7 .NO. x and No. 2 sold in Lindsay by ,g “on, Dmggist. Is successfully used monthly-by over 0.000 Ladies. Safe. eflectml. Ladies Mk outdm ttarauk'l C..- In: Co.- a no otger, as All luau-en. p111. and lmitzï¬ons are dangerous. Price. No. l, 81 r box , No. 3,10 degrees stronger.†pet box. 0. z or 2, nailed on receipt of price and two l-cent sum pa Th0 Cook Commy Windsor. Ont. £rSos. 1 and 2 sold and recommsndedby 111 responsible Dmggisss in Guam General Agent, Lindsay; Box 415. Cor. Sussex and Pool Streets. Organs, Pianos and Sew- ing Machines. W. F. MTARTY, Fenelon Falls Drug Store. Doctors’ J. J. WETHERUP, IMVEYDU THE TIME? you;urely do Mil/wan? {ego mmxrlémife (on. ï¬nally b0 trim/E. ;°me i": . bOdy for “(e fl'me 0-day. W nor have A :3; jeweled Eigm ï¬afch of; your own-They are N be}? ï¬mm made-We km memgbo a c hoice 98kg jewelry, Silvexwam (I °<k_§,erc.. Begin Right Bargains 6993’s Coï¬pn 39% Comm 'res criptions H. J. LYTLE, 77 KENT STREET. and family yRecisaes carefully cam pounded O my the purest drugs used. Bring your pre- striations to us. â€"Engagement Rings â€"â€"Wedding Rings -â€"And Wedding â€"Presents. possess it. We have no poor, mean goods in our store. Everything is the money‘s worth most abundantly. You will be glad you bought it here. and you will come again. When you buy a. poor thing It worries you as long, as it lasts. When you buy a good thing you are glad of the few extra cents. or possiny dollars. you Spexgt fo_r__it pverv day you â€"-â€"Silverware, â€"â€"Spectaeles, â€"-â€"Watches, -â€"â€"Cloeks, â€"J ewelry, All Over The Store PAPDON ME SIR, “But I found his statement of con- ditions literally correct. Poor Griggs sat there with jaws locked ï¬rmly to- gether and with about seven inches of iron protruding from his chin and a similar length from the apex of the skull. The bar was round, two feet long, with a diameter of one Quarter of an inch at one end and one and one quarter inch at the other. It must have weighed seven or eight pounds. “I got my case, slid into a heavy coat and we were off. The overlook quarry was six miles distance and during the drive I gathered particulars. Big Griggs had been drilling for a heavy blast all afternoon, and had loaded for an early morning ï¬ring just before he knocked off. He had been tampind down the powder charge, short time had made him care- less and thee was a prematurd‘explo- sinn. The tamping iron had been; driven up through both jaws and through the top of the cranium and 3 still remained in the wound. I ment- ally concluded that my driver was either drawing the tale p’erstrong through excess of excitement or else that there would be no need of my services when we reached the patient. l "I had just fairly settled into the ‘ business left me by an old practitioner in a small mountain town in Vermont. It was not a town of wealth or great morality, and I was not a busy man. Still, my reading kept me occupied for the most part, and I had just enough of out side work to give exercise and maintenance. Even then I bad form‘ :d opinions and read widely upon the doctrine generally referred to as fatalism. I had observed nothing which conroverted my ideas, while there had come to me much in their support. Early on a olustry, stormy evening I was lounging in my easy chair before a roaring ï¬re, pondering over a very strange deposition which I had just read, when my thought: was interrupted by the sound of wheels and a. moment later there was a determin- ed knock on the door and I opened up. A quarryman whom I knew by sight was my caller. “ ‘For God sake, do ’ he said, ‘come over with me to the quarry and help Big Griggs out of his m‘sery. He’s got a tamping iron clean up through his head.