[NDSA â€â€œâ€˜ Y 1912 >m’n and Total â€tented“ Costs of Not 9 >ublication an. a {2.50 39 14 Pom â€I 2.50 946 Not M S. 2.56 1483 Pam, LLS. , 2.67 19.67 Potomac 2-63 17-70 Patentoa 2.83 26.02 Patented b.1152. 2.50 9.90 Not Pat. l 2.50 10.35 Potent“ p.50 10.36 ram E50 10.38 Patented .50 10.38 Patented lie County of Victor“. p County of Victoï¬. [911, will proceed u; is of land, for the up. above set out, to- taxes and costs m Lindsay. in the a“ enoon -2 Mday the LIE, County Treasurer_ ovemh or L‘Svd )9] ] â€" l LESSONS MAIL ‘ touch and fingering orcrcome stiffness I owrcwnc weakness no and prI‘pel' accent with cxpmssion Practice: for public perform- .cte explanation of lt’x‘ encountered, and and logical way to em will l-e- «em for t-n luv 5‘\‘ NF. Advice {oblcnw Slim IL. ii MILTON Lindsay, Ont. ugh I'lllil’5t‘ in Busi . uni, IL‘PlI‘Fl‘ Inky 0l ~nv- ui’ ~ hools, Toronto Open - krill "esv Head Coll- ‘La ,‘ w. Pro-n . Lral l; I>llld>$ t’ (‘rcrz'zu'cl s to Use Cranberries. . cranberry sauce boil 3 oen‘iex‘ in two cupfuls 02 they are tender. Then brougb a colander to re- -.<. return to â€to ï¬re, add i‘;l.".l‘.l:‘.ff-.". sugar, boil for ncl turn into molds. l‘)‘ jelly boil two quarts i1: :1 «war: 4 1‘ wafer un- twullvi' :Iml then strain :1 1.»..1. llev't the juice vb min: ('I it a pound of gar [three quarters of a 9 used if a tart jelly is until llh‘ surar is dis. m :1»: bun. Turn into r multlk. ranlwrries are a conven- . little suave is wanted I fruit i< not at band. of water are needed for 1 fruit and a pound of the sugar In the water 8 it. boils turn in the be!5 util the skins crackâ€"n0 ut the fruit with a skullâ€" . into a. jar. Boll tho minutes longer, turn it as and seal. shortcake may be mad. 1 biscuit or cake founda- cranberry sauce. Th0 the fruit is whole 13“ tly cake. ole with raisins Ii. lacuna! Five Rose li’lour...:..;.2..-. 1. .. .. . Royal Household............3.00 Purity............. ............ 3.00 Quaker ....290 Harvest Queen . ....... ......2.}.5 Big Diamond...._..............2;:_8$ Thistle-down.... ........".-...2.75 Ivary. White Wonder... ............2.50* Rolled nuts, 90 lbs ... ..... .275 f CO‘ALâ€" Best _Scranton $7200 cash with order. Car of .Windsor salt just arrived. Highest prices for Alsike and Red clover, grade one. Terms Cash. An early set- tlement of overdue accounts solicited. ment in Simpson. W. Va... that I: over thirty years old and as nice and perfect as the day it was setâ€. C. B. N W, Fain mount, W. Va. Slate, sandstone, brownstone and marble have all ‘ proved failures. ' Gnanite i~z going; the same way. No Stone c-tn coupare with White Bron: Durability. Artistic Effects of cauty Arthur Graham, :' LEETWOOD P.0. l GUN REPAIRING l All makes of Guns repaired, Stocks made for Guns. Skates Sharpened and Repaired, Saws Gummed and Sett, Horse Clippers Sharpened equal to new, Locks Fitted with Keys. Cream Separators Repaired, General Machine Repairs at. Geo. W. Shephard’s William St. Forth ' Next Post Building, Lindsay Y .-P l M w mun-Acronzo O l, Wâ€" mm cc '- ‘ homage a 7030960 ’ “Prism Brand ' Read Mixed Paint Me lencan ‘ Co. .QQNADIS an PAC“! I'c WINNIPBG and VANCOUVER Daily Transcontinental Service via The All CANADIAN ROUTE tandard and Tourist Sleepers T0 CHICAGO '!‘Z..l.. ruins daily Excellentservice " i» H: connections at DetrOIt for Florida and at Chicago for CALIFORNIA and Paciï¬c Coast Point: l-‘ 1' rI-st'l'vzttlons an d information T. C. MATCHET’I‘. Agent Dentistry . promptly attended to day or night I harm‘s moderate. 