.rom and on ; : once. Estate s-e :A. Lg; yrs. C. W. Jeffch, 111'. LINDSAY, of Citizens and Streams sithin Out Gates iday, October 23rd) 06$ of Pr P of Toronto .wua H“; a w. BisboP. “ ' evening- “ C. T3883rt. of Port Perry, ' James Robinson, of Toronto in town tad.â€- '51:. a J. Peters, in town today- w gsel Jackson, of TorontO, lof Peterboro. of Stratford sky Trotter, of Toronto, .p’eiting friends in town. if A. Eiliott. of Belleville, was on business.- derson left for Town-- «3;; morning to Visill friends. . ‘ cDonnell, of Marmora. ‘ - _ today on business, Henderson, of Toronto, .._ the Benson house. yon 1013.? r $5 He‘ll . 7: Hit. T~ w , 4 .v4'."‘f‘s 1.19.1; Smiles. of Toronto, - j-‘o Simgson house toâ€" \ .' , __ . from Pleasant v' :15: Sunday at the ‘. it. Simpson, NVilliam -133 young man charged with the s andebuggy from the . sheds a few days ago, . for triu Ion Tuesday, $2.051 Edie \Villiam E. Knight Tuesday were; and: Elis, Mr. and Dix-s. Mr. Jack M'akeley, â€".l.':‘.0ng ..-_, o' of tip‘ .- 3.,wmggv;..»- on ~ _ V .vs‘ vs -., 3-...~O.i 2:1“. / :' Saturday, Oct. 24th) . , . of Kemptville, is in ....- 2041;... V -l§:. F. Daniels left this morning .;: Peterboro. ' “711.25 Olson, of Toronto, Was :zswn 23-413. -ll:.1“:.os. Robinson, of Gult. Was 1233': 13413.3. -ll:. J15 .La'w'son, of Toronto, was i turn 10-day. . -ll:. A. J. Mercer, of Toronto, was ; :awn Coâ€"dly. «if:- R. H. Martin, of Toronto, Was i town 10-day. ~llr. John Snell, of Toronto, was - ; town 20-day. “Miss Cruniield, of New York, is Tilting in town. "Mr-315. Thomlpsoh left this morn- : for Peterboro. rondley, of Cannington. ‘13 Ln £0er Friday. -lf:. C, V. Leslie, of Brantford,rhs 1 3W3 0: 111512355. ‘Mrs- P.- L}. Kingan, of Peterborol “*3 in lO'w‘n ..'~s:erday. . fut C. L:-.: Casselman, of Chester- ‘41 was in town toâ€"day. fin T .31. Richardson, of Peter- m, “'13 in town 10-day . .‘Mr- R. 0. Cameron, of Toronto Hamming insiness in town! ‘llr. Adam Walker, of Gooderham t~~ : . . " *3 town 10â€"day o Mil-Shaw- -‘.vI:. Lorne Dobson and Mib‘s Dob- mâ€˜ï¬ Bea“31011. were in town to- hl‘ 4 a . : l ‘ £33k. Albert \Vatson returned-home Ch “wing after visiting in Peter- to. :Ven- Archdedmn Casey has re- l-r: . . . . its“ from a mat to Springfield, ' ' l l tom 3' J. Turner. in. of Peter- .‘0' “med and game The Post a .e . 133117. Sm.le toâ€"day, :y‘gr. 3- 5- Graham of Victoria. Un- . Me It - _ _ mgsfy ‘3 attending a. convention be- “9‘1 to Columbus, Ohio. atâ€... “'31 PM of Monday, October 26) ‘3‘ Oriel Bricker, of Toronto, M1: tWm today. was;' Isaac FleSher. of Toronto, ‘1‘? to“ today. 13:. wefle? McLean, of Hamilton m t‘3“er today. {fuel Fleming, of Peterboro, is LOW“ “day. .k Richard Corley, of Cobourg, ‘3 town today. it Roy Trembut, ‘ of Toronto, mucosa-n o â€"_â€"~â€"â€"â€" â€"Mr. Harold Anderson returned to Toronto this morning. â€"l[r. Wm. Parnell, of St. Cathar- ines, spent toâ€"day in town. â€"Mr. Jack MeNicholl spent ' Sun- day with his mother in Peterboro. â€"Mr. James Blackwell left this. morning for Toronto and Hamilton. â€"Mr. James Malone, of Niles, 0.. is visiting relatives in this district. â€"Miss May Gassard, of Toronto, is the guest of friends in town and district. â€"Mr. Nelson Zeufeldt is able to be around again after his recent ser- ious illness. â€"Mr. Joseph Grennan, of St. Mich- ael’s College, Toronto, is visiting his parents for a few days. -â€"Miss Fee, of the Normal School, Peterboro. was the guest of Miss Nellie Moehan over Sunday. â€"Mr. J. M. Chalmers was in To- ronto on Saturday. He will go up to the city again this evening. â€"Miss Nellie Meehan, school teach- er, Uphill, was the guest of her parents for the past few days. â€"Mr. Milton