Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1905-1-5, Page 4iirassels Most, THURSO4I', JAN. 5, 1.905. AUTADR DoNLY, formerly of 8imooe, ha% been appointed agent of the °ailed fan Department of Trade and Commerce in Meador), on the recommendation of the Canadian residents. Mr. Denly has been a resident of Mexico City for over twelve years, and speaks and writes Spanish fluently, TEE Toronto Newe' oontinnoue oar. toon of the old war horse, in mimicry of Hon. G. W. Ross and Liberal rule in Ontario, has grown stale and the bitter. nese of their attack from a eo called independent paper has made it ridion. lone among people who admire fair play, It out•doee the Mail -Empire, the leading Opposition organ, from whiob n0 favore are expected. The News le well under stood, bowever, by Liberate generally in the Province, and as a consequence its dietortatione from the Hoeeack letter up and down, lose their point. Hon, G. W. Rose will oocnpy hie seat iu the saddle again and not on a dilapidated looking equine but on a victorious °bargee pre. minted to bim at 5 p. m. on Jan. 25th. THE Clinton New Era says :-In South Huron Rev. Mr. McLennan, the Liberal oandidate, le patting up a most vigorous fight, and deeervee to win. The chief argument against him ie the fact that be is a minister, bat this should really be in bis favor, In the Dominion House, two clergymen held Beata for Western oouetftaenaies, and they made good rep- resentatives, Mr. MaLennan's char- acter is irreproaobable, his ability ie self evident; hie platform capacity is first class, and io oommou parlance "he's a hustler." All over the riding the Liberals are said to be uniting in hie favor. If the Liberals are true to them- selves and their prinoipleo, Mr. MoLen nan will be the next representative for Huth Huron, Rev Ma. Home= appears to be more anxious for political notoriety than be ie for the advancement of the armee of Tempraeme. When the Soots. 2`.ee campaign was on be was an opponent to that meaenre and tamed no doubt have taken it ae an interferenoe with his personal liberty if his right to think for himself had been challenged and yet he wishes to meaenreg the Premier's duty. doing in his biassed half baehel and in a great parade gseaile a man superior to him,elf a hundred fold in working for the advancement of temperance reform instead of going to him personally and advising with bim. Mr. Hoasaok overdid his letter writing and we venture to affirm if he had to do it again the same oorree would not be pursued. Mr. Whitney's 0000e wag not etrengtheoed an iota by the reverend gentlemen's personal attack on the Premier. THE two oaodidatee in East Huron are into one of the most vigorous oampaigne that has been oarried on for the past 25 years along the line of organization and personal canvas. Mr. Hislop is guarding against the possibility of over.00nfldenoe and Mr. Bowman to on the alert athlete Wed, no doubt, by the tnrn•over of the riding last November. We understand that the probabilities are that joint pub. lin meetings are not likely to be held, Mr. Hislop is anxious that this ahoald ba the nee ae it gives the electorate a much better chancel of getting at the fame, especially when both candidates are able to express themselves very creditably in pobiio addreee, and again it reduces the number of meetings, A one sided meeting lacks the vim and go of one where the expooente of each party defend their prinoiplee and a great deal of the small talk carried about in a oampaigo is get at rent where public diooussion ie available and the candidate oateohieed as the eleotore may see fit. A CALM ooaeideratio0 of the temperance question fn its present relation shows that the oa0ee has really gained some prestige as n result of the recent big eo0• ventione. It has got one of the twobig political parties -not a leader or two, bat the party as a whole, and as aa organi. zetion covering every riding in the Prpviooe, with every voter who for any re00ou wants to see that party viotorions oomm;tted to a temperance policy which, though not all that temperance advooatee could wieb,is =oh in edvaooe