.d with the New MORROW L“ .5 d FOASTER. I A‘:\u Al -/ or line of easy summer E5 to: veranda and lawn ‘ I D u '23:; you to enjoy the 2.3:. Your evenings and . :5 be happy. These ~AY. ONT. ' {.5 hop to make you OAT-mm“ C05" Some as low as 40c withdrawalatany .115: am; nice lines in zoo and upwards :p-..4 T" ‘05 and Side- .is 11:5;- are nice goods '1? TWOOD: anagingDErector. _. -..-a E. TANGNEY, “'rs 7. g. Lani“. any x Eiiuse, Kentâ€"Sb, Lindsay .. Weldon IPJSA TOEVNSHIP CLERK. Britain, = Ont. ., etc., thorough? . nt andDrain ted and prompdl 2 ‘9 Agent 1* 0" Marriage Licenses 'n‘.’e:.’ancing in all its forms MONEY TO LOAN \ at Oakwood â€"â€" MondaY: day and Friday 0" have Pale, Greenleh, Sallow Complexion, Gold ‘ds and Feet, Loss of Ap- -te, Dyspepsia, lack of gy or Stomach Troubles, ' YOU do not use Dr. Ward’s d l‘lï¬rve Pills to counter- ° Conditibns. Why? Be- eY Coatain all the natural ‘ necessary to build up the ’ “331. The way to a cure ‘1 the road from the stomach 00d and nerves. All food , n by the stomach and pre- ' absOl'ption into the system. an?" Pills give just the pro- “) a tired system, and dif- g1°w ot health thr h a: III e. 011g 9 yourself getting well take nr. Ward’s Blood Pills. I OREGON BLACKBERRIES. Utah Station. . Commenting upon the wonderful pro- ductiveness of the Oregon evergreen blackberry, the horticulturist of the ‘ Utah station says: The year previous to my coming to this station, 1896, 20 plants on these grounds bore 3-10 quarts of berries. which sold for $17. I had previously known this black- berry in Oregon, where its bearing OREGON EVERGREEN BLACKBERRIES. proclivities surpassed anything I had even seen in fruit production. Three. vines of this variety at the Oregon staâ€" tion, as reported by Professor Coote. yielded 120‘ pounds of berries in one season. I doubt if this record has been beaten by any berry in this country. A few vines in the state which gave the berry its name will often supply a family from late summer until cold weather, so productive is it and its bearing season so prolonged. The size of the fruit, when well grown, is from medium to large. Its quality. to my taste, is fairly good. though some object to its slight cop- pery tang. Like most blackberries, it is a poor shipper, though it does not become soft or deteriorate in quality sooner than the average berry of its kind. No berry has a longer market- ing period. In Oregon it is usually in fruit from the 1st of August until late in October. Its bad qualities are that it suckers vigorously, has a trailing habit which makes it hard to stake or train, and its reeds are too large and its cane too ï¬rm. The character of the leaves and stems can be seen in the ac- countanying plate. The evergreen in the name indicates the berry’s habit of remaining green throughout the win- ter. It has seemed to me ever since I have known the Oregon evergreen that no fruit offered greater inducements to the experimenter as a plant that could be improved by selection and hybridi- zation than this. If its wonderful bearing qualities could be given to a blackberry not having this one’s bad characters to a so pronounced degree. or if these objectionable qualities could be dropped by selection, the growing of blackberries. in the west at least. would be revolutionized. Future For Appleo. At the last meeting of the Massachu- setts Horticultural society S. D. \Yil- lard of that state said that the prices of apples have been steadily advancing until for several winters they have been held so high as to be beyond the reach of the masses. and good No. l apples are a luxury today. They are shipped to all parts of the world as green fruit, canned and evaporated. while the skins and cores are convert- ed into jellies, so that nothing is lost or wasted. A