W1: bid ) :d h 8%., iv. 2 rn Sutudxy rhu- tbom will have M: at8.‘20p.m. quanm‘ofifl Iain. from â€30. (3"AIN CARRYlNGâ€"tmmm on an be 91‘ .‘.w“.'--" tummy): fwd" s ,- int: an the plying bottom Babe-m Limb-y Paint. ’3!) ma double trips- mum: Immlmme Sou-ugg...‘ The ' Trent Valley Navigation - (30., Limited. - gums EVANS, H. H. GILDBRSLBBVE. Agent†Port. Hopo.Genu11 Hanger. Kingston GEORGE MLDER, Agent Mn Express 06a. Baby, M. Lake Ontario Bay of Quinta ST EAMBOAT C0,. L’T’D . 3:. mm}, NJ ........ " amt, NJ. (213.0.) ‘- Chu'wte. N.Y.;.Z.... ‘3. W72, OuL.-.. ..... ELEIR SONS, IKJ. Pm Hope. 00!. '“ Cobquzg, DUL. STR. NORTH KING, ~8ranite and Nickel-PlatedIWare. â€"~Cr<a+.mers and Dairy Pails. oâ€"Prcsaed and Pirrced Milk Pans. hep»: Factory Milk Cans; but norm: ammo. If- impugn .15.}, (21.10.)- - - . . GeooAlason TEWARE EMPORIUM " PM no». 025‘. w'â€â€˜ Tactics by Which Re Beat the Law and Made Enormous Proï¬ts. AM†WOOd’S PhosPhOd-ine) The United States had not long sup- The Great English Remedy. pressed the slave trade. There were plenty Sold and m°mmended by all still of lowland planters, with moneyin ‘ 3d . 0 l reli- ggeggseéicnnceuaisa’mn 3;: both pockets, ready to buy whatever of , 1 ckages W to cum all “black ivory†other men would fetch in. 1053135 035911331 Woekness. all directs 0‘ 21.5%? Laï¬tte, the Louisiana pirate, kept up the g:fftc‘ trifgnoiflst‘igï¬ngfï¬ï¬lzg :fncjem. business of such fetching in. His haunts at price ‘0ne ackage $1 six,$5. Owwalpwaae. Were no great ways from the Bowie habi- sicwfllcure. amphlets free toany addreiï¬t. tat. Moreover, young Jalnes was in the The Wood Gamma†Wmdsor, “ way of coming upon the pirate whenever the business of board rafting took him to , New Orleans. He was too shrewdly Amer- Ww’m' 3 ican not to grudge such fair proï¬ts to a. pack of foreigners. In company with his n 5 l/ H! n n n QTn\I E brother. Rezin Bowie. J12, and two others Iâ€"B‘i’ur sale in Lining; by E. GREGORY. ~Spr:u;w.-rs and Honey Cans. Gflmnized Iran \V ork, Eavetrongh- ing and all kinds of JOBBING attended to promptly. -"’rices are as low as elsewhere. Subject to change without notice. For further inhalation appb to T!“ TABLE- 8409b Fare 75:. Commacin: May 596., Pan. Hope. Cobourg and Rowena. my Davina. SOUTB BOUND. Produce Tczéeiz m Exc/zcmge. BY APPflINTMENT WATBB SPECTOR TO THE 83AM) TRUKK RMLWAY. OAKWOOD STOVE m The Great English Remedy. V‘" 4: Sold and recommended by all r’ , druggists in Canada. om reu- L': A able medicine disgove Biz -1“ The Hobby Tailars, Foot of I nt-st. 2E0. W. BEALL Are now in order. We have the material you want in green variefy Prices right. Fit and Finish Guaranteed. See the lines we have to oï¬er before placing your ordet. ESTURION. If dissatisï¬ed with the way your \Vatch runs send it. or brim: it. to a RELIABLE WATCHMAKER lite A COMPLETE STOCK 0F Oaku'ood, Ont. SEASON OF 1898; AND J. r. :-un....t Cur. Return 51.00. ad 310 pl. on Value-65y, best qual- mmmm 0.0.0.0. mun 2LLZ 8.203r. 840:5]: 1.0)pn. 1.46pm It is said that in many Welsh village-V l the yew tree and the church mo! the same age, the one being planted when the Q other was buns. l The provision for a traveler's require- ments are distinctly generous in Sex-via Notonly does he ï¬nd. public soap, which Englishmen sometimes. resent not ï¬nding in France, butalso hairbrushes,.clothee« bushes, combs and slippers in his bed- room. Even a public toothbrush in by no means unknown. v - . The members were astonished at the ap- plication of this sevens test. Not one was willing to submit to it. Hamilton, seeing that his proposition me: with general dis. approval, took his hat and left the build- hagâ€"Exchange. “Gentlemen, †said Hamilton, coming straight to the point, “in token of our sin- cerity, let every person here omanoipate his slaves now. †. _. At the ï¬rst meeting of the Emancipa- tion society of the city of New York Hamilton attended at the request of La.