IAN‘S ’; ’ rmqunsnso, ... bx, 4th con., 7th 10‘ (Two bottles of N» boars-nu: Drsoom it. Mine was a bad m her of other pm by beneï¬t from then." Ulad to Go. l’V‘ingham, carpem ' Three years ago I '8 [napegsza ; 2.1 pain he. 2 so box. that I tho lvork altogether. ‘ f 1115. 39...“. bottled , Ellison-ant: Discav. . - r v - . . e-. - continued mug‘ hr the!) three cl- Iconsideritbl W Ikncwof‘ nave used itwithtb LYMAN Co. OPRIETORS. 29 Wild Oats, I'M/vest. PLO (all on STRI 01' goods down 80 e the great late this Lance Tooth 80“ 456-; Best PII. uet. $33“ .25, worth $35“ money. I deal. $5.35} 3‘ per 00rd. A of: BemedIes. g‘uusuurnuu. /_ . ï¬rst â€gamma successfully Edit)“ 13:1} prompt use of W: m rectoral. Even in the later I, â€-03, 01 that disease, the cough is Many relieved by this medicine. used Ayer’s Cherry Pectqral ve “1139 best effect in my practice. paration once saved ‘ wonderful pre _ gauge, I hada constant cough, mght aâ€, was greatly reducedm flesh, :4 given u by my physxcmn. One W18 and a of the Pectoral cured ‘- A. J. Eidson, M. D., Middleton, I We. .. Several years ago I was severely ill. e doctors said I was in consumption, at: that they could do nothing for me, jut advised me. as a. last resort, to try pig-’5 Cherry Pectoral. After taking - mrdlClne two or three months cured. and my health remains good the present day.â€â€"James Birchard, Len, Conn. « Sex-oral years ago, on a shame hm; California. by water, I contracted .0 ccx'fll'e a cold that for some days I to my state-room, and a board considered my life Happening to have a bottle ‘1 Arm-‘5 Cherry Pectoral, I used it â€9.46, and my lungs were soon restored “healthy condition. Since then I ably recommended this prep- ‘35 continml ' vsician on (i..‘llg“r- *v . invari . #530113-3- B. Chandler, J unctlon, Nyer’s Uheny Pastoral, PREPARED BY pr. J. C. Ayer 8:. Co., Lowell, Mass. Price $1 : subdue-.35, 2'; by all Dmtt‘lfl'l ' E; Plso-s Remedy forCou-rrh II the - Best, Easiest to UBNM,‘ .’ i 5"?â€- " rcA TA R R H I" Soldhydrugglsuorsentbymalkmc. I}: E. T. Barcltlnc, Warren. Pa, U. S.A. \'..{' a; Eb: (litmus: 33051. 5% LINDSAY, FRIDAY, MAY 8, 1891. ’L". '7 , . --- ~A , jut WAYS 0F BEAVERS. lqnam HOUSES NOT so PLENTIFUL ' now AS FORMERLY. ’31†Little Animal About Miich Much ‘ a... Been “'rlttenâ€"The Size, Location 2nd Shape of Their Housesâ€"A Neat Worker. So much has been written about the 'm of the beaver that almost every knows something about the animal, everybody is acquainted with the athat it builds dams and houses to ellin. Their dams are exceedingly g and durable, and they are pt. in repairing any injury to A dam cut during the day will ally be repaired the same night, and rule morning will be as good as ‘ I remember an instance of this which occurred on San Juan Is- hc‘. An old Englishman named John \"ootton, who was new to the country, ï¬lled to get rid of a colony of beaver lived on his place, and one day cut ' Sam. The next morning he found repaixx‘d and cut it again. and this ‘ mfï¬g'hten away the animals when Icy should fame to rebuild it, he set up Igreen mm,“ wood pole on the dam and Eng)“, “emit on it. The following , 0n visiting glue place he not only lend the dam in its' usual good condi- Ion,l~nt tho (‘ottonxv'c‘nd P019 and his current hzul gone to bet,“ stop the gap Ilml mmh- :llul ware no» ' m the dam' Beam-r houses are less (‘om‘m‘m now Inn they used to be, partly because Iran-r thc-nN-lvcs are loss abundant but Milly lm-i‘uust‘ tlll‘ presence Of a {R‘sll burr lulu-.