I! you {Mend bufldhg this an to 00:10th me before nak- lmz contracts. 1 has an tap-to- data phnins pill. {and an. amply J.fl.SOOTflERAN, E C _ . ‘~ uxn AGENT ' C . d o C . SlKumï¬mMmhquOfl. :OOOIOOOOOOOOCQOOOOOO dryeat lumber 7 and 3M amntoedinevarycue. hung. just added. All orders turned out Mptly ...... .. Mbâ€. GEORGE IIGLE Can’t Blame them for Tel- batter than 'for many years, agd'caggp; say too much in praise of v.11ev-ellacï¬iy'~ which tutored my long 103;. Leahh.†“Since I started using Milbum's Heart and Nerve Pills, the smotheting feeling has gone, my heart beat in now regular, the flattering has disappeared, and I have, been wonderfully built 3? through the tonic efect ofthe gills. I nowfeelguoggqand -- '12: 1t. “ 35 3.“ IC 4 x ‘ O‘ ‘ Hap. -- 2g 3 a; vmmn- Basins. EP. Mo. leleBI’. Engino ad Reflex-7:10, Somlowt. Donor. 40 H. P.. Kenn-o no box boiler. “ 48inch“: 14.39 shell Tuba u 37 :12. a 3 “ u 26 u 6* ‘t, 19 a u u “ 50 RP. Mo Ballot 1“than um rig. 3 Woman Inâ€! 24 inch run of stones. novel! Ed in good dupe; (It-838" 118'!“ “W. butting our“: “3113!! our '9“th “" iron- with 40 Inch so"; Moth" for our mm. now. Monk†opply to JOHN LEVEY.n(,31-ondon'l Tomes. But Word. Linday.-44-t.f. a remedy which cures her 0! nervousness and weakness, relieves be! j a and aches,'puts color in her cheek an Vitality in her whole system, she should be anxious to let her sufl'e ' sisters know (of It. ‘ Mrs. Hannah olmes, St. James Street, 5!. John, N.B., relatesherexperience with Ahis remedy as follows :â€"-“ For some years " have been troubled with fluttering of the rt and dizziness, accompanied by a smothering feeling which prevented me from resting. My appetite was poo‘rand I W muc_h run down and debilitahed. Machinery for Sale IN GOOD ORDER THE GREAT DEIEBY FOB WEAK NERVOUS WQIEN WOMEN WILL TALK. ling each other about 1111- burn’s Heart and Nerve It's on) y natural that when a woman ï¬nds PAY WES-bison um novel, dun-3 and w" m m."- 3 h 13' ID “V ( r, ‘ ad‘s: iron ‘or oqu-I .pply ‘ Crsndoll'l Toma. z 44-“. I THE COUNCIL IS DONE WITH THE COMMIHEE What will the Town Take for its Mort. gage on the Burleigh Power ?--- Debenturcs Sold There was a general session of committees on Friday night. The mayor was absent on account of sick- ness. Without classifying the dif- ferent. items with regard so their committees. the business transacted was as follows : Mr. J. H. Sootheran dropped in for a few minutes before the meeting was called to order and asked the counâ€" cil to consider what sum the town would take for its mortgage on the Burleigh Falls power. He had re» ceived a letter asking him to find out. In his opinion, if the town could_ get the amount paid to invest- AAA“ l‘ollcctor Nicolle explained to Coun- cil that a writ had been served him for $200 damages because he as tax coflector. had seized on Helm's goods for taxes when it Was in the sheriffs' hands for rent. Council told hum to assume the responsibility of defend- ing the writ. The taxes have been secured . C. Dcvell 5 taxes ofs Ԥ' 20 “ere reâ€" mitted. V D. (f. Trcw is black \'n0t inspector and truant. ofï¬Cer, and gets $50. The latter «)fï¬cc formerly got 3100 and the 0th or $25 but the both now only bring 350.3112 Trew‘ s Isalury was raised to $75. Smu Frechettc's taxes of $7.80 were ruuitted.‘ S. Champion's ta‘xcs were remitted for the year he was out of town and Blacksmith Carley’s contention that he was the only smith whose tools are asscsscd got him cloar of taxes on them. flow to Cure all Skin Diseases Simply apply “SWAYNE’S OINT- M'ENT." No internal medicine re- quired. Cures tetters, eczema, itch, all eruptions on the face, hands, nose c., leaving the skin clear, white and healthy. Its great healing and (aura.- tive powers are possessed by no other remedy. Ask your druggist for SWAYNE'S OINTMENT. Sample free. and the expense had been heavy. Council declined to be responsible for more than $5. DEBENTURE TENDERS Thn town advertised 337017.34 Worth of 4 per cent. debentuxm for sale. These tenders W are opem d The commissioner will report on the petition to have the sidewalk moved out on Melbournest east. O'Hara. C0 offered $369413} for them delivered in Toronto. Ald. Jacksonâ€"We will have to pay it, but, we are done with that com- mittee. They were instructed how- ever to go on with thier investigaâ€" tion at any reasonable cost. This sum is part of it. The expense in this case is very much like the $400 spent on the Fenelon Falls scheme. Fire Chief