Newmarket Era, 30 Mar 1894, p. 1

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ffi Every Friday Horning ffjri ME TO FBTOPTO COKE0IENOT ABOVE ALL OTBBB -BY- GEO JACESO AT PRINTING i REACHED r a fc r BEST Cootj- H NORTH 1 North York qd1m In Vol Single Copies Cents tacb Friday Strictly in Advance J or at of year Allowed on DRAFTS ISSUED avail sdrf J- Minuet fcS i LOTTOS K The IeadingSfcoye Depot so I Mill CMS Guaranteed for One and J of A J jr i- IT iod iT J- Atom J J Daisy Barrel Dash and gals Cradle Creamers Milk Pans Butter Bowls Prints Stamps and Ladles in great variety Oar Speciality A BINNS V NEWMARKET to A P to P I J 1 4 M to to sod 99 St op- Cfnrrch ROGERS DENTAL lb VUUsWiUrrrftla1esmFreUBir a Ana a totwli UriBf AfiTIdA w A- Plpck CHEMIOAL8 VI SIMPSON Main J AS Main AIM Work lC7OSKR for York Co II THE LEAD IN I y IN DRY GOODS TheJ J House G PEPPIATT Mr ben q thai Ao inicodf MAINTAINING And to oat work to wort of 1 will bo in or DOt bo to flood the bwd with work but Edgivo Bud entire Old TOWNSHIP MAPS OF East And North all both and And other InfonDRilon one EL map lha County of York ftloof of ML Albert showing fill eta eta of PRICE OF BOTH ficot post paid to pried yo awe on lf J LLOYD a i A- To in to murder faamAQ wbdomi lifti flu Setting A trtiuotndint To were There ire ftrebaighU Then depths put oar ro On faainiD worlds bay Of oar too But in wisdom To plane higher la holds altctrio Fur is KnoBlcdaoonqasn trill Lilts from boadaga And the nil of To heights of law And Thro or people Till cot of dark at Unto heights have J To wDI Pur of York Goods Farm Act to aollcltt tl Prospect ROSE I Zapbrf- GENTLEMEN A- if Price filgn fc Carriage ii We have splendid bargains for you lo miss ihem is simply you both in the loss of the finest clothing possible as well as money It matters not you want a single garment or a full our stock affords the oppor tunity of providing yourselves with strictly firstclass Clothing at Rock Bottom Prices Call and see for yourselves I O Z O it O CO out A team going would be almost certain to comi upon the road unawares hurled down into ravine first emotion was one of surprise Hit second was one of exultation Here was something which would pay off old scores and without the boys doing anything further than to go about his business and affairs take their course There wilt probably be no gen tonight reflected Its Monday night- and the almost always comes back empty Monday night Nobody will be hurt except the old curmudgeon of a driver He crossed the washout by the narrow pathway next to the hill and stood looking back Something i g S3 WW PI o a Hi W D MUTCH Merchant Tailor opposite Starrs Book Store Cents own cloth made up neatly and Cheaply i For Sciatic irr r r AOEsTro fire od TO IT COaftlVT iiHi At Old and P of All cm sod Prpriy Tin Pure Quills Make a better filling for Corsets than any other known material Featherbone Corsets are tough- er and more elastic than any other make as they are entirely filled with quills To be had at all Retail Dry Goods Stores Neuralgic TRY OF THE PLASTER IT Wilt THE FAIN lK MAGIC Loved Els Enemy When heard the rattling of the old red stage behind him and recognised the oddlymatched gray and sorrel horses which had jogged over the familiar route for so many years he deter mined to catch on behind and village He had done this scores of with Mart Baker old driver and he thought it would be quite the proper thing to cultivate his acquaintance in this in formal way So he stood in th- grass by the roadside and when the stage had rattled by he ran alter it caught hold of the baggagerack and himself up to a comfortable seat There were no passengers that evening and but few express packages so the stage was by no over- loaned Surely there could be no objection to giving a boy of z- But suddenly the lad was startled by a cruel cut of the drivers lash across bis shoulders and a gruff voice cried out Git off there I Smarting with pain and tingling with still keener mental anguish and indignation Bridgman slid off the baggagtrack and stood in the road looking after the stage- driver with flaming cheeks and eyes overrunning with tears The pain of the blow from the whiplash was nothing compared with the hurt the harsh word and the wounding of the boys selfrespect His hands clenched convulsively and with a voice that broke into a sob before lie had uttered all his threat the little fellow cried IN CANADA OOLUMiJlA UNITED STATES MANITOBA WWI WORKS NEWMARKET MARBLE WORKS FIEE INSURANCE of Waterloo I Co of CANADA LIFE CO CAPITAL- AND FUNDS- The MONUMENTS and HEAD STONES Canadian and Foreign Jranites and Marble A ill tl9- 1 JAB ALLAN- CO K LLOYD If II Vefrfnrr of MAKHIAOK LIOKNSEH Standard Life Assurance Co CARL to Wc1it4j well MANNING A SON SCI Mi A Bright Lad Tettjeincfftje lh putlid Co tut doctor ah our fltlfftivOrt lb slit I did not lo I weak rl puny A 5d Wler I butt wxniftrfcGd It odd out via tun J I- lo g Rood N If Insuring the of Females TUP- tr low Mrs Baylys Private School MR A C02TCEET BARITONE WKDOKL dfTcrotito of two f Vi f ALBXOITUOTETOKORTO for ratt Cd out If hurt to to J ie til AYER8 l will euro Coughing to Consumption Stop Cough heal Lungs strengthen System with SCOtfS Emulsion J ViHZD STATUTES