LTâ€) \Veallow 110 2c W3? lb ‘1‘ ‘hmuthange for wool and we have Lice aYmngements, so mat our cu; Man trade {or Ike :- wool at any ‘ ‘de gocds stores in Lindsay My“: wool direct to the M' 1 Is E‘Wlmam-st North g 751?.me BROS Woozm Co limited .9 Merchant Tailor ‘3 Wm mum m, “Causing over 20cc 1:0! woo a“? My We have a iavge supply of home~ hieYams and blankets ie «change “M. We allnw . m m. m lb ex ’QM“‘ws‘$ms‘s M. ‘v! 333 333.3 P333383 3 Dentistry 3 specialty. Charges llï¬wm. Phone 387. oï¬ice and '{Isnknce Corner Russell and Home graduate of the Ontario Veterinary Collwe. Post Gradu- ateof the Rom] Vetelinary Col- 7959' alsoof the London School of Tropic a1 Medic me. Day and night. calls promptly at- miï¬E-ST,, lIIDSAY Lomnto, Catalogue .ree I mdqualify fora. good situatian in ‘msimss life. ILwillcost little ‘todnthis. Get our plans. \Vrite The Shaw Correspondence School flYonge-st.= Tomato. DR, 3. M. RICE ‘3- 81’6“ PETERBORO BUSINESS COLLEGE ï¬lTerm Gpens Aug. 9.8 M , Y Jhul "1 â€95}? WA a My“ .0 â€.1... -nolll‘ï¬s Gal-‘5‘: WOCL WANTE D ‘ERENARY SURGEON eta HOME STUDY EGURSES , Our teachers All business regg ) sub1e0ts unexcelled advantages to who cannot attend college, mciculars upon inquiry. ,3 good “in“; i gist_ vou. SWQY AT EDHE .ss$ssm â€m‘ 70‘ . )Dg‘ swpy COURSES Easiness College nntf In ds of young in life. “8 9, best train PI'BSidEIIt sts.. ‘ WAGE CASE m snag mum POUCE CASE . s-s‘sm o .9 i A session or the County police ’court was [held yesterday afternoon 0 - before County Magistrate F. D. Moore, K. (3., when Mr. Malon John- sun, kwa, sued Mr. Bert Woods, Ops, for $21.00. Mr. Johnson claimed this , Mr. J. W. Mitchell, of L ford, and Ewell known in Lindsay, arrived in § town Friday, from Europe and gave : the Post a friendly call. He was in England during the Coronation, and i was fortunate in witnessing the cere- ent. During his so.ourn in Great Orit Emonies connected with this great ev- 6Kain, Mr. Mitchell visited Scotland and E also crossed over to Ireland, being in 3 Belfast July 12th, when over one hun idred thousand Orangemen participab led in a monster demonstration. Mr. Mitchell also crcsssed the Eng- lish. channel into France aod pisited points of interest including France. He was delighted with his trip. Over 300 students enrolled an- nually, half of whom are young ladies. Highest advantages in all departments. Buildings heat- ed by steam and lighted by elec- tricity. Will re-open Tuesday, September IIth, mm For Calen- dar or room, address BEL-LEVI LLE, ONT. A L B E RT CGLLEGE RETURNED FROM TRIP TO CONT INENT Mr. Fulton appeared for plaintifl. while Mr. Weldon was counsel for de« fendent. for $21.00. Mr. Johnson claimed this' amount as wages due him for work parfcrme-d for Mr. Woods. Mr. John- son will receive about $17.00 for his work. The costs amount to $3.71I ' PROPERLY CARED FOR WILL¢LAST A LIFETIME. K m «A WE HAVE 'A LARGE {Assonmam OF THESE WATCHES. PRINCIPAL DYER. DD RENT 51' “She is an orphan," he said, “and she was an heiress. Her father had made his money as a stockman. in the States, in the days before the West was fenced with wire, and opened out with railways. Her childhood had been spent in the saddle, and she often knew what it was to sleep under the stars. When her father had made what he considered was a. big enuogh pile to leave to a girl, he came to Eng- land and brought Margaret with mm; She was fourteen then, and the next three or four years she spent at school, getting the education for which there had been no time in her wild life out .‘West. When she was nearly twenty, her {math r died, and for a year she travelled with an elderly goxerness, whom your father and Mr. Varney en- gaged for her. At the end of that time she went to live with the Varneys for a month or two. The firm of Carring- ton and Varney failed when she was within three weeks of the time when, by her father’ a w.ili she would 0e 01 age. On her twenty-£1: at birthday she was to have been given the absolute and unfettered control of her fortune of twenty thousand pounds. Her father believed that with the training she had had, she would be capable of con- trolling it wisely. But she was never put to the test." ' Scarborough paused, and Elsa, who had made no sign or movement whilst he was speaking, asked quickly: “It had gone?