HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1905-9-7, Page 4°is
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THURSDAY, SEPT, 7, 1905.
New that the Weaterly Provinces are
properly inaugurated a fresh interest will
be taken In their eleotion affairs and an
imputes given to the particular notions
time get apart to govern tbemeelves
provincially. They start housekeeping
with a rosy (stare.
OONBIDBRADLE used to be said against
the normally of a Provincial Auditor by
the present Government when in oppo-
eition bat by the appointment of James
Olanoy, ex.M. P. P., for Kent, to the
offioe, they certainly endorse the pria-
oipie, which 1n Our humble opinion is a
very proper one. Mr. Olanoy will make
an efficient officer no doubt.
McNtxonA and the North West rejoioee
in the geeat barveat reaped. It means a
great deal to that land not only to pres-
ent day settlers but to the proepeative
bomeaeeker who will turn bis faoe West-
ward as a result of tbie season's a-
bundant orops. With the new railways
opening up aomewbat out of the way
sections of the country a large and in.
creasing immigration can ealely be
wanted upon.
Tan Frenchman who importuned
millionaire Rockefeller to pay the indem-
nity asked by Japan from Russia belongs
to a big family whose penchant is :a
strong desire to administer the eetate of
some other fellow and make donntiops
and preeente out of the hunk acoo0ot of
00me person other than themselves. If
they would =regionally bead a subscrip-
tion list or make a gift there world be a
greater harmony in their preaabing and
practising.
Tag first annual general meeting of
the General Reform Aoeooiation for On•
tario wan held on Wednesday of this
week, in the Assembly Hall of the
Labor Temple, Church street, Toronto,
a large number of delegates being in
attendance. In addition to receiving
reports, adopting a Oonetitntion and
electing office bearers for the next year,
a general dieeueeion, along the line of
workable suggestions, in advanoing the
welfare of the Liberal party, waa in.
dulged in from wbiob no doubt good
will Dome.
Toaotiro Fair Direatore are a once lot
in taking advantage of every oiranm-
eIanoe to boom their big show. It may
be a Prince, a egnad of middies, a foreign
Band, a detachment of eoidiere or some
old picture but it all tends to fatten the
exchequer. Macy another institution
might take a leaf oat of their book, with
profit. If the grand stand performance
were removed the turnstiles would not
bave mob work to do. We wonder bow
the Government great works in the
speeding events at the Toronto Fair ?
Sorely the fellows who are doing so mob
croaking about this part of the program
at the oonntry Faire must know that the
city ontflte set a bad example.
TEE dove of peace is brooding over
Manabnrie and before many Jaye there
will be busy times in shipping the thous.
ands of soldiers to their horaee. Japan
same out of the ordeal with flying colors
even if she le minus the indemnity, We
guess Roeeia would very gladly pot up
the cash if thereby they might gain their
former prestige wbioh is gone forever.
The war will be a great blessing to Japan
and also to the common people of Russia
who will not groan under the iron heel
for the time to come ae they have in the
past. Possibly the greatest gain will be
to China and if Japan does not profit by
some reoognition in Manoburia it will
not be because they do not deserve it.
ANNoogoEMgNL is made of Provincial
Winter Fair to be held at Guelph from
Deoemberj 11th to 16th inclneive. The
premium list embraces many interesting
features that cannot fail to be intereeting
Bbd edotative, All members of the
Farmers' Institute are granted free ad-
mission to ihelbuildinge on presentation
of their member's oertifioate, Single
fare tiokets are leaned by the railways
and everything le done to enoonrage
people to attend, The young men
particularly should put forth an effort to
visit the Royal city during the Winter
Fair. Further particulars may he ob.
twined by a 0811 at Tam POO or on
application to A. P. Westervelt, Seare-
tary, Parliament Baildinge, Toronto, who
will mail a premium list to anyone de-
siring it,
IT le said a Vegetable juice has been
tried in a New York hospital on eon.
