HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1900-8-9, Page 4T,HE B11008,14bS
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C 3grasstio Ust,
'I'IIUIISD4Y, AVG. 9, 1900..
Phenomenal M the Growth
an the Triple of 138 Dominion During
the Past wear,
Ottawa, July 29.--A. peaceful oalm baa
.settled over Parliament Hill, and . after 0
months of weary talking the legislators
have %pattered to the four quarters of
the earthy and the longest fieseion stnoe
1886 ie a matter of history, The mfufs-
ters have hastenedto follow the rank
and We, and the majority have left the
capital for more or lese extended periods;
while, following them, the citizens gen.
orally, as far as they are able, are getting
out of town and the potty liae already
taken on ilia out -cif -sewn aepeot. Even
the live and vital question of the general
electione fails to. arouse any sustained
excitement.
The flgnree given by Icon, Mr. Patter -
eon inbie-speech the day before proro-
gation show an enormous inoreaee in
:stir trade, and are entitled to the atten•
tion of everyone 'interested in Canada's
trade development. The total exports of
Canada for tbe year ending June 30th,
last were $175,066,947, and of this
amount the produote of Canada exclusive
of bullion, amounted to 6152,818,917, an
inoreaee in Canadian produote of 645,-
440,186 over 1898, which year showed an
increase over 1878 of $40,638,618. The
1900 Game of Canadian products export.
ed were not given by him, and are as
follows : Tbe produote of the mine,
$14,106,704; fieheriee, 611,803,028-; for-
est, 630,050,018 ; animate, $55,897,800 ;
agrionitnre, $14,083,801 ; manufactures,
60,565,384: miscellaneous, 6109,265.
WHAT A MANGE 88 TWENTY YEARS.
thefigures were Mines
In 1878
g
aforest,
b rise 8 854 000
., 818 347 fisheries, $,
4 1 84 agri.
$19,611 b75 • animals, $1 ,0 9 7 g
culture018 008,754: manufactures, $4,.
227,755 ; miscellaneous, $401,775. A
oomparteon of the figures of 1796 and
1900 shows the greatest proportional
increase to be in the agricultural pro-
ducts—over 95 per Dent ; in animals and
their products, 53 par cent : in mann-
factures, 47 per cent ; and in no case has
there been a deorease. A comparison.
with the figures of 1878 shows there has
been a decrease between that year and
1896 in the exports of animals and their
products are now nearly four times as
great as in 1077.
Although the export of produote of the
fieheriee has been nearly doubled since
1878, the imporbanoe of that branch has
relatively deolined, owing to the greater
growth of mining and manufactures. In
1878 the exports of fishery products was
$6,854,000 ; manufactures, $4,127,755 •
minerals, $2,816,347. In 1896 the export
from the fieheriee was over $11,000,000 ;
mines over 68.000.000 ; manufaotnrea,
$9,385,000. In 1900 the export of fish.
cries, though increased to $11,000,000,
wan lees than maaofaotoree, $13,692,000,
and minerals 814,000,000. Tbe export of
fieheriee shims 1878 has been nearly
doubled, mannfacturee more than trebled
and minerele multiplied by flue.
THE POULTRY INDUSTRY.
The department of agriculture is de-
veloping its policy of encouraging the in.
dusty of thicken fattening for the
British market. Experimental citations
are to be establiehed in different parts of
the Dominion for the purpose of illus.
trating the beet methods of parrying on
this enterprise, and an experienced
:thicken fancier, Mr. Hare, of Whitby,
has been chosen to superintend the work.
The department has for a year or two
been making experiments in fattening
chickens by apeoial food, and shipping
them to the British market, where they
were sold at synth e, large profit that it is
intended to introduce the methods gen.
erally among farmers, and Mr. Hare hi
being employed for this purpose. It is
hoped that in time chicken fattening in-
atitutione will beoome as great a means
of revenue to farmers as oheeee factories
now are, so that all the farmers need to
do is to grow ohiokene. He need not
fatten them. He can sell them to the
fattening institutions and the ill do
the rest.There is 0 hope, too that in
time the same methods will be intro.
dnoed as to all barnyard Towle, as there
ie a large demand in Great Britain for
such food, and many farmers there have
been able to reap fortunes catering to it.