- fayette, who desired to become an honor- gry member. Testing Them. Alexander Hamilton, when slavery ex- isted to a limited extent on Manhattan 18- land, bought a slave for the purpose of enmncipating him. Mr. Widedunksâ€"Only $4 a year! That’s 311,15 it? If you begin on nmgazines, you'll think you have to keep in up. At the end of every year you'll want to have ’em bound. There's two volumes in a year. Costs 81 a volume for binding. That makes $6 a year. In ten years it’s 860. Then you'll want a bookcase to hold the 20 volumes. Thab’ll cost about 825, because you‘ll think it. ought to be big enough to hold the 20 moro‘ volumes. There’s $85 thrown away. Do you think I’m made of money? If you want to road the magazines, what’s the matter with borrowing ’em?â€"Chicago Tribune. Hampstcad folk and Londoners who ï¬nd their way up to the heights of Hamp- stead for a breath of fresh air will have noticed that the famous “Jack Straw's Castle†is now in the hands of the build- ers. At present the old inn is supported with huge props and the lower part in- cased in muiï¬'olding. This should be enough to raise an alarm among those who fly to the defense of historic build- ings, for “Jack Stmw’s Castle,†it is well known, has been frequented by some of our most famous celebrities, past and pres- ent. Here Dickens came for a well cooked chop and a bottle of good wine after a. ramble on the heath. Washington Irving introduces the inn in his “Tales of a Trav- eler,†and it has always been a hostelry beloved of artists. Here, too, the old courts leet were held. As a matter of fact, the ancient face of the â€Castle hotel†is to be preserved, but the interior will be entirely changed, and the charm of the old inn will have passed away. The low rooms and bar will be replaced by loftior rooms and a modern bar. There must be many who have pleasant recollections of good dinners at "Jack Straw’s Castle" after breezy walks on the heath, and many will mourn over the inevitable changes that modernize old citiesâ€"Westminster Gazette. Mrs. Widcdunksâ€"Jcnkinson, we ought to take one of the first class magazines. It’s only $4 a. year, and the children are getting old enough now to have something good to read. The proï¬t was enormousâ€"nobody ever bid against the partners at the forced sales, though there were a lively crying and a swift mounting of prices at the later vend- ings. Altogether the company realized a proï¬t of some $65,000 within a. couple of years. But the business involved such mummery and flummery of false names, , pretended disguises and pretended seizures ‘ that the Bowies pretty soon tired of it. : They dissolved it, and at least set about I spending as strenuously as they had gone : about makingâ€"Martha McCulloch-Wil- l Hams in Harper's Magazine. ! pack of foreigners. In company with his brother, Rezin Bowie, Jr., and two others of like adventurous minds he undertook to get a fair sharing in it. Money was needed to begin. Bowie sold his land to get it. Then the four entered into treaty with Laï¬tte. He sold them sound and likely blacks ofl his slaveships at the rate of $1 a pound. That made the average price something like 8140 the head. In the Open market the blacks would fetch from $500 to $1,000 each. But there was another and a better chance of gain, which the trading crew were quick to seize upon. Under the laws then stand- ing all Africans brought in in violation of the statute were conï¬scated and sold out of hand, one half the price going to the authorities, the other to the informer. Bowie and his comrades made a practice of informing