1a )1 'G'nre la at a r - 01,5» We are receiving 3136 fribuï¬ng large quantit- of HARD COAL. fresh clean, have also good och of STE \M COAL from best mines. ' lowed on deposits‘ 31/0 of2 $100 and up- Oward, compounded half }early. Paid on debentures {[0 Odrawn for one or more years. Interest paid half yearly. htyto Lean on Easy Terms of Pa) meat. thfunher. patticulars call at the opposite the Market ,MVflLE, JAS. LOW. W065 'htis required for starting up FIWYCEDARand CHARGOH- ‘5 fâ€in your furnace or stoves- ‘ Wuhan Jackets M AUIBMOBilE MI; (9 11:. S] of the a I m †, he Rathbun Co. me . Althrird Caci Pm‘denf. '1. Mt R, irst class 28 Dalhonsie Street a} and Alaska Sable.. 3‘1 and Opposuum ...... 21 and Bear ............... a! and Astrzchan ....... FURS .. 77, Mill 78¢ (MUN MCINIYRL Special Agent H ARDWO0D also MiLL 0.500....- JAS. LOW. Manage: CAPERINES. to... 0.. at. .0. 0000...... 0.0... 00.0.0.0... coo...- .oooo-u- o.- oc-..ooo- ..ooouoo coo. .‘C.........I..C...IOIIDO...OI.OCOOIIO go‘s-00.... JOOOOOOO‘OI‘UOOOO‘OJOAIOO 0 0.00000 guano-0'..- RUFFS O..- CAPS lolltlooOIOIIbOOOOOO .0000 6. lo 006 .pvo-ono- a... 0....- 3o...- 0" not... coooooooortc IDOOIOOOIOOODOOOOOD o... u OODOOJOIDIOO I... .0000. O... 6.0.. O. ODDOOIIOODOOOO 6000 o >uu9.ooooooâ€"Oo 0.. 0.... ODOOIOOOOIOOOIOOIOO .00000000000 . cop-7'.- now-roroooououuo .ooo’oo-rvo-oo OOOOOODOOIODOOOO. 0'30...OQOOIOOIQO§|OUQIIIII 00......- O|| IOOOOOIO‘OO§O O0.IQOIIIOQOIDOnOOllOUlbot Fanning twat! nooocovovo I..." .0... .9000... 0 0000-30... 10.00, 18.50, 25.00, 25.00 .................. 8 00 to 12.00 CAMBRAY, ouooooooo '9... o â€tit!!! "I “put! 3-1de 9.0.9... I ( Tudhopc of Orillia. me will “hange for SALE NOW 0" Do No: Buy Blankets, Etc.“ THE GLOBE wms LIBERALS . THAT THE mm . IS WEAKENING The Toronto Glob published an editorial in its issue of Mondfl’ the 9th inst. that indicates that the party organ is not aware “that many of the Opposition charges against the Liberal party are true. and it is not without the moral courage to demand reform. The edi- torial in- full is as follows: It Says That Zeal Has Coolad And That the Party is Afflicted by Parasites and Bmaeles “The Liberal government will, inl all probability, hare control of the administration of allairs in Ontario until the next general election four years hence. '1 he majority in the] Legislature is not large, not half! what it should be for the work that! needs to be done. But the fact of a! majority, the traditions and history of the party, and the dominant few- tures of the present situation all combine in an appeal to every in- telligent Liberal in the province’.‘ "There is a ï¬rst duty before Ontario, Liberals. ' fl “Let it be said quite frankly thatfl? the present political situation is"? neither satisfactory nor creditablelï¬ There is little positiveness or virili-‘~ ty in provincial politics. Both ‘pa.x‘-'j ties have been becalmcd, and than“: too, for causes largely with them-g selves. The Conservative Opposi-i tion has deteriorated steadily in; moral power and the political pres-g Vtige from the days of the ‘brawling1 brood of bribcrs’ until the present humiliation of Gameyism. and it is ,a far cry from Mr. Whitney back to ‘Mr. Meredith. But the government( side has also suffered loss, the least? important of which is a distinguishedj majority in the Legislative Assem-‘ My. , The 'nature, extent. and causes of that loss must be estimated. The condition of the Conservative party is not the ï¬rst concern of Ontario Liberals, nor is their first, duty the reform of the Opposition in the Leg- islature. There is a mote in their own eye which must be taken out if they would judge. justly the quality of their opponents, or see clearly the way in which they themseh'es should walk, and the public service they are in duty bound to render. “The loss which has come upon the -1. J-Ln men-t there is m pumu; 1110 ... ‘.-_ tario, in either party. no other man to whom to turn“. 11‘ the Spint of a ‘o DOISt’cs. his lvadvrship Would seem to be of ï¬rst importance. “The present (Eisn'ess has not coma by accident or chance. or as a 3'0â€" ‘ ‘ â€"-â€"« A: max-ornment 1:0.