Grey Highlands Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 26 Mar 1914, p. 8

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March 20 1914 T H E F L E S H E R T O N A D V AN C E BUSINESSCARDS OTH. WIUOHT. Tr.LKOKD & McDONALD ** llm i iMri , Solicitor*, Ac. OUIces, (Iruy * }tru<- Block, Off un Bounil. Standard Hank niork. PJvoherto i. '.Saturdays). W. H. \Y> i-,-l.t . W. IV Velforil jr.,. I. U. McDonald, U LI. U. SOCIETIES AO U W meats ou the last Honda; ID each month, in tbeir loage rooiu Clayton'* hsll Kloinerlon, at 8 p.m. M. W., W. J. Itellaiuy : Ree., C. H. Uiiuuhaw; riu..U. J, Siiroule. Visltioe bretbrsw luvltud ARTHUR LObQE. No. :ti:t , A . K A A M , meets in tbt Masonic hall. Ann tronc'8 Itlock.KlHKbettou, erery Friday nn Or before tlio full luocn Herb Siultli, W. M.; Oia^.Mviimliaw, Hecre'.nry. f OUKT^KLKSHRRTON, 995, v Clayton's Hlock t n i --t \Vi , .. F. treetsin v ..^. v . ..-..._.-.. Wednesday evening Mtcb month. Vnitiup Korextur* heartily Icome'C. K., urUullamy : B. 8.. U, Cairr.; D. ts-o , W. U/HklB. Pletsnpay jftcis to Fin. Sec. before the fust av of tliv^ftoutb. ~^^^ : CHOSEN FhlENOS Flesherton Council Choiwn Friends meets In Clay ton's hull first and tbiril Wi^lnesday cfetcli uioutb H )>. w fay auieiinne'ntt to tbe Kworder on or before toe flrst sv i.t eacb tuotitb. Cbiel Councillor T. BUkelev;H-oorder W. H. Hunt. RUDU MATHBWS, Uarkdale, Licensed auctioneer for the county of Grey. Gooi' ervice at reasonable ratex. Dates can be aiatie at The Advance, o 09 MEDICAL R CAKTK.U M C V A 8 On4, Physician, gurgeoo etc aud residence Peter St., Flesberton JP OTTiJWF.Lli Veterinary Surgeon Jraduate of Ontario Veterinary College reoideuce second door soutb west. on k.rv street. This street runs Routb Prevt/yterian Cburcb. DENTISTRY t\i. E C. MURKAY U O. fi , dental surgeon *J Luncu Krsduato of Toronto University and feoya! lolltife of Deutal Surneons of Ontario, O>s aduUrtmstana for tenth extraction Cfli-e t resideuce, Toronto Street. Klet:erton . LEGAL JCAR, UANEY & HKXHY-Harristery, Dolicitom,eU-. I. H. l.ucan. K. 0.: w, B. iey K. C. ' \V. 1). Henry, H. A. unices, /orout'n. BOO-O Tiaduis Hsnk Bl</., |>hone main H1J; Msrkdalo J.ucas Hlock. Thone 2 A. Hrauili umce at Dnndslk open every battiruay. busiNK-ss CARDS * YOUNU Hankers Markilato neral banking businuns . Money loane" ressooalile rater Call ou ua. DM.'I'ilXII.. License.! Auctioneer for the County of Uruv. Terms moderate and tit < Li. .n Riiaianteea. Tbs arranffemeuU .. 1 IM.-s of r.lc can tie MI Iu a*. TIIK AIIVAM-K "in. .. Kuoideuce aud P.O., Ceylon, Telephone Loc. W M. KAITTINO, Lieeused Auctioneer foi tbe counties of tirey and Hluicoe t'ai-iii mi I Stock salei a specialty. Terms ji .. inn '. satiafactlou ftuaratiUeil. ArraiiK*- jiHi,t ti.r dMs uiy beuiaduat the Ailvouco >nV'\ c.r Central telephone oflice rever^baui or by addressing uie at Fevenbau), Out. Purclirttl Uolstein Bull Channeling Prince Joe lirnl l>y ChmiKcliiiK lUi'ter I5iy out of Tiily Abtiekerk I'rincciH .Josephine. Tin- gTMtoit butter making-strain kmnvu. 'JVi ..... f s -i vice -W fur i?rdi-H. $5 for pun 1 In'.' l <;K<>. MMUIK & SUN. I'r.ip., ' TCIiIHLKTT. J'ostinastcr, . IVnniniHiiiriiier in H. C. .1 , Conveyancer, deeds imnitMi't.M, leasoH, will* etu. carefully drawn up ollrctiuiiH mad/. r!iir."< reaaonalile. Al-ci ioceri< *. dour, feed etc. krpt in stock. Prices iifht. BULL FOt StVICE Ktfivd li.i'stein Hull, Korndyke Clolhiltle. N-. 