A LL BOOTS __We have made a special effort to have the . 0 Prices, and we have succeeded. Come and te you to Inspect our. stock. We will be pleased to show you the goods and will not p1 ‘* h us while you take 1n the Fair. We will take care of them for you, I Have a look at our LONG BOOTS, all hand bottomed and Sadd e Seam Sldes, $1.75, 53 goods defy competition. Special sale during Fair of TRUNKS AND VALISES. Enry Iain“ ., Hours to MI- 9a and nse feat zaking‘. heï¬tzzs ew- v LOUGH BAR? x45- 142] ugazers. S‘Th‘maitz-Zininlg, when the W“ Berks 3:35:11 married her stage . Her.- >'a::.‘;m;wn. The! have Worked top-1:». Their last child- .‘30. 5 u:._;»-;- 5er family roottree. in Amerhru. DiDDCi. W's»; he married a love]! it! or 2*), zen years ago. Nbbed '1 3 great a tress. She never ‘Nrforzzuzu 9 when her husband '13 fz‘equxnzgv at rehearsals and “Ed says 9:12 is his best critic. ’1 Sem'urL-ngs husband is I grave Mark beard. He is Professor Stenge.‘ um} she married him '88 a :z'x-icm in a musical con- .ot wnich he wns director. She a; Wuurierfu‘. a pianiste and Vi? 339 is a singer. in Dyeing. 1m: popular operatic “3.5 ‘L‘Q‘l'l. Y: :tt’V‘:¢-l‘ a number 0‘ Gui! uuxu .- v ‘ Lz-niece 0! Damon was in the mat saw the revival of “Charb day†at :he 1’ xnncaise in Paris. asible that Sudermann’ n “J ohanâ€" ybeplayedin this country. Miss mam con: rols the American RTAIN RAISERS. '-_ lie Allen has been engaged for «Don Anzouio Perez, support- miter, Viola Allen. in her new uh Pain» of the King." Robert of Sicily†is the name of Lay by Grace Livingston Fumiss, flbe new here later on, with Mr. Elam-1h in the part of the hero. pie Fitch has delivered to Mr. Frohman the manuscript of a fly piay, culEed "The Climbers." Ito be presented in the ï¬rst in- :New York and subsequently in Vadis†as made a trinmphal trough the ltzzlian cities. It was $50 times in Nupkes and 100 in The 11111;» has bad littlo or itrom the play. as the novel was M by Copyight. ‘0 Reszke was married only 8 Years ago to a beautiful French- Hi3 broz‘mr Edouard, however. in; ma: :ie-i recently 1 handful lhis naizve province in the Basso Tern THE SiNGERS. â€â€˜3 Dyck. the popular operlflc â€333 been married a number of 31: Wife is a brilliant. woman. 1 ’01 Smuis. the great Belgian The Van Dycks have two young "‘ and me in a beautiful home In They entertain lavishly. _ poverty â€iota complams 0‘ themnxlzamd, My 01' me dergy gnlukewum' '1 it to the charge 0 “05: the lafty. R." m. azhtieth birzhday ot the ‘ “an†G-WE’ston. president 1131‘ 'cal sem' Mr? 0! CX‘UZer Theo 031 . ‘pDI'O" ct Miami. l‘a., xs to be He Feelebrated in September- . ‘ r 'M connected Wlth broze inception. 1W0 THE DOMINIE. "’0“?! of New York is, deapiife ‘3 Splendid a horseman as hm ther’ the general. All the P09 7%?!) fond of riding, and It is up" taWrite exerciu when 53 :33. though when in town. 5. 31‘1“ in it no often. h; I - l‘f»‘-~ii.~LLl. '4“ WW}! 1“ union.“ ‘1‘" III S. 13711, : will not play in Will ; April. Cmnpose a new com- c: \Vili be Louis XV. m is better known by now convalescent fox revive “Old age \Vinter, has . “‘p “9â€,“ , . , .‘1 ROBINSON and. 81" n one! was. natalrtne Rev. E. K. Milne has been made the M. F. H. of the Catï¬- Iock hounds, making two of his kind in England, the other being the Rev. E. M. Reynolds, master of the Comiston pack. fluid resembling, tasting like and pos« sessinz a close chemical aï¬inity to cow ’9 The saucy little monkey flower, also known :3 musk plant and botanically as mimnlus. makes a. desirable plant for the window. Don’t place the rosebed where it will be partially in the shade of trees or buildings. Roses want all the sun there in. They want all the nutriment there 18 is. They want in the soil also. w- "u w..... Thnnbergia is a beautiful trailing vine, suitable for vase or hanging basket. The blossoms are trumpet shaped, about as large round as a silver halt dollar and are either white or some shade of yellow, with dark velvety brown throats. The plants grow fast and flower freely and bloom until frost comes. l “v uh- -7 An exquisite young woman is she whose dress and hair and skin indi- cate the most scrupulous attention to the daily toilette. We have learned that bathing and rubbing and care for personal cleanliness, the nicety which distinguishes the lady, and adorns her for her station, are the handmaids not of health alone. but of beauty, and l where is the young girl who despises beauty? For the business girl whose daily employment is close and con- ï¬ning, nothing can be better than that she emulate the dainty girl in her everyday care of her dress and ap« pearance and in frequent cleansing of as she possibly camâ€"Margaret E. Sangster, in the August Ladies’ Home . Journal. Th0 Earnlurks 01 C;nnlbsls Like Boas: run. In the New Hebrides human lifo has by the introduction into tho island. Tho canni- naid to pretax roast pork to 1807 more thus 3.500. From 1702 to taken from that! cant 000 Africans We" try as slaves. Beginning Thu “Yes. baby looks like the proud young mamma. have a none like him." 7 " 1 .LA {1 “YE-Es†fl replied from next door. gin tor the colic. â€cu." Vvâ€" ._,,, “My ptrents may come she faltered. - “If they do.