†“Every pensy of it, I am told.†“Poor giri! How she must have loathed the Varneys! What did she r2di’ng-r‘ï¬ress." ' 7‘ " ‘ ‘ "in 10130.41â€? A - -- - “3:73.. in Boston. A man.who‘had known L’Ii' father; 1(9th a big riding. School there. He happened to be in EngTaz‘. '? c2: 9. holiday, and he offered her a past in his school. She had. .1 few young: of .1121: allowance left. and she made up the money for her'pas- sage and ou’ttip'by' semng he'r trinkets. A month ut’ter aha landed, Val B. Mon- tague saw her 1ide,aud asked her to join th? troupe he was getting up to, tour the Atli-zn't'ic islands; 'She'iï¬d 53‘.†“it was ‘an extraordinary thing to (10,â€. said Elsa. -. “Made up her mind to’earn her ~1iv- mg. There was one accomplishment 2'3 which she excelled, and she rgsolved 1,: but it (0 account. She became' a. ‘I fancy she is not a very ordinary giri Besides, she had a reason. And Montague was not a stranger. She had known him out West as one of her father's, Vstockmen, and she. be- lieved he was to be trusted.†dE":s a’,"‘it was 'a mad' “Still,†s’a'id thing, unl rss her reason was a Very strong one ‘ v , .7 “I‘ Deiiexe it “as. †A faint smile' flickered over Elsa's face. and she asked withsomethmgâ€" like a sneer: ‘Was it Phil Varney? So ghe dig not. haze hi m thaugh his mm 112. ruined her‘?’ Sea r'ca: ough shook his head glavely. “-Phil diï¬n ct know of the existenc: of the. ci1_us tzoupe ml three months later, “:an 11.; joinedwit at Rio. rHer moths “as :15 t it .a:. " †"Bo _ on know what 'rt was?" “Oh, what does it matter?" cried Elsa. “She is in the circus, and my mother warned ‘us of danger from the circus! Tell me what you learned about her." Scarborough paced the room once or twice. Then he sat down beside Elsa. “Very little,†she answered. " than I saw Mona de la. Mar at the circus yesterday. I thought at once that I knew the face, but I couldn’t remember at, first where I had Seen it. Just be- fme your friend, the Revolver King, cam e into the ring, I saw him standing in the gangway speaking to her, and she looked up into his face with a laugh, and a curious shake of the head. Then I remembered in a flash where I had seen that laugh, with its accom- panying jerk of the head before. It was at a tennis party at the \ arne "5, three or four years ago, and I rcmem bered that Phil Varney and Margaret Ryan had piayed together most of the afternoon. They are cousins, I think. Tlmt is all I know.†“There is nothir g in all this to make you Bus. pect her.†said Scarborough. He did not know what to say to her; but he had to say something, and no time was given to him for considering what it should b3. For she met him at once with a question: “Tell me what you know of Mar- garet Ryan.†“I know only what Phil Varney told me." he said. “That is what I want to hear." Scarborough thought for a moment. How could he tell her? To gain time, he asked her to tell him ï¬rst what she knew. been correct, and that the gout was a lie. He believed moreover, that Rich- mond Carrington’s whole life had been of a piece with that lie, and that for the last two years he had imposed upon his daughter as he had imposed upon the world before the world had found him out. The guilty man had played upon her credulity, and tricked her of her love by deceit; and Scar- borough, pitying him, hardly blamed him for so doing. But Varney's estiâ€" mate of him was right. and Eisa’s was wrong. Size must know some time. and yet Scarborough shrank from the he scessity of undeceiving her. To destroy a daughter's trust in her father, when that father was dead, and beyond the power of ginning furtherâ€"surely it was a cruel thing to do! i D Z I?! >< Q i 2 D 'U :0 m (D m 2 -I U > .