JESSIE MAYOR COTTAGE—MUSKOKA HOME FOR CONSUMPTIVES.
THE BRITISH ADVANOE.
There's an army =robing, eighty thous'
and strong,
To do battle for the right against the
wrong ;
Every man is true and brave,
None will find a coward's grave—
We will blend oar shouts of jubilance ere
long,
Now the wary foe le cmioldy falling book,
And 18 otainipg with his blood the dreary
track ;
When be hears our booming guns,
With hie fleetest speed he rune,
Till among the towering kopjes grim and
blaok.
Then be sputters out kis bullets from the
rooks,
To the British soldiers Bending deadly
Olathe,
While they l Ya l niokl. move around
Ou the rough and broken e ground,
0verooniiog wbateoe'er their progress
blocks.
Then again with speed the foeman North-
ward hies,
With the look of grimmest terror in his
eyes ;
For the troops of gallant Frenoh
Have gone bounding o'er their trench,
And like chaff before the wind the foeman
flies.
Thus our army marohee in resistless
might,
And will march until the fleeing stand to
fight.
When they reach the flowing Vaal,
Then perhaps the burghers shall,
If they do, 'twill give our soldiere great
delight.
Still a remnant to Pretoria may fly,
And entrench themaelvee behind their
ramparts 8158,
When engirt with Robert's might,
They will falter in the fight—
They'll surrender to the British bye•and•
bye.
Then our troops will rend the Trane
'veal tyrant rag,
And will rear the peace -ensuring British
flag.
When the hateful war is o'er,
'Twill be fought again no more,
It will end fo,ever blueteriog and brag.
Soon will equal rights be given to friend
and foe,
'Tie for this that Britain strikes the
deadly blow ;
'Tie for this she sheds her blood,
On the veldt and in the flood—
'Tie her mission to exalt those lying low.
May the God of battles hasten on the end,
And His "peace on earth" to all the
peoples send;
And in Africa may night
Evermore give plane to right.
May the ranee ever live ae friend with
friend.
Rev. ANDREW McRae,
Luoknow, Oot.
TEM SPOILS SYSTEM.
Dealing with the note of the new Con-
servative government in Manitoba. Mr.
Greenway stated in a recent speech :
"These gentlemen have increased the
salaries of their particular friends about
the legislative boildingd, and they have
introduced something never introduced
in any province or 0o0ntry under British
inetibntione—bbe dismissing of good and
faithful man'and
puttingin their own
friends ,tbeAmerion eytem—"To the
viotore belong the spoils." I think this
improper, and on every platform T shall
denounce it. The premier said be intro•
duped it because the Dominion govern-
ment did so and he adds : "Yon dismiss
men also." We did ; bat it was because
their services were not required. The
private secretary of the late John Nor -
quay was my secretary for twelve years.
I could bring other evidence to show that
we do not believe in that kind of dootrine.
Bub our old friend, John W. Sifton, than
whom there is not a more honest,
straightforward man in Canada, a faith.
ful public servant who discharged hie
duties well, because hie eon was a min.
Teter of the interior, was dismissed, at 64
pare of age, without a day's notice, and
a man without experience pct in his
plaoe with $200 more salary. Ocie
official's salary wa
a increased from $ 10 00
to $1;000, and another's from $1,000 to
$2,850. 130 for ordinary expenditure
they have a larger estimate than we had
in ono last year. You will have more of
it before you are done ; you are not
through with it"
Tbe Western Mail newspaper, publish•
ed in Cardiff, 'referred editorially the
other day to the oharge preferred against
Hon. Clifford Sifton by some of big
political opponents, and congratulated
him on the complete and triumphant
vindication he has received. The Cardiff
journal's %Mole aonoludee : "The friends
-and bhoyare many-whiohMr, Sifton'e
manly personality and statesmanlike
utteranoee made for him while in Cardiff
will rejoi0e in the complete dissipation
of the unwer:ay obargee made against
him,'
OUR OTTAWA LETTER.
above, the shackles have been to a great
extent removed from the trade of the
eountry, and thus the Dominion hes
been enabled to take the greatest possible
advantage of the era of prosperity which
we are now eojoyi05.
