GREAT ASSORTMENT Oil' Library & Gift Books JUST OPENED, 'Guat'ant-<W<l. to give satisfaction. My ex,..,;perience in this department enables me to give this guarantee. Liberal Discount to Schools. ,3 Fn()'ro ALllUMS, in the newest designs, at very low rate. You will be surprised at. what you can get a good Album for. BlBLES--Family, Pew and Pocket. A lady mid the other day_, Mr. T .. J:OU "1.111.ve, by far , th e bee.t selection of writing pEper in town. Euying for cash, I always bny the best, get tho be3t raks, 1md my cuatomera get the benefit. My five q uires of paper for 25c. is a great bargain. ROOM PAPER. Always a specialty with roe. New patterns jus·t received. Painted Window Blinds a t lowesl rates. Bea.utiful goods for Wedding Presents, etc. , new. - -- -- - - ---- - - - - - IBowMA.NVILLE, Nov'n 2, 1887. NO'f A FAIR "DEAL." UNDER tllia heading the Peterborough Eix:aminer has been adminstrating a just trouncing to the business men of that town for giving orders for printing to .-epresenta.ti ves of Toronto firms. No town in Canada has two better equipped printing officws than Peterboro, and it is a burning disgrace to its merchants and {lrofessional men H they a.re guilty of the charge. T hese city solicitors come to Bowmanville occasionally but no business man of any i mportance encourages them as. far as we k n o\v. The l-0cal pr inter~ pay their rent and taxes and as citizi,ns <lo their full share in ke·~pin g u p tho town. The local news papers do everything in tl10ir power to. bring outside\·s t o t-;wn in the interests of busir1ess men, a11 d it is only reasonable that 1he 1acf1I prin terH shrould be allowed to do t h e work in their line wh.i ch the persons they do so much to benefit may have to be d one. The man who makes his m mJCy in town is in ho1Jor bound tc> epeud it in tow11, esp()cially when ho can b e as well :rnd cheaply served M by outeide establish mnnte, which pay no taxes here an d ure twdfli· no. expense here. The greatest si.uners in t he respect complained of, s~ya the Eimminer, are some profeasionnl men aud others of a somewhat similar b usiness, d t>rnaniling considerable printing, stationary, etc., and they are the. most exact mg in regard to the press. ]'air phty is a j ewel, but unfortunately i1 grel< t many gentlenwn m Peterb?ro are not in that k iLd of jewelry busmessespecia:Jy as regards local printing establiahroeuta. H ow would these gentlemen lilrn it--a lawyer fi.r instance, if all business mEn in town should employ Toronto le~al tahn t inst Eiad of local talent ?-a rnonev lender for instance if all his clients ahuultl borrow money from outside lenders-?-a doc! or for instauce if sick persons employed 'l 'or"nto physicians 1 and so on through all the lisG, Yet they no not he.si·ate to give 01·ders for printing to a. Toronto firm - to bny a box of pens from a peddlei-, pl<lyiug d oubl~ prices for w_hat t hey might get as good m a local stationery eh op. Lucal est· bliehroents do not complain of competition but they do object io men malling all their money in tow11, patr onizing printing poachers w~en th<l.y can get as ~ood work at as low prices at home , and give mployment to men who hear th..,ir share in supporting the institutions of the town, and promoting ita prosperit y t o the Lenefit of every individ ual citizen . "Patronize home industries," is n. moUo which some citizens forget when dist:ributing patronage, but vez:y co1 Heniently recollect wli.en wanting favors. Ouit Unfario readers will lJe im1ch mterefOted in rierusing Mr. Pound's lti~ter on. Manitoba's Past Record as an indication of ~hat the future may be expected to be. 'l'he writer gives a plain, practical review of t te year 3 of his sojourn in t,hat country, no t highly colored as many writers are t oo apt to do, but the unvarnished. jacls. We have be~n giving considerable space to Manitoba matters in these columns of late, because we have faith in that country's futu1·e, and we prefer seeing our people ~o there rather than t o the United States. .. WR w.o uld suggest to our Directors of Fairs ih at they t ry the pla.n of exhibiting carriage imd saddle horses that was introduced this season in Webeter County Fair in Iowa. The distance waii a mile and a h alf, t he horses to w1tlk the first half-mile, trot the second half, and finish up with a half-mile run, thus testing the animals on all gait{!. It is etated that this novel race created a great deal of excitement and was the lea.din~ attraction on tll() P air ground, and we suggest that so111e such trial as this might be better for county foirs g enerally. · One of the finest mnsioal magazines that comes to us is the "Galaxy of Music" containing each month about ten pieces of vocal music and the same number of instrumental. The price is only $1,00 a year F.'rrifet , ia the publisher, 408 Wa;.