285 __: Bronze M o n u-l I‘ey‘or County, ' Hr. Jumbo IcGlypn, of Pension .. Too- vins’ homestead will one: «wick-sale 1912, his farm stool: and implements and all household goods to the highestbidder. Mr. Joseph Moeh‘an will wield the hammer and all goods will be sold. to the highestbidder. , _. FARMFORSALEORTORENTâ€" ing 86 acres adjoining the Village of Kirkï¬eld, '66 acres cultivated, balance pasture. Brick house, born 50 x 30 on stone foundation, chad 60 x 34, watered by two wells. This form In in a. good data of cui- tivation. Possession Mmh 1,. or year later. Apply to owner, John Monroe, Kirkï¬old, Ont. _ ‘ _.___________._..â€"'â€"â€"-â€"â€"-..__._ TUESDAY, FEB. c.â€"Byceo. Jack- son, auctioneer. Sale of form stock and Implements, the "prop- erty of J. J, Porter, lot 7, con. 14, Hanvers. Sale at 1 o’clock p.131. M ‘ TUESDAY,_ FEB. 20.-â€"By Elias: ‘Bowes, auctioneer. Sale of form; stock and implements the property of Angus Murray, Lot 7, Con. 11, Mr "osa. ‘9. “ ' 1 o'clock pan. .______â€"â€"Lâ€"~’________â€"â€"-_____. TUESDAY, FEB. 20.. â€"- BY .305. I Mee‘haï¬, auctioneer. Sale of Tim; stock and implements, the pro- perty of P." Hickey, lot 7, con. '6. Ops. Sale at one o'clock pan. .â€" "lIlO RENT â€"â€" THE EAST HALF l0F lot 4. in the 6th con. of the Town- ship of Ops, containing 100 acres. Land in good state of cultivation, Good house with stone cellar, good barn with stone foundation and other outb uildings. Small orchâ€" ard. Ploughing almost ï¬nished. For further particulars apply to S. E. Roddy, Reaboro, Ont. - _._________._.__._â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€" WANTED â€" STRONG WOMAN, 25 years of age or over’ to work on a. farm ï¬ve miles from City of Re- gina, Sask. Must be good plain cook and rtidy housekemer. Wages $20 per month. Apply at once to Mrs. D. ‘ McEachern, Box 1021, Regina, Sack. ¢â€"â€"-'.â€"â€"- ON MONDAY, FEB. 12, 1912.-â€"BY Elias Bowes, auctioneer, 35 head good grade stock, 6 head of young horses, pigs and implements. Sev- eral cows due about sale time. The Cam, Brown schoolhouse, on lot 3 stock is good. Property -of F. B. 1 7, con. 12, Mariposa. Sale at ' one o’clock. l l __ _ _.__,_____.._._.â€"â€"â€"-. _... ON WEDNESDAY, FEB. 21, 1912.â€" By Elias Bowes, auctioneer, on lot 18, con. ‘7. MorlpOso, the farm stock and implements of G. A. Washington. Stock' good. 'Sale at one o’clock sharp. M FRIDAY, MARCH 1,. -â€" By Thou. Onshore, auctioneer. nonsmotlvr clearing sole of farm stock ond in). plemen'ts on. the Syndicate. Farm. lot 24, can. 11, Fenelon, the prop erty of Mr. John Aldous. Sale of. 12 o’clock noon and without re- serve as Mr. ’Aldous has sold the farm. . THI‘HSDAY, FEB. 15.â€"By Thoreau (ashore, ouctionear, sale of farm stock and implements, the proper- ty of William Sims, Lat 11. God. 6, Fenelon. Sale at 1 pm. Mfr-â€" WEDNESDAY, FEB. 21. â€" By 'I‘hos. Ca shore, auctioneer, sale of farm stock and implements. the property of Mitchell Herron, lot 11, con. 7, Fenelon. Sale at 1 o’clock. TUESDAY, FEB. 20. -â€" By Joseph Moehan, auctioner. Sale of form stock and implements, the property Ops. Sale at 1 p.m. 10. Ops. may ‘. 1.7 i . #1....†‘ 4,»-- , l on or «coat when: <1:de m . Lot 43, SJP. ‘R. Eldon, contain- : - because it will glvehyou something to of Patrick J.’ Hickey, lot 6-, con. .7, . DR. J. M. RICE Veterinary Sun-Na Honor Graduate of the Ontario Vol» L'rinzu‘y College, Post-Graduate ROS' a1 Veterinary College, 3.1.0 of the London School of Tropical mm m: LINDSAY nonunion, 6-3:: A l ' . n H b 3' “g, ‘ n tumult†.