TRAVELLING. Kingston & Pembroke & Canadian Pacific Railways. ! 20,000 Harvesters Wanted IN MANITOBA AND CANADIAN NURTH=W EST FARM LABOREI EXCURSIONS will be rua from all stations on Kingston & Pem- broke railway, August 20th, wo Winsipeg, for $10. ' . One-way tickets to Winnipeg only will be sold, but each person purchasing will be lur- nished with a coupon on Which, afier such person has been hired at Winnipeg to work as a farm laborer, but not later then Au- gust Slst, 1902, .free transportation will be given to hokder from Winnipeg to any Con- adian Pacific station in Manitoba or Assini- bois, West or South-west or North-west of Winnipeg, but not beyond Moose Jaw, Rate van or Yorkton. On, complying with conditions of certificates whi will be given art sers of one-way $10 tickets, passengers will be returned to starting point by same route on or before November 30th, 1902, on pavment of $I1K. TICKETS AREF "OND CLASS and ARE NOT GOOD ON "IMPERIAL, LIMITED" and will not entitle holder to purch&ise accomo + dation on Tourist Cars. . Full particulars at K. & P. end CP.R. Ticket Office, Ontario Ss. ° F. CONWAY, F. K. FOLGER, JR, "Gen. Pass. Jen. Supt. Agt. HE BAY OF QUINTE RAILWAY ~ . NEW SHORT LINE FOR Napaties, Deseronto and all loeal Train leaves Citv Hall Depot at 4 R. J. WILSON, C.P.R. Telegraph OI Clarence stroot: i 4 A Es i DRE ese (AERA BRANCH LINE TIME TABLE IN EFFECT JUNE 15th, 1902. Trains will leave City Depot, Foot of Johnston street, GOING EAST. 'Mail... Eastern Flyer 6 Local... Mail. pr J r WEST. Local...... International, Ltd. Mail. Local hess . 5:03 2, 3 and 4 run daily. Nos. run daily, exoept Monday. Nos. 6, 7, 12, 15, and 16 daily, except Sunday. " Direct route to Toronto, Humilton, falo,- London, Detroit, Chicago, Saginaw, Montreal, Ottawa, Quebec," Port- land, St. John, Halifax, Boston, and New York. FARM LABORERS" EXCURSION to Mani toba and A i Fare $10. Going date August For full Rprisaiars apnlv to . P. TIANLEY, Agent, Corner Johnston and Ontario Sts. DOMINION LINE. Californian. ... ... .. . «Aug, 16th *Norseman - 23rd *Turcoman 30th Sept. Gth Sept. 13th Ceditol . ats nis ree Sept. 20th Steamers marked ® do not carry passengers RATES OF PASSAGE--Saloon, §( and upwards, single according to steamer and service, Seco Saloon, $37.50 and up wards, single, according to steamer and ser wico. Third classe, $26. FROM MONTREAL. *Manxman . Ang. *Roman .. Sept Buf- .. Aug. Aur, 23rd 13th FROM BOSTON. Commonwealth. «an ww Aug, i Aug. NEW SERVICE >a 2 uns Cambroman, Aug. loth--Vanconver, Sept. 6th Midship, Salon, Electrie light, S promenade decks. J. P. Hanley, J. P. Gildersleeve, 42 Clarence St. Ac¢t. G.T.R. Station, D. TORRANCE & Co., Gen. Agta Montreal and Portland: EE DAILY : 3 R LINE Toronto, Charlotte, Thousand Islands, Brockville, Prescott and Montreal. New. Kingston and Toronto Steamers LEAVE KINGSTON: GOING FAST--Dailv, except Mondav, at 6 a.m, . Monday, 5:30 a.m, T. dailv. except Mondav.™ at chin Charlotte same evenine at ami Toronto following morning 7:00, 13th 20th Hamilton, Toronto, Bay of Quinte and Montreal Line. LEAVE KINGSTON: GOING EAST, Wednesdays and Fridavs at 4:30 p.t. _ GOING WIEST, Saturdays, 11:30 J. P. HANLEY, Ticket Agons. Tuesduvs, Thursdays and p.m. J. SWIFT & 00 Freight Agents. The Only Direct Line fo Quebec Without Change THE FAVORITE STR. ALEXAND Leaves Craig's wharl every: Friday, midnight, for Charlotte, N.Y. @fott Beach, N.Y., and Buffalo, N.Y.; via! B of Quinte and Murray Canal, and eve Monday at 6:30 p.m., for Montreal and Quebec, (direat without change). Through 1.000 Islands and St. Lawrence River Rapids: ' Low passenger and freight Passepger accommodation W. G. CRAIG. & CO, Agents, Kingston. Auction Sales. y Save Moncey by Employing RIA at 12. rates. unsurpaseed. A. W. HEPBURN, Manager, Picton Bay City, |GREAT WESTERN PRAIRIES VIVID DESCRIPTION OF THEIR GRANDEUR. The Prairie Grasses--Districts of Great TFroductiveAess -- The Peorlec Cantented . and Pros- perous. Bv A. L. H,, sr=on, * Mam? - : --Lo, they In airy undulations, far awav, = As the ocean, in her gentlest swell, Stood still, with ali his rounded billows fixed, Aud motionless