5 A. S. KcIAVOELXV, >- Barrister, Solicitor and Conveyancer. Office:--Bleakley Block, King Street,, Bowmanville! Money to loan.at .reasonable .reasonable rates. B. J. HAZLEWOOD, M.D., CM.. BdwiîAirriMæ, - ont. C '< OLD MEDALIST OF TRINITY UNI'S UNI'S versity, Toronto. Four years Attending Physician and Surgeon, at Mt. Carmel Hospital, Pittsburg, Ks. OfficMfcfâ Residence, Wellington St. Telephone No. 108.• GOODMAN & GALBRAITH Barristers and Solicitors, Notaries Public. A. K, GOODMAN, D. C. GALBRAITH 508 Lnmsdcn Bldg., Yonge & Adelaide Streets, Toronto, Ontario; W. H. ALEXANDER, V. S. Honorary graduate of Ontario Veterin ary College. -Diseases of all domestic animals treated by latest known methods methods Office at his residence, Klng-st. East, Bowmarivillè. Phone 193i 20-lyi RAILWAY TIME TABLES FOR BOWMANVILLE. Grand Trunk Railway GOING EAST. Express 8.62 a. m. 10.18 „ ■ 8.29 p.m. 6.4» „ 7.18 9.68 , GOING WEST- : Express 4.23 a. m Local. Local Passenger : Passenger 7.00 9.46 „ 1.86p.in 7.02 ,, Express •Passenger Local Passenger Ma» : Bally Canadian Pacific Railway Going West Going East €.07 a. m.-daily 10.46 a. m. daily 7.68 a. m. daily! 8.21 p. m. daily! 4.i7p. ni. daily x7.52p. m. daily! 1.4k p. m. daily! 12.67 a. m. daily xNorth Toronto Station 1 Except Sunday. C. B. KENT, Agent. Canadian. Northern Railway GOING EAST. GOING WEST..- ^Express 11.59 a.m. I If Express 9.06 a.m U Express 6.33 p.m. I •,[ Express 7.40 p.m "i Daily except Sunday | liDaily except Sunday RAILWÀ7 SYSTEM Off fo Wohtl Pat yourself in top-notch condition condition by eating Shredded Wbeat Biscuit, a food; that supplies the greatest amount of bodyrbuirdinJ material with the" least tax upon the digestion. You cannot get to "the front" in any business business with a poorly nourished body. Delicious for breakfast breakfast with sliced peaches and cream. Made in Canada OFFICER WORE KID GLOVES. CRpD TRUNK Attractive to Muskoka Lakes Lake of Bays Georgian Bay Algonquin Park French River Kawartha Lakes Magane tawan River Temagami, etc Round trip tourist tickets now on sale from certain stations in Ontario at low rates, with liberal stop-oversvery Muskoka Express Leave Toronto 12 01 p. m. daily except Sunday, and 2.05 a.m. daily, for Muskoka Wharf. Connections are made at Muskoka Muskoka Wharf for Muskoka Lakes. Leave Toronto 10.15 a. m. daily except Sunday and and 2.05 a. m. daily for Huntsville, or po ints on Lake of Bays. Equipment the finest. Full Particulars on application to agents Low Fares To Port Arthur In conformance with its ever progressive progressive policy, The Canadian Northern Railway Railway has inaugurated a low fare from all joints east of Sudbury, to Port Arthur, Ont., which makes the trip practically as inexpensive as the Boat service on the Great Lakes, and being quicker, is bound to meet with considerable favor among Busy Men. T^pss who have already made the trip by Tfater, will find a pleasant change, as this route is one of scenic charm, passing many beautiful lakes and streams, among the most notable being the Nipigon, famous the world over for the wonderful Trout fishing to be had in its waters. Trains leave Bowmanville Monday, Wednesday and Friday. For through tickets, literature and in formation apply to nearest Canadian Northern Agent, or write to R. L. Fair- bairn, General Passenger Agent, 68 King- st., E„ Toronto. M. A. James, Town Agent. 27-tf German Taken at Pozieres Was on His Dignity. An officer writing from the front says: Yesterday morning Pozieres fell u> to our hands,: after a terrific bombardment bombardment during the. night. . I never heard anything like it for intensity, although it did not last as long as some of the others I have heard. The Austrialians who were here the other day in the village took the place without without great loss. I had a long conversation with two officers who were taken prisoners anc were in the prisoners' cage before going back behind the line. Both of them looked rather dilapidated, but the men, about 90 of them, were fairly fairly fine specimens, but the officers told me that they were mostly machine gunners and picked men. Although much on their dignity, one of the officers admitted that we had done well, but he excused himself by saying saying that the'Australians were SO fresh that it was impossible to expect his war-weary men to hold oirt against them. He also admitted that the Australians