upon themselves; then when the slaves were seized and sold they bid them in, pocketed half the money they paid and found themselves free to offer their purchases wheresoever they chose, for the blacks were now lawfully within United States boundaries and a commodity as staple and as marketable as cotton. Forget its worship in its pain. Lest the high heaven should crack and tall Or earth divide and swallow all. â€"Pall Mall Gazette Yet fears she wholly to declare For one or other of these twain. Lest the love. destined to despair. And presently in wilder mood She leaps to meet the lowering skies, With sparkling lips to taste love's food Full tenderly from starry eyes. Then frets and sighs to be caressed Awhile upon earth’s envious breast. ï¬rm-â€1705's son'g. to hizï¬ so énlacei Sometimes she casts one lazy kiss To heaven that stoops and smiles for this. Sometimes about the earth she flings Hez- foam white arms and clips his waist. And with low, purling laughper s_ings "Earsanproclaimed and seci'et strife, While the gold wanton feeds their hate And triumphs in their sad estate. Twain are the lovers of the sea And hard the burden of their lif- Who wage for that which may not; by The End of 3 Famous 01d Inn. BOWIE AS A SLAVE TRADER. Fax-sighted Economy. LOVERS OF THE SEA. The Boardeu‘PI-oce’, . The national departments! agricul- ture sends us the results 0t one exami- nation of the reconï¬y, patented‘Bearden process of butter making, the object 01 whids is to combine with the oloagi- nuns portion of cream f‘xll 4am“ elo- mcnts, heretofore discarded, in such proportions that the resultant thereoi will be a compound thathudl tht Azsefal characteristics of butter. " kinking Butter. The secretary of agriculture has been considering methods for further mark- ing the butter so that it will surely reach the consumer for exactly what it is. Last season it was discovered that unscrupulous merchants availed them- selves of the high standard of American butter to sell it for Danish, Erench or other butter, [whichever brought the highest price. It is the desire of the sec- retary to make this practice impossible, but so far it has not been found prac- ticable because the consumers unwell en the merchants demand butter in boxes. There is a widespread prejudice in Eng- land against butter in small packages; The consumers prefer, to hav’e'it taken from kegs, under the impression that it will he purer and fresher. With "tht butter shipped in hates it is possible ï¬t stamp only the boxes, whichennfeusily be covered by dishonest merchants. Agents of the department are taking precautions to prevent this practiceâ€"‘â€" Breeder's Gazette. The plates on the ï¬rst floor may be 6 by 10 inches, halved together at the corners and then tied by a half inch thick and two inch wide iron strap bent around the timber 12 inches from the corner and held by a one inch bolt through the strap in both sides of the timber and through the timber as well. This ties the joint perfectly and entire- ly prevents spreading of the joint. There is a row of posts at the corners oi the feed troughs, and the beams may be carried from these to the center, resting on posts around which a feedroom is built, or this central space may be left open so that the feed may all be thrown down from the floor above into this cen- tral space, or if the fodder is cut above it will all come down into this space, which is occupied by the feed mixing boy. If steam is used to do the work, the engine will be in the cellar, .or if a windmill this will be on the top of the barn, which will be better than steam, as perfectly safe from ï¬re. Live steam may be carried several hundred feet in pipes wrapped in asbestus or mineral wool and then buried two feet in the ground