Bruce returned to town this morning, after a business trip through the eastern provinces. (From Tuesday’s Evening Post) â€"Mr. R. J. McLaughlin was in To- ronto today. â€"Mr. Bert Wesley left this morn- ing for Toronto. -â€"Mr. R. J. Cooke. of ll‘ilbury, in town today. , . ‘ ~Mr. James Roland, of Cobourg. was in town today. “'83 â€"â€"Mr. Jos. Ryan, of Head Lake, was in town today. -â€")Ir. E. IR. Brackett, of Boston, i5 halted Lindsay today. -)Ir. A. K. McKay, in town on business. -â€"-Mr. Abraham W'ingham, of Tor- onto, was in town today. \ â€"~Mr. Geo. fR. Nimmo, of Montreal, was in Lindsay today. â€")Ir. Russel \Valker, of Hamilton, is v'siting friends in town» â€"Mr. “7. Styles, of Montreal, done of Orillia, «Mr. J. H. Brandon, Fells, was in town today. â€"Mr. Jas. Dickson, P.L.S., of Fenâ€" elon Falls, was in town today. -â€"â€"Mr. McGregor, of the Simpson house, was in Peterboro Monday. â€".\lr. J. A. VanderVOot, of King- ston, is ill Lindsay on business. --)Ir. A. E. Bradley and wife of Winn :eg, are visiting in town. â€"1'zl'r. A. HA Rm, of Montreal: caged on Lindsay merchants tdlé-F. â€"Mr. W. O'Toole, of the Coboconk train, was in Peterboro yesterday. -â€"Mr. William Greenway, of Port Hcpe, is registered at the Pym house. â€"Mr. Leo O’Connor, of Lindsay, spent Monday with relatives in Pe- terboro. â€"-Mrs. Matthews, of Halifax, is visiting her parents, Dr. and Mrs. Gross, Victoria-ave. â€"Mr. H. C. Taylor, of Toronto, was registered at the Simgson house toâ€" day. . I " ' Weather Forecast by Prof Hicks Storms Predicted for a Part of the Month of November _â€"â€"v The following is the forecast for November of the Weather by Prof Ii'l Hicks. .'\; ' 1 L A regular storm‘ {period covers the first six days cf November. The moon is at first quarter on the let, all: :crigee on the 4th, and on the celes- tial equator on the 5th. By the 19th. the barometer will begin to fall in western sections, the temperature will rise and by ï¬he 2nd to 3rd storms will gather and start on their eaSt- word march from west to crust. 0n touoh'ng Thursday, Wednesday and Thursday, the 3rd, 4th, and. 6th, ra'n . wind and hhunder storms cvill pass most parts of the country; with .ris- ing barol‘neter, westerly winds and change to much coolet pressing close behind the storm centres, the change to cool or colder appearing in the west-northwest about the 3rd and passing quite oVer the country to. the eastward by the 7th. FroSts, ' sane freezing northward, will re- sult during the passage of this high- bar ofheter and cool waves. A :eactionary storm period is: cen- tral on the 8th, 9th and 10th. The rm: moon falls on the 8th, increasing the probabilities of storm conditions or: that date. Low~ barometer, rising temperature and rain storms in Lansrl from west to cast, will the natural order on and mm the 8th to 10th: The-0th to the lflh is a probable seismic period. We re- ;est our urgent coined: thud all readers of m Amnso WM “3 wcrlll's tom w. and make cm of all “patches renown! storms and sekmlo disturbances. Do this habitually all the year round, ta- bulatin'g than into dates and con!“- ing them with ourJoreoeetn. In spite of the {not} that the moon is moviw to extreme north declination, a “I†barometer, west m and W *0 much colder will come down from the nerthvnst and tread our the coun- try generally from about math to the 12th. k. 1 r l A regular storm (period begins on the 13th and extends to the 13th, be- ing central on the 15th; The moon is at last lanai-tar ion this ï¬fth and in rer’gee on the 16th. (Falling baro- meter, change to Warmer, southerly winds and autumnal reins will pass over the country from west to east on and touching