{cod well; young 0 sold cheap for .I-.§CY ,._.1n the I :be Maripos well for 10¢. ditto f of ers mings’ attach this ofï¬ce.â€" UC \r the ushers in the fall $2.00, for $1.00 61' Boys 25c mné know all the la test in Dr (i y oods and bi" ’ ight wcmen are always on the a] , , . ert t styles m Dr‘frstsolj’arncs and Dry ï¬gojsegeltlhem' The latest roubl e at our store. arzllly‘ecean be found P “P with Q-nhout eff ds trade as close] y 88 8 ClOCk keg PS lip with time '3 thedry SOC Here are some of the facts in our st 017 m ‘ piece at 1.50 F Mourning beauli-‘ul than ; Lsowyd- LllIIUIBII D whiz-vu. ---_v-, 1+5 Womb. your wzzile to examiee our extra ï¬ne tweeds, usually worth about 43- per yd; our price, a Specia , at 25¢ per yd. You: PiCKIQS of course need to be air tight. The only way to insure this is to buy your corks here. We can ï¬t any bottle or jar with any style of cork. Wash up bottles and recorked by Loaded Shells Powder Shot Reviaadin g Tools ‘ Guns Rifles 321311235 Also ï¬nes 39 Keith! “I: E. Gregory Day at Week. . . largest Stock, mam ‘0“ Thursday afternoon a. war mm"1891i about 50 years, “unant- M 5mm “V leaping into Nngara met a Yaw feet from the brinko! ï¬mhseshoe falls, at .W 1...; HS" cape. pocketbookyxnpa 1.6.[dwards- Mo! Corner on; 5m, m. a! MUNIIION Sign of the Amil ‘ d ' m MCINHRE Black Silk WdiplNeuxietia, i' Chiidren’s School Dresgg your old get them yd. ., Besides black, we show a beautiful range of snow flake effect in navy, cardinal, brown, green and blue at 50¢ per yd. For Ladies’ Suitings, a spec- ScOich Knickerbrockers‘ only one suit in each :e always in use and there is no fabric more ' Warn Neurietia. it looks well on everyone, They Should 7b; Rugged and Sturdy Full of Life and Ready for Work Play or Study â€" Keep Them Healthy “'"J -- --~ .. _ Growing boys should always be h: healthy and rugged. Ready for p ready for study. and ready at c« tune for a hearty meal. This 1i denotes good health, but any who do tidard. They games all play. any condition there are entirely too m not come up to this Sta take no part in the manly healthy boys indulge in; they are stOOpâ€"shouldered, dull and listless; they complain of frequent headaches, and their appetite is variable. Some- times parents say, “Oh, they'll out- grow it.†But they won’t-wits the the blood that's out of condition, and instead of getting better they get Worse. What boys of this class require to make them bright, active and strong, is a tonic, something 1 that will build up the blood and ‘ make the nerves strong. There is ‘ no medicine that can do this as quickly and. as effectively as Dr. Wil- ‘ liams’ Pink Pills. Mrs. Mary Com- of Merriton, 0nt., tells whatl . year' She says : “About two n Samuel began to . He grew very ' d at times experien- ced serious weak spells, coupled with and as the a tired, worn out feeling, orse. This weeks went by he grew w aimed for my husband had he doctors called perâ€" died of what t nicious anaemia, and I feared mygbon. was going the same Way. I had often , read that Dr. Williams Pink Pills would cure anaemia, and de- cided that' he should try them. 7A couple od boxes made a decided, im- provement in his condition, and by the time he had taken a half dozen boxes his health was better than it had been for some years previos. His weight was increased, his listâ€" leSsness had disappeared, and he was blessed with a. good appetite. I‘ may add that oth .. ,-,.._ 1...... been beneï¬tted by the any time for a nearby condition denotes goo there are entirely too not come up to this 51 take no part in the m: healthy boys indulge ‘ ,‘II Stoopâ€"Shouldered, ‘ they complain of f. and their appetite times parents say, Nothing but elegant describ- es our Black Broad Cloths, Cl:- eviots, Silk Finish Crepolin- es, Wire Cloths, Eoliennes, Baritz, Zibelines, Mohair Knobbs, Oat Meals and Cam el’s Hair; these are exquisite goods at reasonable ï¬gures, 29y {rice from 50c to 2.00 a faniily have been W'HCIuHA.