within a wooden box. In the building of an octagonal barn I few directions may be useful. The 10V"- or part, of course, needs to be of etc“ timbers to hold up the great weight 01 staff that may be heaped in above. With a post of 8 by 10 timber at each corner the other intermediate post» may be 8 by 4; the plates need not be over 6 by 10, with joists 3 by 10 be- tween the beams. The upper part may be all built balloon fashion, leaning in to the center, somewhat in the way of a mausard or French roof, with the top 01 the roof having all the rafters meeting in a small. octagonal frame, on which a cupola is built. This gives a very picturesque and pleasing shape to the building and makes the stiï¬â€˜est and strongest frame that can be put to gether. OCTAGOXAL BARN. in at the center and disposed of 31'. around the building. There is the least possible work in attending to the cuttit and especially in their feeding. Thi. form of building is the most economi 2 a1, takes the least quantity of 1:1me and needs the lightest of ' framing stufl outside, only requiring heavy beam and stout supports under them on the lower floor. It is the strongest of all kinds of framing except an exact circle and has the most available space insidc for the length of wall of any ï¬gure ex- cept the circle, and it closely approaches this economy of space, for one has every- thing in it right under his hand, to be reached with the fewest possible steps. A Shelter For Com Which Comblnq Comfort and Economy. An octagonal barn, combining com- fort and economy, is described by The Country Gentleman. It is 50 feet in diameter, but has a floor space for the cows of over 150 feet, affording room for 50. It is an example of the economy of material and labor that is possible in this compact style of building, for the total cost, with cellar, is under $1, 000, and without the cellar not more than $800. It will need 20, 000 feet of rough lumber, 6,000 feet of dressed siding, 23,000 shingles and 1,500 cubic feet 01 concrete in the wall under it. It ha! ample space on the main floor for feed ing. The hay and grain all come down into the central place, and by having a special arrangement on the upper 11001 the hay and fodder may all come dowr ready cut into the mixing boxes on the feeding floor. The- lower floor is arranged so that! wagons may be driven through the building and the hay and grain taken: AN OCTAGONAL BARN. THE WATChMAN, UNDSAY,THURSDAY.AUGUST"TH 1898. nu Look- Like Good Eminent. VA ponhry keeper in Maine wintered M100 hens. and a late» report any: he had than 2,400 hem and ohickmfnaud 100 ham sitting.- fromrwhich be hopew to obtain 1.000 2 more chickens; His chickens And egg. no cold in Boston, and it it to be pro-tuned that he ï¬nds it a p: oflmblo businean. a: he is cnr‘etnl to keep the best layers and only those that an dark brown eggs, as they sell in this narket 2 or 8 cents a dozen highorthan white dulled eggs or mixed lots. A poultry bréeder says that extra large sized eggs seldom hatch well, and he prefers the medium sized eggs from the same flock. It. is doubtful if a chicken was hatched from a very large egg whether it would grow tomake any larger fowl or one that would be more likely to lay large eggs than the chicken from an egg of medium Iize. Possibly by such Ielectiou for several genera- ;ioua the trait might become ï¬xed. but usually. thovory large egg is an unnatu- ral production '0! an accidental one caused by the‘eondition of, the fowl bo- ron laying. ' ,- * ' , Cocks .