STEWART a; O‘CONNOR, Barrister! Notaries, etc. Money to loan at very lowest current rates on best terms. Ofï¬ceâ€"corner Kent and York-nts., Lindsay. '1‘. Stewart. I... V. O‘Connor, B.A. would be a Jay. '1 hen within a few months, .\u'll‘ uni in- ndgh'mflmud would he infected, and real estate \alues would decline as a result about 50 per cent. to 75 per cent. in \aluaHOfl. If you ownnd a fruit ranch In the northern part of the New and were paying my ILBO a My m «hm labors should a Jap= 1! better whom». to be sunset»! t9 «1-» a»: work for 1955‘!!!“ mm tbs amount. Mm aroma you as? he mm Mm 1095; upsn ï¬alflomk's at: much a «vegan and Quantum mm mm éniimman’a have ea- duni m m lags-twenty years! 3M8 mam â€WWW. £93.!!! nan-mm oi 5 or 6 years old were obliged to {:0 to a. public school and sit 300 (iavs in the year at a desk with a .lap 22 years old in :‘mnt of her and a. Jan ‘25 5'0an old hack of her, would you like it ? f }ou owned a house which you had bonght for the purpose or heroming your home and had paid for it out. of your hard- eamod money, would it appeal to you to jinx! some bright morning that twenty .Inp families occupied the house next hoor and intended smxin: 'h-‘rv- 2’ Naturally; you would svll rumors of the State. If y( family man and your little of 5 or 6 years old Were 0 go to a public school and days in the year at a desl .lap 22 years old in from. o a Jap 25 years old hat hnpupular in L‘ahfm‘ma ara gum by H. E. lluericke in the New York Tunes as follows : “ ’l'hc Objection to lha Japanese in- Vusion of California 1;: that the ï¬rst anirmiah will manually be a world- “idc race mu" betwcm the yellow and White races. II" \ou had lived in Immw n. GRAHAM. UNDSAY, 0.0.. guano-cu. 99.6qu 0: Janet seam» o! Annals-flag. 0.â€. Year ptm IGHMV ‘- Wu WE!“ WHY THE JAPS ARE UNPOPULAR IN CALIFORMA 005. MEEHAN. AUCTIONEER FOR tho Counties of Victori. md Peter- bï¬'o. ’Phono 449. Lindsay P.0. THE UNDERSIGNED ls prepared to loan money on farm, town and vil- hgo property. at. very loweflt rates 0! interest. Company or private (until. I am always ready to buy [00d mortgages. I. E. WELDON, solicitor, otc.. Mime Block. Linden, IIcLAUGHLlN, PEEL, FULTON 8n STINSON. Barristers, Solicitors and Notaries. Money to'loan. Spec- Ial uttention given to investments. Ofï¬ces: Dominion Bank, corner of William and Kent-sts., Lindsay. R. G. McLaughlin, K.C., A. M. Ful- ton, B.A., James A. Peel, '1‘. H. Stinson. Woodville ofï¬ce open oVery week at ofï¬ce of C. E. Weeks. IOORE J: JACKSON, Barristers, own Iolicitors for The Canadian Bank of Commerce. Money to loan all mortgages at lowest cutrent rates. Ofï¬ce, Williamâ€"st... Lindsay. F. D. Moore, K.C. Alex. Jackson. LEIGH R. KNIGHT, Barrister, So- licltor, Notary Public. Solicitor for the Home Bank of Canada, repre- senting Waterloo Mutual Fire In- lurance Co., of Waterloo; Federal Life Assurance Co.. of Hamilton, Empire Accident and Surety Co., of London, Ont., Ofï¬ce over Home Bank, opposite Post Ofï¬ce. HOPKINS a: HOPKINS, Barrin- tera. Solicitors, Notary Public. etc. Solicitors for Bank of Montreal. Money to loan on terms to suit borrower. Ofï¬cesâ€"6 William-st. 8.. Lindsay. Ont. G. H. Hopkins, K. 0.. F. H. Hopkins, B.A., LL.D. Dr. F. BLANCHARD IRADUATE 'I‘URON'I‘O UNIVERSI- TY. CORONER FOIH'OUN'I'Y OF VICTORIA Dace â€"- RIdout-sz., corner Kent. M Lindsay-its. Phone 45. Money to Loan. . B. WELDON. Muriposa township Clerk. Oakwood. Fire Insurance ngent. Issuer of marriage licenses. Conveyancing in all its forms. Doctor And Physician Dr. Hall. Little Britain WHAT!) OI" TORONTO AND TRINITY UNIVERSI’I‘IES. “DIAL AWEX'I’IUN m SUB- GERY AND DISEASES OF WOMEN AND (‘HtLH-REN. â€MATE 001(on FOR THE COUNTY UP VIQ‘KHUA. 0M0 Hoursâ€"1 to 3 p.m. ad by â€ointment. iuat a few reasons why the Jap is popular in L‘aht‘urma are giwn by E. liuex‘icke in the New York ' PAGE TWO Barristers, etc. “ur betwecn the yellow cm. If you had lived in r any 1911'.th of time you 2 within m .1 the house use. and flu: 'l‘hen within you were a le daughter U \\ m buyer of Fae aria #s an. and it h manufactured 9%: ‘9 93% Milk“?! Gm. Mud. ‘ . 