3‘08 lab zed dDo~ 5V3 11, u: ICE! of sources 1 those Llo- . 228. at WAY MARBLE WORKS Shauments. get: prices and tee desxgns. R. CHAMBERS. Prov. M‘ s smm. szhtiï¬ge St. North of ï¬re Hall 170; linkinda ot Granite and Marble PEIERBORO SEEKS SENATE REPRESENTATION vâ€"-â€"vv -vâ€"'- â€" M f“? “3 “avâ€"press its claims Mn- N ' .0 ‘ “it, “Haunting in Parliaâ€" 4. . ' “‘1'qu in nomination (or (3W Despatch to The Globe.) Mb. Jan. 18.-In indica- tio‘ that the Borden Government will 109:me ï¬lling the Senate Va~ _ by the death 0! Hon. 3% 001. Mayor Bullet received a “‘3'“! iron: Mr. J. H. Barnum. ,pr" â€an! immediate action 1! the anrb'r Oï¬ce over Eighth than“ Drug Stove «me opp. Post Oflice AB Mamba of Dentistry perform ed, CROWD and Bridge yï¬â€™oxk a Smoialtv. £43.65 from Pure Land and Linseed ml ms mama mm m DR. HOWARD POGUE PRISM Repai 3 while you wait. Larisav- at. and William st. WISH SHREMKEB Mush of Toronto U chew“. and Royal“). Xe geof Dsncal Slit goons. All dénml operatic 3 carefuuv penfurmed at modem 0 W993 00 over Gre‘orr 8|» We Ban’t Babble Shoes flm «than; camm Scientiï¬c nmefï¬gaa. may mum-um: weekly MEN NAN C0 HUGHES minim . nkotch md m Li!†I:3 our opinion in. v m 9. probably tab 0mm .....mcuy conï¬dential.‘ ï¬nflqun hunt. When ynu want. your Shoesor Rubber: re- READY MADE PAINT 5...! HM, Dentist Big TOW“ Mide BRAND and recommendation. A ci- â€"theâ€"â€" take them to 3' deputation 1111 go mate representation. ct Kirkfleld. It will in nest in Canada when Wilson. of Canning- awarded the contract JAN. 33, 1914. PILLGREM'S PROGRESS . The Mealotd ngrems took the scab of R. M. Gemflton, of Fenelon Fans. last night in the wee am' home by a score of 18â€"2. They did an the scoring except in the second and sixth ends where Hamilton got one each. The ice was very heavy and it was hard work even to get the rocks across- the‘hogline so it was agreed that only eight ends be phy- ed instead of the customary twelve. Hinds Hamilton Haniflton ...... '00... Campbemord. Queen City. Smith ............... 12 Kerr...... THE BIRKS TROPHY Flavelle took the lead in scoring on the ï¬rst end but afterward the Brampton rink scored steadily with one exception till the last three ends which were claimed by Lindsay. By the score 10â€"9 for Thauburn the Lindsay 1139:: almost saved themselves from defeat. Flavelle...3 x x x 1 x x x x 212... 9 Thanburn...x 1 1 3 x 1 1 1 2 x x x...10 FLAVELLEâ€"THAUBURN CONTEST. The fastest of the Blue Ribbon games was the ‘Flavellet-Jl‘hauburn Contest run oï¬ on ice 10 at the Lind- say-st rinE. The water on the ice as well as the heave in the center of this sheet which the club have prac- tically abandoned made the play par- ticularly hard and both skips rushed the ends through as fast as possible. They ï¬nished playing their whole twelve ends after less than two hours work. Some of the other rinks took three hours to play eight ends. Skip George Rice, of Oshawa, uncle Toronto Gra of Mrs. 'I‘hos. Wilkinson, of Lindsay, Harstone. sk.. is the oldest curler participating in the bonspiel. He has passed the sev- | Keene. enty summers, but is just as active Moore, 8km... on the ice as a sixteen-year-old. He is an all-round sport, curling in the GILLIES THC winter, hunting in the fall, besides gHamIilton Vi playing cricket in the summer. His Smith, 8“ ------ game last night with 0rillia,,in which he made a number of phenom- Lindaâ€- enal shots was watched by a big Flavelle, 5km- crowd. who cheered the veteran lust- ily whenever a good play was made. Collingwood. A VETERAN. MATTHEWSâ€"BLACKWELL. THURSDAY 11.30 P. M. DRAW. Gravenburst. Port Hope. 'aaley ............... 4 Graham ........ GILLIES TROPHY. Fenelon Fa‘ls. Mord.