One Week Sale Selling out Stock and Business. Windin up of I (Jethro Estate. Men‘s Fall and Winter Overcoat Lengths, Men‘s Suit Lengths, Men‘s Pant Lengths, Clothes made up and una- ealled for, Ladies‘ Skirt and Suit Lengths, Remnants At. and Below Cost Prices CATHRO ESTATE WWWW No. 905 Bargaln Price u $1.98. Ladies’ An Strap Pump Pat Colt, size 2.1, to 7. No. 975 A errand Barg: Now $1. 98. for! price $3.00. Lad HITGH MONTGOMERY MYLES The late Hugh Montgomery Myles, who died in Nelson, Idaho, on May 20th, and who was buried on May 22th in Eagle cemetery under the auspices of the Eagle Society, of which he was a, member, was man khom'i 111 Lindsay, he having 9, mm- Béf, bf removes 1;; Eng viéihiiin 7 7 The mesa t'éï¬'tisihw m 88H: was mm 3; 5858 m m 38 £83.95! SSLQUBS iï¬iï¬ Em: ï¬gg \ ~ A grand Bargain. \ Now $1.98; former \~ price $3.00. Ladies’ golden brown Vice Kid Blucher Low Shoes, goodyear welted sole. Saturday ......... $1.98 31.98. L .................. 93 Suit Cases idle-:18 was 12 Luau asma a£_ _8 $3218 8i if. 6'88. 88'. _u:‘__ o '7 Q[\ 2 m' Myles, and Mrs. J. T. Wells, of Lindsay, and Mrs! C. A. Hennen‘ of Blackwell, Oklahoma. The floral tributes at the funeral were numerous, including a. beautiful pillow. of flowers irom,Ea.gle Soo- iety, a wreath from blends land a beautiful cross. \ mas. cm WSW. I-khelti. ma 1.2.. â€" 11%}. pnce Saturday Bargain. Bare- foot Sandals, ideal for sum- mer sport in the sand pile or on the beach, soft tan lea- thers, hand turned soles, size 11 to 2. Worth $e00. Sat- Bargaln prlces : 30 inch... $2.50 32 inch... $2.75 34 inch... $3.00‘ 36 inch... $3.25 mountings rivéted on by hand. Call and see these Extra heavy Duck éoveg‘ed Trunks, all Barefoot Sandals It Lengths, Men’s Suit Clothes made up and un‘ .uit Lengths, Remnants oouoaononooo II-uoucnool Extra Heavy Trunks Kirkï¬eld. June 12. â€" A sudden death occurred at the home of Mrs. 133. Gordon on Friday p..m and £061: away hu- Aged father. Mr. M. limb. The amped ‘wu eigh- mm years at as ma has bush 3? M a 8 ï¬lms mass m {in he ham 38 ii £88 88 we Mï¬ï¬‚étï¬ï¬ B} BIB *2 H. H. MS}. Rs may «53 Men’s Fine Boots and 1 Low Shoes : Men’s Fine Boots and Low Shoes, patent, tan and calf, worth $3.00 and $3.50. Saturday Sale Price ............... $2,48 A great bargain for Sat- urday, all sizes, Boys’ Booes, will stand rough wear, worth $1.35. On sale Saturday ......... 996 69c Boys’ Boots The farmer is No Longer PEOPLE BACK TO FARMING Ammmmofourlemmgre- "'9‘"! recently promulg‘ta! o. theory which seem logical at least. He ml. ‘08“ the disproportion between one Wdly mama; population um the hummer o! mom W In acer- eunm hmm’ m b to a. db #8 to W 58 auwmobm mums; We mtu‘m mm that mm em» Mg? have m m up mo MM: “F“ gm» mm WNW and Moe hm mm] mam Set «mm w W“ m gunm- We immflng 09- . 89 mm m m wim‘a «mm “in. “mm; it ta that an a“ mm W leek 13 m m m g m Mm lam mm m oultiwmma n mm he «Imam more inmiwl‘v W “Raï¬ bw ‘ "' “18“; 88‘; “my h a“ “B m_ an 3‘3! 6mm mags 38 BM?“ “fa“; “3% Riser-ten; June 10. 1 1 seems to he iii the direction at the M more gammiy with meat The my is “Back to the land 3“ tar ob- Wl‘ all. it is the term who M8 “8-. The swing oi the Within 301% ‘Wflfly seems to he in the direction oi the term. it is surprising to discov- er how many rich city men own farms or country places and how many poorer men would do so it they could. They will laughingly tell you that every turnip they raise costs them . dollar. but there seems to be some lingering primitive in- stinct in us that leads us back to the occupatiou of Adam. . The farmer is no longer “the hay- seed†Telephones, rural delivery. newspapers and more business know- ledge have made a new man of him. Just as trolley systems and paper patterns have put his family in touch with metropolitan modes he has learned that the secret or mak- ing money in taming lies in raising good crops of what the world wants and marketing them wisely. the one as \‘ital'as the other. Knowledge ple did not go in a. vehicle profuse. 