- Broaden. It is not an unusual thing for a cock turkey to take charge of a. brood of young ones. and go about with them and hover them as thchen would and we have even heard that if one were shut up for awhile with a clutch of 6388 he would proceed to sit on them and batch them out, but we never test- ed the truth of this. Yet it would not be strange if true, as we know that in some wild birds the male has to do his share of the incubation of the eggs and with many kinds the father feeds the youngquito as frequently and faithfully as the mother. Capone also are said to be ready upon a little persuasion to take charge of a brood of chickens, but now we have a story in an exGnange of a Brahma rooster that took charge of a lot of chickens after the hen had left them and brooded them faithfully. Practical Breeding. When we have said that we believed that the bird for the farmer or the vil- lage poultry keeper to have is a stand- ard bred bird, we have known that many who have good flocks of fowl would feel that they could not aï¬â€˜ord to dispose of their entire flocks of hens and pallets to begin anew upon some that would be all of one breed. Whether it would be proï¬table for them to accom- plish this by selling their own eggs in the market and paying more for eggs to hatch from well bred birds we will not discuss now. because if we were able to prove to our own satisfaction that it would be for their advantage to do so they would not all be convinced, or. convinced against their will, “they would be of the same opinion still. †For such we have another suggestion to offer. Select next season some of the best fowl in the flock. healthy, active and good layers, and mate them with a male of some good breed to obtain eggs for hatching, allowing all other hens to run without any male. It is not neces- sary to obtain a prize bird nor a 95 point bird, but get as good a one as the means will allow. or such as you will feel a little proud of, and from those matings raise chickens. Raise enough of them to allow of the pallets being carefully culled, and the best selected for next year‘s breeding to the same male or another of the same breed. We are not so much afraid of inbreeding as some, and less sowhen grading up from a mixed flock than we would be if cock and hen were of the same breed. But do not use one of the grade males for bread- ing Elmaâ€"American Cultivator. Upon this bill of fare the chicks will grow and thrive wonderfully. Some trouble, you say. Yes. But I have learned that in this world it pays when we are doing a thing to do it. It is the man who makes the most out of his op- portunities who succeeds, and the fel- low who is not willing to do this don’t out much of a. ï¬gure in this busy, prac- tical world, especially in the poultry yard. â€"Cor. American Poultry Journal. Night, cracked corn one day, a mix- ture of wheat and millet the next. Twice a week a feed of whole barley, soaked in boiling water for about 12 hours, is given. An occasional feed of raw cut bone is also given, not more often than twice a week. Let this take the place of the noon feed. If you have been feeding the chicks wet, sloppy, raw feed, you have been making a mistake, and if you continue to so feed during the warm weather you will certainly lose a great many chicks, and those you do succeed in raising will not be right. Discard the sloppy, raw feed right now. I believe that this kind of feed is the cause of the death,‘ during the summer months, of more chicks than is anything else except lice. The food is allowed to sour and at once the chicks become afl’ected with bowel com- plaint. Nothing will so reduce the vi- tality of a chick as will bowel trouble, and with the attendant effects it soon greatly reduces the number of chicks. The fact is that one feed a day of soft stufl’ is sufï¬cient. Not only is it sufï¬- cient. but more is absolutely injurious. Let this be fed in the morning. If the feed consists of any part of cornmeal, let it be moistened with