Northern Advance, 17 Dec 1903, p. 6

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per100 . _ . . . . FUNERAL NOTICES, black bordered, white paper, per 100, $1.00 to %ABARGAIN LOT OF Letterheads, Noteheads, Billheads, Envelopes,Statements, Dodgers, Etc. [FROM A DOLLAR A THOUSAND UP, FOR THE NEXT FEW MONTHS AT IN THE nomN1oN THE LADVANCE CUTS RATE EVERY ONE GUARANTEED %Clubbing Rates $2.25 $2.25 $2.50 ' `C1143 I0l.lOWlI1g'. WOILOBZ ' [ "The wheat we, are accused of roll- ing down and injuring was ours, up ,1] well as the other Doukhobors. We 4? halped sow it, and it was sown with. V `_'Out animal labor; therefore it was- gsaqwn in accordance with the new `lie`.iThe b'1nder'a.`lso belongs to us Amluch agg to the Abrethren, and we " ` it-. *9 -r9.h0.W .t`11e.,.1[1W -..1'i-f9.. `t.9'i the . e mi: thkti at > The Advice of u_ In-omlnout Un!tedTButAelT V Divine to (auadn. J. A. Rahlcin; President 6!` the 'I`oron1'.o Methodist. Conference,` recently said that, in view of recent events, Canada xhould pause for -a. Wl1i]U`aI1d consider her next steps. After full and mature consideration, the country should press forward un-` dauntcd towzu-'L.ls the goal her God-A insspired ambitions point -to. ..1 1..'.1:.....` H ....:..x 1\/r.. `D.-...1,-:.. Q.|;.._Il1;A\.\A V UwLA:u1A I-J\l.IV|b.1 'I\I|AAu vv. I . I believe, said M1`. Rankin. "that North America will . be A the stage on which the nal scenes v in `the drama of human life will be en- acted. No` one can estimate what. proportions . Ca.nu.da will assume in `years to come. Iinmig-rants are pour- ` ing in on us. I hope they will not `come too quickly. I believe God hal kept locked the doors of this coun- try until we can build up a -proper national character. I was in .New .York recently, and I heard Dr. Tyler preach. After the service I went` up. and shook hands with the venerable divine. `Oh, yes, I know Canada, he exclaimed: "I know commercial Mon-V treal; Ottawa, the centre of legisla- tion, and literary Toronto. And Isad- vise you, never join us, my brother. I told him we never would. We have no wish to take over the vast prob- lems the people of the United States must solve, their 10,000,000 ,of mg. groes, for instance. Canada has prob- lems of her`own,- which she should {ace now. 0 If these problems are not lolved now they will `have to be 3 . hundred ' ove_a.rs hence. " ' V Oddities of Doukhobors. The Doukhobors have-V resumed their fanatical customs in the York- tton district in Manitoba, where they are located in colonies, sa'ys_a Win- nipeg special. -Six have recently been- `before the -courts charged with hav- ing willfully set reito_-a_ binder and a quantity of grain some weeks ago. mkn r\ua:`11p\unp-vnn uuvnvun n\1!.1rA-ml` -I-on nn`nn4- tau-wAnvOv`] v; 5-: gonna. u2\JAAA\/ vvvu--cu unbu- 'f7he prisoners were asked to select ` one of their number who would give evidence for them all. The prisoner chosen was the -man. des i.gna.ted dur- ing the last pilgrimage as "John the l Baptist." He gave his `evidence in the following woxsz ""I"'In.n 'tv`|nn` uvn Ann Ann-n-no` -3 `al.114- ... ...... .99 \.uuu_u sun _uL um WUFIUV. The tari crusade reaches its cli- max to-night at one of the greatest gatherings of the present generation. held at Bingley THa11, where Mr. Chamberlain speaks." The hall seats eleven thousand people, and is to halls what Hyde'Park is. to open- air demonstrations. The placeis as- sociated with `Charles Lamb and was made famous by G-ladstone s denun- .ciations'of the 'I`urkish atrocities.` John Bright's jubilee was celebrated there. r ` ....