forever. - : . --Brvant. Forsan et hace olim meminisse juvabit. L Virgil, Book I. Jeneath an open heaven that o'er canopies nature with its blue, airy dome, spangled with the fleccy down of pillowy clouds that float high up in its azure depths, shedding floods of colden sunlight upon. wide- stretching meadow and broad fields of vernal crops. just beginning to ripen. into head, the great and boundless prair- ies of. Manitoba and the 'territories open up in the wild beauty of their summer attire and the luxuriance of prairie vegetation. ' The freshness of the early spring time, with the green and tender grass in its first appear; ance over the heath, and the light of day irradiating {ficlds of springing crops that lift little blades above the fallow ground, has melted into the full flush of mid-summer, while Sol pours his heavenly beams over broad reaches: of country and plains that stretch away to all points of the com- pass, clothed in the wild growth of the prairie or glorious in the green of the "coming harvest, "making earth bricht and nature resplendent in the dress of thé summer time. Beneath a dome so hich and expansive, under a smile radiant - and bright, be- sprinkled with flowers "of varied hn and family bred" that in many plac ed dot the landscape and give a touch of beauty to: the great sweeps of the desert, the broad prairies stand rich, and beautiful, , and promising An the volden sunlight, but for the most part hare and unshaded of any leafy foli- age, except by the banks of soifie winding creek, or along the ma a slough," in some natural bluff, where the hand of man in recent vears has sown the tender sapling around his dwelling, to hud, and bloom, aud flourigh like the pidm tree planted in the wilderness. To one brought np amid the thick lv settled portions of the eastern sro accustomed to the advantages o from the progress and wealth in that land of culture fand of com- merce, a visit to the great boundless territories of the plains is fraught at first with considerable interest, as the chance of boundary brings wondrous change of scene, of surroundings, of of climate. Coming with "the habits of castern custom mightily ahold of him: familiar wish the wavs of a world settled since the days of his grandiather and filled with the wealth and products of easterm invention and eastern manufacturing: nzed to the frmits of the se: ripen- ing in their order, and to be had with in distances and at mode rate prices; and accustomed to a landscape where hill and valley, leafy roves and rocky upland "unite to give ariety of scene, and blend into-a ere. of the picturesque, the broad 4) rain of or arisit conditions, and son convenient Lion TRAVELLING. Allan Line Royal Mail Steamers. From Montreal: From Quebec: Numidian, Aug.2, 5 am. Aug. 2, 3 pm. Parisian, Aug. 9, 5 a.m. Aug. 9, 3 p.m. Mongolian, Aug. 16, 9 a.m. Aug. 16, 7 p.m. First cabin, $65 and upwards; Second ca- bin, $37.50 to $42.50: London. $1.50 extra: Third, class, $25 aod $26; Liverpool, Derry, B.liast, Glasgow, London. New York to Glasgow & Londonderry. Carthagenian EEE July 30th Sardinian. SNS Auy. - 13th Montreal to Glasgow Direct. 6,284 July 30th, Sept, Liverpool and Londonderry Sicilian, 3rd, Oct, 8th. First class 5. J. P. Hanley, Agent, City Passenger De vot, Johnston -and Ontario streets, J. Yildersleeve, Clarence street. pba? QUEBEC STEAMSHIP COMPANY LIMITED. River and Gulf of SI. Lawrence Summer Cruises in Cool Latitudes Twin Screw Iron SS. * Campana," with electric. lights, electric bells and all modern comic 3 FROM tons, abin $50, second cabin $35, third SAIL MONTREAL ON MONDAYS 1th a 5th August: 8th and smber for Pictou,| N.S. calling at Father Point. Ga § Grand River, Summersid P.EJ Charlotte: town. PEL 7 Ihe finest trip of the season comfort. ARTHUR AHERN, Seceretarv, Quebec. For' tickets and staterooms apply to J. HANLEY, or J. P. GILDERSLEEVE, Ticket Agents, Kinvston, Ont. for heal th and y Laks Ontario & Bay of Quinte Strs, North King & Caspian Bay of Quinte & Rochester Route Steamer lenves daily 5 p.m. for Rochester; eof Quinte ports. 