Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Lindsay Weekly Post (1898), 29 Mar 1907, p. 9

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“"flflfi .uwvwwwm wuwumwmu .Q. 709.99. .0§966§. .09. 696. 00.. 7.00, 096. 06. v0. 9006‘ v30. v90 7â€" "â€"v .cuuuuvu an: III-“61' W his medicine." "And when you were away the wasnmde.Strangethalzyom' D9197. bssofriendlywithboth ’ ‘1 ¥“°- 16 GURU“ “U W 5‘} AW and I went. leaving my purchase on 6 table. It is all coming back to ma “0"- - . . When I returned Mr. Hen- “! W33 quite alone, as somebody hid “Dad to Boo my uncle. Hr. Henson med I*‘l'l'm'ised to see me back no 3, and an I entered he crushed it balms up in his hand and dropped to the waste-paper basket. _Bnt my we“ '33 quite intact." $70119. m and van.- M. “a DOV "Yes. 1! was in I little box salad with yellow wax and tied With yellow “fine. i went to 219 war I m nude ‘5. Purchase. My uncle was there 3nd 30 Wu using the back “null-loom a In once. He ind brought a lot. of P" ”fight: him to go through.” little time. “The case must have been changed.” he said. “It is very-dimcult to say how, but there is no other logical solution It the matter. At about hut-past Nerve on that eventful night you ahced on my doorstera gunâ€"metal agar-case, mounted in diamonds, that you had purchased from Ipckhart’fl': "Very well. I take that case with me to 218, Brunswick Square, and I bring a back again. Did I take‘ it with me or not? Anyhow, it was found on the floor ”side the body. It never passed out of my possession to my knovfledge. Nut lay I leave it at the once of Messrs. Mom and Mack, and it-ats into the hands of the police.” . ”Yes. and the very one 'that you ad- mired. Of that I am certain.” “Was it nbf possibly changed there, David?» "Did you watch it :11 the time?“ "No. I didn‘t. But I was satisfied that nobody passed. and I was suilciently near to hear your door open at the hour appointed. Of course, we had carefully rehearsed the telephone con- versation, and I knew exactly what to “No, because of the initials I had scratched inside it. And’ beyond all question that caseâ€"the same case. mind you. that I picked up on my door- itepâ€"vas purchased by the man now Mug in the hospital ‘ here from Walen‘s. In West Street. Now, how was the Change made?” ignorant as to what advice ‘1 gave to Enid Henson. which brings me back to the cigar-case. You now no’lookln: at it in Lockhart's. Go on.” "Yes. I watched you with ‘a great deal at curiosity. Finally you went on out of the shop saying that'you could not oxford to buy the cum. and I thought no more of the utter for n time. Then we found out :1] shout your private affairs. Oh. I an unmet! :1- most to so on." The dainty little face new cflm: the hand In David's trombh'd. "But we were desperate. And. utter all. We were doing no harm. It won just then that the ides o! the cigar- case camv into my mind. We knew that it we could get you to tote thnt money it would only be as u loan. 1 suggest- ed the gift of the case as a memento of trm occasion. I purchased thnt case with my own money and I pleced it with us contents on the doorstep of aficiédiiess yet that I dare not speak of. And you are in danger. Already Reginald Henson has shown you what hccandc."7 7 > '“And yet he doesn’t know 'every- thing," David smiled. “He may have stabbed me in the back, but by is quite "535m they dared not for your sake. You know a great deal, David, but there is darknesg 315- tronhfe and David sat very thoughtfully for some Crimson Blind lust for n moment on the «glue. “rely my uncle would notâ€"J One moment, please. Wu anybody it your uncle at the tune?” nth gave a sudden little cry. ” How senseless of me to 'W cried. “My uncle was down merely the day, and, as he was very busy. sent. for Mr. Reginald Henson to » him. I did not imagine that. Mr. con would know anything. But a now I cannot see whatâ€"” . lgain