w 5 ,1 guy“ “That picture.†he remarked, “is one o! the pretty little ï¬ctions of trade that have created a decided impression. It has. I have no doubt, brought to the con- cern shrewd enough to adopt it many thousands of dollars in proï¬t. But it gums all a ‘take,’ as we call such things nowadays. As a matter or fact. the great bulk of all the witch hazel distilled is made in factories along the line or the Shore Line division of the New York and New Haven road. The bark from which it is distilled is all harvested in the New England states, near where the _d_istillcries are located. The savages that bring the bark to the factories bring ‘ it in farm wagons. The nearest they ‘ come to being untutored savages is when they are at their homes engaged either as country farmers or charcoal burners. “There has always seemed to be a great mystery about this popular astrin- ‘6 ‘g‘en’t that is used in about every home in the country. Few know or stop to think that it is distilled from the bark of one of the most common or our wild shrubs. Now that the talk of a trust to control the manufacture of the extract has reach- ed the papers, the facts as to witch hazel are appearing. l have had several of my customers ask me it it is true that witch hazel is not an imported remedy. but merely a ‘Yankee concoction.’ It is a fact that it is entirely a Yankee industry,. and all the bark from which the distilla- tion is made is gathered in Massachu- setts, Rhode Island and Connecticut. The latter state is the chief source or the sup- ply. Madison. Guiltord, Clinton, West. brook and the contiguous Connecticut shore villages have a lot of families that L are mainly supported by their harvestings of witch hazel. It is there that the most popular or the proprietary brands of the astringent is all made, herb gathering. Indian labels and all.†It Didn’t Work an Smoothly an no mm Anticipated. “I have had only one experience in ad- dressing a communication to myself.†said a professional man, “and that was so dis- astronS'I‘» never tried'it again. It hap- ' LA___ the â€llc Iva-o anuuy.w.v ._.... _ last degree, and, having lived alone with a lot of cringing servants, she was in the' habit of saying things that made my blood boil in my veins. I managed to hold my tongue, however, and when I ï¬nally saw that I wasn't going to be able to stand it much longer I thought up a neat little scheme for beating a graceful retreat. “I had a special chum here in New Or- leans who knew all about my trip, and one evening I slipped over to the village and sent him a telegram, running about like this: ‘Impossible to remain longer with the old shrew‘ “'ire me tomorrow that important busxness demands my im- mediate presence. Make it strong. Must akip.’ That was brutal, I admit, but I was badly worked up. “Early next morning I announced to my aunt that I was going out ï¬shing for the day. ‘I had a lawsuit coming up this week,’ I remarked casually, ‘and it’s barely possible I may get some message about it. If any telegram arrives, please open it, and it it needs an answer one of the men can come over after me at the bridge.’ I wanted her‘to see the recall telegram with her own eyes so as to avert any suspicion and went 0! chuckling over my cleverness. Somewhat to my surprise, however, the day wore away without a messenger, and I began to so!- ten. ‘The poor old lady don't want me to go.’ I said to myself, ‘and is holding back the news.’ But when I walked up to the house that evening I was thunderstruck to see my trunks standing on the porch, and before I could ask any questions my aunt appeared at the threshold, flung me a telegram with a tragic gesture and slammed the door in my face. I opened .ade Altogether From the Bark oi a. Common American Shrub. The manager of the drug store took up a bottle of distilled witch hazel and pointed at the picture of a lot of naked South American Indians engaged in bringing to the distillery huge bundles of twigs. From this picture the natural in- ference was that this was the way in which the shrub from which the witch the paper mechanically and nearly fell dead. It was my own message. My chum was out of town when it arrived, and it had been returned to the sender.†hazel or hamamelis of commerce is ex- tracted was brought to the distilleries in come wild and hardly habitahIe_ region. ; It is an easy matter .to ï¬nd ninelpeopla 3 out of ten who are willing to do the j» shouting while the tenth does the work.