†he exclaimed hotly, “they must be pretty small.†And be pressed her still close: to he: manly breast. The Why. “Eliza. why do you write so many let- 9†ters in such hot weather. “ 'ell. David. if I don FLOWER AN D TREE. “cow tree†of Venezuela gives a And it’s cozbihg'up t0 Y°“' It. Li Ping Bang: Utterly Impossible. Like Roast Pork. um. the temperance lady “you give the littla one . I understand.â€- or the next TEN 'l'ha' W fly. Exquisite Girl- 'vâ€"u- â€"-~* come between us.†his paipa.†said “I’m sure he‘ll Ingenuity and Strength Used In Pro- viding Materials For It. The genius displayed by ï¬shhawks in nest building time is often wonderful, leading persons to suspect that the me- r-hunical calculations of the bird are equal to those of the average human being. The hawks frequent forests and groves fringing the waters .of Narragan- sett bay to obtain material for buildinu new nests and repairing old ones. Rot- ten limbs of trees high over one's head are heard snapping and crackingb ‘ 1,. This snapping of sticks is caused by’. ï¬shhawks. Mechanically they examinel and break oï¬ the limbs by sheer force. something that is unique in the character of birds. A hawk flying about wheels short on its wings, having: selected a de- cayed stick that is suitable on some oak tree. Something after the fashion of tent pegging the hawk charges past and just above the bough. Just as he is passing the grub, with great dexterity he ' hooks his claws upon it, and, without stopping in his flight and with Wings flapping furiously enough, bang goes the report of the breaking of the rotten limb, and triumphantly the feathered? wonder carries to the nest the stick, sometimes 4 inches in diameter and 4% feet long. Although as a rule the birds break off the limbs at the ï¬rst attempt. they have been seen to try the operation ‘ on the same stick two and three times i before being successful. In case the stick l is not broken off the ï¬rst time they do not loose their hold. but unceasingly flap their broad wings in the air, exhausting every measure toward accomplishing l their purpose. .. L-.1:.._ nrA nnf Sn [UEH' pux pun... Ordinarily their bodies are not so heavy as to cause one to suspect that they could break off such stout pieces of boughs, but the momentum carried in their flight as they hook on to the limb without stopping almost invariably causes their efforts to be crowned with success. The loud snapping noise of the breaking of tree branches by the hawks would lend a person not accustomed to their habits to suppose that an elephant was running amuek through the forest. - . ' _.:.lA-k 5“,: nf n His Meeting With the Man Who Murdered Bil Brother. The brother of one of the victims of “Jim†Cullen certainly had reason for his wrath. Cullen had hacked to death the Presque Isle deputy sherifl and his‘ companion. who went out into the woods to arrest the big, hulking scoundrel.‘ It was a particularly brutal and unpro- voked crime, and “Jim†Cullen was lynched by the infuriated citizens of the sectionâ€"but that is a story that I have no time to tell here. When the news of the double murder came out to Presque Isle, the brother of one of the victims became fairly frantic in his rage. He stormed, he cursed and raved, and he begged to be allowed to get at the villain who had done the deed. The people said one to another. “Wé mustn’t have another tragedy. VVhat‘SJ his-name will be sure to kill Cullen if he gets at him, and so we must keep them apart.†7 i 4.1.-..A man more do. Therefore two or three men were de- tailed to keep guard over the raving brother and look to it that he didn’t form any connection with Cullen. The murderer was guarded in a little store all the day after the crime. He was to be kept there till arrangements could be made to take him to Presque Isle village. The store was ï¬lled-with curiosity seekers and the posse that had nrrestod him. vAll at once the door of the store flew open and in strode a ï¬erce and wild man. His eyes were rolling, his face wu con- vulsgd with an. ad tried. ltxorthn TH E OSPREY’S NEST. THE AVENGER’S WRATH- llluubu .