‘DSAY particles ordinary 5011" .7..â€" -v shown for It not Accounts may be opened at every branch of The Canadian Bank of Commerce to heaperated by mail, and will teceive the same careful attentionas is given to all other departments of the Bank’s business. Money may be deposited or withdrawn in this way as may as by a personal visit “the Bank. 1231 Lindsay Branch, H. A. HOLMES Manager FABMEBS’ BUSIN 588 The Canadian Bank of Commerce extends :to {Farmers every facility for the transaction .of their banking business including the discount and collection of salesmotes. Blank sales aoteé‘are supplied free of charge on application. THE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE The New High Power STEVENS RIFLE 7 Shot Repeating The Fastest Action made Sold with the Stevens Guarantee at $35 Winchester Repeating ~Rifles, ' from 314‘ Uphards CAPITAL ‘ $10,000,000 2 Storey Frame House, foundation. $800 on savings at rates varying from 3% to 4; per can conditions as to security etc. which are unexoeflgd. We respectfully solicit your patronage. t., under Incorporated 1895 Capital $300.000.00 Reserve 1 RSDAY, NOV.’-2, :1va TUL JAMES LOW, The Victoria Loan 8: Savings Company 10 to 3 o’clock. Saturday- 10 to 1 o’clock. Branches of the Bank In every Province of the Dominion. A general Banking business transacted. Savings Department at every Branch. Capital Paid Up Rest Undivided Proï¬ts 17mm , » .G.Edwa.rds .81 CO- SIR EDMUND WALKER, 0.10., “.13., :D.C.L.. P ALEXANDER LAIRD, GENERAL MANAGER Both in South VWand. 1 Storey Brick Veneer Cottage, 5'10th- In the mortgage business we are enabled to pay int e1 es foig H°m= H. B. Black, BANKING BY MAIL ESTABLISHED . 1817 Reserve Fund $58,000.00 rooms, Manager Lindsay Branch $41,400,000 ‘ $l2 ,000 .000 $1,070,735 $27,470.735 writer, concrete calibres, 433%.“??? 3-:me Parisâ€"The Irish Town (Strange contradiction. Cornwallâ€"The Factory Town. Goderiéhâ€"The Salt Toxnl. ‘ Brockvilleâ€"The Island 'I'own. Thoraldâ€"The Hill Town. LindSayâ€"The Commercial Town. ONTARIO. Torontoâ€"The Queen City. Ottawaâ€"The Capital City. Hamiltonâ€"The Ambitious City. Londonâ€"The Forest City. Kingstonâ€"The Limestone City. Brantfordâ€"The ’l‘elephoz 9 City. Windsorâ€"The Frontier City (which claims also as recognition as the Royal City). St. Thomasâ€"The Railway City. Chot‘hamâ€"Tbe Maple City. St. Catharinesâ€"The Garden City. Guelphâ€"The Royal City. Stratfordâ€"The Classic City. Bellevilleâ€"The Bay City. Woodstockâ€"The Century City. Peterboroâ€"The Electric City. Gaitâ€"Little Manchester. Berlin - The German town (also called Busy Berlin). QUEBEC AND EAST. Montrealâ€"The City of the Royal Mopnt. Qï¬ebeoâ€"The Rock City. and also the ancient capital. Halifaxâ€"The Garrison City. Annapolisâ€"The Bluen0sc City. Charlottetownâ€"The Island City. MANITOBA AND TERRITORIES. Winnipegâ€"The Praitie City. Brandonâ€"The Police City. Calgaryâ€"The Cattle City. BRITISH COLUMBIA. Vancouverâ€"The Terminal City. Victoriaâ€"Tho Island City. New Westminsterâ€"The Royal City. Nanaimoâ€"The Coal City. PRESNN ONCE MORE. Millbrook, Oct. 26.â€"J. J. ton of Bethany was the unani choice of East Durham Cons tives at the nomination meeting at Millbrook to-day. Mr. Pr was the only name brought 1 the convention, and was nomi with much enthusiasm. Mr. ton expressed his thanks fer a newal of conï¬dence. SAVED FROM AN OPERATION -;--.; mother bou ht m'e . Iï¬ydia E. Pi m’s egetable Com. n , ‘ pound, and today I V , am a. healthy wo- m " ‘ man. For months “Ur ‘ I suffered framinâ€" flannnaï¬onandyourSanatgve Washre. lieved me. Your ver P1113 have no oqmluacatharti . Anyone ' 5:00! of what your medlcines have one for me can get it from my drug. flat or by writing tome. You unpge ,2" Peoria, Ill.â€"“I wish to let every one L-‘o: E. Pinkham’s reme- " dies have done for me. For two years "-3 -I suflered. The docâ€" ' tors said I had tu- . more, and the only J remedy was the surâ€" ' geoh’s kmfe. My . u, ,A-_~LL __ A By Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Scott’s Emulsion Names of Some Canadian Towns regularly. It wfll give ypu W, flesh and Be an to get SCOTTSâ€" itâ€: the Standard cud always to throw OE and keep 05 disease. Get all the sunshine you can, and take ALL DRUCEXSTS bct. 26.