Sa5 to I Cream of Codliver OH and It la and easy on world endorse It Ail A Ik 111 pay you off for that dont The only laughed derisively and the old red stage rattled out sight around a bend in the road Two or three days after this un pleasant occurrence Bridgman returning from his fathers wood lot where he had been at work gath ering into piles the bark and large chips scattered about after the chopping It was now in the spring of the year There had been a great deal of rain and the streams were all very high So much snowwater was coming down from the that many of the brooks had over- Honed their hanks and were taking shortcuts from point to point To woods and fields walked briskly along through the early dusk He was hungry and and the thought of a good warm meal and a book by the fireside when he reached was very inviting The road roads In- the country ran up and down hill pretty much all the way now winding alone the side of a thickly wooded slope and now crosiing a bit of open mead ow only to seek out the rockiest and steepest knoll in tight apparently for the purpose of going right over the top of it It was the same road on which had been overtaken by the stage and where he hid met with such exasperating treatment at the hands of the new stagedriver The boys indignation still hot within him and he could help planning as he walked along how he could get even with Mart surly successor I guess the stage is late tonight he said to as he examined the hoofprints in the road No double team has been along here this afternoon Well the roads are pretty bad- 1 suppose Wouldnt I be glad if the stage broke down or got stuck in the mud was certainly not the right spirit for to cherish but when a boy had a purple weal across the buck of hit neck which smarts like fire every time he throws his head back it is very hard while that weal lasts fr him to feel disposed toward the man who made it Up up climbed the road along the face of a pine and hemlock wooded hill At length it turned suddenly to right around the shoulder of a hill and came with a sudden short pitch to a place where the steep slope on one side and a deep ravine on the other narrowed road down to a width of less than ten feet Hello exclaimed when he carne to this point The brook in the ravine below had so undermined the bank that a great piece of it had slid down Into the hollow carrying fully half of the road bed with it The strip which remain ed was only stout three feet wide walked rigidly around the bend and down the sudden sharp pitch of the road in the deepening dusk and near falling In to ravine himself It was the worst possible for wash- seemed to chain him to the spot He fancied he saw the stage rolling over and over down the embankment into the gloom below Then he thought he saw the driver lying bruis ed and unconscious at the bottom of the ravine while horses struggling in tbe entangled harness were drown ing in the stream It was a colored picture but the boys con science you see was beginning to dominate bis imagination Ob go on go on whispered the voice in his breast Dont stop to think how the thing would happen Revenge is sweet didnt cause the washout you wont be responsible for the conse Then another voice arose in the heart a voice clear and gentle and like tome sweet familiar strain of music Ye have beard that it said Thou love tby neighbor and hate thine enemy But say unto you Love your enemies bless them that curse you do good to them that hate you and pray which use you and persecute you It was very passage which had re peated in the Sunday School at the last monthly review How beautiful it had sounded to him then He felt as if such true and gracious and loving words had never before been in the world and he longed to live in the spirit of them and help others to do so as well And now he was meditating that very hate and which Christ had so tenderly rebuked I A great wave of sorrow and remorse surged through the boys heart had not realised until that moment how wicked how unchristian his feel ings toward the stagedriver had been God forgive me he prayed and help me to love my enemies I Love That means a great deal It is something more that merely cherishing a benevolent sentiment it is putting that sentiment into deeds For loving his enemy meant something very definite and practical that night It meant staying there by the washout and warning tbe stagedriver of his danger The boy the washout went a little way down the road and look a seat on a log to wait It was now the air was getting chilly and a fine penetrating rain had begun to fall For an hour or more the patient watcher was listen ing He was hungry taint and tired but lie was determined not to desert his post until the stage came along he heard a shout then the crack of a whip and presently the rattling wheels and ley rose from his seat on the log and walked slowly down the road better turn around he cried as the stage came in sight Theres a bad washout just above here Whoa I cried the stagedriver He left his steaming horses in the road took his lantern and followed up the hill Well I declare he exclaimed when they came lo the place where the road had caved in Its a bad one isnt It And Id have been pretty likely to drive into