few years ago our sur- plus of this fruit was marketed in the British isles, while today the German states and Russia are calling loudly for them, with the probability that our newly acquired possessions. both in the Atlantic and Paciï¬c. will soon be numbered among the consumers of this king of all fruits. Seven counties in western New York are said to have re- ceived from their apple crop not far from $5,000,000 the past season, while at the same time receiving hundreds of thousands of dollars from their pears. plums. peaches. quinces. cherries. apri- cots and small fruits. Is not the out- look full of encouragement to the or- chard man as well as to the landown- er who may have found his work an . satisfactory in ï¬ghting . which will never be less from regions unï¬tted by soil or climatic conditions for growing fruits that can be pro- duced nowhere else as well as in New ‘ There should ; York or New England? be an increase of area for the producâ€" _ tion of this fruit on the cheap lands ; now so abundant throughout this re gion. accompanied with gre ligence as to varieties especially adapt- ed to commercial work, and more thor- ough culture, growing only fru't of the highest qual- ity. Currant: For the Market Garden. My experience in the current busi: f ness in Minneapolis was that the Red , Dutch was ï¬rst. The Stewart Seedling; came a little later. and if I was plant ing more I would plant more of thl' Red Dutch. There is another currant I raised a good deal of, and that IS the Prince Albert. ' Bunch Holland were a good deal alike, and both of them will keep extremely late. In old times the earliest fruit brought the best price‘ on the market. but now the late fruit brings the best priceâ€"William Lyons Before Minneso- ta Horticultural Society.- .â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"'â€"â€"'â€" The star shaped 1,0th is a novelty tworthottenflon. ., - '/ , , may“ ._, competition : ater intel- . with the purpose of; That and the Long. I THE WATCHMAN-WARDER: LINDSAY. ON]. THE TREATING HABIT. Ignorance of V National Leads to Disagreeable Results. “1 had a rather embarrassing but instructive experience recently,†remark- ed a clubman of this city. “A gentleman from Breslau, who had just arrived in ‘ New Orleans on a pleasure trip, was in- : troduced to me by a friend, who had met I him on the cars, and we strolled into the Experiment In Horticulture at the 9 St. Charles cafe. Going in, we encoun- ; tered another friend, making a party of ifour altogether, and we sat down to ‘ chat. | “In a moment or two the stranger from . Breslau beckoned a waiter and ordered a glass of Rhine wine. To my utter amazement he said not a word about our joining him, and when the wine arrived he‘proceeded to sip it with perfect sang . froid. In spite of all this, I saw that he was unquestionably a gentleman of breeding and reï¬nement, and, while I was strongly tempted to order something for the balance of the party I refrained from doing so lest he would observe me paying and feel mortiï¬ed. The others looked bewildered and said nothing, but the friend who joined us at the door took early occasion to excuse himself and walk off. He is a ï¬ne type of the old school, hospitable southcrner, and I am sure he felt extremely indignant at what he considered an exhibition of foreign boorishness. “The fact is that our American custom of ‘treating’ is almost entirely unknown [in many parts of Germany and else- where in Europe. There it would be i considered very bad form to offer to pay lfor the refreshments of a chance ac- l quaintancc, and our friend from Breslau [was simply deporting himself according to the custom of his country. \thn he becomes better acquainted with Amer- ican idiosyncrasies, I am sure he will be covered with chagrin. After all, how- . ever, treating is an idiotic usage, and I lmust confess a private sympathy with l the foreign point of view.