Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Watchman (1888), 29 Apr 1897, p. 3

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

- -.xuu:\l um toâ€"nig' '3“ film“ csmc to :1 3:3: fine Dg :‘cen . be 8015 b! 00- “9:1 hm: 'hoq§ payin' 256 1" Kiri-‘6 Eh}: Whilst E of 091’ _ P" ‘-U1‘0pflead:\guxn. “10:13:: ,a. a. con bakers, Gt?! ' a no back ’9‘ RINTS this!” of design. 8395“ with 11-! missed I'E win be at 5'1 nmg in vb»! E v gawk and q“ u this Iine N or gnu, salad cc to confine? :RIES A glam» it anyone of the I :ctiun. FirsH than ME I: hr and son A! . \‘ILL muse . Mrs, ass cons EBONS, ZES. Us are here. an to hustle, but AVE A Fmflou HA5» . . . SHOES- REM RIN G. A full 393m I Shapes, y, your Hats 1n SSortment d ; will be to ' stock. xuuars, 1'," sandC'oMI RINT51 autiful 5.90m: 0,,- 8mm E3523 0rd Rem: IDS I l [IOU Lime, Drain Tile and Sewer )fail sizes. A full line ofall 3fLum‘jer and Shingles for 75. Eve aching up to date 10‘s IO suit the times. Give ‘0. 9 Victoria Avenue- SDAY. APRIL 2915!), 1897. ’6 Watchman. WEST END ther, Coal and Wood “Undertaking use Framing g gash; RYIXNS G70- awards, Bedroom Setts, Parlor Suites, Etc. :dFor Fine F urn- iture and Low Prices IL‘ F I SHOULD DIE EAR? 00d, Long and Short Stove, Nut and Egg 0 the best Blacksmith l in the market . a m}: large white cravat A' l‘ 5 THAT. 2 heartsick o’er my lifeless F‘fh"? knight. me in deepest grief and 3W ume to my cold corpse )I high prices for ,r dxtumiturc when the and Latest can be ie {co-night me to me are exceeded by none '13. and in a mom dis- have equal eflect on manufactures of the that ten dollars that authorities in that show the grief You \‘8 SALE to my cold corpse call and see what offer ...... filgTAKE ztlcmoney. \Ve running a verv mandamu- . IV A LL . ITS BRANCHES me there and F as well have osts no more Ff, but looks so 1d lasts longer. me that ten, â€"I yr in the It will mum! ll!” Mo Allow- the Mo“ y“. Ionou Reptiles to Bite film. The only man in the world who does not fear a make bite and upon whom the yen- cm of nu opparontly bu no eflect is William . Winner, whose home 15 in Woxsvmo, Md. His performances with when“, nation and vipers are a con- mm some. 0! Wonder and amazement to snwho know him, and even tohis lifelong Manda than u a large element of mystery about the man and his mange power over Thus they sueoeéd in making an honest living, often in the face of conquered pride, while fleas industrigps ”citiizeu: are begging on classes, who are hunting bargains, pause to listen to the cries of the fakirs, many of which are alluring as well as amusing, and to examine their wares and probably make one or more purchase}; The inevitable fakir who is disposing of bone collar buttons at the rate of 12 for 5 cents is there, and the number of pedes- trians who stop to examine his wares is surprising. This is a genuine bargain in the eyes of some men, for some men will tnsist on wearing bone collar buttons. The busy pedestrian on Bro..dway rus hes by with scarcely a glance at the may, but hundreds of men and women of the poorer Next. to him were two fakirs who might be called general merchants, for they keep everything from cheap stationery up to snide jewelry, or vice versa, justas you see fit to class them But their principal stock in trade are shoe laces. They have shoe laces till you can’t restâ€"tan, black and leatherâ€"and they make a surprising num- ber of sales, for the articles are genuine and men buy them on the spur of the mo- ment. because they need them and can nev- er think of them when passing a shoe store. The gentleman with the rusty Whiskers, standing next to him, was much put out by this demonstration, which had inter- rupted his work of showing the ladies how to mend tinware with solder which he was selling nt underground prices. Thus he procacded with an endless chain of persuasive remarks, and in a. few min- utes he had disposed of his stock and dis- appeared. “J us: look atthat! Melts in your mouth like ice cream! Taste it and try it before you buy it! Children cry for in! Old maids sigh for it! Sweet-er than honey! Try some, lady?" Every other fakir on tho block looked up in consternation. The blind woman got as far as “Safe in the arms” and stopped. The banana. peddler scowled. A crowd commenced to gather, and the fakir took up a bunch of the long, stringy tafl'y, shin- ing like silken strands, and gurgled in melting tones: “Oh, yes! Go tell your friends to tell their friends to telegraph the news, to tell their friends, that. Tafl'y Sam, from Kala- mazam, the maker of the tafiy and the poor man's friend. is here today!” A glib tongued individual, nun-ed m a waiter‘s or baker’s whito suit, came near causzug o stampede on Broadway Friday afternoon. Nobody seemed to know where 1m came from. He appeared on the scene suddenly, opened up a. small table with legs like a camp stool, and in less than a jifl'y