< :0 O 3 > Z O "I , WEATHERBY CHESNEY g; mwcwow Cd [.4 o; (71 SA.) 9ch." Children Cry --_- 756R FLETCHER? - “TOR I‘A houye 7.10 spare , “Yeé. I?! Am in the circus twenty minutes‘hefore‘ the ‘ performance be- gins .it.wm-.do.- What do‘you want .me for?",» .. ,. ._ ‘ ...... “I Wtint i'ou'fn hnln Mo ï¬rn‘ho â€ï¬e Then she stepped, And With _an im- peyipus gesture pointed to the door. ’ "G‘o! 'I’a's'ke'd‘ror ‘youihelp, but I will do-without it. YOu believe 111 o. mythhen whomg loved more dearly than anyone“ m’the "worla"â€"'ana' then 111.8. lower tong-she addedzâ€"“till you came. and I thought. 1 had found one whom I could love more!†â€I say that that is the story I “as tOId I! . “Do you believe it?" He did not answer. She waited for nearly a minute, and the silence was broken only by their deep bleathing. Then..she laughed softly,- and Scar- borough thought that laugh was the mo_s_t desolate eoungl he had ever heard. He went to take her in his arms, but she shxank back from him. ‘ “Golfiehe cried. ‘fGo! I think I hate You now!" A'nd theï¬, in it paésion of sobbing, she threw herself into a chair, and covered‘her face with her hands. thing. them in his possession, {is it is prob- aBle that he would, they would’suppl'y ,a motive. There are pl‘enty of men in the world who will murder for less. CII AIIF’TER VIII. A Scratched Stone; "Well?" 3st Phil Varney, when mnbcx’éccu returned from the. Chine- Eas to the Gable Station. ‘ Pick-mend Carpingtqn ig dead," maid Scarhozougq gimpI;. ‘ ‘M uzndered â€" ~. ~ ‘1 dont know, but it looks like it." :‘The d amends?†_» ‘Oh. I suppcec ab; ‘Iiaz'e 'ycu "mi “It giveav. that‘even’ though it is not true.†said Elsa quickly. “She believed it, and she vowed revenge.†Again Scarborough had to force him- self to say: ‘ “I do not mean that. I don‘t think' that Marga: et Ryan is the murderess. But it is known that before he left London Mr. Carrington invested a. lgrge sum in diamonds. If he retained “‘Hbracé.†cried‘VElsla. suddenly, and there was a‘not'e’ot heart-breaking grief ,in her voice. “Do you believe all this?†‘ . ‘He forced himself to answer. “I don’t know ‘what I believe. But, if it. .is true, it gives us What has been lacking hithertoâ€"a motive for the mur- derâ€"if murder has been done. " With a, cry that was almost a sob, Elsa rose and faced him. 7‘},You_say that my father had those diamonds?" she askedâ€"“diamonds whic‘h bé'had bought with that girl’s money! You say that, Horace?" “It was believed that the partner who had fled had taken this money with him for his own use. He had taken the crphan's inheritance, not with the intention of paying it back, it by its means he could save his firm from ruinâ€"hut simply and solely for himself, to swell his crime-gained plunder. It sounds incredible, but 1:: any believed it, an -d amongst them the gt: 1 heme-11 haxe told you that in serve was she is a stxange gixl, a girl from whom one would expect strange things. She took a fantastic vow of vengeance, dedicated the next five years of her lifeâ€"if the task should take so longâ€"to tracking down and punishing the man who had ruined her. She became a. riding-mistress because she knew no quicker way of earning the money she would need; she joined Val B. Montague, because with him she could begin her search at once, and earn money as she went. She had heard that the object of her pursuit was in hiding in one of the islands of the Atlantic. " Again he stopped. He saw Elsa’s eyes fixed cn him with horror. looking out of their depths. “Gd on," she said. "Tell me quick- I),.I’ Scarborough stopped. He had ex- pected that the thing won Id be hard to say; but now. with Elsa’s eyes widening with a growing apprehen- sion, he found it almost impossible. "The money was taken to try to stave off the