Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Watchman Warder (1899), 11 Jul 1901, p. 10

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uWho Volt-fl." .. M .V Over‘ a century ago_'B_enjatxiin Franklin discussed the property. qualification for voting in Pennsylvania. ..A 'Innn owned a donkey of sumeietrt'Fnlne to enable him to rote. but before the next election‘t‘he donkey died. and the man‘s vote was re. fused. , “Now." asked. Franklin. “who - voted at- the previous election, the man or 438 donkey?” The Wrong no... ‘ “While spending a vacation at Bedtord ’ Springs, Pa” some years ago.” said a .Baltimore lawyer the other day. “I went Que one night to my room. as I supposed. ~untocked the door and was startled by a woman's scmms. I realized at once that 1 had got ‘into the wrong room. You may be sure I did not waste any time getting out into the corridor, locking the door again and entering my room. which happened to be the next one. While I was doing this the woman continued _-C¢teaming. alarming the whole hotel. A crowd soon gathered. and when the wom- an could be persuaded to open the door she declared there was a man in.her mom. 0! course no intruder was touhd. and as the door was locked when the crowd gathered the lady was told that she must have had a nightmare and im- agined she saw a man in her room. I kept quiet. and every one else In the hotel ' was convinced that the lady’s imawina- tion had worked upon. her tears.” __ Â¥.‘,.V-‘ v- commonplaco. mm-h more 86 than the men who are without it. ‘ '1 , 3 five have often noticodjlix'xfiipeoplghatb ns‘gpdlya one sided tense 9f~xihumon Some can see one kind of joke. but not another. and the next confer is just the opposite. This sort 0! mental obliquity corresponds, I suppose. ‘th color blind- nt-ss.-London Truth. ' “He had no stockings on. and I won- 'dered at him. as I did when I first saw .. Jap climb a ladder of swords with which he had previously slit up sheets or paper, for the Florida oyster has an edge which would put a razor to shame, and I never touched a bunch of oysters without 108- lng blood. ' “One day when we were getting up a sheep’s bead'roast on Sanibel island my friend, Charles B. Hogg of Pleasure Bay. N. 1.. remarked to a darky. ‘Yon are standing on a live coal? Looking around our ‘ circlq‘ot ”acquaintâ€" ance. we find quite as targe'_a pi-opm-tion oi women as ~of men who enjoy a finely sense of humor, VI goipkughat women who have it are quicker 1.0 appreciate tho funny side of’thiugs than men. but that women who have it-"not mfiopolcsfly A‘_...._4#I “ ‘I thought I smelt suifin bumin," said the duky as he iéisurely removed his “from the glowing ember. “The skin on this negro's feet was hard baked and nearly a quarter of an inch thick. I looked cioseiy at him when he came out of the water after wqding for five hours. and there was a ridge of skin like the welt of a shoe all around his foot. It was nearly a quarter of an inc-hi; wider than his foot and was grayish white. having been swollen and bleached ' by the salt water of the gulf.” “Later I was cruising on Matnnzu mundwecamenponabedqtfine oysters which Commodore Garry Van Home of Jersey City had recently dis. covered. My man started to gather some, but before getting out of the boat he took at! a new pair of shoes. saying. ‘I don t mean to git them new shoes ell cut to pieces.’ “\Vhile at St. Petersburg. Fla.. I had occasion to employ a conch, or salt water native. to help me get my boat into the water. I gave him a cigar and I, match at the beginning of the engagement, and he was about to strike the match upon the freshly painted side ot-the boat'but something in the expression of my face must have deterred him. as he suddenly withdrew his hand, raised his bare foot and scratched the match upon his heel. It was the first time I ever saw it done. and it grated npon my nerves tor a n10; ment. Observations by u Tnveler on the Burdened Sole- 01 Florida. “‘I .don’t know what you mean when you speak of tender feet," said Colonel Manson. “But I recently saw a couple of illustrations of what tough feet are. open