-..... `J\JIJ\J.y u`y -ruu \\J\4UD LU +00. The Home Secretary, speaking` last night at the annual dinner of the I-Ierne Agricultural Association, said. that though always desi1'ouslol*tigh~t-. ening `the bonds of union with the colonies he believed that in a, coun- try situated on an island unable to grow the whole of the food-required for its people, the cost. of living to, the working classes should not be in- ' c.rm1sed.' a nu, v u run. _ ' A - L'1'UllS8U- a The Leeds Chamber of Commerce yesterday passed a resolution to the ecct that the time had arrived when it was wise for the country to mod- if_v its scal policy owing to the change that had taken p1aco- in the relative manufacturing powers of the different countries of the world. mkn `nu nun-...._.`l- __, -1 -u.,:u--uu ysnu 1uL;.`.sL'uL HDLLLI tiytshtflll. - 1 Ugunbridge University Union ` decid- % ed in favor of an inquiry ' into the scal policy by 255 votes to 195. I rm... 11-..... u....-.,.4.-..__- M} Irv--- oaboov our.-.\.a,.'.a1 sA\Js:IvL.lL` Lullllb. _ Lord Armstronp:,- Spea,kinp; at New- castle befpre. .tf1e Primrose Lcagueg d'~`D101`ed the present scal system. 1 (`.nn\In~1'rlmn 1Tniun..n4-n 1'I..:,... A-..x..I London, Nov. 4.-.-(C. A- P-)-MIN Morley, speaking "at Nottingham yes ; terd_ay, said that the A B C of the ` colonial system were localfindepend; deuce, freedom from Downing street and payment of their own 'expenses,_ unless it became necessary to defend" thein from aggression, and i then England would spend the last shot in` her locker `for theirprotection.. A; means of subverting these principles by retaliation was no nality. . | The Fiscal vlfight HI Britain. : T ` I London, Nov. 4.-(C. A. . P.)--vThe Berks and Oxford Ch-amber of of Ag- riculture passed resolutions yesterdav = in favor of reconsideration of the fiscal policy to binclthe colonies close and ght foreign hostile tariffs. p ` ` I T rnnur` A nun`: nu... 'I`I ~~4 John Morley Favors Local Indopondoncql F:-oodoxn From Downing Strait and Payment of Their Own Expenses. "E;'6T.'6'rGT/3'E" " NEVER JOIN us." ..J I~J\lI4lllvln Vast numbers of birds meet the fate of my little Chickadee in spring and fall. ` They travel much ' at night, and they cannot . see the thread-1ike._Wires which the necessi- ties of modern civilization have spread, like huge spider webs, all_ ov- er the country. Also, they do not appreciate the virtues. of glass. Like some foolish humans, they `do _not believe in the existence of what they cannot see. The lighthouses on the -_ great `ladies and along the sea coast prove ideath-traps to -thousandi and `thousands of birds every year.. `The glare of` the lights attracts them, 1; and"crash! ..they go to their `doom `against the plate glasses which en- close the, lights, which`toi"thev "sailor are `.a.Z.beacon.'of.._ safety, v ,t._o "the. little it o destrucmzc , feathered` -.trav`;ele_rTj of: the : a j,j1v,1_ree` .|.-uc Jxruy, 'J'l. I'.ll..l,L{S V'\"l1'l mun: [I181 with the power they sway; And while .thIe-`Ir `pride to B:r'it:11 . ` Il"he Empire of the Free- For (`annda thcslr Eoyml love, the desire V:-ha:ll be! A Iimaoul 1.1 Q nay-vg U Lcxuu 'The. city just now is fuli of birds on their fall migration. You may not notice them, 'but the_y are here justithe same, and er scrutiny of the treetops in thaimorning will con- vince you, ;Yes.te1`da.y morning. I in- terrupted a. pair ofvslate`-colored jun-- coes, or black snowbirds, breakfast-V ing in the garden, To-day there was a. shy thrush of some species and a. handsome . White-throated sparrow.