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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1906-09-07, Page 6I ih NEW BUFFALO RANGE. Prk* '*Chan forest and !,lame Pre, r serve In Olctahoaua, There is something about the buffalo .(1WhICIs appeals strongly to the Anted- esitt's patriotism and makes him wel- Marcie the latest step in the effort to *reserve it front extinction. Twelve of AAbe buffaloes from the New York Zoo- legieal park and several more front Other herds in captivity will be placed Da a big buffalo range in the Wichita Wait and game preservbain Oklahoma. ,Twelve square miles of prairie, forest and mountain, watered by a winding Creek and having good pasture of mes- quite and blue stemmed grass, will he fenced off for the use of the herd. Naturalists expect big things from .this buffalo range, for, while the buffalo berd at the Bronx park bas thrived the /lose confines nen Ilea sem„ there *Makes's-immanent.ore�t4Yii» irob1ciit- atical. It is largely •through the effort.: of the director, William T. iiornadtty. that congress was led to wake an ap- propriation of $15,000 to fence off the Oklahoma range and maintain the herd. '(dte nucleus of the herd will be selected from that now at Bronx park, but to prevent too much inbreeding auimals 'from other herds will be taken to Wich- ita as well. About tweuty buffaloes swill be placed on the range. Op this !continent at the present time there are said to•be only eighteen wild buffaloes —eight in. Alberta and .ten in the-Yel- lewstone• National parks It is expected that the work of fenc- ing off the range—it will take fourteen miles of fence to inclose the space—will begin at once in order that the buffa- loes may be shipped in the' fall. That Ss the best time to transport them with safety. It is not thought that the cattle � • will suffer froth lack of shelter; as the range was at one time a wintering place for the herds which roamed the plains and hills of the far west. Great buffalo wallows may still be seen there, ', while skulls and skeletons bear silent 1 witness to the relentless warfare which Indian and white bunters made on the animals. To the northeast the range is completely surrounded by hills and mountains, which will protect the cattle from the severity of storms, To Be Swell, Yet Shabby. "The smartest togs a woman. can wear nowadays," said a chic little New York widow, "are not silks nor laces nor yet lingerie costumes, fascinating though they be: To be really stun- ning and entirely in things you. .must appear in a battered up raincoat—the worst looking the better, as if it iiettl seen hard service—a long, light chiffon veil, rather mussed anti dirty, over an ®1d auto cap or any kind of freak head- gear that suggests motoring. Gloves'' pare a matter of choice, but if you wear any let them .be gauntlets. "That kind of an outfit makes you look as if you owned a car and even as if you ran it yourself. If you have to walk, go at a headlong pace, as if you had just left your car around the earner for a few minutes, and people trill actually . get out of your way as nimbly as if the car were bearing down en them. "I believe I could get a thousand dol- lars' worth of goods charged ou au out- fit like that in almost any New York shop."—New York Press. Antwerp and Shipping. Nearly one-half of the shipping traffic to and from Antwerp is carried on un- der the British and American. flags, and this has made Antwerp.almost an English speaking port. Free night s" -----schools- for ex-elusive—classes in=.Lug- • iish, organized by the city authorities, are attended by thousands of pupils, while special attention is paid to the study of English in all the grades of the day schools, public as well as pri- "a•ate. This desire to popularize the Eng-. lisp language is not confined to Bel• glum, but has extended to Germany as web, where schools of instruction have already been established at Muufeb and Nuremberg by the German gov- ernment. Rider haggard's *She.'" It is believed in South Africa that Hinlzulu has been consulting the mys- terious Majail to determine whether to he begin a Zhiu war on ' 13 i t tish. r Majajf might be the original of hider Haggard's "She." Mr. Benson