Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Watchman (1888), 12 Aug 1897, p. 7

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_v_,_"_-.â€"..â€"â€"râ€" l l l l l l l 0 e l. l‘ r. I ,. 1. l. "V”Hlli Hollcllo ll‘ll‘llll' l .' u v . ‘ .ng moldy. THE WATCHMAN. LINDSAY. THURSDAY, AUGUST 12TH, 1897. . The other was Jane credulity the housemaid. lane had been there only six years, and Susan told her could not go. Of course Jane left the doors open “shot eber' l . ._ n _ ‘ . x. ) one 0 ) remembering every thing that she em." But she must have left them ' *' t‘h ' l i . , :‘ib’iiii :h: if?“ certnin.y ‘get her open, for how else did the kitten get " f:‘ .ijp ti" out? At any rate, before anyone knew kl‘. ups the threat had been re- it, the kitten had gone and was not to y, mi, ~ ~,_, - pc w M J30 Often and end lost its effect. [be found anywhere about, the house. :“ fill." “W3. Jane went on “disremem-l When mistress and servants had :lCl‘lll‘ With the calmness of perfectisearched everywhere in vain Mrs leanizwuce‘in her safety and left doorslArnnm shut herself up in hei' room ”pm and IOFgOC to lock gates and waslagairi and sat down beside the fire, I wrepped herself up and went out. She was gone a long time. When she came back, her eyes were bright and moist and looked almost like a pair of new eyes. She sat down and rook the child and took the child and the kitten both in her lap. “Little man,” she said “I‘ve been to , see your uncle and aunt. They’ve had sickness and haven’t been able to take garid perhaps it is needless to state, «x v l â€" -' - , a; ILLGG.‘ , - , knowing \ilnit we do of llCI‘, that she r ; let: every deor open on her Way up ‘ilfllzdl. n (U I- .1 Q. m I.) ‘< 1] ElSHLll'S. As she set the scuttle down instillingé‘frn the corner she heard the well l known (‘Ollllllitlldi "T”:H- ' “Shut the doors as you come back, .NIDSAY Jane.” _ r? ' And she gave the stereotyped reply: $3: gig-OERKS "Yes, Mis’ Arnam, I ten to it." EL", if 41 " J She went back, shutting all the doors, but it was too late then. The - A mischief was done. Something had , LHAMBERS whisked into the room before you ' , . ‘ could think, and before the echo of i p :10 éf-‘ijfiilrergf 11:31,: lane’s footsteps had died out of the f“ 55”“ lili‘Ni‘IS, boil room there was the roundest, funniest < . ..-.1i;r:iriire. grey kitten running up Mrs. Arririm‘s "‘ drch and scrambling into her lap. I line there, it looked her in the eyes. «ruched out its soft little paws and lllt‘WtECi in the most wheedling, caress- in; manner known to kittenhood. The old woman did not throw the 1'. kinds of cemetery :i‘is, \Z...;‘.cl l’ir-ct-s, etc . . ”rm; ,.‘ , ‘, . - r \ . . v7 :an:¢0:' Egg-3111a a trial to tho methodical l ii he llittleeresfture tfliat liztd distracted i :are of their own children. And 50 :1333‘ J; all the H . “ms after this the old woman had me'fd;1;U§?:§P‘79:xllfirsb\l‘f days! and had I mgomg to send them all, the whole "it. ,. ”so“ i 3: been alone. Sh h l n f e V Di 5 e was gone, and family, out toagreat b‘g farm 0f mine, ..... g 3 _e M _..F€at. fine Once more she was a lonely womanâ€" where they’ll get well and make a ,0 g: 1 hpuse, but shelived in a little corner more lonely and miserable than she a. liviuw, and you are arcing to stay / ““““ w... E ; pr Iii. . bli‘e‘had no friends, or, if she had been before. She sat there look- with m: and be my littlebboy.” L? BATS :: nu. ::lf.lllt\L.PFS.1\Villitln. In ad. Susans ingat gloomy scenesm the glowingcoais, The child contemplated her With :"Ci MASKS 5;; , $122.: grotto};- ligr fire hudmnei er done until she could endure it, no longer, and I serious eyes. After awhile he asked k; kindsu 3.1.1,, any”. intnch: 1 ie servants then she arose and walked about the doubtfully: .. 