14780, whoso .linn, Tii/.ir\ rinlhil'le rir'i-rljM L'nd.Ko. Jlt.ss, his prmluced over 811 ilis. milk per day. Trims (jrHde i:ows $1 HO, put* lir><d cows &> AM COWH nol rutiirui'd will lie . )i LU'i'l Tenn Ciuli A|HI re.'ihtererl Vi.rkwliir^ !>.<, AN , :ur>l. Ti-rni' *l. HKXKV HdLMAN ' Lot 40, Con. 4, Artru.iu.iiu. I'ortlu.v i'.() tf<!:inr Kull Tor Service I'urn lin-d slim lioin l.ii'l, K'II;MT.I. bt'iii.'n, f (i- >-.-rvir. i. ii lol 1C.7, VV.T. S !!.. Artrincsiit. Ti-riiit ?1 M for ^I'.idpH, ftt or tlioroiighbreU*. All cow.s MM -u-itl must 1 u paid for. (J Mm II. 'jinx'-, I DIVISION COURT 1914 n.KsllKKTMN A.NIi HI NDALK Fl*>!lrrtl.|l April. ~l Iu id-ilk June Flm'iettn <>rt I I FLYERS' MASCOTS. Aviator Hacks Never Ascends With- out a Pair of Spain On. The big risk' airmen run keep tlmlr nerves continually on edge and for this reason the majority of well- known flyers have 10 ewhat erratic temperaments. Ilesul antly, all man- ner of curious fads and beliefs exist at the aerodromes. Hucka, for Instance, I'.ie well- known Kngllsh flyer who recently emulated Pegoud's feat of fljplng up- side down In the air, invariably as- cends In his monoplane with a pair of Immaculate spats decorating hla boots. Evident')' he regards these boot d-- ' i i..ii as mascots, for on the mud- diest of days Hick, with his Inevit- able spats, tramps through the mire In the wuke of the mechanics push- ing his machine out to the starting point. Orahame-Wbite has a somewhat similar fad. lie makes all ale big Nights wer. -l.-g a pair of check riding braeches. Ml his big flying succ* sf wt a carried out whilst wearing fo'eeches of this hue. He .va:< thus garbed dur- ing his greai London to Manchester flight in the race against Paulhan, and il vas in a pair of check oraches that he flew to victory when he se- cured the Co ion-Bennett Flying Cup for England a short time back. This <ra7- for check riding- breeches has affected other airmen, too, and one of the best known of those who fly in this garb is Bielo- vucic, the Peruvian flyer, who uot long back fle v c.-ost the Alns in \ Hanriot monoplane. On tbe nth ! . and, several alrm i refuse to go aloft unless accompan- ied by some shabby relic of early fly- ing days. The fart that Beaumont, the famous French flyer, la very par- ticular abor the cap he wears when making long .lights, has already been commented upon. The late Ool. Cody was. perhaps the least superstitious of all airmen, but even he disliked going alot- with- out a shabby old steering wheel which had accompanied him right through his flying career. This strange steering device wa* fixed on the very first machine Cody got off tbe ground on. It agured in every machine he built from that oc- casion, and vith It he steered to suc- cess the biplane w. Ir won him the twenty-five thous- d dollar prize in the military tri last year. One of the most handsome wreaths at his funeral was a perfect model of this strange-looking steering wheel, built up by choice "owers. Alrni-Vs fads, however, gent ally take the .'orm of some peculiar em- blem which acts as a mascof during tli 'ir flights. Vedrines, the French flyr. has af- fixed to his speedy ar:ng monoplanes a little portrait of the famous paint- I Ing of the "Mop- ) Lisa." With a rna- | chine thus decorated he recently flew at a spt-ed of < ne hujdred and eig : mill's an i o r. Na.al airmen like canyinp a lion's tooth alof; as a mascot a practl coined by ilu la'e Lieut. Parke. who always carried such a o-ascot du-inp his flights, an few men came out of so many mishaps unscathed as he. Another Interesting fad of irr- ~n Is their aversion to flying aeroplanes built on na'ural stability lines. '" average flyer Jislikes these machines, and is much happier in one of the tricky racing monop'anes, whl.' are completely dependent on the skill rf the pilot for their balance. 