CÂ¥ I 4 rated in by young men : neighboring. sections. â€" Fo: a : while ?ï¬vdv!'q. «of Athe ckercises t the sreiting ‘and "then it berame of. . & tk.olï¬ interest that. the speiling was a minor mat Aer.‘‘The setections ‘ were sometimes madeby the fcacher,. but more ire ‘émm by . the scholars . themselves: 9 Ln< wereâ€"mostiv ‘fromw‘ our ‘ school sele ted yike; ‘Contentment, . NC F ï¬ and the rtats." A ;in-n« Araveiling, ‘put up for the nigh . infested with‘ rats. In miorning, as be was ready to < he was surprised at Nis billâ€"h <hbarged ten shillings. â€" In ren‘o! ineâ€"with the host he finally s Damon,"‘ a dis lagtâ€" minstrel, ""Â¥he convict him cauets oetFy 1 2 4 BC o Ponnt s . nc io elfing‘ school§, mostly . by: the bo The Saying of Pieces «) Seme oi ‘the boys.had little squib live. the followingr"A ‘codfish break feet ‘and an Indian. rubber..gogt . wi} rw% «l «Geme out re," said_a. : hoy to d lot . ol my Sticks "in j"h' lindow , ‘and.I‘ll ligk. phe â€"wholé, of" you:" A miagy ts g men,* mokning,4 Father ‘"ABfabam,‘‘ said the: f;â€f?‘ *"Good morning, "Fether â€" 1sa e,*" said*~. the sezond; *Good mo:nifg,;Fa!t t Jeâ€" cob," said the third. TheJew _‘teâ€" plied, "I am neither Abraharm, Isaac, mor Jacob, but I am,Saul, the son of ‘Kish,. who was semt to seek my Tather‘s asses, and lo, here 1 have found them." * ic j o moiy: ‘The Beats .#,5‘»".‘-1‘h=‘_ %hunuh‘ % ora' * by W. cowpe "all‘ t survey," i¢r Sélkirk on the Island ruance; **Dignyglus, .. Py mon,‘‘ a dialogue; “’ltherl We at o had wome earnost and liveâ€" 1y pleces on temperahce, ‘as. well as 1 ;::'ï¬â€˜.‘ "teniperance sodgs. "Wicre ‘are the, friends that to..me were . S0 & 7."_’103',;101:4 ago," "Av;‘ the \ ‘There was one of the boys. whg was not naturally over â€" sharp," nevexthe: less, made some good . selections, and made some good SEICCLION: spoke them TaiBly \ Welh s Oné: of M .tell you how to d Wren hntan cries, | waus on the owl, a poem. . The la. t 5»{ évery verse ended, "O, ~the owl;: wowl, the mefty, morry owl, *b4 ~,&" w ‘ol his‘ pieces wa very ~*"The © ~dying sailor‘s equest, â€" "&f Bot in the deep, detp sea.""‘ 1 <re not> his prayer, but b hï¬ in‘ the . . sea. Y "~on "Bryan O. Lynn." One ;ephes The following on t io /. ant ‘St the score, ; And‘ ro. phrenologist could Lnd . a «dilierience in their bumps; bach bad a farm ofvequal worth, a %totly wife to keep, < > mtce Hoys, thrée horses ‘and 2 cow, a deg and twenty sheop, , j ‘?’i-g',qnu ke teok the pape:s, and his lhie wes: happy â€"as a king‘s, is childten aJl> could . »read . ant wrie, ant talk of men and things "Tle other took | no ° paper, and while Itï¬uns through the wood, ‘A tree fell down â€" upon his crown and kiled him as it should.". th The best, mostâ€"therough and most successful buttermakers in the world ccore their: victories and â€" | triumphs when they. use Wells, Richardson & Co‘s Improved Butter which ;lnyigive‘th trué , ':i.i‘t of une. It you ‘ - this periict colot, 30uâ€"are * . the ti ipd‘ cannot . Ahe highâ€" i batter Try * 4 @ne‘ will seo esn ral. t e thei"! that has akÂ¥ ud ~ Hefuse all i is and «/n quitâ€"your House ar ons no morg*.‘~= » it MAKES PRZS BOTTER â€"~ wWHEREVEYâ€"USED. ech ou forego the charg "A Solked i â€" at he gh prose just before elect vyourâ€" nouse my heart t .. ship, tentment just charge theo® ‘each te dink ie; ‘‘The lay by Waiter Improved Ksk® 10¢ when they 11 lake whi IINISCENCES. : ot the j y," by"Aletâ€" landâ€" of J uar Pythias . and he lay of the Nalter Scott; Th ree wh T1 The First Lectureâ€"Amusing Incidents ws netimes }&.Z A m th ta will out friendiy / also them one evening was caused by a mahn‘from a neighboring secti sometimes attended . our o e . oaccd dy «. vounk C * tramn? HH“%;â€"“'&\:K 8 y k :, 'in ; attended _ our utd en t ‘bow, .to: the audience, & ies P healine noned spone on bez .of" gestures, again, ‘and reâ€" | 0 ’t?tnqd,»‘o his .8 % ecal e Jthiu_k‘xo!wm.of ‘j; excrcises was that it was Lpatâ€" licipased in by the boys and â€" : ns n anhe yl.h†k as well as e ‘tre" litst lecture in our section was | by. w old â€" school teacher from .