7; : t. s new er to feet a tramp, and room and limllly threw up It Window to “An the kitten too 'l" "jâ€"j-ETQGEVS. AC- 3“ 1 and 31.5 for giving money to beggars, get rid of the choking pain in her “Oh, yes indeed” cried the old :3: NS and VIOâ€" : i \‘vny, mar me, such a. thing was never throat. And when she leaned out into woman, “this kitten tbo ” :_ ,3: fact nearly ggdreuinmlof the cold air, what do you think she They had supper there tooszther j” , 3:: may desire :7! but it was Jane that ended it. saw? Just below her, seated on the afterward, all three of them and, such ~ 5: A Call é: 2 Julie risid gone out to the coalhouse doorstep, was a. rugged little boy, with a hungry boy as that was Iand What ‘ ‘5; Liitéd- E . and came iii with :t scuttle of coal, her kitten in his arms. a plczisuri- it was to see hiui first: Why, In a moment she was down stairs and hid thedoor open and had fright~ sued the child so that he could do nothing but stand and stare at her. "\Vhat are you doing with my kitten little boy ‘3” she demanded grimly. “ ‘Taiii’t your kitten! It’s mine.” he replied, claspingit closer. “How did it come to be yours, I should like to know?" risked the angry old woman. “It was born mine,” was the simple explanation, lln(l then the \vornsin’s heart sunk. Sue never once thought that the kitten might be somebody’s property before it came to her, and now, lwliold. she had no right to it from the first. Sue was about to go in and shut the door, but she paused to ask coldly: “What were you doing on my door- strep?" “We was a-warmin ourselves.” said the child, and this reminded him of his ow: this rich old woman shut up in her own gloomy thorights, had never dreamed there could be a child as hungry as that in all the world I And, after“ ard, when the little fellow insisted on wearing his new sh0es to bed, Jane and Susan had to be called to see that, and they made a. regular holiday of it, I dOn’t know how many years it had been since those old walls had echoed to such laughter. When b‘uau saw that grim. austeri- old woman actually persuading the child to let the shoes lie in a. chair where he could touch them, and she S’HV her put the kitten into his arms, she remarked lo June in an awestruck whisper: “Hit do ’peir to me like rle mmlen- uiurn mus” be jes’ roun de corner.” And that wasn’t the end of it! No, indeed! Why, the very next day a certain minister, whose work lay . . 3r CHAMBERS ifiifliillllllG SHOP ii if EMERSO i lilac»:- . i-v rs north vi..:..;.. 't::d \sElI .‘ 5‘: 5‘ h’ORSESh’OE/NG \. ‘~\~."l; the qul. y .‘l-limtcd. ?;=:ilar 8: Emerson. so! - GPlTA‘ZlU “â€"â€" _ - ":gg‘ nit? Ont- \ ‘- . T' ‘ . 0.29.0632 : .r Attenuivd to. A - E TON. ' *y Surgeon, D. - ON'l‘ J.’ ltros ...: ;r::i.,..._. :l..cl‘.deul :0. ."::::::::il" ILiflthlllany 1 r V ‘I‘ ) -l/-l[ :fr .. .- ‘ _,,.__ .i. .‘itlll ST 12th, 1897. iii iiPEN DOOR ............ among the po )r ‘Lnd destitute, received a summons to call on an old woman who had refused tosee him when he called at the door once before. And discomfort, so that he began to shiver and to shrink together Truly, it was a bitter day. Even in kitten down, or push it down, or shoot it outside the door. She started to do £Lll three, but instead she just sat that sunny nook the cold was intense. The ehlld was blue with it. She had not noticed that before. “Come in and warm at my fireâ€"-â€"y0u and the kitten,” she said. Now what had come over her? \Vhat magic spell had been working on that hard ord heart? She satin the armchair, watching the child thaw mm grow rosy and in the great warmth, as he sat on the has‘suck before the tire. There was no sound in the room but soft cracking of the burning cool and the gentle purring of the kitten, and lifter awhile llll‘. child begun to mod Over come with drowisness, he slipped down to the rug at last and stretched himself on". there, and when the kitten illt‘rl', looking