disaster?" she said. “No. It had not been added to the firm's assets. No trace of it was found in tin books. It was believed thatâ€"-†‘..;"h’n 11:9 arisizs (f 1 ' ing’icn and Vazney w<1e 111163112315," Scarbor- ough want on, "it \zas found that the paretni 1's, cr whichever of them was the gui! 15' man, must ha a known for a long time that the failuie was inevi- table; and yet it was only within a eriod of six weeks before the crash came that the securities which repre- sented Margaret Ryan‘s inheritance were turned into ready money." “That there are people who believe that he was guiity," he said. "Oh, I'knaw thai!" she said, scorn- fully. “Why, we have been Eidng here for twu vnsu"; in San Miguel under the :‘alsc 123:9: ‘ci‘ “rage, if :2; 54:11.53 31-52:: are {-3015 wio 15:15:: my faiic: He got up and paced the room again. After all, the thing had to be told, and his delay had not made it easier, or shown him any gentle way of saying a. hard thing. But Elsa was not as other girls; she was brave. and w0u1d hear the truth without flinching. He owed. it to her courage not to fence with the necessity longer. He would say straight out whatAhad to be said. “Why do you say that?" she asked quickly. “Because what I am going to tell you is only plausible if it is read in the light of that fact." She looked at him coicily. “What fact?†she asked. "That my father was guilty! Is that what you mean?†“That th-rre are people W110 believe “You Enow that there are people who do not hold the view you do about your father's innocence?†he said._ “Go! I) E “Elsa! †want you' to help me probe lthis r. I am coins fi‘t‘ut."h'§ tfié" cm. she .said. 4â€, L!" .21: P‘ YJIDSi : “Yes,†said Vamey . “And she‘s 1 sensible enough to have forgotten that [fantastic vow businesg long ago. It T was only a piece of girlish froth in the ; beginning. nothing more than a burst for natural temper, expressed in a immantically violent way. Of course 1 she soon dropped it.†=wmmmmm2 Varney understood now, and saw that he'ha‘d’made'a. mistake. It was the girl, not the man, to whom the new knowledge made a difference. He was glad that Scarborough had missed the point of his question, and- hehonored his triendior not understanding him. Varney had learned in a rough school lately, and he knew that in the world’s eyes, his thought would be counted the natuzal one; and he knew too, how. to respect a man to whom that thought did not even accur “Oh, yes," said Scarborough, and they rode o'ff together. The road to the pine- grower's house passed within a few hundred yaxds of the Caldeh‘a de Morte, and they turned aside to see the place where Richard Carrington had met his death, The Caldeira lay in a shallow de- pression in the hillside. formed by an extinct crater, and they had to leave. their bicycles to get to it. There was a narrow fissure in the lip of the crater through which the' warm shallmv oucam train m: uameua made Its way to the loner levels The path and the stream occupied the who! e’ of this fissure. but somtimes the stream 700}! “I don’t quite see. Do you r ean to say that it does make a difference now?†"You mean to help her, nonvthe less." was what he said. Varney shot a puzzled look at him, saying: ~ “Yes. She refusés to speak to me, or to let me help her._ Shall we start? Your machine is in _the shed.†Varney’s question meant to ask What difference the knowledge that the father was an unpunished criminal would make in Seal-borough's feelings towards the daughter, It wasia natural question, perhaps, but luckily Lear- borough misunderstood it. It never even occurred to him that such a ques- tion would be put, so he answered it readily. He thought that Varney was asking about Elsa, not about him. you? “I hope that in the end it will make no difference," he said. man,†he added quietly. _ “I thih}: 1 can understand what you are feeling. What difference will this make to mm EEC}: Kmdayhe and rci‘icvc all the troublgs Inc!