‘ul I . ‘ .l â€â€5150"!!! I'll). i . ,'.'.U?'£uu “Jul, true VIN?" _ Alfred imp“! m More “at†m.wmn§ it m. cm mi: . , .â€"/ ' .‘t, ' h .' . » gun--‘Tuai .fâ€"-- ..m , came'th’ana "Eagle-lee. morthree you to marry themévery'nlce follows.†theyunay be. and they will show you’ heaps of ‘ attentionâ€"all thong that Cousin Katherine will let comé’_ueur, 7 you-undue you're â€young and Ins, experienced you may lose your. midi a littleblt. But do remember that?" losing your head and being flattened and amused isn‘t falling In love. â€A" sman mumt‘be able to make mutate, him for himself. and that self must be worth‘l'oving. .for nothhg'else Is; any good in the end. And now I’ll tell you my storyâ€"just in a few wordsâ€" think about. “I’m thirty-two now. When I was nineteen. a year older than you, I cared for a man and be for me. We cared for each othere-mrr'lbly. But he was poor. and. not only that, become from people whom mine looked down upon. We loved each other so much. though. that I would have married him In spite of all. but, my relations thought it would ruin my life, and they ad- visedand persuaded and implored and insisted, until I was weak enough to give the man up. They took me to. Europe. and because I had somemoney an Italian prince mgmet In Rome wanted to my me. They almost or gued me into consenting. and though they didn't quite the news went home to Kentucky that I was engaged. the man I really loved-loved dearly all the time. though I was trying to for- get himâ€"believed It. Why shouldn‘t be, since I‘d given him up for the rea- sons I had? He was Catholic, and he went into a monastery we have In Kentucky and became a monk. No one ever wrote to me about It. All my friends thonghttbedess I heard-of him the better. And two years later, when I went back homeâ€"not engaged. and thinking In my heart that there was _and always would be only one man for me in the worldâ€"it waste learn that that man had taken the ï¬nal vows which would separate him from earth- Iy love forever. “Ob, Betty. you don‘t know what I Juflered. I’d been saying .to myself that when I saw him againâ€"as I meant toâ€"I would know by his eyes at the ï¬rst glance whether he still cared as much as ever. and If he did I would ask him to marry me. But I never saw him again. except with the eyes of my heart, and I always see him so. Not an hour passes that 1. don't see him 90.". . “You poor darl‘ï¬ig!" I exclaimed. And there was a note ln-ber voice that made my eyelids sting. "How little I guessed. And youm zoo cheerful and even-merry.†, p . , . “One Isn’t In the would to the a we: blanket," paid Sally. “Besides. om- :Isn’t actively miserable every minute ‘ for years because one his thrown awaiy one's chancevof real happiness. One gets along contentedly encugh except . in the bad hours. whenlnsteud of be- Ing a mild gray the world Is Ink black. But I haven't told you Ibi.‘ to get sympathy. dear. It hasn't, been. quite easy felting, for I don‘t talk much about the “dew dawn things in myself. I've told. ybu In the hope that you'll remember me and my wasted years if your chance comes to be happy, even If It should be a chance which you think, in a worldly way. wouldn‘t be prudent or what your peo- ple would like. People have no right to try and order our lives} no matter how near they may be to m1.