1m. Fow'eena Emma 09 We.» “m Aw mun is a remedy that has been me the market for ewr ysixcy-flve years and Ma been used in {nominee of (em: sues: durrng theae yeere. so yen are net mum; any experiment whe yen buy Hmr he sane and get "be. a â€e w ren yen euk Ker it. as were it! may inninn‘eeg er ens remeua ready on me am e e Mas. JOHN FooTE. Hantsport, N.S., writes :â€"â€"†I can recommend DR. FOWLER'E EXTRACT or Wrw STRAWBERRY for Cholera Infantum. My little boy was so sick, I did not think he could live. as he was out of his mind. and did not know any one. I gave him "DR. FOWLER’B," and the ï¬rat dose helped him, and one bottle cured him; I recommended it to a friend whose children were sick. and it cured them too," Cholera Infantum can be speedily cured by the use of DR. FOWLER'S Ex- TRACT OF WILD STRAWBERRY. This trouble is the most dangerous of all the summer complaints of children. It begins with a. profuse diarrhoea, the stomach becomes irritated, and the child is soon reduced to great languor and prostration. "If you have wrecked my eardrum; doctor.“ he began, "I‘ll“â€" Tun man listened with. the inteutaeaé nr‘ u suburhauita "wing to near a sweat nae at 11:30 u‘oluvk on a stuvmy night. Hut he shook his new at last, Hut he did not ï¬nish his threat. to: just then the ductor put his watch to his own ear, grinned foolishly and said: "*1 wuï¬m‘t flaw dung Hm." unidï¬he (199mm “Yet. guttwthmg La eértmm: wrung Linnea which" “I guess I forgot to wind the blamed thing last uight."â€"-Newark News. "See here. duvtnr. when you dug m mm mm yen mam cleats-“y my near lug. ma yam†CHOLERA INFANTUM WAS THE CAUSE. "Now. you ought to hear better." he said and held the watch as before. The man listened. “Don’t you hear lt better now?†“No: I don‘t hear it at all." “That’s queer." said the doctor and took another look. “Are you sure you don‘t hear now?†“I can hear you, but 1 can‘t hear the watch.“ “Let‘s try your well ear. Can you hear?" "News? a tick.†The doc-tor lonkml puzzled. Thé pa: (lent lookvd Marmot]. LITTLE BOY‘ WAS 50 §ICK But It Wasn’t the Patient’s Fault Thaï¬ He Couldn't Hear. A man went to a physician and said: “Doctor, I’ve got trouble with my right ear. What can you do for me?†The doctor held his watch a foot away from the pntieut‘s ear and asked: “Can you hear the tick?†“I can ban-01y bear it.†The physician got out some interest- Ing looking instruments and removed a large lump or wax from the ailing mem ber. " A few years ago we had an old faithful Japanese serVant. He had {been kith us twenty years or more, and finally decided to go back to Ja- pan and die. After he left, while we were cleaning out his room, the maid found an old box securely locked and thrust in an obscure corner of the roam, evidently with the idea of hav- ing it hidden. Inspection proved the box to contain a, series of maps out- lining every seaport and every in- dentation on the California water- front, from the northern boundary down to San Diego. For his Em- peror ! “ Those who think California is rash, think it over.†of the State are virtually controlled by the Japs, who live on practically nothing, hoard their money, and send it back to Japan, or reinvest it in lands adjoining, for the purpose of establishing a. Japanese colony and an eVentual foothold for the Imperial Government. Did Not Think He Could Live. SOMETHING WRONG. ‘I‘he party mat can suhmit avaeaiuu: 1,): to (New. and Came out 01!)