†“My theory is, boys, that afnan lives until his time’s up, and no longer, and that. it makes little or no differ- ence in his length of life what he does or doesn’t do. I seldom air this theory. .In fact, I don't generally like to speak of death, an experience which strangely bears out my ;heory and which lies many years‘ back. l The doctor had been a silent listen- er to all this talk and sat gazing into the glowing coals until our stories were ended. Suddenly he went to his Shakedown, and from beneath it drew an old and weather beaten satchel, from which after some search, he took an envelope and returned to his chair. I The guide told a. young fellow who had been literally frightened to his death a. few years before by the onrush of a big bull moose which he had ‘wounded with his last cartridge. The ‘ brute had been knocked over by a shot from the guide before it reached the boy, who, though unmarked by a. scar, through simple terror had lost his hold upon the spark of life. Instances were named where a fall of a few inches‘ had brought death, and others where men had fallen 50 or 00 feet only to get up and wall: off unharmed. They were ï¬ve, with the guide, snugly camped up in the forest of the rRaugeley country, and the day’s sport ihad been a trifle heavy if empty. They had done a long tramp. The broad ï¬replace yawned a crackling comfort. There was soothing punch on the table and our pipes were draw- ing well. The talk had drifted to casualty and fatality audflro the exchange of views upon the hairbreadth‘ hue whrcn drvides the chance of life‘ from that of death in peculiar cases. I HIS TIME HAD COME Haliburton Mixed ................ . . . . Toronto Expres4 from Port Hope ..... Port Hope Mail from Tomato ......... Coboconk Mixed ..................... Port Hope Mixed from Port Hope ..... TorOnto Mail from Pmt Hope ....... . Port Hope Express from Toronto. .. . . Whitby Mixed. . . . .................. Belleviile Mixed; .................... Bellevflle Fixed ....................... .5 50 I. In Port Hope Mixed via Bethany ............. 6 l5 a.m Toronto Mixed via. Whitby and Pnrt Petty 6 05 am Toronto Express†......... . .......... 9 03 a 11: Port Hope Mall via Pcterboro .............. 11 10 3.111 Toronto glued via Lorueville .............. 12 30 p m HaliburtOu Mixed ........................ 2 15 .11) Toronto Mail ............................. 6 20 p m ....... 6 30 pan Coboconk Mixed .. .......... Port Hope Express via. Patel-bore .......... 8 00 pan†(the Watchman. GEO. A. LITTLE, S C RIBBLJNG B 0 0K5, SLA T55, SLA TE PEN CILS, CR 4 Y OATS, IV/zz'te and Colored BIA CKBOARD ERASERS, THURSDAY, MAR. 10th, 1898. and all the necessaries of the schoolroom SCHOOL SUPPLIES BOOK AND STATIONERY STORE LOCAL TIME-TABLE DEPARTURES. ARRIVALS. mmmmnmmmm pnnnn wwwï¬wwwnwm ssngnacï¬tsm ......... ......... ......... And therewe found him, dead and half crushed under the weight of of a moose of 700 pounds. The signs shout told the story. The tracks werenot two hours old, and showed thut th‘e hulking deer had eometo drink and; then had turned to browse along the fringe of the lapping water-5'" The ldoctor had taken a side shotâ€"which, in the failing end deceptive light. had not been sure, and the moose had chewed him furiously, sseeond shot failing to stop him. Beaten down and scattered was the blind, and behind it hunter and hunted had fought out their battle to the death of both. A broken sat: . ler told the fury of the onslaught and e splintered rifle stock the desperation cf the defence. l SUD, while the boys variously ac- counted for his delay, they grew more and more uneasy, and at length the Ian~ terns were lighted and they netted m a body for the lick. No man voiced his thought or his expectation or spoke a word until we reached the blind. The next day’s hunt promised to be as empty of results as was its predeces- sors. With the dusk three had re- turned to camp with royal appetites as the sole capture of the day, and the guide was rushing up the supper, en- couraged by a running the of adjura- tion. At length all was ready and they drew up chairs. The doctor had not yet shown up but he was a stayer as a sportsman and always the last man home. They knew he had gone Over to a blind which he had thrown up near a promising lick at an inlet of the lake. He had salted the lick some days before and had since noted sure signs of moose. Against the Judg- ment of the guide, who scouted his ability to fool a moose by a blind in the location which he had chosen, the doctor had sworn that if he took one at all he would take him there, and his patience and repeated failure was a joke of the camp. Probably he had waited until darkness had fairly shut in before giving up‘ his vigil and even then was stumbling homeward through the gloom. “What a dâ€"â€"d ghastly ï¬nale for an evening’s good cheer. I wish the doctcr had kept his infernal fancies and his uncanny toast to himself.