Reesor asked for a bar- rel of blue-stone and a striker in his home and one in Fireman Bell's! â€"â€" Granted. The Telephone Co. sent the nauâ€" yearly account for the instrument at ex-chief‘ 5 house. It. appeared that the council had passed a motion authorizing putting it in the chief's‘ house for 3 months at not more than $5. He signed a. 3~year contract, with the company. Manager Martin ex- plaimd that and said it had been necessary to put in a number of poles One was from J. H. Sootheran ofering $37075 without. interest. ‘ The other was from F. C. Taylor $37082 with the accrued interest. Stimson Co. $37026 without the accrued interest. A. E. Amos $37051 and the accrui’d interest. Mr. Ames’ tender was the highest but in it the debentures were referral to incidently, as 5 per cent bonds. This was considered a slip, but council inquired about it. Next dayut 3 o'clock another meeting was held. Two additional Lenders were presented. The Central Canada. $36810 and interest Lindsay delivery. igate. the Fcnelon Falls powerâ€"$400â€" it Would be wise to accept it. One item among the accounts was a. detailed statement of expenses' amounting to $18 sent, by Mr. Mac- Donald the "expert" who advised the committee about the municipal plant. A cheque was asked. Ald. Sinclairâ€"The sooner we get rid of that committee the better. Was that expense ordered by the council? I don't think so. We will never pay it. Axnilius Jarvis 8:. Co. $35918 and interest Toronto delivery. Council held that since thwe had been presented after the others had Jen opened it Would not be honor- able to place them in competition†and since a. telegram had arrived from Mr. Ames saying that the under- stood the debentures to_ bear 4 per cent" his ofler was accepted. The Standard Life Ins. Co. $37042. 1’1. Co. sent the halfâ€" -â€"-William Patterson, the Peter- boro medical student arrested at Belleville with a. woman's body in his trunk, has been sent for trial, â€"â€"The choir of the Church of St. James the Apostle, Montreal, is on strike in sympathy with Mr. Horace Rayner, the organist and choir direc. tor, who recently resigned. .__Miss Annie Clark, of Sydenham, near Owen Sound, recovered from \VID. Waterton $225 for a, broken heart and $25 for assault. The case came up on Thursday and Miss Clark brought action for breach of prolnisc and assault. --Ruth Nollard, eighteeb years old of Kansas City, Mo., was shot. and killed on the street Friday afternoon by Bud Taylor, 23 years old. a base- ball player, formerly her sweetheart, with Whom she had quarrelled. The girl and her sister were walking in a. crowded business district of the city. Taylor, sitting in the window of a, second story reom in a lodging house opposite, ï¬red three shots from a. repeating rifle. Two bullets struck her, and she died in less than an hour. The police arrested Taylor in the lodging house and had difï¬culty in getting him through the mob. many clamoring for the lynching of the murderer. also for London ï¬rms. She says she was married at ï¬fteen. taught school and then thought there were better chancw of advancement as a man. Eventually she married a lady’s maid with whom she lived for fourteen years. we required to be free men and to pun p )porty over a. certain amount in their own name, and right. "George Pete" Was in faifly good â€"George Gala, a laborer from Prqvidence, R.I., lost his life in a cheap Bowery resturant, because he could not pay 4 ccnts for food he had -â€"-Owing to the long continued and severe cold weather this winter the ice of Varty lake, north of Napanee. has formed so solidly that the ï¬sh have great difï¬culty in getting breathing air. Some few holes in the ice have bc‘m formed where there are springs, and below these the ï¬sh gather in shoals to get air. Fisher- man have taken advantage of the ne- cessity of the fish, and are now in- dustriously ï¬shing around these holes, the ï¬sh with which the lake is well supplied being caught by hun- dreds. At times the fish so crowd cax'h other around the holes that they are easily caught with scoop nets or spears. Some have even been caught with ordinary pitch forks. A few days ago one man caught in a short time enough ï¬sh to ï¬ll a. sleigh box. The load was taken to market [at Napanec, and a handsome proï¬t real- ized. The people in l the neighbor?