“ W kuse of Dr. Winams’ Pink Pills and I ‘consider these pills the best of all {of nea _ . WIIIiams’ Pink Pins act directly upon the blood, both enrich (1 Mg the quantity, ing it am such troubles as an- that they care aemia, rheumatism, indigestion, neu- ’- pills may bé h from any dealer in ' medicine or will ‘ ' - 50¢, a‘ box or six hamlet $2.50bv L writing to the Dl". « f. cine 00., Brockwme, Ont. 5 value W with never. allow a _ __fl,.,.. lmtov‘l ' value dealer- JJ-u -v, ad taken a half dozen m: was better than it r some years previos. was increased, his listâ€" “$0351 yd is the cause and it is be- Pink Plus act d both enrich the quantity. about 25,000 I times the capacin ed on the Eri railway-freight t, The Trent Car upper lakes wi short-route new board, a steam terminus at th situated on the having .the, grand her on the upper a canal route time than the l Vizu between S Montreal, and is in distance, a1 shore mileage on of navigable wa way-neglected di half; in fact, tl misnomer, as o tance not more will be canal, tt being lake and are utilized {Or nel LOTS OF 112‘ The Trent ture's short v upper lages an it would be un accept her gi forest products ghOut. the nort moms and dilllc pine has been out, but the l‘ floats for a. she Sun-t only waiti gas can receive the streams tr other portions in agricultural of the larges continent. rcco born. was att on account of the Trent can: 593815 itsBargeswillnave Three Times the Capacity of those on the Erie Canal In a letter to the Globe of Satur- day Mr. J. A. Culverwcll, well known here as the promoter of the Burlcigh Falls power scheme, corrects a stateâ€" ment made in the Globe of a. week ‘before about the depth of water to w’ha maintained at the left 106k near be maintained at the left 100K near Petorboro on the Trent Valley canâ€" al. He says it will be 8 feet in- stead of 7, and goes on about. the canal as follows: The capacity of the Trent; CanalI barges drawing eight feet Will be about 25,000 bushels, being three times the capacity of the bergm us- ed on the Erie canal, that great railwayâ€"freight tariï¬ regulator. The Trent Canal will. connect the upper lakes with Lake Ontario by short-route navigation to the sea- board, a steam tug canal, with its terminus at the town of Midland. situated on the Georgian Bay, and havingï¬the, grandesmand natural.)har- ‘ ;bor on the upper lakeS. It will 'give ‘ a canal route 23 hours shorter in time than the Welland can-a1 route, viz., between Sault Ste. Marie and Montreal, and is some 245 miles less in distance, and will also give a shore mileage of one thousand miles of navigable waters to a sadly rail- way-neglected district in its northern half; in fact, the term “canal" is a misnomer, as out of the whole dis- tance not more than 15 or 20 miles will be canal, the remaining portions being lake and river stretches, which saw utilized fur the navigable chan- 19590 â€~- --, it would be ungrateful of us not to accept her gift. The quantity of forest products of hardwood throu- ghout the northern section is mor- mous and difï¬cult to estimate. The pine has been practically all floated out, but the hardwood (which only floats for a short distance) is at. pre- Sent only waiting till the canal bar- ges can receive it at the mouths of the streams tributary thereto. ~The other portions of the canal are rich in agricultural products ; in fact one of the largest cereal mills on the; continent. recently erected at Peter? tracted there not quly‘ 1on account of the water powers and the Trent canal, but on account of the grains in the district. The dis- trict has lately prOVen also local ts to be derived from the con- structiOn of a canal by the gather- ing of many large industries at dif- ferent large towns on its line, and lately. ALA Inno‘ stretCh be- llï¬DSAY, luuny. Next summer the long tween Lake Simcoe am will be completvd and navigation. Some two half million dollars or let plete the stretch betWeen coe and Georgian Bay, a lion dollars will complet‘ ch between ‘ . iâ€"u-‘Laténu' “ half muuon um...