I wlll visit my Lindsay oï¬ce EVERY SATUR. DAY. It is situated in the rear of the Dominion snk, entrance from William-59 Parties wanting to buy, sell or rent Farm, Village or Town property. should call and see me. Being acquainted with nearly every man and {am In the County. customers can rely on teaching prompt attention. Charges node. ate.‘ I sell Grain Farms, Timber Lots. Grazia Farms, Private and Business Houses and Lots. J. B. EDWARDS ED. Having taken over the above Livery Bun has made vast improvements and has now one of the most complete and up-to-date liveries in town solicits a share of public patronage Comfortable Rigs, Good Horses, Polite Atten tion wdl be the motto of the new proprietor. RS. -â€"Drop in and see the improvements. The undersigned has opened oï¬ces adWood- ville and! Lindsay. and Is prepared to transact REAL ESTATE, LOAN AND GENERAL INSURANCE NEW PROPRIETOR J. 6. Edwards 6: C0 At Dost! Headq‘usrbers for all kinds of Hardware, bums and American Coal Oil. Keep Out The Cold At the Lich and Beading Stables, just north of the Academy of Music. W EF ache and Dyspepsia, and make you feel better in the morning. , It will work while you sleep, without a gripe or pain, curing Constipation, Biliousne‘ss. Sick Head- Your house will be more comfort- uble and the danger from cold de» creased if your doors end windows ere protected with WEAT-R Westhet Striping tims its cost. From now till Jan. 30th I will oï¬erithe balance of my stock of TOYS and FANCY 60005 at cost. This is a chance seldom offered to se= core goods atIyour own prices. 10 JAMES WORKMAN of fuel and don’t cost much '- A Dollu buys iots of JAHES WORKMAN '. G. EYRES They save much in the FIE IVER ; ~5t6re closed all day Saturday. Du’n‘du a: mavens Bren. say about; the proï¬ts that others have. but. here say we can sell for lessproï¬t than others. If we had the great expense of other dealers and slung on lots of ofï¬ce style, we would probably want as much proï¬t as others. Farmers and working men. can you not; call to mlind when we were boys, when we went to the old grist mills where the miller, the one man about the place, did all'the Work. It‘s different: now. They have their book-keepers, check and ticket b00155 bv the cart. load, and dozens of other expenses to keep up and still to sling on all this farmers have to be paid, and who pays .it '3 It is the farmers and working men of the country. On'this we invite successful contradiction. Farmers, bring your wheat to the Farmers' Mill; working men bring your dollar to the Farmers' Mill. Lindsay, and we are prepared to stand to what we say and to give more good flour for the‘ bushel m‘ wheat or the dollar than Sou mt. get elsewhere. If we than you (an. get ulsmxhcru. 11' “'0 get your pan-unugv. we can giw you full value in flour for your wheat and money», not. (mo-half in flour and the. other half in style, but; full val- ue in good family flour. (live us a trial and $00 that. the little one- horse Furmers’ Mill can do in the way‘of fziir dealing. We are willing to istzin‘d'o'xj {all by the verdict of the honest farmers of the surrounding country; ' been an effort put, forth to freeze us out of the flour business in this town we wish to be distinctly understood, },that we are here to stay if cheaper iselling counts for anything. 01‘ course we are meeting with any amount of oppositionâ€"that is what we are here for. and to be satisfied with less profit than other dealers of the town. They may think that this is only a blow. but we can‘t help it. We are determined to sell and ex- change flour for less proï¬t than others. and can and will do it. too. and are determined to not have it, said that farmers bring wheat to Lindsay to exchange for flour and only get. back one-half of what they bring. The farmers' trade is the trade. we court and also the trade of the working men of the town and country. The shabby genteel trade we don't. want: its the working class we are after and that is the class of customers we want. and if we get the honest workers of the. town and Country we are satisfiedf and in con- clusion will say, farmers bring your wheat to the Farmers' Mill, working men bring your dollar to the Farm- ers' Mill. Lindsay. and we will guar- antee to give you more flour for the money or wheat than you can get in the country or out of it. We think we hear other dea.ers say. “Oh, this is all very ï¬ne for a. blow; we can soon run that little Farmers’ ; Mill to the wall." Our answer tof this is come and try it: it will prob- ably b- a bigger job than you made calculation on. We have nothing to Farmers of Victoria County, -â€" Owing to the disappointment in