-rtu‘;“ wtates. _ He travelled ï¬ou‘h, ; the | 1 o8t, u a; mum, of marvelious things that _ would â€" be ' done and shown.. ‘The lecture .was ! mostly on . ‘‘Electricity, . galvanism and magnetism," He would explsin.] the electric telegraph, give every om:l1 the privilege that wished it, of being | shocked by the electric battery, su-]; pend an . irom bar in the air by a| magnetic . ring, ‘ magnetize every one‘s jack knife that wished it, put a two shilling piece in the bottom ol a pail of water, and the one . who would ‘take it out should have it, while the; person would have one of the wires in the one hand and the other being in the pail, and the old teacher was cute cnough to give a. good shock ,| to the person atiempting to get the coin.. Well, he fulfilled his 'promile,‘ every boy‘s jack knife in the section, 1 think, was magnetized. ; . Tle clectric _ «elegraph was being put up in certain places, and caused \ no end of. question and talk as to \the mysterious power of ele btlcity.‘ | We were most of us as ignorant _ of ; this rew discovery as . the woman â€" who rushed in to her neighbors, say~ . ing, "Haye . you . heard the, news? : /‘They are going to put up a . pataâ€" graph right. past qur door, and you , cannot chase out a chicken, or spank . a young one, but the thing will tell > it all over creation." . im a PalK, c _ _ © $ ceRt The inside out, the wooly side in, ‘pice, light,. warm . and cool,} Ssays Hryan 0. Lyun." i great Some eld the f NCE RC There was an Amusifig incident at [’.‘!‘.E door. A tall, stout young man iwnmer! to get in for halfâ€"price. The door ieerer said to him, "You must \pay full fare. "I . won‘t do it, . the handbill said that _ school children would get in for half prices and â€" 1 am a sthool boy." "Oh, you are too big for a school boy," ‘and then he appealed to â€"the old teacher. ‘The kind hearted old _ man replied, "let him in, Tet him in; he has the hody of & man, but the mind ol a boy." That was an exact estimate of the young man. The lecturer _ was> A pleasant, cheerful person, 1 â€" would judge in age pat 60. There was a peculiarity about . his speech that & vahern o h rs e e ple loub: he â€" amount of wea ixpe cepetr. There was sn ue e m i is pleasant, cheerful person, 1 â€" would judge in age pa t 60. There was a peculiarity about . his speech that most of us bhad never heardâ€"hé supâ€" pressed the "r.‘" For instance, in trying to explain to us how the elecâ€" tric message would so quickl; pass through the wire, he said: ‘"Foh exâ€" ample, you fill a tube with wateh, plug it up at the one end, and you try to put some moh in at the otheh eud,; the force applied at the one end is at onte felÂ¥ at _ the otheh,â€"the wich is filled with electwicity from _te battery, it will hold: so much lmd no moeh, and if the wieh is a hundred miles long, as soon as you |apply moeh at one ond it is out at the otheb + @uelph Herald: At a meeting of the Official Board of, Norfolk â€" St. Methodist church onâ€"Wednesday evenâ€" ing, Rev. F.. A> Onssidy, the pastor, intimated that he intended returning to Japan, where he was engaged in miésion work some years ago. The intimation was recaeived with much surptise and <profound regret. If . arâ€" for mw!yine his pulpit fot the re« mainder of his pastoral term and it mects with th&â€"apptoval of the con= grogzation, Mr. Cassidy will leave fot his flew field of labor at: the earliest possible ‘date as he wishes to arrive there and get settled before the holiâ€" day seasons > > Jt (inv ts was a fine evening, and the peoâ€" of the section mostly all came to heat the leciure. The admisâ€" i was oneâ€"shilling for aduits and rertce (hall price) ‘for school chilâ€" n. The teacher had a young man h him as assistant and . doorâ€" yerses® ran "thus: _ + U.