the 15th, 16th and 17th. There will ‘be but little‘time for re- action to antistor'm condition! ‘bcd, tween this and the on-ocmingi storm period. Possibly dbange to cooler may break in about the 17th and 18th. A reactionary storm, (period in cen- tral on the 19th, 20th, and let. The moon cresces the celestial emator veering southward on the 19th.. Change to much warmer, falling bar- ometer and autumnal thunder storms Will appear about the 19th, and run, their course eastward on the 20th and 21st. The influence of the ‘alirproaching Venus disturbance, as seen in the November storm diagram, will be felt at this reactionary Ireriod, the! per- iod coming in with» high‘ temperature and winding um :ith change< to much colder and spurts of early snow In northern {arts of the country. The probabilities of severe and. dangerous @195 over all the northern lake re- gions are decidedly strong at this and all the November [eriods, espe- cially from the '15th to the end. of the month. NaVZgators and shippers on the great lakes, who ignore theï¬e vrrobabilities will take desperate Chin-‘63 of paying expensive forfeits. A regular storm [period extend-‘1 from the 23rd to the 28th, having. its centre on the 26th. . New moon falls on the 53rd within two ‘days of ex- treme soutxh declination n the 26th. This Iferiod is under the run perturb- ing influence of both .Venus and Mer- cury, being intensified by the con- junction of the moon with earth and sun at the very beginning. Abnormal warmth, rautld fall of the barometer and clouds of threatening .rortent will mark the entrance to this treriod. From about Wednesday the 25th to Saturday 28th, autumnal storms of Wide extent and of unusual energy will make their transit across the county from west to east, Rain w‘nd and thunder will dominate in Southern uiurts of the country. while s‘cct, snow, and an early cold M'ave may be. expected nortvhrward. The high barometer, following the storms of this meriod will push very . low temperatures for November far into southern parts of the country. The moon being at extreme south; declin- ation in the crisis of this period, will facilitate the flow of boreal currents from the northwest, bringing a: real dz‘sh of winter to most [arts of this and other countries in the northern hemisphere. All who fail to house or {.1 otect out-door peridhuble products before the on-comi-ng of this storm period will have missed golden opporâ€" tunities and may count their lwses and caddie their regrets. The 23rd of November is the centre of a cosmic rperiod â€" say, from" the 215‘: to the 25th. We mean by this that such phenomena are much more liable on and. touching the 23rd See if regrcrts of earthrauakeado not get into current telegrmprhic news' at this :reriod, although the Saturn- and JuC-ter periods (have about spent their for Ce. It will be found that the sc'szmc disturbances take on milder fcrrns and grow less frequent, in the ubsmce of t-heSe great perturbing forces; at the same timela combina- tion of the Mercury and Venus cquinoxes, as is the: case at this cer- iod, are known to quicken 5e seinm‘ ic guise of our terrestrial globe, espe- cially when the conjunction of the moon and earth and sun adds its clctric tension to fihe strain of a crib- bined Venus and Mercury period; Let us all, especially northward“, watch and see how (far "Thanin-ving ThIJrsdaLY’WiH ‘mi‘s an old-fashions“I slcct and snow storm in 1908. We wrote this {amount June the 3rd, 1907. Friday, Saturday and‘ Sunday, we 26th, 27th and 28th, will tell the story in sleet and snow and cold. No- vember rains. The month will merge into December in the midst of cold. mercurial Cloud-mess, with wintery aspects prevailing over all northern to centre. llparts of the country. Be ready for it! A greword of caution about December will not be amiss. The great drout‘h that has tirevailed Kfllen eyer' most Earths of the country for cheral prise that “nothing concerning months rgractically remains unbroken. A number of readers have the .u n drouth can be found in the almanac}: an out that Old score Of Walter G’ If such' readers will recall. What we at the Peterboro fair. When _____..