of any enforced heretofore. For the first time in the history of the Province a polittoal party, root and branch, lute oome to torme with the prohibitionists and ef- footed a oompromise to which the party as a whole le pledged, so that it -with its drinkers and non.driokere-etnnde or fails by what it hag agreed to, From the other political party it hag get pleated upon record a strong resolution deploring the liquor evil and promising to gapport any reasonable measure to minimize that evih , The Lieutenant Governor formally opened the new Elliot Home for Friend- lege et Guelph. In the bye elections for the New Brdnewiok Legislature in St. John City M J. O'Douaghne hue been appointed collector of inland reve0Ue in Brantford. A oabaoeo ooutaiuiag principally men who were going to the bush t0 oat wood wax derailed while travelling at the rate of fifteen miles an hour on the Roeeadale branch of the 0. N. R. at Arizena, neer Portage 1a Prairie, Man, When the oaboose overturned, the stove set ilea to the oar. Several were injured and Ben, Linklater was ornebed to death. The Ross Government Should Win. The Rees Government has opened np New Ontario by Railways, Oolonizetiou, Eaploratione and Surveys -Here is evidence of it,- RAumers. The Temiekaming and Northern Ontario Railway has been oonetrnoted as n Government work from North Bay to a paint 25 miles North of New Liskeard -187 miles, and it will be pushed at least a further 83 miles to the Grand Trunk Pao fie. The Canadian Northern Railway hag been completed tbrougb the Rainy River Districtmaking another through route to the North Weet, The Algoma Central Railway has 87 miles oompleted, and 107 graded. The James Bay Railway, from Toronto to Sudbury is being built. The Grand Trauk Paailio will also be tapped by a line from Port Arthur. The Nipigan Beltway will also oonneat with the G. T. 1'. In 1881 there were only 12 miles of railway in New Ontario ; with the cora. pletion of the above linen it will have 1,000 miles of railway, or 1,750 including the Ontario seoti0n of the G. T. P. E0PL0RAT10NB AND SURVEYS. New Ontario has been and is still being explored, and no legs than 78 new townships have been surveyed by the Rose Government. There is still over 100,000,000 acres of Crown lands midie- poeed of. THE PULP INDUSTRY The Rose Government have aided in the development of the pulp industry. 53 322,000 is already invested in the Soo, Sturgeon Falig, and Spanish River polp works, employing bemiredo of men. FA0T0 RE TEE CROWN LANDS DEPARTMENT. Revenue from Grown Lands since Confederation „ , 539,040,946 Revenue from Grown Lando for 1903 2,450,110 Estimated value of Pine unapt 575,000,000 Estimated value of Hardwood 550,000,000. Betimete of Pulpwood in New Ontario (oorde)288,000'000 ^ialoe of royalty thereon at 40 Dente a cord 5115,200,000 Area of Clay Belt in &orae16,064,000 Average timber sale bonne per quare mile under Roes Government $3,245 Acreage of forest re0ervee6,917,000 THE 000 INDUSTRIES On November 1, 1904, 9,958 men were on the pay roll, In Ootober 1904, the pay roll was $130,049.49. On November 1, 1904, the Soo Industries paid the first half.year'e interest of $50,000 on the Provincial goarantee of 52,000,000 ae provided by the agreement. Oa December 1 1904 the flratbalf year's payment of $550,000 interest on the Oompany'e bonds was made out of their ownlreeonrcee. And yet Mr. Whitney, in Massey Hall on October 41904 said that the 52,000,000 given in aid of the Soo industries might as well have been thrown into Lake Superior I The Soo Indaetriee include : The steel plant (now producing 500 tone of steel rails a day) the pulp mills producing 100 tone of pulp a day ; the Helen mine, producing 1,000 tone of ore a day ; the Algoma Oeutral Railway, eta., eta. FINAN00AL STANDING OF THE PROVINCE OF ONTARIO. Receipts - 1867 to 31st Deo.. 1908 5123,031,676 53 Expenditure -1867 to 81st Deo., 1903 121,087,297 58 Cash on hand filet Dec„ 1903 1,994,679 00 America of the Province, 310 Deo , 1903 8,383,308 11 Liabilities of the Proviuoe 31st Dec., 1903 5,834,141 99 Surplus of Assets, after deducting Liabilities „ 2,549,164 12 Oat of a total expenditure of $113,191,• 872 eines 1871, 592,685,876 have been returned to the people, CONTRIBUTIONS FOR PUBLIC PURPOSES SINCE 1871 Education 520,042,769 61 Hoopitalo and Obaritiee 3,965,775 11. Maintenance of Asylume and Public) Institutions 20;588.748 01 Agriculture and Arte 4,971,905 54 Railway Sobeidies 11,811.417 27 Administration of Justice 10,986 391 24 Calouizetioo Roads 3,694,247 79 Public Buildings Oonat'n,. 