1y decorated in red, blue and white" and while there might have been some "ï¬shing for mud cats" there was no making of mud '01†as the participants had long passed the mad p'ie age. Banding between the lines it 19 not A CORRECTION. (Editor 0f Watchman-Warden) Sir :â€" There are many readers of cinity 'who objeCt t tone of the article published in your issue of the 8th inst., under the heading of "Yelverton Celebration.†The article is run 01 statements not. borne out by facts, and can be class- ed as neither humorous or truthful, The facts were that on the day in question, several couples of both young people and married folks drove to Caesarea to spend the .1- ternoon at the lake. It was not an excursion o! "ch Friends" Generally he overlooks this fact. It costs a family of ï¬ve adults. living very simply, managing the table expenses with metal economy. and entertaining very littleâ€"it. costs has regenerated his business methods The farmer has one inestimable priv- ilege. He can live well at less ex- pense than any other man on earth. (lanai-all“ hp overlooks this met. a realizing sense of the unrecognized beneï¬ts of the farmâ€"what he gets seeming-2y, though-not actually with out expense from the farm and which would cost him a. good round sum in town. Every egg. every pint of milk, every cabbage. even the onion that seasons the Christmo tv tey's stuffing. has a dollar and cents val- ue of! the farm. He wouldn't grud- ge a. stranger an onion, and a pock- ettul of apples; in town he ï¬nds he gets nothing for nothing. and very little for tuppence.†Suppose Mrs. Farmer mumpueu the number of loaves she bakes in a year by the price of a loaf of baker’s bread, charged herself 8 cents for eVery quart of milk, 35 cents for a dozen of eggs, 20 cents for a glass of jelly, 10 or 15 cents a dozen for cookies and doughnuts, what a sur- prise the sum total would be ! True, she doesn't get these prices for what she has to sell, but she would have to pay them if she had to buy. The young man leaves the farm not so much beCause he hates the life, as because it takes so long to get a, start. He can make money faster in the cityâ€"but he doesn’t re member he can also spend it faster. I! he goes meaning to save and re- turn to buy land, by the time he them from $58 to $60 for meats. vegetables. fruits, etc., things the farmer raises. His grocery bill would not be over $10 at the out- side. turn to buy land, by the time he has sued enough he is weaned from the idea. A might-be producer then becomes a. consumer, and helps raise prices in turn. year in town would give him Farmer multiplied Hr. Dal-yea, inherited a large a. mount 0! means from his father and this we. W In weiul invest- ment. According to the New York papers, the success or these invest- ment: VI: to n Inge extent due to For {our years she nursed him .and fonthe last seven years had been his print» sect-em and had charge or his business and his magmncient home at flout Clnh'. New Jersey. gï¬he’e lot-{mile ii hot yet known but it ii than; M the Mount Mil be but a mum. AM a {New at Entering Roosvelt Hospital, New York, it fell to her lot to wait upon Walter Duryes, son of a, millionaire starch manufacturer, who had been rendered g helpless inv and through an accident. This happened 12 years ago at his summer home where, div- ing into too shallow water, he broke his neck and completely paralyzed his body. So well did Miss Pere- grine discharge her duties that Mr. Duryeo secured her as his permanent nurse as soon â€she was gruduted. Not many millionaires are number- ed among the graduates o! Barrie Collegiate Institute but there is one at least. and that is Miss Eleanor Peregrine, who has been left a. mill- ion dollars as a reward for her faithful attention to duty. Miss Per- cgrine was a student at Barrie Coll- egiate about ï¬lteen years ago com- ing here from Aurora. where she and her family were acquainted with Principal Redditt. At. school she “as a. clever student and when she decided to discontinue her school course and take up nursing it was a disappointment to her teachers, who predicted a bright scholastic tut- ure for her, LEIGH R. KNIGHT Banister. Solicitor. Notary Public Commissioner, to. Successor to McDinnnid Weeks. having removed their business to my own oï¬ice. op- poglte Watchmu Wudet. Kent-t. Phone 4.1 ________ __.I 11-h! Cacao. In a“ in. .u. Iv I."