†v- ecu Lake Simâ€" Georgian Bay, and tWo mil- 5 will complete the s‘rct- ch between Rice lake and Lake 0n- tariHhus compk‘ting the work. mam the Canadian public to only 44-:ou (\I its utility has been provan by :1 gov- ernment-appointed commission com- posed of the ï¬rst railway and waterâ€" engineers of the w ho inational and ,prac grain-carrying route, ' d spirit da and tnc mutt“ national and practical value as a grain-carrying route. there Would be an end to the narrow-minded spirit of antagonism on both sides of poli- t to speak o!‘ the lamentable ignorance diSpl‘ayed generally as to the capacity and utility ' the government makes 'ts annual small grant for construc- instead, this great k . Id be so backed up by pub- its: construction ompleted without a mo- cial results Oi Po Stations, but “‘3" the report W†m ï¬lfl hence coVered 53 letter from i Agriwwm 8‘ read lately in L] 15 looked bad ‘C sults of Poultry 3’ but that that .M-é was for ' th ____r._â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"’â€"â€"'â€"’ . mason. SEPTEMBER 10m. 1903, ther from the he Illustl'a-tion conducting! a! d by the fa ong stretch be- and Rice 1akc and Open“d for two and one- ,. 155 will com- from the practical lustration Poultry Acting, and which a poultry divisions :kens reared at [the good proï¬t above EntereSt on the inâ€" en in charge of thq nets, and are thus poultry knowledge 7 to other farmers they address farm- ":"d- and make ex... fgii‘S; the finâ€" bpneï¬ts t0 the the men in y stations is amount paid Lke Sim- two mil- he stret- nko 0n- 9 Depart- that the House of Withing (the last few years the con- eumption of chickens ' plump chickens has advanced. Both the increase in consumption and adâ€" vance in price ale due to the busi- ness of cram-{attening chickens. The chickens that realize the highest market price to-day are chickens‘ that are tatted and prepared for market. in accordance with the direc- market in accordance With me unw- tions issued by the Dominion deâ€" partment of agriculture. Chickens from the Ontario and Quebec Illus- tration Stations were sold a few days ago to Mr. Henry Gatehouse for 12 cents per pound, live weight; and to the Canadian Produce 00., Toronto, Ont. ior eleven cents per pound live weight. These are pro. ï¬table prices that can be obtained Kmfiim mum crucsnss The method of killing the chicken by dislocating its neck is diaerent from the old-fashioned way of wring: ing or twisting the neck. When ‘the chicken's neck is dislocated, and the head is pulled from the neck in the manner described in the bulletin. “Proï¬tdble Poultry Farming," the loose unbroken skin of the n ‘torms a sack into which the blood of the chicken flows. The body of the chicken is as well drained of blood as if the head were cut OH with an axe; the market appearance of the chicken is improved by killing by dislocation; the flesh of the chick- en is more juicy and edible. On the contrary, when chickens are killed by twisting the neck, death results mainly by strangulation. The body of the chicken is not freed from blood on account of there not being space in the neck into which the blood can flow. The appearance of the flesh of the chicken that has hieen killed by twisting its neck is reddish and mood can be plainly noted in it. 1 In several cities in Canada a law is in force prohibiting the sale of chick- » ens that are killed by twisting the - neck. Home. the senselvssnecs of r the ridicule by certain members of 1 House in debate regarding the dth ' tailed directions in “Proï¬table Poul- - try Farming" for killing the chick- - en by dislocating its neck. and the 1' absurdity of making the statement 3 that dislocating the neck and wring- ! ing the neck are one and the same 3 thing. ‘ _â€"â€" HARDENED CBIKYNALS ESCAPE FROM FAST~RUHNING Three Criminals Join the Procession of u Bolton-s from Ofï¬cers in Toronto He is a poor sort of burglar. who, utter arrest, does not get away Irom the oï¬icers when' in the vicinity of 5 Toronto. Escaping oflenders have of ‘ late formed an animated procession in 1 and about that city, and to see a ' bunch of blacklegs using those ap- pendages to keep well ahead of o!