Knowles writes of her: "Let Majajf be mythical or historical, she wields an infltence over the native nnind comparable to none other. Het abode is in the fastnesses of the north- ern Transvaal. She possesses the secret of perpetual life. She disappears, but returns at will. Iler co-operation is in- valuable. To secure it is to secure success In any undertaking." Lions and Breyelett. • r, Rhodesia lions are afraid of bicycles. A prospector from Australia was cy cling in that country recently when he suddenly met a full grown 11011. "Whether be thought my bicycle was an infernal machine," he says, "or whether be recognized Inc as an Anse j • trallan and something to be avoid- ' ed, I don't know, but after I had somer- . lieej saultod over 'him I was greatly re- lieved to see him ' put his tail be• tween his legs and streak for the fieri• ton." perfectlhn That Trrrifes. Illinois claims to have a schonlgtr who for twelve years has never missed a day at school, never failed in bin. les• sons, never talked back to the teacher and never fell short of high marks on examinations. If she mithitatns that perfection till she reaches woroanhooc her husband is to be pitied.'--PItt.aburg Disneifch. Copt's Cotton [loot Compound; 'fhb en i3t• t Uterine Tonle, and only safe etreetual Monthly Regulator on which women can depend. Sold in three degrees of strength—No. f, al; i+.o. 2. 10degrei's stronger. tat No.., for glacial cases, Se per hoe.Hold b all drugtests, ort tient p�rre,tpaid ottt reedit of prim'. i3'reepampph et. A.ttdress: 1'N iiOiaKMEMOIRS tleelORONTO,ONT. tfortn rasineddor). 'The B.etter WRY The tissues of the throat are inflamed and irritated; you cotugh, and there is more irrita- tion.... more coughing. ' YOU. ;take., a cough gni cture and it eases the irritation,for a while, You take • SCOTT'S EMULSION and it cures the cold. That what is necessary. . It soothes the throat because it reduces the irritation; cures the cold because it drives out the inflammation; builds 'up the weakened tissues because it nourishes them back to their natural strength-. ; T -hats how Scott's Emulsion deals with >a sore throat, a ' cough, a cold, or bronchitis. WE'44 SEND YOU• A $AMF(.E FREE. scoTr 1 l;Qey CT sate NGUAGE EVOLUTION. luso of the some "Less» In Verbs, • Moana and Adjectives. • • Many. Will remember that some years' ano there went on a violent contro- versy about the word tireless. The discovery bad been made that "less" was a suffix which could properly he appended only to nouns; , hence .the force must be discarded, and we must ail take pains to say untiring. The • duty of so doing Was preached from scores -of professional and newspaper pulpits: No one seemed to think or care for the various other adjectives. similarly formed and thereforeliable' to the similar censure which they never received. • • Hostility was. direct ed against it alone. The •actual flaw which vitiated'. the arguments Against tireless its censors never knew or took into col}sideration.; This was that the fancied rule • covering the creation of Such words had practically long ceased to be operative .Whenever a new forma- tion struck the sense . or. the users of language as being desirable. Unquestionably in our earliest speech the suffix "less" when employed: to form 'adjectives was joined only with nouns.. 'But •the. generaL'sloughing 'dfP • of nominal and verbalendings which went on in later centuries reduced a greatproportion.: of substantives 'and* verbs in .the speech to , precisely • the same form.' In copsequence the sense of any fundamental distinction • Ana tween the .two broke down in..many ways—in one way in particular: There is nothing. easier .in 'our speech,than to 'Convert a 'verb'-anto-a-•noun-or -•£i:' noun -- into rt. -kerb. It is a process which has taken place;constantly in the -past -and le liable to take place at anyy,time in the future, either' at the will .or • the whim of. the Writer or Speaker.— Thomas R. Lounsbr•^-' in HIarper's. Does it stand to ieason thatPerr :Davis' Painkiller coital have -held pnblinyconfid- enoefor 60 years unless it 'really did 'cura. diarrhoea, cholera niorbus and all similar' troubles so Common and so dangerous in hot weather..:.;.m... • ieYe 1 .r . *melte F'irat I'le tare. • Sir 'John Mill.)is" first' irh ttli.