at the little ball of grey while it closed and unclosed its paws on her folded hands “Well, what do you want?” she said ' her. It had been so long since she heard it except in giving orders to the servants. There never was such a kitten. The moment she Spoke to it, up it went, hand over hand, over the bosOm of the black dress, and before thr- old woman could move a finger it was rubbing its pink nose on her very chin. Nut only that, but it Eniounted upon her shoulder and purred in her ear :Lll(l smooth and smoothed its silky side against her cheek and actually crept into his arms he murmured: .r‘lc;v.'e‘\l~r'.t her hair and tumbled down “It always sleeps Wid meâ€"to keep into her lap and ran back to her me warm.” Aft-er awhile the old woman arose softly and entered both the. sleepers :i. pillow slmuldcrs again as though it were the world. ‘ Something stirred in the Stern,-\VItli blankets and slipped . silent, grim old woman. The touch of under the child’s bead. Poor little :1. living creature agtinst that With tOssed curls. How pretty the} cred face went deeper than the face would be if the were brushed! 'l‘hv She raised a llirllld arid stroked the withered lllmd touched them SOftlY- kitten and .101... to it gently. \‘i'lien had that hand ever been laid on Such a frolic :is that kitten liztd.‘ a child’s head before? And then, as Hoe. it caught h».â€" hrind and pretend- :hough :ishmiied of such Weakness, she e-l to bite her lingers with its ridicu- Wit dOwn again arid resolutely look'eri UlXS littlv froth and to Scratch them into the fire. “hat was this child will) all its claws at once! How ii more than any other? There were -r;;uup(>rerl about, playing hide and hundreds of such children in the street seek with its tail! How it swarmed â€"-born theives, eyery one of tin-m, up the curtain and the table covers ready. to repay kindness by .stealing and looked atitselfin the glass aid anything they could lay their hands rolled itself up in the Persian rug and on. . Q , enjoyed every minute of the time! But It .Was USP. "i“, couldnt keep In short, if ever there was a kitten from looking at the child, and som2l20w ' ' ' ' ' hear his soft that ust Slm ly took possessmn of a it didseeru pleasant to roomJ and mfde itself thoroughly at breathing in that room, that had been home there, this was that kitten, Silent so long. And after sue had \Vhpn Jane went up staris to an- watched and listened awhile she went nounce the next meal, as was her out into another room and openeda , ’ custom, she returned to the kitchen drawer that had been shut 1 do“ . . - k outâ€" , . - . ‘ d know show many years and too “IMO“ tottering and mm distende a. child’s clonkâ€" a long, warm cloak, preSt-ntly. I The sound of her own voice startled! when he went, there she was with a small boy and a kitten, and there was a radiance in her face that did not come from the fire light as she said: "I have just found out what proverty iS. You see a great meal ofi , 1 run tulu. Next Thursday will bw Thanksgiving. 1 have not observed it for many years, bur all that is changed. I want you to take this money and see how far it will go in giving all the poor you know a litrle supply of fuel and a good Thanksgiving dinner. And will you come back to me when that is gone 1? I want the dinner to be :t good one. mind, a regular, generous. old fashioned Thanksgiving dinner." Uh, i’ W45 's great time in that. Hid Wu- rmn’s lift: ; but that was not all, for 3h sent fur Ml arbitect tha: very cumin Lllll began to talk over plans for a bone for homeless children, and while sh: talked the child was leaning against llv‘ knee and she fmidYPd his thin little ham'. After the architect was gone she still eat there musing. Late as it was, she said to herself, she might still atone for her idle. selfish, lonely life. And that was