was crying out: bad day than you vfcel lik; giviizgr illâ€"é owner of the internal machine your Week’s salary. There is not, a block on Broadway from Franklin avenue to Market; strum on which the street fakir m‘uy not. be seen at all hours of the day and until late at night. Bus the place ha is to be found at the pin nacle of glory is betwecn Washington av- enue and the alloy at the north. on the West side of Broadway. He is particularly prominent in the afternoon. On this particular block a dago banana pedal: 1‘ om-npies the position of honor. He had jump-d a claim on the corner of Broadway and Washington uvsnuc, from which point of vantage he boldly pro- claims, “without fear of successful contu - diction. " as they say in amateur debating sooienies, than he is selling bananas “14 for 5." He stands with his hunds in his coat pockets and moves restlessly up and down from one end of his cart to the oth- er, vying the public surreptitiously and anon calling out in choicest (Iago: “Fourtee’ for 11’ !" Nobody knows how he docs it, but he lmahes more money out of that busincss ‘than an Irishman could. out of a saloon and grocery store. Next; to the banana. emporium is an old j blind woman, grinding away for dear life ‘ on u wheczy hand organ. She plays “Poor ‘ Nellie Gray” and “Safe In the Arms of Jesus” and various other sentimental and religions airs, and she exhausts her reper- tory about 47 times a. day. It is a fact that these hand organs are purposely construct- ed with missing notes, and this hiatus gives the music a mournful, despairing Wail, which makes you so gloomy on a , , V__ 7"- 'y-JontlnllllLt‘ll public, and he will come as near giving you nothing for something as anybody you would strike in a. week’s journey. Little children love him and older folks enjoy his windy dcclamah‘ons concerning the virtue of his wares, and altogether be is not. such a bad follow. after all. He may sell you a real “diamond“ for 10 cents, but that is your lookout. It is you who should be prosecutedâ€"not be. He may sell you a. lot of cheap collar but-tons, but that is what he is there for. He makes no false claims concerning them. and you get your money’s worth. So what more do you want? The arziclcs ho has for sale may be ridiculously cheap. But, as a general rule, they are the “real thing.” mkir. So is will haw to go at that. He is scattered up and down Bro: even as the milky way is stretched the starry path of hoax r-n. Like the of the late Colonel Bunquo‘, he wii down. He stands liken magnet to coin from the pockets of pedestrians ddights in the tenxhfinu- diam..- . Transactions Arc Small, but to Be Uniimltcd Patience : Enduranceâ€"Sample Gran] the Princimn Stu-apt: “4- go 4.1m m_0m<<>CA gmwOI>24m ZO<< “OCZU .2 >5. gram Qjmm. CURBSTONE FAKIRS HAS NO FEAR OF SNAKES. tho streamâ€"St. Louis Post- m. and you get your what. more do you ‘ has for sale may be m, as a general rule, ; There Seem and Plenty of In 1868 the first ribbon factory was es- tabEished in this country by a man named Wicke, who established a. small factory near the East river. It was operated by two Swiss. The demand for the ribbon in- creased, and in 1870 the profits were so good that a four loom factory was started and operated by Swiss weavers especially imported. Only two widths of what is termed “Ladies” ribbons were then me... .13. I887. answere more. .1111qu The first domestic ribbons made were of cotton, of a pale Mlow with a brown stripe running down the center, and this was speedily followed bya. ribbon made wholly of silk. in 1868 a cigar manufac- turer in this country conceived the idea of having his name printed on the silk rib- bon, which had hitherto been plain, and also the shape of the cigar. This was at first done in black, then in colors and eventually in silver and gold, with em- bossed work and coats of arms. Then the name was woven into the ribbon instead of being printed. Many of , these ribbons are stil-l in use on expensive goods. Woven ribbon is very valuable as a trademark, since it is impossible to duplicate it in small quantities. lusty-four Styles Made and Their Man- ufacture an Important Industry. One New York firm alone turns out yearly an average of more than $200,000 worth of cigar ribbons and on these cm- ploys nearly 500 hands. Until 1868, it is said, no cigar ribbons were manufactured here. The use of silk ribbons to tie up cl- gars originated in Cuba. The Spaniard’s patriotism impelled him to choose the na- tional colors of red and yellow, and these two colors, separate or in combination, are still the favorites. The first ribbons were made in Barcelona and were the rich crim- son scarlet; known as the Figaro, the vivid yellow of the Cabanas and Partigas and the red and yellow of the Espanoln. “I never keep a servant, some way," sighed a. woman the other day. “They get so impertinent and talk back, till I can’t endure it, and so just ship them.” Not much wonder they get impertlnent. No servant who has the slightest atom of self respect is going to stand being lectured be- fore a tabletul of people. And the mistress who will do that isn’t a lady, no matter what she claims to be. A mistress should remember that servants are, after all, hu- man and are dominated by much the same spirit as their employers, though in a difâ€" erent degree, perhaps. Whatever injures their ideas of self respect hurts their self esteem, and trouble is bound to come. Lec- ture your servants, if you will, but do it behind closed doors. The public is not in- terosted in your domestic troubles.