- lit-trays chll to the to. unskilled (We the existâ€" m of ll'il\l'l' in the neighborhood. In lllrn'hlcl‘ ‘istricts beaver now gonor- Ully '1ch in holes in the banks of the â€month-y inhabit. though in some )an of the Rocky Mountains and in My illillfl'\1l:i this coast. the sight of a 5917““ ll'lllSr' is not uncommon. . , . . . The “on,†Juror a good deal lll SlZP, 30mins and shape. Some are (is large. “011$ v l'cunrsc loss high, than a small ITIYszacl-i: others are hardly more than his»: through at the base. They may tun-n cizhur wholly on land or partly in “Burnt-r and partly on the bank, or "fly in the water. â€*2" We never placed in very deep For, for a base must be built for the one to stand on reaching up to the â€The. since the chamber inhabited by Iicu-cupants must be dry. The shape gmtla‘éllullsefl which I have seen on harbors approacheslthe conical. Those _ in“: Water are more irregular, some- ‘1335 only rounded, at others long and Merlin: on top. \Vithin each house, 'H’onnected with the water by a con- tier-I llf‘.<.<:lge, through which the bea- h‘h" round fro. is thechamber which Jr: mmnnls‘ dwelling place. It is «2f enough to contain seven' or eight “mum. and high enough so that a bea- I; can conveniently sit up on its It?“ ‘ '. It is warm, dry and clean, . flit r‘t‘llvel‘ isextremelv neat in all hit-nit... ' The food of the beaver consists chief- "i â€19 green bark of twigs and young hr’“ of various trees. Cottonwood $3215 preferred, then comes willow, 31(101'. but the bark of almost any balm? be eaten. I have known them tot? We and white cedar. The beav- w}1 cut down trees of very consider- _ 8‘19 to get at the smaller limbs, they eat. I have seen cotton- tll‘enty inches in diameterso cut, â€ch on Vancouver Island, near tons Straits, found .a cedar two “9 half feet through which they -@;Wed down. This work of cut- 51 “2‘11: a. large tree is done “use animal]. I have seen bib; gaged in e operation. w 'c :gmed as follows: The beaver sits m Io launches facing the tree and . barf?" resting against it. With “hemmed on one side he cuts a - out th“and then one below and a“. echxp. taking it oeinalmoa g “fl-an axeman would. Ho kd the If the trouble. of gnaw- “Hum up into ï¬ne cuttings. . he. felled the whole corn- M and cut up 85032999 nmps, carrying them away tothe cache. Unhke many of our gnawing animals. the beaver does not sleep through the winter; he remains active, often ventur- ing abroad during the whole of the cold weather. He must therefore have food, anda large part of the summerand autumn is devoted to securing this food ' and depodting it in caches. This food consists of the limbs and twigs of the trees most preferred by the beaver. They are cut from 1.} to 3 feet long, stripped of their leaves and smaller twigs, carried to the water and floated to the cache, where they are sunk. And here comes a very curious point. These sticks are floated to the cache and are sunk by the beaver to the bottom of the water where they remain without any appar: ent anchorage. They are not stuckin the mud of the bottom, nor held down by weights. If you lift one to the sur- face it will float, but you may move it about on the bottom without its rising. I have myself tried this with sticks from which the bark had been eaten, but have never done so with the green unpealed limbs before the beaver have taken them into their houses. This matter to me is a very mysterious one, and I have never been able to get any him as to how these sticks were sunk. All through the winter the beaver visit these caches, carry the sticks to their houses where they eat 03 the bark, returning the bare sticks to the water. Sometimes it may happen, that, for some reason or other, the cache may not contain enough to last the whole colony through the winter. In this case, the beaver, if possible, get on land through some air hole or piece of open water and then forage among the timb- er. Occasionally a combination of scar- city and severe weather may oblige the colony to emigrate during the winter to some more favorable spot.