~ It's we (who have ‘to live our lives, not they." For a minute we Kwere both silent. and then Sally said quietly. as if she were glad to speak: "Here comes. some one we've seen before. Do you recog» nice, him? And shall you bow?" Vivace gave such a loop that his leash. which, I'dlbeen holding careless- ‘ Iy. was jerked out of my band. It was my brown man. Who was coming â€"-Jlm Brett. . My face dld‘feel red! Vivace was making such a fuss over him- that Sully . could hardly . help gaming whose the dog had been before he, was. mine. I: I made the best of It. “01' course I rezognize him, and of course I shall bow." said I." “Be we! very kind to me on the dock when I @wcb ct Iot- tch." ’ . . I , Bally. didn't‘moko anymburkubout , .Vlvnco’o mnthoughtby this time be m "mama. mrmhwm It: ' hi.- .W-«fefl.m. lawn: ms» t ' , 3' MIMI. "Oh“. . ,_ upcobll www.mlpboord. “Br- “7. “and; ‘WWNW ’°" Ah†31p; ._.. .15 . asked. . l " 'of..ul"qlmh'd._you for It." the Mr. Brett thanked her and. of course. mid “gleaned he mom. {‘1 up "WW" Ridden. lambs at muscular ouutum out the thought had occurred to me that, he might have lost. hï¬ pmployment at the club. But‘I only anointed that it we: ‘ u'Iovely day‘for’o holiday and that I :dldn't believe he could and a better place to spend part of it than in Gen- mr minus-rm.» *ane you fed the. squirrels yet?†be ., “Oh, no. Can- one do that?†1 ex- claimed. “1 should love It." ' " ,“lIi‘ay I go and get. some peanuml" be said to Sally. . “Do.†she sold In â€pleasant, friend- ly way, which was Just as nice for hlm as it had been for Stan or nicer. “we will go on to the wistaria arbor and wait for you. There are always lots of squirrelsthere." , Vivace broke away from me again and followed him. but still Sally aeom' ed to take no notice. "That‘s certainly u very handsome fellow." she said. “and we can be sure that he's worthy to be trusted. because the wrong sort of men don‘t Jump overboard at m to save the lives of children they don't know. That Is why I feel perfectly safe in being nice to him and letting you babies. I reckon be Is o. south- ern man.†- “How can you tell?" I asked. “0b. a little by that good looking brown face of big. perhaps. but. more by his way of speaking. You Eugllsb people lump up all together for our ‘American’ accent: but we can tell whether a person Is<from Massachu oetts or New York or Illinois or Kerr tucky and so on just as you know Dev ou_s_liire from Lnncyshire." The \vistaria arbor. which we soon reached. was like a fairy lmwer hung with thousands of amethyst lumps burning perfume Instead of oil. and the moxzwuf we sat down a troop of the fairy residents. cleverly disguised as gray squirrels. with adorable lltllv fact-s, began excitedly 1;.) talk as over \‘I'ltb bonds on one side. flu-y criticised our feathers. our (mosses. our bats and finally approved of them so far as to decide that We were creatures the; might know. They stole nearer. by (was. by fours. then need away amiu. gray and soft as undyed ostrich {cath- crs. blown by the sweet smelling breeze, when they saw my brown man coming back with Vivace. I was afraid that Vivace would make a dash and frighten tbvm. but he evi- dently knows how to treat Squirrels as equals. not us odibles. for he behaved himself like the little brindled gentle man that be Is. as Mr. Brett produced six small. brown paper bags. crammed full of the mosl extraordinary objects. They looked something like wood carvings of un ripe bean pods. but It appeared thu' ‘ they were peanuts. They smelt good ’ rather like freclzly