†I l l '-_W __...._â€". “That reminds me of a whimsical little incident which I witnessed in 1895 in a cafe in Antwerp.†said one of the listen- ers to the foregoing. “I was spending a few weeks in the city and used to drop in at a place to which I refer to read my paper over a glass and cigar. The pub- lic room was equipped with a number of little tables on a sanded floor, and ranged along one of the walls were several cab- inets or lockers where residents kept their private bottles. The house supplied the liquor, and they strolled in whenever they felt like it and helped themselves to a nip. ' “One day when I was sitting in my favorite corner a stout gentleman, who was evidently an old citizen, came in with an American whom he seemed to be showing the sights. The American was erect and slender, with a digniï¬ed car- riage and an iron gray, semimilitary mustache. They took the adjoining ta- ble, and presently the portly native wad. died over to the cabinet and returned with a long necked wine bottle and one glass. He poured out a drink very dc- liberately and then recorkcd the bottle. the American looking on with an expres- sion of amazement. ‘Your health, cap- tain,’ said the native in French and raised the glass to his lips. The Amer- l ican’s eyes blazed. ‘Pcrdition!’ he roar- ed, springing to his feet. ‘Do you mean to insult me?’ And be swept the bottle off the table with a blow of his cane. Of course there was a frightful row. E's- erybody talked at once, and the gen- darmcs rushed in and took several reams of memoranda. “The funny part of it was that the portly gentleman couldn’t how he had possibly given offense. I heard him discuss it several times after- ward. and when I left it was still a pro- found mystery, only to be explained by the well known eccentricity of all Amer- icans.â€â€"-Ncw Orleans Titties-Democra . \Von by a Poem. 5 One afternoon a sweet looking old I l l I I l i l l lady with hair as white as the snow and countenance smiling and cheerful stepped into an attorney's ofï¬ce in the Trust building and said she wanted to have tho lawyer make a few changes in her will which she had written about ten years ago. The lawyer made note of the altera- tions desired and then for the ï¬rst time picked up the faded instrument for an examination. Down in the corner of the ï¬rst page written in a very ï¬ne, delicate, feminine hand he saw this verse from Tennyson: Twilight and evening star And one clear call for me, And may there be no moaning of the bar When I put out to sea. “’thn I read that prophetic vcrsc,†said the lawyer, “I took one steady look at the lovely old woman, bowed my head with reverence andâ€"wellâ€"I cut my fee right in two in the middle.â€â€"Indi:m- apolis Sentinel. His Little Joke. An enterprising Philadelphia restau- l rant proprietor hung out a large black- =:board sign one day with the following 5 announcement: “You Can’t Beat Our 15 i Cent Dinners.†I This sign proved to be a good drawing lcard until a young man of humorous lturn of mind came alon". The latter, a seeing the sign. stopped and, after scru- tinizing it closely, smiled one of those smiles which bode no one any good. He ‘ waited until none of the employees was ; watching. and. taking out his handker- ; chief be erased the letter “b†from the g word “beat.†. The transformation was complete. and it was not until a crowd had collected that the proprietor of the restaurant dis- covered why there was a larger crowd ’ outside than inside. . 2 An Illustration In Point. 3 “Right ahead of us,†resumed the trav- eler who was narrating his experiences, “yawned the mountain passâ€- “Do you know," artlcssly interrupted one of the younger women in 111:) compa- ‘ ny. “that seems very queer to the? low can a mountain yawn?