and then snap together. But, as putting salt on a dore's tail is a sure rule for catching the dove, so this gradual and easy opening and closing of the eyes in rhythm. with quiet, natural breathing. when once secured, is almost equivalent to dropping on to sleep. This rule in- duces the respiration that is characteris- tic or normal sleep. It tires the set of muscles the tiring of which is one of the tavorite devices for producing hypnosis. It produces and calls attention to certain sensations in the eyes and eyelids which are the normal precursors of sleep. Final~ ly. persons who have had difiicnlty in go- ing to sleep and staying asleep, report that this method puts them to sleep, and puts them back again when they wake up Goo soon .â€"Ontlook. them. At this stage, or more likely in one of the intervals of breathing without any motion of the eyes, you will an Neel-tons persons will have some difli- culty at first in the gradual opening and closing of the eyes. They will tend to fly the eyelids begin tO'feel heavy and you too] tired and sleepy. as you will very soon. :0 through the motions mom and more éasily Ind laxily until you merely will the motions without. makiwnny ef- fort, or hardly’ any efiort.‘ to execute eyes to remain closed. Alternate ten breaths with opening and closing of the eyes and breaths with closed eyes. When I love! Scheme For Wool-c Ne- ture’n Sweet Restorer. To get a good night's sleep, says a col- lege president, assume an easy position, with the hands resting over the abdomen. Take a long, slow but easy and natural breath in such a way as gradually and gently to lift the hands outward by the action of the abdomen. At the same time slowly and gradually open the eyes so that at the end of the inspiration they are wide open and directed upward. Let the breath out easily and naturally, letting the hands tall inward as the outward pressure of the abdomen is withdrawn. At the same time let the eyes drop and the eyelids naturally fall of their own weight. so that they are closed at the end of the expiration. Do all this quietly and naturally. Do not make too hard work or it. Repeat the inspiration and expiration, with opening and lifting, dropping and closing of the eyes, ten times. Then take ten breaths in the same way, allowing the . ..v ._.I.'l -Womnn's Sense of Humor. NOT TENDERFEET, THESE. 11 HOW TO BRtNG SLEEP. .“Why. David DmiJi" cried the good woman. snatching I'D the child ““‘hat- evér ’is flie’ matter?" "-W‘ell. my 0591'.” re spondod the great 1.;natumlist simply; still gazing at the baby,‘.‘fitf§;vexy stumxgm but I can‘t find a bottle large enough to hold him any: -wlmre.”~ :'- l-i . - leâ€"Tlmt might be 50.1! it hadn't boon a tiig one.- he: would never have hit it. --Smart Set. ~ Very Elnhslble. Jed~CpolIie has just returned from a hunting trip. H? says he shot the biggest hear on record." “ The “Feellngs"_ of Metals. Can metals feel? At the Royal insti- tution in London' Professo'x Jagndis Chun- dvr Bose proved that they can, in'much the same way asuapimal bvings. He struck a piece of copper. pinched a piece of zinc\: «zine it poison and adminis- tered an antidnte and threw light upon an artificial retina., In each case the elec- trioul emotio'n, as registered by the gal- cationic-tor. was painful to witness There is an opening for a society for the pie vomion of cruelty to metals. Folding fans hadkheir origih in Japan ”and were imported thence to China. They were of the shapesstill used. an The fail is as much an article of dress with the Japanese woman as the cute lit- tk' sash which ties in a big bow at the back of her gown. - '1‘ be dry plate IS allowed to remain from 18 to 00 minutes. according to the na- ture and thickness of the paper. Then it Is withdrawn, under the cloth as before, and put into a dark box for subsequent development It is stated by the invent- or of this process that it films are used instead of dry plates 9. large number of copies of different engravings in the same book may be made at the same time.