- flcnt'toa‘mlimxs Mate of “22 13336113, Such as 1)}; )xc:,_ Knuscg, Inowsinpss, Disgress after esmngz. 1mm in the Side etc. While; their most remarkable gucccz has been shown in caring "Probablyfr agreed Scarborough. “But I want to talk to her.†“Oh, all right, I’ll introduce you. How is the daughter taking things?†“Bravely,†said Scarborough. "Did she know the truth about her father?†"No D “You told her 9†“Yes, but she didn’t believe me’. ’ Vamey nodded. “That’s natural †he said. “Poor girl, this is a rough time for her! And for you too, old "What for?†asked Varney quickly. “You are not going to be ass enough to suspect her of merder, are you?†(IN0.H “Then what do you want with her?†“I want to know whether she saw or spoke to Richmond Carrington yes- terday. I want to know whether the private business which made her re- tuse to perform last night was an interVieW with the man who had rob- bed her. Is she the sort of girl who will‘ be sensible enough to see that questions will be put, and that she'll have to answer for her~movements?†Headache. yet (T‘mxer's ittle Live: Plus ms «many Vuï¬mhe in (.ons‘t pation. curing and me am Hung] Elia unzzayim; complaint. while thcyalso cormqul (:is Ms; unhcstpmsth. Stimlllatcim liu {and n-g lino t‘nebowcls. -.E~V€n if they only who, so far as we‘Know, was me IaSl person to see him aiive; and after- wards I shall go with you to Ponda Delgada. I w'» ï¬t to be introduced to Mona de 13. Mar †cuzud Achc‘l‘ney would be nimostprieeksa to'flmsewha rum-r from this distressing complaint: but form» 1mm; leci r gnodncssdorsnctcmljtwrcmhd those who gnu: try them will £120. theselmlc pine; val}? a} m: z :1 so mimy 1:32.15. mt they v. in 11th wk- lwr‘ 1-K 2.0? Without them. Bptaflc; {511 ï¬g}; Luau '9 the we of aémï¬x lifa $53! .h'ï¬'é ’5 “1‘9" we mun; um‘ great. best. Out-1:11;: care it wade “1,3.“ as, 139th . ‘ . h __ .. . . -2- -«_.;. .- .~ u "x v-..~.y ‘artcr's mm: L' vcr Pills are very grim†Md ‘1‘?! â€.5? to take. 0.xcor Um nulsmagc u ,G Ofe- 'i‘hc‘y 122'“ stflctly i'cgct.._b.é and do not gxipc_ 0! not! M LMM ANUFACTURED "a: mmuflm MA. _- II). 1‘ . ’1: 0.1!: .0. ,5.) 1:. u 5.12: v ..I i. i .r .2... n .5... .l .......5..: II o )1! .(“riilz .u 2“! I 92...... S‘ 0.â€.35 - 35' 1 I.'...L C a... V: 921...!!- mapzp :pzciflcnno o4 .2. I?†MGLEHRAR ét EG. '5 noun: PAW “PRISM†BRAND REABY MEXEB PAINTS ï¬iÃ©ï¬ My nu mm 'W“ ,4 "O. Idid not go with him I had done enough; for, Senhores, the Corregido‘o had not said that the body v.39 to be moved. †"I, Senor? No! Why should the Senhor suspect me?†"I don’t suspect you,†said Scarbor- ough. rather impatiently. “I only “ant to know what you saw. You say you saw nothing?" . A gleam came into the man’s eye. He Lesitated a moment. and then he 'said cunningly; - Then he went on to describe the episc’de‘tvith' ‘voluble earnestness and a wealth of dramatic gesture. The finding of a dead man was an event in his life, and he had the histrionic ability to make the most of his share in the occurrence. -He entered into the explanatic s not only of what he had done‘ in this alarming crisis, but also, minutely and comprehensively, of what he had thought. He explained that his fiisnimpuise had been to carry the nen's to the Corregidor at Ribeira Grande; for few Portuguese will touch a dead man. or help a dving man, until otticialdom has given me word, for tear lest, if foul play has been done, they may be Summoned as accompliees._1_he peasantry have a firm belief that the last hand whic h touches a dying man, is by the law oi the land presumed to be the hand which gave him death; and it is a be- lief which in one well authenticated instance left a man who had been in jured on the railway, a few miles from ‘JCoimbra, the intellectual capital of Portugal. to lie unaided thrdugh the heat of a long summer’s day. He was cons :‘ous, and able to beg for water. But 11!) one dazed to give him any, for the Corregidor had been summoned. and nothing could be done till he came And this is not an isolated case‘ _____ â€"___ -.., “v u u“ .uv.u\.