; ` , ' .. ,. ..I- \ . , 'De>u1-Dust. "You want `$50 for thatold suit?" fa`sko'd=.-the '9econd-.l1 and`_dea1er;' `Lwh , "(it-` An N11 i1ust..v__.-{:fYes;ii_ but it `it }A,99a1...:'4! re-Ponde V *9 *W:*v% 'skotp'n of Archibald iyainppan. By 011.3:-les_G. D. Roberts. ~ 15} Vew` of Valum _fOIIIlDO Invwawn ul vhlinw UIIVJ Uivllllvwuo , The few lajdy clerks, typewriters, uni! cashiers required were small in number `compared with cooks and housekeepers. All were well paid, but` few could save, owing to the high` price of living. Vkn nnnnnunn I`: u-snmt\n.'1-urn xvnmn iu\'"_ TH a wo/61:}/Auf B; Albert Cm-mgn. %~uuoc71jj;gs :-i Vega, up, ooaam. Y` uu-I930 ` . I At` --first` it V looks-`like confusion _ worse confdInnded1--a.11 this talk of, At-._ ; luntic time, eastern time. ' starndard Itime, prairie time, mountain time, andVPa.cihc time--the C. P. R. boats } tor_Japa.n running, on the last,men- t tioned._ The only clue is that you shift the hands; an hour. But,..no- 3 tura.lly,.} the question `arises. What 3 Q the system? We know all about lhktv ; itude and spntxime, but how` does` 3 i great tra.ns_contiuenta.l~ railway getit ; `clown to a working basis? How are J all these divisional time_-tables axil- } iusted so- that everything ts in. and: | acts like one piece? How is the. transcontinental time schedule `kept ; up to the mark while the divisional schedules are left enough margin 7 1 within which to agents easily? Wham ; h the Imperial Limited was rst sent. 2 3 ever the line, the engineers were giv-- en a time-table which covered the I ; time of arrival at every station on: 7 ` the road. It is 3, met `that the time-- 2 table was followedi to a, second. The-of engineers must have good wa'tches.. As How is it done? A_'L A. 1 I c no gIc'nu.7\u_n.Avvll\r\J U119 \J.L IJUT II V n R.. has of keeping "time to its busi--- ness. It is neither taken by the`- fonelock. nor pulled by the coat ta.i1,,. but it is expected to- make an even .- pace day in and day out. When a..- clock or a. watch` that works for the I C.P'.R. gets tired, it is discharged. Then is` a. head time-=-keeper at Mont- . real. and official time inspectors, who .. train} up and downzthe road, seeing ' that everything is in proper h_a.pe,~ - and that none of tht timepieces are malfngering. mt... ..4......A.....a :....... :. ..n.4.-:....`.1 u.':..`. .a.4\v-up an an uvuva It is quit true that-. the manwho: constructs. a. timetable which_takes+ into accountsix dierent kinds ` of?`- time must have 9.: ma.thematicia.n'sr headybut his task is greatly simpli- ed: by the perfect ,method the C.P.' 1) IL..- -0 I.;....L.._... '4.a....... 3- .u._ :.....: _be attended by the- omcial. clock re-.- ...g.,-.a-Buu snub o The standard time- is obtained this J in 7 way. Every day at.n.30 a. In. Montreal the oicial time is sent out . from-. the McGill Observatory. Ford twominutes the whole. C.P.R. tele--` graphucircuit does nozbusiness save- to register the time from Montreal. .. For the first minute the station-mas-M ter beats every second*with the op-... erator in Montreal; for the second, minute he beats every second second. Then.. guring the dierence from. . Montreal, he takes note of the varia. . tion of the second hand onithe sta-- _ tion.