not all yet, for when Jane came to the door and said, with a broad grin spreading all OVet her face. "Somebody to see you, Mis’ Armin,” silt did not hear until the somebody came in and stood beside her and asked : “Mother, can you forgive me yet 'l” She must hove been dreaming of him, for she looked at him as though he were part of the dreamâ€"this handsome man, with a mouth as firm as her ownâ€"-but in a moment she had awakened and was in his arms, crying out to him while the tears rained down her cheeks. “Oh, Dick, my little boy, my own little lad, don’t ask forgiveness of me! I need it so much more 1" And there was was Susan’s face in the doorway, illuminated with a radiant grin ; for bad she not known where Mas’ Dick was this long time? And had she not gone to him that very morning and told him? “Mas Dick, now’s yo’ time to make frien’s wit yo’ ma, for she sbo’ly is like anoder ’omau 3” And there was the little boy in Dick’s arms before you could think, and friends / \' f]. (75 ‘ \u-r ~ v, '1‘. .r l‘() V l’ [I ‘ ")5 in“ u». thrill}.q I‘-\ ) .(‘t 8V ) . . '12.; tin-re :tli aluzir “I bleebe Mjs’ Atrnam done gone 'Z‘j' ..._ ., , ~ , . . ~ ‘7\ I“ A F» ~ to ‘. .iiirs. Lven thr- szyl" she cnei “she sottin up dere Llle 1) and , ....uid not llllrp wif ,, kitten in her lap, an she say tor “'15ch 3121.03. F- '31»: wok. if you had YOU to fetch her dinner up to ’er an a. :v, ‘x' .. .2... ivwild have said: . don ask me sech ques- ‘ 3an shet up in disslier ‘, lér‘ grit plun moldy.” 1: us had not left. mold in: :ii- Err-art of the lone win the upper rooms it "' ‘m :iim: had been too '>'~'«!I;‘lr‘l’r‘d what kind »:“:i';l have been when 3-1. "mi-t did not really 7 TY :.:'. knew very well ime to order is W tisfactiozi guaranteedâ€" ;. lf‘ 1. lrb‘ ’4 BLAIR l“ ' So' a} falters, Foot of Ken?“ '0u Going . . H__«x_._fl.._.::~"" “2 a "VH'IT-Lli she was now. . 7f f-"ls 5.) very old, either. llld . . if? Karrie herself OlLl by M ‘ F “El shutting cut ih~ .... fl 1in king hard, bitter ’ 1 L....:i~v wrinkles in he:- '9“.3’e.¥°‘.““ tar; s”? in he“. hm. Anv one ' -' “ ’one. I " flit” tries very hard, but '-’ 17»: best thing to do, ‘.“t’i ' « «*‘Ion .. g :2 .lrv kiln 5'! . ‘ . . , . . uso 1 ml workmen :0 pt). 1 . . . wort uni r.~.v on getting aiding to the already W ”6 sasser 0’ milk for de kitten l” “G’way from here, niggah l”. cried I'usan, and she hurried to her mistress room to diSprove Janes story. She returned with slower footsteps and a frightened face. Mrs. Arnam had said to her: “Yes, I want my dinner here, Susan until the kitten gets used to the house. I have never had a kitten before. I don’t know why I have never thought of it.” “Dev’s somefin wrong wif Mis’ Liza- betli,” said Susan when she had gained the sacred precincts of the kitchen and Jane and assured her that she “sho’ly did look pale. Long as I been stayin here, she aint never et in her room yit, and now she gwine ter eat dere on account oh a measly little cat.” On the second day a queer thing with him from the very first minute, and there was the kitten running up the table cover and tumbling down again and making a perfect Whirligig of itself in that mad pursuit after its own tall, and alto- gether there never was such a happy time. Susan began that very evening making preparations for the most delightful Thanksgiving dinner that ever was eaten, and while she worked the chuckled with delight and took all the credit to herself because she had brought Mas‘ Dick home in the very nick of time. that would surely cover that little figure in the other room from head to foot. She looked at the cloak a. leng time, and once she rolled it up and put it back again, but then she took it out in a. hurry and went and sat down, with it on a. chair beside her. Ah, surely, that was a genial tire. 