â€"Forest and Stream. WONDERFUL ' VENICE ! THE ORIGIN OF ITS VERY PRETTY AND ANCIENT NAME. Obscurity Covers its Earlier Historyâ€"Tho City's Boom Began with the Arrival of the Bones of St. Markâ€"A Long Ex- istent Government. Venetia is one of the oldest provinces of Northern Italy. It takes its name from the ancient tribe of the Venetia the origin of which is not clearly known though these people constructed canals on alarge scale as early as 380 B. C. In the third century A. D., the Veneti en- tered into an alliance with Rome, and when the Lombards overcame the Ro- mans, the inhabitants of Venetia sought refuge from the conquerors in the is- lands of the lagoons. Removed from Teutonic influences, and under the pro- tection of the Byzantine Empire, the most famous of the mediaval states here took its rise from the most in- signiï¬cant beginnings. The earliest his- tory of Venice is obscure. The ï¬rst “Dux†or “Doge,†is said to have been Paulucius Anafestus, and this good man is reported to have died in 716. In 809, the islands withstood an attack of King Pepin, the son of Charlemagne, and, practically throwing off the yoke of the eastern emperors, established a govern- ment of their own, ï¬xing its seat upon the island of Rivoalto, upon which the main portion of Venice stands today. Doge Angelus Participotius established his residence upon the site of the present ducal palace in 819. Situated between the Byzantine and Franconian empires, Venice became a connecting link between the trade of both, and the great empori- um of the trafï¬c between the east and the west. In 828 the city received a great boom from the arrival of the bones of St. Mark, brought by the Venetian fleet from Alexandria. One hundred and fifty years later the church of San Marco was begun as a receptacle worthy of them. In the light of this deliberate achi'm on the part of Venice concerning the rek‘iains of so eminent a character as St. Mask, New York’s slowness in be- ginning the Grant monument seems not eSensible as yet. It re- so very repr quired over 100 ygars to complete San Marco, and the decmvatlon of the struc- veral hundred ture strptched over so years longer. \Ve must remember that for-nearly 1,100 years Venice “'33 80V- erned by Doges. Few governi‘ents have existed so long a time without sex“. ions interruption. After the arrival of St. Mark‘s relics, the saint himself was adopted as tutelary “boss" of Venice. The ofï¬cial title of the supreme ofï¬cial functionary was “The Procurator of St. Mark,†and St. Mark’s emblemâ€"the winged lionâ€"was set up in the great square and in various public places. In the interests of her commerce, Venice made a number of foreign conquests, and the Lion of St. Mark erected in the market places of Treviso, Vicenza, Padua, Verona, Udinc Brescia, Bergamo, Rovigo, etc. , indicated the subjection of these cities. There is scarcely to be found more fascinating reading than the history of Venice from the time of Dogs Enrico Dandolo, who conquered Constantinople in 1204, and laid the foundation forthe greatness of Venice as an eastern power. The lives of Dandolo and his successors, Marino Faliero, Andrea