‘ Oshawa. FLAVELLLE TROPHY. THURSDAY 11.89 P. M. DRAW. Continued from page 10 Ice... .Io-uo .oo... n..-no and. Southampton. winner McAuLay. McMillan by default. 15 Crawford Keene. ,12 Moore ...... Peterboro. Gilding ......... . ml]. ...14 18 Quick Lindsay. Lindsay. - Wood .................. 9 Needler ......... 7 Lindsay. Orillia. Flavelle ............ 11 Madden... . Tor. Granites. North Bay. Harstone ............ 16 Martyn ...... 13 Aberdeens. North Bay. Gilding ............... 8 Reynolds ...... 9 Parry Sound. Queen City. v J ones .................. a Rice ............ 14 Fergus. Peterboro. Hamilton defeated Sturgeon by de- fault. Collingwood. Colbome. Rule .................. 12 Edwards ......... 6 Orillia. ............ 14 Mac-Nab... Lindsay. Scarboro. McFadden ......... 12 Crawford Millbrook. Oshawa. Steele defeated Luke by default. MATTHEWS-BLACKWELL CONSO- LATION. Parry Sound. Claremont. Beg-g, sk ............... 9 Besse, e Lakeviews. Markham. Snow .................. 3 Malcolm ....... Port Hope. Lindsay. McCullough, sk...13 Peppiatt, sk... Oshawa. Smith, 81: ..... Tor. Aberdeens Samla. O’Connor, sk ...6 McGibbons, sk'...18 Collingwood. Fenelon Falls. Rule, sk ............... 9 Deyman ......... Valin, sk ............... 9 Matthews sk...8 FLAVELLE TROPHY 3 P. M. DRAW Lindsay. St. Thomas. Beall, sk ............ 10 Cameron, sk...9 Lindsay. Stouï¬ville. Flavelle, sk....... ...14 Sanders, sk...3 Brampton. 'Petetboro. Beck,an ............... 7 ‘ Waddell, ak,..l4 Kerr, 3k..... Toronto Granite. Peterboro‘., Harstone. sk ...... 18 Lamg,. 31: W4 GILLIES TROPHY, 3 P. M. DRAW >Ham'ilton Vice. Lindsay. Smith, sk ............ 8 Little, sk Keene. Meaford‘- Moore, sk...... ...12. Pillgremr sk..,I3‘ GILLIES TROPHY. FRIDAY 9 A. M. DRAW. Gravenhurst. Peterboro. Belleville . Wits may disc-no dd; to impart: blood ouch as terms, Scrofula, acurvy, and Logs. Ablooosos. Ulcers, Giana-slat Mallinzo, Bella, Pimploo, 897.. ofaoy kind, 9|:chde Poi-onmhwmatiom, Gout, 0:13., don't waste your time and money on lotions and ointments which cannot get below the surï¬ce of the skin. \‘lhat you wanr is a. medicine that will thoroughly free the blood of the poisonous matter which alone is the true cause of all your suffering. Clarke'a Blood Mixture isjust such a. mediums. lt is composed of ingredients which qui3kl)‘ exp-:1 from the blood all impurities. from whatever (run-1 arising, and by rendering it clean :m-l pure, can be relied on to effect a listing we. (Tkaunndi of turf)» Mink, for :n’ccï¬on 55:39,.â€th A mum! .55. On: 59 yeus’ North Bay. > Brian all Sub-21m tas. 8991 by all‘ Chemist: and Store/rap"; Queen City. WHEN WE? ARE ~ ILL MATTHEW Sâ€"BLACKWELL . FRIDAY 9 A. M. eneville. Oshawa. “For the Blood 13 the Life.†GILLIES TROPHY.. THURSDAY 11.30 P. M. Ly. Crillia. . ......... 8 Toogood, ak 10 7 Waddell... 25 McRae ......... 5 Tor. Aberdeens. .12 Ormerod, skS Peterboro. Gravenhurst. Peterboro'. Winnipeg. Besse. 8k ......... i ..... 10 ...... 11 ...... IO ...14 ...14 ...17 ..18 MCFADDE.’ 1130373. Skip madam, the "my Paper Skip Peppiatt still‘retains his rab- bit’s foot. Last night in the Gillies Tr0phy, he walked awayiwith a game from O’Connor of the Toronto 'Abeb deans. Score 13â€"8. This is the O’- Connor who walloped our own “Larâ€" ry" in the Flavelle competition. FALL OF THE O'CONNOR. ORILLIA’S TRIUMPH. The Great Brockéâ€"McAulay,_Â¥ who came to Lindsay bon8piel with the trophies of the St. Thomas 'spiel in his belt, struck a snag last night, when he bumped into the Orillia rink under Skip Hinds. A big crowd watch ed the game, which was? a hummer. The northern curlers played a. cool. heady game. Their shots were put