Australians were "very brave and fearless fearless men." "They seem to have no fear of death," he said. What seemed to stick most in this officer's gizzard was the fact that he was shut up in the same cage as his men, although there was a piece of wire between them; also that his position was so terribly uncomfortable. uncomfortable. He said : "I am not used to sleeping in the open. Officers always always sleep in houses with us!" So I reminded him it was war time. He replied, "Yes, yesterday I was a gentleman; to-day.I am a monkey behind behind iron bars." True, they were' not very comfortable, as they had to lie on some chalky ground alongside of a sunken road. I could not help smiling myself at their lack of humor and absurd opinion opinion they had of themselves. Just picture picture these two German officers ®any- thing but smart--in fact, very bedraggled bedraggled after two days without a shave or wash--one in dark - green when I saw htm broaghfi-in ypstenfay^. evening he was rtiH "wearing *®ean. I gathered from these officers they were rather surprised that we have done as much as wé had, and that our troops were as good as they are ànd our artillery so- accurate. I ask- ed what they thought of thè present ; situation. They said, "Yes, you have i , won five kilometres, but it is a him-. dred miles from here to Brussels; but you will get no further." They were very much concerned as to whether. there was any danger of being torpedoed. torpedoed. when they were going over tp England, as they heard that very g ;'ew boats ever got across. I told ; Jiem. they might get across safe, but in all probability they would be sent ;o the Isle of Man, in which case here was a very good chance of going going under. They replied, "Isn't there a signal given on the steamer that it is carrying German prisoners ? j which I thought was rather priceless * : -- PAYING $1,000,000 A DAY. What British Are Allowing for Dependents Dependents of Soldiers. One million dollars a day. That is what- the British Government is now paying out to the wives and. other dependents of soldiers serving in the army. One million dollars a day or $365,- 000,000 a year, paid out. exclusively to thie families at home of soldiers fighting at the front. And this amount is entirely independent of the regular pay allotted to the soldier himself, the cost of his equipment and all the other expenses incidental to hs support. " Enormous as it is, this amount represents merely a fraction of what the British Government is actually doing for those who have joined the colors. --> -- Box HIGHEST WAGES Mroot Bros., Limited 283 King St. East, Toronto .-America's Pioneer Beg Remedies BOOK ON DOG DISEASES And How to Feed Mailed free to any address by the Author H. CLAY GLOVER CO., Inc. 118 West 31st Street, New York 8 H  KKtKh! S o n ci u o u r RAW FURS toJOHN HALLAM ami racatvahlghtsè eaeh nriesa. We send mammy the wm day the fursars reeelred. ' Oharge.no oqmrn I ssioa »---en* pay mil char gee. Wehere paid eat million» mt dollars to thoe- ■t |r of trappe te hi Cepelt who seed their fdrato ne baoaoeé they know they gat a square deal, and rooetre mere money foi.their furs. To* wlllaleo. We bay mere tars from trejppere for eaah Sew any ether Are ftneu in Oeoada. MMI , HaUam's frâè»er OaUaCMpagss) CPClTHaHamr jeSSeae'e OeteCjtta a IUJj HaUemh Bew Tor Oaotationa Hanam'e fee style Boo* (M Mas) Seat free ee «agues* - Address aa fallow* JOHN HALLAM Limited 202 Hallam Building, Toronto. PLANT TREES BY DYNAMITE. Orchard Planted In ENGLISH MANSIONS SOLà. Some The Soul of a Plano Is the Action. Insist on the •OTTO HIGEL Plano Action • 9 FARM LABORERS WANTED A Gold Mine On Your Farm You can double your profits by storing up good green feed in a BISSELL SILO "Summer Feed »U Winter long" Scientifically built to keep silage fresh, sweet and good to the : last. Built of selected selected timber treated with wood. . preservatives that prevent decay. . The BISSELL SILO has strong. rigid walls; air-tight,doors, hoops of heavy steel, Sold by dealers or address us direct. . Get free folder. • Write T. B. Bissell Co., Ltd. . Dept. U . Flora, Ontario. FREE TO GIRLS We will give this beautiful bracelet free of all charge to any girl or young lady who will sell 30' of our lovely 12x16 inch colored Oildgràph pictures at 10c. each. 1 Thé ' Bràceet là of* rolled gold plate, richly engraved. Send us your name and