‘iâ€" nuns", mu. novemseg mm 1903. LLIU r â€" -7 , by accident or chance. or as a n- sult of a change of government po‘i- not at all because of an) cy, and mouth of power or prestige in th‘ Opposition. It. has come throng] tge cooiing enthusiasm and t!» t of not a few Li-ber slackening cï¬or als. And thesecret of it all is n -1 AM Snn methOd tg'e 600:1ng “WWW slackening effort of not a few I.i'b9râ€"‘ als. And the secret of it all is in the discredited election methods d to. and the acâ€" 3 lost something of its ts note of MUJRMYE “H ï¬Ã©ï¬l. AMBULANCE we in the p‘ 3 through and the if the Some political opponents advise aj itario term in Opposition. That, too.1 L four would be weak and foolish. Ber the sponsibility for administering the at- half fairs of the province rests upon the L that Liberals. and cannot be surrendered of if. exec-pt at the mandate of the elec- istory ’tors. Besides to surrender to the t fed- present leader of the Opposition and in all, his inevitable colleagues would he in: not only political suicide, but 8. Vince?" crime against the State. The elec- 1tarias,tors, not knowing him, may choose - ï¬lir. Whitney, but those who know that}; him and have associated with him an is"; would be without excuse were they tablegiweakly to play into his hands. 01‘ virili-j late years his leadership has been 11$â€; distinguished chiefly by bluster and tha.;-"bun-gl-ing, to be accounted for only them-{liy constitutional incapacity. And pposi- ithe surrender oi the Opposition and dly inii's leader to the member for Mani- presâ€"gtoulin makes the voluntary abdica- iwling1 tion of control on the part of the resent Liberals a thing not to be thought it is of in the interests either of the party lck to or of the province. "‘ L- “What. then, is the ï¬rst duty of Ontario Liberals ? To let things drift ? That is the policy of weak- bees and folly. These are the times of Ontario’s history when the policy of drift is in the leuSt tolerable. The expanding industries of the province demand a. progressive policy and a strong-handed Administration. A negative attitude and an uncertain control would but give opportunity to corporate and capitalistic plund- erers to feed fat on the public do- main. And from the party point of View to drift would be the part of fools, for the reckoning day Would come, a day of swift and certain judgement. , j._:-A A VI VA "luv 17â€" v v -7, I“ “There is but ,one thing open to ithe Liberals of Ontario, and that thing is their ï¬rst and most press- -ing duty. The barnacles on the ‘ship must be treated with an iron 'hand. The interests of the Liberal tparty are superior to those of any lindividual, and the interests or the province are supreme over all. Half measures will not avail.’ Neither |t11e Liberal party or the province ewes to any man any position or leeward not earned by honest and ef- ï¬cient public service. If Premier ‘ Kass is prepared to devote the re- ‘ ma sing years St his public me to the truest political heroism. if he i will risk everything intelligently and deliberately for what ought to be, if , he gives Ontario another term ofi .-Liberal administration organized on -:business more than on party princi- :‘plc-s, he will not only crown his own ' career ï¬ttingly and prove himself the sistatesman his friends believe him to '..be, but his reward will be found in "the rallying to his support of the :!strongest and best citizens, in the -iliiting of his province out of its pre- -*sent low political estate.'and setting Ellis party in the places of honor and Lipower for another generation. ’â€" _-..:Amnmy power for another generation. “To say that all this is visionary or impossible or not worth an effort is to confess oneself a weakling and a coward. The Liberals of Ontario believe it can be done, for they are scund. and brave of heart, and the doing of it would be to them as life from the dead. It would demand courage. and judgment, and a reso- lute will. To give Ontario a vita- lized and truly practical and com- prehensive educational service. to lsecure the public domain for the 'public beneï¬t, to. husband the re- ‘sources of the province against wan- |ton waste and unjust private mon- 'opoly, to man public ofï¬ces with ef- ï¬ciency and integrity of serviceâ€"in a word. to give the province a. thorâ€" oughly competent. aggressive and business. Administration is the ï¬rst duty of Ontario Liberals. If it Hui-“v v v--- ought £0 be ache it can be done. It can be done, and Liberals should do ideas reghrding a s in connection with in! Hospital here._ â€vâ€"r_-_e, The ambulance has been made poem‘ sible here by the generosity of the three banks doing business here. each of which has placed $300 at the credit of the hOSpital board for the purpose of securing an ambulance. The gentlemen who, went to Peterâ€" ‘boro are of the opinion that with the good points noted in the Nicholls Hospital conveyance, and some im- provements that they regard as posâ€" sible, a very excellent ambulance can be made. It may be built by a lo- ‘cal ï¬rm. _ _ o , 9- .