snmptivee with beneficial results and it
le expected, wording to medical testa
moray, that the new remedy will hill the
tuberoaloeia baoilli. The vegetables
aged aro potatoes, onione, beats, turnips,
cabbages, celery, sweet potatoee, oarrote,
parsnips, Summer egaaeb, tomatoes,
epinaob, radioing, string beans and green
peas with the pada. Dootore eay the
jaiee ie eo well adapted to build by the
eyetemthat the patient will soon be
ale to t n
b d a bigfight
p pagainst the so
meth dreaded thanes. 11 a panacea for brad
the witlto man's plague r'e really band bo
many a heart will rejoiee au it bee been
a great foe to the human family for long
yeare with little abatement. The Sani,
tarium treatment has done co great work
and no doubt many a life bag been pro.
longed by the advenoe of madioal eoienae
along tbie line, No doubt close tab ail
be kept ou the vegetable experiments,
Hmmwne Oo107,1aelON0R OAIIPSELL'e an.
Dual report of Good Roads for the peat
year is an intereeting volume, From it
we learn that 185 townships have pub-
etituted the old time statute labor process
for a more modern and better one.
Seven or eight Counties have taken ad.
vantage of the offer of Governmeut help,
dealing with over I000 miles of road npon
whiuh was expended over 5460,000, the
Government grant being over 5152,000.
Permaneooy is also noticeable in build-
ing of oalverte and the erection of
bridges in which cement end steel now
form eo large a part. Clothed and
broken stone are helping make A 1 roads
in many localities taking the place of
gravel in various quarters. The old
toll gates are yet to be foand in some
Counties, York and Middlesex still
sticking to the era of the long ago.
From the report we learn that more ac-
tive
stive measures are coming into play iu
obviating the inoreeeiog difficulty of
keeping the Winter roads open for travel.
Wire fences ie the cure advised and over
120 manicipalitiee are oontribatora to
property ownere;in aiding them in the
oonetruation of wire fences along the
highway. Road making ie developing
into a regular study by np•to-date Poen-
oils and the results are becoming more
apparent every year. Money is wisely
expended when aeefalnees and perman-
ency are the leading features. Every
Reeve and Councillor ehouid peruse Mr.
Campbell's interesting and instructive
report.
LETTER FROM BELGIUM
Bliss Fludlater'a Travels In the
01d Laud,
DEAR EAERTnoDY,—Here I am in Brae.
Bele, aittingiin a little writing room which
opine oat on to a large atone baloony,
coking to "'.Che Royal Park," We left
London Wedueeday morning at 9 o'clock
and reached Dover at 11 a, m. The her.
bar le very pretty with its sheer white
cliffs, while above tower the fortifications
and below' flaking boats and channel
steamers ply to and fro on the blue
water. We could eee the Eoglieh ooaet,
a long way oat of sea, and no doubt ft
can be Been on a clear day from the quiet
of Prance.
We had a pretty "choppy" sea to
Ostend and the air was very cold, but it
was only the matter of a few hours for
we arrived at Ostend at 8 p. no. Here
we had to pass through the wisdoms and
'Mow our paseporte. The etation is a
ramshackle affair compered with the
American stations, and it certainly
aoauded very puzzling to hear the rows
and rows of bus drivers about the namee
of their hotels in a language you do not
understand. However, we bad telegraph
ed for none from London, so our porter
spotted ue at ono. They have the most
remarkable memories, and we were a000
at the Hotel Continental, a magnificent
building overlooking the sea. It was the
day of the regatta and the ocean was
dotted with little white sails, while here
and there a North Sea S. S. belohed forth
clouds of black smoke against the blue
sky. The beach is e fine one and was
covered with men, women and children.
The immense dykes have been turned
into a fine esplanade and all the hotels
have their dining -rooms overlooking this
walk, so that the outlook while at dinner
ie very charming indeed. All classes
meet, and there are hundreds of portable
bath houses,—on wheels, drawn out into
the water by horses. In this respect
they are ahead of ue, for even Atlantic
City can not show the elegant little bath
houses that Belgium can, Wbat struck
ma was the great heavy wagons they
were on and the immense horaee out of
all proportion to the work to be done.
