FOR THE HOME ,‘ “rains and Paintsâ€"for renewing the ï¬nish "ion 5 ~- r‘rvl‘“" - ,- . on fÂ¥3133§§ Enamel‘c'm be washed With soap and “'3‘“ an Williams Special Floor aggbagidglialsomine, Whiting, Brushes h Binding Curtain Poles and , g . _ fl 51,3210; Carpet ‘and Picture Hard- ': mmégï¬lstering Hardware, Enameled Cloths Tang .. Lher, MOSS n lmitation iéfld Black Diamond .Stove Polish, . 85â€.: Prepared Glue, in small tins, Welling- .13 ‘ “v - ~01} Knife POW'der- For the Carriage. Cart or WagOn earl everything to make them we EseilsnGlosys Paints to brighten up the . . 'F‘A‘SH ,1“ .en the r: “2‘. e Top Dressing for the Top “:7; :5; Grease for the Axles . ’3, 1,.3 and Carriage Hardware, heckyokes and ': 23733339,; Irons, CleVices, etc. FOR THE BICYCLE. - can Sei- almost any part of any Bicycle from l - »- ‘ - ‘3' z s okes. Enamel, Saddles, Bells, Cem- :15. Rmilbf Cycle Oil, 5c bottle, Double Tube ~-:‘.‘.S. 3» 1': {war at $4.50 pair , ea “M' 3 cfland Bicycle Liver!†“u have 2. gr t We sell '> w- ‘ If "(TIBVC _ ' ~ new wheels in it this season. “ Cleveland †..AND.. "“16â€de Vale†BlGUGlBS -. 1 pleasure to show them in detail, and our " ‘ prices will interest you. 3 e. nnnuns 00. Hardware Merchants. i i .__,_,_.â€"â€"â€"~_._._.__' _ 4’_,____â€"â€"â€"__.__. ,- ’â€" A Thorough Knowledge of BOOKKEEPING yï¬hnietic. Business Forms, Com'l Law 1.2“ is essential to busmess success. A 1.. i}: :zaining in ...... â€WM SHORTHAND -,3,3~.x':-i:ing. e.c., affords the best means: "' gtiv:uic:ment to young men and The Best Place ~ <3 sire this training and knowledge ............. ~ - inlet nnnmson BUSINESS courts Toronto. Ontario. *.‘.::.’.some Circulars and mention The WatchmamWarder â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€".â€" .â€"â€"'- nnnnn Pllll'l‘ an. i and nnp PAINTS l b â€"P.:e Linseed Oil Paints. , â€"i.atest Artistic Shades in HOUSE and llLLA Paints, prepared for immed- /' I ate use. .- â€"Best in the Market. â€"ros SALE BYâ€" * WIENSAN 00 CHILDREN’S COUGHS I I‘ï¬géez‘z'z‘or (z N n QUICKLY CURED. 72 27:76 172/ . ' Exit twp the clildren from catchâ€" 521527555‘ :2: vxLâ€"wg; run out of doors not P-"-'-§*‘-’.;v‘ -‘-'f.;;l;.er,lâ€";:et. wet feetâ€"kick ' ’ ' , ‘nes (2i. ZLI night. ‘5 " iii-T“ miner going to do about it ? ï¬lo/c) [l]; ~ luff-.94"? tine children's Coughs ’ .~ end in Lroupâ€"and ‘ ' or weaken the lungs {FT/l 1 . 3'1" '. "Mrs 11w give their children . 4 ’ T_ ~- . - ‘. ‘ 12/31 WA 7 w ' . ; .\',:"-'.';::v' I’zne Syrup. l/‘ 3 . †a :;.'.~:o-. and cures all kinds [0 LOSf/W 9 ._' - :ul hurls more quickly and . . ’- i . _. :.:.yrcmedy known. it, ' ~ « “fur/l i’:.rrySound, Ont..writes: f . L ' â€", 7‘.†~ Norway Pine Syrup for r ' myself and also of my baby. * < a ('old quicker than any - .6. .rv- I ever tried.†Price 25c. LAXA. ' .m-rmnstipation,biliousness 5 1.“;ldzu‘lle and dyspepsia. LIVER Eur-cf; pill guaranteed perfect nil in :u-t without any grip- PILLS '_ weakening 01‘ Sickening ~'".'» of» 2.30. at all druggists. “mm a 7wâ€" 565 ., w APRIL 27th, 1599 '0 (7001 '7 :1, ' .T’ :f:‘ 5‘?/[{ 7 2:3. LOCAL TIME-TABLE ' U . : nsraarcass. ,c-i 3"“? .9 bilxed .......................... 5 50 s.m r /Z/lz 0‘ .‘ILf 1- "9 ï¬xed via Bethany ............. 6 15 mm ‘ ; ' 33mg; :13 Whitby and Port Perry 5 50 a.m 7 . :I-‘Z- I-lx'. ress .......................... 8 55 a. m [Oyi/Z A I" “5.7 h ‘3 51331 Via Peterboro .............. ll 03 am I ’ - 534:4 v;a Lorneville .............. 12 to p.m /fl :1 â€1’1 'vlixerl ......................... 3 00 D ID 7 I 1‘: .............................. 6 20 p m 565) f l ., .................... 6 30 D m " 1 “ss v‘a Peterboro .......... b 05 p m ARRIVALS. 3157.92 Mixed ....................... .. 8 40 a.m ‘ :5: Express from Port Hope .......... 8 50 a..m . -. p- K’- 7»; Sir..." from Toronto .............. 11 00 a.m ’]Z t 2â€â€ Mitzi! ........................... 10 10 an!!! ) ' ‘ f :' N 1" llzxcd from Port Hope .......... 2 96 p.m ‘ ‘_ 551m. from Port Hope .............. 6 20 p.m a“. f1 to Express from Toronto .......... 7 53 p.m r . ~ llzxed ........................... 