1000 ISLANDS RAMBLE Steamer leaves daily (except Monday), at 10.17 am, for tour 'of 1.000 Islands, call ing at Alexandria Bay, Rockport and Gana- "™ STEAMER ALETHAQ' Loaves Mondays at 5 p.m.. lor Picton and N.Y., culling at Bay stretch | (except Mondav)™ at eT MA BRITISH WHIG, FRIDAY, AUGUST 15. far-reaching undulations of the prairie apd wide stretches of level country. Tour out far awav. before his vi- on, interspersed with sloughs and and occasiofial bluff, 'in certain parts 'for miles unsettled, svhose sod o'er i many an acre has never yet been turn- ed by the hand of man, are very apt to seem considerably difierent - from ! {he familiar landscape of the east, and strike one with. a sense of. their great diversity. Probably the time in which to see the prairies at their best is in the halcyon days of the summer, when they are robed in the wild beauty of their desert - vegetation, and "stretch themselves . for miles in lone, rising undulations and broad sweeps of lev- el country, clothed with the rank prairie grasses and hr htened with the rich bues if different varieties of wild flowers that lift their tinted blos- soms to the kiss of the sunbeam or to catch the whisperings of the breeze; and when the great fields devoted to the cultivation of our famous har- -osts are 'thickly covered with the waving green so soon to bear fruitage of the labors of the husbandman. Should the visitor come in the early davs of spring, when the snow, of win- ter have but lately departed, and the fields - are but beginning to. assuue "their robes of vernal coloring. he will then have an opportunity of witness- ino the great plains emerge from the dearth of winter to the freshness of the springtime and the glory of their summer beauty. As soon as the latest <nows have disappeare®, and the sharp winds have melted into the. halmy 7éph) of the spring. the hroad plains, whose long, gre lie dead and withered around, begin -to oradu- ally shoot forth little tender hlades of oreen that crop up amid the Wthered stalks. and, in time. supplant them with their own vernal freshness; » the vellow-colored crocus the hardiest of the prairie' wild flewers, appears and décks the landscape with its vold- en blossoms. + the season advances and other varicties appear the great to bloom in places like veritable gardens of the wilderness, and midsummer finds them at the heioht of their beauty and the zenith of their attractiveness. ! (er the rn prairie, In the i rain, Through northern forests, And the southern plain, . ses plains begin flowers, bright, us Jovely «t and to give delight. a, happr secret Will leaves unfold, 1i vou listen closely, When a flower vou. hold. delicately tintea rose, is' to many queen of fragrant flowers. comes out in rich profusion about the latter part of June, and makes earth beautiful with its two- fold varieties of pink and purple blos- Zoms. clustering on little knolls, ino amid their prickly bushes by s wandering stream, peeping from the grass hy some beaten trail : and along with it appears the brilli- ant colored orange lily. very similar to that found in castern meadows. graceful petals spread like some fairy chalice or jack-in-the pulpit. The gold en-oved sunflower, of which thire are no less than twenty-two species found on the American continent, "eleven of them being -said to occur in Canada, a prototype of the massive plant known bv that name and grown in the gardens of Ontario. about two and a half inches from tip to tip of petal and with stem ranging from one to three and a hali feet in height. wanes richly abundant over the uncultivated plains, in appearance very much like Come the Fvor s Kindly Innocent Such its The whose sister or an enlarced daisy, or Little Staring When the at height, during the of and July, a person needs to be some i botanist to be able to of half the mumber that 'deck the great them with their Among the many that dame nature such lavish hand note the familiar names of ane or wind-flower, that seeks the high places where the summer winds are freshest and rollicking; three varieties of asters; the eyening and bird's eve primrose, which, learn from Pliny, - was under the peculiar care of the goc the dwarf butter cup: the little, blue-eyed violet; the white and yeHow the: wild, sweet pea; the blue-bell. and wild flax. Holy writ speaks of the happy time when the desert shall blossom like the rose, and one, riding over these boundless meadows where daisies, and blue-bells, and white-plumed milk-weed, with a dozen other varieties, unite to give a touch of the beautiful to nature, and where evén the delightinl gpee itself ve fuseth not to lift its- little head and cevelops with o to threaten flower season months ove, 1 defv. its June what of know the of wild tlawers, plains and gladden varied-colored hues. different scatters a Hanes varieties about with we mone, most we daisy; toba and is: not unknown in other portions of the province and the ter- ritorics. The little blue:eyed flax, making radiant the crop of that name by its beautifully tinted flowers, whose petals, like thiose of the morning glory, open at the sunbeam's Kiss 'in the fore- noon, but close alter the sun. has pass- ed the meridian, is a flower somewhat like the blue-bell in" shape and size and recall the words of Longfellow in the "Wreck of the Hesperus," where, in his 'description of the old man's daugh- ter, we are told : Blue were her eves as the fairy flax, adler cheeks like the dawn of day, And her (reast as white as thy hawthorn buds \ That ope in the month of May. The tumbling mustard, declared by Dr. James Fletcher, entomologist and botanist to the Dominion Experiment- al farms, to be one of the very worst weeds to be found anywhere in the North West Territories, is a plant not much to boast of for beauty, but is very injurious to the erops among which it harborg/ and is so called from its proclivity of tumbling about by the wind when the Read breaks olf as the seeds become ripe, which leaves it a prey to the hich winds of autumn ang early winter, hy which" it is blown for acrogss the prairie in a rolling scattering "its myriad seeds, and clinging to any obstacle or fence that may happen to be in its way. It has been known to grow two feet broad and three in height, the tall flowering stems being covered with pods nearly three inches in length, each" one of which contains about 120 seeds. A single plant sent in for examination from Indian Head, NW.T., was found to contain more than a million and a half seeds It is said to have all. the had characteristics of the other mus tards, and it is about ten years since it 'was first noticed as a troublesome weed among farm lands, during which time it has spread' over many thou- sands of acres in the western prairies. lte distribution -is owing. almost en- tively to its rolling propensities dur- ino the windy fall and winter months, affording the seeds an'excellent oppor tunity to scatter themsélves hroadeast oter wide 'areas. 1ts original home is said to be the south of Europe, but it appears to be of a roving temper ment. and. has a knack of making it coli comfortable in' other lands, not withstanding that it can hardly be said to have received the warmest wel- come, 'The prairie grasses that clothe these great fields in months of suntmer and orow thick upon the sod, are worthy of more than merely passing mention. An old geography used tp teach that a prairie a wide stretch of level country covered with Jong grass, and the impression" sometimes conveyed to the youthful mind is, probably, that the grass grows as hich as a man's head, the same as Ancient European cuts, in picturing the Canadian maple in sugar-making time, to repre- «mt the sap running out of the spout like water owt of a pump, so that a man was kept busy with twa pails hustling from the tree to a barrel These may undoubtedly be said to be vivid representations, but they are cely historic. It not the pro vince of the writer to state just how long the grasses would be were it not for 'the prairie fires which for centuries Lave swept over the great plains and red - them of their dead, rank heather, but it is doubtiul that +they wouhl attain to any. very great slonath, as they reach their maturity and altitude In a season's orowth. Probably 'three feet would he the aver ave height for the ordinary grass, al thotigk the