Contarini, Fran- cesco Foscari and many others, are full of romantic as well as tragic detail, while the doings of the various govern- mental councils. and later of the inquis- itors, are subjects of the most absorbing interest. At the close of the ï¬fteenth century, in Venice was focussed the commerce of Europe. The city had OVer 200,000 inhab- itants and hundreds of palaces, the like of which existed in no other city; it had 300 sea-going vessels, with 8,000 sailors, and 8,000 smaller craft, with 17,000 men. as well as a fleet of 45 galley! carrying 11,000 men, who maintained the supremacy of the republic over the Mediterranean. In 1797, after the disso- . lution of Venetia as an independent . state, the population of Venice had full- en to about 95,000. Today Venice is growing again. through industrial development and the ‘ prosecution of harbor improvements. The completion of a great breakwater, extending nearly two miles out into the sea, willmakeVmiceone of the most The population at present is about 135,- 000 audthe citvccnslstlof15.000 homes ’m cannons ros'r r .; I and P818013, situated upon three large ‘snd114smallislands, formed by 150 canals,aud connected by 880 bridges. AWL-manila is theprincipal scaportoftheAdriatic. Melatonin. Therearenotnearlyscmanymin ihandtreatment as people imagine. A l little ammonia or bcrax inthewatcr you washwith, and that water just lukewarm, will keep the skin clear- and soft. A little oatmeal mixed withthe water will whiten the hands. Many people use glycerine on their hands when theng to bed, wearing gloves to keep the bedding clean; but glycerin. doe not agree with every one, says the New York Ledger. It makes some skins harsh and red. These people should rub their hands with dry oatmeal and wear gloves in bed. The best preparation for the hands at night is white of an egg, with a grain of alum dissolved in it. Quacks have a fancy name for it, but all can make it. They also make the Roman toilet paste. It is merely the white of an egg, barley flour and honey. They say it was used by the Romans in olden times. At any rate, it is a ï¬rst-rate thing; but it is sticky and does not do the work any better than oatmeal. The roughest and hardest bands can be made soft and white in the space of a month by doctor- ing them a little at bed-time, and all the tools you need are a nail-brush, a bottle of ammonia, a box of powdered borax and a little ï¬ne white sand to rub the stains ofl', or a cut of lemon, which will do even better, for the acid of the lemon will clean anything. ' I The Servant Quest-on. It is a curious fact that there is noth- ing which is so wholly unanimousas the desire that other people’s daughters should be cooks and chambermaids. We never think; of it as a thing desir- able, or perhaps supposable, for our own, and this fact seems to damage most of our arguments for others. Ar- temus Ward was willing to send his wife’s relations to the war, but we are not inclined to contribute even these to the kitchen, for we should hold, right- fully, that it was “menial service." Now, if we draw the line at menial ser- vice for ourselves and our relatives, why should we speak severely of those who draw the line at just that point for . themselves and their own relatives? The whole difï¬culty of this much-vexed question seems to lie precisely there.