L 31:3 70%} Int MARKETS. {use to vase f. .Q Merl-a. su- ,13.1uc; m a Harm m market coder: L 36.90 “>51â€; ï¬ght. STOCK. ï¬ecexpu, 7w; steers $1.78 a cum 8.. :- calves, )3- â€f no 93000ch â€"Whent-â€"8" 13mg. In“: sass; use. a TIONS. vn _mrm t4 PORTS. :o 9394; STOCK. STOCK. pHSVJto ’33-.5 “-A A- ’c to 2455c. - k; recap“ 3o nouns, 17.x. .5 for an]. 100 steady, 'réeung ugh Haml- rial-37$?!) in am to a“; $4.25 to 1‘; HARKET. a cattle u: 10:- r E UARKET. 47s; MARKET. 'to “4:; iii ma; 1...; ’5 110, 641 be“ £135ch lpnngm '- 10'"; reported-I’V- :eer in fall sud its ‘0 59.12%:- meg 0.00 n00- for threshing Salt in bbls. $1. 50. y" vac-m» ‘ 3.1.3 3mm}: mm l 7 ' « “f“ ‘ M “Hasn’t the place' I» future 7" I re- ' ’ marked to another resident. ,3; we s'gt â€"Th§râ€" on the“ mam. enjoying m of the- . _ ’ ‘ ' , ‘. Balacfofl: aim. ‘_‘lf‘\lt\gt'e?" he Sterliflg , Bunk, neared "you gamma-mac long » , nachos, m‘lasy cedar. Why. my ofr’Cmpdaa ‘ tutu‘reï¬ms town ever had a put.“ ' ’" " ‘ 3° “gnaw; ‘W gt a his time éï¬t‘hito deposit. 31 will open an ac- count. Begin with us now. Small savings form the base of large fortunes Of Canada WOODYILLE AGENCY Standard Bank $1.00 opens a count. Current lowed from «we of 65900“. Accrued interest in Milk principal twice a you. Accounts may be opened name at two or non M“ animus 3px: A «bank is the safest magpie: money not in use. eat; from thieves. safari-om ï¬re, safe horn mngptadon to spend .‘ it. Interest added tinge a, year a highest. current, rate. ‘1 starts an aboount. 23913. Married women at! minors W make and Withdraw deposits with- out the intervention 01 tn? W Bank. of‘TOroutO‘ sactéd. Fm' bum ceive mur‘mtiong PARKERS' BUSINESSâ€"S ial :tphtinn given to Farmers, Catt. e and Savings Bank Department. We are here forrbusinan- We want 70m J. B. D; 68"â€; th Folk Who Live . gLWZm 2:41;; ’WSZidquZt'o:$ w Wharton Way 3: “1‘ :::"*mm,...: OMIï¬iN F. F. LOOBEMORE, LINDSAY, ONT, THURSDAY; ,1-1m OCTOBER, 1906. rate of intaest is added'to the AGENT. 11'†â€m “East. Lyuno'ï¬-a place in the hills, :1 place of peace. There is a wiggling little railway built from Kinmount Junction to the town of Bancroft. once well knoxim {or its connection with the ballot box scandals, but. it. didnft. appeal vaw much to usas aplace o! etemal beautv. “Us " moans my friend and I. We were two néxmpapcrmen out onaholidas, rod and gun in our trunks, and light hearts beneath our steel-grey jerseys. I had oanmed sumâ€" mer after summer; I had lived at times on Ontario farms. and ï¬shed Iran: the ferry docks of one-street towns, but that thme weeks in Bali- burton mfar more replete with odd camping experiences, strange (has on farms. and more wonderful attempts to ï¬sh than any I had hitherto pass- ed through. Rather stifling . was it not, for‘tvwo newspapermen to gojo Haliburton to ï¬sh '2 Host newquknnen on their vacations, I believe, go to Monte Carâ€" lo or Atlantic City ; but we two felt. the pinch of poverty. and preferred Ioaï¬ng cheaply on a mlative‘s houn- ty. The relative was a student mis- at. 8. BLACK 1n Towing @1050) Did you say. friend 0‘ mine, \ an} ï¬ngernail! of mommy; and the wall 0! nineteen â€incited and six Ind omen-need to mytw-most comm bf our gm: Dominion ? Let. me tell you of a place within ashon sweep of Toronto, wherétb'c modern mantle. has’ not dragged: t Place where Evan- geline's story mifllt be acted out. with no artiï¬cial Men or changed' tho human backgrwn'd. Come with me on a northbound train up to the cen- W of Halib'urmn county, where mo... ster crop reports nava- have their or- igin. where millionaires never grow, where one highest winding is Tom on lord‘s new barn, where the W of “lawyer†suggests the “heavy man" sionary seat by the l'rosoywnan church