9,518,571 30 DEBTS OP OTHER PROvreage, Quebec 5 22,017,902 Nova Bootie. 8,028 807 New Brunswick - 3,213 946 British Colombia 8,639,878 Daring 1908 Ontario received the eau of 5196,357,76 ae interest on investmeote, while the Province of Quebec paid in interest and chargee on her publio debt uo lege a sum than $1,677,583.19. TER LIQUOR LIOENe1 AOT, License Year 1874-6 1908-4 No, of Tavern Licensee..,. 4,798 2,677 No. of Shop Deanne 1,307 300 No. of Wholesale Licensee 62 22 No, of Vessel Lioeneee 89 none w Total - 8,185 2,899 No, of organized Municipalities in Proviuoe 780 No. in which no Tavern is issued170 Ido. in whioh 000 and not more than two are ieeaed 286 No, of Municipalities without a Shop License 661 NUMRER 00 0,1ORN0100 Ekintwi0RRR. Province of Quebeo, Ona to each 635 persons. Provence of Ontario, one to each 753 persona. City of Montreal, Mae to eaob 845 persons, City of Toron- to, one to each 1,000 persona. EDUCATIONAL ADVANCEMENT. No. of Public Sohoole No, of Tea0hers and County the Liberate -footed Mr. No, trained in Normal 8otaoole Lowell in the county and the Conserve, No, of High Sobeole „,., ii0oa Mr. Maxwell in the oity. No, of High Bohol Papile 6,147 9,455 4,962 136 25,728 I was born in 1841 in Middlesex 0ounlyr Features of Education Depart. Meet admiuietraton. 'Free text•booke for rural Wohoole, tem moat of textbooks. Rural (whool libraries provided tor, Teobniaal education unstated. Four Normal Sebool0 oonduoled. Univereity of '1'uronto and Sellout of Praotioal Satenae generously aided. GOOD ROADS, The Rose Government get spur, in 1901, $1,000,000 for good retitle. Already six counties have adapted the 000nty system of highways, and many other.) have the matter under ooneideration. NIAGARA FALLS SLEO'1RIOAL POWER The Roam Government hes grrnted obarters to three different oompueiee, under which they have the right to develop 375,000 h. p. The projected works will poet $26,000,000, and will yield the Proviuoe a revenue of $275,000 a year, It is expected that the first eappliee of power will be available in a few months. ONTARIO'S PUBLIC 1NSTITUTIONS, 63,445 persons were, in 1903, oared for in the 216 asylums, prison, reformatory, goals, hospitals, sohoole, and other pnbli0 metitutiorie of the Proviuoe. 531,605,917 hale been expended, in the 36 years, 1868-1903, under theme beads. Average ooet per patient in American aeyl0me, 5188 ; in Canadian, 5199 ; in Ontario, $125. PROGRESSIVE AORI00LTOBAL ADMINISTRATION. Grante for Agriculture 1904 (,nolading Department 5307,756 CAPITAL INVESTED IN 081800 LANDS, BUILDINGS, ETV Value of Farm Lands 5620,809,475 Value of Buildings 247,650,190 Value of Implemeute 63,956,190 Value of Stook 154,327,267 Total 51,088,822,085 Manz 080000200 AND 008MMERIEO. 1890 1903 No. Meese Faat'o 817 1,126 No. lbe. of Cheese produced .... 79,364.718 165,306,678 Value of Cheese produced .... 57,189,957 517,203,293 No, of Creameries 89 265 No. of the. of Butter 1,398,580 10,812,116 Value of Batter prodooed $269,154 52.096,593 FARMERS' INSTITUTES. No. of meetings held, 1902-8, ending 30th Jane, 1908837 No. of persona in attendance, 1903, ending 30th June, 1908 126,852 No. of meetings held, women's institutes, 1903-4, ending 30th Jane,1904 960 No. of persona in attendauoe, ending 30th Jane, 190444,698 The Agricultural Department hae the aupervieton of the following institutions for farmers :- Dairy Sohcole.-8 Dairy Schools- Guelpb, Kingston, and Stratbroy, at• tended by 2,240 persona. Pioneer Farm in Algoma. -One hundred and fifty miles Weet of Port Arthur, for the purpose of testing the soil and climate of that portion of New Ontario. Experimental Fruit Stations-looated at 16 different pointe in the Province. 