` The mountain ash trees and "grape vines are i'avori_te resorts of the robins, `and {plenty of_ Warblers may. .be seen in the taller trees, feeding: and itting, ever_ itting to the sun-_ ny South. "_,4 _____4._-__ _.. .'.,;. . .-A I'VE an-'u;,'uwuu, ulUlul'I',l!4llgl3l1(l , Still IIEIHLI hard , for right to be. ' ., Hgr glittering Crown the symbol yet o.'vval- ient menand free, A - _ * Look, fellow Britons, look and Judge what ` . -aiicn banners are, ` `For a brightar ag imam England's yam! Jrhe lung 0! izings wu-1 grant themivnwisdom _ must _s.oe-k another am-!. _ Then rise and reign, Dominion fair, bw `twecvnithe world-winde seas; _ T . 1 White Peace her m.i;:-hzty pindon spreads to M c-hmash ymir decree-s; - 4 Strong as the Nomm ymmr sons in tourtih with Freedom for their dower, . i To guard from blame your name and fame. T to build you like a. tower. ' Nd aesvipy wm duuni; them, no adversity; dismay. 3 VVH-h fhn nnmlnm fhnv unwav- THE DEAD CHICKADEE. blue! Full o1'Bird:z on Their Full Mlgrm 't1on`--'1`l1elr Perils. ' ' .Yeste1'day I picked up` a little (lead `chickadeeof the asphalt pavement in thehc-hart of the city. V'l`he little fellow had probably been telegraph-V ed-that is, had flown Vagztinst a. telegmph or telephone wire during the night and been killed. Possibly he had met 1115 death bumping into a . plate `glass window against which he had flown, attracted by the lightl within. At `any rate, `he is dead} and his delicately-tinted` soft little gray and black bodyflies on the table before me." ' ` ' rnL ,-. . -. V . .. an . _. - "1*1u-y xivoxxl-I. pllrm--u1.s ,adleglance nrom the I To justify tllle treuntsom to thev'world s beat st";-ong cizulndlan hem`-t, V - And ba1':.ruln for his hex-tltage with diplo- Irmutlc 111'-t; - They would l1o'w our _satetly Maple into . spllntel-s in their spate ~ _ _ Till they left no b1':m(-111 in Canmda tobear her en1nbl(~m- b-dlght. ` But her forests are no-1; wilder than the race` at pntrtlot sons- ' ' Thar: will bless her. every acre, where grass grows or waiter runs, '_ ' . That will lave her. live and work for her, and me for her mt last, 7 ' And sleep beneath her maples with the heroes of the past. `- Let follly all the shallow heart tlllat lays` has bll-rthrlgh/c down; confuvslnn take the hollow heart d.lsloyal.to . V he C_`rown! _ I lllhe:-e s no. excuse of vtlclou-.13 king or mon- arch ledastray 9 h nmn fn..si 1' Av Jlmtuy (`U87 l:l`u'U(lr~ [0 I119 'WUl.'l0'S D418` 4 hope to-t1u,v_ For Erngl-wnd, mother, England, still tight: hard for" rlmht ffi he. . ssrv guu uuc1uu'1. LU (.'J(:`. mxrupare {I310 we 010 Red, \\/hzwe and Blue`! * , ' - Some axre boa-sting no true Briton ever V xveaws the Maple` Leaf; Some "Would set. ,gtue mu-ay` Beawer on rt , Tghlt his Lion Chief. T " ', ` ' Let them he-ar our proud deance--`they muy :1-ry N`lta.ga1'a s ood T Ere our land 1 01'get;S ,t1l1e- Name for which ' our nntluers silmd their blood! . 1 Let them say there's not o..Br1ton in our - doaraumctlan home, . - But the boml of bxlood is stronger tfhzln the baa-rlcr or forum A |;h0u'saJ1d luugxtus may separate--a thous- and Ides will hind n |_uuu'=uuu. acuglxus uuuy sepua`ute--4a 12110119- -and mes wlll. bind. Tm hhe brothevlxood 01. B;-xtam Is the glory of mankind, 1 `We cannut and we will not have our Can- ada disclaim I Her pmwtiou in we Empire`, in the Flag, _ the Roll of Fame; L T B1-ltaln lotuls unmmg the natdiorns, she will 4 set the people free, . . She Will nnam~h to mum's redremlprtlon, but sfze needs the Maple Tree, , Oh: gatituer, cons and da,ug hte'rsL of the beauty of the N ovtm; ~ 011! gwtlxer, 1111911 and women, for the nation ' ' . 