â€" Saturday Evening Post. The Trouble. The naturalist’s wife had gone out for a few moments and left the baby in charge or her absentmjnded husband. When she “returned. she was not a little disturbed to discover the baby crying dismally and its father with a collection of his largest bottles of alcohdl before him. evidently at his wits’ end. searches he, found thié sentence referring to Osiris: “In his hand he held a fan.” Photographing Cloned Pacel. Library rules ordinarily forbid the re- moval of valuable books and engravings from the premises. so that there is trou- ble in obtaining photographic copies or pictures or plates. the introduction of ar- tificial light or even of a camera being commonly prohibited. A method of get- ting over this difficulty which has been tried recently with success is to coat a piece of cardboard with a phosphorescent substance and. after sufficient exposure to the sun. place it at the back of the picture to be reproduced. Then (suppos- jng thatfilhe picture is in a book) a dry late is put against the face of it. and he volume is closed. This can be man- ged very easily by manipulating the dry plate under a cloth that covers the book. In China fans of white paper are used, and it is considered a compliment to in- vite your friend or guest to write upon its mount some sentiment as a memento of the occasion. Perhaps the earliest fan in history was Ntioned‘ in hieroglyphics deciphered by the Egypdiiogist; Lepsius. In his re- The Chinese and Japanese have from antiquity used fans of all possible vari- eties. In ancient Egypt fans of strange shape made of parchment or feathers were used in religious ceremonies. The early Gmks made fans of the flat leaves at the lotus. In China both sexes find the tan esseno tial to their comfort. The Romans used a circular fan on 06 casions 0: state. . Iimpet, crabs and all other kindred, and lastly other fishes. The appetite must be capricious indeed which cannot find some. thing to tempt it among all this vast ur- my. Fans were used as sacred emblems in India. Bat doubtless it is a fact that fishes live for the most part on animal diet, and it is obvious that this must consist large- ly of some other class than their own. If fishes ate fishes only, the race would soon become extinct. Fortunately the sea is full of life. and for those which cannot or will not eat seaweed there are worms in- numerable, jellyfislles, starfishes and sea urchins, the great host living in shells. from the oyster to the periwinkle and the The vast majority of fishes feed on fishes or other animals 'found in the sea. Prob- ably. howth, the vegetarians are more numerous ”than are generally supposed. For instance, all the textbooks declare that a gray mullet feeds on the living matter obtained ‘by straining sand or mud in its month, which doubtless is true, but they ought to explain that owing to the peculiar construction of its throat largerbodies are prevented from passing into the stomach, which is not true. No amount or letterpress will persuade a Land’s End fisherman that a gray mullet cannot or does not eat seaweed. He is convinced from a lifelong observation of itsdnbits that it does, and the fact that the fish's stomach is often found full of seaweed proves that the fisherman is right. Fishes which undoubtedly catch and swallow living prey are wont on oc- casion to treat themselves to a dish of vegetables. I assisted at the post mortem examination of a bream which contained. in addition to a crab. large helpings of two kinds otsseaweed in difl’erent stages ofdiaation. ‘ . , â€" v ---o -- "VI-Mu!» It a sailor's direction as to the lowering mam» colon. Mont Denhen- o! the Deep Live on Animal Sub-tnnces. There are many thousand species of fishes, and naturally there is a great di- versity in their food. Nevertheless, it is possible to divide it into sex en distinct classes. Now, all the animal life rests on a foundation of vegetables. Plants store tip the vital forces in the air and sun‘ shine and pass them on to the great army or vegetarians, who in their turn yield them up to the animals which live on flesh. One or two additional steps may sometimes be interposed, but the result is the same. A caterpillar eats a cabbage, an ishneumon fly quarters her brood on the caterpillar. an, insect eating bird snaps up the fly, and a bird of prey ponnces upon the fly catcher and finishes the story. The inevitable order is plant. vegetarian, flesh eater. herdoxyn a peg” is nothing WHAT FISH EAT. THE FAN. Some people who are averse to borrow. ing trouble manage. to keep a stock. on hand.