1 1. uli.-. I By n I ...ok. A cat may look at the king, but apparently Itreslau citizens may not look at Prussian policemen. A local photographer who for some tlnu* had hud strained relations with a police- man stutlonej on the Dominlkaner platz considered one day that the policeman was paying him pronounc- ed official attention. So he stood still and looked straight at him "In a vex- atious wanner," according to the charge. The policeman considered himself deeply insulted by the photograph- er's gar.f and reported the affair. The offender wan haled./ to court and n petty Jury sen ten < ' the luckless phjtographe-r to fourteen days' Im- prisonment for "insulting" an official. London Kxfiresa. FREAKISH SHOWS, Stage Fiascos In the Old Days In the Metropolis. A SINGLE NIGHT "OTHELLO/ WolftoHn Turned the Play Into Ntar Riot and Never Acted Again George Rignold'c Melancholy Romeo to Six Ambitiou* Amateur Juliets. The freak play or the performance thut Is a travesty Is little in evidence todoy, but it does uot seem so long ngo wlu-ii n slump In business souie- tlwes emboldened wen the most con- servative of theutricnl managers to re- sort to extraordinary measures to at- tract at least one capacity audience. Oue of Hie early freak performances was intended as an event of great nr tistlc value. The late Henry Wolf- sohn, W!K> afterward became famous us mi Impresario, atiplred to the Krent Forrest's mautle. The great tragedian was playing at Nlblo's Garden in "Orbello" and vYolfsobu, then twenty- two, had saved n little money with the idea of purchasing the privilege of ap- pearing as the Moor In New York once at least. His ambition nppealed to Mnrie Seehacb, the German actress, who was appearing in that year (ISiiSi .'it the Theatre Frnucuis on \Vest 'Four lei-nth street. Wolfsohn paid tliemnu ager $1.000 for the privilege, besides himself selling out the capacity of the theater. , Altltougb the audience wn composed chiefly of his friends and relatives, the portrayal was BO ludicrous that n riot seemed imminent and was only pre- vented through an appeal to tbe nudi- once from Mme. fieebach to consider her own position. Wolfsohn never trod the iKKirds again. The next year in the same theater opera uouffc was the rage, owing to the tremendous hit <>f a comedian of ! the uamo of Gabcl, who appeared as one of the two gendarmes In "Gene- vieve <le Brabant." Gnbel's popularity was BO great that a benefit was ten- dewd to him. He deckled to present "<!euevieve" as n travesty. Hie male priucipxls nssumltig the female roles and the women those of the men. The house was sold out one- hour after the advance sale opened. Speculators reup- <M| ii Imm-st. The audience becnn to laugh before the curtain rose, the conductor was greeted wllh roars of merriment. Kven tlie usliora were- grinning in iinticipn tion ot n festival of fun. When Gnlx-! uppeanHl elalwrntoly gowned an Gene- vicvo it was fully two minute* before he wns allowed to sing the beautiful Serenade nnmlicr. lie, too. wan burst- In;; with laughter. The same reception -i-rrtnl n cli of the principals, but from then on the performance