it if you hadnt warned me Its a trecher- place light on the bend and going down that little pitch arent you the boy I whipped off tne stage the other day To Editor of the Bra Sia present time the Dis trict of is being considerably talked of as a field for settlement and having spent some seven years in portion of Ontario and traversed a large portion of It at all seasons of the year I thought it not amiss tq put some of my observations before my old friends in York through me dium of your excellent paper in the hope that some one may thereby WHO SHOULD COMB TO ALOOMA First let say to all who own their farms or homes and are com fortable and doing where you are you have advantages we do not possess but to tenant farmers who lave families growing up and for whom you are anxious to secure lands to those who find it difficult to pay rent and taxes who toil year in and year out who are little better drudges and of whose toil the landlord reaps all the benefit to laboring men who are industrious and have a couple or three hundred dol lars put away in the old stocking in to all who are homeless and de sire to have homes for themselves let me say that offers to you more and better inducements than any other portion of Canada at present time SOME WHY One of the first and most important is the quantity of really good land which may be had some free grant some at fiity cents an acre according to location Improved farms can in some cases be secured at reasonable prices owing to the large area of un occupied land It must not be in ferred that all of land in is good far from It the good land is in the river valleys and flats whilst the balance is rock in the form of huge bluffs It here that the rich ores and minerals are found this in the will be a great advantage to the as they will be enabled to sell the products of their farms direct ly to the miners making the very best kind market a local one As a matter of fact the farmers of Algoma and now have the best markets in Ontario Hay is worth at the barn from to ia dollars fresh butter ijtesh eggs potatoes per bag oats per bushel and so on and this is no exceptional season- Then ftt to the crops all spring grains such as barley peas and oats grow abundance and give enormous yields Hay is nearly al ways a wonderful crop One farmer only a few miles from Sudbury states that he took tens off acres dur ing the season Another farmer had tons of hay last season As to pasturage it if safe to say that no part of lower Ontario can at all com pare The nights are cool and heavy dews fall with the only consequent result grass growing In great quantity Dairy farming will no doubt speedily become one of the chief agricultural pursuits many of our farmers already looking in that direction by improv ing the quality of their stock and other mrans GLENVILLE The fall wheat and clover are in excellent condition notice several chmgea among the farmers Mr has leased his farm to Mr Heailip Jr Mr Webster is removing to the place lately occupied by Mr Web ster he having purchased from the estate of the late farm lately occupied by Mr A Morning who in turn has removed to Mr Rileys farm near Holland Landing Mr Harry Graham has leased the farm on the fourth line Mr Geo Haines taking the place vacated by Mr Graham SUTTON The steamer which has been lying at the wharf all winter has had her stern partly itove in caused by the ice shove last week The revival services in the Metho dist are continued this week with increasing attendance and prom ise of much good being effected Quite a number wend ed their way to lake on Sunday taking advantage of the fine day while others took to boating down the river We do not know as nav igation ever opened so early before of March Mr Samuel Cook and family have returned to this neighborhood The fiveyearold daughter of J had two of her fingers acci dentally cut off while playing with an axe in the hands of her little brother last Monday About forty of the members and friends of the Methodist Church re paired to the parsonage last Friday evening with well Allen baskets and gave their pastor the Rev a pleasant surprise The evening was spent in social conversa tion interspersed with music and oil expressed themselves as delighted with the evenings enjoyment Bible class and prayer meeting Is held every Wednesday evening in the houses of the village and vicinity They are very Interesting and profit able- JV suppose I am replied Well now Ive felt awful mean j about that bubawful mean I had one of my ugly streaks that day- do have em once In awhile Say cant you forgive a fellow Thats right Heres hand and heres begging your pardon And to think how youve treated me in spite of itjust heaped coals fire on my head It makes me feel pretty small I can tell you Hut I reckon itll do something towards driving the ugly streak out of me that lime on there was no firmer friends than and the new stage driver Each felt that he had been helped whin he was weak by the experience through which they had passed each was confirmed in the purpose to render thereafter good for evil and to learn to love his enemies Sunday School Times We were once In a banV as a visit or- and observed that at night when the business of the day was at its close