° eras purchased SbY . Chtiries Iteit+r, the G"ugheit tloc!elist: Ittrticiit- s:tiil-filar was not a •fnilutre, but at .tiSsgo-, and kieked a hole In the picture, • • ''Afghan Sniailer•s.. Afghan soldiers are ni>t'admit tea as witnesses is law courts, of their own. country. • Effective ti'est:nnN. During'the sieges of mediaeval tithes it was very common for.thc besiegers, to throw from their pataptrlt; and Other military engines' dead bodies swine," together with • pieces of hawse-, fleshand Similar e,t t s iti o the ti ty or Castle besieged, in order tlatfie defenders Might, by the 'stench of, this y t a • 11 'u 'r, 'forced o sit do be 4 putridity, •' Pings at half Must. . The custom of placing flag, at' half mast as en expression of sorrow is said to be : as old as the use of the. titer►. themseIvett. rf Me Food That Builds Maybe.. you . think of Mooney's Sodas . only as a. toothsome • tidbit. Don't overlook their food value Moonees Perfection Cream Sada are made of finest Cana, dian wheat flour, pure but.. ter and rich cream. Theres nothing else of equal Size and cost that contains so"' much wholesome noun ishrnertt. 'An ideal food. Alt emcees Neve theft•'•fresh and edge in airtight pacitages hI V MD NM s1 Y ptl l,l C`ttQN s NOCPJ YttiSiutr&teHOItd r.tbolaa, tort DA THE Otli;iTON NEW ERA Sept. 7 t900 THOUGHTLESS: TRAPPERS. TQ ow, eo Animate Rad Ituthlesre: Deetruetton• et name. People who have not seen eau form I no idea of the suffering trappers -cause nor of their rutiiiess destruction Of game. Nothing escapes them. Even the squirrels aro sacrificed to bait trails for marten and fisher, and not only the squirrels, but ail kinds of birds, whetb. er game or song birds. In trapping miuk, otter, beaver and a few other fur bearing animals, the trap is nearly always set near the water, where the anintal when caught can drown itself, thus ending its surf Tering, lint with bear, marten and fisher it is different. The bear must drag a heavy clog about until it catches in some.root or bush. There he must wait until the trapper comes to kill him, and this in some cases is not for days, ',flee bones of the leg are (inmost invariably broken by the trap, and the leg swells to in- credible size. One trapper in one day shot nineteen large blue grouse merely to try a new r111e. The birds were nest - leg. He had no use for them, and not one did be even bring to camp, -'Years ago in British. Columbia an old trapper camped near our bear hunting . party. He shat everything be, could find, even little ducks and marmots. A goat he killed fell over a cliff, and as it was harder to recover it than to shoot another be 'shot another. ide was trapping beaver out of season and. boasted of having caught one that was about to become a mother. I Have Seen the spot where a bear fast in ft trap had been caught for more than a week in a thicket through whleb it 'was impossible to drag the trap and' clog. 1 once knew an•old French' trap- per who .shot seventy-three noose and elk in one winter for bear bait for the. spring catch.. I asked why he, .iented so many: He said that he wanted se big stink in the "spring so as to bring the bears around. All of the animals ho had slaughtered for a spring stink were shot with a revolver, for they were snow beund and could not eseapt, lie told me that he dropped five big elk in one pile. This frightful destruction by trappers has exterminated the Baine. • . POINTED PARAGRAPHS. Don't save your money. and Starve • your mind. Vigorous tbougbt must cotile from a fresh brain. . Tens of thousands of people fail be- eause they lo` e ,._air ease too iuuell. • • "Keepiug tine. U it siiielt of, youth.": Stevenson used to Say, was ."the per• ennial spring, of all the mental faeul• ties." •• ` A man. may builds a' :pal tae, but he Can: .never' Makes cf it n•biline. 