was ahum HK cnliveulng as a funeral. The theater \vas half empty before the act Midil .:iii.'i said tlir next day that he wouUI gladly give hack the $r>.000 it yielded If ! lie could forget (lie ex|>eriencc. It was fifteen yours before anything of this nature wns allcnipKK) again. This time It was for the late Maurirc (irati, who had suffered many reverses, that (ho iHMicllt was orgMiib.cd at the A' .iilrmy of Music, (iniii himself ar- i ii "i-d the program, the feature of which was a travesty of the lir.st act of "I.a Gninde Otichesse." The great Aiiiiee. queen of opera boufTe. was cast for General lloiitn. the |iotiderous M. Duplnn played the Ouchcsn. mid I ho droll M. Me/.icri'S was Wanda Scats brought as lunch as $1~> eni'h The house was crowded, hut. alas, the DICKENS' ROMANCE. Hi* Early Love, Who Jilted Him, and Her Path.t.c End. The story of turn Chnrlee Dickens wns jilted Is particularly interesting. \Vhon he was eighteeu Dickens be- cnuie acquainted with the three daugh- ters of (orgc licailucli, a Lombard street iMiikrr. With one of tbeto. Maria (rtie original of Dora in "David Copperfleld"), who was year bis senior, he immediately fell in love, ml Mnrin flirted with him very desperate- ly. But the love making of Hie future novelist was not treated very serious- ly, for he was uot cousidered by any mean* an eligible party, n>iKl even Ma- ria herself adopted an iittitude of ii mused tolerance. For throe years tbe affair \vent oa, and then Dickens realized that his case was hopeless. He pleaded in vulu with HID girl, whose caprices madden- ed and gladdened him alternately, for. us a matter of fact. Maria Residue!) was a willful coquette. The end of it nil was a reply that held out no hope, uiid so the parting came. Kor twenty years they saw no uiorc of one an- other. Ultimately Maria Boaduel! wns mar- ried to Henry Louis Winter, and when Dickens met her agnlu time had wrought sad havoc on his youthful ideal. Airs. Winter wrote to her old lover, but Dickens did not care to re- new a correspondence with his old sweetheart. Then Mr. Winter failed, and tbe chagrined wife appealed to the lover of her girlhood for help, hut without avail, and the romance ended long before the death of Dickens iu 1870. Exchange. THE LADY EXPLAINED. Then He Probably Smiled, but It Must Have Bean a Sickly Effort. A womnu with fifteen bundles board- ed the -irr. ! cur thu other iifteruoon when 1 was on niy wny to my subur- ban residence She was n very pretty young woman. 1 felt sorry for her. sin- wus returning from u shopping tour. Being M 111:111 with a kind heart, I helped her upon thu car :ind piled her bundles about her. A iu:iu ^ot on nt the same time nnd took a seat on the other side of the young ludy. When the car came to luy street I was surprised to see her rise and t>e- -iii to pick up her bundles. Instantly uiy sense of chivalry prompted me to help her off the car, aud. us I was go- ing In the same direction. 