roasted coffee. am when you shelled then: out of Nick woody pod» they were urge, fut beads corered with, I thin brown skin couldn't help feelingcc If I hpd known Mn,‘Brett for a longtime. he he not by us. on the bench under the wilful“. helping Sally‘ a'nd‘ me feed the mom rein and shelling peanuts for us to out too. Idobellevethere mus'tbeoome- thing special about peanuts. which gives you a homey sort of feeling If you share them with . ‘ e. The: formasortyofbondo goodfenow- Ship. and I can't mncy ever being prlm‘wfth a man after you had eaten peanuts with him. . , Mr. Brett didn't tell us much about himself, but from the few things he did tell I gathered the impression that he has led an open 111', adventurous sort of life. He showed that he knows a great deal about horses. and I rather hope he has been a cowboy like "The Virginian," In a delightful book I have found In Mrs. E88 Kay's library. In- leed, I imagine the hero of the story must have looked 1110 Jim Brett. It Is a splendid type. Sally. and be talked about books. He spoke about some college In the went «there be had been. and l was glad that he was a university man. though why [should cure I don‘t know. Any- way. Stan'woul'd be at up und noun- Ierlng In the subject- which my arown mu of the steam â€4,8311: Woodbum ducuued while the Inuit :clo frilked about their shoulder-o. But :benBun doesn't cm to talk too long than: anything except hunting or meeting or polo or motoringâ€"not even Gravely he looked on- bridge. at which We my! be local I «new In Adm“ 1'51; "on" toilinve any itill. ï¬lmy-o cup Minn"! knew you and Mrs. Stu. s reconï¬rm that one permuzw cog ~: swelled Just as good â€Landï¬ll-sum Amerhl. And It ought to be like .‘Ithat In, t new country, where you haven‘t“ aristocrat-y." l ' . “We have two arkfpcrndcs.†on she. “We :0 one Mfervvfhlulyom‘f’o: vou have only one We have our oi. families (maybe they Wouldn't seen very old to you: and we have wealth they bothfthlnk us much of them selves. on your uriswuzxcy dues-um .uighty little of each other." “I mulduod‘ersmnd nu armor-mes of brim! In 1.1mm like Ame-rim." I wait rook «In den-cw. “but It's no good amps from‘tbe old couu~ try at all If you‘re to hamper your selves with anything else. Now. If I hadn't heard Mrs. Stuyvesant-Knox ‘and Mrs. -\Tan as meat mm; 1 C1; 3’ -" . .vifnkâ€"fqn, Ido wtuï¬lyfliï¬i 9" .. i4 . Jr\, @505 I do beam more m be comma modal about peanut: should have supposed that In Aim-r Ica a man like Mr. Brett. for instant-e. could be received anywhere. As It Is. I supposeâ€"no. nobody Could despise him. For myself. I'm proud to know such a brave man. Butâ€"but of 00mm we‘re not likely to meet him again. are we?" "In society?" laughed Sully. "Poor follow. It' doesn't look nun-I) like it now, does It? Though I believe he's a man in a. thousand and worth six of any of those that Cousin Katherine will let you know. counting I'oner. il:(“‘,;:ll ho is my relative." "It svvlns a pity," I said. with a fur Hu- mismkes of the Whole u .1" Hr snuwllllng. "‘..'lvrn’~' :I pity?" “Oh. I hardly know. .sn't it?" "Yes. And I'm Bun that's what on war. handsome friend I: thinking." . "Do you suppose lieâ€"minds?" “I reckon bewouldllketogoon be .ng acquainted withyou, Betty. um nave the chances of other men. You'n not an unattractive girl, you know- or maybe you don't know. And be’: human. I hove a port of Idea be‘i try to make some change In his we: of’llfe, so that It maybe poulblo u meetyou cum.