~hingt-0n-st., Boston, Mass. Sample copy one dime. above. Nor does it ·storm through the winter montl:ia here 1\8 in Ont11!'io. When cold weather sets in, in t he fall it gener"llv is clear sky som etimes for Morwenstow in Cornwall. months after. No snow scarcely and if EXACTING any comes it is very light 8torm, Early SERVICE Lea:ving our temporary home at Bradin the fall we sometimes h~ve what we worthy on Friday, Aug. 12th, the writer, call a regular Ontario snow storm, but [ every y ...ar that I have been here thii r, in company with his youngest brother, goes off before winter sets in. F or a eet out for a tramp across the country to month at 1.1 time I have not seen any v~it an uncle, aunt and other relathes snow foll a11d whe ll' it d oes it is very ligh t living in the noted pari6h of Morwenstow as a general 1hiug. \Ve lrnve exce utions a.a I have t old you. Sleighing is very in the north-west oorner <if Cornwall. poor until March, as a genera.I t.hing, Being unfamiliar with the ro11.d, we r eceivwhen enuugh snow falls for sleighiug. ed-from ot1r uncle, Richard Sanguins, at The weather is so cnld that it is more Brndworthy these directions : Go to like sand than snow, freeziu14 fast to any at.eel, instead of sleighs slippiug over it Bradworthy Mill, turn to the r ight and as iu Ontario. 'rhe r ea,sun WtJ are more follow the road past West Down to t he comfort able is we are never wet. You next crossing, then turn again to the could walk. from morning until nigh t , I right and go to Trentry Cross, then t urn might safely say, from the 20th of Dec. THE J.EWEI,, l . . ER, to the middle of Febrnary in your stocking to the left and proceed down 'to the water feet without shoes and n ot h ··V e we t, feet, Has been appointed sole agent for \ (a large stream running across t be highhavin~ enouo;h wcks t o k, ep y ollr feet way with i10 bridge over it. bnt 11 f<>ot the celebrated H.oCKJ;'ORDWATCHES, warm of course walk on the left side on the hedge), turn The summer of 1883 was very wet, they are the best American Watch to the right and go up the hill to Youlaon cousequently the crops were late. .And at the time we 11hould have had warm manufactured and are guaranteed and at the head of the hill turn to the weather to l'ipen ·he grain it st ill kept on from the factory as be!:ngfiri-t-class, - AND left and go on till you reach the high wet, and the grain still ~·e w all through coach road from Bude, Stratton, etc., to th(l mouth of August, when we had a Bideford, which you will know by the v1>ry heavy fro. st on 6th of Sept., which telegraph line, turn down to the left to ripened everything a t once. and fo r the the next cross, then turn again to foe first time in our Ii ves we lrnew what a right. and go on straight to Shop, whence frozen crop meant. 'l'lrn nex t winter was Silver ,in the town ofBowma.nville. continuing on the main road you will most beautiful, followed by a splendid reach Woodford. harvest, but on account of the fros t the In J ewellry, we have an endless I Following these directions we had n o the yPar h- foi·e some f1 umers cut their variety- Clocks of all kinds very trouble in finding the way, thou, g h it graio before it was ripe and lo~t it. Others seemed to u1:1 that could we have gone as cheap. stacked poorly, and it turned out to be the crow flies the distance would have an unusually wet fall and a great quan- In Silverware we have the e-:been much less. The day was comfortably tity of grain spoile.d in the stack. The warm and we walked about four miles an next win ter was also beautiful not much clnsive right t o sell for the largest hour \\ith ease, though in Canada at the snow the whole winter as the ono pre- firm in the U.S. The quality and same time thn thermometer was pla.ying vious, coulct drive at any time across the among the nineties. The hedges on prar10 at any place. The summer of '85 prices are the best and lowest in either side were literally covered with was a lso wet and consequtlntly a frozen this part of t.he country, We ask black berries, the same as we call thimble crop. Thoao thr.oe sea sons wer e very seberries, and they were just ripening so vere on many farmers, who at time of the you to call and examine our goods that every few rods we would step aside buom had purct1ased i mp'Jemen t.a and before buying. to pick " a beail'y," the sight <Jf which machinery, mortgaged t heir farms and fairlv made our teeth water. 