Teams of doge are also common, big
Burly looking fellows, that seem to be
able to carry their loads and again
the wagon used were a load themeelvee.
We etayed here until 8 p. m. Thursday,
We spent Thursday on the beach and
much to the amusement of the people I
constructed a miniature 'Windsor
Castle" on the wet mod, A party of
English paeeed and one remarked,
"Windsor Castle, By Jove I" We bad a
good deal of fun oat of it and Mr. R.
threw down his hat for pennies and the
little REAMne (boy) $oat grinned. We
left the castle in their bands also oar
shovels, baokets and sand cbaire; they
grinned again and we harried off to
luncheon, The ride from °steed to
Brueee& woe very interesting ; the fields
were separated by hedges or ditches, oe,
oaatonally a wide canal intereeoted the
land, bordered on each aide by a row of
treee. Forestry bee evidently received
great attention for all throagb
the country the roade and oenale
were beautified by fine rows of
trees. Farming is done in a very prima
tive manner, fields of grain were being
out by men and women with abort
handled scythes ; the abeavee were bound
at top and bottom and eeb up in beauti-
ful owe eo straight and regular, you
'burried np" Canadian farmers can't
equal it. Some Nide were being plough
ed with one horse oe ex and once I eaw a
yoke of oxen, We arrived in Brussels
at 5.12 p. ne. and found ourselves just in
time for their great celebration -75 yeare
eines they threw off the yoke of Holland
and beams a free and independent na
Hon. Thie hotel was at one time the
palace of the Duke of Brabant and le a
very fine building indeed. Oar apart-
ments are elegant and epaoione and our
baloony gave ue a fine view of the pro -
onion to day wbioh was well wortb
geeing, I don't know where all the poo.
pie Eritrea from, but there seemed to be
gn of people and militia, It started
at 11 a, m. and streamed forth steadily
until 2p en m without break. Who) the
"Old Veterans" 'Va ¢rang" who hot fought In 1830
aseti woman cheered and clapped their
ode, men ghosted themeelveo hoarse,
ye threw their hate in the air and
FAMOUS ii tL
J BY FANNiE M LOTI-IROP
0ThisZlii:Elhhet q try,.1,0s6aa
QRS tiURONInc. .WAl2C�
England's (treat Woman Novelist
Literary prophecies, litre boomerangs, should be handled with extreme
caution—they are so prone to recoil. When Matthew Arnold affirmed that no
.Arnold could ever write a novel, he did not look sufficiently far into the future
to eeo Mrs. Humphry Ward, the daughter of his brother Thomas, recognized
as the greatest woman novelist of her generation.
She was born in Tasmania in 1851, and when six years old' was brought
by her parents to England. Her father, a college professor, changed his col-
lege as frequently as his religion; his intense conscientious yearning for abso-
lute truth whirling him from one faith to another like a cork caught in the
eddy of a stream, and making him the fit prototype of "Robert Elsmere"
At the age of fourteen, when the far ply migrated to Oxford, she breathed
the University atmosphere that was joy to her heart. She acquired knowl-
edge as naturally as a bird learns to sing, and she was known as a marvelous
linguist, being as perfect in German, French, Spanish and Italian as if each
were her native tongue. At twenty-one she was married to Thomas Humphry
Ward, one of the university dons, whose work as author, editor, critic, has
given him a place in English literature. She was ambitious to write, and her
earliest efforts were so weighted with learning and research' that they were
as heavy as dumb -bells and fit only for scholars to read when they wanted
to get away from pleasure. She wrote many articles for the "Dictionary o9
Christian Biography," which paid little in coin but more in credit.