â€"-Chic’a‘gd News. What has become, 9f the.old fashioned man who said in; would rather be whip- ped than write a 'lettér?â€"Atc193$on Glolie, him.- Dumbletonâ€"F‘ritter’s chief fault is that his temper Occasionally gets the best or him. , , . -‘ Flasherâ€"Very true, and that wouldn't be so bad?“ it didn't reveal the worst of The professor, as he then was. immedi- ately replied. “An Oxford man looks as it the world belonged to him. :1 Cambridge man as if he didn’ t cane to whom the world belonged.” ' ma I). Their Dln'erence.‘ One day when he was in Cambridge the late Bishop Mandel) Creighton was asked it he com’d state the difference 8.07 tween an Oxford man‘aud :1 Cambridge Botanists recognize about 12 species of lilacs, found in a wild state. and these are native from southwestern Europe through central Asinand the Himalaya“! (0 Mongolia. northern China and Japan. None of the species is a native of, the American continent. Lilac: Arc Imported. The common lilac. which is known to botanists as Syringa vulgaris. has been in cultivatiOn for over 300 years. and its no tive home is said to be on the mountain- ous regions of central Europe. from Pied- mont to Hungary, whence it was intro; duced to cultivation in 1597. In Childhood, Obedient. In Wedlock, Virtuous. In Prosperity, Rumble. In Adversity, ' Resigned. In Sickness. Petient. In Death, Happy. Another curious one is that of John Singleton, who died Sept. 10. 1789: ‘ Sacred and solemn To The memory 0! 1 in 4 and 4 in 1. A husband, father, grandfather and tnther-indaw. Two Unusual Epitaphs. 3 A Charleston churchyard contains the dust of many eminent men and severil queer epitaphs. The tombstone of Mary Ann Luyten is a cedar bedstead that has stood the ravages of 131 years. The epi- taph of Charlotte Elford, who died on May 9, 1817, says that “But it taught me a more serious les- son. for I honestly believe that whatever merit there was in my article was lost on that couple because of the intense ix» terest and curious concern which centered in the word which they did not undet- stnml. I have not used the word since. and, while it may be a convenience in lit- erary construction, I believe I would rather spell the idea out in smaller char- acters.” “I did not know exactly what he was driving at and thought at first he was joking me. He pointed out the word ‘deanthmpomorphization.’ I picked it to pieces for him in sections, and he smiled blindly and in his embarrassment forgot to present the bill which he had been trying to collect. and never after that did he dun me. “There was a lean. cadaverous bill col-‘ lector who walked in my shadow on pay day. He walked into the office. with a copy of my article in his hand. ‘Excuse me,’ he said, ‘but me and my wife read your article on the negro question, and, being southerners, we indorse all you say. But there is one thing about it.’ he continued timidly, ‘which we do not un- derstand, and since we have failed to find the word in the dictionary I thought I would ask you what it meant! I had an amazing experience once with a big word. and incidentally the use of it profited me in a small way. I had blazed out on the negro problem. and in a dis- cussion of the mental status of the negro I had occasion to refer to the popular be- liet among negroes in a material heaven and urged in my contention that the ne- gro race was a primitive race; that even his conception of a deity had not yet an- dergone the processes of deanthropomoxs phization. The word" struck me because or its convenience and expressiveness. conveying as it does an idea that could scarcely be conveyed by anything less than a dozen words. “Yet there are but few words used in any of the