-- We Non _,-_. -.._ 44...,†_ The other day I heard of a cat which had been trained to rattle a certain door when she wished to go out. Her owner, it seems, had set apart for the cat’s use a special chair in the sitting room and one day inadvertently occupied it while the cat was in the room. Meanwhile the cat roamed restlessly about, trying ï¬rst one place and then another, until. ï¬nding that her mistress still sat stolidly in this special chair, she deliberately went to the outer door, rattled it, and when her mistress came to let her out turned around and ran back to the sitting room, perching herself on the chair with an air H18 RECALL TELEGRAM. it triumphant satisfaction, much to the _amazement of her mistress. Donnelly’h Wit. Ignatius Donnelly was once rudely in‘ terrupted in the course of a political speech by a head of cabbage“ thrown from the audience. “Gentlemen," he said mildly, “I only asked your ears. I don’t are for your heads.†An Emblemaflo Face. [Pomâ€"How can you admire that fellow? 0’s as homely as an ash barrel. Got a pug: nose and a ghost of a mustache. Claraâ€"That’s what makes his face so eloquent. Tom-You can’t prove it. Claraâ€"I can. His nose tells of the ups and his mustache typiï¬es the downs that all lives are full of.--Exchange. 12 WITCH HAZEL. Cat Tactics. It Should Begin “Hit the Moment of the Baby’. Birth. Nowhere is the comparison between an ounce of prevention and a pound of cure more applicable than in the care of the eyes, for the neglect of seemingly trivial aï¬ectio'ns, perfectly curable in their be- ginnings, may lead in an incredibly short time to permanent impairment of vision or even to total blindness. v. v--._ The care of the eyes should begin with the moment of birth. The new baby’s eyes should be the ï¬rst part to receive attention. They should be wiped care- fully with a piece of absorbent cotton wet with a warm solution of boric acid of a strength of about 60 grains in four ounces of distilled water. After the lids have been thus carefully washed on the outside, they should be gently separated and some of the solution dropped into the eyes. In washing the eyes one should be care- {:1 never to dip again in the solution a piece of cotton which has once been used. A fresh piece must be taken each time the eyes are wiped. -._‘.. v; -w The baby’s eyes must be protected from the light. Its crib must be placed where the eyes are not exposed to the full light from a. window, and the carriage should have a shade raised only about a foot above the baby’s head. u.‘ .‘ VV.- Children often suffer from inflammation of the edges of the lids, which are red and scaly, and the lashes fall out and break off. This may lietoken a general serofulous condition, or it may depend upon some defect in the sight which causes eye strain. or it may be only a lo cal trouble. If it is only a local trouble, a few applications of boric acid ointment at bedtime will generally effect a cure.‘ Another painful consequence of eye strain is a succession of stics. When a child suffers frequently from sties, from sore lids or from conjunctivitis, the sight should be tested. us â€I \II.-u-\a -â€"â€" CVVV- Conjunctivitis. or inflammation of the membrane covering the globe of the eye, may be due to n cold, to the action 01 bright sunlight, or reflection from water or from snow, or to eye strain from some visual imperfection. Usually the boric acid solution will give relief here, even when the trouble cannot be permanently cured until proper glasses are worn. Much harm is often done to the eyes, as i well as to the general health, by too long § application to books. either school or story ' ks. Three hours of looking at print by daylight and one hour in the evening 5 should not be exceeded by any child un- ’ der 14. for that is as much as his eyes, 3 even it their vision is perfectly noE‘mal, The Vigorous “fay They HIV. 0! Walking Clothes In India. The ‘followi extract is from the letter of a young m '00 in India: “I have just extricated myself‘from an awkward ï¬x. The washer people here take your best shirt to a stream, dip it in the water and then smack it hard on a bowlder, repeating the process again and again till a hole is made in the linen. Then and not before do they regard that particular article as ï¬nished. “I objected to this and told my washer- man that I didn't want holes knocked into my clothes. will stan§-;}tï¬Ã©ï¬Â£ iinjur}.