â€" Lynn had no pant ly WILL RETURN TOâ€"JAPAN got a c evening drew near there was nterest in the coming lectu.e. f us stacte@® early and called teacher, who boarded with an lady, who was lamenting that mkee teacher would take . so noney out â€" of the country. said the teacher, "there is no te will take a _ tremendous t of moneyâ€" out of the counâ€" money sheepskin andâ€" made N Cassidy ssidy is â€"well known ity, having preached various churches and to rouds and railways, for takis of the chemical departments of in dustries, for mining O$6t of: gs abou " . N that it lï¬u a dangerous â€" material & $ for this fear. In an dum country like Canada the greater part of the people are ur ought to be enâ€" gaged in: working upon matter, minâ€" ing, e\ltflï¬'fl_l'm forests â€"and manulactur their products, tilling the oil, opening up means of comâ€" munication. "Comparatively: few . are required for teaching, muï¬Â» gisiating and administering the laws, ‘and contributing to literavure. ‘The {physical work must be done, and the ,lonly question is whether it is to be dove well or ill. There‘is no kind of ‘education better than that . which ‘ broadens and elevates the mind _ in ‘ connection with the daily .work . of ‘ life. A mer, for instance, i8 .. at 4 work,ivz; day in a great Igboraâ€" (@ torWM’ eleï¬nlk' Hoâ€.“ are conti y at work. may d own part in a purely noeh!J 3: unintelligent â€" way, . or he may do ~ it as a.scientist. In the latter case he not only farms more efficiently and profitably, but beâ€"has the pleasure which comes from intellectual occuâ€" pation. > _ A Government can hardly go %0o‘ far in responding to the demand for scientific‘ training. ~All such training ‘helps to develop the country and to build â€"up its industries. In Germany ls&ate aid is given for improvements in manufa¢turing processes, just as ‘on this continent Government*aid in 1dimmimting information vseful to | armers. <It is sometimes said | that farmers are neglected in the way of State aid; but this refers only to the \sort of state aid known as protecâ€" ‘iion. It is likely that farmers have \received far more benefit from.experâ€" ;imenu carried on under Governments ‘modet farms, bulletins, farmers‘ . inâ€" stitutes, and other means of spreadâ€" \\ ing information, than â€" they would have received from high tariffsâ€" on l“beix products. â€" Canadian cheese holds the frst place in the Britisb }market because of its excellent qualâ€" ity. ‘One advantage of turning Govâ€" e:nment aid in the direction of exâ€" cellence ol product is that it arouses no opposition and does not give 0C | icuion for political strife.â€" Another is â€'.hat it is a kind of aid which makes the recipient independent. The better _\xhe product the less aid the farmer ‘recds, and the better he is able to l‘hom his own against any competiâ€" tion. TR Manufacturing industry would proâ€" bably have received more Government aid of this kind if attention had not been diverted by the etermal wrangle about tarifis. In the noke of . this controversy there is danger of forâ€" getting that the firmest foundation of inducstrial success is excellence of product. A high tariff may retain the manufacturers‘ hold of the home ‘market, but in our case this is a ‘\small field, our population being only \ oneâ€"fifteenth of that of the . United States. It is important, therefore, \that the products of our factories ‘should commend themselves in all |parts of the world, in markets where they are not favored by tarifis, <and ‘even where there are tariffis against. |them. For this purpose there mus‘ 1te cheap raw materials, quick adaptâ€" |ation of American and other improveâ€" ‘ments, skillful workmen and manaâ€" |gers, and cheap transportation.. in« imtu‘tionn like the Toromto . School ‘of Technology are uséful, and should |be est&blished in other parts of the |Province. They should have evening | as well as day classes, so as to be ‘available for young â€" mechanics at [ work. It would be well, for