we will send ■you the Pictures. When sold send. us ! ühe money and we will send you the SAVE THE CHILDREN. Mothers who keep a box of Baby's Own Tablets in the house may feel that the lives of their little ones are reasonably safe during the hot weather. weather. Stomach troubles, cholera infantum infantum and diarrhoea carry off thousands thousands of little ones every summer, in most cases because the mother does not have a safe medicine at hand to give promptly. Baby's Own Tablets cure these troubles, or if given occasionally occasionally to the well child will prevent their coming on. The Tablets are guaranteed by a government analyst -Bracelet. Address to be absolutely harmless even to the • 37^***^ new-born babe. They are especially good in summer because they regulate regulate the bowels and keep the stomach sweet and pure. They are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at. 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., BrockVille, Ont. T ' ÀNGÉLS UNAWARES. Women Are Doing Their Share These Trying Times. - -Before the war there were five million, five hundred women wage èaruers in Great Britain; to-day there are said to be over ten million. Five million men have enlisted for active service, and a woman has taken the place of every able-bodied man who might have been engaged in peaceful peaceful occupations. England has never been so busy a manufacturing and industrial country as she is in 1916, WABBBN CO.. TOXOHTO. ONT. Her Wish. "I wish I were dead," said he after the quarrel. His wife did not join in this melancholy melancholy yearn. "I wish you were insured,", she did say. Minard's Liniment for sale everywhere. __ . 'but this would nèvër have been pos- uniform, the other m a Prussian blue r._ j ^t-n uniform, tne orner m si ble if women had not stepped into uniform, with his long blue coat look-| ^ reac h_ In Canada there is not the The Western Provinces of Canada have experienced an acute shortage of Farm Laborers for Spring Seeding and Summer Work this year. Even when times were normal throughout throughout Canada moreover, it was always necessary necessary to bring from twenty-five to thirty thousand Laborers from Eastern Points for the harvest season. As voluntary enlistments have been very heavy, and inasmuch as a successful drop is predictèd by the experts, grave fear is being felt along the Lines of the Canadian Northern Railway, on acconnt-of the difficulty difficulty experienced in obtaining Labor, which means steady work and good wages for all who visit in the districts served by; the C. N. R. For further particulars apply to M. A., James. Town agent or write to R. L. Fairbairn, General Passenger Agent, 68 King St. E; ! , Toronto, Ont. 28-w S1.000.00 ing very dirty, and worn and he him self most bedraggled." Then,'to crown all, he was wearing a rather light, pair of kid gloves, which seemed to give him an almost comedian's touch, so absurd did gloves appear in his present surroundings. I felt almost sorry for him, he looked so ridiculous and yet so much on his dignity. He seemed to cling to his gloves as an emblem of respectability, because Striving to Please. "John,", said the ipjLnutely .observant woman, "didn't you forget to tip the waiter ?" "No, I attended to that right at the start: I handed him all the money I can afford to spend and told him to take his tip and then bring us something something to eat with the change." For information that will lead to the discovery or whereabouts of the .. person or persons suffering from VNervous Debility, Diseases- of the Mouth and Throat, Blood Poison, Skin Diseases, Bladder Troubles, . special Ailments, and ;■ Chronic or Complicated Complaints who cannot cannot be cured at The Ontario Medical Medical Institute, 263-265 Yonge St., Toronto. Correspondence invited; In all ctrofitrN#:" Aàk f ior- out r ÎNVÊN-: TOR'S ADVlSHR,which will be seat free* MARION A MARION. 4(4 University St., Montréal. Ûjtfr'ë COttdll mtdieine. Sold in three degrees degrees of etreegtb---No. 1, el. No. 2, $8*. THS COOK MlOtClNE CO o Gets Attention First, because of its wonderfully delicious flavor-- - / Then again, be cause it is ready to eat--fresh and crisp from the package. But the big "get attention" attention" quality is its abundance of well- balanced, easily di- nourishinent. For sound health, every table should have its daily ration of Grape-Nuts-- "There's a Reason tt Canadian Poetum Cereal Co,, Windier, Ont. - Ltd. same supply of surplus available women, so that in this respect Canada has not experienced so great a revolution revolution in industrial life, but many new occupations are being opened to Canadian women, and the demand demand for women workers in factories factories and in the great industrial life of the railways is steadily oh the increase If Sir Robert Borden is to secure his 500,000 Canadian soldiers,. soldiers,. 