~.~u vu. 3/ But this Azorean peasant exniained, and took pride in explaining, that he had risen superior to this fear. “I helped ‘to carry him,†he said proudly. >“Yo_!_1_ helped? Then you were my! “I was alone at first but I went to the Casa Davis, which is near here. and summoned the Sc-nhor Davis. We carried the dead man to Senhpr Davis’s cart, which waited at the end of the gorge, and ScnhorfDavis drove him to the house which is cal!ed As Chinelas. "What islhg in English, “He’ in Eiaiming to be a hero because he dared to touch a corpse,†said Scar- borough; 21nd to the man added; “Was that all?†“What does the $932120)! mean?†“Did . 'gu see anything which sug- gesled .w the dead man methis death?“ alone? “1 Mlhro‘éfmanyï¬enhorr AV bbbr W33 Cannot afford to keon his eves 59 H (To be continued.) Scarborough approached him, and the man, With the real politeness of the. Islanders-jumped to the ground and took his hat off. “Bonas dias, senhores," he said. Scarborongh returned his greeting, and asked‘gvhether he had heard any- thing of a dead man having been found'th'e‘re this morning. “Sim, senhor,†was theâ€"answer. was I who found him.†The man had slung his sack across the donkey ’5 back, and seated himself on the top of it. His seat “as a hot and .wet qne but he seemed to Iind it comfortalge. He relit his cigarette and urged his beast towards éhe narrow en- trance between the walls of pumice. “Then he may have seen something of what happened ysterday,†suggésted varney. “Ask him You speak Por- tuguese. †“Food needs to be cheap in a coun- try where sixpense is a good day's ,wagef’ ‘said‘ Scarborough. “Fortun- ately, it -isvcheap. The lupin grows like a weed; steeping in the sea pick- les the beans; and the Caldeira cooks them. Our friend there probably comes here every day. It's his trade.†“No, thanks. I’ll take your word for it. That's the cheapest kind of whole- sale cooking I ever heard of." They were not the only visitors to the crater. A man was standing by the edge of the water, a blouse-clad Azor- ean peasant, with a wide hat on his head and a cigarette of maize-husk be- tween his lips. A donkey quietly browzing on the herbage at the edge of the, whitened circle was evidently his property. Presently the man bent down and lifted a dripping, steaming sack from the water. "What's he doing?†Varney asked. “Cooking," said Scarborough. “That sack is full of red lupin beans . They are a popular food here; you’ll see sacks of them in every provision shop in Ponta Delgado.†“And they cook them in the Cal- deira!" said Varney. “Is it hot enough for that?†“A few degrees below boiling point. Put your hand in and see." “Sulphuretted hydrogen,†said Scar- borough. ‘“Tl1ere generally is a little, though the amount varies. The va- pors are mostly carbon dioxide, I be- lieve; but after an earthquake any- where ln the island, the sulphur fumes are Alnv sufï¬cient quantity to be dan- serous.†“Does that often happen?†“Yes, pretty often; but I haven't heard of any earthquake lately." “It reminds me of the picture of the genie in the Arabian Nights, rising in a cloud from the brazen jar," said Varâ€" ney. “What’s the smell?" curling, bubbling movement, like milk gently boiling. A cloud of steam rose from them in a dense column, expand- ing into a canopy, and twisted in ever- thinnlng wreaths out over the toothed edge of the crater. snowea‘ that were were times when ,the shallow stream was a rapid torrent, , After about fifty yards this gully ended .1n the shallow cup of the crater. A ring of jagged teeth of basalt made a. complete circle, a quarter of a mile in diameter, broken only at the place where the two young men had entered. Below this black rampart the slapes lwere clothed with a green mantle of lheath and whortleberrles; lower down lthere