†Three glasses were replaced with ‘ brimming edge untouched upon the t9. ble, oneâ€"the donor’sâ€"lay shattered on the hearth. Hurried good nights were said and a half an hour later quiet ruled the camp. But one unsleepsng member of the party went an hour lat- ter to view the skies and judge the morrow’s weather. And there he found another sentinel, who growled: He rose and ï¬lled his glass. "Fill and drink, hoys,†he called, and as they gathered around Without volition to re- snst Ins whim be continued: “Drink (0 the unsolvable riddle of life ; to the unfathomable erbibament of fate and to the unbroubled sleep which follows all in God’s good time.†“It’s a pretty world, senor, but not all has been happiness. I have seen of the travail of my soul and am satisï¬ed †“I fancy, boys, that it will come to- morrow. So sure am I of this that I shall ask you before we haVe a good nugnt to Join me in what I believe will be our last toast together. It will be to your comfort, friends, ff you can dis- miss my statement as but the vagary of an ox'ertalkative comrade who ï¬nds himself 1n strange mood tonight, but we shall see." He continued to mur- mur to himself : The doctor had gazed inn; the eagle without a word since the telling of his story, but 1113 hps now parted in a. slow and melancholy smile as he calmly au- swered : “Well, doc, when have you ï¬gured on reaching the limit of your earthly missxon? Try and plan to ï¬nish this hunt with us, for we are bounq to strike a moose before we are through.†V He drew from the envelope 9. photograph of a skull pinned through by an ir0n her, and 10 turn we exami- ned the picture. As it Was passed from hand to hand each face mirrored the depressing thought of the years of unceasmg suffering which had preced- ed the awful nakedness of the skull The punch bowl received renewed attentlons, and the tall: broke away into forced and aimless channels, difï¬cult for men to sustain long. At last one of them, in well intended effort to lighten the mood of the hour, said 3 “I lookea at him closely, believing that, after all, be was not precisely level. I had examined the curious wound carefully and wouldn’t have insured his life for 48 hours on any termsl But, boys, Big Griggs lived with that iron in his head for more than sux years. During all that time {attended him carefully, and we had long sign voice discussions about our mutual belief in fatalism. He predict; ed very closely the date of his deuth,‘ and later I procured this somewhat gh§§tly photograph.†_ “Nothing to be done. I shall live for years yet, a_.nd theres no buny.’ vuuuï¬u Lu 5| WU rm... “Finally I asked him if he wished any particular thing done or any one sans for. Motioning for a pencil, he wrote': I went: to work and made him as comfortable as I could, thinking mean while of the least brutal way in which to tell him that the long night must soon come. I was a bit) surprised that he was sane, since the wound must have been very snug to the bram cells, but he was fully conscious, though in great pain. 7 7 _ _ _ _ THE WATCHMAN. LINDSAY. THURSDAY MARCH 10TH. 1898 Do not trot heavy draft lorses either with or without a load. You will get far more work out of them in a given time, 'Tho ot‘ndud weight of the adult under in 20 pounds; udult goose, 18 pounda; young gsndpr, 16 pounds, and young goose, 14 pounds. _ , are the only two breeds that have 1h: knob on the heed. The bills of the Africans sre rather large and stout at tl e base. and their neeks‘, are long. Thexr backs are long and flit, breasts round and moderately full. and they have large. long and upright