â€" I ï¬cers and citizens in a race for the 1 ‘1th woods, is a common sight of 3 there. On Thursday three more joinâ€" ‘ ed the procession so lately augment- ed by the Quackerbush gang who ran from the very gateway of the Centâ€" ral Prison. The latest recruits were bad westernexs being taken from Fort William and Port Arthur to Kingston, to serve terms for larceny and highway robbery. They were in charge of Sherifl Thompson of Port Arthur and Constable Hessin and three of them escaped from the swift-moving train under the eyes of of their guardians. The four are named Duncan. Foster, Burns and Jansen. .M From Fort William to Owen Sound I~â€"- LA-‘ “(*5 Il allot In. From Fort William to Owen Sound the prisoners were brought by boat, and from the latter place were en- trained, occupying two seats facing each other in the smoking car 04' the C. P. R. steamboat express. Sherifl Thompson and Constable Hessin oc- cupied seats opposite the prisoners. Everything went serenely until Park- ‘dale was reached, then the car was free from passengers, save the guards and guarded. The convicts were hand- cufl‘ed in pairs, and the pairs of handcuffs connected by steel chains. After leaving Parkdale the train W881 running at 25 miles an hour when Foster and Duncan made a rush for the door of the smoker, and simul- taneously the other two leaped through the newt window. The chains had hpn sawed through silently by a saw obtained by the prisoners in some mysterious man- ner. Duncan eluded Sheriff Thomp- son, and in running through the coach ahead collided with the conâ€" ductor and jumped from the train in “ALâ€"‘- \Iuv I'V- wcâ€" .w-7V . front 0! the glass works near Stracâ€" han avenue. Bums stuck in the winâ€" dow, and when the constable gram)- ed his legs he gave him a vicious kick in the jaw. The constable left. Burns to help the shq’ifl secure Fos- ter. Burns struck out in a northâ€" westerly direction. J 8.1198!) secured ‘â€"â€"-â€"- ‘LA "KDUVIAJ w-v'vâ€"vf an opportunity of leaping from the car while the sheriff and constable were engaged with Foster. ‘ “ Aâ€"'--_ 4.. Foster was h Kingston under Hessin. â€"-W_jlliam Ray, of Owen Sound, husbapd of Mrs. Roy, accused of dashing carbublic acid into Emma. Boyce's face, is charged with tam. pering with an important witness for the purpose of preventing cer- tain portims of the evidence from being given. nd edible. 0n the Only in droams is a lancer ckens are killed 'b'! From the weary earth u k, death results phire walls; lation. The body But the dreams depart. is not freed from vision fans, of there not being And the sleeper wakes on ck into which the of stone. The appearance of - :cken that. has b'ben Heaven is not gained at its neck is reddish hound : plainly noted in It. But we build the ladder .. nnnmda. a law is we rise and taken to d of Constable Owen Sound, We rise by things that " our feet: BV what. we have men ‘guod, and gain By the pride deposed and 91011 slain And the vufliliShed “‘3 But To purer air We hope: While our Wings for the angels, but the man ! We may borrow the wing - the Wayâ€" We may hope and resolve napirg and way. But our feet must rise, or ageun. Godâ€" Lifting the Heaven is not bound: But. we build we rise From thn 10v Cd Skies. \nd mount to round. Beyond 1 things. An EXhibition of Wrasse atGollingwood That Would Have Pleased Some Locus To some locals wnouc gurgvn 5n up as soon as any ruflllanism in the name of lacrosse is not. oulogizml in the press, Lln: following account 1)) the Orillia Ken's-Letter. of a recent match betwe-u Orillian and a joint team 0! Thornbury and Clarksburgl at Colllngvvood. is Commended: The Thornmry-Cluksburg team had a. good following and also the support of most of the spectators. who encouraged their team by such remarks as “Kill him" "Finish him" “Split him open" et cetera, et cetera. The northerners needed no encour-y agement for they used the timber first, last. and all the time. The echo of a rap on an Orillia man’s head or shoulder would hardly die away before thv spectators would be treated to another. And the Spec- tators seemed to like it, too. vn‘_ _ ____ hourly meet- tutors seemed to like it, too. The checking motto of the Thorn- bury-Clarksburg team swmed to 00. “Never Bit a man's stick Hut just give him a two-handed biï¬ over the hea ." And they certainly didn't miss an Opportunity. 