â€"Youith's Com- panion. . “ ‘But. master. how, then, am I to know when they are ï¬nished? he asked. “I couldn’t knock any sense into his head, so I tried to get somebody ,else to do any work. But nobody else would do it for rne. I discovered that a sort of tribal trades’ union exists here. Each kind of work is done by a particular caste. “One caste limits itself to boot clean- ing. and the only scope “hich another allows for its genius is carrying. It you luxdly heat the man “110 cleans your boots or sack him he rcpo1ts you to his nibo. and unless you clean your boots yourself they will ever remain dirty. for 1.0 other member of that tribe will clean 1.10m for you. nor v ill anybody else, for the monk is not consistent with thedig- city 0f the carrying, 'ashing or any oth~ 9:3 CflSfe. “There being no help for it. I had to go back to my old washerman, and it was only by bribes and cntreaties that I could get him to forgive me. "Now, 1 want you to send me two doz- en shirts and let them be or the strongest quality. If he must knock holes in them, I am determined that he will have to work hard. It is possible that I may have some further trouble with him, for if the holes take a long time coming he may complain that he cannot ï¬nish my washing. “Thoéo ignorant fellows always re- quire some sign by which their actions are to be guided. “TX 11911 one of them is eating, how do you think he is to tell when he has had enough? When he takes no further in- terest in his food. you might say. But, no. he might be suffering from indigestion or some other ailment. ha argues, and therefore not be able to judge when he had eaten the proper quantity. “So he tics £1 tin-om} lightly round his waist when he is at meals and eats till it breaks? Two Drln‘xs For a Quarter. A young man about town who thought he had seen the limit in strange happen- ings ran up against a new one the other night. He had drifted into a hotel bar for a drink. and while standing at the bar an elderly man. Very nicely dresscd and with every indication of prosperity, if not wealth. came in and ordered a drink of 15 Cent whisky. inquiring ut the same time it that brand were not sold at the rate of two drinks for a quarter. Upon receiving a reply in the afï¬rmative the old chap produced a flask, laid down a quarter and asked the bartender to put the other drink in the bottle to take away with him. The bartender, dazed. did so without a word. and the incident was closed. It in not an indication that man has music. in- his soul because he blows his own-horn. . » ~ v , â€"_._. W, _._._ Premature Criticism. A green Irishman having been ordered by his omphum to saddle the horse and rxde to toxxn on a mission,w was observed by a neighbor putting the saddle on hind part before. Approaching him, he re- marked: The diï¬erence between the tallest and shortest races in the world is 11/; m. inc-s, and the average height is 5 feet 5 Snakes. “You’ve got that saddle on wron; "7- ï¬rst.†“Indade!†exclaimed the grow . “An how do ve know which “2:; J5 ..: goin?" SEATING HOLES IN SHIRTS. CARE OF. THE EYES. Minnelli of Mexicnnn Cling With Wonderful Te- : naclty to Their Broad Acres. 3 The tenacity with which the great es- tates of Mexico are maintained intact by ‘the old families of this country appears all the more remarkable when it is con- lsldered how generally all lines of indus° :try. aside from that of the farmer, are in the hands of foreigners. The tiry goods {trade of Mexico is controlled by’ the ' French. the Spaniards of Mexico are the .country’s grocers. the Germans do the ' hardware business. the railroads are con- trolled by Americans and English, the ‘ bank stock of Mexico is largely owned in gli‘rance. Germany and° England. and a large percentage of the industrial cOno ' ccrns of the country belong to foreigners. iNot so. however. the agricultural re- .sources of Mexico. A Chemical Benetton That Anton-d- ed a. Washer-woman. “The facetious chemist took an ordina- ry cotton handkerchief and soaked it in nltrle and sulphuric acids," says Harvey Sutherland. in Ainsleefs. -"'Bhen. after; so long a time, he took. it out and :rinsed it carefully- seas. to remove .the tree .acid. It looked then like any other cotton hand- kerchief. It went to the washerwomnn, who put‘it through all the waters that handkerchiefs go through. hung it out on the line and took it in again when it was dry. Shespread