8 00 p.m (1 Er I ‘4 I: Mixed ........................... 10 20 p.m “ . a, mail for Port Hope closes at the P. 0. at 7; vv\ .u“ xiii: mail !..r Toronto closes at 8.30: â€7, V mml 2012;: north connects With the I. B. “3 ‘- J'J 11:. north train carries no mall. ~‘_â€"_â€" 1. B. 0. RAILWAY, G. T. R. SERVICE. :2: ............................. 11 20 am rug-n ......... . ................ 2 30 p m n.a0 Juvction .............. 200p") - .. nmdsay ......................... 5 20 W“ l. P. 8:. 0. SERVICE. 11 00am CTO†............................ 2 '20 p m met on ................ 1 45 p m Bmc'of ............. 5 15 p w s 1‘ â€W " Make the 8011 Rich 8 , eed Free] Study Colon- Eflects. y and The annual flowers of th are those which give theirebzsffislldhï¬ 1n the very year in which the seeds are sown. The true annuals are those plants whmh complete their entire life cycle In one season. Some of the so called annual flowers will continue to bloom the second and third years, but the bloom is so poor and sparse after the ï¬rst season that it does them. not pay to keep enough. humus or vegetable m make 1t rich and enable it :dtellh’lcd morstnre. If the ground is not natural- ly rich, spade in well rotted manure or mold from the woods. A little commer- 018.1 fertilizer may help in starting oï¬ the plants quickly. Prepare the land as early 1n spring as it is in ï¬t condition and prevent evaporation by keeping the surface loose by means of raking. If the flowers are to be grown about the edges of the lawn, make sure that the grass roots do not run underneath them and rob them of food and moisâ€" ture. It is well to run a sharp spade deep Into the ground about the edges of the bed every two or three weeks for the purpose of cutting off any grass roots which may have run into the bed. If beds are made in the turf, see that they are three feet or more wide, so that the grass roots will not undermine them Against the shrub borders this precau- tlon may not be necessary. In fact, it is desirable that the flowers ï¬ll all the space between the overhanging branches and the sod. Sow the seeds freely. Many will not germinate. Even if they do all germiâ€" nate. the combined strength of the ris- ing plantlets will break the crust on the hard soils, and in the thinning which follows only strong and promising plants are allowed to remain. Better effects are also often secured when the colors are in masses, especially if the flowers are thrown into the bays of heavy shrub borders. There are groups of standard or gen- eral purpose plants which are easily grown almost anywhere and are sure to give satisfaction The groups which most strongly appeal to the writer (Pro- fessor L. H. Bailey, Cornell, bulletin 161,) as staple or general purpose types are: Petunias, phloxes, pinks, or di- anthuses; larkspurs, or delphiniums: calliopsis, or coreopsis; pot marigold, or calendnla; bachelor’s button, or Cen- taurea cyanus; clarkias, zinnias, mari- golds, or tagetes; collinsias, gilias, Cali- fornia poppies, or eschscholtzias; ver- benas, China asters, sweet peas, ne- mophulas, portulaccas. silenes, candy- tnfts, alyssum, stocks, morning glories and nasturtiums, or tropmolums. A Superb New Plum. Mr. Luther Burbank, the originator of a large number of new and noted plums which are being largely planted, pronounces the October Purple the best of them all, according to American Gardening, which quotes him thus in illustrating the fruit: “The October Purple is a. splendid grower, ripens up its wood early to the tip, bears every season and fruits all over the old wood on spurs instead of away out on the OCTOBER PURPLE PLUM. branches, like many other kinds; fl'tllt very large and uniform in size. It is a superb variety. †. The fruit is described as measuring a trifle over seven inches in circumfer- ence and shows long keeping quality. The fruit is round in form, color a red- dish purple, a little darker than the Bradshaw; flesh yellow, stone small and in quality superb. The tree is a strong, erect grower, forming a mce, shapely head, something