instance to have one in the éast end, of Torâ€" ‘|onto, which is rather weak in educaâ€" ‘|tional institutions as compared with |the west. The retention of the western ml’-‘ Kets for Canadian manufacturers is an important question, which ‘inâ€" volves "that of cheap transportation. It is true that we may expect manuâ€" facturing industries to be establishâ€" ed in the country lying norï¬ and west of Lake sw‘lmml pre iuent most of them loahtï¬l:ï¬- east, and are hulct‘fl in tace for the trade of the Western farmers. The aim should be to enable out manufacturers to supply the west at prices as low as those of our Ameriâ€" can rivals. Cheap transportation is ofie of the most effective means â€" of placing our industries en this foot: ing Stratford Beacon: Mr. W. J. Henâ€" ry, of this city, has filed an applicaâ€" tion for a patent on a machine which he has invented â€" for cutting . and pressing peat. He believes that it is eminently superic: . to any machine now in use, and he purposes turning it to the fullest advantage by. onâ€" waging in the peat manufacturé himâ€" NEW PEAT MACHINE. Malt Breakfast Food is the only cereal food that children will keep to * rrdm.f‘rondqwm. It bas a Beacon: Hen licious flavor that captivates â€" the ,,“,“;?‘{:{.‘ city, has ::‘ !. :m taste and makes it a favorite. Oatâ€" tion for a patent on a machine which :.'f'i""""’“'“;'dlnflmm he has invented for cutting . and njurious to the #tomach pressing peat. He believes that it is | dieStive organs ot the little ones eminently superior . to any machine because :d“ presence of ingoluble poses turning |Starth. t Breaklast Food is free o. es ailees vates from starch, â€" therefore sasily. and T o o oo anns Lo wor, |quiciay digested * by © the yo n 4 omm 6 wine (Gitroots. ols reakiest " Root " 4s ©Mr. Henry i# at present looking for U dlorks «h me oo Em mom atiinna o amee Incooy Sn take e im n en on on (oocie m es a ewitch h * Mr. Henry it at present looking for a suitable location. He has _ spoken with some of the local G.T.R. of hâ€". this ruml- that fits es, bridges, iking charge ats of . in tions of all ave misgivâ€" , . thinking s ï¬o'fl\ ot ittle ground undeveloped Few ol our readers have any> wits or conception of the immensity: â€" of the great city of Londob. Mr. Frank G. Carpenter, the well known Ameriâ€" can newspaper correspondent, writing from that city on the 6th+Septpmber, turnishes some graphit and highly inâ€" teresting penâ€"sketches of Old London and Ih“mb, trom»which we take a few ts as follows: 1 de pair ‘of being able to gire & conception ol the size of London. I have been here for weeks,. and it grows bigger every day. The statisâ€" tics thow that it has © more people than New York and Chicago combirtâ€" ed. 1t is bigger than any two capiâ€" tais of continental Europe, it has a greater population than New. Engâ€" land, and it exceeds in the number of its inhabitants many territories govâ€" ermed by kings. By the latest figures it has more than 6,500,000 people, or about oneâ€"seventh of al} the peopie of Great Britainand Ireland, and one tourth of all those who live in citâ€" I have gome to the top of the monâ€" ument, to the top of St. Paul‘s and out to Hampstead Heath to try and get a view of the city, but at . no place have I been able to see it all. 1t extends onâ€"and un, a vast wilderâ€" ness ‘of houses overhung by a dense smoke which shroudsâ€" the whole â€" in an autumn haze and at times makes you think you are looking _ through spectacles ‘of â€" ‘smoked ~~glass. ‘The smoke is so thick that it clogs the shimneys, and in some parts of the city: the chimmey sweeps clean them three times a year. The city extends dut for a radius _ of 15 miles from Charing â€"Cross; it embraces an area of about 700 square miles, equal to 2,800% quarter section farms, and in it there are 900,000 inhabited houses and 7,000 muiles of streets and roads. Think of that and figure out what a chore it would be to explore ‘the city on foot. If you should walk day and night, not stopping a _ minute, you could not tramp through all of London‘s streets in & year.