1 asked per- mission to carry her fifteen Immlli-x The man got off also nnd started on ahead. I was lo.ided down like a camel crossing the desert. In those packages she had everything from an electric (liitiron to a five pound luig of prunes. Wo trudged along about a h.'ilf mile The man turned In at a gate. When we reached this gate the young Indy thanked me and said: "This is us ; far as 1 go. 1 live here. Thank you very much." "But the man ahead of UP, the man who came out on the car with us. turu- 1 ed in here too." "Yes," she snid. "lie Is my husband, but be hfites to carry packages through the street." Brooklyn Kngle. Muscular Chnsti.imty. Muscular Christianity found an ex- ponent In the curate of an Kngllsh dio- cese of whom .lames Hryce tells In Ills "Studies In Contemporary Biography." He "had once, under the greatest prov- ocation, knocked down n person who had Insulted him, and the bishop wrote him a letter of reproof, pointing out, liasco xvas even more complete than at "">ong other things, that, exposed as Oabol's l .m. 'hi tho Church of Kngland was 'to much CANADIAN HOMESEEKERS' EXCURSIONS MANITOBA, ALBERTA SASKATCHEWAN Karli Tuesday M.u.-li .1 In Oitobci 'il, inclusive. Winnipeg and Return $35.00 Rdmonton and Return - 44.00 l-ri.ni Toronto, anil Stations West unil North ..I I nit. inn Proportional* fures from Slullont I m of 'I'oronio. Kctutn I. unit two nn mi i.. REDUCED 8BTTLBK8' FAKKS (ONK-WAY SRCONI) U.AS.M I M II I'UKSDAV, MARCH AND AI'RII S>ul-ts iravrlllni witU live t<xk ..n.l fff"'t nli.Mil.l taki- NKTri.FRN' .NI'M:i Al 'I'RAIN wlilrli Ic.ivrj \\>.-l Tuionto cm Ii Tii-tiluv iluniiK MARCH .in, l APR II. after .. nv.il rriular IO.SO p.m. train fioin Toronto Union .S(.ition. Set tl*T arvl i.iniilir-j without live ilix L ihnulil n-ir RKXa'I.AR TRAINS. li-,nu-|. Toronto IO.JC1 p.m. DAILY. Tlinniiili ('..l,t:,it anil T.Mlrist Slrrprff. Throiifli ti.iin* Toronto to U innii" e .ui'l W~t ( < )l i IMS l CARS ON ALL TRAINS. Nn i Ii ir . . /t.i Hrrlh*. Ptittirulam from Cupaili-m I'.n ilii- Acrnli or wit- M. <i. Miniihv. n.P.A., Toronto. A ("nndlil Opli ' in. Mr. :iarri. had been consldorltiK for some tltn> the advisability of _ - uroachliiB his son's schoolteacher In reRard to that : -\\r\f. iuan'8 sltidles. He WHH sure Williitm was not Kitting along HB fust. : r should, and this | , -,.,,1,: i,,-, fact worried the fath r greatly. He wan greeted klndl" hy the teach, r. and nfter a fiw prpltmlniiry questions the father .nqiilred: " * hut .inuich t'o you consider the most prolltKhlo ior i ly :ion Williara, Mr. Flint? ' "I can hardly say, hut I think a good, Htout hlue hooch or a long, Bliit.- OUH ill i.'. would do him as much gr ' I'.iioth's theater, then nt Twenty-tlilnl street iind Sixth Mvenue. was the weiie of the noxt frpnU performance Cr.ni r Iti^nolil. famous us a luiitiuee Idol, was .-iiir:ii tin-, all New York to seo his "Henry the Klftli." Joseph Tnoker, an insenluiis sliowman, If ever there was one. conceived the idnii of n special nintlncc of "liomco and Ju- liet," with six iimnteiirH to appear MS Juliet. Hlgnuld was the Itotneo. Such a scene IIH was on view ou West Twcn l.v-thinl street that matinee day was never witnessed li-'fore nor since. A earl.v us 9 n. in. tho loliliies were pncU- ed. and the line to the hox oflice reiichi'd to Itroadway. At noon nt least .'VtH'D women wm 1 congregated hi front of the theater, and the m.'mauciiicnt. fully nwnUe to cotnmlssioiieil "bit?" Jim 1'rown. UiiiK of ticket speculators of that day. to "work the line." This liruwn did so well that 4,.,'lK) persona. !)."> per cent women, were packed into a playhouse sentiti!,' 1,8(10 comfortably. The performance itself wns so had that l;i-nn!il would have ipilt in the fourth scene but for Tookers plitlntive plea to stick it out. Toolier'tt idea hud been that the JulleU would be go bad criticism ou nil hands, her ministers ought to be very careful In their de- meanor. The offender replied hy say- ing. '1 must regret that, being grossly Insulted and forgetting In (lie he:it of the moment the critical position of the Church of ICugland. 