Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Lindsay Post (1907), 11 Aug 1911, p. 5

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"e have a “exams and! tT O W s “a M J. “ 0.9. 5’ “‘scwzs “ww‘Qo‘as‘s 0:0 lhflbn a) egg-2:0 a: 1 A {A THE H0} Toronzo, Ont, stwas toâ€"day without a superior in Canada. Gndua'es 31w: vs successful. Catalogue free Dentistry moderate. Cambridge.5 “Exchange for W0 Trnpfrfl Mrdhim‘. Day and Light Cans pxumptly at- tended. 8833133282611, lIKDSAY SURGEON Children ury _ Fun FLETCHER’S HUB i'i‘i‘é!’ PREMISES DR, .5. M. RICE IZII' are those zormerly occu- pied by Wilson Pogue, Where we will be found with our choice stock of W032. WANTED s' THIRTYJEALIES. A?! iii‘iESTME NT S COLLEGE Fab" Te m from August 28th 30:8 fangs and Overcoatings 36097 6‘ Town“? invites mtcre “W. 'I {3:1ng supp‘y of home- L'ankz's to :xchange .1‘. In. 1 '0 2r per lb ex . for won! :1: d we have rents, so 11151 our cusn f; mar 20cc Ibaof woo 1‘?) ”I m RBORO Toronto, ,e for th "he Sol Cl! 0th 119 p.c. ncv aver t! at of last 5111-? growing popu- .al' 593:0.»1. \V hat WC torutlzexs We can do way interested in a training will lead you into a good is appointment at a good The Fall Tenn open: on 28th. Address W. H. Presifient. Yonge Gerrard want). and mention this ant Tailor PAIN, \pe'.‘ialty. ”Charge? fine 3:87. oflice aTnd mar Russell and OTCS m Central Business College KC invites you to write for f its curriculum if you are ] :fiways pays the Fur yea: s we have 1-114 :1 fxwthohl in pi-‘Li Wurld. An in- rte of the Ontario v3.39. Post Gradu- 1i Vetuinar)’ Col- ‘ London School of he 3' W0 m.- fur particulars It") (be Ni 15 ‘.‘-.'oo'.cn Co Limited av. mans? 11h», ONT INN-I sage A__.nâ€".-¢-q “v..- LESSONS 1N: MUSEC BY MAIL Over 300 students enrolled an- nually, ha!f of Whom are young ladies. Highest advantages in all departments. Buildings heat- ed by steam and lighted by decâ€" tricity- Will reâ€"open Tuesday, September Ivh, 19H. For Calen- dar cr room, address PROPERLY CARED: FOR WILL LAST A“ LIFETIME.’ M WE HAvEtA LARGE !Asson'rMENT OF ‘ THESE WATCHES. BELLEVILLE, ore-r. cooler atmosphere. ments for height and temperature, sent up from Woodstock July 5th by J. Patterscn of the Meteorological Department, Toronto, was found near Guelph. It recorded a height of elsn- en miles, the lowest temperature be- ing musty-three below zeroâ€" We think we see in this the solu- tion lcr hot spells in the future. When the heat becomes unbearable, just take your balloon ,and sail up to a Mr. A. AtCheson of Highland Grove was in town this week with a proâ€" position from The Standard Chem- ;‘icnlnd lumber 00., now operating in plant at Fenelon Falls. whereby. ‘ they: agree in consideration of a ban. us of §10, 000 to establish smodern. uD-to- date works here ate. cost of $150, 000, and to give steady employ ment to sixty men. Amass meeting or the rzte-payers of Bencroft and the township of Faraday, where the site would probably have to be se-; cured, wih be held in the town hall 1 on Monday evening at8 o'clock and‘ we hope to see the 11331 crowded. Come out anyway, whether in 'favor of the proposition or not and some offer of assistance may be made, which will be mutually advantageous. I WALTHIM WNW PRINf \. :wms T0 LOCATE : IN BANCROFF balloon with recording instru- Cooler Above the man may have been in life, only a churi would deny that this message from him in death was pathetic. If he was a scoundrel, he had never been so to his daughter; and In his skiltul d15- coundns of. tn; revelations that must . “Good-bye, little girl. I think this is the longest letter I have ever writ- ten to you. I have one thing more to add to it. If you have begun to doubt me in some things, at any rate you; have never doubted that I love you. In days to come your estimate of your father may change; you will hear 3 things that will try your faith, But: never believe that he did not love you. 2 It is for your sake that I am daring? danger today; it is for your sake that f I hope for success, that I may return to you to be happy, for a little while ' longer in your love. ' 4‘ “It is time nOW'that I was