†“Did you never see Cumberland Gap. .; miss?" he asked. Ami there were no more interruptions. --< ago Tribune. ....â€" ‘Vlty Not andt‘n'w. ' ’h the help of Pro: Crate.†said 1'22: . "5 "l-v~-1«-i:xtl. "I h;;‘ to restore M m .. . lliii‘fl -‘i-:* sick '.'rr‘“'tn whose g . r." 2~ ? zit-hie" *‘1 out of so- 3] .~ m. “it 3 must Lave the cli- m, 2.4,. Island. why not New- 1:. " :iielpl in Press. \' ‘. Motor: been a poker player 4i. ‘ ~. i... accumulated with :17 'would have come in ll: ‘ ‘ g i g j l-‘t'able. you will be loved.â€" Ei - ~.~ Magazine. 0 Customs l MEN OF MARK. . William J. Bryan, Congressman Wil- hams and Richard Yates were members of the some class at Illinois college. Rev. Dr. Norman Fox, a retired Bap- tist clergyman, has been elected mayor by the Republicans of Morristown, N. J. General Cronje appears to 12‘ thriving in exile. Since his surrendc. he has : gained 30 pounds of the 40 he lost in his ~â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" W“.v -. W_ _________.___._,_,-_ understand : recent campaigning. Senator Tillman said recently, “I have two colored men in charge of my planta- tion, men who think the world of me and to whom I would trust everything I own.†‘ J. W. Robinson of Butler county, Kan., owns a farm of more than 10,000 acres, of which he works 4.500 acres himself. “In my 15 years’ residence in Kansas,†he says, “I have never'known a year that I did not make money.†Dr. Edson Fesscndon Gallaudet, head coach of the Yale crews and an in- structor in physics, will resign at the close of the present rowing season to ac- :ept a place with the Cramp Shipbuild- ing company of Philadelphia. Julius Fleischmann is one of the youn- gest mayors of a large city in this coun- try. He is but 28 years old and is the mayor of Cincinnati. \Yhon only 20. he was made a colonel on the staff of Presi- dent McKinley, then governor of Ohio. A New York paper is authority for the statement that Thomas B. Ilecd is grow- ing more portly and that he uses the fact as the basis for a claim of extraordinary politeness. because he is able to give two ladies a seat by standing up in a crowded car. James J. Clark, once a prosperous res- taurant owner of New York, who made $150,000 a year from the Bijou cafe alone until that notorious resort was shut up by the police. has opened a clam chowder stand at Coney Island. At one time Clark was rated as a millionaire. He lost his money in Speculation. Half of the 2‘2 dukes who sit in the British house of lords have no sons to succeed them. The dukes who are witl - out heirs apparent are the present Duke of Argyll and the Dukes of Beaufort, Hamilton. Dcvonshirc. Leeds, Manchesâ€" ter, Newcastle, St. Albans, Somerset, \Vellington and “’estminster. Two years ago Louis Patnaud resigned his place as assistant postmaster of Ev- erett. “711511.. to try his fortune in the Klondike. Three of his friends made up $400 as a “grub stake†for him. No word came from the recipient until he returned to Everett :1 week ago, when he divided $11,000 among the three friends who had helped him. Nineteen years ago Lord Roberts re. ceived the thanks of both houses of par- liament for his march from Kabul to Kandahar. He is the only man living on- titled to wear two Victoria crosses. His own he wears on his left breast, butâ€"ac- cording to army regulationsâ€"the cross earned by his son he is not only allowed but commanded to wear on the opposite side. THE CYNlC. A dollar will buy a lot of necessities. but few pleasures. Premcditated smart sayings nearly al~ ways contain poison. Your best friend is the one to whom you gossip about all the others. \l'hcn a man appetrs with new clothes, all