0f com-Sc lacrosse is not ï¬ddleâ€"winks and a rap or two may be eXpectod. but im brutality the team from twinâ€"town: can win the cake from numbing Uri!- ‘lia. ever went up against: and our ex- perience has been long and varied - ,4 4|...§u hnntlc DIM miss an opportunity. 01' course lacrosse is not tiddleâ€"win‘.~s and a rap or two may he expected. but for brutality the team from twin-towns can win the cake from nmthing (rril- lie. cVer m-m up against; and our ex; perience has been long and varied. Four Orillia mun had their heads cut open, and through their heavy caps at that. It look Several stitches to sew them up. Another had a gash put right across the bark of his neck. Every player. if not cut, was bruised and sore. and after the match ‘the team looked more as though ‘they had gone through a bayonet1 charge than a lacrosse match. Reâ€" teree Pennock penalized the offenders, but for too short a period. only giv- ing them two minutes. The crowd threatened to mob him, and it is said one chap drew a. revolver u: him between the second and the third quarters. Mr. Pennock did not scare. however, and kept the Wigh- , â€"-_-l‘l ness down as [11111555 our feet still cling to the heavy clay. THE FATHER. MOTHER. AND BOYS AT THE BIG TORONTO FAIR (The Mail and Empire) One does not need to be gifted with perceptive faculties-rivalling those of ‘ -- - A â€":-I- A... +1... Sherlock Holmes to pick out the farmer at the fair. Farmers diï¬er pahaps, quite as much as city tolk in mental and moral qpalities. Their features, certainly, were never pro- duced from the same mould, and yet they have a family likeness by which ,__I- the' are easily indentiï¬ed. A ale â€W" W“""""" --.- . writer is oer-thinly a curiosity. pHo twenty cheese and 501d at 91"“ urs now and then, of course. but “â€"0"â€" e is rare. He is lean, for the farm- GLENARM at is in training all his life, and usu- Report of S. S. No. 9, Fonelon. for August: 4thâ€"A‘. Tolmie, S. Sin- ally he gives one the impression 01. round shoulders. The wrinkled face. clair, L. Nesbitt, W. Harvey. 3rdâ€" hin, slow voice A. Sinclair, E. Fergus‘m. S. May- ;the shrewd eyes, the t It. is not he nos, M. Nicolson, M. McKenzie. 2nd ~these also are his. who stands thunderstruck in the pre- -M. Howie, R. Tolm-ie. Pt. 2M Ferguson, J. Nes- senw of the wonders of the fair. His E. Tolmie, J. vastness is with greater marvels. He bitt. lst. Stuâ€"M. Murchison, M. hos risen and lain down with them Haynes, N. Nicolson. lat, jr.â€"â€" B. shred boyhood. The - mystery of the Ferguson, W. Hewitt, Katie Kenâ€" yo’nns mule mom of wound My; . ‘ l. :4444 75 cents 8 Yea" i“ wings THE INDIANS GAME t‘ï¬e recall build the ladder by lowly earth to UK the aristocrats o! the long and earnestly discussvs pediâ€" hing tobegruxdlytruo 87°95 and the . . ‘ . pomts of mdnxduals, 5 deed ‘8 " step toward proudly tells- of his own “ smart two-year-ol-d, " that he‘s “ calculat- soul from the common in' " to bring down next year. and mm, view THE WIFE AND MOTHER . Clinging lovingly to the ow man's tings that are 'neath arm, one may see his wifv, looking much older than her husband, por- and a little tired and care- WOrn, after having brought up the m 31990“ and the pas» stalwart sons and buxom daughters n who make up the family. Growing unï¬nished i113 that we up the boys and girls are surprised ct. that, their mother is not a hflad tal- ler {Bun their father. She seems to to- «In, ---- â€"- annirn wa becomes smaller gnd smaller, and locals whose gorges get as any rufllianism in the rossc is not. eulngim-‘l in [In following account in \cws-Letter, of a. recent cvn Orillian and a joint r850 Ive l we aspire. 3119818. 