getâ€" ting a power at a reasonable rater the Farmers' Mill at Lindsay has for the present quit chopping, but inâ€" tends to continue to exchange good flour for wheat. and other grain. and is in a position to do. better by the farmers than is done by others. You as farmers may be ready to ask how Can the Farmers’ Mill do better than others. exchanging flour for wheat. The answer to that question is sim- ply this : our expenses are lower; we. pay no high rates of rent, taxes and other expenses that the larger deal- ers have to pay; we have no high- salaried employees such as bookâ€" keepers etc.; no ofï¬ce expenses for telephones or telegraphing; in fact and pay no Salaries to anyone, and we put. on no style, do our own work it. makes the Fe mers‘ Mill the! cheap- est run institution of the kind in this section of the country. We will here say to farmers and others wanting to buy flour in ton, half-ton or quarter- ton lots. we will not be undersold, and to the working man that wants to make his dollar go the farthest, come to the Farmers' Mill for your flour. and if others sell it. cheaper. they will sell without a proï¬t. We, are determined to do a fair share of the flour business of tnis town. and not have it said as has often been Said‘ that the users of :lnur Could go to the neighbouring towns and Vâ€- lages and buy flour manufactured in Lindsay after paying freight both ways and then have it cheaper than they could buy it in Lindsay. We will at all times keep ,f'lnd Hour on hand. and after an experience of (n‘er a. quarter of a century in the tit-anu- facture and handling of lluur. we think We are safe in saying that we have not to go to any iuzller and ask nim if the flour is good. but can determine on the quality of tho-flour by looking at. and examining it. and that too without the aid of a. mag- nifing glass. and although there has 'I. FINLEYCmanagor. “ I have been aï¬iicted with kidneytrouble T for about ten years and have tried several} remedies but never received any real ‘ beneï¬t until I started taking Dean’s ! Kidney Pills. My back used to constantly ‘ ache and my urine was high colored and milky looking at times. Since I have ï¬nished the third box of Dean’s Kidney Pills I am happy to state that I um not: bothered with backache at, all end my. urine is clear as crystal. ~ I feel conï¬dent that these pills ero‘tho best kidney upwind} in the country." d V'_ '- '__ °'__-â€".‘ Laxative Bton‘idfluinine Tablets the remedy that cure. a cold In one day Tania signature is on everyAbo; qt the genuine His love for Jehunc of the exquisite soul, Jehane of the Fair Girdle, Jehane of the seaâ€"green eyesâ€"the singleness- of that love and the way it. swayed his lifeâ€"is the heart. of the story; and as for Jehane, the sacriï¬ce she made for Richard, was the greatest sacrifice in the powm- of woman to make. Fur worse than death was it, to her shrinking soul, and called for every atom of her beautiful courage. for the sternest en- deavor of her lofty nature. Mr. P. M. Burk, who is a well-knowï¬ resident of Glen Miller, Hastings 00., 0nt., was amicted with kidney trouble for ten years. So pleased is he at having found in Doan’s Kidney Pills a cure for his ail- ments, which he had begun to think were incurable, that he wrote the following statement of his case so that others simi~ larly afflicted may proï¬t by his experience: ‘( T knqun ku_ -m:-a.-.1 __:-_L L; x “Richard Yea-and-Nay," by Maurf ice Hewlett, is one of the revelationsg in history, modernly treated; a work" which shows what 'a. wonderfullyj fascinating thing history may after; all become. Mr. Hewlett is a great? master with the brush of English; and has made such warm-colored, such rich, such glowing portraits of at least two people, that. a, memory of them will always be a gladness to recall. This is the love story of Richard Coeur de Lion. a record of; ï¬erce and ï¬tful passions, of desire and loathing, of love and hate, of jealousy and despair. Yeaâ€"and-Nay was a man of strange mixture, of convincing arguments, yet lorever op- posedâ€"heart and brain warring with each other in one life-long struggle; perhaps too gentle. where he should have been master, terrible when he. might have. been more kind. KIDNEY DISEASE FOR TEN YEARS. a crown and kingly robe was scarcely supposed to have a, feeling. an emotion. Of course, Love, Joy, Grief, might be. his companions now and again, but only on state occas- ions, aud just, so long as they behaved themselves in digniï¬ed and proper manner. "The historical novel is practically the only means by which the English schoolboy is likely to get any idea of European history outside Great