100,000 women must temporarily temporarily step into the shoes of men so that the latter may be released for service, as the limit of available men seems almost to be reached. Women are already working alongside alongside of men in sacking and hauling of grain at the Great Lakes elevators, elevators, in the Canadian Pacific yards and shops where they are. cleaning cars, in the telegraph services and in many clerical positions hitherto hitherto held by men. They are acting in some placés as Station Agents with satisfaction to their employers. But Canadians who visit England are surprised surprised to find women ticket inspectors inspectors and guards, women as elevator attendants, women as chauffeurs, and train conductors, women as red caps, porters and ticket clerks, women as locomotive ~ cleaners and track greasers. greasers. . Merit Grows Like Fat.' ■ A Dutch army officer appeared in public with his brëâtit coveted with medals. "Where did you get all those medals, colonel ?" a friend asked him. "Did you win some big battle ?" Thé officer poffited to the biggest, brightest mehar of ail. "Dot's de first.one," he said. "I got dot by mistake. Und I got all de Oder ones because f had dot one." St. Joseph, Levis, July 14, 1903. Minard's Liniment Co., Limited. Gentlemen,--I was badly kicked by my horse last May, and after .using sevèral preparations on my leg nothing nothing would do. My leg was black as jet. I was laid up in bed for a fortnight fortnight and could not walk. After using using three bottles of your MINARD'S LINIMENT I was perfectly cured, so that I could start on the road. - - JOS. DUBES, Commercial Traveller. of the Noted Old Castles Are Changing hands. The old boast that visitors from abroad going to England after a lapse of twenty years would find their old friends established in the same old homesteads is vanishing in the war, along with many other traditions. Estates are changing hands with startling rapidity every week, bringing bringing new announcements in which town and country houses long associated with their owners are offered in the pubÜc mart. In former years many such sales would be made privately. They are now too numerous, as a rule, for the agents to handle in any but public fashion, knocking the bargain down to the highest bidder at auction. One of the most recent sales is that of Pennsylvania Castle, Portland, where a splendid collection of portraits, portraits, autographs, manuscripts, and books belonging to the family of William William Penn had been housed. In the grounds of Pennsylvania Castle were the Norman ruins figuring in Thomas Hardy's novel, "The Well Beloved The estate was bought by T. J. Tem- pleman, of Weymouth, for $29,750. The Penn relics were sold at Christie's, Christie's, a portrait of John Penn, the son of William Penn, bringing $13,125. William Penn's family Bible brought $575. A treaty belt, the original one presented by the Indians to William Penn and made up of eighteen strings of wampum, brought $430. Another treaty belt, the second one given to William Penn by the Indians, brought $350. Commander C. H. R. Slingsby, R.N., who inherited a year or two ago the large estates in Yorkshire of his father, but who has not yet succeeded in establishing the_ legitimacy of his son Teddy Slingsby in the English court, is selling off this month about 12,000 acres of the family estates. The Red House, near York, will be sold, as well as many historical places famous all over the world and during times of peace visited every year by tens of thousands of tourists. These include the Dropping: Well at Knares- borough, where the water possesses petrifying properties.; Eugene Aram's Cave, Mother Shipton's Cave, and St. Robert's Chapel. The Slingsby case is now in the hands of the House of Lords. Commander Commander Clingsby won in the lower court, when the presiding judge based his decision largely.upon the advice of a famous