â€"-Ex- image. Mr. Hendrick’s death took place between the dissolution of one congress and the meeting of the next. So there was no speaker upon whom the succession could fall. scant-or Edmunds, the Missouri mun says, was of the opinion that if, in the ex- isting circumstances, Mr. Cleveland should be incapacitated, there was no one with power even to call a special session of con- gress, and there would he an interregnum of dangerous length. He submitted this View of the case to the president, who, it is asserted, recognized the gravity of the situation, and at once determined to mini~ mize the danger by remaining quietly at home. As is known, the law relating to the presidential succession was changed to its present shape by the congress that met after Mr. Hendrick’s death. that, as the law of presidential succession then stood, if any accident should happen to Mr. Cleveland, no one could succeed to the powers of his office until congress could assemble in regular session the following December. This was due to the fact that Mr. Hendricks had for ‘ political reasons prevented the senate from electing a presi- dent pro tempore. He had been able to do this by declining to vacate the chair and to recognize that privilege, lest the senate, which was Republican by a narrow 1na~ jority, should elect a president pro tempore belonging to that party. Louis Globe-Democrat. as explaining why President Cleveland, after, making all preparations for attending the funeral of Vice President Hendricks, suddenly decid- cd not to do so, but to remain in Washing- ton instead. If this authority is to be trusted, the change of plan was the efioct of a. sudden discovery by Senator Edmunds The Incident That Le For the rest of the day no one won} have been surprised to see the man drop dead at any moment. but. on the contrary, he seemed among the liveliest of the party. There was no swelling: of the arm nor any numbness of the flush. the. only trace of the exhibition being a number of tiny red spots on the arm. which looked as if a needle had punctured the flesh. Those were. the iarks of the snake’s fangs. Winner himself says of the strange pecu- liarity which he possesses that it. is some- thing inherited from his ancestors, one in each generation back as far as he knows having had this same immunity from the poison of venomous reptiles. “I do not try to explain it,” said he. “All I know is that I have no fear of snake bites, and although I have been bitten hundreds of times. I never felt the slightest ill effects from any of them. “It is only a. pastime for me to hunt and catch the. most deadly serpents, and a pe- culiar feature of it is that once a snake has bitten me I have no difficulty in taming it. In fact, at home I have at number of pet rattlcts and copperheads which know me and will come when I call them just like a dog. I seem to have the same power over animals and have 3n 1. to meet. the his-r. Wild animal I cannot, tuinc."-â€".\'ew York l Herald. Then one by one the other vipers were picked up and allowed to seize the arm ur- til thcr‘c were a 11:11 half dozen of the spot- ted, writhing things hanging from Wit- mer’s flesh and winding themselves about the arm in a very frenzy of rage. When the spectators were sufliciently horrified, the man took the snakvs one by one by the tail and shaking them loose from his arm, killed them by snappizw them like the lash of a whip. ,,‘_v “a.“ UL uuuu- Recently, while on a visit in the mom!- tains of western Pennsylvania, 3 half doz- en spotted vipers were found in a. bunch nndera stone. Rolling up the sleeve of his coat until his arm was bare to the el- bow, Winner proceeded with his other hand to take the largest and ugliest look- ing viper by the tail, and shaking him apart from the rest of the snakeS, swung him about until he was thoroughly en- raged. He then allowed the viper to sink its teeth in his arm. 