â€" Harper‘s Bazar. How Herbert Spencer Looks. Herbert Spencer is a man some what above the middle height and not look- ing his 70 years by a good decade. His head is well shaped, but not noticeably large, and is pinky bald, with a fringe of not very gray hair. Round his cheeks and jaw grows a scant whisker to match with a narrow canal cut through at the chin; the nose very delicate and aquiline the teeth strong and well preserved, the skin ruddy, and the whole expression ï¬ne, simple, and intellectual. Of course, he wore soft, square-toad boots, and a baggy broadcloth coat. They are badges of men of genius--the elderly ones, at leastâ€"and even Rudyard Kipling afl'ects them. Never in all my experience have I seen a very great man with such absolute simplicity of manner.â€"Illus- trated American. No Soap in India. It is stated that soap in India is regard- ed almost in the light of a natural curiosity, for it is rarely if ever to be obtained of a shopkeeper there. Of course it is sold in the larger towns; but the amount used by the natives must be very small, seeing that the total conâ€" sumption of soap in India last year was only 5,000 tons. This means that the amount used by each person for the year was considerably less than one ounce.â€" Chumbers’ Journal. As He Intended. Old Mr. Dadkinsâ€"Ar-a-r-r! So I have caught you kissing my daughter; have 1'! Young Mr. Cooleyâ€"I trust there is no doubt about it, sir. The light is quite dim, and I should feel vastly humiliated if it should turn out that I had been kissing the cook. â€"â€" Thin Cnltur‘ Writs!» Cm'uthe.‘Sâ€"I hear you whistling airs from the latest operJS- yet I never see you at the heatre. Waiteâ€"No, but K's have a very progres- our street. ive hand-organ man 0:; Neat. , “And as the maid (ï¬ll 310" l come to the door, my grandfather went ,xwaj' “d never 7, proposed. “And did your grandfather my "1' man?! l" # ‘ Coal Fonda in sodium Count '. Ont- Kingston, May 2.-If the story of John Rutledge, of the adjoining county of Ad' dlugtcn, be correct he has made a discover,‘ that knocks the gecloglsts’ theory into a cocked bat and opens a prospect of great Industrial development for this part of Canada. The man balls from Bridge- nuler. Ka‘sdsr township. In the county of Addlu. ton, and he claims to have dlsccv prod one of the richest coal ï¬elds In Amerlcalu his township. He has spent the mass of his life in prospecting In the northern mining realcns. Last fall, in company with a neighbor named Thomas Whalo-n, he discovered signs of coal in Kalsdar and put in a blast. About a foot and a halt under ground they (ll-covered a vein of coal twenty feet wide and becomluu anger as it penetrated downward. The miners cow r- d up their ï¬nd and at once our-chum 400 acres of the land from the ROVt‘I'DmuLt .t one dollar an acre. They have u-nt ~pv~clmcus to dlflerent points and epeclsllum state that It Is the ï¬nest coal ev- r unear' hcd. Mr. Rutledge took a quantity to Tweed and several blacksmith: in am village who have used the coal any n sun» r-o vvrrv purpose and they will continue to us~ lt. The old man states he has no doubt there are unlimited quanti- Ila-t of coal In the region and other valuable mlnul’ols which the world has not vet heard of. He also exhibited specimens of good mica. a-bo-stoe and copper which be u .0]: unto! the uroundlu Kslsdar. Several I ...-mp. can all vldt the mine and deter- ‘ mine the truth or the story. â€" A tact Worth loom Thethkaa'seprlncncckctM and Slices is the largest ever shown In the commasdthatlthubeeu selected with l. mums.“ ' . mummmnn New Advertisements MEMORIAL CARDSâ€"A very choice selectlm at T3! P08! Printing one. Collard seethslu. mudmnctaflectuslnmvway. The b of this Company. In Which they have a" wussâ€... m M... am... a. house risks. the “City Mutual" dig business of a general character. 