â€"r-â€"â€"-..______ __ Nearly Drowned ’ in the Otonahec fishery' Inspector We“ 8am a Little lad Iron a Water! Gun _â€"-â€"â€" Fishery Inspector Watt of Peter- boro, was successful in saving a little lad from drowning in the Otonabee on Saturday. Mr. Watt was mam; around the O.P.R. brldfl. when he heardasplash. Atm'ltbflpddno attention, but almost MN! he heard calls for help. He hastened up the river towards the 8119 back of Rogers‘ bogthonoo, where the 0.9.3. spur line crosses, and there found a youngster struggling in the water. Mr. Watt succeeded in getting him into the canoe and then on to the land. It seems two youngsters had been playing in the spur line and were running across the trestle work to t away from an approaching train when one little fellow went through. He would have been drowned had not Mr. Watt arrived when he did. __â€"â€";== The Field of Sport ____.+___ RUGBY. In an exciting game of rugby foot ball Lindsay defeated the strong Y. M.C.A. team of Peterboro on their own grounds on Saturday afternoon, by the score of 9 to 6. The game was one of the most exciting ever seen on the Peterboro ï¬eld, and the large crowd went fairly wild during the game. The Y.M.C.A. has a very strong team, and kept the Lind- say boys hustling all the way. In fact Peterboro was ahead until with- in a short time of the close. When the Lindsay boys went on the field they seemed rather stage frightened, and all through the ï¬rst half they did not play up to their regular form. In the first quarter Peterboro got going, and in very short time they landed a touchdown. This, how- evcr, made the locals play all the harder, and Peterboro could not score again. After half time Lindsay boys came on fresh and strong, and it was not long before it was seen that the second half would be a bum- mer. Gradually Lindsay worked their way up towards Peterboro’s line and “Dukey†Cotton landed a nice drop kick across the line. This counted four, and the score was now only 5â€" 4 in favor of Peterboro. The Lindsay boys now took heart, and in very short order they scored a rouge which tied the score. Peterboro spectators now began to a . look serious, and when Conway made u“ 3““ G†won the “gnaw (â€at a dash for the line with the ball mm" “’35 ““1 m 3"" G “um“: their eyes opened with wonder and Dr. Johnston “at.“ that. he . ha surprise. When near the line, how- given notâ€: to withhold m until 9†ever, he slipped and was pounced ““9“ was alttled' Due “Dace was upon by a Paterboro man. It was sent MI" Hodgms. Yb†made no reply not long until another drop kick and has mt made 'dentmc‘tlw' Tb; landed across the line, and Lindsay thirty {133:3 allowed have elapse: an was ahead at last. Peterboro was It ‘5 up .to the local clul It): now playing hard, and for many min- draw Mr. Emma over the. cm 3, at utes they threatened to make a Dr. Johnston .Btat.“ ‘11:: ‘33:; u: touchdown. A rouge was all they d? °°' The fine 5 ‘8 ml 1 :l‘h got. and the score stood 9â€"6 in fa- 8Ԡor swamâ€. 'llhe loco cluff :5 vor of Lindsay until the end. the “Delâ€? 