"VIE STAR" as PDRIORDED.
It all depends upon the point of view.
The Montrerl Star anuounoee that "An
enormous coneignment of biuder twine is
being shipped from the Kingston P eui
tertiary to be sold to the farmers st the
lowest price just before the elections."
The "enormone eoneig: mem" 18 One eon..
tory ear•load which is beiog sept through
to Manitoba se an experiment. Tbe
reason of the substantial and satisfactory
reduction in price was fully explained in
this oolomn last week, and the plan
adopted by the Government in advertis-
ing the goods and bringing the improved
condition of the market promptly and
effaoEivelY before the consumer umer ie simply
PY
the nmethods that would be
adopted to.datedme
by any enterprising badness
house. In the old days of stagnation and
precarious existence in the Northwest
with which the Toriee were familiar dur-
ing mach of their term .of office, a oar -
load of binder twine might brve been an
"enormous consignment," hat in tbeee
days of rapid development a car -load is
but a drop in the bucket ; there will bard•
ly be enough for everybody to get a
sample. The Montreal Star abould re-
member that this is the growing time.
THE TRUTH I8 OUT.
The Tory papers have been amusing
themselves and filling in time with
searching for predictions of dire diaoeter
hidden away in the personnel of the
Cabinet and so forth. They may be in.
terested in learning the following party
secret which was whispered round in the
Tory mune room shortly before proroga.
Moo :—
Ottawa, Jul 28It is a great mistake
to suppose that Governmenthave noth•
Mg to do with controlling the seasons
and the weather generally. Many of tie
can remember how the good oropa whioh
reonrred in the early days of the late
Tory regime were the direct ontoome of
the so called "National Polioy,"—the
Toriee said so themselves and of ooaree
it must have been eo. Now we have it
again at the present time in Manitoba,
for no sooner did Hngh John Macdonald
get the royal aseeot to hie prohibition bill
than the long oontinued drought name to
an end, the heavens were opened and
there was water in abundance to refresh
the thirsty land. By the same token a
Prohibition measure would not be popular
just now in this part of Ontario, there
has been too much water already in this
enation.
Jokingaside however,the olio er.
ened by Governmenthas vastly ore
to do with the material oondition of the
country than Its opponents will generally
y
admit, and while the politicians may not
have yet discovered how to make the
shine or to brio the rain
enc g when It
will do the moat good, it ie quite poaeible
for them to accomplish the aohievement
which the philosopher declares is the
standard of 8000000 in this life, namely,
that of making two blades of grass grow
where only one grew before,
TARE Son EXAMPLE,
the workibg of the tariff,—the reduced
tariff as revised and operated by the
Laurier Government,—how has it aided
tl
in securing 8„ the biggest results in this
resent era of 009990it 7 Notable in
P prosperity y
the veryraotiaal and tangible wayof
P 8
leaving some $18,000,000 of baase in the
pockets of the people, which would have
been taken for.publio revennee had the
old tariff remained in forge, In 1897 the
saving was $1,363,000 ; in 1898, $1,800,
000 ; 1899, $3,700,000, and Last year over
The
$6,000,000, T e aatnal difference be.
'ween taxation for the period of 1878 to
1896 and from 1896 to 1900 is near]
twelve per cent., and if the former period
ie compared with the year 1900the
nit•
ferenoe
ie 17} per omit. By a peooeee ao
judieioualy adjaated that it hae initiated
injury upon no one, and so gradual that
the Tories declared it hae not oowarred at
all, the old It P. has been stripped of its
most objectionable and hurtful features,
and in addition to the aubetantial saving
of $18,000,000 in cold oath as referred to
Olan 0 y.
Hogg A rt.
Ben N etc.
01 A rke,
Bor D en.
D A vin.
Roo H e.
Wall A oe.
0 5 ler,
Mo N eiil.
No 0 re.
Gil M our.