'l‘lmt icy Old heart of hers was thawing before it. as the snow thaws on the southern slopes m spring: . - But then, there was the little be who And ill a. little While ,she made had melted the hard old heart ready for another Journey to the ‘0,"‘4 5m“ Dick’s coming and there was the kitten drawers and brought out P1185 and which had brought the little boy and piles of clo:hesâ€"good ones, too, that there was Jane who had left the doors might have been for the child by the open for the kitten, and soâ€" tireâ€"and shoes, too wra ed in oiled But what does it matter how the skin as though they well: made of Thanksgiving got into the house, so that . . . ‘t c me ? gold, and the ]auntiest little but you 1 ” ever saw. And then, awhile later, she a“: nun-.1; n m“ touched her bell and summoned Jane, Wonderfully elaborate open an, fetus, of- and disregarding June’s ZlmaZEd stare. ten the scene of some mummery or coup Said : de theatre celebrating scenes in connection a - . ' ' with venery were frequent occurrences. Gne this Child a Emmi bail}, Janeé Thus Lcuia,XIV more than once held and put these clot e8 on im, an stag hunts at night, and for that purpose m the great fox-eat of Chantilly was illumi- fif‘f ,irnple said that she ha _ “mitt-cred by a. great what it conSidered a great feat. and in“ 19”: zigo and that it Mrs. Armin laughed. The sound 0f .“erimoia sour. gloomy old the laugh frightened hPI‘. “Dd 1‘ sent tilt world Quid everi- the kitten skurrying under the bed. 3:3,“: Sifter all, when youlIt came outpreseudy “Pd growled at :‘mcut these stories they her as a. gentle intimation not to try say. ’ that any more, and that made her .WOSQTVams in the kitchen, laugh again. I309, sweeping m the 35., Who knew just when next room, heard it, and left her work filing and jUSt how to do unfinished to tell Susan, but Susan She had done the same scronfully warned her m" to come all-“time every day dun. “tellin her no such trash.” Therel loot). a Band Heâ€"saw‘igi ~53.“ .‘um‘oer any i . \‘oii w l: rind lam 38 CW‘ '1 ith regard to Quality. for doing good Planing ugh “ n hard and soft Wood. “ Doors. MOBldingS, Etc. in CEO. INGLE 3y Planing Mills- FOR SALE CR Lot 3. 0011.3. Ops Tom . 50 acres cleared. Good” , one foundation; M 3‘3: 32 well of water. 50%;" . ec- froui Janotvme,m ppened. The kitten had performed then bring him here.” The little fellow was pretty in his noted with torches, and the hunted stag ‘ ' was forced to pass through avenues lined new clothes despite the thin face that by several thousand man holding brightly had been blue with cow that morning. luring flamboaux in their hands. Several And what pretty curls those were, of the princessesof his court were during just as she had thought they would riders, and from thalamus of one or these be! The kitten took him for a. per- royal ladies. a ducks-a of Orleans we . . learn that in four years she was present at feet stranger and wen. under a chair a. (bath or on" than.“ “at Her and growled at b'm- Wow he laughed descriptions of the sport use most enthusi- at thatâ€"a thin little laugh that astlc. “I have hadflstalls, but have hurt brought the tears to her eyes. Oh, it in?“ 0mg “mt; ‘3’ 3'0? “Eliot? e mâ€"" ports n o 17 teen . was wonderful how those eyes of hers tury,” by W. A. Baillie-Grown. in Cen- were improving! And yet she did not my," . , . _ ,. TIME’S CREASES. The Origin and Progress of the Wrinkle. on the Face. We all become interested sooner or later in the subject of wrinkles. They are the “irreparable outrage” of Ru- cine, but although they are so univer- sal few have endeavored to explain their origin and progress. Wrinkles are pro- duced in the first instance by the fre~ quent repetition of some muscular con- traction or by sickness. They are not merely superficial, but appear when the epidermis is removed, and are found not only in the face, but