â€"J. J. Pres- y was the unanimous :ast Durham Conserva- omination meeting held to-day. Mr. Preston name brought before ~ and was nominated MORE. {BORDEN’S MANY : SIDED CABENIT himnellâ€"R. L. Borden. legal. politic. o1 type of able. cultured. kindly con- scientious, thoroughly Canadian statesman. You remember seeing in the new:- papers that Mr. Borden had handed to Mr. Foster the portfolio 0! Trade and Commerce. You needn't look in his ï¬ngers for it. He uses his hands 1as it gestures were nmded to assist. 1his speech. It’s a. wholly superfluous habit. No man in Canada can clothe his meaning in more effective verb- iage than Mr. Foster. who has been in Parliammt nobody can remem- I! you want to see ., representative cross section of the Canadian people just clap your eye to the keyhole r1 the Council Chamber. where Robert Laird Borden, Cmdt‘s new Prim. Miniéter, and his colleagues .re got- ting under way, says 5 correspond- ent of the New York- Herald. The ï¬rst lawyer of the cross section is Country town lawyer, who Stucn w Ontario in the lean days. Now his townâ€"St. Thomas-45 larger and :38 which he thought would be impa'rcd through reciprocity. Mr. Rogers stands out preeminent- ly among his colleagues as a urnc. tical person. "Goad Old Bob." any Conservative will tell yoU, has a weakness for “delivering the goods." It appears that his success is built on the same rock as the practical political population of other coun- triesâ€"when he says yes he means it. and when he Says no he really 1.: "w;- ative. As Minister of Public Works he was nearly the whole works in Manitoba. a. Doininion portfolio. Laser NH 2 of the cross section is tinged at the bottom with school-master. but is the mixed composition peculiar to long continued partisan politics. Did you ever hear Joseph Cham- berlain speak? It so. follow that clean-cut, middle-sized man in the gray clothes. Some time you Will see him rise in the House of Colu- mons. Then shut your eyes. 'iou will think you are listening to Jos- eph- Chamberlain instead of Dr. \‘J. J. Roche. member of Parliament fur Marquette. Manitoba. Secretary of State. His cross section is that of the bright younngntu‘io men who struck out for the Canadian West long before the American farmers be- :an to ride over the border in par lor her how long. and is the only man at the table who has ever bdore held the prestige of Cabinet rank and a share in its respomsilrlility~ without having to administer a. departmentâ€" also without getting $7.500 a. year. But a. little thigg like $7.500 won't worry George E. Parley, Â¥.P., the wealthy lumberman. who magi“; re- ciprocity. although it would have put ciprocity, although 1t woum nave put probably $20,000 a year in his poc- ket, or A. E. Kemp. a. Wealthy Tor- onto manufacturer. The other part- folioless malnber i8 Senator Long . eed. of Alberta. He will hathoGov- Is that an English duke talking. No, it is a. French monk. This quip serves to formally introduce to the keyhoge'audience F. D. Monk, M. P. for Jacques Cartier, Quebec, and Minister of Public Works. Like Mr. Rogers, in the smaller sphere of Mun- itoba, he was the “whole works." Mr. Monk, Mr. Bruno Nantel, an MP. for Terrebonne. that thick-set. silent Frenchman near the foot oi the table, and Mr. L. B. Pelleti-zr. ALP. for Quebec county, an old ï¬ght- er in the opposition ranks in Que- Colonel Sam' HagneS,_ Munsner ox Militia, Irishman, Orangeman, and soldier. Charles J. Doherty, Minister or Justice, Irishmw. Catholic, and judge. Rather contrast?» eh 7 Frank Cochrane. Minister of Rail- ways, is a. typical product of North ern Ontario, the mineral and timber treasure house of the 130105113011. bee, are anti-imperialists. Any one of them by stretching out his hand can touch a colleague who is an im~ perialist. They are Catholics, a ma; jority of