his friends try to be funny. A man never stammcrs or hesitates over what to say next when he is talking about his grievances. There is no denying there is a sigh of relief when the guest who frowns down all attempts at gossip puts on his bat and leaves. The men attending political conven~ tions will soon be returning home to call their wives “gads†for attending church societies meeting next door. A great source of mortiï¬cation to a wo- man is that when she has the preacher to dinner and he asks a blessing her bust band and children will not behave as if they were used to it.â€"-â€"Atchison Globe. THE DOMlNlE. St. Patrick was voted into the calendar of saints in the English prayer book re- cently by the convocation of York. The Rev. Henry A. Stimson. D. D., pastor of the Manhattan Congregational church of New York, has just been ap- pointed Southworth lecturer at Andover Theological seminary for next year. He will deliver a course of six lectures next winter upon “The Church of Today." The report of the churches in the Chi- cago presbytery. just issued, gives a to- tal church membership of 20.349. a de- crease of 814 on last year’s report. This is said to be due to a severe pruning of the rolls. The money raised for mission- ary and philanthropic purposes during the year amounted to $550243. compared with $528538 the previous year. THE ART OF WAR. High angle ï¬re is that from guns at all elevations beyond 15 degrees. A steel plate three-sixteenths of an inch thick which cannot be drilled or pierced by a Lee-Metford bullet has been produced by a Slictlicld (England) ï¬rm. Promotion in the Russian army is ex- ceedingly slow. It takes from six to seven'ycars for a captain to become a lieutenant colonel and four for a lien- tenant colonel to become a colonel. ______.__â€"-â€"-â€"- The \Vuichl. of a Bee. Careful weighing shows that an ordinary bee, not loaded, weighs the ï¬ve thousandth part of a pound. so that it takes 5,000 bees to make a pound. But the loaded bee, when he comes in fresh from the ï¬elds and flowers, freighed with honey or bee broad, weighs nearly three times more. ____________ The Match Trust Spreading Out. The match trust has several factories in Europe and has now absorbed an important establishment in South America. ________.â€"â€"-â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€"- Johnny's Soliloquy. “I shall be glad when I get big enough to wash‘my own face, †mut- tered little Johnny after his mamma had got through with him, “then I won’t wash it. ’ ’ M In His Own Measure. “I believe your friend, the apothe- cary. takes a dram occasionally. †"Oh, yes.“ I believe he has no sample‘s attainst it†.... - _ 4 .q.‘ DR. McCULLOUGI-l of Peterborough, will visit Lindsay Every Wednesday at the Simpson House. Hours 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Consultation in Eye, Ear, Throat and Nose diseasesâ€"‘44 yr. Money to Loan A large amount of private funds to loan. 4% and 5 per cent. WM. STEERS. Solicitor. Dominion Bank Building, William Street, â€"-24-Iyr. Lindsay. G.T. R. LOCAL TIME-TABLE DEPARTURE Bellevtlie mxed.................-........ 5 Port Hog Mixed vie Bethany........ ..... 6 Toronto ixed via Whitby and Port. Perry 5 Toronto Express.........................-.. 8 Port Hope Mathis. Peterboro...............10 Toronto Mixed via Lornevllle.-...,... .. .. .12 Ba'ibuiton Mixed .....-............_...... 2 Toronto Mall... ..... ..-..--.............. 6 331,000“ Mix“... ll... IIIII 0... III-... Port. Hope ExpressviaPeterboro.......... ARRIVALS. Halibmon mxodooltulDOCUDCIOOIOIIIOOO- Toronto Ex rose from Port Hope............ Portliope ilfromToronto.--........... Ooboconk Mlxed........................... Port Hope Mixed from Port Hope.. ......