'i'l e. spirituality and-lof4 Or a wotiiitti alone' can accomplish this. • • ' If we are conteuted to unfold the life wftllIu according to the pattern given • us we; shall reach the• ]highest . cud o.f which we are CtiliablF,' '. • d By proper training • the depressing emotions calx be practically eliminated _from life and thegood emotions. ren• • dered permanently dominant„ a Every time you croind into tbe'inem• .ory what you do non expect it to re' taia..you weaken its powers and _yell lose your. authority to command its services. -Success., ' John Wesley and Renu Naah: •Tu" a" book:ubout !lath is set forth a story abeut.John'Wesley; . Beau Nash had.told,l't-esley, that his preaching is the street was Pot' only 'coutrary .1:11 V; but ft •''frightenca people out:of theIa wits." ' "Si," seal. Wc'sfey, "did you evef'. hear ane pre:iehi . • "No," said the•fnateter•of ceremonies. ' "How w then can • you judge. of Surat u•neiaelabeard: common' report;" • said Nast stoutly. ' • • "Common report is {lot enough. Give rhe'Iease, sir, to ask, iS not•your naenE Nash:" ' • ' M'y ntaule.'is "Sir," said Wesley. "I dare not judge' of you by common rcj:arta' • . l'ootio4 That Make You Fnt. •Potatoes, peas, baked` beaus; 'fats.: ,sweets. -_such os: puddings, pies and. cake—ale, beer, .sweet .whies`ttiati eves - water, , When taken with meals, .all --.sonduee. to obesity But in lieu of the foregoing flesh: producers' one may sat- isfy 'Hunger with a moderate . amount 'Of lean nettts,orttr , fish; with, fruits s (excepting fig, dates and bananas) and with've;etubies; sueh.as spinach, string beans, eggplant, eelely,'. beets, etc. 1 would :recommend also that 'those overfat from a 'too rich and too gener- ous 'diet abstain' froth 'much liquid al meals, 'but'tha•t they drink copiously 01 water. between meals to flush their sys• toms. Water,. be it remembered, is an . excellent. purgative. -G. pithier• Flint in Gtatinb, . • • va,gke 'bitbaritvttrw. Amon; substitutes for coffee: not on- ly 'roasted. grains are used, but also roasted dandelion root, figs, turnips and even acorns, The last aremuch used arming the poorer people in Ber• lSresadbIn Asla,' Bread is' sold from boxes strapped • to donkeys In Asia minor. Bowel Troubles of Childhood It is impossible to exagge, rate the value of FRUIT-A- TIVES as a medicine for children. They contain no alcohol — no• morphine or cocaine ---no dangerous drugs of any hind. Bruit -a -fives are fruit juices --con- eentrated andcombined with the most valuable tonics and internal antiseptics known to medicine. i~ruit-a-tives are free of calomel, cascara, serum and the bolt of violent purgatives that simply act by irritating the bowels. Pruit-a'-tives are made from fruit and tonics and are pleasant to take, and so mild in their action, that they never gripe or pain. • • During' the summer, when children are so apt to eat •' improperly, mothers should have a box of Fruit-a-tives. always handy, At the first sign of Diarrhoea, Indi, gestion, Headaches, Biliousness, Peev- ishneeli r,Vontiting, give, print-a.tives according to directions. These Splendid fruit liver" tablets will instantly. correct 'faulty digestion—clean and sweeten the stomach—regulate the bowels, kidneys and slain -,- and so invigorate and strengthen the whole system, that the little ones ' can quickly throw off the temporary illness. Get a bon now—to-day. soc, a box or 6 for $2.$aSent on receipt of pace, if • yew druggist does not handle then. FRUIT-A-TIVES LIMITED, . OTTAWA, POWER OF MIND. always :a Valuable Asset. In Pres• encs of Danger. A Most A petit ng Bevero ! Presence or mind is always an as- set, It Is especially valuable in pres- ence of danger such as springs from the presence of men intent upon mur- der. This was never better exempli-. flea! than'when a gang of men set out to take. the life of Mazzlni He got to hear of their project. All the' precau- tions he took wtta to get ready' a store of very excellent :efgars, The ruffians presently.. •appearedat his address. "Come- in, gentlenteo," 'he safe and producedhis cigars, To eaeh man he handed' one. Taken aback at their reception, they' seemed - abashed and confused. • "I know that you mane to kill iiie,": he said. "Why do you not. •proceed to your task?'r This was too much for even. this bloodthirsty depu- talkie. They coil!(' not kill the •'man whose. cigars they were •smoking• and who invited them -to earry'out their task. • Muttering :sortie' excuse for hav- ing interrupted his Steele%, they :shuf- tied out of the pont :and troubled Mw no more • .Fitch Yvan has his own method with .Would be .assassins. With Napoleon it was the eye which' counted. .• While • he was :visiting: the Duke of Saxe -Co- burg-Gotlta.-one of ;tile duke's, retainers made up his fnind to slay tam, .?Ie had so frequently heard the great man denounced 'aS the curse' of Europe that he felt intpelled to seize the change: to destroy him, lie: was a cornmeal •Sol- dierat the Aline and had to. do sentry duty. in Otte of the corridors of the pal ace :along,whieh Napoleon passed: '. He put itis linger . to the trigger as the ' duke, 'accompanied. by Napoleon, drew in sight. ale- aimed for Napoleon's: heart. Napoleon •saw him. fle said :nothing; but Simply' fixed, bis eagle- eye upon the youth: The latter seemed • spellbound. He let 'the ..musketfall' with a -crash to the floor ofthe stone corridor. Re felt, he said, 'as If he :._must have swooned: ' Napoleon took no further notice, sa'I uo w ;-'pass= - ed upon his way its if nothing had'hap penal. ''That• one nestling 'glance. had saved his. life. He knew its effeot' and value. -St, James' Gazette. • At Pauli.. '"You admit you Wef'e at fault in that ipvestigation ?,"'• "Greatly et fault," answered the trust magnate. "I see now evitere I could have taken ;fates hatter precautions_ for con'cealmeh:tshlit gton•Star.. • Sign of nein. ' Church—I see itis tell,' tint -t o'clock . in the afternoon le the roiliest hour of the twenty -touts Cotham—That must be the hour the Sunday school pti•nies ust.d to start ant et-s•Yonkers Ste tesienh. • ' Te lbs of the Cznr, . The remain s of all the czars of itttssitt spree I'et'ar the great aro in- terred in it 'tnemoritil chapel built. on oiie of tht' islrtnds of 'the Neva:' All the ccuottiltlis nit' ',malty alike, mei' being a Week of white marble, 'cvith- out ally rieeoratlons whatever, bearing only the Mame of the deeensed emperor. • Ceara' Inti it[ft:, The goose int 'trained by 'lnhnlsit:iiits nt' Siam ti giver n boat !Ike a ranter tee. ;,!sell w•hene vel' a stteur t.'r approaches. iI,reer Old. y'•:nk'lirrl'r Custom. t'iuh'r the* l':n;;ifssh tory of tht' eir;htr�enflt t'e'rttur;v 'tvolnen were- ale ,,seeil fermi ;ttl debts ort ethers/me 1'n-llionalrle women rr•it'f : )furl to f ueavity tit i mala sometimes 'Wedded a t•rfintu;1i on hiie way to the .gohtows to e:;hupe their erect i:sr• J • After the Sttreiip.. Towne i'hat wag the shortest stump speech I ever ' heaiel,: Browere-Whose?. 'Townes -That tough kid's. Ile just said, "Give us a smoke,.mister?"—Phil- Oelpb1A,'l'rmss.• "Kidney Disorders - Are no 4 respecter • persons. People ka Mitt t walk e. life are troubled. nave you a ttackache? If you have it ID the neat egn that the kidneys are not Working' properly. • A cteglezted Backache leads in serious Dgil i',ttc' tremble, ° Check it in time by taking 4AN'SKIDNEY PILLS "TIM GREAT KIDNEY SPECIFIC.° They. care all kinds of l{idney Trouble% from Backache to Bright's Disease. • $Oo, a bo* or -ter $1.211 all doalera or 1t'itlfa DOI N Kttrilf alt PILL 0000 l'tiratato, Oitt. PIERCING A NICKEL. Au Qdd Little Experiment 'With * Needle an4 a Coin. We kpow that steel is 'Much !larder than nickel or silver, but a steel needle Is so very slender that it seems impos- sible to force it throu;b a roil, The feat,.bowever, is very simple and. may' + +OTEA easily be accomplished, Stimulating, • The first tiring is to insert a neeuie y i Refreshing In a cork. so that the point bare y %' �, comes through. If the larger end of L,e R Pa kers Only. Gc, Oe, 4Oe} $Uc sad RBC per Ib.. s oce('f; 01044 Mixtd or braces ' ' L'OROINQ TEE ISLEDLE annoven. the needle projects at the upper end of the cork snap it'o[if with a pair of shears soil t it may be final) with the surface -of the cork, Place •a' nickel upon two blocks of wood, as shown in the cut, and put tho cork on it, with the sharp ,end of the needle down, of colarse, Give the cork. a quick, sharp blow with, a haninier, and the needle, being unable to bend'. owing to the support given it by the cork, will easily go through the nickel, A silver quarter may be readily used Jo place of the''niekel. A .MODEST LiTTLE FLOWER. • The Legend of the ' Angel and th* Purple Panay,. . .A •ntodest little puipfe doer ogee sought the. most secluded Spot. in ` a' large garden for its hove, Itcrept let under some tail leaves, and 'thought. that no one would evet find it.. • But the little.. flpwer had 'forgotten that besides' .being exquisitely .beauti- ful Abaci a rare fragrance; One day an angel, fluttering over tate garden, inhaled • this' chatelaine,' ' fra- grance, and as it was a. new odor to her •she'.searebed the garden fern the flower which had nroduced It. • 'At last the Angel discovered the little flower, and, brushing aside the taxi leaves, she bent down•euserly to .loo,. anii,smeil. Se long 'she stayed there gazing that the sun, which now had • an opportunity to shln'e alien the mod 'est 1>ttI'e flower, plfotographed the an- gel's • Pace. , upon, .,the - tender :.purple: 'reaves. Recognizing lter'.own likesese, the 'lovely . angel nt• last left the :flower, with a kiss and blessing: "Ilereaft- er;": she said: to the flower; you • 06.11 bloom iii ev cry ]bird, :and the splendor Of . your' varied dress shalt' be a marvel to all who behold ;you: And to every one 'iso cats see my Slice upon -your _leases _yetishall t: Lrry .a message of love and bevyiness:" Spouting Springs, ° A • 1•[ost • persons hate ' beard of ;the spouting springs, commonly , called geysers, but perhaps' they do not know .what makes the spouting. The. action is similar to that of a voleano. • Sub teiran.ean mater comes in.eontact with 'heated rocks, and this produces.steam,_ the expansive., force of •which throws the hot Water up and through Any con- venlent outlet. The action •_varies in violence as. the .subterranean force .va ':ries in intensity.• .There -is .a famous • geyser iii.Teehandi near the Hecla vol cane, called the: Stro'kr. • It is general- by- safe to • look. down into the' opening, •i+;bereiwater maybe seen 'working, or:" boiling, 'about twenty feet below If. enough turf be thrown to choke the. passage, the geyser may be set in ac- tion, for, the obstruction' confines. the steam so that it gathers force and soon bursts forth, sending:a stream •01 hot water` sixty 'feet up into the air and a volume of steam all around: There are several geysers in the•Yellowstone re- gion. l+ali:leins, the-fibtuntn. iTheir you are a • little. further ad - enticed in your •studies you will heal if yott ',eye' not already'heard of Ti'abri= c. u. 5 the' ,Roma u Statesman and sol- dier rho; has been held .up for centu ilea aa a 'model of incorruptible hon= esty and patriotism. It is well'for us all to know about such men. The story is ' that when Fabricius was Seat 'to Jaime Pyrrhus of Epirus to negotiate the exchange of some Roman prisoners the king offered him all sorts of alter - Ing bribes'to enter bis service and sub- jeeted him. -to • both temptations and threats, but rabricius• in spite of his poverty, ivhiclr" was Well known to Pyrrhus, refused everything and 're- mained loyal to his country, Pyrrhus said of Mw, "It is easier to turn tate Inn from Ito,. career. than Fabricius • from his honesty." : ' Just a Starter. ,A, small boy who happened to be hoat'se was asked bow he had Caught such n cold.. With an indignant look he replied: • .. "I haven't got any cold.. I've only got cold in my talk." • Sally Ann Stntbla. Rooth Sally,,Ai n Simple: "You never cart tell; The Seater might alt tiry up hi the well. Ill pet a lot by 1.111 a nutty day." • So she gathered ht'r buckets and pails with a will, • And she dug 'a deep !role with water to . fill, • And day efter'day alto tugged It away. She emptied the wen with stain' a slah. But tita•wuter leaked out arid left the !tole Ary, A rA eeee Scilly Ann sat down to ery, 1RE YOU' MARINO $2,003.22 1 !ERR.? it is being done with our goods, York ip p1aasant, permanent and profitable. loons used ia'every house, every day. No fake, and no need to emote the demand. Legitimate, reputable business. You Can start without si eche of capital, Write to day. G. MAutotALt & t'0., Wholesale Teas, and Coffees, tendon, Orth iltf.tiEST AWARD, , ST, !LUPI$,1an4. Canadian Nati�nal. Exhibition 406. 7 1:OPON:TO SEPT - 10 L3 O N T'A R I O - . M,.i1RGER, MORE INSTRUCIpit SRO MORE ENTERTAINING TIAN Rik AA•RT''LO.c�N EXHIBIT • ' . N UNL UALL[ ' Irl AND CATTLE ATTLE EA' 1113. IT •mossorso, POULTRY AND °PET STOCK EXHIBIT MAGNIFICIENT EDUCATIONAL . EXHIBIT OF 'I'ROO E MANUFACTURE, IN ° NEW $100,000 BUILDING, $ OF Y THE FINEST PROGRAMME GP „AMUSE3MENTS 1(lTEn PRESENTED, INCLUDING t LV IVANE WITH IIXPERT TILTERS BROUGII',r'EXXRES,SLY F'RQMI ENGLAND. MS MAJESTY'S HOUSEHOLD BAND OF THE LIF!: G1i.RDS wlLL PLAY TWLOE DALLY ON T5E GRAND PLAZA (Pi;EE), 11 A• NI. AND 4 P. At. No up -to -crate Canadian will miss this Exhibitipp. To avoid the great crowd come the•first week. Eon ALL INroaieveroe A,'PLT TO , * ` • Lieut, -Col. J. A. McGillivray, K. 0. • J. 0.O6rc , ' • PRESIDENT, MANER, La • • CiryAG)3er.n,nd. TSEOliOliRETTO. u WESTERNAIR The Exhibition That Made Fall Fairs Famous. An ideal occasion for a family - outing.. Daily ascensions of a navigable airship, always udder. perfect control.. The most wonderful invention of the age. 'Royal Venetian Band, the•nost'celebrated European• • musical organization, under thegreat leader, Victor, will give concerts daily. ' •' Fireworks on a more magnificent and i g :a mposinb scale, • picturing the the Carnival :, great of:Veniee. Manys' �lendid P. educational features for the . boys . •ys and •girls . Forparparticulars r` s rrrit�W, J. � E[D President A1 1�r . HUNT, Serrelary. 196. Our Stock of high art Pianos 'cif fates case designs, .and :containing fines actions. purchasable for money. See our very 'latest styles. of • sweet- toned-organsa at low prices. Instru- 'ments rented, .tuned or' repaired. Gramophones and music in variety. a ••••C. `HOARE'S MUSIC EMPORIUM. Anchor Here. This is the port for High-class Confectionery, and. Fancy Baking, Have you .tried our . Cakes and Bread, if not.: why trot? We carry a .,choice line of fruits, and our `cbot{olates have no equal, we beadle GANONG BROS'., of New Y. Brunswick, and HARR., WEBB'S, ' ''Toronto; we beat then a,ll in ;fancy box goods; While out .strolling, don't forget to 'visit our, :Ice •-Cream Parlor, we . are always pleased to see arid wait on ou. Parlor o.en from 7.30 to 11' ',m. NIMENS' CAFE.. .Nitrnens. , Phone 42 :. CYint'on. • '1 Steamers leave Hamilton 4.30 a.tn. Toronto' at 4.30 pin. Tuesdays and Thursdays, and Saturdays, for Bay of Quinte .porta, 1000 Islands, Montreal, and Intermediate points. Toronto and Montreal Line.' • (commencing June 2, steamers leave Toronto 3:30 pan. Daily except Sun- days, from July 1st. Datly •for Roche ester, 1000 Islands, Rapids, St,, Lawrence. Montreal anAl. Inter- mediate points, ., ' • l -+or tickets apply, to R. R. agents, or write to It FOSTER CRAM ,EE, Western Passenger Agent.. Toronto fastageogiesstalweauses Before placing your-ilyders fare your season's supply of Coal, get our prices. The very best goods carried in stock and' sold at the lowest possible pylae. Orders may be left;at;Davis & Rowlaud s Hardware ,tore, or with W. J. Stevenson; Riectrllc mot ht giant. The L.RMOt'R School --OF.- _...•.Tec -r ° .. a !Railway , And General Training for ' • ' Service,. The new niethod'of instrt'tetion adopted •by this echooi.has proved a great saccade. Pupils graduate in.the;ahortest possible tim . ,; •• th refore at the least expense. , Employment provided at once. Write for free pamphlet which will giro full information. , • etotdbitonptenitiO, he mosfaelociin he y Inspection of elasles at work cordially invited ROBERT LAI•t•MOUtt Stratford, Ont Principal and"Instraictor, formerl District Superintendent G;'x'. R. Y • •Apri120th 06-07. Ad ertise in the NEw . ER, ire You . - on the look -oat tor the best that's eetn•g? s Then, for a Breakfast ltererage, 'drank .• Pall Term opens Sept. 4th. 41/1 I'iLLIO T A fliglitreadc Schoen The demand 'for our graduates this sear is about" twenty theme tate su51_tb.• It ttn9s to attcn.. our esilea . r 07. ,r ;> Lt!OTZ n Carnet of zonae and Atexaf dtr Sts • ARAMEL ERE U, OFFEE.. IT IS' THE IIEST Dotter Stan the rest, because it ie mi ) • the latest anti numb inipreved methods knee is and t,c11s at last t ,c per padksge. Don't.ferget the nntnn--('511.51151 Cereal Soiree—awl, e Ltd, having, once tried it t forget the flavor. , You eanh o AD. . f. ! The People's Grocer, Prompt Delivery. 'Phone 111, •