-. clock. He makes a daily re-4 cord of these variations, . and if '8 _ station clock transgresses ten sec-' onds either way inn. month it must pairei-',_ who is generally some reput- able jeweler at 0119-0! the divisional points. It in spite of the clqzk doc- . tor theclock continues to go wrong.. it is retired. From these station clocks the superintendents, `section bosses, trainmasters, despatchers, en- gineers. conductors, brakemen, in; .ct,jall those who have to do with the moving of . trains, take their time. ` The inquisitions of the time inspector `do not end with the station clock. He has a. right, and he fre- quently insists on it, to look at the Watch` or every employe of the com- pany. After an inspection trip it` is not unusual for a superintendent to get an order from headquarters like this: Clock at Jerkwaterville to. be cleaned. Bralteman _J ones watch to be retired on the _10th instsan.t.."` ` third-rate `dime museum. Ivaovnv \lI aavoa0a- . The means of recreation were limit ed. The theatres were quite unfit for` Women to attend, both on account 0! the low standard of vulgar plays put on the stage and of the almost uni- versal custom of drinking and smok- ing oindulged in by the spectators. The actors appeared to look upon a. Dawson audience as devoid of taste or eeucation, and consequently gave an peformunce which would disgrace 3, v VA LlI~rrVJa~- W~m;t.:v;;e,n_ Halif . 'a.`nd Vahcotiverw there are,` at least, six clhmges of` time. Going V west you put your. .'wa.tclb back an ` hour at eac! of the cha.nging\points. Crossing the contin- .ent westward, you` are Six liour younger, but you lose it when.`-you. come bwck, owing to the pfmit of compensation which exists ' `between the sun: and the C.P.R. `time: sche-. a 0 1 - n,,_.a.. 21 u -0 _ "loI,- ' _4a'._-r__ Landmark` writes: _ In an article describing a. farewell pilgrimage through the old Parliament build- ings on Front street you (The T0- ronto Telegram) say that Mr. Yeigh tells us the. rst Parliament build- ing in Toronto was at small log building erected on Berkeley street in1876." It is true that the first Parliament buildings- in York were erected on the `south side of Palace, now Front street, south` of the south end of Berkeley street, but they were of brick and not of `log. That they , were of ./brick is veried by "Heriot s | Travels in 1805" anal by the state- rmen of the late . Mrs.sCha.r.1es Sey- | _mour.of Ottawa,` who _ died a ;few ,'da.ys ago. She saw them` burn`. in` 1813 and informed the writer that theyywere of `brick. It `is also true that nearly every history of Toronto` . speaks of, these buildings as being of ,lo anii wood. There can be no._mia_= _..ta._ `e about-` it. that they were... hot g-Abriek, and red brick. at `that, ` ' . _ ` I."1l89'l!.`.`ti"be"thIi;1i ; . `V tor dierence 'in," wa.;t,;he8; V` bilinessv ` 0I". _1i8" i`.`" ~fi'ne_s;~_-F Bixt`o`;Tgreat` ril%viyf~`,,*ou1d. . b;e - r_un; ' that -way Vniqdgdoys-A V pressure ol freight and passenger ` mane is` so heavy that V timei-1`>a`b168 an.o!t.en'gured down to _oeonds5 1.1 it C.P.R.'. for instance, allowed a- % discrepancy`-_of ve minutes tminv `men : "watches there would - be` ' aw horrjble, disastrous` niuddle,~' Gellisv ions of all kinds, and` a `tremendous loss of l1fe an'd-property. Takeany` dozen 01- watches, on. any pa.rt.icura1j` time-section of the C._.P.R.,` and the: probability is. that then willdnot be: a evafiatioh 4 of more than ten sec- onds among them. If the variatiolg exceeds ten seconds `the time inspec-. tors.ha,Ve not been doing: their duty, ar `practically, such a. thing as `that never happens. V `Dad iwvlunun `LT- 186. up a--.4 `T-ounnII1rns0 lo 0 . I ` % git -n_`nn_`- -I...