.%.aaxmm~mmmx~wm~w~swwx~cmc§ : ' r :E The Mantle Bush is On E g ' 0 rt ' g -2 '3» EAnother Big ppo unityg :E‘ O ' O ’ c t E m Ladies ~ on s E :0 . § '3' g: 3: a o; ’ ¢ . E Women sCoat of Heavy ,3 r. a. 0:0 . 0. E Weight Imported ,. 0:9 . . g: :E: Cheviot, Price $5 E; 2’: To emphasize the advantage of buy- § 2;; ing at Wakely’s, we have selected this 3 *3: heavy imported Chev1ot. Th1s coat lS 3:1 z, . .. §E~ Single breasted, collar of same mat- 3:3 ‘80: . . . «.- enal elaborately tr1mmed With black 3,1 :1: silk braid. loose ï¬ttIng style, Sizes 34 :2: 3E to 42 Price - - $5.00 g If: 3: 3“ :z: ’i’ All-wool Kersey, fly front. mantle 4-7 inches long, 2:: t; 7.00 trimmed with fancy strapping and stitching. .. In 'i’ Ii: black only. Price .......................................... . ..... 1.00 3: 3;: . ____________â€"â€"-' 1:: ti: All-wool double-breasted Kersev, mantle 4-7 inches Ii: :3: 8.00 long, trimmed with self strapping. This is a very g: r? effective garment. In black only. Price ..................... 8.00 ,i, :E: 2:: In both double and single breasted styles, lined to ii: If: 10.00 waist, trimmed with strappings of self and silk :3: f: braids, assorted sizes, black only. Price... ............... 10.00 of: i: :E: '3‘ - :2: See Our Ready-to-Wear Suits :E E: o? .i, 5E: :E: comes»: ~:»° c»: : °»:«:~.~°»:~:occ»:sew»:«ac»:«z~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:o Prominent Manager's Telling Testi mony Mr. D. R. Gourl-IIY. advertising man- .igef for |bile Well known( piano firm of. Gourlay, Winter Lee'ming, Tor- onto and; Winnipeg, is amongst the prominent men and, women Who tes- tify to Zam-Buk'a great curative pow- er. He writes to the company as: folâ€" . ‘ l "Gentlemen, â€"- I [have pleasure in stating that upon the recommends-l tion of a relative 1‘ purchased a box of your remedy} (Zam-Buk) and! by a few applications Entirely cured a very severe sprain of the back. While no given to indiscriminate use of, or belief in, patent medicines, I can 0011â€". sc‘eatuouslxy recommend Zamâ€"Buk._, Sincerely yours, . ‘(Signe-d) D. R. Gourlay.". '1.an is just why Zam-Buk [:roves its superiority! It is treated by [no hands ‘W-Oln‘fll who have tried it as altogether di-ffeyent to ordinary «preparations. DoctorS, hospital nurses. matrons of convaleScent homes â€". all give Zam-Buk a good word, and bet: ter still, they use it/ Za‘m-Buk is as good for muscular stiffness, sprains, rheumatism, and. sciatica as it. is for skin troubles. Hockey {players and athletes in general find it invaluable. For eruptions, pustules. scalp sores, itch, eczema, ulcers. boils, absesses, blood Ipoison, cum, burns, bruises and abrasions, it is a spec-(30‘ cure. Takes the soreness out of [wounds ,ahwst 3031131313. and. kills all disease germs. “303 wreVenting festering and. inflam- mation. Al-l drugg-Zshs‘. and stores sell at 50c. a box, on post free from the Zam-Buk (30., Toronto for lit-rice, 10 boxe'i for $3.50. Send. in. stamp for trial box. ' . i That Championship Local base ball fans would like to know what is going to be done about the Wideawakes-Bankers game. As yet the ofï¬cials have made no statement regarding the game, and the people who are interested are still waiting to hear the result. Typewriting by Wireless ‘ The omce clerk of the future will, perhaps, have his typewriter under a glass case, and from time to time the tap-tap of the machine will be heard, actuated by invisible means and producing typewritten letters dic- tated by another omce hundreds of miles away,†says the London Mail. “Such an apparently impossible state of affairs has been showb to‘be within reach by the demonstration which took place at the Hotel Cecil, when Hans Knudsen, a Danish elec- trical engineer, gave proof of his power to make a typewriter work by meabs of wireless telegraphy from an oflice situated any distance away from it. Not only can a typewriter be operated, but a linotype compos- ing machine; and although the ma- chines demonstrated with are in a more or less experimental stage they nevertheless work With sufï¬cient ac- curacy to justify the vista of almost magic writing opened up by the Dan- ish inventor’s claims. “Yet the method is exceedingly simple when one sees it and under- stands its basis. As each letter is tapped on the sending typewriter, a metal pin is forced up through