â€" If the streets were placed end to end, beâ€" ginning here, they would reach across Surope, malong a paved walk,/~walled lwith houses, over France, Germany, and: Russia, across {the Ural mounâ€" tains and <Highlands of Thibet â€" and clear through China . to the Pacific ocean. All the way you would find ‘the streets well paved, and some . of them the smoothest and best streets of the world. You would find many grand buildings, and tens of thous ands of dirty little two and _ three story blocks packed _ with London‘s poer, the most wretched and . most drunken poor on earth. You would find plenty of plases to eat and drink along the way. Lonâ€" lon has about 8,000 saloons, someâ€" hing like 2,000 coffee houses, and it has thousands of restaurants . and ‘laces for tem and cake. It has 500 hotels, â€" from _ enormous buildings which cover acres and sleep thousâ€" ~nds; down to the little inns which ave rooms for & seore. London is a city of â€" millionaires and paupers, of thousands who are very rich, of bundreds of thousands who spend money as freely as any people on earth, and of 1,000,000 or so who are wretchedly poor. _ The town has 100,000 paupers and I canâ€" not tell you how many millionaires. it has a Fing who has a civil list of $3,000,000 a year, © and dukes ‘and earls, who own towns and vast esâ€" tates, and lords and other golden dromes galore. In the West End, about Hyde Park, you drive through street aiter street of magnificent palâ€" aces; and in the east end along the docks you may ride for miles : and miles through sections where whole families live in one room and where semiâ€"starvation reigns. ‘ Let me give you $wo pictures of London which I have seen during my stay. One is the church parade . at ‘4yde Park, which takes place every noon on Sundays from one until two o‘clock. Hyde Park is a great‘ exâ€" panse of green trees, . soft, velvety Malt Breakfast Food The Children Are Delighted wWith It. Builds Them Up In Flesh, Bone and Muscle. The Biggest City in the World d ives; Sunday there were 1-0: 000:; 6 walking 2‘& down the ch d these people cepresented" the cream _ of: London‘s swelidons.. .1 have â€"never seen . $0 many persons «o well dressed. Every man and every boy wore a tall silk hat: Alt were gloved, and the < men wore frock coats and trousers tightly creased. M * And then the women! There were at least 10,000 hbg'gdl and ‘lordâ€" ly ‘damesy clad in gowns and bounets.. They were goodâ€"looking, and, as a rule, tall and stately. in the crowd I saw faces of every naâ€" tionality under the sun, although the majority were English. f A ‘Eow let me give you a pieture of the parade ‘of the ~poor: Imagine yoursel! on ‘the: Strand ‘on the night the word came ‘that the Boer : war was ended â€" and : peace had come. Everyone is madâ€"with joy, ard . the lower classes have dropped work for a holiday. â€" They have poured â€" themâ€" selves from‘ Whitechapel . and â€" the slums »of qtr parts of the city and have conté Fleet street, â€" the Strand and Trafaigar Square to cole brate the occasion. © Mauny= of them have been drinking all d& and more are drinking now. The wd comsists of men and woâ€" men,~ boys and girls, 1iushing, â€" pushâ€" ing and joswing one anuther as they move up andâ€"down the sidewalks and roadways. At times they stop . the buses and handsom cabs must go at a walk. The ‘faces are hard and many . of them.gre red with drink. Even the womem ‘are drunk, and at every few wteps you meet a party of them who are singing: and dancing and throwâ€" ing their arms around one er in their inebriace joy. / T I was surprised at the drunkentiess : of the crowd and especially. the numâ€" ber ‘of int@#icated women. Iâ€" ‘have seen every great city in the world, but nowhére have I . seen â€" women drinking publicly in saloons as they do