starting. I cannot write more. But again, darl- 1 ing, good-bye.” s ' Elsa read this letter with tears streaming down her face. Whatever! thi 1: it is a presentiment, Elsaâ€"has by that time come true. I Wish you to Cream-er this package frem the safe place 122 Which you have bestowed it, and to give it into her hands, When you do so, tell her also tha; my last message to her, spoken by the lips or you, her daughter is that she is to respect the wish I have expressed in a letter to hex which the packet con- tains. She will understand; you will not. For the rest, be guided by her. I say to you solemnly. that it is as strong now as ever it was. But having said that, I am now going to add some- thing which you will, perhaps, not un- derstand. It is this: I hand over the work to you, but I lay no charge upon you to complete it. Nay, more, under certain circumstances. I forbid you to complete it. I do not even make you the juc‘ge of those circumstances. That :5 an office which I leave, not to you, but to your mother. ' {Your mother is on her way to join us. -. {She will arrive on the Funchal from‘JJebon on the, tenth of the month. It on *La: date I am unable to meet her. if my presentmentâ€"after all, I me that the Weak place was becoming weaker. The effort which I must make todayâ€"an effort, which for your sake as well as mine, is inevitableâ€"is of the sort which I have been warned to avoid, but I haVe no choice. I tell you this unwillingly, and for the first time; but it is necessary that you should be ready, if I fail, to take 11 pthe work ‘yvhei‘e I leave it. . \ .“Now you will askâ€"what is the woi‘k? My daughter, it is the rehabili- tation of my name. I have thought lately that you were beginning to doubt whether my anxiety on this point was not beooming weaker. Elsa, _--- A- _A, “I am not a fanciful man, Elsa, but I have written these four words, ‘I do not retum,’ deliberately. Of late I have had a feelingâ€"~a fanciful man would say a presentimentâ€"that my end is not far off. I haVe lived a life of varied activities, some useful, and some perhaps not so useful, and the strain of old efforts is beginning to tell upon me. In the early years of my manhood I suffered great physical hardships, and they left a weak place; before I lei: London my doctor warned me will not consider it necessary to watch you also. Take the packet, and put it in the safest place that you know. When I return, if I do return, I shall not ask you where it is. “The sealed packet which you will find with this letter contains docu- ments which must at all costs be kept out of the hands of people who would use them to your and my injury. I do not trust to my own ability to safe- guard them, nor is it possible for me, watched as I believe I am, to put them into any place of safety. That must be your task. Those who are shadowing “My dear daughter,â€"I told you this morning that when you returned from 1 Pants Delgada you might possibly find ‘ that I was not at home to greet you, and to hear your report of what and whom you had seen. I might have told you that the possibility was a cer- laInLy, out 1 um um. wash to alarm you. By the time you return I shall have succeeded or failed, in an enterprise, the success of which is so essential, that to ensure it I am voluntarily put- ting myself in some danger. While you are doing your best at Ponta Del- gada to discover who the unknown enemy is, I shall be engaged in a simi. lar contest with an enemy who is well known to me, an enemy who of late has taken to using threats. Now, little girl, between the known enemy, and the unknown, I run a double risk , of failure, and this is what you must ‘ help me to avoid. Elsa opened it an hour hftér Scar- borough had left her. This was what it contained: This paper was marked, “To my daughter, Elsa, to be opened by her to-morrow at noon, if by that time I have not returned to destroy it." It “in b remembered that when Elsa set out to go to the circus at Pon- ta Delgada, her father's last words to her had been that ifâ€"unlikely as such a chance seemed at the timeâ€"he was not at the Chinelas when she returned, she