slough. grass reaches di mensions as oreat as twice that length "but this is exceptional. is probably the com the wide uplands <treteh for miles bevond the limits of cultivation, and so named from the shape of its mpper s®tions, which are formed that, when separated from the stem, a long, wiry blade is found, tipped with a sharp-peinted head, somewhat larger than the blade itself, which clings to the clothing very dously as one passes among the stalks. It is injurious to cattle, which have "learned the wisdom i avoiding it, and is occasionally taken from the stomach of sheep; and dt has a faculty, if well fastened to the wool, of working a way into the system by its sharp. fibrous point. At this time of -vear the spears are beginning to fall, leaving the vray stalks to tad alone, devoid of their warlike accoutrements. In the sloughs there grows a fine praivie g of excellent quality, which the farmers use for hay, ait ting itt about this season when other work Jack and. the water. has dis: appeared . from most the hollow places. One might say that no 'hay whatever is sown in this dis trict. and although the wild grass may not, he Jaltogether as antial as timothy. it none the less, a miles used in some place Fhe spear mone > where ore is Leng Oi ol almost sith he's, associate with flowers of a less humble origin or meaner # may re lect thaf, however near the moral | world may be to that glad "day. _ the natural world, in this great ang silent is certainly not far re it. . 1 Amon the noxions weeds which, in | come places, alllict the farm] rs by arowing in amony | the crops and "doin to thi grain I wheat, are found one | trgor-t ? ard tof tinted blo | their Of these agrance, i wilderness, { moved from miury | to b | or ba the eve -in they the produ the liv: the fairest Beial bulletins as | or cow-herb, a plant 'helonging to thes| pink family. having been introduced | into Southern: Manitoba from the con- tinent. It ant in form to two and 'a hall fect hich the month of .July SAMS as in effects of sail the cow-coekle, | 12 ele from one being covered, in with a | rot | costs the farrier nofhing | hile is that known {4 growing | fair substitute. Having, if so it he call, considering how httle in 'these parts, practically but: the trom rather into barns, nature herself the "sowing very prolifically. ~ It is something, how : . which usually" engrosses very Tit the of their' attention, being merely a and quo-non in the sister province, heina® atten 1 linarv food | in great concern the glorions wheat tlds, which ¢ certainly magnificent 1 their ich, green Crops w ng the summer breeze, and, spreading ont over acres miles in. extent, where the country is, well 'settled and. given to the aultivation of the soil. Accustom- ed as people have been in Ontario to see little fields of. perhaps, twenty or thirty dgcres of grain, fenced in ta Keep out wandering cattle, and growing, it very mayv He to ent and as nosi-essential not a sin wheat shares in-place of the more Ontario. The 2,000 . sev- covering an area anywhere' from to - 20,000 acres, comprisi eral farms, with grain, gicen and emerald as a savamah, rising al- most to one s.shoulders and' spreading itself away across the prairie abun- dant as in a fairy tale. Not all of that vast acreage might covered with, prolific crops is true; there may_ be sections of fallow ground with" a lapse of wild land, but enough indeed to render the scene lying out" before "the eye alike historic 'and me- morable, Standing in the narrow trail that rups between the vast fields of ripening harvests, or on the roadside that 's s the broad acres teeming with a rich growth of opulent abund- ance one gets.a view, stretching away before him, of glorious wheat fields, magnificens and beautiful, which it would seem that Ceres, hersell' had planted or, having come in person to Manitoba, had taught the farmers the divine art of agriculture. The -abund- ant rains which have fallen this spring and summer--so abundant that it is said there has not been as much in these parts for the space of fifteen or twenty vears--and the absence, for the most part, of the" destructive hail