Brit- ain. This being so, those placed in authority ought to see that among the books within reach of the boys are included historical novels, to see that these are suitable, and to on- courage the boys to read them at times when they Will ï¬t in with the mork being done in school." X lee Hewlett, Toronto: Copp Clark Co. History, of the old-school sort, trained the minds of students to be- lieve royal pOFSOImgOS but bundles of form and ceremony. The man under a child, could anyone in fact, feel in those becrowned, those otherwise ornamental monarchs. If they were not like other human beings, what did it, signify that their birth was such a date, their ascension another date, and their death still another ? Dates. dates. eternal dates ! It was the kind of history that many a youngster into the doubtful path of truant. that made him heart- ily wish there. never had been any past. What possible interest could Turn to the historical novel of to- day. How the old schoolmaster would have held up his horriï¬ed hands at tno very idea of it‘s exist- ing at all ! While many great. eduâ€" cationists are now advocating its use in colleges. And Mr. Fearnsido, also a high authority in matters ccmcvrning school progress, speaking along the same line said : Mr. A. J. Balfour. member of the English Parliament, said recently in a speech which was universally quot.â€" ed: “All education which does not make the person educatcd at home in some great imaginative literature. is an education which mum, leave un- developed somc of the ï¬ner sympath- ies. some of the more valuable quali- ties, which education ought, to de- velop." A Glen Miller Man's Terrible Trial. He Found a Cure at Last In Doan’s Kidney Pills. A KING‘S LOVE STORY, by Mam- 6%zz’, THE WATCHMAN-WARDER: LINDSAY, 0N1. Book Reviews 'Subscrfbe 'tor the Watchmaï¬-Warhér, They are superior to the barred rocks in that they haw. less offal Ei, e, smaller combs and lighter bone: Ethey r10 not however mum to as Eheavy birds. The chickens mature EL'g‘uhckly, and are plump broilers at Eilmost any ‘a'ge. Ethe Whitby, Ont. fattening station. E With regard to the breed of fowl to gbe made use of, the barred plymouth irock has fattened very satisfactorily at the Dominion government poultry fattening stations. At the Bom'lle. Que. station, Mr. Hillhouse faith-(l a number of barred rock cockerels: that when dressed and ready to pack into the cases. weighed eight pounds each. Some of these chickens were exhibit- ed at the fat Stock Show in Guelph. Ont. last December. and were great- ly admired; Whilst they all had bright yellow legs, the Skin of each chicken Was perfectly white. The color of the skin is due to the fecd~ inn'. Not one of the several thousand chickens shipped to England last year from the poultry fattening :sla- tions had a yellow-colored skin. Legs must not be dark or black in color. All other qualities being.r equal. a yellow legged chicken brings the. same price in England as one having white legs. In breeding rocks for table quality. select a male bird with short, legs. and with a. small 10w comb. Tm- English poultryman, remember. buys ‘the head and legs of the chicken,'aml pays less per pound for chickens with long. heavy legs and large combs. Do not develope these useless qualiâ€" tics. J White wyandottes fattod well at, Dr. “'illiams' Pink Pills have re- moved more weak and ailing women [and girls to robust health than anv or medicine excr discowred, “llkh gamut. accounts for their popularity §ihroughout the world. Thcsu pins larc sold by all dealers or may be had 1by mail at 50 cents a Box or six 1boxes for $2. 50. by uddrvssimr the Dr. Williams Medicine C0.. Brockxillv, Ont. A recent. circular from the govern- ment contains this information I'v- garding fowl for the English market. MRS. PETER BEAMER ï¬LLS HOW THESE PILLS WSED HER FROM YEARS OF NEURALGIAC mums AFTER DOCTORS AND OTHER MEDICINES FAILED. Among the best RDOWII and most, respected residents of- the township of Gainsboro, Lincoln county, Ont., are Mr. and Mrs. Peter Bcamer. For Mr. A. E. Silverwood, manager of the Dundas and Flavcllc fowl departâ€" ment is conducting a, series of meet- ings in the interests of poultry rais- ing. He speaks in the schoolhonscs and punctuares his discourse with captivating selections on tin- gramm- phonc. His talks are able: expositâ€" ions of the gospel according to the hen and are rousing great interest in poultry raising. Brought About Through the Use of Dr. Williams’ Pink a, long time Mrs. Beamer was the vic- tim at a. complication of diseases. which made her life one of almost constant misery, and from which she nearly despaired of obtaining