would find in his desk, in the sec- ond small drawer, on the left, a paper that would tell her what she waste do. } Later had .come the reaction. She ‘ took up her faith again, the more un- reasonably because reason had fewer] her to lay it down: and she despised herself for the weakness in allowing the calumny to influence her even for a moment. There was something of obstinacy in thisâ€"the obstinacy of a strong nature which fights the more tenaciously when facts and common- sense alike are against it, and it knows quite well that it is in the wrong; and there was even more of the beautiful loyalty with which every true woman will always, at whatever violence to her own judgment of right and wrong. defend those whom she loves. inheritance, and had told him passion ately that since he believed it, he might goâ€"fcr almost she thought she hated him. She had thrown herself on the couch, and sobbed hysterically; for at that moment the knowledge was in her heart that what he said was true! . . , ; L.-. ‘ . { 2 :>:tfi v.1 H.135. he Cableman §AN EXCITING PRESENT- DAY ROMANCE 4 g BY M WE ATHERBY CHESNEY ! She looked up at' the name painted etter with tears on the bows. It was almost dark now, face. Whatever i but she cgpld just make out the white ‘_ 1.. I;- - She pushed back quickly, but a head appeared ovgr the forward bulwarks. letters. She nearly betrayed herself by a cry of dismay. The vessel was the Sea-Horse, the circus people’s chooner. She sculled nearer, as quietly as she could. I; did not seem that there was any immediate danger, the vessel ap- parently was not sinking, and as the sea ouigigie was calm, her people would easily make the shore in their boats, She did not wish to be seen, so she waited until they were gone. But meanwhile she must know whether it was pcssible for her to get out at all. It was not pogslbie, Under the light air the ship had taken ground slowly, but her weight had carried her well into the opening There was not room on either side of her for a boat to pass out. Elsa. was a prisoner. -_ 7 _°_. There was a confusion and shouting on her deck, and Elsa thought that she saw a woman’s form. The fog crept round again, and blotted out the View of thg stranded vessel. v- ".5 vvvulub nut: UUUAU Bed 'thro‘t’xgh the narrow entrance that the heavy billowing masses.of whiteness' were still twisting and heaving on the ' sea outside. She put an ear in the stern-notch,_ and began sculling towards the en-{ trance. A voice from close at hand! rang sharply on her cars. ‘ “Rocks dead ahead! Starboard!" | \ She heard the rumble of a wheel, and 1the sharp rattle of the rudder chains. A shadowy form loomed out of the vapors, and came slowly on towards the entrance. The next moment the bowsprit of a large vessel passed b;- tween the rock walls of the narrow opening; there was a grating noise, and a sharp jerk; the vessel heeled till her bulwark touched the basalt, slll'.'-’ ered a moment, and swung back again 5 the other way; the hell on her fore-' mast tolled with the violence of the oscillation. and then, balanced on the tulcrum of the grounded forefoot, she settled down with long slow swings, like some giant metronome, or like the i dead rolling of arderellct in the trough. v... - u--- l cheerfully. “Do you know who I am?” “You are Margaret Ryan.” “I was. I’m Mona de la Mar now. Come down to my cabin. Sambo, you heard what the lady said about the boat. Can you do it?" “Got to. Missy Mona,” said Samba “(:an’t stay here till the wind comes. Oh, yes, we’ll do it all right.” , "Then be quick as you can. Let me know when you’ve done it. I shall be iâ€"-â€"â€"â€"_.JIâ€"IIâ€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€" ________________ A335,. v'_-‘. wvv whole circle or the basalt walls. It was only a local clearness; in the gath- ering dusk of the evening she could see through the narrow entrance that the heavy billowing masses.of whiteness were still twisting and heaving on the sea outside. She must finish her work before it lifted to betray her. was sudden,_ and probably diify “local“. But while it lasted she was safe from observation. She heard