into the wilderness to conduct services over thirty miles. of terriâ€" tory. hirty long medlees mnelthey were, mic or the hardest ï¬elds in the listof the‘Ontuio â€maidens, end- the missionary is share of the cross it ever a. man justly desa'vod the ti- tle. It wu4 p. m. whenthe “Iron- dele†railroad conductor called , out "Violet !" or some equally fanciful name. So we left the bumping, toss. in'g seat and went to the' rear. Bracinghimsefl for the next. curve. he addéfl, with; grin: "You know, when they cometo rough ground the engineer fellow runs the we on the flu. Wouldn‘tdu'e to runtho cars ‘on the rails over rough ground. you know. " "-Look there," said my friend, sud- denly, ashe pointed to the track be- hind us. At the moment we were passing over a marsh. and the tracks and ties sank several inches below the cozy surface†the coaches passed over, and then arose to their former posi- tion. A lurch threw us back into the doorway. and we collided with a young Englishmen. "Hi, there !" he cried, ashe paged out. both hands to prevent himself from falling ; “this is a. beastly line of rails, isn’t it? Seems to follow the rice and (all of the ant-hills; real- ly it dous. ‘you know.†que toWn that seems to be patterned more alter the mining towns of Brit- ish Columbia}. such as Trojl or Kuslo. than the serene dignity o! the habits. tions of Ontario. Men and women with greet heats live in Bancroft, so we found ' out before we had been there 10:13:; but there's noelnck of reâ€" negede'humity to make the good the {note outstanding. What a. talk»! he m,the bighotél mnwvho had O] Bana-onpame at last, the pktureo- by the Presbyterian "it!“ w with igmat' swinging shoulders, and thefthe aisle. :head of a Marc Antony. envoréd with 5 Yet in that great and oniy partially zlong white hair and board. He didn't ‘ known district there are hundreds of {like me as much as my cousin (I could zhonost. loyal, hard-working ‘m' isee that). becausehe soon found that «miners and lumbermen. with their I was not. a "muster." Newspaper. families. far more happy and 00th men. to his conception. were :uncanny led than many who live in the C‘Wv ï¬xings. That night. long after the 1nd who arena-med“! “‘1 night ism: had gone to its rest. we found ‘how to keep up Woes. and who 'the’relntive. and. what was equdly 'worry over their â€mic“ My '1‘ Jweleome, a steaming hot supper. ‘ ‘minpnd ulna-manic inc-putty. 30M ., For dim durum-n .'m-wocmm. W “I “‘1‘" 91km of my belt W chm-hens. cacti-morning to both dwou.†He lgifpu witheut giving us the lnlohne tion â€sought. We walked mat day tmty milesâ€"theaty endless miles. ova: hills and th’rough valleys, and wk for hours child the silent mums ottheforest. lien) were ago the government ofthedey hunt a broad path through that unsettled land, a great. expensive road. and called it “the Honk road. " Heavy timber bridges at intervals spanned the rush- ing torrents, and the tortuous route of travel was been from rocks and steep hillsides and angel-brush. To-(ley there is nothing- of it left. Only . e 'faiht trace of a deï¬nite llnc can now and than be minimal. To tru‘el through it is to grape. and the streams must be walled ur crawled over on asingle tutu-ring log. Ah. yes. he’s even mm, b’g‘t‘ he's ewfui yeti: to buck inst thud-toe)! behind‘ui; Biit he earnest led. and. 1m: you he's pot“- eri‘ul onhlsto‘n. Ah. men. that's the onemarkol' sweet When when he can quote the dates. and the {:1th end the stories wont Rehoboam and J'onethen and Sun 0' Tamas. Give us them I “hand vour attacks on the throtre and gear talk of apostolic secession can go glee: to pot. The young minister knows history. and the next time he comes down the Car- ringion mad I’m gomg to give him a An old S'cotch‘ farmer who had liv- ed sixty years in‘Halihm-mn on his presént farm. ind twenty yr-ars in his "Home Innfl,†offered to guide us over part of our way. The fact that I was the “preachcr's cousin" mmnd to touch the-man's hart. Six fact he stood, straight. as an arrow, with neyed over the field 0! tint brave mission student. visiting his parish- ishidners. purtaking 0! their hospital- ity and talking poiitics with the worktworn farmers when the day's iabï¬r had ceased. I have often thought since then of the oddness of two contrasts that came before my fancy-that farmer. with his staff, striding over the meadows, with the blue clouds'und rigged hills suggest- ing thedreamo! life. On the other hand. that fronting man dodging an automobile'to cud: aYong'e street car which will carry him over a mile of pavement to quickklunch restauâ€" man's door is Open to him and the welcomeing Mme:- withheld. We met one day a. nice old mu: who was babbling about the house on a hickory me. ‘The student had argu- ed with the aged parishionee magma oven the headt- ol medical treatment yet'thoold mu: he!!! Mostly to cmby faith. ('03:: you explain this vendor that ?" he would ask us, and uh.‘ vet-ad ‘ answered he would linflrand glvo his own“ fanciful expu- ï¬atâ€"n. Stubbomas was his primary Ii: that country, where many a grown man could be found who never suwastmeta car. nor a habitation higher than two ttories. where girls grow to womanhood and marry with- in (We drive from home; where grandchildren prate of great cities as thing! {mover apart from them, the feeling of conservatism runs not so tervid toward religion. There were more unbeliever- among those hospi- table hill! of Halibut-ton than in mm large towns of the Wanton: States. Family alter family in a very ml! tree. are sometimes num- bered among the mission student's talig'iou Opponents, although every uâ€"vâ€"v-v- Onambrnhc “'5“ the chilly “r had turnad’ouf steps homewutd from the aching grounds “ w’e" 1‘“ M ( I‘m)“: wommund her medo-cin “1° md“ snip “- ï¬g 1"†to Harem!“ 4?" I cried in III-S..- .m M," TEYery Han and Woman { Should Have a. Bank Account mM9-’ m medi- 5. The viows'of horsemen genera!- 1y :1 to the advisahflity o! a. Stal- ed in lion Inspection Act. 6. Swath†from those inter- turnod mediaflnhone business as m "'0'†Mint can he done to improve condi- them wortmees. sun the old mu and the child ask a minim; for it. and waste about half the your going about the country offering it to the big timber merchants. He has been drifting that way for them ï¬fteen years and seems not the least bit. dis- couragvd." We came back one duv' to Toronto, tnd “our eyes met the crowding moreommerce 1m friend nudged moon them. "How far didyou say those Haiâ€" burtou farmers were from Toronto ?" he “Rod. Yat. in that great and only partially known district thereare hundreds of honest. loyal. hard-working farm, miners and lumbermen. with their families, {u- more happy and content- "I suppose about two hundred miles." " Ever; inch of a thousand, " he an- sx’verod.u he swung hissuit case in In these outwith-way PIM- At the last session 01 the Legisla- ture the Minister of Agriculture se- cured an appropriation {or the pur- pose 0! making an investigation in- to the condition of the horse indus- try in the Province of Ontario. This work is now being undertaken by the Department of Agriculture of Ontario, and will be commenced early ib October. The 01330“. of this investigation is to obtain iniorma- tion to be used in deciding as to the best policy'to adopt to encour- age more extensive breeding of a better class of horses. Following are the principal points which will be considered in the course of the investigttion :7 1. The number, type; (pulity and breeding of stallipns end brood Innrec in the Province. . 