1 did Unock tho innn down.'" The bishop - It wns Eraser of Manchester retaliated by asking the curate to dinner. Indian Caricature. ! Humor Is more or less a secular en- j joyment, nnd Its suggestion In pictorial 'art therefore necessarily has u secular ' sign I (lea lice. And as the chief motive of Indian art was religious expression. secularism In the form of caricature was never very much emphasized. Hut this aspect, though not very fretpiently represented, was not entirely .-ilisent In Indian art. Even the oldest records of Indian painting hear evidence to the fact that the sense of ridicule or satire 1 was not altogether divorced from Hie canons of art of those times . Caictiita Modern Itevlew. IKE mm Carefully Corrected Each Week Wheat 90 to 90 Oats 37 o 37 Peas 1 12 to J 12 Barley 55 to 55 Hay 15 00 tr 15 00 Butter ,. 22 '< 22 Kugti, fresh 20 PoUtoeiper bag 100-olW) Geese 12 to 13 Ducka 15 .o 15 Fowl U to 13 Chickens Hi to 10 TurKcya 18 to 21 FlesKorton Tonsorial Parlors We Aim to (iive Entire Satisfaction LAUNDRY Bjsket closes Monday night, delivery Friday eveni-ig. CLEANING and DYEING We are gents for Parker's Dye Works Clothes cleaned and dyad, feathers rejuvenated. T FISHER, - - PROPRIETOR i/'"",,'" OVER two million practical farmers and stockman say International Stock Food is the greatest animal tonic and health preserver ever formulated. Added to the regular grain feed, it helps digestion and assimilation enable* tlit stock to get all the good out of their feed builds up strength and keeps them in prime condition all vrinter. And costs only 3 feedi for ore cent. If you will write and tell us liow many head of stock you own, we will forwanl to you free our $3,000. Stock Book. 1 06 INTERNATIONAL STOCK FOOD CO. LIMITED. TORONTO FOR SALE LY .JOHN FISHED. PLfi&HERTON. M .11 HARDWARE! Listen: Life insurance f.'r your hmtse. A tree often lives several hundred >vri. N*tme has protected the wood by covrring it with buk to .shield it from the element*. When trees ure sawed into lumber. Nature's protection is lost, 'f herefure th wood used in ynur house must be protected to iu- s ur it 8iii8l the weather mid wear. S. W. P. is a good life insurance policy on your liousu. It pro- tects agiiriKt decay pays fur itself over und over iijMin in the re- ILHI-H it stves. It udds value and beauty ti> your Ii -me, s well as long life to t.lie wood. Sherwin Williams' [idiiit i K cril| i" e hite le:id, oxide of zinc purest colors, and linseed nil ground to .\II.IIH- tinenes-s l>y powerful niiicliinery c inbination of which products H paint that i" -ii-eatcst in hiding, eovenry and wearing ijualities, and iiiiikes it the cheapest paiiit to use, HN well us tho ii't satisfac- tory. Ask fdrcolur cards or any infoiuiiition or sujj^jeMions. Fiec for the HSking. S11KLF AND HEAVY HAKDWARK-M'LITE COLD I5LAST LALTERN.S Bi-at )'', n\e cliiiunejs, v-ill not yo nit in any win I Frank W. Duncan SHEITON T , O>JT. II Our Spring, li.iys' and youths' suits have just arrived' and we wen> never mine .silisfied limn w are tl is turini; with our clothing, we hav all siy., in navy lilue, light brown, light grey, and lirnwu and bl.-ick hai . line stripe. Our Display i f wall paper exceeds H we hnio erer had before in bcnuty and in price. alu the lri{ amount f samples to select from. They me selling well now, and soon, die 1 y one, they will be sold 4> it, and our customers wi I IIBVH !1 tho Iocs to clinose from. \Ve hav them now fr .111 4c. a toll up to _'::.