Wile 0 n.
Oo 11 by.
B E 11.
Maul E an.
Inc A n.
La 11 iviere.
Mon T ague.
Coo H rane.
Gil L Sea.
Ta Y for.
T U pper,
Fo 5 ter.
Topp E r.
Kloep F er.
M 0 nk.
0a R on.
Reber T eon.
Hug H es.
Berg E ron.
Mar T in.
Poop 0 re,
Sp R pule.
MoIoern° Y.
Po P e.
Roe A mond.
Ca R gill.
Bea T tie.
Kendr Y.
waiting for news of the Chinese doings,
and deoels tde'the th fate of the e 000etl4t king.
dom far some limo 80 00180, vaned other
kinds of information are being fueniehed
eoncierning the Flowery Land, and it 10
t0 be hoped that the laud wilt bocomo
m018 aooeeeibl0 and civi'izad without les,,
ing any of its wonderful charms,
NEW BOOKS ATLIBR,i Y,
The following now books have Been
placed on the Shelves of the Public Lib.
rary, Brussels, and new catalogue issued
and ready for the members :—
Standard Opera Glees
Life of Nelson Mahan
Alfred Tlie Great..,. .,...Bowker
The Silver Wedding Journey, .I3owolle
A Confident To -morrow. Matthews.
De 'WVillougbby's Claim Burnett
The 1Parridgdons ..,...1 owlpr
:The Action and the Word,...MattlieWO.
The Love of Pareon Lord Wilkins
Man'e Women . • •..Norrie
Brown V. C. .. —Mrs. Alexander'
The Danvers Jewels • ... Oholmondeley
The Jeseamy Bride Moore.
The Gad Fly Voynioh
Red Pottage Cholmondeley
A Splendid Sin Grant Allan
The Good Mrs, Hypoorite ....,....Rita
A Man'e Undoing Cameron
Civil War, 1861-5 Sohouler
Hietorio Side Lights Arnold
Mr. Thomas Atkins ., Anson•
Camp Fires of Napoleon.. H.O. Watson
Conquest of the Seven Hills..
0 II. V. Laing
Cromwell's Own Patterson
Transvaal from Within Fitzpatrick
The United Kingdom, Vol. I. , O. Smith
The United Kingdom, Vol. II G. Smith
HiefioaiTales .from Shakespeare, Couch
The English in Africa. David Mille
Towards Pretoria Julian,Ralph
With Fife and Drum Orley
Aztec Treasure House Jauvier
Men of Iron Pyle
Robespierre Sardon•Glademar
From Capetown to Ladysmith, . Stevens
The Marshes of Minna Roberta
De
Adam Origeon La Paeteuro
A Man of Hie Age Drummond
The Rebel Watson
A Manifest Destiny Moeruder
The Oonepiratore Chambers
That Fortune Warner
Janice Meredith Ford
Via Cruois Crawford
Fables in Slang Ade
Prisoners of Hope Johnston
The Black Wolf's Breed Dickson
No. 5, John's Street Whiteing
Uncle Remus Harris
Old France and New MOLennan
Bob, Son of Battle Olivant
The Sky Pilot Connor
The Anglo-Saxon Superiority..
Richard Carvel Shnrohill
David Harm Weetoott
The Taming of the Jungle ' Doyle
The Shabow of Quong Lung Doyle
Unleavened Bread Grant
Adventures of Francois Mitchell
The Legionaries Clark
Resurrection Tolstoi
The Knight of the King's Guard, Martin
Baldoon Hooker
The Voice of the People Glasgow
God'e Education of Man Hyde
Shameless Wayne ... ........Sutoliffe
Gillian, The Dreamer Munroe
Wino on the Lees Steurt
Heronford Keightley
Grand Mademoiselle Former
Babee in the Bush Balderwood
Redemption of David Corson Gose
Philip Winwood, Stevens
A Kent Squire Hayes
The•Yellow Danger Shiel
Bejli, The Dancer Patton
In Old New York.... Barrett
The Black Terror Leye
Deftoient Saints Saunders
Town Travellers Giseing
Bladye of the Stewponey Gould
MoTeague .....................Norrie
Old Chester Tales Deland
St. Ives Stephenson
Hagar of the Pawn Shop Hume
On the Brink of the Chasm Meade
The Real Lady Hilda Oroker
Oakleigh Deland
The Story of Babette Stuart
A Master of Craft Jacobs
Feo Pemberton
Lady Barbarity Snaith
The Phantom Future........Merriman
Siren City Swift
The Garden of Eden Howard
Sophia Weyman
The Biography of. Grizzly•
n•Thom eon
Seto p
Suspense Merriman
Joan of the Sword Hand Crockett
The Realist Flowerdew
The Ambaesaior Hobbes
Treasury of Canadian Verse ....Rand
The Revolution in Tanner's Lane..