†When Sally uld'thIl I had the odd est â€nation, like a prickllng In all my veins. I longed to at her If she wen Joking. or if she godly did think thal Jim Brett was enouï¬ Interested In m to take so much trouble. But thc words came only as for u the tip of my tongue. and attack to It a If they had been glued mm. W i i £49 Cï¬apter FE: N the afternoon Mrs. Ens Kay end I, In our thin:- uest musllns, went out in the motor. We whiued up Fifth-avenue for sev- “bIocks†(as she called them). turned Into an expensive looking side street and stopped before one of the most enormous buildings I ever saw In my life. it seemed only half ï¬nished, for the steel column: of It: skeleton were cull visible around ground floor and .tbe street before It was still cluttered with brick: and board! and rubbish. In the hallway men were working like active animal- In an Immense cage Suddenly from won: them I now emerge a beauti- fully around “mogul foaming with by “train“ cum In no Ignzt'om. They were M m.: of the “It. Which _do-.- u with ‘uppolllug ’by‘i man in llvory. " V “Goodwin,†I «chimed. "who: «‘6le Everythim * E loco trill-.106 W In my. mambo! mum skeleton an my: comic don set-m extract-d1 \‘xl DOESN'T DISTURB THE s'rom- â€3 it“: n. «i “I I .I t " ’ WW. “Over here. only ~W Ila-“hour. non SXfléulkh are so mm In some won.†mmurked Mrs 835 polled- It's all Well triumph for us to think Americans odd. and we are no comma! to that. for evvrylndy says they are. but that they should think which shut upon us with .‘l vicious map and then tossk-J us up (award It... roof of the world I do hope 0:1.- Ioeuu't experience the Mun- sensation In dying, though In that car; it woul" be worse going down limp up. Before I had time to do more thin gasp wewere at Ibo top. and a: we ' waited for an Inrmut fluisule Mrs» Llurvey Ric-huwum 'I‘aylour‘s door ll .bould have liked to pinch my «books I test my fright had left we pale. Vic has a friend who lives In al nut near the park for the season. and ‘ tire I was taken â€there. I thought it« quite beautiful. but though the friends I 2 countess and very rich the tint Isi poor campared with this topbeavy cat I or Mrs. Tuylour's. ‘ l l .By; ï¬lls time we were In the lift. ‘. (To no cocci-nod.) ; __"’"_â€"â€" l _.-__ ,m. I , C Cures Old Folk 5 Coughs ; ' ""'" l ACH, BASES A’I‘ ONCE - AND: cums THOROUGHLY. l " CATARRHOZONE" A BOON "ml MANY THOUSANDS. l l l l A Because you are old is no reason for suffering with everlasting cough- ingâ€"those terrible chest troublesl and dimcult breathing can be thor-p oughly cured with Catarrhozone. ’ You simply breathe the healing va-‘ por of Catarrhomne, and instantly: its rich balsamic fumes are carried, by your breath into the tiniest rev ceases of the nose, throat, chest,’ bronchial tubes and lungs. l Just think of itâ€"a. direct breath- nble medicine, full of soothing anti-1 septic pine essences that reached every sore, congested membrane in ' l two seconds. ’ l I No drugs to take -â€"-' nothing to harm or sicken the storm ' och, because (‘atarrhozone is thef purest, safest cough, catarrh and} cold remedy ever devised. : “ For many years,†writes Rich-, ard McCallum, Stirling, Ont.., “ I; have sullered from Catarrh, and ': continually hawkcd and coughed, so: that my throat was always in an in- l flamed, irritable condition. l " motors' medicine did' not help 5 me in the leest, and all other reme-l dies I used were quite useless. . 