â€"-- _ )ut four feet in width and of a structure the nests can with- le fury of severe storms. The l so woven and bound crisscross that cases have been known of a remaining intact even after the [led the tree or pole and threw violently to the ground. A se- rm blew down a ï¬shhawk’s nest ten 3 year ago, leaving the nest up. It was discovered several [er with three young dead birds Being imprisoned. they had died THE w A~*‘CHMAN-W'ARDER: LINDSAY. ONT; YS and during I '7 W‘ nmtner or me Vic-Um. He had in some manner escaped from those that guarded him, and here he was ten miles from Presque Isle looking for the man Whom he had sworn to chew into mince meat. Soriierce was the brother’s demeanor that the crowd instinctively broke before him. A clear aisle was left between him and the cowering: Cullen. The broiher strode forward. Some of the bystanders turned away their heads. They expected to see blood fly all over the place. The men were face to face. The brotherâ€"the avengerâ€"raised both his ï¬sts. Then he shouted: "\Yhang blank you to blanknation. I’m a good mind to kick your jaw off’n ye!†That was all there was to it. Then they led him gently away and shut the door on him. I’ve seen men a great deal like that myself. Have you '1- Queer Experiences of Demane and Demunza With Cannibals. Here is a Katï¬r fairy story. It is call- ed “Demane and Demanza†and is a very good example of the kind of story current among the dusky “boys†of South Africa. Demane and Demanza are husband and wife. living together in a cave. De- mane one day goes out to~hunt, but tells his wife before starting that on no ac- count must she cook any food during his absence. lest the cannibals, attracted by the smell of the cooking, ï¬nd out the cave and carry her off and eat her. Demanza, directly her lord has gone, commences to prepare a meal, with the result that one of the cannibals knocks at the “door†of the cave and demands admission. This is refused him. So the ‘ cannibal goes and consults with his tribesmen. and they burn his throat, ‘ which changes his voice to a very smooth tone. like that of a girl. He returns to the cave and is this time admitted. The cannibal at once ties Demanza up in 'a sack he has brought with him and takes her away to his own habitation. De- mane, returning home with a swarm of bees he has found, discovers his Wife’s abduction. Forthwith he tracks the can- nibal to his lair. The latter has left De- manza tied up in thesack while he. goes to fetch some relations to share in the feast which is to follow. So Demane re- leases his wife and substitutes in the sack the swarm of bees. and the husband and Wife at once make themselves scarce. The would be feasters arrive, and the cannibal tells one of them to get some- thing good out of the sack. A -_ .4"...â€" ln-n 15;. 1111115 gwu vu. v- -_ He attempts this, but is stung for his i pains. So mine host himself, to disprove the charge of practical joking that has been unanimously preferred, goes to the sack, on opening which all the bees swarm out and sting him so unmercifully that he rushes from the cave and jumps into a pond head ï¬rst and sticks in the mud at the bottom. Thus he dies, and Demane and Demanza appropriate all his wealth and live happy ever after. There are plenty of other “fairy tales†equally strange, and nearly all of them treat of the fruit of disobedience, virtue is its own reward and like matters, but they have no story emblematic of our “mu imnwn nroverb. “Honesty is the best There are plenty of other equally strange. and nearly treat of the fruit of disobec' is its own reward and like they have no story emblel well known proverb, “Hones policy.â€-â€"â€"London Mail. But He “'ouldn’t ununge. When Captain Jack. the chief of the Modocs. once the terror of the whites“ was captured and about to be executed, a clergyman waited upon the tough old Chieftain to offer Consolation. He ended up a long exhortation by saying. “And if you repent of your wickedness in ï¬ghting good white men the Great Spirit will permit you to go to heaven.†YVith all the politeness in the world Captain Jack inquired: “Do you think you will go to that place?†“Certainly.†said the minister. “If I should die today, I would be there before night.†Quick as a flash came the answer, ‘fIt you will take my place and be hanged to- morrow, I will give you {0 ponies.