“: Way hetm‘ and much the wiaul‘, is the mm. but of all the shameful cribs. suï¬ering dvluat that will nurSeS a sore spot is to he pitied, The Lib- eral party in (mtarin has a sore spot “hich has fostered in irritable man- ner during the last week, owing to the defeat of their cause in North Grey. Thu cause of the Howellites has receiu-d a son .' blow, and Lil)- eral papers throughout the Province have set up a dismal wail that au- gurs poorly for the welfare of their party, qut of all the shameful cried, the one of “Whitney and Whiskey" is perhaps the most unbecoming. 'I‘here‘ is a certain amount of decency in all‘ bring to Lindsay nn that date the {615%th "amulian lx’mlak team, 0! memm; Thu kmluk: nl‘p Mm nf {hp fantvat baseball mm: in ‘l‘nr‘uhm {Hm sea: On Monday, Aug. 4, Lindsay’s (“i- \ic Holiday, the baseball fans of Lindsay and the citizens in general will have the opportunity of witness- ing vne of the fastest games that has: emr hem played on the local dia- mrmd, Hm PXE‘CNHVQ of the Town Hnswhnll Lung-up hming dm-iulml tn Fast Game Promised for Baseball Fans in Lindsay on Civic Holiday a. railing. At the hour above men- tioned a. train from Lindsay was passing through and howling along at a’ lively paCe, when the~(-ng-ineer noticed a. mare and two months om colt on the track ahead. The train- man stopped, but the animal struck 011 on the track, followul by her off- spring. The crew of the train folâ€" lowed the fleeing mare and found her lying on the track, with one hind leg down between the ties. The Colt stood by, haVing made no missteps. A peculiar happening took‘plaee on place, and another train and its crew l’oube’s bridge, on the line of the G. : came upon the scene ; ropes were pro- 'P.R., near Omemee, about ten o’clock Cured, the colt's legs tied. then PiCR- Sunday night. The trestle is 85 feet ed up by the men and carried off the high, 300 feet long, and devoid of. bridge to a. place of safety. One tie a. railing. At the hour above men- had to be removed before the dam tioned a, train from Lindsay was’could be extricated from her perilous passing through and bowling along Iosition. She was also tied up to at a lively paCe, \vh'vn the~(-ng-ineer§pre\'ent kicking, and dragged by a noticed a. mare and two months old‘rope from the high structure, whcre cult on the track ahead. The train- she was placed on a stone boat, and man stopped, but the animal struck by the assistance of a. team of horses 01! on the track, followul by her oi‘f- drawn to the pasture ï¬eld near by. a settlement or his rights. His ans- wer to that was that he only acâ€" cepted the crossing without the subway on the representation that it Horse and Colt Held considerable Interest. wu- nou pvnmmo Ior tun-nu w A nutter of to the farmers of this county was it. love-Lighted before the Railway L‘om- After the compny Mum to do mlulomn-s on the 15th inst... at the onythlnu Mr. l'uttornon applied to City Hall. 'l‘orunlu- It appears tho Railway l‘ommluulun and they that the Georgian “My und Seaboard sent on their engineer to look into ‘Rflllwuy crosses Mr. ll. J. l’otter- his claim and he ropertwl against. it. Ian's farm in southumt Om. and Mr. Patterson then applied to the that in doing so it cuts oil twonty- Hon. Ham. Huuhol. who called upon five acres of his farm tram the othorlthu railway cmuml’usionm'n mid ulwn seventy-13w. .l-‘rom the very bouln- his rowmmundatlonn a trial of tho him: Mr. Patterson insisted on hav- case was granted to Eur. Patterson. ing a “ (‘altln pass " or subway unv ()n the hearing Mr. Moore. dor their truck 80 that his cattle K.C.. of Moore Jackson. 