-. We Handle the one kind of c'nver and grass l;. units xxx No. 1, Mid special no. 1, that cm not lie beat anynheie i/r any li.ne, and 'he price is the same s otht-r biaudp. Sometimes their no. '2 wimples Hiked f.r wiil l;o cl.errfully sjnt with piiies then wcic sure of your order JAMES PATTISON and COMPANY'S general merchandise warehouse ONTARIO \ > CEYLON, i-W * as any." that they would be funny, whereas live of iliem were just rank incompe- tents. Tin 1 sixth Juliet was none other than Marie \Vain\vrlglit, who distin- guished hei'Helf all the more tiy tile contrast. Miss \Valnwrlglit was Imme- diately etigiiged us a professional nnd Located nt Last. Drummer (mttliiiK bill in Hagle House, iia\ iii-iii i Pardon my curios- ity, sir, hut what do you stuff your beds with In this hotel? Landlord (proudly) Best straw to he had in thin hull county, I/gosh! Drummer Ah! That IB very Inter- es'lng. I hnow now where the traw came from that broke the camel's hack! (jiilrkly became n star New York Sun A Sent* of Humor. Dr. Ingram, bishop of r.ondon. once declared that n "sense of humor Is ea- senthit to success. If u young man has no sonso of humor I would keep and Us Pictures. I. Ill" according to a writer In the London Academy, Is one of the few uninteresting towns of l-'rance. lie went there "obstinate in the belief that no uavti In l-'nuire with over '-'(Hi.- ("in inhabitants could lie entirely with- out Interest." hut Dually "tied to the station, defeated, and took train for I.aou." In justice, however, tbe critic | makes the conslderaiile admission Hint " "Lille has perhaps the Muest collection of pictures In France outside I'arls." | Flesherton Tin Sho n !' I lavc just placed on the shelves a full line of U Tin\v;uv, Nickehvaiv and ^\rat\v;uo for domestic ,: |^| use. Call on tnr and -;ot your supplies. L' IMI ;^; Kavet roughing, Stovepipes and Stove l-'uniish- Novels. Novels are aveete. All people with healthy literary appetite love them. | lliu llt co |lego until he got one." Almost all women, a vnxt nu in her of clear, hard-her.ded men, judges, hloli- ops, chancellor*, mathematicians. ar notorious novel readers. (IB well H young hoys and swe't ^Irln and their kind, tender mothers. William Makepeace Thackeray. Jpmiotu> \errlle IVKn. Japanese I.H-II are a-nong the h t nrriiii nut K>> the we rid. their only equals hrJnf the women of Runili. \ Na'uro. Nature Is Just toward men. It ree- ompeiiacs them for their Mini-rings; i' renders them Inhorlotis. because to the greatest tolls It attaches the greatest K-U .inls -Motileacpileu. Why She Held on to It. Mrs. \Villful-My liusliaiid told me If I didn't like tho brooch you'd exchange It for me Jeweler -Certainly, madam. I'll he only too xhnl. n\ four tlirferont Indies of your set want it. K'epairing ot'all kinds promptly attended to. Pipe-fitting, including pump work. J||| Furnaces installed. Agent for Clare IJnw. j||| Furnaces. l ^ tt Heeret I* nf little uoml except at a milestone nt tho tiei'lnnlng or u ntvndjr UMCl-llt. Economy. "Oh. Kthcl. wlr>' tlon't you use your finger howl?" "\Vhnt' HL' use o' wntln' (his good .hrn. miitlicr. tvlien I can Ih-k inv flu- UcnV'-r.lfc. H.v lieln(t hnpp.T WP sow nnonyinouti upon tli world, D. McKILLOP ,,(! |j CHRISTOE BLOCK 111! FLESHERTON & ONTARIO.

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