storms so damaging to the labors of the hushandman, at times causing al- most utter ruin to a season's crop, have been very feaitful in producing a thick and prolific growth, uniting to vield a prospective harvest that may well delight the heart of the jolly far- mer, aud send words of telegraphic fre to the east for help to cut and thresh the ripening ears. Should the weather continue to prove favorable and there be no loss to the abundance now ripening in the open fields, Mani- toba 'and the territories will require an army of thousands of men to as- sist the farmers in 'their efforts to get the golden ears in shape for trans- portation, and the C. P. R. company will find a task on their hands before which it will be practically unable to cope. In order to show that our lan- guage is not wholly rhetorical a few tigures, the product of personal - en- quiry. may not be amiss to those who be are interested. 2 About eleven miles from here there is a district abundant most in its wheat producing capabilities, and ene comparatively well settled for Mani- toba and the territories. On one of the farms, where the crops are as rich as anv. in the neighborhood one and one-half bushels and one gallon of, orain were sown to the acre Last vear there was a yield of thirty-one bushels per acre. By measurement of two stalks growing among the wheat. one was found: to have attained a height of five feet one inch.; the other four feet ten inches. In a specimen sxamined there were. nine stools from the first. each containing in all about sixty grains. Standing there amid these glorious stalks the eye ran away over broad fields, teeming with oreen and magnificent in their promis- ing abundance, and we were told they extended three mike east, and f south, the greater part of which was under cultivation. Here are some fig- ures for the Ontario farmer,--let: him ompute the number of grains in that one pateh, the stalks growing as thick almost to the square foot as marsh in Ontario. A year ago the C. P.R. was practically powerless to get the great vield out of the country over its line, and this year, notwithstand- ing an increase in the number of freicht cars thade ready against the tarvest time, and the encouraging de- clarations on the part of some of its b hich "oflidials, | there is every probabi litv of a rather embarassing blocade for months during the fall and winter, the farmers drew much of their grain to the elevators in the winter time, when the roads were good and the tranke--as--hard---as brick, -and--even to this day load after load of last year's crop finding its way in the Bain wageons to the centres of transpovta- tion. The railway company is extend- ine lits branch line from Beloraine to Waskada® as far, as Lyleton, and al at the latter station no = less than six elevator sites have been pur- chased hy various companies, who do a thriving business in times when the harvests are abundant and plentiful. it-has not been by any méans an un- lnown thing for the grain to be piled hich on the ground Hoor after thresh- ing. covered with a thick blanket of araw. and left to the. night dews and the howling of. winter tempes till a sre convenient season, when the rail as ready wavs and elevators would not be 'so The more ordinary way, however, is that wherehy the grain Cis drawn, at onge "to the elevators threshed, som «~ loose in the high Bain way ible at the hl anspor tation, crowded. as soon as mes in bags, of this 'is the fe mto open hoxes if owing to sometin the hi imho= ons, or, time chade it is built often drawn oli when to the huge ele that lofty peaks from every im poriant village and centre of popula tion. lt ranked "according to quality as No. 1 hard, 'or first quality: No. I Northern, or. second quality, No. 2 Northern, or third quality. The prices range. {fom sixty cents par ind upwatdd for first quality, sixtv-three cents, at being paid - for last 8 being drawn to thescJevators: about fiftyeseven. cents for second, and fifty-five for third. Bat it must not be I from fh that the: ManitoRafarm i a- one of then r, this is 1he country living, uf not to be Some of thm certain- but the