01 could freely puss back and forward this town represented Mr. Patterson in addition to crossing over it. The and after a full invmatigutiou of the Railway Company refused to grunt. facts the Rgllway Commission decided his request on the ground that as it lthat he was entitled to his cattle required an embankment of at least pass and accordingly ordered the six feet high in which to build 3. Railroad Company to put it in. lenttlc-pass it would be imposzs‘ible to â€"â€"â€"â€"-o-â€"â€"-â€"- give him one because there would belKEEP CHILDREN WELL DURING no point in their embankment across; HOT WEATHER. his farm which would be of that ele-l Every mother knows how mm! the vation. Upon that representation 'hot summer months are to small Mr. Patterson linnlly consented to children. Cholera infantum, diar- accept the crossing over without the ‘rhoea, dysentry and stomach trou- pass under the track. “hen, how-gbles are rife at this time and often ever, it was built it was found that is. precious little life is lost after only in many places it much exceeded theia few hours illness. The mother As soon as iMr. iwho keeps Baby's Own Tablets in Patterson discovered there was room the house feels safe. The occasional enough he at once demanded that the use of the Tablets prevent stomach Company put in his cattle pass. This [and bowel troubles, or if trouble to do on the ground {comes suddenlyâ€"as it generally does baby required six feet. they refused that he had accepted the crossing as lâ€"the Tablets will bring the Farmers were notiï¬ed of what took Railway Cattle-Passes _ ---Case of Local Interest THE WATCHMAN-WARDER, LINDSAY. ONTARIO. onnldornblo interest. A Shameful Cr Up Two Lindsay Trains tn the UP impercem questions and debates. but the Liberal pave? met, "coined" the “Whitney and Whiskey" headHue. {hereby planed e stain on Its sheet and. on the Liberal party. and papers that reiterated the headline had plane ty of space when they allowed their columns to be ï¬lled with the same shameful cry. Ifitlwns M Llhtlnm' are asked in knvh Hm tlutn in mind and bobs! Hm ‘l‘nwn Hague by giving mom a bum- ;wr wmwh Sun. playing in the Svnior City Ama- teur League, and they have already assured Lindsay that the strongest team will be on hand for the holiday game. It being Toronto's Civic holiday as well as Lindsay's it is an- tiripatml that a large mum-d of the OM Lindsay buy: will be on hand to with-‘9: NW ï¬ll‘llgfl‘l"; It was 2 o‘clock Monday morning before the trains got through, and ï¬fteen men had been engaged in the rescue during four hours. The ani- mals are Owned by Mr. Robert Casey, of Emily. ' -â€"the Tablets will bring the baby Safely through. They are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a. hm: from The Dr. Williams’ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. KEEP CHILDREN WELL DURING HOT WEATHER. Every mother knows how fatal the hot summer months are to small children. Cholera infamum, diar- rhoea, dysentry and stomach trou- bles are rife at this time and often a. precious little life is lost after only a few hours illness. The mother who keeps Baby's Own Tablets in the house feels safe. The occasional use of the Tablets prevent stomach and bowel troubles, or if trouble comes suddenlyâ€"as it generally does wu not pauulblo' for than: a build It. Anoher strange freak in the story of Spot is, that through he leaves his ‘ College beat. at 7 or 8 he doesn't get I home till 10 or later. Here is a prob- ‘km for the budding Burnses. How ‘does the clever collie put in his time 7 between seasons? Another cracker- ) jack in canine psychology is th: ques- tion of who orders him to change his 1 beat? â€W" 3U"! W! "19 IV“! , "Funnny thing um Wall" gets all these commands.“ grumbled one Mamba: o! the club. "How doe: he do M" "Don't on know the mason?