Mrs. Ward was thirty-one before she undertook real fiction with "Miss
Bretherton," followed four years later by "Robert Elsmere," which captured
the reading public of two continents. Before this, it is true, she had written a
child's story, a pale -complexioned, anaemic piece of work, fitly named "Millie
and 011ie." Her translation of "Amiel's Journal" from French into Englisch
was an exquisite literary gem, expressing so perfectly the subtle windings
of the thoughts and emotions of the simple Swiss professor, that it seems
se If be himself must have re -thought his whole diary in English, without
the touch of a translator. "David Grieve," which paid its author over 5100,-
000, and others whiob paid fully as much, soon, followed, among them, "Sir
George Tressady," "Helbeck of Annisdale," "Eleanor" and "Lady Rose's
Daughter," In her beautiful country home, in Hertfordshire, she does her
literary work, seeking to escape from the storm of publicity her books have
Aroused and avoiding all society but a little band of devoted friends.
material according toAc100Oho PerUamant ofCanada, la the row ty W, 0, Muck, atilt)itebneat of Agdoattnn,
climbed to tope of anything that would
hold them. The cannonading was deaf-
ening and shook the windows and walls
of the hotel. We eaw Ring Leopold II,
the Prince and the Prince's eon, a little
lad of four years old. Again the shouts
went np and the Ring, a dignified old
gentleman of 72 years with long snow
white beard, ealated as be passed and it
was oats to see the little bad with little
fat chubby faoe and white bushy hair
wave hie little hand to the people. One
old gentleman who stood beside me
actually cried. They are very courteous
people and smile and salute in a most
friendly manner. I am glad to have
seen this military display, but our eight
seeing is stopped for all the shops ;and
galleries are closed until Monday and we
leave for Waterloo to•morrow morning.
I went to eee Westminster Abbey one
day last week and think it magnificent.
I eaw the old Ooronation chair, and
sacred stone that Edward I took from
Saone, the shrine of Edward the Con-
fessor, who firer began Weetmineter, end
many many other things of interest. I
visited the Poets' Corner. Some lover
of Longfellow had placed a nee 10 his
coat, while another bad thrown some
sweet peas over Shakespeare's arm. Of
the statesmen—W. E. Gladstone, Peel,
Pttt, Fax and iDieraeli, all stand out
prominently—Pitt's I liked particularly
and I ooald imagine him thundering from
the floor of the Hoose of Commons;
would never lay down my arms—never,
Never, Never!" Why shouldn't Eng.
nehmen be proud, no other country has
such a heritage as they, Now, I think
this le quite a long letter. This la a de-
lightful little quiet room in whiob to
write, and I oould write mob more, bat
I'm afraid you'll be tired of this ae it is.
Yoare lovingly,
Mane R. FINDLATss.
Hotel De Bellevue, Bruxelles, July 21,105,
Rey. Dr. Moffat's Death,
In the death of Rev. Dr. Robert 0.
Moffat, Secretary of the Upper Canada
Toot Society, Sunday night, August
271,13, Mende loose one of its oldest and
moat honored Presbyterian divines,
After a long career of ueefalneee be pass.
ed away ea 9 o'olook at hie home, 888
Senkville street, 'Toronto, Dr. Moffat
wee in hie 74th year, and enjoyed good
health until about four months ago,
when he was eelzed with a severe attack
of stomach troublo. His 000414100 took
a turn for the worse about two weeks
ago, and since then be bad been failicg
rapidly but did not lose conadioueneee
until Sunday,
Deaeaeed wag born in Langdale, near
Glaegow, Sootiend. He received hie
early education in Glasgow University.
In 1862 he name to Canada and entered
011e Presbyterian Univeretty in Toronto,
from whiob he graduated in 1858. On
October 14411, 1887, he wag ordained and
inducted at St, dobn'a Presbyterian
ohtroh, Walkerton, where he remelted
until 1885, when be benome minieter of
the itreebytoriao aharoh at Winoheeter,
Ont, Rev, Dr. Moffat retired from the
ministry in 1888. and a year later be wag
appointed Secretary of the Upper Canada
Treat Society, which
pgtiou he
has
held ever efnoe
Deo8aee a,
d wag a charter member of °110
Masonic, Lodge at Wlnaheeter. Be le
survived by a widow, one dangbter and
one eon, James W. Moffat, a mining
engineer of Nelson, B. 0.