scalding water. It will then swell before it is consumed instead of after it fed raw. As to the other feeds, I have found nothing so good as millet seed. It is rich in oil and other desired properties and is greatly relished by the chicks. Do not feed it exclusively, for a mixed and varied feed is essential to growth. Remember this. This season I am feeding as follows: Morning feed, mixture of commas], ground oats, barley and rye, moistened with scalding water, with a little milk added. Noon, millet need one day, wheat the next. A nm of Fm “1’30 383! Not Best For Hitching. LESSONS IN FEEDING. For Young Chicks In 1103 Weather. .11 hens are getting too fat. there is no better way of reducing their flesh than to change the character of the ra- tions. It is not often the quantityof food that fattens,‘ but the character of it. and to give more clover and grew foods and to substitute ‘bran and outs for the heavier grains will do much. though omitting a meal or giving lose fora. few days might assist and also help to give them a better appetite for he tuggecnatomed food. Have Enough Nests. ‘ It is not necessary to have as many pests in the henhouse as there are hens. out it is better to have too many than hot enough. and three nests'are not the many for four or ï¬ve hens. If there are 83 than this, several W111 lay in one ifest. and often in the struggle for two or three to get in it at one time eggs will be broken. not only causing the loss of the broken ones, but daubmg the others. and perhaps teaching the hens to eat their eggs. and thus calming greater loss. Exp From Put Hens. All the experiments show that eggs from Very fat hens VV ill not hatch well. This is not always because the eggs are not fertile, for very often the process 01 hatching will be staited all right but the embryo will die sooner or later, sometimes as early as the third d1y and at others not until fully formed and ready to leave the shell. The lack of vitality in the eggs from a fleck of very fat 119.113 is no doubt due to lack of Vigor in the hen, which is transmitted to th ’ embryo 1n the ahellï¬ â€"F1u-mers Review. The loss of young chicks is very great on most farms, amounting to one half or more of all that are hatched, and nine-tenths of this loss is clearly pre- | veritable. The causes of loss are many, } as, for example, gapes, drowning or chill- ing in wet dews and rain, the deprcda- tions of rats. hawks, skunks and other prowlers, and then the giving of im- proper food or failing to furnish grit and to keep the coops clean. Nearly all these losses are preventable by furnish- ing a suitable place to keep the chicks for the ï¬rst ï¬ve or six weeks, and then. if they must be moved, have a safe house to put them in. I have found that young chickens do very much better on a floor raised considerably above the ground, and I now make all my coops and the houses to put the chickens in at weaning time with a floor raised so high above the ground as to give a free circulation of air under them, so that they will not be damp, and there is no place for rats or other enemies to ï¬nd shelter. coxvnxuzxr CHICKEN nooss. tion of them shows in the engraving. Our boxes are all made movable end a)"; slid into the spaces made for them. These spaces are not floored, but have inch cleats nailed at the sides for the boxes to rest on. as a. floor would make a breeding place for lice. It is an ad- vanmge to be able to carry the b07104 outdoors when the house must be clean- ed, and as we do not allow the hens to sit in these houses we want to put the eggs under them and carry box and hen together to the new place, as the hen can be moved in this way with less risk of her leaving the nest than if she is carried without the box. to give suflicient slope