'he Incident That Led to the Change In the Law. An unnamed Missourian, described as for many years a. trusted ofl‘icial of the Tnitcd States senatm' is quoted by the St. dfifiiisefxfinfi m Eiin fl) Ifu'n‘t ”up some lgly looking specimen of the serp e'nt. fam- Ilyâ€"the more deadly the betterrp it fits his purposeâ€"and to let the reptile sink its venomous fangs: m his bare arm or hand. PRESIDENTIAL SUCC Mumxing Servants. DIGAR RIBBONS. lHt WHChMAN, LINDSAY THURSDAY. APRIL 29TH 1897‘ ESSION. Thad Bron-Why, :6“:th you want- «I to know We mma'n wofild W- K! who pas-formed s bmvo act. Now, a m who we bray-1y in summit] can't and the wood" a bme‘womm Tuckerâ€"Wt is fire? Thaiâ€"Shem. ,t it} at in this dlc~ --<.-â€" -_<..- Teacherâ€"What word are you looking for, Brown? “That’s what she was trying to do when her red head shone like a danger signal and stopped me. Later the owners of the stock gave her money enough to buys nice little house at Hinton and six months later I moved in. We’ve got the house yet, but We don’t live in it,” concluded the engi- neer, “for it wasn’t big enough for a fam- ily of six children, and not a redheaded one in the lot. "--Washington Star. “ With an oath I opened everything Wide, but as I did so Maggie threw up her hands and dropped in a dead faint by the track, and I stopped off everything again, for I felt sure that something was wrong. I had half an hour or so leeway between trains, and I shook Maggie up as quickly as I could to find out What was the matter. She mine around mighty soon, because she had only fainted from overexertion, and she told me how a big bowlder had Janet: on the track in scurve near her house that I wouldn't have seen till it was too late to stop for, and she had run ,across the spur of the mountain to stop me in time if she could. “Right then my fireman gave me the ha ha in a way to chill the blood in the veins of a man who can't stand teasing, and I took a. look forward and found that the red light I thought I saw was only Maggie’s head of red hair sticking up in advance as she pulled herself up the steep embankment to get on to the track. on a human He'lng’s shoulders outside of a. torchlight procession. But I didn’t care for that and I did care for Maggie. One sunshiny day I was coming down track with a stock train lpadcd with extra. line cattle and sheep, and I had in the caboose three of the owners. It had been mining and wnsh‘outs were looked for, but I hadn’t seen any, and was bowling along ate. good speed when all of a sudden, at the curve, I thought I saw a red light rising just over the track. It seemed to shine like a blaze in the track. and before I took time for a thought I had shut off the steam, whistled down the brakes and was doing my best to shop. “The girl‘s name was Maggie Conroy, and she had 131m reddest head I ever saw "You may talk as you please about red- hcadcd women,” be was saying to a group of listeners, among whom was a Star reâ€" porter, “but a redheaded woman saved my life and established a home for herself all at once. I was 25 then and was running a freight. on the C. and O. in the West Vir- ginia mountains, where it took talent to run an enlgne. My division ended at: Hin- ton, and there was a rcdheaded girl living six miles to the cast, where there was a siding near a big cut and fill, and it; was a bad place, as the road was new. He Tells a Story of Love and Advontum W'hich Sounds Like a Book. A locomotive engineer should be one of the most truthful of men. That's why this little story of a southern engineer should be believed implicitly. “The president,” says a contemporary writer, "was literally pursued by a motley concourse of people, riding, running helter skelter, striving who should first gain udâ€" mittance into the executive mansion, where it was understood that refreshments ‘ Were to be distributed.” An abundance of refreshments had been provided, including many barrels of orange punch. As the waiters opened the doors to bring out the punch in pails the crowd rushed upon them, upsetting the pails and breaking the glasses. Inside the house the crush was so great that distribution of refreshments was impossible, and tubs of orange punch Were set out in the grounds to entice peo- ple from the rooms. Jackson himself was so pressed against the wall of the reception room that he was in danger of injury and was protected bye number of men linking arms and forming a barrier against the crowd. Men with boots heavy with mud stood on the satin covered chairs and sofas in their eagerness to get a view of the he- re. Judge Story wrote that the crowd con- mined all sorts of people, from the highest and most polished down to the most rul- gnr and gross in the nation. “I never saw such a. mixture," he added. "The reign e1 King Mob seemed triumphant. I was glad to escape from the scene as soon as possi- ble. ” An eyewitness, who took a somewhat jocose View of the day’s events, wnte that the most remarkable feature aboq't Jack- son as he marched down the aisb of the senate with a. quick, large step, asgthough he proposed to storm the capitol, ivas his double pair of spectacles. Ho habitually wore two pairs, one for reading and the other for seeing at a distance, the