2. What condition have allowed. or are enecting the quality â€damn- her of stallions end brood more! in the various sections of the province, and J! the ellect is for good. wheth- er or not the same conditions could beepplied in other sections; and if pï¬-Lmbly waned in diaerenc ‘aec- float of the Ravine under the na- tinlconditiom found in those see- ï¬nal 0! the home business gamer I? a syndicate. and any other plan It preomt. adopted in Ontario other dun print. ownership. at or not the same conditions could “(applied in other sections; and it the cohditions hum not a. good ef- lect. what could be done to improve INVESTCGATION B" THE DEâ€" PARTHENT or AGRICULTURE The Horse Industry of Ontario Bax-(ï¬ns in . TRU NKB and * YALIBES “' F m‘béfl Foi‘beft Shoe Store mm 30“ OF GOOD SHOES 4. Thesysm 8. What ads: of horses can most Our line of Me- dmn'ic’s Shoes is way out of the ordinary line of shoesthot most shoe stores ofl'er to working men. We sekct the best of Box Calf Leather and oak tanned S ole s Punk Fox-Inn 52 Kent-St†LINDSAY or owning and expert horsemen-Kw been seiâ€" ected end allotted to each district. Fromï¬veto eix'eeh'illbespeut‘ in each district by the- committee appointed for tint Met. The district: will be eonpooed of a. num- were! M grouped together. the umber making up each district being decided by the lengthvof time m and add†01' the stallion to foilow while in the district. He has also been asked to'mcompony the committee. and to amuse for the public meeting- in: theoounty- In cases where the - Secretuy was- mble to do’ the work} the ‘Presi- dent of the Farmer-3' Institute has been asked to make the- am arrangements: The dates and points» at whtch thevpub‘ ic meetings will be hevrbeen - selected. Arrangements hive mobbed: completed for the dates M for each Institute div-~ ï¬lial; til the paint: a whicheon» um.- will trend-r tron one Insti- as; W to the- one following. as to the number. type and quality of the brood m. the commitâ€o am an opportunity of conï¬rming this by noting the appearance-01th. pea-son who no desires an opportuni- ty of expressing his vim to thy committee. The meeting in each county will be held imediatcly utter the committee has complebed- the work in tint county;- ‘ In each W’Inmtutc district required to go~through a county. M county will require. from {our to nine days. The information rev guding stallion will boas detailll as possible, each stallion- in tho Province being inspected. The infor- mtion restrain; was cannot be got so accurately, but a grect dot! of information can boprocnred from the stallion owners- in“ eazh‘ district ‘ In each hm' Institute district the Secretary has been ukéd to as- sist in: the work of ' procuring the matters of a. more general nature, information will be . procured by clone observation and ' by conversa' tion with thosevmet by the commit- we who my hum any, knowledge of the local condition... In addition to the work as above' outlined, it is being arranged to hove-one public meeting in each. county at some point oentmily. lo- mm seen while travelling through the district. Regarding thg other is takenvin the homindnstry. The object of the meetings is to give my Mailed to us today will bring our handsomely illustrated new temp!» book. telling how you can learn telegraph and qualify for a, position at. from $45.00 10- 860.00 pu- month in from ï¬ve 10 seven months. Dominion School of Telegraphy Th- work should- have the- synâ€" 9 ADELAIDE mm’ EAS Tenor-m. m ‘3 Kindly write your postal 11017. B. W. Sonora. Prlndpgl A POSTAL NUSEBER- 41‘ for the DR. A. REID Cushion Shoo FOR WOMEN Specipl Agents- Sole Agents for the Famous flatly and Promptly men .