and before the money was put away in the vaults It was counted and a balance taken that a every Item of business transaction was ac counted for As the funds were put Into the vaults and the doors closed this text suggested itself to our mind So then one of us shall give of himself to God thought conveyed to our minds was that of accounting to God everyday of our lives so that our accounts were settled and for us Judgment was passed as we lay down upon our pillow every rilght This Is surely the way to live It is secret of great peace and It will be a delightful comfort when life Is closing or the Master coining to know that our account Is settled and our Judgment over and that forui there Is only waiting the glad Well done good and faithful servant enter thou Into the joyof thy Lord HOW TO GET THERE Algoma is not a long way off in fact railway facilities make it practical ly at yojr very threshold Take the train at Newmarket at and the next day at you ire in at of the same day you are at Sault St Marie the Capital I of the district from the time you reached North Bay enjoyed the journey a palatial Canadian Pacific Railway car such as you never see in York and for a small extra charge you may in the gorgeously fitted dining- car have meals which would delight an epicure Or upon the opening of navigation you may on leaving your station go to town of and there take of the North Shore Navigation steamers the of or of Midland literally floating palaces for all points to the Mr M Burton the ener getic manager of the company who has taken a lively interest in Algoma will give you any further information you may Arriving at the Mr Fred Rogers Mr Sheriff Carney Mr no Dawson President of the District Agricultural Society Mr A G Duncan and other well known will feel it a- pleasure to assist you Having seen the country for yourself if you decide to locate make your arrangements and then move your effects especially your farm stock as it scarce here yet and will be for years to come Having already written at consider able length I must conclude this let ter If however any person would like more complete particulars than I am enabled to give the space allotted to a correspondent write to Mr Fred Rogers Sault St Marie who will send you a most excellent pamph let entitled Algoma farmers testify A large number of these documents are being circulated in the Old Country through courtesy of Sir Charles the Canadian High Commissioner In next letter I shall endeavor to give some Informa tion as to mining Districts A- QUI0ELL Sudbury March 1804 SCHOOL REPORTS von sioxrn or vivas or s so Hay field Lottie Class Eva Morton Br 3rd Oldham Hearty IXomll EU Jr Ida Shaw Arthur Rob Falrbalra Carl Morton 8r Ellas Sinclair Jr Aggie Shaw Rose Part Lid a Aodrsw Old ham Charlie Hoy Part I Bertie Present every day Eva Arfcaey In Shaw Ptray Carl Morion Mary Oldham Jeremiah Izalk Mary Roy Thomas Oldham Average A Buffalo The disappearance of the has led to a useful invention and a new The Saskatchewan Buffalo Robe which is such an ex cellent imitation of original that they can hardly be told apart except on close examination It is the in vention of Mr A of Gait Canada who has had years experience as a woollen manufacturer and he foresaw along in the seventies when the buffalo disappeared never to return that a substitute must be bad for its valuable skin The Saskatchewan is made on a patented machine A back as strong as leather with a covering of hair and wool made in one piece no seams to rip and lined with a scarlet or black lambskin and an intermediate of rubber sheeting which makes it impervious to rain and wind Doctors and farmers who have tested these robes for four years in Canada pronounce them equal in all respects to the old buffalo which for a century or more did such good service when wear and warmth were a necessity At the Worlds Fair Chicago these robes also coats made from the same material were on exhibition They attracted much attention and received the highest award and a diploma jSeirnixife American Floater of Parle The method of testing the quality of plaster of Paris is by taking a small pinch of the powder between the thumb and finger and gently rubbing it if small particles of grit are felt it indicates that parts of the plaster have already absorbed water and it is therefore unfit for use The same test may be observed by taking a pinch of powder again and plac ing the fingers under water and then rubbing in the same way as before If however in both of these tests no grit is felt and under water a thin creamy substance is formed which is easily rubbed off the fingers the plas ter in a proper condition for use Where plaster has been kept for a long time or where it is gritty its cpndidon can be very It may be by putting it In a metal dish such as a pie plate or iron pot and placing it in an oven of a fire or over a gas jet As soon as it becomes heated it will be observed that a process identical with boiling water is taking place When this ebullition has entirely ceased the powder is freshly kilndried If the method of testing Is again resorted to it will be found that the gritty appear ance and feelinK have disappeared in a very large measure leaving only the fine dry