let me interrupt you. Did you refihe room at all?" k to es. It is all coming bac me . My uncle’s medicine was locked {1537 bag. He asked .me to go for "they dand not. They veto 1am: to what might become of the :eply.” ‘But the} might have come “to me could only By FRED M. WHITE f "Tregarthan’s Wire,” Robe of Lucifer,‘ Etc. ‘11 you the exact time." "It was on the morning of your adventure.” kept it by you All tho » was made the day 1031 59. By me fly, wax- and yellow string and )5, by R. F. Fenno Coy. I remember. It was reminded my uncle see my my to help t POST. LINDSAY. FRIDAY. MARCH 2m: Ihe "All but one thing.” he whispered. “Don't mnko a. fuss about It. hoceuee Cross to very kind. But I curt stud ; the electric lkhtun romtnds me o! the great tmody of my life. But to:- the '.electrlo 11.11: x should he 3 nu ma l-with s good pryctloo to-dqf-A # l I “meet”. new." va-v‘ Heritage passed 1118 next and ‘CMS vour hands _ it. And now it has it Did I tell you all about it, Cross?" Bell gave Cross a significant glance, and the letter shook his head. “Well, it was this way,” Heritage be. gan, eagerly. His eyes were gleaming now, his whole aspect was changed. “I was poor and struggling. but I had a patient of mine, a deadly trouble. And he was throat to leave'me all his money it I cured him. He told me he had made a will to that effect, and he had done so. And I was in direst straits for some readycashWhenIcametoo tel used an electric 1W 8 powe ul light â€"you know what I mean. The opera.- tion failed and my patientvdied. The operation failed because the electric light went out at a critical time. “People said it was a great misfor- tune for me, because I was on the threshold of a new discovery which would have made my name. Nothing at ‘ the kind. I deliberately cut the podtive I wire 9: the electric_lisht so. that 11 again.” 8011 aid. coldly. “I fueled that I hzd med you out or thut. 'You know perfectly well that. it in :11 ba- dnation. Heritggg.:_ fl .. .. .wwâ€" “â€" V -â€" "I hope you will be v «untenable here." Boll suggested. A taint subtle chute cane our the other’a nee. The voice was low end pleasant. there was no trace of insanity about the speaker; Bell shook the proflered hand. For some little time the conver- sation proceeded smoothly enough. The stranger'wus a good talker; hie remarks were keen and to the_poin_t_. “The labor we delight in physics pain,” be greeted with a laugh and a groan. "It’s worth 3 badly twisted shoulder to have the pleasure of see- ing Hatherly Bell again. My dear 1e1- low._how are you?” - . _ .#A _-â€" â€"â€", ,__ in Bed. ‘7I'hefidirk'eyes lighted 'with pleasure as they fell upon Bell’s queer, shambling figure augvghite halr._ Bell nodded, understanding perfect- ly. He came at length to a. brilliantly- nghted room, where a. dark man with an exceedingly high forehead and won- derfully piercing _eyes wa_s_ait§lng p? “Well,it is,” Cross admitted. “But I am an enthusiast, and one doesn't often get a. chance of chatting with a brilliant, erratic star like yourself. Be- sides, our man is not in the hospital proper. He 45 in a. kind of annex by my own (matters, and he scam the suggestion or being nursedz" - A “This is an contrary’td regulations, of course,” he suggested. _ ‘ {aéfiisithg old war-horse who 511185 the battle tram afar. And the battle with death was ever a joy to Beenf Bell followed Dr. Cross into the hospital with a. sense of familiar pleasure. The cool, sweet smell of the place, the decorum silence, the order of it all appealed to him strongly. It “â€"‘fi‘VII‘ihd the letter forged over what looks like a genuine cipher." David said. grimly. "My own cipher." David went on. “Scrawled in so boldly as to marl: on the under sheet of paper. Almost in- variably I nee initials insteud of my full name unless it is quite iormal business." # “And what is to be done now?