- hood of the lake have all gone into the ï¬sh business fer the time being. â€"Gcorge Peter Newkirk, a. negro. known as “Qld George Pete," died. at his home in Hurley, near Ringg- tOn, N.Y., at the extraordinary age of 117 years. “George Pete" had been a. familiar ï¬gure to generations of prominent men and women whose early lives were passed in Ulster county. He Was born and brought up a. slave in the Newkirk family,‘ and. continued to reside with some member of that family all his mfg. He was the ï¬rst, negro vote: in the State of New York, having voted long before Abraham Linmln signed tne emancipation proclamation. At. that. time negroes, in 011er to votg, â€"â€"-A remarkable story of male im- personation recalling the Murry Hill case in New York, was revealed in a Police Court last week, in connection with an arrest tor alleged money frauds. The prisoner, named Cather- ine Coom‘bo, aged 66, described as a house decorator, appeared in the dock. in male attire. For 40 years~ Oath» erine impersonated a. man and work- (d on board Peninsular and Oriental steamers in various capacities and just eaten. When he said he had no money after ravenously partaking of coffee and butter cakes he was, acâ€" cording to custom, set; upon by sev- eral waiters. He fell dead. Fou?‘ \Vaibel’s were arrested. -â€".-\n almost, unexampled case of ofï¬cial blundering is reported from Liverpool. It appears that the War Ofï¬ce was under the impression that the Liverpool Volunteers were still in South Africa. and kept a. new special service corps on waiting orders until it could be (tscertaintd whether the Liverpool Volunteers required strung- thenfng.’ The Liverpool volunteers returned to Liverpool four months Eigo. â€"Burgla.rs entered the house of William McDonald of Lynbrook, L.I. while he and Mrs. McDonald were asleep one morning last. week and stole every stitch of Wearing apparel in the house. McDonald wrapped himself in blankets and went to the, house next door, where he borrowed some clothing for himself and wife. Labor, Mr. and Mrs. McDonald went. to New York, where they laid in a new stock. NEWS IN .A NUTSHELL life, and even until within a short. time of his death. dâ€"w‘f-he death of Capt. ’1‘. B. Newton, a veteran of the British nav v, occur- red last week at his late residence, Dovercourt road, Toronto. Deceased was 81'. blurs 01:1,, and hadrheen 'a resident of the city for many years. Captain Newton was present at the coronation of Queen Victoria in 1837 â€"â€"1)eat11 came very quickly Satur- day evening to Dred Hale, who was playing hockey with St, Andrew's Masonic Lodge team against the Temple Club team at Montreal. The game had lasted only a few minutes when young Hale, who had never be- fore been sick an hour, doubled up and dropped to the ice. death coming in about half an hour. Ilale Was 21 years old, and W218 to have been, married next Saturday to a Bliss Brown of Point St. Charles. -â€"Dr. Potts announced Thursday last; that the Methodist, Twentieth Century Fund has gone $60,000 be yond the million dollar mark. ' It was the intention to close the fund at once but 150 letters came in Thursday morning containing con- tributions. As the mail for several days past has contained hundreds of such letters, it is deemed unwise ..to close the fund until March 15th. â€"â€"Captain Bouchard, a former noâ€"1 torious whiskey smuggler, who in the prosecution of his nefarious call- ing had great experience of the naviâ€" gation of the Lower St. Lawrence in all weathers and all seasons, writes to the French local press to express the opinion that wmter navigation of the river and Gulf below Quebec is perfectly feasible and easy by thej north channel, entering the gulf by Cape Ray, passing to the north of Anticosti and following the north shore upwards, as the ice. always masses along the south shore and be- tween the Mugdalcn Islands and the north shore of Prince Edward Island, and also before Sydney. He declares that provided the government. erects lighthouses at five points which he specifies, a. steamship can ascend or descend the St. Lawrence during any‘ weather and any month of the win-t ter with absolute safety and ease.j He further offers to place his servicesi at the government's disposal in order to explain the currents, the move- ments of the ice, the ports of refuge, etc., on the condition that. it; simply pays his expem. do not think it. lowering to their dignity to be polite, as they do on our government railways.