Rutherford
Mark Rutherford
Texts Explained Farrar
The New Evangelism Drummond
Wild Animals I have Known, Thompson
Flame, Electricity and the Camera, Iles
.AN UNKNOWN LAND.
China, the oountry about which we
are now likely to hear so tenth, ie to
most people praotioally an 'unknown
country. We have beard something from
missionaries and travelers, read some-
thing in books and magazines, and we
see the silent Chinaman with the age of
centuries on his faoe walking through our
streets and yet we feel that we know
little of that great populous land. After
this it is likely that we shall know more
of Obina, and China will know more of
the great world from which she has eo
carefully shut herself off. Yet China
has been known to the West for a long
time. Vaeoa da Gama fonod the way
round the Cape to India in 1497, and we
are told that "Sixteen years latex the
Portuguese had aoolimated the ring.
necked pheasant in the island of St.
Helena," where probably Mr. Conji will
have the pleasure of eating descendants
of fbe birds 'ken "planted,"
for they e
n
thrive greatly. When the Elizabethan
explorer, Cavendish,
visited
the inland in
1684, he found there riag•ncoked
chews.
ante in great abundance. "Recently the
same bird hae almost oneted our common
pheasant, America hae aloe imported it,
a form of Chinese Immigration which is
highly popular." Thus it will be seen
that many thin
e oome from
Ch
ina b
e
•
sides tea,eilke and wa b rmen. "For
number
and variety t a erha
p p is y n o water•
fowl equal those of China. The air is
simply bleak with them over the rivers
and marehe5 near the comet at flight
time. Ornament, even in these orna-
mental birds, ie carried to the extreme
in some of these Chinese varieties. The
mandarin teal is the gayest ae well aa the
most fanoifallyplumedot all dusk°, The
gold fleh brought from China need to be
galled China fish, While the world ie
Nature's Oa.. • , 13lanoban
Nerve of Foley .....
Spearman
Men with the Baric on 1lomington
Jhnmyjohu Boss .. Wietor
Ae Seen by Mo , ,,, Lilian Dell
Maoltivao Taloa gatherwood
The Storiee of the Bailioed J. If, Hill
Tramping with Tranape ..Flynt
Treasure Ship •,,,,,,,, ,,Butterworth
Sailing Alone Around the World, Sioouin
The Gun Renner, , , .. , . , Milford
Mo01fntook
Geillie
Bowman
Russell
Biart
A.dventureein Canada
Bear Hunters
Captain Jackman
An Involuntary Voyage
Canadian Guide Beck .,,...Roberts
The Lost 13eir. Honty
The Bed 11at'e Daughter Boothby
Three Men on Wheels , . Jerome
Everybody ghopld take advantage of
the splendid collection of books in the
Public Library as the fee for a card Sud
catalogue is a mere bagatelle.
Breve Dion 8.'all
Viotiule to stomach, liver and kidney
troubles and feel the results in loss of
appetite, baoliaohe, nervousness, head.
ache and tired, run-down feeling, "but
E'eolrio Bitters are just the thing for a
man" writra J. W. Gardner, of Idaville,
Ind., "when he is all run-down, and don't
care whether be livee'or dies. It did
more to give me new strength and good
appetite than anything I oonld take. I
can now eat anything and have a now
lease on'life," Only 80o at G. A. Dead-
man's drug store.