“ Ruth asked “Now. here is a and!" he cried. "Look at the address in green 3: the top: '15. Downend Temce.’ Five sheets of my own 'best notepeper. printed eepecinlly for myself. in this basket! Originally this was 3 block of six sheets. but the one has been writ- ten dpon ad the others crushed up like this. Beyond doubt the pnper was stolen from my study. Andâ€"whnt'e this He held up the thick paper to the light. At the root of the top sheet was plainly indented in outline the initials “D. s." The basket proved to he a. large one, and was partially filled with letters that had never been openedâ€"begging letters, Ruth said. For half an hour David was engaged in smoothing out crumpled sheets of paper, until at length his search was rewarded. He held a packet of notepaper,the usual six sheets, one inside the other, that generally :0 to correspondence sheets of good quality. It was crushed up. but Steel flattened it out and held it up for Ruth's inspection: _ “I am going with you to see it we can find anything in the waste-paper basket at No. 219. Bell tells me that your servants have instructions to touch no papers, and- I know that the back sitting-room or your house is used as a. kind of once. I want, it possible, to find the paper that Henson tried to hide on the day you bought the cigar- case.” “No," Ruth replied. “Henson has al- ways alluded to Dr. Bell as a lost man. He professes to be deeply sorry for him, but he has declined to meet him. W'here are you going?” ’0. CHAPTER XXII. I ~12 xooxs as 1! your patient had enn- sd st Steel'u house by appointment." Boll admitted. “Here is the invitation undoubtedly in Steel’s hsndwriting. flubsequently the poor fellow is found in Steel’s house nesrly murdered. end a yet Steel declares solemnly thst the msn is s periect stranger to him. It is o bsd business. but I sssure you thst Steel is the soul of honor. Cross. would you be so good se to let me hsve thst letter (or two or three dsys?" "Very well.” Cross ssld, After s little I hesitstion. “Good-night." l Bell went on his war homewsrd with ; plenty of too}! fol: thought. _- ._ __n g- Sno'ek is?" “I have already told you so." Lit» timer said, d 1!. “How many y: have you been hand»: up”; Brlxbmrt.._- -- 7. have made an excel so you hays round The expression .on Henson‘s usually benign countenance would hove start- led such of his friends and admirers as regarded him as a shining light and great example. The smug satisfaction, the unctuous Woetwss of the expen- sive blue eyes were gone; a. murder- ous gleam shone there instead, Hhflps were set and rigid, the strong ma seemed to be strangling the beam It wanted no enort of imagination to picture Henson as the murderer m in: over his prey. The men he: dis- canied his mask altogether. “Oh." he said, between his teeth, "you are a. clever fellow. You would have made an excellent detective. And .. war! have found .out where Van “Getting towards the light." he mut- tered; “getting along. The light to not coin; to full mar all. I wonder what Reginald Henson would any I! he only knew that I had been to who hospital and recognized our mutual .trlend Van Snack there! " He stopped just to: i moment to light n cigar. - .. .l,lA “L-_.__A "What do you make asked. _ . And Cross proceeded to take a letter from his pocket. It was on thick paper; the stamped address given was "15. Downend Terrace.” There was no head- ing. merely the words “Certainly, with pleasure, I shall be home: in tact. I am home every night till 12.30. and you may call any time up till then. If you knock quietly on the door I shall hear yourâ€"D3.” “It's more than I am." Cross said. when at length he and his visitor were standing outside together. "Look here, Bell, you’re a great friend of Steel’s. whom I believe to be a. very good fel- lo'. I don't want to get him into any harm, but a day or two ago I found this letter in a pocket-book in a. belt