0 MACDONALD. 14th January. 1891.47. ____.__â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"_ FIRST-CLASS FARM FOR SALE.â€" Ncrtb-half Iotmand North-half 21. Con. mine :00 acres of and in chin of the mo.t desirable home-tends cnolceclsy loam. On the prosthesis house. stable and excellent. lame. frame with stable under it. Fences Rood. Fsrm on lsksshcse. within two-aud-o-half miles of Up. vs. Plen y of good fresh water. In crate. Posse-luncaubculvest once. Title In utablo. Apply to MICHAEL Kc- INTAGGA 'l‘. on the farm or Una-grove P.O. April 3rd. lash-48. You Pull the Cork “Harvard†Does the Rest. "I have used Emma) Bnoxcunt SYRUP. It lathe most ulen-n 8"" ““‘ï¬kmm' "m ... all." “3'33 ave reccv a very 'â€" Mackenzle. C. P. R. emcee. Mcuuual. Therelsuc lnthewcrld equaltotbls remedy for Sore . Coughs and Colds. Flaunt to the Tasteâ€"Gives instant reliefâ€"Ab- Apamphlet of Information and ab- ‘ l ‘ . start“? the has, sch‘owlng now to - v. Paton vest 'l‘rade . Marks. Co his. son? ' Addrâ€" N BS Ill YUUNU all ULU EBRD msmwsam HAZELTON’S VITALIZER lsc Nervous nobility Dlmness of Sight. Loss of Ambition, Unfltuess to Marry. Stunted Devslc ment. Loss of Power. Night Emlsdonaghaln in Urine. Seminal Losses. Sleepleunus, Aversion to Society. Unflt for Study, Exceulvo | swam? 3"" WW3“ ‘ year . ' angina stamp for uncle’s. 3'. B. HAZBL'I‘ON, 351’ whose-st. Toronto. Ont. Instant Relief, Permaneaf Cure, Failure lmpcw‘ble. mu so-esllod diseases are lymptgms of Catarrh, such new ache partial acumen-Joan; nous. smell. cul breath. hawklu and if , no general 1 -cl my. etc. If you are troub ed with any of the“ or kindred s mptoms, mil-vow Laud-hon lounc Escudo: a bottle of Nun. Wham-.mphem In head results in Caurrh. fol. lowed by cousum than and death. mulls-cl. b autumn-i crufllbeuubpost cur-cup“ â€(Wotan-nil ) 1m rquono a co, mum, on. 5' bereutcd ‘ I mmumemamund 3%wggugp’mc For â€Away. mam.â€"4s-u.' ' 'Im ' ARM T0 RENTâ€"One mile from tcwu;2macl'cs;lot28.ln3rdocu.. acne ed.50acres meadow. Brick smefoundaumdscbamcuscï¬ burn farm. ...... AIAOT‘ORENTâ€"Ooeurcestcu xttcthe n " Windsor†â€mm “3.3 $331... 3-“. BER LIMITS FOR SALEâ€"M valu- able mills knownasGresuA: Ellis’lills at Fenclcu Falls. or with timber 11ml the Townships Glam Snowdeuuanld gloatin- fcrwbolecrau madethBEENk. E arcane ' 4“ OKINï¬B-nlstcr.ctc..flndsay. Sherbcurue. bout ImmofeetcldInutflunmuct Lumber-in WIDDESS dc ARMSTRONG, All klndscfrcpalrlnsmomvflimtc. bum,fcrwblchcrdersarescllclt- ' Corner of Williamson Regent-m ed. Slap. north Dr. McAlplnc’s. nudes]. Jan. 6. m1. li‘omsm'sss. runners. (to. ' J WILSON, mammotomnm of Victoria WM.V m.“ andImSg-is wantsd.fcrwhlchtb h estprlce lncssh. Corletsprcfoeng willbe Household fatalâ€"WWW second- hand articles cfcvcrr desalptlcn urchssed audcallecfcr. p I rent. Parties looking out for one lunch-cc fortthonu havcalistofhcusesâ€"m for select-to willdcwell applytcma'l'hceehsvinghcusestclet u should apply tonic. Goedsoundfarmï¬cne. abontflycu'loldtanlc. JOHN WILSON, Opp. Presbyterian “mm-st. Hod-y. March £5. motâ€"loam...» THE LONDON MUTUAL rm MORAN" 00. 0" CANADA A80"- Orrla in Barron a llalnuablln's Room. linden. Aprllz. 1891. 8. CORNEIL. Lindsay. March l7th. 1891.45. John Begley. 1:- Y6? WAR-'1' Bargains in Furniture call at my warerooms in Adam's Block, opposite Hurley Brady’s cIlEAPEST PLACE Ill Town, 1:3. I and every article is warranted to store You wil ï¬nd it the give stirs satisfaction. mmm- shorten Notice. JOHN BEGLEY. IRE-v Mu. “unruâ€" arc CURE In“! that I have n positive re “a :1“) New Advertisements. mnroarsnnn BRICK trust. 