it out on the ironing board, put the hot iron on it, andâ€"it went away. There was a flash, 9. puï¬ of smoke. and thenâ€"no handkerchief, not even the ashes of one. “W'hen you consider how frightened the poor washerwoman must have been at such goings on in the broad, open day- light, how worried she must have been lest the gentleman should think she had stolen his handkerchief, for she was an honest woman I make no doubt whatevâ€" er, at least as far as cheap cotton hand- kerchiers are concerned, and of course she thought he wouldn‘t believe her when she told him what had become of it, you will see at once that this is really a very ï¬ne joke indeed. - “ ‘ ‘. ,LQA.‘ Mu» Jv--.. “\Vhat happened to the handkerchief was what happens to the manufacture of gun cotton. ‘The sulphuric acid takes the water out o'f'the cellulose, and the nitric acid makes an arrangement whereby a certain amount of nitryl gets to take the place of it, so that when ï¬re is applied it all burns at once. Starch“ is the same thing chemically as cotton. same propor- tions of carbon. hydrogen and oxygen. only the patterns, so to speak, or the molecuie is different, and out of that law abiding box of white grains at this mo- ment in the left hand corner or your kitchen'vcnpboard, madam. could be made enough nitro starch to wreck your happy home while you are saying ‘Jack Robin- son.’ The molasses jug is just as potent for destruction. and an explosive is now marketed that is made from straw nitrat- ed in the same way as cotton. “01' coin-Se you have heard that glyc- erin. which is so good for chapped hands, can be turned into the most power- ful explosive known by the same combi- nation ‘ot acids. It is so powerful that it has to be diluted with intusorial earth, each tiny particle of which long years ago was the shell of a little animal that never dreamed it was going to assist in torpedoing an oil well. It seems to me a queer‘use r'o't this terrible destructive that it shbuld be a medicine, a heart stimuâ€" lant. It anybody is desirous of getting a headache without a gay evening to pre- ccdc it, he has only to taste a tiny drop of the yellow, sweetish. oily liquid. and he will think every beat of his heart is a whack of a sledge hammer on the back of his __.._.â€", V .a tax upon products the unused acres . are no great burden. They are naturally those “ho desire to see these tracts ta.\- ed so that the owners “ill be forced to -scll at least portions of them and the land of the country divided among a larger number of small proprietors. Such a measure would be vigorously opposed by the \veaithy landed proprietors. and such is the number and importance of this class that "no active measure of this kind has ever Been promulgated. 'lhe ancient estates of Mexico are so large that few individuals" can purchase them entire and the on Mrs ca'n Iarely be prevailed upon to divide their holdings in any manner. Occasionally now one or them is bought by a syndicate or company for develop ment or for subdivision and sale. In this w ay smaller holdings are becoming more common than formerly. though the old ouler of things is not likely to be greatly altered in Maxim for many years to During recent years a great deal of American capital has entered the republic for investment in trepical plantations, particularly in southern Mexico. but the great bulk of Mexico‘s rural land is held in the form of extensive haciendas or ranches. often hundreds of thousands of acres in extent. Some of these estates have heenzhanded down in the same {am- ilies (oi-“nearly 400 years. not n..tew titles tracing their origin hack to the ï¬rst grants from the king of Spain after the conquest. The aristocracy of Mexico is counted among these landed proprietors. many of whom enjoy princely incomes from their plantations, which often pro. duce a great variety of products and em- brace several manufacturing plants. -.a-~-- A.- THE VANISHING HANDKEROHIEF It is largely due. to the fact that the tax upon .land of this character is com- paratively’very light that these estates have so long remained undivided, as in most instances only a small per cent of their area is under cultivation. As in many states the levy is practically only come. The Very unusual Way. “I undbrstnnd you whipped my boy this mowing." the angry father said stxiding into the schoolroom after the thildxen had been dismissed. 