» buying public :gres of Lindsay $15,12,19 SINESS M 72);- system -renovating products . days, July 1, 8, 15,33»: ,NER DRUG STORE A most carefully PR?“ combination of them“:1 tested blood pUTHYingj OBJECT: A half-1 men 0 the town. HALF-HOLIDAY- RSAFAMLLA WWI) ' A clear skin, a keen '4 ï¬ts good digestion, 3‘ lixer and kidneys."cue \ italitv invariably 1011M rec: with North. is we?! assorted our sales are .Im re they can exp ml); and that :1: are" ed Blood 'e to 520’ 072 your Wool E. GREG “In Pounds of W001â€; :pp. v mus: come. We will]! nary next the hand must be at treats PREPARED BY E ’9’“), ___ET§} INDSAY BEE WORKS 'eet. â€"Aspâ€"â€" assortod. is of the '81! 9 are double what the" can expend their funds! :1 that the manufacture; ' driving. Every man {11 i. t Barns. !?iiï¬inHamess Emporium "" DILLMAN, mop. r. a n v‘v present manufacf NSC In the 321.3? lshard to realize, as I came WM: and forlorn the day of L‘F'Sfuneraj, that I was alone '°"d.1that )1) longer my ï¬rst m,“ entï¬ring xhe house must be â€â€1 Quick steps to the library Ehe handsome hPad raise from to; Writing with come word of ï¬gs “PS: When now only an M“ and soundiess space here- M‘d PYOVe my grpetiog. His been so short, so sudden, {“SDAY MOTHER-IN-LAW. Team Harness, h$28 for ....... $20 00 Team Coat, 11 ’2. so, for ..... 2 00 ‘gle Harness for 19 oo ‘ I7 50 L‘ Is 50 :hand weather semitting. So i: sure a foal 88. two foals $15. OROCCO \ \ V5‘Ill7 u lvl “w o .‘qunders flute} Lincls153for niiht. in mnfnn “ii! pror: cud to his o_wn MA 16, PL'REâ€"BRED FRENCH ur prices for harness with T. ‘x ncr v spartmemal store in the ‘m: {in not lead in low ash WAR CLARED OFF! .In the rear of the Marketpn Cambridge 31; .‘s' packing house. ’OBT CHAMBERS H IT CHAMBERS 'workmnn. all shonldaee his do- 3::- rices betore purchasing else .10)? 31:0 furnish the people of Lind- .mounding country with 5:35 and HEADSTONES both 3;:[ 316 and Granite. PVCâ€?! W?- COSICHO’S for noon; LOX ;58 IO RENT BY THE HOUR 'AIRHG BONE PROMPTâ€- reps, Wash Tops, Mantel Piezes, etc he first day of August the £01- 21 be advanced, so place your rss Icioxc that day and get the uraurdinary bargains we are ‘Igfzdct‘ in Lr‘DIES .Ic1'CLES is theâ€" Hatcbman. )TH WE: pNLY g GOKEâ€" <09.) KING PRICEâ€"- . JULY 22nd, 1897. rte be M] y momin ESMAN’ rues on race pt 3f price will leave K2350 h Agent, Lindsay. given cu all kinds of IL SSTERN, Proprietors. us: in the 4th con. to ‘ in: men; thence to Xur 1:: '1“. .‘h The Glen to Thee t'KCI‘L'e 2U Oakwood for rcmuin until the fol: .- nf Palestine, to ghcnce to Camp. :nginued during the '37 as follows : is own stable, Cam (I! Cameron, north :er of the late John .ce to Glenarm, for ,ym. :2 00 IO 00 7 50 Change my dress! Even to-night in the quiet home circle, must I remove my dustostained garb and go through the exertion of a fresh toilet ere my husband’s motner extended to me her welcome? But I could not refuse, and \‘vhen, my toilet: completed, Hugh’S “So much, Hugh, that she feels as though she must: stay here for even May I not haw tea here toâ€"night?†“Oh, dalling, mother would be so disappointed not. to see you! Come, change your dress and look yOur pret~ ties:, that. I may present yOn to her.†"And how does my bird like her nesx?†queszioned my husband, bending over me With tender care as I sank ex; hausted into a chair. I caught sight of a cheerful the burn- in" on hesrth and upstairs into my own luxurious‘ vy furnisht- {i apartments. So he is ft. 1119, and I let him go with no ans u r for I did not know my own '1e.~.1t. " hat it was love heating at its porta- 5 hr admissionâ€"love which had made his coming so we come, his going ~11 Sid, I could not realize until he had gone: and then came only the long, brotherly leiters, so full of earnest soli tude for my comfort . so unselï¬sh in the caieful guard ever shown in his own twling for me till the time drew nigh when he was to come ac'ain. Then doubt, uncertainty, all tied, and I anew my heart had passed from out of my keeping. So I went to meet him, stand- ing in the open door of my house as he} came up the pathway, and in answer to,l his question as for a moment he held‘ me off while he looked straight into my eyes: “Helen, is this my wife?