all over the body. They do not run in any regular direction, and no law has been found including all their directions. It has been said that the life history of a me. can be written from his wrinkles, but physiology hardly agrees in this in- stance, for it has still to be proved that a generul’s wrinkles differ from those of a physician’s, or a laborer’s from a lawyer’s. A man does not always or even generally carry about a faithful autobiography in his face. Although no part of the body is free from them they visit chiefly the face, particularly round the eyes and lips. They run in all di- rr-ctione â€" horizontal, vertical and oblique, straight, curved and crossed. Going in the sun with the face insuffi- ciently covered brings them on prema- turely, but they are in every case nor- mal at 40 or even earlier. Vertical wrinkles between the eyes come quickly to men who study or wor- ry themselves. This can readily be im- agined. The eyebrows contract natural~ 15' when in deep thought. Grief or wor- ry produces the same action, which, when repeated frequently, produces a fold in the skin, marking emotion uiiâ€" dcrgonc many times. Between these and the straight lines on the forehead, al- ready mentioned, come the arched wrinâ€" kles of the forehead, found above the root of the nose. These often tell of long and painful mental torture. They arise from a cruel physical suffering or of still more great development of the vertical wrinkles and the resistance of the skin above. The crew's feet mark the passing of the forticth year and are characterized by furrows which diverge from the ex- ternal angles of the eyes in all direc- tions, like the claws of a bird, from which they are named. The wrinkles of the nose, which descend from the nostrils down each side of the mouth, are. perhaps, the first to appear. These. furrows are created in laughing and mastication. A simple smile is sufii~ cicnt to produce them, so it is not sur- prising that the repetition of the com- monest acts should soon be graven on. the face. They are also hereditary. The wrinkles of the cheeks and chin follow the oval of the face and are caused by a diminution of t e fatty substance un- der the skin, w ch then falls into folds. The small wrinkles which form a network iii the lower parts of the cheeks near the ears have the same origin and only appear in old age. These found in the upper eyelids and sometimes in the lower, which give the eyes an air of fatigue. are the results of hard living, grief or worry.â€"-New York Ledger. KNOW THEIR POWERS. The Eternal Womanly In the Rough Girl- of New York. In the girls of the rougher tenement house districts the eternal womanly wears such a disguise of the eternal gamin that it cannot always be recog- nized. Their pertuess and sauciness are only sharpened by their precocity and their tomboy habits of street Arabia. A reporter recently had occasion to visit lower Washington street to ascertain the facts regarding the murder of a boy down there. He was obtaining his in- formation from the boys of the neigh~ borhood, who might have been play- mates of the dead youth. A circle of them, together with three or four girls of 15 or 16 years, was gathered around him. A big, hulking youth about 20 years old arrogated to himself the place of spokesman. He was evidently the ty- rant, the bully of the street, a young “Bill the Brute,” who had not yet ac- quired a wife to beat and was conse- quently an object of great interest to these misses, whose skirts had not yet grown down to their ankles. With his big, harsh voice he silenced every inter- ruption of his tale, saying: “Shut up therel I’m tollin this yarn. ” Of course this adjuration, which forms a part of the ordinary courtesy of the neighborhood, did not quiet the girls. They chafl’ed him and the report- er and giggled