branches of science which a mere novice in language could not under- stand it he would but analyze the combi~ nation and think for a moment of the derivative fragments which are to be found. Sometimes the word may string out over half a line in an ordinary news- paper column, but an examination of it will show that. even independent of the context. one may easily understand it if one will but reflect for a moment upon the fragments of other simpler words which are preserved in the combination. Sometimes They Come Handy to “one Who Know Then. “I do not like big words as a usual thing, but occasionally they are a great convenience, for they are great savers of space and time." remarked a gentleman who occasionally breaks into a magazine with a heavy weight. “By multiplying the prefixes or sandwiching in the frac- tion of the root of some word here and there a combination can be arranged that will convey in a single word and at a sin- gle glance an idea that ordinarily it would take a multiplicity of words to convey. For this reason medical jurisprudence and scientific literature generally are rich with what is regarded as a rare and ex- traordinary vocabulary. What more of each can I say? They are human flowers that flower and fall. This is the long and the end of them :11. Duo 0! the women who only love Loved nnd grieved and faded away. Ah me! Are these gone’ to the God above? One of the singer: among mankind Sang healing songs from m o'crwrought heart, But are men listened the grass and wind Were‘ wasting the rest uncung like auve, And now of his tame the: will ne’er “pm He has never heard in his gave. One of the heroes of the world . Fought to conquer. then fought to fail And (ell a'own slain in his blood stained mil. And over his form. they slept; Hi- cause was lost and his banner turled, And only I. woman wept. One of the worker: of the world. Living, toiled and, toiling, died, But. other: worked, and the world went on And was not changed when he was gone; A strong arm stricken. a wide nil (urled, And only a few men sighed. :m,z;zm.mw L...:.. L; L» 'z ; ‘ The Evil of It. FALLEN FLOWERS. BIG WORDS. â€"Arthur O'Sbaughneuy. i :xs'h's and in the den-xi ii “.,,.,.n;.nds. finding" a .pmm umi: HIP sot-ina‘ come-s, 1100 ”mm and I.“ lite takes 013': ~ - w â€"â€"“â€"v’ 'I-he winter finds the trees, my“ and gardens deserted except by the few forms which defy the cold. The birds are in the south-Elorida. Cuba and eye” South America: the reptiles are bogged noun-ground; insect file has been aggro» (-d or is hibernating and will Spring into life in the swing. T-b'e only'animals {HM-(mt, age the mammalsâ€"(be deer, elk. (unilmn. [68. cpllgur, wfld rat. ’3’!!! Old ”3” "" “fins-5"." Whirl! wand" nrnr 95-1.-- way. On the Pacific coast the coast range and Sierra Nevada mountains constitute a well defined line of travel. In southern California the flight of cranes and geese along this pathway is a nemarkable sight. The birds, especially the cranes. cover long distances by soaring. gradually reaching within ritle shot ot“the ground. then they stop and begin a spiral move- ment. turning in graceful curves, flash- ing like silver dollars in the sunlight as they turn and disappear. rising ever high- er until they ate a mile or more above the valley; or above the summit of the Sierra Madre: then. as though at the command of the. leader. they turn. and in long lines seary'away with remarkable velocity. literally'sliding down the hill, covering six or eight miles or more be- {Ore the maneuver is repeated. At the approach of winter the birds. perhaps. present the most remarkable spectacle. With some few exceptions they move away from the conditions which threatened them. and in what is popularly called the departure and return of the birds we contemplate a wonderful migration. in which the highest instinct of self preservation appears to have been developed. The birds of the coast have a definite line of migration: the shore line at this time constitutes a bird highway. over which tens of thousands are passing â€"in the autumn to the south. 