worn by our queer patient. Steel says the fel- low is a. perfect stranger to him, and I believe that statement. But what about this letter? I ought to have sent it to the police, but I didn’t. Read it.” “Looks very young.” he muttered. "But then he is one of those men who never grow any hair on their faces. Young as he looks. I should judge him to he at least forty-ave, and, it -I am not mistaken. he is a man who has heard the chimes at midnight or later. I'm quite satisfied", Bell bent low partly to examine the patient. partly to hide his face from Cross. If Bell had made any discovery he kept the fact rigidly to himself. Boll strolled along with the air of a man who is moved by no more than or- dinary curiosity. But from the iirst he had made up his mind not to lose this opportunity. He had not the remotest idea. what he expected to ilnd. but he had a pretty good idea that he was on the verge of an important dlscovery. He came at length to the bedside of the mysterious stranger. The man was lying on his back in a state of coma. his breath came heavily between his parted lips. 7 - “Then be good enough'to let me have a. pup at the man who was found half-murdered In my friend Dnvtd Steel's conservatory. I'm interested in that case.“ Cross hesitated for n moment. “All right," he said. “There can‘t be nny harm In that. Come this way." “Exactly. He was on the verge of discovering some way of operating for throat cases with complete success. You can imagine how excited he was over his discovery. Unfortunately the patient he experimented on died under the operation. not because the light Went out’or any nonsense of that kind, but from failure of the heart’s action owing to excitement. Heritage had no sleep for a fortnight. and he broke down altogether. For months he was really mad, and when his senses came back to him he had that hallucination. Some day it will go, and come day Heritage will take up the dropped threads of his discovery and the world will be all the better for it. And now. will you do me a, favor?" nâ€" _ LT“-.â€"n . mom ram, and go that my Mom. might die and I might get :11 m. money at once. And he did die. and no- body suspected meâ€"nobody could pos« sibly have found me out. Then I went mad and they put me under Bell's care. "1 37m do anything that Me: In my power.“ W‘V‘Hérita’ge,” Bell said, sternly, "close your eyes at once. and b_e sileng.” I should have got Well, only he gave up his practice and drifted into AC world again. My good, kind friend Reginald Henson heard of my case; be interested some people In me and placed me where _I_ am at Present." The patient obeyed instantly. He had not forgotten the old habit of obedience. When he opened his eyes again at length he looked round him in a. foolish, shame-faced manner. “I-I‘am afraid I have been ram- bling." he muttered. “Pray don’t notice me, Bell; it you are as good a fellow as you used to be, come and see me again. I’m tired now." wfieii gzfiewthew desired assurance. and he and Cross left the room together. “Very little,” ‘Bell replied. “Heritage is an exceedingly clever fellow who has not yet recovered from a bad breakdown some years ago. I had near- ly cured him at one time. but he seem; to have lapsed into bad way: again. Some day. when I have time, I shall take up his case once more.” “Did he Operate. or try some new throat cure ?” rT‘So Regfifild Henson hows all ubont it?" Bell asked, drflyi ‘ “My deu‘ renew. be 1- the best friend I June in the wax-H.119 was melt in- 'terested in m cue. I have gone over it with him a hundred times. I shoved him exactly how u was done. And now you know why I loathe the electric light. When it shines in my eyes it maddens me; it brings back to me the recollection of that dreadful time, it causes me toâ€"â€"--” V‘An} isofirrtroivtrruth in whaf he has been saying?" gsked thg lgtggg. __ CHAPTER XXIII. of St?” Cross “I know the house you mean." he said. “It 1. next door to the temporary residence or my esteemed triend. Gilead Gates. At the present moment the place is voidâ€"" 1 “And has been ever since your bogus ‘Home’ broke up. Years Ito, be- fore you need your power to rob and 1 oppress us as you do 110'. you had a .Home there. You collected subscrip- ttionlflzhtnndlettinthenmeotthe Henson's knees suddenly came up to his nose, than he lay quite flat again for a longtime. His hoe had grown white once more. his lips utterly blood- less. Fear was written all over him. A more astute man than Litumer would have seen the bends standing out on his forehead. It was some little time beforehednredtrnsthlmelttospenk “He says he saw it at 218. Brunsâ€" wick Square.” "Oh. play the farce out to the end." Henson laughed. good-humoredly. “Where did he see it?” " "rho Crimoon mind' in “VI: Buck'- wohk spot.” he said. “It in King Chules'l head to him. By good or had luckâ€"it is in your hands to say which â€"you know :1] about the way in which it became necessary to get Hatherly Bell on our side. All the some, the Rembrandtâ€"the other oneâ€"is destroy- "Vu: Sneck has seen the picture.” Littlmer said. doggedly. Henson chuckled. The noise was in- tended to convey unused contempt. and it had the: elect. note: as um- mer was concerned. it we. well for Henson am the letter codid not nee the Itreined anxiety of his face. The men was alert and quivering with ex. citement in every limb. Still he chuck- led unin u it the whole thing merely mused him. “Va Snack told in Out hi hul to tally seen the plum-gm Brighton? “It isn’t here, because it doesn‘t exist. The thing was destroyed by ac- cident by the police when'they ruded Van Sneek's lodgings years ago.” “Beam he known]: was there, I suppose." “80 Van Sneck told you so?" he ask- ed. “What. a. too] he must-have been! And why should he come seeking for the Rembrandt in Brighton 2" But Littimer's surprise was as nothing to Henson’s amazement. He laynatonhisbacksothathisfsoe could not be seen. From the expres- sion of it he had obtained a totally un- expected reply to his question. He wns so amazed that he had no words for the moment. But his quick intelligence and amazing cunning grasped the poo- sibilities of the situation. Littimer was in possession of information to which he was a stranger. Except in a. vague way he had not the remotest idea what Littirner was talking about. But the younger man must not know that. He lay back on his bed utterly ex- hausted by his iit (I passion. One of the white bandages about his throat had started. and a little thin stream of blood trickled down his chest. Littimer waited for the next move. He watched the crimson iluid trickle over Henson's sleepingdacket. He could have watch- ed the big scoundrel bleeding to death with the greatest possible pleasure. “What was Van Sneck doing here?" The voice came clear and sharp from thebedLittimerrespondedtoitasa cowed hound does to a sudden yet not quite unexpected lash {mm a hunts- man’s whip. His manlinesa was of small account where Henson was con. cemed. For years he had come to heel like this. Yet the question startled him and took him entirely by surprise. “He was looking for the lost Rem- brandt.” “I on word to speak freely before you.” he aid. "Sly n word extinct me end I'll crush you. Put out a hand to injure me and I’ll wipe you on the face or the enrth. li'e nheoiutely imperative that I should send en important tele- phone meesnge to London at once. and here the machine has broken down end no chance of it: being repaired for e day or two. Curse, the telephone." “Go on," Littimer aid. bitterly. “I like to hour you. I like to hear the anus. plausible Pheriaee. the friend of the good and pious. going on like this. I'd give any years of my life to have just a handful of your future con- stituent. here for A moment.” Henson