'I'hero rnu!lt invested their mon ey to a d1s,.d van tdge, Specs and Eye Glasses, Cases, &c., hav~ been hundr~ds of tons of black so that the failure of their cro p caused we carry t he leading stock, and b"rries in Devon and C'ornwall this year, them to be unitble t o pay their d ebts a ud for go which way one would the hedt'es Oh for the poor man's church again, guarantee every pair for 6 months, the sherriffo h ad a pi~ nic. were more or less thickly covered with With one roof over all, The winter of 1885-6 was much like the if well used. l l they break we berry bushes or brambles. On the way "Where the true hearts of Cornishwen two previous onet1, a louger spell of cold will repair t hem free of charge. we stopped to chat with a very intelligent Migh t be111; beside the wall ! through January and Febr uary than t be laborer at a form called Dea ., e. He was Th<l ultars where in holier days, Call and get fitted properly. two yeari; before, bnt no quantity of snow auxious to hear about Canada and we Our fathers were forgiven, and no blizzards. The. summer of 1886 gave him some particnlars that made him Who went with meek and faithful ways, was rernarka hly d ry, having no ram all OUR REPAIRING D:EPA.RTMENT.--We wish Im were 3000 miles further towards Through the old aisles to h eaven l summer. Althoug h so d ry, some farmers can only go over the same old sayt · e se"tting sun. He told us that h is threshed as high as 30 bueh (> f N o. 1 haed wages were lls. a week and he boarded ing, that we repair Watches, Clocks wheat per acre. Tber'i was on the lighter himself. How would our Canadian farm MANITOBA'S RECORD. and J ewellry in t he most skilful l1 md an a lmost failnre of crop, but all hands like to support a wife and Jive heavy land was a g< ·od crop. Lakes and manner. We arn boked upon as children on that wage 1 · · Hearin!! that an old lady lived at Shop EDITOR . OF S·rATESMAN.-SiR- Having po.:ids and rivers th11t had n ever before who bad two B\lns living near Bowman ville seen a letter written by one who has been been seen dry by the earliest settlers the only r eliable Watchmaker in we called at her house and rejoiced her h ere but ll. few m onths in thtJ country, were dry that summel'. Jn th e fall a this part ·of the country. Mere heart by telling h01· of the progress h er aud who claims th:i t the pe nple of t his very destructive fire raged over the p rairie, sous were making in Canada. -ve soon c,)unt ry an 1 themselyes unsel,tled etc. some suffered very heav:Jy b ut the many talking can't do the work, but tools, reached onr destination where wo found a Now, Sir, I have lived in this country for very litde or nothint! oy pro~·cting them- ability and experience combined tempring mAal provided for us and of the last seven years, and find a few as the selves in t ime. The winter of 1886-7 can, of which we have plenty. which we partooll with a ravcnoull a ppe- writ er of th~t correspondence says, un was very fine throughout, n o heavy snow Cold tite, the walk and sea breezes having settl.,d, but the most. «f the settlements &torm11 nor much snow all win ter. edged it up to a high degree. The next are composed of per·manent settlers, whr> weather as usual, but none so disagr ee· day was llpent in s~rolling o¥er Morwen- would not go back to Ontario unless to able as a north-east min in winter, 44. The Jeweller. stow ancl scemg the chief attracti ons. better their condition financially or otherT be summer of 1887 alt hough at fir st lt'rom the "Vicar of Morwenstow" we wise. Some fe w the ciimate d oes not· promising not at all good, on account of obtained much interesti ng mformation of agree with, others who re mo\'ed from' scarcely any snow thro1 1gh win t er to this p ,riah. No railway has a.~ yet come to Ontario for their health find it a much mois ten the gr ound, and no rain thro n~ h Morwinstow, ~nd none will propably ever better climate thr1n On1ario. I now live May. Some heavy winds b ow the light approach it nearer than Bude. 