'where there is a food supply: in the spring to the north. to the fields t know so well. and the nesting places ere the young are to be raised. Much of this migmtion is carried on at night high in air, and during storms myrlads of birds are otten confused and killed by dashing blindly into the lighthouses that mark the high- The change in color of animals at the approach or the winter season is one of the remarkable features or life. The ermine, as an example. and several oth- ers assume a white coat. the change be ing a protective feature. The ptarmigan has a similar habit. a change which ren- ders it inconspicuous to its various en- emies. This curious night coma is. so far as appearances 30. identical with the winter sleep of eastern lizards. The functions are in abeyance for the time and life is at its lowest ebb. In observing these lsleepers I have found them by turning ‘over the piles of stones early in the morn- ‘ing and have often found a row of them. :limp. cold and awarently dead. lying in the sun. to watch the gradual return to life. It came very gradually. those liz- arils placed on their backs first showing sicns of life by a quivering ot the limbs, which were then drawn up. Then the long tail would move, and- finally the little sleeper would clumsily roll over into an upright position. and as the direct-rays ot‘ the sun struck and warmed it into life its eyes would grow brighter. and end- denly. as it touched by some magic wand. its. head would be lifted high. the blue hrcastplate gleamcd in the light. and 'with an air of astonishment and alarm this sleeper. awakened. would dash over the ground and escape. once more a living creature. a type of activity. a menace. to insect life. Every night in the California winter this occurs. and the condition” can easily be supeiindnced by subjecting the animals to artificial cold. The bears in southern California are found abroad at all times. while in the northern part of the state and in the east‘ they enter into a complete state of hiâ€" .bernation. going into their winter sleep well conditioned and fat. evidently living on the latter until spring. when they emerge lean and ugly. less. in this wnf pissing the night until 9 or 10 o’clock in the morning. when the rays of the sun slowly bring it back to life. This is the case with the reptiles or the. eastern and middle states or wherev- cr there is a cold winter, ice and snow. But on the Pacific slope, in southern Cal- ifornia, in the same latitude asthe above. a different condition holds. Here-and the San Gabriel valley may be taken as an example-the lizards are subjected to a winter and summer every 24 hours. There is no snow, the days are bright and beautiful. resembling a cool eastern summer, and insect life does not disap- pear. All winter I have found lizards basking in the sun on these bright days. but as the winter day wears on and 4 o‘clock approaches there is a very mate- rial-ehangeâ€"a strange chill that aflects reptilian life at once. Itis~their winter. and just as the eastern lizard creeps down into the earth for shelter and en- ters its winter sleep. so this California lizard crawls out of sight beneath rocks, into crevices or under the bark of trees and enters what is the equivalent of a state of coma. It seems to shrivel, be- comes seemingly intenseiy cold. often stretches out its entire length and lies. to all intents and purposes, dead and life- a most miraculous manner. The snakes enter holes and crevices, projecting them- selves as tar into the earth as possible. and, coiled tightly. assume a condition. 3 state of coma. in which they remain until the heat of the sun comes to waken them the following spring, when they up. pear voracious and eager for prey to re- habilitate them physically after months of fasting. The frogs plunge down into the mud or the ponds where they have made music during the long summer. and the same is true of turtles. Lizards nt- tect the same places ls snakes and When taken out at this time are apparently lite- less. At the approach of winter animals are afiected in various ways. In the ,north all the reptilesâ€"snakes, lizards, frog! and toads, a vast concourseâ€"disappear in Marvelous Manner In Which the Functions of Life Slumberâ€"DI"! Emigrant. With n Wonderful [I- stinct For Self. {preservation The devices of animal life to bridge over the winter season and their ways and habits during this time present an in. teresting, indeed fascinating, page of na- ture, writes Charles Frederick Hoider. WAYS INVWHICH VARIOUS ANIMALS SPEND THEW warm-23w LONG WINTER NAPS. ‘.""".