“ Toronto Hall from Port. Hope ........... .. Port. Hope E rose from Toronto. .. . .... ... Whitby Mix ................ ....... 858 p.m Bellevllle Mlxed............ ....... . ..... 10 20 p.m The 11 38 mail for Port. Hope closes at the P. 0. at 10.30 a. m. The 8.55 mail for Toronto closes at 8.40. The 11.00 mail going north connects with the I. B. 0. RV. The 2 40 p. m, north train carries no mail. _.__.â€"_.__â€"â€"â€" I. B. O. RAILWAY, G. T. R. SERVICE. â€"â€" 881135384858 .Vrrrer B B B B B B B B B one prev 8 588883 B E B B 8 use??? 8 02 p.m Leave Lindsay ........... ........ 10 50 can Leave Junction ............... ..... ....... 2 40 p.m arriveat I. B.O. Junction ..... 1 35 p.m Arnve at. Lindsay...†................... 5 15 p.m L B. ,0. SERVICE. Leave. Bancroft. ...... .. . ..... ......11 00 am Leave Junction ........ ......... 2 20pm Arrive at Junction ................1 45p.m A111“: at Bancroft .... .-.. . ............ 5 15 p.m Lindsay Malble Works ROBT. CHAMBERS is prepared to furnish the pcephof Lindsay and sur- rounding country with MON ENTS and HEAD- STONES, both Marble and Granite; Estimates promptly given on all kinds of cemetery I" 'l Marble Table Tops, Wash Tops, Mantle Piecee,'etc., specialty. Being a practical workman, all should see his designs and compare prices before purchasing else- where. WOBKS â€"In the rear of the Market on Cambridge- st,.'oppoelte the packing house. ROBT CHAMBERS C - NADIAN ’ ' . ?Acl FlC Y. WILL RUN AT RETURN FARES Home “strata Seeker? $28 60 Day unreal Swan River Excursions lag... ,,,,, , To the l¥£f§3i7.2)$30 Canadian fireballs North West j Eager-.22} $40 Going June xgth Returning untillAug. 20th (an 3311' or as. Alberta) Going July 13th Returning untillSept. nth (All Rail only) Going July 17th Returning until Sept. 16th (All Rail or 8.8. Alberta) F‘ 1' tickets and further information apply to any Canadian Paciï¬c Agent. or to A. H. NOTMAN, Asst. Genl. Pacer. Actâ€, 1 King St. East, Toronto. ;_‘_‘; T. C. Mitchell, Agent 0.P.R- OFFICE - - - KENT STREET Important Announcement! The undersigned has purchased one of the ......famous...... AYLMER SPHAYEHS and is prepared to whitewash the interior of Factories, MiIIS, Farm Buildings, etc., on the most reasonable terms. Farmers should have their Outbuildings whitewashed this spring. It will not only improve the health of their stock, but will also add materially to the light. For particulars apply to. . Geo. MoFaolyen, Painter, - Lindsay, Ont. LAKE ONTARIO BAY OF QUINTE STEAM BOAT COM PANY, Limited Week-Day Route Between Rochester, N.Y., Cobourg and Port Hope, Ont. TAKING EFFECT 30TH APRIL. SOUTH BOUND Leave Port Hope ..... .-....... ........... 2 30 nu. “ Oobourg 125 “ Arrive Charlotte"... .................... 7.15 “ ‘-"‘ BOOhOBtIOl'(N.Y.o.)......u......o 7.50 “ NORTH BOUND Qmï¬strp H. GROSS DENTIST, ' - llIIIISAY. Hambu- aoyu Dental College, Ont. 11¢.qu for Good Dentistryâ€"84. DR SUTTON, DENTIST "-â€" IIIIDSAY Honor graduate of Toronto University and Bo e Oonoge of Dental Surgeons. All th 1:. y method: adopted and prices underage. test mproved Oï¬ce over Anderson 8 N u ' “taâ€"29. genre, opposite Vcltchl I)R.E.A.TOTTEN nnulsr,‘ "'7 urns“ Graduate :0! Toronto Univereit 'nnd Bo of Dental Surgeons. y“ yel Colleg Every department of dentistry done in a practical and scientiï¬c manner at moderate prices. Ofllce over Morgan’s Drug Storeâ€"17. DR. F. A. WALTERS DEITIST. - llNDSAY Honor Graduate of Tor nto Unive it. ‘ College of Dental Sui-W30“:J re Stud Boy. All the latest and improved branches of dentistr Successfully performed. Charges'moderate, OFFICE over Gregory’s Dru Store co streetsâ€"814% g , mer Kent and William DR. NEELANDS DENTIST. - - LINDSAY Extracts teeth without pain by Gas (Vitallzed Air administered by him for 26 years with gran euoceea He studied the gas under