13m; “3"" ‘0' and resolve and its summit rm r'r would hardly die spectators would be :er. And the spec- depart. and the ladder thrown arth to the sap' mount the air sensual his pillow g and varied. neir heads cut r heavy caps 31 stitches to Holland vault,â€" single which fall by Advance ; 3| if m - 30 paid ‘wvâ€"_w 7, day, as she stands beside ‘ does look slight. But he la and sees the blooming girl her hand in his forty y« Straight and tall she Was her hand in his forty years ago. Straight and tall she was then, arid good to look upon. and it is with this memory rather than with his eyes he beholds her. It is the main building attracts her every year. She loves to linger before the glit- tering show-cases, and gum with awd at the costly wares displayed there. Then at night the fireWOrks hold her enchanted. till the man has to al- most drag her away, saying, “I don't know what Mrs. Smith'll think! “bout bein' out. so late,†and a< it is nearly‘9 o’clock, they hurry to ‘the cars. apiece, and usually cigarsâ€"at lea they are shaped like cigars. to 5 nothing of the wrapper down 0 sine. Their boulr‘wt gives rise to t suspicion that perhaps they aro 11 what they seem. However. the bl, like them, or rat-her they like tr..- fact which they think they prndu So they roam about; a little 1 blase, perhaps, to admire ovorytlï¬ hut enjoying themselve hugely. '] gusts of wild mirth which ovary n and then convulav the little cm any would extract an envious s from Geo. W. Muncoe. It is a gr time for them. They may never quite so joyous again, for the life the farm is not conducivo of gait On Thursday of Toronto. a butter and 98 visit, to Port Perry was strum; III we head by a bullet from a 22-Calihrc rifle which penetrated the skull three- quarbers of an inch and Was not exâ€" tracted, Hut he seems none the worse. He was standing on the p1111f01’;;l of the Siebert House when he was cfnmk bv a, bullet which passed of the Siebert House wm struck by a bullet wh through the rim and cm hat and penetrated his } thrvo-quartors of an inch minger staggered for a. m was assisted into the hot: local physicians were sm An examination nevoaic that the bullet had entrred the mac about two inches above the loft ear. On probing the wound thv doctors were unable to locate the bullet. and said that it was impossible to state deï¬nitively whether the ball was still imbvdded in Mr. Ensmingcr's ht‘ad or had glanced out again. A party of local sports. accmnp- anied by citizens of Tumnm. had. throughout the day, in dirm-t \iola- tion of a local by-law. vngagml in shoot-Lug sparrows, and to this cause is Mr. Ensmingvr? unfortunate ac- cident plainly attributed. Tho part- iw in question were within 100 yards of the Sicbert House at the time of the accident. and on becoming aware of the result of their criminal careâ€" lessness immediately left, not wait- ing h enquire into the conditinn of theix: victim. ' On several occasions recently a number of citizens of Port Perry have been placed in a position of jeopardy through bullets passing close to their bodies. Rcmonstrances; have proved of no avail. and it has remained for this accident to awaken: the authorities of the town to a sense duty. u“v.y - A remarkable feature of the shoot- ing was the fact that a member of the local constabulary was standing on the steps of the hotel, yet so far as Mr. Ensmingvr is aware, no act- ion has been taken in the matter. \ll PALESTINEâ€"ELDON Harvesting in this district is al- most over. Mr. Finlay McArthur is making his threshing route this year with a new Waterloo engine of 18-horsw power as} out .of .his equipment. We under- stand its is giving good satxicfacï¬on. The cheese factory at this place has (teen getting: along very pros- perously this year. The last ship- ment contained one hundred and twenty cheese and sold at 9;c. of their dereliction of their Hit by a Rifle Ball Mr. Geo Ensmmgor, wholesale dealer in s when on a H‘qular rrv was struck in the at from a 22-ca1ihrc palm. thp Skull ‘1"00- :atc the b impossibl; the ball ms they az‘o nut, owever. the boys they like tlu- ofâ€" ak they produce. t; a littlr- too dmire everything elve hugely. The which every now the little comp- an envious sigh no. It is a great at a head tal- She seems to mailer, and to- side him, she he looks down , girl who put band, pet‘- and careâ€" ht up the daughters , Growing e surprised Rummm Llod 1h! cred th 2 the II )lll‘dl ir. l‘lnS- ,‘HL. and and 1 W0 anuts least .Ifft nt 011 fu fact 011 his