â€" I In Peterboro the ambulance [charge of an undertaker who i {101‘ his services by the hospit thoritis, and it is intimate itho same plm will be ’adoptet‘ anew: 0! 59 to devote the re- of his public life to )litical heroism. if he hing intelligently and what ought to be, if in another term Of bated with an iron crests of the Liberal ior to those of any the interests of the name over all. Half not avail.- Neither arty or the province an any position or led by honest and et- rvice. If Premier the ambulance is in dertaker who i8 Paid by the hospital au‘ it is intimated that ,m be adopted here. a View to getting similar convenience the Ross Memor- the nth? owns 25,000 miles of railroad. .and some years is adding to them at the rate of 2,600 miles a year; he has 000,000. 500,000 into new warships, 321,- 575,000 into relief for the crop fail- ure, and other millions be poured inâ€" to increasing the army. In a time of ï¬nancial depression he was affectâ€" ed the least. He pushed ‘his great Siberian railroad, 7,600 miles long, his trans-Caspian railroad; his rail- roads down to the frontier of Aus- tria and Germany, and his railroads in Central Asia, just as if he owned all the mines and mints in the world. ’ ’ 11-.-...5... India. That is the menace of to- day. he believes, the dogged. resist- less manoeuvreingv of the Muscovite to get. hold of the great Chinese Empire. 9n :. 4A nnIrï¬ovn mpllc. “With her to will is to achieve. She moves as if she had only to pick out of everything what she wants. Is it Siberia ? She takes it. Is it Central Asia ? She takes it. Is it Port Arthur ? She takes it. Is it Manchuria? She takes it. Is it Persia ? She runs her railroads to the Persian gulf, and takes the Persian commerce, knowing that’ where Persia’s heart is, there will she be also. Does she want Mongo- lia. ? She has only to say the word. The iron net is fully spread. Does she want Thibet'? She already has ‘her hand stretched under the limb to icatch it, when she wishes to jar the tree. Her railroad runs 7,600 miles from the Bosphorus to the Yellow within cannon-shot oi Pekin. With her railroad stations skirting the Chinese border for 3.000 miles, and thickly set with forts. and with her no whose advice must be taken. Without ï¬ring a single shot, or takâ€" ing a single step worthy of interna- tional consideratio-n,~ with only the pressure Russia knows so well how to exercise, China seems certain to- be brought. and is being brought, the absolute control of Bus-- Mr. Robt. Bryans Talks of the Land of Great Distances and Agricultural Abundance Mr. Robert Bryans who re recently from a. business trip t Northwest is another com pire's Granary. “Earnest. extends over a lo: iod in that country" Said M: ans. “Cutting begins in some some places that is not so strange when pne con-,4 ! the country â€"its northern and southern boudur- ies Bmder very widelyâ€"Separated latitudes. In tact the sense of vast distance is one of the things that the nerves of the people who live there though. They talk of people living ‘15,:niles away as neighbors. They start out on a journey 'of 150 miles as {I It reached only to the mt concession. At a. 'iittle party *~--‘~ n... mints given by some I came chiefly from aw“. I heard 01 came to 80% his 3“} after 10 o'clock home whiCh W“ got there by back. T1160 :1 prairie at a. 80° lllc: guy- i - , niles as if it reached only to we mitt concession. At a iittlc party‘ given by some friends, the guests†:ame chiefly from at. least 20 milcsi‘ away. I heard of a young man who- 1 :ame to see his girl. He stayed till 1 after 10 o'clock and started out forl‘ as 45 miles away. Hell got there by the next, night. A“? good deal of travel is done on horst ‘ back. Than mustangs go over the prairie at a. good rate. THE FOREIGNERS THERE I was interested in the" .tor‘eigners who have settled up . ï¬ckomplgihéd to the ‘ Edmonton, ac justiï¬ed his action on "points; ' at A oractically whole-hue future 1 . sale deal. And as a matter i 0f {thelthese Doukhobors get their 5 carloads at once. One land 85 Md sold them a $100,000 blqck. are getting rid of some of u t with the wool side in. W Th the “Emâ€" cian girls are very bright ar good-looking. They are tale sitious as \vmtresecs in r051 t long WP- and hotels. “r' Brvâ€" to .dres' aqd act in Advance ; SILifinot so paid (Chas. D. G. Roberts) Now 310113 the solemn heights Fade the Autumn’s utmights ; Down the great earth’s glimmerin‘ Little kindred of the grass, Like a, shadow in'the glass Falls the dark and falls the still- ness ; We must rise and pass. We must rise 'and follow, wending Where the nights and days have 6! ins- Pass in order pale and slow Little brothers of the clad, Soul of ï¬re and seed of sogi, Little comrades of the sky Wing to wing we “(under by Hark, the moving shapes confer, Globe of dew and gossamer Fading and ephemeral spirits In the dusk astir. Going. going, going. going, Softly as a sigh- Moth and blssom, blade and bee. Worlds must go as well as w,c In the long proceSSion joining Mount, and star, and sea. Toward the'shadowy brink we climb Where the round years roll sublime, Rolls, and drops, and falls forever In the vast of time; Like a plummet plungir Past the utmost roach Till remembrance has Care to laugh or weep. Wieâ€" ï¬iust {are into the silence At the knees of God. China has 40,000 men ready to march against the Russiansâ€"and then run away from them. It begins to look ast there were room .for only tWO nations on this continent, and Carrie seems to be one of them. ' That; daughter of feller, jr., that was born yesterday is one of the richest girls in the ‘ A â€"A 6.1.. (1011‘1519 John D. Rocke- Into sleep extending. Mrs. Nation has this at over 'other' alleged artors tresses.†No matter how h ’ - 3“ ----.4‘In performs nobody w her with stale hen would simply get chet. It looks as if law should be am deer shooter before slay shall be com; in addition 'to h list's certiï¬cate tha chancel lide the days and nights. if the Ontario game amended so that the starts out to It looks as law should be deer shooter before ge slav shall be compelled to take out, in ~addition ‘ to his license. an ocu- list's certiï¬cate that he is not cross- eyed, and can tell a deer from a hu- man being at 100 yards. to tiring their people into line. The Menonites are bound to li close together. To do that th‘ have very long narrow farms a} “build there houses in a row on 0 end of the farms. ï¬â€™ou Sm: the MU strips of land divided by ri-Ubons sod. These are‘ the farms, and t houses on them are $9 close 11.10;) bl: .as to look almost like 'one side of street. 'These narrow {minis are mile or so long but these people Every 1 prove ‘5 1coming in _to the for Every year sees the country prove. New settlers with money coming in. Good crops are am to 'the fortunes of the old settl Railways are extending and bring conveniences to the parts form “A“ fn‘o vvvâ€". , Every year sees the country im- prove. New settlers with money are coming in. Good crops are adding to the fortunes of the old settlers. Railways are extending and bringing conveniences to the parts formerly remote. The wheat crop for the " or 20 years has brought many millions into the country. A good deal of money has gone into land, eudis still being used to pay what. farmers owe on their large holdings. In the south some {am - ‘efl do nothing but grow wheat. I have seen tax-meta with no cattle but 0119th cow. - In the north there " 7,“, 4-4 -c afmk- The soil 0 land, andis still being USCG to pay what. farmers owe on their large holdings. In the south some farmâ€" ers do nothing but grow wheat. I have seen farmers with no cattle but one milqh cow. In the north there is a. good deal of stock. The soil is wonderful. . In a. good many secâ€" tions 20 years of cropping, without lany tertilizet. ï¬nds it growing just ‘aï¬m crops asatNï¬rst. In other pages it is re‘quiring care similar to Mt our land here does. Most 01‘ {up Juiï¬â€˜ber comes into the country a; 7 British 'Columlï¬a, ibut more I' †you would think jg produced in v_ - Territories. W5 some tim- : inflamed districts, and logs 10- wear sheepskiu wool side in. ‘ '1‘! are very bright a ing. They are ta‘ I waitresses in res 3, and will do a gc their people {nto lil RECESSIOIAL THE JOLLIER 1â€" la in d others at 0th Than is no doubj': abO y will ventm hen {nut for get, her axe DOK ast there were twO nations on this Carrie seems to be ; narrow farms are a. Lg but these people do Lg all that’distancc to Sake of living close to- There‘lis some tim- led districts, and logs down the rivers“ from ging deep ‘h Of Sli‘ep as no lung Northvc ,tter 0f faCt. uir stuff by land agent o'ck. The." of their odd :kin coats 'l‘hv Gali- ’ and (1in taking PO“ restaurants re anxiO‘lS 1 na-