sculptor that the boy must be the son of the commander's wife because of peculiar ear formations found in both. The case was appealed, Sir Edward Carson acting for the brothers of Commander Slingsby, and under Carson's cross-examination Mrs. Slingsby admitted that she had advertised advertised in a San Francisco paper for a foundling which she wished to adopt. Lord Ashburton, the husband of the former New York show girl> Frances Belmont,. after disposing of much of his family inheritage, is selling Eving- ton, in Kent, a beautiful property which it is expected will be cut up and bou'gfit by the'tenants. -- •> of 4,000 Trees Fifteen Days. New methods of using dynamite are being constantly devised. Among the most noVel of theie is its application j in the planting of très. 1 There was an apple orchard of 4,000'treés to be planted, and as winter was z approaching no, time could be lost, for fear a sudden turn in temperature temperature should frèeze the ground. The man who undertook the work first mounted a two and one-half-horsepower one-half-horsepower gasoline engine on the running gear of a light wagon and arranged it to operate a soil auger. With this outfit outfit two men were able to put down as many holes in a day as 30 men could have punched with a bar and sledge. In these holes light charges of dynamite dynamite were exploded to form an excavation excavation in which to plant trees, a number number of holes being fired at a time. By this method the entire orchard was planted In less than 15 days of nine hours each. STORAGE BATTERIES Magnetos Starters Generators REPAIRS made promptly Canadian Storage Battery Co., Limited. Willard Agents. 117-119 8IMCOE 8T., TORONTO Gets Them Out in the Air. Dix --Running into debt is poor exercise. Bix--But it gives good exercise to the bill collectors. Minard's Liniment Cures Dandruff. A Granulated Eyelids', I IÀ Eyes inflamed by expo- ,ure to Son, Dusl and Wlni uickly relieved by Marine 'yeRemedy. No Smarting, _ just Eye Comfort. At Your Druggist's 50c per Bottle. MnrleeEye SalveinTubes25c.ForBeokeltheEyeFreeask Druggists or Mari ee Eye Remedy Co., Ckkagf * 8BBD POTATOES S EED POTATOES, b IRISH COB- blers, Deleware. Carman. Order at once. Supply limited. Write for quotations. quotations. H. W. Dawson, Brampton. POB SALE. I Ka acres, four miles Peterboro (pop. 22,000). FROM Choice i situation and superb buildings. RobL I Graham, R.R. 4, Peterboro. i .... ■: HELP WANTED. M And He Knew it. The Professor--I'm afraid, my dear young woman, that you find statistics .very dry things.* The Dear Young Woman--Not always. always. Lieutenant Smyth told me : that ! shop ; steady job there were 400,000,000,000 people in ' the world and I was the prettiest girl of the lot.. W atchmaker wanted, must be capable and reliable. A. Ross. Port Arthur. Ont. ACHINISTS--SIX GOOD--EITHER machines or vise hands ; general work ; good wages for good men. The Iron Works, Limited, Owen Sound. B lacksmith wanted Shoer and general smith GOOD power $3.60 per day ; pay every week. J. W. Griffith, Gore Bay, Manitoulin Island, Ont. HOW COCOANUTS GROW. Covered With Thick Husk So They Will Float. Why do cocoanuts have "eyes"? This, say the naturalists, is the reason: reason: Cocoanuts generally grow at the Phonograph Fire Alarm. edge of seas or rivers, and a good , ,-i . fi I many of the nuts as they become ripe A fire alarm apparatus that calls feU ^ the water The nuts are cov- "central," telling h . er J ca ^' I ered with a thick husk, whch has a passionate, mechanical voice that the j waterproof COV ering, so that they will factory of Smith, Jones & Co^ is : float P Ag they float the three eyes, flames and to please call the fire w hich are all at one end of the nut, gade immediately is the proposal of | on t an English ^e^outhffieœ I Once in the water, nature goes to with its horn close to the mouthpiece | From one of the eyes there of a telephone, is fitted with a record i coraes & ghoQt that sends forth bearing the Are warning. The phono-; leayeg that act as saUs . The graph starts when an electro magn t catc hes these sails and wafts draws down the releas- | ^ cMoanut on a journey that may be many miles long. As it sails the other two eyes send out roots, which at first grow among the fibre of the woody husk. In time the cocoanut is swept on another shore, pérhaps on another island. The roots embed themselves in the soft earth