The funeral took plane at 8 o'oloak
Wednesday afternoon to Mount Pleasant
oemstery. Dr. Moffat was a familiar
figure in this section on mount of his
repeated visite in poising Traot Sootety
work.
A SUCCESSFUL HORSEMAN
Never allows hie horse 6o Buffer pain.
He always uses Nerviline whiob ie noted
for aliffeese, rhenmati: u, swellings and
strains. Narviiiue is joat as good iueide
as outside. For orampe, polio, and
external pain it's *infect marvel. In
the good raping stables Nerviline is al-
ways need,—becauee it makes better
horses and smaller veterinary bills.
Twenty-five oente buys a large bottle of
Nerviline; try it.
ANNUAL REPORT ON
GOOD ROADS.
The most voluminone annual report
yet submitted by A. W. Campbell,
Commissioner of Highways for Oo•
tufo, gives come idea of the immen-
sity of a public work which ie improv
ins some 60,000 miles of roads within
the province.
Statute labor, the report demon.
etratee, hag been eopereeded in 135
towoabipe by a eyetem of commute.
tion, A. number of ooaotiee have ee•
tabliehed county systems of roads
which are aided by the Provincial
Government to the extent of one-
third of the entire coat of construction,
the 00084180 whiuh have adopted thio
plan being Wentworth, Simooe, Lan-
ark, Oxford, Lincoln, wellington and
Hastings. Thus, under the highway
improvement sot, amen oonntiee have
taken over 1,624 miles of main road
and expended thereon in the year
1908.4, 5457,244.49, to which the Govern-
ment has contributed 5152,414 88.
The report !aye strese upon the
value and importance of minarets con•
etruotion in bridge abutments, col•
vert¢ and floors. The facility with
wbiob it van be moolded makes it
snitable for a variety of nee, It ie,
when properly made of good material
more durable than atone masonry and
ooete lees. Direotione for a parted
mixing of mortar and broken atone
are appended,
Broken atone le now being employed
for roods of heaviest trade, particular•
ly where good gravel Is not plentiful,
Although a gravel road is more easily
built than a broken atone road, the lat.
ter properly constructed is mnob more
durable and repays the extra coat,
The coat of oohing atone ie oaaefaily
tabulated in the report. While this
varies in different !080114i& in the
came tOwnehip, given a haul from the
author to the road not exceeding halt
a mile, the poet of crushing, apart from
ooet of quarrying, is approximately
$24.00 per day.
The treatment of snow rode is a
feature of the report. The moot tint.
vereal oars for anow dritte on -a road
appears to be the use of wire bong
along the highway. By this method
no obgtedotioo is rale-
ed to the eweep.
fn n
p
s Ow, which It
w Alters thio
g r through the
I
g
tenon with no oocagion to atm.
Many 4ownehips are granting a bongs
dNYw, .PaarsaaOYaasommamorate
for the emotion of this type of fano,
considering this grant a matter of
economy, es the wire fence does away
with the Dost of ehovailing our dritte
while the injury to the roads in the
spring le very much 180eened. Some
120 townsbipe ere emoting bonuses
trona 10 cents to 51,00 per rod, wbiob
in the latter ogee entirely covers the
oust of erection,
Toll role seem to be steadily 810.
appearing in the ptrovince, although
there yet remain 240 miiee of them.
The County of York has three milee
operated by the Holland River Road
Company.