the voices again. and F this time they seemed quite close. She ‘ coma annosc mstlngulsn me actual! Words, and she could hear plainly that 5 the language was English. The fog é swept down upon her again in a thick . blanket. She could not see three yards 3 ahead. The thickening of the gloom‘2 way off or close to her? She knew how deceptive is the nature of sound in a fog on the water. Probably some bogt was passing in the distance. Elsa drew back her boat-hook from the fissure, and stood up in the boat, listening with a strained intensity of concentration. She was quite sure that they were men's voices that she had heard ; but were the men a long Her love carried her at once to the other extreme of speculation. Was her father not a victim, but a hero? He had made a great effort, and he said that he made it for her sake; she did‘ . not understand that, but he had writ- , ten the words. Did he know that the effort would cost him his life? She canvassed this thought, and it seemed to her that it was the truth. She found a certain comfort in it, and she took a dreary pleasure in carrying ,out the task which he had laid upon her. The safest place she knew. That was surely the Ring-Rock, round whose flanks she could now, through the fog, hear the water swirling. She had the packet with her, sealed in a great stone jar. It was thin and flat, and had rolled easily into a shape that would pass through the jar’s neck. She took the boat in through the opening. and made for a spot on the east of the circle. There was a funnel- shaped fissure in the rock wall here, which even at low tide contained a fathom of black water. She had sounded it on the last occasion on which she had visited the Ring-Rock, land it was this funnel shaped fissure that she meant to use for her hiding- place. She had painted the jar black, ' so that it should not be visible against the basalt, and she had ticd many loops of strong picture wire about its neck so that she could recover it by grap- pling when her mother came. She brought her boat close to the mck wall, and was feeling with a boat- hook for the mouth of the fissure, when a sound from the outside struck her ears. She was not alone. Voices of men floss at hand came to her through the as. CHAPTER XI. The Piling-Up of the Sea Horse Elsa drew back her boat-hook from the fissure, and stood up in the boat, listening with a strained intensity of concentration. She “ran nnitn. cnrn “Boat ahoy! We want help. Bring your boat alongside.” It was Mona de la Mar. i Elsa drew back further into the fog. 9' Her first impulse was to refuse help. Mona shouted again, and Elsa brought her boat alongside. “Do you need help?" she asked. “Are you filling?” { “No. I don't think so. . hard aground. We shall break up." “You had better take to your boats." But we’re “We haven't any boats. that’s why! : we need yours. Can you come aboard : if we let down a ladder?" ’ [‘Yes.’) side. the painter of her boat, and then, ] waiting till the pendulum swing of the schooner brought the bulwarks to their lowest point, put her feet in a rung‘ and took a firm hold with her hands. There was an almost motionless second between the.down swing and the up, and then she was carried swiftly up- wards. At the same time she was pressed hard against the schooner's side. and the cold iron took the skin off her knucxles. it was all she could do to hold on; she could not climb until once rrcre the fall of the roll, swung her Outwards again. In the brief pause between the two move- rtents she raised herself two rungs, but it was net until she had been hoisted and lowered eight times that she reached the bulwark level. Then two biack arms grasped her and lifted her on the deck, and a soft voice mur- ntnr-crl- "..'il right, missy; now yo‘s safe. You very brave lady." “I didn't thin}r you would manage it,” said Mom de la Mar, who was standing class by “Sambo is right. You are a vc ry brave girl. But i don't suppose you need us to tell you than! and titre is precious. May we use, you beat?” “ch,” said Elsa. “I expect you wonder why we 'ilflk’fin’f nnn nf I‘JTY‘ [she's mL‘_-y_ - l i “Yes." I If it