the sail becomes the trunk and very shortly a thrifty cocoanut palm is growing where none grew before. -- Liniment Believe* Neuralgia. placed near it _ . , ing lever. The circuit of which the magnet is a part is closed by an automatic automatic switch which is held by a cord. A fire burns the cord. Queer But True. "It's a queer world." "Why?" "Stand up and say that riches don't make for happiness and everybody will agree with you heartily." "That's so." "And everybody will go out and keep right on trying to get rich. M'GoéÜM a Gift Spenditt--V say, old chap, if you would lefifl nie ^50, I could make $75. Smart---How would, you make' the othSj'ttVenty-flye Y Immune From Suggestions. "People don't bother ■ Wbftibdt with remedies fpr his-ailment." "What's his ailment?" "Jk!s deaf/- i d o r» f v & Minor»'» ÿz PILI.S Vu : x v x x - n |V . 'AIUN^.-h -,c,:»* f ■ *. j •'J'rK 'rt"7:s.P^uV. ED. 4. ISSUE 38--'16. Independent of Germany. Hitherto Great Britain has been mainly dependent upon Germany and Austria for its supply of medical herbe, but È. M. Holmes, curator of the Pharmaceutical Society's Museum, Museum, states th#t two of the most valuable valuable drugs; belladonna and fox^glpve, àré growft in England, and that she can be lndépendeilt of Germany in respect1 respect 1 ôf théâè. Bèlladbfiiia occurs in twe ity-eight British countries; and in regard to digitalis--foxglove^-- its seed is scattered in fresh localities in the autumn there will be no need td import it from ; the continent: jguàord'» Liniment Crurei • Burn, Nto. * , some people never have a chance because'they are unable td recognize one when they see.lt. PI .You wlH find relief In Zam-Buk I It oases the burning, stinging pain, stops bleeding and brings ease. Perseverance, with Zam- Buk, means cure. Why not prove this ? J>ruooùdé^wnA Storms,-- NEWSPATEKS EQ31 SALE ROFIT-MAKIN G NEWS AND JOB Offices for sale in good Ontario towns. The most 'useful and interesting of all businesses. Full Information on application to Wilson Publishing Company, Company, 73 West Adelaide Street. Toronto. MISCELLANEOUS C ANCER. TUMORS, LUMPS. ETC* Internal and external, cured wltb» cut pain by our home treatment Write ee before too late. Dr. Bellman M*41 cal Co.. Limited. Colllngwood. Ont Become a Regietered Nur#e and receive pay while learning The Beth Israel Hospital of New York City Pounded 1890 Accredited by the Hew York Ktite K.'.uoatlon Dept. Offer* * two-siid-one-h »! f ye»r conr?o la tralnthg for Dtirsts with ollowauce and m*lut#n*nce. Appltoeet* must have one year lii*h school instruotifln or it* ednOfttional equ'Tftlriit. Vur particulars aildrsrt Beth Israel Hospital, 66 J«-fferson 8t.. New Yoik. "No more headache for you--take these" Don't just smother" the headache without removing the cause. Take Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. They not only cure the headache but give you a buoyant healthful feeling because they tone the liver, sweeten the stomach and cleanse the bowels. Try them. All Drageisb, 25c., or by mail CHAMBERLAIN MEDICINE CO. Teroite, Oat. 13 Westminster Hotel, Toronto "A Real Hotel Without a Bar »> Bright and attractive. Fireproof. Every bedroom bedroom has a bathroom. Elegant furnishings. Splendid cuisine. Easy access to shopping districts districts and theatres. Free taxi service from Union Station and wharf. Ask for Provincial Motor taxis. ■ RATES: Single room, with bath, ?1.50 to *2.50. -Breakfast, 25c to 50c. Luncheon, 85c to 50c. Dinner, 50c to 75c. Inclusive rates, - American plan, 52.50 to 53.50 a day. Write for booklet to 240 JARVIS STREET, TORONTO. FARE $522 DAILY BETWEEN BUFFALO 5t CLEVELAND Sleeping accommoda^ The Great Ship "SEEANDBEE" The largest sad most costly steamer on any inland water of the world. tion* for 1500 passengers. "CITY OF ERIE" 3 Magnificent Steamers CITY OF BUFFALO j BETWEEN on our steamers. Ask yoog ticket agent for tickets via C. & B. Lino. , colored sectional pu*le chart, showing both exterior and interior of The Great DBfifi' 1 MotfiO of ©enta to cover postage and muling. Also ask > pictorial and Josuilptive booklet free. THE CLEVELAND 4 BUFFALO TRANSIT CO., Cleveland. I COAL COAL Commencing November 1st, 1915, the following prices will prevail : Chestnut Stove. Egg - Pea $7.75 7.75 7.75 6.75 Have your bins filled, now before another raise comes along. E- W. LOSCOMBE Standard DanK Building, Temperance Phone 177 St.