their colleagues are Pro? testants. We aregat the heart of the national cross sections now, where the human and political layers do not run straight. but are curved and twisted by the circumstances of a vast and growing country. ORANGE AND GREEN. The two men chatting So amiably on the far side of the table? They us formed by New York Press flan will tell you, has a ‘ ‘del-ivering the guods. ’ ' at his success is built e rock as the practical Nation of other coun- n. savs yes he means 1t. without portfolio has Hughes,_ Minister of NO»HAYSEED.HE. On that In the was: of Agri- culm to‘ihom they are all now tM? Then is no hnyseOd on ma collar. and his boots are vici Aid shoes. However, it is the Minister of Agï¬cultnre. mun Bun-m, M. f. for Yale-Cariboo, B.C. ’ W. ind an English m. but he is“ what the Scotch an . bonnie AFTER FIVE YEARS OF SUFFEE DREâ€"THREE DOCTORS FAILED AND SAID CASE WAS INCUR- ABI E. ITCKING AND BURNING WAQ TERRIBLE UNTIL RELIEF AND CUIZE WAS EFFECTED-BY A reporter intervieued a local grocer to-day inquiring about the prospects in prices of canned goods. corn, canned strawberries and plums. for this year. He ascertained the in- formation that practically every- thing would be higher in price than last year, and the main reuson seemed to be the scarcity of this year's crops, caused by the dry spell which was encountered. The tomato crop for instance was an unusually small one. Canned ‘tomatoes are now being retailed at 15 cents a tin, compared with 2 for 25 cents last year. Prunes will be a lot 'higher owing to the crop scarcity. What is caus- ing the high price of California fruit is the fact that the weather has been terribly dry and harmful, literally burning the crop. More of these prunes are also being exported to France, thereby lessening the supply here. Another reason advanced was two {or 25 gents. i tinue to go up. Canned Goods ing and burning “as hard to bear. At last my broth 3r read in the paper about Dr. Chase's Ointment as a healer. I used 8 boxes and I am glad to say I am entirely cured not a sign of ., sore to be seen. I can hardly praise the ointment enough. and you are at liberty to use my testimony, as I hope thereby to in- duce other suflerers to try the same" Dr. Chase's Ointment 60¢ a box at all dealers or Edmnnson. Bates 00., Limited, Toronto. just 40 p. c. Last year they secured 60 to 70 p_. c. of! their orders; so the diï¬erence is very evident. All that the wholesalers can do there- fore, is to buy American tomatoes. Owing to the high price of canned salmon, it is expected that some new lines of kippered herring, and herring tomato sauce, will be big and popular sellers. Canned plums are slightly cheaper than last year, being 3 for 25 cents. now a 10 cent article; , It is also thought by leading can- ners that pork and beans may be that the West is ï¬lling up rapidly, and as tomatoes cannot be raised there, the canners’ association must necessarily increase the prices to meet the demand of the consumers in the West and secure a ï¬roï¬t. All the wholesalers get of! their orders is Canned» corn has not yet been vanced in price, still sglling at Dr. Chase’s ointment by Acclamation WAS CURED are Climbing I, if the pricge con- For hum of years China was th basalt ‘ poultry-raising union in ho world. not. only as regards the ma! prodwtion, but. also in per capita. an. 0! flu in†than 800,000,000 po- pulï¬ion o! Ch‘ns shown by the lust «mus then m M indeed who do notinthecourseofaywconsme something in the way of poultry '- chicken or ducks or geeseâ€"and cer- x.inly ‘ urge mfmber of eggs. 4L- are away from a home supply. Eggs ot_ all kinds are used fresh and are cured by burying in clay and lime until they â€gain something of the Why of cheese. and ate a great ('h'nese luxury. ï¬lhere are Iew families in China. even in the larger cities, that do not have at least some emacens. Ifâ€: :ré pickled, di-iéd. dined and other. wise preserved, and shipped to many pwrts o! the work! to Chineï¬e :‘ho â€"Fo§ considerable portion of the population poultry