comes on to blow, f A rope ladder was thrown over the I . , Elsa fastened the end of it to . was a girl who made a habit of taking . uut. 1 small nave to explain at great length to Val B. Montague presently, and explanations are fatiguing. I want to talk about ‘you just now. I want to know you, if I can. Do you wonder why?” ! Elsa looked straight at the laughing i o -vv, ‘ “LIVVV I’MBL- face of her questioner. and after a brief pause, said coldly: I‘No.)fl “You understand why?” said Mona, nodding. . "I don’t understand. It is merely that the question does not interest me." Mona clasped her fingers behind her head, and leaned her back against the heaving wall of the cabin. Her brown eyes showed a sparkle of amusement, and a smile played about her lips. She life with a laugh, and even the fact that she had just piled her employer's ship on a ledge of sharp volcanic rock did not seem to have made a break in the habit. Elsa regarded her with a cold disapproval. but at the same time with a certain admiration. There had been no examination of the extent of the damage. For all that this laughing girl knew to the contrary, the Sea- Horse might in a few minutes slip off the ledge and take her to the bottom. “I want to talk to you,” said Monaâ€" “to learn, if I can, what sort of girl you are; and though you are not inter- ested in my reason, I'm going to give it .to you. It is because you are the daughter of the man who robbed me of twenty thousand pounds.” Elsa sprang to her feet with quiver- ing lips. “That is not true," she said. “Oh, come! You don’t deny the relationship!" said Mona mockingly. “And as for the robberyâ€"” “My father did not rob you,” said Elsa hotly. “Didn’t he? I think the term is ac- curate. At any rate Richmond Carring- ton accepted its substantial accuracy as a description of what he had done when I taxed him with it yesteterday.” “Yesterday!" cried Elsa. “You saw him‘yesterday? You admit it?” I so that she could recover it by grap- pling when her mother came. She brought her boat close to the rock wall, and was feeling with a boat- hook for the mouth of the fissure, when a. sound from the outside struck her She took the boat in through the opening. and made for a. spot on the east of the circle. There was a funnel- shaped fissure in the rock wall here, which even at low tide contained a fathom of black water. She 'had sounded it on the last occasion on which she had visited the Ring-Rock, and it was this funnel shaped fissure that she meant to use for her hiding- piace. She had painted the jar black, so that it should not be visible against the basalt, and she had ticd many loops of strong picture wire about its neck She canvassed this thought. and it seemed to her that it was the truth. She found a certain comfort in it, and she took a dreary pleasure in carrying out the task which he had laid upon her. The safest place she knew. That was surely the Ring-Rock, round whose flanks she could now. through the fog, hear the water swirling. She had the packet with her, sealed in a great stone jar. It was thin and flat, and had rolled easily into a shape that would pass through the jar's neck. There was much in the letter that she did not understand. Her father plainly looked for death as the issue of his effort; but what sort of death? At the hands of the enemy whom he was going to meet?-â€"â€"murder? Then why that reference to the hardships of his youth. and the weak place they had left? For the first time she al~ lowed herself to hope that her father’s and had not been violent, after all. Sudden it must have been, but per- hapsâ€" éome after his death, there was a me!- ancholy cleverness. He fought for the continuance of her love, and it was plain that while he pleaded he feared. At present Elsa saw only fiche pleading; it was not until later days that she recognized, with a. sorrowing pity, that the fear was there too. mama pom? 7* 0mm IUI‘NIAVI um". gig” MVegemmo. W :fiéflfiffis Ca rte r’s 3 Lime Liver Pills. ' “Aren’t you Elsa Carrington ?” she asked in a low voice. ___ -___.. _~..Jwv-., Jun 905. She léfiéhied softly again, and then with a quick movement, came closer torllfllsahand peered into her face. _- __..