was a thick carpet of stag-horn imoss; and lower still, barrenness, bar; berth and :tones, with a scurfy incrus- ;tatlon of white upon them. The Cal- ‘ deira itself was hardly more than ten 'yards across .lt now, but the white Pdesolation round it marked the limits [to which its waters sometimes rose. 3The Waters themselves were white, km“ milk, and they were in constant a.) um um avuuame Space tor nut-:11, and left no path; so that it was neces- sary to jump from rock to rock in its bed, or to splash boldly through it. Walls of grey pumice, splashed with irregular patches of red lichen, rose for forty' feet on either Side; and scor- ings and watermarks on their flanks showed. that there were times when the shallot}! stream was a rapid torrent. on gaymg ‘3" asked Varne. “It WWJ¢ I E {ï¬g 233% 3‘6 A ï¬iciniy 5: ' iii 2 gig-E ’ 9:1 ~ 5 E. 6%: -:e;dv:-d to give evidence as to the conâ€" stion he found the car in, and Mr. W C. Moore was a witness and stated the rubber on the wheels was torn and a spring broken. Tuv:sday court was held in the Town Hall, and Mr. Routley, assisted by his lawyer, Mr. Weldon, of Lindsay. proâ€" Mr. Iioutley, it appears, was in Toronto at the time, and left Frank :‘JuI‘saiflw in charge 01 the car No. !249. B‘IaI‘SAiUCS had been running ar- ound the village with some parties, and some AmariCans wanting to see Buckhorn, asked Marsailles would he take them over to Buckhorn. He ag- reed to do so for $8, which was paid. The trip was made. Qn Saturday Mr. Routley returned from Toronto,’sav.- the car in bad condition, and asked Frank how it was. iie replied that he had made a run to Buckhorn with a party. Mr. Routley on Monday ‘ took iegal stgps to sue the Americans for damages. Monday morning Marsailles left by train for Toronto. £01.. at. 1.. .. r Bobcaygeon Independent: An inter- esting c;~.ce came before County Mag- istrate F. D. Moore on Tuesday when Mr. W. C. Routley, of Toronto, had two American; summoned m a. charge 01 taking his automobile from the Rockland and running to Buckhorn one any last week. INTERESTING COUNTY PEEICE CQEERT CASE ‘ QETCOME OF AUTO TEE? T33: EE‘CKHORN MAGNIFICENT DISPLAYS OF CGRQEATION FEREWORKS Festival of Empire â€" Pictur- ing the glories ofthe Cor- onation ceremomes. 1,500 erformers 1n unixorm. [we Stack and Agncultureâ€" A: Greatest show on comin- pi em! Special Prizes of {r 3500 each. Increased C Prizes i n all classes. St August 26th - TORONTO - September 11th Canaéim Naiional Exhibition ~~Store closes a ocaock daiiy (Saturday exceptu) . iv_._ â€"' "â€"Iw g the glories ofthe Cor- Musicians of the Royal SwaIing battlebetween union ceremonies. 1,500 Household, by special a Dreadnought and a :rformers in uniform. permission of the King. Submarine. HOSTS OF OTHER ATTRACTIONS Y.R.A. Refltmâ€"Azhletic Sportsâ€"Boy Scouts Review-R’audwineâ€"Japanese Firework!- Twelvc Massed Military Bandsâ€"Trotting and Pacing Races, etc. CORON‘LTIQN YEAR LEADS THEM ALL For all information write Manager I. O. ORR. Cit) CASH AND ONE 9310?. IHREE GREAT SPECEALS a flag a." A: p u. .. tr (tum. . 9 may m4 we Aftâ€"Gems from Euro- pean gallcnesâ€"masters from best collections in pqldsygam Gaga]; Egan-j Ear Beneath thn Ham E’lgi Wï¬maia Rarï¬iw E av: Ca nada and United States. ,, Mr. ~Weldon then wished to take out an information regarding the Ameri- cans hgving dealt with adriver who was without a license. Mr. O’Connor was quite ready to meet the change. but Wish'id to know if Mr. Weldon's clie:.t was hacking him in the propos- c'd information. Finally nothing fur- ther was done, court was closed and the Hull coded oï¬. The Magistrate said he failed to see how Mr. Weldon could hold the gentle 1 men responsible, and dismissed the cass. Mr. Weldon was insistent that the .émsi‘iflns had taken the car and were responsible. launchers: â€"â€" Greatat display ever shown in America! Goods man- ufacturcd while you wait. y Hall. T020210 953! 9