'file coa st in the pretty lit.tie village of Morden, 82 soil and grain sown clear off tho fields, so is high aud rocky-ironbound. Strangely miles S . W. of Winnipeg, at the foot of that in some cases farmers were ~ompelled contorted Rchists and sandstones stro·ch the P.-mbina Mout1tail}, which l may des· to sow their seed the eecond time and in I am now s howing a complet e Stock away northward in an almost unbroken criba at some future time. I have tra· a few casee even the third lime. They of New line of rocky wall to tn.e point of Hartland; veiled over consideraole of southern Man· have an abundant yield. In a few se lect and to the south-west a bulwat·k of cliff,; 1toba, and was h ere before the boom .,f ed acres the yield has been to t.he enorof very similar diaracter .extends to and 1882, which was the most fatal thing that mous amount of 53 bushels to the acr e. beyond Tintagel. The coast scenery is happened as a drawback t o the pro~pects Many with whom l am personally ac-A N Dof the grandest description with its spir~ s of this beautiful country. The great quainted have in 40 acre fields an averof splintered rock, its ledges of g reen q uestion the writ er asks is, "Whether age of over 40 bus. per a cre. But the turf, inaccessible, but tempting frow the the count ry is fit to Ii ve in". If any will average y ield throughuut eouthern M anirare plants which nPstle in t.he crevices, tak e the statement of mine I will cer 1 ainly toba is between 25 and 30 bus. per acre . its seal-haunted caverns, its wild birds, answer in the affirmative. I have lived Oats and barley in like pl'oportion . P .iaa Which for S tyle and Design cannot be the miles of sparkliug blue sea over which as before aiated seven years in southern are not grown here except in very small surpll.llf!ed in t own, and to which I inthe eye ranges from the summits ablaze Manitoba, nnd find as for climate it far patcbes. Potatoes are an abundant crop. vite the special at tention of the ladies of and fragrant with ftlrze avd heath or exceeds that, of Ontario. I have never I have a man in n.y employ who planted this dittrict. heathen . D espite the bright weather no experienced a winter in thid country as ativen·eighths of an acre aud out of t.hat She Tried in vain to Get one could fail t see that the s aa and d ieagreable as the winters in Ontario. ground he t ook 500 bus. of potatoes beccast here are pitiless, and before the It generally freezes up to stop plowing sides what the family used duriug the K ing St., B owmanville. 40 IteJieC and bad qui1e construction of Budehaven, a vessel had about the 15th of November, and I have summer. At the Morden E xhibition Given UJ> aJI Ho1>e. no chance of escape when i t C· me within never see11 rain from that date until some thero were 12 pot atoes t hat weighed 60 a cerrain distance of the rocks, and the time in April, but generaliy clear, cod lbs.. nther vegetables in like proporCa mpbollfor d , J une 9 1 1887. church ym·da along the coast contain sad weather three-fourths of the time. In tion. You all havo seen a Mmplo of our M1i . E. M oRms, Toron to, records of rnauy sl:ipwrecks ; and in t fJat the winter of 1880 and 81 there was no productious a.t your exhibitions, and at D EAR Sm :- I feel it m y duty to givo of Morweustow tlie crew of many a tall snow upon the trails up to the 8th of the Toronto exhibition the samples were you my t estimony for the good I hacl vessel have been laid to rest by the c:ire February, and up to that elate you could not so good as they were here on account from your D and elion Liver and K idney of the late vicar, Rev. R. S . Hawker, · drive a Luggy upon the trails any place of those being taken before they were Bitters. My liver was in a bad s tate and who organized a soecial bond of searchers i th.-.re being sleighing only across the fully matured. 1 .ramea H. Gilmour, or '1'. Gilmour & Co.