- _.-_ v.. .uy Vital L, UUL I thought we were a good the miles from it. Val B. will say nasty things about my navigation when he hears. I‘m his pupil in that sbuject, you see!” Va and! and as easy “I didn't think Sou would manage it,” saiz' Menu (19 19. Mar, who was 51:15 ing clase by. “Sambo is right. You are a W. ry brave girl. But 1 don’t CURE $40K HEADACHE; and a woman's voice hailing her to’ld herithat she had been seen. was: Eear Signature of Sea Pea-Slam» Wrapper Below. “M an.“ "”M Wmmm w M ‘ I In... 1.4.0., {I I a 0. )flil lots”, a...~ 33.3 3:... y lli .L PficLEHHAfi 81 09. “PRlSM” BRAND READY MXEO PAINTS ‘ Gut 0.3.21... 9‘ .9 l 0.... t. . . :‘311 :3: I it... I. (at £113.... 3. Iran mucus. :roa mmuass. {run anwusnasz. ‘ras mam um. ran cons-ram!“ m smaw SEER. mu m: connexion co‘s mm W“ I her told ' ip. Bring -. 5L- 8-... ,W w- -- yww- “You don’t believe that I am sorry, that I would not have said a word of all this to you if I had known,” she cried passionately; and then, as she noted the fixed look of scorn on Elsa’s face, she added: “You think that I did know! You think that!" “I do not helinve anything thfit you (To be contuued.) Mona shuddered, {aha her brown eyes were wiQe xyit_h _g real distress. “Dead! Your father is dead!" re- peated the girl, with a scared face. “Of course I did not know. And I have been saying all these things about .- L. to you! Oh, what a brute you must think me!” She came close to Elsa and tried to put her arm about her, saying softly: “I am so sorry. I would give anything to be able to unsay all I have said in the last few minutes. But I did not know. You believe me. don’t you? You don’t think I could be so utterly heartless?” Elsa. drew back from her touch. "I think,” she said, coldly, “that you are a finished actress.” it?” “Let me go!” said Elsa. fiercely, “How dare you mock at him like that? You know that he is dead!” In-__ .4- .- _-, ,,.. v-.. “But you would prefer not to have any more of my company than is ne cessary,” said Mona, laughing. “I sup- pose that’s natural. But I‘ve some thing more to say. Your father made a. ridiculous proposition to me. Will you tell him that it is declined, with Margaret Ryan’s best love and thanks.” “I thought the defaulting trustee was ' looking very. prosperous," Mona went on mocking-1y. "He has put an flesh since I last met him. But he didn’t : seem to be as glad to see me as he might haVe been, considering all that i he owes to me. He spoke of you, by I the way, and actually had the folly to kappeal to what he called my finer feel- } lugs, my generous heart. on your be half. That was a false more which I should not have expected from a man of his proved ability. Do you know. Miss Carringtcn, that your f‘ {her is a very plausible impostor?" “Of course I admit it. Why should- n’t I? I have been very anxious to see him, you know. I knew he was in San ‘ I Miguel, and I meant to see him; but I didn't count on having the luck to run up against him in the course of the very first bicycle ride I took in the 3 island. However, that was what hap- . pened.” a ! “Where did you meet him?” Elsa de- manded. ‘ “About a mile from the village of Furnas. I had gone there to see that famous geysers, you know. Romantic‘ 5 disrtict for a defrauded heiress and the defaulting trustee to meet in. wasn't in" ‘ ' L I “I recognize,” she said, “that. he made a mistake in crediting Margaret Ryan with finer feelings. Will you allow me to return to the deck? You shall have the use of my boat.” Elsa answered l-xer with a glance of contempt. Elsa decided at once that the girl was lying. Furnas is ten miles from the Caldeira de Morte. The tale was impossible. it ?” “Dead! Do you say he is dead?" “Do you say that you did no: know ,,,,~- â€"- . uvuuo Moha'ae 18. mar sfarteo Iorwara mm 3 “Not in the sense in which I asked it,” said Elsa. “No, I know that. But I shall have to explain at great length to Va] B. Montague presently, and explanations are fatiguing. I want to talk about ‘you just now. I want to know you, if I can. Do you wonder why?” f Elsa looked straight at the laughing V ..,.