is the only ani- mal food used. and (or the more well-to-do classes it. is an ordinary mt diet. thg yea-ground. _ Dunks 132$. and V . Paultry I n Chinaland the ports open to foreign trade there no a few rather good-sized poultry {arms as . rule. Ducks are rused in immense numâ€" bers on farms ‘Iong the annals 1nd rixers 0! Central and South China. and are much more common chickens. One of the customary sights along the Grand Canal in. Mid-China. for example. is that of gt Ch’neee duck farmer in his toat‘ watching his flock feed in and along the cam). The ducks are trained toi obey him, and. armed with a, long! tummy role to guide them. he con- trols their movements and takes them ml: to shelter for the night. ‘ The surplus of poultry and poul-g trv prOdUCts which China can export , n'nually is immense. Up to the pre-' sent exportation’ has taken the form largely of egg products, mostly dried albumen and yolks. The trade in‘ Large Bear Shot Near Haliburton eggsâ€"7w and egg ‘products is rapidly in- creasing. as may be seen froun the fact that the exports of egg album- en and ,volks in 1908 were valued at $463,088 gold, and the shipments of fresh and preserved eggs at 81.234.â€" 7185 gold. while in 1909 the values were $81,829 and $1,529,685 re- spectively. SURVEY PARTY HAD SCAXTY PROVISIONS . Friday a. Warder man met Mr. A. E. Lake, of Toronto, who was in team [or a few hours, and in the course of a. short conversation he stated that he had just returned from away track north of Larder Lake, where he was employed on a. Government survey. 011 Sept. 7 last‘ ice to the thickness of over half an inch Covered the brooklets. and small streams and the party had to tramp out of the woods in snow sev- pro visions, and for several days eral inches deep. T hev ran out of they were forced to live on muskrats and oatmeal. The Haliburton correspondent to the Minden Echo says : Mr. Robert Spier, of Toronto, son of our esteemed townsman, Mr. Wm. Spier. on Monday last. gave ample proof of his skill in handling ’a. rifle. He was On his way from the village to the farm on the Kenneway, where he spent a. portion of his boyhood days. and when about half way be- twecn Cain's mill and the farm, his attention was attracwd by a moving objeCt many yards in advance. which, on closer observation, proved to be 1: large bear making considerable £2.8th t3 increase the Histance be- tween the marksman and himself. But. Bob was too quick {qr _ bruin : bang fell. the bullet haxing passed through his kidneys. He was com eyed to townbvyoneoflgr. Laking's teams and is on exhibition at the stables of Mr. Wm. Spier, st. The brute is There will be no cases for his Honor Justice Teetml at the October As- NO ASSIZE CASES. INJURED HA RBSHIPS We offer you special blend at 35c per pound. ~â€" This coffee is unequalled in cup flavor and quality. It surpass es the coffees that you will pay 40 or 45 cents for else- where. Give a trial order. ' Only35cpalb. A As we import direct in large quantities, we secure a uniformity of quality and e cheapness of price that cannot be secured otherwise; We give our customers the advant- . of this 02nd if you give us a trial order you will be convinced that our teas ere superior ' Phone No 10 ‘mED AT WINNIPEG. Mr. and Mrs. J33. Bryson, of the :north ward, received a sad message from Winnipeg the other day to the edect that their niece Miss Kathleen Bryson. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. sAlex. Bryson, had passed’awav after an illness of but. one week. The de . LATE JOHN HICKEY. The funeral of the late John Hick- ey took place this naming. and was largely attended. High mass was said by Venerable Archdeacon Casey at St. Mary's church. after which the sort-owing friends and cortege proceeded to the R. C. cemetery, where interment took place The pa]! bearers were nephews and the immediate friends of the deceased. JIM-“3W ll'Imr‘v-VVâ€"wiv_ an illness of but. one week. The de- ceased young lady spent several waits in Lindsay two years ago. a â€67 short tins." OBITUARY.