22‘ war“ ’10 see fl @5565 [he Vva‘icnman-Warder ms 'z‘eads, [1 11111111111 U“ “HUI ' m zzpetzz‘ we are 5 m f/zeF 2 82m rm z‘e/l Ends Laxa-Liver Pills a perfect cure for Sick Headache. ‘ 3;;j; ninety per cont. of the women of '"2‘5 country suffer from sick headache. re mod- ‘at runs er. A1- ’6 t \ ‘ MW": M. (L mm ‘teel Disc Ba uers N0 ln‘ also; 91!! only Dru oWnMixï¬ IIIIIIIIIIIIII .CIOIOOIO- B‘O‘Om “‘0 EXPreee from Por: Hope .......... 8 50 nan Hope Mail fromTorontao..............11 00 mm onk Mixed ............. ..............1010m Hepe Mixed tromPort Hope... ....... 2 05 p.11) 11150 Ian from Port Hope ............ .. 6 20 p.111 '7' HOW Egress from Toronto.... ...... 7 63 pan htby Mix ..u.~¢.-..o..o. ...---o..¢o- emp‘m Deï¬ne Mixed ......... . ................. 10 20 pan [11011.03 m“! P. 0. at ‘45 a. m. or Port. Rape closes at the Due §;55 mail for Tomato closes at 8.30. E13230 mail 801118 north connects with the I. B. THURSDAY. MAY 116b, 1899 2 ievflle Mixed .............. t Hope Mixed Vin Bethany. Fe 3.00 p. m 0 A HAMILTON LADY is country suffer from sick headache. Liver disorder and constipation are at I: bottom of the troukï¬e. Lam-Liver Pills cure the headache by erecting; the cause. And they do their work easily and :{fec‘fy without any gripe, pain or Dr. Wood’s Norway Pine Syrup is t _<. Emplest, safest, quickest cure for all Ugh: and colds of children or adults. Ice 35¢. Pure Linseed Oil Paints. Latest Artistic Shades in HOUSE and VILLA Paints, prepared for immed- Eate use. Best in tha Market. 5 acquire this training and knowledge $3: the... ..... JIMMO HARRISON BUSINESS COLLEGE Toronto. Ontario. ANADA PAINT CO. [ADY MIXED PMNTS 0P8 Exprem’vis Poterboro ARRIVALS. ï¬ghmezic. Business Forms, Com'l Law a, is essenpigl by business success. A 101.0th :ramxng 1n. . . . . . 'pewriting, e.c., affords the best means ,- admncement to young men and men. . G. EDWARDS CO. '“LENNAN 60 - 3ppeamnce , . .Enmel Top Dresmng for the Top 015 and Grease to; the Axles Pants and Carnage Hardware, Neckyokes and Whirfletree Irons, Clevices, etc. 1:5 rst, we keep nearly everything to mike them .szen there 13 Gloss Pants to brighten up th “ Welland Vale†BiGUGlE G T.R. LOCAL TIME-TABLE “or the Carriage. Cart or Wagoq : the Hamilton lady we referred toâ€" ? mme is Mrs. John Tomlinson. ‘ midi-ess is 107 Steven St. North. 5 is what she says : Wing troubled with severe head- . I was advised by a. friend to try Liver Pins. I only required to ulf a bottle when the headache zed and I have not been troubled ,njsh Stains and Pain'toâ€"for renewing the ï¬nish on furniture 'moerial Gold Enamelâ€"can be washed with soap The “PRISM†Brand awe-w. v-- ~-~ -_ fryimmings, Shade. Carpet and Picture Hard- ware, Upholstering Hardware Enm To Imitation amazing-l. Moss ’ “ed mm†mes Dome Lead an ack Diamond - 339m: Prepared Glue, in small tifwvlzmi :on Knife Powder. 3 p easure to show them in detail, and our prices will interest you. $11108 Hardware M erchants 931W FOR THE BICYCLE. 3.11 get almcst any part of any Bicycle from [a “aw: l Enamel, Sherman 5: Williams Saecial inns, Alabastine, Kslsomlne, Whining, 32581101: 3.11 kinds :2: Felt, Oil Cloth Ending, Curtain Poles and Rims, Spokes. Enamel, Saddles, Bella, Cem- .5c tube. Cycle Oil, 5c bottle, Double Tube 3. :1 flew at $4.50 pair ‘ Zieveland Bicycle Livery†will have a great 3' new wheels in it tlns season. We sell Ever Pills 25c., all dmggistl. handsome ‘D-noao 0.0... 9-0. BOOKKEEPING I. B. 3:. 0; SERVICE. north train carries no mail. Thorough Knowledge of The Best Place uuuuuuuuuu .aountoooooâ€" rom Por:Hopo.......... omTorontuo.............. ..... oo-u-ooc.a~ocu'..'ul fromPortHope.......... zPortHope ...... . ....... Iatrom Toronto.......... .o.--u.ouoo- nut-0.0....- on.no..1no~c-..cunnunoooa. FOR THE HOME SHORTHAND -â€"FOR SALE BYâ€" Mu I 1TH, 1399 ‘. a: o. RAILWAY. ~â€" '. T. R. SERVICE. L Junctiéhr.r._.i.ï¬.i.v.l DEPARTURE. “ Gleveland †Duo... Watchman-Wade: Iii-.0... .n-o.o~.o . "uni; vuusgrq "mwmmnm uwmxwu mummmm ......5 15in). ......1100a..m ...... 2 20 33.11: ...... 1 45 p.m. and mention The. ....1 08L93MH88 mmmmmmmmm unaddmmwm mmmmmmmmm the past few years. The vivid streak appeared to strike about the middle of the roof, on the west _side, and instantly a. -‘i’he Bob. Independent says : A short but sharp storm blew up on Monday, iust before the noon bell rang. It lasted only a few minutes, butleft us minus one of our old land marks. A few fairly lively cracks of lightning indicated that the electrical agitation was sufï¬ciently close for all spectacular purposes. then there was a sizzling crack that made most per- sons in the village jump, the impression of each being that it must have struck in the back yard. Mr, \Vm. J unkin happened to witness the exact spot, and it was Mr. Petrie’s saw mill, that has been closed for l â€"The body of Thomas Snell, who was ‘ supposed to have drapped off the railroad bridge near Parry Sound last November was found on Frinay evening last floating in the water near Rose Point. An inquest has been held, the post-mortem examinaâ€" tion revealing the fact that Snell was not drowned, but that his death was caused by a blow on the side of his head inflicted bya pointed instrument, as a hole was found over the right car, penetrating to the base of the brain. It might have been inflicted with a piece of wood with a nail driven through it. Snell was a railway ï¬reman, and was in the company of two others, whose whereabouts are now un- known. The night of his disappearance: they had all been :drinking. His wages‘ had not been drawn from the railway} company, and nothing pointed to anything but accidental drowning. The relatives of the deceased live at Brockville. It looks like murder, but the inquest was adjourn- ed for further evidence. ’ -â€"Severe electric storms accompanied by heavy rain visited Barrie and district on Sunday and Monday. On Monday noon the lightning struck and killed two cows belonging to Mr. Wm. Ainley in the northern part of the town. The current passed along the wire clothes line and gave Mrs. Ainley, who was taking in some clothes, a slight shock in the arm. Other havoc caused by lightning was as follows: John McDevitt, aged 82, Mono Road, was killed instantly on Monday while ï¬shing; his hat and boots were torn into frag- ments. The end of Mr. Robert Orok‘s barn. near Midhurst, was struck and part- ly wrecked; there was no ï¬re. James VVood’s barn and outbuildings, near Brad - ; ford, were burned on Monday; loss $4000; insurance $3000. Mr. Sage's house in Midland was burned on Sunday night; the family escaped. The rain did much good to vegetation. â€"Monday of last week George Blashill was seriously injured while rolling logs off a skidway into South River. He was in front of the dump pinching the logs to get them to roll. He jumped back and let it go, but the logs also rolled down striking him on the back of neck and shoulders, doubling him forward and pin- ning his head between his legs. the logs being prevented from crushing his life out by the skids on which they rolled. The only injury sustained was the awful strain of the muscles rendering the patient unable to move himself in bed. ‘ â€"There was a lively time in Magistrate Flint‘s ofï¬ce in Belleville on Monday of last week. A lawyer and a county con- stable engaged in arather warm argument. when the guardian of the peace declared {the barrister to be a liar. Before the f constable had realized what had happened. ‘ one of his eyes were closed, and his nasal ‘Organ badly smshed. The lawyer was dancing around him. dropping in the blows, and in the pauses sarcastically 1n- inquiring, “Call mealiar, will you?" In the meantime the Magistrate was lustily crying "Peace! peace!†when there was no peace, and threatening the combatants with the rigours of the law. It was not until the constable was soundly thrashed that the insulted lawyer desisted, and as he shouldered his blue bag and sauntered up the street he was heard to utter, “Call me a liar. will he? Well!" ~Mat. Black: of Kinmount was one of the innumerable peg legs who was arres t- ed last year, as a consequence of the shoot- ing of the London policeman by a man with a. pee leg. Black sued McMann and the Kinmount constable for arresting him as a vagrant, without a warrant. He claimed $60, and at a. recent sitting of the division court in Fenelon Falls obtained a judgment for $10. â€"The Norwood Register says: Mr. W. H. Tucker showed us a. twin which he pulled off a rock elm tree on his premises last Saturday on which the leaves were out full size and the stem showed 10 inches of new growth this season. Farmers and others who saw it say that it is the most wonderful growth they have observed this year. â€"Ralph Weese, aged 12‘years, speared a pike in the river'at Believille a few days ago which weighed ï¬fteen pounds. It was 3 feet 6 inches in length. He was unable to lift it from the water and had to get assistance. 01d ï¬shermen say it was_the largest pike they have ever seen in these parts. â€"After a long-continued illness John gGilbert of Draper township, near the Macaulay town line, died on Sunday, April 28th, aged 70 years. Mr. Gilbert was an old and highly respected settler. â€"About four million dollars have been expended on the Trent canal so far, and it is estimated that it will cost three million more to make a navigable waterway from Midland to Trenton. It seems certain that the work will be pushed on to completion at once. â€"The Rathbun Company are eredting a. sawmill on the Esterbrook property at Deseronto. They will cut out railroad ties and saw small logs that have hereto- fore been floated to Deseronto. ' â€"After a long-continued illness John Gilbert of Draper township, near the “ir.-.Aâ€"--‘i ' ‘ the erection :of ï¬ne bank premises at Port Perry, â€"â€"The felectors of Roach townshij vote on local option on the 2181; inst. â€"â€"Rev. Father O‘Malley of Port will hold his annual picnic in that on May 24th. ' cownsmp, near the :, died on Sunday, April Roach tOWnship will As a basis of a. grain ration for a dairy cow no grain is better or cheaper than oats and peas To this cream glu- ten or cottonseed or linseed meal can be added in small quantities to suit the needs of the animal fed. As soon as this crop of oats and peas is taken ofl seed to clover. The land will be in a mellow. loose condition and can be ï¬tted with a spring tooth harrow without plowing. Sow on the clover seed eight quarts to the acre and barrow in light- ly. I seeded this last year the ï¬rst week in August and have good results. I heartily commend this plan of growing protein to -the dairymen to stop that everlasting teed bilL When a farmer draws $6 worth of milk to the creamery and draws back $5 worth of grain, he has to do a lot of business to get much money from his dairy. Let our motto be to raise more and buy less. On some land a person can sow more peas per acre. As a rule, I would say sow as may peas with the oats as will stand up and not lodge. Some years I have mixed them half and half with good results, but cannot depend on it. Just as the top oat begins to turn out ‘ the crop with a. mowing machine and cure as you would hay. The advantages of the early cutting are: The straw is worth as much as timothy bay to feed, the peas will not shell in mowing and raking, and the grain cut thus early will ï¬ll out and be as plump and weigh more pounds to the bushel than it will if allowed to stand and mature before harvesting. The grain is cut so green it cannot be cured out if cut with a binder, but with a mower it can be treated exactly as you would treat hay. When dry, it is ready to be thrashed, and we will get grain enough from one acre to feed a dairy cow one year. In other words, on good land we can raise 50 bushels per acre, which will weigh 2,200 pounds, about the amount ordi- narily fed to a dairy cow in 12 months. or an average of six pounds per day. The analysis shows that oats and peas have a nutritive ratio of about one to ï¬ve. Of course this is more or less vari- able as the two crops mix. Mix the seed, one bushel of White Canada peas to two bushels of oats, and put on 2% to 8 bushels of the mixture per acre, drilling it in rather deeply. Three bushels of seed per acre should be used only where the land is very fertile and well cultivated. After the grain is sowed roll the ï¬eld or go over it with a “clod crusher, †followed with a weeder or smoothing barrow. Never leave a piece of grain just as the roller leaves it; always “roughen†it to hold the moisture. Go through the oats and peas once a week with the weeder until they get so high you must stop. This will hasten the ripening of the grain. keep down the weeds, especially wild mustard, besides increasing the fertility by cultivation. After the potatoes are dug rye should be sown to keep the ground covered dur- ing the winter with a growing crop. As early as possible in the spring plow this rye under and ï¬t the land thoroughly for the oats and peas. I have tried several ways of raising this crop and will describe the one most successful. Our rotation of crops is (1) clover, (2) corn for the silo, (3) potatoes, , (4) oats and peas. {Durymen Urged to Raise What ‘ Grain They Need. In an interesting letter to The Na- tional Stockman F. A. Converse of New York expresses the belief that more than half the money put into grain for our dairy cows can be and should be saved by raising the grain on the farm. A farmer with a silo never needs to buy any cornmeal, as his feed already has enough starch. What is Wanted, then, is some feeds to take the place Of the bran, gluten, middlings, etc. What, then, can be raised to best take the place of these feeds and balance up the silage or the other coarse~ fodder we may happen to have, such as mixed hay, cornstalks and straw? The an- swer to the question, it seems to me. is to raise oats and peas. In case where the farmer has a wooden well, all he has to do is to extend the Wire down the well into the water;or in case of a townsman the wire should be con- nected with the water pipes. “A protection fulï¬lling all the indicat- ions may be very cheaply arranged on a country house by nailing a. few lengths of common barbed wire to the roof and bringing the ends to a. point Where they can be twisted around the iron pump of a driven well. This gives an enormous number of points and a perfectly adequate water connection.†In the last issue of the Scientiï¬c Ameri- can there is described a, simple contrivance that; has proved perfectly effectual in pro- tecting barns and houses from lightening. It is as follows : The severe electric storms of last week have reminded the people of this of the large number of barns, etc., that were burned last year as the result of being struck by lightning. The subject of lightening protection is there- fore receiving much attention. It is long since the lightning rod proved more orna- mental than useful. its great defect being the conducting of the electric current to the ground instead of to water. cloud of dust streamed from the old build- ing. It was only a few minutes later when smoke “as seen to rise from the roof, then with a. burst the entire building was a. mass of flame. The boiler and engine were in the building, and Mr. Petrie’sloss will be heavy, for there was no insurance. The building was erected about 29 years ago, by Mr. Wm. Kennedy, and was run with considerable success by Mr. Petrie, who closed it when he re- moved to Ottawa. Farmers, Put up You Own Lightning Rods. GROWING PROTEIN. THEiWATCHMAN-WARDER: LINDSAY, .ONT An Ohio maple sugar maker writes to The New England Homestead that in taking care of the niter nuisance he knows nothing better than the use of muriatic acid diluted as occasion de- mande Another method in vogue by him is a thorough cleansing of pans and evaporators in the fall with the sonrest of whey. “The difï¬culties in making nice maple goods.†he writes, “are as nothing compared to those of getting the product to the consumer for what it really is and is worth. " The Nlter Nuisance In Sugar Making. FIG. II--IN SOIL WITH OPEN SUBSOIL. tivation will depend very largely upon the character of the soil and subsoil. The Kansas station found no essential difference in the moisture content at the diï¬erent depths of soil that had been prepared in the spring by shallow plowing. by deep plowing and by sub- soiling. In experiments at the North Dakota station on different methods of preparing soil and tillage for wheat the largest yield was obtained from land subsoiled eight inches below a six inch furrow Whether the best results 1n prevent- ing loss of moisture from the soil in humid regions will be obtained by sub- soiling, shallow cultivation or deep cul- To prevent loss of water from the soil by evaporation it is necessary to check the rise of water by capillarity to the surface of the soil. This is ac- complished to some extent by subsoil- ing, but in order that the work partly accomplished by the subsoiling may be completed and continued the surface of the soil must be kept covered with a mulch of loose. well tilled soil by means of frequent tillage to great depths. †This difference in the root systems of plants in humid and arid regions is illustrated in the accom- panying ï¬gures. A glance at the ï¬gures suflices to show that, while a root sys- tem like Fig. 1 will stand in need of fre- quent rains or irrigation to sustain its vitality, such a one as Fig. 2 may have prolonged drought with impunity, be- ing independent of surface conditions and able to perform all its functions out of reach of stress from lack of mois- ture. It is equally clear that it is to the farmer’s interest to favor to the utmost this deep penetration of the roots. This can be done in humid regions, to some extent at least, by thorough preparation 1 and tillage of the soil and, in case of; fruit trees, by guarding against excess- ive surface fertilization. In arid re- gions frequent irrigation, it is claimed, encourages shallow rooting. In many parts of the region of deï¬- cient rainfall, as in southern Califor- nia, plants, especially fruit trees, are capable of withstanding months of drought. This is claimed to be due to the fact that “in the arid region, as a rule. subsoils in the eastern sense do not exist. The soil is readily penetrable In humid regions, as a recent bulletin of the California station points out, the soil as a rule is underlaid at a compara- tively short distance below the surface by a subsoil, which the roots of plants penetrate with difï¬culty and from which they can draw little nourishment. The roots, therefore, spread out near the surface, and the plants require fre- quent rains or irrigation to sustain life. A suspension of either rain or irrigation for ten days or two weeks under these conditions usually results in injury to the plant. Under such circumstances subsoiling encourages deep rooting and thus enlarges the stock of water as well as plant food at the command of the plant Subsoiling increases the storage ca- pacity of the soil for moisture and in- creases the rate at which water will sink into the soil, but decreases the rate at which it maybe brought back to the surface. Subsoiling also increases the amount of moisture available to crops, since plants are capable of utilizing a larger proportion of the moisture present in loose, coarse grained seils than of that in ï¬ne grained and compact soils. FIG. Iâ€"IN SOIL WITH HARD SUBSOIL. gions). For this reason the following re- port of the department of agriculture on the conservation of moisture in the soil, as studied at various stations, is of general interest: Subsoiling is one of the important means. The Wisconsin station describes this influence substan- tially as follows: Methods of Conserving Itâ€"Subsoil- ing', Plowing and Tillage. Next to temperature moisture is prob- ably the controlling factor in the growth of plants. The importance of a. supply of moisture is most strikingly demon- strated in regions of deï¬cient rainfall, where irrigation is necessary for the growth of crops (arid regions), but it is no less important in regions where the rainfall is usually considered sufï¬cient for the needs of the crops (humid re- SOIL MOISTURE. The latest wrinkle in sugar beet cul- ture, according to the Denver Field and Farm, is a squeezing plant or substa- tion located at a place far distant from the factory. The squeezer extracts the juices of the beet and leaves the pulp or pomace at the place for the use of feed farmers there. The juice is then trans- ported in barrels or tierces to the fac- tory, and in this form it can be kept in- deï¬nitely by proper temperature. With plen.y of squeezers all over the coun- try a factory could be kept running nearh7 all. the year. On account of the limited amount of arable land in Japan, as Dr. Knapp of the department of agriculture tells, the ï¬eld crops are all managed upon garden methods. The seed for all the wheat, rice. rye and barley produced is ï¬rst sown in highly fertilized beds, and when the plant is of suï¬â€˜icient size it is trans- planted into the ï¬elds. much like cab- bagea The twentyâ€"ï¬fth biennial session of the American Pomological society is to be held in Philadelphia Sept. 7 and 8 in the hall of the Pennsylvania Horti- cultural society. Already it promises to be largely participated in by the various state societies. To all agriculturists the toad renders conspicuous service. but gardeners and greenhouse owners may make this ani- mal of especial value. Every gardener should aim to keep a colony of toads among his growing crops. and the prac- tice of collecting and transferring them to the gardens is a commendableb one. Taking bees out of the cellar was dis- cussed at the Brantford convention, the prevailing opinion being that they should be put out earlyâ€"in March or April; some preferring to take out all at once, others by instalments; no uni- formity of opinion as to whether they should be put on the old standsâ€"Cana- dian Bee Journal. In spraying the foliage of peach trees reduce the copper sulphate to four pounds. Even this may seem strong. It should not, however, be condemned un- til tried, and when tried the mixture should be made by the one method which has been most successful. To dis- solve the copper sulphate suspend it in a coarse sack in a barrel containing 25 gallons of water. Slack the lime (use only the best) slowly and then dilute it to 25 gallons. Pour the two together in this dilute form, stirring for a few minutes Stir before using. If large quantities of the mixture are desired,} stock solutions may be made as usual. Dissolve, say, 50 pounds of the copper sulphate in a barrel containing as many gallons of water. The stock solution of lime may be made of the same strength. Then each gallon means a pound of the substance wanted. When the mixture is made. dilute each solution separately before pouring them together. The customary formula for bordeaux mixture is: Copper sulphate (blue vitc riol), 6 pounds; unslaked lime (good quality). 4 pounds; water, 50 gallons. Professor Duggar further says: In making the ï¬rst spraying, the all im- portant one, strong bordeaux mixture mw be used, and every twig should be so well covered that the blue color ap- pears as a distinct coating after the ap plication has dried. However, under certain conditions the foliage of the peach seems to be easily injured by spraying with bordeaux mixture. With weak bordeaux mixture properly made I have not been able to produce any in- jury on the trees experimented upon. Thirdâ€"This spraying is to cover the leaves with bordeaux at about the time the fungus is fruiting, hoping not only to prevent summer infection, but to cover places wherethe spores may lodge in order to pass the Winter. Secondâ€"Why? Late infections by spores from the ground or from neigh- boring ï¬elds may be thus guarded against. First. â€"Why not spray in midwinter? Midwinter spraying may be quite ef- fective, but there is every reason to be- lieve that the April spraying will be better, for if that is near the time that the buds are infected the spores will then be more readily killed. If a time when other work is not pressing is of ï¬rst importance, spray earlier. Why not use copper sulphate solution? It may be quite as effective, but bordeaux adheres better and would be more liken 1y to prevent infections throughout a} period. 1 Professor Duggar _next discusses his recommendations thus: Thirdâ€"Spray again with weak bor- deaux when the ï¬rst leaves are just full grown or at just about the time that the spores of the fungus are developing. Secondâ€"Spray again with weaker bordeaux as soon as the petals of the flower have fallen or after the work of the bees is over. First. -â€"â€"Spray thoroughly with strong bordeaux mixture just previous to the swelling of the buds, late in March, or very early in April seems desirable in this latitude. An Increasing Wave of It In the North the Past Few Sensor". Peach leaf curl has been long known to the orchardist, but the seasons of 1897 and 1898 have brought it into a prominence by no means pleasing in many peach growing sections. This year everybody will be on the alert for its ï¬rst appearance, and it is important that all should be prepared to combat it. The disease can often be detected when the leaf buds have but slightly opened. The usual early indications are a rough- ening of the surface on the young: leaves and heightened color. B. M. Duggar of the Cornell university station, has giv‘ 3 en, in bulletin 164, a brief and clear ac- count of the fungus which causes leaf curl, and he has outlined a treatment which has proved most satisfactory. With the present knowledge of peach leaf curl he makes the following special recommendations: Taking Bees Out of the Cellar. New. and Notes. PEACH LEAF CURL. AGENTS WANTED to sell szxm’s POPULAR PREPARATIONS. g Putin’s Drug lSzorc, next to Gough’s. is a positive cute for piles; heals every kind of sore. from a common pimple to the most malignant ulcer. PILES, PILES, FILES! We have them in diï¬â€™erent sizes. W.G.WUODS “Blue Flame †Wickless Oil Stove Milk Cans, Chums, Washing Machines and Wringers Seasonable Gooods... signs md’compare prices betom puréhiéi'ngâ€"‘elgo where. WORKS,-â€"In the rest of the Marketzon Cambridge 2... opposite Hstthewn‘ packing house. a prepared to furnish the people of Lind- an and surrounding country with MONUMENTS and HEADSTONES. both Marble and Granite. Eskflmta promptly given on :11 kinds 0! cemetery var . Marble stle Tops. Wash Tops, Intel Pieces, etc Emmy. in; a. practical workm, 911 should eee his :1 4,7, ROBERT CHAMBERS THE J EWELER. Next the Daly House. MARBLE WORKS S. J. PETTY Repairing, Engraving Watches. Clocks, Jewelry, Silverware and Spectacles Dealer in all grades of Inspected Standard Watches for Railway Em- ployees’ Time Service. THEVEHY BEST or NONE GEO. W. BEALL, \ ,.... Q“ errin’s All-Healing Ointment PRICE, 25 CENTS A BOX. The Hot Weather Stove is the KENT STREET. special appointment W atch Time Inspector to the Grand Trunk Railway. THE WATCHMAKER, LINDSAY, the counfy. G.T.R. and all work connected with the business, we are second to none In ROBT CHAMBERS ed as at present. The largest assortment of LADIES’ BELTS and BUCKLES. Always bear in mind that for were never so lazge and well assort- fl..- vvâ€"(v-owv-U. be up-to-dste you must have a Columbia Chainless. Come and see and test it. We have samples of the Columbia Chain Wheels at prices from $32.50 up. This has been our motto during our many years in business. In acoep'ing the Agency for the COLUMBIA BICYCLE we were assured that the Columbia wheel had no successful competitors. To LINDSAY -â€"OUR STOCK OFâ€"