here. The women patronize . the saloons almost as much as the men, and you cannot drive through . the poorer sections of a Saturday evenâ€" ing without seeing drunken â€" women dancing, shouting and quarre!ling. There are mo more expert thieves in the world than here, and I saw a good specimen <of their work as I stood against the wall. Two _ mer lost their watches inside of two minâ€" London has 15,000 policemen, and hey are, I believe, about the best police in the world. The city is so great, however,‘ ‘that they cannot take care of it all, <hough‘they do so very well in ordinary times. diction extends in ~ every direction within fiffeen miles of Chatring Cross. Three hundred of them are mounted and a large part of their business is hasing bicycle riders . and bicycle thieves. The ordinary policeman gets from $330 to $460 a year, ‘and : a serâ€" geant receives from $465 to $785. â€"The lpoii; are under the control of the Home Secretary, and their jurisâ€" ‘The city has the greatest markets of the world.. Take, for instance, the Copenhagen Fields* cattle markets, near Islington. ‘They cover 30 actes and handle about 4,000,000 cattle a year. Four thousand beeves and 12, 000 sheep are, on the average, sold thers;:ry market day, and _ the place accommodation for 10,000 ‘attle ard â€" 35,000 : sheep. Another great market for cattle is that . of Smithfield, on the site where Bloody Queen Mary burnt the saintly John Rogers at the stake. Then there are the Leademhall Market, where} poulâ€" try has been sold for 400 years, and the great markets of Covent GaÂ¥â€" den, which sell fruit, vegetables and flowers. ‘The Covent Garden Market is one of theâ€"largest of London. It is within m ‘stome‘s throw | of ~ the Strand and right in the heart of the ‘ity. ‘Theâ€" houses ~consist of vas! buildings of ijron â€"and glass, big enough fof a national exposition. Gaudy bonnets with street snits. Soiled whire gloves on a shopping etpedition or at any time. _ . .. . ;‘foï¬"m' ves with an elaborate oi Dotted veils with weak eyes. A linen coh{oï¬u is not fresh. Gloves with holes in or shoes with Hair dressed â€" high with a ~snub â€" Gandy colors in naterials. . @‘:‘Lï¬u'ï¬&"&, l&flmcuï¬-m a Don‘t wear:; . White -ki;: on muddy days. je time. g:al red m :n:oml complexion A broad belt on a stout figure. . A plain basque on a slim g(m Cheap trimmings on a good dress. Cheap lace on anything. L Diamonds in the qaytime. Lipen collats with dressy frocks. Picture hats with outing costumes. Hait in psyche knot with a Roman TO BE WELLERBSSED h NFW BEGULATIONS, N A list of new regulations ma * Ni# 8W |order of the Licutenantâ€"Goverr 44 C 13, 1goz. brought m’P’ Mc u“" o inted ' on, prin; forms are M’(’&nmhnt?tp all the surrogate registrars in the proâ€" vince and to all members of the ie ip} profession who desire them. . _yhe effect of the now ts ols o dpe uen be ',u:l?ï¬:\ regard h.ï¬, a ture or value of the mqa deceased, the applicant . must . file with the ‘surrogate registrar two duâ€" 'm‘W'u afidavits, setting value and xmflaï¬â€˜-ol ‘m property, _ One» of these vits must be forwarded forthwith to the Provincial ‘Treasurer, â€"and the other to the Solicitor â€"to . the Treasury, who shall determine whether the esâ€" tate is.liable to succession duty, and in case it is a bond will be required of the applicant equal to 10 _ per cent. of the sworn value of the proâ€" of the applicant equal to cent. of m sworn value perty. _ s .No letters probate or letters of adâ€" ministration shall issue without the cofisent in writing to the Solicitor to the Treasury or some one deputed by the Treasuter to act for him. CANADA INCBREASES ITS LIQUOR BILL,_â€" Oltawa, Ont., Nov. 6.