relief. To a reportenwho recently interview- ed her, Mrs. Beamer. gave the follow- ing particulars of her illness,and ul- timate curezâ€"“For sonic nine years I was troubled with a. pain in the back, and neuralgia, which caused me unspeakable misery. The pains in my back was so bad that, Whether sitting or lying down, I suffered more or less torture. My appetite left me. and I suil'ered from headaches accomâ€" panied by attacks of dizziness that left me at times too weak to walk. My nervous system was badly shat- tered, so that the slightest noiSu would startle me. and my sleep at night Was broken by sheer exhaus- tion. I was under the care of three different doctors at various times, but did not succeed in getting more than the merest temporary relief. I also used several advertised mediâ€" 1cines, but with no better results. I [was ï¬nally urged to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and got half a dozen box- es. In the‘ course of a few weeks I inoted considerable improvement. and {as a. consequence, I gladly continued fthe use of the pills for several €months, with the result that every symptom of the malady left me, and I was able to do my housework without the least trouble. As several ‘years have passed since I have used the pills, I feel safe in saying that the cure is permanent, and the result also veriï¬es the claim that Dr. Williauls' Pink Pills cure when other ~medicines fail." The reporter can only add that Mrs. Beamer's present condition indicates a state of perfect health, and speaks louder than mere words can do, the beneï¬t these pills have been to her. RENEWED VIGOR Chickens for Export We begin at once a Big Clearing Sale and hare gone thoroughly through our stock, which is much too heavy for thls season gof the year, and have marked many lines away below wholesale prices. All lines of Men’s Suits, Boys’ Suits, Men’s Overcoats and Bms Overcoats to be cleared at Special Cut Prices. 2|] MYS’ “SALE -â€"Un all lines of Overcoate we other at once one quarter of our regular price. â€"200 Men's Tweed Suite, ranging in price from $3.75 to $12. We offer at one quarter off our regular price. â€"75 Men's Black Worsted Suits. One quarter off our regular price. -Men's and Boye’ Fur Cape are to be cleared at lees than wholesal prices. â€"Everv line of Ladlee' and Mieaee' Jackete ranging in price from $3 to $12. We give one quarter off the price. ~14!) yards good Tweed Dress Goods, 81. wavs sold at 25c per yard, we make short work of these and sell '2! and sell them st. per yard.. .. . . 2 â€"80 yards good heavy Tweed Dress Goods Check and Plslds, negulsr price 40 400. We clear them at .......... o â€"76 yards Black Figured Dress Goods. stood patterns, regular price 75c, 50 We clear them at ............... 0 H. B. ALLAN Bl]. 2C0 Ygrde'o Dark~Hesvy Cloth Dress Goods, mvgularly sold at 180 and 20¢ a per Id- Will clam-the lot at, per yard ............ . .l 0 ............. Directly Opposite Post Ofï¬ce, Kerr’s Old Stand, LINDSAY idloa' Colored Dress Skirtsâ€"For†Ladies' Dress Skirts, all sizes from 36 Inches to 43 Inches. We win give ONE QUARTER OFF THE REGU- LAR PRICE. LINDSAY’S LEADING OVERCOATS, SUITS ARCH. CAMPBELL, 0PENED.. From‘Now Until the 5th of January DRESS GOODS' I EHAEE ESLSPHIBPUH l “ CHAMBER SEEES I “ DINNER SEETS I “ WHITE GRANITE Blï¬ STOCK=TAKING CUT PRICE JEWELERS Watches have to be taken pretty much on trust. Your safeguard lies in buying where you have con- ï¬dence, and where your dealer has will and ability to make you satisï¬ed. If you need a Watch our stock and prices should. interest yzu. Our cuétomers ha‘Qe had over twenty years exSeï¬Ã©ncé of the kind of Watches we sell. The proof of _a gco_d Watch is in the using of it. -â€"If you want some snaps in Flannel. we. hsve them to ofl'er during this sue. â€"5 pieces good quality Navy Blue Plan m}, 26 inches wide, tegulu' price 20,“ . clearing price ..................... .h -Grey Flannel; men! pieces at 12y.- 0 and 15c. clearing price for these. .I â€"Jnat to handâ€"30 pieces Flwnelettes AT BARGAIN PRICE. -Man’o sud Boyo' Fur Cups m to be so‘d at LESS THAN WHOLESALE PRICE. â€"Al_t_ou§ _1 d‘ozen' CW â€"20 Ladies' Fur Man'sâ€"Electric Seal, Opossum, Sable. Astrnchsn. The» are to go at ONE-THIRD OFF TH PRICE. -Wa are overstocked In Ladlea' Muff: and ofl'er some big banning in am Thnudny, Janna-y 3xst, 190:. Rum; In Ommfï¬leï¬iic Sci]. Sui-I: and other makes of Fun. to be cleared st ONE QUARTER OFF THE PRIC PI Blue ï¬rey Flannels BRITTON BROS. G PUHEELAIN LADIES’ MUFFS ...FUR CAPS... H by ac for. J roa< oth' tiï¬c no: C011 yea: «do: 31‘ trus of ( of Bro In {1'01 On P81 for wil Lhc ten 1W 1' CO! bl the O