a. hole. Thus in typing a word of ï¬ve letters ï¬ve such pins would be forced up in their respective positions. Over these projecting pins 3 metal 'r band travels, which comes in contact with them one by one, and as each con- tact is made an electric wave is The old adag There’s Danger There l“ c “A stitch in time saves nineâ€a 11 the human system. bison-c gives her timely pp 5 to if hccdcd much suffering may be prevented, but if neglected she demands a very heavy penalty. ~ , It means more than wearincss. , l cares that the kidneys are being attacked as _a very largeperccntage of our ills and fermgs have their origin in the kidney /9--. liver, a course of Dr. Roots Kidney and ‘ Liver Pills should be taken. They will of trouble at once. ranged or out of order, every part of the human system becomes disorganized, often terminating in along and tedious illnccs which often proves fatal. Dr. Roots Kidggy and Liver Pills CURE ALL KIDNEY AND LIVER TROUBLES. warn ng, and A STOP THAT BACKACHE! It indi- and suf- and the Once those organs gct dc- "a: started 08 from tho antennae of the win!“ mm. "The machine, which receives the wireless m. and W it into typewrltlnx, is ï¬tted with an endless metal band travelling attire same rate and in perfect unison with that in the transmitting Wt. Whenever a wave is sent out by the latter it is received by this band, and the band actuate. an electro- magnet connected with the m pondlng letter, which in tapped by a typewriter placed in electrical com- nucleation." Robber Paved Streets When Sir Henry A. Blake declared open the International Rubber Exhi- bition at Olympia, London. he had around‘hlm in the great building â€"- according to an export computationâ€" nearly 1,000,000 pounds worth of pure rubber. “Rubber," declared Sir Henry, “is a product that has during the past half century played a greater part than any other substance in cxpcdit-' ing human progress." As proof of this statement. he added: "Without rubber no cables could have been laid to give the means of that instantan- eous communication which makes for peace, friendship and commerce.†“If rubber sank in price to 28. a pound," observed a prominent exhi- bitor, "its scope might be further extended by using it to pave the streets of London.“ This remark conjures up visions of a silent Lon- don. With streets pavcd with rub- ber instead of with wood blocks, or macadam, or stone sctts, and with gines, tramc would be almost quiet.†.â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€". 00......0000000000 3 av: 8115 or rows... 5 ; ....fROM All aunties; 3 Notes froin. .cdrioipondcnts : : and Excerpts from Wide . : awake Exchanges. 3 0.00.00.00.0000000 â€"-Engineer Dorien, of the tug Glyde on Lake St. Francis, was shot in the arm by a hunter’s stray bullet. â€"Mrs. L. Holmes, of Winnipeg, was burned to death as the result of lighting a ï¬re with coal oil. Her 21-year-old son was also fatally burn- ed. â€"Andrew Keelson, of Toronto, lies in a critical condition at the hospital at La Grande, Oregon, with a frac- tured skull, the result of a. logging accident. Robert Calwell and J. B. Rounds, a county constable, are under arrest at. Woodstock, charged with blackmail- ing Chas. Damm and extorting $300. â€"A report from, St. Raphael, Belle- chasse county, states that the branch of the Provincial Bank was broken into by burglars and the sum of $4,500 stolen. â€"â€"Thomas Dunbar, an old resident of Guelph, was ground to pieces un- der a freight train at a level cross- ing. He was deaf and could notsce the train for a fence. His horse was also killed. â€"-At Montreal on Saturday sixty undesirable citizens were deported, Erie, Hesperian and Virginian. these were C.P.R. mechanics who fall- ed to make good. The Chinese Government has proâ€" hibited the growing of poppies as a step to prevent the manufacture of opium. A. T. Taylor, late of McGill, has been elected to the London County Council, beating the ï¬rst lady can- didate put forward. â€"Lehmann, librarian to the Czar of Russia at. St. Petersburg, has been sentenced to three years’ imprison- ment for stealing the Emperors medals and money. Hunters ioving Northwnrd A number of hunters with their dogs, passed through town today beund’ for blue north land :to hunt; deer. ’llhe deer [promise .td be very mientiful this year and the hunters expect to get their number. President for Life Springfield Republican; In the con- stitutional conVention of 1787, the :roppsal lhuld considerable pupporh that the president of the United Stat- cs be elected to hold office dur ng good behavior. But it was objected that there could never be any cer- tainty of aunt-constituted bad he- _!