Iu Huron County the County Connell
maintains bridges of 20 feet epee and
over, on all boundary linee. Au engin.
ser, paid by salary, eopervieee all
oonnty work. Bridges are about 100
in number, and are being re•bnilt with
steel and concrete. The oouuty le re.
markable for the fact that nob one of
the townebipe has oommuted or abol.
iebed etatate labor. Gravel is, at a
rule, pleotifnl and is fairly well dietri.
buted ; but broken atone hat bean need
to a elight extent. Oonorete ie very
largely used throughout the ooan4y
for culverts and small bridges. There
were 18 road graders in use in 1904.
Huron County bac 2,109 miles of road,
ae follows; Aebfield, 189 miles; Ool-
borne, 126 miles, 50 gravelled ; Goder.
toh, 156 miles; Grey, 180 miles, nearly
all gravelled ; Hay, 110 miiee, 80 gra.
yelled; Howlett, 146 miles, all gravel.
led ; Hallett, 135 miles, nearly all gra.
veiled; MoKillop, 120 miles, nearly all
gravelled; Morrie, 120 mile°, 80 gra.
veiled ; Stanley, 112 miles, nearly all
gravelled; Stephen, 170 miiee, 140 gra-
velled; Tuokersmith, 127 miles; Turn -
berry, 87 miiee; Ueborne, 126 miles;
East Wawanoeh, 88 miles, West Wa.
wanoeb, 120 miles, nearly all gravelled,
In five of the townships there ie either
none gravelled or else no record was
Bent to the department.
Tiredness Means Danger !
Indicates Faulty Blood and worn out
Nerves—Build up, or total col.,
lapse will Surely Follow.
When you'r tired all day, bothered by
trifles,exbaaeted with netvoneneee, be
sure there ie eomething wrong,
Yon need booing up, need more
noariehment in the blood, need it power-
ful medicine to vitalize the nerves and
dietribute force and staying power in ail
over-worked organs.
The most marvelous noose ie Ferro.
zone, a nourishing tonic go eoieotifio as
to be the admiration of every phyeioion.
Ferrozone performs wonders for people in
poor health ; it ante directly on the
blood enriching it with strength and new
life that ie at once diepatohed to all parte
of the body. Ferrozone feeds the nerves
and vital energies, supplies foroe, deter-
mination and joyous, buoyant spirits.
A case where there was lassitude and
leak of strength is told by Mr. David
Brown, of post -office box No. 80. Bea•
ton, Oot ;—"About ooa year ago my
health began to fail. My hands and feet
seemed always cold. I felt wore out and
exhausted, weak ea a little child. My
faoe twitobad. My limbs end acme aoma
meneed to loge their sense of feeling and
finally my left side was perfectly numb.
All my color left. My appetite ran
down. Ferrozone wax the firet to give
me any help. I improved witb it very
gaiokly. It toned up the blood and
started oiroalation, eo that the numbneee
gradually disappeared. My condition
was perfeotly cured by Ferrozone and I
bave been well ever since. (signed)
"David Brown."
SPECIAL NOTIOE.—To get eetie•
factory results be erre yon get Ferrozone
only, Fifty ciente per box or six boxes
for $2,50, at all dealers, or N. 0. Polon)
& Go., Kingston Ont., and Hartford
Conn., U' S. A.
IMPORTANT NOTICES
MISS KATE MoKINLAY—
A pupil in vocal ramie of Mre. Nor.
ton, of Detroit, is prepared to give Inetrue.
Mon in vocal music and the violin. Terme
on application.
TIWO REGISTERED LEICES.
01040 rams for sale. One is a 2 year old
anp the other a lamb. They are nine ones,
10050. MaDONA0D,
7.8 Lot 17,0on, 0, Grey.
COMFORTABLE HOUSE AND
40 acme of land in Bruesele South. to
rent, Poeseseion could be given about Oot.
15th. For further parbiouiare apply on the
premises, or 3f by letter to 13ruepele P. 0,
7-41 MISS MITCHELL,
DESIRABLE PROPERTY FOR
Sem°, — The undersigned offers his
desirable property in Graham's Survey for
gale, eontataing Bi acres, with a good brick
house and frame
Yy barn on it. For further
p 61tt ulaze a310IOZVEL the
IBrussela,
COMFORTABLE RESIDENCE
and 2 aures of land for sale on Walnut
street, Brussels. Brick house, good stable,
hard and soft water, small orchard, &o.