0! the hatronals 1; - A small shower was falling t=ng “9mm“ \i‘gfnzf' :l i0 ‘3', throughout the game, which made ured “DEM ‘ r. the ground wet and slippery, besides making the ball very heavy and soggy. Both teams played up well, and the return game will be awaited with interest. Lindsay team took down a good crowd, who thorough- ly enjoyed themselves. Rugby in Lindsay is now under way, and it is up, to the people to patronize their team. Dr. McPherson umpired the game, and gave entire satisfaction. SCORE. New sweet potatoes will not be so hard and dry if rubbed with butter When making omelets allow one tablespoonful of cream or hot water for each egg. M Straw Wanted The Northumberland Paper and Lindsay- 2 drop kicks ........................... 1 rouge ................................. L8 Ont., will buy baled rye. wheat or cat straw in carioad lots, to be 9 loaded by sellerut any Grand Total ................................. . Peterboroâ€" Trunk stationâ€"v73 1 touchdown .................. . ......... .-â€"-â€"=_-_-â€"â€""â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-'-’_'~' 1 rouge .................................... 3: SALE OCTOBER 24 Total ....................... . ......... 15 horses, all M in lot. 1 horse by Keswick, can show 3-minute clip. 1 chestnut mare 4 years old, extra roadster. 1 two year old, by Sun- shine, broken single. 1 bay extra worker, selling under lien note. (must be sold. 1 bay man, must be sold (under lien note). 20 two year old steers, well bred and extra fat. 1 new milch cow. 10 two year old shots. 1 man, weight moors, con- signed. 10 yearling steers. 1 two year old heifer, consigned. 60,000 shlngIBs, any price. 9 pigs, weight ranging from 60 to 1002:. 50 horse blankets, extra good, any price.‘ 3 dosen circinglee, any price. 1 set racing hobbies. 1 second hand buggy. 1 second hand single harness. 1 sec- ond hand pony phaeton. 1 set pony harness. 1 set regular single har- ness in good repair. 1 potato dig- ging plow, new. 1 Tiukler Fleury plow, new. 1 medium also Fleur! Lindsay, Watson Cotton F. Green B. Green .. Sylvester McQuorry Dougan Newton Murdie McHugh Coulter Kayl Conway Walker __â€"â€" THE TUBE From all appearances the Peterbor- the horse that won one of the races Thos. before baking. 1 Electric Company. Campbellford ' horse, . The Qméa‘ Elegance of This Overcoaz‘ Fz'z‘s it for A my Occasion . This is a direct importation that we picked up at a bargain. All ï¬rst-class goods that will nor crack with the heat. See Our West Wlndow on Kent street for Samples of these Bargains. â€"â€"Groceries Kent-st. â€"China Hall, William’st. Farm for Sale. North Half of Lot 8, Canoes-I sfon 10, Emily, ' 100 acres principally cleared state of cultivation with fair Thisfarmis situated onthe eon sndina build Brighten Up “The Peeple’s Candidate.†me---Flnlsbes. If there is anything about the house that needs painting or varnishing, I ‘m town t i v V 11‘} . . \ur. , Funk Wetherup, of Toronto, ' "' In ten ï¬r, today, itblfty‘ years “concerning" "dun?“ the races there was considerable during the Jupiter period, and! then ï¬rnculation as to his Identity In if the" Wm read: on“ forecasts cared fact, more than one horseman hinted ‘u-“Y “1’ “Wu Amt: “1" 86PM!- that he was none othen than "Limo plow,.new. 6 Bishop robes. 3 Sas- katchewan robes. 4 sets No. 1 single harness. 3 plush rugs. 50 to be slaughtered. Don't Dr. Shoop’s tieularly for that purpose. niesthisbigsaleofblsnketsï¬rerms uusual. W. "e" 1908': M Wm be “Wt“ “18* sector." It is stated with mg,- the! we" “ken “were! ’0'! the offered no identiï¬cation and aorta. "shuffles in general, diffused. ruins. the race ‘ pretest we. offered by Dr. Leash and Mr. Gerald Dunsforlll. Night Cure .1 G. EDWARDS (0. ti; um I. â€"09"- ka Anderson left 101' North Bay_ NW Miss Roberts me this 1°? Toronto. 1 A. PARKING . i