~avior to justify ejection from of: fice, and the 'result Would be an int vaiable life tenure. ending in monar- chy. This was sufficient to shelve the good behavior proposal. The founders of the government could easily see tne possibility of a 1president who would so lower the d’gnity of the: office and subvert it to partisan ends, as to outrage the national «sense of what is trooper, withoutgoing quite far enough to support fmpreachmcnt changes of "high crimes and misde- .; ....~..._._...,._. -5"! deficit: elective term was ifinallymaï¬ged w- on by Which the result could protect Wives in a measure'acainit ah ,. r such conï¬nement; but can this cannot. of com-u, an“ '8“ tem- porary, ember-wt: of ti: kind. =="â€"'â€"’-"'â€"= "My heart M .in at month. :I am afraid to hear your “'0’." ."YW may well be, Mr. DollW." 1'60!th Ethel. "I never ooulll Instr! I min whose heart was not in the» 1‘8“ Lord HMMM'S sister wu often annoyed at her brother’s indicrlmi- nato ho‘itality. uDo you remember, my dear," he and her at dinner one day, "whether mt {anions Icmndrcl was lunged or gozmlttedlf" t "He must have been bonsai. or you would. have had min to dinner low "°" "42.2.93;â€" I Remarkable Entbcsiasm Exhibited in the Election bf lion. J- I. Station â€"â€" The news of the election of Mr. J. R. Stratton in West Pctcrboro was received with genuine satisfaction by his many friends in Lindsay. A re- presentative of The Post was in the electric city on Monday and states. that the excitement there was at fe-l ver heat. Both sides worked ener- getically, but early in the afternoon{ the Conservatives threw no the 3 sponge and admitted the defeat of i Mr. Burnham. . When the returns were announced. from the city, and it was found that Mr. Stratton had carried it, the scene was indescribable. The climax came, however, when the results from the townships were thrown on the canvas. The people swarmed the streets in thousands, cheering wildly. . The parade in the evening was a, grand sight, the discharge of m1 works illuminating the heavens and adding a brilliancy to the festivities. During the evening Mr. Stratton was deluged with congratulations from the leading public men of Canada. The American Member There was something more than pleasantry in the jocular character- ization of Sir John Henry Puleston, whose death was announced on Mon. day, as the American member of the British House of Commons. Sir John who died on the verge of four-score. spent his early manhood in the Un- ited States. For a time he earned a living in Scranton and elsewhere in Pennsylvania as a newspaper re- porter, the entrance thus given him into public life leading to an ac- quaintence and then to friendship, with Mr. Lincoln, then a candidate for the presidency, which continued while Mr. Lincoln was president. When he returned to England Mr. Pulcston (as he was then) introduced there business methods he had learnâ€" ed in this country, and very soon became potent in great enterprises requiring skilful ï¬nanciering. Pules- ton's acquaintance with America, its resources and its people. enabled him to inspire English investors with con- ï¬dence in American securities. And it should be noted that he bravely stood by his American commitments in the face of such discouraging in- cidents as the collapse. about thirty years ago, of the Central Railroad Company of New Jersey, in which many millions of dollars of British capital were invested. Hls manful and convincing arguments helped to make practicable the rcorganlzatlon of that company's adults, at a. time of gloom and depression still shad- owed by the great panic of 1873. To loch Corn Juice A young farm laborer from 0,:5 who came in on Monday evening to hear the election returns, was in- vated by friends to imbibe: in corn juice at their boarding quarteru He left for ‘home late in the evening and must baVe fallen dialectâ€"'9 in his buggy as he was found â€dead to the. world" about one o'clock tins morning a: the L'ttle Builin road. He had fallen out of the hm andpls horse was found at {his employer'bgate waiting the re- turn of its driver. on a Bar llnnt township started out Monday in search of the bear seen near Clabo station or! Saturday. They were 1111-. suceszul in their hunt, although the! g state they found sufficient evidence: of the 'fact that‘ Mr» Bruin was in, the township somewhere. I American Brevities Mr. Hearst denounces Senator For- aker as 'a [paid toclfof uhlc Standard ’ Oll Trust. u. Senator Foraker denies the charge #’ ___...