· I wad a, gr eat suffer er. I had tried in for employment a.her a great storm. prairie where the grass would lodge the Now, Sir, I have given yqu a len gthy, Wholel!Rle Grocers. Brookville, says : I have vain to get relief and h ad q uit e given up The road to Morwenstow from ci viliza- snow. Upon that d r\to we had a very if not an interesting:, acco nnt of Southern used " Tamarac Elixir " for a severe Cold and tion passes between narrow hedges, every heavy snow storm and the following day Manitoba since I first came h ere. And Cough, which i t immediit,tely relieved and all hope, till a friend told me . of your B it ters. I got a bottle at onc~J!.. "ld I am bush in which is bent from the sea. Not it blew very ha.rd from the south, drifting last year I eold out my business in t he cured, Hiram Buker. Lumber and Cheese Dealer. h appy to say the B itbera m ade a -aew wo" trne is visible, the whole country doubt- the light snow that had fallen the day be- town of Manitou, leaving my self free to North August.a, Ont.. say~ : " Tamarac Elixir" less a century ago being moor and fen. fore and also snowing _ very heavy. All go where I pleased · I candidly state to i~ a wonderful medicine for Coughs and CoUs, man of me . I can hear t ily recommend A~ Chapel is a plantation, but every tree the snow seemed to be in the air until you 1 would much rather remain in Man- Throat and Lung Complaints. tt is without t hem t o any one troubled with liver comdoubt the best medicine! ever used, and never crouches shrivelled and turns its arms lodged in the grass, ravines, scrub, etc. i toba than return to Ontario for cli ma,te tails to give immediate relief, We consider it plaint. Yours truly CARRIE S rRP Hi>Ns . imploringly inland. The glorious blue That Wllfl what we called 3. hfo:zard and which I have done by moving to Morden, a household necessity. At antic 1s before one with only Lundy the remainder of that mouth. it was al- 22 miles east of Manitou. As t he writ er lele breaking the continuity of t he most impossible to get around, but about of "Manitoba's Future" states, in the horizon line. In very clear weather the 1st of March the weather was warm summer there you are groaning and before 11 storm the Wdsh coa~t can be tmd pleasant, t he remainder of that win- weltering in the heat. H er e it is always seen t o the nnth-weet. I ter. I have a record of the thermometer cool at nights be it ever so ho t in the day. Suddenly the road dips down a c ombe, ; that winter taken at Oalf Mountain three H ave seen it 99! degrees in the shade in aud Morwenstow tower, gray-stoned, times eac.h de.y from the 24th of Novem- · the day and same night down fiG degrees, For the preservation of health than having your feet kept pinnacled, siands up against the blue bot' to the 24t h ;if March, which I can and many t imes it g()eS down to 40 in the dr,y and warm. ocean. Some way below ueeper down in give you if you wish it. The crop of 1880 evenin~. · the glen are seen the roofs and fautt\6tic was u1ost exo~llent, and that of 1881 was Up to present date we h ave ha.d one chimneys of the vicarage now occupied grand. Yield on an average was 30 bus. by the Rev. John T & gart, B. A. Acc1m- to the acre, several h!!.ving a yield of over snow storm, just enough t o cover the panied by a cousin employed at the 40. 'rhe winter of 1881 and 82 month of ground, ar1d gone the same hour, and vicarage we pursued the path leading from Novern ber and fir st part of December that same night another light skiff of being aware of the fact, has laid in a first-class stock of the church and vicarage out upon Mor- very corn for that season of the year. snow. Sun shining every day since and very cold. Thermometer went to zero wenstow cliffs, where on a prominent ]'rom about the 20th of December up to point is a hut overlooking the sea wherein 1st of February, it was unusually warm. the night of t he 2::lrd, warmer since. If you see fi t to insert this in the the late vicar spent many a,n hour writinn- My sister plastered their house between poetry and engaged in other literary Xmas and ~ew Year ~nd the mortar did coJurons of your ; nluablo paper so highly pursuita while the waves played about not freeze . We had one of the worst appreciated by us who come from so near In large quantities· and. great er variety than ever before-All well the rocky b.iach 300 feet below. On the blizzards 1 ever saw on th0 5th of March there, do so. We live near mauy who other aide of the cornbe or valli>y rises coming from the North East, but not came from near Bowmanville, including bought on best cash terms, saving large discount s to benefit prompt Hinnacliffo (the Ea~le's craig) 450 feet ! col.;-thermometer 2 de'lrees above zero' the Elliotta, Whites. Foleyt1, Stephens, paying customers. above the sea. Ralf way down Morwen- i The following week was very fine wellther, Pickels, Okes, Leddinghams, Washingtons, Elfords , and many more who are. Good assortment of all kinds of Seasonap]e Leather Goods. stow cliff is the sacred well of St . Mor- but the n ext was very rough. Aft&r that glad to see your paper. I am wenna. On a green spot hard by in the _ beautiful weather. Grand display of Yours Truly, side of the glen originally stood, it is said, The winter of 1882-3 was very fine H.F. POUND. a. chapel to St. Morwenna, visited by up to Xmas, but from that time all Morden, Man., Oct. 24, 1887. those who sought h er sacred well. From throu!th the month of January it was vety the cliff an unrivalled view can be had cold, not much snow all winter. I left AMONG THE lNDI.ANs.