-.l_ ts`-_..I`.A -` " , Mange is . caused `by aesmall para. site" (insect)v. Rub "once a, `day with ;-oarbolic acid, ha.1fVounce;. oil or "tar, ` four ounces \ sulnh\_xr,. four` ounces; ;cottonsee'd oi1,,j one-.qua.rt..' Wash , with It, soap `a.ft'_2`._.e`t1_11f;ee_, Ao`re `tqurl .rv_`____ 2 Q g I llllldil-IIGIJI ' A prominent; citizen of British lumbia has been arrestye on a charge ` ,ot.arson. ..0f_ quhise hefsj, pyrgmang. all!` T. (ha 1".` fun.` nA-.- `ALL - .. \Il- ....,...... .9. vvu1' .u.c.=- u. P.Y1UU-I-K1-Ill` ; sic}. If he _ha.d idqnejt `in any other "way than by a.n"j_ir_'!"e5.i'8_ibl6- impulse: 1,.- _youl'cl hg;vo,b9[en Q robux.-*~" ` - T ~' _ n.c'.' -a-mania-an-in-\... Toronto : First Pu-uunvent Building. Treatment for Mnge.7 ' XKVIIVCYI \r$UI5J l I . But towards thetend of `'97 all the `civilized world. was thrilled with news of the Klondike s richness, and. then it was that women as wellas men were enthused with a.hburnlngde- Dim to struggle into the Klondike over the Chilcoot and White passes, } and to risk tae terrors of dangerous 3 `rapids in home-xmxde boats, in or-, der` to obtain a, share of the precious 1 metal which would, perchance, `drive; from many/a home "the gaunt` -"wolf '1 which had long threatened it; . `I... 4-L.-.4 ...:].-l ......l. L. 4.1.- ........-.... -1 A Pyromanlaq. - Abiokstore, Barrie : V 1 Of all kinds in `Spock or 'nm.1e to order. ` Robes, Grape and al} Funeral Requ1s1tesfurnis}nw1_ pOrde1fs} by p'l.`e1egraph or otherwise promptly attended to. '* GL"O. DQL1:l1:1GE, _.H[I:a/nager, smma. ISioam \Vwcirl':VsJa?iiii`8howRoom; Gbllier-st., Bani. T A ALWAYS THE BEST T AT THE LOWEST PRICE i MATT. Tonm:RTs,.RECEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION MlAB.LING--Inbokstown, on Monday, Nov. 10th, to Mr. and Mrs. Robb. Marling, an Inn PAVI:;1;1;:R-inBradford. on Friday; Oct. 31st, `to Mr. and~Mra. Harry Parker. 3 son. .WooDs-In.Weat Gwillimbury, on Wednes- In dav, Nov; 5th. 1902, as son to Mr. and` Mrs. Jae. Wood. , ].I1J\)\.n.IL.L"JJ'J3J|7T`.l.lUJ.VlA|lI:'2Il uuv LILOUUUUIBD personage, Orillia, on Wednesday, Nov 12th,, 1902, bv the Rev. John Locke, John Henry Bloomeld, of Medonte,.~to Flore. . Dnnlop, of Oro. .REm--I1usH.--"At the residence of the bride's father, on Wednesday, November 12th, 1902, by the Rev. R. N. Grant, D. D., Mr. MoPhee Reed, son of Mr. Alexander Reid, to Miss Megoie Maud, eldest dough.- tenof Mr. N. B. Irish. Orillie. Hoomm.--TRn\v--At the Methodist person- ege,v0rilli&, on Wednesday, Nov. 12th, 1902, by the Rev. John Locke, Welter Hooper. of New Liekard, District of Nip- isaing. to Agnes"Drew. of Coven. in the County oH)urham. MGGEAGI_I.-MOTH At St. Merk e church`, Midle.nd,`on November 5th, 1902, by the _Rev."J. A. Henna, Elias McGea.gh,..oi 4 Port Arthur, to-Miss Edith Annie. young- est den hter of Mr. end , Mrs. C. Moth, 1 . of -Mid and-avenue , and lane of Orillie. Enr;GIf|ox-CAswnm-At the home of the | j bride : parents, Goldwater, on Wednes- dny, `November 5t_h,.l902, by Rev. A. '1`. Ingram." W19. AN- Ferguson, ofvUx- jhrid;'ze;,to;Evs.,E;,,,daughter; of Mr. Geo.- j`-"0,ujw1lt` ' N A vvooaug yyu suasa vua t-u.v\-uvu Iva In hfat wild rush in the springga '98 there were xlrobably two women to a thousand men, and Whil'ef`many_ of j the latter behaved gallantly and` obligingly, there were t.housands`_who acted like selfish brutes, and.we`re totally indierent to the trials, t.rnubles,.and dangers - which befe_1l others. A __-L_. . u . . ' -