powder ready for use If there are any- lumps remaining they may be removed by the use of a From what has already been said it will need be but a reminder that the plaster of Paris must always be kept in a hermetically sealed jar or in a very dry place Charlotte Medical Journal Indigestion Is stubborn but C overcomes It A chandelier fell in the Sons of Temperance Hall as the caretaker was preparing for the evening meeting One lamp only camo whole out of the wreck while a mass of broken glass and Iron well oiled remained to DC thrown out 1 George Holler the rayear old son of Mrs J of West- on was eating some nuts about three weeks ago when he made a mistake and tried to instead of a nut shell stuck fast In the lads windpipe As allerToits to re move ft were unavailing was brought to the General of Weston on Friday lash and Monday an operation was performed and the shell removed is now doing well Power The State of New York has made the greatest contract with a corpora tion ever proposed in giving the Cat aract General Electric Company which Is a branch of the Niagara Power Company right- of way along the canals of the State to lay conduits string wires or otherwise transmit the Immense electric current generated at Niagara Falls The company may according to the con tract use such electricity distributed not only for canal propulsion but for light heat and power to such points as they please In return com is to furnish to the State to each and every canal lock such as will operate mo tors to open and close the locks and electric lights sufficient to light each lock- The company must complete its work inside of three years When the system of electricity is complete company must furnish electricity for the propulsion of canal at a rate not to exceed each electric horsepower for the season of naviga tion The State at any time may condemn and take from the company any or all such apparatus used fn canal propulsion and located on Slate lands by paying to the company ten per cent more the original cost All work must be done under supervision of the Superintend ent of Public Works the preient Superintendent Edward of Troy making the contract while a bill was being hurried through the Legislature depriving of thority to do so Worth Many a man who would like to re form the world has a front gat that wont stay shut Many a church member sponges his preaching and pays full price for his cigars If angels had to live with some men there would probably be more fallen ones The richest man is the one who can give away the most without re gretting it Give a loose rein to passion and there Is more danger of a runaway and a wreck than there Is in riding behind a wild horse Many a man will tell you that the church he belongs to Is full of hypo crites the moment he finds out that he cant run It The devil would probably be will ing stop throwing stones at a mis sionary for a chance to lit down and watch a preacher It is said the prospect for fall wheat in Township this year is simply grand ly Mr Wm Thompson of has donated to the branch of the M C A Snowstorms prevailed in Nova Scotia and New on Good Friday and also in Manitoba The Government printing bureau at Ottawa was damaged by fire to a considerable extent one night last week Schomberg and ponds burst open last week Both mills are idle now and will be for some weeks The Dominion Government has voted 1500 towards the repair ing and dredging of har bor Maggie Mitchell was convict ed at Berlin on Saturday for bavin used a postage stamp in payment of postage which had been used before She fined including costs Kfc The newspaper man who has been studying astronomy while measles have been raging ray ing that he was looking for spots on the son reports that are now visible to the naked eye During the year from March to the same date in six thousand car loads containing Ions of hay passed from Can ada Into the United States at Niagara Falls The value was end the duty was At last meeting Township Council it was resolved that Hon John Dryden and Tames Moore he notified of the deficiency caused by absconding Treasurer J F Moore and that they be re quested as sureties to make payment to the Council l William Kane t McMan committed the robberies in St in end made good his by going through floor lockup again behind the the gaol County detective loy has kept a watch out for the move ments of Kane and succeeded in locating the prisoner In Muskoka While Rev R A of was putting the finish strokes on his sermon the tamp exploded and his type writ ten sermon was consumed his Oxford Bible lying on table was relieved of the Book of Romans and the table cloth dripping with oil was soon With great presence of mind ho the lamp and carried it out then carried the baby lying sleeping in the cradle the next room and returned to fight flames which be was successful His hands were burned while fighting the fiery el ements but though within a few min utes of church time he managed to reach his pulpit on time and without telling his large congregation what had happened reproduced ser mon that the spirits had consumed and got through remarkably well con sidering the exciting circumstances of evening if

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