55%; .4}; 1' did." the terriï¬ed teacher ax13\\'(~1'ed.,'" “But I did not Whip him seâ€" vowly." ‘ ‘ ‘ _- -... n .90‘ " ‘lxat’s what I’m kicking about," he rejoined. “You didn‘t hurt him at all. Now. look here. sir. I'm_ one of the largest taxpayers .in_ this school district. and my buy is entitled‘to as good a whipping as you give any othier boy. Understand that. If you slight'bim again. you’ll hear from me in a way you Won’t like. lRood after- noon, sir," ‘ ' v.11: Pay Him. 4 1 :“20â€"1 heard about your elopomom n A 2121 G orlie Giddygirl Mr. Snooks. Has nor mother forgiven you. ’ Hoe-No. fear' She knows how to pay off an olgl"§c0m. She has come to live with us.â€"Londpnvlv_‘un. -- D'â€""7-â€"‘ ,- whatever the béréon owning it m'aynsk. At $1,0’JQfl-ituwouuynot; b9 {diameter BOAST OF A LANDED GENTRY. A genuihé Stradivarihs yioljn {9 worth )9 A Collection of Human Ills In an. Army Hedlcnl III-cum. In the Army Medical museum in Washington there is a bottled stock of new}! all the diseases which'are up! ‘to be fatal- tohuman -li1e.-r.. Theremre espe- cially on- hand germsrot consumption, Pneumonia, typhoid fever, diphtheria, Asiatic cho1era, blood poisoning, erysipâ€" elas and carbuncle. , ..,-_- Ah-xnaanq hot. elas and curuuuu‘. . The museum keeps these diseases bot- 1 fled in tubes constantly ready for imme‘ ‘ diate use. The curator in charge of the laboratory mentioned that he could give them all to any one in a few moments. He added that he would be able to do ' ' or expense, inas- tor instance, ' to communicate th - thousands of people, and it was the same with all the other diseases on hand. In administering pneumonia to a pa- tient, he said. he would select by prefer- ence the method of putting a solution of the germs in water in a spraying vessel and have the victim breathe the spray. The subject operated upon would almost immediately contract the affection with absolute certainty every time. He ex- plained that pneumonia is contracted not from a cold or inflammation of the lungs, as people ordinarily suppose, but from the breathing in of pneumonia germs, whose increase and development are aid- ed by an unhealthy condition, such as a cold may give rise to. The mouths of altogether healthy people very commonly have lots of pneumonia bacteria in them. As for carbuncle, the curator said that he could produce it any time in the most healthy individual by a simple inoculation with a solution of the germs. Once so in- oculated you would have about an even chance with death. Spraying the throat with a solution of the proper germs is the method also for conveying diphtheria. I-J‘ vâ€"v‘ _-~' There is noâ€"Ercit difï¬cï¬lty in contract- ing Asiatic cholera i{ you want to. Take - ~Aâ€"Aâ€"_--b.‘ I“. “unuyov -.â€"-â€"-»_ a few of the gems from the appropriate bottles at the museum and drink them in water or beet tea. If your stomach is in u particularly healthy condition, you may r“? vâ€"“ not take the disease. but otherwise you are pretty certain to have it. It is said that. an assistant in the laboratory of the famous Dr. Koch once swallowed by ac- cident a lot or germs of Asiatic cholera, with which experiments were beinr made, and developed what Dr. Koch believed a typical case. The assistant recovered by a narrow chance. The diseases which the government keeps thus bottled in convenient form are all obtained-the germs, that is to sayâ€" from actual diseased tissues of patients afflicted with the complaints. To propa- gate the germs in any quantity from these tissues is easy enough. Vegttahle gela- tin, tmm a Japanese plant called agm~ agar, is boiled and mixed with beef tea, “gal, In Wllcu uuu ulna-V‘- Iv .â€" u--- --_., so as to form a soft. transparent solid. A small quantity of this is put into a tube tightly corked with cotton. The tube is then placed in an oven and heated until all the germs in it, of whatever sort, are killed. Next, the tube is briefly uncorked and a long steel wire that has been heat- ed also to sterilize it is dipped in the germs of the disease which it is desired to cultivate and scraped across the sur- face of the gelatin. The tube is now recorked and permitted to stand for a few hours. at the end of which the bac- teria of the disease. having found the gel- atin to their taste for feeding upon. will have multiplied enormously. so as to cov- er the surface or the gelatin. Then the germs are; ready for the purpose for which they are kept at the museum- namely. to enable the physicians to make experiments to determine the proper method of treating the disease and to seek remedies for it.