bodies. The wines a large and strong and are folded well' against the body. The thigs are short; and stout end the shanks of medium" length. The knob is black and the dewlap of a gray color, while the plumsge of gthe neck -is light gray , with a dark stripe running from the head to the body. The-beck is deck grey, thedplumnge d r‘the breast is any. end the un’ er_'part of the body ls light grey. The wings and tail ers‘de‘rk grey, end the thighs are light‘grsy. The eyes are hazel or brown ; bill. black; shanks, toes and web are or do}! orsnge paler. These geese have a large head, with a large knob and e heavy dewlep under the throut. These and the Chinese geese are diï¬erent from the others in the heed and Gray African geese are by many raisers considered the most proï¬table of all geese to keep. They grow the heaviest in the shortest space of time and are ready for market in ten weeks, weighing at that age between eight and ten pounds. They are very much like the Pekin duck in this respect and as compared with other geese give the mot satisfactrry returns for the least labor and time spent in growing them. They are. according to standard weights, as heavy as the Toulouse and Embden, but specimens, are not uncommon that exceed these weights by several pounds. They are ï¬rst-class layers and average about 40 eggs in a season. This is considered as a low estimate for their egg production. For table pn see they are esteemed very highly. t eir flesh being ï¬ne and nic_ely flavored. I had read of their curing cases similar to mine and so I decided to give them a trial. I pur chased a supply of the pills and com- menced taking them according to di» sections. I had only taken them a short time when I found that I was regaining the use of my legs and could raise one up and cross the other with- out much difï¬culty. I also remarked to my wife that the pills were doing‘ me much good and she was both sur- and delighted when I showed her what ease I could move my limbs ,with. I continued taking the pills for about a month and by that time I had as full control of my legs as I ever hadâ€"in fact was completly cured. I have never had a symptom of the trouble since and am now as well as ever I was. I attribute my cure en tirelyto Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. In fact itmust have been the pills forI tool: nothing else in the way of medi cine, and I cannot too strongly recom- mend them to anyone afflicted as I was. Vi There are few men in Brockville or elvicinity better known to. the general , public, and there is certainly no one held in greater esteem by his friends than Mr. L. deCarle, sr. Mr. deCarle came frOm England to Canada forty four years ago, locating in the county of Glengarry. Eight years later «he removed to Brockville and has mtde‘ his home here ever since. He estab- lish the large marble businoss sttll carried on by his sons here, and is him- self one of the most expert stone- _ cutters in the Dominion of Canada. He is also well known as an artist in L other lines and as a draughLSman has few equals and no superiors. Ample, evidence of this is afforded in the fact ‘ that when the construction of the Canadian Paciï¬c Railroad was begun Sir Sanford F leming, chief engineer of that great trans continental roul, r:quested him to join his staff. Mr. deC‘arle accepted the position at Sir Sanford’s request and remained with the company for nine years, during which time he drew nearly all the proï¬les of the road and the plans of the bridges between Ottawa and Thunder bay. His work was com- mended as the best done by any draugbtsman in the company’s em= ploy. Since leaving the company’s service Mr. deCarle has lived a retired life, enjoying a well earned competence at his cosy home in the west end of the - town. Mr. deCarle is possessed ofa rugged constitution and had always { enjoyed the best of health until the fall 1‘ of 1896. Then he was stricken with an afl’ection of the limbs which much alarmed him. Speaking with a Recorder representatives the other day the conversation happened to turn ‘ upon