where they counted most .and they deserved to win. Score 13â€"11. Tom Gage lost a hard luck game last night to Skip Rice of the Toron- to Granites in a 9â€"8 Score. It was in the Gillies competition. and the local quartette tonight with the ten- acity of drowning men. Last night’s issue credited‘Pep- piatt, of Lindsay, with a win ang a loss in place of two wing. Peppiatt was still in the running for both tro- phies at noon today and marking up scores on the good side of the layer against rinks with high reputation. fning. A feature of Thursday's gamns [was the defeat of the “big guns†in ï¬ndingâ€"Messrs. Rennie. Rochon znd chAuley. ; This evening excitement will reign ‘supteme, in the great Blue Ribbon event - the all comers’ struggle â€"- when ten Lindsay rinks will tattle with a similar number from the vis- iting clubs. It will be a battle royal for the Birks' trophy. HAS TWO WINS. SKIP GAGE OUT. The contests in the different com- petitions are narrowing down and many rinks (including a number from Lindsay) are out of the run- Nothing is talked of in town but the big bonspiel, and young and old have Fh-ecome inoculated with the curling spirit. The two rinks are crqwded night and day with specta- tors, who arq as 'much interested in the struggles as the curlers them- selves. ITH the cry of Sweep ! ‘Sweep ! heard on every side, and ex- citement on eaCh . ice at such a 1 temperature as to threaten its destruction, the battle raged at both rin’ks Wed- nesday evening as well as this morning in the Fla- velle and Gillies trophy. One of the close, exciting games this morning was between Flavelle's rink, of Lindsay, and Madden's, Or- illia rink, when a score of 11â€"10 in favor of the popular Lindsay Skip was the result. The game was nip and tuck all through and could have been. anybodie's game up tï¬o‘ the last end. \ FLAVELLE’S WIN. Graham, of Port Hope, is a certain prizewinner in the Matthews-Black- well Trophy styled the Consolation Contest. There were only sixteen rinks entered in this contest and the Port Hoper won from his opponent Wasley, or Gravenhurst. The next round he got by his opponent default- ing so that now he is in the tours af- ter playing only one game. Two games more will ï¬nish this contest. The committee expect to have it completed this afternoon. 14 PORT HOPE WINNER Beal, Lindsay, 10;?i11grem, Meaâ€" ford, 9. Ice No. 5. 'McNab‘b, Orillia, 12- McFadden, Lindsay, 10. Ice No 9. R. B. Rice, Queen City, 14;1'=in- lay, INorwood, 13, Ice No. 4. Beatty, Seaforth; Braden, Winni- peg. By default. I McMillan, Beaverton, 9; Hinds, Orillia, 7. Ice‘No. 7. GILLIES TROPHY Round; 2: FridaYv 12.30 P: m. Neale, Ghnford, 12; Peppiatt, Lindsay, 9. Ice No. 6. O'Connor, Lindsay, 17; Toogood Drillia, 7. Ice No. x. Vania, North Bay. 10; Thaub'urn Brampton, 15. Icé No. 3. Friday, 12.30 p.m. Moore, Keene, 5; Snow, Lakeview . Ice No. 1. MATTIiEWS-BLACKWELL TRO- run was» r. Anyway. anybody who would lug a hundred pounds of polished atone home for decorative purposes deserv- es either a medal or a, straitjaaket, and ‘win probably get the latter sooner or later. The real reason is that the stones are much better to curl with it very cold, and theaontside air is therefore better. A rink using stones which have been in a hot express car all day is heaving, hanéicapped when playing against one whose curling stones are below freezing in temper- ature. The stones will hold heat. for many hours at antime, and . become sluggish on the ice, ABOUT CURLING STONES. People are wondering these days why the curlers are so trusting with their property. The man remarked they must believe implicitly in the honesty of Lindsay citizens