“ ro- lled uno er actor. "You know the noon is a little bit deaf in one ear. and Wane; about: louder than the It «meow: bhe face that Mr. Wal- la has bean tewrmi hp ï¬ve m a! oammunda ho am May- bétnre nu Edvard and Queen Alum" an mu as am" emvned heads. M: is a greater sham at royal {avar than ember English when swayed. and on the Green new: Club new“) The.- pian Mad,- 6! Mr. Waller were dim wanna the new: a: me am oran- mmd performance. wluoh had hm been «em ‘9 the _aotog,_ __ __ Mr. Lewis Waller. me amine!“ Englkah actor who has been touring Canada. told a mun of Canadian dramaua «Men t a other day an alumina lmle Just. the point of which “I-“ h a own ‘axppnae.__ ‘ __ m . In the afternoon the reporter tra- versed what would be a ï¬fteen or twenty minutes’ dog trot to the south- east, and called at Spot’s home. That name, of course, was only an alias, but we didn’t want to strip the jolly old fellow’s secret to the bone, did “He was as normal as could be till six months ago,†said the wanderer's owner, who is very proud of him; "then he took to following policemen. He's been all over, though his last beat before this College one was down on Queen. He even goes after the mounted police. My own theory is that he must have been brought up with men in uniform, soldiers per- haps, and that now he’s reverting to his youthful love. I bought him three years ago in Montreal. and he must have been about. a year old then." we? wave to get into the thick fur under his throat, where the city of Toronto had put a brass number on him, the cor- responding name for which would be registered at the all-recording City Hall. to probe the secret of this dog with the wanderlust, who came from the dawning and disappeared into the mists. It would be Sherlock}; t9 5 ‘- low him home. But it was much eas- ier to tell him what a heart-smashing doggie he was until he raised his shaggy head 9_v~d allowed one’s ï¬ngers vu, Ia Acnc, uuu mu. nu... - “Every day we get bones for Sin?“ Davies’," the ofï¬cer went on, "some- times he goes in himself and barks for them. Everybody round here knows himâ€"been coming regular for near a month.†7 The reporter's curiosity got the bet- ter of his breeding, and h_e»det3ermin_¢gl -vu __ The subject of conjecture extricatea himself from under the wheels of a City Dairy cart to attend to his police duties, which consist in keeping all canine trafï¬c on the move. Should a strange dog so much as show his foot. steps in the neighborhood of College and Yonge, Spot growls his “Move on, there,†and the field is cleared. "We call him Spot,†the switchman cuts in. "don't know his right name, but. that. does. Say. he's the jolliest beggar ypg ever say!" ,,,LA!_~AA- tery. "No. lit." the ofï¬cer tells you, "he doesn't belong to me. not yet to the switchman. No. nor he doesn't live in any at the stores. Fact is, we don't know anything about him. ex- cept that he lands about eight o'clock every morning, coming from the east. He's here all day. and usually goes off iglï¬uty gbput seven‘og eight. ,.__:A_L_.A_ PM" 2-!“ Just, Naturally W the Q‘Foorco.“ . In the centre of tho biu street cur int-racctlon at College and Yong. strut-ta, Toronto. stands rhr-foot-nve of tumo pollccmun ‘(eountln his bushy) and I btg black And whu dog. Thin plrttculsr corner in about u dungcrouu u a rent hr the 5010 0! our rubhan at Toronto holdu. since he imminont cur threaten: you dine- omll with a cross bvtwoen u hand-on colliu on 3nd u hibyou-in-thv-buck. But the big Euuliuhmun and the 09!