mused cuddenly and re- queoted that Luann would help him Into bed. He twirled the hand round passion- ntely. ' "You alwnyu were n tool,” he growl- ed. “and you always will be." Still no reply me. Henson whirl- ed angrily, but he could elicit no re- sponse. He kicked the instrument over and danced round it impotently. Littlo mer had never seen him in such a raging fury below. The language of the man was an outage. filthy. re- volting. profane. No yelling. drunken Hooligan could have been more fluent, more luridly dilute. Littimer obeyed mechenically, but though he rang and nag again no an- swer came. With a snarling curse Hen- son dragged himself out of bed and crossed the room. with limbs that shook under him. fiwwwwAwâ€"e'uugm mt Chris was ill. I didn‘t due to come near the bongo. a least not too near. for ten- of being seen. But I pumped me doctor. Then he told me that Chris wus dead. and I risked it all to see the lat of her." "qu, you.” Hen-0!! said, tesuly; “but whst has this to do with Vm Snack?” “Well. that is an extension telephone on the table yonder worked in connec- tion with the main instrument in the library. I like to have 'my own tele- phone, as it is of the greatest assist- ance to me. Turn that handle two or three times and put that receiver to your ear. When the Exchange nnswers tell them to put you on to 0,017 Ger- “Do you know how Van Sneck got then-e?" he asked. , Littimer nodded. Evidently he had heard most of the story. Henson was silent for some little time. He was working out something in his mind. His smile was not a puissant one; it was nothing like his bland platiorm smile, for instance. look hard." phone?" "I was lookinx for Van Sneck. I mathnthehadbeennero. 1cm- eovered that he had left his mom: and had not returned to them. Then it oc- curred to m to try the hospital. 1 pre- tended that I was in search of some missing relative. and they showed me three eases of had noddents, the vic- tims had not been identified. And the third was Van Snack.” Littimer told his story with just the suggestion of triumph in his voice. Henson was watching him with the keenest possible interest. “Give me that. black book, " he said. “Do you know how to work the tele- Ehresay I could learn. It doesn’t 2 MIW ABSOLUTE SEBUBITY. far more week than he had imagined himselftobe.buthewu in danger now, and his indomitable will-power pulled him through. Who: e fool Littiv me: had been to tell him so much merely so the: he might triumph over his powerful foe for a few minutes. But Henson wu pinning 3 little ecbeme by which he intended to rem the yam mm tenfold. He had no doubt a to the willingneu of his tool. ”me-mueotnmayrromu dnwer and helped himself to I libel-n] done. Walker had expressly forbidden Anything ogthe nod, mm; we: no Reginnld Henson struggled out o! bed and into his clothing as best he could. He vi: terribly weak sud shaky. “Splendid,” he whispered. “Worth! 01 maven: himself! Provided than thatlangettherenmtulcouldonl! see Bell's two atterwardl. hen Littl- mer ordering him 0!! the premllet. Theonlyquesflonis,amluptom in; the am; throuh?" He paused. to the Million: outline of some cunning echeme occurred to him. A thin. cruel smile crept over his lips. Never had he been in e. tight place yet without discovering a. loophole of eo- cape unmet before he had eeen the “So the dsnxer hes come st lsst." he muttered. “1 sin tsce to (see with it. and i knew i should be. Estherly Bell is not the msn to quietly lie down under s cloud like thst. The men hss bruins, snd pstience. snd indomitshle coursge. Now. does he suspect thst l hsve sny hunt! in the business? I must see him when my nerves are stronger sndmsndgetstthetruthlihegoes to Lord Littnner with thst picture he shskes my power end my position perilously. tht s tool I was not to get it swsy. But, then. I only esosped from the Brighton police in those dsys hy the skin or my teeth. And they hsd fol- lowed me from Huddersfield like those cursed hloodhounds here. I won- derâ€"â€"- Ho closed the door behind him. and Immediately Hm at up in bed. He reached (or his hudkerchle! tad viped the big head: from)!