'h'lAd.s you fm'th-'. V . Your Cnunrad-u demand-a 1.1;; you, her children, ` are you true. ` T . ofvua \-vuwcuuu up-uuuu"_ 5],, gu-u, um.` 31-Nl|ll'Ul N011 tI`ll0, Are you ta-`ifllfuil to the Emap-1 `e d 11 Red. \Vl1M`n4nn R1119`) an It e old A SOIIG-,FO R CANAIS: -':&xbert 12.. s. Sniythe. c:_v aw u_v; _ I Bu-'lt:`dn turns- ; _ ; their heart ! I - -..vh...-.. vuumtl Jul tut: 1uUL1Ve power. The Doukhobors have improved , their condition very much in -four years. At that time they sowed 3 mowed. their grass and; cut their graineby hand, threshing` it with a ,Ilail. Now the seed is drilled in by r horsepower. the grass is cut 'with f mowing machines, the qrainiis har- ' I vested with binders and threshed by -c steam. While we were in Atradnoe one of these steam threshers was in 1 operation, and we weretold that the t` Doulchobors with it in nine hours threshed 2,600 bushels of oats. The l Doukhobors have eight of these steam ' threshers. Two of them, with trac- tion engines, cost $3,000 each, and the six with portable engines $2,250 h each. .When the grain is threshed in one` village the thresher is moved to 2 another. The engines used by the .. Doukhobors to furnish the motive power for threshing` when not in use ' that Way are used as the motive power for grinding grain. -, There" is one windmi.ll for grinding in one of the villagesthrougrh which we passed that was built this year. ` | % Now Self-Supporting. , The, Doukhobors are now elt- ` supporting. Their fertile lands yield 1 them a bountiful harvest and their , vegetable diet makes their living ex- pensesas far as food is concerned- I but. a mere trie. They still con- -I tinue to make a. large portion, of ' . their boots and shoes. They also spin ;, and` weave some of the cloth for Itheir garments. The Women and children have gathered and sold more | than $10,000 worth of senaca. root . is the present year. When, we left i_ Atradnoe to go to Yorkton, 45 miles , distant, Peter Verigin, Evan Mach- ,` ortoff and several other Doukhobora ` (three carriages,` in all)" went with us to the `bridge over White Sand `Riv- er, about ten milesodistant, to show ; us a, herd of'320 horses which were ; grazing on the prairie near by. Peter ' Verigin had recently purchased these 5 horses for the different villag'es.of the , Doukhobors, obtaining them from a I trader living 150 miles from Regina, `Assiniboia, taking. his choice out of a, herd of 2,000 horses, at a cost- of $24,000. These horses `were raised in the State of Montana. , (4117)--.. 11-.-: -` vuv vauu ualul VI (Iv uvagvuct. "The Doukhobors have great en- joyment in playixg ball. One after- _ noon just before sunset. we saw quite a, `number of boys and girls whose ages "ranged from 15 to 20 .yea.rs, en- gaged in this pastime, and they kept -it up even` after sunset, {in fact, Just as long as ,thiY`0.11ld`keep track` of th ball. It.did not.seem to.rma,_tter 1: -iwhiether. .3 =sir1.Tor;':n .:bo;v>w.8' at. % bl ;:; L195:,th92'?-11i kit; ~wentf* punts!`-\_; AALI.