for more curling stones are left outside the rinks on the sheet than inside. Some of the Toronto rinks haVe stated a preference‘for playing night games, believing‘that they do better work than «in the day time. M. A. Rice's rink, of Toronto, is‘one of these. This suite the committee ï¬rst rate as most rinks do not like being put on the “night shift." HOLDS THE RECORD. The record by score of the bonspiel to date is held by Skip Beattie of Seaforth, -who piled up twenty-two today against the Cannington rink’s three. The game was not as uninter- esting as the score looks nor as oneâ€" sided .‘ LIKE NIGHT GAMES. Skip George Bean’s rink, which had been playing a ï¬ne. game all along, tell before Cannington (Dobson) last night by a 7â€"10 score, The localâ€" .quartecce fought to the last ditch. “ The victory for the Hamilton Vic- toria skip is all the greater because of the fact that previous to this bonspiel he and his men have never had a work out together. His own rink was unable to come. so Mr. Smith came alone and picked up a rink of Lindsay men. They are play- ing a. remarkable game together and have not yet been defeated in any competition. SKIP BEAL'L'S DEFEAT. It was a gneat event last night when Smith, of the Hamilton Victo- rias, put it over the famous Rennie rink of the Queen City in a furious game of a dozen ends. Scoreâ€"Smith 11, Rennie 7. One of the most interesting games played in the midnight hours last night was between Rice, of Toronto, and Gage, of Lindsay, in the Gillies Trophy, Gage going down to defeat by a single shot gotten in the last end. The battle was nip and tuck all the way till at the ï¬nish of the elev- enth end the two rinks were tied. On the twelfth end Rice's lead put both his stones through. His second, howâ€" ever, placed one rock on the button ahd then guarded. The other men played a protective game and Gage could not dislodge the Toronto man from the tee. Final score. Rice 9. Gage 8. Rev. Father F. J. O'Sullivan, of Port Hope, and formerly of Lindsay, went down before Skip Geo. Little ~at: Peel-st rink Wednesday afternoon. Score 14â€"7. A big crowd watched the contest, which was replete with many ï¬ne plays. GOOD GAME TO WATCH. TORONTO RINKS CLA‘SH. 'I‘wo crack Toronto rinks met last night and fought it out. Empringham of the Aberdeens with a score of 13 trimmed, Keith of the Lakeviews whose score was 12. This game was worth watching but too- late for most people. RENNIE’ S DEFEAT. While Peppiatt was busy adminis- tering defeat ‘to O’Connor, of Toronâ€" to, Lindsay's crack curler, L. V. 0'- Oonnor, disposed of Skip Wilson of Fergus, in a 11â€"9 score. It was a great game to watch. Wilson had just emerged triumphant from a gruelling battle of 13 ends with Bramp ton and was a foeman worthy of his steel. The game was a ding dong one all the way through, ‘but the splendid work of the local rink was of the gilt edged kind, and was well worth seeing. The game was in the Gillies competition. It looked one time as if it might be a Fergus game as Wilson was one up. On the last end though O’Connor redeemed himself and made up the re- quisite score to trim him. SKIP LITTLE WINS. King" met: another defeat yesterday. It was in the Gillies competition and his opponent was Blaylock, of Toron- to. Score 13â€"9. O ’CONNOR'S GREAT WIN. Advertise in The Post J. G. EDWARDS 8a 60., Hardware,: Phone 27 We carry at this season a very large stock of axe handles, carefully selected, as to shape and quality. Come in and make your own selection. Turned Hickory Hand- les. Good shape and quality at 15¢: and 266 AXE HANDLES The best 2nd Growth Hickory Axe Handles, hand shaved. None better at PAGE m.