Dr. Cotton, of New York the originator of gas for extracting teeth. Dr. Cotton writes Dr. Neelands that he has given the gas to 186,417 persons without an accident. Dr. Neale-ride uses the best local pain obtundere. Beautiful arti- ï¬cial teeth inserted at moderate prices. Please send a. postelmrd before coming. Ofllce nearly opposite the Simpson House, Lindsay. -23 DR. ARTH UR DAY DENTIST successor: to re: LATE on. HART Member of Toronto Dental College and Toronto- Unlverelty. Also graduate of American Dental College. Hut Modern Dentistry practised in the most- ooientlflc manner. Crown and Bridge Work a specialty. Charge- moderate. OFFICEâ€"94 Kent Street ï¬hpsitiatts DR. A. E. VROOMANQâ€"Ofï¬cer and residence north-east. corner ' Cambridge-etc. Telephone 51. Fwd DR. G. s. RYERSOAN, 60 COLLEGE-2:571. TORONTO EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT SPECIALIST DR. JEFFERS. Ofï¬ce hours 9to 11 mm: 2 to 4pm.; 7 tr 8 .m. Bui- dence 30 Wellington, meet. Telephon. £0. 43. R. WHITE, GRADUATE OF of Toronto Universitv Medical Facu't . graduate of Trinity University, Tor-ante, and He’mablzg gï¬Coléegih of Physicians and Surgeons. Ontario. co on -ess corner Linden ' and Russe TelephOce 107.â€"23-ly. y 11 streets. DR. A. GILLESPIE, CA. AND 8.0. 06cc and residnece Corner of and Russell streets. Licentiate of Royal “$2215; Physic ans and. Surgeons, Edinburgh. ' Licentiate of Midwifery, EdiDDUIL‘h. Special attention given to gidwgery and diseases of women. Telephone No. DR. SIMPSON, PHYSICIAN, Ofï¬ce and residence, Russel-st. Lin ‘ sec- end door west of York-st. Oï¬ice h c ur's, 9.63322... to 10.30 aux; 1.330 p.m. to 3 p.m, and 7 to 8 p.m. DB. :er SIMIITOdT' Igcrzzï¬uatefof Univ. of Trinity 031., ronto e on o ege 0 Ph eicians d Ont. Late of Rockwood Asyilzm, an mwm' i13880011. Grand Trunk Surgeon, Lindsa District. Lind - . 3-13". 4th. 1891. y 933). Feoru nutrients, r. ONALD R. ANDE R S O N, Banister, Solicitor. c. Oï¬lce immediately opposite the Duly Houee, Kent-BL, Lind . . ANDERSON. say D B “‘ H. HOPKINS, Barrister. G' Solicitor for the Ontario Bank. Money to Loan at Lowest Rates. omce No. 6 William Street south. G. H. HOPKINS. STEWART O’CONNOR.â€" Barrieters, Notaries, etc. Ofï¬ce over Ontario Bank, Kent-st, Lindsay. Money to Loan at very lowest rates. T. STEWART. L. v. o'ooxxoa, BA: MOORE JACKSONâ€"Bar- risters, etc. Solicitors for the Ocnnty of" Victoria and the Bank of Montreal. Money 1.01an on mortgages at lowest current rates. 0600â€"- Wlillam-et., Lindsay. F. D. MOORE. ALEX. JACKSCN MCLAUGHLIN MCDIAR- MID, Barristers, Solicitors, c. Linosay and Fonelon Fella. Lindsay Omce, Baker's Block. Kent-at. We are loaning money on real estate ï¬rst mortgage in sumo lergeand small, to suit borrowers, on the best. terms an at the very lowwt rates of Interest. We do nottlend on notes or chattel security R. J. McLAUGHLIN I". A. HcDIARMID glutï¬mttrre PETER BROWN, Auctioneer, Oakwood P.0., (interimâ€"Farm stock and other sales prompgly attended to. Chars _ee mod- erate. Sales can arranged for at THE WATCH- MAN Oflice. HOMAS SWAIN, gs, Auc- tioneer, Caesaree P.O., Ontario. â€" Sales conducted in any part of the Conan of Durham as reasonably as in my own immediate neigh- borhood. Experienced in all kinds of mercantile and stock 321193. Terms reasonable. Also licensed to conduct sales of all kinds in Muiptma township. Correspondence answered promptlyâ€"~47- iv. “3° â€chaff“...9:331:::::.'.'.'.".':21: iii ‘3“ The wdersrgn' edm versed t° Weâ€? IooloooIoIO-Qouoooooolo-O 20 . . . ‘ â€BREE... loci.“ mm‘mmtsmmd F“'“°'T°“ H. GILDERSLEEVE, Gen. Manager, Kingston. 'r" #â€" For tickets and freight rates apply to use. wnoea. Linda», petty at 4% per cent. peranoum. Small loans at slightly increased rates. MGSWEYN WEIâ€"DON. Lindsey. i i { l t