0 ro m.â€" lcslst upon having the HARTSIIOBI. com or ALL curses. Factory, Toronto, Ont. mas. intâ€"is. G. A. Mother-911. mum-“mum“... m I Ceiling Papersï¬ornersand Decorations Prlccandmletcsultcustcmeruhcm So a roll up. Notroublctosbowgccds. “â€"6 =5 l-â€"â€" 2 m and quite fresh, having been as usual import- ed from ENGLAND and FRINGE Direct. Quality is good and prices low Timothy and all kinds of EDMUND DBEDDRY, Ulll'llfll‘ Kell and William sun. In I N I) - LY. Nudeâ€. March 17th. 188.45. Flax-Seed Emulsion Go EMULSION compounu BRONGHITI New York C' . Sept. 19, 18%. I hageciascd}h§ “3:15?“ graphical in severe: were ronu: race it an e stages Phtlnsrs, and have been wells. leased “etc; the result: AM K. CROOK, NJ). consilulpnoyl Brooklyn N. Y" Dâ€- mv . I mmglyrccommeud I-‘lsxSeed Emulsions: helpful to therelief and possibly the cure of all Lung. Bronchial.“ Nervous Affection. and a good gen- eral tonic an physio-l debility. JOHN F. TALMAGE, MD. NERVOUS PRUSTIIAIIUN GENERAL DEBILI‘I'Y, WASTING DISEASES And RHEUMATISM. “Producer b no Equal and can be '“w by the iron: «Inn'm 50“th PrlceOuelIclu. V-SEED EMULSION 00. PM; poem St" New York. In; Carrot, Turnip, Glover, _5‘OB SAX-I “â€" n. alolnoot‘llMl. buds-y. A'Iscellanooa‘.‘ on sun? . , Ce .. va‘f‘ â€Win 4 tf. _ uulun unnm‘l’fllll _. u mucous! .0 103' an N‘phuvw N». ' 1“ we“ bhotce mu 5. thewnovhm- techie-loos Mme-elm“ ghetto-Ao- mugpucmor ...-«fat ‘9 “‘f BAKING . °OWDER Inn. to: «'5 BEST menu Insurance L-BABTHOLMZE â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"~ HE LIVERPOOL AND Lonnon AND GLOBE INSURANCE COMP“! FIRE .1171) LIFE. â€WMWMD MOW“. CaplN...... ...... --.â€".810.th Accumulated funds...,.. 1...... ... mm-.. â€23%? Rstesandprunlums allow-s any other so- IMOble comm. The settlement of â€I ward..." .... anew... ......m as t! I8 Amos oflmd with or without m at m rates. Four-ï¬fths of proï¬ts srlvcu a policy holders. For particulars or rates apply to 1'. c. TAYLOR. Amtmmmdma. WILL Pusmvnv cuss " ENNIS. I??? IN NESTUNIIEN Bowel Complaints, Diarrhoea â€"AND ALL- SUMNER CDHIPLAINTS KEEP A BOTTLE IN THE HOUSE. inv'v‘ . DEALERS. ‘v (FORGE DOUGLASS, man 0" Imus]: um: WILLA. ONT. R. s. PORTER, ISSUED DP [ARRIIGE LICENSES. LINDSAY. on m. Oct. 39. ISLâ€"11. Eudo Mineral Water. †EU DO †MINERAL WATER, A SPEEDY ANDEURI WY â€3 mm.mwm Dian-has. Nervous Bounty. h- “mamas. m, mwmmunmmm men. ennui-sac, dent and an Dim “cottons. Calm mucoutholyosmul Nonalcoholic-non.†Salt Rheum. Paco. eta. Cam and all mamas. PRICE III '1'. a... mum ..‘ï¬hgm' “ mm ... ... a ’ - ...... ... .- ...-o...- refllled bib. an m no: Forsalcgyallnru- 1.. manner. Pmprletcs. Baum. Out Miscellaneous. UN IGAL’S LI V ERY STABLE, York Street Lindsay. Comfortable can monoundccodhcrsescuhlreatm rates BRIAN GUNIGAL. THE OLD RELIABLE BRICK YARD-Established 1870â€"! have new- nudism! atCannlnztouacholoe â€unï¬whlchl willed] “chewy-r6 or deliver attbeC-nninatou station or ood- v'lllc station. My brick for color and quaint cannot beaten. JOHN WAKIIJN. Oas- aim. 8,1887â€"74-1â€. A. MIDDLETON, The subca'lberhastcrsslealarge m ofchcloe Bed Brick at his yurd north‘d Cun- oratthe Canningtcu rallwaystada. hewlll sellat reasonable moons. â€whammmu'm AUDI,†JOHN SACKVILLE, W Winston, Aprllfl. 1881â€"48. ALLAN LIN E ROYAL MAIL STEAMBHIPB. tum musings m aurora membom CABIN asrmsnsumsusum. m “mummnm ueuofsuta'ooms. l0 CAM m. _A Comm], Seven- INTERMEDIATE mimosa west. mum-rams. Accommodations Unsurpassed. Apply to n. a A. ALLAN. Issued. or R- g. PORTER, Lindsay. â€BUN N’s .: 3a,. 'hw- m*:<. l