s Spring : Cota : made of pol Cloth 3 in smart style. The colors nd Grey sonitesting color trim. : : Prices $3.00 to ne 00 Fawn : Ee silk 63{ to 7 os "Price $3.76 | Men's Black Cashmere Hose * 50c. Men's Hose made of fine cashmere yarn in black only. Sizes 1034 and 11 Per pair 80c, Boys' Golf 'Stockings 5c. os hat is made of best ead fur felt, with bound brim, and Rus- ut leather sweat bands. Colors-- "Pearl Grey, Beaver, and Radium, with silk band. Sires 634 to T4. Price $4. 00. New Spring Caps for Men and Boys The new Spring Caps are shown with both one piece and eight piece tops. The Men's Caps are made from Tweeds, Homespuns, and Whitney Cloth, in smart. Spring shades. Prices $1.50 to $2.50 ety S She in Wash Dresses The materials in these dresses are Gingham, Beadora Voile, Normandy Voile, Sisgham B: Rating, Sie 8 and are made up in dainty s ies. $2.95 to $6.50 rices $2. ; " sss sss F. W. MCINTYRE Spring Butterick 25¢c. worsted yarn 91, and Boys' Golf Stockings made of pure in heather mixture. Rolled 30 has colored stripes. Per pair 86¢c. 2000608060604 Lanna s ss esns sas ad Sizes | IB herringbon Boys' Caps are made from tweeds e and fancy weaves. Prices 65¢. to 96¢. PE0ELIROPEIO0E PEISLETITIIRERNLITIICIOPTTLEVBOL = April Delineator 20c. 3 ust arrived a carioad Wire for Farm and Poultry \ Carnegie Hardware Colgan] Hardware--Fu urnaces-- Plumbing. Telephone 61 : Ei Port Perry ; nn The Torrie" Tosa ll stand for 'a li) heaviest, 8 tims et one yor] Port Perry, Ont. Jor any windnull _Toro~re FR The Greatest Service-- The Least Attention There's no piece of farm equipment that gives so hat service over so long a period with so little attention as a good windmill. That's why I recommend the Toronto Sclf- Oiling Windmill so highly. Lots of Toronto Windmills have given from eighteen to twenty years' service with practically no attention outside an occasional oiling and are still operating satisfactorily A A In the Toronto Self-Oiling Windmill all gears operate in a bath of special oil affected by neither heat or cold-- every bearing igtly and automatically lubricated. New oil is required "only once a year.' 1f you already own a Toronto Windmill, 1 can ve you this self-oiling fuature by merely inter Bos the head and usin Jose Drosent Most Toronto "inl bn be made ab ly self-reg MILTON STONE SELF-OILING WINDMILLS CREAM! CREAMI! for our New Creamery : Hn) HIGHEST PRICES PAID Special 39¢ No.1 37¢ No.2 Me f. 0.b. your. station --_ SHIP FARM TO FACTORY MORE MONEY | preference for Shakespeare, all the: {him at all of their own free choice. g Jocks 'they had fo study in connection | | who reported a liking for the poet. Back Bands, Hame Tugs, WHAT DO YOU READ? (Peterboro Examiner) A school superintendent of the State of Illinois recently made in- quiry among high school students in his district regarding the kind of literature they 'read in their spare time, says the Hamilton Spectator in an editorial for young people. Of the 800. scholars to whom he address- ed his inquiries, only one expressed a vest admitted they had never read Halt the pupils confessed they never at any other books except with their school work; there was one Tennyson; two read Fenimore Cooper, two Sir Walter Scott, two Nathaniel | Hawthorne, four Dickens, one Kipling and one Barrie. ~One-fourth of the | LAST CHANCE Balance of stock must be cleaned out in two weeks, including a few Single Sets of Harness and parts, Team Belly Bands, Halters, Col- lars, Tools, etc. Everything must go at your own price. Building also for sale or rent JOHN ROLPH a diffeient story would have been told; but if the habit of reading good literature has not been formed by the time* the boys #nd girls have reached high school age, it is likely never to be formed at all. And that means a lifelong loss to them. It would not be fair to judge Peter- boro's high school population by what is done--or rather left undone--by the students of Illinois. B tuit is not safe to assume that a similar in- vestigation in this city would give much beter results. We will hope that it would. Our splendid local library and the special efforts which | are made to interest young people, both by that institution and the edu- 'would surely not prove so utterly barren of results. Nevertheless, it is pertinent to urge upon the young peo- ple that they should not neglect the | great writers. ' To do this is to sacri- | fice: one of the most satisfying of i pleasures. ED | cational authorities, in the best books It cannot be the pti must result of service. 4. Manufacturing is not buying low and selling high. It is the pro- cess of buying materials fairly and, with the smallest possible addition of cost, transformng those materials in- to a consumable product and giving it to the consumer. Gambling, spec- ulating, and sharp dealing tend only to clog this progression. PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING Glazing, Graining, ete. I am handling a full line of Empire Wall Paper, numerous choice designs. Prices ranging from 10c. to $4.00. These papers are widely known for quality. Place your erder early. Walter Ward, Painter and Decorator. How small the cost! The value to you of YOUR telephone in- creases as rapidly as the value of a corner store in the busy section of a big city--and for the same reason--if youmake the most of it. Each year more than 50,000 new telephones in Ontario and Quebec are added to the army of those you can do business with. Your telephone also en- ables you, to talk with upwards of 125,000 telephones on rural lines in these two provinces. annual oul Cotte a fail Jom Bun 1% o 1 Goode's Creamery at Port Perry Is paying 33c. per 1b. for butter You can save labor and more money by sending your cream to Port Perry Creamery GOODE BROS. Proprietors Whatever you need for your HORSES In the way of | Henry Ford gives the following Fo fous wriniplen 4s. the-buss of bis