- Accordiing to a story told in Marseilles the Church of Notre Dame de la Garde. in that city. was miraculously saved from destruction in the closing days of the nineteenth century. The story is as 101- lows: A gentleman entered the church carry- ing two candles, which he placed in a chandelier. After lighting them he re- tired from the main body of the church and called two beggars who were stand- ing at the door. Placing them in a posi- tion where they could see the chandelier he gave each of them 10 francs to watch the candles and to relight them if the flame went out. He had made a vow, he said, and it was of great importance to his future hopes that both candles should be entirely consumed. The man then withdrew and the beg- gars began their watch. As evening came on they became alarmed and called aloud to a priest whom they saw in a distant part of the church. When he went to them, they declared that they had twice heard a voice commanding them to extinâ€" guish the candles. The priest listened. but heard nothing. The beggars appealed to him not to leave them. and to please them he-blew out the candles and took them from the chandelier. In handling them he was struck by their weight; when in tnrningone around in his hands the wax peeled off and revealed a car- tridge ot dynamite. If any man thinks the American sailor is a thing of the past. he should spend some time on the great lakes. '1‘ he Amerio can fresh water sailor is every bit as pie turesque a personage as was the “salt†of early days who carried our merchant flag into every port of the world. His life is just as full of hardships and just as full of dangers. There is a large fleet of three and four masted schooners on the lakes, and sto. ries of the wrecking of them come with every big storm. A nastier body of wa- ter than Lake Erie when it comes on to blow can be found nowhere, and some of the experiences of the life saving crews along its shores are the most thrilling in the history of the service. The men who man the gig lake steam- ers, of course, have not much romance in their lives, but there are enough of the old sailing vessels left to keep a consider- able army of men employed. Any skip- per who can navigate a schooner from Duluth to Buffalo is a good enough sailor to sail around the world. and he will do as well as the next man to take care of his vessel in the roughest sea the Atlan- tic was ever able to blow up. Little Molly sat down to write a letter to her father, who had been absent three months, and this is What she ï¬nally sent: “Dear Fatherâ€"We are all well and ham-1 py, The baby has grown ever so much ‘ and has a great den} more sense than he ’ used to have. 'Hopmg 'the 'same ot-~you,"‘ I remain. :yon: daughter‘:Mofly.â€-Ex-‘ â€".._-v\ DISEAS E§ REP-1' How a Church Was Saved. Our Freak Water Elnora. Molly’s Letter. "m BOTTLES 11: flat He will be at the Benson House, Lindsay, Thurs. (lulu Icy-lauvyuu-.. , , I \ loss of hair made pé’fection. Thousands owe their ï¬ne looks to the ski‘l of Prof. Dorcnw end. Human hair Adams av d pro ects the bead. Don't fail to see } 7 , Structure, patented all over the wor'd. Private Manning: '3‘": Pawn: Er Remexqber tor onlyl «my. first-class cut hair, especially “Majâ€"urea }at a“: ' ’ J :1“ ‘ Lie hair- ‘ LA~ -_ --.‘L-nm l â€"‘,..__ “The complexion is one of the points that are noticed ï¬rst in a woman's ap- pearance," writes Mrs. Humphry. in The Ladies’ Home Journal, telling plain women how they may be pretty. “The bath is a valuable aid to the necessary purity of the skin, but, like all bene- ï¬cial processes, it is liable to abuse. The hot bath especially is misused to a great extent. A warm bath, as distinct from a hot one. is seldom injurious, but the safest is the tepid or the quite cold VH6. “The test is a simple one. If after a cold bath. when the skin is dried. the surface of the body glows with heat and is suflused with a pink tint. all is well, but if this reactionary warmth fails to respond to vigorous rubbing with the towels the bath is injurious. A chill often follows the hot bath. which prove».l how dangerous it is. 11 a chill follows the cold bath, it must be abandoned at once and the tepid tried. Much depends upon the circulation. whether it be brisk or sluggish. If the former, the cold bath may almost cer- tainly be ventured upon with uniform. ity and become a daily delight, but it the circulation be slow and defective a large can of hot water should be added to the cold. Fall Wheat per bushel ....... Fyfe Wheat per bushel ...... Spring Wheat per bushel. . . . Goose Wheat. petbuahel..... Pena, small .................. Pans, MummletI ............. . PM". Blue. .................. Blmkeyepeaa ................ van-rum. Potatoes, per bag“ .......... Pontoon, per bag" .......... 0 30 to 0 30 HEAT, POULTRY m mun! PRODUCE. Butter per lb. ................ O 17 to 0 18 Chickens, poll-u .......... 0 40 to 0 60 Eggs. per omen .............. 0 10 to 0 ll Hogs, live weight. per cwt.. 6 % to 6 25 Hmdmmd,mrcwt ...... 750m800 Hay. pet-ton ................. 8m to 1000 Lard, r H) ................. 0 12 w 0 13 Beefâ€" ides .................. 4 50 to 5 CO Dill W: per no. ................ Chickens, pain. .......... Eggs. per omen .............. Hogs, live weight. per cwt.. Hogs, dressed, per cwt ...... Hay. per ton ................. Lard, per Tb ................. Beef-Hides .................. ' vvuâ€" “Only a. short time should be allowed ' to the bath proper, whether hot, warm, ' tepid or cold, but the drying prooea * should be thorough and vigorous. " ‘ Kawartha Lakes â€18 “Bill WHEY NflViflflï¬ï¬‚fl 80", “MM May 15! to 325:. and frcm Oct 15! to close of Navigation. Leave Bobcaygeol 8 co 8,113. Anive 5 30 p.111. Arrive Lindsay 10,30 3,31, Leave 3.00 " Calling at Sturgeon Point cn signal. June 15: to Oct. :51. Leave Bobcaygeon. 6.15 3.3:. and 3 10 p I1. “ Sturg: n Pom! 1.15 " “ 4.xo “ Arrive Lma say 8 4,0 5.30 “ 1:33": o‘ 1‘.†46 n 5“5 .3 ‘l u _ Sturgeon Point 12.10 Anu’e Bobmygeon 1.15 Saturdays boat will await evening Toronto train. July 15! t9 Sept, 15th. leave Lindaay 6.30 p.111. in- stead of 5.45. Meals served « n board. Tickets can be had from GEO_ WlLDER, Express 056:. {silken in exchange. suwas on: nous “ES'I‘UIRION†The Lindsay Markets SEASON OF 1901 COABS! GRAIN. *- I-C (-0 THE WAWANâ€"WABDM. HAY 0th, 1901 656% 0000 mwmm mmmm 0000 awummwï¬m 00000000 mmwmwmww mflwmmmwm 00000000 5-45 6. :TnEnPEncHEBBN mums scoL HAIR, DI IN TH 03. ETC- R1 HA] ' ED BLACK DUKE N. DAY, Lakeview Farm, NILE? CORNERS. PERM]. on Aprzx 1m inst... from msmm will in three yarn 01.1 o: Mq 13$ .3 wish 17501“ A; for his (1081“in invioe inspection to leave the [)3th judgc. Below will be found; then WM of the breeding of BL XCK DUKE. ' t diflct duoem‘hnt. .ofumany gm; .5" crud fail to prove one vfri'ne gr; nook hon. over imported into Co. “1., Elkhom, Waiwo-th 0).. Win. Aprxl Huh, 1901, 'fllil in to eerfily thnt I has thin day mold the Percheron ammon Duke 217-35» Nuthln Dny, of POWIes' L‘urnen, Ont..|nd lr'l sire m 3 blnck home an: weighd over 3 ton. and m we of the â€Lighiy can. wooded ct. the “70:13": Fit and wunn'd. ed ï¬at pdu n. the Minnesota State I‘d: in his clan. And gnnd champion :- but. Pflcbfon lltllion of uny age. :1: the nu hit; duo flat. 3:. we Wxacnuszn Sate Emir, 3nd ï¬rst. with tour of 'ma get at. the use fsvot of251h, inst, TUESDAYâ€"Will lane ... s own W Lukeviaw Farm, re: .c. n, sud P" coed to John Bryan: ~ ( ‘hamerulh t“ noon. thence to L1." v. hlte'l‘s, 11, Con. 1, Fenelux we macaw“; of Cmbny, for 122;, whence W ' SATURDAY MURV 1M ;â€":\Yli} 9N: rennin. 10 héd pa. .hrougn ‘0'! land- th'u week that r. d in {eight over on. ton each. (2;. ; :38 "um! 2,400“; was: acme r. .pouyull Of them dean ï¬nned legs a: 7 whxle not “ bony boned a the Sash: 1:-cyhad W enough sad as not w A}? 1; be p031 I the mom many legged rseo. Y0†V011 truly, A. 19. Built} 1 .4: {Hr The :bovo mentioned ; ,» “2 from $250 to $350 each. Never mind win: you :- ;. come and use this grab some of than high pnccdi. to J'rhn Aldoua’ um ‘. nmil 501111;; thri.‘ : The flame route will be as»; the reuon, heaim and T0 inn"? 8f081810_0 E. In) abge 1 1902. Insured mares mus Med regularly to the how will be chuged wheLher in .L‘IA IREIDER'S C ERTI FICATE: tmea regmany Lu . r .--- 0‘1 01’ 'ill be chuged whet: r in f not; muea become payableu :7; 3| “8de of. (Me do list who be†it time of service, which willbo tot! turned if we prove: not in ‘ 'hon mined. Accounts W Flue 13'0â€lean ‘nh‘lfg1902 11W“ (the color of .ii bexggfbuï¬', --'u imported by (Signed) H. A. BRIGGS, Elkhcrn, w: TERMS 2 ROUTE : bead-oldfur P.“ i0}. XL! and extensx Ribbons 0’L You good Parts and there are ‘ g00d han OUR GU: Oppositi “g Shoes. '11. N (ire Bar Din n2!