- llo no u uncomciouu all though they were sitting 9n n pnrk bench. , _ Tho Englishman you can under- stand. Even the Toronto btreet Rn“. wny would hesitate to mow down the mu'oat ot the law. But why the col is can: a charmed lite is n my:- One on Law's Waller. I. DOB-POLICEMA'K Ottawa. July Pie-Rap“! promise in being made in equipping the mili- tia. with drill haul. Nineteen. are now under contract. tenders are in and under consideration for eight more, and tenders have been caned for tWenty-ï¬ve additional. This makes a total of 52 centres which are being supplied at the present moment with mommodation. REG A'PI‘A DATES. NEW DRILL HALLS. It has been deï¬nitely settled that Cbemong regatta. will be held on August 14th. and Sturchn Point on Angust 7th. - tota'l area of the cemetery is three hundred acres. It is well wooded, and from the entrance inward there are several rows of magniï¬cent elms. In this cemetery repose the remains of Joseph Guibord. whose grave for forty-tour years has been for the eager spectator a spot of remarkable notoriety, for it has the unique dis. tinction of being set apart and de- nounced as unhallowed ground. Gui- bord was a free-thinker. who died in the year 1869. He was one of the members of the Institut Canadien. and when he died. his widow. a de- vout Catholic. proceeded to have him buried at Cote des Neiges. The auth- orities of the Roman Catholic Church declared that, as he had lived and died a member of an institution that existed a'zainst the will of the Church. his remains \‘t't'l‘t’ not to he suffered to be buried in consecrated ground. Notwithstanding this dictate. the wife ' anPt-etlt‘d to have the body interred at (‘ott- des Eteiqu. but the gates were ’lnnked and admittance was refused. The body was then placed in a vault in the Protestant cemetery. and there ‘ it remained for six months. durincl which time the question of the Church's richt to refuse burial to Gui- 1 bord “‘85 dehated through the Quebec! l courts. and finally an appeal was imadc to the Privy Council of the! House of Lords. The Lords found' i that the Church could not rightly re-l l Pose burial. and a writ of mandamus.‘ ‘ siunml by Queen Victoria. was, issued.’ 1 The writ called upon the Church tot admit the body for burial. but even! then tremendous efforts were made tol prevent the cortezze from entering the: grounds. . It looked at one time as it the con- hum: IIhnNy ‘nnk Mm pramfuhy but, in "HM tn prm-nm dnsevrnhun mam- !nm hf Pnnlnml mammt wan Nm‘wl MN‘ "w «mnm. mu! [he wlmie Ma unrnnumml by a hug» plum-1 nlmpw! like A «Mu: Arthxlwp lluurgr! meuum dwluml in in mm luml MM‘ um "UM: Maw Mme Hui- fnlmmmll‘ fluid n! m: (‘hurnh has liven laid In new. in MN. wparah ml than mu wait at We N'Muvrmed muutury. m he no mums anything hut a prufune plane." Ami :qu :04“ the éhllle may he Semi theme. wita unthiug in partimlur to ahuw that the 21m! in different in enema {rum the rest at the (remvtery. It lnnked at one time as if Qhe con- trm N's} mould end in oivil war. \\ hen Iho any for burial arrived, one hun- drml pnlicvmnn with 12m \nlunt-eere rvprvcmninn sewn of the pprinci ni nuimm II: M (he city. were callpd out. Thm pnrmlml with lnmlml riflm: and MM hnvanla. “hilp the artillery mrpc hrnmzht nu! hmvy guns. hauled in lwrwa. W. G. BLAIR 8: SON Cote des Neiges, with its average of more than twenty burials a day and a population already of more than three hundred thousand. might well be ealled an actual pity of the dead. It is located on the slope and in the vall~y between two mountains, which in reality are merely large hills. The name when expressed in English is Hill of the Snows. rThe MW at “than“ mm. lent-3L. Lindsay great cemeter like that at the north- eastern subur o! Montreelâ€"the Cote des Neiges. the Roman Catholic ne- cropolis. The village graveyard. with its few modest monuments and head- stones oi marble slab. is the last test- ing-place of neighbor with neighbor; the other. with its sloping hills and verdant valleys, its imposing