-.V l V. _ grace of her questioner, and after a I brief pause, said coldly: “No.” , “You understand why?" said Mona- As she ht a lamp In the pretty little cabin she said With a smile: in my cabin." She led the way down below, and Elsa followed her. W’ . v..- v u ”Jung‘kné. KJUTJ i @4’0 “1' 1 be sure "to find somuhiug. um: «221-: G’Loughlm 81 Mafipéyfe fig ‘3‘! mm: §@ @3@ EEC @C H 1~m®_ Vahwig g Q. EB mm JAG R?“ Wm. w. E a m rma 0 A mm W my...” v 0 L At thz conclusion of the Mass, th: entire congregatim approach.-d thz altar rail and received the young ori;st's blessing. During the mass, Miss Mary Fluray rendered an “Ave Maria" in exczlln: voice. Rev. Father McBrgdy, of St. Mich- ael's College, Toronto, preached a imasterly discourse on “The Priest- hood.” The reverend gentleman is re- cognize-d as one of the lading ora- tors of the Church in the Province, and be well sustaind that reputatioa on Sunday. H-is discourse was an in spiring exposition of the szcred voca- tion, and his clcszng remarks. ad- dressed tz Rev. Father Rogers, cre- ateda profound impress'on on th: congregation. Rev. Father McBrady, of St. Mich Rev. Fathm Colfins, C. S. B. of St. Anne’s Church, Detroit and Rev. Fr. Morley C. S. B., of Toronto. Notwithstanding that1 three mgsses durgng the d fice was crowded at the 1 service. .wfla @E .kmmw. V_ -WAW , _ W Newly Ordained Priest at 8?. iéeeyts Rev. Father McBrady’s Fine Seaman On Sunday at St rYev. Father Wm. ] Store clnse‘ 5 o’ciack daily (Saturday mes-ptec‘i) The summor girl will hail with defight ail th-a coquettish Iiule accessories for neck and Waiit damnation; sho vn on our counters. aha m’ 1 be sure to find something :uitahh: as Women's White Lawn B?ouse'=, wih {mm of allover embroidery and tucked had», abort. (r long sleeves, high or Dutch neck, in mi :22 best value $l 00. J v' u \ v MAGNIFICENT DISPLAYS 0F COROHA'E'EON FER"??? ».»\'\ - ,_._â€" n- guy-IUL‘J Y Scouts Reviewâ€"Vaudevilb ry Bandsâ€"Trotting and Pacim L.Y.R..A. Regattaâ€"Athletic Sportsâ€"Bo Twelve Massed Milka. â€" , Tea Aprons fine white iawn, around saspo. trimmed with rufli: of fine embroidery, pocket and wide sashâ€"ozzly 2.3:: each Festival of Emmaâ€"Pictur- ing the glories ofthe Cor- onazion ccremonies.‘ 1,500 performers in uniform. In \Vash Goods, Brown IInHand, 331 Eiuen Irish Brown Holland, super quaiizy fur dresses and dust or motor coats, etc, 12% to '25:: yarJ Greatest show on contin- ent! Special Prizes of 8500 each. Increased Prizes in all classes. m I U8! This being a fact, we tell her of the freshest things imaginable that are to be seen in the July sales, that are going on in our store. Live Stock a}! Agricultureâ€" Art August 26th - TORONTO - Septemberallth Especially if it Relates to Something for her Personal Needs. Tires of z CASH AND ONE PR!CE For all infatuation write M; St. Mary's Church, . Rogers, C. S. B.. MEAT SPECIALS nosrs or omen Coldstreau Gums 321â€" War Benz-alt: the Wants Musicians of the Royal Showing 3 ba 2229 Law Household. by special a Dnaglnotght and pcrmxssmn of the ng. bubmarnnr. nâ€"Gems from Euro. pean gallenes~mastcrs {lam bgst collections m . Fr. Janager J. O. ORR, Ciiy Hall. Tomato M2593 Way and McMahon left to- ' day for the convention of Independ- ent Cddfeuows at Niagara Falls. Ccnveenon at Feierboro A Convention of the Liberals of West Peterboro will be heli in the city of Petertoro next Sim-Jay. Hon J..R. Stratton will rece;ve the unan- imous nomination and will likely consznt to Contest the riding in the forthconing DomZn'on elections. sue reverend gentleman has had 8. most brilliant schol:stic career and his many {fiends jo n in wishing him evay saccess in ois holy calling. and United cnesner, MissSFallcn. of Whitby. Rev. Father Rogers will spend a short time in Lindsay before takin; up the work to which he is assi5ned. The reverend gentleman has had a Rev. Father ATTRAC T10 NS Matures -â€" Greatest display ever shown in Amenca! Goods man- ufacwred while you wait. 22%)?" - ifâ€"hvzmese Firework,â€" 1! Races. (ac. @E ‘5?) @% mm PALE ¢ @Ua new

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