†Sale Register Thursday, March Pithâ€"By Bias Bowes, atmtioneer. Credit sale of farm SL008. and implements, the property of Thomas Prior. Sale at one o'clock sharp. I Thursday, March let â€"â€" By Elias Bowcs, auctioneer. Credit, sale- 0! farm stock and implements, the property of Nesbftt, Murdock, lot 5, â€"Mr. C. C. James, Deputy Minister of Agriculture, has received a copy of the agricultural journal the Aus- tralisian I’astoralists’ Review, whose reprcm‘ntative, Capt. A. W. Pearce. tourul Canada last year. The whole aspect of grazing and farming in Can- ada. is Well written up, as will also be the Agricultdral College at Guelph, Mr. Massey's “Dentonia.†farm. and other prominent features. Capt. Pearce Was evidently_ very favorably flnpresscd with what he saw of Can- adian people. He writes: “I wish to say here that during the fortnight I was in Canada, I did not see a drunken man or a. bad woman. 1 did not see a. beggar or a. badly dressed person. I found the Cauadains the most courteous and hospitable peo- ple I have ever come across. The ofï¬cials on railways and tramways con. A, Verulam. Sale at one o’clock. The stock list, comprises 2 bay mares, 2 black mares, 1 bay mare foal of 1900, 1 bay horse colt. of 1900. Friday, March 8th.â€"â€"By Elias Bowes, auctioneer. Credit sale of farm stock and implements, the property of Isaac Hodge, lot 20 con. 13. Gage states that between ()ct.. 1899 and Jan. 31. 190]. horses. mules and other supplies to the extent. of 826,-- 595,692 were exported to South Africa. No steps were taken to pre- vent, the lawful exportation of horses etc. The number of horses and mules shipped from American ports during this period was 76,632. . The chief shipments in addition to horses and mules were wheat, canned beef and rum. â€"â€"Secretary Gage last week sub- :nittcd to the House at, Washington a reply to the resolution of inquiry as to whether United States ports or waters have been used for the ox- portation of-horscs. mules or other supplies for use in South Africa. Mr. may. Sale; at one o’clock and Without reserve. The stdck list in- cludes 1 span of horses, 1 brown mare. 8 cows supposed to be in calf, 1 heifer in caltz5 steers,~ 3 calvw: 18 sheep; 3 pigs. _ ,V â€"â€"â€"W- U“-, 'uuww mm William-it. Purina w'shlng '0 boy. se'l or rent. Farm, Vallmeor Town Property, should cgll and we mo. B inc unmanned with nearly ova-y Inn!) and Faun tn the County customers an 5.]- ._ _,._A,:~g I will yin"; In! Lind-a. om SATURRAY. It I: 39:wa i: 55:83:;- nf Oh“ I1-..“ _!-râ€" *Wâ€"v-V'a-Iv ‘- u-u UPI-"v“ Woodvum and Lindsay. and I to transact. “619068“! Be Md General luau-woe. REAL ESTATE, LOAN AND GENERAL INSURANCE I «all G39“! Faun THE WITH THE PLOW pfmzhiél‘t hunk, ARCH. CAMPBELL, OPENED" T J. WE THERUP 1 BHAIE E 81 L SPRIB PORCELAIN 1 “ CHAMBER SETS 1 “ nmnmsms 1 “ WHITE GRANITE '. WI! '1' EBR'UZP -7 1‘ ‘oBv THE WATCHMAN-WARDER. P- PORBBR‘I‘ TwitltmvwbuythohdShmAtm crows mechanic cum \l’ocd to buv ch33“ Womtwufl mention†our â€Imam £8038. neonate have but "In. In good“ abloShou. Wohngnrvlup stock a goods and. ID of tho but Punch. m Amman 3nd (In-Mun lather. mnnmrmamm flag. any. Itmrzvmflom-ondrfmqn tongs-we "clam-wokohoumd kma-mamm with. It u the only 3,: cl“- custom and "our slopinLlnduy. n... all-Mucus. Dm'ï¬toqetthoplue. i l4 William-st. North. noun: “‘8 he Ml removed nu 1â€"- het- and Bug Wot-kn from muff“. godsâ€. to No. 11 York..c.,snd I‘ a to execute all orders mom I awfully. An Inspection of n! â€a invited. Chm moderate- 1408. (if-ll «dart Liar} m- um! advertisemnnmui wr vi 1 1n?â€" Watd them Swilthvm. n xul'llthem .mdt'ma beau uruLasolid Purina. willhcu'ntyou artful): dintvrl'etlnwlbox. 'ritetodSY- humanism. 5001mm The undeï¬ned wishes to in", public that he h“ removedjic 93.: m cmm m wow Wholesale and retail (1.2“, numb-grade... i PIANOS, ORGANS ...SEWlNG MACHINES? Having 27 yws experience- thebusiness I claim tobeabk. select the best make (’ngon to will recommend no om". N Family Grocer -â€""vâ€" v 41!. Zdoounortholclrw’ . 1901 {5‘33 ins Fill and ; but. wc ht, sign laughtd â€"ran awn.V lg about. 3 0t 10 imu Wsnt; um manner I osicion s»: 1y did yu‘u other Wm Why did ank .VOU‘ u shall 1 an start s, of cour Lon direct! he laughcc; Ip the sub upon the hen he re and then his gand. not to h V! The *9? all at] ï¬lling hu morning's r, and in: fly to be 5. “.hv‘ r all abo hink I s] .g mqmen let em . .crc mk L $09.3 '50 quickli It that. I [ came u| hen I am! contradid rg)‘ other Lh 50 “ECU!“ min: nu )1 rs t hem [0031 m. 9 skim: if you di nnor recei w what she re‘ lie est with you Bv you the: In? ODLV ins )I \Y 19 rvst mor (LU