†The offer was not taken, and the clergyman sought heaven by a less direct route. KAFFIR FAIRY STORY. Though he loomed a mum quxu: The rector could only uy “. Unstrung language! His game In thtt Wty beqamo m wukut that out we 93v. mint! “'ouldn’t Change. loomedâ€"a tuoiJé qute raw, ._. I. : to have the BEST Goods at the LOWEST I. Come and see. During the Lindsay Central and will not press you to buy. Leave your parcels Prospective Guestâ€"Where links '3 A W Proprietor of the One horse noxelâ€" ‘ What are golf links, young man? , Prospective Guestâ€"What are golf links? Doesn’t your advertisement say “boating, bathing, ï¬shing and golf?†’ And you don’t know what golf links are! Proprietorâ€"Well, 1 put in the adver- tisement because I thought some folks’d i like to play golf, an 1 had no objection to i ’em doin it, but I thought they’d bring 3 along whatever they needed for playing the game. “One hundred and sixty-sixâ€â€" Thus far the answers to queries editor, sitting at the telephqne, had proceeded, when the exchange editor threw up his hands and exclaimed: ~ “Merciful heavens!†“One hundred and sixty-six central,†resumed the other. “Hello! Is that.â€â€" “Oh!†ejaculated the exchange editor, greatly relieved, “I thought you were looking at the thermometer.†The Fact] Coming Out. “But,†said a citizen of Kilkenny, when the original proposition was made to fas- ten the two cats together by the tails and hang them over a clothesline. “how long will it take them to kill each other?†“That,†replied the purveyor of the en- tertainment, shrugging his shoulders, “is only a question of tie ’em.†JlNGLES 'AND JESTS. “ » A Sad Case. “I got cheated out of the best part of my vacation this year.†“What was the matter? Wouldn’t they let you off as long as usual?†“Oh, yes, I was away an extra week, but I had to go early in the summer, so I diam have anv chance to look for- l didm have ward in it." Cheaper Than bonnet-n. “Were 1 as rich, my darling, As Solomon of old. Your dainty head should always wear A crown of purest. gold!†And lightly laughed his darling And answered in her glee, “The latest thing in bouncts, love, Is crown enough for me.†With frequent change of fasruon The fleeting seasons sped, And the latest thing in bonnet: Was always on her head. And he, poor. fond economist, With many a patient smile, Placed one by on. her bonnet bill: Upon 1 Separate ï¬le. And one day at his ï¬gures _ m In the autumn of his life . He flung a few pathetic wordl .. ‘ Of proLest at his wife. v A ;; “Were I as wise. my darling, A: Solomon of old, I should have bought you, long ago, That crown of purest gold, “For such a mode of ornament, You really may depend, Though seemingly extravagant. Never nmmar pleaéures 'never seem To gladden man's dull lot. We slight the joys we have and dream 01 those that we have not. 1! skin were always bright and blue .And day: were always warm, 3 1- .11.. 4A They watched the sky 4 For t sin of rain. . -33: i But all their watching _;3:;_;;. W1 i ‘ unvan. A +33%- Tho crops were scorched. - ‘33 My; And the gran wu brown ‘ “‘6 highs} 1:: winches géféii ep 11: o n. 3;; 13153;“ And when their hope â€Wu near worn out. A wise man brought the. A wnterspout. .. #3:}; ‘ He conxed the rain, All damp and cool, With 1 picnic for tho Sunday school. $2.00, $2.15, Failing Rainmaker. Than Bonnets. He Advertised. the One Horse_Hotelâ€"â€" Figures. change of fashion Kan-st, Lindsay are the golf :42“... 345.44 (Nu; ,.._..;_-4 too, ENGRAVING f? On all articles of Silverware purchased fr cm as we engrave initials free of charge. Our line of Silverware articles is very complete, including avaried collection of articles, suit- able for birthday and wedding presents. Jeweler and Issuer of Mamage Licenses, No. 1 William-st., - Lindsay The Old Reliable Remedy for Diarrhtea and Dysentery. FREE of CHARGE Grandma Mrs. ghos. Sherlock, Arn‘ prior, nt., recently wrote : "80d It' “ My little girl, three years of age. was taken very bad with diarrhoea, and we thought we were going to lose her. when I remembered that m grandmother aIWays used Dr. Fowler's xtact of \K’ild Strawberry, and often said that it saved her life. I got a bottle and gave it to my child, and after the third dose she began to get better and slept well that night. She im- proved right along and was soon com- pletely cured." M SIGN OF THE MILL SAW Builders Hardware Horse Clippers Prism Brand Ready Mixed Paints: Chums Wheelbarrows The Celebrated Eureka Smithing Coal Carriage Makers’ and Black- smith’s supplies. LOWEST PRlCES “. HUGHANsv Sunnis:cI'ibeifm‘im't McLENNAN 81 El]. MM“ 8180. Hardware, Coal and Iron and $3.25. Side of Kent-St. arder