“ forehand. _ unima- promised meehly enough. With thoee eyes hinting upon him he would hue promised nuything. We uhnii use preeentiy whnt n stupendous tenor Heneon had over the younger man. nnd in whet my nil the sweet- ness end savour at life m being crushed out of him. “You can leave me now." he sold. “I’m tired. I hsve had it trying dsy. and I need sleep; sad the sooner you are out of the house the better. For your own sake sad {or the sske of those shoot. you. you need not say one word of this to Enid Henson." Henson yawned mectedly. All the me he was terribly disturbed end mwhemtednowwutobe noneandtothinhkfaruhe could tell nobody besides Littuner knew ony- thing of the matter. And no starved. oowed, broken-hearted puppy was ever closer under the heel of his master than Littimer. He still held til the ends; he still controlled the fortunes at two ill-stoned houses. "Not the latter pert of it." Littimer replied. “seeing that he was in the hoe- pitai whenishnppened. “Know it ietrnehecaneelenwnellmmvid Steel, the novelist. come any from the ham and Bel u theplctnre un- der his III. ‘33 thet'e why Van Sneck's agent couldn't find it the sec- ond time he went. Check to you. my friend. 1t any rate. Bell will go to my father with Rembrandt number two, and compare it with number one. And then the int will be in the tire.” “Excellent!” Benson cried. "How drunntic! There is only one thing re- quired to make the story complete. The picture was taken any by rather» ly Bell. It you don't bring thnt in u the denoucment I shall be utterly dil- appointed." Henson chuckled spin. quite a par- ody of e chuckle this time. He could detect the quiet suggestion of triumph in Littimer’e voice. _ _, 7?, “You hbedn't be'.” ummer said. cool 1y. “That is exactly what did happen! “Did Van Snack tell you :11 this he asked. 'nama' Felixâ€"Cradlfiefsnd 'yon Hunt the money into your pocket. A certain weekly journal exposed you. and you nsd to leave suddenly or you would have found yourself in the bends of the police. You skipped so suddenly thnt you hsd no time even to think of your personal elects. which you understood were sold to detrny expenses. But they were not sold. as nobody cared to throw good money after bad. Van Sneck got in with the agent under pretence of viewing the house. nnd he saw the picture there." _ "Why didn’t he take it with him?" Henson asked, with unused scorn. Ho wasmsterothlmseltagunwdhad his nerves well under control. “Wen. thnt was hardly like Von Snack. Our friend is nothing if not diplomatic. But when he did me to get into the house gain the pic- ture was gone.” ’ was no: Humans; \ In: at noiseless hunter shook ('1‘o Fm Gaulwuw} CHAPTER XXIV. Genuine 9n Myprinhuuloonfidenfid. ' Goddess-tony“ mtmoney udget-yhu _ mt: Vinaâ€"W Expo-u kept don to thalowut notch: gubyfine-ofthiapmkept bud “out. 9! Kent“. Uneasy IO!" '1'. mm .- Hm anytemm-lu "You: at Invent Gun-um mm- 9613“"... vith priviloce of repnymtiin inch! mun-mm Emmanuel: tho Worm. Gupta! ............... $10 000.000 Aquila-bud Find... .mooo Inn-lad In Canal... 000.000 Ram Ind printma- lovuuxyoeha Thou-Moment! MM!