479 Agricultural and Hortioultnral Sooietiee. 14 different Aaeooiatione, such to Fruit Growers, Dairymen, and Breeders' Associations of different kinds. The Ontario Agrioalturel °o'leoe, with an attendant* in 1903 of 728 etadente. The Sir William MaoDonald Inetitote for instruction in Domettio Baienoe, opened Ebb) year, and attended by 107 farmers' daughters. The Premier of Ontario. IIIS BRILLIANT ANO SUCCESSFUL CAREER. There ie no doubt that the moat inter. e00i0g personality in the election cam- paign now in programa is that of Premier Roes, and the attention of hie weary - men is fixed on him at the moment to a degree thea hae not been surpassed in any contest of the generation, Mr. Rose ie a firm believer in the principle of "the strenuous life,' and for over forty pare he has been a tirelesa and indefatigable worker. His energy and force of char• aoter hays never been more abundantly manifested or more severely needed than during his period of Premiership. The removal from the Provincial polittoal arena in 1896 of Sir Oliver Mowat, who had eo long dominated Ontario polities, left hie 000oe0eo00 with a etormyontleok. A gap had been created whioh nous could hope oonld be immediately lilted, any more than could that caused by the death of Sir John Maodoaald at Ottawa, or the dieappearenoe from public) life of Mr, Gladstone in England. I1 fell to the lets A. S. Hardy and the present Premier to take up the work of Sir Oliver Alowat, Undoubtedly there was grave danger of the party going to pieces. The Liberal 000000000 in Federal affairs has inteneitf ed Ooneervative efforts for victory in the great Province of Ontario, where the integrity and aat0teneee of Sir Oliver Mowat had held the people faithful to Liberalism for nearly a generation. The Premierships of the late A. 8, Hardy and Mr. Rose, who enooeeded to the office in 1900 have not, therefore, been beda of rosea. '.there is little doubt that had a mac appeared on the other side during the past eight years poe0ee0ing eloquence and gaalitiee of leadership and admini. titration equal to those of Mr. Rose and fie predooeeeor, the long rule of the Liberal party in Ontario would have ended. But the opponents of the Govern. mens failed to develop euob a man. Tb'e present Premier passed en0oe0ofully throngh the severest ordeals with char. eater untainted and oourage undimmed. Rio indomitable spirit, hie patience, his energy, his reeourcefulneee, hie ttm6, hie eoraeetnees have made an impreoeion on the people et large whioh has b000me more and more apparent during the last few months, ae it became olear that an appeal to the people must be made before another session of the Legislature. Whatever the outcome of the campaign, 00 one will refnee the present reline llIinieter of Ontario the oredit of brltliant qualities exerted faithfully and fearlessly in the intereeOe of hie netiv0 Province. L'•t 0e glance for a moment at his career. It is ouch a one a0 may Won bo held up to the young Canadian ns en example and innpiratin, The Pr. mier which for over thirty years Ile has repro. emitted in the Federal or Provinalal Parliament. Hit peerage WON Scottie') eett'ete and the accent of the rugged Northland was tranemitted to himself, cad gives an added pioturesgnoneea to hie public specking. Qnaiifying for a public) euttoo) teeoher, be spent the early years of hie menbood in this work, varying it with some jiurnalietie experience, until in 0871 he wee appointed Public School Inepeotor for L'imbton County. From that ttmo until the preemit he bait been oloeely identified with the public aohool system of the Proviuoe and has been largely reopoueiblo for the progreoeivenese and thoroughness that give it today an honorable di0tioatlott. The establish. meet of County Model 80hoole, lbo uniformity of text books and the Ilmlta. tion of Normal Suhoole to profeeeionol work were some of the early reforms in this deportment of affairs traceable to bis lefluenoe. But it is impartible to partioularize closely in what is no more then the briefest outline of a lite crowded with aohlevement. Iu 