this event, and the circumstances connected therewith can best he told in his own words. “Last fall,†said he, ‘my legs became in such a condition that when I sat down I had no power over them. I could not move them one way or the other, and was natur ally much alarmed. I was advised to try Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills I had read of their curing cases orâ€"‘vwF-‘dwm‘C-IQ DON'T TROT DRAFT HORSES HIS LEGS GAVE OUT AND WHEN SAT DOWN HE HAD NO CONTROL OVER THEMâ€"DR. WILLIAMS PINK PILLS RESTORED HIM TO ACTIVITY. From the Brockville Recorder. FOR TILLERS OF THE SOIL. PASSED- THROUGH BY ONE OF BROCKVILLE’S BEST KNOWN MEN. A SERIOUS EXPERIENGE PROFITABLE GEhSE ,7 -- -- nâ€"qu-lu uuvu II "pl!- tation. 1 believe u: Imopan’lla to be the best bIOod pu ' or that has ever been introduced to the genera public. Iofun hear other manufucturets uy that thin is “33 ed as Ayer's," but no one ever t hea it said thnt Ayer'e was “gs good' a any other kind. The nlways net Ayer'u u as the standard 0 “anneal-:8. i? BOYCE Bullith. Minn. W - ~ Deviled Eggsâ€"Boil the eggs until very hard, shell and cut a small piece or “cover†from the small end. Remove the yolks and prepare them by mixing thoroughly with pepper, salt, lemon juice, a little mustard and oil. Put the mixture into the eggs. “I have sold Ayer's Sax-upon]: for more than twenty-ï¬ve yearn, and have never heard anything but words of pnise from my customers; not a single oom hint has ever touched me. A pro ' u must possess t merit to mainflch a repu- tation. believe Your Imnmpm. 4- I..- - _ “J'- of lattice. add the potï¬}5§;:= drained. Place tastequy the “egg rings,†and over all pour the dressing. Egg Saladâ€"One cupful of chopped cold potatoes. pour over it three tablespoonfule of hot vinegar, seasoned wi!h white pepper, cayenne. mustard, salt and butter. Five eggs boiled hard. Slice the whites ï¬rst and remove the yolks. Make a dressing for the salad. Arrange a layer -E ‘,A.,,, Stufl‘ed Eggsâ€"Cut in two hard boiled eggs. Remove the yolks and “rub†and mix thoroughly wivh a little sage or thyme, pepper, salt and butter. Next reï¬ll the eggs, pour over a generous amount of melted butter, and stand in the oven sev- eral minutes. has neï¬? here; equaled by in); cheap imitation of it, and quality tells, just as’ blood tells. u Is as 3mm; «2%? Satiilparflla Eggs with Mushroomsâ€"Cut into halves a can of mushrooms. Stew the mush- rooms into a little but burner ten or twelve minutes. Season with pepper and salt. Next drain and plsce the mushrooms in a shallow baking dish. “Break sufï¬cient one to C0ch over the top.†Seatter a few bread crumbs over these, dot with butter, pepper and celery salt. Bake a very few minutes. Eggs may also be scalloped. _One method requires a layer of bread crumbs, then one of sliced, cold, hard boiled eggs; repeat. and ï¬nally bake, adding pepper, salt, parsley or celery salt, and a generous allowance of butter. In place of butter a white sauce is suitable. And the eggs are somerimea scalloped with alternate lays of sliced mushrooms. Curried Eggsâ€"Slice and fry two small onions, then add two cupfuls of stock and two teaspoonfuls of curry powder. Cool;l a few minutes thicken half a pint of‘ cream and cook again. Then slice six or seven hard-boiled eggs into the curry and simmer gently. Why is it every sarsaparilla which tries to sell itself, ranges itself against Ayer’s as the stand- ard? Why is it that all have to offer extra inducementsâ€"bigger bottles, fancy wrappers, chea er priceâ€"anything, everything, at the one inducement of quality ‘2 Spanish Omeletâ€"Chop a very little gariic and fry in olive on]. Add one cup- ful of inced mushrooms and one-half cuptul of stewed tomatoes, pepper‘and salt. Spread the above combination on a plain omelet just before folding over. Serve very hot. Our Spanish friends, as well as many Americans, cnjuy the following : Omeletâ€"The yo‘ka of six eggs with two tablesPunufuls of qudFred sugar. vanilla; beat. Now beat the whxtes and mix both parts of the eggs together, fry in hot butter that has not