Property in good aha pe. Immediate posses-
sion can be given. For further partloulare
apply on the promisee. Will also loll two
good Jersey Cows, one a thorn' bred,
JOHN SWICIONZIE,
62-tf Proprietor, Brussels.
�'iROICE FARM FOR SALE,
being Lot 20, Con. 18, Goy township,
Huron Go., containing 100 acres. There to a
olearsvoe of 00 moil, the land beben-!n
01100018 condition. Upen the farm is a
brick hones, bank bare, low barn, pig house,
&o ,also good Orchard. POaeoee8On given
next Spring, with privilege , of :putting Fall
wheat In, Per further cartlenl are apply on
the premieee to WM, MeliAH13 , Proprietor,
or L`, B. Scott, Brussels, 01-41
T1ARM lii'O7t SALE, CONTAIN.
1' INa 100 acres, being 1•11 Lot 10, 0011, 5.
and 84 Lot 00, Con. 0 Morrie township, Go.
Huron. Tho lots w111 bo sold separately or
together to null purehaeor. Morels a frame
house, frame bare, orchard, &o. Property
18 of miles from Br•uenela and 1n a floe dont.
amity, For price, tome and further pm'.
(Armlet—sanely On 0110 promisee, Or adttreoe
Brussels 40.
7.41Mag, llt. Bll1LLINGTON,
12tot
FARM 12,DI'OR, SAL])tainDE-
ingg
100 80580, 80 of which aro eteared and bal.
anon 10 hardwood bush, Frame house, new'
batik barn, orchard,&o„ en promises with
venae of spring good
water. Place In wen
t
7onoed' is in c t
and tion and e
n wrote
;nil f
laud, f Inn neither
a t, r m b rearm ty Ur, wet.
ton, 1000 fu00 80 9 neer to (11 apply on Oprom i ass or !f b531u1� ab taeflaki 18)N% P.C.,
7.41 Proprietor,
Cream°
Has a choice stock of
Canned Goods of all var-
ieties, the very thing for
the hot weather.
Large range of
Fancy Cakes.
Agent for Stewart's
High Grade Chocolates.
Our Ice Cream, Crushed Fruits
and Summer Drinks are delic-
iously Cool and Refreshing.
TR
lied nose Tea
IT IS GOOD.
al a
erney
LEADER
IN
Ice Cream
Summer Drinks
Fruits
Confectionery
Give us a Call
TELEPHONE NO. 5.
1
.i.l Clear
Them Out
Not intending to keep a stock of
Toys and other Smallwares the balance
of the stock will be cleared out at
GREATLY
REDUCED
PRICES
Wagons, Rocking Horses,
Dolls' Carriages, Cradles,
Carts, &c., all will ga.
War H. I\ EI\ R
L adies' Fine
Shoes.
Handsome to the eye
Artistic in design.
First-rate workman-
ship,
Made to wear and
keep their shape.
Beautiful finish, easy
:ngy;Syp: t.
comfort, very durable.
When you discard
themou want another " just like - "
Y � ke the last ones¢
Then our prices are not the least pleasing part of
the buying,
Here are a few:---
—Ladies' Dongola Laced or Buttoned Boots, heavy or light soles,
at $1.00.
—Choice Laced or Buttoned Rid Boots at2
$ .00 and upwards.
IIARN)11SS DEPARTMENT— Achoice lot of Single Harness rub-
ber trimmed, our own make, at close rices Balance of our
Dusters reduced to cost. Fly p
ly Nets, Rubber Rugs, Trunks and
Satchels l at Lowest 8 1
w t Pr Ossa.
Oomfo ,
rtabie
Dwelling for pate 1 to
rapply
Cr 6.19.H I C S