-â€"â€" . .u--- M Insurance and Real Est-t: in All its branches. Was Rememdered by Million- aire She Nursed HOPKINS. WEEKS a HOPKINS Curt-WI, Soliciton, Rotation, etc BARRIE GIR GETS MILLION uo 3300mm" PETERBOBO. mu mu Bun-on Bog-o! Und- Dr. T. P. McCullough oven run. one... 6 wanna-u. tenth, undny. 0m. Burch Oxï¬ce. Wouldâ€: TWO GOOD HACKS TELEPHoï¬i: 104K] O. 8. 30253311. W. Workman - Kent-st. East} exceptional business ability of amt mount of ms: Pere- for attentive service and careful drivers FREE EULMES ‘The Susan’s latest dwebpments refined apparel for {be panicalar m Gothing and Furnishing Department “O‘CE-A-CDKLH .3 "It. I “flu nut: manta mun alums mu tam-.1: Htï¬ï¬-Mhbw Developing and Finishing for Amateurs ‘Ilu's Man's Siore will close every afternoon at 5 o'clock except Saturday: during July and jAugust Let us make for Photogfl YOU EVER H AD HT‘Eâ€"T’wn- mamas mm The Photographer Fowler‘s Old Stand THE BEST SPECIALISTS The following dium'of :- Piles iEpileps3 Eczema Asthma !Syp hilis Dyspepsi. Atarrh IStricture Rheumatm. Ru tux-e iEmiss i am Lost Y iralizy Din, Des Varicocele Skin Disease __ Kidney Afl'ect‘ans One visit advisable. butifimpu sible send history and mm atamp for free repl3. Consulram THURSDAY, J L'NE [To ronto-et. . Ask for my 7.11er before NW' mg Your policyâ€"security cos‘ ad â€"-thev are 1110 luww: obtain“ and the diï¬rrence in cast hatter: good and had is $0 infinitesifl‘ When spread owr three year‘; W furniture or dwvlling policiee‘ 23‘ the Wise insurex will chum-e the. 7' eye; 3P2}? 5:15;†hcw MI" W ï¬deqce and [w :1.~.~in‘vd of the}: servxce optiml skill mm prod“- Glasses of evmy dwcriptlon f†$1 upwards. M. B. ANNIS,Qph-fl Several companies that I am for have been paying lossesw policy-holdere for nearly 200 W," and still haw Assets out“!I to heamongst 11w Strange-s! F? Insurance Companies iq th» “g Fire Insurance That lnsures Phone 88 ’PPICE Hours: 20 to You may trusnzt h(' .H. KIDD Sun days Limited Regarding Y“ 10 amtolpl E a 13 bf ill can [WM lcï¬criptim ha 415.1911 Toronto Ont. 91 Ken'A Everlasting Memcrial be same ua}. No Stu: with in Durability. Actisvi: Beauty. Th South Ayrshire Premier Ch Agent for the MunInm-n of Bridgepun. ( “Prism Brand' Ready Mixed Paint‘ memmog» UOU 'im‘ ‘Iflll‘a llu I 2‘ III» mam... ~ « i ‘ . - lw-wie-e Lfll'flr- rluvk \!«u lulu s. Faun flivych d! kil d- ww‘ml. Hun-wt m.“ row“ quul In new. hm. flux at u a: limb and Gate: a luck“. Works , ll! Goo. 3‘ ’0‘? BUILDING U. Shepherd Prep. McLennan C0. In Canada ' m, be“ poskions Thu nu at home Ex of the "numb-g ‘ :k-keeping System“ . {to “Actual Busimu- a; to ï¬nish.†“The for porn] ulw .. 1>0 OUGJt1IJJ1-n ‘1. lo ‘EI‘O‘I‘.’ 1....t. 03‘981‘011 â€cl. Ito‘i-l'lllll’ Il\l|.l'¢lcl0ll.¢ It'll/H '†fl, 00h. 5. Eldon Statiwn, â€OI; thence to 1). F. mum-m “31. con. 3, for night. â€At Ed. Lucas', Args'n‘. “ 1" ICEAttie, lot 2, (Hm M for night. “At D. J. Calder’s, In! H yum. .for noon. -' V lot 8, con. 1’ ’Xhm fl‘t Lornevme for n, . 'ï¬ ï¬‚out. Woodvme, for 560% Again Arthur Graham z' LEETWOOD PO, PETER MORRISON Arygle, Ont. 'fllmnketheseusona perennono sums comes White Bronze mu..' 6 Murmunco IIAQON 3 11479. (11340 The property u J UNE Wm}; enter any day. I Now is a water. Llrgest 1.. Graduates 3. Thousands me. Exclusive £15.00 S i :1 l r brow! luau-l .1 pran Gruni 15, 1911 {ll p1¢i Mk“ ENE r am: STOCK Hmtb