majority. of well-to-do farmers as caod amdscomfortable Iving, meetd all expenses, and hav livid of for estas estion and along thrown thie occasion elicr ors is there and bust Iv time us ont Lis RINLY ents Crop now SH sed! ppose sta wealthy. are well off, them are only vit, making Iv iv ne a sum money sophy, struck the true key-note of the of the third book : same book : be feared forty "below 'mild nature of the cold through the cracks of the building. A houses, expensive, ion Jdittle house here costs as high us vield nearly on ably exceptional" and not as severe as sect the ¢ able A LD . tio i EDDY'S he LICH Matches The best and most economical on the market. le For sale by all the principal dealers. Use Eddy's Toilet Papers. The Kingston Agency, No. 75 Princess Street. J. A. HENDRY, Agent. ---- m-- Ideal Beverage JOHN LABATT'S [ ondon Full of the Virtue of Malt and Hops. > Perfectly Agreeable to the Most * JAS. "McPARLAND, AGE KING STREET, KINGSTON. Delicate . Palate. | NT, | ---- WY ~ Imperial, Metallic ABBIT ™" sea star For all work. All grades. They are the best. THE .CANADA METAL CO, ,TORONTO, ON Manitoba farmer in the sixteenth ode --Multa petentibus | Q0oOD FURNISHED 101 T m_---- TO LET. ROONS, WITH Od Queen stron without board, rt. Desunt; Bene est cui Deus obtulit Parca, quod satis est, manu. * And again in the 24th ode of the POUR GOOs FURNISHED board, with ROOMS, all modern conveniences, Avenue. WiTia nh 191 University Silicet improbae Crescunt divitine: tamen Curtae nescio quid semper abest rei** The people are contented, and for the most part prosperous and thriv- ing. They work hard during the spring and summer season to "make hay while the sun shines," but have a much easier time during the long months of winter, when darkness falls carly, often as soon as a little after four, and the long evenings afiord op BRICK | PWELLING, POSSESSION AT ONCE, 193 EARL# STREET, ten rooms; Hot Wath, Heating: Also other dwellings, stores and offices. J. 8. R. McCann, 51 Brock St., ground floor, THAT AIRY DE- sirable house on the corner of Bagot and Gory streets, near the park. jodern in every way. Daisy hot water hemting and in perfect order. Apply to Felix Shaw, 115 | Bagot street. -- w-- MONEY AND BUSINESS. portunity for reailing and recreation. Their buildings ar¢ framed with a view to the cold winds prevailing in the winter season, which are more to than the intense chill of zero. The air, howevar, is muck drier than that in the east, which accounts for the comparatively climate even 1 weather, ii the wind be still, which alto accounts for the sandy +) MONEY 10 LOAN IN LARGE UR SMALL sums, at low rates of interest on city and farm property. Loans granted on city 'and county debentures. Apply to S.C. McGILL, manager 'ol Frontenas Loan and Investment Society. Office op posite the Post Office. TWO HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS IN from one thous: to ten thous dollars. For particulars apply dN DWIN'S INSURANCE EMPORIGM, ovér Express Office, Market Souare. sums acter of the snow, rendering draw- im sleighs much more difticult than It 'was asked a farmer long since if his stable, built of stone and within, was warm in the cold months of the winter and the reply was in the affirmative. that as a coating of frost formed on the masonry about an inch and a half thick it was warmer then for cattle than in mildet wea- ther when the cold would gét in in ad moister region. not unboarded season, few of the farmers, especially the pio- neers of unsettled districts, live in sod reminding one almost of the mud=huts of Africa, as lumber is very coming from the woodv re- British Columbia. A very a one inn Ghtario, but even buildn going up wide fields, the habitations settler They can buy on the ing¥thering of the har- woney will he more plen- tiful and payments morg convenient. One thing to be noted with regard to farming in this western prairie is that the farmers "are not altogether sure of. their ¢rop till they have it. In the aditions are usually as fa- erdily the ably fair here, the pro duets gre subicct to severe hail storms which sometimes beat the crop into und