brswned, and roll May be served with jam, and half pow- dered sugar sifted ovu- it. B'nman Omeletâ€"-0ne teaspoonful of butter. four tab!espo.vnfuls of grated cheese, a few leaves of parsley and shallot, chopped; nutmeg, and mm tableapoonfule of White wine. S ir these ingredients cansbantly. As soon as the cheese melts. break and stir in ï¬ve or six eggs. Hue a iluw ï¬re. Garnish with pmrslev. To a plain omelet: add celery and parsley or bay leaves. chopped. Even those people who have no reli- ious principles concerning the church ohservnnces of rent, in many cases appre- ciate the hvgiemc value of a radioed change in their menu at this season. Great are the nutritious properties of eggs, and numerous the appeuz ng methods of pre- paring them. Baked or “shined†eggs are delicious. Break the eggs into well- bubtered egg cups and bake, season with ; pepper, salt and butter. Serve hard boiled eggs. shelled. on lettuce or parsley. or on small pla‘es, garnished with celery leaves, placing a tiny stalk or two beside each egg. Fur a novelzy poached eggs may be served on Well-buttered hot, Graham toast. Scrambled eggs are plea singly varied by the addition of steWrd tomatoes or corn. or a. dtfl'erent flworine used, a lirtle lemon juice is appettzing. The number of omelem IS legion. Peas, corn or tomatoes, codï¬sh, sa mon, celery. oranges. onions. etc., a‘l these may be used and the cmelets are often hired instead of fried. and the) will be in much ï¬ner condition besides if you walk them. This has been tried. A trot jars the internal economy ofa heavy horse feat-fully. Train them to a fast: walk. It is surprising how rapidly they will learn to walk after a time. GCI More EGGS FOR LENTEN DAYS LIN DSA Y en. Remember we eend'both 7 __ :vhgiyeer: including book, a the very low pr! shove given. Addreu ell ordere to GEO. LYTBE, Publisher. To all subscribing immodhbely we will and Chamber-3’ Popuhr Encyclopedis. containing 700 8nd over 1000 fllmtutiona. Thu Encyclo- which ha never sold for lean thu $1. is unsur. pounds 1 work of reference. It conning 20,000 articles. and will befound of the mutant use in “muting the wounds“ ogguestions that What! fly mud to tea. - M. Persons. ' out, Misï¬ts. ‘etc. No one u. all interned Ihould be wkhoutlt. Do not delay or bl! to takeâ€"alumnae! thin mainly llbenl otter, which "nuke 50:14th 0:13 MW insggeant with the nu .l - ._L Luck of 3' forbids-a description of the contents of Fun: m5 Home, which are unequalled for uriety end excellence. Prominent among ice many depa t. meats any be mentioned the ï¬rm Ind Guden Market Reports Fruit Cultu:e Plans and Inventions The Apsiry Talks with a Lawyer Around the Globe Live Stock and Dairy The Poultry Yard Question Box The Veterintry leuand Florers Fashion. end Fuucy Work Household Futures, etc. Fannmd Home is publiehed eemi-monthl , thm giving yeuununbene you, the whole ' g a mlmdomMWuithmthe loses: ‘on the: experiencemd mun ‘ . Nobetterproototlupopulmg‘ can beoï¬ered it among circnleuon. wh‘ J extendslntoanrym end teedtoryinthe Cnlged umber bemg‘ E Ind III on: Onnede, each reed by no leq‘then emu. renders. a Believing that even' one of our readers should have at least one good unicuftnnlmd fnm'ny journal we have perfected arrangements whmby we eon send that practical 1nd instructive journnl, Fun: and He me. in connection with our own public-man, TH! WA'mgiMés, both_ a {nil you; fox: only $1: Oné of the best Farm Papers published, both one year FOR ONLY $1.. THE WKCGHMAN BIGGEST OFFER YET ,, ï¬,__ -_- rv'r-v v; “an“ 58% 'and surrounding country witlz MONUMENTS end HEADSTONES. both Marble and Granite. 38:th promptly given on :11 kinds 0! cemetery we: Marble Table rope, Wash Tape, Mentel Pieces, etc I ty. D: e praetleel workmen, 111 should lee hie 1!