- mum-«um The ad»:- mdh‘dmoonp-ny Whizpducmdty i :9 E W I. ‘1’.” A”. (or Lind-y cod Viewfi- GUI-O) The feet the: we have been in basins: in Lindsey for 25 you! So acumen: enough for our Ordered Clothing. If thing: were not elrvcit we would not be 35!. teem the lax-gm stock end do the lune! £1.50 in the (but: of Vlotofle to-dey- We love the Ines! stool olgoob we ever lad, ell well bought for call end able to be cold cheeva. CATHBO GO. Who is Your Tailor? GATHBD Suits Me to a 3mm - mum . ‘ \ 0609696966666666666 !LJPPIN80TT’ OOOOOOQOCOOOO0.0QO moor kn m Tden ‘ Dyspep- sia. 0! Hanan. vet. ncflonu and oven ninth: and other “actions of the ban yield to m cunuve action. The menu". cum these tad mmromer am I: clearly shown In 1 mm book dextncn (mm the sundud medical works yhlgb h muxeg In; to my “M.” Di. R. fiot le- mmelons. an the unparanelcd cum I: u consuntly linking of womm's wt pecan: wecuom. weaknesses and ms to Dr. Pierce”. RE nun: other navm mum bud tailed. ‘38 LIVERPOOL um LUND‘N An GLOBE INSURALCS COMPANY. Vim «same. man :0 must to: the an”. x. M our Ana-Ian 1m thonnd I. plan 'hich poo-cu the moat unable ndidnd virtue: in :bnndnntly attested by m of the most eminent medical "its! nod teachers. Even the num- tnl'ed Indium had discovered the useful- na of my native plants before the advent of the white race. This informa- tion. imparted fteely to the whites. led the W to continue investigations until to-dny we have 1 rich assortment of must Nimble American medicinal roots. J. H. SOOTHERAN J 12 COUPLE?! Nova. Yuan MANY SHORT STORIES AND PAPERS ON TIHELY TOPICS $2.50 navna: 26cm. A can NO. CONTINUED STORIES nun nun-n com-Ln: m mu r mmumumm and surrounding country. We wish to inform you that we carry a full line of Pub- lic and High School Books and Supplies. We 'giye special attention to this line of our business. and we respectfully solicit a share of your patronage. FIR E AND LIFE. In the SIllinliS at lindsay FARM LOANS. MONTHLY MAGAZINE A FAIILY LIIRARY fllefY BROS. LINDSAY Mflbshtémm “weekly-hike: Young ‘ insulin-nu without inert-Io 831:1: inbred. Intonatud mm 13’. shlostouofloe. The only upâ€"to-d‘te mm. and Gui. Work: in the County. Lute» fidfi lowest price. and but work. Cd) nee thopneunstie tools“ work. Cato- prices baton buying also-hm. IOIEY TO lm AT LOW!!! CURRENT RATES Seed Merchant and Mar II Agricultural 1m emu. Gmmhwdu_ ”an all. LINDSAY MARBLE WORKS a cunt-ms, Prop. The Subteribor in ash W . conduct Audion who at 311 had: an M m be fumed with. CHARGE non. IRATE ELIAS ”'33, wawu-dafi‘dcldiq. Villain-a. - LINDSAY. 0. v Auctioneer FOR rm: cocx'rr or vxmm‘. Linda, P.O. - - OBI. McLAUGHLIN, PEEL and? FULTON. Barristers, Solicitors and Notaries. mes: Comer Kent and Ilium-mp (Over Dominion Bank, Lindsty) Honey to Lean on Real Estate. 3. J. mm, It, A. I. PM, DJ» m A. M. ['_ and Civil Engi'neers. Hail och prompt}: sttendgqrgo. Box 25, m MWdWUM. wmwmmmam met-oar. “Mum -0”: mamaâ€"'03.. w F. 'BOYLfiCIerkd the Idi- ° «undo». unname- Jim W “10‘0““ om: omnommm unmet-s. cameo-cor: to ficSweyn Smith). Have private funds to loan at 10103 possible rates. OFFICESâ€"Oupooito Pym Hotel, Mi. , Linda”. L Barrister. Solicitor. loan Public. lea! Esme Agent Oc- Re’reoeming Wturloo Hutu-.1 175:. b. sumac Compwy of Waterloo, the Poi- rn! Life Insurance Com uy 0! Hull) ton, and the Dominion of Gun.- too and Accident Comptny of Tomato. DHNS I, m. Iambor 80131 00110:. Dunn fill-geo- . We. Judge O’Le; sold once, over I“ phono#03_ce. one No. ’06. E I todau h Dam Ema guards GTE-.2; wont ' t. . ' We “MW? 1’ M. I 08. F. A. WALTERS Special “tuition will be given to lil- witery. Disease of Women ad I)” of Children. NOW LOCATED AT JANETVILLE DR. NEELANDS IRVINE DENTISTS. R. J. W. WOODâ€" MedKirHeld. ”Bond-n, first doorman!“- Modw Church. OMBouuâ€"Otolls.m.,2to¢ I. 7u8p.n. hone J. uccuuocn, I. 0., 0. I. DR. 1'. BLAHCHARD Graduate Toronto taint-lit” Coroner for Victoria. Ccuaty. Oflcoâ€"Bidoutâ€"st, cor. Kent and I cum, (1m Incidence at ht. LID?“ Tolophom 45. a W. H. GROSS 013190 and" ”pad“ Simpso- Bo- JOSEPH _MEEHAN,, MON fi SMITH. 0- 15-9w McDIARMID WEEKS Formerly of Black-tack, Ont. GRADUATE OF ”I may. JAMES KEITH STEWART e: 012019108, Bum'uten, Lind Successor to Dr. Numith.) AUCTION SALE. DENTIST. Lindsay IISCBLLANIOITS IABRISTIIS. Etc. L: WAN. “-19 BITSIIISB CARDS AICTIONEERS DEN 1'18le PHYSICIANS Amado.

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