abmost ws though it had en sown: dry spell of hing every- this of much larg SO, many over these of many credit till when are the vest, speaking, of o but boundlsss plains farm taraer ure ev season, wea I'omay. occur the ¢ par thing 10 root, but is prob- The runnm coun t fit "row th of a fickls "mayb storms certain an'll if mintites sea to the - reaped v at=ell in a high nodd hail in rine. of the may be amg have a faculty MS QCross hhavy wily destroy in the opulent (Mr the wn 1 whole son. ripe Fin ar once : torn great extent by rock wind, the ripened ears ing rubbing off con acainst_ one another and i thereby entail there for vears the farm LIVERPOOL, LONDON AND "limited sectiond of people of Manitoba. great wealth of grain ripening in the ear kle and stretching fields clothed with abund- ance and the. food with a [sunshine that promises speedv maturity, mother's glorious) ingathering, truly the farm- ers of the west be grateful 'and to look forward with thankful | hearts joining With the people of the east, in the song who clothes the lily and mini€térs "to the fowl of heaven and the nations of the The flowery spring, -at Embalms The To raise the corn, smd chicer the vine. Seasons, Demand Still With opening lig GLOBE FIRE Company. Available assets, ,215. n addition to which the policy holders have for security the ume liability. of all the stockholders. Farm and Citv Property insured at lowest possible rates. Before renewing old or giving new bpsiness get rates from STRANGE & STRANGE, Agents. Insurance 861,18 ers scarcely made a living for thems sclved and chinobk most ser{s,| swept over the prairie, scorch- ing the heather and drying the skin on human hand similar to the breath of a furnade; the rains dried in mid-heaven, and the sun parched the stunted vege: tation, But this does not occur often- or : frequently, with all the abundant crops that cov- er them, are at the mercy of the ele- ments and .the care of a loving God avove, | He certainly, notwithstanding their families. The hot dry and flaming al Libyan de- wingls, as the sirocco on: the i as fields, than once in a dozen year and although the casional disasters in certain country, is good to the And with the soon to be ready for the sic- the winnowing; with wide anc for manv people: and a rain, gentle as a tears, 'that is an aungurv of a have to every reégson to the ingathering, Him f the hatvest home to world : thy command, paints the land; ror shine, air, aml rays with the summer lPivshimrel in autumn richly pours Through And winters, No" more all our, conses redundunt stores; softened by thy eare, a face of horror~wear weeks, "and days, prai paid * ing shade. arid somes ¢ cheerful hon it, and ars months] sue he the ) mav our more harmonious tongue pursui the unknown 2. brighter courts adore, n thos ride Where davs and years revolve no more. Porter 3 Late i wi of pretty pink flow ers about half an inch in width. ht has spread with rather alarming ra pidity in the southern part of Nani | 51 hs ef 7 MOE" Torr . - ; rn on New "line of suff front shirts, just Something different; 'The H 'ovement s the farm. Ho and dream f philo and hin) ace, on his Solime ing his poetie interp may be from twenty-five bushels to the how different it is to - stand surrounded by wide stretching fields r ! 2. farm, tate ALLEN & BROWN totermediate Day Ports. : for [ull informati poly, to : ' IE finde aus abr Y. 3 J. P. GILDERSLEEVE, Ticket Acenta. Auctioneers. James Swift & Co. Fre:bs Agents. agre, -- Central Park West, New York, March 28, 1902, "FORCE" FOOD CO., ! ra Buffalo, N. Y en u Gentlemen .--I think it 'my duty-to write and tell you how 1 appreciate the good! quality of your ** FORCE" Breakfast Food. Ihave had stomach trouble for a year and am unable to eat any- thing but "FORCE" and milk. It is the only solid food | eat, and 1 never _get tired of it and have gained four pounds leat about : ; ' : three packages a'week It is better than any other food on the v a s : ed market, and | cannot praise it too highly. =", A Brenkinst Food that Makes Vitality Quick as Lightning's Flash> Yours vey iy, eet Se -- a. Name furnished on application. ~ -