- ug: end compare prices below purcheeing else w e. wowâ€"In the ten of the Merketpa Cunbxldg-e t... opposite “the“ pecking house. s pregaerd to furnis}; the people of Lind- A 700 PAGE BOOK FREE ROBERT CHAMBERS LINDSAY MARBLE WGRKS Gm Ewan, OUR SUGARS IF YOU WANT“ TO TRAVEL In Factory Cottons and Dress Goods we take ï¬rst place. In fact we have the goods you want, at prices that will suit. Bring us your Farm Produce if you want the HIGHEST PRICE. and DRIED FRUITS are choice. ROBT CHAMBERS at correct prices. and we are going to give the pe0ple the beneï¬t of it. To our store in the above fashion we don’t object. The point is: be sure and get here. We are determined to do the big share of the business of this district. With this in View we have purchased the very ï¬nest lines ‘of ..... OAKWOOD. â€"â€"Dry GO ds, â€"Groceries, -â€"Boots and Sh es â€"-AND ~ â€"â€"v- moaulmwolwmâ€"ï¬b ‘ 4 M" 4'†Wood'l l’hoopho . new " Remedy dBoldnnclnreoomgm bytl . uhle medicine disco" 81: tom ' :. ,. ., Wham c1! 9mm team We... 15.33233} 1% Art-sq 1 1 undymig I cnnty : ._ per cent cent... tin Rf: not exec: 0“ I»: :3: qua-ted; T“. on. Principal cam 0e of THE WATCIIMAMs ox}: 3 Sold in Lin “.85. 0:22:21†2. . an addreu. Wisdom“;- “U'W nu CHWU UK Exec-ave use ulu'. .31 u: MW; Stun Into “Toronto Collage 0! Hate, wank} 1 pupils who desire» take lessons u: nun-ca Mbvmumuuconvwm Mudmmmdmd hauntâ€"86 / .5 PER CENT; Any privilege u to me desired 5! home-wad. L. V. non, B.A.. Bu- m. tor. Comm, .etc. 05cc: eve: I. J. Gum‘s Drs'GoodsSiore. mutiny. Arrangement: hnvebeennnd: > ~ 1 u aquï¬gnedwlendonnulï¬suECR: curity “mediators: tramszc. __ pexcent; vexyhrgvosumsn «ï¬ver qua-tab" . 0nd: ï¬xed to edit borrw- cn. an ac red by instalments. A."- ply to BAR N A: S‘I‘EKRS. Doulnion ank Bui d- mmWiuh-a Sheet Lind-us v. We have a large amount of pri funds to loan at 5 :- cent. on 1 Mortgages on Farm or own Pmperu' Terms to suit borrowers. ï¬mmomgcéinsum borrowers. on the beat unn- and u the very V 1: rates of interest. We do not lend on notes or ct. oecurity. R J- I'uucnun F. A. "'0!“ Lindsay and Echelon Faun. Lindsay 05cc Block, Kent“, We the leaping money on n A... _--A~~ ~~ ~' F. D. MOORE. on mortaga at Ion-£1 Wi'lism-an, Lindsay. "‘ vistas, etc. Soï¬aitors to: the Viaorismdthe Bank of Montreal. In H-LICITCR, ezcl, County cmm Anon: Clerk of the Peace, Lindsay. 050e, Keenan's b act of Kent Street. Solicitor for the Ontario Bank Money to loan at lowest rates. Ofï¬ce! No 6,y William street south. IOHN McSWEYN DONALD R MOORE JACKSONâ€"Bar, rristers, etc. Solicitors far thnf «m MONEY LENT‘ leSTERS, SOLICITORS. etc mediaxely opposite the Daily House Lindsay The undersigned 3. WM z clues hm 0r producuve town mï¬wq 6‘ 5v; RISTERS, 50;; 06: over Ontario Bank D. I. McINTYRE. Ofï¬ce and Resm‘ence 7 t0 31). m. TELEPHONY U of Toronto _ifni:e;sity Emulty, also mduate of 7.2m: eon, Lindsay District. Lmdsav. Feb. 4th. 180:. < R. SlMPS! )N PHYSICIABTxk Ofï¬ce and renidence, Russell Sum Lindsav. seand door west of York Saw omce hours. 9.1m. 4. co 13.30 A. u. ; 1.30 2.31. 1:03 P.ll.nnd 7 0089.21. 03. J. SmPscx Henudiedthogumader Ur Cotton, of h the originator 0183:: for extracting teeth. . writes Dr. Neehmu that he has given 1 186,417m without. so mcident. Dr. use: in but loud min obtuoden But flea] loath W as madam prices. R t pom-Jam betone coming. Ofï¬ce near} the Simon 1: Home, Linda; Streets â€"31.'1y. OFFICEâ€"94 KGDHL, Over ' e the Post exace- Graduate of Trinity UniVertity, m of the 8031.1 College 01 Dent; SWAIN, CLAUGHLIN and McDIARMID Bantams, Soucmons. c.. 'CSVVE YN P.DEV LIN, IfARRISTEB 80 f IBV'I‘A“ cINTYRE MONEY T0 LOAN. DENTIST, )R. NEELAND§ DENTIST. . _. A. GILLES PIE :. WHITE, GRADUATE 0f Toronrn Ifâ€: .. U... __ R. HARf, mmsr. -JEFFE§§ DENTIST McSWEYN 8: ANDERSON ‘, 1U DO u a 131., . .) TELEPHONE \o. 43 of um ‘ " rdence Corner of Lindsay RI. ssell St. eats. “kc 1mm “cwuht‘ .VROOMAN 4‘; STEWART. .. WALTERS dicitors. Ncnries. 'etc 7.2;: k. Kent-St. Lindsav T. STEWART The GUARANTEED Weekly circulation zecoxv, [“38st Cruz: ANDERSON, BAR College at Humane “mg: of Nidw Surgeons. 0 amount of print: *. H. HOPKllfl‘b. ni‘iefaityv 7‘ 1‘ cent. on First urgeon to G Line'sav r‘ 3:400- ALEX. JACKSON -a' Sim tau. exact pee; a ~86. m 08, Russell SW " "“’"““JI given to Midwinq me No. 98â€"35, F. A. I'DIAR I ~. Toronto. Mun, unosu â€Facial?! sad ANDERSO: .AXI It): Media: mus" a w r'. h