‘"’ ,wuu rat. 1:!!! and ivhivh wander over the bar In! in the den-f) show: of the fin.l:..-â€"» 7 mun-s, .glm. wanden‘r; ] takes out new mour 1 a - precarious livigg III..;- A I , and even are housed een (legacy. spring into 1! animais ’ 2 deer. elk. nus ' 0 MIL Diarrhcna, Dysentery, Colic, Cramps, Pains in the Stomach. Cholera, Cholera Morbus, Cholera lnfantum and all Summer Com- plaints. Safe, Reliable, Harm- THE GENUINE IS " Ponfi'épe. ........ .. ...§.;.,.;... R}: htruervcd to Chan e time with 0: .000: Tickets and all m ormaxion can le GEO. WILDER, Expmss Office, Lindsay DAILY sznvxc: Cchnrx. Port Hope and Rochester, N. Y. Strs. NORTH KINfi CASPIAN For PamAmerican, Buffalo Leave Rochester, N. Y., N.Y.C. _ “_ ghngMIe, N. Y.,. ...... Anive ghaglotté, N_'._ Y). . .f .7 ...a..-.-o.o.......a o-ooanmgw ”)3 a.............. 1.! .5 .v..5..|:) 1L. 0. B. of Q. Steamboat Co., Limited Ledave C_'obou_r_g ........... THE BARGAIN GIVERS OF UNDSAY Opp. Post Office. '- - Lin We 112959. a Pics .stock of Boys’ and Children’s Suits at all pric'es. Men’s Suits made to order on short are filled with new and stylish Millin- ery goods. It has been the general remark that ALLAN'S have had the most stylish stock of Mininery‘ in IS dozen regular 75c Sailor flats to be cleared at 25¢ each. Men’ S Suits at all prices, ranging from An AAL-AA‘AA $3.00 to $12100 pér suTt. Men’s .Black Worsted :Suits Bargains in Spring and ' Simmer Goods $5 00 Return Tickets; and for 30 days ’3 '0 u 3 STRAWBERRY WINUIDS Men’s and Boys’ Clothing A SPECIAL IN LADIES' SAILORSâ€" RochestehN x", N.v.c...l NORTH BOUND' Our Millinery Rooms (Pin Up in yellow 0W.) RANK IIITATIOIIS. . B. Allan Ill IO‘I'HIIO IOII OR LESS "IA. Our stock ofl Dress Goods is one of ourlarg ‘ departments. We hold a big stock of bofi: Black a?) Colored Dress Goods. all makes and prices. Priesfley’s Black Dress Goods, both PlainIand PM Gm. Manager, Kingsmo, Ont. SOUTH BOUND THE WATCHMAN ~WARDER time '1!!! or without col... .0. HAS NO ..l.<l ..:.5: pm . .7 42 . $.25 Dress floods 8.25 polite attentiOn the new prop”? ‘ the improYemwu’ At the Liver: Stables, Just? ways.» .â€"- H. Hamfixoxh Bobcaygwwm Wilder, G 1-12 W Office; Pczcfiflm Agcngw- 3, T G. T. R Lakefic figki 3:63;” G“ reduced ran Falls Arrive Euriéigh F8115 Mel: on board. Island with Sir. Amve Lakcficid Lute ' Burleigh, Lakefidd, Leave P-u Bobcaygeon, Chem. Burleigh, Luv: Coboconk. Fenelon Falls. Leave Penelon Falls i 30“ i: “. Sturgeon Pain: 9 on“ ‘ Arnv: L indsay :9 3o “ _ Commas a: Fender. with“? to and a: Unix}; for Pm Hi!!- I tor Breakfast and Tea. hive Bobcaygeda 1:15 I“ ' Saturdays hoax will ankaaifltn Mals send a Andy: SAILINGS 0F BOATS Bobcaygeon. Sturgeon M Leave Lave Kawartha [a] me Hem may mm m Men’s Ties, Shirts, Braces, etc d don’t fail to see our £3ch from the lowest price prim“! Blouse to the hes: quality 0? Satin, in every Style. If vou want to' Keldis! Sauce an Nougat". Pats. RI“ WHITE BLOUSES as. Ham“ 1 of \Vhltc Blouses, W 8:644 Organatc, e , " l Ginn‘ |d eve. Men’s and Boys’ M. Young's Point _ McCrackdI'} W Burlcig h Falls ju :nper Island McCracken' s m Fit. pro... I ‘1 am rwcvn non «awn». 395m 2 ; 683. O l _ 5%” 0.2. ..£na.mfl.vm§§...u Rainaâ€"LEI £312 «0 Bobcaygeon C hemong Burleigh Coboccnk 6 out: Ronda}: 7m:- Fencloa Falls 740 f Sturgeon June xst to On. a Bonyseen. 6-15 a!- I? a-Vt Ju'sti north,‘ SEASON OF 1901 133:3deth year: 1303' ‘9 2: 12.10 Lindsay. 13y Gould 2 l7§ IblemJian 10. l 218+: bred 1t he the season 0 e, 172 Kentssta, 'thetbavehu meipcot pri s Puke Glad thy Qentury. ieswick ,‘l’ GEO. A. STATIONEP, all seldom Dre fai

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