obelisks and massive mausoleums. is the com- mon burying-ground of a vast, motley multitude, the one place where at last the dust of the street vagrant will mingle with the ashes of the great men of the community, a full meaning of the Wealth and the poverty. the pomp and the pauperism. tl.: vastness and yet the inadequate- neu and glittering apperflciglity M‘s Pro. Thinkor'o Tomb 0‘ File. of in- terest Nur Montreal. To a person who i: familiar only with the little quueatered giaveynrd beside the village church it requires a long stretch of imagination to $1!“an MR. MAN GUIBORD'S WAVE. Guaranteed toï¬t or mom'y rhrcv/‘ully u ï¬mded. Your inspectwn is our plmsnn‘. It‘s up to you to see that you got pni/rw w isfaction in everything you wear and 1'; 3: buy your wants at Blair’s you are sur'I' this every time. We are at your svrz'ic‘v’. Your suit made to Measure this rm'k 1‘ the Blair Tailors at reasonable pram. Sept. 8. “oodville Bancroft ...... Blackntock. Campbellford . London . Madoc ......... Victoria Road ATTENDING CONVI‘ZX’I‘I Friday Ticket. Anon? ‘.\ sold some ï¬fteen 1iCLn-" to Mr. H. Pcrrln, of ('um‘ understood that a numhr-r eron Vicinity will atu-xmv‘ uon of the Intexnationnl dents at Toronto. LIMNAY . ........ Markham ..... Midland e Mfllhmok mm... “mu. Medan Newmnrket Oakwaud â€m..." mm“ F MNQMH‘. ‘._ .m. m... .. Ottawa. (Comm! “Mind Paternal-o "mm Port Halley . ..... . Port Perry ........... 5. Sunderland 80"â€! ............ .......... > Toronto (Can. Nalxm Barrie ......... Beaverton ............ Bellerille . ....... . ....... Bobcaygeon Bowmam-ille ........... Cobourg ................... Cobouré Horse Show Fenelon Falls ........... Halibnrmn ............ Kmmount . ....... Lnknflnld mm.“ pensos of the examiners cnu‘ entrance examinations in Ln follows: MeSsrs. John IL».- T. A. Kirkconncll $44.2H Broderick $89.09, W. 1!. $33.06, and G. A. Broderick At the meeting of the 110 Education held yesterday 2 Finance Minister Jackson number of accounts includin: What Entrance Examinations Cast in Lin dsay Ofï¬ce and Residence corner Rum; and Cambridge-st... Lindsav 0mm Phone 387-1. RENUL‘B! e 115711 Dentisxry a. specialty. Cats are promptly attended to day or Light. Veterinary Surgeon Honor Graduate of the "mar Veterinary College, I‘Ubt-‘Ew‘iua‘ Reva! Veterinary College, km the LOndon School of Truman Ltd cine. Monuments W. H. CRESSWELL LINDSAY Butter (Unsalted: on. cent per pound more than market prloo will be pud. Now is the clmuec fur rm :fl-J-m. era to bring in all kin.:. of scrap, rags, rubbers. ham. 3,15,. AEL KINDS. HIGHEST PRICES PAID. Poultry Wanted THURSDAY, JI’LY H. APPLEBAUM Cor. Williem and Peel eta Telephone 337 L Highest cash priNN pui FA Ll. FAIRS. . M. RICE Cemetery Work Bee! 157 L el-t Sort b‘e 19 me i WARREN’E Lindsay Branch. CAPITAL, $15,000 Province of Canada. “:2? every San Francisco, Seattle. Ponlam, Cog-respondents in every pat: < t s unveiling public, enabling mu; their journey the world ox'cf. " by this Bank overcome the .ar- In places where idenï¬ï¬camc v Cheques and Drafts (:r‘. ;.1; 1.: nuts. lite. kronen. 0:9,. can he L , mu cum: " Lindsay. BANK Wm. Warren Von Travel Headquarters for ISG MACHINE: oflers just now a IXG MACHINES the room {or EVERYTHTNG ( m “n In“ you. w [Wild . pm“~ uu‘flm with it “ ‘Mt can hmo M “9 Gun {um - m use will . NW unmana- n 2 fl “‘9‘ 9' II In thn Omemee Bram â€" .vv- M‘n! t Consor Spec; CAPITAL AND DRUGGIS'I‘ AN 11? “RANFH‘ SIR EDMX'NU “'A! l ALEXANDER LAXRI) manufactun ware incoypbrutod by of Parliament A. HIGINBOTHA Im- Mmohd Cred you hm ‘0 t0 3 o’clm'k. “turd!!! 10 to M arm in \h Paid up Capi Rest Undivided Lind!!! ("unmet- Brunch OFC Ofï¬ce Hou ion PR! CI ork, SUI inum Genernl M anag‘ â€much! Ta k winâ€! “0 Inc Brat III Ila