†I could only falter: "Yours forevermore.†The succeeding week flew swiftly by. He suddenly grew impatient of delay, and declared he could not go back to his work until I went with him. The thought of my loneliness without him urged me to consent, and so the days were ï¬lled with busy pre- paration, while in the evenings I sat by his side, content and blissful, while he told me of his home, of his widowed mother who started it, and of the new, sweet daughter he was to bring her. But when all was over, when I had stood in my wedding robes before the grey-haired minister. and knelt to re- ceive for the last time his blessing, when my husband’s ï¬rst rapturous kiss had been pressed upon my lips, fervent congratulations oï¬ered by the few friends present at our quiet wedding ‘ my wedding dress exchanged for travel- ing garb the long Journey at last over, it was with :1 feeling of ti1ed relief that the carriage in the dusk of the evening drew up before a handsome house, and my husband welcomed me to my home. But where was his mother? All day visions had danced before my eyes for two loving arms waiting to enfold me, ‘of a sweet motherly face bending over me to imprint a. kiss of greeting upon my "heek, of the whispered words “W'el- come, my daughter,†sounding in mv ear; but no; the door was thrown wide Open by a servant in livery, but the handsome hall in its long vista presented to sight no other occupants, and to my amazement, I was hurried past the elegant drawingr‘OO-m, where “Yes,†he answered. “but if you wili help me, I am coming back. I did inot mean to tell you of my love just ‘yet. I can hardly help that in all the drear desoiatior. which has overspread your life, love had found time to plant. a single germ, but with me it has been different. I haveloved you from the first moment I saw you, and my fond- est ambition is to see you my wife. Do not answer me now; only when the birds sing and the flowers bloom try to think they breathe a. message from me, and when I return in the fall, remember my home wili have been nude ready for you, and if‘you comel to my arms, they will open, oh, so glad-‘ iy! to receive you.†I «WV vu WI-giuu] nuuscn. uuau J. nuutuucu. “And you now are going?†I ques- tioned, while a. black cloud swept be- fore my eyes. “Helen,†he said. drawing a chair close beside me. “Dr. Edwards, you know, has returned, and my own pati- ents in Philadelphia. are demanding my presence among them. I have stayed already longer that I intended. that is almost seemed as though I should awaken from the frightful night maxe of the past few weeks and ï¬nd it ml a dream, vivid but unreal. Only a fortnight before he had been stricken .down. and I had sent in hot haste for, ‘ my old practitioneer, to ï¬nd himj absent and a stranger in his place. A: ‘ first I felt regret, but when I saw D121 Phillips and witnessed his earnest,l shilful. care, that feeling gave my to cwngratulation and the assurance that if human skill could avail, he would be saved. It was he who told me finally1 there was no longer hOpe; he whom I I turned upon with quick fury that he should dare assert that my father’s life was in absolute danger, when in all t the wide world we two were alone to- fgether; he who stood beside him to the last, then, with ï¬rm, gentle hand, drew me from the chamber of death and himself prepared the sleeping draught which sent restiul sleep to quiet my strained nerves. In my new sadness, my utter despair, he came and went as of old, until it seemed as though a brother’s protection _. had been offered me, and I began to wait and to watch tor the hour when I should see him, to feel a keen disap- pointment if it passed without him, until one eVening. sittihg alone by the low, smouldering ï¬re in the ï¬rst day of spring, I was roused by his familiar step. ‘ Then, with a happy, dreaming smile, I fell asleep again, his hand clasped close in mine. When I was szronger he told me how he never had lost, sight: of me, but thought it best. to let my own better self work out. the end, and when he whispered: "There is 3mm 0n», Helen, \thing to son youâ€"arm: one, who said no one could take care of “N of. a. word, my darling! We can- not expect a woman’s wisdom frOm a. child, but our little mother twist grow wise now for her baby’s sake.†In the anxious time that followed I was aware of some one neurjnp with Hugh's eyes, some one with Hugh’s \‘oicv, and I would try to catch 'Lud hid it stay, but in vain until one mom. ing the mists cleared up, and I opened my eyes to see his dear face bending over me, but he sealed my lips with kisses, as he murmured: “My babe, my bonny chilrԠOh. how the words of motherly greeting fell on my hem: as she clasped m»- in her arms when I alighted at her door and I told her in obroken words as [much of my story as I thought: neces- lsary. But as the weeks grew into months, and Ispent long, busy hours )1) fashioning the tiny garments the little- stranger coming was to ï¬ll, sofler memories began to creep into my Heart, and a. dim wonder as to Whether I had let my pride gain too much ascendancy, and if Hugh renllv had given up nu mother for my sake, COuld I still have loved him so well? So, drop by drop. the gentle dew of repentance fell on m\ heart, and tear after tear upon my work, until there came aday when all was doneâ€"a day when a. child’s cry brokefor an instant, upOn my ear a>l if a. sound from Heaven had reachedl me and then darkness closed louml, and I knew no more. ‘4 “illâ€: "He has chosen between us. He will not give her up.†With this thought huged to my heart for comfort. T saw him leave me next morning with an anxious frown upon his brow, and I, quickly gathered together a few things. called a carriage and was driven rapid 1y to the depot from which I had Gem-mined to take the ï¬rst. outgoing Lmin. My plans were all formed. I Would go to the house of my old nurse, who would care for me in my cominu :.rouble, and if I died there would be none to regret me, since even Hugh had given me up. “Since I entered this house six months ago, a happy bride, a. joyous giri, I have met), madam, at your hands, with insults and scorn, which I have suffered in silence. As my reward [yOu now try to take from me the last thing left; naeâ€"my husband’s conï¬d- ence. What my mission has been you shall know tomorrow. Accept it as my giftâ€"the gift of an injured woman to a cruel injustice. Hugh,†(turning fro my husband) “the same house no longer can hold ‘ us No. (721005! between us!†and I named and left the room. ’fj"ï¬ ml} ï¬nd your way into her heart, and once there, you will know how really warm it is, which she conceals beneath a. coid exterior.†“I will not live with your motlwr,†Isaid. “If you mun: have her sham your homeI will go.†“Dauing I cannot ask her to Imm- it when old age. is creeping upon her. She dons not know you yetiug-“flVaitf Have :aticnc' uiittle longer, and you My husband, how ever, strove to calm me, bur. in vain. v “Four hours every day, Hugh, she is absent \Vhat can be her purpose? I told you when you brought a. young, giddy thing into this house you would regret it. It is your duty to see where she goes and what she does.†"in I could hear no more, as, with flashing eyes and head erect, I entered the room. ' It was some six weeks before her birthday that I once heard her express :tuish thatshelnul a {ï¬cture of her boy (for so she ever called Hugh) and instantly a resolution was formed in my brain. I had always had a. talent Fer painting. Before my father’s death it had been my delight and his pride, ‘riml [ determined upon carrying a pniniature of Hugh I possessed to an fartist I knew well and asked his assis- jtance in transferring the likeness and painting a portrait. Perhaps I thought :as my work it might soften her heart towardxne. So the nextinonï¬ng I started out. and, to my inexpressi‘ole‘ delight, I found my desire feasible, and received the artist’s permission to use} the studio to: four hours each dayâ€"â€" the hours I knew Hugh would be away from home. It- was not long ere I saw that Mrs. Phillips watched my coming and going with suspicious eyes, but I picturing her shamed look of surprise when she found my missmn, went silentlv on my way until the picture was almost completed, and I had re- ceived the artist’s congratulation upon my success, when, entering the house flushed and happy, I overheard her voice in the library ndressing my bus- band: “Mv wite, mother,†Hugh said while I felt a cold hand take mine in a passionless grasp. A kiss as if a fallen 5:10“ flake had rested on my brow and \Irs. Phillips fell back with graceful ease into the chair from winch she had risen. a tall ï¬gure rose from an arm-chair, and in all the rustling dignity of velvet :md lace approaching me. proud gkance of approval met mme, I fa): rewarded. Then he led me down stairs and we Entered the drawing room together. In the farthest corner THE WATCHMAN, LINDSAY. THURSDAY, JULY 22ND, 1897: One of the most curious results of the investigations made by doctors in the Rus- sian jails is the statement that each group of criminals has its own peculiar color of the eye. A legal journal at Odessa. states that it has been found that thieves and murderers usually possess “chestnut brown†eyes. Robbersâ€"that is to say, thieves in a large and violent line of busi- nessâ€"have slate colored eyes, and the same is stated of criminals convicted of swin- dling. The vagabond classes, among whom are probably reckoned the passport- less class, have eyes of azure blue tint. The color most observed among minor crimi- nals and those convicted of slight ofl'enses is “chestnut. Drown green. â€â€"London Tit- Not a Tailor’a Shop. Mr. Dudcleighâ€"Ah, Miss du Million, I have come to press me suit, doncher know. Miss du Millionâ€"You may be a goose, Mr. Dudcleigh, but; this is not a. tailor shopâ€"Omaha World-Herald. “Oh, yes; there’s one little matter that I wish you would attend tofor me. I want you :0 telephone to the confectioner and have him send up two or three pounds of bomnons. Iunderstand it is consid- ered proper to have some between the courses. â€â€"Washington Star. Observing the Proprieties. “Now,†said Mrs. Cumrox, “I guess We’re all ready for the dinner‘party.†“Sure you haven’t forgotten anything?†rejoined her husband. As every imperfection in a plate is mag- niï¬vd many times when thrown on the screen, great care must be taken in the de- w-Mping, ï¬xing, washing and drying. When the slides are washed enough, take a piece of clean surgeon’s cotton and wash tho ï¬lm very gent-1y. Then place it to dry where no dust will settle on the surface.â€" Hurpcr’s Round Table. 20 seconds, according to the density of the plate. A plate that prints quickly will need but 5 or 8 seconds, but a denser plate will require a much longer exposure, often as long as 30 seconds. Cover the plate as soon as it is printed, close the lantern, re~ move the slide from the frame, and place it face up in the developing tray. Turn the developer over it quickly, taking care that the whole surface of the plate is cover- ed immediately. Any developer that makes good negatives will make good lantern slides. A weak developer is to be prefer- red to one which brings out the imuga quickly. Develop till the detail is Well out and wash and 11: the same as a nega- tive. . If one has a lantern the light of which is suitable for printing lantern slides, cover the negative, open the door of the lantern. and then, holding the printing frame about 15 inches from the light, expose from 5 to The Simplest W'ay to Make Them In by Contact Printing. Most young amateurs huvo an idea that it requires a great deal of skill to make lnnturu slides, but any one who can make a good negative can soon learn how to make :5 good lantern slide. The simplest Way is by contact printing. Select a. nega- tive tree from spots, scratches or pinholes. It must have ï¬ne detail in the shadows and no harsh contrasts of light and shade. The rogulation size of a lantern slide is 3% by 4; so choose a negative which will still make a. good picture if all but the portion included in these dimensions is blocked out. Cover the part of the negative which is to be blocked out with needle paper, or paint it with nonuctinic paint, applying it to the gloss side of the negative. The negat- tivo is placed in a printing frame, and then by a. red light the slide is placed over the port to be printed from, the ï¬lm side‘ toward the negative. { Rev. R. I). Herrington, 3apti:t m1n€ster at Kingsville, says:-- ~“Having known Mr. Izz'ues Lovelace for the past: thirty yez'u‘g, I believe the above suntements mad» by him to be strictly true. I might also say that I have been great!» beneï¬sted? myselï¬bygtho use of Dr. Willinu’s Pink Pills." Followmp; an attackiof Lauripne He Suï¬â€˜ered Day and Night for Four Yearsâ€"A Well Known Clergyman . ‘ â€"A-* Endorses HIS Statements. From the Record, Windsor. Ont. Amoug the residents of Kingsville, Ont. none is held in higher esteem than Mr. J as. Lovelace, who is known not only in Iowa, but throughout Essex county. When a. correspondent of the Record called upon him and asked him to vertify certain statements as to his cure for a. painful malady after several years of suffering, he cheerfully did so. Mr. Lovelace said:~â€"Four years ago I had u. had attack of la grippe, which left me ivith a. severe palnin the pit of my stomach. After trying household remedies and getting no relief, I consulted a. doctor. but after a long treatment, which did not help me. I became discouraged andj concluded there was no relief for me. Night and day for four years that pain1 ‘never lef: me. At times it was so bad lthzit I had to give up \vnr 'JflI'hwl frequently read of Dr. William’s Pink Pills and perhaps as much out of curi- osity as with any hope that they would help me, I boughta box. I followed the directions carefully, and by the time the hm; was ï¬nishede was sur- . rised to find that I was getting relief. I could not understand how, after all the medicine I had previously tried had failed, this one box of Dr. \Vill- imm’s Pink Pills should help me.“‘] now cheerfully continued their use and by the time I had taken ï¬ve‘gboxes “wry tmce of pain hid left mo 'and I felt. as well as ever I hudsldone in um: life. 'l‘o-day I am as souned as a dol‘ar and helium there is no man of mygagc in Essex counlyylwho can stand. 21.- har- l’er day 3 work an" my». I gave glad assent; am?! when, a few moments later, a sweet, motherly face bent over mine-a face from which all thehard lines seemed forever fled, as her arms claSped close a sleeping infm i: and her gentle voice Whispered: “My daughter,†in my ear, 1' could only clasp my arms around them both and answer: “3~.[(>t.h€-I-!â€Q I baby as she could. May she came in?†The Eyen of Criminals. A PIONEER’S STORY. LANTERN SLIDES. They have. sometimes a curious way of deciding lmvsuits‘ in north Siam. Both parties are put under cold water. and the use Staying [min the longer wins the suit, The Financial Question. “Charley,†said young Mrs. Torkins art the. conclusion of a discussion of domestic ï¬nances. “haven’t I heard you say a great many times that what the country needs is a larger volume 01' circulating medium wish which to do business?†"Nodoubr. you have heard me say that. †“ Well, Charley, dear, that being- the case, don’t you think you ought to have given me a bigger book of blank checks than this?â€-â€"-Washington Star. “I am satisï¬ed that the naturalists are mistaken in the general belief that ele- phants live to be 200 yea-rs old. Of course it is a difficult matter to determine the age of an elephant with any degree of accu- may. yet it can be easily estimated on the basis commonly used in arriving at the ex- pcstuncy of all other animals. The hu- man, for example, attains full growth at the age of 22 or 23 years. With this knowl- edge we can estimate that the average length of human life is three times the ï¬g:- ure at which physical maturity is reached. or about (30 years. Dealing with the ele- plmnt on the same basis, I cannot estimate his expectancy at much over 100 years. The elephant quits growing at the age of 35 On the principle accepted, therefore, he cannot be expected to live more than three times 85 years, or 105 years. We have one elephant known to be something over a hundred years old, but he is show- ing his ago very decidedly, and I look for him to die most any time.â€â€"-St. Louis Republic. How Long Does an Elephant Live? “I was practically reared in the circus business,†said Alf Ringling, one of the brothers of circus fame, “but I never tire of watching the elephants. There is an indescribable fascination about the big brntes to me which I am unable either to rid myself of or explain, and I. am just as much afraid of them as any country yup who sees them for the ï¬rst time. They are the most treacherous animals I know anything about, and I would as soon trust my safety to a lion as to an elephant, no matter how well I may be acquainted with him or on what good terms we may ap- pear to be. When 400 and 500 men now enter college together. Only a single study, English, is prescribed to all of them. All the rest they select, each man choosing what best suits his taste, inclinations and purposes. Most of the. elective courses are open to students of several classes and to graduate students. and when a freshman has sorted out the studies he purposes to pursue, he ï¬nds himself in the lecture or recitation room with an unclassiï¬ed body of learners. most of them no doubt freshmen like him- self. but very likely with plenty of sopho- mores, too, and possibly with other upper class men and graduate students. Com- pulsory prayers have passed out of exist- ence, and he rarely or never sees his own 3 class all together at one time. Indeed, ‘ there is not a lecture room in Harvard col- 9 logo that will seat all the members of the ‘ present freshman class at once. He rarely 1 ever sees a group of men together in any “ classroom of whom he can be sure that all i of them are his classmatesâ€"Edward S. Martin in Scribner-’3. Nowadays a Harvard class has come to be a much larger and looser aggregation of individuals, and the facilities for knitting 13 together have almost: disappeared. 3w The Line of Separation Commenced “'ith the Elegy? System. There was an old Harvard and there isa new, and the line of separation is so recent that a graduate of less than 20 years’ stand- ing can remember when it began to appear. It came with the elective system and has dexszlovsé mu by ysergagw 3; my!!!“ deveBbEd, ‘é’ï¬d 33 Mu ents regime hive multiplied in the Harvard catalogue. Twenty years ago there were still classes and class feeling at Harvard. Most of the studies of freshman year and nearly half of the sophomore studies were prescribed. There were then about 200 students in a class. “van-I-v‘ u tun-y avvu LIIULAAAI. 5;.) 3 gree in: which was not returned. But Mr Jones went on his way rejoicing in a mental image of Mr Brown, whosa scowl- ing face and former snowy linen Wt re generously decorated in lampblack. â€"-Chi cago Tribune. A; The following morning the Browns no- ticed signs of some unusual festivities in the flat above, and wishing to know the cause thereof Mr. Brown stopped on his way out to listen a moment at the tube. He heard a door slam and the excited cry of “Now!†The next moment a blast oi air smote his ear, and he found himself enveloped in what seemed to be a cloud oi dust. But on looking at his hand, with which he had rubbed his face, he gave an unrepentable exclamation that brought his wife and daughter to the scene, and was a. source of gratiï¬cation to Mr. Jones, who, coming jauntily down the stairs on his way to business, paused to wish his friend and neighbor a very good morning, Mr. Jones has long suspected that the Browns employ the speaking tube as a means of learning what was going on in his household, and when his suspicions were conï¬rmed the other night by his eld- est daughter, who had been hanging over the bannister to watch, he grew wroth in- deed and swore vengeance. When he came home the next night, he carried an awk- ward bundle, which he opened and dis- played to his wife and children: “What’s that, pa?†a'ske'd his 6-year-old. “You don't know nothing,†said the elder brother haughtily; “that’s a. bel- lows." ï¬at No. 2 without undergoing the scru- tiny of Mrs. Brown and her daughter, and that. frequently they examine the mail which the postman leaves in the unlocked box of the J oneses, one of the small chil- dren having lost the key. On the other hand, Mrs. Jones com- plains that the people underneath exhibit an undue“ curiosity in regard to all her af- fairs; that no visitor is allowed to call at Mr. and Mrs. Brown and their daughtor oecupy flat No. 1 on the ground floor, while Mr. Jones and his wife, with their numerous flock of young hopefuls, live in the flat directly above. The little Joncses are greatly given to playing tag and hide and go seek. According to Mr. Brown, there is no hour in the day and very few in the night when they are not tearing from one end of their flatto the other, pounding the undeadened floors with a steadiness almost unendurable to the highly strung nerves of Mrs. and Miss Brown. Brown Learned What \Vaa Gofna an, bu! Got More Than He Wanted. Asmall apartment house in nhis c2 fy tas become the scene of a feud that 13in fair to rival that of the houses 01’ Mon- taguo and Capulot. OLD ANflï¬gyy, H’AEVARD. CURIOUS ONCE T00 OFTEN. “-V mm- .EDWAR’D \ ' Y:ri<..â€"41 A. VXLSONT B'ookiu. New The undersigned having been restored to belch by simple means. alter entering for several van with a severe lung affection, and that dread disease Consumptxon. is anxious to mpke known to his fel- low sufferers the me we of cure. To lhose who desire it. he will cheerfully send (freeof charge) a copy of the preecriutinn used, which they will ï¬nd 1 snre cure for Consumption, Asthma, Catmh Brou- chilis and all throat and lung Maladies. He hope: all sufferers will try his remedy, as it is invalmbe. Those dealrlng the prescription, which will cost them noclxinz. and raw prove a. blefliing, gll Nev-e ad- " nu an... CALL ND INPSECT WORK AND GET PRICES. J. P- RKVLE 'V...‘ FRAMES . . SASH . . . .. DOORS . . . Vf‘ï¬i’i PLANING MILL TO CONSUMPTIVES. grocery mouse glve us a ma! order and we will feel assured of your trade ........ I l' ": ,5 ._ 7 , z I] e market, and the cheapest 3,." " cording to quality, are sold by W. W, A LOGAN , 653%? TEA BUFFEE--8PEGIALTIES § If you have been contemplating changing grocery house give us a trial order and we wi assured of your trade. . . . ' nun-.9 Christie, Brown Co’s Biscuitsâ€"Armour’s Canned Beefâ€"Alymer Boned Chicken, Alymer Boned Duck, Alymer Boned Turkeyâ€"Potted Ham. Chicken and Tongueâ€"Crosse Black- well's Pickles, Heinz’s Celebrated Sweet _ Picklesâ€"Crosse Blackwell’s Marmaladeâ€" _ Batzger’s English Jellies. and a full line of Canned Fruits. Prime Sugar Cured Hams, Breakfast Bacon and Rolls always in stock. Although we have been in business for the last tw years and have seen our trade grow from infa the magniï¬cent nrnnnrï¬nnc :4- mm“--- L, enty-t\ may to V 3--" ..vuu. Llllallby e magniï¬cent proportions it assumes today, some people are always a little slow in falling into line, and it is to this class that we desire to direct our attention. To our friends who have favored us with their trade for years we take this opportun- ity of returning our heartfelt gratitude and asâ€" sure you that thesame courtesy and at- tention you have re- ceived in the past will be extended in the future. To the other class we might say that besides the goods usually found in ï¬rst-class grocery stores our stock comprises such dainties as ~I7O Kent Street. Lindsay, Ontario 91211103, Organs and gJOHN PEEREE, F‘ura ehon time :h» prices (or STA “N “t" 3‘! I i ‘t . will he made eï¬u-puonally MW. “'2!" ant-5 r 'u - know just Hm. Ai do! a Show gnu “an. and IV I . quay: _\uu a. "I an 1 tl-iMSnâ€"buhwtt) Cult. P. J be; «8.3. Linda... 0:.L.~4J In». MOULDINGS TURNINGS ETC, ETC. Rubber Stamps of all Kinds. â€"MAXUFACTCRBR OF“ " 7 HE BESTC. Sewing Machines n your will feel UQ '-two 44.