to the roof. The walls should be lined with build-l ing paper, to make it warm. and the windows well ï¬tted. Onr- engraving, shows the interior arrangement of the building. I like the plan of putting the rcusts high and a sloping floor under them to catch the droppings, as it makes it easier to clean. and the hens like a high roost. This sloping floor serves as a ladder for the hens to get up to their roasts by nailing small cleats to the beards at each side. It also enables us to utilized the room under the roasts, and we use it for a dust bath in winter when the hens are shut in, and in thy summer we use it to set eight or ten hens at a time, or when not needed for this to shut up broody hens. The nest boxes are located at the side opposite the windows, and a small sec- Ln Arrangement Combining Conveniencs “’1“: Moderate: quense. Waldo F. Brawn. writing in The Country Gentleman. says: 1 make ail my poultry houses long'zmd narrow anti running: east and west. for the poultry housa is especialiy for wiutzr use. and we want large windows on the south to admit as much sunshine as possible. Ten feel: by 24 or 25 is a good size for a colony of 50110215, and if there iaa yard to let them out into for exercise or they can have the run of the barnyard in pleasant weather 70120118 can be kept hr-ulzhy in a house of this size, as I have proved in several cases. 1 prefer to make these house: with the roof sloping: but One. way. and if the house is built; inde- pendent of the other buildings the reef should slope to the north, so as to have the. high side «if the sun, but. often the building can be located at the south end of a barn, thus saving lumber and seem-- ing a warm lncutiou. I have two built in this way. There is no need of a high building for the laying hens. and we um; posts six feet high at the low mt side and nine or ten feet at the highest side, so as to give sufï¬cient: slope to the roof. HOUSING CHICKENS. How to Reduce Flesh. FOR FAMILY USE are the best tint Good Gram, Up-to date Machinery and Careful Hgmdling can "prbduoe. BUY THE ROYAL FLOUR. Sadler, Dundas ‘49:. Flavelle Milling Ca recently put into our mill is giving the best 0! satisfaction. We use Manitoba No. I Hard Wheat and manufacture the FIN- EST, LINES 0F FLOUR ever produced in Lindsay. The famous glnlmmlmmmumuuummnmm llllfllllflllflg all"! mmmlmmm mnnmuummzm' Hilmm: ASK YOUR GROGER T ourz'st Service Is arranged ani vquipped with special reference to the Comfort and Convenience of the HOLIDAY Tmmc. For rates and all in- formation apply to 250. Those who know Leave Bancnlt ......... Leave Junction.. ..... Arrive at Junction ...... Arrive st Baum“. LeaveLndsay ................ . Leave Junction. Arrive at]. B. O. Junction“ AnivaatLindsay............. Haliburton Mixed ................. Tvronto Express (tom Port Hope.. Port Hope mm from Toronto ...... Cobocouk Mixed ...... . ....... Port Hope kind from Port Hope. . Torouw flail {tom Port Hope ...... Port Hope Express 1mm Toronto‘ . Whitby Mixed ................... “A“. ,,,~I u.- Bellevmo Mixed ................ Port Hope Mixed vi: Bethlny†Toronto Mixed Vin Whitby 3de 1 Toronto hxpxosa ................ Port Hope Mall via Petexboro. . . . Toronto â€ï¬xed ‘ia Lorneville. .. . uglibunou Mixed. .............. Toronto Mail ................... Coboconk Mixed... ..... ....... Port. Hope Expreu via Peterboro Bellevx 19 Mixed. . . . . . . FRAMES; . - SASH . . . .. DOORS . . . VW M I ii THE GRAND TRUNK R’Y. ROYAL Thev regul'ete the lcwels, stimulate tone and brace up u e whole ....system..... PLAN SIFI'ER MA- CH INERY Grades ...... S‘VAIN, Indigestion, Constipation, Biliousness, Dyspepsia, Rheumatism, Elysipelas, Sick Headache Sallow Complexion, Pains in the back, That awful tired feeling. And all diseases caused by P003 BLOOD or a Tonpm LIVER. «1 Unu- 1am i “F. '5‘???