1111 one case it was time wasted In snuf- ' ting powder up the nose; in another! using a greasy ointment, and so on. Not one of them was the least. ‘bit spoken of, and tried it. Really it benefited me more in a few hours than years of treatment with doc- tors' and other lac-called remedies. " Receiving such immense beneï¬t, I-continued using .Catorrhozone. and In a. few weeks I was completely cured of Catarrh and throat troub- lo." Get Catarrhozone to-duy. Large size costs $1, and luster two months. Smaller sizes 25c._ and 50c. All dealers, or the Cutarrhozone Com- pany, Buaalo, N.Y., and Kingston, Ont. of good_ . " 1 board Catarrhoxono fovorobly' M ADVERTISE IN THE WARDER â€3??? 1-, , . ,1 .11, 5 “ . 33m NG GORDWOOD ‘ . ' ~ . f - ‘ ' rJ make room. Cull and get prices on â€Main: “"4Ҡd“ Jan would be furlou'o If you said they I! TfluilntD-vlï¬rtments." ' ‘ 5 ' ,all kindsofwood. I! BIKE [m (0., [Wild PHONE 7 '1 A A Child's Slipper Bag. If you ure a lover of children you .. will/not an In make glad the bend- . â€Vi-"mm m‘"“"""‘- l of your favorite little girl friend by giving her a dainty bag to carry no: slippers In when she goes to dam-mg . school. This you can make from threeofonrths of a yard of n dnrk c01- ored silk And the same amount of l bright flowered satin or brocade for a lining. Cut the pieces the same size. fold over once. saw together and run a double casing around the top two inches from the edge. Ribbon is run through these casings so the bag can be drawn up tight. Sewed flat to the lining Is a little patch pocket that has a flap whhb buttons over Its opening. In It is o tiny hand mirror so the little lady can arrange her curls before entering tho room where the class is held. Another pocket contains :1 small pm hock ï¬tted out with various sizes and kinds of pins. not forgetting several small and a few large safety pins. In this pocket Is a folding shoe buttoner. and in a similar pocket Is a little purse where the child can safely carry her handkerchief and the change for her fare. ' The slippers and fan are carried In the main portion of the bag. Such a bag would be acceptable and pleasing to any little girl who knows the joys of attending dancing class. - Linoleum Brightener. of To make a good linoleum brighten ~ save all the candle ends and dripping; to which add a little turpentine. Apply the polish to the linoleum or oilcloth and you will and that it will serve you just as well as the purchased beeswu and turpentine mixture. for which you will be asked to pay nothing less thin a quarter. - boon-ï¬â€"coâ€"o â€" o . In tho Family. Sheâ€"Did you ever see u mulching Indy? Gran WIdower-Yec; I married one. -Now York Mall. _â€"_â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€" IN MEMORIAM. In remembrance of our dear moth- er, Mrs. Dorothy E. Rodd, Mark pose, who departed this life on Feb, 12, 1911.. One year is gcne and still we her, Folks may think the wound is healed But they little know the sorrow Lies w thin the heart concealed. miss May we when this life is ended, Meet with mother over there, In that pure celestial city, ’Neath our Saviour's gentle care, H ER DA III II TICIIS. â€" Custom Tailoring Suite t’nade to order $12.50 to $30. Srcial suiting Indigo Blue c case from. Also, all kinds of Dry and Dyeing an] Repairing. â€" Trousers 82.50 to $8.00 $16.00, 300 samples to Steam Cleaning, Pressing, . o quot!’uclf0r*u'vlnlldood‘m'uuru . 'J. ELMARRS ‘ Agent for Crown Tailoring, Toronto Kent St, 5 doors out of Benson House . ‘ ' Phone 264-K n. .anyh, .. ""w~ ‘ “-t.~"