mir not in use being placed across the t0) of his head. On this occasion, says theeycwit~ noss, the pair on his head retlwtcd the light, and some of the rural admirers of the old hero were firmly persuaded that they were two plates of metal let into his head to close up holes made by British bullets. Whon he appeared on the portico, w: arc told that the shout which arose runt tho air and seemed to shake tho vm'y glullllil. The ceremony ended. tho genera: mounted his horse to proceed to the White House, and the whole crowd followed him. l Mob Followed Him From theiCapltol and Invaded the White Rode. Mr. Joseph 13. Bishop, in his aéticle on "Inauguration Scenes and Inciddxtss" in The Century, says of President; Jackson’s inauguration : inches. United States ribbons arq sold in Canada. in preference to the English make, although the duty on our goods is heavier. Some 01" the machinery is very inui'csting, especially that used for weaving} in the name «if the iirm in Huck. E Some years ago the general public was bitten by a cigar ribbon fad, ant many ribbons were sold by cigar dealer ‘0 make lambroquius, sum cushions, etc. . wom- an in New Haven made a. table max; of 45C separate rihhnns, and it fetch“ $160, while a cushion made by a cigar nimufac- hiring; firm as a. compliment, to an; actress ‘Vh'lSU mum: was usual as a. triflmmu'k cost; $250 simply for the ncmllcwo'rk and time cxncndcd on it. â€"New York bun. The raw silk for the ribbon is imported direct from Japan and China. There are 94 styles of cigar ribbons made, Varying In with!) from one-eighth of an ind) to 1% :scum pmpcrrmntonne total numneror cigars manufactured in this country than in any other year, and since then the bun- dling of cigars has steadily decreased in favor of the system of packing 95 or 50 in a box without ribbons, but: so great has been the incrmse in the number of cigars made. now over 4,000,000,000 yearly, that the ribbon business .lzzs not decreased, but has sccudily held its own. THE LOCOMOTIVE ENGINEER. N“ In the Nation-x". JACKSON’S INAUGURATICN‘ The napp)'- Careless Days of Age. Youth takes itself with the some serious- ness which belonged to age in a. time of less knowledge, and one of the greatest proofs of a more complete mastery by the world of the art of living is the wish and ability to be careless. The one who is: learning to dance counts the step, and that is what; age has ceased to do, while youth is still whispering “one, two, three” most sodulously to itself. It; is not that things do not seem so important, nor is it, as it is sometimes claimed, that age or the age is more skeptical. But generally age nowa- days has mastered its elementary know-1- edge earlier until it has it as an actor has an often played role and need not be con- ning the part all the time. It does not lose its dignity because sometimes, like royalty, it travels incognito, and if it chooses under other titles to seek a freer life it knows how to doit, and dares do it, and is wel- come to, though it creates a very diflerent state of things from any that ever existed before. Seeing the bent brows of sopho- mores snd the solemn eyes or “buds," no one dares to talk longer of the happy, i careless days of youbh. There is a change. ‘ Age “s‘emuse,” and mm, in view of ‘ present conditions, there !; nothing to be done except to advise youth to hurry up as fast as it can and grow oldâ€"“Tho Point of View” in Soribner's. The country is very rough, wild and hard to penetrate. There is an abundance of wild game isolated around the falls. The discovcmrs of the falls killed nine clks in half an hour, and said there were a hundred more in sightâ€"Scuttle Postin- telligcncer. The huge volume of water disappears in a wild looking cavern, and becomes an un- derground river. It flows beneath the plateau for a distance of two miles, and then again bursts out of its imprisonment in the shape of an oval bridal veil and dashes over the rocks and cataracts down to Lake Sutherland and out to sea. From the snow on the crest of the Olym’ pics, where white men have never visited, comes a little stream, which rapidly grows in volume until it; reaches the edge of a perpendicular clifi‘ overlooking a beautiful plateau of 300 acres 1,000 feet below. For centuries the water has poured over the precipice until it has cut a smooth passage, something like a large pipe split in half, in the side of the mountain. Here and there it strikes an obstruction and out 01‘ the mountain’s side spurts other falls. Standing alongside of the clifl‘ a short dis- tance away the scene is beautiful and looks as though there were half a dozen rivers bursting out of the mountain. A. Cataract W’ith a Thousand Foot. Plunge In the Olympics. The Olympic mountains have produced nunthcr attraction, the beauty of which is not. surpassed on the western slope. What is said to boa grand Waterfall coming from