â€"The annual report of the Inland Revenue Departâ€" ment for the fiscal year up to June shows that the comsumption . pet capita in Canada of spirits was .796 gallons, the larget since 1885; . of beer, 5.102 gallons, the largest since confederation; of wing, .090 gallons, the largest â€" since 1899; of tobaceo, 2.404 pounds, the largest since 1885. The quantity of spirits produced in the year was 3,234,147 gallons, . as compared with 2,652,708 gallons the year before. ‘The export was 151,799 gallons, the largest on record". The quantity on which duty was paid was 3,123,430 gallons, the largest the \country ever knew. ek In tobacco, snuff and cigarettes, ‘tie‘ total taken â€"for consumption was 11,900,054 pounds; 222,355 pounds were exported. Of> raw leaf, 10,704 tbs., and of Canadian _twist, 72,286 pounds were taken for consumption; 58,686,795 cigars were manufactured during the year, aâ€"Jlarge increase; 151,700,516 were taken for consumpâ€" tion, and 128,845 exported. New York City has built on the horizontal so long, and has so nearly covered the most available and w-‘ cessible space, that it is now engagâ€" ed in building on the perpendicular. Skyâ€"scrapers are Aspiring to mingle their cornices with the clouds, and with drills, shovels and picks, thousâ€" ands of workmen â€" are boring into "‘the bowels of the earth.‘" In fact, today the visifor to New York City does not seek out, as in the . past, such places as "Five Points," ‘"‘The Bowery," ‘"Niblo‘s Garden" _ and . | vionately, â€" HOney,.400 DC 30. . ho‘ ice ies c nds c mt * Anfoen e is| No response came, and she knocked|21 years and have the privilese "Barnum‘s Museum.‘‘ All these h&ve‘ passed away, for "The Bowery"‘ toâ€" day has lost the flavor that made it so noted. The sight of New _ York just now is the great subway, . an undertaking, the very conception of which is a forceful illustration of the audacity of _ American .. enterprise. Boring a great tunnel of such huge dimensions through the length . of Manhattan Island, and even beyond;, through miles of rock, much of which is as hard as granite, is a task so gigantic, that its execution seems all but. impossible.â€"From ‘"In the Trail of the Traveler,"‘ _ in Fourâ€"Track News for November: The Stratiord Council has passed aj""** * F"" **M ME TT C £oR ""'§ resolution to submit a bylaw to the ponmmene womee Rey i.\ \ people to acquire the works, â€" plant, | ‘WILL PULL SUGAR BEETS. _ and mains of the Stratford Watct nbumics & Supply Company for $95,000. A simâ€"| (Gueiph Mercury: A number of gete ilart bylaw was submitted once beâ€"|tlemen from this city will takea a fore for $100,000, and was defeated.|holiday on Tuesday next, when 3 It is said that Chatham‘s indusâ€"|will proceed to the farm of Mr. Herâ€" trial committee has ~persuaded an|pert Wright, Paisley Block, and € eastern firm in the iron industry that|sist him to get up his crop of K Chatham will be an excellent spot to | Mr. â€"Wright has had a great deal of locate. The capital of the company |aificulty in . securing labor for getâ€" will be from $150,000 to $200,000 and ting in his crop, and will be ed itwfllthnflntyut.uc‘hnfldlminm.-ny.guulyu]m ere 240 feet by 60 feet, one . story â€" Oof|at the meeting of the Fat ¢ concrete and steel, and will employ |Cjub on W" evening w from 40 to 50 hands, mostly. skilled go, and by noon today the mechanics. names secured was about fifty, Stratiotd â€" is to have a $100,000 |include the Mayor, bankers, m biscuit factory, it is said, ‘W. J.|chants, journalists and * Mooney, a well known man in _ the|tives of many other classes. &A Classic City, being the moving spitit. |pody who care to go and put in A plant costing $75,000 is to be built |good solid day‘s work will be -a by a joint stock â€" company, and the|welcome, and it is hoped that city will be asked to guarantee bonds |number will Be‘cénsiderable" tommcum&z:“.mmu-mmwmmmsw c ing and plant to be offered as secutrâ€" | Tuesday. siia s ane s 3 Stratiotd â€" is to have a $100,000 biscuit factory, it is said, W. J. Mookey, a well known man in the Classic City, being the moving spitit. A plant costing $75,000 is to be built by a joint stock â€" company, and the city will be asked to guarantee bonds to the extent of m(x:“m buildâ€" ing and plant to be as secur« iity. Mr. lmybv:_}omuly traâ€" for a Toron k is well $esd in Wheteen Okabige s â€" *‘ (Argonaut.) ‘This is teld on the better hall of x couple who went from tha country to spend the honeymoon in a lirge city. One day :the bride, finding she ticles en .:-'tall“; , left the an the hove +o o Shopping: .. She ‘rsâ€" turmed shortly and ber way upâ€" :‘m‘:"““g hi RESOLUTION TO. PURCHASE WATERWOREKS PLANT. THE GREAT SUBWAY NOT A BEEâ€"HIVE regulations made by A large. number. of the farmer this district who are shipping 1 from Galt station to Wallace were desizrous of hnvh&‘ Wt :s tested. Mr, Peter H. rsomâ€" twenty beets from each of the tw fields and sent them to PTI Harcourt; â€" B.S.A,, Qutario. tural College, Gueiph, to be Prol. Harcourt writes in reply i date of November &th: ‘‘The sample of beets which . yoi sent me has been analyzed, . givi the following results: 4A ‘‘Percentage of sugar in juice 15. > "Purity, 88.9. * , ‘‘Percentage ol sugar h?v s "Average weight of beet, 41.5 0%."" The test should prove very sati factory . to ~ the farmers i od, the percentage of sugar in juice TUNâ€" ning 3.6 per cent. over the s which is 12 per cent. \< o S Up to this morningâ€"700 loads . ¢ beets had been shipped from Galt to Wallaceburg.. It. took â€"wellâ€"filled cars to transport this amount. . It _ is estimated that about . twoâ€"third! of the local crop has been harvested. Mr. A. M. Patterson -v.f. =. ed a second. consignment of. Indians from Muncey, Middlesex County. The. tribe numberedsixteen. ‘The Indians | are proving good workmen, and afe giving every satisfaction to their emâ€" . ployers. The wages run from $1.00 a / day for the youths to $1.50 for the The work on the Syndicate beets i# now well under. way. â€" + sn neal men SUGAR LUMPS FROM SUGAR VILLE. > e ts ‘The men at present employed . by the E. H. Dyer Co. are working nine hours a day and six days a week. _ At 3.30 on Friday afternoon $2 waggon loads of beets were on the road to . Sugatrville wai their turn.at the scales. hi 8 0 oi The beet sheds are almost filled with beets. "p v «On Thursday four â€" hundred. bartels of sugar were turned out.â€" T Mr.. W. B.‘Rouse, of Bayâ€" City, Mich., told a Telegraph scribe . on Friday afternoon that no better qualâ€" ity of sugar is turned out: on the continent. $ Lo Messrs. Randall & Roos have placâ€" ed a trial order with +the company for 100 barrels. 2 ons y Enquiries for sugar | are arriving daily, and by; present appearances the company. will have no difficulty plac« ing their output. +; The directors of the company gach took about ten. pounds of Berlin su» gar home with them. . t & _Premier Geo. W.:Ross andâ€". Hone John Dryden will each ~receive & barrel of Maple Leaf brand of ‘sugar with the compliments of the Ontario Sugar Company. ho en Shipped From Galtâ€" Red Men Come to While it is necessary for the Reâ€" finery to be in continuous w seven days in the week, no outside. of the employses, are per= mitted to enter . the yards of : the company on Sunday. 6 :‘,jé The directors of the company, 5 visited the.plant on Friday were greatly delighted with the splendid progress the â€" i e e operators are making, and â€"the â€" fin quality of sugar that is being ed out. vTH Messrs. W. B. Rouse and. E. .T. Carrington,. of Bay City,. Mich., that when the Berlin factory is . im full operation it will be among . best equipped‘refineri¢s in the Hamilton ‘Spectator: "I wish _I were a boy~again." "In Sweden the government submitted to a commitâ€" tee of scientific men the question as to Now many houts of sleep children of various ages required in order t their bealth might be n . committee reported to the mit e ;otmmnmtmm_ ho . are 4 years â€" should .7 those of 7 years old, i1 bours, â€" years old, from:0 to 10 hours; those who are from i4 to 21 years, diwllr‘l“ a blessed it is to be a boy or girl unide HOURS FOR. SLEEPING 3 ts A,