-"While my husof the Atlantic from Lundy Isle to for Ontario on the 23rd of January ; Call and examine stock. We arc _ g oing to sell on small profit,;i fearin,g Padstow Point. Wo viaitcd ono very arrived at Port Perry on the 28th, found band was trading in furs he came across an Indian who was t &ken t o h ill lodge t o no honest competition. interesting old house, Tonacombe, which it much warmer than Manitoba. I re~·belonged originally to the J ourdains, maiued there WI the last of March. die. He hnd inward p&ins and pains i· all his limbs. He gave some Yellow Oil All goods warrented as represented. We are fully prepared t o cany passed to theKempthornea,tho Waddons, Although warmer weather we found it and from thence to the Marty ns, tho very disagreeable on account of it raining internally and applied it ex ternally and out ALL we advertise. present proprietor being the Rev. \V. or snowing half of the time. Nor have I cured him. It also cured my husband of Woddon Martyn, r ector of Lifton. It is felt so cold driving 30 miles in M~uitoba rheumatism, and I find it valuable for an ancient mansion of the 16th century at 20 degrees below zero as I felt in driv· coughs and colds, sore throat, etc." Mns. and well worthy of a visit. A. low gate ing 15 miles from Enniekillen to Port A. BESAW, Cook's Mills , Serpent R iver, · KING S'I".,, B OWMANVILLE. with porte1·'s lodge at the iid.-i leads into , Pen'Y with the thormometer 10 degrees Ont. EDITORIAL CORRESPONDENCE. · a small yard into which look the :vindows of ihe hall. The ball goes t o t he roof with open timber; it is small, 30 ft. long, but perfect i_ n its way, ~instrel'!1 gallery, large open fire place with and1n n, and adorned with antlers, old weap 01ns, a.nd banners beating the arms of th<l former owners. The lui.11 gives access to a dark, panelled parlor with peculiar and lmndsome braaa andirons in the old fir ' places, looking through a latticed window int'· the old walled- garden. .A Mr. Cowl~ng is the tenant of Tnnacombe, and a wide a wake and successful farmer he is. Rev. Robert Stephen Hawker bcnm.e vicar of Morwenst ow about 1834 a po:u · tion which he held for 41 year~, dying in the Catholic fait h in 1875 In politics he was a Liberal a nd he was a real" born philanthroµis t, his sympathy for the poor and unfortunate knowing no bounds His tendor heart bled for the laborer and the energy with which he uph,,ld his cause brought upon him unreasonable resent ment from the farmers. His intense sy.npathy with the poor and the down tl'odden breaks out in his ballad, " The Poor Man and his Parish Church," of which we produce a few lines: The poor have hands and feet and eyes, Flesh and a feelmg mind ; They breathe ·he breath of moral sighs, They are of hlltnam kind ; They wetlp such tears as others shed, And now and then they smile ; F .. r swe t to them is thl\t poor bra.id They win wit.h honest toil. The poor men have their wedding day, And children climb their kn"e ; They have not mrJ,ny friends, for they Are in s1 1ch misery. They sell their youth, their skill, their pains For hire in hill and glen ; The very blood within their veins, It flows for other men. They should have roofs to call their own, When ihey are old and bent,Meek houses built of dark gray atone, Worn laborers' mon11ment. There should they dw.,ll beneath the thatch, With threshold calm and free ; No st ranger's hand should 1ift the latch To mark t heir poverty. FORD WATCHES LOST I money by buying great many have lost MAYNARD, FAMILY :· :~~~:~~:~E:~t~'::: IAl u .,,.ums from Agents instead of local dealers. We have received a Iarg-e supply of ALBUMS and BIBLES, which we are offering very cheap, and we think it will pay you to inspect our stock before purchasing els.ewhere. KRNNER&CO VARIETY HALL. MAYNARD, NewGoods Fancy Goods, fAll ANO WINTfR MILUNf RY MRS. ANDERSON. Tamarac NOTHING BETTER HEL ·L YAR FELT BOOlS,SHOES&OVERSHOES Trunks, Bags and Valises. ---· · ~...,.__. ____ JOHN HELLYAR,