\/ vv Lil net :3! The Doukhobors in the different villages visited gave us a hearty wel- come,` and expressed great thankful-' ness-ithatVW_e had come to visit them once. more, and appeared glad` to learn that there` was a prospect of having schools established in the dif- ferent villages in which their child- ren could learnto speak, read` and write the English language. V ' eWhat Peter.Thlnk5. ." Peter Verigin thought that the `Doukhobors would probably cut the ready for the schools in, the fall. lumber this winter, build the school- houses `next year, and have - them ,Ql\Vv\'n\ V\t\I\I\`o\ ----- 1- 4` ..,u....vv av. y . a V u u a;uuao 111. U116 lull. ` Some people seem to think that` the Doukhobors` are not very intelli- gent, but we met with two who were able to speak, read `and write three different languages. One of them, a, young man about 21 years of-\ age, is able to read; write and speak `English, Russian and Georgian. H13 ability to do this was acquired with- out the aid of` a teapher. ll"ITI.._ .'I'\-_-I-I-_L_--- ` uuuu v~Juu.u\4 ux .Luuuo.a.uu. When Verigiln `found it would cost him about seven dolla.rs`1)e'r head to have them .shipped by rail from Re- gina to Yorkton, `he concluded to have them driven overland. By doinp: this he saved about six dollars peg head. They were four weeks on. the journey, and though they had been on the prairie only two. or three days, they looked none the worse for their journey. ~ The herd was. guard- ed by two mounted Doukhobors. As the grain eldsof the Doukhobors are, for the most part, without fences, their herds of cattle_ and horses must be looked after by herds-` men. We left the trail and _ drove over the prairie through the herd of horses, . which are in a. Wild .fa.tc_. but looked as though they_ would make `ne workers - .`6r"`.- `l\_,,I,I. I V vvuoava J 9 There are several stables used by the Doukhobors in common for their stock, and buiv1d_ings"where 8,000 bushels of wheat, oats and barley are stored, representing: the grain crop raised by the Doukhobors of this vi_l1age the present year. There is also a our mill near a small stream on the `southerly side of- the village which furnishes water fortho engine used for the motive power.` (P110 -"I\II],'I`\l\;l\Iv1-c L---A ---'------J (vino:-o _It of interest to `have 0 .description of this village, which would give. a general idea of the oth~ ~ or Doukhobor villages; for nearly all of -them are laid out in a similar ;manner, This village is situated in t Assiniboia, on the northeasterly side of White Sand River, and about as half mile distant therefrom. It con- tainu 22 log houses neatly calsomine ed with clay inside and out, located about 100 -feet distant from each other on either side of a. street about 75 feet in width, passing through the village in an' easterly and westerly direction. The settlement has a commanding View of the surrounding country. `H'I1L-.._ .,__, 1 . . - - `wvocea Here we. met once more Evan `_ Macholto, the patriarch at the Doukhc-bors, who though 90 years 6! age. appears as well preserved and `sprightly as. the average man of 40 P6838. IITL ...-__-1., ,n - 1 U!!! Foomo! fotor Vbrlgln; t.l|o:"\\`\Is'e llolklolaoi-'-*lI`osor_lpt1o'n at thol hoo- ' other Vlllhgu An llsnlln. * ' Job s. Gidley of Dsrtniouth. Ma.ss.. who has ` just returned from .3 conference with = `hr Doukhobors in the Canadian Northwest concerning the cxpenditurelof` $15,000 left by a woman Friend of Philadelphia to be devoted to the educational needs col these people, thus describes the VI!- lage of Atradnoe, the home of Peter .Ve'rigin: ` unt; tin mg-` --`A- -on`..- Z`.-_.. THADNOE ximunnngnvgncn ~ :,little-Acomedy..j` l1I_r.;Db.Venport's ;inte_`r 9s.i;ygin;vtheaItri!