“ G.T.R. LOCAL TIME-TABLE DEPARTUBES. F lour DODD’S IVER PILLS I. B. O. RAILWAY. I. B. k 0. SERVICE. G T. R. SERVICE. AT AU. DRUCCISTS. GEO. WILDER, Agent. “FORâ€"â€" ooooooooooooooo 0.9...“ on: Port Hope .......... In Toronto ............ {éuh'ï¬'riiiéï¬fffffiiifi' Port Hope .............. dram Toronto. ....................... ARRIVALS. 2145px!) .515p.m "1100:5111 220px!) 250. P" n m u m... w. u. 081930088 mwmzmmsmm ï¬ddddtwtv mummmmmwm ..11 20 mm . V. w - tnndstolosn atoperoegl'wfl“ on Farm or fawn Terms to suit borrowers. â€I McSWEYN ANOE Try Our Job D A»: omiiece u u - ~ repayment “I" am gnaw. L. v. 013052603. aA. 1; MSVMW. Conn} weer, etc. 0‘- -. . - mmwmozmpwnamy" Lila-y and Fern“. my. Lindsn‘ on.†Book, Kati-5 We are lowing monéyxd'dâ€: a norm in sums Inge :nd 31‘ on the beaten: and 1: the '5'! “W9! inane». We do no: Icnd on mated“ : ‘m‘unduugud is preputd to lawn" In†km or pmduczm qu pron“ ‘ R J- I'MBCHUH R. SIMPSON, PHYSICIAS Oï¬ce and residence, Russell Sm Lindsav, second door crest of York 5 Oflice hours, 9.00 4.31. to 13.30 5.2!. ; 1.36 mu. to 3 9.11. and 7 to 8 P. :1. DR. J. Snapsâ€: Gnduare o! Utm.of Trinitv (14.. Toronto. Bid College 0! Ihx‘sicnm Surgeons. 0n. Lag: Rockwood Asylum. ngston. Gard am; on, Lindsay District. ndsav. Feb. 4th. 180:. : 1v1‘.'“- “ J“"""" "ital. m. Scimitar-s m m M‘ “mum Bunk 0! Menu :1 x-nev 091'" on mue- u 1 - . ,2' '0â€- '9" .Lin yin»: excl: ram ;-.l F. D. [GORE 30 \Vellington- st. Surgeon :ZoGac saé surgeon to G. T. R., Lur'sa) disms OEoeHou lanolin“: 2to4pn 7 to 8 p m. unpuoxn No. 43. Ofï¬ce and Residence Corner of Lindsay u m 836/! St. eets. Um of Roy: Colioge of Pbys‘dtfld Mnbumh. Licenmw d lid-t5 Edinburg Spedl' ttncutmn giwn to Km md dine-nee 0! women. Telev'ncv c So 92-35. *u RISTERS, Soï¬cuors. Xxxâ€"i5. 'ex . 05c overOnnl-ioi‘ack, KenLSL Linduv D. I. "(INTYREL T. STF'A†Solicitor for the Ontario Bwi Money tn loan at lowest rates. 05' No. 6. William street south. P. DEVLI\ V BAR RISTEB so 'LICITC‘R etc. Cour zy Crcvcauofl Clerk ohhe Peace, my. 05cc, Room“ 5 not of Ken: smog nediately W" e, a; vbhi i 7;, Kiwi M I . I y 3 0‘ JOHN McSWEYN DONALD R ANDRE†U and residence north-en umbrldge sts. Telephone 51. U of Toronto University Media} Faculty. 3150 graduate of Tnniry Univ sity, Toronto, and Membe of College: Physician and Surgeons, Ontario. 05: South-east corner Lindsay and Rani streets. Telephone "'7 â€" Zilv. Honor gnduste of Toronto Unive' College of Dean! Surgeon-L A]: t n: method: adopted and pcices moderate Ofï¬ce m2: Anderson Nuclear}, u‘ boutâ€"E. Extncu teeth without pein by Gm (\ Idmniswmd by him to: 26 yew Nth 5 He studied the gas under Dr. Cotton, 31 theoriginator of gu for extracting bean writes Dr. Neeltnds that he has given 186,417 peranns without an accidczzt. l I. postal and before coming. Cite: as the Simpun House. Lindsay. M MOORE Jacxsox’ï¬ar- :.- Hm (W ‘ All the 11:3th improved ha. y padormed. (Ranges :1 over Gregory's Drug more, corner i streets. -â€"3] -1y. Honor Graduate of tomato Cr: College. 9f_Denul Sutgeone. Boiler Grudmte of Toronto Univ {nausea o! the Royal Cunege ox On‘vio OFFICEâ€"94 Kent-at. stow. Upposioe the Pus: va. Member Boyd Dental C for Good Dentistryâ€"34. DENTIST, DENTIST, , H. HOPKINS. BARRIE- - mp. cINTYRE STE“ A}: T, 8:15 OLAUGHLIN and hieâ€"{MAW Baum-nus, Soucrrons. c.. R. c. s. McLEAN neunsr. - . R_13TERS. SOLIC! TO RS 1. WHITE, GRADUATE Of Toronto Univomirr mum HONEY T0 LOAN. . A. E. VROOMAN .SUTTON, . J EFFERS. . NEELANDS A. GILLESPIE, .C.P. AM‘SJ; DENTIST, DENTIST 6 PER CBN T g RIOJEY ! 'ental Collel AND}: G. H. HOPKIM. 'ALTERS ï¬e; Ont n UNDSAY. 9 c.mer held lM’DSlY. "cram RSON, BAR etc 05.6.. U EXJAC g'NDS‘V LING "W inâ€! 1 cm