like Abun- dance in this respect. It is. however, a more symmetrical and shapely grower. Its season of ripening is about a month later than Abundance or Burbank, or from the middle to last of September. Its large, even size and beautiful color, late season in ripening, long keeping and superb quality will make it a very desirable variety for the garden or for the market. A Uniform Apple Barrel. The Country Gentleman presents re- marks made before the Eastern New, York Horticultural society by Mr Charles Foster, in which occurs the fol- lowing: Let me say that the time has come when our growers recognize the necessity of coming together on this question. Our barrel manufacturers are ready for the change, and there is to- i day no widespread opposition to legis- lation that will place us in fair compe- , tition in the markets of this country and Europe with the larger barrel now in general use in the western states, Virginia, New England and Canada. What we desire is a package of the capacity of the flour barrel, which is 17% inches diameter of head, 28% 3 inches stave and 64 inches bulge. There is nothing in our bill which precludes the use of new or secondhand flour barrelsâ€"the former so largely used in Virginia and the latter in New Eng- . land. t 4E ' ATcHMANWARaERUNBSAYONT I * ,...-.._-- M mm COLDS IN CHICKENS. Some of the Old Theories May Be at Fault. I have been experimenting somewhat with colds in chicks and by these ex- periments have proved to my satisfac- tion that some of the so called pet theo‘ ries are at fault. I have especially dem- onstrated that common colds will not develop into roup, as a great‘many clalm, but that if afowl has the roup it comes entirely from contagion. I have had some of the worst: cases of cold this sea.- son to deal with I have ever had, and I have placed those afflicted with those that were well to see if they would also take the disease, but they did not. I have also taken the worse cases andput them into places where the conditions 'were worse and did nothing for them In the way of giving them medicine and have not had any roup from this experi- ment. Others I put under better cond1â€" tions and gave everything ever recom- mended for colds and even roup, and they did not get better. I made up my mind there was something wrong. I discovered the trouble after awhile. Previous to this and through all my various experiments they had been cud- dling together, as chicks always do, jUSt as long as they are allowed to do so. So I separated them and made them roost and single out and gave them good care and a good, tight house, so no drafts could touch them, and they at once began to improve and ï¬nally got entirely well. Therefore I reasoned that by packing together at night they per- spired and when they got up in the morning they were chilled by the sud- den change and contracted cold. I am now convinced that the best way is to teach chicks to roost early, care being taken to give them a good, wide board to roost on until they are fully develop- ed, and thus avoid crooked breasts, etc. -Henry Traï¬ord in Feather. Down With the Hatchet Doctrine. It makes me “tired†to hear a. man who professes to be a poultryman advo- cating the hatchet for sick fowls, says H. C. Austen in The American Poultry Journal. I have been raising poultry 40 years and have had to take the hatchet to but two birds. I have found roup and canker in its worst form. It was the ï¬rst I had ever seen, so I killed the two that showed the sickness ï¬rst. In a few days there were 50 cases, but I succeed- ed in curing them, and when they were well they were well. There was a ï¬ne Leghorn cock among them. I used him for three years. He was never again sick, nor did any of his offspring have roup. I did not breed from him until he was well The cause of this outbreak of roup, I believe, was my carelessness in their roosting quarters. During some very cold weather the wind blew through cracks in the house. Roup in fowls is like cold in the human system If you neglect it, you will soon have a bad case. A true poultryman, when he sees his fowls have cold, will keep them up and give them a little tonic for a. few days. As for a chicken that has once had the roup being unï¬t to eat, that is all “bosh. †In less than a year after a fowl is well of such complaint the disease is entirely out of its system A cured bird is as good as one that has never had the roup. A house should be without cracks, without lice, and kept clean. Disin- fectants must be used. Blue Andalullune. Breeders of the fancy and utility, why not try them? I have bred them ï¬ve years, and for eggs I ï¬nd they out- class the Barred Plymouth Rocks and Bud Leghorns 20 per cent by actual test. They are all year round layers, and lay larger eggs. They are much hard- ier than either of the above mentioned varieties, mature as quickly as the Leg- horns, and are as heavy as the Minor- cas. They do not breed as true to color as most varieties throwing off black and white chicks, but you can get as many high scoring birds from the same number hatched as from almost any other variety. My birds have never failed to carry off a large per cent of premiums wherever shown, with score cards from 92 to 94. They always at- tract attention in the showroom and certainly ought to be more extensively bred. From experience I have found them practically nonsetters. In the ï¬ve years I have only had three hens to . show the least sign of broodiness and I l have hens 4 years old.â€"-â€"B. F. Parsons in American Poultry Journal. s Poultry Show. as Educators. The poultry show should be regarded as an educational institution, a place where different breeds and varieties can . be studied, where the most advanced I results in breeding can be seen, and where many excellent and valuable les- sons can be learned. This can be accom- plished in a greater degree than it has ever been accomplished if the follow- ing plan is carried out: Every breed or variety entered alive should also have dressed representativesâ€"at least one cock, hen, cockerel and pullet. With every breed should be exhibited at least one dozen eggs laid by hens and an equal number laid by pallets. If this were . done, the department of dressed poultry, 5 as well as the department of live poul- 2 try, would take on an additional mean- in g. â€"â€"American Fancier. Incubators For Early Chicks. However resolutely a, breeder may re solve to do without incubators, he can- : not very well dispense with them if he wants the very earliest hatched chicks. Any one who has tried to get a hen to sit steadily early in spring for sufï¬cient time to hatch out the chicks will know . that it is impossible. The broodiest hen ’ after two or three days on the nest will 3 probably leave the eggs and go to lay- ing again. Yet it is necessary to have . the chicks hatched early, so that they . begin laying next fall before the cold weather comes, in which case most of ‘them, if well fed and given a warm. light room, will continue to lay through the winter. -â€"Boston Cultivator. FEEDING STEERS IN TEXAS. No Necessity Now of Sending Their Steers North. The recent meeting at Denver of the ctockmen’s convention demonstrated the fact that the breeders of Texas are holding their cattle at much higher ï¬g- ures than heretofore, and it is thought that these high prices are demanded not only because of the scarcity of cat- tle, but because the Texas experiment station has shown the stock breeders and feeders of the state through its publications that the supply of feed stuffs in Texas is ample and that there is now no necessity for shipping thin steers to the north and to the northwest to be fed, while at the same time the cottonseed mills and the producers of hay are exporting their products to other states and to foreign countries. The tide is now turning toward feed- ing cattle as well as toward raising bet- ter stock in the Lone Star State. It will not be long before Texas breeders will cease to turn over a large part of their annual increase to the feeders and range people of the northwest. Earlier feed- ing will be the rule, and the steers that are fattened upon meal and hulls will have a smaller ration of cornmeal given them, which will enable the feeder to extend the feeding period from 100 to 150 days, completing the fattening process and deriving the highest prices for beeves on foot when delivered at the Kansas City, St. Louis or Chicago stockyards. Such a practice will be more proï¬table from every standpoint. Texas cattlemen have been raising the cattle and allowing a. second party to ï¬nish them OE and to make a handsome proï¬t, entirely overlooking the vast amount of foodstuffs produced in the state, much of which is destroyed by weevil or is shipped out at very low prices through the port of Galveston or by northern trunk lines to the cities of the north and east. Texas cattle are worth as much to the Texas people as to the people of the north and west because of the abun- dance of foodstuffs. Undoubtedly it costs less in Texas per ton to raise bay or 100 pounds of dry matter, as found in cottonseed and cottonseed meal or the hull. than in any other portion of the Union. It is therefore encouraging to know that Texas breeders are bold- ing their cattle for higher prices, and it is certain that by intelligently feed- ing the crude steer the crude feeding products can be so combined as to aï¬ord the largest possible proï¬ts in this branch of stock raising. Fatal Horne Disease. A rather fatal horse disease exists in some parts of Illinois. The disease is a form of cerebro-spinal meningitis and is caused largely by an error in diet, but unfortunately the error is not discov- ered till more or less loss has been sus- tained. Investigation into the outbreak has resulted without exception in the discovery that the horses afflicted had been fed unripe or unsound corn, a fa- vorable condition for the production of fungi. The ï¬rst indication of the dis- ease is that the horse does not have good vision, perhaps only one eye being af- fected, more frequently both. Delirium soon after sets in, and if not restrained the animal will go through fences or other obstacles, being apparently un- conscious of its actions. In from 5 to 12 hours, sometimes longer, the horse loses power of locomotion, when death soon follows The disease is so acute that treatment is of no avail. Sup lujurlng Sheep. Sheep are exceedingly fond of the sweet of the maple, and if allowed where trees are tapped they will drink it to excess One of its effects is to make the sheep stagger, or, as people say, “become drunk.†This, however, isa misnomer, for in the maple sap while it remains sweet there is no in- toxicating quality. The real effect of the sap is to weaken the sheep. So much liquid causes the sheep to urinate enormously, and it also prevents the animal from eating as much nourishing food as it requires. It has been said that sheep advanced in pregnancy will abort if they get at the sap troughs. This may come from making them too weak. so that they lie on the cold ground and are chilled. After a chill, then, of course, a fever naturally fol- lows. and both the sheep and its unborn lamb are lostâ€"Boston Cultivator. Fecundity In Swine. The impression is prevalent among farmers that pure bred swine are unâ€" proï¬table for breeding purposes, as it is thought that as purity of breed in- creases fecundity decreases. The ques- tion of the fecundity of improved breeds of swine was investigated recently by thâ€" Indiana station. The number of pigs farrowed and raised in the ï¬rst and the last 200 litters recorded in the registers of Berkshire, Poland-China and Chester White pigs were compiled. In compar- ing the litters 100 litters were selected in which the sows were recorded and 100 in which the boars were recorded. The. dates of farrowing of the ï¬rst 200 litters varied through a. number of years. The last 200 litters were almost all farrowed in 1896. The popular opin- ion was not conï¬rmed by this investiga- tion. High Class Wool. The last American clip is one of the cleanest, lightest and brightest in a decade, the range clip never more so, and if only it could be put on the mar- ket in the same high condition as Aus- tralasian wools it would not need to take l second place to any of the ranking wools of the world. -â€"-Live Stock. TIRED inn Luann. "THE EXPERIENCE OF AN ESTIM- ABLE YOUNG LADY, HER BLOOD WAS POUR AND WATERYâ€"' SUFFERED FROM SICK Hummer-res 1 AND PAINTING SPELLSâ€"HOW SHE REGAINED HEALTH’S BLOOM. The Recorder, Brockville. On one of the ï¬nest farms in Wolford ’township, Grenville county, resides Mr. land Mrs. Alonzo Smith and family. Mr. Smith is perhaps one of the best-known men in the county, as in addition to being a practical farmer he represents several agricultural implement companies. His family consists of two estimable daugh- ters, the eldest being seventeen years of age. To a correspondent of the Brockville Recorder who recently called at Mr. Smith’s, Miss Minnie E. Smith, the eldest daughter, related the following story :â€" “About two years ago I was taken quite ill. I became pale and languid, and if I undertook to do any work about the house, would easilv become terribly fatigued. I became subject to terrible sick headaches, and my stomach became so weak that I loathed food. My trouble was further aggravated by weak spells, and my feet, winter or summer, were as cold as ice; in fact it seemed as if there was no feeling in them. I tried several kinds of medicine, but instead of helping me I was growing weaker. One dav in March, 1898, my fa ther brought home a box of Dr Williams’ Pink Pills. I immediately discontinued the other medicine and began taking the pills. Ifound that they helped me, and four more boxes were procured and by the time 1 had ï¬nished them I was entirely well. I have never had better health in my life than I am now enjoying. My appetite is now always good, and I have increased in weight. All this is due to the eflicacy of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills, and I would advise any other young girl troubled as I was to use them, and they will certainly cure if the directions are followed.†The facts above related are important to parents, as there are many young girls just budding into womanhood Whose condition is, to say the least. more critical than their parents imagine. Their com- plexion is pale and waxy in appearance, troubled with heart palpitation, headache, shortness of breath on the slightest exer- cise, faintness and other distressing symptoms which invariably lead to a pre- 'mature grave unless prompt steps are ‘taken to bring about a natural condition of health. In this emergency no remedy yet discovered can supply the place of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills, which build anew the blood, strengthen the nerves, and restore the glow of health to pale and sallow cheeks. They are certain cure for all troubles peculiar to the female system. old or young, these Pills also cure such diseases as rheumatism, neuralgia, partial paralysis, locomotor ataxia, St. Vitus dance, nervous headache, nervous prostra~ tion, the after effects of la gripne, influenza and severe colds, diseases depending on homers in the blood, such as scrofula. chronic erysipelas, etc. Do not be per- suaded to accept any imitation, no matter what the dealer may say who offers it. Imitations never cured any one. See that the full name Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People is around the wrapper on every box you buy. One Docked Horse We ï¬nd in the Buffalo Horse World of Dec. 23rd, 1898, this: “I saw her at the excavation of a great reservoir one June afternoon when the giant labors of mighty digging were in full swing and hundreds of men, the hundreds of horses, the donkey engines the steam scoop, the hurrv, the swelter: the enormous toil of that great undertak- ing ï¬lled all the air. She was harnessed toaroad-shovel be. side a placid cart-horse who plodded by her frenzied stride and whose hairy nose lagged permanently at the middle of her foaming neck. Her stretched scarlet nostrils were smeared with sweat and clay; every vein was corded beneath her thin, quivering skin, and her delicate ears started for the brutal voice of the exâ€" tramp whose unaccustomed hand bore on the bit between her sensitive jaws. I paused and gazed sadly upon her eager. superhuman efforts to perform the impos- sible, to pull more than she could-and I saw that. her tail was but a poor stump which, docked and nicked into a ï¬ve-inch mutilation, twisted incessantly, with pitiful. semi-spasmodic brushings, in futile effort to reach, some of the clusters of greenhead flies which leisurely fed upon the tender skin of her inner flank. I drew near the heavy~faced rough who held the reins, as the high-bred creature, with a frantic struggle, dragged shovel, pole-mate and driver through a dirt heap and stood trembling and panting with heating flanks and shaking knees, whisk- ing violently the deformed stump which occupied the place of the superb fly brush provided for her by nature. As the flies gathered comfortably over her blood-speckled body the poor thing ï¬xed upon my pitving face such a look of desperate misery that it has remained like a rough splinter in my unwilling memory ever since. It moved me to immediate utterance. I said to the man who drove her: ‘It‘s pretty hard on the brown horse having no tail.’ ‘You mean the flies a eatin' on her ’l' he inquired as he roughly snatched her rein and she leaped around as if an electric shock had passed through her. ‘Yes,’ I returned, ‘I wish the man that cut it off could see her now.’ He jerked his team back, straightened, his shovel, paused and gazed attentively upon the object of my solicitude who danced upon her crippled knees, fretting to be off. ‘Well, it does look like she was kinder in ‘hell here, doesn’t it?‘ he replied, and was snatched unevenly away, hanging to his taut reins. BIGYGLES willâ€"'â€" This space, in next week’s issue, will be mostly devoted to a description of the world- renowned Columbia Bicycle. In a few days we will have four or ï¬ve samples to show you. After you have seen the Wheels, and get our prices, we are satisï¬ed if you are thinking of buying 21 Wheel you will close a bargain at once. Please remember we are headquarters for everything new in the way of WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY and SIL- VERWARE. Our repairing and engraving is constantly in- creasing. The best goods at living prices is our motto. To be convinced, call and see. 8. J. PETTY THE J EWELER. Next the Daly House. LINDSAY MARBLE WilRKS noBth CHAMBERS a prepared to furnish the people of Lindâ€" say and surrounding country With MONUMENTS and HEADSTONES, both Marble and Granite. Esktlmates promptly given on all kinds of cemetery Ivor . Marble Table Tops, Wash Tops, Mantel Pieces, etc ’ ty. ing a practical workman, all should see his :1 signs and compare prices below purchasing else w ere. WORK8,â€"ln the rear of the Marketzon Cambridge 2.. opposite Hatthews’ packing house.. ROBT CHAMBERS Cheese Boxes for- ’99 r I am again in 2. position to manufacture CHEESE BOXES on a large scale, having built a large New Factory, convenient to C. RR. station; the old machinery having been burned last summer, I have replaced it with New and Up-to-date Machines for making Cheese Boxes and Cutting Shingles. This factory has a capacity of 100,000 in one season, placing it in a position second to none in the province. I have already between two and three hund- red cords of Bolts on hand to be out into headings before the season opens. All orders for B0xes sent in early willreceive prompt attention. ROBT. ARNOTT. â€"I4-4 Peterborough, Got. Seasonable Gooods... m Milk Cans, Chums, Washing Machines and Wringers r The Hot \Veather Stove is :11: “Blue Flame †Wickless Oil Stove We have them in different sizes. 'W.G.WBODS KENT STREET. â€"â€"'-â€" Pertin’s Pine! Tar Cordial ] â€"ronâ€" l Gounns Golds ‘ has no equal. lI Cures where i other... l . Remedies fail, l - PRICE: 8. Penn, .25 cm, DRUGGIST. I A earns. ‘A few doors West or Gongh's Lindsay. “aura. ‘ .... . . I. . «n rad-84?" A ‘