until at last the speaker said to the reporter: “Don’t mind them. They’re no ’count. They’re nothin but girls. " “Of course he’ll mind us, smarty,” instantly rctorted one of the girls. “We’s the makin’s of ladies." It was the eternal womanly of street Arabia. -â€"N ew York Tribune. Du Maurie:- Heroines. When Mrs. Frances Hodgsou Burnett was first presented to Du Maurier. who was, in point of fact, rather an under» sized man, she exclaimed: “Oh, I am so glad that you Ire not six feet tall!” “But why?” asked Du Maurier. “Because for these many months, ” replied Mrs. Burnett, who is consider- ably below medium height, “you have simply denied us the right to live. You have made us feel that a. woman who is not six feet tall has not the right to exist.” “Oh, that is only a trick of mine!” laughed Du Maurier. “I have started again and again to make my heroine a little woman, but before I know it she has somehow grown way beyond my own recognition. ”â€"American Queen. He and Failed. “My friend,” solemnly remarked the man in black, “you don’t know how hard‘it-risto lose your wife. ” ‘fi-Hard?” he echoed. “My dear sir, is giggly impossible. ”â€"Ohioago Times- be as good as can be bought elsewhere for in all those e . _ . - , . l y ars When she was gI‘OW- were bounds beyond Winch Susan’s say a, ward to him except to ask l Tm M-‘â€"M WM’ "'3: where he lived. And then she told -r '~ to take care of the boy and the . , _ again beforea week was out. She de- kitten unti . ,every day that If She didn’t quit “dis- elated that she 1 She came bmk’ and She We guarantee 35 cents. W. 1V. LOGAN, our 25 cent TEA to Remember we do as we advertise; PRATT Klltll FAMILY GROCERS, KENT-ST. _~_-- w‘m‘a“_m, ....._ 3‘. “MWâ€"r. Pianos and Organs. Pianos and Organs, manufactured by the Dominion Organ and Piano Company, .Bow- inuiiville, are still having a wide szile. A few weeks ago two very important sales were made which are worth recording. although the instruments were placed 300“ miles apart. They had the Special'honor of placing one of their Cabinet Grand Pianos in the Crystal Palace at London, Eng.,and :iiirrt lll‘l“ luautilii Cabinet Grand in Italian walnut wis sold by their agent, Mr. Fleming of Markham. to Sir. George Parker, ex-reeve of Pickering town- ship. This alone is sufiicicni, if it were ne- cessary, to convince the musical public how highly these instruments :irc appreciated at home and abroad, and speaks volum-s for the energy displayed in the management of this company. GENERAI AGENT, L170 Kent Street, Lindsay. Ontario $131 .1 Int 1 «1 ['7 \ Violent PLA Willi FRAMES . . SASH . . . .. DOORS . . . MOULDINGS TURN IN GS ETC, ETC. CALL AND INPSECT WORK AND GET PRICES. J. P. RYLEY â€" Household w C . Necessrties THE E. B. EDDY CO.’S desire it, he will cheerfully and (Moot copy of the prescription used, which they will and a sure cure for Consumption, Asthma. chili; and all throat and lung Maladies. He ho all sufferers will try his remedy, as it in lava! . Those desiring the prescription, which will cost. them will bends nothmr. and may prove a. biasinz, will rib-w "i know just what kind of a Stanly Vull “mu 1 Telegraph £3 Telephone Tiger . . . . Parlor . . . MATCHES 1:3 CONSUMPTIVES. JOHN PEERCE, The undersigned having been motored to health by simple means. after entering (or men! you: with a. severe lung affection, and that dread disease Consumption. is ominous tomake known to his tel~ low sufferers the means of cure. To those who â€"nNUFACTURER 03‘.- Rubber Stamps of all Kinds. l * ) a Bron. For: short time the prices for STAVPS of ti: Linda exceptionally low. Write an L le. mg ml l Will, dr ~55, REV. EDWARD A. WILSON, Bmkiin, New quote.“ it a price. reamsâ€"since; crsh. p. o Yorkâ€"41. Inndaay, Orinâ€"643m. s g. 41”,. _." ,1

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