1872 Mr. Roes went to the Oommons as member for West Middlesex, and for some years it ap. peered that the polittoal career for which he was eo evidently destined was to be identified with Federal rather than Provincial affuire. He quickly established a high reputation by hie powers in debate, and was one of the most effeotive and active of the younger Liberals of those days. But in 1883 a re organization in Hon, Oliver Mowat'- Cabinet brought Mr, Rose a call from Toronto, and he entered the Mowat Government as Minister of Education. Into the work of this important depart. ment Mr. Rose threw himself with ober. aoterietia energy and enthusiasm. Be was an expert on the eubjeot or edaoation, and its problems at0raoted him. The best years of hie life were spent in thio work. Hie nativity woe not without its penalty. Tile Department of Eduoation b oame and remsinen for many years the special ohjeot of criticism on the part of the Opposition, At one election after another the partisan cry was of "The Rose Bible," "Tho eeperate eahool," "French language in the sehoole" ; the Education Department was always the foremost enbjeot of attack. Mr. Rose proved himself an able antagoniut in those days, and defended with brilliant and oonvinaing eloquence hie course on every point. So far as hie own former department is coneernett, perhaps the chief monument of those years of work is the federation of the nuiverefties, a per- maneut and far reaabieg effeot of the most vital character on the education of the young men and women of Ontario. But hie work in the Legislature and iD oommit0eee brought him into touoh with all departments and gave him an ample and admirable training for the higber offioe yet to oame. In temperance leg. illation Mr. Rtes was always one of the most advanced and eager among the members of the Government, hie earnest. nese in the muse baiug proved equally by his prominent convection with the tem- perance orgonizetion of the onuntry. When in 1900 Mr. Hardy was nom• palled by ill health to retire from the Premiership, there could be no 008000on of saooeaeion, and Mr. Rose, exchanging hie portfolio 00 the Eduoaoion Depart. meet for that of the Treasury, took the reins of Government. With the events of his administration we are all familiar. Mr. Roes ehowid himself in a new light. Without neglect. ing the other departments of Govern• meet, the Premier took up enthuoiaet•io• ally the question of the development of new Ontario, the vast territory which the soga0i0as Sir Oliver Mowat had seemed for the Province half a generation earlier. Railways were built, iodnetriee established, settlers nttreeted, the rich undeveloped regions to the North and West b gen apeedtly to give promise of a future greater Oban the must sanguine had hoped for. In Temiekaming alone a new Manitoba hag been brought almost to our doors, and Otd Ontario is wready beginning to reap a rich harvest from the foresight and enterprise of a progressive Premier. So by a man could not have beet) expected to filed time for literary work, yet the Premier assisted SU prod going soon atter tbo death of the late Honor. able Alexander Mackenzie an admirable and valuable biography of that states• man. Ha wrote alma a report on the educational eyetem of England and Germany, a history of the Ontario school symtem, and edited a oolltctiou Of patriotic recitations. He has been honored by several univereitlee, being L. L. D., of St. Andrew's(1888), Victoria (1892), and Toronto (1894). In religion Mr. Roes ie a Presbyterian, and has taken frequently an active part in the deliberations of the Assemblies of that oharoh. In 1896 he was a delegate to the Pan Presbyterian Council at Glasgow. Although Mr. Roes has thus been dar- ing eo mat a portion of his public life identified with the effete of the Proviuoe it has in no way restricted hie eympaohieo or outlook, In Federal affairs he has always maintained an active ounnettion with Ohs Liberal party, and is to devoted adberaut to the policy of Sir Wilfred Laurier. In the wider domain of Impar. ial sgaire, Mr. Roes has alwaye been foremost to all that would make for the stability and integrity of the empire. An ardent Canadian whorls devotion to the laud of hie birth is undoubted, he views the parent land with affectionate pride, and umee'llis influence steadily arid con. eietently to etrengthon the Impetial tie It ie a record of continue enooe0e at which we Neve briefly glanced and one of whittle au Oanudiaas we may well be proud, regardless of the inane at the approaobing matfett at the polio, Anson G. Northrop, Deputy Clerk of Otto Crown, died soddenly at Belleville from hoarO failure after a 'few hours' illness He was 72 years old and hod held officio over fifty years. A. Bertin, of Mitchell, remembered hie family on Christmas Day by giving mob of them 59,000 stook in a certain Toronto Oo. The stook is paying 12%, Rev, Mr, Parton and his esteemed wife were kindly remembered by the mention of Trinity chore), Mitchell, Obrietmas eve. The ladies of the congregation presented the rentor with a handoome Morris chair, and lVlre, Porton with a beautiful jordeniere. The transfer of the Mtn and equip, went of No, 41 Co , 28th Regiment, was mode irate Captain Money to Lieut. W. J. Thompecn, 1Najer Leyborn, the in. epeoting defier of the district, noh,inoting commanding °Miner of No. 5 Oo , located atStratford,1 Sococe aanL Manch A s'an m -'t S RN e -The count bard i o of exa i , Y m de a met to list of u. day 24th ult., and banded out the lief of eaon,eoful students at the recent Model aohool examinatiouo, All who tried were summate} and have been granted lhird•olase certifloatee. They are ae follows :-Mitchell.-Edith M. Gaffney (honors) ; Annie M, tllodgeon. Mergaer. 1te Jordan, Eliza J. Norrie, Eloio M. Pomeroy, Resell& At. Roger, Jessie Walker, Alvis H. Doope, Wm A, Hntl• Burt. Stratford. -Luella Burke, Olive le, Garter, Emma Foereter, Laura Fol. ler, Lena Guilfoyle, Leila 1Iuoeton, (honors); Josie Kennedy, Florenoe Kennedy, Minnie Kiley, Beatrice Eines (houore) ; Pearl Mowbray, Fannin bion• teeth, Effie Robertson, Ellen M. Switzer, Ada M. Switzer, Minnie Sherman, Genoa Stewart, Esther Weston, Jean K. Wright, (honors) ; Walter Bann, Rase Keane (honors) ; John W. Stewart. v IMPORTANT NOTICES STORE TO RENT IN THE iJ village of Oranbrook, lately oaouniod by A, McNair, rib° has sold out. Terme reasonable. Apply to .1. LONG, Oraubrook. LEICESTERS FOR SALE, either sex or any age. This flunk has been very successful at the local Shows. Have also for solo a prise.wicning young Durham Bull. .Apply at Lot 10, Oon, 15, Grey, or O. TURNBULL, 15.01 Walton P.O. LEICESTERS FOR SALE. - 4 good Shearllog and 8 Ram Lambe, Also young Short Horn Bulls from 7 to 20 months, tnoloding the 1st prize Senior Bull Galt at Eset Huron Fall Show. Mao a number of Cows and Heifers. Will be sold cheap and ou terms to suit buyers. DAVID MYLNE, Ethel ,Ont. REAL ESTATE. FARM FOR SALE.- GOOD homestead -100 acres -in the Town. ebip o1 Morris, Huron county, For partio• Mars apply to J. BENNETT, 8 t1 000 Bathnrat St. Toronto. "'WARM FOR SALE CONTAIN- ING 00 acres, being North halves of Lots 15 and 10, Con, 1, Grey. Comfortable frame house, bank barn, orchard, &o. Only 4 miles from Molesworth. Good locality and fine rondo. Immediate poeeeselon. For further partioulare apply to or write W. H. KEBR, Brussels. LARM.FOR SALE. -THE UN. dereigned offers her 100 aore farm, be- ing Lot 20, Con. 7, Grey, tor sale. There is a comfortable house, bank barn, or. chard; wells, &o. Perm 10 only 1 mile from the thriving village of Ethel. For further particulars as to price, terms. &o., apply to SIRS. HA1'1, HOLLAND, 78 Skater street, Toronto, GOOD FARM FOR SALE. - form, being Lot 1 iCon. 1ed 8 Grey forsale cis sik noted on the Gravel road, 2 doles South of Brussels and contains 100 acres of good land, all cleared but 12 nares. There le a first elan furicnaoewoodk s shed, kitchen,e and heated well with and water is pumped to barn. Barn is 80x58 feet with stone stables. Bay barn 88100 feet. Good orchard, farm well fenced ; pleasantly situated Will be sold on easy terms. Apply on premises or Brus- sels P. 0., ENEA8 0181011. 15.1f -FARMS FOR SALE. - 350 cores first -Wass land in the Township of Grey -Lot 10, Con. 14, 100 acres ; Lot 17, Oon 14,100 nose ; and W3 Lot 18, Oon. 14, 00 aoros-260 aures. All to excellent condi- tion with firat.olase buildings ; brick house with all modern conveniences, and large bank barn, root and straw house, stables, dc. Well watered. From 85 to 40 aore0 of good hardwood bush, Lot 10,Owl. 18,eon- tango g100sures of Sret•olaes land, good frame house and large bank barn nearly new. The property oan be sold in two or three parcels to suit purohase1e. Terms liberal, Also a commodious dwelling house and lot in Brussels. For Ruttier - particu- lars apply to the owner on the promisee. LAUOBLIN MONEIL, or to JNO. LEMUR, Brussels. 21-01 DRESS- MAKING MISS M. A. PARDY has opened a Drees making eetabliehment in the rooms Over the . Post Office and hopes by doing good work to merit the patronage of the general pablio. Please Give us a Trial. CUTTERS ----AND SLEIGHS 8 Bete of A Record Breaker 18 Cutters and Sleighs sold in one week. OGr Cutters are all made of the same material as time whioh have taken flret prize Oh last 5 yoare at our looal shows against all competitors. They are the BEST and take no neoond plane for Material and Workmanship. Our Sleight) ate nearly all Oak and have a firet•olaeo record for cagy draft and gond traoking. They can't be beat, Plow call early and get your etiolate of our dandy Cotters. We already have our stook of wbeele for the coming year, They ere the high est made and intending purohaeere of Buggios for next year are invited to examine our goods before the paint brush ie on thorn 00 everything le the bestthat can be bought, EWAN & CO. the brander, 00pt, Money is made Leadin 10anufaoturere, UTTERS THAT TALK msa,MPoPt bell ttatliett'ti titteeet• We have just received a car load of "Brockvilles," the kind that speaks for themselves. Call early should you require one as these are fast sellers. We have the "Ball" Cylinder Root Pulper, the BEST on the market. See them, Should you have any grass to kill or sod or rouuh ground to work remem• her the "Frost dr Woad" and "Wind• ser" are the disks that will do it. It you want a General Purpose Plow, then whioh there le no better, mourn a No, 20, Frost tO Wood. If you want n mond hand Buggy, Dart, Dotter, Pew or Implement of any loud be ease to call on as. We have also the U. S. Dream Sep. orator, Singer Sewing Maohinee, Volmar Waohiug Machines always on hated. We eau supply you with a good Driving 0r Work Horse cheap or Stook of any kind on short unties, N. S. McLAUCHLIN AG 1\TO Choice Stock of ROBES, UOS &C.. &C. A. fine range of Robes, Best in the market, has been opened up consisting of :- - BLACK GALLOWAY -SASKATCHEWAN -GREY GOAT -GRIZZLY BEAR and MOUNTAIN BEAR. -Plush and Wool Rugs, a very Choice lot. - In Horse Blankets It large stook is carried and sold at Close Prices. - Trunks and Valises of all kinds. . Repairing Promptly Attended to. J. ooNnLosow BRUSSELS Sign of the Horse's Head COBER CARRIAGE Co. WE eau supply you at once with any Buggy youmay want but as the time for purchasing CUTTERS has come we would like to tell you that we are fully pre- pared to meet your every want in the Cut- ter as well as in the Sleigh line. We have the Finest and Most Up-to-date assortment of Cutters that can be found anywhere, ready for inspection, and would be pleased to have you Gall and see them. Prices Right. ' TWO COWS FOR SALIl. JOHN CODER -SONS, FALL AND COOL WEATHER le here again and cool weather makes ns think of Stoves and how to keep warm in Winter. If you are thinking of rureleming a new Stove or Range this Fall call and gee our lines of High class RANGES and STOVES AMONG THEM ARE THE Famous Pandora Range, Mario by Memof Lory,. ` oudon The Dockash and World's Favorite Ranges, The Silver King and"Garland line of Stoves and Ranges - ALL GOAL AND WOOD BURNERS. See out Lines of Base Burners and Air Tight Coil Stoves. Agents for the Famous Every Stove Guaranteed "Queen" Air Tight Wood heaters. to work Perfect. Estimates on Furuabc Oontracte freely given. Prices 'Bight. Wilton GOAL IN STOCK EARDWAI1E AND STOUR.