=a;1;es` `icozztimfi j ' . ` In the latest list` of accessions to the Balfour Government will be found a namethat is familiar to many Canadians. It is that of Mr. William Bromley-Davenport, who has been appointed Financial Secretary to the War Oice. Mr. Bromley-Dav- enport is `not known in Canada, but his next eldest brother, Mr. A. H. Bromley-Davenport, was a- resident of Toronto for some years in the early nineties. _His residence was on St. Patrick street, and he was a pro- T minent member of the Toronto Crick-` et Club, on whose best elevens `he was able to. qualify for a place. "Mr. Davenport had learned` _his cricket at Eton, Where all` the boys. of the fam- ily are sent for their schooling, and his eective, though hardly nished style of batting, helped the Toronto Cricket Club to many victories. As` an. amateur actor, Mr. Brom1ey-Dav- enport - was very clever. Doubtless T many Torontoniana will remember.` theecapitalj performance of A Scrap j .of_`Pa.per,-" which was given by; the ; _c.lubin the Grand Opera, House, aomef "fourteen years ago. A" Mr- Da.venpo_rt,J Grrant Stewart, Mr.-To_wnsend{ and others combined to. give ..ex.'.';-. cellent: gpreaentation; o1 `-the j,_ brig}; . A p I d \W&8!=._no.t 10118`? . . , .ed branches, -vites the loitering feathered visitors` The crisp rustle of" the leaves grows more pleasing as the brown transi- torycovering deepens in the hallows and yields to the caprices of vagrant winds. Where the red maple still dis- plays `its foliage it is the most bril- liant of forest trees. Every leaf has a special design in crimson, yellow, and green. Some are edaintly tipped with the richest hues, others vary their brilliant reds with a tracery of pale yellow. andisurviving green, while others show a uniform richness of color in every vein and bre. ,When the sun looks through and the Wind pulls at the clinging foliage the masses of color glow and gleam in vivid intensity. The oaks still cling to theirgrich and varied foliage, and seem scarcely to miss their generous contrifbution tovthe crisp covering on the ground. They like to retain their leaves, and often abrown bunch will remain here and there throughout the winter, gathering a transient load of snow from every storm. In this they show a sympathy with some of their . evergreen relatives ' in the south Branches stand out in more distinct trweery as the leaves are cast aside. The silver birches are almost disrob-` ed, and theirgclear, graceful outlines lend distinction to the changing landscape. The cedars, spruces, and hemlocks in their perennial `green become conspicuous in the fading and disappearing foliage. The dense banks and masses of verdure that blended with the surrounding woods in the fullness of summer now stand out distinctlyaiiiong the half-denud- and their shelter in- on their southern migration.--Torom to Globe. ` so--vuov oAvIau;aa vv AA\J\Ao Next came the Ashburt`onitreaty'o1 1 1842 under which 4,500,000 acres of Canadian territory were. ceded to the lnitedstates, owing to the suppres-0 sion of. maps; `and a strip 150 miles long by from one to two miles wide, which had been confirmed to Canada by three previous treaties. In 1846 Lord Ashburton made another treaty under which Oregon, which had been jointly occupied "by England and the , United States, `was ceded as worth- , less. The Washington treaty of ` 1871 followed, under which the is- land of San Juan, which, und'er_the treaty of 1846, was British, was abandoned, and Canada s claims, amounting; to $1,600,000 in connec-' tion with the Fenian Raid `were abandoned by Lord Kimberley; and, lastly, in 1903, Canada sustained the loss of two strategic islands in Alas- 0 ka, and connection with the ocean, which was our right by the trcaty'o! 1825, by a decision which had been described as -a travesty of justice. ` `II 1 the territory 5 UV MISC IIQVIVIQL `ll I\IVo _ ' His Honor in opening referred to. of some four million square miles which Great Britain ob- tained under the treaty of 1763. by which `France ceded not V. only the magnicent heritagewhich now com- prises the Dominion. of Canada, but also what are now known as _ the States of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan; Wisconsin; and half ' ` of Minnesota. Owing to the pussilani- mity of Mr. Richard Oswald, a neo- phite in diplomacy, to whom the ne- gotiations were entrusted at the close 'of the revolutionary war, and who advised that Canada and Nova Scotia "be also ceded, the States above named, together with the In- dian territory out of which the Stat- es of Kentucky, Tennessee and {Ala- bama were afterwards formed, were. ceded to the United States. The U. E. Loyalists were also abandoned to their colonies; The Canadian sher- ies were aiso ceded under false re- presentations. ~ " f'I\I\n -...... -2 10-10 '.....-... L- l`1uun..& j""- V`*5V"V4\ 5"-`I ' _ . The war of 1812' `gave to Great Britain the whole of ` Maine, to the Penobscot, on the Atlantic; the whole of Michigan to Prairie du `Chine, and also the mouth of. the -Columbia. River, which` controlled Oregon. These were all given up by the treaty of 1818, together with 4,000,000 acres of -territjory -which Congress had previously admitted Great Britain owned. cumin _I'ii-spgq gt ,1`-rx-itioayil-Judge nu. ` u . Addrou_ to the U. I_. Loyalist LI! ' uolotlon-gliutoryotloruor Luna. 1 ' The otory of "Canada's territoriel ; floaees'since 1788." as tdfd by hisf Honor J udge Hodgins to the United_ Empire Loyalist Association at their meeting the other night in Toronto, presented a striking record of diplo- matic blundering. not at all atter- ing to the national pride. ` `LIZ-u `CI'..._.~-. :-5 _vuuuv\n- uI1|`t|I!!\l5I` <"l\ av wuss oi,P%Lo_MAcv. Familiar to Canndians. AI tlio Year Pusan. llLI.VIUIyU" L)!/I'lI'llIllIO %lF`s%50I IIoonI.BoI|ior-si.,Barrio ;`(,`rap;ejaid all Funeral Requisites furnished. *` i .,'.`d".` ..kbt. of all kinds in stock or mad*8 Ha rdwa re, Stoves %andTinware . . . A ....___.__.._._, ', __` T'*--in-`T l ...___._.._.._i__..._.._.._. -_._.k,__-._. ; `:34,++++++++++++%+++++.3{l>4MR+4 A V A j jgj-_.j _ T THE` NEWEST BOOK. We have them. C.-\'mnI. Ic I n.-xwzn Bum; ( m':; H _oF;ENGLAN1) PRAYERS AND HYMNS, .METHOI)ls 1` .-xxx) Pl:ESI:Y'I`l-;l:I.-\.\' 1h .\1.\'.\, in -.111 bindings. ' ` $See SCOTT S STOCK,anyway' before _purch2-.sing BOX OF- STATIONERY-- M _++; FOR...` Scott's Suggestions CR14s;'[i`!f:S Our stock of cross-cut saws, Axes, sleigh Bells, cattle Ties and Halters,Horse% Blank- Kts, Robes,$kates and Hockey sticks is the up-to-date at lowest prices`. ~ ...HAMBLY 8 BAKER... Our business this season has been awaybeyond our expectations. - We attribute__this to the fact that We have the goods that are required--at prices we can save you money on. If you require anything in the stove line see our stock. We. can save you money by purchasing at BARRIE S BIG HARDWARE STORE. - I IIIJ Fox AMY Mmmmm 01` THE FAMILY Notrxxlxv. MORE A1'1*1mx-x:1..x5rn TH.\.\' _\ AL REDUCTION` or so PER CENT. IN `MANY LINES. % Noiv` i th Timei %"""--='-"-`- for Cheap . j"\for its Subscribers at .'DIu:'ssING CASES,` Won}: BASKETS, Pvxsrzs, }~1Axi) BAUS,11t all 1>x`im-.~` CALENQARS AND XMAS CARDS in endless varietv, HAMBLY E9 BAKEWM. wATERMANg; IDEAL FOUNTAIN PEN -. G. sMITH _ Any Paper ADVANCE %BARRAIE AND STROUD. Mnuogrn. CARDS (folders) per 100,` FUNERAL NOTICES, card folders,

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