â€"â€"â€"â€"’4- , -â€".- l c Royal Household Flour is made entirely from the hard, nutritious Spring in a two-column letter, but retires from the political arena. President Roosevelt says that Bill Taft is a bigger man than himselfâ€"in l three columns and a fhalf. GOVernor Haskell gives Mr. Hearst the lie direct in two thousand words and resigns. / . ' a l . President Roosevelt says ditto to Mr. Hearst in. six thousand words. Mr. Bryan rebukes President- Roosevelt in four columns. â€"Presidcnt Roosevelt says Mr. Bryan is a fraud in ten thousand words. " . Mr. Rockefeller says nothingâ€"Lon- don Punch. ‘ \ OBITUARY MRS. EDMUND STAUNTON. Death removed a highly respected and much esteemed lady at the Ross Memorial hospital at eleven o'clock Monday morning in the person of Mrs. Edmund Staunton, at the age of 50 years. The deceased lady, who took ill a week ago. has been a resi- dent of Lindsay for ï¬fteen years. She leaves to mourn her loss, two daugh- tcu, Mrs. J. L. Prlmcau, and Mrs. H. H. Lockwood, and two sons, Ed- ward, at home, and Fred, in Toron- to The funeral will be held on Wed- nesday, at 2.30 o'clock from her daughter's residence, Mrs. H. M. Lockwood. Albertâ€"st.. south, to the Riverside cemetery for interment. A lunicipnl Theatre The first municipal, uncommercial theatre in America -- an endowed in- stitution -- is in successful qporation in Red Wing, Minn. Red ‘Wing is a town of only ten thousand persona, forty miles down the (Mississippi River from St. Paul, and to it sever- al years ago a citiZen left 380,000,: to found a municipal theatre. A oi- tizcns’ commiteee, under the terms of the bequest, manages the playhouse, and so well has it done its work that for the last three years a dividend on the capital interested has been paid to the town. Ptofessor Richard Burton, in a lecture on the drama, using the Red Wing experiment as a criterion, predicts that. "in ten. years (probably and in twenty-five considerable years certainly, every city in the United States will hare its municipal theatre." l BABY'S own mm: 9 A Boon T0 IOTIIERS A medium; that will keep babies' ' and young dixilsdren [plump and†good natured, widh a clear eye and rosy skin is a blessiw not only to the little ones, ‘but to, mothers as Well. Baby's Own Tablets is just such a medicine. ‘Dhcy cure .all the minor ailnwnts of children and make them cut well, sleep 'Well. and play “ell. 'nlwy are used exclusively" in thousands of homes when a child mn- dEOine is needed. IMIB. G. Collins. Hir- kella, Mam, 33-33; â€Baby’s Own Tab- lets are the meat satisfactory 'medi- cine I have ever used for ills . of young children. The): are as good as 8 doctor in the bone." Sold by medl- OZno dealers or by mail‘ at 25¢ a box [Four The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine. (30.,t BI “Ville, Ont... \ . l ‘â€" .â€" ... HERE are many kinds of flour sold. Some are made from Spring Wheat and some from winter what. the snow. When the again, ripening in July. soft and very starchy. rapidly and is therefore nearly twice as much wm' tcr wheat. wheat, carefully selected this kind grown in Canada. Royal Household is ï¬ne, light and pureâ€" milled by the most improved methods mill as cleanly as your own kitchen. Ask your grocer for Ogilvie's Royal House- holdâ€"just enough to try. a few cents more than you are used :c- paying, but you will forget that when you. see results in your bread and pastry. 0gilvie Flour Mills (30., Limited Icntrcal. "The touch of a friend,†remarks a Missouri contemporary, "may hurt . more than the cut of an enemy.†"No doubt about it, EsieCiallyt if the friend forgets the amount he touches you for.â€â€"-Washington Post. 1 Waste Products Prof. Bonnycastle Dale, a scientist of the Paciï¬c Coast, has, says the N. Y. Post, made a strong bid for eith- er famc or infamy by his suggestion contained in a serious magazine art- icle that the seaweeds that grow in such profusion along every coast supâ€" ply incxhaustible quantities of ideal raw materials for digestible and un- tritious breakfast foods. That the hint will, sooner or later, be acted upon by sonic enterprising manufact- urer, can hardly be doubted, and it. is within the bounds of reasonable expectation that we shall soon see “Shredded Seaweed," “Flaked Fu- cas,†“Dcssicatcd Dulsc," “Predigest- ed Sargassum,†“Pulled Nercocystis,’ "Malta-Kelp," “Cream of Sea Moss," and a score more marine substitutes for hot cakes and maple syrup, done up in one-pound packages. "guaran- teed under the Pure Food Laws," and crammed down the throats of a long- suffering and surfeitcd people. It is just ten years since Sir Wil- liam Crookes, president of the Brit- ish Association for the Advancement 01 Science. presented his alarming ar- ray of statistics, proving that by the year 1923 the entire population of the globe would be face to face with starvation, or at best half~rations, for the reason that the production of wheat could not possibly keep pace with the progressive increase in the world’s population. Sir William failed to take into consideration the neglected and ungathered harvests of the seas. In the great Sargasso Sea alone, in the North Atlantic Ocean, suflclcnt nutritious vegetation flour- en- ' 13th and decays to support the tire population of Europe, if it were harvested and prepared in a manner ï¬tting it for human consumption. On the sea beaches of the United States, enough proteins are cast up by the waves, and allowed to decay and des- sicatc into their original elements, to take the place of the whole product of the North-Western wheat ï¬elds. If the world’s teeming millions ever face wholesale hunger, it will not. be on account of any niggardliness of - . COD Ll‘u’EQ CIL TON! . -« tron. LINDSAY 1m“, a What you ought to know is Which What makes the best flour, and why. Winter wheat is put into the ground in the fall, grows a few inches, then gives up to Spring wheat is sown Ln late Aprfl 0,. early May, and ripcns in August. translucent wheat, rich in gluten and containing â€â€˜9“. v habaaï¬uamh 35:. «151.00 ' â€Moscow armour \ snow melts it grows It matures slowly, is It matures strong. It’s a ï¬lmy, real nutrimcnt as the from all the wheat of 1:121 to., ._u. h \. He may c C VOil Providence, bu: ‘riecausc mm»; lacks the wit to u:;l;ze the food m. terials that ens? Of course. there return; new 3 the idea of eats: seaweeds. The: have been eaten azi c:;cyed for c:- accounted centuries Diary varietie are nearly pure sciatLE. These have been eaten fcr are by the Chinese Japanese. and >1 sister. lsianders. Thousands of Japa..e:e coast dwele's gather a suflicxcst qgaztzty of see- ;: superabunmcg 1 {D m weed in July, Aucust, and Septembe: to last them 1:31;; the next seasocs harvest. The people 2:; out to the marine harves' 1102i: .: row-boat: ‘ '* the coil armed with 10:: rvie: each one of which tool: isattacheé With these queer unplenients 01hr;- they tear the seaweeds loose fro: the submerged rocks. and take the: ashore, and spread them out to c,- in the sun. Then they are taken 2; local factories. bmled, shredded, an: prepared for food. A cleaner at more wholesome article of diet can not be imagined. and travelers vhf have tasted it say that the taste If pleasant. As a base for cheap car dy, preserves, jellies. and puddings?- is inï¬nitely superior to material“? ten used. ___.___â€"â€"â€"â€" l Lipton Limited l A (1 M. Over 3,000 depe:..crs have take! advantage of a new system of W‘ ing which Lipton. anzted. havejuS introduced at cm; of their branches“ the United Kingdom. Accounts may be opened by “3" . , :1.- '15 body irrespective .7: 828 W- amoun- count, and interest ; rate of 4 per cent. , . however. may he one month's notice : have to give three days' no withdrawals. rice ‘0‘ If anyone in ed to take calomel as they should be careful n any salt. after it (common . . ,w c mbinatior. of the . _ the 0 Â¥ \ 3 corrosive sublimate. Whlc“ ‘" 1y poison. Sheets, pillow cases. , clothsâ€"all folded linens“: laid upon the shelves on the wall, the . ‘..‘u . The effect is renter r oweiS. â€bk. houid be ds “W“? nature, 01' any Shortsightedness of articles are more 939$. | /