the snow capped peaks above the clouds over a blufi’, falling n. perpendicular dis- tance of over 1,000 feet and disappearing in the bosomof a beautiful plain, has been discovered near Lake Crescent by two ranchmen. Their description of the scene would exceed anything of similar character in the Yellowstone park. Another article for which the cattail is used is the bed quilt. The eidordown quilt is an old time article of luxury. The cut- tail quilt is every whit as comfortable and costs about one-quarter us much. In N ("V Jerscy at least the houszowifc fully appro- cimos the value of the cattail quilt, how- ever much her less well informed sisters may 8003' at the idemâ€"St. Louis Globe. Democrat.. The. family album which graces the com ter table in the parlor of so many furm~ houses is also in many instances adorned with cattail cox’ers, although the house- wife cannot be convinced they are not plush. She has doubtless paid almost as much as if they were what she supposes, and naturally sho scoffs at‘any person who hints that she has been victimized. It is becoming a prevalent custom to use cacmil fur on the back of hand mirrors and brushes, which have heretofore been backed with plush. Some say that; the substitute is really proving better than the original. The head rest, boo, seen on the easy chair is often of cottonâ€"and it: is none the less comfortable for that. Sofa. pillows also are made nf catmil, be- cause u willow urnwvdly cm and wilh cut- tail Would probably be rvgurdcd with con- bcmpt. Call it Alaskan plush, howuvcr, or Shetland wool that has been treated by a new process, and in will sell readily enough, and give good satisfaction too. The same argument that applies to the sofa is applicable to the pillow. Very 0f- tcn, however, such pillows go by another name. One of the most elaborate uses to which this material is put is that; of covering sofas. Very many of the supposed plush covered divans are really covered with a fabric of cattail. It wears beater than the plush, and is infinitely chvupcr. It is a vast extent of country, compara- tively speaking, from which the cattail is gathered. It comes from the swamps along the numerous creeks that put in from the Delaware buy, from Murris rix‘cr ‘0 Cape May. The average amount gath- ered in the season is a ton a day. The work of gathering and transporting it, and then weaving it into the many forms which it must take before becoming sala- ble, constitutes a. considerable industry. A New Use For the Bumble but Pratt? ‘ \Vutor Plant. Very few probably are aware that the fur, or vegetable down, of the cattuil is a marketable ur'gicle. superior to feathers rrr cottnn for many pnryoscs. It is not, quite so valuable or useful 'as eiderdown, but it approaches in vw‘y closely and is cheaper than any of the three. As a. matter of fact, a great; many people are today using articles covered with catmil products who have no idea where the material comes from. “Tell me. sir, the cure for love," Said I to an old man dying. "Fain wouid I your simples prove." Faintly smiled he while replying: “Death has no cure for love." said he. “Would that mine may follow me!” .1. I- I ;U'.'lel$ in “'21“: (Jail-£3113 338- L CLUIH FROM CAT‘IAIL. Said I to a beardlesa youth When a hopeless lovo betel] me. “Give me balm for woe and ruth, Pierced by Cupid’s flying luncés?” ' “Can love. then, be cur. d?” cried he. “Would that mine may :uuVer be!" And the cure for 10w pray tell-me.” “Lovu is cured by low,” sighed he. “Would that mine were kind 1,0 me!" “Tell me, than." I asknd a swain Happy in a fair bride’s glances, “What wil} hgal {21): Sgdficuri’s pain. A WON DROUS WATERFALL. Bomflnrmrm "I- “‘«2. wink. THE CURE FOR LOVE. gâ€"Xy, I an tub dob. undersigned to lend on Real Estde ve- ourity It rates 0! ixtereet from 6 to 7 __ peroen: vexy large mm- “ Q per cent. the mortgagee “iron {or any term not exceed“ Myeu end the inter- est psylole 1y, but yen-1y or qwtetly, on ”in fixed to w borrow- en. Princi on be redu byiuhlnente. A plytoBAR ONO ms, Dominican-akin“ - mg. wanna Street. Lindsey 1 Moment: hue been made by the Subscribe for Watchman The undersigned having been restored to health by simple means, after suffering for several veers with heaven lung affection, ard that. dread disease Consumption, is anxious to make known to his fel- low sufferers the means of cure. To those who desire it, he will cheerfully send (free of charge) a copy of the prescription used, which they will find a sure cunt” Consumption, Asthma. Catarrh Bron- chitis and all throat and lung Maladies. He he all Mei-ere will try his remedy, as it is invalm . Those desiring the prescription. which will cost them nothing. and may prove a bleak}? will please ad- g-nau, REV. EDWARD A. WILSO , Brooklin. New foilâ€"4'1. “Queen Victoria; Her Life and Reign," has captured the British Empire. Extraordinary testi- moninls from