The Earl of Kinnoull hue invited
invalided Canadian soldiers from South
Africa to stay at his castle in Perthshire.
The striking flshermen on the Fraser.
have beenoverawed by the militia, and
the Japaneee were allowed to proceed
undisturbed.
• 1000 LIVE
Spr!ilg CltiCieus
Highest Market Price per pound
paid in cash. Must weigh not
less than Si lbs. per pair.
NO Live Hens Wanted Alm
For further particulars as to
prioe and dates of delivery
apply to
W. H. KERR,
Toni POST, Brussels.
Spectacles
—OF ALIT BINDS—
Fitted to Correct all
Failures of' Eyesight,
and your Eyes tested FREE by
latest Optical methods at
Division Court Office,
BRUSSELS.
MONEY
TO. LOAN
McLEOD'S
System om ca tov'atQ
J �
—•800 9740841•
TESTED REMEDIES
SPECIFIC AND ANTIDOTE
For Impure, Weak and Impoverished
Blood, Dyspepsia, Sleeolesenese, Palpita•
lion of the Heart, Liver Oomplaiut, Neur-
915i0, Loas of Memory, Brouohitia, Don.
emotion, Gall Stones, Jaundice, ]Sidney.
and Urinary Dleeaaoe, 58, Vitue' Dance,
Female Irregularities and General De.
bility,
LABORATORY, CODERIC 1, ONT.
J. M. MaLHOU,
Prop. and Mannfucterer,
8ol,I by •lab. Fox. 50018anlat, Jlrueseia
Auo, 9, 1909.
SUINOLES
C
British Colombia,
o
Tied Caw
Shinglew
AN
North Shorn
Pine itnd Cedar
FOB 8A.T417 Al TH1'l
Brussels Planing Els
Alan Deena and Saeb of all Pat
terns on hand or made to order
at Short Natio,
Eetimatee Furnished for all
kinds of Buildings. Workman-
ship and Material Guaranteed..
P1 AMENT,
Fair, London.
September 6th to 15th, 1900.
Entries 01080 September 811x(
The moat complete exhibits from Farm, Forest and Factory, New and startling
epeoial features. Ohariot rapes by imported Grey Hounde, Balloon Ascensions,
Double Parachute Drop by man and lady, celebrated Gymnasts, Aerial Artiste and
Aarobate, Fireworks earth everting. "The armoured train's atteek on the Boar
strongholds," and many beautiful set devioes.
Special trains over all lines each evening after the f1reworke..
Send for Prize Liete and Programmee.
LT..00L. WM. M. GARTSHORB, 3. A. NELLES.
P1;ES1DENT. SE00ETAIIY.
At
Per Cent.
Costs of Loan
Very Reasonable.
Liberal Terms of
Re -payment.
G. F. BLAIR,
SOLICITOIR, &a.
Office over Standard Bank,
Brussels.
AN IMPORTANT CHANCE.
Ad Not•
Will be made this week in the prioee of all Summer goo e,
withstanding the foot that the sale of Ladies' Bloneea has been
larger this season than aver before, still we have a number left.
o We do not wieb to carry one over and are offering the balance of our
Shirt Waists at Greatly Reduced Prices
Extra quality faooy stripes and oheoke, worth $0 60 for $0 38
New patterns in stripes and dote 75 58
Fanoy etripee with or without white yokes1.00 80
Only three fancy muffling 3. 85 1 00
White Pique, insertion trimming .. 1 86 1
09Wkite Figured Muslims,very pretty 1 76 1 3
All sizes inbiaok SateeShirt Weide, veryfine quality, for 91,00.
Giinghame, Piques, Muslim and Prints at oorreeponding low prioee,
Ro oi1a You S[ell Mes!ok?
THD POST BOOI?STUBE
HARMONICAS that airy..
has a nioe assortment of . body 'al.
most oonld make mneio on. Among the different makes may be found the
old reliable ROHNER; THE MARVELLOUS, with steel bronze reedit ;
DIVA, ho oelltloid, with silver reeds ; and last but not least DAVID'S
HARP. They run from 6o. to 500,
PARASOLS 1
Bargains in Parasols. Extra good value. Guaranteed faet dye. Never
equalled, worth 7bo for OOo' Ladies'Stand Fast Umbrella, Rood size worth h 9
Oo for
7Oo • Ladies' Si1k finish Parasol, splendid value worth $100 for 80o, Only a few of
the better
ones left -$1.25 for $1,00 ; 91.60 fol 11,25; $2,00 for $1.75; 82.25 for 91.75.
t Augnet Fashion Sheets and Patterns to band.
Everything Cheap. No Fancy Prices.
A. Strachan.
A. �r� Yxan.
The Old Fashioned Jew's Harp
Is also in stook and may be handled by a Gentile ae well as a.Jew. In
the long ago many ad hour was pleasantly spent with the Jew's Harp.
Have You a Little Girl ?
We can supply her with Dolls, Diehee, Wash Tube, Smoothing Iroise,
Workbox or a Broom.
•
For that Stirring Boy
Yon ,often pall a botheration—we have Balsa, Bate, I'lxpresu Wagons,
Carte, Rocking Horses, Jack Knives, Drums, Toy Pistols, fie
3 TIN CUPS FOR 5 CENTS.
Novelty in Savings Banks to help Youngsters take care of Nickles.
lBtri {.7 e IN both Pads and Note Paper, Envelopes, Pens, Ink and
Ise YW Y1O11 �� Mucilage. Foolscap Paper if you write long lettere.
THE POST SOOKSTO"E.
ri SOME FEATURES.
Saul Hunter's Cartoons, Full_lllarket Reports, e/
Special Cables, The Khan. j,
Ir Madge Merton's Page for Women F.'
I+ if
Toronto
4ally Star;�,g
iOp
Publishes the best of everything. It -leads
p% in the excellence of its special departments,
%4 while its news columns are brlEht and `°
Ontario Despatches, 'Sporting News,
readable. 74
/it
HERE IS A BARGAIN FOR THE BALANCE Y/
OF THE YEAR. 74
`, The Toronto Da115 Star will be Mailed to any Address yyyyy,
q
To January ist, 01for i/
o,
ea�;
nts
•
p9�4e .
The regular subscription price of DIE STAR is $3.00 a year, S.
and $2.00 where the paper is not received until the day after pub- /(
lication. The present offer is made with a view of placing THE
STAR in the homes of thousands who will be interested in read- w
ing the best afternoon paper in Ontario. 8
t. PICTURE OFY4THE QUEEN GIVEN FREE
CA rh
To every
subscriber5
will be mailed a
beautiful plate of Her Majesty Queen 'Victoria it,
and the Prince of Wales.
This picture which usually sells for 75 cents, ie the hnndsoieast picture or the royal mother and son ever published lit Canada. Ilia conventional,ortraitsofthe
Queen represent Nor as much y00000r than the cycle or years I 11
r yea has I)o her, and
f thej`�
t la as rt nevi SOVu �
r that
Diu h
6 her people lova f
g o e 10, and Will P p f 1 itlnioml
mother oilier people she18111
tar�her. As ever b r
no
to mem r� •-
b td Foul e
e 1 0f ten Nal
t.Y t Womanhood'.
motherhood. Fitting its-th
lr and
a therefore. faro. t t 1
that she should be painted n
d
fon win
t hereon
1
the 1'uturo if In , s;
g
and so In this historical m
Xing, s Seal 1 Ea •
o to ti
, la Prince n 11nostands
behind
the chair oL'
Nle royal ouldb, The am picture to 1e x a lnekoa, 1n 15 guides or colors, and suitably
framed, would be an ornament On any '
( Y wnti.
AIS
It is a special painting, made exclusively for The Toronto Star, v
and is a worko ��
i Art.
.O!'s: �C aw°vr.:°a ey+,®:°�wa �v:"�wgo:'aOOa:°a;"a"" �:'\:r a:A
,a��e'a�,.kixxmasa, ,�.§a�,a,aae et:� xxxl::430.
The Post end Daily Star to Jan, lot for 7Go, in Advance,