the great men; send for copy free. Marquis of Lorne says, ”The best popular life of the Queen I have seen." Her Magesty sends a kind letter of apprec'ation. Selling y thousands; gives enthus sstic satisfaction. Canvassers making $15 to 340 weekly. Prospectus free 00 agents. THE BRAD. LEY-GARRETSON 00., L11», Toronto, Ontâ€"15431 V with good education. who want to wetter their positions. and would be content for a. year: with $600 and expenses. Write us, with description and occupation, and we will make a proposition for now or the future. Also needed, reliable men for Australia. Write to-day, for we are in a. hurry, THE MANAGER, 15-1yr 49 Richmond-st., west. Toronto, Ont WANTEDâ€"C anv asscrs‘ ”02mm: \annrin - YJar Lift: and 121.30" " WANTEDâ€"Intclligent Men with (vnnal Mnmfinn wkn “mat vn v.0.“- MONEY LENT. Wholesale House wants one or two honest and industnous representatives for this section. Can pay a hustler about. $12 a week to start with. APPLY TO MR JOHN A. BARRON Lindsay, for Moneys for Investment: at Lowest Rates of Interest. Offices William St. in new Dominion Bank build- ings. WANTEDâ€"Old established \V.hn]mmh-'H “Ian manna an“ -â€" “A 1.-.. .. The undersigned has {or sale a younc thoroughbred Cruickshank bull, sired by “J ust-the-Thing," from his best. reglstcrcd cow, “Water Lily" (15142). The animal is one year old and very large, and will develop. This is just the animal to head a. first-class herd, and will prove a prize-winner in any company. Will be sold on reasonable terms. Apply to Marble Table Tops, Wash Tops, Mantel Pieces, etc a specialty. Beinga practical workman, all should see his de- signs and compare prices before purchasing e150 where. \\'0RKS,-â€"In the rear ofthe MarketLOn Cambridge st... opposite Matthevn’ packing house. is prepared to furnish the people of Lindv sav and Surrounding countrv with MONUMEIS'TS‘ gnd HQADSTONES. both Estimates promptly given on all kinds of work. TO CONSUMPTIVES. Everywhere. to conduct business at home. No canvassing; work is simple writing and copying lists of addresses received from local advertisinz, tobe forwarded to us daily. No previous ex- perience required, but plain writers preferred. Permanent work to those content to earn $6 or more weekly in spare time. Apply to “Publish- ers," care of J. C. ARMSTRONG, Lindsay, 0nt., ~13-3m. There are numerous changes in the original license bill as brought before the local legislature. and many of them are , very important. Here are a list of them:â€"- (1) In case of a reduction in the number of licenses in any municipality, the reduczion is to take effect on the first of May of that year, and to continue until - the by-law is altered or repealed, the set, period of three years mentioned in that original bill” being now set aside. Such a by-law can only be passed after notice has been given prior to November 15th fat the preceding year, the notice to be -signed by 100 municipal electors, and in itowns by 500. (2) Liquor stores are l allowed to sell unbroken packages of not iless than one half pint. (3) Holders of i the shop licenses are allowed to sell pack- ‘ ages of titty cigars or five pounds of tobac- ico. (4) The restrictions on drug store I liquor sales are made more stringent and ‘and more clearly indicated. The demand for medical certificates and registrations * Wlll apply to all compounds where liquors ' lare mixed with other ingredients. Thei .physician is not only to be ”registered,” but “legally qualified.” Penalties are i imposed for selling liquor to be consumed 'on the premises mixed with soda, etc. (5)The regulations prohibiting the sale of liquor to persons of either sex under 21 years of age are made more stringent. Bona fide guests or lodgers, accepted by the original bill, are not now so accepted and in addition, clubs are prohibited from selling or supplying liquor to minors, whether members or otherwise, or whet- her the charter of the clubs or associations gave them power to sell to members. (Moreover, if minors, other than lodgers, are found frequenting taverns, the pro- prietor as well as the minor shall be sub- jected to a fine. (6) Hereafter no new licenses are to be granted within 300 feet of a church or educational institu- tions. (7) The clause obliging municipali- , ies to contribute to the expenses of en- 1. forcing local option is withdrawn alto-l; gether. (8) The machinery for securing the remOVal of a license from the resi» dental district is altered in two importgl ant particulars: (4) a majority (ins:eadi of three fifths) suilices for the requisite[ petition. and of (1.) municipal electors, l; not, as before, electors for the assembly under the Manhood Suffrage Act. This 1 1 petition may be presanted as late as April let, instead of March 15th. (9) The ' municipality may by by-law order that the licensed places close at an earlier or open at a later hour than now. i - l 1 I LINDSAY MARBEE WfiRKS ROBERT CHAMBERS 15-151. JAMES CASEY, 15.4. Lot 23. Con. 1, Mariposa, Valentin. P.0 mm ‘ man-z ”73.1177"!me BULL FOR SALE. MEN and WOMEN ROBT CHAMBERS Marble and Granite. DRAWER 29, BRANTFORD, ONT. The License Bl“. cemetery LICENSED 4067101558. ADDRESS 0M~ W000 P. 0. _ adamant! to vith mach ad Woo W41”. Barrister, Solicitor, Conreyancer, Etc. Offices over Walgry 090d: pica, Kent Shot WHORE! T0 LOAN st low: I interest. on any term 0! topmost-7431. Lindsay and Penelon Falls. Lindsay once. Bdrm Block, Kent-st, We are loaning money on real «man first mortgage in sum large and ml], to all borrowers, on me best terms 1nd at the very low. rates of interest. We do not lend on note. or duh. security. R J- H'MUGHUN PETER BROWN, 0 Ontario Vetinary College. registered member of Ontario Vetinnry Medical Associnti Oflice and residence. 37 William-am, North, oppoa Presbyterian Chm-ch, Lindsayâ€"37. Jâ€"L' LICITCR, etci. County Crown Anon}; Clerk of the Peace, Lindsay. Ofiu, Keenan's bloc foot of Kent. Street. OORE JACKSON (SUCCESS ORS tc Hudspeth Jackson) Barri: tars. Solicitors etc. .4 Office William street Lindsay. F. D. MOORE. ALEX. JACKSON Solicitor for the Ontario Bank. Money to loan at lowest rates. Office: No. 6, William street south. JOHN MCSWEYN DONALD R. ANDERSON "*RISTERS, SOLICITORS. etc. 6606, in. mpdiately opposite the Daly House, Ken: sue“ Lmdsay OHS A. BARRON, Q. C. (Solicitor for Dominion Bank.) Lindsay. 0- oo: William St., in new Dominion Bank building. *"l- RISTER_S, Solicitors. tharies. Ofic over Ontano Bank, Kent-St. Lindsa D. r. McINTYRE. T- s' Office and Readenceflomer of Lindsay and m. sse/l StIeets. L'centiate of Roya College of Physicians 5136 Surgeons Edinburgh. Licentiate of Midwiiary. E4131?“ S cm attention wen to Mi_d anddlsgmnf fimnn "l‘AIn‘L -§. ‘7- “1m -v... ukuwuu g1 and disei’seg ofvxgomen. Telephoxie 30 \Vellington- st Surgeo surgeon to GMT R. Lind Office Hours 10 to 1.2 a. m.; 7 (908 p. m. TELEPHONE No. U of Toronto University Medical Faculty, also graduate of Trinit Univer- sity, Toronto, and Member of liege of Physicians and Surgeons, Ontario. Office South-east corner Lindsay and Russell streets. Telephone 107 .â€"â€" 23-1v. IVIcINTYRE STEWARTi 9121‘ch cur-tn Graduate of Unmet Trinity COL, Toron Col of thsicians Surgeons‘Ont. Lat: Rockwood Asylum. ngszon. Grand geon‘. Lindsay District. Lmdsav. Feb. 4th. 180:. < DR. JEFFERS. U Office and resiéience, Russefi Etreet Lindsav, second door west of York Street Office hours, 9.00.1. M. to 10.30 A. M. ; 1.30 PJK. to 3 P.u.and 7 to 8 P. M. DR. WHITE, GRADUATE 0f Toronto Univprcirv mum-“ 9.11.; 7 to 8 'm’ TELEPHONE N0. 43. DR- JEFFERS, 28 Wellington: Street, Lindsay on ICE HOURS ~:10to 12 A M. a to z successfully practiced. Mr. Gross is prepared to giva you thelbeneflt of the very lowest prices and the best. terms on Artificial Teeth. Fit, finish and material guaranteed. For the painless extraction of teeth, he is still usi 1:; gas and vitalized air with his usual success. Also the best local applications for killing pain, gums numbed by FREEZING. Remember Gross, the reliable Dentist over Kenn edy’s store Kent street GOLD FORBELAEN BROWNING SYSTEM MEMBER ROYAL COLLEb Extracts teeth without pain by Gas (Vitalized Alt) administered by him {or 26 years with great success He studied the gas under Dz. Cotton, of New York the originator of gas to: extractfng teeth. Dr. Cotton wrltcsDr. Neelands that he has given the gas to 186,417 persons without an accident. Dr. Neelsnda uses the best local pain obtunders, Beautiful arti. ficial teeth inserted at moderate prices. Please send apostalcard before coming. Office nearly opposit the Simpson House, Lindsay. -23. DEHTIST 7 V." V‘“ “us. All‘thelntéht and iaprovod branches 0: Successfully performed. Charges moderate over Gregory's Drug Store. corner Kent am streets. â€"3l-1y. Honor Graduate of ToronwyUniversity and Boy: College of Dental Surgeons. All thelntest and imprqyod bmncpes of dentin! finnnmuhfllu ......l.‘__‘ ‘ J OFFICEâ€"94 Kent-st" over Fairweathe r's Store Opposite the Post Office Graduate of Trinity University. Toronto. also gr are of the Royal College of Dental Surgeons, Ont. cLAUGHLIN and McDIARMID anxs'rzas, Soncxmns, c.. . H. HOPKINS. BARRIS- - TER. V. O’CONNOR, B. A . R. A. GILLESPIE .C.P . AND S. C. .R. F. A. WALTERS, DENTIST, . LIND. P.DEVLIN, RARBISTER SO DENTIST, 'CSWEYN ANDERSON, BAR- A‘l branches of Dentistry, including R. HART, DENTIST. .MSIMBSON, PHYSICIAN KEN N :Y, V.S., Graduate of . N EELAN DS. grofesstonczf Garbs. 0501/3, ONT. DR. J. SIMPSCN ,- H. HOPKINS. Surgeon to Gaol and . Lindsay distnct. . a.n{.; 2 to 4 p.m.' 1., Toronto. Member at. Late Physicia a No. . A. I'MIIB ‘. Linds‘av" 'r. snawam LINDSAY. LINDSAY, LINDSAY- LINDSAY. ‘IITAL SUR- etc ‘ at: Ztoi '1 rank and W'il'u'fii the 2 .95!“ 3! 115%“ El

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy